From c956829645c414a78bdc566880ebd8799f071428 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 25 Oct 2022 14:23:25 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 01/63] Delete matcher.py --- text_matcher/matcher.py | 297 ---------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 297 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 text_matcher/matcher.py diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher.py b/text_matcher/matcher.py deleted file mode 100644 index 93b9ea4..0000000 --- a/text_matcher/matcher.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,297 +0,0 @@ -# coding: utf-8 - -import re -import os -import json -import logging -import itertools -import nltk -from difflib import SequenceMatcher -from nltk.metrics.distance import edit_distance as editDistance -from nltk.stem.lancaster import LancasterStemmer -from nltk.util import ngrams -from string import punctuation -from termcolor import colored - - -class Text: - def __init__(self, raw_text, label, removeStopwords=True): - if type(raw_text) == list: - # JSTOR critical works come in lists, where each item represents a page. - self.text = ' \n '.join(raw_text) - else: - self.text = raw_text - self.label = label - self.preprocess(self.text) - self.tokens = self.getTokens(removeStopwords) - self.trigrams = self.ngrams(3) - - def preprocess(self, text): - """ Heals hyphenated words, and maybe other things. """ - self.text = re.sub(r'([A-Za-z])- ([a-z])', r'\1\2', self.text) - - def getTokens(self, removeStopwords=True): - """ Tokenizes the text, breaking it up into words, removing punctuation. """ - tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\w+\'?\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. - spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text)) - # Take note of how many spans there are in the text - self.length = spans[-1][-1] - tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(self.text) - tokens = [token.lower() for token in tokens] # make them lowercase - stemmer = LancasterStemmer() - tokens = [stemmer.stem(token) for token in tokens] - if not removeStopwords: - self.spans = spans - return tokens - tokenSpans = list(zip(tokens, spans)) # zip it up - stopwords = nltk.corpus.stopwords.words('english') # get stopwords - tokenSpans = [token for token in tokenSpans if token[0] not in stopwords] # remove stopwords from zip - self.spans = [x[1] for x in tokenSpans] # unzip; get spans - return [x[0] for x in tokenSpans] # unzip; get tokens - - def ngrams(self, n): - """ Returns ngrams for the text.""" - return list(ngrams(self.tokens, n)) - - -class ExtendedMatch: - """ - Data structure container for a fancy version of a difflib-style - Match object. The difflib Match class won't work for extended - matches, since it only has the properties `a` (start location in - text A), `b` (start location in text B), and size. Since our fancy - new matches have different sizes in our different texts, we'll need - two size attributes. - """ - - def __init__(self, a, b, sizeA, sizeB): - self.a = a - self.b = b - self.sizeA = sizeA - self.sizeB = sizeB - # Whether this is actually two matches that have been fused into one. - self.healed = False - # Whether this match has been extended from its original boundaries. - self.extendedBackwards = 0 - self.extendedForwards = 0 - - def __repr__(self): - out = "a: %s, b: %s, size a: %s, size b: %s" % (self.a, self.b, self.sizeA, self.sizeB) - if self.extendedBackwards: - out += ", extended backwards x%s" % self.extendedBackwards - if self.extendedForwards: - out += ", extended forwards x%s" % self.extendedForwards - if self.healed: - out += ", healed" - return out - - -class Matcher: - """ - Does the text matching. - """ - - def __init__(self, textObjA, textObjB, threshold=3, cutoff=5, ngramSize=3, removeStopwords=True, minDistance=8, silent=False): - - """ - Takes as input two Text() objects, and matches between them. - """ - self.threshold = threshold - self.ngramSize = ngramSize - self.minDistance = minDistance - - self.textA = textObjA - self.textB = textObjB - - self.textAgrams = self.textA.ngrams(ngramSize) - self.textBgrams = self.textB.ngrams(ngramSize) - - self.locationsA = [] - self.locationsB = [] - - self.initial_matches = self.get_initial_matches() - self.healed_matches = self.heal_neighboring_matches() - - # Rewrote just after - self.extended_matches = self.extend_matches() - - # Prune matches - self.extended_matches = [match for match in self.extended_matches - if min(match.sizeA, match.sizeB) >= cutoff] - - self.numMatches = len(self.extended_matches) - - self.silent = silent - - def get_initial_matches(self): - """ - This does the main work of finding matching n-gram sequences between - the texts. - """ - sequence = SequenceMatcher(None, self.textAgrams, self.textBgrams) - matchingBlocks = sequence.get_matching_blocks() - - # Only return the matching sequences that are higher than the - # threshold given by the user. - highMatchingBlocks = [match for match in matchingBlocks if match.size > self.threshold] - - numBlocks = len(highMatchingBlocks) - - if numBlocks > 0 and self.silent is not True: - print('%s total matches found.' % numBlocks, flush=True) - - return highMatchingBlocks - - def getContext(self, text, start, length, context): - match = self.getTokensText(text, start, length) - before = self.getTokensText(text, start - context, context) - after = self.getTokensText(text, start + length, context) - match = colored(match, 'red') - out = " ".join([before, match, after]) - out = out.replace('\n', ' ') # Replace newlines with spaces. - out = re.sub('\s+', ' ', out) - return out - - def getTokensText(self, text, start, length): - """ Looks up the passage in the original text, using its spans. """ - matchTokens = text.tokens[start:start + length] - spans = text.spans[start:start + length] - if len(spans) == 0: - # Don't try to get text or context beyond the end of a text. - passage = "" - else: - passage = text.text[spans[0][0]:spans[-1][-1]] - return passage - - def getLocations(self, text, start, length, asPercentages=False): - """ Gets the numeric locations of the match. """ - spans = text.spans[start:start + length] - if asPercentages: - locations = (spans[0][0] / text.length, spans[-1][-1] / text.length) - else: - try: - locations = (spans[0][0], spans[-1][-1]) - except IndexError: - return None - return locations - - def getMatch(self, match, context=5): - textA, textB = self.textA, self.textB - lengthA = match.sizeA + self.ngramSize - 1 # offset according to nGram size - lengthB = match.sizeB + self.ngramSize - 1 # offset according to nGram size - wordsA = self.getContext(textA, match.a, lengthA, context) - wordsB = self.getContext(textB, match.b, lengthB, context) - spansA = self.getLocations(textA, match.a, lengthA) - spansB = self.getLocations(textB, match.b, lengthB) - if spansA is not None and spansB is not None: - self.locationsA.append(spansA) - self.locationsB.append(spansB) - line1 = ('%s: %s %s' % (colored(textA.label, 'green'), spansA, wordsA)) - line2 = ('%s: %s %s' % (colored(textB.label, 'green'), spansB, wordsB)) - out = line1 + '\n' + line2 - return out - - def heal_neighboring_matches(self): - healedMatches = [] - ignoreNext = False - matches = self.initial_matches.copy() - # Handle only one match. - if len(matches) == 1: - match = matches[0] - sizeA, sizeB = match.size, match.size - match = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) - healedMatches.append(match) - return healedMatches - # For multiple match - for i, match in enumerate(matches): - # If last match - if i + 1 > len(matches) - 1: - break - nextMatch = matches[i + 1] - # If math already treated - if ignoreNext: - ignoreNext = False - continue - else: - # Look at the number of different character between two raw match - if (nextMatch.a - (match.a + match.size)) < self.minDistance: - # logging.debug('Potential healing candidate found: ' % (match, nextMatch)) - sizeA = (nextMatch.a + nextMatch.size) - match.a - sizeB = (nextMatch.b + nextMatch.size) - match.b - healed = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) - healed.healed = True - healedMatches.append(healed) - ignoreNext = True - else: - sizeA, sizeB = match.size, match.size - match = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) - healedMatches.append(match) - return healedMatches - - def edit_ratio(self, wordA, wordB): - """ Computes the number of edits required to transform one - (stemmed already, probably) word into another word, and - adjusts for the average number of letters in each. - - Examples: - color, colour: 0.1818181818 - theater, theatre: 0.2857 - day, today: 0.5 - foobar, foo56bar: 0.2857 - """ - distance = editDistance(wordA, wordB) - averageLength = (len(wordA) + len(wordB)) / 2 - return distance / averageLength - - def extend_matches(self, cutoff=0.4): - extended = False - for match in self.healed_matches: - # Look one word before. - wordA = self.textAgrams[(match.a - 1)][0] - wordB = self.textBgrams[(match.b - 1)][0] - if self.edit_ratio(wordA, wordB) < cutoff: - if self.silent is not True: - print('Extending match backwards with words: %s %s' % - (wordA, wordB)) - match.a -= 1 - match.b -= 1 - match.sizeA += 1 - match.sizeB += 1 - match.extendedBackwards += 1 - extended = True - # Look one word after. - idxA = match.a + match.sizeA + 1 - idxB = match.b + match.sizeB + 1 - if idxA > len(self.textAgrams) - 1 or idxB > len(self.textBgrams) - 1: - # We've gone too far, and we're actually at the end of the text. - continue - wordA = self.textAgrams[idxA][-1] - wordB = self.textBgrams[idxB][-1] - if self.edit_ratio(wordA, wordB) < cutoff: - if self.silent is not True: - print('Extending match forwards with words: %s %s' % - (wordA, wordB)) - match.sizeA += 1 - match.sizeB += 1 - match.extendedForwards += 1 - extended = True - - if extended: - # If we've gone through the whole list and there's nothing - # left to extend, then stop. Otherwise do this again. - self.extend_matches() - - return self.healed_matches - - def match(self): - """ Gets and prints all matches. """ - - for num, match in enumerate(self.extended_matches): - # print('match: ', match) - out = self.getMatch(match) - if self.silent is not True: - print('\n') - print('match %s:' % (num + 1), flush=True) - print(out, flush=True) - - return self.numMatches, self.locationsA, self.locationsB From b1f812af65432dcfa560532c0b656c4c5f0d1348 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 25 Oct 2022 14:23:38 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 02/63] Add files via upload --- text_matcher/matcher.py | 300 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 300 insertions(+) create mode 100644 text_matcher/matcher.py diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher.py b/text_matcher/matcher.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2603c84 --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/matcher.py @@ -0,0 +1,300 @@ +# coding: utf-8 + +import re +import os +import json +import logging +import itertools +import nltk +from difflib import SequenceMatcher +from nltk.metrics.distance import edit_distance as editDistance +from nltk.stem.lancaster import LancasterStemmer +from nltk.util import ngrams +from string import punctuation +from termcolor import colored + + +class Text: + def __init__(self, raw_text, label, removeStopwords=True): + if type(raw_text) == list: + # JSTOR critical works come in lists, where each item represents a page. + self.text = ' \n '.join(raw_text) + else: + self.text = raw_text + self.label = label + self.preprocess(self.text) + self.tokens = self.getTokens(removeStopwords) + self.trigrams = self.ngrams(3) + + def preprocess(self, text): + """ Heals hyphenated words, and maybe other things. """ + self.text = re.sub(r'([A-Za-z])- ([a-z])', r'\1\2', self.text) + + def getTokens(self, removeStopwords=True): + """ Tokenizes the text, breaking it up into words, removing punctuation. """ + tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\w+\'?\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. + spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text)) + # Take note of how many spans there are in the text + self.length = spans[-1][-1] + tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(self.text) + tokens = [token.lower() for token in tokens] # make them lowercase + stemmer = LancasterStemmer() + tokens = [stemmer.stem(token) for token in tokens] + if not removeStopwords: + self.spans = spans + return tokens + tokenSpans = list(zip(tokens, spans)) # zip it up + stopwords = nltk.corpus.stopwords.words('english') # get stopwords + tokenSpans = [token for token in tokenSpans if token[0] not in stopwords] # remove stopwords from zip + self.spans = [x[1] for x in tokenSpans] # unzip; get spans + return [x[0] for x in tokenSpans] # unzip; get tokens + + def ngrams(self, n): + """ Returns ngrams for the text.""" + return list(ngrams(self.tokens, n)) + + +class ExtendedMatch: + """ + Data structure container for a fancy version of a difflib-style + Match object. The difflib Match class won't work for extended + matches, since it only has the properties `a` (start location in + text A), `b` (start location in text B), and size. Since our fancy + new matches have different sizes in our different texts, we'll need + two size attributes. + """ + + def __init__(self, a, b, sizeA, sizeB): + self.a = a + self.b = b + self.sizeA = sizeA + self.sizeB = sizeB + # Whether this is actually two matches that have been fused into one. + self.healed = False + # Whether this match has been extended from its original boundaries. + self.extendedBackwards = 0 + self.extendedForwards = 0 + + def __repr__(self): + out = "a: %s, b: %s, size a: %s, size b: %s" % (self.a, self.b, self.sizeA, self.sizeB) + if self.extendedBackwards: + out += ", extended backwards x%s" % self.extendedBackwards + if self.extendedForwards: + out += ", extended forwards x%s" % self.extendedForwards + if self.healed: + out += ", healed" + return out + + +class Matcher: + """ + Does the text matching. + """ + + def __init__(self, textObjA, textObjB, threshold=3, cutoff=5, ngramSize=3, removeStopwords=True, minDistance=8, silent=False): + + """ + Takes as input two Text() objects, and matches between them. + """ + + + self.threshold = threshold + self.ngramSize = ngramSize + self.minDistance = minDistance + + self.textA = textObjA + self.textB = textObjB + + self.textAgrams = self.textA.ngrams(ngramSize) + self.textBgrams = self.textB.ngrams(ngramSize) + + self.locationsA = [] + self.locationsB = [] + + self.initial_matches = self.get_initial_matches() + self.healed_matches = self.heal_neighboring_matches() + + # Rewrote just after + self.extended_matches = self.extend_matches() + + # Prune matches + self.extended_matches = [match for match in self.extended_matches + if min(match.sizeA, match.sizeB) >= cutoff] + + self.numMatches = len(self.extended_matches) + + self.silent = silent + + + def get_initial_matches(self): + """ + This does the main work of finding matching n-gram sequences between + the texts. + """ + sequence = SequenceMatcher(None, self.textAgrams, self.textBgrams) + matchingBlocks = sequence.get_matching_blocks() + + # Only return the matching sequences that are higher than the + # threshold given by the user. + highMatchingBlocks = [match for match in matchingBlocks if match.size > self.threshold] + + numBlocks = len(highMatchingBlocks) + + if numBlocks > 0 and (not hasattr(self, 'silent') or self.silent is not True): #modified grace + print('%s total matches found.' % numBlocks, flush=True) + + return highMatchingBlocks + + def getContext(self, text, start, length, context): + match = self.getTokensText(text, start, length) + before = self.getTokensText(text, start - context, context) + after = self.getTokensText(text, start + length, context) + match = colored(match, 'red') + out = " ".join([before, match, after]) + out = out.replace('\n', ' ') # Replace newlines with spaces. + out = re.sub('\s+', ' ', out) + return out + + def getTokensText(self, text, start, length): + """ Looks up the passage in the original text, using its spans. """ + matchTokens = text.tokens[start:start + length] + spans = text.spans[start:start + length] + if len(spans) == 0: + # Don't try to get text or context beyond the end of a text. + passage = "" + else: + passage = text.text[spans[0][0]:spans[-1][-1]] + return passage + + def getLocations(self, text, start, length, asPercentages=False): + """ Gets the numeric locations of the match. """ + spans = text.spans[start:start + length] + if asPercentages: + locations = (spans[0][0] / text.length, spans[-1][-1] / text.length) + else: + try: + locations = (spans[0][0], spans[-1][-1]) + except IndexError: + return None + return locations + + def getMatch(self, match, context=5): + textA, textB = self.textA, self.textB + lengthA = match.sizeA + self.ngramSize - 1 # offset according to nGram size + lengthB = match.sizeB + self.ngramSize - 1 # offset according to nGram size + wordsA = self.getContext(textA, match.a, lengthA, context) + wordsB = self.getContext(textB, match.b, lengthB, context) + spansA = self.getLocations(textA, match.a, lengthA) + spansB = self.getLocations(textB, match.b, lengthB) + if spansA is not None and spansB is not None: + self.locationsA.append(spansA) + self.locationsB.append(spansB) + line1 = ('%s: %s %s' % (colored(textA.label, 'green'), spansA, wordsA)) + line2 = ('%s: %s %s' % (colored(textB.label, 'green'), spansB, wordsB)) + out = line1 + '\n' + line2 + return out + + def heal_neighboring_matches(self): + healedMatches = [] + ignoreNext = False + matches = self.initial_matches.copy() + # Handle only one match. + if len(matches) == 1: + match = matches[0] + sizeA, sizeB = match.size, match.size + match = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) + healedMatches.append(match) + return healedMatches + # For multiple match + for i, match in enumerate(matches): + # If last match + if i + 1 > len(matches) - 1: + break + nextMatch = matches[i + 1] + # If math already treated + if ignoreNext: + ignoreNext = False + continue + else: + # Look at the number of different character between two raw match + if (nextMatch.a - (match.a + match.size)) < self.minDistance: + # logging.debug('Potential healing candidate found: ' % (match, nextMatch)) + sizeA = (nextMatch.a + nextMatch.size) - match.a + sizeB = (nextMatch.b + nextMatch.size) - match.b + healed = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) + healed.healed = True + healedMatches.append(healed) + ignoreNext = True + else: + sizeA, sizeB = match.size, match.size + match = ExtendedMatch(match.a, match.b, sizeA, sizeB) + healedMatches.append(match) + return healedMatches + + def edit_ratio(self, wordA, wordB): + """ Computes the number of edits required to transform one + (stemmed already, probably) word into another word, and + adjusts for the average number of letters in each. + + Examples: + color, colour: 0.1818181818 + theater, theatre: 0.2857 + day, today: 0.5 + foobar, foo56bar: 0.2857 + """ + distance = editDistance(wordA, wordB) + averageLength = (len(wordA) + len(wordB)) / 2 + return distance / averageLength + + def extend_matches(self, cutoff=0.4): + extended = False + for match in self.healed_matches: + # Look one word before. + wordA = self.textAgrams[(match.a - 1)][0] + wordB = self.textBgrams[(match.b - 1)][0] + if self.edit_ratio(wordA, wordB) < cutoff: + if not hasattr(self, 'silent') or self.silent is not True: #grace + print('Extending match backwards with words: %s %s' % + (wordA, wordB)) + match.a -= 1 + match.b -= 1 + match.sizeA += 1 + match.sizeB += 1 + match.extendedBackwards += 1 + extended = True + # Look one word after. + idxA = match.a + match.sizeA + 1 + idxB = match.b + match.sizeB + 1 + if idxA > len(self.textAgrams) - 1 or idxB > len(self.textBgrams) - 1: + # We've gone too far, and we're actually at the end of the text. + continue + wordA = self.textAgrams[idxA][-1] + wordB = self.textBgrams[idxB][-1] + if self.edit_ratio(wordA, wordB) < cutoff: + if not hasattr(self, 'silent') or self.silent is not True: #grace modified + print('Extending match forwards with words: %s %s' % + (wordA, wordB)) + match.sizeA += 1 + match.sizeB += 1 + match.extendedForwards += 1 + extended = True + + if extended: + # If we've gone through the whole list and there's nothing + # left to extend, then stop. Otherwise do this again. + self.extend_matches() + + return self.healed_matches + + def match(self): + """ Gets and prints all matches. """ + + for num, match in enumerate(self.extended_matches): + # print('match: ', match) + out = self.getMatch(match) + if self.silent is not True: + print('\n') + print('match %s:' % (num + 1), flush=True) + print(out, flush=True) + + return self.numMatches, self.locationsA, self.locationsB From 74afb1f23befc3b4ef459ed66095e3aa80025676 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 14:53:33 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 03/63] Add files via upload --- annotated-by-size.html | 6310 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ annotated-by-size.ipynb | 576 ++++ 2 files changed, 6886 insertions(+) create mode 100644 annotated-by-size.html create mode 100644 annotated-by-size.ipynb diff --git a/annotated-by-size.html b/annotated-by-size.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc8ccd2 --- /dev/null +++ b/annotated-by-size.html @@ -0,0 +1,6310 @@ + + + + + + +
Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
+to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have
+as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one
+of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded
+my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an
+embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even
+as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in
+the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it
+belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
+and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
+undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the
+former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the
+case of Gender Trouble.
+In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual
+assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views
+that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and
+restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity
+and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theorythat restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
+practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often
+with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to
+seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and
+exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or
+derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for
+readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field
+of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities
+ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in
+the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal,
+and illegitimate is likely to pose that question.
+Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual
+and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and
+all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought
+to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions
+about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the
+face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of
+gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must
+be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded
+from any effort to think gender?
+Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was
+called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists.
+Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of
+sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to beone of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
+on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If
+in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof
+from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the
+case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point
+was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those
+theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the
+critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed
+strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive
+can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism
+is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years,
+however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and
+sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism
+of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the
+domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether
+my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty
+Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but
+perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between
+the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim
+that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural
+studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory
+(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural
+studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the
+point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural
+appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure,
+where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is
+not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where
+cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and
+its promise of success, uncertain.Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
+American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate
+theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although
+the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it
+will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of
+the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein,
+various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva,
+Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in
+France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a
+French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct
+from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist
+inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has
+threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few
+French publishers who have considered it.1
+Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It
+emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates
+on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and
+feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality,
+and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique
+Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and
+lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the
+1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism,
+Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the
+two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what
+is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con-
+summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in
+a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call
+into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do
+certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is
+a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through
+normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to
+queer contexts?
+The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender
+emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and
+sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender.
+Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent
+that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and
+to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s
+sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of
+“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror
+and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one
+sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a
+certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and
+language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various
+new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism
+and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme
+identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who
+become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”?
+What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must
+be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness”
+that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some
+lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status
+as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years,
+offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not
+anticipate.2
+But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought
+to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual
+practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of
+normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
+of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
+of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there
+are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes:
+Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of
+gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of
+sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization
+of inequality between men and women.3
+
+In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is
+not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender,
+but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is
+what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may
+be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said.
+Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for
+the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy
+serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are
+gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony?
+Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative
+use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming
+the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender,
+MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for
+thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of genderdiscrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
+discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment
+may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there
+are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is
+important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated
+against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in
+accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment
+of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity.
+Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender
+means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with
+some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that
+men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be
+straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a
+critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her
+womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination
+becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender
+should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter
+accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that
+the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but
+seeks to oppose it.
+I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn
+an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal
+or structural link between them. This makes good sense from oneperspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
+normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to
+be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is
+meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension
+of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are
+clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede,
+however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered
+ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at
+all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or
+deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for
+instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably
+mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing.
+Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying
+and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender
+Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only
+because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have
+changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but
+because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of
+gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.”
+There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law,
+attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which
+that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its
+object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that
+might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very
+phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in whichthe anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
+outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization
+in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained
+temporal duration.8
+Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and
+one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender
+is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal
+essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed
+that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we
+anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an
+hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble
+clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into
+the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and
+several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to
+come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic
+break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I
+would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of
+a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical
+mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted.
+Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do
+become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through
+that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche
+performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration.
+Although this text does not answer the question of whether the
+materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of
+much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for thereader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
+can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several
+scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made
+explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple
+analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not
+whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but
+what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race.
+Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,”
+whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that
+no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
+always work as background for one another, and they often find their
+most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
+of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once,
+and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive
+category of analysis.12
+Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and
+debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a
+full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions
+of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was
+produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social
+movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a
+lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in
+which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book.
+Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a
+person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw
+many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of
+some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural
+edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the
+midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom,
+and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a
+part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension.
+At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also livinga life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
+book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth
+Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life.
+That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
+solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
+problem that this someone is given in language).
+It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the
+text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same
+time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its
+reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated
+with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
+to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and
+the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
+were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the
+relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist
+jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of
+Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug.
+In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in
+Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I
+tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and
+exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important
+strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I
+worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human
+Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual
+minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to
+understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out
+the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yetmet. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
+defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More
+recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory
+and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book
+that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of
+hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be
+published by Verso in 2000).
+Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in
+relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that
+seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on
+questions of sexuality, gender, and culture.
+Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to
+the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to
+some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular”
+according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps
+attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the
+complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of
+calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for
+grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive.
+I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend.
+Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly,
+one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are
+not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style
+are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible
+speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of
+not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell,
+in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about
+common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar
+is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraintsthat grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
+But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly
+irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and
+sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who
+are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does
+their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual
+life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of
+linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical
+norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at
+the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part,
+through contesting the grammar in which gender is given.
+The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon
+looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing
+perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the
+sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who
+devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve?
+What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency”
+keep obscure?
+I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender
+norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body,
+deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the
+Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their
+sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the
+age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and
+homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation
+but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on
+a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this
+violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at
+the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to bea natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
+agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the
+violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
+text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the
+pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality
+that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The
+writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to
+play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real”
+politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are
+always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible,
+and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be
+like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended
+kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate
+the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14
+Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the
+realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose
+are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to
+judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings
+in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to
+describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender
+ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also
+pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete
+consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender
+Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender
+is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It
+is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at thesame time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
+world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of
+a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be
+good.”
+Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide
+between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their
+judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and
+then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on
+the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what
+makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility,
+whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which
+expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying
+persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way.
+The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a
+question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a
+fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what
+is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense
+prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation.
+I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes
+the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such
+judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be
+made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves
+posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always
+run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition
+and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity
+culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name
+the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what
+is at stake in using the term at all?What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
+questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
+how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In
+other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit
+the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the
+means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are
+the means by which we transform it?
+The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of
+subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is
+rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or
+a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those
+perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced
+through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory
+appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take
+the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood,
+and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this
+perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of
+the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or
+we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or
+how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it
+is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly
+erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality,
+then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy
+from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be
+preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may
+not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees?
+The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail,
+when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely
+the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered
+is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories
+itself constitutes the experience of the body in question.
+When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is
+also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from
+the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand
+that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized
+knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call
+it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in
+itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real.
+And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices
+that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and
+reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented
+and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be
+made differently and, indeed, less violently.
+The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a
+true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling
+of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized
+knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism,
+heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and
+improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten
+by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish
+what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be
+considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which
+bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this
+legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is
+not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter
+the violence performed by gender norms.
+In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the
+condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain
+performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal
+dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in
+response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications.
+Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and
+I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and
+revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and
+expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the
+volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political
+(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions
+(Routledge, 1995).
+I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I”
+to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I”
+that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the
+availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that
+structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes
+this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it.
+What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar
+that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that
+establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be preciselyto thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
+trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without
+which no “I” can appear.
+This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from
+a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of
+the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the
+publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory
+of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the
+ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in
+The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency.
+Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or
+that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read
+directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined
+over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have
+come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and
+that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In
+Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied
+relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider
+that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences.
+Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor
+to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous.
+This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the
+insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of
+both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
+include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal
+gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I
+would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular,
+how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized
+forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual
+minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will
+refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a
+coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and
+its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power,
+and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to
+refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining
+recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within
+reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider
+it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the
+purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of
+identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no
+reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position
+purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as
+the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those
+who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold
+that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life
+of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
+try to live, on the sexual margins.15
+Judith Butler
+Berkeley, California
+June, 1999
+Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
+and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps
+trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was,
+within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should
+never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion
+and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of
+power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in
+trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble
+is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it.
+As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I
+noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the
+terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and
+unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I
+read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject
+of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the
+unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the
+glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of themasculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
+the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my
+attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than
+an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion
+between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate
+in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I
+asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the
+Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those
+terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the
+subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic
+regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology?
+But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into
+question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support
+gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of
+“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female
+indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is,
+the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories
+is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to
+require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of
+the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that
+gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
+Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
+natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
+which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through
+which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constitutedthrough discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
+body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize
+“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative
+construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be
+shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original,
+and the inevitable?
+To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as
+effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical
+inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual
+identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
+discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this
+inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions:
+phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality.
+Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion,
+its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both
+terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this
+inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests.
+Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle
+the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of
+politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the
+consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
+new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no
+longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what
+extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
+for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself?
+* * *This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
+gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1,
+“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as
+the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory
+heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of
+power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of
+sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the
+feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the
+female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how
+do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where
+are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce
+the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of
+power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of
+continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
+these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
+into question their alleged relations?
+Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
+Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism
+that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities
+within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within
+some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of
+cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued
+through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan
+Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is
+subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The
+History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown
+both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexualeconomy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
+complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual
+codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about
+the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies?
+The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical
+consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva
+in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged
+to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of
+Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an
+insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and
+fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions,
+Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas
+and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body,
+sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification
+and proliferation beyond the binary frame.
+It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within
+its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of
+the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a
+childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact.
+Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which
+gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It isclearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
+various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled
+to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the
+predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
+author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other
+discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical
+boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
+participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from
+other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an
+interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist
+the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique.
+The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of
+Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship
+for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for
+Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and
+provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The
+George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported
+my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has
+been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this
+manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The
+“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under
+Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by
+virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective
+thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna
+Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll
+Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender,
+Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985
+and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness toimagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
+critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work
+from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities
+Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the
+University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School
+of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and
+her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial
+and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues
+who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar,
+Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice
+Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone,
+Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work
+in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project
+and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance.
+As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination,
+keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work.
+GENDER TROUBL1
+
+Subjects of
+Sex/Gender/Desire
+One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one.
+—Simone de Beauvoir
+Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist.
+—Julia Kristeva
+Woman does not have a sex.
+—Luce Irigaray
+The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex.
+—Michel Foucault
+The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual.
+—Monique Wittig
+
+i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism
+For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some
+existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not
+only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
+representation serves as the operative term within a political process
+that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political
+subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function
+of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what isassumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
+the development of a language that fully or adequately represents
+women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of
+women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all.
+Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist
+discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable
+or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after
+all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of
+women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out
+in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed,
+with the result that representation is extended only to what can be
+acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being
+a subject must first be met before representation can be extended.
+Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
+appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is,
+through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the
+contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them,
+formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements
+of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
+of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
+representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
+facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
+system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differentialaxis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
+masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
+emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
+The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
+politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
+through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the
+juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the
+political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating
+and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively
+concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical
+structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces”
+what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned
+with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In
+effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject
+before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s
+own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women
+might become more fully represented in language and politics.
+Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
+“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
+very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
+Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
+the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the
+law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
+well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law
+as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing
+assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law
+might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature
+hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a
+presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and,
+thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
+the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism
+encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common
+identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
+whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural,
+has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As
+Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by
+the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a
+woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
+because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of
+its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
+consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
+separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in
+which it is invariably produced and maintained.
+The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for
+feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist
+cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
+women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
+a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its
+failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts
+have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the
+start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its
+efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support
+highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
+construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western
+barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for
+patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s ownclaims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
+categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to
+produce women’s common subjugated experience.
+Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
+kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
+difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is
+there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
+there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
+integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified
+against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
+formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
+both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its
+difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of
+“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
+exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but
+in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully
+decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from
+the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of
+identity a misnomer.4
+My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the
+subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the
+representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature
+insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the
+category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory
+consequences of that construction, even when the construction has
+been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation
+within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from
+“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessarylimits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
+representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the
+constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem
+is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for
+merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
+exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion
+itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By
+conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism
+articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross
+misrepresentation.
+Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
+constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position
+outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating
+practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present,
+as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted
+frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize.
+Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics,
+a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a
+feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the
+ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order
+to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on
+other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical
+critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having
+to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested
+by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably
+excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in
+a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals
+to extend its claims to “representation”?5
+Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction ofthe category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
+regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of
+the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves
+to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
+of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of
+gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
+identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a
+political goal.
+To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what
+qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a
+feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort
+to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic
+invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend
+representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion
+of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of
+the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics?
+The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of
+feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a
+field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation.
+Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense
+for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed.
+ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire
+Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject
+by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex
+and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability
+sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender isneither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
+of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction
+that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7
+If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
+then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
+to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
+Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
+that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of
+males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even
+if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
+and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to
+assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of
+a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise
+restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as
+radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily
+signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male
+body as easily as a female one.
+This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set
+of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without
+first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what
+means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific
+discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex
+have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is
+there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy
+that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are
+the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests?
+If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
+called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps itwas always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
+between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11
+It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural
+interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
+not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a
+pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the
+very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
+also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
+a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of
+“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it
+is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for
+sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be
+understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to
+encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production?
+iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of
+Contemporary Debate
+Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential
+attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What
+gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
+is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness
+imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of
+agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
+laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? Whatsense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
+gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law.
+When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
+terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In
+such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
+On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
+that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For
+Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
+agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and
+could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable
+and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear
+that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion
+to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.”
+There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who
+becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as
+she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
+been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
+a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
+shown to have been gender all along.14
+The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to
+founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will
+and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that
+some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits
+the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a
+passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the
+instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive willings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
+as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the
+mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does
+the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do
+we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument
+awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15
+Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse
+which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to
+safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender”
+or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose
+and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered
+possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the
+limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always
+set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on
+binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality.
+Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender.
+Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
+of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
+gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
+differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
+only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not
+an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that
+only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the
+masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms oftheir sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
+In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray
+argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within
+the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.”
+Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language,
+women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity.
+Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex
+constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense,
+women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to
+Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray
+argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a
+closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing
+goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir,
+women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of
+signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the
+Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity
+of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as
+inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the
+metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject.
+What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform
+thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist
+conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is
+the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist
+feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person
+who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,”
+called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral
+deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
+gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable
+contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what
+the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the
+constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and
+contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being,
+but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically
+specific sets of relations.
+Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point
+of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an
+abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This
+absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s)
+that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray,
+the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female
+sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither
+“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the
+Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for
+Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir
+would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms
+of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even
+in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one.
+The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in
+a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men
+could not settle the question of women because they would then be
+acting as both judge and party to the case.18
+The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
+meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of
+socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of
+gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above.
+The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume
+that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which,
+on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned
+within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility
+of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements
+about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be
+argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is,
+indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and
+man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of
+identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry.
+For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms
+of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to
+immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for
+the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and,
+hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her
+position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
+is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as
+female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
+to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom.
+Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act ofnegation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
+The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will
+later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both
+the existential subject and its Other.
+Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation
+and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting
+essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is
+clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts
+to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/
+body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The
+preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the
+very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes,
+Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political
+and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates
+the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
+and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
+mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender
+hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized.
+The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from
+“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very
+mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of
+gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body
+is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body,
+in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within amasculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
+off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian
+terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading,
+Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not
+the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and
+en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting
+linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place.
+iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond
+Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by
+which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed
+reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that
+the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist
+critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical
+structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that
+traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
+difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological
+imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of
+cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism?
+The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
+global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a
+repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23
+Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect tothe totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
+singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
+strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms.
+That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike
+suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the
+varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly
+insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related,
+distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed,
+the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of
+dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual
+difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot
+be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism
+or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one
+tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service
+of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain.
+The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the
+question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or
+shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture
+feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who
+claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and
+is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege
+intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of
+the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity ofcultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
+of “women” are constructed.
+Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics
+which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be.
+They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously
+positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework
+of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not
+to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging
+and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in
+advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates
+coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert
+herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for
+coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee
+unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not
+the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and,
+most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition.
+The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes
+that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action.
+But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on
+unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and
+take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what
+dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of
+democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific
+and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a
+conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power
+relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be
+interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a
+liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions
+of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals togory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
+complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that
+category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve
+as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force.
+Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature
+insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged
+fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the
+“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired.
+Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of
+identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt
+the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish
+precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted
+at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context
+of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of
+identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions
+must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
+permanently moot.
+This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes
+neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a
+coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because
+the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
+definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity
+concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist
+tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity
+concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities
+or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme orsubject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
+depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain
+political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to
+accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous
+self that offers its complexity at once.
+Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
+never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition,
+then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without
+obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure.
+v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance
+What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the
+same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do
+these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would
+be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed
+prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological
+discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the
+person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the
+various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility
+and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the
+person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally
+related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that
+literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the
+focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
+what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accountsalmost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
+person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through
+time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of
+gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To
+what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive
+feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
+other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
+logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
+assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
+the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
+emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
+who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered
+norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
+“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
+maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
+sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
+norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines
+of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders,
+and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual
+desire through sexual practice.
+The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that
+generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender
+norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the
+production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between
+“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive
+attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which
+gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
+from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation
+of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate
+the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain
+kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural
+intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical
+impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and
+regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up
+within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder.
+Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems
+crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of
+what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist
+between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect
+of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
+relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
+a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in
+which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression?
+Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the
+identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine,
+that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and
+those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category
+of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the
+category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
+with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of
+heterosexual hegemony.
+The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on
+how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive
+capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a
+“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western
+culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation
+and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off.
+Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple
+negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a
+monologic elaboration of the masculine.
+Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex
+appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically
+speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a
+performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact
+that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray,
+grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely
+because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation
+between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the
+substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well
+as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary
+that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive
+multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes anartificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
+sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies.
+For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive
+aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she
+claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In
+other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender,
+and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian”
+emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary
+restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no
+metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination,
+appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
+the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands
+first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept
+I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an
+inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27
+The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
+is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized
+features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and
+autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the
+destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an
+attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche,
+come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In
+other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but
+the feminine:
+Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between
+the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there
+are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine”
+not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the
+general.28
+
+Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can
+assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that
+destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal
+point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality
+through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the
+normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of
+substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not
+only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and
+materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a
+radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction
+between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of
+the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not
+only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to
+that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production
+and naturalization of the category of sex itself.
+The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with
+Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a
+number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain
+illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that
+the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior
+ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues
+Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity,
+order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do
+they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes,
+this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the
+psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical
+thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the
+metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the
+psychological person as a substantive thing:
+The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as
+well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic.
+All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person)
+derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes
+back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense
+but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the
+structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty
+that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that
+come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to
+be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual,
+are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances
+fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31
+
+Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons
+cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She
+provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French.
+According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies”
+them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary
+gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of
+nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender”
+(1984), she writes:
+The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its
+meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as
+far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and
+French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give
+way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a
+division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals
+with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to
+belong primarily to philosophy.32
+
+For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to
+“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe
+they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without
+saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in
+nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on
+gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of
+“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to
+“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that
+metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and
+“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under
+that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender
+and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various
+expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual
+desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex”
+whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional
+internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I
+feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant.
+Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy
+(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also
+fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like
+a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of thedefining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
+This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender.
+Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of
+gender within that binary pair.
+Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and
+desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate
+gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the
+self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it
+desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or
+woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the
+univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of
+gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system.
+This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation
+among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects
+or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The
+metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and
+expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that
+is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic
+paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and
+desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self
+is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and
+desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is
+presupposed, reified, and rationalized.
+This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding
+the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
+regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
+differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in aconsolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
+gender, and desire.
+The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories
+of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within
+the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality
+and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the
+Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35
+Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization
+of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific
+mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary
+categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus
+of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience,
+behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this
+ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of
+sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any
+discursive account of sexuality.
+Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite,
+Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
+a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the
+sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the
+true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
+she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
+govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
+terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault,
+Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; thedisconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
+her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her
+anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality)
+implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the
+identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the
+cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as
+qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere.
+As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered
+experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and
+hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes,
+essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine,
+Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the
+postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and
+hierarchy, a regulatory fiction.
+If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and
+to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that
+man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine
+attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the
+gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman”
+as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion
+of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the
+compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences,
+then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman
+as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that
+fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility.
+The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the
+psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established linesof coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
+conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant
+adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they
+are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of
+gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if
+these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently
+created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the
+ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous.
+In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
+practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse
+of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative—
+that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense,
+gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
+said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
+relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there
+is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a
+fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application
+that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we
+might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
+expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
+the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
+vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of
+Displacement
+A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is
+argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate atransformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
+appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other
+hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical
+locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that
+there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the
+performative construction of gender within the material practices of
+culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would
+confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual
+space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the
+Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes:
+A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the
+cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the
+oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
+Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
+an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging
+to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct
+perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40
+
+Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual
+desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could
+liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41
+Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an
+institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
+view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would
+understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
+economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaboratingmechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
+of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig,
+language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its
+structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of
+another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping
+the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose
+the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse
+that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like
+Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine
+and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on
+Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig
+asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43
+Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate
+and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language
+to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically
+transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and,
+hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The
+linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to
+restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual
+desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as
+well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the
+category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig
+appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call
+for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the
+construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures
+outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine
+form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can beunderstood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
+the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more
+diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification
+invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital
+norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to
+deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely
+those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and
+effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of
+development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual
+matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what
+extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of
+normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model
+of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what
+extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What
+possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself?
+Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
+unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks
+to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the
+marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she
+both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of
+the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands
+that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
+regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of
+heterosexist oppression in Wittig.
+In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud,
+sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics ofstruction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
+mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the
+Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create
+sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions
+of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars
+the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation
+between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly,
+the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father
+requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the
+rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that
+reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48
+The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in
+opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical
+reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an
+expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable
+absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of
+that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and
+Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of
+sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the
+dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual
+identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous
+ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the
+French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking
+replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect
+the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed
+sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the veryimpossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
+feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence
+through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only
+that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs
+identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as
+a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the
+ground for the insurrections against him).
+The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there
+is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the
+mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality.
+Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is
+understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is
+no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set
+of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of
+the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of
+substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her
+existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person,
+to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the
+paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is
+perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52
+But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal
+trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a
+law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its
+authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that
+sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation
+of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the
+law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before”
+of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted
+modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normativeframework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
+inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed
+to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not
+have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or
+“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the
+juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently
+generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that
+emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication
+or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy
+of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and
+inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely
+exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the
+boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible.
+The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of
+significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom
+have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of
+Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual
+constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in
+which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even
+within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The
+same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality.
+Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from
+a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific
+feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that
+biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here
+through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether
+it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization
+of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognizethat sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
+off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
+is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed
+within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine
+pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If
+so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction?
+The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice
+has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the
+terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in
+terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence
+of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a
+masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed
+project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if
+a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of
+the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed
+within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative
+sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural
+impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones
+the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This
+critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of
+power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its
+consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified”
+sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
+of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in
+terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
+“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
+its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to
+acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there
+forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of
+“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
+intelligibility that govern gendered life?
+Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the
+simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of
+specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch”
+and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
+as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And
+neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of
+heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight
+may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization
+of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in
+non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed
+status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not
+as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of
+this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the
+idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs
+circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do
+gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation
+exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace throughhyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
+constructs by which they are mobilized?
+Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and
+among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive
+and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural
+configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention,
+exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the
+“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The
+force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their
+convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized
+ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as
+if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the
+cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges:
+What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself?
+If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that
+escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively
+produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what
+constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender?
+Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears
+to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not
+always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations thatinfuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
+complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to
+hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of
+these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of
+sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning,
+then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility
+of a disruption of their univocal posturing.
+Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional
+philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being
+a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology.
+The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object
+of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of
+its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those
+terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the
+“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender
+ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of
+the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate
+and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization.
+If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born,
+but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in
+process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to
+originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the
+most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious
+practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for
+Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a
+telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
+is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
+highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce theappearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
+of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
+appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for
+those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that
+police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that
+create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a
+part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on
+the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that
+have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that
+have constituted its contingent ontologies.
+The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of
+sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes
+outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those
+regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the
+binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as
+regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power
+regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter
+considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting
+signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically
+signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of
+dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively
+enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its
+naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues,
+then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support
+masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble,
+not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the
+mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
+constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing
+as the foundational illusions of identity.2
+
+Prohibition, Psychoanalysis,
+and the Production
+of the Heterosexual Matrix
+The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality
+represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight
+mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality.
+—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind”
+
+On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin,
+a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an
+imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the
+history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether
+prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or
+matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a
+beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind
+these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a
+reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon.
+Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended
+to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme
+has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some
+feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs
+within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
+to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinctarticulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
+feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against
+racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important
+to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy
+as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration
+from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary
+past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic
+reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
+The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost
+always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
+the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and
+necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a
+state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the
+law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that,
+by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past,
+makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability.
+Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a
+utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that
+promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
+new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the
+terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present
+state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law,
+then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory
+fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or
+antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory
+becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authenticgic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
+ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome.
+Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those
+feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge
+various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or
+key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories
+which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women.
+As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the
+contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of
+oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however,
+whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals.
+Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist
+theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently
+transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or
+“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect
+that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is
+before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins
+to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship.
+This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized
+foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies ofdomination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
+culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which
+culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it
+into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the
+model of domination.
+Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have
+argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
+female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured
+as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
+with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered
+to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an
+opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
+and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that
+construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the
+discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing
+framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of
+“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are
+the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they
+serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very
+designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to
+be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3
+The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be
+rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to
+think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining.
+Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to beno “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
+serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical
+assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism
+whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only
+the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status,
+but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.
+How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
+Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful
+to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery
+of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal
+of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
+theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism,
+and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status—
+is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it
+inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To
+what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place?
+i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange
+Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in
+accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure
+of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship.
+According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange
+that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women,
+given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes
+“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not onlyserves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
+words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men;
+she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being
+the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific
+kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion
+of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As
+wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of
+men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the
+patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they
+bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a
+relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a
+common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity.
+The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure
+human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that
+he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete
+cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical
+structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can
+be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work
+(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the
+questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this
+universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic
+describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human
+character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
+women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of
+positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative
+logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems
+always require the construction of socially impossible identities to
+occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
+marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a
+major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions
+whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss.
+The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested
+within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship
+of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation
+within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms
+presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is
+presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning.
+This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
+totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness
+within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and
+with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss
+refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of
+binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As
+a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the
+operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement.
+For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established
+through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where
+the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established
+between men and the women who effect the differentiation betweenmen eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
+moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a
+Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But
+what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first
+in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating
+mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit,
+male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As
+Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on
+an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal
+clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls
+“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a
+relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men,
+but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9
+In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest
+taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds:
+Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply
+that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of
+exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the
+means of binding men together.
+
+The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss
+understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and
+unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays
+on the Theory of Sexuality).The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
+the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men
+and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women.
+Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought
+must have required that women, like words, should be things that were
+exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from
+the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective
+position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an
+inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in
+which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby
+becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on
+what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work,
+Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of
+reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity
+between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the
+unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality.
+If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and
+can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain
+either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual
+difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose
+that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does
+“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it
+produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law
+itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive?
+The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship
+that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of theincest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
+anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges
+that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds,
+he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a
+pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of
+the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the
+mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance
+undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying
+a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an
+ancient and lasting dream.”11
+In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious
+incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its
+power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it
+evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at
+all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides
+insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of
+incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with
+assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in
+no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest
+that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are
+generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That
+incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not
+also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms
+become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their
+prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous
+practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription?
+For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest
+between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated
+as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality
+constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
+naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency
+are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere
+assumed within this founding structuralist frame.
+The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of
+culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic
+structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the
+incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of
+kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take
+place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity
+apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the
+Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile
+entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression
+that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly
+barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery
+of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the
+subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural
+production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language
+inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of
+its referential gestures.
+ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade
+To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to
+confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western
+metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
+and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the
+paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the
+characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
+gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is
+itself pre-ontological.
+There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being,
+without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing
+signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition
+of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus
+denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other
+words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
+that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but
+the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
+means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
+to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
+to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
+dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
+lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests
+that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the
+masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
+and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
+This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance
+or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the
+mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of
+men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The
+interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure offailed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
+own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in
+a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the
+terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the
+inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction
+and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real.
+If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of
+signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense
+to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly
+crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame
+that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the
+structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this
+scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in
+terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression,
+one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but
+whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions
+that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
+subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding
+signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the
+(now repressed) maternal body.
+The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
+thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
+to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual
+possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
+everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy.
+This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women
+reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes
+essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the
+basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function itserves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
+the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced
+maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be
+precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also
+and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to
+repression and individuation.
+Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain
+the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding
+postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would
+break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position.
+In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent
+masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the
+sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in
+their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being”
+the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to
+reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that
+“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify
+the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The
+division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is
+established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic
+dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both
+masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging
+to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by
+either position.
+To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its
+object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and
+promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of
+exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the
+mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the
+emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is
+necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully
+reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation ofwomen’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
+the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be
+nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity
+of the Phallus.
+On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to
+“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and
+can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having”
+and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic
+failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these
+repeated impossibilities.
+But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that
+embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done
+through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the
+feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the
+Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”:
+Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a
+having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the
+contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject
+in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be
+signified.16
+
+In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to
+refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well
+as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the
+position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows
+from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the
+‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said
+not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on
+the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems
+that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” ischaracteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
+unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of
+behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84).
+Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it
+suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the
+ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would
+appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of
+being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to
+the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that
+there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the
+masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable
+of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and
+displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy.
+At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the
+ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade
+may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other
+hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented
+by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s
+desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would
+engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery
+distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the
+“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by
+Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in
+order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained
+suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
+as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time.
+Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan
+Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
+interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated
+and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some
+way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual
+possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of
+a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests,
+transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
+to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the
+masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position?
+Lacan continues the quotation cited above:
+Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the
+phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman
+will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes
+through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be
+desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in
+the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love.
+Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84)
+
+If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic
+Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might
+so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essentialpart of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
+part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that
+must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the
+unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that
+attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is
+this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the
+core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must
+be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore,
+is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order
+to be that lack that confirms?
+Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of
+the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of
+love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the
+object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of
+love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals
+suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals
+are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure
+of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in
+effect, twice lost.
+Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from
+a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love”
+(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently
+elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone
+who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding
+disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment
+recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade.
+One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to
+a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the
+expense of desire.
+Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” withthe statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
+the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if
+female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear,
+and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that
+female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as
+observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it
+the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what
+clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment”
+and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear
+to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can
+understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is
+presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as
+the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account
+not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and
+whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the
+essential character of the women who effectively refuse him?
+In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to
+make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to
+understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way
+to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in
+the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well.
+The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this
+loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which
+is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through
+the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then
+wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it isthe signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
+refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the
+refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed,
+becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is
+never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal
+boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the
+process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy.
+Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms
+of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at
+first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the
+comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of
+Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into
+heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the
+“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual
+and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of
+Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s
+facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane
+perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate
+types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with
+who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display
+strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the
+classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of
+attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to
+display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation
+among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that
+unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity
+between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an
+instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex.
+And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies
+through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaningof mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
+would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a
+woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the
+acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual
+or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in
+order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes:
+Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their
+heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall
+attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a
+mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared
+from men. (35)
+
+It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the
+homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under
+notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much
+different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt
+differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic
+“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to
+the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained
+from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the
+supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes
+count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus,
+the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire.
+Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be
+interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order
+to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured
+through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some
+consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not overthe desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
+father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user
+of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating
+desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of
+woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language.
+Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual
+man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between
+male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman
+who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of
+taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on
+by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from
+others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes
+on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from
+the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
+is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that
+allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly,
+because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that
+the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words,
+the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both
+desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and
+Riviere apparently do.
+But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the
+analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification,
+but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s
+typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a
+“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women
+who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of
+their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in
+other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian ishere signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
+sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it
+would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female
+homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to
+read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious
+typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage.
+One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade
+wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men
+and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely
+because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she
+fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to
+deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women
+sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual
+exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or,
+at least, that has none that she will name.
+Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is
+masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from
+the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she
+suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”:
+The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw
+the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My
+suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether
+radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38)
+
+This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and
+the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and theMasquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
+such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the
+denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24
+Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine
+identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female
+object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may
+reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the
+hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd
+form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the
+melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic
+inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality.
+One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is,
+of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture,
+her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself
+both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine
+identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that
+she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids
+herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that
+accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26
+Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a
+discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s
+analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because
+that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her
+as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her
+castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest
+over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation andessential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
+her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might
+usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and
+what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the
+position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s
+aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably,
+reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the
+authority of the speaking subject?
+We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes.
+The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in
+the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in
+the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute
+their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still
+not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some
+psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the
+exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a
+bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is
+assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that
+identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is,
+through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the
+binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality
+that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality
+shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it
+purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through
+which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality”
+that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at alater date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
+practices of normative heterosexuality.
+Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary
+or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and
+that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on
+the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is
+always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which
+the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will
+necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental
+divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression,
+is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a
+prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose
+writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the
+law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of
+Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality,
+and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the
+artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as
+the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well.
+Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely
+because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the
+accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and thedrama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
+And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules
+that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is
+clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined
+epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual
+ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the
+“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of
+sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result.
+The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an
+impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
+restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality
+and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In
+marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the
+Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for
+Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and
+paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could
+not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through
+the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position
+of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge
+within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical
+past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that
+does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary
+speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality.
+The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an
+account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law thatproves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
+of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The
+injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic
+always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
+consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas
+of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
+be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
+humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
+that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls
+the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
+those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward.
+That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the
+demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct
+from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that
+eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic
+as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity.
+This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively
+undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative
+imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure
+of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old
+Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the
+comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the
+permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this
+comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it
+claims to be unable to overcome.
+Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
+of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power)
+that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the
+paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which
+the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological
+impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that
+points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is
+symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative
+powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility.
+What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the
+trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and
+self-subjection?
+iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender
+Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir:
+Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the
+melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of
+gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of
+melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only
+alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id
+(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient
+structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the
+1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing
+another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said
+to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on
+attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of
+imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome
+through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that otherwithin the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
+love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply
+momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in
+effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent
+relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the
+other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic
+identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic
+cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved
+person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud
+makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is
+crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.”
+In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization
+described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks:
+we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by
+supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost
+has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis
+has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did
+not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know
+how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to
+understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18)
+
+As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds,
+however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the
+acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that
+this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up
+its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way intate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
+those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves
+becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the
+incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for
+the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited
+heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other
+objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual
+union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself
+with him” (21).
+In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object
+cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of
+a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud
+does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the
+process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a
+bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does.
+The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and
+Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to
+seduce the mother.
+Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why
+the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude
+toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be
+that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be
+attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
+above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23,
+n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly,
+Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between thetwo object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
+result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the
+heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated,
+but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally
+sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather
+than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation
+of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
+the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently,
+the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis.
+Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother
+(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire
+who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding
+moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the
+mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through
+identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in
+which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there
+are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic
+landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and
+disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object
+choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and
+sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place.
+For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result
+either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object isfound.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
+which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of
+masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud
+avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22).
+What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in
+consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each
+of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to
+keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects
+or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what
+traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a
+“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object
+choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the
+father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin,
+despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual
+matrix for desire?
+The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine
+and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect,
+never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither
+is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl
+may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an
+object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity
+and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
+and only opposites attract.
+But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such
+dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity
+acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional,
+then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities
+are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional
+sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can
+we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and,
+secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the
+self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications.
+In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical
+attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a
+lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though
+the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is
+“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an
+interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and
+Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice
+or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that
+the internalized object now berates the ego:
+If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the
+melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often
+the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself,
+but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else,
+some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . .
+the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have
+been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169)
+
+The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization
+becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only
+because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the
+object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled.
+In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of
+libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that
+cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that
+the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole
+condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other
+words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia
+becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud
+remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego
+assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon
+the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the
+object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation.
+What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and
+its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a
+moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are
+reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external
+mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably
+heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego
+changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits
+its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego
+by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to
+turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities
+of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36
+The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali-
+zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is
+a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the
+successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity:
+The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest
+object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted
+by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also
+comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your
+father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his
+prerogative.” (24)
+
+The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and
+taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity
+through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The
+internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love,
+but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The
+prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed,
+repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an
+interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution
+to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification
+and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire.
+As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications
+substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence
+of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
+of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of
+heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects
+gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to
+that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifieswith the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
+and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent
+to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
+and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
+object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
+more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so
+that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an
+original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved.
+But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
+implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and
+masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of
+that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed
+object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the
+construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily
+to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of
+identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the
+consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the
+body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition
+moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation,
+whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of
+“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of
+affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of
+the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by
+the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal.
+In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means:
+separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal
+situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set
+of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which
+“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and
+energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does notexplicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
+homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo
+against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions”
+by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and
+young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that
+Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are
+effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete
+gender identity and heterosexuality.
+Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process
+whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is
+untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of
+dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure
+which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are
+trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the
+name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes
+the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the
+law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears
+disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly
+“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic
+kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of
+the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the
+law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical
+continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as
+its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations.
+What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative andto think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
+of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis
+for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms,
+but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault,
+subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and
+inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault
+argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed
+is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own
+self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a
+discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in
+that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to
+maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in
+question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law
+constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and
+invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in
+effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.”
+The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a
+repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in
+the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally
+homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the
+prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives
+which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence
+into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field
+deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence
+that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements.
+Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts
+not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
+from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the
+unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate.
+iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits
+of Identification
+The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id
+offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed,
+of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity
+and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts
+those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting
+and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of
+any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having”
+or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of
+the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of
+any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the
+self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know
+the source and object of its desire.
+For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question
+of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and
+its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and
+clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within
+the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce
+precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders
+into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of
+the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gayand lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
+maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the
+semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in
+the following chapter.
+What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the
+consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The
+recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it
+seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal
+determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair.
+Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is
+impervious to historical variability and possibility.
+As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity
+in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although
+the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the
+law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less
+deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to
+acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in
+which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to
+culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
+origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the
+repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational
+moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even
+though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law,
+is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself.
+The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from
+psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonanceswithin gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
+feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the
+possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible
+to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine
+and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
+that “the” law may not even be singular.
+The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to
+be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to
+be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space
+as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In
+agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a
+process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined,
+and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such
+spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are
+“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated
+space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as
+its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as
+an incorporated space.
+Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that
+serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but
+acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs
+more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended
+grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some
+way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty
+mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The
+successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved
+through the formation of words which both signify and displace that
+object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially
+metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpassporation, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
+melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it
+maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself.
+As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the
+Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the
+possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is
+necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of
+desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal
+body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out
+of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy—
+results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the
+maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term,
+and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of
+the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds.
+When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it
+makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that
+identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above,
+gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that
+encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living
+versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation
+literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the
+body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal
+truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in
+given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating
+melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable
+object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with
+the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the
+compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law.
+The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo againsthomosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
+which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In
+the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which
+heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained
+through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object,
+argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object
+requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is
+not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at
+all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely
+safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial.
+Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the
+denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of
+repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it
+is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a
+‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a
+psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible
+desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be
+felt or known.
+Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the
+developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly
+pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of
+that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims.
+Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim
+together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated
+through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure
+which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal
+space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia
+operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual loveder identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
+the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment
+of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment
+and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief.
+Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable
+may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure
+of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is
+neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the
+heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is
+in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In
+other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires.
+But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this
+incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an
+enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own
+interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation
+is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its
+melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.”
+What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming
+naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and
+parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in
+the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such
+descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructedor naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
+body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in
+some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life.
+Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which
+serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place
+within the matrix of gender norms.42
+Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual
+pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly,
+pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of
+parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the
+transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body
+not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy
+of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself.
+Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an
+altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
+might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary
+condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on
+which it works.
+Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to
+the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and
+the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized
+heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes
+and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality.
+The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is
+parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which causeacteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
+reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex”
+designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
+desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that
+transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the
+body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and
+desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or
+encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible
+anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized
+sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable
+homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he
+never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the
+empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not
+only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the
+very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The
+love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an
+impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has
+that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual
+desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign
+must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in
+favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality.
+v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power
+Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has
+guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual
+matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the
+juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates
+the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to
+the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the
+Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace theprimary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
+proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be
+reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several
+cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would
+a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique
+mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most
+influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle
+Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article,
+Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article
+might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame.
+Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the
+prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on
+sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and
+reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and
+Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros.
+Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general
+“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion
+and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the
+human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation,
+however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and
+consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own
+genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions,
+but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary”
+dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if weconceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
+the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its
+desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted.
+Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes:
+the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon
+the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides
+the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173)
+
+Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the
+particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved,
+exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union
+between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo
+against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes:
+the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a
+taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed
+toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in
+both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180)
+
+Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations.
+In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females
+into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural
+institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of
+women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws
+which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
+against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains
+that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a
+gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189).
+The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a
+primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of
+an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual
+possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the
+Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo,
+that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law
+produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
+the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the
+creation of that law.
+Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and
+gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a
+“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed
+subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires
+a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is
+in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And
+yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking,
+is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a
+belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by
+the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language,
+then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before”
+will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does
+the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally
+(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the
+“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes
+an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence.
+Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a
+primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and
+presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of
+femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for
+both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the
+traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality
+and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the
+compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
+and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204).
+Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
+that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities
+to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
+of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of
+gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in
+what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing
+but unclarified implications of her analysis.
+Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently
+sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed
+have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual
+form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear;
+in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi-
+Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads
+her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory
+heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of
+bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin
+has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
+which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law.
+If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of
+knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal
+sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the
+structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what
+relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of
+gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order
+to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive?
+Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of
+Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and
+that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire
+it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be
+its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the
+very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and
+necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its
+repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures;
+desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture
+whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power.
+The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit
+incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities
+through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to
+guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are
+anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute overwhat, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
+meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to
+claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant
+framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim
+the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it
+exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form.
+My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the
+incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the
+generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its
+juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety
+of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in
+advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we
+extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that
+the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized
+in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might
+be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as
+well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an
+“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a
+production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition.
+If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a
+wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire
+both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame
+law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive
+from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo.
+Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire
+and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that
+the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desirein the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
+is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly
+stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed
+parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification.
+But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of
+the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced
+and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the
+incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and
+if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced
+in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to
+remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis,
+bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon
+their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive
+possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and
+homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes
+the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of
+bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48
+The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves
+as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of
+that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete
+cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What
+remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing
+cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of
+intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized,
+not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini-
+mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to
+gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully
+within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory
+which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive
+subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the
+very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I
+will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never
+be translated into other cultural practices.
+In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed
+to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the
+terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire
+and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of
+the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This
+full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the
+irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that
+that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution
+of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal
+libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can
+only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this
+case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always
+speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes
+the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond”
+is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the
+Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of
+what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is
+“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the
+start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the
+account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the
+split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence
+at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy,
+revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a
+perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin
+in the name of subversion inevitably belated.
+3
+
+Subversive Bodily Acts
+i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva
+Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears
+to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a
+specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
+principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful
+language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of
+primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child
+on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who
+emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early
+dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language
+is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by
+suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body)
+and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place.
+Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural
+meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the
+maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language
+occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
+Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion
+within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that originallibidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
+within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to
+disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law.
+Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to
+displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts
+to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes
+that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it
+assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those
+terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony?
+The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several
+steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of
+effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to
+accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple
+drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but
+which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest
+in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal
+economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem
+emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion
+cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained
+presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of
+cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension
+of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of
+language which never can be consistently maintained.In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
+ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and
+what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva
+describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior
+to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a
+paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural
+reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively
+reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction
+and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity
+is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a
+given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and
+primary cause.
+Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear
+that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as
+anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony
+of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political
+strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of
+drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of
+the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it
+seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never
+become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I
+will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective
+strategy of subversion.
+Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number
+of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their
+emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements
+of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that
+the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in thesemiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
+which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech.
+As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for
+a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the
+plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she
+maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of
+primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms
+of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple
+sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of
+the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the
+requirements of univocal designation.
+In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic
+function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives
+in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that
+in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic]
+place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of
+univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated
+or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against
+the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their
+repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives
+manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity,
+these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work,
+she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to
+the modality [of] primary process.”3
+In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva
+ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic
+terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic
+obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not onlythose drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
+dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other
+words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather
+than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that
+jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that
+desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal
+body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the
+“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse
+prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike
+effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the
+mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as
+the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as
+distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But
+this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it
+thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself
+in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5
+The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the
+Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to
+vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words
+to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two
+modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood
+as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the
+semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition,
+mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely
+signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests
+upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it
+becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and
+univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery ofthe maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
+univocal signification. Kristeva writes:
+In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for
+example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints
+(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic
+elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
+
+For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests
+a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body:
+Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the
+contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language
+(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the
+cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7
+
+Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly
+appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject,
+where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the
+Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against
+the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of
+maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally
+signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
+would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of
+incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding
+law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language fromwithin its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
+libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state
+of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the
+ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the
+heterogeneity of drives.
+In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that,
+because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete
+identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a
+woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal
+signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language
+is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and,
+hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow
+that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the
+structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the
+founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire
+can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements
+that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the
+act of giving birth:
+By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she
+becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her
+instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently,
+more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9
+
+According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully
+reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because
+the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated
+off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation fromthe girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
+never fully completed.
+As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to
+grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense,
+refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body
+is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a
+kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack.
+The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female
+“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female
+homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture:
+The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete
+absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm,
+sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a
+screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10
+
+For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides
+childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic.
+For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an
+unmediated way. And yet why is this the case?
+Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the
+Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the
+Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those
+which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task,
+then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor totion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
+as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the
+site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in
+culturally communicable form:
+The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by
+virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also
+attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of
+split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of
+the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth
+consists.11
+
+Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged
+practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic
+of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the
+autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The
+heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of
+displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law
+by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself.
+Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented
+in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the
+Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is
+impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of
+the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law
+challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva
+does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the
+prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, thesubversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
+version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s
+concealed foundation.
+This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law
+produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one
+hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible
+practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva
+does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from
+her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva
+poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always
+on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the
+incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and,
+because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality.
+For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual
+desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this
+drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of
+maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or
+through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity
+of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially
+sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual
+desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences
+for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of
+the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire
+would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to
+Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality
+and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked.
+How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experienceas the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
+identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism
+constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis?
+By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing
+lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs
+lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal
+and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law
+positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege.
+The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is
+precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a
+site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience
+is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a
+fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
+In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva
+appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression
+necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior
+to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain
+lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation
+itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her
+restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear
+encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a
+developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to
+culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”?
+Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experiencefrom a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
+its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
+not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural
+subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it
+appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to
+return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that
+escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed,
+beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law,
+temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they
+initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of
+culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion
+as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility.
+Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her
+postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of
+epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these
+drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives
+us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this
+answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend
+upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot,
+then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives
+through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed
+for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that
+which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives
+prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to
+attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation
+into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot
+reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In otherwords, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
+effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with
+their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations
+are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves.
+This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider,
+for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse
+is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we
+have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order
+to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts
+are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover
+that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and
+are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception
+of maternal instincts:
+Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species
+that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of
+markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the
+life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic,
+unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the
+whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled
+drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13
+
+Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which,
+it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy,
+in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in
+avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that thesevarious cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
+moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents
+any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts
+with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the
+Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle
+of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly,
+that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends
+operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the
+way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her
+description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the
+very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has
+become a univocal signifier.
+Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to
+their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions
+about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive
+and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the
+hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed
+ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with
+the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity
+of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other
+cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which
+operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva
+believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she wouldating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
+to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed
+concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear
+and univocal.
+Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire,
+part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes
+an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity
+and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the
+semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of
+univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the
+principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations.
+Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having
+an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the
+way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it
+is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required
+and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the
+consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed,
+rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction
+of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand
+the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on
+women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of
+Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the
+desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and
+produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14
+What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal
+teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture?
+To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction
+between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of
+the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originarysignification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
+itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider
+the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her
+argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary
+processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing
+framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and
+for what purposes?
+By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which
+affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
+result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally
+constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship
+which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of
+desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders
+that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality.
+Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology
+of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this
+sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure
+generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that
+activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and
+poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
+uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of
+humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does
+the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
+female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the veryorder of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
+In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality,
+he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . .
+[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex
+facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to
+cause the structure and meaning of desire:
+the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
+unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious
+unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus
+able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16
+
+For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to
+its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning
+within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an
+historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and
+affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce
+“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises
+the power relations responsible for its genesis.
+Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of
+the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a
+maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the
+structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive
+production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by
+which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the
+maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of
+all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
+female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self
+and the law of its desire.
+If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically
+specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality,
+itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the
+trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no
+longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon
+the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This
+very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends
+and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women.
+Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood
+are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the
+institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures
+of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and
+requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its
+reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural
+necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated
+maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law
+itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability.
+Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in
+which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural
+drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct
+produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do
+these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest,
+however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated
+upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to considerwhether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
+which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of
+the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the
+object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may
+be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself.
+As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the
+mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and
+makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body
+that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be
+yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating
+in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order
+to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the
+oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and
+subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body
+beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from
+within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when
+the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of
+itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither
+to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future
+of cultural possibilities.
+ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics
+of Sexual Discontinuity
+Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those
+Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms
+of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a
+disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of
+theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we
+consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes
+the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that
+his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal thatproves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
+his own critical apparatus.
+Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality,
+Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of
+“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to
+doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to
+“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published
+in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided.
+A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also
+included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation
+of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is
+necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the
+critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s
+reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of
+Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that
+sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete
+relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
+“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual
+difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine
+against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text.
+In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that
+the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the
+other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures withindiscourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
+reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18
+In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and
+causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as
+an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and
+continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes
+“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and
+power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
+power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment
+of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as
+repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted
+energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this
+juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only
+works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in
+this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations
+and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
+falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be
+recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power
+must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power
+which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity.
+the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it
+possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to
+sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
+relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible
+urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154)
+
+Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they
+subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of
+power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to
+emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and,
+thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of
+departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into
+how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within
+discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model
+of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in
+his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some
+sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault
+remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal
+subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled
+than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to
+be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs
+those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex,
+gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and
+any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically
+extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/
+knowledge regime.
+In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin,
+Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of
+sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy
+dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic andphysiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
+within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides,
+according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a
+world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii).
+Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation
+imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of
+Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of
+emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the
+release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from
+the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or
+Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture.
+The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine
+Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History
+of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures
+of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition
+of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants
+to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to
+be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any
+specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a
+trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault
+officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we
+must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues
+that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it isalways produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
+both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality
+before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory
+sexual politics.
+The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read
+Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the
+constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for
+sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust
+victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the
+time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the
+other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety
+and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although
+Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals,
+the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s
+own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what
+is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where
+one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably
+female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation
+that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents.
+Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a
+state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er
+suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward
+men, but finally toward the world as such.
+Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at
+school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate
+attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt
+and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes
+h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that
+effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer andeffect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
+obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of
+men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the
+journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide.
+One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a
+man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of
+the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed,
+Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely
+that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of
+univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of
+the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the
+pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law
+they are said to defy.
+The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian
+play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the
+alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we
+have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the
+productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative
+strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the
+specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context
+of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference
+reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical
+reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of
+Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of
+Herculine’s sexual world.
+Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality
+between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of
+female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculinewe know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
+French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within
+an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions
+produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and
+Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner
+of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about
+ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously,
+the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
+sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality
+and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself.
+The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young
+girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological
+doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If
+Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or
+chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently
+generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires,
+the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body,
+and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both
+causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity?
+Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle
+to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender
+which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself
+presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender
+confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
+and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/eranomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
+and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a
+sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse
+on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of
+happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide.
+If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of
+confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as
+the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters”
+and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made
+possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her
+sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of
+women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once
+“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment,
+structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy
+limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly
+retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of
+female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather
+than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy
+the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for
+Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault
+wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject.
+But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he
+wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in
+homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to
+the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following
+description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at onceinvoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
+pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes
+astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another”
+(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to
+accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions
+the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the
+eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces
+these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even
+within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er
+difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference
+is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire.
+S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she
+is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he
+contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it.
+The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the
+denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no
+longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex.
+Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but
+confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing
+the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to
+which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover,
+Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which
+challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic
+exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence
+and redistribution.
+But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level
+of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex”
+and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play ofsexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
+sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost
+Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a
+natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as
+“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough
+medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the
+heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very
+medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But
+what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve?
+If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as
+precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that
+he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the
+effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear
+whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something
+else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces
+sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be
+described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place
+of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether
+this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In
+other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality
+and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly
+didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity
+or parallel between his life and hers?On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
+understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some
+sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks
+that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten
+to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that
+do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community
+of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable.
+“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel
+points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the
+textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the
+adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and
+Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it
+is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps
+Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in
+the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,”
+might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not
+in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such,
+especially as it applies to the categories of sex.
+Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are
+in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic
+distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of
+h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after
+some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of
+appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when
+she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!”
+(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in
+order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on
+homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there
+is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly
+among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female
+homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very differentbians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
+do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed
+“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This
+explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
+les choses):
+This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter
+that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my
+thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes
+with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing
+things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with
+collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20
+
+The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and
+particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre
+Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for
+Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of
+kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s
+now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference,
+designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s
+dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics,
+but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh
+of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface
+constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
+Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23
+In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa,
+Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to
+freeze” (105) those who encounter it.
+But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and
+Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference whichconsolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
+as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable—
+that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one.
+But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive
+identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to
+the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it
+is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed,
+perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify
+for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification.
+But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems
+to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a
+laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he
+loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine,
+then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two
+positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it
+either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the
+jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of
+punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was
+not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he
+articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a
+devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then
+finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself
+from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation,
+s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully
+directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those
+who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love.
+At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentenceparagraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
+incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into
+h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was
+abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he
+tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for
+abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures,
+deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence
+s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a
+sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother”
+(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through
+the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears
+as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal
+caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it
+were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which
+scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between
+being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object
+of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic
+structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy
+involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination
+is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the
+mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be
+constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive
+narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and
+neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of
+enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is
+better for all women than any “man” (107).
+S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early
+“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at
+the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that earlyrefuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
+phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very
+father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the
+tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my
+feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the
+anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier
+enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and
+whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs
+h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet
+underground!” (69).
+Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place
+Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not
+“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier,
+h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production,
+construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of
+the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and
+the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law,
+one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic
+and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are
+subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by
+death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its
+condition and its aim.
+After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid
+than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person”
+who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for theother. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
+h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects
+h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law
+precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law
+naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other
+words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of
+“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical
+naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized
+instrument and sign.
+Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical
+law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside”
+within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of
+fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected,
+have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis.
+Concluding Unscientific Postscript
+Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the
+quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that
+become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although
+Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of
+Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his
+philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest forple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
+Foucaultian critique.
+One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
+to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With
+the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene,
+which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was
+discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or
+testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No.
+51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon
+which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions
+regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked.
+According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the
+Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA
+were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had
+XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and
+some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis
+they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but
+we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations.
+Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be
+some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of
+DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its
+usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
+expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA
+sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why
+it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact,
+still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y
+chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had
+somehow been misplaced.Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
+with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their
+research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has
+chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female
+and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal
+criteria could provide.
+Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that
+haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA
+sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of
+females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that
+perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its
+absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males
+and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains
+hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his
+coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals
+from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous
+in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her
+article, “Life in the XY Corral”:
+the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm
+production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e.,
+precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and
+low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males
+because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . .
+Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal,
+[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328)
+
+Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not
+add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated
+by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as
+well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these areXX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
+and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided
+by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were
+sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the
+experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary
+at all.
+But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which
+that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice
+that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher
+and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that
+ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of
+the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence
+of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an
+object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active
+and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions
+about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew
+and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes
+Eicher and Washburn:
+Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y
+chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the
+induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant)
+event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive
+(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as
+much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the
+induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any
+cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written
+about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the
+undifferentiated gonad. (325)
+
+In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come undertiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
+argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research
+orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated
+cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and
+well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that
+would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning
+and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during
+differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic
+interactions alter during differentation” (323–24).
+The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general
+trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from
+the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the
+descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the
+description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at
+hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that
+femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence
+of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would
+invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is
+not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself
+frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of
+those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior
+to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more
+complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates
+in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation
+in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
+when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is
+male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex?
+One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be
+resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary
+framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek
+recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the
+claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three
+Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange,
+that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world
+of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself
+constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies,
+about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to
+inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the
+categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within
+the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent,
+that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as
+one that might well be constructed differently.
+Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that
+Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in
+the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is
+interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those
+anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment.
+One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses
+that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external
+genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of
+reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish themale principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
+to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather
+than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
+Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male
+body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s
+inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with
+the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work
+together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting,
+then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the
+last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority
+over the discourse of reproduction.
+This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance,
+according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates
+through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view,
+to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female”
+exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from
+a radical critique.
+iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and
+Fictive Sex
+Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body.
+—Monique Wittig
+
+Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a
+woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical,
+for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along?
+And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human
+who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that
+this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
+one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of genderconstruction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
+a gendered subject?
+Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the
+question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who
+do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute
+the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the
+human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in
+advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human
+who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural
+afterthought?
+Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of
+women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are
+taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with
+a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was
+willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that
+being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is
+an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed;
+sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause
+gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex;
+indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and
+whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the
+variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities
+of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body.
+Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones
+that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are
+radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to
+become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret
+male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinctionent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
+the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way
+restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never
+be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of
+some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively,
+then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond
+the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new
+vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the
+binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But
+how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the
+fate of an impossible and vain utopian project?
+“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in
+an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what
+sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig
+offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from
+her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is
+a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to
+divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a
+division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig,
+there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is
+itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not
+natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is
+the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only
+exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. Alesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
+terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains,
+transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is
+neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is
+beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding
+presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might
+say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not
+born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if
+one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man.
+Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a
+category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable
+political categories of description.
+Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the
+political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This
+relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary
+in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one
+sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is
+always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this
+system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig,
+then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male
+sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex,
+trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because
+“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no
+sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into
+sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues
+that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become
+ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex
+is necessarily feminine.
+Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe inthe viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
+system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it.
+As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire
+discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans
+and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her
+theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that
+regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender.
+Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions
+forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a
+“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience,
+Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a
+datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no
+longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a
+violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is
+“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused,
+but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that
+her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge:
+Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical
+features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a
+physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic
+construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social
+system), through the network of relationships in which they are
+perceived.27
+
+“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side
+of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that
+these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce thereductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
+gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within
+the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on
+an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a
+language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
+Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body?
+An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
+forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous
+body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
+Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a
+“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction
+of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the
+“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the
+body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination
+those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate
+what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her
+theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the
+body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination.
+Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
+locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of
+reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted
+ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
+be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
+that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly
+refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying
+structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formationof that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
+contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
+that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and
+deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
+The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
+authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex
+and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
+Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
+reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively
+considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
+domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that
+both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/
+perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual
+difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies
+and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of
+nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28
+“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category
+of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon
+the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the
+“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences,
+“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because
+they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the
+speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of
+that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s
+own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
+gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To
+speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech;
+hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction,
+the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language
+that asserts it.
+The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous.
+Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical
+and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and
+interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and
+theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds,
+even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms
+of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather,
+one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had
+to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the
+cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression.
+Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity
+of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33
+Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through
+locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and,
+ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that
+identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male
+and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no
+sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of
+men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists:
+“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The
+universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated
+by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act,
+perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the
+level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
+the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an
+absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,”
+which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women”
+altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman,
+the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the
+invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject
+could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking
+presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig
+describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the
+power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I”
+assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to
+speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and
+power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the
+feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36
+Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology
+of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off
+the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial
+or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a
+full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The
+social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior
+ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertionof subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
+hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal
+mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she
+writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal
+to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access,
+however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity
+of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she
+argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being
+is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes
+not only the totality of language, but the unity of being.
+If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within
+the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence,
+Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a
+Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on
+an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and
+invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction
+gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social
+relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion
+of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its
+universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the
+straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she
+not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the
+totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts.
+Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of
+ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the
+universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection.
+Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary
+unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs
+through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
+about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a
+tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity.
+Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration,
+suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and
+proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an
+absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is
+one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for
+being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.”
+In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of
+the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In
+that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two
+sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are
+individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically
+entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds
+to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any
+general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular
+property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization.
+The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work
+in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
+Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating
+social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are
+measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept
+and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a
+material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these
+“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be
+judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
+that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered,
+however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the
+universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is
+quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,”
+even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for
+women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized
+through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the
+speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view.
+The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his
+or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The
+literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the
+hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular
+in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms.
+To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy
+the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of
+a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise
+unified ontology.
+Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between
+abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as
+Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so
+she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of
+language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . .
+words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise
+made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that
+within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with
+the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les
+Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
+universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize
+the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48
+In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that
+only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively
+lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish
+the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can
+wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic
+and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals,
+but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position
+of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a
+set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject
+becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective
+that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the
+world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory
+heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the
+latter’s epistemic hegemony.
+In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion
+of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality
+with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It
+can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it
+can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to
+speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point
+of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that
+speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an
+ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and
+concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
+in her theoretical essays all along.51
+Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot
+be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes:
+I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which
+cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole
+life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we
+are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52
+
+As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within
+Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to
+falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the
+radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime.
+But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of
+heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as
+a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist
+power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution.
+Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely
+problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice
+and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically
+“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by
+numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay
+culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as
+they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships toity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
+heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not
+follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further,
+Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the
+kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind.
+My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig
+between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that
+there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian
+sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse
+centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality;
+heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
+informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
+describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
+impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic
+elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of
+the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not
+always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and
+the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with
+these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory
+law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into
+heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a
+constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective.
+Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate
+with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position
+is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
+for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
+Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
+contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with thenormative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
+lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged
+in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that
+proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls,
+even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and
+destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood
+as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the
+oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other
+hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical
+meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing
+sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation,
+the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs
+a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply
+possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation
+between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
+the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense
+is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an
+assumption surely suspect.
+Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that
+appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back
+into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she
+likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and
+resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a
+culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that
+constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly,
+there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculineidentity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
+interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
+prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite
+direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case,
+the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the
+“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
+Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire
+admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the
+sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can
+shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay
+claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief,
+depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch
+and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual
+exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as
+internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may
+recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same
+time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that
+question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source
+of their erotic significance.
+Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme
+identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a
+natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist
+among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in
+Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the
+various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate
+descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is
+established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action ofbodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
+that they themselves invested in the category.
+For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual
+contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of
+choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood
+to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said
+to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining
+and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be
+neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my
+view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on
+the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the
+impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence.
+Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale
+refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very
+terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are
+coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed
+than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless
+pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off.
+The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and
+lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and
+lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or
+reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and
+denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual
+constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of
+power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of
+parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its
+claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond
+sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a
+problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary worksappear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
+which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body
+and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political
+transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms
+and to deprive them of their legitimating functions.
+Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific
+meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome
+the split between materiality and representation that characterizes
+“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas
+to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base,
+strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she
+understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the
+male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality
+are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to
+support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense,
+Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and
+to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality.
+Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a
+medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained
+for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible
+materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures
+and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the
+naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her
+aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to
+offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuringbodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
+form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are
+always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For
+Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably
+constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct
+and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex.
+If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the
+binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive
+enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In
+The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its
+partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of
+attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the
+same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig
+clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a
+“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks
+those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the
+task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
+but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories.
+The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the
+violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for
+this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not
+to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and
+binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now
+represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that
+consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive
+redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared tobelong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
+assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,”
+but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this
+literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical
+use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings
+that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the
+tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple
+internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence
+against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
+out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem
+inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution,
+and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness.
+Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution
+of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is
+always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged
+among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs
+that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities.
+But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can
+this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of
+this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a
+way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well
+a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different
+centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency
+comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, andrecirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
+become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes.
+This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third
+gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal
+subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to
+the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction,
+its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories
+of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of
+the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole
+new languages of description.
+In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but,
+rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman,
+one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of
+women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism.
+This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But
+even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to
+decide the question of sexual “identity”?
+If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a
+self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming
+an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian
+no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts
+that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a
+“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a
+contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,”
+but also of “lesbian”?Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
+homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a
+homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that
+construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of
+view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted
+through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that
+do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
+identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were
+not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed,
+required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it
+seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
+Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality
+deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result,
+that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in
+its oppressive forms.
+The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity
+themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to
+render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic.
+iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions
+“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that
+heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . .
+How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation,
+whether the sex underneath is true or not.”
+—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted
+in Esther Newton, Mother Camp
+
+Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have
+constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feministtheory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
+epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is
+shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express
+the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political
+shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political
+elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that
+identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site
+of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female
+body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
+gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body”
+itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that
+body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex?
+The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to
+presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
+of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive
+medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of
+suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse.
+There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which,
+prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century,
+understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or,
+more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception,
+sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine.
+There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where
+“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that
+can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in
+Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification,
+and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To
+what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenologyadapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
+as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent
+do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit
+hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the
+taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations
+are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance?
+Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the
+body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy?
+Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body
+is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body
+is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is
+“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
+understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction
+of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities
+are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through
+the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering
+destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of
+values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the
+speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through
+the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama”
+of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus
+vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault,
+“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture.
+Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his
+body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or
+for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the
+constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the
+body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
+writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and
+self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for
+Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an
+inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank
+page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
+must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated
+domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the
+body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in
+order for “culture” to emerge.
+By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault
+appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because
+this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he
+defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical
+investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break
+through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of
+cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of
+precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a
+genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a
+subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of
+the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of
+the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility.
+Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours
+of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish
+specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the
+boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing
+certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes
+of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
+between within and without, above and below, male and female, with
+and against, that a semblance of order is created.55
+
+Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction
+between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural
+means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a
+region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably
+binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot
+point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame.
+Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for
+understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
+maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that
+what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but
+that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become,
+within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist
+appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the
+body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she
+maintains, there are
+pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and
+which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or
+joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where
+the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined.
+A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed
+some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which
+should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger
+for someone.56
+In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his
+Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness
+figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and
+homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a
+continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of
+the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted
+through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist
+graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable
+bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks
+that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its
+boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to
+read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59
+Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
+margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous.
+If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which
+open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and
+oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
+site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural
+presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless
+of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief
+the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside”
+the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy
+and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always
+conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural.
+The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites
+of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices
+in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and
+orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex
+among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body
+in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution
+which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social)
+intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a
+consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its
+stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various
+bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered
+exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such
+exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine
+what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the
+regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed
+constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that
+might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61
+Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror
+begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject
+through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been
+expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered
+“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is
+effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the
+“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which
+are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes:
+nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the
+mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign
+of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I”
+expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in
+their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the
+same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63
+
+The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation
+of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As
+Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism,
+homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that
+founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along
+sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of
+Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
+through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
+the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary
+tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
+those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes
+outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by
+which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In
+effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and
+outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body
+would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its
+surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but
+this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears.
+Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions
+of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make
+sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by
+cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiationtion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
+subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos,
+then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of
+gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not
+how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a
+process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed.
+Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse
+and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive
+binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
+is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility
+of its hidden depth?
+From Interiority to Gender Performatives
+In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
+to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner”
+truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the
+doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his
+history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as
+Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in
+On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of
+prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a
+repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the
+prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is
+not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that
+bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body;
+there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of
+their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is
+at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external
+to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
+effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power
+that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66
+
+The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode
+of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The
+effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification
+of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the
+body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That
+lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In
+this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic
+space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually
+renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest,
+but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67
+The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface
+politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the
+disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of
+presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the
+gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying
+absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body
+politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We
+have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against
+homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of
+an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of
+the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within theder discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
+and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
+significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive
+model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed
+as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe.
+According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired,
+wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the
+effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of
+the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but
+never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts,
+gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
+that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
+fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
+other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
+constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated
+as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of
+a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control
+that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity”
+of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core,
+an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation
+of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
+the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinarypractices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
+origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
+analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its
+fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its
+true identity.
+If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a
+fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems
+that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the
+truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother
+Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton
+suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender
+takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
+both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
+identity. Newton writes:
+At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
+‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is
+masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
+“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my
+essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69
+
+Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth
+and falsity.
+The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
+parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading tosexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
+the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more
+complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a
+clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
+plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
+the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
+of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
+sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
+performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and
+both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the
+performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
+drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose),
+it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
+which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
+heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
+pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
+natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence,
+we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which
+avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their
+fabricated unity.
+The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
+there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the
+parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
+notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
+the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that
+double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
+which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To bemore precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
+effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification
+and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender
+identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
+styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
+original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
+original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender
+identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
+received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer
+laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
+a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
+construction.
+According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer
+Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
+Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
+wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
+practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the
+satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that
+there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it
+humor.70
+
+The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion
+for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
+be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
+In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
+and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
+actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive
+confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the
+inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of
+the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance
+will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that
+destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire.
+If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
+permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
+what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre
+would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest
+that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all
+never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a
+corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent
+construction of meaning.
+Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is
+an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to
+materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and
+to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal
+project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating
+force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation ofduress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
+Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a
+performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are
+part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture;
+indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right.
+Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender
+is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and
+without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a
+construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective
+agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders
+as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
+and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
+construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
+historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
+nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
+Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the
+peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which,
+in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes
+existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted,
+and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their
+originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible
+“cause” to be an “effect”?
+In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This
+repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of
+meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies
+that enact these significations by becoming stylized into genderedtive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
+inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic
+aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot
+be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found
+and consolidate the subject.
+Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of
+agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
+tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
+stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the
+stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane
+way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds
+constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation
+moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model
+of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
+social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
+which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
+precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
+which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
+come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
+norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to
+embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of
+acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized
+configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts
+that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity,
+but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and
+contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender
+transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
+between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
+or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
+identity as a politically tenuous construction.If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
+then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to
+express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
+which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
+attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or
+distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity
+would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created
+through sustained social performances means that the very notions of
+an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also
+constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative
+character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender
+configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination
+and compulsory heterosexuality.
+Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
+incredible.
+From Parody to Politics
+I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
+do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether
+it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in
+order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we”
+is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the
+term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of
+the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous
+or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or,
+at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
+theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and
+bodies, but of politics itself.
+The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume
+that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
+elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument
+is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is
+variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an
+existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
+its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in
+and through the other that has interested me here.The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
+stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the
+subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
+usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains
+intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject.
+This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared
+necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that
+culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes
+(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive
+“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and
+(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse,
+where determination forecloses the possibility of agency.
+Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted
+environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally
+enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for
+example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender,
+but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point
+of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never
+fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness
+of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural
+predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates
+of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close
+with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is
+instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of
+exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It
+is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort toposit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
+itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
+If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity
+is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates
+within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is
+not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are
+provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the
+legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices
+that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I
+pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The
+Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by
+Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses
+presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its
+world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as
+an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here
+belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very
+problematic of identity that it seeks to solve.
+What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an
+epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and
+how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What
+kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the
+invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled
+out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely
+documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object
+dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and
+distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a
+strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, oncethat separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
+the knowability and recoverability of that Other.
+As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move
+within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in
+and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a
+necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary
+itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity
+to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification
+permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one
+possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of
+agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert
+piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many
+inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this
+appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks
+to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to
+qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent
+and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally
+intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a
+practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that
+inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic
+life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs
+by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves
+in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting
+unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific
+modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
+identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,”
+rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy
+and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed,
+when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the
+subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined
+by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a
+founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals
+itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the
+orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing
+signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative
+domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that
+contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within
+the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity
+becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated.
+Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through
+discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable
+object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees
+in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a
+transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who
+maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural
+field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the
+very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there.
+What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs thegenre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
+itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself
+here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests
+the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
+that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the
+real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which
+gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
+written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s
+“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the
+accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry
+within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between
+instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition
+are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to
+approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the
+rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits
+itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition
+that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so
+these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized
+performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself.
+Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the
+very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a
+failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a
+politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion
+of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And
+yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
+argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable.
+Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic
+practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them-
+selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the
+effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive
+identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The
+parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender
+identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a
+subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it
+were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those
+hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration,
+reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status.
+I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed
+to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in
+order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously
+work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities
+that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative
+political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically,
+the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
+generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
+fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally
+determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status
+of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests
+the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction
+remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and
+determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and
+becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to
+establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit
+is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its
+own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a
+position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism
+ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local
+possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those
+practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present
+the immanent possibility of contesting them.
+This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the
+very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the
+political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative
+cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in
+their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics?
+This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of
+sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of
+the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification,
+a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the
+inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as
+binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as
+enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as
+an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of
+“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual
+construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the
+mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are
+also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction
+and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of
+sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that
+presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and
+globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention.
+If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these
+“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not
+only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that
+enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a
+feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might
+enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to
+repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
+There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political
+contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on
+sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a
+foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by
+installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground.
+The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which
+identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the
+foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has
+been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it
+presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every
+new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that
+already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as
+culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer
+fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer
+understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that
+belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
+would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations
+of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that
+establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of
+sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local
+strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such?
+
+Preface (1999)
+1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation
+of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the
+arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
+ratification of same-sex partnerships.
+2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
+Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and
+Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998.
+3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
+(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
+4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky
+Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los
+Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my
+arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of
+gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book.
+5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point.
+6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/
+Wellek/index.html.
+7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek,
+Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy
+Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
+Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity.
+8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the
+notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only
+came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to
+account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
+Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997).
+9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the
+earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the
+melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of
+the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss
+that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or
+disavow the loss it has just articulated.
+10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and
+interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to
+contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real:
+Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences,
+Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126.
+11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose
+work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
+“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the
+postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the
+appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that
+emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the
+same time under conditions of domination.
+12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has
+been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject.
+I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions
+of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to
+Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at
+Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection.
+13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most
+prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech.
+14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America
+(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
+other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
+gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at
+http://www.isna.org.
+15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances
+Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell,
+Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William
+Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava,
+Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for
+their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface
+was written.
+1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire
+1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History
+of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York:
+Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté
+de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses
+the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the
+productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not
+identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of
+productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of
+Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault,
+Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of
+sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under
+criticism in the final chapter.
+2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka
+and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan
+Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987).
+3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in
+History (New York: Macmillan, 1988).
+4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of
+Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and
+Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp.
+283–302.
+5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The
+Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987).
+She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement
+sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that
+movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether
+uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the
+repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities
+that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the
+very instability that the foundationalist move creates.
+6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
+grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
+are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
+“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/
+epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to
+cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a
+stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female)
+that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory
+practice of heterosexuality.
+7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see
+chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.”
+8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements
+in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the
+Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press,
+1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
+Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge
+University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis
+of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies,
+see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological
+Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978).
+9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of
+biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific
+basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender,
+vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on
+feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2,
+No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The
+Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique
+for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra
+Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University
+Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New
+Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
+was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in
+Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions
+(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex
+and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne
+Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men
+(New York: Norton, 1979).
+10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history
+of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed
+consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The
+Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century
+(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as
+an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986.
+11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in
+Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil
+Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987).
+12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York:
+Vintage, 1973), p. 301.
+13. Ibid., p. 38.
+14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies,
+Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986.
+15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s,
+Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn
+as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a
+mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic
+relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the
+body itself.
+16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
+Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977).
+17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
+Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press,
+1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5,
+1986.
+18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi.
+19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.”
+20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz
+Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization
+through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of
+doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz
+Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323,
+originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil,
+1952]).
+21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and
+the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
+the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit.
+Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is
+clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of
+that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and
+Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be
+the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion
+for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first
+this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that
+remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the
+ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed
+and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
+over feminine.
+22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary
+Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982.
+23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
+explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
+“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates
+politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of
+that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions
+. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the
+possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
+and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New
+York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113).
+24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La
+Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
+eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
+Women of Color Press, 1982).
+25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has
+Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
+Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
+Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10).
+26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2,
+Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20,
+see chapter 3, n. 49.
+27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two
+of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of
+cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the
+terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual
+difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the
+Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so
+wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as
+a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and
+Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed
+for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that
+preexist and structure subject-formation itself.
+28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist
+Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other
+Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49.
+29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least
+to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
+Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
+30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
+Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original
+editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social
+function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to
+the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave
+ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality.
+31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche:
+Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta,
+1977), pp. 17–18.
+32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall
+1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25.
+33. Ibid., p. 3.
+34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that
+“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other
+words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without
+“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that
+“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s
+Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall,
+Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed.
+(New York: Routledge, 1996).
+35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
+of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New
+York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
+Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French
+version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English
+translation.
+36. See chapter 2, section ii.
+37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x.
+38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press,
+1985), pp. 11–14.
+39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann
+(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45.
+40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion
+of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups
+to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977.
+The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex.
+41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
+Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
+(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114.
+42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration
+or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of
+structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender-
+neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
+1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language.
+43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63.
+44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
+Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30.
+45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon,
+1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
+1973).
+46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase.
+47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the
+genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See,
+for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline
+of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton,
+1979).
+48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in
+various parts of chapter 2 of this text.
+49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987).
+50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The
+Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982).
+51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender
+(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is
+that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed
+roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90).
+52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the
+Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The
+“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the
+understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche.
+Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the
+law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the
+other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of
+the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a
+fictive and repressive notion.
+53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
+Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston:
+Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and
+Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of
+Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual
+Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the
+Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber
+Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed
+with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann
+Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
+1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to
+Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and
+Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,”
+Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N.
+Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and
+Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71.
+54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure
+of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness
+through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See
+Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and
+Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of
+that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar
+College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that
+she did not.
+55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J.
+Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989).
+56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it
+is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of
+gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic
+ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson,
+“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
+Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983).
+2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
+Heterosexual Matrix
+1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s
+“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
+provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and
+masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its
+attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as
+a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map
+that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time.
+Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language
+and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be
+fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the
+reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to
+an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of
+Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer
+exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic
+authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in
+Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana
+University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of
+this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the
+law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of
+that law through recourse to a time before the law.
+2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
+Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
+3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
+Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
+Routledge, 1990).
+4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women:
+Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of
+Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
+Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the
+notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how
+women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the
+social bond between men.
+5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary
+Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496.
+6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist
+Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns
+Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of
+Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
+Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
+trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
+7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange—
+and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a
+social value. It provides the means of binding men together.”
+8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca:
+Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103.
+9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men:
+English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University
+Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of
+reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering
+attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and
+an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects
+of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object
+of discourse.
+10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
+as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1993).
+11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
+12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
+13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated
+jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother.
+14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master
+and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire:
+Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999).
+15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment
+from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father
+onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
+mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
+Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
+femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980).
+16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques
+Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose,
+trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter,
+page references to this work will appear in the text.
+17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977),
+p. 131.
+18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here
+is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic
+of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is
+whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as
+genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which
+femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a
+fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann
+Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington:
+Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the
+Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982,
+pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17,
+Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and
+the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark
+Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary
+Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper,
+Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985).
+19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of
+Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the
+consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which
+founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of
+disavowed losses.
+20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the
+text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order.
+21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
+Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986),
+pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of
+Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will
+appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows,
+“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.”
+22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther
+Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More
+Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance
+(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how
+radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of
+gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the
+presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find
+their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are
+themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a
+counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms.
+23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by
+bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
+Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
+Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and
+are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal.
+24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61.
+25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic
+establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification,
+with the analysand that she describes in the article.
+26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85.
+27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
+Rose, p. 44.
+28. Ibid., p. 55.
+29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
+understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See
+his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de
+Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me.
+30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans.
+Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is
+created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery
+of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible
+through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the
+thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s
+Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most
+clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction
+between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in
+Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms,
+the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power,
+but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
+subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
+I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81)
+and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined
+status of the juridical law.
+31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73.
+32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art,
+ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S.
+Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir:
+Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun:
+Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter
+text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the
+matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked
+with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of
+primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to
+the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to
+commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas
+the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the
+suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly
+and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern
+effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the
+psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood
+According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body
+Politics of Julia Kristeva.”
+33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id,
+trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia
+and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion
+of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul
+Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and
+Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip
+Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text.
+34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s
+“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic
+Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim
+(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195.
+35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of
+mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below.
+36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between
+the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does
+not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine
+Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
+the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New
+York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
+engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan.
+37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81.
+38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale
+University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York:
+International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of
+the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press,
+1968).
+39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie,
+introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in
+L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and
+the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by
+Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of
+this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and
+Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in
+Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New
+York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the
+same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s
+Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer
+(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics
+of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp.
+3–18.
+40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68.
+41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes
+of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes.
+This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward
+by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a
+fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5).
+42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian
+Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the
+heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu-
+ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that
+body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals
+the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and
+the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout
+the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on
+these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is
+understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and
+anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity
+into question.
+43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed
+by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego
+is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests
+that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development.
+Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface
+entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in
+Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins
+(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative
+account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the
+implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A
+Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale
+University Press, 1989).
+44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in
+the text.
+45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
+Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de
+Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality.
+46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View
+(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest.
+47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of
+Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980.
+48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James
+Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7.
+49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought
+and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable
+narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which
+transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic
+order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting
+or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
+3. Subversive Bodily Acts
+1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol.
+3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118.
+2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984),
+p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris:
+Editions du Seuil, 1974).
+3. Ibid., p. 25.
+4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p.
+135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from
+two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and
+Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil,
+1969).
+5. Ibid., p. 135.
+6. Ibid., p. 134.
+7. Ibid., p. 136.
+8. Ibid.
+9. Ibid., p. 239.
+10. Ibid., pp. 239–240.
+11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen,
+“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia
+Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English,
+1985.
+12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239.
+13. Ibid., p. 239.
+14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of
+Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4.
+15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he
+writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations
+are understood as sublimated reproductive desire.
+16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans.
+Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154.
+17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
+of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New
+York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
+Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text.
+18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
+unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
+pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a
+causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See
+chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted.
+19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James
+O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982–
+Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy,
+Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman
+(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291.
+20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences
+(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv.
+21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My
+Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank
+Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . .
+(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973).
+22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism
+without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago:
+University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la
+différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967).
+23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms.
+24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s
+Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on
+Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V.
+Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her
+article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda
+Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,”
+Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360.
+25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being
+almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It
+is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender
+to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No.
+2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89.
+See chapter 3, n. 4).
+26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might
+account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category
+violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies
+effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing
+the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to
+writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action,
+we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the
+category of sex in action.
+27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2,
+Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20.,
+see chapter 3, n. 49.
+28. Ibid., p. 17.
+29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
+30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
+Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp.
+21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49.
+31. Ibid., p. 107.
+32. Ibid., p. 106.
+33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
+34. Ibid., p. 5.
+35. Ibid., p. 6.
+36. Ibid.
+37. Ibid.
+38. Ibid.
+39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
+Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
+(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical
+difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language
+that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and
+Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of
+linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s
+critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains
+closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the
+semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both
+Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces
+and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze
+argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is
+deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet,
+Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York:
+Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89.
+40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this
+insight.
+41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also
+in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49.
+42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3,
+No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67.
+See chapter 3, n. 49.
+43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.”
+44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French
+New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
+1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter
+3, n. 49.
+45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48.
+46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a
+“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee”
+the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the
+second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social
+capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues,
+individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that
+precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay
+with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any
+reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely
+woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their
+organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139).
+47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon,
+1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du
+Minuit, 1969).
+48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9.
+49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in
+1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press,
+1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic
+contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although
+she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general
+will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see
+Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in
+Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and
+Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp.
+259–279.
+50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.”
+51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.”
+52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41.
+53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.”
+54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans.
+Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
+Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to
+this essay.
+55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley:
+Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4.
+56. Ibid., p. 113.
+57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988).
+58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115.
+59. Ibid., p. 121.
+60. Ibid., p. 140.
+61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory,
+Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion
+of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in
+honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical
+“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
+62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
+Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur
+(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her
+own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality,
+that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then
+becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals
+and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65).
+63. Ibid., p. 3.
+64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious
+Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of
+Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern
+University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery
+and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990),
+pp. 201–214.
+65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic
+Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
+Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
+Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20,
+No. 3,Winter 1988.
+66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
+Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
+67. Ibid., p. 30.
+68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female
+Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
+69. Ibid., p. 103.
+70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,
+WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114.
+71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University
+Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The
+Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive
+Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983).
diff --git a/annotated-by-size.ipynb b/annotated-by-size.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ce4b23f --- /dev/null +++ b/annotated-by-size.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,576 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Experiment 0 Annotator\n", + "\n", + "This annotates the text with the number of times that passage has been quoted. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 21, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import nltk\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import math\n", + "from ast import literal_eval\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "import re\n", + "from matplotlib import pyplot as plt\n", + "from colour import Color\n", + "from IPython.core.display import HTML\n", + "from matplotlib import cm\n", + "from matplotlib.colors import rgb2hex\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 22, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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0gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE.txt353153505445970[(437197, 437306)][(34199, 34308)]
1gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH.txt353153505458719[(120176, 120440)][(4653, 4920)]
2gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/From Sodomy to .txt353153505481840[(790, 864)][(74227, 74304)]
3gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/Two Strikes and.txt353153505456002[(790, 864)][(52436, 52513)]
4gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/Inclusion and t.txt353153505435376[(479445, 479510)][(33058, 33123)]
\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Text A Text B Threshold Cutoff \\\n", + "0 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE.txt 3 5 \n", + "1 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH.txt 3 5 \n", + "2 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/From Sodomy to .txt 3 5 \n", + "3 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/Two Strikes and.txt 3 5 \n", + "4 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/Inclusion and t.txt 3 5 \n", + "\n", + " N-Grams Num Matches Text A Length Text B Length Locations in A \\\n", + "0 3 1 535054 45970 [(437197, 437306)] \n", + "1 3 1 535054 58719 [(120176, 120440)] \n", + "2 3 1 535054 81840 [(790, 864)] \n", + "3 3 1 535054 56002 [(790, 864)] \n", + "4 3 1 535054 35376 [(479445, 479510)] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \n", + "0 [(34199, 34308)] \n", + "1 [(4653, 4920)] \n", + "2 [(74227, 74304)] \n", + "3 [(52436, 52513)] \n", + "4 [(33058, 33123)] " + ] + }, + "execution_count": 22, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df = pd.read_csv('log.csv')\n", + "df.head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 23, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Adapted from text-matcher\n", + "class Text: \n", + " def __init__(self, filename): \n", + " self.filename = filename\n", + " \n", + " @property\n", + " def text(self):\n", + " \"\"\" Reads the file in memory. \"\"\"\n", + " f = open(self.filename, encoding='utf-8', errors='ignore')\n", + " return f.read() \n", + "\n", + " @property\n", + " def tokens(self, removeStopwords=True): \n", + " \"\"\" Tokenizes the text, breaking it up into words, removing punctuation. \"\"\"\n", + " tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\\w+\\'?\\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. \n", + " spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text))\n", + " # Take note of how many spans there are in the text\n", + " self.length = spans[-1][-1] \n", + " tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(self.text)\n", + " tokens = [ token.lower() for token in tokens ] # make them lowercase\n", + " if not removeStopwords: \n", + " self.spans = spans\n", + " return tokens\n", + " tokenSpans = list(zip(tokens, spans)) # zip it up\n", + " stopwords = nltk.corpus.stopwords.words('english') # get stopwords\n", + " tokenSpans = [ token for token in tokenSpans if token[0] not in stopwords ] # remove stopwords from zip\n", + " self.spans = [ x[1] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get spans\n", + " return [ x[0] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get tokens" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 24, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "mm = Text('gendertrouble.txt')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 25, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "/var/folders/_g/ykvg1w8n5g7f967fyjqxrpgc0000gn/T/ipykernel_1243/1050344303.py:10: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", + "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", + " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the size of the text. \n", + "textALength = df['Text A Length'][0]\n", + "\n", + "# I don't know why, but without the offset the novel ends too soon,\n", + "# with \"unvisited tomb.\" This fixes it. \n", + "offset = 2\n", + "textALength += offset\n", + "\n", + "# Make an empty array the size of the text. \n", + "tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 26, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "535056" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 26, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(tally)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 27, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "1" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 27, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "min(1,2)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 28, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Read the locations from the CSV file, and literally evaluate them into lists. \n", + "locations = df['Locations in A']\n", + "locations = locations.apply(literal_eval)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 29, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Tally up every time a letter in the novel is quoted. \n", + "for article in locations: \n", + " for locRange in article: \n", + " for i in range(locRange[0], min(locRange[1]+1, len(tally))):\n", + " tally[i] += 1" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Make a color list in hex for all the values in the tally. \n", + "# Let's hope there aren't too many. \n", + "colors = list(np.arange(5,75,70/(tally.max()+1)))\n", + "colorList = colors" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false, + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# cmax = 16\n", + "# normalized = [round((i/cmax) * 255) for i in range(cmax)]\n", + "# print(normalized)\n", + "# hexes = [rgb2hex(x) for x in cm.gnuplot(normalized)]\n", + "# colorList = hexes\n", + "# colorList" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Create a CSS Stylesheet for each color value in the map. \n", + "colorCSS = \"\"\n", + "for i, color in zip(range(0, tally.max()+1), colorList): \n", + " colorCSS += \".c-%s { font-size: %spx; }\\n\" % (i, color)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "n = 50\n", + "\n", + "checkpoints = np.linspace(0, textALength, n).round()\n", + "checkpoints = [int(point) for point in checkpoints]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def span(val): \n", + " return '' % val\n", + "\n", + "previousVal = None\n", + "for i, valChar in enumerate(zip(tally, mm.text)):\n", + " val, char = valChar[0], valChar[1]\n", + " if previousVal == None: \n", + " # First character. \n", + " out = '' % val\n", + " elif val != previousVal: \n", + " out += '' % val\n", + " if i in checkpoints: \n", + " out += '' % checkpoints.index(i)\n", + " out += char\n", + " previousVal = val" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get dates\n", + "def getDate(filename): \n", + " \"\"\"\n", + " Extract dates from filenames. \n", + " \"\"\"\n", + " m = re.search('_(\\d{4})_', filename)\n", + " if m is not None: \n", + " return int(m.group(1))\n", + " else:\n", + " return None\n", + "\n", + "df['Date'] = df['Text B'].apply(getDate)\n", + "df['Decade'] = df['Date'] - (df['Date'] % 10)\n", + "\n", + "# Make a list of valid decades. \n", + "decades = np.arange(1930, 2020, 10)\n", + "\n", + "# Make a dictionary of decades. \n", + "# Values are a list of locations. \n", + "decadeDict = {}\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows():\n", + " decade = row['Decade']\n", + " locations = literal_eval(row['Locations in A'])\n", + " if decade not in decadeDict: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] = locations\n", + " else: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] += locations \n", + " \n", + "# Grab the beginnings of quotes. \n", + "decadeStarts = {decade: [item[0] for item in loc] for decade, loc in decadeDict.items()}\n", + "\n", + "decadesBinned = {decade: \n", + " np.histogram(locations, bins=n, range=(0, textALength))[0]\n", + " for decade, locations in decadeStarts.items() if decade in decades}\n", + "\n", + "decadesDF = pd.DataFrame(decadesBinned).T" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Normalize the totals for each section. \n", + "normalizedBlocks = decadesDF.sum() / decadesDF.sum().max()\n", + "\n", + "# Now use the scale that we're already using for the CSS. \n", + "normalizedBlocks = round(normalizedBlocks * tally.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "blockHTML = '
'\n", + "for i, block in enumerate(normalizedBlocks): \n", + " blockHTML += '' % (int(block), i, i)\n", + "blockHTML = blockHTML + \"
\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "blockCSS = \"\"\"\n", + "#blocks { }\n", + ".block, .block { \n", + " width: 30px; \n", + " height: 30px; \n", + " display: inline-block;\n", + " color: white; \n", + " text-align: center;\n", + " text-decoration: none;\n", + " margin-top: 3px; \n", + "}\n", + "\"\"\"\n", + "\n", + "for i, color in zip(range(0, tally.max()+1), colorList): \n", + " blockCSS += '.b-%s { font-size: %spx; }\\n' % (i, color)\n", + "colorCSS += blockCSS" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "html = \"\"\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + " \n", + " \n", + "\n", + "%s
%s
\n", + "\"\"\" % (colorCSS, blockHTML, out)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "with open('annotated-by-size.html', 'w') as f: \n", + " f.write(html)\n", + " f.close()" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.2" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 0 +} From 86d800418cea711c38e0cf2ecb09fa459aa6bad0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 14:55:08 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 04/63] Create placeholder.txt --- gender-trouble/placeholder.txt | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) create mode 100644 gender-trouble/placeholder.txt diff --git a/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt b/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6e9f0da --- /dev/null +++ b/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +h From 5c53effbdbfe98b3162c72bdbdcd454af69aaffc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 14:56:32 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 05/63] Rename annotated-by-size.html to gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.html --- annotated-by-size.html => gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.html | 0 1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) rename annotated-by-size.html => gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.html (100%) diff --git a/annotated-by-size.html b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.html similarity index 100% rename from annotated-by-size.html rename to gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.html From 8be4f12743a4aa0babe47489ca16847f229be66e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 14:56:50 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 06/63] Rename annotated-by-size.ipynb to gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb --- annotated-by-size.ipynb => gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb | 0 1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) rename annotated-by-size.ipynb => gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb (100%) diff --git a/annotated-by-size.ipynb b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb similarity index 100% rename from annotated-by-size.ipynb rename to gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb From e11f2945be409fe8a921f76d5c48b74d8048f67e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Tue, 1 Nov 2022 14:57:11 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 07/63] Delete placeholder.txt --- gender-trouble/placeholder.txt | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) delete mode 100644 gender-trouble/placeholder.txt diff --git a/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt b/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 6e9f0da..0000000 --- a/gender-trouble/placeholder.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -h From 1a31302736e4ec624b4e6030c25ee7e91963409e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Thu, 3 Nov 2022 11:41:38 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 08/63] character index finder --- text_matcher/text_matcher.py | 25 +++++++++++++------------ 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/text_matcher/text_matcher.py b/text_matcher/text_matcher.py index 988ff56..6dec881 100644 --- a/text_matcher/text_matcher.py +++ b/text_matcher/text_matcher.py @@ -22,10 +22,11 @@ def getFiles(path): if os.path.isfile(path): return [path] elif os.path.isdir(path): - # Get list of all files in dir, recursively. + # Get list of all files in dir, recursively. return glob.glob(path + "/**/*.txt", recursive=True) else: - raise click.ClickException("The path %s doesn't appear to be a file or directory" % path) + raise click.ClickException( + "The path %s doesn't appear to be a file or directory" % path) def checkLog(logfile, textpair): @@ -61,13 +62,13 @@ def createLog(logfile, columnLabels): @click.command() @click.argument('text1') @click.argument('text2') -@click.option('-t', '--threshold', type=int, default=3, \ +@click.option('-t', '--threshold', type=int, default=3, help='The shortest length of match to include in the list of initial matches.') -@click.option('-c', '--cutoff', type=int, default=5, \ +@click.option('-c', '--cutoff', type=int, default=5, help='The shortest length of match to include in the final list of extended matches.') -@click.option('-n', '--ngrams', type=int, default=3, \ +@click.option('-n', '--ngrams', type=int, default=3, help='The ngram n-value to match against.') -@click.option('-m', '--mindistance', type=int, default=8, \ +@click.option('-m', '--mindistance', type=int, default=8, help='The minimum value for distance between two match.') @click.option('-l', '--logfile', default='log.txt', help='The name of the log file to write to.') @click.option('--stops', is_flag=True, help='Include stopwords in matching.', default=False) @@ -114,12 +115,12 @@ def cli(text1, text2, threshold, cutoff, ngrams, logfile, verbose, stops, mindis logging.debug('Now comparing pair %s of %s.' % (index + 1, numPairs)) logging.debug('Comparing %s with %s.' % (pair[0], pair[1])) - # Make sure we haven't already done this pair. + # Make sure we haven't already done this pair. inLog = checkLog(logfile, [pair[0], pair[1]]) if inLog is None: # This means that there isn't a log file. Let's set one up. - # Set up columns and their labels. + # Set up columns and their labels. columnLabels = ['Text A', 'Text B', 'Threshold', 'Cutoff', 'N-Grams', 'Num Matches', 'Text A Length', 'Text B Length', 'Locations in A', 'Locations in B'] logging.debug('No log file found. Setting one up.') @@ -140,15 +141,15 @@ def cli(text1, text2, threshold, cutoff, ngrams, logfile, verbose, stops, mindis logging.debug('Processing text: %s' % filename) prevTextObjs[filename] = Text(texts[filename], filename) - # Just more convenient naming. + # Just more convenient naming. textObjA = prevTextObjs[filenameA] textObjB = prevTextObjs[filenameB] - # Reset the table of previous text objects, so we don't overload memory. - # This means we'll only remember the previous two texts. + # Reset the table of previous text objects, so we don't overload memory. + # This means we'll only remember the previous two texts. prevTextObjs = {filenameA: textObjA, filenameB: textObjB} - # Do the matching. + # Do the matching. myMatch = Matcher(textObjA, textObjB, threshold=threshold, cutoff=cutoff, ngramSize=ngrams, removeStopwords=stops, minDistance=mindistance, silent=silent) myMatch.match() From b6083c18ef9681ecbb0a891295b09c9bc27e4799 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Thu, 3 Nov 2022 11:43:47 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 09/63] character index finder --- .DS_Store | Bin 0 -> 6148 bytes preprocessing/get_index.py | 22 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 22 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .DS_Store create mode 100644 preprocessing/get_index.py diff --git a/.DS_Store b/.DS_Store new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..6bd0f8102912e1c0ba7583816a79c7249dbcba11 GIT binary patch literal 6148 zcmeHKOG-mQ5UkcL0wQGTa<1SFh7eDX3j|^ag1ksX*Kd_`c{Hm(DB+=G<3_4Ocg^(c zn&H*rbsB&z-yZLQ1%Nr-5ho8*^XKjpyQ+*4={)0z1Gd=VmA}i(xwm*Ba~JWO|AYbi z_w{jjJ`DT3;j$xDB?Y8_6p#W^Knnb#fcIY7{3cOR3P=Gd@TGu%9~#}U7mkVX>0pQv zfH-41jO&;sh|LqkUN|N)L$jn3lWH|$SkjqqRo4s0#H7P&_^`U!YC^HNo#(eGhxJ57 zDIf*T6}Zmr!u$UN{fGJgoTQx;kOKco0h_JXt0iBldh6unyw^7RhVC^VbT_Vp!VvA4 k810xFZ^w60ly%M5eBKMk#Go@DbfW$YxGpj&@Yf1_0{hz+2mk;8 literal 0 HcmV?d00001 diff --git a/preprocessing/get_index.py b/preprocessing/get_index.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3251f7a --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/get_index.py @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +import re +import sys + + +def getCharIndex(textfile, quote): + ''' + Returns the spans of the quote in the textfile. + ''' + # Get the text of the textfile + with open(textfile, 'r') as f: + text = f.read() + # Get the spans of the quote in the text + spans = [] + for match in re.finditer(quote, text): + spans.append(match.span()) + return spans + + +if __name__ == "__main__": + a = sys.argv[1] + b = sys.argv[2] + print(getCharIndex(a, b)) From b98c8029c09aaeab17e20ba9913e64bc8d6f7e1f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2022 14:20:07 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 10/63] Add files via upload --- gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html | 7141 +++++++++++++++++++++++ gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt | 6969 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 14110 insertions(+) create mode 100644 gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html create mode 100644 gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt diff --git a/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html b/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..13202e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html @@ -0,0 +1,7141 @@ + + + + + + +
Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
+to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have
+as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one
+of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded
+my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an
+embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even
+as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in
+the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it
+belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
+and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
+undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the
+former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the
+case of Gender Trouble.
+In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual
+assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views
+that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and
+restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity
+and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory
+~
+that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
+practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often
+with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to
+seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and
+exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or
+derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for
+readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field
+of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities
+ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in
+the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal,
+and illegitimate is likely to pose that question.
+Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual
+and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and
+all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought
+to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions
+about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the
+face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of
+gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must
+be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded
+from any effort to think gender?
+Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was
+called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists.
+Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of
+sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be
+~
+one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
+on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If
+in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof
+from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the
+case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point
+was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those
+theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the
+critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed
+strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive
+can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism
+is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years,
+however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and
+sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism
+of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the
+domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether
+my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty
+Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but
+perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between
+the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim
+that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural
+studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory
+(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural
+studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the
+point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural
+appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure,
+where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is
+not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where
+cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and
+its promise of success, uncertain.
+~
+Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
+American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate
+theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although
+the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it
+will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of
+the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein,
+various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva,
+Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in
+France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a
+French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct
+from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist
+inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has
+threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few
+French publishers who have considered it.1
+Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It
+emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates
+on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and
+feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality,
+and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique
+Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and
+lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the
+1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism,
+Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the
+two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what
+is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con-
+
+~
+summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in
+a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call
+into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do
+certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is
+a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through
+normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to
+queer contexts?
+The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender
+emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and
+sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender.
+Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent
+that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and
+to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s
+sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of
+“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror
+and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one
+sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a
+certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and
+language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various
+new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism
+and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme
+identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who
+become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”?
+What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must
+be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness”
+that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some
+lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status
+
+~
+as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years,
+offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not
+anticipate.2
+But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought
+to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual
+practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of
+normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
+of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
+of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there
+are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes:
+Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of
+gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of
+sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization
+of inequality between men and women.3
+
+In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is
+not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender,
+but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is
+what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may
+be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said.
+Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for
+the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy
+serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are
+gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony?
+Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative
+use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming
+the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender,
+MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for
+thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender
+~
+discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
+discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment
+may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there
+are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is
+important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated
+against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in
+accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment
+of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity.
+Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender
+means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with
+some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that
+men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be
+straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a
+critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her
+womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination
+becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender
+should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter
+accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that
+the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but
+seeks to oppose it.
+I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn
+an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal
+or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one
+~
+perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
+normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to
+be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is
+meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension
+of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are
+clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede,
+however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered
+ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at
+all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or
+deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for
+instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably
+mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing.
+Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying
+and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender
+Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only
+because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have
+changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but
+because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of
+gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.”
+There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law,
+attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which
+that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its
+object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that
+might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very
+phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which
+~
+the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
+outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization
+in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained
+temporal duration.8
+Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and
+one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender
+is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal
+essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed
+that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we
+anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an
+hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble
+clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into
+the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and
+several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to
+come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic
+break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I
+would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of
+a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical
+mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted.
+Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do
+become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through
+that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche
+performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration.
+Although this text does not answer the question of whether the
+materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of
+much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the
+~
+reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
+can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several
+scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made
+explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple
+analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not
+whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but
+what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race.
+Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,”
+whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that
+no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
+always work as background for one another, and they often find their
+most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
+of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once,
+and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive
+category of analysis.12
+Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and
+debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a
+full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions
+of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was
+produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social
+movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a
+lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in
+which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book.
+Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a
+person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw
+many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of
+some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural
+edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the
+midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom,
+and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a
+part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension.
+At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living
+~
+a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
+book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth
+Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life.
+That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
+solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
+problem that this someone is given in language).
+It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the
+text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same
+time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its
+reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated
+with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
+to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and
+the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
+were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the
+relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist
+jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of
+Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug.
+In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in
+Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I
+tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and
+exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important
+strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I
+worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human
+Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual
+minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to
+understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out
+the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet
+~
+met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
+defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More
+recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory
+and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book
+that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of
+hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be
+published by Verso in 2000).
+Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in
+relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that
+seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on
+questions of sexuality, gender, and culture.
+Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to
+the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to
+some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular”
+according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps
+attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the
+complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of
+calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for
+grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive.
+I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend.
+Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly,
+one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are
+not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style
+are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible
+speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of
+not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell,
+in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about
+common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar
+is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints
+~
+that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
+But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly
+irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and
+sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who
+are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does
+their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual
+life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of
+linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical
+norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at
+the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part,
+through contesting the grammar in which gender is given.
+The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon
+looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing
+perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the
+sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who
+devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve?
+What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency”
+keep obscure?
+I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender
+norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body,
+deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the
+Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their
+sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the
+age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and
+homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation
+but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on
+a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this
+violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at
+the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be
+~
+a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
+agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the
+violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
+text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the
+pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality
+that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The
+writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to
+play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real”
+politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are
+always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible,
+and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be
+like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended
+kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate
+the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14
+Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the
+realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose
+are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to
+judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings
+in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to
+describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender
+ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also
+pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete
+consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender
+Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender
+is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It
+is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the
+~
+same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
+world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of
+a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be
+good.”
+Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide
+between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their
+judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and
+then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on
+the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what
+makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility,
+whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which
+expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying
+persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way.
+The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a
+question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a
+fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what
+is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense
+prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation.
+I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes
+the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such
+judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be
+made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves
+posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always
+run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition
+and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity
+culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name
+the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what
+is at stake in using the term at all?
+~
+What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
+questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
+how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In
+other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit
+the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the
+means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are
+the means by which we transform it?
+The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of
+subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is
+rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or
+a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those
+perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced
+through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory
+appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take
+the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood,
+and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this
+perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of
+the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or
+we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or
+how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it
+is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly
+erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality,
+then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy
+from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be
+preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may
+not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees?
+The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail,
+
+~
+when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely
+the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered
+is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories
+itself constitutes the experience of the body in question.
+When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is
+also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from
+the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand
+that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized
+knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call
+it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in
+itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real.
+And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices
+that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and
+reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented
+and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be
+made differently and, indeed, less violently.
+The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a
+true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling
+of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized
+knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism,
+heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and
+improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten
+by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish
+what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be
+considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which
+bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this
+legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is
+
+~
+not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter
+the violence performed by gender norms.
+In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the
+condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain
+performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal
+dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in
+response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications.
+Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and
+I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and
+revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and
+expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the
+volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political
+(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions
+(Routledge, 1995).
+I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I”
+to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I”
+that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the
+availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that
+structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes
+this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it.
+What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar
+that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that
+establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely
+~
+to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
+trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without
+which no “I” can appear.
+This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from
+a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of
+the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the
+publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory
+of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the
+ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in
+The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency.
+Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or
+that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read
+directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined
+over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have
+come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and
+that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In
+Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied
+relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider
+that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences.
+Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor
+to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous.
+This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the
+insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of
+both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.
+~
+If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
+include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal
+gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I
+would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular,
+how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized
+forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual
+minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will
+refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a
+coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and
+its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power,
+and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to
+refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining
+recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within
+reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider
+it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the
+purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of
+identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no
+reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position
+purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as
+the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those
+who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold
+that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life
+of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
+try to live, on the sexual margins.15
+Judith Butler
+Berkeley, California
+June, 1999
+~
+
+Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
+and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps
+trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was,
+within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should
+never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion
+and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of
+power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in
+trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble
+is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it.
+As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I
+noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the
+terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and
+unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I
+read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject
+of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the
+unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the
+glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the
+~
+masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
+the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my
+attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than
+an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion
+between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate
+in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I
+asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the
+Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those
+terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the
+subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic
+regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology?
+But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into
+question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support
+gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of
+“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female
+indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is,
+the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories
+is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to
+require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of
+the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that
+gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
+Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
+natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
+which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through
+which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted
+~
+through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
+body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize
+“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative
+construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be
+shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original,
+and the inevitable?
+To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as
+effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical
+inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual
+identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
+discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this
+inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions:
+phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality.
+Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion,
+its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both
+terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this
+inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests.
+Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle
+the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of
+politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the
+consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
+new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no
+longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what
+extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
+for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself?
+* * *
+~
+This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
+gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1,
+“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as
+the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory
+heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of
+power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of
+sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the
+feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the
+female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how
+do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where
+are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce
+the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of
+power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of
+continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
+these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
+into question their alleged relations?
+Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
+Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism
+that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities
+within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within
+some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of
+cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued
+through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan
+Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is
+subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The
+History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown
+both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual
+~
+economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
+complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual
+codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about
+the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies?
+The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical
+consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva
+in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged
+to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of
+Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an
+insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and
+fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions,
+Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas
+and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body,
+sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification
+and proliferation beyond the binary frame.
+It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within
+its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of
+the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a
+childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact.
+Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which
+gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is
+~
+clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
+various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled
+to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the
+predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
+author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other
+discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical
+boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
+participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from
+other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an
+interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist
+the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique.
+The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of
+Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship
+for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for
+Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and
+provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The
+George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported
+my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has
+been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this
+manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The
+“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under
+Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by
+virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective
+thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna
+Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll
+Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender,
+Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985
+and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to
+~
+imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
+critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work
+from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities
+Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the
+University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School
+of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and
+her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial
+and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues
+who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar,
+Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice
+Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone,
+Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work
+in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project
+and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance.
+As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination,
+keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work.
+
+~
+
+~
+GENDER TROUBL
+~
+
+~
+1
+
+Subjects of
+Sex/Gender/Desire
+One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one.
+—Simone de Beauvoir
+Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist.
+—Julia Kristeva
+Woman does not have a sex.
+—Luce Irigaray
+The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex.
+—Michel Foucault
+The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual.
+—Monique Wittig
+
+i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism
+For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some
+existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not
+only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
+representation serves as the operative term within a political process
+that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political
+subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function
+of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is
+~
+assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
+the development of a language that fully or adequately represents
+women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of
+women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all.
+Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist
+discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable
+or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after
+all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of
+women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out
+in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed,
+with the result that representation is extended only to what can be
+acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being
+a subject must first be met before representation can be extended.
+Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
+appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is,
+through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the
+contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them,
+formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements
+of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
+of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
+representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
+facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
+system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential
+~
+axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
+masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
+emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
+The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
+politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
+through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the
+juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the
+political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating
+and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively
+concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical
+structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces”
+what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned
+with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In
+effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject
+before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s
+own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women
+might become more fully represented in language and politics.
+Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
+“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
+very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
+Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
+the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the
+law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
+well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law
+as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing
+assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law
+might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature
+hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a
+presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and,
+thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.
+~
+Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
+the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism
+encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common
+identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
+whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural,
+has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As
+Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by
+the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a
+woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
+because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of
+its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
+consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
+separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in
+which it is invariably produced and maintained.
+The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for
+feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist
+cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
+women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
+a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its
+failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts
+have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the
+start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its
+efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support
+highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
+construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western
+barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for
+patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own
+~
+claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
+categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to
+produce women’s common subjugated experience.
+Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
+kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
+difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is
+there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
+there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
+integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified
+against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
+formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
+both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its
+difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of
+“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
+exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but
+in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully
+decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from
+the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of
+identity a misnomer.4
+My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the
+subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the
+representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature
+insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the
+category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory
+consequences of that construction, even when the construction has
+been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation
+within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from
+“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary
+~
+limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
+representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the
+constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem
+is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for
+merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
+exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion
+itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By
+conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism
+articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross
+misrepresentation.
+Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
+constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position
+outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating
+practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present,
+as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted
+frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize.
+Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics,
+a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a
+feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the
+ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order
+to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on
+other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical
+critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having
+to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested
+by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably
+excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in
+a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals
+to extend its claims to “representation”?5
+Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of
+~
+the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
+regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of
+the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves
+to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
+of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of
+gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
+identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a
+political goal.
+To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what
+qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a
+feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort
+to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic
+invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend
+representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion
+of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of
+the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics?
+The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of
+feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a
+field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation.
+Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense
+for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed.
+ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire
+Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject
+by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex
+and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability
+sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is
+~
+neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
+of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction
+that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7
+If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
+then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
+to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
+Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
+that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of
+males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even
+if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
+and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to
+assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of
+a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise
+restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as
+radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily
+signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male
+body as easily as a female one.
+This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set
+of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without
+first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what
+means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific
+discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex
+have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is
+there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy
+that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are
+the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests?
+If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
+called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it
+~
+was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
+between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11
+It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural
+interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
+not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a
+pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the
+very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
+also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
+a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of
+“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it
+is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for
+sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be
+understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to
+encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production?
+iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of
+Contemporary Debate
+Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential
+attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What
+gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
+is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness
+imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of
+agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
+laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What
+~
+sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
+gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law.
+When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
+terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In
+such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
+On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
+that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For
+Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
+agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and
+could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable
+and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear
+that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion
+to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.”
+There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who
+becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as
+she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
+been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
+a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
+shown to have been gender all along.14
+The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to
+founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will
+and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that
+some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits
+the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a
+passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the
+instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will
+~
+ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
+as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the
+mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does
+the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do
+we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument
+awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15
+Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse
+which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to
+safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender”
+or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose
+and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered
+possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the
+limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always
+set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on
+binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality.
+Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender.
+Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
+of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
+gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
+differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
+only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not
+an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that
+only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the
+masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of
+~
+their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
+In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray
+argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within
+the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.”
+Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language,
+women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity.
+Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex
+constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense,
+women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to
+Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray
+argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a
+closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing
+goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir,
+women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of
+signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the
+Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity
+of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as
+inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the
+metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject.
+What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform
+thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist
+conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is
+the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist
+feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person
+who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,”
+called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral
+deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,
+~
+der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
+gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable
+contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what
+the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the
+constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and
+contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being,
+but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically
+specific sets of relations.
+Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point
+of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an
+abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This
+absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s)
+that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray,
+the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female
+sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither
+“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the
+Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for
+Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir
+would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms
+of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even
+in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one.
+The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in
+a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men
+could not settle the question of women because they would then be
+acting as both judge and party to the case.18
+The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;
+~
+each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
+meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of
+socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of
+gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above.
+The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume
+that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which,
+on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned
+within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility
+of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements
+about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be
+argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is,
+indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and
+man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of
+identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry.
+For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms
+of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to
+immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for
+the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and,
+hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her
+position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
+is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as
+female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
+to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom.
+Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of
+~
+negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
+The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will
+later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both
+the existential subject and its Other.
+Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation
+and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting
+essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is
+clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts
+to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/
+body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The
+preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the
+very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes,
+Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political
+and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates
+the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
+and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
+mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender
+hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized.
+The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from
+“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very
+mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of
+gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body
+is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body,
+in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a
+~
+masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
+off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian
+terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading,
+Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not
+the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and
+en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting
+linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place.
+iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond
+Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by
+which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed
+reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that
+the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist
+critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical
+structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that
+traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
+difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological
+imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of
+cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism?
+The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
+global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a
+repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23
+Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to
+~
+the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
+singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
+strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms.
+That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike
+suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the
+varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly
+insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related,
+distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed,
+the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of
+dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual
+difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot
+be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism
+or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one
+tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service
+of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain.
+The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the
+question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or
+shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture
+feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who
+claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and
+is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege
+intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of
+the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of
+~
+cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
+of “women” are constructed.
+Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics
+which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be.
+They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously
+positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework
+of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not
+to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging
+and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in
+advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates
+coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert
+herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for
+coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee
+unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not
+the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and,
+most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition.
+The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes
+that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action.
+But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on
+unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and
+take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what
+dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of
+democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific
+and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a
+conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power
+relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be
+interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a
+liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions
+of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to
+~
+gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
+complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that
+category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve
+as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force.
+Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature
+insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged
+fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the
+“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired.
+Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of
+identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt
+the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish
+precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted
+at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context
+of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of
+identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions
+must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
+permanently moot.
+This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes
+neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a
+coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because
+the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
+definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity
+concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist
+tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity
+concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities
+or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or
+~
+subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
+depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain
+political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to
+accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous
+self that offers its complexity at once.
+Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
+never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition,
+then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without
+obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure.
+v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance
+What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the
+same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do
+these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would
+be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed
+prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological
+discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the
+person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the
+various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility
+and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the
+person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally
+related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that
+literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the
+focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
+what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts
+~
+almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
+person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through
+time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of
+gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To
+what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive
+feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
+other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
+logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
+assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
+the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
+emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
+who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered
+norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
+“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
+maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
+sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
+norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines
+of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders,
+and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual
+desire through sexual practice.
+The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that
+generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender
+norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the
+production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between
+“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive
+attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which
+gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of
+~
+“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
+from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation
+of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate
+the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain
+kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural
+intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical
+impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and
+regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up
+within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder.
+Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems
+crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of
+what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist
+between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect
+of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
+relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
+a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in
+which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression?
+Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the
+identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine,
+that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and
+those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category
+of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the
+category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,
+~
+onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
+with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of
+heterosexual hegemony.
+The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on
+how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive
+capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a
+“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western
+culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation
+and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off.
+Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple
+negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a
+monologic elaboration of the masculine.
+Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex
+appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically
+speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a
+performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact
+that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray,
+grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely
+because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation
+between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the
+substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well
+as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary
+that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive
+multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an
+~
+artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
+sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies.
+For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive
+aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she
+claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In
+other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender,
+and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian”
+emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary
+restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no
+metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination,
+appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
+the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands
+first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept
+I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an
+inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27
+The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
+is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized
+features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and
+autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the
+destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an
+attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche,
+come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In
+other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but
+the feminine:
+
+~
+Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between
+the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there
+are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine”
+not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the
+general.28
+
+Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can
+assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that
+destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal
+point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality
+through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the
+normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of
+substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not
+only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and
+materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a
+radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction
+between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of
+the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not
+only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to
+that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production
+and naturalization of the category of sex itself.
+The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with
+Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a
+number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain
+illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that
+the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior
+ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues
+Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity,
+order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do
+
+~
+they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes,
+this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the
+psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical
+thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the
+metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the
+psychological person as a substantive thing:
+The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as
+well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic.
+All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person)
+derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes
+back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense
+but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the
+structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty
+that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that
+come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to
+be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual,
+are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances
+fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31
+
+Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons
+cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She
+provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French.
+According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies”
+them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary
+gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of
+nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender”
+(1984), she writes:
+The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its
+meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as
+
+~
+far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and
+French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give
+way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a
+division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals
+with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to
+belong primarily to philosophy.32
+
+For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to
+“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe
+they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without
+saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in
+nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on
+gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of
+“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to
+“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that
+metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and
+“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under
+that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender
+and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various
+expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual
+desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex”
+whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional
+internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I
+feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant.
+Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy
+(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also
+fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like
+a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the
+~
+defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
+This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender.
+Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of
+gender within that binary pair.
+Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and
+desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate
+gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the
+self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it
+desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or
+woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the
+univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of
+gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system.
+This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation
+among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects
+or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The
+metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and
+expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that
+is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic
+paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and
+desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self
+is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and
+desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is
+presupposed, reified, and rationalized.
+This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding
+the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
+regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
+differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a
+~
+consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
+gender, and desire.
+The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories
+of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within
+the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality
+and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the
+Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35
+Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization
+of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific
+mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary
+categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus
+of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience,
+behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this
+ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of
+sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any
+discursive account of sexuality.
+Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite,
+Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
+a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the
+sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the
+true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
+she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
+govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
+terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault,
+Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the
+~
+disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
+her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her
+anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality)
+implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the
+identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the
+cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as
+qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere.
+As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered
+experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and
+hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes,
+essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine,
+Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the
+postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and
+hierarchy, a regulatory fiction.
+If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and
+to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that
+man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine
+attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the
+gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman”
+as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion
+of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the
+compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences,
+then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman
+as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that
+fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility.
+The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the
+psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines
+~
+of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
+conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant
+adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they
+are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of
+gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if
+these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently
+created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the
+ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous.
+In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
+practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse
+of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative—
+that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense,
+gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
+said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
+relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there
+is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a
+fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application
+that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we
+might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
+expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
+the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
+vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of
+Displacement
+A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is
+argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a
+~
+transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
+appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other
+hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical
+locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that
+there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the
+performative construction of gender within the material practices of
+culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would
+confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual
+space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the
+Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes:
+A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the
+cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the
+oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
+Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
+an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging
+to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct
+perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40
+
+Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual
+desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could
+liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41
+Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an
+institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
+view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would
+understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
+economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating
+~
+mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
+of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig,
+language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its
+structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of
+another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping
+the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose
+the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse
+that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like
+Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine
+and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on
+Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig
+asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43
+Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate
+and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language
+to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically
+transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and,
+hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The
+linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to
+restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual
+desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as
+well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the
+category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig
+appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call
+for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the
+construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures
+outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine
+form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be
+~
+understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
+the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more
+diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification
+invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital
+norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to
+deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely
+those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and
+effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of
+development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual
+matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what
+extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of
+normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model
+of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what
+extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What
+possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself?
+Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
+unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks
+to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the
+marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she
+both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of
+the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands
+that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
+regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of
+heterosexist oppression in Wittig.
+In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud,
+sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of
+~
+struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
+mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the
+Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create
+sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions
+of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars
+the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation
+between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly,
+the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father
+requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the
+rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that
+reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48
+The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in
+opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical
+reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an
+expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable
+absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of
+that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and
+Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of
+sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the
+dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual
+identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous
+ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the
+French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking
+replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect
+the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed
+sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very
+~
+impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
+feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence
+through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only
+that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs
+identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as
+a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the
+ground for the insurrections against him).
+The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there
+is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the
+mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality.
+Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is
+understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is
+no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set
+of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of
+the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of
+substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her
+existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person,
+to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the
+paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is
+perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52
+But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal
+trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a
+law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its
+authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that
+sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation
+of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the
+law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before”
+of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted
+modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative
+~
+framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
+inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed
+to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not
+have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or
+“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the
+juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently
+generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that
+emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication
+or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy
+of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and
+inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely
+exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the
+boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible.
+The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of
+significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom
+have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of
+Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual
+constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in
+which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even
+within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The
+same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality.
+Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from
+a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific
+feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that
+biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here
+through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether
+it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization
+of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize
+~
+that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
+off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
+is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed
+within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine
+pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If
+so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction?
+The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice
+has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the
+terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in
+terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence
+of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a
+masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed
+project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if
+a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of
+the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed
+within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative
+sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural
+impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones
+the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This
+critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of
+power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its
+consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified”
+sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
+of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in
+terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
+“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.
+~
+If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
+its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to
+acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there
+forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of
+“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
+intelligibility that govern gendered life?
+Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the
+simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of
+specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch”
+and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
+as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And
+neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of
+heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight
+may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization
+of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in
+non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed
+status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not
+as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of
+this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the
+idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs
+circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do
+gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation
+exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through
+~
+hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
+constructs by which they are mobilized?
+Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and
+among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive
+and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural
+configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention,
+exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the
+“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The
+force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their
+convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized
+ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as
+if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the
+cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges:
+What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself?
+If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that
+escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively
+produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what
+constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender?
+Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears
+to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not
+always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that
+~
+infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
+complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to
+hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of
+these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of
+sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning,
+then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility
+of a disruption of their univocal posturing.
+Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional
+philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being
+a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology.
+The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object
+of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of
+its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those
+terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the
+“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender
+ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of
+the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate
+and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization.
+If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born,
+but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in
+process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to
+originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the
+most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious
+practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for
+Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a
+telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
+is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
+highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the
+~
+appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
+of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
+appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for
+those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that
+police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that
+create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a
+part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on
+the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that
+have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that
+have constituted its contingent ontologies.
+The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of
+sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes
+outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those
+regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the
+binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as
+regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power
+regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter
+considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting
+signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically
+signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of
+dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively
+enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its
+naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues,
+then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support
+masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble,
+not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the
+mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
+constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing
+as the foundational illusions of identity.
+~
+2
+
+Prohibition, Psychoanalysis,
+and the Production
+of the Heterosexual Matrix
+The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality
+represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight
+mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality.
+—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind”
+
+On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin,
+a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an
+imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the
+history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether
+prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or
+matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a
+beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind
+these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a
+reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon.
+Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended
+to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme
+has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some
+feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs
+within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
+to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct
+~
+articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
+feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against
+racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important
+to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy
+as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration
+from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary
+past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic
+reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
+The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost
+always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
+the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and
+necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a
+state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the
+law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that,
+by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past,
+makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability.
+Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a
+utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that
+promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
+new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the
+terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present
+state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law,
+then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory
+fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or
+antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory
+becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic
+~
+gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
+ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome.
+Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those
+feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge
+various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or
+key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories
+which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women.
+As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the
+contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of
+oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however,
+whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals.
+Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist
+theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently
+transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or
+“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect
+that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is
+before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins
+to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship.
+This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized
+foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of
+~
+domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
+culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which
+culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it
+into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the
+model of domination.
+Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have
+argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
+female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured
+as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
+with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered
+to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an
+opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
+and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that
+construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the
+discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing
+framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of
+“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are
+the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they
+serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very
+designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to
+be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3
+The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be
+rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to
+think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining.
+Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be
+~
+no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
+serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical
+assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism
+whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only
+the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status,
+but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.
+How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
+Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful
+to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery
+of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal
+of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
+theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism,
+and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status—
+is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it
+inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To
+what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place?
+i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange
+Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in
+accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure
+of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship.
+According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange
+that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women,
+given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes
+“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only
+~
+serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
+words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men;
+she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being
+the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific
+kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion
+of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As
+wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of
+men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the
+patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they
+bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a
+relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a
+common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity.
+The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure
+human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that
+he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete
+cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical
+structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can
+be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work
+(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the
+questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this
+universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic
+describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human
+character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”
+~
+to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
+women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of
+positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative
+logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems
+always require the construction of socially impossible identities to
+occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
+marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a
+major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions
+whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss.
+The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested
+within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship
+of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation
+within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms
+presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is
+presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning.
+This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
+totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness
+within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and
+with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss
+refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of
+binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As
+a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the
+operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement.
+For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established
+through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where
+the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established
+between men and the women who effect the differentiation between
+~
+men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
+moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a
+Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But
+what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first
+in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating
+mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit,
+male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As
+Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on
+an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal
+clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls
+“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a
+relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men,
+but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9
+In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest
+taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds:
+Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply
+that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of
+exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the
+means of binding men together.
+
+The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss
+understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and
+unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays
+on the Theory of Sexuality).
+~
+The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
+the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men
+and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women.
+Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought
+must have required that women, like words, should be things that were
+exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from
+the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective
+position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an
+inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in
+which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby
+becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on
+what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work,
+Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of
+reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity
+between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the
+unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality.
+If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and
+can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain
+either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual
+difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose
+that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does
+“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it
+produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law
+itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive?
+The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship
+that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the
+~
+incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
+anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges
+that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds,
+he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a
+pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of
+the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the
+mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance
+undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying
+a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an
+ancient and lasting dream.”11
+In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious
+incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its
+power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it
+evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at
+all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides
+insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of
+incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with
+assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in
+no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest
+that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are
+generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That
+incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not
+also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms
+become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their
+prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous
+practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription?
+For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest
+between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated
+as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality
+constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,
+~
+and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
+naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency
+are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere
+assumed within this founding structuralist frame.
+The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of
+culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic
+structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the
+incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of
+kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take
+place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity
+apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the
+Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile
+entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression
+that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly
+barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery
+of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the
+subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural
+production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language
+inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of
+its referential gestures.
+ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade
+To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to
+confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western
+metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question
+~
+“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
+and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the
+paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the
+characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
+gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is
+itself pre-ontological.
+There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being,
+without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing
+signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition
+of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus
+denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other
+words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
+that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but
+the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
+means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
+to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
+to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
+dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
+lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests
+that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the
+masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
+and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
+This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance
+or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the
+mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of
+men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The
+interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of
+~
+failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
+own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in
+a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the
+terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the
+inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction
+and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real.
+If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of
+signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense
+to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly
+crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame
+that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the
+structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this
+scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in
+terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression,
+one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but
+whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions
+that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
+subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding
+signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the
+(now repressed) maternal body.
+The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
+thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
+to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual
+possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
+everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy.
+This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women
+reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes
+essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the
+basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it
+~
+serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
+the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced
+maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be
+precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also
+and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to
+repression and individuation.
+Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain
+the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding
+postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would
+break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position.
+In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent
+masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the
+sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in
+their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being”
+the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to
+reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that
+“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify
+the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The
+division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is
+established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic
+dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both
+masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging
+to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by
+either position.
+To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its
+object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and
+promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of
+exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the
+mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the
+emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is
+necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully
+reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of
+~
+women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
+the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be
+nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity
+of the Phallus.
+On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to
+“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and
+can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having”
+and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic
+failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these
+repeated impossibilities.
+But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that
+embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done
+through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the
+feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the
+Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”:
+Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a
+having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the
+contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject
+in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be
+signified.16
+
+In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to
+refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well
+as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the
+position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows
+from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the
+‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said
+not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on
+the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems
+that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is
+~
+characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
+unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of
+behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84).
+Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it
+suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the
+ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would
+appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of
+being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to
+the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that
+there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the
+masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable
+of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and
+displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy.
+At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the
+ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade
+may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other
+hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented
+by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s
+desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would
+engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery
+distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the
+“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by
+Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in
+order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained
+suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18
+~
+Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
+as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time.
+Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan
+Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
+interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated
+and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some
+way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual
+possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of
+a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests,
+transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
+to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the
+masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position?
+Lacan continues the quotation cited above:
+Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the
+phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman
+will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes
+through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be
+desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in
+the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love.
+Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84)
+
+If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic
+Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might
+so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential
+~
+part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
+part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that
+must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the
+unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that
+attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is
+this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the
+core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must
+be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore,
+is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order
+to be that lack that confirms?
+Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of
+the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of
+love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the
+object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of
+love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals
+suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals
+are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure
+of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in
+effect, twice lost.
+Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from
+a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love”
+(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently
+elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone
+who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding
+disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment
+recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade.
+One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to
+a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the
+expense of desire.
+Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with
+~
+the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
+the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if
+female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear,
+and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that
+female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as
+observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it
+the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what
+clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment”
+and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear
+to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can
+understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is
+presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as
+the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account
+not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and
+whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the
+essential character of the women who effectively refuse him?
+In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to
+make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to
+understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way
+to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in
+the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well.
+The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this
+loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which
+is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through
+the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then
+wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is
+~
+the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
+refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the
+refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed,
+becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is
+never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal
+boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the
+process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy.
+Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms
+of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at
+first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the
+comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of
+Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into
+heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the
+“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual
+and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of
+Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s
+facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane
+perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate
+types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with
+who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display
+strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the
+classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of
+attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to
+display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation
+among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that
+unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity
+between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an
+instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex.
+And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies
+through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning
+~
+of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
+would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a
+woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the
+acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual
+or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in
+order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes:
+Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their
+heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall
+attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a
+mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared
+from men. (35)
+
+It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the
+homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under
+notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much
+different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt
+differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic
+“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to
+the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained
+from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the
+supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes
+count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus,
+the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire.
+Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be
+interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order
+to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured
+through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some
+consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over
+~
+the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
+father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user
+of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating
+desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of
+woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language.
+Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual
+man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between
+male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman
+who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of
+taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on
+by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from
+others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes
+on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from
+the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
+is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that
+allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly,
+because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that
+the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words,
+the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both
+desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and
+Riviere apparently do.
+But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the
+analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification,
+but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s
+typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a
+“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women
+who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of
+their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in
+other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is
+~
+here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
+sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it
+would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female
+homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to
+read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious
+typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage.
+One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade
+wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men
+and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely
+because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she
+fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to
+deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women
+sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual
+exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or,
+at least, that has none that she will name.
+Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is
+masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from
+the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she
+suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”:
+The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw
+the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My
+suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether
+radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38)
+
+This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and
+the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the
+~
+Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
+such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the
+denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24
+Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine
+identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female
+object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may
+reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the
+hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd
+form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the
+melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic
+inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality.
+One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is,
+of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture,
+her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself
+both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine
+identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that
+she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids
+herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that
+accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26
+Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a
+discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s
+analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because
+that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her
+as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her
+castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest
+over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and
+~
+essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
+her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might
+usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and
+what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the
+position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s
+aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably,
+reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the
+authority of the speaking subject?
+We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes.
+The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in
+the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in
+the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute
+their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still
+not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some
+psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the
+exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a
+bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is
+assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that
+identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is,
+through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the
+binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality
+that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality
+shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it
+purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through
+which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality”
+that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a
+~
+later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
+practices of normative heterosexuality.
+Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary
+or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and
+that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on
+the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is
+always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which
+the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will
+necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental
+divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression,
+is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a
+prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose
+writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the
+law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of
+Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality,
+and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the
+artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as
+the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well.
+Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely
+because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the
+accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the
+~
+drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
+And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules
+that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is
+clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined
+epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual
+ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the
+“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of
+sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result.
+The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an
+impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
+restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality
+and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In
+marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the
+Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for
+Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and
+paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could
+not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through
+the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position
+of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge
+within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical
+past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that
+does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary
+speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality.
+The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an
+account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that
+~
+proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
+of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The
+injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic
+always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
+consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas
+of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
+be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
+humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
+that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls
+the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
+those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward.
+That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the
+demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct
+from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that
+eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic
+as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity.
+This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively
+undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative
+imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure
+of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old
+Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the
+comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the
+permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this
+comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it
+claims to be unable to overcome.
+Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”
+~
+How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
+of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power)
+that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the
+paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which
+the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological
+impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that
+points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is
+symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative
+powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility.
+What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the
+trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and
+self-subjection?
+iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender
+Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir:
+Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the
+melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of
+gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of
+melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only
+alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id
+(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient
+structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the
+1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing
+another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said
+to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on
+attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of
+imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome
+through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other
+~
+within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
+love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply
+momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in
+effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent
+relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the
+other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic
+identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic
+cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved
+person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud
+makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is
+crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.”
+In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization
+described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks:
+we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by
+supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost
+has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis
+has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did
+not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know
+how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to
+understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18)
+
+As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds,
+however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the
+acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that
+this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up
+its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in
+~
+tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
+those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves
+becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the
+incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for
+the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited
+heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other
+objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual
+union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself
+with him” (21).
+In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object
+cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of
+a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud
+does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the
+process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a
+bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does.
+The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and
+Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to
+seduce the mother.
+Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why
+the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude
+toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be
+that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be
+attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
+above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23,
+n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly,
+Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the
+~
+two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
+result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the
+heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated,
+but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally
+sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather
+than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation
+of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
+the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently,
+the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis.
+Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother
+(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire
+who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding
+moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the
+mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through
+identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in
+which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there
+are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic
+landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and
+disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object
+choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and
+sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place.
+For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result
+either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is
+~
+found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
+which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of
+masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud
+avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22).
+What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in
+consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each
+of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to
+keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects
+or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what
+traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a
+“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object
+choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the
+father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin,
+despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual
+matrix for desire?
+The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine
+and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect,
+never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither
+is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl
+may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an
+object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity
+and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,
+~
+within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
+and only opposites attract.
+But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such
+dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity
+acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional,
+then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities
+are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional
+sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can
+we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and,
+secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the
+self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications.
+In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical
+attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a
+lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though
+the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is
+“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an
+interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and
+Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice
+or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that
+the internalized object now berates the ego:
+If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the
+melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often
+the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself,
+but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else,
+some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . .
+the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have
+been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169)
+
+The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization
+becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only
+
+~
+because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the
+object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled.
+In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of
+libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that
+cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that
+the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole
+condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other
+words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia
+becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud
+remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego
+assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon
+the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the
+object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation.
+What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and
+its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a
+moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are
+reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external
+mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably
+heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego
+changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits
+its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego
+by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to
+turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities
+of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36
+The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali-
+
+~
+zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is
+a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the
+successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity:
+The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest
+object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted
+by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also
+comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your
+father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his
+prerogative.” (24)
+
+The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and
+taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity
+through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The
+internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love,
+but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The
+prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed,
+repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an
+interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution
+to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification
+and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire.
+As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications
+substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence
+of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
+of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of
+heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects
+gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to
+that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies
+~
+with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
+and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent
+to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
+and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
+object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
+more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so
+that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an
+original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved.
+But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
+implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and
+masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of
+that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed
+object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the
+construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily
+to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of
+identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the
+consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the
+body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition
+moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation,
+whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of
+“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of
+affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of
+the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by
+the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal.
+In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means:
+separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal
+situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set
+of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which
+“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and
+energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not
+~
+explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
+homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo
+against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions”
+by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and
+young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that
+Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are
+effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete
+gender identity and heterosexuality.
+Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process
+whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is
+untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of
+dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure
+which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are
+trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the
+name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes
+the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the
+law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears
+disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly
+“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic
+kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of
+the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the
+law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical
+continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as
+its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations.
+What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and
+~
+to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
+of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis
+for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms,
+but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault,
+subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and
+inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault
+argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed
+is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own
+self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a
+discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in
+that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to
+maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in
+question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law
+constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and
+invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in
+effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.”
+The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a
+repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in
+the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally
+homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the
+prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives
+which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence
+into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field
+deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence
+that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements.
+Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts
+not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,
+~
+most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
+from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the
+unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate.
+iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits
+of Identification
+The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id
+offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed,
+of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity
+and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts
+those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting
+and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of
+any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having”
+or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of
+the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of
+any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the
+self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know
+the source and object of its desire.
+For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question
+of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and
+its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and
+clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within
+the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce
+precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders
+into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of
+the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay
+~
+and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
+maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the
+semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in
+the following chapter.
+What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the
+consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The
+recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it
+seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal
+determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair.
+Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is
+impervious to historical variability and possibility.
+As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity
+in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although
+the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the
+law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less
+deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to
+acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in
+which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to
+culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
+origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the
+repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational
+moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even
+though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law,
+is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself.
+The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from
+psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances
+~
+within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
+feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the
+possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible
+to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine
+and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
+that “the” law may not even be singular.
+The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to
+be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to
+be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space
+as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In
+agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a
+process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined,
+and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such
+spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are
+“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated
+space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as
+its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as
+an incorporated space.
+Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that
+serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but
+acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs
+more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended
+grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some
+way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty
+mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The
+successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved
+through the formation of words which both signify and displace that
+object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially
+metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass
+~
+poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
+melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it
+maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself.
+As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the
+Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the
+possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is
+necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of
+desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal
+body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out
+of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy—
+results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the
+maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term,
+and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of
+the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds.
+When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it
+makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that
+identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above,
+gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that
+encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living
+versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation
+literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the
+body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal
+truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in
+given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating
+melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable
+object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with
+the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the
+compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law.
+The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against
+~
+homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
+which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In
+the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which
+heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained
+through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object,
+argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object
+requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is
+not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at
+all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely
+safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial.
+Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the
+denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of
+repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it
+is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a
+‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a
+psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible
+desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be
+felt or known.
+Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the
+developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly
+pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of
+that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims.
+Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim
+together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated
+through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure
+which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal
+space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia
+operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love
+~
+der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
+the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment
+of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment
+and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief.
+Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable
+may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure
+of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is
+neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the
+heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is
+in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In
+other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires.
+But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this
+incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an
+enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own
+interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation
+is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its
+melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.”
+What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming
+naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and
+parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in
+the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such
+descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed
+~
+or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
+body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in
+some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life.
+Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which
+serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place
+within the matrix of gender norms.42
+Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual
+pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly,
+pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of
+parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the
+transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body
+not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy
+of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself.
+Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an
+altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
+might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary
+condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on
+which it works.
+Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to
+the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and
+the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized
+heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes
+and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality.
+The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is
+parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause
+~
+acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
+reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex”
+designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
+desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that
+transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the
+body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and
+desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or
+encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible
+anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized
+sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable
+homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he
+never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the
+empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not
+only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the
+very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The
+love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an
+impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has
+that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual
+desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign
+must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in
+favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality.
+v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power
+Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has
+guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual
+matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the
+juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates
+the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to
+the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the
+Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the
+~
+primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
+proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be
+reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several
+cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would
+a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique
+mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most
+influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle
+Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article,
+Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article
+might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame.
+Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the
+prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on
+sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and
+reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and
+Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros.
+Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general
+“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion
+and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the
+human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation,
+however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and
+consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own
+genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions,
+but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary”
+dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we
+~
+conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
+the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its
+desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted.
+Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes:
+the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon
+the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides
+the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173)
+
+Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the
+particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved,
+exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union
+between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo
+against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes:
+the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a
+taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed
+toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in
+both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180)
+
+Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations.
+In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females
+into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural
+institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of
+women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws
+which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,
+~
+the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
+against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains
+that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a
+gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189).
+The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a
+primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of
+an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual
+possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the
+Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo,
+that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law
+produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
+the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the
+creation of that law.
+Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and
+gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a
+“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed
+subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires
+a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is
+in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And
+yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking,
+is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a
+belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by
+the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language,
+then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before”
+will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does
+the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally
+(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the
+
+~
+“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes
+an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence.
+Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a
+primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and
+presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of
+femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for
+both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the
+traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality
+and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the
+compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
+and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204).
+Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
+that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities
+to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
+of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of
+gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in
+what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing
+but unclarified implications of her analysis.
+Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently
+sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed
+have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual
+form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear;
+in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi-
+
+~
+Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads
+her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory
+heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of
+bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin
+has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
+which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law.
+If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of
+knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal
+sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the
+structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what
+relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of
+gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order
+to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive?
+Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of
+Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and
+that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire
+it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be
+its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the
+very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and
+necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its
+repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures;
+desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture
+whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power.
+The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit
+incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities
+through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to
+guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are
+anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over
+~
+what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
+meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to
+claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant
+framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim
+the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it
+exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form.
+My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the
+incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the
+generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its
+juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety
+of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in
+advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we
+extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that
+the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized
+in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might
+be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as
+well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an
+“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a
+production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition.
+If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a
+wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire
+both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame
+law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive
+from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo.
+Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire
+and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that
+the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire
+~
+in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
+is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly
+stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed
+parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification.
+But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of
+the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced
+and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the
+incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and
+if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced
+in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to
+remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis,
+bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon
+their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive
+possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and
+homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes
+the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of
+bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48
+The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves
+as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of
+that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete
+cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What
+remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing
+cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of
+intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized,
+not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini-
+
+~
+mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to
+gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully
+within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory
+which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive
+subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the
+very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I
+will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never
+be translated into other cultural practices.
+In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed
+to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the
+terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire
+and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of
+the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This
+full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the
+irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that
+that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution
+of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal
+libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can
+only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this
+case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always
+speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes
+the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond”
+is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the
+Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of
+
+~
+what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is
+“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the
+start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the
+account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the
+split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence
+at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy,
+revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a
+perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin
+in the name of subversion inevitably belated.
+
+~
+3
+
+Subversive Bodily Acts
+i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva
+Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears
+to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a
+specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
+principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful
+language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of
+primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child
+on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who
+emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early
+dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language
+is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by
+suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body)
+and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place.
+Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural
+meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the
+maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language
+occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
+Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion
+within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original
+~
+libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
+within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to
+disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law.
+Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to
+displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts
+to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes
+that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it
+assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those
+terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony?
+The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several
+steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of
+effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to
+accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple
+drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but
+which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest
+in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal
+economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem
+emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion
+cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained
+presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of
+cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension
+of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of
+language which never can be consistently maintained.
+~
+In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
+ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and
+what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva
+describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior
+to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a
+paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural
+reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively
+reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction
+and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity
+is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a
+given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and
+primary cause.
+Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear
+that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as
+anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony
+of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political
+strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of
+drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of
+the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it
+seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never
+become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I
+will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective
+strategy of subversion.
+Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number
+of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their
+emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements
+of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that
+the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the
+~
+semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
+which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech.
+As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for
+a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the
+plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she
+maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of
+primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms
+of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple
+sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of
+the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the
+requirements of univocal designation.
+In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic
+function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives
+in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that
+in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic]
+place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of
+univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated
+or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against
+the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their
+repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives
+manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity,
+these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work,
+she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to
+the modality [of] primary process.”3
+In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva
+ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic
+terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic
+obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only
+~
+those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
+dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other
+words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather
+than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that
+jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that
+desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal
+body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the
+“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse
+prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike
+effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the
+mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as
+the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as
+distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But
+this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it
+thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself
+in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5
+The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the
+Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to
+vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words
+to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two
+modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood
+as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the
+semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition,
+mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely
+signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests
+upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it
+becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and
+univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of
+~
+the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
+univocal signification. Kristeva writes:
+In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for
+example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints
+(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic
+elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
+
+For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests
+a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body:
+Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the
+contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language
+(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the
+cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7
+
+Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly
+appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject,
+where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the
+Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against
+the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of
+maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally
+signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
+would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of
+incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding
+law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from
+~
+within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
+libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state
+of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the
+ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the
+heterogeneity of drives.
+In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that,
+because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete
+identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a
+woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal
+signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language
+is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and,
+hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow
+that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the
+structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the
+founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire
+can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements
+that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the
+act of giving birth:
+By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she
+becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her
+instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently,
+more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9
+
+According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully
+reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because
+the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated
+off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from
+~
+the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
+never fully completed.
+As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to
+grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense,
+refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body
+is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a
+kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack.
+The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female
+“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female
+homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture:
+The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete
+absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm,
+sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a
+screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10
+
+For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides
+childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic.
+For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an
+unmediated way. And yet why is this the case?
+Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the
+Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the
+Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those
+which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task,
+then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to
+~
+tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
+as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the
+site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in
+culturally communicable form:
+The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by
+virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also
+attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of
+split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of
+the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth
+consists.11
+
+Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged
+practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic
+of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the
+autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The
+heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of
+displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law
+by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself.
+Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented
+in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the
+Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is
+impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of
+the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law
+challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva
+does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the
+prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the
+~
+subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
+version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s
+concealed foundation.
+This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law
+produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one
+hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible
+practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva
+does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from
+her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva
+poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always
+on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the
+incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and,
+because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality.
+For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual
+desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this
+drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of
+maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or
+through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity
+of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially
+sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual
+desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences
+for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of
+the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire
+would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to
+Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality
+and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked.
+How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience
+~
+as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
+identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism
+constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis?
+By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing
+lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs
+lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal
+and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law
+positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege.
+The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is
+precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a
+site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience
+is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a
+fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
+In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva
+appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression
+necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior
+to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain
+lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation
+itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her
+restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear
+encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a
+developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to
+culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”?
+Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience
+~
+from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
+its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
+not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural
+subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it
+appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to
+return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that
+escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed,
+beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law,
+temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they
+initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of
+culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion
+as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility.
+Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her
+postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of
+epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these
+drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives
+us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this
+answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend
+upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot,
+then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives
+through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed
+for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that
+which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives
+prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to
+attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation
+into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot
+reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other
+~
+words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
+effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with
+their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations
+are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves.
+This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider,
+for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse
+is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we
+have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order
+to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts
+are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover
+that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and
+are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception
+of maternal instincts:
+Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species
+that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of
+markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the
+life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic,
+unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the
+whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled
+drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13
+
+Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which,
+it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy,
+in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in
+avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these
+~
+various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
+moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents
+any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts
+with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the
+Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle
+of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly,
+that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends
+operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the
+way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her
+description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the
+very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has
+become a univocal signifier.
+Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to
+their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions
+about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive
+and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the
+hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed
+ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with
+the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity
+of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other
+cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which
+operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva
+believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would
+~
+ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
+to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed
+concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear
+and univocal.
+Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire,
+part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes
+an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity
+and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the
+semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of
+univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the
+principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations.
+Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having
+an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the
+way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it
+is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required
+and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the
+consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed,
+rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction
+of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand
+the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on
+women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of
+Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the
+desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and
+produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14
+What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal
+teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture?
+To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction
+between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of
+the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary
+~
+signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
+itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider
+the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her
+argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary
+processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing
+framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and
+for what purposes?
+By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which
+affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
+result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally
+constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship
+which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of
+desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders
+that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality.
+Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology
+of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this
+sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure
+generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that
+activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and
+poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
+uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of
+humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does
+the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
+female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very
+~
+order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
+In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality,
+he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . .
+[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex
+facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to
+cause the structure and meaning of desire:
+the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
+unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious
+unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus
+able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16
+
+For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to
+its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning
+within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an
+historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and
+affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce
+“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises
+the power relations responsible for its genesis.
+Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of
+the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a
+maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the
+structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive
+production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by
+which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the
+maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of
+all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,
+~
+rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
+female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self
+and the law of its desire.
+If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically
+specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality,
+itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the
+trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no
+longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon
+the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This
+very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends
+and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women.
+Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood
+are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the
+institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures
+of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and
+requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its
+reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural
+necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated
+maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law
+itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability.
+Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in
+which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural
+drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct
+produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do
+these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest,
+however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated
+upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider
+~
+whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
+which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of
+the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the
+object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may
+be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself.
+As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the
+mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and
+makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body
+that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be
+yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating
+in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order
+to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the
+oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and
+subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body
+beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from
+within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when
+the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of
+itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither
+to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future
+of cultural possibilities.
+ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics
+of Sexual Discontinuity
+Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those
+Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms
+of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a
+disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of
+theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we
+consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes
+the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that
+his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that
+~
+proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
+his own critical apparatus.
+Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality,
+Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of
+“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to
+doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to
+“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published
+in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided.
+A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also
+included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation
+of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is
+necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the
+critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s
+reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of
+Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that
+sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete
+relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
+“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual
+difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine
+against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text.
+In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that
+the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the
+other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within
+~
+discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
+reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18
+In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and
+causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as
+an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and
+continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes
+“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and
+power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
+power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment
+of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as
+repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted
+energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this
+juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only
+works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in
+this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations
+and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
+falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be
+recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power
+must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power
+which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity.
+the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it
+possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to
+sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
+
+~
+relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible
+urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154)
+
+Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they
+subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of
+power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to
+emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and,
+thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of
+departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into
+how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within
+discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model
+of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in
+his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some
+sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault
+remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal
+subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled
+than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to
+be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs
+those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex,
+gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and
+any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically
+extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/
+knowledge regime.
+In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin,
+Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of
+sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy
+dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and
+~
+physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
+within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides,
+according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a
+world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii).
+Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation
+imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of
+Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of
+emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the
+release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from
+the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or
+Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture.
+The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine
+Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History
+of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures
+of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition
+of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants
+to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to
+be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any
+specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a
+trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault
+officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we
+must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues
+that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is
+~
+always produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
+both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality
+before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory
+sexual politics.
+The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read
+Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the
+constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for
+sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust
+victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the
+time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the
+other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety
+and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although
+Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals,
+the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s
+own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what
+is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where
+one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably
+female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation
+that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents.
+Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a
+state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er
+suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward
+men, but finally toward the world as such.
+Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at
+school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate
+attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt
+and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes
+h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that
+effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and
+~
+effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
+obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of
+men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the
+journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide.
+One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a
+man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of
+the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed,
+Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely
+that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of
+univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of
+the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the
+pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law
+they are said to defy.
+The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian
+play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the
+alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we
+have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the
+productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative
+strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the
+specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context
+of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference
+reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical
+reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of
+Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of
+Herculine’s sexual world.
+Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality
+between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of
+female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine
+~
+we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
+French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within
+an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions
+produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and
+Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner
+of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about
+ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously,
+the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
+sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality
+and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself.
+The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young
+girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological
+doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If
+Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or
+chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently
+generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires,
+the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body,
+and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both
+causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity?
+Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle
+to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender
+which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself
+presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender
+confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
+and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er
+~
+anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
+and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a
+sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse
+on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of
+happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide.
+If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of
+confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as
+the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters”
+and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made
+possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her
+sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of
+women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once
+“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment,
+structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy
+limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly
+retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of
+female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather
+than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy
+the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for
+Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault
+wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject.
+But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he
+wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in
+homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to
+the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following
+description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once
+~
+invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
+pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes
+astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another”
+(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to
+accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions
+the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the
+eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces
+these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even
+within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er
+difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference
+is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire.
+S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she
+is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he
+contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it.
+The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the
+denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no
+longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex.
+Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but
+confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing
+the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to
+which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover,
+Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which
+challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic
+exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence
+and redistribution.
+But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level
+of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex”
+and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of
+~
+sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
+sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost
+Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a
+natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as
+“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough
+medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the
+heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very
+medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But
+what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve?
+If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as
+precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that
+he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the
+effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear
+whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something
+else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces
+sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be
+described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place
+of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether
+this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In
+other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality
+and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly
+didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity
+or parallel between his life and hers?
+~
+On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
+understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some
+sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks
+that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten
+to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that
+do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community
+of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable.
+“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel
+points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the
+textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the
+adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and
+Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it
+is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps
+Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in
+the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,”
+might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not
+in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such,
+especially as it applies to the categories of sex.
+Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are
+in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic
+distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of
+h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after
+some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of
+appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when
+she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!”
+(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in
+order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on
+homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there
+is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly
+among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female
+homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different
+~
+bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
+do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed
+“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This
+explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
+les choses):
+This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter
+that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my
+thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes
+with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing
+things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with
+collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20
+
+The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and
+particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre
+Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for
+Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of
+kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s
+now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference,
+designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s
+dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics,
+but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh
+of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface
+constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
+Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23
+In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa,
+Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to
+freeze” (105) those who encounter it.
+But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and
+Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which
+~
+consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
+as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable—
+that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one.
+But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive
+identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to
+the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it
+is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed,
+perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify
+for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification.
+But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems
+to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a
+laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he
+loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine,
+then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two
+positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it
+either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the
+jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of
+punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was
+not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he
+articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a
+devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then
+finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself
+from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation,
+s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully
+directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those
+who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love.
+At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence
+~
+paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
+incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into
+h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was
+abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he
+tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for
+abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures,
+deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence
+s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a
+sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother”
+(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through
+the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears
+as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal
+caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it
+were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which
+scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between
+being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object
+of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic
+structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy
+involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination
+is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the
+mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be
+constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive
+narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and
+neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of
+enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is
+better for all women than any “man” (107).
+S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early
+“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at
+the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early
+~
+refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
+phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very
+father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the
+tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my
+feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the
+anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier
+enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and
+whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs
+h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet
+underground!” (69).
+Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place
+Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not
+“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier,
+h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production,
+construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of
+the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and
+the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law,
+one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic
+and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are
+subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by
+death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its
+condition and its aim.
+After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid
+than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person”
+who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the
+~
+other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
+h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects
+h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law
+precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law
+naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other
+words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of
+“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical
+naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized
+instrument and sign.
+Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical
+law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside”
+within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of
+fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected,
+have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis.
+Concluding Unscientific Postscript
+Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the
+quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that
+become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although
+Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of
+Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his
+philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for
+~
+ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
+Foucaultian critique.
+One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
+to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With
+the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene,
+which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was
+discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or
+testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No.
+51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon
+which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions
+regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked.
+According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the
+Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA
+were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had
+XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and
+some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis
+they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but
+we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations.
+Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be
+some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of
+DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its
+usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
+expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA
+sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why
+it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact,
+still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y
+chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had
+somehow been misplaced.
+~
+Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
+with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their
+research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has
+chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female
+and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal
+criteria could provide.
+Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that
+haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA
+sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of
+females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that
+perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its
+absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males
+and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains
+hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his
+coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals
+from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous
+in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her
+article, “Life in the XY Corral”:
+the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm
+production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e.,
+precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and
+low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males
+because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . .
+Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal,
+[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328)
+
+Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not
+add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated
+by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as
+well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are
+~
+XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
+and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided
+by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were
+sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the
+experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary
+at all.
+But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which
+that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice
+that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher
+and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that
+ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of
+the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence
+of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an
+object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active
+and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions
+about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew
+and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes
+Eicher and Washburn:
+Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y
+chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the
+induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant)
+event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive
+(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as
+much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the
+induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any
+cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written
+about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the
+undifferentiated gonad. (325)
+
+In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under
+~
+tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
+argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research
+orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated
+cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and
+well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that
+would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning
+and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during
+differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic
+interactions alter during differentation” (323–24).
+The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general
+trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from
+the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the
+descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the
+description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at
+hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that
+femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence
+of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would
+invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is
+not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself
+frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of
+those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior
+to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more
+complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates
+in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation
+in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.
+~
+Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
+when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is
+male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex?
+One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be
+resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary
+framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek
+recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the
+claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three
+Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange,
+that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world
+of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself
+constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies,
+about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to
+inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the
+categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within
+the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent,
+that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as
+one that might well be constructed differently.
+Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that
+Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in
+the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is
+interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those
+anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment.
+One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses
+that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external
+genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of
+reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the
+~
+male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
+to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather
+than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
+Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male
+body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s
+inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with
+the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work
+together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting,
+then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the
+last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority
+over the discourse of reproduction.
+This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance,
+according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates
+through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view,
+to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female”
+exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from
+a radical critique.
+iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and
+Fictive Sex
+Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body.
+—Monique Wittig
+
+Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a
+woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical,
+for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along?
+And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human
+who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that
+this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
+one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender
+~
+construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
+a gendered subject?
+Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the
+question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who
+do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute
+the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the
+human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in
+advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human
+who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural
+afterthought?
+Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of
+women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are
+taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with
+a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was
+willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that
+being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is
+an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed;
+sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause
+gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex;
+indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and
+whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the
+variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities
+of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body.
+Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones
+that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are
+radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to
+become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret
+male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction
+~
+ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
+the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way
+restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never
+be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of
+some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively,
+then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond
+the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new
+vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the
+binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But
+how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the
+fate of an impossible and vain utopian project?
+“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in
+an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what
+sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig
+offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from
+her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is
+a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to
+divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a
+division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig,
+there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is
+itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not
+natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is
+the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only
+exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A
+~
+lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
+terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains,
+transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is
+neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is
+beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding
+presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might
+say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not
+born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if
+one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man.
+Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a
+category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable
+political categories of description.
+Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the
+political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This
+relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary
+in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one
+sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is
+always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this
+system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig,
+then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male
+sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex,
+trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because
+“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no
+sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into
+sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues
+that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become
+ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex
+is necessarily feminine.
+Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in
+~
+the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
+system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it.
+As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire
+discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans
+and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her
+theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that
+regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender.
+Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions
+forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a
+“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience,
+Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a
+datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no
+longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a
+violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is
+“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused,
+but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that
+her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge:
+Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical
+features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a
+physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic
+construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social
+system), through the network of relationships in which they are
+perceived.27
+
+“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side
+of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that
+these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the
+~
+reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
+gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within
+the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on
+an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a
+language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
+Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body?
+An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
+forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous
+body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
+Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a
+“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction
+of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the
+“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the
+body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination
+those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate
+what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her
+theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the
+body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination.
+Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
+locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of
+reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted
+ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
+be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
+that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly
+refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying
+structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation
+~
+of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
+contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
+that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and
+deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
+The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
+authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex
+and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
+Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
+reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively
+considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
+domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that
+both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/
+perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual
+difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies
+and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of
+nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28
+“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category
+of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon
+the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the
+“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences,
+“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because
+they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the
+speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of
+that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s
+own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:
+~
+“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
+gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To
+speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech;
+hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction,
+the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language
+that asserts it.
+The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous.
+Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical
+and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and
+interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and
+theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds,
+even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms
+of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather,
+one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had
+to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the
+cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression.
+Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity
+of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33
+Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through
+locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and,
+ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that
+identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male
+and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no
+sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of
+men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists:
+“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The
+universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated
+by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act,
+perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the
+level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34
+~
+Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
+the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an
+absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,”
+which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women”
+altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman,
+the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the
+invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject
+could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking
+presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig
+describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the
+power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I”
+assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to
+speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and
+power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the
+feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36
+Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology
+of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off
+the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial
+or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a
+full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The
+social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior
+ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion
+~
+of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
+hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal
+mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she
+writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal
+to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access,
+however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity
+of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she
+argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being
+is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes
+not only the totality of language, but the unity of being.
+If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within
+the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence,
+Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a
+Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on
+an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and
+invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction
+gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social
+relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion
+of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its
+universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the
+straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she
+not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the
+totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts.
+Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of
+ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the
+universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection.
+Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary
+unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs
+through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.
+~
+Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
+about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a
+tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity.
+Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration,
+suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and
+proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an
+absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is
+one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for
+being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.”
+In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of
+the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In
+that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two
+sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are
+individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically
+entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds
+to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any
+general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular
+property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization.
+The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work
+in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
+Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating
+social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are
+measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept
+and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a
+material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these
+“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be
+judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.
+~
+Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
+that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered,
+however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the
+universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is
+quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,”
+even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for
+women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized
+through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the
+speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view.
+The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his
+or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The
+literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the
+hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular
+in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms.
+To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy
+the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of
+a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise
+unified ontology.
+Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between
+abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as
+Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so
+she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of
+language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . .
+words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise
+made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that
+within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with
+the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les
+Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,
+~
+indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
+universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize
+the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48
+In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that
+only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively
+lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish
+the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can
+wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic
+and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals,
+but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position
+of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a
+set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject
+becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective
+that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the
+world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory
+heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the
+latter’s epistemic hegemony.
+In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion
+of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality
+with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It
+can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it
+can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to
+speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point
+of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that
+speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an
+ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and
+concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,
+~
+the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
+in her theoretical essays all along.51
+Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot
+be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes:
+I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which
+cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole
+life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we
+are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52
+
+As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within
+Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to
+falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the
+radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime.
+But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of
+heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as
+a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist
+power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution.
+Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely
+problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice
+and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically
+“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by
+numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay
+culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as
+they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to
+~
+ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
+heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not
+follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further,
+Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the
+kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind.
+My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig
+between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that
+there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian
+sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse
+centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality;
+heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
+informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
+describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
+impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic
+elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of
+the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not
+always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and
+the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with
+these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory
+law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into
+heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a
+constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective.
+Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate
+with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position
+is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
+for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
+Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
+contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the
+~
+normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
+lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged
+in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that
+proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls,
+even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and
+destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood
+as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the
+oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other
+hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical
+meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing
+sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation,
+the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs
+a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply
+possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation
+between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
+the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense
+is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an
+assumption surely suspect.
+Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that
+appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back
+into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she
+likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and
+resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a
+culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that
+constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly,
+there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine
+~
+identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
+interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
+prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite
+direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case,
+the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the
+“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
+Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire
+admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the
+sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can
+shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay
+claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief,
+depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch
+and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual
+exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as
+internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may
+recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same
+time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that
+question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source
+of their erotic significance.
+Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme
+identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a
+natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist
+among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in
+Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the
+various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate
+descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is
+established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of
+~
+bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
+that they themselves invested in the category.
+For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual
+contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of
+choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood
+to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said
+to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining
+and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be
+neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my
+view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on
+the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the
+impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence.
+Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale
+refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very
+terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are
+coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed
+than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless
+pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off.
+The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and
+lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and
+lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or
+reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and
+denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual
+constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of
+power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of
+parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its
+claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond
+sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a
+problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works
+~
+appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
+which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body
+and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political
+transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms
+and to deprive them of their legitimating functions.
+Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific
+meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome
+the split between materiality and representation that characterizes
+“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas
+to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base,
+strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she
+understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the
+male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality
+are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to
+support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense,
+Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and
+to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality.
+Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a
+medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained
+for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible
+materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures
+and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the
+naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her
+aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to
+offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring
+~
+bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
+form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are
+always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For
+Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably
+constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct
+and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex.
+If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the
+binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive
+enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In
+The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its
+partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of
+attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the
+same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig
+clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a
+“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks
+those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the
+task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
+but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories.
+The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the
+violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for
+this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not
+to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and
+binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now
+represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that
+consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive
+redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to
+~
+belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
+assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,”
+but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this
+literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical
+use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings
+that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the
+tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple
+internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence
+against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
+out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem
+inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution,
+and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness.
+Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution
+of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is
+always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged
+among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs
+that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities.
+But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can
+this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of
+this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a
+way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well
+a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different
+centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency
+comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and
+~
+recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
+become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes.
+This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third
+gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal
+subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to
+the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction,
+its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories
+of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of
+the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole
+new languages of description.
+In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but,
+rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman,
+one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of
+women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism.
+This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But
+even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to
+decide the question of sexual “identity”?
+If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a
+self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming
+an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian
+no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts
+that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a
+“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a
+contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,”
+but also of “lesbian”?
+~
+Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
+homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a
+homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that
+construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of
+view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted
+through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that
+do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
+identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were
+not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed,
+required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it
+seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
+Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality
+deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result,
+that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in
+its oppressive forms.
+The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity
+themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to
+render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic.
+iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions
+“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that
+heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . .
+How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation,
+whether the sex underneath is true or not.”
+—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted
+in Esther Newton, Mother Camp
+
+Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have
+constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist
+~
+theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
+epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is
+shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express
+the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political
+shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political
+elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that
+identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site
+of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female
+body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
+gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body”
+itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that
+body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex?
+The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to
+presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
+of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive
+medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of
+suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse.
+There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which,
+prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century,
+understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or,
+more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception,
+sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine.
+There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where
+“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that
+can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in
+Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification,
+and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To
+what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology
+~
+adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
+as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent
+do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit
+hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the
+taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations
+are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance?
+Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the
+body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy?
+Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body
+is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body
+is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is
+“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
+understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction
+of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities
+are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through
+the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering
+destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of
+values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the
+speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through
+the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama”
+of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus
+vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault,
+“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture.
+Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his
+body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or
+for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the
+constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the
+body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,
+~
+requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
+writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and
+self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for
+Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an
+inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank
+page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
+must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated
+domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the
+body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in
+order for “culture” to emerge.
+By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault
+appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because
+this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he
+defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical
+investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break
+through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of
+cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of
+precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a
+genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a
+subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of
+the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of
+the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility.
+Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours
+of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish
+specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the
+boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing
+certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes
+of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:
+~
+ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
+between within and without, above and below, male and female, with
+and against, that a semblance of order is created.55
+
+Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction
+between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural
+means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a
+region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably
+binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot
+point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame.
+Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for
+understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
+maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that
+what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but
+that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become,
+within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist
+appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the
+body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she
+maintains, there are
+pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and
+which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or
+joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where
+the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined.
+A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed
+some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which
+should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger
+for someone.56
+
+~
+In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his
+Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness
+figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and
+homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a
+continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of
+the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted
+through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist
+graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable
+bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks
+that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its
+boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to
+read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59
+Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
+margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous.
+If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which
+open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and
+oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
+site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural
+presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless
+of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief
+the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside”
+the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy
+and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always
+conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural.
+
+~
+The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites
+of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices
+in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and
+orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex
+among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body
+in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution
+which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social)
+intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a
+consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its
+stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various
+bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered
+exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such
+exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine
+what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the
+regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed
+constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that
+might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61
+Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror
+begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject
+through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been
+expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered
+“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is
+effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the
+“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which
+are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes:
+nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the
+mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign
+of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I”
+expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in
+
+~
+their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the
+same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63
+
+The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation
+of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As
+Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism,
+homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that
+founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along
+sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of
+Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
+through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
+the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary
+tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
+those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes
+outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by
+which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In
+effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and
+outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body
+would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its
+surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but
+this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears.
+Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions
+of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make
+sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by
+cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation
+~
+tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
+subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos,
+then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of
+gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not
+how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a
+process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed.
+Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse
+and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive
+binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
+is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility
+of its hidden depth?
+From Interiority to Gender Performatives
+In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
+to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner”
+truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the
+doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his
+history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as
+Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in
+On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of
+prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a
+repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the
+prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is
+not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that
+bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body;
+there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of
+their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is
+at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external
+to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:
+~
+It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
+effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power
+that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66
+
+The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode
+of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The
+effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification
+of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the
+body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That
+lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In
+this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic
+space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually
+renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest,
+but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67
+The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface
+politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the
+disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of
+presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the
+gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying
+absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body
+politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We
+have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against
+homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of
+an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of
+the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the
+~
+der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
+and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
+significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive
+model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed
+as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe.
+According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired,
+wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the
+effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of
+the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but
+never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts,
+gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
+that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
+fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
+other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
+constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated
+as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of
+a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control
+that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity”
+of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core,
+an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation
+of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
+the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary
+~
+practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
+origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
+analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its
+fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its
+true identity.
+If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a
+fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems
+that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the
+truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother
+Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton
+suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender
+takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
+both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
+identity. Newton writes:
+At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
+‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is
+masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
+“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my
+essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69
+
+Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth
+and falsity.
+The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
+parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to
+~
+sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
+the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more
+complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a
+clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
+plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
+the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
+of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
+sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
+performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and
+both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the
+performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
+drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose),
+it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
+which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
+heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
+pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
+natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence,
+we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which
+avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their
+fabricated unity.
+The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
+there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the
+parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
+notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
+the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that
+double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
+which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be
+~
+more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
+effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification
+and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender
+identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
+styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
+original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
+original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender
+identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
+received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer
+laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
+a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
+construction.
+According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer
+Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
+Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
+wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
+practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the
+satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that
+there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it
+humor.70
+
+The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion
+for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
+be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
+In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.
+~
+stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
+and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
+actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive
+confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the
+inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of
+the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance
+will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that
+destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire.
+If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
+permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
+what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre
+would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest
+that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all
+never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a
+corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent
+construction of meaning.
+Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is
+an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to
+materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and
+to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal
+project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating
+force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of
+~
+duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
+Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a
+performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are
+part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture;
+indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right.
+Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender
+is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and
+without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a
+construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective
+agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders
+as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
+and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
+construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
+historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
+nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
+Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the
+peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which,
+in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes
+existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted,
+and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their
+originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible
+“cause” to be an “effect”?
+In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This
+repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of
+meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies
+that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered
+~
+tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
+inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic
+aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot
+be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found
+and consolidate the subject.
+Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of
+agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
+tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
+stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the
+stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane
+way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds
+constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation
+moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model
+of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
+social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
+which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
+precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
+which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
+come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
+norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to
+embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of
+acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized
+configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts
+that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity,
+but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and
+contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender
+transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
+between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
+or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
+identity as a politically tenuous construction.
+~
+If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
+then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to
+express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
+which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
+attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or
+distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity
+would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created
+through sustained social performances means that the very notions of
+an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also
+constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative
+character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender
+configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination
+and compulsory heterosexuality.
+Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
+incredible.
+
+~
+From Parody to Politics
+I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
+do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether
+it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in
+order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we”
+is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the
+term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of
+the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous
+or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or,
+at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
+theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and
+bodies, but of politics itself.
+The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume
+that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
+elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument
+is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is
+variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an
+existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
+its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in
+and through the other that has interested me here.
+~
+The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
+stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the
+subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
+usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains
+intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject.
+This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared
+necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that
+culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes
+(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive
+“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and
+(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse,
+where determination forecloses the possibility of agency.
+Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted
+environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally
+enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for
+example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender,
+but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point
+of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never
+fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness
+of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural
+predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates
+of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close
+with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is
+instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of
+exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It
+is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to
+~
+posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
+itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
+If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity
+is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates
+within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is
+not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are
+provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the
+legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices
+that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I
+pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The
+Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by
+Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses
+presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its
+world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as
+an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here
+belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very
+problematic of identity that it seeks to solve.
+What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an
+epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and
+how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What
+kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the
+invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled
+out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely
+documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object
+dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and
+distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a
+strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once
+~
+that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
+the knowability and recoverability of that Other.
+As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move
+within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in
+and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a
+necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary
+itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity
+to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification
+permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one
+possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of
+agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert
+piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many
+inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this
+appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks
+to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to
+qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent
+and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally
+intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a
+practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that
+inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic
+life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs
+by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves
+in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting
+unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific
+modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.
+~
+logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
+identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,”
+rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy
+and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed,
+when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the
+subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined
+by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a
+founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals
+itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the
+orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing
+signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative
+domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that
+contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within
+the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity
+becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated.
+Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through
+discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable
+object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees
+in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a
+transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who
+maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural
+field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the
+very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there.
+What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the
+~
+genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
+itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself
+here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests
+the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
+that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the
+real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which
+gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
+written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s
+“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the
+accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry
+within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between
+instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition
+are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to
+approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the
+rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits
+itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition
+that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so
+these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized
+performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself.
+Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the
+very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a
+failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a
+politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion
+of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And
+yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
+argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable.
+Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic
+practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them-
+
+~
+selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the
+effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive
+identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The
+parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender
+identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a
+subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it
+were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those
+hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration,
+reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status.
+I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed
+to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in
+order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously
+work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities
+that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative
+political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically,
+the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
+generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
+fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally
+determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status
+of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests
+the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction
+remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and
+determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and
+becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to
+establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit
+is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its
+own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a
+position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism
+
+~
+ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local
+possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those
+practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present
+the immanent possibility of contesting them.
+This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the
+very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the
+political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative
+cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in
+their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics?
+This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of
+sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of
+the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification,
+a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the
+inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as
+binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as
+enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as
+an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of
+“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual
+construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the
+mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are
+also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction
+and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of
+sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that
+presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and
+globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention.
+
+~
+If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these
+“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not
+only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that
+enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a
+feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might
+enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to
+repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
+There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political
+contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on
+sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a
+foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by
+installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground.
+The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which
+identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the
+foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has
+been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it
+presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every
+new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that
+already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as
+culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer
+fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer
+understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that
+belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
+
+~
+would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations
+of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that
+establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of
+sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local
+strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such?
+
+~
+
+Preface (1999)
+1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation
+of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the
+arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
+ratification of same-sex partnerships.
+2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
+Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and
+Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998.
+3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
+(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
+4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky
+Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los
+Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my
+arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of
+gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book.
+5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point.
+6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/
+Wellek/index.html.
+7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek,
+Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy
+Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
+
+~
+Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity.
+8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the
+notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only
+came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to
+account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
+Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997).
+9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the
+earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the
+melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of
+the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss
+that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or
+disavow the loss it has just articulated.
+10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and
+interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to
+contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real:
+Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences,
+Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126.
+11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose
+work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
+“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the
+postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the
+appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that
+emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the
+same time under conditions of domination.
+12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has
+been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject.
+I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions
+of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to
+Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at
+Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection.
+
+~
+13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most
+prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech.
+14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America
+(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
+other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
+gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at
+http://www.isna.org.
+15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances
+Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell,
+Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William
+Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava,
+Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for
+their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface
+was written.
+1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire
+1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History
+of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York:
+Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté
+de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses
+the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the
+productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not
+identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of
+productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of
+Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault,
+Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of
+sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under
+criticism in the final chapter.
+2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka
+and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan
+Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987).
+3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in
+History (New York: Macmillan, 1988).
+
+~
+4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of
+Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and
+Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp.
+283–302.
+5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The
+Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987).
+She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement
+sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that
+movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether
+uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the
+repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities
+that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the
+very instability that the foundationalist move creates.
+6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
+grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
+are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
+“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/
+epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to
+cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a
+stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female)
+that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory
+practice of heterosexuality.
+7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see
+chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.”
+8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements
+in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the
+Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press,
+1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
+Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge
+University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis
+of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies,
+see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological
+Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978).
+
+~
+9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of
+biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific
+basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender,
+vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on
+feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2,
+No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The
+Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique
+for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra
+Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University
+Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New
+Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
+was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in
+Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions
+(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex
+and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne
+Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men
+(New York: Norton, 1979).
+10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history
+of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed
+consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The
+Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century
+(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as
+an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986.
+11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in
+Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil
+Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987).
+12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York:
+Vintage, 1973), p. 301.
+13. Ibid., p. 38.
+14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies,
+Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986.
+15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s,
+Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn
+as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a
+
+~
+mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic
+relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the
+body itself.
+16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
+Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977).
+17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
+Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press,
+1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5,
+1986.
+18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi.
+19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.”
+20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz
+Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization
+through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of
+doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz
+Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323,
+originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil,
+1952]).
+21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and
+the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
+the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit.
+Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is
+clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of
+that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and
+Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be
+the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion
+for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first
+this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that
+
+~
+remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the
+ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed
+and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
+over feminine.
+22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary
+Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982.
+23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
+explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
+“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates
+politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of
+that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions
+. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the
+possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
+and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New
+York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113).
+24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La
+Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
+eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
+Women of Color Press, 1982).
+25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has
+Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
+Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
+Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10).
+26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2,
+Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20,
+see chapter 3, n. 49.
+27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two
+of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of
+
+~
+cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the
+terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual
+difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the
+Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so
+wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as
+a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and
+Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed
+for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that
+preexist and structure subject-formation itself.
+28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist
+Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other
+Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49.
+29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least
+to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
+Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
+30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
+Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original
+editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social
+function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to
+the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave
+ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality.
+31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche:
+Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta,
+1977), pp. 17–18.
+32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall
+1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25.
+
+~
+33. Ibid., p. 3.
+34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that
+“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other
+words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without
+“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that
+“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s
+Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall,
+Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed.
+(New York: Routledge, 1996).
+35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
+of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New
+York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
+Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French
+version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English
+translation.
+36. See chapter 2, section ii.
+37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x.
+38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press,
+1985), pp. 11–14.
+39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann
+(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45.
+40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion
+of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups
+to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977.
+The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex.
+41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
+Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
+(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114.
+42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration
+or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of
+structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender-
+
+~
+neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
+1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language.
+43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63.
+44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
+Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30.
+45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon,
+1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
+1973).
+46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase.
+47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the
+genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See,
+for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline
+of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton,
+1979).
+48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in
+various parts of chapter 2 of this text.
+49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987).
+50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The
+Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982).
+51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender
+(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is
+that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed
+roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90).
+52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the
+Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The
+“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the
+understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche.
+Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the
+law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the
+other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of
+the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a
+fictive and repressive notion.
+
+~
+53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
+Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston:
+Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and
+Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of
+Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual
+Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the
+Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber
+Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed
+with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann
+Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
+1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to
+Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and
+Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,”
+Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N.
+Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and
+Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71.
+54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure
+of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness
+through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See
+Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and
+Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of
+that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar
+College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that
+she did not.
+55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J.
+Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989).
+56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it
+is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of
+gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic
+ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson,
+
+~
+“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
+Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983).
+2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
+Heterosexual Matrix
+1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s
+“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
+provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and
+masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its
+attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as
+a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map
+that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time.
+Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language
+and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be
+fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the
+reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to
+an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of
+Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer
+exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic
+authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in
+Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana
+University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of
+this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the
+law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of
+that law through recourse to a time before the law.
+2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
+Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
+3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
+Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
+Routledge, 1990).
+4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women:
+Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of
+Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
+Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the
+
+~
+notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how
+women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the
+social bond between men.
+5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary
+Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496.
+6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist
+Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns
+Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of
+Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
+Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
+trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
+7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange—
+and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a
+social value. It provides the means of binding men together.”
+8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca:
+Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103.
+9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men:
+English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University
+Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of
+reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering
+attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and
+an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects
+of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object
+of discourse.
+10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
+as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1993).
+11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
+12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
+13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated
+jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother.
+14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master
+and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire:
+
+~
+Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999).
+15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment
+from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father
+onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
+mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
+Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
+femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980).
+16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques
+Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose,
+trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter,
+page references to this work will appear in the text.
+17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977),
+p. 131.
+18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here
+is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic
+of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is
+whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as
+genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which
+femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a
+fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann
+Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington:
+Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the
+Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982,
+pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17,
+Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and
+the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark
+Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary
+Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper,
+Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985).
+19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of
+Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the
+
+~
+consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which
+founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of
+disavowed losses.
+20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the
+text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order.
+21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
+Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986),
+pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of
+Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will
+appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows,
+“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.”
+22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther
+Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More
+Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance
+(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how
+radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of
+gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the
+presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find
+their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are
+themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a
+counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms.
+23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by
+bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
+Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
+Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and
+are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal.
+24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61.
+25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic
+
+~
+establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification,
+with the analysand that she describes in the article.
+26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85.
+27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
+Rose, p. 44.
+28. Ibid., p. 55.
+29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
+understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See
+his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de
+Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me.
+30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans.
+Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is
+created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery
+of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible
+through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the
+thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s
+Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most
+clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction
+between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in
+Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms,
+the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power,
+but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
+subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
+I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81)
+and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined
+status of the juridical law.
+31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73.
+32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art,
+ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S.
+Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir:
+Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun:
+Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter
+text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the
+
+~
+matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked
+with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of
+primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to
+the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to
+commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas
+the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the
+suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly
+and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern
+effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the
+psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood
+According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body
+Politics of Julia Kristeva.”
+33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id,
+trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia
+and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion
+of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul
+Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and
+Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip
+Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text.
+34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s
+“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic
+Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim
+(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195.
+35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of
+mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below.
+36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between
+the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does
+not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine
+Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
+the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New
+
+~
+York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
+engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan.
+37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81.
+38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale
+University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York:
+International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of
+the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press,
+1968).
+39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie,
+introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in
+L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and
+the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by
+Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of
+this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and
+Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in
+Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New
+York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the
+same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s
+Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer
+(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics
+of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp.
+3–18.
+40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68.
+41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes
+of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes.
+This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward
+by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a
+fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5).
+42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian
+Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the
+heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu-
+
+~
+ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that
+body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals
+the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and
+the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout
+the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on
+these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is
+understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and
+anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity
+into question.
+43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed
+by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego
+is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests
+that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development.
+Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface
+entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in
+Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins
+(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative
+account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the
+implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A
+Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale
+University Press, 1989).
+44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in
+the text.
+45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
+Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de
+Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality.
+46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View
+(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest.
+47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of
+Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980.
+
+~
+48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James
+Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7.
+49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought
+and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable
+narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which
+transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic
+order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting
+or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
+3. Subversive Bodily Acts
+1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol.
+3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118.
+2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984),
+p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris:
+Editions du Seuil, 1974).
+3. Ibid., p. 25.
+4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p.
+135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from
+two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and
+Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil,
+1969).
+5. Ibid., p. 135.
+6. Ibid., p. 134.
+7. Ibid., p. 136.
+8. Ibid.
+9. Ibid., p. 239.
+10. Ibid., pp. 239–240.
+11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen,
+“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia
+Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English,
+1985.
+12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239.
+
+~
+13. Ibid., p. 239.
+14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of
+Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4.
+15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he
+writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations
+are understood as sublimated reproductive desire.
+16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans.
+Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154.
+17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
+of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New
+York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
+Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text.
+18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
+unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
+pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a
+causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See
+chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted.
+19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James
+O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982–
+Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy,
+Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman
+(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291.
+20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences
+(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv.
+21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My
+Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank
+Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . .
+(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973).
+22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism
+without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago:
+University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la
+différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967).
+23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms.
+24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s
+
+~
+Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on
+Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V.
+Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her
+article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda
+Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,”
+Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360.
+25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being
+almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It
+is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender
+to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No.
+2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89.
+See chapter 3, n. 4).
+26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might
+account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category
+violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies
+effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing
+the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to
+writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action,
+we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the
+category of sex in action.
+27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2,
+Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20.,
+see chapter 3, n. 49.
+28. Ibid., p. 17.
+29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
+30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
+Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp.
+21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49.
+31. Ibid., p. 107.
+32. Ibid., p. 106.
+33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
+
+~
+34. Ibid., p. 5.
+35. Ibid., p. 6.
+36. Ibid.
+37. Ibid.
+38. Ibid.
+39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
+Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
+(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical
+difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language
+that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and
+Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of
+linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s
+critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains
+closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the
+semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both
+Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces
+and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze
+argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is
+deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet,
+Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York:
+Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89.
+40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this
+insight.
+41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also
+in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49.
+42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3,
+No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67.
+See chapter 3, n. 49.
+43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.”
+44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French
+New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
+1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter
+3, n. 49.
+45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48.
+
+~
+46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a
+“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee”
+the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the
+second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social
+capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues,
+individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that
+precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay
+with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any
+reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely
+woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their
+organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139).
+47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon,
+1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du
+Minuit, 1969).
+48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9.
+49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in
+1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press,
+1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic
+contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although
+she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general
+will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see
+Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in
+Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and
+Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp.
+259–279.
+50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.”
+51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.”
+52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41.
+53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.”
+54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans.
+Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
+
+~
+Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to
+this essay.
+55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley:
+Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4.
+56. Ibid., p. 113.
+57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988).
+58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115.
+59. Ibid., p. 121.
+60. Ibid., p. 140.
+61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory,
+Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion
+of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in
+honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical
+“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
+62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
+Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
+University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur
+(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her
+own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality,
+that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then
+becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals
+and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65).
+63. Ibid., p. 3.
+64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious
+Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of
+Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern
+University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery
+and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990),
+pp. 201–214.
+65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic
+Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
+Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
+
+~
+Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20,
+No. 3,Winter 1988.
+66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
+Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
+67. Ibid., p. 30.
+68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female
+Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
+69. Ibid., p. 103.
+70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,
+WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114.
+71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University
+Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The
+Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive
+Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983).
+
+~
+
+abject, the, 169–70
+Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87
+AIDS, 168–69
+Am I That Name? (Riley), 6
+Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari),
+151
+Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43
+Barnes, Djuna, 152
+Bataille, Georges, 131
+“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60,
+149–51
+berdache, 194n. 8
+binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63
+biology, cellular, 135–41
+bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84,
+98–100, 173
+bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43
+body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as
+boundary, variable, 44, 170–71,
+177; construction of, 12–13, 17,
+161, 168–69; inscription on,
+163–67, 171–73; maternal,
+101–19; permeability of, 168;
+“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70
+Borges, Jorge, 131
+
+butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58
+chromosomes, 135–41
+Civilization and Its Discontents
+(Freud), 92
+Cixous, Hélène, 131
+corporeal styles, 178–80
+Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5
+de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18,
+35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177
+de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49
+Deleuze and Guattari, 151
+Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150,
+193n. 2, 201–2n. 1
+de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51
+Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21
+Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5
+Dews, Peter, 209n. 49
+différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150
+Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171
+dispositions, sexual, 77–84
+Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169,
+214–15n. 62
+drag, 174–80
+écriture feminine, 19
+
+~
+Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77,
+79–82, 84
+ego-ideal, the, 79–81
+Eicher, Eva, 138–41
+Elementary Structures of Kinship, The
+(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55
+empty space, 86
+Engels, Friedrich, 47
+epistemology and identity, 183–84
+Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92
+Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41
+fêlure, 71, 100
+feminism: debates within, 18–22;
+foundationalist frame of,
+189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46;
+and politics, 181–90; and sexual
+difference, 35–44; women as
+“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
+Ferenczi, Sandor, 66
+Foucault, Michel: on category of
+sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18,
+123–35; on genealogy, 165–66;
+on homosexuality, 83, 130–31;
+on inscription, 171–73; on
+repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97
+Franklin, Aretha, 29–30,
+198–99n. 34
+Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84,
+203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36
+Gallop, Jane, 37
+Garbo, Greta, 163
+Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50
+gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77;
+as incredible, 180; in language,
+28–30; overthrow of, 95–96,
+151–54; as performative,
+163–90; as regulatory, 23–33,
+
+42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33,
+47–48, 141–65
+genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188
+genetics, sex and, 135–41
+Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53,
+160–61
+Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40
+Haar, Michel, 27–28
+Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25
+Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183,
+196–97n. 21, 203n. 14
+Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently
+Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault),
+31–32, 120, 123–35
+heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26,
+30–31, 34–35, 147–50
+heterosexual matrix, 42–43,
+45–100
+History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1
+(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117,
+120–24, 135–36
+homosexuality: Foucault on, 83,
+130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan
+on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14;
+and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere
+on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84,
+87–88, 168–70;Wittig on,
+24–33
+hooks, bell, 205n. 23
+Husserl, Edmund, 17
+identification in gender, 40–41,
+80–91, 207n. 38
+identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of,
+181–90
+imitation, 41, 174–76
+impersonation, 174–80
+
+~
+incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84,
+87–88, 110, 204n. 19
+“incorporation” of identity, 86–91,
+171–74
+internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38
+“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166,
+186, 201–2n. 1
+Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27,
+34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54
+Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56
+“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade”
+(Heath), 67–68
+Jones, Ernest, 64
+jouissance, 55, 71
+Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2,
+201–2n. 1
+Kant, Immanuel, 71
+kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16
+Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32
+Kristeva, Julia: on the abject,
+169–70; on Lacan, 101–2,
+104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14;
+and the maternal body, 101–19;
+on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32;
+as orientalist, 114; on repression,
+104–5, 115–17; on the
+Symbolic, 102, 104–10
+Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2,
+104–5; and lesbian sexuality,
+62–64; and the Law, 55, 59,
+70–72; and masquerade, 60–73;
+on the Phallus, 56–60; on
+sexual difference, 36–39; on
+the Symbolic, 57, 70–73,
+101–2, 104
+language: and culture, 55; gender in,
+28–30; poetic, 101–12; and
+
+identity, 182–86; and power,
+33–44
+law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2,
+118–19, 200n. 52
+Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72
+Leibniz, Gottfried, 51
+Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36,
+153, 159–60, 169
+lesbianism: and the body, 35–36,
+159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64;
+and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of
+women, 26–27, 162–63
+Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93
+“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41
+literalization, 87–91
+Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50
+Locke, John, 158
+MacCormack, Carol, 48
+Marcuse, Herbert, 92
+“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig),
+28–29
+Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183
+masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18
+melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19,
+206–7n. 32
+Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in
+America (Newton), 163, 174
+“Motherhood According to Bellini”
+(Kristeva), 71
+mourning, 73–84, 107–9
+“Mourning and Melancholia”
+(Freud), 73–74, 78–79
+Newton, Esther, 163, 174,
+205n. 22
+
+~
+Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73,
+166, 171, 206n. 30
+Oedipal complex, the, 75–84,
+91–100
+“One Is Not Born a Woman”
+(Wittig), 143–44
+On the Genealogy of Morals
+(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171,
+206n. 30
+“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig),
+159, 214n. 49
+Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131
+Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11
+Page, David, 136–41
+Panizza, Oscar, 120
+“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151
+parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90
+pastiche, 176, 186–87
+patriarchy, 45–46
+performativity, 171–90
+person, unversal conception of,
+14–15
+phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52
+Phallus, the, 55–73
+Plato, 17, 92, 116
+Pleasure and Danger (Vance),
+200–201n. 53, 205n. 22
+pleasures, proliferation of,
+35–36
+Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and
+the Media (Watney), 168
+politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9,
+181–90; of identity, 181–87
+“Postmodernism and Consumer
+Society” (Jameson), 176
+power: and category of sex, 25,
+155–58; and language, 33–44;
+
+prohibition as, 91–100; and
+volition, 158
+Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70
+Proust, Marcel, 152
+psychoanalytic accounts of sexual
+difference, 33–39, 44–100
+Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67,
+169
+redeployment of categories, 163–90
+repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87
+representation, problems of, 3–9
+repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17
+Revolution in Poetic Language
+(Kristeva), 104
+Riley, Denise, 6
+Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25
+Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70,
+156n. 51, 205–6n. 29
+Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4,
+209n. 45
+Same/Other binary, 131–33
+Sarraute, Natalie, 152
+Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164,
+196–97n. 21
+Schafer, Roy, 86
+Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18,
+35, 141, 143
+Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9
+semiotic, the, 101–19
+sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,”
+35–36, 141–63; and genetics,
+135–41; vs. gender, 9–11,
+23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and
+identity, 23–33; as project,
+177–78
+“Sex-Determining Region of the
+Human Y Chromosome Encodes
+a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41
+
+~
+Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53
+sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96,
+120–24, 155–58
+signifying economy, masculinist,
+18–19
+“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30
+Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie
+(Kristeva), 73
+space, internal, 86–91, 170–71
+Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty,
+197n. 23, 204n. 18
+Stoller, Robert, 32
+“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45,
+159
+Strathern, Marilyn, 48
+structuralism, 49–55
+subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48,
+149–54, 169–70, 181–90
+substance, metaphysics of, 25–28,
+34, 37
+Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73,
+102, 104–10
+Symposium (Plato), 116
+Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
+(Freud), 36, 52, 140
+Torok, Maria, 86–87
+Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54
+“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political
+Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin),
+92–96
+transsexuality, 90
+
+Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50
+Tyler, Parker, 163
+“unity,” 20–22
+“universality,” 15–16
+Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault),
+135–36
+Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53,
+205n. 22
+Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22
+Washburn, Linda L., 138–41
+Watney, Simon, 168
+Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir,
+143–44; and category of sex,
+24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59;
+and heterosexual contract,
+34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and
+Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141,
+147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as
+materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159
+“Womanliness as a Masquerade”
+(Riviere), 61–73
+women: as “being” the Phallus,
+55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9,
+19–22, 162–64; as object of
+exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of
+feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
+Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131
+Young, Iris Marion, 
diff --git a/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt b/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..92e5c9a --- /dev/null +++ b/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6969 @@ +Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it +to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have +as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one +of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded +my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an +embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even +as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in +the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it +belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism +and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to +undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the +former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the +case of Gender Trouble. +In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual +assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views +that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and +restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity +and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory +~ +that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own +practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often +with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to +seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and +exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or +derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for +readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field +of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities +ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in +the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal, +and illegitimate is likely to pose that question. +Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual +and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and +all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought +to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions +about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the +face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of +gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must +be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded +from any effort to think gender? +Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was +called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists. +Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of +sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be +~ +one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear +on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If +in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof +from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the +case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point +was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those +theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the +critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed +strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive +can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism +is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years, +however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and +sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism +of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the +domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether +my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty +Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but +perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between +the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim +that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural +studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory +(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural +studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the +point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural +appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure, +where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is +not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where +cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and +its promise of success, uncertain. +~ +Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious +American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate +theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although +the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it +will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of +the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein, +various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva, +Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in +France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a +French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct +from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist +inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has +threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few +French publishers who have considered it.1 +Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It +emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates +on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and +feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality, +and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique +Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and +lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the +1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism, +Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the +two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what +is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con- + +~ +summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in +a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call +into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do +certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is +a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through +normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to +queer contexts? +The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender +emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and +sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender. +Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent +that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and +to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s +sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of +“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror +and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one +sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a +certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and +language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various +new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism +and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme +identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who +become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”? +What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must +be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness” +that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some +lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status + +~ +as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years, +offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not +anticipate.2 +But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought +to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual +practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of +normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way +of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation +of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there +are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes: +Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of +gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of +sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization +of inequality between men and women.3 + +In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is +not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender, +but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is +what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may +be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said. +Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for +the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy +serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are +gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony? +Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative +use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming +the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender, +MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for +thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender +~ +discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all +discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment +may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there +are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is +important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated +against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in +accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment +of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity. +Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender +means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with +some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that +men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be +straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a +critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her +womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination +becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender +should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter +accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that +the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but +seeks to oppose it. +I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn +an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal +or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one +~ +perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual +normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to +be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is +meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension +of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are +clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede, +however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered +ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at +all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or +deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for +instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably +mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing. +Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying +and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender +Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only +because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have +changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but +because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of +gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.” +There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law, +attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which +that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its +object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that +might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very +phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which +~ +the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as +outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization +in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained +temporal duration.8 +Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and +one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender +is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal +essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed +that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we +anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an +hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble +clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into +the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and +several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to +come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic +break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I +would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of +a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical +mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted. +Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do +become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through +that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche +performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration. +Although this text does not answer the question of whether the +materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of +much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the +~ +reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity +can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several +scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made +explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple +analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not +whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but +what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race. +Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,” +whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that +no single account of construction will do, and that these categories +always work as background for one another, and they often find their +most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization +of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once, +and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive +category of analysis.12 +Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and +debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a +full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions +of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was +produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social +movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a +lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in +which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book. +Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a +person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw +many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of +some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural +edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the +midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom, +and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a +part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension. +At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living +~ +a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic +book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth +Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life. +That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of +solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the +problem that this someone is given in language). +It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the +text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same +time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its +reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated +with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped +to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and +the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender +were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the +relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist +jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of +Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug. +In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in +Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I +tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and +exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important +strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I +worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human +Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual +minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to +understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out +the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet +~ +met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is +defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More +recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory +and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book +that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of +hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be +published by Verso in 2000). +Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in +relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that +seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on +questions of sexuality, gender, and culture. +Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to +the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to +some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular” +according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps +attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the +complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of +calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for +grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive. +I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend. +Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly, +one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are +not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style +are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible +speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of +not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell, +in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about +common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar +is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints +~ +that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself. +But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly +irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and +sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who +are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does +their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual +life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of +linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical +norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at +the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part, +through contesting the grammar in which gender is given. +The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon +looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing +perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the +sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who +devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve? +What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency” +keep obscure? +I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender +norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body, +deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the +Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their +sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the +age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and +homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation +but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on +a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this +violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at +the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be +~ +a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human +agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the +violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this +text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the +pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality +that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The +writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to +play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real” +politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are +always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible, +and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be +like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended +kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate +the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14 +Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the +realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose +are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to +judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings +in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to +describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender +ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also +pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete +consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender +Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender +is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It +is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the +~ +same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered +world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of +a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be +good.” +Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide +between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their +judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and +then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on +the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what +makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility, +whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which +expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying +persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way. +The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a +question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a +fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what +is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense +prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation. +I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes +the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such +judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be +made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves +posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always +run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition +and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity +culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name +the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what +is at stake in using the term at all? +~ +What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of +questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and +how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In +other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit +the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the +means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are +the means by which we transform it? +The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of +subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is +rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or +a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those +perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced +through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory +appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take +the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood, +and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this +perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of +the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or +we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or +how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it +is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly +erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality, +then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy +from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be +preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may +not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees? +The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail, + +~ +when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely +the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered +is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories +itself constitutes the experience of the body in question. +When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is +also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from +the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand +that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized +knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call +it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in +itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real. +And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices +that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and +reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented +and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be +made differently and, indeed, less violently. +The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a +true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling +of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized +knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism, +heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and +improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten +by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish +what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be +considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which +bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this +legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is + +~ +not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter +the violence performed by gender norms. +In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the +condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain +performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal +dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in +response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications. +Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and +I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and +revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and +expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the +volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political +(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions +(Routledge, 1995). +I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I” +to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I” +that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the +availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that +structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes +this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it. +What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar +that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that +establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely +~ +to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not +trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without +which no “I” can appear. +This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from +a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of +the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the +publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory +of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the +ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in +The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency. +Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or +that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read +directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined +over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have +come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and +that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In +Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied +relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider +that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences. +Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor +to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous. +This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the +insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of +both bodily seduction and the threat of injury. +~ +If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would +include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal +gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I +would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular, +how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized +forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual +minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will +refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a +coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and +its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power, +and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to +refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining +recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within +reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider +it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the +purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of +identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no +reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position +purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as +the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those +who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold +that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life +of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or +try to live, on the sexual margins.15 +Judith Butler +Berkeley, California +June, 1999 +~ + +Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time +and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps +trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was, +within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should +never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion +and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of +power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in +trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble +is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it. +As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I +noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the +terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and +unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I +read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject +of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the +unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the +glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the +~ +masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on +the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my +attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than +an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion +between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate +in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I +asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the +Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those +terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the +subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic +regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology? +But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into +question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support +gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of +“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female +indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is, +the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories +is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to +require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of +the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that +gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real. +Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the +natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through +which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through +which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted +~ +through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the +body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize +“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative +construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be +shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original, +and the inevitable? +To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as +effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical +inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual +identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices, +discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this +inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions: +phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality. +Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion, +its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both +terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this +inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests. +Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle +the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of +politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the +consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What +new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no +longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what +extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation +for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself? +* * * +~ +This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of +gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1, +“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as +the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory +heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of +power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of +sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the +feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the +female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how +do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where +are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce +the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of +power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of +continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are +these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call +into question their alleged relations? +Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the +Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism +that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities +within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within +some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of +cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued +through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan +Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is +subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The +History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown +both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual +~ +economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual +complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual +codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about +the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies? +The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical +consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva +in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged +to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of +Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an +insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and +fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions, +Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas +and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body, +sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification +and proliferation beyond the binary frame. +It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within +its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of +the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a +childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact. +Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which +gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is +~ +clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the +various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled +to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the +predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this +author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other +discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical +boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to +participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from +other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an +interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist +the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique. +The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of +Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship +for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for +Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and +provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The +George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported +my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has +been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this +manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The +“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under +Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by +virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective +thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna +Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll +Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender, +Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985 +and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to +~ +imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of +critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work +from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities +Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the +University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School +of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and +her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial +and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues +who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar, +Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice +Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone, +Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work +in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project +and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance. +As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination, +keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work. + +~ + +~ +GENDER TROUBL +~ + +~ +1 + +Subjects of +Sex/Gender/Desire +One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one. +—Simone de Beauvoir +Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist. +—Julia Kristeva +Woman does not have a sex. +—Luce Irigaray +The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex. +—Michel Foucault +The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual. +—Monique Wittig + +i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism +For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some +existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not +only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand, +representation serves as the operative term within a political process +that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political +subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function +of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is +~ +assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory, +the development of a language that fully or adequately represents +women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of +women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all. +Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist +discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable +or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after +all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of +women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out +in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed, +with the result that representation is extended only to what can be +acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being +a subject must first be met before representation can be extended. +Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power +appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is, +through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the +contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them, +formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements +of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation +of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of +representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to +facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that +system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential +~ +axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be +masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the +emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating. +The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist +politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced +through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the +juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the +political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating +and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively +concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical +structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces” +what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned +with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In +effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject +before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s +own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women +might become more fully represented in language and politics. +Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of +“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the +very structures of power through which emancipation is sought. +Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises +the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the +law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as +well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law +as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing +assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law +might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature +hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a +presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and, +thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract. +~ +Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of +the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism +encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common +identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those +whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural, +has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As +Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by +the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a +woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not +because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of +its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or +consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to +separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in +which it is invariably produced and maintained. +The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for +feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist +cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of +women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of +a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its +failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts +have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the +start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its +efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support +highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to +construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western +barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for +patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own +~ +claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a +categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to +produce women’s common subjugated experience. +Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the +kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more +difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is +there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is +there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and +integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified +against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural +formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is +both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its +difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of +“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the +exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but +in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully +decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from +the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of +identity a misnomer.4 +My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the +subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the +representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature +insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the +category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory +consequences of that construction, even when the construction has +been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation +within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from +“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary +~ +limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider +representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the +constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem +is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for +merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that +exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion +itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By +conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism +articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross +misrepresentation. +Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics +constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position +outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating +practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present, +as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted +frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize. +Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics, +a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a +feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the +ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order +to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on +other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical +critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having +to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested +by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably +excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in +a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals +to extend its claims to “representation”?5 +Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of +~ +the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting +regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of +the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves +to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort +of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of +gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of +identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a +political goal. +To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what +qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a +feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort +to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic +invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend +representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion +of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of +the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics? +The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of +feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a +field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation. +Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense +for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed. +ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire +Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject +by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex +and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability +sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is +~ +neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity +of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction +that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7 +If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes, +then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken +to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders. +Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow +that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of +males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even +if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology +and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to +assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of +a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise +restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as +radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily +signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male +body as easily as a female one. +This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set +of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without +first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what +means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific +discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex +have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is +there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy +that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are +the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests? +If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct +called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it +~ +was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction +between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11 +It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural +interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought +not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a +pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the +very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is +also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture, +a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of +“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it +is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for +sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be +understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to +encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production? +iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of +Contemporary Debate +Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential +attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What +gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what +is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness +imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of +agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain +laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What +~ +sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that +gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law. +When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in +terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In +such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny. +On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex +that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For +Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an +agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and +could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable +and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear +that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion +to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.” +There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who +becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as +she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already +been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as +a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be +shown to have been gender all along.14 +The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to +founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will +and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that +some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits +the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a +passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the +instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will +~ +ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction, +as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the +mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does +the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do +we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument +awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15 +Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse +which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to +safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender” +or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose +and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered +possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the +limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always +set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on +binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality. +Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender. +Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension” +of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases, +gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually +differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists +only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not +an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that +only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the +masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of +~ +their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood. +In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray +argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within +the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.” +Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language, +women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity. +Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex +constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense, +women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to +Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray +argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a +closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing +goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir, +women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of +signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the +Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity +of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as +inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the +metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject. +What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform +thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist +conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is +the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist +feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person +who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,” +called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral +deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person, +~ +der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand +gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable +contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what +the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the +constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and +contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being, +but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically +specific sets of relations. +Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point +of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an +abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This +absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s) +that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray, +the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female +sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither +“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the +Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for +Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir +would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms +of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even +in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one. +The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in +a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men +could not settle the question of women because they would then be +acting as both judge and party to the case.18 +The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete; +~ +each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and +meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of +socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of +gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above. +The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume +that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which, +on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned +within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility +of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements +about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be +argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is, +indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and +man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of +identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry. +For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms +of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to +immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for +the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and, +hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her +position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject +is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as +female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted +to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom. +Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of +~ +negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality? +The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will +later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both +the existential subject and its Other. +Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation +and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting +essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is +clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts +to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/ +body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The +preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the +very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes, +Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political +and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates +the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity +and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the +mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender +hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized. +The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from +“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very +mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of +gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body +is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body, +in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a +~ +masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked +off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian +terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading, +Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not +the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and +en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting +linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place. +iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond +Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by +which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed +reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that +the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist +critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical +structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that +traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual +difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological +imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of +cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism? +The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a +global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a +repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23 +Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to +~ +the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as +singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the +strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms. +That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike +suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the +varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly +insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related, +distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed, +the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of +dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual +difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot +be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism +or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one +tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service +of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain. +The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the +question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or +shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture +feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who +claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and +is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege +intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of +the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of +~ +cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array +of “women” are constructed. +Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics +which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be. +They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously +positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework +of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not +to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging +and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in +advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates +coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert +herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for +coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee +unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not +the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and, +most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition. +The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes +that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action. +But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on +unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and +take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what +dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of +democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific +and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a +conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power +relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be +interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a +liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions +of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to +~ +gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become +complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that +category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve +as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force. +Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature +insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged +fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the +“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired. +Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of +identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt +the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish +precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted +at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context +of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of +identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions +must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is +permanently moot. +This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes +neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a +coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because +the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a +definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity +concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist +tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity +concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities +or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or +~ +subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve +depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain +political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to +accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous +self that offers its complexity at once. +Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred, +never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition, +then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without +obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure. +v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance +What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the +same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do +these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would +be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed +prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological +discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the +person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the +various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility +and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the +person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally +related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that +literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the +focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of +what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts +~ +almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the +person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through +time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of +gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To +what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive +feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In +other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not +logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is +assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality, +the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural +emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings +who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered +norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined. +“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and +maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender, +sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing +norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines +of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders, +and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual +desire through sexual practice. +The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that +generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender +norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the +production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between +“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive +attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which +gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of +~ +“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow” +from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation +of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate +the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain +kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural +intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical +impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and +regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up +within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder. +Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems +crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of +what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist +between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect +of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a +relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of +a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in +which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression? +Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the +identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine, +that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and +those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category +of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the +category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality, +~ +onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically, +with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of +heterosexual hegemony. +The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on +how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive +capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a +“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western +culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation +and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off. +Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple +negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a +monologic elaboration of the masculine. +Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex +appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically +speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a +performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact +that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray, +grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely +because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation +between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the +substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well +as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary +that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive +multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an +~ +artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of +sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies. +For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive +aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she +claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In +other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender, +and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian” +emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary +restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no +metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination, +appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under +the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands +first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept +I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an +inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27 +The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig, +is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized +features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and +autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the +destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an +attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche, +come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In +other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but +the feminine: + +~ +Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between +the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there +are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine” +not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the +general.28 + +Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can +assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that +destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal +point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality +through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the +normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of +substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not +only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and +materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a +radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction +between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of +the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not +only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to +that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production +and naturalization of the category of sex itself. +The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with +Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a +number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain +illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that +the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior +ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues +Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity, +order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do + +~ +they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes, +this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the +psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical +thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the +metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the +psychological person as a substantive thing: +The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as +well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic. +All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person) +derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes +back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense +but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the +structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty +that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that +come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to +be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual, +are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances +fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31 + +Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons +cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She +provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French. +According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies” +them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary +gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of +nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender” +(1984), she writes: +The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its +meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as + +~ +far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and +French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give +way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a +division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals +with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to +belong primarily to philosophy.32 + +For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to +“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe +they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without +saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in +nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on +gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of +“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to +“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that +metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and +“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under +that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender +and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various +expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual +desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex” +whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional +internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I +feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant. +Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy +(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also +fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like +a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the +~ +defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34 +This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender. +Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of +gender within that binary pair. +Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and +desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate +gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the +self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it +desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or +woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the +univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of +gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system. +This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation +among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects +or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The +metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and +expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that +is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic +paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and +desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self +is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and +desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is +presupposed, reified, and rationalized. +This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding +the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and +regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is +differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a +~ +consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex, +gender, and desire. +The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories +of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within +the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality +and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the +Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35 +Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization +of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific +mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary +categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus +of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience, +behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this +ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of +sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any +discursive account of sexuality. +Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite, +Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of +a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the +sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the +true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because +she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that +govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the +terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault, +Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the +~ +disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in +her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her +anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality) +implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the +identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the +cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as +qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere. +As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered +experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and +hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes, +essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine, +Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the +postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and +hierarchy, a regulatory fiction. +If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and +to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that +man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine +attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the +gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman” +as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion +of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the +compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences, +then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman +as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that +fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility. +The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the +psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines +~ +of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is +conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant +adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they +are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of +gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if +these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently +created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the +ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous. +In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory +practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse +of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative— +that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense, +gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be +said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the +relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there +is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a +fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application +that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we +might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the +expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by +the very “expressions” that are said to be its results. +vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of +Displacement +A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is +argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a +~ +transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig +appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other +hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical +locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that +there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the +performative construction of gender within the material practices of +culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would +confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual +space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the +Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes: +A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the +cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the +oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women. +Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as +an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging +to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct +perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40 + +Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual +desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could +liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41 +Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an +institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her +view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would +understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying +economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating +~ +mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field +of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig, +language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its +structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of +another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping +the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose +the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse +that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like +Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine +and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on +Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig +asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43 +Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate +and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language +to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically +transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and, +hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The +linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to +restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual +desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as +well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the +category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig +appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call +for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the +construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures +outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine +form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be +~ +understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on +the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more +diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification +invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital +norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to +deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely +those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and +effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of +development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual +matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what +extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of +normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model +of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what +extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What +possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself? +Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the +unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks +to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the +marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she +both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of +the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands +that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a +regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of +heterosexist oppression in Wittig. +In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud, +sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of +~ +struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a +mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the +Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create +sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions +of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars +the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation +between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly, +the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father +requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the +rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that +reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48 +The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in +opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical +reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an +expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable +absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of +that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and +Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of +sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the +dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual +identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous +ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the +French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking +replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect +the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed +sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very +~ +impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the +feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence +through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only +that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs +identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as +a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the +ground for the insurrections against him). +The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there +is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the +mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality. +Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is +understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is +no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set +of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of +the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of +substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her +existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person, +to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the +paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is +perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52 +But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal +trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a +law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its +authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that +sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation +of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the +law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before” +of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted +modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative +~ +framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and +inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed +to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not +have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or +“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the +juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently +generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that +emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication +or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy +of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and +inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely +exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the +boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible. +The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of +significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom +have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of +Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual +constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in +which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even +within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The +same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality. +Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from +a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific +feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that +biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here +through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether +it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization +of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize +~ +that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written +off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality +is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed +within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine +pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If +so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction? +The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice +has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the +terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in +terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence +of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a +masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed +project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if +a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of +the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed +within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative +sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural +impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones +the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This +critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of +power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its +consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified” +sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning +of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in +terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of +“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable. +~ +If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays +its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to +acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there +forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of +“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural +intelligibility that govern gendered life? +Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the +simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of +specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch” +and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained +as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And +neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of +heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight +may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization +of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in +non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed +status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not +as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of +this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the +idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs +circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do +gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation +exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through +~ +hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very +constructs by which they are mobilized? +Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and +among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive +and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural +configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention, +exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the +“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The +force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their +convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized +ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as +if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the +cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges: +What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself? +If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that +escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively +produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what +constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender? +Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears +to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not +always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that +~ +infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very +complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to +hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of +these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of +sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning, +then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility +of a disruption of their univocal posturing. +Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional +philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being +a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology. +The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object +of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of +its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those +terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the +“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender +ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of +the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate +and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization. +If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born, +but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in +process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to +originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the +most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious +practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for +Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a +telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender +is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a +highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the +~ +appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy +of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive +appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for +those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that +police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that +create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a +part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on +the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that +have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that +have constituted its contingent ontologies. +The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of +sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes +outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those +regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the +binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as +regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power +regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter +considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting +signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically +signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of +dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively +enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its +naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues, +then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support +masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble, +not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the +mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those +constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing +as the foundational illusions of identity. +~ +2 + +Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, +and the Production +of the Heterosexual Matrix +The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality +represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight +mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality. +—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind” + +On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin, +a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an +imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the +history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether +prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or +matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a +beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind +these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a +reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon. +Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended +to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme +has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some +feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs +within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened +to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct +~ +articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As +feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against +racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important +to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy +as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration +from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary +past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic +reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power. +The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost +always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of +the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and +necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a +state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the +law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that, +by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past, +makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability. +Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a +utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that +promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a +new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the +terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present +state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law, +then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory +fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or +antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory +becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic +~ +gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This +ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome. +Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those +feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge +various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or +key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories +which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women. +As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the +contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of +oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however, +whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals. +Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist +theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently +transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or +“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect +that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is +before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins +to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship. +This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized +foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of +~ +domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between +culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which +culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it +into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the +model of domination. +Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have +argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as +female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured +as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated +with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered +to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an +opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality +and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that +construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the +discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing +framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of +“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are +the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they +serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very +designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to +be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3 +The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be +rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to +think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining. +Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be +~ +no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might +serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical +assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism +whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only +the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status, +but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms. +How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology? +Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful +to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery +of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal +of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist +theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism, +and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status— +is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it +inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To +what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place? +i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange +Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in +accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure +of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship. +According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange +that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women, +given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes +“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only +~ +serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other +words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men; +she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being +the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific +kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion +of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As +wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of +men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the +patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they +bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a +relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a +common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity. +The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure +human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that +he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete +cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical +structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can +be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work +(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the +questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this +universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic +describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human +character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity” +~ +to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to +women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of +positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative +logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems +always require the construction of socially impossible identities to +occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s +marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a +major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions +whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss. +The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested +within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship +of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation +within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms +presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is +presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning. +This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic +totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness +within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and +with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss +refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of +binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As +a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the +operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement. +For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established +through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where +the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established +between men and the women who effect the differentiation between +~ +men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating +moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a +Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But +what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first +in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating +mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit, +male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As +Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on +an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal +clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls +“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a +relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men, +but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9 +In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest +taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds: +Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply +that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of +exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the +means of binding men together. + +The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss +understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and +unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays +on the Theory of Sexuality). +~ +The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is +the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men +and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women. +Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought +must have required that women, like words, should be things that were +exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from +the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective +position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an +inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in +which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby +becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on +what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work, +Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of +reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity +between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the +unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality. +If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and +can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain +either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual +difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose +that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does +“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it +produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law +itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive? +The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship +that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the +~ +incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist +anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges +that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds, +he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a +pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of +the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the +mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance +undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying +a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an +ancient and lasting dream.”11 +In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious +incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its +power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it +evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at +all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides +insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of +incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with +assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in +no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest +that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are +generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That +incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not +also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms +become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their +prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous +practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription? +For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest +between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated +as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality +constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire, +~ +and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The +naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency +are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere +assumed within this founding structuralist frame. +The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of +culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic +structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the +incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of +kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take +place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity +apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the +Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile +entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression +that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly +barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery +of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the +subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural +production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language +inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of +its referential gestures. +ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade +To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to +confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western +metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question +~ +“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted +and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the +paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the +characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological +gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is +itself pre-ontological. +There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being, +without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing +signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition +of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus +denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other +words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other +that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but +the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus +means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power, +to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and +to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the +dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that +lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests +that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the +masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm +and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13 +This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance +or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the +mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of +men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The +interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of +~ +failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his +own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in +a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the +terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the +inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction +and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real. +If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of +signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense +to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly +crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame +that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the +structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this +scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in +terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression, +one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but +whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions +that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the +subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding +signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the +(now repressed) maternal body. +The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and +thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts +to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual +possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and +everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy. +This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women +reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes +essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the +basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it +~ +serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by +the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced +maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be +precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also +and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to +repression and individuation. +Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain +the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding +postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would +break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position. +In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent +masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the +sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in +their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being” +the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to +reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that +“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify +the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The +division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is +established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic +dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both +masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging +to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by +either position. +To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its +object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and +promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of +exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the +mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the +emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is +necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully +reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of +~ +women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to +the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be +nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity +of the Phallus. +On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to +“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and +can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having” +and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic +failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these +repeated impossibilities. +But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that +embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done +through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the +feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the +Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”: +Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a +having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the +contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject +in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be +signified.16 + +In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to +refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well +as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the +position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows +from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the +‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said +not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on +the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems +that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is +~ +characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some +unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of +behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84). +Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it +suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the +ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would +appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of +being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to +the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that +there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the +masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable +of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and +displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy. +At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the +ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade +may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other +hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented +by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s +desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would +engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery +distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the +“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by +Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in +order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained +suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18 +~ +Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive +as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time. +Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan +Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their +interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated +and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some +way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual +possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of +a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests, +transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity +to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the +masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position? +Lacan continues the quotation cited above: +Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the +phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman +will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes +through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be +desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in +the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love. +Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84) + +If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic +Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might +so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential +~ +part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed +part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that +must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the +unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that +attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is +this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the +core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must +be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore, +is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order +to be that lack that confirms? +Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of +the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of +love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the +object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of +love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals +suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals +are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure +of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in +effect, twice lost. +Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from +a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love” +(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently +elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone +who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding +disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment +recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade. +One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to +a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the +expense of desire. +Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with +~ +the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate +the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if +female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear, +and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that +female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as +observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it +the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what +clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment” +and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear +to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can +understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is +presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as +the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account +not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and +whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the +essential character of the women who effectively refuse him? +In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to +make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to +understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way +to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in +the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well. +The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this +loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which +is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through +the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then +wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is +~ +the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been +refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the +refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed, +becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is +never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal +boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the +process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy. +Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms +of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at +first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the +comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of +Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into +heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the +“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual +and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of +Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s +facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane +perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate +types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with +who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display +strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the +classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of +attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to +display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation +among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that +unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity +between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an +instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex. +And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies +through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning +~ +of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that +would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a +woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the +acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual +or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in +order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes: +Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their +heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall +attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a +mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared +from men. (35) + +It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the +homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under +notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much +different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt +differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic +“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to +the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained +from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the +supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes +count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus, +the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire. +Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be +interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order +to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured +through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some +consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over +~ +the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the +father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user +of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating +desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of +woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language. +Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual +man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between +male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman +who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of +taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on +by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from +others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes +on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from +the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man +is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that +allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly, +because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that +the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words, +the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both +desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and +Riviere apparently do. +But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the +analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification, +but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s +typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a +“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women +who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of +their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in +other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is +~ +here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses +sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it +would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female +homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to +read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious +typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage. +One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade +wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men +and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely +because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she +fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to +deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women +sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual +exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or, +at least, that has none that she will name. +Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is +masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from +the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she +suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”: +The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw +the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My +suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether +radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38) + +This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and +the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the +~ +Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is +such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the +denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24 +Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine +identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female +object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may +reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the +hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd +form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the +melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic +inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality. +One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is, +of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture, +her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself +both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine +identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that +she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids +herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that +accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26 +Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a +discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s +analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because +that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her +as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her +castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest +over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and +~ +essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for +her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might +usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and +what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the +position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s +aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably, +reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the +authority of the speaking subject? +We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes. +The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in +the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in +the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute +their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still +not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some +psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the +exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a +bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is +assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that +identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is, +through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the +binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality +that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality +shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it +purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through +which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality” +that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a +~ +later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary +practices of normative heterosexuality. +Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary +or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and +that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on +the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is +always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which +the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will +necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental +divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression, +is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a +prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose +writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the +law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of +Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality, +and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the +artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as +the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well. +Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely +because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the +accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the +~ +drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29 +And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules +that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is +clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined +epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual +ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the +“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of +sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result. +The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an +impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary +restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality +and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In +marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the +Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for +Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and +paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could +not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through +the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position +of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge +within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical +past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that +does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary +speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality. +The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an +account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that +~ +proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility +of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The +injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic +always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively +consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas +of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to +be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,” +humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative +that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls +the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and +those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward. +That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the +demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct +from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that +eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic +as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity. +This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively +undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative +imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure +of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old +Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the +comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the +permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this +comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it +claims to be unable to overcome. +Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.” +~ +How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation +of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power) +that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the +paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which +the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological +impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that +points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is +symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative +powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility. +What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the +trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and +self-subjection? +iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender +Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir: +Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the +melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of +gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of +melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only +alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id +(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient +structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the +1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing +another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said +to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on +attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of +imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome +through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other +~ +within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego, +love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply +momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in +effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent +relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the +other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic +identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic +cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved +person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud +makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is +crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.” +In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization +described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks: +we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by +supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost +has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis +has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did +not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know +how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to +understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18) + +As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds, +however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the +acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that +this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up +its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in +~ +tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of +those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves +becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the +incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for +the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited +heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other +objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual +union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself +with him” (21). +In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object +cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of +a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud +does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the +process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a +bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does. +The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and +Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to +seduce the mother. +Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why +the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude +toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be +that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be +attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented +above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23, +n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly, +Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the +~ +two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the +result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the +heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated, +but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally +sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather +than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation +of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of +the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently, +the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis. +Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother +(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire +who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding +moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the +mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through +identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in +which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there +are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic +landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and +disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object +choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and +sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place. +For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result +either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is +~ +found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides +which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of +masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud +avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22). +What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in +consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each +of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to +keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects +or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what +traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a +“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object +choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the +father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin, +despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual +matrix for desire? +The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine +and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect, +never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither +is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl +may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an +object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity +and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence, +~ +within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality, +and only opposites attract. +But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such +dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity +acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional, +then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities +are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional +sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can +we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and, +secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the +self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications. +In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical +attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a +lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though +the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is +“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an +interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and +Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice +or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that +the internalized object now berates the ego: +If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the +melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often +the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself, +but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else, +some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . . +the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have +been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169) + +The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization +becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only + +~ +because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the +object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled. +In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of +libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that +cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that +the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole +condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other +words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia +becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud +remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego +assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon +the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the +object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation. +What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and +its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a +moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are +reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external +mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably +heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego +changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits +its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego +by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to +turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities +of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36 +The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali- + +~ +zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is +a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the +successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity: +The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest +object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted +by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also +comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your +father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his +prerogative.” (24) + +The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and +taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity +through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The +internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love, +but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The +prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed, +repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an +interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution +to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification +and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire. +As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications +substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence +of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex +of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of +heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects +gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to +that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies +~ +with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim +and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent +to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations, +and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved +object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and +more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so +that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an +original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved. +But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful +implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and +masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of +that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed +object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the +construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily +to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of +identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the +consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the +body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition +moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation, +whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of +“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of +affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of +the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by +the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal. +In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means: +separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal +situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set +of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which +“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and +energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not +~ +explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against +homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo +against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions” +by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and +young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that +Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are +effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete +gender identity and heterosexuality. +Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process +whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is +untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of +dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure +which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are +trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the +name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes +the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the +law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears +disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly +“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic +kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of +the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the +law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical +continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as +its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations. +What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and +~ +to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume +of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis +for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms, +but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault, +subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and +inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault +argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed +is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own +self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a +discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in +that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to +maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in +question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law +constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and +invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in +effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.” +The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a +repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in +the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally +homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the +prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives +which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence +into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field +deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence +that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements. +Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts +not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and, +~ +most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable +from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the +unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate. +iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits +of Identification +The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id +offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed, +of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity +and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts +those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting +and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of +any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having” +or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of +the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of +any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the +self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know +the source and object of its desire. +For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question +of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and +its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and +clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within +the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce +precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders +into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of +the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay +~ +and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that +maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the +semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in +the following chapter. +What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the +consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The +recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it +seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal +determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair. +Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is +impervious to historical variability and possibility. +As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity +in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although +the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the +law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less +deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to +acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in +which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to +culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our +origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the +repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational +moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even +though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law, +is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself. +The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from +psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances +~ +within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and +feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the +possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible +to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine +and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and +that “the” law may not even be singular. +The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to +be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to +be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space +as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In +agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a +process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined, +and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such +spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are +“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated +space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as +its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as +an incorporated space. +Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that +serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but +acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs +more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended +grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some +way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty +mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The +successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved +through the formation of words which both signify and displace that +object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially +metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass +~ +poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes +melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it +maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself. +As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the +Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the +possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is +necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of +desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal +body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out +of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy— +results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the +maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term, +and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of +the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds. +When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it +makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that +identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above, +gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that +encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living +versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation +literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the +body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal +truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in +given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating +melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable +object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with +the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the +compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law. +The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against +~ +homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through +which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In +the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which +heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained +through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object, +argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object +requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is +not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at +all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely +safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial. +Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the +denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of +repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it +is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a +‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a +psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible +desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be +felt or known. +Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the +developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly +pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of +that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims. +Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim +together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated +through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure +which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal +space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia +operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love +~ +der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains +the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment +of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment +and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief. +Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable +may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure +of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is +neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the +heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is +in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In +other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires. +But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this +incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an +enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own +interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation +is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its +melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.” +What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming +naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and +parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in +the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such +descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed +~ +or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the +body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in +some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life. +Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which +serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place +within the matrix of gender norms.42 +Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual +pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly, +pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of +parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the +transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body +not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy +of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself. +Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an +altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary, +might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary +condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on +which it works. +Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to +the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and +the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized +heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes +and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality. +The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is +parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause +~ +acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality +reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex” +designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural +desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that +transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the +body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and +desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or +encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible +anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized +sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable +homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he +never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the +empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not +only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the +very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The +love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an +impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has +that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual +desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign +must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in +favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality. +v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power +Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has +guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual +matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the +juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates +the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to +the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the +Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the +~ +primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that +proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be +reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several +cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would +a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique +mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most +influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle +Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article, +Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article +might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame. +Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the +prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on +sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and +reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and +Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros. +Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general +“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion +and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the +human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation, +however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and +consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own +genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions, +but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary” +dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we +~ +conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then +the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its +desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted. +Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes: +the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon +the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides +the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173) + +Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the +particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved, +exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union +between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo +against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes: +the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a +taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed +toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in +both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180) + +Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations. +In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females +into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural +institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of +women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws +which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence, +~ +the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo +against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains +that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a +gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189). +The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a +primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of +an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual +possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the +Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo, +that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law +produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than +the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the +creation of that law. +Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and +gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a +“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed +subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires +a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is +in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And +yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking, +is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a +belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by +the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language, +then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before” +will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does +the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally +(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the + +~ +“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes +an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence. +Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a +primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and +presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of +femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for +both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the +traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality +and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the +compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior +and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204). +Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as +that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities +to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character +of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of +gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in +what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing +but unclarified implications of her analysis. +Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently +sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed +have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual +form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear; +in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi- + +~ +Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads +her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory +heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of +bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin +has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law +which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law. +If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of +knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal +sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the +structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what +relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of +gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order +to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive? +Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of +Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and +that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire +it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be +its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the +very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and +necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its +repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures; +desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture +whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power. +The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit +incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities +through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to +guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are +anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over +~ +what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the +meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to +claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant +framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim +the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it +exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form. +My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the +incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the +generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its +juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety +of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in +advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we +extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that +the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized +in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might +be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as +well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an +“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a +production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition. +If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a +wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire +both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame +law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive +from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo. +Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire +and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that +the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire +~ +in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex +is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly +stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed +parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification. +But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of +the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced +and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the +incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and +if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced +in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to +remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis, +bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon +their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive +possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and +homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes +the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of +bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48 +The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves +as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of +that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete +cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What +remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing +cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of +intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized, +not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini- + +~ +mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to +gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully +within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory +which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive +subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the +very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I +will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never +be translated into other cultural practices. +In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed +to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the +terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire +and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of +the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This +full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the +irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that +that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution +of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal +libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can +only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this +case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always +speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes +the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond” +is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the +Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of + +~ +what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is +“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the +start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the +account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the +split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence +at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy, +revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a +perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin +in the name of subversion inevitably belated. + +~ +3 + +Subversive Bodily Acts +i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva +Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears +to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a +specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing +principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful +language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of +primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child +on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who +emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early +dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language +is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by +suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body) +and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place. +Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural +meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the +maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language +occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes +Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion +within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original +~ +libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely, +within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to +disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law. +Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to +displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts +to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes +that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it +assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those +terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony? +The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several +steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of +effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to +accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple +drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but +which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest +in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal +economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem +emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion +cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained +presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of +cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension +of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of +language which never can be consistently maintained. +~ +In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to +ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and +what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva +describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior +to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a +paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural +reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively +reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction +and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity +is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a +given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and +primary cause. +Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear +that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as +anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony +of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political +strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of +drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of +the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it +seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never +become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I +will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective +strategy of subversion. +Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number +of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their +emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements +of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that +the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the +~ +semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic, +which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech. +As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for +a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the +plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she +maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of +primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms +of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple +sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of +the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the +requirements of univocal designation. +In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic +function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives +in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that +in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic] +place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of +univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated +or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against +the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their +repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives +manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity, +these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work, +she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to +the modality [of] primary process.”3 +In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva +ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic +terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic +obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only +~ +those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the +dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other +words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather +than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that +jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that +desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal +body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the +“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse +prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike +effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the +mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as +the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as +distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But +this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it +thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself +in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5 +The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the +Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to +vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words +to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two +modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood +as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the +semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition, +mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely +signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests +upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it +becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and +univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of +~ +the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and +univocal signification. Kristeva writes: +In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for +example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints +(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic +elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6 + +For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests +a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body: +Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the +contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language +(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the +cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7 + +Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly +appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject, +where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the +Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against +the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of +maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally +signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language +would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of +incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding +law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from +~ +within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of +libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state +of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the +ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the +heterogeneity of drives. +In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that, +because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete +identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a +woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal +signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language +is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and, +hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow +that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the +structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the +founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire +can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements +that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the +act of giving birth: +By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she +becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her +instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently, +more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9 + +According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully +reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because +the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated +off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from +~ +the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is +never fully completed. +As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to +grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense, +refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body +is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a +kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack. +The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female +“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female +homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture: +The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete +absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm, +sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a +screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10 + +For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides +childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic. +For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an +unmediated way. And yet why is this the case? +Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the +Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the +Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those +which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task, +then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to +~ +tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just +as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the +site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in +culturally communicable form: +The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by +virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also +attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of +split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of +the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth +consists.11 + +Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged +practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic +of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the +autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The +heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of +displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law +by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself. +Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented +in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the +Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is +impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of +the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law +challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva +does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the +prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the +~ +subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another +version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s +concealed foundation. +This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law +produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one +hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible +practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva +does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from +her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva +poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always +on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the +incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and, +because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality. +For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual +desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this +drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of +maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or +through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity +of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially +sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual +desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences +for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of +the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire +would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to +Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality +and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked. +How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience +~ +as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she +identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism +constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis? +By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing +lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs +lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal +and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law +positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege. +The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is +precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a +site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience +is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a +fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself. +In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva +appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression +necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior +to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain +lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation +itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her +restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear +encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a +developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to +culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”? +Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience +~ +from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge +its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law +not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural +subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it +appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to +return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that +escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed, +beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law, +temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they +initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of +culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion +as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility. +Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her +postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of +epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these +drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives +us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this +answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend +upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot, +then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives +through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed +for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that +which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives +prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to +attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation +into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot +reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other +~ +words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their +effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with +their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations +are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves. +This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider, +for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse +is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we +have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order +to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts +are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover +that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and +are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception +of maternal instincts: +Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species +that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of +markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the +life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic, +unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the +whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled +drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13 + +Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which, +it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy, +in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in +avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these +~ +various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural +moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents +any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts +with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the +Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle +of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly, +that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends +operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the +way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her +description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the +very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has +become a univocal signifier. +Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to +their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions +about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive +and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the +hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed +ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with +the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity +of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other +cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which +operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva +believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would +~ +ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return +to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed +concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear +and univocal. +Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire, +part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes +an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity +and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the +semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of +univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the +principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations. +Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having +an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the +way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it +is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required +and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the +consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed, +rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction +of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand +the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on +women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of +Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the +desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and +produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14 +What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal +teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture? +To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction +between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of +the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary +~ +signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification +itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider +the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her +argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary +processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing +framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and +for what purposes? +By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which +affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the +result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally +constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship +which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of +desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders +that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality. +Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology +of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this +sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure +generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that +activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and +poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an +uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of +humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does +the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary +female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very +~ +order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse? +In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality, +he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . . +[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex +facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to +cause the structure and meaning of desire: +the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial +unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious +unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus +able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16 + +For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to +its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning +within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an +historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and +affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce +“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises +the power relations responsible for its genesis. +Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of +the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a +maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the +structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive +production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by +which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the +maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of +all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood, +~ +rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the +female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self +and the law of its desire. +If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically +specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality, +itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the +trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no +longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon +the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This +very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends +and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women. +Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood +are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the +institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures +of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and +requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its +reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural +necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated +maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law +itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability. +Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in +which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural +drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct +produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do +these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest, +however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated +upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider +~ +whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by +which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of +the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the +object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may +be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself. +As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the +mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and +makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body +that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be +yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating +in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order +to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the +oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and +subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body +beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from +within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when +the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of +itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither +to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future +of cultural possibilities. +ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics +of Sexual Discontinuity +Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those +Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms +of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a +disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of +theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we +consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes +the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that +his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that +~ +proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of +his own critical apparatus. +Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality, +Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of +“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to +doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to +“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published +in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided. +A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also +included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation +of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is +necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the +critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s +reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of +Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that +sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete +relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the +“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual +difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine +against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text. +In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that +the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the +other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within +~ +discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally +reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18 +In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and +causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as +an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and +continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes +“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and +power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which +power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment +of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as +repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted +energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this +juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only +works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in +this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations +and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and +falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be +recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power +must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power +which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity. +the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it +possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to +sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive + +~ +relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible +urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154) + +Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they +subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of +power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to +emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and, +thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of +departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into +how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within +discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model +of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in +his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some +sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault +remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal +subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled +than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to +be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs +those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex, +gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and +any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically +extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/ +knowledge regime. +In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin, +Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of +sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy +dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and +~ +physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes +within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides, +according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a +world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii). +Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation +imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of +Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of +emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the +release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from +the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or +Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture. +The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine +Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History +of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures +of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition +of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants +to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to +be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any +specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a +trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault +officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we +must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues +that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is +~ +always produced or constructed within specific historical practices, +both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality +before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory +sexual politics. +The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read +Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the +constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for +sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust +victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the +time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the +other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety +and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although +Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals, +the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s +own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what +is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where +one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably +female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation +that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents. +Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a +state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er +suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward +men, but finally toward the world as such. +Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at +school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate +attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt +and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes +h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that +effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and +~ +effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally +obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of +men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the +journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide. +One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a +man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of +the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed, +Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely +that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of +univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of +the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the +pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law +they are said to defy. +The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian +play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the +alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we +have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the +productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative +strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the +specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context +of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference +reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical +reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of +Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of +Herculine’s sexual world. +Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality +between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of +female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine +~ +we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as +French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within +an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions +produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and +Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner +of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about +ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously, +the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous +sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality +and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself. +The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young +girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological +doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If +Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or +chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently +generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires, +the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body, +and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both +causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity? +Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle +to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender +which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself +presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender +confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result +and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er +~ +anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs +and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a +sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse +on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of +happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide. +If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of +confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as +the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters” +and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made +possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her +sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of +women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once +“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment, +structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy +limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly +retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of +female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather +than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy +the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for +Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault +wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject. +But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he +wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in +homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to +the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following +description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once +~ +invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender +pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes +astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another” +(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to +accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions +the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the +eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces +these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even +within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er +difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference +is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire. +S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she +is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he +contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it. +The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the +denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no +longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex. +Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but +confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing +the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to +which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover, +Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which +challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic +exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence +and redistribution. +But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level +of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex” +and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of +~ +sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of +sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost +Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a +natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as +“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough +medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the +heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very +medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But +what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve? +If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as +precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that +he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the +effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear +whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something +else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces +sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be +described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place +of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether +this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In +other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality +and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly +didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity +or parallel between his life and hers? +~ +On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch +understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some +sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks +that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten +to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that +do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community +of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable. +“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel +points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the +textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the +adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and +Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it +is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps +Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in +the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,” +might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not +in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such, +especially as it applies to the categories of sex. +Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are +in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic +distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of +h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after +some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of +appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when +she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!” +(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in +order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on +homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there +is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly +among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female +homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different +~ +bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally +do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed +“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This +explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et +les choses): +This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter +that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my +thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes +with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing +things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with +collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20 + +The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and +particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre +Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for +Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of +kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s +now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference, +designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s +dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics, +but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh +of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface +constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of +Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23 +In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa, +Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to +freeze” (105) those who encounter it. +But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and +Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which +~ +consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked +as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable— +that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one. +But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive +identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to +the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it +is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed, +perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify +for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification. +But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems +to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a +laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he +loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine, +then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two +positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it +either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the +jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of +punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was +not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he +articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a +devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then +finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself +from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation, +s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully +directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those +who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love. +At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence +~ +paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic +incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into +h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was +abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he +tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for +abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures, +deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence +s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a +sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother” +(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through +the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears +as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal +caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it +were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which +scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between +being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object +of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic +structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy +involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination +is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the +mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be +constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive +narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and +neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of +enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is +better for all women than any “man” (107). +S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early +“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at +the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early +~ +refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the +phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very +father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the +tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my +feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the +anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier +enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and +whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs +h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet +underground!” (69). +Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place +Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not +“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier, +h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, +construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of +the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and +the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law, +one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic +and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are +subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by +death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its +condition and its aim. +After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid +than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person” +who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the +~ +other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns +h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects +h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law +precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law +naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other +words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of +“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical +naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized +instrument and sign. +Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical +law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside” +within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of +fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected, +have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis. +Concluding Unscientific Postscript +Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the +quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that +become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although +Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of +Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his +philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for +~ +ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a +Foucaultian critique. +One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim +to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With +the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene, +which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was +discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or +testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No. +51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon +which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions +regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked. +According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the +Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA +were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had +XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and +some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis +they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but +we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations. +Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be +some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of +DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its +usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not +expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA +sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why +it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact, +still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y +chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had +somehow been misplaced. +~ +Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up +with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their +research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has +chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female +and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal +criteria could provide. +Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that +haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA +sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of +females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that +perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its +absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males +and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains +hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his +coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals +from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous +in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her +article, “Life in the XY Corral”: +the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm +production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e., +precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and +low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males +because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . . +Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal, +[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328) + +Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not +add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated +by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as +well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are +~ +XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male +and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided +by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were +sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the +experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary +at all. +But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which +that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice +that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher +and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that +ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of +the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence +of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an +object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active +and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions +about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew +and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes +Eicher and Washburn: +Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y +chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the +induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant) +event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive +(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as +much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the +induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any +cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written +about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the +undifferentiated gonad. (325) + +In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under +~ +tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have +argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research +orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated +cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and +well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that +would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning +and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during +differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic +interactions alter during differentation” (323–24). +The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general +trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from +the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the +descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the +description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at +hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that +femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence +of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would +invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is +not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself +frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of +those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior +to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more +complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates +in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation +in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe. +~ +Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer +when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is +male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex? +One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be +resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary +framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek +recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the +claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three +Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange, +that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world +of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself +constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies, +about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to +inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the +categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within +the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent, +that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as +one that might well be constructed differently. +Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that +Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in +the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is +interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those +anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment. +One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses +that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external +genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of +reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the +~ +male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire +to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather +than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other. +Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male +body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s +inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with +the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work +together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting, +then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the +last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority +over the discourse of reproduction. +This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance, +according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates +through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view, +to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female” +exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from +a radical critique. +iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and +Fictive Sex +Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body. +—Monique Wittig + +Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a +woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical, +for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along? +And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human +who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that +this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does +one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender +~ +construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into +a gendered subject? +Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the +question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who +do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute +the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the +human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in +advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human +who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural +afterthought? +Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of +women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are +taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with +a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was +willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that +being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is +an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed; +sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause +gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex; +indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and +whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the +variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities +of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body. +Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones +that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are +radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to +become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret +male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction +~ +ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to +the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way +restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never +be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of +some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively, +then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond +the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new +vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the +binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But +how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the +fate of an impossible and vain utopian project? +“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in +an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what +sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig +offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from +her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is +a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to +divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a +division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig, +there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is +itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not +natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is +the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only +exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A +~ +lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in +terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains, +transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is +neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is +beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding +presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might +say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not +born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if +one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man. +Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a +category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable +political categories of description. +Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the +political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This +relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary +in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one +sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is +always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this +system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig, +then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male +sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex, +trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because +“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no +sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into +sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues +that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become +ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex +is necessarily feminine. +Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in +~ +the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the +system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it. +As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire +discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans +and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her +theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that +regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender. +Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions +forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a +“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience, +Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a +datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no +longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a +violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is +“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused, +but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that +her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge: +Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical +features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a +physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic +construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social +system), through the network of relationships in which they are +perceived.27 + +“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side +of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that +these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the +~ +reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features +gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within +the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on +an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a +language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived. +Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body? +An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so +forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous +body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole. +Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a +“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction +of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the +“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the +body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination +those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate +what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her +theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the +body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination. +Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the +locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of +reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted +ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to +be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology +that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly +refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying +structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation +~ +of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically +contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory +that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and +deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons. +The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the +authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex +and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin. +Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce +reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively +considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of +domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that +both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/ +perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual +difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies +and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of +nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28 +“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category +of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon +the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the +“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences, +“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because +they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the +speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of +that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s +own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat: +~ +“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and +gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To +speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech; +hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction, +the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language +that asserts it. +The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous. +Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical +and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and +interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and +theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds, +even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms +of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather, +one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had +to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the +cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression. +Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity +of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33 +Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through +locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and, +ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that +identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male +and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no +sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of +men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists: +“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The +universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated +by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act, +perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the +level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34 +~ +Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of +the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an +absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,” +which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women” +altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman, +the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the +invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject +could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking +presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig +describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the +power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I” +assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to +speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and +power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the +feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36 +Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology +of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off +the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial +or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a +full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The +social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior +ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion +~ +of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and, +hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal +mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she +writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal +to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access, +however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity +of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she +argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being +is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes +not only the totality of language, but the unity of being. +If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within +the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence, +Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a +Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on +an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and +invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction +gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social +relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion +of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its +universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the +straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she +not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the +totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts. +Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of +ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the +universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection. +Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary +unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs +through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality. +~ +Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth +about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a +tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity. +Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration, +suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and +proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an +absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is +one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for +being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.” +In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of +the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In +that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two +sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are +individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically +entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds +to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any +general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular +property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization. +The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work +in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status. +Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating +social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are +measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept +and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a +material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these +“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be +judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude. +~ +Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena +that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered, +however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the +universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is +quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,” +even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for +women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized +through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the +speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view. +The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his +or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The +literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the +hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular +in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms. +To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy +the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of +a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise +unified ontology. +Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between +abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as +Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so +she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of +language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . . +words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise +made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that +within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with +the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les +Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions, +~ +indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the +universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize +the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48 +In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that +only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively +lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish +the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can +wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic +and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals, +but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position +of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a +set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject +becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective +that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the +world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory +heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the +latter’s epistemic hegemony. +In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion +of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality +with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It +can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it +can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to +speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point +of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that +speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an +ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and +concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract, +~ +the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present +in her theoretical essays all along.51 +Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot +be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes: +I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which +cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole +life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we +are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52 + +As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within +Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to +falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the +radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime. +But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of +heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as +a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist +power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution. +Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely +problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice +and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically +“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by +numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay +culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as +they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to +~ +ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if +heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not +follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further, +Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the +kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind. +My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig +between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that +there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian +sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse +centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality; +heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that +informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig +describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an +impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic +elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of +the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not +always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and +the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with +these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory +law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into +heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a +constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective. +Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate +with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position +is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies +for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct. +Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively +contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the +~ +normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be +lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged +in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that +proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls, +even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and +destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood +as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the +oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other +hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical +meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing +sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation, +the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs +a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply +possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation +between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize +the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense +is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an +assumption surely suspect. +Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that +appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back +into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she +likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and +resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a +culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that +constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly, +there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine +~ +identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic +interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well +prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite +direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case, +the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the +“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other. +Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire +admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the +sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can +shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay +claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief, +depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch +and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual +exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as +internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may +recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same +time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that +question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source +of their erotic significance. +Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme +identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a +natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist +among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in +Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the +various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate +descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is +established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of +~ +bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality +that they themselves invested in the category. +For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual +contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of +choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood +to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said +to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining +and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be +neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my +view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on +the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the +impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence. +Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale +refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very +terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are +coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed +than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless +pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off. +The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and +lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and +lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or +reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and +denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual +constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of +power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of +parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its +claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond +sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a +problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works +~ +appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for +which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body +and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political +transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms +and to deprive them of their legitimating functions. +Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific +meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome +the split between materiality and representation that characterizes +“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas +to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base, +strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she +understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the +male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality +are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to +support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense, +Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and +to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality. +Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a +medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained +for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible +materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures +and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the +naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her +aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to +offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring +~ +bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and +form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are +always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For +Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably +constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct +and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex. +If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the +binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive +enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In +The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its +partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of +attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the +same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig +clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a +“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks +those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the +task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine, +but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories. +The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the +violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for +this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not +to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and +binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now +represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that +consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive +redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to +~ +belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has +assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,” +but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this +literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical +use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings +that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the +tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple +internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence +against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct +out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem +inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution, +and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness. +Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution +of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is +always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged +among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs +that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities. +But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can +this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of +this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a +way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well +a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different +centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency +comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and +~ +recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to +become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes. +This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third +gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal +subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to +the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction, +its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories +of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of +the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole +new languages of description. +In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but, +rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman, +one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of +women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism. +This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But +even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to +decide the question of sexual “identity”? +If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a +self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming +an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian +no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts +that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a +“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a +contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,” +but also of “lesbian”? +~ +Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the +homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a +homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that +construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of +view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted +through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that +do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian +identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were +not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed, +required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it +seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality. +Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality +deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result, +that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in +its oppressive forms. +The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity +themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to +render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic. +iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions +“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that +heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . . +How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation, +whether the sex underneath is true or not.” +—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted +in Esther Newton, Mother Camp + +Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have +constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist +~ +theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of +epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is +shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express +the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political +shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political +elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that +identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site +of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female +body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which +gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body” +itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that +body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex? +The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to +presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition +of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive +medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of +suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse. +There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which, +prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century, +understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or, +more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception, +sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine. +There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where +“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that +can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in +Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification, +and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To +what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology +~ +adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed +as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent +do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit +hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the +taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations +are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance? +Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the +body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy? +Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body +is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body +is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is +“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly +understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction +of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities +are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through +the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering +destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of +values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the +speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through +the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama” +of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus +vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault, +“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture. +Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his +body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or +for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the +constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the +body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification, +~ +requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it +writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and +self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for +Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an +inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank +page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium +must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated +domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the +body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in +order for “culture” to emerge. +By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault +appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because +this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he +defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical +investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break +through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of +cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of +precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a +genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a +subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of +the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of +the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility. +Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours +of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish +specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the +boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing +certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes +of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies: +~ +ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference +between within and without, above and below, male and female, with +and against, that a semblance of order is created.55 + +Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction +between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural +means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a +region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably +binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot +point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame. +Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for +understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and +maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that +what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but +that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become, +within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist +appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the +body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she +maintains, there are +pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and +which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or +joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where +the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined. +A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed +some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which +should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger +for someone.56 + +~ +In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his +Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness +figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and +homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a +continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of +the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted +through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist +graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable +bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks +that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its +boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to +read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59 +Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their +margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous. +If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which +open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and +oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a +site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural +presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless +of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief +the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside” +the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy +and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always +conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural. + +~ +The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites +of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices +in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and +orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex +among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body +in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution +which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social) +intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a +consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its +stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various +bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered +exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such +exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine +what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the +regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed +constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that +might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61 +Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror +begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject +through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been +expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered +“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is +effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the +“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which +are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes: +nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the +mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign +of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I” +expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in + +~ +their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the +same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63 + +The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation +of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As +Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism, +homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that +founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along +sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of +Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others +through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division +the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary +tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by +those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes +outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by +which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In +effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and +outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body +would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its +surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but +this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears. +Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions +of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make +sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by +cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation +~ +tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that +subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos, +then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of +gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not +how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a +process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed. +Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse +and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive +binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body +is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility +of its hidden depth? +From Interiority to Gender Performatives +In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected +to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner” +truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the +doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his +history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as +Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in +On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of +prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a +repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the +prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is +not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that +bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body; +there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of +their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is +at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external +to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes: +~ +It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological +effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power +that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66 + +The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode +of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The +effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification +of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the +body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That +lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In +this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic +space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually +renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest, +but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67 +The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface +politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the +disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of +presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the +gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying +absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body +politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We +have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against +homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of +an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of +the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the +~ +der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual, +and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of +significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive +model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed +as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe. +According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired, +wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the +effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of +the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but +never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts, +gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense +that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are +fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and +other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which +constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated +as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of +a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control +that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity” +of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core, +an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation +of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within +the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary +~ +practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive +origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an +analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its +fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its +true identity. +If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a +fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems +that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the +truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother +Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton +suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender +takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks +both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender +identity. Newton writes: +At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my +‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is +masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion; +“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my +essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69 + +Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth +and falsity. +The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such +parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to +~ +sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But +the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more +complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a +clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag +plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and +the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence +of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical +sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the +performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and +both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the +performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as +drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose), +it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience +which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of +heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the +pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be +natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence, +we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which +avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their +fabricated unity. +The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that +there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the +parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic +notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy, +the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that +double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after +which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be +~ +more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its +effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification +and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender +identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic +styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the +original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an +original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender +identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of +received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer +laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of +a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that +construction. +According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer +Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody: +Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the +wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral +practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the +satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that +there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it +humor.70 + +The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion +for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to +be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody. +In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived. +~ +stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated +and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of +actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive +confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the +inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of +the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance +will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that +destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire. +If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose +permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then +what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre +would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest +that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all +never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a +corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent +construction of meaning. +Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is +an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to +materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and +to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal +project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating +force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of +~ +duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs. +Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a +performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are +part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture; +indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right. +Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender +is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and +without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a +construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective +agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders +as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions— +and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the +construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The +historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are +nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress. +Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the +peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which, +in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes +existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted, +and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their +originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible +“cause” to be an “effect”? +In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This +repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of +meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies +that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered +~ +tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not +inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic +aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot +be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found +and consolidate the subject. +Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of +agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity +tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a +stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the +stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane +way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds +constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation +moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model +of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted +social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts +which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is +precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment +which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves, +come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a +norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to +embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of +acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized +configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts +that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity, +but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and +contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender +transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation +between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity, +or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding +identity as a politically tenuous construction. +~ +If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative, +then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to +express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in +which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or +attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or +distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity +would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created +through sustained social performances means that the very notions of +an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also +constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative +character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender +configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination +and compulsory heterosexuality. +Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically +incredible. + +~ +From Parody to Politics +I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could +do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether +it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in +order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we” +is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the +term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of +the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous +or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or, +at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political +theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and +bodies, but of politics itself. +The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume +that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be +elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument +is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is +variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an +existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and +its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in +and through the other that has interested me here. +~ +The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some +stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the +subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency, +usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains +intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject. +This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared +necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that +culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes +(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive +“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and +(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse, +where determination forecloses the possibility of agency. +Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted +environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally +enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for +example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender, +but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point +of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never +fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness +of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural +predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates +of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close +with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is +instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of +exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It +is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to +~ +posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers +itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing. +If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity +is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates +within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is +not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are +provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the +legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices +that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I +pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The +Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by +Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses +presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its +world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as +an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here +belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very +problematic of identity that it seeks to solve. +What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an +epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and +how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What +kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the +invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled +out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely +documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object +dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and +distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a +strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once +~ +that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about +the knowability and recoverability of that Other. +As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move +within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in +and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a +necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary +itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity +to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification +permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one +possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of +agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert +piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many +inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this +appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks +to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to +qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent +and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally +intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a +practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that +inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic +life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs +by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves +in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting +unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific +modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered. +~ +logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible +identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,” +rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy +and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed, +when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the +subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined +by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a +founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals +itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the +orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing +signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative +domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that +contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within +the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity +becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated. +Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through +discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable +object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees +in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a +transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who +maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural +field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the +very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there. +What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the +~ +genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar +itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself +here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests +the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted) +that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the +real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which +gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not +written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s +“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the +accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry +within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between +instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition +are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to +approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the +rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits +itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition +that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so +these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized +performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself. +Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the +very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a +failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a +politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion +of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And +yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would +argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable. +Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic +practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them- + +~ +selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the +effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive +identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The +parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender +identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a +subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it +were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those +hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration, +reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status. +I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed +to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in +order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously +work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities +that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative +political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically, +the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or +generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and +fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally +determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status +of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests +the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction +remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and +determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and +becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to +establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit +is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its +own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a +position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism + +~ +ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local +possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those +practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present +the immanent possibility of contesting them. +This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the +very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the +political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative +cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in +their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics? +This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of +sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of +the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification, +a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the +inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as +binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as +enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as +an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of +“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual +construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the +mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are +also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction +and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of +sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that +presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and +globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention. + +~ +If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these +“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not +only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that +enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a +feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might +enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to +repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself. +There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political +contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on +sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a +foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by +installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground. +The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which +identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the +foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has +been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it +presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every +new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that +already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as +culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer +fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer +understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that +belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics + +~ +would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations +of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that +establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of +sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local +strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such? + +~ + +Preface (1999) +1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation +of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the +arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal +ratification of same-sex partnerships. +2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme: +Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and +Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998. +3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law +(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7. +4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky +Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los +Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my +arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of +gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book. +5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point. +6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/ +Wellek/index.html. +7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek, +Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy +Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser, + +~ +Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity. +8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the +notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only +came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to +account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A +Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997). +9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the +earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the +melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of +the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss +that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or +disavow the loss it has just articulated. +10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and +interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to +contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real: +Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences, +Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126. +11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose +work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s +“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the +postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the +appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that +emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the +same time under conditions of domination. +12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has +been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject. +I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions +of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to +Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at +Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection. + +~ +13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most +prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech. +14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America +(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any +other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent +gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at +http://www.isna.org. +15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances +Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell, +Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William +Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava, +Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for +their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface +was written. +1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire +1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History +of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York: +Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté +de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses +the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the +productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not +identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of +productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of +Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault, +Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of +sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under +criticism in the final chapter. +2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka +and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan +Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987). +3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in +History (New York: Macmillan, 1988). + +~ +4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of +Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and +Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. +283–302. +5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The +Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987). +She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement +sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that +movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether +uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the +repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities +that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the +very instability that the foundationalist move creates. +6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that +grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires +are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of +“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/ +epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to +cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a +stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female) +that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory +practice of heterosexuality. +7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see +chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.” +8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements +in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the +Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press, +1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual +Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge +University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis +of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies, +see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological +Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978). + +~ +9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of +biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific +basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender, +vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on +feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2, +No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The +Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique +for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra +Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University +Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New +Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning +was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in +Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions +(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex +and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne +Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men +(New York: Norton, 1979). +10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history +of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed +consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The +Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century +(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as +an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986. +11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in +Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil +Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987). +12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York: +Vintage, 1973), p. 301. +13. Ibid., p. 38. +14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies, +Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986. +15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s, +Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn +as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a + +~ +mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic +relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the +body itself. +16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with +Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977). +17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in +Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press, +1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5, +1986. +18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi. +19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.” +20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz +Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization +through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of +doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz +Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323, +originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil, +1952]). +21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and +the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at +the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit. +Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is +clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of +that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and +Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be +the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion +for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first +this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that + +~ +remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the +ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed +and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine +over feminine. +22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary +Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982. +23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary +explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the +“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates +politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of +that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions +. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the +possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation +and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New +York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113). +24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La +Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color, +eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table, +Women of Color Press, 1982). +25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has +Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other +Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985). +Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10). +26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2, +Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20, +see chapter 3, n. 49. +27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two +of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of + +~ +cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the +terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual +difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the +Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so +wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as +a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and +Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed +for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that +preexist and structure subject-formation itself. +28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist +Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other +Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49. +29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least +to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist +Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41). +30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist +Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original +editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social +function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to +the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave +ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality. +31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche: +Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta, +1977), pp. 17–18. +32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall +1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25. + +~ +33. Ibid., p. 3. +34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that +“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other +words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without +“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that +“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s +Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall, +Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed. +(New York: Routledge, 1996). +35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs +of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New +York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite +Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French +version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English +translation. +36. See chapter 2, section ii. +37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x. +38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press, +1985), pp. 11–14. +39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann +(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45. +40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion +of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups +to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977. +The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. +41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature: +Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian +(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114. +42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration +or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of +structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender- + +~ +neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, +1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language. +43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63. +44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1, +Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30. +45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, +1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, +1973). +46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase. +47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the +genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See, +for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline +of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton, +1979). +48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in +various parts of chapter 2 of this text. +49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987). +50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The +Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982). +51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender +(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is +that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed +roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90). +52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the +Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The +“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the +understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche. +Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the +law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the +other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of +the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a +fictive and repressive notion. + +~ +53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the +Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston: +Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and +Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of +Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual +Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the +Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber +Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed +with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann +Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago, +1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to +Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and +Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,” +Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N. +Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and +Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71. +54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure +of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness +through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See +Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and +Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of +that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar +College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that +she did not. +55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J. +Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989). +56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it +is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of +gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic +ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson, + +~ +“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on +Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983). +2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the +Heterosexual Matrix +1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s +“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that +provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and +masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its +attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as +a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map +that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time. +Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language +and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be +fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the +reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to +an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of +Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer +exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic +authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in +Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana +University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of +this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the +law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of +that law through recourse to a time before the law. +2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and +Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980). +3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in +Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York: +Routledge, 1990). +4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women: +Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of +Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975). +Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the + +~ +notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how +women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the +social bond between men. +5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary +Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496. +6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist +Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns +Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of +Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns +Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy, +trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982). +7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange— +and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a +social value. It provides the means of binding men together.” +8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: +Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103. +9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men: +English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University +Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of +reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering +attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and +an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects +of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object +of discourse. +10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated +as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia +University Press, 1993). +11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive. +12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491. +13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated +jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother. +14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master +and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire: + +~ +Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999). +15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment +from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father +onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost +mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman: +Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la +femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980). +16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques +Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose, +trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter, +page references to this work will appear in the text. +17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977), +p. 131. +18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here +is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic +of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is +whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as +genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which +femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a +fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann +Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington: +Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the +Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982, +pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17, +Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and +the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark +Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary +Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper, +Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985). +19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of +Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the + +~ +consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which +founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of +disavowed losses. +20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the +text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order. +21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds. +Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986), +pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of +Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will +appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows, +“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.” +22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther +Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More +Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance +(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how +radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of +gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the +presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find +their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are +themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a +counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms. +23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by +bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End +Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire. +Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and +are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal. +24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61. +25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic + +~ +establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification, +with the analysand that she describes in the article. +26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85. +27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and +Rose, p. 44. +28. Ibid., p. 55. +29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to +understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See +his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de +Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me. +30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans. +Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is +created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery +of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible +through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the +thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s +Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most +clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction +between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in +Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms, +the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power, +but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and +subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume +I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81) +and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined +status of the juridical law. +31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73. +32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, +ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S. +Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir: +Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun: +Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia +University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter +text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the + +~ +matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked +with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of +primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to +the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to +commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas +the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the +suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly +and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern +effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the +psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood +According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body +Politics of Julia Kristeva.” +33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id, +trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia +and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion +of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul +Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and +Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip +Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text. +34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s +“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic +Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim +(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195. +35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of +mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below. +36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between +the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does +not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine +Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of +the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New + +~ +York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text +engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan. +37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81. +38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale +University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York: +International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of +the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press, +1968). +39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie, +introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in +L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and +the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by +Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of +this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and +Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in +Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New +York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the +same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s +Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer +(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics +of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp. +3–18. +40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68. +41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes +of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes. +This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward +by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a +fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5). +42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian +Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the +heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu- + +~ +ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that +body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals +the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and +the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout +the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on +these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is +understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and +anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity +into question. +43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed +by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego +is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests +that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development. +Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface +entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in +Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins +(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative +account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the +implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A +Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale +University Press, 1989). +44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in +the text. +45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the +Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de +Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality. +46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View +(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest. +47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of +Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980. + +~ +48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James +Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7. +49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought +and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable +narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which +transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic +order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting +or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105). +3. Subversive Bodily Acts +1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol. +3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118. +2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984), +p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris: +Editions du Seuil, 1974). +3. Ibid., p. 25. +4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p. +135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from +two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and +Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil, +1969). +5. Ibid., p. 135. +6. Ibid., p. 134. +7. Ibid., p. 136. +8. Ibid. +9. Ibid., p. 239. +10. Ibid., pp. 239–240. +11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen, +“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia +Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English, +1985. +12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239. + +~ +13. Ibid., p. 239. +14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of +Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4. +15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he +writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations +are understood as sublimated reproductive desire. +16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans. +Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154. +17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs +of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New +York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite +Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text. +18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial +unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, +pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a +causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See +chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted. +19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James +O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982– +Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy, +Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman +(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291. +20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences +(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv. +21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My +Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank +Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . . +(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973). +22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism +without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: +University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la +différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967). +23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms. +24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s + +~ +Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on +Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V. +Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her +article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda +Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,” +Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360. +25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being +almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It +is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender +to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. +2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89. +See chapter 3, n. 4). +26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might +account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category +violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies +effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing +the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to +writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action, +we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the +category of sex in action. +27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2, +Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20., +see chapter 3, n. 49. +28. Ibid., p. 17. +29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4. +30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1, +Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. +21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49. +31. Ibid., p. 107. +32. Ibid., p. 106. +33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4. + +~ +34. Ibid., p. 5. +35. Ibid., p. 6. +36. Ibid. +37. Ibid. +38. Ibid. +39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature: +Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian +(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical +difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language +that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and +Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of +linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s +critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains +closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the +semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both +Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces +and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze +argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is +deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet, +Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York: +Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89. +40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this +insight. +41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also +in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49. +42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3, +No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67. +See chapter 3, n. 49. +43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.” +44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French +New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, +1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter +3, n. 49. +45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48. + +~ +46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a +“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee” +the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the +second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social +capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues, +individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that +precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay +with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any +reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely +woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their +organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139). +47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon, +1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du +Minuit, 1969). +48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9. +49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in +1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press, +1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic +contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although +she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general +will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see +Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in +Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and +Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp. +259–279. +50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.” +51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.” +52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41. +53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.” +54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans. +Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca: + +~ +Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to +this essay. +55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley: +Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4. +56. Ibid., p. 113. +57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988). +58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115. +59. Ibid., p. 121. +60. Ibid., p. 140. +61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory, +Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion +of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in +honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical +“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48. +62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of +Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia +University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur +(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her +own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality, +that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then +becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals +and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65). +63. Ibid., p. 3. +64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious +Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of +Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern +University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery +and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990), +pp. 201–214. +65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic +Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York: +Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An + +~ +Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20, +No. 3,Winter 1988. +66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan +Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29. +67. Ibid., p. 30. +68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female +Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972). +69. Ibid., p. 103. +70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend, +WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114. +71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University +Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The +Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive +Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983). + +~ + +abject, the, 169–70 +Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87 +AIDS, 168–69 +Am I That Name? (Riley), 6 +Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari), +151 +Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43 +Barnes, Djuna, 152 +Bataille, Georges, 131 +“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60, +149–51 +berdache, 194n. 8 +binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63 +biology, cellular, 135–41 +bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84, +98–100, 173 +bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43 +body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as +boundary, variable, 44, 170–71, +177; construction of, 12–13, 17, +161, 168–69; inscription on, +163–67, 171–73; maternal, +101–19; permeability of, 168; +“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70 +Borges, Jorge, 131 + +butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58 +chromosomes, 135–41 +Civilization and Its Discontents +(Freud), 92 +Cixous, Hélène, 131 +corporeal styles, 178–80 +Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5 +de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18, +35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177 +de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49 +Deleuze and Guattari, 151 +Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150, +193n. 2, 201–2n. 1 +de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51 +Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21 +Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5 +Dews, Peter, 209n. 49 +différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150 +Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171 +dispositions, sexual, 77–84 +Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169, +214–15n. 62 +drag, 174–80 +écriture feminine, 19 + +~ +Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77, +79–82, 84 +ego-ideal, the, 79–81 +Eicher, Eva, 138–41 +Elementary Structures of Kinship, The +(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55 +empty space, 86 +Engels, Friedrich, 47 +epistemology and identity, 183–84 +Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92 +Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41 +fêlure, 71, 100 +feminism: debates within, 18–22; +foundationalist frame of, +189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46; +and politics, 181–90; and sexual +difference, 35–44; women as +“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 +Ferenczi, Sandor, 66 +Foucault, Michel: on category of +sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18, +123–35; on genealogy, 165–66; +on homosexuality, 83, 130–31; +on inscription, 171–73; on +repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97 +Franklin, Aretha, 29–30, +198–99n. 34 +Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84, +203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36 +Gallop, Jane, 37 +Garbo, Greta, 163 +Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50 +gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77; +as incredible, 180; in language, +28–30; overthrow of, 95–96, +151–54; as performative, +163–90; as regulatory, 23–33, + +42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33, +47–48, 141–65 +genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188 +genetics, sex and, 135–41 +Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53, +160–61 +Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40 +Haar, Michel, 27–28 +Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25 +Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183, +196–97n. 21, 203n. 14 +Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently +Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault), +31–32, 120, 123–35 +heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26, +30–31, 34–35, 147–50 +heterosexual matrix, 42–43, +45–100 +History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1 +(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117, +120–24, 135–36 +homosexuality: Foucault on, 83, +130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan +on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14; +and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere +on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84, +87–88, 168–70;Wittig on, +24–33 +hooks, bell, 205n. 23 +Husserl, Edmund, 17 +identification in gender, 40–41, +80–91, 207n. 38 +identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of, +181–90 +imitation, 41, 174–76 +impersonation, 174–80 + +~ +incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84, +87–88, 110, 204n. 19 +“incorporation” of identity, 86–91, +171–74 +internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38 +“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166, +186, 201–2n. 1 +Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27, +34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54 +Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56 +“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade” +(Heath), 67–68 +Jones, Ernest, 64 +jouissance, 55, 71 +Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2, +201–2n. 1 +Kant, Immanuel, 71 +kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16 +Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32 +Kristeva, Julia: on the abject, +169–70; on Lacan, 101–2, +104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14; +and the maternal body, 101–19; +on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32; +as orientalist, 114; on repression, +104–5, 115–17; on the +Symbolic, 102, 104–10 +Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2, +104–5; and lesbian sexuality, +62–64; and the Law, 55, 59, +70–72; and masquerade, 60–73; +on the Phallus, 56–60; on +sexual difference, 36–39; on +the Symbolic, 57, 70–73, +101–2, 104 +language: and culture, 55; gender in, +28–30; poetic, 101–12; and + +identity, 182–86; and power, +33–44 +law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2, +118–19, 200n. 52 +Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72 +Leibniz, Gottfried, 51 +Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36, +153, 159–60, 169 +lesbianism: and the body, 35–36, +159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64; +and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of +women, 26–27, 162–63 +Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93 +“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41 +literalization, 87–91 +Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50 +Locke, John, 158 +MacCormack, Carol, 48 +Marcuse, Herbert, 92 +“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig), +28–29 +Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183 +masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18 +melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19, +206–7n. 32 +Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in +America (Newton), 163, 174 +“Motherhood According to Bellini” +(Kristeva), 71 +mourning, 73–84, 107–9 +“Mourning and Melancholia” +(Freud), 73–74, 78–79 +Newton, Esther, 163, 174, +205n. 22 + +~ +Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73, +166, 171, 206n. 30 +Oedipal complex, the, 75–84, +91–100 +“One Is Not Born a Woman” +(Wittig), 143–44 +On the Genealogy of Morals +(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171, +206n. 30 +“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig), +159, 214n. 49 +Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131 +Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11 +Page, David, 136–41 +Panizza, Oscar, 120 +“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151 +parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90 +pastiche, 176, 186–87 +patriarchy, 45–46 +performativity, 171–90 +person, unversal conception of, +14–15 +phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52 +Phallus, the, 55–73 +Plato, 17, 92, 116 +Pleasure and Danger (Vance), +200–201n. 53, 205n. 22 +pleasures, proliferation of, +35–36 +Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and +the Media (Watney), 168 +politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9, +181–90; of identity, 181–87 +“Postmodernism and Consumer +Society” (Jameson), 176 +power: and category of sex, 25, +155–58; and language, 33–44; + +prohibition as, 91–100; and +volition, 158 +Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70 +Proust, Marcel, 152 +psychoanalytic accounts of sexual +difference, 33–39, 44–100 +Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67, +169 +redeployment of categories, 163–90 +repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87 +representation, problems of, 3–9 +repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17 +Revolution in Poetic Language +(Kristeva), 104 +Riley, Denise, 6 +Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25 +Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70, +156n. 51, 205–6n. 29 +Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4, +209n. 45 +Same/Other binary, 131–33 +Sarraute, Natalie, 152 +Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164, +196–97n. 21 +Schafer, Roy, 86 +Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18, +35, 141, 143 +Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9 +semiotic, the, 101–19 +sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,” +35–36, 141–63; and genetics, +135–41; vs. gender, 9–11, +23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and +identity, 23–33; as project, +177–78 +“Sex-Determining Region of the +Human Y Chromosome Encodes +a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41 + +~ +Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53 +sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96, +120–24, 155–58 +signifying economy, masculinist, +18–19 +“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30 +Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie +(Kristeva), 73 +space, internal, 86–91, 170–71 +Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty, +197n. 23, 204n. 18 +Stoller, Robert, 32 +“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45, +159 +Strathern, Marilyn, 48 +structuralism, 49–55 +subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48, +149–54, 169–70, 181–90 +substance, metaphysics of, 25–28, +34, 37 +Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73, +102, 104–10 +Symposium (Plato), 116 +Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality +(Freud), 36, 52, 140 +Torok, Maria, 86–87 +Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54 +“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political +Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin), +92–96 +transsexuality, 90 + +Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50 +Tyler, Parker, 163 +“unity,” 20–22 +“universality,” 15–16 +Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault), +135–36 +Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53, +205n. 22 +Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22 +Washburn, Linda L., 138–41 +Watney, Simon, 168 +Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir, +143–44; and category of sex, +24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59; +and heterosexual contract, +34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and +Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141, +147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as +materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159 +“Womanliness as a Masquerade” +(Riviere), 61–73 +women: as “being” the Phallus, +55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9, +19–22, 162–64; as object of +exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of +feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 +Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131 +Young, Iris Marion, 170 From 8bd864f3f5b9d425d61b310c49d7520cc62f62da Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 13:44:58 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 11/63] jump to visualization --- .DS_Store | Bin 6148 -> 6148 bytes gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb | 223 +++++++++---------------- 2 files changed, 75 insertions(+), 148 deletions(-) diff --git a/.DS_Store b/.DS_Store index 6bd0f8102912e1c0ba7583816a79c7249dbcba11..34e29f0fffbe35baac2de2f8b92c743f0cf9bb85 100644 GIT binary patch literal 6148 zcmeHK!A{#i5S@h-HXy1TT8ZOIy#|pGR8euUQuu+oY7Yek8%L>CmsT4)>x&5Jj z3E$HuFd;)uil4#V5XcuXPqL{3!mA4yS|Gi?=$jqBI{CCLv9Rm~!?p%@aNC>q(xJ zCO5PJ*_6#eYj-v~I67*pUZ*>6tJ#}_PFo%JUeD)E`SR8N@w>s7>?+saEs+BIj*%UQ z3-|$NsjjbKk!Ly|A;x*nX@tsiN?;4xqY75jgks*scn^D04tl7&d)Rv*2Y1$Zi;o?= z{{mdF)pQB3#4iOyqbFzMalVK?B{)Yp3>?-L5rGJs3bd)hwHU&tV_dm;fy3IOO()@+58<9HT!$je z({X=grjrOPdg~eR4BTX3-Cnl%{6GDB|9>;dUwH;R11rUVXq<#6eU#+R)}`Y3tX0qp qC=1W4Et(VCJzu~2NHo}wrt0|NsP3otMgG2}BOGo&&UGZarORG%!&CO=t({qtr8 s4tAD}4arQK**W+*fciEIa(ri=%rBzL3DSB1h#4l^@JMft5m~|v0NO|t>Hq)$ diff --git a/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb index ce4b23f..360c2d2 100644 --- a/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb +++ b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb @@ -11,12 +11,23 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 21, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, - "outputs": [], + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "3.8.8 (default, Apr 13 2021, 12:59:45) \n", + "[Clang 10.0.0 ]\n" + ] + } + ], "source": [ + "import sys\n", + "print(sys.version)\n", "import pandas as pd\n", "import nltk\n", "%matplotlib inline\n", @@ -34,140 +45,28 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 22, + "execution_count": 4, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, "outputs": [ { - "data": { - "text/html": [ - "
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Text AText BThresholdCutoffN-GramsNum MatchesText A LengthText B LengthLocations in ALocations in B
0gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE.txt353153505445970[(437197, 437306)][(34199, 34308)]
1gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH.txt353153505458719[(120176, 120440)][(4653, 4920)]
2gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/From Sodomy to .txt353153505481840[(790, 864)][(74227, 74304)]
3gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/Two Strikes and.txt353153505456002[(790, 864)][(52436, 52513)]
4gendertrouble.txtgender_texts/Inclusion and t.txt353153505435376[(479445, 479510)][(33058, 33123)]
\n", - "
" - ], - "text/plain": [ - " Text A Text B Threshold Cutoff \\\n", - "0 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE.txt 3 5 \n", - "1 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH.txt 3 5 \n", - "2 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/From Sodomy to .txt 3 5 \n", - "3 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/Two Strikes and.txt 3 5 \n", - "4 gendertrouble.txt gender_texts/Inclusion and t.txt 3 5 \n", - "\n", - " N-Grams Num Matches Text A Length Text B Length Locations in A \\\n", - "0 3 1 535054 45970 [(437197, 437306)] \n", - "1 3 1 535054 58719 [(120176, 120440)] \n", - "2 3 1 535054 81840 [(790, 864)] \n", - "3 3 1 535054 56002 [(790, 864)] \n", - "4 3 1 535054 35376 [(479445, 479510)] \n", - "\n", - " Locations in B \n", - "0 [(34199, 34308)] \n", - "1 [(4653, 4920)] \n", - "2 [(74227, 74304)] \n", - "3 [(52436, 52513)] \n", - "4 [(33058, 33123)] " - ] - }, - "execution_count": 22, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" + "ename": "FileNotFoundError", + "evalue": "[Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'log.csv'", + "output_type": "error", + "traceback": [ + "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", + "\u001b[0;31mFileNotFoundError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", + "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 1\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpd\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mread_csv\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'log.csv'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 2\u001b[0m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mhead\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36mread_csv\u001b[0;34m(filepath_or_buffer, sep, delimiter, header, names, index_col, usecols, squeeze, prefix, mangle_dupe_cols, dtype, engine, converters, true_values, false_values, skipinitialspace, skiprows, skipfooter, nrows, na_values, keep_default_na, na_filter, verbose, skip_blank_lines, parse_dates, infer_datetime_format, keep_date_col, date_parser, dayfirst, cache_dates, iterator, chunksize, compression, thousands, decimal, lineterminator, quotechar, quoting, doublequote, escapechar, comment, encoding, dialect, error_bad_lines, warn_bad_lines, delim_whitespace, low_memory, memory_map, float_precision, storage_options)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 608\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mupdate\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mkwds_defaults\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 609\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 610\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mreturn\u001b[0m \u001b[0m_read\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mfilepath_or_buffer\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 611\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 612\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m_read\u001b[0;34m(filepath_or_buffer, kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 460\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 461\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# Create the parser.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 462\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mparser\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mTextFileReader\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mfilepath_or_buffer\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m**\u001b[0m\u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 463\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 464\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mif\u001b[0m \u001b[0mchunksize\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mor\u001b[0m \u001b[0miterator\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m__init__\u001b[0;34m(self, f, engine, **kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 817\u001b[0m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0moptions\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"has_index_names\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"has_index_names\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 818\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 819\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0m_engine\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m 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\u001b[0mmapping\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0mengine\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m**\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0moptions\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# type: ignore[call-arg]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 1051\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1052\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mdef\u001b[0m \u001b[0m_failover_to_python\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m__init__\u001b[0;34m(self, src, **kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1865\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1866\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# open handles\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1867\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0m_open_handles\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0msrc\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 1868\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32massert\u001b[0m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mhandles\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mis\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mnot\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mNone\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1869\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mfor\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkey\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32min\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"storage_options\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"encoding\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"memory_map\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m 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"\u001b[0;31mFileNotFoundError\u001b[0m: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'log.csv'" + ] } ], "source": [ @@ -177,7 +76,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 23, + "execution_count": 6, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, @@ -215,7 +114,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 24, + "execution_count": 7, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -226,18 +125,20 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 25, + "execution_count": 8, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, "outputs": [ { - "name": "stderr", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "/var/folders/_g/ykvg1w8n5g7f967fyjqxrpgc0000gn/T/ipykernel_1243/1050344303.py:10: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", - "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", - " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" + "ename": "NameError", + "evalue": "name 'df' is not defined", + "output_type": "error", + "traceback": [ + "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", + "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", + "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# Get the size of the text.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 2\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mtextALength\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'Text A Length'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;36m0\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# I don't know why, but without the offset the novel ends too soon,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 5\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# with \"unvisited tomb.\" This fixes it.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m: name 'df' is not defined" ] } ], @@ -473,15 +374,27 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, - "outputs": [], + "outputs": [ + { + "ename": "NameError", + "evalue": "name 'normalizedBlocks' is not defined", + "output_type": "error", + "traceback": [ + "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", + "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", + "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m'
'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 2\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mfor\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblock\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32min\u001b[0m \u001b[0menumerate\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mnormalizedBlocks\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m+=\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m''\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m%\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mint\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mblock\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m+\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"
\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m: name 'normalizedBlocks' is not defined" + ] + } + ], "source": [ "blockHTML = '
'\n", "for i, block in enumerate(normalizedBlocks): \n", - " blockHTML += '' % (int(block), i, i)\n", + " blockHTML += '' % (int(block), i, i, i)\n", "blockHTML = blockHTML + \"
\"" ] }, @@ -533,9 +446,18 @@ " }\n", " %s\n", " \n", - "\n", - "%s
%s
\n", - "\"\"\" % (colorCSS, blockHTML, out)" + " \"\"\" % (colorCSS)\n", + "\n", + "info = [(block, i) for i, block in enumerate(normalizedBlocks)]\n", + "info.sort()\n", + "info.reverse()\n", + "top = 5\n", + "for block, i in info[:top]:\n", + " html += '%s' % (i, \"Link to block %s size %s\" % (i, int(block)))\n", + "html += \"\"\"\n", + " \n", + " %s
%s
\n", + " \"\"\" % (blockHTML, out)" ] }, { @@ -554,7 +476,7 @@ ], "metadata": { "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3", + "display_name": "Python 3.8.8 ('base')", "language": "python", "name": "python3" }, @@ -568,7 +490,12 @@ "name": "python", "nbconvert_exporter": "python", "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.10.2" + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "40d3a090f54c6569ab1632332b64b2c03c39dcf918b08424e98f38b5ae0af88f" + } } }, "nbformat": 4, From 0f1cd0bfa3292071ede4eb15bc749af707b0bd6e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 1 Dec 2022 14:30:13 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 12/63] Add files via upload --- gender-trouble/log_pages.csv | 2438 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 2438 insertions(+) create mode 100644 gender-trouble/log_pages.csv diff --git a/gender-trouble/log_pages.csv b/gender-trouble/log_pages.csv new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f10df44 --- /dev/null +++ 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455598)]","[(16561, 16845), (20368, 20449)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/Doing without K,3,5,3,1,533517,75302,"[(477195, 477271)]","[(64925, 65001)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/The Sartrean Or,3,5,3,4,533517,53722,"[(434109, 434205), (478955, 479086), (479469, 480082), (479724, 480190)]","[(44676, 44771), (45966, 46097), (46103, 46653), (46298, 46762)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/Sexual Harassme,3,5,3,1,533517,52508,"[(45122, 45225)]","[(35508, 35609)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/AfricanAmerican,3,5,3,2,533517,73305,"[(478124, 478195), (481404, 481554)]","[(1638, 1709), (2368, 2477)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/LE GENRE EN FAC,3,5,3,1,533517,64506,"[(471827, 471893)]","[(61863, 61930)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/Knowledge as Ma,3,5,3,1,533517,74597,"[(495840, 495899)]","[(72190, 72246)]" +gender_trouble_pages.txt,gender_texts/Spilling All ov,3,5,3,1,533517,41454,"[(458216, 458782)]","[(34906, 35475)]" 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Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
+  
+  
+  
Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
 to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have
 as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one
 of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded
@@ -176,8 +179,8 @@
 embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even
 as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in
 the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it
-belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
-and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
+belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
+and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
 undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the
 former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the
 case of Gender Trouble.
@@ -185,7 +188,9 @@
 assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views
 that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and
 restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity
-and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theorythat restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
+and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory
+~
+that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
 practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often
 with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to
 seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and
@@ -208,7 +213,9 @@
 Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was
 called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists.
 Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of
-sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to beone of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
+sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be
+~
+one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
 on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If
 in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof
 from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the
@@ -236,7 +243,9 @@
 where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is
 not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where
 cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and
-its promise of success, uncertain.Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
+its promise of success, uncertain.
+~
+Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
 American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate
 theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although
 the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it
@@ -261,6 +270,8 @@
 Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the
 two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what
 is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con-
+
+~
 summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in
 a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call
 into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do
@@ -288,14 +299,16 @@
 be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness”
 that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some
 lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status
+
+~
 as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years,
 offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not
 anticipate.2
 But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought
 to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual
 practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of
-normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
-of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
+normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
+of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
 of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there
 are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes:
 Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of
@@ -316,7 +329,9 @@
 use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming
 the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender,
 MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for
-thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of genderdiscrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
+thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender
+~
+discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
 discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment
 may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there
 are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is
@@ -338,7 +353,9 @@
 seeks to oppose it.
 I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn
 an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal
-or structural link between them. This makes good sense from oneperspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
+or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one
+~
+perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
 normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to
 be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is
 meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension
@@ -362,7 +379,9 @@
 that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its
 object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that
 might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very
-phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in whichthe anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
+phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which
+~
+the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
 outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization
 in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained
 temporal duration.8
@@ -387,7 +406,9 @@
 performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration.
 Although this text does not answer the question of whether the
 materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of
-much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for thereader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
+much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the
+~
+reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
 can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several
 scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made
 explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple
@@ -396,9 +417,9 @@
 what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race.
 Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,”
 whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that
-no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
-always work as background for one another, and they often find their
-most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
+no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
+always work as background for one another, and they often find their
+most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
 of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once,
 and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive
 category of analysis.12
@@ -418,19 +439,21 @@
 midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom,
 and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a
 part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension.
-At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also livinga life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
+At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living
+~
+a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
 book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth
 Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life.
-That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
-solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
+That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
+solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
 problem that this someone is given in language).
 It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the
 text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same
 time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its
 reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated
-with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
+with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
 to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and
-the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
+the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
 were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the
 relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist
 jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of
@@ -444,7 +467,9 @@
 Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual
 minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to
 understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out
-the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yetmet. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
+the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet
+~
+met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
 defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More
 recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory
 and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book
@@ -472,7 +497,9 @@
 not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell,
 in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about
 common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar
-is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraintsthat grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
+is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints
+~
+that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
 But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly
 irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and
 sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who
@@ -500,9 +527,11 @@
 but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on
 a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this
 violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at
-the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to bea natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
+the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be
+~
+a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
 agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the
-violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
+violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
 text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the
 pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality
 that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The
@@ -525,7 +554,9 @@
 consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender
 Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender
 is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It
-is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at thesame time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
+is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the
+~
+same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
 world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of
 a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be
 good.”
@@ -552,8 +583,10 @@
 and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity
 culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name
 the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what
-is at stake in using the term at all?What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
-questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
+is at stake in using the term at all?
+~
+What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
+questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
 how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In
 other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit
 the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the
@@ -579,6 +612,8 @@
 preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may
 not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees?
 The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail,
+
+~
 when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely
 the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered
 is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories
@@ -606,6 +641,8 @@
 considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which
 bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this
 legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is
+
+~
 not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter
 the violence performed by gender norms.
 In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the
@@ -628,7 +665,9 @@
 this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it.
 What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar
 that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that
-establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be preciselyto thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
+establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely
+~
+to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
 trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without
 which no “I” can appear.
 This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from
@@ -651,7 +690,9 @@
 to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous.
 This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the
 insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of
-both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
+both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.
+~
+If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
 include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal
 gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I
 would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular,
@@ -673,12 +714,14 @@
 the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those
 who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold
 that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life
-of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
+of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
 try to live, on the sexual margins.15
 Judith Butler
 Berkeley, California
 June, 1999
-Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
+~
+
+Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
 and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps
 trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was,
 within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should
@@ -694,7 +737,9 @@
 read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject
 of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the
 unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the
-glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of themasculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
+glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the
+~
+masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
 the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my
 attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than
 an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion
@@ -714,11 +759,13 @@
 is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to
 require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of
 the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that
-gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
-Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
-natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
+gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
+Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
+natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
 which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through
-which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constitutedthrough discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
+which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted
+~
+through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
 body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize
 “the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative
 construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be
@@ -727,7 +774,7 @@
 To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as
 effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical
 inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual
-identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
+identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
 discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this
 inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions:
 phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality.
@@ -738,12 +785,14 @@
 Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle
 the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of
 politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the
-consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
+consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
 new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no
 longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what
-extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
+extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
 for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself?
-* * *This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
+* * *
+~
+This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
 gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1,
 “Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as
 the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory
@@ -756,8 +805,8 @@
 are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce
 the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of
 power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of
-continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
-these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
+continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
+these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
 into question their alleged relations?
 Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
 Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism
@@ -769,7 +818,9 @@
 Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is
 subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The
 History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown
-both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexualeconomy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
+both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual
+~
+economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
 complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual
 codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about
 the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies?
@@ -789,13 +840,15 @@
 the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a
 childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact.
 Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which
-gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It isclearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
+gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is
+~
+clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
 various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled
 to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the
-predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
+predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
 author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other
 discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical
-boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
+boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
 participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from
 other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an
 interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist
@@ -816,7 +869,9 @@
 Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll
 Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender,
 Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985
-and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness toimagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
+and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to
+~
+imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
 critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work
 from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities
 Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the
@@ -832,7 +887,15 @@
 and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance.
 As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination,
 keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work.
-GENDER TROUBL1
+
+~
+
+~
+GENDER TROUBL
+~
+
+~
+1
 
 Subjects of
 Sex/Gender/Desire
@@ -850,11 +913,13 @@
 i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism
 For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some
 existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not
-only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
-representation serves as the operative term within a political process
+only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
+representation serves as the operative term within a political process
 that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political
 subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function
-of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what isassumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
+of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is
+~
+assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
 the development of a language that fully or adequately represents
 women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of
 women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all.
@@ -867,20 +932,22 @@
 with the result that representation is extended only to what can be
 acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being
 a subject must first be met before representation can be extended.
-Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
+Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
 appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is,
 through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the
 contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them,
 formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements
-of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
-of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
-representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
-facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
-system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differentialaxis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
-masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
-emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
-The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
-politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
+of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
+of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
+representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
+facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
+system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential
+~
+axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
+masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
+emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
+The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
+politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
 through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the
 juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the
 political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating
@@ -893,58 +960,62 @@
 before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s
 own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women
 might become more fully represented in language and politics.
-Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
-“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
-very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
-Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
+Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
+“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
+very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
+Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
 the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the
-law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
+law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
 well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law
 as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing
 assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law
 might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature
 hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a
 presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and,
-thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
+thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.
+~
+Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
 the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism
 encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common
-identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
+identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
 whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural,
 has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As
 Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by
 the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a
-woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
+woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
 because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of
-its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
-consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
+its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
+consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
 separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in
-which it is invariably produced and maintained.
+which it is invariably produced and maintained.
 The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for
 feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist
-cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
-women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
+cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
+women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
 a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its
 failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts
 have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the
 start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its
 efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support
-highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
+highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
 construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western
 barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for
-patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s ownclaims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
+patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own
+~
+claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
 categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to
 produce women’s common subjugated experience.
-Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
-kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
+Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
+kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
 difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is
-there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
-there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
+there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
+there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
 integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified
-against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
-formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
+against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
+formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
 both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its
 difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of
-“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
+“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
 exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but
 in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully
 decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from
@@ -958,17 +1029,19 @@
 consequences of that construction, even when the construction has
 been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation
 within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from
-“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessarylimits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
+“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary
+~
+limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
 representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the
 constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem
 is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for
-merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
+merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
 exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion
 itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By
 conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism
 articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross
 misrepresentation.
-Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
+Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
 constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position
 outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating
 practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present,
@@ -986,12 +1059,14 @@
 excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in
 a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals
 to extend its claims to “representation”?5
-Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction ofthe category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
+Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of
+~
+the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
 regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of
 the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves
-to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
+to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
 of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of
-gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
+gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
 identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a
 political goal.
 To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what
@@ -1011,13 +1086,15 @@
 Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject
 by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex
 and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability
-sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender isneither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
+sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is
+~
+neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
 of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction
 that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7
-If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
-then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
-to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
-Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
+If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
+then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
+to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
+Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
 that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of
 males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even
 if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
@@ -1037,15 +1114,17 @@
 there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy
 that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are
 the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests?
-If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
-called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps itwas always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
+If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
+called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it
+~
+was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
 between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11
 It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural
-interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
+interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
 not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a
 pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the
-very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
-also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
+very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
+also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
 a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of
 “sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it
 is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for
@@ -1056,18 +1135,20 @@
 Contemporary Debate
 Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential
 attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What
-gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
+gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
 is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness
 imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of
-agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
-laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? Whatsense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
+agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
+laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What
+~
+sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
 gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law.
-When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
+When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
 terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In
-such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
-On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
+such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
+On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
 that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For
-Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
+Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
 agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and
 could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable
 and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear
@@ -1075,17 +1156,19 @@
 to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.”
 There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who
 becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as
-she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
-been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
-a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
-shown to have been gender all along.14
+she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
+been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
+a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
+shown to have been gender all along.14
 The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to
 founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will
 and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that
 some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits
 the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a
 passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the
-instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive willings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
+instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will
+~
+ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
 as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the
 mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does
 the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do
@@ -1101,14 +1184,16 @@
 set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on
 binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality.
 Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender.
-Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
-of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
-gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
-differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
+Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
+of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
+gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
+differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
 only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not
 an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that
 only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the
-masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms oftheir sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
+masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of
+~
+their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
 In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray
 argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within
 the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.”
@@ -1134,7 +1219,9 @@
 feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person
 who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,”
 called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral
-deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
+deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,
+~
+der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
 gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable
 contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what
 the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the
@@ -1159,7 +1246,9 @@
 a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men
 could not settle the question of women because they would then be
 acting as both judge and party to the case.18
-The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
+The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;
+~
+each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
 meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of
 socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of
 gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above.
@@ -1178,11 +1267,13 @@
 immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for
 the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and,
 hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her
-position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
+position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
 is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as
-female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
+female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
 to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom.
-Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act ofnegation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
+Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of
+~
+negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
 The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will
 later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both
 the existential subject and its Other.
@@ -1196,8 +1287,8 @@
 very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes,
 Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political
 and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates
-the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
-and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
+the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
+and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
 mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender
 hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized.
 The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from
@@ -1205,7 +1296,9 @@
 mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of
 gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body
 is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body,
-in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within amasculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
+in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a
+~
+masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
 off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian
 terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading,
 Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not
@@ -1219,15 +1312,17 @@
 the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist
 critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical
 structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that
-traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
+traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
 difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological
 imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of
 cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism?
-The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
+The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
 global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a
 repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23
-Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect tothe totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
-singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
+Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to
+~
+the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
+singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
 strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms.
 That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike
 suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the
@@ -1248,7 +1343,9 @@
 claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and
 is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege
 intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of
-the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity ofcultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
+the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of
+~
+cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
 of “women” are constructed.
 Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics
 which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be.
@@ -1276,7 +1373,9 @@
 relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be
 interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a
 liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions
-of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals togory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
+of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to
+~
+gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
 complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that
 category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve
 as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force.
@@ -1291,22 +1390,24 @@
 at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context
 of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of
 identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions
-must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
+must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
 permanently moot.
 This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes
 neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a
 coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because
-the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
+the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
 definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity
 concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist
 tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity
 concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities
-or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme orsubject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
+or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or
+~
+subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
 depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain
 political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to
 accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous
 self that offers its complexity at once.
-Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
+Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
 never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition,
 then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without
 obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure.
@@ -1323,23 +1424,25 @@
 person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally
 related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that
 literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the
-focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
-what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accountsalmost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
+focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
+what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts
+~
+almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
 person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through
 time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of
 gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To
 what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive
-feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
-other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
-logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
-assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
-the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
-emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
+feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
+other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
+logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
+assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
+the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
+emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
 who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered
-norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
-“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
-maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
-sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
+norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
+“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
+maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
+sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
 norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines
 of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders,
 and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual
@@ -1350,7 +1453,9 @@
 production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between
 “feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive
 attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which
-gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
+gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of
+~
+“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
 from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation
 of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate
 the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain
@@ -1363,8 +1468,8 @@
 crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of
 what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist
 between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect
-of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
-relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
+of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
+relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
 a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in
 which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression?
 Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the
@@ -1372,7 +1477,9 @@
 that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and
 those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category
 of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the
-category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
+category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,
+~
+onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
 with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of
 heterosexual hegemony.
 The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on
@@ -1395,7 +1502,9 @@
 substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well
 as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary
 that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive
-multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes anartificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
+multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an
+~
+artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
 sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies.
 For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive
 aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she
@@ -1405,12 +1514,12 @@
 emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary
 restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no
 metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination,
-appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
+appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
 the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands
 first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept
 I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an
 inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27
-The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
+The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
 is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized
 features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and
 autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the
@@ -1419,6 +1528,8 @@
 come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In
 other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but
 the feminine:
+
+~
 Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between
 the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there
 are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine”
@@ -1448,6 +1559,8 @@
 ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues
 Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity,
 order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do
+
+~
 they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes,
 this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the
 psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical
@@ -1477,6 +1590,8 @@
 (1984), she writes:
 The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its
 meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as
+
+~
 far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and
 French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give
 way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a
@@ -1504,7 +1619,9 @@
 Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy
 (although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also
 fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like
-a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of thedefining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
+a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the
+~
+defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
 This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender.
 Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of
 gender within that binary pair.
@@ -1528,9 +1645,11 @@
 desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is
 presupposed, reified, and rationalized.
 This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding
-the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
-regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
-differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in aconsolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
+the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
+regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
+differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a
+~
+consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
 gender, and desire.
 The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories
 of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within
@@ -1547,14 +1666,16 @@
 sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any
 discursive account of sexuality.
 Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite,
-Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
+Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
 a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the
 sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the
-true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
-she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
-govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
+true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
+she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
+govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
 terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault,
-Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; thedisconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
+Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the
+~
+disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
 her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her
 anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality)
 implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the
@@ -1580,7 +1701,9 @@
 as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that
 fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility.
 The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the
-psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established linesof coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
+psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines
+~
+of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
 conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant
 adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they
 are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of
@@ -1588,23 +1711,25 @@
 these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently
 created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the
 ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous.
-In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
+In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
 practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse
 of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative—
 that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense,
-gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
-said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
+gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
+said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
 relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there
 is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a
 fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application
 that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we
-might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
-expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
+might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
+expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
 the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
 vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of
 Displacement
 A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is
-argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate atransformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
+argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a
+~
+transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
 appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other
 hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical
 locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that
@@ -1616,8 +1741,8 @@
 Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes:
 A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the
 cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the
-oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
-Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
+oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
+Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
 an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging
 to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct
 perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40
@@ -1626,10 +1751,12 @@
 desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could
 liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41
 Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an
-institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
+institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
 view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would
-understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
-economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaboratingmechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
+understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
+economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating
+~
+mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
 of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig,
 language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its
 structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of
@@ -1655,7 +1782,9 @@
 for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the
 construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures
 outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine
-form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can beunderstood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
+form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be
+~
+understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
 the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more
 diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification
 invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital
@@ -1670,17 +1799,19 @@
 of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what
 extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What
 possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself?
-Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
+Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
 unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks
 to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the
 marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she
 both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of
 the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands
-that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
+that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
 regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of
 heterosexist oppression in Wittig.
 In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud,
-sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics ofstruction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
+sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of
+~
+struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
 mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the
 Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create
 sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions
@@ -1705,7 +1836,9 @@
 French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking
 replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect
 the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed
-sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the veryimpossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
+sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very
+~
+impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
 feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence
 through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only
 that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs
@@ -1733,7 +1866,9 @@
 of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the
 law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before”
 of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted
-modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normativeframework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
+modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative
+~
+framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
 inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed
 to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not
 have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or
@@ -1760,7 +1895,9 @@
 biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here
 through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether
 it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization
-of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognizethat sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
+of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize
+~
+that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
 off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
 is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed
 within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine
@@ -1785,16 +1922,18 @@
 sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
 of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in
 terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
-“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
+“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.
+~
+If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
 its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to
 acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there
 forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of
-“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
+“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
 intelligibility that govern gendered life?
 Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the
 simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of
 specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch”
-and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
+and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
 as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And
 neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of
 heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight
@@ -1807,7 +1946,9 @@
 idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs
 circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do
 gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation
-exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace throughhyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
+exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through
+~
+hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
 constructs by which they are mobilized?
 Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and
 among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive
@@ -1827,7 +1968,9 @@
 constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender?
 Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears
 to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not
-always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations thatinfuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
+always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that
+~
+infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
 complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to
 hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of
 these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of
@@ -1852,10 +1995,12 @@
 most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious
 practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for
 Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a
-telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
-is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
-highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce theappearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
-of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
+telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
+is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
+highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the
+~
+appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
+of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
 appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for
 those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that
 police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that
@@ -1880,9 +2025,11 @@
 then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support
 masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble,
 not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the
-mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
+mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
 constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing
-as the foundational illusions of identity.2
+as the foundational illusions of identity.
+~
+2
 
 Prohibition, Psychoanalysis,
 and the Production
@@ -1905,17 +2052,19 @@
 to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme
 has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some
 feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs
-within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
-to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinctarticulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
+within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
+to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct
+~
+articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
 feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against
 racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important
 to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy
 as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration
 from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary
 past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic
-reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
+reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
 The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost
-always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
+always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
 the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and
 necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a
 state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the
@@ -1924,14 +2073,16 @@
 makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability.
 Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a
 utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that
-promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
+promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
 new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the
 terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present
 state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law,
 then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory
 fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or
 antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory
-becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authenticgic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
+becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic
+~
+gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
 ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome.
 Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those
 feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge
@@ -1950,18 +2101,20 @@
 before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins
 to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship.
 This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized
-foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies ofdomination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
+foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of
+~
+domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
 culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which
 culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it
 into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the
 model of domination.
 Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have
-argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
+argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
 female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured
-as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
+as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
 with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered
 to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an
-opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
+opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
 and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that
 construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the
 discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing
@@ -1974,17 +2127,19 @@
 The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be
 rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to
 think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining.
-Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to beno “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
+Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be
+~
+no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
 serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical
 assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism
 whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only
 the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status,
 but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.
-How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
+How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
 Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful
 to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery
 of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal
-of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
+of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
 theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism,
 and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status—
 is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it
@@ -1997,7 +2152,9 @@
 According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange
 that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women,
 given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes
-“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not onlyserves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
+“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only
+~
+serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
 words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men;
 she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being
 the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific
@@ -2019,12 +2176,14 @@
 questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this
 universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic
 describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human
-character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
+character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”
+~
+to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
 women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of
 positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative
 logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems
 always require the construction of socially impossible identities to
-occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
+occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
 marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a
 major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions
 whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss.
@@ -2034,7 +2193,7 @@
 within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms
 presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is
 presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning.
-This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
+This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
 totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness
 within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and
 with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss
@@ -2045,7 +2204,9 @@
 For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established
 through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where
 the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established
-between men and the women who effect the differentiation betweenmen eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
+between men and the women who effect the differentiation between
+~
+men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
 moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a
 Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But
 what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first
@@ -2068,7 +2229,9 @@
 The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss
 understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and
 unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays
-on the Theory of Sexuality).The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
+on the Theory of Sexuality).
+~
+The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
 the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men
 and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women.
 Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought
@@ -2093,7 +2256,9 @@
 produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law
 itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive?
 The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship
-that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of theincest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
+that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the
+~
+incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
 anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges
 that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds,
 he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a
@@ -2122,7 +2287,9 @@
 For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest
 between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated
 as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality
-constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
+constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,
+~
+and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
 naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency
 are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere
 assumed within this founding structuralist frame.
@@ -2145,10 +2312,12 @@
 ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade
 To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to
 confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western
-metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
+metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question
+~
+“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
 and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the
 paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the
-characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
+characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
 gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is
 itself pre-ontological.
 There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being,
@@ -2156,22 +2325,24 @@
 signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition
 of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus
 denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other
-words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
+words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
 that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but
-the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
-means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
-to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
-to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
-dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
+the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
+means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
+to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
+to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
+dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
 lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests
 that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the
-masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
-and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
+masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
+and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
 This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance
 or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the
 mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of
 men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The
-interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure offailed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
+interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of
+~
+failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
 own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in
 a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the
 terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the
@@ -2187,19 +2358,21 @@
 terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression,
 one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but
 whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions
-that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
+that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
 subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding
 signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the
 (now repressed) maternal body.
-The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
-thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
+The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
+thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
 to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual
-possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
+possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
 everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy.
 This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women
 reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes
 essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the
-basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function itserves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
+basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it
+~
+serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
 the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced
 maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be
 precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also
@@ -2230,7 +2403,9 @@
 mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the
 emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is
 necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully
-reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation ofwomen’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
+reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of
+~
+women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
 the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be
 nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity
 of the Phallus.
@@ -2259,7 +2434,9 @@
 ‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said
 not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on
 the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems
-that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” ischaracteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
+that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is
+~
+characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
 unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of
 behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84).
 Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it
@@ -2283,16 +2460,18 @@
 “comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by
 Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in
 order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained
-suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
+suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18
+~
+Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
 as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time.
 Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan
-Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
+Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
 interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated
 and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some
 way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual
 possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of
 a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests,
-transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
+transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
 to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the
 masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position?
 Lacan continues the quotation cited above:
@@ -2306,7 +2485,9 @@
 
 If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic
 Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might
-so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essentialpart of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
+so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential
+~
+part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
 part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that
 must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the
 unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that
@@ -2335,7 +2516,9 @@
 One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to
 a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the
 expense of desire.
-Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” withthe statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
+Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with
+~
+the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
 the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if
 female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear,
 and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that
@@ -2360,7 +2543,9 @@
 loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which
 is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through
 the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then
-wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it isthe signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
+wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is
+~
+the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
 refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the
 refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed,
 becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is
@@ -2389,7 +2574,9 @@
 between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an
 instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex.
 And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies
-through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaningof mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
+through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning
+~
+of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
 would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a
 woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the
 acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual
@@ -2416,7 +2603,9 @@
 interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order
 to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured
 through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some
-consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not overthe desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
+consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over
+~
+the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
 father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user
 of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating
 desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of
@@ -2429,7 +2618,7 @@
 by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from
 others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes
 on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from
-the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
+the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
 is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that
 allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly,
 because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that
@@ -2444,7 +2633,9 @@
 “defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women
 who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of
 their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in
-other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian ishere signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
+other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is
+~
+here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
 sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it
 would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female
 homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to
@@ -2469,7 +2660,9 @@
 radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38)
 
 This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and
-the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and theMasquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
+the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the
+~
+Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
 such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the
 denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24
 Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine
@@ -2494,7 +2687,9 @@
 that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her
 as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her
 castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest
-over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation andessential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
+over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and
+~
+essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
 her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might
 usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and
 what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the
@@ -2519,7 +2714,9 @@
 shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it
 purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through
 which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality”
-that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at alater date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
+that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a
+~
+later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
 practices of normative heterosexuality.
 Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary
 or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and
@@ -2539,7 +2736,9 @@
 the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well.
 Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely
 because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the
-accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and thedrama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
+accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the
+~
+drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
 And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules
 that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is
 clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined
@@ -2548,7 +2747,7 @@
 “invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of
 sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result.
 The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an
-impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
+impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
 restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality
 and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In
 marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the
@@ -2563,16 +2762,18 @@
 does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary
 speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality.
 The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an
-account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law thatproves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
+account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that
+~
+proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
 of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The
 injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic
-always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
+always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
 consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas
-of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
-be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
-humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
+of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
+be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
+humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
 that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls
-the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
+the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
 those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward.
 That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the
 demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct
@@ -2588,7 +2789,9 @@
 permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this
 comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it
 claims to be unable to overcome.
-Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
+Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”
+~
+How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
 of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power)
 that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the
 paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which
@@ -2614,7 +2817,9 @@
 to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on
 attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of
 imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome
-through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that otherwithin the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
+through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other
+~
+within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
 love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply
 momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in
 effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent
@@ -2639,7 +2844,9 @@
 however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the
 acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that
 this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up
-its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way intate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
+its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in
+~
+tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
 those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves
 becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the
 incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for
@@ -2661,16 +2868,18 @@
 the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude
 toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be
 that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be
-attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
+attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
 above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23,
 n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly,
-Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between thetwo object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
+Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the
+~
+two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
 result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the
 heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated,
 but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally
 sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather
 than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation
-of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
+of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
 the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently,
 the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis.
 Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother
@@ -2686,7 +2895,9 @@
 choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and
 sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place.
 For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result
-either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object isfound.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
+either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is
+~
+found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
 which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of
 masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud
 avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22).
@@ -2707,7 +2918,9 @@
 is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl
 may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an
 object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity
-and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
+and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,
+~
+within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
 and only opposites attract.
 But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such
 dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity
@@ -2737,6 +2950,8 @@
 
 The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization
 becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only
+
+~
 because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the
 object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled.
 In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of
@@ -2762,6 +2977,8 @@
 turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities
 of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36
 The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali-
+
+~
 zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is
 a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the
 successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity:
@@ -2784,19 +3001,21 @@
 and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire.
 As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications
 substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence
-of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
+of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
 of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of
 heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects
 gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to
-that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifieswith the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
+that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies
+~
+with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
 and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent
-to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
-and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
-object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
+to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
+and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
+object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
 more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so
 that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an
 original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved.
-But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
+But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
 implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and
 masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of
 that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed
@@ -2817,7 +3036,9 @@
 situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set
 of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which
 “answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and
-energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does notexplicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
+energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not
+~
+explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
 homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo
 against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions”
 by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and
@@ -2841,7 +3062,9 @@
 law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical
 continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as
 its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations.
-What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative andto think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
+What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and
+~
+to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
 of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis
 for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms,
 but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault,
@@ -2867,7 +3090,9 @@
 deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence
 that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements.
 Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts
-not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
+not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,
+~
+most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
 from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the
 unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate.
 iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits
@@ -2891,7 +3116,9 @@
 the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce
 precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders
 into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of
-the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gayand lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
+the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay
+~
+and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
 maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the
 semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in
 the following chapter.
@@ -2909,18 +3136,20 @@
 deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to
 acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in
 which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to
-culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
+culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
 origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the
 repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational
 moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even
 though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law,
 is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself.
 The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from
-psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonanceswithin gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
+psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances
+~
+within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
 feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the
 possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible
 to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine
-and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
+and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
 that “the” law may not even be singular.
 The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to
 be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to
@@ -2944,7 +3173,9 @@
 successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved
 through the formation of words which both signify and displace that
 object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially
-metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpassporation, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
+metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass
+~
+poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
 melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it
 maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself.
 As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the
@@ -2972,7 +3203,9 @@
 object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with
 the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the
 compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law.
-The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo againsthomosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
+The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against
+~
+homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
 which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In
 the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which
 heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained
@@ -2999,7 +3232,9 @@
 through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure
 which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal
 space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia
-operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual loveder identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
+operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love
+~
+der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
 the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment
 of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment
 and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief.
@@ -3020,7 +3255,9 @@
 naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and
 parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in
 the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such
-descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructedor naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
+descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed
+~
+or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
 body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in
 some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life.
 Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which
@@ -3034,7 +3271,7 @@
 not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy
 of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself.
 Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an
-altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
+altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
 might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary
 condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on
 which it works.
@@ -3044,9 +3281,11 @@
 heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes
 and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality.
 The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is
-parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which causeacteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
+parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause
+~
+acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
 reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex”
-designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
+designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
 desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that
 transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the
 body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and
@@ -3072,7 +3311,9 @@
 juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates
 the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to
 the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the
-Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace theprimary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
+Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the
+~
+primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
 proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be
 reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several
 cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would
@@ -3095,7 +3336,9 @@
 consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own
 genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions,
 but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary”
-dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if weconceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
+dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we
+~
+conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
 the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its
 desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted.
 Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes:
@@ -3118,7 +3361,9 @@
 into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural
 institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of
 women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws
-which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
+which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,
+~
+the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
 against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains
 that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a
 gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189).
@@ -3128,9 +3373,9 @@
 possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the
 Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo,
 that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law
-produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
+produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
 the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the
-creation of that law.
+creation of that law.
 Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and
 gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a
 “sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed
@@ -3145,6 +3390,8 @@
 will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does
 the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally
 (by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the
+
+~
 “before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes
 an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence.
 Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a
@@ -3154,11 +3401,11 @@
 both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the
 traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality
 and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the
-compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
+compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
 and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204).
-Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
+Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
 that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities
-to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
+to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
 of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of
 gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in
 what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing
@@ -3168,11 +3415,13 @@
 have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual
 form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear;
 in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi-
+
+~
 Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads
 her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory
 heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of
 bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin
-has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
+has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
 which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law.
 If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of
 knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal
@@ -3195,7 +3444,9 @@
 incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities
 through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to
 guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are
-anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute overwhat, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
+anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over
+~
+what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
 meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to
 claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant
 framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim
@@ -3221,7 +3472,9 @@
 from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo.
 Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire
 and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that
-the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desirein the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
+the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire
+~
+in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
 is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly
 stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed
 parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification.
@@ -3246,6 +3499,8 @@
 cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of
 intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized,
 not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini-
+
+~
 mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to
 gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully
 within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory
@@ -3270,6 +3525,8 @@
 the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond”
 is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the
 Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of
+
+~
 what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is
 “during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the
 start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the
@@ -3279,13 +3536,15 @@
 revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a
 perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin
 in the name of subversion inevitably belated.
+
+~
 3
 
 Subversive Bodily Acts
 i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva
 Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears
 to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a
-specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
+specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
 principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful
 language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of
 primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child
@@ -3298,9 +3557,11 @@
 Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural
 meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the
 maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language
-occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
+occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
 Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion
-within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that originallibidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
+within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original
+~
+libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
 within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to
 disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law.
 Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to
@@ -3322,7 +3583,9 @@
 presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of
 cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension
 of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of
-language which never can be consistently maintained.In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
+language which never can be consistently maintained.
+~
+In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
 ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and
 what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva
 describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior
@@ -3349,7 +3612,9 @@
 of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their
 emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements
 of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that
-the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in thesemiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
+the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the
+~
+semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
 which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech.
 As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for
 a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the
@@ -3376,7 +3641,9 @@
 In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva
 ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic
 terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic
-obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not onlythose drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
+obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only
+~
+those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
 dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other
 words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather
 than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that
@@ -3403,12 +3670,14 @@
 signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests
 upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it
 becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and
-univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery ofthe maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
+univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of
+~
+the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
 univocal signification. Kristeva writes:
 In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for
 example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints
 (rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic
-elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
+elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
 
 For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests
 a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body:
@@ -3423,10 +3692,12 @@
 Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against
 the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of
 maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally
-signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
+signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
 would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of
 incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding
-law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language fromwithin its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
+law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from
+~
+within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
 libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state
 of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the
 ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the
@@ -3452,7 +3723,9 @@
 According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully
 reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because
 the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated
-off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation fromthe girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
+off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from
+~
+the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
 never fully completed.
 As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to
 grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense,
@@ -3475,7 +3748,9 @@
 Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the
 Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those
 which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task,
-then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor totion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
+then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to
+~
+tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
 as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the
 site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in
 culturally communicable form:
@@ -3500,7 +3775,9 @@
 the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law
 challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva
 does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the
-prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, thesubversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
+prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the
+~
+subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
 version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s
 concealed foundation.
 This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law
@@ -3526,7 +3803,9 @@
 would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to
 Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality
 and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked.
-How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experienceas the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
+How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience
+~
+as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
 identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism
 constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis?
 By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing
@@ -3538,7 +3817,7 @@
 precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a
 site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience
 is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a
-fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
+fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
 In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva
 appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression
 necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior
@@ -3549,8 +3828,10 @@
 encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a
 developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to
 culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”?
-Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experiencefrom a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
-its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
+Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience
+~
+from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
+its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
 not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural
 subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it
 appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to
@@ -3575,7 +3856,9 @@
 prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to
 attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation
 into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot
-reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In otherwords, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
+reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other
+~
+words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
 effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with
 their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations
 are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves.
@@ -3599,7 +3882,9 @@
 Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which,
 it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy,
 in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in
-avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that thesevarious cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
+avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these
+~
+various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
 moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents
 any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts
 with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the
@@ -3621,7 +3906,9 @@
 of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other
 cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which
 operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva
-believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she wouldating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
+believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would
+~
+ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
 to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed
 concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear
 and univocal.
@@ -3649,7 +3936,9 @@
 teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture?
 To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction
 between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of
-the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originarysignification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
+the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary
+~
+signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
 itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider
 the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her
 argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary
@@ -3657,7 +3946,7 @@
 framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and
 for what purposes?
 By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which
-affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
+affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
 result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally
 constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship
 which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of
@@ -3668,11 +3957,13 @@
 sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure
 generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that
 activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and
-poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
+poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
 uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of
 humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does
-the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
-female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the veryorder of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
+the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
+female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very
+~
+order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
 In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality,
 he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . .
 [and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex
@@ -3697,7 +3988,9 @@
 production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by
 which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the
 maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of
-all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
+all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,
+~
+rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
 female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self
 and the law of its desire.
 If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically
@@ -3723,7 +4016,9 @@
 produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do
 these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest,
 however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated
-upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to considerwhether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
+upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider
+~
+whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
 which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of
 the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the
 object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may
@@ -3752,7 +4047,9 @@
 theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we
 consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes
 the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that
-his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal thatproves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
+his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that
+~
+proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
 his own critical apparatus.
 Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality,
 Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of
@@ -3768,20 +4065,22 @@
 reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of
 Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that
 sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete
-relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
+relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
 “happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual
 difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine
 against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text.
 In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that
 the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the
-other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures withindiscourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
+other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within
+~
+discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
 reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18
 In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and
 causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as
 an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and
 continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes
 “sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and
-power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
+power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
 power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment
 of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as
 repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted
@@ -3789,14 +4088,16 @@
 juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only
 works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in
 this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations
-and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
+and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
 falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be
 recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power
 must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power
 which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity.
 the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it
 possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to
-sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
+sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
+
+~
 relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible
 urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154)
 
@@ -3823,7 +4124,9 @@
 In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin,
 Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of
 sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy
-dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic andphysiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
+dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and
+~
+physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
 within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides,
 according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a
 world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii).
@@ -3845,7 +4148,9 @@
 trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault
 officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we
 must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues
-that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it isalways produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
+that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is
+~
+always produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
 both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality
 before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory
 sexual politics.
@@ -3873,7 +4178,9 @@
 attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt
 and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes
 h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that
-effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer andeffect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
+effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and
+~
+effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
 obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of
 men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the
 journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide.
@@ -3900,14 +4207,16 @@
 Herculine’s sexual world.
 Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality
 between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of
-female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculinewe know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
+female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine
+~
+we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
 French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within
 an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions
 produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and
 Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner
 of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about
 ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously,
-the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
+the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
 sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality
 and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself.
 The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young
@@ -3923,8 +4232,10 @@
 to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender
 which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself
 presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender
-confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
-and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/eranomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
+confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
+and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er
+~
+anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
 and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a
 sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse
 on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of
@@ -3949,7 +4260,9 @@
 wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in
 homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to
 the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following
-description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at onceinvoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
+description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once
+~
+invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
 pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes
 astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another”
 (xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to
@@ -3976,7 +4289,9 @@
 and redistribution.
 But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level
 of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex”
-and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play ofsexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
+and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of
+~
+sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
 sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost
 Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a
 natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as
@@ -3998,7 +4313,9 @@
 other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality
 and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly
 didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity
-or parallel between his life and hers?On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
+or parallel between his life and hers?
+~
+On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
 understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some
 sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks
 that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten
@@ -4028,10 +4345,12 @@
 homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there
 is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly
 among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female
-homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very differentbians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
+homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different
+~
+bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
 do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed
 “[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This
-explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
+explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
 les choses):
 This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter
 that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my
@@ -4050,13 +4369,15 @@
 dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics,
 but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh
 of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface
-constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
+constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
 Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23
 In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa,
 Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to
 freeze” (105) those who encounter it.
 But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and
-Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference whichconsolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
+Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which
+~
+consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
 as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable—
 that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one.
 But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive
@@ -4082,7 +4403,9 @@
 s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully
 directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those
 who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love.
-At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentenceparagraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
+At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence
+~
+paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
 incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into
 h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was
 abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he
@@ -4110,7 +4433,9 @@
 better for all women than any “man” (107).
 S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early
 “refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at
-the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that earlyrefuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
+the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early
+~
+refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
 phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very
 father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the
 tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my
@@ -4134,7 +4459,9 @@
 condition and its aim.
 After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid
 than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person”
-who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for theother. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
+who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the
+~
+other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
 h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects
 h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law
 precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law
@@ -4154,9 +4481,11 @@
 become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although
 Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of
 Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his
-philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest forple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
+philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for
+~
+ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
 Foucaultian critique.
-One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
+One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
 to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With
 the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene,
 which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was
@@ -4175,13 +4504,15 @@
 Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be
 some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of
 DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its
-usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
+usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
 expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA
 sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why
 it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact,
 still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y
 chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had
-somehow been misplaced.Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
+somehow been misplaced.
+~
+Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
 with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their
 research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has
 chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female
@@ -4210,7 +4541,9 @@
 Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not
 add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated
 by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as
-well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these areXX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
+well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are
+~
+XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
 and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided
 by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were
 sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the
@@ -4239,7 +4572,9 @@
 about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the
 undifferentiated gonad. (325)
 
-In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come undertiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
+In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under
+~
+tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
 argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research
 orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated
 cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and
@@ -4263,7 +4598,9 @@
 to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more
 complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates
 in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation
-in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
+in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.
+~
+Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
 when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is
 male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex?
 One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be
@@ -4289,9 +4626,11 @@
 One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses
 that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external
 genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of
-reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish themale principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
+reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the
+~
+male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
 to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather
-than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
+than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
 Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male
 body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s
 inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with
@@ -4316,8 +4655,10 @@
 for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along?
 And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human
 who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that
-this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
-one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of genderconstruction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
+this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
+one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender
+~
+construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
 a gendered subject?
 Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the
 question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who
@@ -4344,7 +4685,9 @@
 that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are
 radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to
 become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret
-male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinctionent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
+male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction
+~
+ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
 the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way
 restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never
 be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of
@@ -4367,7 +4710,9 @@
 itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not
 natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is
 the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only
-exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. Alesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
+exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A
+~
+lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
 terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains,
 transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is
 neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is
@@ -4395,7 +4740,9 @@
 that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become
 ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex
 is necessarily feminine.
-Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe inthe viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
+Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in
+~
+the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
 system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it.
 As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire
 discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans
@@ -4421,15 +4768,17 @@
 
 “Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side
 of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that
-these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce thereductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
+these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the
+~
+reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
 gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within
 the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on
 an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a
-language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
+language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
 Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body?
-An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
+An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
 forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous
-body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
+body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
 Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a
 “disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction
 of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the
@@ -4439,23 +4788,25 @@
 what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her
 theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the
 body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination.
-Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
+Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
 locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of
 reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted
-ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
-be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
+ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
+be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
 that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly
 refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying
-structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formationof that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
-contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
+structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation
+~
+of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
+contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
 that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and
-deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
-The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
+deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
+The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
 authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex
-and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
-Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
+and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
+Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
 reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively
-considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
+considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
 domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that
 both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/
 perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual
@@ -4470,7 +4821,9 @@
 they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the
 speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of
 that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s
-own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
+own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:
+~
+“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
 gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To
 speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech;
 hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction,
@@ -4499,7 +4852,9 @@
 universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated
 by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act,
 perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the
-level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
+level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34
+~
+Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
 the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an
 absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,”
 which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women”
@@ -4520,7 +4875,9 @@
 or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a
 full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The
 social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior
-ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertionof subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
+ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion
+~
+of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
 hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal
 mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she
 writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal
@@ -4548,7 +4905,9 @@
 universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection.
 Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary
 unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs
-through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
+through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.
+~
+Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
 about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a
 tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity.
 Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration,
@@ -4567,14 +4926,16 @@
 general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular
 property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization.
 The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work
-in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
+in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
 Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating
 social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are
 measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept
 and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a
 material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these
 “constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be
-judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
+judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.
+~
+Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
 that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered,
 however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the
 universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is
@@ -4601,7 +4962,9 @@
 made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that
 within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with
 the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les
-Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
+Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,
+~
+indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
 universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize
 the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48
 In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that
@@ -4627,7 +4990,9 @@
 of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that
 speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an
 ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and
-concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
+concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,
+~
+the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
 in her theoretical essays all along.51
 Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot
 be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes:
@@ -4650,7 +5015,9 @@
 “outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by
 numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay
 culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as
-they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships toity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
+they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to
+~
+ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
 heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not
 follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further,
 Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the
@@ -4660,9 +5027,9 @@
 there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian
 sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse
 centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality;
-heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
-informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
-describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
+heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
+informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
+describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
 impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic
 elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of
 the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not
@@ -4674,10 +5041,12 @@
 constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective.
 Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate
 with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position
-is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
-for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
-Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
-contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with thenormative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
+is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
+for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
+Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
+contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the
+~
+normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
 lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged
 in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that
 proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls,
@@ -4691,7 +5060,7 @@
 the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs
 a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply
 possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation
-between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
+between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
 the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense
 is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an
 assumption surely suspect.
@@ -4702,12 +5071,14 @@
 resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a
 culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that
 constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly,
-there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculineidentity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
-interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
+there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine
+~
+identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
+interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
 prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite
 direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case,
 the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the
-“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
+“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
 Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire
 admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the
 sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can
@@ -4728,7 +5099,9 @@
 Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the
 various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate
 descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is
-established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action ofbodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
+established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of
+~
+bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
 that they themselves invested in the category.
 For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual
 contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of
@@ -4756,7 +5129,9 @@
 parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its
 claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond
 sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a
-problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary worksappear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
+problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works
+~
+appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
 which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body
 and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political
 transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms
@@ -4780,7 +5155,9 @@
 and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the
 naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her
 aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to
-offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuringbodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
+offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring
+~
+bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
 form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are
 always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For
 Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably
@@ -4796,7 +5173,7 @@
 clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a
 “specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks
 those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the
-task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
+task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
 but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories.
 The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the
 violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for
@@ -4805,7 +5182,9 @@
 binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now
 represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that
 consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive
-redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared tobelong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
+redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to
+~
+belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
 assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,”
 but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this
 literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical
@@ -4813,7 +5192,7 @@
 that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the
 tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple
 internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence
-against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
+against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
 out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem
 inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution,
 and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness.
@@ -4828,7 +5207,9 @@
 way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well
 a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different
 centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency
-comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, andrecirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
+comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and
+~
+recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
 become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes.
 This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third
 gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal
@@ -4852,17 +5233,19 @@
 that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a
 “straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a
 contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,”
-but also of “lesbian”?Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
+but also of “lesbian”?
+~
+Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
 homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a
 homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that
 construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of
 view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted
 through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that
-do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
+do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
 identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were
 not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed,
 required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it
-seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
+seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
 Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality
 deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result,
 that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in
@@ -4879,7 +5262,9 @@
 in Esther Newton, Mother Camp
 
 Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have
-constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feministtheory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
+constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist
+~
+theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
 epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is
 shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express
 the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political
@@ -4887,12 +5272,12 @@
 elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that
 identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site
 of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female
-body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
+body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
 gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body”
 itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that
 body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex?
 The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to
-presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
+presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
 of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive
 medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of
 suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse.
@@ -4906,7 +5291,9 @@
 can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in
 Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification,
 and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To
-what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenologyadapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
+what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology
+~
+adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
 as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent
 do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit
 hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the
@@ -4917,7 +5304,7 @@
 Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body
 is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body
 is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is
-“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
+“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
 understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction
 of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities
 are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through
@@ -4933,12 +5320,14 @@
 body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or
 for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the
 constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the
-body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
+body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,
+~
+requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
 writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and
 self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for
 Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an
 inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank
-page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
+page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
 must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated
 domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the
 body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in
@@ -4960,7 +5349,9 @@
 specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the
 boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing
 certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes
-of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
+of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:
+~
+ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
 between within and without, above and below, male and female, with
 and against, that a semblance of order is created.55
 
@@ -4971,7 +5362,7 @@
 binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot
 point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame.
 Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for
-understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
+understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
 maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that
 what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but
 that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become,
@@ -4987,6 +5378,8 @@
 some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which
 should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger
 for someone.56
+
+~
 In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his
 Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness
 figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and
@@ -4999,11 +5392,11 @@
 that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its
 boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to
 read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59
-Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
+Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
 margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous.
 If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which
 open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and
-oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
+oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
 site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural
 presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless
 of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief
@@ -5011,6 +5404,8 @@
 the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy
 and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always
 conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural.
+
+~
 The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites
 of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices
 in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and
@@ -5040,6 +5435,8 @@
 mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign
 of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I”
 expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in
+
+~
 their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the
 same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63
 
@@ -5049,10 +5446,10 @@
 homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that
 founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along
 sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of
-Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
-through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
+Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
+through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
 the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary
-tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
+tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
 those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes
 outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by
 which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In
@@ -5064,7 +5461,9 @@
 Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions
 of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make
 sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by
-cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiationtion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
+cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation
+~
+tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
 subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos,
 then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of
 gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not
@@ -5072,11 +5471,11 @@
 process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed.
 Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse
 and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive
-binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
+binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
 is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility
 of its hidden depth?
-From Interiority to Gender Performatives
-In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
+From Interiority to Gender Performatives
+In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
 to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner”
 truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the
 doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his
@@ -5091,7 +5490,9 @@
 there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of
 their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is
 at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external
-to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
+to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:
+~
+It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
 effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power
 that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66
 
@@ -5115,8 +5516,10 @@
 have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against
 homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of
 an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of
-the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within theder discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
-and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
+the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the
+~
+der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
+and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
 significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive
 model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed
 as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe.
@@ -5125,19 +5528,21 @@
 effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of
 the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but
 never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts,
-gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
-that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
-fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
-other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
+gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
+that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
+fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
+other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
 constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated
 as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of
 a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control
 that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity”
 of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core,
 an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation
-of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
-the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinarypractices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
-origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
+of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
+the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary
+~
+practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
+origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
 analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its
 fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its
 true identity.
@@ -5147,78 +5552,84 @@
 truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother
 Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton
 suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender
-takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
-both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
-identity. Newton writes:
-At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
+takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
+both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
+identity. Newton writes:
+At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
 ‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is
-masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
+masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
 “my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my
 essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69
 
 Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth
 and falsity.
-The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
-parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading tosexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
+The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
+parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to
+~
+sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
 the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more
 complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a
-clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
-plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
-the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
-of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
-sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
+clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
+plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
+the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
+of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
+sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
 performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and
 both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the
-performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
+performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
 drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose),
-it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
-which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
-heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
-pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
+it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
+which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
+heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
+pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
 natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence,
 we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which
 avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their
 fabricated unity.
-The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
+The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
 there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the
-parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
-notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
+parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
+notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
 the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that
-double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
-which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To bemore precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
+double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
+which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be
+~
+more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
 effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification
 and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender
-identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
-styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
-original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
+identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
+styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
+original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
 original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender
-identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
+identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
 received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer
-laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
-a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
-construction.
+laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
+a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
+construction.
 According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer
-Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
-Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
-wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
+Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
+Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
+wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
 practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the
 satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that
 there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it
 humor.70
 
 The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion
-for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
-be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
-In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
-and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
+for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
+be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
+In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.
+~
+stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
+and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
 actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive
 confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the
 inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of
 the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance
 will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that
 destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire.
-If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
-permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
+If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
+permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
 what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre
 would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest
 that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all
@@ -5230,7 +5641,9 @@
 materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and
 to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal
 project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating
-force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation ofduress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
+force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of
+~
+duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
 Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a
 performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are
 part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture;
@@ -5240,11 +5653,11 @@
 without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a
 construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective
 agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders
-as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
-and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
-construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
-historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
-nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
+as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
+and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
+construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
+historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
+nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
 Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the
 peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which,
 in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes
@@ -5255,25 +5668,27 @@
 In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This
 repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of
 meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies
-that enact these significations by becoming stylized into genderedtive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
+that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered
+~
+tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
 inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic
 aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot
 be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found
 and consolidate the subject.
 Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of
-agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
-tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
+agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
+tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
 stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the
 stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane
 way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds
 constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation
 moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model
-of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
-social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
-which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
-precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
-which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
-come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
+of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
+social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
+which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
+precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
+which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
+come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
 norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to
 embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of
 acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized
@@ -5281,13 +5696,15 @@
 that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity,
 but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and
 contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender
-transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
-between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
-or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
-identity as a politically tenuous construction.If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
+transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
+between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
+or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
+identity as a politically tenuous construction.
+~
+If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
 then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to
-express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
-which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
+express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
+which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
 attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or
 distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity
 would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created
@@ -5296,11 +5713,13 @@
 constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative
 character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender
 configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination
-and compulsory heterosexuality.
-Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
-incredible.
+and compulsory heterosexuality.
+Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
+incredible.
+
+~
 From Parody to Politics
-I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
+I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
 do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether
 it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in
 order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we”
@@ -5308,19 +5727,21 @@
 term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of
 the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous
 or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or,
-at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
+at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
 theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and
 bodies, but of politics itself.
 The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume
-that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
+that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
 elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument
 is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is
 variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an
-existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
+existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
 its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in
-and through the other that has interested me here.The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
+and through the other that has interested me here.
+~
+The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
 stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the
-subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
+subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
 usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains
 intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject.
 This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared
@@ -5343,8 +5764,10 @@
 with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is
 instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of
 exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It
-is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort toposit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
-itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
+is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to
+~
+posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
+itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
 If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity
 is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates
 within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is
@@ -5369,7 +5792,9 @@
 documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object
 dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and
 distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a
-strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, oncethat separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
+strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once
+~
+that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
 the knowability and recoverability of that Other.
 As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move
 within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in
@@ -5393,7 +5818,9 @@
 by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves
 in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting
 unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific
-modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
+modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.
+~
+logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
 identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,”
 rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy
 and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed,
@@ -5416,13 +5843,15 @@
 maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural
 field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the
 very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there.
-What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs thegenre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
+What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the
+~
+genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
 itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself
 here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests
-the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
+the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
 that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the
 real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which
-gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
+gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
 written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s
 “In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the
 accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry
@@ -5440,10 +5869,12 @@
 failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a
 politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion
 of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And
-yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
+yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
 argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable.
 Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic
 practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them-
+
+~
 selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the
 effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive
 identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The
@@ -5459,8 +5890,8 @@
 work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities
 that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative
 political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically,
-the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
-generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
+the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
+generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
 fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally
 determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status
 of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests
@@ -5472,6 +5903,8 @@
 is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its
 own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a
 position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism
+
+~
 ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local
 possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those
 practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present
@@ -5497,13 +5930,15 @@
 sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that
 presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and
 globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention.
+
+~
 If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these
 “effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not
 only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that
 enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a
 feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might
 enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to
-repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
+repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
 There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political
 contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on
 sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a
@@ -5520,22 +5955,26 @@
 fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer
 understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that
 belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
+
+~
 would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations
 of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that
 establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of
 sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local
 strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such?
 
+~
+
 Preface (1999)
 1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation
 of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the
-arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
+arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
 ratification of same-sex partnerships.
-2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
+2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
 Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and
 Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998.
-3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
-(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
+3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
+(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
 4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky
 Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los
 Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my
@@ -5546,12 +5985,14 @@
 Wellek/index.html.
 7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek,
 Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy
-Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
+Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
+
+~
 Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity.
 8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the
 notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only
 came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to
-account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
+account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
 Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997).
 9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the
 earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the
@@ -5565,23 +6006,25 @@
 Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences,
 Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126.
 11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose
-work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
+work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
 “Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the
 postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the
 appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that
 emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the
-same time under conditions of domination.
+same time under conditions of domination.
 12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has
 been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject.
 I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions
 of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to
 Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at
 Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection.
+
+~
 13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most
 prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech.
 14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America
-(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
-other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
+(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
+other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
 gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at
 http://www.isna.org.
 15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances
@@ -5609,6 +6052,8 @@
 Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987).
 3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in
 History (New York: Macmillan, 1988).
+
+~
 4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of
 Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and
 Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp.
@@ -5622,9 +6067,9 @@
 repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities
 that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the
 very instability that the foundationalist move creates.
-6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
-grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
-are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
+6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
+grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
+are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
 “compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/
 epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to
 cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a
@@ -5636,12 +6081,14 @@
 8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements
 in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the
 Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press,
-1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
+1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
 Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge
 University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis
 of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies,
 see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological
 Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978).
+
+~
 9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of
 biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific
 basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender,
@@ -5652,7 +6099,7 @@
 for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra
 Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University
 Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New
-Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
+Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
 was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in
 Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions
 (New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex
@@ -5676,12 +6123,14 @@
 15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s,
 Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn
 as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a
+
+~
 mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic
 relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the
 body itself.
-16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
+16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
 Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977).
-17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
+17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
 Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press,
 1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5,
 1986.
@@ -5695,7 +6144,7 @@
 originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil,
 1952]).
 21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and
-the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
+the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
 the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit.
 Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is
 clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of
@@ -5704,34 +6153,38 @@
 the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion
 for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first
 this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that
+
+~
 remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the
 ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed
-and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
-over feminine.
+and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
+over feminine.
 22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary
 Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982.
-23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
-explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
+23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
+explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
 “self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates
 politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of
 that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions
 . . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the
-possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
+possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
 and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New
 York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113).
 24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La
-Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
-eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
-Women of Color Press, 1982).
+Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
+eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
+Women of Color Press, 1982).
 25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has
-Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
-Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
+Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
+Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
 Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10).
 26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2,
 Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20,
 see chapter 3, n. 49.
 27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two
 of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of
+
+~
 cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the
 terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual
 difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the
@@ -5745,9 +6198,9 @@
 Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other
 Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49.
 29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least
-to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
-Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
-30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
+to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
+Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
+30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
 Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original
 editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social
 function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to
@@ -5758,6 +6211,8 @@
 1977), pp. 17–18.
 32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall
 1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25.
+
+~
 33. Ibid., p. 3.
 34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that
 “naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other
@@ -5789,6 +6244,8 @@
 42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration
 or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of
 structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender-
+
+~
 neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
 1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language.
 43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63.
@@ -5821,6 +6278,8 @@
 other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of
 the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a
 fictive and repressive notion.
+
+~
 53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
 Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston:
 Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and
@@ -5830,7 +6289,7 @@
 Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber
 Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed
 with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann
-Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
+Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
 1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to
 Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and
 Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,”
@@ -5851,12 +6310,14 @@
 is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of
 gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic
 ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson,
+
+~
 “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
 Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983).
 2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
 Heterosexual Matrix
 1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s
-“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
+“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
 provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and
 masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its
 attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as
@@ -5875,15 +6336,17 @@
 this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the
 law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of
 that law through recourse to a time before the law.
-2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
+2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
 Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
-3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
-Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
+3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
+Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
 Routledge, 1990).
 4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women:
 Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of
-Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
+Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
 Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the
+
+~
 notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how
 women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the
 social bond between men.
@@ -5892,8 +6355,8 @@
 6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist
 Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns
 Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of
-Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
-Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
+Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
+Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
 trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
 7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange—
 and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a
@@ -5908,21 +6371,23 @@
 an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects
 of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object
 of discourse.
-10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
-as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
+10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
+as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
 University Press, 1993).
-11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
-12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
+11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
+12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
 13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated
 jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother.
 14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master
 and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire:
+
+~
 Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999).
 15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment
 from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father
-onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
-mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
-Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
+onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
+mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
+Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
 femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980).
 16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques
 Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose,
@@ -5948,12 +6413,14 @@
 Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985).
 19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of
 Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the
+
+~
 consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which
 founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of
 disavowed losses.
 20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the
 text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order.
-21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
+21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
 Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986),
 pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of
 Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will
@@ -5970,19 +6437,21 @@
 themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a
 counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms.
 23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by
-bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
-Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
+bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
+Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
 Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and
 are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal.
 24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61.
 25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic
+
+~
 establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification,
 with the analysand that she describes in the article.
 26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85.
-27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
+27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
 Rose, p. 44.
 28. Ibid., p. 55.
-29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
+29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
 understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See
 his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de
 Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me.
@@ -5997,8 +6466,8 @@
 between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in
 Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms,
 the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power,
-but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
-subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
+but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
+subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
 I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81)
 and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined
 status of the juridical law.
@@ -6010,6 +6479,8 @@
 Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
 University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter
 text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the
+
+~
 matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked
 with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of
 primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to
@@ -6038,9 +6509,11 @@
 36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between
 the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does
 not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine
-Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
+Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
 the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New
-York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
+
+~
+York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
 engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan.
 37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81.
 38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale
@@ -6071,6 +6544,8 @@
 42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian
 Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the
 heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu-
+
+~
 ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that
 body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals
 the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and
@@ -6101,6 +6576,8 @@
 (London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest.
 47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of
 Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980.
+
+~
 48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James
 Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7.
 49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought
@@ -6108,7 +6585,7 @@
 narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which
 transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic
 order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting
-or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
+or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
 3. Subversive Bodily Acts
 1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol.
 3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118.
@@ -6132,6 +6609,8 @@
 Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English,
 1985.
 12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239.
+
+~
 13. Ibid., p. 239.
 14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of
 Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4.
@@ -6145,7 +6624,7 @@
 York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
 Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text.
 18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
-unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
+unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
 pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a
 causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See
 chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted.
@@ -6166,6 +6645,8 @@
 différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967).
 23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms.
 24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s
+
+~
 Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on
 Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V.
 Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her
@@ -6197,6 +6678,8 @@
 31. Ibid., p. 107.
 32. Ibid., p. 106.
 33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
+
+~
 34. Ibid., p. 5.
 35. Ibid., p. 6.
 36. Ibid.
@@ -6231,6 +6714,8 @@
 1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter
 3, n. 49.
 45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48.
+
+~
 46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a
 “first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee”
 the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the
@@ -6262,6 +6747,8 @@
 53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.”
 54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans.
 Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
+
+~
 Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to
 this essay.
 55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley:
@@ -6275,9 +6762,9 @@
 Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion
 of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in
 honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical
-“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
-62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
-Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
+“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
+62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
+Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
 University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur
 (Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her
 own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality,
@@ -6292,12 +6779,14 @@
 and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990),
 pp. 201–214.
 65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic
-Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
-Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
+Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
+Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
+
+~
 Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20,
 No. 3,Winter 1988.
-66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
-Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
+66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
+Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
 67. Ibid., p. 30.
 68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female
 Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
@@ -6307,4 +6796,348 @@
 71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University
 Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The
 Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive
-Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983).
+Anthropology (New York: Basic
Books, 1983). + +~ + +abject, the, 169–70 +Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87 +AIDS, 168–69 +Am I That Name? (Riley), 6 +Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari), +151 +Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43 +Barnes, Djuna, 152 +Bataille, Georges, 131 +“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60, +149–51 +berdache, 194n. 8 +binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63 +biology, cellular, 135–41 +bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84, +98–100, 173 +bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43 +body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as +boundary, variable, 44, 170–71, +177; construction of, 12–13, 17, +161, 168–69; inscription on, +163–67, 171–73; maternal, +101–19; permeability of, 168; +“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70 +Borges, Jorge, 131 + +butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58 +chromosomes, 135–41 +Civilization and Its Discontents +(Freud), 92 +Cixous, Hélène, 131 +corporeal styles, 178–80 +Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5 +de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18, +35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177 +de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49 +Deleuze and Guattari, 151 +Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150, +193n. 2, 201–2n. 1 +de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51 +Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21 +Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5 +Dews, Peter, 209n. 49 +différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150 +Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171 +dispositions, sexual, 77–84 +Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169, +214–15n. 62 +drag, 174–80 +écriture feminine, 19 + +~ +Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77, +79–82, 84 +ego-ideal, the, 79–81 +Eicher, Eva, 138–41 +Elementary Structures of Kinship, The +(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55 +empty space, 86 +Engels, Friedrich, 47 +epistemology and identity, 183–84 +Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92 +Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41 +fêlure, 71, 100 +feminism: debates within, 18–22; +foundationalist frame of, +189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46; +and politics, 181–90; and sexual +difference, 35–44; women as +“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 +Ferenczi, Sandor, 66 +Foucault, Michel: on category of +sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18, +123–35; on genealogy, 165–66; +on homosexuality, 83, 130–31; +on inscription, 171–73; on +repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97 +Franklin, Aretha, 29–30, +198–99n. 34 +Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84, +203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36 +Gallop, Jane, 37 +Garbo, Greta, 163 +Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50 +gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77; +as incredible, 180; in language, +28–30; overthrow of, 95–96, +151–54; as performative, +163–90; as regulatory, 23–33, + +42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33, +47–48, 141–65 +genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188 +genetics, sex and, 135–41 +Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53, +160–61 +Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40 +Haar, Michel, 27–28 +Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25 +Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183, +196–97n. 21, 203n. 14 +Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently +Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault), +31–32, 120, 123–35 +heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26, +30–31, 34–35, 147–50 +heterosexual matrix, 42–43, +45–100 +History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1 +(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117, +120–24, 135–36 +homosexuality: Foucault on, 83, +130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan +on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14; +and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere +on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84, +87–88, 168–70;Wittig on, +24–33 +hooks, bell, 205n. 23 +Husserl, Edmund, 17 +identification in gender, 40–41, +80–91, 207n. 38 +identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of, +181–90 +imitation, 41, 174–76 +impersonation, 174–80 + +~ +incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84, +87–88, 110, 204n. 19 +“incorporation” of identity, 86–91, +171–74 +internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38 +“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166, +186, 201–2n. 1 +Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27, +34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54 +Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56 +“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade” +(Heath), 67–68 +Jones, Ernest, 64 +jouissance, 55, 71 +Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2, +201–2n. 1 +Kant, Immanuel, 71 +kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16 +Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32 +Kristeva, Julia: on the abject, +169–70; on Lacan, 101–2, +104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14; +and the maternal body, 101–19; +on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32; +as orientalist, 114; on repression, +104–5, 115–17; on the +Symbolic, 102, 104–10 +Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2, +104–5; and lesbian sexuality, +62–64; and the Law, 55, 59, +70–72; and masquerade, 60–73; +on the Phallus, 56–60; on +sexual difference, 36–39; on +the Symbolic, 57, 70–73, +101–2, 104 +language: and culture, 55; gender in, +28–30; poetic, 101–12; and + +identity, 182–86; and power, +33–44 +law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2, +118–19, 200n. 52 +Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72 +Leibniz, Gottfried, 51 +Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36, +153, 159–60, 169 +lesbianism: and the body, 35–36, +159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64; +and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of +women, 26–27, 162–63 +Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93 +“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41 +literalization, 87–91 +Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50 +Locke, John, 158 +MacCormack, Carol, 48 +Marcuse, Herbert, 92 +“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig), +28–29 +Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183 +masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18 +melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19, +206–7n. 32 +Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in +America (Newton), 163, 174 +“Motherhood According to Bellini” +(Kristeva), 71 +mourning, 73–84, 107–9 +“Mourning and Melancholia” +(Freud), 73–74, 78–79 +Newton, Esther, 163, 174, +205n. 22 + +~ +Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73, +166, 171, 206n. 30 +Oedipal complex, the, 75–84, +91–100 +“One Is Not Born a Woman” +(Wittig), 143–44 +On the Genealogy of Morals +(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171, +206n. 30 +“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig), +159, 214n. 49 +Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131 +Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11 +Page, David, 136–41 +Panizza, Oscar, 120 +“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151 +parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90 +pastiche, 176, 186–87 +patriarchy, 45–46 +performativity, 171–90 +person, unversal conception of, +14–15 +phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52 +Phallus, the, 55–73 +Plato, 17, 92, 116 +Pleasure and Danger (Vance), +200–201n. 53, 205n. 22 +pleasures, proliferation of, +35–36 +Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and +the Media (Watney), 168 +politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9, +181–90; of identity, 181–87 +“Postmodernism and Consumer +Society” (Jameson), 176 +power: and category of sex, 25, +155–58; and language, 33–44; + +prohibition as, 91–100; and +volition, 158 +Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70 +Proust, Marcel, 152 +psychoanalytic accounts of sexual +difference, 33–39, 44–100 +Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67, +169 +redeployment of categories, 163–90 +repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87 +representation, problems of, 3–9 +repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17 +Revolution in Poetic Language +(Kristeva), 104 +Riley, Denise, 6 +Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25 +Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70, +156n. 51, 205–6n. 29 +Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4, +209n. 45 +Same/Other binary, 131–33 +Sarraute, Natalie, 152 +Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164, +196–97n. 21 +Schafer, Roy, 86 +Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18, +35, 141, 143 +Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9 +semiotic, the, 101–19 +sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,” +35–36, 141–63; and genetics, +135–41; vs. gender, 9–11, +23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and +identity, 23–33; as project, +177–78 +“Sex-Determining Region of the +Human Y Chromosome Encodes +a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41 + +~ +Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53 +sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96, +120–24, 155–58 +signifying economy, masculinist, +18–19 +“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30 +Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie +(Kristeva), 73 +space, internal, 86–91, 170–71 +Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty, +197n. 23, 204n. 18 +Stoller, Robert, 32 +“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45, +159 +Strathern, Marilyn, 48 +structuralism, 49–55 +subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48, +149–54, 169–70, 181–90 +substance, metaphysics of, 25–28, +34, 37 +Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73, +102, 104–10 +Symposium (Plato), 116 +Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality +(Freud), 36, 52, 140 +Torok, Maria, 86–87 +Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54 +“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political +Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin), +92–96 +transsexuality, 90 + +Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50 +Tyler, Parker, 163 +“unity,” 20–22 +“universality,” 15–16 +Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault), +135–36 +Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53, +205n. 22 +Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22 +Washburn, Linda L., 138–41 +Watney, Simon, 168 +Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir, +143–44; and category of sex, +24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59; +and heterosexual contract, +34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and +Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141, +147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as +materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159 +“Womanliness as a Masquerade” +(Riviere), 61–73 +women: as “being” the Phallus, +55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9, +19–22, 162–64; as object of +exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of +feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 +Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131 +Young, Iris Marion,
+ \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb index 360c2d2..a790afb 100644 --- a/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb +++ b/gender-trouble/annotated-by-size.ipynb @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 29, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, @@ -45,38 +45,150 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 30, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, "outputs": [ { - "ename": "FileNotFoundError", - "evalue": "[Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'log.csv'", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mFileNotFoundError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 1\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpd\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mread_csv\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'log.csv'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 2\u001b[0m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mhead\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36mread_csv\u001b[0;34m(filepath_or_buffer, sep, delimiter, header, names, index_col, usecols, squeeze, prefix, mangle_dupe_cols, dtype, engine, converters, true_values, false_values, skipinitialspace, skiprows, skipfooter, nrows, na_values, keep_default_na, na_filter, verbose, skip_blank_lines, parse_dates, infer_datetime_format, keep_date_col, date_parser, dayfirst, cache_dates, iterator, chunksize, compression, thousands, decimal, lineterminator, quotechar, quoting, doublequote, escapechar, comment, encoding, dialect, error_bad_lines, warn_bad_lines, delim_whitespace, low_memory, memory_map, float_precision, storage_options)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 608\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mupdate\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mkwds_defaults\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 609\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 610\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mreturn\u001b[0m \u001b[0m_read\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mfilepath_or_buffer\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 611\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 612\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m_read\u001b[0;34m(filepath_or_buffer, kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 460\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 461\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# Create the parser.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 462\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mparser\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mTextFileReader\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mfilepath_or_buffer\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m**\u001b[0m\u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 463\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 464\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mif\u001b[0m \u001b[0mchunksize\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mor\u001b[0m \u001b[0miterator\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m__init__\u001b[0;34m(self, f, engine, **kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 817\u001b[0m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0moptions\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"has_index_names\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"has_index_names\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 818\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 819\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0m_engine\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0m_make_engine\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mengine\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 820\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 821\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mdef\u001b[0m \u001b[0mclose\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m_make_engine\u001b[0;34m(self, engine)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1048\u001b[0m )\n\u001b[1;32m 1049\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# error: Too many arguments for \"ParserBase\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1050\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mreturn\u001b[0m \u001b[0mmapping\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0mengine\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m**\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0moptions\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# type: ignore[call-arg]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 1051\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1052\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mdef\u001b[0m \u001b[0m_failover_to_python\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m__init__\u001b[0;34m(self, src, **kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1865\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1866\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# open handles\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1867\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0m_open_handles\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0msrc\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkwds\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 1868\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32massert\u001b[0m \u001b[0mself\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mhandles\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mis\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mnot\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mNone\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1869\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mfor\u001b[0m \u001b[0mkey\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32min\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\"storage_options\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"encoding\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"memory_map\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"compression\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/parsers.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m_open_handles\u001b[0;34m(self, src, kwds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1360\u001b[0m \u001b[0mLet\u001b[0m \u001b[0mthe\u001b[0m \u001b[0mreaders\u001b[0m \u001b[0mopen\u001b[0m \u001b[0mIOHanldes\u001b[0m \u001b[0mafter\u001b[0m \u001b[0mthey\u001b[0m \u001b[0mare\u001b[0m \u001b[0mdone\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mwith\u001b[0m \u001b[0mtheir\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpotential\u001b[0m \u001b[0mraises\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1361\u001b[0m \"\"\"\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1362\u001b[0;31m self.handles = get_handle(\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 1363\u001b[0m \u001b[0msrc\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1364\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"r\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;32m/opt/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/io/common.py\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36mget_handle\u001b[0;34m(path_or_buf, mode, encoding, compression, memory_map, is_text, errors, storage_options)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 640\u001b[0m \u001b[0merrors\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"replace\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 641\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# Encoding\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m--> 642\u001b[0;31m handle = open(\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 643\u001b[0m \u001b[0mhandle\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 644\u001b[0m \u001b[0mioargs\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mmode\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;31mFileNotFoundError\u001b[0m: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'log.csv'" - ] + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Text AText BThresholdCutoffN-GramsNum MatchesText A LengthText B LengthLocations in ALocations in B
0gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE353153351745970[(435522, 435631)][(34199, 34308)]
1gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH353153351758719[(118066, 118330)][(4653, 4920)]
2gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Inclusion and t353153351735376[(477833, 477898)][(33058, 33123)]
3gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/An Exploration353153351745966[(443971, 444257)][(6388, 6643)]
4gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/The Sentimental353153351759900[(478055, 478118)][(2578, 2642)]
\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Text A Text B Threshold Cutoff \\\n", + "0 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE 3 5 \n", + "1 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH 3 5 \n", + "2 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Inclusion and t 3 5 \n", + "3 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/An Exploration 3 5 \n", + "4 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/The Sentimental 3 5 \n", + "\n", + " N-Grams Num Matches Text A Length Text B Length Locations in A \\\n", + "0 3 1 533517 45970 [(435522, 435631)] \n", + "1 3 1 533517 58719 [(118066, 118330)] \n", + "2 3 1 533517 35376 [(477833, 477898)] \n", + "3 3 1 533517 45966 [(443971, 444257)] \n", + "4 3 1 533517 59900 [(478055, 478118)] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \n", + "0 [(34199, 34308)] \n", + "1 [(4653, 4920)] \n", + "2 [(33058, 33123)] \n", + "3 [(6388, 6643)] \n", + "4 [(2578, 2642)] " + ] + }, + "execution_count": 30, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" } ], "source": [ - "df = pd.read_csv('log.csv')\n", + "df = pd.read_csv('log_pages.csv')\n", "df.head()" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 31, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, @@ -114,31 +226,29 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, + "execution_count": 32, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, "outputs": [], "source": [ - "mm = Text('gendertrouble.txt')" + "mm = Text('gender_trouble_pages.txt')" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 8, + "execution_count": 33, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, "outputs": [ { - "ename": "NameError", - "evalue": "name 'df' is not defined", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# Get the size of the text.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 2\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0mtextALength\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mdf\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'Text A Length'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m[\u001b[0m\u001b[0;36m0\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m]\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# I don't know why, but without the offset the novel ends too soon,\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 5\u001b[0m \u001b[0;31m# with \"unvisited tomb.\" This fixes it.\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m: name 'df' is not defined" + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + ":10: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", + "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", + " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" ] } ], @@ -157,7 +267,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 26, + "execution_count": 34, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -165,10 +275,10 @@ { "data": { "text/plain": [ - "535056" + "533519" ] }, - "execution_count": 26, + "execution_count": 34, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -179,7 +289,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 27, + "execution_count": 35, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -190,7 +300,7 @@ "1" ] }, - "execution_count": 27, + "execution_count": 35, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -201,7 +311,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 28, + "execution_count": 36, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -214,7 +324,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 29, + "execution_count": 37, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -229,7 +339,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 38, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -243,7 +353,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 39, "metadata": { "collapsed": false, "scrolled": true @@ -260,7 +370,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 40, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -274,7 +384,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 41, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -288,7 +398,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 42, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -313,7 +423,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 43, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -359,7 +469,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 44, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, @@ -374,23 +484,11 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 45, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, - "outputs": [ - { - "ename": "NameError", - "evalue": "name 'normalizedBlocks' is not defined", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m'
'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 2\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mfor\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblock\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32min\u001b[0m \u001b[0menumerate\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mnormalizedBlocks\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m:\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m+=\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m''\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m%\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mint\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0mblock\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mi\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m=\u001b[0m \u001b[0mblockHTML\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m+\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m\"
\"\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;31mNameError\u001b[0m: name 'normalizedBlocks' is not defined" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "blockHTML = '
'\n", "for i, block in enumerate(normalizedBlocks): \n", @@ -400,7 +498,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 46, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, @@ -426,7 +524,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 47, "metadata": { "collapsed": true }, @@ -462,7 +560,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 48, "metadata": { "collapsed": false }, diff --git a/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt b/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..def4b00 --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1521 @@ +Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's "The Lifted Veil" +Author(s): Thomas Albrecht +Source: ELH , Summer, 2006, Vol. 73, No. 2 (Summer, 2006), pp. 437-463 +Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press +Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019 +REFERENCES +Linked references are available on JSTOR for this article: +https://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019?seq=1&cid=pdfreference#references_tab_contents +You may need to log in to JSTOR to access the linked references. +JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide +range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and +facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. +Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at +https://about.jstor.org/terms + +The Johns Hopkins University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and +extend access to ELH + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + SYMPATHY AND TELEPATHY: THE PROBLEM OF +ETHICS IN GEORGE ELIOT'S THE LIFTED VEIL +BY THOMAS ALBRECHT + +Presentiments are strange things! and so are sympathies; and so a +signs. + +-Charlotte BrontW, Jane Eyre + +I. SYMPATHY AND ANTIPATHY + +If art does not enlarge men's sympathies, it does nothing morally. + +-George Eliot, letter to Charles Bray + +I have never been encouraged to trust much in the sympathy of my + +fellow men. + +-Latimer, in The Lifted Veil + +Although George Eliot's gothic novella The Lifted Veil is not oste + +sibly a work of realism, and although it has until recently been treate + +by critics as a marginal anomaly in Eliot's oeuvre, its themes are +several respects central to Eliot's work overall and to Eliot's ethics +particular. By the time she composed the story early in 1859, El +had developed in her essays and in her first full-length novel Ad +Bede an ethics of art and aesthetics, specifically of realist art. T +ethics is founded on emotional responses, what Eliot calls sympat +and compassion, by which she means a person's ability to feel and +suffer with another person. Her theory insists that art should giv +reader or viewer access to the experiences, thoughts, and feelings + +a great variety of different characters. Eliot proposes that our insigh + +into the minds and experiences of these characters "extend" our sy + +pathy for other people and for humanity in general, thereby producin + +ELH 73 (2006) 437-463 c 2006 by The Johns Hopkins University Press 4 + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + an ethical response in us. In her 1856 essay "The Natural History of +German Life," for example, she writes, "The greatest benefit we owe +to the artist, whether painter, poet, or novelist, is the extension of our +sympathies. ... Art is the nearest thing to life; it is a mode of amplifying experience and extending our contact with our fellow-men beyond + +the bounds of our personal lot."' So whereas a critic like Walter Pater +describes the experience of art as a retraction into the self ("What is +this song or picture, this engaging personality presented in life or in a +book, to me?"), Eliot describes it as an extension beyond the limitations + +of the self, as a coming up against some form of otherness. +Most recent scholars working on The Lifted Veil have noted in pass- + +ing that the relation between art and ethics is implicitly taken up in +the novella; however, their analyses have largely sidestepped this issue + +and concentrated instead on contextualizing elements from the plot +within such Victorian scientific theories and practices as mesmerism +and animal magnetism, phrenology, clairvoyance, vivisection, blood +transfusions, and physiological psychology.3 In this essay, I should like +to bring critical attention to the ethical dilemma that is implicitly and + +explicitly raised in The Lifted Veil. I will focus in particular on the +central conceit of telepathic power and on its equivocal relation to +the moral value Eliot calls sympathy. +The Lifted Veil is told retrospectively in the form of a confessional + +manuscript written by Latimer, an overly sensitive aesthete and misanthrope. As a young man, Latimer discovers that he is intermittently +and involuntarily subjected to two kinds of clairvoyant powers: he has +prescient visions of future events and telepathic access to the thoughts + +and feelings of those around him. His insights into what he describes +as the pettiness, stupidity, and egotism of other people alienate him +from all society. He eventually meets Bertha Grant, a beautiful young +woman who soon after becomes engaged to marry his half-brother +Alfred. He falls in love with Bertha, in part because "she made the +only exception, among all the human beings about me, to my unhappy + +gift of insight."4 He has a prescient vision of an older Bertha as his +wife, which reveals to him her cruelty and her hatred of him, but +he nevertheless continues to love and desire her. Following Alfred's +death in an accident, Latimer and Bertha are married and eventually +come to live together in the state of mutual alienation anticipated in +Latimer's vision. A visit from Latimer's childhood friend Meunier, now + +a renowned scientist, is the occasion for a gothic reanimation scene +in which a recently deceased maid is momentarily restored to life to +accuse Bertha of plotting to poison Latimer. In this climactic scene, + +438 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + Bertha is revealed to Latimer as a femme fatale whose outer beauty +has veiled her inner monstrosity. After the couple's final separation +following this incident, the story ends with Latimer finishing his account and awaiting, in the narrative present, his own death predicted +at the novella's outset.5 + +Following a suggestive essay by Charles Swann, I propose that The +Lifted Veil implicitly tests the premises of Eliot's ethics of sympathy +through the conceit of Latimer's telepathic "participation in other + +people's consciousness" (V, 17). Latimer's clairvoyance can be read +as an implicit figure for realist art as Eliot defines it, because it gives +Latimer access to the thoughts and feelings of a large number of +different people. Latimer is in this sense a stand-in for the reader or +viewer, and also, in another sense, a stand-in for Eliot herself and for + +the artist in general. As Swann puts it, "Latimer knows the pains and +joys of others. . . . [His] position is strikingly analogous to that of the + +reader of a George Eliot novel."6 Latimer himself characterizes his +telepathic powers as +the obtrusion in my mind of the mental process going forward in first + +one person, then another, with whom I happened to be in contact: +the vagrant, frivolous ideas and emotions of some uninteresting +acquaintance .., .would force themselves on my consciousness like an +importunate, ill-played musical instrument, or the loud activity of an + +imprisoned insect. (V, 13) + +Latimer's reference to an obtrusion of frivolous emotions, and his +metaphors of the importunate instrument and the imprisoned insect, +suggest the potential failure of Eliot's ethical theory of art. This is + +because while Latimer has access to the thoughts and feelings of +others, he does not respond according to Eliot's prescription; he feels +neither sympathy nor affection. Rather than eliciting pity and compassion, Latimer's telepathic insights elicit in him only boredom and +contempt. To have involuntary access to the minds of his neighbors, +he complains, is at best "wearying and annoying," at worst "an intense + +pain and grief" (V, 13-14). Thus Latimer's experiences would seem to +contradict Eliot's theory that art can and should enlarge our sympathy + +simply by granting us access to the thoughts and feelings of those +around us. Latimer in fact makes explicit reference to this theory, but +only to dismiss it as a wishful illusion: +This is one of the vain thoughts with which we men flatter ourselves. +We try to believe that the egotism within us would have easily been + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +439 + + melted, and that it was only the narrowness of our knowledge which +hemmed in our generosity, our awe, our human pity, and hindered +them from submerging our hard indifference to the sensations and +emotions of our fellow. (V, 21-22) + +Latimer briefly considers the possibility that an expansion of our insight into others might lead us to feel pity and generosity for them. +But his final assessment is that this is only "one of the vain thoughts + +with which we men flatter ourselves."7 + +Through Latimer's "hard indifference" to the sensations and emotions of the people around him, The Lifted Veil dramatizes a crisis for + +Eliot's ethics of sympathy. Latimer's misanthropic responses to other +people suggest a less stable relation between art and ethics than the +one necessitated by Eliot's theory. Eliot herself alludes to this more +unstable relation in a line she wrote to her friend Charles Bray at +the time of the novella's composition, "If art does not enlarge men's +sympathies, it does nothing morally."" There are at least two ways to +read this sentence, and the ambiguity nicely condenses the ethical +predicament in The Lifted Veil. On the one hand, Eliot maintains that +art can be morally effective by enlarging our sympathies. On the other +hand, her use of the double negative suggests that art is morally inef- + +ficient because it does not enlarge our sympathy, a more pessimistic +assessment which Latimer's experiences would seem to confirm.9 I +propose that Eliot both acknowledges and resolves this predicament +at the level of the plot. In order to defend her ethical theory against +the implications of Latimer's narcissism, she stages a conversion narrative in which Latimer makes an unexpected transition from antipathy to sympathy. She then projects Latimer's antipathy onto another +character, namely Bertha Grant, the femme fatale of her story. This +projection allows her to delineate and to demonize the antipathy more +distinctively (using the convenient figure of a transgressive woman), +and then, at a symbolic level, to expel it. +The initial step in the expulsion of Bertha and of the antipathy she + +represents is the moral conversion Latimer undergoes on the evening +of his father's death. The father's dying from an illness becomes the first + +occasion for Latimer to feel sympathy for another human being: +Perhaps it was the first day since the beginning of my passion for +[Bertha], in which that passion was completely neutralised by the +presence of an absorbing feeling of another kind. I had been watching +by my father's deathbed: I had been witnessing the last fitful yearning +glance his soul had cast back on the spent inheritance of life-the last + +440 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + faint consciousness of love he had gathered from the pressure of my +hand. What are all our personal loves when we have been sharing in +that supreme agony? In the first moments when we come away from +the presence of death, every other relation to the living is merged, to + +our feeling, in the great relation of a common nature and a common +destiny. (V, 31, my emphasis) + +This passage depicts unprecedented avowals of sympathy and compassion. For the first time in the novella, Latimer does not respond to +the consciousness of another person with contempt or indifference. +Instead, he claims a connection with his father by way of their shared + +mortality. The word sympathy derives from the Greek sympathes +(having common feelings) and is here evoked in Latimer's emphasis +on commonality ("the great relation of a common nature and a common destiny"). Through his communion with his father and through +the sense of their common mortality, Latimer is also able to claim a +connection with humanity in general, as indicated by his shift in the +passage from the first person singular to the first person plural.1o +Latimer's conversion to sympathy at his father's death leads directly +to his first clairvoyant insight into Bertha's mind. Up until this point + +in the narrative, Bertha has remained a "fascinating secret" (V, 20) +and an "oasis of mystery" (V, 18) to him, and for this reason an object + +of intense speculations and desires. But immediately following his +communion with his dying father, Latimer experiences a "terrible moment of complete illumination," which directly reveals to him Bertha's + +"scheming selfishness" and her "repulsion and antipathy harden[ing] +into cruel hatred" (V, 32). He explicitly depicts this illumination as an +effect of the bond he has just shared with his father: +In that state of mind I joined Bertha in her private sitting-room... +I remember, as I closed the door behind me, a cold tremulousness + +seizing me, and a vague sense of being hated and lonely-vague and +strong, like a presentiment. I know how I looked at that moment, for + +I saw myself in Bertha's thought as she lifted her cutting grey eyes, +and looked at me: a miserable ghost-seer, surrounded by phantoms + +in the noon-day, trembling under a breeze when the leaves were +still, without appetites for the common objects of human desire, but +pining after the moonbeams. We were front to front with each other, +and judged each other. The terrible moment of complete illumination + +had come. (V, 31-32) + +Among other things, this scene is explicitly a moment of judgment +("We ... judged each other"), a moment of moral recognition. I would +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +441 + + argue that in the exchange of looks between the two characters, the +specific function of Bertha's gaze is to appropriate Latimer's earlier +antipathy. What Latimer sees and recognizes is not so much Bertha's +inner self, but rather the way in which she sees him: "I saw myself +in Bertha's thought as she lifted her cutting grey eyes, and looked at +me: a miserable ghost-seer, surrounded by phantoms in the noon-day, +trembling under a breeze when the leaves were still, without appetite +for the common objects of human desire." The way in which Bertha +sees Latimer closely resembles the way in which he had earlier seen +the people around him: as miserable, pitiful, and as fundamentally +disconnected from one another. At the same time, her gaze stands in +explicit contrast to Latimer's clairvoyant communion with his dying +father in the scene just before, thus suggesting that Eliot has projected + +the antipathy away from Latimer and onto Bertha. The misanthropic +Bertha, it seems, is unveiled here by Latimer as his own uncanny +double." + +Eliot's purpose in exposing Bertha as Latimer's double is to protect +her ethics of sympathy from the implications of Latimer's antipathy. +By projecting that antipathy onto Bertha, Eliot leaves Latimer, the +proxy for both herself and the reader, free to convert to sympathy. The +subsequent redemption of Latimer in the plot signals the concurrent +redemption of Eliot's literary ethics and the successful warding off of an + +implicit threat. The protective effect of the projection lies in Bertha's + +more unequivocal embodiment of antipathy. While Latimer's misanthropy is exonerated in the plot by the oedipal and social pressures to +which he is continually subjected, and while it is ultimately (though +only partially) transformed into sympathy for the dying father and for +humanity in general, Bertha is an image of antipathy as pure, absolute +evil. Eliot uses the conventions of the nineteenth-centuryfemmefatale + +to make this evil intelligible, suggesting a direct correspondence between Bertha's character and her sex, an association readily available +in Victorian culture.'" The femme fatale provides Eliot with a stock +personification of antipathy, an antipathy that is unveiled and then +symbolically expelled, much as the character Bertha is expelled from +the plot once her secret plan to poison Latimer has been unveiled. + +442 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + II. SYMPATHY AND METAPHOR + +All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors an +act fatally on the strength of them. + +-Middlemarch, chapter 10 + +The structure outlined at the end of the previous section is w +Neil Hertz has identified as "a structure common in Eliot's novels + +double surrogation, in which the author's investment in her characte + +is split into 'good' and 'bad' versions, and the valued imaginative activ + +of the 'good' surrogate is purchased by the exiling of the 'bad.""'1 +The Lifted Veil, Latimer transforms into Eliot's good surrogate, w +Bertha is the bad surrogate. In his reading of Middlemarch, He +considers the overall structure, and the overcoming of the thr +posed by the bad surrogate, a protective displacement of a diffe +threat, one which Eliot cannot overcome as easily. He identifies +second threat as an "open and indeterminate self-dispersion ass + +ated with a plurality of signs and the plurality of interpretations th + +writing can provoke."14 For Hertz, the danger displaced by the m +conflict in Middlemarch between good and bad authorial surroga +is a categorical threat to the self as such, to its ability to conceiv +itself as a unified and coherent entity. My reading of The Lifted +follows Hertz in identifying an opposition between a good and a +surrogate for Eliot and in suggesting that the entire double surr +tion structure is a displacement of a different threat altogether. +unlike Hertz, I identify the latter not as an extra-moral threat to + +self's ability to constitute itself, but as another moral threat. I will b + +arguing that this second threat is ethically more troubling to + +than either Latimer's egotism or Bertha's evil. I specifically locate th + +threat not in any one character's disposition towards another charact + +but in the visual metaphors through which Latimer's moral insig + +are formulated. Insofar as these insights take the form of metaphor + +they are based on principles of similarity, analogy, and commona +Such principles are fundamentally at odds with Eliot's notion of w + +a true ethics should be, namely an attentiveness to what is irreducibl + +different or apart from oneself. Ultimately the more disturbing eth +conflict in The Lifted Veil is not between antipathy and sympathy b + +between an ethics based on similarity and one based on differenc +As its title suggests, The Lifted Veil has an interest in the co +monplace Victorian theme of knowledge and, more specifically, in +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +443 + + play between knowledge and ignorance, veiling and unveiling, secrecy +and initiation. The privileged object of knowledge for Eliot's novels +in general and for The Lifted Veil in particular is the consciousness +of other people. In The Lifted Veil, the theme of Latimer's telepathy +demonstrates the novella's preoccupation with the idea of gaining access to someone else's mind. For Eliot, the appreciation of another +person's consciousness that is made possible by art is the first step +towards moral agency, which is for her the aim of all great art and +criticism. Thus any understanding one may gain of another person's +thoughts and feelings is never a neutral kind of knowledge but always +has a strong moral dimension; in The Lifted Veil, for instance, Latimer's +sympathetic witnessing of his dying father's thoughts, and the revelation + +to him of Bertha's antipathy, are distinctly moral insights. +As its title also suggests, The Lifted Veil portrays the initiation into + +moral knowledge in specifically visual terms. Here, for example, is +Latimer's experience of his grieving father's consciousness: "As I saw +into the desolation of my father's heart, I felt a movement of deep +pity towards him, which was the beginning of a new affection" (V, 28, + +my emphasis). And here is Latimer's telepathic insight into Bertha's +mind, partially quoted earlier: "I saw myself in Bertha's thought as +she lifted her cutting grey eyes, and looked at me: a miserable ghostseer... The terrible moment of complete illumination had come to +me, and I saw the darkness had hidden no landscape from me, but +only a blank prosaic wall" (V, 32, my emphasis). Latimer's conversion to sympathy and the revelation of Bertha's antipathy are both +represented visually: Latimer sees into his father's desolate heart, he +sees into Bertha's mind, and he sees himself in Bertha's eyes. Both +moments demonstrate the extent to which Eliot frames morality and +immorality in visual terms and the extent to which she makes moral +conclusions intelligible through visual metaphors such as clairvoyance, +darkness, and illumination. These kinds of metaphors traditionally imply + +an epistemological reliability and would thus serve to strengthen the +authority of Latimer's insights. + +The "blank prosaic wall" as which Bertha is revealed to Latimer in +the second quotation indicates a second metaphorical strand in The +Lifted Veil that is intertwined with the visual metaphors (clairvoyance, + +illumination, darkness, and so on), namely a series of metaphorical +references to prose, that is to writing, reading, texts, and to language. + +Rather than comparing Bertha to a visual object, the latter metaphors +compare her to a text that must be deciphered or read. Latimer compares Bertha to an epigram (V, 26), her glances to "feminine nothings + +444 S1ympathq and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + which could never be quoted against her" (V, 16), and his recollections +of her to "an oriental alphabet" (V, 35). Like the visual metaphors, +these metaphors concentrate around Bertha in scenes of considerable +epistemological stress. But unlike the visual metaphors, they designate +her inaccessibility, rather than her accessibility, to Latimer's clairvoyant + +powers: "Bertha's inward self remained shrouded from me, and I still +read her thoughts only through the language of her lips and demeanour" (V, 31). In this line, Latimer associates vision with certainty, and +reading with uncertainty and tentativeness. +Several of the examples I have cited join together the two metaphori- + +cal strands in which Bertha is entwined: the visual metaphors (which +compare her to a visual object) and the textual metaphors (which +compare her to a piece of writing). For instance, the "blank prosaic +wall" simultaneously compares her to a wall and to a piece of prose. +Yet even as the two metaphorical strands sometimes overlap, they each +designate their referent, Bertha, in very distinct terms: the one in terms + +of the senses ("seeing" her) and the other in textual terms ("reading" +her). Reading and seeing are of course not wholly analogous, and in +fact the two strands sometimes come to interfere with one another, +and to comment on one another. As J. Hillis Miller has noted about the +relation between different metaphorical strands in Middlemarch, "the + +interpretation of one metaphor by another metaphor is characteristic +of Eliot's use of figure."'5 In The Lifted Veil, I would propose, the +textual metaphors interpret the visual metaphors as mere metaphors. +In doing so, they subvert the visual metaphors' privileged status as +decisive revelations. This is because simply by their juxtaposition with +the visual metaphors, the textual metaphors foreground, as it were, the +metaphorical nature of the visual metaphors. The combination of the +two strands, for instance in the "blank prosaic wall," emphasizes that +the "illumination" and "unveiling" of Bertha's inner self are also only +metaphors, just as the comparisons of Bertha to an oriental alphabet +or an epigram are metaphors. However, because the unveiling and +the illumination evoke the sensual experience of seeing an object with +one's eyes (rather than the experience of reading a text), they veil their +own metaphorical nature in a way that the textual metaphors arguably +do not. By veiling their status as figures, the visual metaphors imply +a revelation by means of the senses; this revelation would be decisive +and absolute insofar as it would not be mediated by means of language +and tropological figures, that is, by means of reading and writing. The +claim to a sensory rather than linguistic access to truth underwrites +the moral conclusions of the novella; I have shown this in my reading +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +445 + + of moral truths becoming visually intelligible in Latimer's visions of +his father's desolate soul and Bertha's misanthropic consciousness. My +claim now is that through the juxtaposition of Latimer's visual revela- + +tions with the textual metaphors, Eliot brings out the metaphorical +nature of those revelations. That metaphorical nature in turn implies +the revelations' potential arbitrariness and unreliability. +The comparisons of Bertha to a piece of writing suggest that rather +than being an object Latimer can see, Bertha is a kind of impenetrable +text that has to be read or deciphered. The metaphor of a text designates +the otherness of Bertha from Latimer; Eliot makes this explicit insofar + +as she repeatedly associates versions of this figure with opacity, as in +the image of the oriental alphabet. If the other is a kind of obscure +text, Eliot suggests, it is open to something like numerous, potentially +contradictory interpretations, but not to something like clear, unequivocal vision. As only one possible interpretation (out of many) of the text + +as which Bertha becomes manifest, then, Latimer's visual exposure of + +the character Bertha is not an absolute revelation of truth. It is rather + +the revelation of a truth that is more arbitrary and subjective, one that + +potentially says more about Latimer than about Bertha. Hence even +at the moment of her alleged unveiling, Bertha "remain[s] virtually +unknown" to Latimer and to us; she is "known merely as a cluster of +signs for [her] neighbour's false suppositions."'16 Latimer's recognition + +of her inner selfishness is only one supposition made on the basis of +the cluster of signs as which Bertha is intelligible to him. His insight +into her consciousness, and by extension any insight into it, is only +one interpretation of "the language of her lips and demeanour," of +that obscure language which (figuratively) indicates her difference +from him and from us. + +To some extent, the possibility that Latimer is interpreting Bertha, +rather than directly seeing into her, is covered over, so to speak, by the +veil of the visual metaphor, by the veil of Bertha's visual unveiling. Eliot + +covers it over because she wants to protect the authority of Latimer's +moral insights; once we realize that those insights are only metaphors +and interpretations, their authority would be compromised due to the +potential arbitrariness of metaphors and interpretations, which Eliot +famously acknowledges throughout her writings. At the same time +that she protects Latimer's insights, however, Eliot uses the textual +metaphors implicitly to undermine their authority, by showing that +Bertha is truly Latimer's other, and that his insights into her are only +his own approximations of that otherness via metaphor. Figuratively +speaking, those insights are like interpretations of a text and thus sub- + +446 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + ject to the same kind of uncertainty and capriciousness to which any +interpretation is subject."7 If Bertha in her otherness is more like a text +than like a visual object, Eliot implies, Latimer cannot literally see into + +her. She cannot literally be unveiled, only metaphorically. Thus Eliot +calls the epistemological authority of Latimer's visions into question. +In the concluding section of this essay, I will consider how she calls +the moral authority of those visions into question as well. +As a first step in that direction, I should like to offer an example +of how Latimer's use of figurative language destabilizes the moral +insights made possible by Bertha's visual unveiling. In the climactic +scene of The Lifted Veil, Bertha's recently deceased maid, Mrs. Archer, is temporarily brought back to life to reveal Bertha's secret plot + +to poison Latimer: +The dead woman's eyes were wide open, and met [Bertha's eyes] in full +recognition-the recognition of hate. With a sudden strong effort, the +hand that Bertha had thought for ever still was pointed towards her, and + +the haggard face moved. The gasping eager voice said-"You mean to +poison your husband." (V, 41-42) + +Like Latimer's insights into the consciousnesses of his father and +Bertha, Mrs. Archer's exposure of Bertha is pointedly visual; it takes +the form of her eyes meeting Bertha's eyes. The scene is crucial to +the plot because it provides empirical evidence for Bertha's exposure +and indictment, adding to Latimer's earlier clairvoyant evidence. +And it is also crucial to the double surrogation structure because it +provides empirical evidence for the indictment of Bertha as Eliot's +bad surrogate. In the passage, the good surrogate, Latimer, explicitly +equates Mrs. Archer's "full recognition" of Bertha with "the recognition of hate," the kind of hate of which Eliot wishes to purge him by +projecting it onto Bertha. +Yet the moral authority of Bertha's exposure ("we all felt that the +dark veil had completely fallen") is undermined by a suggestion that the + +evidence in question is as much metaphorical as empirical.'8 Bertha's +plan to poison Latimer is not only a secret plot unveiled by Mrs. Archer +but also a citation of one of Latimer's recurring metaphors for Bertha, +the figure of Lucrezia Borgia. Earlier in the story, Latimer and Bertha +are in Vienna, visiting a picture gallery: +I had been looking at Giorgione's picture of the cruel-eyed woman, +said to be a likeness of Lucrezia Borgia. I had stood long alone before +it, fascinated by the terrible reality of that cunning, relentless face, till + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +447 + + I felt a strange poisoned sensation, as if I had long been inhaling a fatal +odour, and was just beginning to be conscious of its effects. (V, 18-19, +my emphasis) + +Latimer's choice of the word "poisoned" to describe the strange sensation + +he feels while looking at the portrait would seem to be motivated by +the subject matter of the painting itself. At the same time, the epithet +"cruel-eyed" indicates an affinity between the woman in the portrait and +Bertha, an affinity that is confirmed in a scene immediately following. + +As Bertha takes Latimer's arm, he relates that "a strange intoxicating +numbness passed over me, like the continuance or climax of the sensa- + +tion I was still feeling from the gaze of Lucrezia Borgia" (V, 19). The +doubling of Bertha and Lucrezia Borgia raises the possibility that the +poisoning plot that is later revealed by Mrs. Archer is merely Latimer's + +taking his metaphor for Bertha to its logical conclusion. If Bertha is +(like) Lucrezia Borgia, it follows that she would attempt to eliminate +her enemy by poison. The literal poison intended for Latimer is in this + +sense just a variant of the "poisoned sensation" Latimer claims to feel +in the presence of the Lucrezia Borgia portrait.'9 + +The poison metaphor appears elsewhere in the novella as well. Latimer refers to the scene just described as "that hideous vision which +poisoned the passion it could not destroy" (V, 21), and he justifies his +ongoing infatuation with Bertha by claiming, "The fear of poison is feeble + +against the sense of thirst" (V, 20). Given this recurring and somewhat +banal metaphor, one has to be just a little suspicious when Bertha's plan +to poison Latimer is finally revealed. At best, Mrs. Archer's exposure of +Bertha's plan leaves us unable to choose between taking this moment as +a revelation of an empirical truth and taking it as one more recurrence of +the Lucrezia Borgia metaphor. The status of the revelation is ultimately +undecidable because Eliot provides us with no means by which to know +for sure. Certainly the unveiling of Bertha's secret plot is crucial to the +novella's resolution, but its truth is not empirically (that is to say, nonmetaphorically) verifiable. This is not because Latimer may be an unreli- + +able narrator, as Terry Eagleton has argued, but because the poisoning +plot is at the same time simply a quotation of a metaphor taken from a +series of metaphors that leads back to the woman in the portrait, "said +to be a likeness of Lucrezia Borgia" (V, 18-19, my emphasis)."20 +Caught in this predicament, we should not try to verify whether the +scene is "really" a moment of truth or "just" a citation of a metaphor. + +Eliot's point is that it is both at once, insofar as she does not make a +tenable distinction here between a true insight into the other and a meta- + +448 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + phor for the other. This is the epistemological predicament personified +by the figure of Bertha. The many textual metaphors for Bertha insist +that any revelation of Bertha's inner self, including this one, is already a +metaphor, whether that metaphor is drawn from the sensual realm or the + +linguistic realm or from elsewhere. To put it another way, the unveiling +of Bertha's character is one interpretation (among many possible interpretations) of the text as which Bertha is intelligible to Latimer and to +us. This general point about the constitutive relation between the other +and metaphor is merely reconfirmed here by the uncanny coincidence of +a frequently recurring metaphor and an alleged revelation of the other's +interiority or essence. +Eliot's recognition of metaphor's constitutive role in our insights into + +other people has fundamental consequences for her understanding of +morality, as she acknowledges in a comment made by her good surrogate, + +Latimer. At a point late in the narrative, Latimer explicitly interrogates +the validity of any moral judgment of another person that is mediated + +through one's own verbal representation of that person's experience. +He concludes an assessment of his and Bertha's unhappy marriage by +questioning the moral authority of such assessments: +That course of our life which I have indicated in a few sentences filled + +the space of years. So much misery-so slow and hideous a growth of +hatred and sin, may be compressed into a sentence! And men judge of +each other's lives through this summary medium. They epitomise the +experience of their fellow-mortal, and pronounce judgment on him in +neat syntax, and feel themselves wise and virtuous-conquerors over the +temptations they define in well-selected predicates. (V, 34) + +Latimer insists here on a distinction between years of misery and the +compression of those years into a single sentence, between actual +experience and the epitome of that experience (an epitome is a brief +verbal summary). What men judge when they judge one another, he +says, is never the other's actual experience, but always its epitome. +These kinds of judgments, he points out, allow the judges to "feel +themselves wise and virtuous-conquerors over the temptations they +define in well-selected predicates." At the same time, he calls this kind +of morality into question because it is built on one's own definition of + +the other's temptations and on one's own summations of the other's +experience, rather than on an appreciation of the other's experience +itself, of that experience in its otherness. + +Latimer's reflections on the ways our judgments of one another +are verbally mediated substantiate my earlier claim that Eliot's episThomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +449 + + temological emphasis on the metaphorical bases of moral insights into +other people puts not only the reliability but the morality of those +insights into question. The epistemological problem is that metaphors +are arbitrary and subjective, which in turn subjects one's insights to +a potential arbitrariness. The moral problem is that these metaphors +are always one's own figures for the other; as such, they refer back to + +oneself, not to the other. Metaphors are based on principles of analogy and similarity, not difference. They establish a relation between +the other and something that is already familiar to oneself in order +to make the other more familiar. In the Rhetoric, Aristotle identifies +familiarization as both the means and the aim of metaphors: "[I]n using + +metaphors to give names to nameless things, we must draw them not +from remote but from kindred and similar things, so that the kinship + +is clearly perceived as soon as the words are said."21 The kinship to be +perceived is not only between the metaphor and the nameless thing +but also between us and the thing. The ethical problem here is the +implicit emphasis on the other's kinship to oneself. Latimer suggests +in the passage quoted above that a more just ethics would be an appreciation of the other as other: an appreciation of the other's actual +experience, not an appreciation of one's definition of that experience. +His claim complements explicit claims Eliot makes throughout her +writings. In her essay "The Natural History of German Life," for +instance, she argues that great art "surprises even the trivial and the +selfish into that attention to what is apart from themselves, which may +be called the raw material of moral sentiment.""22 Elsewhere, in a letter + +to Bray from which I have quoted earlier, she writes, "[T]he only effect I ardently long to produce by my writings is that those who read + +them should be better able to imagine and to feel the pains and joys +of those who differ from themselves" (L, 3:111). And in Middlemarch, +her narrator specifically indicts the egotistic Rosamond for her inability +or unwillingness to engage with Lydgate as someone autonomous from + +herself: "Rosamond, in fact, was entirely occupied not exactly with +Tertius Lydgate as he was in himself, but with his relation to her."23 +So Eliot explicitly defines the ethics of art and of interpersonal relations as an attention to what is apart or different from oneself. This +appeal to our awareness of the other's difference from us, rather than +its similarity to us, has been largely overlooked by critics working on + +Eliot's ethics, critics who primarily define those ethics in terms of a +fellowship or sympathy between the self and the other.24 Eliot derives +the imperative to acknowledge the other's otherness from the work of + +Ludwig Feuerbach, a writer with whom she claimed a great affinity + +450 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + (L, 2:153), and especially from Feuerbach's Essence of Christianity, +a text she translated in 1854. "The consciousness of the moral law, +of right, of propriety, of truth itself," Feuerbach writes in Marian +Evans's translation, "is indissolubly connected with my consciousness +of another than myself."25 + +Eliot's appeal to a consciousness of the other's difference from +ourselves would seem to be at odds with her own attention to Bertha, +which pointedly does not acknowledge Bertha's otherness, even though + +Bertha is, by virtue of her gender (she is the only significant female +character in the story) and by virtue of her opacity, the novella's exem- + +plar of otherness. Eliot ultimately reveals Bertha as a deficient double +of Latimer and, by implicit extension, of herself, not as something truly + +apart from Latimer or herself. Like Rosamond in the citation from +Midlemarch, Eliot is preoccupied not with Bertha as she is, but with +Bertha's relation to herself. This preoccupation with Bertha as her own +bad double ultimately allows her to resolve her ethical dilemma and to +close the narrative, but the ethics of that closure are called into question by her simultaneous insistence that the other must be attended +to as other, not as a (negative or positive) reflection of the self. In the +final section of this essay, I will argue that this discrepancy between +an ethics based on true difference and an ethics based on similarity +points to an ethical dilemma in The Lifted Veil that is itself radically +different from the sympathy/antipathy problem on which the novella +and Eliot's work in general ostensibly concentrate. The latter problem, +I will propose, is a protective displacement of the former. +III. SYMPATHY AND TELEPATHY + +The moral is plain enough... the one-sided knowing of + +relation to the self. + +-George Henry Lewes, on The Lifted V + +In The Lifted Veil, the truly ethical attention to the othe +from oneself" would seem to be exemplified by the conceit + +telepathy. Etymologically, the word telepathy implies distan + +apartness; literally, it means to feel something from a distan +is usually defined as extrasensory impressions of something + +far away and separate from oneself. Thus it designates an ap + +of the other from a distance, a relation to the other that is + +unmediated by one's senses or language. In accordance wi +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +451 + + junction to respect the difference between oneself and the other, it would +seem to be a figure for a purely ethical relation. It is a figure for gaining + +access to the actual person rather than to an epitome of the person. Yet +Eliot is tellingly unable to represent Latimer's telepathy except through +sensory metaphors like "microscopic vision" (V, 14) and "a preternaturally heightened sense of hearing" (V, 18). These metaphors indicate +the extent to which Eliot is forced to represent the radical alterity of +telepathic experience in familiar analogues. Something that is presumably +extrasensory is rendered by her in images of heightened sensory experiences. Telepathy, it would seem, can only be represented metaphorically, +which is to say it cannot be represented as such; thus the representation +of telepathy as heightened senses paradoxically points to the impossibility of representing telepathy. Along a similar vein, Eliot represents the +thoughts and feelings of other people to which Latimer gains clairvoyant +access not as any kind of irreducible otherness but in familiar (though +admittedly opaque) similes like "a ringing in the ears not to be gotten rid +of" (V, 18), "a sensation of grating metal" (V, 14), an "ill-played musical +instrument" (V, 13), "the loud activity of an imprisoned insect" (V, 13), +and "a roar of sound where others find perfect stillness" (V, 18). These +metaphors for the otherness of other people's consciousnesses ostensibly +designate the epistemological problem outlined in the previous section: +the recognition that the other necessarily becomes intelligible through +one's own metaphors for it.26 For Eliot, this epistemological problem +has profound and explicit ethical repercussions. +I would maintain that the novella's failure to represent Latimer's +telepathy is indicative of its true ethical dilemma: the inability to face +the other as other, despite Eliot's injunction that we must do precisely +that, and the inevitable recourse to framing the other in terms of oneself. This recourse to one's own terms is a recourse to metaphor, to a +framing of the relation to the other as a similarity, not as irreducibly +differential. Eliot's failure to write telepathically about telepathy suggests that the kinds of verbal summations and judgments we make of +each other's experiences are inevitable because the person doing the +judging could never have access to the other's experiences as such, +could never, that is, have telepathic access to the other. Through this +failure, Eliot insists that as soon as one enters into a relationship with +the other, a relation of ethically judging, say, this relationship is never +telepathic but always mediated through one's own metaphors and interpretations. This is the argument of the narrator in Middlemarch, who +states that people remain "virtually unknown" to one another, and can +be known only as clusters of signs for their neighbor's false suppositions. + +452 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + Latimer, for instance, comes to know Bertha through such signs and +sign clusters as the blank prosaic wall, the cold gaze, the secret plot +to poison him, and so on, but he does not know her telepathically, as +someone completely and irreducibly apart from himself. So despite +the novella's title, Bertha's veil is never truly lifted at all.27 + +Through her failure to represent Latimer's telepathy as such, Eliot suggests that an ethics based on difference may be impossible to +formalize. In attempting to attain a moral position, her only recourse +is sympathy, an ethics based on commonality, on what she calls the +fellowship of all human beings.2s The word sympathy, derived from +the Greek syn (with, together with) and pathos (feeling), would seem +to be opposed to telepathy, a word derived from tele (distant) and +pathos. The difference is between understanding and relating to the +other in terms of its similarity to oneself, and understanding it in terms + +of its irreducible distance from oneself. In The Lifted Veil, Eliot can +only understand or represent the other in terms of similarity, which +is to say in terms of metaphors (the ill-played musical instrument, +the imprisoned insect, the narrow room, and so on). The other is not +known as "apart from oneself," even though the conceit of telepathy +is a reminder of the (failed) imperative to know it in just such a way. +The other is known only in terms of an analogy to the self, in terms +of what Latimer at his father's deathbed calls "the great relation of +a common nature and a common destiny" (V, 31). Latimer's implicit +interpretation of his father's mortality as a figure for his own is indicative + +of this ethics of sympathy. It is indicative of the necessary recourse to +metaphor (for Latimer, the dying father is fundamentally a metaphor + +for himself). Latimer's conversion to sympathy is in this sense also a +figure for the failure of telepathy, for the impossibility of facing the +other as other.29 +Eliot's turn from telepathy to sympathy is not only an epistemologi- + +cal necessity but a compensatory move aimed at restoring for Eliot +the possibility of any ethical agency at all.30 To put it in the terms +of Freud's essay "Fetishism," it is an apotropaic belief in similarity +(here, the fellowship between oneself and the other) that indicates +and simultaneously covers over an awareness of difference (here, the +other's difference from oneself, and the difference between an ethics +based on difference and an ethics based on similarity). Sympathy is +a kind of fetish, and, like the Freudian fetish, it designates both the +presence and the absence of something deemed valuable (in Eliot's +case not the maternal phallus but an ethical relation to the other). It +enables Eliot and her reader to be moral agents, but it also subverts +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +453 + + that morality through its uncanny similarity, at a fundamental level, +to antipathy, its alleged opposite. +Insofar as sympathy is based on a presumed similarity between the +other and oneself, it effectively collapses the distinction between itself +and egotism. That distinction is the fundamental opposition within +which critics have traditionally located the defining ethical conflict in +Eliot's work. The distinction collapses, Eliot implies in The Lifted Veil, +because both sympathy and egotism similarly relate the other back to +the self, either in terms of its similarity or dissimilarity to the self. In +the end, the two kinds of relationships come back to the same thing, +namely the self, and neither meets Eliot's ethical criterion of being +attentive to what is "apart from oneself" (in other words neither is +telepathic). This is true no matter how good or bad one's intentions, + +or how compassionate or misanthropic one's language. Both positions are fundamentally metaphorical, since any relationship to the +other, whether friendly or hostile, is based on a (positive or negative) +comparison of the other to oneself. This implicit comparison is what +such diverse metaphors as the blank prosaic wall, the great relation +of a common destiny, and the ill-played musical instrument have in +common. Eliot's failure to represent the radical alterity of Latimer's +telepathy suggests that this recourse to metaphor is inevitable; it implies that we can only ever face the other as some kind of metaphor. +Eliot uses the figure of obscure writing to designate her awareness of +Bertha's irreducible otherness, but it too is just a metaphor. +If the recourse to sympathy and thus to metaphor is epistemologically +unavoidable, however, Eliot also indicts it as ethically deficient. Sympathy is in one crucial respect not a fully ethical position for her because +it does not attend to the other as such, but is rather, in George Henry +Lewes's words, a "one-sided knowing of things in relation to the self."31 + +It is a unilateral relation, not only insofar as it relates the other back +to the self via the assumption of a fellowship, but in that it empowers +and inflates the self by means of this relation. In The Lifted Veil, Eliot +suggests that there is a kind of narcissism implicit in sympathy, since +sympathy, not unlike antipathy, ultimately refers the other back to the + +self in order to confirm and nourish the self. As Latimer puts this in + +a phrase cited earlier, the assumption of a sympathetic bond between +ourselves and our neighbors "is one of the vain thoughts with which +we men flatter ourselves." His critique of sympathy here is twofold. On +the one hand, he argues that sympathy is simply impossible, due to our +"hard indifference to the sensations and emotions of our fellow." This +is his by now familiar misanthropic critique of sympathy, against which + +454 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + a defense of sympathy could meaningfully be opposed. On the other +hand, and much more problematically, he states that sympathy and the +very idea of sympathy are essentially narcissistic. According to this latter critique, we are not indifferent to the other at all but use the other +(and our relation to the other) as a means of flattering ourselves.32 In +this sense of an underlying narcissism, Latimer's "good" sympathy for +his father is not fundamentally distinct from his "bad" condemnations +of his neighbors' pettiness and stupidity. Neither is Latimer's antipathy +fundamentally distinct from his ostensibly moral recognition of Bertha's + +selfishness and shallowness, or from Eliot's indictment of Bertha as a +bad surrogate. These are all not only self-referential but self-serving, +self-confirming relationships; as Latimer puts it, they are relations that +make people "feel wise and virtuous-conquerors over the temptations they define in well-selected predicates." To use the words of the +Middlemarch narrator, they are a taking of the world as an udder to +feed the supreme self.33 In Middlemarch, Eliot equates our feeding +on the external world with infantilism and moral stupidity. The danger +she allows herself to dramatize in The Lifted Veil is that we can never +outgrow this infantile, narcissistic relation to what is outside of us by +a transition from immature egotism to mature sympathy. The collapse +in The Lifted Veil of any tenable distinction between sympathy and +egotism is an indictment of sympathy as implicitly narcissistic. Eliot +is not only asking whether sympathy is possible without narcissism, +without seeing the other in terms of its "great relation of a common +nature" to oneself. She is suggesting that compassion and sympathy +are disguised forms of narcissism and, as such, not fundamentally +different from the kinds of character-traits (selfishness, misanthropy) +she and her narrators routinely indict.34 +The Lifted Veil suggests Eliot's awareness of this ethical dilemma +in the problematic figure of Bertha, the privileged object of the text's +epistemological, moral, and sexual energies. It is this figure, I have +been arguing, which implies a true threat to Eliot.35 The threat is not +Bertha's ultimate revelation as afemmefatale, nor is it her role as Eliot's +bad surrogate. Those threats can be (and are) visually exposed and +then symbolically expelled from the text, so they pose no real danger. +The Fatal Woman is unveiled as such and then exiled, while the bad + +surrogate is replaced by the good surrogate, Latimer. Insofar as they +are recoverable threats, they in fact play an apotropaic role, much like +Freud's fetish which acknowledges but also protects against the threat + +of potential castration. The revelation of Bertha as the bad surrogate, +for instance, allows Latimer to be realized more fully as Eliot's good +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +455 + + surrogate, thereby helping to redeem Eliot's ethics of sympathy. At the +same time, however, Eliot's injunction to face the other as other implies + +that there is something unethical and narcissistic in the revealing of +Bertha as Latimer's and Eliot's bad double. This implication hints at a +second ethical threat in The Lifted Veil, one that is only partially veiled +by the more visible threat of Bertha's antipathy. This latter threat takes +the form not of antipathy but of sympathy, of a relation to the other + +that is fundamentally metaphorical (and therefore unethical insofar +as it is not telepathic).36 +Bertha is the face of both aspects of Eliot's ethical project and ethi- + +cal dilemma. She is the text's exemplary figure for otherness and for +the awareness of otherness: "[S]he made the only exception, among all +human beings about me, to my unhappy gift of insight. About Bertha + +I was always in a state of uncertainty" (V, 15). At various points in +the novella, Latimer compares Bertha to a piece of writing, often a +piece of writing he cannot read or comprehend, in order to designate +her inaccessibility. The illegible or incomprehensible writing to which +Bertha is compared is a metaphor for the other's irreducible otherness, + +just as Latimer's telepathy is a metaphor for the appreciation of that +otherness as such. At the same time, Latimer also compares Bertha +to a visual object, in order to designate her accessibility ("I saw all +around the narrow room of this woman's soul"). Here the other's accessibility is figured in terms of visibility, and telepathy is figured in + +sensory terms, as clairvoyance. In light of the traditional Aristotelian +association between perception and the use of metaphor, Latimer's +visions of Bertha are figures for a relation to the other that is based +on metaphorical principles of similarity and analogy. The complementary figures of Bertha as visual object and of Latimer's clairvoyance +are self-reflexive metaphors for how the other becomes intelligible +through one's own metaphors for it. They are indicative of how the +other becomes intelligible to us through its (visual) similarity and +dissimilarity to ourselves. In The Lifted Veil, Latimer tellingly gains +clairvoyant access to Bertha's mind at the moment when he looks at her +in terms of himself, or, more specifically, in terms of her dissimilarity +to himself. He contrasts her antipathy for him with his own sympathy +for his dying father, thereby converting her into his bad double. At +that moment, he also tellingly stops thinking of her as radically other +to himself, as an oriental alphabet he cannot read or decipher. The +revelation of Bertha by means of sight (that is, by means of metaphor) +enables the (moral) closure of the narrative but only partially veils that +which is left out by this closure: the other's otherness, the otherness + +456 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + for which the oriental alphabet is a metaphor or, more precisely, a +catachresis. Eliot's dilemma in the novella (and perhaps in her novels +and criticism more generally) is that her sympathetic ethics succeeds +only at the expense of a telepathic relation, at the expense of what she + +considers our obligatory "reverence before the secrets of each other's +souls" (L, 3:164). + +Tulane University +NOTES + +The intellectual debt my article owes to the teachings and writings of J. Hillis M + +will be apparent, and I am very grateful for his longstanding generosity and guida + +I also want to thank Megan Becker-Leckrone, Ellen Burt, Matthew Potolsky + +Barbara Spackman for their responses to the dissertation chapter on which this +is partially based. Thanks as well to Stefan Mattessich, Marc Redfield, and to Ken + +Reinhard and the U.C.L.A. 1998-1999 Humanities Consortium Seminar Series. + +deepest thanks go to Patience Moll for her careful reading and substantive, thou +ful suggestions. +1 George Eliot, Essays of George Eliot, ed. Thomas Pinney (New York: Colum +Univ. Press, 1963), 270-71. The figure of an expanded sympathy is indebted to W +sworth: "Thus daily were my sympathies enlarged." See The Prelude: 1799, 1805, 18 +ed. Jonathan Wordsworth and others (New York: Norton, 1979), 74. + +2 Walter Pater, The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry, ed. Donald L. + +(Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1980), xix-xx. On the relation between aesth +and sympathy, see in particular chapter 17 of Adam Bede: "All honour and rever +to the divine beauty of form ... But let us love that other beauty too, which lies in +secret of proportion, but in the secret of deep human sympathy." Eliot, Adam B +ed. Stephen Gill (New York: Penguin, 1980), 224. On the ethics of sympathy in A +Bede, see J. Hillis Miller, The Ethics of Reading: Kant, de Man, Eliot, Trollope, Jam + +and Benjamin (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1987), 61-80. + +3 See Kate Flint, "Blood, Bodies, and The Lifted Veil," Nineteenth-Century Literat + +51 (1997): 455-73; Malcolm Bull, "Mastery and Slavery in The Lifted Veil," Es +in Criticism 48 (1998): 244-61; Richard Menke, "Fiction as Vivisection: G. H. L + +and George Eliot," ELH 67 (2000): 629-30; and Sally Shuttleworth, "Introduction + +Eliot, The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob, ed. Shuttleworth (New York: Penguin, 200 + +xi-xxxii. Much of this line of inquiry is indebted to B. M. Gray, "Pseudoscience +George Eliot's 'The Lifted Veil,"' Nineteenth-Century Fiction 36 (1982): 407-23. +4 Eliot, The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob, ed. Helen Small (Oxford: Oxford Un +Press, 1999), 15. Hereafter abbreviated V and cited parenthetically by page num +page numbers for Small's introduction provided parenthetically in roman numer +5 The Lifted Veil was originally published anonymously in Blackwood's magazin +July 1859, six months after the publication of Adam Bede. Its composition coin +with Eliot's beginning work on what would eventually become The Mill on the F +Eliot did not republish the novella until 1878, two years before her death. On t +biographical circumstances of the text's composition and publication, see Go +Haight, George Eliot: A Biography (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968), 295-97; +U. C. Knoepflmacher, George Eliot's Early Novels: The Limits of Realism (Berke +Univ. of California Press, 1968), 128-39. + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +457 + + 6 Charles Swann, "Djai Vu: Djai Lu: 'The Lifted Veil' as an Experiment in Art," +Literature and History 5 (1979): 47. +My claims in this paragraph are based on some points in Swann's essay, especially +pages 46-49. Swann's argument about the ethical problem in The Lifted Veil is the +following: + +[Latimer] has "direct experience of the inner states of others." Yet-with + +all these advantages-he does not feel for others as a reader should... +Latimer is in literal possession of what Eliot normally offers as metaphors +for how to be a moral agent: but he is paralyzed into passivity by his insights. + +If Latimer is an example of a reader trapped in the book of life, then there +is the horrific possibility for Eliot that her key value of sympathy doesn't +open the door into the fully moral life. Her theories about the relationship +between her art and life may be entirely wrong. (47) +While Swann here identifies Latimer as Eliot's reader, other critics and Swann himself + +have also interpreted him as a stand-in for Eliot herself or for the novelist as such. +See Gillian Beer, "Myth and the Single Consciousness: Middlemarch and The Lifted +Veil," in This Particular Web: Essays on Middlemarch, ed. Ian Adam (Toronto: Univ. +of Toronto Press, 1975), 94-101; Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in +the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (New + +Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1979), 470-71; Neil Hertz, George Eliot's Pulse (Stanford: +Stanford Univ. Press, 2003), 42-62; and Swann, 46-49. These critics equate Latimer's +telepathy with the novelist's power to imagine the thoughts and feelings of a great variety of different characters. Whether Latimer is interpreted as the reader, the writer, + +or both at once, he points to a similar ethical problem: a lack of sympathy for those +to whose thoughts and feelings he has access. His responses to his clairvoyant visions +contradict Eliot's moral injunctions about creating and responding to art. +8 Eliot, The George Eliot Letters, ed. Haight, 9 vols. (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, +1954-1978), 9:220. Hereafter abbreviated L and cited parenthetically by volume and +page number. +9 My claims about the novella's negative implications for Eliot's aesthetics and ethics +are complementary to a critical tradition that has read The Lifted Veil as an allegorical +text about writing and the creative process. See, for example, Ruby Redinger, George +Eliot: The Emergent Self(New York: Knopf, 1975), 403; Knoepflmacher, 137-61; Hertz, + +Pulse, 42-62; Swann, 42; Beer, 94-101; and Gilbert and Gubar, 470. See also Carroll + +Vierra, "'The Lifted Veil' and George Eliot's Early Aesthetic," Studies in English Literature 24 (1984): 749-67. Vierra reads the novella in the context of Marian Evans's +critical writings about art and aesthetics from the 1840s and 1850s. Many critics locate +the allegory at the level of an autobiographical identification they find between the +emerging writer George Eliot and her protagonist Latimer, who identifies himself as +a failed poet. Both the young Marian Evans and Latimer, they maintain, are characterized by intense self-doubt, self-consciousness, insecurity, feelings of guilt vis-a-vis +their fathers and families, and "feminine" sensitivity. See, for example, Knoepflmacher, + +137, 150-52, 160-61; Redinger, 401-5; and Gilbert and Gubar, 450. Other critics focus +specifically on the problem of Latimer's misanthropy and selfishness but do not discuss +these character traits in terms of their potentially negative implications for Eliot's ethics +of sympathy. See Eliot L. Rubinstein, "A Forgotten Tale by George Eliot," Nineteenth- + +Century Fiction 17 (1962): 180-82; Edward Hurley, "'The Lifted Veil': George Eliot +as Anti-Intellectual," Studies in Short Fiction 5 (1968): 260-62; and Knoepflmacher, +154-59. It is only a few critics, in particular Swann and Beer, who have brought the + +458 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + theme of Latimer's misanthropy into a relation with Eliot's allegorical reflections in +The Lifted Veil on art and writing as such. +10 Latimer's conversion to sympathy anticipates that of Philip Wakem in The Mill on +the Floss, a text written concurrently with and after The Lifted Veil. There are notable +parallels between the two characters, as both are insecure, solipsistic, deeply alienated +from society, selfish, and devoid of sympathy for others. Philip indicates his conversion +in a letter he writes to Maggie late in the novel: +The new life I have found in caring for your joy and sorrow more than +for what is directly my own, has transformed the spirit of rebellious murmuring into that willing endurance which is the birth of true sympathy. +I think nothing but such complete and intense love could have initiated +me into that enlarged life which grows and grows by appropriating the life +of others; for before I was always dragged back from it by ever-present +painful self-consciousness. +Eliot, The Mill on the Floss, ed. A. S. Byatt (New York: Penguin, 1979), 634. +" The doubling is emphasized in the two characters' reciprocal gazes, and even at +the level of the sentence: "we were front to front with each other and judged each +other" (my emphasis). The mirroring between Bertha and Latimer has gone largely +unnoticed by critics. This oversight works in the interest of Eliot's ethical agenda, since +ultimately Eliot wants to disassociate the two characters in order to redeem Latimer +and to indict Bertha. Only Hertz has recognized Bertha as Latimer's clone (see Hertz, +Pulse, 55-56, 62). For Hertz, the doubling of Eliot's surrogate, Latimer, is a step towards +safely distancing Eliot (and, by extension, Marian Evans) from any direct implication +in the potentially harmful powers of her own language. Gilbert and Gubar also note +that Bertha and Latimer are "mutually reciprocal characters." They interpret the "effeminate Latimer" and the "castrating Bertha" autobiographically, as two aspects of +Eliot's allegedly divided self. See The Madwoman in the Attic, 465. +12 Consider, for example, Freud's statements on women and ethics. In his essay + +"Some Psychical Consequences of the Anatomical Distinction between the Sexes," +Freud writes, "I cannot evade the notion (though I hesitate to give it expression) that +for women the level of what is ethically normal is different from what it is in men" +(The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. and +trans. James Strachey and others, 24 vols. [London: The Hogarth Press, 1953-1974], +19:257). In the lecture on "Femininity," he makes this point in a less roundabout way: +"[W]e attribute a larger amount of narcissism to femininity" (22:132). On Bertha as a +version of the conventional nineteenth-century Fatal Woman figure, see Knoepflmacher + +(148-49), Gilbert and Gubar (459-61), and Vierra (755). + +13 Hertz, The End of the Line: Essays on Psychoanalysis and the Sublime (New York: + +Columbia Univ. Press, 1985), 224. +14 Hertz, End of the Line, 85. + +15 J. Hillis Miller, "Optic and Semiotic in Middlemarch," in George Eliot: Modern +Critical Views, ed. Harold Bloom (New York: Chelsea House, 1986), 102. +" The citation is from chapter fifteen of Middlemarch. The full sentence, which refers + +to Lydgate, runs as follows: "For surely all must admit that a man may be puffed and + +belauded, envied, ridiculed, counted upon as a tool and fallen in love with, or at least +selected as a future husband, and yet remain virtually unknown-known merely as a +cluster of signs for his neighbour's false suppositions" (Eliot, Middlemarch, ed. W. J. +Harvey [New York: Penguin, 1985], 171). I am arguing that The Lifted Veil explicitly +depicts Bertha as such a cluster of signs and Latimer's unveiling of her as one inter- + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +459 + + pretation of those signs. For a discussion of the characters in Middlemarch as texts +open to numerous and potentially conflicting interpretations by other characters, see +J. Hillis Miller, "Narrative and History," ELH 41 (1974): 465-68. +17 J. Hillis Miller makes a similar argument about perceptions in Middlemarch. He +proposes that the optical metaphors in the novel, and the kinds of knowledge they make +possible, are always subverted by other metaphors that qualify any (literal or figurative) +perceptions as interpretations, which is to say as having a subjective investment in what + +is seen and in particular ways of seeing. See Miller, "Optic and Semiotic," 109. +" The parenthetical citation is from The Lifted Veil, 41. +19 According to George Henry Lewes's journal, Marian Evans and he attended a +performance of Donizetti's opera Lucrezia Borgia in August 1857, not long before the +writing of The Lifted Veil. See Haight, 241. In her notes for The Lifted Veil, Helen +Small points out that the painting Latimer describes was for much of the nineteenth +century attributed to Giorgione in error, and identifies it as a copy of Lorenzo Lotto's + +A Lady with a Drawing of Lucretia. +20 Terry Eagleton, "Power and Knowledge in 'The Lifted Veil,'" Literature and +History 9 (1983): 58-59. Eagleton maintains that the revelation scene in The Lifted +Veil provides the reader with no means by which to verify its truth, but he lays out +the predicament very differently than I do. On the one hand, he argues, the conventions of realist fictions demand that Latimer's report be taken literally because he is +the narrator and as such the most reliable index of truth in the novella. On the other + +hand, he maintains, it is equally possible that "Latimer has rigged his tale to frame +his wife, impudently concocting an event as he may have previously, perhaps more +permissably, falsified perceptions" (58). For Eagleton, this ambiguity undermines the +implicit restoration of truth provided by narrative, a restoration that is generically +the aim of realist fiction as such. My own reading of the scene does not attribute its +ambiguity to character or intention (Latimer's alleged untrustworthiness) but rather +to the truth that is revealed. + +21 Aristotle, Rhetoric, trans. Rhys Roberts, in The Rhetoric and Poetics of Aristotle, +ed. Edward P. J. Corbett (New York: Modern Library, 1984), 1405a 170. Eliot famously +makes reference to Aristotle's theory of metaphor in book two, chapter one of The + +Mill on the Floss. + +22 Eliot, Essays, 270. In that same essay, she writes that art is a mode of "extending +our contact with our fellow-men beyond the bounds of our personal lot" (Essays, 271, +my emphasis). +23 Eliot, Middlemarch, 196, my emphasis. +24 This is true even for critics who do not endorse Eliot's ethics of sympathy and focus, + +rather, on her questioning of the possibility or viability of sympathetic identifications, as + +for instance John Kucich in Repression in Victorian Fiction: Charlotte Bronti, George +Eliot, and Charles Dickens (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1987), J. Hillis Miller +in The Ethics of Reading, or D. A. Miller in Narrative and Its Discontents: Problems +of Closure in the Traditional Novel (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1981). +25 Ludwig Feuerbach, The Essence of Christianity, trans. Eliot (New York: Harper, +1957), 268. +26 On the other in Middlemarch and in Eliot's work in general as an epistemological + +problem, see J. Hillis Miller, Others (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 2001), 67-79. +27 In the crucial revivification scene, Latimer writes, "[W]e all felt that the dark veil +had completely fallen" (V, 41). This remark is thoroughly ambiguous since it designates + +Bertha's complete obfuscation as much as her full exposure. + +460 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + 28 The ethics of sympathy is evoked explicitly by the epigraph Eliot wrote for The + +Lifted Veil fourteen years after its original publication: "Give me no light, great +heaven, but such as turns / To energy of human fellowship; / No powers save the +growing heritage / That makes completer manhood" (Letters, 5:380). This epigraph +first appears in a letter of February 1873 to her editor, John Blackwood. It has been +attached to all subsequently published versions of the novella, including the one in +the 1878 Cabinet edition of Eliot's works. Ostensibly, the epigraph serves to counter +the threat of Latimer's lack of sympathy, as Small has argued in her introduction to +the novella: "[The motto] is also an attempt to close down the threat of what [Eliot] +has allowed herself to imagine. ... [It] courts our compassionate insight into the narrator while he himself mocks us with the impossibility of sympathy" (xxx). I would add + +that Eliot's evocation of human fellowship also covers over (and defends against) the +impossibility of telepathy. + +29 On the success and failure of telepathy in The Lifted Veil, see Marc Redfield, +Phantom Formations: Aesthetic Ideology and the Bildungsroman (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. +Press, 1996), 160-70. Complementary to my juxtaposition of sympathy and telepathy, +Redfield reads the figure of telepathy as itself indicative of both identification and difference. He discusses telepathy as a metaphor for reading the materiality of language, +and, at the same time, as "a particularly appropriate metaphor for an aesthetic of +sympathy, grounded in a predicament of reading it must disavow" (162). So on the one +hand, he equates the distance (tele) in telepathy with the other's irreducible difference +as the otherness of language: "[T]his difference and distance is that of language in its +materiality" (162). At the same time, he takes the pathos in telepathy as a figure for +feeling, for sympathy, for aesthetically bringing the other close to oneself. These two +figures are for him in a relation of mutual disavowal, wherein feeling must disavow +the necessity of reading in order to succeed. Telepathy (as a figure for feeling with the +other) figuratively designates the possibility of sympathy, but (as a figure for reading +the material signs of language) it also designates sympathy's destruction. It insists that +one cannot feel with the other, one only reads the material signs that constitute the +other's otherness from oneself. Telepathy thus designates an irreducible difference +within sympathy that is also the ground of sympathy. For Eliot, I would add, the +other's otherness from oneself designates not only the epistemological destruction +of any grounds on which sympathy could take place but also an ethical imperative +that is heterogeneous to the ethical imperative called sympathy. Certainly the other's +otherness is for Eliot a metaphor for the materiality of language, as Redfield points +out; but this figurative relationship also functions in reverse, thereby supplementing +the epistemological problematic with an ethical one. +30 Insofar as this move to sympathy is at best a consolation, however, it also relegates + +sympathy to a questionable status. As D. A. Miller has argued, Eliot's ostensible endorsement of an ethics of sympathy coincides with an implicit questioning of sympathy. + +See Narrative and Its Discontents, 152-94. For Miller's reading of Eliot, sympathy +is on the one hand a genuinely ethical transcendence of egotism, of the separation +between self and other, and of the ambiguous material signs through which the other + +becomes intelligible. At the same time, Miller argues, sympathy is shown by Eliot +to be impossible, insofar as any moment of transcendence is subverted by the very +material signs that narrate it, signs which are demonstratively as much indicative of +egotism and obfuscation as of fellow feeling and transparency. Hence Eliot leaves us +in a kind of double bind: sympathetic transcendence would negate the problem of +interpersonal differences, but it is in turn negated by difference (in the form of mate- + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +461 + + rial signs). Miller's reading of sympathy as a structure of mutual negation is not unlike +the structure of mutual disavowal identified in Redfield's double reading of telepathy, + +discussed in the previous endnote. Both Redfield and Miller see the materiality of +signs as a difference Eliot would overcome in the name of a sympathetic ethics. In +The Lifted Veil, however, the association of Bertha with texts, writing, and signs not +only questions and potentially subverts the possibility of sympathetic identifications. +It is also a reminder of an entirely different ethical imperative, of an ethics that would +not transcend otherness but maintain it (this relation is what I am calling telepathy). +My emphasis on telepathy as a second ethical imperative (besides sympathy) refutes +received ideas about the formal impasse in which deconstructive readings of Eliot +are often said to terminate. Telepathy is for Eliot a figure for a genuine ethical value, +not only a figure for the simultaneous possibility and impossibility of interpersonal +identifications. + +3' This phrase is excerpted from a telling remark about The Lifted Veil made by +Lewes to the writer Edith Simcox, a remark that also serves as the epigraph for this +section of the essay: "the moral is plain enough ... the one-sided knowing of things in +relation to the self" (Eliot, Letters, 9:220). Lewes is presumably referring to Latimer's +egotism, but Latimer's sympathy, and perhaps any sympathy, is similarly unilateral, +similarly one-sided. +32 As Kucich has pointed out, egotism in Eliot's work is not an indifference to or an +isolation from other people. Rather, it is a dependence on others. For Kucich, Eliot's +egotists (such a Tito in Romola, Hetty in Adam Bede, Godfrey in Silas Marner, and +Gwendolen and Grandcourt in Daniel Deronda) depend on the thoughts and opinions +of the people around them to constitute themselves as selves, to have desires and motives, and to feel valuable (181-200). +33 "We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our + +supreme selves" (Eliot, Middlemarch, 243). +34 It is on this point that my reading dovetails momentarily with Kucich's compelling + +and counterintuitive critique of sympathy as a moral value in Eliot's work (114-200). +Kucich too finds an unexpected and ironic similarity between sympathy and egotism +in Eliot's writings; both sympathy and egotism, he claims, are for Eliot fundamentally +similar kinds of relationships to other people. Both relationships represent a dangerous +dependence on, and vulnerability to, other people, and both represent an implicit submission of the self to the other (172, 181). As such, Kucich argues, both pose a threat +to the autonomy of the self (150). I would argue, by contrast, that neither sympathy +nor egotism poses a threat to the self (what they threaten, rather, is Eliot's ethics). Both +are fundamentally confirming and constitutive of the self, insofar as both are relations +to the other in which the other is defined in terms of the self (and not vice versa, as +Kucich would say), and in which the self constructs itself out of an appropriation of the + +other. According to Kucich, Eliot's solution to the problem of otherness is to bypass +any relation to the other altogether, and to advocate a model of selfhood and an ethics +that are constituted by an exclusively inner dialectic between desire and internalized +repression (117). On the contrary, I do not see Eliot advocating a turn inward and away +from the other but rather advocating a qualitatively different relationship to the other, + +one I am calling telepathy (as an alternative to both egotism and sympathy). It seems +to me significant that Kucich's critique of sympathy, a value which he understands as a +fusion with the other and as a renunciation of all individuation, does not acknowledge +Eliot's insistence on respecting and simultaneously engaging with the other's otherness. +Kucich cites part of a sentence from "The Natural History of German Life" about the + +462 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + + obligatory movement from selfishness to moral sentiment, but tellingly elides Eliot's +call in that sentence for an "attention to what is apart from [ourselves]" (see Kucich, +114, and Eliot, Essays, 270). +35 To read Eliot's text and then to talk about Eliot being somehow threatened is to +reproduce the move from telepathy to sympathy that is performed within the text itself. + +Just as there is a movement in the novella from "reading" the other to "seeing into" or +"feeling with" the other, we perform, as soon as we talk about Eliot's awareness of a +threat, a movement from reading the text to psychologizing and anthropomorphizing +it. John Blackwell, for instance, writes to Eliot about the manuscript version, "Others +like me are thrilled [with the story], but wish the author in a happier frame of mind," +and elsewhere, "I think you must have been worrying and disturbing yourself about + +something when you wrote" (Eliot, Letters, 3:112, 67). Blackwell's attention moves +from the writing to a speculation about how the author must have been feeling when + +she wrote. This interest in Marian Evans's mindset is the move from reading the +manuscript to psychologizing it. The moment we ask about how Eliot might have +been feeling, and the moment we attempt to explain her awareness of a given threat, +we are operating at the level of similarity, of metaphor, of aesthetic ideology. We are +reproducing an ethics of sympathy, not an ethics of telepathy. As Eliot suggests, this +move is epistemologically unavoidable, but it also places us in an ethical predicament +similar to the one dramatized in her text. +I Eliot's suspicion of sympathy, and her shifting of the ethical dilemma away from + +an opposition between sympathy and egotism, distinguish her project from ethical +theories that equate morality with individual conscience, intention, or character psychology. Those theories often base their definition of ethics on psychology, typology, +the traditional subject, or the categorical valorization of some form of alterity. They +also tend to construct simple oppositions between good and bad, moral and immoral, +self and other. Eliot's own conclusions demonstrate how such projects can succeed +ethically only through celebrations and condemnations of the other (and of the self) +that are ultimately arbitrary and, in a manner of speaking, narcissistic. + +Thomas + +Albrecht + +This content downloaded from +128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC +All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms + +463 + + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/test b/preprocessing/test new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c405e3a --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/test @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +hi hi hi hi hi \ No newline at end of file From 52b6e948e168cd2c108c261de8b569b1fbe5aa70 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 12:45:55 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 14/63] Create file.txt --- visualization/file.txt | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) create mode 100644 visualization/file.txt diff --git a/visualization/file.txt b/visualization/file.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f73f309 --- /dev/null +++ b/visualization/file.txt @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +file From 3440db78bf8997ec377916758fb7bd2fa4bb3359 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 12:49:16 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 15/63] Add files via upload --- visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb | 563 +++++++ visualization/new_analysis.ipynb | 2083 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ visualization/sidebyside.html | 23 + 3 files changed, 2669 insertions(+) create mode 100644 visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb create mode 100644 visualization/new_analysis.ipynb create mode 100644 visualization/sidebyside.html diff --git a/visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb b/visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3d20674 --- /dev/null +++ b/visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,563 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Experiment 0 Annotator\n", + "\n", + "This annotates the text with the number of times that passage has been quoted. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 55, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "3.10.2 (v3.10.2:a58ebcc701, Jan 13 2022, 14:50:16) [Clang 13.0.0 (clang-1300.0.29.30)]\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "import sys\n", + "print(sys.version)\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import nltk\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import math\n", + "from ast import literal_eval\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "import re\n", + "from matplotlib import pyplot as plt\n", + "from colour import Color\n", + "from IPython.core.display import HTML\n", + "from matplotlib import cm\n", + "from matplotlib.colors import rgb2hex\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 56, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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[Frank Episale] \n", + "\n", + " datePublished docSubType docType \\\n", + "10 2015-09-01 research-article article \n", + "12 2015-09-01 research-article article \n", + "13 2011-01-01 research-article article \n", + "14 2014-01-01 research-article article \n", + "18 2012-04-01 research-article article \n", + "\n", + " fullText \\\n", + "10 [Obeah and the Politics of Religion's Making a... \n", + "12 [Nation, Subculture, and Queer Representation:... \n", + "13 [\"The Door of Opportunity\" by Southwestern Eng... \n", + "14 [The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass... \n", + "18 [LITERATURE REVIEW Gender, Tradition, and Cult... \n", + "\n", + " id \\\n", + "10 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24488181 \n", + "12 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24616518 \n", + "13 http://www.jstor.org/stable/43025266 \n", + "14 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24191440 \n", + "18 http://www.jstor.org/stable/23359546 \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "10 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00027189'}, {'name... \n", + "12 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10434070'}, {'name... \n", + "13 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00433462'}, {'name... \n", + "14 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00754250'}, {'name... \n", + "18 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '07425457'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber ... \\\n", + "10 Journal of the American Academy of Religion 3 ... \n", + "12 Journal of the History of Sexuality 3 ... \n", + "13 Western American Literature 4 ... \n", + "14 Journal of Glass Studies NaN ... \n", + "18 Asian Theatre Journal 1 ... \n", + "\n", + " tdmCategory \\\n", + "10 [Religion - Theology] \n", + "12 [Arts - Performing arts, Philosophy - Applied ... \n", + "13 [Arts - Literature, Philosophy - Applied philo... \n", + "14 [Arts - Art history, Arts - Performing arts] \n", + "18 [Arts - Art history, Arts - Performing arts] \n", + "\n", + " title \\\n", + "10 Obeah and the Politics of Religion's Making an... \n", + "12 Nation, Subculture, and Queer Representation: ... \n", + "13 Clean Hands and an Iron Face: Frontier Masculi... \n", + "14 The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass:... \n", + "18 Gender, Tradition, and Culture in Translation:... \n", + "\n", + " url volumeNumber wordCount numMatches \\\n", + "10 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24488181 83 11337 0 \n", + "12 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24616518 24 10736 0 \n", + "13 http://www.jstor.org/stable/43025266 45 8406 0 \n", + "14 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24191440 56 12566 0 \n", + "18 http://www.jstor.org/stable/23359546 29 9266 0 \n", + "\n", + " Locations in A Locations in B subTitle Decade \n", + "10 [] [] NaN 2010 \n", + "12 [] [] NaN 2010 \n", + "13 [] [] NaN 2010 \n", + "14 [] [] NaN 2010 \n", + "18 [] [] NaN 2010 \n", + "\n", + "[5 rows x 30 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 56, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "orig = pd.read_json('nocite.json')\n", + "orig['Decade'] = orig['publicationYear'] - (orig['publicationYear'] % 10)\n", + "df = orig[orig['Decade']==2010]\n", + "df.head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 57, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Adapted from text-matcher\n", + "class Text: \n", + " def __init__(self, filename): \n", + " self.filename = filename\n", + " tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\\w+\\'?\\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. \n", + " spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text))\n", + " # Take note of how many spans there are in the text\n", + " self.length = spans[-1][-1] \n", + " \n", + " @property\n", + " def text(self):\n", + " \"\"\" Reads the file in memory. \"\"\"\n", + " f = open(self.filename, encoding='utf-8', errors='ignore')\n", + " return f.read() \n", + "\n", + " @property\n", + " def tokens(self, removeStopwords=True): \n", + " \"\"\" Tokenizes the text, breaking it up into words, removing punctuation. \"\"\"\n", + " tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\\w+\\'?\\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. \n", + " spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text))\n", + " # Take note of how many spans there are in the text\n", + " self.length = spans[-1][-1] \n", + " tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(self.text)\n", + " tokens = [ token.lower() for token in tokens ] # make them lowercase\n", + " if not removeStopwords: \n", + " self.spans = spans\n", + " return tokens\n", + " tokenSpans = list(zip(tokens, spans)) # zip it up\n", + " stopwords = nltk.corpus.stopwords.words('english') # get stopwords\n", + " tokenSpans = [ token for token in tokenSpans if token[0] not in stopwords ] # remove stopwords from zip\n", + " self.spans = [ x[1] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get spans\n", + " return [ x[0] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get tokens" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 58, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "mm = Text('nocite_pages.txt')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 59, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "510344\n" + ] + }, + { + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "/var/folders/_g/ykvg1w8n5g7f967fyjqxrpgc0000gn/T/ipykernel_32735/807644614.py:11: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", + "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", + " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the size of the text. \n", + "textALength = mm.length\n", + "\n", + "# I don't know why, but without the offset the novel ends too soon,\n", + "# with \"unvisited tomb.\" This fixes it. \n", + "offset = 2\n", + "textALength += offset\n", + "print(textALength)\n", + "\n", + "# Make an empty array the size of the text. \n", + "tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 60, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Read the locations from the CSV file, and literally evaluate them into lists. \n", + "locations = df['Locations in A']\n", + "#locations = locations.apply(literal_eval)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 61, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Tally up every time a letter in the novel is quoted. \n", + "for article in locations: \n", + " for locRange in article: \n", + " for i in range(locRange[0], min(locRange[1]+1, len(tally))):\n", + " tally[i] += 1" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 62, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Make a color list in hex for all the values in the tally. \n", + "# Let's hope there aren't too many. \n", + "colors = list(np.arange(5,75,70/(tally.max()+1)))\n", + "colorList = colors" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 63, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Create a CSS Stylesheet for each color value in the map. \n", + "colorCSS = \"\"\n", + "for i, color in zip(range(0, tally.max()+1), colorList): \n", + " colorCSS += \".c-%s { font-size: %spx; }\\n\" % (i, color)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 64, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "n = 50\n", + "\n", + "checkpoints = np.linspace(0, textALength, n).round()\n", + "checkpoints = [int(point) for point in checkpoints]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 65, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def span(val): \n", + " return '' % val\n", + "\n", + "previousVal = None\n", + "for i, valChar in enumerate(zip(tally, mm.text)):\n", + " val, char = valChar[0], valChar[1]\n", + " if previousVal == None: \n", + " # First character. \n", + " out = '' % val\n", + " elif val != previousVal: \n", + " out += '' % val\n", + " if i in checkpoints: \n", + " out += '' % checkpoints.index(i)\n", + " out += char\n", + " previousVal = val" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "html = \"\"\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " \"\"\" % (colorCSS)\n", + "html += \"\"\"\n", + " \n", + "
%s
\n", + " \"\"\" % (out)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "with open('nocite_2010.html', 'w') as f: \n", + " f.write(html)\n", + " f.close()" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3.8.8 ('base')", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.2" + }, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "40d3a090f54c6569ab1632332b64b2c03c39dcf918b08424e98f38b5ae0af88f" + } + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 0 +} diff --git a/visualization/new_analysis.ipynb b/visualization/new_analysis.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8b1ec7 --- /dev/null +++ b/visualization/new_analysis.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,2083 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Analysis of Text Matching Data Generated from JSTOR Dataset " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "#import spacy\n", + "import re\n", + "import json\n", + "import altair as alt\n", + "#new viz library for single-column heatmap\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "import seaborn as sns\n", + "sns.set()\n", + "#from nltk.corpus import names\n", + "from collections import Counter\n", + "from matplotlib import pyplot as plt\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "plt.style.use('ggplot')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "with open('nocite_pages.txt') as f: \n", + " mm = f.read()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "textALength = len(mm) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get chapter locations\n", + "chapterMatches = re.finditer('~', mm)\n", + "chapterLocations = [match.start() for match in chapterMatches]\n", + "chapterLocations.append(textALength) # Add one to account for last chunk. \n", + "len(chapterLocations)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getChapters(text): \n", + " chapters = []\n", + " for i, loc in enumerate(chapterLocations): \n", + " if i != len(chapterLocations)-1: \n", + " chapter = mm[loc:chapterLocations[i+1]]\n", + " chapters.append(chapter)\n", + " return chapters" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "chapters = getChapters(mm)\n", + "chapterLengths = [len(chapter.split()) for chapter in chapters]\n", + "chapterLengthsSeries = pd.Series(chapterLengths)\n", + "chapterLengthsSeries.plot(kind='bar', title='Chapter Lengths')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df = pd.read_json('nocite.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Decade'] = df['publicationYear'] - (df['publicationYear'] % 10)\n", + "# df['Locations in A'] = df['matches'].apply(lambda x: x[1])\n", + "# df['NumMatches'] = df['matches'].apply(lambda x: x[0])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "sum([len(item) for item in df['Locations in A'].values])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# How many articles do we have? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(df) # Total articles with \"Middlemarch\" mentioned somewhere" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Find only those with non-trivial quotations from Middlemarch: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches = df[df['Locations in A'].apply(lambda x: len(x) > 0)]\n", + "#articlesWithMatches.year.describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches.Wordcounts.apply(len).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# articlesWithMatches.to_json('../data/cleaned-matches.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## How many articles do we have published in each year? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(articlesWithMatches).mark_bar().encode(x='publicationYear:O', y='count()').properties(width=1000)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df.columns" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Average Numbers of Quoted Words Per Item" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Quoted Words'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Quoted Words'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(df[df['Quoted Words'] > 0])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Quoted Words'].hist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Stats about Wordcounts\n", + "\n", + "Average number of words per match, per item: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Wordcounts'].apply(np.mean).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Wordcounts'].apply(np.mean).describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "#### Functions for extracting wordcounts, numbers of quotations for diachronic and synchronic analysis" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=True, normalize=True):\n", + " \"\"\" Turning on useWordcounts makes it so that it's weighted by wordcount. \n", + " Turning it off uses raw numbers of quotations. \"\"\"\n", + " decades = np.arange(decades[0], decades[1], 10)\n", + " # Make a dictionary of decades. \n", + " # Values are a list of locations. \n", + " decadeDict = {}\n", + " for i, row in df.iterrows():\n", + " decade = row['Decade']\n", + " locationsAndWordcounts = row['Locations in A with Wordcounts']\n", + " if decade not in decadeDict: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] = locationsAndWordcounts.copy()\n", + " else: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] += locationsAndWordcounts.copy()\n", + " # Grab the beginnings of quotes. \n", + " decadeStartsWeights = {decade: [(item[0][0], item[1]) \n", + " for item in loc] \n", + " for decade, loc in decadeDict.items()}\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " decadesBinned = {decade: \n", + " np.histogram([loc[0] for loc in locations], \n", + " bins=bins,\n", + " weights=[loc[1] for loc in locations],\n", + " range=(0, textALength))[0]\n", + " for decade, locations in decadeStartsWeights.items() \n", + " if decade in decades}\n", + " else: \n", + " decadesBinned = {decade: \n", + " np.histogram([loc[0] for loc in locations], \n", + " bins=bins,\n", + " range=(0, textALength))[0]\n", + " for decade, locations in decadeStartsWeights.items() \n", + " if decade in decades}\n", + " decadesDF = pd.DataFrame(decadesBinned).T\n", + " #Normalize\n", + " if normalize: \n", + " decadesDF = decadesDF.div(decadesDF.max(axis=1), axis=0)\n", + " return decadesDF\n", + "\n", + "def countWords(locRange): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts words in middlemarch, given character ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " \n", + " chunk = mm[locRange[0]:locRange[1]]\n", + " return len(chunk.split())\n", + "\n", + "def totalWords(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts total words in a list of location ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " locRangeSet = locRangeSet\n", + " return sum([countWords(locRange) for locRange in locRangeSet]) \n", + " \n", + "def countsPerSet(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Returns an augmented location range set that includes word counts. \"\"\"\n", + " locRangeSet = locRangeSet\n", + " return [(locRange, countWords(locRange))\n", + " for locRange in locRangeSet]\n", + " \n", + "def extractWordcounts(locsAndWordcounts): \n", + " \"\"\" \n", + " Takes pairs of location ranges and wordcounts, \n", + " and returns just the wordcounts. \n", + " \"\"\"\n", + " return [item[1] for item in locsAndWordcounts \n", + " if len(locsAndWordcounts) > 0]\n", + "\n", + "def synchronicAnalysis(df, bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " locs = df['Locations in A'].values\n", + " locCounts = [(loc, countWords(loc)) for locSet in locs\n", + " for loc in locSet]\n", + " starts = [loc[0][0] for loc in locCounts]\n", + " counts = [loc[1] for loc in locCounts]\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " binned = np.histogram(starts, bins=bins, \n", + " weights=counts, range=(0, textALength))\n", + " else: \n", + " binned = np.histogram(starts, bins=bins, \n", + " range=(0, textALength))\n", + " binnedDF = pd.Series(binned[0])\n", + " return binnedDF\n", + "\n", + "def plotDiachronicAnalysis(df, save=False, reverse=False): \n", + " ylabels = [str(int(decade)) for decade in df.index] + ['2020']\n", + " plt.pcolor(df, cmap='gnuplot')\n", + " plt.yticks(np.arange(len(df.index)+1), ylabels)\n", + " plt.gca().invert_yaxis()\n", + " plt.ylabel('Decade')\n", + " plt.xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " plt.gca().set_xlim((0, len(df.T)))\n", + " plt.colorbar(ticks=[])\n", + " if save: \n", + " plt.savefig('diachronic.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300, transparent=True)\n", + " plt.show()\n", + " \n", + "def plotSynchronicAnalysis(s, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " ax = s.plot(kind='bar')\n", + " ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Words Quoted')\n", + " else: \n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')\n", + " plt.locator_params('x', nbins = 20)\n", + " \n", + "def plotSynchronicAnalysisHeatmap(s, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + " fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + " sns.color_palette(\"magma\")\n", + " sns.heatmap([vec1])\n", + " ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')\n", + " plt.locator_params('x', nbins = 20)\n", + " \n", + "def plotDiachronicAnalysisBubble(df, save=False, reverse=False):\n", + " ylabels = [str(int(decade)) for decade in df.index] + ['2020'] \n", + " alt.Chart(df).mark_circle().encode(\n", + " x='Chapter',\n", + " y='Decade',\n", + " size='sum(count):Q'\n", + ")" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Quoted Words'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(totalWords)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(countsPerSet)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Verify that the diachronic wordcounts are the same as the synchronic wordcounts\n", + "decadeSums = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1700, 2020), useWordcounts=True, normalize=False).sum(axis=1)\n", + "decadeSums.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "chapterSums = synchronicAnalysis(df)\n", + "chapterSums.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Quotation Length Statistics" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'].apply(extractWordcounts)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "wordcounts = []\n", + "for countSet in df['Wordcounts'].values: \n", + " for count in countSet: \n", + " wordcounts.append(count)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.Series(wordcounts).hist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Number of Quotes (and words Quoted) by Chapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(synchronicAnalysis(df))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=True).to_csv('test_pages.csv')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Total number of matches" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "allMatches = []\n", + "for group in df['Locations in A'].values: \n", + " for pair in group: \n", + " allMatches.append(pair)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(allMatches)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False), useWordcounts=False)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "quotationsPerChapter = synchronicAnalysis(df, bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "quotationsPerChapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "quotationsPerChapter = pd.DataFrame(quotationsPerChapter, index=range(0,249), columns=['Number of Quotations'])\n", + "quotationsPerChapter['Chapter'] = range(0, 249)\n", + "quotationsPerChapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x='Chapter:O', size='Number of Quotations:Q').properties(width=1000, height=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x='Chapter:O', size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=1000, height=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Redo chart with horizontal labels\n", + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x=alt.X('Chapter:Q', axis=alt.Axis(title=\"Chapter\", tickMinStep=5,\n", + " labelOverlap=False,labelAngle=0)), \n", + "size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=1000,height=150).configure_legend(\n", + " titleFontSize=9,\n", + " labelFontSize=10\n", + ")" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(y='Chapter:O', size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Raw Number of Quotations Per Chapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the raw number of quotations per chapter\n", + "# synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False).to_csv('../papers/spring2017-middlemarch-paper/data/num-quotations-per-chapter.csv')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Adjusted for the number of words in each chapter\n", + "ax = (synchronicAnalysis(df) / chapterLengthsSeries).plot(kind='bar')\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Words Quoted, Normalized')\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysis(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysis(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Create a one-dimensional heatmap of the synchonic raw number of quotations per chapter, as heatmap\n", + "vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + "sns.color_palette(\"magma\")\n", + "sns.heatmap([vec1])\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Create a one-dimensional heatmap of the synchonic raw number of quotations per chapter, as heatmap\n", + "# INVERTED COLOR SCHEMA\n", + "vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + "sns.heatmap([vec1], cmap = 'magma_r')\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDFquoteOnly = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=False, normalize=False).sort_index()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysisBubble(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synDF = synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synDF.index.name = 'chapter'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synDF" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Redo chart in Altair" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF.columns.name = 'chapter'\n", + "diaDF.index.name = 'decade'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Redo with raw quotations, not normalized by decade\n", + "diaDFquoteOnly.columns.name ='chapter'\n", + "diaDFquoteOnly.index.name = 'decade'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDFquoteOnly" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF.columns" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF['decade'] = diaDF.index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaMelted = diaDF.melt(id_vars='decade')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDFquoteOnly['decade'] = diaDFquoteOnly.index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDFquoteOnlyMelted = diaDFquoteOnly.melt(id_vars='decade')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(diaMelted).mark_rect().encode(x='chapter:O', y='decade:O', color=alt.Color('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"# of Quotations (normalized)\"))).properties(width=1000, height=300).configure(background='#eeeeeeff')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(diaMelted).mark_circle().encode(x='chapter:O', y='decade:O', size=alt.Size('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"Number of Quotations (normalized)\"), scale=alt.Scale(type = 'threshold', domain = [0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1], range =[0, 20, 60, 100, 150, 250, 350, 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000,]))).properties(width=1000, height=300).configure_legend(\n", + "titleFontSize=9,\n", + "labelFontSize=10\n", + ") " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "#Redo Chart to rotate tick marks\n", + "alt.Chart(diaMelted).mark_circle().encode(\n", + " x=alt.X('chapter:Q', axis=alt.Axis(tickMinStep=5,\n", + " labelOverlap=False,\n", + " labelAngle=0)), \n", + " y=alt.Y('decade:O'), \n", + " size=alt.Size('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"Number of Quotations (normalized)\"), \n", + " scale=alt.Scale(type = 'threshold', domain = [0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1], range =[0, 20, 60, 100, 150, 250, 350, 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000,]))).properties(width=1000, height=300).configure_legend(\n", + "titleFontSize=9,\n", + "labelFontSize=10\n", + ") " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "#Chart with raw quotations\n", + "alt.Chart(diaDFquoteOnlyMelted).mark_rect().encode(x='chapter:O', y='decade:O', color='value').properties(width=1000, height=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(diaDFquoteOnlyMelted).mark_circle().encode(x='chapter:O', y='decade:O', size='value').properties(width=1000, height=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the normalized proportion of, say, Chapter 20 in 1950: \n", + "diachronicAnalysis(df)[20][1950]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Gender of Author" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "maleNames, femaleNames = names.words('male.txt'), names.words('female.txt')\n", + "maleNames = [name.lower() for name in maleNames]\n", + "femaleNames = [name.lower() for name in femaleNames]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def guessGender(name): \n", + " name = name.split()[0].lower() # Grab the first name. \n", + " if name in maleNames and name in femaleNames: \n", + " return 'A' #Ambiguous\n", + " elif name in maleNames: \n", + " return 'M'\n", + " elif name in femaleNames: \n", + " return 'F'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'U'\n", + "\n", + "def averageGender(names): \n", + " if type(names) != list: \n", + " return 'U'\n", + " genderGuesses = [guessGender(name) for name in names]\n", + " stats = Counter(genderGuesses).most_common()\n", + " if len(stats) == 1: \n", + " # Only one author. We can just use that's author's gender guess. \n", + " return stats[0][0]\n", + " elif stats[0][1] == stats[1][1]: # There's a tie. \n", + " return 'A' # Ambiguous. \n", + " else: \n", + " return stats[0][0] # Return the most common gender. \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['gender'] = df['author'].apply(averageGender)\n", + "dfF = df.loc[df['gender'] == 'F']\n", + "dfM = df.loc[df['gender'] == 'M']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Differences in citations between genders. \n", + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(synchronicAnalysis(dfM) - synchronicAnalysis(dfF))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getFirst(row): \n", + " if type(row) == list: \n", + " return row[0]\n", + " else: \n", + " return row\n", + "\n", + "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = publishers.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getCountry(publisher): \n", + " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", + " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", + " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", + " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", + " if type(publisher) != list: \n", + " return 'Unknown'\n", + " publisher = publisher[0]\n", + " if publisher in brits: \n", + " return 'Britain' \n", + " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Canada' \n", + " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Germany'\n", + " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Spain'\n", + " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", + " return 'France' \n", + " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Ireland'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'US'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'].value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", + "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", + "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", + "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", + "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", + "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", + "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By Journal" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Look at the top journals. \n", + "journalStats = df['isPartOf'].value_counts()\n", + "journalStats[:10]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "journalList = journalStats.index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Compare the specialist journal, \"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies,\" with all other journals. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "geJournals = df.loc[df['isPartOf'] == 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']\n", + "otherJournals = df.loc[df['isPartOf'] != 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Normalize\n", + "geDF = synchronicAnalysis(geJournals)\n", + "otherDF = synchronicAnalysis(otherJournals)\n", + "normGE = geDF.div(geDF.max())\n", + "normOther = otherDF.div(otherDF.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "fig = plt.figure()\n", + "ax = (normGE - normOther).plot(kind='bar')\n", + "fig.add_subplot(ax)\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Specialization Index')\n", + "# Save a big version for publication. \n", + "#fig.savefig('specialization.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "journals = pd.DataFrame({title: synchronicAnalysis(df.loc[df['isPartOf'] == title]) for title in journalList }).T" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "cutoff = 500\n", + "topJournals = journals.loc[journals.sum(axis=1) > cutoff]\n", + "otherJournals = journals.loc[journals.sum(axis=1) < cutoff]\n", + "topJournals.loc['Other'] = otherJournals.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "topJournals.T.plot(kind='bar', stacked=True, colormap='nipy_spectral')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "ax = topJournals.T.plot(kind='bar', stacked=True, colormap='nipy_spectral')\n", + "fig = ax.get_figure()\n", + "fig.savefig('synchronic-journals.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Print the total number of journals\n", + "len(journalStats)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Detour: Ch. 15" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out why Ch. 15 was so big in the 80s and 90s. \n", + "chap15s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 322052: # Does it cite Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": false + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "ch15Topics = [item.topics for item in chap15s]\n", + "chap15TopicsFlat = [item for sublist in ch15Topics for item in sublist]\n", + "Counter(chap15TopicsFlat).most_common(20)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xvStart, xvEnd = chapterLocations[15:17]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xvStart:xvStart+1000]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out which articles cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV (with Lydgate's scientific research) \n", + "# vs the last 1/3 on the story of Laure\n", + "chap15p1s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 313892: # Does it cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15p1s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n", + "chap15p2s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 313892 and start < 322052: # Does it cite the last 1/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15p2s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id) \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of articles citing the first 2/3 \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15p1s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15p2s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Verify that we have the right location for the start of Laure's story in the last 1/3 of Chapter XV\n", + "print(mm[313892:313892+1500]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Verify the location of the eipgraph and first paragraph\n", + "print(mm[290371:290371+1571]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "chap15para1s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 291943: # Does it cite the last 1/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15para1s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of articles that cite paragraph 1 of Chapter 15\n", + "[item.title for item in chap15para1s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "chap15Lydgates = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 291942 and start < 313892: # Does it cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15Lydgates.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n", + " \n", + "# Get the titles of articles that cite Lydgate section\n", + "[item.title for item in chap15Lydgates]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Chapter 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Chapter 20 Detour\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles cited chapter 20 \n", + "chap20s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1870, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 406324 and start < 432778: # Does it cite Chapter XX? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap20s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap20s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# articlesWithoutMatches.title #Print the titles of articles without matches\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(chap20s)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles cite paragraph 6 in Chapter 20\n", + "chap20par6s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1870, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 411152 and start < 412177: # Does it cite Chapter XX? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap20par6s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles.\n", + "[item.title for item in chap20par6s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(chap20par6s) # The number of items citing paragraph 6 in chapter 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xxStart, xxEnd = chapterLocations[20:22] # Chapter 20 Boundaries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xxStart:xxStart+1000]) # Verify we have Ch. 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xx = mm[xxStart:xxEnd]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xxParaLocations = [match.start() for match in re.finditer('\\n\\n+', mm)]\n", + "xxParaLocations = [x for x in xxParaLocations if (x > xxStart) and (x < xxEnd)] " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "mm[xxParaLocations[4]:xxParaLocations[5]]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].loc[0]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def inXX(matches): \n", + " \"\"\" Determine if the article has a match in Ch. 20\"\"\"\n", + " for match in matches: \n", + " if match[0] > xxStart and match[0] < xxEnd:\n", + " return True\n", + " return False" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].apply(inXX).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def paraIndicesIn20(matches, paraLocations=xxParaLocations): \n", + " \"\"\" Determine paragraph number (index) for match in Ch. 20. \"\"\"\n", + " paraIndices = []\n", + " if inXX(matches): \n", + " paraBoundaries = list(zip(paraLocations, paraLocations[1:]))\n", + " for match in matches: \n", + " for i, paraBoundary in enumerate(paraBoundaries): \n", + " if set(range(match[0], match[1])) & set(range(paraBoundary[0], paraBoundary[1])): # find the set intersection of the ranges of pairs\n", + " paraIndices.append(i)\n", + " else: \n", + " paraIndices.append(None)\n", + " return paraIndices\n", + " \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(set(range(8, 10)) & set(range(1, 9)))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['paraIndicesIn20'] = articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].apply(paraIndicesIn20)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "counters = list(articlesWithMatches['paraIndicesIn20'].apply(Counter))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "grandTally = Counter()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "for counter in counters: \n", + " grandTally += counter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "del grandTally[None]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dict(grandTally)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.Series(dict(grandTally)).sort_index().plot(kind='bar')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xxParaLocations[5]:xxParaLocations[7]]) # What are paragraphs #5 and #6? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# NLH, ELH and GE-GHL" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal title is \"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "geJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.set_option('display.max_columns', 207)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "geJournals " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(geJournals.title)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal title is 'George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies':\")\n", + "len(geJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal code is \"georelioghlstud\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal code is 'georelioghlstud':\")\n", + "geJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'georelioghlstud']\n", + "len(geJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## NLH" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### NLH articles where journal title is \"New Literary History\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "nlhJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'New Literary History']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.set_option('display.max_rows', 300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "nlhJournals " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of NLH articles where journal title is 'New Literary History':\")\n", + "len(nlhJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### NLH articles where journal code is \"newlitehist\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print('NLH articles where journal code is \"newlitehist\":')\n", + "nlhJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'newlitehist']\n", + "len(nlhJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## ELH" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### ELH articles where journal title is \"ELH\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "elhJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'ELH']\n", + "elhJournals" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(elhJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### ELH articles where journal code is \"elh\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "elhJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'elh']\n", + "len(elhJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Nonmatches" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df # Print the dataframe" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df[df.title.apply(isGarbage)] # How many garbage items? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles contain no Middlemarch citations\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches = df[df['Locations in A'].apply(lambda x: len(x) == 0)]\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "n = 10\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches['title'].value_counts()[:n].index.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# What is the most frequent name of articles with no citations?\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches['title'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Generating samples of dataset for evaluating the precision and recall of text matcher\n", + "First, we're going to generate a smaller sample dataset, which we'll then perform bootstrapping on.\n", + "\n", + "First, let's stratify our dataset by year, and then take a random sample in that year." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches1960_2015 = articlesWithMatches[articlesWithMatches['Decade'] >= 1960]\n", + "len(articlesWithMatches1960_2015)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "len(articlesWithMatches1960_2015['year'].value_counts())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Generate random sample" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "sampleData = articlesWithMatches1960_2015.sample(n=56, random_state=56)\n", + "sampleData['journal'].value_counts(sort=False)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "sampleData.to_csv('../data/sample_dataset.csv', encoding='utf-8')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Function to loop over each row, extracting locations in A and metadata, then output that to a new text file\n", + "def extractSampleDataMatches(sampleData):\n", + " for i, row in sampleData.iterrows():\n", + " title = row['title']\n", + " year = row['year']\n", + " # Print a break between each article\n", + " with open('../data/sample-data-matches.txt', \"a\") as f:\n", + " print(\"---------------------------------------\\n\", file=f)\n", + " print(title, file=f)\n", + " print(year, file=f)\n", + " # For each pair of locations in the \"Locations in A\" column, iterate over, printing the location indexes\n", + " # Followed by the\n", + " for pair in row['Locations in A']:\n", + " print(f\"Location in A: {pair}\", file=f)\n", + " print(mm[pair[0]:pair[1]]+\"\\n\", file=f)\n", + " \n", + "extractSampleDataMatches(sampleData)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Evaluation metrics\n", + "\n", + "Terminology\n", + "TP (True Positives):\n", + "TN (True Negatives): \n", + "FP (False Posiives): \n", + "FN (False Negatives): \n", + "\n", + "**Classification accuracy:** percentage of correctly identified quotes and non-quotes, or overall, how often is the matcher correct? classification_accuracy = (TP + TN) / float(TP + TN + FP + FN)))\n", + "\n", + " **Recall (or \"sensitivity\")**: When the actual match is correc, how often is the prediction correct? recall = TP / float(FN + TP)\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "**Precision:** When a match is detected, how often is that match correct? precision = TP / float(TP + FP)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.2" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} diff --git a/visualization/sidebyside.html b/visualization/sidebyside.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e7165d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/visualization/sidebyside.html @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ + + + + + + + + + + + + \ No newline at end of file From 11f164b6acc0809afe9101ebd90594585c60fb0d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 12:49:35 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 16/63] Delete file.txt --- visualization/file.txt | 1 - 1 file changed, 1 deletion(-) delete mode 100644 visualization/file.txt diff --git a/visualization/file.txt b/visualization/file.txt deleted file mode 100644 index f73f309..0000000 --- a/visualization/file.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -file From 76486656b5996c7e69162c89003532fca0bb8640 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: gracexu7 <92694281+gracexu7@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 12:50:00 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 17/63] Add files via upload --- text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb | 105 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 105 insertions(+) create mode 100644 text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb diff --git a/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb b/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..908d20f --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,105 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Experiment 2A\n", + "\n", + "Using the rewritten text matcher. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 1, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load the data. \n", + "with open('part-1.jsonl') as f: \n", + " rawCriticism = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "# Parse the data. \n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawCriticism]\n", + "\n", + "# Load Middlemarch\n", + "with open('nocite_pages.txt') as f: \n", + " rawMM = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Gender Trouble')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 3, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + " Matching article 5184 of 5185" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", + " clear_output()\n", + " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", + " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", + " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", + " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", + " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Write output somewhere. \n", + "with open('nocite.json', 'w') as outfile: \n", + " json.dump(data, outfile)" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.2" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 1 +} From f6207b7202ea1957c35cd169d33b85fc45084e57 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: milanterlunen Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2023 15:40:35 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 18/63] added notebook to retrieve character indexes --- jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 685 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 685 insertions(+) create mode 100644 jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb diff --git a/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..851b6f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,685 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Checking and retrieving character indexes from quotations\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "What you will need to run this notebook:\n", + "\n", + "+ The Project Gutenberg fulltext of your source text (text A). In this case, the Project Gutenberg version of *Middlemarch*: `middlemarch.txt`\n", + "+ The JSON file with the output of `text-matcher`. In this case, this is `default.json`\n", + "\n", + "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "In addition, you will need a list of the JSTOR article ids for the sample texts in the corpus.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", + "\n", + "A match in text matcher takes the form of a pair, or a list of pairs, of character indexes. These character indexes store the position of a match and can be used to retrieve the corresponding text.\n", + "\n", + "Let's say you were looking at an output : [[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]. \n", + "\n", + "In each pair, the first number corresponds to the **starting character index**, and the second number corresponds to the **ending character index** of a quotation. \n", + "\n", + "So in this example, for match [173657, 173756].\n", + "+ the **starting charcter** is 173657\n", + "+ the **ending character** is 173756" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Import libraries\n", + "Run the cell below to import libraries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 1, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "ename": "ModuleNotFoundError", + "evalue": "No module named 'text_matcher'", + "output_type": "error", + "traceback": [ + "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", + "\u001b[0;31mModuleNotFoundError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", + "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 1\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mfrom\u001b[0m \u001b[0mtext_matcher\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mmatcher\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mText\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mMatcher\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 2\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mjson\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpandas\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mas\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpd\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mfrom\u001b[0m \u001b[0mIPython\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mdisplay\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mclear_output\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 5\u001b[0m \u001b[0mget_ipython\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mrun_line_magic\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'matplotlib'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m'inline'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", + "\u001b[0;31mModuleNotFoundError\u001b[0m: No module named 'text_matcher'" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Load in our data files:" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load Middlemarch .txt file \n", + "# (Note: must have 'middlemarch.txt' in this directory)\n", + "with open('middlemarch.txt') as f: \n", + " rawMM = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Middlemarch')\n", + "\n", + "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", + "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", + "df = pd.read_json('default.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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creatordatePublisheddocSubTypedocTypefullTextididentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguage...titleurlvolumeNumberwordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in BabstractkeyphrasesubTitle
0[Rainer Emig]2006-01-01book-reviewarticle[Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l...http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name...Amerikastudien / American Studies3[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/411582445111090[][]NaNNaNNaN
1[Martin Green]1970-01-01book-reviewarticle[Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated...http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name...The Modern Language Review1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/37228196513420[][]NaNNaNNaN
2[Richard Exner]1982-01-01book-reviewarticle[Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne...http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name...World Literature Today1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021564930[][]NaNNaNNaN
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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " creator datePublished docSubType docType \\\n", + "0 [Rainer Emig] 2006-01-01 book-review article \n", + "1 [Martin Green] 1970-01-01 book-review article \n", + "2 [Richard Exner] 1982-01-01 book-review article \n", + "\n", + " fullText \\\n", + "0 [Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l... \n", + "1 [Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated... \n", + "2 [Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne... \n", + "\n", + " id \\\n", + "0 http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 \n", + "1 http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 \n", + "2 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "0 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name... \n", + "1 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name... \n", + "2 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber language ... \\\n", + "0 Amerikastudien / American Studies 3 [eng] ... \n", + "1 The Modern Language Review 1 [eng] ... \n", + "2 World Literature Today 1 [eng] ... \n", + "\n", + " title url volumeNumber \\\n", + "0 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 51 \n", + "1 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 65 \n", + "2 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 56 \n", + "\n", + " wordCount numMatches Locations in A Locations in B abstract keyphrase \\\n", + "0 1109 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "1 1342 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "2 493 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "\n", + " subTitle \n", + "0 NaN \n", + "1 NaN \n", + "2 NaN \n", + "\n", + "[3 rows x 30 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Let's peek inside our DataFrame\n", + "df.head(3)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Check quotation matches for particular articles\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Set the `article_id` ‼️\n", + "\n", + "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to exampine.\n", + "\n", + "**Where can I find the article id?**\n", + "\n", + "+ This can be found in the `id` column of URL of a given article.\n", + "+ For *Middlemarch*, please use the following article IDs: \n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/41059781,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928567,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/462077,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827730,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933477,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873079,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932968,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827900,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2001.56.2.160,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/437748,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919123,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2872038,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044620,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/591341,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/4334358,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933096,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23539270,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3751142,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3825796,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3826242,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932697,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40754482,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2012.66.4.494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3828324,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23099626,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42965156,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt155j8bf.9,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044863,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873139,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044571,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533514,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/43028240,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40549795,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25733489,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/1345484,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708593,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708062,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044589,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827827,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25459494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "*Note: JSTOR outputs the fulltext of articles text as a list of strings, so we have to concatenate them using text-matcher;s `Text()` function.*\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 6, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Title: Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's \"The Lifted Veil\"\n", + "\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "\n", + "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", + "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", + "article_text = df['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + "article_title = df['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + "\n", + "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "\n", + "# Print out the title and ID of the article we selected as confirmation\n", + "print(f\"\"\"\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: {article_id}\n", + "Title: {article_title}\n", + "\"\"\")\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Part 1: Get quotes (& their character indexes) from `text-matcher` output\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the index positions of matches in our source text (Text \"A\")?\n", + "Retrieve the character indexes in for the source text (Text A):" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in A?\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in A'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches?\n", + "\n", + "Let's check the corresponding text in Middlemarch for one of the matches output above. \n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes: [173657, 173756]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'all of\\nus, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act\\nfatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "mm_start = 173657 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "mm_end = 173756 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"A\" for the start and end characters selected above\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\", f\"[{mm_start}, {mm_end}]\")\n", + "mm.text[mm_start:mm_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the indexes positions of matches in our target text (Text \"B\")?\n", + "Retrieve the indexes in the B text (that is, the article index: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in B?\n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in B'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches in Text \"B\" (the article)?\n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019: [14718, 14816]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "textB_start = 14718 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "textB_end = 14816 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"B\" for the start and end characters selected above \n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\", f\"[{textB_start}, {textB_end}]\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[textB_start:textB_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "---" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", + "\n", + "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", + "\n", + "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 1: Locate the quotation in the PDF of the article." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", + "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", + "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the article text." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(cleaned_article_text.text)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 3: Copy that text of the quotation as it appears exactly in the article text above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 4: Paste the text of the quotation in the `quotation` field below\n", + "Make sure that you enclose the quotation in quotation marks.\n", + "\n", + "If there are are quotation marks in the text of the quote, either place an escape character `\\` in front of them, or change the quotation marks that you use. (Eg, if there are single quotes (`'`) in the text, use double quotes (`\"`) to surround the text.\n", + "\n", + "Run the cell below." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Starting index: 14718\n", + "Ending index: 14816\n", + "Character indexes for match: [14718, 14816]\n", + "\n", + " Corresponding text:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", + "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", + "quotation = \"All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength\" #pas\n", + "\n", + "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", + "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", + "print('Starting index:', index) \n", + "print('Ending index:', index + len(quotation))\n", + "print(f'Character indexes for match: [{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", + "print(\"\\n Corresponding text:\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[index:index + len(quotation)]\n", + "\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 5: Record the character indexes and article id in spreadsheet\n", + "Add the character indexes and article ID as a new row in a spreadsheet" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.5" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 1 +} From e668413411f29457a53aba8a891c1e323e48d1c3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Milan Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2023 16:13:45 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 19/63] added index retrieval notebook --- ...etrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb | 673 + .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 14 +- algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt | 33213 ++++++++++++++++ 3 files changed, 33887 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) create mode 100644 .ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb rename jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb => algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb (92%) create mode 100644 algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt diff --git a/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb b/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd9e3dd --- /dev/null +++ b/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,673 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Checking and retrieving character indexes from quotations\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "What you will need to run this notebook:\n", + "\n", + "+ The Project Gutenberg fulltext of your source text (text A). In this case, the Project Gutenberg version of *Middlemarch*: `middlemarch.txt`\n", + "+ The JSON file with the output of `text-matcher`. In this case, this is `default.json`\n", + "\n", + "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "In addition, you will need a list of the JSTOR article ids for the sample texts in the corpus.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", + "\n", + "A match in text matcher takes the form of a pair, or a list of pairs, of character indexes. These character indexes store the position of a match and can be used to retrieve the corresponding text.\n", + "\n", + "Let's say you were looking at an output : [[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]. \n", + "\n", + "In each pair, the first number corresponds to the **starting character index**, and the second number corresponds to the **ending character index** of a quotation. \n", + "\n", + "So in this example, for match [173657, 173756].\n", + "+ the **starting charcter** is 173657\n", + "+ the **ending character** is 173756" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Import libraries\n", + "Run the cell below to import libraries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 1, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Load in our data files:" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load Middlemarch .txt file \n", + "# (Note: must have 'middlemarch.txt' in this directory)\n", + "with open('middlemarch.txt') as f: \n", + " rawMM = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Middlemarch')\n", + "\n", + "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", + "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", + "df = pd.read_json('default.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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creatordatePublisheddocSubTypedocTypefullTextididentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguage...titleurlvolumeNumberwordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in BabstractkeyphrasesubTitle
0[Rainer Emig]2006-01-01book-reviewarticle[Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l...http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name...Amerikastudien / American Studies3[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/411582445111090[][]NaNNaNNaN
1[Martin Green]1970-01-01book-reviewarticle[Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated...http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name...The Modern Language Review1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/37228196513420[][]NaNNaNNaN
2[Richard Exner]1982-01-01book-reviewarticle[Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne...http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name...World Literature Today1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021564930[][]NaNNaNNaN
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\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " creator datePublished docSubType docType \\\n", + "0 [Rainer Emig] 2006-01-01 book-review article \n", + "1 [Martin Green] 1970-01-01 book-review article \n", + "2 [Richard Exner] 1982-01-01 book-review article \n", + "\n", + " fullText \\\n", + "0 [Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l... \n", + "1 [Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated... \n", + "2 [Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne... \n", + "\n", + " id \\\n", + "0 http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 \n", + "1 http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 \n", + "2 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "0 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name... \n", + "1 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name... \n", + "2 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber language ... \\\n", + "0 Amerikastudien / American Studies 3 [eng] ... \n", + "1 The Modern Language Review 1 [eng] ... \n", + "2 World Literature Today 1 [eng] ... \n", + "\n", + " title url volumeNumber \\\n", + "0 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 51 \n", + "1 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 65 \n", + "2 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 56 \n", + "\n", + " wordCount numMatches Locations in A Locations in B abstract keyphrase \\\n", + "0 1109 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "1 1342 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "2 493 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "\n", + " subTitle \n", + "0 NaN \n", + "1 NaN \n", + "2 NaN \n", + "\n", + "[3 rows x 30 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Let's peek inside our DataFrame\n", + "df.head(3)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Check quotation matches for particular articles\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Set the `article_id` ‼️\n", + "\n", + "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to exampine.\n", + "\n", + "**Where can I find the article id?**\n", + "\n", + "+ This can be found in the `id` column of URL of a given article.\n", + "+ For *Middlemarch*, please use the following article IDs: \n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/41059781,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928567,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/462077,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827730,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933477,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873079,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932968,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827900,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2001.56.2.160,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/437748,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919123,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2872038,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044620,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/591341,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/4334358,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933096,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23539270,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3751142,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3825796,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3826242,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932697,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40754482,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2012.66.4.494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3828324,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23099626,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42965156,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt155j8bf.9,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044863,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873139,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044571,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533514,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/43028240,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40549795,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25733489,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/1345484,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708593,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708062,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044589,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827827,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25459494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "*Note: JSTOR outputs the fulltext of articles text as a list of strings, so we have to concatenate them using text-matcher;s `Text()` function.*\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 6, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Title: Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's \"The Lifted Veil\"\n", + "\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "\n", + "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", + "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", + "article_text = df['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + "article_title = df['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + "\n", + "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "\n", + "# Print out the title and ID of the article we selected as confirmation\n", + "print(f\"\"\"\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: {article_id}\n", + "Title: {article_title}\n", + "\"\"\")\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Part 1: Get quotes (& their character indexes) from `text-matcher` output\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the index positions of matches in our source text (Text \"A\")?\n", + "Retrieve the character indexes in for the source text (Text A):" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in A?\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in A'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches?\n", + "\n", + "Let's check the corresponding text in Middlemarch for one of the matches output above. \n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes: [173657, 173756]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'all of\\nus, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act\\nfatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "mm_start = 173657 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "mm_end = 173756 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"A\" for the start and end characters selected above\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\", f\"[{mm_start}, {mm_end}]\")\n", + "mm.text[mm_start:mm_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the indexes positions of matches in our target text (Text \"B\")?\n", + "Retrieve the indexes in the B text (that is, the article index: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in B?\n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in B'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches in Text \"B\" (the article)?\n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019: [14718, 14816]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "textB_start = 14718 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "textB_end = 14816 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"B\" for the start and end characters selected above \n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\", f\"[{textB_start}, {textB_end}]\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[textB_start:textB_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "---" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", + "\n", + "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", + "\n", + "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 1: Locate the quotation in the PDF of the article." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", + "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", + "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the article text." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(cleaned_article_text.text)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 3: Copy that text of the quotation as it appears exactly in the article text above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 4: Paste the text of the quotation in the `quotation` field below\n", + "Make sure that you enclose the quotation in quotation marks.\n", + "\n", + "If there are are quotation marks in the text of the quote, either place an escape character `\\` in front of them, or change the quotation marks that you use. (Eg, if there are single quotes (`'`) in the text, use double quotes (`\"`) to surround the text.\n", + "\n", + "Run the cell below." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Starting index: 14718\n", + "Ending index: 14816\n", + "Character indexes for match: [14718, 14816]\n", + "\n", + " Corresponding text:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", + "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", + "quotation = \"All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength\" #pas\n", + "\n", + "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", + "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", + "print('Starting index:', index) \n", + "print('Ending index:', index + len(quotation))\n", + "print(f'Character indexes for match: [{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", + "print(\"\\n Corresponding text:\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[index:index + len(quotation)]\n", + "\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 5: Record the character indexes and article id in spreadsheet\n", + "Add the character indexes and article ID as a new row in a spreadsheet" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.5" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 1 +} diff --git a/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb similarity index 92% rename from jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb rename to algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index 851b6f9..bd9e3dd 100644 --- a/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -43,19 +43,7 @@ "cell_type": "code", "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "ename": "ModuleNotFoundError", - "evalue": "No module named 'text_matcher'", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mModuleNotFoundError\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "\u001b[0;32m\u001b[0m in \u001b[0;36m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0;32m----> 1\u001b[0;31m \u001b[0;32mfrom\u001b[0m \u001b[0mtext_matcher\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mmatcher\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mText\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0mMatcher\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[0m\u001b[1;32m 2\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mjson\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 3\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpandas\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mas\u001b[0m \u001b[0mpd\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 4\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mfrom\u001b[0m \u001b[0mIPython\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mdisplay\u001b[0m \u001b[0;32mimport\u001b[0m \u001b[0mclear_output\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 5\u001b[0m \u001b[0mget_ipython\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m.\u001b[0m\u001b[0mrun_line_magic\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m(\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m'matplotlib'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m,\u001b[0m \u001b[0;34m'inline'\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m)\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0;34m\u001b[0m\u001b[0m\n", - "\u001b[0;31mModuleNotFoundError\u001b[0m: No module named 'text_matcher'" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", "import json\n", diff --git a/algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt b/algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fd8ea44 --- /dev/null +++ b/algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt @@ -0,0 +1,33213 @@ + +Middlemarch + + +By + +George Eliot + + + + + +BOOK I. + +MISS BROOKE. + + +PRELUDE + + +Who that cares much to know the history of man, and how the mysterious +mixture behaves under the varying experiments of Time, has not dwelt, +at least briefly, on the life of Saint Theresa, has not smiled with +some gentleness at the thought of the little girl walking forth one +morning hand-in-hand with her still smaller brother, to go and seek +martyrdom in the country of the Moors? Out they toddled from rugged +Avila, wide-eyed and helpless-looking as two fawns, but with human +hearts, already beating to a national idea; until domestic reality met +them in the shape of uncles, and turned them back from their great +resolve. That child-pilgrimage was a fit beginning. Theresa's +passionate, ideal nature demanded an epic life: what were many-volumed +romances of chivalry and the social conquests of a brilliant girl to +her? Her flame quickly burned up that light fuel; and, fed from +within, soared after some illimitable satisfaction, some object which +would never justify weariness, which would reconcile self-despair with +the rapturous consciousness of life beyond self. She found her epos in +the reform of a religious order. + +That Spanish woman who lived three hundred years ago, was certainly not +the last of her kind. Many Theresas have been born who found for +themselves no epic life wherein there was a constant unfolding of +far-resonant action; perhaps only a life of mistakes, the offspring of +a certain spiritual grandeur ill-matched with the meanness of +opportunity; perhaps a tragic failure which found no sacred poet and +sank unwept into oblivion. With dim lights and tangled circumstance +they tried to shape their thought and deed in noble agreement; but +after all, to common eyes their struggles seemed mere inconsistency and +formlessness; for these later-born Theresas were helped by no coherent +social faith and order which could perform the function of knowledge +for the ardently willing soul. Their ardor alternated between a vague +ideal and the common yearning of womanhood; so that the one was +disapproved as extravagance, and the other condemned as a lapse. + +Some have felt that these blundering lives are due to the inconvenient +indefiniteness with which the Supreme Power has fashioned the natures +of women: if there were one level of feminine incompetence as strict as +the ability to count three and no more, the social lot of women might +be treated with scientific certitude. Meanwhile the indefiniteness +remains, and the limits of variation are really much wider than any one +would imagine from the sameness of women's coiffure and the favorite +love-stories in prose and verse. Here and there a cygnet is reared +uneasily among the ducklings in the brown pond, and never finds the +living stream in fellowship with its own oary-footed kind. Here and +there is born a Saint Theresa, foundress of nothing, whose loving +heart-beats and sobs after an unattained goodness tremble off and are +dispersed among hindrances, instead of centring in some +long-recognizable deed. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + + "Since I can do no good because a woman, + Reach constantly at something that is near it. + --The Maid's Tragedy: BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER. + + +Miss Brooke had that kind of beauty which seems to be thrown into +relief by poor dress. Her hand and wrist were so finely formed that +she could wear sleeves not less bare of style than those in which the +Blessed Virgin appeared to Italian painters; and her profile as well as +her stature and bearing seemed to gain the more dignity from her plain +garments, which by the side of provincial fashion gave her the +impressiveness of a fine quotation from the Bible,--or from one of our +elder poets,--in a paragraph of to-day's newspaper. She was usually +spoken of as being remarkably clever, but with the addition that her +sister Celia had more common-sense. Nevertheless, Celia wore scarcely +more trimmings; and it was only to close observers that her dress +differed from her sister's, and had a shade of coquetry in its +arrangements; for Miss Brooke's plain dressing was due to mixed +conditions, in most of which her sister shared. The pride of being +ladies had something to do with it: the Brooke connections, though not +exactly aristocratic, were unquestionably "good:" if you inquired +backward for a generation or two, you would not find any yard-measuring +or parcel-tying forefathers--anything lower than an admiral or a +clergyman; and there was even an ancestor discernible as a Puritan +gentleman who served under Cromwell, but afterwards conformed, and +managed to come out of all political troubles as the proprietor of a +respectable family estate. Young women of such birth, living in a +quiet country-house, and attending a village church hardly larger than +a parlor, naturally regarded frippery as the ambition of a huckster's +daughter. Then there was well-bred economy, which in those days made +show in dress the first item to be deducted from, when any margin was +required for expenses more distinctive of rank. Such reasons would +have been enough to account for plain dress, quite apart from religious +feeling; but in Miss Brooke's case, religion alone would have +determined it; and Celia mildly acquiesced in all her sister's +sentiments, only infusing them with that common-sense which is able to +accept momentous doctrines without any eccentric agitation. Dorothea +knew many passages of Pascal's Pensees and of Jeremy Taylor by heart; +and to her the destinies of mankind, seen by the light of Christianity, +made the solicitudes of feminine fashion appear an occupation for +Bedlam. She could not reconcile the anxieties of a spiritual life +involving eternal consequences, with a keen interest in gimp and +artificial protrusions of drapery. Her mind was theoretic, and yearned +by its nature after some lofty conception of the world which might +frankly include the parish of Tipton and her own rule of conduct there; +she was enamoured of intensity and greatness, and rash in embracing +whatever seemed to her to have those aspects; likely to seek martyrdom, +to make retractations, and then to incur martyrdom after all in a +quarter where she had not sought it. Certainly such elements in the +character of a marriageable girl tended to interfere with her lot, and +hinder it from being decided according to custom, by good looks, +vanity, and merely canine affection. With all this, she, the elder of +the sisters, was not yet twenty, and they had both been educated, since +they were about twelve years old and had lost their parents, on plans +at once narrow and promiscuous, first in an English family and +afterwards in a Swiss family at Lausanne, their bachelor uncle and +guardian trying in this way to remedy the disadvantages of their +orphaned condition. + +It was hardly a year since they had come to live at Tipton Grange with +their uncle, a man nearly sixty, of acquiescent temper, miscellaneous +opinions, and uncertain vote. He had travelled in his younger years, +and was held in this part of the county to have contracted a too +rambling habit of mind. Mr. Brooke's conclusions were as difficult to +predict as the weather: it was only safe to say that he would act with +benevolent intentions, and that he would spend as little money as +possible in carrying them out. For the most glutinously indefinite +minds enclose some hard grains of habit; and a man has been seen lax +about all his own interests except the retention of his snuff-box, +concerning which he was watchful, suspicious, and greedy of clutch. + +In Mr. Brooke the hereditary strain of Puritan energy was clearly in +abeyance; but in his niece Dorothea it glowed alike through faults and +virtues, turning sometimes into impatience of her uncle's talk or his +way of "letting things be" on his estate, and making her long all the +more for the time when she would be of age and have some command of +money for generous schemes. She was regarded as an heiress; for not +only had the sisters seven hundred a-year each from their parents, but +if Dorothea married and had a son, that son would inherit Mr. Brooke's +estate, presumably worth about three thousand a-year--a rental which +seemed wealth to provincial families, still discussing Mr. Peel's late +conduct on the Catholic question, innocent of future gold-fields, and +of that gorgeous plutocracy which has so nobly exalted the necessities +of genteel life. + +And how should Dorothea not marry?--a girl so handsome and with such +prospects? Nothing could hinder it but her love of extremes, and her +insistence on regulating life according to notions which might cause a +wary man to hesitate before he made her an offer, or even might lead +her at last to refuse all offers. A young lady of some birth and +fortune, who knelt suddenly down on a brick floor by the side of a sick +laborer and prayed fervidly as if she thought herself living in the +time of the Apostles--who had strange whims of fasting like a Papist, +and of sitting up at night to read old theological books! Such a wife +might awaken you some fine morning with a new scheme for the +application of her income which would interfere with political economy +and the keeping of saddle-horses: a man would naturally think twice +before he risked himself in such fellowship. Women were expected to +have weak opinions; but the great safeguard of society and of domestic +life was, that opinions were not acted on. Sane people did what their +neighbors did, so that if any lunatics were at large, one might know +and avoid them. + +The rural opinion about the new young ladies, even among the cottagers, +was generally in favor of Celia, as being so amiable and +innocent-looking, while Miss Brooke's large eyes seemed, like her +religion, too unusual and striking. Poor Dorothea! compared with her, +the innocent-looking Celia was knowing and worldly-wise; so much +subtler is a human mind than the outside tissues which make a sort of +blazonry or clock-face for it. + +Yet those who approached Dorothea, though prejudiced against her by +this alarming hearsay, found that she had a charm unaccountably +reconcilable with it. Most men thought her bewitching when she was on +horseback. She loved the fresh air and the various aspects of the +country, and when her eyes and cheeks glowed with mingled pleasure she +looked very little like a devotee. Riding was an indulgence which she +allowed herself in spite of conscientious qualms; she felt that she +enjoyed it in a pagan sensuous way, and always looked forward to +renouncing it. + +She was open, ardent, and not in the least self-admiring; indeed, it +was pretty to see how her imagination adorned her sister Celia with +attractions altogether superior to her own, and if any gentleman +appeared to come to the Grange from some other motive than that of +seeing Mr. Brooke, she concluded that he must be in love with Celia: +Sir James Chettam, for example, whom she constantly considered from +Celia's point of view, inwardly debating whether it would be good for +Celia to accept him. That he should be regarded as a suitor to herself +would have seemed to her a ridiculous irrelevance. Dorothea, with all +her eagerness to know the truths of life, retained very childlike ideas +about marriage. She felt sure that she would have accepted the +judicious Hooker, if she had been born in time to save him from that +wretched mistake he made in matrimony; or John Milton when his +blindness had come on; or any of the other great men whose odd habits +it would have been glorious piety to endure; but an amiable handsome +baronet, who said "Exactly" to her remarks even when she expressed +uncertainty,--how could he affect her as a lover? The really +delightful marriage must be that where your husband was a sort of +father, and could teach you even Hebrew, if you wished it. + +These peculiarities of Dorothea's character caused Mr. Brooke to be all +the more blamed in neighboring families for not securing some +middle-aged lady as guide and companion to his nieces. But he himself +dreaded so much the sort of superior woman likely to be available for +such a position, that he allowed himself to be dissuaded by Dorothea's +objections, and was in this case brave enough to defy the world--that +is to say, Mrs. Cadwallader the Rector's wife, and the small group of +gentry with whom he visited in the northeast corner of Loamshire. So +Miss Brooke presided in her uncle's household, and did not at all +dislike her new authority, with the homage that belonged to it. + +Sir James Chettam was going to dine at the Grange to-day with another +gentleman whom the girls had never seen, and about whom Dorothea felt +some venerating expectation. This was the Reverend Edward Casaubon, +noted in the county as a man of profound learning, understood for many +years to be engaged on a great work concerning religious history; also +as a man of wealth enough to give lustre to his piety, and having views +of his own which were to be more clearly ascertained on the publication +of his book. His very name carried an impressiveness hardly to be +measured without a precise chronology of scholarship. + +Early in the day Dorothea had returned from the infant school which she +had set going in the village, and was taking her usual place in the +pretty sitting-room which divided the bedrooms of the sisters, bent on +finishing a plan for some buildings (a kind of work which she delighted +in), when Celia, who had been watching her with a hesitating desire to +propose something, said-- + +"Dorothea, dear, if you don't mind--if you are not very busy--suppose +we looked at mamma's jewels to-day, and divided them? It is exactly +six months to-day since uncle gave them to you, and you have not looked +at them yet." + +Celia's face had the shadow of a pouting expression in it, the full +presence of the pout being kept back by an habitual awe of Dorothea and +principle; two associated facts which might show a mysterious +electricity if you touched them incautiously. To her relief, +Dorothea's eyes were full of laughter as she looked up. + +"What a wonderful little almanac you are, Celia! Is it six calendar or +six lunar months?" + +"It is the last day of September now, and it was the first of April +when uncle gave them to you. You know, he said that he had forgotten +them till then. I believe you have never thought of them since you +locked them up in the cabinet here." + +"Well, dear, we should never wear them, you know." Dorothea spoke in a +full cordial tone, half caressing, half explanatory. She had her +pencil in her hand, and was making tiny side-plans on a margin. + +Celia colored, and looked very grave. "I think, dear, we are wanting +in respect to mamma's memory, to put them by and take no notice of +them. And," she added, after hesitating a little, with a rising sob of +mortification, "necklaces are quite usual now; and Madame Poincon, who +was stricter in some things even than you are, used to wear ornaments. +And Christians generally--surely there are women in heaven now who wore +jewels." Celia was conscious of some mental strength when she really +applied herself to argument. + +"You would like to wear them?" exclaimed Dorothea, an air of astonished +discovery animating her whole person with a dramatic action which she +had caught from that very Madame Poincon who wore the ornaments. "Of +course, then, let us have them out. Why did you not tell me before? +But the keys, the keys!" She pressed her hands against the sides of her +head and seemed to despair of her memory. + +"They are here," said Celia, with whom this explanation had been long +meditated and prearranged. + +"Pray open the large drawer of the cabinet and get out the jewel-box." + +The casket was soon open before them, and the various jewels spread +out, making a bright parterre on the table. It was no great +collection, but a few of the ornaments were really of remarkable +beauty, the finest that was obvious at first being a necklace of purple +amethysts set in exquisite gold work, and a pearl cross with five +brilliants in it. Dorothea immediately took up the necklace and +fastened it round her sister's neck, where it fitted almost as closely +as a bracelet; but the circle suited the Henrietta-Maria style of +Celia's head and neck, and she could see that it did, in the pier-glass +opposite. + +"There, Celia! you can wear that with your Indian muslin. But this +cross you must wear with your dark dresses." + +Celia was trying not to smile with pleasure. "O Dodo, you must keep +the cross yourself." + +"No, no, dear, no," said Dorothea, putting up her hand with careless +deprecation. + +"Yes, indeed you must; it would suit you--in your black dress, now," +said Celia, insistingly. "You _might_ wear that." + +"Not for the world, not for the world. A cross is the last thing I +would wear as a trinket." Dorothea shuddered slightly. + +"Then you will think it wicked in me to wear it," said Celia, uneasily. + +"No, dear, no," said Dorothea, stroking her sister's cheek. "Souls +have complexions too: what will suit one will not suit another." + +"But you might like to keep it for mamma's sake." + +"No, I have other things of mamma's--her sandal-wood box which I am so +fond of--plenty of things. In fact, they are all yours, dear. We need +discuss them no longer. There--take away your property." + +Celia felt a little hurt. There was a strong assumption of superiority +in this Puritanic toleration, hardly less trying to the blond flesh of +an unenthusiastic sister than a Puritanic persecution. + +"But how can I wear ornaments if you, who are the elder sister, will +never wear them?" + +"Nay, Celia, that is too much to ask, that I should wear trinkets to +keep you in countenance. If I were to put on such a necklace as that, +I should feel as if I had been pirouetting. The world would go round +with me, and I should not know how to walk." + +Celia had unclasped the necklace and drawn it off. "It would be a +little tight for your neck; something to lie down and hang would suit +you better," she said, with some satisfaction. The complete unfitness +of the necklace from all points of view for Dorothea, made Celia +happier in taking it. She was opening some ring-boxes, which disclosed +a fine emerald with diamonds, and just then the sun passing beyond a +cloud sent a bright gleam over the table. + +"How very beautiful these gems are!" said Dorothea, under a new current +of feeling, as sudden as the gleam. "It is strange how deeply colors +seem to penetrate one, like scent. I suppose that is the reason why +gems are used as spiritual emblems in the Revelation of St. John. They +look like fragments of heaven. I think that emerald is more beautiful +than any of them." + +"And there is a bracelet to match it," said Celia. "We did not notice +this at first." + +"They are lovely," said Dorothea, slipping the ring and bracelet on her +finely turned finger and wrist, and holding them towards the window on +a level with her eyes. All the while her thought was trying to justify +her delight in the colors by merging them in her mystic religious joy. + +"You _would_ like those, Dorothea," said Celia, rather falteringly, +beginning to think with wonder that her sister showed some weakness, +and also that emeralds would suit her own complexion even better than +purple amethysts. "You must keep that ring and bracelet--if nothing +else. But see, these agates are very pretty and quiet." + +"Yes! I will keep these--this ring and bracelet," said Dorothea. +Then, letting her hand fall on the table, she said in another +tone--"Yet what miserable men find such things, and work at them, and +sell them!" She paused again, and Celia thought that her sister was +going to renounce the ornaments, as in consistency she ought to do. + +"Yes, dear, I will keep these," said Dorothea, decidedly. "But take +all the rest away, and the casket." + +She took up her pencil without removing the jewels, and still looking +at them. She thought of often having them by her, to feed her eye at +these little fountains of pure color. + +"Shall you wear them in company?" said Celia, who was watching her with +real curiosity as to what she would do. + +Dorothea glanced quickly at her sister. Across all her imaginative +adornment of those whom she loved, there darted now and then a keen +discernment, which was not without a scorching quality. If Miss Brooke +ever attained perfect meekness, it would not be for lack of inward fire. + +"Perhaps," she said, rather haughtily. "I cannot tell to what level I +may sink." + +Celia blushed, and was unhappy: she saw that she had offended her +sister, and dared not say even anything pretty about the gift of the +ornaments which she put back into the box and carried away. Dorothea +too was unhappy, as she went on with her plan-drawing, questioning the +purity of her own feeling and speech in the scene which had ended with +that little explosion. + +Celia's consciousness told her that she had not been at all in the +wrong: it was quite natural and justifiable that she should have asked +that question, and she repeated to herself that Dorothea was +inconsistent: either she should have taken her full share of the +jewels, or, after what she had said, she should have renounced them +altogether. + +"I am sure--at least, I trust," thought Celia, "that the wearing of a +necklace will not interfere with my prayers. And I do not see that I +should be bound by Dorothea's opinions now we are going into society, +though of course she herself ought to be bound by them. But Dorothea +is not always consistent." + +Thus Celia, mutely bending over her tapestry, until she heard her +sister calling her. + +"Here, Kitty, come and look at my plan; I shall think I am a great +architect, if I have not got incompatible stairs and fireplaces." + +As Celia bent over the paper, Dorothea put her cheek against her +sister's arm caressingly. Celia understood the action. Dorothea saw +that she had been in the wrong, and Celia pardoned her. Since they +could remember, there had been a mixture of criticism and awe in the +attitude of Celia's mind towards her elder sister. The younger had +always worn a yoke; but is there any yoked creature without its private +opinions? + + + +CHAPTER II. + + "'Dime; no ves aquel caballero que hacia nosotros viene + sobre un caballo rucio rodado que trae puesto en la cabeza + un yelmo de oro?' 'Lo que veo y columbro,' respondio Sancho, + 'no es sino un hombre sobre un as no pardo como el mio, que + trae sobre la cabeza una cosa que relumbra.' 'Pues ese es el + yelmo de Mambrino,' dijo Don Quijote."--CERVANTES. + + "'Seest thou not yon cavalier who cometh toward us on a + dapple-gray steed, and weareth a golden helmet?' 'What I + see,' answered Sancho, 'is nothing but a man on a gray ass + like my own, who carries something shiny on his head.' 'Just + so,' answered Don Quixote: 'and that resplendent object is + the helmet of Mambrino.'" + + +"Sir Humphry Davy?" said Mr. Brooke, over the soup, in his easy smiling +way, taking up Sir James Chettam's remark that he was studying Davy's +Agricultural Chemistry. "Well, now, Sir Humphry Davy; I dined with him +years ago at Cartwright's, and Wordsworth was there too--the poet +Wordsworth, you know. Now there was something singular. I was at +Cambridge when Wordsworth was there, and I never met him--and I dined +with him twenty years afterwards at Cartwright's. There's an oddity in +things, now. But Davy was there: he was a poet too. Or, as I may say, +Wordsworth was poet one, and Davy was poet two. That was true in every +sense, you know." + +Dorothea felt a little more uneasy than usual. In the beginning of +dinner, the party being small and the room still, these motes from the +mass of a magistrate's mind fell too noticeably. She wondered how a +man like Mr. Casaubon would support such triviality. His manners, she +thought, were very dignified; the set of his iron-gray hair and his +deep eye-sockets made him resemble the portrait of Locke. He had the +spare form and the pale complexion which became a student; as different +as possible from the blooming Englishman of the red-whiskered type +represented by Sir James Chettam. + +"I am reading the Agricultural Chemistry," said this excellent baronet, +"because I am going to take one of the farms into my own hands, and see +if something cannot be done in setting a good pattern of farming among +my tenants. Do you approve of that, Miss Brooke?" + +"A great mistake, Chettam," interposed Mr. Brooke, "going into +electrifying your land and that kind of thing, and making a parlor of +your cow-house. It won't do. I went into science a great deal myself +at one time; but I saw it would not do. It leads to everything; you +can let nothing alone. No, no--see that your tenants don't sell their +straw, and that kind of thing; and give them draining-tiles, you know. +But your fancy farming will not do--the most expensive sort of whistle +you can buy: you may as well keep a pack of hounds." + +"Surely," said Dorothea, "it is better to spend money in finding out +how men can make the most of the land which supports them all, than in +keeping dogs and horses only to gallop over it. It is not a sin to +make yourself poor in performing experiments for the good of all." + +She spoke with more energy than is expected of so young a lady, but Sir +James had appealed to her. He was accustomed to do so, and she had +often thought that she could urge him to many good actions when he was +her brother-in-law. + +Mr. Casaubon turned his eyes very markedly on Dorothea while she was +speaking, and seemed to observe her newly. + +"Young ladies don't understand political economy, you know," said Mr. +Brooke, smiling towards Mr. Casaubon. "I remember when we were all +reading Adam Smith. _There_ is a book, now. I took in all the new +ideas at one time--human perfectibility, now. But some say, history +moves in circles; and that may be very well argued; I have argued it +myself. The fact is, human reason may carry you a little too far--over +the hedge, in fact. It carried me a good way at one time; but I saw it +would not do. I pulled up; I pulled up in time. But not too hard. I +have always been in favor of a little theory: we must have Thought; +else we shall be landed back in the dark ages. But talking of books, +there is Southey's 'Peninsular War.' I am reading that of a morning. +You know Southey?" + +"No" said Mr. Casaubon, not keeping pace with Mr. Brooke's impetuous +reason, and thinking of the book only. "I have little leisure for such +literature just now. I have been using up my eyesight on old +characters lately; the fact is, I want a reader for my evenings; but I +am fastidious in voices, and I cannot endure listening to an imperfect +reader. It is a misfortune, in some senses: I feed too much on the +inward sources; I live too much with the dead. My mind is something +like the ghost of an ancient, wandering about the world and trying +mentally to construct it as it used to be, in spite of ruin and +confusing changes. But I find it necessary to use the utmost caution +about my eyesight." + +This was the first time that Mr. Casaubon had spoken at any length. He +delivered himself with precision, as if he had been called upon to make +a public statement; and the balanced sing-song neatness of his speech, +occasionally corresponded to by a movement of his head, was the more +conspicuous from its contrast with good Mr. Brooke's scrappy +slovenliness. Dorothea said to herself that Mr. Casaubon was the most +interesting man she had ever seen, not excepting even Monsieur Liret, +the Vaudois clergyman who had given conferences on the history of the +Waldenses. To reconstruct a past world, doubtless with a view to the +highest purposes of truth--what a work to be in any way present at, to +assist in, though only as a lamp-holder! This elevating thought lifted +her above her annoyance at being twitted with her ignorance of +political economy, that never-explained science which was thrust as an +extinguisher over all her lights. + +"But you are fond of riding, Miss Brooke," Sir James presently took an +opportunity of saying. "I should have thought you would enter a little +into the pleasures of hunting. I wish you would let me send over a +chestnut horse for you to try. It has been trained for a lady. I saw +you on Saturday cantering over the hill on a nag not worthy of you. My +groom shall bring Corydon for you every day, if you will only mention +the time." + +"Thank you, you are very good. I mean to give up riding. I shall not +ride any more," said Dorothea, urged to this brusque resolution by a +little annoyance that Sir James would be soliciting her attention when +she wanted to give it all to Mr. Casaubon. + +"No, that is too hard," said Sir James, in a tone of reproach that +showed strong interest. "Your sister is given to self-mortification, +is she not?" he continued, turning to Celia, who sat at his right hand. + +"I think she is," said Celia, feeling afraid lest she should say +something that would not please her sister, and blushing as prettily as +possible above her necklace. "She likes giving up." + +"If that were true, Celia, my giving-up would be self-indulgence, not +self-mortification. But there may be good reasons for choosing not to +do what is very agreeable," said Dorothea. + +Mr. Brooke was speaking at the same time, but it was evident that Mr. +Casaubon was observing Dorothea, and she was aware of it. + +"Exactly," said Sir James. "You give up from some high, generous +motive." + +"No, indeed, not exactly. I did not say that of myself," answered +Dorothea, reddening. Unlike Celia, she rarely blushed, and only from +high delight or anger. At this moment she felt angry with the perverse +Sir James. Why did he not pay attention to Celia, and leave her to +listen to Mr. Casaubon?--if that learned man would only talk, instead +of allowing himself to be talked to by Mr. Brooke, who was just then +informing him that the Reformation either meant something or it did +not, that he himself was a Protestant to the core, but that Catholicism +was a fact; and as to refusing an acre of your ground for a Romanist +chapel, all men needed the bridle of religion, which, properly +speaking, was the dread of a Hereafter. + +"I made a great study of theology at one time," said Mr. Brooke, as if +to explain the insight just manifested. "I know something of all +schools. I knew Wilberforce in his best days. Do you know +Wilberforce?" + +Mr. Casaubon said, "No." + +"Well, Wilberforce was perhaps not enough of a thinker; but if I went +into Parliament, as I have been asked to do, I should sit on the +independent bench, as Wilberforce did, and work at philanthropy." + +Mr. Casaubon bowed, and observed that it was a wide field. + +"Yes," said Mr. Brooke, with an easy smile, "but I have documents. I +began a long while ago to collect documents. They want arranging, but +when a question has struck me, I have written to somebody and got an +answer. I have documents at my back. But now, how do you arrange your +documents?" + +"In pigeon-holes partly," said Mr. Casaubon, with rather a startled air +of effort. + +"Ah, pigeon-holes will not do. I have tried pigeon-holes, but +everything gets mixed in pigeon-holes: I never know whether a paper is +in A or Z." + +"I wish you would let me sort your papers for you, uncle," said +Dorothea. "I would letter them all, and then make a list of subjects +under each letter." + +Mr. Casaubon gravely smiled approval, and said to Mr. Brooke, "You have +an excellent secretary at hand, you perceive." + +"No, no," said Mr. Brooke, shaking his head; "I cannot let young ladies +meddle with my documents. Young ladies are too flighty." + +Dorothea felt hurt. Mr. Casaubon would think that her uncle had some +special reason for delivering this opinion, whereas the remark lay in +his mind as lightly as the broken wing of an insect among all the other +fragments there, and a chance current had sent it alighting on _her_. + +When the two girls were in the drawing-room alone, Celia said-- + +"How very ugly Mr. Casaubon is!" + +"Celia! He is one of the most distinguished-looking men I ever saw. +He is remarkably like the portrait of Locke. He has the same deep +eye-sockets." + +"Had Locke those two white moles with hairs on them?" + +"Oh, I dare say! when people of a certain sort looked at him," said +Dorothea, walking away a little. + +"Mr. Casaubon is so sallow." + +"All the better. I suppose you admire a man with the complexion of a +cochon de lait." + +"Dodo!" exclaimed Celia, looking after her in surprise. "I never heard +you make such a comparison before." + +"Why should I make it before the occasion came? It is a good +comparison: the match is perfect." + +Miss Brooke was clearly forgetting herself, and Celia thought so. + +"I wonder you show temper, Dorothea." + +"It is so painful in you, Celia, that you will look at human beings as +if they were merely animals with a toilet, and never see the great soul +in a man's face." + +"Has Mr. Casaubon a great soul?" Celia was not without a touch of naive +malice. + +"Yes, I believe he has," said Dorothea, with the full voice of +decision. "Everything I see in him corresponds to his pamphlet on +Biblical Cosmology." + +"He talks very little," said Celia + +"There is no one for him to talk to." + +Celia thought privately, "Dorothea quite despises Sir James Chettam; I +believe she would not accept him." Celia felt that this was a pity. +She had never been deceived as to the object of the baronet's interest. +Sometimes, indeed, she had reflected that Dodo would perhaps not make a +husband happy who had not her way of looking at things; and stifled in +the depths of her heart was the feeling that her sister was too +religious for family comfort. Notions and scruples were like spilt +needles, making one afraid of treading, or sitting down, or even eating. + +When Miss Brooke was at the tea-table, Sir James came to sit down by +her, not having felt her mode of answering him at all offensive. Why +should he? He thought it probable that Miss Brooke liked him, and +manners must be very marked indeed before they cease to be interpreted +by preconceptions either confident or distrustful. She was thoroughly +charming to him, but of course he theorized a little about his +attachment. He was made of excellent human dough, and had the rare +merit of knowing that his talents, even if let loose, would not set the +smallest stream in the county on fire: hence he liked the prospect of a +wife to whom he could say, "What shall we do?" about this or that; who +could help her husband out with reasons, and would also have the +property qualification for doing so. As to the excessive religiousness +alleged against Miss Brooke, he had a very indefinite notion of what it +consisted in, and thought that it would die out with marriage. In +short, he felt himself to be in love in the right place, and was ready +to endure a great deal of predominance, which, after all, a man could +always put down when he liked. Sir James had no idea that he should +ever like to put down the predominance of this handsome girl, in whose +cleverness he delighted. Why not? A man's mind--what there is of +it--has always the advantage of being masculine,--as the smallest +birch-tree is of a higher kind than the most soaring palm,--and even +his ignorance is of a sounder quality. Sir James might not have +originated this estimate; but a kind Providence furnishes the limpest +personality with a little gum or starch in the form of tradition. + +"Let me hope that you will rescind that resolution about the horse, +Miss Brooke," said the persevering admirer. "I assure you, riding is +the most healthy of exercises." + +"I am aware of it," said Dorothea, coldly. "I think it would do Celia +good--if she would take to it." + +"But you are such a perfect horsewoman." + +"Excuse me; I have had very little practice, and I should be easily +thrown." + +"Then that is a reason for more practice. Every lady ought to be a +perfect horsewoman, that she may accompany her husband." + +"You see how widely we differ, Sir James. I have made up my mind that +I ought not to be a perfect horsewoman, and so I should never +correspond to your pattern of a lady." Dorothea looked straight before +her, and spoke with cold brusquerie, very much with the air of a +handsome boy, in amusing contrast with the solicitous amiability of her +admirer. + +"I should like to know your reasons for this cruel resolution. It is +not possible that you should think horsemanship wrong." + +"It is quite possible that I should think it wrong for me." + +"Oh, why?" said Sir James, in a tender tone of remonstrance. + +Mr. Casaubon had come up to the table, teacup in hand, and was +listening. + +"We must not inquire too curiously into motives," he interposed, in his +measured way. "Miss Brooke knows that they are apt to become feeble in +the utterance: the aroma is mixed with the grosser air. We must keep +the germinating grain away from the light." + +Dorothea colored with pleasure, and looked up gratefully to the +speaker. Here was a man who could understand the higher inward life, +and with whom there could be some spiritual communion; nay, who could +illuminate principle with the widest knowledge a man whose learning +almost amounted to a proof of whatever he believed! + +Dorothea's inferences may seem large; but really life could never have +gone on at any period but for this liberal allowance of conclusions, +which has facilitated marriage under the difficulties of civilization. +Has any one ever pinched into its pilulous smallness the cobweb of +pre-matrimonial acquaintanceship? + +"Certainly," said good Sir James. "Miss Brooke shall not be urged to +tell reasons she would rather be silent upon. I am sure her reasons +would do her honor." + +He was not in the least jealous of the interest with which Dorothea had +looked up at Mr. Casaubon: it never occurred to him that a girl to whom +he was meditating an offer of marriage could care for a dried bookworm +towards fifty, except, indeed, in a religious sort of way, as for a +clergyman of some distinction. + +However, since Miss Brooke had become engaged in a conversation with +Mr. Casaubon about the Vaudois clergy, Sir James betook himself to +Celia, and talked to her about her sister; spoke of a house in town, +and asked whether Miss Brooke disliked London. Away from her sister, +Celia talked quite easily, and Sir James said to himself that the +second Miss Brooke was certainly very agreeable as well as pretty, +though not, as some people pretended, more clever and sensible than the +elder sister. He felt that he had chosen the one who was in all +respects the superior; and a man naturally likes to look forward to +having the best. He would be the very Mawworm of bachelors who +pretended not to expect it. + + + +CHAPTER III. + + "Say, goddess, what ensued, when Raphael, + The affable archangel . . . + Eve + The story heard attentive, and was filled + With admiration, and deep muse, to hear + Of things so high and strange." + --Paradise Lost, B. vii. + + +If it had really occurred to Mr. Casaubon to think of Miss Brooke as a +suitable wife for him, the reasons that might induce her to accept him +were already planted in her mind, and by the evening of the next day +the reasons had budded and bloomed. For they had had a long +conversation in the morning, while Celia, who did not like the company +of Mr. Casaubon's moles and sallowness, had escaped to the vicarage to +play with the curate's ill-shod but merry children. + +Dorothea by this time had looked deep into the ungauged reservoir of +Mr. Casaubon's mind, seeing reflected there in vague labyrinthine +extension every quality she herself brought; had opened much of her own +experience to him, and had understood from him the scope of his great +work, also of attractively labyrinthine extent. For he had been as +instructive as Milton's "affable archangel;" and with something of the +archangelic manner he told her how he had undertaken to show (what +indeed had been attempted before, but not with that thoroughness, +justice of comparison, and effectiveness of arrangement at which Mr. +Casaubon aimed) that all the mythical systems or erratic mythical +fragments in the world were corruptions of a tradition originally +revealed. Having once mastered the true position and taken a firm +footing there, the vast field of mythical constructions became +intelligible, nay, luminous with the reflected light of +correspondences. But to gather in this great harvest of truth was no +light or speedy work. His notes already made a formidable range of +volumes, but the crowning task would be to condense these voluminous +still-accumulating results and bring them, like the earlier vintage of +Hippocratic books, to fit a little shelf. In explaining this to +Dorothea, Mr. Casaubon expressed himself nearly as he would have done +to a fellow-student, for he had not two styles of talking at command: +it is true that when he used a Greek or Latin phrase he always gave the +English with scrupulous care, but he would probably have done this in +any case. A learned provincial clergyman is accustomed to think of his +acquaintances as of "lords, knyghtes, and other noble and worthi men, +that conne Latyn but lytille." + +Dorothea was altogether captivated by the wide embrace of this +conception. Here was something beyond the shallows of ladies' school +literature: here was a living Bossuet, whose work would reconcile +complete knowledge with devoted piety; here was a modern Augustine who +united the glories of doctor and saint. + +The sanctity seemed no less clearly marked than the learning, for when +Dorothea was impelled to open her mind on certain themes which she +could speak of to no one whom she had before seen at Tipton, especially +on the secondary importance of ecclesiastical forms and articles of +belief compared with that spiritual religion, that submergence of self +in communion with Divine perfection which seemed to her to be expressed +in the best Christian books of widely distant ages, she found in Mr. +Casaubon a listener who understood her at once, who could assure her of +his own agreement with that view when duly tempered with wise +conformity, and could mention historical examples before unknown to her. + +"He thinks with me," said Dorothea to herself, "or rather, he thinks a +whole world of which my thought is but a poor twopenny mirror. And his +feelings too, his whole experience--what a lake compared with my little +pool!" + +Miss Brooke argued from words and dispositions not less unhesitatingly +than other young ladies of her age. Signs are small measurable things, +but interpretations are illimitable, and in girls of sweet, ardent +nature, every sign is apt to conjure up wonder, hope, belief, vast as a +sky, and colored by a diffused thimbleful of matter in the shape of +knowledge. They are not always too grossly deceived; for Sinbad +himself may have fallen by good-luck on a true description, and wrong +reasoning sometimes lands poor mortals in right conclusions: starting a +long way off the true point, and proceeding by loops and zigzags, we +now and then arrive just where we ought to be. Because Miss Brooke was +hasty in her trust, it is not therefore clear that Mr. Casaubon was +unworthy of it. + +He stayed a little longer than he had intended, on a slight pressure of +invitation from Mr. Brooke, who offered no bait except his own +documents on machine-breaking and rick-burning. Mr. Casaubon was called +into the library to look at these in a heap, while his host picked up +first one and then the other to read aloud from in a skipping and +uncertain way, passing from one unfinished passage to another with a +"Yes, now, but here!" and finally pushing them all aside to open the +journal of his youthful Continental travels. + +"Look here--here is all about Greece. Rhamnus, the ruins of +Rhamnus--you are a great Grecian, now. I don't know whether you have +given much study to the topography. I spent no end of time in making +out these things--Helicon, now. Here, now!--'We started the next +morning for Parnassus, the double-peaked Parnassus.' All this volume is +about Greece, you know," Mr. Brooke wound up, rubbing his thumb +transversely along the edges of the leaves as he held the book forward. + +Mr. Casaubon made a dignified though somewhat sad audience; bowed in +the right place, and avoided looking at anything documentary as far as +possible, without showing disregard or impatience; mindful that this +desultoriness was associated with the institutions of the country, and +that the man who took him on this severe mental scamper was not only an +amiable host, but a landholder and custos rotulorum. Was his endurance +aided also by the reflection that Mr. Brooke was the uncle of Dorothea? + +Certainly he seemed more and more bent on making her talk to him, on +drawing her out, as Celia remarked to herself; and in looking at her +his face was often lit up by a smile like pale wintry sunshine. Before +he left the next morning, while taking a pleasant walk with Miss Brooke +along the gravelled terrace, he had mentioned to her that he felt the +disadvantage of loneliness, the need of that cheerful companionship +with which the presence of youth can lighten or vary the serious toils +of maturity. And he delivered this statement with as much careful +precision as if he had been a diplomatic envoy whose words would be +attended with results. Indeed, Mr. Casaubon was not used to expect +that he should have to repeat or revise his communications of a +practical or personal kind. The inclinations which he had deliberately +stated on the 2d of October he would think it enough to refer to by the +mention of that date; judging by the standard of his own memory, which +was a volume where a vide supra could serve instead of repetitions, and +not the ordinary long-used blotting-book which only tells of forgotten +writing. But in this case Mr. Casaubon's confidence was not likely to +be falsified, for Dorothea heard and retained what he said with the +eager interest of a fresh young nature to which every variety in +experience is an epoch. + +It was three o'clock in the beautiful breezy autumn day when Mr. +Casaubon drove off to his Rectory at Lowick, only five miles from +Tipton; and Dorothea, who had on her bonnet and shawl, hurried along +the shrubbery and across the park that she might wander through the +bordering wood with no other visible companionship than that of Monk, +the Great St. Bernard dog, who always took care of the young ladies in +their walks. There had risen before her the girl's vision of a +possible future for herself to which she looked forward with trembling +hope, and she wanted to wander on in that visionary future without +interruption. She walked briskly in the brisk air, the color rose in +her cheeks, and her straw bonnet (which our contemporaries might look +at with conjectural curiosity as at an obsolete form of basket) fell a +little backward. She would perhaps be hardly characterized enough if +it were omitted that she wore her brown hair flatly braided and coiled +behind so as to expose the outline of her head in a daring manner at a +time when public feeling required the meagreness of nature to be +dissimulated by tall barricades of frizzed curls and bows, never +surpassed by any great race except the Feejeean. This was a trait of +Miss Brooke's asceticism. But there was nothing of an ascetic's +expression in her bright full eyes, as she looked before her, not +consciously seeing, but absorbing into the intensity of her mood, the +solemn glory of the afternoon with its long swathes of light between +the far-off rows of limes, whose shadows touched each other. + +All people, young or old (that is, all people in those ante-reform +times), would have thought her an interesting object if they had +referred the glow in her eyes and cheeks to the newly awakened ordinary +images of young love: the illusions of Chloe about Strephon have been +sufficiently consecrated in poetry, as the pathetic loveliness of all +spontaneous trust ought to be. Miss Pippin adoring young Pumpkin, and +dreaming along endless vistas of unwearying companionship, was a little +drama which never tired our fathers and mothers, and had been put into +all costumes. Let but Pumpkin have a figure which would sustain the +disadvantages of the shortwaisted swallow-tail, and everybody felt it +not only natural but necessary to the perfection of womanhood, that a +sweet girl should be at once convinced of his virtue, his exceptional +ability, and above all, his perfect sincerity. But perhaps no persons +then living--certainly none in the neighborhood of Tipton--would have +had a sympathetic understanding for the dreams of a girl whose notions +about marriage took their color entirely from an exalted enthusiasm +about the ends of life, an enthusiasm which was lit chiefly by its own +fire, and included neither the niceties of the trousseau, the pattern +of plate, nor even the honors and sweet joys of the blooming matron. + +It had now entered Dorothea's mind that Mr. Casaubon might wish to make +her his wife, and the idea that he would do so touched her with a sort +of reverential gratitude. How good of him--nay, it would be almost as +if a winged messenger had suddenly stood beside her path and held out +his hand towards her! For a long while she had been oppressed by the +indefiniteness which hung in her mind, like a thick summer haze, over +all her desire to make her life greatly effective. What could she do, +what ought she to do?--she, hardly more than a budding woman, but yet +with an active conscience and a great mental need, not to be satisfied +by a girlish instruction comparable to the nibblings and judgments of a +discursive mouse. With some endowment of stupidity and conceit, she +might have thought that a Christian young lady of fortune should find +her ideal of life in village charities, patronage of the humbler +clergy, the perusal of "Female Scripture Characters," unfolding the +private experience of Sara under the Old Dispensation, and Dorcas under +the New, and the care of her soul over her embroidery in her own +boudoir--with a background of prospective marriage to a man who, if +less strict than herself, as being involved in affairs religiously +inexplicable, might be prayed for and seasonably exhorted. From such +contentment poor Dorothea was shut out. The intensity of her religious +disposition, the coercion it exercised over her life, was but one +aspect of a nature altogether ardent, theoretic, and intellectually +consequent: and with such a nature struggling in the bands of a narrow +teaching, hemmed in by a social life which seemed nothing but a +labyrinth of petty courses, a walled-in maze of small paths that led no +whither, the outcome was sure to strike others as at once exaggeration +and inconsistency. The thing which seemed to her best, she wanted to +justify by the completest knowledge; and not to live in a pretended +admission of rules which were never acted on. Into this soul-hunger as +yet all her youthful passion was poured; the union which attracted her +was one that would deliver her from her girlish subjection to her own +ignorance, and give her the freedom of voluntary submission to a guide +who would take her along the grandest path. + +"I should learn everything then," she said to herself, still walking +quickly along the bridle road through the wood. "It would be my duty +to study that I might help him the better in his great works. There +would be nothing trivial about our lives. Every-day things with us +would mean the greatest things. It would be like marrying Pascal. I +should learn to see the truth by the same light as great men have seen +it by. And then I should know what to do, when I got older: I should +see how it was possible to lead a grand life here--now--in England. I +don't feel sure about doing good in any way now: everything seems like +going on a mission to a people whose language I don't know;--unless it +were building good cottages--there can be no doubt about that. Oh, I +hope I should be able to get the people well housed in Lowick! I will +draw plenty of plans while I have time." + +Dorothea checked herself suddenly with self-rebuke for the presumptuous +way in which she was reckoning on uncertain events, but she was spared +any inward effort to change the direction of her thoughts by the +appearance of a cantering horseman round a turning of the road. The +well-groomed chestnut horse and two beautiful setters could leave no +doubt that the rider was Sir James Chettam. He discerned Dorothea, +jumped off his horse at once, and, having delivered it to his groom, +advanced towards her with something white on his arm, at which the two +setters were barking in an excited manner. + +"How delightful to meet you, Miss Brooke," he said, raising his hat and +showing his sleekly waving blond hair. "It has hastened the pleasure I +was looking forward to." + +Miss Brooke was annoyed at the interruption. This amiable baronet, +really a suitable husband for Celia, exaggerated the necessity of +making himself agreeable to the elder sister. Even a prospective +brother-in-law may be an oppression if he will always be presupposing +too good an understanding with you, and agreeing with you even when you +contradict him. The thought that he had made the mistake of paying his +addresses to herself could not take shape: all her mental activity was +used up in persuasions of another kind. But he was positively +obtrusive at this moment, and his dimpled hands were quite +disagreeable. Her roused temper made her color deeply, as she returned +his greeting with some haughtiness. + +Sir James interpreted the heightened color in the way most gratifying +to himself, and thought he never saw Miss Brooke looking so handsome. + +"I have brought a little petitioner," he said, "or rather, I have +brought him to see if he will be approved before his petition is +offered." He showed the white object under his arm, which was a tiny +Maltese puppy, one of nature's most naive toys. + +"It is painful to me to see these creatures that are bred merely as +pets," said Dorothea, whose opinion was forming itself that very moment +(as opinions will) under the heat of irritation. + +"Oh, why?" said Sir James, as they walked forward. + +"I believe all the petting that is given them does not make them happy. +They are too helpless: their lives are too frail. A weasel or a mouse +that gets its own living is more interesting. I like to think that the +animals about us have souls something like our own, and either carry on +their own little affairs or can be companions to us, like Monk here. +Those creatures are parasitic." + +"I am so glad I know that you do not like them," said good Sir James. +"I should never keep them for myself, but ladies usually are fond of +these Maltese dogs. Here, John, take this dog, will you?" + +The objectionable puppy, whose nose and eyes were equally black and +expressive, was thus got rid of, since Miss Brooke decided that it had +better not have been born. But she felt it necessary to explain. + +"You must not judge of Celia's feeling from mine. I think she likes +these small pets. She had a tiny terrier once, which she was very fond +of. It made me unhappy, because I was afraid of treading on it. I am +rather short-sighted." + +"You have your own opinion about everything, Miss Brooke, and it is +always a good opinion." + +What answer was possible to such stupid complimenting? + +"Do you know, I envy you that," Sir James said, as they continued +walking at the rather brisk pace set by Dorothea. + +"I don't quite understand what you mean." + +"Your power of forming an opinion. I can form an opinion of persons. +I know when I like people. But about other matters, do you know, I +have often a difficulty in deciding. One hears very sensible things +said on opposite sides." + +"Or that seem sensible. Perhaps we don't always discriminate between +sense and nonsense." + +Dorothea felt that she was rather rude. + +"Exactly," said Sir James. "But you seem to have the power of +discrimination." + +"On the contrary, I am often unable to decide. But that is from +ignorance. The right conclusion is there all the same, though I am +unable to see it." + +"I think there are few who would see it more readily. Do you know, +Lovegood was telling me yesterday that you had the best notion in the +world of a plan for cottages--quite wonderful for a young lady, he +thought. You had a real _genus_, to use his expression. He said you +wanted Mr. Brooke to build a new set of cottages, but he seemed to +think it hardly probable that your uncle would consent. Do you know, +that is one of the things I wish to do--I mean, on my own estate. I +should be so glad to carry out that plan of yours, if you would let me +see it. Of course, it is sinking money; that is why people object to +it. Laborers can never pay rent to make it answer. But, after all, it +is worth doing." + +"Worth doing! yes, indeed," said Dorothea, energetically, forgetting +her previous small vexations. "I think we deserve to be beaten out of +our beautiful houses with a scourge of small cords--all of us who let +tenants live in such sties as we see round us. Life in cottages might +be happier than ours, if they were real houses fit for human beings +from whom we expect duties and affections." + +"Will you show me your plan?" + +"Yes, certainly. I dare say it is very faulty. But I have been +examining all the plans for cottages in Loudon's book, and picked out +what seem the best things. Oh what a happiness it would be to set the +pattern about here! I think instead of Lazarus at the gate, we should +put the pigsty cottages outside the park-gate." + +Dorothea was in the best temper now. Sir James, as brother in-law, +building model cottages on his estate, and then, perhaps, others being +built at Lowick, and more and more elsewhere in imitation--it would be +as if the spirit of Oberlin had passed over the parishes to make the +life of poverty beautiful! + +Sir James saw all the plans, and took one away to consult upon with +Lovegood. He also took away a complacent sense that he was making +great progress in Miss Brooke's good opinion. The Maltese puppy was +not offered to Celia; an omission which Dorothea afterwards thought of +with surprise; but she blamed herself for it. She had been engrossing +Sir James. After all, it was a relief that there was no puppy to tread +upon. + +Celia was present while the plans were being examined, and observed Sir +James's illusion. "He thinks that Dodo cares about him, and she only +cares about her plans. Yet I am not certain that she would refuse him +if she thought he would let her manage everything and carry out all her +notions. And how very uncomfortable Sir James would be! I cannot bear +notions." + +It was Celia's private luxury to indulge in this dislike. She dared +not confess it to her sister in any direct statement, for that would be +laying herself open to a demonstration that she was somehow or other at +war with all goodness. But on safe opportunities, she had an indirect +mode of making her negative wisdom tell upon Dorothea, and calling her +down from her rhapsodic mood by reminding her that people were staring, +not listening. Celia was not impulsive: what she had to say could +wait, and came from her always with the same quiet staccato evenness. +When people talked with energy and emphasis she watched their faces and +features merely. She never could understand how well-bred persons +consented to sing and open their mouths in the ridiculous manner +requisite for that vocal exercise. + +It was not many days before Mr. Casaubon paid a morning visit, on which +he was invited again for the following week to dine and stay the night. +Thus Dorothea had three more conversations with him, and was convinced +that her first impressions had been just. He was all she had at first +imagined him to be: almost everything he had said seemed like a +specimen from a mine, or the inscription on the door of a museum which +might open on the treasures of past ages; and this trust in his mental +wealth was all the deeper and more effective on her inclination because +it was now obvious that his visits were made for her sake. This +accomplished man condescended to think of a young girl, and take the +pains to talk to her, not with absurd compliment, but with an appeal to +her understanding, and sometimes with instructive correction. What +delightful companionship! Mr. Casaubon seemed even unconscious that +trivialities existed, and never handed round that small-talk of heavy +men which is as acceptable as stale bride-cake brought forth with an +odor of cupboard. He talked of what he was interested in, or else he +was silent and bowed with sad civility. To Dorothea this was adorable +genuineness, and religious abstinence from that artificiality which +uses up the soul in the efforts of pretence. For she looked as +reverently at Mr. Casaubon's religious elevation above herself as she +did at his intellect and learning. He assented to her expressions of +devout feeling, and usually with an appropriate quotation; he allowed +himself to say that he had gone through some spiritual conflicts in his +youth; in short, Dorothea saw that here she might reckon on +understanding, sympathy, and guidance. On one--only one--of her +favorite themes she was disappointed. Mr. Casaubon apparently did not +care about building cottages, and diverted the talk to the extremely +narrow accommodation which was to be had in the dwellings of the +ancient Egyptians, as if to check a too high standard. After he was +gone, Dorothea dwelt with some agitation on this indifference of his; +and her mind was much exercised with arguments drawn from the varying +conditions of climate which modify human needs, and from the admitted +wickedness of pagan despots. Should she not urge these arguments on +Mr. Casaubon when he came again? But further reflection told her that +she was presumptuous in demanding his attention to such a subject; he +would not disapprove of her occupying herself with it in leisure +moments, as other women expected to occupy themselves with their dress +and embroidery--would not forbid it when--Dorothea felt rather ashamed +as she detected herself in these speculations. But her uncle had been +invited to go to Lowick to stay a couple of days: was it reasonable to +suppose that Mr. Casaubon delighted in Mr. Brooke's society for its own +sake, either with or without documents? + +Meanwhile that little disappointment made her delight the more in Sir +James Chettam's readiness to set on foot the desired improvements. He +came much oftener than Mr. Casaubon, and Dorothea ceased to find him +disagreeable since he showed himself so entirely in earnest; for he had +already entered with much practical ability into Lovegood's estimates, +and was charmingly docile. She proposed to build a couple of cottages, +and transfer two families from their old cabins, which could then be +pulled down, so that new ones could be built on the old sites. Sir +James said "Exactly," and she bore the word remarkably well. + +Certainly these men who had so few spontaneous ideas might be very +useful members of society under good feminine direction, if they were +fortunate in choosing their sisters-in-law! It is difficult to say +whether there was or was not a little wilfulness in her continuing +blind to the possibility that another sort of choice was in question in +relation to her. But her life was just now full of hope and action: +she was not only thinking of her plans, but getting down learned books +from the library and reading many things hastily (that she might be a +little less ignorant in talking to Mr. Casaubon), all the while being +visited with conscientious questionings whether she were not exalting +these poor doings above measure and contemplating them with that +self-satisfaction which was the last doom of ignorance and folly. + + + +CHAPTER IV. + + 1st Gent. Our deeds are fetters that we forge ourselves. + 2d Gent. Ay, truly: but I think it is the world + That brings the iron. + + +"Sir James seems determined to do everything you wish," said Celia, as +they were driving home from an inspection of the new building-site. + +"He is a good creature, and more sensible than any one would imagine," +said Dorothea, inconsiderately. + +"You mean that he appears silly." + +"No, no," said Dorothea, recollecting herself, and laying her hand on +her sister's a moment, "but he does not talk equally well on all +subjects." + +"I should think none but disagreeable people do," said Celia, in her +usual purring way. "They must be very dreadful to live with. Only +think! at breakfast, and always." + +Dorothea laughed. "O Kitty, you are a wonderful creature!" She pinched +Celia's chin, being in the mood now to think her very winning and +lovely--fit hereafter to be an eternal cherub, and if it were not +doctrinally wrong to say so, hardly more in need of salvation than a +squirrel. "Of course people need not be always talking well. Only one +tells the quality of their minds when they try to talk well." + +"You mean that Sir James tries and fails." + +"I was speaking generally. Why do you catechise me about Sir James? +It is not the object of his life to please me." + +"Now, Dodo, can you really believe that?" + +"Certainly. He thinks of me as a future sister--that is all." Dorothea +had never hinted this before, waiting, from a certain shyness on such +subjects which was mutual between the sisters, until it should be +introduced by some decisive event. Celia blushed, but said at once-- + +"Pray do not make that mistake any longer, Dodo. When Tantripp was +brushing my hair the other day, she said that Sir James's man knew from +Mrs. Cadwallader's maid that Sir James was to marry the eldest Miss +Brooke." + +"How can you let Tantripp talk such gossip to you, Celia?" said +Dorothea, indignantly, not the less angry because details asleep in her +memory were now awakened to confirm the unwelcome revelation. "You +must have asked her questions. It is degrading." + +"I see no harm at all in Tantripp's talking to me. It is better to +hear what people say. You see what mistakes you make by taking up +notions. I am quite sure that Sir James means to make you an offer; +and he believes that you will accept him, especially since you have +been so pleased with him about the plans. And uncle too--I know he +expects it. Every one can see that Sir James is very much in love with +you." + +The revulsion was so strong and painful in Dorothea's mind that the +tears welled up and flowed abundantly. All her dear plans were +embittered, and she thought with disgust of Sir James's conceiving that +she recognized him as her lover. There was vexation too on account of +Celia. + +"How could he expect it?" she burst forth in her most impetuous manner. +"I have never agreed with him about anything but the cottages: I was +barely polite to him before." + +"But you have been so pleased with him since then; he has begun to feel +quite sure that you are fond of him." + +"Fond of him, Celia! How can you choose such odious expressions?" said +Dorothea, passionately. + +"Dear me, Dorothea, I suppose it would be right for you to be fond of a +man whom you accepted for a husband." + +"It is offensive to me to say that Sir James could think I was fond of +him. Besides, it is not the right word for the feeling I must have +towards the man I would accept as a husband." + +"Well, I am sorry for Sir James. I thought it right to tell you, +because you went on as you always do, never looking just where you are, +and treading in the wrong place. You always see what nobody else sees; +it is impossible to satisfy you; yet you never see what is quite plain. +That's your way, Dodo." Something certainly gave Celia unusual courage; +and she was not sparing the sister of whom she was occasionally in awe. +Who can tell what just criticisms Murr the Cat may be passing on us +beings of wider speculation? + +"It is very painful," said Dorothea, feeling scourged. "I can have no +more to do with the cottages. I must be uncivil to him. I must tell +him I will have nothing to do with them. It is very painful." Her eyes +filled again with tears. + +"Wait a little. Think about it. You know he is going away for a day +or two to see his sister. There will be nobody besides Lovegood." +Celia could not help relenting. "Poor Dodo," she went on, in an +amiable staccato. "It is very hard: it is your favorite _fad_ to draw +plans." + +"_Fad_ to draw plans! Do you think I only care about my +fellow-creatures' houses in that childish way? I may well make +mistakes. How can one ever do anything nobly Christian, living among +people with such petty thoughts?" + +No more was said; Dorothea was too much jarred to recover her temper +and behave so as to show that she admitted any error in herself. She +was disposed rather to accuse the intolerable narrowness and the +purblind conscience of the society around her: and Celia was no longer +the eternal cherub, but a thorn in her spirit, a pink-and-white +nullifidian, worse than any discouraging presence in the "Pilgrim's +Progress." The _fad_ of drawing plans! What was life worth--what great +faith was possible when the whole effect of one's actions could be +withered up into such parched rubbish as that? When she got out of the +carriage, her cheeks were pale and her eyelids red. She was an image +of sorrow, and her uncle who met her in the hall would have been +alarmed, if Celia had not been close to her looking so pretty and +composed, that he at once concluded Dorothea's tears to have their +origin in her excessive religiousness. He had returned, during their +absence, from a journey to the county town, about a petition for the +pardon of some criminal. + +"Well, my dears," he said, kindly, as they went up to kiss him, "I hope +nothing disagreeable has happened while I have been away." + +"No, uncle," said Celia, "we have been to Freshitt to look at the +cottages. We thought you would have been at home to lunch." + +"I came by Lowick to lunch--you didn't know I came by Lowick. And I +have brought a couple of pamphlets for you, Dorothea--in the library, +you know; they lie on the table in the library." + +It seemed as if an electric stream went through Dorothea, thrilling her +from despair into expectation. They were pamphlets about the early +Church. The oppression of Celia, Tantripp, and Sir James was shaken +off, and she walked straight to the library. Celia went up-stairs. Mr. +Brooke was detained by a message, but when he re-entered the library, +he found Dorothea seated and already deep in one of the pamphlets which +had some marginal manuscript of Mr. Casaubon's,--taking it in as +eagerly as she might have taken in the scent of a fresh bouquet after a +dry, hot, dreary walk. + +She was getting away from Tipton and Freshitt, and her own sad +liability to tread in the wrong places on her way to the New Jerusalem. + +Mr. Brooke sat down in his arm-chair, stretched his legs towards the +wood-fire, which had fallen into a wondrous mass of glowing dice +between the dogs, and rubbed his hands gently, looking very mildly +towards Dorothea, but with a neutral leisurely air, as if he had +nothing particular to say. Dorothea closed her pamphlet, as soon as +she was aware of her uncle's presence, and rose as if to go. Usually +she would have been interested about her uncle's merciful errand on +behalf of the criminal, but her late agitation had made her +absent-minded. + +"I came back by Lowick, you know," said Mr. Brooke, not as if with any +intention to arrest her departure, but apparently from his usual +tendency to say what he had said before. This fundamental principle of +human speech was markedly exhibited in Mr. Brooke. "I lunched there +and saw Casaubon's library, and that kind of thing. There's a sharp +air, driving. Won't you sit down, my dear? You look cold." + +Dorothea felt quite inclined to accept the invitation. Some times, +when her uncle's easy way of taking things did not happen to be +exasperating, it was rather soothing. She threw off her mantle and +bonnet, and sat down opposite to him, enjoying the glow, but lifting up +her beautiful hands for a screen. They were not thin hands, or small +hands; but powerful, feminine, maternal hands. She seemed to be +holding them up in propitiation for her passionate desire to know and +to think, which in the unfriendly mediums of Tipton and Freshitt had +issued in crying and red eyelids. + +She bethought herself now of the condemned criminal. "What news have +you brought about the sheep-stealer, uncle?" + +"What, poor Bunch?--well, it seems we can't get him off--he is to be +hanged." + +Dorothea's brow took an expression of reprobation and pity. + +"Hanged, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with a quiet nod. "Poor Romilly! +he would have helped us. I knew Romilly. Casaubon didn't know +Romilly. He is a little buried in books, you know, Casaubon is." + +"When a man has great studies and is writing a great work, he must of +course give up seeing much of the world. How can he go about making +acquaintances?" + +"That's true. But a man mopes, you know. I have always been a +bachelor too, but I have that sort of disposition that I never moped; +it was my way to go about everywhere and take in everything. I never +moped: but I can see that Casaubon does, you know. He wants a +companion--a companion, you know." + +"It would be a great honor to any one to be his companion," said +Dorothea, energetically. + +"You like him, eh?" said Mr. Brooke, without showing any surprise, or +other emotion. "Well, now, I've known Casaubon ten years, ever since +he came to Lowick. But I never got anything out of him--any ideas, you +know. However, he is a tiptop man and may be a bishop--that kind of +thing, you know, if Peel stays in. And he has a very high opinion of +you, my dear." + +Dorothea could not speak. + +"The fact is, he has a very high opinion indeed of you. And he speaks +uncommonly well--does Casaubon. He has deferred to me, you not being +of age. In short, I have promised to speak to you, though I told him I +thought there was not much chance. I was bound to tell him that. I +said, my niece is very young, and that kind of thing. But I didn't +think it necessary to go into everything. However, the long and the +short of it is, that he has asked my permission to make you an offer of +marriage--of marriage, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with his explanatory +nod. "I thought it better to tell you, my dear." + +No one could have detected any anxiety in Mr. Brooke's manner, but he +did really wish to know something of his niece's mind, that, if there +were any need for advice, he might give it in time. What feeling he, +as a magistrate who had taken in so many ideas, could make room for, +was unmixedly kind. Since Dorothea did not speak immediately, he +repeated, "I thought it better to tell you, my dear." + +"Thank you, uncle," said Dorothea, in a clear unwavering tone. "I am +very grateful to Mr. Casaubon. If he makes me an offer, I shall accept +him. I admire and honor him more than any man I ever saw." + +Mr. Brooke paused a little, and then said in a lingering low tone, "Ah? +. . . Well! He is a good match in some respects. But now, Chettam is +a good match. And our land lies together. I shall never interfere +against your wishes, my dear. People should have their own way in +marriage, and that sort of thing--up to a certain point, you know. I +have always said that, up to a certain point. I wish you to marry +well; and I have good reason to believe that Chettam wishes to marry +you. I mention it, you know." + +"It is impossible that I should ever marry Sir James Chettam," said +Dorothea. "If he thinks of marrying me, he has made a great mistake." + +"That is it, you see. One never knows. I should have thought Chettam +was just the sort of man a woman would like, now." + +"Pray do not mention him in that light again, uncle," said Dorothea, +feeling some of her late irritation revive. + +Mr. Brooke wondered, and felt that women were an inexhaustible subject +of study, since even he at his age was not in a perfect state of +scientific prediction about them. Here was a fellow like Chettam with +no chance at all. + +"Well, but Casaubon, now. There is no hurry--I mean for you. It's +true, every year will tell upon him. He is over five-and-forty, you +know. I should say a good seven-and-twenty years older than you. To +be sure,--if you like learning and standing, and that sort of thing, we +can't have everything. And his income is good--he has a handsome +property independent of the Church--his income is good. Still he is +not young, and I must not conceal from you, my dear, that I think his +health is not over-strong. I know nothing else against him." + +"I should not wish to have a husband very near my own age," said +Dorothea, with grave decision. "I should wish to have a husband who +was above me in judgment and in all knowledge." + +Mr. Brooke repeated his subdued, "Ah?--I thought you had more of your +own opinion than most girls. I thought you liked your own +opinion--liked it, you know." + +"I cannot imagine myself living without some opinions, but I should +wish to have good reasons for them, and a wise man could help me to see +which opinions had the best foundation, and would help me to live +according to them." + +"Very true. You couldn't put the thing better--couldn't put it better, +beforehand, you know. But there are oddities in things," continued Mr. +Brooke, whose conscience was really roused to do the best he could for +his niece on this occasion. "Life isn't cast in a mould--not cut out +by rule and line, and that sort of thing. I never married myself, and +it will be the better for you and yours. The fact is, I never loved +any one well enough to put myself into a noose for them. It _is_ a +noose, you know. Temper, now. There is temper. And a husband likes +to be master." + +"I know that I must expect trials, uncle. Marriage is a state of +higher duties. I never thought of it as mere personal ease," said poor +Dorothea. + +"Well, you are not fond of show, a great establishment, balls, dinners, +that kind of thing. I can see that Casaubon's ways might suit you +better than Chettam's. And you shall do as you like, my dear. I would +not hinder Casaubon; I said so at once; for there is no knowing how +anything may turn out. You have not the same tastes as every young +lady; and a clergyman and scholar--who may be a bishop--that kind of +thing--may suit you better than Chettam. Chettam is a good fellow, a +good sound-hearted fellow, you know; but he doesn't go much into ideas. +I did, when I was his age. But Casaubon's eyes, now. I think he has +hurt them a little with too much reading." + +"I should be all the happier, uncle, the more room there was for me to +help him," said Dorothea, ardently. + +"You have quite made up your mind, I see. Well, my dear, the fact is, +I have a letter for you in my pocket." Mr. Brooke handed the letter to +Dorothea, but as she rose to go away, he added, "There is not too much +hurry, my dear. Think about it, you know." + +When Dorothea had left him, he reflected that he had certainly spoken +strongly: he had put the risks of marriage before her in a striking +manner. It was his duty to do so. But as to pretending to be wise for +young people,--no uncle, however much he had travelled in his youth, +absorbed the new ideas, and dined with celebrities now deceased, could +pretend to judge what sort of marriage would turn out well for a young +girl who preferred Casaubon to Chettam. In short, woman was a problem +which, since Mr. Brooke's mind felt blank before it, could be hardly +less complicated than the revolutions of an irregular solid. + + + +CHAPTER V. + + "Hard students are commonly troubled with gowts, catarrhs, + rheums, cachexia, bradypepsia, bad eyes, stone, and collick, + crudities, oppilations, vertigo, winds, consumptions, and + all such diseases as come by over-much sitting: they are + most part lean, dry, ill-colored . . . and all through + immoderate pains and extraordinary studies. If you will not + believe the truth of this, look upon great Tostatus and + Thomas Aquainas' works; and tell me whether those men took + pains."--BURTON'S Anatomy of Melancholy, P. I, s. 2. + + +This was Mr. Casaubon's letter. + + +MY DEAR MISS BROOKE,--I have your guardian's permission to address you +on a subject than which I have none more at heart. I am not, I trust, +mistaken in the recognition of some deeper correspondence than that of +date in the fact that a consciousness of need in my own life had arisen +contemporaneously with the possibility of my becoming acquainted with +you. For in the first hour of meeting you, I had an impression of your +eminent and perhaps exclusive fitness to supply that need (connected, I +may say, with such activity of the affections as even the +preoccupations of a work too special to be abdicated could not +uninterruptedly dissimulate); and each succeeding opportunity for +observation has given the impression an added depth by convincing me +more emphatically of that fitness which I had preconceived, and thus +evoking more decisively those affections to which I have but now +referred. Our conversations have, I think, made sufficiently clear to +you the tenor of my life and purposes: a tenor unsuited, I am aware, to +the commoner order of minds. But I have discerned in you an elevation +of thought and a capability of devotedness, which I had hitherto not +conceived to be compatible either with the early bloom of youth or with +those graces of sex that may be said at once to win and to confer +distinction when combined, as they notably are in you, with the mental +qualities above indicated. It was, I confess, beyond my hope to meet +with this rare combination of elements both solid and attractive, +adapted to supply aid in graver labors and to cast a charm over vacant +hours; and but for the event of my introduction to you (which, let me +again say, I trust not to be superficially coincident with +foreshadowing needs, but providentially related thereto as stages +towards the completion of a life's plan), I should presumably have gone +on to the last without any attempt to lighten my solitariness by a +matrimonial union. + +Such, my dear Miss Brooke, is the accurate statement of my feelings; +and I rely on your kind indulgence in venturing now to ask you how far +your own are of a nature to confirm my happy presentiment. To be +accepted by you as your husband and the earthly guardian of your +welfare, I should regard as the highest of providential gifts. In +return I can at least offer you an affection hitherto unwasted, and the +faithful consecration of a life which, however short in the sequel, has +no backward pages whereon, if you choose to turn them, you will find +records such as might justly cause you either bitterness or shame. I +await the expression of your sentiments with an anxiety which it would +be the part of wisdom (were it possible) to divert by a more arduous +labor than usual. But in this order of experience I am still young, +and in looking forward to an unfavorable possibility I cannot but feel +that resignation to solitude will be more difficult after the temporary +illumination of hope. + + In any case, I shall remain, + Yours with sincere devotion, + EDWARD CASAUBON. + + +Dorothea trembled while she read this letter; then she fell on her +knees, buried her face, and sobbed. She could not pray: under the rush +of solemn emotion in which thoughts became vague and images floated +uncertainly, she could but cast herself, with a childlike sense of +reclining, in the lap of a divine consciousness which sustained her +own. She remained in that attitude till it was time to dress for +dinner. + +How could it occur to her to examine the letter, to look at it +critically as a profession of love? Her whole soul was possessed by +the fact that a fuller life was opening before her: she was a neophyte +about to enter on a higher grade of initiation. She was going to have +room for the energies which stirred uneasily under the dimness and +pressure of her own ignorance and the petty peremptoriness of the +world's habits. + +Now she would be able to devote herself to large yet definite duties; +now she would be allowed to live continually in the light of a mind +that she could reverence. This hope was not unmixed with the glow of +proud delight--the joyous maiden surprise that she was chosen by the +man whom her admiration had chosen. All Dorothea's passion was +transfused through a mind struggling towards an ideal life; the +radiance of her transfigured girlhood fell on the first object that +came within its level. The impetus with which inclination became +resolution was heightened by those little events of the day which had +roused her discontent with the actual conditions of her life. + +After dinner, when Celia was playing an "air, with variations," a small +kind of tinkling which symbolized the aesthetic part of the young +ladies' education, Dorothea went up to her room to answer Mr. +Casaubon's letter. Why should she defer the answer? She wrote it over +three times, not because she wished to change the wording, but because +her hand was unusually uncertain, and she could not bear that Mr. +Casaubon should think her handwriting bad and illegible. She piqued +herself on writing a hand in which each letter was distinguishable +without any large range of conjecture, and she meant to make much use +of this accomplishment, to save Mr. Casaubon's eyes. Three times she +wrote. + +MY DEAR MR. CASAUBON,--I am very grateful to you for loving me, and +thinking me worthy to be your wife. I can look forward to no better +happiness than that which would be one with yours. If I said more, it +would only be the same thing written out at greater length, for I +cannot now dwell on any other thought than that I may be through life + + Yours devotedly, + DOROTHEA BROOKE. + + +Later in the evening she followed her uncle into the library to give +him the letter, that he might send it in the morning. He was +surprised, but his surprise only issued in a few moments' silence, +during which he pushed about various objects on his writing-table, and +finally stood with his back to the fire, his glasses on his nose, +looking at the address of Dorothea's letter. + +"Have you thought enough about this, my dear?" he said at last. + +"There was no need to think long, uncle. I know of nothing to make me +vacillate. If I changed my mind, it must be because of something +important and entirely new to me." + +"Ah!--then you have accepted him? Then Chettam has no chance? Has +Chettam offended you--offended you, you know? What is it you don't +like in Chettam?" + +"There is nothing that I like in him," said Dorothea, rather +impetuously. + +Mr. Brooke threw his head and shoulders backward as if some one had +thrown a light missile at him. Dorothea immediately felt some +self-rebuke, and said-- + +"I mean in the light of a husband. He is very kind, I think--really +very good about the cottages. A well-meaning man." + +"But you must have a scholar, and that sort of thing? Well, it lies a +little in our family. I had it myself--that love of knowledge, and +going into everything--a little too much--it took me too far; though +that sort of thing doesn't often run in the female-line; or it runs +underground like the rivers in Greece, you know--it comes out in the +sons. Clever sons, clever mothers. I went a good deal into that, at +one time. However, my dear, I have always said that people should do +as they like in these things, up to a certain point. I couldn't, as +your guardian, have consented to a bad match. But Casaubon stands +well: his position is good. I am afraid Chettam will be hurt, though, +and Mrs. Cadwallader will blame me." + +That evening, of course, Celia knew nothing of what had happened. She +attributed Dorothea's abstracted manner, and the evidence of further +crying since they had got home, to the temper she had been in about Sir +James Chettam and the buildings, and was careful not to give further +offence: having once said what she wanted to say, Celia had no +disposition to recur to disagreeable subjects. It had been her nature +when a child never to quarrel with any one--only to observe with wonder +that they quarrelled with her, and looked like turkey-cocks; whereupon +she was ready to play at cat's cradle with them whenever they recovered +themselves. And as to Dorothea, it had always been her way to find +something wrong in her sister's words, though Celia inwardly protested +that she always said just how things were, and nothing else: she never +did and never could put words together out of her own head. But the +best of Dodo was, that she did not keep angry for long together. Now, +though they had hardly spoken to each other all the evening, yet when +Celia put by her work, intending to go to bed, a proceeding in which +she was always much the earlier, Dorothea, who was seated on a low +stool, unable to occupy herself except in meditation, said, with the +musical intonation which in moments of deep but quiet feeling made her +speech like a fine bit of recitative-- + +"Celia, dear, come and kiss me," holding her arms open as she spoke. + +Celia knelt down to get the right level and gave her little butterfly +kiss, while Dorothea encircled her with gentle arms and pressed her +lips gravely on each cheek in turn. + +"Don't sit up, Dodo, you are so pale to-night: go to bed soon," said +Celia, in a comfortable way, without any touch of pathos. + +"No, dear, I am very, very happy," said Dorothea, fervently. + +"So much the better," thought Celia. "But how strangely Dodo goes from +one extreme to the other." + +The next day, at luncheon, the butler, handing something to Mr. Brooke, +said, "Jonas is come back, sir, and has brought this letter." + +Mr. Brooke read the letter, and then, nodding toward Dorothea, said, +"Casaubon, my dear: he will be here to dinner; he didn't wait to write +more--didn't wait, you know." + +It could not seem remarkable to Celia that a dinner guest should be +announced to her sister beforehand, but, her eyes following the same +direction as her uncle's, she was struck with the peculiar effect of +the announcement on Dorothea. It seemed as if something like the +reflection of a white sunlit wing had passed across her features, +ending in one of her rare blushes. For the first time it entered into +Celia's mind that there might be something more between Mr. Casaubon +and her sister than his delight in bookish talk and her delight in +listening. Hitherto she had classed the admiration for this "ugly" and +learned acquaintance with the admiration for Monsieur Liret at +Lausanne, also ugly and learned. Dorothea had never been tired of +listening to old Monsieur Liret when Celia's feet were as cold as +possible, and when it had really become dreadful to see the skin of his +bald head moving about. Why then should her enthusiasm not extend to +Mr. Casaubon simply in the same way as to Monsieur Liret? And it +seemed probable that all learned men had a sort of schoolmaster's view +of young people. + +But now Celia was really startled at the suspicion which had darted +into her mind. She was seldom taken by surprise in this way, her +marvellous quickness in observing a certain order of signs generally +preparing her to expect such outward events as she had an interest in. +Not that she now imagined Mr. Casaubon to be already an accepted lover: +she had only begun to feel disgust at the possibility that anything in +Dorothea's mind could tend towards such an issue. Here was something +really to vex her about Dodo: it was all very well not to accept Sir +James Chettam, but the idea of marrying Mr. Casaubon! Celia felt a +sort of shame mingled with a sense of the ludicrous. But perhaps Dodo, +if she were really bordering on such an extravagance, might be turned +away from it: experience had often shown that her impressibility might +be calculated on. The day was damp, and they were not going to walk +out, so they both went up to their sitting-room; and there Celia +observed that Dorothea, instead of settling down with her usual +diligent interest to some occupation, simply leaned her elbow on an +open book and looked out of the window at the great cedar silvered with +the damp. She herself had taken up the making of a toy for the +curate's children, and was not going to enter on any subject too +precipitately. + +Dorothea was in fact thinking that it was desirable for Celia to know +of the momentous change in Mr. Casaubon's position since he had last +been in the house: it did not seem fair to leave her in ignorance of +what would necessarily affect her attitude towards him; but it was +impossible not to shrink from telling her. Dorothea accused herself of +some meanness in this timidity: it was always odious to her to have any +small fears or contrivances about her actions, but at this moment she +was seeking the highest aid possible that she might not dread the +corrosiveness of Celia's pretty carnally minded prose. Her reverie was +broken, and the difficulty of decision banished, by Celia's small and +rather guttural voice speaking in its usual tone, of a remark aside or +a "by the bye." + +"Is any one else coming to dine besides Mr. Casaubon?" + +"Not that I know of." + +"I hope there is some one else. Then I shall not hear him eat his soup +so." + +"What is there remarkable about his soup-eating?" + +"Really, Dodo, can't you hear how he scrapes his spoon? And he always +blinks before he speaks. I don't know whether Locke blinked, but I'm +sure I am sorry for those who sat opposite to him if he did." + +"Celia," said Dorothea, with emphatic gravity, "pray don't make any +more observations of that kind." + +"Why not? They are quite true," returned Celia, who had her reasons +for persevering, though she was beginning to be a little afraid. + +"Many things are true which only the commonest minds observe." + +"Then I think the commonest minds must be rather useful. I think it is +a pity Mr. Casaubon's mother had not a commoner mind: she might have +taught him better." Celia was inwardly frightened, and ready to run +away, now she had hurled this light javelin. + +Dorothea's feelings had gathered to an avalanche, and there could be no +further preparation. + +"It is right to tell you, Celia, that I am engaged to marry Mr. +Casaubon." + +Perhaps Celia had never turned so pale before. The paper man she was +making would have had his leg injured, but for her habitual care of +whatever she held in her hands. She laid the fragile figure down at +once, and sat perfectly still for a few moments. When she spoke there +was a tear gathering. + +"Oh, Dodo, I hope you will be happy." Her sisterly tenderness could not +but surmount other feelings at this moment, and her fears were the +fears of affection. + +Dorothea was still hurt and agitated. + +"It is quite decided, then?" said Celia, in an awed under tone. "And +uncle knows?" + +"I have accepted Mr. Casaubon's offer. My uncle brought me the letter +that contained it; he knew about it beforehand." + +"I beg your pardon, if I have said anything to hurt you, Dodo," said +Celia, with a slight sob. She never could have thought that she should +feel as she did. There was something funereal in the whole affair, and +Mr. Casaubon seemed to be the officiating clergyman, about whom it +would be indecent to make remarks. + +"Never mind, Kitty, do not grieve. We should never admire the same +people. I often offend in something of the same way; I am apt to speak +too strongly of those who don't please me." + +In spite of this magnanimity Dorothea was still smarting: perhaps as +much from Celia's subdued astonishment as from her small criticisms. +Of course all the world round Tipton would be out of sympathy with this +marriage. Dorothea knew of no one who thought as she did about life +and its best objects. + +Nevertheless before the evening was at an end she was very happy. In +an hour's tete-a-tete with Mr. Casaubon she talked to him with more +freedom than she had ever felt before, even pouring out her joy at the +thought of devoting herself to him, and of learning how she might best +share and further all his great ends. Mr. Casaubon was touched with an +unknown delight (what man would not have been?) at this childlike +unrestrained ardor: he was not surprised (what lover would have been?) +that he should be the object of it. + +"My dear young lady--Miss Brooke--Dorothea!" he said, pressing her hand +between his hands, "this is a happiness greater than I had ever +imagined to be in reserve for me. That I should ever meet with a mind +and person so rich in the mingled graces which could render marriage +desirable, was far indeed from my conception. You have all--nay, more +than all--those qualities which I have ever regarded as the +characteristic excellences of womanhood. The great charm of your sex +is its capability of an ardent self-sacrificing affection, and herein +we see its fitness to round and complete the existence of our own. +Hitherto I have known few pleasures save of the severer kind: my +satisfactions have been those of the solitary student. I have been +little disposed to gather flowers that would wither in my hand, but now +I shall pluck them with eagerness, to place them in your bosom." + +No speech could have been more thoroughly honest in its intention: the +frigid rhetoric at the end was as sincere as the bark of a dog, or the +cawing of an amorous rook. Would it not be rash to conclude that there +was no passion behind those sonnets to Delia which strike us as the +thin music of a mandolin? + +Dorothea's faith supplied all that Mr. Casaubon's words seemed to leave +unsaid: what believer sees a disturbing omission or infelicity? The +text, whether of prophet or of poet, expands for whatever we can put +into it, and even his bad grammar is sublime. + +"I am very ignorant--you will quite wonder at my ignorance," said +Dorothea. "I have so many thoughts that may be quite mistaken; and now +I shall be able to tell them all to you, and ask you about them. But," +she added, with rapid imagination of Mr. Casaubon's probable feeling, +"I will not trouble you too much; only when you are inclined to listen +to me. You must often be weary with the pursuit of subjects in your +own track. I shall gain enough if you will take me with you there." + +"How should I be able now to persevere in any path without your +companionship?" said Mr. Casaubon, kissing her candid brow, and feeling +that heaven had vouchsafed him a blessing in every way suited to his +peculiar wants. He was being unconsciously wrought upon by the charms +of a nature which was entirely without hidden calculations either for +immediate effects or for remoter ends. It was this which made Dorothea +so childlike, and, according to some judges, so stupid, with all her +reputed cleverness; as, for example, in the present case of throwing +herself, metaphorically speaking, at Mr. Casaubon's feet, and kissing +his unfashionable shoe-ties as if he were a Protestant Pope. She was +not in the least teaching Mr. Casaubon to ask if he were good enough +for her, but merely asking herself anxiously how she could be good +enough for Mr. Casaubon. Before he left the next day it had been +decided that the marriage should take place within six weeks. Why not? +Mr. Casaubon's house was ready. It was not a parsonage, but a +considerable mansion, with much land attached to it. The parsonage was +inhabited by the curate, who did all the duty except preaching the +morning sermon. + + + +CHAPTER VI. + + My lady's tongue is like the meadow blades, + That cut you stroking them with idle hand. + Nice cutting is her function: she divides + With spiritual edge the millet-seed, + And makes intangible savings. + + +As Mr. Casaubon's carriage was passing out of the gateway, it arrested +the entrance of a pony phaeton driven by a lady with a servant seated +behind. It was doubtful whether the recognition had been mutual, for +Mr. Casaubon was looking absently before him; but the lady was +quick-eyed, and threw a nod and a "How do you do?" in the nick of time. +In spite of her shabby bonnet and very old Indian shawl, it was plain +that the lodge-keeper regarded her as an important personage, from the +low curtsy which was dropped on the entrance of the small phaeton. + +"Well, Mrs. Fitchett, how are your fowls laying now?" said the +high-colored, dark-eyed lady, with the clearest chiselled utterance. + +"Pretty well for laying, madam, but they've ta'en to eating their eggs: +I've no peace o' mind with 'em at all." + +"Oh, the cannibals! Better sell them cheap at once. What will you +sell them a couple? One can't eat fowls of a bad character at a high +price." + +"Well, madam, half-a-crown: I couldn't let 'em go, not under." + +"Half-a-crown, these times! Come now--for the Rector's chicken-broth +on a Sunday. He has consumed all ours that I can spare. You are half +paid with the sermon, Mrs. Fitchett, remember that. Take a pair of +tumbler-pigeons for them--little beauties. You must come and see them. +You have no tumblers among your pigeons." + +"Well, madam, Master Fitchett shall go and see 'em after work. He's +very hot on new sorts; to oblige you." + +"Oblige me! It will be the best bargain he ever made. A pair of +church pigeons for a couple of wicked Spanish fowls that eat their own +eggs! Don't you and Fitchett boast too much, that is all!" + +The phaeton was driven onwards with the last words, leaving Mrs. +Fitchett laughing and shaking her head slowly, with an interjectional +"Sure_ly_, sure_ly_!"--from which it might be inferred that she would +have found the country-side somewhat duller if the Rector's lady had +been less free-spoken and less of a skinflint. Indeed, both the +farmers and laborers in the parishes of Freshitt and Tipton would have +felt a sad lack of conversation but for the stories about what Mrs. +Cadwallader said and did: a lady of immeasurably high birth, descended, +as it were, from unknown earls, dim as the crowd of heroic shades--who +pleaded poverty, pared down prices, and cut jokes in the most +companionable manner, though with a turn of tongue that let you know +who she was. Such a lady gave a neighborliness to both rank and +religion, and mitigated the bitterness of uncommuted tithe. A much +more exemplary character with an infusion of sour dignity would not +have furthered their comprehension of the Thirty-nine Articles, and +would have been less socially uniting. + +Mr. Brooke, seeing Mrs. Cadwallader's merits from a different point of +view, winced a little when her name was announced in the library, where +he was sitting alone. + +"I see you have had our Lowick Cicero here," she said, seating herself +comfortably, throwing back her wraps, and showing a thin but well-built +figure. "I suspect you and he are brewing some bad polities, else you +would not be seeing so much of the lively man. I shall inform against +you: remember you are both suspicious characters since you took Peel's +side about the Catholic Bill. I shall tell everybody that you are +going to put up for Middlemarch on the Whig side when old Pinkerton +resigns, and that Casaubon is going to help you in an underhand manner: +going to bribe the voters with pamphlets, and throw open the +public-houses to distribute them. Come, confess!" + +"Nothing of the sort," said Mr. Brooke, smiling and rubbing his +eye-glasses, but really blushing a little at the impeachment. +"Casaubon and I don't talk politics much. He doesn't care much about +the philanthropic side of things; punishments, and that kind of thing. +He only cares about Church questions. That is not my line of action, +you know." + +"Ra-a-ther too much, my friend. I have heard of your doings. Who was +it that sold his bit of land to the Papists at Middlemarch? I believe +you bought it on purpose. You are a perfect Guy Faux. See if you are +not burnt in effigy this 5th of November coming. Humphrey would not +come to quarrel with you about it, so I am come." + +"Very good. I was prepared to be persecuted for not persecuting--not +persecuting, you know." + +"There you go! That is a piece of clap-trap you have got ready for the +hustings. Now, _do not_ let them lure you to the hustings, my dear Mr. +Brooke. A man always makes a fool of himself, speechifying: there's no +excuse but being on the right side, so that you can ask a blessing on +your humming and hawing. You will lose yourself, I forewarn you. You +will make a Saturday pie of all parties' opinions, and be pelted by +everybody." + +"That is what I expect, you know," said Mr. Brooke, not wishing to +betray how little he enjoyed this prophetic sketch--"what I expect as +an independent man. As to the Whigs, a man who goes with the thinkers +is not likely to be hooked on by any party. He may go with them up to +a certain point--up to a certain point, you know. But that is what you +ladies never understand." + +"Where your certain point is? No. I should like to be told how a man +can have any certain point when he belongs to no party--leading a +roving life, and never letting his friends know his address. 'Nobody +knows where Brooke will be--there's no counting on Brooke'--that is +what people say of you, to be quite frank. Now, do turn respectable. +How will you like going to Sessions with everybody looking shy on you, +and you with a bad conscience and an empty pocket?" + +"I don't pretend to argue with a lady on politics," said Mr. Brooke, +with an air of smiling indifference, but feeling rather unpleasantly +conscious that this attack of Mrs. Cadwallader's had opened the +defensive campaign to which certain rash steps had exposed him. "Your +sex are not thinkers, you know--varium et mutabile semper--that kind of +thing. You don't know Virgil. I knew"--Mr. Brooke reflected in time +that he had not had the personal acquaintance of the Augustan poet--"I +was going to say, poor Stoddart, you know. That was what _he_ said. +You ladies are always against an independent attitude--a man's caring +for nothing but truth, and that sort of thing. And there is no part of +the county where opinion is narrower than it is here--I don't mean to +throw stones, you know, but somebody is wanted to take the independent +line; and if I don't take it, who will?" + +"Who? Why, any upstart who has got neither blood nor position. People +of standing should consume their independent nonsense at home, not hawk +it about. And you! who are going to marry your niece, as good as your +daughter, to one of our best men. Sir James would be cruelly annoyed: +it will be too hard on him if you turn round now and make yourself a +Whig sign-board." + +Mr. Brooke again winced inwardly, for Dorothea's engagement had no +sooner been decided, than he had thought of Mrs. Cadwallader's +prospective taunts. It might have been easy for ignorant observers to +say, "Quarrel with Mrs. Cadwallader;" but where is a country gentleman +to go who quarrels with his oldest neighbors? Who could taste the fine +flavor in the name of Brooke if it were delivered casually, like wine +without a seal? Certainly a man can only be cosmopolitan up to a +certain point. + +"I hope Chettam and I shall always be good friends; but I am sorry to +say there is no prospect of his marrying my niece," said Mr. Brooke, +much relieved to see through the window that Celia was coming in. + +"Why not?" said Mrs. Cadwallader, with a sharp note of surprise. "It +is hardly a fortnight since you and I were talking about it." + +"My niece has chosen another suitor--has chosen him, you know. I have +had nothing to do with it. I should have preferred Chettam; and I +should have said Chettam was the man any girl would have chosen. But +there is no accounting for these things. Your sex is capricious, you +know." + +"Why, whom do you mean to say that you are going to let her marry?" +Mrs. Cadwallader's mind was rapidly surveying the possibilities of +choice for Dorothea. + +But here Celia entered, blooming from a walk in the garden, and the +greeting with her delivered Mr. Brooke from the necessity of answering +immediately. He got up hastily, and saying, "By the way, I must speak +to Wright about the horses," shuffled quickly out of the room. + +"My dear child, what is this?--this about your sister's engagement?" +said Mrs. Cadwallader. + +"She is engaged to marry Mr. Casaubon," said Celia, resorting, as +usual, to the simplest statement of fact, and enjoying this opportunity +of speaking to the Rector's wife alone. + +"This is frightful. How long has it been going on?" + +"I only knew of it yesterday. They are to be married in six weeks." + +"Well, my dear, I wish you joy of your brother-in-law." + +"I am so sorry for Dorothea." + +"Sorry! It is her doing, I suppose." + +"Yes; she says Mr. Casaubon has a great soul." + +"With all my heart." + +"Oh, Mrs. Cadwallader, I don't think it can be nice to marry a man with +a great soul." + +"Well, my dear, take warning. You know the look of one now; when the +next comes and wants to marry you, don't you accept him." + +"I'm sure I never should." + +"No; one such in a family is enough. So your sister never cared about +Sir James Chettam? What would you have said to _him_ for a +brother-in-law?" + +"I should have liked that very much. I am sure he would have been a +good husband. Only," Celia added, with a slight blush (she sometimes +seemed to blush as she breathed), "I don't think he would have suited +Dorothea." + +"Not high-flown enough?" + +"Dodo is very strict. She thinks so much about everything, and is so +particular about what one says. Sir James never seemed to please her." + +"She must have encouraged him, I am sure. That is not very creditable." + +"Please don't be angry with Dodo; she does not see things. She thought +so much about the cottages, and she was rude to Sir James sometimes; +but he is so kind, he never noticed it." + +"Well," said Mrs. Cadwallader, putting on her shawl, and rising, as if +in haste, "I must go straight to Sir James and break this to him. He +will have brought his mother back by this time, and I must call. Your +uncle will never tell him. We are all disappointed, my dear. Young +people should think of their families in marrying. I set a bad +example--married a poor clergyman, and made myself a pitiable object +among the De Bracys--obliged to get my coals by stratagem, and pray to +heaven for my salad oil. However, Casaubon has money enough; I must do +him that justice. As to his blood, I suppose the family quarterings +are three cuttle-fish sable, and a commentator rampant. By the bye, +before I go, my dear, I must speak to your Mrs. Carter about pastry. I +want to send my young cook to learn of her. Poor people with four +children, like us, you know, can't afford to keep a good cook. I have +no doubt Mrs. Carter will oblige me. Sir James's cook is a perfect +dragon." + +In less than an hour, Mrs. Cadwallader had circumvented Mrs. Carter and +driven to Freshitt Hall, which was not far from her own parsonage, her +husband being resident in Freshitt and keeping a curate in Tipton. + +Sir James Chettam had returned from the short journey which had kept +him absent for a couple of days, and had changed his dress, intending +to ride over to Tipton Grange. His horse was standing at the door when +Mrs. Cadwallader drove up, and he immediately appeared there himself, +whip in hand. Lady Chettam had not yet returned, but Mrs. +Cadwallader's errand could not be despatched in the presence of grooms, +so she asked to be taken into the conservatory close by, to look at the +new plants; and on coming to a contemplative stand, she said-- + +"I have a great shock for you; I hope you are not so far gone in love +as you pretended to be." + +It was of no use protesting, against Mrs. Cadwallader's way of putting +things. But Sir James's countenance changed a little. He felt a vague +alarm. + +"I do believe Brooke is going to expose himself after all. I accused +him of meaning to stand for Middlemarch on the Liberal side, and he +looked silly and never denied it--talked about the independent line, +and the usual nonsense." + +"Is that all?" said Sir James, much relieved. + +"Why," rejoined Mrs. Cadwallader, with a sharper note, "you don't mean +to say that you would like him to turn public man in that way--making a +sort of political Cheap Jack of himself?" + +"He might be dissuaded, I should think. He would not like the expense." + +"That is what I told him. He is vulnerable to reason there--always a +few grains of common-sense in an ounce of miserliness. Miserliness is +a capital quality to run in families; it's the safe side for madness to +dip on. And there must be a little crack in the Brooke family, else we +should not see what we are to see." + +"What? Brooke standing for Middlemarch?" + +"Worse than that. I really feel a little responsible. I always told +you Miss Brooke would be such a fine match. I knew there was a great +deal of nonsense in her--a flighty sort of Methodistical stuff. But +these things wear out of girls. However, I am taken by surprise for +once." + +"What do you mean, Mrs. Cadwallader?" said Sir James. His fear lest +Miss Brooke should have run away to join the Moravian Brethren, or some +preposterous sect unknown to good society, was a little allayed by the +knowledge that Mrs. Cadwallader always made the worst of things. "What +has happened to Miss Brooke? Pray speak out." + +"Very well. She is engaged to be married." Mrs. Cadwallader paused a +few moments, observing the deeply hurt expression in her friend's face, +which he was trying to conceal by a nervous smile, while he whipped his +boot; but she soon added, "Engaged to Casaubon." + +Sir James let his whip fall and stooped to pick it up. Perhaps his +face had never before gathered so much concentrated disgust as when he +turned to Mrs. Cadwallader and repeated, "Casaubon?" + +"Even so. You know my errand now." + +"Good God! It is horrible! He is no better than a mummy!" (The point +of view has to be allowed for, as that of a blooming and disappointed +rival.) + +"She says, he is a great soul.--A great bladder for dried peas to +rattle in!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. + +"What business has an old bachelor like that to marry?" said Sir James. +"He has one foot in the grave." + +"He means to draw it out again, I suppose." + +"Brooke ought not to allow it: he should insist on its being put off +till she is of age. She would think better of it then. What is a +guardian for?" + +"As if you could ever squeeze a resolution out of Brooke!" + +"Cadwallader might talk to him." + +"Not he! Humphrey finds everybody charming. I never can get him to +abuse Casaubon. He will even speak well of the bishop, though I tell +him it is unnatural in a beneficed clergyman; what can one do with a +husband who attends so little to the decencies? I hide it as well as I +can by abusing everybody myself. Come, come, cheer up! you are well +rid of Miss Brooke, a girl who would have been requiring you to see the +stars by daylight. Between ourselves, little Celia is worth two of +her, and likely after all to be the better match. For this marriage to +Casaubon is as good as going to a nunnery." + +"Oh, on my own account--it is for Miss Brooke's sake I think her +friends should try to use their influence." + +"Well, Humphrey doesn't know yet. But when I tell him, you may depend +on it he will say, 'Why not? Casaubon is a good fellow--and +young--young enough.' These charitable people never know vinegar from +wine till they have swallowed it and got the colic. However, if I were +a man I should prefer Celia, especially when Dorothea was gone. The +truth is, you have been courting one and have won the other. I can see +that she admires you almost as much as a man expects to be admired. If +it were any one but me who said so, you might think it exaggeration. +Good-by!" + +Sir James handed Mrs. Cadwallader to the phaeton, and then jumped on +his horse. He was not going to renounce his ride because of his +friend's unpleasant news--only to ride the faster in some other +direction than that of Tipton Grange. + +Now, why on earth should Mrs. Cadwallader have been at all busy about +Miss Brooke's marriage; and why, when one match that she liked to think +she had a hand in was frustrated, should she have straightway contrived +the preliminaries of another? Was there any ingenious plot, any +hide-and-seek course of action, which might be detected by a careful +telescopic watch? Not at all: a telescope might have swept the +parishes of Tipton and Freshitt, the whole area visited by Mrs. +Cadwallader in her phaeton, without witnessing any interview that could +excite suspicion, or any scene from which she did not return with the +same unperturbed keenness of eye and the same high natural color. In +fact, if that convenient vehicle had existed in the days of the Seven +Sages, one of them would doubtless have remarked, that you can know +little of women by following them about in their pony-phaetons. Even +with a microscope directed on a water-drop we find ourselves making +interpretations which turn out to be rather coarse; for whereas under a +weak lens you may seem to see a creature exhibiting an active voracity +into which other smaller creatures actively play as if they were so +many animated tax-pennies, a stronger lens reveals to you certain +tiniest hairlets which make vortices for these victims while the +swallower waits passively at his receipt of custom. In this way, +metaphorically speaking, a strong lens applied to Mrs. Cadwallader's +match-making will show a play of minute causes producing what may be +called thought and speech vortices to bring her the sort of food she +needed. Her life was rurally simple, quite free from secrets either +foul, dangerous, or otherwise important, and not consciously affected +by the great affairs of the world. All the more did the affairs of the +great world interest her, when communicated in the letters of high-born +relations: the way in which fascinating younger sons had gone to the +dogs by marrying their mistresses; the fine old-blooded idiocy of young +Lord Tapir, and the furious gouty humors of old Lord Megatherium; the +exact crossing of genealogies which had brought a coronet into a new +branch and widened the relations of scandal,--these were topics of +which she retained details with the utmost accuracy, and reproduced +them in an excellent pickle of epigrams, which she herself enjoyed the +more because she believed as unquestionably in birth and no-birth as +she did in game and vermin. She would never have disowned any one on +the ground of poverty: a De Bracy reduced to take his dinner in a basin +would have seemed to her an example of pathos worth exaggerating, and I +fear his aristocratic vices would not have horrified her. But her +feeling towards the vulgar rich was a sort of religious hatred: they +had probably made all their money out of high retail prices, and Mrs. +Cadwallader detested high prices for everything that was not paid in +kind at the Rectory: such people were no part of God's design in making +the world; and their accent was an affliction to the ears. A town +where such monsters abounded was hardly more than a sort of low comedy, +which could not be taken account of in a well-bred scheme of the +universe. Let any lady who is inclined to be hard on Mrs. Cadwallader +inquire into the comprehensiveness of her own beautiful views, and be +quite sure that they afford accommodation for all the lives which have +the honor to coexist with hers. + +With such a mind, active as phosphorus, biting everything that came +near into the form that suited it, how could Mrs. Cadwallader feel that +the Miss Brookes and their matrimonial prospects were alien to her? +especially as it had been the habit of years for her to scold Mr. +Brooke with the friendliest frankness, and let him know in confidence +that she thought him a poor creature. From the first arrival of the +young ladies in Tipton she had prearranged Dorothea's marriage with Sir +James, and if it had taken place would have been quite sure that it was +her doing: that it should not take place after she had preconceived it, +caused her an irritation which every thinker will sympathize with. She +was the diplomatist of Tipton and Freshitt, and for anything to happen +in spite of her was an offensive irregularity. As to freaks like this +of Miss Brooke's, Mrs. Cadwallader had no patience with them, and now +saw that her opinion of this girl had been infected with some of her +husband's weak charitableness: those Methodistical whims, that air of +being more religious than the rector and curate together, came from a +deeper and more constitutional disease than she had been willing to +believe. + +"However," said Mrs. Cadwallader, first to herself and afterwards to +her husband, "I throw her over: there was a chance, if she had married +Sir James, of her becoming a sane, sensible woman. He would never have +contradicted her, and when a woman is not contradicted, she has no +motive for obstinacy in her absurdities. But now I wish her joy of her +hair shirt." + +It followed that Mrs. Cadwallader must decide on another match for Sir +James, and having made up her mind that it was to be the younger Miss +Brooke, there could not have been a more skilful move towards the +success of her plan than her hint to the baronet that he had made an +impression on Celia's heart. For he was not one of those gentlemen who +languish after the unattainable Sappho's apple that laughs from the +topmost bough--the charms which + + "Smile like the knot of cowslips on the cliff, + Not to be come at by the willing hand." + +He had no sonnets to write, and it could not strike him agreeably that +he was not an object of preference to the woman whom he had preferred. +Already the knowledge that Dorothea had chosen Mr. Casaubon had bruised +his attachment and relaxed its hold. Although Sir James was a +sportsman, he had some other feelings towards women than towards grouse +and foxes, and did not regard his future wife in the light of prey, +valuable chiefly for the excitements of the chase. Neither was he so +well acquainted with the habits of primitive races as to feel that an +ideal combat for her, tomahawk in hand, so to speak, was necessary to +the historical continuity of the marriage-tie. On the contrary, having +the amiable vanity which knits us to those who are fond of us, and +disinclines us to those who are indifferent, and also a good grateful +nature, the mere idea that a woman had a kindness towards him spun +little threads of tenderness from out his heart towards hers. + +Thus it happened, that after Sir James had ridden rather fast for half +an hour in a direction away from Tipton Grange, he slackened his pace, +and at last turned into a road which would lead him back by a shorter +cut. Various feelings wrought in him the determination after all to go +to the Grange to-day as if nothing new had happened. He could not help +rejoicing that he had never made the offer and been rejected; mere +friendly politeness required that he should call to see Dorothea about +the cottages, and now happily Mrs. Cadwallader had prepared him to +offer his congratulations, if necessary, without showing too much +awkwardness. He really did not like it: giving up Dorothea was very +painful to him; but there was something in the resolve to make this +visit forthwith and conquer all show of feeling, which was a sort of +file-biting and counter-irritant. And without his distinctly +recognizing the impulse, there certainly was present in him the sense +that Celia would be there, and that he should pay her more attention +than he had done before. + +We mortals, men and women, devour many a disappointment between +breakfast and dinner-time; keep back the tears and look a little pale +about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say, "Oh, nothing!" Pride +helps us; and pride is not a bad thing when it only urges us to hide +our own hurts--not to hurt others. + + + +CHAPTER VII. + + "Piacer e popone + Vuol la sua stagione." + --Italian Proverb. + + +Mr. Casaubon, as might be expected, spent a great deal of his time at +the Grange in these weeks, and the hindrance which courtship occasioned +to the progress of his great work--the Key to all +Mythologies--naturally made him look forward the more eagerly to the +happy termination of courtship. But he had deliberately incurred the +hindrance, having made up his mind that it was now time for him to +adorn his life with the graces of female companionship, to irradiate +the gloom which fatigue was apt to hang over the intervals of studious +labor with the play of female fancy, and to secure in this, his +culminating age, the solace of female tendance for his declining years. +Hence he determined to abandon himself to the stream of feeling, and +perhaps was surprised to find what an exceedingly shallow rill it was. +As in droughty regions baptism by immersion could only be performed +symbolically, Mr. Casaubon found that sprinkling was the utmost +approach to a plunge which his stream would afford him; and he +concluded that the poets had much exaggerated the force of masculine +passion. Nevertheless, he observed with pleasure that Miss Brooke +showed an ardent submissive affection which promised to fulfil his most +agreeable previsions of marriage. It had once or twice crossed his +mind that possibly there was some deficiency in Dorothea to account for +the moderation of his abandonment; but he was unable to discern the +deficiency, or to figure to himself a woman who would have pleased him +better; so that there was clearly no reason to fall back upon but the +exaggerations of human tradition. + +"Could I not be preparing myself now to be more useful?" said Dorothea +to him, one morning, early in the time of courtship; "could I not learn +to read Latin and Greek aloud to you, as Milton's daughters did to +their father, without understanding what they read?" + +"I fear that would be wearisome to you," said Mr. Casaubon, smiling; +"and, indeed, if I remember rightly, the young women you have mentioned +regarded that exercise in unknown tongues as a ground for rebellion +against the poet." + +"Yes; but in the first place they were very naughty girls, else they +would have been proud to minister to such a father; and in the second +place they might have studied privately and taught themselves to +understand what they read, and then it would have been interesting. I +hope you don't expect me to be naughty and stupid?" + +"I expect you to be all that an exquisite young lady can be in every +possible relation of life. Certainly it might be a great advantage if +you were able to copy the Greek character, and to that end it were well +to begin with a little reading." + +Dorothea seized this as a precious permission. She would not have +asked Mr. Casaubon at once to teach her the languages, dreading of all +things to be tiresome instead of helpful; but it was not entirely out +of devotion to her future husband that she wished to know Latin and +Greek. Those provinces of masculine knowledge seemed to her a +standing-ground from which all truth could be seen more truly. As it +was, she constantly doubted her own conclusions, because she felt her +own ignorance: how could she be confident that one-roomed cottages were +not for the glory of God, when men who knew the classics appeared to +conciliate indifference to the cottages with zeal for the glory? +Perhaps even Hebrew might be necessary--at least the alphabet and a few +roots--in order to arrive at the core of things, and judge soundly on +the social duties of the Christian. And she had not reached that point +of renunciation at which she would have been satisfied with having a +wise husband: she wished, poor child, to be wise herself. Miss Brooke +was certainly very naive with all her alleged cleverness. Celia, whose +mind had never been thought too powerful, saw the emptiness of other +people's pretensions much more readily. To have in general but little +feeling, seems to be the only security against feeling too much on any +particular occasion. + +However, Mr. Casaubon consented to listen and teach for an hour +together, like a schoolmaster of little boys, or rather like a lover, +to whom a mistress's elementary ignorance and difficulties have a +touching fitness. Few scholars would have disliked teaching the +alphabet under such circumstances. But Dorothea herself was a little +shocked and discouraged at her own stupidity, and the answers she got +to some timid questions about the value of the Greek accents gave her a +painful suspicion that here indeed there might be secrets not capable +of explanation to a woman's reason. + +Mr. Brooke had no doubt on that point, and expressed himself with his +usual strength upon it one day that he came into the library while the +reading was going forward. + +"Well, but now, Casaubon, such deep studies, classics, mathematics, +that kind of thing, are too taxing for a woman--too taxing, you know." + +"Dorothea is learning to read the characters simply," said Mr. +Casaubon, evading the question. "She had the very considerate thought +of saving my eyes." + +"Ah, well, without understanding, you know--that may not be so bad. +But there is a lightness about the feminine mind--a touch and +go--music, the fine arts, that kind of thing--they should study those +up to a certain point, women should; but in a light way, you know. A +woman should be able to sit down and play you or sing you a good old +English tune. That is what I like; though I have heard most +things--been at the opera in Vienna: Gluck, Mozart, everything of that +sort. But I'm a conservative in music--it's not like ideas, you know. +I stick to the good old tunes." + +"Mr. Casaubon is not fond of the piano, and I am very glad he is not," +said Dorothea, whose slight regard for domestic music and feminine fine +art must be forgiven her, considering the small tinkling and smearing +in which they chiefly consisted at that dark period. She smiled and +looked up at her betrothed with grateful eyes. If he had always been +asking her to play the "Last Rose of Summer," she would have required +much resignation. "He says there is only an old harpsichord at Lowick, +and it is covered with books." + +"Ah, there you are behind Celia, my dear. Celia, now, plays very +prettily, and is always ready to play. However, since Casaubon does +not like it, you are all right. But it's a pity you should not have +little recreations of that sort, Casaubon: the bow always strung--that +kind of thing, you know--will not do." + +"I never could look on it in the light of a recreation to have my ears +teased with measured noises," said Mr. Casaubon. "A tune much iterated +has the ridiculous effect of making the words in my mind perform a sort +of minuet to keep time--an effect hardly tolerable, I imagine, after +boyhood. As to the grander forms of music, worthy to accompany solemn +celebrations, and even to serve as an educating influence according to +the ancient conception, I say nothing, for with these we are not +immediately concerned." + +"No; but music of that sort I should enjoy," said Dorothea. "When we +were coming home from Lausanne my uncle took us to hear the great organ +at Freiberg, and it made me sob." + +"That kind of thing is not healthy, my dear," said Mr. Brooke. +"Casaubon, she will be in your hands now: you must teach my niece to +take things more quietly, eh, Dorothea?" + +He ended with a smile, not wishing to hurt his niece, but really +thinking that it was perhaps better for her to be early married to so +sober a fellow as Casaubon, since she would not hear of Chettam. + +"It is wonderful, though," he said to himself as he shuffled out of the +room--"it is wonderful that she should have liked him. However, the +match is good. I should have been travelling out of my brief to have +hindered it, let Mrs. Cadwallader say what she will. He is pretty +certain to be a bishop, is Casaubon. That was a very seasonable +pamphlet of his on the Catholic Question:--a deanery at least. They +owe him a deanery." + +And here I must vindicate a claim to philosophical reflectiveness, by +remarking that Mr. Brooke on this occasion little thought of the +Radical speech which, at a later period, he was led to make on the +incomes of the bishops. What elegant historian would neglect a +striking opportunity for pointing out that his heroes did not foresee +the history of the world, or even their own actions?--For example, that +Henry of Navarre, when a Protestant baby, little thought of being a +Catholic monarch; or that Alfred the Great, when he measured his +laborious nights with burning candles, had no idea of future gentlemen +measuring their idle days with watches. Here is a mine of truth, +which, however vigorously it may be worked, is likely to outlast our +coal. + +But of Mr. Brooke I make a further remark perhaps less warranted by +precedent--namely, that if he had foreknown his speech, it might not +have made any great difference. To think with pleasure of his niece's +husband having a large ecclesiastical income was one thing--to make a +Liberal speech was another thing; and it is a narrow mind which cannot +look at a subject from various points of view. + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + + "Oh, rescue her! I am her brother now, + And you her father. Every gentle maid + Should have a guardian in each gentleman." + + +It was wonderful to Sir James Chettam how well he continued to like +going to the Grange after he had once encountered the difficulty of +seeing Dorothea for the first time in the light of a woman who was +engaged to another man. Of course the forked lightning seemed to pass +through him when he first approached her, and he remained conscious +throughout the interview of hiding uneasiness; but, good as he was, it +must be owned that his uneasiness was less than it would have been if +he had thought his rival a brilliant and desirable match. He had no +sense of being eclipsed by Mr. Casaubon; he was only shocked that +Dorothea was under a melancholy illusion, and his mortification lost +some of its bitterness by being mingled with compassion. + +Nevertheless, while Sir James said to himself that he had completely +resigned her, since with the perversity of a Desdemona she had not +affected a proposed match that was clearly suitable and according to +nature; he could not yet be quite passive under the idea of her +engagement to Mr. Casaubon. On the day when he first saw them together +in the light of his present knowledge, it seemed to him that he had not +taken the affair seriously enough. Brooke was really culpable; he +ought to have hindered it. Who could speak to him? Something might be +done perhaps even now, at least to defer the marriage. On his way home +he turned into the Rectory and asked for Mr. Cadwallader. Happily, the +Rector was at home, and his visitor was shown into the study, where all +the fishing tackle hung. But he himself was in a little room +adjoining, at work with his turning apparatus, and he called to the +baronet to join him there. The two were better friends than any other +landholder and clergyman in the county--a significant fact which was in +agreement with the amiable expression of their faces. + +Mr. Cadwallader was a large man, with full lips and a sweet smile; very +plain and rough in his exterior, but with that solid imperturbable ease +and good-humor which is infectious, and like great grassy hills in the +sunshine, quiets even an irritated egoism, and makes it rather ashamed +of itself. "Well, how are you?" he said, showing a hand not quite fit +to be grasped. "Sorry I missed you before. Is there anything +particular? You look vexed." + +Sir James's brow had a little crease in it, a little depression of the +eyebrow, which he seemed purposely to exaggerate as he answered. + +"It is only this conduct of Brooke's. I really think somebody should +speak to him." + +"What? meaning to stand?" said Mr. Cadwallader, going on with the +arrangement of the reels which he had just been turning. "I hardly +think he means it. But where's the harm, if he likes it? Any one who +objects to Whiggery should be glad when the Whigs don't put up the +strongest fellow. They won't overturn the Constitution with our friend +Brooke's head for a battering ram." + +"Oh, I don't mean that," said Sir James, who, after putting down his +hat and throwing himself into a chair, had begun to nurse his leg and +examine the sole of his boot with much bitterness. "I mean this +marriage. I mean his letting that blooming young girl marry Casaubon." + +"What is the matter with Casaubon? I see no harm in him--if the girl +likes him." + +"She is too young to know what she likes. Her guardian ought to +interfere. He ought not to allow the thing to be done in this headlong +manner. I wonder a man like you, Cadwallader--a man with daughters, +can look at the affair with indifference: and with such a heart as +yours! Do think seriously about it." + +"I am not joking; I am as serious as possible," said the Rector, with a +provoking little inward laugh. "You are as bad as Elinor. She has +been wanting me to go and lecture Brooke; and I have reminded her that +her friends had a very poor opinion of the match she made when she +married me." + +"But look at Casaubon," said Sir James, indignantly. "He must be +fifty, and I don't believe he could ever have been much more than the +shadow of a man. Look at his legs!" + +"Confound you handsome young fellows! you think of having it all your +own way in the world. You don't under stand women. They don't admire +you half so much as you admire yourselves. Elinor used to tell her +sisters that she married me for my ugliness--it was so various and +amusing that it had quite conquered her prudence." + +"You! it was easy enough for a woman to love you. But this is no +question of beauty. I don't _like_ Casaubon." This was Sir James's +strongest way of implying that he thought ill of a man's character. + +"Why? what do you know against him?" said the Rector laying down his +reels, and putting his thumbs into his armholes with an air of +attention. + +Sir James paused. He did not usually find it easy to give his reasons: +it seemed to him strange that people should not know them without being +told, since he only felt what was reasonable. At last he said-- + +"Now, Cadwallader, has he got any heart?" + +"Well, yes. I don't mean of the melting sort, but a sound kernel, +_that_ you may be sure of. He is very good to his poor relations: +pensions several of the women, and is educating a young fellow at a +good deal of expense. Casaubon acts up to his sense of justice. His +mother's sister made a bad match--a Pole, I think--lost herself--at any +rate was disowned by her family. If it had not been for that, Casaubon +would not have had so much money by half. I believe he went himself to +find out his cousins, and see what he could do for them. Every man +would not ring so well as that, if you tried his metal. _You_ would, +Chettam; but not every man." + +"I don't know," said Sir James, coloring. "I am not so sure of +myself." He paused a moment, and then added, "That was a right thing +for Casaubon to do. But a man may wish to do what is right, and yet be +a sort of parchment code. A woman may not be happy with him. And I +think when a girl is so young as Miss Brooke is, her friends ought to +interfere a little to hinder her from doing anything foolish. You +laugh, because you fancy I have some feeling on my own account. But +upon my honor, it is not that. I should feel just the same if I were +Miss Brooke's brother or uncle." + +"Well, but what should you do?" + +"I should say that the marriage must not be decided on until she was of +age. And depend upon it, in that case, it would never come off. I +wish you saw it as I do--I wish you would talk to Brooke about it." + +Sir James rose as he was finishing his sentence, for he saw Mrs. +Cadwallader entering from the study. She held by the hand her youngest +girl, about five years old, who immediately ran to papa, and was made +comfortable on his knee. + +"I hear what you are talking about," said the wife. "But you will make +no impression on Humphrey. As long as the fish rise to his bait, +everybody is what he ought to be. Bless you, Casaubon has got a +trout-stream, and does not care about fishing in it himself: could +there be a better fellow?" + +"Well, there is something in that," said the Rector, with his quiet, +inward laugh. "It is a very good quality in a man to have a +trout-stream." + +"But seriously," said Sir James, whose vexation had not yet spent +itself, "don't you think the Rector might do some good by speaking?" + +"Oh, I told you beforehand what he would say," answered Mrs. +Cadwallader, lifting up her eyebrows. "I have done what I could: I +wash my hands of the marriage." + +"In the first place," said the Rector, looking rather grave, "it would +be nonsensical to expect that I could convince Brooke, and make him act +accordingly. Brooke is a very good fellow, but pulpy; he will run into +any mould, but he won't keep shape." + +"He might keep shape long enough to defer the marriage," said Sir James. + +"But, my dear Chettam, why should I use my influence to Casaubon's +disadvantage, unless I were much surer than I am that I should be +acting for the advantage of Miss Brooke? I know no harm of Casaubon. +I don't care about his Xisuthrus and Fee-fo-fum and the rest; but then +he doesn't care about my fishing-tackle. As to the line he took on the +Catholic Question, that was unexpected; but he has always been civil to +me, and I don't see why I should spoil his sport. For anything I can +tell, Miss Brooke may be happier with him than she would be with any +other man." + +"Humphrey! I have no patience with you. You know you would rather +dine under the hedge than with Casaubon alone. You have nothing to say +to each other." + +"What has that to do with Miss Brooke's marrying him? She does not do +it for my amusement." + +"He has got no good red blood in his body," said Sir James. + +"No. Somebody put a drop under a magnifying-glass and it was all +semicolons and parentheses," said Mrs. Cadwallader. + +"Why does he not bring out his book, instead of marrying," said Sir +James, with a disgust which he held warranted by the sound feeling of +an English layman. + +"Oh, he dreams footnotes, and they run away with all his brains. They +say, when he was a little boy, he made an abstract of 'Hop o' my +Thumb,' and he has been making abstracts ever since. Ugh! And that is +the man Humphrey goes on saying that a woman may be happy with." + +"Well, he is what Miss Brooke likes," said the Rector. "I don't +profess to understand every young lady's taste." + +"But if she were your own daughter?" said Sir James. + +"That would be a different affair. She is _not_ my daughter, and I +don't feel called upon to interfere. Casaubon is as good as most of +us. He is a scholarly clergyman, and creditable to the cloth. Some +Radical fellow speechifying at Middlemarch said Casaubon was the +learned straw-chopping incumbent, and Freke was the brick-and-mortar +incumbent, and I was the angling incumbent. And upon my word, I don't +see that one is worse or better than the other." The Rector ended with +his silent laugh. He always saw the joke of any satire against +himself. His conscience was large and easy, like the rest of him: it +did only what it could do without any trouble. + +Clearly, there would be no interference with Miss Brooke's marriage +through Mr. Cadwallader; and Sir James felt with some sadness that she +was to have perfect liberty of misjudgment. It was a sign of his good +disposition that he did not slacken at all in his intention of carrying +out Dorothea's design of the cottages. Doubtless this persistence was +the best course for his own dignity: but pride only helps us to be +generous; it never makes us so, any more than vanity makes us witty. +She was now enough aware of Sir James's position with regard to her, to +appreciate the rectitude of his perseverance in a landlord's duty, to +which he had at first been urged by a lover's complaisance, and her +pleasure in it was great enough to count for something even in her +present happiness. Perhaps she gave to Sir James Chettam's cottages +all the interest she could spare from Mr. Casaubon, or rather from the +symphony of hopeful dreams, admiring trust, and passionate self +devotion which that learned gentleman had set playing in her soul. +Hence it happened that in the good baronet's succeeding visits, while +he was beginning to pay small attentions to Celia, he found himself +talking with more and more pleasure to Dorothea. She was perfectly +unconstrained and without irritation towards him now, and he was +gradually discovering the delight there is in frank kindness and +companionship between a man and a woman who have no passion to hide or +confess. + + + +CHAPTER IX. + + 1st Gent. An ancient land in ancient oracles + Is called "law-thirsty": all the struggle there + Was after order and a perfect rule. + Pray, where lie such lands now? . . . + 2d Gent. Why, where they lay of old--in human souls. + + +Mr. Casaubon's behavior about settlements was highly satisfactory to +Mr. Brooke, and the preliminaries of marriage rolled smoothly along, +shortening the weeks of courtship. The betrothed bride must see her +future home, and dictate any changes that she would like to have made +there. A woman dictates before marriage in order that she may have an +appetite for submission afterwards. And certainly, the mistakes that +we male and female mortals make when we have our own way might fairly +raise some wonder that we are so fond of it. + +On a gray but dry November morning Dorothea drove to Lowick in company +with her uncle and Celia. Mr. Casaubon's home was the manor-house. +Close by, visible from some parts of the garden, was the little church, +with the old parsonage opposite. In the beginning of his career, Mr. +Casaubon had only held the living, but the death of his brother had put +him in possession of the manor also. It had a small park, with a fine +old oak here and there, and an avenue of limes towards the southwest +front, with a sunk fence between park and pleasure-ground, so that from +the drawing-room windows the glance swept uninterruptedly along a slope +of greensward till the limes ended in a level of corn and pastures, +which often seemed to melt into a lake under the setting sun. This was +the happy side of the house, for the south and east looked rather +melancholy even under the brightest morning. The grounds here were +more confined, the flower-beds showed no very careful tendance, and +large clumps of trees, chiefly of sombre yews, had risen high, not ten +yards from the windows. The building, of greenish stone, was in the +old English style, not ugly, but small-windowed and melancholy-looking: +the sort of house that must have children, many flowers, open windows, +and little vistas of bright things, to make it seem a joyous home. In +this latter end of autumn, with a sparse remnant of yellow leaves +falling slowly athwart the dark evergreens in a stillness without +sunshine, the house too had an air of autumnal decline, and Mr. +Casaubon, when he presented himself, had no bloom that could be thrown +into relief by that background. + +"Oh dear!" Celia said to herself, "I am sure Freshitt Hall would have +been pleasanter than this." She thought of the white freestone, the +pillared portico, and the terrace full of flowers, Sir James smiling +above them like a prince issuing from his enchantment in a rose-bush, +with a handkerchief swiftly metamorphosed from the most delicately +odorous petals--Sir James, who talked so agreeably, always about things +which had common-sense in them, and not about learning! Celia had +those light young feminine tastes which grave and weatherworn gentlemen +sometimes prefer in a wife; but happily Mr. Casaubon's bias had been +different, for he would have had no chance with Celia. + +Dorothea, on the contrary, found the house and grounds all that she +could wish: the dark book-shelves in the long library, the carpets and +curtains with colors subdued by time, the curious old maps and +bird's-eye views on the walls of the corridor, with here and there an +old vase below, had no oppression for her, and seemed more cheerful +than the easts and pictures at the Grange, which her uncle had long ago +brought home from his travels--they being probably among the ideas he +had taken in at one time. To poor Dorothea these severe classical +nudities and smirking Renaissance-Correggiosities were painfully +inexplicable, staring into the midst of her Puritanic conceptions: she +had never been taught how she could bring them into any sort of +relevance with her life. But the owners of Lowick apparently had not +been travellers, and Mr. Casaubon's studies of the past were not +carried on by means of such aids. + +Dorothea walked about the house with delightful emotion. Everything +seemed hallowed to her: this was to be the home of her wifehood, and +she looked up with eyes full of confidence to Mr. Casaubon when he drew +her attention specially to some actual arrangement and asked her if she +would like an alteration. All appeals to her taste she met gratefully, +but saw nothing to alter. His efforts at exact courtesy and formal +tenderness had no defect for her. She filled up all blanks with +unmanifested perfections, interpreting him as she interpreted the works +of Providence, and accounting for seeming discords by her own deafness +to the higher harmonies. And there are many blanks left in the weeks +of courtship which a loving faith fills with happy assurance. + +"Now, my dear Dorothea, I wish you to favor me by pointing out which +room you would like to have as your boudoir," said Mr. Casaubon, +showing that his views of the womanly nature were sufficiently large to +include that requirement. + +"It is very kind of you to think of that," said Dorothea, "but I assure +you I would rather have all those matters decided for me. I shall be +much happier to take everything as it is--just as you have been used to +have it, or as you will yourself choose it to be. I have no motive for +wishing anything else." + +"Oh, Dodo," said Celia, "will you not have the bow-windowed room +up-stairs?" + +Mr. Casaubon led the way thither. The bow-window looked down the +avenue of limes; the furniture was all of a faded blue, and there were +miniatures of ladies and gentlemen with powdered hair hanging in a +group. A piece of tapestry over a door also showed a blue-green world +with a pale stag in it. The chairs and tables were thin-legged and +easy to upset. It was a room where one might fancy the ghost of a +tight-laced lady revisiting the scene of her embroidery. A light +bookcase contained duodecimo volumes of polite literature in calf, +completing the furniture. + +"Yes," said Mr. Brooke, "this would be a pretty room with some new +hangings, sofas, and that sort of thing. A little bare now." + +"No, uncle," said Dorothea, eagerly. "Pray do not speak of altering +anything. There are so many other things in the world that want +altering--I like to take these things as they are. And you like them +as they are, don't you?" she added, looking at Mr. Casaubon. "Perhaps +this was your mother's room when she was young." + +"It was," he said, with his slow bend of the head. + +"This is your mother," said Dorothea, who had turned to examine the +group of miniatures. "It is like the tiny one you brought me; only, I +should think, a better portrait. And this one opposite, who is this?" + +"Her elder sister. They were, like you and your sister, the only two +children of their parents, who hang above them, you see." + +"The sister is pretty," said Celia, implying that she thought less +favorably of Mr. Casaubon's mother. It was a new opening to Celia's +imagination, that he came of a family who had all been young in their +time--the ladies wearing necklaces. + +"It is a peculiar face," said Dorothea, looking closely. "Those deep +gray eyes rather near together--and the delicate irregular nose with a +sort of ripple in it--and all the powdered curls hanging backward. +Altogether it seems to me peculiar rather than pretty. There is not +even a family likeness between her and your mother." + +"No. And they were not alike in their lot." + +"You did not mention her to me," said Dorothea. + +"My aunt made an unfortunate marriage. I never saw her." + +Dorothea wondered a little, but felt that it would be indelicate just +then to ask for any information which Mr. Casaubon did not proffer, and +she turned to the window to admire the view. The sun had lately +pierced the gray, and the avenue of limes cast shadows. + +"Shall we not walk in the garden now?" said Dorothea. + +"And you would like to see the church, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "It +is a droll little church. And the village. It all lies in a +nut-shell. By the way, it will suit you, Dorothea; for the cottages are +like a row of alms-houses--little gardens, gilly-flowers, that sort of +thing." + +"Yes, please," said Dorothea, looking at Mr. Casaubon, "I should like +to see all that." She had got nothing from him more graphic about the +Lowick cottages than that they were "not bad." + +They were soon on a gravel walk which led chiefly between grassy +borders and clumps of trees, this being the nearest way to the church, +Mr. Casaubon said. At the little gate leading into the churchyard +there was a pause while Mr. Casaubon went to the parsonage close by to +fetch a key. Celia, who had been hanging a little in the rear, came up +presently, when she saw that Mr. Casaubon was gone away, and said in +her easy staccato, which always seemed to contradict the suspicion of +any malicious intent-- + +"Do you know, Dorothea, I saw some one quite young coming up one of the +walks." + +"Is that astonishing, Celia?" + +"There may be a young gardener, you know--why not?" said Mr. Brooke. +"I told Casaubon he should change his gardener." + +"No, not a gardener," said Celia; "a gentleman with a sketch-book. He +had light-brown curls. I only saw his back. But he was quite young." + +"The curate's son, perhaps," said Mr. Brooke. "Ah, there is Casaubon +again, and Tucker with him. He is going to introduce Tucker. You +don't know Tucker yet." + +Mr. Tucker was the middle-aged curate, one of the "inferior clergy," +who are usually not wanting in sons. But after the introduction, the +conversation did not lead to any question about his family, and the +startling apparition of youthfulness was forgotten by every one but +Celia. She inwardly declined to believe that the light-brown curls and +slim figure could have any relationship to Mr. Tucker, who was just as +old and musty-looking as she would have expected Mr. Casaubon's curate +to be; doubtless an excellent man who would go to heaven (for Celia +wished not to be unprincipled), but the corners of his mouth were so +unpleasant. Celia thought with some dismalness of the time she should +have to spend as bridesmaid at Lowick, while the curate had probably no +pretty little children whom she could like, irrespective of principle. + +Mr. Tucker was invaluable in their walk; and perhaps Mr. Casaubon had +not been without foresight on this head, the curate being able to +answer all Dorothea's questions about the villagers and the other +parishioners. Everybody, he assured her, was well off in Lowick: not a +cottager in those double cottages at a low rent but kept a pig, and the +strips of garden at the back were well tended. The small boys wore +excellent corduroy, the girls went out as tidy servants, or did a +little straw-plaiting at home: no looms here, no Dissent; and though +the public disposition was rather towards laying by money than towards +spirituality, there was not much vice. The speckled fowls were so +numerous that Mr. Brooke observed, "Your farmers leave some barley for +the women to glean, I see. The poor folks here might have a fowl in +their pot, as the good French king used to wish for all his people. +The French eat a good many fowls--skinny fowls, you know." + +"I think it was a very cheap wish of his," said Dorothea, indignantly. +"Are kings such monsters that a wish like that must be reckoned a royal +virtue?" + +"And if he wished them a skinny fowl," said Celia, "that would not be +nice. But perhaps he wished them to have fat fowls." + +"Yes, but the word has dropped out of the text, or perhaps was +subauditum; that is, present in the king's mind, but not uttered," said +Mr. Casaubon, smiling and bending his head towards Celia, who +immediately dropped backward a little, because she could not bear Mr. +Casaubon to blink at her. + +Dorothea sank into silence on the way back to the house. She felt some +disappointment, of which she was yet ashamed, that there was nothing +for her to do in Lowick; and in the next few minutes her mind had +glanced over the possibility, which she would have preferred, of +finding that her home would be in a parish which had a larger share of +the world's misery, so that she might have had more active duties in +it. Then, recurring to the future actually before her, she made a +picture of more complete devotion to Mr. Casaubon's aims in which she +would await new duties. Many such might reveal themselves to the +higher knowledge gained by her in that companionship. + +Mr. Tucker soon left them, having some clerical work which would not +allow him to lunch at the Hall; and as they were re-entering the garden +through the little gate, Mr. Casaubon said-- + +"You seem a little sad, Dorothea. I trust you are pleased with what +you have seen." + +"I am feeling something which is perhaps foolish and wrong," answered +Dorothea, with her usual openness--"almost wishing that the people +wanted more to be done for them here. I have known so few ways of +making my life good for anything. Of course, my notions of usefulness +must be narrow. I must learn new ways of helping people." + +"Doubtless," said Mr. Casaubon. "Each position has its corresponding +duties. Yours, I trust, as the mistress of Lowick, will not leave any +yearning unfulfilled." + +"Indeed, I believe that," said Dorothea, earnestly. "Do not suppose +that I am sad." + +"That is well. But, if you are not tired, we will take another way to +the house than that by which we came." + +Dorothea was not at all tired, and a little circuit was made towards a +fine yew-tree, the chief hereditary glory of the grounds on this side +of the house. As they approached it, a figure, conspicuous on a dark +background of evergreens, was seated on a bench, sketching the old +tree. Mr. Brooke, who was walking in front with Celia, turned his +head, and said-- + +"Who is that youngster, Casaubon?" + +They had come very near when Mr. Casaubon answered-- + +"That is a young relative of mine, a second cousin: the grandson, in +fact," he added, looking at Dorothea, "of the lady whose portrait you +have been noticing, my aunt Julia." + +The young man had laid down his sketch-book and risen. His bushy +light-brown curls, as well as his youthfulness, identified him at once +with Celia's apparition. + +"Dorothea, let me introduce to you my cousin, Mr. Ladislaw. Will, this +is Miss Brooke." + +The cousin was so close now, that, when he lifted his hat, Dorothea +could see a pair of gray eyes rather near together, a delicate +irregular nose with a little ripple in it, and hair falling backward; +but there was a mouth and chin of a more prominent, threatening aspect +than belonged to the type of the grandmother's miniature. Young +Ladislaw did not feel it necessary to smile, as if he were charmed with +this introduction to his future second cousin and her relatives; but +wore rather a pouting air of discontent. + +"You are an artist, I see," said Mr. Brooke, taking up the sketch-book +and turning it over in his unceremonious fashion. + +"No, I only sketch a little. There is nothing fit to be seen there," +said young Ladislaw, coloring, perhaps with temper rather than modesty. + +"Oh, come, this is a nice bit, now. I did a little in this way myself +at one time, you know. Look here, now; this is what I call a nice +thing, done with what we used to call _brio_." Mr. Brooke held out +towards the two girls a large colored sketch of stony ground and trees, +with a pool. + +"I am no judge of these things," said Dorothea, not coldly, but with an +eager deprecation of the appeal to her. "You know, uncle, I never see +the beauty of those pictures which you say are so much praised. They +are a language I do not understand. I suppose there is some relation +between pictures and nature which I am too ignorant to feel--just as +you see what a Greek sentence stands for which means nothing to me." +Dorothea looked up at Mr. Casaubon, who bowed his head towards her, +while Mr. Brooke said, smiling nonchalantly-- + +"Bless me, now, how different people are! But you had a bad style of +teaching, you know--else this is just the thing for girls--sketching, +fine art and so on. But you took to drawing plans; you don't +understand morbidezza, and that kind of thing. You will come to my +house, I hope, and I will show you what I did in this way," he +continued, turning to young Ladislaw, who had to be recalled from his +preoccupation in observing Dorothea. Ladislaw had made up his mind +that she must be an unpleasant girl, since she was going to marry +Casaubon, and what she said of her stupidity about pictures would have +confirmed that opinion even if he had believed her. As it was, he took +her words for a covert judgment, and was certain that she thought his +sketch detestable. There was too much cleverness in her apology: she +was laughing both at her uncle and himself. But what a voice! It was +like the voice of a soul that had once lived in an Aeolian harp. This +must be one of Nature's inconsistencies. There could be no sort of +passion in a girl who would marry Casaubon. But he turned from her, +and bowed his thanks for Mr. Brooke's invitation. + +"We will turn over my Italian engravings together," continued that +good-natured man. "I have no end of those things, that I have laid by +for years. One gets rusty in this part of the country, you know. Not +you, Casaubon; you stick to your studies; but my best ideas get +undermost--out of use, you know. You clever young men must guard +against indolence. I was too indolent, you know: else I might have +been anywhere at one time." + +"That is a seasonable admonition," said Mr. Casaubon; "but now we will +pass on to the house, lest the young ladies should be tired of +standing." + +When their backs were turned, young Ladislaw sat down to go on with his +sketching, and as he did so his face broke into an expression of +amusement which increased as he went on drawing, till at last he threw +back his head and laughed aloud. Partly it was the reception of his +own artistic production that tickled him; partly the notion of his +grave cousin as the lover of that girl; and partly Mr. Brooke's +definition of the place he might have held but for the impediment of +indolence. Mr. Will Ladislaw's sense of the ludicrous lit up his +features very agreeably: it was the pure enjoyment of comicality, and +had no mixture of sneering and self-exaltation. + +"What is your nephew going to do with himself, Casaubon?" said Mr. +Brooke, as they went on. + +"My cousin, you mean--not my nephew." + +"Yes, yes, cousin. But in the way of a career, you know." + +"The answer to that question is painfully doubtful. On leaving Rugby +he declined to go to an English university, where I would gladly have +placed him, and chose what I must consider the anomalous course of +studying at Heidelberg. And now he wants to go abroad again, without +any special object, save the vague purpose of what he calls culture, +preparation for he knows not what. He declines to choose a profession." + +"He has no means but what you furnish, I suppose." + +"I have always given him and his friends reason to understand that I +would furnish in moderation what was necessary for providing him with a +scholarly education, and launching him respectably. I am-therefore +bound to fulfil the expectation so raised," said Mr. Casaubon, putting +his conduct in the light of mere rectitude: a trait of delicacy which +Dorothea noticed with admiration. + +"He has a thirst for travelling; perhaps he may turn out a Bruce or a +Mungo Park," said Mr. Brooke. "I had a notion of that myself at one +time." + +"No, he has no bent towards exploration, or the enlargement of our +geognosis: that would be a special purpose which I could recognize with +some approbation, though without felicitating him on a career which so +often ends in premature and violent death. But so far is he from +having any desire for a more accurate knowledge of the earth's surface, +that he said he should prefer not to know the sources of the Nile, and +that there should be some unknown regions preserved as hunting grounds +for the poetic imagination." + +"Well, there is something in that, you know," said Mr. Brooke, who had +certainly an impartial mind. + +"It is, I fear, nothing more than a part of his general inaccuracy and +indisposition to thoroughness of all kinds, which would be a bad augury +for him in any profession, civil or sacred, even were he so far +submissive to ordinary rule as to choose one." + +"Perhaps he has conscientious scruples founded on his own unfitness," +said Dorothea, who was interesting herself in finding a favorable +explanation. "Because the law and medicine should be very serious +professions to undertake, should they not? People's lives and fortunes +depend on them." + +"Doubtless; but I fear that my young relative Will Ladislaw is chiefly +determined in his aversion to these callings by a dislike to steady +application, and to that kind of acquirement which is needful +instrumentally, but is not charming or immediately inviting to +self-indulgent taste. I have insisted to him on what Aristotle has +stated with admirable brevity, that for the achievement of any work +regarded as an end there must be a prior exercise of many energies or +acquired facilities of a secondary order, demanding patience. I have +pointed to my own manuscript volumes, which represent the toil of years +preparatory to a work not yet accomplished. But in vain. To careful +reasoning of this kind he replies by calling himself Pegasus, and every +form of prescribed work 'harness.'" + +Celia laughed. She was surprised to find that Mr. Casaubon could say +something quite amusing. + +"Well, you know, he may turn out a Byron, a Chatterton, a +Churchill--that sort of thing--there's no telling," said Mr. Brooke. +"Shall you let him go to Italy, or wherever else he wants to go?" + +"Yes; I have agreed to furnish him with moderate supplies for a year or +so; he asks no more. I shall let him be tried by the test of freedom." + +"That is very kind of you," said Dorothea, looking up at Mr. Casaubon +with delight. "It is noble. After all, people may really have in them +some vocation which is not quite plain to themselves, may they not? +They may seem idle and weak because they are growing. We should be +very patient with each other, I think." + +"I suppose it is being engaged to be married that has made you think +patience good," said Celia, as soon as she and Dorothea were alone +together, taking off their wrappings. + +"You mean that I am very impatient, Celia." + +"Yes; when people don't do and say just what you like." Celia had +become less afraid of "saying things" to Dorothea since this +engagement: cleverness seemed to her more pitiable than ever. + + + +CHAPTER X. + + "He had catched a great cold, had he had no other clothes + to wear than the skin of a bear not yet killed."--FULLER. + + +Young Ladislaw did not pay that visit to which Mr. Brooke had invited +him, and only six days afterwards Mr. Casaubon mentioned that his young +relative had started for the Continent, seeming by this cold vagueness +to waive inquiry. Indeed, Will had declined to fix on any more precise +destination than the entire area of Europe. Genius, he held, is +necessarily intolerant of fetters: on the one hand it must have the +utmost play for its spontaneity; on the other, it may confidently await +those messages from the universe which summon it to its peculiar work, +only placing itself in an attitude of receptivity towards all sublime +chances. The attitudes of receptivity are various, and Will had +sincerely tried many of them. He was not excessively fond of wine, but +he had several times taken too much, simply as an experiment in that +form of ecstasy; he had fasted till he was faint, and then supped on +lobster; he had made himself ill with doses of opium. Nothing greatly +original had resulted from these measures; and the effects of the opium +had convinced him that there was an entire dissimilarity between his +constitution and De Quincey's. The superadded circumstance which would +evolve the genius had not yet come; the universe had not yet beckoned. +Even Caesar's fortune at one time was, but a grand presentiment. We +know what a masquerade all development is, and what effective shapes +may be disguised in helpless embryos.--In fact, the world is full of +hopeful analogies and handsome dubious eggs called possibilities. Will +saw clearly enough the pitiable instances of long incubation producing +no chick, and but for gratitude would have laughed at Casaubon, whose +plodding application, rows of note-books, and small taper of learned +theory exploring the tossed ruins of the world, seemed to enforce a +moral entirely encouraging to Will's generous reliance on the +intentions of the universe with regard to himself. He held that +reliance to be a mark of genius; and certainly it is no mark to the +contrary; genius consisting neither in self-conceit nor in humility, +but in a power to make or do, not anything in general, but something in +particular. Let him start for the Continent, then, without our +pronouncing on his future. Among all forms of mistake, prophecy is the +most gratuitous. + +But at present this caution against a too hasty judgment interests me +more in relation to Mr. Casaubon than to his young cousin. If to +Dorothea Mr. Casaubon had been the mere occasion which had set alight +the fine inflammable material of her youthful illusions, does it follow +that he was fairly represented in the minds of those less impassioned +personages who have hitherto delivered their judgments concerning him? +I protest against any absolute conclusion, any prejudice derived from +Mrs. Cadwallader's contempt for a neighboring clergyman's alleged +greatness of soul, or Sir James Chettam's poor opinion of his rival's +legs,--from Mr. Brooke's failure to elicit a companion's ideas, or from +Celia's criticism of a middle-aged scholar's personal appearance. I am +not sure that the greatest man of his age, if ever that solitary +superlative existed, could escape these unfavorable reflections of +himself in various small mirrors; and even Milton, looking for his +portrait in a spoon, must submit to have the facial angle of a bumpkin. +Moreover, if Mr. Casaubon, speaking for himself, has rather a chilling +rhetoric, it is not therefore certain that there is no good work or +fine feeling in him. Did not an immortal physicist and interpreter of +hieroglyphs write detestable verses? Has the theory of the solar +system been advanced by graceful manners and conversational tact? +Suppose we turn from outside estimates of a man, to wonder, with keener +interest, what is the report of his own consciousness about his doings +or capacity: with what hindrances he is carrying on his daily labors; +what fading of hopes, or what deeper fixity of self-delusion the years +are marking off within him; and with what spirit he wrestles against +universal pressure, which will one day be too heavy for him, and bring +his heart to its final pause. Doubtless his lot is important in his +own eyes; and the chief reason that we think he asks too large a place +in our consideration must be our want of room for him, since we refer +him to the Divine regard with perfect confidence; nay, it is even held +sublime for our neighbor to expect the utmost there, however little he +may have got from us. Mr. Casaubon, too, was the centre of his own +world; if he was liable to think that others were providentially made +for him, and especially to consider them in the light of their fitness +for the author of a "Key to all Mythologies," this trait is not quite +alien to us, and, like the other mendicant hopes of mortals, claims +some of our pity. + +Certainly this affair of his marriage with Miss Brooke touched him more +nearly than it did any one of the persons who have hitherto shown their +disapproval of it, and in the present stage of things I feel more +tenderly towards his experience of success than towards the +disappointment of the amiable Sir James. For in truth, as the day +fixed for his marriage came nearer, Mr. Casaubon did not find his +spirits rising; nor did the contemplation of that matrimonial garden +scene, where, as all experience showed, the path was to be bordered +with flowers, prove persistently more enchanting to him than the +accustomed vaults where he walked taper in hand. He did not confess to +himself, still less could he have breathed to another, his surprise +that though he had won a lovely and noble-hearted girl he had not won +delight,--which he had also regarded as an object to be found by +search. It is true that he knew all the classical passages implying +the contrary; but knowing classical passages, we find, is a mode of +motion, which explains why they leave so little extra force for their +personal application. + +Poor Mr. Casaubon had imagined that his long studious bachelorhood had +stored up for him a compound interest of enjoyment, and that large +drafts on his affections would not fail to be honored; for we all of +us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act +fatally on the strength of them. And now he was in danger of being +saddened by the very conviction that his circumstances were unusually +happy: there was nothing external by which he could account for a +certain blankness of sensibility which came over him just when his +expectant gladness should have been most lively, just when he exchanged +the accustomed dulness of his Lowick library for his visits to the +Grange. Here was a weary experience in which he was as utterly +condemned to loneliness as in the despair which sometimes threatened +him while toiling in the morass of authorship without seeming nearer to +the goal. And his was that worst loneliness which would shrink from +sympathy. He could not but wish that Dorothea should think him not +less happy than the world would expect her successful suitor to be; and +in relation to his authorship he leaned on her young trust and +veneration, he liked to draw forth her fresh interest in listening, as +a means of encouragement to himself: in talking to her he presented all +his performance and intention with the reflected confidence of the +pedagogue, and rid himself for the time of that chilling ideal audience +which crowded his laborious uncreative hours with the vaporous pressure +of Tartarean shades. + +For to Dorothea, after that toy-box history of the world adapted to +young ladies which had made the chief part of her education, Mr. +Casaubon's talk about his great book was full of new vistas; and this +sense of revelation, this surprise of a nearer introduction to Stoics +and Alexandrians, as people who had ideas not totally unlike her own, +kept in abeyance for the time her usual eagerness for a binding theory +which could bring her own life and doctrine into strict connection with +that amazing past, and give the remotest sources of knowledge some +bearing on her actions. That more complete teaching would come--Mr. +Casaubon would tell her all that: she was looking forward to higher +initiation in ideas, as she was looking forward to marriage, and +blending her dim conceptions of both. It would be a great mistake to +suppose that Dorothea would have cared about any share in Mr. +Casaubon's learning as mere accomplishment; for though opinion in the +neighborhood of Freshitt and Tipton had pronounced her clever, that +epithet would not have described her to circles in whose more precise +vocabulary cleverness implies mere aptitude for knowing and doing, +apart from character. All her eagerness for acquirement lay within +that full current of sympathetic motive in which her ideas and impulses +were habitually swept along. She did not want to deck herself with +knowledge--to wear it loose from the nerves and blood that fed her +action; and if she had written a book she must have done it as Saint +Theresa did, under the command of an authority that constrained her +conscience. But something she yearned for by which her life might be +filled with action at once rational and ardent; and since the time was +gone by for guiding visions and spiritual directors, since prayer +heightened yearning but not instruction, what lamp was there but +knowledge? Surely learned men kept the only oil; and who more learned +than Mr. Casaubon? + +Thus in these brief weeks Dorothea's joyous grateful expectation was +unbroken, and however her lover might occasionally be conscious of +flatness, he could never refer it to any slackening of her affectionate +interest. + +The season was mild enough to encourage the project of extending the +wedding journey as far as Rome, and Mr. Casaubon was anxious for this +because he wished to inspect some manuscripts in the Vatican. + +"I still regret that your sister is not to accompany us," he said one +morning, some time after it had been ascertained that Celia objected to +go, and that Dorothea did not wish for her companionship. "You will +have many lonely hours, Dorothea, for I shall be constrained to make +the utmost use of my time during our stay in Rome, and I should feel +more at liberty if you had a companion." + +The words "I should feel more at liberty" grated on Dorothea. For the +first time in speaking to Mr. Casaubon she colored from annoyance. + +"You must have misunderstood me very much," she said, "if you think I +should not enter into the value of your time--if you think that I +should not willingly give up whatever interfered with your using it to +the best purpose." + +"That is very amiable in you, my dear Dorothea," said Mr. Casaubon, not +in the least noticing that she was hurt; "but if you had a lady as your +companion, I could put you both under the care of a cicerone, and we +could thus achieve two purposes in the same space of time." + +"I beg you will not refer to this again," said Dorothea, rather +haughtily. But immediately she feared that she was wrong, and turning +towards him she laid her hand on his, adding in a different tone, "Pray +do not be anxious about me. I shall have so much to think of when I am +alone. And Tantripp will be a sufficient companion, just to take care +of me. I could not bear to have Celia: she would be miserable." + +It was time to dress. There was to be a dinner-party that day, the +last of the parties which were held at the Grange as proper +preliminaries to the wedding, and Dorothea was glad of a reason for +moving away at once on the sound of the bell, as if she needed more +than her usual amount of preparation. She was ashamed of being +irritated from some cause she could not define even to herself; for +though she had no intention to be untruthful, her reply had not touched +the real hurt within her. Mr. Casaubon's words had been quite +reasonable, yet they had brought a vague instantaneous sense of +aloofness on his part. + +"Surely I am in a strangely selfish weak state of mind," she said to +herself. "How can I have a husband who is so much above me without +knowing that he needs me less than I need him?" + +Having convinced herself that Mr. Casaubon was altogether right, she +recovered her equanimity, and was an agreeable image of serene dignity +when she came into the drawing-room in her silver-gray dress--the +simple lines of her dark-brown hair parted over her brow and coiled +massively behind, in keeping with the entire absence from her manner +and expression of all search after mere effect. Sometimes when +Dorothea was in company, there seemed to be as complete an air of +repose about her as if she had been a picture of Santa Barbara looking +out from her tower into the clear air; but these intervals of quietude +made the energy of her speech and emotion the more remarked when some +outward appeal had touched her. + +She was naturally the subject of many observations this evening, for +the dinner-party was large and rather more miscellaneous as to the male +portion than any which had been held at the Grange since Mr. Brooke's +nieces had resided with him, so that the talking was done in duos and +trios more or less inharmonious. There was the newly elected mayor of +Middlemarch, who happened to be a manufacturer; the philanthropic +banker his brother-in-law, who predominated so much in the town that +some called him a Methodist, others a hypocrite, according to the +resources of their vocabulary; and there were various professional men. +In fact, Mrs. Cadwallader said that Brooke was beginning to treat the +Middlemarchers, and that she preferred the farmers at the tithe-dinner, +who drank her health unpretentiously, and were not ashamed of their +grandfathers' furniture. For in that part of the country, before +reform had done its notable part in developing the political +consciousness, there was a clearer distinction of ranks and a dimmer +distinction of parties; so that Mr. Brooke's miscellaneous invitations +seemed to belong to that general laxity which came from his inordinate +travel and habit of taking too much in the form of ideas. + +Already, as Miss Brooke passed out of the dining-room, opportunity was +found for some interjectional "asides." + +"A fine woman, Miss Brooke! an uncommonly fine woman, by God!" said Mr. +Standish, the old lawyer, who had been so long concerned with the +landed gentry that he had become landed himself, and used that oath in +a deep-mouthed manner as a sort of armorial bearings, stamping the +speech of a man who held a good position. + +Mr. Bulstrode, the banker, seemed to be addressed, but that gentleman +disliked coarseness and profanity, and merely bowed. The remark was +taken up by Mr. Chichely, a middle-aged bachelor and coursing +celebrity, who had a complexion something like an Easter egg, a few +hairs carefully arranged, and a carriage implying the consciousness of +a distinguished appearance. + +"Yes, but not my style of woman: I like a woman who lays herself out a +little more to please us. There should be a little filigree about a +woman--something of the coquette. A man likes a sort of challenge. +The more of a dead set she makes at you the better." + +"There's some truth in that," said Mr. Standish, disposed to be genial. +"And, by God, it's usually the way with them. I suppose it answers +some wise ends: Providence made them so, eh, Bulstrode?" + +"I should be disposed to refer coquetry to another source," said Mr. +Bulstrode. "I should rather refer it to the devil." + +"Ay, to be sure, there should be a little devil in a woman," said Mr. +Chichely, whose study of the fair sex seemed to have been detrimental +to his theology. "And I like them blond, with a certain gait, and a +swan neck. Between ourselves, the mayor's daughter is more to my taste +than Miss Brooke or Miss Celia either. If I were a marrying man I +should choose Miss Vincy before either of them." + +"Well, make up, make up," said Mr. Standish, jocosely; "you see the +middle-aged fellows early the day." + +Mr. Chichely shook his head with much meaning: he was not going to +incur the certainty of being accepted by the woman he would choose. + +The Miss Vincy who had the honor of being Mr. Chichely's ideal was of +course not present; for Mr. Brooke, always objecting to go too far, +would not have chosen that his nieces should meet the daughter of a +Middlemarch manufacturer, unless it were on a public occasion. The +feminine part of the company included none whom Lady Chettam or Mrs. +Cadwallader could object to; for Mrs. Renfrew, the colonel's widow, was +not only unexceptionable in point of breeding, but also interesting on +the ground of her complaint, which puzzled the doctors, and seemed +clearly a case wherein the fulness of professional knowledge might need +the supplement of quackery. Lady Chettam, who attributed her own +remarkable health to home-made bitters united with constant medical +attendance, entered with much exercise of the imagination into Mrs. +Renfrew's account of symptoms, and into the amazing futility in her +case of all strengthening medicines. + +"Where can all the strength of those medicines go, my dear?" said the +mild but stately dowager, turning to Mrs. Cadwallader reflectively, +when Mrs. Renfrew's attention was called away. + +"It strengthens the disease," said the Rector's wife, much too +well-born not to be an amateur in medicine. "Everything depends on the +constitution: some people make fat, some blood, and some bile--that's +my view of the matter; and whatever they take is a sort of grist to the +mill." + +"Then she ought to take medicines that would reduce--reduce the +disease, you know, if you are right, my dear. And I think what you say +is reasonable." + +"Certainly it is reasonable. You have two sorts of potatoes, fed on +the same soil. One of them grows more and more watery--" + +"Ah! like this poor Mrs. Renfrew--that is what I think. Dropsy! There +is no swelling yet--it is inward. I should say she ought to take +drying medicines, shouldn't you?--or a dry hot-air bath. Many things +might be tried, of a drying nature." + +"Let her try a certain person's pamphlets," said Mrs. Cadwallader in an +undertone, seeing the gentlemen enter. "He does not want drying." + +"Who, my dear?" said Lady Chettam, a charming woman, not so quick as to +nullify the pleasure of explanation. + +"The bridegroom--Casaubon. He has certainly been drying up faster since +the engagement: the flame of passion, I suppose." + +"I should think he is far from having a good constitution," said Lady +Chettam, with a still deeper undertone. "And then his studies--so very +dry, as you say." + +"Really, by the side of Sir James, he looks like a death's head skinned +over for the occasion. Mark my words: in a year from this time that +girl will hate him. She looks up to him as an oracle now, and +by-and-by she will be at the other extreme. All flightiness!" + +"How very shocking! I fear she is headstrong. But tell me--you know +all about him--is there anything very bad? What is the truth?" + +"The truth? he is as bad as the wrong physic--nasty to take, and sure +to disagree." + +"There could not be anything worse than that," said Lady Chettam, with +so vivid a conception of the physic that she seemed to have learned +something exact about Mr. Casaubon's disadvantages. "However, James +will hear nothing against Miss Brooke. He says she is the mirror of +women still." + +"That is a generous make-believe of his. Depend upon it, he likes +little Celia better, and she appreciates him. I hope you like my +little Celia?" + +"Certainly; she is fonder of geraniums, and seems more docile, though +not so fine a figure. But we were talking of physic. Tell me about +this new young surgeon, Mr. Lydgate. I am told he is wonderfully +clever: he certainly looks it--a fine brow indeed." + +"He is a gentleman. I heard him talking to Humphrey. He talks well." + +"Yes. Mr. Brooke says he is one of the Lydgates of Northumberland, +really well connected. One does not expect it in a practitioner of +that kind. For my own part, I like a medical man more on a footing +with the servants; they are often all the cleverer. I assure you I +found poor Hicks's judgment unfailing; I never knew him wrong. He was +coarse and butcher-like, but he knew my constitution. It was a loss to +me his going off so suddenly. Dear me, what a very animated +conversation Miss Brooke seems to be having with this Mr. Lydgate!" + +"She is talking cottages and hospitals with him," said Mrs. +Cadwallader, whose ears and power of interpretation were quick. "I +believe he is a sort of philanthropist, so Brooke is sure to take him +up." + +"James," said Lady Chettam when her son came near, "bring Mr. Lydgate +and introduce him to me. I want to test him." + +The affable dowager declared herself delighted with this opportunity of +making Mr. Lydgate's acquaintance, having heard of his success in +treating fever on a new plan. + +Mr. Lydgate had the medical accomplishment of looking perfectly grave +whatever nonsense was talked to him, and his dark steady eyes gave him +impressiveness as a listener. He was as little as possible like the +lamented Hicks, especially in a certain careless refinement about his +toilet and utterance. Yet Lady Chettam gathered much confidence in +him. He confirmed her view of her own constitution as being peculiar, +by admitting that all constitutions might be called peculiar, and he +did not deny that hers might be more peculiar than others. He did not +approve of a too lowering system, including reckless cupping, nor, on +the other hand, of incessant port wine and bark. He said "I think so" +with an air of so much deference accompanying the insight of agreement, +that she formed the most cordial opinion of his talents. + +"I am quite pleased with your protege," she said to Mr. Brooke before +going away. + +"My protege?--dear me!--who is that?" said Mr. Brooke. + +"This young Lydgate, the new doctor. He seems to me to understand his +profession admirably." + +"Oh, Lydgate! he is not my protege, you know; only I knew an uncle of +his who sent me a letter about him. However, I think he is likely to +be first-rate--has studied in Paris, knew Broussais; has ideas, you +know--wants to raise the profession." + +"Lydgate has lots of ideas, quite new, about ventilation and diet, that +sort of thing," resumed Mr. Brooke, after he had handed out Lady +Chettam, and had returned to be civil to a group of Middlemarchers. + +"Hang it, do you think that is quite sound?--upsetting The old +treatment, which has made Englishmen what they are?" said Mr. Standish. + +"Medical knowledge is at a low ebb among us," said Mr. Bulstrode, who +spoke in a subdued tone, and had rather a sickly air. "I, for my part, +hail the advent of Mr. Lydgate. I hope to find good reason for +confiding the new hospital to his management." + +"That is all very fine," replied Mr. Standish, who was not fond of Mr. +Bulstrode; "if you like him to try experiments on your hospital +patients, and kill a few people for charity I have no objection. But I +am not going to hand money out of my purse to have experiments tried on +me. I like treatment that has been tested a little." + +"Well, you know, Standish, every dose you take is an experiment-an +experiment, you know," said Mr. Brooke, nodding towards the lawyer. + +"Oh, if you talk in that sense!" said Mr. Standish, with as much +disgust at such non-legal quibbling as a man can well betray towards a +valuable client. + +"I should be glad of any treatment that would cure me without reducing +me to a skeleton, like poor Grainger," said Mr. Vincy, the mayor, a +florid man, who would have served for a study of flesh in striking +contrast with the Franciscan tints of Mr. Bulstrode. "It's an +uncommonly dangerous thing to be left without any padding against the +shafts of disease, as somebody said,--and I think it a very good +expression myself." + +Mr. Lydgate, of course, was out of hearing. He had quitted the party +early, and would have thought it altogether tedious but for the novelty +of certain introductions, especially the introduction to Miss Brooke, +whose youthful bloom, with her approaching marriage to that faded +scholar, and her interest in matters socially useful, gave her the +piquancy of an unusual combination. + +"She is a good creature--that fine girl--but a little too earnest," he +thought. "It is troublesome to talk to such women. They are always +wanting reasons, yet they are too ignorant to understand the merits of +any question, and usually fall back on their moral sense to settle +things after their own taste." + +Evidently Miss Brooke was not Mr. Lydgate's style of woman any more +than Mr. Chichely's. Considered, indeed, in relation to the latter, +whose mind was matured, she was altogether a mistake, and calculated to +shock his trust in final causes, including the adaptation of fine young +women to purplefaced bachelors. But Lydgate was less ripe, and might +possibly have experience before him which would modify his opinion as +to the most excellent things in woman. + +Miss Brooke, however, was not again seen by either of these gentlemen +under her maiden name. Not long after that dinner-party she had become +Mrs. Casaubon, and was on her way to Rome. + + + +CHAPTER XI. + + "But deeds and language such as men do use, + And persons such as comedy would choose, + When she would show an image of the times, + And sport with human follies, not with crimes." + --BEN JONSON. + + +Lydgate, in fact, was already conscious of being fascinated by a woman +strikingly different from Miss Brooke: he did not in the least suppose +that he had lost his balance and fallen in love, but he had said of +that particular woman, "She is grace itself; she is perfectly lovely +and accomplished. That is what a woman ought to be: she ought to +produce the effect of exquisite music." Plain women he regarded as he +did the other severe facts of life, to be faced with philosophy and +investigated by science. But Rosamond Vincy seemed to have the true +melodic charm; and when a man has seen the woman whom he would have +chosen if he had intended to marry speedily, his remaining a bachelor +will usually depend on her resolution rather than on his. Lydgate +believed that he should not marry for several years: not marry until he +had trodden out a good clear path for himself away from the broad road +which was quite ready made. He had seen Miss Vincy above his horizon +almost as long as it had taken Mr. Casaubon to become engaged and +married: but this learned gentleman was possessed of a fortune; he had +assembled his voluminous notes, and had made that sort of reputation +which precedes performance,--often the larger part of a man's fame. He +took a wife, as we have seen, to adorn the remaining quadrant of his +course, and be a little moon that would cause hardly a calculable +perturbation. But Lydgate was young, poor, ambitious. He had his +half-century before him instead of behind him, and he had come to +Middlemarch bent on doing many things that were not directly fitted to +make his fortune or even secure him a good income. To a man under such +circumstances, taking a wife is something more than a question of +adornment, however highly he may rate this; and Lydgate was disposed to +give it the first place among wifely functions. To his taste, guided +by a single conversation, here was the point on which Miss Brooke would +be found wanting, notwithstanding her undeniable beauty. She did not +look at things from the proper feminine angle. The society of such +women was about as relaxing as going from your work to teach the second +form, instead of reclining in a paradise with sweet laughs for +bird-notes, and blue eyes for a heaven. + +Certainly nothing at present could seem much less important to Lydgate +than the turn of Miss Brooke's mind, or to Miss Brooke than the +qualities of the woman who had attracted this young surgeon. But any +one watching keenly the stealthy convergence of human lots, sees a slow +preparation of effects from one life on another, which tells like a +calculated irony on the indifference or the frozen stare with which we +look at our unintroduced neighbor. Destiny stands by sarcastic with +our dramatis personae folded in her hand. + +Old provincial society had its share of this subtle movement: had not +only its striking downfalls, its brilliant young professional dandies +who ended by living up an entry with a drab and six children for their +establishment, but also those less marked vicissitudes which are +constantly shifting the boundaries of social intercourse, and begetting +new consciousness of interdependence. Some slipped a little downward, +some got higher footing: people denied aspirates, gained wealth, and +fastidious gentlemen stood for boroughs; some were caught in political +currents, some in ecclesiastical, and perhaps found themselves +surprisingly grouped in consequence; while a few personages or families +that stood with rocky firmness amid all this fluctuation, were slowly +presenting new aspects in spite of solidity, and altering with the +double change of self and beholder. Municipal town and rural parish +gradually made fresh threads of connection--gradually, as the old +stocking gave way to the savings-bank, and the worship of the solar +guinea became extinct; while squires and baronets, and even lords who +had once lived blamelessly afar from the civic mind, gathered the +faultiness of closer acquaintanceship. Settlers, too, came from +distant counties, some with an alarming novelty of skill, others with +an offensive advantage in cunning. In fact, much the same sort of +movement and mixture went on in old England as we find in older +Herodotus, who also, in telling what had been, thought it well to take +a woman's lot for his starting-point; though Io, as a maiden apparently +beguiled by attractive merchandise, was the reverse of Miss Brooke, and +in this respect perhaps bore more resemblance to Rosamond Vincy, who +had excellent taste in costume, with that nymph-like figure and pure +blindness which give the largest range to choice in the flow and color +of drapery. But these things made only part of her charm. She was +admitted to be the flower of Mrs. Lemon's school, the chief school in +the county, where the teaching included all that was demanded in the +accomplished female--even to extras, such as the getting in and out of +a carriage. Mrs. Lemon herself had always held up Miss Vincy as an +example: no pupil, she said, exceeded that young lady for mental +acquisition and propriety of speech, while her musical execution was +quite exceptional. We cannot help the way in which people speak of us, +and probably if Mrs. Lemon had undertaken to describe Juliet or Imogen, +these heroines would not have seemed poetical. The first vision of +Rosamond would have been enough with most judges to dispel any +prejudice excited by Mrs. Lemon's praise. + +Lydgate could not be long in Middlemarch without having that agreeable +vision, or even without making the acquaintance of the Vincy family; +for though Mr. Peacock, whose practice he had paid something to enter +on, had not been their doctor (Mrs. Vincy not liking the lowering +system adopted by him), he had many patients among their connections +and acquaintances. For who of any consequence in Middlemarch was not +connected or at least acquainted with the Vincys? They were old +manufacturers, and had kept a good house for three generations, in +which there had naturally been much intermarrying with neighbors more +or less decidedly genteel. Mr. Vincy's sister had made a wealthy match +in accepting Mr. Bulstrode, who, however, as a man not born in the +town, and altogether of dimly known origin, was considered to have done +well in uniting himself with a real Middlemarch family; on the other +hand, Mr. Vincy had descended a little, having taken an innkeeper's +daughter. But on this side too there was a cheering sense of money; +for Mrs. Vincy's sister had been second wife to rich old Mr. +Featherstone, and had died childless years ago, so that her nephews and +nieces might be supposed to touch the affections of the widower. And +it happened that Mr. Bulstrode and Mr. Featherstone, two of Peacock's +most important patients, had, from different causes, given an +especially good reception to his successor, who had raised some +partisanship as well as discussion. Mr. Wrench, medical attendant to +the Vincy family, very early had grounds for thinking lightly of +Lydgate's professional discretion, and there was no report about him +which was not retailed at the Vincys', where visitors were frequent. +Mr. Vincy was more inclined to general good-fellowship than to taking +sides, but there was no need for him to be hasty in making any new man +acquaintance. Rosamond silently wished that her father would invite +Mr. Lydgate. She was tired of the faces and figures she had always +been used to--the various irregular profiles and gaits and turns of +phrase distinguishing those Middlemarch young men whom she had known as +boys. She had been at school with girls of higher position, whose +brothers, she felt sure, it would have been possible for her to be more +interested in, than in these inevitable Middlemarch companions. But +she would not have chosen to mention her wish to her father; and he, +for his part, was in no hurry on the subject. An alderman about to be +mayor must by-and-by enlarge his dinner-parties, but at present there +were plenty of guests at his well-spread table. + +That table often remained covered with the relics of the family +breakfast long after Mr. Vincy had gone with his second son to the +warehouse, and when Miss Morgan was already far on in morning lessons +with the younger girls in the schoolroom. It awaited the family +laggard, who found any sort of inconvenience (to others) less +disagreeable than getting up when he was called. This was the case one +morning of the October in which we have lately seen Mr. Casaubon +visiting the Grange; and though the room was a little overheated with +the fire, which had sent the spaniel panting to a remote corner, +Rosamond, for some reason, continued to sit at her embroidery longer +than usual, now and then giving herself a little shake, and laying her +work on her knee to contemplate it with an air of hesitating weariness. +Her mamma, who had returned from an excursion to the kitchen, sat on +the other side of the small work-table with an air of more entire +placidity, until, the clock again giving notice that it was going to +strike, she looked up from the lace-mending which was occupying her +plump fingers and rang the bell. + +"Knock at Mr. Fred's door again, Pritchard, and tell him it has struck +half-past ten." + +This was said without any change in the radiant good-humor of Mrs. +Vincy's face, in which forty-five years had delved neither angles nor +parallels; and pushing back her pink capstrings, she let her work rest +on her lap, while she looked admiringly at her daughter. + +"Mamma," said Rosamond, "when Fred comes down I wish you would not let +him have red herrings. I cannot bear the smell of them all over the +house at this hour of the morning." + +"Oh, my dear, you are so hard on your brothers! It is the only fault I +have to find with you. You are the sweetest temper in the world, but +you are so tetchy with your brothers." + +"Not tetchy, mamma: you never hear me speak in an unladylike way." + +"Well, but you want to deny them things." + +"Brothers are so unpleasant." + +"Oh, my dear, you must allow for young men. Be thankful if they have +good hearts. A woman must learn to put up with little things. You +will be married some day." + +"Not to any one who is like Fred." + +"Don't decry your own brother, my dear. Few young men have less +against them, although he couldn't take his degree--I'm sure I can't +understand why, for he seems to me most clever. And you know yourself +he was thought equal to the best society at college. So particular as +you are, my dear, I wonder you are not glad to have such a gentlemanly +young man for a brother. You are always finding fault with Bob because +he is not Fred." + +"Oh no, mamma, only because he is Bob." + +"Well, my dear, you will not find any Middlemarch young man who has not +something against him." + +"But"--here Rosamond's face broke into a smile which suddenly revealed +two dimples. She herself thought unfavorably of these dimples and +smiled little in general society. "But I shall not marry any +Middlemarch young man." + +"So it seems, my love, for you have as good as refused the pick of +them; and if there's better to be had, I'm sure there's no girl better +deserves it." + +"Excuse me, mamma--I wish you would not say, 'the pick of them.'" + +"Why, what else are they?" + +"I mean, mamma, it is rather a vulgar expression." + +"Very likely, my dear; I never was a good speaker. What should I say?" + +"The best of them." + +"Why, that seems just as plain and common. If I had had time to think, +I should have said, 'the most superior young men.' But with your +education you must know." + +"What must Rosy know, mother?" said Mr. Fred, who had slid in +unobserved through the half-open door while the ladies were bending +over their work, and now going up to the fire stood with his back +towards it, warming the soles of his slippers. + +"Whether it's right to say 'superior young men,'" said Mrs. Vincy, +ringing the bell. + +"Oh, there are so many superior teas and sugars now. Superior is +getting to be shopkeepers' slang." + +"Are you beginning to dislike slang, then?" said Rosamond, with mild +gravity. + +"Only the wrong sort. All choice of words is slang. It marks a class." + +"There is correct English: that is not slang." + +"I beg your pardon: correct English is the slang of prigs who write +history and essays. And the strongest slang of all is the slang of +poets." + +"You will say anything, Fred, to gain your point." + +"Well, tell me whether it is slang or poetry to call an ox a +leg-plaiter." + +"Of course you can call it poetry if you like." + +"Aha, Miss Rosy, you don't know Homer from slang. I shall invent a new +game; I shall write bits of slang and poetry on slips, and give them to +you to separate." + +"Dear me, how amusing it is to hear young people talk!" said Mrs. +Vincy, with cheerful admiration. + +"Have you got nothing else for my breakfast, Pritchard?" said Fred, to +the servant who brought in coffee and buttered toast; while he walked +round the table surveying the ham, potted beef, and other cold +remnants, with an air of silent rejection, and polite forbearance from +signs of disgust. + +"Should you like eggs, sir?" + +"Eggs, no! Bring me a grilled bone." + +"Really, Fred," said Rosamond, when the servant had left the room, "if +you must have hot things for breakfast, I wish you would come down +earlier. You can get up at six o'clock to go out hunting; I cannot +understand why you find it so difficult to get up on other mornings." + +"That is your want of understanding, Rosy. I can get up to go hunting +because I like it." + +"What would you think of me if I came down two hours after every one +else and ordered grilled bone?" + +"I should think you were an uncommonly fast young lady," said Fred, +eating his toast with the utmost composure. + +"I cannot see why brothers are to make themselves disagreeable, any +more than sisters." + +"I don't make myself disagreeable; it is you who find me so. +Disagreeable is a word that describes your feelings and not my actions." + +"I think it describes the smell of grilled bone." + +"Not at all. It describes a sensation in your little nose associated +with certain finicking notions which are the classics of Mrs. Lemon's +school. Look at my mother; you don't see her objecting to everything +except what she does herself. She is my notion of a pleasant woman." + +"Bless you both, my dears, and don't quarrel," said Mrs. Vincy, with +motherly cordiality. "Come, Fred, tell us all about the new doctor. +How is your uncle pleased with him?" + +"Pretty well, I think. He asks Lydgate all sorts of questions and then +screws up his face while he hears the answers, as if they were pinching +his toes. That's his way. Ah, here comes my grilled bone." + +"But how came you to stay out so late, my dear? You only said you were +going to your uncle's." + +"Oh, I dined at Plymdale's. We had whist. Lydgate was there too." + +"And what do you think of him? He is very gentlemanly, I suppose. +They say he is of excellent family--his relations quite county people." + +"Yes," said Fred. "There was a Lydgate at John's who spent no end of +money. I find this man is a second cousin of his. But rich men may +have very poor devils for second cousins." + +"It always makes a difference, though, to be of good family," said +Rosamond, with a tone of decision which showed that she had thought on +this subject. Rosamond felt that she might have been happier if she +had not been the daughter of a Middlemarch manufacturer. She disliked +anything which reminded her that her mother's father had been an +innkeeper. Certainly any one remembering the fact might think that +Mrs. Vincy had the air of a very handsome good-humored landlady, +accustomed to the most capricious orders of gentlemen. + +"I thought it was odd his name was Tertius," said the bright-faced +matron, "but of course it's a name in the family. But now, tell us +exactly what sort of man he is." + +"Oh, tallish, dark, clever--talks well--rather a prig, I think." + +"I never can make out what you mean by a prig," said Rosamond. + +"A fellow who wants to show that he has opinions." + +"Why, my dear, doctors must have opinions," said Mrs. Vincy. "What are +they there for else?" + +"Yes, mother, the opinions they are paid for. But a prig is a fellow +who is always making you a present of his opinions." + +"I suppose Mary Garth admires Mr. Lydgate," said Rosamond, not without +a touch of innuendo. + +"Really, I can't say." said Fred, rather glumly, as he left the table, +and taking up a novel which he had brought down with him, threw himself +into an arm-chair. "If you are jealous of her, go oftener to Stone +Court yourself and eclipse her." + +"I wish you would not be so vulgar, Fred. If you have finished, pray +ring the bell." + +"It is true, though--what your brother says, Rosamond," Mrs. Vincy +began, when the servant had cleared the table. "It is a thousand +pities you haven't patience to go and see your uncle more, so proud of +you as he is, and wanted you to live with him. There's no knowing what +he might have done for you as well as for Fred. God knows, I'm fond of +having you at home with me, but I can part with my children for their +good. And now it stands to reason that your uncle Featherstone will do +something for Mary Garth." + +"Mary Garth can bear being at Stone Court, because she likes that +better than being a governess," said Rosamond, folding up her work. "I +would rather not have anything left to me if I must earn it by enduring +much of my uncle's cough and his ugly relations." + +"He can't be long for this world, my dear; I wouldn't hasten his end, +but what with asthma and that inward complaint, let us hope there is +something better for him in another. And I have no ill-will toward's +Mary Garth, but there's justice to be thought of. And Mr. +Featherstone's first wife brought him no money, as my sister did. Her +nieces and nephews can't have so much claim as my sister's. And I must +say I think Mary Garth a dreadful plain girl--more fit for a governess." + +"Every one would not agree with you there, mother," said Fred, who +seemed to be able to read and listen too. + +"Well, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, wheeling skilfully, "if she _had_ +some fortune left her,--a man marries his wife's relations, and the +Garths are so poor, and live in such a small way. But I shall leave +you to your studies, my dear; for I must go and do some shopping." + +"Fred's studies are not very deep," said Rosamond, rising with her +mamma, "he is only reading a novel." + +"Well, well, by-and-by he'll go to his Latin and things," said Mrs. +Vincy, soothingly, stroking her son's head. "There's a fire in the +smoking-room on purpose. It's your father's wish, you know--Fred, my +dear--and I always tell him you will be good, and go to college again +to take your degree." + +Fred drew his mother's hand down to his lips, but said nothing. + +"I suppose you are not going out riding to-day?" said Rosamond, +lingering a little after her mamma was gone. + +"No; why?" + +"Papa says I may have the chestnut to ride now." + +"You can go with me to-morrow, if you like. Only I am going to Stone +Court, remember." + +"I want to ride so much, it is indifferent to me where we go." Rosamond +really wished to go to Stone Court, of all other places. + +"Oh, I say, Rosy," said Fred, as she was passing out of the room, "if +you are going to the piano, let me come and play some airs with you." + +"Pray do not ask me this morning." + +"Why not this morning?" + +"Really, Fred, I wish you would leave off playing the flute. A man +looks very silly playing the flute. And you play so out of tune." + +"When next any one makes love to you, Miss Rosamond, I will tell him +how obliging you are." + +"Why should you expect me to oblige you by hearing you play the flute, +any more than I should expect you to oblige me by not playing it?" + +"And why should you expect me to take you out riding?" + +This question led to an adjustment, for Rosamond had set her mind on +that particular ride. + +So Fred was gratified with nearly an hour's practice of "Ar hyd y nos," +"Ye banks and braes," and other favorite airs from his "Instructor on +the Flute;" a wheezy performance, into which he threw much ambition and +an irrepressible hopefulness. + + + +CHAPTER XII. + + "He had more tow on his distaffe + Than Gerveis knew." + --CHAUCER. + + +The ride to Stone Court, which Fred and Rosamond took the next morning, +lay through a pretty bit of midland landscape, almost all meadows and +pastures, with hedgerows still allowed to grow in bushy beauty and to +spread out coral fruit for the birds. Little details gave each field a +particular physiognomy, dear to the eyes that have looked on them from +childhood: the pool in the corner where the grasses were dank and trees +leaned whisperingly; the great oak shadowing a bare place in +mid-pasture; the high bank where the ash-trees grew; the sudden slope +of the old marl-pit making a red background for the burdock; the +huddled roofs and ricks of the homestead without a traceable way of +approach; the gray gate and fences against the depths of the bordering +wood; and the stray hovel, its old, old thatch full of mossy hills and +valleys with wondrous modulations of light and shadow such as we travel +far to see in later life, and see larger, but not more beautiful. +These are the things that make the gamut of joy in landscape to +midland-bred souls--the things they toddled among, or perhaps learned +by heart standing between their father's knees while he drove leisurely. + +But the road, even the byroad, was excellent; for Lowick, as we have +seen, was not a parish of muddy lanes and poor tenants; and it was into +Lowick parish that Fred and Rosamond entered after a couple of miles' +riding. Another mile would bring them to Stone Court, and at the end +of the first half, the house was already visible, looking as if it had +been arrested in its growth toward a stone mansion by an unexpected +budding of farm-buildings on its left flank, which had hindered it from +becoming anything more than the substantial dwelling of a gentleman +farmer. It was not the less agreeable an object in the distance for +the cluster of pinnacled corn-ricks which balanced the fine row of +walnuts on the right. + +Presently it was possible to discern something that might be a gig on +the circular drive before the front door. + +"Dear me," said Rosamond, "I hope none of my uncle's horrible relations +are there." + +"They are, though. That is Mrs. Waule's gig--the last yellow gig left, +I should think. When I see Mrs. Waule in it, I understand how yellow +can have been worn for mourning. That gig seems to me more funereal +than a hearse. But then Mrs. Waule always has black crape on. How +does she manage it, Rosy? Her friends can't always be dying." + +"I don't know at all. And she is not in the least evangelical," said +Rosamond, reflectively, as if that religious point of view would have +fully accounted for perpetual crape. "And, not poor," she added, after +a moment's pause. + +"No, by George! They are as rich as Jews, those Waules and +Featherstones; I mean, for people like them, who don't want to spend +anything. And yet they hang about my uncle like vultures, and are +afraid of a farthing going away from their side of the family. But I +believe he hates them all." + +The Mrs. Waule who was so far from being admirable in the eyes of these +distant connections, had happened to say this very morning (not at all +with a defiant air, but in a low, muffled, neutral tone, as of a voice +heard through cotton wool) that she did not wish "to enjoy their good +opinion." She was seated, as she observed, on her own brother's hearth, +and had been Jane Featherstone five-and-twenty years before she had +been Jane Waule, which entitled her to speak when her own brother's +name had been made free with by those who had no right to it. + +"What are you driving at there?" said Mr. Featherstone, holding his +stick between his knees and settling his wig, while he gave her a +momentary sharp glance, which seemed to react on him like a draught of +cold air and set him coughing. + +Mrs. Waule had to defer her answer till he was quiet again, till Mary +Garth had supplied him with fresh syrup, and he had begun to rub the +gold knob of his stick, looking bitterly at the fire. It was a bright +fire, but it made no difference to the chill-looking purplish tint of +Mrs. Waule's face, which was as neutral as her voice; having mere +chinks for eyes, and lips that hardly moved in speaking. + +"The doctors can't master that cough, brother. It's just like what I +have; for I'm your own sister, constitution and everything. But, as I +was saying, it's a pity Mrs. Vincy's family can't be better conducted." + +"Tchah! you said nothing o' the sort. You said somebody had made free +with my name." + +"And no more than can be proved, if what everybody says is true. My +brother Solomon tells me it's the talk up and down in Middlemarch how +unsteady young Vincy is, and has been forever gambling at billiards +since home he came." + +"Nonsense! What's a game at billiards? It's a good gentlemanly game; +and young Vincy is not a clodhopper. If your son John took to +billiards, now, he'd make a fool of himself." + +"Your nephew John never took to billiards or any other game, brother, +and is far from losing hundreds of pounds, which, if what everybody +says is true, must be found somewhere else than out of Mr. Vincy the +father's pocket. For they say he's been losing money for years, though +nobody would think so, to see him go coursing and keeping open house as +they do. And I've heard say Mr. Bulstrode condemns Mrs. Vincy beyond +anything for her flightiness, and spoiling her children so." + +"What's Bulstrode to me? I don't bank with him." + +"Well, Mrs. Bulstrode is Mr. Vincy's own sister, and they do say that +Mr. Vincy mostly trades on the Bank money; and you may see yourself, +brother, when a woman past forty has pink strings always flying, and +that light way of laughing at everything, it's very unbecoming. But +indulging your children is one thing, and finding money to pay their +debts is another. And it's openly said that young Vincy has raised +money on his expectations. I don't say what expectations. Miss Garth +hears me, and is welcome to tell again. I know young people hang +together." + +"No, thank you, Mrs. Waule," said Mary Garth. "I dislike hearing +scandal too much to wish to repeat it." + +Mr. Featherstone rubbed the knob of his stick and made a brief +convulsive show of laughter, which had much the same genuineness as an +old whist-player's chuckle over a bad hand. Still looking at the fire, +he said-- + +"And who pretends to say Fred Vincy hasn't got expectations? Such a +fine, spirited fellow is like enough to have 'em." + +There was a slight pause before Mrs. Waule replied, and when she did +so, her voice seemed to be slightly moistened with tears, though her +face was still dry. + +"Whether or no, brother, it is naturally painful to me and my brother +Solomon to hear your name made free with, and your complaint being such +as may carry you off sudden, and people who are no more Featherstones +than the Merry-Andrew at the fair, openly reckoning on your property +coming to _them_. And me your own sister, and Solomon your own +brother! And if that's to be it, what has it pleased the Almighty to +make families for?" Here Mrs. Waule's tears fell, but with moderation. + +"Come, out with it, Jane!" said Mr. Featherstone, looking at her. "You +mean to say, Fred Vincy has been getting somebody to advance him money +on what he says he knows about my will, eh?" + +"I never said so, brother" (Mrs. Waule's voice had again become dry and +unshaken). "It was told me by my brother Solomon last night when he +called coming from market to give me advice about the old wheat, me +being a widow, and my son John only three-and-twenty, though steady +beyond anything. And he had it from most undeniable authority, and not +one, but many." + +"Stuff and nonsense! I don't believe a word of it. It's all a got-up +story. Go to the window, missy; I thought I heard a horse. See if the +doctor's coming." + +"Not got up by me, brother, nor yet by Solomon, who, whatever else he +may be--and I don't deny he has oddities--has made his will and parted +his property equal between such kin as he's friends with; though, for +my part, I think there are times when some should be considered more +than others. But Solomon makes it no secret what he means to do." + +"The more fool he!" said Mr. Featherstone, with some difficulty; +breaking into a severe fit of coughing that required Mary Garth to +stand near him, so that she did not find out whose horses they were +which presently paused stamping on the gravel before the door. + +Before Mr. Featherstone's cough was quiet, Rosamond entered, bearing up +her riding-habit with much grace. She bowed ceremoniously to Mrs. +Waule, who said stiffly, "How do you do, miss?" smiled and nodded +silently to Mary, and remained standing till the coughing should cease, +and allow her uncle to notice her. + +"Heyday, miss!" he said at last, "you have a fine color. Where's Fred?" + +"Seeing about the horses. He will be in presently." + +"Sit down, sit down. Mrs. Waule, you'd better go." + +Even those neighbors who had called Peter Featherstone an old fox, had +never accused him of being insincerely polite, and his sister was quite +used to the peculiar absence of ceremony with which he marked his sense +of blood-relationship. Indeed, she herself was accustomed to think that +entire freedom from the necessity of behaving agreeably was included in +the Almighty's intentions about families. She rose slowly without any +sign of resentment, and said in her usual muffled monotone, "Brother, I +hope the new doctor will be able to do something for you. Solomon says +there's great talk of his cleverness. I'm sure it's my wish you should +be spared. And there's none more ready to nurse you than your own +sister and your own nieces, if you'd only say the word. There's +Rebecca, and Joanna, and Elizabeth, you know." + +"Ay, ay, I remember--you'll see I've remembered 'em all--all dark and +ugly. They'd need have some money, eh? There never was any beauty in +the women of our family; but the Featherstones have always had some +money, and the Waules too. Waule had money too. A warm man was Waule. +Ay, ay; money's a good egg; and if you 've got money to leave behind +you, lay it in a warm nest. Good-by, Mrs. Waule." Here Mr. +Featherstone pulled at both sides of his wig as if he wanted to deafen +himself, and his sister went away ruminating on this oracular speech of +his. Notwithstanding her jealousy of the Vincys and of Mary Garth, +there remained as the nethermost sediment in her mental shallows a +persuasion that her brother Peter Featherstone could never leave his +chief property away from his blood-relations:--else, why had the +Almighty carried off his two wives both childless, after he had gained +so much by manganese and things, turning up when nobody expected +it?--and why was there a Lowick parish church, and the Waules and +Powderells all sitting in the same pew for generations, and the +Featherstone pew next to them, if, the Sunday after her brother Peter's +death, everybody was to know that the property was gone out of the +family? The human mind has at no period accepted a moral chaos; and so +preposterous a result was not strictly conceivable. But we are +frightened at much that is not strictly conceivable. + +When Fred came in the old man eyed him with a peculiar twinkle, which +the younger had often had reason to interpret as pride in the +satisfactory details of his appearance. + +"You two misses go away," said Mr. Featherstone. "I want to speak to +Fred." + +"Come into my room, Rosamond, you will not mind the cold for a little +while," said Mary. The two girls had not only known each other in +childhood, but had been at the same provincial school together (Mary as +an articled pupil), so that they had many memories in common, and liked +very well to talk in private. Indeed, this tete-a-tete was one of +Rosamond's objects in coming to Stone Court. + +Old Featherstone would not begin the dialogue till the door had been +closed. He continued to look at Fred with the same twinkle and with +one of his habitual grimaces, alternately screwing and widening his +mouth; and when he spoke, it was in a low tone, which might be taken +for that of an informer ready to be bought off, rather than for the +tone of an offended senior. He was not a man to feel any strong moral +indignation even on account of trespasses against himself. It was +natural that others should want to get an advantage over him, but then, +he was a little too cunning for them. + +"So, sir, you've been paying ten per cent for money which you've +promised to pay off by mortgaging my land when I'm dead and gone, eh? +You put my life at a twelvemonth, say. But I can alter my will yet." + +Fred blushed. He had not borrowed money in that way, for excellent +reasons. But he was conscious of having spoken with some confidence +(perhaps with more than he exactly remembered) about his prospect of +getting Featherstone's land as a future means of paying present debts. + +"I don't know what you refer to, sir. I have certainly never borrowed +any money on such an insecurity. Please do explain." + +"No, sir, it's you must explain. I can alter my will yet, let me tell +you. I'm of sound mind--can reckon compound interest in my head, and +remember every fool's name as well as I could twenty years ago. What +the deuce? I'm under eighty. I say, you must contradict this story." + +"I have contradicted it, sir," Fred answered, with a touch of +impatience, not remembering that his uncle did not verbally +discriminate contradicting from disproving, though no one was further +from confounding the two ideas than old Featherstone, who often +wondered that so many fools took his own assertions for proofs. "But I +contradict it again. The story is a silly lie." + +"Nonsense! you must bring dockiments. It comes from authority." + +"Name the authority, and make him name the man of whom I borrowed the +money, and then I can disprove the story." + +"It's pretty good authority, I think--a man who knows most of what goes +on in Middlemarch. It's that fine, religious, charitable uncle o' +yours. Come now!" Here Mr. Featherstone had his peculiar inward shake +which signified merriment. + +"Mr. Bulstrode?" + +"Who else, eh?" + +"Then the story has grown into this lie out of some sermonizing words +he may have let fall about me. Do they pretend that he named the man +who lent me the money?" + +"If there is such a man, depend upon it Bulstrode knows him. But, +supposing you only tried to get the money lent, and didn't get +it--Bulstrode 'ud know that too. You bring me a writing from Bulstrode +to say he doesn't believe you've ever promised to pay your debts out o' +my land. Come now!" + +Mr. Featherstone's face required its whole scale of grimaces as a +muscular outlet to his silent triumph in the soundness of his faculties. + +Fred felt himself to be in a disgusting dilemma. + +"You must be joking, sir. Mr. Bulstrode, like other men, believes +scores of things that are not true, and he has a prejudice against me. +I could easily get him to write that he knew no facts in proof of the +report you speak of, though it might lead to unpleasantness. But I +could hardly ask him to write down what he believes or does not believe +about me." Fred paused an instant, and then added, in politic appeal to +his uncle's vanity, "That is hardly a thing for a gentleman to ask." +But he was disappointed in the result. + +"Ay, I know what you mean. You'd sooner offend me than Bulstrode. And +what's he?--he's got no land hereabout that ever I heard tell of. A +speckilating fellow! He may come down any day, when the devil leaves +off backing him. And that's what his religion means: he wants God +A'mighty to come in. That's nonsense! There's one thing I made out +pretty clear when I used to go to church--and it's this: God A'mighty +sticks to the land. He promises land, and He gives land, and He makes +chaps rich with corn and cattle. But you take the other side. You +like Bulstrode and speckilation better than Featherstone and land." + +"I beg your pardon, sir," said Fred, rising, standing with his back to +the fire and beating his boot with his whip. "I like neither Bulstrode +nor speculation." He spoke rather sulkily, feeling himself stalemated. + +"Well, well, you can do without me, that's pretty clear," said old +Featherstone, secretly disliking the possibility that Fred would show +himself at all independent. "You neither want a bit of land to make a +squire of you instead of a starving parson, nor a lift of a hundred +pound by the way. It's all one to me. I can make five codicils if I +like, and I shall keep my bank-notes for a nest-egg. It's all one to +me." + +Fred colored again. Featherstone had rarely given him presents of +money, and at this moment it seemed almost harder to part with the +immediate prospect of bank-notes than with the more distant prospect of +the land. + +"I am not ungrateful, sir. I never meant to show disregard for any +kind intentions you might have towards me. On the contrary." + +"Very good. Then prove it. You bring me a letter from Bulstrode +saying he doesn't believe you've been cracking and promising to pay +your debts out o' my land, and then, if there's any scrape you've got +into, we'll see if I can't back you a bit. Come now! That's a +bargain. Here, give me your arm. I'll try and walk round the room." + +Fred, in spite of his irritation, had kindness enough in him to be a +little sorry for the unloved, unvenerated old man, who with his +dropsical legs looked more than usually pitiable in walking. While +giving his arm, he thought that he should not himself like to be an old +fellow with his constitution breaking up; and he waited +good-temperedly, first before the window to hear the wonted remarks +about the guinea-fowls and the weather-cock, and then before the scanty +book-shelves, of which the chief glories in dark calf were Josephus, +Culpepper, Klopstock's "Messiah," and several volumes of the +"Gentleman's Magazine." + +"Read me the names o' the books. Come now! you're a college man." + +Fred gave him the titles. + +"What did missy want with more books? What must you be bringing her +more books for?" + +"They amuse her, sir. She is very fond of reading." + +"A little too fond," said Mr. Featherstone, captiously. "She was for +reading when she sat with me. But I put a stop to that. She's got the +newspaper to read out loud. That's enough for one day, I should think. +I can't abide to see her reading to herself. You mind and not bring +her any more books, do you hear?" + +"Yes, sir, I hear." Fred had received this order before, and had +secretly disobeyed it. He intended to disobey it again. + +"Ring the bell," said Mr. Featherstone; "I want missy to come down." + +Rosamond and Mary had been talking faster than their male friends. +They did not think of sitting down, but stood at the toilet-table near +the window while Rosamond took off her hat, adjusted her veil, and +applied little touches of her finger-tips to her hair--hair of +infantine fairness, neither flaxen nor yellow. Mary Garth seemed all +the plainer standing at an angle between the two nymphs--the one in the +glass, and the one out of it, who looked at each other with eyes of +heavenly blue, deep enough to hold the most exquisite meanings an +ingenious beholder could put into them, and deep enough to hide the +meanings of the owner if these should happen to be less exquisite. +Only a few children in Middlemarch looked blond by the side of +Rosamond, and the slim figure displayed by her riding-habit had +delicate undulations. In fact, most men in Middlemarch, except her +brothers, held that Miss Vincy was the best girl in the world, and some +called her an angel. Mary Garth, on the contrary, had the aspect of an +ordinary sinner: she was brown; her curly dark hair was rough and +stubborn; her stature was low; and it would not be true to declare, in +satisfactory antithesis, that she had all the virtues. Plainness has +its peculiar temptations and vices quite as much as beauty; it is apt +either to feign amiability, or, not feigning it, to show all the +repulsiveness of discontent: at any rate, to be called an ugly thing in +contrast with that lovely creature your companion, is apt to produce +some effect beyond a sense of fine veracity and fitness in the phrase. +At the age of two-and-twenty Mary had certainly not attained that +perfect good sense and good principle which are usually recommended to +the less fortunate girl, as if they were to be obtained in quantities +ready mixed, with a flavor of resignation as required. Her shrewdness +had a streak of satiric bitterness continually renewed and never +carried utterly out of sight, except by a strong current of gratitude +towards those who, instead of telling her that she ought to be +contented, did something to make her so. Advancing womanhood had +tempered her plainness, which was of a good human sort, such as the +mothers of our race have very commonly worn in all latitudes under a +more or less becoming headgear. Rembrandt would have painted her with +pleasure, and would have made her broad features look out of the canvas +with intelligent honesty. For honesty, truth-telling fairness, was +Mary's reigning virtue: she neither tried to create illusions, nor +indulged in them for her own behoof, and when she was in a good mood +she had humor enough in her to laugh at herself. When she and Rosamond +happened both to be reflected in the glass, she said, laughingly-- + +"What a brown patch I am by the side of you, Rosy! You are the most +unbecoming companion." + +"Oh no! No one thinks of your appearance, you are so sensible and +useful, Mary. Beauty is of very little consequence in reality," said +Rosamond, turning her head towards Mary, but with eyes swerving towards +the new view of her neck in the glass. + +"You mean my beauty," said Mary, rather sardonically. + +Rosamond thought, "Poor Mary, she takes the kindest things ill." Aloud +she said, "What have you been doing lately?" + +"I? Oh, minding the house--pouring out syrup--pretending to be amiable +and contented--learning to have a bad opinion of everybody." + +"It is a wretched life for you." + +"No," said Mary, curtly, with a little toss of her head. "I think my +life is pleasanter than your Miss Morgan's." + +"Yes; but Miss Morgan is so uninteresting, and not young." + +"She is interesting to herself, I suppose; and I am not at all sure +that everything gets easier as one gets older." + +"No," said Rosamond, reflectively; "one wonders what such people do, +without any prospect. To be sure, there is religion as a support. +But," she added, dimpling, "it is very different with you, Mary. You +may have an offer." + +"Has any one told you he means to make me one?" + +"Of course not. I mean, there is a gentleman who may fall in love with +you, seeing you almost every day." + +A certain change in Mary's face was chiefly determined by the resolve +not to show any change. + +"Does that always make people fall in love?" she answered, carelessly; +"it seems to me quite as often a reason for detesting each other." + +"Not when they are interesting and agreeable. I hear that Mr. Lydgate +is both." + +"Oh, Mr. Lydgate!" said Mary, with an unmistakable lapse into +indifference. "You want to know something about him," she added, not +choosing to indulge Rosamond's indirectness. + +"Merely, how you like him." + +"There is no question of liking at present. My liking always wants +some little kindness to kindle it. I am not magnanimous enough to like +people who speak to me without seeming to see me." + +"Is he so haughty?" said Rosamond, with heightened satisfaction. "You +know that he is of good family?" + +"No; he did not give that as a reason." + +"Mary! you are the oddest girl. But what sort of looking man is he? +Describe him to me." + +"How can one describe a man? I can give you an inventory: heavy +eyebrows, dark eyes, a straight nose, thick dark hair, large solid +white hands--and--let me see--oh, an exquisite cambric +pocket-handkerchief. But you will see him. You know this is about the +time of his visits." + +Rosamond blushed a little, but said, meditatively, "I rather like a +haughty manner. I cannot endure a rattling young man." + +"I did not tell you that Mr. Lydgate was haughty; but il y en a pour +tous les gouts, as little Mamselle used to say, and if any girl can +choose the particular sort of conceit she would like, I should think it +is you, Rosy." + +"Haughtiness is not conceit; I call Fred conceited." + +"I wish no one said any worse of him. He should be more careful. Mrs. +Waule has been telling uncle that Fred is very unsteady." Mary spoke +from a girlish impulse which got the better of her judgment. There was +a vague uneasiness associated with the word "unsteady" which she hoped +Rosamond might say something to dissipate. But she purposely abstained +from mentioning Mrs. Waule's more special insinuation. + +"Oh, Fred is horrid!" said Rosamond. She would not have allowed +herself so unsuitable a word to any one but Mary. + +"What do you mean by horrid?" + +"He is so idle, and makes papa so angry, and says he will not take +orders." + +"I think Fred is quite right." + +"How can you say he is quite right, Mary? I thought you had more sense +of religion." + +"He is not fit to be a clergyman." + +"But he ought to be fit."--"Well, then, he is not what he ought to be. +I know some other people who are in the same case." + +"But no one approves of them. I should not like to marry a clergyman; +but there must be clergymen." + +"It does not follow that Fred must be one." + +"But when papa has been at the expense of educating him for it! And +only suppose, if he should have no fortune left him?" + +"I can suppose that very well," said Mary, dryly. + +"Then I wonder you can defend Fred," said Rosamond, inclined to push +this point. + +"I don't defend him," said Mary, laughing; "I would defend any parish +from having him for a clergyman." + +"But of course if he were a clergyman, he must be different." + +"Yes, he would be a great hypocrite; and he is not that yet." + +"It is of no use saying anything to you, Mary. You always take Fred's +part." + +"Why should I not take his part?" said Mary, lighting up. "He would +take mine. He is the only person who takes the least trouble to oblige +me." + +"You make me feel very uncomfortable, Mary," said Rosamond, with her +gravest mildness; "I would not tell mamma for the world." + +"What would you not tell her?" said Mary, angrily. + +"Pray do not go into a rage, Mary," said Rosamond, mildly as ever. + +"If your mamma is afraid that Fred will make me an offer, tell her that +I would not marry him if he asked me. But he is not going to do so, +that I am aware. He certainly never has asked me." + +"Mary, you are always so violent." + +"And you are always so exasperating." + +"I? What can you blame me for?" + +"Oh, blameless people are always the most exasperating. There is the +bell--I think we must go down." + +"I did not mean to quarrel," said Rosamond, putting on her hat. + +"Quarrel? Nonsense; we have not quarrelled. If one is not to get into +a rage sometimes, what is the good of being friends?" + +"Am I to repeat what you have said?" "Just as you please. I never say +what I am afraid of having repeated. But let us go down." + +Mr. Lydgate was rather late this morning, but the visitors stayed long +enough to see him; for Mr. Featherstone asked Rosamond to sing to him, +and she herself was so kind as to propose a second favorite song of +his--"Flow on, thou shining river"--after she had sung "Home, sweet +home" (which she detested). This hard-headed old Overreach approved of +the sentimental song, as the suitable garnish for girls, and also as +fundamentally fine, sentiment being the right thing for a song. + +Mr. Featherstone was still applauding the last performance, and +assuring missy that her voice was as clear as a blackbird's, when Mr. +Lydgate's horse passed the window. + +His dull expectation of the usual disagreeable routine with an aged +patient--who can hardly believe that medicine would not "set him up" if +the doctor were only clever enough--added to his general disbelief in +Middlemarch charms, made a doubly effective background to this vision +of Rosamond, whom old Featherstone made haste ostentatiously to +introduce as his niece, though he had never thought it worth while to +speak of Mary Garth in that light. Nothing escaped Lydgate in +Rosamond's graceful behavior: how delicately she waived the notice +which the old man's want of taste had thrust upon her by a quiet +gravity, not showing her dimples on the wrong occasion, but showing +them afterwards in speaking to Mary, to whom she addressed herself with +so much good-natured interest, that Lydgate, after quickly examining +Mary more fully than he had done before, saw an adorable kindness in +Rosamond's eyes. But Mary from some cause looked rather out of temper. + +"Miss Rosy has been singing me a song--you've nothing to say against +that, eh, doctor?" said Mr. Featherstone. "I like it better than your +physic." + +"That has made me forget how the time was going," said Rosamond, rising +to reach her hat, which she had laid aside before singing, so that her +flower-like head on its white stem was seen in perfection above-her +riding-habit. "Fred, we must really go." + +"Very good," said Fred, who had his own reasons for not being in the +best spirits, and wanted to get away. + +"Miss Vincy is a musician?" said Lydgate, following her with his eyes. +(Every nerve and muscle in Rosamond was adjusted to the consciousness +that she was being looked at. She was by nature an actress of parts +that entered into her physique: she even acted her own character, and +so well, that she did not know it to be precisely her own.) + +"The best in Middlemarch, I'll be bound," said Mr. Featherstone, "let +the next be who she will. Eh, Fred? Speak up for your sister." + +"I'm afraid I'm out of court, sir. My evidence would be good for +nothing." + +"Middlemarch has not a very high standard, uncle," said Rosamond, with +a pretty lightness, going towards her whip, which lay at a distance. + +Lydgate was quick in anticipating her. He reached the whip before she +did, and turned to present it to her. She bowed and looked at him: he +of course was looking at her, and their eyes met with that peculiar +meeting which is never arrived at by effort, but seems like a sudden +divine clearance of haze. I think Lydgate turned a little paler than +usual, but Rosamond blushed deeply and felt a certain astonishment. +After that, she was really anxious to go, and did not know what sort of +stupidity her uncle was talking of when she went to shake hands with +him. + +Yet this result, which she took to be a mutual impression, called +falling in love, was just what Rosamond had contemplated beforehand. +Ever since that important new arrival in Middlemarch she had woven a +little future, of which something like this scene was the necessary +beginning. Strangers, whether wrecked and clinging to a raft, or duly +escorted and accompanied by portmanteaus, have always had a +circumstantial fascination for the virgin mind, against which native +merit has urged itself in vain. And a stranger was absolutely +necessary to Rosamond's social romance, which had always turned on a +lover and bridegroom who was not a Middlemarcher, and who had no +connections at all like her own: of late, indeed, the construction +seemed to demand that he should somehow be related to a baronet. Now +that she and the stranger had met, reality proved much more moving than +anticipation, and Rosamond could not doubt that this was the great +epoch of her life. She judged of her own symptoms as those of +awakening love, and she held it still more natural that Mr. Lydgate +should have fallen in love at first sight of her. These things +happened so often at balls, and why not by the morning light, when the +complexion showed all the better for it? Rosamond, though no older +than Mary, was rather used to being fallen in love with; but she, for +her part, had remained indifferent and fastidiously critical towards +both fresh sprig and faded bachelor. And here was Mr. Lydgate suddenly +corresponding to her ideal, being altogether foreign to Middlemarch, +carrying a certain air of distinction congruous with good family, and +possessing connections which offered vistas of that middle-class +heaven, rank; a man of talent, also, whom it would be especially +delightful to enslave: in fact, a man who had touched her nature quite +newly, and brought a vivid interest into her life which was better than +any fancied "might-be" such as she was in the habit of opposing to the +actual. + +Thus, in riding home, both the brother and the sister were preoccupied +and inclined to be silent. Rosamond, whose basis for her structure had +the usual airy slightness, was of remarkably detailed and realistic +imagination when the foundation had been once presupposed; and before +they had ridden a mile she was far on in the costume and introductions +of her wedded life, having determined on her house in Middlemarch, and +foreseen the visits she would pay to her husband's high-bred relatives +at a distance, whose finished manners she could appropriate as +thoroughly as she had done her school accomplishments, preparing +herself thus for vaguer elevations which might ultimately come. There +was nothing financial, still less sordid, in her previsions: she cared +about what were considered refinements, and not about the money that +was to pay for them. + +Fred's mind, on the other hand, was busy with an anxiety which even his +ready hopefulness could not immediately quell. He saw no way of +eluding Featherstone's stupid demand without incurring consequences +which he liked less even than the task of fulfilling it. His father +was already out of humor with him, and would be still more so if he +were the occasion of any additional coolness between his own family and +the Bulstrodes. Then, he himself hated having to go and speak to his +uncle Bulstrode, and perhaps after drinking wine he had said many +foolish things about Featherstone's property, and these had been +magnified by report. Fred felt that he made a wretched figure as a +fellow who bragged about expectations from a queer old miser like +Featherstone, and went to beg for certificates at his bidding. +But--those expectations! He really had them, and he saw no agreeable +alternative if he gave them up; besides, he had lately made a debt +which galled him extremely, and old Featherstone had almost bargained +to pay it off. The whole affair was miserably small: his debts were +small, even his expectations were not anything so very magnificent. +Fred had known men to whom he would have been ashamed of confessing the +smallness of his scrapes. Such ruminations naturally produced a streak +of misanthropic bitterness. To be born the son of a Middlemarch +manufacturer, and inevitable heir to nothing in particular, while such +men as Mainwaring and Vyan--certainly life was a poor business, when a +spirited young fellow, with a good appetite for the best of everything, +had so poor an outlook. + +It had not occurred to Fred that the introduction of Bulstrode's name +in the matter was a fiction of old Featherstone's; nor could this have +made any difference to his position. He saw plainly enough that the +old man wanted to exercise his power by tormenting him a little, and +also probably to get some satisfaction out of seeing him on unpleasant +terms with Bulstrode. Fred fancied that he saw to the bottom of his +uncle Featherstone's soul, though in reality half what he saw there was +no more than the reflex of his own inclinations. The difficult task of +knowing another soul is not for young gentlemen whose consciousness is +chiefly made up of their own wishes. + +Fred's main point of debate with himself was, whether he should tell +his father, or try to get through the affair without his father's +knowledge. It was probably Mrs. Waule who had been talking about him; +and if Mary Garth had repeated Mrs. Waule's report to Rosamond, it +would be sure to reach his father, who would as surely question him +about it. He said to Rosamond, as they slackened their pace-- + +"Rosy, did Mary tell you that Mrs. Waule had said anything about me?" + +"Yes, indeed, she did." + +"What?" + +"That you were very unsteady." + +"Was that all?" + +"I should think that was enough, Fred." + +"You are sure she said no more?" + +"Mary mentioned nothing else. But really, Fred, I think you ought to +be ashamed." + +"Oh, fudge! Don't lecture me. What did Mary say about it?" + +"I am not obliged to tell you. You care so very much what Mary says, +and you are too rude to allow me to speak." + +"Of course I care what Mary says. She is the best girl I know." + +"I should never have thought she was a girl to fall in love with." + +"How do you know what men would fall in love with? Girls never know." + +"At least, Fred, let me advise _you_ not to fall in love with her, for +she says she would not marry you if you asked her." + +"She might have waited till I did ask her." + +"I knew it would nettle you, Fred." + +"Not at all. She would not have said so if you had not provoked her." +Before reaching home, Fred concluded that he would tell the whole +affair as simply as possible to his father, who might perhaps take on +himself the unpleasant business of speaking to Bulstrode. + + + + + +BOOK II. + + + + +OLD AND YOUNG. + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + + 1st Gent. How class your man?--as better than the most, + Or, seeming better, worse beneath that cloak? + As saint or knave, pilgrim or hypocrite? + 2d Gent. Nay, tell me how you class your wealth of books + The drifted relics of all time. + As well sort them at once by size and livery: + Vellum, tall copies, and the common calf + Will hardly cover more diversity + Than all your labels cunningly devised + To class your unread authors. + + +In consequence of what he had heard from Fred, Mr. Vincy determined to +speak with Mr. Bulstrode in his private room at the Bank at half-past +one, when he was usually free from other callers. But a visitor had +come in at one o'clock, and Mr. Bulstrode had so much to say to him, +that there was little chance of the interview being over in half an +hour. The banker's speech was fluent, but it was also copious, and he +used up an appreciable amount of time in brief meditative pauses. Do +not imagine his sickly aspect to have been of the yellow, black-haired +sort: he had a pale blond skin, thin gray-besprinkled brown hair, +light-gray eyes, and a large forehead. Loud men called his subdued +tone an undertone, and sometimes implied that it was inconsistent with +openness; though there seems to be no reason why a loud man should not +be given to concealment of anything except his own voice, unless it can +be shown that Holy Writ has placed the seat of candor in the lungs. +Mr. Bulstrode had also a deferential bending attitude in listening, and +an apparently fixed attentiveness in his eyes which made those persons +who thought themselves worth hearing infer that he was seeking the +utmost improvement from their discourse. Others, who expected to make +no great figure, disliked this kind of moral lantern turned on them. +If you are not proud of your cellar, there is no thrill of satisfaction +in seeing your guest hold up his wine-glass to the light and look +judicial. Such joys are reserved for conscious merit. Hence Mr. +Bulstrode's close attention was not agreeable to the publicans and +sinners in Middlemarch; it was attributed by some to his being a +Pharisee, and by others to his being Evangelical. Less superficial +reasoners among them wished to know who his father and grandfather +were, observing that five-and-twenty years ago nobody had ever heard of +a Bulstrode in Middlemarch. To his present visitor, Lydgate, the +scrutinizing look was a matter of indifference: he simply formed an +unfavorable opinion of the banker's constitution, and concluded that he +had an eager inward life with little enjoyment of tangible things. + +"I shall be exceedingly obliged if you will look in on me here +occasionally, Mr. Lydgate," the banker observed, after a brief pause. +"If, as I dare to hope, I have the privilege of finding you a valuable +coadjutor in the interesting matter of hospital management, there will +be many questions which we shall need to discuss in private. As to the +new hospital, which is nearly finished, I shall consider what you have +said about the advantages of the special destination for fevers. The +decision will rest with me, for though Lord Medlicote has given the +land and timber for the building, he is not disposed to give his +personal attention to the object." + +"There are few things better worth the pains in a provincial town like +this," said Lydgate. "A fine fever hospital in addition to the old +infirmary might be the nucleus of a medical school here, when once we +get our medical reforms; and what would do more for medical education +than the spread of such schools over the country? A born provincial +man who has a grain of public spirit as well as a few ideas, should do +what he can to resist the rush of everything that is a little better +than common towards London. Any valid professional aims may often find +a freer, if not a richer field, in the provinces." + +One of Lydgate's gifts was a voice habitually deep and sonorous, yet +capable of becoming very low and gentle at the right moment. About his +ordinary bearing there was a certain fling, a fearless expectation of +success, a confidence in his own powers and integrity much fortified by +contempt for petty obstacles or seductions of which he had had no +experience. But this proud openness was made lovable by an expression +of unaffected good-will. Mr. Bulstrode perhaps liked him the better for +the difference between them in pitch and manners; he certainly liked +him the better, as Rosamond did, for being a stranger in Middlemarch. +One can begin so many things with a new person!--even begin to be a +better man. + +"I shall rejoice to furnish your zeal with fuller opportunities," Mr. +Bulstrode answered; "I mean, by confiding to you the superintendence of +my new hospital, should a maturer knowledge favor that issue, for I am +determined that so great an object shall not be shackled by our two +physicians. Indeed, I am encouraged to consider your advent to this +town as a gracious indication that a more manifest blessing is now to +be awarded to my efforts, which have hitherto been much with stood. +With regard to the old infirmary, we have gained the initial point--I +mean your election. And now I hope you will not shrink from incurring +a certain amount of jealousy and dislike from your professional +brethren by presenting yourself as a reformer." + +"I will not profess bravery," said Lydgate, smiling, "but I acknowledge +a good deal of pleasure in fighting, and I should not care for my +profession, if I did not believe that better methods were to be found +and enforced there as well as everywhere else." + +"The standard of that profession is low in Middlemarch, my dear sir," +said the banker. "I mean in knowledge and skill; not in social status, +for our medical men are most of them connected with respectable +townspeople here. My own imperfect health has induced me to give some +attention to those palliative resources which the divine mercy has +placed within our reach. I have consulted eminent men in the +metropolis, and I am painfully aware of the backwardness under which +medical treatment labors in our provincial districts." + +"Yes;--with our present medical rules and education, one must be +satisfied now and then to meet with a fair practitioner. As to all the +higher questions which determine the starting-point of a diagnosis--as +to the philosophy of medical evidence--any glimmering of these can only +come from a scientific culture of which country practitioners have +usually no more notion than the man in the moon." + +Mr. Bulstrode, bending and looking intently, found the form which +Lydgate had given to his agreement not quite suited to his +comprehension. Under such circumstances a judicious man changes the +topic and enters on ground where his own gifts may be more useful. + +"I am aware," he said, "that the peculiar bias of medical ability is +towards material means. Nevertheless, Mr. Lydgate, I hope we shall not +vary in sentiment as to a measure in which you are not likely to be +actively concerned, but in which your sympathetic concurrence may be an +aid to me. You recognize, I hope; the existence of spiritual interests +in your patients?" + +"Certainly I do. But those words are apt to cover different meanings +to different minds." + +"Precisely. And on such subjects wrong teaching is as fatal as no +teaching. Now a point which I have much at heart to secure is a new +regulation as to clerical attendance at the old infirmary. The +building stands in Mr. Farebrother's parish. You know Mr. Farebrother?" + +"I have seen him. He gave me his vote. I must call to thank him. He +seems a very bright pleasant little fellow. And I understand he is a +naturalist." + +"Mr. Farebrother, my dear sir, is a man deeply painful to contemplate. +I suppose there is not a clergyman in this country who has greater +talents." Mr. Bulstrode paused and looked meditative. + +"I have not yet been pained by finding any excessive talent in +Middlemarch," said Lydgate, bluntly. + +"What I desire," Mr. Bulstrode continued, looking still more serious, +"is that Mr. Farebrother's attendance at the hospital should be +superseded by the appointment of a chaplain--of Mr. Tyke, in fact--and +that no other spiritual aid should be called in." + +"As a medical man I could have no opinion on such a point unless I knew +Mr. Tyke, and even then I should require to know the cases in which he +was applied." Lydgate smiled, but he was bent on being circumspect. + +"Of course you cannot enter fully into the merits of this measure at +present. But"--here Mr. Bulstrode began to speak with a more chiselled +emphasis--"the subject is likely to be referred to the medical board of +the infirmary, and what I trust I may ask of you is, that in virtue of +the cooperation between us which I now look forward to, you will not, +so far as you are concerned, be influenced by my opponents in this +matter." + +"I hope I shall have nothing to do with clerical disputes," said +Lydgate. "The path I have chosen is to work well in my own profession." + +"My responsibility, Mr. Lydgate, is of a broader kind. With me, +indeed, this question is one of sacred accountableness; whereas with my +opponents, I have good reason to say that it is an occasion for +gratifying a spirit of worldly opposition. But I shall not therefore +drop one iota of my convictions, or cease to identify myself with that +truth which an evil generation hates. I have devoted myself to this +object of hospital-improvement, but I will boldly confess to you, Mr. +Lydgate, that I should have no interest in hospitals if I believed that +nothing more was concerned therein than the cure of mortal diseases. I +have another ground of action, and in the face of persecution I will +not conceal it." + +Mr. Bulstrode's voice had become a loud and agitated whisper as he said +the last words. + +"There we certainly differ," said Lydgate. But he was not sorry that +the door was now opened, and Mr. Vincy was announced. That florid +sociable personage was become more interesting to him since he had seen +Rosamond. Not that, like her, he had been weaving any future in which +their lots were united; but a man naturally remembers a charming girl +with pleasure, and is willing to dine where he may see her again. +Before he took leave, Mr. Vincy had given that invitation which he had +been "in no hurry about," for Rosamond at breakfast had mentioned that +she thought her uncle Featherstone had taken the new doctor into great +favor. + +Mr. Bulstrode, alone with his brother-in-law, poured himself out a +glass of water, and opened a sandwich-box. + +"I cannot persuade you to adopt my regimen, Vincy?" + +"No, no; I've no opinion of that system. Life wants padding," said Mr. +Vincy, unable to omit his portable theory. "However," he went on, +accenting the word, as if to dismiss all irrelevance, "what I came here +to talk about was a little affair of my young scapegrace, Fred's." + +"That is a subject on which you and I are likely to take quite as +different views as on diet, Vincy." + +"I hope not this time." (Mr. Vincy was resolved to be good-humored.) +"The fact is, it's about a whim of old Featherstone's. Somebody has +been cooking up a story out of spite, and telling it to the old man, to +try to set him against Fred. He's very fond of Fred, and is likely to +do something handsome for him; indeed he has as good as told Fred that +he means to leave him his land, and that makes other people jealous." + +"Vincy, I must repeat, that you will not get any concurrence from me as +to the course you have pursued with your eldest son. It was entirely +from worldly vanity that you destined him for the Church: with a family +of three sons and four daughters, you were not warranted in devoting +money to an expensive education which has succeeded in nothing but in +giving him extravagant idle habits. You are now reaping the +consequences." + +To point out other people's errors was a duty that Mr. Bulstrode rarely +shrank from, but Mr. Vincy was not equally prepared to be patient. +When a man has the immediate prospect of being mayor, and is ready, in +the interests of commerce, to take up a firm attitude on politics +generally, he has naturally a sense of his importance to the framework +of things which seems to throw questions of private conduct into the +background. And this particular reproof irritated him more than any +other. It was eminently superfluous to him to be told that he was +reaping the consequences. But he felt his neck under Bulstrode's yoke; +and though he usually enjoyed kicking, he was anxious to refrain from +that relief. + +"As to that, Bulstrode, it's no use going back. I'm not one of your +pattern men, and I don't pretend to be. I couldn't foresee everything +in the trade; there wasn't a finer business in Middlemarch than ours, +and the lad was clever. My poor brother was in the Church, and would +have done well--had got preferment already, but that stomach fever took +him off: else he might have been a dean by this time. I think I was +justified in what I tried to do for Fred. If you come to religion, it +seems to me a man shouldn't want to carve out his meat to an ounce +beforehand:--one must trust a little to Providence and be generous. +It's a good British feeling to try and raise your family a little: in +my opinion, it's a father's duty to give his sons a fine chance." + +"I don't wish to act otherwise than as your best friend, Vincy, when I +say that what you have been uttering just now is one mass of +worldliness and inconsistent folly." + +"Very well," said Mr. Vincy, kicking in spite of resolutions, "I never +professed to be anything but worldly; and, what's more, I don't see +anybody else who is not worldly. I suppose you don't conduct business +on what you call unworldly principles. The only difference I see is +that one worldliness is a little bit honester than another." + +"This kind of discussion is unfruitful, Vincy," said Mr. Bulstrode, +who, finishing his sandwich, had thrown himself back in his chair, and +shaded his eyes as if weary. "You had some more particular business." + +"Yes, yes. The long and short of it is, somebody has told old +Featherstone, giving you as the authority, that Fred has been borrowing +or trying to borrow money on the prospect of his land. Of course you +never said any such nonsense. But the old fellow will insist on it +that Fred should bring him a denial in your handwriting; that is, just +a bit of a note saying you don't believe a word of such stuff, either +of his having borrowed or tried to borrow in such a fool's way. I +suppose you can have no objection to do that." + +"Pardon me. I have an objection. I am by no means sure that your son, +in his recklessness and ignorance--I will use no severer word--has not +tried to raise money by holding out his future prospects, or even that +some one may not have been foolish enough to supply him on so vague a +presumption: there is plenty of such lax money-lending as of other +folly in the world." + +"But Fred gives me his honor that he has never borrowed money on the +pretence of any understanding about his uncle's land. He is not a +liar. I don't want to make him better than he is. I have blown him up +well--nobody can say I wink at what he does. But he is not a liar. +And I should have thought--but I may be wrong--that there was no +religion to hinder a man from believing the best of a young fellow, +when you don't know worse. It seems to me it would be a poor sort of +religion to put a spoke in his wheel by refusing to say you don't +believe such harm of him as you've got no good reason to believe." + +"I am not at all sure that I should be befriending your son by +smoothing his way to the future possession of Featherstone's property. +I cannot regard wealth as a blessing to those who use it simply as a +harvest for this world. You do not like to hear these things, Vincy, +but on this occasion I feel called upon to tell you that I have no +motive for furthering such a disposition of property as that which you +refer to. I do not shrink from saying that it will not tend to your +son's eternal welfare or to the glory of God. Why then should you +expect me to pen this kind of affidavit, which has no object but to +keep up a foolish partiality and secure a foolish bequest?" + +"If you mean to hinder everybody from having money but saints and +evangelists, you must give up some profitable partnerships, that's all +I can say," Mr. Vincy burst out very bluntly. "It may be for the glory +of God, but it is not for the glory of the Middlemarch trade, that +Plymdale's house uses those blue and green dyes it gets from the +Brassing manufactory; they rot the silk, that's all I know about it. +Perhaps if other people knew so much of the profit went to the glory of +God, they might like it better. But I don't mind so much about that--I +could get up a pretty row, if I chose." + +Mr. Bulstrode paused a little before he answered. "You pain me very +much by speaking in this way, Vincy. I do not expect you to understand +my grounds of action--it is not an easy thing even to thread a path for +principles in the intricacies of the world--still less to make the +thread clear for the careless and the scoffing. You must remember, if +you please, that I stretch my tolerance towards you as my wife's +brother, and that it little becomes you to complain of me as +withholding material help towards the worldly position of your family. +I must remind you that it is not your own prudence or judgment that has +enabled you to keep your place in the trade." + +"Very likely not; but you have been no loser by my trade yet," said Mr. +Vincy, thoroughly nettled (a result which was seldom much retarded by +previous resolutions). "And when you married Harriet, I don't see how +you could expect that our families should not hang by the same nail. +If you've changed your mind, and want my family to come down in the +world, you'd better say so. I've never changed; I'm a plain Churchman +now, just as I used to be before doctrines came up. I take the world +as I find it, in trade and everything else. I'm contented to be no +worse than my neighbors. But if you want us to come down in the world, +say so. I shall know better what to do then." + +"You talk unreasonably. Shall you come down in the world for want of +this letter about your son?" + +"Well, whether or not, I consider it very unhandsome of you to refuse +it. Such doings may be lined with religion, but outside they have a +nasty, dog-in-the-manger look. You might as well slander Fred: it +comes pretty near to it when you refuse to say you didn't set a slander +going. It's this sort of thing--this tyrannical spirit, wanting to +play bishop and banker everywhere--it's this sort of thing makes a +man's name stink." + +"Vincy, if you insist on quarrelling with me, it will be exceedingly +painful to Harriet as well as myself," said Mr. Bulstrode, with a +trifle more eagerness and paleness than usual. + +"I don't want to quarrel. It's for my interest--and perhaps for yours +too--that we should be friends. I bear you no grudge; I think no worse +of you than I do of other people. A man who half starves himself, and +goes the length in family prayers, and so on, that you do, believes in +his religion whatever it may be: you could turn over your capital just +as fast with cursing and swearing:--plenty of fellows do. You like to +be master, there's no denying that; you must be first chop in heaven, +else you won't like it much. But you're my sister's husband, and we +ought to stick together; and if I know Harriet, she'll consider it your +fault if we quarrel because you strain at a gnat in this way, and +refuse to do Fred a good turn. And I don't mean to say I shall bear it +well. I consider it unhandsome." + +Mr. Vincy rose, began to button his great-coat, and looked steadily at +his brother-in-law, meaning to imply a demand for a decisive answer. + +This was not the first time that Mr. Bulstrode had begun by admonishing +Mr. Vincy, and had ended by seeing a very unsatisfactory reflection of +himself in the coarse unflattering mirror which that manufacturer's +mind presented to the subtler lights and shadows of his fellow-men; and +perhaps his experience ought to have warned him how the scene would +end. But a full-fed fountain will be generous with its waters even in +the rain, when they are worse than useless; and a fine fount of +admonition is apt to be equally irrepressible. + +It was not in Mr. Bulstrode's nature to comply directly in consequence +of uncomfortable suggestions. Before changing his course, he always +needed to shape his motives and bring them into accordance with his +habitual standard. He said, at last-- + +"I will reflect a little, Vincy. I will mention the subject to +Harriet. I shall probably send you a letter." + +"Very well. As soon as you can, please. I hope it will all be settled +before I see you to-morrow." + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + + "Follows here the strict receipt + For that sauce to dainty meat, + Named Idleness, which many eat + By preference, and call it sweet: + First watch for morsels, like a hound + Mix well with buffets, stir them round + With good thick oil of flatteries, + And froth with mean self-lauding lies. + Serve warm: the vessels you must choose + To keep it in are dead men's shoes." + + +Mr. Bulstrode's consultation of Harriet seemed to have had the effect +desired by Mr. Vincy, for early the next morning a letter came which +Fred could carry to Mr. Featherstone as the required testimony. + +The old gentleman was staying in bed on account of the cold weather, +and as Mary Garth was not to be seen in the sitting-room, Fred went +up-stairs immediately and presented the letter to his uncle, who, +propped up comfortably on a bed-rest, was not less able than usual to +enjoy his consciousness of wisdom in distrusting and frustrating +mankind. He put on his spectacles to read the letter, pursing up his +lips and drawing down their corners. + +"Under the circumstances I will not decline to state my +conviction--tchah! what fine words the fellow puts! He's as fine as an +auctioneer--that your son Frederic has not obtained any advance of +money on bequests promised by Mr. Featherstone--promised? who said I +had ever promised? I promise nothing--I shall make codicils as long as +I like--and that considering the nature of such a proceeding, it is +unreasonable to presume that a young man of sense and character would +attempt it--ah, but the gentleman doesn't say you are a young man of +sense and character, mark you that, sir!--As to my own concern with any +report of such a nature, I distinctly affirm that I never made any +statement to the effect that your son had borrowed money on any +property that might accrue to him on Mr. Featherstone's demise--bless +my heart! 'property'--accrue--demise! Lawyer Standish is nothing to +him. He couldn't speak finer if he wanted to borrow. Well," Mr. +Featherstone here looked over his spectacles at Fred, while he handed +back the letter to him with a contemptuous gesture, "you don't suppose +I believe a thing because Bulstrode writes it out fine, eh?" + +Fred colored. "You wished to have the letter, sir. I should think it +very likely that Mr. Bulstrode's denial is as good as the authority +which told you what he denies." + +"Every bit. I never said I believed either one or the other. And now +what d' you expect?" said Mr. Featherstone, curtly, keeping on his +spectacles, but withdrawing his hands under his wraps. + +"I expect nothing, sir." Fred with difficulty restrained himself from +venting his irritation. "I came to bring you the letter. If you like +I will bid you good morning." + +"Not yet, not yet. Ring the bell; I want missy to come." + +It was a servant who came in answer to the bell. + +"Tell missy to come!" said Mr. Featherstone, impatiently. "What +business had she to go away?" He spoke in the same tone when Mary came. + +"Why couldn't you sit still here till I told you to go? I want my +waistcoat now. I told you always to put it on the bed." + +Mary's eyes looked rather red, as if she had been crying. It was clear +that Mr. Featherstone was in one of his most snappish humors this +morning, and though Fred had now the prospect of receiving the +much-needed present of money, he would have preferred being free to +turn round on the old tyrant and tell him that Mary Garth was too good +to be at his beck. Though Fred had risen as she entered the room, she +had barely noticed him, and looked as if her nerves were quivering with +the expectation that something would be thrown at her. But she never +had anything worse than words to dread. When she went to reach the +waistcoat from a peg, Fred went up to her and said, "Allow me." + +"Let it alone! You bring it, missy, and lay it down here," said Mr. +Featherstone. "Now you go away again till I call you," he added, when +the waistcoat was laid down by him. It was usual with him to season +his pleasure in showing favor to one person by being especially +disagreeable to another, and Mary was always at hand to furnish the +condiment. When his own relatives came she was treated better. Slowly +he took out a bunch of keys from the waistcoat pocket, and slowly he +drew forth a tin box which was under the bed-clothes. + +"You expect I am going to give you a little fortune, eh?" he said, +looking above his spectacles and pausing in the act of opening the lid. + +"Not at all, sir. You were good enough to speak of making me a present +the other day, else, of course, I should not have thought of the +matter." But Fred was of a hopeful disposition, and a vision had +presented itself of a sum just large enough to deliver him from a +certain anxiety. When Fred got into debt, it always seemed to him +highly probable that something or other--he did not necessarily +conceive what--would come to pass enabling him to pay in due time. And +now that the providential occurrence was apparently close at hand, it +would have been sheer absurdity to think that the supply would be short +of the need: as absurd as a faith that believed in half a miracle for +want of strength to believe in a whole one. + +The deep-veined hands fingered many bank-notes-one after the other, +laying them down flat again, while Fred leaned back in his chair, +scorning to look eager. He held himself to be a gentleman at heart, +and did not like courting an old fellow for his money. At last, Mr. +Featherstone eyed him again over his spectacles and presented him with +a little sheaf of notes: Fred could see distinctly that there were but +five, as the less significant edges gaped towards him. But then, each +might mean fifty pounds. He took them, saying-- + +"I am very much obliged to you, sir," and was going to roll them up +without seeming to think of their value. But this did not suit Mr. +Featherstone, who was eying him intently. + +"Come, don't you think it worth your while to count 'em? You take +money like a lord; I suppose you lose it like one." + +"I thought I was not to look a gift-horse in the mouth, sir. But I +shall be very happy to count them." + +Fred was not so happy, however, after he had counted them. For they +actually presented the absurdity of being less than his hopefulness had +decided that they must be. What can the fitness of things mean, if not +their fitness to a man's expectations? Failing this, absurdity and +atheism gape behind him. The collapse for Fred was severe when he +found that he held no more than five twenties, and his share in the +higher education of this country did not seem to help him. +Nevertheless he said, with rapid changes in his fair complexion-- + +"It is very handsome of you, sir." + +"I should think it is," said Mr. Featherstone, locking his box and +replacing it, then taking off his spectacles deliberately, and at +length, as if his inward meditation had more deeply convinced him, +repeating, "I should think it handsome." + +"I assure you, sir, I am very grateful," said Fred, who had had time to +recover his cheerful air. + +"So you ought to be. You want to cut a figure in the world, and I +reckon Peter Featherstone is the only one you've got to trust to." Here +the old man's eyes gleamed with a curiously mingled satisfaction in the +consciousness that this smart young fellow relied upon him, and that +the smart young fellow was rather a fool for doing so. + +"Yes, indeed: I was not born to very splendid chances. Few men have +been more cramped than I have been," said Fred, with some sense of +surprise at his own virtue, considering how hardly he was dealt with. +"It really seems a little too bad to have to ride a broken-winded +hunter, and see men, who, are not half such good judges as yourself, +able to throw away any amount of money on buying bad bargains." + +"Well, you can buy yourself a fine hunter now. Eighty pound is enough +for that, I reckon--and you'll have twenty pound over to get yourself +out of any little scrape," said Mr. Featherstone, chuckling slightly. + +"You are very good, sir," said Fred, with a fine sense of contrast +between the words and his feeling. + +"Ay, rather a better uncle than your fine uncle Bulstrode. You won't +get much out of his spekilations, I think. He's got a pretty strong +string round your father's leg, by what I hear, eh?" + +"My father never tells me anything about his affairs, sir." + +"Well, he shows some sense there. But other people find 'em out +without his telling. _He'll_ never have much to leave you: he'll +most-like die without a will--he's the sort of man to do it--let 'em +make him mayor of Middlemarch as much as they like. But you won't get +much by his dying without a will, though you _are_ the eldest son." + +Fred thought that Mr. Featherstone had never been so disagreeable +before. True, he had never before given him quite so much money at +once. + +"Shall I destroy this letter of Mr. Bulstrode's, sir?" said Fred, +rising with the letter as if he would put it in the fire. + +"Ay, ay, I don't want it. It's worth no money to me." + +Fred carried the letter to the fire, and thrust the poker through it +with much zest. He longed to get out of the room, but he was a little +ashamed before his inner self, as well as before his uncle, to run away +immediately after pocketing the money. Presently, the farm-bailiff +came up to give his master a report, and Fred, to his unspeakable +relief, was dismissed with the injunction to come again soon. + +He had longed not only to be set free from his uncle, but also to find +Mary Garth. She was now in her usual place by the fire, with sewing in +her hands and a book open on the little table by her side. Her eyelids +had lost some of their redness now, and she had her usual air of +self-command. + +"Am I wanted up-stairs?" she said, half rising as Fred entered. + +"No; I am only dismissed, because Simmons is gone up." + +Mary sat down again, and resumed her work. She was certainly treating +him with more indifference than usual: she did not know how +affectionately indignant he had felt on her behalf up-stairs. + +"May I stay here a little, Mary, or shall I bore you?" + +"Pray sit down," said Mary; "you will not be so heavy a bore as Mr. +John Waule, who was here yesterday, and he sat down without asking my +leave." + +"Poor fellow! I think he is in love with you." + +"I am not aware of it. And to me it is one of the most odious things +in a girl's life, that there must always be some supposition of falling +in love coming between her and any man who is kind to her, and to whom +she is grateful. I should have thought that I, at least, might have +been safe from all that. I have no ground for the nonsensical vanity +of fancying everybody who comes near me is in love with me." + +Mary did not mean to betray any feeling, but in spite of herself she +ended in a tremulous tone of vexation. + +"Confound John Waule! I did not mean to make you angry. I didn't know +you had any reason for being grateful to me. I forgot what a great +service you think it if any one snuffs a candle for you." Fred also had +his pride, and was not going to show that he knew what had called forth +this outburst of Mary's. + +"Oh, I am not angry, except with the ways of the world. I do like to +be spoken to as if I had common-sense. I really often feel as if I +could understand a little more than I ever hear even from young +gentlemen who have been to college." Mary had recovered, and she spoke +with a suppressed rippling under-current of laughter pleasant to hear. + +"I don't care how merry you are at my expense this morning," said Fred, +"I thought you looked so sad when you came up-stairs. It is a shame you +should stay here to be bullied in that way." + +"Oh, I have an easy life--by comparison. I have tried being a teacher, +and I am not fit for that: my mind is too fond of wandering on its own +way. I think any hardship is better than pretending to do what one is +paid for, and never really doing it. Everything here I can do as well +as any one else could; perhaps better than some--Rosy, for example. +Though she is just the sort of beautiful creature that is imprisoned +with ogres in fairy tales." + +"_Rosy!_" cried Fred, in a tone of profound brotherly scepticism. + +"Come, Fred!" said Mary, emphatically; "you have no right to be so +critical." + +"Do you mean anything particular--just now?" + +"No, I mean something general--always." + +"Oh, that I am idle and extravagant. Well, I am not fit to be a poor +man. I should not have made a bad fellow if I had been rich." + +"You would have done your duty in that state of life to which it has +not pleased God to call you," said Mary, laughing. + +"Well, I couldn't do my duty as a clergyman, any more than you could do +yours as a governess. You ought to have a little fellow-feeling there, +Mary." + +"I never said you ought to be a clergyman. There are other sorts of +work. It seems to me very miserable not to resolve on some course and +act accordingly." + +"So I could, if--" Fred broke off, and stood up, leaning against the +mantel-piece. + +"If you were sure you should not have a fortune?" + +"I did not say that. You want to quarrel with me. It is too bad of +you to be guided by what other people say about me." + +"How can I want to quarrel with you? I should be quarrelling with all +my new books," said Mary, lifting the volume on the table. "However +naughty you may be to other people, you are good to me." + +"Because I like you better than any one else. But I know you despise +me." + +"Yes, I do--a little," said Mary, nodding, with a smile. + +"You would admire a stupendous fellow, who would have wise opinions +about everything." + +"Yes, I should." Mary was sewing swiftly, and seemed provokingly +mistress of the situation. When a conversation has taken a wrong turn +for us, we only get farther and farther into the swamp of awkwardness. +This was what Fred Vincy felt. + +"I suppose a woman is never in love with any one she has always +known--ever since she can remember; as a man often is. It is always +some new fellow who strikes a girl." + +"Let me see," said Mary, the corners of her mouth curling archly; "I +must go back on my experience. There is Juliet--she seems an example +of what you say. But then Ophelia had probably known Hamlet a long +while; and Brenda Troil--she had known Mordaunt Merton ever since they +were children; but then he seems to have been an estimable young man; +and Minna was still more deeply in love with Cleveland, who was a +stranger. Waverley was new to Flora MacIvor; but then she did not fall +in love with him. And there are Olivia and Sophia Primrose, and +Corinne--they may be said to have fallen in love with new men. +Altogether, my experience is rather mixed." + +Mary looked up with some roguishness at Fred, and that look of hers was +very dear to him, though the eyes were nothing more than clear windows +where observation sat laughingly. He was certainly an affectionate +fellow, and as he had grown from boy to man, he had grown in love with +his old playmate, notwithstanding that share in the higher education of +the country which had exalted his views of rank and income. + +"When a man is not loved, it is no use for him to say that he could be +a better fellow--could do anything--I mean, if he were sure of being +loved in return." + +"Not of the least use in the world for him to say he _could_ be better. +Might, could, would--they are contemptible auxiliaries." + +"I don't see how a man is to be good for much unless he has some one +woman to love him dearly." + +"I think the goodness should come before he expects that." + +"You know better, Mary. Women don't love men for their goodness." + +"Perhaps not. But if they love them, they never think them bad." + +"It is hardly fair to say I am bad." + +"I said nothing at all about you." + +"I never shall be good for anything, Mary, if you will not say that you +love me--if you will not promise to marry me--I mean, when I am able to +marry." + +"If I did love you, I would not marry you: I would certainly not +promise ever to marry you." + +"I think that is quite wicked, Mary. If you love me, you ought to +promise to marry me." + +"On the contrary, I think it would be wicked in me to marry you even if +I did love you." + +"You mean, just as I am, without any means of maintaining a wife. Of +course: I am but three-and-twenty." + +"In that last point you will alter. But I am not so sure of any other +alteration. My father says an idle man ought not to exist, much less, +be married." + +"Then I am to blow my brains out?" + +"No; on the whole I should think you would do better to pass your +examination. I have heard Mr. Farebrother say it is disgracefully +easy." + +"That is all very fine. Anything is easy to him. Not that cleverness +has anything to do with it. I am ten times cleverer than many men who +pass." + +"Dear me!" said Mary, unable to repress her sarcasm; "that accounts for +the curates like Mr. Crowse. Divide your cleverness by ten, and the +quotient--dear me!--is able to take a degree. But that only shows you +are ten times more idle than the others." + +"Well, if I did pass, you would not want me to go into the Church?" + +"That is not the question--what I want you to do. You have a +conscience of your own, I suppose. There! there is Mr. Lydgate. I +must go and tell my uncle." + +"Mary," said Fred, seizing her hand as she rose; "if you will not give +me some encouragement, I shall get worse instead of better." + +"I will not give you any encouragement," said Mary, reddening. "Your +friends would dislike it, and so would mine. My father would think it +a disgrace to me if I accepted a man who got into debt, and would not +work!" + +Fred was stung, and released her hand. She walked to the door, but +there she turned and said: "Fred, you have always been so good, so +generous to me. I am not ungrateful. But never speak to me in that +way again." + +"Very well," said Fred, sulkily, taking up his hat and whip. His +complexion showed patches of pale pink and dead white. Like many a +plucked idle young gentleman, he was thoroughly in love, and with a +plain girl, who had no money! But having Mr. Featherstone's land in +the background, and a persuasion that, let Mary say what she would, she +really did care for him, Fred was not utterly in despair. + +When he got home, he gave four of the twenties to his mother, asking +her to keep them for him. "I don't want to spend that money, mother. +I want it to pay a debt with. So keep it safe away from my fingers." + +"Bless you, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy. She doted on her eldest son and +her youngest girl (a child of six), whom others thought her two +naughtiest children. The mother's eyes are not always deceived in +their partiality: she at least can best judge who is the tender, +filial-hearted child. And Fred was certainly very fond of his mother. +Perhaps it was his fondness for another person also that made him +particularly anxious to take some security against his own liability to +spend the hundred pounds. For the creditor to whom he owed a hundred +and sixty held a firmer security in the shape of a bill signed by +Mary's father. + + + +CHAPTER XV. + + "Black eyes you have left, you say, + Blue eyes fail to draw you; + Yet you seem more rapt to-day, + Than of old we saw you. + + "Oh, I track the fairest fair + Through new haunts of pleasure; + Footprints here and echoes there + Guide me to my treasure: + + "Lo! she turns--immortal youth + Wrought to mortal stature, + Fresh as starlight's aged truth-- + Many-named Nature!" + + +A great historian, as he insisted on calling himself, who had the +happiness to be dead a hundred and twenty years ago, and so to take his +place among the colossi whose huge legs our living pettiness is +observed to walk under, glories in his copious remarks and digressions +as the least imitable part of his work, and especially in those initial +chapters to the successive books of his history, where he seems to +bring his armchair to the proscenium and chat with us in all the lusty +ease of his fine English. But Fielding lived when the days were longer +(for time, like money, is measured by our needs), when summer +afternoons were spacious, and the clock ticked slowly in the winter +evenings. We belated historians must not linger after his example; and +if we did so, it is probable that our chat would be thin and eager, as +if delivered from a campstool in a parrot-house. I at least have so +much to do in unraveling certain human lots, and seeing how they were +woven and interwoven, that all the light I can command must be +concentrated on this particular web, and not dispersed over that +tempting range of relevancies called the universe. + +At present I have to make the new settler Lydgate better known to any +one interested in him than he could possibly be even to those who had +seen the most of him since his arrival in Middlemarch. For surely all +must admit that a man may be puffed and belauded, envied, ridiculed, +counted upon as a tool and fallen in love with, or at least selected as +a future husband, and yet remain virtually unknown--known merely as a +cluster of signs for his neighbors' false suppositions. There was a +general impression, however, that Lydgate was not altogether a common +country doctor, and in Middlemarch at that time such an impression was +significant of great things being expected from him. For everybody's +family doctor was remarkably clever, and was understood to have +immeasurable skill in the management and training of the most skittish +or vicious diseases. The evidence of his cleverness was of the higher +intuitive order, lying in his lady-patients' immovable conviction, and +was unassailable by any objection except that their intuitions were +opposed by others equally strong; each lady who saw medical truth in +Wrench and "the strengthening treatment" regarding Toller and "the +lowering system" as medical perdition. For the heroic times of copious +bleeding and blistering had not yet departed, still less the times of +thorough-going theory, when disease in general was called by some bad +name, and treated accordingly without shilly-shally--as if, for +example, it were to be called insurrection, which must not be fired on +with blank-cartridge, but have its blood drawn at once. The +strengtheners and the lowerers were all "clever" men in somebody's +opinion, which is really as much as can be said for any living talents. +Nobody's imagination had gone so far as to conjecture that Mr. Lydgate +could know as much as Dr. Sprague and Dr. Minchin, the two physicians, +who alone could offer any hope when danger was extreme, and when the +smallest hope was worth a guinea. Still, I repeat, there was a general +impression that Lydgate was something rather more uncommon than any +general practitioner in Middlemarch. And this was true. He was but +seven-and-twenty, an age at which many men are not quite common--at +which they are hopeful of achievement, resolute in avoidance, thinking +that Mammon shall never put a bit in their mouths and get astride their +backs, but rather that Mammon, if they have anything to do with him, +shall draw their chariot. + +He had been left an orphan when he was fresh from a public school. His +father, a military man, had made but little provision for three +children, and when the boy Tertius asked to have a medical education, +it seemed easier to his guardians to grant his request by apprenticing +him to a country practitioner than to make any objections on the score +of family dignity. He was one of the rarer lads who early get a +decided bent and make up their minds that there is something particular +in life which they would like to do for its own sake, and not because +their fathers did it. Most of us who turn to any subject with love +remember some morning or evening hour when we got on a high stool to +reach down an untried volume, or sat with parted lips listening to a +new talker, or for very lack of books began to listen to the voices +within, as the first traceable beginning of our love. Something of +that sort happened to Lydgate. He was a quick fellow, and when hot +from play, would toss himself in a corner, and in five minutes be deep +in any sort of book that he could lay his hands on: if it were Rasselas +or Gulliver, so much the better, but Bailey's Dictionary would do, or +the Bible with the Apocrypha in it. Something he must read, when he +was not riding the pony, or running and hunting, or listening to the +talk of men. All this was true of him at ten years of age; he had then +read through "Chrysal, or the Adventures of a Guinea," which was +neither milk for babes, nor any chalky mixture meant to pass for milk, +and it had already occurred to him that books were stuff, and that life +was stupid. His school studies had not much modified that opinion, for +though he "did" his classics and mathematics, he was not pre-eminent in +them. It was said of him, that Lydgate could do anything he liked, but +he had certainly not yet liked to do anything remarkable. He was a +vigorous animal with a ready understanding, but no spark had yet +kindled in him an intellectual passion; knowledge seemed to him a very +superficial affair, easily mastered: judging from the conversation of +his elders, he had apparently got already more than was necessary for +mature life. Probably this was not an exceptional result of expensive +teaching at that period of short-waisted coats, and other fashions +which have not yet recurred. But, one vacation, a wet day sent him to +the small home library to hunt once more for a book which might have +some freshness for him: in vain! unless, indeed, he took down a dusty +row of volumes with gray-paper backs and dingy labels--the volumes of +an old Cyclopaedia which he had never disturbed. It would at least be +a novelty to disturb them. They were on the highest shelf, and he +stood on a chair to get them down. But he opened the volume which he +first took from the shelf: somehow, one is apt to read in a makeshift +attitude, just where it might seem inconvenient to do so. The page he +opened on was under the head of Anatomy, and the first passage that +drew his eyes was on the valves of the heart. He was not much +acquainted with valves of any sort, but he knew that valvae were +folding-doors, and through this crevice came a sudden light startling +him with his first vivid notion of finely adjusted mechanism in the +human frame. A liberal education had of course left him free to read +the indecent passages in the school classics, but beyond a general +sense of secrecy and obscenity in connection with his internal +structure, had left his imagination quite unbiassed, so that for +anything he knew his brains lay in small bags at his temples, and he +had no more thought of representing to himself how his blood circulated +than how paper served instead of gold. But the moment of vocation had +come, and before he got down from his chair, the world was made new to +him by a presentiment of endless processes filling the vast spaces +planked out of his sight by that wordy ignorance which he had supposed +to be knowledge. From that hour Lydgate felt the growth of an +intellectual passion. + +We are not afraid of telling over and over again how a man comes to +fall in love with a woman and be wedded to her, or else be fatally +parted from her. Is it due to excess of poetry or of stupidity that we +are never weary of describing what King James called a woman's "makdom +and her fairnesse," never weary of listening to the twanging of the old +Troubadour strings, and are comparatively uninterested in that other +kind of "makdom and fairnesse" which must be wooed with industrious +thought and patient renunciation of small desires? In the story of +this passion, too, the development varies: sometimes it is the glorious +marriage, sometimes frustration and final parting. And not seldom the +catastrophe is bound up with the other passion, sung by the +Troubadours. For in the multitude of middle-aged men who go about +their vocations in a daily course determined for them much in the same +way as the tie of their cravats, there is always a good number who once +meant to shape their own deeds and alter the world a little. The story +of their coming to be shapen after the average and fit to be packed by +the gross, is hardly ever told even in their consciousness; for perhaps +their ardor in generous unpaid toil cooled as imperceptibly as the +ardor of other youthful loves, till one day their earlier self walked +like a ghost in its old home and made the new furniture ghastly. +Nothing in the world more subtle than the process of their gradual +change! In the beginning they inhaled it unknowingly: you and I may +have sent some of our breath towards infecting them, when we uttered +our conforming falsities or drew our silly conclusions: or perhaps it +came with the vibrations from a woman's glance. + +Lydgate did not mean to be one of those failures, and there was the +better hope of him because his scientific interest soon took the form +of a professional enthusiasm: he had a youthful belief in his +bread-winning work, not to be stifled by that initiation in makeshift +called his 'prentice days; and he carried to his studies in London, +Edinburgh, and Paris, the conviction that the medical profession as it +might be was the finest in the world; presenting the most perfect +interchange between science and art; offering the most direct alliance +between intellectual conquest and the social good. Lydgate's nature +demanded this combination: he was an emotional creature, with a +flesh-and-blood sense of fellowship which withstood all the +abstractions of special study. He cared not only for "cases," but for +John and Elizabeth, especially Elizabeth. + +There was another attraction in his profession: it wanted reform, and +gave a man an opportunity for some indignant resolve to reject its +venal decorations and other humbug, and to be the possessor of genuine +though undemanded qualifications. He went to study in Paris with the +determination that when he came home again he would settle in some +provincial town as a general practitioner, and resist the +irrational severance between medical and surgical knowledge in the +interest of his own scientific pursuits, as well as of the general +advance: he would keep away from the range of London intrigues, +jealousies, and social truckling, and win celebrity, however slowly, as +Jenner had done, by the independent value of his work. For it must be +remembered that this was a dark period; and in spite of venerable +colleges which used great efforts to secure purity of knowledge by +making it scarce, and to exclude error by a rigid exclusiveness in +relation to fees and appointments, it happened that very ignorant young +gentlemen were promoted in town, and many more got a legal right to +practise over large areas in the country. Also, the high standard held +up to the public mind by the College of Physicians, which gave its peculiar +sanction to the expensive and highly rarefied medical instruction +obtained by graduates of Oxford and Cambridge, did not hinder quackery +from having an excellent time of it; for since professional practice +chiefly consisted in giving a great many drugs, the public inferred +that it might be better off with more drugs still, if they could only +be got cheaply, and hence swallowed large cubic measures of physic +prescribed by unscrupulous ignorance which had taken no degrees. +Considering that statistics had not yet embraced a calculation as to +the number of ignorant or canting doctors which absolutely must exist +in the teeth of all changes, it seemed to Lydgate that a change in the +units was the most direct mode of changing the numbers. He meant to be +a unit who would make a certain amount of difference towards that +spreading change which would one day tell appreciably upon the +averages, and in the mean time have the pleasure of making an +advantageous difference to the viscera of his own patients. But he did +not simply aim at a more genuine kind of practice than was common. He +was ambitious of a wider effect: he was fired with the possibility that +he might work out the proof of an anatomical conception and make a link +in the chain of discovery. + +Does it seem incongruous to you that a Middlemarch surgeon should dream +of himself as a discoverer? Most of us, indeed, know little of the +great originators until they have been lifted up among the +constellations and already rule our fates. But that Herschel, for +example, who "broke the barriers of the heavens"--did he not once play +a provincial church-organ, and give music-lessons to stumbling +pianists? Each of those Shining Ones had to walk on the earth among +neighbors who perhaps thought much more of his gait and his garments +than of anything which was to give him a title to everlasting fame: +each of them had his little local personal history sprinkled with small +temptations and sordid cares, which made the retarding friction of his +course towards final companionship with the immortals. Lydgate was not +blind to the dangers of such friction, but he had plenty of confidence +in his resolution to avoid it as far as possible: being +seven-and-twenty, he felt himself experienced. And he was not going to +have his vanities provoked by contact with the showy worldly successes +of the capital, but to live among people who could hold no rivalry with +that pursuit of a great idea which was to be a twin object with the +assiduous practice of his profession. There was fascination in the +hope that the two purposes would illuminate each other: the careful +observation and inference which was his daily work, the use of the lens +to further his judgment in special cases, would further his thought as +an instrument of larger inquiry. Was not this the typical pre-eminence +of his profession? He would be a good Middlemarch doctor, and by that +very means keep himself in the track of far-reaching investigation. On +one point he may fairly claim approval at this particular stage of his +career: he did not mean to imitate those philanthropic models who make +a profit out of poisonous pickles to support themselves while they are +exposing adulteration, or hold shares in a gambling-hell that they may +have leisure to represent the cause of public morality. He intended to +begin in his own case some particular reforms which were quite +certainly within his reach, and much less of a problem than the +demonstrating of an anatomical conception. One of these reforms was to +act stoutly on the strength of a recent legal decision, and simply +prescribe, without dispensing drugs or taking percentage from +druggists. This was an innovation for one who had chosen to adopt the +style of general practitioner in a country town, and would be felt as +offensive criticism by his professional brethren. But Lydgate meant to +innovate in his treatment also, and he was wise enough to see that the +best security for his practising honestly according to his belief was +to get rid of systematic temptations to the contrary. + +Perhaps that was a more cheerful time for observers and theorizers than +the present; we are apt to think it the finest era of the world when +America was beginning to be discovered, when a bold sailor, even if he +were wrecked, might alight on a new kingdom; and about 1829 the dark +territories of Pathology were a fine America for a spirited young +adventurer. Lydgate was ambitious above all to contribute towards +enlarging the scientific, rational basis of his profession. The more +he became interested in special questions of disease, such as the +nature of fever or fevers, the more keenly he felt the need for that +fundamental knowledge of structure which just at the beginning of the +century had been illuminated by the brief and glorious career of +Bichat, who died when he was only one-and-thirty, but, like another +Alexander, left a realm large enough for many heirs. That great +Frenchman first carried out the conception that living bodies, +fundamentally considered, are not associations of organs which can be +understood by studying them first apart, and then as it were federally; +but must be regarded as consisting of certain primary webs or tissues, +out of which the various organs--brain, heart, lungs, and so on--are +compacted, as the various accommodations of a house are built up in +various proportions of wood, iron, stone, brick, zinc, and the rest, +each material having its peculiar composition and proportions. No man, +one sees, can understand and estimate the entire structure or its +parts--what are its frailties and what its repairs, without knowing the +nature of the materials. And the conception wrought out by Bichat, +with his detailed study of the different tissues, acted necessarily on +medical questions as the turning of gas-light would act on a dim, +oil-lit street, showing new connections and hitherto hidden facts of +structure which must be taken into account in considering the symptoms +of maladies and the action of medicaments. But results which depend on +human conscience and intelligence work slowly, and now at the end of +1829, most medical practice was still strutting or shambling along the +old paths, and there was still scientific work to be done which might +have seemed to be a direct sequence of Bichat's. This great seer did +not go beyond the consideration of the tissues as ultimate facts in the +living organism, marking the limit of anatomical analysis; but it was +open to another mind to say, have not these structures some common +basis from which they have all started, as your sarsnet, gauze, net, +satin, and velvet from the raw cocoon? Here would be another light, as +of oxy-hydrogen, showing the very grain of things, and revising all +former explanations. Of this sequence to Bichat's work, already +vibrating along many currents of the European mind, Lydgate was +enamoured; he longed to demonstrate the more intimate relations of +living structure, and help to define men's thought more accurately +after the true order. The work had not yet been done, but only +prepared for those who knew how to use the preparation. What was the +primitive tissue? In that way Lydgate put the question--not quite in +the way required by the awaiting answer; but such missing of the right +word befalls many seekers. And he counted on quiet intervals to be +watchfully seized, for taking up the threads of investigation--on many +hints to be won from diligent application, not only of the scalpel, but +of the microscope, which research had begun to use again with new +enthusiasm of reliance. Such was Lydgate's plan of his future: to do +good small work for Middlemarch, and great work for the world. + +He was certainly a happy fellow at this time: to be seven-and-twenty, +without any fixed vices, with a generous resolution that his action +should be beneficent, and with ideas in his brain that made life +interesting quite apart from the cultus of horseflesh and other mystic +rites of costly observance, which the eight hundred pounds left him +after buying his practice would certainly not have gone far in paying +for. He was at a starting-point which makes many a man's career a fine +subject for betting, if there were any gentlemen given to that +amusement who could appreciate the complicated probabilities of an +arduous purpose, with all the possible thwartings and furtherings of +circumstance, all the niceties of inward balance, by which a man swims +and makes his point or else is carried headlong. The risk would remain +even with close knowledge of Lydgate's character; for character too is +a process and an unfolding. The man was still in the making, as much +as the Middlemarch doctor and immortal discoverer, and there were both +virtues and faults capable of shrinking or expanding. The faults will +not, I hope, be a reason for the withdrawal of your interest in him. +Among our valued friends is there not some one or other who is a little +too self-confident and disdainful; whose distinguished mind is a little +spotted with commonness; who is a little pinched here and protuberant +there with native prejudices; or whose better energies are liable to +lapse down the wrong channel under the influence of transient +solicitations? All these things might be alleged against Lydgate, but +then, they are the periphrases of a polite preacher, who talks of Adam, +and would not like to mention anything painful to the pew-renters. The +particular faults from which these delicate generalities are distilled +have distinguishable physiognomies, diction, accent, and grimaces; +filling up parts in very various dramas. Our vanities differ as our +noses do: all conceit is not the same conceit, but varies in +correspondence with the minutiae of mental make in which one of us +differs from another. Lydgate's conceit was of the arrogant sort, +never simpering, never impertinent, but massive in its claims and +benevolently contemptuous. He would do a great deal for noodles, being +sorry for them, and feeling quite sure that they could have no power +over him: he had thought of joining the Saint Simonians when he was in +Paris, in order to turn them against some of their own doctrines. All +his faults were marked by kindred traits, and were those of a man who +had a fine baritone, whose clothes hung well upon him, and who even in +his ordinary gestures had an air of inbred distinction. Where then lay +the spots of commonness? says a young lady enamoured of that careless +grace. How could there be any commonness in a man so well-bred, so +ambitious of social distinction, so generous and unusual in his views +of social duty? As easily as there may be stupidity in a man of genius +if you take him unawares on the wrong subject, or as many a man who has +the best will to advance the social millennium might be ill-inspired in +imagining its lighter pleasures; unable to go beyond Offenbach's music, +or the brilliant punning in the last burlesque. Lydgate's spots of +commonness lay in the complexion of his prejudices, which, in spite of +noble intention and sympathy, were half of them such as are found in +ordinary men of the world: that distinction of mind which belonged to +his intellectual ardor, did not penetrate his feeling and judgment +about furniture, or women, or the desirability of its being known +(without his telling) that he was better born than other country +surgeons. He did not mean to think of furniture at present; but +whenever he did so it was to be feared that neither biology nor schemes +of reform would lift him above the vulgarity of feeling that there +would be an incompatibility in his furniture not being of the best. + +As to women, he had once already been drawn headlong by impetuous +folly, which he meant to be final, since marriage at some distant +period would of course not be impetuous. For those who want to be +acquainted with Lydgate it will be good to know what was that case of +impetuous folly, for it may stand as an example of the fitful swerving +of passion to which he was prone, together with the chivalrous kindness +which helped to make him morally lovable. The story can be told +without many words. It happened when he was studying in Paris, and +just at the time when, over and above his other work, he was occupied +with some galvanic experiments. One evening, tired with his +experimenting, and not being able to elicit the facts he needed, he +left his frogs and rabbits to some repose under their trying and +mysterious dispensation of unexplained shocks, and went to finish his +evening at the theatre of the Porte Saint Martin, where there was a +melodrama which he had already seen several times; attracted, not by +the ingenious work of the collaborating authors, but by an actress +whose part it was to stab her lover, mistaking him for the +evil-designing duke of the piece. Lydgate was in love with this +actress, as a man is in love with a woman whom he never expects to +speak to. She was a Provencale, with dark eyes, a Greek profile, and +rounded majestic form, having that sort of beauty which carries a sweet +matronliness even in youth, and her voice was a soft cooing. She had +but lately come to Paris, and bore a virtuous reputation, her husband +acting with her as the unfortunate lover. It was her acting which was +"no better than it should be," but the public was satisfied. Lydgate's +only relaxation now was to go and look at this woman, just as he might +have thrown himself under the breath of the sweet south on a bank of +violets for a while, without prejudice to his galvanism, to which he +would presently return. But this evening the old drama had a new +catastrophe. At the moment when the heroine was to act the stabbing of +her lover, and he was to fall gracefully, the wife veritably stabbed +her husband, who fell as death willed. A wild shriek pierced the +house, and the Provencale fell swooning: a shriek and a swoon were +demanded by the play, but the swooning too was real this time. Lydgate +leaped and climbed, he hardly knew how, on to the stage, and was active +in help, making the acquaintance of his heroine by finding a contusion +on her head and lifting her gently in his arms. Paris rang with the +story of this death:--was it a murder? Some of the actress's warmest +admirers were inclined to believe in her guilt, and liked her the +better for it (such was the taste of those times); but Lydgate was not +one of these. He vehemently contended for her innocence, and the +remote impersonal passion for her beauty which he had felt before, had +passed now into personal devotion, and tender thought of her lot. The +notion of murder was absurd: no motive was discoverable, the young +couple being understood to dote on each other; and it was not +unprecedented that an accidental slip of the foot should have brought +these grave consequences. The legal investigation ended in Madame +Laure's release. Lydgate by this time had had many interviews with +her, and found her more and more adorable. She talked little; but that +was an additional charm. She was melancholy, and seemed grateful; her +presence was enough, like that of the evening light. Lydgate was madly +anxious about her affection, and jealous lest any other man than +himself should win it and ask her to marry him. But instead of +reopening her engagement at the Porte Saint Martin, where she would +have been all the more popular for the fatal episode, she left Paris +without warning, forsaking her little court of admirers. Perhaps no +one carried inquiry far except Lydgate, who felt that all science had +come to a stand-still while he imagined the unhappy Laure, stricken by +ever-wandering sorrow, herself wandering, and finding no faithful +comforter. Hidden actresses, however, are not so difficult to find as +some other hidden facts, and it was not long before Lydgate gathered +indications that Laure had taken the route to Lyons. He found her at +last acting with great success at Avignon under the same name, looking +more majestic than ever as a forsaken wife carrying her child in her +arms. He spoke to her after the play, was received with the usual +quietude which seemed to him beautiful as clear depths of water, and +obtained leave to visit her the next day; when he was bent on telling +her that he adored her, and on asking her to marry him. He knew that +this was like the sudden impulse of a madman--incongruous even with his +habitual foibles. No matter! It was the one thing which he was +resolved to do. He had two selves within him apparently, and they must +learn to accommodate each other and bear reciprocal impediments. +Strange, that some of us, with quick alternate vision, see beyond our +infatuations, and even while we rave on the heights, behold the wide +plain where our persistent self pauses and awaits us. + +To have approached Laure with any suit that was not reverentially +tender would have been simply a contradiction of his whole feeling +towards her. + +"You have come all the way from Paris to find me?" she said to him the +next day, sitting before him with folded arms, and looking at him with +eyes that seemed to wonder as an untamed ruminating animal wonders. +"Are all Englishmen like that?" + +"I came because I could not live without trying to see you. You are +lonely; I love you; I want you to consent to be my wife; I will wait, +but I want you to promise that you will marry me--no one else." + +Laure looked at him in silence with a melancholy radiance from under +her grand eyelids, until he was full of rapturous certainty, and knelt +close to her knees. + +"I will tell you something," she said, in her cooing way, keeping her +arms folded. "My foot really slipped." + +"I know, I know," said Lydgate, deprecatingly. "It was a fatal +accident--a dreadful stroke of calamity that bound me to you the more." + +Again Laure paused a little and then said, slowly, "_I meant to do it._" + +Lydgate, strong man as he was, turned pale and trembled: moments seemed +to pass before he rose and stood at a distance from her. + +"There was a secret, then," he said at last, even vehemently. "He was +brutal to you: you hated him." + +"No! he wearied me; he was too fond: he would live in Paris, and not in +my country; that was not agreeable to me." + +"Great God!" said Lydgate, in a groan of horror. "And you planned to +murder him?" + +"I did not plan: it came to me in the play--_I meant to do it._" + +Lydgate stood mute, and unconsciously pressed his hat on while he +looked at her. He saw this woman--the first to whom he had given his +young adoration--amid the throng of stupid criminals. + +"You are a good young man," she said. "But I do not like husbands. I +will never have another." + +Three days afterwards Lydgate was at his galvanism again in his Paris +chambers, believing that illusions were at an end for him. He was +saved from hardening effects by the abundant kindness of his heart and +his belief that human life might be made better. But he had more +reason than ever for trusting his judgment, now that it was so +experienced; and henceforth he would take a strictly scientific view of +woman, entertaining no expectations but such as were justified +beforehand. + +No one in Middlemarch was likely to have such a notion of Lydgate's +past as has here been faintly shadowed, and indeed the respectable +townsfolk there were not more given than mortals generally to any eager +attempt at exactness in the representation to themselves of what did +not come under their own senses. Not only young virgins of that town, +but gray-bearded men also, were often in haste to conjecture how a new +acquaintance might be wrought into their purposes, contented with very +vague knowledge as to the way in which life had been shaping him for +that instrumentality. Middlemarch, in fact, counted on swallowing +Lydgate and assimilating him very comfortably. + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + + "All that in woman is adored + In thy fair self I find-- + For the whole sex can but afford + The handsome and the kind." + --SIR CHARLES SEDLEY. + + +The question whether Mr. Tyke should be appointed as salaried chaplain +to the hospital was an exciting topic to the Middlemarchers; and +Lydgate heard it discussed in a way that threw much light on the power +exercised in the town by Mr. Bulstrode. The banker was evidently a +ruler, but there was an opposition party, and even among his supporters +there were some who allowed it to be seen that their support was a +compromise, and who frankly stated their impression that the general +scheme of things, and especially the casualties of trade, required you +to hold a candle to the devil. + +Mr. Bulstrode's power was not due simply to his being a country banker, +who knew the financial secrets of most traders in the town and could +touch the springs of their credit; it was fortified by a beneficence +that was at once ready and severe--ready to confer obligations, and +severe in watching the result. He had gathered, as an industrious man +always at his post, a chief share in administering the town charities, +and his private charities were both minute and abundant. He would take +a great deal of pains about apprenticing Tegg the shoemaker's son, and +he would watch over Tegg's church-going; he would defend Mrs. Strype +the washerwoman against Stubbs's unjust exaction on the score of her +drying-ground, and he would himself scrutinize a calumny against Mrs. +Strype. His private minor loans were numerous, but he would inquire +strictly into the circumstances both before and after. In this way a +man gathers a domain in his neighbors' hope and fear as well as +gratitude; and power, when once it has got into that subtle region, +propagates itself, spreading out of all proportion to its external +means. It was a principle with Mr. Bulstrode to gain as much power as +possible, that he might use it for the glory of God. He went through a +great deal of spiritual conflict and inward argument in order to adjust +his motives, and make clear to himself what God's glory required. But, +as we have seen, his motives were not always rightly appreciated. +There were many crass minds in Middlemarch whose reflective scales +could only weigh things in the lump; and they had a strong suspicion +that since Mr. Bulstrode could not enjoy life in their fashion, eating +and drinking so little as he did, and worreting himself about +everything, he must have a sort of vampire's feast in the sense of +mastery. + +The subject of the chaplaincy came up at Mr. Vincy's table when Lydgate +was dining there, and the family connection with Mr. Bulstrode did not, +he observed, prevent some freedom of remark even on the part of the +host himself, though his reasons against the proposed arrangement +turned entirely on his objection to Mr. Tyke's sermons, which were all +doctrine, and his preference for Mr. Farebrother, whose sermons were +free from that taint. Mr. Vincy liked well enough the notion of the +chaplain's having a salary, supposing it were given to Farebrother, who +was as good a little fellow as ever breathed, and the best preacher +anywhere, and companionable too. + +"What line shall you take, then?" said Mr. Chichely, the coroner, a +great coursing comrade of Mr. Vincy's. + +"Oh, I'm precious glad I'm not one of the Directors now. I shall vote +for referring the matter to the Directors and the Medical Board +together. I shall roll some of my responsibility on your shoulders, +Doctor," said Mr. Vincy, glancing first at Dr. Sprague, the senior +physician of the town, and then at Lydgate who sat opposite. "You +medical gentlemen must consult which sort of black draught you will +prescribe, eh, Mr. Lydgate?" + +"I know little of either," said Lydgate; "but in general, appointments +are apt to be made too much a question of personal liking. The fittest +man for a particular post is not always the best fellow or the most +agreeable. Sometimes, if you wanted to get a reform, your only way +would be to pension off the good fellows whom everybody is fond of, and +put them out of the question." + +Dr. Sprague, who was considered the physician of most "weight," though +Dr. Minchin was usually said to have more "penetration," divested his +large heavy face of all expression, and looked at his wine-glass while +Lydgate was speaking. Whatever was not problematical and suspected +about this young man--for example, a certain showiness as to foreign +ideas, and a disposition to unsettle what had been settled and +forgotten by his elders--was positively unwelcome to a physician whose +standing had been fixed thirty years before by a treatise on +Meningitis, of which at least one copy marked "own" was bound in calf. +For my part I have some fellow-feeling with Dr. Sprague: one's +self-satisfaction is an untaxed kind of property which it is very +unpleasant to find deprecated. + +Lydgate's remark, however, did not meet the sense of the company. Mr. +Vincy said, that if he could have _his_ way, he would not put +disagreeable fellows anywhere. + +"Hang your reforms!" said Mr. Chichely. "There's no greater humbug in +the world. You never hear of a reform, but it means some trick to put +in new men. I hope you are not one of the 'Lancet's' men, Mr. +Lydgate--wanting to take the coronership out of the hands of the legal +profession: your words appear to point that way." + +"I disapprove of Wakley," interposed Dr. Sprague, "no man more: he is +an ill-intentioned fellow, who would sacrifice the respectability of +the profession, which everybody knows depends on the London Colleges, +for the sake of getting some notoriety for himself. There are men who +don't mind about being kicked blue if they can only get talked about. +But Wakley is right sometimes," the Doctor added, judicially. "I could +mention one or two points in which Wakley is in the right." + +"Oh, well," said Mr. Chichely, "I blame no man for standing up in favor +of his own cloth; but, coming to argument, I should like to know how a +coroner is to judge of evidence if he has not had a legal training?" + +"In my opinion," said Lydgate, "legal training only makes a man more +incompetent in questions that require knowledge a of another kind. +People talk about evidence as if it could really be weighed in scales +by a blind Justice. No man can judge what is good evidence on any +particular subject, unless he knows that subject well. A lawyer is no +better than an old woman at a post-mortem examination. How is he to +know the action of a poison? You might as well say that scanning verse +will teach you to scan the potato crops." + +"You are aware, I suppose, that it is not the coroner's business to +conduct the post-mortem, but only to take the evidence of the medical +witness?" said Mr. Chichely, with some scorn. + +"Who is often almost as ignorant as the coroner himself," said Lydgate. +"Questions of medical jurisprudence ought not to be left to the chance +of decent knowledge in a medical witness, and the coroner ought not to +be a man who will believe that strychnine will destroy the coats of the +stomach if an ignorant practitioner happens to tell him so." + +Lydgate had really lost sight of the fact that Mr. Chichely was his +Majesty's coroner, and ended innocently with the question, "Don't you +agree with me, Dr. Sprague?" + +"To a certain extent--with regard to populous districts, and in the +metropolis," said the Doctor. "But I hope it will be long before this +part of the country loses the services of my friend Chichely, even +though it might get the best man in our profession to succeed him. I +am sure Vincy will agree with me." + +"Yes, yes, give me a coroner who is a good coursing man," said Mr. +Vincy, jovially. "And in my opinion, you're safest with a lawyer. +Nobody can know everything. Most things are 'visitation of God.' And as +to poisoning, why, what you want to know is the law. Come, shall we +join the ladies?" + +Lydgate's private opinion was that Mr. Chichely might be the very +coroner without bias as to the coats of the stomach, but he had not +meant to be personal. This was one of the difficulties of moving in +good Middlemarch society: it was dangerous to insist on knowledge as a +qualification for any salaried office. Fred Vincy had called Lydgate a +prig, and now Mr. Chichely was inclined to call him prick-eared; +especially when, in the drawing-room, he seemed to be making himself +eminently agreeable to Rosamond, whom he had easily monopolized in a +tete-a-tete, since Mrs. Vincy herself sat at the tea-table. She +resigned no domestic function to her daughter; and the matron's +blooming good-natured face, with the two volatile pink strings floating +from her fine throat, and her cheery manners to husband and children, +was certainly among the great attractions of the Vincy +house--attractions which made it all the easier to fall in love with +the daughter. The tinge of unpretentious, inoffensive vulgarity in +Mrs. Vincy gave more effect to Rosamond's refinement, which was beyond +what Lydgate had expected. + +Certainly, small feet and perfectly turned shoulders aid the impression +of refined manners, and the right thing said seems quite astonishingly +right when it is accompanied with exquisite curves of lip and eyelid. +And Rosamond could say the right thing; for she was clever with that +sort of cleverness which catches every tone except the humorous. +Happily she never attempted to joke, and this perhaps was the most +decisive mark of her cleverness. + +She and Lydgate readily got into conversation. He regretted that he +had not heard her sing the other day at Stone Court. The only pleasure +he allowed himself during the latter part of his stay in Paris was to +go and hear music. + +"You have studied music, probably?" said Rosamond. + +"No, I know the notes of many birds, and I know many melodies by ear; +but the music that I don't know at all, and have no notion about, +delights me--affects me. How stupid the world is that it does not make +more use of such a pleasure within its reach!" + +"Yes, and you will find Middlemarch very tuneless. There are hardly +any good musicians. I only know two gentlemen who sing at all well." + +"I suppose it is the fashion to sing comic songs in a rhythmic way, +leaving you to fancy the tune--very much as if it were tapped on a +drum?" + +"Ah, you have heard Mr. Bowyer," said Rosamond, with one of her rare +smiles. "But we are speaking very ill of our neighbors." + +Lydgate was almost forgetting that he must carry on the conversation, +in thinking how lovely this creature was, her garment seeming to be +made out of the faintest blue sky, herself so immaculately blond, as if +the petals of some gigantic flower had just opened and disclosed her; +and yet with this infantine blondness showing so much ready, +self-possessed grace. Since he had had the memory of Laure, Lydgate +had lost all taste for large-eyed silence: the divine cow no longer +attracted him, and Rosamond was her very opposite. But he recalled +himself. + +"You will let me hear some music to-night, I hope." + +"I will let you hear my attempts, if you like," said Rosamond. "Papa +is sure to insist on my singing. But I shall tremble before you, who +have heard the best singers in Paris. I have heard very little: I have +only once been to London. But our organist at St. Peter's is a good +musician, and I go on studying with him." + +"Tell me what you saw in London." + +"Very little." (A more naive girl would have said, "Oh, everything!" +But Rosamond knew better.) "A few of the ordinary sights, such as raw +country girls are always taken to." + +"Do you call yourself a raw country girl?" said Lydgate, looking at her +with an involuntary emphasis of admiration, which made Rosamond blush +with pleasure. But she remained simply serious, turned her long neck a +little, and put up her hand to touch her wondrous hair-plaits--an +habitual gesture with her as pretty as any movements of a kitten's paw. +Not that Rosamond was in the least like a kitten: she was a sylph +caught young and educated at Mrs. Lemon's. + +"I assure you my mind is raw," she said immediately; "I pass at +Middlemarch. I am not afraid of talking to our old neighbors. But I +am really afraid of you." + +"An accomplished woman almost always knows more than we men, though her +knowledge is of a different sort. I am sure you could teach me a +thousand things--as an exquisite bird could teach a bear if there were +any common language between them. Happily, there is a common language +between women and men, and so the bears can get taught." + +"Ah, there is Fred beginning to strum! I must go and hinder him from +jarring all your nerves," said Rosamond, moving to the other side of +the room, where Fred having opened the piano, at his father's desire, +that Rosamond might give them some music, was parenthetically +performing "Cherry Ripe!" with one hand. Able men who have passed +their examinations will do these things sometimes, not less than the +plucked Fred. + +"Fred, pray defer your practising till to-morrow; you will make Mr. +Lydgate ill," said Rosamond. "He has an ear." + +Fred laughed, and went on with his tune to the end. + +Rosamond turned to Lydgate, smiling gently, and said, "You perceive, +the bears will not always be taught." + +"Now then, Rosy!" said Fred, springing from the stool and twisting it +upward for her, with a hearty expectation of enjoyment. "Some good +rousing tunes first." + +Rosamond played admirably. Her master at Mrs. Lemon's school (close to +a county town with a memorable history that had its relics in church +and castle) was one of those excellent musicians here and there to be +found in our provinces, worthy to compare with many a noted +Kapellmeister in a country which offers more plentiful conditions of +musical celebrity. Rosamond, with the executant's instinct, had seized +his manner of playing, and gave forth his large rendering of noble +music with the precision of an echo. It was almost startling, heard +for the first time. A hidden soul seemed to be flowing forth from +Rosamond's fingers; and so indeed it was, since souls live on in +perpetual echoes, and to all fine expression there goes somewhere an +originating activity, if it be only that of an interpreter. Lydgate +was taken possession of, and began to believe in her as something +exceptional. After all, he thought, one need not be surprised to find +the rare conjunctions of nature under circumstances apparently +unfavorable: come where they may, they always depend on conditions that +are not obvious. He sat looking at her, and did not rise to pay her +any compliments, leaving that to others, now that his admiration was +deepened. + +Her singing was less remarkable, but also well trained, and sweet to +hear as a chime perfectly in tune. It is true she sang "Meet me by +moonlight," and "I've been roaming"; for mortals must share the +fashions of their time, and none but the ancients can be always +classical. But Rosamond could also sing "Black-eyed Susan" with +effect, or Haydn's canzonets, or "Voi, che sapete," or "Batti, +batti"--she only wanted to know what her audience liked. + +Her father looked round at the company, delighting in their admiration. +Her mother sat, like a Niobe before her troubles, with her youngest +little girl on her lap, softly beating the child's hand up and down in +time to the music. And Fred, notwithstanding his general scepticism +about Rosy, listened to her music with perfect allegiance, wishing he +could do the same thing on his flute. It was the pleasantest family +party that Lydgate had seen since he came to Middlemarch. The Vincys +had the readiness to enjoy, the rejection of all anxiety, and the +belief in life as a merry lot, which made a house exceptional in most +county towns at that time, when Evangelicalism had cast a certain +suspicion as of plague-infection over the few amusements which survived +in the provinces. At the Vincys' there was always whist, and the +card-tables stood ready now, making some of the company secretly +impatient of the music. Before it ceased Mr. Farebrother came in--a +handsome, broad-chested but otherwise small man, about forty, whose +black was very threadbare: the brilliancy was all in his quick gray +eyes. He came like a pleasant change in the light, arresting little +Louisa with fatherly nonsense as she was being led out of the room by +Miss Morgan, greeting everybody with some special word, and seeming to +condense more talk into ten minutes than had been held all through the +evening. He claimed from Lydgate the fulfilment of a promise to come +and see him. "I can't let you off, you know, because I have some +beetles to show you. We collectors feel an interest in every new man +till he has seen all we have to show him." + +But soon he swerved to the whist-table, rubbing his hands and saying, +"Come now, let us be serious! Mr. Lydgate? not play? Ah! you are too +young and light for this kind of thing." + +Lydgate said to himself that the clergyman whose abilities were so +painful to Mr. Bulstrode, appeared to have found an agreeable resort in +this certainly not erudite household. He could half understand it: the +good-humor, the good looks of elder and younger, and the provision for +passing the time without any labor of intelligence, might make the +house beguiling to people who had no particular use for their odd hours. + +Everything looked blooming and joyous except Miss Morgan, who was +brown, dull, and resigned, and altogether, as Mrs. Vincy often said, +just the sort of person for a governess. Lydgate did not mean to pay +many such visits himself. They were a wretched waste of the evenings; +and now, when he had talked a little more to Rosamond, he meant to +excuse himself and go. + +"You will not like us at Middlemarch, I feel sure," she said, when the +whist-players were settled. "We are very stupid, and you have been +used to something quite different." + +"I suppose all country towns are pretty much alike," said Lydgate. +"But I have noticed that one always believes one's own town to be more +stupid than any other. I have made up my mind to take Middlemarch as +it comes, and shall be much obliged if the town will take me in the +same way. I have certainly found some charms in it which are much +greater than I had expected." + +"You mean the rides towards Tipton and Lowick; every one is pleased +with those," said Rosamond, with simplicity. + +"No, I mean something much nearer to me." + +Rosamond rose and reached her netting, and then said, "Do you care +about dancing at all? I am not quite sure whether clever men ever +dance." + +"I would dance with you if you would allow me." + +"Oh!" said Rosamond, with a slight deprecatory laugh. "I was only +going to say that we sometimes have dancing, and I wanted to know +whether you would feel insulted if you were asked to come." + +"Not on the condition I mentioned." + +After this chat Lydgate thought that he was going, but on moving +towards the whist-tables, he got interested in watching Mr. +Farebrother's play, which was masterly, and also his face, which was a +striking mixture of the shrewd and the mild. At ten o'clock supper was +brought in (such were the customs of Middlemarch) and there was +punch-drinking; but Mr. Farebrother had only a glass of water. He was +winning, but there seemed to be no reason why the renewal of rubbers +should end, and Lydgate at last took his leave. + +But as it was not eleven o'clock, he chose to walk in the brisk air +towards the tower of St. Botolph's, Mr. Farebrother's church, which +stood out dark, square, and massive against the starlight. It was the +oldest church in Middlemarch; the living, however, was but a vicarage +worth barely four hundred a-year. Lydgate had heard that, and he +wondered now whether Mr. Farebrother cared about the money he won at +cards; thinking, "He seems a very pleasant fellow, but Bulstrode may +have his good reasons." Many things would be easier to Lydgate if it +should turn out that Mr. Bulstrode was generally justifiable. "What is +his religious doctrine to me, if he carries some good notions along +with it? One must use such brains as are to be found." + +These were actually Lydgate's first meditations as he walked away from +Mr. Vincy's, and on this ground I fear that many ladies will consider +him hardly worthy of their attention. He thought of Rosamond and her +music only in the second place; and though, when her turn came, he +dwelt on the image of her for the rest of his walk, he felt no +agitation, and had no sense that any new current had set into his life. +He could not marry yet; he wished not to marry for several years; and +therefore he was not ready to entertain the notion of being in love +with a girl whom he happened to admire. He did admire Rosamond +exceedingly; but that madness which had once beset him about Laure was +not, he thought, likely to recur in relation to any other woman. +Certainly, if falling in love had been at all in question, it would +have been quite safe with a creature like this Miss Vincy, who had just +the kind of intelligence one would desire in a woman--polished, +refined, docile, lending itself to finish in all the delicacies of +life, and enshrined in a body which expressed this with a force of +demonstration that excluded the need for other evidence. Lydgate felt +sure that if ever he married, his wife would have that feminine +radiance, that distinctive womanhood which must be classed with flowers +and music, that sort of beauty which by its very nature was virtuous, +being moulded only for pure and delicate joys. + +But since he did not mean to marry for the next five years--his more +pressing business was to look into Louis' new book on Fever, which he +was specially interested in, because he had known Louis in Paris, and +had followed many anatomical demonstrations in order to ascertain the +specific differences of typhus and typhoid. He went home and read far +into the smallest hour, bringing a much more testing vision of details +and relations into this pathological study than he had ever thought it +necessary to apply to the complexities of love and marriage, these +being subjects on which he felt himself amply informed by literature, +and that traditional wisdom which is handed down in the genial +conversation of men. Whereas Fever had obscure conditions, and gave +him that delightful labor of the imagination which is not mere +arbitrariness, but the exercise of disciplined power--combining and +constructing with the clearest eye for probabilities and the fullest +obedience to knowledge; and then, in yet more energetic alliance with +impartial Nature, standing aloof to invent tests by which to try its +own work. + +Many men have been praised as vividly imaginative on the strength of +their profuseness in indifferent drawing or cheap narration:--reports +of very poor talk going on in distant orbs; or portraits of Lucifer +coming down on his bad errands as a large ugly man with bat's wings and +spurts of phosphorescence; or exaggerations of wantonness that seem to +reflect life in a diseased dream. But these kinds of inspiration +Lydgate regarded as rather vulgar and vinous compared with the +imagination that reveals subtle actions inaccessible by any sort of +lens, but tracked in that outer darkness through long pathways of +necessary sequence by the inward light which is the last refinement of +Energy, capable of bathing even the ethereal atoms in its ideally +illuminated space. He for his part had tossed away all cheap +inventions where ignorance finds itself able and at ease: he was +enamoured of that arduous invention which is the very eye of research, +provisionally framing its object and correcting it to more and more +exactness of relation; he wanted to pierce the obscurity of those +minute processes which prepare human misery and joy, those invisible +thoroughfares which are the first lurking-places of anguish, mania, and +crime, that delicate poise and transition which determine the growth of +happy or unhappy consciousness. + +As he threw down his book, stretched his legs towards the embers in the +grate, and clasped his hands at the back of his head, in that agreeable +afterglow of excitement when thought lapses from examination of a +specific object into a suffusive sense of its connections with all the +rest of our existence--seems, as it were, to throw itself on its back +after vigorous swimming and float with the repose of unexhausted +strength--Lydgate felt a triumphant delight in his studies, and +something like pity for those less lucky men who were not of his +profession. + +"If I had not taken that turn when I was a lad," he thought, "I might +have got into some stupid draught-horse work or other, and lived always +in blinkers. I should never have been happy in any profession that did +not call forth the highest intellectual strain, and yet keep me in good +warm contact with my neighbors. There is nothing like the medical +profession for that: one can have the exclusive scientific life that +touches the distance and befriend the old fogies in the parish too. It +is rather harder for a clergyman: Farebrother seems to be an anomaly." + +This last thought brought back the Vincys and all the pictures of the +evening. They floated in his mind agreeably enough, and as he took up +his bed-candle his lips were curled with that incipient smile which is +apt to accompany agreeable recollections. He was an ardent fellow, but +at present his ardor was absorbed in love of his work and in the +ambition of making his life recognized as a factor in the better life +of mankind--like other heroes of science who had nothing but an obscure +country practice to begin with. + +Poor Lydgate! or shall I say, Poor Rosamond! Each lived in a world of +which the other knew nothing. It had not occurred to Lydgate that he +had been a subject of eager meditation to Rosamond, who had neither any +reason for throwing her marriage into distant perspective, nor any +pathological studies to divert her mind from that ruminating habit, +that inward repetition of looks, words, and phrases, which makes a +large part in the lives of most girls. He had not meant to look at her +or speak to her with more than the inevitable amount of admiration and +compliment which a man must give to a beautiful girl; indeed, it seemed +to him that his enjoyment of her music had remained almost silent, for +he feared falling into the rudeness of telling her his great surprise +at her possession of such accomplishment. But Rosamond had registered +every look and word, and estimated them as the opening incidents of a +preconceived romance--incidents which gather value from the foreseen +development and climax. In Rosamond's romance it was not necessary to +imagine much about the inward life of the hero, or of his serious +business in the world: of course, he had a profession and was clever, +as well as sufficiently handsome; but the piquant fact about Lydgate +was his good birth, which distinguished him from all Middlemarch +admirers, and presented marriage as a prospect of rising in rank and +getting a little nearer to that celestial condition on earth in which +she would have nothing to do with vulgar people, and perhaps at last +associate with relatives quite equal to the county people who looked +down on the Middlemarchers. It was part of Rosamond's cleverness to +discern very subtly the faintest aroma of rank, and once when she had +seen the Miss Brookes accompanying their uncle at the county assizes, +and seated among the aristocracy, she had envied them, notwithstanding +their plain dress. + +If you think it incredible that to imagine Lydgate as a man of family +could cause thrills of satisfaction which had anything to do with the +sense that she was in love with him, I will ask you to use your power +of comparison a little more effectively, and consider whether red cloth +and epaulets have never had an influence of that sort. Our passions do +not live apart in locked chambers, but, dressed in their small wardrobe +of notions, bring their provisions to a common table and mess together, +feeding out of the common store according to their appetite. + +Rosamond, in fact, was entirely occupied not exactly with Tertius +Lydgate as he was in himself, but with his relation to her; and it was +excusable in a girl who was accustomed to hear that all young men +might, could, would be, or actually were in love with her, to believe +at once that Lydgate could be no exception. His looks and words meant +more to her than other men's, because she cared more for them: she +thought of them diligently, and diligently attended to that perfection +of appearance, behavior, sentiments, and all other elegancies, which +would find in Lydgate a more adequate admirer than she had yet been +conscious of. + +For Rosamond, though she would never do anything that was disagreeable +to her, was industrious; and now more than ever she was active in +sketching her landscapes and market-carts and portraits of friends, in +practising her music, and in being from morning till night her own +standard of a perfect lady, having always an audience in her own +consciousness, with sometimes the not unwelcome addition of a more +variable external audience in the numerous visitors of the house. She +found time also to read the best novels, and even the second best, and +she knew much poetry by heart. Her favorite poem was "Lalla Rookh." + +"The best girl in the world! He will be a happy fellow who gets her!" +was the sentiment of the elderly gentlemen who visited the Vincys; and +the rejected young men thought of trying again, as is the fashion in +country towns where the horizon is not thick with coming rivals. But +Mrs. Plymdale thought that Rosamond had been educated to a ridiculous +pitch, for what was the use of accomplishments which would be all laid +aside as soon as she was married? While her aunt Bulstrode, who had a +sisterly faithfulness towards her brother's family, had two sincere +wishes for Rosamond--that she might show a more serious turn of mind, +and that she might meet with a husband whose wealth corresponded to her +habits. + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + + "The clerkly person smiled and said + Promise was a pretty maid, + But being poor she died unwed." + + +The Rev. Camden Farebrother, whom Lydgate went to see the next evening, +lived in an old parsonage, built of stone, venerable enough to match +the church which it looked out upon. All the furniture too in the +house was old, but with another grade of age--that of Mr. Farebrother's +father and grandfather. There were painted white chairs, with gilding +and wreaths on them, and some lingering red silk damask with slits in +it. There were engraved portraits of Lord Chancellors and other +celebrated lawyers of the last century; and there were old pier-glasses +to reflect them, as well as the little satin-wood tables and the sofas +resembling a prolongation of uneasy chairs, all standing in relief +against the dark wainscot. This was the physiognomy of the drawing-room +into which Lydgate was shown; and there were three ladies to receive +him, who were also old-fashioned, and of a faded but genuine +respectability: Mrs. Farebrother, the Vicar's white-haired mother, +befrilled and kerchiefed with dainty cleanliness, upright, quick-eyed, +and still under seventy; Miss Noble, her sister, a tiny old lady of +meeker aspect, with frills and kerchief decidedly more worn and mended; +and Miss Winifred Farebrother, the Vicar's elder sister, well-looking +like himself, but nipped and subdued as single women are apt to be who +spend their lives in uninterrupted subjection to their elders. Lydgate +had not expected to see so quaint a group: knowing simply that Mr. +Farebrother was a bachelor, he had thought of being ushered into a +snuggery where the chief furniture would probably be books and +collections of natural objects. The Vicar himself seemed to wear +rather a changed aspect, as most men do when acquaintances made +elsewhere see them for the first time in their own homes; some indeed +showing like an actor of genial parts disadvantageously cast for the +curmudgeon in a new piece. This was not the case with Mr. Farebrother: +he seemed a trifle milder and more silent, the chief talker being his +mother, while he only put in a good-humored moderating remark here and +there. The old lady was evidently accustomed to tell her company what +they ought to think, and to regard no subject as quite safe without her +steering. She was afforded leisure for this function by having all her +little wants attended to by Miss Winifred. Meanwhile tiny Miss Noble +carried on her arm a small basket, into which she diverted a bit of +sugar, which she had first dropped in her saucer as if by mistake; +looking round furtively afterwards, and reverting to her teacup with a +small innocent noise as of a tiny timid quadruped. Pray think no ill +of Miss Noble. That basket held small savings from her more portable +food, destined for the children of her poor friends among whom she +trotted on fine mornings; fostering and petting all needy creatures +being so spontaneous a delight to her, that she regarded it much as if +it had been a pleasant vice that she was addicted to. Perhaps she was +conscious of being tempted to steal from those who had much that she +might give to those who had nothing, and carried in her conscience the +guilt of that repressed desire. One must be poor to know the luxury of +giving! + +Mrs. Farebrother welcomed the guest with a lively formality and +precision. She presently informed him that they were not often in want +of medical aid in that house. She had brought up her children to wear +flannel and not to over-eat themselves, which last habit she considered +the chief reason why people needed doctors. Lydgate pleaded for those +whose fathers and mothers had over-eaten themselves, but Mrs. +Farebrother held that view of things dangerous: Nature was more just +than that; it would be easy for any felon to say that his ancestors +ought to have been hanged instead of him. If those who had bad fathers +and mothers were bad themselves, they were hanged for that. There was +no need to go back on what you couldn't see. + +"My mother is like old George the Third," said the Vicar, "she objects +to metaphysics." + +"I object to what is wrong, Camden. I say, keep hold of a few plain +truths, and make everything square with them. When I was young, Mr. +Lydgate, there never was any question about right and wrong. We knew +our catechism, and that was enough; we learned our creed and our duty. +Every respectable Church person had the same opinions. But now, if you +speak out of the Prayer-book itself, you are liable to be contradicted." + +"That makes rather a pleasant time of it for those who like to maintain +their own point," said Lydgate. + +"But my mother always gives way," said the Vicar, slyly. + +"No, no, Camden, you must not lead Mr. Lydgate into a mistake about +_me_. I shall never show that disrespect to my parents, to give up what +they taught me. Any one may see what comes of turning. If you change +once, why not twenty times?" + +"A man might see good arguments for changing once, and not see them for +changing again," said Lydgate, amused with the decisive old lady. + +"Excuse me there. If you go upon arguments, they are never wanting, +when a man has no constancy of mind. My father never changed, and he +preached plain moral sermons without arguments, and was a good man--few +better. When you get me a good man made out of arguments, I will get +you a good dinner with reading you the cookery-book. That's my opinion, +and I think anybody's stomach will bear me out." + +"About the dinner certainly, mother," said Mr. Farebrother. + +"It is the same thing, the dinner or the man. I am nearly seventy, Mr. +Lydgate, and I go upon experience. I am not likely to follow new +lights, though there are plenty of them here as elsewhere. I say, they +came in with the mixed stuffs that will neither wash nor wear. It was +not so in my youth: a Churchman was a Churchman, and a clergyman, you +might be pretty sure, was a gentleman, if nothing else. But now he may +be no better than a Dissenter, and want to push aside my son on +pretence of doctrine. But whoever may wish to push him aside, I am +proud to say, Mr. Lydgate, that he will compare with any preacher in +this kingdom, not to speak of this town, which is but a low standard to +go by; at least, to my thinking, for I was born and bred at Exeter." + +"A mother is never partial," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling. "What do +you think Tyke's mother says about him?" + +"Ah, poor creature! what indeed?" said Mrs. Farebrother, her sharpness +blunted for the moment by her confidence in maternal judgments. "She +says the truth to herself, depend upon it." + +"And what is the truth?" said Lydgate. "I am curious to know." + +"Oh, nothing bad at all," said Mr. Farebrother. "He is a zealous +fellow: not very learned, and not very wise, I think--because I don't +agree with him." + +"Why, Camden!" said Miss Winifred, "Griffin and his wife told me only +to-day, that Mr. Tyke said they should have no more coals if they came +to hear you preach." + +Mrs. Farebrother laid down her knitting, which she had resumed after +her small allowance of tea and toast, and looked at her son as if to +say "You hear that?" Miss Noble said, "Oh poor things! poor things!" +in reference, probably, to the double loss of preaching and coal. But +the Vicar answered quietly-- + +"That is because they are not my parishioners. And I don't think my +sermons are worth a load of coals to them." + +"Mr. Lydgate," said Mrs. Farebrother, who could not let this pass, "you +don't know my son: he always undervalues himself. I tell him he is +undervaluing the God who made him, and made him a most excellent +preacher." + +"That must be a hint for me to take Mr. Lydgate away to my study, +mother," said the Vicar, laughing. "I promised to show you my +collection," he added, turning to Lydgate; "shall we go?" + +All three ladies remonstrated. Mr. Lydgate ought not to be hurried +away without being allowed to accept another cup of tea: Miss Winifred +had abundance of good tea in the pot. Why was Camden in such haste to +take a visitor to his den? There was nothing but pickled vermin, and +drawers full of blue-bottles and moths, with no carpet on the floor. +Mr. Lydgate must excuse it. A game at cribbage would be far better. +In short, it was plain that a vicar might be adored by his womankind as +the king of men and preachers, and yet be held by them to stand in much +need of their direction. Lydgate, with the usual shallowness of a +young bachelor, wondered that Mr. Farebrother had not taught them +better. + +"My mother is not used to my having visitors who can take any interest +in my hobbies," said the Vicar, as he opened the door of his study, +which was indeed as bare of luxuries for the body as the ladies had +implied, unless a short porcelain pipe and a tobacco-box were to be +excepted. + +"Men of your profession don't generally smoke," he said. Lydgate +smiled and shook his head. "Nor of mine either, properly, I suppose. +You will hear that pipe alleged against me by Bulstrode and Company. +They don't know how pleased the devil would be if I gave it up." + +"I understand. You are of an excitable temper and want a sedative. I +am heavier, and should get idle with it. I should rush into idleness, +and stagnate there with all my might." + +"And you mean to give it all to your work. I am some ten or twelve +years older than you, and have come to a compromise. I feed a weakness +or two lest they should get clamorous. See," continued the Vicar, +opening several small drawers, "I fancy I have made an exhaustive study +of the entomology of this district. I am going on both with the fauna +and flora; but I have at least done my insects well. We are singularly +rich in orthoptera: I don't know whether--Ah! you have got hold of that +glass jar--you are looking into that instead of my drawers. You don't +really care about these things?" + +"Not by the side of this lovely anencephalous monster. I have never +had time to give myself much to natural history. I was early bitten +with an interest in structure, and it is what lies most directly in my +profession. I have no hobby besides. I have the sea to swim in there." + +"Ah! you are a happy fellow," said Mr. Farebrother, turning on his heel +and beginning to fill his pipe. "You don't know what it is to want +spiritual tobacco--bad emendations of old texts, or small items about a +variety of Aphis Brassicae, with the well-known signature of +Philomicron, for the 'Twaddler's Magazine;' or a learned treatise on +the entomology of the Pentateuch, including all the insects not +mentioned, but probably met with by the Israelites in their passage +through the desert; with a monograph on the Ant, as treated by Solomon, +showing the harmony of the Book of Proverbs with the results of modern +research. You don't mind my fumigating you?" + +Lydgate was more surprised at the openness of this talk than at its +implied meaning--that the Vicar felt himself not altogether in the +right vocation. The neat fitting-up of drawers and shelves, and the +bookcase filled with expensive illustrated books on Natural History, +made him think again of the winnings at cards and their destination. +But he was beginning to wish that the very best construction of +everything that Mr. Farebrother did should be the true one. The +Vicar's frankness seemed not of the repulsive sort that comes from an +uneasy consciousness seeking to forestall the judgment of others, but +simply the relief of a desire to do with as little pretence as +possible. Apparently he was not without a sense that his freedom of +speech might seem premature, for he presently said-- + +"I have not yet told you that I have the advantage of you, Mr. Lydgate, +and know you better than you know me. You remember Trawley who shared +your apartment at Paris for some time? I was a correspondent of his, +and he told me a good deal about you. I was not quite sure when you +first came that you were the same man. I was very glad when I found +that you were. Only I don't forget that you have not had the like +prologue about me." + +Lydgate divined some delicacy of feeling here, but did not half +understand it. "By the way," he said, "what has become of Trawley? I +have quite lost sight of him. He was hot on the French social systems, +and talked of going to the Backwoods to found a sort of Pythagorean +community. Is he gone?" + +"Not at all. He is practising at a German bath, and has married a rich +patient." + +"Then my notions wear the best, so far," said Lydgate, with a short +scornful laugh. "He would have it, the medical profession was an +inevitable system of humbug. I said, the fault was in the men--men who +truckle to lies and folly. Instead of preaching against humbug outside +the walls, it might be better to set up a disinfecting apparatus +within. In short--I am reporting my own conversation--you may be sure +I had all the good sense on my side." + +"Your scheme is a good deal more difficult to carry out than the +Pythagorean community, though. You have not only got the old Adam in +yourself against you, but you have got all those descendants of the +original Adam who form the society around you. You see, I have paid +twelve or thirteen years more than you for my knowledge of +difficulties. But"--Mr. Farebrother broke off a moment, and then +added, "you are eying that glass vase again. Do you want to make an +exchange? You shall not have it without a fair barter." + +"I have some sea-mice--fine specimens--in spirits. And I will throw in +Robert Brown's new thing--'Microscopic Observations on the Pollen of +Plants'--if you don't happen to have it already." + +"Why, seeing how you long for the monster, I might ask a higher price. +Suppose I ask you to look through my drawers and agree with me about +all my new species?" The Vicar, while he talked in this way, +alternately moved about with his pipe in his mouth, and returned to +hang rather fondly over his drawers. "That would be good discipline, +you know, for a young doctor who has to please his patients in +Middlemarch. You must learn to be bored, remember. However, you shall +have the monster on your own terms." + +"Don't you think men overrate the necessity for humoring everybody's +nonsense, till they get despised by the very fools they humor?" said +Lydgate, moving to Mr. Farebrother's side, and looking rather absently +at the insects ranged in fine gradation, with names subscribed in +exquisite writing. "The shortest way is to make your value felt, so +that people must put up with you whether you flatter them or not." + +"With all my heart. But then you must be sure of having the value, and +you must keep yourself independent. Very few men can do that. Either +you slip out of service altogether, and become good for nothing, or you +wear the harness and draw a good deal where your yoke-fellows pull you. +But do look at these delicate orthoptera!" + +Lydgate had after all to give some scrutiny to each drawer, the Vicar +laughing at himself, and yet persisting in the exhibition. + +"Apropos of what you said about wearing harness," Lydgate began, after +they had sat down, "I made up my mind some time ago to do with as +little of it as possible. That was why I determined not to try anything +in London, for a good many years at least. I didn't like what I saw +when I was studying there--so much empty bigwiggism, and obstructive +trickery. In the country, people have less pretension to knowledge, +and are less of companions, but for that reason they affect one's +amour-propre less: one makes less bad blood, and can follow one's own +course more quietly." + +"Yes--well--you have got a good start; you are in the right profession, +the work you feel yourself most fit for. Some people miss that, and +repent too late. But you must not be too sure of keeping your +independence." + +"You mean of family ties?" said Lydgate, conceiving that these might +press rather tightly on Mr. Farebrother. + +"Not altogether. Of course they make many things more difficult. But +a good wife--a good unworldly woman--may really help a man, and keep +him more independent. There's a parishioner of mine--a fine fellow, +but who would hardly have pulled through as he has done without his +wife. Do you know the Garths? I think they were not Peacock's +patients." + +"No; but there is a Miss Garth at old Featherstone's, at Lowick." + +"Their daughter: an excellent girl." + +"She is very quiet--I have hardly noticed her." + +"She has taken notice of you, though, depend upon it." + +"I don't understand," said Lydgate; he could hardly say "Of course." + +"Oh, she gauges everybody. I prepared her for confirmation--she is a +favorite of mine." + +Mr. Farebrother puffed a few moments in silence, Lydgate not caring to +know more about the Garths. At last the Vicar laid down his pipe, +stretched out his legs, and turned his bright eyes with a smile towards +Lydgate, saying-- + +"But we Middlemarchers are not so tame as you take us to be. We have +our intrigues and our parties. I am a party man, for example, and +Bulstrode is another. If you vote for me you will offend Bulstrode." + +"What is there against Bulstrode?" said Lydgate, emphatically. + +"I did not say there was anything against him except that. If you vote +against him you will make him your enemy." + +"I don't know that I need mind about that," said Lydgate, rather +proudly; "but he seems to have good ideas about hospitals, and he +spends large sums on useful public objects. He might help me a good +deal in carrying out my ideas. As to his religious notions--why, as +Voltaire said, incantations will destroy a flock of sheep if +administered with a certain quantity of arsenic. I look for the man +who will bring the arsenic, and don't mind about his incantations." + +"Very good. But then you must not offend your arsenic-man. You will +not offend me, you know," said Mr. Farebrother, quite unaffectedly. "I +don't translate my own convenience into other people's duties. I am +opposed to Bulstrode in many ways. I don't like the set he belongs to: +they are a narrow ignorant set, and do more to make their neighbors +uncomfortable than to make them better. Their system is a sort of +worldly-spiritual cliqueism: they really look on the rest of mankind as +a doomed carcass which is to nourish them for heaven. But," he added, +smilingly, "I don't say that Bulstrode's new hospital is a bad thing; +and as to his wanting to oust me from the old one--why, if he thinks me +a mischievous fellow, he is only returning a compliment. And I am not +a model clergyman--only a decent makeshift." + +Lydgate was not at all sure that the Vicar maligned himself. A model +clergyman, like a model doctor, ought to think his own profession the +finest in the world, and take all knowledge as mere nourishment to his +moral pathology and therapeutics. He only said, "What reason does +Bulstrode give for superseding you?" + +"That I don't teach his opinions--which he calls spiritual religion; +and that I have no time to spare. Both statements are true. But then +I could make time, and I should be glad of the forty pounds. That is +the plain fact of the case. But let us dismiss it. I only wanted to +tell you that if you vote for your arsenic-man, you are not to cut me +in consequence. I can't spare you. You are a sort of circumnavigator +come to settle among us, and will keep up my belief in the antipodes. +Now tell me all about them in Paris." + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + + "Oh, sir, the loftiest hopes on earth + Draw lots with meaner hopes: heroic breasts, + Breathing bad air, ran risk of pestilence; + Or, lacking lime-juice when they cross the Line, + May languish with the scurvy." + + +Some weeks passed after this conversation before the question of the +chaplaincy gathered any practical import for Lydgate, and without +telling himself the reason, he deferred the predetermination on which +side he should give his vote. It would really have been a matter of +total indifference to him--that is to say, he would have taken the more +convenient side, and given his vote for the appointment of Tyke without +any hesitation--if he had not cared personally for Mr. Farebrother. + +But his liking for the Vicar of St. Botolph's grew with growing +acquaintanceship. That, entering into Lydgate's position as a +new-comer who had his own professional objects to secure, Mr. +Farebrother should have taken pains rather to warn off than to obtain +his interest, showed an unusual delicacy and generosity, which +Lydgate's nature was keenly alive to. It went along with other points +of conduct in Mr. Farebrother which were exceptionally fine, and made +his character resemble those southern landscapes which seem divided +between natural grandeur and social slovenliness. Very few men could +have been as filial and chivalrous as he was to the mother, aunt, and +sister, whose dependence on him had in many ways shaped his life rather +uneasily for himself; few men who feel the pressure of small needs are +so nobly resolute not to dress up their inevitably self-interested +desires in a pretext of better motives. In these matters he was +conscious that his life would bear the closest scrutiny; and perhaps +the consciousness encouraged a little defiance towards the critical +strictness of persons whose celestial intimacies seemed not to improve +their domestic manners, and whose lofty aims were not needed to account +for their actions. Then, his preaching was ingenious and pithy, like +the preaching of the English Church in its robust age, and his sermons +were delivered without book. People outside his parish went to hear +him; and, since to fill the church was always the most difficult part +of a clergyman's function, here was another ground for a careless sense +of superiority. Besides, he was a likable man: sweet-tempered, +ready-witted, frank, without grins of suppressed bitterness or other +conversational flavors which make half of us an affliction to our +friends. Lydgate liked him heartily, and wished for his friendship. + +With this feeling uppermost, he continued to waive the question of the +chaplaincy, and to persuade himself that it was not only no proper +business of his, but likely enough never to vex him with a demand for +his vote. Lydgate, at Mr. Bulstrode's request, was laying down plans +for the internal arrangements of the new hospital, and the two were +often in consultation. The banker was always presupposing that he +could count in general on Lydgate as a coadjutor, but made no special +recurrence to the coming decision between Tyke and Farebrother. When +the General Board of the Infirmary had met, however, and Lydgate had +notice that the question of the chaplaincy was thrown on a council of +the directors and medical men, to meet on the following Friday, he had +a vexed sense that he must make up his mind on this trivial Middlemarch +business. He could not help hearing within him the distinct +declaration that Bulstrode was prime minister, and that the Tyke affair +was a question of office or no office; and he could not help an equally +pronounced dislike to giving up the prospect of office. For his +observation was constantly confirming Mr. Farebrother's assurance that +the banker would not overlook opposition. "Confound their petty +politics!" was one of his thoughts for three mornings in the meditative +process of shaving, when he had begun to feel that he must really hold +a court of conscience on this matter. Certainly there were valid +things to be said against the election of Mr. Farebrother: he had too +much on his hands already, especially considering how much time he +spent on non-clerical occupations. Then again it was a continually +repeated shock, disturbing Lydgate's esteem, that the Vicar should +obviously play for the sake of money, liking the play indeed, but +evidently liking some end which it served. Mr. Farebrother contended +on theory for the desirability of all games, and said that Englishmen's +wit was stagnant for want of them; but Lydgate felt certain that he +would have played very much less but for the money. There was a +billiard-room at the Green Dragon, which some anxious mothers and wives +regarded as the chief temptation in Middlemarch. The Vicar was a +first-rate billiard-player, and though he did not frequent the Green +Dragon, there were reports that he had sometimes been there in the +daytime and had won money. And as to the chaplaincy, he did not +pretend that he cared for it, except for the sake of the forty pounds. +Lydgate was no Puritan, but he did not care for play, and winning money +at it had always seemed a meanness to him; besides, he had an ideal of +life which made this subservience of conduct to the gaining of small +sums thoroughly hateful to him. Hitherto in his own life his wants had +been supplied without any trouble to himself, and his first impulse was +always to be liberal with half-crowns as matters of no importance to a +gentleman; it had never occurred to him to devise a plan for getting +half-crowns. He had always known in a general way that he was not +rich, but he had never felt poor, and he had no power of imagining the +part which the want of money plays in determining the actions of men. +Money had never been a motive to him. Hence he was not ready to frame +excuses for this deliberate pursuit of small gains. It was altogether +repulsive to him, and he never entered into any calculation of the +ratio between the Vicar's income and his more or less necessary +expenditure. It was possible that he would not have made such a +calculation in his own case. + +And now, when the question of voting had come, this repulsive fact told +more strongly against Mr. Farebrother than it had done before. One +would know much better what to do if men's characters were more +consistent, and especially if one's friends were invariably fit for any +function they desired to undertake! Lydgate was convinced that if +there had been no valid objection to Mr. Farebrother, he would have +voted for him, whatever Bulstrode might have felt on the subject: he +did not intend to be a vassal of Bulstrode's. On the other hand, there +was Tyke, a man entirely given to his clerical office, who was simply +curate at a chapel of ease in St. Peter's parish, and had time for +extra duty. Nobody had anything to say against Mr. Tyke, except that +they could not bear him, and suspected him of cant. Really, from his +point of view, Bulstrode was thoroughly justified. + +But whichever way Lydgate began to incline, there was something to make +him wince; and being a proud man, he was a little exasperated at being +obliged to wince. He did not like frustrating his own best purposes by +getting on bad terms with Bulstrode; he did not like voting against +Farebrother, and helping to deprive him of function and salary; and the +question occurred whether the additional forty pounds might not leave +the Vicar free from that ignoble care about winning at cards. +Moreover, Lydgate did not like the consciousness that in voting for +Tyke he should be voting on the side obviously convenient for himself. +But would the end really be his own convenience? Other people would +say so, and would allege that he was currying favor with Bulstrode for +the sake of making himself important and getting on in the world. What +then? He for his own part knew that if his personal prospects simply +had been concerned, he would not have cared a rotten nut for the +banker's friendship or enmity. What he really cared for was a medium +for his work, a vehicle for his ideas; and after all, was he not bound +to prefer the object of getting a good hospital, where he could +demonstrate the specific distinctions of fever and test therapeutic +results, before anything else connected with this chaplaincy? For the +first time Lydgate was feeling the hampering threadlike pressure of +small social conditions, and their frustrating complexity. At the end +of his inward debate, when he set out for the hospital, his hope was +really in the chance that discussion might somehow give a new aspect to +the question, and make the scale dip so as to exclude the necessity for +voting. I think he trusted a little also to the energy which is +begotten by circumstances--some feeling rushing warmly and making +resolve easy, while debate in cool blood had only made it more +difficult. However it was, he did not distinctly say to himself on +which side he would vote; and all the while he was inwardly resenting +the subjection which had been forced upon him. It would have seemed +beforehand like a ridiculous piece of bad logic that he, with his +unmixed resolutions of independence and his select purposes, would find +himself at the very outset in the grasp of petty alternatives, each of +which was repugnant to him. In his student's chambers, he had +prearranged his social action quite differently. + +Lydgate was late in setting out, but Dr. Sprague, the two other +surgeons, and several of the directors had arrived early; Mr. +Bulstrode, treasurer and chairman, being among those who were still +absent. The conversation seemed to imply that the issue was +problematical, and that a majority for Tyke was not so certain as had +been generally supposed. The two physicians, for a wonder, turned out +to be unanimous, or rather, though of different minds, they concurred +in action. Dr. Sprague, the rugged and weighty, was, as every one had +foreseen, an adherent of Mr. Farebrother. The Doctor was more than +suspected of having no religion, but somehow Middlemarch tolerated this +deficiency in him as if he had been a Lord Chancellor; indeed it is +probable that his professional weight was the more believed in, the +world-old association of cleverness with the evil principle being still +potent in the minds even of lady-patients who had the strictest ideas +of frilling and sentiment. It was perhaps this negation in the Doctor +which made his neighbors call him hard-headed and dry-witted; +conditions of texture which were also held favorable to the storing of +judgments connected with drugs. At all events, it is certain that if +any medical man had come to Middlemarch with the reputation of having +very definite religious views, of being given to prayer, and of +otherwise showing an active piety, there would have been a general +presumption against his medical skill. + +On this ground it was (professionally speaking) fortunate for Dr. +Minchin that his religious sympathies were of a general kind, and such +as gave a distant medical sanction to all serious sentiment, whether of +Church or Dissent, rather than any adhesion to particular tenets. If +Mr. Bulstrode insisted, as he was apt to do, on the Lutheran doctrine +of justification, as that by which a Church must stand or fall, Dr. +Minchin in return was quite sure that man was not a mere machine or a +fortuitous conjunction of atoms; if Mrs. Wimple insisted on a +particular providence in relation to her stomach complaint, Dr. Minchin +for his part liked to keep the mental windows open and objected to +fixed limits; if the Unitarian brewer jested about the Athanasian +Creed, Dr. Minchin quoted Pope's "Essay on Man." He objected to the +rather free style of anecdote in which Dr. Sprague indulged, preferring +well-sanctioned quotations, and liking refinement of all kinds: it was +generally known that he had some kinship to a bishop, and sometimes +spent his holidays at "the palace." + +Dr. Minchin was soft-handed, pale-complexioned, and of rounded outline, +not to be distinguished from a mild clergyman in appearance: whereas +Dr. Sprague was superfluously tall; his trousers got creased at the +knees, and showed an excess of boot at a time when straps seemed +necessary to any dignity of bearing; you heard him go in and out, and +up and down, as if he had come to see after the roofing. In short, he +had weight, and might be expected to grapple with a disease and throw +it; while Dr. Minchin might be better able to detect it lurking and to +circumvent it. They enjoyed about equally the mysterious privilege of +medical reputation, and concealed with much etiquette their contempt +for each other's skill. Regarding themselves as Middlemarch +institutions, they were ready to combine against all innovators, and +against non-professionals given to interference. On this ground they +were both in their hearts equally averse to Mr. Bulstrode, though Dr. +Minchin had never been in open hostility with him, and never differed +from him without elaborate explanation to Mrs. Bulstrode, who had found +that Dr. Minchin alone understood her constitution. A layman who pried +into the professional conduct of medical men, and was always obtruding +his reforms,--though he was less directly embarrassing to the two +physicians than to the surgeon-apothecaries who attended paupers by +contract, was nevertheless offensive to the professional nostril as +such; and Dr. Minchin shared fully in the new pique against Bulstrode, +excited by his apparent determination to patronize Lydgate. The +long-established practitioners, Mr. Wrench and Mr. Toller; were just +now standing apart and having a friendly colloquy, in which they agreed +that Lydgate was a jackanapes, just made to serve Bulstrode's purpose. +To non-medical friends they had already concurred in praising the other +young practitioner, who had come into the town on Mr. Peacock's +retirement without further recommendation than his own merits and such +argument for solid professional acquirement as might be gathered from +his having apparently wasted no time on other branches of knowledge. +It was clear that Lydgate, by not dispensing drugs, intended to cast +imputations on his equals, and also to obscure the limit between his +own rank as a general practitioner and that of the physicians, who, in +the interest of the profession, felt bound to maintain its various +grades,--especially against a man who had not been to either of the +English universities and enjoyed the absence of anatomical and bedside +study there, but came with a libellous pretension to experience in +Edinburgh and Paris, where observation might be abundant indeed, but +hardly sound. + +Thus it happened that on this occasion Bulstrode became identified with +Lydgate, and Lydgate with Tyke; and owing to this variety of +interchangeable names for the chaplaincy question, diverse minds were +enabled to form the same judgment concerning it. + +Dr. Sprague said at once bluntly to the group assembled when he +entered, "I go for Farebrother. A salary, with all my heart. But why +take it from the Vicar? He has none too much--has to insure his life, +besides keeping house, and doing a vicar's charities. Put forty pounds +in his pocket and you'll do no harm. He's a good fellow, is +Farebrother, with as little of the parson about him as will serve to +carry orders." + +"Ho, ho! Doctor," said old Mr. Powderell, a retired iron-monger of +some standing--his interjection being something between a laugh and a +Parliamentary disapproval; "we must let you have your say. But what we +have to consider is not anybody's income--it's the souls of the poor +sick people"--here Mr. Powderell's voice and face had a sincere pathos +in them. "He is a real Gospel preacher, is Mr. Tyke. I should vote +against my conscience if I voted against Mr. Tyke--I should indeed." + +"Mr. Tyke's opponents have not asked any one to vote against his +conscience, I believe," said Mr. Hackbutt, a rich tanner of fluent +speech, whose glittering spectacles and erect hair were turned with +some severity towards innocent Mr. Powderell. "But in my judgment it +behoves us, as Directors, to consider whether we will regard it as our +whole business to carry out propositions emanating from a single +quarter. Will any member of the committee aver that he would have +entertained the idea of displacing the gentleman who has always +discharged the function of chaplain here, if it had not been suggested +to him by parties whose disposition it is to regard every institution +of this town as a machinery for carrying out their own views? I tax no +man's motives: let them lie between himself and a higher Power; but I +do say, that there are influences at work here which are incompatible +with genuine independence, and that a crawling servility is usually +dictated by circumstances which gentlemen so conducting themselves +could not afford either morally or financially to avow. I myself am a +layman, but I have given no inconsiderable attention to the divisions +in the Church and--" + +"Oh, damn the divisions!" burst in Mr. Frank Hawley, lawyer and +town-clerk, who rarely presented himself at the board, but now looked +in hurriedly, whip in hand. "We have nothing to do with them here. +Farebrother has been doing the work--what there was--without pay, and +if pay is to be given, it should be given to him. I call it a +confounded job to take the thing away from Farebrother." + +"I think it would be as well for gentlemen not to give their remarks a +personal bearing," said Mr. Plymdale. "I shall vote for the +appointment of Mr. Tyke, but I should not have known, if Mr. Hackbutt +hadn't hinted it, that I was a Servile Crawler." + +"I disclaim any personalities. I expressly said, if I may be allowed +to repeat, or even to conclude what I was about to say--" + +"Ah, here's Minchin!" said Mr. Frank Hawley; at which everybody turned +away from Mr. Hackbutt, leaving him to feel the uselessness of superior +gifts in Middlemarch. "Come, Doctor, I must have you on the right +side, eh?" + +"I hope so," said Dr. Minchin, nodding and shaking hands here and +there; "at whatever cost to my feelings." + +"If there's any feeling here, it should be feeling for the man who is +turned out, I think," said Mr. Frank Hawley. + +"I confess I have feelings on the other side also. I have a divided +esteem," said Dr. Minchin, rubbing his hands. "I consider Mr. Tyke an +exemplary man--none more so--and I believe him to be proposed from +unimpeachable motives. I, for my part, wish that I could give him my +vote. But I am constrained to take a view of the case which gives the +preponderance to Mr. Farebrother's claims. He is an amiable man, an +able preacher, and has been longer among us." + +Old Mr. Powderell looked on, sad and silent. Mr. Plymdale settled his +cravat, uneasily. + +"You don't set up Farebrother as a pattern of what a clergyman ought to +be, I hope," said Mr. Larcher, the eminent carrier, who had just come +in. "I have no ill-will towards him, but I think we owe something to +the public, not to speak of anything higher, in these appointments. In +my opinion Farebrother is too lax for a clergyman. I don't wish to +bring up particulars against him; but he will make a little attendance +here go as far as he can." + +"And a devilish deal better than too much," said Mr. Hawley, whose bad +language was notorious in that part of the county. "Sick people can't +bear so much praying and preaching. And that methodistical sort of +religion is bad for the spirits--bad for the inside, eh?" he added, +turning quickly round to the four medical men who were assembled. + +But any answer was dispensed with by the entrance of three gentlemen, +with whom there were greetings more or less cordial. These were the +Reverend Edward Thesiger, Rector of St. Peter's, Mr. Bulstrode, and our +friend Mr. Brooke of Tipton, who had lately allowed himself to be put +on the board of directors in his turn, but had never before attended, +his attendance now being due to Mr. Bulstrode's exertions. Lydgate was +the only person still expected. + +Every one now sat down, Mr. Bulstrode presiding, pale and +self-restrained as usual. Mr. Thesiger, a moderate evangelical, wished +for the appointment of his friend Mr. Tyke, a zealous able man, who, +officiating at a chapel of ease, had not a cure of souls too extensive +to leave him ample time for the new duty. It was desirable that +chaplaincies of this kind should be entered on with a fervent +intention: they were peculiar opportunities for spiritual influence; +and while it was good that a salary should be allotted, there was the +more need for scrupulous watching lest the office should be perverted +into a mere question of salary. Mr. Thesiger's manner had so much +quiet propriety that objectors could only simmer in silence. + +Mr. Brooke believed that everybody meant well in the matter. He had +not himself attended to the affairs of the Infirmary, though he had a +strong interest in whatever was for the benefit of Middlemarch, and was +most happy to meet the gentlemen present on any public question--"any +public question, you know," Mr. Brooke repeated, with his nod of +perfect understanding. "I am a good deal occupied as a magistrate, and +in the collection of documentary evidence, but I regard my time as +being at the disposal of the public--and, in short, my friends have +convinced me that a chaplain with a salary--a salary, you know--is a +very good thing, and I am happy to be able to come here and vote for +the appointment of Mr. Tyke, who, I understand, is an unexceptionable +man, apostolic and eloquent and everything of that kind--and I am the +last man to withhold my vote--under the circumstances, you know." + +"It seems to me that you have been crammed with one side of the +question, Mr. Brooke," said Mr. Frank Hawley, who was afraid of nobody, +and was a Tory suspicious of electioneering intentions. "You don't +seem to know that one of the worthiest men we have has been doing duty +as chaplain here for years without pay, and that Mr. Tyke is proposed +to supersede him." + +"Excuse me, Mr. Hawley," said Mr. Bulstrode. "Mr. Brooke has been +fully informed of Mr. Farebrother's character and position." + +"By his enemies," flashed out Mr. Hawley. + +"I trust there is no personal hostility concerned here," said Mr. +Thesiger. + +"I'll swear there is, though," retorted Mr. Hawley. + +"Gentlemen," said Mr. Bulstrode, in a subdued tone, "the merits of the +question may be very briefly stated, and if any one present doubts that +every gentleman who is about to give his vote has not been fully +informed, I can now recapitulate the considerations that should weigh +on either side." + +"I don't see the good of that," said Mr. Hawley. "I suppose we all +know whom we mean to vote for. Any man who wants to do justice does +not wait till the last minute to hear both sides of the question. I +have no time to lose, and I propose that the matter be put to the vote +at once." + +A brief but still hot discussion followed before each person wrote +"Tyke" or "Farebrother" on a piece of paper and slipped it into a glass +tumbler; and in the mean time Mr. Bulstrode saw Lydgate enter. + +"I perceive that the votes are equally divided at present," said Mr. +Bulstrode, in a clear biting voice. Then, looking up at Lydgate-- + +"There is a casting-vote still to be given. It is yours, Mr. Lydgate: +will you be good enough to write?" + +"The thing is settled now," said Mr. Wrench, rising. "We all know how +Mr. Lydgate will vote." + +"You seem to speak with some peculiar meaning, sir," said Lydgate, +rather defiantly, and keeping his pencil suspended. + +"I merely mean that you are expected to vote with Mr. Bulstrode. Do +you regard that meaning as offensive?" + +"It may be offensive to others. But I shall not desist from voting +with him on that account." Lydgate immediately wrote down "Tyke." + +So the Rev. Walter Tyke became chaplain to the Infirmary, and Lydgate +continued to work with Mr. Bulstrode. He was really uncertain whether +Tyke were not the more suitable candidate, and yet his consciousness +told him that if he had been quite free from indirect bias he should +have voted for Mr. Farebrother. The affair of the chaplaincy remained +a sore point in his memory as a case in which this petty medium of +Middlemarch had been too strong for him. How could a man be satisfied +with a decision between such alternatives and under such circumstances? +No more than he can be satisfied with his hat, which he has chosen from +among such shapes as the resources of the age offer him, wearing it at +best with a resignation which is chiefly supported by comparison. + +But Mr. Farebrother met him with the same friendliness as before. The +character of the publican and sinner is not always practically +incompatible with that of the modern Pharisee, for the majority of us +scarcely see more distinctly the faultiness of our own conduct than the +faultiness of our own arguments, or the dulness of our own jokes. But +the Vicar of St. Botolph's had certainly escaped the slightest tincture +of the Pharisee, and by dint of admitting to himself that he was too +much as other men were, he had become remarkably unlike them in +this--that he could excuse others for thinking slightly of him, and +could judge impartially of their conduct even when it told against him. + +"The world has been too strong for _me_, I know," he said one day to +Lydgate. "But then I am not a mighty man--I shall never be a man of +renown. The choice of Hercules is a pretty fable; but Prodicus makes +it easy work for the hero, as if the first resolves were enough. +Another story says that he came to hold the distaff, and at last wore +the Nessus shirt. I suppose one good resolve might keep a man right if +everybody else's resolve helped him." + +The Vicar's talk was not always inspiriting: he had escaped being a +Pharisee, but he had not escaped that low estimate of possibilities +which we rather hastily arrive at as an inference from our own failure. +Lydgate thought that there was a pitiable infirmity of will in Mr. +Farebrother. + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + + "L' altra vedete ch'ha fatto alla guancia + Della sua palma, sospirando, letto." + --Purgatorio, vii. + + +When George the Fourth was still reigning over the privacies of +Windsor, when the Duke of Wellington was Prime Minister, and Mr. Vincy +was mayor of the old corporation in Middlemarch, Mrs. Casaubon, born +Dorothea Brooke, had taken her wedding journey to Rome. In those days +the world in general was more ignorant of good and evil by forty years +than it is at present. Travellers did not often carry full information +on Christian art either in their heads or their pockets; and even the +most brilliant English critic of the day mistook the flower-flushed +tomb of the ascended Virgin for an ornamental vase due to the painter's +fancy. Romanticism, which has helped to fill some dull blanks with +love and knowledge, had not yet penetrated the times with its leaven +and entered into everybody's food; it was fermenting still as a +distinguishable vigorous enthusiasm in certain long-haired German +artists at Rome, and the youth of other nations who worked or idled +near them were sometimes caught in the spreading movement. + +One fine morning a young man whose hair was not immoderately long, but +abundant and curly, and who was otherwise English in his equipment, had +just turned his back on the Belvedere Torso in the Vatican and was +looking out on the magnificent view of the mountains from the adjoining +round vestibule. He was sufficiently absorbed not to notice the +approach of a dark-eyed, animated German who came up to him and placing +a hand on his shoulder, said with a strong accent, "Come here, quick! +else she will have changed her pose." + +Quickness was ready at the call, and the two figures passed lightly +along by the Meleager, towards the hall where the reclining Ariadne, +then called the Cleopatra, lies in the marble voluptuousness of her +beauty, the drapery folding around her with a petal-like ease and +tenderness. They were just in time to see another figure standing +against a pedestal near the reclining marble: a breathing blooming +girl, whose form, not shamed by the Ariadne, was clad in Quakerish gray +drapery; her long cloak, fastened at the neck, was thrown backward from +her arms, and one beautiful ungloved hand pillowed her cheek, pushing +somewhat backward the white beaver bonnet which made a sort of halo to +her face around the simply braided dark-brown hair. She was not +looking at the sculpture, probably not thinking of it: her large eyes +were fixed dreamily on a streak of sunlight which fell across the +floor. But she became conscious of the two strangers who suddenly +paused as if to contemplate the Cleopatra, and, without looking at +them, immediately turned away to join a maid-servant and courier who +were loitering along the hall at a little distance off. + +"What do you think of that for a fine bit of antithesis?" said the +German, searching in his friend's face for responding admiration, but +going on volubly without waiting for any other answer. "There lies +antique beauty, not corpse-like even in death, but arrested in the +complete contentment of its sensuous perfection: and here stands beauty +in its breathing life, with the consciousness of Christian centuries in +its bosom. But she should be dressed as a nun; I think she looks +almost what you call a Quaker; I would dress her as a nun in my +picture. However, she is married; I saw her wedding-ring on that +wonderful left hand, otherwise I should have thought the sallow +Geistlicher was her father. I saw him parting from her a good while +ago, and just now I found her in that magnificent pose. Only think! he +is perhaps rich, and would like to have her portrait taken. Ah! it is +no use looking after her--there she goes! Let us follow her home!" + +"No, no," said his companion, with a little frown. + +"You are singular, Ladislaw. You look struck together. Do you know +her?" + +"I know that she is married to my cousin," said Will Ladislaw, +sauntering down the hall with a preoccupied air, while his German +friend kept at his side and watched him eagerly. + +"What! the Geistlicher? He looks more like an uncle--a more useful sort +of relation." + +"He is not my uncle. I tell you he is my second cousin," said +Ladislaw, with some irritation. + +"Schon, schon. Don't be snappish. You are not angry with me for +thinking Mrs. Second-Cousin the most perfect young Madonna I ever saw?" + +"Angry? nonsense. I have only seen her once before, for a couple of +minutes, when my cousin introduced her to me, just before I left +England. They were not married then. I didn't know they were coming +to Rome." + +"But you will go to see them now--you will find out what they have for +an address--since you know the name. Shall we go to the post? And you +could speak about the portrait." + +"Confound you, Naumann! I don't know what I shall do. I am not so +brazen as you." + +"Bah! that is because you are dilettantish and amateurish. If you were +an artist, you would think of Mistress Second-Cousin as antique form +animated by Christian sentiment--a sort of Christian Antigone--sensuous +force controlled by spiritual passion." + +"Yes, and that your painting her was the chief outcome of her +existence--the divinity passing into higher completeness and all but +exhausted in the act of covering your bit of canvas. I am amateurish +if you like: I do _not_ think that all the universe is straining +towards the obscure significance of your pictures." + +"But it is, my dear!--so far as it is straining through me, Adolf +Naumann: that stands firm," said the good-natured painter, putting a +hand on Ladislaw's shoulder, and not in the least disturbed by the +unaccountable touch of ill-humor in his tone. "See now! My existence +presupposes the existence of the whole universe--does it _not?_ and my +function is to paint--and as a painter I have a conception which is +altogether genialisch, of your great-aunt or second grandmother as a +subject for a picture; therefore, the universe is straining towards +that picture through that particular hook or claw which it puts forth +in the shape of me--not true?" + +"But how if another claw in the shape of me is straining to thwart +it?--the case is a little less simple then." + +"Not at all: the result of the struggle is the same thing--picture or +no picture--logically." + +Will could not resist this imperturbable temper, and the cloud in his +face broke into sunshiny laughter. + +"Come now, my friend--you will help?" said Naumann, in a hopeful tone. + +"No; nonsense, Naumann! English ladies are not at everybody's service +as models. And you want to express too much with your painting. You +would only have made a better or worse portrait with a background which +every connoisseur would give a different reason for or against. And +what is a portrait of a woman? Your painting and Plastik are poor +stuff after all. They perturb and dull conceptions instead of raising +them. Language is a finer medium." + +"Yes, for those who can't paint," said Naumann. "There you have +perfect right. I did not recommend you to paint, my friend." + +The amiable artist carried his sting, but Ladislaw did not choose to +appear stung. He went on as if he had not heard. + +"Language gives a fuller image, which is all the better for beings +vague. After all, the true seeing is within; and painting stares at +you with an insistent imperfection. I feel that especially about +representations of women. As if a woman were a mere colored +superficies! You must wait for movement and tone. There is a +difference in their very breathing: they change from moment to +moment.--This woman whom you have just seen, for example: how would you +paint her voice, pray? But her voice is much diviner than anything you +have seen of her." + +"I see, I see. You are jealous. No man must presume to think that he +can paint your ideal. This is serious, my friend! Your great-aunt! +'Der Neffe als Onkel' in a tragic sense--ungeheuer!" + +"You and I shall quarrel, Naumann, if you call that lady my aunt again." + +"How is she to be called then?" + +"Mrs. Casaubon." + +"Good. Suppose I get acquainted with her in spite of you, and find +that she very much wishes to be painted?" + +"Yes, suppose!" said Will Ladislaw, in a contemptuous undertone, +intended to dismiss the subject. He was conscious of being irritated +by ridiculously small causes, which were half of his own creation. Why +was he making any fuss about Mrs. Casaubon? And yet he felt as if +something had happened to him with regard to her. There are characters +which are continually creating collisions and nodes for themselves in +dramas which nobody is prepared to act with them. Their +susceptibilities will clash against objects that remain innocently +quiet. + + + +CHAPTER XX. + + "A child forsaken, waking suddenly, + Whose gaze afeard on all things round doth rove, + And seeth only that it cannot see + The meeting eyes of love." + + +Two hours later, Dorothea was seated in an inner room or boudoir of a +handsome apartment in the Via Sistina. + +I am sorry to add that she was sobbing bitterly, with such abandonment +to this relief of an oppressed heart as a woman habitually controlled +by pride on her own account and thoughtfulness for others will +sometimes allow herself when she feels securely alone. And Mr. +Casaubon was certain to remain away for some time at the Vatican. + +Yet Dorothea had no distinctly shapen grievance that she could state +even to herself; and in the midst of her confused thought and passion, +the mental act that was struggling forth into clearness was a +self-accusing cry that her feeling of desolation was the fault of her +own spiritual poverty. She had married the man of her choice, and with +the advantage over most girls that she had contemplated her marriage +chiefly as the beginning of new duties: from the very first she had +thought of Mr. Casaubon as having a mind so much above her own, that he +must often be claimed by studies which she could not entirely share; +moreover, after the brief narrow experience of her girlhood she was +beholding Rome, the city of visible history, where the past of a whole +hemisphere seems moving in funeral procession with strange ancestral +images and trophies gathered from afar. + +But this stupendous fragmentariness heightened the dreamlike +strangeness of her bridal life. Dorothea had now been five weeks in +Rome, and in the kindly mornings when autumn and winter seemed to go +hand in hand like a happy aged couple one of whom would presently +survive in chiller loneliness, she had driven about at first with Mr. +Casaubon, but of late chiefly with Tantripp and their experienced +courier. She had been led through the best galleries, had been taken +to the chief points of view, had been shown the grandest ruins and the +most glorious churches, and she had ended by oftenest choosing to drive +out to the Campagna where she could feel alone with the earth and sky, +away-from the oppressive masquerade of ages, in which her own life too +seemed to become a masque with enigmatical costumes. + +To those who have looked at Rome with the quickening power of a +knowledge which breathes a growing soul into all historic shapes, and +traces out the suppressed transitions which unite all contrasts, Rome +may still be the spiritual centre and interpreter of the world. But +let them conceive one more historical contrast: the gigantic broken +revelations of that Imperial and Papal city thrust abruptly on the +notions of a girl who had been brought up in English and Swiss +Puritanism, fed on meagre Protestant histories and on art chiefly of +the hand-screen sort; a girl whose ardent nature turned all her small +allowance of knowledge into principles, fusing her actions into their +mould, and whose quick emotions gave the most abstract things the +quality of a pleasure or a pain; a girl who had lately become a wife, +and from the enthusiastic acceptance of untried duty found herself +plunged in tumultuous preoccupation with her personal lot. The weight +of unintelligible Rome might lie easily on bright nymphs to whom it +formed a background for the brilliant picnic of Anglo-foreign society; +but Dorothea had no such defence against deep impressions. Ruins and +basilicas, palaces and colossi, set in the midst of a sordid present, +where all that was living and warm-blooded seemed sunk in the deep +degeneracy of a superstition divorced from reverence; the dimmer but +yet eager Titanic life gazing and struggling on walls and ceilings; the +long vistas of white forms whose marble eyes seemed to hold the +monotonous light of an alien world: all this vast wreck of ambitious +ideals, sensuous and spiritual, mixed confusedly with the signs of +breathing forgetfulness and degradation, at first jarred her as with an +electric shock, and then urged themselves on her with that ache +belonging to a glut of confused ideas which check the flow of emotion. +Forms both pale and glowing took possession of her young sense, and +fixed themselves in her memory even when she was not thinking of them, +preparing strange associations which remained through her after-years. +Our moods are apt to bring with them images which succeed each other +like the magic-lantern pictures of a doze; and in certain states of +dull forlornness Dorothea all her life continued to see the vastness of +St. Peter's, the huge bronze canopy, the excited intention in the +attitudes and garments of the prophets and evangelists in the mosaics +above, and the red drapery which was being hung for Christmas spreading +itself everywhere like a disease of the retina. + +Not that this inward amazement of Dorothea's was anything very +exceptional: many souls in their young nudity are tumbled out among +incongruities and left to "find their feet" among them, while their +elders go about their business. Nor can I suppose that when Mrs. +Casaubon is discovered in a fit of weeping six weeks after her wedding, +the situation will be regarded as tragic. Some discouragement, some +faintness of heart at the new real future which replaces the imaginary, +is not unusual, and we do not expect people to be deeply moved by what +is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of +frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotion of +mankind; and perhaps our frames could hardly bear much of it. If we +had a keen vision and feeling of all ordinary human life, it would be +like hearing the grass grow and the squirrel's heart beat, and we +should die of that roar which lies on the other side of silence. As it +is, the quickest of us walk about well wadded with stupidity. + +However, Dorothea was crying, and if she had been required to state the +cause, she could only have done so in some such general words as I have +already used: to have been driven to be more particular would have been +like trying to give a history of the lights and shadows, for that new +real future which was replacing the imaginary drew its material from +the endless minutiae by which her view of Mr. Casaubon and her wifely +relation, now that she was married to him, was gradually changing with +the secret motion of a watch-hand from what it had been in her maiden +dream. It was too early yet for her fully to recognize or at least +admit the change, still more for her to have readjusted that +devotedness which was so necessary a part of her mental life that she +was almost sure sooner or later to recover it. Permanent rebellion, +the disorder of a life without some loving reverent resolve, was not +possible to her; but she was now in an interval when the very force of +her nature heightened its confusion. In this way, the early months of +marriage often are times of critical tumult--whether that of a +shrimp-pool or of deeper waters--which afterwards subsides into +cheerful peace. + +But was not Mr. Casaubon just as learned as before? Had his forms of +expression changed, or his sentiments become less laudable? Oh +waywardness of womanhood! did his chronology fail him, or his ability +to state not only a theory but the names of those who held it; or his +provision for giving the heads of any subject on demand? And was not +Rome the place in all the world to give free play to such +accomplishments? Besides, had not Dorothea's enthusiasm especially +dwelt on the prospect of relieving the weight and perhaps the sadness +with which great tasks lie on him who has to achieve them?-- And that +such weight pressed on Mr. Casaubon was only plainer than before. + +All these are crushing questions; but whatever else remained the same, +the light had changed, and you cannot find the pearly dawn at noonday. +The fact is unalterable, that a fellow-mortal with whose nature you are +acquainted solely through the brief entrances and exits of a few +imaginative weeks called courtship, may, when seen in the continuity of +married companionship, be disclosed as something better or worse than +what you have preconceived, but will certainly not appear altogether +the same. And it would be astonishing to find how soon the change is +felt if we had no kindred changes to compare with it. To share +lodgings with a brilliant dinner-companion, or to see your favorite +politician in the Ministry, may bring about changes quite as rapid: in +these cases too we begin by knowing little and believing much, and we +sometimes end by inverting the quantities. + +Still, such comparisons might mislead, for no man was more incapable of +flashy make-believe than Mr. Casaubon: he was as genuine a character as +any ruminant animal, and he had not actively assisted in creating any +illusions about himself. How was it that in the weeks since her +marriage, Dorothea had not distinctly observed but felt with a stifling +depression, that the large vistas and wide fresh air which she had +dreamed of finding in her husband's mind were replaced by anterooms and +winding passages which seemed to lead nowhither? I suppose it was that +in courtship everything is regarded as provisional and preliminary, and +the smallest sample of virtue or accomplishment is taken to guarantee +delightful stores which the broad leisure of marriage will reveal. But +the door-sill of marriage once crossed, expectation is concentrated on +the present. Having once embarked on your marital voyage, it is +impossible not to be aware that you make no way and that the sea is not +within sight--that, in fact, you are exploring an enclosed basin. + +In their conversation before marriage, Mr. Casaubon had often dwelt on +some explanation or questionable detail of which Dorothea did not see +the bearing; but such imperfect coherence seemed due to the brokenness +of their intercourse, and, supported by her faith in their future, she +had listened with fervid patience to a recitation of possible arguments +to be brought against Mr. Casaubon's entirely new view of the +Philistine god Dagon and other fish-deities, thinking that hereafter +she should see this subject which touched him so nearly from the same +high ground whence doubtless it had become so important to him. Again, +the matter-of-course statement and tone of dismissal with which he +treated what to her were the most stirring thoughts, was easily +accounted for as belonging to the sense of haste and preoccupation in +which she herself shared during their engagement. But now, since they +had been in Rome, with all the depths of her emotion roused to +tumultuous activity, and with life made a new problem by new elements, +she had been becoming more and more aware, with a certain terror, that +her mind was continually sliding into inward fits of anger and +repulsion, or else into forlorn weariness. How far the judicious +Hooker or any other hero of erudition would have been the same at Mr. +Casaubon's time of life, she had no means of knowing, so that he could +not have the advantage of comparison; but her husband's way of +commenting on the strangely impressive objects around them had begun to +affect her with a sort of mental shiver: he had perhaps the best +intention of acquitting himself worthily, but only of acquitting +himself. What was fresh to her mind was worn out to his; and such +capacity of thought and feeling as had ever been stimulated in him by +the general life of mankind had long shrunk to a sort of dried +preparation, a lifeless embalmment of knowledge. + +When he said, "Does this interest you, Dorothea? Shall we stay a +little longer? I am ready to stay if you wish it,"--it seemed to her +as if going or staying were alike dreary. Or, "Should you like to go +to the Farnesina, Dorothea? It contains celebrated frescos designed or +painted by Raphael, which most persons think it worth while to visit." + +"But do you care about them?" was always Dorothea's question. + +"They are, I believe, highly esteemed. Some of them represent the +fable of Cupid and Psyche, which is probably the romantic invention of +a literary period, and cannot, I think, be reckoned as a genuine +mythical product. But if you like these wall-paintings we can easily +drive thither; and you will then, I think, have seen the chief works of +Raphael, any of which it were a pity to omit in a visit to Rome. He is +the painter who has been held to combine the most complete grace of +form with sublimity of expression. Such at least I have gathered to be +the opinion of cognoscenti." + +This kind of answer given in a measured official tone, as of a +clergyman reading according to the rubric, did not help to justify the +glories of the Eternal City, or to give her the hope that if she knew +more about them the world would be joyously illuminated for her. There +is hardly any contact more depressing to a young ardent creature than +that of a mind in which years full of knowledge seem to have issued in +a blank absence of interest or sympathy. + +On other subjects indeed Mr. Casaubon showed a tenacity of occupation +and an eagerness which are usually regarded as the effect of +enthusiasm, and Dorothea was anxious to follow this spontaneous +direction of his thoughts, instead of being made to feel that she +dragged him away from it. But she was gradually ceasing to expect with +her former delightful confidence that she should see any wide opening +where she followed him. Poor Mr. Casaubon himself was lost among small +closets and winding stairs, and in an agitated dimness about the +Cabeiri, or in an exposure of other mythologists' ill-considered +parallels, easily lost sight of any purpose which had prompted him to +these labors. With his taper stuck before him he forgot the absence of +windows, and in bitter manuscript remarks on other men's notions about +the solar deities, he had become indifferent to the sunlight. + +These characteristics, fixed and unchangeable as bone in Mr. Casaubon, +might have remained longer unfelt by Dorothea if she had been +encouraged to pour forth her girlish and womanly feeling--if he would +have held her hands between his and listened with the delight of +tenderness and understanding to all the little histories which made up +her experience, and would have given her the same sort of intimacy in +return, so that the past life of each could be included in their mutual +knowledge and affection--or if she could have fed her affection with +those childlike caresses which are the bent of every sweet woman, who +has begun by showering kisses on the hard pate of her bald doll, +creating a happy soul within that woodenness from the wealth of her own +love. That was Dorothea's bent. With all her yearning to know what +was afar from her and to be widely benignant, she had ardor enough for +what was near, to have kissed Mr. Casaubon's coat-sleeve, or to have +caressed his shoe-latchet, if he would have made any other sign of +acceptance than pronouncing her, with his unfailing propriety, to be of +a most affectionate and truly feminine nature, indicating at the same +time by politely reaching a chair for her that he regarded these +manifestations as rather crude and startling. Having made his clerical +toilet with due care in the morning, he was prepared only for those +amenities of life which were suited to the well-adjusted stiff cravat +of the period, and to a mind weighted with unpublished matter. + +And by a sad contradiction Dorothea's ideas and resolves seemed like +melting ice floating and lost in the warm flood of which they had been +but another form. She was humiliated to find herself a mere victim of +feeling, as if she could know nothing except through that medium: all +her strength was scattered in fits of agitation, of struggle, of +despondency, and then again in visions of more complete renunciation, +transforming all hard conditions into duty. Poor Dorothea! she was +certainly troublesome--to herself chiefly; but this morning for the +first time she had been troublesome to Mr. Casaubon. + +She had begun, while they were taking coffee, with a determination to +shake off what she inwardly called her selfishness, and turned a face +all cheerful attention to her husband when he said, "My dear Dorothea, +we must now think of all that is yet left undone, as a preliminary to +our departure. I would fain have returned home earlier that we might +have been at Lowick for the Christmas; but my inquiries here have been +protracted beyond their anticipated period. I trust, however, that the +time here has not been passed unpleasantly to you. Among the sights of +Europe, that of Rome has ever been held one of the most striking and in +some respects edifying. I well remember that I considered it an epoch +in my life when I visited it for the first time; after the fall of +Napoleon, an event which opened the Continent to travellers. Indeed I +think it is one among several cities to which an extreme hyperbole has +been applied--'See Rome and die:' but in your case I would propose an +emendation and say, See Rome as a bride, and live henceforth as a happy +wife." + +Mr. Casaubon pronounced this little speech with the most conscientious +intention, blinking a little and swaying his head up and down, and +concluding with a smile. He had not found marriage a rapturous state, +but he had no idea of being anything else than an irreproachable +husband, who would make a charming young woman as happy as she deserved +to be. + +"I hope you are thoroughly satisfied with our stay--I mean, with the +result so far as your studies are concerned," said Dorothea, trying to +keep her mind fixed on what most affected her husband. + +"Yes," said Mr. Casaubon, with that peculiar pitch of voice which makes +the word half a negative. "I have been led farther than I had +foreseen, and various subjects for annotation have presented themselves +which, though I have no direct need of them, I could not pretermit. +The task, notwithstanding the assistance of my amanuensis, has been a +somewhat laborious one, but your society has happily prevented me from +that too continuous prosecution of thought beyond the hours of study +which has been the snare of my solitary life." + +"I am very glad that my presence has made any difference to you," said +Dorothea, who had a vivid memory of evenings in which she had supposed +that Mr. Casaubon's mind had gone too deep during the day to be able to +get to the surface again. I fear there was a little temper in her +reply. "I hope when we get to Lowick, I shall be more useful to you, +and be able to enter a little more into what interests you." + +"Doubtless, my dear," said Mr. Casaubon, with a slight bow. "The notes +I have here made will want sifting, and you can, if you please, extract +them under my direction." + +"And all your notes," said Dorothea, whose heart had already burned +within her on this subject, so that now she could not help speaking +with her tongue. "All those rows of volumes--will you not now do what +you used to speak of?--will you not make up your mind what part of them +you will use, and begin to write the book which will make your vast +knowledge useful to the world? I will write to your dictation, or I +will copy and extract what you tell me: I can be of no other use." +Dorothea, in a most unaccountable, darkly feminine manner, ended with a +slight sob and eyes full of tears. + +The excessive feeling manifested would alone have been highly +disturbing to Mr. Casaubon, but there were other reasons why Dorothea's +words were among the most cutting and irritating to him that she could +have been impelled to use. She was as blind to his inward troubles as +he to hers: she had not yet learned those hidden conflicts in her +husband which claim our pity. She had not yet listened patiently to +his heartbeats, but only felt that her own was beating violently. In +Mr. Casaubon's ear, Dorothea's voice gave loud emphatic iteration to +those muffled suggestions of consciousness which it was possible to +explain as mere fancy, the illusion of exaggerated sensitiveness: +always when such suggestions are unmistakably repeated from without, +they are resisted as cruel and unjust. We are angered even by the full +acceptance of our humiliating confessions--how much more by hearing in +hard distinct syllables from the lips of a near observer, those +confused murmurs which we try to call morbid, and strive against as if +they were the oncoming of numbness! And this cruel outward accuser was +there in the shape of a wife--nay, of a young bride, who, instead of +observing his abundant pen-scratches and amplitude of paper with the +uncritical awe of an elegant-minded canary-bird, seemed to present +herself as a spy watching everything with a malign power of inference. +Here, towards this particular point of the compass, Mr. Casaubon had a +sensitiveness to match Dorothea's, and an equal quickness to imagine +more than the fact. He had formerly observed with approbation her +capacity for worshipping the right object; he now foresaw with sudden +terror that this capacity might be replaced by presumption, this +worship by the most exasperating of all criticism,--that which sees +vaguely a great many fine ends, and has not the least notion what it +costs to reach them. + +For the first time since Dorothea had known him, Mr. Casaubon's face +had a quick angry flush upon it. + +"My love," he said, with irritation reined in by propriety, "you may +rely upon me for knowing the times and the seasons, adapted to the +different stages of a work which is not to be measured by the facile +conjectures of ignorant onlookers. It had been easy for me to gain a +temporary effect by a mirage of baseless opinion; but it is ever the +trial of the scrupulous explorer to be saluted with the impatient scorn +of chatterers who attempt only the smallest achievements, being indeed +equipped for no other. And it were well if all such could be +admonished to discriminate judgments of which the true subject-matter +lies entirely beyond their reach, from those of which the elements may +be compassed by a narrow and superficial survey." + +This speech was delivered with an energy and readiness quite unusual +with Mr. Casaubon. It was not indeed entirely an improvisation, but +had taken shape in inward colloquy, and rushed out like the round +grains from a fruit when sudden heat cracks it. Dorothea was not only +his wife: she was a personification of that shallow world which +surrounds the appreciated or desponding author. + +Dorothea was indignant in her turn. Had she not been repressing +everything in herself except the desire to enter into some fellowship +with her husband's chief interests? + +"My judgment _was_ a very superficial one--such as I am capable of +forming," she answered, with a prompt resentment, that needed no +rehearsal. "You showed me the rows of notebooks--you have often spoken +of them--you have often said that they wanted digesting. But I never +heard you speak of the writing that is to be published. Those were +very simple facts, and my judgment went no farther. I only begged you +to let me be of some good to you." + +Dorothea rose to leave the table and Mr. Casaubon made no reply, taking +up a letter which lay beside him as if to reperuse it. Both were +shocked at their mutual situation--that each should have betrayed anger +towards the other. If they had been at home, settled at Lowick in +ordinary life among their neighbors, the clash would have been less +embarrassing: but on a wedding journey, the express object of which is +to isolate two people on the ground that they are all the world to each +other, the sense of disagreement is, to say the least, confounding and +stultifying. To have changed your longitude extensively and placed +yourselves in a moral solitude in order to have small explosions, to +find conversation difficult and to hand a glass of water without +looking, can hardly be regarded as satisfactory fulfilment even to the +toughest minds. To Dorothea's inexperienced sensitiveness, it seemed +like a catastrophe, changing all prospects; and to Mr. Casaubon it was +a new pain, he never having been on a wedding journey before, or found +himself in that close union which was more of a subjection than he had +been able to imagine, since this charming young bride not only obliged +him to much consideration on her behalf (which he had sedulously +given), but turned out to be capable of agitating him cruelly just +where he most needed soothing. Instead of getting a soft fence against +the cold, shadowy, unapplausive audience of his life, had he only given +it a more substantial presence? + +Neither of them felt it possible to speak again at present. To have +reversed a previous arrangement and declined to go out would have been +a show of persistent anger which Dorothea's conscience shrank from, +seeing that she already began to feel herself guilty. However just her +indignation might be, her ideal was not to claim justice, but to give +tenderness. So when the carriage came to the door, she drove with Mr. +Casaubon to the Vatican, walked with him through the stony avenue of +inscriptions, and when she parted with him at the entrance to the +Library, went on through the Museum out of mere listlessness as to what +was around her. She had not spirit to turn round and say that she +would drive anywhere. It was when Mr. Casaubon was quitting her that +Naumann had first seen her, and he had entered the long gallery of +sculpture at the same time with her; but here Naumann had to await +Ladislaw with whom he was to settle a bet of champagne about an +enigmatical mediaeval-looking figure there. After they had examined +the figure, and had walked on finishing their dispute, they had parted, +Ladislaw lingering behind while Naumann had gone into the Hall of +Statues where he again saw Dorothea, and saw her in that brooding +abstraction which made her pose remarkable. She did not really see the +streak of sunlight on the floor more than she saw the statues: she was +inwardly seeing the light of years to come in her own home and over the +English fields and elms and hedge-bordered highroads; and feeling that +the way in which they might be filled with joyful devotedness was not +so clear to her as it had been. But in Dorothea's mind there was a +current into which all thought and feeling were apt sooner or later to +flow--the reaching forward of the whole consciousness towards the +fullest truth, the least partial good. There was clearly something +better than anger and despondency. + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + + "Hire facounde eke full womanly and plain, + No contrefeted termes had she + To semen wise." + --CHAUCER. + + +It was in that way Dorothea came to be sobbing as soon as she was +securely alone. But she was presently roused by a knock at the door, +which made her hastily dry her eyes before saying, "Come in." Tantripp +had brought a card, and said that there was a gentleman waiting in the +lobby. The courier had told him that only Mrs. Casaubon was at home, +but he said he was a relation of Mr. Casaubon's: would she see him? + +"Yes," said Dorothea, without pause; "show him into the salon." Her +chief impressions about young Ladislaw were that when she had seen him +at Lowick she had been made aware of Mr. Casaubon's generosity towards +him, and also that she had been interested in his own hesitation about +his career. She was alive to anything that gave her an opportunity for +active sympathy, and at this moment it seemed as if the visit had come +to shake her out of her self-absorbed discontent--to remind her of her +husband's goodness, and make her feel that she had now the right to be +his helpmate in all kind deeds. She waited a minute or two, but when +she passed into the next room there were just signs enough that she had +been crying to make her open face look more youthful and appealing than +usual. She met Ladislaw with that exquisite smile of good-will which +is unmixed with vanity, and held out her hand to him. He was the elder +by several years, but at that moment he looked much the younger, for +his transparent complexion flushed suddenly, and he spoke with a +shyness extremely unlike the ready indifference of his manner with his +male companion, while Dorothea became all the calmer with a wondering +desire to put him at ease. + +"I was not aware that you and Mr. Casaubon were in Rome, until this +morning, when I saw you in the Vatican Museum," he said. "I knew you +at once--but--I mean, that I concluded Mr. Casaubon's address would be +found at the Poste Restante, and I was anxious to pay my respects to +him and you as early as possible." + +"Pray sit down. He is not here now, but he will be glad to hear of +you, I am sure," said Dorothea, seating herself unthinkingly between +the fire and the light of the tall window, and pointing to a chair +opposite, with the quietude of a benignant matron. The signs of +girlish sorrow in her face were only the more striking. "Mr. Casaubon +is much engaged; but you will leave your address--will you not?--and +he will write to you." + +"You are very good," said Ladislaw, beginning to lose his diffidence in +the interest with which he was observing the signs of weeping which had +altered her face. "My address is on my card. But if you will allow me +I will call again to-morrow at an hour when Mr. Casaubon is likely to +be at home." + +"He goes to read in the Library of the Vatican every day, and you can +hardly see him except by an appointment. Especially now. We are about +to leave Rome, and he is very busy. He is usually away almost from +breakfast till dinner. But I am sure he will wish you to dine with us." + +Will Ladislaw was struck mute for a few moments. He had never been +fond of Mr. Casaubon, and if it had not been for the sense of +obligation, would have laughed at him as a Bat of erudition. But the +idea of this dried-up pedant, this elaborator of small explanations +about as important as the surplus stock of false antiquities kept in a +vendor's back chamber, having first got this adorable young creature to +marry him, and then passing his honeymoon away from her, groping after +his mouldy futilities (Will was given to hyperbole)--this sudden +picture stirred him with a sort of comic disgust: he was divided +between the impulse to laugh aloud and the equally unseasonable impulse +to burst into scornful invective. + +For an instant he felt that the struggle, was causing a queer +contortion of his mobile features, but with a good effort he resolved +it into nothing more offensive than a merry smile. + +Dorothea wondered; but the smile was irresistible, and shone back from +her face too. Will Ladislaw's smile was delightful, unless you were +angry with him beforehand: it was a gush of inward light illuminating +the transparent skin as well as the eyes, and playing about every curve +and line as if some Ariel were touching them with a new charm, and +banishing forever the traces of moodiness. The reflection of that +smile could not but have a little merriment in it too, even under dark +eyelashes still moist, as Dorothea said inquiringly, "Something amuses +you?" + +"Yes," said Will, quick in finding resources. "I am thinking of the +sort of figure I cut the first time I saw you, when you annihilated my +poor sketch with your criticism." + +"My criticism?" said Dorothea, wondering still more. "Surely not. I +always feel particularly ignorant about painting." + +"I suspected you of knowing so much, that you knew how to say just what +was most cutting. You said--I dare say you don't remember it as I +do--that the relation of my sketch to nature was quite hidden from you. +At least, you implied that." Will could laugh now as well as smile. + +"That was really my ignorance," said Dorothea, admiring +Will's good-humor. "I must have said so only because I never could see +any beauty in the pictures which my uncle told me all judges thought +very fine. And I have gone about with just the same ignorance in Rome. +There are comparatively few paintings that I can really enjoy. At +first when I enter a room where the walls are covered with frescos, or +with rare pictures, I feel a kind of awe--like a child present at great +ceremonies where there are grand robes and processions; I feel myself +in the presence of some higher life than my own. But when I begin to +examine the pictures one by one the life goes out of them, or else is +something violent and strange to me. It must be my own dulness. I am +seeing so much all at once, and not understanding half of it. That +always makes one feel stupid. It is painful to be told that anything +is very fine and not be able to feel that it is fine--something like +being blind, while people talk of the sky." + +"Oh, there is a great deal in the feeling for art which must be +acquired," said Will. (It was impossible now to doubt the directness +of Dorothea's confession.) "Art is an old language with a great many +artificial affected styles, and sometimes the chief pleasure one gets +out of knowing them is the mere sense of knowing. I enjoy the art of +all sorts here immensely; but I suppose if I could pick my enjoyment to +pieces I should find it made up of many different threads. There is +something in daubing a little one's self, and having an idea of the +process." + +"You mean perhaps to be a painter?" said Dorothea, with a new direction +of interest. "You mean to make painting your profession? Mr. Casaubon +will like to hear that you have chosen a profession." + +"No, oh no," said Will, with some coldness. "I have quite made up my +mind against it. It is too one-sided a life. I have been seeing a +great deal of the German artists here: I travelled from Frankfort with +one of them. Some are fine, even brilliant fellows--but I should not +like to get into their way of looking at the world entirely from the +studio point of view." + +"That I can understand," said Dorothea, cordially. "And in Rome it +seems as if there were so many things which are more wanted in the +world than pictures. But if you have a genius for painting, would it +not be right to take that as a guide? Perhaps you might do better +things than these--or different, so that there might not be so many +pictures almost all alike in the same place." + +There was no mistaking this simplicity, and Will was won by it into +frankness. "A man must have a very rare genius to make changes of that +sort. I am afraid mine would not carry me even to the pitch of doing +well what has been done already, at least not so well as to make it +worth while. And I should never succeed in anything by dint of +drudgery. If things don't come easily to me I never get them." + +"I have heard Mr. Casaubon say that he regrets your want of patience," +said Dorothea, gently. She was rather shocked at this mode of taking +all life as a holiday. + +"Yes, I know Mr. Casaubon's opinion. He and I differ." + +The slight streak of contempt in this hasty reply offended Dorothea. +She was all the more susceptible about Mr. Casaubon because of her +morning's trouble. + +"Certainly you differ," she said, rather proudly. "I did not think of +comparing you: such power of persevering devoted labor as Mr. +Casaubon's is not common." + +Will saw that she was offended, but this only gave an additional +impulse to the new irritation of his latent dislike towards Mr. +Casaubon. It was too intolerable that Dorothea should be worshipping +this husband: such weakness in a woman is pleasant to no man but the +husband in question. Mortals are easily tempted to pinch the life out +of their neighbor's buzzing glory, and think that such killing is no +murder. + +"No, indeed," he answered, promptly. "And therefore it is a pity that +it should be thrown away, as so much English scholarship is, for want +of knowing what is being done by the rest of the world. If Mr. +Casaubon read German he would save himself a great deal of trouble." + +"I do not understand you," said Dorothea, startled and anxious. + +"I merely mean," said Will, in an offhand way, "that the Germans have +taken the lead in historical inquiries, and they laugh at results which +are got by groping about in woods with a pocket-compass while they have +made good roads. When I was with Mr. Casaubon I saw that he deafened +himself in that direction: it was almost against his will that he read +a Latin treatise written by a German. I was very sorry." + +Will only thought of giving a good pinch that would annihilate that +vaunted laboriousness, and was unable to imagine the mode in which +Dorothea would be wounded. Young Mr. Ladislaw was not at all deep +himself in German writers; but very little achievement is required in +order to pity another man's shortcomings. + +Poor Dorothea felt a pang at the thought that the labor of her +husband's life might be void, which left her no energy to spare for the +question whether this young relative who was so much obliged to him +ought not to have repressed his observation. She did not even speak, +but sat looking at her hands, absorbed in the piteousness of that +thought. + +Will, however, having given that annihilating pinch, was rather +ashamed, imagining from Dorothea's silence that he had offended her +still more; and having also a conscience about plucking the +tail-feathers from a benefactor. + +"I regretted it especially," he resumed, taking the usual course from +detraction to insincere eulogy, "because of my gratitude and respect +towards my cousin. It would not signify so much in a man whose talents +and character were less distinguished." + +Dorothea raised her eyes, brighter than usual with excited feeling, and +said in her saddest recitative, "How I wish I had learned German when I +was at Lausanne! There were plenty of German teachers. But now I can +be of no use." + +There was a new light, but still a mysterious light, for Will in +Dorothea's last words. The question how she had come to accept Mr. +Casaubon--which he had dismissed when he first saw her by saying that +she must be disagreeable in spite of appearances--was not now to be +answered on any such short and easy method. Whatever else she might +be, she was not disagreeable. She was not coldly clever and indirectly +satirical, but adorably simple and full of feeling. She was an angel +beguiled. It would be a unique delight to wait and watch for the +melodious fragments in which her heart and soul came forth so directly +and ingenuously. The Aeolian harp again came into his mind. + +She must have made some original romance for herself in this marriage. +And if Mr. Casaubon had been a dragon who had carried her off to his +lair with his talons simply and without legal forms, it would have been +an unavoidable feat of heroism to release her and fall at her feet. +But he was something more unmanageable than a dragon: he was a +benefactor with collective society at his back, and he was at that +moment entering the room in all the unimpeachable correctness of his +demeanor, while Dorothea was looking animated with a newly roused alarm +and regret, and Will was looking animated with his admiring speculation +about her feelings. + +Mr. Casaubon felt a surprise which was quite unmixed with pleasure, but +he did not swerve from his usual politeness of greeting, when Will rose +and explained his presence. Mr. Casaubon was less happy than usual, +and this perhaps made him look all the dimmer and more faded; else, the +effect might easily have been produced by the contrast of his young +cousin's appearance. The first impression on seeing Will was one of +sunny brightness, which added to the uncertainty of his changing +expression. Surely, his very features changed their form, his jaw +looked sometimes large and sometimes small; and the little ripple in +his nose was a preparation for metamorphosis. When he turned his head +quickly his hair seemed to shake out light, and some persons thought +they saw decided genius in this coruscation. Mr. Casaubon, on the +contrary, stood rayless. + +As Dorothea's eyes were turned anxiously on her husband she was perhaps +not insensible to the contrast, but it was only mingled with other +causes in making her more conscious of that new alarm on his behalf +which was the first stirring of a pitying tenderness fed by the +realities of his lot and not by her own dreams. Yet it was a source of +greater freedom to her that Will was there; his young equality was +agreeable, and also perhaps his openness to conviction. She felt an +immense need of some one to speak to, and she had never before seen any +one who seemed so quick and pliable, so likely to understand everything. + +Mr. Casaubon gravely hoped that Will was passing his time profitably as +well as pleasantly in Rome--had thought his intention was to remain in +South Germany--but begged him to come and dine to-morrow, when he could +converse more at large: at present he was somewhat weary. Ladislaw +understood, and accepting the invitation immediately took his leave. + +Dorothea's eyes followed her husband anxiously, while he sank down +wearily at the end of a sofa, and resting his elbow supported his head +and looked on the floor. A little flushed, and with bright eyes, she +seated herself beside him, and said-- + +"Forgive me for speaking so hastily to you this morning. I was wrong. +I fear I hurt you and made the day more burdensome." + +"I am glad that you feel that, my dear," said Mr. Casaubon. He spoke +quietly and bowed his head a little, but there was still an uneasy +feeling in his eyes as he looked at her. + +"But you do forgive me?" said Dorothea, with a quick sob. In her need +for some manifestation of feeling she was ready to exaggerate her own +fault. Would not love see returning penitence afar off, and fall on +its neck and kiss it? + +"My dear Dorothea--'who with repentance is not satisfied, is not of +heaven nor earth:'--you do not think me worthy to be banished by that +severe sentence," said Mr. Casaubon, exerting himself to make a strong +statement, and also to smile faintly. + +Dorothea was silent, but a tear which had come up with the sob would +insist on falling. + +"You are excited, my dear. And I also am feeling some unpleasant +consequences of too much mental disturbance," said Mr. Casaubon. In +fact, he had it in his thought to tell her that she ought not to have +received young Ladislaw in his absence: but he abstained, partly from +the sense that it would be ungracious to bring a new complaint in the +moment of her penitent acknowledgment, partly because he wanted to +avoid further agitation of himself by speech, and partly because he was +too proud to betray that jealousy of disposition which was not so +exhausted on his scholarly compeers that there was none to spare in +other directions. There is a sort of jealousy which needs very little +fire: it is hardly a passion, but a blight bred in the cloudy, damp +despondency of uneasy egoism. + +"I think it is time for us to dress," he added, looking at his watch. +They both rose, and there was never any further allusion between them +to what had passed on this day. + +But Dorothea remembered it to the last with the vividness with which we +all remember epochs in our experience when some dear expectation dies, +or some new motive is born. Today she had begun to see that she had +been under a wild illusion in expecting a response to her feeling from +Mr. Casaubon, and she had felt the waking of a presentiment that there +might be a sad consciousness in his life which made as great a need on +his side as on her own. + +We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder +to feed our supreme selves: Dorothea had early begun to emerge from +that stupidity, but yet it had been easier to her to imagine how she +would devote herself to Mr. Casaubon, and become wise and strong in his +strength and wisdom, than to conceive with that distinctness which is +no longer reflection but feeling--an idea wrought back to the +directness of sense, like the solidity of objects--that he had an +equivalent centre of self, whence the lights and shadows must always +fall with a certain difference. + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + + "Nous câusames longtemps; elle était simple et bonne. + Ne sachant pas le mal, elle faisait le bien; + Des richesses du coeur elle me fit l'aumône, + Et tout en écoutant comme le coeur se donne, + Sans oser y penser je lui donnai le mien; + Elle emporta ma vie, et n'en sut jamais rien." + --ALFRED DE MUSSET. + + +Will Ladislaw was delightfully agreeable at dinner the next day, and +gave no opportunity for Mr. Casaubon to show disapprobation. On the +contrary it seemed to Dorothea that Will had a happier way of drawing +her husband into conversation and of deferentially listening to him +than she had ever observed in any one before. To be sure, the +listeners about Tipton were not highly gifted! Will talked a good deal +himself, but what he said was thrown in with such rapidity, and with +such an unimportant air of saying something by the way, that it seemed +a gay little chime after the great bell. If Will was not always +perfect, this was certainly one of his good days. He described touches +of incident among the poor people in Rome, only to be seen by one who +could move about freely; he found himself in agreement with Mr. +Casaubon as to the unsound opinions of Middleton concerning the +relations of Judaism and Catholicism; and passed easily to a +half-enthusiastic half-playful picture of the enjoyment he got out of +the very miscellaneousness of Rome, which made the mind flexible with +constant comparison, and saved you from seeing the world's ages as a +set of box-like partitions without vital connection. Mr. Casaubon's +studies, Will observed, had always been of too broad a kind for that, +and he had perhaps never felt any such sudden effect, but for himself +he confessed that Rome had given him quite a new sense of history as a +whole: the fragments stimulated his imagination and made him +constructive. Then occasionally, but not too often, he appealed to +Dorothea, and discussed what she said, as if her sentiment were an item +to be considered in the final judgment even of the Madonna di Foligno +or the Laocoon. A sense of contributing to form the world's opinion +makes conversation particularly cheerful; and Mr. Casaubon too was not +without his pride in his young wife, who spoke better than most women, +as indeed he had perceived in choosing her. + +Since things were going on so pleasantly, Mr. Casaubon's statement that +his labors in the Library would be suspended for a couple of days, and +that after a brief renewal he should have no further reason for staying +in Rome, encouraged Will to urge that Mrs. Casaubon should not go away +without seeing a studio or two. Would not Mr. Casaubon take her? That +sort of thing ought not to be missed: it was quite special: it was a +form of life that grew like a small fresh vegetation with its +population of insects on huge fossils. Will would be happy to conduct +them--not to anything wearisome, only to a few examples. + +Mr. Casaubon, seeing Dorothea look earnestly towards him, could not but +ask her if she would be interested in such visits: he was now at her +service during the whole day; and it was agreed that Will should come +on the morrow and drive with them. + +Will could not omit Thorwaldsen, a living celebrity about whom even Mr. +Casaubon inquired, but before the day was far advanced he led the way +to the studio of his friend Adolf Naumann, whom he mentioned as one of +the chief renovators of Christian art, one of those who had not only +revived but expanded that grand conception of supreme events as +mysteries at which the successive ages were spectators, and in relation +to which the great souls of all periods became as it were +contemporaries. Will added that he had made himself Naumann's pupil +for the nonce. + +"I have been making some oil-sketches under him," said Will. "I hate +copying. I must put something of my own in. Naumann has been painting +the Saints drawing the Car of the Church, and I have been making a +sketch of Marlowe's Tamburlaine Driving the Conquered Kings in his +Chariot. I am not so ecclesiastical as Naumann, and I sometimes twit +him with his excess of meaning. But this time I mean to outdo him in +breadth of intention. I take Tamburlaine in his chariot for the +tremendous course of the world's physical history lashing on the +harnessed dynasties. In my opinion, that is a good mythical +interpretation." Will here looked at Mr. Casaubon, who received this +offhand treatment of symbolism very uneasily, and bowed with a neutral +air. + +"The sketch must be very grand, if it conveys so much," said Dorothea. +"I should need some explanation even of the meaning you give. Do you +intend Tamburlaine to represent earthquakes and volcanoes?" + +"Oh yes," said Will, laughing, "and migrations of races and clearings +of forests--and America and the steam-engine. Everything you can +imagine!" + +"What a difficult kind of shorthand!" said Dorothea, smiling towards +her husband. "It would require all your knowledge to be able to read +it." + +Mr. Casaubon blinked furtively at Will. He had a suspicion that he was +being laughed at. But it was not possible to include Dorothea in the +suspicion. + +They found Naumann painting industriously, but no model was present; +his pictures were advantageously arranged, and his own plain vivacious +person set off by a dove-colored blouse and a maroon velvet cap, so +that everything was as fortunate as if he had expected the beautiful +young English lady exactly at that time. + +The painter in his confident English gave little dissertations on his +finished and unfinished subjects, seeming to observe Mr. Casaubon as +much as he did Dorothea. Will burst in here and there with ardent +words of praise, marking out particular merits in his friend's work; +and Dorothea felt that she was getting quite new notions as to the +significance of Madonnas seated under inexplicable canopied thrones +with the simple country as a background, and of saints with +architectural models in their hands, or knives accidentally wedged in +their skulls. Some things which had seemed monstrous to her were +gathering intelligibility and even a natural meaning: but all this was +apparently a branch of knowledge in which Mr. Casaubon had not +interested himself. + +"I think I would rather feel that painting is beautiful than have to +read it as an enigma; but I should learn to understand these pictures +sooner than yours with the very wide meaning," said Dorothea, speaking +to Will. + +"Don't speak of my painting before Naumann," said Will. "He will tell +you, it is all pfuscherei, which is his most opprobrious word!" + +"Is that true?" said Dorothea, turning her sincere eyes on Naumann, who +made a slight grimace and said-- + +"Oh, he does not mean it seriously with painting. His walk must be +belles-lettres. That is wi-ide." + +Naumann's pronunciation of the vowel seemed to stretch the word +satirically. Will did not half like it, but managed to laugh: and Mr. +Casaubon, while he felt some disgust at the artist's German accent, +began to entertain a little respect for his judicious severity. + +The respect was not diminished when Naumann, after drawing Will aside +for a moment and looking, first at a large canvas, then at Mr. +Casaubon, came forward again and said-- + +"My friend Ladislaw thinks you will pardon me, sir, if I say that a +sketch of your head would be invaluable to me for the St. Thomas +Aquinas in my picture there. It is too much to ask; but I so seldom +see just what I want--the idealistic in the real." + +"You astonish me greatly, sir," said Mr. Casaubon, his looks improved +with a glow of delight; "but if my poor physiognomy, which I have been +accustomed to regard as of the commonest order, can be of any use to +you in furnishing some traits for the angelical doctor, I shall feel +honored. That is to say, if the operation will not be a lengthy one; +and if Mrs. Casaubon will not object to the delay." + +As for Dorothea, nothing could have pleased her more, unless it had +been a miraculous voice pronouncing Mr. Casaubon the wisest and +worthiest among the sons of men. In that case her tottering faith +would have become firm again. + +Naumann's apparatus was at hand in wonderful completeness, and the +sketch went on at once as well as the conversation. Dorothea sat down +and subsided into calm silence, feeling happier than she had done for a +long while before. Every one about her seemed good, and she said to +herself that Rome, if she had only been less ignorant, would have been +full of beauty: its sadness would have been winged with hope. No nature +could be less suspicious than hers: when she was a child she believed +in the gratitude of wasps and the honorable susceptibility of sparrows, +and was proportionately indignant when their baseness was made manifest. + +The adroit artist was asking Mr. Casaubon questions about English +polities, which brought long answers, and, Will meanwhile had perched +himself on some steps in the background overlooking all. + +Presently Naumann said--"Now if I could lay this by for half an hour +and take it up again--come and look, Ladislaw--I think it is perfect so +far." + +Will vented those adjuring interjections which imply that admiration is +too strong for syntax; and Naumann said in a tone of piteous regret-- + +"Ah--now--if I could but have had more--but you have other +engagements--I could not ask it--or even to come again to-morrow." + +"Oh, let us stay!" said Dorothea. "We have nothing to do to-day except +go about, have we?" she added, looking entreatingly at Mr. Casaubon. +"It would be a pity not to make the head as good as possible." + +"I am at your service, sir, in the matter," said Mr. Casaubon, with +polite condescension. "Having given up the interior of my head to +idleness, it is as well that the exterior should work in this way." + +"You are unspeakably good--now I am happy!" said Naumann, and then went +on in German to Will, pointing here and there to the sketch as if he +were considering that. Putting it aside for a moment, he looked round +vaguely, as if seeking some occupation for his visitors, and afterwards +turning to Mr. Casaubon, said-- + +"Perhaps the beautiful bride, the gracious lady, would not be unwilling +to let me fill up the time by trying to make a slight sketch of +her--not, of course, as you see, for that picture--only as a single +study." + +Mr. Casaubon, bowing, doubted not that Mrs. Casaubon would oblige him, +and Dorothea said, at once, "Where shall I put myself?" + +Naumann was all apologies in asking her to stand, and allow him to +adjust her attitude, to which she submitted without any of the affected +airs and laughs frequently thought necessary on such occasions, when +the painter said, "It is as Santa Clara that I want you to +stand--leaning so, with your cheek against your hand--so--looking at +that stool, please, so!" + +Will was divided between the inclination to fall at the Saint's feet +and kiss her robe, and the temptation to knock Naumann down while he +was adjusting her arm. All this was impudence and desecration, and he +repented that he had brought her. + +The artist was diligent, and Will recovering himself moved about and +occupied Mr. Casaubon as ingeniously as he could; but he did not in the +end prevent the time from seeming long to that gentleman, as was clear +from his expressing a fear that Mrs. Casaubon would be tired. Naumann +took the hint and said-- + +"Now, sir, if you can oblige me again; I will release the lady-wife." + +So Mr. Casaubon's patience held out further, and when after all it +turned out that the head of Saint Thomas Aquinas would be more perfect +if another sitting could be had, it was granted for the morrow. On the +morrow Santa Clara too was retouched more than once. The result of all +was so far from displeasing to Mr. Casaubon, that he arranged for the +purchase of the picture in which Saint Thomas Aquinas sat among the +doctors of the Church in a disputation too abstract to be represented, +but listened to with more or less attention by an audience above. The +Santa Clara, which was spoken of in the second place, Naumann declared +himself to be dissatisfied with--he could not, in conscience, engage +to make a worthy picture of it; so about the Santa Clara the +arrangement was conditional. + +I will not dwell on Naumann's jokes at the expense of Mr. Casaubon that +evening, or on his dithyrambs about Dorothea's charm, in all which Will +joined, but with a difference. No sooner did Naumann mention any +detail of Dorothea's beauty, than Will got exasperated at his +presumption: there was grossness in his choice of the most ordinary +words, and what business had he to talk of her lips? She was not a +woman to be spoken of as other women were. Will could not say just +what he thought, but he became irritable. And yet, when after some +resistance he had consented to take the Casaubons to his friend's +studio, he had been allured by the gratification of his pride in being +the person who could grant Naumann such an opportunity of studying her +loveliness--or rather her divineness, for the ordinary phrases which +might apply to mere bodily prettiness were not applicable to her. +(Certainly all Tipton and its neighborhood, as well as Dorothea +herself, would have been surprised at her beauty being made so much of. +In that part of the world Miss Brooke had been only a "fine young +woman.") + +"Oblige me by letting the subject drop, Naumann. Mrs. Casaubon is not +to be talked of as if she were a model," said Will. Naumann stared at +him. + +"Schon! I will talk of my Aquinas. The head is not a bad type, after +all. I dare say the great scholastic himself would have been flattered +to have his portrait asked for. Nothing like these starchy doctors for +vanity! It was as I thought: he cared much less for her portrait than +his own." + +"He's a cursed white-blooded pedantic coxcomb," said Will, with +gnashing impetuosity. His obligations to Mr. Casaubon were not known +to his hearer, but Will himself was thinking of them, and wishing that +he could discharge them all by a check. + +Naumann gave a shrug and said, "It is good they go away soon, my dear. +They are spoiling your fine temper." + +All Will's hope and contrivance were now concentrated on seeing +Dorothea when she was alone. He only wanted her to take more emphatic +notice of him; he only wanted to be something more special in her +remembrance than he could yet believe himself likely to be. He was +rather impatient under that open ardent good-will, which he saw was her +usual state of feeling. The remote worship of a woman throned out of +their reach plays a great part in men's lives, but in most cases the +worshipper longs for some queenly recognition, some approving sign by +which his soul's sovereign may cheer him without descending from her +high place. That was precisely what Will wanted. But there were +plenty of contradictions in his imaginative demands. It was beautiful +to see how Dorothea's eyes turned with wifely anxiety and beseeching to +Mr. Casaubon: she would have lost some of her halo if she had been +without that duteous preoccupation; and yet at the next moment the +husband's sandy absorption of such nectar was too intolerable; and +Will's longing to say damaging things about him was perhaps not the +less tormenting because he felt the strongest reasons for restraining +it. + +Will had not been invited to dine the next day. Hence he persuaded +himself that he was bound to call, and that the only eligible time was +the middle of the day, when Mr. Casaubon would not be at home. + +Dorothea, who had not been made aware that her former reception of Will +had displeased her husband, had no hesitation about seeing him, +especially as he might be come to pay a farewell visit. When he +entered she was looking at some cameos which she had been buying for +Celia. She greeted Will as if his visit were quite a matter of course, +and said at once, having a cameo bracelet in her hand-- + +"I am so glad you are come. Perhaps you understand all about cameos, +and can tell me if these are really good. I wished to have you with us +in choosing them, but Mr. Casaubon objected: he thought there was not +time. He will finish his work to-morrow, and we shall go away in three +days. I have been uneasy about these cameos. Pray sit down and look +at them." + +"I am not particularly knowing, but there can be no great mistake about +these little Homeric bits: they are exquisitely neat. And the color is +fine: it will just suit you." + +"Oh, they are for my sister, who has quite a different complexion. You +saw her with me at Lowick: she is light-haired and very pretty--at +least I think so. We were never so long away from each other in our +lives before. She is a great pet and never was naughty in her life. I +found out before I came away that she wanted me to buy her some cameos, +and I should be sorry for them not to be good--after their kind." +Dorothea added the last words with a smile. + +"You seem not to care about cameos," said Will, seating himself at some +distance from her, and observing her while she closed the cases. + +"No, frankly, I don't think them a great object in life," said Dorothea + +"I fear you are a heretic about art generally. How is that? I should +have expected you to be very sensitive to the beautiful everywhere." + +"I suppose I am dull about many things," said Dorothea, simply. "I +should like to make life beautiful--I mean everybody's life. And then +all this immense expense of art, that seems somehow to lie outside life +and make it no better for the world, pains one. It spoils my enjoyment +of anything when I am made to think that most people are shut out from +it." + +"I call that the fanaticism of sympathy," said Will, impetuously. "You +might say the same of landscape, of poetry, of all refinement. If you +carried it out you ought to be miserable in your own goodness, and turn +evil that you might have no advantage over others. The best piety is +to enjoy--when you can. You are doing the most then to save the +earth's character as an agreeable planet. And enjoyment radiates. It +is of no use to try and take care of all the world; that is being taken +care of when you feel delight--in art or in anything else. Would you +turn all the youth of the world into a tragic chorus, wailing and +moralizing over misery? I suspect that you have some false belief in +the virtues of misery, and want to make your life a martyrdom." Will +had gone further than he intended, and checked himself. But Dorothea's +thought was not taking just the same direction as his own, and she +answered without any special emotion-- + +"Indeed you mistake me. I am not a sad, melancholy creature. I am +never unhappy long together. I am angry and naughty--not like Celia: I +have a great outburst, and then all seems glorious again. I cannot +help believing in glorious things in a blind sort of way. I should be +quite willing to enjoy the art here, but there is so much that I don't +know the reason of--so much that seems to me a consecration of ugliness +rather than beauty. The painting and sculpture may be wonderful, but +the feeling is often low and brutal, and sometimes even ridiculous. +Here and there I see what takes me at once as noble--something that I +might compare with the Alban Mountains or the sunset from the Pincian +Hill; but that makes it the greater pity that there is so little of the +best kind among all that mass of things over which men have toiled so." + +"Of course there is always a great deal of poor work: the rarer things +want that soil to grow in." + +"Oh dear," said Dorothea, taking up that thought into the chief current +of her anxiety; "I see it must be very difficult to do anything good. +I have often felt since I have been in Rome that most of our lives +would look much uglier and more bungling than the pictures, if they +could be put on the wall." + +Dorothea parted her lips again as if she were going to say more, but +changed her mind and paused. + +"You are too young--it is an anachronism for you to have such +thoughts," said Will, energetically, with a quick shake of the head +habitual to him. "You talk as if you had never known any youth. It is +monstrous--as if you had had a vision of Hades in your childhood, like +the boy in the legend. You have been brought up in some of those +horrible notions that choose the sweetest women to devour--like +Minotaurs. And now you will go and be shut up in that stone prison at +Lowick: you will be buried alive. It makes me savage to think of it! +I would rather never have seen you than think of you with such a +prospect." + +Will again feared that he had gone too far; but the meaning we attach +to words depends on our feeling, and his tone of angry regret had so +much kindness in it for Dorothea's heart, which had always been giving +out ardor and had never been fed with much from the living beings +around her, that she felt a new sense of gratitude and answered with a +gentle smile-- + +"It is very good of you to be anxious about me. It is because you did +not like Lowick yourself: you had set your heart on another kind of +life. But Lowick is my chosen home." + +The last sentence was spoken with an almost solemn cadence, and Will +did not know what to say, since it would not be useful for him to +embrace her slippers, and tell her that he would die for her: it was +clear that she required nothing of the sort; and they were both silent +for a moment or two, when Dorothea began again with an air of saying at +last what had been in her mind beforehand. + +"I wanted to ask you again about something you said the other day. +Perhaps it was half of it your lively way of speaking: I notice that +you like to put things strongly; I myself often exaggerate when I speak +hastily." + +"What was it?" said Will, observing that she spoke with a timidity +quite new in her. "I have a hyperbolical tongue: it catches fire as it +goes. I dare say I shall have to retract." + +"I mean what you said about the necessity of knowing German--I mean, +for the subjects that Mr. Casaubon is engaged in. I have been thinking +about it; and it seems to me that with Mr. Casaubon's learning he must +have before him the same materials as German scholars--has he not?" +Dorothea's timidity was due to an indistinct consciousness that she was +in the strange situation of consulting a third person about the +adequacy of Mr. Casaubon's learning. + +"Not exactly the same materials," said Will, thinking that he would be +duly reserved. "He is not an Orientalist, you know. He does not +profess to have more than second-hand knowledge there." + +"But there are very valuable books about antiquities which were written +a long while ago by scholars who knew nothing about these modern +things; and they are still used. Why should Mr. Casaubon's not be +valuable, like theirs?" said Dorothea, with more remonstrant energy. +She was impelled to have the argument aloud, which she had been having +in her own mind. + +"That depends on the line of study taken," said Will, also getting a +tone of rejoinder. "The subject Mr. Casaubon has chosen is as changing +as chemistry: new discoveries are constantly making new points of view. +Who wants a system on the basis of the four elements, or a book to +refute Paracelsus? Do you not see that it is no use now to be crawling +a little way after men of the last century--men like Bryant--and +correcting their mistakes?--living in a lumber-room and furbishing up +broken-legged theories about Chus and Mizraim?" + +"How can you bear to speak so lightly?" said Dorothea, with a look +between sorrow and anger. "If it were as you say, what could be sadder +than so much ardent labor all in vain? I wonder it does not affect you +more painfully, if you really think that a man like Mr. Casaubon, of so +much goodness, power, and learning, should in any way fail in what has +been the labor of his best years." She was beginning to be shocked that +she had got to such a point of supposition, and indignant with Will for +having led her to it. + +"You questioned me about the matter of fact, not of feeling," said +Will. "But if you wish to punish me for the fact, I submit. I am not +in a position to express my feeling toward Mr. Casaubon: it would be at +best a pensioner's eulogy." + +"Pray excuse me," said Dorothea, coloring deeply. "I am aware, as you +say, that I am in fault in having introduced the subject. Indeed, I am +wrong altogether. Failure after long perseverance is much grander than +never to have a striving good enough to be called a failure." + +"I quite agree with you," said Will, determined to change the +situation--"so much so that I have made up my mind not to run that +risk of never attaining a failure. Mr. Casaubon's generosity has +perhaps been dangerous to me, and I mean to renounce the liberty it has +given me. I mean to go back to England shortly and work my own +way--depend on nobody else than myself." + +"That is fine--I respect that feeling," said Dorothea, with returning +kindness. "But Mr. Casaubon, I am sure, has never thought of anything +in the matter except what was most for your welfare." + +"She has obstinacy and pride enough to serve instead of love, now she +has married him," said Will to himself. Aloud he said, rising-- + +"I shall not see you again." + +"Oh, stay till Mr. Casaubon comes," said Dorothea, earnestly. "I am so +glad we met in Rome. I wanted to know you." + +"And I have made you angry," said Will. "I have made you think ill of +me." + +"Oh no. My sister tells me I am always angry with people who do not +say just what I like. But I hope I am not given to think ill of them. +In the end I am usually obliged to think ill of myself for being so +impatient." + +"Still, you don't like me; I have made myself an unpleasant thought to +you." + +"Not at all," said Dorothea, with the most open kindness. "I like you +very much." + +Will was not quite contented, thinking that he would apparently have +been of more importance if he had been disliked. He said nothing, but +looked dull, not to say sulky. + +"And I am quite interested to see what you will do," Dorothea went on +cheerfully. "I believe devoutly in a natural difference of vocation. +If it were not for that belief, I suppose I should be very narrow--there +are so many things, besides painting, that I am quite ignorant +of. You would hardly believe how little I have taken in of music and +literature, which you know so much of. I wonder what your vocation +will turn out to be: perhaps you will be a poet?" + +"That depends. To be a poet is to have a soul so quick to discern that +no shade of quality escapes it, and so quick to feel, that discernment +is but a hand playing with finely ordered variety on the chords of +emotion--a soul in which knowledge passes instantaneously into feeling, +and feeling flashes back as a new organ of knowledge. One may have +that condition by fits only." + +"But you leave out the poems," said Dorothea. "I think they are wanted +to complete the poet. I understand what you mean about knowledge +passing into feeling, for that seems to be just what I experience. But +I am sure I could never produce a poem." + +"You _are_ a poem--and that is to be the best part of a poet--what +makes up the poet's consciousness in his best moods," said Will, +showing such originality as we all share with the morning and the +spring-time and other endless renewals. + +"I am very glad to hear it," said Dorothea, laughing out her words in a +bird-like modulation, and looking at Will with playful gratitude in her +eyes. "What very kind things you say to me!" + +"I wish I could ever do anything that would be what you call kind--that +I could ever be of the slightest service to you. I fear I shall never +have the opportunity." Will spoke with fervor. + +"Oh yes," said Dorothea, cordially. "It will come; and I shall +remember how well you wish me. I quite hoped that we should be friends +when I first saw you--because of your relationship to Mr. Casaubon." +There was a certain liquid brightness in her eyes, and Will was +conscious that his own were obeying a law of nature and filling too. +The allusion to Mr. Casaubon would have spoiled all if anything at that +moment could have spoiled the subduing power, the sweet dignity, of her +noble unsuspicious inexperience. + +"And there is one thing even now that you can do," said Dorothea, +rising and walking a little way under the strength of a recurring +impulse. "Promise me that you will not again, to any one, speak of +that subject--I mean about Mr. Casaubon's writings--I mean in that +kind of way. It was I who led to it. It was my fault. But promise +me." + +She had returned from her brief pacing and stood opposite Will, looking +gravely at him. + +"Certainly, I will promise you," said Will, reddening however. If he +never said a cutting word about Mr. Casaubon again and left off +receiving favors from him, it would clearly be permissible to hate him +the more. The poet must know how to hate, says Goethe; and Will was at +least ready with that accomplishment. He said that he must go now +without waiting for Mr. Casaubon, whom he would come to take leave of +at the last moment. Dorothea gave him her hand, and they exchanged a +simple "Good-by." + +But going out of the porte cochere he met Mr. Casaubon, and that +gentleman, expressing the best wishes for his cousin, politely waived +the pleasure of any further leave-taking on the morrow, which would be +sufficiently crowded with the preparations for departure. + +"I have something to tell you about our cousin Mr. Ladislaw, which I +think will heighten your opinion of him," said Dorothea to her husband +in the coarse of the evening. She had mentioned immediately on his +entering that Will had just gone away, and would come again, but Mr. +Casaubon had said, "I met him outside, and we made our final adieux, I +believe," saying this with the air and tone by which we imply that any +subject, whether private or public, does not interest us enough to wish +for a further remark upon it. So Dorothea had waited. + +"What is that, my love?" said Mr Casaubon (he always said "my love" +when his manner was the coldest). + +"He has made up his mind to leave off wandering at once, and to give up +his dependence on your generosity. He means soon to go back to +England, and work his own way. I thought you would consider that a +good sign," said Dorothea, with an appealing look into her husband's +neutral face. + +"Did he mention the precise order of occupation to which he would +addict himself?" + +"No. But he said that he felt the danger which lay for him in your +generosity. Of course he will write to you about it. Do you not think +better of him for his resolve?" + +"I shall await his communication on the subject," said Mr. Casaubon. + +"I told him I was sure that the thing you considered in all you did for +him was his own welfare. I remembered your goodness in what you said +about him when I first saw him at Lowick," said Dorothea, putting her +hand on her husband's. + +"I had a duty towards him," said Mr. Casaubon, laying his other hand on +Dorothea's in conscientious acceptance of her caress, but with a glance +which he could not hinder from being uneasy. "The young man, I +confess, is not otherwise an object of interest to me, nor need we, I +think, discuss his future course, which it is not ours to determine +beyond the limits which I have sufficiently indicated." Dorothea did +not mention Will again. + + + + + +BOOK III. + + + + + +WAITING FOR DEATH. + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + + "Your horses of the Sun," he said, + "And first-rate whip Apollo! + Whate'er they be, I'll eat my head, + But I will beat them hollow." + + +Fred Vincy, we have seen, had a debt on his mind, and though no such +immaterial burthen could depress that buoyant-hearted young gentleman +for many hours together, there were circumstances connected with this +debt which made the thought of it unusually importunate. The creditor +was Mr. Bambridge a horse-dealer of the neighborhood, whose company was +much sought in Middlemarch by young men understood to be "addicted to +pleasure." During the vacations Fred had naturally required more +amusements than he had ready money for, and Mr. Bambridge had been +accommodating enough not only to trust him for the hire of horses and +the accidental expense of ruining a fine hunter, but also to make a +small advance by which he might be able to meet some losses at +billiards. The total debt was a hundred and sixty pounds. Bambridge +was in no alarm about his money, being sure that young Vincy had +backers; but he had required something to show for it, and Fred had at +first given a bill with his own signature. Three months later he had +renewed this bill with the signature of Caleb Garth. On both occasions +Fred had felt confident that he should meet the bill himself, having +ample funds at disposal in his own hopefulness. You will hardly demand +that his confidence should have a basis in external facts; such +confidence, we know, is something less coarse and materialistic: it is +a comfortable disposition leading us to expect that the wisdom of +providence or the folly of our friends, the mysteries of luck or the +still greater mystery of our high individual value in the universe, +will bring about agreeable issues, such as are consistent with our good +taste in costume, and our general preference for the best style of +thing. Fred felt sure that he should have a present from his uncle, +that he should have a run of luck, that by dint of "swapping" he should +gradually metamorphose a horse worth forty pounds into a horse that +would fetch a hundred at any moment--"judgment" being always equivalent +to an unspecified sum in hard cash. And in any case, even supposing +negations which only a morbid distrust could imagine, Fred had always +(at that time) his father's pocket as a last resource, so that his +assets of hopefulness had a sort of gorgeous superfluity about them. +Of what might be the capacity of his father's pocket, Fred had only a +vague notion: was not trade elastic? And would not the deficiencies of +one year be made up for by the surplus of another? The Vincys lived in +an easy profuse way, not with any new ostentation, but according to the +family habits and traditions, so that the children had no standard of +economy, and the elder ones retained some of their infantine notion +that their father might pay for anything if he would. Mr. Vincy +himself had expensive Middlemarch habits--spent money on coursing, on +his cellar, and on dinner-giving, while mamma had those running +accounts with tradespeople, which give a cheerful sense of getting +everything one wants without any question of payment. But it was in +the nature of fathers, Fred knew, to bully one about expenses: there +was always a little storm over his extravagance if he had to disclose a +debt, and Fred disliked bad weather within doors. He was too filial to +be disrespectful to his father, and he bore the thunder with the +certainty that it was transient; but in the mean time it was +disagreeable to see his mother cry, and also to be obliged to look +sulky instead of having fun; for Fred was so good-tempered that if he +looked glum under scolding, it was chiefly for propriety's sake. The +easier course plainly, was to renew the bill with a friend's signature. +Why not? With the superfluous securities of hope at his command, there +was no reason why he should not have increased other people's +liabilities to any extent, but for the fact that men whose names were +good for anything were usually pessimists, indisposed to believe that +the universal order of things would necessarily be agreeable to an +agreeable young gentleman. + +With a favor to ask we review our list of friends, do justice to their +more amiable qualities, forgive their little offenses, and concerning +each in turn, try to arrive at the conclusion that he will be eager to +oblige us, our own eagerness to be obliged being as communicable as +other warmth. Still there is always a certain number who are dismissed +as but moderately eager until the others have refused; and it happened +that Fred checked off all his friends but one, on the ground that +applying to them would be disagreeable; being implicitly convinced that +he at least (whatever might be maintained about mankind generally) had +a right to be free from anything disagreeable. That he should ever +fall into a thoroughly unpleasant position--wear trousers shrunk with +washing, eat cold mutton, have to walk for want of a horse, or to "duck +under" in any sort of way--was an absurdity irreconcilable with those +cheerful intuitions implanted in him by nature. And Fred winced under +the idea of being looked down upon as wanting funds for small debts. +Thus it came to pass that the friend whom he chose to apply to was at +once the poorest and the kindest--namely, Caleb Garth. + +The Garths were very fond of Fred, as he was of them; for when he and +Rosamond were little ones, and the Garths were better off, the slight +connection between the two families through Mr. Featherstone's double +marriage (the first to Mr. Garth's sister, and the second to Mrs. +Vincy's) had led to an acquaintance which was carried on between the +children rather than the parents: the children drank tea together out +of their toy teacups, and spent whole days together in play. Mary was +a little hoyden, and Fred at six years old thought her the nicest girl +in the world, making her his wife with a brass ring which he had cut +from an umbrella. Through all the stages of his education he had kept +his affection for the Garths, and his habit of going to their house as +a second home, though any intercourse between them and the elders of +his family had long ceased. Even when Caleb Garth was prosperous, the +Vincys were on condescending terms with him and his wife, for there +were nice distinctions of rank in Middlemarch; and though old +manufacturers could not any more than dukes be connected with none but +equals, they were conscious of an inherent social superiority which was +defined with great nicety in practice, though hardly expressible +theoretically. Since then Mr. Garth had failed in the building +business, which he had unfortunately added to his other avocations of +surveyor, valuer, and agent, had conducted that business for a time +entirely for the benefit of his assignees, and had been living +narrowly, exerting himself to the utmost that he might after all pay +twenty shillings in the pound. He had now achieved this, and from all +who did not think it a bad precedent, his honorable exertions had won +him due esteem; but in no part of the world is genteel visiting founded +on esteem, in the absence of suitable furniture and complete +dinner-service. Mrs. Vincy had never been at her ease with Mrs. Garth, +and frequently spoke of her as a woman who had had to work for her +bread--meaning that Mrs. Garth had been a teacher before her marriage; +in which case an intimacy with Lindley Murray and Mangnall's Questions +was something like a draper's discrimination of calico trademarks, or a +courier's acquaintance with foreign countries: no woman who was better +off needed that sort of thing. And since Mary had been keeping Mr. +Featherstone's house, Mrs. Vincy's want of liking for the Garths had +been converted into something more positive, by alarm lest Fred should +engage himself to this plain girl, whose parents "lived in such a small +way." Fred, being aware of this, never spoke at home of his visits to +Mrs. Garth, which had of late become more frequent, the increasing +ardor of his affection for Mary inclining him the more towards those +who belonged to her. + +Mr. Garth had a small office in the town, and to this Fred went with +his request. He obtained it without much difficulty, for a large +amount of painful experience had not sufficed to make Caleb Garth +cautious about his own affairs, or distrustful of his fellow-men when +they had not proved themselves untrustworthy; and he had the highest +opinion of Fred, was "sure the lad would turn out well--an open +affectionate fellow, with a good bottom to his character--you might +trust him for anything." Such was Caleb's psychological argument. He +was one of those rare men who are rigid to themselves and indulgent to +others. He had a certain shame about his neighbors' errors, and never +spoke of them willingly; hence he was not likely to divert his mind +from the best mode of hardening timber and other ingenious devices in +order to preconceive those errors. If he had to blame any one, it was +necessary for him to move all the papers within his reach, or describe +various diagrams with his stick, or make calculations with the odd +money in his pocket, before he could begin; and he would rather do +other men's work than find fault with their doing. I fear he was a bad +disciplinarian. + +When Fred stated the circumstances of his debt, his wish to meet it +without troubling his father, and the certainty that the money would be +forthcoming so as to cause no one any inconvenience, Caleb pushed his +spectacles upward, listened, looked into his favorite's clear young +eyes, and believed him, not distinguishing confidence about the future +from veracity about the past; but he felt that it was an occasion for a +friendly hint as to conduct, and that before giving his signature he +must give a rather strong admonition. Accordingly, he took the paper +and lowered his spectacles, measured the space at his command, reached +his pen and examined it, dipped it in the ink and examined it again, +then pushed the paper a little way from him, lifted up his spectacles +again, showed a deepened depression in the outer angle of his bushy +eyebrows, which gave his face a peculiar mildness (pardon these details +for once--you would have learned to love them if you had known Caleb +Garth), and said in a comfortable tone-- + +"It was a misfortune, eh, that breaking the horse's knees? And then, +these exchanges, they don't answer when you have 'cute jockeys to deal +with. You'll be wiser another time, my boy." + +Whereupon Caleb drew down his spectacles, and proceeded to write his +signature with the care which he always gave to that performance; for +whatever he did in the way of business he did well. He contemplated +the large well-proportioned letters and final flourish, with his head a +trifle on one side for an instant, then handed it to Fred, said +"Good-by," and returned forthwith to his absorption in a plan for Sir +James Chettam's new farm-buildings. + +Either because his interest in this work thrust the incident of the +signature from his memory, or for some reason of which Caleb was more +conscious, Mrs. Garth remained ignorant of the affair. + +Since it occurred, a change had come over Fred's sky, which altered his +view of the distance, and was the reason why his uncle Featherstone's +present of money was of importance enough to make his color come and +go, first with a too definite expectation, and afterwards with a +proportionate disappointment. His failure in passing his examination, +had made his accumulation of college debts the more unpardonable by his +father, and there had been an unprecedented storm at home. Mr. Vincy +had sworn that if he had anything more of that sort to put up with, +Fred should turn out and get his living how he could; and he had never +yet quite recovered his good-humored tone to his son, who had +especially enraged him by saying at this stage of things that he did +not want to be a clergyman, and would rather not "go on with that." +Fred was conscious that he would have been yet more severely dealt with +if his family as well as himself had not secretly regarded him as Mr. +Featherstone's heir; that old gentleman's pride in him, and apparent +fondness for him, serving in the stead of more exemplary conduct--just +as when a youthful nobleman steals jewellery we call the act +kleptomania, speak of it with a philosophical smile, and never think of +his being sent to the house of correction as if he were a ragged boy +who had stolen turnips. In fact, tacit expectations of what would be +done for him by uncle Featherstone determined the angle at which most +people viewed Fred Vincy in Middlemarch; and in his own consciousness, +what uncle Featherstone would do for him in an emergency, or what he +would do simply as an incorporated luck, formed always an immeasurable +depth of aerial perspective. But that present of bank-notes, once +made, was measurable, and being applied to the amount of the debt, +showed a deficit which had still to be filled up either by Fred's +"judgment" or by luck in some other shape. For that little episode of +the alleged borrowing, in which he had made his father the agent in +getting the Bulstrode certificate, was a new reason against going to +his father for money towards meeting his actual debt. Fred was keen +enough to foresee that anger would confuse distinctions, and that his +denial of having borrowed expressly on the strength of his uncle's will +would be taken as a falsehood. He had gone to his father and told him +one vexatious affair, and he had left another untold: in such cases the +complete revelation always produces the impression of a previous +duplicity. Now Fred piqued himself on keeping clear of lies, and even +fibs; he often shrugged his shoulders and made a significant grimace at +what he called Rosamond's fibs (it is only brothers who can associate +such ideas with a lovely girl); and rather than incur the accusation of +falsehood he would even incur some trouble and self-restraint. It was +under strong inward pressure of this kind that Fred had taken the wise +step of depositing the eighty pounds with his mother. It was a pity +that he had not at once given them to Mr. Garth; but he meant to make +the sum complete with another sixty, and with a view to this, he had +kept twenty pounds in his own pocket as a sort of seed-corn, which, +planted by judgment, and watered by luck, might yield more than +threefold--a very poor rate of multiplication when the field is a young +gentleman's infinite soul, with all the numerals at command. + +Fred was not a gambler: he had not that specific disease in which the +suspension of the whole nervous energy on a chance or risk becomes as +necessary as the dram to the drunkard; he had only the tendency to that +diffusive form of gambling which has no alcoholic intensity, but is +carried on with the healthiest chyle-fed blood, keeping up a joyous +imaginative activity which fashions events according to desire, and +having no fears about its own weather, only sees the advantage there +must be to others in going aboard with it. Hopefulness has a pleasure +in making a throw of any kind, because the prospect of success is +certain; and only a more generous pleasure in offering as many as +possible a share in the stake. Fred liked play, especially billiards, +as he liked hunting or riding a steeple-chase; and he only liked it the +better because he wanted money and hoped to win. But the twenty +pounds' worth of seed-corn had been planted in vain in the seductive +green plot--all of it at least which had not been dispersed by the +roadside--and Fred found himself close upon the term of payment with no +money at command beyond the eighty pounds which he had deposited with +his mother. The broken-winded horse which he rode represented a +present which had been made to him a long while ago by his uncle +Featherstone: his father always allowed him to keep a horse, Mr. +Vincy's own habits making him regard this as a reasonable demand even +for a son who was rather exasperating. This horse, then, was Fred's +property, and in his anxiety to meet the imminent bill he determined to +sacrifice a possession without which life would certainly be worth +little. He made the resolution with a sense of heroism--heroism forced +on him by the dread of breaking his word to Mr. Garth, by his love for +Mary and awe of her opinion. He would start for Houndsley horse-fair +which was to be held the next morning, and--simply sell his horse, +bringing back the money by coach?--Well, the horse would hardly fetch +more than thirty pounds, and there was no knowing what might happen; it +would be folly to balk himself of luck beforehand. It was a hundred to +one that some good chance would fall in his way; the longer he thought +of it, the less possible it seemed that he should not have a good +chance, and the less reasonable that he should not equip himself with +the powder and shot for bringing it down. He would ride to Houndsley +with Bambridge and with Horrock "the vet," and without asking them +anything expressly, he should virtually get the benefit of their +opinion. Before he set out, Fred got the eighty pounds from his mother. + +Most of those who saw Fred riding out of Middlemarch in company with +Bambridge and Horrock, on his way of course to Houndsley horse-fair, +thought that young Vincy was pleasure-seeking as usual; and but for an +unwonted consciousness of grave matters on hand, he himself would have +had a sense of dissipation, and of doing what might be expected of a +gay young fellow. Considering that Fred was not at all coarse, that he +rather looked down on the manners and speech of young men who had not +been to the university, and that he had written stanzas as pastoral and +unvoluptuous as his flute-playing, his attraction towards Bambridge and +Horrock was an interesting fact which even the love of horse-flesh +would not wholly account for without that mysterious influence of +Naming which determinates so much of mortal choice. Under any other +name than "pleasure" the society of Messieurs Bambridge and Horrock +must certainly have been regarded as monotonous; and to arrive with +them at Houndsley on a drizzling afternoon, to get down at the Red Lion +in a street shaded with coal-dust, and dine in a room furnished with a +dirt-enamelled map of the county, a bad portrait of an anonymous horse +in a stable, His Majesty George the Fourth with legs and cravat, and +various leaden spittoons, might have seemed a hard business, but for +the sustaining power of nomenclature which determined that the pursuit +of these things was "gay." + +In Mr. Horrock there was certainly an apparent unfathomableness which +offered play to the imagination. Costume, at a glance, gave him a +thrilling association with horses (enough to specify the hat-brim which +took the slightest upward angle just to escape the suspicion of bending +downwards), and nature had given him a face which by dint of Mongolian +eyes, and a nose, mouth, and chin seeming to follow his hat-brim in a +moderate inclination upwards, gave the effect of a subdued unchangeable +sceptical smile, of all expressions the most tyrannous over a +susceptible mind, and, when accompanied by adequate silence, likely to +create the reputation of an invincible understanding, an infinite fund +of humor--too dry to flow, and probably in a state of immovable +crust,--and a critical judgment which, if you could ever be fortunate +enough to know it, would be _the_ thing and no other. It is a +physiognomy seen in all vocations, but perhaps it has never been more +powerful over the youth of England than in a judge of horses. + +Mr. Horrock, at a question from Fred about his horse's fetlock, turned +sideways in his saddle, and watched the horse's action for the space of +three minutes, then turned forward, twitched his own bridle, and +remained silent with a profile neither more nor less sceptical than it +had been. + +The part thus played in dialogue by Mr. Horrock was terribly effective. +A mixture of passions was excited in Fred--a mad desire to thrash +Horrock's opinion into utterance, restrained by anxiety to retain the +advantage of his friendship. There was always the chance that Horrock +might say something quite invaluable at the right moment. + +Mr. Bambridge had more open manners, and appeared to give forth his +ideas without economy. He was loud, robust, and was sometimes spoken +of as being "given to indulgence"--chiefly in swearing, drinking, and +beating his wife. Some people who had lost by him called him a vicious +man; but he regarded horse-dealing as the finest of the arts, and might +have argued plausibly that it had nothing to do with morality. He was +undeniably a prosperous man, bore his drinking better than others bore +their moderation, and, on the whole, flourished like the green +bay-tree. But his range of conversation was limited, and like the fine +old tune, "Drops of brandy," gave you after a while a sense of +returning upon itself in a way that might make weak heads dizzy. But a +slight infusion of Mr. Bambridge was felt to give tone and character to +several circles in Middlemarch; and he was a distinguished figure in +the bar and billiard-room at the Green Dragon. He knew some anecdotes +about the heroes of the turf, and various clever tricks of Marquesses +and Viscounts which seemed to prove that blood asserted its +pre-eminence even among black-legs; but the minute retentiveness of his +memory was chiefly shown about the horses he had himself bought and +sold; the number of miles they would trot you in no time without +turning a hair being, after the lapse of years, still a subject of +passionate asseveration, in which he would assist the imagination of +his hearers by solemnly swearing that they never saw anything like it. +In short, Mr. Bambridge was a man of pleasure and a gay companion. + +Fred was subtle, and did not tell his friends that he was going to +Houndsley bent on selling his horse: he wished to get indirectly at +their genuine opinion of its value, not being aware that a genuine +opinion was the last thing likely to be extracted from such eminent +critics. It was not Mr. Bambridge's weakness to be a gratuitous +flatterer. He had never before been so much struck with the fact that +this unfortunate bay was a roarer to a degree which required the +roundest word for perdition to give you any idea of it. + +"You made a bad hand at swapping when you went to anybody but me, +Vincy! Why, you never threw your leg across a finer horse than that +chestnut, and you gave him for this brute. If you set him cantering, +he goes on like twenty sawyers. I never heard but one worse roarer in +my life, and that was a roan: it belonged to Pegwell, the corn-factor; +he used to drive him in his gig seven years ago, and he wanted me to +take him, but I said, 'Thank you, Peg, I don't deal in +wind-instruments.' That was what I said. It went the round of the +country, that joke did. But, what the hell! the horse was a penny +trumpet to that roarer of yours." + +"Why, you said just now his was worse than mine," said Fred, more +irritable than usual. + +"I said a lie, then," said Mr. Bambridge, emphatically. "There wasn't +a penny to choose between 'em." + +Fred spurred his horse, and they trotted on a little way. When they +slackened again, Mr. Bambridge said-- + +"Not but what the roan was a better trotter than yours." + +"I'm quite satisfied with his paces, I know," said Fred, who required +all the consciousness of being in gay company to support him; "I say +his trot is an uncommonly clean one, eh, Horrock?" + +Mr. Horrock looked before him with as complete a neutrality as if he +had been a portrait by a great master. + +Fred gave up the fallacious hope of getting a genuine opinion; but on +reflection he saw that Bambridge's depreciation and Horrock's silence +were both virtually encouraging, and indicated that they thought better +of the horse than they chose to say. + +That very evening, indeed, before the fair had set in, Fred thought he +saw a favorable opening for disposing advantageously of his horse, but +an opening which made him congratulate himself on his foresight in +bringing with him his eighty pounds. A young farmer, acquainted with +Mr. Bambridge, came into the Red Lion, and entered into conversation +about parting with a hunter, which he introduced at once as Diamond, +implying that it was a public character. For himself he only wanted a +useful hack, which would draw upon occasion; being about to marry and +to give up hunting. The hunter was in a friend's stable at some little +distance; there was still time for gentlemen to see it before dark. +The friend's stable had to be reached through a back street where you +might as easily have been poisoned without expense of drugs as in any +grim street of that unsanitary period. Fred was not fortified against +disgust by brandy, as his companions were, but the hope of having at +last seen the horse that would enable him to make money was +exhilarating enough to lead him over the same ground again the first +thing in the morning. He felt sure that if he did not come to a +bargain with the farmer, Bambridge would; for the stress of +circumstances, Fred felt, was sharpening his acuteness and endowing him +with all the constructive power of suspicion. Bambridge had run down +Diamond in a way that he never would have done (the horse being a +friend's) if he had not thought of buying it; every one who looked at +the animal--even Horrock--was evidently impressed with its merit. To +get all the advantage of being with men of this sort, you must know how +to draw your inferences, and not be a spoon who takes things literally. +The color of the horse was a dappled gray, and Fred happened to know +that Lord Medlicote's man was on the look-out for just such a horse. +After all his running down, Bambridge let it out in the course of the +evening, when the farmer was absent, that he had seen worse horses go +for eighty pounds. Of course he contradicted himself twenty times +over, but when you know what is likely to be true you can test a man's +admissions. And Fred could not but reckon his own judgment of a horse +as worth something. The farmer had paused over Fred's respectable +though broken-winded steed long enough to show that he thought it worth +consideration, and it seemed probable that he would take it, with +five-and-twenty pounds in addition, as the equivalent of Diamond. In +that case Fred, when he had parted with his new horse for at least +eighty pounds, would be fifty-five pounds in pocket by the transaction, +and would have a hundred and thirty-five pounds towards meeting the +bill; so that the deficit temporarily thrown on Mr. Garth would at the +utmost be twenty-five pounds. By the time he was hurrying on his +clothes in the morning, he saw so clearly the importance of not losing +this rare chance, that if Bambridge and Horrock had both dissuaded him, +he would not have been deluded into a direct interpretation of their +purpose: he would have been aware that those deep hands held something +else than a young fellow's interest. With regard to horses, distrust +was your only clew. But scepticism, as we know, can never be +thoroughly applied, else life would come to a standstill: something we +must believe in and do, and whatever that something may be called, it +is virtually our own judgment, even when it seems like the most slavish +reliance on another. Fred believed in the excellence of his bargain, +and even before the fair had well set in, had got possession of the +dappled gray, at the price of his old horse and thirty pounds in +addition--only five pounds more than he had expected to give. + +But he felt a little worried and wearied, perhaps with mental debate, +and without waiting for the further gayeties of the horse-fair, he set +out alone on his fourteen miles' journey, meaning to take it very +quietly and keep his horse fresh. + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + + "The offender's sorrow brings but small relief + To him who wears the strong offence's cross." + --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets. + + +I am sorry to say that only the third day after the propitious events +at Houndsley Fred Vincy had fallen into worse spirits than he had known +in his life before. Not that he had been disappointed as to the +possible market for his horse, but that before the bargain could be +concluded with Lord Medlicote's man, this Diamond, in which hope to the +amount of eighty pounds had been invested, had without the slightest +warning exhibited in the stable a most vicious energy in kicking, had +just missed killing the groom, and had ended in laming himself severely +by catching his leg in a rope that overhung the stable-board. There was +no more redress for this than for the discovery of bad temper after +marriage--which of course old companions were aware of before the +ceremony. For some reason or other, Fred had none of his usual +elasticity under this stroke of ill-fortune: he was simply aware that +he had only fifty pounds, that there was no chance of his getting any +more at present, and that the bill for a hundred and sixty would be +presented in five days. Even if he had applied to his father on the +plea that Mr. Garth should be saved from loss, Fred felt smartingly +that his father would angrily refuse to rescue Mr. Garth from the +consequence of what he would call encouraging extravagance and deceit. +He was so utterly downcast that he could frame no other project than to +go straight to Mr. Garth and tell him the sad truth, carrying with him +the fifty pounds, and getting that sum at least safely out of his own +hands. His father, being at the warehouse, did not yet know of the +accident: when he did, he would storm about the vicious brute being +brought into his stable; and before meeting that lesser annoyance Fred +wanted to get away with all his courage to face the greater. He took +his father's nag, for he had made up his mind that when he had told Mr. +Garth, he would ride to Stone Court and confess all to Mary. In fact, +it is probable that but for Mary's existence and Fred's love for her, +his conscience would have been much less active both in previously +urging the debt on his thought and impelling him not to spare himself +after his usual fashion by deferring an unpleasant task, but to act as +directly and simply as he could. Even much stronger mortals than Fred +Vincy hold half their rectitude in the mind of the being they love +best. "The theatre of all my actions is fallen," said an antique +personage when his chief friend was dead; and they are fortunate who +get a theatre where the audience demands their best. Certainly it +would have made a considerable difference to Fred at that time if Mary +Garth had had no decided notions as to what was admirable in character. + +Mr. Garth was not at the office, and Fred rode on to his house, which +was a little way outside the town--a homely place with an orchard in +front of it, a rambling, old-fashioned, half-timbered building, which +before the town had spread had been a farm-house, but was now +surrounded with the private gardens of the townsmen. We get the fonder +of our houses if they have a physiognomy of their own, as our friends +have. The Garth family, which was rather a large one, for Mary had +four brothers and one sister, were very fond of their old house, from +which all the best furniture had long been sold. Fred liked it too, +knowing it by heart even to the attic which smelt deliciously of apples +and quinces, and until to-day he had never come to it without pleasant +expectations; but his heart beat uneasily now with the sense that he +should probably have to make his confession before Mrs. Garth, of whom +he was rather more in awe than of her husband. Not that she was +inclined to sarcasm and to impulsive sallies, as Mary was. In her +present matronly age at least, Mrs. Garth never committed herself by +over-hasty speech; having, as she said, borne the yoke in her youth, +and learned self-control. She had that rare sense which discerns what +is unalterable, and submits to it without murmuring. Adoring her +husband's virtues, she had very early made up her mind to his +incapacity of minding his own interests, and had met the consequences +cheerfully. She had been magnanimous enough to renounce all pride in +teapots or children's frilling, and had never poured any pathetic +confidences into the ears of her feminine neighbors concerning Mr. +Garth's want of prudence and the sums he might have had if he had been +like other men. Hence these fair neighbors thought her either proud or +eccentric, and sometimes spoke of her to their husbands as "your fine +Mrs. Garth." She was not without her criticism of them in return, being +more accurately instructed than most matrons in Middlemarch, and--where +is the blameless woman?--apt to be a little severe towards her own sex, +which in her opinion was framed to be entirely subordinate. On the +other hand, she was disproportionately indulgent towards the failings +of men, and was often heard to say that these were natural. Also, it +must be admitted that Mrs. Garth was a trifle too emphatic in her +resistance to what she held to be follies: the passage from governess +into housewife had wrought itself a little too strongly into her +consciousness, and she rarely forgot that while her grammar and accent +were above the town standard, she wore a plain cap, cooked the family +dinner, and darned all the stockings. She had sometimes taken pupils +in a peripatetic fashion, making them follow her about in the kitchen +with their book or slate. She thought it good for them to see that she +could make an excellent lather while she corrected their blunders +"without looking,"--that a woman with her sleeves tucked up above her +elbows might know all about the Subjunctive Mood or the Torrid +Zone--that, in short, she might possess "education" and other good +things ending in "tion," and worthy to be pronounced emphatically, +without being a useless doll. When she made remarks to this edifying +effect, she had a firm little frown on her brow, which yet did not +hinder her face from looking benevolent, and her words which came forth +like a procession were uttered in a fervid agreeable contralto. +Certainly, the exemplary Mrs. Garth had her droll aspects, but her +character sustained her oddities, as a very fine wine sustains a flavor +of skin. + +Towards Fred Vincy she had a motherly feeling, and had always been +disposed to excuse his errors, though she would probably not have +excused Mary for engaging herself to him, her daughter being included +in that more rigorous judgment which she applied to her own sex. But +this very fact of her exceptional indulgence towards him made it the +harder to Fred that he must now inevitably sink in her opinion. And +the circumstances of his visit turned out to be still more unpleasant +than he had expected; for Caleb Garth had gone out early to look at +some repairs not far off. Mrs. Garth at certain hours was always in +the kitchen, and this morning she was carrying on several occupations +at once there--making her pies at the well-scoured deal table on one +side of that airy room, observing Sally's movements at the oven and +dough-tub through an open door, and giving lessons to her youngest boy +and girl, who were standing opposite to her at the table with their +books and slates before them. A tub and a clothes-horse at the other +end of the kitchen indicated an intermittent wash of small things also +going on. + +Mrs. Garth, with her sleeves turned above her elbows, deftly handling +her pastry--applying her rolling-pin and giving ornamental pinches, +while she expounded with grammatical fervor what were the right views +about the concord of verbs and pronouns with "nouns of multitude or +signifying many," was a sight agreeably amusing. She was of the same +curly-haired, square-faced type as Mary, but handsomer, with more +delicacy of feature, a pale skin, a solid matronly figure, and a +remarkable firmness of glance. In her snowy-frilled cap she reminded +one of that delightful Frenchwoman whom we have all seen marketing, +basket on arm. Looking at the mother, you might hope that the daughter +would become like her, which is a prospective advantage equal to a +dowry--the mother too often standing behind the daughter like a +malignant prophecy--"Such as I am, she will shortly be." + +"Now let us go through that once more," said Mrs. Garth, pinching an +apple-puff which seemed to distract Ben, an energetic young male with a +heavy brow, from due attention to the lesson. "'Not without regard to +the import of the word as conveying unity or plurality of idea'--tell +me again what that means, Ben." + +(Mrs. Garth, like more celebrated educators, had her favorite ancient +paths, and in a general wreck of society would have tried to hold her +"Lindley Murray" above the waves.) + +"Oh--it means--you must think what you mean," said Ben, rather +peevishly. "I hate grammar. What's the use of it?" + +"To teach you to speak and write correctly, so that you can be +understood," said Mrs. Garth, with severe precision. "Should you like +to speak as old Job does?" + +"Yes," said Ben, stoutly; "it's funnier. He says, 'Yo goo'--that's +just as good as 'You go.'" + +"But he says, 'A ship's in the garden,' instead of 'a sheep,'" said +Letty, with an air of superiority. "You might think he meant a ship +off the sea." + +"No, you mightn't, if you weren't silly," said Ben. "How could a ship +off the sea come there?" + +"These things belong only to pronunciation, which is the least part of +grammar," said Mrs. Garth. "That apple-peel is to be eaten by the +pigs, Ben; if you eat it, I must give them your piece of pasty. Job +has only to speak about very plain things. How do you think you would +write or speak about anything more difficult, if you knew no more of +grammar than he does? You would use wrong words, and put words in the +wrong places, and instead of making people understand you, they would +turn away from you as a tiresome person. What would you do then?" + +"I shouldn't care, I should leave off," said Ben, with a sense that +this was an agreeable issue where grammar was concerned. + +"I see you are getting tired and stupid, Ben," said Mrs. Garth, +accustomed to these obstructive arguments from her male offspring. +Having finished her pies, she moved towards the clothes-horse, and +said, "Come here and tell me the story I told you on Wednesday, about +Cincinnatus." + +"I know! he was a farmer," said Ben. + +"Now, Ben, he was a Roman--let _me_ tell," said Letty, using her elbow +contentiously. + +"You silly thing, he was a Roman farmer, and he was ploughing." + +"Yes, but before that--that didn't come first--people wanted him," said +Letty. + +"Well, but you must say what sort of a man he was first," insisted Ben. +"He was a wise man, like my father, and that made the people want his +advice. And he was a brave man, and could fight. And so could my +father--couldn't he, mother?" + +"Now, Ben, let me tell the story straight on, as mother told it us," +said Letty, frowning. "Please, mother, tell Ben not to speak." + +"Letty, I am ashamed of you," said her mother, wringing out the caps +from the tub. "When your brother began, you ought to have waited to +see if he could not tell the story. How rude you look, pushing and +frowning, as if you wanted to conquer with your elbows! Cincinnatus, I +am sure, would have been sorry to see his daughter behave so." (Mrs. +Garth delivered this awful sentence with much majesty of enunciation, +and Letty felt that between repressed volubility and general disesteem, +that of the Romans inclusive, life was already a painful affair.) "Now, +Ben." + +"Well--oh--well--why, there was a great deal of fighting, and they were +all blockheads, and--I can't tell it just how you told it--but they +wanted a man to be captain and king and everything--" + +"Dictator, now," said Letty, with injured looks, and not without a wish +to make her mother repent. + +"Very well, dictator!" said Ben, contemptuously. "But that isn't a +good word: he didn't tell them to write on slates." + +"Come, come, Ben, you are not so ignorant as that," said Mrs. Garth, +carefully serious. "Hark, there is a knock at the door! Run, Letty, +and open it." + +The knock was Fred's; and when Letty said that her father was not in +yet, but that her mother was in the kitchen, Fred had no alternative. +He could not depart from his usual practice of going to see Mrs. Garth +in the kitchen if she happened to be at work there. He put his arm +round Letty's neck silently, and led her into the kitchen without his +usual jokes and caresses. + +Mrs. Garth was surprised to see Fred at this hour, but surprise was not +a feeling that she was given to express, and she only said, quietly +continuing her work-- + +"You, Fred, so early in the day? You look quite pale. Has anything +happened?" + +"I want to speak to Mr. Garth," said Fred, not yet ready to say +more--"and to you also," he added, after a little pause, for he had no +doubt that Mrs. Garth knew everything about the bill, and he must in the +end speak of it before her, if not to her solely. + +"Caleb will be in again in a few minutes," said Mrs. Garth, who +imagined some trouble between Fred and his father. "He is sure not to +be long, because he has some work at his desk that must be done this +morning. Do you mind staying with me, while I finish my matters here?" + +"But we needn't go on about Cincinnatus, need we?" said Ben, who had +taken Fred's whip out of his hand, and was trying its efficiency on the +cat. + +"No, go out now. But put that whip down. How very mean of you to whip +poor old Tortoise! Pray take the whip from him, Fred." + +"Come, old boy, give it me," said Fred, putting out his hand. + +"Will you let me ride on your horse to-day?" said Ben, rendering up the +whip, with an air of not being obliged to do it. + +"Not to-day--another time. I am not riding my own horse." + +"Shall you see Mary to-day?" + +"Yes, I think so," said Fred, with an unpleasant twinge. + +"Tell her to come home soon, and play at forfeits, and make fun." + +"Enough, enough, Ben! run away," said Mrs. Garth, seeing that Fred was +teased. . . + +"Are Letty and Ben your only pupils now, Mrs. Garth?" said Fred, when +the children were gone and it was needful to say something that would +pass the time. He was not yet sure whether he should wait for Mr. +Garth, or use any good opportunity in conversation to confess to Mrs. +Garth herself, give her the money and ride away. + +"One--only one. Fanny Hackbutt comes at half past eleven. I am not +getting a great income now," said Mrs. Garth, smiling. "I am at a low +ebb with pupils. But I have saved my little purse for Alfred's +premium: I have ninety-two pounds. He can go to Mr. Hanmer's now; he +is just at the right age." + +This did not lead well towards the news that Mr. Garth was on the brink +of losing ninety-two pounds and more. Fred was silent. "Young +gentlemen who go to college are rather more costly than that," Mrs. +Garth innocently continued, pulling out the edging on a cap-border. +"And Caleb thinks that Alfred will turn out a distinguished engineer: +he wants to give the boy a good chance. There he is! I hear him +coming in. We will go to him in the parlor, shall we?" + +When they entered the parlor Caleb had thrown down his hat and was +seated at his desk. + +"What! Fred, my boy!" he said, in a tone of mild surprise, holding his +pen still undipped; "you are here betimes." But missing the usual +expression of cheerful greeting in Fred's face, he immediately added, +"Is there anything up at home?--anything the matter?" + +"Yes, Mr. Garth, I am come to tell something that I am afraid will give +you a bad opinion of me. I am come to tell you and Mrs. Garth that I +can't keep my word. I can't find the money to meet the bill after all. +I have been unfortunate; I have only got these fifty pounds towards the +hundred and sixty." + +While Fred was speaking, he had taken out the notes and laid them on +the desk before Mr. Garth. He had burst forth at once with the plain +fact, feeling boyishly miserable and without verbal resources. Mrs. +Garth was mutely astonished, and looked at her husband for an +explanation. Caleb blushed, and after a little pause said-- + +"Oh, I didn't tell you, Susan: I put my name to a bill for Fred; it was +for a hundred and sixty pounds. He made sure he could meet it himself." + +There was an evident change in Mrs. Garth's face, but it was like a +change below the surface of water which remains smooth. She fixed her +eyes on Fred, saying-- + +"I suppose you have asked your father for the rest of the money and he +has refused you." + +"No," said Fred, biting his lip, and speaking with more difficulty; +"but I know it will be of no use to ask him; and unless it were of use, +I should not like to mention Mr. Garth's name in the matter." + +"It has come at an unfortunate time," said Caleb, in his hesitating +way, looking down at the notes and nervously fingering the paper, +"Christmas upon us--I'm rather hard up just now. You see, I have to +cut out everything like a tailor with short measure. What can we do, +Susan? I shall want every farthing we have in the bank. It's a +hundred and ten pounds, the deuce take it!" + +"I must give you the ninety-two pounds that I have put by for Alfred's +premium," said Mrs. Garth, gravely and decisively, though a nice ear +might have discerned a slight tremor in some of the words. "And I have +no doubt that Mary has twenty pounds saved from her salary by this +time. She will advance it." + +Mrs. Garth had not again looked at Fred, and was not in the least +calculating what words she should use to cut him the most effectively. +Like the eccentric woman she was, she was at present absorbed in +considering what was to be done, and did not fancy that the end could +be better achieved by bitter remarks or explosions. But she had made +Fred feel for the first time something like the tooth of remorse. +Curiously enough, his pain in the affair beforehand had consisted +almost entirely in the sense that he must seem dishonorable, and sink +in the opinion of the Garths: he had not occupied himself with the +inconvenience and possible injury that his breach might occasion them, +for this exercise of the imagination on other people's needs is not +common with hopeful young gentlemen. Indeed we are most of us brought +up in the notion that the highest motive for not doing a wrong is +something irrespective of the beings who would suffer the wrong. But +at this moment he suddenly saw himself as a pitiful rascal who was +robbing two women of their savings. + +"I shall certainly pay it all, Mrs. Garth--ultimately," he stammered +out. + +"Yes, ultimately," said Mrs. Garth, who having a special dislike to +fine words on ugly occasions, could not now repress an epigram. "But +boys cannot well be apprenticed ultimately: they should be apprenticed +at fifteen." She had never been so little inclined to make excuses for +Fred. + +"I was the most in the wrong, Susan," said Caleb. "Fred made sure of +finding the money. But I'd no business to be fingering bills. I +suppose you have looked all round and tried all honest means?" he +added, fixing his merciful gray eyes on Fred. Caleb was too delicate, +to specify Mr. Featherstone. + +"Yes, I have tried everything--I really have. I should have had a +hundred and thirty pounds ready but for a misfortune with a horse which +I was about to sell. My uncle had given me eighty pounds, and I paid +away thirty with my old horse in order to get another which I was going +to sell for eighty or more--I meant to go without a horse--but now it +has turned out vicious and lamed itself. I wish I and the horses too +had been at the devil, before I had brought this on you. There's no +one else I care so much for: you and Mrs. Garth have always been so +kind to me. However, it's no use saying that. You will always think +me a rascal now." + +Fred turned round and hurried out of the room, conscious that he was +getting rather womanish, and feeling confusedly that his being sorry +was not of much use to the Garths. They could see him mount, and +quickly pass through the gate. + +"I am disappointed in Fred Vincy," said Mrs. Garth. "I would not have +believed beforehand that he would have drawn you into his debts. I +knew he was extravagant, but I did not think that he would be so mean +as to hang his risks on his oldest friend, who could the least afford +to lose." + +"I was a fool, Susan:" + +"That you were," said the wife, nodding and smiling. "But I should not +have gone to publish it in the market-place. Why should you keep such +things from me? It is just so with your buttons: you let them burst +off without telling me, and go out with your wristband hanging. If I +had only known I might have been ready with some better plan." + +"You are sadly cut up, I know, Susan," said Caleb, looking feelingly at +her. "I can't abide your losing the money you've scraped together for +Alfred." + +"It is very well that I _had_ scraped it together; and it is you who +will have to suffer, for you must teach the boy yourself. You must +give up your bad habits. Some men take to drinking, and you have taken +to working without pay. You must indulge yourself a little less in +that. And you must ride over to Mary, and ask the child what money she +has." + +Caleb had pushed his chair back, and was leaning forward, shaking his +head slowly, and fitting his finger-tips together with much nicety. + +"Poor Mary!" he said. "Susan," he went on in a lowered tone, "I'm +afraid she may be fond of Fred." + +"Oh no! She always laughs at him; and he is not likely to think of her +in any other than a brotherly way." + +Caleb made no rejoinder, but presently lowered his spectacles, drew up +his chair to the desk, and said, "Deuce take the bill--I wish it was +at Hanover! These things are a sad interruption to business!" + +The first part of this speech comprised his whole store of maledictory +expression, and was uttered with a slight snarl easy to imagine. But +it would be difficult to convey to those who never heard him utter the +word "business," the peculiar tone of fervid veneration, of religious +regard, in which he wrapped it, as a consecrated symbol is wrapped in +its gold-fringed linen. + +Caleb Garth often shook his head in meditation on the value, the +indispensable might of that myriad-headed, myriad-handed labor by which +the social body is fed, clothed, and housed. It had laid hold of his +imagination in boyhood. The echoes of the great hammer where roof or +keel were a-making, the signal-shouts of the workmen, the roar of the +furnace, the thunder and plash of the engine, were a sublime music to +him; the felling and lading of timber, and the huge trunk vibrating +star-like in the distance along the highway, the crane at work on the +wharf, the piled-up produce in warehouses, the precision and variety of +muscular effort wherever exact work had to be turned out,--all these +sights of his youth had acted on him as poetry without the aid of the +poets, had made a philosophy for him without the aid of philosophers, +a religion without the aid of theology. His early ambition had been to +have as effective a share as possible in this sublime labor, which was +peculiarly dignified by him with the name of "business;" and though he +had only been a short time under a surveyor, and had been chiefly his +own teacher, he knew more of land, building, and mining than most of +the special men in the county. + +His classification of human employments was rather crude, and, like the +categories of more celebrated men, would not be acceptable in these +advanced times. He divided them into "business, politics, preaching, +learning, and amusement." He had nothing to say against the last four; +but he regarded them as a reverential pagan regarded other gods than +his own. In the same way, he thought very well of all ranks, but he +would not himself have liked to be of any rank in which he had not such +close contact with "business" as to get often honorably decorated with +marks of dust and mortar, the damp of the engine, or the sweet soil of +the woods and fields. Though he had never regarded himself as other +than an orthodox Christian, and would argue on prevenient grace if the +subject were proposed to him, I think his virtual divinities were good +practical schemes, accurate work, and the faithful completion of +undertakings: his prince of darkness was a slack workman. But there +was no spirit of denial in Caleb, and the world seemed so wondrous to +him that he was ready to accept any number of systems, like any number +of firmaments, if they did not obviously interfere with the best +land-drainage, solid building, correct measuring, and judicious boring +(for coal). In fact, he had a reverential soul with a strong practical +intelligence. But he could not manage finance: he knew values well, +but he had no keenness of imagination for monetary results in the shape +of profit and loss: and having ascertained this to his cost, he +determined to give up all forms of his beloved "business" which +required that talent. He gave himself up entirely to the many kinds of +work which he could do without handling capital, and was one of those +precious men within his own district whom everybody would choose to +work for them, because he did his work well, charged very little, and +often declined to charge at all. It is no wonder, then, that the +Garths were poor, and "lived in a small way." However, they did not +mind it. + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + + "Love seeketh not itself to please, + Nor for itself hath any care + But for another gives its ease + And builds a heaven in hell's despair. + . . . . . . . + Love seeketh only self to please, + To bind another to its delight, + Joys in another's loss of ease, + And builds a hell in heaven's despite." + --W. BLAKE: Songs of Experience + + +Fred Vincy wanted to arrive at Stone Court when Mary could not expect +him, and when his uncle was not down-stairs in that case she might be +sitting alone in the wainscoted parlor. He left his horse in the yard +to avoid making a noise on the gravel in front, and entered the parlor +without other notice than the noise of the door-handle. Mary was in her +usual corner, laughing over Mrs. Piozzi's recollections of Johnson, and +looked up with the fun still in her face. It gradually faded as she +saw Fred approach her without speaking, and stand before her with his +elbow on the mantel-piece, looking ill. She too was silent, only +raising her eyes to him inquiringly. + +"Mary," he began, "I am a good-for-nothing blackguard." + +"I should think one of those epithets would do at a time," said Mary, +trying to smile, but feeling alarmed. + +"I know you will never think well of me any more. You will think me a +liar. You will think me dishonest. You will think I didn't care for +you, or your father and mother. You always do make the worst of me, I +know." + +"I cannot deny that I shall think all that of you, Fred, if you give me +good reasons. But please to tell me at once what you have done. I +would rather know the painful truth than imagine it." + +"I owed money--a hundred and sixty pounds. I asked your father to put +his name to a bill. I thought it would not signify to him. I made +sure of paying the money myself, and I have tried as hard as I could. +And now, I have been so unlucky--a horse has turned out badly--I can +only pay fifty pounds. And I can't ask my father for the money: he +would not give me a farthing. And my uncle gave me a hundred a little +while ago. So what can I do? And now your father has no ready money +to spare, and your mother will have to pay away her ninety-two pounds +that she has saved, and she says your savings must go too. You see +what a--" + +"Oh, poor mother, poor father!" said Mary, her eyes filling with tears, +and a little sob rising which she tried to repress. She looked +straight before her and took no notice of Fred, all the consequences at +home becoming present to her. He too remained silent for some moments, +feeling more miserable than ever. "I wouldn't have hurt you for the +world, Mary," he said at last. "You can never forgive me." + +"What does it matter whether I forgive you?" said Mary, passionately. +"Would that make it any better for my mother to lose the money she has +been earning by lessons for four years, that she might send Alfred to +Mr. Hanmer's? Should you think all that pleasant enough if I forgave +you?" + +"Say what you like, Mary. I deserve it all." + +"I don't want to say anything," said Mary, more quietly, "and my anger +is of no use." She dried her eyes, threw aside her book, rose and +fetched her sewing. + +Fred followed her with his eyes, hoping that they would meet hers, and +in that way find access for his imploring penitence. But no! Mary +could easily avoid looking upward. + +"I do care about your mother's money going," he said, when she was +seated again and sewing quickly. "I wanted to ask you, Mary--don't +you think that Mr. Featherstone--if you were to tell him--tell him, I +mean, about apprenticing Alfred--would advance the money?" + +"My family is not fond of begging, Fred. We would rather work for our +money. Besides, you say that Mr. Featherstone has lately given you a +hundred pounds. He rarely makes presents; he has never made presents +to us. I am sure my father will not ask him for anything; and even if +I chose to beg of him, it would be of no use." + +"I am so miserable, Mary--if you knew how miserable I am, you would be +sorry for me." + +"There are other things to be more sorry for than that. But selfish +people always think their own discomfort of more importance than +anything else in the world. I see enough of that every day." + +"It is hardly fair to call me selfish. If you knew what things other +young men do, you would think me a good way off the worst." + +"I know that people who spend a great deal of money on themselves +without knowing how they shall pay, must be selfish. They are always +thinking of what they can get for themselves, and not of what other +people may lose." + +"Any man may be unfortunate, Mary, and find himself unable to pay when +he meant it. There is not a better man in the world than your father, +and yet he got into trouble." + +"How dare you make any comparison between my father and you, Fred?" +said Mary, in a deep tone of indignation. "He never got into trouble +by thinking of his own idle pleasures, but because he was always +thinking of the work he was doing for other people. And he has fared +hard, and worked hard to make good everybody's loss." + +"And you think that I shall never try to make good anything, Mary. It +is not generous to believe the worst of a man. When you have got any +power over him, I think you might try and use it to make him better; +but that is what you never do. However, I'm going," Fred ended, +languidly. "I shall never speak to you about anything again. I'm very +sorry for all the trouble I've caused--that's all." + +Mary had dropped her work out of her hand and looked up. There is +often something maternal even in a girlish love, and Mary's hard +experience had wrought her nature to an impressibility very different +from that hard slight thing which we call girlishness. At Fred's last +words she felt an instantaneous pang, something like what a mother +feels at the imagined sobs or cries of her naughty truant child, which +may lose itself and get harm. And when, looking up, her eyes met his +dull despairing glance, her pity for him surmounted her anger and all +her other anxieties. + +"Oh, Fred, how ill you look! Sit down a moment. Don't go yet. Let me +tell uncle that you are here. He has been wondering that he has not +seen you for a whole week." Mary spoke hurriedly, saying the words +that came first without knowing very well what they were, but saying +them in a half-soothing half-beseeching tone, and rising as if to go +away to Mr. Featherstone. Of course Fred felt as if the clouds had +parted and a gleam had come: he moved and stood in her way. + +"Say one word, Mary, and I will do anything. Say you will not think +the worst of me--will not give me up altogether." + +"As if it were any pleasure to me to think ill of you," said Mary, in a +mournful tone. "As if it were not very painful to me to see you an +idle frivolous creature. How can you bear to be so contemptible, when +others are working and striving, and there are so many things to be +done--how can you bear to be fit for nothing in the world that is +useful? And with so much good in your disposition, Fred,--you might +be worth a great deal." + +"I will try to be anything you like, Mary, if you will say that you +love me." + +"I should be ashamed to say that I loved a man who must always be +hanging on others, and reckoning on what they would do for him. What +will you be when you are forty? Like Mr. Bowyer, I suppose--just as +idle, living in Mrs. Beck's front parlor--fat and shabby, hoping +somebody will invite you to dinner--spending your morning in learning a +comic song--oh no! learning a tune on the flute." + +Mary's lips had begun to curl with a smile as soon as she had asked +that question about Fred's future (young souls are mobile), and before +she ended, her face had its full illumination of fun. To him it was +like the cessation of an ache that Mary could laugh at him, and with a +passive sort of smile he tried to reach her hand; but she slipped away +quickly towards the door and said, "I shall tell uncle. You _must_ see +him for a moment or two." + +Fred secretly felt that his future was guaranteed against the +fulfilment of Mary's sarcastic prophecies, apart from that "anything" +which he was ready to do if she would define it. He never dared in +Mary's presence to approach the subject of his expectations from Mr. +Featherstone, and she always ignored them, as if everything depended on +himself. But if ever he actually came into the property, she must +recognize the change in his position. All this passed through his mind +somewhat languidly, before he went up to see his uncle. He stayed but +a little while, excusing himself on the ground that he had a cold; and +Mary did not reappear before he left the house. But as he rode home, +he began to be more conscious of being ill, than of being melancholy. + +When Caleb Garth arrived at Stone Court soon after dusk, Mary was not +surprised, although he seldom had leisure for paying her a visit, and +was not at all fond of having to talk with Mr. Featherstone. The old +man, on the other hand, felt himself ill at ease with a brother-in-law +whom he could not annoy, who did not mind about being considered poor, +had nothing to ask of him, and understood all kinds of farming and +mining business better than he did. But Mary had felt sure that her +parents would want to see her, and if her father had not come, she +would have obtained leave to go home for an hour or two the next day. +After discussing prices during tea with Mr. Featherstone Caleb rose to +bid him good-by, and said, "I want to speak to you, Mary." + +She took a candle into another large parlor, where there was no fire, +and setting down the feeble light on the dark mahogany table, turned +round to her father, and putting her arms round his neck kissed him +with childish kisses which he delighted in,--the expression of his +large brows softening as the expression of a great beautiful dog +softens when it is caressed. Mary was his favorite child, and whatever +Susan might say, and right as she was on all other subjects, Caleb +thought it natural that Fred or any one else should think Mary more +lovable than other girls. + +"I've got something to tell you, my dear," said Caleb in his hesitating +way. "No very good news; but then it might be worse." + +"About money, father? I think I know what it is." + +"Ay? how can that be? You see, I've been a bit of a fool again, and +put my name to a bill, and now it comes to paying; and your mother has +got to part with her savings, that's the worst of it, and even they +won't quite make things even. We wanted a hundred and ten pounds: your +mother has ninety-two, and I have none to spare in the bank; and she +thinks that you have some savings." + +"Oh yes; I have more than four-and-twenty pounds. I thought you would +come, father, so I put it in my bag. See! beautiful white notes and +gold." + +Mary took out the folded money from her reticule and put it into her +father's hand. + +"Well, but how--we only want eighteen--here, put the rest back, +child,--but how did you know about it?" said Caleb, who, in his +unconquerable indifference to money, was beginning to be chiefly +concerned about the relation the affair might have to Mary's affections. + +"Fred told me this morning." + +"Ah! Did he come on purpose?" + +"Yes, I think so. He was a good deal distressed." + +"I'm afraid Fred is not to be trusted, Mary," said the father, with +hesitating tenderness. "He means better than he acts, perhaps. But I +should think it a pity for any body's happiness to be wrapped up in +him, and so would your mother." + +"And so should I, father," said Mary, not looking up, but putting the +back of her father's hand against her cheek. + +"I don't want to pry, my dear. But I was afraid there might be +something between you and Fred, and I wanted to caution you. You see, +Mary"--here Caleb's voice became more tender; he had been pushing his +hat about on the table and looking at it, but finally he turned his +eyes on his daughter--"a woman, let her be as good as she may, has got +to put up with the life her husband makes for her. Your mother has had +to put up with a good deal because of me." + +Mary turned the back of her father's hand to her lips and smiled at him. + +"Well, well, nobody's perfect, but"--here Mr. Garth shook his head to +help out the inadequacy of words--"what I am thinking of is--what it +must be for a wife when she's never sure of her husband, when he hasn't +got a principle in him to make him more afraid of doing the wrong thing +by others than of getting his own toes pinched. That's the long and +the short of it, Mary. Young folks may get fond of each other before +they know what life is, and they may think it all holiday if they can +only get together; but it soon turns into working day, my dear. +However, you have more sense than most, and you haven't been kept in +cotton-wool: there may be no occasion for me to say this, but a father +trembles for his daughter, and you are all by yourself here." + +"Don't fear for me, father," said Mary, gravely meeting her father's +eyes; "Fred has always been very good to me; he is kind-hearted and +affectionate, and not false, I think, with all his self-indulgence. But +I will never engage myself to one who has no manly independence, and +who goes on loitering away his time on the chance that others will +provide for him. You and my mother have taught me too much pride for +that." + +"That's right--that's right. Then I am easy," said Mr. Garth, taking +up his hat. "But it's hard to run away with your earnings, eh child." + +"Father!" said Mary, in her deepest tone of remonstrance. "Take +pocketfuls of love besides to them all at home," was her last word +before he closed the outer door on himself. + +"I suppose your father wanted your earnings," said old Mr. +Featherstone, with his usual power of unpleasant surmise, when Mary +returned to him. "He makes but a tight fit, I reckon. You're of age +now; you ought to be saving for yourself." + +"I consider my father and mother the best part of myself, sir," said +Mary, coldly. + +Mr. Featherstone grunted: he could not deny that an ordinary sort of +girl like her might be expected to be useful, so he thought of another +rejoinder, disagreeable enough to be always apropos. "If Fred Vincy +comes to-morrow, now, don't you keep him chattering: let him come up to +me." + + + +CHAPTER XXVI. + + "He beats me and I rail at him: O worthy satisfaction! + would it were otherwise--that I could beat him while + he railed at me.--" + --Troilus and Cressida. + + +But Fred did not go to Stone Court the next day, for reasons that were +quite peremptory. From those visits to unsanitary Houndsley streets in +search of Diamond, he had brought back not only a bad bargain in +horse-flesh, but the further misfortune of some ailment which for a day +or two had deemed mere depression and headache, but which got so much +worse when he returned from his visit to Stone Court that, going into +the dining-room, he threw himself on the sofa, and in answer to his +mother's anxious question, said, "I feel very ill: I think you must +send for Wrench." + +Wrench came, but did not apprehend anything serious, spoke of a "slight +derangement," and did not speak of coming again on the morrow. He had +a due value for the Vincys' house, but the wariest men are apt to be +dulled by routine, and on worried mornings will sometimes go through +their business with the zest of the daily bell-ringer. Mr. Wrench was +a small, neat, bilious man, with a well-dressed wig: he had a laborious +practice, an irascible temper, a lymphatic wife and seven children; and +he was already rather late before setting out on a four-miles drive to +meet Dr. Minchin on the other side of Tipton, the decease of Hicks, a +rural practitioner, having increased Middlemarch practice in that +direction. Great statesmen err, and why not small medical men? Mr. +Wrench did not neglect sending the usual white parcels, which this time +had black and drastic contents. Their effect was not alleviating to +poor Fred, who, however, unwilling as he said to believe that he was +"in for an illness," rose at his usual easy hour the next morning and +went down-stairs meaning to breakfast, but succeeded in nothing but in +sitting and shivering by the fire. Mr. Wrench was again sent for, but +was gone on his rounds, and Mrs. Vincy seeing her darling's changed +looks and general misery, began to cry and said she would send for Dr. +Sprague. + +"Oh, nonsense, mother! It's nothing," said Fred, putting out his hot +dry hand to her, "I shall soon be all right. I must have taken cold in +that nasty damp ride." + +"Mamma!" said Rosamond, who was seated near the window (the dining-room +windows looked on that highly respectable street called Lowick Gate), +"there is Mr. Lydgate, stopping to speak to some one. If I were you I +would call him in. He has cured Ellen Bulstrode. They say he cures +every one." + +Mrs. Vincy sprang to the window and opened it in an instant, thinking +only of Fred and not of medical etiquette. Lydgate was only two yards +off on the other side of some iron palisading, and turned round at the +sudden sound of the sash, before she called to him. In two minutes he +was in the room, and Rosamond went out, after waiting just long enough +to show a pretty anxiety conflicting with her sense of what was +becoming. + +Lydgate had to hear a narrative in which Mrs. Vincy's mind insisted +with remarkable instinct on every point of minor importance, especially +on what Mr. Wrench had said and had not said about coming again. That +there might be an awkward affair with Wrench, Lydgate saw at once; but +the case was serious enough to make him dismiss that consideration: he +was convinced that Fred was in the pink-skinned stage of typhoid fever, +and that he had taken just the wrong medicines. He must go to bed +immediately, must have a regular nurse, and various appliances and +precautions must be used, about which Lydgate was particular. Poor +Mrs. Vincy's terror at these indications of danger found vent in such +words as came most easily. She thought it "very ill usage on the part +of Mr. Wrench, who had attended their house so many years in preference +to Mr. Peacock, though Mr. Peacock was equally a friend. Why Mr. +Wrench should neglect her children more than others, she could not for +the life of her understand. He had not neglected Mrs. Larcher's when +they had the measles, nor indeed would Mrs. Vincy have wished that he +should. And if anything should happen--" + +Here poor Mrs. Vincy's spirit quite broke down, and her Niobe throat +and good-humored face were sadly convulsed. This was in the hall out +of Fred's hearing, but Rosamond had opened the drawing-room door, and +now came forward anxiously. Lydgate apologized for Mr. Wrench, said +that the symptoms yesterday might have been disguising, and that this +form of fever was very equivocal in its beginnings: he would go +immediately to the druggist's and have a prescription made up in order +to lose no time, but he would write to Mr. Wrench and tell him what had +been done. + +"But you must come again--you must go on attending Fred. I can't have +my boy left to anybody who may come or not. I bear nobody ill-will, +thank God, and Mr. Wrench saved me in the pleurisy, but he'd better +have let me die--if--if--" + +"I will meet Mr. Wrench here, then, shall I?" said Lydgate, really +believing that Wrench was not well prepared to deal wisely with a case +of this kind. + +"Pray make that arrangement, Mr. Lydgate," said Rosamond, coming to her +mother's aid, and supporting her arm to lead her away. + +When Mr. Vincy came home he was very angry with Wrench, and did not +care if he never came into his house again. Lydgate should go on now, +whether Wrench liked it or not. It was no joke to have fever in the +house. Everybody must be sent to now, not to come to dinner on +Thursday. And Pritchard needn't get up any wine: brandy was the best +thing against infection. "I shall drink brandy," added Mr. Vincy, +emphatically--as much as to say, this was not an occasion for firing +with blank-cartridges. "He's an uncommonly unfortunate lad, is Fred. +He'd need have--some luck by-and-by to make up for all this--else I +don't know who'd have an eldest son." + +"Don't say so, Vincy," said the mother, with a quivering lip, "if you +don't want him to be taken from me." + +"It will worret you to death, Lucy; _that_ I can see," said Mr. Vincy, +more mildly. "However, Wrench shall know what I think of the matter." +(What Mr. Vincy thought confusedly was, that the fever might somehow +have been hindered if Wrench had shown the proper solicitude about +his--the Mayor's--family.) "I'm the last man to give in to the cry +about new doctors, or new parsons either--whether they're Bulstrode's +men or not. But Wrench shall know what I think, take it as he will." + +Wrench did not take it at all well. Lydgate was as polite as he could +be in his offhand way, but politeness in a man who has placed you at a +disadvantage is only an additional exasperation, especially if he +happens to have been an object of dislike beforehand. Country +practitioners used to be an irritable species, susceptible on the point +of honor; and Mr. Wrench was one of the most irritable among them. He +did not refuse to meet Lydgate in the evening, but his temper was +somewhat tried on the occasion. He had to hear Mrs. Vincy say-- + +"Oh, Mr. Wrench, what have I ever done that you should use me so?-- To +go away, and never to come again! And my boy might have been stretched +a corpse!" + +Mr. Vincy, who had been keeping up a sharp fire on the enemy Infection, +and was a good deal heated in consequence, started up when he heard +Wrench come in, and went into the hall to let him know what he thought. + +"I'll tell you what, Wrench, this is beyond a joke," said the Mayor, +who of late had had to rebuke offenders with an official air, and how +broadened himself by putting his thumbs in his armholes.-- "To let +fever get unawares into a house like this. There are some things that +ought to be actionable, and are not so-- that's my opinion." + +But irrational reproaches were easier to bear than the sense of being +instructed, or rather the sense that a younger man, like Lydgate, +inwardly considered him in need of instruction, for "in point of fact," +Mr. Wrench afterwards said, Lydgate paraded flighty, foreign notions, +which would not wear. He swallowed his ire for the moment, but he +afterwards wrote to decline further attendance in the case. The house +might be a good one, but Mr. Wrench was not going to truckle to anybody +on a professional matter. He reflected, with much probability on his +side, that Lydgate would by-and-by be caught tripping too, and that his +ungentlemanly attempts to discredit the sale of drugs by his +professional brethren, would by-and-by recoil on himself. He threw out +biting remarks on Lydgate's tricks, worthy only of a quack, to get +himself a factitious reputation with credulous people. That cant about +cures was never got up by sound practitioners. + +This was a point on which Lydgate smarted as much as Wrench could +desire. To be puffed by ignorance was not only humiliating, but +perilous, and not more enviable than the reputation of the +weather-prophet. He was impatient of the foolish expectations amidst +which all work must be carried on, and likely enough to damage himself +as much as Mr. Wrench could wish, by an unprofessional openness. + +However, Lydgate was installed as medical attendant on the Vincys, and +the event was a subject of general conversation in Middlemarch. Some +said, that the Vincys had behaved scandalously, that Mr. Vincy had +threatened Wrench, and that Mrs. Vincy had accused him of poisoning her +son. Others were of opinion that Mr. Lydgate's passing by was +providential, that he was wonderfully clever in fevers, and that +Bulstrode was in the right to bring him forward. Many people believed +that Lydgate's coming to the town at all was really due to Bulstrode; +and Mrs. Taft, who was always counting stitches and gathered her +information in misleading fragments caught between the rows of her +knitting, had got it into her head that Mr. Lydgate was a natural son +of Bulstrode's, a fact which seemed to justify her suspicions of +evangelical laymen. + +She one day communicated this piece of knowledge to Mrs. Farebrother, +who did not fail to tell her son of it, observing-- + +"I should not be surprised at anything in Bulstrode, but I should be +sorry to think it of Mr. Lydgate." + +"Why, mother," said Mr. Farebrother, after an explosive laugh, "you +know very well that Lydgate is of a good family in the North. He never +heard of Bulstrode before he came here." + +"That is satisfactory so far as Mr. Lydgate is concerned, Camden," said +the old lady, with an air of precision.--"But as to Bulstrode--the +report may be true of some other son." + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + + Let the high Muse chant loves Olympian: + We are but mortals, and must sing of man. + + +An eminent philosopher among my friends, who can dignify even your ugly +furniture by lifting it into the serene light of science, has shown me +this pregnant little fact. Your pier-glass or extensive surface of +polished steel made to be rubbed by a housemaid, will be minutely and +multitudinously scratched in all directions; but place now against it a +lighted candle as a centre of illumination, and lo! the scratches will +seem to arrange themselves in a fine series of concentric circles round +that little sun. It is demonstrable that the scratches are going +everywhere impartially and it is only your candle which produces the +flattering illusion of a concentric arrangement, its light falling with +an exclusive optical selection. These things are a parable. The +scratches are events, and the candle is the egoism of any person now +absent--of Miss Vincy, for example. Rosamond had a Providence of her +own who had kindly made her more charming than other girls, and who +seemed to have arranged Fred's illness and Mr. Wrench's mistake in +order to bring her and Lydgate within effective proximity. It would +have been to contravene these arrangements if Rosamond had consented to +go away to Stone Court or elsewhere, as her parents wished her to do, +especially since Mr. Lydgate thought the precaution needless. +Therefore, while Miss Morgan and the children were sent away to a +farmhouse the morning after Fred's illness had declared itself, +Rosamond refused to leave papa and mamma. + +Poor mamma indeed was an object to touch any creature born of woman; +and Mr. Vincy, who doted on his wife, was more alarmed on her account +than on Fred's. But for his insistence she would have taken no rest: +her brightness was all bedimmed; unconscious of her costume which had +always been so fresh and gay, she was like a sick bird with languid eye +and plumage ruffled, her senses dulled to the sights and sounds that +used most to interest her. Fred's delirium, in which he seemed to be +wandering out of her reach, tore her heart. After her first outburst +against Mr. Wrench she went about very quietly: her one low cry was to +Lydgate. She would follow him out of the room and put her hand on his +arm moaning out, "Save my boy." Once she pleaded, "He has always been +good to me, Mr. Lydgate: he never had a hard word for his mother,"--as +if poor Fred's suffering were an accusation against him. All the +deepest fibres of the mother's memory were stirred, and the young man +whose voice took a gentler tone when he spoke to her, was one with the +babe whom she had loved, with a love new to her, before he was born. + +"I have good hope, Mrs. Vincy," Lydgate would say. "Come down with me +and let us talk about the food." In that way he led her to the parlor +where Rosamond was, and made a change for her, surprising her into +taking some tea or broth which had been prepared for her. There was a +constant understanding between him and Rosamond on these matters. He +almost always saw her before going to the sickroom, and she appealed to +him as to what she could do for mamma. Her presence of mind and +adroitness in carrying out his hints were admirable, and it is not +wonderful that the idea of seeing Rosamond began to mingle itself with +his interest in the case. Especially when the critical stage was +passed, and he began to feel confident of Fred's recovery. In the more +doubtful time, he had advised calling in Dr. Sprague (who, if he could, +would rather have remained neutral on Wrench's account); but after two +consultations, the conduct of the case was left to Lydgate, and there +was every reason to make him assiduous. Morning and evening he was at +Mr. Vincy's, and gradually the visits became cheerful as Fred became +simply feeble, and lay not only in need of the utmost petting but +conscious of it, so that Mrs. Vincy felt as if, after all, the illness +had made a festival for her tenderness. + +Both father and mother held it an added reason for good spirits, when +old Mr. Featherstone sent messages by Lydgate, saying that Fred must +make haste and get well, as he, Peter Featherstone, could not do +without him, and missed his visits sadly. The old man himself was +getting bedridden. Mrs. Vincy told these messages to Fred when he +could listen, and he turned towards her his delicate, pinched face, +from which all the thick blond hair had been cut away, and in which the +eyes seemed to have got larger, yearning for some word about +Mary--wondering what she felt about his illness. No word passed his +lips; but "to hear with eyes belongs to love's rare wit," and the +mother in the fulness of her heart not only divined Fred's longing, but +felt ready for any sacrifice in order to satisfy him. + +"If I can only see my boy strong again," she said, in her loving folly; +"and who knows?--perhaps master of Stone Court! and he can marry +anybody he likes then." + +"Not if they won't have me, mother," said Fred. The illness had made +him childish, and tears came as he spoke. + +"Oh, take a bit of jelly, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, secretly +incredulous of any such refusal. + +She never left Fred's side when her husband was not in the house, and +thus Rosamond was in the unusual position of being much alone. +Lydgate, naturally, never thought of staying long with her, yet it +seemed that the brief impersonal conversations they had together were +creating that peculiar intimacy which consists in shyness. They were +obliged to look at each other in speaking, and somehow the looking +could not be carried through as the matter of course which it really +was. Lydgate began to feel this sort of consciousness unpleasant and +one day looked down, or anywhere, like an ill-worked puppet. But this +turned out badly: the next day, Rosamond looked down, and the +consequence was that when their eyes met again, both were more +conscious than before. There was no help for this in science, and as +Lydgate did not want to flirt, there seemed to be no help for it in +folly. It was therefore a relief when neighbors no longer considered +the house in quarantine, and when the chances of seeing Rosamond alone +were very much reduced. + +But that intimacy of mutual embarrassment, in which each feels that the +other is feeling something, having once existed, its effect is not to +be done away with. Talk about the weather and other well-bred topics +is apt to seem a hollow device, and behavior can hardly become easy +unless it frankly recognizes a mutual fascination--which of course need +not mean anything deep or serious. This was the way in which Rosamond +and Lydgate slid gracefully into ease, and made their intercourse +lively again. Visitors came and went as usual, there was once more +music in the drawing-room, and all the extra hospitality of Mr. Vincy's +mayoralty returned. Lydgate, whenever he could, took his seat by +Rosamond's side, and lingered to hear her music, calling himself her +captive--meaning, all the while, not to be her captive. The +preposterousness of the notion that he could at once set up a +satisfactory establishment as a married man was a sufficient guarantee +against danger. This play at being a little in love was agreeable, and +did not interfere with graver pursuits. Flirtation, after all, was not +necessarily a singeing process. Rosamond, for her part, had never +enjoyed the days so much in her life before: she was sure of being +admired by some one worth captivating, and she did not distinguish +flirtation from love, either in herself or in another. She seemed to +be sailing with a fair wind just whither she would go, and her thoughts +were much occupied with a handsome house in Lowick Gate which she hoped +would by-and-by be vacant. She was quite determined, when she was +married, to rid herself adroitly of all the visitors who were not +agreeable to her at her father's; and she imagined the drawing-room in +her favorite house with various styles of furniture. + +Certainly her thoughts were much occupied with Lydgate himself; he +seemed to her almost perfect: if he had known his notes so that his +enchantment under her music had been less like an emotional elephant's, +and if he had been able to discriminate better the refinements of her +taste in dress, she could hardly have mentioned a deficiency in him. +How different he was from young Plymdale or Mr. Caius Larcher! Those +young men had not a notion of French, and could speak on no subject +with striking knowledge, except perhaps the dyeing and carrying trades, +which of course they were ashamed to mention; they were Middlemarch +gentry, elated with their silver-headed whips and satin stocks, but +embarrassed in their manners, and timidly jocose: even Fred was above +them, having at least the accent and manner of a university man. +Whereas Lydgate was always listened to, bore himself with the careless +politeness of conscious superiority, and seemed to have the right +clothes on by a certain natural affinity, without ever having to think +about them. Rosamond was proud when he entered the room, and when he +approached her with a distinguishing smile, she had a delicious sense +that she was the object of enviable homage. If Lydgate had been aware +of all the pride he excited in that delicate bosom, he might have been +just as well pleased as any other man, even the most densely ignorant +of humoral pathology or fibrous tissue: he held it one of the prettiest +attitudes of the feminine mind to adore a man's pre-eminence without +too precise a knowledge of what it consisted in. But Rosamond was not +one of those helpless girls who betray themselves unawares, and whose +behavior is awkwardly driven by their impulses, instead of being +steered by wary grace and propriety. Do you imagine that her rapid +forecast and rumination concerning house-furniture and society were +ever discernible in her conversation, even with her mamma? On the +contrary, she would have expressed the prettiest surprise and +disapprobation if she had heard that another young lady had been +detected in that immodest prematureness--indeed, would probably have +disbelieved in its possibility. For Rosamond never showed any +unbecoming knowledge, and was always that combination of correct +sentiments, music, dancing, drawing, elegant note-writing, private +album for extracted verse, and perfect blond loveliness, which made the +irresistible woman for the doomed man of that date. Think no unfair +evil of her, pray: she had no wicked plots, nothing sordid or +mercenary; in fact, she never thought of money except as something +necessary which other people would always provide. She was not in the +habit of devising falsehoods, and if her statements were no direct clew +to fact, why, they were not intended in that light--they were among +her elegant accomplishments, intended to please. Nature had inspired +many arts in finishing Mrs. Lemon's favorite pupil, who by general +consent (Fred's excepted) was a rare compound of beauty, cleverness, +and amiability. + +Lydgate found it more and more agreeable to be with her, and there was +no constraint now, there was a delightful interchange of influence in +their eyes, and what they said had that superfluity of meaning for +them, which is observable with some sense of flatness by a third +person; still they had no interviews or asides from which a third +person need have been excluded. In fact, they flirted; and Lydgate was +secure in the belief that they did nothing else. If a man could not +love and be wise, surely he could flirt and be wise at the same time? +Really, the men in Middlemarch, except Mr. Farebrother, were great +bores, and Lydgate did not care about commercial politics or cards: +what was he to do for relaxation? He was often invited to the +Bulstrodes'; but the girls there were hardly out of the schoolroom; and +Mrs. Bulstrode's _naive_ way of conciliating piety and worldliness, the +nothingness of this life and the desirability of cut glass, the +consciousness at once of filthy rags and the best damask, was not a +sufficient relief from the weight of her husband's invariable +seriousness. The Vincys' house, with all its faults, was the +pleasanter by contrast; besides, it nourished Rosamond--sweet to look +at as a half-opened blush-rose, and adorned with accomplishments for +the refined amusement of man. + +But he made some enemies, other than medical, by his success with Miss +Vincy. One evening he came into the drawing-room rather late, when +several other visitors were there. The card-table had drawn off the +elders, and Mr. Ned Plymdale (one of the good matches in Middlemarch, +though not one of its leading minds) was in tete-a-tete with Rosamond. +He had brought the last "Keepsake," the gorgeous watered-silk +publication which marked modern progress at that time; and he +considered himself very fortunate that he could be the first to look +over it with her, dwelling on the ladies and gentlemen with shiny +copper-plate cheeks and copper-plate smiles, and pointing to comic +verses as capital and sentimental stories as interesting. Rosamond was +gracious, and Mr. Ned was satisfied that he had the very best thing in +art and literature as a medium for "paying addresses"--the very thing +to please a nice girl. He had also reasons, deep rather than +ostensible, for being satisfied with his own appearance. To +superficial observers his chin had too vanishing an aspect, looking as +if it were being gradually reabsorbed. And it did indeed cause him +some difficulty about the fit of his satin stocks, for which chins were +at that time useful. + +"I think the Honorable Mrs. S. is something like you," said Mr. Ned. +He kept the book open at the bewitching portrait, and looked at it +rather languishingly. + +"Her back is very large; she seems to have sat for that," said +Rosamond, not meaning any satire, but thinking how red young Plymdale's +hands were, and wondering why Lydgate did not come. She went on with +her tatting all the while. + +"I did not say she was as beautiful as you are," said Mr. Ned, +venturing to look from the portrait to its rival. + +"I suspect you of being an adroit flatterer," said Rosamond, feeling +sure that she should have to reject this young gentleman a second time. + +But now Lydgate came in; the book was closed before he reached +Rosamond's corner, and as he took his seat with easy confidence on the +other side of her, young Plymdale's jaw fell like a barometer towards +the cheerless side of change. Rosamond enjoyed not only Lydgate's +presence but its effect: she liked to excite jealousy. + +"What a late comer you are!" she said, as they shook hands. "Mamma had +given you up a little while ago. How do you find Fred?" + +"As usual; going on well, but slowly. I want him to go away--to Stone +Court, for example. But your mamma seems to have some objection." + +"Poor fellow!" said Rosamond, prettily. "You will see Fred so +changed," she added, turning to the other suitor; "we have looked to +Mr. Lydgate as our guardian angel during this illness." + +Mr. Ned smiled nervously, while Lydgate, drawing the "Keepsake" towards +him and opening it, gave a short scornful laugh and tossed up his +chin, as if in wonderment at human folly. + +"What are you laughing at so profanely?" said Rosamond, with bland +neutrality. + +"I wonder which would turn out to be the silliest--the engravings or +the writing here," said Lydgate, in his most convinced tone, while he +turned over the pages quickly, seeming to see all through the book in +no time, and showing his large white hands to much advantage, as +Rosamond thought. "Do look at this bridegroom coming out of church: +did you ever see such a 'sugared invention'--as the Elizabethans used +to say? Did any haberdasher ever look so smirking? Yet I will answer +for it the story makes him one of the first gentlemen in the land." + +"You are so severe, I am frightened at you," said Rosamond, keeping her +amusement duly moderate. Poor young Plymdale had lingered with +admiration over this very engraving, and his spirit was stirred. + +"There are a great many celebrated people writing in the 'Keepsake,' at +all events," he said, in a tone at once piqued and timid. "This is the +first time I have heard it called silly." + +"I think I shall turn round on you and accuse you of being a Goth," +said Rosamond, looking at Lydgate with a smile. "I suspect you know +nothing about Lady Blessington and L. E. L." Rosamond herself was not +without relish for these writers, but she did not readily commit +herself by admiration, and was alive to the slightest hint that +anything was not, according to Lydgate, in the very highest taste. + +"But Sir Walter Scott--I suppose Mr. Lydgate knows him," said young +Plymdale, a little cheered by this advantage. + +"Oh, I read no literature now," said Lydgate, shutting the book, and +pushing it away. "I read so much when I was a lad, that I suppose it +will last me all my life. I used to know Scott's poems by heart." + +"I should like to know when you left off," said Rosamond, "because then +I might be sure that I knew something which you did not know." + +"Mr. Lydgate would say that was not worth knowing," said Mr. Ned, +purposely caustic. + +"On the contrary," said Lydgate, showing no smart; but smiling with +exasperating confidence at Rosamond. "It would be worth knowing by the +fact that Miss Vincy could tell it me." + +Young Plymdale soon went to look at the whist-playing, thinking that +Lydgate was one of the most conceited, unpleasant fellows it had ever +been his ill-fortune to meet. + +"How rash you are!" said Rosamond, inwardly delighted. "Do you see +that you have given offence?" + +"What! is it Mr. Plymdale's book? I am sorry. I didn't think about +it." + +"I shall begin to admit what you said of yourself when you first came +here--that you are a bear, and want teaching by the birds." + +"Well, there is a bird who can teach me what she will. Don't I listen +to her willingly?" + +To Rosamond it seemed as if she and Lydgate were as good as engaged. +That they were some time to be engaged had long been an idea in her +mind; and ideas, we know, tend to a more solid kind of existence, the +necessary materials being at hand. It is true, Lydgate had the +counter-idea of remaining unengaged; but this was a mere negative, a +shadow cast by other resolves which themselves were capable of +shrinking. Circumstance was almost sure to be on the side of +Rosamond's idea, which had a shaping activity and looked through +watchful blue eyes, whereas Lydgate's lay blind and unconcerned as a +jelly-fish which gets melted without knowing it. + +That evening when he went home, he looked at his phials to see how a +process of maceration was going on, with undisturbed interest; and he +wrote out his daily notes with as much precision as usual. The +reveries from which it was difficult for him to detach himself were +ideal constructions of something else than Rosamond's virtues, and the +primitive tissue was still his fair unknown. Moreover, he was +beginning to feel some zest for the growing though half-suppressed feud +between him and the other medical men, which was likely to become more +manifest, now that Bulstrode's method of managing the new hospital was +about to be declared; and there were various inspiriting signs that his +non-acceptance by some of Peacock's patients might be counterbalanced +by the impression he had produced in other quarters. Only a few days +later, when he had happened to overtake Rosamond on the Lowick road and +had got down from his horse to walk by her side until he had quite +protected her from a passing drove, he had been stopped by a servant on +horseback with a message calling him in to a house of some importance +where Peacock had never attended; and it was the second instance of +this kind. The servant was Sir James Chettam's, and the house was +Lowick Manor. + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + + 1st Gent. All times are good to seek your wedded home + Bringing a mutual delight. + + 2d Gent. Why, true. + The calendar hath not an evil day + For souls made one by love, and even death + Were sweetness, if it came like rolling waves + While they two clasped each other, and foresaw + No life apart. + + +Mr. and Mrs. Casaubon, returning from their wedding journey, arrived at +Lowick Manor in the middle of January. A light snow was falling as +they descended at the door, and in the morning, when Dorothea passed +from her dressing-room avenue the blue-green boudoir that we know of, +she saw the long avenue of limes lifting their trunks from a white +earth, and spreading white branches against the dun and motionless sky. +The distant flat shrank in uniform whiteness and low-hanging uniformity +of cloud. The very furniture in the room seemed to have shrunk since +she saw it before: the stag in the tapestry looked more like a ghost in +his ghostly blue-green world; the volumes of polite literature in the +bookcase looked more like immovable imitations of books. The bright +fire of dry oak-boughs burning on the logs seemed an incongruous +renewal of life and glow--like the figure of Dorothea herself as she +entered carrying the red-leather cases containing the cameos for Celia. + +She was glowing from her morning toilet as only healthful youth can +glow: there was gem-like brightness on her coiled hair and in her hazel +eyes; there was warm red life in her lips; her throat had a breathing +whiteness above the differing white of the fur which itself seemed to +wind about her neck and cling down her blue-gray pelisse with a +tenderness gathered from her own, a sentient commingled innocence which +kept its loveliness against the crystalline purity of the outdoor snow. +As she laid the cameo-cases on the table in the bow-window, she +unconsciously kept her hands on them, immediately absorbed in looking +out on the still, white enclosure which made her visible world. + +Mr. Casaubon, who had risen early complaining of palpitation, was in +the library giving audience to his curate Mr. Tucker. By-and-by Celia +would come in her quality of bridesmaid as well as sister, and through +the next weeks there would be wedding visits received and given; all in +continuance of that transitional life understood to correspond with the +excitement of bridal felicity, and keeping up the sense of busy +ineffectiveness, as of a dream which the dreamer begins to suspect. +The duties of her married life, contemplated as so great beforehand, +seemed to be shrinking with the furniture and the white vapor-walled +landscape. The clear heights where she expected to walk in full +communion had become difficult to see even in her imagination; the +delicious repose of the soul on a complete superior had been shaken +into uneasy effort and alarmed with dim presentiment. When would the +days begin of that active wifely devotion which was to strengthen her +husband's life and exalt her own? Never perhaps, as she had +preconceived them; but somehow--still somehow. In this solemnly +pledged union of her life, duty would present itself in some new form +of inspiration and give a new meaning to wifely love. + +Meanwhile there was the snow and the low arch of dun vapor--there was +the stifling oppression of that gentlewoman's world, where everything +was done for her and none asked for her aid--where the sense of +connection with a manifold pregnant existence had to be kept up +painfully as an inward vision, instead of coming from without in claims +that would have shaped her energies.-- "What shall I do?" "Whatever you +please, my dear:" that had been her brief history since she had left +off learning morning lessons and practising silly rhythms on the hated +piano. Marriage, which was to bring guidance into worthy and +imperative occupation, had not yet freed her from the gentlewoman's +oppressive liberty: it had not even filled her leisure with the +ruminant joy of unchecked tenderness. Her blooming full-pulsed youth +stood there in a moral imprisonment which made itself one with the +chill, colorless, narrowed landscape, with the shrunken furniture, the +never-read books, and the ghostly stag in a pale fantastic world that +seemed to be vanishing from the daylight. + +In the first minutes when Dorothea looked out she felt nothing but the +dreary oppression; then came a keen remembrance, and turning away from +the window she walked round the room. The ideas and hopes which were +living in her mind when she first saw this room nearly three months +before were present now only as memories: she judged them as we judge +transient and departed things. All existence seemed to beat with a +lower pulse than her own, and her religious faith was a solitary cry, +the struggle out of a nightmare in which every object was withering and +shrinking away from her. Each remembered thing in the room was +disenchanted, was deadened as an unlit transparency, till her wandering +gaze came to the group of miniatures, and there at last she saw +something which had gathered new breath and meaning: it was the +miniature of Mr. Casaubon's aunt Julia, who had made the unfortunate +marriage--of Will Ladislaw's grandmother. Dorothea could fancy that +it was alive now--the delicate woman's face which yet had a headstrong +look, a peculiarity difficult to interpret. Was it only her friends +who thought her marriage unfortunate? or did she herself find it out to +be a mistake, and taste the salt bitterness of her tears in the +merciful silence of the night? What breadths of experience Dorothea +seemed to have passed over since she first looked at this miniature! +She felt a new companionship with it, as if it had an ear for her and +could see how she was looking at it. Here was a woman who had known +some difficulty about marriage. Nay, the colors deepened, the lips and +chin seemed to get larger, the hair and eyes seemed to be sending out +light, the face was masculine and beamed on her with that full gaze +which tells her on whom it falls that she is too interesting for the +slightest movement of her eyelid to pass unnoticed and uninterpreted. +The vivid presentation came like a pleasant glow to Dorothea: she felt +herself smiling, and turning from the miniature sat down and looked up +as if she were again talking to a figure in front of her. But the +smile disappeared as she went on meditating, and at last she said +aloud-- + +"Oh, it was cruel to speak so! How sad--how dreadful!" + +She rose quickly and went out of the room, hurrying along the corridor, +with the irresistible impulse to go and see her husband and inquire if +she could do anything for him. Perhaps Mr. Tucker was gone and Mr. +Casaubon was alone in the library. She felt as if all her morning's +gloom would vanish if she could see her husband glad because of her +presence. + +But when she reached the head of the dark oak there was Celia coming +up, and below there was Mr. Brooke, exchanging welcomes and +congratulations with Mr. Casaubon. + +"Dodo!" said Celia, in her quiet staccato; then kissed her sister, +whose arms encircled her, and said no more. I think they both cried a +little in a furtive manner, while Dorothea ran down-stairs to greet her +uncle. + +"I need not ask how you are, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, after kissing +her forehead. "Rome has agreed with you, I see--happiness, frescos, +the antique--that sort of thing. Well, it's very pleasant to have you +back again, and you understand all about art now, eh? But Casaubon is +a little pale, I tell him--a little pale, you know. Studying hard in +his holidays is carrying it rather too far. I overdid it at one +time"--Mr. Brooke still held Dorothea's hand, but had turned his face +to Mr. Casaubon--"about topography, ruins, temples--I thought I had a +clew, but I saw it would carry me too far, and nothing might come of +it. You may go any length in that sort of thing, and nothing may come +of it, you know." + +Dorothea's eyes also were turned up to her husband's face with some +anxiety at the idea that those who saw him afresh after absence might +be aware of signs which she had not noticed. + +"Nothing to alarm you, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, observing her +expression. "A little English beef and mutton will soon make a +difference. It was all very well to look pale, sitting for the +portrait of Aquinas, you know--we got your letter just in time. But +Aquinas, now--he was a little too subtle, wasn't he? Does anybody read +Aquinas?" + +"He is not indeed an author adapted to superficial minds," said Mr. +Casaubon, meeting these timely questions with dignified patience. + +"You would like coffee in your own room, uncle?" said Dorothea, coming +to the rescue. + +"Yes; and you must go to Celia: she has great news to tell you, you +know. I leave it all to her." + +The blue-green boudoir looked much more cheerful when Celia was seated +there in a pelisse exactly like her sister's, surveying the cameos with +a placid satisfaction, while the conversation passed on to other topics. + +"Do you think it nice to go to Rome on a wedding journey?" said Celia, +with her ready delicate blush which Dorothea was used to on the +smallest occasions. + +"It would not suit all--not you, dear, for example," said Dorothea, +quietly. No one would ever know what she thought of a wedding journey +to Rome. + +"Mrs. Cadwallader says it is nonsense, people going a long journey when +they are married. She says they get tired to death of each other, and +can't quarrel comfortably, as they would at home. And Lady Chettam +says she went to Bath." Celia's color changed again and again--seemed + + "To come and go with tidings from the heart, + As it a running messenger had been." + +It must mean more than Celia's blushing usually did. + +"Celia! has something happened?" said Dorothea, in a tone full of +sisterly feeling. "Have you really any great news to tell me?" + +"It was because you went away, Dodo. Then there was nobody but me for +Sir James to talk to," said Celia, with a certain roguishness in her +eyes. + +"I understand. It is as I used to hope and believe," said Dorothea, +taking her sister's face between her hands, and looking at her half +anxiously. Celia's marriage seemed more serious than it used to do. + +"It was only three days ago," said Celia. "And Lady Chettam is very +kind." + +"And you are very happy?" + +"Yes. We are not going to be married yet. Because every thing is to +be got ready. And I don't want to be married so very soon, because I +think it is nice to be engaged. And we shall be married all our lives +after." + +"I do believe you could not marry better, Kitty. Sir James is a good, +honorable man," said Dorothea, warmly. + +"He has gone on with the cottages, Dodo. He will tell you about them +when he comes. Shall you be glad to see him?" + +"Of course I shall. How can you ask me?" + +"Only I was afraid you would be getting so learned," said Celia, +regarding Mr. Casaubon's learning as a kind of damp which might in due +time saturate a neighboring body. + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + + "I found that no genius in another could please me. My + unfortunate paradoxes had entirely dried up that source of + comfort."--GOLDSMITH. + + +One morning, some weeks after her arrival at Lowick, Dorothea--but why +always Dorothea? Was her point of view the only possible one with +regard to this marriage? I protest against all our interest, all our +effort at understanding being given to the young skins that look +blooming in spite of trouble; for these too will get faded, and will +know the older and more eating griefs which we are helping to neglect. +In spite of the blinking eyes and white moles objectionable to Celia, +and the want of muscular curve which was morally painful to Sir James, +Mr. Casaubon had an intense consciousness within him, and was +spiritually a-hungered like the rest of us. He had done nothing +exceptional in marrying--nothing but what society sanctions, and +considers an occasion for wreaths and bouquets. It had occurred to him +that he must not any longer defer his intention of matrimony, and he +had reflected that in taking a wife, a man of good position should +expect and carefully choose a blooming young lady--the younger the +better, because more educable and submissive--of a rank equal to his +own, of religious principles, virtuous disposition, and good +understanding. On such a young lady he would make handsome +settlements, and he would neglect no arrangement for her happiness: in +return, he should receive family pleasures and leave behind him that +copy of himself which seemed so urgently required of a man--to the +sonneteers of the sixteenth century. Times had altered since then, and +no sonneteer had insisted on Mr. Casaubon's leaving a copy of himself; +moreover, he had not yet succeeded in issuing copies of his +mythological key; but he had always intended to acquit himself by +marriage, and the sense that he was fast leaving the years behind him, +that the world was getting dimmer and that he felt lonely, was a reason +to him for losing no more time in overtaking domestic delights before +they too were left behind by the years. + +And when he had seen Dorothea he believed that he had found even more +than he demanded: she might really be such a helpmate to him as would +enable him to dispense with a hired secretary, an aid which Mr. +Casaubon had never yet employed and had a suspicious dread of. (Mr. +Casaubon was nervously conscious that he was expected to manifest a +powerful mind.) Providence, in its kindness, had supplied him with the +wife he needed. A wife, a modest young lady, with the purely +appreciative, unambitious abilities of her sex, is sure to think her +husband's mind powerful. Whether Providence had taken equal care of +Miss Brooke in presenting her with Mr. Casaubon was an idea which could +hardly occur to him. Society never made the preposterous demand that a +man should think as much about his own qualifications for making a +charming girl happy as he thinks of hers for making himself happy. As +if a man could choose not only his wife but his wife's husband! Or as +if he were bound to provide charms for his posterity in his own +person!-- When Dorothea accepted him with effusion, that was only +natural; and Mr. Casaubon believed that his happiness was going to +begin. + +He had not had much foretaste of happiness in his previous life. To +know intense joy without a strong bodily frame, one must have an +enthusiastic soul. Mr. Casaubon had never had a strong bodily frame, +and his soul was sensitive without being enthusiastic: it was too +languid to thrill out of self-consciousness into passionate delight; it +went on fluttering in the swampy ground where it was hatched, thinking +of its wings and never flying. His experience was of that pitiable +kind which shrinks from pity, and fears most of all that it should be +known: it was that proud narrow sensitiveness which has not mass enough +to spare for transformation into sympathy, and quivers thread-like in +small currents of self-preoccupation or at best of an egoistic +scrupulosity. And Mr. Casaubon had many scruples: he was capable of a +severe self-restraint; he was resolute in being a man of honor +according to the code; he would be unimpeachable by any recognized +opinion. In conduct these ends had been attained; but the difficulty +of making his Key to all Mythologies unimpeachable weighed like lead +upon his mind; and the pamphlets--or "Parerga" as he called them--by +which he tested his public and deposited small monumental records of +his march, were far from having been seen in all their significance. +He suspected the Archdeacon of not having read them; he was in painful +doubt as to what was really thought of them by the leading minds of +Brasenose, and bitterly convinced that his old acquaintance Carp had +been the writer of that depreciatory recension which was kept locked in +a small drawer of Mr. Casaubon's desk, and also in a dark closet of his +verbal memory. These were heavy impressions to struggle against, and +brought that melancholy embitterment which is the consequence of all +excessive claim: even his religious faith wavered with his wavering +trust in his own authorship, and the consolations of the Christian hope +in immortality seemed to lean on the immortality of the still unwritten +Key to all Mythologies. For my part I am very sorry for him. It is an +uneasy lot at best, to be what we call highly taught and yet not to +enjoy: to be present at this great spectacle of life and never to be +liberated from a small hungry shivering self--never to be fully +possessed by the glory we behold, never to have our consciousness +rapturously transformed into the vividness of a thought, the ardor of a +passion, the energy of an action, but always to be scholarly and +uninspired, ambitious and timid, scrupulous and dim-sighted. Becoming a +dean or even a bishop would make little difference, I fear, to Mr. +Casaubon's uneasiness. Doubtless some ancient Greek has observed that +behind the big mask and the speaking-trumpet, there must always be our +poor little eyes peeping as usual and our timorous lips more or less +under anxious control. + +To this mental estate mapped out a quarter of a century before, to +sensibilities thus fenced in, Mr. Casaubon had thought of annexing +happiness with a lovely young bride; but even before marriage, as we +have seen, he found himself under a new depression in the consciousness +that the new bliss was not blissful to him. Inclination yearned back +to its old, easier custom. And the deeper he went in domesticity the +more did the sense of acquitting himself and acting with propriety +predominate over any other satisfaction. Marriage, like religion and +erudition, nay, like authorship itself, was fated to become an outward +requirement, and Edward Casaubon was bent on fulfilling unimpeachably +all requirements. Even drawing Dorothea into use in his study, +according to his own intention before marriage, was an effort which he +was always tempted to defer, and but for her pleading insistence it +might never have begun. But she had succeeded in making it a matter of +course that she should take her place at an early hour in the library +and have work either of reading aloud or copying assigned her. The +work had been easier to define because Mr. Casaubon had adopted an +immediate intention: there was to be a new Parergon, a small monograph +on some lately traced indications concerning the Egyptian mysteries +whereby certain assertions of Warburton's could be corrected. +References were extensive even here, but not altogether shoreless; and +sentences were actually to be written in the shape wherein they would +be scanned by Brasenose and a less formidable posterity. These minor +monumental productions were always exciting to Mr. Casaubon; digestion +was made difficult by the interference of citations, or by the rivalry +of dialectical phrases ringing against each other in his brain. And +from the first there was to be a Latin dedication about which +everything was uncertain except that it was not to be addressed to +Carp: it was a poisonous regret to Mr. Casaubon that he had once +addressed a dedication to Carp in which he had numbered that member of +the animal kingdom among the viros nullo aevo perituros, a mistake +which would infallibly lay the dedicator open to ridicule in the next +age, and might even be chuckled over by Pike and Tench in the present. + +Thus Mr. Casaubon was in one of his busiest epochs, and as I began to +say a little while ago, Dorothea joined him early in the library where +he had breakfasted alone. Celia at this time was on a second visit to +Lowick, probably the last before her marriage, and was in the +drawing-room expecting Sir James. + +Dorothea had learned to read the signs of her husband's mood, and she +saw that the morning had become more foggy there during the last hour. +She was going silently to her desk when he said, in that distant tone +which implied that he was discharging a disagreeable duty-- + +"Dorothea, here is a letter for you, which was enclosed in one +addressed to me." + +It was a letter of two pages, and she immediately looked at the +signature. + +"Mr. Ladislaw! What can he have to say to me?" she exclaimed, in a +tone of pleased surprise. "But," she added, looking at Mr. Casaubon, +"I can imagine what he has written to you about." + +"You can, if you please, read the letter," said Mr. Casaubon, severely +pointing to it with his pen, and not looking at her. "But I may as +well say beforehand, that I must decline the proposal it contains to +pay a visit here. I trust I may be excused for desiring an interval of +complete freedom from such distractions as have been hitherto +inevitable, and especially from guests whose desultory vivacity makes +their presence a fatigue." + +There had been no clashing of temper between Dorothea and her husband +since that little explosion in Rome, which had left such strong traces +in her mind that it had been easier ever since to quell emotion than to +incur the consequence of venting it. But this ill-tempered +anticipation that she could desire visits which might be disagreeable +to her husband, this gratuitous defence of himself against selfish +complaint on her part, was too sharp a sting to be meditated on until +after it had been resented. Dorothea had thought that she could have +been patient with John Milton, but she had never imagined him behaving +in this way; and for a moment Mr. Casaubon seemed to be stupidly +undiscerning and odiously unjust. Pity, that "new-born babe" which was +by-and-by to rule many a storm within her, did not "stride the blast" +on this occasion. With her first words, uttered in a tone that shook +him, she startled Mr. Casaubon into looking at her, and meeting the +flash of her eyes. + +"Why do you attribute to me a wish for anything that would annoy you? +You speak to me as if I were something you had to contend against. +Wait at least till I appear to consult my own pleasure apart from +yours." + +"Dorothea, you are hasty," answered Mr. Casaubon, nervously. + +Decidedly, this woman was too young to be on the formidable level of +wifehood--unless she had been pale and featureless and taken +everything for granted. + +"I think it was you who were first hasty in your false suppositions +about my feeling," said Dorothea, in the same tone. The fire was not +dissipated yet, and she thought it was ignoble in her husband not to +apologize to her. + +"We will, if you please, say no more on this subject, Dorothea. I have +neither leisure nor energy for this kind of debate." + +Here Mr. Casaubon dipped his pen and made as if he would return to his +writing, though his hand trembled so much that the words seemed to be +written in an unknown character. There are answers which, in turning +away wrath, only send it to the other end of the room, and to have a +discussion coolly waived when you feel that justice is all on your own +side is even more exasperating in marriage than in philosophy. + +Dorothea left Ladislaw's two letters unread on her husband's +writing-table and went to her own place, the scorn and indignation +within her rejecting the reading of these letters, just as we hurl away +any trash towards which we seem to have been suspected of mean +cupidity. She did not in the least divine the subtle sources of her +husband's bad temper about these letters: she only knew that they had +caused him to offend her. She began to work at once, and her hand did +not tremble; on the contrary, in writing out the quotations which had +been given to her the day before, she felt that she was forming her +letters beautifully, and it seemed to her that she saw the construction +of the Latin she was copying, and which she was beginning to +understand, more clearly than usual. In her indignation there was a +sense of superiority, but it went out for the present in firmness of +stroke, and did not compress itself into an inward articulate voice +pronouncing the once "affable archangel" a poor creature. + +There had been this apparent quiet for half an hour, and Dorothea had +not looked away from her own table, when she heard the loud bang of a +book on the floor, and turning quickly saw Mr. Casaubon on the library +steps clinging forward as if he were in some bodily distress. She +started up and bounded towards him in an instant: he was evidently in +great straits for breath. Jumping on a stool she got close to his +elbow and said with her whole soul melted into tender alarm-- + +"Can you lean on me, dear?" + +He was still for two or three minutes, which seemed endless to her, +unable to speak or move, gasping for breath. When at last he descended +the three steps and fell backward in the large chair which Dorothea had +drawn close to the foot of the ladder, he no longer gasped but seemed +helpless and about to faint. Dorothea rang the bell violently, and +presently Mr. Casaubon was helped to the couch: he did not faint, and +was gradually reviving, when Sir James Chettam came in, having been met +in the hall with the news that Mr. Casaubon had "had a fit in the +library." + +"Good God! this is just what might have been expected," was his +immediate thought. If his prophetic soul had been urged to +particularize, it seemed to him that "fits" would have been the +definite expression alighted upon. He asked his informant, the butler, +whether the doctor had been sent for. The butler never knew his master +to want the doctor before; but would it not be right to send for a +physician? + +When Sir James entered the library, however, Mr. Casaubon could make +some signs of his usual politeness, and Dorothea, who in the reaction +from her first terror had been kneeling and sobbing by his side now +rose and herself proposed that some one should ride off for a medical +man. + +"I recommend you to send for Lydgate," said Sir James. "My mother has +called him in, and she has found him uncommonly clever. She has had a +poor opinion of the physicians since my father's death." + +Dorothea appealed to her husband, and he made a silent sign of +approval. So Mr. Lydgate was sent for and he came wonderfully soon, +for the messenger, who was Sir James Chettam's man and knew Mr. +Lydgate, met him leading his horse along the Lowick road and giving his +arm to Miss Vincy. + +Celia, in the drawing-room, had known nothing of the trouble till Sir +James told her of it. After Dorothea's account, he no longer +considered the illness a fit, but still something "of that nature." + +"Poor dear Dodo--how dreadful!" said Celia, feeling as much grieved as +her own perfect happiness would allow. Her little hands were clasped, +and enclosed by Sir James's as a bud is enfolded by a liberal calyx. +"It is very shocking that Mr. Casaubon should be ill; but I never did +like him. And I think he is not half fond enough of Dorothea; and he +ought to be, for I am sure no one else would have had him--do you +think they would?" + +"I always thought it a horrible sacrifice of your sister," said Sir +James. + +"Yes. But poor Dodo never did do what other people do, and I think she +never will." + +"She is a noble creature," said the loyal-hearted Sir James. He had +just had a fresh impression of this kind, as he had seen Dorothea +stretching her tender arm under her husband's neck and looking at him +with unspeakable sorrow. He did not know how much penitence there was +in the sorrow. + +"Yes," said Celia, thinking it was very well for Sir James to say so, +but _he_ would not have been comfortable with Dodo. "Shall I go to +her? Could I help her, do you think?" + +"I think it would be well for you just to go and see her before Lydgate +comes," said Sir James, magnanimously. "Only don't stay long." + +While Celia was gone he walked up and down remembering what he had +originally felt about Dorothea's engagement, and feeling a revival of +his disgust at Mr. Brooke's indifference. If Cadwallader--if every +one else had regarded the affair as he, Sir James, had done, the +marriage might have been hindered. It was wicked to let a young girl +blindly decide her fate in that way, without any effort to save her. +Sir James had long ceased to have any regrets on his own account: his +heart was satisfied with his engagement to Celia. But he had a +chivalrous nature (was not the disinterested service of woman among the +ideal glories of old chivalry?): his disregarded love had not turned to +bitterness; its death had made sweet odors--floating memories that +clung with a consecrating effect to Dorothea. He could remain her +brotherly friend, interpreting her actions with generous trustfulness. + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + + "Qui veut delasser hors de propos, lasse."--PASCAL. + + +Mr. Casaubon had no second attack of equal severity with the first, and +in a few days began to recover his usual condition. But Lydgate seemed +to think the case worth a great deal of attention. He not only used +his stethoscope (which had not become a matter of course in practice at +that time), but sat quietly by his patient and watched him. To Mr. +Casaubon's questions about himself, he replied that the source of the +illness was the common error of intellectual men--a too eager and +monotonous application: the remedy was, to be satisfied with moderate +work, and to seek variety of relaxation. Mr. Brooke, who sat by on one +occasion, suggested that Mr. Casaubon should go fishing, as Cadwallader +did, and have a turning-room, make toys, table-legs, and that kind of +thing. + +"In short, you recommend me to anticipate the arrival of my second +childhood," said poor Mr. Casaubon, with some bitterness. "These +things," he added, looking at Lydgate, "would be to me such relaxation +as tow-picking is to prisoners in a house of correction." + +"I confess," said Lydgate, smiling, "amusement is rather an +unsatisfactory prescription. It is something like telling people to +keep up their spirits. Perhaps I had better say, that you must submit +to be mildly bored rather than to go on working." + +"Yes, yes," said Mr. Brooke. "Get Dorothea to play backgammon with you +in the evenings. And shuttlecock, now--I don't know a finer game than +shuttlecock for the daytime. I remember it all the fashion. To be +sure, your eyes might not stand that, Casaubon. But you must unbend, +you know. Why, you might take to some light study: conchology, now: I +always think that must be a light study. Or get Dorothea to read you +light things, Smollett--'Roderick Random,' 'Humphrey Clinker:' they +are a little broad, but she may read anything now she's married, you +know. I remember they made me laugh uncommonly--there's a droll bit +about a postilion's breeches. We have no such humor now. I have gone +through all these things, but they might be rather new to you." + +"As new as eating thistles," would have been an answer to represent Mr. +Casaubon's feelings. But he only bowed resignedly, with due respect to +his wife's uncle, and observed that doubtless the works he mentioned +had "served as a resource to a certain order of minds." + +"You see," said the able magistrate to Lydgate, when they were outside +the door, "Casaubon has been a little narrow: it leaves him rather at a +loss when you forbid him his particular work, which I believe is +something very deep indeed--in the line of research, you know. I would +never give way to that; I was always versatile. But a clergyman is +tied a little tight. If they would make him a bishop, now!--he did a +very good pamphlet for Peel. He would have more movement then, more +show; he might get a little flesh. But I recommend you to talk to Mrs. +Casaubon. She is clever enough for anything, is my niece. Tell her, +her husband wants liveliness, diversion: put her on amusing tactics." + +Without Mr. Brooke's advice, Lydgate had determined on speaking to +Dorothea. She had not been present while her uncle was throwing out +his pleasant suggestions as to the mode in which life at Lowick might +be enlivened, but she was usually by her husband's side, and the +unaffected signs of intense anxiety in her face and voice about +whatever touched his mind or health, made a drama which Lydgate was +inclined to watch. He said to himself that he was only doing right in +telling her the truth about her husband's probable future, but he +certainly thought also that it would be interesting to talk +confidentially with her. A medical man likes to make psychological +observations, and sometimes in the pursuit of such studies is too +easily tempted into momentous prophecy which life and death easily set +at nought. Lydgate had often been satirical on this gratuitous +prediction, and he meant now to be guarded. + +He asked for Mrs. Casaubon, but being told that she was out walking, he +was going away, when Dorothea and Celia appeared, both glowing from +their struggle with the March wind. When Lydgate begged to speak with +her alone, Dorothea opened the library door which happened to be the +nearest, thinking of nothing at the moment but what he might have to +say about Mr. Casaubon. It was the first time she had entered this +room since her husband had been taken ill, and the servant had chosen +not to open the shutters. But there was light enough to read by from +the narrow upper panes of the windows. + +"You will not mind this sombre light," said Dorothea, standing in the +middle of the room. "Since you forbade books, the library has been out +of the question. But Mr. Casaubon will soon be here again, I hope. Is +he not making progress?" + +"Yes, much more rapid progress than I at first expected. Indeed, he is +already nearly in his usual state of health." + +"You do not fear that the illness will return?" said Dorothea, whose +quick ear had detected some significance in Lydgate's tone. + +"Such cases are peculiarly difficult to pronounce upon," said Lydgate. +"The only point on which I can be confident is that it will be +desirable to be very watchful on Mr. Casaubon's account, lest he should +in any way strain his nervous power." + +"I beseech you to speak quite plainly," said Dorothea, in an imploring +tone. "I cannot bear to think that there might be something which I +did not know, and which, if I had known it, would have made me act +differently." The words came out like a cry: it was evident that they +were the voice of some mental experience which lay not very far off. + +"Sit down," she added, placing herself on the nearest chair, and +throwing off her bonnet and gloves, with an instinctive discarding of +formality where a great question of destiny was concerned. + +"What you say now justifies my own view," said Lydgate. "I think it is +one's function as a medical man to hinder regrets of that sort as far +as possible. But I beg you to observe that Mr. Casaubon's case is +precisely of the kind in which the issue is most difficult to pronounce +upon. He may possibly live for fifteen years or more, without much +worse health than he has had hitherto." + +Dorothea had turned very pale, and when Lydgate paused she said in a +low voice, "You mean if we are very careful." + +"Yes--careful against mental agitation of all kinds, and against +excessive application." + +"He would be miserable, if he had to give up his work," said Dorothea, +with a quick prevision of that wretchedness. + +"I am aware of that. The only course is to try by all means, direct +and indirect, to moderate and vary his occupations. With a happy +concurrence of circumstances, there is, as I said, no immediate danger +from that affection of the heart, which I believe to have been the +cause of his late attack. On the other hand, it is possible that the +disease may develop itself more rapidly: it is one of those cases in +which death is sometimes sudden. Nothing should be neglected which +might be affected by such an issue." + +There was silence for a few moments, while Dorothea sat as if she had +been turned to marble, though the life within her was so intense that +her mind had never before swept in brief time over an equal range of +scenes and motives. + +"Help me, pray," she said, at last, in the same low voice as before. +"Tell me what I can do." + +"What do you think of foreign travel? You have been lately in Rome, I +think." + +The memories which made this resource utterly hopeless were a new +current that shook Dorothea out of her pallid immobility. + +"Oh, that would not do--that would be worse than anything," she said +with a more childlike despondency, while the tears rolled down. +"Nothing will be of any use that he does not enjoy." + +"I wish that I could have spared you this pain," said Lydgate, deeply +touched, yet wondering about her marriage. Women just like Dorothea +had not entered into his traditions. + +"It was right of you to tell me. I thank you for telling me the truth." + +"I wish you to understand that I shall not say anything to enlighten +Mr. Casaubon himself. I think it desirable for him to know nothing +more than that he must not overwork himself, and must observe certain +rules. Anxiety of any kind would be precisely the most unfavorable +condition for him." + +Lydgate rose, and Dorothea mechanically rose at the same time, +unclasping her cloak and throwing it off as if it stifled her. He was +bowing and quitting her, when an impulse which if she had been alone +would have turned into a prayer, made her say with a sob in her voice-- + +"Oh, you are a wise man, are you not? You know all about life and +death. Advise me. Think what I can do. He has been laboring all his +life and looking forward. He minds about nothing else.-- And I mind +about nothing else--" + +For years after Lydgate remembered the impression produced in him by +this involuntary appeal--this cry from soul to soul, without other +consciousness than their moving with kindred natures in the same +embroiled medium, the same troublous fitfully illuminated life. But +what could he say now except that he should see Mr. Casaubon again +to-morrow? + +When he was gone, Dorothea's tears gushed forth, and relieved her +stifling oppression. Then she dried her eyes, reminded that her +distress must not be betrayed to her husband; and looked round the room +thinking that she must order the servant to attend to it as usual, +since Mr. Casaubon might now at any moment wish to enter. On his +writing-table there were letters which had lain untouched since the +morning when he was taken ill, and among them, as Dorothea well +remembered, there were young Ladislaw's letters, the one addressed to +her still unopened. The associations of these letters had been made +the more painful by that sudden attack of illness which she felt that +the agitation caused by her anger might have helped to bring on: it +would be time enough to read them when they were again thrust upon her, +and she had had no inclination to fetch them from the library. But now +it occurred to her that they should be put out of her husband's sight: +whatever might have been the sources of his annoyance about them, he +must, if possible, not be annoyed again; and she ran her eyes first +over the letter addressed to him to assure herself whether or not it +would be necessary to write in order to hinder the offensive visit. + +Will wrote from Rome, and began by saying that his obligations to Mr. +Casaubon were too deep for all thanks not to seem impertinent. It was +plain that if he were not grateful, he must be the poorest-spirited +rascal who had ever found a generous friend. To expand in wordy thanks +would be like saying, "I am honest." But Will had come to perceive that +his defects--defects which Mr. Casaubon had himself often pointed +to--needed for their correction that more strenuous position which his +relative's generosity had hitherto prevented from being inevitable. He +trusted that he should make the best return, if return were possible, +by showing the effectiveness of the education for which he was +indebted, and by ceasing in future to need any diversion towards +himself of funds on which others might have a better claim. He was +coming to England, to try his fortune, as many other young men were +obliged to do whose only capital was in their brains. His friend +Naumann had desired him to take charge of the "Dispute"--the picture +painted for Mr. Casaubon, with whose permission, and Mrs. Casaubon's, +Will would convey it to Lowick in person. A letter addressed to the +Poste Restante in Paris within the fortnight would hinder him, if +necessary, from arriving at an inconvenient moment. He enclosed a +letter to Mrs. Casaubon in which he continued a discussion about art, +begun with her in Rome. + +Opening her own letter Dorothea saw that it was a lively continuation +of his remonstrance with her fanatical sympathy and her want of sturdy +neutral delight in things as they were--an outpouring of his young +vivacity which it was impossible to read just now. She had immediately +to consider what was to be done about the other letter: there was still +time perhaps to prevent Will from coming to Lowick. Dorothea ended by +giving the letter to her uncle, who was still in the house, and begging +him to let Will know that Mr. Casaubon had been ill, and that his +health would not allow the reception of any visitors. + +No one more ready than Mr. Brooke to write a letter: his only +difficulty was to write a short one, and his ideas in this case +expanded over the three large pages and the inward foldings. He had +simply said to Dorothea-- + +"To be sure, I will write, my dear. He's a very clever young +fellow--this young Ladislaw--I dare say will be a rising young man. +It's a good letter--marks his sense of things, you know. However, I +will tell him about Casaubon." + +But the end of Mr. Brooke's pen was a thinking organ, evolving +sentences, especially of a benevolent kind, before the rest of his mind +could well overtake them. It expressed regrets and proposed remedies, +which, when Mr. Brooke read them, seemed felicitously +worded--surprisingly the right thing, and determined a sequel which he +had never before thought of. In this case, his pen found it such a pity +young Ladislaw should not have come into the neighborhood just at +that time, in order that Mr. Brooke might make his acquaintance more +fully, and that they might go over the long-neglected Italian drawings +together--it also felt such an interest in a young man who was starting +in life with a stock of ideas--that by the end of the second page it +had persuaded Mr. Brooke to invite young Ladislaw, since he could not +be received at Lowick, to come to Tipton Grange. Why not? They could +find a great many things to do together, and this was a period of +peculiar growth--the political horizon was expanding, and--in short, +Mr. Brooke's pen went off into a little speech which it had lately +reported for that imperfectly edited organ the "Middlemarch Pioneer." +While Mr. Brooke was sealing this letter, he felt elated with an influx +of dim projects:--a young man capable of putting ideas into form, the +"Pioneer" purchased to clear the pathway for a new candidate, documents +utilized--who knew what might come of it all? Since Celia was going to +marry immediately, it would be very pleasant to have a young fellow at +table with him, at least for a time. + +But he went away without telling Dorothea what he had put into the +letter, for she was engaged with her husband, and--in fact, these +things were of no importance to her. + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + + How will you know the pitch of that great bell + Too large for you to stir? Let but a flute + Play 'neath the fine-mixed metal listen close + Till the right note flows forth, a silvery rill. + Then shall the huge bell tremble--then the mass + With myriad waves concurrent shall respond + In low soft unison. + + +Lydgate that evening spoke to Miss Vincy of Mrs. Casaubon, and laid +some emphasis on the strong feeling she appeared to have for that +formal studious man thirty years older than herself. + +"Of course she is devoted to her husband," said Rosamond, implying a +notion of necessary sequence which the scientific man regarded as the +prettiest possible for a woman; but she was thinking at the same time +that it was not so very melancholy to be mistress of Lowick Manor with +a husband likely to die soon. "Do you think her very handsome?" + +"She certainly is handsome, but I have not thought about it," said +Lydgate. + +"I suppose it would be unprofessional," said Rosamond, dimpling. "But +how your practice is spreading! You were called in before to the +Chettams, I think; and now, the Casaubons." + +"Yes," said Lydgate, in a tone of compulsory admission. "But I don't +really like attending such people so well as the poor. The cases are +more monotonous, and one has to go through more fuss and listen more +deferentially to nonsense." + +"Not more than in Middlemarch," said Rosamond. "And at least you go +through wide corridors and have the scent of rose-leaves everywhere." + +"That is true, Mademoiselle de Montmorenci," said Lydgate, just bending +his head to the table and lifting with his fourth finger her delicate +handkerchief which lay at the mouth of her reticule, as if to enjoy its +scent, while he looked at her with a smile. + +But this agreeable holiday freedom with which Lydgate hovered about the +flower of Middlemarch, could not continue indefinitely. It was not +more possible to find social isolation in that town than elsewhere, and +two people persistently flirting could by no means escape from "the +various entanglements, weights, blows, clashings, motions, by which +things severally go on." Whatever Miss Vincy did must be remarked, and +she was perhaps the more conspicuous to admirers and critics because +just now Mrs. Vincy, after some struggle, had gone with Fred to stay a +little while at Stone Court, there being no other way of at once +gratifying old Featherstone and keeping watch against Mary Garth, who +appeared a less tolerable daughter-in-law in proportion as Fred's +illness disappeared. + +Aunt Bulstrode, for example, came a little oftener into Lowick Gate to +see Rosamond, now she was alone. For Mrs. Bulstrode had a true +sisterly feeling for her brother; always thinking that he might have +married better, but wishing well to the children. Now Mrs. Bulstrode +had a long-standing intimacy with Mrs. Plymdale. They had nearly the +same preferences in silks, patterns for underclothing, china-ware, and +clergymen; they confided their little troubles of health and household +management to each other, and various little points of superiority on +Mrs. Bulstrode's side, namely, more decided seriousness, more +admiration for mind, and a house outside the town, sometimes served to +give color to their conversation without dividing them--well-meaning +women both, knowing very little of their own motives. + +Mrs. Bulstrode, paying a morning visit to Mrs. Plymdale, happened to +say that she could not stay longer, because she was going to see poor +Rosamond. + +"Why do you say 'poor Rosamond'?" said Mrs. Plymdale, a round-eyed +sharp little woman, like a tamed falcon. + +"She is so pretty, and has been brought up in such thoughtlessness. +The mother, you know, had always that levity about her, which makes me +anxious for the children." + +"Well, Harriet, if I am to speak my mind," said Mrs. Plymdale, with +emphasis, "I must say, anybody would suppose you and Mr. Bulstrode +would be delighted with what has happened, for you have done everything +to put Mr. Lydgate forward." + +"Selina, what do you mean?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, in genuine surprise. + +"Not but what I am truly thankful for Ned's sake," said Mrs. Plymdale. +"He could certainly better afford to keep such a wife than some people +can; but I should wish him to look elsewhere. Still a mother has +anxieties, and some young men would take to a bad life in consequence. +Besides, if I was obliged to speak, I should say I was not fond of +strangers coming into a town." + +"I don't know, Selina," said Mrs. Bulstrode, with a little emphasis in +her turn. "Mr. Bulstrode was a stranger here at one time. Abraham and +Moses were strangers in the land, and we are told to entertain +strangers. And especially," she added, after a slight pause, "when +they are unexceptionable." + +"I was not speaking in a religious sense, Harriet. I spoke as a +mother." + +"Selina, I am sure you have never heard me say anything against a niece +of mine marrying your son." + +"Oh, it is pride in Miss Vincy--I am sure it is nothing else," said +Mrs. Plymdale, who had never before given all her confidence to +"Harriet" on this subject. "No young man in Middlemarch was good +enough for her: I have heard her mother say as much. That is not a +Christian spirit, I think. But now, from all I hear, she has found a +man as proud as herself." + +"You don't mean that there is anything between Rosamond and Mr. +Lydgate?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, rather mortified at finding out her own +ignorance. + +"Is it possible you don't know, Harriet?" + +"Oh, I go about so little; and I am not fond of gossip; I really never +hear any. You see so many people that I don't see. Your circle is +rather different from ours." + +"Well, but your own niece and Mr. Bulstrode's great favorite--and +yours too, I am sure, Harriet! I thought, at one time, you meant him +for Kate, when she is a little older." + +"I don't believe there can be anything serious at present," said Mrs. +Bulstrode. "My brother would certainly have told me." + +"Well, people have different ways, but I understand that nobody can see +Miss Vincy and Mr. Lydgate together without taking them to be engaged. +However, it is not my business. Shall I put up the pattern of mittens?" + +After this Mrs. Bulstrode drove to her niece with a mind newly +weighted. She was herself handsomely dressed, but she noticed with a +little more regret than usual that Rosamond, who was just come in and +met her in walking-dress, was almost as expensively equipped. Mrs. +Bulstrode was a feminine smaller edition of her brother, and had none +of her husband's low-toned pallor. She had a good honest glance and +used no circumlocution. + +"You are alone, I see, my dear," she said, as they entered the +drawing-room together, looking round gravely. Rosamond felt sure that +her aunt had something particular to say, and they sat down near each +other. Nevertheless, the quilling inside Rosamond's bonnet was so +charming that it was impossible not to desire the same kind of thing +for Kate, and Mrs. Bulstrode's eyes, which were rather fine, rolled +round that ample quilled circuit, while she spoke. + +"I have just heard something about you that has surprised me very much, +Rosamond." + +"What is that, aunt?" Rosamond's eyes also were roaming over her +aunt's large embroidered collar. + +"I can hardly believe it--that you should be engaged without my knowing +it--without your father's telling me." Here Mrs. Bulstrode's eyes +finally rested on Rosamond's, who blushed deeply, and said-- + +"I am not engaged, aunt." + +"How is it that every one says so, then--that it is the town's talk?" + +"The town's talk is of very little consequence, I think," said +Rosamond, inwardly gratified. + +"Oh, my dear, be more thoughtful; don't despise your neighbors so. +Remember you are turned twenty-two now, and you will have no fortune: +your father, I am sure, will not be able to spare you anything. Mr. +Lydgate is very intellectual and clever; I know there is an attraction +in that. I like talking to such men myself; and your uncle finds him +very useful. But the profession is a poor one here. To be sure, this +life is not everything; but it is seldom a medical man has true +religious views--there is too much pride of intellect. And you are not +fit to marry a poor man. + +"Mr. Lydgate is not a poor man, aunt. He has very high connections." + +"He told me himself he was poor." + +"That is because he is used to people who have a high style of living." + +"My dear Rosamond, _you_ must not think of living in high style." + +Rosamond looked down and played with her reticule. She was not a fiery +young lady and had no sharp answers, but she meant to live as she +pleased. + +"Then it is really true?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, looking very earnestly +at her niece. "You are thinking of Mr. Lydgate--there is some +understanding between you, though your father doesn't know. Be open, +my dear Rosamond: Mr. Lydgate has really made you an offer?" + +Poor Rosamond's feelings were very unpleasant. She had been quite easy +as to Lydgate's feeling and intention, but now when her aunt put this +question she did not like being unable to say Yes. Her pride was hurt, +but her habitual control of manner helped her. + +"Pray excuse me, aunt. I would rather not speak on the subject." + +"You would not give your heart to a man without a decided prospect, I +trust, my dear. And think of the two excellent offers I know of that +you have refused!--and one still within your reach, if you will not +throw it away. I knew a very great beauty who married badly at last, +by doing so. Mr. Ned Plymdale is a nice young man--some might think +good-looking; and an only son; and a large business of that kind is +better than a profession. Not that marrying is everything. I would +have you seek first the kingdom of God. But a girl should keep her +heart within her own power." + +"I should never give it to Mr. Ned Plymdale, if it were. I have +already refused him. If I loved, I should love at once and without +change," said Rosamond, with a great sense of being a romantic heroine, +and playing the part prettily. + +"I see how it is, my dear," said Mrs. Bulstrode, in a melancholy voice, +rising to go. "You have allowed your affections to be engaged without +return." + +"No, indeed, aunt," said Rosamond, with emphasis. + +"Then you are quite confident that Mr. Lydgate has a serious attachment +to you?" + +Rosamond's cheeks by this time were persistently burning, and she felt +much mortification. She chose to be silent, and her aunt went away all +the more convinced. + +Mr. Bulstrode in things worldly and indifferent was disposed to do what +his wife bade him, and she now, without telling her reasons, desired +him on the next opportunity to find out in conversation with Mr. +Lydgate whether he had any intention of marrying soon. The result was +a decided negative. Mr. Bulstrode, on being cross-questioned, showed +that Lydgate had spoken as no man would who had any attachment that +could issue in matrimony. Mrs. Bulstrode now felt that she had a +serious duty before her, and she soon managed to arrange a tete-a-tete +with Lydgate, in which she passed from inquiries about Fred Vincy's +health, and expressions of her sincere anxiety for her brother's large +family, to general remarks on the dangers which lay before young people +with regard to their settlement in life. Young men were often wild and +disappointing, making little return for the money spent on them, and a +girl was exposed to many circumstances which might interfere with her +prospects. + +"Especially when she has great attractions, and her parents see much +company," said Mrs. Bulstrode "Gentlemen pay her attention, and engross +her all to themselves, for the mere pleasure of the moment, and that +drives off others. I think it is a heavy responsibility, Mr. Lydgate, +to interfere with the prospects of any girl." Here Mrs. Bulstrode fixed +her eyes on him, with an unmistakable purpose of warning, if not of +rebuke. + +"Clearly," said Lydgate, looking at her--perhaps even staring a little +in return. "On the other hand, a man must be a great coxcomb to go +about with a notion that he must not pay attention to a young lady lest +she should fall in love with him, or lest others should think she must." + +"Oh, Mr. Lydgate, you know well what your advantages are. You know +that our young men here cannot cope with you. Where you frequent a +house it may militate very much against a girl's making a desirable +settlement in life, and prevent her from accepting offers even if they +are made." + +Lydgate was less flattered by his advantage over the Middlemarch +Orlandos than he was annoyed by the perception of Mrs. Bulstrode's +meaning. She felt that she had spoken as impressively as it was +necessary to do, and that in using the superior word "militate" she had +thrown a noble drapery over a mass of particulars which were still +evident enough. + +Lydgate was fuming a little, pushed his hair back with one hand, felt +curiously in his waistcoat-pocket with the other, and then stooped to +beckon the tiny black spaniel, which had the insight to decline his +hollow caresses. It would not have been decent to go away, because he +had been dining with other guests, and had just taken tea. But Mrs. +Bulstrode, having no doubt that she had been understood, turned the +conversation. + +Solomon's Proverbs, I think, have omitted to say, that as the sore +palate findeth grit, so an uneasy consciousness heareth innuendoes. +The next day Mr. Farebrother, parting from Lydgate in the street, +supposed that they should meet at Vincy's in the evening. Lydgate +answered curtly, no--he had work to do--he must give up going out in +the evening. + +"What! you are going to get lashed to the mast, eh, and are stopping +your ears?" said the Vicar. "Well, if you don't mean to be won by the +sirens, you are right to take precautions in time." + +A few days before, Lydgate would have taken no notice of these words as +anything more than the Vicar's usual way of putting things. They +seemed now to convey an innuendo which confirmed the impression that he +had been making a fool of himself and behaving so as to be +misunderstood: not, he believed, by Rosamond herself; she, he felt +sure, took everything as lightly as he intended it. She had an +exquisite tact and insight in relation to all points of manners; but +the people she lived among were blunderers and busybodies. However, +the mistake should go no farther. He resolved--and kept his +resolution--that he would not go to Mr. Vincy's except on business. + +Rosamond became very unhappy. The uneasiness first stirred by her +aunt's questions grew and grew till at the end of ten days that she had +not seen Lydgate, it grew into terror at the blank that might possibly +come--into foreboding of that ready, fatal sponge which so cheaply +wipes out the hopes of mortals. The world would have a new dreariness +for her, as a wilderness that a magician's spells had turned for a +little while into a garden. She felt that she was beginning to know +the pang of disappointed love, and that no other man could be the +occasion of such delightful aerial building as she had been enjoying +for the last six months. Poor Rosamond lost her appetite and felt as +forlorn as Ariadne--as a charming stage Ariadne left behind with all +her boxes full of costumes and no hope of a coach. + +There are many wonderful mixtures in the world which are all alike +called love, and claim the privileges of a sublime rage which is an +apology for everything (in literature and the drama). Happily Rosamond +did not think of committing any desperate act: she plaited her fair +hair as beautifully as usual, and kept herself proudly calm. Her most +cheerful supposition was that her aunt Bulstrode had interfered in some +way to hinder Lydgate's visits: everything was better than a +spontaneous indifference in him. Any one who imagines ten days too +short a time--not for falling into leanness, lightness, or other +measurable effects of passion, but--for the whole spiritual circuit of +alarmed conjecture and disappointment, is ignorant of what can go on in +the elegant leisure of a young lady's mind. + +On the eleventh day, however, Lydgate when leaving Stone Court was +requested by Mrs. Vincy to let her husband know that there was a marked +change in Mr. Featherstone's health, and that she wished him to come to +Stone Court on that day. Now Lydgate might have called at the +warehouse, or might have written a message on a leaf of his pocket-book +and left it at the door. Yet these simple devices apparently did not +occur to him, from which we may conclude that he had no strong +objection to calling at the house at an hour when Mr. Vincy was not at +home, and leaving the message with Miss Vincy. A man may, from various +motives, decline to give his company, but perhaps not even a sage would +be gratified that nobody missed him. It would be a graceful, easy way +of piecing on the new habits to the old, to have a few playful words +with Rosamond about his resistance to dissipation, and his firm resolve +to take long fasts even from sweet sounds. It must be confessed, also, +that momentary speculations as to all the possible grounds for Mrs. +Bulstrode's hints had managed to get woven like slight clinging hairs +into the more substantial web of his thoughts. + +Miss Vincy was alone, and blushed so deeply when Lydgate came in that +he felt a corresponding embarrassment, and instead of any playfulness, +he began at once to speak of his reason for calling, and to beg her, +almost formally, to deliver the message to her father. Rosamond, who +at the first moment felt as if her happiness were returning, was keenly +hurt by Lydgate's manner; her blush had departed, and she assented +coldly, without adding an unnecessary word, some trivial chain-work +which she had in her hands enabling her to avoid looking at Lydgate +higher than his chin. In all failures, the beginning is certainly the +half of the whole. After sitting two long moments while he moved his +whip and could say nothing, Lydgate rose to go, and Rosamond, made +nervous by her struggle between mortification and the wish not to +betray it, dropped her chain as if startled, and rose too, +mechanically. Lydgate instantaneously stooped to pick up the chain. +When he rose he was very near to a lovely little face set on a fair +long neck which he had been used to see turning about under the most +perfect management of self-contented grace. But as he raised his eyes +now he saw a certain helpless quivering which touched him quite newly, +and made him look at Rosamond with a questioning flash. At this moment +she was as natural as she had ever been when she was five years old: +she felt that her tears had risen, and it was no use to try to do +anything else than let them stay like water on a blue flower or let +them fall over her cheeks, even as they would. + +That moment of naturalness was the crystallizing feather-touch: it +shook flirtation into love. Remember that the ambitious man who was +looking at those Forget-me-nots under the water was very warm-hearted +and rash. He did not know where the chain went; an idea had thrilled +through the recesses within him which had a miraculous effect in +raising the power of passionate love lying buried there in no sealed +sepulchre, but under the lightest, easily pierced mould. His words +were quite abrupt and awkward; but the tone made them sound like an +ardent, appealing avowal. + +"What is the matter? you are distressed. Tell me, pray." + +Rosamond had never been spoken to in such tones before. I am not sure +that she knew what the words were: but she looked at Lydgate and the +tears fell over her cheeks. There could have been no more complete +answer than that silence, and Lydgate, forgetting everything else, +completely mastered by the outrush of tenderness at the sudden belief +that this sweet young creature depended on him for her joy, actually +put his arms round her, folding her gently and protectingly--he was +used to being gentle with the weak and suffering--and kissed each of +the two large tears. This was a strange way of arriving at an +understanding, but it was a short way. Rosamond was not angry, but she +moved backward a little in timid happiness, and Lydgate could now sit +near her and speak less incompletely. Rosamond had to make her little +confession, and he poured out words of gratitude and tenderness with +impulsive lavishment. In half an hour he left the house an engaged +man, whose soul was not his own, but the woman's to whom he had bound +himself. + +He came again in the evening to speak with Mr. Vincy, who, just +returned from Stone Court, was feeling sure that it would not be long +before he heard of Mr. Featherstone's demise. The felicitous word +"demise," which had seasonably occurred to him, had raised his spirits +even above their usual evening pitch. The right word is always a +power, and communicates its definiteness to our action. Considered as +a demise, old Featherstone's death assumed a merely legal aspect, so +that Mr. Vincy could tap his snuff-box over it and be jovial, without +even an intermittent affectation of solemnity; and Mr. Vincy hated both +solemnity and affectation. Who was ever awe struck about a testator, +or sang a hymn on the title to real property? Mr. Vincy was inclined +to take a jovial view of all things that evening: he even observed to +Lydgate that Fred had got the family constitution after all, and would +soon be as fine a fellow as ever again; and when his approbation of +Rosamond's engagement was asked for, he gave it with astonishing +facility, passing at once to general remarks on the desirableness of +matrimony for young men and maidens, and apparently deducing from the +whole the appropriateness of a little more punch. + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + + "They'll take suggestion as a cat laps milk." + --SHAKESPEARE: Tempest. + + +The triumphant confidence of the Mayor founded on Mr. Featherstone's +insistent demand that Fred and his mother should not leave him, was a +feeble emotion compared with all that was agitating the breasts of the +old man's blood-relations, who naturally manifested more their sense of +the family tie and were more visibly numerous now that he had become +bedridden. Naturally: for when "poor Peter" had occupied his arm-chair +in the wainscoted parlor, no assiduous beetles for whom the cook +prepares boiling water could have been less welcome on a hearth which +they had reasons for preferring, than those persons whose Featherstone +blood was ill-nourished, not from penuriousness on their part, but from +poverty. Brother Solomon and Sister Jane were rich, and the family +candor and total abstinence from false politeness with which they were +always received seemed to them no argument that their brother in the +solemn act of making his will would overlook the superior claims of +wealth. Themselves at least he had never been unnatural enough to +banish from his house, and it seemed hardly eccentric that he should +have kept away Brother Jonah, Sister Martha, and the rest, who had no +shadow of such claims. They knew Peter's maxim, that money was a good +egg, and should be laid in a warm nest. + +But Brother Jonah, Sister Martha, and all the needy exiles, held a +different point of view. Probabilities are as various as the faces to +be seen at will in fretwork or paper-hangings: every form is there, +from Jupiter to Judy, if you only look with creative inclination. To +the poorer and least favored it seemed likely that since Peter had done +nothing for them in his life, he would remember them at the last. +Jonah argued that men liked to make a surprise of their wills, while +Martha said that nobody need be surprised if he left the best part of +his money to those who least expected it. Also it was not to be +thought but that an own brother "lying there" with dropsy in his legs +must come to feel that blood was thicker than water, and if he didn't +alter his will, he might have money by him. At any rate some +blood-relations should be on the premises and on the watch against +those who were hardly relations at all. Such things had been known as +forged wills and disputed wills, which seemed to have the golden-hazy +advantage of somehow enabling non-legatees to live out of them. Again, +those who were no blood-relations might be caught making away with +things--and poor Peter "lying there" helpless! Somebody should be on +the watch. But in this conclusion they were at one with Solomon and +Jane; also, some nephews, nieces, and cousins, arguing with still +greater subtilty as to what might be done by a man able to "will away" +his property and give himself large treats of oddity, felt in a +handsome sort of way that there was a family interest to be attended +to, and thought of Stone Court as a place which it would be nothing but +right for them to visit. Sister Martha, otherwise Mrs. Cranch, living +with some wheeziness in the Chalky Flats, could not undertake the +journey; but her son, as being poor Peter's own nephew, could represent +her advantageously, and watch lest his uncle Jonah should make an +unfair use of the improbable things which seemed likely to happen. In +fact there was a general sense running in the Featherstone blood that +everybody must watch everybody else, and that it would be well for +everybody else to reflect that the Almighty was watching him. + +Thus Stone Court continually saw one or other blood-relation alighting +or departing, and Mary Garth had the unpleasant task of carrying their +messages to Mr. Featherstone, who would see none of them, and sent her +down with the still more unpleasant task of telling them so. As +manager of the household she felt bound to ask them in good provincial +fashion to stay and eat; but she chose to consult Mrs. Vincy on the +point of extra down-stairs consumption now that Mr. Featherstone was +laid up. + +"Oh, my dear, you must do things handsomely where there's last illness +and a property. God knows, I don't grudge them every ham in the +house--only, save the best for the funeral. Have some stuffed veal +always, and a fine cheese in cut. You must expect to keep open house +in these last illnesses," said liberal Mrs. Vincy, once more of +cheerful note and bright plumage. + +But some of the visitors alighted and did not depart after the handsome +treating to veal and ham. Brother Jonah, for example (there are such +unpleasant people in most families; perhaps even in the highest +aristocracy there are Brobdingnag specimens, gigantically in debt and +bloated at greater expense)--Brother Jonah, I say, having come down in +the world, was mainly supported by a calling which he was modest enough +not to boast of, though it was much better than swindling either on +exchange or turf, but which did not require his presence at Brassing so +long as he had a good corner to sit in and a supply of food. He chose +the kitchen-corner, partly because he liked it best, and partly because +he did not want to sit with Solomon, concerning whom he had a strong +brotherly opinion. Seated in a famous arm-chair and in his best suit, +constantly within sight of good cheer, he had a comfortable +consciousness of being on the premises, mingled with fleeting +suggestions of Sunday and the bar at the Green Man; and he informed +Mary Garth that he should not go out of reach of his brother Peter +while that poor fellow was above ground. The troublesome ones in a +family are usually either the wits or the idiots. Jonah was the wit +among the Featherstones, and joked with the maid-servants when they +came about the hearth, but seemed to consider Miss Garth a suspicious +character, and followed her with cold eyes. + +Mary would have borne this one pair of eyes with comparative ease, but +unfortunately there was young Cranch, who, having come all the way from +the Chalky Flats to represent his mother and watch his uncle Jonah, +also felt it his duty to stay and to sit chiefly in the kitchen to give +his uncle company. Young Cranch was not exactly the balancing point +between the wit and the idiot,--verging slightly towards the latter +type, and squinting so as to leave everything in doubt about his +sentiments except that they were not of a forcible character. When +Mary Garth entered the kitchen and Mr. Jonah Featherstone began to +follow her with his cold detective eyes, young Cranch turning his head +in the same direction seemed to insist on it that she should remark how +he was squinting, as if he did it with design, like the gypsies when +Borrow read the New Testament to them. This was rather too much for +poor Mary; sometimes it made her bilious, sometimes it upset her +gravity. One day that she had an opportunity she could not resist +describing the kitchen scene to Fred, who would not be hindered from +immediately going to see it, affecting simply to pass through. But no +sooner did he face the four eyes than he had to rush through the +nearest door which happened to lead to the dairy, and there under the +high roof and among the pans he gave way to laughter which made a +hollow resonance perfectly audible in the kitchen. He fled by another +doorway, but Mr. Jonah, who had not before seen Fred's white +complexion, long legs, and pinched delicacy of face, prepared many +sarcasms in which these points of appearance were wittily combined with +the lowest moral attributes. + +"Why, Tom, _you_ don't wear such gentlemanly trousers--you haven't got +half such fine long legs," said Jonah to his nephew, winking at the +same time, to imply that there was something more in these statements +than their undeniableness. Tom looked at his legs, but left it +uncertain whether he preferred his moral advantages to a more vicious +length of limb and reprehensible gentility of trouser. + +In the large wainscoted parlor too there were constantly pairs of eyes +on the watch, and own relatives eager to be "sitters-up." Many came, +lunched, and departed, but Brother Solomon and the lady who had been +Jane Featherstone for twenty-five years before she was Mrs. Waule found +it good to be there every day for hours, without other calculable +occupation than that of observing the cunning Mary Garth (who was so +deep that she could be found out in nothing) and giving occasional dry +wrinkly indications of crying--as if capable of torrents in a wetter +season--at the thought that they were not allowed to go into Mr. +Featherstone's room. For the old man's dislike of his own family +seemed to get stronger as he got less able to amuse himself by saying +biting things to them. Too languid to sting, he had the more venom +refluent in his blood. + +Not fully believing the message sent through Mary Garth, they had +presented themselves together within the door of the bedroom, both in +black--Mrs. Waule having a white handkerchief partially unfolded in her +hand--and both with faces in a sort of half-mourning purple; while Mrs. +Vincy with her pink cheeks and pink ribbons flying was actually +administering a cordial to their own brother, and the +light-complexioned Fred, his short hair curling as might be expected in +a gambler's, was lolling at his ease in a large chair. + +Old Featherstone no sooner caught sight of these funereal figures +appearing in spite of his orders than rage came to strengthen him more +successfully than the cordial. He was propped up on a bed-rest, and +always had his gold-headed stick lying by him. He seized it now and +swept it backwards and forwards in as large an area as he could, +apparently to ban these ugly spectres, crying in a hoarse sort of +screech-- + +"Back, back, Mrs. Waule! Back, Solomon!" + +"Oh, Brother. Peter," Mrs. Waule began--but Solomon put his hand +before her repressingly. He was a large-cheeked man, nearly seventy, +with small furtive eyes, and was not only of much blander temper but +thought himself much deeper than his brother Peter; indeed not likely +to be deceived in any of his fellow-men, inasmuch as they could not +well be more greedy and deceitful than he suspected them of being. +Even the invisible powers, he thought, were likely to be soothed by a +bland parenthesis here and there--coming from a man of property, who +might have been as impious as others. + +"Brother Peter," he said, in a wheedling yet gravely official tone, +"It's nothing but right I should speak to you about the Three Crofts +and the Manganese. The Almighty knows what I've got on my mind--" + +"Then he knows more than I want to know," said Peter, laying down his +stick with a show of truce which had a threat in it too, for he +reversed the stick so as to make the gold handle a club in case of +closer fighting, and looked hard at Solomon's bald head. + +"There's things you might repent of, Brother, for want of speaking to +me," said Solomon, not advancing, however. "I could sit up with you +to-night, and Jane with me, willingly, and you might take your own time +to speak, or let me speak." + +"Yes, I shall take my own time--you needn't offer me yours," said Peter. + +"But you can't take your own time to die in, Brother," began Mrs. +Waule, with her usual woolly tone. "And when you lie speechless you +may be tired of having strangers about you, and you may think of me and +my children"--but here her voice broke under the touching thought which +she was attributing to her speechless brother; the mention of ourselves +being naturally affecting. + +"No, I shan't," said old Featherstone, contradictiously. "I shan't +think of any of you. I've made my will, I tell you, I've made my +will." Here he turned his head towards Mrs. Vincy, and swallowed some +more of his cordial. + +"Some people would be ashamed to fill up a place belonging by rights to +others," said Mrs. Waule, turning her narrow eyes in the same direction. + +"Oh, sister," said Solomon, with ironical softness, "you and me are not +fine, and handsome, and clever enough: we must be humble and let smart +people push themselves before us." + +Fred's spirit could not bear this: rising and looking at Mr. +Featherstone, he said, "Shall my mother and I leave the room, sir, that +you may be alone with your friends?" + +"Sit down, I tell you," said old Featherstone, snappishly. "Stop where +you are. Good-by, Solomon," he added, trying to wield his stick again, +but failing now that he had reversed the handle. "Good-by, Mrs. Waule. +Don't you come again." + +"I shall be down-stairs, Brother, whether or no," said Solomon. "I +shall do my duty, and it remains to be seen what the Almighty will +allow." + +"Yes, in property going out of families," said Mrs. Waule, in +continuation,--"and where there's steady young men to carry on. But I +pity them who are not such, and I pity their mothers. Good-by, Brother +Peter." + +"Remember, I'm the eldest after you, Brother, and prospered from the +first, just as you did, and have got land already by the name of +Featherstone," said Solomon, relying much on that reflection, as one +which might be suggested in the watches of the night. "But I bid you +good-by for the present." + +Their exit was hastened by their seeing old Mr. Featherstone pull his +wig on each side and shut his eyes with his mouth-widening grimace, as +if he were determined to be deaf and blind. + +None the less they came to Stone Court daily and sat below at the post +of duty, sometimes carrying on a slow dialogue in an undertone in which +the observation and response were so far apart, that any one hearing +them might have imagined himself listening to speaking automata, in +some doubt whether the ingenious mechanism would really work, or wind +itself up for a long time in order to stick and be silent. Solomon and +Jane would have been sorry to be quick: what that led to might be seen +on the other side of the wall in the person of Brother Jonah. + +But their watch in the wainscoted parlor was sometimes varied by the +presence of other guests from far or near. Now that Peter Featherstone +was up-stairs, his property could be discussed with all that local +enlightenment to be found on the spot: some rural and Middlemarch +neighbors expressed much agreement with the family and sympathy with +their interest against the Vincys, and feminine visitors were even +moved to tears, in conversation with Mrs. Waule, when they recalled the +fact that they themselves had been disappointed in times past by +codicils and marriages for spite on the part of ungrateful elderly +gentlemen, who, it might have been supposed, had been spared for +something better. Such conversation paused suddenly, like an organ +when the bellows are let drop, if Mary Garth came into the room; and +all eyes were turned on her as a possible legatee, or one who might get +access to iron chests. + +But the younger men who were relatives or connections of the family, +were disposed to admire her in this problematic light, as a girl who +showed much conduct, and who among all the chances that were flying +might turn out to be at least a moderate prize. Hence she had her +share of compliments and polite attentions. + +Especially from Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, a distinguished bachelor and +auctioneer of those parts, much concerned in the sale of land and +cattle: a public character, indeed, whose name was seen on widely +distributed placards, and who might reasonably be sorry for those who +did not know of him. He was second cousin to Peter Featherstone, and +had been treated by him with more amenity than any other relative, +being useful in matters of business; and in that programme of his +funeral which the old man had himself dictated, he had been named as a +Bearer. There was no odious cupidity in Mr. Borthrop Trumbull--nothing +more than a sincere sense of his own merit, which, he was aware, in +case of rivalry might tell against competitors; so that if Peter +Featherstone, who so far as he, Trumbull, was concerned, had +behaved like as good a soul as ever breathed, should have done anything +handsome by him, all he could say was, that he had never fished and +fawned, but had advised him to the best of his experience, which now +extended over twenty years from the time of his apprenticeship at +fifteen, and was likely to yield a knowledge of no surreptitious kind. +His admiration was far from being confined to himself, but was +accustomed professionally as well as privately to delight in estimating +things at a high rate. He was an amateur of superior phrases, and +never used poor language without immediately correcting himself--which +was fortunate, as he was rather loud, and given to predominate, +standing or walking about frequently, pulling down his waistcoat with +the air of a man who is very much of his own opinion, trimming himself +rapidly with his fore-finger, and marking each new series in these +movements by a busy play with his large seals. There was occasionally +a little fierceness in his demeanor, but it was directed chiefly +against false opinion, of which there is so much to correct in the +world that a man of some reading and experience necessarily has his +patience tried. He felt that the Featherstone family generally was of +limited understanding, but being a man of the world and a public +character, took everything as a matter of course, and even went to +converse with Mr. Jonah and young Cranch in the kitchen, not doubting +that he had impressed the latter greatly by his leading questions +concerning the Chalky Flats. If anybody had observed that Mr. Borthrop +Trumbull, being an auctioneer, was bound to know the nature of +everything, he would have smiled and trimmed himself silently with the +sense that he came pretty near that. On the whole, in an auctioneering +way, he was an honorable man, not ashamed of his business, and feeling +that "the celebrated Peel, now Sir Robert," if introduced to him, would +not fail to recognize his importance. + +"I don't mind if I have a slice of that ham, and a glass of that ale, +Miss Garth, if you will allow me," he said, coming into the parlor at +half-past eleven, after having had the exceptional privilege of seeing +old Featherstone, and standing with his back to the fire between Mrs. +Waule and Solomon. + +"It's not necessary for you to go out;--let me ring the bell." + +"Thank you," said Mary, "I have an errand." + +"Well, Mr. Trumbull, you're highly favored," said Mrs. Waule. + +"What! seeing the old man?" said the auctioneer, playing with his seals +dispassionately. "Ah, you see he has relied on me considerably." Here +he pressed his lips together, and frowned meditatively. + +"Might anybody ask what their brother has been saying?" said Solomon, +in a soft tone of humility, in which he had a sense of luxurious +cunning, he being a rich man and not in need of it. + +"Oh yes, anybody may ask," said Mr. Trumbull, with loud and +good-humored though cutting sarcasm. "Anybody may interrogate. Any +one may give their remarks an interrogative turn," he continued, his +sonorousness rising with his style. "This is constantly done by good +speakers, even when they anticipate no answer. It is what we call a +figure of speech--speech at a high figure, as one may say." The +eloquent auctioneer smiled at his own ingenuity. + +"I shouldn't be sorry to hear he'd remembered you, Mr. Trumbull," said +Solomon. "I never was against the deserving. It's the undeserving I'm +against." + +"Ah, there it is, you see, there it is," said Mr. Trumbull, +significantly. "It can't be denied that undeserving people have been +legatees, and even residuary legatees. It is so, with testamentary +dispositions." Again he pursed up his lips and frowned a little. + +"Do you mean to say for certain, Mr. Trumbull, that my brother has left +his land away from our family?" said Mrs. Waule, on whom, as an +unhopeful woman, those long words had a depressing effect. + +"A man might as well turn his land into charity land at once as leave +it to some people," observed Solomon, his sister's question having +drawn no answer. + +"What, Blue-Coat land?" said Mrs. Waule, again. "Oh, Mr. Trumbull, you +never can mean to say that. It would be flying in the face of the +Almighty that's prospered him." + +While Mrs. Waule was speaking, Mr. Borthrop Trumbull walked away from +the fireplace towards the window, patrolling with his fore-finger round +the inside of his stock, then along his whiskers and the curves of his +hair. He now walked to Miss Garth's work-table, opened a book which +lay there and read the title aloud with pompous emphasis as if he were +offering it for sale: + +"'Anne of Geierstein' (pronounced Jeersteen) or the 'Maiden of the +Mist, by the author of Waverley.'" Then turning the page, he began +sonorously--"The course of four centuries has well-nigh elapsed since +the series of events which are related in the following chapters took +place on the Continent." He pronounced the last truly admirable word +with the accent on the last syllable, not as unaware of vulgar usage, +but feeling that this novel delivery enhanced the sonorous beauty which +his reading had given to the whole. + +And now the servant came in with the tray, so that the moments for +answering Mrs. Waule's question had gone by safely, while she and +Solomon, watching Mr. Trumbull's movements, were thinking that high +learning interfered sadly with serious affairs. Mr. Borthrop Trumbull +really knew nothing about old Featherstone's will; but he could hardly +have been brought to declare any ignorance unless he had been arrested +for misprision of treason. + +"I shall take a mere mouthful of ham and a glass of ale," he said, +reassuringly. "As a man with public business, I take a snack when I +can. I will back this ham," he added, after swallowing some morsels +with alarming haste, "against any ham in the three kingdoms. In my +opinion it is better than the hams at Freshitt Hall--and I think I am +a tolerable judge." + +"Some don't like so much sugar in their hams," said Mrs. Waule. "But +my poor brother would always have sugar." + +"If any person demands better, he is at liberty to do so; but, God +bless me, what an aroma! I should be glad to buy in that quality, I +know. There is some gratification to a gentleman"--here Mr. +Trumbull's voice conveyed an emotional remonstrance--"in having this +kind of ham set on his table." + +He pushed aside his plate, poured out his glass of ale and drew his +chair a little forward, profiting by the occasion to look at the inner +side of his legs, which he stroked approvingly--Mr. Trumbull having +all those less frivolous airs and gestures which distinguish the +predominant races of the north. + +"You have an interesting work there, I see, Miss Garth," he observed, +when Mary re-entered. "It is by the author of 'Waverley': that is Sir +Walter Scott. I have bought one of his works myself--a very nice +thing, a very superior publication, entitled 'Ivanhoe.' You will not +get any writer to beat him in a hurry, I think--he will not, in my +opinion, be speedily surpassed. I have just been reading a portion at +the commencement of 'Anne of Jeersteen.' It commences well." (Things +never began with Mr. Borthrop Trumbull: they always commenced, both in +private life and on his handbills.) "You are a reader, I see. Do you +subscribe to our Middlemarch library?" + +"No," said Mary. "Mr. Fred Vincy brought this book." + +"I am a great bookman myself," returned Mr. Trumbull. "I have no less +than two hundred volumes in calf, and I flatter myself they are well +selected. Also pictures by Murillo, Rubens, Teniers, Titian, Vandyck, +and others. I shall be happy to lend you any work you like to mention, +Miss Garth." + +"I am much obliged," said Mary, hastening away again, "but I have +little time for reading." + +"I should say my brother has done something for _her_ in his will," +said Mr. Solomon, in a very low undertone, when she had shut the door +behind her, pointing with his head towards the absent Mary. + +"His first wife was a poor match for him, though," said Mrs. Waule. +"She brought him nothing: and this young woman is only her niece,--and +very proud. And my brother has always paid her wage." + +"A sensible girl though, in my opinion," said Mr. Trumbull, finishing +his ale and starting up with an emphatic adjustment of his waistcoat. +"I have observed her when she has been mixing medicine in drops. She +minds what she is doing, sir. That is a great point in a woman, and a +great point for our friend up-stairs, poor dear old soul. A man whose +life is of any value should think of his wife as a nurse: that is what +I should do, if I married; and I believe I have lived single long +enough not to make a mistake in that line. Some men must marry to +elevate themselves a little, but when I am in need of that, I hope some +one will tell me so--I hope some individual will apprise me of the +fact. I wish you good morning, Mrs. Waule. Good morning, Mr. Solomon. +I trust we shall meet under less melancholy auspices." + +When Mr. Trumbull had departed with a fine bow, Solomon, leaning +forward, observed to his sister, "You may depend, Jane, my brother has +left that girl a lumping sum." + +"Anybody would think so, from the way Mr. Trumbull talks," said Jane. +Then, after a pause, "He talks as if my daughters wasn't to be trusted +to give drops." + +"Auctioneers talk wild," said Solomon. "Not but what Trumbull has made +money." + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + + "Close up his eyes and draw the curtain close; + And let us all to meditation." + --2 Henry VI. + + +That night after twelve o'clock Mary Garth relieved the watch in Mr. +Featherstone's room, and sat there alone through the small hours. She +often chose this task, in which she found some pleasure, +notwithstanding the old man's testiness whenever he demanded her +attentions. There were intervals in which she could sit perfectly +still, enjoying the outer stillness and the subdued light. The red +fire with its gently audible movement seemed like a solemn existence +calmly independent of the petty passions, the imbecile desires, the +straining after worthless uncertainties, which were daily moving her +contempt. Mary was fond of her own thoughts, and could amuse herself +well sitting in twilight with her hands in her lap; for, having early +had strong reason to believe that things were not likely to be arranged +for her peculiar satisfaction, she wasted no time in astonishment and +annoyance at that fact. And she had already come to take life very +much as a comedy in which she had a proud, nay, a generous resolution +not to act the mean or treacherous part. Mary might have become +cynical if she had not had parents whom she honored, and a well of +affectionate gratitude within her, which was all the fuller because she +had learned to make no unreasonable claims. + +She sat to-night revolving, as she was wont, the scenes of the day, her +lips often curling with amusement at the oddities to which her fancy +added fresh drollery: people were so ridiculous with their illusions, +carrying their fool's caps unawares, thinking their own lies opaque +while everybody else's were transparent, making themselves exceptions +to everything, as if when all the world looked yellow under a lamp they +alone were rosy. Yet there were some illusions under Mary's eyes which +were not quite comic to her. She was secretly convinced, though she +had no other grounds than her close observation of old Featherstone's +nature, that in spite of his fondness for having the Vincys about him, +they were as likely to be disappointed as any of the relations whom he +kept at a distance. She had a good deal of disdain for Mrs. Vincy's +evident alarm lest she and Fred should be alone together, but it did +not hinder her from thinking anxiously of the way in which Fred would +be affected, if it should turn out that his uncle had left him as poor +as ever. She could make a butt of Fred when he was present, but she +did not enjoy his follies when he was absent. + +Yet she liked her thoughts: a vigorous young mind not overbalanced by +passion, finds a good in making acquaintance with life, and watches its +own powers with interest. Mary had plenty of merriment within. + +Her thought was not veined by any solemnity or pathos about the old man +on the bed: such sentiments are easier to affect than to feel about an +aged creature whose life is not visibly anything but a remnant of +vices. She had always seen the most disagreeable side of Mr. +Featherstone: he was not proud of her, and she was only useful to him. +To be anxious about a soul that is always snapping at you must be left +to the saints of the earth; and Mary was not one of them. She had +never returned him a harsh word, and had waited on him faithfully: that +was her utmost. Old Featherstone himself was not in the least anxious +about his soul, and had declined to see Mr. Tucker on the subject. + +To-night he had not snapped, and for the first hour or two he lay +remarkably still, until at last Mary heard him rattling his bunch of +keys against the tin box which he always kept in the bed beside him. +About three o'clock he said, with remarkable distinctness, "Missy, come +here!" + +Mary obeyed, and found that he had already drawn the tin box from under +the clothes, though he usually asked to have this done for him; and he +had selected the key. He now unlocked the box, and, drawing from it +another key, looked straight at her with eyes that seemed to have +recovered all their sharpness and said, "How many of 'em are in the +house?" + +"You mean of your own relations, sir," said Mary, well used to the old +man's way of speech. He nodded slightly and she went on. + +"Mr. Jonah Featherstone and young Cranch are sleeping here." + +"Oh ay, they stick, do they? and the rest--they come every day, I'll +warrant--Solomon and Jane, and all the young uns? They come peeping, +and counting and casting up?" + +"Not all of them every day. Mr. Solomon and Mrs. Waule are here every +day, and the others come often." + +The old man listened with a grimace while she spoke, and then said, +relaxing his face, "The more fools they. You hearken, missy. It's +three o'clock in the morning, and I've got all my faculties as well as +ever I had in my life. I know all my property, and where the money's +put out, and everything. And I've made everything ready to change my +mind, and do as I like at the last. Do you hear, missy? I've got my +faculties." + +"Well, sir?" said Mary, quietly. + +He now lowered his tone with an air of deeper cunning. "I've made two +wills, and I'm going to burn one. Now you do as I tell you. This is +the key of my iron chest, in the closet there. You push well at the +side of the brass plate at the top, till it goes like a bolt: then you +can put the key in the front lock and turn it. See and do that; and +take out the topmost paper--Last Will and Testament--big printed." + +"No, sir," said Mary, in a firm voice, "I cannot do that." + +"Not do it? I tell you, you must," said the old man, his voice +beginning to shake under the shock of this resistance. + +"I cannot touch your iron chest or your will. I must refuse to do +anything that might lay me open to suspicion." + +"I tell you, I'm in my right mind. Shan't I do as I like at the last? +I made two wills on purpose. Take the key, I say." + +"No, sir, I will not," said Mary, more resolutely still. Her repulsion +was getting stronger. + +"I tell you, there's no time to lose." + +"I cannot help that, sir. I will not let the close of your life soil +the beginning of mine. I will not touch your iron chest or your will." +She moved to a little distance from the bedside. + +The old man paused with a blank stare for a little while, holding the +one key erect on the ring; then with an agitated jerk he began to work +with his bony left hand at emptying the tin box before him. + +"Missy," he began to say, hurriedly, "look here! take the money--the +notes and gold--look here--take it--you shall have it all--do as I +tell you." + +He made an effort to stretch out the key towards her as far as +possible, and Mary again retreated. + +"I will not touch your key or your money, sir. Pray don't ask me to do +it again. If you do, I must go and call your brother." + +He let his hand fall, and for the first time in her life Mary saw old +Peter Featherstone begin to cry childishly. She said, in as gentle a +tone as she could command, "Pray put up your money, sir;" and then went +away to her seat by the fire, hoping this would help to convince him +that it was useless to say more. Presently he rallied and said +eagerly-- + +"Look here, then. Call the young chap. Call Fred Vincy." + +Mary's heart began to beat more quickly. Various ideas rushed through +her mind as to what the burning of a second will might imply. She had +to make a difficult decision in a hurry. + +"I will call him, if you will let me call Mr. Jonah and others with +him." + +"Nobody else, I say. The young chap. I shall do as I like." + +"Wait till broad daylight, sir, when every one is stirring. Or let me +call Simmons now, to go and fetch the lawyer? He can be here in less +than two hours." + +"Lawyer? What do I want with the lawyer? Nobody shall know--I say, +nobody shall know. I shall do as I like." + +"Let me call some one else, sir," said Mary, persuasively. She did not +like her position--alone with the old man, who seemed to show a strange +flaring of nervous energy which enabled him to speak again and again +without falling into his usual cough; yet she desired not to push +unnecessarily the contradiction which agitated him. "Let me, pray, +call some one else." + +"You let me alone, I say. Look here, missy. Take the money. You'll +never have the chance again. It's pretty nigh two hundred--there's +more in the box, and nobody knows how much there was. Take it and do +as I tell you." + +Mary, standing by the fire, saw its red light falling on the old man, +propped up on his pillows and bed-rest, with his bony hand holding out +the key, and the money lying on the quilt before him. She never forgot +that vision of a man wanting to do as he liked at the last. But the +way in which he had put the offer of the money urged her to speak with +harder resolution than ever. + +"It is of no use, sir. I will not do it. Put up your money. I will +not touch your money. I will do anything else I can to comfort you; +but I will not touch your keys or your money." + +"Anything else anything else!" said old Featherstone, with hoarse rage, +which, as if in a nightmare, tried to be loud, and yet was only just +audible. "I want nothing else. You come here--you come here." + +Mary approached him cautiously, knowing him too well. She saw him +dropping his keys and trying to grasp his stick, while he looked at her +like an aged hyena, the muscles of his face getting distorted with the +effort of his hand. She paused at a safe distance. + +"Let me give you some cordial," she said, quietly, "and try to compose +yourself. You will perhaps go to sleep. And to-morrow by daylight you +can do as you like." + +He lifted the stick, in spite of her being beyond his reach, and threw +it with a hard effort which was but impotence. It fell, slipping over +the foot of the bed. Mary let it lie, and retreated to her chair by +the fire. By-and-by she would go to him with the cordial. Fatigue +would make him passive. It was getting towards the chillest moment of +the morning, the fire had got low, and she could see through the chink +between the moreen window-curtains the light whitened by the blind. +Having put some wood on the fire and thrown a shawl over her, she sat +down, hoping that Mr. Featherstone might now fall asleep. If she went +near him the irritation might be kept up. He had said nothing after +throwing the stick, but she had seen him taking his keys again and +laying his right hand on the money. He did not put it up, however, and +she thought that he was dropping off to sleep. + +But Mary herself began to be more agitated by the remembrance of what +she had gone through, than she had been by the reality--questioning +those acts of hers which had come imperatively and excluded all +question in the critical moment. + +Presently the dry wood sent out a flame which illuminated every +crevice, and Mary saw that the old man was lying quietly with his head +turned a little on one side. She went towards him with inaudible +steps, and thought that his face looked strangely motionless; but the +next moment the movement of the flame communicating itself to all +objects made her uncertain. The violent beating of her heart rendered +her perceptions so doubtful that even when she touched him and listened +for his breathing, she could not trust her conclusions. She went to +the window and gently propped aside the curtain and blind, so that the +still light of the sky fell on the bed. + +The next moment she ran to the bell and rang it energetically. In a +very little while there was no longer any doubt that Peter Featherstone +was dead, with his right hand clasping the keys, and his left hand +lying on the heap of notes and gold. + + + + + +BOOK IV. + + + + + +THREE LOVE PROBLEMS. + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + + 1st Gent. Such men as this are feathers, chips, and straws. + Carry no weight, no force. + 2d Gent. But levity + Is causal too, and makes the sum of weight. + For power finds its place in lack of power; + Advance is cession, and the driven ship + May run aground because the helmsman's thought + Lacked force to balance opposites." + + +It was on a morning of May that Peter Featherstone was buried. In the +prosaic neighborhood of Middlemarch, May was not always warm and sunny, +and on this particular morning a chill wind was blowing the blossoms +from the surrounding gardens on to the green mounds of Lowick +churchyard. Swiftly moving clouds only now and then allowed a gleam to +light up any object, whether ugly or beautiful, that happened to stand +within its golden shower. In the churchyard the objects were +remarkably various, for there was a little country crowd waiting to see +the funeral. The news had spread that it was to be a "big burying;" +the old gentleman had left written directions about everything and +meant to have a funeral "beyond his betters." This was true; for old +Featherstone had not been a Harpagon whose passions had all been +devoured by the ever-lean and ever-hungry passion of saving, and who +would drive a bargain with his undertaker beforehand. He loved money, +but he also loved to spend it in gratifying his peculiar tastes, and +perhaps he loved it best of all as a means of making others feel his +power more or less uncomfortably. If any one will here contend that +there must have been traits of goodness in old Featherstone, I will not +presume to deny this; but I must observe that goodness is of a modest +nature, easily discouraged, and when much privacy, elbowed in early +life by unabashed vices, is apt to retire into extreme privacy, so that +it is more easily believed in by those who construct a selfish old +gentleman theoretically, than by those who form the narrower judgments +based on his personal acquaintance. In any case, he had been bent on +having a handsome funeral, and on having persons "bid" to it who would +rather have stayed at home. He had even desired that female relatives +should follow him to the grave, and poor sister Martha had taken a +difficult journey for this purpose from the Chalky Flats. She and Jane +would have been altogether cheered (in a tearful manner) by this sign +that a brother who disliked seeing them while he was living had been +prospectively fond of their presence when he should have become a +testator, if the sign had not been made equivocal by being extended to +Mrs. Vincy, whose expense in handsome crape seemed to imply the most +presumptuous hopes, aggravated by a bloom of complexion which told +pretty plainly that she was not a blood-relation, but of that generally +objectionable class called wife's kin. + +We are all of us imaginative in some form or other, for images are the +brood of desire; and poor old Featherstone, who laughed much at the way +in which others cajoled themselves, did not escape the fellowship of +illusion. In writing the programme for his burial he certainly did not +make clear to himself that his pleasure in the little drama of which it +formed a part was confined to anticipation. In chuckling over the +vexations he could inflict by the rigid clutch of his dead hand, he +inevitably mingled his consciousness with that livid stagnant presence, +and so far as he was preoccupied with a future life, it was with one of +gratification inside his coffin. Thus old Featherstone was +imaginative, after his fashion. + +However, the three mourning-coaches were filled according to the +written orders of the deceased. There were pall-bearers on horseback, +with the richest scarfs and hatbands, and even the under-bearers had +trappings of woe which were of a good well-priced quality. The black +procession, when dismounted, looked the larger for the smallness of the +churchyard; the heavy human faces and the black draperies shivering in +the wind seemed to tell of a world strangely incongruous with the +lightly dropping blossoms and the gleams of sunshine on the daisies. +The clergyman who met the procession was Mr. Cadwallader--also +according to the request of Peter Featherstone, prompted as usual by +peculiar reasons. Having a contempt for curates, whom he always called +understrappers, he was resolved to be buried by a beneficed clergyman. +Mr. Casaubon was out of the question, not merely because he declined +duty of this sort, but because Featherstone had an especial dislike to +him as the rector of his own parish, who had a lien on the land in the +shape of tithe, also as the deliverer of morning sermons, which the old +man, being in his pew and not at all sleepy, had been obliged to sit +through with an inward snarl. He had an objection to a parson stuck up +above his head preaching to him. But his relations with Mr. +Cadwallader had been of a different kind: the trout-stream which ran +through Mr. Casaubon's land took its course through Featherstone's +also, so that Mr. Cadwallader was a parson who had had to ask a favor +instead of preaching. Moreover, he was one of the high gentry living +four miles away from Lowick, and was thus exalted to an equal sky with +the sheriff of the county and other dignities vaguely regarded as +necessary to the system of things. There would be a satisfaction in +being buried by Mr. Cadwallader, whose very name offered a fine +opportunity for pronouncing wrongly if you liked. + +This distinction conferred on the Rector of Tipton and Freshitt was the +reason why Mrs. Cadwallader made one of the group that watched old +Featherstone's funeral from an upper window of the manor. She was not +fond of visiting that house, but she liked, as she said, to see +collections of strange animals such as there would be at this funeral; +and she had persuaded Sir James and the young Lady Chettam to drive the +Rector and herself to Lowick in order that the visit might be +altogether pleasant. + +"I will go anywhere with you, Mrs. Cadwallader," Celia had said; "but I +don't like funerals." + +"Oh, my dear, when you have a clergyman in your family you must +accommodate your tastes: I did that very early. When I married +Humphrey I made up my mind to like sermons, and I set out by liking the +end very much. That soon spread to the middle and the beginning, +because I couldn't have the end without them." + +"No, to be sure not," said the Dowager Lady Chettam, with stately +emphasis. + +The upper window from which the funeral could be well seen was in the +room occupied by Mr. Casaubon when he had been forbidden to work; but +he had resumed nearly his habitual style of life now in spite of +warnings and prescriptions, and after politely welcoming Mrs. +Cadwallader had slipped again into the library to chew a cud of erudite +mistake about Cush and Mizraim. + +But for her visitors Dorothea too might have been shut up in the +library, and would not have witnessed this scene of old Featherstone's +funeral, which, aloof as it seemed to be from the tenor of her life, +always afterwards came back to her at the touch of certain sensitive +points in memory, just as the vision of St. Peter's at Rome was inwoven +with moods of despondency. Scenes which make vital changes in our +neighbors' lot are but the background of our own, yet, like a +particular aspect of the fields and trees, they become associated for +us with the epochs of our own history, and make a part of that unity +which lies in the selection of our keenest consciousness. + +The dream-like association of something alien and ill-understood with +the deepest secrets of her experience seemed to mirror that sense of +loneliness which was due to the very ardor of Dorothea's nature. The +country gentry of old time lived in a rarefied social air: dotted apart +on their stations up the mountain they looked down with imperfect +discrimination on the belts of thicker life below. And Dorothea was +not at ease in the perspective and chilliness of that height. + +"I shall not look any more," said Celia, after the train had entered +the church, placing herself a little behind her husband's elbow so that +she could slyly touch his coat with her cheek. "I dare say Dodo likes +it: she is fond of melancholy things and ugly people." + +"I am fond of knowing something about the people I live among," said +Dorothea, who had been watching everything with the interest of a monk +on his holiday tour. "It seems to me we know nothing of our neighbors, +unless they are cottagers. One is constantly wondering what sort of +lives other people lead, and how they take things. I am quite obliged +to Mrs. Cadwallader for coming and calling me out of the library." + +"Quite right to feel obliged to me," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Your rich +Lowick farmers are as curious as any buffaloes or bisons, and I dare +say you don't half see them at church. They are quite different from +your uncle's tenants or Sir James's--monsters--farmers without +landlords--one can't tell how to class them." + +"Most of these followers are not Lowick people," said Sir James; "I +suppose they are legatees from a distance, or from Middlemarch. +Lovegood tells me the old fellow has left a good deal of money as well +as land." + +"Think of that now! when so many younger sons can't dine at their own +expense," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Ah," turning round at the sound of +the opening door, "here is Mr. Brooke. I felt that we were incomplete +before, and here is the explanation. You are come to see this odd +funeral, of course?" + +"No, I came to look after Casaubon--to see how he goes on, you know. +And to bring a little news--a little news, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, +nodding at Dorothea as she came towards him. "I looked into the +library, and I saw Casaubon over his books. I told him it wouldn't do: +I said, 'This will never do, you know: think of your wife, Casaubon.' +And he promised me to come up. I didn't tell him my news: I said, he +must come up." + +"Ah, now they are coming out of church," Mrs. Cadwallader exclaimed. +"Dear me, what a wonderfully mixed set! Mr. Lydgate as doctor, I +suppose. But that is really a good looking woman, and the fair young +man must be her son. Who are they, Sir James, do you know?" + +"I see Vincy, the Mayor of Middlemarch; they are probably his wife and +son," said Sir James, looking interrogatively at Mr. Brooke, who nodded +and said-- + +"Yes, a very decent family--a very good fellow is Vincy; a credit to +the manufacturing interest. You have seen him at my house, you know." + +"Ah, yes: one of your secret committee," said Mrs. Cadwallader, +provokingly. + +"A coursing fellow, though," said Sir James, with a fox-hunter's +disgust. + +"And one of those who suck the life out of the wretched handloom +weavers in Tipton and Freshitt. That is how his family look so fair +and sleek," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Those dark, purple-faced people +are an excellent foil. Dear me, they are like a set of jugs! Do look +at Humphrey: one might fancy him an ugly archangel towering above them +in his white surplice." + +"It's a solemn thing, though, a funeral," said Mr. Brooke, "if you take +it in that light, you know." + +"But I am not taking it in that light. I can't wear my solemnity too +often, else it will go to rags. It was time the old man died, and none +of these people are sorry." + +"How piteous!" said Dorothea. "This funeral seems to me the most +dismal thing I ever saw. It is a blot on the morning I cannot bear to +think that any one should die and leave no love behind." + +She was going to say more, but she saw her husband enter and seat +himself a little in the background. The difference his presence made +to her was not always a happy one: she felt that he often inwardly +objected to her speech. + +"Positively," exclaimed Mrs. Cadwallader, "there is a new face come out +from behind that broad man queerer than any of them: a little round +head with bulging eyes--a sort of frog-face--do look. He must be of +another blood, I think." + +"Let me see!" said Celia, with awakened curiosity, standing behind Mrs. +Cadwallader and leaning forward over her head. "Oh, what an odd face!" +Then with a quick change to another sort of surprised expression, she +added, "Why, Dodo, you never told me that Mr. Ladislaw was come again!" + +Dorothea felt a shock of alarm: every one noticed her sudden paleness +as she looked up immediately at her uncle, while Mr. Casaubon looked at +her. + +"He came with me, you know; he is my guest--puts up with me at the +Grange," said Mr. Brooke, in his easiest tone, nodding at Dorothea, as +if the announcement were just what she might have expected. "And we +have brought the picture at the top of the carriage. I knew you would +be pleased with the surprise, Casaubon. There you are to the very +life--as Aquinas, you know. Quite the right sort of thing. And you +will hear young Ladislaw talk about it. He talks uncommonly +well--points out this, that, and the other--knows art and everything of +that kind--companionable, you know--is up with you in any track--what +I've been wanting a long while." + +Mr. Casaubon bowed with cold politeness, mastering his irritation, but +only so far as to be silent. He remembered Will's letter quite as well +as Dorothea did; he had noticed that it was not among the letters which +had been reserved for him on his recovery, and secretly concluding that +Dorothea had sent word to Will not to come to Lowick, he had shrunk +with proud sensitiveness from ever recurring to the subject. He now +inferred that she had asked her uncle to invite Will to the Grange; and +she felt it impossible at that moment to enter into any explanation. + +Mrs. Cadwallader's eyes, diverted from the churchyard, saw a good deal +of dumb show which was not so intelligible to her as she could have +desired, and could not repress the question, "Who is Mr. Ladislaw?" + +"A young relative of Mr. Casaubon's," said Sir James, promptly. His +good-nature often made him quick and clear-seeing in personal matters, +and he had divined from Dorothea's glance at her husband that there was +some alarm in her mind. + +"A very nice young fellow--Casaubon has done everything for him," +explained Mr. Brooke. "He repays your expense in him, Casaubon," he +went on, nodding encouragingly. "I hope he will stay with me a long +while and we shall make something of my documents. I have plenty of +ideas and facts, you know, and I can see he is just the man to put them +into shape--remembers what the right quotations are, omne tulit +punctum, and that sort of thing--gives subjects a kind of turn. I +invited him some time ago when you were ill, Casaubon; Dorothea said +you couldn't have anybody in the house, you know, and she asked me to +write." + +Poor Dorothea felt that every word of her uncle's was about as pleasant +as a grain of sand in the eye to Mr. Casaubon. It would be altogether +unfitting now to explain that she had not wished her uncle to invite +Will Ladislaw. She could not in the least make clear to herself the +reasons for her husband's dislike to his presence--a dislike painfully +impressed on her by the scene in the library; but she felt the +unbecomingness of saying anything that might convey a notion of it to +others. Mr. Casaubon, indeed, had not thoroughly represented those +mixed reasons to himself; irritated feeling with him, as with all of +us, seeking rather for justification than for self-knowledge. But he +wished to repress outward signs, and only Dorothea could discern the +changes in her husband's face before he observed with more of dignified +bending and sing-song than usual-- + +"You are exceedingly hospitable, my dear sir; and I owe you +acknowledgments for exercising your hospitality towards a relative of +mine." + +The funeral was ended now, and the churchyard was being cleared. + +"Now you can see him, Mrs. Cadwallader," said Celia. "He is just like +a miniature of Mr. Casaubon's aunt that hangs in Dorothea's +boudoir--quite nice-looking." + +"A very pretty sprig," said Mrs. Cadwallader, dryly. "What is your +nephew to be, Mr. Casaubon?" + +"Pardon me, he is not my nephew. He is my cousin." + +"Well, you know," interposed Mr. Brooke, "he is trying his wings. He +is just the sort of young fellow to rise. I should be glad to give him +an opportunity. He would make a good secretary, now, like Hobbes, +Milton, Swift--that sort of man." + +"I understand," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "One who can write speeches." + +"I'll fetch him in now, eh, Casaubon?" said Mr. Brooke. "He wouldn't +come in till I had announced him, you know. And we'll go down and look +at the picture. There you are to the life: a deep subtle sort of +thinker with his fore-finger on the page, while Saint Bonaventure or +somebody else, rather fat and florid, is looking up at the Trinity. +Everything is symbolical, you know--the higher style of art: I like +that up to a certain point, but not too far--it's rather straining to +keep up with, you know. But you are at home in that, Casaubon. And +your painter's flesh is good--solidity, transparency, everything of +that sort. I went into that a great deal at one time. However, I'll +go and fetch Ladislaw." + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + + "Non, je ne comprends pas de plus charmant plaisir + Que de voir d'heritiers une troupe affligee + Le maintien interdit, et la mine allongee, + Lire un long testament ou pales, etonnes + On leur laisse un bonsoir avec un pied de nez. + Pour voir au naturel leur tristesse profonde + Je reviendrais, je crois, expres de l'autre monde." + --REGNARD: Le Legataire Universel. + + +When the animals entered the Ark in pairs, one may imagine that allied +species made much private remark on each other, and were tempted to +think that so many forms feeding on the same store of fodder were +eminently superfluous, as tending to diminish the rations. (I fear the +part played by the vultures on that occasion would be too painful for +art to represent, those birds being disadvantageously naked about the +gullet, and apparently without rites and ceremonies.) + +The same sort of temptation befell the Christian Carnivora who formed +Peter Featherstone's funeral procession; most of them having their +minds bent on a limited store which each would have liked to get the +most of. The long-recognized blood-relations and connections by +marriage made already a goodly number, which, multiplied by +possibilities, presented a fine range for jealous conjecture and +pathetic hopefulness. Jealousy of the Vincys had created a fellowship +in hostility among all persons of the Featherstone blood, so that in +the absence of any decided indication that one of themselves was to +have more than the rest, the dread lest that long-legged Fred Vincy +should have the land was necessarily dominant, though it left abundant +feeling and leisure for vaguer jealousies, such as were entertained +towards Mary Garth. Solomon found time to reflect that Jonah was +undeserving, and Jonah to abuse Solomon as greedy; Jane, the elder +sister, held that Martha's children ought not to expect so much as the +young Waules; and Martha, more lax on the subject of primogeniture, was +sorry to think that Jane was so "having." These nearest of kin were +naturally impressed with the unreasonableness of expectations in +cousins and second cousins, and used their arithmetic in reckoning the +large sums that small legacies might mount to, if there were too many +of them. Two cousins were present to hear the will, and a second +cousin besides Mr. Trumbull. This second cousin was a Middlemarch +mercer of polite manners and superfluous aspirates. The two cousins +were elderly men from Brassing, one of them conscious of claims on the +score of inconvenient expense sustained by him in presents of oysters +and other eatables to his rich cousin Peter; the other entirely +saturnine, leaning his hands and chin on a stick, and conscious of +claims based on no narrow performance but on merit generally: both +blameless citizens of Brassing, who wished that Jonah Featherstone did +not live there. The wit of a family is usually best received among +strangers. + +"Why, Trumbull himself is pretty sure of five hundred--_that_ you may +depend,--I shouldn't wonder if my brother promised him," said Solomon, +musing aloud with his sisters, the evening before the funeral. + +"Dear, dear!" said poor sister Martha, whose imagination of hundreds +had been habitually narrowed to the amount of her unpaid rent. + +But in the morning all the ordinary currents of conjecture were +disturbed by the presence of a strange mourner who had plashed among +them as if from the moon. This was the stranger described by Mrs. +Cadwallader as frog-faced: a man perhaps about two or three and thirty, +whose prominent eyes, thin-lipped, downward-curved mouth, and hair +sleekly brushed away from a forehead that sank suddenly above the ridge +of the eyebrows, certainly gave his face a batrachian unchangeableness +of expression. Here, clearly, was a new legatee; else why was he +bidden as a mourner? Here were new possibilities, raising a new +uncertainty, which almost checked remark in the mourning-coaches. We +are all humiliated by the sudden discovery of a fact which has existed +very comfortably and perhaps been staring at us in private while we +have been making up our world entirely without it. No one had seen +this questionable stranger before except Mary Garth, and she knew +nothing more of him than that he had twice been to Stone Court when Mr. +Featherstone was down-stairs, and had sat alone with him for several +hours. She had found an opportunity of mentioning this to her father, +and perhaps Caleb's were the only eyes, except the lawyer's, which +examined the stranger with more of inquiry than of disgust or +suspicion. Caleb Garth, having little expectation and less cupidity, +was interested in the verification of his own guesses, and the calmness +with which he half smilingly rubbed his chin and shot intelligent +glances much as if he were valuing a tree, made a fine contrast with +the alarm or scorn visible in other faces when the unknown mourner, +whose name was understood to be Rigg, entered the wainscoted parlor and +took his seat near the door to make part of the audience when the will +should be read. Just then Mr. Solomon and Mr. Jonah were gone +up-stairs with the lawyer to search for the will; and Mrs. Waule, +seeing two vacant seats between herself and Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, had +the spirit to move next to that great authority, who was handling his +watch-seals and trimming his outlines with a determination not to show +anything so compromising to a man of ability as wonder or surprise. + +"I suppose you know everything about what my poor brother's done, Mr. +Trumbull," said Mrs. Waule, in the lowest of her woolly tones, while +she turned her crape-shadowed bonnet towards Mr. Trumbull's ear. + +"My good lady, whatever was told me was told in confidence," said the +auctioneer, putting his hand up to screen that secret. + +"Them who've made sure of their good-luck may be disappointed yet," +Mrs. Waule continued, finding some relief in this communication. + +"Hopes are often delusive," said Mr. Trumbull, still in confidence. + +"Ah!" said Mrs. Waule, looking across at the Vincys, and then moving +back to the side of her sister Martha. + +"It's wonderful how close poor Peter was," she said, in the same +undertones. "We none of us know what he might have had on his mind. I +only hope and trust he wasn't a worse liver than we think of, Martha." + +Poor Mrs. Cranch was bulky, and, breathing asthmatically, had the +additional motive for making her remarks unexceptionable and giving +them a general bearing, that even her whispers were loud and liable to +sudden bursts like those of a deranged barrel-organ. + +"I never _was_ covetous, Jane," she replied; "but I have six children +and have buried three, and I didn't marry into money. The eldest, that +sits there, is but nineteen--so I leave you to guess. And stock always +short, and land most awkward. But if ever I've begged and prayed; it's +been to God above; though where there's one brother a bachelor and the +other childless after twice marrying--anybody might think!" + +Meanwhile, Mr. Vincy had glanced at the passive face of Mr. Rigg, and +had taken out his snuff-box and tapped it, but had put it again +unopened as an indulgence which, however clarifying to the judgment, +was unsuited to the occasion. "I shouldn't wonder if Featherstone had +better feelings than any of us gave him credit for," he observed, in +the ear of his wife. "This funeral shows a thought about everybody: it +looks well when a man wants to be followed by his friends, and if they +are humble, not to be ashamed of them. I should be all the better +pleased if he'd left lots of small legacies. They may be uncommonly +useful to fellows in a small way." + +"Everything is as handsome as could be, crape and silk and everything," +said Mrs. Vincy, contentedly. + +But I am sorry to say that Fred was under some difficulty in repressing +a laugh, which would have been more unsuitable than his father's +snuff-box. Fred had overheard Mr. Jonah suggesting something about a +"love-child," and with this thought in his mind, the stranger's face, +which happened to be opposite him, affected him too ludicrously. Mary +Garth, discerning his distress in the twitchings of his mouth, and his +recourse to a cough, came cleverly to his rescue by asking him to +change seats with her, so that he got into a shadowy corner. Fred was +feeling as good-naturedly as possible towards everybody, including +Rigg; and having some relenting towards all these people who were less +lucky than he was aware of being himself, he would not for the world +have behaved amiss; still, it was particularly easy to laugh. + +But the entrance of the lawyer and the two brothers drew every one's +attention. The lawyer was Mr. Standish, and he had come to Stone Court +this morning believing that he knew thoroughly well who would be +pleased and who disappointed before the day was over. The will he +expected to read was the last of three which he had drawn up for Mr. +Featherstone. Mr. Standish was not a man who varied his manners: he +behaved with the same deep-voiced, off-hand civility to everybody, as +if he saw no difference in them, and talked chiefly of the hay-crop, +which would be "very fine, by God!" of the last bulletins concerning +the King, and of the Duke of Clarence, who was a sailor every inch of +him, and just the man to rule over an island like Britain. + +Old Featherstone had often reflected as he sat looking at the fire that +Standish would be surprised some day: it is true that if he had done as +he liked at the last, and burnt the will drawn up by another lawyer, he +would not have secured that minor end; still he had had his pleasure in +ruminating on it. And certainly Mr. Standish was surprised, but not at +all sorry; on the contrary, he rather enjoyed the zest of a little +curiosity in his own mind, which the discovery of a second will added +to the prospective amazement on the part of the Featherstone family. + +As to the sentiments of Solomon and Jonah, they were held in utter +suspense: it seemed to them that the old will would have a certain +validity, and that there might be such an interlacement of poor Peter's +former and latter intentions as to create endless "lawing" before +anybody came by their own--an inconvenience which would have at least +the advantage of going all round. Hence the brothers showed a +thoroughly neutral gravity as they re-entered with Mr. Standish; but +Solomon took out his white handkerchief again with a sense that in any +case there would be affecting passages, and crying at funerals, however +dry, was customarily served up in lawn. + +Perhaps the person who felt the most throbbing excitement at this +moment was Mary Garth, in the consciousness that it was she who had +virtually determined the production of this second will, which might +have momentous effects on the lot of some persons present. No soul +except herself knew what had passed on that final night. + +"The will I hold in my hand," said Mr. Standish, who, seated at the +table in the middle of the room, took his time about everything, +including the coughs with which he showed a disposition to clear his +voice, "was drawn up by myself and executed by our deceased friend on +the 9th of August, 1825. But I find that there is a subsequent +instrument hitherto unknown to me, bearing date the 20th of July, 1826, +hardly a year later than the previous one. And there is farther, I +see"--Mr. Standish was cautiously travelling over the document with his +spectacles--"a codicil to this latter will, bearing date March 1, 1828." + +"Dear, dear!" said sister Martha, not meaning to be audible, but driven +to some articulation under this pressure of dates. + +"I shall begin by reading the earlier will," continued Mr. Standish, +"since such, as appears by his not having destroyed the document, was +the intention of deceased." + +The preamble was felt to be rather long, and several besides Solomon +shook their heads pathetically, looking on the ground: all eyes avoided +meeting other eyes, and were chiefly fixed either on the spots in the +table-cloth or on Mr. Standish's bald head; excepting Mary Garth's. +When all the rest were trying to look nowhere in particular, it was +safe for her to look at them. And at the sound of the first "give and +bequeath" she could see all complexions changing subtly, as if some +faint vibration were passing through them, save that of Mr. Rigg. He +sat in unaltered calm, and, in fact, the company, preoccupied with more +important problems, and with the complication of listening to bequests +which might or might not be revoked, had ceased to think of him. Fred +blushed, and Mr. Vincy found it impossible to do without his snuff-box +in his hand, though he kept it closed. + +The small bequests came first, and even the recollection that there was +another will and that poor Peter might have thought better of it, could +not quell the rising disgust and indignation. One likes to be done +well by in every tense, past, present, and future. And here was Peter +capable five years ago of leaving only two hundred apiece to his own +brothers and sisters, and only a hundred apiece to his own nephews and +nieces: the Garths were not mentioned, but Mrs. Vincy and Rosamond were +each to have a hundred. Mr. Trumbull was to have the gold-headed cane +and fifty pounds; the other second cousins and the cousins present were +each to have the like handsome sum, which, as the saturnine cousin +observed, was a sort of legacy that left a man nowhere; and there was +much more of such offensive dribbling in favor of persons not +present--problematical, and, it was to be feared, low connections. +Altogether, reckoning hastily, here were about three thousand disposed of. +Where then had Peter meant the rest of the money to go--and where the +land? and what was revoked and what not revoked--and was the revocation +for better or for worse? All emotion must be conditional, and might turn +out to be the wrong thing. The men were strong enough to bear up and +keep quiet under this confused suspense; some letting their lower lip +fall, others pursing it up, according to the habit of their muscles. +But Jane and Martha sank under the rush of questions, and began to cry; +poor Mrs. Cranch being half moved with the consolation of getting any +hundreds at all without working for them, and half aware that her share +was scanty; whereas Mrs. Waule's mind was entirely flooded with the +sense of being an own sister and getting little, while somebody else +was to have much. The general expectation now was that the "much" +would fall to Fred Vincy, but the Vincys themselves were surprised when +ten thousand pounds in specified investments were declared to be +bequeathed to him:--was the land coming too? Fred bit his lips: it was +difficult to help smiling, and Mrs. Vincy felt herself the happiest of +women--possible revocation shrinking out of sight in this dazzling +vision. + +There was still a residue of personal property as well as the land, but +the whole was left to one person, and that person was--O +possibilities! O expectations founded on the favor of "close" old +gentlemen! O endless vocatives that would still leave expression +slipping helpless from the measurement of mortal folly!--that +residuary legatee was Joshua Rigg, who was also sole executor, and who +was to take thenceforth the name of Featherstone. + +There was a rustling which seemed like a shudder running round the +room. Every one stared afresh at Mr. Rigg, who apparently experienced +no surprise. + +"A most singular testamentary disposition!" exclaimed Mr. Trumbull, +preferring for once that he should be considered ignorant in the past. +"But there is a second will--there is a further document. We have not +yet heard the final wishes of the deceased." + +Mary Garth was feeling that what they had yet to hear were not the +final wishes. The second will revoked everything except the legacies +to the low persons before mentioned (some alterations in these being +the occasion of the codicil), and the bequest of all the land lying in +Lowick parish with all the stock and household furniture, to Joshua +Rigg. The residue of the property was to be devoted to the erection +and endowment of almshouses for old men, to be called Featherstone's +Alms-Houses, and to be built on a piece of land near Middlemarch +already bought for the purpose by the testator, he wishing--so the +document declared--to please God Almighty. Nobody present had a +farthing; but Mr. Trumbull had the gold-headed cane. It took some time +for the company to recover the power of expression. Mary dared not +look at Fred. + +Mr. Vincy was the first to speak--after using his snuff-box +energetically--and he spoke with loud indignation. "The most +unaccountable will I ever heard! I should say he was not in his right +mind when he made it. I should say this last will was void," added Mr. +Vincy, feeling that this expression put the thing in the true light. +"Eh Standish?" + +"Our deceased friend always knew what he was about, I think," said Mr. +Standish. "Everything is quite regular. Here is a letter from +Clemmens of Brassing tied with the will. He drew it up. A very +respectable solicitor." + +"I never noticed any alienation of mind--any aberration of intellect in +the late Mr. Featherstone," said Borthrop Trumbull, "but I call this +will eccentric. I was always willingly of service to the old soul; and +he intimated pretty plainly a sense of obligation which would show +itself in his will. The gold-headed cane is farcical considered as an +acknowledgment to me; but happily I am above mercenary considerations." + +"There's nothing very surprising in the matter that I can see," said +Caleb Garth. "Anybody might have had more reason for wondering if the +will had been what you might expect from an open-minded straightforward +man. For my part, I wish there was no such thing as a will." + +"That's a strange sentiment to come from a Christian man, by God!" said +the lawyer. "I should like to know how you will back that up, Garth!" + +"Oh," said Caleb, leaning forward, adjusting his finger-tips with +nicety and looking meditatively on the ground. It always seemed to him +that words were the hardest part of "business." + +But here Mr. Jonah Featherstone made himself heard. "Well, he always +was a fine hypocrite, was my brother Peter. But this will cuts out +everything. If I'd known, a wagon and six horses shouldn't have drawn +me from Brassing. I'll put a white hat and drab coat on to-morrow." + +"Dear, dear," wept Mrs. Cranch, "and we've been at the expense of +travelling, and that poor lad sitting idle here so long! It's the +first time I ever heard my brother Peter was so wishful to please God +Almighty; but if I was to be struck helpless I must say it's hard--I +can think no other." + +"It'll do him no good where he's gone, that's my belief," said Solomon, +with a bitterness which was remarkably genuine, though his tone could +not help being sly. "Peter was a bad liver, and almshouses won't cover +it, when he's had the impudence to show it at the last." + +"And all the while had got his own lawful family--brothers and sisters +and nephews and nieces--and has sat in church with 'em whenever he +thought well to come," said Mrs. Waule. "And might have left his +property so respectable, to them that's never been used to extravagance +or unsteadiness in no manner of way--and not so poor but what they +could have saved every penny and made more of it. And me--the trouble +I've been at, times and times, to come here and be sisterly--and him +with things on his mind all the while that might make anybody's flesh +creep. But if the Almighty's allowed it, he means to punish him for +it. Brother Solomon, I shall be going, if you'll drive me." + +"I've no desire to put my foot on the premises again," said Solomon. +"I've got land of my own and property of my own to will away." + +"It's a poor tale how luck goes in the world," said Jonah. "It never +answers to have a bit of spirit in you. You'd better be a dog in the +manger. But those above ground might learn a lesson. One fool's will +is enough in a family." + +"There's more ways than one of being a fool," said Solomon. "I shan't +leave my money to be poured down the sink, and I shan't leave it to +foundlings from Africay. I like Featherstones that were brewed such, +and not turned Featherstones with sticking the name on 'em." + +Solomon addressed these remarks in a loud aside to Mrs. Waule as he +rose to accompany her. Brother Jonah felt himself capable of much more +stinging wit than this, but he reflected that there was no use in +offending the new proprietor of Stone Court, until you were certain +that he was quite without intentions of hospitality towards witty men +whose name he was about to bear. + +Mr. Joshua Rigg, in fact, appeared to trouble himself little about any +innuendoes, but showed a notable change of manner, walking coolly up to +Mr. Standish and putting business questions with much coolness. He had +a high chirping voice and a vile accent. Fred, whom he no longer moved +to laughter, thought him the lowest monster he had ever seen. But Fred +was feeling rather sick. The Middlemarch mercer waited for an +opportunity of engaging Mr. Rigg in conversation: there was no knowing +how many pairs of legs the new proprietor might require hose for, and +profits were more to be relied on than legacies. Also, the mercer, as +a second cousin, was dispassionate enough to feel curiosity. + +Mr. Vincy, after his one outburst, had remained proudly silent, though +too much preoccupied with unpleasant feelings to think of moving, till +he observed that his wife had gone to Fred's side and was crying +silently while she held her darling's hand. He rose immediately, and +turning his back on the company while he said to her in an +undertone,--"Don't give way, Lucy; don't make a fool of yourself, my +dear, before these people," he added in his usual loud voice--"Go and +order the phaeton, Fred; I have no time to waste." + +Mary Garth had before this been getting ready to go home with her +father. She met Fred in the hall, and now for the first time had the +courage to look at him. He had that withered sort of paleness which +will sometimes come on young faces, and his hand was very cold when she +shook it. Mary too was agitated; she was conscious that fatally, +without will of her own, she had perhaps made a great difference to +Fred's lot. + +"Good-by," she said, with affectionate sadness. "Be brave, Fred. I do +believe you are better without the money. What was the good of it to +Mr. Featherstone?" + +"That's all very fine," said Fred, pettishly. "What is a fellow to do? +I must go into the Church now." (He knew that this would vex Mary: +very well; then she must tell him what else he could do.) "And I +thought I should be able to pay your father at once and make everything +right. And you have not even a hundred pounds left you. What shall +you do now, Mary?" + +"Take another situation, of course, as soon as I can get one. My +father has enough to do to keep the rest, without me. Good-by." + +In a very short time Stone Court was cleared of well-brewed +Featherstones and other long-accustomed visitors. Another stranger had +been brought to settle in the neighborhood of Middlemarch, but in the +case of Mr. Rigg Featherstone there was more discontent with immediate +visible consequences than speculation as to the effect which his +presence might have in the future. No soul was prophetic enough to +have any foreboding as to what might appear on the trial of Joshua Rigg. + +And here I am naturally led to reflect on the means of elevating a low +subject. Historical parallels are remarkably efficient in this way. +The chief objection to them is, that the diligent narrator may lack +space, or (what is often the same thing) may not be able to think of +them with any degree of particularity, though he may have a +philosophical confidence that if known they would be illustrative. It +seems an easier and shorter way to dignity, to observe that--since +there never was a true story which could not be told in parables, where +you might put a monkey for a margrave, and vice versa--whatever has +been or is to be narrated by me about low people, may be ennobled by +being considered a parable; so that if any bad habits and ugly +consequences are brought into view, the reader may have the relief of +regarding them as not more than figuratively ungenteel, and may feel +himself virtually in company with persons of some style. Thus while I +tell the truth about loobies, my reader's imagination need not be +entirely excluded from an occupation with lords; and the petty sums +which any bankrupt of high standing would be sorry to retire upon, may +be lifted to the level of high commercial transactions by the +inexpensive addition of proportional ciphers. + +As to any provincial history in which the agents are all of high moral +rank, that must be of a date long posterior to the first Reform Bill, +and Peter Featherstone, you perceive, was dead and buried some months +before Lord Grey came into office. + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + + "'Tis strange to see the humors of these men, + These great aspiring spirits, that should be wise: + . . . . . . . . + For being the nature of great spirits to love + To be where they may be most eminent; + They, rating of themselves so farre above + Us in conceit, with whom they do frequent, + Imagine how we wonder and esteeme + All that they do or say; which makes them strive + To make our admiration more extreme, + Which they suppose they cannot, 'less they give + Notice of their extreme and highest thoughts. + --DANIEL: Tragedy of Philotas. + + +Mr. Vincy went home from the reading of the will with his point of view +considerably changed in relation to many subjects. He was an +open-minded man, but given to indirect modes of expressing himself: +when he was disappointed in a market for his silk braids, he swore at +the groom; when his brother-in-law Bulstrode had vexed him, he made +cutting remarks on Methodism; and it was now apparent that he regarded +Fred's idleness with a sudden increase of severity, by his throwing an +embroidered cap out of the smoking-room on to the hall-floor. + +"Well, sir," he observed, when that young gentleman was moving off to +bed, "I hope you've made up your mind now to go up next term and pass +your examination. I've taken my resolution, so I advise you to lose no +time in taking yours." + +Fred made no answer: he was too utterly depressed. Twenty-four hours +ago he had thought that instead of needing to know what he should do, +he should by this time know that he needed to do nothing: that he +should hunt in pink, have a first-rate hunter, ride to cover on a fine +hack, and be generally respected for doing so; moreover, that he should +be able at once to pay Mr. Garth, and that Mary could no longer have +any reason for not marrying him. And all this was to have come without +study or other inconvenience, purely by the favor of providence in the +shape of an old gentleman's caprice. But now, at the end of the +twenty-four hours, all those firm expectations were upset. It was +"rather hard lines" that while he was smarting under this +disappointment he should be treated as if he could have helped it. But +he went away silently and his mother pleaded for him. + +"Don't be hard on the poor boy, Vincy. He'll turn out well yet, though +that wicked man has deceived him. I feel as sure as I sit here, Fred +will turn out well--else why was he brought back from the brink of the +grave? And I call it a robbery: it was like giving him the land, to +promise it; and what is promising, if making everybody believe is not +promising? And you see he did leave him ten thousand pounds, and then +took it away again." + +"Took it away again!" said Mr. Vincy, pettishly. "I tell you the lad's +an unlucky lad, Lucy. And you've always spoiled him." + +"Well, Vincy, he was my first, and you made a fine fuss with him when +he came. You were as proud as proud," said Mrs. Vincy, easily +recovering her cheerful smile. + +"Who knows what babies will turn to? I was fool enough, I dare say," +said the husband--more mildly, however. + +"But who has handsomer, better children than ours? Fred is far beyond +other people's sons: you may hear it in his speech, that he has kept +college company. And Rosamond--where is there a girl like her? She +might stand beside any lady in the land, and only look the better for +it. You see--Mr. Lydgate has kept the highest company and been +everywhere, and he fell in love with her at once. Not but what I could +have wished Rosamond had not engaged herself. She might have met +somebody on a visit who would have been a far better match; I mean at +her schoolfellow Miss Willoughby's. There are relations in that family +quite as high as Mr. Lydgate's." + +"Damn relations!" said Mr. Vincy; "I've had enough of them. I don't +want a son-in-law who has got nothing but his relations to recommend +him." + +"Why, my dear," said Mrs. Vincy, "you seemed as pleased as could be +about it. It's true, I wasn't at home; but Rosamond told me you hadn't +a word to say against the engagement. And she has begun to buy in the +best linen and cambric for her underclothing." + +"Not by my will," said Mr. Vincy. "I shall have enough to do this +year, with an idle scamp of a son, without paying for wedding-clothes. +The times are as tight as can be; everybody is being ruined; and I +don't believe Lydgate has got a farthing. I shan't give my consent to +their marrying. Let 'em wait, as their elders have done before 'em." + +"Rosamond will take it hard, Vincy, and you know you never could bear +to cross her." + +"Yes, I could. The sooner the engagement's off, the better. I don't +believe he'll ever make an income, the way he goes on. He makes +enemies; that's all I hear of his making." + +"But he stands very high with Mr. Bulstrode, my dear. The marriage +would please _him_, I should think." + +"Please the deuce!" said Mr. Vincy. "Bulstrode won't pay for their +keep. And if Lydgate thinks I'm going to give money for them to set up +housekeeping, he's mistaken, that's all. I expect I shall have to put +down my horses soon. You'd better tell Rosy what I say." + +This was a not infrequent procedure with Mr. Vincy--to be rash in +jovial assent, and on becoming subsequently conscious that he had been +rash, to employ others in making the offensive retractation. However, +Mrs. Vincy, who never willingly opposed her husband, lost no time the +next morning in letting Rosamond know what he had said. Rosamond, +examining some muslin-work, listened in silence, and at the end gave a +certain turn of her graceful neck, of which only long experience could +teach you that it meant perfect obstinacy. + +"What do you say, my dear?" said her mother, with affectionate +deference. + +"Papa does not mean anything of the kind," said Rosamond, quite calmly. +"He has always said that he wished me to marry the man I loved. And I +shall marry Mr. Lydgate. It is seven weeks now since papa gave his +consent. And I hope we shall have Mrs. Bretton's house." + +"Well, my dear, I shall leave you to manage your papa. You always do +manage everybody. But if we ever do go and get damask, Sadler's is the +place--far better than Hopkins's. Mrs. Bretton's is very large, though: +I should love you to have such a house; but it will take a great deal +of furniture--carpeting and everything, besides plate and glass. And +you hear, your papa says he will give no money. Do you think Mr. +Lydgate expects it?" + +"You cannot imagine that I should ask him, mamma. Of course he +understands his own affairs." + +"But he may have been looking for money, my dear, and we all thought of +your having a pretty legacy as well as Fred;--and now everything is so +dreadful--there's no pleasure in thinking of anything, with that poor +boy disappointed as he is." + +"That has nothing to do with my marriage, mamma. Fred must leave off +being idle. I am going up-stairs to take this work to Miss Morgan: she +does the open hemming very well. Mary Garth might do some work for me +now, I should think. Her sewing is exquisite; it is the nicest thing I +know about Mary. I should so like to have all my cambric frilling +double-hemmed. And it takes a long time." + +Mrs. Vincy's belief that Rosamond could manage her papa was well +founded. Apart from his dinners and his coursing, Mr. Vincy, +blustering as he was, had as little of his own way as if he had been a +prime minister: the force of circumstances was easily too much for him, +as it is for most pleasure-loving florid men; and the circumstance +called Rosamond was particularly forcible by means of that mild +persistence which, as we know, enables a white soft living substance to +make its way in spite of opposing rock. Papa was not a rock: he had no +other fixity than that fixity of alternating impulses sometimes called +habit, and this was altogether unfavorable to his taking the only +decisive line of conduct in relation to his daughter's +engagement--namely, to inquire thoroughly into Lydgate's circumstances, +declare his own inability to furnish money, and forbid alike either a +speedy marriage or an engagement which must be too lengthy. That seems +very simple and easy in the statement; but a disagreeable resolve +formed in the chill hours of the morning had as many conditions against +it as the early frost, and rarely persisted under the warming +influences of the day. The indirect though emphatic expression of +opinion to which Mr. Vincy was prone suffered much restraint in this +case: Lydgate was a proud man towards whom innuendoes were obviously +unsafe, and throwing his hat on the floor was out of the question. Mr. +Vincy was a little in awe of him, a little vain that he wanted to marry +Rosamond, a little indisposed to raise a question of money in which his +own position was not advantageous, a little afraid of being worsted in +dialogue with a man better educated and more highly bred than himself, +and a little afraid of doing what his daughter would not like. The +part Mr. Vincy preferred playing was that of the generous host whom +nobody criticises. In the earlier half of the day there was business +to hinder any formal communication of an adverse resolve; in the later +there was dinner, wine, whist, and general satisfaction. And in the +mean while the hours were each leaving their little deposit and +gradually forming the final reason for inaction, namely, that action +was too late. The accepted lover spent most of his evenings in Lowick +Gate, and a love-making not at all dependent on money-advances from +fathers-in-law, or prospective income from a profession, went on +flourishingly under Mr. Vincy's own eyes. Young love-making--that +gossamer web! Even the points it clings to--the things whence its +subtle interlacings are swung--are scarcely perceptible: momentary +touches of fingertips, meetings of rays from blue and dark orbs, +unfinished phrases, lightest changes of cheek and lip, faintest +tremors. The web itself is made of spontaneous beliefs and indefinable +joys, yearnings of one life towards another, visions of completeness, +indefinite trust. And Lydgate fell to spinning that web from his +inward self with wonderful rapidity, in spite of experience supposed to +be finished off with the drama of Laure--in spite too of medicine and +biology; for the inspection of macerated muscle or of eyes presented in +a dish (like Santa Lucia's), and other incidents of scientific inquiry, +are observed to be less incompatible with poetic love than a native +dulness or a lively addiction to the lowest prose. As for Rosamond, +she was in the water-lily's expanding wonderment at its own fuller +life, and she too was spinning industriously at the mutual web. All +this went on in the corner of the drawing-room where the piano stood, +and subtle as it was, the light made it a sort of rainbow visible to +many observers besides Mr. Farebrother. The certainty that Miss Vincy +and Mr. Lydgate were engaged became general in Middlemarch without the +aid of formal announcement. + +Aunt Bulstrode was again stirred to anxiety; but this time she +addressed herself to her brother, going to the warehouse expressly to +avoid Mrs. Vincy's volatility. His replies were not satisfactory. + +"Walter, you never mean to tell me that you have allowed all this to go +on without inquiry into Mr. Lydgate's prospects?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, +opening her eyes with wider gravity at her brother, who was in his +peevish warehouse humor. "Think of this girl brought up in luxury--in +too worldly a way, I am sorry to say--what will she do on a small +income?" + +"Oh, confound it, Harriet! What can I do when men come into the town +without any asking of mine? Did you shut your house up against +Lydgate? Bulstrode has pushed him forward more than anybody. I never +made any fuss about the young fellow. You should go and talk to your +husband about it, not me." + +"Well, really, Walter, how can Mr. Bulstrode be to blame? I am sure he +did not wish for the engagement." + +"Oh, if Bulstrode had not taken him by the hand, I should never have +invited him." + +"But you called him in to attend on Fred, and I am sure that was a +mercy," said Mrs. Bulstrode, losing her clew in the intricacies of the +subject. + +"I don't know about mercy," said Mr. Vincy, testily. "I know I am +worried more than I like with my family. I was a good brother to you, +Harriet, before you married Bulstrode, and I must say he doesn't always +show that friendly spirit towards your family that might have been +expected of him." Mr. Vincy was very little like a Jesuit, but no +accomplished Jesuit could have turned a question more adroitly. +Harriet had to defend her husband instead of blaming her brother, and +the conversation ended at a point as far from the beginning as some +recent sparring between the brothers-in-law at a vestry meeting. + +Mrs. Bulstrode did not repeat her brother's complaints to her husband, +but in the evening she spoke to him of Lydgate and Rosamond. He did +not share her warm interest, however; and only spoke with resignation +of the risks attendant on the beginning of medical practice and the +desirability of prudence. + +"I am sure we are bound to pray for that thoughtless girl--brought up +as she has been," said Mrs. Bulstrode, wishing to rouse her husband's +feelings. + +"Truly, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, assentingly. "Those who are not +of this world can do little else to arrest the errors of the +obstinately worldly. That is what we must accustom ourselves to +recognize with regard to your brother's family. I could have wished +that Mr. Lydgate had not entered into such a union; but my relations +with him are limited to that use of his gifts for God's purposes which +is taught us by the divine government under each dispensation." + +Mrs. Bulstrode said no more, attributing some dissatisfaction which she +felt to her own want of spirituality. She believed that her husband +was one of those men whose memoirs should be written when they died. + +As to Lydgate himself, having been accepted, he was prepared to accept +all the consequences which he believed himself to foresee with perfect +clearness. Of course he must be married in a year--perhaps even in +half a year. This was not what he had intended; but other schemes +would not be hindered: they would simply adjust themselves anew. +Marriage, of course, must be prepared for in the usual way. A house +must be taken instead of the rooms he at present occupied; and Lydgate, +having heard Rosamond speak with admiration of old Mrs. Bretton's house +(situated in Lowick Gate), took notice when it fell vacant after the +old lady's death, and immediately entered into treaty for it. + +He did this in an episodic way, very much as he gave orders to his +tailor for every requisite of perfect dress, without any notion of +being extravagant. On the contrary, he would have despised any +ostentation of expense; his profession had familiarized him with all +grades of poverty, and he cared much for those who suffered hardships. +He would have behaved perfectly at a table where the sauce was served +in a jug with the handle off, and he would have remembered nothing +about a grand dinner except that a man was there who talked well. But +it had never occurred to him that he should live in any other than what +he would have called an ordinary way, with green glasses for hock, and +excellent waiting at table. In warming himself at French social +theories he had brought away no smell of scorching. We may handle even +extreme opinions with impunity while our furniture, our dinner-giving, +and preference for armorial bearings in our own case, link us +indissolubly with the established order. And Lydgate's tendency was +not towards extreme opinions: he would have liked no barefooted +doctrines, being particular about his boots: he was no radical in +relation to anything but medical reform and the prosecution of +discovery. In the rest of practical life he walked by hereditary +habit; half from that personal pride and unreflecting egoism which I +have already called commonness, and half from that naivete which +belonged to preoccupation with favorite ideas. + +Any inward debate Lydgate had as to the consequences of this engagement +which had stolen upon him, turned on the paucity of time rather than of +money. Certainly, being in love and being expected continually by some +one who always turned out to be prettier than memory could represent +her to be, did interfere with the diligent use of spare hours which +might serve some "plodding fellow of a German" to make the great, +imminent discovery. This was really an argument for not deferring the +marriage too long, as he implied to Mr. Farebrother, one day that the +Vicar came to his room with some pond-products which he wanted to +examine under a better microscope than his own, and, finding Lydgate's +tableful of apparatus and specimens in confusion, said sarcastically-- + +"Eros has degenerated; he began by introducing order and harmony, and +now he brings back chaos." + +"Yes, at some stages," said Lydgate, lifting his brows and smiling, +while he began to arrange his microscope. "But a better order will +begin after." + +"Soon?" said the Vicar. + +"I hope so, really. This unsettled state of affairs uses up the time, +and when one has notions in science, every moment is an opportunity. I +feel sure that marriage must be the best thing for a man who wants to +work steadily. He has everything at home then--no teasing with +personal speculations--he can get calmness and freedom." + +"You are an enviable dog," said the Vicar, "to have such a +prospect--Rosamond, calmness and freedom, all to your share. Here am +I with nothing but my pipe and pond-animalcules. Now, are you ready?" + +Lydgate did not mention to the Vicar another reason he had for wishing +to shorten the period of courtship. It was rather irritating to him, +even with the wine of love in his veins, to be obliged to mingle so +often with the family party at the Vincys', and to enter so much into +Middlemarch gossip, protracted good cheer, whist-playing, and general +futility. He had to be deferential when Mr. Vincy decided questions +with trenchant ignorance, especially as to those liquors which were the +best inward pickle, preserving you from the effects of bad air. Mrs. +Vincy's openness and simplicity were quite unstreaked with suspicion as +to the subtle offence she might give to the taste of her intended +son-in-law; and altogether Lydgate had to confess to himself that he +was descending a little in relation to Rosamond's family. But that +exquisite creature herself suffered in the same sort of way:--it was +at least one delightful thought that in marrying her, he could give her +a much-needed transplantation. + +"Dear!" he said to her one evening, in his gentlest tone, as he sat +down by her and looked closely at her face-- + +But I must first say that he had found her alone in the drawing-room, +where the great old-fashioned window, almost as large as the side of +the room, was opened to the summer scents of the garden at the back of +the house. Her father and mother were gone to a party, and the rest +were all out with the butterflies. + +"Dear! your eyelids are red." + +"Are they?" said Rosamond. "I wonder why." It was not in her nature +to pour forth wishes or grievances. They only came forth gracefully on +solicitation. + +"As if you could hide it from me!" said Lydgate, laying his hand +tenderly on both of hers. "Don't I see a tiny drop on one of the +lashes? Things trouble you, and you don't tell me. That is unloving." + +"Why should I tell you what you cannot alter? They are every-day +things:--perhaps they have been a little worse lately." + +"Family annoyances. Don't fear speaking. I guess them." + +"Papa has been more irritable lately. Fred makes him angry, and this +morning there was a fresh quarrel because Fred threatens to throw his +whole education away, and do something quite beneath him. And +besides--" + +Rosamond hesitated, and her cheeks were gathering a slight flush. +Lydgate had never seen her in trouble since the morning of their +engagement, and he had never felt so passionately towards her as at +this moment. He kissed the hesitating lips gently, as if to encourage +them. + +"I feel that papa is not quite pleased about our engagement," Rosamond +continued, almost in a whisper; "and he said last night that he should +certainly speak to you and say it must be given up." + +"Will you give it up?" said Lydgate, with quick energy--almost angrily. + +"I never give up anything that I choose to do," said Rosamond, +recovering her calmness at the touching of this chord. + +"God bless you!" said Lydgate, kissing her again. This constancy of +purpose in the right place was adorable. He went on:-- + +"It is too late now for your father to say that our engagement must be +given up. You are of age, and I claim you as mine. If anything is +done to make you unhappy,--that is a reason for hastening our marriage." + +An unmistakable delight shone forth from the blue eyes that met his, +and the radiance seemed to light up all his future with mild sunshine. +Ideal happiness (of the kind known in the Arabian Nights, in which you +are invited to step from the labor and discord of the street into a +paradise where everything is given to you and nothing claimed) seemed +to be an affair of a few weeks' waiting, more or less. + +"Why should we defer it?" he said, with ardent insistence. "I have +taken the house now: everything else can soon be got ready--can it +not? You will not mind about new clothes. Those can be bought +afterwards." + +"What original notions you clever men have!" said Rosamond, dimpling +with more thorough laughter than usual at this humorous incongruity. +"This is the first time I ever heard of wedding-clothes being bought +after marriage." + +"But you don't mean to say you would insist on my waiting months for +the sake of clothes?" said Lydgate, half thinking that Rosamond was +tormenting him prettily, and half fearing that she really shrank from +speedy marriage. "Remember, we are looking forward to a better sort of +happiness even than this--being continually together, independent of +others, and ordering our lives as we will. Come, dear, tell me how +soon you can be altogether mine." + +There was a serious pleading in Lydgate's tone, as if he felt that she +would be injuring him by any fantastic delays. Rosamond became serious +too, and slightly meditative; in fact, she was going through many +intricacies of lace-edging and hosiery and petticoat-tucking, in order +to give an answer that would at least be approximative. + +"Six weeks would be ample--say so, Rosamond," insisted Lydgate, +releasing her hands to put his arm gently round her. + +One little hand immediately went to pat her hair, while she gave her +neck a meditative turn, and then said seriously-- + +"There would be the house-linen and the furniture to be prepared. +Still, mamma could see to those while we were away." + +"Yes, to be sure. We must be away a week or so." + +"Oh, more than that!" said Rosamond, earnestly. She was thinking of +her evening dresses for the visit to Sir Godwin Lydgate's, which she +had long been secretly hoping for as a delightful employment of at +least one quarter of the honeymoon, even if she deferred her +introduction to the uncle who was a doctor of divinity (also a pleasing +though sober kind of rank, when sustained by blood). She looked at her +lover with some wondering remonstrance as she spoke, and he readily +understood that she might wish to lengthen the sweet time of double +solitude. + +"Whatever you wish, my darling, when the day is fixed. But let us take +a decided course, and put an end to any discomfort you may be +suffering. Six weeks!--I am sure they would be ample." + +"I could certainly hasten the work," said Rosamond. "Will you, then, +mention it to papa?--I think it would be better to write to him." She +blushed and looked at him as the garden flowers look at us when we walk +forth happily among them in the transcendent evening light: is there +not a soul beyond utterance, half nymph, half child, in those delicate +petals which glow and breathe about the centres of deep color? + +He touched her ear and a little bit of neck under it with his lips, and +they sat quite still for many minutes which flowed by them like a small +gurgling brook with the kisses of the sun upon it. Rosamond thought +that no one could be more in love than she was; and Lydgate thought +that after all his wild mistakes and absurd credulity, he had found +perfect womanhood--felt as if already breathed upon by exquisite wedded +affection such as would be bestowed by an accomplished creature who +venerated his high musings and momentous labors and would never +interfere with them; who would create order in the home and accounts +with still magic, yet keep her fingers ready to touch the lute and +transform life into romance at any moment; who was instructed to the +true womanly limit and not a hair's-breadth beyond--docile, therefore, +and ready to carry out behests which came from that limit. It was +plainer now than ever that his notion of remaining much longer a +bachelor had been a mistake: marriage would not be an obstruction but a +furtherance. And happening the next day to accompany a patient to +Brassing, he saw a dinner-service there which struck him as so exactly +the right thing that he bought it at once. It saved time to do these +things just when you thought of them, and Lydgate hated ugly crockery. +The dinner-service in question was expensive, but that might be in the +nature of dinner-services. Furnishing was necessarily expensive; but +then it had to be done only once. + +"It must be lovely," said Mrs. Vincy, when Lydgate mentioned his +purchase with some descriptive touches. "Just what Rosy ought to have. +I trust in heaven it won't be broken!" + +"One must hire servants who will not break things," said Lydgate. +(Certainly, this was reasoning with an imperfect vision of sequences. +But at that period there was no sort of reasoning which was not more or +less sanctioned by men of science.) + +Of course it was unnecessary to defer the mention of anything to mamma, +who did not readily take views that were not cheerful, and being a +happy wife herself, had hardly any feeling but pride in her daughter's +marriage. But Rosamond had good reasons for suggesting to Lydgate that +papa should be appealed to in writing. She prepared for the arrival of +the letter by walking with her papa to the warehouse the next morning, +and telling him on the way that Mr. Lydgate wished to be married soon. + +"Nonsense, my dear!" said Mr. Vincy. "What has he got to marry on? +You'd much better give up the engagement. I've told you so pretty +plainly before this. What have you had such an education for, if you +are to go and marry a poor man? It's a cruel thing for a father to +see." + +"Mr. Lydgate is not poor, papa. He bought Mr. Peacock's practice, +which, they say, is worth eight or nine hundred a-year." + +"Stuff and nonsense! What's buying a practice? He might as well buy +next year's swallows. It'll all slip through his fingers." + +"On the contrary, papa, he will increase the practice. See how he has +been called in by the Chettams and Casaubons." + +"I hope he knows I shan't give anything--with this disappointment about +Fred, and Parliament going to be dissolved, and machine-breaking +everywhere, and an election coming on--" + +"Dear papa! what can that have to do with my marriage?" + +"A pretty deal to do with it! We may all be ruined for what I know--the +country's in that state! Some say it's the end of the world, and +be hanged if I don't think it looks like it! Anyhow, it's not a time +for me to be drawing money out of my business, and I should wish +Lydgate to know that." + +"I am sure he expects nothing, papa. And he has such very high +connections: he is sure to rise in one way or another. He is engaged +in making scientific discoveries." + +Mr. Vincy was silent. + +"I cannot give up my only prospect of happiness, papa. Mr. Lydgate is a +gentleman. I could never love any one who was not a perfect gentleman. +You would not like me to go into a consumption, as Arabella Hawley did. +And you know that I never change my mind." + +Again papa was silent. + +"Promise me, papa, that you will consent to what we wish. We shall +never give each other up; and you know that you have always objected to +long courtships and late marriages." + +There was a little more urgency of this kind, till Mr. Vincy said, +"Well, well, child, he must write to me first before I can answer +him,"--and Rosamond was certain that she had gained her point. + +Mr. Vincy's answer consisted chiefly in a demand that Lydgate should +insure his life--a demand immediately conceded. This was a +delightfully reassuring idea supposing that Lydgate died, but in the +mean time not a self-supporting idea. However, it seemed to make +everything comfortable about Rosamond's marriage; and the necessary +purchases went on with much spirit. Not without prudential +considerations, however. A bride (who is going to visit at a +baronet's) must have a few first-rate pocket-handkerchiefs; but beyond +the absolutely necessary half-dozen, Rosamond contented herself without +the very highest style of embroidery and Valenciennes. Lydgate also, +finding that his sum of eight hundred pounds had been considerably +reduced since he had come to Middlemarch, restrained his inclination +for some plate of an old pattern which was shown to him when he went +into Kibble's establishment at Brassing to buy forks and spoons. He +was too proud to act as if he presupposed that Mr. Vincy would advance +money to provide furniture; and though, since it would not be +necessary to pay for everything at once, some bills would be left +standing over, he did not waste time in conjecturing how much his +father-in-law would give in the form of dowry, to make payment easy. +He was not going to do anything extravagant, but the requisite things +must be bought, and it would be bad economy to buy them of a poor +quality. All these matters were by the bye. Lydgate foresaw that +science and his profession were the objects he should alone pursue +enthusiastically; but he could not imagine himself pursuing them in +such a home as Wrench had--the doors all open, the oil-cloth worn, the +children in soiled pinafores, and lunch lingering in the form of bones, +black-handled knives, and willow-pattern. But Wrench had a wretched +lymphatic wife who made a mummy of herself indoors in a large shawl; +and he must have altogether begun with an ill-chosen domestic apparatus. + +Rosamond, however, was on her side much occupied with conjectures, +though her quick imitative perception warned her against betraying them +too crudely. + +"I shall like so much to know your family," she said one day, when the +wedding journey was being discussed. "We might perhaps take a +direction that would allow us to see them as we returned. Which of +your uncles do you like best?" + +"Oh,--my uncle Godwin, I think. He is a good-natured old fellow." + +"You were constantly at his house at Quallingham, when you were a boy, +were you not? I should so like to see the old spot and everything you +were used to. Does he know you are going to be married?" + +"No," said Lydgate, carelessly, turning in his chair and rubbing his +hair up. + +"Do send him word of it, you naughty undutiful nephew. He will perhaps +ask you to take me to Quallingham; and then you could show me about the +grounds, and I could imagine you there when you were a boy. Remember, +you see me in my home, just as it has been since I was a child. It is +not fair that I should be so ignorant of yours. But perhaps you would +be a little ashamed of me. I forgot that." + +Lydgate smiled at her tenderly, and really accepted the suggestion that +the proud pleasure of showing so charming a bride was worth some +trouble. And now he came to think of it, he would like to see the old +spots with Rosamond. + +"I will write to him, then. But my cousins are bores." + +It seemed magnificent to Rosamond to be able to speak so slightingly of +a baronet's family, and she felt much contentment in the prospect of +being able to estimate them contemptuously on her own account. + +But mamma was near spoiling all, a day or two later, by saying-- + +"I hope your uncle Sir Godwin will not look down on Rosy, Mr. Lydgate. +I should think he would do something handsome. A thousand or two can +be nothing to a baronet." + +"Mamma!" said Rosamond, blushing deeply; and Lydgate pitied her so much +that he remained silent and went to the other end of the room to +examine a print curiously, as if he had been absent-minded. Mamma had a +little filial lecture afterwards, and was docile as usual. But +Rosamond reflected that if any of those high-bred cousins who were +bores, should be induced to visit Middlemarch, they would see many +things in her own family which might shock them. Hence it seemed +desirable that Lydgate should by-and-by get some first-rate position +elsewhere than in Middlemarch; and this could hardly be difficult in +the case of a man who had a titled uncle and could make discoveries. +Lydgate, you perceive, had talked fervidly to Rosamond of his hopes as +to the highest uses of his life, and had found it delightful to be +listened to by a creature who would bring him the sweet furtherance of +satisfying affection--beauty--repose--such help as our thoughts get +from the summer sky and the flower-fringed meadows. + +Lydgate relied much on the psychological difference between what for +the sake of variety I will call goose and gander: especially on the +innate submissiveness of the goose as beautifully corresponding to the +strength of the gander. + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + + "Thrice happy she that is so well assured + Unto herself and settled so in heart + That neither will for better be allured + Ne fears to worse with any chance to start, + But like a steddy ship doth strongly part + The raging waves and keeps her course aright; + Ne aught for tempest doth from it depart, + Ne aught for fairer weather's false delight. + Such self-assurance need not fear the spight + Of grudging foes; ne favour seek of friends; + But in the stay of her own stedfast might + Neither to one herself nor other bends. + Most happy she that most assured doth rest, + But he most happy who such one loves best." + --SPENSER. + + +The doubt hinted by Mr. Vincy whether it were only the general election +or the end of the world that was coming on, now that George the Fourth +was dead, Parliament dissolved, Wellington and Peel generally +depreciated and the new King apologetic, was a feeble type of the +uncertainties in provincial opinion at that time. With the glow-worm +lights of country places, how could men see which were their own +thoughts in the confusion of a Tory Ministry passing Liberal measures, +of Tory nobles and electors being anxious to return Liberals rather +than friends of the recreant Ministers, and of outcries for remedies +which seemed to have a mysteriously remote bearing on private interest, +and were made suspicious by the advocacy of disagreeable neighbors? +Buyers of the Middlemarch newspapers found themselves in an anomalous +position: during the agitation on the Catholic Question many had given +up the "Pioneer"--which had a motto from Charles James Fox and was in +the van of progress--because it had taken Peel's side about the +Papists, and had thus blotted its Liberalism with a toleration of +Jesuitry and Baal; but they were ill-satisfied with the "Trumpet," +which--since its blasts against Rome, and in the general flaccidity of +the public mind (nobody knowing who would support whom)--had become +feeble in its blowing. + +It was a time, according to a noticeable article in the "Pioneer," when +the crying needs of the country might well counteract a reluctance to +public action on the part of men whose minds had from long experience +acquired breadth as well as concentration, decision of judgment as well +as tolerance, dispassionateness as well as energy--in fact, all those +qualities which in the melancholy experience of mankind have been the +least disposed to share lodgings. + +Mr. Hackbutt, whose fluent speech was at that time floating more widely +than usual, and leaving much uncertainty as to its ultimate channel, +was heard to say in Mr. Hawley's office that the article in question +"emanated" from Brooke of Tipton, and that Brooke had secretly bought +the "Pioneer" some months ago. + +"That means mischief, eh?" said Mr. Hawley. "He's got the freak of +being a popular man now, after dangling about like a stray tortoise. +So much the worse for him. I've had my eye on him for some time. He +shall be prettily pumped upon. He's a damned bad landlord. What +business has an old county man to come currying favor with a low set of +dark-blue freemen? As to his paper, I only hope he may do the writing +himself. It would be worth our paying for." + +"I understand he has got a very brilliant young fellow to edit it, who +can write the highest style of leading article, quite equal to anything +in the London papers. And he means to take very high ground on Reform." + +"Let Brooke reform his rent-roll. He's a cursed old screw, and the +buildings all over his estate are going to rack. I suppose this young +fellow is some loose fish from London." + +"His name is Ladislaw. He is said to be of foreign extraction." + +"I know the sort," said Mr. Hawley; "some emissary. He'll begin with +flourishing about the Rights of Man and end with murdering a wench. +That's the style." + +"You must concede that there are abuses, Hawley," said Mr. Hackbutt, +foreseeing some political disagreement with his family lawyer. "I +myself should never favor immoderate views--in fact I take my stand +with Huskisson--but I cannot blind myself to the consideration that the +non-representation of large towns--" + +"Large towns be damned!" said Mr. Hawley, impatient of exposition. "I +know a little too much about Middlemarch elections. Let 'em quash +every pocket borough to-morrow, and bring in every mushroom town in the +kingdom--they'll only increase the expense of getting into Parliament. +I go upon facts." + +Mr. Hawley's disgust at the notion of the "Pioneer" being edited by an +emissary, and of Brooke becoming actively political--as if a tortoise +of desultory pursuits should protrude its small head ambitiously and +become rampant--was hardly equal to the annoyance felt by some members +of Mr. Brooke's own family. The result had oozed forth gradually, like +the discovery that your neighbor has set up an unpleasant kind of +manufacture which will be permanently under your nostrils without legal +remedy. The "Pioneer" had been secretly bought even before Will +Ladislaw's arrival, the expected opportunity having offered itself in +the readiness of the proprietor to part with a valuable property which +did not pay; and in the interval since Mr. Brooke had written his +invitation, those germinal ideas of making his mind tell upon the world +at large which had been present in him from his younger years, but had +hitherto lain in some obstruction, had been sprouting under cover. + +The development was much furthered by a delight in his guest which +proved greater even than he had anticipated. For it seemed that Will +was not only at home in all those artistic and literary subjects which +Mr. Brooke had gone into at one time, but that he was strikingly ready +at seizing the points of the political situation, and dealing with them +in that large spirit which, aided by adequate memory, lends itself to +quotation and general effectiveness of treatment. + +"He seems to me a kind of Shelley, you know," Mr. Brooke took an +opportunity of saying, for the gratification of Mr. Casaubon. "I don't +mean as to anything objectionable--laxities or atheism, or anything of +that kind, you know--Ladislaw's sentiments in every way I am sure are +good--indeed, we were talking a great deal together last night. But he +has the same sort of enthusiasm for liberty, freedom, emancipation--a +fine thing under guidance--under guidance, you know. I think I shall +be able to put him on the right tack; and I am the more pleased because +he is a relation of yours, Casaubon." + +If the right tack implied anything more precise than the rest of Mr. +Brooke's speech, Mr. Casaubon silently hoped that it referred to some +occupation at a great distance from Lowick. He had disliked Will while +he helped him, but he had begun to dislike him still more now that Will +had declined his help. That is the way with us when we have any uneasy +jealousy in our disposition: if our talents are chiefly of the +burrowing kind, our honey-sipping cousin (whom we have grave reasons +for objecting to) is likely to have a secret contempt for us, and any +one who admires him passes an oblique criticism on ourselves. Having +the scruples of rectitude in our souls, we are above the meanness of +injuring him--rather we meet all his claims on us by active benefits; +and the drawing of cheques for him, being a superiority which he must +recognize, gives our bitterness a milder infusion. Now Mr. Casaubon +had been deprived of that superiority (as anything more than a +remembrance) in a sudden, capricious manner. His antipathy to Will did +not spring from the common jealousy of a winter-worn husband: it was +something deeper, bred by his lifelong claims and discontents; but +Dorothea, now that she was present--Dorothea, as a young wife who +herself had shown an offensive capability of criticism, necessarily +gave concentration to the uneasiness which had before been vague. + +Will Ladislaw on his side felt that his dislike was flourishing at the +expense of his gratitude, and spent much inward discourse in justifying +the dislike. Casaubon hated him--he knew that very well; on his first +entrance he could discern a bitterness in the mouth and a venom in the +glance which would almost justify declaring war in spite of past +benefits. He was much obliged to Casaubon in the past, but really the +act of marrying this wife was a set-off against the obligation. It was +a question whether gratitude which refers to what is done for one's +self ought not to give way to indignation at what is done against +another. And Casaubon had done a wrong to Dorothea in marrying her. A +man was bound to know himself better than that, and if he chose to grow +gray crunching bones in a cavern, he had no business to be luring a +girl into his companionship. "It is the most horrible of +virgin-sacrifices," said Will; and he painted to himself what were +Dorothea's inward sorrows as if he had been writing a choric wail. But +he would never lose sight of her: he would watch over her--if he gave +up everything else in life he would watch over her, and she should know +that she had one slave in the world, Will had--to use Sir Thomas +Browne's phrase--a "passionate prodigality" of statement both to +himself and others. The simple truth was that nothing then invited him +so strongly as the presence of Dorothea. + +Invitations of the formal kind had been wanting, however, for Will had +never been asked to go to Lowick. Mr. Brooke, indeed, confident of +doing everything agreeable which Casaubon, poor fellow, was too much +absorbed to think of, had arranged to bring Ladislaw to Lowick several +times (not neglecting meanwhile to introduce him elsewhere on every +opportunity as "a young relative of Casaubon's"). And though Will had +not seen Dorothea alone, their interviews had been enough to restore +her former sense of young companionship with one who was cleverer than +herself, yet seemed ready to be swayed by her. Poor Dorothea before +her marriage had never found much room in other minds for what she +cared most to say; and she had not, as we know, enjoyed her husband's +superior instruction so much as she had expected. If she spoke with +any keenness of interest to Mr. Casaubon, he heard her with an air of +patience as if she had given a quotation from the Delectus familiar to +him from his tender years, and sometimes mentioned curtly what ancient +sects or personages had held similar ideas, as if there were too much +of that sort in stock already; at other times he would inform her that +she was mistaken, and reassert what her remark had questioned. + +But Will Ladislaw always seemed to see more in what she said than she +herself saw. Dorothea had little vanity, but she had the ardent +woman's need to rule beneficently by making the joy of another soul. +Hence the mere chance of seeing Will occasionally was like a lunette +opened in the wall of her prison, giving her a glimpse of the sunny +air; and this pleasure began to nullify her original alarm at what her +husband might think about the introduction of Will as her uncle's +guest. On this subject Mr. Casaubon had remained dumb. + +But Will wanted to talk with Dorothea alone, and was impatient of slow +circumstance. However slight the terrestrial intercourse between Dante +and Beatrice or Petrarch and Laura, time changes the proportion of +things, and in later days it is preferable to have fewer sonnets and +more conversation. Necessity excused stratagem, but stratagem was +limited by the dread of offending Dorothea. He found out at last that +he wanted to take a particular sketch at Lowick; and one morning when +Mr. Brooke had to drive along the Lowick road on his way to the county +town, Will asked to be set down with his sketch-book and camp-stool at +Lowick, and without announcing himself at the Manor settled himself to +sketch in a position where he must see Dorothea if she came out to +walk--and he knew that she usually walked an hour in the morning. + +But the stratagem was defeated by the weather. Clouds gathered with +treacherous quickness, the rain came down, and Will was obliged to take +shelter in the house. He intended, on the strength of relationship, to +go into the drawing-room and wait there without being announced; and +seeing his old acquaintance the butler in the hall, he said, "Don't +mention that I am here, Pratt; I will wait till luncheon; I know Mr. +Casaubon does not like to be disturbed when he is in the library." + +"Master is out, sir; there's only Mrs. Casaubon in the library. I'd +better tell her you're here, sir," said Pratt, a red-cheeked man given +to lively converse with Tantripp, and often agreeing with her that it +must be dull for Madam. + +"Oh, very well; this confounded rain has hindered me from sketching," +said Will, feeling so happy that he affected indifference with +delightful ease. + +In another minute he was in the library, and Dorothea was meeting him +with her sweet unconstrained smile. + +"Mr. Casaubon has gone to the Archdeacon's," she said, at once. "I +don't know whether he will be at home again long before dinner. He was +uncertain how long he should be. Did you want to say anything +particular to him?" + +"No; I came to sketch, but the rain drove me in. Else I would not have +disturbed you yet. I supposed that Mr. Casaubon was here, and I know +he dislikes interruption at this hour." + +"I am indebted to the rain, then. I am so glad to see you." Dorothea +uttered these common words with the simple sincerity of an unhappy +child, visited at school. + +"I really came for the chance of seeing you alone," said Will, +mysteriously forced to be just as simple as she was. He could not stay +to ask himself, why not? "I wanted to talk about things, as we did in +Rome. It always makes a difference when other people are present." + +"Yes," said Dorothea, in her clear full tone of assent. "Sit down." +She seated herself on a dark ottoman with the brown books behind her, +looking in her plain dress of some thin woollen-white material, without +a single ornament on her besides her wedding-ring, as if she were under +a vow to be different from all other women; and Will sat down opposite +her at two yards' distance, the light falling on his bright curls and +delicate but rather petulant profile, with its defiant curves of lip +and chin. Each looked at the other as if they had been two flowers +which had opened then and there. Dorothea for the moment forgot her +husband's mysterious irritation against Will: it seemed fresh water at +her thirsty lips to speak without fear to the one person whom she had +found receptive; for in looking backward through sadness she +exaggerated a past solace. + +"I have often thought that I should like to talk to you again," she +said, immediately. "It seems strange to me how many things I said to +you." + +"I remember them all," said Will, with the unspeakable content in his +soul of feeling that he was in the presence of a creature worthy to be +perfectly loved. I think his own feelings at that moment were perfect, +for we mortals have our divine moments, when love is satisfied in the +completeness of the beloved object. + +"I have tried to learn a great deal since we were in Rome," said +Dorothea. "I can read Latin a little, and I am beginning to understand +just a little Greek. I can help Mr. Casaubon better now. I can find +out references for him and save his eyes in many ways. But it is very +difficult to be learned; it seems as if people were worn out on the way +to great thoughts, and can never enjoy them because they are too tired." + +"If a man has a capacity for great thoughts, he is likely to overtake +them before he is decrepit," said Will, with irrepressible quickness. +But through certain sensibilities Dorothea was as quick as he, and +seeing her face change, he added, immediately, "But it is quite true +that the best minds have been sometimes overstrained in working out +their ideas." + +"You correct me," said Dorothea. "I expressed myself ill. I should +have said that those who have great thoughts get too much worn in +working them out. I used to feel about that, even when I was a little +girl; and it always seemed to me that the use I should like to make of +my life would be to help some one who did great works, so that his +burthen might be lighter." + +Dorothea was led on to this bit of autobiography without any sense of +making a revelation. But she had never before said anything to Will +which threw so strong a light on her marriage. He did not shrug his +shoulders; and for want of that muscular outlet he thought the more +irritably of beautiful lips kissing holy skulls and other emptinesses +ecclesiastically enshrined. Also he had to take care that his speech +should not betray that thought. + +"But you may easily carry the help too far," he said, "and get +over-wrought yourself. Are you not too much shut up? You already look +paler. It would be better for Mr. Casaubon to have a secretary; he +could easily get a man who would do half his work for him. It would +save him more effectually, and you need only help him in lighter ways." + +"How can you think of that?" said Dorothea, in a tone of earnest +remonstrance. "I should have no happiness if I did not help him in his +work. What could I do? There is no good to be done in Lowick. The +only thing I desire is to help him more. And he objects to a +secretary: please not to mention that again." + +"Certainly not, now I know your feeling. But I have heard both Mr. +Brooke and Sir James Chettam express the same wish." + +"Yes?" said Dorothea, "but they don't understand--they want me to be a +great deal on horseback, and have the garden altered and new +conservatories, to fill up my days. I thought you could understand +that one's mind has other wants," she added, rather +impatiently--"besides, Mr. Casaubon cannot bear to hear of a secretary." + +"My mistake is excusable," said Will. "In old days I used to hear Mr. +Casaubon speak as if he looked forward to having a secretary. Indeed +he held out the prospect of that office to me. But I turned out to +be--not good enough for it." + +Dorothea was trying to extract out of this an excuse for her husband's +evident repulsion, as she said, with a playful smile, "You were not a +steady worker enough." + +"No," said Will, shaking his head backward somewhat after the manner of +a spirited horse. And then, the old irritable demon prompting him to +give another good pinch at the moth-wings of poor Mr. Casaubon's glory, +he went on, "And I have seen since that Mr. Casaubon does not like any +one to overlook his work and know thoroughly what he is doing. He is +too doubtful--too uncertain of himself. I may not be good for much, +but he dislikes me because I disagree with him." + +Will was not without his intentions to be always generous, but our +tongues are little triggers which have usually been pulled before +general intentions can be brought to bear. And it was too intolerable +that Casaubon's dislike of him should not be fairly accounted for to +Dorothea. Yet when he had spoken he was rather uneasy as to the effect +on her. + +But Dorothea was strangely quiet--not immediately indignant, as she had +been on a like occasion in Rome. And the cause lay deep. She was no +longer struggling against the perception of facts, but adjusting +herself to their clearest perception; and now when she looked steadily +at her husband's failure, still more at his possible consciousness of +failure, she seemed to be looking along the one track where duty became +tenderness. Will's want of reticence might have been met with more +severity, if he had not already been recommended to her mercy by her +husband's dislike, which must seem hard to her till she saw better +reason for it. + +She did not answer at once, but after looking down ruminatingly she +said, with some earnestness, "Mr. Casaubon must have overcome his +dislike of you so far as his actions were concerned: and that is +admirable." + +"Yes; he has shown a sense of justice in family matters. It was an +abominable thing that my grandmother should have been disinherited +because she made what they called a mesalliance, though there was +nothing to be said against her husband except that he was a Polish +refugee who gave lessons for his bread." + +"I wish I knew all about her!" said Dorothea. "I wonder how she bore +the change from wealth to poverty: I wonder whether she was happy with +her husband! Do you know much about them?" + +"No; only that my grandfather was a patriot--a bright fellow--could +speak many languages--musical--got his bread by teaching all sorts of +things. They both died rather early. And I never knew much of my +father, beyond what my mother told me; but he inherited the musical +talents. I remember his slow walk and his long thin hands; and one day +remains with me when he was lying ill, and I was very hungry, and had +only a little bit of bread." + +"Ah, what a different life from mine!" said Dorothea, with keen +interest, clasping her hands on her lap. "I have always had too much +of everything. But tell me how it was--Mr. Casaubon could not have +known about you then." + +"No; but my father had made himself known to Mr. Casaubon, and that was +my last hungry day. My father died soon after, and my mother and I +were well taken care of. Mr. Casaubon always expressly recognized it +as his duty to take care of us because of the harsh injustice which had +been shown to his mother's sister. But now I am telling you what is +not new to you." + +In his inmost soul Will was conscious of wishing to tell Dorothea what +was rather new even in his own construction of things--namely, that +Mr. Casaubon had never done more than pay a debt towards him. Will was +much too good a fellow to be easy under the sense of being ungrateful. +And when gratitude has become a matter of reasoning there are many ways +of escaping from its bonds. + +"No," answered Dorothea; "Mr. Casaubon has always avoided dwelling on +his own honorable actions." She did not feel that her husband's +conduct was depreciated; but this notion of what justice had required +in his relations with Will Ladislaw took strong hold on her mind. +After a moment's pause, she added, "He had never told me that he +supported your mother. Is she still living?" + +"No; she died by an accident--a fall--four years ago. It is curious +that my mother, too, ran away from her family, but not for the sake of +her husband. She never would tell me anything about her family, except +that she forsook them to get her own living--went on the stage, in +fact. She was a dark-eyed creature, with crisp ringlets, and never +seemed to be getting old. You see I come of rebellious blood on both +sides," Will ended, smiling brightly at Dorothea, while she was still +looking with serious intentness before her, like a child seeing a drama +for the first time. + +But her face, too, broke into a smile as she said, "That is your +apology, I suppose, for having yourself been rather rebellious; I mean, +to Mr. Casaubon's wishes. You must remember that you have not done +what he thought best for you. And if he dislikes you--you were +speaking of dislike a little while ago--but I should rather say, if he +has shown any painful feelings towards you, you must consider how +sensitive he has become from the wearing effect of study. Perhaps," +she continued, getting into a pleading tone, "my uncle has not told you +how serious Mr. Casaubon's illness was. It would be very petty of us +who are well and can bear things, to think much of small offences from +those who carry a weight of trial." + +"You teach me better," said Will. "I will never grumble on that +subject again." There was a gentleness in his tone which came from the +unutterable contentment of perceiving--what Dorothea was hardly +conscious of--that she was travelling into the remoteness of pure pity +and loyalty towards her husband. Will was ready to adore her pity and +loyalty, if she would associate himself with her in manifesting them. +"I have really sometimes been a perverse fellow," he went on, "but I +will never again, if I can help it, do or say what you would +disapprove." + +"That is very good of you," said Dorothea, with another open smile. "I +shall have a little kingdom then, where I shall give laws. But you +will soon go away, out of my rule, I imagine. You will soon be tired +of staying at the Grange." + +"That is a point I wanted to mention to you--one of the reasons why I +wished to speak to you alone. Mr. Brooke proposes that I should stay +in this neighborhood. He has bought one of the Middlemarch newspapers, +and he wishes me to conduct that, and also to help him in other ways." + +"Would not that be a sacrifice of higher prospects for you?" said +Dorothea. + +"Perhaps; but I have always been blamed for thinking of prospects, and +not settling to anything. And here is something offered to me. If you +would not like me to accept it, I will give it up. Otherwise I would +rather stay in this part of the country than go away. I belong to +nobody anywhere else." + +"I should like you to stay very much," said Dorothea, at once, as +simply and readily as she had spoken at Rome. There was not the shadow +of a reason in her mind at the moment why she should not say so. + +"Then I _will_ stay," said Ladislaw, shaking his head backward, rising +and going towards the window, as if to see whether the rain had ceased. + +But the next moment, Dorothea, according to a habit which was getting +continually stronger, began to reflect that her husband felt +differently from herself, and she colored deeply under the double +embarrassment of having expressed what might be in opposition to her +husband's feeling, and of having to suggest this opposition to Will. +His face was not turned towards her, and this made it easier to say-- + +"But my opinion is of little consequence on such a subject. I think +you should be guided by Mr. Casaubon. I spoke without thinking of +anything else than my own feeling, which has nothing to do with the +real question. But it now occurs to me--perhaps Mr. Casaubon might +see that the proposal was not wise. Can you not wait now and mention +it to him?" + +"I can't wait to-day," said Will, inwardly seared by the possibility +that Mr. Casaubon would enter. "The rain is quite over now. I told +Mr. Brooke not to call for me: I would rather walk the five miles. I +shall strike across Halsell Common, and see the gleams on the wet +grass. I like that." + +He approached her to shake hands quite hurriedly, longing but not +daring to say, "Don't mention the subject to Mr. Casaubon." No, he +dared not, could not say it. To ask her to be less simple and direct +would be like breathing on the crystal that you want to see the light +through. And there was always the other great dread--of himself +becoming dimmed and forever ray-shorn in her eyes. + +"I wish you could have stayed," said Dorothea, with a touch of +mournfulness, as she rose and put out her hand. She also had her +thought which she did not like to express:--Will certainly ought to +lose no time in consulting Mr. Casaubon's wishes, but for her to urge +this might seem an undue dictation. + +So they only said "Good-by," and Will quitted the house, striking +across the fields so as not to run any risk of encountering Mr. +Casaubon's carriage, which, however, did not appear at the gate until +four o'clock. That was an unpropitious hour for coming home: it was too +early to gain the moral support under ennui of dressing his person for +dinner, and too late to undress his mind of the day's frivolous +ceremony and affairs, so as to be prepared for a good plunge into the +serious business of study. On such occasions he usually threw into an +easy-chair in the library, and allowed Dorothea to read the London +papers to him, closing his eyes the while. To-day, however, he +declined that relief, observing that he had already had too many public +details urged upon him; but he spoke more cheerfully than usual, when +Dorothea asked about his fatigue, and added with that air of formal +effort which never forsook him even when he spoke without his waistcoat +and cravat-- + +"I have had the gratification of meeting my former acquaintance, Dr. +Spanning, to-day, and of being praised by one who is himself a worthy +recipient of praise. He spoke very handsomely of my late tractate on +the Egyptian Mysteries,--using, in fact, terms which it would not +become me to repeat." In uttering the last clause, Mr. Casaubon leaned +over the elbow of his chair, and swayed his head up and down, +apparently as a muscular outlet instead of that recapitulation which +would not have been becoming. + +"I am very glad you have had that pleasure," said Dorothea, delighted +to see her husband less weary than usual at this hour. "Before you +came I had been regretting that you happened to be out to-day." + +"Why so, my dear?" said Mr. Casaubon, throwing himself backward again. + +"Because Mr. Ladislaw has been here; and he has mentioned a proposal of +my uncle's which I should like to know your opinion of." Her husband +she felt was really concerned in this question. Even with her +ignorance of the world she had a vague impression that the position +offered to Will was out of keeping with his family connections, and +certainly Mr. Casaubon had a claim to be consulted. He did not speak, +but merely bowed. + +"Dear uncle, you know, has many projects. It appears that he has +bought one of the Middlemarch newspapers, and he has asked Mr. Ladislaw +to stay in this neighborhood and conduct the paper for him, besides +helping him in other ways." + +Dorothea looked at her husband while she spoke, but he had at first +blinked and finally closed his eyes, as if to save them; while his lips +became more tense. "What is your opinion?" she added, rather timidly, +after a slight pause. + +"Did Mr. Ladislaw come on purpose to ask my opinion?" said Mr. +Casaubon, opening his eyes narrowly with a knife-edged look at +Dorothea. She was really uncomfortable on the point he inquired about, +but she only became a little more serious, and her eyes did not swerve. + +"No," she answered immediately, "he did not say that he came to ask +your opinion. But when he mentioned the proposal, he of course +expected me to tell you of it." + +Mr. Casaubon was silent. + +"I feared that you might feel some objection. But certainly a young +man with so much talent might be very useful to my uncle--might help +him to do good in a better way. And Mr. Ladislaw wishes to have some +fixed occupation. He has been blamed, he says, for not seeking +something of that kind, and he would like to stay in this neighborhood +because no one cares for him elsewhere." + +Dorothea felt that this was a consideration to soften her husband. +However, he did not speak, and she presently recurred to Dr. Spanning +and the Archdeacon's breakfast. But there was no longer sunshine on +these subjects. + +The next morning, without Dorothea's knowledge, Mr. Casaubon despatched +the following letter, beginning "Dear Mr. Ladislaw" (he had always +before addressed him as "Will"):-- + + +"Mrs. Casaubon informs me that a proposal has been made to you, and +(according to an inference by no means stretched) has on your part been +in some degree entertained, which involves your residence in this +neighborhood in a capacity which I am justified in saying touches my +own position in such a way as renders it not only natural and +warrantable in me when that effect is viewed under the influence of +legitimate feeling, but incumbent on me when the same effect is +considered in the light of my responsibilities, to state at once that +your acceptance of the proposal above indicated would be highly +offensive to me. That I have some claim to the exercise of a veto +here, would not, I believe, be denied by any reasonable person +cognizant of the relations between us: relations which, though thrown +into the past by your recent procedure, are not thereby annulled in +their character of determining antecedents. I will not here make +reflections on any person's judgment. It is enough for me to point out +to yourself that there are certain social fitnesses and proprieties +which should hinder a somewhat near relative of mine from becoming any +wise conspicuous in this vicinity in a status not only much beneath my +own, but associated at best with the sciolism of literary or political +adventurers. At any rate, the contrary issue must exclude you from +further reception at my house. + + Yours faithfully, + "EDWARD CASAUBON." + + +Meanwhile Dorothea's mind was innocently at work towards the further +embitterment of her husband; dwelling, with a sympathy that grew to +agitation, on what Will had told her about his parents and +grandparents. Any private hours in her day were usually spent in her +blue-green boudoir, and she had come to be very fond of its pallid +quaintness. Nothing had been outwardly altered there; but while the +summer had gradually advanced over the western fields beyond the avenue +of elms, the bare room had gathered within it those memories of an +inward life which fill the air as with a cloud of good or bad angels, +the invisible yet active forms of our spiritual triumphs or our +spiritual falls. She had been so used to struggle for and to find +resolve in looking along the avenue towards the arch of western light +that the vision itself had gained a communicating power. Even the pale +stag seemed to have reminding glances and to mean mutely, "Yes, we +know." And the group of delicately touched miniatures had made an +audience as of beings no longer disturbed about their own earthly lot, +but still humanly interested. Especially the mysterious "Aunt Julia" +about whom Dorothea had never found it easy to question her husband. + +And now, since her conversation with Will, many fresh images had +gathered round that Aunt Julia who was Will's grandmother; the presence +of that delicate miniature, so like a living face that she knew, +helping to concentrate her feelings. What a wrong, to cut off the girl +from the family protection and inheritance only because she had chosen +a man who was poor! Dorothea, early troubling her elders with +questions about the facts around her, had wrought herself into some +independent clearness as to the historical, political reasons why +eldest sons had superior rights, and why land should be entailed: those +reasons, impressing her with a certain awe, might be weightier than she +knew, but here was a question of ties which left them uninfringed. +Here was a daughter whose child--even according to the ordinary aping +of aristocratic institutions by people who are no more aristocratic +than retired grocers, and who have no more land to "keep together" than +a lawn and a paddock--would have a prior claim. Was inheritance a +question of liking or of responsibility? All the energy of Dorothea's +nature went on the side of responsibility--the fulfilment of claims +founded on our own deeds, such as marriage and parentage. + +It was true, she said to herself, that Mr. Casaubon had a debt to the +Ladislaws--that he had to pay back what the Ladislaws had been wronged +of. And now she began to think of her husband's will, which had been +made at the time of their marriage, leaving the bulk of his property to +her, with proviso in case of her having children. That ought to be +altered; and no time ought to be lost. This very question which had +just arisen about Will Ladislaw's occupation, was the occasion for +placing things on a new, right footing. Her husband, she felt sure, +according to all his previous conduct, would be ready to take the just +view, if she proposed it--she, in whose interest an unfair +concentration of the property had been urged. His sense of right had +surmounted and would continue to surmount anything that might be called +antipathy. She suspected that her uncle's scheme was disapproved by +Mr. Casaubon, and this made it seem all the more opportune that a fresh +understanding should be begun, so that instead of Will's starting +penniless and accepting the first function that offered itself, he +should find himself in possession of a rightful income which should be +paid by her husband during his life, and, by an immediate alteration of +the will, should be secured at his death. The vision of all this as +what ought to be done seemed to Dorothea like a sudden letting in of +daylight, waking her from her previous stupidity and incurious +self-absorbed ignorance about her husband's relation to others. Will +Ladislaw had refused Mr. Casaubon's future aid on a ground that no +longer appeared right to her; and Mr. Casaubon had never himself seen +fully what was the claim upon him. "But he will!" said Dorothea. "The +great strength of his character lies here. And what are we doing with +our money? We make no use of half of our income. My own money buys me +nothing but an uneasy conscience." + +There was a peculiar fascination for Dorothea in this division of +property intended for herself, and always regarded by her as excessive. +She was blind, you see, to many things obvious to others--likely to +tread in the wrong places, as Celia had warned her; yet her blindness +to whatever did not lie in her own pure purpose carried her safely by +the side of precipices where vision would have been perilous with fear. + +The thoughts which had gathered vividness in the solitude of her +boudoir occupied her incessantly through the day on which Mr. Casaubon +had sent his letter to Will. Everything seemed hindrance to her till +she could find an opportunity of opening her heart to her husband. To +his preoccupied mind all subjects were to be approached gently, and she +had never since his illness lost from her consciousness the dread of +agitating him. But when young ardor is set brooding over the +conception of a prompt deed, the deed itself seems to start forth with +independent life, mastering ideal obstacles. The day passed in a +sombre fashion, not unusual, though Mr. Casaubon was perhaps unusually +silent; but there were hours of the night which might be counted on as +opportunities of conversation; for Dorothea, when aware of her +husband's sleeplessness, had established a habit of rising, lighting a +candle, and reading him to sleep again. And this night she was from +the beginning sleepless, excited by resolves. He slept as usual for a +few hours, but she had risen softly and had sat in the darkness for +nearly an hour before he said-- + +"Dorothea, since you are up, will you light a candle?" + +"Do you feel ill, dear?" was her first question, as she obeyed him. + +"No, not at all; but I shall be obliged, since you are up, if you will +read me a few pages of Lowth." + +"May I talk to you a little instead?" said Dorothea. + +"Certainly." + +"I have been thinking about money all day--that I have always had too +much, and especially the prospect of too much." + +"These, my dear Dorothea, are providential arrangements." + +"But if one has too much in consequence of others being wronged, it +seems to me that the divine voice which tells us to set that wrong +right must be obeyed." + +"What, my love, is the bearing of your remark?" + +"That you have been too liberal in arrangements for me--I mean, with +regard to property; and that makes me unhappy." + +"How so? I have none but comparatively distant connections." + +"I have been led to think about your aunt Julia, and how she was left +in poverty only because she married a poor man, an act which was not +disgraceful, since he was not unworthy. It was on that ground, I know, +that you educated Mr. Ladislaw and provided for his mother." + +Dorothea waited a few moments for some answer that would help her +onward. None came, and her next words seemed the more forcible to her, +falling clear upon the dark silence. + +"But surely we should regard his claim as a much greater one, even to +the half of that property which I know that you have destined for me. +And I think he ought at once to be provided for on that understanding. +It is not right that he should be in the dependence of poverty while we +are rich. And if there is any objection to the proposal he mentioned, +the giving him his true place and his true share would set aside any +motive for his accepting it." + +"Mr. Ladislaw has probably been speaking to you on this subject?" said +Mr. Casaubon, with a certain biting quickness not habitual to him. + +"Indeed, no!" said Dorothea, earnestly. "How can you imagine it, since +he has so lately declined everything from you? I fear you think too +hardly of him, dear. He only told me a little about his parents and +grandparents, and almost all in answer to my questions. You are so +good, so just--you have done everything you thought to be right. But +it seems to me clear that more than that is right; and I must speak +about it, since I am the person who would get what is called benefit by +that 'more' not being done." + +There was a perceptible pause before Mr. Casaubon replied, not quickly +as before, but with a still more biting emphasis. + +"Dorothea, my love, this is not the first occasion, but it were well +that it should be the last, on which you have assumed a judgment on +subjects beyond your scope. Into the question how far conduct, +especially in the matter of alliances, constitutes a forfeiture of +family claims, I do not now enter. Suffice it, that you are not here +qualified to discriminate. What I now wish you to understand is, that +I accept no revision, still less dictation within that range of affairs +which I have deliberated upon as distinctly and properly mine. It is +not for you to interfere between me and Mr. Ladislaw, and still less to +encourage communications from him to you which constitute a criticism +on my procedure." + +Poor Dorothea, shrouded in the darkness, was in a tumult of conflicting +emotions. Alarm at the possible effect on himself of her husband's +strongly manifested anger, would have checked any expression of her own +resentment, even if she had been quite free from doubt and compunction +under the consciousness that there might be some justice in his last +insinuation. Hearing him breathe quickly after he had spoken, she sat +listening, frightened, wretched--with a dumb inward cry for help to +bear this nightmare of a life in which every energy was arrested by +dread. But nothing else happened, except that they both remained a +long while sleepless, without speaking again. + +The next day, Mr. Casaubon received the following answer from Will +Ladislaw:-- + + +"DEAR MR. CASAUBON,--I have given all due consideration to your letter +of yesterday, but I am unable to take precisely your view of our mutual +position. With the fullest acknowledgment of your generous conduct to +me in the past, I must still maintain that an obligation of this kind +cannot fairly fetter me as you appear to expect that it should. +Granted that a benefactor's wishes may constitute a claim; there must +always be a reservation as to the quality of those wishes. They may +possibly clash with more imperative considerations. Or a benefactor's +veto might impose such a negation on a man's life that the consequent +blank might be more cruel than the benefaction was generous. I am +merely using strong illustrations. In the present case I am unable to +take your view of the bearing which my acceptance of occupation--not +enriching certainly, but not dishonorable--will have on your own +position which seems to me too substantial to be affected in that +shadowy manner. And though I do not believe that any change in our +relations will occur (certainly none has yet occurred) which can +nullify the obligations imposed on me by the past, pardon me for not +seeing that those obligations should restrain me from using the +ordinary freedom of living where I choose, and maintaining myself by +any lawful occupation I may choose. Regretting that there exists this +difference between us as to a relation in which the conferring of +benefits has been entirely on your side-- + + I remain, yours with persistent obligation, + WILL LADISLAW." + + +Poor Mr. Casaubon felt (and must not we, being impartial, feel with him +a little?) that no man had juster cause for disgust and suspicion than +he. Young Ladislaw, he was sure, meant to defy and annoy him, meant to +win Dorothea's confidence and sow her mind with disrespect, and perhaps +aversion, towards her husband. Some motive beneath the surface had +been needed to account for Will's sudden change of course in rejecting Mr. +Casaubon's aid and quitting his travels; and this defiant determination +to fix himself in the neighborhood by taking up something so much at +variance with his former choice as Mr. Brooke's Middlemarch projects, +revealed clearly enough that the undeclared motive had relation to +Dorothea. Not for one moment did Mr. Casaubon suspect Dorothea of any +doubleness: he had no suspicions of her, but he had (what was little +less uncomfortable) the positive knowledge that her tendency to form +opinions about her husband's conduct was accompanied with a disposition +to regard Will Ladislaw favorably and be influenced by what he said. +His own proud reticence had prevented him from ever being undeceived in +the supposition that Dorothea had originally asked her uncle to invite +Will to his house. + +And now, on receiving Will's letter, Mr. Casaubon had to consider his +duty. He would never have been easy to call his action anything else +than duty; but in this case, contending motives thrust him back into +negations. + +Should he apply directly to Mr. Brooke, and demand of that troublesome +gentleman to revoke his proposal? Or should he consult Sir James +Chettam, and get him to concur in remonstrance against a step which +touched the whole family? In either case Mr. Casaubon was aware that +failure was just as probable as success. It was impossible for him to +mention Dorothea's name in the matter, and without some alarming +urgency Mr. Brooke was as likely as not, after meeting all +representations with apparent assent, to wind up by saying, "Never +fear, Casaubon! Depend upon it, young Ladislaw will do you credit. +Depend upon it, I have put my finger on the right thing." And Mr. +Casaubon shrank nervously from communicating on the subject with Sir +James Chettam, between whom and himself there had never been any +cordiality, and who would immediately think of Dorothea without any +mention of her. + +Poor Mr. Casaubon was distrustful of everybody's feeling towards him, +especially as a husband. To let any one suppose that he was jealous +would be to admit their (suspected) view of his disadvantages: to let +them know that he did not find marriage particularly blissful would +imply his conversion to their (probably) earlier disapproval. It would +be as bad as letting Carp, and Brasenose generally, know how backward +he was in organizing the matter for his "Key to all Mythologies." All +through his life Mr. Casaubon had been trying not to admit even to +himself the inward sores of self-doubt and jealousy. And on the most +delicate of all personal subjects, the habit of proud suspicious +reticence told doubly. + +Thus Mr. Casaubon remained proudly, bitterly silent. But he had +forbidden Will to come to Lowick Manor, and he was mentally preparing +other measures of frustration. + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + + "C'est beaucoup que le jugement des hommes sur les actions + humaines; tôt ou tard il devient efficace."--GUIZOT. + + +Sir James Chettam could not look with any satisfaction on Mr. Brooke's +new courses; but it was easier to object than to hinder. Sir James +accounted for his having come in alone one day to lunch with the +Cadwalladers by saying-- + +"I can't talk to you as I want, before Celia: it might hurt her. +Indeed, it would not be right." + +"I know what you mean--the 'Pioneer' at the Grange!" darted in Mrs. +Cadwallader, almost before the last word was off her friend's tongue. +"It is frightful--this taking to buying whistles and blowing them in +everybody's hearing. Lying in bed all day and playing at dominoes, +like poor Lord Plessy, would be more private and bearable." + +"I see they are beginning to attack our friend Brooke in the +'Trumpet,'" said the Rector, lounging back and smiling easily, as he +would have done if he had been attacked himself. "There are tremendous +sarcasms against a landlord not a hundred miles from Middlemarch, who +receives his own rents, and makes no returns." + +"I do wish Brooke would leave that off," said Sir James, with his +little frown of annoyance. + +"Is he really going to be put in nomination, though?" said Mr. +Cadwallader. "I saw Farebrother yesterday--he's Whiggish himself, +hoists Brougham and Useful Knowledge; that's the worst I know of +him;--and he says that Brooke is getting up a pretty strong party. +Bulstrode, the banker, is his foremost man. But he thinks Brooke would +come off badly at a nomination." + +"Exactly," said Sir James, with earnestness. "I have been inquiring +into the thing, for I've never known anything about Middlemarch +politics before--the county being my business. What Brooke trusts to, +is that they are going to turn out Oliver because he is a Peelite. But +Hawley tells me that if they send up a Whig at all it is sure to be +Bagster, one of those candidates who come from heaven knows where, but +dead against Ministers, and an experienced Parliamentary man. Hawley's +rather rough: he forgot that he was speaking to me. He said if Brooke +wanted a pelting, he could get it cheaper than by going to the +hustings." + +"I warned you all of it," said Mrs. Cadwallader, waving her hands +outward. "I said to Humphrey long ago, Mr. Brooke is going to make a +splash in the mud. And now he has done it." + +"Well, he might have taken it into his head to marry," said the Rector. +"That would have been a graver mess than a little flirtation with +politics." + +"He may do that afterwards," said Mrs. Cadwallader--"when he has come +out on the other side of the mud with an ague." + +"What I care for most is his own dignity," said Sir James. "Of course +I care the more because of the family. But he's getting on in life +now, and I don't like to think of his exposing himself. They will be +raking up everything against him." + +"I suppose it's no use trying any persuasion," said the Rector. +"There's such an odd mixture of obstinacy and changeableness in Brooke. +Have you tried him on the subject?" + +"Well, no," said Sir James; "I feel a delicacy in appearing to dictate. +But I have been talking to this young Ladislaw that Brooke is making a +factotum of. Ladislaw seems clever enough for anything. I thought it +as well to hear what he had to say; and he is against Brooke's standing +this time. I think he'll turn him round: I think the nomination may be +staved off." + +"I know," said Mrs. Cadwallader, nodding. "The independent member +hasn't got his speeches well enough by heart." + +"But this Ladislaw--there again is a vexatious business," said Sir +James. "We have had him two or three times to dine at the Hall (you +have met him, by the bye) as Brooke's guest and a relation of +Casaubon's, thinking he was only on a flying visit. And now I find +he's in everybody's mouth in Middlemarch as the editor of the +'Pioneer.' There are stories going about him as a quill-driving alien, +a foreign emissary, and what not." + +"Casaubon won't like that," said the Rector. + +"There _is_ some foreign blood in Ladislaw," returned Sir James. "I +hope he won't go into extreme opinions and carry Brooke on." + +"Oh, he's a dangerous young sprig, that Mr. Ladislaw," said Mrs. +Cadwallader, "with his opera songs and his ready tongue. A sort of +Byronic hero--an amorous conspirator, it strikes me. And Thomas +Aquinas is not fond of him. I could see that, the day the picture was +brought." + +"I don't like to begin on the subject with Casaubon," said Sir James. +"He has more right to interfere than I. But it's a disagreeable affair +all round. What a character for anybody with decent connections to +show himself in!--one of those newspaper fellows! You have only to +look at Keck, who manages the 'Trumpet.' I saw him the other day with +Hawley. His writing is sound enough, I believe, but he's such a low +fellow, that I wished he had been on the wrong side." + +"What can you expect with these peddling Middlemarch papers?" said the +Rector. "I don't suppose you could get a high style of man anywhere to +be writing up interests he doesn't really care about, and for pay that +hardly keeps him in at elbows." + +"Exactly: that makes it so annoying that Brooke should have put a man +who has a sort of connection with the family in a position of that +kind. For my part, I think Ladislaw is rather a fool for accepting." + +"It is Aquinas's fault," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Why didn't he use his +interest to get Ladislaw made an attache or sent to India? That is how +families get rid of troublesome sprigs." + +"There is no knowing to what lengths the mischief may go," said Sir +James, anxiously. "But if Casaubon says nothing, what can I do?" + +"Oh my dear Sir James," said the Rector, "don't let us make too much of +all this. It is likely enough to end in mere smoke. After a month or +two Brooke and this Master Ladislaw will get tired of each other; +Ladislaw will take wing; Brooke will sell the 'Pioneer,' and everything +will settle down again as usual." + +"There is one good chance--that he will not like to feel his money +oozing away," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "If I knew the items of election +expenses I could scare him. It's no use plying him with wide words +like Expenditure: I wouldn't talk of phlebotomy, I would empty a pot of +leeches upon him. What we good stingy people don't like, is having our +sixpences sucked away from us." + +"And he will not like having things raked up against him," said Sir +James. "There is the management of his estate. They have begun upon +that already. And it really is painful for me to see. It is a +nuisance under one's very nose. I do think one is bound to do the best +for one's land and tenants, especially in these hard times." + +"Perhaps the 'Trumpet' may rouse him to make a change, and some good +may come of it all," said the Rector. "I know I should be glad. I +should hear less grumbling when my tithe is paid. I don't know what I +should do if there were not a modus in Tipton." + +"I want him to have a proper man to look after things--I want him to +take on Garth again," said Sir James. "He got rid of Garth twelve +years ago, and everything has been going wrong since. I think of +getting Garth to manage for me--he has made such a capital plan for my +buildings; and Lovegood is hardly up to the mark. But Garth would not +undertake the Tipton estate again unless Brooke left it entirely to +him." + +"In the right of it too," said the Rector. "Garth is an independent +fellow: an original, simple-minded fellow. One day, when he was doing +some valuation for me, he told me point-blank that clergymen seldom +understood anything about business, and did mischief when they meddled; +but he said it as quietly and respectfully as if he had been talking to +me about sailors. He would make a different parish of Tipton, if +Brooke would let him manage. I wish, by the help of the 'Trumpet,' you +could bring that round." + +"If Dorothea had kept near her uncle, there would have been some +chance," said Sir James. "She might have got some power over him in +time, and she was always uneasy about the estate. She had wonderfully +good notions about such things. But now Casaubon takes her up +entirely. Celia complains a good deal. We can hardly get her to dine +with us, since he had that fit." Sir James ended with a look of pitying +disgust, and Mrs. Cadwallader shrugged her shoulders as much as to say +that _she_ was not likely to see anything new in that direction. + +"Poor Casaubon!" the Rector said. "That was a nasty attack. I thought +he looked shattered the other day at the Archdeacon's." + +"In point of fact," resumed Sir James, not choosing to dwell on "fits," +"Brooke doesn't mean badly by his tenants or any one else, but he has +got that way of paring and clipping at expenses." + +"Come, that's a blessing," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "That helps him to +find himself in a morning. He may not know his own opinions, but he +does know his own pocket." + +"I don't believe a man is in pocket by stinginess on his land," said +Sir James. + +"Oh, stinginess may be abused like other virtues: it will not do to +keep one's own pigs lean," said Mrs. Cadwallader, who had risen to look +out of the window. "But talk of an independent politician and he will +appear." + +"What! Brooke?" said her husband. + +"Yes. Now, you ply him with the 'Trumpet,' Humphrey; and I will put +the leeches on him. What will you do, Sir James?" + +"The fact is, I don't like to begin about it with Brooke, in our mutual +position; the whole thing is so unpleasant. I do wish people would +behave like gentlemen," said the good baronet, feeling that this was a +simple and comprehensive programme for social well-being. + +"Here you all are, eh?" said Mr. Brooke, shuffling round and shaking +hands. "I was going up to the Hall by-and-by, Chettam. But it's +pleasant to find everybody, you know. Well, what do you think of +things?--going on a little fast! It was true enough, what Lafitte +said--'Since yesterday, a century has passed away:'--they're in the +next century, you know, on the other side of the water. Going on +faster than we are." + +"Why, yes," said the Rector, taking up the newspaper. "Here is the +'Trumpet' accusing you of lagging behind--did you see?" + +"Eh? no," said Mr. Brooke, dropping his gloves into his hat and hastily +adjusting his eye-glass. But Mr. Cadwallader kept the paper in his +hand, saying, with a smile in his eyes-- + +"Look here! all this is about a landlord not a hundred miles from +Middlemarch, who receives his own rents. They say he is the most +retrogressive man in the county. I think you must have taught them +that word in the 'Pioneer.'" + +"Oh, that is Keck--an illiterate fellow, you know. Retrogressive, now! +Come, that's capital. He thinks it means destructive: they want to +make me out a destructive, you know," said Mr. Brooke, with that +cheerfulness which is usually sustained by an adversary's ignorance. + +"I think he knows the meaning of the word. Here is a sharp stroke or +two. If we had to describe a man who is retrogressive in the most evil +sense of the word--we should say, he is one who would dub himself a +reformer of our constitution, while every interest for which he is +immediately responsible is going to decay: a philanthropist who cannot +bear one rogue to be hanged, but does not mind five honest tenants +being half-starved: a man who shrieks at corruption, and keeps his +farms at rack-rent: who roars himself red at rotten boroughs, and does +not mind if every field on his farms has a rotten gate: a man very +open-hearted to Leeds and Manchester, no doubt; he would give any +number of representatives who will pay for their seats out of their own +pockets: what he objects to giving, is a little return on rent-days to +help a tenant to buy stock, or an outlay on repairs to keep the weather +out at a tenant's barn-door or make his house look a little less like +an Irish cottier's. But we all know the wag's definition of a +philanthropist: a man whose charity increases directly as the square of +the distance. And so on. All the rest is to show what sort of +legislator a philanthropist is likely to make," ended the Rector, +throwing down the paper, and clasping his hands at the back of his +head, while he looked at Mr. Brooke with an air of amused neutrality. + +"Come, that's rather good, you know," said Mr. Brooke, taking up the +paper and trying to bear the attack as easily as his neighbor did, but +coloring and smiling rather nervously; "that about roaring himself red +at rotten boroughs--I never made a speech about rotten boroughs in my +life. And as to roaring myself red and that kind of thing--these men +never understand what is good satire. Satire, you know, should be true +up to a certain point. I recollect they said that in 'The Edinburgh' +somewhere--it must be true up to a certain point." + +"Well, that is really a hit about the gates," said Sir James, anxious +to tread carefully. "Dagley complained to me the other day that he +hadn't got a decent gate on his farm. Garth has invented a new pattern +of gate--I wish you would try it. One ought to use some of one's +timber in that way." + +"You go in for fancy farming, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke, +appearing to glance over the columns of the "Trumpet." "That's your +hobby, and you don't mind the expense." + +"I thought the most expensive hobby in the world was standing for +Parliament," said Mrs. Cadwallader. "They said the last unsuccessful +candidate at Middlemarch--Giles, wasn't his name?--spent ten thousand +pounds and failed because he did not bribe enough. What a bitter +reflection for a man!" + +"Somebody was saying," said the Rector, laughingly, "that East Retford +was nothing to Middlemarch, for bribery." + +"Nothing of the kind," said Mr. Brooke. "The Tories bribe, you know: +Hawley and his set bribe with treating, hot codlings, and that sort of +thing; and they bring the voters drunk to the poll. But they are not +going to have it their own way in future--not in future, you know. +Middlemarch is a little backward, I admit--the freemen are a little +backward. But we shall educate them--we shall bring them on, you +know. The best people there are on our side." + +"Hawley says you have men on your side who will do you harm," remarked +Sir James. "He says Bulstrode the banker will do you harm." + +"And that if you got pelted," interposed Mrs. Cadwallader, "half the +rotten eggs would mean hatred of your committee-man. Good heavens! +Think what it must be to be pelted for wrong opinions. And I seem to +remember a story of a man they pretended to chair and let him fall into +a dust-heap on purpose!" + +"Pelting is nothing to their finding holes in one's coat," said the +Rector. "I confess that's what I should be afraid of, if we parsons +had to stand at the hustings for preferment. I should be afraid of +their reckoning up all my fishing days. Upon my word, I think the +truth is the hardest missile one can be pelted with." + +"The fact is," said Sir James, "if a man goes into public life he must +be prepared for the consequences. He must make himself proof against +calumny." + +"My dear Chettam, that is all very fine, you know," said Mr. Brooke. +"But how will you make yourself proof against calumny? You should read +history--look at ostracism, persecution, martyrdom, and that kind of +thing. They always happen to the best men, you know. But what is that +in Horace?--'fiat justitia, ruat . . . something or other." + +"Exactly," said Sir James, with a little more heat than usual. "What I +mean by being proof against calumny is being able to point to the fact +as a contradiction." + +"And it is not martyrdom to pay bills that one has run into one's +self," said Mrs. Cadwallader. + +But it was Sir James's evident annoyance that most stirred Mr. Brooke. +"Well, you know, Chettam," he said, rising, taking up his hat and +leaning on his stick, "you and I have a different system. You are all +for outlay with your farms. I don't want to make out that my system is +good under all circumstances--under all circumstances, you know." + +"There ought to be a new valuation made from time to time," said Sir +James. "Returns are very well occasionally, but I like a fair +valuation. What do you say, Cadwallader?" + +"I agree with you. If I were Brooke, I would choke the 'Trumpet' at +once by getting Garth to make a new valuation of the farms, and giving +him carte blanche about gates and repairs: that's my view of the +political situation," said the Rector, broadening himself by sticking +his thumbs in his armholes, and laughing towards Mr. Brooke. + +"That's a showy sort of thing to do, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "But +I should like you to tell me of another landlord who has distressed his +tenants for arrears as little as I have. I let the old tenants stay +on. I'm uncommonly easy, let me tell you, uncommonly easy. I have my +own ideas, and I take my stand on them, you know. A man who does that +is always charged with eccentricity, inconsistency, and that kind of +thing. When I change my line of action, I shall follow my own ideas." + +After that, Mr. Brooke remembered that there was a packet which he had +omitted to send off from the Grange, and he bade everybody hurriedly +good-by. + +"I didn't want to take a liberty with Brooke," said Sir James; "I see +he is nettled. But as to what he says about old tenants, in point of +fact no new tenant would take the farms on the present terms." + +"I have a notion that he will be brought round in time," said the +Rector. "But you were pulling one way, Elinor, and we were pulling +another. You wanted to frighten him away from expense, and we want to +frighten him into it. Better let him try to be popular and see that +his character as a landlord stands in his way. I don't think it +signifies two straws about the 'Pioneer,' or Ladislaw, or Brooke's +speechifying to the Middlemarchers. But it does signify about the +parishioners in Tipton being comfortable." + +"Excuse me, it is you two who are on the wrong tack," said Mrs. +Cadwallader. "You should have proved to him that he loses money by bad +management, and then we should all have pulled together. If you put +him a-horseback on politics, I warn you of the consequences. It was +all very well to ride on sticks at home and call them ideas." + + + +CHAPTER XXXIX. + + "If, as I have, you also doe, + Vertue attired in woman see, + And dare love that, and say so too, + And forget the He and She; + + And if this love, though placed so, + From prophane men you hide, + Which will no faith on this bestow, + Or, if they doe, deride: + + Then you have done a braver thing + Than all the Worthies did, + And a braver thence will spring, + Which is, to keep that hid." + --DR. DONNE. + + +Sir James Chettam's mind was not fruitful in devices, but his growing +anxiety to "act on Brooke," once brought close to his constant belief +in Dorothea's capacity for influence, became formative, and issued in a +little plan; namely, to plead Celia's indisposition as a reason for +fetching Dorothea by herself to the Hall, and to leave her at the +Grange with the carriage on the way, after making her fully aware of +the situation concerning the management of the estate. + +In this way it happened that one day near four o'clock, when Mr. Brooke +and Ladislaw were seated in the library, the door opened and Mrs. +Casaubon was announced. + +Will, the moment before, had been low in the depths of boredom, and, +obliged to help Mr. Brooke in arranging "documents" about hanging +sheep-stealers, was exemplifying the power our minds have of riding +several horses at once by inwardly arranging measures towards getting a +lodging for himself in Middlemarch and cutting short his constant +residence at the Grange; while there flitted through all these steadier +images a tickling vision of a sheep-stealing epic written with Homeric +particularity. When Mrs. Casaubon was announced he started up as from +an electric shock, and felt a tingling at his finger-ends. Any one +observing him would have seen a change in his complexion, in the +adjustment of his facial muscles, in the vividness of his glance, which +might have made them imagine that every molecule in his body had passed +the message of a magic touch. And so it had. For effective magic is +transcendent nature; and who shall measure the subtlety of those +touches which convey the quality of soul as well as body, and make a +man's passion for one woman differ from his passion for another as joy +in the morning light over valley and river and white mountain-top +differs from joy among Chinese lanterns and glass panels? Will, too, +was made of very impressible stuff. The bow of a violin drawn near him +cleverly, would at one stroke change the aspect of the world for him, +and his point of view shifted--as easily as his mood. Dorothea's +entrance was the freshness of morning. + +"Well, my dear, this is pleasant, now," said Mr. Brooke, meeting and +kissing her. "You have left Casaubon with his books, I suppose. +That's right. We must not have you getting too learned for a woman, +you know." + +"There is no fear of that, uncle," said Dorothea, turning to Will and +shaking hands with open cheerfulness, while she made no other form of +greeting, but went on answering her uncle. "I am very slow. When I +want to be busy with books, I am often playing truant among my +thoughts. I find it is not so easy to be learned as to plan cottages." + +She seated herself beside her uncle opposite to Will, and was evidently +preoccupied with something that made her almost unmindful of him. He +was ridiculously disappointed, as if he had imagined that her coming +had anything to do with him. + +"Why, yes, my dear, it was quite your hobby to draw plans. But it was +good to break that off a little. Hobbies are apt to ran away with us, +you know; it doesn't do to be run away with. We must keep the reins. +I have never let myself be run away with; I always pulled up. That is +what I tell Ladislaw. He and I are alike, you know: he likes to go +into everything. We are working at capital punishment. We shall do a +great deal together, Ladislaw and I." + +"Yes," said Dorothea, with characteristic directness, "Sir James has +been telling me that he is in hope of seeing a great change made soon +in your management of the estate--that you are thinking of having the +farms valued, and repairs made, and the cottages improved, so that +Tipton may look quite another place. Oh, how happy!"--she went on, +clasping her hands, with a return to that more childlike impetuous +manner, which had been subdued since her marriage. "If I were at home +still, I should take to riding again, that I might go about with you +and see all that! And you are going to engage Mr. Garth, who praised +my cottages, Sir James says." + +"Chettam is a little hasty, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, coloring +slightly; "a little hasty, you know. I never said I should do anything +of the kind. I never said I should _not_ do it, you know." + +"He only feels confident that you will do it," said Dorothea, in a +voice as clear and unhesitating as that of a young chorister chanting a +credo, "because you mean to enter Parliament as a member who cares for +the improvement of the people, and one of the first things to be made +better is the state of the land and the laborers. Think of Kit Downes, +uncle, who lives with his wife and seven children in a house with one +sitting room and one bedroom hardly larger than this table!--and those +poor Dagleys, in their tumble-down farmhouse, where they live in the +back kitchen and leave the other rooms to the rats! That is one reason +why I did not like the pictures here, dear uncle--which you think me +stupid about. I used to come from the village with all that dirt and +coarse ugliness like a pain within me, and the simpering pictures in +the drawing-room seemed to me like a wicked attempt to find delight in +what is false, while we don't mind how hard the truth is for the +neighbors outside our walls. I think we have no right to come forward +and urge wider changes for good, until we have tried to alter the evils +which lie under our own hands." + +Dorothea had gathered emotion as she went on, and had forgotten +everything except the relief of pouring forth her feelings, unchecked: +an experience once habitual with her, but hardly ever present since her +marriage, which had been a perpetual struggle of energy with fear. For +the moment, Will's admiration was accompanied with a chilling sense of +remoteness. A man is seldom ashamed of feeling that he cannot love a +woman so well when he sees a certain greatness in her: nature having +intended greatness for men. But nature has sometimes made sad +oversights in carrying out her intention; as in the case of good Mr. +Brooke, whose masculine consciousness was at this moment in rather a +stammering condition under the eloquence of his niece. He could not +immediately find any other mode of expressing himself than that of +rising, fixing his eye-glass, and fingering the papers before him. At +last he said-- + +"There is something in what you say, my dear, something in what you +say--but not everything--eh, Ladislaw? You and I don't like our +pictures and statues being found fault with. Young ladies are a little +ardent, you know--a little one-sided, my dear. Fine art, poetry, that +kind of thing, elevates a nation--emollit mores--you understand a +little Latin now. But--eh? what?" + +These interrogatives were addressed to the footman who had come in to +say that the keeper had found one of Dagley's boys with a leveret in +his hand just killed. + +"I'll come, I'll come. I shall let him off easily, you know," said Mr. +Brooke aside to Dorothea, shuffling away very cheerfully. + +"I hope you feel how right this change is that I--that Sir James wishes +for," said Dorothea to Will, as soon as her uncle was gone. + +"I do, now I have heard you speak about it. I shall not forget what +you have said. But can you think of something else at this moment? I +may not have another opportunity of speaking to you about what has +occurred," said Will, rising with a movement of impatience, and holding +the back of his chair with both hands. + +"Pray tell me what it is," said Dorothea, anxiously, also rising and +going to the open window, where Monk was looking in, panting and +wagging his tail. She leaned her back against the window-frame, and +laid her hand on the dog's head; for though, as we know, she was not +fond of pets that must be held in the hands or trodden on, she was +always attentive to the feelings of dogs, and very polite if she had to +decline their advances. + +Will followed her only with his eyes and said, "I presume you know that +Mr. Casaubon has forbidden me to go to his house." + +"No, I did not," said Dorothea, after a moment's pause. She was +evidently much moved. "I am very, very sorry," she added, mournfully. +She was thinking of what Will had no knowledge of--the conversation +between her and her husband in the darkness; and she was anew smitten +with hopelessness that she could influence Mr. Casaubon's action. But +the marked expression of her sorrow convinced Will that it was not all +given to him personally, and that Dorothea had not been visited by the +idea that Mr. Casaubon's dislike and jealousy of him turned upon +herself. He felt an odd mixture of delight and vexation: of delight +that he could dwell and be cherished in her thought as in a pure home, +without suspicion and without stint--of vexation because he was of too +little account with her, was not formidable enough, was treated with an +unhesitating benevolence which did not flatter him. But his dread of +any change in Dorothea was stronger than his discontent, and he began +to speak again in a tone of mere explanation. + +"Mr. Casaubon's reason is, his displeasure at my taking a position here +which he considers unsuited to my rank as his cousin. I have told him +that I cannot give way on this point. It is a little too hard on me to +expect that my course in life is to be hampered by prejudices which I +think ridiculous. Obligation may be stretched till it is no better +than a brand of slavery stamped on us when we were too young to know +its meaning. I would not have accepted the position if I had not meant +to make it useful and honorable. I am not bound to regard family +dignity in any other light." + +Dorothea felt wretched. She thought her husband altogether in the +wrong, on more grounds than Will had mentioned. + +"It is better for us not to speak on the subject," she said, with a +tremulousness not common in her voice, "since you and Mr. Casaubon +disagree. You intend to remain?" She was looking out on the lawn, +with melancholy meditation. + +"Yes; but I shall hardly ever see you now," said Will, in a tone of +almost boyish complaint. + +"No," said Dorothea, turning her eyes full upon him, "hardly ever. But +I shall hear of you. I shall know what you are doing for my uncle." + +"I shall know hardly anything about you," said Will. "No one will tell +me anything." + +"Oh, my life is very simple," said Dorothea, her lips curling with an +exquisite smile, which irradiated her melancholy. "I am always at +Lowick." + +"That is a dreadful imprisonment," said Will, impetuously. + +"No, don't think that," said Dorothea. "I have no longings." + +He did not speak, but she replied to some change in his expression. "I +mean, for myself. Except that I should like not to have so much more +than my share without doing anything for others. But I have a belief +of my own, and it comforts me." + +"What is that?" said Will, rather jealous of the belief. + +"That by desiring what is perfectly good, even when we don't quite know +what it is and cannot do what we would, we are part of the divine power +against evil--widening the skirts of light and making the struggle with +darkness narrower." + +"That is a beautiful mysticism--it is a--" + +"Please not to call it by any name," said Dorothea, putting out her +hands entreatingly. "You will say it is Persian, or something else +geographical. It is my life. I have found it out, and cannot part +with it. I have always been finding out my religion since I was a +little girl. I used to pray so much--now I hardly ever pray. I try +not to have desires merely for myself, because they may not be good for +others, and I have too much already. I only told you, that you might +know quite well how my days go at Lowick." + +"God bless you for telling me!" said Will, ardently, and rather +wondering at himself. They were looking at each other like two fond +children who were talking confidentially of birds. + +"What is _your_ religion?" said Dorothea. "I mean--not what you know +about religion, but the belief that helps you most?" + +"To love what is good and beautiful when I see it," said Will. "But I +am a rebel: I don't feel bound, as you do, to submit to what I don't +like." + +"But if you like what is good, that comes to the same thing," said +Dorothea, smiling. + +"Now you are subtle," said Will. + +"Yes; Mr. Casaubon often says I am too subtle. I don't feel as if I +were subtle," said Dorothea, playfully. "But how long my uncle is! I +must go and look for him. I must really go on to the Hall. Celia is +expecting me." + +Will offered to tell Mr. Brooke, who presently came and said that he +would step into the carriage and go with Dorothea as far as Dagley's, +to speak about the small delinquent who had been caught with the +leveret. Dorothea renewed the subject of the estate as they drove +along, but Mr. Brooke, not being taken unawares, got the talk under his +own control. + +"Chettam, now," he replied; "he finds fault with me, my dear; but I +should not preserve my game if it were not for Chettam, and he can't +say that that expense is for the sake of the tenants, you know. It's a +little against my feeling:--poaching, now, if you come to look into +it--I have often thought of getting up the subject. Not long ago, +Flavell, the Methodist preacher, was brought up for knocking down a +hare that came across his path when he and his wife were walking out +together. He was pretty quick, and knocked it on the neck." + +"That was very brutal, I think," said Dorothea + +"Well, now, it seemed rather black to me, I confess, in a Methodist +preacher, you know. And Johnson said, 'You may judge what a +_hypocrite_ he is.' And upon my word, I thought Flavell looked very +little like 'the highest style of man'--as somebody calls the +Christian--Young, the poet Young, I think--you know Young? Well, now, +Flavell in his shabby black gaiters, pleading that he thought the Lord +had sent him and his wife a good dinner, and he had a right to knock it +down, though not a mighty hunter before the Lord, as Nimrod was--I +assure you it was rather comic: Fielding would have made something of +it--or Scott, now--Scott might have worked it up. But really, when I +came to think of it, I couldn't help liking that the fellow should have +a bit of hare to say grace over. It's all a matter of +prejudice--prejudice with the law on its side, you know--about the +stick and the gaiters, and so on. However, it doesn't do to reason +about things; and law is law. But I got Johnson to be quiet, and I +hushed the matter up. I doubt whether Chettam would not have been more +severe, and yet he comes down on me as if I were the hardest man in the +county. But here we are at Dagley's." + +Mr. Brooke got down at a farmyard-gate, and Dorothea drove on. It is +wonderful how much uglier things will look when we only suspect that we +are blamed for them. Even our own persons in the glass are apt to +change their aspect for us after we have heard some frank remark on +their less admirable points; and on the other hand it is astonishing +how pleasantly conscience takes our encroachments on those who never +complain or have nobody to complain for them. Dagley's homestead never +before looked so dismal to Mr. Brooke as it did today, with his mind +thus sore about the fault-finding of the "Trumpet," echoed by Sir James. + +It is true that an observer, under that softening influence of the fine +arts which makes other people's hardships picturesque, might have been +delighted with this homestead called Freeman's End: the old house had +dormer-windows in the dark red roof, two of the chimneys were choked +with ivy, the large porch was blocked up with bundles of sticks, and +half the windows were closed with gray worm-eaten shutters about which +the jasmine-boughs grew in wild luxuriance; the mouldering garden wall +with hollyhocks peeping over it was a perfect study of highly mingled +subdued color, and there was an aged goat (kept doubtless on +interesting superstitious grounds) lying against the open back-kitchen +door. The mossy thatch of the cow-shed, the broken gray barn-doors, +the pauper laborers in ragged breeches who had nearly finished +unloading a wagon of corn into the barn ready for early thrashing; the +scanty dairy of cows being tethered for milking and leaving one half of +the shed in brown emptiness; the very pigs and white ducks seeming to +wander about the uneven neglected yard as if in low spirits from +feeding on a too meagre quality of rinsings,--all these objects under +the quiet light of a sky marbled with high clouds would have made a +sort of picture which we have all paused over as a "charming bit," +touching other sensibilities than those which are stirred by the +depression of the agricultural interest, with the sad lack of farming +capital, as seen constantly in the newspapers of that time. But these +troublesome associations were just now strongly present to Mr. Brooke, +and spoiled the scene for him. Mr. Dagley himself made a figure in the +landscape, carrying a pitchfork and wearing his milking-hat--a very old +beaver flattened in front. His coat and breeches were the best he had, +and he would not have been wearing them on this weekday occasion if he +had not been to market and returned later than usual, having given +himself the rare treat of dining at the public table of the Blue Bull. +How he came to fall into this extravagance would perhaps be matter of +wonderment to himself on the morrow; but before dinner something in the +state of the country, a slight pause in the harvest before the Far Dips +were cut, the stories about the new King and the numerous handbills on +the walls, had seemed to warrant a little recklessness. It was a maxim +about Middlemarch, and regarded as self-evident, that good meat should +have good drink, which last Dagley interpreted as plenty of table ale +well followed up by rum-and-water. These liquors have so far truth in +them that they were not false enough to make poor Dagley seem merry: +they only made his discontent less tongue-tied than usual. He had also +taken too much in the shape of muddy political talk, a stimulant +dangerously disturbing to his farming conservatism, which consisted in +holding that whatever is, is bad, and any change is likely to be worse. +He was flushed, and his eyes had a decidedly quarrelsome stare as he +stood still grasping his pitchfork, while the landlord approached with +his easy shuffling walk, one hand in his trouser-pocket and the other +swinging round a thin walking-stick. + +"Dagley, my good fellow," began Mr. Brooke, conscious that he was going +to be very friendly about the boy. + +"Oh, ay, I'm a good feller, am I? Thank ye, sir, thank ye," said +Dagley, with a loud snarling irony which made Fag the sheep-dog stir +from his seat and prick his ears; but seeing Monk enter the yard after +some outside loitering, Fag seated himself again in an attitude of +observation. "I'm glad to hear I'm a good feller." + +Mr. Brooke reflected that it was market-day, and that his worthy tenant +had probably been dining, but saw no reason why he should not go on, +since he could take the precaution of repeating what he had to say to +Mrs. Dagley. + +"Your little lad Jacob has been caught killing a leveret, Dagley: I +have told Johnson to lock him up in the empty stable an hour or two, +just to frighten him, you know. But he will be brought home by-and-by, +before night: and you'll just look after him, will you, and give him a +reprimand, you know?" + +"No, I woon't: I'll be dee'd if I'll leather my boy to please you or +anybody else, not if you was twenty landlords istid o' one, and that a +bad un." + +Dagley's words were loud enough to summon his wife to the back-kitchen +door--the only entrance ever used, and one always open except in bad +weather--and Mr. Brooke, saying soothingly, "Well, well, I'll speak to +your wife--I didn't mean beating, you know," turned to walk to the +house. But Dagley, only the more inclined to "have his say" with a +gentleman who walked away from him, followed at once, with Fag +slouching at his heels and sullenly evading some small and probably +charitable advances on the part of Monk. + +"How do you do, Mrs. Dagley?" said Mr. Brooke, making some haste. "I +came to tell you about your boy: I don't want you to give him the +stick, you know." He was careful to speak quite plainly this time. + +Overworked Mrs. Dagley--a thin, worn woman, from whose life pleasure +had so entirely vanished that she had not even any Sunday clothes which +could give her satisfaction in preparing for church--had already had a +misunderstanding with her husband since he had come home, and was in +low spirits, expecting the worst. But her husband was beforehand in +answering. + +"No, nor he woon't hev the stick, whether you want it or no," pursued +Dagley, throwing out his voice, as if he wanted it to hit hard. +"You've got no call to come an' talk about sticks o' these primises, as +you woon't give a stick tow'rt mending. Go to Middlemarch to ax for +_your_ charrickter." + +"You'd far better hold your tongue, Dagley," said the wife, "and not +kick your own trough over. When a man as is father of a family has +been an' spent money at market and made himself the worse for liquor, +he's done enough mischief for one day. But I should like to know what +my boy's done, sir." + +"Niver do you mind what he's done," said Dagley, more fiercely, "it's +my business to speak, an' not yourn. An' I wull speak, too. I'll hev +my say--supper or no. An' what I say is, as I've lived upo' your +ground from my father and grandfather afore me, an' hev dropped our +money into't, an' me an' my children might lie an' rot on the ground +for top-dressin' as we can't find the money to buy, if the King wasn't +to put a stop." + +"My good fellow, you're drunk, you know," said Mr. Brooke, +confidentially but not judiciously. "Another day, another day," he +added, turning as if to go. + +But Dagley immediately fronted him, and Fag at his heels growled low, +as his master's voice grew louder and more insulting, while Monk also +drew close in silent dignified watch. The laborers on the wagon were +pausing to listen, and it seemed wiser to be quite passive than to +attempt a ridiculous flight pursued by a bawling man. + +"I'm no more drunk nor you are, nor so much," said Dagley. "I can +carry my liquor, an' I know what I meean. An' I meean as the King 'ull +put a stop to 't, for them say it as knows it, as there's to be a +Rinform, and them landlords as never done the right thing by their +tenants 'ull be treated i' that way as they'll hev to scuttle off. An' +there's them i' Middlemarch knows what the Rinform is--an' as knows +who'll hev to scuttle. Says they, 'I know who _your_ landlord is.' +An' says I, 'I hope you're the better for knowin' him, I arn't.' Says +they, 'He's a close-fisted un.' 'Ay ay,' says I. 'He's a man for the +Rinform,' says they. That's what they says. An' I made out what the +Rinform were--an' it were to send you an' your likes a-scuttlin' an' +wi' pretty strong-smellin' things too. An' you may do as you like now, +for I'm none afeard on you. An' you'd better let my boy aloan, an' +look to yoursen, afore the Rinform has got upo' your back. That's what +I'n got to say," concluded Mr. Dagley, striking his fork into the +ground with a firmness which proved inconvenient as he tried to draw it +up again. + +At this last action Monk began to bark loudly, and it was a moment for +Mr. Brooke to escape. He walked out of the yard as quickly as he +could, in some amazement at the novelty of his situation. He had never +been insulted on his own land before, and had been inclined to regard +himself as a general favorite (we are all apt to do so, when we think +of our own amiability more than of what other people are likely to want +of us). When he had quarrelled with Caleb Garth twelve years before he +had thought that the tenants would be pleased at the landlord's taking +everything into his own hands. + +Some who follow the narrative of his experience may wonder at the +midnight darkness of Mr. Dagley; but nothing was easier in those times +than for an hereditary farmer of his grade to be ignorant, in spite +somehow of having a rector in the twin parish who was a gentleman to +the backbone, a curate nearer at hand who preached more learnedly than +the rector, a landlord who had gone into everything, especially fine +art and social improvement, and all the lights of Middlemarch only +three miles off. As to the facility with which mortals escape +knowledge, try an average acquaintance in the intellectual blaze of +London, and consider what that eligible person for a dinner-party would +have been if he had learned scant skill in "summing" from the +parish-clerk of Tipton, and read a chapter in the Bible with immense +difficulty, because such names as Isaiah or Apollos remained +unmanageable after twice spelling. Poor Dagley read a few verses +sometimes on a Sunday evening, and the world was at least not darker to +him than it had been before. Some things he knew thoroughly, namely, +the slovenly habits of farming, and the awkwardness of weather, stock +and crops, at Freeman's End--so called apparently by way of sarcasm, +to imply that a man was free to quit it if he chose, but that there was +no earthly "beyond" open to him. + + + +CHAPTER XL. + + Wise in his daily work was he: + To fruits of diligence, + And not to faiths or polity, + He plied his utmost sense. + These perfect in their little parts, + Whose work is all their prize-- + Without them how could laws, or arts, + Or towered cities rise? + + +In watching effects, if only of an electric battery, it is often +necessary to change our place and examine a particular mixture or group +at some distance from the point where the movement we are interested in +was set up. The group I am moving towards is at Caleb Garth's +breakfast-table in the large parlor where the maps and desk were: +father, mother, and five of the children. Mary was just now at home +waiting for a situation, while Christy, the boy next to her, was +getting cheap learning and cheap fare in Scotland, having to his +father's disappointment taken to books instead of that sacred calling +"business." + +The letters had come--nine costly letters, for which the postman had +been paid three and twopence, and Mr. Garth was forgetting his tea and +toast while he read his letters and laid them open one above the other, +sometimes swaying his head slowly, sometimes screwing up his mouth in +inward debate, but not forgetting to cut off a large red seal unbroken, +which Letty snatched up like an eager terrier. + +The talk among the rest went on unrestrainedly, for nothing disturbed +Caleb's absorption except shaking the table when he was writing. + +Two letters of the nine had been for Mary. After reading them, she had +passed them to her mother, and sat playing with her tea-spoon absently, +till with a sudden recollection she returned to her sewing, which she +had kept on her lap during breakfast. + +"Oh, don't sew, Mary!" said Ben, pulling her arm down. "Make me a +peacock with this bread-crumb." He had been kneading a small mass for +the purpose. + +"No, no, Mischief!" said Mary, good-humoredly, while she pricked his +hand lightly with her needle. "Try and mould it yourself: you have +seen me do it often enough. I must get this sewing done. It is for +Rosamond Vincy: she is to be married next week, and she can't be +married without this handkerchief." Mary ended merrily, amused with +the last notion. + +"Why can't she, Mary?" said Letty, seriously interested in this +mystery, and pushing her head so close to her sister that Mary now +turned the threatening needle towards Letty's nose. + +"Because this is one of a dozen, and without it there would only be +eleven," said Mary, with a grave air of explanation, so that Letty sank +back with a sense of knowledge. + +"Have you made up your mind, my dear?" said Mrs. Garth, laying the +letters down. + +"I shall go to the school at York," said Mary. "I am less unfit to +teach in a school than in a family. I like to teach classes best. +And, you see, I must teach: there is nothing else to be done." + +"Teaching seems to me the most delightful work in the world," said Mrs. +Garth, with a touch of rebuke in her tone. "I could understand your +objection to it if you had not knowledge enough, Mary, or if you +disliked children." + +"I suppose we never quite understand why another dislikes what we like, +mother," said Mary, rather curtly. "I am not fond of a schoolroom: I +like the outside world better. It is a very inconvenient fault of +mine." + +"It must be very stupid to be always in a girls' school," said Alfred. +"Such a set of nincompoops, like Mrs. Ballard's pupils walking two and +two." + +"And they have no games worth playing at," said Jim. "They can neither +throw nor leap. I don't wonder at Mary's not liking it." + +"What is that Mary doesn't like, eh?" said the father, looking over his +spectacles and pausing before he opened his next letter. + +"Being among a lot of nincompoop girls," said Alfred. + +"Is it the situation you had heard of, Mary?" said Caleb, gently, +looking at his daughter. + +"Yes, father: the school at York. I have determined to take it. It is +quite the best. Thirty-five pounds a-year, and extra pay for teaching +the smallest strummers at the piano." + +"Poor child! I wish she could stay at home with us, Susan," said +Caleb, looking plaintively at his wife. + +"Mary would not be happy without doing her duty," said Mrs. Garth, +magisterially, conscious of having done her own. + +"It wouldn't make me happy to do such a nasty duty as that," said +Alfred--at which Mary and her father laughed silently, but Mrs. Garth +said, gravely-- + +"Do find a fitter word than nasty, my dear Alfred, for everything that +you think disagreeable. And suppose that Mary could help you to go to +Mr. Hanmer's with the money she gets?" + +"That seems to me a great shame. But she's an old brick," said Alfred, +rising from his chair, and pulling Mary's head backward to kiss her. + +Mary colored and laughed, but could not conceal that the tears were +coming. Caleb, looking on over his spectacles, with the angles of his +eyebrows falling, had an expression of mingled delight and sorrow as he +returned to the opening of his letter; and even Mrs. Garth, her lips +curling with a calm contentment, allowed that inappropriate language to +pass without correction, although Ben immediately took it up, and sang, +"She's an old brick, old brick, old brick!" to a cantering measure, +which he beat out with his fist on Mary's arm. + +But Mrs. Garth's eyes were now drawn towards her husband, who was +already deep in the letter he was reading. His face had an expression +of grave surprise, which alarmed her a little, but he did not like to +be questioned while he was reading, and she remained anxiously watching +till she saw him suddenly shaken by a little joyous laugh as he turned +back to the beginning of the letter, and looking at her above his +spectacles, said, in a low tone, "What do you think, Susan?" + +She went and stood behind him, putting her hand on his shoulder, while +they read the letter together. It was from Sir James Chettam, offering +to Mr. Garth the management of the family estates at Freshitt and +elsewhere, and adding that Sir James had been requested by Mr. Brooke +of Tipton to ascertain whether Mr. Garth would be disposed at the same +time to resume the agency of the Tipton property. The Baronet added in +very obliging words that he himself was particularly desirous of seeing +the Freshitt and Tipton estates under the same management, and he hoped +to be able to show that the double agency might be held on terms +agreeable to Mr. Garth, whom he would be glad to see at the Hall at +twelve o'clock on the following day. + +"He writes handsomely, doesn't he, Susan?" said Caleb, turning his eyes +upward to his wife, who raised her hand from his shoulder to his ear, +while she rested her chin on his head. "Brooke didn't like to ask me +himself, I can see," he continued, laughing silently. + +"Here is an honor to your father, children," said Mrs. Garth, looking +round at the five pair of eyes, all fixed on the parents. "He is asked +to take a post again by those who dismissed him long ago. That shows +that he did his work well, so that they feel the want of him." + +"Like Cincinnatus--hooray!" said Ben, riding on his chair, with a +pleasant confidence that discipline was relaxed. + +"Will they come to fetch him, mother?" said Letty, thinking of the +Mayor and Corporation in their robes. + +Mrs. Garth patted Letty's head and smiled, but seeing that her husband +was gathering up his letters and likely soon to be out of reach in that +sanctuary "business," she pressed his shoulder and said emphatically-- + +"Now, mind you ask fair pay, Caleb." + +"Oh yes," said Caleb, in a deep voice of assent, as if it would be +unreasonable to suppose anything else of him. "It'll come to between +four and five hundred, the two together." Then with a little start of +remembrance he said, "Mary, write and give up that school. Stay and +help your mother. I'm as pleased as Punch, now I've thought of that." + +No manner could have been less like that of Punch triumphant than +Caleb's, but his talents did not lie in finding phrases, though he was +very particular about his letter-writing, and regarded his wife as a +treasury of correct language. + +There was almost an uproar among the children now, and Mary held up the +cambric embroidery towards her mother entreatingly, that it might be +put out of reach while the boys dragged her into a dance. Mrs. Garth, +in placid joy, began to put the cups and plates together, while Caleb +pushing his chair from the table, as if he were going to move to the +desk, still sat holding his letters in his hand and looking on the +ground meditatively, stretching out the fingers of his left hand, +according to a mute language of his own. At last he said-- + +"It's a thousand pities Christy didn't take to business, Susan. I +shall want help by-and-by. And Alfred must go off to the +engineering--I've made up my mind to that." He fell into meditation and +finger-rhetoric again for a little while, and then continued: "I shall +make Brooke have new agreements with the tenants, and I shall draw up a +rotation of crops. And I'll lay a wager we can get fine bricks out of +the clay at Bott's corner. I must look into that: it would cheapen the +repairs. It's a fine bit of work, Susan! A man without a family would +be glad to do it for nothing." + +"Mind you don't, though," said his wife, lifting up her finger. + +"No, no; but it's a fine thing to come to a man when he's seen into the +nature of business: to have the chance of getting a bit of the country +into good fettle, as they say, and putting men into the right way with +their farming, and getting a bit of good contriving and solid building +done--that those who are living and those who come after will be the +better for. I'd sooner have it than a fortune. I hold it the most +honorable work that is." Here Caleb laid down his letters, thrust his +fingers between the buttons of his waistcoat, and sat upright, but +presently proceeded with some awe in his voice and moving his head +slowly aside--"It's a great gift of God, Susan." + +"That it is, Caleb," said his wife, with answering fervor. "And it +will be a blessing to your children to have had a father who did such +work: a father whose good work remains though his name may be +forgotten." She could not say any more to him then about the pay. + +In the evening, when Caleb, rather tired with his day's work, was +seated in silence with his pocket-book open on his knee, while Mrs. +Garth and Mary were at their sewing, and Letty in a corner was +whispering a dialogue with her doll, Mr. Farebrother came up the +orchard walk, dividing the bright August lights and shadows with the +tufted grass and the apple-tree boughs. We know that he was fond of +his parishioners the Garths, and had thought Mary worth mentioning to +Lydgate. He used to the full the clergyman's privilege of disregarding +the Middlemarch discrimination of ranks, and always told his mother +that Mrs. Garth was more of a lady than any matron in the town. Still, +you see, he spent his evenings at the Vincys', where the matron, though +less of a lady, presided over a well-lit drawing-room and whist. In +those days human intercourse was not determined solely by respect. But +the Vicar did heartily respect the Garths, and a visit from him was no +surprise to that family. Nevertheless he accounted for it even while +he was shaking hands, by saying, "I come as an envoy, Mrs. Garth: I +have something to say to you and Garth on behalf of Fred Vincy. The +fact is, poor fellow," he continued, as he seated himself and looked +round with his bright glance at the three who were listening to him, +"he has taken me into his confidence." + +Mary's heart beat rather quickly: she wondered how far Fred's +confidence had gone. + +"We haven't seen the lad for months," said Caleb. "I couldn't think +what was become of him." + +"He has been away on a visit," said the Vicar, "because home was a +little too hot for him, and Lydgate told his mother that the poor +fellow must not begin to study yet. But yesterday he came and poured +himself out to me. I am very glad he did, because I have seen him grow +up from a youngster of fourteen, and I am so much at home in the house +that the children are like nephews and nieces to me. But it is a +difficult case to advise upon. However, he has asked me to come and +tell you that he is going away, and that he is so miserable about his +debt to you, and his inability to pay, that he can't bear to come +himself even to bid you good by." + +"Tell him it doesn't signify a farthing," said Caleb, waving his hand. +"We've had the pinch and have got over it. And now I'm going to be as +rich as a Jew." + +"Which means," said Mrs. Garth, smiling at the Vicar, "that we are +going to have enough to bring up the boys well and to keep Mary at +home." + +"What is the treasure-trove?" said Mr. Farebrother. + +"I'm going to be agent for two estates, Freshitt and Tipton; and +perhaps for a pretty little bit of land in Lowick besides: it's all the +same family connection, and employment spreads like water if it's once +set going. It makes me very happy, Mr. Farebrother"--here Caleb threw +back his head a little, and spread his arms on the elbows of his +chair--"that I've got an opportunity again with the letting of the +land, and carrying out a notion or two with improvements. It's a most +uncommonly cramping thing, as I've often told Susan, to sit on +horseback and look over the hedges at the wrong thing, and not be able +to put your hand to it to make it right. What people do who go into +politics I can't think: it drives me almost mad to see mismanagement +over only a few hundred acres." + +It was seldom that Caleb volunteered so long a speech, but his +happiness had the effect of mountain air: his eyes were bright, and the +words came without effort. + +"I congratulate you heartily, Garth," said the Vicar. "This is the +best sort of news I could have had to carry to Fred Vincy, for he dwelt +a good deal on the injury he had done you in causing you to part with +money--robbing you of it, he said--which you wanted for other purposes. +I wish Fred were not such an idle dog; he has some very good points, +and his father is a little hard upon him." + +"Where is he going?" said Mrs. Garth, rather coldly. + +"He means to try again for his degree, and he is going up to study +before term. I have advised him to do that. I don't urge him to enter +the Church--on the contrary. But if he will go and work so as to pass, +that will be some guarantee that he has energy and a will; and he is +quite at sea; he doesn't know what else to do. So far he will please +his father, and I have promised in the mean time to try and reconcile +Vincy to his son's adopting some other line of life. Fred says frankly +he is not fit for a clergyman, and I would do anything I could to +hinder a man from the fatal step of choosing the wrong profession. He +quoted to me what you said, Miss Garth--do you remember it?" (Mr. +Farebrother used to say "Mary" instead of "Miss Garth," but it was part +of his delicacy to treat her with the more deference because, according +to Mrs. Vincy's phrase, she worked for her bread.) + +Mary felt uncomfortable, but, determined to take the matter lightly, +answered at once, "I have said so many impertinent things to Fred--we +are such old playfellows." + +"You said, according to him, that he would be one of those ridiculous +clergymen who help to make the whole clergy ridiculous. Really, that +was so cutting that I felt a little cut myself." + +Caleb laughed. "She gets her tongue from you, Susan," he said, with +some enjoyment. + +"Not its flippancy, father," said Mary, quickly, fearing that her +mother would be displeased. "It is rather too bad of Fred to repeat my +flippant speeches to Mr. Farebrother." + +"It was certainly a hasty speech, my dear," said Mrs. Garth, with whom +speaking evil of dignities was a high misdemeanor. "We should not +value our Vicar the less because there was a ridiculous curate in the +next parish." + +"There's something in what she says, though," said Caleb, not disposed +to have Mary's sharpness undervalued. "A bad workman of any sort makes +his fellows mistrusted. Things hang together," he added, looking on +the floor and moving his feet uneasily with a sense that words were +scantier than thoughts. + +"Clearly," said the Vicar, amused. "By being contemptible we set men's +minds, to the tune of contempt. I certainly agree with Miss Garth's +view of the matter, whether I am condemned by it or not. But as to +Fred Vincy, it is only fair he should be excused a little: old +Featherstone's delusive behavior did help to spoil him. There was +something quite diabolical in not leaving him a farthing after all. +But Fred has the good taste not to dwell on that. And what he cares +most about is having offended you, Mrs. Garth; he supposes you will +never think well of him again." + +"I have been disappointed in Fred," said Mrs. Garth, with decision. +"But I shall be ready to think well of him again when he gives me good +reason to do so." + +At this point Mary went out of the room, taking Letty with her. + +"Oh, we must forgive young people when they're sorry," said Caleb, +watching Mary close the door. "And as you say, Mr. Farebrother, there +was the very devil in that old man. Now Mary's gone out, I must tell you +a thing--it's only known to Susan and me, and you'll not tell it again. +The old scoundrel wanted Mary to burn one of the wills the very night +he died, when she was sitting up with him by herself, and he offered her +a sum of money that he had in the box by him if she would do it. But Mary, +you understand, could do no such thing--would not be handling his iron +chest, and so on. Now, you see, the will he wanted burnt was this last, +so that if Mary had done what he wanted, Fred Vincy would have had ten +thousand pounds. The old man did turn to him at the last. That touches +poor Mary close; she couldn't help it--she was in the right to do what +she did, but she feels, as she says, much as if she had knocked down +somebody's property and broken it against her will, when she was +rightfully defending herself. I feel with her, somehow, and if I could +make any amends to the poor lad, instead of bearing him a grudge for +the harm he did us, I should be glad to do it. Now, what is your opinion, +sir? Susan doesn't agree with me. She says--tell what you say, Susan." + +"Mary could not have acted otherwise, even if she had known what would +be the effect on Fred," said Mrs. Garth, pausing from her work, and +looking at Mr. Farebrother. + +"And she was quite ignorant of it. It seems to me, a loss which falls +on another because we have done right is not to lie upon our +conscience." + +The Vicar did not answer immediately, and Caleb said, "It's the +feeling. The child feels in that way, and I feel with her. You don't +mean your horse to tread on a dog when you're backing out of the way; +but it goes through you, when it's done." + +"I am sure Mrs. Garth would agree with you there," said Mr. +Farebrother, who for some reason seemed more inclined to ruminate than +to speak. "One could hardly say that the feeling you mention about +Fred is wrong--or rather, mistaken--though no man ought to make a claim +on such feeling." + +"Well, well," said Caleb, "it's a secret. You will not tell Fred." + +"Certainly not. But I shall carry the other good news--that you can +afford the loss he caused you." + +Mr. Farebrother left the house soon after, and seeing Mary in the +orchard with Letty, went to say good-by to her. They made a pretty +picture in the western light which brought out the brightness of the +apples on the old scant-leaved boughs--Mary in her lavender gingham and +black ribbons holding a basket, while Letty in her well-worn nankin +picked up the fallen apples. If you want to know more particularly how +Mary looked, ten to one you will see a face like hers in the crowded +street to-morrow, if you are there on the watch: she will not be among +those daughters of Zion who are haughty, and walk with stretched-out +necks and wanton eyes, mincing as they go: let all those pass, and fix +your eyes on some small plump brownish person of firm but quiet +carriage, who looks about her, but does not suppose that anybody is +looking at her. If she has a broad face and square brow, well-marked +eyebrows and curly dark hair, a certain expression of amusement in her +glance which her mouth keeps the secret of, and for the rest features +entirely insignificant--take that ordinary but not disagreeable person +for a portrait of Mary Garth. If you made her smile, she would show +you perfect little teeth; if you made her angry, she would not raise +her voice, but would probably say one of the bitterest things you have +ever tasted the flavor of; if you did her a kindness, she would never +forget it. Mary admired the keen-faced handsome little Vicar in his +well-brushed threadbare clothes more than any man she had had the +opportunity of knowing. She had never heard him say a foolish thing, +though she knew that he did unwise ones; and perhaps foolish sayings +were more objectionable to her than any of Mr. Farebrother's unwise +doings. At least, it was remarkable that the actual imperfections of +the Vicar's clerical character never seemed to call forth the same +scorn and dislike which she showed beforehand for the predicted +imperfections of the clerical character sustained by Fred Vincy. These +irregularities of judgment, I imagine, are found even in riper minds +than Mary Garth's: our impartiality is kept for abstract merit and +demerit, which none of us ever saw. Will any one guess towards which +of those widely different men Mary had the peculiar woman's +tenderness?--the one she was most inclined to be severe on, or the +contrary? + +"Have you any message for your old playfellow, Miss Garth?" said the +Vicar, as he took a fragrant apple from the basket which she held +towards him, and put it in his pocket. "Something to soften down that +harsh judgment? I am going straight to see him." + +"No," said Mary, shaking her head, and smiling. "If I were to say that +he would not be ridiculous as a clergyman, I must say that he would be +something worse than ridiculous. But I am very glad to hear that he is +going away to work." + +"On the other hand, I am very glad to hear that _you_ are not going +away to work. My mother, I am sure, will be all the happier if you +will come to see her at the vicarage: you know she is fond of having +young people to talk to, and she has a great deal to tell about old +times. You will really be doing a kindness." + +"I should like it very much, if I may," said Mary. "Everything seems +too happy for me all at once. I thought it would always be part of my +life to long for home, and losing that grievance makes me feel rather +empty: I suppose it served instead of sense to fill up my mind?" + +"May I go with you, Mary?" whispered Letty--a most inconvenient child, +who listened to everything. But she was made exultant by having her +chin pinched and her cheek kissed by Mr. Farebrother--an incident +which she narrated to her mother and father. + +As the Vicar walked to Lowick, any one watching him closely might have +seen him twice shrug his shoulders. I think that the rare Englishmen +who have this gesture are never of the heavy type--for fear of any +lumbering instance to the contrary, I will say, hardly ever; they have +usually a fine temperament and much tolerance towards the smaller +errors of men (themselves inclusive). The Vicar was holding an inward +dialogue in which he told himself that there was probably something +more between Fred and Mary Garth than the regard of old playfellows, +and replied with a question whether that bit of womanhood were not a +great deal too choice for that crude young gentleman. The rejoinder to +this was the first shrug. Then he laughed at himself for being likely +to have felt jealous, as if he had been a man able to marry, which, +added he, it is as clear as any balance-sheet that I am not. Whereupon +followed the second shrug. + +What could two men, so different from each other, see in this "brown +patch," as Mary called herself? It was certainly not her plainness +that attracted them (and let all plain young ladies be warned against +the dangerous encouragement given them by Society to confide in their +want of beauty). A human being in this aged nation of ours is a very +wonderful whole, the slow creation of long interchanging influences: +and charm is a result of two such wholes, the one loving and the one +loved. + +When Mr. and Mrs. Garth were sitting alone, Caleb said, "Susan, guess +what I'm thinking of." + +"The rotation of crops," said Mrs. Garth, smiling at him, above her +knitting, "or else the back-doors of the Tipton cottages." + +"No," said Caleb, gravely; "I am thinking that I could do a great turn +for Fred Vincy. Christy's gone, Alfred will be gone soon, and it will +be five years before Jim is ready to take to business. I shall want +help, and Fred might come in and learn the nature of things and act +under me, and it might be the making of him into a useful man, if he +gives up being a parson. What do you think?" + +"I think, there is hardly anything honest that his family would object +to more," said Mrs. Garth, decidedly. + +"What care I about their objecting?" said Caleb, with a sturdiness +which he was apt to show when he had an opinion. "The lad is of age +and must get his bread. He has sense enough and quickness enough; he +likes being on the land, and it's my belief that he could learn +business well if he gave his mind to it." + +"But would he? His father and mother wanted him to be a fine +gentleman, and I think he has the same sort of feeling himself. They +all think us beneath them. And if the proposal came from you, I am +sure Mrs. Vincy would say that we wanted Fred for Mary." + +"Life is a poor tale, if it is to be settled by nonsense of that sort," +said Caleb, with disgust. + +"Yes, but there is a certain pride which is proper, Caleb." + +"I call it improper pride to let fools' notions hinder you from doing a +good action. There's no sort of work," said Caleb, with fervor, +putting out his hand and moving it up and down to mark his emphasis, +"that could ever be done well, if you minded what fools say. You must +have it inside you that your plan is right, and that plan you must +follow." + +"I will not oppose any plan you have set your mind on, Caleb," said +Mrs. Garth, who was a firm woman, but knew that there were some points +on which her mild husband was yet firmer. "Still, it seems to be fixed +that Fred is to go back to college: will it not be better to wait and +see what he will choose to do after that? It is not easy to keep +people against their will. And you are not yet quite sure enough of +your own position, or what you will want." + +"Well, it may be better to wait a bit. But as to my getting plenty of +work for two, I'm pretty sure of that. I've always had my hands full +with scattered things, and there's always something fresh turning up. +Why, only yesterday--bless me, I don't think I told you!--it was rather +odd that two men should have been at me on different sides to do the +same bit of valuing. And who do you think they were?" said Caleb, +taking a pinch of snuff and holding it up between his fingers, as if it +were a part of his exposition. He was fond of a pinch when it occurred +to him, but he usually forgot that this indulgence was at his command. + +His wife held down her knitting and looked attentive. + +"Why, that Rigg, or Rigg Featherstone, was one. But Bulstrode was +before him, so I'm going to do it for Bulstrode. Whether it's mortgage +or purchase they're going for, I can't tell yet." + +"Can that man be going to sell the land just left him--which he has +taken the name for?" said Mrs. Garth. + +"Deuce knows," said Caleb, who never referred the knowledge of +discreditable doings to any higher power than the deuce. "But +Bulstrode has long been wanting to get a handsome bit of land under his +fingers--that I know. And it's a difficult matter to get, in this part +of the country." + +Caleb scattered his snuff carefully instead of taking it, and then +added, "The ins and outs of things are curious. Here is the land +they've been all along expecting for Fred, which it seems the old man +never meant to leave him a foot of, but left it to this side-slip of a +son that he kept in the dark, and thought of his sticking there and +vexing everybody as well as he could have vexed 'em himself if he could +have kept alive. I say, it would be curious if it got into Bulstrode's +hands after all. The old man hated him, and never would bank with him." + +"What reason could the miserable creature have for hating a man whom he +had nothing to do with?" said Mrs. Garth. + +"Pooh! where's the use of asking for such fellows' reasons? The soul +of man," said Caleb, with the deep tone and grave shake of the head +which always came when he used this phrase--"The soul of man, when it +gets fairly rotten, will bear you all sorts of poisonous toad-stools, +and no eye can see whence came the seed thereof." + +It was one of Caleb's quaintnesses, that in his difficulty of finding +speech for his thought, he caught, as it were, snatches of diction +which he associated with various points of view or states of mind; and +whenever he had a feeling of awe, he was haunted by a sense of Biblical +phraseology, though he could hardly have given a strict quotation. + + + +CHAPTER XLI. + + "By swaggering could I never thrive, + For the rain it raineth every day. + --Twelfth Night + + +The transactions referred to by Caleb Garth as having gone forward +between Mr. Bulstrode and Mr. Joshua Rigg Featherstone concerning the +land attached to Stone Court, had occasioned the interchange of a +letter or two between these personages. + +Who shall tell what may be the effect of writing? If it happens to +have been cut in stone, though it lie face down-most for ages on a +forsaken beach, or "rest quietly under the drums and tramplings of many +conquests," it may end by letting us into the secret of usurpations and +other scandals gossiped about long empires ago:--this world being +apparently a huge whispering-gallery. Such conditions are often +minutely represented in our petty lifetimes. As the stone which has +been kicked by generations of clowns may come by curious little links +of effect under the eyes of a scholar, through whose labors it may at +last fix the date of invasions and unlock religions, so a bit of ink +and paper which has long been an innocent wrapping or stop-gap may at +last be laid open under the one pair of eyes which have knowledge +enough to turn it into the opening of a catastrophe. To Uriel watching +the progress of planetary history from the sun, the one result would be +just as much of a coincidence as the other. + +Having made this rather lofty comparison I am less uneasy in calling +attention to the existence of low people by whose interference, however +little we may like it, the course of the world is very much determined. +It would be well, certainly, if we could help to reduce their number, +and something might perhaps be done by not lightly giving occasion to +their existence. Socially speaking, Joshua Rigg would have been +generally pronounced a superfluity. But those who like Peter +Featherstone never had a copy of themselves demanded, are the very last +to wait for such a request either in prose or verse. The copy in this +case bore more of outside resemblance to the mother, in whose sex +frog-features, accompanied with fresh-colored cheeks and a well-rounded +figure, are compatible with much charm for a certain order of admirers. +The result is sometimes a frog-faced male, desirable, surely, to no +order of intelligent beings. Especially when he is suddenly brought +into evidence to frustrate other people's expectations--the very +lowest aspect in which a social superfluity can present himself. + +But Mr. Rigg Featherstone's low characteristics were all of the sober, +water-drinking kind. From the earliest to the latest hour of the day +he was always as sleek, neat, and cool as the frog he resembled, and +old Peter had secretly chuckled over an offshoot almost more +calculating, and far more imperturbable, than himself. I will add that +his finger-nails were scrupulously attended to, and that he meant to +marry a well-educated young lady (as yet unspecified) whose person was +good, and whose connections, in a solid middle-class way, were +undeniable. Thus his nails and modesty were comparable to those of +most gentlemen; though his ambition had been educated only by the +opportunities of a clerk and accountant in the smaller commercial +houses of a seaport. He thought the rural Featherstones very simple +absurd people, and they in their turn regarded his "bringing up" in a +seaport town as an exaggeration of the monstrosity that their brother +Peter, and still more Peter's property, should have had such belongings. + +The garden and gravel approach, as seen from the two windows of the +wainscoted parlor at Stone Court, were never in better trim than now, +when Mr. Rigg Featherstone stood, with his hands behind him, looking +out on these grounds as their master. But it seemed doubtful whether +he looked out for the sake of contemplation or of turning his back to a +person who stood in the middle of the room, with his legs considerably +apart and his hands in his trouser-pockets: a person in all respects a +contrast to the sleek and cool Rigg. He was a man obviously on the way +towards sixty, very florid and hairy, with much gray in his bushy +whiskers and thick curly hair, a stoutish body which showed to +disadvantage the somewhat worn joinings of his clothes, and the air of +a swaggerer, who would aim at being noticeable even at a show of +fireworks, regarding his own remarks on any other person's performance +as likely to be more interesting than the performance itself. + +His name was John Raffles, and he sometimes wrote jocosely W.A.G. +after his signature, observing when he did so, that he was once taught +by Leonard Lamb of Finsbury who wrote B.A. after his name, and that he, +Raffles, originated the witticism of calling that celebrated principal +Ba-Lamb. Such were the appearance and mental flavor of Mr. Raffles, +both of which seemed to have a stale odor of travellers' rooms in the +commercial hotels of that period. + +"Come, now, Josh," he was saying, in a full rumbling tone, "look at it +in this light: here is your poor mother going into the vale of years, +and you could afford something handsome now to make her comfortable." + +"Not while you live. Nothing would make her comfortable while you +live," returned Rigg, in his cool high voice. "What I give her, you'll +take." + +"You bear me a grudge, Josh, that I know. But come, now--as between +man and man--without humbug--a little capital might enable me to make a +first-rate thing of the shop. The tobacco trade is growing. I should +cut my own nose off in not doing the best I could at it. I should +stick to it like a flea to a fleece for my own sake. I should always +be on the spot. And nothing would make your poor mother so happy. +I've pretty well done with my wild oats--turned fifty-five. I want to +settle down in my chimney-corner. And if I once buckled to the tobacco +trade, I could bring an amount of brains and experience to bear on it +that would not be found elsewhere in a hurry. I don't want to be +bothering you one time after another, but to get things once for all +into the right channel. Consider that, Josh--as between man and +man--and with your poor mother to be made easy for her life. I was +always fond of the old woman, by Jove!" + +"Have you done?" said Mr. Rigg, quietly, without looking away from the +window. + +"Yes, I've done," said Raffles, taking hold of his hat which stood +before him on the table, and giving it a sort of oratorical push. + +"Then just listen to me. The more you say anything, the less I shall +believe it. The more you want me to do a thing, the more reason I +shall have for never doing it. Do you think I mean to forget your +kicking me when I was a lad, and eating all the best victual away from +me and my mother? Do you think I forget your always coming home to +sell and pocket everything, and going off again leaving us in the +lurch? I should be glad to see you whipped at the cart-tail. My +mother was a fool to you: she'd no right to give me a father-in-law, +and she's been punished for it. She shall have her weekly allowance +paid and no more: and that shall be stopped if you dare to come on to +these premises again, or to come into this country after me again. The +next time you show yourself inside the gates here, you shall be driven +off with the dogs and the wagoner's whip." + +As Rigg pronounced the last words he turned round and looked at Raffles +with his prominent frozen eyes. The contrast was as striking as it +could have been eighteen years before, when Rigg was a most unengaging +kickable boy, and Raffles was the rather thick-set Adonis of bar-rooms +and back-parlors. But the advantage now was on the side of Rigg, and +auditors of this conversation might probably have expected that Raffles +would retire with the air of a defeated dog. Not at all. He made a +grimace which was habitual with him whenever he was "out" in a game; +then subsided into a laugh, and drew a brandy-flask from his pocket. + +"Come, Josh," he said, in a cajoling tone, "give us a spoonful of +brandy, and a sovereign to pay the way back, and I'll go. Honor +bright! I'll go like a bullet, _by_ Jove!" + +"Mind," said Rigg, drawing out a bunch of keys, "if I ever see you +again, I shan't speak to you. I don't own you any more than if I saw a +crow; and if you want to own me you'll get nothing by it but a +character for being what you are--a spiteful, brassy, bullying rogue." + +"That's a pity, now, Josh," said Raffles, affecting to scratch his head +and wrinkle his brows upward as if he were nonplussed. "I'm very fond +of you; _by_ Jove, I am! There's nothing I like better than plaguing +you--you're so like your mother, and I must do without it. But the +brandy and the sovereign's a bargain." + +He jerked forward the flask and Rigg went to a fine old oaken bureau +with his keys. But Raffles had reminded himself by his movement with +the flask that it had become dangerously loose from its leather +covering, and catching sight of a folded paper which had fallen within +the fender, he took it up and shoved it under the leather so as to make +the glass firm. + +By that time Rigg came forward with a brandy-bottle, filled the flask, +and handed Raffles a sovereign, neither looking at him nor speaking to +him. After locking up the bureau again, he walked to the window and +gazed out as impassibly as he had done at the beginning of the +interview, while Raffles took a small allowance from the flask, screwed +it up, and deposited it in his side-pocket, with provoking slowness, +making a grimace at his stepson's back. + +"Farewell, Josh--and if forever!" said Raffles, turning back his head +as he opened the door. + +Rigg saw him leave the grounds and enter the lane. The gray day had +turned to a light drizzling rain, which freshened the hedgerows and the +grassy borders of the by-roads, and hastened the laborers who were +loading the last shocks of corn. Raffles, walking with the uneasy gait +of a town loiterer obliged to do a bit of country journeying on foot, +looked as incongruous amid this moist rural quiet and industry as if he +had been a baboon escaped from a menagerie. But there were none to +stare at him except the long-weaned calves, and none to show dislike of +his appearance except the little water-rats which rustled away at his +approach. + +He was fortunate enough when he got on to the highroad to be overtaken +by the stage-coach, which carried him to Brassing; and there he took +the new-made railway, observing to his fellow-passengers that he +considered it pretty well seasoned now it had done for Huskisson. Mr. +Raffles on most occasions kept up the sense of having been educated at +an academy, and being able, if he chose, to pass well everywhere; +indeed, there was not one of his fellow-men whom he did not feel +himself in a position to ridicule and torment, confident of the +entertainment which he thus gave to all the rest of the company. + +He played this part now with as much spirit as if his journey had been +entirely successful, resorting at frequent intervals to his flask. The +paper with which he had wedged it was a letter signed Nicholas +Bulstrode, but Raffles was not likely to disturb it from its present +useful position. + + + +CHAPTER XLII. + + "How much, methinks, I could despise this man + Were I not bound in charity against it! + --SHAKESPEARE: Henry VIII. + + +One of the professional calls made by Lydgate soon after his return +from his wedding-journey was to Lowick Manor, in consequence of a +letter which had requested him to fix a time for his visit. + +Mr. Casaubon had never put any question concerning the nature of his +illness to Lydgate, nor had he even to Dorothea betrayed any anxiety as +to how far it might be likely to cut short his labors or his life. On +this point, as on all others, he shrank from pity; and if the suspicion +of being pitied for anything in his lot surmised or known in spite of +himself was embittering, the idea of calling forth a show of compassion +by frankly admitting an alarm or a sorrow was necessarily intolerable +to him. Every proud mind knows something of this experience, and +perhaps it is only to be overcome by a sense of fellowship deep enough +to make all efforts at isolation seem mean and petty instead of +exalting. + +But Mr. Casaubon was now brooding over something through which the +question of his health and life haunted his silence with a more +harassing importunity even than through the autumnal unripeness of his +authorship. It is true that this last might be called his central +ambition; but there are some kinds of authorship in which by far the +largest result is the uneasy susceptibility accumulated in the +consciousness of the author--one knows of the river by a few streaks +amid a long-gathered deposit of uncomfortable mud. That was the way +with Mr. Casaubon's hard intellectual labors. Their most +characteristic result was not the "Key to all Mythologies," but a +morbid consciousness that others did not give him the place which he +had not demonstrably merited--a perpetual suspicious conjecture that +the views entertained of him were not to his advantage--a melancholy +absence of passion in his efforts at achievement, and a passionate +resistance to the confession that he had achieved nothing. + +Thus his intellectual ambition which seemed to others to have absorbed +and dried him, was really no security against wounds, least of all +against those which came from Dorothea. And he had begun now to frame +possibilities for the future which were somehow more embittering to him +than anything his mind had dwelt on before. + +Against certain facts he was helpless: against Will Ladislaw's +existence, his defiant stay in the neighborhood of Lowick, and his +flippant state of mind with regard to the possessors of authentic, +well-stamped erudition: against Dorothea's nature, always taking on +some new shape of ardent activity, and even in submission and silence +covering fervid reasons which it was an irritation to think of: against +certain notions and likings which had taken possession of her mind in +relation to subjects that he could not possibly discuss with her. +There was no denying that Dorothea was as virtuous and lovely a young +lady as he could have obtained for a wife; but a young lady turned out +to be something more troublesome than he had conceived. She nursed +him, she read to him, she anticipated his wants, and was solicitous +about his feelings; but there had entered into the husband's mind the +certainty that she judged him, and that her wifely devotedness was like +a penitential expiation of unbelieving thoughts--was accompanied with a +power of comparison by which himself and his doings were seen too +luminously as a part of things in general. His discontent passed +vapor-like through all her gentle loving manifestations, and clung to +that inappreciative world which she had only brought nearer to him. + +Poor Mr. Casaubon! This suffering was the harder to bear because it +seemed like a betrayal: the young creature who had worshipped him with +perfect trust had quickly turned into the critical wife; and early +instances of criticism and resentment had made an impression which no +tenderness and submission afterwards could remove. To his suspicious +interpretation Dorothea's silence now was a suppressed rebellion; a +remark from her which he had not in any way anticipated was an +assertion of conscious superiority; her gentle answers had an +irritating cautiousness in them; and when she acquiesced it was a +self-approved effort of forbearance. The tenacity with which he strove +to hide this inward drama made it the more vivid for him; as we hear +with the more keenness what we wish others not to hear. + +Instead of wondering at this result of misery in Mr. Casaubon, I think +it quite ordinary. Will not a tiny speck very close to our vision blot +out the glory of the world, and leave only a margin by which we see the +blot? I know no speck so troublesome as self. And who, if Mr. +Casaubon had chosen to expound his discontents--his suspicions that he +was not any longer adored without criticism--could have denied that +they were founded on good reasons? On the contrary, there was a strong +reason to be added, which he had not himself taken explicitly into +account--namely, that he was not unmixedly adorable. He suspected +this, however, as he suspected other things, without confessing it, and +like the rest of us, felt how soothing it would have been to have a +companion who would never find it out. + +This sore susceptibility in relation to Dorothea was thoroughly +prepared before Will Ladislaw had returned to Lowick, and what had +occurred since then had brought Mr. Casaubon's power of suspicious +construction into exasperated activity. To all the facts which he +knew, he added imaginary facts both present and future which became +more real to him than those because they called up a stronger dislike, +a more predominating bitterness. Suspicion and jealousy of Will +Ladislaw's intentions, suspicion and jealousy of Dorothea's +impressions, were constantly at their weaving work. It would be quite +unjust to him to suppose that he could have entered into any coarse +misinterpretation of Dorothea: his own habits of mind and conduct, +quite as much as the open elevation of her nature, saved him from any +such mistake. What he was jealous of was her opinion, the sway that +might be given to her ardent mind in its judgments, and the future +possibilities to which these might lead her. As to Will, though until +his last defiant letter he had nothing definite which he would choose +formally to allege against him, he felt himself warranted in believing +that he was capable of any design which could fascinate a rebellious +temper and an undisciplined impulsiveness. He was quite sure that +Dorothea was the cause of Will's return from Rome, and his +determination to settle in the neighborhood; and he was penetrating +enough to imagine that Dorothea had innocently encouraged this course. +It was as clear as possible that she was ready to be attached to Will +and to be pliant to his suggestions: they had never had a tete-a-tete +without her bringing away from it some new troublesome impression, and +the last interview that Mr. Casaubon was aware of (Dorothea, on +returning from Freshitt Hall, had for the first time been silent about +having seen Will) had led to a scene which roused an angrier feeling +against them both than he had ever known before. Dorothea's outpouring +of her notions about money, in the darkness of the night, had done +nothing but bring a mixture of more odious foreboding into her +husband's mind. + +And there was the shock lately given to his health always sadly present +with him. He was certainly much revived; he had recovered all his +usual power of work: the illness might have been mere fatigue, and +there might still be twenty years of achievement before him, which +would justify the thirty years of preparation. That prospect was made +the sweeter by a flavor of vengeance against the hasty sneers of Carp & +Company; for even when Mr. Casaubon was carrying his taper among the +tombs of the past, those modern figures came athwart the dim light, and +interrupted his diligent exploration. To convince Carp of his mistake, +so that he would have to eat his own words with a good deal of +indigestion, would be an agreeable accident of triumphant authorship, +which the prospect of living to future ages on earth and to all +eternity in heaven could not exclude from contemplation. Since, thus, +the prevision of his own unending bliss could not nullify the bitter +savors of irritated jealousy and vindictiveness, it is the less +surprising that the probability of a transient earthly bliss for other +persons, when he himself should have entered into glory, had not a +potently sweetening effect. If the truth should be that some +undermining disease was at work within him, there might be large +opportunity for some people to be the happier when he was gone; and if +one of those people should be Will Ladislaw, Mr. Casaubon objected so +strongly that it seemed as if the annoyance would make part of his +disembodied existence. + +This is a very bare and therefore a very incomplete way of putting the +case. The human soul moves in many channels, and Mr. Casaubon, we +know, had a sense of rectitude and an honorable pride in satisfying the +requirements of honor, which compelled him to find other reasons for +his conduct than those of jealousy and vindictiveness. The way in +which Mr. Casaubon put the case was this:--"In marrying Dorothea Brooke +I had to care for her well-being in case of my death. But well-being +is not to be secured by ample, independent possession of property; on +the contrary, occasions might arise in which such possession might +expose her to the more danger. She is ready prey to any man who knows +how to play adroitly either on her affectionate ardor or her Quixotic +enthusiasm; and a man stands by with that very intention in his mind--a +man with no other principle than transient caprice, and who has a +personal animosity towards me--I am sure of it--an animosity which is +fed by the consciousness of his ingratitude, and which he has +constantly vented in ridicule of which I am as well assured as if I had +heard it. Even if I live I shall not be without uneasiness as to what +he may attempt through indirect influence. This man has gained +Dorothea's ear: he has fascinated her attention; he has evidently tried +to impress her mind with the notion that he has claims beyond anything +I have done for him. If I die--and he is waiting here on the watch for +that--he will persuade her to marry him. That would be calamity for +her and success for him. _She_ would not think it calamity: he would +make her believe anything; she has a tendency to immoderate attachment +which she inwardly reproaches me for not responding to, and already her +mind is occupied with his fortunes. He thinks of an easy conquest and +of entering into my nest. That I will hinder! Such a marriage would be +fatal to Dorothea. Has he ever persisted in anything except from +contradiction? In knowledge he has always tried to be showy at small +cost. In religion he could be, as long as it suited him, the facile +echo of Dorothea's vagaries. When was sciolism ever dissociated from +laxity? I utterly distrust his morals, and it is my duty to hinder to +the utmost the fulfilment of his designs." + +The arrangements made by Mr. Casaubon on his marriage left strong +measures open to him, but in ruminating on them his mind inevitably +dwelt so much on the probabilities of his own life that the longing to +get the nearest possible calculation had at last overcome his proud +reticence, and had determined him to ask Lydgate's opinion as to the +nature of his illness. + +He had mentioned to Dorothea that Lydgate was coming by appointment at +half-past three, and in answer to her anxious question, whether he had +felt ill, replied,--"No, I merely wish to have his opinion concerning +some habitual symptoms. You need not see him, my dear. I shall give +orders that he may be sent to me in the Yew-tree Walk, where I shall be +taking my usual exercise." + +When Lydgate entered the Yew-tree Walk he saw Mr. Casaubon slowly +receding with his hands behind him according to his habit, and his head +bent forward. It was a lovely afternoon; the leaves from the lofty +limes were falling silently across the sombre evergreens, while the +lights and shadows slept side by side: there was no sound but the +cawing of the rooks, which to the accustomed ear is a lullaby, or that +last solemn lullaby, a dirge. Lydgate, conscious of an energetic frame +in its prime, felt some compassion when the figure which he was likely +soon to overtake turned round, and in advancing towards him showed more +markedly than ever the signs of premature age--the student's bent +shoulders, the emaciated limbs, and the melancholy lines of the mouth. +"Poor fellow," he thought, "some men with his years are like lions; one +can tell nothing of their age except that they are full grown." + +"Mr. Lydgate," said Mr. Casaubon, with his invariably polite air, "I am +exceedingly obliged to you for your punctuality. We will, if you +please, carry on our conversation in walking to and fro." + +"I hope your wish to see me is not due to the return of unpleasant +symptoms," said Lydgate, filling up a pause. + +"Not immediately--no. In order to account for that wish I must +mention--what it were otherwise needless to refer to--that my life, on +all collateral accounts insignificant, derives a possible importance +from the incompleteness of labors which have extended through all its +best years. In short, I have long had on hand a work which I would +fain leave behind me in such a state, at least, that it might be +committed to the press by--others. Were I assured that this is the +utmost I can reasonably expect, that assurance would be a useful +circumscription of my attempts, and a guide in both the positive and +negative determination of my course." + +Here Mr. Casaubon paused, removed one hand from his back and thrust it +between the buttons of his single-breasted coat. To a mind largely +instructed in the human destiny hardly anything could be more +interesting than the inward conflict implied in his formal measured +address, delivered with the usual sing-song and motion of the head. +Nay, are there many situations more sublimely tragic than the struggle +of the soul with the demand to renounce a work which has been all the +significance of its life--a significance which is to vanish as the +waters which come and go where no man has need of them? But there was +nothing to strike others as sublime about Mr. Casaubon, and Lydgate, +who had some contempt at hand for futile scholarship, felt a little +amusement mingling with his pity. He was at present too ill acquainted +with disaster to enter into the pathos of a lot where everything is +below the level of tragedy except the passionate egoism of the sufferer. + +"You refer to the possible hindrances from want of health?" he said, +wishing to help forward Mr. Casaubon's purpose, which seemed to be +clogged by some hesitation. + +"I do. You have not implied to me that the symptoms which--I am bound +to testify--you watched with scrupulous care, were those of a fatal +disease. But were it so, Mr. Lydgate, I should desire to know the +truth without reservation, and I appeal to you for an exact statement +of your conclusions: I request it as a friendly service. If you can +tell me that my life is not threatened by anything else than ordinary +casualties, I shall rejoice, on grounds which I have already indicated. +If not, knowledge of the truth is even more important to me." + +"Then I can no longer hesitate as to my course," said Lydgate; "but the +first thing I must impress on you is that my conclusions are doubly +uncertain--uncertain not only because of my fallibility, but because +diseases of the heart are eminently difficult to found predictions on. +In any case, one can hardly increase appreciably the tremendous +uncertainty of life." + +Mr. Casaubon winced perceptibly, but bowed. + +"I believe that you are suffering from what is called fatty +degeneration of the heart, a disease which was first divined and +explored by Laennec, the man who gave us the stethoscope, not so very +many years ago. A good deal of experience--a more lengthened +observation--is wanting on the subject. But after what you have said, +it is my duty to tell you that death from this disease is often sudden. +At the same time, no such result can be predicted. Your condition may +be consistent with a tolerably comfortable life for another fifteen +years, or even more. I could add no information to this beyond +anatomical or medical details, which would leave expectation at +precisely the same point." Lydgate's instinct was fine enough to tell +him that plain speech, quite free from ostentatious caution, would be +felt by Mr. Casaubon as a tribute of respect. + +"I thank you, Mr. Lydgate," said Mr. Casaubon, after a moment's pause. +"One thing more I have still to ask: did you communicate what you have +now told me to Mrs. Casaubon?" + +"Partly--I mean, as to the possible issues." Lydgate was going to +explain why he had told Dorothea, but Mr. Casaubon, with an +unmistakable desire to end the conversation, waved his hand slightly, +and said again, "I thank you," proceeding to remark on the rare beauty +of the day. + +Lydgate, certain that his patient wished to be alone, soon left him; +and the black figure with hands behind and head bent forward continued +to pace the walk where the dark yew-trees gave him a mute companionship +in melancholy, and the little shadows of bird or leaf that fleeted +across the isles of sunlight, stole along in silence as in the presence +of a sorrow. Here was a man who now for the first time found himself +looking into the eyes of death--who was passing through one of those +rare moments of experience when we feel the truth of a commonplace, +which is as different from what we call knowing it, as the vision of +waters upon the earth is different from the delirious vision of the +water which cannot be had to cool the burning tongue. When the +commonplace "We must all die" transforms itself suddenly into the acute +consciousness "I must die--and soon," then death grapples us, and his +fingers are cruel; afterwards, he may come to fold us in his arms as +our mother did, and our last moment of dim earthly discerning may be +like the first. To Mr. Casaubon now, it was as if he suddenly found +himself on the dark river-brink and heard the plash of the oncoming +oar, not discerning the forms, but expecting the summons. In such an +hour the mind does not change its lifelong bias, but carries it onward +in imagination to the other side of death, gazing backward--perhaps +with the divine calm of beneficence, perhaps with the petty anxieties +of self-assertion. What was Mr. Casaubon's bias his acts will give us a +clew to. He held himself to be, with some private scholarly +reservations, a believing Christian, as to estimates of the present and +hopes of the future. But what we strive to gratify, though we may call +it a distant hope, is an immediate desire: the future estate for which +men drudge up city alleys exists already in their imagination and love. +And Mr. Casaubon's immediate desire was not for divine communion and +light divested of earthly conditions; his passionate longings, poor +man, clung low and mist-like in very shady places. + +Dorothea had been aware when Lydgate had ridden away, and she had +stepped into the garden, with the impulse to go at once to her husband. +But she hesitated, fearing to offend him by obtruding herself; for her +ardor, continually repulsed, served, with her intense memory, to +heighten her dread, as thwarted energy subsides into a shudder; and she +wandered slowly round the nearer clumps of trees until she saw him +advancing. Then she went towards him, and might have represented a +heaven-sent angel coming with a promise that the short hours remaining +should yet be filled with that faithful love which clings the closer to +a comprehended grief. His glance in reply to hers was so chill that +she felt her timidity increased; yet she turned and passed her hand +through his arm. + +Mr. Casaubon kept his hands behind him and allowed her pliant arm to +cling with difficulty against his rigid arm. + +There was something horrible to Dorothea in the sensation which this +unresponsive hardness inflicted on her. That is a strong word, but not +too strong: it is in these acts called trivialities that the seeds of +joy are forever wasted, until men and women look round with haggard +faces at the devastation their own waste has made, and say, the earth +bears no harvest of sweetness--calling their denial knowledge. You may +ask why, in the name of manliness, Mr. Casaubon should have behaved in +that way. Consider that his was a mind which shrank from pity: have +you ever watched in such a mind the effect of a suspicion that what is +pressing it as a grief may be really a source of contentment, either +actual or future, to the being who already offends by pitying? +Besides, he knew little of Dorothea's sensations, and had not reflected +that on such an occasion as the present they were comparable in +strength to his own sensibilities about Carp's criticisms. + +Dorothea did not withdraw her arm, but she could not venture to speak. +Mr. Casaubon did not say, "I wish to be alone," but he directed his +steps in silence towards the house, and as they entered by the glass +door on this eastern side, Dorothea withdrew her arm and lingered on +the matting, that she might leave her husband quite free. He entered +the library and shut himself in, alone with his sorrow. + +She went up to her boudoir. The open bow-window let in the serene +glory of the afternoon lying in the avenue, where the lime-trees cast +long shadows. But Dorothea knew nothing of the scene. She threw +herself on a chair, not heeding that she was in the dazzling sun-rays: +if there were discomfort in that, how could she tell that it was not +part of her inward misery? + +She was in the reaction of a rebellious anger stronger than any she had +felt since her marriage. Instead of tears there came words:-- + +"What have I done--what am I--that he should treat me so? He never +knows what is in my mind--he never cares. What is the use of anything +I do? He wishes he had never married me." + +She began to hear herself, and was checked into stillness. Like one +who has lost his way and is weary, she sat and saw as in one glance all +the paths of her young hope which she should never find again. And +just as clearly in the miserable light she saw her own and her +husband's solitude--how they walked apart so that she was obliged to +survey him. If he had drawn her towards him, she would never have +surveyed him--never have said, "Is he worth living for?" but would have +felt him simply a part of her own life. Now she said bitterly, "It is +his fault, not mine." In the jar of her whole being, Pity was +overthrown. Was it her fault that she had believed in him--had +believed in his worthiness?--And what, exactly, was he?-- She was able +enough to estimate him--she who waited on his glances with trembling, +and shut her best soul in prison, paying it only hidden visits, that +she might be petty enough to please him. In such a crisis as this, +some women begin to hate. + +The sun was low when Dorothea was thinking that she would not go down +again, but would send a message to her husband saying that she was not +well and preferred remaining up-stairs. She had never deliberately +allowed her resentment to govern her in this way before, but she +believed now that she could not see him again without telling him the +truth about her feeling, and she must wait till she could do it without +interruption. He might wonder and be hurt at her message. It was good +that he should wonder and be hurt. Her anger said, as anger is apt to +say, that God was with her--that all heaven, though it were crowded +with spirits watching them, must be on her side. She had determined to +ring her bell, when there came a rap at the door. + +Mr. Casaubon had sent to say that he would have his dinner in the +library. He wished to be quite alone this evening, being much occupied. + +"I shall not dine, then, Tantripp." + +"Oh, madam, let me bring you a little something?" + +"No; I am not well. Get everything ready in my dressing room, but pray +do not disturb me again." + +Dorothea sat almost motionless in her meditative struggle, while the +evening slowly deepened into night. But the struggle changed +continually, as that of a man who begins with a movement towards +striking and ends with conquering his desire to strike. The energy +that would animate a crime is not more than is wanted to inspire a +resolved submission, when the noble habit of the soul reasserts itself. +That thought with which Dorothea had gone out to meet her husband--her +conviction that he had been asking about the possible arrest of all his +work, and that the answer must have wrung his heart, could not be long +without rising beside the image of him, like a shadowy monitor looking +at her anger with sad remonstrance. It cost her a litany of pictured +sorrows and of silent cries that she might be the mercy for those +sorrows--but the resolved submission did come; and when the house was +still, and she knew that it was near the time when Mr. Casaubon +habitually went to rest, she opened her door gently and stood outside +in the darkness waiting for his coming up-stairs with a light in his +hand. If he did not come soon she thought that she would go down and +even risk incurring another pang. She would never again expect +anything else. But she did hear the library door open, and slowly the +light advanced up the staircase without noise from the footsteps on the +carpet. When her husband stood opposite to her, she saw that his face +was more haggard. He started slightly on seeing her, and she looked up +at him beseechingly, without speaking. + +"Dorothea!" he said, with a gentle surprise in his tone. "Were you +waiting for me?" + +"Yes, I did not like to disturb you." + +"Come, my dear, come. You are young, and need not to extend your life +by watching." + +When the kind quiet melancholy of that speech fell on Dorothea's ears, +she felt something like the thankfulness that might well up in us if we +had narrowly escaped hurting a lamed creature. She put her hand into +her husband's, and they went along the broad corridor together. + + + + + +BOOK V. + + + + + +THE DEAD HAND. + + + +CHAPTER XLIII. + + This figure hath high price: 't was wrought with love + Ages ago in finest ivory; + Nought modish in it, pure and noble lines + Of generous womanhood that fits all time + That too is costly ware; majolica + Of deft design, to please a lordly eye: + The smile, you see, is perfect--wonderful + As mere Faience! a table ornament + To suit the richest mounting." + + +Dorothea seldom left home without her husband, but she did occasionally +drive into Middlemarch alone, on little errands of shopping or charity +such as occur to every lady of any wealth when she lives within three +miles of a town. Two days after that scene in the Yew-tree Walk, she +determined to use such an opportunity in order if possible to see +Lydgate, and learn from him whether her husband had really felt any +depressing change of symptoms which he was concealing from her, and +whether he had insisted on knowing the utmost about himself. She felt +almost guilty in asking for knowledge about him from another, but the +dread of being without it--the dread of that ignorance which would make +her unjust or hard--overcame every scruple. That there had been some +crisis in her husband's mind she was certain: he had the very next day +begun a new method of arranging his notes, and had associated her quite +newly in carrying out his plan. Poor Dorothea needed to lay up stores +of patience. + +It was about four o'clock when she drove to Lydgate's house in Lowick +Gate, wishing, in her immediate doubt of finding him at home, that she +had written beforehand. And he was not at home. + +"Is Mrs. Lydgate at home?" said Dorothea, who had never, that she knew +of, seen Rosamond, but now remembered the fact of the marriage. Yes, +Mrs. Lydgate was at home. + +"I will go in and speak to her, if she will allow me. Will you ask her +if she can see me--see Mrs. Casaubon, for a few minutes?" + +When the servant had gone to deliver that message, Dorothea could hear +sounds of music through an open window--a few notes from a man's voice +and then a piano bursting into roulades. But the roulades broke off +suddenly, and then the servant came back saying that Mrs. Lydgate would +be happy to see Mrs. Casaubon. + +When the drawing-room door opened and Dorothea entered, there was a +sort of contrast not infrequent in country life when the habits of the +different ranks were less blent than now. Let those who know, tell us +exactly what stuff it was that Dorothea wore in those days of mild +autumn--that thin white woollen stuff soft to the touch and soft to the +eye. It always seemed to have been lately washed, and to smell of the +sweet hedges--was always in the shape of a pelisse with sleeves hanging +all out of the fashion. Yet if she had entered before a still audience +as Imogene or Cato's daughter, the dress might have seemed right +enough: the grace and dignity were in her limbs and neck; and about her +simply parted hair and candid eyes the large round poke which was then +in the fate of women, seemed no more odd as a head-dress than the gold +trencher we call a halo. By the present audience of two persons, no +dramatic heroine could have been expected with more interest than Mrs. +Casaubon. To Rosamond she was one of those county divinities not +mixing with Middlemarch mortality, whose slightest marks of manner or +appearance were worthy of her study; moreover, Rosamond was not without +satisfaction that Mrs. Casaubon should have an opportunity of studying +_her_. What is the use of being exquisite if you are not seen by the +best judges? and since Rosamond had received the highest compliments at +Sir Godwin Lydgate's, she felt quite confident of the impression she +must make on people of good birth. Dorothea put out her hand with her +usual simple kindness, and looked admiringly at Lydgate's lovely +bride--aware that there was a gentleman standing at a distance, but +seeing him merely as a coated figure at a wide angle. The gentleman +was too much occupied with the presence of the one woman to reflect on +the contrast between the two--a contrast that would certainly have been +striking to a calm observer. They were both tall, and their eyes were +on a level; but imagine Rosamond's infantine blondness and wondrous +crown of hair-plaits, with her pale-blue dress of a fit and fashion so +perfect that no dressmaker could look at it without emotion, a large +embroidered collar which it was to be hoped all beholders would know +the price of, her small hands duly set off with rings, and that +controlled self-consciousness of manner which is the expensive +substitute for simplicity. + +"Thank you very much for allowing me to interrupt you," said Dorothea, +immediately. "I am anxious to see Mr. Lydgate, if possible, before I +go home, and I hoped that you might possibly tell me where I could find +him, or even allow me to wait for him, if you expect him soon." + +"He is at the New Hospital," said Rosamond; "I am not sure how soon he +will come home. But I can send for him." + +"Will you let me go and fetch him?" said Will Ladislaw, coming forward. +He had already taken up his hat before Dorothea entered. She colored +with surprise, but put out her hand with a smile of unmistakable +pleasure, saying-- + +"I did not know it was you: I had no thought of seeing you here." + +"May I go to the Hospital and tell Mr. Lydgate that you wish to see +him?" said Will. + +"It would be quicker to send the carriage for him," said Dorothea, "if +you will be kind enough to give the message to the coachman." + +Will was moving to the door when Dorothea, whose mind had flashed in an +instant over many connected memories, turned quickly and said, "I will +go myself, thank you. I wish to lose no time before getting home +again. I will drive to the Hospital and see Mr. Lydgate there. Pray +excuse me, Mrs. Lydgate. I am very much obliged to you." + +Her mind was evidently arrested by some sudden thought, and she left +the room hardly conscious of what was immediately around her--hardly +conscious that Will opened the door for her and offered her his arm to +lead her to the carriage. She took the arm but said nothing. Will was +feeling rather vexed and miserable, and found nothing to say on his +side. He handed her into the carriage in silence, they said good-by, +and Dorothea drove away. + +In the five minutes' drive to the Hospital she had time for some +reflections that were quite new to her. Her decision to go, and her +preoccupation in leaving the room, had come from the sudden sense that +there would be a sort of deception in her voluntarily allowing any +further intercourse between herself and Will which she was unable to +mention to her husband, and already her errand in seeking Lydgate was a +matter of concealment. That was all that had been explicitly in her +mind; but she had been urged also by a vague discomfort. Now that she +was alone in her drive, she heard the notes of the man's voice and the +accompanying piano, which she had not noted much at the time, returning +on her inward sense; and she found herself thinking with some wonder +that Will Ladislaw was passing his time with Mrs. Lydgate in her +husband's absence. And then she could not help remembering that he had +passed some time with her under like circumstances, so why should there +be any unfitness in the fact? But Will was Mr. Casaubon's relative, +and one towards whom she was bound to show kindness. Still there had +been signs which perhaps she ought to have understood as implying that +Mr. Casaubon did not like his cousin's visits during his own absence. +"Perhaps I have been mistaken in many things," said poor Dorothea to +herself, while the tears came rolling and she had to dry them quickly. +She felt confusedly unhappy, and the image of Will which had been so +clear to her before was mysteriously spoiled. But the carriage stopped +at the gate of the Hospital. She was soon walking round the grass +plots with Lydgate, and her feelings recovered the strong bent which +had made her seek for this interview. + +Will Ladislaw, meanwhile, was mortified, and knew the reason of it +clearly enough. His chances of meeting Dorothea were rare; and here +for the first time there had come a chance which had set him at a +disadvantage. It was not only, as it had been hitherto, that she was +not supremely occupied with him, but that she had seen him under +circumstances in which he might appear not to be supremely occupied +with her. He felt thrust to a new distance from her, amongst the +circles of Middlemarchers who made no part of her life. But that was +not his fault: of course, since he had taken his lodgings in the town, +he had been making as many acquaintances as he could, his position +requiring that he should know everybody and everything. Lydgate was +really better worth knowing than any one else in the neighborhood, and +he happened to have a wife who was musical and altogether worth calling +upon. Here was the whole history of the situation in which Diana had +descended too unexpectedly on her worshipper. It was mortifying. Will +was conscious that he should not have been at Middlemarch but for +Dorothea; and yet his position there was threatening to divide him from +her with those barriers of habitual sentiment which are more fatal to +the persistence of mutual interest than all the distance between Rome +and Britain. Prejudices about rank and status were easy enough to defy +in the form of a tyrannical letter from Mr. Casaubon; but prejudices, +like odorous bodies, have a double existence both solid and subtle--solid +as the pyramids, subtle as the twentieth echo of an echo, or as +the memory of hyacinths which once scented the darkness. And Will was +of a temperament to feel keenly the presence of subtleties: a man of +clumsier perceptions would not have felt, as he did, that for the first +time some sense of unfitness in perfect freedom with him had sprung up +in Dorothea's mind, and that their silence, as he conducted her to the +carriage, had had a chill in it. Perhaps Casaubon, in his hatred and +jealousy, had been insisting to Dorothea that Will had slid below her +socially. Confound Casaubon! + +Will re-entered the drawing-room, took up his hat, and looking +irritated as he advanced towards Mrs. Lydgate, who had seated herself +at her work-table, said-- + +"It is always fatal to have music or poetry interrupted. May I come +another day and just finish about the rendering of 'Lungi dal caro +bene'?" + +"I shall be happy to be taught," said Rosamond. "But I am sure you +admit that the interruption was a very beautiful one. I quite envy +your acquaintance with Mrs. Casaubon. Is she very clever? She looks +as if she were." + +"Really, I never thought about it," said Will, sulkily. + +"That is just the answer Tertius gave me, when I first asked him if she +were handsome. What is it that you gentlemen are thinking of when you +are with Mrs. Casaubon?" + +"Herself," said Will, not indisposed to provoke the charming Mrs. +Lydgate. "When one sees a perfect woman, one never thinks of her +attributes--one is conscious of her presence." + +"I shall be jealous when Tertius goes to Lowick," said Rosamond, +dimpling, and speaking with aery lightness. "He will come back and +think nothing of me." + +"That does not seem to have been the effect on Lydgate hitherto. Mrs. +Casaubon is too unlike other women for them to be compared with her." + +"You are a devout worshipper, I perceive. You often see her, I +suppose." + +"No," said Will, almost pettishly. "Worship is usually a matter of +theory rather than of practice. But I am practising it to excess just +at this moment--I must really tear myself away." + +"Pray come again some evening: Mr. Lydgate will like to hear the music, +and I cannot enjoy it so well without him." + +When her husband was at home again, Rosamond said, standing in front of +him and holding his coat-collar with both her hands, "Mr. Ladislaw was +here singing with me when Mrs. Casaubon came in. He seemed vexed. Do +you think he disliked her seeing him at our house? Surely your +position is more than equal to his--whatever may be his relation to the +Casaubons." + +"No, no; it must be something else if he were really vexed, Ladislaw is +a sort of gypsy; he thinks nothing of leather and prunella." + +"Music apart, he is not always very agreeable. Do you like him?" + +"Yes: I think he is a good fellow: rather miscellaneous and +bric-a-brac, but likable." + +"Do you know, I think he adores Mrs. Casaubon." + +"Poor devil!" said Lydgate, smiling and pinching his wife's ears. + +Rosamond felt herself beginning to know a great deal of the world, +especially in discovering what when she was in her unmarried girlhood +had been inconceivable to her except as a dim tragedy in by-gone +costumes--that women, even after marriage, might make conquests and +enslave men. At that time young ladies in the country, even when +educated at Mrs. Lemon's, read little French literature later than +Racine, and public prints had not cast their present magnificent +illumination over the scandals of life. Still, vanity, with a woman's +whole mind and day to work in, can construct abundantly on slight +hints, especially on such a hint as the possibility of indefinite +conquests. How delightful to make captives from the throne of marriage +with a husband as crown-prince by your side--himself in fact a +subject--while the captives look up forever hopeless, losing their +rest probably, and if their appetite too, so much the better! But +Rosamond's romance turned at present chiefly on her crown-prince, and +it was enough to enjoy his assured subjection. When he said, "Poor +devil!" she asked, with playful curiosity-- + +"Why so?" + +"Why, what can a man do when he takes to adoring one of you mermaids? +He only neglects his work and runs up bills." + +"I am sure you do not neglect your work. You are always at the +Hospital, or seeing poor patients, or thinking about some doctor's +quarrel; and then at home you always want to pore over your microscope +and phials. Confess you like those things better than me." + +"Haven't you ambition enough to wish that your husband should be +something better than a Middlemarch doctor?" said Lydgate, letting his +hands fall on to his wife's shoulders, and looking at her with +affectionate gravity. "I shall make you learn my favorite bit from an +old poet-- + + 'Why should our pride make such a stir to be + And be forgot? What good is like to this, + To do worthy the writing, and to write + Worthy the reading and the worlds delight?' + +What I want, Rosy, is to do worthy the writing,--and to write out +myself what I have done. A man must work, to do that, my pet." + +"Of course, I wish you to make discoveries: no one could more wish you +to attain a high position in some better place than Middlemarch. You +cannot say that I have ever tried to hinder you from working. But we +cannot live like hermits. You are not discontented with me, Tertius?" + +"No, dear, no. I am too entirely contented." + +"But what did Mrs. Casaubon want to say to you?" + +"Merely to ask about her husband's health. But I think she is going to +be splendid to our New Hospital: I think she will give us two hundred +a-year." + + + +CHAPTER XLIV. + + I would not creep along the coast but steer + Out in mid-sea, by guidance of the stars. + + +When Dorothea, walking round the laurel-planted plots of the New +Hospital with Lydgate, had learned from him that there were no signs of +change in Mr. Casaubon's bodily condition beyond the mental sign of +anxiety to know the truth about his illness, she was silent for a few +moments, wondering whether she had said or done anything to rouse this +new anxiety. Lydgate, not willing to let slip an opportunity of +furthering a favorite purpose, ventured to say-- + +"I don't know whether your or Mr.--Casaubon's attention has been drawn +to the needs of our New Hospital. Circumstances have made it seem +rather egotistic in me to urge the subject; but that is not my fault: +it is because there is a fight being made against it by the other +medical men. I think you are generally interested in such things, for +I remember that when I first had the pleasure of seeing you at Tipton +Grange before your marriage, you were asking me some questions about +the way in which the health of the poor was affected by their miserable +housing." + +"Yes, indeed," said Dorothea, brightening. "I shall be quite grateful +to you if you will tell me how I can help to make things a little +better. Everything of that sort has slipped away from me since I have +been married. I mean," she said, after a moment's hesitation, "that +the people in our village are tolerably comfortable, and my mind has +been too much taken up for me to inquire further. But here--in such a +place as Middlemarch--there must be a great deal to be done." + +"There is everything to be done," said Lydgate, with abrupt energy. +"And this Hospital is a capital piece of work, due entirely to Mr. +Bulstrode's exertions, and in a great degree to his money. But one man +can't do everything in a scheme of this sort. Of course he looked +forward to help. And now there's a mean, petty feud set up against the +thing in the town, by certain persons who want to make it a failure." + +"What can be their reasons?" said Dorothea, with naive surprise. + +"Chiefly Mr. Bulstrode's unpopularity, to begin with. Half the town +would almost take trouble for the sake of thwarting him. In this +stupid world most people never consider that a thing is good to be done +unless it is done by their own set. I had no connection with Bulstrode +before I came here. I look at him quite impartially, and I see that he +has some notions--that he has set things on foot--which I can turn to +good public purpose. If a fair number of the better educated men went +to work with the belief that their observations might contribute to the +reform of medical doctrine and practice, we should soon see a change +for the better. That's my point of view. I hold that by refusing to +work with Mr. Bulstrode I should be turning my back on an opportunity +of making my profession more generally serviceable." + +"I quite agree with you," said Dorothea, at once fascinated by the +situation sketched in Lydgate's words. "But what is there against Mr. +Bulstrode? I know that my uncle is friendly with him." + +"People don't like his religious tone," said Lydgate, breaking off +there. + +"That is all the stronger reason for despising such an opposition," +said Dorothea, looking at the affairs of Middlemarch by the light of +the great persecutions. + +"To put the matter quite fairly, they have other objections to him:--he +is masterful and rather unsociable, and he is concerned with trade, +which has complaints of its own that I know nothing about. But what +has that to do with the question whether it would not be a fine thing +to establish here a more valuable hospital than any they have in the +county? The immediate motive to the opposition, however, is the fact +that Bulstrode has put the medical direction into my hands. Of course +I am glad of that. It gives me an opportunity of doing some good +work,--and I am aware that I have to justify his choice of me. But the +consequence is, that the whole profession in Middlemarch have set +themselves tooth and nail against the Hospital, and not only refuse to +cooperate themselves, but try to blacken the whole affair and hinder +subscriptions." + +"How very petty!" exclaimed Dorothea, indignantly. + +"I suppose one must expect to fight one's way: there is hardly anything +to be done without it. And the ignorance of people about here is +stupendous. I don't lay claim to anything else than having used some +opportunities which have not come within everybody's reach; but there +is no stifling the offence of being young, and a new-comer, and +happening to know something more than the old inhabitants. Still, if I +believe that I can set going a better method of treatment--if I +believe that I can pursue certain observations and inquiries which may +be a lasting benefit to medical practice, I should be a base truckler +if I allowed any consideration of personal comfort to hinder me. And +the course is all the clearer from there being no salary in question to +put my persistence in an equivocal light." + +"I am glad you have told me this, Mr. Lydgate," said Dorothea, +cordially. "I feel sure I can help a little. I have some money, and +don't know what to do with it--that is often an uncomfortable thought +to me. I am sure I can spare two hundred a-year for a grand purpose +like this. How happy you must be, to know things that you feel sure +will do great good! I wish I could awake with that knowledge every +morning. There seems to be so much trouble taken that one can hardly +see the good of!" + +There was a melancholy cadence in Dorothea's voice as she spoke these +last words. But she presently added, more cheerfully, "Pray come to +Lowick and tell us more of this. I will mention the subject to Mr. +Casaubon. I must hasten home now." + +She did mention it that evening, and said that she should like to +subscribe two hundred a-year--she had seven hundred a-year as the +equivalent of her own fortune, settled on her at her marriage. Mr. +Casaubon made no objection beyond a passing remark that the sum might +be disproportionate in relation to other good objects, but when +Dorothea in her ignorance resisted that suggestion, he acquiesced. He +did not care himself about spending money, and was not reluctant to +give it. If he ever felt keenly any question of money it was through +the medium of another passion than the love of material property. + +Dorothea told him that she had seen Lydgate, and recited the gist of +her conversation with him about the Hospital. Mr. Casaubon did not +question her further, but he felt sure that she had wished to know what +had passed between Lydgate and himself. "She knows that I know," said +the ever-restless voice within; but that increase of tacit knowledge +only thrust further off any confidence between them. He distrusted her +affection; and what loneliness is more lonely than distrust? + + + +CHAPTER XLV. + + It is the humor of many heads to extol the days of their + forefathers, and declaim against the wickedness of times + present. Which notwithstanding they cannot handsomely do, + without the borrowed help and satire of times past; + condemning the vices of their own times, by the expressions + of vices in times which they commend, which cannot but argue + the community of vice in both. Horace, therefore, Juvenal, + and Persius, were no prophets, although their lines did seem + to indigitate and point at our times.--SIR THOMAS BROWNE: + Pseudodoxia Epidemica. + + +That opposition to the New Fever Hospital which Lydgate had sketched to +Dorothea was, like other oppositions, to be viewed in many different +lights. He regarded it as a mixture of jealousy and dunderheaded +prejudice. Mr. Bulstrode saw in it not only medical jealousy but a +determination to thwart himself, prompted mainly by a hatred of that +vital religion of which he had striven to be an effectual lay +representative--a hatred which certainly found pretexts apart from +religion such as were only too easy to find in the entanglements of +human action. These might be called the ministerial views. But +oppositions have the illimitable range of objections at command, which +need never stop short at the boundary of knowledge, but can draw +forever on the vasts of ignorance. What the opposition in Middlemarch +said about the New Hospital and its administration had certainly a +great deal of echo in it, for heaven has taken care that everybody +shall not be an originator; but there were differences which +represented every social shade between the polished moderation of Dr. +Minchin and the trenchant assertion of Mrs. Dollop, the landlady of the +Tankard in Slaughter Lane. + +Mrs. Dollop became more and more convinced by her own asseveration, +that Dr. Lydgate meant to let the people die in the Hospital, if not to +poison them, for the sake of cutting them up without saying by your +leave or with your leave; for it was a known "fac" that he had wanted +to cut up Mrs. Goby, as respectable a woman as any in Parley Street, +who had money in trust before her marriage--a poor tale for a doctor, +who if he was good for anything should know what was the matter with +you before you died, and not want to pry into your inside after you +were gone. If that was not reason, Mrs. Dollop wished to know what +was; but there was a prevalent feeling in her audience that her opinion +was a bulwark, and that if it were overthrown there would be no limits +to the cutting-up of bodies, as had been well seen in Burke and Hare +with their pitch-plaisters--such a hanging business as that was not +wanted in Middlemarch! + +And let it not be supposed that opinion at the Tankard in Slaughter +Lane was unimportant to the medical profession: that old authentic +public-house--the original Tankard, known by the name of Dollop's--was +the resort of a great Benefit Club, which had some months before put to +the vote whether its long-standing medical man, "Doctor Gambit," should +not be cashiered in favor of "this Doctor Lydgate," who was capable of +performing the most astonishing cures, and rescuing people altogether +given up by other practitioners. But the balance had been turned +against Lydgate by two members, who for some private reasons held that +this power of resuscitating persons as good as dead was an equivocal +recommendation, and might interfere with providential favors. In the +course of the year, however, there had been a change in the public +sentiment, of which the unanimity at Dollop's was an index. + +A good deal more than a year ago, before anything was known of +Lydgate's skill, the judgments on it had naturally been divided, +depending on a sense of likelihood, situated perhaps in the pit of the +stomach or in the pineal gland, and differing in its verdicts, but not +the less valuable as a guide in the total deficit of evidence. +Patients who had chronic diseases or whose lives had long been worn +threadbare, like old Featherstone's, had been at once inclined to try +him; also, many who did not like paying their doctor's bills, thought +agreeably of opening an account with a new doctor and sending for him +without stint if the children's temper wanted a dose, occasions when +the old practitioners were often crusty; and all persons thus inclined +to employ Lydgate held it likely that he was clever. Some considered +that he might do more than others "where there was liver;"--at least +there would be no harm in getting a few bottles of "stuff" from him, +since if these proved useless it would still be possible to return to +the Purifying Pills, which kept you alive if they did not remove the +yellowness. But these were people of minor importance. Good +Middlemarch families were of course not going to change their doctor +without reason shown; and everybody who had employed Mr. Peacock did +not feel obliged to accept a new man merely in the character of his +successor, objecting that he was "not likely to be equal to Peacock." + +But Lydgate had not been long in the town before there were particulars +enough reported of him to breed much more specific expectations and to +intensify differences into partisanship; some of the particulars being +of that impressive order of which the significance is entirely hidden, +like a statistical amount without a standard of comparison, but with a +note of exclamation at the end. The cubic feet of oxygen yearly +swallowed by a full-grown man--what a shudder they might have created +in some Middlemarch circles! "Oxygen! nobody knows what that may +be--is it any wonder the cholera has got to Dantzic? And yet there are +people who say quarantine is no good!" + +One of the facts quickly rumored was that Lydgate did not dispense +drugs. This was offensive both to the physicians whose exclusive +distinction seemed infringed on, and to the surgeon-apothecaries with +whom he ranged himself; and only a little while before, they might have +counted on having the law on their side against a man who without +calling himself a London-made M.D. dared to ask for pay except as a +charge on drugs. But Lydgate had not been experienced enough to +foresee that his new course would be even more offensive to the laity; +and to Mr. Mawmsey, an important grocer in the Top Market, who, though +not one of his patients, questioned him in an affable manner on the +subject, he was injudicious enough to give a hasty popular explanation +of his reasons, pointing out to Mr. Mawmsey that it must lower the +character of practitioners, and be a constant injury to the public, if +their only mode of getting paid for their work was by their making out +long bills for draughts, boluses, and mixtures. + +"It is in that way that hard-working medical men may come to be almost +as mischievous as quacks," said Lydgate, rather thoughtlessly. "To get +their own bread they must overdose the king's lieges; and that's a bad +sort of treason, Mr. Mawmsey--undermines the constitution in a fatal +way." + +Mr. Mawmsey was not only an overseer (it was about a question of +outdoor pay that he was having an interview with Lydgate), he was also +asthmatic and had an increasing family: thus, from a medical point of +view, as well as from his own, he was an important man; indeed, an +exceptional grocer, whose hair was arranged in a flame-like pyramid, +and whose retail deference was of the cordial, encouraging +kind--jocosely complimentary, and with a certain considerate abstinence +from letting out the full force of his mind. It was Mr. Mawmsey's +friendly jocoseness in questioning him which had set the tone of +Lydgate's reply. But let the wise be warned against too great +readiness at explanation: it multiplies the sources of mistake, +lengthening the sum for reckoners sure to go wrong. + +Lydgate smiled as he ended his speech, putting his foot into the +stirrup, and Mr. Mawmsey laughed more than he would have done if he had +known who the king's lieges were, giving his "Good morning, sir, +good-morning, sir," with the air of one who saw everything clearly +enough. But in truth his views were perturbed. For years he had been +paying bills with strictly made items, so that for every half-crown and +eighteen-pence he was certain something measurable had been delivered. +He had done this with satisfaction, including it among his +responsibilities as a husband and father, and regarding a longer bill +than usual as a dignity worth mentioning. Moreover, in addition to the +massive benefit of the drugs to "self and family," he had enjoyed the +pleasure of forming an acute judgment as to their immediate effects, so +as to give an intelligent statement for the guidance of Mr. Gambit--a +practitioner just a little lower in status than Wrench or Toller, and +especially esteemed as an accoucheur, of whose ability Mr. Mawmsey had +the poorest opinion on all other points, but in doctoring, he was wont +to say in an undertone, he placed Gambit above any of them. + +Here were deeper reasons than the superficial talk of a new man, which +appeared still flimsier in the drawing-room over the shop, when they +were recited to Mrs. Mawmsey, a woman accustomed to be made much of as +a fertile mother,--generally under attendance more or less frequent +from Mr. Gambit, and occasionally having attacks which required Dr. +Minchin. + +"Does this Mr. Lydgate mean to say there is no use in taking medicine?" +said Mrs. Mawmsey, who was slightly given to drawling. "I should like +him to tell me how I could bear up at Fair time, if I didn't take +strengthening medicine for a month beforehand. Think of what I have to +provide for calling customers, my dear!"--here Mrs. Mawmsey turned to +an intimate female friend who sat by--"a large veal pie--a stuffed +fillet--a round of beef--ham, tongue, et cetera, et cetera! But what +keeps me up best is the pink mixture, not the brown. I wonder, Mr. +Mawmsey, with _your_ experience, you could have patience to listen. I +should have told him at once that I knew a little better than that." + +"No, no, no," said Mr. Mawmsey; "I was not going to tell him my +opinion. Hear everything and judge for yourself is my motto. But he +didn't know who he was talking to. I was not to be turned on _his_ +finger. People often pretend to tell me things, when they might as +well say, 'Mawmsey, you're a fool.' But I smile at it: I humor +everybody's weak place. If physic had done harm to self and family, I +should have found it out by this time." + +The next day Mr. Gambit was told that Lydgate went about saying physic +was of no use. + +"Indeed!" said he, lifting his eyebrows with cautious surprise. (He +was a stout husky man with a large ring on his fourth finger.) "How +will he cure his patients, then?" + +"That is what I say," returned Mrs. Mawmsey, who habitually gave weight +to her speech by loading her pronouns. "Does _he_ suppose that people +will pay him only to come and sit with them and go away again?" + +Mrs. Mawmsey had had a great deal of sitting from Mr. Gambit, including +very full accounts of his own habits of body and other affairs; but of +course he knew there was no innuendo in her remark, since his spare +time and personal narrative had never been charged for. So he replied, +humorously-- + +"Well, Lydgate is a good-looking young fellow, you know." + +"Not one that I would employ," said Mrs. Mawmsey. "_Others_ may do as +they please." + +Hence Mr. Gambit could go away from the chief grocer's without fear of +rivalry, but not without a sense that Lydgate was one of those +hypocrites who try to discredit others by advertising their own +honesty, and that it might be worth some people's while to show him up. +Mr. Gambit, however, had a satisfactory practice, much pervaded by the +smells of retail trading which suggested the reduction of cash payments +to a balance. And he did not think it worth his while to show Lydgate +up until he knew how. He had not indeed great resources of education, +and had had to work his own way against a good deal of professional +contempt; but he made none the worse accoucheur for calling the +breathing apparatus "longs." + +Other medical men felt themselves more capable. Mr. Toller shared the +highest practice in the town and belonged to an old Middlemarch family: +there were Tollers in the law and everything else above the line of +retail trade. Unlike our irascible friend Wrench, he had the easiest +way in the world of taking things which might be supposed to annoy him, +being a well-bred, quietly facetious man, who kept a good house, was +very fond of a little sporting when he could get it, very friendly with +Mr. Hawley, and hostile to Mr. Bulstrode. It may seem odd that with +such pleasant habits he should have been given to the heroic treatment, +bleeding and blistering and starving his patients, with a dispassionate +disregard to his personal example; but the incongruity favored the +opinion of his ability among his patients, who commonly observed that +Mr. Toller had lazy manners, but his treatment was as active as you +could desire: no man, said they, carried more seriousness into his +profession: he was a little slow in coming, but when he came, he _did_ +something. He was a great favorite in his own circle, and whatever he +implied to any one's disadvantage told doubly from his careless +ironical tone. + +He naturally got tired of smiling and saying, "Ah!" when he was told +that Mr. Peacock's successor did not mean to dispense medicines; and +Mr. Hackbutt one day mentioning it over the wine at a dinner-party, Mr. +Toller said, laughingly, "Dibbitts will get rid of his stale drugs, +then. I'm fond of little Dibbitts--I'm glad he's in luck." + +"I see your meaning, Toller," said Mr. Hackbutt, "and I am entirely of +your opinion. I shall take an opportunity of expressing myself to that +effect. A medical man should be responsible for the quality of the +drugs consumed by his patients. That is the rationale of the system of +charging which has hitherto obtained; and nothing is more offensive +than this ostentation of reform, where there is no real amelioration." + +"Ostentation, Hackbutt?" said Mr. Toller, ironically. "I don't see +that. A man can't very well be ostentatious of what nobody believes +in. There's no reform in the matter: the question is, whether the +profit on the drugs is paid to the medical man by the druggist or by +the patient, and whether there shall be extra pay under the name of +attendance." + +"Ah, to be sure; one of your damned new versions of old humbug," said +Mr. Hawley, passing the decanter to Mr. Wrench. + +Mr. Wrench, generally abstemious, often drank wine rather freely at a +party, getting the more irritable in consequence. + +"As to humbug, Hawley," he said, "that's a word easy to fling about. +But what I contend against is the way medical men are fouling their own +nest, and setting up a cry about the country as if a general +practitioner who dispenses drugs couldn't be a gentleman. I throw back +the imputation with scorn. I say, the most ungentlemanly trick a man +can be guilty of is to come among the members of his profession with +innovations which are a libel on their time-honored procedure. That is +my opinion, and I am ready to maintain it against any one who +contradicts me." Mr. Wrench's voice had become exceedingly sharp. + +"I can't oblige you there, Wrench," said Mr. Hawley, thrusting his +hands into his trouser-pockets. + +"My dear fellow," said Mr. Toller, striking in pacifically, and looking +at Mr. Wrench, "the physicians have their toes trodden on more than we +have. If you come to dignity it is a question for Minchin and Sprague." + +"Does medical jurisprudence provide nothing against these +infringements?" said Mr. Hackbutt, with a disinterested desire to offer +his lights. "How does the law stand, eh, Hawley?" + +"Nothing to be done there," said Mr. Hawley. "I looked into it for +Sprague. You'd only break your nose against a damned judge's decision." + +"Pooh! no need of law," said Mr. Toller. "So far as practice is +concerned the attempt is an absurdity. No patient will like +it--certainly not Peacock's, who have been used to depletion. Pass the +wine." + +Mr. Toller's prediction was partly verified. If Mr. and Mrs. Mawmsey, +who had no idea of employing Lydgate, were made uneasy by his supposed +declaration against drugs, it was inevitable that those who called him +in should watch a little anxiously to see whether he did "use all the +means he might use" in the case. Even good Mr. Powderell, who in his +constant charity of interpretation was inclined to esteem Lydgate the +more for what seemed a conscientious pursuit of a better plan, had his +mind disturbed with doubts during his wife's attack of erysipelas, and +could not abstain from mentioning to Lydgate that Mr. Peacock on a +similar occasion had administered a series of boluses which were not +otherwise definable than by their remarkable effect in bringing Mrs. +Powderell round before Michaelmas from an illness which had begun in a +remarkably hot August. At last, indeed, in the conflict between his +desire not to hurt Lydgate and his anxiety that no "means" should be +lacking, he induced his wife privately to take Widgeon's Purifying +Pills, an esteemed Middlemarch medicine, which arrested every disease +at the fountain by setting to work at once upon the blood. This +co-operative measure was not to be mentioned to Lydgate, and Mr. +Powderell himself had no certain reliance on it, only hoping that it +might be attended with a blessing. + +But in this doubtful stage of Lydgate's introduction he was helped by +what we mortals rashly call good fortune. I suppose no doctor ever +came newly to a place without making cures that surprised somebody--cures +which may be called fortune's testimonials, and deserve as much +credit as the written or printed kind. Various patients got well while +Lydgate was attending them, some even of dangerous illnesses; and it +was remarked that the new doctor with his new ways had at least the +merit of bringing people back from the brink of death. The trash +talked on such occasions was the more vexatious to Lydgate, because it +gave precisely the sort of prestige which an incompetent and +unscrupulous man would desire, and was sure to be imputed to him by the +simmering dislike of the other medical men as an encouragement on his +own part of ignorant puffing. But even his proud outspokenness was +checked by the discernment that it was as useless to fight against the +interpretations of ignorance as to whip the fog; and "good fortune" +insisted on using those interpretations. + +Mrs. Larcher having just become charitably concerned about alarming +symptoms in her charwoman, when Dr. Minchin called, asked him to see +her then and there, and to give her a certificate for the Infirmary; +whereupon after examination he wrote a statement of the case as one of +tumor, and recommended the bearer Nancy Nash as an out-patient. Nancy, +calling at home on her way to the Infirmary, allowed the stay maker and +his wife, in whose attic she lodged, to read Dr. Minchin's paper, and +by this means became a subject of compassionate conversation in the +neighboring shops of Churchyard Lane as being afflicted with a tumor at +first declared to be as large and hard as a duck's egg, but later in +the day to be about the size of "your fist." Most hearers agreed that +it would have to be cut out, but one had known of oil and another of +"squitchineal" as adequate to soften and reduce any lump in the body +when taken enough of into the inside--the oil by gradually "soopling," +the squitchineal by eating away. + +Meanwhile when Nancy presented herself at the Infirmary, it happened to +be one of Lydgate's days there. After questioning and examining her, +Lydgate said to the house-surgeon in an undertone, "It's not tumor: +it's cramp." He ordered her a blister and some steel mixture, and told +her to go home and rest, giving her at the same time a note to Mrs. +Larcher, who, she said, was her best employer, to testify that she was +in need of good food. + +But by-and-by Nancy, in her attic, became portentously worse, the +supposed tumor having indeed given way to the blister, but only +wandered to another region with angrier pain. The staymaker's wife +went to fetch Lydgate, and he continued for a fortnight to attend Nancy +in her own home, until under his treatment she got quite well and went +to work again. But the case continued to be described as one of tumor +in Churchyard Lane and other streets--nay, by Mrs. Larcher also; for +when Lydgate's remarkable cure was mentioned to Dr. Minchin, he +naturally did not like to say, "The case was not one of tumor, and I +was mistaken in describing it as such," but answered, "Indeed! ah! I +saw it was a surgical case, not of a fatal kind." He had been inwardly +annoyed, however, when he had asked at the Infirmary about the woman he +had recommended two days before, to hear from the house-surgeon, a +youngster who was not sorry to vex Minchin with impunity, exactly what +had occurred: he privately pronounced that it was indecent in a general +practitioner to contradict a physician's diagnosis in that open manner, +and afterwards agreed with Wrench that Lydgate was disagreeably +inattentive to etiquette. Lydgate did not make the affair a ground for +valuing himself or (very particularly) despising Minchin, such +rectification of misjudgments often happening among men of equal +qualifications. But report took up this amazing case of tumor, not +clearly distinguished from cancer, and considered the more awful for +being of the wandering sort; till much prejudice against Lydgate's +method as to drugs was overcome by the proof of his marvellous skill in +the speedy restoration of Nancy Nash after she had been rolling and +rolling in agonies from the presence of a tumor both hard and +obstinate, but nevertheless compelled to yield. + +How could Lydgate help himself? It is offensive to tell a lady when +she is expressing her amazement at your skill, that she is altogether +mistaken and rather foolish in her amazement. And to have entered into +the nature of diseases would only have added to his breaches of medical +propriety. Thus he had to wince under a promise of success given by +that ignorant praise which misses every valid quality. + +In the case of a more conspicuous patient, Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, +Lydgate was conscious of having shown himself something better than an +every-day doctor, though here too it was an equivocal advantage that he +won. The eloquent auctioneer was seized with pneumonia, and having +been a patient of Mr. Peacock's, sent for Lydgate, whom he had +expressed his intention to patronize. Mr Trumbull was a robust man, a +good subject for trying the expectant theory upon--watching the course +of an interesting disease when left as much as possible to itself, so +that the stages might be noted for future guidance; and from the air +with which he described his sensations Lydgate surmised that he would +like to be taken into his medical man's confidence, and be represented +as a partner in his own cure. The auctioneer heard, without much +surprise, that his was a constitution which (always with due watching) +might be left to itself, so as to offer a beautiful example of a +disease with all its phases seen in clear delineation, and that he +probably had the rare strength of mind voluntarily to become the test +of a rational procedure, and thus make the disorder of his pulmonary +functions a general benefit to society. + +Mr. Trumbull acquiesced at once, and entered strongly into the view +that an illness of his was no ordinary occasion for medical science. + +"Never fear, sir; you are not speaking to one who is altogether +ignorant of the vis medicatrix," said he, with his usual superiority of +expression, made rather pathetic by difficulty of breathing. And he +went without shrinking through his abstinence from drugs, much +sustained by application of the thermometer which implied the +importance of his temperature, by the sense that he furnished objects +for the microscope, and by learning many new words which seemed suited +to the dignity of his secretions. For Lydgate was acute enough to +indulge him with a little technical talk. + +It may be imagined that Mr. Trumbull rose from his couch with a +disposition to speak of an illness in which he had manifested the +strength of his mind as well as constitution; and he was not backward +in awarding credit to the medical man who had discerned the quality of +patient he had to deal with. The auctioneer was not an ungenerous man, +and liked to give others their due, feeling that he could afford it. +He had caught the words "expectant method," and rang chimes on this and +other learned phrases to accompany the assurance that Lydgate "knew a +thing or two more than the rest of the doctors--was far better versed +in the secrets of his profession than the majority of his compeers." + +This had happened before the affair of Fred Vincy's illness had given +to Mr. Wrench's enmity towards Lydgate more definite personal ground. +The new-comer already threatened to be a nuisance in the shape of +rivalry, and was certainly a nuisance in the shape of practical +criticism or reflections on his hard-driven elders, who had had +something else to do than to busy themselves with untried notions. His +practice had spread in one or two quarters, and from the first the +report of his high family had led to his being pretty generally +invited, so that the other medical men had to meet him at dinner in the +best houses; and having to meet a man whom you dislike is not observed +always to end in a mutual attachment. There was hardly ever so much +unanimity among them as in the opinion that Lydgate was an arrogant +young fellow, and yet ready for the sake of ultimately predominating to +show a crawling subservience to Bulstrode. That Mr. Farebrother, whose +name was a chief flag of the anti-Bulstrode party, always defended +Lydgate and made a friend of him, was referred to Farebrother's +unaccountable way of fighting on both sides. + +Here was plenty of preparation for the outburst of professional disgust +at the announcement of the laws Mr. Bulstrode was laying down for the +direction of the New Hospital, which were the more exasperating because +there was no present possibility of interfering with his will and +pleasure, everybody except Lord Medlicote having refused help towards +the building, on the ground that they preferred giving to the Old +Infirmary. Mr. Bulstrode met all the expenses, and had ceased to be +sorry that he was purchasing the right to carry out his notions of +improvement without hindrance from prejudiced coadjutors; but he had +had to spend large sums, and the building had lingered. Caleb Garth +had undertaken it, had failed during its progress, and before the +interior fittings were begun had retired from the management of the +business; and when referring to the Hospital he often said that however +Bulstrode might ring if you tried him, he liked good solid carpentry +and masonry, and had a notion both of drains and chimneys. In fact, +the Hospital had become an object of intense interest to Bulstrode, and +he would willingly have continued to spare a large yearly sum that he +might rule it dictatorially without any Board; but he had another +favorite object which also required money for its accomplishment: he +wished to buy some land in the neighborhood of Middlemarch, and +therefore he wished to get considerable contributions towards +maintaining the Hospital. Meanwhile he framed his plan of management. +The Hospital was to be reserved for fever in all its forms; Lydgate was +to be chief medical superintendent, that he might have free authority +to pursue all comparative investigations which his studies, +particularly in Paris, had shown him the importance of, the other +medical visitors having a consultative influence, but no power to +contravene Lydgate's ultimate decisions; and the general management was +to be lodged exclusively in the hands of five directors associated with +Mr. Bulstrode, who were to have votes in the ratio of their +contributions, the Board itself filling up any vacancy in its numbers, +and no mob of small contributors being admitted to a share of +government. + +There was an immediate refusal on the part of every medical man in the +town to become a visitor at the Fever Hospital. + +"Very well," said Lydgate to Mr. Bulstrode, "we have a capital +house-surgeon and dispenser, a clear-headed, neat-handed fellow; we'll +get Webbe from Crabsley, as good a country practitioner as any of them, +to come over twice a-week, and in case of any exceptional operation, +Protheroe will come from Brassing. I must work the harder, that's all, +and I have given up my post at the Infirmary. The plan will flourish +in spite of them, and then they'll be glad to come in. Things can't +last as they are: there must be all sorts of reform soon, and then +young fellows may be glad to come and study here." Lydgate was in high +spirits. + +"I shall not flinch, you may depend upon it, Mr. Lydgate," said Mr. +Bulstrode. "While I see you carrying out high intentions with vigor, +you shall have my unfailing support. And I have humble confidence that +the blessing which has hitherto attended my efforts against the spirit +of evil in this town will not be withdrawn. Suitable directors to +assist me I have no doubt of securing. Mr. Brooke of Tipton has +already given me his concurrence, and a pledge to contribute yearly: he +has not specified the sum--probably not a great one. But he will be a +useful member of the board." + +A useful member was perhaps to be defined as one who would originate +nothing, and always vote with Mr. Bulstrode. + +The medical aversion to Lydgate was hardly disguised now. Neither Dr. +Sprague nor Dr. Minchin said that he disliked Lydgate's knowledge, or +his disposition to improve treatment: what they disliked was his +arrogance, which nobody felt to be altogether deniable. They implied +that he was insolent, pretentious, and given to that reckless +innovation for the sake of noise and show which was the essence of the +charlatan. + +The word charlatan once thrown on the air could not be let drop. In +those days the world was agitated about the wondrous doings of Mr. St. +John Long, "noblemen and gentlemen" attesting his extraction of a fluid +like mercury from the temples of a patient. + +Mr. Toller remarked one day, smilingly, to Mrs. Taft, that "Bulstrode +had found a man to suit him in Lydgate; a charlatan in religion is sure +to like other sorts of charlatans." + +"Yes, indeed, I can imagine," said Mrs. Taft, keeping the number of +thirty stitches carefully in her mind all the while; "there are so many +of that sort. I remember Mr. Cheshire, with his irons, trying to make +people straight when the Almighty had made them crooked." + +"No, no," said Mr. Toller, "Cheshire was all right--all fair and above +board. But there's St. John Long--that's the kind of fellow we call a +charlatan, advertising cures in ways nobody knows anything about: a +fellow who wants to make a noise by pretending to go deeper than other +people. The other day he was pretending to tap a man's brain and get +quicksilver out of it." + +"Good gracious! what dreadful trifling with people's constitutions!" +said Mrs. Taft. + +After this, it came to be held in various quarters that Lydgate played +even with respectable constitutions for his own purposes, and how much +more likely that in his flighty experimenting he should make sixes and +sevens of hospital patients. Especially it was to be expected, as the +landlady of the Tankard had said, that he would recklessly cut up their +dead bodies. For Lydgate having attended Mrs. Goby, who died +apparently of a heart-disease not very clearly expressed in the +symptoms, too daringly asked leave of her relatives to open the body, +and thus gave an offence quickly spreading beyond Parley Street, where +that lady had long resided on an income such as made this association +of her body with the victims of Burke and Hare a flagrant insult to her +memory. + +Affairs were in this stage when Lydgate opened the subject of the +Hospital to Dorothea. We see that he was bearing enmity and silly +misconception with much spirit, aware that they were partly created by +his good share of success. + +"They will not drive me away," he said, talking confidentially in Mr. +Farebrother's study. "I have got a good opportunity here, for the ends +I care most about; and I am pretty sure to get income enough for our +wants. By-and-by I shall go on as quietly as possible: I have no +seductions now away from home and work. And I am more and more +convinced that it will be possible to demonstrate the homogeneous +origin of all the tissues. Raspail and others are on the same track, +and I have been losing time." + +"I have no power of prophecy there," said Mr. Farebrother, who had been +puffing at his pipe thoughtfully while Lydgate talked; "but as to the +hostility in the town, you'll weather it if you are prudent." + +"How am I to be prudent?" said Lydgate, "I just do what comes before me +to do. I can't help people's ignorance and spite, any more than +Vesalius could. It isn't possible to square one's conduct to silly +conclusions which nobody can foresee." + +"Quite true; I didn't mean that. I meant only two things. One is, +keep yourself as separable from Bulstrode as you can: of course, you +can go on doing good work of your own by his help; but don't get tied. +Perhaps it seems like personal feeling in me to say so--and there's a +good deal of that, I own--but personal feeling is not always in the +wrong if you boil it down to the impressions which make it simply an +opinion." + +"Bulstrode is nothing to me," said Lydgate, carelessly, "except on +public grounds. As to getting very closely united to him, I am not +fond enough of him for that. But what was the other thing you meant?" +said Lydgate, who was nursing his leg as comfortably as possible, and +feeling in no great need of advice. + +"Why, this. Take care--experto crede--take care not to get hampered +about money matters. I know, by a word you let fall one day, that you +don't like my playing at cards so much for money. You are right enough +there. But try and keep clear of wanting small sums that you haven't +got. I am perhaps talking rather superfluously; but a man likes to +assume superiority over himself, by holding up his bad example and +sermonizing on it." + +Lydgate took Mr. Farebrother's hints very cordially, though he would +hardly have borne them from another man. He could not help remembering +that he had lately made some debts, but these had seemed inevitable, +and he had no intention now to do more than keep house in a simple way. +The furniture for which he owed would not want renewing; nor even the +stock of wine for a long while. + +Many thoughts cheered him at that time--and justly. A man conscious of +enthusiasm for worthy aims is sustained under petty hostilities by the +memory of great workers who had to fight their way not without wounds, +and who hover in his mind as patron saints, invisibly helping. At +home, that same evening when he had been chatting with Mr. Farebrother, +he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and +his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating +attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after +another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he +was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious +sea-breezes. + +There was something very fine in Lydgate's look just then, and any one +might have been encouraged to bet on his achievement. In his dark eyes +and on his mouth and brow there was that placidity which comes from the +fulness of contemplative thought--the mind not searching, but +beholding, and the glance seeming to be filled with what is behind it. + +Presently Rosamond left the piano and seated herself on a chair close +to the sofa and opposite her husband's face. + +"Is that enough music for you, my lord?" she said, folding her hands +before her and putting on a little air of meekness. + +"Yes, dear, if you are tired," said Lydgate, gently, turning his eyes +and resting them on her, but not otherwise moving. Rosamond's presence +at that moment was perhaps no more than a spoonful brought to the lake, +and her woman's instinct in this matter was not dull. + + +"What is absorbing you?" she said, leaning forward and bringing her +face nearer to his. + +He moved his hands and placed them gently behind her shoulders. + +"I am thinking of a great fellow, who was about as old as I am three +hundred years ago, and had already begun a new era in anatomy." + +"I can't guess," said Rosamond, shaking her head. "We used to play at +guessing historical characters at Mrs. Lemon's, but not anatomists." + +"I'll tell you. His name was Vesalius. And the only way he could get +to know anatomy as he did, was by going to snatch bodies at night, from +graveyards and places of execution." + +"Oh!" said Rosamond, with a look of disgust on her pretty face, "I am +very glad you are not Vesalius. I should have thought he might find +some less horrible way than that." + +"No, he couldn't," said Lydgate, going on too earnestly to take much +notice of her answer. "He could only get a complete skeleton by +snatching the whitened bones of a criminal from the gallows, and +burying them, and fetching them away by bits secretly, in the dead of +night." + +"I hope he is not one of your great heroes," said Rosamond, half +playfully, half anxiously, "else I shall have you getting up in the +night to go to St. Peter's churchyard. You know how angry you told me +the people were about Mrs. Goby. You have enemies enough already." + +"So had Vesalius, Rosy. No wonder the medical fogies in Middlemarch +are jealous, when some of the greatest doctors living were fierce upon +Vesalius because they had believed in Galen, and he showed that Galen +was wrong. They called him a liar and a poisonous monster. But the +facts of the human frame were on his side; and so he got the better of +them." + +"And what happened to him afterwards?" said Rosamond, with some +interest. + +"Oh, he had a good deal of fighting to the last. And they did +exasperate him enough at one time to make him burn a good deal of his +work. Then he got shipwrecked just as he was coming from Jerusalem to +take a great chair at Padua. He died rather miserably." + +There was a moment's pause before Rosamond said, "Do you know, Tertius, +I often wish you had not been a medical man." + +"Nay, Rosy, don't say that," said Lydgate, drawing her closer to him. +"That is like saying you wish you had married another man." + +"Not at all; you are clever enough for anything: you might easily have +been something else. And your cousins at Quallingham all think that +you have sunk below them in your choice of a profession." + +"The cousins at Quallingham may go to the devil!" said Lydgate, with +scorn. "It was like their impudence if they said anything of the sort +to you." + +"Still," said Rosamond, "I do _not_ think it is a nice profession, +dear." We know that she had much quiet perseverance in her opinion. + +"It is the grandest profession in the world, Rosamond," said Lydgate, +gravely. "And to say that you love me without loving the medical man +in me, is the same sort of thing as to say that you like eating a peach +but don't like its flavor. Don't say that again, dear, it pains me." + +"Very well, Doctor Grave-face," said Rosy, dimpling, "I will declare in +future that I dote on skeletons, and body-snatchers, and bits of things +in phials, and quarrels with everybody, that end in your dying +miserably." + +"No, no, not so bad as that," said Lydgate, giving up remonstrance and +petting her resignedly. + + + +CHAPTER XLVI. + + Pues no podemos haber aquello que queremos, queramos + aquello que podremos. + + Since we cannot get what we like, let us like + what we can get. + --Spanish Proverb. + + +While Lydgate, safely married and with the Hospital under his command, +felt himself struggling for Medical Reform against Middlemarch, +Middlemarch was becoming more and more conscious of the national +struggle for another kind of Reform. + +By the time that Lord John Russell's measure was being debated in the +House of Commons, there was a new political animation in Middlemarch, +and a new definition of parties which might show a decided change of +balance if a new election came. And there were some who already +predicted this event, declaring that a Reform Bill would never be +carried by the actual Parliament. This was what Will Ladislaw dwelt on +to Mr. Brooke as a reason for congratulation that he had not yet tried +his strength at the hustings. + +"Things will grow and ripen as if it were a comet year," said Will. +"The public temper will soon get to a cometary heat, now the question +of Reform has set in. There is likely to be another election before +long, and by that time Middlemarch will have got more ideas into its +head. What we have to work at now is the 'Pioneer' and political +meetings." + +"Quite right, Ladislaw; we shall make a new thing of opinion here," +said Mr. Brooke. "Only I want to keep myself independent about Reform, +you know; I don't want to go too far. I want to take up +Wilberforce's and Romilly's line, you know, and work at Negro +Emancipation, Criminal Law--that kind of thing. But of course I should +support Grey." + +"If you go in for the principle of Reform, you must be prepared to take +what the situation offers," said Will. "If everybody pulled for his +own bit against everybody else, the whole question would go to tatters." + +"Yes, yes, I agree with you--I quite take that point of view. I should +put it in that light. I should support Grey, you know. But I don't +want to change the balance of the constitution, and I don't think Grey +would." + +"But that is what the country wants," said Will. "Else there would be +no meaning in political unions or any other movement that knows what +it's about. It wants to have a House of Commons which is not weighted +with nominees of the landed class, but with representatives of the +other interests. And as to contending for a reform short of that, it +is like asking for a bit of an avalanche which has already begun to +thunder." + +"That is fine, Ladislaw: that is the way to put it. Write that down, +now. We must begin to get documents about the feeling of the country, +as well as the machine-breaking and general distress." + +"As to documents," said Will, "a two-inch card will hold plenty. A few +rows of figures are enough to deduce misery from, and a few more will +show the rate at which the political determination of the people is +growing." + +"Good: draw that out a little more at length, Ladislaw. That is an +idea, now: write it out in the 'Pioneer.' Put the figures and deduce +the misery, you know; and put the other figures and deduce--and so on. +You have a way of putting things. Burke, now:--when I think of Burke, +I can't help wishing somebody had a pocket-borough to give you, +Ladislaw. You'd never get elected, you know. And we shall always want +talent in the House: reform as we will, we shall always want talent. +That avalanche and the thunder, now, was really a little like Burke. I +want that sort of thing--not ideas, you know, but a way of putting +them." + +"Pocket-boroughs would be a fine thing," said Ladislaw, "if they were +always in the right pocket, and there were always a Burke at hand." + +Will was not displeased with that complimentary comparison, even from +Mr. Brooke; for it is a little too trying to human flesh to be +conscious of expressing one's self better than others and never to have +it noticed, and in the general dearth of admiration for the right +thing, even a chance bray of applause falling exactly in time is rather +fortifying. Will felt that his literary refinements were usually +beyond the limits of Middlemarch perception; nevertheless, he was +beginning thoroughly to like the work of which when he began he had +said to himself rather languidly, "Why not?"--and he studied the +political situation with as ardent an interest as he had ever given to +poetic metres or mediaevalism. It is undeniable that but for the +desire to be where Dorothea was, and perhaps the want of knowing what +else to do, Will would not at this time have been meditating on the +needs of the English people or criticising English statesmanship: he +would probably have been rambling in Italy sketching plans for several +dramas, trying prose and finding it too jejune, trying verse and +finding it too artificial, beginning to copy "bits" from old pictures, +leaving off because they were "no good," and observing that, after all, +self-culture was the principal point; while in politics he would have +been sympathizing warmly with liberty and progress in general. Our +sense of duty must often wait for some work which shall take the place +of dilettanteism and make us feel that the quality of our action is not +a matter of indifference. + +Ladislaw had now accepted his bit of work, though it was not that +indeterminate loftiest thing which he had once dreamed of as alone +worthy of continuous effort. His nature warmed easily in the presence +of subjects which were visibly mixed with life and action, and the +easily stirred rebellion in him helped the glow of public spirit. In +spite of Mr. Casaubon and the banishment from Lowick, he was rather +happy; getting a great deal of fresh knowledge in a vivid way and for +practical purposes, and making the "Pioneer" celebrated as far as +Brassing (never mind the smallness of the area; the writing was not +worse than much that reaches the four corners of the earth). + +Mr. Brooke was occasionally irritating; but Will's impatience was +relieved by the division of his time between visits to the Grange and +retreats to his Middlemarch lodgings, which gave variety to his life. + +"Shift the pegs a little," he said to himself, "and Mr. Brooke might be +in the Cabinet, while I was Under-Secretary. That is the common order +of things: the little waves make the large ones and are of the same +pattern. I am better here than in the sort of life Mr. Casaubon would +have trained me for, where the doing would be all laid down by a +precedent too rigid for me to react upon. I don't care for prestige or +high pay." + +As Lydgate had said of him, he was a sort of gypsy, rather enjoying the +sense of belonging to no class; he had a feeling of romance in his +position, and a pleasant consciousness of creating a little surprise +wherever he went. That sort of enjoyment had been disturbed when he +had felt some new distance between himself and Dorothea in their +accidental meeting at Lydgate's, and his irritation had gone out +towards Mr. Casaubon, who had declared beforehand that Will would lose +caste. "I never had any caste," he would have said, if that prophecy +had been uttered to him, and the quick blood would have come and gone +like breath in his transparent skin. But it is one thing to like +defiance, and another thing to like its consequences. + +Meanwhile, the town opinion about the new editor of the "Pioneer" was +tending to confirm Mr. Casaubon's view. Will's relationship in that +distinguished quarter did not, like Lydgate's high connections, serve +as an advantageous introduction: if it was rumored that young Ladislaw +was Mr. Casaubon's nephew or cousin, it was also rumored that "Mr. +Casaubon would have nothing to do with him." + +"Brooke has taken him up," said Mr. Hawley, "because that is what no +man in his senses could have expected. Casaubon has devilish good +reasons, you may be sure, for turning the cold shoulder on a young +fellow whose bringing-up he paid for. Just like Brooke--one of those +fellows who would praise a cat to sell a horse." + +And some oddities of Will's, more or less poetical, appeared to support +Mr. Keck, the editor of the "Trumpet," in asserting that Ladislaw, if +the truth were known, was not only a Polish emissary but crack-brained, +which accounted for the preternatural quickness and glibness of his +speech when he got on to a platform--as he did whenever he had an +opportunity, speaking with a facility which cast reflections on solid +Englishmen generally. It was disgusting to Keck to see a strip of a +fellow, with light curls round his head, get up and speechify by the +hour against institutions "which had existed when he was in his +cradle." And in a leading article of the "Trumpet," Keck characterized +Ladislaw's speech at a Reform meeting as "the violence of an +energumen--a miserable effort to shroud in the brilliancy of fireworks +the daring of irresponsible statements and the poverty of a knowledge +which was of the cheapest and most recent description." + +"That was a rattling article yesterday, Keck," said Dr. Sprague, with +sarcastic intentions. "But what is an energumen?" + +"Oh, a term that came up in the French Revolution," said Keck. + +This dangerous aspect of Ladislaw was strangely contrasted with other +habits which became matter of remark. He had a fondness, half +artistic, half affectionate, for little children--the smaller they were +on tolerably active legs, and the funnier their clothing, the better +Will liked to surprise and please them. We know that in Rome he was +given to ramble about among the poor people, and the taste did not quit +him in Middlemarch. + +He had somehow picked up a troop of droll children, little hatless boys +with their galligaskins much worn and scant shirting to hang out, +little girls who tossed their hair out of their eyes to look at him, +and guardian brothers at the mature age of seven. This troop he had +led out on gypsy excursions to Halsell Wood at nutting-time, and since +the cold weather had set in he had taken them on a clear day to gather +sticks for a bonfire in the hollow of a hillside, where he drew out a +small feast of gingerbread for them, and improvised a Punch-and-Judy +drama with some private home-made puppets. Here was one oddity. +Another was, that in houses where he got friendly, he was given to +stretch himself at full length on the rug while he talked, and was apt +to be discovered in this attitude by occasional callers for whom such +an irregularity was likely to confirm the notions of his dangerously +mixed blood and general laxity. + +But Will's articles and speeches naturally recommended him in families +which the new strictness of party division had marked off on the side +of Reform. He was invited to Mr. Bulstrode's; but here he could not +lie down on the rug, and Mrs. Bulstrode felt that his mode of talking +about Catholic countries, as if there were any truce with Antichrist, +illustrated the usual tendency to unsoundness in intellectual men. + +At Mr. Farebrother's, however, whom the irony of events had brought on +the same side with Bulstrode in the national movement, Will became a +favorite with the ladies; especially with little Miss Noble, whom it +was one of his oddities to escort when he met her in the street with +her little basket, giving her his arm in the eyes of the town, and +insisting on going with her to pay some call where she distributed her +small filchings from her own share of sweet things. + +But the house where he visited oftenest and lay most on the rug was +Lydgate's. The two men were not at all alike, but they agreed none the +worse. Lydgate was abrupt but not irritable, taking little notice of +megrims in healthy people; and Ladislaw did not usually throw away his +susceptibilities on those who took no notice of them. With Rosamond, +on the other hand, he pouted and was wayward--nay, often +uncomplimentary, much to her inward surprise; nevertheless he was +gradually becoming necessary to her entertainment by his companionship +in her music, his varied talk, and his freedom from the grave +preoccupation which, with all her husband's tenderness and indulgence, +often made his manners unsatisfactory to her, and confirmed her dislike +of the medical profession. + +Lydgate, inclined to be sarcastic on the superstitious faith of the +people in the efficacy of "the bill," while nobody cared about the low +state of pathology, sometimes assailed Will with troublesome questions. +One evening in March, Rosamond in her cherry-colored dress with +swansdown trimming about the throat sat at the tea-table; Lydgate, +lately come in tired from his outdoor work, was seated sideways on an +easy-chair by the fire with one leg over the elbow, his brow looking a +little troubled as his eyes rambled over the columns of the "Pioneer," +while Rosamond, having noticed that he was perturbed, avoided looking +at him, and inwardly thanked heaven that she herself had not a moody +disposition. Will Ladislaw was stretched on the rug contemplating the +curtain-pole abstractedly, and humming very low the notes of "When +first I saw thy face;" while the house spaniel, also stretched out with +small choice of room, looked from between his paws at the usurper of +the rug with silent but strong objection. + +Rosamond bringing Lydgate his cup of tea, he threw down the paper, and +said to Will, who had started up and gone to the table-- + +"It's no use your puffing Brooke as a reforming landlord, Ladislaw: +they only pick the more holes in his coat in the 'Trumpet.'" + +"No matter; those who read the 'Pioneer' don't read the 'Trumpet,'" +said Will, swallowing his tea and walking about. "Do you suppose the +public reads with a view to its own conversion? We should have a +witches' brewing with a vengeance then--'Mingle, mingle, mingle, +mingle, You that mingle may'--and nobody would know which side he was +going to take." + +"Farebrother says, he doesn't believe Brooke would get elected if the +opportunity came: the very men who profess to be for him would bring +another member out of the bag at the right moment." + +"There's no harm in trying. It's good to have resident members." + +"Why?" said Lydgate, who was much given to use that inconvenient word +in a curt tone. + +"They represent the local stupidity better," said Will, laughing, and +shaking his curls; "and they are kept on their best behavior in the +neighborhood. Brooke is not a bad fellow, but he has done some good +things on his estate that he never would have done but for this +Parliamentary bite." + +"He's not fitted to be a public man," said Lydgate, with contemptuous +decision. "He would disappoint everybody who counted on him: I can see +that at the Hospital. Only, there Bulstrode holds the reins and drives +him." + +"That depends on how you fix your standard of public men," said Will. +"He's good enough for the occasion: when the people have made up their +mind as they are making it up now, they don't want a man--they only +want a vote." + +"That is the way with you political writers, Ladislaw--crying up a +measure as if it were a universal cure, and crying up men who are a +part of the very disease that wants curing." + +"Why not? Men may help to cure themselves off the face of the land +without knowing it," said Will, who could find reasons impromptu, when +he had not thought of a question beforehand. + +"That is no excuse for encouraging the superstitious exaggeration of +hopes about this particular measure, helping the cry to swallow it +whole and to send up voting popinjays who are good for nothing but to +carry it. You go against rottenness, and there is nothing more +thoroughly rotten than making people believe that society can be cured +by a political hocus-pocus." + +"That's very fine, my dear fellow. But your cure must begin somewhere, +and put it that a thousand things which debase a population can never +be reformed without this particular reform to begin with. Look what +Stanley said the other day--that the House had been tinkering long +enough at small questions of bribery, inquiring whether this or that +voter has had a guinea when everybody knows that the seats have been +sold wholesale. Wait for wisdom and conscience in public +agents--fiddlestick! The only conscience we can trust to is the +massive sense of wrong in a class, and the best wisdom that will work +is the wisdom of balancing claims. That's my text--which side is +injured? I support the man who supports their claims; not the virtuous +upholder of the wrong." + +"That general talk about a particular case is mere question begging, +Ladislaw. When I say, I go in for the dose that cures, it doesn't +follow that I go in for opium in a given case of gout." + +"I am not begging the question we are upon--whether we are to try for +nothing till we find immaculate men to work with. Should you go on +that plan? If there were one man who would carry you a medical reform +and another who would oppose it, should you inquire which had the +better motives or even the better brains?" + +"Oh, of course," said Lydgate, seeing himself checkmated by a move +which he had often used himself, "if one did not work with such men as +are at hand, things must come to a dead-lock. Suppose the worst opinion +in the town about Bulstrode were a true one, that would not make it +less true that he has the sense and the resolution to do what I think +ought to be done in the matters I know and care most about; but that is +the only ground on which I go with him," Lydgate added rather proudly, +bearing in mind Mr. Farebrother's remarks. "He is nothing to me +otherwise; I would not cry him up on any personal ground--I would keep +clear of that." + +"Do you mean that I cry up Brooke on any personal ground?" said Will +Ladislaw, nettled, and turning sharp round. For the first time he felt +offended with Lydgate; not the less so, perhaps, because he would have +declined any close inquiry into the growth of his relation to Mr. +Brooke. + +"Not at all," said Lydgate, "I was simply explaining my own action. I +meant that a man may work for a special end with others whose motives +and general course are equivocal, if he is quite sure of his personal +independence, and that he is not working for his private +interest--either place or money." + +"Then, why don't you extend your liberality to others?" said Will, +still nettled. "My personal independence is as important to me as +yours is to you. You have no more reason to imagine that I have +personal expectations from Brooke, than I have to imagine that you have +personal expectations from Bulstrode. Motives are points of honor, I +suppose--nobody can prove them. But as to money and place in the +world." Will ended, tossing back his head, "I think it is pretty clear +that I am not determined by considerations of that sort." + +"You quite mistake me, Ladislaw," said Lydgate, surprised. He had been +preoccupied with his own vindication, and had been blind to what +Ladislaw might infer on his own account. "I beg your pardon for +unintentionally annoying you. In fact, I should rather attribute to +you a romantic disregard of your own worldly interests. On the +political question, I referred simply to intellectual bias." + +"How very unpleasant you both are this evening!" said Rosamond. "I +cannot conceive why money should have been referred to. Polities and +Medicine are sufficiently disagreeable to quarrel upon. You can both +of you go on quarrelling with all the world and with each other on +those two topics." + +Rosamond looked mildly neutral as she said this, rising to ring the +bell, and then crossing to her work-table. + +"Poor Rosy!" said Lydgate, putting out his hand to her as she was +passing him. "Disputation is not amusing to cherubs. Have some music. +Ask Ladislaw to sing with you." + +When Will was gone Rosamond said to her husband, "What put you out of +temper this evening, Tertius?" + +"Me? It was Ladislaw who was out of temper. He is like a bit of +tinder." + +"But I mean, before that. Something had vexed you before you came in, +you looked cross. And that made you begin to dispute with Mr. +Ladislaw. You hurt me very much when you look so, Tertius." + +"Do I? Then I am a brute," said Lydgate, caressing her penitently. + +"What vexed you?" + +"Oh, outdoor things--business." It was really a letter insisting on +the payment of a bill for furniture. But Rosamond was expecting to +have a baby, and Lydgate wished to save her from any perturbation. + + + +CHAPTER XLVII. + + Was never true love loved in vain, + For truest love is highest gain. + No art can make it: it must spring + Where elements are fostering. + So in heaven's spot and hour + Springs the little native flower, + Downward root and upward eye, + Shapen by the earth and sky. + + +It happened to be on a Saturday evening that Will Ladislaw had that +little discussion with Lydgate. Its effect when he went to his own +rooms was to make him sit up half the night, thinking over again, under +a new irritation, all that he had before thought of his having settled +in Middlemarch and harnessed himself with Mr. Brooke. Hesitations +before he had taken the step had since turned into susceptibility to +every hint that he would have been wiser not to take it; and hence came +his heat towards Lydgate--a heat which still kept him restless. Was he +not making a fool of himself?--and at a time when he was more than +ever conscious of being something better than a fool? And for what end? + +Well, for no definite end. True, he had dreamy visions of +possibilities: there is no human being who having both passions and +thoughts does not think in consequence of his passions--does not find +images rising in his mind which soothe the passion with hope or sting +it with dread. But this, which happens to us all, happens to some with +a wide difference; and Will was not one of those whose wit "keeps the +roadway:" he had his bypaths where there were little joys of his own +choosing, such as gentlemen cantering on the highroad might have +thought rather idiotic. The way in which he made a sort of happiness +for himself out of his feeling for Dorothea was an example of this. It +may seem strange, but it is the fact, that the ordinary vulgar vision +of which Mr. Casaubon suspected him--namely, that Dorothea might become +a widow, and that the interest he had established in her mind might +turn into acceptance of him as a husband--had no tempting, arresting +power over him; he did not live in the scenery of such an event, and +follow it out, as we all do with that imagined "otherwise" which is our +practical heaven. It was not only that he was unwilling to entertain +thoughts which could be accused of baseness, and was already uneasy in +the sense that he had to justify himself from the charge of +ingratitude--the latent consciousness of many other barriers between +himself and Dorothea besides the existence of her husband, had helped +to turn away his imagination from speculating on what might befall Mr. +Casaubon. And there were yet other reasons. Will, we know, could not +bear the thought of any flaw appearing in his crystal: he was at once +exasperated and delighted by the calm freedom with which Dorothea +looked at him and spoke to him, and there was something so exquisite in +thinking of her just as she was, that he could not long for a change +which must somehow change her. Do we not shun the street version of a +fine melody?--or shrink from the news that the rarity--some bit of +chiselling or engraving perhaps--which we have dwelt on even with +exultation in the trouble it has cost us to snatch glimpses of it, is +really not an uncommon thing, and may be obtained as an every-day +possession? Our good depends on the quality and breadth of our +emotion; and to Will, a creature who cared little for what are called +the solid things of life and greatly for its subtler influences, to +have within him such a feeling as he had towards Dorothea, was like the +inheritance of a fortune. What others might have called the futility +of his passion, made an additional delight for his imagination: he was +conscious of a generous movement, and of verifying in his own +experience that higher love-poetry which had charmed his fancy. +Dorothea, he said to himself, was forever enthroned in his soul: no +other woman could sit higher than her footstool; and if he could have +written out in immortal syllables the effect she wrought within him, he +might have boasted after the example of old Drayton, that,-- + + "Queens hereafter might be glad to live + Upon the alms of her superfluous praise." + +But this result was questionable. And what else could he do for +Dorothea? What was his devotion worth to her? It was impossible to +tell. He would not go out of her reach. He saw no creature among her +friends to whom he could believe that she spoke with the same simple +confidence as to him. She had once said that she would like him to +stay; and stay he would, whatever fire-breathing dragons might hiss +around her. + +This had always been the conclusion of Will's hesitations. But he was +not without contradictoriness and rebellion even towards his own +resolve. He had often got irritated, as he was on this particular +night, by some outside demonstration that his public exertions with Mr. +Brooke as a chief could not seem as heroic as he would like them to be, +and this was always associated with the other ground of +irritation--that notwithstanding his sacrifice of dignity for +Dorothea's sake, he could hardly ever see her. Whereupon, not being +able to contradict these unpleasant facts, he contradicted his own +strongest bias and said, "I am a fool." + +Nevertheless, since the inward debate necessarily turned on Dorothea, +he ended, as he had done before, only by getting a livelier sense of +what her presence would be to him; and suddenly reflecting that the +morrow would be Sunday, he determined to go to Lowick Church and see +her. He slept upon that idea, but when he was dressing in the rational +morning light, Objection said-- + +"That will be a virtual defiance of Mr. Casaubon's prohibition to visit +Lowick, and Dorothea will be displeased." + +"Nonsense!" argued Inclination, "it would be too monstrous for him to +hinder me from going out to a pretty country church on a spring +morning. And Dorothea will be glad." + +"It will be clear to Mr. Casaubon that you have come either to annoy +him or to see Dorothea." + +"It is not true that I go to annoy him, and why should I not go to see +Dorothea? Is he to have everything to himself and be always +comfortable? Let him smart a little, as other people are obliged to +do. I have always liked the quaintness of the church and congregation; +besides, I know the Tuckers: I shall go into their pew." + +Having silenced Objection by force of unreason, Will walked to Lowick +as if he had been on the way to Paradise, crossing Halsell Common and +skirting the wood, where the sunlight fell broadly under the budding +boughs, bringing out the beauties of moss and lichen, and fresh green +growths piercing the brown. Everything seemed to know that it was +Sunday, and to approve of his going to Lowick Church. Will easily felt +happy when nothing crossed his humor, and by this time the thought of +vexing Mr. Casaubon had become rather amusing to him, making his face +break into its merry smile, pleasant to see as the breaking of sunshine +on the water--though the occasion was not exemplary. But most of us +are apt to settle within ourselves that the man who blocks our way is +odious, and not to mind causing him a little of the disgust which his +personality excites in ourselves. Will went along with a small book +under his arm and a hand in each side-pocket, never reading, but +chanting a little, as he made scenes of what would happen in church and +coming out. He was experimenting in tunes to suit some words of his +own, sometimes trying a ready-made melody, sometimes improvising. The +words were not exactly a hymn, but they certainly fitted his Sunday +experience:-- + + "O me, O me, what frugal cheer + My love doth feed upon! + A touch, a ray, that is not here, + A shadow that is gone: + + "A dream of breath that might be near, + An inly-echoed tone, + The thought that one may think me dear, + The place where one was known, + + "The tremor of a banished fear, + An ill that was not done-- + O me, O me, what frugal cheer + My love doth feed upon!" + +Sometimes, when he took off his hat, shaking his head backward, and +showing his delicate throat as he sang, he looked like an incarnation +of the spring whose spirit filled the air--a bright creature, abundant +in uncertain promises. + +The bells were still ringing when he got to Lowick, and he went into +the curate's pew before any one else arrived there. But he was still +left alone in it when the congregation had assembled. The curate's pew +was opposite the rector's at the entrance of the small chancel, and +Will had time to fear that Dorothea might not come while he looked +round at the group of rural faces which made the congregation from year +to year within the white-washed walls and dark old pews, hardly with +more change than we see in the boughs of a tree which breaks here and +there with age, but yet has young shoots. Mr. Rigg's frog-face was +something alien and unaccountable, but notwithstanding this shock to +the order of things, there were still the Waules and the rural stock of +the Powderells in their pews side by side; brother Samuel's cheek had +the same purple round as ever, and the three generations of decent +cottagers came as of old with a sense of duty to their betters +generally--the smaller children regarding Mr. Casaubon, who wore the +black gown and mounted to the highest box, as probably the chief of all +betters, and the one most awful if offended. Even in 1831 Lowick was +at peace, not more agitated by Reform than by the solemn tenor of the +Sunday sermon. The congregation had been used to seeing Will at church +in former days, and no one took much note of him except the choir, who +expected him to make a figure in the singing. + +Dorothea did at last appear on this quaint background, walking up the +short aisle in her white beaver bonnet and gray cloak--the same she had +worn in the Vatican. Her face being, from her entrance, towards the +chancel, even her shortsighted eyes soon discerned Will, but there was +no outward show of her feeling except a slight paleness and a grave bow +as she passed him. To his own surprise Will felt suddenly +uncomfortable, and dared not look at her after they had bowed to each +other. Two minutes later, when Mr. Casaubon came out of the vestry, +and, entering the pew, seated himself in face of Dorothea, Will felt +his paralysis more complete. He could look nowhere except at the choir +in the little gallery over the vestry-door: Dorothea was perhaps +pained, and he had made a wretched blunder. It was no longer amusing +to vex Mr. Casaubon, who had the advantage probably of watching him and +seeing that he dared not turn his head. Why had he not imagined this +beforehand?--but he could not expect that he should sit in that square +pew alone, unrelieved by any Tuckers, who had apparently departed from +Lowick altogether, for a new clergyman was in the desk. Still he +called himself stupid now for not foreseeing that it would be +impossible for him to look towards Dorothea--nay, that she might feel +his coming an impertinence. There was no delivering himself from his +cage, however; and Will found his places and looked at his book as if +he had been a school-mistress, feeling that the morning service had +never been so immeasurably long before, that he was utterly ridiculous, +out of temper, and miserable. This was what a man got by worshipping +the sight of a woman! The clerk observed with surprise that Mr. +Ladislaw did not join in the tune of Hanover, and reflected that he +might have a cold. + +Mr. Casaubon did not preach that morning, and there was no change in +Will's situation until the blessing had been pronounced and every one +rose. It was the fashion at Lowick for "the betters" to go out first. +With a sudden determination to break the spell that was upon him, Will +looked straight at Mr. Casaubon. But that gentleman's eyes were on the +button of the pew-door, which he opened, allowing Dorothea to pass, and +following her immediately without raising his eyelids. Will's glance +had caught Dorothea's as she turned out of the pew, and again she +bowed, but this time with a look of agitation, as if she were +repressing tears. Will walked out after them, but they went on towards +the little gate leading out of the churchyard into the shrubbery, never +looking round. + +It was impossible for him to follow them, and he could only walk back +sadly at mid-day along the same road which he had trodden hopefully in +the morning. The lights were all changed for him both without and +within. + + + +CHAPTER XLVIII + + Surely the golden hours are turning gray + And dance no more, and vainly strive to run: + I see their white locks streaming in the wind-- + Each face is haggard as it looks at me, + Slow turning in the constant clasping round + Storm-driven. + + +Dorothea's distress when she was leaving the church came chiefly from +the perception that Mr. Casaubon was determined not to speak to his +cousin, and that Will's presence at church had served to mark more +strongly the alienation between them. Will's coming seemed to her +quite excusable, nay, she thought it an amiable movement in him towards +a reconciliation which she herself had been constantly wishing for. He +had probably imagined, as she had, that if Mr. Casaubon and he could +meet easily, they would shake hands and friendly intercourse might +return. But now Dorothea felt quite robbed of that hope. Will was +banished further than ever, for Mr. Casaubon must have been newly +embittered by this thrusting upon him of a presence which he refused to +recognize. + +He had not been very well that morning, suffering from some difficulty +in breathing, and had not preached in consequence; she was not +surprised, therefore, that he was nearly silent at luncheon, still less +that he made no allusion to Will Ladislaw. For her own part she felt +that she could never again introduce that subject. They usually spent +apart the hours between luncheon and dinner on a Sunday; Mr. Casaubon +in the library dozing chiefly, and Dorothea in her boudoir, where she +was wont to occupy herself with some of her favorite books. There was +a little heap of them on the table in the bow-window--of various sorts, +from Herodotus, which she was learning to read with Mr. Casaubon, to +her old companion Pascal, and Keble's "Christian Year." But to-day +opened one after another, and could read none of them. Everything +seemed dreary: the portents before the birth of Cyrus--Jewish +antiquities--oh dear!--devout epigrams--the sacred chime of favorite +hymns--all alike were as flat as tunes beaten on wood: even the spring +flowers and the grass had a dull shiver in them under the afternoon +clouds that hid the sun fitfully; even the sustaining thoughts which +had become habits seemed to have in them the weariness of long future +days in which she would still live with them for her sole companions. +It was another or rather a fuller sort of companionship that poor +Dorothea was hungering for, and the hunger had grown from the perpetual +effort demanded by her married life. She was always trying to be what +her husband wished, and never able to repose on his delight in what she +was. The thing that she liked, that she spontaneously cared to have, +seemed to be always excluded from her life; for if it was only granted +and not shared by her husband it might as well have been denied. About +Will Ladislaw there had been a difference between them from the first, +and it had ended, since Mr. Casaubon had so severely repulsed +Dorothea's strong feeling about his claims on the family property, by +her being convinced that she was in the right and her husband in the +wrong, but that she was helpless. This afternoon the helplessness was +more wretchedly benumbing than ever: she longed for objects who could +be dear to her, and to whom she could be dear. She longed for work +which would be directly beneficent like the sunshine and the rain, and +now it appeared that she was to live more and more in a virtual tomb, +where there was the apparatus of a ghastly labor producing what would +never see the light. Today she had stood at the door of the tomb and +seen Will Ladislaw receding into the distant world of warm activity and +fellowship--turning his face towards her as he went. + +Books were of no use. Thinking was of no use. It was Sunday, and she +could not have the carriage to go to Celia, who had lately had a baby. +There was no refuge now from spiritual emptiness and discontent, and +Dorothea had to bear her bad mood, as she would have borne a headache. + +After dinner, at the hour when she usually began to read aloud, Mr. +Casaubon proposed that they should go into the library, where, he said, +he had ordered a fire and lights. He seemed to have revived, and to be +thinking intently. + +In the library Dorothea observed that he had newly arranged a row of +his note-books on a table, and now he took up and put into her hand a +well-known volume, which was a table of contents to all the others. + +"You will oblige me, my dear," he said, seating himself, "if instead of +other reading this evening, you will go through this aloud, pencil in +hand, and at each point where I say 'mark,' will make a cross with your +pencil. This is the first step in a sifting process which I have long +had in view, and as we go on I shall be able to indicate to you certain +principles of selection whereby you will, I trust, have an intelligent +participation in my purpose." + +This proposal was only one more sign added to many since his memorable +interview with Lydgate, that Mr. Casaubon's original reluctance to let +Dorothea work with him had given place to the contrary disposition, +namely, to demand much interest and labor from her. + +After she had read and marked for two hours, he said, "We will take the +volume up-stairs--and the pencil, if you please--and in case of +reading in the night, we can pursue this task. It is not wearisome to +you, I trust, Dorothea?" + +"I prefer always reading what you like best to hear," said Dorothea, +who told the simple truth; for what she dreaded was to exert herself in +reading or anything else which left him as joyless as ever. + +It was a proof of the force with which certain characteristics in +Dorothea impressed those around her, that her husband, with all his +jealousy and suspicion, had gathered implicit trust in the integrity of +her promises, and her power of devoting herself to her idea of the +right and best. Of late he had begun to feel that these qualities were +a peculiar possession for himself, and he wanted to engross them. + +The reading in the night did come. Dorothea in her young weariness had +slept soon and fast: she was awakened by a sense of light, which seemed +to her at first like a sudden vision of sunset after she had climbed a +steep hill: she opened her eyes and saw her husband wrapped in his warm +gown seating himself in the arm-chair near the fire-place where the +embers were still glowing. He had lit two candles, expecting that +Dorothea would awake, but not liking to rouse her by more direct means. + +"Are you ill, Edward?" she said, rising immediately. + +"I felt some uneasiness in a reclining posture. I will sit here for a +time." She threw wood on the fire, wrapped herself up, and said, "You +would like me to read to you?" + +"You would oblige me greatly by doing so, Dorothea," said Mr. Casaubon, +with a shade more meekness than usual in his polite manner. "I am +wakeful: my mind is remarkably lucid." + +"I fear that the excitement may be too great for you," said Dorothea, +remembering Lydgate's cautions. + +"No, I am not conscious of undue excitement. Thought is easy." +Dorothea dared not insist, and she read for an hour or more on the same +plan as she had done in the evening, but getting over the pages with +more quickness. Mr. Casaubon's mind was more alert, and he seemed to +anticipate what was coming after a very slight verbal indication, +saying, "That will do--mark that"--or "Pass on to the next head--I omit +the second excursus on Crete." Dorothea was amazed to think of the +bird-like speed with which his mind was surveying the ground where it +had been creeping for years. At last he said-- + +"Close the book now, my dear. We will resume our work to-morrow. I +have deferred it too long, and would gladly see it completed. But you +observe that the principle on which my selection is made, is to give +adequate, and not disproportionate illustration to each of the theses +enumerated in my introduction, as at present sketched. You have +perceived that distinctly, Dorothea?" + +"Yes," said Dorothea, rather tremulously. She felt sick at heart. + +"And now I think that I can take some repose," said Mr. Casaubon. He +laid down again and begged her to put out the lights. When she had +lain down too, and there was a darkness only broken by a dull glow on +the hearth, he said-- + +"Before I sleep, I have a request to make, Dorothea." + +"What is it?" said Dorothea, with dread in her mind. + +"It is that you will let me know, deliberately, whether, in case of my +death, you will carry out my wishes: whether you will avoid doing what +I should deprecate, and apply yourself to do what I should desire." + +Dorothea was not taken by surprise: many incidents had been leading her +to the conjecture of some intention on her husband's part which might +make a new yoke for her. She did not answer immediately. + +"You refuse?" said Mr. Casaubon, with more edge in his tone. + +"No, I do not yet refuse," said Dorothea, in a clear voice, the need of +freedom asserting itself within her; "but it is too solemn--I think it +is not right--to make a promise when I am ignorant what it will bind me +to. Whatever affection prompted I would do without promising." + +"But you would use your own judgment: I ask you to obey mine; you +refuse." + +"No, dear, no!" said Dorothea, beseechingly, crushed by opposing fears. +"But may I wait and reflect a little while? I desire with my whole +soul to do what will comfort you; but I cannot give any pledge +suddenly--still less a pledge to do I know not what." + +"You cannot then confide in the nature of my wishes?" + +"Grant me till to-morrow," said Dorothea, beseechingly. + +"Till to-morrow then," said Mr. Casaubon. + +Soon she could hear that he was sleeping, but there was no more sleep +for her. While she constrained herself to lie still lest she should +disturb him, her mind was carrying on a conflict in which imagination +ranged its forces first on one side and then on the other. She had no +presentiment that the power which her husband wished to establish over +her future action had relation to anything else than his work. But it +was clear enough to her that he would expect her to devote herself to +sifting those mixed heaps of material, which were to be the doubtful +illustration of principles still more doubtful. The poor child had +become altogether unbelieving as to the trustworthiness of that Key +which had made the ambition and the labor of her husband's life. It +was not wonderful that, in spite of her small instruction, her judgment +in this matter was truer than his: for she looked with unbiassed +comparison and healthy sense at probabilities on which he had risked +all his egoism. And now she pictured to herself the days, and months, +and years which she must spend in sorting what might be called +shattered mummies, and fragments of a tradition which was itself a +mosaic wrought from crushed ruins--sorting them as food for a theory +which was already withered in the birth like an elfin child. Doubtless +a vigorous error vigorously pursued has kept the embryos of truth +a-breathing: the quest of gold being at the same time a questioning of +substances, the body of chemistry is prepared for its soul, and +Lavoisier is born. But Mr. Casaubon's theory of the elements which +made the seed of all tradition was not likely to bruise itself unawares +against discoveries: it floated among flexible conjectures no more +solid than those etymologies which seemed strong because of likeness in +sound until it was shown that likeness in sound made them impossible: +it was a method of interpretation which was not tested by the necessity +of forming anything which had sharper collisions than an elaborate +notion of Gog and Magog: it was as free from interruption as a plan for +threading the stars together. And Dorothea had so often had to check +her weariness and impatience over this questionable riddle-guessing, as +it revealed itself to her instead of the fellowship in high knowledge +which was to make life worthier! She could understand well enough now +why her husband had come to cling to her, as possibly the only hope +left that his labors would ever take a shape in which they could be +given to the world. At first it had seemed that he wished to keep even +her aloof from any close knowledge of what he was doing; but gradually +the terrible stringency of human need--the prospect of a too speedy +death-- + +And here Dorothea's pity turned from her own future to her husband's +past--nay, to his present hard struggle with a lot which had grown out +of that past: the lonely labor, the ambition breathing hardly under the +pressure of self-distrust; the goal receding, and the heavier limbs; +and now at last the sword visibly trembling above him! And had she not +wished to marry him that she might help him in his life's labor?--But +she had thought the work was to be something greater, which she could +serve in devoutly for its own sake. Was it right, even to soothe his +grief--would it be possible, even if she promised--to work as in a +treadmill fruitlessly? + +And yet, could she deny him? Could she say, "I refuse to content this +pining hunger?" It would be refusing to do for him dead, what she was +almost sure to do for him living. If he lived as Lydgate had said he +might, for fifteen years or more, her life would certainly be spent in +helping him and obeying him. + +Still, there was a deep difference between that devotion to the living +and that indefinite promise of devotion to the dead. While he lived, +he could claim nothing that she would not still be free to remonstrate +against, and even to refuse. But--the thought passed through her mind +more than once, though she could not believe in it--might he not mean +to demand something more from her than she had been able to imagine, +since he wanted her pledge to carry out his wishes without telling her +exactly what they were? No; his heart was bound up in his work only: +that was the end for which his failing life was to be eked out by hers. + +And now, if she were to say, "No! if you die, I will put no finger to +your work"--it seemed as if she would be crushing that bruised heart. + +For four hours Dorothea lay in this conflict, till she felt ill and +bewildered, unable to resolve, praying mutely. Helpless as a child +which has sobbed and sought too long, she fell into a late morning +sleep, and when she waked Mr. Casaubon was already up. Tantripp told +her that he had read prayers, breakfasted, and was in the library. + +"I never saw you look so pale, madam," said Tantripp, a solid-figured +woman who had been with the sisters at Lausanne. + +"Was I ever high-colored, Tantripp?" said Dorothea, smiling faintly. + +"Well, not to say high-colored, but with a bloom like a Chiny rose. +But always smelling those leather books, what can be expected? Do rest +a little this morning, madam. Let me say you are ill and not able to +go into that close library." + +"Oh no, no! let me make haste," said Dorothea. "Mr. Casaubon wants me +particularly." + +When she went down she felt sure that she should promise to fulfil his +wishes; but that would be later in the day--not yet. + +As Dorothea entered the library, Mr. Casaubon turned round from the +table where he had been placing some books, and said-- + +"I was waiting for your appearance, my dear. I had hoped to set to +work at once this morning, but I find myself under some indisposition, +probably from too much excitement yesterday. I am going now to take a +turn in the shrubbery, since the air is milder." + +"I am glad to hear that," said Dorothea. "Your mind, I feared, was too +active last night." + +"I would fain have it set at rest on the point I last spoke of, +Dorothea. You can now, I hope, give me an answer." + +"May I come out to you in the garden presently?" said Dorothea, winning +a little breathing space in that way. + +"I shall be in the Yew-tree Walk for the next half-hour," said Mr. +Casaubon, and then he left her. + +Dorothea, feeling very weary, rang and asked Tantripp to bring her some +wraps. She had been sitting still for a few minutes, but not in any +renewal of the former conflict: she simply felt that she was going to +say "Yes" to her own doom: she was too weak, too full of dread at the +thought of inflicting a keen-edged blow on her husband, to do anything +but submit completely. She sat still and let Tantripp put on her +bonnet and shawl, a passivity which was unusual with her, for she liked +to wait on herself. + +"God bless you, madam!" said Tantripp, with an irrepressible movement +of love towards the beautiful, gentle creature for whom she felt unable +to do anything more, now that she had finished tying the bonnet. + +This was too much for Dorothea's highly-strung feeling, and she burst +into tears, sobbing against Tantripp's arm. But soon she checked +herself, dried her eyes, and went out at the glass door into the +shrubbery. + +"I wish every book in that library was built into a caticom for your +master," said Tantripp to Pratt, the butler, finding him in the +breakfast-room. She had been at Rome, and visited the antiquities, as +we know; and she always declined to call Mr. Casaubon anything but +"your master," when speaking to the other servants. + +Pratt laughed. He liked his master very well, but he liked Tantripp +better. + +When Dorothea was out on the gravel walks, she lingered among the +nearer clumps of trees, hesitating, as she had done once before, though +from a different cause. Then she had feared lest her effort at +fellowship should be unwelcome; now she dreaded going to the spot where +she foresaw that she must bind herself to a fellowship from which she +shrank. Neither law nor the world's opinion compelled her to +this--only her husband's nature and her own compassion, only the ideal +and not the real yoke of marriage. She saw clearly enough the whole +situation, yet she was fettered: she could not smite the stricken soul +that entreated hers. If that were weakness, Dorothea was weak. But +the half-hour was passing, and she must not delay longer. When she +entered the Yew-tree Walk she could not see her husband; but the walk +had bends, and she went, expecting to catch sight of his figure wrapped +in a blue cloak, which, with a warm velvet cap, was his outer garment +on chill days for the garden. It occurred to her that he might be +resting in the summer-house, towards which the path diverged a little. +Turning the angle, she could see him seated on the bench, close to a +stone table. His arms were resting on the table, and his brow was +bowed down on them, the blue cloak being dragged forward and screening +his face on each side. + +"He exhausted himself last night," Dorothea said to herself, thinking +at first that he was asleep, and that the summer-house was too damp a +place to rest in. But then she remembered that of late she had seen +him take that attitude when she was reading to him, as if he found it +easier than any other; and that he would sometimes speak, as well as +listen, with his face down in that way. She went into the summerhouse +and said, "I am come, Edward; I am ready." + +He took no notice, and she thought that he must be fast asleep. She +laid her hand on his shoulder, and repeated, "I am ready!" Still he was +motionless; and with a sudden confused fear, she leaned down to him, +took off his velvet cap, and leaned her cheek close to his head, crying +in a distressed tone-- + +"Wake, dear, wake! Listen to me. I am come to answer." But Dorothea +never gave her answer. + +Later in the day, Lydgate was seated by her bedside, and she was +talking deliriously, thinking aloud, and recalling what had gone +through her mind the night before. She knew him, and called him by his +name, but appeared to think it right that she should explain everything +to him; and again, and again, begged him to explain everything to her +husband. + +"Tell him I shall go to him soon: I am ready to promise. Only, +thinking about it was so dreadful--it has made me ill. Not very ill. +I shall soon be better. Go and tell him." + +But the silence in her husband's ear was never more to be broken. + + + +CHAPTER XLIX. + + A task too strong for wizard spells + This squire had brought about; + 'T is easy dropping stones in wells, + But who shall get them out?" + + +"I wish to God we could hinder Dorothea from knowing this," said Sir +James Chettam, with a little frown on his brow, and an expression of +intense disgust about his mouth. + +He was standing on the hearth-rug in the library at Lowick Grange, and +speaking to Mr. Brooke. It was the day after Mr. Casaubon had been +buried, and Dorothea was not yet able to leave her room. + +"That would be difficult, you know, Chettam, as she is an executrix, +and she likes to go into these things--property, land, that kind of +thing. She has her notions, you know," said Mr. Brooke, sticking his +eye-glasses on nervously, and exploring the edges of a folded paper +which he held in his hand; "and she would like to act--depend upon it, +as an executrix Dorothea would want to act. And she was twenty-one +last December, you know. I can hinder nothing." + +Sir James looked at the carpet for a minute in silence, and then +lifting his eyes suddenly fixed them on Mr. Brooke, saying, "I will +tell you what we can do. Until Dorothea is well, all business must be +kept from her, and as soon as she is able to be moved she must come to +us. Being with Celia and the baby will be the best thing in the world +for her, and will pass away the time. And meanwhile you must get rid +of Ladislaw: you must send him out of the country." Here Sir James's +look of disgust returned in all its intensity. + +Mr. Brooke put his hands behind him, walked to the window and +straightened his back with a little shake before he replied. + +"That is easily said, Chettam, easily said, you know." + +"My dear sir," persisted Sir James, restraining his indignation within +respectful forms, "it was you who brought him here, and you who keep +him here--I mean by the occupation you give him." + +"Yes, but I can't dismiss him in an instant without assigning reasons, +my dear Chettam. Ladislaw has been invaluable, most satisfactory. I +consider that I have done this part of the country a service by +bringing him--by bringing him, you know." Mr. Brooke ended with a nod, +turning round to give it. + +"It's a pity this part of the country didn't do without him, that's all +I have to say about it. At any rate, as Dorothea's brother-in-law, I +feel warranted in objecting strongly to his being kept here by any +action on the part of her friends. You admit, I hope, that I have a +right to speak about what concerns the dignity of my wife's sister?" + +Sir James was getting warm. + +"Of course, my dear Chettam, of course. But you and I have different +ideas--different--" + +"Not about this action of Casaubon's, I should hope," interrupted Sir +James. "I say that he has most unfairly compromised Dorothea. I say +that there never was a meaner, more ungentlemanly action than this--a +codicil of this sort to a will which he made at the time of his +marriage with the knowledge and reliance of her family--a positive +insult to Dorothea!" + +"Well, you know, Casaubon was a little twisted about Ladislaw. +Ladislaw has told me the reason--dislike of the bent he took, you +know--Ladislaw didn't think much of Casaubon's notions, Thoth and +Dagon--that sort of thing: and I fancy that Casaubon didn't like the +independent position Ladislaw had taken up. I saw the letters between +them, you know. Poor Casaubon was a little buried in books--he didn't +know the world." + +"It's all very well for Ladislaw to put that color on it," said Sir +James. "But I believe Casaubon was only jealous of him on Dorothea's +account, and the world will suppose that she gave him some reason; and +that is what makes it so abominable--coupling her name with this young +fellow's." + +"My dear Chettam, it won't lead to anything, you know," said Mr. +Brooke, seating himself and sticking on his eye-glass again. "It's all +of a piece with Casaubon's oddity. This paper, now, 'Synoptical +Tabulation' and so on, 'for the use of Mrs. Casaubon,' it was locked up +in the desk with the will. I suppose he meant Dorothea to publish his +researches, eh? and she'll do it, you know; she has gone into his +studies uncommonly." + +"My dear sir," said Sir James, impatiently, "that is neither here nor +there. The question is, whether you don't see with me the propriety of +sending young Ladislaw away?" + +"Well, no, not the urgency of the thing. By-and-by, perhaps, it may +come round. As to gossip, you know, sending him away won't hinder +gossip. People say what they like to say, not what they have chapter +and verse for," said Mr Brooke, becoming acute about the truths that +lay on the side of his own wishes. "I might get rid of Ladislaw up to +a certain point--take away the 'Pioneer' from him, and that sort of +thing; but I couldn't send him out of the country if he didn't choose +to go--didn't choose, you know." + +Mr. Brooke, persisting as quietly as if he were only discussing the +nature of last year's weather, and nodding at the end with his usual +amenity, was an exasperating form of obstinacy. + +"Good God!" said Sir James, with as much passion as he ever showed, +"let us get him a post; let us spend money on him. If he could go in +the suite of some Colonial Governor! Grampus might take him--and I +could write to Fulke about it." + +"But Ladislaw won't be shipped off like a head of cattle, my dear +fellow; Ladislaw has his ideas. It's my opinion that if he were to +part from me to-morrow, you'd only hear the more of him in the country. +With his talent for speaking and drawing up documents, there are few +men who could come up to him as an agitator--an agitator, you know." + +"Agitator!" said Sir James, with bitter emphasis, feeling that the +syllables of this word properly repeated were a sufficient exposure of +its hatefulness. + +"But be reasonable, Chettam. Dorothea, now. As you say, she had +better go to Celia as soon as possible. She can stay under your roof, +and in the mean time things may come round quietly. Don't let us be +firing off our guns in a hurry, you know. Standish will keep our +counsel, and the news will be old before it's known. Twenty things may +happen to carry off Ladislaw--without my doing anything, you know." + +"Then I am to conclude that you decline to do anything?" + +"Decline, Chettam?--no--I didn't say decline. But I really don't see +what I could do. Ladislaw is a gentleman." + +"I am glad to hear it!" said Sir James, his irritation making him +forget himself a little. "I am sure Casaubon was not." + +"Well, it would have been worse if he had made the codicil to hinder +her from marrying again at all, you know." + +"I don't know that," said Sir James. "It would have been less +indelicate." + +"One of poor Casaubon's freaks! That attack upset his brain a little. +It all goes for nothing. She doesn't _want_ to marry Ladislaw." + +"But this codicil is framed so as to make everybody believe that she +did. I don't believe anything of the sort about Dorothea," said Sir +James--then frowningly, "but I suspect Ladislaw. I tell you frankly, +I suspect Ladislaw." + +"I couldn't take any immediate action on that ground, Chettam. In +fact, if it were possible to pack him off--send him to Norfolk +Island--that sort of thing--it would look all the worse for Dorothea +to those who knew about it. It would seem as if we distrusted +her--distrusted her, you know." + +That Mr. Brooke had hit on an undeniable argument, did not tend to +soothe Sir James. He put out his hand to reach his hat, implying that +he did not mean to contend further, and said, still with some heat-- + +"Well, I can only say that I think Dorothea was sacrificed once, +because her friends were too careless. I shall do what I can, as her +brother, to protect her now." + +"You can't do better than get her to Freshitt as soon as possible, +Chettam. I approve that plan altogether," said Mr. Brooke, well +pleased that he had won the argument. It would have been highly +inconvenient to him to part with Ladislaw at that time, when a +dissolution might happen any day, and electors were to be convinced of +the course by which the interests of the country would be best served. +Mr. Brooke sincerely believed that this end could be secured by his own +return to Parliament: he offered the forces of his mind honestly to the +nation. + + + +CHAPTER L. + + "'This Loller here wol precilen us somewhat.' + 'Nay by my father's soule! that schal he nat,' + Sayde the Schipman, 'here schal he not preche, + We schal no gospel glosen here ne teche. + We leven all in the gret God,' quod he. + He wolden sowen some diffcultee." + Canterbury Tales. + + +Dorothea had been safe at Freshitt Hall nearly a week before she had +asked any dangerous questions. Every morning now she sat with Celia in +the prettiest of up-stairs sitting-rooms, opening into a small +conservatory--Celia all in white and lavender like a bunch of mixed +violets, watching the remarkable acts of the baby, which were so +dubious to her inexperienced mind that all conversation was interrupted +by appeals for their interpretation made to the oracular nurse. +Dorothea sat by in her widow's dress, with an expression which rather +provoked Celia, as being much too sad; for not only was baby quite +well, but really when a husband had been so dull and troublesome while +he lived, and besides that had--well, well! Sir James, of course, had +told Celia everything, with a strong representation how important it +was that Dorothea should not know it sooner than was inevitable. + +But Mr. Brooke had been right in predicting that Dorothea would not +long remain passive where action had been assigned to her; she knew the +purport of her husband's will made at the time of their marriage, and +her mind, as soon as she was clearly conscious of her position, was +silently occupied with what she ought to do as the owner of Lowick +Manor with the patronage of the living attached to it. + +One morning when her uncle paid his usual visit, though with an unusual +alacrity in his manner which he accounted for by saying that it was now +pretty certain Parliament would be dissolved forthwith, Dorothea said-- + +"Uncle, it is right now that I should consider who is to have the +living at Lowick. After Mr. Tucker had been provided for, I never +heard my husband say that he had any clergyman in his mind as a +successor to himself. I think I ought to have the keys now and go to +Lowick to examine all my husband's papers. There may be something that +would throw light on his wishes." + +"No hurry, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, quietly. "By-and-by, you know, +you can go, if you like. But I cast my eyes over things in the desks +and drawers--there was nothing--nothing but deep subjects, you +know--besides the will. Everything can be done by-and-by. As to the +living, I have had an application for interest already--I should say +rather good. Mr. Tyke has been strongly recommended to me--I had +something to do with getting him an appointment before. An apostolic +man, I believe--the sort of thing that would suit you, my dear." + +"I should like to have fuller knowledge about him, uncle, and judge for +myself, if Mr. Casaubon has not left any expression of his wishes. He +has perhaps made some addition to his will--there may be some +instructions for me," said Dorothea, who had all the while had this +conjecture in her mind with relation to her husband's work. + +"Nothing about the rectory, my dear--nothing," said Mr. Brooke, rising +to go away, and putting out his hand to his nieces: "nor about his +researches, you know. Nothing in the will." + +Dorothea's lip quivered. + +"Come, you must not think of these things yet, my dear. By-and-by, you +know." + +"I am quite well now, uncle; I wish to exert myself." + +"Well, well, we shall see. But I must run away now--I have no end of +work now--it's a crisis--a political crisis, you know. And here is +Celia and her little man--you are an aunt, you know, now, and I am a +sort of grandfather," said Mr. Brooke, with placid hurry, anxious to +get away and tell Chettam that it would not be his (Mr. Brooke's) fault +if Dorothea insisted on looking into everything. + +Dorothea sank back in her chair when her uncle had left the room, and +cast her eyes down meditatively on her crossed hands. + +"Look, Dodo! look at him! Did you ever see anything like that?" said +Celia, in her comfortable staccato. + +"What, Kitty?" said Dorothea, lifting her eyes rather absently. + +"What? why, his upper lip; see how he is drawing it down, as if he +meant to make a face. Isn't it wonderful! He may have his little +thoughts. I wish nurse were here. Do look at him." + +A large tear which had been for some time gathering, rolled down +Dorothea's cheek as she looked up and tried to smile. + +"Don't be sad, Dodo; kiss baby. What are you brooding over so? I am +sure you did everything, and a great deal too much. You should be +happy now." + +"I wonder if Sir James would drive me to Lowick. I want to look over +everything--to see if there were any words written for me." + +"You are not to go till Mr. Lydgate says you may go. And he has not +said so yet (here you are, nurse; take baby and walk up and down the +gallery). Besides, you have got a wrong notion in your head as usual, +Dodo--I can see that: it vexes me." + +"Where am I wrong, Kitty?" said Dorothea, quite meekly. She was almost +ready now to think Celia wiser than herself, and was really wondering +with some fear what her wrong notion was. Celia felt her advantage, +and was determined to use it. None of them knew Dodo as well as she +did, or knew how to manage her. Since Celia's baby was born, she had +had a new sense of her mental solidity and calm wisdom. It seemed +clear that where there was a baby, things were right enough, and that +error, in general, was a mere lack of that central poising force. + +"I can see what you are thinking of as well as can be, Dodo," said +Celia. "You are wanting to find out if there is anything uncomfortable +for you to do now, only because Mr. Casaubon wished it. As if you had +not been uncomfortable enough before. And he doesn't deserve it, and +you will find that out. He has behaved very badly. James is as angry +with him as can be. And I had better tell you, to prepare you." + +"Celia," said Dorothea, entreatingly, "you distress me. Tell me at +once what you mean." It glanced through her mind that Mr. Casaubon +had left the property away from her--which would not be so very +distressing. + +"Why, he has made a codicil to his will, to say the property was all to +go away from you if you married--I mean--" + +"That is of no consequence," said Dorothea, breaking in impetuously. + +"But if you married Mr. Ladislaw, not anybody else," Celia went on with +persevering quietude. "Of course that is of no consequence in one +way--you never _would_ marry Mr. Ladislaw; but that only makes it worse +of Mr. Casaubon." + +The blood rushed to Dorothea's face and neck painfully. But Celia was +administering what she thought a sobering dose of fact. It was taking +up notions that had done Dodo's health so much harm. So she went on in +her neutral tone, as if she had been remarking on baby's robes. + +"James says so. He says it is abominable, and not like a gentleman. +And there never was a better judge than James. It is as if Mr. +Casaubon wanted to make people believe that you would wish to marry Mr. +Ladislaw--which is ridiculous. Only James says it was to hinder Mr. +Ladislaw from wanting to marry you for your money--just as if he ever +would think of making you an offer. Mrs. Cadwallader said you might as +well marry an Italian with white mice! But I must just go and look at +baby," Celia added, without the least change of tone, throwing a light +shawl over her, and tripping away. + +Dorothea by this time had turned cold again, and now threw herself back +helplessly in her chair. She might have compared her experience at +that moment to the vague, alarmed consciousness that her life was +taking on a new form, that she was undergoing a metamorphosis in which +memory would not adjust itself to the stirring of new organs. +Everything was changing its aspect: her husband's conduct, her own +duteous feeling towards him, every struggle between them--and yet +more, her whole relation to Will Ladislaw. Her world was in a state of +convulsive change; the only thing she could say distinctly to herself +was, that she must wait and think anew. One change terrified her as if +it had been a sin; it was a violent shock of repulsion from her +departed husband, who had had hidden thoughts, perhaps perverting +everything she said and did. Then again she was conscious of another +change which also made her tremulous; it was a sudden strange yearning +of heart towards Will Ladislaw. It had never before entered her mind +that he could, under any circumstances, be her lover: conceive the +effect of the sudden revelation that another had thought of him in that +light--that perhaps he himself had been conscious of such a +possibility,--and this with the hurrying, crowding vision of unfitting +conditions, and questions not soon to be solved. + +It seemed a long while--she did not know how long--before she heard +Celia saying, "That will do, nurse; he will be quiet on my lap now. +You can go to lunch, and let Garratt stay in the next room." "What I +think, Dodo," Celia went on, observing nothing more than that Dorothea +was leaning back in her chair, and likely to be passive, "is that Mr. +Casaubon was spiteful. I never did like him, and James never did. I +think the corners of his mouth were dreadfully spiteful. And now he +has behaved in this way, I am sure religion does not require you to +make yourself uncomfortable about him. If he has been taken away, that +is a mercy, and you ought to be grateful. We should not grieve, should +we, baby?" said Celia confidentially to that unconscious centre and +poise of the world, who had the most remarkable fists all complete even +to the nails, and hair enough, really, when you took his cap off, to +make--you didn't know what:--in short, he was Bouddha in a Western +form. + +At this crisis Lydgate was announced, and one of the first things he +said was, "I fear you are not so well as you were, Mrs. Casaubon; have +you been agitated? allow me to feel your pulse." Dorothea's hand was +of a marble coldness. + +"She wants to go to Lowick, to look over papers," said Celia. "She +ought not, ought she?" + +Lydgate did not speak for a few moments. Then he said, looking at +Dorothea. "I hardly know. In my opinion Mrs. Casaubon should do what +would give her the most repose of mind. That repose will not always +come from being forbidden to act." + +"Thank you," said Dorothea, exerting herself, "I am sure that is wise. +There are so many things which I ought to attend to. Why should I sit +here idle?" Then, with an effort to recall subjects not connected with +her agitation, she added, abruptly, "You know every one in Middlemarch, +I think, Mr. Lydgate. I shall ask you to tell me a great deal. I have +serious things to do now. I have a living to give away. You know Mr. +Tyke and all the--" But Dorothea's effort was too much for her; she +broke off and burst into sobs. Lydgate made her drink a dose of sal +volatile. + +"Let Mrs. Casaubon do as she likes," he said to Sir James, whom he +asked to see before quitting the house. "She wants perfect freedom, I +think, more than any other prescription." + +His attendance on Dorothea while her brain was excited, had enabled him +to form some true conclusions concerning the trials of her life. He +felt sure that she had been suffering from the strain and conflict of +self-repression; and that she was likely now to feel herself only in +another sort of pinfold than that from which she had been released. + +Lydgate's advice was all the easier for Sir James to follow when he +found that Celia had already told Dorothea the unpleasant fact about +the will. There was no help for it now--no reason for any further +delay in the execution of necessary business. And the next day Sir +James complied at once with her request that he would drive her to +Lowick. + +"I have no wish to stay there at present," said Dorothea; "I could +hardly bear it. I am much happier at Freshitt with Celia. I shall be +able to think better about what should be done at Lowick by looking at +it from a distance. And I should like to be at the Grange a little +while with my uncle, and go about in all the old walks and among the +people in the village." + +"Not yet, I think. Your uncle is having political company, and you are +better out of the way of such doings," said Sir James, who at that +moment thought of the Grange chiefly as a haunt of young Ladislaw's. +But no word passed between him and Dorothea about the objectionable +part of the will; indeed, both of them felt that the mention of it +between them would be impossible. Sir James was shy, even with men, +about disagreeable subjects; and the one thing that Dorothea would have +chosen to say, if she had spoken on the matter at all, was forbidden to +her at present because it seemed to be a further exposure of her +husband's injustice. Yet she did wish that Sir James could know what +had passed between her and her husband about Will Ladislaw's moral +claim on the property: it would then, she thought, be apparent to him +as it was to her, that her husband's strange indelicate proviso had +been chiefly urged by his bitter resistance to that idea of claim, and +not merely by personal feelings more difficult to talk about. Also, it +must be admitted, Dorothea wished that this could be known for Will's +sake, since her friends seemed to think of him as simply an object of +Mr. Casaubon's charity. Why should he be compared with an Italian +carrying white mice? That word quoted from Mrs. Cadwallader seemed +like a mocking travesty wrought in the dark by an impish finger. + +At Lowick Dorothea searched desk and drawer--searched all her husband's +places of deposit for private writing, but found no paper addressed +especially to her, except that "Synoptical Tabulation," which was +probably only the beginning of many intended directions for her +guidance. In carrying out this bequest of labor to Dorothea, as in all +else, Mr. Casaubon had been slow and hesitating, oppressed in the plan +of transmitting his work, as he had been in executing it, by the sense +of moving heavily in a dim and clogging medium: distrust of Dorothea's +competence to arrange what he had prepared was subdued only by distrust +of any other redactor. But he had come at last to create a trust for +himself out of Dorothea's nature: she could do what she resolved to do: +and he willingly imagined her toiling under the fetters of a promise to +erect a tomb with his name upon it. (Not that Mr. Casaubon called the +future volumes a tomb; he called them the Key to all Mythologies.) But +the months gained on him and left his plans belated: he had only had +time to ask for that promise by which he sought to keep his cold grasp +on Dorothea's life. + +The grasp had slipped away. Bound by a pledge given from the depths of +her pity, she would have been capable of undertaking a toil which her +judgment whispered was vain for all uses except that consecration of +faithfulness which is a supreme use. But now her judgment, instead of +being controlled by duteous devotion, was made active by the +imbittering discovery that in her past union there had lurked the +hidden alienation of secrecy and suspicion. The living, suffering man +was no longer before her to awaken her pity: there remained only the +retrospect of painful subjection to a husband whose thoughts had been +lower than she had believed, whose exorbitant claims for himself had +even blinded his scrupulous care for his own character, and made him +defeat his own pride by shocking men of ordinary honor. As for the +property which was the sign of that broken tie, she would have been +glad to be free from it and have nothing more than her original fortune +which had been settled on her, if there had not been duties attached to +ownership, which she ought not to flinch from. About this property +many troublous questions insisted on rising: had she not been right in +thinking that the half of it ought to go to Will Ladislaw?--but was it +not impossible now for her to do that act of justice? Mr. Casaubon had +taken a cruelly effective means of hindering her: even with indignation +against him in her heart, any act that seemed a triumphant eluding of +his purpose revolted her. + +After collecting papers of business which she wished to examine, she +locked up again the desks and drawers--all empty of personal words for +her--empty of any sign that in her husband's lonely brooding his heart +had gone out to her in excuse or explanation; and she went back to +Freshitt with the sense that around his last hard demand and his last +injurious assertion of his power, the silence was unbroken. + +Dorothea tried now to turn her thoughts towards immediate duties, and +one of these was of a kind which others were determined to remind her +of. Lydgate's ear had caught eagerly her mention of the living, and as +soon as he could, he reopened the subject, seeing here a possibility of +making amends for the casting-vote he had once given with an +ill-satisfied conscience. "Instead of telling you anything about Mr. +Tyke," he said, "I should like to speak of another man--Mr. +Farebrother, the Vicar of St. Botolph's. His living is a poor one, and +gives him a stinted provision for himself and his family. His mother, +aunt, and sister all live with him, and depend upon him. I believe he +has never married because of them. I never heard such good preaching +as his--such plain, easy eloquence. He would have done to preach at +St. Paul's Cross after old Latimer. His talk is just as good about all +subjects: original, simple, clear. I think him a remarkable fellow: he +ought to have done more than he has done." + +"Why has he not done more?" said Dorothea, interested now in all who +had slipped below their own intention. + +"That's a hard question," said Lydgate. "I find myself that it's +uncommonly difficult to make the right thing work: there are so many +strings pulling at once. Farebrother often hints that he has got into +the wrong profession; he wants a wider range than that of a poor +clergyman, and I suppose he has no interest to help him on. He is very +fond of Natural History and various scientific matters, and he is +hampered in reconciling these tastes with his position. He has no +money to spare--hardly enough to use; and that has led him into +card-playing--Middlemarch is a great place for whist. He does play for +money, and he wins a good deal. Of course that takes him into company +a little beneath him, and makes him slack about some things; and yet, +with all that, looking at him as a whole, I think he is one of the most +blameless men I ever knew. He has neither venom nor doubleness in him, +and those often go with a more correct outside." + +"I wonder whether he suffers in his conscience because of that habit," +said Dorothea; "I wonder whether he wishes he could leave it off." + +"I have no doubt he would leave it off, if he were transplanted into +plenty: he would be glad of the time for other things." + +"My uncle says that Mr. Tyke is spoken of as an apostolic man," said +Dorothea, meditatively. She was wishing it were possible to restore +the times of primitive zeal, and yet thinking of Mr. Farebrother with a +strong desire to rescue him from his chance-gotten money. + +"I don't pretend to say that Farebrother is apostolic," said Lydgate. +"His position is not quite like that of the Apostles: he is only a +parson among parishioners whose lives he has to try and make better. +Practically I find that what is called being apostolic now, is an +impatience of everything in which the parson doesn't cut the principal +figure. I see something of that in Mr. Tyke at the Hospital: a good +deal of his doctrine is a sort of pinching hard to make people +uncomfortably aware of him. Besides, an apostolic man at Lowick!--he +ought to think, as St. Francis did, that it is needful to preach to the +birds." + +"True," said Dorothea. "It is hard to imagine what sort of notions our +farmers and laborers get from their teaching. I have been looking into +a volume of sermons by Mr. Tyke: such sermons would be of no use at +Lowick--I mean, about imputed righteousness and the prophecies in the +Apocalypse. I have always been thinking of the different ways in which +Christianity is taught, and whenever I find one way that makes it a +wider blessing than any other, I cling to that as the truest--I mean +that which takes in the most good of all kinds, and brings in the most +people as sharers in it. It is surely better to pardon too much, than +to condemn too much. But I should like to see Mr. Farebrother and hear +him preach." + +"Do," said Lydgate; "I trust to the effect of that. He is very much +beloved, but he has his enemies too: there are always people who can't +forgive an able man for differing from them. And that money-winning +business is really a blot. You don't, of course, see many Middlemarch +people: but Mr. Ladislaw, who is constantly seeing Mr. Brooke, is a +great friend of Mr. Farebrother's old ladies, and would be glad to sing +the Vicar's praises. One of the old ladies--Miss Noble, the aunt--is a +wonderfully quaint picture of self-forgetful goodness, and Ladislaw +gallants her about sometimes. I met them one day in a back street: you +know Ladislaw's look--a sort of Daphnis in coat and waistcoat; and this +little old maid reaching up to his arm--they looked like a couple +dropped out of a romantic comedy. But the best evidence about +Farebrother is to see him and hear him." + +Happily Dorothea was in her private sitting-room when this conversation +occurred, and there was no one present to make Lydgate's innocent +introduction of Ladislaw painful to her. As was usual with him in +matters of personal gossip, Lydgate had quite forgotten Rosamond's +remark that she thought Will adored Mrs. Casaubon. At that moment he +was only caring for what would recommend the Farebrother family; and he +had purposely given emphasis to the worst that could be said about the +Vicar, in order to forestall objections. In the weeks since Mr. +Casaubon's death he had hardly seen Ladislaw, and he had heard no rumor +to warn him that Mr. Brooke's confidential secretary was a dangerous +subject with Mrs. Casaubon. When he was gone, his picture of Ladislaw +lingered in her mind and disputed the ground with that question of the +Lowick living. What was Will Ladislaw thinking about her? Would he +hear of that fact which made her cheeks burn as they never used to do? +And how would he feel when he heard it?--But she could see as well as +possible how he smiled down at the little old maid. An Italian with +white mice!--on the contrary, he was a creature who entered into every +one's feelings, and could take the pressure of their thought instead of +urging his own with iron resistance. + + + +CHAPTER LI. + + Party is Nature too, and you shall see + By force of Logic how they both agree: + The Many in the One, the One in Many; + All is not Some, nor Some the same as Any: + Genus holds species, both are great or small; + One genus highest, one not high at all; + Each species has its differentia too, + This is not That, and He was never You, + Though this and that are AYES, and you and he + Are like as one to one, or three to three. + + +No gossip about Mr. Casaubon's will had yet reached Ladislaw: the air +seemed to be filled with the dissolution of Parliament and the coming +election, as the old wakes and fairs were filled with the rival clatter +of itinerant shows; and more private noises were taken little notice +of. The famous "dry election" was at hand, in which the depths of +public feeling might be measured by the low flood-mark of drink. Will +Ladislaw was one of the busiest at this time; and though Dorothea's +widowhood was continually in his thought, he was so far from wishing to +be spoken to on the subject, that when Lydgate sought him out to tell +him what had passed about the Lowick living, he answered rather +waspishly-- + +"Why should you bring me into the matter? I never see Mrs. Casaubon, +and am not likely to see her, since she is at Freshitt. I never go +there. It is Tory ground, where I and the 'Pioneer' are no more +welcome than a poacher and his gun." + +The fact was that Will had been made the more susceptible by observing +that Mr. Brooke, instead of wishing him, as before, to come to the +Grange oftener than was quite agreeable to himself, seemed now to +contrive that he should go there as little as possible. This was a +shuffling concession of Mr. Brooke's to Sir James Chettam's indignant +remonstrance; and Will, awake to the slightest hint in this direction, +concluded that he was to be kept away from the Grange on Dorothea's +account. Her friends, then, regarded him with some suspicion? Their +fears were quite superfluous: they were very much mistaken if they +imagined that he would put himself forward as a needy adventurer trying +to win the favor of a rich woman. + +Until now Will had never fully seen the chasm between himself and +Dorothea--until now that he was come to the brink of it, and saw her on +the other side. He began, not without some inward rage, to think of +going away from the neighborhood: it would be impossible for him to +show any further interest in Dorothea without subjecting himself to +disagreeable imputations--perhaps even in her mind, which others might +try to poison. + +"We are forever divided," said Will. "I might as well be at Rome; she +would be no farther from me." But what we call our despair is often +only the painful eagerness of unfed hope. There were plenty of reasons +why he should not go--public reasons why he should not quit his post at +this crisis, leaving Mr. Brooke in the lurch when he needed "coaching" +for the election, and when there was so much canvassing, direct and +indirect, to be carried on. Will could not like to leave his own +chessmen in the heat of a game; and any candidate on the right side, +even if his brain and marrow had been as soft as was consistent with a +gentlemanly bearing, might help to turn a majority. To coach Mr. +Brooke and keep him steadily to the idea that he must pledge himself to +vote for the actual Reform Bill, instead of insisting on his +independence and power of pulling up in time, was not an easy task. +Mr. Farebrother's prophecy of a fourth candidate "in the bag" had not +yet been fulfilled, neither the Parliamentary Candidate Society nor any +other power on the watch to secure a reforming majority seeing a worthy +nodus for interference while there was a second reforming candidate +like Mr. Brooke, who might be returned at his own expense; and the +fight lay entirely between Pinkerton the old Tory member, Bagster the +new Whig member returned at the last election, and Brooke the future +independent member, who was to fetter himself for this occasion only. +Mr. Hawley and his party would bend all their forces to the return of +Pinkerton, and Mr. Brooke's success must depend either on plumpers +which would leave Bagster in the rear, or on the new minting of Tory +votes into reforming votes. The latter means, of course, would be +preferable. + +This prospect of converting votes was a dangerous distraction to Mr. +Brooke: his impression that waverers were likely to be allured by +wavering statements, and also the liability of his mind to stick afresh +at opposing arguments as they turned up in his memory, gave Will +Ladislaw much trouble. + +"You know there are tactics in these things," said Mr. Brooke; "meeting +people half-way--tempering your ideas--saying, 'Well now, there's +something in that,' and so on. I agree with you that this is a +peculiar occasion--the country with a will of its own--political +unions--that sort of thing--but we sometimes cut with rather too sharp +a knife, Ladislaw. These ten-pound householders, now: why ten? Draw +the line somewhere--yes: but why just at ten? That's a difficult +question, now, if you go into it." + +"Of course it is," said Will, impatiently. "But if you are to wait +till we get a logical Bill, you must put yourself forward as a +revolutionist, and then Middlemarch would not elect you, I fancy. As +for trimming, this is not a time for trimming." + +Mr. Brooke always ended by agreeing with Ladislaw, who still appeared +to him a sort of Burke with a leaven of Shelley; but after an interval +the wisdom of his own methods reasserted itself, and he was again drawn +into using them with much hopefulness. At this stage of affairs he was +in excellent spirits, which even supported him under large advances of +money; for his powers of convincing and persuading had not yet been +tested by anything more difficult than a chairman's speech introducing +other orators, or a dialogue with a Middlemarch voter, from which he +came away with a sense that he was a tactician by nature, and that it +was a pity he had not gone earlier into this kind of thing. He was a +little conscious of defeat, however, with Mr. Mawmsey, a chief +representative in Middlemarch of that great social power, the retail +trader, and naturally one of the most doubtful voters in the +borough--willing for his own part to supply an equal quality of teas +and sugars to reformer and anti-reformer, as well as to agree +impartially with both, and feeling like the burgesses of old that this +necessity of electing members was a great burthen to a town; for even +if there were no danger in holding out hopes to all parties beforehand, +there would be the painful necessity at last of disappointing +respectable people whose names were on his books. He was accustomed to +receive large orders from Mr. Brooke of Tipton; but then, there were +many of Pinkerton's committee whose opinions had a great weight of +grocery on their side. Mr. Mawmsey thinking that Mr. Brooke, as not +too "clever in his intellects," was the more likely to forgive a grocer +who gave a hostile vote under pressure, had become confidential in his +back parlor. + +"As to Reform, sir, put it in a family light," he said, rattling the +small silver in his pocket, and smiling affably. "Will it support Mrs. +Mawmsey, and enable her to bring up six children when I am no more? I +put the question _fictiously_, knowing what must be the answer. Very +well, sir. I ask you what, as a husband and a father, I am to do when +gentlemen come to me and say, 'Do as you like, Mawmsey; but if you vote +against us, I shall get my groceries elsewhere: when I sugar my liquor +I like to feel that I am benefiting the country by maintaining +tradesmen of the right color.' Those very words have been spoken to +me, sir, in the very chair where you are now sitting. I don't mean by +your honorable self, Mr. Brooke." + +"No, no, no--that's narrow, you know. Until my butler complains to me +of your goods, Mr. Mawmsey," said Mr. Brooke, soothingly, "until I hear +that you send bad sugars, spices--that sort of thing--I shall never +order him to go elsewhere." + +"Sir, I am your humble servant, and greatly obliged," said Mr. Mawmsey, +feeling that politics were clearing up a little. "There would be some +pleasure in voting for a gentleman who speaks in that honorable manner." + +"Well, you know, Mr. Mawmsey, you would find it the right thing to put +yourself on our side. This Reform will touch everybody by-and-by--a +thoroughly popular measure--a sort of A, B, C, you know, that must come +first before the rest can follow. I quite agree with you that you've +got to look at the thing in a family light: but public spirit, now. +We're all one family, you know--it's all one cupboard. Such a thing +as a vote, now: why, it may help to make men's fortunes at the +Cape--there's no knowing what may be the effect of a vote," Mr. Brooke +ended, with a sense of being a little out at sea, though finding it +still enjoyable. But Mr. Mawmsey answered in a tone of decisive check. + +"I beg your pardon, sir, but I can't afford that. When I give a vote I +must know what I am doing; I must look to what will be the effects on +my till and ledger, speaking respectfully. Prices, I'll admit, are +what nobody can know the merits of; and the sudden falls after you've +bought in currants, which are a goods that will not keep--I've never; +myself seen into the ins and outs there; which is a rebuke to human +pride. But as to one family, there's debtor and creditor, I hope; +they're not going to reform that away; else I should vote for things +staying as they are. Few men have less need to cry for change than I +have, personally speaking--that is, for self and family. I am not one +of those who have nothing to lose: I mean as to respectability both in +parish and private business, and noways in respect of your honorable +self and custom, which you was good enough to say you would not +withdraw from me, vote or no vote, while the article sent in was +satisfactory." + +After this conversation Mr. Mawmsey went up and boasted to his wife +that he had been rather too many for Brooke of Tipton, and that he +didn't mind so much now about going to the poll. + +Mr. Brooke on this occasion abstained from boasting of his tactics to +Ladislaw, who for his part was glad enough to persuade himself that he +had no concern with any canvassing except the purely argumentative +sort, and that he worked no meaner engine than knowledge. Mr. Brooke, +necessarily, had his agents, who understood the nature of the +Middlemarch voter and the means of enlisting his ignorance on the side +of the Bill--which were remarkably similar to the means of enlisting it +on the side against the Bill. Will stopped his ears. Occasionally +Parliament, like the rest of our lives, even to our eating and apparel, +could hardly go on if our imaginations were too active about processes. +There were plenty of dirty-handed men in the world to do dirty +business; and Will protested to himself that his share in bringing Mr. +Brooke through would be quite innocent. + +But whether he should succeed in that mode of contributing to the +majority on the right side was very doubtful to him. He had written +out various speeches and memoranda for speeches, but he had begun to +perceive that Mr. Brooke's mind, if it had the burthen of remembering +any train of thought, would let it drop, run away in search of it, and +not easily come back again. To collect documents is one mode of +serving your country, and to remember the contents of a document is +another. No! the only way in which Mr. Brooke could be coerced into +thinking of the right arguments at the right time was to be well plied +with them till they took up all the room in his brain. But here there +was the difficulty of finding room, so many things having been taken in +beforehand. Mr. Brooke himself observed that his ideas stood rather in +his way when he was speaking. + +However, Ladislaw's coaching was forthwith to be put to the test, for +before the day of nomination Mr. Brooke was to explain himself to the +worthy electors of Middlemarch from the balcony of the White Hart, +which looked out advantageously at an angle of the market-place, +commanding a large area in front and two converging streets. It was a +fine May morning, and everything seemed hopeful: there was some +prospect of an understanding between Bagster's committee and Brooke's, +to which Mr. Bulstrode, Mr. Standish as a Liberal lawyer, and such +manufacturers as Mr. Plymdale and Mr. Vincy, gave a solidity which +almost counterbalanced Mr. Hawley and his associates who sat for +Pinkerton at the Green Dragon. Mr. Brooke, conscious of having +weakened the blasts of the "Trumpet" against him, by his reforms as a +landlord in the last half year, and hearing himself cheered a little as +he drove into the town, felt his heart tolerably light under his +buff-colored waistcoat. But with regard to critical occasions, it +often happens that all moments seem comfortably remote until the last. + +"This looks well, eh?" said Mr. Brooke as the crowd gathered. "I shall +have a good audience, at any rate. I like this, now--this kind of +public made up of one's own neighbors, you know." + +The weavers and tanners of Middlemarch, unlike Mr. Mawmsey, had never +thought of Mr. Brooke as a neighbor, and were not more attached to him +than if he had been sent in a box from London. But they listened +without much disturbance to the speakers who introduced the candidate, +one of them--a political personage from Brassing, who came to tell +Middlemarch its duty--spoke so fully, that it was alarming to think +what the candidate could find to say after him. Meanwhile the crowd +became denser, and as the political personage neared the end of his +speech, Mr. Brooke felt a remarkable change in his sensations while he +still handled his eye-glass, trifled with documents before him, and +exchanged remarks with his committee, as a man to whom the moment of +summons was indifferent. + +"I'll take another glass of sherry, Ladislaw," he said, with an easy +air, to Will, who was close behind him, and presently handed him the +supposed fortifier. It was ill-chosen; for Mr. Brooke was an +abstemious man, and to drink a second glass of sherry quickly at no +great interval from the first was a surprise to his system which tended +to scatter his energies instead of collecting them. Pray pity him: so +many English gentlemen make themselves miserable by speechifying on +entirely private grounds! whereas Mr. Brooke wished to serve his +country by standing for Parliament--which, indeed, may also be done on +private grounds, but being once undertaken does absolutely demand some +speechifying. + +It was not about the beginning of his speech that Mr. Brooke was at all +anxious; this, he felt sure, would be all right; he should have it +quite pat, cut out as neatly as a set of couplets from Pope. Embarking +would be easy, but the vision of open sea that might come after was +alarming. "And questions, now," hinted the demon just waking up in his +stomach, "somebody may put questions about the schedules.--Ladislaw," +he continued, aloud, "just hand me the memorandum of the schedules." + +When Mr. Brooke presented himself on the balcony, the cheers were quite +loud enough to counterbalance the yells, groans, brayings, and other +expressions of adverse theory, which were so moderate that Mr. Standish +(decidedly an old bird) observed in the ear next to him, "This looks +dangerous, by God! Hawley has got some deeper plan than this." Still, +the cheers were exhilarating, and no candidate could look more amiable +than Mr. Brooke, with the memorandum in his breast-pocket, his left +hand on the rail of the balcony, and his right trifling with his +eye-glass. The striking points in his appearance were his buff +waistcoat, short-clipped blond hair, and neutral physiognomy. He began +with some confidence. + +"Gentlemen--Electors of Middlemarch!" + +This was so much the right thing that a little pause after it seemed +natural. + +"I'm uncommonly glad to be here--I was never so proud and happy in my +life--never so happy, you know." + +This was a bold figure of speech, but not exactly the right thing; for, +unhappily, the pat opening had slipped away--even couplets from Pope +may be but "fallings from us, vanishings," when fear clutches us, and a +glass of sherry is hurrying like smoke among our ideas. Ladislaw, who +stood at the window behind the speaker, thought, "it's all up now. The +only chance is that, since the best thing won't always do, floundering +may answer for once." Mr. Brooke, meanwhile, having lost other clews, +fell back on himself and his qualifications--always an appropriate +graceful subject for a candidate. + +"I am a close neighbor of yours, my good friends--you've known me on +the bench a good while--I've always gone a good deal into public +questions--machinery, now, and machine-breaking--you're many of you +concerned with machinery, and I've been going into that lately. It +won't do, you know, breaking machines: everything must go on--trade, +manufactures, commerce, interchange of staples--that kind of +thing--since Adam Smith, that must go on. We must look all over the +globe:--'Observation with extensive view,' must look everywhere, 'from +China to Peru,' as somebody says--Johnson, I think, 'The Rambler,' you +know. That is what I have done up to a certain point--not as far as +Peru; but I've not always stayed at home--I saw it wouldn't do. I've +been in the Levant, where some of your Middlemarch goods go--and then, +again, in the Baltic. The Baltic, now." + +Plying among his recollections in this way, Mr. Brooke might have got +along, easily to himself, and would have come back from the remotest +seas without trouble; but a diabolical procedure had been set up by the +enemy. At one and the same moment there had risen above the shoulders +of the crowd, nearly opposite Mr. Brooke, and within ten yards of him, +the effigy of himself: buff-colored waistcoat, eye-glass, and neutral +physiognomy, painted on rag; and there had arisen, apparently in the +air, like the note of the cuckoo, a parrot-like, Punch-voiced echo of +his words. Everybody looked up at the open windows in the houses at +the opposite angles of the converging streets; but they were either +blank, or filled by laughing listeners. The most innocent echo has an +impish mockery in it when it follows a gravely persistent speaker, and +this echo was not at all innocent; if it did not follow with the +precision of a natural echo, it had a wicked choice of the words it +overtook. By the time it said, "The Baltic, now," the laugh which had +been running through the audience became a general shout, and but for +the sobering effects of party and that great public cause which the +entanglement of things had identified with "Brooke of Tipton," the +laugh might have caught his committee. Mr. Bulstrode asked, +reprehensively, what the new police was doing; but a voice could not +well be collared, and an attack on the effigy of the candidate would +have been too equivocal, since Hawley probably meant it to be pelted. + +Mr. Brooke himself was not in a position to be quickly conscious of +anything except a general slipping away of ideas within himself: he had +even a little singing in the ears, and he was the only person who had +not yet taken distinct account of the echo or discerned the image of +himself. Few things hold the perceptions more thoroughly captive than +anxiety about what we have got to say. Mr. Brooke heard the laughter; +but he had expected some Tory efforts at disturbance, and he was at +this moment additionally excited by the tickling, stinging sense that +his lost exordium was coming back to fetch him from the Baltic. + +"That reminds me," he went on, thrusting a hand into his side-pocket, +with an easy air, "if I wanted a precedent, you know--but we never want +a precedent for the right thing--but there is Chatham, now; I can't say +I should have supported Chatham, or Pitt, the younger Pitt--he was not +a man of ideas, and we want ideas, you know." + +"Blast your ideas! we want the Bill," said a loud rough voice from the +crowd below. + +Immediately the invisible Punch, who had hitherto followed Mr. Brooke, +repeated, "Blast your ideas! we want the Bill." The laugh was louder +than ever, and for the first time Mr. Brooke being himself silent, +heard distinctly the mocking echo. But it seemed to ridicule his +interrupter, and in that light was encouraging; so he replied with +amenity-- + +"There is something in what you say, my good friend, and what do we +meet for but to speak our minds--freedom of opinion, freedom of the +press, liberty--that kind of thing? The Bill, now--you shall have the +Bill"--here Mr. Brooke paused a moment to fix on his eye-glass and take +the paper from his breast-pocket, with a sense of being practical and +coming to particulars. The invisible Punch followed:-- + +"You shall have the Bill, Mr. Brooke, per electioneering contest, and a +seat outside Parliament as delivered, five thousand pounds, seven +shillings, and fourpence." + +Mr. Brooke, amid the roars of laughter, turned red, let his eye-glass +fall, and looking about him confusedly, saw the image of himself, which +had come nearer. The next moment he saw it dolorously bespattered with +eggs. His spirit rose a little, and his voice too. + +"Buffoonery, tricks, ridicule the test of truth--all that is very +well"--here an unpleasant egg broke on Mr. Brooke's shoulder, as the +echo said, "All that is very well;" then came a hail of eggs, chiefly +aimed at the image, but occasionally hitting the original, as if by +chance. There was a stream of new men pushing among the crowd; +whistles, yells, bellowings, and fifes made all the greater hubbub +because there was shouting and struggling to put them down. No voice +would have had wing enough to rise above the uproar, and Mr. Brooke, +disagreeably anointed, stood his ground no longer. The frustration +would have been less exasperating if it had been less gamesome and +boyish: a serious assault of which the newspaper reporter "can aver +that it endangered the learned gentleman's ribs," or can respectfully +bear witness to "the soles of that gentleman's boots having been +visible above the railing," has perhaps more consolations attached to +it. + +Mr. Brooke re-entered the committee-room, saying, as carelessly as he +could, "This is a little too bad, you know. I should have got the ear +of the people by-and-by--but they didn't give me time. I should have +gone into the Bill by-and-by, you know," he added, glancing at +Ladislaw. "However, things will come all right at the nomination." + +But it was not resolved unanimously that things would come right; on +the contrary, the committee looked rather grim, and the political +personage from Brassing was writing busily, as if he were brewing new +devices. + +"It was Bowyer who did it," said Mr. Standish, evasively. "I know it +as well as if he had been advertised. He's uncommonly good at +ventriloquism, and he did it uncommonly well, by God! Hawley has been +having him to dinner lately: there's a fund of talent in Bowyer." + +"Well, you know, you never mentioned him to me, Standish, else I would +have invited him to dine," said poor Mr. Brooke, who had gone through a +great deal of inviting for the good of his country. + +"There's not a more paltry fellow in Middlemarch than Bowyer," said +Ladislaw, indignantly, "but it seems as if the paltry fellows were +always to turn the scale." + +Will was thoroughly out of temper with himself as well as with his +"principal," and he went to shut himself in his rooms with a +half-formed resolve to throw up the "Pioneer" and Mr. Brooke together. +Why should he stay? If the impassable gulf between himself and +Dorothea were ever to be filled up, it must rather be by his going away +and getting into a thoroughly different position than by staying here +and slipping into deserved contempt as an understrapper of Brooke's. +Then came the young dream of wonders that he might do--in five years, +for example: political writing, political speaking, would get a higher +value now public life was going to be wider and more national, and they +might give him such distinction that he would not seem to be asking +Dorothea to step down to him. Five years:--if he could only be sure +that she cared for him more than for others; if he could only make her +aware that he stood aloof until he could tell his love without lowering +himself--then he could go away easily, and begin a career which at +five-and-twenty seemed probable enough in the inward order of things, +where talent brings fame, and fame everything else which is delightful. +He could speak and he could write; he could master any subject if he +chose, and he meant always to take the side of reason and justice, on +which he would carry all his ardor. Why should he not one day be +lifted above the shoulders of the crowd, and feel that he had won that +eminence well? Without doubt he would leave Middlemarch, go to town, +and make himself fit for celebrity by "eating his dinners." + +But not immediately: not until some kind of sign had passed between him +and Dorothea. He could not be satisfied until she knew why, even if he +were the man she would choose to marry, he would not marry her. Hence +he must keep his post and bear with Mr. Brooke a little longer. + +But he soon had reason to suspect that Mr. Brooke had anticipated him +in the wish to break up their connection. Deputations without and +voices within had concurred in inducing that philanthropist to take a +stronger measure than usual for the good of mankind; namely, to +withdraw in favor of another candidate, to whom he left the advantages +of his canvassing machinery. He himself called this a strong measure, +but observed that his health was less capable of sustaining excitement +than he had imagined. + +"I have felt uneasy about the chest--it won't do to carry that too +far," he said to Ladislaw in explaining the affair. "I must pull up. +Poor Casaubon was a warning, you know. I've made some heavy advances, +but I've dug a channel. It's rather coarse work--this electioneering, +eh, Ladislaw? dare say you are tired of it. However, we have dug a +channel with the 'Pioneer'--put things in a track, and so on. A more +ordinary man than you might carry it on now--more ordinary, you know." + +"Do you wish me to give it up?" said Will, the quick color coming in +his face, as he rose from the writing-table, and took a turn of three +steps with his hands in his pockets. "I am ready to do so whenever you +wish it." + +"As to wishing, my dear Ladislaw, I have the highest opinion of your +powers, you know. But about the 'Pioneer,' I have been consulting a +little with some of the men on our side, and they are inclined to take +it into their hands--indemnify me to a certain extent--carry it on, in +fact. And under the circumstances, you might like to give up--might +find a better field. These people might not take that high view of you +which I have always taken, as an alter ego, a right hand--though I +always looked forward to your doing something else. I think of having +a run into France. But I'll write you any letters, you know--to +Althorpe and people of that kind. I've met Althorpe." + +"I am exceedingly obliged to you," said Ladislaw, proudly. "Since you +are going to part with the 'Pioneer,' I need not trouble you about the +steps I shall take. I may choose to continue here for the present." + +After Mr. Brooke had left him Will said to himself, "The rest of the +family have been urging him to get rid of me, and he doesn't care now +about my going. I shall stay as long as I like. I shall go of my own +movements and not because they are afraid of me." + + + +CHAPTER LII. + + "His heart + The lowliest duties on itself did lay." + --WORDSWORTH. + + +On that June evening when Mr. Farebrother knew that he was to have the +Lowick living, there was joy in the old fashioned parlor, and even the +portraits of the great lawyers seemed to look on with satisfaction. +His mother left her tea and toast untouched, but sat with her usual +pretty primness, only showing her emotion by that flush in the cheeks +and brightness in the eyes which give an old woman a touching momentary +identity with her far-off youthful self, and saying decisively-- + +"The greatest comfort, Camden, is that you have deserved it." + +"When a man gets a good berth, mother, half the deserving must come +after," said the son, brimful of pleasure, and not trying to conceal +it. The gladness in his face was of that active kind which seems to +have energy enough not only to flash outwardly, but to light up busy +vision within: one seemed to see thoughts, as well as delight, in his +glances. + +"Now, aunt," he went on, rubbing his hands and looking at Miss Noble, +who was making tender little beaver-like noises, "There shall be +sugar-candy always on the table for you to steal and give to the +children, and you shall have a great many new stockings to make +presents of, and you shall darn your own more than ever!" + +Miss Noble nodded at her nephew with a subdued half-frightened laugh, +conscious of having already dropped an additional lump of sugar into +her basket on the strength of the new preferment. + +"As for you, Winny"--the Vicar went on--"I shall make no difficulty +about your marrying any Lowick bachelor--Mr. Solomon Featherstone, for +example, as soon as I find you are in love with him." + +Miss Winifred, who had been looking at her brother all the while and +crying heartily, which was her way of rejoicing, smiled through her +tears and said, "You must set me the example, Cam: _you_ must marry +now." + +"With all my heart. But who is in love with me? I am a seedy old +fellow," said the Vicar, rising, pushing his chair away and looking +down at himself. "What do you say, mother?" + +"You are a handsome man, Camden: though not so fine a figure of a man +as your father," said the old lady. + +"I wish you would marry Miss Garth, brother," said Miss Winifred. "She +would make us so lively at Lowick." + +"Very fine! You talk as if young women were tied up to be chosen, like +poultry at market; as if I had only to ask and everybody would have +me," said the Vicar, not caring to specify. + +"We don't want everybody," said Miss Winifred. "But _you_ would like +Miss Garth, mother, shouldn't you?" + +"My son's choice shall be mine," said Mrs. Farebrother, with majestic +discretion, "and a wife would be most welcome, Camden. You will want +your whist at home when we go to Lowick, and Henrietta Noble never was +a whist-player." (Mrs. Farebrother always called her tiny old sister by +that magnificent name.) + +"I shall do without whist now, mother." + +"Why so, Camden? In my time whist was thought an undeniable amusement +for a good churchman," said Mrs. Farebrother, innocent of the meaning +that whist had for her son, and speaking rather sharply, as at some +dangerous countenancing of new doctrine. + +"I shall be too busy for whist; I shall have two parishes," said the +Vicar, preferring not to discuss the virtues of that game. + +He had already said to Dorothea, "I don't feel bound to give up St. +Botolph's. It is protest enough against the pluralism they want to +reform if I give somebody else most of the money. The stronger thing +is not to give up power, but to use it well." + +"I have thought of that," said Dorothea. "So far as self is concerned, +I think it would be easier to give up power and money than to keep +them. It seems very unfitting that I should have this patronage, yet I +felt that I ought not to let it be used by some one else instead of me." + +"It is I who am bound to act so that you will not regret your power," +said Mr. Farebrother. + +His was one of the natures in which conscience gets the more active +when the yoke of life ceases to gall them. He made no display of +humility on the subject, but in his heart he felt rather ashamed that +his conduct had shown laches which others who did not get benefices +were free from. + +"I used often to wish I had been something else than a clergyman," he +said to Lydgate, "but perhaps it will be better to try and make as good +a clergyman out of myself as I can. That is the well-beneficed point +of view, you perceive, from which difficulties are much simplified," he +ended, smiling. + +The Vicar did feel then as if his share of duties would be easy. But +Duty has a trick of behaving unexpectedly--something like a heavy +friend whom we have amiably asked to visit us, and who breaks his leg +within our gates. + +Hardly a week later, Duty presented itself in his study under the +disguise of Fred Vincy, now returned from Omnibus College with his +bachelor's degree. + +"I am ashamed to trouble you, Mr. Farebrother," said Fred, whose fair +open face was propitiating, "but you are the only friend I can consult. +I told you everything once before, and you were so good that I can't +help coming to you again." + +"Sit down, Fred, I'm ready to hear and do anything I can," said the +Vicar, who was busy packing some small objects for removal, and went on +with his work. + +"I wanted to tell you--" Fred hesitated an instant and then went on +plungingly, "I might go into the Church now; and really, look where I +may, I can't see anything else to do. I don't like it, but I know it's +uncommonly hard on my father to say so, after he has spent a good deal +of money in educating me for it." Fred paused again an instant, and +then repeated, "and I can't see anything else to do." + +"I did talk to your father about it, Fred, but I made little way with +him. He said it was too late. But you have got over one bridge now: +what are your other difficulties?" + +"Merely that I don't like it. I don't like divinity, and preaching, +and feeling obliged to look serious. I like riding across country, and +doing as other men do. I don't mean that I want to be a bad fellow in +any way; but I've no taste for the sort of thing people expect of a +clergyman. And yet what else am I to do? My father can't spare me any +capital, else I might go into farming. And he has no room for me in +his trade. And of course I can't begin to study for law or physic now, +when my father wants me to earn something. It's all very well to say +I'm wrong to go into the Church; but those who say so might as well +tell me to go into the backwoods." + +Fred's voice had taken a tone of grumbling remonstrance, and Mr. +Farebrother might have been inclined to smile if his mind had not been +too busy in imagining more than Fred told him. + +"Have you any difficulties about doctrines--about the Articles?" he +said, trying hard to think of the question simply for Fred's sake. + +"No; I suppose the Articles are right. I am not prepared with any +arguments to disprove them, and much better, cleverer fellows than I am +go in for them entirely. I think it would be rather ridiculous in me +to urge scruples of that sort, as if I were a judge," said Fred, quite +simply. + +"I suppose, then, it has occurred to you that you might be a fair +parish priest without being much of a divine?" + +"Of course, if I am obliged to be a clergyman, I shall try and do my +duty, though I mayn't like it. Do you think any body ought to blame +me?" + +"For going into the Church under the circumstances? That depends on +your conscience, Fred--how far you have counted the cost, and seen what +your position will require of you. I can only tell you about myself, +that I have always been too lax, and have been uneasy in consequence." + +"But there is another hindrance," said Fred, coloring. "I did not tell +you before, though perhaps I may have said things that made you guess +it. There is somebody I am very fond of: I have loved her ever since +we were children." + +"Miss Garth, I suppose?" said the Vicar, examining some labels very +closely. + +"Yes. I shouldn't mind anything if she would have me. And I know I +could be a good fellow then." + +"And you think she returns the feeling?" + +"She never will say so; and a good while ago she made me promise not to +speak to her about it again. And she has set her mind especially +against my being a clergyman; I know that. But I can't give her up. I +do think she cares about me. I saw Mrs. Garth last night, and she said +that Mary was staying at Lowick Rectory with Miss Farebrother." + +"Yes, she is very kindly helping my sister. Do you wish to go there?" + +"No, I want to ask a great favor of you. I am ashamed to bother you in +this way; but Mary might listen to what you said, if you mentioned the +subject to her--I mean about my going into the Church." + +"That is rather a delicate task, my dear Fred. I shall have to +presuppose your attachment to her; and to enter on the subject as you +wish me to do, will be asking her to tell me whether she returns it." + +"That is what I want her to tell you," said Fred, bluntly. "I don't +know what to do, unless I can get at her feeling." + +"You mean that you would be guided by that as to your going into the +Church?" + +"If Mary said she would never have me I might as well go wrong in one +way as another." + +"That is nonsense, Fred. Men outlive their love, but they don't +outlive the consequences of their recklessness." + +"Not my sort of love: I have never been without loving Mary. If I had +to give her up, it would be like beginning to live on wooden legs." + +"Will she not be hurt at my intrusion?" + +"No, I feel sure she will not. She respects you more than any one, and +she would not put you off with fun as she does me. Of course I could +not have told any one else, or asked any one else to speak to her, but +you. There is no one else who could be such a friend to both of us." +Fred paused a moment, and then said, rather complainingly, "And she +ought to acknowledge that I have worked in order to pass. She ought to +believe that I would exert myself for her sake." + +There was a moment's silence before Mr. Farebrother laid down his work, +and putting out his hand to Fred said-- + +"Very well, my boy. I will do what you wish." + +That very day Mr. Farebrother went to Lowick parsonage on the nag which +he had just set up. "Decidedly I am an old stalk," he thought, "the +young growths are pushing me aside." + +He found Mary in the garden gathering roses and sprinkling the petals +on a sheet. The sun was low, and tall trees sent their shadows across +the grassy walks where Mary was moving without bonnet or parasol. She +did not observe Mr. Farebrother's approach along the grass, and had +just stooped down to lecture a small black-and-tan terrier, which would +persist in walking on the sheet and smelling at the rose-leaves as Mary +sprinkled them. She took his fore-paws in one hand, and lifted up the +forefinger of the other, while the dog wrinkled his brows and looked +embarrassed. "Fly, Fly, I am ashamed of you," Mary was saying in a +grave contralto. "This is not becoming in a sensible dog; anybody +would think you were a silly young gentleman." + +"You are unmerciful to young gentlemen, Miss Garth," said the Vicar, +within two yards of her. + +Mary started up and blushed. "It always answers to reason with Fly," +she said, laughingly. + +"But not with young gentlemen?" + +"Oh, with some, I suppose; since some of them turn into excellent men." + +"I am glad of that admission, because I want at this very moment to +interest you in a young gentleman." + +"Not a silly one, I hope," said Mary, beginning to pluck the roses +again, and feeling her heart beat uncomfortably. + +"No; though perhaps wisdom is not his strong point, but rather +affection and sincerity. However, wisdom lies more in those two +qualities than people are apt to imagine. I hope you know by those +marks what young gentleman I mean." + +"Yes, I think I do," said Mary, bravely, her face getting more serious, +and her hands cold; "it must be Fred Vincy." + +"He has asked me to consult you about his going into the Church. I +hope you will not think that I consented to take a liberty in promising +to do so." + +"On the contrary, Mr. Farebrother," said Mary, giving up the roses, and +folding her arms, but unable to look up, "whenever you have anything to +say to me I feel honored." + +"But before I enter on that question, let me just touch a point on +which your father took me into confidence; by the way, it was that very +evening on which I once before fulfilled a mission from Fred, just +after he had gone to college. Mr. Garth told me what happened on the +night of Featherstone's death--how you refused to burn the will; and he +said that you had some heart-prickings on that subject, because you had +been the innocent means of hindering Fred from getting his ten thousand +pounds. I have kept that in mind, and I have heard something that may +relieve you on that score--may show you that no sin-offering is +demanded from you there." + +Mr. Farebrother paused a moment and looked at Mary. He meant to give +Fred his full advantage, but it would be well, he thought, to clear her +mind of any superstitions, such as women sometimes follow when they do +a man the wrong of marrying him as an act of atonement. Mary's cheeks +had begun to burn a little, and she was mute. + +"I mean, that your action made no real difference to Fred's lot. I +find that the first will would not have been legally good after the +burning of the last; it would not have stood if it had been disputed, +and you may be sure it would have been disputed. So, on that score, +you may feel your mind free." + +"Thank you, Mr. Farebrother," said Mary, earnestly. "I am grateful to +you for remembering my feelings." + +"Well, now I may go on. Fred, you know, has taken his degree. He has +worked his way so far, and now the question is, what is he to do? That +question is so difficult that he is inclined to follow his father's +wishes and enter the Church, though you know better than I do that he +was quite set against that formerly. I have questioned him on the +subject, and I confess I see no insuperable objection to his being a +clergyman, as things go. He says that he could turn his mind to doing +his best in that vocation, on one condition. If that condition were +fulfilled I would do my utmost in helping Fred on. After a time--not, +of course, at first--he might be with me as my curate, and he would +have so much to do that his stipend would be nearly what I used to get +as vicar. But I repeat that there is a condition without which all +this good cannot come to pass. He has opened his heart to me, Miss +Garth, and asked me to plead for him. The condition lies entirely in +your feeling." + +Mary looked so much moved, that he said after a moment, "Let us walk a +little;" and when they were walking he added, "To speak quite plainly, +Fred will not take any course which would lessen the chance that you +would consent to be his wife; but with that prospect, he will try his +best at anything you approve." + +"I cannot possibly say that I will ever be his wife, Mr. Farebrother: +but I certainly never will be his wife if he becomes a clergyman. What +you say is most generous and kind; I don't mean for a moment to correct +your judgment. It is only that I have my girlish, mocking way of +looking at things," said Mary, with a returning sparkle of playfulness +in her answer which only made its modesty more charming. + +"He wishes me to report exactly what you think," said Mr. Farebrother. + +"I could not love a man who is ridiculous," said Mary, not choosing to +go deeper. "Fred has sense and knowledge enough to make him +respectable, if he likes, in some good worldly business, but I can +never imagine him preaching and exhorting, and pronouncing blessings, +and praying by the sick, without feeling as if I were looking at a +caricature. His being a clergyman would be only for gentility's sake, +and I think there is nothing more contemptible than such imbecile +gentility. I used to think that of Mr. Crowse, with his empty face and +neat umbrella, and mincing little speeches. What right have such men +to represent Christianity--as if it were an institution for getting up +idiots genteelly--as if--" Mary checked herself. She had been carried +along as if she had been speaking to Fred instead of Mr. Farebrother. + +"Young women are severe: they don't feel the stress of action as men +do, though perhaps I ought to make you an exception there. But you +don't put Fred Vincy on so low a level as that?" + +"No, indeed, he has plenty of sense, but I think he would not show it +as a clergyman. He would be a piece of professional affectation." + +"Then the answer is quite decided. As a clergyman he could have no +hope?" + +Mary shook her head. + +"But if he braved all the difficulties of getting his bread in some +other way--will you give him the support of hope? May he count on +winning you?" + +"I think Fred ought not to need telling again what I have already said +to him," Mary answered, with a slight resentment in her manner. "I +mean that he ought not to put such questions until he has done +something worthy, instead of saying that he could do it." + +Mr. Farebrother was silent for a minute or more, and then, as they +turned and paused under the shadow of a maple at the end of a grassy +walk, said, "I understand that you resist any attempt to fetter you, +but either your feeling for Fred Vincy excludes your entertaining +another attachment, or it does not: either he may count on your +remaining single until he shall have earned your hand, or he may in any +case be disappointed. Pardon me, Mary--you know I used to catechise +you under that name--but when the state of a woman's affections touches +the happiness of another life--of more lives than one--I think it would +be the nobler course for her to be perfectly direct and open." + +Mary in her turn was silent, wondering not at Mr. Farebrother's manner +but at his tone, which had a grave restrained emotion in it. When the +strange idea flashed across her that his words had reference to +himself, she was incredulous, and ashamed of entertaining it. She had +never thought that any man could love her except Fred, who had espoused +her with the umbrella ring, when she wore socks and little strapped +shoes; still less that she could be of any importance to Mr. +Farebrother, the cleverest man in her narrow circle. She had only time +to feel that all this was hazy and perhaps illusory; but one thing was +clear and determined--her answer. + +"Since you think it my duty, Mr. Farebrother, I will tell you that I +have too strong a feeling for Fred to give him up for any one else. I +should never be quite happy if I thought he was unhappy for the loss of +me. It has taken such deep root in me--my gratitude to him for always +loving me best, and minding so much if I hurt myself, from the time +when we were very little. I cannot imagine any new feeling coming to +make that weaker. I should like better than anything to see him worthy +of every one's respect. But please tell him I will not promise to +marry him till then: I should shame and grieve my father and mother. +He is free to choose some one else." + +"Then I have fulfilled my commission thoroughly," said Mr. Farebrother, +putting out his hand to Mary, "and I shall ride back to Middlemarch +forthwith. With this prospect before him, we shall get Fred into the +right niche somehow, and I hope I shall live to join your hands. God +bless you!" + +"Oh, please stay, and let me give you some tea," said Mary. Her eyes +filled with tears, for something indefinable, something like the +resolute suppression of a pain in Mr. Farebrother's manner, made her +feel suddenly miserable, as she had once felt when she saw her father's +hands trembling in a moment of trouble. + +"No, my dear, no. I must get back." + +In three minutes the Vicar was on horseback again, having gone +magnanimously through a duty much harder than the renunciation of +whist, or even than the writing of penitential meditations. + + + +CHAPTER LIII. + + It is but a shallow haste which concludeth insincerity from + what outsiders call inconsistency--putting a dead mechanism + of "ifs" and "therefores" for the living myriad of hidden + suckers whereby the belief and the conduct are wrought into + mutual sustainment. + + +Mr. Bulstrode, when he was hoping to acquire a new interest in Lowick, +had naturally had an especial wish that the new clergyman should be one +whom he thoroughly approved; and he believed it to be a chastisement +and admonition directed to his own shortcomings and those of the nation +at large, that just about the time when he came in possession of the +deeds which made him the proprietor of Stone Court, Mr. Farebrother +"read himself" into the quaint little church and preached his first +sermon to the congregation of farmers, laborers, and village artisans. +It was not that Mr. Bulstrode intended to frequent Lowick Church or to +reside at Stone Court for a good while to come: he had bought the +excellent farm and fine homestead simply as a retreat which he might +gradually enlarge as to the land and beautify as to the dwelling, until +it should be conducive to the divine glory that he should enter on it +as a residence, partially withdrawing from his present exertions in the +administration of business, and throwing more conspicuously on the side +of Gospel truth the weight of local landed proprietorship, which +Providence might increase by unforeseen occasions of purchase. A +strong leading in this direction seemed to have been given in the +surprising facility of getting Stone Court, when every one had expected +that Mr. Rigg Featherstone would have clung to it as the Garden of +Eden. That was what poor old Peter himself had expected; having often, +in imagination, looked up through the sods above him, and, unobstructed +by perspective, seen his frog-faced legatee enjoying the fine old +place to the perpetual surprise and disappointment of other survivors. + +But how little we know what would make paradise for our neighbors! We +judge from our own desires, and our neighbors themselves are not always +open enough even to throw out a hint of theirs. The cool and judicious +Joshua Rigg had not allowed his parent to perceive that Stone Court was +anything less than the chief good in his estimation, and he had +certainly wished to call it his own. But as Warren Hastings looked at +gold and thought of buying Daylesford, so Joshua Rigg looked at Stone +Court and thought of buying gold. He had a very distinct and intense +vision of his chief good, the vigorous greed which he had inherited +having taken a special form by dint of circumstance: and his chief good +was to be a moneychanger. From his earliest employment as an +errand-boy in a seaport, he had looked through the windows of the +moneychangers as other boys look through the windows of the +pastry-cooks; the fascination had wrought itself gradually into a deep +special passion; he meant, when he had property, to do many things, one +of them being to marry a genteel young person; but these were all +accidents and joys that imagination could dispense with. The one joy +after which his soul thirsted was to have a money-changer's shop on a +much-frequented quay, to have locks all round him of which he held the +keys, and to look sublimely cool as he handled the breeding coins of +all nations, while helpless Cupidity looked at him enviously from the +other side of an iron lattice. The strength of that passion had been a +power enabling him to master all the knowledge necessary to gratify it. +And when others were thinking that he had settled at Stone Court for +life, Joshua himself was thinking that the moment now was not far off +when he should settle on the North Quay with the best appointments in +safes and locks. + +Enough. We are concerned with looking at Joshua Rigg's sale of his +land from Mr. Bulstrode's point of view, and he interpreted it as a +cheering dispensation conveying perhaps a sanction to a purpose which +he had for some time entertained without external encouragement; he +interpreted it thus, but not too confidently, offering up his +thanksgiving in guarded phraseology. His doubts did not arise from the +possible relations of the event to Joshua Rigg's destiny, which +belonged to the unmapped regions not taken under the providential +government, except perhaps in an imperfect colonial way; but they arose +from reflecting that this dispensation too might be a chastisement for +himself, as Mr. Farebrother's induction to the living clearly was. + +This was not what Mr. Bulstrode said to any man for the sake of +deceiving him: it was what he said to himself--it was as genuinely his +mode of explaining events as any theory of yours may be, if you happen +to disagree with him. For the egoism which enters into our theories +does not affect their sincerity; rather, the more our egoism is +satisfied, the more robust is our belief. + +However, whether for sanction or for chastisement, Mr. Bulstrode, +hardly fifteen months after the death of Peter Featherstone, had become +the proprietor of Stone Court, and what Peter would say "if he were +worthy to know," had become an inexhaustible and consolatory subject of +conversation to his disappointed relatives. The tables were now turned +on that dear brother departed, and to contemplate the frustration of +his cunning by the superior cunning of things in general was a cud of +delight to Solomon. Mrs. Waule had a melancholy triumph in the proof +that it did not answer to make false Featherstones and cut off the +genuine; and Sister Martha receiving the news in the Chalky Flats said, +"Dear, dear! then the Almighty could have been none so pleased with the +almshouses after all." + +Affectionate Mrs. Bulstrode was particularly glad of the advantage +which her husband's health was likely to get from the purchase of Stone +Court. Few days passed without his riding thither and looking over +some part of the farm with the bailiff, and the evenings were delicious +in that quiet spot, when the new hay-ricks lately set up were sending +forth odors to mingle with the breath of the rich old garden. One +evening, while the sun was still above the horizon and burning in +golden lamps among the great walnut boughs, Mr. Bulstrode was pausing +on horseback outside the front gate waiting for Caleb Garth, who had +met him by appointment to give an opinion on a question of stable +drainage, and was now advising the bailiff in the rick-yard. + +Mr. Bulstrode was conscious of being in a good spiritual frame and more +than usually serene, under the influence of his innocent recreation. +He was doctrinally convinced that there was a total absence of merit in +himself; but that doctrinal conviction may be held without pain when +the sense of demerit does not take a distinct shape in memory and +revive the tingling of shame or the pang of remorse. Nay, it may be +held with intense satisfaction when the depth of our sinning is but a +measure for the depth of forgiveness, and a clenching proof that we are +peculiar instruments of the divine intention. The memory has as many +moods as the temper, and shifts its scenery like a diorama. At this +moment Mr. Bulstrode felt as if the sunshine were all one with that of +far-off evenings when he was a very young man and used to go out +preaching beyond Highbury. And he would willingly have had that +service of exhortation in prospect now. The texts were there still, +and so was his own facility in expounding them. His brief reverie was +interrupted by the return of Caleb Garth, who also was on horseback, +and was just shaking his bridle before starting, when he exclaimed-- + +"Bless my heart! what's this fellow in black coming along the lane? +He's like one of those men one sees about after the races." + +Mr. Bulstrode turned his horse and looked along the lane, but made no +reply. The comer was our slight acquaintance Mr. Raffles, whose +appearance presented no other change than such as was due to a suit of +black and a crape hat-band. He was within three yards of the horseman +now, and they could see the flash of recognition in his face as he +whirled his stick upward, looking all the while at Mr. Bulstrode, and +at last exclaiming:-- + +"By Jove, Nick, it's you! I couldn't be mistaken, though the +five-and-twenty years have played old Boguy with us both! How are you, +eh? you didn't expect to see _me_ here. Come, shake us by the hand." +To say that Mr. Raffles' manner was rather excited would be only one +mode of saying that it was evening. Caleb Garth could see that there +was a moment of struggle and hesitation in Mr. Bulstrode, but it ended +in his putting out his hand coldly to Raffles and saying-- + +"I did not indeed expect to see you in this remote country place." + +"Well, it belongs to a stepson of mine," said Raffles, adjusting +himself in a swaggering attitude. "I came to see him here before. I'm +not so surprised at seeing you, old fellow, because I picked up a +letter--what you may call a providential thing. It's uncommonly +fortunate I met you, though; for I don't care about seeing my stepson: +he's not affectionate, and his poor mother's gone now. To tell the +truth, I came out of love to you, Nick: I came to get your address, +for--look here!" Raffles drew a crumpled paper from his pocket. + +Almost any other man than Caleb Garth might have been tempted to linger +on the spot for the sake of hearing all he could about a man whose +acquaintance with Bulstrode seemed to imply passages in the banker's +life so unlike anything that was known of him in Middlemarch that they +must have the nature of a secret to pique curiosity. But Caleb was +peculiar: certain human tendencies which are commonly strong were +almost absent from his mind; and one of these was curiosity about +personal affairs. Especially if there was anything discreditable to be +found out concerning another man, Caleb preferred not to know it; and +if he had to tell anybody under him that his evil doings were +discovered, he was more embarrassed than the culprit. He now spurred +his horse, and saying, "I wish you good evening, Mr. Bulstrode; I must +be getting home," set off at a trot. + +"You didn't put your full address to this letter," Raffles continued. +"That was not like the first-rate man of business you used to be. 'The +Shrubs,'--they may be anywhere: you live near at hand, eh?--have cut +the London concern altogether--perhaps turned country squire--have a +rural mansion to invite me to. Lord, how many years it is ago! The +old lady must have been dead a pretty long while--gone to glory without +the pain of knowing how poor her daughter was, eh? But, by Jove! +you're very pale and pasty, Nick. Come, if you're going home, I'll +walk by your side." + +Mr. Bulstrode's usual paleness had in fact taken an almost deathly hue. +Five minutes before, the expanse of his life had been submerged in its +evening sunshine which shone backward to its remembered morning: sin +seemed to be a question of doctrine and inward penitence, humiliation +an exercise of the closet, the bearing of his deeds a matter of private +vision adjusted solely by spiritual relations and conceptions of the +divine purposes. And now, as if by some hideous magic, this loud red +figure had risen before him in unmanageable solidity--an incorporate +past which had not entered into his imagination of chastisements. But +Mr. Bulstrode's thought was busy, and he was not a man to act or speak +rashly. + +"I was going home," he said, "but I can defer my ride a little. And +you can, if you please, rest here." + +"Thank you," said Raffles, making a grimace. "I don't care now about +seeing my stepson. I'd rather go home with you." + +"Your stepson, if Mr. Rigg Featherstone was he, is here no longer. I +am master here now." + +Raffles opened wide eyes, and gave a long whistle of surprise, before +he said, "Well then, I've no objection. I've had enough walking from +the coach-road. I never was much of a walker, or rider either. What I +like is a smart vehicle and a spirited cob. I was always a little +heavy in the saddle. What a pleasant surprise it must be to you to see +me, old fellow!" he continued, as they turned towards the house. "You +don't say so; but you never took your luck heartily--you were always +thinking of improving the occasion--you'd such a gift for improving +your luck." + +Mr. Raffles seemed greatly to enjoy his own wit, and swung his leg in a +swaggering manner which was rather too much for his companion's +judicious patience. + +"If I remember rightly," Mr. Bulstrode observed, with chill anger, "our +acquaintance many years ago had not the sort of intimacy which you are +now assuming, Mr. Raffles. Any services you desire of me will be the +more readily rendered if you will avoid a tone of familiarity which did +not lie in our former intercourse, and can hardly be warranted by more +than twenty years of separation." + +"You don't like being called Nick? Why, I always called you Nick in my +heart, and though lost to sight, to memory dear. By Jove! my feelings +have ripened for you like fine old cognac. I hope you've got some in +the house now. Josh filled my flask well the last time." + +Mr. Bulstrode had not yet fully learned that even the desire for cognac +was not stronger in Raffles than the desire to torment, and that a hint +of annoyance always served him as a fresh cue. But it was at least +clear that further objection was useless, and Mr. Bulstrode, in giving +orders to the housekeeper for the accommodation of the guest, had a +resolute air of quietude. + +There was the comfort of thinking that this housekeeper had been in the +service of Rigg also, and might accept the idea that Mr. Bulstrode +entertained Raffles merely as a friend of her former master. + +When there was food and drink spread before his visitor in the +wainscoted parlor, and no witness in the room, Mr. Bulstrode said-- + +"Your habits and mine are so different, Mr. Raffles, that we can hardly +enjoy each other's society. The wisest plan for both of us will +therefore be to part as soon as possible. Since you say that you +wished to meet me, you probably considered that you had some business +to transact with me. But under the circumstances I will invite you to +remain here for the night, and I will myself ride over here early +to-morrow morning--before breakfast, in fact, when I can receive any +Communication you have to make to me." + +"With all my heart," said Raffles; "this is a comfortable place--a +little dull for a continuance; but I can put up with it for a night, +with this good liquor and the prospect of seeing you again in the +morning. You're a much better host than my stepson was; but Josh owed +me a bit of a grudge for marrying his mother; and between you and me +there was never anything but kindness." + +Mr. Bulstrode, hoping that the peculiar mixture of joviality and +sneering in Raffles' manner was a good deal the effect of drink, had +determined to wait till he was quite sober before he spent more words +upon him. But he rode home with a terribly lucid vision of the +difficulty there would be in arranging any result that could be +permanently counted on with this man. It was inevitable that he should +wish to get rid of John Raffles, though his reappearance could not be +regarded as lying outside the divine plan. The spirit of evil might +have sent him to threaten Mr. Bulstrode's subversion as an instrument +of good; but the threat must have been permitted, and was a +chastisement of a new kind. It was an hour of anguish for him very +different from the hours in which his struggle had been securely +private, and which had ended with a sense that his secret misdeeds were +pardoned and his services accepted. Those misdeeds even when +committed--had they not been half sanctified by the singleness of his +desire to devote himself and all he possessed to the furtherance of the +divine scheme? And was he after all to become a mere stone of +stumbling and a rock of offence? For who would understand the work +within him? Who would not, when there was the pretext of casting +disgrace upon him, confound his whole life and the truths he had +espoused, in one heap of obloquy? + +In his closest meditations the life-long habit of Mr. Bulstrode's mind +clad his most egoistic terrors in doctrinal references to superhuman +ends. But even while we are talking and meditating about the earth's +orbit and the solar system, what we feel and adjust our movements to is +the stable earth and the changing day. And now within all the +automatic succession of theoretic phrases--distinct and inmost as the +shiver and the ache of oncoming fever when we are discussing abstract +pain, was the forecast of disgrace in the presence of his neighbors and +of his own wife. For the pain, as well as the public estimate of +disgrace, depends on the amount of previous profession. To men who +only aim at escaping felony, nothing short of the prisoner's dock is +disgrace. But Mr. Bulstrode had aimed at being an eminent Christian. + +It was not more than half-past seven in the morning when he again +reached Stone Court. The fine old place never looked more like a +delightful home than at that moment; the great white lilies were in +flower, the nasturtiums, their pretty leaves all silvered with dew, +were running away over the low stone wall; the very noises all around +had a heart of peace within them. But everything was spoiled for the +owner as he walked on the gravel in front and awaited the descent of +Mr. Raffles, with whom he was condemned to breakfast. + +It was not long before they were seated together in the wainscoted +parlor over their tea and toast, which was as much as Raffles cared to +take at that early hour. The difference between his morning and +evening self was not so great as his companion had imagined that it +might be; the delight in tormenting was perhaps even the stronger +because his spirits were rather less highly pitched. Certainly his +manners seemed more disagreeable by the morning light. + +"As I have little time to spare, Mr. Raffles," said the banker, who +could hardly do more than sip his tea and break his toast without +eating it, "I shall be obliged if you will mention at once the ground +on which you wished to meet with me. I presume that you have a home +elsewhere and will be glad to return to it." + +"Why, if a man has got any heart, doesn't he want to see an old friend, +Nick?--I must call you Nick--we always did call you young Nick when we +knew you meant to marry the old widow. Some said you had a handsome +family likeness to old Nick, but that was your mother's fault, calling +you Nicholas. Aren't you glad to see me again? I expected an invite +to stay with you at some pretty place. My own establishment is broken +up now my wife's dead. I've no particular attachment to any spot; I +would as soon settle hereabout as anywhere." + +"May I ask why you returned from America? I considered that the strong +wish you expressed to go there, when an adequate sum was furnished, was +tantamount to an engagement that you would remain there for life." + +"Never knew that a wish to go to a place was the same thing as a wish +to stay. But I did stay a matter of ten years; it didn't suit me to +stay any longer. And I'm not going again, Nick." Here Mr. Raffles +winked slowly as he looked at Mr. Bulstrode. + +"Do you wish to be settled in any business? What is your calling now?" + +"Thank you, my calling is to enjoy myself as much as I can. I don't +care about working any more. If I did anything it would be a little +travelling in the tobacco line--or something of that sort, which takes +a man into agreeable company. But not without an independence to fall +back upon. That's what I want: I'm not so strong as I was, Nick, +though I've got more color than you. I want an independence." + +"That could be supplied to you, if you would engage to keep at a +distance," said Mr. Bulstrode, perhaps with a little too much eagerness +in his undertone. + +"That must be as it suits my convenience," said Raffles coolly. "I see +no reason why I shouldn't make a few acquaintances hereabout. I'm not +ashamed of myself as company for anybody. I dropped my portmanteau at +the turnpike when I got down--change of linen--genuine--honor bright--more +than fronts and wristbands; and with this suit of mourning, straps +and everything, I should do you credit among the nobs here." Mr. +Raffles had pushed away his chair and looked down at himself, +particularly at his straps. His chief intention was to annoy +Bulstrode, but he really thought that his appearance now would produce +a good effect, and that he was not only handsome and witty, but clad in +a mourning style which implied solid connections. + +"If you intend to rely on me in any way, Mr. Raffles," said Bulstrode, +after a moment's pause, "you will expect to meet my wishes." + +"Ah, to be sure," said Raffles, with a mocking cordiality. "Didn't I +always do it? Lord, you made a pretty thing out of me, and I got but +little. I've often thought since, I might have done better by telling +the old woman that I'd found her daughter and her grandchild: it would +have suited my feelings better; I've got a soft place in my heart. But +you've buried the old lady by this time, I suppose--it's all one to her +now. And you've got your fortune out of that profitable business which +had such a blessing on it. You've taken to being a nob, buying land, +being a country bashaw. Still in the Dissenting line, eh? Still +godly? Or taken to the Church as more genteel?" + +This time Mr. Raffles' slow wink and slight protrusion of his tongue +was worse than a nightmare, because it held the certitude that it was +not a nightmare, but a waking misery. Mr. Bulstrode felt a shuddering +nausea, and did not speak, but was considering diligently whether he +should not leave Raffles to do as he would, and simply defy him as a +slanderer. The man would soon show himself disreputable enough to make +people disbelieve him. "But not when he tells any ugly-looking truth +about _you_," said discerning consciousness. And again: it seemed no +wrong to keep Raffles at a distance, but Mr. Bulstrode shrank from the +direct falsehood of denying true statements. It was one thing to look +back on forgiven sins, nay, to explain questionable conformity to lax +customs, and another to enter deliberately on the necessity of +falsehood. + +But since Bulstrode did not speak, Raffles ran on, by way of using time +to the utmost. + +"I've not had such fine luck as you, by Jove! Things went confoundedly +with me in New York; those Yankees are cool hands, and a man of +gentlemanly feelings has no chance with them. I married when I came +back--a nice woman in the tobacco trade--very fond of me--but the +trade was restricted, as we say. She had been settled there a good +many years by a friend; but there was a son too much in the case. Josh +and I never hit it off. However, I made the most of the position, and +I've always taken my glass in good company. It's been all on the +square with me; I'm as open as the day. You won't take it ill of me +that I didn't look you up before. I've got a complaint that makes me a +little dilatory. I thought you were trading and praying away in London +still, and didn't find you there. But you see I was sent to you, +Nick--perhaps for a blessing to both of us." + +Mr. Raffles ended with a jocose snuffle: no man felt his intellect more +superior to religious cant. And if the cunning which calculates on the +meanest feelings in men could be called intellect, he had his share, +for under the blurting rallying tone with which he spoke to Bulstrode, +there was an evident selection of statements, as if they had been so +many moves at chess. Meanwhile Bulstrode had determined on his move, +and he said, with gathered resolution-- + +"You will do well to reflect, Mr. Raffles, that it is possible for a +man to overreach himself in the effort to secure undue advantage. +Although I am not in any way bound to you, I am willing to supply you +with a regular annuity--in quarterly payments--so long as you fulfil a +promise to remain at a distance from this neighborhood. It is in your +power to choose. If you insist on remaining here, even for a short +time, you will get nothing from me. I shall decline to know you." + +"Ha, ha!" said Raffles, with an affected explosion, "that reminds me of +a droll dog of a thief who declined to know the constable." + +"Your allusions are lost on me sir," said Bulstrode, with white heat; +"the law has no hold on me either through your agency or any other." + +"You can't understand a joke, my good fellow. I only meant that I +should never decline to know you. But let us be serious. Your +quarterly payment won't quite suit me. I like my freedom." + +Here Raffles rose and stalked once or twice up and down the room, +swinging his leg, and assuming an air of masterly meditation. At last +he stopped opposite Bulstrode, and said, "I'll tell you what! Give us +a couple of hundreds--come, that's modest--and I'll go away--honor +bright!--pick up my portmanteau and go away. But I shall not give up +my Liberty for a dirty annuity. I shall come and go where I like. +Perhaps it may suit me to stay away, and correspond with a friend; +perhaps not. Have you the money with you?" + +"No, I have one hundred," said Bulstrode, feeling the immediate +riddance too great a relief to be rejected on the ground of future +uncertainties. "I will forward you the other if you will mention an +address." + +"No, I'll wait here till you bring it," said Raffles. "I'll take a +stroll and have a snack, and you'll be back by that time." + +Mr. Bulstrode's sickly body, shattered by the agitations he had gone +through since the last evening, made him feel abjectly in the power of +this loud invulnerable man. At that moment he snatched at a temporary +repose to be won on any terms. He was rising to do what Raffles +suggested, when the latter said, lifting up his finger as if with a +sudden recollection-- + +"I did have another look after Sarah again, though I didn't tell you; +I'd a tender conscience about that pretty young woman. I didn't find +her, but I found out her husband's name, and I made a note of it. But +hang it, I lost my pocketbook. However, if I heard it, I should know +it again. I've got my faculties as if I was in my prime, but names +wear out, by Jove! Sometimes I'm no better than a confounded tax-paper +before the names are filled in. However, if I hear of her and her +family, you shall know, Nick. You'd like to do something for her, now +she's your step-daughter." + +"Doubtless," said Mr. Bulstrode, with the usual steady look of his +light-gray eyes; "though that might reduce my power of assisting you." + +As he walked out of the room, Raffles winked slowly at his back, and +then turned towards the window to watch the banker riding away--virtually +at his command. His lips first curled with a smile and then opened +with a short triumphant laugh. + +"But what the deuce was the name?" he presently said, half aloud, +scratching his head, and wrinkling his brows horizontally. He had not +really cared or thought about this point of forgetfulness until it +occurred to him in his invention of annoyances for Bulstrode. + +"It began with L; it was almost all l's I fancy," he went on, with a +sense that he was getting hold of the slippery name. But the hold was +too slight, and he soon got tired of this mental chase; for few men +were more impatient of private occupation or more in need of making +themselves continually heard than Mr. Raffles. He preferred using his +time in pleasant conversation with the bailiff and the housekeeper, +from whom he gathered as much as he wanted to know about Mr. +Bulstrode's position in Middlemarch. + +After all, however, there was a dull space of time which needed +relieving with bread and cheese and ale, and when he was seated alone +with these resources in the wainscoted parlor, he suddenly slapped his +knee, and exclaimed, "Ladislaw!" That action of memory which he had +tried to set going, and had abandoned in despair, had suddenly +completed itself without conscious effort--a common experience, +agreeable as a completed sneeze, even if the name remembered is of no +value. Raffles immediately took out his pocket-book, and wrote down +the name, not because he expected to use it, but merely for the sake of +not being at a loss if he ever did happen to want it. He was not going +to tell Bulstrode: there was no actual good in telling, and to a mind +like that of Mr. Raffles there is always probable good in a secret. + +He was satisfied with his present success, and by three o'clock that +day he had taken up his portmanteau at the turnpike and mounted the +coach, relieving Mr. Bulstrode's eyes of an ugly black spot on the +landscape at Stone Court, but not relieving him of the dread that the +black spot might reappear and become inseparable even from the vision +of his hearth. + + + + + +BOOK VI. + + + + + +THE WIDOW AND THE WIFE. + + + +CHAPTER LIV. + + "Negli occhi porta la mia donna Amore; + Per che si fa gentil ciò ch'ella mira: + Ov'ella passa, ogni uom ver lei si gira, + E cui saluta fa tremar lo core. + + Sicchè, bassando il viso, tutto smore, + E d'ogni suo difetto allor sospira: + Fuggon dinanzi a lei Superbia ed Ira: + Aiutatemi, donne, a farle onore. + + Ogni dolcezza, ogni pensiero umile + Nasce nel core a chi parlar la sente; + Ond'è beato chi prima la vide. + Quel ch'ella par quand' un poco sorride, + Non si può dicer, nè tener a mente, + Si è nuovo miracolo gentile." + --DANTE: la Vita Nuova. + + +By that delightful morning when the hay-ricks at Stone Court were +scenting the air quite impartially, as if Mr. Raffles had been a guest +worthy of finest incense, Dorothea had again taken up her abode at +Lowick Manor. After three months Freshitt had become rather +oppressive: to sit like a model for Saint Catherine looking rapturously +at Celia's baby would not do for many hours in the day, and to remain +in that momentous babe's presence with persistent disregard was a +course that could not have been tolerated in a childless sister. +Dorothea would have been capable of carrying baby joyfully for a mile +if there had been need, and of loving it the more tenderly for that +labor; but to an aunt who does not recognize her infant nephew as +Bouddha, and has nothing to do for him but to admire, his behavior is +apt to appear monotonous, and the interest of watching him exhaustible. +This possibility was quite hidden from Celia, who felt that Dorothea's +childless widowhood fell in quite prettily with the birth of little +Arthur (baby was named after Mr. Brooke). + +"Dodo is just the creature not to mind about having anything of her +own--children or anything!" said Celia to her husband. "And if she +had had a baby, it never could have been such a dear as Arthur. Could +it, James? + +"Not if it had been like Casaubon," said Sir James, conscious of some +indirectness in his answer, and of holding a strictly private opinion +as to the perfections of his first-born. + +"No! just imagine! Really it was a mercy," said Celia; "and I think it +is very nice for Dodo to be a widow. She can be just as fond of our +baby as if it were her own, and she can have as many notions of her own +as she likes." + +"It is a pity she was not a queen," said the devout Sir James. + +"But what should we have been then? We must have been something else," +said Celia, objecting to so laborious a flight of imagination. "I like +her better as she is." + +Hence, when she found that Dorothea was making arrangements for her +final departure to Lowick, Celia raised her eyebrows with +disappointment, and in her quiet unemphatic way shot a needle-arrow of +sarcasm. + +"What will you do at Lowick, Dodo? You say yourself there is nothing +to be done there: everybody is so clean and well off, it makes you +quite melancholy. And here you have been so happy going all about +Tipton with Mr. Garth into the worst backyards. And now uncle is +abroad, you and Mr. Garth can have it all your own way; and I am sure +James does everything you tell him." + +"I shall often come here, and I shall see how baby grows all the +better," said Dorothea. + +"But you will never see him washed," said Celia; "and that is quite the +best part of the day." She was almost pouting: it did seem to her very +hard in Dodo to go away from the baby when she might stay. + +"Dear Kitty, I will come and stay all night on purpose," said Dorothea; +"but I want to be alone now, and in my own home. I wish to know the +Farebrothers better, and to talk to Mr. Farebrother about what there is +to be done in Middlemarch." + +Dorothea's native strength of will was no longer all converted into +resolute submission. She had a great yearning to be at Lowick, and was +simply determined to go, not feeling bound to tell all her reasons. +But every one around her disapproved. Sir James was much pained, and +offered that they should all migrate to Cheltenham for a few months +with the sacred ark, otherwise called a cradle: at that period a man +could hardly know what to propose if Cheltenham were rejected. + +The Dowager Lady Chettam, just returned from a visit to her daughter in +town, wished, at least, that Mrs. Vigo should be written to, and +invited to accept the office of companion to Mrs. Casaubon: it was not +credible that Dorothea as a young widow would think of living alone in +the house at Lowick. Mrs. Vigo had been reader and secretary to royal +personages, and in point of knowledge and sentiments even Dorothea +could have nothing to object to her. + +Mrs. Cadwallader said, privately, "You will certainly go mad in that +house alone, my dear. You will see visions. We have all got to exert +ourselves a little to keep sane, and call things by the same names as +other people call them by. To be sure, for younger sons and women who +have no money, it is a sort of provision to go mad: they are taken care +of then. But you must not run into that. I dare say you are a little +bored here with our good dowager; but think what a bore you might +become yourself to your fellow-creatures if you were always playing +tragedy queen and taking things sublimely. Sitting alone in that +library at Lowick you may fancy yourself ruling the weather; you must +get a few people round you who wouldn't believe you if you told them. +That is a good lowering medicine." + +"I never called everything by the same name that all the people about +me did," said Dorothea, stoutly. + +"But I suppose you have found out your mistake, my dear," said Mrs. +Cadwallader, "and that is a proof of sanity." + +Dorothea was aware of the sting, but it did not hurt her. "No," she +said, "I still think that the greater part of the world is mistaken +about many things. Surely one may be sane and yet think so, since the +greater part of the world has often had to come round from its opinion." + +Mrs. Cadwallader said no more on that point to Dorothea, but to her +husband she remarked, "It will be well for her to marry again as soon +as it is proper, if one could get her among the right people. Of +course the Chettams would not wish it. But I see clearly a husband is +the best thing to keep her in order. If we were not so poor I would +invite Lord Triton. He will be marquis some day, and there is no +denying that she would make a good marchioness: she looks handsomer +than ever in her mourning." + +"My dear Elinor, do let the poor woman alone. Such contrivances are of +no use," said the easy Rector. + +"No use? How are matches made, except by bringing men and women +together? And it is a shame that her uncle should have run away and +shut up the Grange just now. There ought to be plenty of eligible +matches invited to Freshitt and the Grange. Lord Triton is precisely +the man: full of plans for making the people happy in a soft-headed +sort of way. That would just suit Mrs. Casaubon." + +"Let Mrs. Casaubon choose for herself, Elinor." + +"That is the nonsense you wise men talk! How can she choose if she has +no variety to choose from? A woman's choice usually means taking the +only man she can get. Mark my words, Humphrey. If her friends don't +exert themselves, there will be a worse business than the Casaubon +business yet." + +"For heaven's sake don't touch on that topic, Elinor! It is a very sore +point with Sir James. He would be deeply offended if you entered on it +to him unnecessarily." + +"I have never entered on it," said Mrs Cadwallader, opening her hands. +"Celia told me all about the will at the beginning, without any asking +of mine." + +"Yes, yes; but they want the thing hushed up, and I understand that the +young fellow is going out of the neighborhood." + +Mrs. Cadwallader said nothing, but gave her husband three significant +nods, with a very sarcastic expression in her dark eyes. + +Dorothea quietly persisted in spite of remonstrance and persuasion. So +by the end of June the shutters were all opened at Lowick Manor, and +the morning gazed calmly into the library, shining on the rows of +note-books as it shines on the weary waste planted with huge stones, +the mute memorial of a forgotten faith; and the evening laden with +roses entered silently into the blue-green boudoir where Dorothea chose +oftenest to sit. At first she walked into every room, questioning the +eighteen months of her married life, and carrying on her thoughts as if +they were a speech to be heard by her husband. Then, she lingered in +the library and could not be at rest till she had carefully ranged all +the note-books as she imagined that he would wish to see them, in +orderly sequence. The pity which had been the restraining compelling +motive in her life with him still clung about his image, even while she +remonstrated with him in indignant thought and told him that he was +unjust. One little act of hers may perhaps be smiled at as +superstitious. The Synoptical Tabulation for the use of Mrs. Casaubon, +she carefully enclosed and sealed, writing within the envelope, "I +could not use it. Do you not see now that I could not submit my soul +to yours, by working hopelessly at what I have no belief in--Dorothea?" +Then she deposited the paper in her own desk. + +That silent colloquy was perhaps only the more earnest because +underneath and through it all there was always the deep longing which +had really determined her to come to Lowick. The longing was to see +Will Ladislaw. She did not know any good that could come of their +meeting: she was helpless; her hands had been tied from making up to +him for any unfairness in his lot. But her soul thirsted to see him. +How could it be otherwise? If a princess in the days of enchantment +had seen a four-footed creature from among those which live in herds +come to her once and again with a human gaze which rested upon her with +choice and beseeching, what would she think of in her journeying, what +would she look for when the herds passed her? Surely for the gaze +which had found her, and which she would know again. Life would be no +better than candle-light tinsel and daylight rubbish if our spirits +were not touched by what has been, to issues of longing and constancy. +It was true that Dorothea wanted to know the Farebrothers better, and +especially to talk to the new rector, but also true that remembering +what Lydgate had told her about Will Ladislaw and little Miss Noble, +she counted on Will's coming to Lowick to see the Farebrother family. +The very first Sunday, _before_ she entered the church, she saw him as +she had seen him the last time she was there, alone in the clergyman's +pew; but _when_ she entered his figure was gone. + +In the week-days when she went to see the ladies at the Rectory, she +listened in vain for some word that they might let fall about Will; but +it seemed to her that Mrs. Farebrother talked of every one else in the +neighborhood and out of it. + +"Probably some of Mr. Farebrother's Middlemarch hearers may follow him +to Lowick sometimes. Do you not think so?" said Dorothea, rather +despising herself for having a secret motive in asking the question. + +"If they are wise they will, Mrs. Casaubon," said the old lady. "I see +that you set a right value on my son's preaching. His grandfather on +my side was an excellent clergyman, but his father was in the law:--most +exemplary and honest nevertheless, which is a reason for our never +being rich. They say Fortune is a woman and capricious. But sometimes +she is a good woman and gives to those who merit, which has been the +case with you, Mrs. Casaubon, who have given a living to my son." + +Mrs. Farebrother recurred to her knitting with a dignified satisfaction +in her neat little effort at oratory, but this was not what Dorothea +wanted to hear. Poor thing! she did not even know whether Will +Ladislaw was still at Middlemarch, and there was no one whom she dared +to ask, unless it were Lydgate. But just now she could not see Lydgate +without sending for him or going to seek him. Perhaps Will Ladislaw, +having heard of that strange ban against him left by Mr. Casaubon, had +felt it better that he and she should not meet again, and perhaps she +was wrong to wish for a meeting that others might find many good +reasons against. Still "I do wish it" came at the end of those wise +reflections as naturally as a sob after holding the breath. And the +meeting did happen, but in a formal way quite unexpected by her. + +One morning, about eleven, Dorothea was seated in her boudoir with a +map of the land attached to the manor and other papers before her, +which were to help her in making an exact statement for herself of her +income and affairs. She had not yet applied herself to her work, but +was seated with her hands folded on her lap, looking out along the +avenue of limes to the distant fields. Every leaf was at rest in the +sunshine, the familiar scene was changeless, and seemed to represent +the prospect of her life, full of motiveless ease--motiveless, if her +own energy could not seek out reasons for ardent action. The widow's +cap of those times made an oval frame for the face, and had a crown +standing up; the dress was an experiment in the utmost laying on of +crape; but this heavy solemnity of clothing made her face look all the +younger, with its recovered bloom, and the sweet, inquiring candor of +her eyes. + +Her reverie was broken by Tantripp, who came to say that Mr. Ladislaw +was below, and begged permission to see Madam if it were not too early. + +"I will see him," said Dorothea, rising immediately. "Let him be shown +into the drawing-room." + +The drawing-room was the most neutral room in the house to her--the +one least associated with the trials of her married life: the damask +matched the wood-work, which was all white and gold; there were two +tall mirrors and tables with nothing on them--in brief, it was a room +where you had no reason for sitting in one place rather than in +another. It was below the boudoir, and had also a bow-window looking +out on the avenue. But when Pratt showed Will Ladislaw into it the +window was open; and a winged visitor, buzzing in and out now and then +without minding the furniture, made the room look less formal and +uninhabited. + +"Glad to see you here again, sir," said Pratt, lingering to adjust a +blind. + +"I am only come to say good-by, Pratt," said Will, who wished even the +butler to know that he was too proud to hang about Mrs. Casaubon now +she was a rich widow. + +"Very sorry to hear it, sir," said Pratt, retiring. Of course, as a +servant who was to be told nothing, he knew the fact of which Ladislaw +was still ignorant, and had drawn his inferences; indeed, had not +differed from his betrothed Tantripp when she said, "Your master was as +jealous as a fiend--and no reason. Madam would look higher than Mr. +Ladislaw, else I don't know her. Mrs. Cadwallader's maid says there's +a lord coming who is to marry her when the mourning's over." + +There were not many moments for Will to walk about with his hat in his +hand before Dorothea entered. The meeting was very different from that +first meeting in Rome when Will had been embarrassed and Dorothea calm. +This time he felt miserable but determined, while she was in a state of +agitation which could not be hidden. Just outside the door she had +felt that this longed-for meeting was after all too difficult, and when +she saw Will advancing towards her, the deep blush which was rare in +her came with painful suddenness. Neither of them knew how it was, but +neither of them spoke. She gave her hand for a moment, and then they +went to sit down near the window, she on one settee and he on another +opposite. Will was peculiarly uneasy: it seemed to him not like +Dorothea that the mere fact of her being a widow should cause such a +change in her manner of receiving him; and he knew of no other +condition which could have affected their previous relation to each +other--except that, as his imagination at once told him, her friends +might have been poisoning her mind with their suspicions of him. + +"I hope I have not presumed too much in calling," said Will; "I could +not bear to leave the neighborhood and begin a new life without seeing +you to say good-by." + +"Presumed? Surely not. I should have thought it unkind if you had not +wished to see me," said Dorothea, her habit of speaking with perfect +genuineness asserting itself through all her uncertainty and agitation. +"Are you going away immediately?" + +"Very soon, I think. I intend to go to town and eat my dinners as a +barrister, since, they say, that is the preparation for all public +business. There will be a great deal of political work to be done +by-and-by, and I mean to try and do some of it. Other men have managed +to win an honorable position for themselves without family or money." + +"And that will make it all the more honorable," said Dorothea, +ardently. "Besides, you have so many talents. I have heard from my +uncle how well you speak in public, so that every one is sorry when you +leave off, and how clearly you can explain things. And you care that +justice should be done to every one. I am so glad. When we were in +Rome, I thought you only cared for poetry and art, and the things that +adorn life for us who are well off. But now I know you think about the +rest of the world." + +While she was speaking Dorothea had lost her personal embarrassment, +and had become like her former self. She looked at Will with a direct +glance, full of delighted confidence. + +"You approve of my going away for years, then, and never coming here +again till I have made myself of some mark in the world?" said Will, +trying hard to reconcile the utmost pride with the utmost effort to get +an expression of strong feeling from Dorothea. + +She was not aware how long it was before she answered. She had turned +her head and was looking out of the window on the rose-bushes, which +seemed to have in them the summers of all the years when Will would be +away. This was not judicious behavior. But Dorothea never thought of +studying her manners: she thought only of bowing to a sad necessity +which divided her from Will. Those first words of his about his +intentions had seemed to make everything clear to her: he knew, she +supposed, all about Mr. Casaubon's final conduct in relation to him, +and it had come to him with the same sort of shock as to herself. He +had never felt more than friendship for her--had never had anything in +his mind to justify what she felt to be her husband's outrage on the +feelings of both: and that friendship he still felt. Something which +may be called an inward silent sob had gone on in Dorothea before she +said with a pure voice, just trembling in the last words as if only +from its liquid flexibility-- + +"Yes, it must be right for you to do as you say. I shall be very happy +when I hear that you have made your value felt. But you must have +patience. It will perhaps be a long while." + +Will never quite knew how it was that he saved himself from falling +down at her feet, when the "long while" came forth with its gentle +tremor. He used to say that the horrible hue and surface of her crape +dress was most likely the sufficient controlling force. He sat still, +however, and only said-- + +"I shall never hear from you. And you will forget all about me." + +"No," said Dorothea, "I shall never forget you. I have never forgotten +any one whom I once knew. My life has never been crowded, and seems +not likely to be so. And I have a great deal of space for memory at +Lowick, haven't I?" She smiled. + +"Good God!" Will burst out passionately, rising, with his hat still in +his hand, and walking away to a marble table, where he suddenly turned +and leaned his back against it. The blood had mounted to his face and +neck, and he looked almost angry. It had seemed to him as if they were +like two creatures slowly turning to marble in each other's presence, +while their hearts were conscious and their eyes were yearning. But +there was no help for it. It should never be true of him that in this +meeting to which he had come with bitter resolution he had ended by a +confession which might be interpreted into asking for her fortune. +Moreover, it was actually true that he was fearful of the effect which +such confessions might have on Dorothea herself. + +She looked at him from that distance in some trouble, imagining that +there might have been an offence in her words. But all the while there +was a current of thought in her about his probable want of money, and +the impossibility of her helping him. If her uncle had been at home, +something might have been done through him! It was this preoccupation +with the hardship of Will's wanting money, while she had what ought to +have been his share, which led her to say, seeing that he remained +silent and looked away from her-- + +"I wonder whether you would like to have that miniature which hangs +up-stairs--I mean that beautiful miniature of your grandmother. I +think it is not right for me to keep it, if you would wish to have it. +It is wonderfully like you." + +"You are very good," said Will, irritably. "No; I don't mind about it. +It is not very consoling to have one's own likeness. It would be more +consoling if others wanted to have it." + +"I thought you would like to cherish her memory--I thought--" Dorothea +broke off an instant, her imagination suddenly warning her away from +Aunt Julia's history--"you would surely like to have the miniature as a +family memorial." + +"Why should I have that, when I have nothing else! A man with only a +portmanteau for his stowage must keep his memorials in his head." + +Will spoke at random: he was merely venting his petulance; it was a +little too exasperating to have his grandmother's portrait offered him +at that moment. But to Dorothea's feeling his words had a peculiar +sting. She rose and said with a touch of indignation as well as +hauteur-- + +"You are much the happier of us two, Mr. Ladislaw, to have nothing." + +Will was startled. Whatever the words might be, the tone seemed like a +dismissal; and quitting his leaning posture, he walked a little way +towards her. Their eyes met, but with a strange questioning gravity. +Something was keeping their minds aloof, and each was left to +conjecture what was in the other. Will had really never thought of +himself as having a claim of inheritance on the property which was held +by Dorothea, and would have required a narrative to make him understand +her present feeling. + +"I never felt it a misfortune to have nothing till now," he said. "But +poverty may be as bad as leprosy, if it divides us from what we most +care for." + +The words cut Dorothea to the heart, and made her relent. She answered +in a tone of sad fellowship. + +"Sorrow comes in so many ways. Two years ago I had no notion of +that--I mean of the unexpected way in which trouble comes, and ties our +hands, and makes us silent when we long to speak. I used to despise +women a little for not shaping their lives more, and doing better +things. I was very fond of doing as I liked, but I have almost given +it up," she ended, smiling playfully. + +"I have not given up doing as I like, but I can very seldom do it," +said Will. He was standing two yards from her with his mind full of +contradictory desires and resolves--desiring some unmistakable proof +that she loved him, and yet dreading the position into which such a +proof might bring him. "The thing one most longs for may be surrounded +with conditions that would be intolerable." + +At this moment Pratt entered and said, "Sir James Chettam is in the +library, madam." + +"Ask Sir James to come in here," said Dorothea, immediately. It was as +if the same electric shock had passed through her and Will. Each of +them felt proudly resistant, and neither looked at the other, while +they awaited Sir James's entrance. + +After shaking hands with Dorothea, he bowed as slightly as possible to +Ladislaw, who repaid the slightness exactly, and then going towards +Dorothea, said-- + +"I must say good-by, Mrs. Casaubon; and probably for a long while." + +Dorothea put out her hand and said her good-by cordially. The sense +that Sir James was depreciating Will, and behaving rudely to him, +roused her resolution and dignity: there was no touch of confusion in +her manner. And when Will had left the room, she looked with such calm +self-possession at Sir James, saying, "How is Celia?" that he was +obliged to behave as if nothing had annoyed him. And what would be the +use of behaving otherwise? Indeed, Sir James shrank with so much +dislike from the association even in thought of Dorothea with Ladislaw +as her possible lover, that he would himself have wished to avoid an +outward show of displeasure which would have recognized the +disagreeable possibility. If any one had asked him why he shrank in +that way, I am not sure that he would at first have said anything +fuller or more precise than "_That_ Ladislaw!"--though on reflection +he might have urged that Mr. Casaubon's codicil, barring Dorothea's +marriage with Will, except under a penalty, was enough to cast +unfitness over any relation at all between them. His aversion was all +the stronger because he felt himself unable to interfere. + +But Sir James was a power in a way unguessed by himself. Entering at +that moment, he was an incorporation of the strongest reasons through +which Will's pride became a repellent force, keeping him asunder from +Dorothea. + + + +CHAPTER LV. + + Hath she her faults? I would you had them too. + They are the fruity must of soundest wine; + Or say, they are regenerating fire + Such as hath turned the dense black element + Into a crystal pathway for the sun. + + +If youth is the season of hope, it is often so only in the sense that +our elders are hopeful about us; for no age is so apt as youth to think +its emotions, partings, and resolves are the last of their kind. Each +crisis seems final, simply because it is new. We are told that the +oldest inhabitants in Peru do not cease to be agitated by the +earthquakes, but they probably see beyond each shock, and reflect that +there are plenty more to come. + +To Dorothea, still in that time of youth when the eyes with their long +full lashes look out after their rain of tears unsoiled and unwearied +as a freshly opened passion-flower, that morning's parting with Will +Ladislaw seemed to be the close of their personal relations. He was +going away into the distance of unknown years, and if ever he came back +he would be another man. The actual state of his mind--his proud +resolve to give the lie beforehand to any suspicion that he would play +the needy adventurer seeking a rich woman--lay quite out of her +imagination, and she had interpreted all his behavior easily enough by +her supposition that Mr. Casaubon's codicil seemed to him, as it did to +her, a gross and cruel interdict on any active friendship between them. +Their young delight in speaking to each other, and saying what no one +else would care to hear, was forever ended, and become a treasure of +the past. For this very reason she dwelt on it without inward check. +That unique happiness too was dead, and in its shadowed silent chamber +she might vent the passionate grief which she herself wondered at. For +the first time she took down the miniature from the wall and kept it +before her, liking to blend the woman who had been too hardly judged +with the grandson whom her own heart and judgment defended. Can any +one who has rejoiced in woman's tenderness think it a reproach to her +that she took the little oval picture in her palm and made a bed for it +there, and leaned her cheek upon it, as if that would soothe the +creatures who had suffered unjust condemnation? She did not know then +that it was Love who had come to her briefly, as in a dream before +awaking, with the hues of morning on his wings--that it was Love to +whom she was sobbing her farewell as his image was banished by the +blameless rigor of irresistible day. She only felt that there was +something irrevocably amiss and lost in her lot, and her thoughts about +the future were the more readily shapen into resolve. Ardent souls, +ready to construct their coming lives, are apt to commit themselves to +the fulfilment of their own visions. + +One day that she went to Freshitt to fulfil her promise of staying all +night and seeing baby washed, Mrs. Cadwallader came to dine, the Rector +being gone on a fishing excursion. It was a warm evening, and even in +the delightful drawing-room, where the fine old turf sloped from the +open window towards a lilied pool and well-planted mounds, the heat was +enough to make Celia in her white muslin and light curls reflect with +pity on what Dodo must feel in her black dress and close cap. But this +was not until some episodes with baby were over, and had left her mind +at leisure. She had seated herself and taken up a fan for some time +before she said, in her quiet guttural-- + +"Dear Dodo, do throw off that cap. I am sure your dress must make you +feel ill." + +"I am so used to the cap--it has become a sort of shell," said +Dorothea, smiling. "I feel rather bare and exposed when it is off." + +"I must see you without it; it makes us all warm," said Celia, throwing +down her fan, and going to Dorothea. It was a pretty picture to see +this little lady in white muslin unfastening the widow's cap from her +more majestic sister, and tossing it on to a chair. Just as the coils +and braids of dark-brown hair had been set free, Sir James entered the +room. He looked at the released head, and said, "Ah!" in a tone of +satisfaction. + +"It was I who did it, James," said Celia. "Dodo need not make such a +slavery of her mourning; she need not wear that cap any more among her +friends." + +"My dear Celia," said Lady Chettam, "a widow must wear her mourning at +least a year." + +"Not if she marries again before the end of it," said Mrs. Cadwallader, +who had some pleasure in startling her good friend the Dowager. Sir +James was annoyed, and leaned forward to play with Celia's Maltese dog. + +"That is very rare, I hope," said Lady Chettam, in a tone intended to +guard against such events. "No friend of ours ever committed herself +in that way except Mrs. Beevor, and it was very painful to Lord +Grinsell when she did so. Her first husband was objectionable, which +made it the greater wonder. And severely she was punished for it. +They said Captain Beevor dragged her about by the hair, and held up +loaded pistols at her." + +"Oh, if she took the wrong man!" said Mrs. Cadwallader, who was in a +decidedly wicked mood. "Marriage is always bad then, first or second. +Priority is a poor recommendation in a husband if he has got no other. +I would rather have a good second husband than an indifferent first." + +"My dear, your clever tongue runs away with you," said Lady Chettam. +"I am sure you would be the last woman to marry again prematurely, if +our dear Rector were taken away." + +"Oh, I make no vows; it might be a necessary economy. It is lawful to +marry again, I suppose; else we might as well be Hindoos instead of +Christians. Of course if a woman accepts the wrong man, she must take +the consequences, and one who does it twice over deserves her fate. +But if she can marry blood, beauty, and bravery--the sooner the +better." + +"I think the subject of our conversation is very ill-chosen," said Sir +James, with a look of disgust. "Suppose we change it." + +"Not on my account, Sir James," said Dorothea, determined not to lose +the opportunity of freeing herself from certain oblique references to +excellent matches. "If you are speaking on my behalf, I can assure you +that no question can be more indifferent and impersonal to me than +second marriage. It is no more to me than if you talked of women going +fox-hunting: whether it is admirable in them or not, I shall not follow +them. Pray let Mrs. Cadwallader amuse herself on that subject as much +as on any other." + +"My dear Mrs. Casaubon," said Lady Chettam, in her stateliest way, "you +do not, I hope, think there was any allusion to you in my mentioning +Mrs. Beevor. It was only an instance that occurred to me. She was +step-daughter to Lord Grinsell: he married Mrs. Teveroy for his second +wife. There could be no possible allusion to you." + +"Oh no," said Celia. "Nobody chose the subject; it all came out of +Dodo's cap. Mrs. Cadwallader only said what was quite true. A woman +could not be married in a widow's cap, James." + +"Hush, my dear!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "I will not offend again. I +will not even refer to Dido or Zenobia. Only what are we to talk +about? I, for my part, object to the discussion of Human Nature, +because that is the nature of rectors' wives." + +Later in the evening, after Mrs. Cadwallader was gone, Celia said +privately to Dorothea, "Really, Dodo, taking your cap off made you like +yourself again in more ways than one. You spoke up just as you used to +do, when anything was said to displease you. But I could hardly make +out whether it was James that you thought wrong, or Mrs. Cadwallader." + +"Neither," said Dorothea. "James spoke out of delicacy to me, but he +was mistaken in supposing that I minded what Mrs. Cadwallader said. I +should only mind if there were a law obliging me to take any piece of +blood and beauty that she or anybody else recommended." + +"But you know, Dodo, if you ever did marry, it would be all the better +to have blood and beauty," said Celia, reflecting that Mr. Casaubon had +not been richly endowed with those gifts, and that it would be well to +caution Dorothea in time. + +"Don't be anxious, Kitty; I have quite other thoughts about my life. I +shall never marry again," said Dorothea, touching her sister's chin, +and looking at her with indulgent affection. Celia was nursing her +baby, and Dorothea had come to say good-night to her. + +"Really--quite?" said Celia. "Not anybody at all--if he were very +wonderful indeed?" + +Dorothea shook her head slowly. "Not anybody at all. I have +delightful plans. I should like to take a great deal of land, and +drain it, and make a little colony, where everybody should work, and +all the work should be done well. I should know every one of the +people and be their friend. I am going to have great consultations +with Mr. Garth: he can tell me almost everything I want to know." + +"Then you _will_ be happy, if you have a plan, Dodo?" said Celia. +"Perhaps little Arthur will like plans when he grows up, and then he +can help you." + +Sir James was informed that same night that Dorothea was really quite +set against marrying anybody at all, and was going to take to "all +sorts of plans," just like what she used to have. Sir James made no +remark. To his secret feeling there was something repulsive in a +woman's second marriage, and no match would prevent him from feeling it +a sort of desecration for Dorothea. He was aware that the world would +regard such a sentiment as preposterous, especially in relation to a +woman of one-and-twenty; the practice of "the world" being to treat of +a young widow's second marriage as certain and probably near, and to +smile with meaning if the widow acts accordingly. But if Dorothea did +choose to espouse her solitude, he felt that the resolution would well +become her. + + + +CHAPTER LVI. + + "How happy is he born and taught + That serveth not another's will; + Whose armor is his honest thought, + And simple truth his only skill! + . . . . . . . + This man is freed from servile bands + Of hope to rise or fear to fall; + Lord of himself though not of lands; + And having nothing yet hath all." + --SIR HENRY WOTTON. + + +Dorothea's confidence in Caleb Garth's knowledge, which had begun on +her hearing that he approved of her cottages, had grown fast during her +stay at Freshitt, Sir James having induced her to take rides over the +two estates in company with himself and Caleb, who quite returned her +admiration, and told his wife that Mrs. Casaubon had a head for +business most uncommon in a woman. It must be remembered that by +"business" Caleb never meant money transactions, but the skilful +application of labor. + +"Most uncommon!" repeated Caleb. "She said a thing I often used to +think myself when I was a lad:--'Mr. Garth, I should like to feel, if I +lived to be old, that I had improved a great piece of land and built a +great many good cottages, because the work is of a healthy kind while +it is being done, and after it is done, men are the better for it.' +Those were the very words: she sees into things in that way." + +"But womanly, I hope," said Mrs. Garth, half suspecting that Mrs. +Casaubon might not hold the true principle of subordination. + +"Oh, you can't think!" said Caleb, shaking his head. "You would like +to hear her speak, Susan. She speaks in such plain words, and a voice +like music. Bless me! it reminds me of bits in the 'Messiah'--'and +straightway there appeared a multitude of the heavenly host, praising +God and saying;' it has a tone with it that satisfies your ear." + +Caleb was very fond of music, and when he could afford it went to hear +an oratorio that came within his reach, returning from it with a +profound reverence for this mighty structure of tones, which made him +sit meditatively, looking on the floor and throwing much unutterable +language into his outstretched hands. + +With this good understanding between them, it was natural that Dorothea +asked Mr. Garth to undertake any business connected with the three +farms and the numerous tenements attached to Lowick Manor; indeed, his +expectation of getting work for two was being fast fulfilled. As he +said, "Business breeds." And one form of business which was beginning +to breed just then was the construction of railways. A projected line +was to run through Lowick parish where the cattle had hitherto grazed +in a peace unbroken by astonishment; and thus it happened that the +infant struggles of the railway system entered into the affairs of +Caleb Garth, and determined the course of this history with regard to +two persons who were dear to him. The submarine railway may have its +difficulties; but the bed of the sea is not divided among various +landed proprietors with claims for damages not only measurable but +sentimental. In the hundred to which Middlemarch belonged railways +were as exciting a topic as the Reform Bill or the imminent horrors of +Cholera, and those who held the most decided views on the subject were +women and landholders. Women both old and young regarded travelling by +steam as presumptuous and dangerous, and argued against it by saying +that nothing should induce them to get into a railway carriage; while +proprietors, differing from each other in their arguments as much as +Mr. Solomon Featherstone differed from Lord Medlicote, were yet +unanimous in the opinion that in selling land, whether to the Enemy of +mankind or to a company obliged to purchase, these pernicious agencies +must be made to pay a very high price to landowners for permission to +injure mankind. + +But the slower wits, such as Mr. Solomon and Mrs. Waule, who both +occupied land of their own, took a long time to arrive at this +conclusion, their minds halting at the vivid conception of what it +would be to cut the Big Pasture in two, and turn it into three-cornered +bits, which would be "nohow;" while accommodation-bridges and high +payments were remote and incredible. + +"The cows will all cast their calves, brother," said Mrs. Waule, in a +tone of deep melancholy, "if the railway comes across the Near Close; +and I shouldn't wonder at the mare too, if she was in foal. It's a +poor tale if a widow's property is to be spaded away, and the law say +nothing to it. What's to hinder 'em from cutting right and left if +they begin? It's well known, _I_ can't fight." + +"The best way would be to say nothing, and set somebody on to send 'em +away with a flea in their ear, when they came spying and measuring," +said Solomon. "Folks did that about Brassing, by what I can +understand. It's all a pretence, if the truth was known, about their +being forced to take one way. Let 'em go cutting in another parish. +And I don't believe in any pay to make amends for bringing a lot of +ruffians to trample your crops. Where's a company's pocket?" + +"Brother Peter, God forgive him, got money out of a company," said Mrs. +Waule. "But that was for the manganese. That wasn't for railways to +blow you to pieces right and left." + +"Well, there's this to be said, Jane," Mr. Solomon concluded, lowering +his voice in a cautious manner--"the more spokes we put in their wheel, +the more they'll pay us to let 'em go on, if they must come whether or +not." + +This reasoning of Mr. Solomon's was perhaps less thorough than he +imagined, his cunning bearing about the same relation to the course of +railways as the cunning of a diplomatist bears to the general chill or +catarrh of the solar system. But he set about acting on his views in a +thoroughly diplomatic manner, by stimulating suspicion. His side of +Lowick was the most remote from the village, and the houses of the +laboring people were either lone cottages or were collected in a hamlet +called Frick, where a water-mill and some stone-pits made a little +centre of slow, heavy-shouldered industry. + +In the absence of any precise idea as to what railways were, public +opinion in Frick was against them; for the human mind in that grassy +corner had not the proverbial tendency to admire the unknown, holding +rather that it was likely to be against the poor man, and that +suspicion was the only wise attitude with regard to it. Even the rumor +of Reform had not yet excited any millennial expectations in Frick, +there being no definite promise in it, as of gratuitous grains to +fatten Hiram Ford's pig, or of a publican at the "Weights and Scales" +who would brew beer for nothing, or of an offer on the part of the +three neighboring farmers to raise wages during winter. And without +distinct good of this kind in its promises, Reform seemed on a footing +with the bragging of pedlers, which was a hint for distrust to every +knowing person. The men of Frick were not ill-fed, and were less given +to fanaticism than to a strong muscular suspicion; less inclined to +believe that they were peculiarly cared for by heaven, than to regard +heaven itself as rather disposed to take them in--a disposition +observable in the weather. + +Thus the mind of Frick was exactly of the sort for Mr. Solomon +Featherstone to work upon, he having more plenteous ideas of the same +order, with a suspicion of heaven and earth which was better fed and +more entirely at leisure. Solomon was overseer of the roads at that +time, and on his slow-paced cob often took his rounds by Frick to look +at the workmen getting the stones there, pausing with a mysterious +deliberation, which might have misled you into supposing that he had +some other reason for staying than the mere want of impulse to move. +After looking for a long while at any work that was going on, he would +raise his eyes a little and look at the horizon; finally he would shake +his bridle, touch his horse with the whip, and get it to move slowly +onward. The hour-hand of a clock was quick by comparison with Mr. +Solomon, who had an agreeable sense that he could afford to be slow. +He was in the habit of pausing for a cautious, vaguely designing chat +with every hedger or ditcher on his way, and was especially willing to +listen even to news which he had heard before, feeling himself at an +advantage over all narrators in partially disbelieving them. One day, +however, he got into a dialogue with Hiram Ford, a wagoner, in which he +himself contributed information. He wished to know whether Hiram had +seen fellows with staves and instruments spying about: they called +themselves railroad people, but there was no telling what they were or +what they meant to do. The least they pretended was that they were +going to cut Lowick Parish into sixes and sevens. + +"Why, there'll be no stirrin' from one pla-ace to another," said Hiram, +thinking of his wagon and horses. + +"Not a bit," said Mr. Solomon. "And cutting up fine land such as this +parish! Let 'em go into Tipton, say I. But there's no knowing what +there is at the bottom of it. Traffic is what they put for'ard; but +it's to do harm to the land and the poor man in the long-run." + +"Why, they're Lunnon chaps, I reckon," said Hiram, who had a dim notion +of London as a centre of hostility to the country. + +"Ay, to be sure. And in some parts against Brassing, by what I've +heard say, the folks fell on 'em when they were spying, and broke their +peep-holes as they carry, and drove 'em away, so as they knew better +than come again." + +"It war good foon, I'd be bound," said Hiram, whose fun was much +restricted by circumstances. + +"Well, I wouldn't meddle with 'em myself," said Solomon. "But some say +this country's seen its best days, and the sign is, as it's being +overrun with these fellows trampling right and left, and wanting to cut +it up into railways; and all for the big traffic to swallow up the +little, so as there shan't be a team left on the land, nor a whip to +crack." + +"I'll crack _my_ whip about their ear'n, afore they bring it to that, +though," said Hiram, while Mr. Solomon, shaking his bridle, moved +onward. + +Nettle-seed needs no digging. The ruin of this countryside by +railroads was discussed, not only at the "Weights and Scales," but in +the hay-field, where the muster of working hands gave opportunities for +talk such as were rarely had through the rural year. + +One morning, not long after that interview between Mr. Farebrother and +Mary Garth, in which she confessed to him her feeling for Fred Vincy, +it happened that her father had some business which took him to +Yoddrell's farm in the direction of Frick: it was to measure and value +an outlying piece of land belonging to Lowick Manor, which Caleb +expected to dispose of advantageously for Dorothea (it must be +confessed that his bias was towards getting the best possible terms +from railroad companies). He put up his gig at Yoddrell's, and in +walking with his assistant and measuring-chain to the scene of his +work, he encountered the party of the company's agents, who were +adjusting their spirit-level. After a little chat he left them, +observing that by-and-by they would reach him again where he was going +to measure. It was one of those gray mornings after light rains, which +become delicious about twelve o'clock, when the clouds part a little, +and the scent of the earth is sweet along the lanes and by the +hedgerows. + +The scent would have been sweeter to Fred Vincy, who was coming along +the lanes on horseback, if his mind had not been worried by +unsuccessful efforts to imagine what he was to do, with his father on +one side expecting him straightway to enter the Church, with Mary on +the other threatening to forsake him if he did enter it, and with the +working-day world showing no eager need whatever of a young gentleman +without capital and generally unskilled. It was the harder to Fred's +disposition because his father, satisfied that he was no longer +rebellious, was in good humor with him, and had sent him on this +pleasant ride to see after some greyhounds. Even when he had fixed on +what he should do, there would be the task of telling his father. But +it must be admitted that the fixing, which had to come first, was the +more difficult task:--what secular avocation on earth was there for a +young man (whose friends could not get him an "appointment") which was +at once gentlemanly, lucrative, and to be followed without special +knowledge? Riding along the lanes by Frick in this mood, and +slackening his pace while he reflected whether he should venture to go +round by Lowick Parsonage to call on Mary, he could see over the hedges +from one field to another. Suddenly a noise roused his attention, and +on the far side of a field on his left hand he could see six or seven +men in smock-frocks with hay-forks in their hands making an offensive +approach towards the four railway agents who were facing them, while +Caleb Garth and his assistant were hastening across the field to join +the threatened group. Fred, delayed a few moments by having to find +the gate, could not gallop up to the spot before the party in +smock-frocks, whose work of turning the hay had not been too pressing +after swallowing their mid-day beer, were driving the men in coats +before them with their hay-forks; while Caleb Garth's assistant, a lad +of seventeen, who had snatched up the spirit-level at Caleb's order, +had been knocked down and seemed to be lying helpless. The coated men +had the advantage as runners, and Fred covered their retreat by getting +in front of the smock-frocks and charging them suddenly enough to throw +their chase into confusion. "What do you confounded fools mean?" +shouted Fred, pursuing the divided group in a zigzag, and cutting right +and left with his whip. "I'll swear to every one of you before the +magistrate. You've knocked the lad down and killed him, for what I +know. You'll every one of you be hanged at the next assizes, if you +don't mind," said Fred, who afterwards laughed heartily as he +remembered his own phrases. + +The laborers had been driven through the gate-way into their hay-field, +and Fred had checked his horse, when Hiram Ford, observing himself at a +safe challenging distance, turned back and shouted a defiance which he +did not know to be Homeric. + +"Yo're a coward, yo are. Yo git off your horse, young measter, and +I'll have a round wi' ye, I wull. Yo daredn't come on wi'out your hoss +an' whip. I'd soon knock the breath out on ye, I would." + +"Wait a minute, and I'll come back presently, and have a round with you +all in turn, if you like," said Fred, who felt confidence in his power +of boxing with his dearly beloved brethren. But just now he wanted to +hasten back to Caleb and the prostrate youth. + +The lad's ankle was strained, and he was in much pain from it, but he +was no further hurt, and Fred placed him on the horse that he might +ride to Yoddrell's and be taken care of there. + +"Let them put the horse in the stable, and tell the surveyors they can +come back for their traps," said Fred. "The ground is clear now." + +"No, no," said Caleb, "here's a breakage. They'll have to give up for +to-day, and it will be as well. Here, take the things before you on +the horse, Tom. They'll see you coming, and they'll turn back." + +"I'm glad I happened to be here at the right moment, Mr. Garth," said +Fred, as Tom rode away. "No knowing what might have happened if the +cavalry had not come up in time." + +"Ay, ay, it was lucky," said Caleb, speaking rather absently, and +looking towards the spot where he had been at work at the moment of +interruption. "But--deuce take it--this is what comes of men being +fools--I'm hindered of my day's work. I can't get along without +somebody to help me with the measuring-chain. However!" He was +beginning to move towards the spot with a look of vexation, as if he +had forgotten Fred's presence, but suddenly he turned round and said +quickly, "What have you got to do to-day, young fellow?" + +"Nothing, Mr. Garth. I'll help you with pleasure--can I?" said Fred, +with a sense that he should be courting Mary when he was helping her +father. + +"Well, you mustn't mind stooping and getting hot." + +"I don't mind anything. Only I want to go first and have a round with +that hulky fellow who turned to challenge me. It would be a good +lesson for him. I shall not be five minutes." + +"Nonsense!" said Caleb, with his most peremptory intonation. "I shall +go and speak to the men myself. It's all ignorance. Somebody has been +telling them lies. The poor fools don't know any better." + +"I shall go with you, then," said Fred. + +"No, no; stay where you are. I don't want your young blood. I can +take care of myself." + +Caleb was a powerful man and knew little of any fear except the fear of +hurting others and the fear of having to speechify. But he felt it his +duty at this moment to try and give a little harangue. There was a +striking mixture in him--which came from his having always been a +hard-working man himself--of rigorous notions about workmen and +practical indulgence towards them. To do a good day's work and to do +it well, he held to be part of their welfare, as it was the chief part +of his own happiness; but he had a strong sense of fellowship with +them. When he advanced towards the laborers they had not gone to work +again, but were standing in that form of rural grouping which consists +in each turning a shoulder towards the other, at a distance of two or +three yards. They looked rather sulkily at Caleb, who walked quickly +with one hand in his pocket and the other thrust between the buttons of +his waistcoat, and had his every-day mild air when he paused among them. + +"Why, my lads, how's this?" he began, taking as usual to brief phrases, +which seemed pregnant to himself, because he had many thoughts lying +under them, like the abundant roots of a plant that just manages to +peep above the water. "How came you to make such a mistake as this? +Somebody has been telling you lies. You thought those men up there +wanted to do mischief." + +"Aw!" was the answer, dropped at intervals by each according to his +degree of unreadiness. + +"Nonsense! No such thing! They're looking out to see which way the +railroad is to take. Now, my lads, you can't hinder the railroad: it +will be made whether you like it or not. And if you go fighting +against it, you'll get yourselves into trouble. The law gives those +men leave to come here on the land. The owner has nothing to say +against it, and if you meddle with them you'll have to do with the +constable and Justice Blakesley, and with the handcuffs and Middlemarch +jail. And you might be in for it now, if anybody informed against you." + +Caleb paused here, and perhaps the greatest orator could not have +chosen either his pause or his images better for the occasion. + +"But come, you didn't mean any harm. Somebody told you the railroad +was a bad thing. That was a lie. It may do a bit of harm here and +there, to this and to that; and so does the sun in heaven. But the +railway's a good thing." + +"Aw! good for the big folks to make money out on," said old Timothy +Cooper, who had stayed behind turning his hay while the others had been +gone on their spree;--"I'n seen lots o' things turn up sin' I war a +young un--the war an' the peace, and the canells, an' the oald King +George, an' the Regen', an' the new King George, an' the new un as has +got a new ne-ame--an' it's been all aloike to the poor mon. What's the +canells been t' him? They'n brought him neyther me-at nor be-acon, nor +wage to lay by, if he didn't save it wi' clemmin' his own inside. +Times ha' got wusser for him sin' I war a young un. An' so it'll be +wi' the railroads. They'll on'y leave the poor mon furder behind. But +them are fools as meddle, and so I told the chaps here. This is the +big folks's world, this is. But yo're for the big folks, Muster Garth, +yo are." + +Timothy was a wiry old laborer, of a type lingering in those times--who +had his savings in a stocking-foot, lived in a lone cottage, and was +not to be wrought on by any oratory, having as little of the feudal +spirit, and believing as little, as if he had not been totally +unacquainted with the Age of Reason and the Rights of Man. Caleb was +in a difficulty known to any person attempting in dark times and +unassisted by miracle to reason with rustics who are in possession of +an undeniable truth which they know through a hard process of feeling, +and can let it fall like a giant's club on your neatly carved argument +for a social benefit which they do not feel. Caleb had no cant at +command, even if he could have chosen to use it; and he had been +accustomed to meet all such difficulties in no other way than by doing +his "business" faithfully. He answered-- + +"If you don't think well of me, Tim, never mind; that's neither here +nor there now. Things may be bad for the poor man--bad they are; but I +want the lads here not to do what will make things worse for +themselves. The cattle may have a heavy load, but it won't help 'em to +throw it over into the roadside pit, when it's partly their own fodder." + +"We war on'y for a bit o' foon," said Hiram, who was beginning to see +consequences. "That war all we war arter." + +"Well, promise me not to meddle again, and I'll see that nobody informs +against you." + +"I'n ne'er meddled, an' I'n no call to promise," said Timothy. + +"No, but the rest. Come, I'm as hard at work as any of you to-day, and +I can't spare much time. Say you'll be quiet without the constable." + +"Aw, we wooant meddle--they may do as they loike for oos"--were the +forms in which Caleb got his pledges; and then he hastened back to +Fred, who had followed him, and watched him in the gateway. + +They went to work, and Fred helped vigorously. His spirits had risen, +and he heartily enjoyed a good slip in the moist earth under the +hedgerow, which soiled his perfect summer trousers. Was it his +successful onset which had elated him, or the satisfaction of helping +Mary's father? Something more. The accidents of the morning had +helped his frustrated imagination to shape an employment for himself +which had several attractions. I am not sure that certain fibres in +Mr. Garth's mind had not resumed their old vibration towards the very +end which now revealed itself to Fred. For the effective accident is +but the touch of fire where there is oil and tow; and it always +appeared to Fred that the railway brought the needed touch. But they +went on in silence except when their business demanded speech. At +last, when they had finished and were walking away, Mr. Garth said-- + +"A young fellow needn't be a B. A. to do this sort of work, eh, Fred?" + +"I wish I had taken to it before I had thought of being a B. A.," said +Fred. He paused a moment, and then added, more hesitatingly, "Do you +think I am too old to learn your business, Mr. Garth?" + +"My business is of many sorts, my boy," said Mr. Garth, smiling. "A +good deal of what I know can only come from experience: you can't learn +it off as you learn things out of a book. But you are young enough to +lay a foundation yet." Caleb pronounced the last sentence +emphatically, but paused in some uncertainty. He had been under the +impression lately that Fred had made up his mind to enter the Church. + +"You do think I could do some good at it, if I were to try?" said Fred, +more eagerly. + +"That depends," said Caleb, turning his head on one side and lowering +his voice, with the air of a man who felt himself to be saying +something deeply religious. "You must be sure of two things: you must +love your work, and not be always looking over the edge of it, wanting +your play to begin. And the other is, you must not be ashamed of your +work, and think it would be more honorable to you to be doing something +else. You must have a pride in your own work and in learning to do it +well, and not be always saying, There's this and there's that--if I had +this or that to do, I might make something of it. No matter what a man +is--I wouldn't give twopence for him"--here Caleb's mouth looked +bitter, and he snapped his fingers--"whether he was the prime minister +or the rick-thatcher, if he didn't do well what he undertook to do." + +"I can never feel that I should do that in being a clergyman," said +Fred, meaning to take a step in argument. + +"Then let it alone, my boy," said Caleb, abruptly, "else you'll never +be easy. Or, if you _are_ easy, you'll be a poor stick." + +"That is very nearly what Mary thinks about it," said Fred, coloring. +"I think you must know what I feel for Mary, Mr. Garth: I hope it does +not displease you that I have always loved her better than any one +else, and that I shall never love any one as I love her." + +The expression of Caleb's face was visibly softening while Fred spoke. +But he swung his head with a solemn slowness, and said-- + +"That makes things more serious, Fred, if you want to take Mary's +happiness into your keeping." + +"I know that, Mr. Garth," said Fred, eagerly, "and I would do anything +for _her_. She says she will never have me if I go into the Church; +and I shall be the most miserable devil in the world if I lose all hope +of Mary. Really, if I could get some other profession, +business--anything that I am at all fit for, I would work hard, I would +deserve your good opinion. I should like to have to do with outdoor +things. I know a good deal about land and cattle already. I used to +believe, you know--though you will think me rather foolish for it--that +I should have land of my own. I am sure knowledge of that sort would +come easily to me, especially if I could be under you in any way." + +"Softly, my boy," said Caleb, having the image of "Susan" before his +eyes. "What have you said to your father about all this?" + +"Nothing, yet; but I must tell him. I am only waiting to know what I +can do instead of entering the Church. I am very sorry to disappoint +him, but a man ought to be allowed to judge for himself when he is +four-and-twenty. How could I know when I was fifteen, what it would be +right for me to do now? My education was a mistake." + +"But hearken to this, Fred," said Caleb. "Are you sure Mary is fond of +you, or would ever have you?" + +"I asked Mr. Farebrother to talk to her, because she had forbidden +me--I didn't know what else to do," said Fred, apologetically. "And he +says that I have every reason to hope, if I can put myself in an +honorable position--I mean, out of the Church. I dare say you think it +unwarrantable in me, Mr. Garth, to be troubling you and obtruding my +own wishes about Mary, before I have done anything at all for myself. +Of course I have not the least claim--indeed, I have already a debt to +you which will never be discharged, even when I have been, able to pay +it in the shape of money." + +"Yes, my boy, you have a claim," said Caleb, with much feeling in his +voice. "The young ones have always a claim on the old to help them +forward. I was young myself once and had to do without much help; but +help would have been welcome to me, if it had been only for the +fellow-feeling's sake. But I must consider. Come to me to-morrow at +the office, at nine o'clock. At the office, mind." + +Mr. Garth would take no important step without consulting Susan, but it +must be confessed that before he reached home he had taken his +resolution. With regard to a large number of matters about which other +men are decided or obstinate, he was the most easily manageable man in +the world. He never knew what meat he would choose, and if Susan had +said that they ought to live in a four-roomed cottage, in order to +save, he would have said, "Let us go," without inquiring into details. +But where Caleb's feeling and judgment strongly pronounced, he was a +ruler; and in spite of his mildness and timidity in reproving, every +one about him knew that on the exceptional occasions when he chose, he +was absolute. He never, indeed, chose to be absolute except on some +one else's behalf. On ninety-nine points Mrs. Garth decided, but on +the hundredth she was often aware that she would have to perform the +singularly difficult task of carrying out her own principle, and to +make herself subordinate. + +"It is come round as I thought, Susan," said Caleb, when they were +seated alone in the evening. He had already narrated the adventure +which had brought about Fred's sharing in his work, but had kept back +the further result. "The children _are_ fond of each other--I mean, +Fred and Mary." + +Mrs. Garth laid her work on her knee, and fixed her penetrating eyes +anxiously on her husband. + +"After we'd done our work, Fred poured it all out to me. He can't bear +to be a clergyman, and Mary says she won't have him if he is one; and +the lad would like to be under me and give his mind to business. And +I've determined to take him and make a man of him." + +"Caleb!" said Mrs. Garth, in a deep contralto, expressive of resigned +astonishment. + +"It's a fine thing to do," said Mr. Garth, settling himself firmly +against the back of his chair, and grasping the elbows. "I shall have +trouble with him, but I think I shall carry it through. The lad loves +Mary, and a true love for a good woman is a great thing, Susan. It +shapes many a rough fellow." + +"Has Mary spoken to you on the subject?" said Mrs Garth, secretly a +little hurt that she had to be informed on it herself. + +"Not a word. I asked her about Fred once; I gave her a bit of a +warning. But she assured me she would never marry an idle +self-indulgent man--nothing since. But it seems Fred set on Mr. +Farebrother to talk to her, because she had forbidden him to speak +himself, and Mr. Farebrother has found out that she is fond of Fred, +but says he must not be a clergyman. Fred's heart is fixed on Mary, +that I can see: it gives me a good opinion of the lad--and we always +liked him, Susan." + +"It is a pity for Mary, I think," said Mrs. Garth. + +"Why--a pity?" + +"Because, Caleb, she might have had a man who is worth twenty Fred +Vincy's." + +"Ah?" said Caleb, with surprise. + +"I firmly believe that Mr. Farebrother is attached to her, and meant to +make her an offer; but of course, now that Fred has used him as an +envoy, there is an end to that better prospect." There was a severe +precision in Mrs. Garth's utterance. She was vexed and disappointed, +but she was bent on abstaining from useless words. + +Caleb was silent a few moments under a conflict of feelings. He looked +at the floor and moved his head and hands in accompaniment to some +inward argumentation. At last he said-- + +"That would have made me very proud and happy, Susan, and I should have +been glad for your sake. I've always felt that your belongings have +never been on a level with you. But you took me, though I was a plain +man." + +"I took the best and cleverest man I had ever known," said Mrs. Garth, +convinced that _she_ would never have loved any one who came short of +that mark. + +"Well, perhaps others thought you might have done better. But it would +have been worse for me. And that is what touches me close about Fred. +The lad is good at bottom, and clever enough to do, if he's put in the +right way; and he loves and honors my daughter beyond anything, and she +has given him a sort of promise according to what he turns out. I say, +that young man's soul is in my hand; and I'll do the best I can for +him, so help me God! It's my duty, Susan." + +Mrs. Garth was not given to tears, but there was a large one rolling +down her face before her husband had finished. It came from the +pressure of various feelings, in which there was much affection and +some vexation. She wiped it away quickly, saying-- + +"Few men besides you would think it a duty to add to their anxieties in +that way, Caleb." + +"That signifies nothing--what other men would think. I've got a clear +feeling inside me, and that I shall follow; and I hope your heart will +go with me, Susan, in making everything as light as can be to Mary, +poor child." + +Caleb, leaning back in his chair, looked with anxious appeal towards +his wife. She rose and kissed him, saying, "God bless you, Caleb! Our +children have a good father." + +But she went out and had a hearty cry to make up for the suppression of +her words. She felt sure that her husband's conduct would be +misunderstood, and about Fred she was rational and unhopeful. Which +would turn out to have the more foresight in it--her rationality or +Caleb's ardent generosity? + +When Fred went to the office the next morning, there was a test to be +gone through which he was not prepared for. + +"Now Fred," said Caleb, "you will have some desk-work. I have always +done a good deal of writing myself, but I can't do without help, and as +I want you to understand the accounts and get the values into your +head, I mean to do without another clerk. So you must buckle to. How +are you at writing and arithmetic?" + +Fred felt an awkward movement of the heart; he had not thought of +desk-work; but he was in a resolute mood, and not going to shrink. +"I'm not afraid of arithmetic, Mr. Garth: it always came easily to me. +I think you know my writing." + +"Let us see," said Caleb, taking up a pen, examining it carefully and +handing it, well dipped, to Fred with a sheet of ruled paper. "Copy me +a line or two of that valuation, with the figures at the end." + +At that time the opinion existed that it was beneath a gentleman to +write legibly, or with a hand in the least suitable to a clerk. Fred +wrote the lines demanded in a hand as gentlemanly as that of any +viscount or bishop of the day: the vowels were all alike and the +consonants only distinguishable as turning up or down, the strokes had +a blotted solidity and the letters disdained to keep the line--in +short, it was a manuscript of that venerable kind easy to interpret +when you know beforehand what the writer means. + +As Caleb looked on, his visage showed a growing depression, but when +Fred handed him the paper he gave something like a snarl, and rapped +the paper passionately with the back of his hand. Bad work like this +dispelled all Caleb's mildness. + +"The deuce!" he exclaimed, snarlingly. "To think that this is a +country where a man's education may cost hundreds and hundreds, and it +turns you out this!" Then in a more pathetic tone, pushing up his +spectacles and looking at the unfortunate scribe, "The Lord have mercy +on us, Fred, I can't put up with this!" + +"What can I do, Mr. Garth?" said Fred, whose spirits had sunk very low, +not only at the estimate of his handwriting, but at the vision of +himself as liable to be ranked with office clerks. + +"Do? Why, you must learn to form your letters and keep the line. +What's the use of writing at all if nobody can understand it?" asked +Caleb, energetically, quite preoccupied with the bad quality of the +work. "Is there so little business in the world that you must be +sending puzzles over the country? But that's the way people are +brought up. I should lose no end of time with the letters some people +send me, if Susan did not make them out for me. It's disgusting." Here +Caleb tossed the paper from him. + +Any stranger peeping into the office at that moment might have wondered +what was the drama between the indignant man of business, and the +fine-looking young fellow whose blond complexion was getting rather +patchy as he bit his lip with mortification. Fred was struggling with +many thoughts. Mr. Garth had been so kind and encouraging at the +beginning of their interview, that gratitude and hopefulness had been +at a high pitch, and the downfall was proportionate. He had not +thought of desk-work--in fact, like the majority of young gentlemen, he +wanted an occupation which should be free from disagreeables. I cannot +tell what might have been the consequences if he had not distinctly +promised himself that he would go to Lowick to see Mary and tell her +that he was engaged to work under her father. He did not like to +disappoint himself there. + +"I am very sorry," were all the words that he could muster. But Mr. +Garth was already relenting. + +"We must make the best of it, Fred," he began, with a return to his +usual quiet tone. "Every man can learn to write. I taught myself. Go +at it with a will, and sit up at night if the day-time isn't enough. +We'll be patient, my boy. Callum shall go on with the books for a bit, +while you are learning. But now I must be off," said Caleb, rising. +"You must let your father know our agreement. You'll save me Callum's +salary, you know, when you can write; and I can afford to give you +eighty pounds for the first year, and more after." + +When Fred made the necessary disclosure to his parents, the relative +effect on the two was a surprise which entered very deeply into his +memory. He went straight from Mr. Garth's office to the warehouse, +rightly feeling that the most respectful way in which he could behave +to his father was to make the painful communication as gravely and +formally as possible. Moreover, the decision would be more certainly +understood to be final, if the interview took place in his father's +gravest hours, which were always those spent in his private room at the +warehouse. + +Fred entered on the subject directly, and declared briefly what he had +done and was resolved to do, expressing at the end his regret that he +should be the cause of disappointment to his father, and taking the +blame on his own deficiencies. The regret was genuine, and inspired +Fred with strong, simple words. + +Mr. Vincy listened in profound surprise without uttering even an +exclamation, a silence which in his impatient temperament was a sign of +unusual emotion. He had not been in good spirits about trade that +morning, and the slight bitterness in his lips grew intense as he +listened. When Fred had ended, there was a pause of nearly a minute, +during which Mr. Vincy replaced a book in his desk and turned the key +emphatically. Then he looked at his son steadily, and said-- + +"So you've made up your mind at last, sir?" + +"Yes, father." + +"Very well; stick to it. I've no more to say. You've thrown away your +education, and gone down a step in life, when I had given you the means +of rising, that's all." + +"I am very sorry that we differ, father. I think I can be quite as +much of a gentleman at the work I have undertaken, as if I had been a +curate. But I am grateful to you for wishing to do the best for me." + +"Very well; I have no more to say. I wash my hands of you. I only +hope, when you have a son of your own he will make a better return for +the pains you spend on him." + +This was very cutting to Fred. His father was using that unfair +advantage possessed by us all when we are in a pathetic situation and +see our own past as if it were simply part of the pathos. In reality, +Mr. Vincy's wishes about his son had had a great deal of pride, +inconsiderateness, and egoistic folly in them. But still the +disappointed father held a strong lever; and Fred felt as if he were +being banished with a malediction. + +"I hope you will not object to my remaining at home, sir?" he said, +after rising to go; "I shall have a sufficient salary to pay for my +board, as of course I should wish to do." + +"Board be hanged!" said Mr. Vincy, recovering himself in his disgust at +the notion that Fred's keep would be missed at his table. "Of course +your mother will want you to stay. But I shall keep no horse for you, +you understand; and you will pay your own tailor. You will do with a +suit or two less, I fancy, when you have to pay for 'em." + +Fred lingered; there was still something to be said. At last it came. + +"I hope you will shake hands with me, father, and forgive me the +vexation I have caused you." + +Mr. Vincy from his chair threw a quick glance upward at his son, who +had advanced near to him, and then gave his hand, saying hurriedly, +"Yes, yes, let us say no more." + +Fred went through much more narrative and explanation with his mother, +but she was inconsolable, having before her eyes what perhaps her +husband had never thought of, the certainty that Fred would marry Mary +Garth, that her life would henceforth be spoiled by a perpetual +infusion of Garths and their ways, and that her darling boy, with his +beautiful face and stylish air "beyond anybody else's son in +Middlemarch," would be sure to get like that family in plainness of +appearance and carelessness about his clothes. To her it seemed that +there was a Garth conspiracy to get possession of the desirable Fred, +but she dared not enlarge on this opinion, because a slight hint of it +had made him "fly out" at her as he had never done before. Her temper +was too sweet for her to show any anger, but she felt that her +happiness had received a bruise, and for several days merely to look at +Fred made her cry a little as if he were the subject of some baleful +prophecy. Perhaps she was the slower to recover her usual cheerfulness +because Fred had warned her that she must not reopen the sore question +with his father, who had accepted his decision and forgiven him. If +her husband had been vehement against Fred, she would have been urged +into defence of her darling. It was the end of the fourth day when Mr. +Vincy said to her-- + +"Come, Lucy, my dear, don't be so down-hearted. You always have spoiled +the boy, and you must go on spoiling him." + +"Nothing ever did cut me so before, Vincy," said the wife, her fair +throat and chin beginning to tremble again, "only his illness." + +"Pooh, pooh, never mind! We must expect to have trouble with our +children. Don't make it worse by letting me see you out of spirits." + +"Well, I won't," said Mrs. Vincy, roused by this appeal and adjusting +herself with a little shake as of a bird which lays down its ruffled +plumage. + +"It won't do to begin making a fuss about one," said Mr. Vincy, wishing +to combine a little grumbling with domestic cheerfulness. "There's +Rosamond as well as Fred." + +"Yes, poor thing. I'm sure I felt for her being disappointed of her +baby; but she got over it nicely." + +"Baby, pooh! I can see Lydgate is making a mess of his practice, and +getting into debt too, by what I hear. I shall have Rosamond coming to +me with a pretty tale one of these days. But they'll get no money from +me, I know. Let _his_ family help him. I never did like that +marriage. But it's no use talking. Ring the bell for lemons, and +don't look dull any more, Lucy. I'll drive you and Louisa to Riverston +to-morrow." + + + +CHAPTER LVII. + + They numbered scarce eight summers when a name + Rose on their souls and stirred such motions there + As thrill the buds and shape their hidden frame + At penetration of the quickening air: + His name who told of loyal Evan Dhu, + Of quaint Bradwardine, and Vich Ian Vor, + Making the little world their childhood knew + Large with a land of mountain lake and scaur, + And larger yet with wonder love belief + Toward Walter Scott who living far away + Sent them this wealth of joy and noble grief. + The book and they must part, but day by day, + In lines that thwart like portly spiders ran + They wrote the tale, from Tully Veolan. + + +The evening that Fred Vincy walked to Lowick parsonage (he had begun to +see that this was a world in which even a spirited young man must +sometimes walk for want of a horse to carry him) he set out at five +o'clock and called on Mrs. Garth by the way, wishing to assure himself +that she accepted their new relations willingly. + +He found the family group, dogs and cats included, under the great +apple-tree in the orchard. It was a festival with Mrs. Garth, for her +eldest son, Christy, her peculiar joy and pride, had come home for a +short holiday--Christy, who held it the most desirable thing in the +world to be a tutor, to study all literatures and be a regenerate +Porson, and who was an incorporate criticism on poor Fred, a sort of +object-lesson given to him by the educational mother. Christy himself, +a square-browed, broad-shouldered masculine edition of his mother not +much higher than Fred's shoulder--which made it the harder that he +should be held superior--was always as simple as possible, and thought +no more of Fred's disinclination to scholarship than of a giraffe's, +wishing that he himself were more of the same height. He was lying on +the ground now by his mother's chair, with his straw hat laid flat over +his eyes, while Jim on the other side was reading aloud from that +beloved writer who has made a chief part in the happiness of many young +lives. The volume was "Ivanhoe," and Jim was in the great archery +scene at the tournament, but suffered much interruption from Ben, who +had fetched his own old bow and arrows, and was making himself +dreadfully disagreeable, Letty thought, by begging all present to +observe his random shots, which no one wished to do except Brownie, the +active-minded but probably shallow mongrel, while the grizzled +Newfoundland lying in the sun looked on with the dull-eyed neutrality +of extreme old age. Letty herself, showing as to her mouth and +pinafore some slight signs that she had been assisting at the gathering +of the cherries which stood in a coral-heap on the tea-table, was now +seated on the grass, listening open-eyed to the reading. + +But the centre of interest was changed for all by the arrival of Fred +Vincy. When, seating himself on a garden-stool, he said that he was on +his way to Lowick Parsonage, Ben, who had thrown down his bow, and +snatched up a reluctant half-grown kitten instead, strode across Fred's +outstretched leg, and said "Take me!" + +"Oh, and me too," said Letty. + +"You can't keep up with Fred and me," said Ben. + +"Yes, I can. Mother, please say that I am to go," urged Letty, whose +life was much checkered by resistance to her depreciation as a girl. + +"I shall stay with Christy," observed Jim; as much as to say that he +had the advantage of those simpletons; whereupon Letty put her hand up +to her head and looked with jealous indecision from the one to the +other. + +"Let us all go and see Mary," said Christy, opening his arms. + +"No, my dear child, we must not go in a swarm to the parsonage. And +that old Glasgow suit of yours would never do. Besides, your father +will come home. We must let Fred go alone. He can tell Mary that you +are here, and she will come back to-morrow." + +Christy glanced at his own threadbare knees, and then at Fred's +beautiful white trousers. Certainly Fred's tailoring suggested the +advantages of an English university, and he had a graceful way even of +looking warm and of pushing his hair back with his handkerchief. + +"Children, run away," said Mrs. Garth; "it is too warm to hang about +your friends. Take your brother and show him the rabbits." + +The eldest understood, and led off the children immediately. Fred felt +that Mrs. Garth wished to give him an opportunity of saying anything he +had to say, but he could only begin by observing-- + +"How glad you must be to have Christy here!" + +"Yes; he has come sooner than I expected. He got down from the coach +at nine o'clock, just after his father went out. I am longing for +Caleb to come and hear what wonderful progress Christy is making. He +has paid his expenses for the last year by giving lessons, carrying on +hard study at the same time. He hopes soon to get a private tutorship +and go abroad." + +"He is a great fellow," said Fred, to whom these cheerful truths had a +medicinal taste, "and no trouble to anybody." After a slight pause, he +added, "But I fear you will think that I am going to be a great deal of +trouble to Mr. Garth." + +"Caleb likes taking trouble: he is one of those men who always do more +than any one would have thought of asking them to do," answered Mrs. +Garth. She was knitting, and could either look at Fred or not, as she +chose--always an advantage when one is bent on loading speech with +salutary meaning; and though Mrs. Garth intended to be duly reserved, +she did wish to say something that Fred might be the better for. + +"I know you think me very undeserving, Mrs. Garth, and with good +reason," said Fred, his spirit rising a little at the perception of +something like a disposition to lecture him. "I happen to have behaved +just the worst to the people I can't help wishing for the most from. +But while two men like Mr. Garth and Mr. Farebrother have not given me +up, I don't see why I should give myself up." Fred thought it might be +well to suggest these masculine examples to Mrs. Garth. + +"Assuredly," said she, with gathering emphasis. "A young man for whom +two such elders had devoted themselves would indeed be culpable if he +threw himself away and made their sacrifices vain." + +Fred wondered a little at this strong language, but only said, "I hope +it will not be so with me, Mrs. Garth, since I have some encouragement +to believe that I may win Mary. Mr. Garth has told you about that? +You were not surprised, I dare say?" Fred ended, innocently referring +only to his own love as probably evident enough. + +"Not surprised that Mary has given you encouragement?" returned Mrs. +Garth, who thought it would be well for Fred to be more alive to the +fact that Mary's friends could not possibly have wished this +beforehand, whatever the Vincys might suppose. "Yes, I confess I was +surprised." + +"She never did give me any--not the least in the world, when I talked +to her myself," said Fred, eager to vindicate Mary. "But when I asked +Mr. Farebrother to speak for me, she allowed him to tell me there was a +hope." + +The power of admonition which had begun to stir in Mrs. Garth had not +yet discharged itself. It was a little too provoking even for _her_ +self-control that this blooming youngster should flourish on the +disappointments of sadder and wiser people--making a meal of a +nightingale and never knowing it--and that all the while his family +should suppose that hers was in eager need of this sprig; and her +vexation had fermented the more actively because of its total +repression towards her husband. Exemplary wives will sometimes find +scapegoats in this way. She now said with energetic decision, "You +made a great mistake, Fred, in asking Mr. Farebrother to speak for you." + +"Did I?" said Fred, reddening instantaneously. He was alarmed, but at +a loss to know what Mrs. Garth meant, and added, in an apologetic tone, +"Mr. Farebrother has always been such a friend of ours; and Mary, I +knew, would listen to him gravely; and he took it on himself quite +readily." + +"Yes, young people are usually blind to everything but their own +wishes, and seldom imagine how much those wishes cost others," said +Mrs. Garth. She did not mean to go beyond this salutary general +doctrine, and threw her indignation into a needless unwinding of her +worsted, knitting her brow at it with a grand air. + +"I cannot conceive how it could be any pain to Mr. Farebrother," said +Fred, who nevertheless felt that surprising conceptions were beginning +to form themselves. + +"Precisely; you cannot conceive," said Mrs. Garth, cutting her words as +neatly as possible. + +For a moment Fred looked at the horizon with a dismayed anxiety, and +then turning with a quick movement said almost sharply-- + +"Do you mean to say, Mrs. Garth, that Mr. Farebrother is in love with +Mary?" + +"And if it were so, Fred, I think you are the last person who ought to +be surprised," returned Mrs. Garth, laying her knitting down beside her +and folding her arms. It was an unwonted sign of emotion in her that +she should put her work out of her hands. In fact her feelings were +divided between the satisfaction of giving Fred his discipline and the +sense of having gone a little too far. Fred took his hat and stick and +rose quickly. + +"Then you think I am standing in his way, and in Mary's too?" he said, +in a tone which seemed to demand an answer. + +Mrs. Garth could not speak immediately. She had brought herself into +the unpleasant position of being called on to say what she really felt, +yet what she knew there were strong reasons for concealing. And to her +the consciousness of having exceeded in words was peculiarly +mortifying. Besides, Fred had given out unexpected electricity, and he +now added, "Mr. Garth seemed pleased that Mary should be attached to +me. He could not have known anything of this." + +Mrs. Garth felt a severe twinge at this mention of her husband, the +fear that Caleb might think her in the wrong not being easily +endurable. She answered, wanting to check unintended consequences-- + +"I spoke from inference only. I am not aware that Mary knows anything +of the matter." + +But she hesitated to beg that he would keep entire silence on a subject +which she had herself unnecessarily mentioned, not being used to stoop +in that way; and while she was hesitating there was already a rush of +unintended consequences under the apple-tree where the tea-things +stood. Ben, bouncing across the grass with Brownie at his heels, and +seeing the kitten dragging the knitting by a lengthening line of wool, +shouted and clapped his hands; Brownie barked, the kitten, desperate, +jumped on the tea-table and upset the milk, then jumped down again and +swept half the cherries with it; and Ben, snatching up the half-knitted +sock-top, fitted it over the kitten's head as a new source of madness, +while Letty arriving cried out to her mother against this cruelty--it +was a history as full of sensation as "This is the house that Jack +built." Mrs. Garth was obliged to interfere, the other young ones came +up and the tete-a-tete with Fred was ended. He got away as soon as he +could, and Mrs. Garth could only imply some retractation of her +severity by saying "God bless you" when she shook hands with him. + +She was unpleasantly conscious that she had been on the verge of +speaking as "one of the foolish women speaketh"--telling first and +entreating silence after. But she had not entreated silence, and to +prevent Caleb's blame she determined to blame herself and confess all +to him that very night. It was curious what an awful tribunal the mild +Caleb's was to her, whenever he set it up. But she meant to point out +to him that the revelation might do Fred Vincy a great deal of good. + +No doubt it was having a strong effect on him as he walked to Lowick. +Fred's light hopeful nature had perhaps never had so much of a bruise +as from this suggestion that if he had been out of the way Mary might +have made a thoroughly good match. Also he was piqued that he had been +what he called such a stupid lout as to ask that intervention from Mr. +Farebrother. But it was not in a lover's nature--it was not in +Fred's, that the new anxiety raised about Mary's feeling should not +surmount every other. Notwithstanding his trust in Mr. Farebrother's +generosity, notwithstanding what Mary had said to him, Fred could not +help feeling that he had a rival: it was a new consciousness, and he +objected to it extremely, not being in the least ready to give up Mary +for her good, being ready rather to fight for her with any man +whatsoever. But the fighting with Mr. Farebrother must be of a +metaphorical kind, which was much more difficult to Fred than the +muscular. Certainly this experience was a discipline for Fred hardly +less sharp than his disappointment about his uncle's will. The iron +had not entered into his soul, but he had begun to imagine what the +sharp edge would be. It did not once occur to Fred that Mrs. Garth +might be mistaken about Mr. Farebrother, but he suspected that she +might be wrong about Mary. Mary had been staying at the parsonage +lately, and her mother might know very little of what had been passing +in her mind. + +He did not feel easier when he found her looking cheerful with the +three ladies in the drawing-room. They were in animated discussion on +some subject which was dropped when he entered, and Mary was copying +the labels from a heap of shallow cabinet drawers, in a minute +handwriting which she was skilled in. Mr. Farebrother was somewhere in +the village, and the three ladies knew nothing of Fred's peculiar +relation to Mary: it was impossible for either of them to propose that +they should walk round the garden, and Fred predicted to himself that +he should have to go away without saying a word to her in private. He +told her first of Christy's arrival and then of his own engagement with +her father; and he was comforted by seeing that this latter news +touched her keenly. She said hurriedly, "I am so glad," and then bent +over her writing to hinder any one from noticing her face. But here +was a subject which Mrs. Farebrother could not let pass. + +"You don't mean, my dear Miss Garth, that you are glad to hear of a +young man giving up the Church for which he was educated: you only mean +that things being so, you are glad that he should be under an excellent +man like your father." + +"No, really, Mrs. Farebrother, I am glad of both, I fear," said Mary, +cleverly getting rid of one rebellious tear. "I have a dreadfully +secular mind. I never liked any clergyman except the Vicar of +Wakefield and Mr. Farebrother." + +"Now why, my dear?" said Mrs. Farebrother, pausing on her large wooden +knitting-needles and looking at Mary. "You have always a good reason +for your opinions, but this astonishes me. Of course I put out of the +question those who preach new doctrine. But why should you dislike +clergymen?" + +"Oh dear," said Mary, her face breaking into merriment as she seemed to +consider a moment, "I don't like their neckcloths." + +"Why, you don't like Camden's, then," said Miss Winifred, in some +anxiety. + +"Yes, I do," said Mary. "I don't like the other clergymen's +neckcloths, because it is they who wear them." + +"How very puzzling!" said Miss Noble, feeling that her own intellect +was probably deficient. + +"My dear, you are joking. You would have better reasons than these for +slighting so respectable a class of men," said Mrs. Farebrother, +majestically. + +"Miss Garth has such severe notions of what people should be that it is +difficult to satisfy her," said Fred. + +"Well, I am glad at least that she makes an exception in favor of my +son," said the old lady. + +Mary was wondering at Fred's piqued tone, when Mr. Farebrother came in +and had to hear the news about the engagement under Mr. Garth. At the +end he said with quiet satisfaction, "_That_ is right;" and then bent +to look at Mary's labels and praise her handwriting. Fred felt +horribly jealous--was glad, of course, that Mr. Farebrother was so +estimable, but wished that he had been ugly and fat as men at forty +sometimes are. It was clear what the end would be, since Mary openly +placed Farebrother above everybody, and these women were all evidently +encouraging the affair. He was feeling sure that he should have no +chance of speaking to Mary, when Mr. Farebrother said-- + +"Fred, help me to carry these drawers back into my study--you have +never seen my fine new study. Pray come too, Miss Garth. I want you +to see a stupendous spider I found this morning." + +Mary at once saw the Vicar's intention. He had never since the +memorable evening deviated from his old pastoral kindness towards her, +and her momentary wonder and doubt had quite gone to sleep. Mary was +accustomed to think rather rigorously of what was probable, and if a +belief flattered her vanity she felt warned to dismiss it as +ridiculous, having early had much exercise in such dismissals. It was +as she had foreseen: when Fred had been asked to admire the fittings of +the study, and she had been asked to admire the spider, Mr. Farebrother +said-- + +"Wait here a minute or two. I am going to look out an engraving which +Fred is tall enough to hang for me. I shall be back in a few minutes." +And then he went out. Nevertheless, the first word Fred said to Mary +was-- + +"It is of no use, whatever I do, Mary. You are sure to marry +Farebrother at last." There was some rage in his tone. + +"What do you mean, Fred?" Mary exclaimed indignantly, blushing deeply, +and surprised out of all her readiness in reply. + +"It is impossible that you should not see it all clearly enough--you +who see everything." + +"I only see that you are behaving very ill, Fred, in speaking so of Mr. +Farebrother after he has pleaded your cause in every way. How can you +have taken up such an idea?" + +Fred was rather deep, in spite of his irritation. If Mary had really +been unsuspicious, there was no good in telling her what Mrs. Garth had +said. + +"It follows as a matter of course," he replied. "When you are +continually seeing a man who beats me in everything, and whom you set +up above everybody, I can have no fair chance." + +"You are very ungrateful, Fred," said Mary. "I wish I had never told +Mr. Farebrother that I cared for you in the least." + +"No, I am not ungrateful; I should be the happiest fellow in the world +if it were not for this. I told your father everything, and he was +very kind; he treated me as if I were his son. I could go at the work +with a will, writing and everything, if it were not for this." + +"For this? for what?" said Mary, imagining now that something specific +must have been said or done. + +"This dreadful certainty that I shall be bowled out by Farebrother." +Mary was appeased by her inclination to laugh. + +"Fred," she said, peeping round to catch his eyes, which were sulkily +turned away from her, "you are too delightfully ridiculous. If you +were not such a charming simpleton, what a temptation this would be to +play the wicked coquette, and let you suppose that somebody besides you +has made love to me." + +"Do you really like me best, Mary?" said Fred, turning eyes full of +affection on her, and trying to take her hand. + +"I don't like you at all at this moment," said Mary, retreating, and +putting her hands behind her. "I only said that no mortal ever made +love to me besides you. And that is no argument that a very wise man +ever will," she ended, merrily. + +"I wish you would tell me that you could not possibly ever think of +him," said Fred. + +"Never dare to mention this any more to me, Fred," said Mary, getting +serious again. "I don't know whether it is more stupid or ungenerous +in you not to see that Mr. Farebrother has left us together on purpose +that we might speak freely. I am disappointed that you should be so +blind to his delicate feeling." + +There was no time to say any more before Mr. Farebrother came back with +the engraving; and Fred had to return to the drawing-room still with a +jealous dread in his heart, but yet with comforting arguments from +Mary's words and manner. The result of the conversation was on the +whole more painful to Mary: inevitably her attention had taken a new +attitude, and she saw the possibility of new interpretations. She was +in a position in which she seemed to herself to be slighting Mr. +Farebrother, and this, in relation to a man who is much honored, is +always dangerous to the firmness of a grateful woman. To have a reason +for going home the next day was a relief, for Mary earnestly desired to +be always clear that she loved Fred best. When a tender affection has +been storing itself in us through many of our years, the idea that we +could accept any exchange for it seems to be a cheapening of our lives. +And we can set a watch over our affections and our constancy as we can +over other treasures. + +"Fred has lost all his other expectations; he must keep this," Mary +said to herself, with a smile curling her lips. It was impossible to +help fleeting visions of another kind--new dignities and an +acknowledged value of which she had often felt the absence. But these +things with Fred outside them, Fred forsaken and looking sad for the +want of her, could never tempt her deliberate thought. + + + +CHAPTER LVIII. + + "For there can live no hatred in thine eye, + Therefore in that I cannot know thy change: + In many's looks the false heart's history + Is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange: + But Heaven in thy creation did decree + That in thy face sweet love should ever dwell: + Whate'er thy thoughts or thy heart's workings be + Thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness tell." + --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets. + + +At the time when Mr. Vincy uttered that presentiment about Rosamond, +she herself had never had the idea that she should be driven to make +the sort of appeal which he foresaw. She had not yet had any anxiety +about ways and means, although her domestic life had been expensive as +well as eventful. Her baby had been born prematurely, and all the +embroidered robes and caps had to be laid by in darkness. This +misfortune was attributed entirely to her having persisted in going out +on horseback one day when her husband had desired her not to do so; but +it must not be supposed that she had shown temper on the occasion, or +rudely told him that she would do as she liked. + +What led her particularly to desire horse-exercise was a visit from +Captain Lydgate, the baronet's third son, who, I am sorry to say, was +detested by our Tertius of that name as a vapid fop "parting his hair +from brow to nape in a despicable fashion" (not followed by Tertius +himself), and showing an ignorant security that he knew the proper +thing to say on every topic. Lydgate inwardly cursed his own folly +that he had drawn down this visit by consenting to go to his uncle's on +the wedding-tour, and he made himself rather disagreeable to Rosamond +by saying so in private. For to Rosamond this visit was a source of +unprecedented but gracefully concealed exultation. She was so +intensely conscious of having a cousin who was a baronet's son staying +in the house, that she imagined the knowledge of what was implied by +his presence to be diffused through all other minds; and when she +introduced Captain Lydgate to her guests, she had a placid sense that +his rank penetrated them as if it had been an odor. The satisfaction +was enough for the time to melt away some disappointment in the +conditions of marriage with a medical man even of good birth: it seemed +now that her marriage was visibly as well as ideally floating her above +the Middlemarch level, and the future looked bright with letters and +visits to and from Quallingham, and vague advancement in consequence +for Tertius. Especially as, probably at the Captain's suggestion, his +married sister, Mrs. Mengan, had come with her maid, and stayed two +nights on her way from town. Hence it was clearly worth while for +Rosamond to take pains with her music and the careful selection of her +lace. + +As to Captain Lydgate himself, his low brow, his aquiline nose bent on +one side, and his rather heavy utterance, might have been +disadvantageous in any young gentleman who had not a military bearing +and mustache to give him what is doted on by some flower-like blond +heads as "style." He had, moreover, that sort of high-breeding which +consists in being free from the petty solicitudes of middle-class +gentility, and he was a great critic of feminine charms. Rosamond +delighted in his admiration now even more than she had done at +Quallingham, and he found it easy to spend several hours of the day in +flirting with her. The visit altogether was one of the pleasantest +larks he had ever had, not the less so perhaps because he suspected +that his queer cousin Tertius wished him away: though Lydgate, who +would rather (hyperbolically speaking) have died than have failed in +polite hospitality, suppressed his dislike, and only pretended +generally not to hear what the gallant officer said, consigning the +task of answering him to Rosamond. For he was not at all a jealous +husband, and preferred leaving a feather-headed young gentleman alone +with his wife to bearing him company. + +"I wish you would talk more to the Captain at dinner, Tertius," said +Rosamond, one evening when the important guest was gone to Loamford to +see some brother officers stationed there. "You really look so absent +sometimes--you seem to be seeing through his head into something behind +it, instead of looking at him." + +"My dear Rosy, you don't expect me to talk much to such a conceited ass +as that, I hope," said Lydgate, brusquely. "If he got his head broken, +I might look at it with interest, not before." + +"I cannot conceive why you should speak of your cousin so +contemptuously," said Rosamond, her fingers moving at her work while +she spoke with a mild gravity which had a touch of disdain in it. + +"Ask Ladislaw if he doesn't think your Captain the greatest bore he +ever met with. Ladislaw has almost forsaken the house since he came." + +Rosamond thought she knew perfectly well why Mr. Ladislaw disliked the +Captain: he was jealous, and she liked his being jealous. + +"It is impossible to say what will suit eccentric persons," she +answered, "but in my opinion Captain Lydgate is a thorough gentleman, +and I think you ought not, out of respect to Sir Godwin, to treat him +with neglect." + +"No, dear; but we have had dinners for him. And he comes in and goes +out as he likes. He doesn't want me." + +"Still, when he is in the room, you might show him more attention. He +may not be a phoenix of cleverness in your sense; his profession is +different; but it would be all the better for you to talk a little on +his subjects. _I_ think his conversation is quite agreeable. And he +is anything but an unprincipled man." + +"The fact is, you would wish me to be a little more like him, Rosy," +said Lydgate, in a sort of resigned murmur, with a smile which was not +exactly tender, and certainly not merry. Rosamond was silent and did +not smile again; but the lovely curves of her face looked good-tempered +enough without smiling. + +Those words of Lydgate's were like a sad milestone marking how far he +had travelled from his old dreamland, in which Rosamond Vincy appeared +to be that perfect piece of womanhood who would reverence her husband's +mind after the fashion of an accomplished mermaid, using her comb and +looking-glass and singing her song for the relaxation of his adored +wisdom alone. He had begun to distinguish between that imagined +adoration and the attraction towards a man's talent because it gives +him prestige, and is like an order in his button-hole or an Honorable +before his name. + +It might have been supposed that Rosamond had travelled too, since she +had found the pointless conversation of Mr. Ned Plymdale perfectly +wearisome; but to most mortals there is a stupidity which is +unendurable and a stupidity which is altogether acceptable--else, +indeed, what would become of social bonds? Captain Lydgate's stupidity +was delicately scented, carried itself with "style," talked with a good +accent, and was closely related to Sir Godwin. Rosamond found it quite +agreeable and caught many of its phrases. + +Therefore since Rosamond, as we know, was fond of horseback, there were +plenty of reasons why she should be tempted to resume her riding when +Captain Lydgate, who had ordered his man with two horses to follow him +and put up at the "Green Dragon," begged her to go out on the gray +which he warranted to be gentle and trained to carry a lady--indeed, he +had bought it for his sister, and was taking it to Quallingham. +Rosamond went out the first time without telling her husband, and came +back before his return; but the ride had been so thorough a success, +and she declared herself so much the better in consequence, that he was +informed of it with full reliance on his consent that she should go +riding again. + +On the contrary Lydgate was more than hurt--he was utterly confounded +that she had risked herself on a strange horse without referring the +matter to his wish. After the first almost thundering exclamations of +astonishment, which sufficiently warned Rosamond of what was coming, he +was silent for some moments. + +"However, you have come back safely," he said, at last, in a decisive +tone. "You will not go again, Rosy; that is understood. If it were +the quietest, most familiar horse in the world, there would always be +the chance of accident. And you know very well that I wished you to +give up riding the roan on that account." + +"But there is the chance of accident indoors, Tertius." + +"My darling, don't talk nonsense," said Lydgate, in an imploring tone; +"surely I am the person to judge for you. I think it is enough that I +say you are not to go again." + +Rosamond was arranging her hair before dinner, and the reflection of +her head in the glass showed no change in its loveliness except a +little turning aside of the long neck. Lydgate had been moving about +with his hands in his pockets, and now paused near her, as if he +awaited some assurance. + +"I wish you would fasten up my plaits, dear," said Rosamond, letting +her arms fall with a little sigh, so as to make a husband ashamed of +standing there like a brute. Lydgate had often fastened the plaits +before, being among the deftest of men with his large finely formed +fingers. He swept up the soft festoons of plaits and fastened in the +tall comb (to such uses do men come!); and what could he do then but +kiss the exquisite nape which was shown in all its delicate curves? +But when we do what we have done before, it is often with a difference. +Lydgate was still angry, and had not forgotten his point. + +"I shall tell the Captain that he ought to have known better than offer +you his horse," he said, as he moved away. + +"I beg you will not do anything of the kind, Tertius," said Rosamond, +looking at him with something more marked than usual in her speech. +"It will be treating me as if I were a child. Promise that you will +leave the subject to me." + +There did seem to be some truth in her objection. Lydgate said, "Very +well," with a surly obedience, and thus the discussion ended with his +promising Rosamond, and not with her promising him. + +In fact, she had been determined not to promise. Rosamond had that +victorious obstinacy which never wastes its energy in impetuous +resistance. What she liked to do was to her the right thing, and all +her cleverness was directed to getting the means of doing it. She +meant to go out riding again on the gray, and she did go on the next +opportunity of her husband's absence, not intending that he should know +until it was late enough not to signify to her. The temptation was +certainly great: she was very fond of the exercise, and the +gratification of riding on a fine horse, with Captain Lydgate, Sir +Godwin's son, on another fine horse by her side, and of being met in +this position by any one but her husband, was something as good as her +dreams before marriage: moreover she was riveting the connection with +the family at Quallingham, which must be a wise thing to do. + +But the gentle gray, unprepared for the crash of a tree that was being +felled on the edge of Halsell wood, took fright, and caused a worse +fright to Rosamond, leading finally to the loss of her baby. Lydgate +could not show his anger towards her, but he was rather bearish to the +Captain, whose visit naturally soon came to an end. + +In all future conversations on the subject, Rosamond was mildly certain +that the ride had made no difference, and that if she had stayed at +home the same symptoms would have come on and would have ended in the +same way, because she had felt something like them before. + +Lydgate could only say, "Poor, poor darling!"--but he secretly wondered +over the terrible tenacity of this mild creature. There was gathering +within him an amazed sense of his powerlessness over Rosamond. His +superior knowledge and mental force, instead of being, as he had +imagined, a shrine to consult on all occasions, was simply set aside on +every practical question. He had regarded Rosamond's cleverness as +precisely of the receptive kind which became a woman. He was now +beginning to find out what that cleverness was--what was the shape into +which it had run as into a close network aloof and independent. No one +quicker than Rosamond to see causes and effects which lay within the +track of her own tastes and interests: she had seen clearly Lydgate's +preeminence in Middlemarch society, and could go on imaginatively +tracing still more agreeable social effects when his talent should have +advanced him; but for her, his professional and scientific ambition had +no other relation to these desirable effects than if they had been the +fortunate discovery of an ill-smelling oil. And that oil apart, with +which she had nothing to do, of course she believed in her own opinion +more than she did in his. Lydgate was astounded to find in numberless +trifling matters, as well as in this last serious case of the riding, +that affection did not make her compliant. He had no doubt that the +affection was there, and had no presentiment that he had done anything +to repel it. For his own part he said to himself that he loved her as +tenderly as ever, and could make up his mind to her negations; +but--well! Lydgate was much worried, and conscious of new elements in +his life as noxious to him as an inlet of mud to a creature that has +been used to breathe and bathe and dart after its illuminated prey in +the clearest of waters. + +Rosamond was soon looking lovelier than ever at her worktable, enjoying +drives in her father's phaeton and thinking it likely that she might be +invited to Quallingham. She knew that she was a much more exquisite +ornament to the drawing-room there than any daughter of the family, and +in reflecting that the gentlemen were aware of that, did not perhaps +sufficiently consider whether the ladies would be eager to see +themselves surpassed. + +Lydgate, relieved from anxiety about her, relapsed into what she +inwardly called his moodiness--a name which to her covered his +thoughtful preoccupation with other subjects than herself, as well as +that uneasy look of the brow and distaste for all ordinary things as if +they were mixed with bitter herbs, which really made a sort of +weather-glass to his vexation and foreboding. These latter states of +mind had one cause amongst others, which he had generously but +mistakenly avoided mentioning to Rosamond, lest it should affect her +health and spirits. Between him and her indeed there was that total +missing of each other's mental track, which is too evidently possible +even between persons who are continually thinking of each other. To +Lydgate it seemed that he had been spending month after month in +sacrificing more than half of his best intent and best power to his +tenderness for Rosamond; bearing her little claims and interruptions +without impatience, and, above all, bearing without betrayal of +bitterness to look through less and less of interfering illusion at the +blank unreflecting surface her mind presented to his ardor for the more +impersonal ends of his profession and his scientific study, an ardor +which he had fancied that the ideal wife must somehow worship as +sublime, though not in the least knowing why. But his endurance was +mingled with a self-discontent which, if we know how to be candid, we +shall confess to make more than half our bitterness under grievances, +wife or husband included. It always remains true that if we had been +greater, circumstance would have been less strong against us. Lydgate +was aware that his concessions to Rosamond were often little more than +the lapse of slackening resolution, the creeping paralysis apt to seize +an enthusiasm which is out of adjustment to a constant portion of our +lives. And on Lydgate's enthusiasm there was constantly pressing not a +simple weight of sorrow, but the biting presence of a petty degrading +care, such as casts the blight of irony over all higher effort. + +This was the care which he had hitherto abstained from mentioning to +Rosamond; and he believed, with some wonder, that it had never entered +her mind, though certainly no difficulty could be less mysterious. It +was an inference with a conspicuous handle to it, and had been easily +drawn by indifferent observers, that Lydgate was in debt; and he could +not succeed in keeping out of his mind for long together that he was +every day getting deeper into that swamp, which tempts men towards it +with such a pretty covering of flowers and verdure. It is wonderful +how soon a man gets up to his chin there--in a condition in which, +in spite of himself, he is forced to think chiefly of release, though he +had a scheme of the universe in his soul. + +Eighteen months ago Lydgate was poor, but had never known the eager +want of small sums, and felt rather a burning contempt for any one who +descended a step in order to gain them. He was now experiencing +something worse than a simple deficit: he was assailed by the vulgar +hateful trials of a man who has bought and used a great many things +which might have been done without, and which he is unable to pay for, +though the demand for payment has become pressing. + +How this came about may be easily seen without much arithmetic or +knowledge of prices. When a man in setting up a house and preparing +for marriage finds that his furniture and other initial expenses come +to between four and five hundred pounds more than he has capital to pay +for; when at the end of a year it appears that his household expenses, +horses and et caeteras, amount to nearly a thousand, while the proceeds +of the practice reckoned from the old books to be worth eight hundred +per annum have sunk like a summer pond and make hardly five hundred, +chiefly in unpaid entries, the plain inference is that, whether he +minds it or not, he is in debt. Those were less expensive times than +our own, and provincial life was comparatively modest; but the ease +with which a medical man who had lately bought a practice, who thought +that he was obliged to keep two horses, whose table was supplied +without stint, and who paid an insurance on his life and a high rent +for house and garden, might find his expenses doubling his receipts, +can be conceived by any one who does not think these details beneath +his consideration. Rosamond, accustomed from her childhood to an extravagant +household, thought that good housekeeping consisted simply in ordering +the best of everything--nothing else "answered;" and Lydgate supposed +that "if things were done at all, they must be done properly"--he did +not see how they were to live otherwise. If each head of household +expenditure had been mentioned to him beforehand, he would have +probably observed that "it could hardly come to much," and if any one +had suggested a saving on a particular article--for example, the +substitution of cheap fish for dear--it would have appeared to him +simply a penny-wise, mean notion. Rosamond, even without such an +occasion as Captain Lydgate's visit, was fond of giving invitations, +and Lydgate, though he often thought the guests tiresome, did not +interfere. This sociability seemed a necessary part of professional +prudence, and the entertainment must be suitable. It is true Lydgate +was constantly visiting the homes of the poor and adjusting his +prescriptions of diet to their small means; but, dear me! has it not by +this time ceased to be remarkable--is it not rather that we expect in +men, that they should have numerous strands of experience lying side by +side and never compare them with each other? Expenditure--like +ugliness and errors--becomes a totally new thing when we attach our own +personality to it, and measure it by that wide difference which is +manifest (in our own sensations) between ourselves and others. Lydgate +believed himself to be careless about his dress, and he despised a man +who calculated the effects of his costume; it seemed to him only a +matter of course that he had abundance of fresh garments--such things +were naturally ordered in sheaves. It must be remembered that he had +never hitherto felt the check of importunate debt, and he walked by +habit, not by self-criticism. But the check had come. + +Its novelty made it the more irritating. He was amazed, disgusted that +conditions so foreign to all his purposes, so hatefully disconnected +with the objects he cared to occupy himself with, should have lain in +ambush and clutched him when he was unaware. And there was not only +the actual debt; there was the certainty that in his present position +he must go on deepening it. Two furnishing tradesmen at Brassing, +whose bills had been incurred before his marriage, and whom +uncalculated current expenses had ever since prevented him from paying, +had repeatedly sent him unpleasant letters which had forced themselves +on his attention. This could hardly have been more galling to any +disposition than to Lydgate's, with his intense pride--his dislike of +asking a favor or being under an obligation to any one. He had scorned +even to form conjectures about Mr. Vincy's intentions on money matters, +and nothing but extremity could have induced him to apply to his +father-in-law, even if he had not been made aware in various indirect +ways since his marriage that Mr. Vincy's own affairs were not +flourishing, and that the expectation of help from him would be +resented. Some men easily trust in the readiness of friends; it had +never in the former part of his life occurred to Lydgate that he should +need to do so: he had never thought what borrowing would be to him; but +now that the idea had entered his mind, he felt that he would rather +incur any other hardship. In the mean time he had no money or +prospects of money; and his practice was not getting more lucrative. + +No wonder that Lydgate had been unable to suppress all signs of inward +trouble during the last few months, and now that Rosamond was regaining +brilliant health, he meditated taking her entirely into confidence on +his difficulties. New conversance with tradesmen's bills had forced +his reasoning into a new channel of comparison: he had begun to +consider from a new point of view what was necessary and unnecessary in +goods ordered, and to see that there must be some change of habits. +How could such a change be made without Rosamond's concurrence? The +immediate occasion of opening the disagreeable fact to her was forced +upon him. + +Having no money, and having privately sought advice as to what security +could possibly be given by a man in his position, Lydgate had offered +the one good security in his power to the less peremptory creditor, who +was a silversmith and jeweller, and who consented to take on himself +the upholsterer's credit also, accepting interest for a given term. +The security necessary was a bill of sale on the furniture of his +house, which might make a creditor easy for a reasonable time about a +debt amounting to less than four hundred pounds; and the silversmith, +Mr. Dover, was willing to reduce it by taking back a portion of the +plate and any other article which was as good as new. "Any other +article" was a phrase delicately implying jewellery, and more +particularly some purple amethysts costing thirty pounds, which Lydgate +had bought as a bridal present. + +Opinions may be divided as to his wisdom in making this present: some +may think that it was a graceful attention to be expected from a man +like Lydgate, and that the fault of any troublesome consequences lay in +the pinched narrowness of provincial life at that time, which offered +no conveniences for professional people whose fortune was not +proportioned to their tastes; also, in Lydgate's ridiculous +fastidiousness about asking his friends for money. + +However, it had seemed a question of no moment to him on that fine +morning when he went to give a final order for plate: in the presence +of other jewels enormously expensive, and as an addition to orders of +which the amount had not been exactly calculated, thirty pounds for +ornaments so exquisitely suited to Rosamond's neck and arms could +hardly appear excessive when there was no ready cash for it to exceed. +But at this crisis Lydgate's imagination could not help dwelling on the +possibility of letting the amethysts take their place again among Mr. +Dover's stock, though he shrank from the idea of proposing this to +Rosamond. Having been roused to discern consequences which he had +never been in the habit of tracing, he was preparing to act on this +discernment with some of the rigor (by no means all) that he would have +applied in pursuing experiment. He was nerving himself to this rigor +as he rode from Brassing, and meditated on the representations he must +make to Rosamond. + +It was evening when he got home. He was intensely miserable, this +strong man of nine-and-twenty and of many gifts. He was not saying +angrily within himself that he had made a profound mistake; but the +mistake was at work in him like a recognized chronic disease, mingling +its uneasy importunities with every prospect, and enfeebling every +thought. As he went along the passage to the drawing-room, he heard +the piano and singing. Of course, Ladislaw was there. It was some +weeks since Will had parted from Dorothea, yet he was still at the old +post in Middlemarch. Lydgate had no objection in general to Ladislaw's +coming, but just now he was annoyed that he could not find his hearth +free. When he opened the door the two singers went on towards the +key-note, raising their eyes and looking at him indeed, but not +regarding his entrance as an interruption. To a man galled with his +harness as poor Lydgate was, it is not soothing to see two people +warbling at him, as he comes in with the sense that the painful day has +still pains in store. His face, already paler than usual, took on a +scowl as he walked across the room and flung himself into a chair. + +The singers feeling themselves excused by the fact that they had only +three bars to sing, now turned round. + +"How are you, Lydgate?" said Will, coming forward to shake hands. + +Lydgate took his hand, but did not think it necessary to speak. + +"Have you dined, Tertius? I expected you much earlier," said Rosamond, +who had already seen that her husband was in a "horrible humor." She +seated herself in her usual place as she spoke. + +"I have dined. I should like some tea, please," said Lydgate, curtly, +still scowling and looking markedly at his legs stretched out before +him. + +Will was too quick to need more. "I shall be off," he said, reaching +his hat. + +"Tea is coming," said Rosamond; "pray don't go." + +"Yes, Lydgate is bored," said Will, who had more comprehension of +Lydgate than Rosamond had, and was not offended by his manner, easily +imagining outdoor causes of annoyance. + +"There is the more need for you to stay," said Rosamond, playfully, and +in her lightest accent; "he will not speak to me all the evening." + +"Yes, Rosamond, I shall," said Lydgate, in his strong baritone. "I +have some serious business to speak to you about." + +No introduction of the business could have been less like that which +Lydgate had intended; but her indifferent manner had been too provoking. + +"There! you see," said Will. "I'm going to the meeting about the +Mechanics' Institute. Good-by;" and he went quickly out of the room. + +Rosamond did not look at her husband, but presently rose and took her +place before the tea-tray. She was thinking that she had never seen him +so disagreeable. Lydgate turned his dark eyes on her and watched her +as she delicately handled the tea-service with her taper fingers, and +looked at the objects immediately before her with no curve in her face +disturbed, and yet with an ineffable protest in her air against all +people with unpleasant manners. For the moment he lost the sense of +his wound in a sudden speculation about this new form of feminine +impassibility revealing itself in the sylph-like frame which he had +once interpreted as the sign of a ready intelligent sensitiveness. His +mind glancing back to Laure while he looked at Rosamond, he said +inwardly, "Would _she_ kill me because I wearied her?" and then, "It is +the way with all women." But this power of generalizing which gives men +so much the superiority in mistake over the dumb animals, was +immediately thwarted by Lydgate's memory of wondering impressions from +the behavior of another woman--from Dorothea's looks and tones of +emotion about her husband when Lydgate began to attend him--from her +passionate cry to be taught what would best comfort that man for whose +sake it seemed as if she must quell every impulse in her except the +yearnings of faithfulness and compassion. These revived impressions +succeeded each other quickly and dreamily in Lydgate's mind while the +tea was being brewed. He had shut his eyes in the last instant of +reverie while he heard Dorothea saying, "Advise me--think what I can +do--he has been all his life laboring and looking forward. He minds +about nothing else--and I mind about nothing else." + +That voice of deep-souled womanhood had remained within him as the +enkindling conceptions of dead and sceptred genius had remained within +him (is there not a genius for feeling nobly which also reigns over +human spirits and their conclusions?); the tones were a music from +which he was falling away--he had really fallen into a momentary doze, +when Rosamond said in her silvery neutral way, "Here is your tea, +Tertius," setting it on the small table by his side, and then moved +back to her place without looking at him. Lydgate was too hasty in +attributing insensibility to her; after her own fashion, she was +sensitive enough, and took lasting impressions. Her impression now was +one of offence and repulsion. But then, Rosamond had no scowls and had +never raised her voice: she was quite sure that no one could justly +find fault with her. + +Perhaps Lydgate and she had never felt so far off each other before; +but there were strong reasons for not deferring his revelation, even if +he had not already begun it by that abrupt announcement; indeed some of +the angry desire to rouse her into more sensibility on his account +which had prompted him to speak prematurely, still mingled with his +pain in the prospect of her pain. But he waited till the tray was +gone, the candles were lit, and the evening quiet might be counted on: +the interval had left time for repelled tenderness to return into the +old course. He spoke kindly. + +"Dear Rosy, lay down your work and come to sit by me," he said, gently, +pushing away the table, and stretching out his arm to draw a chair near +his own. + +Rosamond obeyed. As she came towards him in her drapery of transparent +faintly tinted muslin, her slim yet round figure never looked more +graceful; as she sat down by him and laid one hand on the elbow of his +chair, at last looking at him and meeting his eyes, her delicate neck +and cheek and purely cut lips never had more of that untarnished beauty +which touches as in spring-time and infancy and all sweet freshness. +It touched Lydgate now, and mingled the early moments of his love for +her with all the other memories which were stirred in this crisis of +deep trouble. He laid his ample hand softly on hers, saying-- + +"Dear!" with the lingering utterance which affection gives to the word. +Rosamond too was still under the power of that same past, and her +husband was still in part the Lydgate whose approval had stirred +delight. She put his hair lightly away from his forehead, then laid +her other hand on his, and was conscious of forgiving him. + +"I am obliged to tell you what will hurt you, Rosy. But there are +things which husband and wife must think of together. I dare say it +has occurred to you already that I am short of money." + +Lydgate paused; but Rosamond turned her neck and looked at a vase on +the mantel-piece. + +"I was not able to pay for all the things we had to get before we were +married, and there have been expenses since which I have been obliged +to meet. The consequence is, there is a large debt at Brassing--three +hundred and eighty pounds--which has been pressing on me a good while, +and in fact we are getting deeper every day, for people don't pay me +the faster because others want the money. I took pains to keep it from +you while you were not well; but now we must think together about it, +and you must help me." + +"What can--I--do, Tertius?" said Rosamond, turning her eyes on him +again. That little speech of four words, like so many others in all +languages, is capable by varied vocal inflections of expressing all +states of mind from helpless dimness to exhaustive argumentative +perception, from the completest self-devoting fellowship to the most +neutral aloofness. Rosamond's thin utterance threw into the words +"What can--I--do!" as much neutrality as they could hold. They fell +like a mortal chill on Lydgate's roused tenderness. He did not storm +in indignation--he felt too sad a sinking of the heart. And when he +spoke again it was more in the tone of a man who forces himself to +fulfil a task. + +"It is necessary for you to know, because I have to give security for a +time, and a man must come to make an inventory of the furniture." + +Rosamond colored deeply. "Have you not asked papa for money?" she +said, as soon as she could speak. + +"No." + +"Then I must ask him!" she said, releasing her hands from Lydgate's, +and rising to stand at two yards' distance from him. + +"No, Rosy," said Lydgate, decisively. "It is too late to do that. The +inventory will be begun to-morrow. Remember it is a mere security: it +will make no difference: it is a temporary affair. I insist upon it +that your father shall not know, unless I choose to tell him," added +Lydgate, with a more peremptory emphasis. + +This certainly was unkind, but Rosamond had thrown him back on evil +expectation as to what she would do in the way of quiet steady +disobedience. The unkindness seemed unpardonable to her: she was not +given to weeping and disliked it, but now her chin and lips began to +tremble and the tears welled up. Perhaps it was not possible for +Lydgate, under the double stress of outward material difficulty and of +his own proud resistance to humiliating consequences, to imagine fully +what this sudden trial was to a young creature who had known nothing +but indulgence, and whose dreams had all been of new indulgence, more +exactly to her taste. But he did wish to spare her as much as he +could, and her tears cut him to the heart. He could not speak again +immediately; but Rosamond did not go on sobbing: she tried to conquer +her agitation and wiped away her tears, continuing to look before her +at the mantel-piece. + +"Try not to grieve, darling," said Lydgate, turning his eyes up towards +her. That she had chosen to move away from him in this moment of her +trouble made everything harder to say, but he must absolutely go on. +"We must brace ourselves to do what is necessary. It is I who have +been in fault: I ought to have seen that I could not afford to live in +this way. But many things have told against me in my practice, and it +really just now has ebbed to a low point. I may recover it, but in the +mean time we must pull up--we must change our way of living. We shall +weather it. When I have given this security I shall have time to look +about me; and you are so clever that if you turn your mind to managing +you will school me into carefulness. I have been a thoughtless rascal +about squaring prices--but come, dear, sit down and forgive me." + +Lydgate was bowing his neck under the yoke like a creature who had +talons, but who had Reason too, which often reduces us to meekness. +When he had spoken the last words in an imploring tone, Rosamond +returned to the chair by his side. His self-blame gave her some hope +that he would attend to her opinion, and she said-- + +"Why can you not put off having the inventory made? You can send the +men away to-morrow when they come." + +"I shall not send them away," said Lydgate, the peremptoriness rising +again. Was it of any use to explain? + +"If we left Middlemarch? there would of course be a sale, and that +would do as well." + +"But we are not going to leave Middlemarch." + +"I am sure, Tertius, it would be much better to do so. Why can we not +go to London? Or near Durham, where your family is known?" + +"We can go nowhere without money, Rosamond." + +"Your friends would not wish you to be without money. And surely these +odious tradesmen might be made to understand that, and to wait, if you +would make proper representations to them." + +"This is idle Rosamond," said Lydgate, angrily. "You must learn to +take my judgment on questions you don't understand. I have made +necessary arrangements, and they must be carried out. As to friends, I +have no expectations whatever from them, and shall not ask them for +anything." + +Rosamond sat perfectly still. The thought in her mind was that if she +had known how Lydgate would behave, she would never have married him. + +"We have no time to waste now on unnecessary words, dear," said +Lydgate, trying to be gentle again. "There are some details that I +want to consider with you. Dover says he will take a good deal of the +plate back again, and any of the jewellery we like. He really behaves +very well." + +"Are we to go without spoons and forks then?" said Rosamond, whose very +lips seemed to get thinner with the thinness of her utterance. She was +determined to make no further resistance or suggestions. + +"Oh no, dear!" said Lydgate. "But look here," he continued, drawing a +paper from his pocket and opening it; "here is Dover's account. See, I +have marked a number of articles, which if we returned them would +reduce the amount by thirty pounds and more. I have not marked any +of the jewellery." Lydgate had really felt this point of the jewellery +very bitter to himself; but he had overcome the feeling by severe +argument. He could not propose to Rosamond that she should return any +particular present of his, but he had told himself that he was bound to +put Dover's offer before her, and her inward prompting might make the +affair easy. + +"It is useless for me to look, Tertius," said Rosamond, calmly; "you +will return what you please." She would not turn her eyes on the +paper, and Lydgate, flushing up to the roots of his hair, drew it back +and let it fall on his knee. Meanwhile Rosamond quietly went out of +the room, leaving Lydgate helpless and wondering. Was she not coming +back? It seemed that she had no more identified herself with him than +if they had been creatures of different species and opposing interests. +He tossed his head and thrust his hands deep into his pockets with a +sort of vengeance. There was still science--there were still good +objects to work for. He must give a tug still--all the stronger +because other satisfactions were going. + +But the door opened and Rosamond re-entered. She carried the leather +box containing the amethysts, and a tiny ornamental basket which +contained other boxes, and laying them on the chair where she had been +sitting, she said, with perfect propriety in her air-- + +"This is all the jewellery you ever gave me. You can return what you +like of it, and of the plate also. You will not, of course, expect me +to stay at home to-morrow. I shall go to papa's." + +To many women the look Lydgate cast at her would have been more +terrible than one of anger: it had in it a despairing acceptance of the +distance she was placing between them. + +"And when shall you come back again?" he said, with a bitter edge on +his accent. + +"Oh, in the evening. Of course I shall not mention the subject to +mamma." Rosamond was convinced that no woman could behave more +irreproachably than she was behaving; and she went to sit down at her +work-table. Lydgate sat meditating a minute or two, and the result was +that he said, with some of the old emotion in his tone-- + +"Now we have been united, Rosy, you should not leave me to myself in +the first trouble that has come." + +"Certainly not," said Rosamond; "I shall do everything it becomes me to +do." + +"It is not right that the thing should be left to servants, or that I +should have to speak to them about it. And I shall be obliged to go +out--I don't know how early. I understand your shrinking from the +humiliation of these money affairs. But, my dear Rosamond, as a +question of pride, which I feel just as much as you can, it is surely +better to manage the thing ourselves, and let the servants see as +little of it as possible; and since you are my wife, there is no +hindering your share in my disgraces--if there were disgraces." + +Rosamond did not answer immediately, but at last she said, "Very well, +I will stay at home." + +"I shall not touch these jewels, Rosy. Take them away again. But I +will write out a list of plate that we may return, and that can be +packed up and sent at once." + +"The servants will know _that_," said Rosamond, with the slightest +touch of sarcasm. + +"Well, we must meet some disagreeables as necessities. Where is the +ink, I wonder?" said Lydgate, rising, and throwing the account on the +larger table where he meant to write. + +Rosamond went to reach the inkstand, and after setting it on the table +was going to turn away, when Lydgate, who was standing close by, put +his arm round her and drew her towards him, saying-- + +"Come, darling, let us make the best of things. It will only be for a +time, I hope, that we shall have to be stingy and particular. Kiss me." + +His native warm-heartedness took a great deal of quenching, and it is a +part of manliness for a husband to feel keenly the fact that an +inexperienced girl has got into trouble by marrying him. She received +his kiss and returned it faintly, and in this way an appearance of +accord was recovered for the time. But Lydgate could not help looking +forward with dread to the inevitable future discussions about +expenditure and the necessity for a complete change in their way of +living. + + + +CHAPTER LIX. + + They said of old the Soul had human shape, + But smaller, subtler than the fleshly self, + So wandered forth for airing when it pleased. + And see! beside her cherub-face there floats + A pale-lipped form aerial whispering + Its promptings in that little shell her ear." + + +News is often dispersed as thoughtlessly and effectively as that pollen +which the bees carry off (having no idea how powdery they are) when +they are buzzing in search of their particular nectar. This fine +comparison has reference to Fred Vincy, who on that evening at Lowick +Parsonage heard a lively discussion among the ladies on the news which +their old servant had got from Tantripp concerning Mr. Casaubon's +strange mention of Mr. Ladislaw in a codicil to his will made not long +before his death. Miss Winifred was astounded to find that her brother +had known the fact before, and observed that Camden was the most +wonderful man for knowing things and not telling them; whereupon Mary +Garth said that the codicil had perhaps got mixed up with the habits of +spiders, which Miss Winifred never would listen to. Mrs. Farebrother +considered that the news had something to do with their having only +once seen Mr. Ladislaw at Lowick, and Miss Noble made many small +compassionate mewings. + +Fred knew little and cared less about Ladislaw and the Casaubons, and +his mind never recurred to that discussion till one day calling on +Rosamond at his mother's request to deliver a message as he passed, he +happened to see Ladislaw going away. Fred and Rosamond had little to +say to each other now that marriage had removed her from collision with +the unpleasantness of brothers, and especially now that he had taken +what she held the stupid and even reprehensible step of giving up the +Church to take to such a business as Mr. Garth's. Hence Fred talked by +preference of what he considered indifferent news, and "a propos of +that young Ladislaw" mentioned what he had heard at Lowick Parsonage. + +Now Lydgate, like Mr. Farebrother, knew a great deal more than he told, +and when he had once been set thinking about the relation between Will +and Dorothea his conjectures had gone beyond the fact. He imagined +that there was a passionate attachment on both sides, and this struck +him as much too serious to gossip about. He remembered Will's +irritability when he had mentioned Mrs. Casaubon, and was the more +circumspect. On the whole his surmises, in addition to what he knew of +the fact, increased his friendliness and tolerance towards Ladislaw, +and made him understand the vacillation which kept him at Middlemarch +after he had said that he should go away. It was significant of the +separateness between Lydgate's mind and Rosamond's that he had no +impulse to speak to her on the subject; indeed, he did not quite trust +her reticence towards Will. And he was right there; though he had no +vision of the way in which her mind would act in urging her to speak. + +When she repeated Fred's news to Lydgate, he said, "Take care you don't +drop the faintest hint to Ladislaw, Rosy. He is likely to fly out as +if you insulted him. Of course it is a painful affair." + +Rosamond turned her neck and patted her hair, looking the image of +placid indifference. But the next time Will came when Lydgate was +away, she spoke archly about his not going to London as he had +threatened. + +"I know all about it. I have a confidential little bird," said she, +showing very pretty airs of her head over the bit of work held high +between her active fingers. "There is a powerful magnet in this +neighborhood." + +"To be sure there is. Nobody knows that better than you," said Will, +with light gallantry, but inwardly prepared to be angry. + +"It is really the most charming romance: Mr. Casaubon jealous, and +foreseeing that there was no one else whom Mrs. Casaubon would so much +like to marry, and no one who would so much like to marry her as a +certain gentleman; and then laying a plan to spoil all by making her +forfeit her property if she did marry that gentleman--and then--and +then--and then--oh, I have no doubt the end will be thoroughly +romantic." + +"Great God! what do you mean?" said Will, flushing over face and ears, +his features seeming to change as if he had had a violent shake. +"Don't joke; tell me what you mean." + +"You don't really know?" said Rosamond, no longer playful, and desiring +nothing better than to tell in order that she might evoke effects. + +"No!" he returned, impatiently. + +"Don't know that Mr. Casaubon has left it in his will that if Mrs. +Casaubon marries you she is to forfeit all her property?" + +"How do you know that it is true?" said Will, eagerly. + +"My brother Fred heard it from the Farebrothers." Will started up from +his chair and reached his hat. + +"I dare say she likes you better than the property," said Rosamond, +looking at him from a distance. + +"Pray don't say any more about it," said Will, in a hoarse undertone +extremely unlike his usual light voice. "It is a foul insult to her +and to me." Then he sat down absently, looking before him, but seeing +nothing. + +"Now you are angry with _me_," said Rosamond. "It is too bad to bear +_me_ malice. You ought to be obliged to me for telling you." + +"So I am," said Will, abruptly, speaking with that kind of double soul +which belongs to dreamers who answer questions. + +"I expect to hear of the marriage," said Rosamond, playfully. + +"Never! You will never hear of the marriage!" + +With those words uttered impetuously, Will rose, put out his hand to +Rosamond, still with the air of a somnambulist, and went away. + +When he was gone, Rosamond left her chair and walked to the other end +of the room, leaning when she got there against a chiffonniere, and +looking out of the window wearily. She was oppressed by ennui, and by +that dissatisfaction which in women's minds is continually turning into +a trivial jealousy, referring to no real claims, springing from no +deeper passion than the vague exactingness of egoism, and yet capable +of impelling action as well as speech. "There really is nothing to +care for much," said poor Rosamond inwardly, thinking of the family at +Quallingham, who did not write to her; and that perhaps Tertius when he +came home would tease her about expenses. She had already secretly +disobeyed him by asking her father to help them, and he had ended +decisively by saying, "I am more likely to want help myself." + + + +CHAPTER LX. + + Good phrases are surely, and ever were, very commendable. + --Justice Shallow. + + +A few days afterwards--it was already the end of August--there was an +occasion which caused some excitement in Middlemarch: the public, if it +chose, was to have the advantage of buying, under the distinguished +auspices of Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, the furniture, books, and pictures +which anybody might see by the handbills to be the best in every kind, +belonging to Edwin Larcher, Esq. This was not one of the sales +indicating the depression of trade; on the contrary, it was due to Mr. +Larcher's great success in the carrying business, which warranted his +purchase of a mansion near Riverston already furnished in high style by +an illustrious Spa physician--furnished indeed with such large +framefuls of expensive flesh-painting in the dining-room, that Mrs. +Larcher was nervous until reassured by finding the subjects to be +Scriptural. Hence the fine opportunity to purchasers which was well +pointed out in the handbills of Mr. Borthrop Trumbull, whose +acquaintance with the history of art enabled him to state that the hall +furniture, to be sold without reserve, comprised a piece of carving by +a contemporary of Gibbons. + +At Middlemarch in those times a large sale was regarded as a kind of +festival. There was a table spread with the best cold eatables, as at +a superior funeral; and facilities were offered for that +generous-drinking of cheerful glasses which might lead to generous and +cheerful bidding for undesirable articles. Mr. Larcher's sale was the +more attractive in the fine weather because the house stood just at the +end of the town, with a garden and stables attached, in that pleasant +issue from Middlemarch called the London Road, which was also the road +to the New Hospital and to Mr. Bulstrode's retired residence, known as +the Shrubs. In short, the auction was as good as a fair, and drew all +classes with leisure at command: to some, who risked making bids in +order simply to raise prices, it was almost equal to betting at the +races. The second day, when the best furniture was to be sold, +"everybody" was there; even Mr. Thesiger, the rector of St. Peter's, +had looked in for a short time, wishing to buy the carved table, and +had rubbed elbows with Mr. Bambridge and Mr. Horrock. There was a +wreath of Middlemarch ladies accommodated with seats round the large +table in the dining-room, where Mr. Borthrop Trumbull was mounted with +desk and hammer; but the rows chiefly of masculine faces behind were +often varied by incomings and outgoings both from the door and the +large bow-window opening on to the lawn. + +"Everybody" that day did not include Mr. Bulstrode, whose health could +not well endure crowds and draughts. But Mrs. Bulstrode had +particularly wished to have a certain picture--a "Supper at Emmaus," +attributed in the catalogue to Guido; and at the last moment before the +day of the sale Mr. Bulstrode had called at the office of the +"Pioneer," of which he was now one of the proprietors, to beg of Mr. +Ladislaw as a great favor that he would obligingly use his remarkable +knowledge of pictures on behalf of Mrs. Bulstrode, and judge of the +value of this particular painting--"if," added the scrupulously polite +banker, "attendance at the sale would not interfere with the +arrangements for your departure, which I know is imminent." + +This proviso might have sounded rather satirically in Will's ear if he +had been in a mood to care about such satire. It referred to an +understanding entered into many weeks before with the proprietors of +the paper, that he should be at liberty any day he pleased to hand over +the management to the subeditor whom he had been training; since he +wished finally to quit Middlemarch. But indefinite visions of ambition +are weak against the ease of doing what is habitual or beguilingly +agreeable; and we all know the difficulty of carrying out a resolve +when we secretly long that it may turn out to be unnecessary. In such +states of mind the most incredulous person has a private leaning +towards miracle: impossible to conceive how our wish could be +fulfilled, still--very wonderful things have happened! Will did not +confess this weakness to himself, but he lingered. What was the use of +going to London at that time of the year? The Rugby men who would +remember him were not there; and so far as political writing was +concerned, he would rather for a few weeks go on with the "Pioneer." +At the present moment, however, when Mr. Bulstrode was speaking to him, +he had both a strengthened resolve to go and an equally strong resolve +not to go till he had once more seen Dorothea. Hence he replied that +he had reasons for deferring his departure a little, and would be happy +to go to the sale. + +Will was in a defiant mood, his consciousness being deeply stung with +the thought that the people who looked at him probably knew a fact +tantamount to an accusation against him as a fellow with low designs +which were to be frustrated by a disposal of property. Like most +people who assert their freedom with regard to conventional +distinction, he was prepared to be sudden and quick at quarrel with any +one who might hint that he had personal reasons for that assertion--that +there was anything in his blood, his bearing, or his character to +which he gave the mask of an opinion. When he was under an irritating +impression of this kind he would go about for days with a defiant look, +the color changing in his transparent skin as if he were on the qui +vive, watching for something which he had to dart upon. + +This expression was peculiarly noticeable in him at the sale, and those +who had only seen him in his moods of gentle oddity or of bright +enjoyment would have been struck with a contrast. He was not sorry to +have this occasion for appearing in public before the Middlemarch +tribes of Toller, Hackbutt, and the rest, who looked down on him as an +adventurer, and were in a state of brutal ignorance about Dante--who +sneered at his Polish blood, and were themselves of a breed very much +in need of crossing. He stood in a conspicuous place not far from the +auctioneer, with a fore-finger in each side-pocket and his head thrown +backward, not caring to speak to anybody, though he had been cordially +welcomed as a connoiss_ure_ by Mr. Trumbull, who was enjoying the +utmost activity of his great faculties. + +And surely among all men whose vocation requires them to exhibit their +powers of speech, the happiest is a prosperous provincial auctioneer +keenly alive to his own jokes and sensible of his encyclopedic +knowledge. Some saturnine, sour-blooded persons might object to be +constantly insisting on the merits of all articles from boot-jacks to +"Berghems;" but Mr. Borthrop Trumbull had a kindly liquid in his veins; +he was an admirer by nature, and would have liked to have the universe +under his hammer, feeling that it would go at a higher figure for his +recommendation. + +Meanwhile Mrs. Larcher's drawing-room furniture was enough for him. +When Will Ladislaw had come in, a second fender, said to have been +forgotten in its right place, suddenly claimed the auctioneer's +enthusiasm, which he distributed on the equitable principle of praising +those things most which were most in need of praise. The fender was of +polished steel, with much lancet-shaped open-work and a sharp edge. + +"Now, ladies," said he, "I shall appeal to you. Here is a fender which +at any other sale would hardly be offered with out reserve, being, as I +may say, for quality of steel and quaintness of design, a kind of +thing"--here Mr. Trumbull dropped his voice and became slightly nasal, +trimming his outlines with his left finger--"that might not fall in +with ordinary tastes. Allow me to tell you that by-and-by this style +of workmanship will be the only one in vogue--half-a-crown, you said? +thank you--going at half-a-crown, this characteristic fender; and I +have particular information that the antique style is very much sought +after in high quarters. Three shillings--three-and-sixpence--hold it +well up, Joseph! Look, ladies, at the chastity of the design--I have +no doubt myself that it was turned out in the last century! Four +shillings, Mr. Mawmsey?--four shillings." + +"It's not a thing I would put in _my_ drawing-room," said Mrs. Mawmsey, +audibly, for the warning of the rash husband. "I wonder _at_ Mrs. +Larcher. Every blessed child's head that fell against it would be cut +in two. The edge is like a knife." + +"Quite true," rejoined Mr. Trumbull, quickly, "and most uncommonly +useful to have a fender at hand that will cut, if you have a leather +shoe-tie or a bit of string that wants cutting and no knife at hand: +many a man has been left hanging because there was no knife to cut him +down. Gentlemen, here's a fender that if you had the misfortune to +hang yourselves would cut you down in no time--with astonishing +celerity--four-and-sixpence--five--five-and-sixpence--an appropriate +thing for a spare bedroom where there was a four-poster and a guest a +little out of his mind--six shillings--thank you, Mr. Clintup--going +at six shillings--going--gone!" The auctioneer's glance, which had +been searching round him with a preternatural susceptibility to all +signs of bidding, here dropped on the paper before him, and his voice +too dropped into a tone of indifferent despatch as he said, "Mr. +Clintup. Be handy, Joseph." + +"It was worth six shillings to have a fender you could always tell that +joke on," said Mr. Clintup, laughing low and apologetically to his next +neighbor. He was a diffident though distinguished nurseryman, and +feared that the audience might regard his bid as a foolish one. + +Meanwhile Joseph had brought a trayful of small articles. "Now, +ladies," said Mr. Trumbull, taking up one of the articles, "this tray +contains a very recherchy lot--a collection of trifles for the +drawing-room table--and trifles make the sum _of_ human things--nothing +more important than trifles--(yes, Mr. Ladislaw, yes, by-and-by)--but +pass the tray round, Joseph--these bijoux must be examined, ladies. +This I have in my hand is an ingenious contrivance--a sort of +practical rebus, I may call it: here, you see, it looks like an elegant +heart-shaped box, portable--for the pocket; there, again, it becomes +like a splendid double flower--an ornament for the table; and now"--Mr. +Trumbull allowed the flower to fall alarmingly into strings of +heart-shaped leaves--"a book of riddles! No less than five hundred +printed in a beautiful red. Gentlemen, if I had less of a conscience, +I should not wish you to bid high for this lot--I have a longing for +it myself. What can promote innocent mirth, and I may say virtue, more +than a good riddle?--it hinders profane language, and attaches a man to +the society of refined females. This ingenious article itself, without +the elegant domino-box, card-basket, &c., ought alone to give a high +price to the lot. Carried in the pocket it might make an individual +welcome in any society. Four shillings, sir?--four shillings for this +remarkable collection of riddles with the et caeteras. Here is a +sample: 'How must you spell honey to make it catch lady-birds? +Answer--money.' You hear?--lady-birds--honey money. This is an +amusement to sharpen the intellect; it has a sting--it has what we call +satire, and wit without indecency. Four-and-sixpence--five shillings." + +The bidding ran on with warming rivalry. Mr. Bowyer was a bidder, and +this was too exasperating. Bowyer couldn't afford it, and only wanted +to hinder every other man from making a figure. The current carried +even Mr. Horrock with it, but this committal of himself to an opinion +fell from him with so little sacrifice of his neutral expression, that +the bid might not have been detected as his but for the friendly oaths +of Mr. Bambridge, who wanted to know what Horrock would do with blasted +stuff only fit for haberdashers given over to that state of perdition +which the horse-dealer so cordially recognized in the majority of +earthly existences. The lot was finally knocked down at a guinea to +Mr. Spilkins, a young Slender of the neighborhood, who was reckless +with his pocket-money and felt his want of memory for riddles. + +"Come, Trumbull, this is too bad--you've been putting some old maid's +rubbish into the sale," murmured Mr. Toller, getting close to the +auctioneer. "I want to see how the prints go, and I must be off soon." + +"_Im_mediately, Mr. Toller. It was only an act of benevolence which +your noble heart would approve. Joseph! quick with the prints--Lot +235. Now, gentlemen, you who are connoiss_ures_, you are going to have +a treat. Here is an engraving of the Duke of Wellington surrounded by +his staff on the Field of Waterloo; and notwithstanding recent events +which have, as it were, enveloped our great Hero in a cloud, I will be +bold to say--for a man in my line must not be blown about by political +winds--that a finer subject--of the modern order, belonging to our own +time and epoch--the understanding of man could hardly conceive: angels +might, perhaps, but not men, sirs, not men." + +"Who painted it?" said Mr. Powderell, much impressed. + +"It is a proof before the letter, Mr. Powderell--the painter is not +known," answered Trumbull, with a certain gaspingness in his last +words, after which he pursed up his lips and stared round him. + +"I'll bid a pound!" said Mr. Powderell, in a tone of resolved emotion, +as of a man ready to put himself in the breach. Whether from awe or +pity, nobody raised the price on him. + +Next came two Dutch prints which Mr. Toller had been eager for, and +after he had secured them he went away. Other prints, and afterwards +some paintings, were sold to leading Middlemarchers who had come with a +special desire for them, and there was a more active movement of the +audience in and out; some, who had bought what they wanted, going away, +others coming in either quite newly or from a temporary visit to the +refreshments which were spread under the marquee on the lawn. It was +this marquee that Mr. Bambridge was bent on buying, and he appeared to +like looking inside it frequently, as a foretaste of its possession. +On the last occasion of his return from it he was observed to bring +with him a new companion, a stranger to Mr. Trumbull and every one +else, whose appearance, however, led to the supposition that he might +be a relative of the horse-dealer's--also "given to indulgence." His +large whiskers, imposing swagger, and swing of the leg, made him a +striking figure; but his suit of black, rather shabby at the edges, +caused the prejudicial inference that he was not able to afford himself +as much indulgence as he liked. + +"Who is it you've picked up, Bam?" said Mr. Horrock, aside. + +"Ask him yourself," returned Mr. Bambridge. "He said he'd just turned +in from the road." + +Mr. Horrock eyed the stranger, who was leaning back against his stick +with one hand, using his toothpick with the other, and looking about +him with a certain restlessness apparently under the silence imposed on +him by circumstances. + +At length the "Supper at Emmaus" was brought forward, to Will's immense +relief, for he was getting so tired of the proceedings that he had +drawn back a little and leaned his shoulder against the wall just +behind the auctioneer. He now came forward again, and his eye caught +the conspicuous stranger, who, rather to his surprise, was staring at +him markedly. But Will was immediately appealed to by Mr. Trumbull. + +"Yes, Mr. Ladislaw, yes; this interests you as a connoiss_ure_, I +think. It is some pleasure," the auctioneer went on with a rising +fervor, "to have a picture like this to show to a company of ladies and +gentlemen--a picture worth any sum to an individual whose means were on +a level with his judgment. It is a painting of the Italian school--by +the celebrated Guydo, the greatest painter in the world, the chief of +the Old Masters, as they are called--I take it, because they were up +to a thing or two beyond most of us--in possession of secrets now lost +to the bulk of mankind. Let me tell you, gentlemen, I have seen a +great many pictures by the Old Masters, and they are not all up to this +mark--some of them are darker than you might like and not family +subjects. But here is a Guydo--the frame alone is worth pounds--which +any lady might be proud to hang up--a suitable thing for what we call a +refectory in a charitable institution, if any gentleman of the +Corporation wished to show his munifi_cence_. Turn it a little, sir? +yes. Joseph, turn it a little towards Mr. Ladislaw--Mr. Ladislaw, +having been abroad, understands the merit of these things, you observe." + +All eyes were for a moment turned towards Will, who said, coolly, "Five +pounds." The auctioneer burst out in deep remonstrance. + +"Ah! Mr. Ladislaw! the frame alone is worth that. Ladies and +gentlemen, for the credit of the town! Suppose it should be discovered +hereafter that a gem of art has been amongst us in this town, and +nobody in Middlemarch awake to it. Five guineas--five seven-six--five +ten. Still, ladies, still! It is a gem, and 'Full many a gem,' as the +poet says, has been allowed to go at a nominal price because the public +knew no better, because it was offered in circles where there was--I +was going to say a low feeling, but no!--Six pounds--six guineas--a +Guydo of the first order going at six guineas--it is an insult to +religion, ladies; it touches us all as Christians, gentlemen, that a +subject like this should go at such a low figure--six pounds +ten--seven--" + +The bidding was brisk, and Will continued to share in it, remembering +that Mrs. Bulstrode had a strong wish for the picture, and thinking +that he might stretch the price to twelve pounds. But it was knocked +down to him at ten guineas, whereupon he pushed his way towards the +bow-window and went out. He chose to go under the marquee to get a +glass of water, being hot and thirsty: it was empty of other visitors, +and he asked the woman in attendance to fetch him some fresh water; but +before she was well gone he was annoyed to see entering the florid +stranger who had stared at him. It struck Will at this moment that the +man might be one of those political parasitic insects of the bloated +kind who had once or twice claimed acquaintance with him as having +heard him speak on the Reform question, and who might think of getting +a shilling by news. In this light his person, already rather heating +to behold on a summer's day, appeared the more disagreeable; and Will, +half-seated on the elbow of a garden-chair, turned his eyes carefully +away from the comer. But this signified little to our acquaintance Mr. +Raffles, who never hesitated to thrust himself on unwilling +observation, if it suited his purpose to do so. He moved a step or two +till he was in front of Will, and said with full-mouthed haste, "Excuse +me, Mr. Ladislaw--was your mother's name Sarah Dunkirk?" + +Will, starting to his feet, moved backward a step, frowning, and saying +with some fierceness, "Yes, sir, it was. And what is that to you?" + +It was in Will's nature that the first spark it threw out was a direct +answer of the question and a challenge of the consequences. To have +said, "What is that to you?" in the first instance, would have seemed +like shuffling--as if he minded who knew anything about his origin! + +Raffles on his side had not the same eagerness for a collision which +was implied in Ladislaw's threatening air. The slim young fellow with +his girl's complexion looked like a tiger-cat ready to spring on him. +Under such circumstances Mr. Raffles's pleasure in annoying his company +was kept in abeyance. + +"No offence, my good sir, no offence! I only remember your mother--knew +her when she was a girl. But it is your father that you feature, +sir. I had the pleasure of seeing your father too. Parents alive, Mr. +Ladislaw?" + +"No!" thundered Will, in the same attitude as before. + +"Should be glad to do you a service, Mr. Ladislaw--by Jove, I should! +Hope to meet again." + +Hereupon Raffles, who had lifted his hat with the last words, turned +himself round with a swing of his leg and walked away. Will looked +after him a moment, and could see that he did not re-enter the +auction-room, but appeared to be walking towards the road. For an +instant he thought that he had been foolish not to let the man go on +talking;--but no! on the whole he preferred doing without knowledge +from that source. + +Later in the evening, however, Raffles overtook him in the street, and +appearing either to have forgotten the roughness of his former +reception or to intend avenging it by a forgiving familiarity, greeted +him jovially and walked by his side, remarking at first on the +pleasantness of the town and neighborhood. Will suspected that the man +had been drinking and was considering how to shake him off when Raffles +said-- + +"I've been abroad myself, Mr. Ladislaw--I've seen the world--used to +parley-vous a little. It was at Boulogne I saw your father--a most +uncommon likeness you are of him, by Jove! mouth--nose--eyes--hair +turned off your brow just like his--a little in the foreign style. +John Bull doesn't do much of that. But your father was very ill when I +saw him. Lord, lord! hands you might see through. You were a small +youngster then. Did he get well?" + +"No," said Will, curtly. + +"Ah! Well! I've often wondered what became of your mother. She ran +away from her friends when she was a young lass--a proud-spirited +lass, and pretty, by Jove! I knew the reason why she ran away," said +Raffles, winking slowly as he looked sideways at Will. + +"You know nothing dishonorable of her, sir," said Will, turning on him +rather savagely. But Mr. Raffles just now was not sensitive to shades +of manner. + +"Not a bit!" said he, tossing his head decisively "She was a little too +honorable to like her friends--that was it!" Here Raffles again winked +slowly. "Lord bless you, I knew all about 'em--a little in what you +may call the respectable thieving line--the high style of +receiving-house--none of your holes and corners--first-rate. Slap-up +shop, high profits and no mistake. But Lord! Sarah would have known +nothing about it--a dashing young lady she was--fine +boarding-school--fit for a lord's wife--only Archie Duncan threw it at +her out of spite, because she would have nothing to do with him. And +so she ran away from the whole concern. I travelled for 'em, sir, in a +gentlemanly way--at a high salary. They didn't mind her running away +at first--godly folks, sir, very godly--and she was for the stage. The +son was alive then, and the daughter was at a discount. Hallo! here we +are at the Blue Bull. What do you say, Mr. Ladislaw?--shall we turn in +and have a glass?" + +"No, I must say good evening," said Will, dashing up a passage which +led into Lowick Gate, and almost running to get out of Raffles's reach. + +He walked a long while on the Lowick road away from the town, glad of +the starlit darkness when it came. He felt as if he had had dirt cast +on him amidst shouts of scorn. There was this to confirm the fellow's +statement--that his mother never would tell him the reason why she had +run away from her family. + +Well! what was he, Will Ladislaw, the worse, supposing the truth about +that family to be the ugliest? His mother had braved hardship in order +to separate herself from it. But if Dorothea's friends had known this +story--if the Chettams had known it--they would have had a fine color +to give their suspicions a welcome ground for thinking him unfit to +come near her. However, let them suspect what they pleased, they would +find themselves in the wrong. They would find out that the blood in +his veins was as free from the taint of meanness as theirs. + + + +CHAPTER LXI. + + "Inconsistencies," answered Imlac, "cannot both be right, + but imputed to man they may both be true."--Rasselas. + + +The same night, when Mr. Bulstrode returned from a journey to Brassing +on business, his good wife met him in the entrance-hall and drew him +into his private sitting-room. + +"Nicholas," she said, fixing her honest eyes upon him anxiously, "there +has been such a disagreeable man here asking for you--it has made me +quite uncomfortable." + +"What kind of man, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, dreadfully certain of +the answer. + +"A red-faced man with large whiskers, and most impudent in his manner. +He declared he was an old friend of yours, and said you would be sorry +not to see him. He wanted to wait for you here, but I told him he +could see you at the Bank to-morrow morning. Most impudent he +was!--stared at me, and said his friend Nick had luck in wives. I +don't believe he would have gone away, if Blucher had not happened to +break his chain and come running round on the gravel--for I was in the +garden; so I said, 'You'd better go away--the dog is very fierce, and I +can't hold him.' Do you really know anything of such a man?" + +"I believe I know who he is, my dear," said Mr. Bulstrode, in his usual +subdued voice, "an unfortunate dissolute wretch, whom I helped too much +in days gone by. However, I presume you will not be troubled by him +again. He will probably come to the Bank--to beg, doubtless." + +No more was said on the subject until the next day, when Mr. Bulstrode +had returned from the town and was dressing for dinner. His wife, not +sure that he was come home, looked into his dressing-room and saw him +with his coat and cravat off, leaning one arm on a chest of drawers and +staring absently at the ground. He started nervously and looked up as +she entered. + +"You look very ill, Nicholas. Is there anything the matter?" + +"I have a good deal of pain in my head," said Mr. Bulstrode, who was so +frequently ailing that his wife was always ready to believe in this +cause of depression. + +"Sit down and let me sponge it with vinegar." + +Physically Mr. Bulstrode did not want the vinegar, but morally the +affectionate attention soothed him. Though always polite, it was his +habit to receive such services with marital coolness, as his wife's +duty. But to-day, while she was bending over him, he said, "You are +very good, Harriet," in a tone which had something new in it to her +ear; she did not know exactly what the novelty was, but her woman's +solicitude shaped itself into a darting thought that he might be going +to have an illness. + +"Has anything worried you?" she said. "Did that man come to you at the +Bank?" + +"Yes; it was as I had supposed. He is a man who at one time might have +done better. But he has sunk into a drunken debauched creature." + +"Is he quite gone away?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, anxiously but for certain +reasons she refrained from adding, "It was very disagreeable to hear +him calling himself a friend of yours." At that moment she would not +have liked to say anything which implied her habitual consciousness +that her husband's earlier connections were not quite on a level with +her own. Not that she knew much about them. That her husband had at +first been employed in a bank, that he had afterwards entered into what +he called city business and gained a fortune before he was +three-and-thirty, that he had married a widow who was much older than +himself--a Dissenter, and in other ways probably of that +disadvantageous quality usually perceptible in a first wife if inquired +into with the dispassionate judgment of a second--was almost as much as +she had cared to learn beyond the glimpses which Mr. Bulstrode's +narrative occasionally gave of his early bent towards religion, his +inclination to be a preacher, and his association with missionary and +philanthropic efforts. She believed in him as an excellent man whose +piety carried a peculiar eminence in belonging to a layman, whose +influence had turned her own mind toward seriousness, and whose share +of perishable good had been the means of raising her own position. But +she also liked to think that it was well in every sense for Mr. +Bulstrode to have won the hand of Harriet Vincy; whose family was +undeniable in a Middlemarch light--a better light surely than any +thrown in London thoroughfares or dissenting chapel-yards. The +unreformed provincial mind distrusted London; and while true religion +was everywhere saving, honest Mrs. Bulstrode was convinced that to be +saved in the Church was more respectable. She so much wished to ignore +towards others that her husband had ever been a London Dissenter, that +she liked to keep it out of sight even in talking to him. He was quite +aware of this; indeed in some respects he was rather afraid of this +ingenuous wife, whose imitative piety and native worldliness were +equally sincere, who had nothing to be ashamed of, and whom he had +married out of a thorough inclination still subsisting. But his fears +were such as belong to a man who cares to maintain his recognized +supremacy: the loss of high consideration from his wife, as from every +one else who did not clearly hate him out of enmity to the truth, would +be as the beginning of death to him. When she said-- + +"Is he quite gone away?" + +"Oh, I trust so," he answered, with an effort to throw as much sober +unconcern into his tone as possible! + +But in truth Mr. Bulstrode was very far from a state of quiet trust. +In the interview at the Bank, Raffles had made it evident that his +eagerness to torment was almost as strong in him as any other greed. +He had frankly said that he had turned out of the way to come to +Middlemarch, just to look about him and see whether the neighborhood +would suit him to live in. He had certainly had a few debts to pay +more than he expected, but the two hundred pounds were not gone yet: a +cool five-and-twenty would suffice him to go away with for the present. +What he had wanted chiefly was to see his friend Nick and family, and +know all about the prosperity of a man to whom he was so much attached. +By-and-by he might come back for a longer stay. This time Raffles +declined to be "seen off the premises," as he expressed it--declined to +quit Middlemarch under Bulstrode's eyes. He meant to go by coach the +next day--if he chose. + +Bulstrode felt himself helpless. Neither threats nor coaxing could +avail: he could not count on any persistent fear nor on any promise. +On the contrary, he felt a cold certainty at his heart that +Raffles--unless providence sent death to hinder him--would come back +to Middlemarch before long. And that certainty was a terror. + +It was not that he was in danger of legal punishment or of beggary: he +was in danger only of seeing disclosed to the judgment of his neighbors +and the mournful perception of his wife certain facts of his past life +which would render him an object of scorn and an opprobrium of the +religion with which he had diligently associated himself. The terror +of being judged sharpens the memory: it sends an inevitable glare over +that long-unvisited past which has been habitually recalled only in +general phrases. Even without memory, the life is bound into one by a +zone of dependence in growth and decay; but intense memory forces a man +to own his blameworthy past. With memory set smarting like a reopened +wound, a man's past is not simply a dead history, an outworn +preparation of the present: it is not a repented error shaken loose +from the life: it is a still quivering part of himself, bringing +shudders and bitter flavors and the tinglings of a merited shame. + +Into this second life Bulstrode's past had now risen, only the +pleasures of it seeming to have lost their quality. Night and day, +without interruption save of brief sleep which only wove retrospect and +fear into a fantastic present, he felt the scenes of his earlier life +coming between him and everything else, as obstinately as when we look +through the window from a lighted room, the objects we turn our backs +on are still before us, instead of the grass and the trees. The +successive events inward and outward were there in one view: though +each might be dwelt on in turn, the rest still kept their hold in the +consciousness. + +Once more he saw himself the young banker's clerk, with an agreeable +person, as clever in figures as he was fluent in speech and fond of +theological definition: an eminent though young member of a Calvinistic +dissenting church at Highbury, having had striking experience in +conviction of sin and sense of pardon. Again he heard himself called +for as Brother Bulstrode in prayer meetings, speaking on religious +platforms, preaching in private houses. Again he felt himself thinking +of the ministry as possibly his vocation, and inclined towards +missionary labor. That was the happiest time of his life: that was the +spot he would have chosen now to awake in and find the rest a dream. +The people among whom Brother Bulstrode was distinguished were very +few, but they were very near to him, and stirred his satisfaction the +more; his power stretched through a narrow space, but he felt its +effect the more intensely. He believed without effort in the peculiar +work of grace within him, and in the signs that God intended him for +special instrumentality. + +Then came the moment of transition; it was with the sense of promotion +he had when he, an orphan educated at a commercial charity-school, was +invited to a fine villa belonging to Mr. Dunkirk, the richest man in +the congregation. Soon he became an intimate there, honored for his +piety by the wife, marked out for his ability by the husband, whose +wealth was due to a flourishing city and west-end trade. That was the +setting-in of a new current for his ambition, directing his prospects +of "instrumentality" towards the uniting of distinguished religious +gifts with successful business. + +By-and-by came a decided external leading: a confidential subordinate +partner died, and nobody seemed to the principal so well fitted to fill +the severely felt vacancy as his young friend Bulstrode, if he would +become confidential accountant. The offer was accepted. The business +was a pawnbroker's, of the most magnificent sort both in extent and +profits; and on a short acquaintance with it Bulstrode became aware +that one source of magnificent profit was the easy reception of any +goods offered, without strict inquiry as to where they came from. But +there was a branch house at the west end, and no pettiness or dinginess +to give suggestions of shame. + +He remembered his first moments of shrinking. They were private, and +were filled with arguments; some of these taking the form of prayer. +The business was established and had old roots; is it not one thing to +set up a new gin-palace and another to accept an investment in an old +one? The profits made out of lost souls--where can the line be drawn +at which they begin in human transactions? Was it not even God's way +of saving His chosen? "Thou knowest,"--the young Bulstrode had said +then, as the older Bulstrode was saying now--"Thou knowest how loose +my soul sits from these things--how I view them all as implements for +tilling Thy garden rescued here and there from the wilderness." + +Metaphors and precedents were not wanting; peculiar spiritual +experiences were not wanting which at last made the retention of his +position seem a service demanded of him: the vista of a fortune had +already opened itself, and Bulstrode's shrinking remained private. Mr. +Dunkirk had never expected that there would be any shrinking at all: he +had never conceived that trade had anything to do with the scheme of +salvation. And it was true that Bulstrode found himself carrying on +two distinct lives; his religious activity could not be incompatible +with his business as soon as he had argued himself into not feeling it +incompatible. + +Mentally surrounded with that past again, Bulstrode had the same +pleas--indeed, the years had been perpetually spinning them into +intricate thickness, like masses of spider-web, padding the moral +sensibility; nay, as age made egoism more eager but less enjoying, his +soul had become more saturated with the belief that he did everything +for God's sake, being indifferent to it for his own. And yet--if he +could be back in that far-off spot with his youthful poverty--why, then +he would choose to be a missionary. + +But the train of causes in which he had locked himself went on. There +was trouble in the fine villa at Highbury. Years before, the only +daughter had run away, defied her parents, and gone on the stage; and +now the only boy died, and after a short time Mr. Dunkirk died also. +The wife, a simple pious woman, left with all the wealth in and out of +the magnificent trade, of which she never knew the precise nature, had +come to believe in Bulstrode, and innocently adore him as women often +adore their priest or "man-made" minister. It was natural that after a +time marriage should have been thought of between them. But Mrs. +Dunkirk had qualms and yearnings about her daughter, who had long been +regarded as lost both to God and her parents. It was known that the +daughter had married, but she was utterly gone out of sight. The +mother, having lost her boy, imagined a grandson, and wished in a +double sense to reclaim her daughter. If she were found, there would +be a channel for property--perhaps a wide one--in the provision for +several grandchildren. Efforts to find her must be made before Mrs. +Dunkirk would marry again. Bulstrode concurred; but after +advertisement as well as other modes of inquiry had been tried, the +mother believed that her daughter was not to be found, and consented to +marry without reservation of property. + +The daughter had been found; but only one man besides Bulstrode knew +it, and he was paid for keeping silence and carrying himself away. + +That was the bare fact which Bulstrode was now forced to see in the +rigid outline with which acts present themselves onlookers. But for +himself at that distant time, and even now in burning memory, the fact +was broken into little sequences, each justified as it came by +reasonings which seemed to prove it righteous. Bulstrode's course up +to that time had, he thought, been sanctioned by remarkable +providences, appearing to point the way for him to be the agent in +making the best use of a large property and withdrawing it from +perversion. Death and other striking dispositions, such as feminine +trustfulness, had come; and Bulstrode would have adopted Cromwell's +words--"Do you call these bare events? The Lord pity you!" The +events were comparatively small, but the essential condition was +there--namely, that they were in favor of his own ends. It was easy +for him to settle what was due from him to others by inquiring what +were God's intentions with regard to himself. Could it be for God's +service that this fortune should in any considerable proportion go to a +young woman and her husband who were given up to the lightest pursuits, +and might scatter it abroad in triviality--people who seemed to lie +outside the path of remarkable providences? Bulstrode had never said +to himself beforehand, "The daughter shall not be found"--nevertheless +when the moment came he kept her existence hidden; and when other +moments followed, he soothed the mother with consolation in the +probability that the unhappy young woman might be no more. + +There were hours in which Bulstrode felt that his action was +unrighteous; but how could he go back? He had mental exercises, called +himself nought, laid hold on redemption, and went on in his course of +instrumentality. And after five years Death again came to widen his +path, by taking away his wife. He did gradually withdraw his capital, +but he did not make the sacrifices requisite to put an end to the +business, which was carried on for thirteen years afterwards before it +finally collapsed. Meanwhile Nicholas Bulstrode had used his hundred +thousand discreetly, and was become provincially, solidly important--a +banker, a Churchman, a public benefactor; also a sleeping partner in +trading concerns, in which his ability was directed to economy in the +raw material, as in the case of the dyes which rotted Mr. Vincy's silk. +And now, when this respectability had lasted undisturbed for nearly +thirty years--when all that preceded it had long lain benumbed in the +consciousness--that past had risen and immersed his thought as if with +the terrible irruption of a new sense overburthening the feeble being. + +Meanwhile, in his conversation with Raffles, he had learned something +momentous, something which entered actively into the struggle of his +longings and terrors. There, he thought, lay an opening towards +spiritual, perhaps towards material rescue. + +The spiritual kind of rescue was a genuine need with him. There may be +coarse hypocrites, who consciously affect beliefs and emotions for the +sake of gulling the world, but Bulstrode was not one of them. He was +simply a man whose desires had been stronger than his theoretic +beliefs, and who had gradually explained the gratification of his +desires into satisfactory agreement with those beliefs. If this be +hypocrisy, it is a process which shows itself occasionally in us all, +to whatever confession we belong, and whether we believe in the future +perfection of our race or in the nearest date fixed for the end of the +world; whether we regard the earth as a putrefying nidus for a saved +remnant, including ourselves, or have a passionate belief in the +solidarity of mankind. + +The service he could do to the cause of religion had been through life +the ground he alleged to himself for his choice of action: it had been +the motive which he had poured out in his prayers. Who would use money +and position better than he meant to use them? Who could surpass him +in self-abhorrence and exaltation of God's cause? And to Mr. Bulstrode +God's cause was something distinct from his own rectitude of conduct: +it enforced a discrimination of God's enemies, who were to be used +merely as instruments, and whom it would be as well if possible to keep +out of money and consequent influence. Also, profitable investments in +trades where the power of the prince of this world showed its most +active devices, became sanctified by a right application of the profits +in the hands of God's servant. + +This implicit reasoning is essentially no more peculiar to evangelical +belief than the use of wide phrases for narrow motives is peculiar to +Englishmen. There is no general doctrine which is not capable of +eating out our morality if unchecked by the deep-seated habit of direct +fellow-feeling with individual fellow-men. + +But a man who believes in something else than his own greed, has +necessarily a conscience or standard to which he more or less adapts +himself. Bulstrode's standard had been his serviceableness to God's +cause: "I am sinful and nought--a vessel to be consecrated by use--but +use me!"--had been the mould into which he had constrained his immense +need of being something important and predominating. And now had come +a moment in which that mould seemed in danger of being broken and +utterly cast away. + +What if the acts he had reconciled himself to because they made him a +stronger instrument of the divine glory, were to become the pretext of +the scoffer, and a darkening of that glory? If this were to be the +ruling of Providence, he was cast out from the temple as one who had +brought unclean offerings. + +He had long poured out utterances of repentance. But today a +repentance had come which was of a bitterer flavor, and a threatening +Providence urged him to a kind of propitiation which was not simply a +doctrinal transaction. The divine tribunal had changed its aspect for +him; self-prostration was no longer enough, and he must bring +restitution in his hand. It was really before his God that Bulstrode +was about to attempt such restitution as seemed possible: a great dread +had seized his susceptible frame, and the scorching approach of shame +wrought in him a new spiritual need. Night and day, while the +resurgent threatening past was making a conscience within him, he was +thinking by what means he could recover peace and trust--by what +sacrifice he could stay the rod. His belief in these moments of dread +was, that if he spontaneously did something right, God would save him +from the consequences of wrong-doing. For religion can only change when +the emotions which fill it are changed; and the religion of personal +fear remains nearly at the level of the savage. + +He had seen Raffles actually going away on the Brassing coach, and this +was a temporary relief; it removed the pressure of an immediate dread, +but did not put an end to the spiritual conflict and the need to win +protection. At last he came to a difficult resolve, and wrote a letter +to Will Ladislaw, begging him to be at the Shrubs that evening for a +private interview at nine o'clock. Will had felt no particular surprise +at the request, and connected it with some new notions about the +"Pioneer;" but when he was shown into Mr. Bulstrode's private room, he +was struck with the painfully worn look on the banker's face, and was +going to say, "Are you ill?" when, checking himself in that abruptness, +he only inquired after Mrs. Bulstrode, and her satisfaction with the +picture bought for her. + +"Thank you, she is quite satisfied; she has gone out with her daughters +this evening. I begged you to come, Mr. Ladislaw, because I have a +communication of a very private--indeed, I will say, of a sacredly +confidential nature, which I desire to make to you. Nothing, I dare +say, has been farther from your thoughts than that there had been +important ties in the past which could connect your history with mine." + +Will felt something like an electric shock. He was already in a state +of keen sensitiveness and hardly allayed agitation on the subject of +ties in the past, and his presentiments were not agreeable. It seemed +like the fluctuations of a dream--as if the action begun by that loud +bloated stranger were being carried on by this pale-eyed sickly looking +piece of respectability, whose subdued tone and glib formality of +speech were at this moment almost as repulsive to him as their +remembered contrast. He answered, with a marked change of color-- + +"No, indeed, nothing." + +"You see before you, Mr. Ladislaw, a man who is deeply stricken. But +for the urgency of conscience and the knowledge that I am before the +bar of One who seeth not as man seeth, I should be under no compulsion +to make the disclosure which has been my object in asking you to come +here to-night. So far as human laws go, you have no claim on me +whatever." + +Will was even more uncomfortable than wondering. Mr. Bulstrode had +paused, leaning his head on his hand, and looking at the floor. But he +now fixed his examining glance on Will and said-- + +"I am told that your mother's name was Sarah Dunkirk, and that she ran +away from her friends to go on the stage. Also, that your father was +at one time much emaciated by illness. May I ask if you can confirm +these statements?" + +"Yes, they are all true," said Will, struck with the order in which an +inquiry had come, that might have been expected to be preliminary to +the banker's previous hints. But Mr. Bulstrode had to-night followed +the order of his emotions; he entertained no doubt that the opportunity +for restitution had come, and he had an overpowering impulse towards +the penitential expression by which he was deprecating chastisement. + +"Do you know any particulars of your mother's family?" he continued. + +"No; she never liked to speak of them. She was a very generous, +honorable woman," said Will, almost angrily. + +"I do not wish to allege anything against her. Did she never mention +her mother to you at all?" + +"I have heard her say that she thought her mother did not know the +reason of her running away. She said 'poor mother' in a pitying tone." + +"That mother became my wife," said Bulstrode, and then paused a moment +before he added, "you have a claim on me, Mr. Ladislaw: as I said +before, not a legal claim, but one which my conscience recognizes. I +was enriched by that marriage--a result which would probably not have +taken place--certainly not to the same extent--if your grandmother +could have discovered her daughter. That daughter, I gather, is no +longer living!" + +"No," said Will, feeling suspicion and repugnance rising so strongly +within him, that without quite knowing what he did, he took his hat +from the floor and stood up. The impulse within him was to reject the +disclosed connection. + +"Pray be seated, Mr. Ladislaw," said Bulstrode, anxiously. "Doubtless +you are startled by the suddenness of this discovery. But I entreat +your patience with one who is already bowed down by inward trial." + +Will reseated himself, feeling some pity which was half contempt for +this voluntary self-abasement of an elderly man. + +"It is my wish, Mr. Ladislaw, to make amends for the deprivation which +befell your mother. I know that you are without fortune, and I wish to +supply you adequately from a store which would have probably already +been yours had your grandmother been certain of your mother's existence +and been able to find her." + +Mr. Bulstrode paused. He felt that he was performing a striking piece +of scrupulosity in the judgment of his auditor, and a penitential act +in the eyes of God. He had no clew to the state of Will Ladislaw's +mind, smarting as it was from the clear hints of Raffles, and with its +natural quickness in construction stimulated by the expectation of +discoveries which he would have been glad to conjure back into +darkness. Will made no answer for several moments, till Mr. Bulstrode, +who at the end of his speech had cast his eyes on the floor, now raised +them with an examining glance, which Will met fully, saying-- + +"I suppose you did know of my mother's existence, and knew where she +might have been found." + +Bulstrode shrank--there was a visible quivering in his face and hands. +He was totally unprepared to have his advances met in this way, or to +find himself urged into more revelation than he had beforehand set down +as needful. But at that moment he dared not tell a lie, and he felt +suddenly uncertain of his ground which he had trodden with some +confidence before. + +"I will not deny that you conjecture rightly," he answered, with a +faltering in his tone. "And I wish to make atonement to you as the one +still remaining who has suffered a loss through me. You enter, I +trust, into my purpose, Mr. Ladislaw, which has a reference to higher +than merely human claims, and as I have already said, is entirely +independent of any legal compulsion. I am ready to narrow my own +resources and the prospects of my family by binding myself to allow you +five hundred pounds yearly during my life, and to leave you a +proportional capital at my death--nay, to do still more, if more should +be definitely necessary to any laudable project on your part." Mr. +Bulstrode had gone on to particulars in the expectation that these +would work strongly on Ladislaw, and merge other feelings in grateful +acceptance. + +But Will was looking as stubborn as possible, with his lip pouting and +his fingers in his side-pockets. He was not in the least touched, and +said firmly,-- + +"Before I make any reply to your proposition, Mr. Bulstrode, I must beg +you to answer a question or two. Were you connected with the business +by which that fortune you speak of was originally made?" + +Mr. Bulstrode's thought was, "Raffles has told him." How could he +refuse to answer when he had volunteered what drew forth the question? +He answered, "Yes." + +"And was that business--or was it not--a thoroughly dishonorable +one--nay, one that, if its nature had been made public, might have +ranked those concerned in it with thieves and convicts?" + +Will's tone had a cutting bitterness: he was moved to put his question +as nakedly as he could. + +Bulstrode reddened with irrepressible anger. He had been prepared for +a scene of self-abasement, but his intense pride and his habit of +supremacy overpowered penitence, and even dread, when this young man, +whom he had meant to benefit, turned on him with the air of a judge. + +"The business was established before I became connected with it, sir; +nor is it for you to institute an inquiry of that kind," he answered, +not raising his voice, but speaking with quick defiantness. + +"Yes, it is," said Will, starting up again with his hat in his hand. +"It is eminently mine to ask such questions, when I have to decide +whether I will have transactions with you and accept your money. My +unblemished honor is important to me. It is important to me to have no +stain on my birth and connections. And now I find there is a stain +which I can't help. My mother felt it, and tried to keep as clear of +it as she could, and so will I. You shall keep your ill-gotten money. +If I had any fortune of my own, I would willingly pay it to any one who +could disprove what you have told me. What I have to thank you for is +that you kept the money till now, when I can refuse it. It ought to +lie with a man's self that he is a gentleman. Good-night, sir." + +Bulstrode was going to speak, but Will, with determined quickness, was +out of the room in an instant, and in another the hall-door had closed +behind him. He was too strongly possessed with passionate rebellion +against this inherited blot which had been thrust on his knowledge to +reflect at present whether he had not been too hard on Bulstrode--too +arrogantly merciless towards a man of sixty, who was making efforts at +retrieval when time had rendered them vain. + +No third person listening could have thoroughly understood the +impetuosity of Will's repulse or the bitterness of his words. No one +but himself then knew how everything connected with the sentiment of +his own dignity had an immediate bearing for him on his relation to +Dorothea and to Mr. Casaubon's treatment of him. And in the rush of +impulses by which he flung back that offer of Bulstrode's there was +mingled the sense that it would have been impossible for him ever to +tell Dorothea that he had accepted it. + +As for Bulstrode--when Will was gone he suffered a violent reaction, +and wept like a woman. It was the first time he had encountered an +open expression of scorn from any man higher than Raffles; and with +that scorn hurrying like venom through his system, there was no +sensibility left to consolations. But the relief of weeping had to be +checked. His wife and daughters soon came home from hearing the +address of an Oriental missionary, and were full of regret that papa +had not heard, in the first instance, the interesting things which they +tried to repeat to him. + +Perhaps, through all other hidden thoughts, the one that breathed most +comfort was, that Will Ladislaw at least was not likely to publish what +had taken place that evening. + + + +CHAPTER LXII. + + "He was a squyer of lowe degre, + That loved the king's daughter of Hungrie. + --Old Romance. + + +Will Ladislaw's mind was now wholly bent on seeing Dorothea again, and +forthwith quitting Middlemarch. The morning after his agitating scene +with Bulstrode he wrote a brief letter to her, saying that various +causes had detained him in the neighborhood longer than he had +expected, and asking her permission to call again at Lowick at some +hour which she would mention on the earliest possible day, he being +anxious to depart, but unwilling to do so until she had granted him an +interview. He left the letter at the office, ordering the messenger to +carry it to Lowick Manor, and wait for an answer. + +Ladislaw felt the awkwardness of asking for more last words. His +former farewell had been made in the hearing of Sir James Chettam, and +had been announced as final even to the butler. It is certainly trying +to a man's dignity to reappear when he is not expected to do so: a +first farewell has pathos in it, but to come back for a second lends an +opening to comedy, and it was possible even that there might be bitter +sneers afloat about Will's motives for lingering. Still it was on the +whole more satisfactory to his feeling to take the directest means of +seeing Dorothea, than to use any device which might give an air of +chance to a meeting of which he wished her to understand that it was +what he earnestly sought. When he had parted from her before, he had +been in ignorance of facts which gave a new aspect to the relation +between them, and made a more absolute severance than he had then +believed in. He knew nothing of Dorothea's private fortune, and being +little used to reflect on such matters, took it for granted that +according to Mr. Casaubon's arrangement marriage to him, Will Ladislaw, +would mean that she consented to be penniless. That was not what he +could wish for even in his secret heart, or even if she had been ready +to meet such hard contrast for his sake. And then, too, there was the +fresh smart of that disclosure about his mother's family, which if +known would be an added reason why Dorothea's friends should look down +upon him as utterly below her. The secret hope that after some years +he might come back with the sense that he had at least a personal value +equal to her wealth, seemed now the dreamy continuation of a dream. +This change would surely justify him in asking Dorothea to receive him +once more. + +But Dorothea on that morning was not at home to receive Will's note. +In consequence of a letter from her uncle announcing his intention to +be at home in a week, she had driven first to Freshitt to carry the +news, meaning to go on to the Grange to deliver some orders with which +her uncle had intrusted her--thinking, as he said, "a little mental +occupation of this sort good for a widow." + +If Will Ladislaw could have overheard some of the talk at Freshitt that +morning, he would have felt all his suppositions confirmed as to the +readiness of certain people to sneer at his lingering in the +neighborhood. Sir James, indeed, though much relieved concerning +Dorothea, had been on the watch to learn Ladislaw's movements, and had +an instructed informant in Mr. Standish, who was necessarily in his +confidence on this matter. That Ladislaw had stayed in Middlemarch +nearly two months after he had declared that he was going immediately, +was a fact to embitter Sir James's suspicions, or at least to justify +his aversion to a "young fellow" whom he represented to himself as +slight, volatile, and likely enough to show such recklessness as +naturally went along with a position unriveted by family ties or a +strict profession. But he had just heard something from Standish +which, while it justified these surmises about Will, offered a means of +nullifying all danger with regard to Dorothea. + +Unwonted circumstances may make us all rather unlike ourselves: there +are conditions under which the most majestic person is obliged to +sneeze, and our emotions are liable to be acted on in the same +incongruous manner. Good Sir James was this morning so far unlike +himself that he was irritably anxious to say something to Dorothea on a +subject which he usually avoided as if it had been a matter of shame to +them both. He could not use Celia as a medium, because he did not +choose that she should know the kind of gossip he had in his mind; and +before Dorothea happened to arrive he had been trying to imagine how, +with his shyness and unready tongue, he could ever manage to introduce +his communication. Her unexpected presence brought him to utter +hopelessness in his own power of saying anything unpleasant; but +desperation suggested a resource; he sent the groom on an unsaddled +horse across the park with a pencilled note to Mrs. Cadwallader, who +already knew the gossip, and would think it no compromise of herself to +repeat it as often as required. + +Dorothea was detained on the good pretext that Mr. Garth, whom she +wanted to see, was expected at the hall within the hour, and she was +still talking to Caleb on the gravel when Sir James, on the watch for +the rector's wife, saw her coming and met her with the needful hints. + +"Enough! I understand,"--said Mrs. Cadwallader. "You shall be +innocent. I am such a blackamoor that I cannot smirch myself." + +"I don't mean that it's of any consequence," said Sir James, disliking +that Mrs. Cadwallader should understand too much. "Only it is +desirable that Dorothea should know there are reasons why she should +not receive him again; and I really can't say so to her. It will come +lightly from you." + +It came very lightly indeed. When Dorothea quitted Caleb and turned to +meet them, it appeared that Mrs. Cadwallader had stepped across the +park by the merest chance in the world, just to chat with Celia in a +matronly way about the baby. And so Mr. Brooke was coming back? +Delightful!--coming back, it was to be hoped, quite cured of +Parliamentary fever and pioneering. Apropos of the "Pioneer"--somebody +had prophesied that it would soon be like a dying dolphin, and turn all +colors for want of knowing how to help itself, because Mr. Brooke's +protege, the brilliant young Ladislaw, was gone or going. Had Sir +James heard that? + +The three were walking along the gravel slowly, and Sir James, turning +aside to whip a shrub, said he had heard something of that sort. + +"All false!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "He is not gone, or going, +apparently; the 'Pioneer' keeps its color, and Mr. Orlando Ladislaw is +making a sad dark-blue scandal by warbling continually with your Mr. +Lydgate's wife, who they tell me is as pretty as pretty can be. It +seems nobody ever goes into the house without finding this young +gentleman lying on the rug or warbling at the piano. But the people in +manufacturing towns are always disreputable." + +"You began by saying that one report was false, Mrs. Cadwallader, and I +believe this is false too," said Dorothea, with indignant energy; "at +least, I feel sure it is a misrepresentation. I will not hear any evil +spoken of Mr. Ladislaw; he has already suffered too much injustice." + +Dorothea when thoroughly moved cared little what any one thought of her +feelings; and even if she had been able to reflect, she would have held +it petty to keep silence at injurious words about Will from fear of +being herself misunderstood. Her face was flushed and her lip trembled. + +Sir James, glancing at her, repented of his stratagem; but Mrs. +Cadwallader, equal to all occasions, spread the palms of her hands +outward and said--"Heaven grant it, my dear!--I mean that all bad tales +about anybody may be false. But it is a pity that young Lydgate should +have married one of these Middlemarch girls. Considering he's a son of +somebody, he might have got a woman with good blood in her veins, and +not too young, who would have put up with his profession. There's +Clara Harfager, for instance, whose friends don't know what to do with +her; and she has a portion. Then we might have had her among us. +However!--it's no use being wise for other people. Where is Celia? +Pray let us go in." + +"I am going on immediately to Tipton," said Dorothea, rather haughtily. +"Good-by." + +Sir James could say nothing as he accompanied her to the carriage. He +was altogether discontented with the result of a contrivance which had +cost him some secret humiliation beforehand. + +Dorothea drove along between the berried hedgerows and the shorn +corn-fields, not seeing or hearing anything around. The tears came and +rolled down her cheeks, but she did not know it. The world, it seemed, +was turning ugly and hateful, and there was no place for her +trustfulness. "It is not true--it is not true!" was the voice within +her that she listened to; but all the while a remembrance to which +there had always clung a vague uneasiness would thrust itself on her +attention--the remembrance of that day when she had found Will Ladislaw +with Mrs. Lydgate, and had heard his voice accompanied by the piano. + +"He said he would never do anything that I disapproved--I wish I could +have told him that I disapproved of that," said poor Dorothea, +inwardly, feeling a strange alternation between anger with Will and the +passionate defence of him. "They all try to blacken him before me; but +I will care for no pain, if he is not to blame. I always believed he +was good."--These were her last thoughts before she felt that the +carriage was passing under the archway of the lodge-gate at the Grange, +when she hurriedly pressed her handkerchief to her face and began to +think of her errands. The coachman begged leave to take out the horses +for half an hour as there was something wrong with a shoe; and +Dorothea, having the sense that she was going to rest, took off her +gloves and bonnet, while she was leaning against a statue in the +entrance-hall, and talking to the housekeeper. At last she said-- + +"I must stay here a little, Mrs. Kell. I will go into the library and +write you some memoranda from my uncle's letter, if you will open the +shutters for me." + +"The shutters are open, madam," said Mrs. Kell, following Dorothea, who +had walked along as she spoke. "Mr. Ladislaw is there, looking for +something." + +(Will had come to fetch a portfolio of his own sketches which he had +missed in the act of packing his movables, and did not choose to leave +behind.) + +Dorothea's heart seemed to turn over as if it had had a blow, but she +was not perceptibly checked: in truth, the sense that Will was there +was for the moment all-satisfying to her, like the sight of something +precious that one has lost. When she reached the door she said to Mrs. +Kell-- + +"Go in first, and tell him that I am here." + +Will had found his portfolio, and had laid it on the table at the far +end of the room, to turn over the sketches and please himself by +looking at the memorable piece of art which had a relation to nature +too mysterious for Dorothea. He was smiling at it still, and shaking +the sketches into order with the thought that he might find a letter +from her awaiting him at Middlemarch, when Mrs. Kell close to his elbow +said-- + +"Mrs. Casaubon is coming in, sir." + +Will turned round quickly, and the next moment Dorothea was entering. +As Mrs. Kell closed the door behind her they met: each was looking at +the other, and consciousness was overflowed by something that +suppressed utterance. It was not confusion that kept them silent, for +they both felt that parting was near, and there is no shamefacedness in +a sad parting. + +She moved automatically towards her uncle's chair against the +writing-table, and Will, after drawing it out a little for her, went a +few paces off and stood opposite to her. + +"Pray sit down," said Dorothea, crossing her hands on her lap; "I am +very glad you were here." Will thought that her face looked just as it +did when she first shook hands with him in Rome; for her widow's cap, +fixed in her bonnet, had gone off with it, and he could see that she +had lately been shedding tears. But the mixture of anger in her +agitation had vanished at the sight of him; she had been used, when +they were face to face, always to feel confidence and the happy freedom +which comes with mutual understanding, and how could other people's +words hinder that effect on a sudden? Let the music which can take +possession of our frame and fill the air with joy for us, sound once +more--what does it signify that we heard it found fault with in its +absence? + +"I have sent a letter to Lowick Manor to-day, asking leave to see you," +said Will, seating himself opposite to her. "I am going away +immediately, and I could not go without speaking to you again." + +"I thought we had parted when you came to Lowick many weeks ago--you +thought you were going then," said Dorothea, her voice trembling a +little. + +"Yes; but I was in ignorance then of things which I know now--things +which have altered my feelings about the future. When I saw you +before, I was dreaming that I might come back some day. I don't think +I ever shall--now." Will paused here. + +"You wished me to know the reasons?" said Dorothea, timidly. + +"Yes," said Will, impetuously, shaking his head backward, and looking +away from her with irritation in his face. "Of course I must wish it. +I have been grossly insulted in your eyes and in the eyes of others. +There has been a mean implication against my character. I wish you to +know that under no circumstances would I have lowered myself by--under +no circumstances would I have given men the chance of saying that I +sought money under the pretext of seeking--something else. There was +no need of other safeguard against me--the safeguard of wealth was +enough." + +Will rose from his chair with the last word and went--he hardly knew +where; but it was to the projecting window nearest him, which had been +open as now about the same season a year ago, when he and Dorothea had +stood within it and talked together. Her whole heart was going out at +this moment in sympathy with Will's indignation: she only wanted to +convince him that she had never done him injustice, and he seemed to +have turned away from her as if she too had been part of the unfriendly +world. + +"It would be very unkind of you to suppose that I ever attributed any +meanness to you," she began. Then in her ardent way, wanting to plead +with him, she moved from her chair and went in front of him to her old +place in the window, saying, "Do you suppose that I ever disbelieved in +you?" + +When Will saw her there, he gave a start and moved backward out of the +window, without meeting her glance. Dorothea was hurt by this movement +following up the previous anger of his tone. She was ready to say that +it was as hard on her as on him, and that she was helpless; but those +strange particulars of their relation which neither of them could +explicitly mention kept her always in dread of saying too much. At +this moment she had no belief that Will would in any case have wanted +to marry her, and she feared using words which might imply such a +belief. She only said earnestly, recurring to his last word-- + +"I am sure no safeguard was ever needed against you." + +Will did not answer. In the stormy fluctuation of his feelings these +words of hers seemed to him cruelly neutral, and he looked pale and +miserable after his angry outburst. He went to the table and fastened +up his portfolio, while Dorothea looked at him from the distance. They +were wasting these last moments together in wretched silence. What +could he say, since what had got obstinately uppermost in his mind was +the passionate love for her which he forbade himself to utter? What +could she say, since she might offer him no help--since she was forced +to keep the money that ought to have been his?--since to-day he seemed +not to respond as he used to do to her thorough trust and liking? + +But Will at last turned away from his portfolio and approached the +window again. + +"I must go," he said, with that peculiar look of the eyes which +sometimes accompanies bitter feeling, as if they had been tired and +burned with gazing too close at a light. + +"What shall you do in life?" said Dorothea, timidly. "Have your +intentions remained just the same as when we said good-by before?" + +"Yes," said Will, in a tone that seemed to waive the subject as +uninteresting. "I shall work away at the first thing that offers. I +suppose one gets a habit of doing without happiness or hope." + +"Oh, what sad words!" said Dorothea, with a dangerous tendency to sob. +Then trying to smile, she added, "We used to agree that we were alike +in speaking too strongly." + +"I have not spoken too strongly now," said Will, leaning back against +the angle of the wall. "There are certain things which a man can only +go through once in his life; and he must know some time or other that +the best is over with him. This experience has happened to me while I +am very young--that is all. What I care more for than I can ever care +for anything else is absolutely forbidden to me--I don't mean merely +by being out of my reach, but forbidden me, even if it were within my +reach, by my own pride and honor--by everything I respect myself for. +Of course I shall go on living as a man might do who had seen heaven in +a trance." + +Will paused, imagining that it would be impossible for Dorothea to +misunderstand this; indeed he felt that he was contradicting himself +and offending against his self-approval in speaking to her so plainly; +but still--it could not be fairly called wooing a woman to tell her +that he would never woo her. It must be admitted to be a ghostly kind +of wooing. + +But Dorothea's mind was rapidly going over the past with quite another +vision than his. The thought that she herself might be what Will most +cared for did throb through her an instant, but then came doubt: the +memory of the little they had lived through together turned pale and +shrank before the memory which suggested how much fuller might have +been the intercourse between Will and some one else with whom he had +had constant companionship. Everything he had said might refer to that +other relation, and whatever had passed between him and herself was +thoroughly explained by what she had always regarded as their simple +friendship and the cruel obstruction thrust upon it by her husband's +injurious act. Dorothea stood silent, with her eyes cast down +dreamily, while images crowded upon her which left the sickening +certainty that Will was referring to Mrs. Lydgate. But why sickening? +He wanted her to know that here too his conduct should be above +suspicion. + +Will was not surprised at her silence. His mind also was tumultuously +busy while he watched her, and he was feeling rather wildly that +something must happen to hinder their parting--some miracle, clearly +nothing in their own deliberate speech. Yet, after all, had she any +love for him?--he could not pretend to himself that he would rather +believe her to be without that pain. He could not deny that a secret +longing for the assurance that she loved him was at the root of all his +words. + +Neither of them knew how long they stood in that way. Dorothea was +raising her eyes, and was about to speak, when the door opened and her +footman came to say-- + +"The horses are ready, madam, whenever you like to start." + +"Presently," said Dorothea. Then turning to Will, she said, "I have +some memoranda to write for the housekeeper." + +"I must go," said Will, when the door had closed again--advancing +towards her. "The day after to-morrow I shall leave Middlemarch." + +"You have acted in every way rightly," said Dorothea, in a low tone, +feeling a pressure at her heart which made it difficult to speak. + +She put out her hand, and Will took it for an instant without speaking, +for her words had seemed to him cruelly cold and unlike herself. Their +eyes met, but there was discontent in his, and in hers there was only +sadness. He turned away and took his portfolio under his arm. + +"I have never done you injustice. Please remember me," said Dorothea, +repressing a rising sob. + +"Why should you say that?" said Will, with irritation. "As if I were +not in danger of forgetting everything else." + +He had really a movement of anger against her at that moment, and it +impelled him to go away without pause. It was all one flash to +Dorothea--his last words--his distant bow to her as he reached the +door--the sense that he was no longer there. She sank into the chair, +and for a few moments sat like a statue, while images and emotions were +hurrying upon her. Joy came first, in spite of the threatening train +behind it--joy in the impression that it was really herself whom Will +loved and was renouncing, that there was really no other love less +permissible, more blameworthy, which honor was hurrying him away from. +They were parted all the same, but--Dorothea drew a deep breath and +felt her strength return--she could think of him unrestrainedly. At +that moment the parting was easy to bear: the first sense of loving and +being loved excluded sorrow. It was as if some hard icy pressure had +melted, and her consciousness had room to expand: her past was come +back to her with larger interpretation. The joy was not the +less--perhaps it was the more complete just then--because of the +irrevocable parting; for there was no reproach, no contemptuous wonder +to imagine in any eye or from any lips. He had acted so as to defy +reproach, and make wonder respectful. + +Any one watching her might have seen that there was a fortifying +thought within her. Just as when inventive power is working with glad +ease some small claim on the attention is fully met as if it were only +a cranny opened to the sunlight, it was easy now for Dorothea to write +her memoranda. She spoke her last words to the housekeeper in cheerful +tones, and when she seated herself in the carriage her eyes were bright +and her cheeks blooming under the dismal bonnet. She threw back the +heavy "weepers," and looked before her, wondering which road Will had +taken. It was in her nature to be proud that he was blameless, and +through all her feelings there ran this vein--"I was right to defend +him." + +The coachman was used to drive his grays at a good pace, Mr. Casaubon +being unenjoying and impatient in everything away from his desk, and +wanting to get to the end of all journeys; and Dorothea was now bowled +along quickly. Driving was pleasant, for rain in the night had laid +the dust, and the blue sky looked far off, away from the region of the +great clouds that sailed in masses. The earth looked like a happy +place under the vast heavens, and Dorothea was wishing that she might +overtake Will and see him once more. + +After a turn of the road, there he was with the portfolio under his +arm; but the next moment she was passing him while he raised his hat, +and she felt a pang at being seated there in a sort of exaltation, +leaving him behind. She could not look back at him. It was as if a +crowd of indifferent objects had thrust them asunder, and forced them +along different paths, taking them farther and farther away from each +other, and making it useless to look back. She could no more make any +sign that would seem to say, "Need we part?" than she could stop the +carriage to wait for him. Nay, what a world of reasons crowded upon +her against any movement of her thought towards a future that might +reverse the decision of this day! + +"I only wish I had known before--I wish he knew--then we could be quite +happy in thinking of each other, though we are forever parted. And if +I could but have given him the money, and made things easier for +him!"--were the longings that came back the most persistently. And +yet, so heavily did the world weigh on her in spite of her independent +energy, that with this idea of Will as in need of such help and at a +disadvantage with the world, there came always the vision of that +unfittingness of any closer relation between them which lay in the +opinion of every one connected with her. She felt to the full all the +imperativeness of the motives which urged Will's conduct. How could he +dream of her defying the barrier that her husband had placed between +them?--how could she ever say to herself that she would defy it? + +Will's certainty as the carriage grew smaller in the distance, had much +more bitterness in it. Very slight matters were enough to gall him in +his sensitive mood, and the sight of Dorothea driving past him while he +felt himself plodding along as a poor devil seeking a position in a +world which in his present temper offered him little that he coveted, +made his conduct seem a mere matter of necessity, and took away the +sustainment of resolve. After all, he had no assurance that she loved +him: could any man pretend that he was simply glad in such a case to +have the suffering all on his own side? + +That evening Will spent with the Lydgates; the next evening he was gone. + + + + + +BOOK VII. + + + + + +TWO TEMPTATIONS. + + + +CHAPTER LXIII. + + These little things are great to little man.--GOLDSMITH. + + +"Have you seen much of your scientific phoenix, Lydgate, lately?" said +Mr. Toller at one of his Christmas dinner-parties, speaking to Mr. +Farebrother on his right hand. + +"Not much, I am sorry to say," answered the Vicar, accustomed to parry +Mr. Toller's banter about his belief in the new medical light. "I am +out of the way and he is too busy." + +"Is he? I am glad to hear it," said Dr. Minchin, with mingled suavity +and surprise. + +"He gives a great deal of time to the New Hospital," said Mr. +Farebrother, who had his reasons for continuing the subject: "I hear of +that from my neighbor, Mrs. Casaubon, who goes there often. She says +Lydgate is indefatigable, and is making a fine thing of Bulstrode's +institution. He is preparing a new ward in case of the cholera coming +to us." + +"And preparing theories of treatment to try on the patients, I +suppose," said Mr. Toller. + +"Come, Toller, be candid," said Mr. Farebrother. "You are too clever +not to see the good of a bold fresh mind in medicine, as well as in +everything else; and as to cholera, I fancy, none of you are very sure +what you ought to do. If a man goes a little too far along a new road, +it is usually himself that he harms more than any one else." + +"I am sure you and Wrench ought to be obliged to him," said Dr. +Minchin, looking towards Toller, "for he has sent you the cream of +Peacock's patients." + +"Lydgate has been living at a great rate for a young beginner," said +Mr. Harry Toller, the brewer. "I suppose his relations in the North +back him up." + +"I hope so," said Mr. Chichely, "else he ought not to have married that +nice girl we were all so fond of. Hang it, one has a grudge against a +man who carries off the prettiest girl in the town." + +"Ay, by God! and the best too," said Mr. Standish. + +"My friend Vincy didn't half like the marriage, I know that," said Mr. +Chichely. "_He_ wouldn't do much. How the relations on the other side +may have come down I can't say." There was an emphatic kind of +reticence in Mr. Chichely's manner of speaking. + +"Oh, I shouldn't think Lydgate ever looked to practice for a living," +said Mr. Toller, with a slight touch of sarcasm, and there the subject +was dropped. + +This was not the first time that Mr. Farebrother had heard hints of +Lydgate's expenses being obviously too great to be met by his practice, +but he thought it not unlikely that there were resources or +expectations which excused the large outlay at the time of Lydgate's +marriage, and which might hinder any bad consequences from the +disappointment in his practice. One evening, when he took the pains to +go to Middlemarch on purpose to have a chat with Lydgate as of old, he +noticed in him an air of excited effort quite unlike his usual easy way +of keeping silence or breaking it with abrupt energy whenever he had +anything to say. Lydgate talked persistently when they were in his +work-room, putting arguments for and against the probability of certain +biological views; but he had none of those definite things to say or to +show which give the waymarks of a patient uninterrupted pursuit, such +as he used himself to insist on, saying that "there must be a systole +and diastole in all inquiry," and that "a man's mind must be +continually expanding and shrinking between the whole human horizon and +the horizon of an object-glass." That evening he seemed to be talking +widely for the sake of resisting any personal bearing; and before long +they went into the drawing room, where Lydgate, having asked Rosamond +to give them music, sank back in his chair in silence, but with a +strange light in his eyes. "He may have been taking an opiate," was a +thought that crossed Mr. Farebrother's mind--"tic-douloureux +perhaps--or medical worries." + +It did not occur to him that Lydgate's marriage was not delightful: he +believed, as the rest did, that Rosamond was an amiable, docile +creature, though he had always thought her rather uninteresting--a +little too much the pattern-card of the finishing-school; and his +mother could not forgive Rosamond because she never seemed to see that +Henrietta Noble was in the room. "However, Lydgate fell in love with +her," said the Vicar to himself, "and she must be to his taste." + +Mr. Farebrother was aware that Lydgate was a proud man, but having very +little corresponding fibre in himself, and perhaps too little care +about personal dignity, except the dignity of not being mean or +foolish, he could hardly allow enough for the way in which Lydgate +shrank, as from a burn, from the utterance of any word about his +private affairs. And soon after that conversation at Mr. Toller's, the +Vicar learned something which made him watch the more eagerly for an +opportunity of indirectly letting Lydgate know that if he wanted to +open himself about any difficulty there was a friendly ear ready. + +The opportunity came at Mr. Vincy's, where, on New Year's Day, there +was a party, to which Mr. Farebrother was irresistibly invited, on the +plea that he must not forsake his old friends on the first new year of +his being a greater man, and Rector as well as Vicar. And this party +was thoroughly friendly: all the ladies of the Farebrother family were +present; the Vincy children all dined at the table, and Fred had +persuaded his mother that if she did not invite Mary Garth, the +Farebrothers would regard it as a slight to themselves, Mary being +their particular friend. Mary came, and Fred was in high spirits, +though his enjoyment was of a checkered kind--triumph that his mother +should see Mary's importance with the chief personages in the party +being much streaked with jealousy when Mr. Farebrother sat down by her. +Fred used to be much more easy about his own accomplishments in the +days when he had not begun to dread being "bowled out by Farebrother," +and this terror was still before him. Mrs. Vincy, in her fullest +matronly bloom, looked at Mary's little figure, rough wavy hair, and +visage quite without lilies and roses, and wondered; trying +unsuccessfully to fancy herself caring about Mary's appearance in +wedding clothes, or feeling complacency in grandchildren who would +"feature" the Garths. However, the party was a merry one, and Mary was +particularly bright; being glad, for Fred's sake, that his friends were +getting kinder to her, and being also quite willing that they should +see how much she was valued by others whom they must admit to be judges. + +Mr. Farebrother noticed that Lydgate seemed bored, and that Mr. Vincy +spoke as little as possible to his son-in-law. Rosamond was perfectly +graceful and calm, and only a subtle observation such as the Vicar had +not been roused to bestow on her would have perceived the total absence +of that interest in her husband's presence which a loving wife is sure +to betray, even if etiquette keeps her aloof from him. When Lydgate +was taking part in the conversation, she never looked towards him any +more than if she had been a sculptured Psyche modelled to look another +way: and when, after being called out for an hour or two, he re-entered +the room, she seemed unconscious of the fact, which eighteen months +before would have had the effect of a numeral before ciphers. In +reality, however, she was intensely aware of Lydgate's voice and +movements; and her pretty good-tempered air of unconsciousness was a +studied negation by which she satisfied her inward opposition to him +without compromise of propriety. When the ladies were in the +drawing-room after Lydgate had been called away from the dessert, Mrs. +Farebrother, when Rosamond happened to be near her, said--"You have to +give up a great deal of your husband's society, Mrs. Lydgate." + +"Yes, the life of a medical man is very arduous: especially when he is +so devoted to his profession as Mr. Lydgate is," said Rosamond, who was +standing, and moved easily away at the end of this correct little +speech. + +"It is dreadfully dull for her when there is no company," said Mrs. +Vincy, who was seated at the old lady's side. "I am sure I thought so +when Rosamond was ill, and I was staying with her. You know, Mrs. +Farebrother, ours is a cheerful house. I am of a cheerful disposition +myself, and Mr. Vincy always likes something to be going on. That is +what Rosamond has been used to. Very different from a husband out at +odd hours, and never knowing when he will come home, and of a close, +proud disposition, _I_ think"--indiscreet Mrs. Vincy did lower her tone +slightly with this parenthesis. "But Rosamond always had an angel of a +temper; her brothers used very often not to please her, but she was +never the girl to show temper; from a baby she was always as good as +good, and with a complexion beyond anything. But my children are all +good-tempered, thank God." + +This was easily credible to any one looking at Mrs. Vincy as she threw +back her broad cap-strings, and smiled towards her three little girls, +aged from seven to eleven. But in that smiling glance she was obliged +to include Mary Garth, whom the three girls had got into a corner to +make her tell them stories. Mary was just finishing the delicious tale +of Rumpelstiltskin, which she had well by heart, because Letty was +never tired of communicating it to her ignorant elders from a favorite +red volume. Louisa, Mrs. Vincy's darling, now ran to her with +wide-eyed serious excitement, crying, "Oh mamma, mamma, the little man +stamped so hard on the floor he couldn't get his leg out again!" + +"Bless you, my cherub!" said mamma; "you shall tell me all about it +to-morrow. Go and listen!" and then, as her eyes followed Louisa back +towards the attractive corner, she thought that if Fred wished her to +invite Mary again she would make no objection, the children being so +pleased with her. + +But presently the corner became still more animated, for Mr. +Farebrother came in, and seating himself behind Louisa, took her on his +lap; whereupon the girls all insisted that he must hear +Rumpelstiltskin, and Mary must tell it over again. He insisted too, +and Mary, without fuss, began again in her neat fashion, with precisely +the same words as before. Fred, who had also seated himself near, +would have felt unmixed triumph in Mary's effectiveness if Mr. +Farebrother had not been looking at her with evident admiration, while +he dramatized an intense interest in the tale to please the children. + +"You will never care any more about my one-eyed giant, Loo," said Fred +at the end. + +"Yes, I shall. Tell about him now," said Louisa. + +"Oh, I dare say; I am quite cut out. Ask Mr. Farebrother." + +"Yes," added Mary; "ask Mr. Farebrother to tell you about the ants +whose beautiful house was knocked down by a giant named Tom, and he +thought they didn't mind because he couldn't hear them cry, or see them +use their pocket-handkerchiefs." + +"Please," said Louisa, looking up at the Vicar. + +"No, no, I am a grave old parson. If I try to draw a story out of my +bag a sermon comes instead. Shall I preach you a sermon?" said he, +putting on his short-sighted glasses, and pursing up his lips. + +"Yes," said Louisa, falteringly. + +"Let me see, then. Against cakes: how cakes are bad things, especially +if they are sweet and have plums in them." + +Louisa took the affair rather seriously, and got down from the Vicar's +knee to go to Fred. + +"Ah, I see it will not do to preach on New Year's Day," said Mr. +Farebrother, rising and walking away. He had discovered of late that +Fred had become jealous of him, and also that he himself was not losing +his preference for Mary above all other women. + +"A delightful young person is Miss Garth," said Mrs. Farebrother, who +had been watching her son's movements. + +"Yes," said Mrs. Vincy, obliged to reply, as the old lady turned to her +expectantly. "It is a pity she is not better-looking." + +"I cannot say that," said Mrs. Farebrother, decisively. "I like her +countenance. We must not always ask for beauty, when a good God has +seen fit to make an excellent young woman without it. I put good +manners first, and Miss Garth will know how to conduct herself in any +station." + +The old lady was a little sharp in her tone, having a prospective +reference to Mary's becoming her daughter-in-law; for there was this +inconvenience in Mary's position with regard to Fred, that it was not +suitable to be made public, and hence the three ladies at Lowick +Parsonage were still hoping that Camden would choose Miss Garth. + +New visitors entered, and the drawing-room was given up to music and +games, while whist-tables were prepared in the quiet room on the other +side of the hall. Mr. Farebrother played a rubber to satisfy his +mother, who regarded her occasional whist as a protest against scandal +and novelty of opinion, in which light even a revoke had its dignity. +But at the end he got Mr. Chichely to take his place, and left the +room. As he crossed the hall, Lydgate had just come in and was taking +off his great-coat. + +"You are the man I was going to look for," said the Vicar; and instead +of entering the drawing-room, they walked along the hall and stood +against the fireplace, where the frosty air helped to make a glowing +bank. "You see, I can leave the whist-table easily enough," he went +on, smiling at Lydgate, "now I don't play for money. I owe that to +you, Mrs. Casaubon says." + +"How?" said Lydgate, coldly. + +"Ah, you didn't mean me to know it; I call that ungenerous reticence. +You should let a man have the pleasure of feeling that you have done +him a good turn. I don't enter into some people's dislike of being +under an obligation: upon my word, I prefer being under an obligation +to everybody for behaving well to me." + +"I can't tell what you mean," said Lydgate, "unless it is that I once +spoke of you to Mrs. Casaubon. But I did not think that she would +break her promise not to mention that I had done so," said Lydgate, +leaning his back against the corner of the mantel-piece, and showing no +radiance in his face. + +"It was Brooke who let it out, only the other day. He paid me the +compliment of saying that he was very glad I had the living though you +had come across his tactics, and had praised me up as a lien and a +Tillotson, and that sort of thing, till Mrs. Casaubon would hear of no +one else." + +"Oh, Brooke is such a leaky-minded fool," said Lydgate, contemptuously. + +"Well, I was glad of the leakiness then. I don't see why you shouldn't +like me to know that you wished to do me a service, my dear fellow. +And you certainly have done me one. It's rather a strong check to +one's self-complacency to find how much of one's right doing depends on +not being in want of money. A man will not be tempted to say the +Lord's Prayer backward to please the devil, if he doesn't want the +devil's services. I have no need to hang on the smiles of chance now." + +"I don't see that there's any money-getting without chance," said +Lydgate; "if a man gets it in a profession, it's pretty sure to come by +chance." + +Mr. Farebrother thought he could account for this speech, in striking +contrast with Lydgate's former way of talking, as the perversity which +will often spring from the moodiness of a man ill at ease in his +affairs. He answered in a tone of good-humored admission-- + +"Ah, there's enormous patience wanted with the way of the world. But +it is the easier for a man to wait patiently when he has friends who +love him, and ask for nothing better than to help him through, so far +as it lies in their power." + +"Oh yes," said Lydgate, in a careless tone, changing his attitude and +looking at his watch. "People make much more of their difficulties +than they need to do." + +He knew as distinctly as possible that this was an offer of help to +himself from Mr. Farebrother, and he could not bear it. So strangely +determined are we mortals, that, after having been long gratified with +the sense that he had privately done the Vicar a service, the +suggestion that the Vicar discerned his need of a service in return +made him shrink into unconquerable reticence. Besides, behind all +making of such offers what else must come?--that he should "mention his +case," imply that he wanted specific things. At that moment, suicide +seemed easier. + +Mr. Farebrother was too keen a man not to know the meaning of that +reply, and there was a certain massiveness in Lydgate's manner and +tone, corresponding with his physique, which if he repelled your +advances in the first instance seemed to put persuasive devices out of +question. + +"What time are you?" said the Vicar, devouring his wounded feeling. + +"After eleven," said Lydgate. And they went into the drawing-room. + + + +CHAPTER LXIV. + + 1st Gent. Where lies the power, there let the blame lie too. + 2d Gent. Nay, power is relative; you cannot fright + The coming pest with border fortresses, + Or catch your carp with subtle argument. + All force is twain in one: cause is not cause + Unless effect be there; and action's self + Must needs contain a passive. So command + Exists but with obedience." + + +Even if Lydgate had been inclined to be quite open about his affairs, +he knew that it would have hardly been in Mr. Farebrother's power to +give him the help he immediately wanted. With the year's bills coming +in from his tradesmen, with Dover's threatening hold on his furniture, +and with nothing to depend on but slow dribbling payments from patients +who must not be offended--for the handsome fees he had had from +Freshitt Hall and Lowick Manor had been easily absorbed--nothing less +than a thousand pounds would have freed him from actual embarrassment, +and left a residue which, according to the favorite phrase of +hopefulness in such circumstances, would have given him "time to look +about him." + +Naturally, the merry Christmas bringing the happy New Year, when +fellow-citizens expect to be paid for the trouble and goods they have +smilingly bestowed on their neighbors, had so tightened the pressure of +sordid cares on Lydgate's mind that it was hardly possible for him to +think unbrokenly of any other subject, even the most habitual and +soliciting. He was not an ill-tempered man; his intellectual activity, +the ardent kindness of his heart, as well as his strong frame, would +always, under tolerably easy conditions, have kept him above the petty +uncontrolled susceptibilities which make bad temper. But he was now a +prey to that worst irritation which arises not simply from annoyances, +but from the second consciousness underlying those annoyances, of +wasted energy and a degrading preoccupation, which was the reverse of +all his former purposes. "_This_ is what I am thinking of; and _that_ +is what I might have been thinking of," was the bitter incessant murmur +within him, making every difficulty a double goad to impatience. + +Some gentlemen have made an amazing figure in literature by general +discontent with the universe as a trap of dulness into which their +great souls have fallen by mistake; but the sense of a stupendous self +and an insignificant world may have its consolations. Lydgate's +discontent was much harder to bear: it was the sense that there was a +grand existence in thought and effective action lying around him, while +his self was being narrowed into the miserable isolation of egoistic +fears, and vulgar anxieties for events that might allay such fears. +His troubles will perhaps appear miserably sordid, and beneath the +attention of lofty persons who can know nothing of debt except on a +magnificent scale. Doubtless they were sordid; and for the majority, +who are not lofty, there is no escape from sordidness but by being free +from money-craving, with all its base hopes and temptations, its +watching for death, its hinted requests, its horse-dealer's desire to +make bad work pass for good, its seeking for function which ought to be +another's, its compulsion often to long for Luck in the shape of a wide +calamity. + +It was because Lydgate writhed under the idea of getting his neck +beneath this vile yoke that he had fallen into a bitter moody state +which was continually widening Rosamond's alienation from him. After +the first disclosure about the bill of sale, he had made many efforts +to draw her into sympathy with him about possible measures for +narrowing their expenses, and with the threatening approach of +Christmas his propositions grew more and more definite. "We two can do +with only one servant, and live on very little," he said, "and I shall +manage with one horse." For Lydgate, as we have seen, had begun to +reason, with a more distinct vision, about the expenses of living, and +any share of pride he had given to appearances of that sort was meagre +compared with the pride which made him revolt from exposure as a +debtor, or from asking men to help him with their money. + +"Of course you can dismiss the other two servants, if you like," said +Rosamond; "but I should have thought it would be very injurious to your +position for us to live in a poor way. You must expect your practice +to be lowered." + +"My dear Rosamond, it is not a question of choice. We have begun too +expensively. Peacock, you know, lived in a much smaller house than +this. It is my fault: I ought to have known better, and I deserve a +thrashing--if there were anybody who had a right to give it me--for +bringing you into the necessity of living in a poorer way than you have +been used to. But we married because we loved each other, I suppose. +And that may help us to pull along till things get better. Come, dear, +put down that work and come to me." + +He was really in chill gloom about her at that moment, but he dreaded a +future without affection, and was determined to resist the oncoming of +division between them. Rosamond obeyed him, and he took her on his +knee, but in her secret soul she was utterly aloof from him. The poor +thing saw only that the world was not ordered to her liking, and +Lydgate was part of that world. But he held her waist with one hand +and laid the other gently on both of hers; for this rather abrupt man +had much tenderness in his manners towards women, seeming to have +always present in his imagination the weakness of their frames and the +delicate poise of their health both in body and mind. And he began +again to speak persuasively. + +"I find, now I look into things a little, Rosy, that it is wonderful +what an amount of money slips away in our housekeeping. I suppose the +servants are careless, and we have had a great many people coming. But +there must be many in our rank who manage with much less: they must do +with commoner things, I suppose, and look after the scraps. It seems, +money goes but a little way in these matters, for Wrench has everything +as plain as possible, and he has a very large practice." + +"Oh, if you think of living as the Wrenches do!" said Rosamond, with a +little turn of her neck. "But I have heard you express your disgust at +that way of living." + +"Yes, they have bad taste in everything--they make economy look ugly. +We needn't do that. I only meant that they avoid expenses, although +Wrench has a capital practice." + +"Why should not you have a good practice, Tertius? Mr. Peacock had. +You should be more careful not to offend people, and you should send +out medicines as the others do. I am sure you began well, and you got +several good houses. It cannot answer to be eccentric; you should +think what will be generally liked," said Rosamond, in a decided little +tone of admonition. + +Lydgate's anger rose: he was prepared to be indulgent towards feminine +weakness, but not towards feminine dictation. The shallowness of a +waternixie's soul may have a charm until she becomes didactic. But he +controlled himself, and only said, with a touch of despotic firmness-- + +"What I am to do in my practice, Rosy, it is for me to judge. That is +not the question between us. It is enough for you to know that our +income is likely to be a very narrow one--hardly four hundred, perhaps +less, for a long time to come, and we must try to re-arrange our lives +in accordance with that fact." + +Rosamond was silent for a moment or two, looking before her, and then +said, "My uncle Bulstrode ought to allow you a salary for the time you +give to the Hospital: it is not right that you should work for nothing." + +"It was understood from the beginning that my services would be +gratuitous. That, again, need not enter into our discussion. I have +pointed out what is the only probability," said Lydgate, impatiently. +Then checking himself, he went on more quietly-- + +"I think I see one resource which would free us from a good deal of the +present difficulty. I hear that young Ned Plymdale is going to be +married to Miss Sophy Toller. They are rich, and it is not often that +a good house is vacant in Middlemarch. I feel sure that they would be +glad to take this house from us with most of our furniture, and they +would be willing to pay handsomely for the lease. I can employ +Trumbull to speak to Plymdale about it." + +Rosamond left her husband's knee and walked slowly to the other end of +the room; when she turned round and walked towards him it was evident +that the tears had come, and that she was biting her under-lip and +clasping her hands to keep herself from crying. Lydgate was +wretched--shaken with anger and yet feeling that it would be unmanly to +vent the anger just now. + +"I am very sorry, Rosamond; I know this is painful." + +"I thought, at least, when I had borne to send the plate back and have +that man taking an inventory of the furniture--I should have thought +_that_ would suffice." + +"I explained it to you at the time, dear. That was only a security and +behind that security there is a debt. And that debt must be paid +within the next few months, else we shall have our furniture sold. If +young Plymdale will take our house and most of our furniture, we shall +be able to pay that debt, and some others too, and we shall be quit of +a place too expensive for us. We might take a smaller house: Trumbull, +I know, has a very decent one to let at thirty pounds a-year, and this +is ninety." Lydgate uttered this speech in the curt hammering way with +which we usually try to nail down a vague mind to imperative facts. +Tears rolled silently down Rosamond's cheeks; she just pressed her +handkerchief against them, and stood looking at the large vase on the +mantel-piece. It was a moment of more intense bitterness than she had +ever felt before. At last she said, without hurry and with careful +emphasis-- + +"I never could have believed that you would like to act in that way." + +"Like it?" burst out Lydgate, rising from his chair, thrusting his +hands in his pockets and stalking away from the hearth; "it's not a +question of liking. Of course, I don't like it; it's the only thing I +can do." He wheeled round there, and turned towards her. + +"I should have thought there were many other means than that," said +Rosamond. "Let us have a sale and leave Middlemarch altogether." + +"To do what? What is the use of my leaving my work in Middlemarch to +go where I have none? We should be just as penniless elsewhere as we +are here," said Lydgate still more angrily. + +"If we are to be in that position it will be entirely your own doing, +Tertius," said Rosamond, turning round to speak with the fullest +conviction. "You will not behave as you ought to do to your own +family. You offended Captain Lydgate. Sir Godwin was very kind to me +when we were at Quallingham, and I am sure if you showed proper regard +to him and told him your affairs, he would do anything for you. But +rather than that, you like giving up our house and furniture to Mr. Ned +Plymdale." + +There was something like fierceness in Lydgate's eyes, as he answered +with new violence, "Well, then, if you will have it so, I do like it. +I admit that I like it better than making a fool of myself by going to +beg where it's of no use. Understand then, that it is what I _like to +do._" + +There was a tone in the last sentence which was equivalent to the +clutch of his strong hand on Rosamond's delicate arm. But for all +that, his will was not a whit stronger than hers. She immediately +walked out of the room in silence, but with an intense determination to +hinder what Lydgate liked to do. + +He went out of the house, but as his blood cooled he felt that the +chief result of the discussion was a deposit of dread within him at the +idea of opening with his wife in future subjects which might again urge +him to violent speech. It was as if a fracture in delicate crystal had +begun, and he was afraid of any movement that might make it fatal. His +marriage would be a mere piece of bitter irony if they could not go on +loving each other. He had long ago made up his mind to what he thought +was her negative character--her want of sensibility, which showed +itself in disregard both of his specific wishes and of his general +aims. The first great disappointment had been borne: the tender +devotedness and docile adoration of the ideal wife must be renounced, +and life must be taken up on a lower stage of expectation, as it is by +men who have lost their limbs. But the real wife had not only her +claims, she had still a hold on his heart, and it was his intense +desire that the hold should remain strong. In marriage, the certainty, +"She will never love me much," is easier to bear than the fear, "I +shall love her no more." Hence, after that outburst, his inward effort +was entirely to excuse her, and to blame the hard circumstances which +were partly his fault. He tried that evening, by petting her, to heal +the wound he had made in the morning, and it was not in Rosamond's +nature to be repellent or sulky; indeed, she welcomed the signs that +her husband loved her and was under control. But this was something +quite distinct from loving _him_. Lydgate would not have chosen soon to +recur to the plan of parting with the house; he was resolved to carry +it out, and say as little more about it as possible. But Rosamond +herself touched on it at breakfast by saying, mildly-- + +"Have you spoken to Trumbull yet?" + +"No," said Lydgate, "but I shall call on him as I go by this morning. +No time must be lost." He took Rosamond's question as a sign that she +withdrew her inward opposition, and kissed her head caressingly when he +got up to go away. + +As soon as it was late enough to make a call, Rosamond went to Mrs. +Plymdale, Mr. Ned's mother, and entered with pretty congratulations +into the subject of the coming marriage. Mrs. Plymdale's maternal view +was, that Rosamond might possibly now have retrospective glimpses of +her own folly; and feeling the advantages to be at present all on the +side of her son, was too kind a woman not to behave graciously. + +"Yes, Ned is most happy, I must say. And Sophy Toller is all I could +desire in a daughter-in-law. Of course her father is able to do +something handsome for her--that is only what would be expected with a +brewery like his. And the connection is everything we should desire. +But that is not what I look at. She is such a very nice girl--no airs, +no pretensions, though on a level with the first. I don't mean with +the titled aristocracy. I see very little good in people aiming out of +their own sphere. I mean that Sophy is equal to the best in the town, +and she is contented with that." + +"I have always thought her very agreeable," said Rosamond. + +"I look upon it as a reward for Ned, who never held his head too high, +that he should have got into the very best connection," continued Mrs. +Plymdale, her native sharpness softened by a fervid sense that she was +taking a correct view. "And such particular people as the Tollers are, +they might have objected because some of our friends are not theirs. +It is well known that your aunt Bulstrode and I have been intimate from +our youth, and Mr. Plymdale has been always on Mr. Bulstrode's side. +And I myself prefer serious opinions. But the Tollers have welcomed +Ned all the same." + +"I am sure he is a very deserving, well-principled young man," said +Rosamond, with a neat air of patronage in return for Mrs. Plymdale's +wholesome corrections. + +"Oh, he has not the style of a captain in the army, or that sort of +carriage as if everybody was beneath him, or that showy kind of +talking, and singing, and intellectual talent. But I am thankful he +has not. It is a poor preparation both for here and Hereafter." + +"Oh dear, yes; appearances have very little to do with happiness," said +Rosamond. "I think there is every prospect of their being a happy +couple. What house will they take?" + +"Oh, as for that, they must put up with what they can get. They have +been looking at the house in St. Peter's Place, next to Mr. Hackbutt's; +it belongs to him, and he is putting it nicely in repair. I suppose +they are not likely to hear of a better. Indeed, I think Ned will +decide the matter to-day." + +"I should think it is a nice house; I like St. Peter's Place." + +"Well, it is near the Church, and a genteel situation. But the windows +are narrow, and it is all ups and downs. You don't happen to know of +any other that would be at liberty?" said Mrs. Plymdale, fixing her +round black eyes on Rosamond with the animation of a sudden thought in +them. + +"Oh no; I hear so little of those things." + +Rosamond had not foreseen that question and answer in setting out to +pay her visit; she had simply meant to gather any information which +would help her to avert the parting with her own house under +circumstances thoroughly disagreeable to her. As to the untruth in her +reply, she no more reflected on it than she did on the untruth there +was in her saying that appearances had very little to do with +happiness. Her object, she was convinced, was thoroughly justifiable: +it was Lydgate whose intention was inexcusable; and there was a plan in +her mind which, when she had carried it out fully, would prove how very +false a step it would have been for him to have descended from his +position. + +She returned home by Mr. Borthrop Trumbull's office, meaning to call +there. It was the first time in her life that Rosamond had thought of +doing anything in the form of business, but she felt equal to the +occasion. That she should be obliged to do what she intensely +disliked, was an idea which turned her quiet tenacity into active +invention. Here was a case in which it could not be enough simply to +disobey and be serenely, placidly obstinate: she must act according to +her judgment, and she said to herself that her judgment was +right--"indeed, if it had not been, she would not have wished to act on +it." + +Mr. Trumbull was in the back-room of his office, and received Rosamond +with his finest manners, not only because he had much sensibility to +her charms, but because the good-natured fibre in him was stirred by +his certainty that Lydgate was in difficulties, and that this +uncommonly pretty woman--this young lady with the highest personal +attractions--was likely to feel the pinch of trouble--to find herself +involved in circumstances beyond her control. He begged her to do him +the honor to take a seat, and stood before her trimming and comporting +himself with an eager solicitude, which was chiefly benevolent. +Rosamond's first question was, whether her husband had called on Mr. +Trumbull that morning, to speak about disposing of their house. + +"Yes, ma'am, yes, he did; he did so," said the good auctioneer, trying +to throw something soothing into his iteration. "I was about to fulfil +his order, if possible, this afternoon. He wished me not to +procrastinate." + +"I called to tell you not to go any further, Mr. Trumbull; and I beg of +you not to mention what has been said on the subject. Will you oblige +me?" + +"Certainly I will, Mrs. Lydgate, certainly. Confidence is sacred with +me on business or any other topic. I am then to consider the +commission withdrawn?" said Mr. Trumbull, adjusting the long ends of +his blue cravat with both hands, and looking at Rosamond deferentially. + +"Yes, if you please. I find that Mr. Ned Plymdale has taken a house--the +one in St. Peter's Place next to Mr. Hackbutt's. Mr. Lydgate would be +annoyed that his orders should be fulfilled uselessly. And besides +that, there are other circumstances which render the proposal +unnecessary." + +"Very good, Mrs. Lydgate, very good. I am at your commands, whenever +you require any service of me," said Mr. Trumbull, who felt pleasure in +conjecturing that some new resources had been opened. "Rely on me, I +beg. The affair shall go no further." + +That evening Lydgate was a little comforted by observing that Rosamond +was more lively than she had usually been of late, and even seemed +interested in doing what would please him without being asked. He +thought, "If she will be happy and I can rub through, what does it all +signify? It is only a narrow swamp that we have to pass in a long +journey. If I can get my mind clear again, I shall do." + +He was so much cheered that he began to search for an account of +experiments which he had long ago meant to look up, and had neglected +out of that creeping self-despair which comes in the train of petty +anxieties. He felt again some of the old delightful absorption in a +far-reaching inquiry, while Rosamond played the quiet music which was +as helpful to his meditation as the plash of an oar on the evening +lake. It was rather late; he had pushed away all the books, and was +looking at the fire with his hands clasped behind his head in +forgetfulness of everything except the construction of a new +controlling experiment, when Rosamond, who had left the piano and was +leaning back in her chair watching him, said-- + +"Mr. Ned Plymdale has taken a house already." + +Lydgate, startled and jarred, looked up in silence for a moment, like a +man who has been disturbed in his sleep. Then flushing with an +unpleasant consciousness, he asked-- + +"How do you know?" + +"I called at Mrs. Plymdale's this morning, and she told me that he had +taken the house in St. Peter's Place, next to Mr. Hackbutt's." + +Lydgate was silent. He drew his hands from behind his head and pressed +them against the hair which was hanging, as it was apt to do, in a mass +on his forehead, while he rested his elbows on his knees. He was +feeling bitter disappointment, as if he had opened a door out of a +suffocating place and had found it walled up; but he also felt sure +that Rosamond was pleased with the cause of his disappointment. He +preferred not looking at her and not speaking, until he had got over +the first spasm of vexation. After all, he said in his bitterness, +what can a woman care about so much as house and furniture? a husband +without them is an absurdity. When he looked up and pushed his hair +aside, his dark eyes had a miserable blank non-expectance of sympathy +in them, but he only said, coolly-- + +"Perhaps some one else may turn up. I told Trumbull to be on the +look-out if he failed with Plymdale." + +Rosamond made no remark. She trusted to the chance that nothing more +would pass between her husband and the auctioneer until some issue +should have justified her interference; at any rate, she had hindered +the event which she immediately dreaded. After a pause, she said-- + +"How much money is it that those disagreeable people want?" + +"What disagreeable people?" + +"Those who took the list--and the others. I mean, how much money would +satisfy them so that you need not be troubled any more?" + +Lydgate surveyed her for a moment, as if he were looking for symptoms, +and then said, "Oh, if I could have got six hundred from Plymdale for +furniture and as premium, I might have managed. I could have paid off +Dover, and given enough on account to the others to make them wait +patiently, if we contracted our expenses." + +"But I mean how much should you want if we stayed in this house?" + +"More than I am likely to get anywhere," said Lydgate, with rather a +grating sarcasm in his tone. It angered him to perceive that +Rosamond's mind was wandering over impracticable wishes instead of +facing possible efforts. + +"Why should you not mention the sum?" said Rosamond, with a mild +indication that she did not like his manners. + +"Well," said Lydgate in a guessing tone, "it would take at least a +thousand to set me at ease. But," he added, incisively, "I have to +consider what I shall do without it, not with it." + +Rosamond said no more. + +But the next day she carried out her plan of writing to Sir Godwin +Lydgate. Since the Captain's visit, she had received a letter from +him, and also one from Mrs. Mengan, his married sister, condoling with +her on the loss of her baby, and expressing vaguely the hope that they +should see her again at Quallingham. Lydgate had told her that this +politeness meant nothing; but she was secretly convinced that any +backwardness in Lydgate's family towards him was due to his cold and +contemptuous behavior, and she had answered the letters in her most +charming manner, feeling some confidence that a specific invitation +would follow. But there had been total silence. The Captain evidently +was not a great penman, and Rosamond reflected that the sisters might +have been abroad. However, the season was come for thinking of friends +at home, and at any rate Sir Godwin, who had chucked her under the +chin, and pronounced her to be like the celebrated beauty, Mrs. Croly, +who had made a conquest of him in 1790, would be touched by any appeal +from her, and would find it pleasant for her sake to behave as he ought +to do towards his nephew. Rosamond was naively convinced of what an +old gentleman ought to do to prevent her from suffering annoyance. And +she wrote what she considered the most judicious letter possible--one +which would strike Sir Godwin as a proof of her excellent sense--pointing +out how desirable it was that Tertius should quit such a place +as Middlemarch for one more fitted to his talents, how the unpleasant +character of the inhabitants had hindered his professional success, and +how in consequence he was in money difficulties, from which it would +require a thousand pounds thoroughly to extricate him. She did not say +that Tertius was unaware of her intention to write; for she had the +idea that his supposed sanction of her letter would be in accordance +with what she did say of his great regard for his uncle Godwin as the +relative who had always been his best friend. Such was the force of +Poor Rosamond's tactics now she applied them to affairs. + +This had happened before the party on New Year's Day, and no answer had +yet come from Sir Godwin. But on the morning of that day Lydgate had +to learn that Rosamond had revoked his order to Borthrop Trumbull. +Feeling it necessary that she should be gradually accustomed to the +idea of their quitting the house in Lowick Gate, he overcame his +reluctance to speak to her again on the subject, and when they were +breakfasting said-- + +"I shall try to see Trumbull this morning, and tell him to advertise +the house in the 'Pioneer' and the 'Trumpet.' If the thing were +advertised, some one might be inclined to take it who would not +otherwise have thought of a change. In these country places many +people go on in their old houses when their families are too large for +them, for want of knowing where they can find another. And Trumbull +seems to have got no bite at all." + +Rosamond knew that the inevitable moment was come. "I ordered Trumbull +not to inquire further," she said, with a careful calmness which was +evidently defensive. + +Lydgate stared at her in mute amazement. Only half an hour before he +had been fastening up her plaits for her, and talking the "little +language" of affection, which Rosamond, though not returning it, +accepted as if she had been a serene and lovely image, now and then +miraculously dimpling towards her votary. With such fibres still astir +in him, the shock he received could not at once be distinctly anger; it +was confused pain. He laid down the knife and fork with which he was +carving, and throwing himself back in his chair, said at last, with a +cool irony in his tone-- + +"May I ask when and why you did so?" + +"When I knew that the Plymdales had taken a house, I called to tell him +not to mention ours to them; and at the same time I told him not to let +the affair go on any further. I knew that it would be very injurious +to you if it were known that you wished to part with your house and +furniture, and I had a very strong objection to it. I think that was +reason enough." + +"It was of no consequence then that I had told you imperative reasons +of another kind; of no consequence that I had come to a different +conclusion, and given an order accordingly?" said Lydgate, bitingly, +the thunder and lightning gathering about his brow and eyes. + +The effect of any one's anger on Rosamond had always been to make her +shrink in cold dislike, and to become all the more calmly correct, in +the conviction that she was not the person to misbehave whatever others +might do. She replied-- + +"I think I had a perfect right to speak on a subject which concerns me +at least as much as you." + +"Clearly--you had a right to speak, but only to me. You had no right +to contradict my orders secretly, and treat me as if I were a fool," +said Lydgate, in the same tone as before. Then with some added scorn, +"Is it possible to make you understand what the consequences will be? +Is it of any use for me to tell you again why we must try to part with +the house?" + +"It is not necessary for you to tell me again," said Rosamond, in a +voice that fell and trickled like cold water-drops. "I remembered what +you said. You spoke just as violently as you do now. But that does +not alter my opinion that you ought to try every other means rather +than take a step which is so painful to me. And as to advertising the +house, I think it would be perfectly degrading to you." + +"And suppose I disregard your opinion as you disregard mine?" + +"You can do so, of course. But I think you ought to have told me +before we were married that you would place me in the worst position, +rather than give up your own will." + +Lydgate did not speak, but tossed his head on one side, and twitched +the corners of his mouth in despair. Rosamond, seeing that he was not +looking at her, rose and set his cup of coffee before him; but he took +no notice of it, and went on with an inward drama and argument, +occasionally moving in his seat, resting one arm on the table, and +rubbing his hand against his hair. There was a conflux of emotions and +thoughts in him that would not let him either give thorough way to his +anger or persevere with simple rigidity of resolve. Rosamond took +advantage of his silence. + +"When we were married everyone felt that your position was very high. +I could not have imagined then that you would want to sell our +furniture, and take a house in Bride Street, where the rooms are like +cages. If we are to live in that way let us at least leave +Middlemarch." + +"These would be very strong considerations," said Lydgate, half +ironically--still there was a withered paleness about his lips as he +looked at his coffee, and did not drink--"these would be very strong +considerations if I did not happen to be in debt." + +"Many persons must have been in debt in the same way, but if they are +respectable, people trust them. I am sure I have heard papa say that +the Torbits were in debt, and they went on very well. It cannot be +good to act rashly," said Rosamond, with serene wisdom. + +Lydgate sat paralyzed by opposing impulses: since no reasoning he could +apply to Rosamond seemed likely to conquer her assent, he wanted to +smash and grind some object on which he could at least produce an +impression, or else to tell her brutally that he was master, and she +must obey. But he not only dreaded the effect of such extremities on +their mutual life--he had a growing dread of Rosamond's quiet elusive +obstinacy, which would not allow any assertion of power to be final; +and again, she had touched him in a spot of keenest feeling by implying +that she had been deluded with a false vision of happiness in marrying +him. As to saying that he was master, it was not the fact. The very +resolution to which he had wrought himself by dint of logic and +honorable pride was beginning to relax under her torpedo contact. He +swallowed half his cup of coffee, and then rose to go. + +"I may at least request that you will not go to Trumbull at +present--until it has been seen that there are no other means," said +Rosamond. Although she was not subject to much fear, she felt it safer +not to betray that she had written to Sir Godwin. "Promise me that you +will not go to him for a few weeks, or without telling me." + +Lydgate gave a short laugh. "I think it is I who should exact a +promise that you will do nothing without telling me," he said, turning +his eyes sharply upon her, and then moving to the door. + +"You remember that we are going to dine at papa's," said Rosamond, +wishing that he should turn and make a more thorough concession to her. +But he only said "Oh yes," impatiently, and went away. She held it to +be very odious in him that he did not think the painful propositions he +had had to make to her were enough, without showing so unpleasant a +temper. And when she put the moderate request that he would defer +going to Trumbull again, it was cruel in him not to assure her of what +he meant to do. She was convinced of her having acted in every way for +the best; and each grating or angry speech of Lydgate's served only as +an addition to the register of offences in her mind. Poor Rosamond for +months had begun to associate her husband with feelings of +disappointment, and the terribly inflexible relation of marriage had +lost its charm of encouraging delightful dreams. It had freed her from +the disagreeables of her father's house, but it had not given her +everything that she had wished and hoped. The Lydgate with whom she +had been in love had been a group of airy conditions for her, most of +which had disappeared, while their place had been taken by every-day +details which must be lived through slowly from hour to hour, not +floated through with a rapid selection of favorable aspects. The +habits of Lydgate's profession, his home preoccupation with scientific +subjects, which seemed to her almost like a morbid vampire's taste, his +peculiar views of things which had never entered into the dialogue of +courtship--all these continually alienating influences, even without +the fact of his having placed himself at a disadvantage in the town, +and without that first shock of revelation about Dover's debt, would +have made his presence dull to her. There was another presence which +ever since the early days of her marriage, until four months ago, had +been an agreeable excitement, but that was gone: Rosamond would not +confess to herself how much the consequent blank had to do with her +utter ennui; and it seemed to her (perhaps she was right) that an +invitation to Quallingham, and an opening for Lydgate to settle +elsewhere than in Middlemarch--in London, or somewhere likely to be +free from unpleasantness--would satisfy her quite well, and make her +indifferent to the absence of Will Ladislaw, towards whom she felt some +resentment for his exaltation of Mrs. Casaubon. + +That was the state of things with Lydgate and Rosamond on the New +Year's Day when they dined at her father's, she looking mildly neutral +towards him in remembrance of his ill-tempered behavior at breakfast, +and he carrying a much deeper effect from the inward conflict in which +that morning scene was only one of many epochs. His flushed effort +while talking to Mr. Farebrother--his effort after the cynical pretence +that all ways of getting money are essentially the same, and that +chance has an empire which reduces choice to a fool's illusion--was but +the symptom of a wavering resolve, a benumbed response to the old +stimuli of enthusiasm. + +What was he to do? He saw even more keenly than Rosamond did the +dreariness of taking her into the small house in Bride Street, where +she would have scanty furniture around her and discontent within: a +life of privation and life with Rosamond were two images which had +become more and more irreconcilable ever since the threat of privation +had disclosed itself. But even if his resolves had forced the two +images into combination, the useful preliminaries to that hard change +were not visibly within reach. And though he had not given the promise +which his wife had asked for, he did not go again to Trumbull. He even +began to think of taking a rapid journey to the North and seeing Sir +Godwin. He had once believed that nothing would urge him into making +an application for money to his uncle, but he had not then known the +full pressure of alternatives yet more disagreeable. He could not +depend on the effect of a letter; it was only in an interview, however +disagreeable this might be to himself, that he could give a thorough +explanation and could test the effectiveness of kinship. No sooner had +Lydgate begun to represent this step to himself as the easiest than +there was a reaction of anger that he--he who had long ago determined +to live aloof from such abject calculations, such self-interested +anxiety about the inclinations and the pockets of men with whom he had +been proud to have no aims in common--should have fallen not simply to +their level, but to the level of soliciting them. + + + +CHAPTER LXV. + + "One of us two must bowen douteless, + And, sith a man is more reasonable + Than woman is, ye [men] moste be suffrable. + --CHAUCER: Canterbury Tales. + + +The bias of human nature to be slow in correspondence triumphs even +over the present quickening in the general pace of things: what wonder +then that in 1832 old Sir Godwin Lydgate was slow to write a letter +which was of consequence to others rather than to himself? Nearly +three weeks of the new year were gone, and Rosamond, awaiting an answer +to her winning appeal, was every day disappointed. Lydgate, in total +ignorance of her expectations, was seeing the bills come in, and +feeling that Dover's use of his advantage over other creditors was +imminent. He had never mentioned to Rosamond his brooding purpose of +going to Quallingham: he did not want to admit what would appear to her +a concession to her wishes after indignant refusal, until the last +moment; but he was really expecting to set off soon. A slice of the +railway would enable him to manage the whole journey and back in four +days. + +But one morning after Lydgate had gone out, a letter came addressed to +him, which Rosamond saw clearly to be from Sir Godwin. She was full of +hope. Perhaps there might be a particular note to her enclosed; but +Lydgate was naturally addressed on the question of money or other aid, +and the fact that he was written to, nay, the very delay in writing at +all, seemed to certify that the answer was thoroughly compliant. She +was too much excited by these thoughts to do anything but light +stitching in a warm corner of the dining-room, with the outside of this +momentous letter lying on the table before her. About twelve she heard +her husband's step in the passage, and tripping to open the door, she +said in her lightest tones, "Tertius, come in here--here is a letter +for you." + +"Ah?" he said, not taking off his hat, but just turning her round +within his arm to walk towards the spot where the letter lay. "My +uncle Godwin!" he exclaimed, while Rosamond reseated herself, and +watched him as he opened the letter. She had expected him to be +surprised. + +While Lydgate's eyes glanced rapidly over the brief letter, she saw his +face, usually of a pale brown, taking on a dry whiteness; with nostrils +and lips quivering he tossed down the letter before her, and said +violently-- + +"It will be impossible to endure life with you, if you will always be +acting secretly--acting in opposition to me and hiding your actions." + +He checked his speech and turned his back on her--then wheeled round +and walked about, sat down, and got up again restlessly, grasping hard +the objects deep down in his pockets. He was afraid of saying +something irremediably cruel. + +Rosamond too had changed color as she read. The letter ran in this +way:-- + +"DEAR TERTIUS,--Don't set your wife to write to me when you have +anything to ask. It is a roundabout wheedling sort of thing which I +should not have credited you with. I never choose to write to a woman +on matters of business. As to my supplying you with a thousand pounds, +or only half that sum, I can do nothing of the sort. My own family +drains me to the last penny. With two younger sons and three +daughters, I am not likely to have cash to spare. You seem to have got +through your own money pretty quickly, and to have made a mess where +you are; the sooner you go somewhere else the better. But I have +nothing to do with men of your profession, and can't help you there. I +did the best I could for you as guardian, and let you have your own way +in taking to medicine. You might have gone into the army or the +Church. Your money would have held out for that, and there would have +been a surer ladder before you. Your uncle Charles has had a grudge +against you for not going into his profession, but not I. I have always +wished you well, but you must consider yourself on your own legs +entirely now. + + Your affectionate uncle, + GODWIN LYDGATE." + +When Rosamond had finished reading the letter she sat quite still, with +her hands folded before her, restraining any show of her keen +disappointment, and intrenching herself in quiet passivity under her +husband's wrath. Lydgate paused in his movements, looked at her again, +and said, with biting severity-- + +"Will this be enough to convince you of the harm you may do by secret +meddling? Have you sense enough to recognize now your incompetence to +judge and act for me--to interfere with your ignorance in affairs which +it belongs to me to decide on?" + +The words were hard; but this was not the first time that Lydgate had +been frustrated by her. She did not look at him, and made no reply. + +"I had nearly resolved on going to Quallingham. It would have cost me +pain enough to do it, yet it might have been of some use. But it has +been of no use for me to think of anything. You have always been +counteracting me secretly. You delude me with a false assent, and then +I am at the mercy of your devices. If you mean to resist every wish I +express, say so and defy me. I shall at least know what I am doing +then." + +It is a terrible moment in young lives when the closeness of love's +bond has turned to this power of galling. In spite of Rosamond's +self-control a tear fell silently and rolled over her lips. She still +said nothing; but under that quietude was hidden an intense effect: she +was in such entire disgust with her husband that she wished she had +never seen him. Sir Godwin's rudeness towards her and utter want of +feeling ranged him with Dover and all other creditors--disagreeable +people who only thought of themselves, and did not mind how annoying +they were to her. Even her father was unkind, and might have done more +for them. In fact there was but one person in Rosamond's world whom +she did not regard as blameworthy, and that was the graceful creature +with blond plaits and with little hands crossed before her, who had +never expressed herself unbecomingly, and had always acted for the +best--the best naturally being what she best liked. + +Lydgate pausing and looking at her began to feel that half-maddening +sense of helplessness which comes over passionate people when their +passion is met by an innocent-looking silence whose meek victimized air +seems to put them in the wrong, and at last infects even the justest +indignation with a doubt of its justice. He needed to recover the full +sense that he was in the right by moderating his words. + +"Can you not see, Rosamond," he began again, trying to be simply grave +and not bitter, "that nothing can be so fatal as a want of openness and +confidence between us? It has happened again and again that I have +expressed a decided wish, and you have seemed to assent, yet after that +you have secretly disobeyed my wish. In that way I can never know what +I have to trust to. There would be some hope for us if you would admit +this. Am I such an unreasonable, furious brute? Why should you not be +open with me?" Still silence. + +"Will you only say that you have been mistaken, and that I may depend +on your not acting secretly in future?" said Lydgate, urgently, but +with something of request in his tone which Rosamond was quick to +perceive. She spoke with coolness. + +"I cannot possibly make admissions or promises in answer to such words +as you have used towards me. I have not been accustomed to language of +that kind. You have spoken of my 'secret meddling,' and my +'interfering ignorance,' and my 'false assent.' I have never expressed +myself in that way to you, and I think that you ought to apologize. +You spoke of its being impossible to live with me. Certainly you have +not made my life pleasant to me of late. I think it was to be expected +that I should try to avert some of the hardships which our marriage has +brought on me." Another tear fell as Rosamond ceased speaking, and she +pressed it away as quietly as the first. + +Lydgate flung himself into a chair, feeling checkmated. What place was +there in her mind for a remonstrance to lodge in? He laid down his +hat, flung an arm over the back of his chair, and looked down for some +moments without speaking. Rosamond had the double purchase over him of +insensibility to the point of justice in his reproach, and of +sensibility to the undeniable hardships now present in her married +life. Although her duplicity in the affair of the house had exceeded +what he knew, and had really hindered the Plymdales from knowing of it, +she had no consciousness that her action could rightly be called false. +We are not obliged to identify our own acts according to a strict +classification, any more than the materials of our grocery and clothes. +Rosamond felt that she was aggrieved, and that this was what Lydgate +had to recognize. + +As for him, the need of accommodating himself to her nature, which was +inflexible in proportion to its negations, held him as with pincers. +He had begun to have an alarmed foresight of her irrevocable loss of +love for him, and the consequent dreariness of their life. The ready +fulness of his emotions made this dread alternate quickly with the +first violent movements of his anger. It would assuredly have been a +vain boast in him to say that he was her master. + +"You have not made my life pleasant to me of late"--"the hardships +which our marriage has brought on me"--these words were stinging his +imagination as a pain makes an exaggerated dream. If he were not only +to sink from his highest resolve, but to sink into the hideous +fettering of domestic hate? + +"Rosamond," he said, turning his eyes on her with a melancholy look, +"you should allow for a man's words when he is disappointed and +provoked. You and I cannot have opposite interests. I cannot part my +happiness from yours. If I am angry with you, it is that you seem not +to see how any concealment divides us. How could I wish to make +anything hard to you either by my words or conduct? When I hurt you, I +hurt part of my own life. I should never be angry with you if you +would be quite open with me." + +"I have only wished to prevent you from hurrying us into wretchedness +without any necessity," said Rosamond, the tears coming again from a +softened feeling now that her husband had softened. "It is so very +hard to be disgraced here among all the people we know, and to live in +such a miserable way. I wish I had died with the baby." + +She spoke and wept with that gentleness which makes such words and +tears omnipotent over a loving-hearted man. Lydgate drew his chair +near to hers and pressed her delicate head against his cheek with his +powerful tender hand. He only caressed her; he did not say anything; +for what was there to say? He could not promise to shield her from the +dreaded wretchedness, for he could see no sure means of doing so. When +he left her to go out again, he told himself that it was ten times +harder for her than for him: he had a life away from home, and constant +appeals to his activity on behalf of others. He wished to excuse +everything in her if he could--but it was inevitable that in that +excusing mood he should think of her as if she were an animal of +another and feebler species. Nevertheless she had mastered him. + + + +CHAPTER LXVI. + + "'Tis one thing to be tempted, Escalus, + Another thing to fall." + --Measure for Measure. + + +Lydgate certainly had good reason to reflect on the service his +practice did him in counteracting his personal cares. He had no longer +free energy enough for spontaneous research and speculative thinking, +but by the bedside of patients, the direct external calls on his +judgment and sympathies brought the added impulse needed to draw him +out of himself. It was not simply that beneficent harness of routine +which enables silly men to live respectably and unhappy men to live +calmly--it was a perpetual claim on the immediate fresh application of +thought, and on the consideration of another's need and trial. Many of +us looking back through life would say that the kindest man we have +ever known has been a medical man, or perhaps that surgeon whose fine +tact, directed by deeply informed perception, has come to us in our +need with a more sublime beneficence than that of miracle-workers. Some +of that twice-blessed mercy was always with Lydgate in his work at the +Hospital or in private houses, serving better than any opiate to quiet +and sustain him under his anxieties and his sense of mental degeneracy. + +Mr. Farebrother's suspicion as to the opiate was true, however. Under +the first galling pressure of foreseen difficulties, and the first +perception that his marriage, if it were not to be a yoked loneliness, +must be a state of effort to go on loving without too much care about +being loved, he had once or twice tried a dose of opium. But he had no +hereditary constitutional craving after such transient escapes from the +hauntings of misery. He was strong, could drink a great deal of wine, +but did not care about it; and when the men round him were drinking +spirits, he took sugar and water, having a contemptuous pity even for +the earliest stages of excitement from drink. It was the same with +gambling. He had looked on at a great deal of gambling in Paris, +watching it as if it had been a disease. He was no more tempted by +such winning than he was by drink. He had said to himself that the +only winning he cared for must be attained by a conscious process of +high, difficult combination tending towards a beneficent result. The +power he longed for could not be represented by agitated fingers +clutching a heap of coin, or by the half-barbarous, half-idiotic +triumph in the eyes of a man who sweeps within his arms the ventures of +twenty chapfallen companions. + +But just as he had tried opium, so his thought now began to turn upon +gambling--not with appetite for its excitement, but with a sort of +wistful inward gaze after that easy way of getting money, which implied +no asking and brought no responsibility. If he had been in London or +Paris at that time, it is probable that such thoughts, seconded by +opportunity, would have taken him into a gambling-house, no longer to +watch the gamblers, but to watch with them in kindred eagerness. +Repugnance would have been surmounted by the immense need to win, if +chance would be kind enough to let him. An incident which happened not +very long after that airy notion of getting aid from his uncle had been +excluded, was a strong sign of the effect that might have followed any +extant opportunity of gambling. + +The billiard-room at the Green Dragon was the constant resort of a +certain set, most of whom, like our acquaintance Mr. Bambridge, were +regarded as men of pleasure. It was here that poor Fred Vincy had made +part of his memorable debt, having lost money in betting, and been +obliged to borrow of that gay companion. It was generally known in +Middlemarch that a good deal of money was lost and won in this way; and +the consequent repute of the Green Dragon as a place of dissipation +naturally heightened in some quarters the temptation to go there. +Probably its regular visitants, like the initiates of freemasonry, +wished that there were something a little more tremendous to keep to +themselves concerning it; but they were not a closed community, and +many decent seniors as well as juniors occasionally turned into the +billiard-room to see what was going on. Lydgate, who had the muscular +aptitude for billiards, and was fond of the game, had once or twice in +the early days after his arrival in Middlemarch taken his turn with the +cue at the Green Dragon; but afterwards he had no leisure for the game, +and no inclination for the socialities there. One evening, however, he +had occasion to seek Mr. Bambridge at that resort. The horsedealer had +engaged to get him a customer for his remaining good horse, for which +Lydgate had determined to substitute a cheap hack, hoping by this +reduction of style to get perhaps twenty pounds; and he cared now for +every small sum, as a help towards feeding the patience of his +tradesmen. To run up to the billiard-room, as he was passing, would +save time. + +Mr. Bambridge was not yet come, but would be sure to arrive by-and-by, +said his friend Mr. Horrock; and Lydgate stayed, playing a game for the +sake of passing the time. That evening he had the peculiar light in +the eyes and the unusual vivacity which had been once noticed in him by +Mr. Farebrother. The exceptional fact of his presence was much noticed +in the room, where there was a good deal of Middlemarch company; and +several lookers-on, as well as some of the players, were betting with +animation. Lydgate was playing well, and felt confident; the bets were +dropping round him, and with a swift glancing thought of the probable +gain which might double the sum he was saving from his horse, he began +to bet on his own play, and won again and again. Mr. Bambridge had +come in, but Lydgate did not notice him. He was not only excited with +his play, but visions were gleaming on him of going the next day to +Brassing, where there was gambling on a grander scale to be had, and +where, by one powerful snatch at the devil's bait, he might carry it +off without the hook, and buy his rescue from his daily solicitings. + +He was still winning when two new visitors entered. One of them was a +young Hawley, just come from his law studies in town, and the other was +Fred Vincy, who had spent several evenings of late at this old haunt of +his. Young Hawley, an accomplished billiard-player, brought a cool +fresh hand to the cue. But Fred Vincy, startled at seeing Lydgate, and +astonished to see him betting with an excited air, stood aside, and +kept out of the circle round the table. + +Fred had been rewarding resolution by a little laxity of late. He had +been working heartily for six months at all outdoor occupations under +Mr. Garth, and by dint of severe practice had nearly mastered the +defects of his handwriting, this practice being, perhaps, a little the +less severe that it was often carried on in the evening at Mr. Garth's +under the eyes of Mary. But the last fortnight Mary had been staying +at Lowick Parsonage with the ladies there, during Mr. Farebrother's +residence in Middlemarch, where he was carrying out some parochial +plans; and Fred, not seeing anything more agreeable to do, had turned +into the Green Dragon, partly to play at billiards, partly to taste the +old flavor of discourse about horses, sport, and things in general, +considered from a point of view which was not strenuously correct. He +had not been out hunting once this season, had had no horse of his own +to ride, and had gone from place to place chiefly with Mr. Garth in his +gig, or on the sober cob which Mr. Garth could lend him. It was a +little too bad, Fred began to think, that he should be kept in the +traces with more severity than if he had been a clergyman. "I will +tell you what, Mistress Mary--it will be rather harder work to learn +surveying and drawing plans than it would have been to write sermons," +he had said, wishing her to appreciate what he went through for her +sake; "and as to Hercules and Theseus, they were nothing to me. They +had sport, and never learned to write a bookkeeping hand." And now, +Mary being out of the way for a little while, Fred, like any other +strong dog who cannot slip his collar, had pulled up the staple of his +chain and made a small escape, not of course meaning to go fast or far. +There could be no reason why he should not play at billiards, but he +was determined not to bet. As to money just now, Fred had in his mind +the heroic project of saving almost all of the eighty pounds that Mr. +Garth offered him, and returning it, which he could easily do by giving +up all futile money-spending, since he had a superfluous stock of +clothes, and no expense in his board. In that way he could, in one +year, go a good way towards repaying the ninety pounds of which he had +deprived Mrs. Garth, unhappily at a time when she needed that sum more +than she did now. Nevertheless, it must be acknowledged that on this +evening, which was the fifth of his recent visits to the billiard-room, +Fred had, not in his pocket, but in his mind, the ten pounds which he +meant to reserve for himself from his half-year's salary (having before +him the pleasure of carrying thirty to Mrs. Garth when Mary was likely +to be come home again)--he had those ten pounds in his mind as a fund +from which he might risk something, if there were a chance of a good +bet. Why? Well, when sovereigns were flying about, why shouldn't he +catch a few? He would never go far along that road again; but a man +likes to assure himself, and men of pleasure generally, what he could +do in the way of mischief if he chose, and that if he abstains from +making himself ill, or beggaring himself, or talking with the utmost +looseness which the narrow limits of human capacity will allow, it is +not because he is a spooney. Fred did not enter into formal reasons, +which are a very artificial, inexact way of representing the tingling +returns of old habit, and the caprices of young blood: but there was +lurking in him a prophetic sense that evening, that when he began to +play he should also begin to bet--that he should enjoy some +punch-drinking, and in general prepare himself for feeling "rather +seedy" in the morning. It is in such indefinable movements that action +often begins. + +But the last thing likely to have entered Fred's expectation was that +he should see his brother-in-law Lydgate--of whom he had never quite +dropped the old opinion that he was a prig, and tremendously conscious +of his superiority--looking excited and betting, just as he himself +might have done. Fred felt a shock greater than he could quite account +for by the vague knowledge that Lydgate was in debt, and that his +father had refused to help him; and his own inclination to enter into +the play was suddenly checked. It was a strange reversal of attitudes: +Fred's blond face and blue eyes, usually bright and careless, ready to +give attention to anything that held out a promise of amusement, +looking involuntarily grave and almost embarrassed as if by the sight +of something unfitting; while Lydgate, who had habitually an air of +self-possessed strength, and a certain meditativeness that seemed to +lie behind his most observant attention, was acting, watching, speaking +with that excited narrow consciousness which reminds one of an animal +with fierce eyes and retractile claws. + +Lydgate, by betting on his own strokes, had won sixteen pounds; but +young Hawley's arrival had changed the poise of things. He made +first-rate strokes himself, and began to bet against Lydgate's strokes, +the strain of whose nerves was thus changed from simple confidence in +his own movements to defying another person's doubt in them. The +defiance was more exciting than the confidence, but it was less sure. +He continued to bet on his own play, but began often to fail. Still he +went on, for his mind was as utterly narrowed into that precipitous +crevice of play as if he had been the most ignorant lounger there. +Fred observed that Lydgate was losing fast, and found himself in the +new situation of puzzling his brains to think of some device by which, +without being offensive, he could withdraw Lydgate's attention, and +perhaps suggest to him a reason for quitting the room. He saw that +others were observing Lydgate's strange unlikeness to himself, and it +occurred to him that merely to touch his elbow and call him aside for a +moment might rouse him from his absorption. He could think of nothing +cleverer than the daring improbability of saying that he wanted to see +Rosy, and wished to know if she were at home this evening; and he was +going desperately to carry out this weak device, when a waiter came up +to him with a message, saying that Mr. Farebrother was below, and +begged to speak with him. + +Fred was surprised, not quite comfortably, but sending word that he +would be down immediately, he went with a new impulse up to Lydgate, +said, "Can I speak to you a moment?" and drew him aside. + +"Farebrother has just sent up a message to say that he wants to speak +to me. He is below. I thought you might like to know he was there, if +you had anything to say to him." + +Fred had simply snatched up this pretext for speaking, because he could +not say, "You are losing confoundedly, and are making everybody stare +at you; you had better come away." But inspiration could hardly have +served him better. Lydgate had not before seen that Fred was present, +and his sudden appearance with an announcement of Mr. Farebrother had +the effect of a sharp concussion. + +"No, no," said Lydgate; "I have nothing particular to say to him. +But--the game is up--I must be going--I came in just to see Bambridge." + +"Bambridge is over there, but he is making a row--I don't think he's +ready for business. Come down with me to Farebrother. I expect he is +going to blow me up, and you will shield me," said Fred, with some +adroitness. + +Lydgate felt shame, but could not bear to act as if he felt it, by +refusing to see Mr. Farebrother; and he went down. They merely shook +hands, however, and spoke of the frost; and when all three had turned +into the street, the Vicar seemed quite willing to say good-by to +Lydgate. His present purpose was clearly to talk with Fred alone, and +he said, kindly, "I disturbed you, young gentleman, because I have some +pressing business with you. Walk with me to St. Botolph's, will you?" + +It was a fine night, the sky thick with stars, and Mr. Farebrother +proposed that they should make a circuit to the old church by the +London road. The next thing he said was-- + +"I thought Lydgate never went to the Green Dragon?" + +"So did I," said Fred. "But he said that he went to see Bambridge." + +"He was not playing, then?" + +Fred had not meant to tell this, but he was obliged now to say, "Yes, +he was. But I suppose it was an accidental thing. I have never seen +him there before." + +"You have been going often yourself, then, lately?" + +"Oh, about five or six times." + +"I think you had some good reason for giving up the habit of going +there?" + +"Yes. You know all about it," said Fred, not liking to be catechised +in this way. "I made a clean breast to you." + +"I suppose that gives me a warrant to speak about the matter now. It +is understood between us, is it not?--that we are on a footing of open +friendship: I have listened to you, and you will be willing to listen +to me. I may take my turn in talking a little about myself?" + +"I am under the deepest obligation to you, Mr. Farebrother," said Fred, +in a state of uncomfortable surmise. + +"I will not affect to deny that you are under some obligation to me. +But I am going to confess to you, Fred, that I have been tempted to +reverse all that by keeping silence with you just now. When somebody +said to me, 'Young Vincy has taken to being at the billiard-table every +night again--he won't bear the curb long;' I was tempted to do the +opposite of what I am doing--to hold my tongue and wait while you went +down the ladder again, betting first and then--" + +"I have not made any bets," said Fred, hastily. + +"Glad to hear it. But I say, my prompting was to look on and see you +take the wrong turning, wear out Garth's patience, and lose the best +opportunity of your life--the opportunity which you made some rather +difficult effort to secure. You can guess the feeling which raised +that temptation in me--I am sure you know it. I am sure you know that +the satisfaction of your affections stands in the way of mine." + +There was a pause. Mr. Farebrother seemed to wait for a recognition of +the fact; and the emotion perceptible in the tones of his fine voice +gave solemnity to his words. But no feeling could quell Fred's alarm. + +"I could not be expected to give her up," he said, after a moment's +hesitation: it was not a case for any pretence of generosity. + +"Clearly not, when her affection met yours. But relations of this +sort, even when they are of long standing, are always liable to change. +I can easily conceive that you might act in a way to loosen the tie she +feels towards you--it must be remembered that she is only conditionally +bound to you--and that in that case, another man, who may flatter +himself that he has a hold on her regard, might succeed in winning that +firm place in her love as well as respect which you had let slip. I +can easily conceive such a result," repeated Mr. Farebrother, +emphatically. "There is a companionship of ready sympathy, which might +get the advantage even over the longest associations." It seemed to +Fred that if Mr. Farebrother had had a beak and talons instead of his +very capable tongue, his mode of attack could hardly be more cruel. He +had a horrible conviction that behind all this hypothetic statement +there was a knowledge of some actual change in Mary's feeling. + +"Of course I know it might easily be all up with me," he said, in a +troubled voice. "If she is beginning to compare--" He broke off, not +liking to betray all he felt, and then said, by the help of a little +bitterness, "But I thought you were friendly to me." + +"So I am; that is why we are here. But I have had a strong disposition +to be otherwise. I have said to myself, 'If there is a likelihood of +that youngster doing himself harm, why should you interfere? Aren't +you worth as much as he is, and don't your sixteen years over and above +his, in which you have gone rather hungry, give you more right to +satisfaction than he has? If there's a chance of his going to the +dogs, let him--perhaps you could nohow hinder it--and do you take the +benefit.'" + +There was a pause, in which Fred was seized by a most uncomfortable +chill. What was coming next? He dreaded to hear that something had +been said to Mary--he felt as if he were listening to a threat rather +than a warning. When the Vicar began again there was a change in his +tone like the encouraging transition to a major key. + +"But I had once meant better than that, and I am come back to my old +intention. I thought that I could hardly _secure myself_ in it better, +Fred, than by telling you just what had gone on in me. And now, do you +understand me? I want you to make the happiness of her life and your +own, and if there is any chance that a word of warning from me may turn +aside any risk to the contrary--well, I have uttered it." + +There was a drop in the Vicar's voice when he spoke the last words. He +paused--they were standing on a patch of green where the road diverged +towards St. Botolph's, and he put out his hand, as if to imply that the +conversation was closed. Fred was moved quite newly. Some one highly +susceptible to the contemplation of a fine act has said, that it +produces a sort of regenerating shudder through the frame, and makes +one feel ready to begin a new life. A good degree of that effect was +just then present in Fred Vincy. + +"I will try to be worthy," he said, breaking off before he could say +"of you as well as of her." And meanwhile Mr. Farebrother had gathered +the impulse to say something more. + +"You must not imagine that I believe there is at present any decline in +her preference of you, Fred. Set your heart at rest, that if you keep +right, other things will keep right." + +"I shall never forget what you have done," Fred answered. "I can't say +anything that seems worth saying--only I will try that your goodness +shall not be thrown away." + +"That's enough. Good-by, and God bless you." + +In that way they parted. But both of them walked about a long while +before they went out of the starlight. Much of Fred's rumination might +be summed up in the words, "It certainly would have been a fine thing +for her to marry Farebrother--but if she loves me best and I am a good +husband?" + +Perhaps Mr. Farebrother's might be concentrated into a single shrug and +one little speech. "To think of the part one little woman can play in +the life of a man, so that to renounce her may be a very good imitation +of heroism, and to win her may be a discipline!" + + + +CHAPTER LXVII. + + Now is there civil war within the soul: + Resolve is thrust from off the sacred throne + By clamorous Needs, and Pride the grand-vizier + Makes humble compact, plays the supple part + Of envoy and deft-tongued apologist + For hungry rebels. + + +Happily Lydgate had ended by losing in the billiard-room, and brought +away no encouragement to make a raid on luck. On the contrary, he felt +unmixed disgust with himself the next day when he had to pay four or +five pounds over and above his gains, and he carried about with him a +most unpleasant vision of the figure he had made, not only rubbing +elbows with the men at the Green Dragon but behaving just as they did. +A philosopher fallen to betting is hardly distinguishable from a +Philistine under the same circumstances: the difference will chiefly be +found in his subsequent reflections, and Lydgate chewed a very +disagreeable cud in that way. His reason told him how the affair might +have been magnified into ruin by a slight change of scenery--if it had +been a gambling-house that he had turned into, where chance could be +clutched with both hands instead of being picked up with thumb and +fore-finger. Nevertheless, though reason strangled the desire to +gamble, there remained the feeling that, with an assurance of luck to +the needful amount, he would have liked to gamble, rather than take the +alternative which was beginning to urge itself as inevitable. + +That alternative was to apply to Mr. Bulstrode. Lydgate had so many +times boasted both to himself and others that he was totally +independent of Bulstrode, to whose plans he had lent himself solely +because they enabled him to carry out his own ideas of professional +work and public benefit--he had so constantly in their personal +intercourse had his pride sustained by the sense that he was making a +good social use of this predominating banker, whose opinions he thought +contemptible and whose motives often seemed to him an absurd mixture of +contradictory impressions--that he had been creating for himself +strong ideal obstacles to the proffering of any considerable request to +him on his own account. + +Still, early in March his affairs were at that pass in which men begin +to say that their oaths were delivered in ignorance, and to perceive +that the act which they had called impossible to them is becoming +manifestly possible. With Dover's ugly security soon to be put in +force, with the proceeds of his practice immediately absorbed in paying +back debts, and with the chance, if the worst were known, of daily +supplies being refused on credit, above all with the vision of +Rosamond's hopeless discontent continually haunting him, Lydgate had +begun to see that he should inevitably bend himself to ask help from +somebody or other. At first he had considered whether he should write +to Mr. Vincy; but on questioning Rosamond he found that, as he had +suspected, she had already applied twice to her father, the last time +being since the disappointment from Sir Godwin; and papa had said that +Lydgate must look out for himself. "Papa said he had come, with one +bad year after another, to trade more and more on borrowed capital, and +had had to give up many indulgences; he could not spare a single +hundred from the charges of his family. He said, let Lydgate ask +Bulstrode: they have always been hand and glove." + +Indeed, Lydgate himself had come to the conclusion that if he must end +by asking for a free loan, his relations with Bulstrode, more at least +than with any other man, might take the shape of a claim which was not +purely personal. Bulstrode had indirectly helped to cause the failure +of his practice, and had also been highly gratified by getting a +medical partner in his plans:--but who among us ever reduced himself +to the sort of dependence in which Lydgate now stood, without trying to +believe that he had claims which diminished the humiliation of asking? +It was true that of late there had seemed to be a new languor of +interest in Bulstrode about the Hospital; but his health had got worse, +and showed signs of a deep-seated nervous affection. In other respects +he did not appear to be changed: he had always been highly polite, but +Lydgate had observed in him from the first a marked coldness about his +marriage and other private circumstances, a coldness which he had +hitherto preferred to any warmth of familiarity between them. He +deferred the intention from day to day, his habit of acting on his +conclusions being made infirm by his repugnance to every possible +conclusion and its consequent act. He saw Mr. Bulstrode often, but he +did not try to use any occasion for his private purpose. At one moment +he thought, "I will write a letter: I prefer that to any circuitous +talk;" at another he thought, "No; if I were talking to him, I could +make a retreat before any signs of disinclination." + +Still the days passed and no letter was written, no special interview +sought. In his shrinking from the humiliation of a dependent attitude +towards Bulstrode, he began to familiarize his imagination with another +step even more unlike his remembered self. He began spontaneously to +consider whether it would be possible to carry out that puerile notion +of Rosamond's which had often made him angry, namely, that they should +quit Middlemarch without seeing anything beyond that preface. The +question came--"Would any man buy the practice of me even now, for as +little as it is worth? Then the sale might happen as a necessary +preparation for going away." + +But against his taking this step, which he still felt to be a +contemptible relinquishment of present work, a guilty turning aside +from what was a real and might be a widening channel for worthy +activity, to start again without any justified destination, there was +this obstacle, that the purchaser, if procurable at all, might not be +quickly forthcoming. And afterwards? Rosamond in a poor lodging, +though in the largest city or most distant town, would not find the +life that could save her from gloom, and save him from the reproach of +having plunged her into it. For when a man is at the foot of the hill +in his fortunes, he may stay a long while there in spite of +professional accomplishment. In the British climate there is no +incompatibility between scientific insight and furnished lodgings: the +incompatibility is chiefly between scientific ambition and a wife who +objects to that kind of residence. + +But in the midst of his hesitation, opportunity came to decide him. A +note from Mr. Bulstrode requested Lydgate to call on him at the Bank. +A hypochondriacal tendency had shown itself in the banker's +constitution of late; and a lack of sleep, which was really only a +slight exaggeration of an habitual dyspeptic symptom, had been dwelt on +by him as a sign of threatening insanity. He wanted to consult Lydgate +without delay on that particular morning, although he had nothing to +tell beyond what he had told before. He listened eagerly to what +Lydgate had to say in dissipation of his fears, though this too was +only repetition; and this moment in which Bulstrode was receiving a +medical opinion with a sense of comfort, seemed to make the +communication of a personal need to him easier than it had been in +Lydgate's contemplation beforehand. He had been insisting that it +would be well for Mr. Bulstrode to relax his attention to business. + +"One sees how any mental strain, however slight, may affect a delicate +frame," said Lydgate at that stage of the consultation when the remarks +tend to pass from the personal to the general, "by the deep stamp which +anxiety will make for a time even on the young and vigorous. I am +naturally very strong; yet I have been thoroughly shaken lately by an +accumulation of trouble." + +"I presume that a constitution in the susceptible state in which mine +at present is, would be especially liable to fall a victim to cholera, +if it visited our district. And since its appearance near London, we +may well besiege the Mercy-seat for our protection," said Mr. +Bulstrode, not intending to evade Lydgate's allusion, but really +preoccupied with alarms about himself. + +"You have at all events taken your share in using good practical +precautions for the town, and that is the best mode of asking for +protection," said Lydgate, with a strong distaste for the broken +metaphor and bad logic of the banker's religion, somewhat increased by +the apparent deafness of his sympathy. But his mind had taken up its +long-prepared movement towards getting help, and was not yet arrested. +He added, "The town has done well in the way of cleansing, and finding +appliances; and I think that if the cholera should come, even our +enemies will admit that the arrangements in the Hospital are a public +good." + +"Truly," said Mr. Bulstrode, with some coldness. "With regard to what +you say, Mr. Lydgate, about the relaxation of my mental labor, I have +for some time been entertaining a purpose to that effect--a purpose of +a very decided character. I contemplate at least a temporary +withdrawal from the management of much business, whether benevolent or +commercial. Also I think of changing my residence for a time: probably +I shall close or let 'The Shrubs,' and take some place near the +coast--under advice of course as to salubrity. That would be a measure +which you would recommend?" + +"Oh yes," said Lydgate, falling backward in his chair, with +ill-repressed impatience under the banker's pale earnest eyes and +intense preoccupation with himself. + +"I have for some time felt that I should open this subject with you in +relation to our Hospital," continued Bulstrode. "Under the +circumstances I have indicated, of course I must cease to have any +personal share in the management, and it is contrary to my views of +responsibility to continue a large application of means to an +institution which I cannot watch over and to some extent regulate. I +shall therefore, in case of my ultimate decision to leave Middlemarch, +consider that I withdraw other support to the New Hospital than that +which will subsist in the fact that I chiefly supplied the expenses of +building it, and have contributed further large sums to its successful +working." + +Lydgate's thought, when Bulstrode paused according to his wont, was, +"He has perhaps been losing a good deal of money." This was the most +plausible explanation of a speech which had caused rather a startling +change in his expectations. He said in reply-- + +"The loss to the Hospital can hardly be made up, I fear." + +"Hardly," returned Bulstrode, in the same deliberate, silvery tone; +"except by some changes of plan. The only person who may be certainly +counted on as willing to increase her contributions is Mrs. Casaubon. +I have had an interview with her on the subject, and I have pointed out +to her, as I am about to do to you, that it will be desirable to win a +more general support to the New Hospital by a change of system." +Another pause, but Lydgate did not speak. + +"The change I mean is an amalgamation with the Infirmary, so that the +New Hospital shall be regarded as a special addition to the elder +institution, having the same directing board. It will be necessary, +also, that the medical management of the two shall be combined. In +this way any difficulty as to the adequate maintenance of our new +establishment will be removed; the benevolent interests of the town +will cease to be divided." + +Mr. Bulstrode had lowered his eyes from Lydgate's face to the buttons +of his coat as he again paused. + +"No doubt that is a good device as to ways and means," said Lydgate, +with an edge of irony in his tone. "But I can't be expected to rejoice +in it at once, since one of the first results will be that the other +medical men will upset or interrupt my methods, if it were only because +they are mine." + +"I myself, as you know, Mr. Lydgate, highly valued the opportunity of +new and independent procedure which you have diligently employed: the +original plan, I confess, was one which I had much at heart, under +submission to the Divine Will. But since providential indications +demand a renunciation from me, I renounce." + +Bulstrode showed a rather exasperating ability in this conversation. +The broken metaphor and bad logic of motive which had stirred his +hearer's contempt were quite consistent with a mode of putting the +facts which made it difficult for Lydgate to vent his own indignation +and disappointment. After some rapid reflection, he only asked-- + +"What did Mrs. Casaubon say?" + +"That was the further statement which I wished to make to you," said +Bulstrode, who had thoroughly prepared his ministerial explanation. +"She is, you are aware, a woman of most munificent disposition, and +happily in possession--not I presume of great wealth, but of funds +which she can well spare. She has informed me that though she has +destined the chief part of those funds to another purpose, she is +willing to consider whether she cannot fully take my place in relation +to the Hospital. But she wishes for ample time to mature her thoughts +on the subject, and I have told her that there is no need for +haste--that, in fact, my own plans are not yet absolute." + +Lydgate was ready to say, "If Mrs. Casaubon would take your place, +there would be gain, instead of loss." But there was still a weight on +his mind which arrested this cheerful candor. He replied, "I suppose, +then, that I may enter into the subject with Mrs. Casaubon." + +"Precisely; that is what she expressly desires. Her decision, she +says, will much depend on what you can tell her. But not at present: +she is, I believe, just setting out on a journey. I have her letter +here," said Mr. Bulstrode, drawing it out, and reading from it. "'I am +immediately otherwise engaged,' she says. 'I am going into Yorkshire +with Sir James and Lady Chettam; and the conclusions I come to about +some land which I am to see there may affect my power of contributing +to the Hospital.' Thus, Mr. Lydgate, there is no haste necessary in +this matter; but I wished to apprise you beforehand of what may +possibly occur." + +Mr. Bulstrode returned the letter to his side-pocket, and changed his +attitude as if his business were closed. Lydgate, whose renewed hope +about the Hospital only made him more conscious of the facts which +poisoned his hope, felt that his effort after help, if made at all, +must be made now and vigorously. + +"I am much obliged to you for giving me full notice," he said, with a +firm intention in his tone, yet with an interruptedness in his delivery +which showed that he spoke unwillingly. "The highest object to me is +my profession, and I had identified the Hospital with the best use I +can at present make of my profession. But the best use is not always +the same with monetary success. Everything which has made the Hospital +unpopular has helped with other causes--I think they are all connected +with my professional zeal--to make me unpopular as a practitioner. I +get chiefly patients who can't pay me. I should like them best, if I +had nobody to pay on my own side." Lydgate waited a little, but +Bulstrode only bowed, looking at him fixedly, and he went on with the +same interrupted enunciation--as if he were biting an objectional leek. + +"I have slipped into money difficulties which I can see no way out of, +unless some one who trusts me and my future will advance me a sum +without other security. I had very little fortune left when I came +here. I have no prospects of money from my own family. My expenses, +in consequence of my marriage, have been very much greater than I had +expected. The result at this moment is that it would take a thousand +pounds to clear me. I mean, to free me from the risk of having all my +goods sold in security of my largest debt--as well as to pay my other +debts--and leave anything to keep us a little beforehand with our small +income. I find that it is out of the question that my wife's father +should make such an advance. That is why I mention my position to--to +the only other man who may be held to have some personal connection +with my prosperity or ruin." + +Lydgate hated to hear himself. But he had spoken now, and had spoken +with unmistakable directness. Mr. Bulstrode replied without haste, but +also without hesitation. + +"I am grieved, though, I confess, not surprised by this information, +Mr. Lydgate. For my own part, I regretted your alliance with my +brother-in-law's family, which has always been of prodigal habits, and +which has already been much indebted to me for sustainment in its +present position. My advice to you, Mr. Lydgate, would be, that +instead of involving yourself in further obligations, and continuing a +doubtful struggle, you should simply become a bankrupt." + +"That would not improve my prospect," said Lydgate, rising and speaking +bitterly, "even if it were a more agreeable thing in itself." + +"It is always a trial," said Mr. Bulstrode; "but trial, my dear sir, is +our portion here, and is a needed corrective. I recommend you to weigh +the advice I have given." + +"Thank you," said Lydgate, not quite knowing what he said. "I have +occupied you too long. Good-day." + + + +CHAPTER LXVIII. + + "What suit of grace hath Virtue to put on + If Vice shall wear as good, and do as well? + If Wrong, if Craft, if Indiscretion + Act as fair parts with ends as laudable? + Which all this mighty volume of events + The world, the universal map of deeds, + Strongly controls, and proves from all descents, + That the directest course still best succeeds. + For should not grave and learn'd Experience + That looks with the eyes of all the world beside, + And with all ages holds intelligence, + Go safer than Deceit without a guide! + --DANIEL: Musophilus. + + +That change of plan and shifting of interest which Bulstrode stated or +betrayed in his conversation with Lydgate, had been determined in him +by some severe experience which he had gone through since the epoch of +Mr. Larcher's sale, when Raffles had recognized Will Ladislaw, and when +the banker had in vain attempted an act of restitution which might move +Divine Providence to arrest painful consequences. + +His certainty that Raffles, unless he were dead, would return to +Middlemarch before long, had been justified. On Christmas Eve he had +reappeared at The Shrubs. Bulstrode was at home to receive him, and +hinder his communication with the rest of the family, but he could not +altogether hinder the circumstances of the visit from compromising +himself and alarming his wife. Raffles proved more unmanageable than +he had shown himself to be in his former appearances, his chronic state +of mental restlessness, the growing effect of habitual intemperance, +quickly shaking off every impression from what was said to him. He +insisted on staying in the house, and Bulstrode, weighing two sets of +evils, felt that this was at least not a worse alternative than his +going into the town. He kept him in his own room for the evening and +saw him to bed, Raffles all the while amusing himself with the +annoyance he was causing this decent and highly prosperous +fellow-sinner, an amusement which he facetiously expressed as sympathy +with his friend's pleasure in entertaining a man who had been +serviceable to him, and who had not had all his earnings. There was a +cunning calculation under this noisy joking--a cool resolve to extract +something the handsomer from Bulstrode as payment for release from this +new application of torture. But his cunning had a little overcast its +mark. + +Bulstrode was indeed more tortured than the coarse fibre of Raffles +could enable him to imagine. He had told his wife that he was simply +taking care of this wretched creature, the victim of vice, who might +otherwise injure himself; he implied, without the direct form of +falsehood, that there was a family tie which bound him to this care, +and that there were signs of mental alienation in Raffles which urged +caution. He would himself drive the unfortunate being away the next +morning. In these hints he felt that he was supplying Mrs. Bulstrode +with precautionary information for his daughters and servants, and +accounting for his allowing no one but himself to enter the room even +with food and drink. But he sat in an agony of fear lest Raffles +should be overheard in his loud and plain references to past facts--lest +Mrs. Bulstrode should be even tempted to listen at the door. How +could he hinder her, how betray his terror by opening the door to +detect her? She was a woman of honest direct habits, and little likely +to take so low a course in order to arrive at painful knowledge; but +fear was stronger than the calculation of probabilities. + +In this way Raffles had pushed the torture too far, and produced an +effect which had not been in his plan. By showing himself hopelessly +unmanageable he had made Bulstrode feel that a strong defiance was the +only resource left. After taking Raffles to bed that night the banker +ordered his closed carriage to be ready at half-past seven the next +morning. At six o'clock he had already been long dressed, and had +spent some of his wretchedness in prayer, pleading his motives for +averting the worst evil if in anything he had used falsity and spoken +what was not true before God. For Bulstrode shrank from a direct lie +with an intensity disproportionate to the number of his more indirect +misdeeds. But many of these misdeeds were like the subtle muscular +movements which are not taken account of in the consciousness, though +they bring about the end that we fix our mind on and desire. And it is +only what we are vividly conscious of that we can vividly imagine to be +seen by Omniscience. + +Bulstrode carried his candle to the bedside of Raffles, who was +apparently in a painful dream. He stood silent, hoping that the +presence of the light would serve to waken the sleeper gradually and +gently, for he feared some noise as the consequence of a too sudden +awakening. He had watched for a couple of minutes or more the +shudderings and pantings which seemed likely to end in waking, when +Raffles, with a long half-stifled moan, started up and stared round him +in terror, trembling and gasping. But he made no further noise, and +Bulstrode, setting down the candle, awaited his recovery. + +It was a quarter of an hour later before Bulstrode, with a cold +peremptoriness of manner which he had not before shown, said, "I came +to call you thus early, Mr. Raffles, because I have ordered the +carriage to be ready at half-past seven, and intend myself to conduct +you as far as Ilsely, where you can either take the railway or await a +coach." Raffles was about to speak, but Bulstrode anticipated him +imperiously with the words, "Be silent, sir, and hear what I have to +say. I shall supply you with money now, and I will furnish you with a +reasonable sum from time to time, on your application to me by letter; +but if you choose to present yourself here again, if you return to +Middlemarch, if you use your tongue in a manner injurious to me, you +will have to live on such fruits as your malice can bring you, without +help from me. Nobody will pay you well for blasting my name: I know +the worst you can do against me, and I shall brave it if you dare to +thrust yourself upon me again. Get up, sir, and do as I order you, +without noise, or I will send for a policeman to take you off my +premises, and you may carry your stories into every pothouse in the +town, but you shall have no sixpence from me to pay your expenses +there." + +Bulstrode had rarely in his life spoken with such nervous energy: he +had been deliberating on this speech and its probable effects through a +large part of the night; and though he did not trust to its ultimately +saving him from any return of Raffles, he had concluded that it was the +best throw he could make. It succeeded in enforcing submission from +the jaded man this morning: his empoisoned system at this moment +quailed before Bulstrode's cold, resolute bearing, and he was taken off +quietly in the carriage before the family breakfast time. The servants +imagined him to be a poor relation, and were not surprised that a +strict man like their master, who held his head high in the world, +should be ashamed of such a cousin and want to get rid of him. The +banker's drive of ten miles with his hated companion was a dreary +beginning of the Christmas day; but at the end of the drive, Raffles +had recovered his spirits, and parted in a contentment for which there +was the good reason that the banker had given him a hundred pounds. +Various motives urged Bulstrode to this open-handedness, but he did not +himself inquire closely into all of them. As he had stood watching +Raffles in his uneasy sleep, it had certainly entered his mind that the +man had been much shattered since the first gift of two hundred pounds. + +He had taken care to repeat the incisive statement of his resolve not +to be played on any more; and had tried to penetrate Raffles with the +fact that he had shown the risks of bribing him to be quite equal to +the risks of defying him. But when, freed from his repulsive presence, +Bulstrode returned to his quiet home, he brought with him no confidence +that he had secured more than a respite. It was as if he had had a +loathsome dream, and could not shake off its images with their hateful +kindred of sensations--as if on all the pleasant surroundings of his +life a dangerous reptile had left his slimy traces. + +Who can know how much of his most inward life is made up of the +thoughts he believes other men to have about him, until that fabric of +opinion is threatened with ruin? + +Bulstrode was only the more conscious that there was a deposit of +uneasy presentiment in his wife's mind, because she carefully avoided +any allusion to it. He had been used every day to taste the flavor of +supremacy and the tribute of complete deference: and the certainty that +he was watched or measured with a hidden suspicion of his having some +discreditable secret, made his voice totter when he was speaking to +edification. Foreseeing, to men of Bulstrode's anxious temperament, is +often worse than seeing; and his imagination continually heightened the +anguish of an imminent disgrace. Yes, imminent; for if his defiance of +Raffles did not keep the man away--and though he prayed for this result +he hardly hoped for it--the disgrace was certain. In vain he said to +himself that, if permitted, it would be a divine visitation, a +chastisement, a preparation; he recoiled from the imagined burning; and +he judged that it must be more for the Divine glory that he should +escape dishonor. That recoil had at last urged him to make +preparations for quitting Middlemarch. If evil truth must be reported +of him, he would then be at a less scorching distance from the contempt +of his old neighbors; and in a new scene, where his life would not have +gathered the same wide sensibility, the tormentor, if he pursued him, +would be less formidable. To leave the place finally would, he knew, +be extremely painful to his wife, and on other grounds he would have +preferred to stay where he had struck root. Hence he made his +preparations at first in a conditional way, wishing to leave on all +sides an opening for his return after brief absence, if any favorable +intervention of Providence should dissipate his fears. He was +preparing to transfer his management of the Bank, and to give up any +active control of other commercial affairs in the neighborhood, on the +ground of his failing health, but without excluding his future +resumption of such work. The measure would cause him some added +expense and some diminution of income beyond what he had already +undergone from the general depression of trade; and the Hospital +presented itself as a principal object of outlay on which he could +fairly economize. + +This was the experience which had determined his conversation with +Lydgate. But at this time his arrangements had most of them gone no +farther than a stage at which he could recall them if they proved to be +unnecessary. He continually deferred the final steps; in the midst of +his fears, like many a man who is in danger of shipwreck or of being +dashed from his carriage by runaway horses, he had a clinging +impression that something would happen to hinder the worst, and that to +spoil his life by a late transplantation might be over-hasty--especially +since it was difficult to account satisfactorily to his wife for the +project of their indefinite exile from the only place where she would +like to live. + +Among the affairs Bulstrode had to care for, was the management of the +farm at Stone Court in case of his absence; and on this as well as on +all other matters connected with any houses and land he possessed in or +about Middlemarch, he had consulted Caleb Garth. Like every one else +who had business of that sort, he wanted to get the agent who was more +anxious for his employer's interests than his own. With regard to +Stone Court, since Bulstrode wished to retain his hold on the stock, +and to have an arrangement by which he himself could, if he chose, +resume his favorite recreation of superintendence, Caleb had advised +him not to trust to a mere bailiff, but to let the land, stock, and +implements yearly, and take a proportionate share of the proceeds. + +"May I trust to you to find me a tenant on these terms, Mr. Garth?" +said Bulstrode. "And will you mention to me the yearly sum which would +repay you for managing these affairs which we have discussed together?" + +"I'll think about it," said Caleb, in his blunt way. "I'll see how I +can make it out." + +If it had not been that he had to consider Fred Vincy's future, Mr. +Garth would not probably have been glad of any addition to his work, of +which his wife was always fearing an excess for him as he grew older. +But on quitting Bulstrode after that conversation, a very alluring idea +occurred to him about this said letting of Stone Court. What if +Bulstrode would agree to his placing Fred Vincy there on the +understanding that he, Caleb Garth, should be responsible for the +management? It would be an excellent schooling for Fred; he might make +a modest income there, and still have time left to get knowledge by +helping in other business. He mentioned his notion to Mrs. Garth with +such evident delight that she could not bear to chill his pleasure by +expressing her constant fear of his undertaking too much. + +"The lad would be as happy as two," he said, throwing himself back in +his chair, and looking radiant, "if I could tell him it was all +settled. Think; Susan! His mind had been running on that place for +years before old Featherstone died. And it would be as pretty a turn +of things as could be that he should hold the place in a good +industrious way after all--by his taking to business. For it's likely +enough Bulstrode might let him go on, and gradually buy the stock. He +hasn't made up his mind, I can see, whether or not he shall settle +somewhere else as a lasting thing. I never was better pleased with a +notion in my life. And then the children might be married by-and-by, +Susan." + +"You will not give any hint of the plan to Fred, until you are sure +that Bulstrode would agree to the plan?" said Mrs. Garth, in a tone of +gentle caution. "And as to marriage, Caleb, we old people need not +help to hasten it." + +"Oh, I don't know," said Caleb, swinging his head aside. "Marriage is +a taming thing. Fred would want less of my bit and bridle. However, I +shall say nothing till I know the ground I'm treading on. I shall +speak to Bulstrode again." + +He took his earliest opportunity of doing so. Bulstrode had anything +but a warm interest in his nephew Fred Vincy, but he had a strong wish +to secure Mr. Garth's services on many scattered points of business at +which he was sure to be a considerable loser, if they were under less +conscientious management. On that ground he made no objection to Mr. +Garth's proposal; and there was also another reason why he was not +sorry to give a consent which was to benefit one of the Vincy family. +It was that Mrs. Bulstrode, having heard of Lydgate's debts, had been +anxious to know whether her husband could not do something for poor +Rosamond, and had been much troubled on learning from him that +Lydgate's affairs were not easily remediable, and that the wisest plan +was to let them "take their course." Mrs. Bulstrode had then said for +the first time, "I think you are always a little hard towards my +family, Nicholas. And I am sure I have no reason to deny any of my +relatives. Too worldly they may be, but no one ever had to say that +they were not respectable." + +"My dear Harriet," said Mr. Bulstrode, wincing under his wife's eyes, +which were filling with tears, "I have supplied your brother with a +great deal of capital. I cannot be expected to take care of his +married children." + +That seemed to be true, and Mrs. Bulstrode's remonstrance subsided into +pity for poor Rosamond, whose extravagant education she had always +foreseen the fruits of. + +But remembering that dialogue, Mr. Bulstrode felt that when he had to +talk to his wife fully about his plan of quitting Middlemarch, he +should be glad to tell her that he had made an arrangement which might +be for the good of her nephew Fred. At present he had merely mentioned +to her that he thought of shutting up The Shrubs for a few months, and +taking a house on the Southern Coast. + +Hence Mr. Garth got the assurance he desired, namely, that in case of +Bulstrode's departure from Middlemarch for an indefinite time, Fred +Vincy should be allowed to have the tenancy of Stone Court on the terms +proposed. + +Caleb was so elated with his hope of this "neat turn" being given to +things, that if his self-control had not been braced by a little +affectionate wifely scolding, he would have betrayed everything to +Mary, wanting "to give the child comfort." However, he restrained +himself, and kept in strict privacy from Fred certain visits which he +was making to Stone Court, in order to look more thoroughly into the +state of the land and stock, and take a preliminary estimate. He was +certainly more eager in these visits than the probable speed of events +required him to be; but he was stimulated by a fatherly delight in +occupying his mind with this bit of probable happiness which he held in +store like a hidden birthday gift for Fred and Mary. + +"But suppose the whole scheme should turn out to be a castle in the +air?" said Mrs. Garth. + +"Well, well," replied Caleb; "the castle will tumble about nobody's +head." + + + +CHAPTER LXIX. + + "If thou hast heard a word, let it die with thee." + --Ecclesiasticus. + + +Mr. Bulstrode was still seated in his manager's room at the Bank, about +three o'clock of the same day on which he had received Lydgate there, +when the clerk entered to say that his horse was waiting, and also that +Mr. Garth was outside and begged to speak with him. + +"By all means," said Bulstrode; and Caleb entered. "Pray sit down, Mr. +Garth," continued the banker, in his suavest tone. + +"I am glad that you arrived just in time to find me here. I know you +count your minutes." + +"Oh," said Caleb, gently, with a slow swing of his head on one side, as +he seated himself and laid his hat on the floor. + +He looked at the ground, leaning forward and letting his long fingers +droop between his legs, while each finger moved in succession, as if it +were sharing some thought which filled his large quiet brow. + +Mr. Bulstrode, like every one else who knew Caleb, was used to his +slowness in beginning to speak on any topic which he felt to be +important, and rather expected that he was about to recur to the buying +of some houses in Blindman's Court, for the sake of pulling them down, +as a sacrifice of property which would be well repaid by the influx of +air and light on that spot. It was by propositions of this kind that +Caleb was sometimes troublesome to his employers; but he had usually +found Bulstrode ready to meet him in projects of improvement, and they +had got on well together. When he spoke again, however, it was to say, +in rather a subdued voice-- + +"I have just come away from Stone Court, Mr. Bulstrode." + +"You found nothing wrong there, I hope," said the banker; "I was there +myself yesterday. Abel has done well with the lambs this year." + +"Why, yes," said Caleb, looking up gravely, "there is something wrong--a +stranger, who is very ill, I think. He wants a doctor, and I came to +tell you of that. His name is Raffles." + +He saw the shock of his words passing through Bulstrode's frame. On +this subject the banker had thought that his fears were too constantly +on the watch to be taken by surprise; but he had been mistaken. + +"Poor wretch!" he said in a compassionate tone, though his lips +trembled a little. "Do you know how he came there?" + +"I took him myself," said Caleb, quietly--"took him up in my gig. He +had got down from the coach, and was walking a little beyond the +turning from the toll-house, and I overtook him. He remembered seeing +me with you once before, at Stone Court, and he asked me to take him +on. I saw he was ill: it seemed to me the right thing to do, to carry +him under shelter. And now I think you should lose no time in getting +advice for him." Caleb took up his hat from the floor as he ended, and +rose slowly from his seat. + +"Certainly," said Bulstrode, whose mind was very active at this moment. +"Perhaps you will yourself oblige me, Mr. Garth, by calling at Mr. +Lydgate's as you pass--or stay! he may at this hour probably be at the +Hospital. I will first send my man on the horse there with a note this +instant, and then I will myself ride to Stone Court." + +Bulstrode quickly wrote a note, and went out himself to give the +commission to his man. When he returned, Caleb was standing as before +with one hand on the back of the chair, holding his hat with the other. +In Bulstrode's mind the dominant thought was, "Perhaps Raffles only +spoke to Garth of his illness. Garth may wonder, as he must have done +before, at this disreputable fellow's claiming intimacy with me; but he +will know nothing. And he is friendly to me--I can be of use to him." + +He longed for some confirmation of this hopeful conjecture, but to have +asked any question as to what Raffles had said or done would have been +to betray fear. + +"I am exceedingly obliged to you, Mr. Garth," he said, in his usual +tone of politeness. "My servant will be back in a few minutes, and I +shall then go myself to see what can be done for this unfortunate man. +Perhaps you had some other business with me? If so, pray be seated." + +"Thank you," said Caleb, making a slight gesture with his right hand to +waive the invitation. "I wish to say, Mr. Bulstrode, that I must +request you to put your business into some other hands than mine. I am +obliged to you for your handsome way of meeting me--about the letting +of Stone Court, and all other business. But I must give it up." A +sharp certainty entered like a stab into Bulstrode's soul. + +"This is sudden, Mr. Garth," was all he could say at first. + +"It is," said Caleb; "but it is quite fixed. I must give it up." + +He spoke with a firmness which was very gentle, and yet he could see +that Bulstrode seemed to cower under that gentleness, his face looking +dried and his eyes swerving away from the glance which rested on him. +Caleb felt a deep pity for him, but he could have used no pretexts to +account for his resolve, even if they would have been of any use. + +"You have been led to this, I apprehend, by some slanders concerning me +uttered by that unhappy creature," said Bulstrode, anxious now to know +the utmost. + +"That is true. I can't deny that I act upon what I heard from him." + +"You are a conscientious man, Mr. Garth--a man, I trust, who feels +himself accountable to God. You would not wish to injure me by being +too ready to believe a slander," said Bulstrode, casting about for +pleas that might be adapted to his hearer's mind. "That is a poor +reason for giving up a connection which I think I may say will be +mutually beneficial." + +"I would injure no man if I could help it," said Caleb; "even if I +thought God winked at it. I hope I should have a feeling for my +fellow-creature. But, sir--I am obliged to believe that this Raffles +has told me the truth. And I can't be happy in working with you, or +profiting by you. It hurts my mind. I must beg you to seek another +agent." + +"Very well, Mr. Garth. But I must at least claim to know the worst +that he has told you. I must know what is the foul speech that I am +liable to be the victim of," said Bulstrode, a certain amount of anger +beginning to mingle with his humiliation before this quiet man who +renounced his benefits. + +"That's needless," said Caleb, waving his hand, bowing his head +slightly, and not swerving from the tone which had in it the merciful +intention to spare this pitiable man. "What he has said to me will +never pass from my lips, unless something now unknown forces it from +me. If you led a harmful life for gain, and kept others out of their +rights by deceit, to get the more for yourself, I dare say you +repent--you would like to go back, and can't: that must be a bitter +thing"--Caleb paused a moment and shook his head--"it is not for me to +make your life harder to you." + +"But you do--you do make it harder to me," said Bulstrode constrained +into a genuine, pleading cry. "You make it harder to me by turning +your back on me." + +"That I'm forced to do," said Caleb, still more gently, lifting up his +hand. "I am sorry. I don't judge you and say, he is wicked, and I am +righteous. God forbid. I don't know everything. A man may do wrong, +and his will may rise clear out of it, though he can't get his life +clear. That's a bad punishment. If it is so with you,--well, I'm +very sorry for you. But I have that feeling inside me, that I can't go +on working with you. That's all, Mr. Bulstrode. Everything else is +buried, so far as my will goes. And I wish you good-day." + +"One moment, Mr. Garth!" said Bulstrode, hurriedly. "I may trust then +to your solemn assurance that you will not repeat either to man or +woman what--even if it have any degree of truth in it--is yet a +malicious representation?" Caleb's wrath was stirred, and he said, +indignantly-- + +"Why should I have said it if I didn't mean it? I am in no fear of +you. Such tales as that will never tempt my tongue." + +"Excuse me--I am agitated--I am the victim of this abandoned man." + +"Stop a bit! you have got to consider whether you didn't help to make +him worse, when you profited by his vices." + +"You are wronging me by too readily believing him," said Bulstrode, +oppressed, as by a nightmare, with the inability to deny flatly what +Raffles might have said; and yet feeling it an escape that Caleb had +not so stated it to him as to ask for that flat denial. + +"No," said Caleb, lifting his hand deprecatingly; "I am ready to +believe better, when better is proved. I rob you of no good chance. +As to speaking, I hold it a crime to expose a man's sin unless I'm +clear it must be done to save the innocent. That is my way of +thinking, Mr. Bulstrode, and what I say, I've no need to swear. I wish +you good-day." + +Some hours later, when he was at home, Caleb said to his wife, +incidentally, that he had had some little differences with Bulstrode, +and that in consequence, he had given up all notion of taking Stone +Court, and indeed had resigned doing further business for him. + +"He was disposed to interfere too much, was he?" said Mrs. Garth, +imagining that her husband had been touched on his sensitive point, and +not been allowed to do what he thought right as to materials and modes +of work. + +"Oh," said Caleb, bowing his head and waving his hand gravely. And +Mrs. Garth knew that this was a sign of his not intending to speak +further on the subject. + +As for Bulstrode, he had almost immediately mounted his horse and set +off for Stone Court, being anxious to arrive there before Lydgate. + +His mind was crowded with images and conjectures, which were a language +to his hopes and fears, just as we hear tones from the vibrations which +shake our whole system. The deep humiliation with which he had winced +under Caleb Garth's knowledge of his past and rejection of his +patronage, alternated with and almost gave way to the sense of safety +in the fact that Garth, and no other, had been the man to whom Raffles +had spoken. It seemed to him a sort of earnest that Providence +intended his rescue from worse consequences; the way being thus left +open for the hope of secrecy. That Raffles should be afflicted with +illness, that he should have been led to Stone Court rather than +elsewhere--Bulstrode's heart fluttered at the vision of probabilities +which these events conjured up. If it should turn out that he was +freed from all danger of disgrace--if he could breathe in perfect +liberty--his life should be more consecrated than it had ever been +before. He mentally lifted up this vow as if it would urge the result +he longed for--he tried to believe in the potency of that prayerful +resolution--its potency to determine death. He knew that he ought to +say, "Thy will be done;" and he said it often. But the intense desire +remained that the will of God might be the death of that hated man. + +Yet when he arrived at Stone Court he could not see the change in +Raffles without a shock. But for his pallor and feebleness, Bulstrode +would have called the change in him entirely mental. Instead of his +loud tormenting mood, he showed an intense, vague terror, and seemed to +deprecate Bulstrode's anger, because the money was all gone--he had +been robbed--it had half of it been taken from him. He had only come +here because he was ill and somebody was hunting him--somebody was +after him, he had told nobody anything, he had kept his mouth shut. +Bulstrode, not knowing the significance of these symptoms, interpreted +this new nervous susceptibility into a means of alarming Raffles into +true confessions, and taxed him with falsehood in saying that he had +not told anything, since he had just told the man who took him up in +his gig and brought him to Stone Court. Raffles denied this with +solemn adjurations; the fact being that the links of consciousness were +interrupted in him, and that his minute terror-stricken narrative to +Caleb Garth had been delivered under a set of visionary impulses which +had dropped back into darkness. + +Bulstrode's heart sank again at this sign that he could get no grasp +over the wretched man's mind, and that no word of Raffles could be +trusted as to the fact which he most wanted to know, namely, whether or +not he had really kept silence to every one in the neighborhood except +Caleb Garth. The housekeeper had told him without the least constraint +of manner that since Mr. Garth left, Raffles had asked her for beer, +and after that had not spoken, seeming very ill. On that side it might +be concluded that there had been no betrayal. Mrs. Abel thought, like +the servants at The Shrubs, that the strange man belonged to the +unpleasant "kin" who are among the troubles of the rich; she had at +first referred the kinship to Mr. Rigg, and where there was property +left, the buzzing presence of such large blue-bottles seemed natural +enough. How he could be "kin" to Bulstrode as well was not so clear, +but Mrs. Abel agreed with her husband that there was "no knowing," a +proposition which had a great deal of mental food for her, so that she +shook her head over it without further speculation. + +In less than an hour Lydgate arrived. Bulstrode met him outside the +wainscoted parlor, where Raffles was, and said-- + +"I have called you in, Mr. Lydgate, to an unfortunate man who was once +in my employment, many years ago. Afterwards he went to America, and +returned I fear to an idle dissolute life. Being destitute, he has a +claim on me. He was slightly connected with Rigg, the former owner of +this place, and in consequence found his way here. I believe he is +seriously ill: apparently his mind is affected. I feel bound to do the +utmost for him." + +Lydgate, who had the remembrance of his last conversation with +Bulstrode strongly upon him, was not disposed to say an unnecessary +word to him, and bowed slightly in answer to this account; but just +before entering the room he turned automatically and said, "What is his +name?"--to know names being as much a part of the medical man's +accomplishment as of the practical politician's. + +"Raffles, John Raffles," said Bulstrode, who hoped that whatever became +of Raffles, Lydgate would never know any more of him. + +When he had thoroughly examined and considered the patient, Lydgate +ordered that he should go to bed, and be kept there in as complete +quiet as possible, and then went with Bulstrode into another room. + +"It is a serious case, I apprehend," said the banker, before Lydgate +began to speak. + +"No--and yes," said Lydgate, half dubiously. "It is difficult to +decide as to the possible effect of long-standing complications; but +the man had a robust constitution to begin with. I should not expect +this attack to be fatal, though of course the system is in a ticklish +state. He should be well watched and attended to." + +"I will remain here myself," said Bulstrode. "Mrs. Abel and her +husband are inexperienced. I can easily remain here for the night, if +you will oblige me by taking a note for Mrs. Bulstrode." + +"I should think that is hardly necessary," said Lydgate. "He seems +tame and terrified enough. He might become more unmanageable. But +there is a man here--is there not?" + +"I have more than once stayed here a few nights for the sake of +seclusion," said Bulstrode, indifferently; "I am quite disposed to do +so now. Mrs. Abel and her husband can relieve or aid me, if necessary." + +"Very well. Then I need give my directions only to you," said Lydgate, +not feeling surprised at a little peculiarity in Bulstrode. + +"You think, then, that the case is hopeful?" said Bulstrode, when +Lydgate had ended giving his orders. + +"Unless there turn out to be further complications, such as I have not +at present detected--yes," said Lydgate. "He may pass on to a worse +stage; but I should not wonder if he got better in a few days, by +adhering to the treatment I have prescribed. There must be firmness. +Remember, if he calls for liquors of any sort, not to give them to him. +In my opinion, men in his condition are oftener killed by treatment +than by the disease. Still, new symptoms may arise. I shall come +again to-morrow morning." + +After waiting for the note to be carried to Mrs. Bulstrode, Lydgate +rode away, forming no conjectures, in the first instance, about the +history of Raffles, but rehearsing the whole argument, which had lately +been much stirred by the publication of Dr. Ware's abundant experience +in America, as to the right way of treating cases of alcoholic +poisoning such as this. Lydgate, when abroad, had already been +interested in this question: he was strongly convinced against the +prevalent practice of allowing alcohol and persistently administering +large doses of opium; and he had repeatedly acted on this conviction +with a favorable result. + +"The man is in a diseased state," he thought, "but there's a good deal +of wear in him still. I suppose he is an object of charity to +Bulstrode. It is curious what patches of hardness and tenderness lie +side by side in men's dispositions. Bulstrode seems the most +unsympathetic fellow I ever saw about some people, and yet he has taken +no end of trouble, and spent a great deal of money, on benevolent +objects. I suppose he has some test by which he finds out whom Heaven +cares for--he has made up his mind that it doesn't care for me." + +This streak of bitterness came from a plenteous source, and kept +widening in the current of his thought as he neared Lowick Gate. He +had not been there since his first interview with Bulstrode in the +morning, having been found at the Hospital by the banker's messenger; +and for the first time he was returning to his home without the vision +of any expedient in the background which left him a hope of raising +money enough to deliver him from the coming destitution of everything +which made his married life tolerable--everything which saved him and +Rosamond from that bare isolation in which they would be forced to +recognize how little of a comfort they could be to each other. It was +more bearable to do without tenderness for himself than to see that his +own tenderness could make no amends for the lack of other things to +her. The sufferings of his own pride from humiliations past and to +come were keen enough, yet they were hardly distinguishable to himself +from that more acute pain which dominated them--the pain of foreseeing +that Rosamond would come to regard him chiefly as the cause of +disappointment and unhappiness to her. He had never liked the +makeshifts of poverty, and they had never before entered into his +prospects for himself; but he was beginning now to imagine how two +creatures who loved each other, and had a stock of thoughts in common, +might laugh over their shabby furniture, and their calculations how far +they could afford butter and eggs. But the glimpse of that poetry +seemed as far off from him as the carelessness of the golden age; in +poor Rosamond's mind there was not room enough for luxuries to look +small in. He got down from his horse in a very sad mood, and went into +the house, not expecting to be cheered except by his dinner, and +reflecting that before the evening closed it would be wise to tell +Rosamond of his application to Bulstrode and its failure. It would be +well not to lose time in preparing her for the worst. + +But his dinner waited long for him before he was able to eat it. For +on entering he found that Dover's agent had already put a man in the +house, and when he asked where Mrs. Lydgate was, he was told that she +was in her bedroom. He went up and found her stretched on the bed pale +and silent, without an answer even in her face to any word or look of +his. He sat down by the bed and leaning over her said with almost a +cry of prayer-- + +"Forgive me for this misery, my poor Rosamond! Let us only love one +another." + +She looked at him silently, still with the blank despair on her face; +but then the tears began to fill her blue eyes, and her lip trembled. +The strong man had had too much to bear that day. He let his head fall +beside hers and sobbed. + +He did not hinder her from going to her father early in the morning--it +seemed now that he ought not to hinder her from doing as she +pleased. In half an hour she came back, and said that papa and mamma +wished her to go and stay with them while things were in this miserable +state. Papa said he could do nothing about the debt--if he paid this, +there would be half-a-dozen more. She had better come back home again +till Lydgate had got a comfortable home for her. "Do you object, +Tertius?" + +"Do as you like," said Lydgate. "But things are not coming to a crisis +immediately. There is no hurry." + +"I should not go till to-morrow," said Rosamond; "I shall want to pack +my clothes." + +"Oh, I would wait a little longer than to-morrow--there is no knowing +what may happen," said Lydgate, with bitter irony. "I may get my neck +broken, and that may make things easier to you." + +It was Lydgate's misfortune and Rosamond's too, that his tenderness +towards her, which was both an emotional prompting and a +well-considered resolve, was inevitably interrupted by these outbursts +of indignation either ironical or remonstrant. She thought them +totally unwarranted, and the repulsion which this exceptional severity +excited in her was in danger of making the more persistent tenderness +unacceptable. + +"I see you do not wish me to go," she said, with chill mildness; "why +can you not say so, without that kind of violence? I shall stay until +you request me to do otherwise." + +Lydgate said no more, but went out on his rounds. He felt bruised and +shattered, and there was a dark line under his eyes which Rosamond had +not seen before. She could not bear to look at him. Tertius had a way +of taking things which made them a great deal worse for her. + + + +CHAPTER LXX. + + Our deeds still travel with us from afar, + And what we have been makes us what we are." + + +Bulstrode's first object after Lydgate had left Stone Court was to +examine Raffles's pockets, which he imagined were sure to carry signs +in the shape of hotel-bills of the places he had stopped in, if he had +not told the truth in saying that he had come straight from Liverpool +because he was ill and had no money. There were various bills crammed +into his pocketbook, but none of a later date than Christmas at any +other place, except one, which bore date that morning. This was +crumpled up with a hand-bill about a horse-fair in one of his +tail-pockets, and represented the cost of three days' stay at an inn at +Bilkley, where the fair was held--a town at least forty miles from +Middlemarch. The bill was heavy, and since Raffles had no luggage with +him, it seemed probable that he had left his portmanteau behind in +payment, in order to save money for his travelling fare; for his purse +was empty, and he had only a couple of sixpences and some loose pence +in his pockets. + +Bulstrode gathered a sense of safety from these indications that +Raffles had really kept at a distance from Middlemarch since his +memorable visit at Christmas. At a distance and among people who were +strangers to Bulstrode, what satisfaction could there be to Raffles's +tormenting, self-magnifying vein in telling old scandalous stories +about a Middlemarch banker? And what harm if he did talk? The chief +point now was to keep watch over him as long as there was any danger of +that intelligible raving, that unaccountable impulse to tell, which +seemed to have acted towards Caleb Garth; and Bulstrode felt much +anxiety lest some such impulse should come over him at the sight of +Lydgate. He sat up alone with him through the night, only ordering the +housekeeper to lie down in her clothes, so as to be ready when he +called her, alleging his own indisposition to sleep, and his anxiety to +carry out the doctor's orders. He did carry them out faithfully, +although Raffles was incessantly asking for brandy, and declaring that +he was sinking away--that the earth was sinking away from under him. +He was restless and sleepless, but still quailing and manageable. On +the offer of the food ordered by Lydgate, which he refused, and the +denial of other things which he demanded, he seemed to concentrate all +his terror on Bulstrode, imploringly deprecating his anger, his revenge +on him by starvation, and declaring with strong oaths that he had never +told any mortal a word against him. Even this Bulstrode felt that he +would not have liked Lydgate to hear; but a more alarming sign of +fitful alternation in his delirium was, that in-the morning twilight +Raffles suddenly seemed to imagine a doctor present, addressing him and +declaring that Bulstrode wanted to starve him to death out of revenge +for telling, when he never had told. + +Bulstrode's native imperiousness and strength of determination served +him well. This delicate-looking man, himself nervously perturbed, +found the needed stimulus in his strenuous circumstances, and through +that difficult night and morning, while he had the air of an animated +corpse returned to movement without warmth, holding the mastery by its +chill impassibility his mind was intensely at work thinking of what he +had to guard against and what would win him security. Whatever prayers +he might lift up, whatever statements he might inwardly make of this +man's wretched spiritual condition, and the duty he himself was under +to submit to the punishment divinely appointed for him rather than to +wish for evil to another--through all this effort to condense words +into a solid mental state, there pierced and spread with irresistible +vividness the images of the events he desired. And in the train of +those images came their apology. He could not but see the death of +Raffles, and see in it his own deliverance. What was the removal of +this wretched creature? He was impenitent--but were not public +criminals impenitent?--yet the law decided on their fate. Should +Providence in this case award death, there was no sin in contemplating +death as the desirable issue--if he kept his hands from hastening +it--if he scrupulously did what was prescribed. Even here there might +be a mistake: human prescriptions were fallible things: Lydgate had +said that treatment had hastened death,--why not his own method of +treatment? But of course intention was everything in the question of +right and wrong. + +And Bulstrode set himself to keep his intention separate from his +desire. He inwardly declared that he intended to obey orders. Why +should he have got into any argument about the validity of these +orders? It was only the common trick of desire--which avails itself of +any irrelevant scepticism, finding larger room for itself in all +uncertainty about effects, in every obscurity that looks like the +absence of law. Still, he did obey the orders. + +His anxieties continually glanced towards Lydgate, and his remembrance +of what had taken place between them the morning before was accompanied +with sensibilities which had not been roused at all during the actual +scene. He had then cared but little about Lydgate's painful +impressions with regard to the suggested change in the Hospital, or +about the disposition towards himself which what he held to be his +justifiable refusal of a rather exorbitant request might call forth. +He recurred to the scene now with a perception that he had probably +made Lydgate his enemy, and with an awakened desire to propitiate him, +or rather to create in him a strong sense of personal obligation. He +regretted that he had not at once made even an unreasonable +money-sacrifice. For in case of unpleasant suspicions, or even +knowledge gathered from the raving of Raffles, Bulstrode would have +felt that he had a defence in Lydgate's mind by having conferred a +momentous benefit on him. But the regret had perhaps come too late. + +Strange, piteous conflict in the soul of this unhappy man, who had +longed for years to be better than he was--who had taken his selfish +passions into discipline and clad them in severe robes, so that he had +walked with them as a devout choir, till now that a terror had risen +among them, and they could chant no longer, but threw out their common +cries for safety. + +It was nearly the middle of the day before Lydgate arrived: he had +meant to come earlier, but had been detained, he said; and his +shattered looks were noticed by Balstrode. But he immediately threw +himself into the consideration of the patient, and inquired strictly +into all that had occurred. Raffles was worse, would take hardly any +food, was persistently wakeful and restlessly raving; but still not +violent. Contrary to Bulstrode's alarmed expectation, he took little +notice of Lydgate's presence, and continued to talk or murmur +incoherently. + +"What do you think of him?" said Bulstrode, in private. + +"The symptoms are worse." + +"You are less hopeful?" + +"No; I still think he may come round. Are you going to stay here +yourself?" said Lydgate, looking at Bulstrode with an abrupt question, +which made him uneasy, though in reality it was not due to any +suspicious conjecture. + +"Yes, I think so," said Bulstrode, governing himself and speaking with +deliberation. "Mrs. Bulstrode is advised of the reasons which detain +me. Mrs. Abel and her husband are not experienced enough to be left +quite alone, and this kind of responsibility is scarcely included in +their service of me. You have some fresh instructions, I presume." + +The chief new instruction that Lydgate had to give was on the +administration of extremely moderate doses of opium, in case of the +sleeplessness continuing after several hours. He had taken the +precaution of bringing opium in his pocket, and he gave minute +directions to Bulstrode as to the doses, and the point at which they +should cease. He insisted on the risk of not ceasing; and repeated his +order that no alcohol should be given. + +"From what I see of the case," he ended, "narcotism is the only thing I +should be much afraid of. He may wear through even without much food. +There's a good deal of strength in him." + +"You look ill yourself, Mr. Lydgate--a most unusual, I may say +unprecedented thing in my knowledge of you," said Bulstrode, showing a +solicitude as unlike his indifference the day before, as his present +recklessness about his own fatigue was unlike his habitual +self-cherishing anxiety. "I fear you are harassed." + +"Yes, I am," said Lydgate, brusquely, holding his hat, and ready to go. + +"Something new, I fear," said Bulstrode, inquiringly. "Pray be seated." + +"No, thank you," said Lydgate, with some hauteur. "I mentioned to you +yesterday what was the state of my affairs. There is nothing to add, +except that the execution has since then been actually put into my +house. One can tell a good deal of trouble in a short sentence. I +will say good morning." + +"Stay, Mr. Lydgate, stay," said Bulstrode; "I have been reconsidering +this subject. I was yesterday taken by surprise, and saw it +superficially. Mrs. Bulstrode is anxious for her niece, and I myself +should grieve at a calamitous change in your position. Claims on me +are numerous, but on reconsideration, I esteem it right that I should +incur a small sacrifice rather than leave you unaided. You said, I +think, that a thousand pounds would suffice entirely to free you from +your burthens, and enable you to recover a firm stand?" + +"Yes," said Lydgate, a great leap of joy within him surmounting every +other feeling; "that would pay all my debts, and leave me a little on +hand. I could set about economizing in our way of living. And +by-and-by my practice might look up." + +"If you will wait a moment, Mr. Lydgate, I will draw a check to that +amount. I am aware that help, to be effectual in these cases, should +be thorough." + +While Bulstrode wrote, Lydgate turned to the window thinking of his +home--thinking of his life with its good start saved from frustration, +its good purposes still unbroken. + +"You can give me a note of hand for this, Mr. Lydgate," said the +banker, advancing towards him with the check. "And by-and-by, I hope, +you may be in circumstances gradually to repay me. Meanwhile, I have +pleasure in thinking that you will be released from further difficulty." + +"I am deeply obliged to you," said Lydgate. "You have restored to me +the prospect of working with some happiness and some chance of good." + +It appeared to him a very natural movement in Bulstrode that he should +have reconsidered his refusal: it corresponded with the more munificent +side of his character. But as he put his hack into a canter, that he +might get the sooner home, and tell the good news to Rosamond, and get +cash at the bank to pay over to Dover's agent, there crossed his mind, +with an unpleasant impression, as from a dark-winged flight of evil +augury across his vision, the thought of that contrast in himself which +a few months had brought--that he should be overjoyed at being under a +strong personal obligation--that he should be overjoyed at getting +money for himself from Bulstrode. + +The banker felt that he had done something to nullify one cause of +uneasiness, and yet he was scarcely the easier. He did not measure the +quantity of diseased motive which had made him wish for Lydgate's +good-will, but the quantity was none the less actively there, like an +irritating agent in his blood. A man vows, and yet will not cast away +the means of breaking his vow. Is it that he distinctly means to break +it? Not at all; but the desires which tend to break it are at work in +him dimly, and make their way into his imagination, and relax his +muscles in the very moments when he is telling himself over again the +reasons for his vow. Raffles, recovering quickly, returning to the +free use of his odious powers--how could Bulstrode wish for that? +Raffles dead was the image that brought release, and indirectly he +prayed for that way of release, beseeching that, if it were possible, +the rest of his days here below might be freed from the threat of an +ignominy which would break him utterly as an instrument of God's +service. Lydgate's opinion was not on the side of promise that this +prayer would be fulfilled; and as the day advanced, Bulstrode felt +himself getting irritated at the persistent life in this man, whom he +would fain have seen sinking into the silence of death: imperious will +stirred murderous impulses towards this brute life, over which will, by +itself, had no power. He said inwardly that he was getting too much +worn; he would not sit up with the patient to-night, but leave him to +Mrs. Abel, who, if necessary, could call her husband. + +At six o'clock, Raffles, having had only fitful perturbed snatches of +sleep, from which he waked with fresh restlessness and perpetual cries +that he was sinking away, Bulstrode began to administer the opium +according to Lydgate's directions. At the end of half an hour or more +he called Mrs. Abel and told her that he found himself unfit for +further watching. He must now consign the patient to her care; and he +proceeded to repeat to her Lydgate's directions as to the quantity of +each dose. Mrs. Abel had not before known anything of Lydgate's +prescriptions; she had simply prepared and brought whatever Bulstrode +ordered, and had done what he pointed out to her. She began now to ask +what else she should do besides administering the opium. + +"Nothing at present, except the offer of the soup or the soda-water: +you can come to me for further directions. Unless there is any +important change, I shall not come into the room again to-night. You +will ask your husband for help if necessary. I must go to bed early." + +"You've much need, sir, I'm sure," said Mrs. Abel, "and to take +something more strengthening than what you've done." + +Bulstrode went away now without anxiety as to what Raffles might say in +his raving, which had taken on a muttering incoherence not likely to +create any dangerous belief. At any rate he must risk this. He went +down into the wainscoted parlor first, and began to consider whether he +would not have his horse saddled and go home by the moonlight, and give +up caring for earthly consequences. Then, he wished that he had begged +Lydgate to come again that evening. Perhaps he might deliver a +different opinion, and think that Raffles was getting into a less +hopeful state. Should he send for Lydgate? If Raffles were really +getting worse, and slowly dying, Bulstrode felt that he could go to bed +and sleep in gratitude to Providence. But was he worse? Lydgate might +come and simply say that he was going on as he expected, and predict +that he would by-and-by fall into a good sleep, and get well. What was +the use of sending for him? Bulstrode shrank from that result. No +ideas or opinions could hinder him from seeing the one probability to +be, that Raffles recovered would be just the same man as before, with +his strength as a tormentor renewed, obliging him to drag away his wife +to spend her years apart from her friends and native place, carrying an +alienating suspicion against him in her heart. + +He had sat an hour and a half in this conflict by the firelight only, +when a sudden thought made him rise and light the bed-candle, which he +had brought down with him. The thought was, that he had not told Mrs. +Abel when the doses of opium must cease. + +He took hold of the candlestick, but stood motionless for a long while. +She might already have given him more than Lydgate had prescribed. But +it was excusable in him, that he should forget part of an order, in his +present wearied condition. He walked up-stairs, candle in hand, not +knowing whether he should straightway enter his own room and go to bed, +or turn to the patient's room and rectify his omission. He paused in +the passage, with his face turned towards Raffles's room, and he could +hear him moaning and murmuring. He was not asleep, then. Who could +know that Lydgate's prescription would not be better disobeyed than +followed, since there was still no sleep? + +He turned into his own room. Before he had quite undressed, Mrs. Abel +rapped at the door; he opened it an inch, so that he could hear her +speak low. + +"If you please, sir, should I have no brandy nor nothing to give the +poor creetur? He feels sinking away, and nothing else will he +swaller--and but little strength in it, if he did--only the opium. And +he says more and more he's sinking down through the earth." + +To her surprise, Mr. Bulstrode did not answer. A struggle was going on +within him. + +"I think he must die for want o' support, if he goes on in that way. +When I nursed my poor master, Mr. Robisson, I had to give him port-wine +and brandy constant, and a big glass at a time," added Mrs. Abel, with +a touch of remonstrance in her tone. + +But again Mr. Bulstrode did not answer immediately, and she continued, +"It's not a time to spare when people are at death's door, nor would +you wish it, sir, I'm sure. Else I should give him our own bottle o' +rum as we keep by us. But a sitter-up so as you've been, and doing +everything as laid in your power--" + +Here a key was thrust through the inch of doorway, and Mr. Bulstrode +said huskily, "That is the key of the wine-cooler. You will find plenty +of brandy there." + +Early in the morning--about six--Mr. Bulstrode rose and spent some time +in prayer. Does any one suppose that private prayer is necessarily +candid--necessarily goes to the roots of action? Private prayer is +inaudible speech, and speech is representative: who can represent +himself just as he is, even in his own reflections? Bulstrode had not +yet unravelled in his thought the confused promptings of the last +four-and-twenty hours. + +He listened in the passage, and could hear hard stertorous breathing. +Then he walked out in the garden, and looked at the early rime on the +grass and fresh spring leaves. When he re-entered the house, he felt +startled at the sight of Mrs. Abel. + +"How is your patient--asleep, I think?" he said, with an attempt at +cheerfulness in his tone. + +"He's gone very deep, sir," said Mrs. Abel. "He went off gradual +between three and four o'clock. Would you please to go and look at +him? I thought it no harm to leave him. My man's gone afield, and the +little girl's seeing to the kettles." + +Bulstrode went up. At a glance he knew that Raffles was not in the +sleep which brings revival, but in the sleep which streams deeper and +deeper into the gulf of death. + +He looked round the room and saw a bottle with some brandy in it, and +the almost empty opium phial. He put the phial out of sight, and +carried the brandy-bottle down-stairs with him, locking it again in the +wine-cooler. + +While breakfasting he considered whether he should ride to Middlemarch +at once, or wait for Lydgate's arrival. He decided to wait, and told +Mrs. Abel that she might go about her work--he could watch in the +bed-chamber. + +As he sat there and beheld the enemy of his peace going irrevocably +into silence, he felt more at rest than he had done for many months. +His conscience was soothed by the enfolding wing of secrecy, which +seemed just then like an angel sent down for his relief. He drew out +his pocket-book to review various memoranda there as to the +arrangements he had projected and partly carried out in the prospect of +quitting Middlemarch, and considered how far he would let them stand or +recall them, now that his absence would be brief. Some economies which +he felt desirable might still find a suitable occasion in his temporary +withdrawal from management, and he hoped still that Mrs. Casaubon would +take a large share in the expenses of the Hospital. In that way the +moments passed, until a change in the stertorous breathing was marked +enough to draw his attention wholly to the bed, and forced him to think +of the departing life, which had once been subservient to his +own--which he had once been glad to find base enough for him to act on +as he would. It was his gladness then which impelled him now to be +glad that the life was at an end. + +And who could say that the death of Raffles had been hastened? Who +knew what would have saved him? + +Lydgate arrived at half-past ten, in time to witness the final pause of +the breath. When he entered the room Bulstrode observed a sudden +expression in his face, which was not so much surprise as a recognition +that he had not judged correctly. He stood by the bed in silence for +some time, with his eyes turned on the dying man, but with that subdued +activity of expression which showed that he was carrying on an inward +debate. + +"When did this change begin?" said he, looking at Bulstrode. + +"I did not watch by him last night," said Bulstrode. "I was over-worn, +and left him under Mrs. Abel's care. She said that he sank into sleep +between three and four o'clock. When I came in before eight he was +nearly in this condition." + +Lydgate did not ask another question, but watched in silence until he +said, "It's all over." + +This morning Lydgate was in a state of recovered hope and freedom. He +had set out on his work with all his old animation, and felt himself +strong enough to bear all the deficiencies of his married life. And he +was conscious that Bulstrode had been a benefactor to him. But he was +uneasy about this case. He had not expected it to terminate as it had +done. Yet he hardly knew how to put a question on the subject to +Bulstrode without appearing to insult him; and if he examined the +housekeeper--why, the man was dead. There seemed to be no use in +implying that somebody's ignorance or imprudence had killed him. And +after all, he himself might be wrong. + +He and Bulstrode rode back to Middlemarch together, talking of many +things--chiefly cholera and the chances of the Reform Bill in the House +of Lords, and the firm resolve of the political Unions. Nothing was +said about Raffles, except that Bulstrode mentioned the necessity of +having a grave for him in Lowick churchyard, and observed that, so far +as he knew, the poor man had no connections, except Rigg, whom he had +stated to be unfriendly towards him. + +On returning home Lydgate had a visit from Mr. Farebrother. The Vicar +had not been in the town the day before, but the news that there was an +execution in Lydgate's house had got to Lowick by the evening, having +been carried by Mr. Spicer, shoemaker and parish-clerk, who had it from +his brother, the respectable bell-hanger in Lowick Gate. Since that +evening when Lydgate had come down from the billiard room with Fred +Vincy, Mr. Farebrother's thoughts about him had been rather gloomy. +Playing at the Green Dragon once or oftener might have been a trifle in +another man; but in Lydgate it was one of several signs that he was +getting unlike his former self. He was beginning to do things for +which he had formerly even an excessive scorn. Whatever certain +dissatisfactions in marriage, which some silly tinklings of gossip had +given him hints of, might have to do with this change, Mr. Farebrother +felt sure that it was chiefly connected with the debts which were being +more and more distinctly reported, and he began to fear that any notion +of Lydgate's having resources or friends in the background must be +quite illusory. The rebuff he had met with in his first attempt to win +Lydgate's confidence, disinclined him to a second; but this news of the +execution being actually in the house, determined the Vicar to overcome +his reluctance. + +Lydgate had just dismissed a poor patient, in whom he was much +interested, and he came forward to put out his hand--with an open +cheerfulness which surprised Mr. Farebrother. Could this too be a +proud rejection of sympathy and help? Never mind; the sympathy and +help should be offered. + +"How are you, Lydgate? I came to see you because I had heard something +which made me anxious about you," said the Vicar, in the tone of a good +brother, only that there was no reproach in it. They were both seated +by this time, and Lydgate answered immediately-- + +"I think I know what you mean. You had heard that there was an +execution in the house?" + +"Yes; is it true?" + +"It was true," said Lydgate, with an air of freedom, as if he did not +mind talking about the affair now. "But the danger is over; the debt +is paid. I am out of my difficulties now: I shall be freed from debts, +and able, I hope, to start afresh on a better plan." + +"I am very thankful to hear it," said the Vicar, falling back in his +chair, and speaking with that low-toned quickness which often follows +the removal of a load. "I like that better than all the news in the +'Times.' I confess I came to you with a heavy heart." + +"Thank you for coming," said Lydgate, cordially. "I can enjoy the +kindness all the more because I am happier. I have certainly been a +good deal crushed. I'm afraid I shall find the bruises still painful +by-and by," he added, smiling rather sadly; "but just now I can only +feel that the torture-screw is off." + +Mr. Farebrother was silent for a moment, and then said earnestly, "My +dear fellow, let me ask you one question. Forgive me if I take a +liberty." + +"I don't believe you will ask anything that ought to offend me." + +"Then--this is necessary to set my heart quite at rest--you have +not--have you?--in order to pay your debts, incurred another debt which +may harass you worse hereafter?" + +"No," said Lydgate, coloring slightly. "There is no reason why I +should not tell you--since the fact is so--that the person to whom I am +indebted is Bulstrode. He has made me a very handsome advance--a +thousand pounds--and he can afford to wait for repayment." + +"Well, that is generous," said Mr. Farebrother, compelling himself to +approve of the man whom he disliked. His delicate feeling shrank from +dwelling even in his thought on the fact that he had always urged +Lydgate to avoid any personal entanglement with Bulstrode. He added +immediately, "And Bulstrode must naturally feel an interest in your +welfare, after you have worked with him in a way which has probably +reduced your income instead of adding to it. I am glad to think that +he has acted accordingly." + +Lydgate felt uncomfortable under these kindly suppositions. They made +more distinct within him the uneasy consciousness which had shown its +first dim stirrings only a few hours before, that Bulstrode's motives +for his sudden beneficence following close upon the chillest +indifference might be merely selfish. He let the kindly suppositions +pass. He could not tell the history of the loan, but it was more +vividly present with him than ever, as well as the fact which the Vicar +delicately ignored--that this relation of personal indebtedness to +Bulstrode was what he had once been most resolved to avoid. + +He began, instead of answering, to speak of his projected economies, +and of his having come to look at his life from a different point of +view. + +"I shall set up a surgery," he said. "I really think I made a mistaken +effort in that respect. And if Rosamond will not mind, I shall take an +apprentice. I don't like these things, but if one carries them out +faithfully they are not really lowering. I have had a severe galling +to begin with: that will make the small rubs seem easy." + +Poor Lydgate! the "if Rosamond will not mind," which had fallen from +him involuntarily as part of his thought, was a significant mark of the +yoke he bore. But Mr. Farebrother, whose hopes entered strongly into +the same current with Lydgate's, and who knew nothing about him that +could now raise a melancholy presentiment, left him with affectionate +congratulation. + + + +CHAPTER LXXI. + + Clown. . . . 'Twas in the Bunch of Grapes, where, indeed, + you have a delight to sit, have you not? + Froth. I have so: because it is an open room, and good for winter. + Clo. Why, very well then: I hope here be truths. + --Measure for Measure. + + +Five days after the death of Raffles, Mr. Bambridge was standing at his +leisure under the large archway leading into the yard of the Green +Dragon. He was not fond of solitary contemplation, but he had only +just come out of the house, and any human figure standing at ease under +the archway in the early afternoon was as certain to attract +companionship as a pigeon which has found something worth pecking at. +In this case there was no material object to feed upon, but the eye of +reason saw a probability of mental sustenance in the shape of gossip. +Mr. Hopkins, the meek-mannered draper opposite, was the first to act on +this inward vision, being the more ambitious of a little masculine talk +because his customers were chiefly women. Mr. Bambridge was rather +curt to the draper, feeling that Hopkins was of course glad to talk to +_him_, but that he was not going to waste much of his talk on Hopkins. +Soon, however, there was a small cluster of more important listeners, +who were either deposited from the passers-by, or had sauntered to the +spot expressly to see if there were anything going on at the Green +Dragon; and Mr. Bambridge was finding it worth his while to say many +impressive things about the fine studs he had been seeing and the +purchases he had made on a journey in the north from which he had just +returned. Gentlemen present were assured that when they could show him +anything to cut out a blood mare, a bay, rising four, which was to be +seen at Doncaster if they chose to go and look at it, Mr. Bambridge +would gratify them by being shot "from here to Hereford." Also, a pair +of blacks which he was going to put into the break recalled vividly to +his mind a pair which he had sold to Faulkner in '19, for a hundred +guineas, and which Faulkner had sold for a hundred and sixty two months +later--any gent who could disprove this statement being offered the +privilege of calling Mr. Bambridge by a very ugly name until the +exercise made his throat dry. + +When the discourse was at this point of animation, came up Mr. Frank +Hawley. He was not a man to compromise his dignity by lounging at the +Green Dragon, but happening to pass along the High Street and seeing +Bambridge on the other side, he took some of his long strides across to +ask the horsedealer whether he had found the first-rate gig-horse which +he had engaged to look for. Mr. Hawley was requested to wait until he +had seen a gray selected at Bilkley: if that did not meet his wishes to +a hair, Bambridge did not know a horse when he saw it, which seemed to +be the highest conceivable unlikelihood. Mr. Hawley, standing with his +back to the street, was fixing a time for looking at the gray and +seeing it tried, when a horseman passed slowly by. + +"Bulstrode!" said two or three voices at once in a low tone, one of +them, which was the draper's, respectfully prefixing the "Mr.;" but +nobody having more intention in this interjectural naming than if they +had said "the Riverston coach" when that vehicle appeared in the +distance. Mr. Hawley gave a careless glance round at Bulstrode's back, +but as Bambridge's eyes followed it he made a sarcastic grimace. + +"By jingo! that reminds me," he began, lowering his voice a little, "I +picked up something else at Bilkley besides your gig-horse, Mr. Hawley. +I picked up a fine story about Bulstrode. Do you know how he came by +his fortune? Any gentleman wanting a bit of curious information, I can +give it him free of expense. If everybody got their deserts, Bulstrode +might have had to say his prayers at Botany Bay." + +"What do you mean?" said Mr. Hawley, thrusting his hands into his +pockets, and pushing a little forward under the archway. If Bulstrode +should turn out to be a rascal, Frank Hawley had a prophetic soul. + +"I had it from a party who was an old chum of Bulstrode's. I'll tell +you where I first picked him up," said Bambridge, with a sudden gesture +of his fore-finger. "He was at Larcher's sale, but I knew nothing of +him then--he slipped through my fingers--was after Bulstrode, no +doubt. He tells me he can tap Bulstrode to any amount, knows all his +secrets. However, he blabbed to me at Bilkley: he takes a stiff glass. +Damme if I think he meant to turn king's evidence; but he's that sort +of bragging fellow, the bragging runs over hedge and ditch with him, +till he'd brag of a spavin as if it 'ud fetch money. A man should know +when to pull up." Mr. Bambridge made this remark with an air of +disgust, satisfied that his own bragging showed a fine sense of the +marketable. + +"What's the man's name? Where can he be found?" said Mr. Hawley. + +"As to where he is to be found, I left him to it at the Saracen's Head; +but his name is Raffles." + +"Raffles!" exclaimed Mr. Hopkins. "I furnished his funeral yesterday. +He was buried at Lowick. Mr. Bulstrode followed him. A very decent +funeral." There was a strong sensation among the listeners. Mr. +Bambridge gave an ejaculation in which "brimstone" was the mildest +word, and Mr. Hawley, knitting his brows and bending his head forward, +exclaimed, "What?--where did the man die?" + +"At Stone Court," said the draper. "The housekeeper said he was a +relation of the master's. He came there ill on Friday." + +"Why, it was on Wednesday I took a glass with him," interposed +Bambridge. + +"Did any doctor attend him?" said Mr. Hawley + +"Yes. Mr. Lydgate. Mr. Bulstrode sat up with him one night. He died +the third morning." + +"Go on, Bambridge," said Mr. Hawley, insistently. "What did this +fellow say about Bulstrode?" + +The group had already become larger, the town-clerk's presence being a +guarantee that something worth listening to was going on there; and Mr. +Bambridge delivered his narrative in the hearing of seven. It was +mainly what we know, including the fact about Will Ladislaw, with some +local color and circumstance added: it was what Bulstrode had dreaded +the betrayal of--and hoped to have buried forever with the corpse of +Raffles--it was that haunting ghost of his earlier life which as he +rode past the archway of the Green Dragon he was trusting that +Providence had delivered him from. Yes, Providence. He had not +confessed to himself yet that he had done anything in the way of +contrivance to this end; he had accepted what seemed to have been +offered. It was impossible to prove that he had done anything which +hastened the departure of that man's soul. + +But this gossip about Bulstrode spread through Middlemarch like the +smell of fire. Mr. Frank Hawley followed up his information by sending +a clerk whom he could trust to Stone Court on a pretext of inquiring +about hay, but really to gather all that could be learned about Raffles +and his illness from Mrs. Abel. In this way it came to his knowledge +that Mr. Garth had carried the man to Stone Court in his gig; and Mr. +Hawley in consequence took an opportunity of seeing Caleb, calling at +his office to ask whether he had time to undertake an arbitration if it +were required, and then asking him incidentally about Raffles. Caleb +was betrayed into no word injurious to Bulstrode beyond the fact which +he was forced to admit, that he had given up acting for him within the +last week. Mr Hawley drew his inferences, and feeling convinced that +Raffles had told his story to Garth, and that Garth had given up +Bulstrode's affairs in consequence, said so a few hours later to Mr. +Toller. The statement was passed on until it had quite lost the stamp +of an inference, and was taken as information coming straight from +Garth, so that even a diligent historian might have concluded Caleb to +be the chief publisher of Bulstrode's misdemeanors. + +Mr. Hawley was not slow to perceive that there was no handle for the +law either in the revelations made by Raffles or in the circumstances +of his death. He had himself ridden to Lowick village that he might +look at the register and talk over the whole matter with Mr. +Farebrother, who was not more surprised than the lawyer that an ugly +secret should have come to light about Bulstrode, though he had always +had justice enough in him to hinder his antipathy from turning into +conclusions. But while they were talking another combination was +silently going forward in Mr. Farebrother's mind, which foreshadowed +what was soon to be loudly spoken of in Middlemarch as a necessary +"putting of two and two together." With the reasons which kept +Bulstrode in dread of Raffles there flashed the thought that the dread +might have something to do with his munificence towards his medical +man; and though he resisted the suggestion that it had been consciously +accepted in any way as a bribe, he had a foreboding that this +complication of things might be of malignant effect on Lydgate's +reputation. He perceived that Mr. Hawley knew nothing at present of +the sudden relief from debt, and he himself was careful to glide away +from all approaches towards the subject. + +"Well," he said, with a deep breath, wanting to wind up the illimitable +discussion of what might have been, though nothing could be legally +proven, "it is a strange story. So our mercurial Ladislaw has a queer +genealogy! A high-spirited young lady and a musical Polish patriot +made a likely enough stock for him to spring from, but I should never +have suspected a grafting of the Jew pawnbroker. However, there's no +knowing what a mixture will turn out beforehand. Some sorts of dirt +serve to clarify." + +"It's just what I should have expected," said Mr. Hawley, mounting his +horse. "Any cursed alien blood, Jew, Corsican, or Gypsy." + +"I know he's one of your black sheep, Hawley. But he is really a +disinterested, unworldly fellow," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling. + +"Ay, ay, that is your Whiggish twist," said Mr. Hawley, who had been in +the habit of saying apologetically that Farebrother was such a damned +pleasant good-hearted fellow you would mistake him for a Tory. + +Mr. Hawley rode home without thinking of Lydgate's attendance on +Raffles in any other light than as a piece of evidence on the side of +Bulstrode. But the news that Lydgate had all at once become able not +only to get rid of the execution in his house but to pay all his debts +in Middlemarch was spreading fast, gathering round it conjectures and +comments which gave it new body and impetus, and soon filling the ears +of other persons besides Mr. Hawley, who were not slow to see a +significant relation between this sudden command of money and +Bulstrode's desire to stifle the scandal of Raffles. That the money +came from Bulstrode would infallibly have been guessed even if there +had been no direct evidence of it; for it had beforehand entered into +the gossip about Lydgate's affairs, that neither his father-in-law nor +his own family would do anything for him, and direct evidence was +furnished not only by a clerk at the Bank, but by innocent Mrs. +Bulstrode herself, who mentioned the loan to Mrs. Plymdale, who +mentioned it to her daughter-in-law of the house of Toller, who +mentioned it generally. The business was felt to be so public and +important that it required dinners to feed it, and many invitations +were just then issued and accepted on the strength of this scandal +concerning Bulstrode and Lydgate; wives, widows, and single ladies took +their work and went out to tea oftener than usual; and all public +conviviality, from the Green Dragon to Dollop's, gathered a zest which +could not be won from the question whether the Lords would throw out +the Reform Bill. + +For hardly anybody doubted that some scandalous reason or other was at +the bottom of Bulstrode's liberality to Lydgate. Mr. Hawley indeed, in +the first instance, invited a select party, including the two +physicians, with Mr Toller and Mr. Wrench, expressly to hold a close +discussion as to the probabilities of Raffles's illness, reciting to +them all the particulars which had been gathered from Mrs. Abel in +connection with Lydgate's certificate, that the death was due to +delirium tremens; and the medical gentlemen, who all stood +undisturbedly on the old paths in relation to this disease, declared +that they could see nothing in these particulars which could be +transformed into a positive ground of suspicion. But the moral grounds +of suspicion remained: the strong motives Bulstrode clearly had for +wishing to be rid of Raffles, and the fact that at this critical moment +he had given Lydgate the help which he must for some time have known +the need for; the disposition, moreover, to believe that Bulstrode +would be unscrupulous, and the absence of any indisposition to believe +that Lydgate might be as easily bribed as other haughty-minded men when +they have found themselves in want of money. Even if the money had +been given merely to make him hold his tongue about the scandal of +Bulstrode's earlier life, the fact threw an odious light on Lydgate, +who had long been sneered at as making himself subservient to the +banker for the sake of working himself into predominance, and +discrediting the elder members of his profession. Hence, in spite of +the negative as to any direct sign of guilt in relation to the death at +Stone Court, Mr. Hawley's select party broke up with the sense that the +affair had "an ugly look." + +But this vague conviction of indeterminable guilt, which was enough to +keep up much head-shaking and biting innuendo even among substantial +professional seniors, had for the general mind all the superior power +of mystery over fact. Everybody liked better to conjecture how the +thing was, than simply to know it; for conjecture soon became more +confident than knowledge, and had a more liberal allowance for the +incompatible. Even the more definite scandal concerning Bulstrode's +earlier life was, for some minds, melted into the mass of mystery, as +so much lively metal to be poured out in dialogue, and to take such +fantastic shapes as heaven pleased. + +This was the tone of thought chiefly sanctioned by Mrs. Dollop, the +spirited landlady of the Tankard in Slaughter Lane, who had often to +resist the shallow pragmatism of customers disposed to think that their +reports from the outer world were of equal force with what had "come +up" in her mind. How it had been brought to her she didn't know, but +it was there before her as if it had been "scored with the chalk on the +chimney-board--" as Bulstrode should say, "his inside was _that black_ +as if the hairs of his head knowed the thoughts of his heart, he'd tear +'em up by the roots." + +"That's odd," said Mr. Limp, a meditative shoemaker, with weak eyes and +a piping voice. "Why, I read in the 'Trumpet' that was what the Duke +of Wellington said when he turned his coat and went over to the Romans." + +"Very like," said Mrs. Dollop. "If one raskill said it, it's more +reason why another should. But hypo_crite_ as he's been, and holding +things with that high hand, as there was no parson i' the country good +enough for him, he was forced to take Old Harry into his counsel, and +Old Harry's been too many for him." + +"Ay, ay, he's a 'complice you can't send out o' the country," said Mr. +Crabbe, the glazier, who gathered much news and groped among it dimly. +"But by what I can make out, there's them says Bulstrode was for +running away, for fear o' being found out, before now." + +"He'll be drove away, whether or no," said Mr. Dill, the barber, who +had just dropped in. "I shaved Fletcher, Hawley's clerk, this +morning--he's got a bad finger--and he says they're all of one mind to +get rid of Bulstrode. Mr. Thesiger is turned against him, and wants +him out o' the parish. And there's gentlemen in this town says they'd +as soon dine with a fellow from the hulks. 'And a deal sooner I +would,' says Fletcher; 'for what's more against one's stomach than a +man coming and making himself bad company with his religion, and giving +out as the Ten Commandments are not enough for him, and all the while +he's worse than half the men at the tread-mill?' Fletcher said so +himself." + +"It'll be a bad thing for the town though, if Bulstrode's money goes +out of it," said Mr. Limp, quaveringly. + +"Ah, there's better folks spend their money worse," said a firm-voiced +dyer, whose crimson hands looked out of keeping with his good-natured +face. + +"But he won't keep his money, by what I can make out," said the +glazier. "Don't they say as there's somebody can strip it off him? By +what I can understan', they could take every penny off him, if they +went to lawing." + +"No such thing!" said the barber, who felt himself a little above his +company at Dollop's, but liked it none the worse. "Fletcher says it's +no such thing. He says they might prove over and over again whose +child this young Ladislaw was, and they'd do no more than if they +proved I came out of the Fens--he couldn't touch a penny." + +"Look you there now!" said Mrs. Dollop, indignantly. "I thank the Lord +he took my children to Himself, if that's all the law can do for the +motherless. Then by that, it's o' no use who your father and mother +is. But as to listening to what one lawyer says without asking +another--I wonder at a man o' your cleverness, Mr. Dill. It's well +known there's always two sides, if no more; else who'd go to law, I +should like to know? It's a poor tale, with all the law as there is up +and down, if it's no use proving whose child you are. Fletcher may say +that if he likes, but I say, don't Fletcher _me_!" + +Mr. Dill affected to laugh in a complimentary way at Mrs. Dollop, as a +woman who was more than a match for the lawyers; being disposed to +submit to much twitting from a landlady who had a long score against +him. + +"If they come to lawing, and it's all true as folks say, there's more +to be looked to nor money," said the glazier. "There's this poor +creetur as is dead and gone; by what I can make out, he'd seen the day +when he was a deal finer gentleman nor Bulstrode." + +"Finer gentleman! I'll warrant him," said Mrs. Dollop; "and a far +personabler man, by what I can hear. As I said when Mr. Baldwin, the +tax-gatherer, comes in, a-standing where you sit, and says, 'Bulstrode +got all his money as he brought into this town by thieving and +swindling,'--I said, 'You don't make me no wiser, Mr. Baldwin: it's set +my blood a-creeping to look at him ever sin' here he came into +Slaughter Lane a-wanting to buy the house over my head: folks don't +look the color o' the dough-tub and stare at you as if they wanted to +see into your backbone for nothingk.' That was what I said, and Mr. +Baldwin can bear me witness." + +"And in the rights of it too," said Mr. Crabbe. "For by what I can +make out, this Raffles, as they call him, was a lusty, fresh-colored +man as you'd wish to see, and the best o' company--though dead he lies +in Lowick churchyard sure enough; and by what I can understan', there's +them knows more than they _should_ know about how he got there." + +"I'll believe you!" said Mrs. Dallop, with a touch of scorn at Mr. +Crabbe's apparent dimness. "When a man's been 'ticed to a lone house, +and there's them can pay for hospitals and nurses for half the +country-side choose to be sitters-up night and day, and nobody to come +near but a doctor as is known to stick at nothingk, and as poor as he +can hang together, and after that so flush o' money as he can pay off +Mr. Byles the butcher as his bill has been running on for the best o' +joints since last Michaelmas was a twelvemonth--I don't want anybody to +come and tell me as there's been more going on nor the Prayer-book's +got a service for--I don't want to stand winking and blinking and +thinking." + +Mrs. Dollop looked round with the air of a landlady accustomed to +dominate her company. There was a chorus of adhesion from the more +courageous; but Mr. Limp, after taking a draught, placed his flat hands +together and pressed them hard between his knees, looking down at them +with blear-eyed contemplation, as if the scorching power of Mrs. +Dollop's speech had quite dried up and nullified his wits until they +could be brought round again by further moisture. + +"Why shouldn't they dig the man up and have the Crowner?" said the +dyer. "It's been done many and many's the time. If there's been foul +play they might find it out." + +"Not they, Mr. Jonas!" said Mrs Dollop, emphatically. "I know what +doctors are. They're a deal too cunning to be found out. And this +Doctor Lydgate that's been for cutting up everybody before the breath +was well out o' their body--it's plain enough what use he wanted to +make o' looking into respectable people's insides. He knows drugs, you +may be sure, as you can neither smell nor see, neither before they're +swallowed nor after. Why, I've seen drops myself ordered by Doctor +Gambit, as is our club doctor and a good charikter, and has brought +more live children into the world nor ever another i' Middlemarch--I +say I've seen drops myself as made no difference whether they was in +the glass or out, and yet have griped you the next day. So I'll leave +your own sense to judge. Don't tell me! All I say is, it's a mercy +they didn't take this Doctor Lydgate on to our club. There's many a +mother's child might ha' rued it." + +The heads of this discussion at "Dollop's" had been the common theme +among all classes in the town, had been carried to Lowick Parsonage on +one side and to Tipton Grange on the other, had come fully to the ears +of the Vincy family, and had been discussed with sad reference to "poor +Harriet" by all Mrs. Bulstrode's friends, before Lydgate knew +distinctly why people were looking strangely at him, and before +Bulstrode himself suspected the betrayal of his secrets. He had not +been accustomed to very cordial relations with his neighbors, and hence +he could not miss the signs of cordiality; moreover, he had been taking +journeys on business of various kinds, having now made up his mind that +he need not quit Middlemarch, and feeling able consequently to +determine on matters which he had before left in suspense. + +"We will make a journey to Cheltenham in the course of a month or two," +he had said to his wife. "There are great spiritual advantages to be +had in that town along with the air and the waters, and six weeks there +will be eminently refreshing to us." + +He really believed in the spiritual advantages, and meant that his life +henceforth should be the more devoted because of those later sins which +he represented to himself as hypothetic, praying hypothetically for +their pardon:--"if I have herein transgressed." + +As to the Hospital, he avoided saying anything further to Lydgate, +fearing to manifest a too sudden change of plans immediately on the +death of Raffles. In his secret soul he believed that Lydgate +suspected his orders to have been intentionally disobeyed, and +suspecting this he must also suspect a motive. But nothing had been +betrayed to him as to the history of Raffles, and Bulstrode was anxious +not to do anything which would give emphasis to his undefined +suspicions. As to any certainty that a particular method of treatment +would either save or kill, Lydgate himself was constantly arguing +against such dogmatism; he had no right to speak, and he had every +motive for being silent. Hence Bulstrode felt himself providentially +secured. The only incident he had strongly winced under had been an +occasional encounter with Caleb Garth, who, however, had raised his hat +with mild gravity. + +Meanwhile, on the part of the principal townsmen a strong determination +was growing against him. + +A meeting was to be held in the Town-Hall on a sanitary question which +had risen into pressing importance by the occurrence of a cholera case +in the town. Since the Act of Parliament, which had been hurriedly +passed, authorizing assessments for sanitary measures, there had been a +Board for the superintendence of such measures appointed in +Middlemarch, and much cleansing and preparation had been concurred in +by Whigs and Tories. The question now was, whether a piece of ground +outside the town should be secured as a burial-ground by means of +assessment or by private subscription. The meeting was to be open, and +almost everybody of importance in the town was expected to be there. + +Mr. Bulstrode was a member of the Board, and just before twelve o'clock +he started from the Bank with the intention of urging the plan of +private subscription. Under the hesitation of his projects, he had for +some time kept himself in the background, and he felt that he should +this morning resume his old position as a man of action and influence +in the public affairs of the town where he expected to end his days. +Among the various persons going in the same direction, he saw Lydgate; +they joined, talked over the object of the meeting, and entered it +together. + +It seemed that everybody of mark had been earlier than they. But there +were still spaces left near the head of the large central table, and +they made their way thither. Mr. Farebrother sat opposite, not far +from Mr. Hawley; all the medical men were there; Mr. Thesiger was in +the chair, and Mr. Brooke of Tipton was on his right hand. + +Lydgate noticed a peculiar interchange of glances when he and Bulstrode +took their seats. + +After the business had been fully opened by the chairman, who pointed +out the advantages of purchasing by subscription a piece of ground +large enough to be ultimately used as a general cemetery, Mr. +Bulstrode, whose rather high-pitched but subdued and fluent voice the +town was used to at meetings of this sort, rose and asked leave to +deliver his opinion. Lydgate could see again the peculiar interchange +of glances before Mr. Hawley started up, and said in his firm resonant +voice, "Mr. Chairman, I request that before any one delivers his +opinion on this point I may be permitted to speak on a question of +public feeling, which not only by myself, but by many gentlemen +present, is regarded as preliminary." + +Mr. Hawley's mode of speech, even when public decorum repressed his +"awful language," was formidable in its curtness and self-possession. +Mr. Thesiger sanctioned the request, Mr. Bulstrode sat down, and Mr. +Hawley continued. + +"In what I have to say, Mr. Chairman, I am not speaking simply on my +own behalf: I am speaking with the concurrence and at the express +request of no fewer than eight of my fellow-townsmen, who are +immediately around us. It is our united sentiment that Mr. Bulstrode +should be called upon--and I do now call upon him--to resign public +positions which he holds not simply as a tax-payer, but as a gentleman +among gentlemen. There are practices and there are acts which, owing +to circumstances, the law cannot visit, though they may be worse than +many things which are legally punishable. Honest men and gentlemen, if +they don't want the company of people who perpetrate such acts, have +got to defend themselves as they best can, and that is what I and the +friends whom I may call my clients in this affair are determined to do. +I don't say that Mr. Bulstrode has been guilty of shameful acts, but I +call upon him either publicly to deny and confute the scandalous +statements made against him by a man now dead, and who died in his +house--the statement that he was for many years engaged in nefarious +practices, and that he won his fortune by dishonest procedures--or else +to withdraw from positions which could only have been allowed him as a +gentleman among gentlemen." + +All eyes in the room were turned on Mr. Bulstrode, who, since the first +mention of his name, had been going through a crisis of feeling almost +too violent for his delicate frame to support. Lydgate, who himself +was undergoing a shock as from the terrible practical interpretation of +some faint augury, felt, nevertheless, that his own movement of +resentful hatred was checked by that instinct of the Healer which +thinks first of bringing rescue or relief to the sufferer, when he +looked at the shrunken misery of Bulstrode's livid face. + +The quick vision that his life was after all a failure, that he was a +dishonored man, and must quail before the glance of those towards whom +he had habitually assumed the attitude of a reprover--that God had +disowned him before men and left him unscreened to the triumphant scorn +of those who were glad to have their hatred justified--the sense of +utter futility in that equivocation with his conscience in dealing with +the life of his accomplice, an equivocation which now turned venomously +upon him with the full-grown fang of a discovered lie:--all this +rushed through him like the agony of terror which fails to kill, and +leaves the ears still open to the returning wave of execration. The +sudden sense of exposure after the re-established sense of safety +came--not to the coarse organization of a criminal but to--the +susceptible nerve of a man whose intensest being lay in such mastery +and predominance as the conditions of his life had shaped for him. + +But in that intense being lay the strength of reaction. Through all +his bodily infirmity there ran a tenacious nerve of ambitious +self-preserving will, which had continually leaped out like a flame, +scattering all doctrinal fears, and which, even while he sat an object +of compassion for the merciful, was beginning to stir and glow under +his ashy paleness. Before the last words were out of Mr. Hawley's +mouth, Bulstrode felt that he should answer, and that his answer would +be a retort. He dared not get up and say, "I am not guilty, the whole +story is false"--even if he had dared this, it would have seemed to +him, under his present keen sense of betrayal, as vain as to pull, for +covering to his nakedness, a frail rag which would rend at every little +strain. + +For a few moments there was total silence, while every man in the room +was looking at Bulstrode. He sat perfectly still, leaning hard against +the back of his chair; he could not venture to rise, and when he began +to speak he pressed his hands upon the seat on each side of him. But +his voice was perfectly audible, though hoarser than usual, and his +words were distinctly pronounced, though he paused between sentence as +if short of breath. He said, turning first toward Mr. Thesiger, and +then looking at Mr. Hawley-- + +"I protest before you, sir, as a Christian minister, against the +sanction of proceedings towards me which are dictated by virulent +hatred. Those who are hostile to me are glad to believe any libel +uttered by a loose tongue against me. And their consciences become +strict against me. Say that the evil-speaking of which I am to be made +the victim accuses me of malpractices--" here Bulstrode's voice rose +and took on a more biting accent, till it seemed a low cry--"who shall +be my accuser? Not men whose own lives are unchristian, nay, +scandalous--not men who themselves use low instruments to carry out +their ends--whose profession is a tissue of chicanery--who have been +spending their income on their own sensual enjoyments, while I have +been devoting mine to advance the best objects with regard to this life +and the next." + +After the word chicanery there was a growing noise, half of murmurs and +half of hisses, while four persons started up at once--Mr. Hawley, Mr. +Toller, Mr. Chichely, and Mr. Hackbutt; but Mr. Hawley's outburst was +instantaneous, and left the others behind in silence. + +"If you mean me, sir, I call you and every one else to the inspection +of my professional life. As to Christian or unchristian, I repudiate +your canting palavering Christianity; and as to the way in which I +spend my income, it is not my principle to maintain thieves and cheat +offspring of their due inheritance in order to support religion and set +myself up as a saintly Killjoy. I affect no niceness of conscience--I +have not found any nice standards necessary yet to measure your actions +by, sir. And I again call upon you to enter into satisfactory +explanations concerning the scandals against you, or else to withdraw +from posts in which we at any rate decline you as a colleague. I say, +sir, we decline to co-operate with a man whose character is not cleared +from infamous lights cast upon it, not only by reports but by recent +actions." + +"Allow me, Mr. Hawley," said the chairman; and Mr. Hawley, still +fuming, bowed half impatiently, and sat down with his hands thrust deep +in his pockets. + +"Mr. Bulstrode, it is not desirable, I think, to prolong the present +discussion," said Mr. Thesiger, turning to the pallid trembling man; "I +must so far concur with what has fallen from Mr. Hawley in expression +of a general feeling, as to think it due to your Christian profession +that you should clear yourself, if possible, from unhappy aspersions. +I for my part should be willing to give you full opportunity and +hearing. But I must say that your present attitude is painfully +inconsistent with those principles which you have sought to identify +yourself with, and for the honor of which I am bound to care. I +recommend you at present, as your clergyman, and one who hopes for your +reinstatement in respect, to quit the room, and avoid further hindrance +to business." + +Bulstrode, after a moment's hesitation, took his hat from the floor and +slowly rose, but he grasped the corner of the chair so totteringly that +Lydgate felt sure there was not strength enough in him to walk away +without support. What could he do? He could not see a man sink close +to him for want of help. He rose and gave his arm to Bulstrode, and in +that way led him out of the room; yet this act, which might have been +one of gentle duty and pure compassion, was at this moment unspeakably +bitter to him. It seemed as if he were putting his sign-manual to that +association of himself with Bulstrode, of which he now saw the full +meaning as it must have presented itself to other minds. He now felt +the conviction that this man who was leaning tremblingly on his arm, +had given him the thousand pounds as a bribe, and that somehow the +treatment of Raffles had been tampered with from an evil motive. The +inferences were closely linked enough; the town knew of the loan, +believed it to be a bribe, and believed that he took it as a bribe. + +Poor Lydgate, his mind struggling under the terrible clutch of this +revelation, was all the while morally forced to take Mr. Bulstrode to +the Bank, send a man off for his carriage, and wait to accompany him +home. + +Meanwhile the business of the meeting was despatched, and fringed off +into eager discussion among various groups concerning this affair of +Bulstrode--and Lydgate. + +Mr. Brooke, who had before heard only imperfect hints of it, and was +very uneasy that he had "gone a little too far" in countenancing +Bulstrode, now got himself fully informed, and felt some benevolent +sadness in talking to Mr. Farebrother about the ugly light in which +Lydgate had come to be regarded. Mr. Farebrother was going to walk +back to Lowick. + +"Step into my carriage," said Mr. Brooke. "I am going round to see +Mrs. Casaubon. She was to come back from Yorkshire last night. She +will like to see me, you know." + +So they drove along, Mr. Brooke chatting with good-natured hope that +there had not really been anything black in Lydgate's behavior--a +young fellow whom he had seen to be quite above the common mark, when +he brought a letter from his uncle Sir Godwin. Mr. Farebrother said +little: he was deeply mournful: with a keen perception of human +weakness, he could not be confident that under the pressure of +humiliating needs Lydgate had not fallen below himself. + +When the carriage drove up to the gate of the Manor, Dorothea was out +on the gravel, and came to greet them. + +"Well, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, "we have just come from a meeting--a +sanitary meeting, you know." + +"Was Mr. Lydgate there?" said Dorothea, who looked full of health and +animation, and stood with her head bare under the gleaming April +lights. "I want to see him and have a great consultation with him +about the Hospital. I have engaged with Mr. Bulstrode to do so." + +"Oh, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, "we have been hearing bad news--bad +news, you know." + +They walked through the garden towards the churchyard gate, Mr. +Farebrother wanting to go on to the parsonage; and Dorothea heard the +whole sad story. + +She listened with deep interest, and begged to hear twice over the +facts and impressions concerning Lydgate. After a short silence, +pausing at the churchyard gate, and addressing Mr. Farebrother, she +said energetically-- + +"You don't believe that Mr. Lydgate is guilty of anything base? I will +not believe it. Let us find out the truth and clear him!" + + + + + +BOOK VIII. + + + + + +SUNSET AND SUNRISE. + + + +CHAPTER LXXII. + + Full souls are double mirrors, making still + An endless vista of fair things before, + Repeating things behind. + + +Dorothea's impetuous generosity, which would have leaped at once to the +vindication of Lydgate from the suspicion of having accepted money as a +bribe, underwent a melancholy check when she came to consider all the +circumstances of the case by the light of Mr. Farebrother's experience. + +"It is a delicate matter to touch," he said. "How can we begin to +inquire into it? It must be either publicly by setting the magistrate +and coroner to work, or privately by questioning Lydgate. As to the +first proceeding there is no solid ground to go upon, else Hawley would +have adopted it; and as to opening the subject with Lydgate, I confess +I should shrink from it. He would probably take it as a deadly insult. +I have more than once experienced the difficulty of speaking to him on +personal matters. And--one should know the truth about his conduct +beforehand, to feel very confident of a good result." + +"I feel convinced that his conduct has not been guilty: I believe that +people are almost always better than their neighbors think they are," +said Dorothea. Some of her intensest experience in the last two years +had set her mind strongly in opposition to any unfavorable construction +of others; and for the first time she felt rather discontented with Mr. +Farebrother. She disliked this cautious weighing of consequences, +instead of an ardent faith in efforts of justice and mercy, which would +conquer by their emotional force. Two days afterwards, he was dining +at the Manor with her uncle and the Chettams, and when the dessert was +standing uneaten, the servants were out of the room, and Mr. Brooke was +nodding in a nap, she returned to the subject with renewed vivacity. + +"Mr. Lydgate would understand that if his friends hear a calumny about +him their first wish must be to justify him. What do we live for, if +it is not to make life less difficult to each other? I cannot be +indifferent to the troubles of a man who advised me in _my_ trouble, +and attended me in my illness." + +Dorothea's tone and manner were not more energetic than they had been +when she was at the head of her uncle's table nearly three years +before, and her experience since had given her more right to express a +decided opinion. But Sir James Chettam was no longer the diffident and +acquiescent suitor: he was the anxious brother-in-law, with a devout +admiration for his sister, but with a constant alarm lest she should +fall under some new illusion almost as bad as marrying Casaubon. He +smiled much less; when he said "Exactly" it was more often an +introduction to a dissentient opinion than in those submissive bachelor +days; and Dorothea found to her surprise that she had to resolve not to +be afraid of him--all the more because he was really her best friend. +He disagreed with her now. + +"But, Dorothea," he said, remonstrantly, "you can't undertake to manage +a man's life for him in that way. Lydgate must know--at least he will +soon come to know how he stands. If he can clear himself, he will. He +must act for himself." + +"I think his friends must wait till they find an opportunity," added +Mr. Farebrother. "It is possible--I have often felt so much weakness +in myself that I can conceive even a man of honorable disposition, such +as I have always believed Lydgate to be, succumbing to such a +temptation as that of accepting money which was offered more or less +indirectly as a bribe to insure his silence about scandalous facts long +gone by. I say, I can conceive this, if he were under the pressure of +hard circumstances--if he had been harassed as I feel sure Lydgate has +been. I would not believe anything worse of him except under stringent +proof. But there is the terrible Nemesis following on some errors, +that it is always possible for those who like it to interpret them into +a crime: there is no proof in favor of the man outside his own +consciousness and assertion." + +"Oh, how cruel!" said Dorothea, clasping her hands. "And would you not +like to be the one person who believed in that man's innocence, if the +rest of the world belied him? Besides, there is a man's character +beforehand to speak for him." + +"But, my dear Mrs. Casaubon," said Mr. Farebrother, smiling gently at +her ardor, "character is not cut in marble--it is not something solid +and unalterable. It is something living and changing, and may become +diseased as our bodies do." + +"Then it may be rescued and healed," said Dorothea "I should not be +afraid of asking Mr. Lydgate to tell me the truth, that I might help +him. Why should I be afraid? Now that I am not to have the land, +James, I might do as Mr. Bulstrode proposed, and take his place in +providing for the Hospital; and I have to consult Mr. Lydgate, to know +thoroughly what are the prospects of doing good by keeping up the +present plans. There is the best opportunity in the world for me to +ask for his confidence; and he would be able to tell me things which +might make all the circumstances clear. Then we would all stand by him +and bring him out of his trouble. People glorify all sorts of bravery +except the bravery they might show on behalf of their nearest +neighbors." Dorothea's eyes had a moist brightness in them, and the +changed tones of her voice roused her uncle, who began to listen. + +"It is true that a woman may venture on some efforts of sympathy which +would hardly succeed if we men undertook them," said Mr. Farebrother, +almost converted by Dorothea's ardor. + +"Surely, a woman is bound to be cautious and listen to those who know +the world better than she does." said Sir James, with his little +frown. "Whatever you do in the end, Dorothea, you should really keep +back at present, and not volunteer any meddling with this Bulstrode +business. We don't know yet what may turn up. You must agree with +me?" he ended, looking at Mr. Farebrother. + +"I do think it would be better to wait," said the latter. + +"Yes, yes, my dear," said Mr. Brooke, not quite knowing at what point +the discussion had arrived, but coming up to it with a contribution +which was generally appropriate. "It is easy to go too far, you know. +You must not let your ideas run away with you. And as to being in a +hurry to put money into schemes--it won't do, you know. Garth has +drawn me in uncommonly with repairs, draining, that sort of thing: I'm +uncommonly out of pocket with one thing or another. I must pull up. +As for you, Chettam, you are spending a fortune on those oak fences +round your demesne." + +Dorothea, submitting uneasily to this discouragement, went with Celia +into the library, which was her usual drawing-room. + +"Now, Dodo, do listen to what James says," said Celia, "else you will +be getting into a scrape. You always did, and you always will, when +you set about doing as you please. And I think it is a mercy now after +all that you have got James to think for you. He lets you have your +plans, only he hinders you from being taken in. And that is the good +of having a brother instead of a husband. A husband would not let you +have your plans." + +"As if I wanted a husband!" said Dorothea. "I only want not to have my +feelings checked at every turn." Mrs. Casaubon was still undisciplined +enough to burst into angry tears. + +"Now, really, Dodo," said Celia, with rather a deeper guttural than +usual, "you _are_ contradictory: first one thing and then another. You +used to submit to Mr. Casaubon quite shamefully: I think you would have +given up ever coming to see me if he had asked you." + +"Of course I submitted to him, because it was my duty; it was my +feeling for him," said Dorothea, looking through the prism of her tears. + +"Then why can't you think it your duty to submit a little to what James +wishes?" said Celia, with a sense of stringency in her argument. +"Because he only wishes what is for your own good. And, of course, men +know best about everything, except what women know better." Dorothea +laughed and forgot her tears. + +"Well, I mean about babies and those things," explained Celia. "I +should not give up to James when I knew he was wrong, as you used to do +to Mr. Casaubon." + + + +CHAPTER LXXIII. + + Pity the laden one; this wandering woe + May visit you and me. + + +When Lydgate had allayed Mrs. Bulstrode's anxiety by telling her that +her husband had been seized with faintness at the meeting, but that he +trusted soon to see him better and would call again the next day, +unless she sent for him earlier, he went directly home, got on his +horse, and rode three miles out of the town for the sake of being out +of reach. + +He felt himself becoming violent and unreasonable as if raging under +the pain of stings: he was ready to curse the day on which he had come +to Middlemarch. Everything that bad happened to him there seemed a +mere preparation for this hateful fatality, which had come as a blight +on his honorable ambition, and must make even people who had only +vulgar standards regard his reputation as irrevocably damaged. In such +moments a man can hardly escape being unloving. Lydgate thought of +himself as the sufferer, and of others as the agents who had injured +his lot. He had meant everything to turn out differently; and others +had thrust themselves into his life and thwarted his purposes. His +marriage seemed an unmitigated calamity; and he was afraid of going to +Rosamond before he had vented himself in this solitary rage, lest the +mere sight of her should exasperate him and make him behave +unwarrantably. There are episodes in most men's lives in which their +highest qualities can only cast a deterring shadow over the objects +that fill their inward vision: Lydgate's tenderheartedness was present +just then only as a dread lest he should offend against it, not as an +emotion that swayed him to tenderness. For he was very miserable. +Only those who know the supremacy of the intellectual life--the life +which has a seed of ennobling thought and purpose within it--can +understand the grief of one who falls from that serene activity into +the absorbing soul-wasting struggle with worldly annoyances. + +How was he to live on without vindicating himself among people who +suspected him of baseness? How could he go silently away from +Middlemarch as if he were retreating before a just condemnation? And +yet how was he to set about vindicating himself? + +For that scene at the meeting, which he had just witnessed, although it +had told him no particulars, had been enough to make his own situation +thoroughly clear to him. Bulstrode had been in dread of scandalous +disclosures on the part of Raffles. Lydgate could now construct all +the probabilities of the case. "He was afraid of some betrayal in my +hearing: all he wanted was to bind me to him by a strong obligation: +that was why he passed on a sudden from hardness to liberality. And he +may have tampered with the patient--he may have disobeyed my orders. I +fear he did. But whether he did or not, the world believes that he +somehow or other poisoned the man and that I winked at the crime, if I +didn't help in it. And yet--and yet he may not be guilty of the last +offence; and it is just possible that the change towards me may have +been a genuine relenting--the effect of second thoughts such as he +alleged. What we call the 'just possible' is sometimes true and the +thing we find it easier to believe is grossly false. In his last +dealings with this man Bulstrode may have kept his hands pure, in spite +of my suspicion to the contrary." + +There was a benumbing cruelty in his position. Even if he renounced +every other consideration than that of justifying himself--if he met +shrugs, cold glances, and avoidance as an accusation, and made a public +statement of all the facts as he knew them, who would be convinced? It +would be playing the part of a fool to offer his own testimony on +behalf of himself, and say, "I did not take the money as a bribe." The +circumstances would always be stronger than his assertion. And +besides, to come forward and tell everything about himself must include +declarations about Bulstrode which would darken the suspicions of +others against him. He must tell that he had not known of Raffles's +existence when he first mentioned his pressing need of money to +Bulstrode, and that he took the money innocently as a result of that +communication, not knowing that a new motive for the loan might have +arisen on his being called in to this man. And after all, the +suspicion of Bulstrode's motives might be unjust. + +But then came the question whether he should have acted in precisely +the same way if he had not taken the money? Certainly, if Raffles had +continued alive and susceptible of further treatment when he arrived, +and he had then imagined any disobedience to his orders on the part of +Bulstrode, he would have made a strict inquiry, and if his conjecture +had been verified he would have thrown up the case, in spite of his +recent heavy obligation. But if he had not received any money--if +Bulstrode had never revoked his cold recommendation of bankruptcy--would +he, Lydgate, have abstained from all inquiry even on finding the +man dead?--would the shrinking from an insult to Bulstrode--would the +dubiousness of all medical treatment and the argument that his own +treatment would pass for the wrong with most members of his +profession--have had just the same force or significance with him? + +That was the uneasy corner of Lydgate's consciousness while he was +reviewing the facts and resisting all reproach. If he had been +independent, this matter of a patient's treatment and the distinct rule +that he must do or see done that which he believed best for the life +committed to him, would have been the point on which he would have been +the sturdiest. As it was, he had rested in the consideration that +disobedience to his orders, however it might have arisen, could not be +considered a crime, that in the dominant opinion obedience to his +orders was just as likely to be fatal, and that the affair was simply +one of etiquette. Whereas, again and again, in his time of freedom, he +had denounced the perversion of pathological doubt into moral doubt and +had said--"the purest experiment in treatment may still be +conscientious: my business is to take care of life, and to do the best +I can think of for it. Science is properly more scrupulous than dogma. +Dogma gives a charter to mistake, but the very breath of science is a +contest with mistake, and must keep the conscience alive." Alas! the +scientific conscience had got into the debasing company of money +obligation and selfish respects. + +"Is there a medical man of them all in Middlemarch who would question +himself as I do?" said poor Lydgate, with a renewed outburst of +rebellion against the oppression of his lot. "And yet they will all +feel warranted in making a wide space between me and them, as if I were +a leper! My practice and my reputation are utterly damned--I can see +that. Even if I could be cleared by valid evidence, it would make +little difference to the blessed world here. I have been set down as +tainted and should be cheapened to them all the same." + +Already there had been abundant signs which had hitherto puzzled him, +that just when he had been paying off his debts and getting cheerfully +on his feet, the townsmen were avoiding him or looking strangely at +him, and in two instances it came to his knowledge that patients of his +had called in another practitioner. The reasons were too plain now. +The general black-balling had begun. + +No wonder that in Lydgate's energetic nature the sense of a hopeless +misconstruction easily turned into a dogged resistance. The scowl +which occasionally showed itself on his square brow was not a +meaningless accident. Already when he was re-entering the town after +that ride taken in the first hours of stinging pain, he was setting his +mind on remaining in Middlemarch in spite of the worst that could be +done against him. He would not retreat before calumny, as if he +submitted to it. He would face it to the utmost, and no act of his +should show that he was afraid. It belonged to the generosity as well +as defiant force of his nature that he resolved not to shrink from +showing to the full his sense of obligation to Bulstrode. It was true +that the association with this man had been fatal to him--true that if +he had had the thousand pounds still in his hands with all his debts +unpaid he would have returned the money to Bulstrode, and taken beggary +rather than the rescue which had been sullied with the suspicion of a +bribe (for, remember, he was one of the proudest among the sons of +men)--nevertheless, he would not turn away from this crushed +fellow-mortal whose aid he had used, and make a pitiful effort to get +acquittal for himself by howling against another. "I shall do as I +think right, and explain to nobody. They will try to starve me out, +but--" he was going on with an obstinate resolve, but he was getting +near home, and the thought of Rosamond urged itself again into that +chief place from which it had been thrust by the agonized struggles of +wounded honor and pride. + +How would Rosamond take it all? Here was another weight of chain to +drag, and poor Lydgate was in a bad mood for bearing her dumb mastery. +He had no impulse to tell her the trouble which must soon be common to +them both. He preferred waiting for the incidental disclosure which +events must soon bring about. + + + +CHAPTER LXXIV. + + "Mercifully grant that we may grow aged together." + --BOOK OF TOBIT: Marriage Prayer. + + +In Middlemarch a wife could not long remain ignorant that the town held +a bad opinion of her husband. No feminine intimate might carry her +friendship so far as to make a plain statement to the wife of the +unpleasant fact known or believed about her husband; but when a woman +with her thoughts much at leisure got them suddenly employed on +something grievously disadvantageous to her neighbors, various moral +impulses were called into play which tended to stimulate utterance. +Candor was one. To be candid, in Middlemarch phraseology, meant, to +use an early opportunity of letting your friends know that you did not +take a cheerful view of their capacity, their conduct, or their +position; and a robust candor never waited to be asked for its opinion. +Then, again, there was the love of truth--a wide phrase, but meaning in +this relation, a lively objection to seeing a wife look happier than +her husband's character warranted, or manifest too much satisfaction in +her lot--the poor thing should have some hint given her that if she +knew the truth she would have less complacency in her bonnet, and in +light dishes for a supper-party. Stronger than all, there was the +regard for a friend's moral improvement, sometimes called her soul, +which was likely to be benefited by remarks tending to gloom, uttered +with the accompaniment of pensive staring at the furniture and a manner +implying that the speaker would not tell what was on her mind, from +regard to the feelings of her hearer. On the whole, one might say that +an ardent charity was at work setting the virtuous mind to make a +neighbor unhappy for her good. + +There were hardly any wives in Middlemarch whose matrimonial +misfortunes would in different ways be likely to call forth more of +this moral activity than Rosamond and her aunt Bulstrode. Mrs. +Bulstrode was not an object of dislike, and had never consciously +injured any human being. Men had always thought her a handsome +comfortable woman, and had reckoned it among the signs of Bulstrode's +hypocrisy that he had chosen a red-blooded Vincy, instead of a ghastly +and melancholy person suited to his low esteem for earthly pleasure. +When the scandal about her husband was disclosed they remarked of +her--"Ah, poor woman! She's as honest as the day--_she_ never +suspected anything wrong in him, you may depend on it." Women, who +were intimate with her, talked together much of "poor Harriet," +imagined what her feelings must be when she came to know everything, +and conjectured how much she had already come to know. There was no +spiteful disposition towards her; rather, there was a busy benevolence +anxious to ascertain what it would be well for her to feel and do under +the circumstances, which of course kept the imagination occupied with +her character and history from the times when she was Harriet Vincy +till now. With the review of Mrs. Bulstrode and her position it was +inevitable to associate Rosamond, whose prospects were under the same +blight with her aunt's. Rosamond was more severely criticised and less +pitied, though she too, as one of the good old Vincy family who had +always been known in Middlemarch, was regarded as a victim to marriage +with an interloper. The Vincys had their weaknesses, but then they lay +on the surface: there was never anything bad to be "found out" +concerning them. Mrs. Bulstrode was vindicated from any resemblance to +her husband. Harriet's faults were her own. + +"She has always been showy," said Mrs. Hackbutt, making tea for a small +party, "though she has got into the way of putting her religion +forward, to conform to her husband; she has tried to hold her head up +above Middlemarch by making it known that she invites clergymen and +heaven-knows-who from Riverston and those places." + +"We can hardly blame her for that," said Mrs. Sprague; "because few of +the best people in the town cared to associate with Bulstrode, and she +must have somebody to sit down at her table." + +"Mr. Thesiger has always countenanced him," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "I +think he must be sorry now." + +"But he was never fond of him in his heart--that every one knows," said +Mrs. Tom Toller. "Mr. Thesiger never goes into extremes. He keeps to +the truth in what is evangelical. It is only clergymen like Mr. Tyke, +who want to use Dissenting hymn-books and that low kind of religion, +who ever found Bulstrode to their taste." + +"I understand, Mr. Tyke is in great distress about him," said Mrs. +Hackbutt. "And well he may be: they say the Bulstrodes have half kept +the Tyke family." + +"And of course it is a discredit to his doctrines," said Mrs. Sprague, +who was elderly, and old-fashioned in her opinions. + +"People will not make a boast of being methodistical in Middlemarch for +a good while to come." + +"I think we must not set down people's bad actions to their religion," +said falcon-faced Mrs. Plymdale, who had been listening hitherto. + +"Oh, my dear, we are forgetting," said Mrs. Sprague. "We ought not to +be talking of this before you." + +"I am sure I have no reason to be partial," said Mrs. Plymdale, +coloring. "It's true Mr. Plymdale has always been on good terms with +Mr. Bulstrode, and Harriet Vincy was my friend long before she married +him. But I have always kept my own opinions and told her where she was +wrong, poor thing. Still, in point of religion, I must say, Mr. +Bulstrode might have done what he has, and worse, and yet have been a +man of no religion. I don't say that there has not been a little too +much of that--I like moderation myself. But truth is truth. The men +tried at the assizes are not all over-religious, I suppose." + +"Well," said Mrs. Hackbutt, wheeling adroitly, "all I can say is, that +I think she ought to separate from him." + +"I can't say that," said Mrs. Sprague. "She took him for better or +worse, you know." + +"But 'worse' can never mean finding out that your husband is fit for +Newgate," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "Fancy living with such a man! I should +expect to be poisoned." + +"Yes, I think myself it is an encouragement to crime if such men are to +be taken care of and waited on by good wives," said Mrs. Tom Toller. + +"And a good wife poor Harriet has been," said Mrs. Plymdale. "She +thinks her husband the first of men. It's true he has never denied her +anything." + +"Well, we shall see what she will do," said Mrs. Hackbutt. "I suppose +she knows nothing yet, poor creature. I do hope and trust I shall not +see her, for I should be frightened to death lest I should say anything +about her husband. Do you think any hint has reached her?" + +"I should hardly think so," said Mrs. Tom Toller. "We hear that he is +ill, and has never stirred out of the house since the meeting on +Thursday; but she was with her girls at church yesterday, and they had +new Tuscan bonnets. Her own had a feather in it. I have never seen +that her religion made any difference in her dress." + +"She wears very neat patterns always," said Mrs. Plymdale, a little +stung. "And that feather I know she got dyed a pale lavender on +purpose to be consistent. I must say it of Harriet that she wishes to +do right." + +"As to her knowing what has happened, it can't be kept from her long," +said Mrs. Hackbutt. "The Vincys know, for Mr. Vincy was at the +meeting. It will be a great blow to him. There is his daughter as +well as his sister." + +"Yes, indeed," said Mrs. Sprague. "Nobody supposes that Mr. Lydgate +can go on holding up his head in Middlemarch, things look so black +about the thousand pounds he took just at that man's death. It really +makes one shudder." + +"Pride must have a fall," said Mrs. Hackbutt. + +"I am not so sorry for Rosamond Vincy that was as I am for her aunt," +said Mrs. Plymdale. "She needed a lesson." + +"I suppose the Bulstrodes will go and live abroad somewhere," said Mrs. +Sprague. "That is what is generally done when there is anything +disgraceful in a family." + +"And a most deadly blow it will be to Harriet," said Mrs. Plymdale. +"If ever a woman was crushed, she will be. I pity her from my heart. +And with all her faults, few women are better. From a girl she had the +neatest ways, and was always good-hearted, and as open as the day. You +might look into her drawers when you would--always the same. And so +she has brought up Kate and Ellen. You may think how hard it will be +for her to go among foreigners." + +"The doctor says that is what he should recommend the Lydgates to do," +said Mrs. Sprague. "He says Lydgate ought to have kept among the +French." + +"That would suit _her_ well enough, I dare say," said Mrs. Plymdale; +"there is that kind of lightness about her. But she got that from her +mother; she never got it from her aunt Bulstrode, who always gave her +good advice, and to my knowledge would rather have had her marry +elsewhere." + +Mrs. Plymdale was in a situation which caused her some complication of +feeling. There had been not only her intimacy with Mrs. Bulstrode, but +also a profitable business relation of the great Plymdale dyeing house +with Mr. Bulstrode, which on the one hand would have inclined her to +desire that the mildest view of his character should be the true one, +but on the other, made her the more afraid of seeming to palliate his +culpability. Again, the late alliance of her family with the Tollers +had brought her in connection with the best circle, which gratified her +in every direction except in the inclination to those serious views +which she believed to be the best in another sense. The sharp little +woman's conscience was somewhat troubled in the adjustment of these +opposing "bests," and of her griefs and satisfactions under late +events, which were likely to humble those who needed humbling, but also +to fall heavily on her old friend whose faults she would have preferred +seeing on a background of prosperity. + +Poor Mrs. Bulstrode, meanwhile, had been no further shaken by the +oncoming tread of calamity than in the busier stirring of that secret +uneasiness which had always been present in her since the last visit of +Raffles to The Shrubs. That the hateful man had come ill to Stone +Court, and that her husband had chosen to remain there and watch over +him, she allowed to be explained by the fact that Raffles had been +employed and aided in earlier-days, and that this made a tie of +benevolence towards him in his degraded helplessness; and she had been +since then innocently cheered by her husband's more hopeful speech +about his own health and ability to continue his attention to business. +The calm was disturbed when Lydgate had brought him home ill from the +meeting, and in spite of comforting assurances during the next few +days, she cried in private from the conviction that her husband was not +suffering from bodily illness merely, but from something that afflicted +his mind. He would not allow her to read to him, and scarcely to sit +with him, alleging nervous susceptibility to sounds and movements; yet +she suspected that in shutting himself up in his private room he wanted +to be busy with his papers. Something, she felt sure, had happened. +Perhaps it was some great loss of money; and she was kept in the dark. +Not daring to question her husband, she said to Lydgate, on the fifth +day after the meeting, when she had not left home except to go to +church-- + +"Mr. Lydgate, pray be open with me: I like to know the truth. Has +anything happened to Mr. Bulstrode?" + +"Some little nervous shock," said Lydgate, evasively. He felt that it +was not for him to make the painful revelation. + +"But what brought it on?" said Mrs. Bulstrode, looking directly at him +with her large dark eyes. + +"There is often something poisonous in the air of public rooms," said +Lydgate. "Strong men can stand it, but it tells on people in +proportion to the delicacy of their systems. It is often impossible to +account for the precise moment of an attack--or rather, to say why the +strength gives way at a particular moment." + +Mrs. Bulstrode was not satisfied with this answer. There remained in +her the belief that some calamity had befallen her husband, of which +she was to be kept in ignorance; and it was in her nature strongly to +object to such concealment. She begged leave for her daughters to sit +with their father, and drove into the town to pay some visits, +conjecturing that if anything were known to have gone wrong in Mr. +Bulstrode's affairs, she should see or hear some sign of it. + +She called on Mrs. Thesiger, who was not at home, and then drove to +Mrs. Hackbutt's on the other side of the churchyard. Mrs. Hackbutt saw +her coming from an up-stairs window, and remembering her former alarm +lest she should meet Mrs. Bulstrode, felt almost bound in consistency +to send word that she was not at home; but against that, there was a +sudden strong desire within her for the excitement of an interview in +which she was quite determined not to make the slightest allusion to +what was in her mind. + +Hence Mrs. Bulstrode was shown into the drawing-room, and Mrs. Hackbutt +went to her, with more tightness of lip and rubbing of her hands than +was usually observable in her, these being precautions adopted against +freedom of speech. She was resolved not to ask how Mr. Bulstrode was. + +"I have not been anywhere except to church for nearly a week," said +Mrs. Bulstrode, after a few introductory remarks. "But Mr. Bulstrode +was taken so ill at the meeting on Thursday that I have not liked to +leave the house." + +Mrs. Hackbutt rubbed the back of one hand with the palm of the other +held against her chest, and let her eyes ramble over the pattern on the +rug. + +"Was Mr. Hackbutt at the meeting?" persevered Mrs. Bulstrode. + +"Yes, he was," said Mrs. Hackbutt, with the same attitude. "The land +is to be bought by subscription, I believe." + +"Let us hope that there will be no more cases of cholera to be buried +in it," said Mrs. Bulstrode. "It is an awful visitation. But I always +think Middlemarch a very healthy spot. I suppose it is being used to +it from a child; but I never saw the town I should like to live at +better, and especially our end." + +"I am sure I should be glad that you always should live at Middlemarch, +Mrs. Bulstrode," said Mrs. Hackbutt, with a slight sigh. "Still, we +must learn to resign ourselves, wherever our lot may be cast. Though I +am sure there will always be people in this town who will wish you +well." + +Mrs. Hackbutt longed to say, "if you take my advice you will part from +your husband," but it seemed clear to her that the poor woman knew +nothing of the thunder ready to bolt on her head, and she herself could +do no more than prepare her a little. Mrs. Bulstrode felt suddenly +rather chill and trembling: there was evidently something unusual +behind this speech of Mrs. Hackbutt's; but though she had set out with +the desire to be fully informed, she found herself unable now to pursue +her brave purpose, and turning the conversation by an inquiry about the +young Hackbutts, she soon took her leave saying that she was going to +see Mrs. Plymdale. On her way thither she tried to imagine that there +might have been some unusually warm sparring at the meeting between Mr. +Bulstrode and some of his frequent opponents--perhaps Mr. Hackbutt +might have been one of them. That would account for everything. + +But when she was in conversation with Mrs. Plymdale that comforting +explanation seemed no longer tenable. "Selina" received her with a +pathetic affectionateness and a disposition to give edifying answers on +the commonest topics, which could hardly have reference to an ordinary +quarrel of which the most important consequence was a perturbation of +Mr. Bulstrode's health. Beforehand Mrs. Bulstrode had thought that she +would sooner question Mrs. Plymdale than any one else; but she found to +her surprise that an old friend is not always the person whom it is +easiest to make a confidant of: there was the barrier of remembered +communication under other circumstances--there was the dislike of +being pitied and informed by one who had been long wont to allow her +the superiority. For certain words of mysterious appropriateness that +Mrs. Plymdale let fall about her resolution never to turn her back on +her friends, convinced Mrs. Bulstrode that what had happened must be +some kind of misfortune, and instead of being able to say with her +native directness, "What is it that you have in your mind?" she found +herself anxious to get away before she had heard anything more +explicit. She began to have an agitating certainty that the misfortune +was something more than the mere loss of money, being keenly sensitive +to the fact that Selina now, just as Mrs. Hackbutt had done before, +avoided noticing what she said about her husband, as they would have +avoided noticing a personal blemish. + +She said good-by with nervous haste, and told the coachman to drive to +Mr. Vincy's warehouse. In that short drive her dread gathered so much +force from the sense of darkness, that when she entered the private +counting-house where her brother sat at his desk, her knees trembled +and her usually florid face was deathly pale. Something of the same +effect was produced in him by the sight of her: he rose from his seat +to meet her, took her by the hand, and said, with his impulsive +rashness-- + +"God help you, Harriet! you know all." + +That moment was perhaps worse than any which came after. It contained +that concentrated experience which in great crises of emotion reveals +the bias of a nature, and is prophetic of the ultimate act which will +end an intermediate struggle. Without that memory of Raffles she might +still have thought only of monetary ruin, but now along with her +brother's look and words there darted into her mind the idea of some +guilt in her husband--then, under the working of terror came the image +of her husband exposed to disgrace--and then, after an instant of +scorching shame in which she felt only the eyes of the world, with one +leap of her heart she was at his side in mournful but unreproaching +fellowship with shame and isolation. All this went on within her in a +mere flash of time--while she sank into the chair, and raised her eyes +to her brother, who stood over her. "I know nothing, Walter. What is +it?" she said, faintly. + +He told her everything, very inartificially, in slow fragments, making +her aware that the scandal went much beyond proof, especially as to the +end of Raffles. + +"People will talk," he said. "Even if a man has been acquitted by a +jury, they'll talk, and nod and wink--and as far as the world goes, a +man might often as well be guilty as not. It's a breakdown blow, and +it damages Lydgate as much as Bulstrode. I don't pretend to say what +is the truth. I only wish we had never heard the name of either +Bulstrode or Lydgate. You'd better have been a Vincy all your life, +and so had Rosamond." Mrs. Bulstrode made no reply. + +"But you must bear up as well as you can, Harriet. People don't blame +_you_. And I'll stand by you whatever you make up your mind to do," +said the brother, with rough but well-meaning affectionateness. + +"Give me your arm to the carriage, Walter," said Mrs. Bulstrode. "I +feel very weak." + +And when she got home she was obliged to say to her daughter, "I am not +well, my dear; I must go and lie down. Attend to your papa. Leave me +in quiet. I shall take no dinner." + +She locked herself in her room. She needed time to get used to her +maimed consciousness, her poor lopped life, before she could walk +steadily to the place allotted her. A new searching light had fallen +on her husband's character, and she could not judge him leniently: the +twenty years in which she had believed in him and venerated him by +virtue of his concealments came back with particulars that made them +seem an odious deceit. He had married her with that bad past life +hidden behind him, and she had no faith left to protest his innocence +of the worst that was imputed to him. Her honest ostentatious nature +made the sharing of a merited dishonor as bitter as it could be to any +mortal. + +But this imperfectly taught woman, whose phrases and habits were an odd +patchwork, had a loyal spirit within her. The man whose prosperity she +had shared through nearly half a life, and who had unvaryingly +cherished her--now that punishment had befallen him it was not possible +to her in any sense to forsake him. There is a forsaking which still +sits at the same board and lies on the same couch with the forsaken +soul, withering it the more by unloving proximity. She knew, when she +locked her door, that she should unlock it ready to go down to her +unhappy husband and espouse his sorrow, and say of his guilt, I will +mourn and not reproach. But she needed time to gather up her strength; +she needed to sob out her farewell to all the gladness and pride of her +life. When she had resolved to go down, she prepared herself by some +little acts which might seem mere folly to a hard onlooker; they were +her way of expressing to all spectators visible or invisible that she +had begun a new life in which she embraced humiliation. She took off +all her ornaments and put on a plain black gown, and instead of wearing +her much-adorned cap and large bows of hair, she brushed her hair down +and put on a plain bonnet-cap, which made her look suddenly like an +early Methodist. + +Bulstrode, who knew that his wife had been out and had come in saying +that she was not well, had spent the time in an agitation equal to +hers. He had looked forward to her learning the truth from others, and +had acquiesced in that probability, as something easier to him than any +confession. But now that he imagined the moment of her knowledge come, +he awaited the result in anguish. His daughters had been obliged to +consent to leave him, and though he had allowed some food to be brought +to him, he had not touched it. He felt himself perishing slowly in +unpitied misery. Perhaps he should never see his wife's face with +affection in it again. And if he turned to God there seemed to be no +answer but the pressure of retribution. + +It was eight o'clock in the evening before the door opened and his wife +entered. He dared not look up at her. He sat with his eyes bent down, +and as she went towards him she thought he looked smaller--he seemed +so withered and shrunken. A movement of new compassion and old +tenderness went through her like a great wave, and putting one hand on +his which rested on the arm of the chair, and the other on his +shoulder, she said, solemnly but kindly-- + +"Look up, Nicholas." + +He raised his eyes with a little start and looked at her half amazed +for a moment: her pale face, her changed, mourning dress, the trembling +about her mouth, all said, "I know;" and her hands and eyes rested +gently on him. He burst out crying and they cried together, she +sitting at his side. They could not yet speak to each other of the +shame which she was bearing with him, or of the acts which had brought +it down on them. His confession was silent, and her promise of +faithfulness was silent. Open-minded as she was, she nevertheless +shrank from the words which would have expressed their mutual +consciousness, as she would have shrunk from flakes of fire. She could +not say, "How much is only slander and false suspicion?" and he did not +say, "I am innocent." + + + +CHAPTER LXXV. + + "Le sentiment de la fausseté des plaisirs présents, et + l'ignorance de la vanité des plaisirs absents causent + l'inconstance."--PASCAL. + + +Rosamond had a gleam of returning cheerfulness when the house was freed +from the threatening figure, and when all the disagreeable creditors +were paid. But she was not joyous: her married life had fulfilled none +of her hopes, and had been quite spoiled for her imagination. In this +brief interval of calm, Lydgate, remembering that he had often been +stormy in his hours of perturbation, and mindful of the pain Rosamond +had had to bear, was carefully gentle towards her; but he, too, had +lost some of his old spirit, and he still felt it necessary to refer to +an economical change in their way of living as a matter of course, +trying to reconcile her to it gradually, and repressing his anger when +she answered by wishing that he would go to live in London. When she +did not make this answer, she listened languidly, and wondered what she +had that was worth living for. The hard and contemptuous words which +had fallen from her husband in his anger had deeply offended that +vanity which he had at first called into active enjoyment; and what she +regarded as his perverse way of looking at things, kept up a secret +repulsion, which made her receive all his tenderness as a poor +substitute for the happiness he had failed to give her. They were at a +disadvantage with their neighbors, and there was no longer any outlook +towards Quallingham--there was no outlook anywhere except in an +occasional letter from Will Ladislaw. She had felt stung and +disappointed by Will's resolution to quit Middlemarch, for in spite of +what she knew and guessed about his admiration for Dorothea, she +secretly cherished the belief that he had, or would necessarily come to +have, much more admiration for herself; Rosamond being one of those +women who live much in the idea that each man they meet would have +preferred them if the preference had not been hopeless. Mrs. Casaubon +was all very well; but Will's interest in her dated before he knew Mrs. +Lydgate. Rosamond took his way of talking to herself, which was a +mixture of playful fault-finding and hyperbolical gallantry, as the +disguise of a deeper feeling; and in his presence she felt that +agreeable titillation of vanity and sense of romantic drama which +Lydgate's presence had no longer the magic to create. She even +fancied--what will not men and women fancy in these matters?--that +Will exaggerated his admiration for Mrs. Casaubon in order to pique +herself. In this way poor Rosamond's brain had been busy before Will's +departure. He would have made, she thought, a much more suitable +husband for her than she had found in Lydgate. No notion could have +been falser than this, for Rosamond's discontent in her marriage was +due to the conditions of marriage itself, to its demand for +self-suppression and tolerance, and not to the nature of her husband; +but the easy conception of an unreal Better had a sentimental charm +which diverted her ennui. She constructed a little romance which was +to vary the flatness of her life: Will Ladislaw was always to be a +bachelor and live near her, always to be at her command, and have an +understood though never fully expressed passion for her, which would be +sending out lambent flames every now and then in interesting scenes. +His departure had been a proportionate disappointment, and had sadly +increased her weariness of Middlemarch; but at first she had the +alternative dream of pleasures in store from her intercourse with the +family at Quallingham. Since then the troubles of her married life had +deepened, and the absence of other relief encouraged her regretful +rumination over that thin romance which she had once fed on. Men and +women make sad mistakes about their own symptoms, taking their vague +uneasy longings, sometimes for genius, sometimes for religion, and +oftener still for a mighty love. Will Ladislaw had written chatty +letters, half to her and half to Lydgate, and she had replied: their +separation, she felt, was not likely to be final, and the change she +now most longed for was that Lydgate should go to live in London; +everything would be agreeable in London; and she had set to work with +quiet determination to win this result, when there came a sudden, +delightful promise which inspirited her. + +It came shortly before the memorable meeting at the town-hall, and was +nothing less than a letter from Will Ladislaw to Lydgate, which turned +indeed chiefly on his new interest in plans of colonization, but +mentioned incidentally, that he might find it necessary to pay a visit +to Middlemarch within the next few weeks--a very pleasant necessity, he +said, almost as good as holidays to a schoolboy. He hoped there was +his old place on the rug, and a great deal of music in store for him. +But he was quite uncertain as to the time. While Lydgate was reading +the letter to Rosamond, her face looked like a reviving flower--it grew +prettier and more blooming. There was nothing unendurable now: the +debts were paid, Mr. Ladislaw was coming, and Lydgate would be +persuaded to leave Middlemarch and settle in London, which was "so +different from a provincial town." + +That was a bright bit of morning. But soon the sky became black over +poor Rosamond. The presence of a new gloom in her husband, about which +he was entirely reserved towards her--for he dreaded to expose his +lacerated feeling to her neutrality and misconception--soon received a +painfully strange explanation, alien to all her previous notions of +what could affect her happiness. In the new gayety of her spirits, +thinking that Lydgate had merely a worse fit of moodiness than usual, +causing him to leave her remarks unanswered, and evidently to keep out +of her way as much as possible, she chose, a few days after the +meeting, and without speaking to him on the subject, to send out notes +of invitation for a small evening party, feeling convinced that this +was a judicious step, since people seemed to have been keeping aloof +from them, and wanted restoring to the old habit of intercourse. When +the invitations had been accepted, she would tell Lydgate, and give him +a wise admonition as to how a medical man should behave to his +neighbors; for Rosamond had the gravest little airs possible about +other people's duties. But all the invitations were declined, and the +last answer came into Lydgate's hands. + +"This is Chichely's scratch. What is he writing to you about?" said +Lydgate, wonderingly, as he handed the note to her. She was obliged to +let him see it, and, looking at her severely, he said-- + +"Why on earth have you been sending out invitations without telling me, +Rosamond? I beg, I insist that you will not invite any one to this +house. I suppose you have been inviting others, and they have refused +too." She said nothing. + +"Do you hear me?" thundered Lydgate. + +"Yes, certainly I hear you," said Rosamond, turning her head aside with +the movement of a graceful long-necked bird. + +Lydgate tossed his head without any grace and walked out of the room, +feeling himself dangerous. Rosamond's thought was, that he was getting +more and more unbearable--not that there was any new special reason for +this peremptoriness. His indisposition to tell her anything in which +he was sure beforehand that she would not be interested was growing +into an unreflecting habit, and she was in ignorance of everything +connected with the thousand pounds except that the loan had come from +her uncle Bulstrode. Lydgate's odious humors and their neighbors' +apparent avoidance of them had an unaccountable date for her in their +relief from money difficulties. If the invitations had been accepted +she would have gone to invite her mamma and the rest, whom she had seen +nothing of for several days; and she now put on her bonnet to go and +inquire what had become of them all, suddenly feeling as if there were +a conspiracy to leave her in isolation with a husband disposed to +offend everybody. It was after the dinner hour, and she found her +father and mother seated together alone in the drawing-room. They +greeted her with sad looks, saying "Well, my dear!" and no more. She +had never seen her father look so downcast; and seating herself near +him she said-- + +"Is there anything the matter, papa?" + +He did not answer, but Mrs. Vincy said, "Oh, my dear, have you heard +nothing? It won't be long before it reaches you." + +"Is it anything about Tertius?" said Rosamond, turning pale. The idea +of trouble immediately connected itself with what had been +unaccountable to her in him. + +"Oh, my dear, yes. To think of your marrying into this trouble. Debt +was bad enough, but this will be worse." + +"Stay, stay, Lucy," said Mr. Vincy. "Have you heard nothing about your +uncle Bulstrode, Rosamond?" + +"No, papa," said the poor thing, feeling as if trouble were not +anything she had before experienced, but some invisible power with an +iron grasp that made her soul faint within her. + +Her father told her everything, saying at the end, "It's better for you +to know, my dear. I think Lydgate must leave the town. Things have +gone against him. I dare say he couldn't help it. I don't accuse him +of any harm," said Mr. Vincy. He had always before been disposed to +find the utmost fault with Lydgate. + +The shock to Rosamond was terrible. It seemed to her that no lot could +be so cruelly hard as hers to have married a man who had become the +centre of infamous suspicions. In many cases it is inevitable that the +shame is felt to be the worst part of crime; and it would have required +a great deal of disentangling reflection, such as had never entered +into Rosamond's life, for her in these moments to feel that her trouble +was less than if her husband had been certainly known to have done +something criminal. All the shame seemed to be there. And she had +innocently married this man with the belief that he and his family were +a glory to her! She showed her usual reticence to her parents, and +only said, that if Lydgate had done as she wished he would have left +Middlemarch long ago. + +"She bears it beyond anything," said her mother when she was gone. + +"Ah, thank God!" said Mr. Vincy, who was much broken down. + +But Rosamond went home with a sense of justified repugnance towards her +husband. What had he really done--how had he really acted? She did +not know. Why had he not told her everything? He did not speak to her +on the subject, and of course she could not speak to him. It came into +her mind once that she would ask her father to let her go home again; +but dwelling on that prospect made it seem utter dreariness to her: a +married woman gone back to live with her parents--life seemed to have +no meaning for her in such a position: she could not contemplate +herself in it. + +The next two days Lydgate observed a change in her, and believed that +she had heard the bad news. Would she speak to him about it, or would +she go on forever in the silence which seemed to imply that she +believed him guilty? We must remember that he was in a morbid state of +mind, in which almost all contact was pain. Certainly Rosamond in this +case had equal reason to complain of reserve and want of confidence on +his part; but in the bitterness of his soul he excused himself;--was +he not justified in shrinking from the task of telling her, since now +she knew the truth she had no impulse to speak to him? But a +deeper-lying consciousness that he was in fault made him restless, and +the silence between them became intolerable to him; it was as if they +were both adrift on one piece of wreck and looked away from each other. + +He thought, "I am a fool. Haven't I given up expecting anything? I +have married care, not help." And that evening he said-- + +"Rosamond, have you heard anything that distresses you?" + +"Yes," she answered, laying down her work, which she had been carrying +on with a languid semi-consciousness, most unlike her usual self. + +"What have you heard?" + +"Everything, I suppose. Papa told me." + +"That people think me disgraced?" + +"Yes," said Rosamond, faintly, beginning to sew again automatically. + +There was silence. Lydgate thought, "If she has any trust in me--any +notion of what I am, she ought to speak now and say that she does not +believe I have deserved disgrace." + +But Rosamond on her side went on moving her fingers languidly. +Whatever was to be said on the subject she expected to come from +Tertius. What did she know? And if he were innocent of any wrong, why +did he not do something to clear himself? + +This silence of hers brought a new rush of gall to that bitter mood in +which Lydgate had been saying to himself that nobody believed in +him--even Farebrother had not come forward. He had begun to question +her with the intent that their conversation should disperse the chill +fog which had gathered between them, but he felt his resolution checked +by despairing resentment. Even this trouble, like the rest, she seemed +to regard as if it were hers alone. He was always to her a being +apart, doing what she objected to. He started from his chair with an +angry impulse, and thrusting his hands in his pockets, walked up and +down the room. There was an underlying consciousness all the while +that he should have to master this anger, and tell her everything, and +convince her of the facts. For he had almost learned the lesson that +he must bend himself to her nature, and that because she came short in +her sympathy, he must give the more. Soon he recurred to his intention +of opening himself: the occasion must not be lost. If he could bring +her to feel with some solemnity that here was a slander which must be +met and not run away from, and that the whole trouble had come out of +his desperate want of money, it would be a moment for urging powerfully +on her that they should be one in the resolve to do with as little +money as possible, so that they might weather the bad time and keep +themselves independent. He would mention the definite measures which +he desired to take, and win her to a willing spirit. He was bound to +try this--and what else was there for him to do? + +He did not know how long he had been walking uneasily backwards and +forwards, but Rosamond felt that it was long, and wished that he would +sit down. She too had begun to think this an opportunity for urging on +Tertius what he ought to do. Whatever might be the truth about all +this misery, there was one dread which asserted itself. + +Lydgate at last seated himself, not in his usual chair, but in one +nearer to Rosamond, leaning aside in it towards her, and looking at her +gravely before he reopened the sad subject. He had conquered himself +so far, and was about to speak with a sense of solemnity, as on an +occasion which was not to be repeated. He had even opened his lips, +when Rosamond, letting her hands fall, looked at him and said-- + +"Surely, Tertius--" + +"Well?" + +"Surely now at last you have given up the idea of staying in +Middlemarch. I cannot go on living here. Let us go to London. Papa, +and every one else, says you had better go. Whatever misery I have to +put up with, it will be easier away from here." + +Lydgate felt miserably jarred. Instead of that critical outpouring for +which he had prepared himself with effort, here was the old round to be +gone through again. He could not bear it. With a quick change of +countenance he rose and went out of the room. + +Perhaps if he had been strong enough to persist in his determination to +be the more because she was less, that evening might have had a better +issue. If his energy could have borne down that check, he might still +have wrought on Rosamond's vision and will. We cannot be sure that any +natures, however inflexible or peculiar, will resist this effect from a +more massive being than their own. They may be taken by storm and for +the moment converted, becoming part of the soul which enwraps them in +the ardor of its movement. But poor Lydgate had a throbbing pain +within him, and his energy had fallen short of its task. + +The beginning of mutual understanding and resolve seemed as far off as +ever; nay, it seemed blocked out by the sense of unsuccessful effort. +They lived on from day to day with their thoughts still apart, Lydgate +going about what work he had in a mood of despair, and Rosamond +feeling, with some justification, that he was behaving cruelly. It was +of no use to say anything to Tertius; but when Will Ladislaw came, she +was determined to tell him everything. In spite of her general +reticence, she needed some one who would recognize her wrongs. + + + +CHAPTER LXXVI. + + "To mercy, pity, peace, and love + All pray in their distress, + And to these virtues of delight, + Return their thankfulness. + . . . . . . + For Mercy has a human heart, + Pity a human face; + And Love, the human form divine; + And Peace, the human dress. + --WILLIAM BLAKE: Songs of Innocence. + + +Some days later, Lydgate was riding to Lowick Manor, in consequence of +a summons from Dorothea. The summons had not been unexpected, since it +had followed a letter from Mr. Bulstrode, in which he stated that he +had resumed his arrangements for quitting Middlemarch, and must remind +Lydgate of his previous communications about the Hospital, to the +purport of which he still adhered. It had been his duty, before taking +further steps, to reopen the subject with Mrs. Casaubon, who now +wished, as before, to discuss the question with Lydgate. "Your views +may possibly have undergone some change," wrote Mr. Bulstrode; "but, in +that case also, it is desirable that you should lay them before her." + +Dorothea awaited his arrival with eager interest. Though, in deference +to her masculine advisers, she had refrained from what Sir James had +called "interfering in this Bulstrode business," the hardship of +Lydgate's position was continually in her mind, and when Bulstrode +applied to her again about the hospital, she felt that the opportunity +was come to her which she had been hindered from hastening. In her +luxurious home, wandering under the boughs of her own great trees, her +thought was going out over the lot of others, and her emotions were +imprisoned. The idea of some active good within her reach, "haunted +her like a passion," and another's need having once come to her as a +distinct image, preoccupied her desire with the yearning to give +relief, and made her own ease tasteless. She was full of confident +hope about this interview with Lydgate, never heeding what was said of +his personal reserve; never heeding that she was a very young woman. +Nothing could have seemed more irrelevant to Dorothea than insistence +on her youth and sex when she was moved to show her human fellowship. + +As she sat waiting in the library, she could do nothing but live +through again all the past scenes which had brought Lydgate into her +memories. They all owed their significance to her marriage and its +troubles--but no; there were two occasions in which the image of +Lydgate had come painfully in connection with his wife and some one +else. The pain had been allayed for Dorothea, but it had left in her +an awakened conjecture as to what Lydgate's marriage might be to him, a +susceptibility to the slightest hint about Mrs. Lydgate. These +thoughts were like a drama to her, and made her eyes bright, and gave +an attitude of suspense to her whole frame, though she was only looking +out from the brown library on to the turf and the bright green buds +which stood in relief against the dark evergreens. + +When Lydgate came in, she was almost shocked at the change in his face, +which was strikingly perceptible to her who had not seen him for two +months. It was not the change of emaciation, but that effect which +even young faces will very soon show from the persistent presence of +resentment and despondency. Her cordial look, when she put out her +hand to him, softened his expression, but only with melancholy. + +"I have wished very much to see you for a long while, Mr. Lydgate," +said Dorothea when they were seated opposite each other; "but I put off +asking you to come until Mr. Bulstrode applied to me again about the +Hospital. I know that the advantage of keeping the management of it +separate from that of the Infirmary depends on you, or, at least, on +the good which you are encouraged to hope for from having it under your +control. And I am sure you will not refuse to tell me exactly what you +think." + +"You want to decide whether you should give a generous support to the +Hospital," said Lydgate. "I cannot conscientiously advise you to do it +in dependence on any activity of mine. I may be obliged to leave the +town." + +He spoke curtly, feeling the ache of despair as to his being able to +carry out any purpose that Rosamond had set her mind against. + +"Not because there is no one to believe in you?" said Dorothea, pouring +out her words in clearness from a full heart. "I know the unhappy +mistakes about you. I knew them from the first moment to be mistakes. +You have never done anything vile. You would not do anything +dishonorable." + +It was the first assurance of belief in him that had fallen on +Lydgate's ears. He drew a deep breath, and said, "Thank you." He could +say no more: it was something very new and strange in his life that +these few words of trust from a woman should be so much to him. + +"I beseech you to tell me how everything was," said Dorothea, +fearlessly. "I am sure that the truth would clear you." + +Lydgate started up from his chair and went towards the window, +forgetting where he was. He had so often gone over in his mind the +possibility of explaining everything without aggravating appearances +that would tell, perhaps unfairly, against Bulstrode, and had so often +decided against it--he had so often said to himself that his assertions +would not change people's impressions--that Dorothea's words sounded +like a temptation to do something which in his soberness he had +pronounced to be unreasonable. + +"Tell me, pray," said Dorothea, with simple earnestness; "then we can +consult together. It is wicked to let people think evil of any one +falsely, when it can be hindered." + +Lydgate turned, remembering where he was, and saw Dorothea's face +looking up at him with a sweet trustful gravity. The presence of a +noble nature, generous in its wishes, ardent in its charity, changes +the lights for us: we begin to see things again in their larger, +quieter masses, and to believe that we too can be seen and judged in +the wholeness of our character. That influence was beginning to act on +Lydgate, who had for many days been seeing all life as one who is +dragged and struggling amid the throng. He sat down again, and felt +that he was recovering his old self in the consciousness that he was +with one who believed in it. + +"I don't want," he said, "to bear hard on Bulstrode, who has lent me +money of which I was in need--though I would rather have gone without +it now. He is hunted down and miserable, and has only a poor thread of +life in him. But I should like to tell you everything. It will be a +comfort to me to speak where belief has gone beforehand, and where I +shall not seem to be offering assertions of my own honesty. You will +feel what is fair to another, as you feel what is fair to me." + +"Do trust me," said Dorothea; "I will not repeat anything without your +leave. But at the very least, I could say that you have made all the +circumstances clear to me, and that I know you are not in any way +guilty. Mr. Farebrother would believe me, and my uncle, and Sir James +Chettam. Nay, there are persons in Middlemarch to whom I could go; +although they don't know much of me, they would believe me. They would +know that I could have no other motive than truth and justice. I would +take any pains to clear you. I have very little to do. There is +nothing better that I can do in the world." + +Dorothea's voice, as she made this childlike picture of what she would +do, might have been almost taken as a proof that she could do it +effectively. The searching tenderness of her woman's tones seemed made +for a defence against ready accusers. Lydgate did not stay to think +that she was Quixotic: he gave himself up, for the first time in his +life, to the exquisite sense of leaning entirely on a generous +sympathy, without any check of proud reserve. And he told her +everything, from the time when, under the pressure of his difficulties, +he unwillingly made his first application to Bulstrode; gradually, in +the relief of speaking, getting into a more thorough utterance of what +had gone on in his mind--entering fully into the fact that his +treatment of the patient was opposed to the dominant practice, into his +doubts at the last, his ideal of medical duty, and his uneasy +consciousness that the acceptance of the money had made some difference +in his private inclination and professional behavior, though not in his +fulfilment of any publicly recognized obligation. + +"It has come to my knowledge since," he added, "that Hawley sent some +one to examine the housekeeper at Stone Court, and she said that she +gave the patient all the opium in the phial I left, as well as a good +deal of brandy. But that would not have been opposed to ordinary +prescriptions, even of first-rate men. The suspicions against me had +no hold there: they are grounded on the knowledge that I took money, +that Bulstrode had strong motives for wishing the man to die, and that +he gave me the money as a bribe to concur in some malpractices or other +against the patient--that in any case I accepted a bribe to hold my +tongue. They are just the suspicions that cling the most obstinately, +because they lie in people's inclination and can never be disproved. +How my orders came to be disobeyed is a question to which I don't know +the answer. It is still possible that Bulstrode was innocent of any +criminal intention--even possible that he had nothing to do with the +disobedience, and merely abstained from mentioning it. But all that +has nothing to do with the public belief. It is one of those cases on +which a man is condemned on the ground of his character--it is +believed that he has committed a crime in some undefined way, because +he had the motive for doing it; and Bulstrode's character has enveloped +me, because I took his money. I am simply blighted--like a damaged +ear of corn--the business is done and can't be undone." + +"Oh, it is hard!" said Dorothea. "I understand the difficulty there is +in your vindicating yourself. And that all this should have come to +you who had meant to lead a higher life than the common, and to find +out better ways--I cannot bear to rest in this as unchangeable. I know +you meant that. I remember what you said to me when you first spoke to +me about the hospital. There is no sorrow I have thought more about +than that--to love what is great, and try to reach it, and yet to fail." + +"Yes," said Lydgate, feeling that here he had found room for the full +meaning of his grief. "I had some ambition. I meant everything to be +different with me. I thought I had more strength and mastery. But the +most terrible obstacles are such as nobody can see except oneself." + +"Suppose," said Dorothea, meditatively,--"suppose we kept on the +Hospital according to the present plan, and you stayed here though only +with the friendship and support of a few, the evil feeling towards you +would gradually die out; there would come opportunities in which people +would be forced to acknowledge that they had been unjust to you, +because they would see that your purposes were pure. You may still win +a great fame like the Louis and Laennec I have heard you speak of, and +we shall all be proud of you," she ended, with a smile. + +"That might do if I had my old trust in myself," said Lydgate, +mournfully. "Nothing galls me more than the notion of turning round +and running away before this slander, leaving it unchecked behind me. +Still, I can't ask any one to put a great deal of money into a plan +which depends on me." + +"It would be quite worth my while," said Dorothea, simply. "Only +think. I am very uncomfortable with my money, because they tell me I +have too little for any great scheme of the sort I like best, and yet I +have too much. I don't know what to do. I have seven hundred a-year +of my own fortune, and nineteen hundred a-year that Mr. Casaubon left +me, and between three and four thousand of ready money in the bank. I +wished to raise money and pay it off gradually out of my income which I +don't want, to buy land with and found a village which should be a +school of industry; but Sir James and my uncle have convinced me that +the risk would be too great. So you see that what I should most +rejoice at would be to have something good to do with my money: I +should like it to make other people's lives better to them. It makes +me very uneasy--coming all to me who don't want it." + +A smile broke through the gloom of Lydgate's face. The childlike +grave-eyed earnestness with which Dorothea said all this was +irresistible--blent into an adorable whole with her ready understanding +of high experience. (Of lower experience such as plays a great part in +the world, poor Mrs. Casaubon had a very blurred shortsighted +knowledge, little helped by her imagination.) But she took the smile as +encouragement of her plan. + +"I think you see now that you spoke too scrupulously," she said, in a +tone of persuasion. "The hospital would be one good; and making your +life quite whole and well again would be another." + +Lydgate's smile had died away. "You have the goodness as well as the +money to do all that; if it could be done," he said. "But--" + +He hesitated a little while, looking vaguely towards the window; and +she sat in silent expectation. At last he turned towards her and said +impetuously-- + +"Why should I not tell you?--you know what sort of bond marriage is. +You will understand everything." + +Dorothea felt her heart beginning to beat faster. Had he that sorrow +too? But she feared to say any word, and he went on immediately. + +"It is impossible for me now to do anything--to take any step without +considering my wife's happiness. The thing that I might like to do if +I were alone, is become impossible to me. I can't see her miserable. +She married me without knowing what she was going into, and it might +have been better for her if she had not married me." + +"I know, I know--you could not give her pain, if you were not obliged +to do it," said Dorothea, with keen memory of her own life. + +"And she has set her mind against staying. She wishes to go. The +troubles she has had here have wearied her," said Lydgate, breaking off +again, lest he should say too much. + +"But when she saw the good that might come of staying--" said Dorothea, +remonstrantly, looking at Lydgate as if he had forgotten the reasons +which had just been considered. He did not speak immediately. + +"She would not see it," he said at last, curtly, feeling at first that +this statement must do without explanation. "And, indeed, I have lost +all spirit about carrying on my life here." He paused a moment and +then, following the impulse to let Dorothea see deeper into the +difficulty of his life, he said, "The fact is, this trouble has come +upon her confusedly. We have not been able to speak to each other +about it. I am not sure what is in her mind about it: she may fear +that I have really done something base. It is my fault; I ought to be +more open. But I have been suffering cruelly." + +"May I go and see her?" said Dorothea, eagerly. "Would she accept my +sympathy? I would tell her that you have not been blamable before any +one's judgment but your own. I would tell her that you shall be +cleared in every fair mind. I would cheer her heart. Will you ask her +if I may go to see her? I did see her once." + +"I am sure you may," said Lydgate, seizing the proposition with some +hope. "She would feel honored--cheered, I think, by the proof that you +at least have some respect for me. I will not speak to her about your +coming--that she may not connect it with my wishes at all. I know very +well that I ought not to have left anything to be told her by others, +but--" + +He broke off, and there was a moment's silence. Dorothea refrained +from saying what was in her mind--how well she knew that there might be +invisible barriers to speech between husband and wife. This was a +point on which even sympathy might make a wound. She returned to the +more outward aspect of Lydgate's position, saying cheerfully-- + +"And if Mrs. Lydgate knew that there were friends who would believe in +you and support you, she might then be glad that you should stay in +your place and recover your hopes--and do what you meant to do. +Perhaps then you would see that it was right to agree with what I +proposed about your continuing at the Hospital. Surely you would, if +you still have faith in it as a means of making your knowledge useful?" + +Lydgate did not answer, and she saw that he was debating with himself. + +"You need not decide immediately," she said, gently. "A few days hence +it will be early enough for me to send my answer to Mr. Bulstrode." + +Lydgate still waited, but at last turned to speak in his most decisive +tones. + +"No; I prefer that there should be no interval left for wavering. I am +no longer sure enough of myself--I mean of what it would be possible +for me to do under the changed circumstances of my life. It would be +dishonorable to let others engage themselves to anything serious in +dependence on me. I might be obliged to go away after all; I see +little chance of anything else. The whole thing is too problematic; I +cannot consent to be the cause of your goodness being wasted. No--let +the new Hospital be joined with the old Infirmary, and everything go on +as it might have done if I had never come. I have kept a valuable +register since I have been there; I shall send it to a man who will +make use of it," he ended bitterly. "I can think of nothing for a long +while but getting an income." + +"It hurts me very much to hear you speak so hopelessly," said Dorothea. +"It would be a happiness to your friends, who believe in your future, +in your power to do great things, if you would let them save you from +that. Think how much money I have; it would be like taking a burthen +from me if you took some of it every year till you got free from this +fettering want of income. Why should not people do these things? It +is so difficult to make shares at all even. This is one way." + +"God bless you, Mrs. Casaubon!" said Lydgate, rising as if with the +same impulse that made his words energetic, and resting his arm on the +back of the great leather chair he had been sitting in. "It is good +that you should have such feelings. But I am not the man who ought to +allow himself to benefit by them. I have not given guarantees enough. +I must not at least sink into the degradation of being pensioned for +work that I never achieved. It is very clear to me that I must not +count on anything else than getting away from Middlemarch as soon as I +can manage it. I should not be able for a long while, at the very +best, to get an income here, and--and it is easier to make necessary +changes in a new place. I must do as other men do, and think what will +please the world and bring in money; look for a little opening in the +London crowd, and push myself; set up in a watering-place, or go to +some southern town where there are plenty of idle English, and get +myself puffed,--that is the sort of shell I must creep into and try to +keep my soul alive in." + +"Now that is not brave," said Dorothea,--"to give up the fight." + +"No, it is not brave," said Lydgate, "but if a man is afraid of +creeping paralysis?" Then, in another tone, "Yet you have made a great +difference in my courage by believing in me. Everything seems more +bearable since I have talked to you; and if you can clear me in a few +other minds, especially in Farebrother's, I shall be deeply grateful. +The point I wish you not to mention is the fact of disobedience to my +orders. That would soon get distorted. After all, there is no +evidence for me but people's opinion of me beforehand. You can only +repeat my own report of myself." + +"Mr. Farebrother will believe--others will believe," said Dorothea. "I +can say of you what will make it stupidity to suppose that you would be +bribed to do a wickedness." + +"I don't know," said Lydgate, with something like a groan in his voice. +"I have not taken a bribe yet. But there is a pale shade of bribery +which is sometimes called prosperity. You will do me another great +kindness, then, and come to see my wife?" + +"Yes, I will. I remember how pretty she is," said Dorothea, into whose +mind every impression about Rosamond had cut deep. "I hope she will +like me." + +As Lydgate rode away, he thought, "This young creature has a heart +large enough for the Virgin Mary. She evidently thinks nothing of her +own future, and would pledge away half her income at once, as if she +wanted nothing for herself but a chair to sit in from which she can +look down with those clear eyes at the poor mortals who pray to her. +She seems to have what I never saw in any woman before--a fountain of +friendship towards men--a man can make a friend of her. Casaubon must +have raised some heroic hallucination in her. I wonder if she could +have any other sort of passion for a man? Ladislaw?--there was +certainly an unusual feeling between them. And Casaubon must have had +a notion of it. Well--her love might help a man more than her money." + +Dorothea on her side had immediately formed a plan of relieving Lydgate +from his obligation to Bulstrode, which she felt sure was a part, +though small, of the galling pressure he had to bear. She sat down at +once under the inspiration of their interview, and wrote a brief note, +in which she pleaded that she had more claim than Mr. Bulstrode had to +the satisfaction of providing the money which had been serviceable to +Lydgate--that it would be unkind in Lydgate not to grant her the +position of being his helper in this small matter, the favor being +entirely to her who had so little that was plainly marked out for her +to do with her superfluous money. He might call her a creditor or by +any other name if it did but imply that he granted her request. She +enclosed a check for a thousand pounds, and determined to take the +letter with her the next day when she went to see Rosamond. + + + +CHAPTER LXXVII. + + "And thus thy fall hath left a kind of blot, + To mark the full-fraught man and best indued + With some suspicion." + --Henry V. + + +The next day Lydgate had to go to Brassing, and told Rosamond that he +should be away until the evening. Of late she had never gone beyond +her own house and garden, except to church, and once to see her papa, +to whom she said, "If Tertius goes away, you will help us to move, will +you not, papa? I suppose we shall have very little money. I am sure I +hope some one will help us." And Mr. Vincy had said, "Yes, child, I +don't mind a hundred or two. I can see the end of that." With these +exceptions she had sat at home in languid melancholy and suspense, +fixing her mind on Will Ladislaw's coming as the one point of hope and +interest, and associating this with some new urgency on Lydgate to make +immediate arrangements for leaving Middlemarch and going to London, +till she felt assured that the coming would be a potent cause of the +going, without at all seeing how. This way of establishing sequences +is too common to be fairly regarded as a peculiar folly in Rosamond. +And it is precisely this sort of sequence which causes the greatest +shock when it is sundered: for to see how an effect may be produced is +often to see possible missings and checks; but to see nothing except +the desirable cause, and close upon it the desirable effect, rids us of +doubt and makes our minds strongly intuitive. That was the process +going on in poor Rosamond, while she arranged all objects around her +with the same nicety as ever, only with more slowness--or sat down to +the piano, meaning to play, and then desisting, yet lingering on the +music stool with her white fingers suspended on the wooden front, and +looking before her in dreamy ennui. Her melancholy had become so +marked that Lydgate felt a strange timidity before it, as a perpetual +silent reproach, and the strong man, mastered by his keen sensibilities +towards this fair fragile creature whose life he seemed somehow to have +bruised, shrank from her look, and sometimes started at her approach, +fear of her and fear for her rushing in only the more forcibly after it +had been momentarily expelled by exasperation. + +But this morning Rosamond descended from her room upstairs--where she +sometimes sat the whole day when Lydgate was out--equipped for a walk +in the town. She had a letter to post--a letter addressed to Mr. +Ladislaw and written with charming discretion, but intended to hasten +his arrival by a hint of trouble. The servant-maid, their sole +house-servant now, noticed her coming down-stairs in her walking dress, +and thought "there never did anybody look so pretty in a bonnet poor +thing." + +Meanwhile Dorothea's mind was filled with her project of going to +Rosamond, and with the many thoughts, both of the past and the probable +future, which gathered round the idea of that visit. Until yesterday +when Lydgate had opened to her a glimpse of some trouble in his married +life, the image of Mrs. Lydgate had always been associated for her with +that of Will Ladislaw. Even in her most uneasy moments--even when she +had been agitated by Mrs. Cadwallader's painfully graphic report of +gossip--her effort, nay, her strongest impulsive prompting, had been +towards the vindication of Will from any sullying surmises; and when, +in her meeting with him afterwards, she had at first interpreted his +words as a probable allusion to a feeling towards Mrs. Lydgate which he +was determined to cut himself off from indulging, she had had a quick, +sad, excusing vision of the charm there might be in his constant +opportunities of companionship with that fair creature, who most likely +shared his other tastes as she evidently did his delight in music. But +there had followed his parting words--the few passionate words in +which he had implied that she herself was the object of whom his love +held him in dread, that it was his love for her only which he was +resolved not to declare but to carry away into banishment. From the +time of that parting, Dorothea, believing in Will's love for her, +believing with a proud delight in his delicate sense of honor and his +determination that no one should impeach him justly, felt her heart +quite at rest as to the regard he might have for Mrs. Lydgate. She was +sure that the regard was blameless. + +There are natures in which, if they love us, we are conscious of having +a sort of baptism and consecration: they bind us over to rectitude and +purity by their pure belief about us; and our sins become that worst +kind of sacrilege which tears down the invisible altar of trust. "If +you are not good, none is good"--those little words may give a +terrific meaning to responsibility, may hold a vitriolic intensity for +remorse. + +Dorothea's nature was of that kind: her own passionate faults lay along +the easily counted open channels of her ardent character; and while she +was full of pity for the visible mistakes of others, she had not yet +any material within her experience for subtle constructions and +suspicions of hidden wrong. But that simplicity of hers, holding up an +ideal for others in her believing conception of them, was one of the +great powers of her womanhood. And it had from the first acted +strongly on Will Ladislaw. He felt, when he parted from her, that the +brief words by which he had tried to convey to her his feeling about +herself and the division which her fortune made between them, would +only profit by their brevity when Dorothea had to interpret them: he +felt that in her mind he had found his highest estimate. + +And he was right there. In the months since their parting Dorothea had +felt a delicious though sad repose in their relation to each other, as +one which was inwardly whole and without blemish. She had an active +force of antagonism within her, when the antagonism turned on the +defence either of plans or persons that she believed in; and the wrongs +which she felt that Will had received from her husband, and the +external conditions which to others were grounds for slighting him, +only gave the more tenacity to her affection and admiring judgment. +And now with the disclosures about Bulstrode had come another fact +affecting Will's social position, which roused afresh Dorothea's inward +resistance to what was said about him in that part of her world which +lay within park palings. + +"Young Ladislaw the grandson of a thieving Jew pawnbroker" was a phrase +which had entered emphatically into the dialogues about the Bulstrode +business, at Lowick, Tipton, and Freshitt, and was a worse kind of +placard on poor Will's back than the "Italian with white mice." +Upright Sir James Chettam was convinced that his own satisfaction was +righteous when he thought with some complacency that here was an added +league to that mountainous distance between Ladislaw and Dorothea, +which enabled him to dismiss any anxiety in that direction as too +absurd. And perhaps there had been some pleasure in pointing Mr. +Brooke's attention to this ugly bit of Ladislaw's genealogy, as a fresh +candle for him to see his own folly by. Dorothea had observed the +animus with which Will's part in the painful story had been recalled +more than once; but she had uttered no word, being checked now, as she +had not been formerly in speaking of Will, by the consciousness of a +deeper relation between them which must always remain in consecrated +secrecy. But her silence shrouded her resistant emotion into a more +thorough glow; and this misfortune in Will's lot which, it seemed, +others were wishing to fling at his back as an opprobrium, only gave +something more of enthusiasm to her clinging thought. + +She entertained no visions of their ever coming into nearer union, and +yet she had taken no posture of renunciation. She had accepted her +whole relation to Will very simply as part of her marriage sorrows, and +would have thought it very sinful in her to keep up an inward wail +because she was not completely happy, being rather disposed to dwell on +the superfluities of her lot. She could bear that the chief pleasures +of her tenderness should lie in memory, and the idea of marriage came +to her solely as a repulsive proposition from some suitor of whom she +at present knew nothing, but whose merits, as seen by her friends, +would be a source of torment to her:--"somebody who will manage your +property for you, my dear," was Mr. Brooke's attractive suggestion of +suitable characteristics. "I should like to manage it myself, if I +knew what to do with it," said Dorothea. No--she adhered to her +declaration that she would never be married again, and in the long +valley of her life which looked so flat and empty of waymarks, guidance +would come as she walked along the road, and saw her fellow-passengers +by the way. + +This habitual state of feeling about Will Ladislaw had been strong in +all her waking hours since she had proposed to pay a visit to Mrs. +Lydgate, making a sort of background against which she saw Rosamond's +figure presented to her without hindrances to her interest and +compassion. There was evidently some mental separation, some barrier +to complete confidence which had arisen between this wife and the +husband who had yet made her happiness a law to him. That was a +trouble which no third person must directly touch. But Dorothea +thought with deep pity of the loneliness which must have come upon +Rosamond from the suspicions cast on her husband; and there would +surely be help in the manifestation of respect for Lydgate and sympathy +with her. + +"I shall talk to her about her husband," thought Dorothea, as she was +being driven towards the town. The clear spring morning, the scent of +the moist earth, the fresh leaves just showing their creased-up wealth +of greenery from out their half-opened sheaths, seemed part of the +cheerfulness she was feeling from a long conversation with Mr. +Farebrother, who had joyfully accepted the justifying explanation of +Lydgate's conduct. "I shall take Mrs. Lydgate good news, and perhaps +she will like to talk to me and make a friend of me." + +Dorothea had another errand in Lowick Gate: it was about a new +fine-toned bell for the school-house, and as she had to get out of her +carriage very near to Lydgate's, she walked thither across the street, +having told the coachman to wait for some packages. The street door +was open, and the servant was taking the opportunity of looking out at +the carriage which was pausing within sight when it became apparent to +her that the lady who "belonged to it" was coming towards her. + +"Is Mrs. Lydgate at home?" said Dorothea. + +"I'm not sure, my lady; I'll see, if you'll please to walk in," said +Martha, a little confused on the score of her kitchen apron, but +collected enough to be sure that "mum" was not the right title for this +queenly young widow with a carriage and pair. "Will you please to walk +in, and I'll go and see." + +"Say that I am Mrs. Casaubon," said Dorothea, as Martha moved forward +intending to show her into the drawing-room and then to go up-stairs to +see if Rosamond had returned from her walk. + +They crossed the broader part of the entrance-hall, and turned up the +passage which led to the garden. The drawing-room door was unlatched, +and Martha, pushing it without looking into the room, waited for Mrs. +Casaubon to enter and then turned away, the door having swung open and +swung back again without noise. + +Dorothea had less of outward vision than usual this morning, being +filled with images of things as they had been and were going to be. +She found herself on the other side of the door without seeing anything +remarkable, but immediately she heard a voice speaking in low tones +which startled her as with a sense of dreaming in daylight, and +advancing unconsciously a step or two beyond the projecting slab of a +bookcase, she saw, in the terrible illumination of a certainty which +filled up all outlines, something which made her pause, motionless, +without self-possession enough to speak. + +Seated with his back towards her on a sofa which stood against the wall +on a line with the door by which she had entered, she saw Will +Ladislaw: close by him and turned towards him with a flushed +tearfulness which gave a new brilliancy to her face sat Rosamond, her +bonnet hanging back, while Will leaning towards her clasped both her +upraised hands in his and spoke with low-toned fervor. + +Rosamond in her agitated absorption had not noticed the silently +advancing figure; but when Dorothea, after the first immeasurable +instant of this vision, moved confusedly backward and found herself +impeded by some piece of furniture, Rosamond was suddenly aware of her +presence, and with a spasmodic movement snatched away her hands and +rose, looking at Dorothea who was necessarily arrested. Will Ladislaw, +starting up, looked round also, and meeting Dorothea's eyes with a new +lightning in them, seemed changing to marble: But she immediately +turned them away from him to Rosamond and said in a firm voice-- + +"Excuse me, Mrs. Lydgate, the servant did not know that you were here. +I called to deliver an important letter for Mr. Lydgate, which I wished +to put into your own hands." + +She laid down the letter on the small table which had checked her +retreat, and then including Rosamond and Will in one distant glance and +bow, she went quickly out of the room, meeting in the passage the +surprised Martha, who said she was sorry the mistress was not at home, +and then showed the strange lady out with an inward reflection that +grand people were probably more impatient than others. + +Dorothea walked across the street with her most elastic step and was +quickly in her carriage again. + +"Drive on to Freshitt Hall," she said to the coachman, and any one +looking at her might have thought that though she was paler than usual +she was never animated by a more self-possessed energy. And that was +really her experience. It was as if she had drunk a great draught of +scorn that stimulated her beyond the susceptibility to other feelings. +She had seen something so far below her belief, that her emotions +rushed back from it and made an excited throng without an object. She +needed something active to turn her excitement out upon. She felt +power to walk and work for a day, without meat or drink. And she would +carry out the purpose with which she had started in the morning, of +going to Freshitt and Tipton to tell Sir James and her uncle all that +she wished them to know about Lydgate, whose married loneliness under +his trial now presented itself to her with new significance, and made +her more ardent in readiness to be his champion. She had never felt +anything like this triumphant power of indignation in the struggle of +her married life, in which there had always been a quickly subduing +pang; and she took it as a sign of new strength. + +"Dodo, how very bright your eyes are!" said Celia, when Sir James was +gone out of the room. "And you don't see anything you look at, Arthur +or anything. You are going to do something uncomfortable, I know. Is +it all about Mr. Lydgate, or has something else happened?" Celia had +been used to watch her sister with expectation. + +"Yes, dear, a great many things have happened," said Dodo, in her full +tones. + +"I wonder what," said Celia, folding her arms cozily and leaning +forward upon them. + +"Oh, all the troubles of all people on the face of the earth," said +Dorothea, lifting her arms to the back of her head. + +"Dear me, Dodo, are you going to have a scheme for them?" said Celia, a +little uneasy at this Hamlet-like raving. + +But Sir James came in again, ready to accompany Dorothea to the Grange, +and she finished her expedition well, not swerving in her resolution +until she descended at her own door. + + + +CHAPTER LXXVIII. + + "Would it were yesterday and I i' the grave, + With her sweet faith above for monument" + + +Rosamond and Will stood motionless--they did not know how long--he +looking towards the spot where Dorothea had stood, and she looking +towards him with doubt. It seemed an endless time to Rosamond, in +whose inmost soul there was hardly so much annoyance as gratification +from what had just happened. Shallow natures dream of an easy sway +over the emotions of others, trusting implicitly in their own petty +magic to turn the deepest streams, and confident, by pretty gestures +and remarks, of making the thing that is not as though it were. She +knew that Will had received a severe blow, but she had been little used +to imagining other people's states of mind except as a material cut +into shape by her own wishes; and she believed in her own power to +soothe or subdue. Even Tertius, that most perverse of men, was always +subdued in the long-run: events had been obstinate, but still Rosamond +would have said now, as she did before her marriage, that she never +gave up what she had set her mind on. + +She put out her arm and laid the tips of her fingers on Will's +coat-sleeve. + +"Don't touch me!" he said, with an utterance like the cut of a lash, +darting from her, and changing from pink to white and back again, as if +his whole frame were tingling with the pain of the sting. He wheeled +round to the other side of the room and stood opposite to her, with the +tips of his fingers in his pockets and his head thrown back, looking +fiercely not at Rosamond but at a point a few inches away from her. + +She was keenly offended, but the Signs she made of this were such as +only Lydgate was used to interpret. She became suddenly quiet and +seated herself, untying her hanging bonnet and laying it down with her +shawl. Her little hands which she folded before her were very cold. + +It would have been safer for Will in the first instance to have taken +up his hat and gone away; but he had felt no impulse to do this; on the +contrary, he had a horrible inclination to stay and shatter Rosamond +with his anger. It seemed as impossible to bear the fatality she had +drawn down on him without venting his fury as it would be to a panther +to bear the javelin-wound without springing and biting. And yet--how +could he tell a woman that he was ready to curse her? He was fuming +under a repressive law which he was forced to acknowledge: he was +dangerously poised, and Rosamond's voice now brought the decisive +vibration. In flute-like tones of sarcasm she said-- + +"You can easily go after Mrs. Casaubon and explain your preference." + +"Go after her!" he burst out, with a sharp edge in his voice. "Do you +think she would turn to look at me, or value any word I ever uttered to +her again at more than a dirty feather?--Explain! How can a man +explain at the expense of a woman?" + +"You can tell her what you please," said Rosamond with more tremor. + +"Do you suppose she would like me better for sacrificing you? She is +not a woman to be flattered because I made myself despicable--to +believe that I must be true to her because I was a dastard to you." + +He began to move about with the restlessness of a wild animal that sees +prey but cannot reach it. Presently he burst out again-- + +"I had no hope before--not much--of anything better to come. But I had +one certainty--that she believed in me. Whatever people had said or +done about me, she believed in me.--That's gone! She'll never again +think me anything but a paltry pretence--too nice to take heaven +except upon flattering conditions, and yet selling myself for any +devil's change by the sly. She'll think of me as an incarnate insult +to her, from the first moment we--" + +Will stopped as if he had found himself grasping something that must +not be thrown and shattered. He found another vent for his rage by +snatching up Rosamond's words again, as if they were reptiles to be +throttled and flung off. + +"Explain! Tell a man to explain how he dropped into hell! Explain my +preference! I never had a _preference_ for her, any more than I have a +preference for breathing. No other woman exists by the side of her. I +would rather touch her hand if it were dead, than I would touch any +other woman's living." + +Rosamond, while these poisoned weapons were being hurled at her, was +almost losing the sense of her identity, and seemed to be waking into +some new terrible existence. She had no sense of chill resolute +repulsion, of reticent self-justification such as she had known under +Lydgate's most stormy displeasure: all her sensibility was turned into +a bewildering novelty of pain; she felt a new terrified recoil under a +lash never experienced before. What another nature felt in opposition +to her own was being burnt and bitten into her consciousness. When +Will had ceased to speak she had become an image of sickened misery: +her lips were pale, and her eyes had a tearless dismay in them. If it +had been Tertius who stood opposite to her, that look of misery would +have been a pang to him, and he would have sunk by her side to comfort +her, with that strong-armed comfort which, she had often held very +cheap. + +Let it be forgiven to Will that he had no such movement of pity. He +had felt no bond beforehand to this woman who had spoiled the ideal +treasure of his life, and he held himself blameless. He knew that he +was cruel, but he had no relenting in him yet. + +After he had done speaking, he still moved about, half in absence of +mind, and Rosamond sat perfectly still. At length Will, seeming to +bethink himself, took up his hat, yet stood some moments irresolute. +He had spoken to her in a way that made a phrase of common politeness +difficult to utter; and yet, now that he had come to the point of going +away from her without further speech, he shrank from it as a brutality; +he felt checked and stultified in his anger. He walked towards the +mantel-piece and leaned his arm on it, and waited in silence for--he +hardly knew what. The vindictive fire was still burning in him, and he +could utter no word of retractation; but it was nevertheless in his +mind that having come back to this hearth where he had enjoyed a +caressing friendship he had found calamity seated there--he had had +suddenly revealed to him a trouble that lay outside the home as well as +within it. And what seemed a foreboding was pressing upon him as with +slow pincers:--that his life might come to be enslaved by this helpless +woman who had thrown herself upon him in the dreary sadness of her +heart. But he was in gloomy rebellion against the fact that his quick +apprehensiveness foreshadowed to him, and when his eyes fell on +Rosamond's blighted face it seemed to him that he was the more pitiable +of the two; for pain must enter into its glorified life of memory +before it can turn into compassion. + +And so they remained for many minutes, opposite each other, far apart, +in silence; Will's face still possessed by a mute rage, and Rosamond's +by a mute misery. The poor thing had no force to fling out any passion +in return; the terrible collapse of the illusion towards which all her +hope had been strained was a stroke which had too thoroughly shaken +her: her little world was in ruins, and she felt herself tottering in +the midst as a lonely bewildered consciousness. + +Will wished that she would speak and bring some mitigating shadow +across his own cruel speech, which seemed to stand staring at them both +in mockery of any attempt at revived fellowship. But she said nothing, +and at last with a desperate effort over himself, he asked, "Shall I +come in and see Lydgate this evening?" + +"If you like," Rosamond answered, just audibly. + +And then Will went out of the house, Martha never knowing that he had +been in. + +After he was gone, Rosamond tried to get up from her seat, but fell +back fainting. When she came to herself again, she felt too ill to +make the exertion of rising to ring the bell, and she remained helpless +until the girl, surprised at her long absence, thought for the first +time of looking for her in all the down-stairs rooms. Rosamond said +that she had felt suddenly sick and faint, and wanted to be helped +up-stairs. When there she threw herself on the bed with her clothes on, +and lay in apparent torpor, as she had done once before on a memorable +day of grief. + +Lydgate came home earlier than he had expected, about half-past five, +and found her there. The perception that she was ill threw every other +thought into the background. When he felt her pulse, her eyes rested +on him with more persistence than they had done for a long while, as if +she felt some content that he was there. He perceived the difference +in a moment, and seating himself by her put his arm gently under her, +and bending over her said, "My poor Rosamond! has something agitated +you?" Clinging to him she fell into hysterical sobbings and cries, and +for the next hour he did nothing but soothe and tend her. He imagined +that Dorothea had been to see her, and that all this effect on her +nervous system, which evidently involved some new turning towards +himself, was due to the excitement of the new impressions which that +visit had raised. + + + +CHAPTER LXXIX. + + "Now, I saw in my dream, that just as they had ended their + talk, they drew nigh to a very miry slough, that was in the + midst of the plain; and they, being heedless, did both fall + suddenly into the bog. The name of the slough was + Despond."--BUNYAN. + + +When Rosamond was quiet, and Lydgate had left her, hoping that she +might soon sleep under the effect of an anodyne, he went into the +drawing-room to fetch a book which he had left there, meaning to spend +the evening in his work-room, and he saw on the table Dorothea's letter +addressed to him. He had not ventured to ask Rosamond if Mrs. Casaubon +had called, but the reading of this letter assured him of the fact, for +Dorothea mentioned that it was to be carried by herself. + +When Will Ladislaw came in a little later Lydgate met him with a +surprise which made it clear that he had not been told of the earlier +visit, and Will could not say, "Did not Mrs. Lydgate tell you that I +came this morning?" + +"Poor Rosamond is ill," Lydgate added immediately on his greeting. + +"Not seriously, I hope," said Will. + +"No--only a slight nervous shock--the effect of some agitation. She +has been overwrought lately. The truth is, Ladislaw, I am an unlucky +devil. We have gone through several rounds of purgatory since you +left, and I have lately got on to a worse ledge of it than ever. I +suppose you are only just come down--you look rather battered--you +have not been long enough in the town to hear anything?" + +"I travelled all night and got to the White Hart at eight o'clock this +morning. I have been shutting myself up and resting," said Will, +feeling himself a sneak, but seeing no alternative to this evasion. + +And then he heard Lydgate's account of the troubles which Rosamond had +already depicted to him in her way. She had not mentioned the fact of +Will's name being connected with the public story--this detail not +immediately affecting her--and he now heard it for the first time. + +"I thought it better to tell you that your name is mixed up with the +disclosures," said Lydgate, who could understand better than most men +how Ladislaw might be stung by the revelation. "You will be sure to +hear it as soon as you turn out into the town. I suppose it is true +that Raffles spoke to you." + +"Yes," said Will, sardonically. "I shall be fortunate if gossip does +not make me the most disreputable person in the whole affair. I should +think the latest version must be, that I plotted with Raffles to murder +Bulstrode, and ran away from Middlemarch for the purpose." + +He was thinking "Here is a new ring in the sound of my name to +recommend it in her hearing; however--what does it signify now?" + +But he said nothing of Bulstrode's offer to him. Will was very open +and careless about his personal affairs, but it was among the more +exquisite touches in nature's modelling of him that he had a delicate +generosity which warned him into reticence here. He shrank from saying +that he had rejected Bulstrode's money, in the moment when he was +learning that it was Lydgate's misfortune to have accepted it. + +Lydgate too was reticent in the midst of his confidence. He made no +allusion to Rosamond's feeling under their trouble, and of Dorothea he +only said, "Mrs. Casaubon has been the one person to come forward and +say that she had no belief in any of the suspicions against me." +Observing a change in Will's face, he avoided any further mention of +her, feeling himself too ignorant of their relation to each other not +to fear that his words might have some hidden painful bearing on it. +And it occurred to him that Dorothea was the real cause of the present +visit to Middlemarch. + +The two men were pitying each other, but it was only Will who guessed +the extent of his companion's trouble. When Lydgate spoke with +desperate resignation of going to settle in London, and said with a +faint smile, "We shall have you again, old fellow." Will felt +inexpressibly mournful, and said nothing. Rosamond had that morning +entreated him to urge this step on Lydgate; and it seemed to him as if +he were beholding in a magic panorama a future where he himself was +sliding into that pleasureless yielding to the small solicitations of +circumstance, which is a commoner history of perdition than any single +momentous bargain. + +We are on a perilous margin when we begin to look passively at our +future selves, and see our own figures led with dull consent into +insipid misdoing and shabby achievement. Poor Lydgate was inwardly +groaning on that margin, and Will was arriving at it. It seemed to him +this evening as if the cruelty of his outburst to Rosamond had made an +obligation for him, and he dreaded the obligation: he dreaded Lydgate's +unsuspecting good-will: he dreaded his own distaste for his spoiled +life, which would leave him in motiveless levity. + + + +CHAPTER LXXX. + + "Stern lawgiver! yet thou dost wear + The Godhead's most benignant grace; + Nor know we anything so fair + As is the smile upon thy face; + Flowers laugh before thee on their beds, + And fragrance in thy footing treads; + Thou dost preserve the Stars from wrong; + And the most ancient Heavens, through thee, are fresh and strong. + --WORDSWORTH: Ode to Duty. + + +When Dorothea had seen Mr. Farebrother in the morning, she had promised +to go and dine at the parsonage on her return from Freshitt. There was +a frequent interchange of visits between her and the Farebrother +family, which enabled her to say that she was not at all lonely at the +Manor, and to resist for the present the severe prescription of a lady +companion. When she reached home and remembered her engagement, she +was glad of it; and finding that she had still an hour before she could +dress for dinner, she walked straight to the schoolhouse and entered +into a conversation with the master and mistress about the new bell, +giving eager attention to their small details and repetitions, and +getting up a dramatic sense that her life was very busy. She paused on +her way back to talk to old Master Bunney who was putting in some +garden-seeds, and discoursed wisely with that rural sage about the +crops that would make the most return on a perch of ground, and the +result of sixty years' experience as to soils--namely, that if your +soil was pretty mellow it would do, but if there came wet, wet, wet to +make it all of a mummy, why then-- + +Finding that the social spirit had beguiled her into being rather late, +she dressed hastily and went over to the parsonage rather earlier than +was necessary. That house was never dull, Mr. Farebrother, like +another White of Selborne, having continually something new to tell of +his inarticulate guests and proteges, whom he was teaching the boys not +to torment; and he had just set up a pair of beautiful goats to be pets +of the village in general, and to walk at large as sacred animals. The +evening went by cheerfully till after tea, Dorothea talking more than +usual and dilating with Mr. Farebrother on the possible histories of +creatures that converse compendiously with their antennae, and for +aught we know may hold reformed parliaments; when suddenly some +inarticulate little sounds were heard which called everybody's +attention. + +"Henrietta Noble," said Mrs. Farebrother, seeing her small sister +moving about the furniture-legs distressfully, "what is the matter?" + +"I have lost my tortoise-shell lozenge-box. I fear the kitten has +rolled it away," said the tiny old lady, involuntarily continuing her +beaver-like notes. + +"Is it a great treasure, aunt?" said Mr. Farebrother, putting up his +glasses and looking at the carpet. + +"Mr. Ladislaw gave it me," said Miss Noble. "A German box--very +pretty, but if it falls it always spins away as far as it can." + +"Oh, if it is Ladislaw's present," said Mr. Farebrother, in a deep tone +of comprehension, getting up and hunting. The box was found at last +under a chiffonier, and Miss Noble grasped it with delight, saying, "it +was under a fender the last time." + +"That is an affair of the heart with my aunt," said Mr. Farebrother, +smiling at Dorothea, as he reseated himself. + +"If Henrietta Noble forms an attachment to any one, Mrs. Casaubon," +said his mother, emphatically,--"she is like a dog--she would take +their shoes for a pillow and sleep the better." + +"Mr. Ladislaw's shoes, I would," said Henrietta Noble. + +Dorothea made an attempt at smiling in return. She was surprised and +annoyed to find that her heart was palpitating violently, and that it +was quite useless to try after a recovery of her former animation. +Alarmed at herself--fearing some further betrayal of a change so marked +in its occasion, she rose and said in a low voice with undisguised +anxiety, "I must go; I have overtired myself." + +Mr. Farebrother, quick in perception, rose and said, "It is true; you +must have half-exhausted yourself in talking about Lydgate. That sort +of work tells upon one after the excitement is over." + +He gave her his arm back to the Manor, but Dorothea did not attempt to +speak, even when he said good-night. + +The limit of resistance was reached, and she had sunk back helpless +within the clutch of inescapable anguish. Dismissing Tantripp with a +few faint words, she locked her door, and turning away from it towards +the vacant room she pressed her hands hard on the top of her head, and +moaned out-- + +"Oh, I did love him!" + +Then came the hour in which the waves of suffering shook her too +thoroughly to leave any power of thought. She could only cry in loud +whispers, between her sobs, after her lost belief which she had planted +and kept alive from a very little seed since the days in Rome--after +her lost joy of clinging with silent love and faith to one who, +misprized by others, was worthy in her thought--after her lost woman's +pride of reigning in his memory--after her sweet dim perspective of +hope, that along some pathway they should meet with unchanged +recognition and take up the backward years as a yesterday. + +In that hour she repeated what the merciful eyes of solitude have +looked on for ages in the spiritual struggles of man--she besought +hardness and coldness and aching weariness to bring her relief from the +mysterious incorporeal might of her anguish: she lay on the bare floor +and let the night grow cold around her; while her grand woman's frame +was shaken by sobs as if she had been a despairing child. + +There were two images--two living forms that tore her heart in two, as +if it had been the heart of a mother who seems to see her child divided +by the sword, and presses one bleeding half to her breast while her +gaze goes forth in agony towards the half which is carried away by the +lying woman that has never known the mother's pang. + +Here, with the nearness of an answering smile, here within the +vibrating bond of mutual speech, was the bright creature whom she had +trusted--who had come to her like the spirit of morning visiting the +dim vault where she sat as the bride of a worn-out life; and now, with +a full consciousness which had never awakened before, she stretched out +her arms towards him and cried with bitter cries that their nearness +was a parting vision: she discovered her passion to herself in the +unshrinking utterance of despair. + +And there, aloof, yet persistently with her, moving wherever she moved, +was the Will Ladislaw who was a changed belief exhausted of hope, a +detected illusion--no, a living man towards whom there could not yet +struggle any wail of regretful pity, from the midst of scorn and +indignation and jealous offended pride. The fire of Dorothea's anger +was not easily spent, and it flamed out in fitful returns of spurning +reproach. Why had he come obtruding his life into hers, hers that +might have been whole enough without him? Why had he brought his cheap +regard and his lip-born words to her who had nothing paltry to give in +exchange? He knew that he was deluding her--wished, in the very moment +of farewell, to make her believe that he gave her the whole price of +her heart, and knew that he had spent it half before. Why had he not +stayed among the crowd of whom she asked nothing--but only prayed that +they might be less contemptible? + +But she lost energy at last even for her loud-whispered cries and +moans: she subsided into helpless sobs, and on the cold floor she +sobbed herself to sleep. + +In the chill hours of the morning twilight, when all was dim around +her, she awoke--not with any amazed wondering where she was or what had +happened, but with the clearest consciousness that she was looking into +the eyes of sorrow. She rose, and wrapped warm things around her, and +seated herself in a great chair where she had often watched before. +She was vigorous enough to have borne that hard night without feeling +ill in body, beyond some aching and fatigue; but she had waked to a new +condition: she felt as if her soul had been liberated from its terrible +conflict; she was no longer wrestling with her grief, but could sit +down with it as a lasting companion and make it a sharer in her +thoughts. For now the thoughts came thickly. It was not in Dorothea's +nature, for longer than the duration of a paroxysm, to sit in the +narrow cell of her calamity, in the besotted misery of a consciousness +that only sees another's lot as an accident of its own. + +She began now to live through that yesterday morning deliberately +again, forcing herself to dwell on every detail and its possible +meaning. Was she alone in that scene? Was it her event only? She +forced herself to think of it as bound up with another woman's life--a +woman towards whom she had set out with a longing to carry some +clearness and comfort into her beclouded youth. In her first outleap +of jealous indignation and disgust, when quitting the hateful room, she +had flung away all the mercy with which she had undertaken that visit. +She had enveloped both Will and Rosamond in her burning scorn, and it +seemed to her as if Rosamond were burned out of her sight forever. But +that base prompting which makes a women more cruel to a rival than to a +faithless lover, could have no strength of recurrence in Dorothea when +the dominant spirit of justice within her had once overcome the tumult +and had once shown her the truer measure of things. All the active +thought with which she had before been representing to herself the +trials of Lydgate's lot, and this young marriage union which, like her +own, seemed to have its hidden as well as evident troubles--all this +vivid sympathetic experience returned to her now as a power: it +asserted itself as acquired knowledge asserts itself and will not let +us see as we saw in the day of our ignorance. She said to her own +irremediable grief, that it should make her more helpful, instead of +driving her back from effort. + +And what sort of crisis might not this be in three lives whose contact +with hers laid an obligation on her as if they had been suppliants +bearing the sacred branch? The objects of her rescue were not to be +sought out by her fancy: they were chosen for her. She yearned towards +the perfect Right, that it might make a throne within her, and rule her +errant will. "What should I do--how should I act now, this very day, +if I could clutch my own pain, and compel it to silence, and think of +those three?" + +It had taken long for her to come to that question, and there was light +piercing into the room. She opened her curtains, and looked out +towards the bit of road that lay in view, with fields beyond outside +the entrance-gates. On the road there was a man with a bundle on his +back and a woman carrying her baby; in the field she could see figures +moving--perhaps the shepherd with his dog. Far off in the bending sky +was the pearly light; and she felt the largeness of the world and the +manifold wakings of men to labor and endurance. She was a part of that +involuntary, palpitating life, and could neither look out on it from +her luxurious shelter as a mere spectator, nor hide her eyes in selfish +complaining. + +What she would resolve to do that day did not yet seem quite clear, but +something that she could achieve stirred her as with an approaching +murmur which would soon gather distinctness. She took off the clothes +which seemed to have some of the weariness of a hard watching in them, +and began to make her toilet. Presently she rang for Tantripp, who +came in her dressing-gown. + +"Why, madam, you've never been in bed this blessed night," burst out +Tantripp, looking first at the bed and then at Dorothea's face, which +in spite of bathing had the pale cheeks and pink eyelids of a mater +dolorosa. "You'll kill yourself, you _will_. Anybody might think now +you had a right to give yourself a little comfort." + +"Don't be alarmed, Tantripp," said Dorothea, smiling. "I have slept; I +am not ill. I shall be glad of a cup of coffee as soon as possible. +And I want you to bring me my new dress; and most likely I shall want +my new bonnet to-day." + +"They've lain there a month and more ready for you, madam, and most +thankful I shall be to see you with a couple o' pounds' worth less of +crape," said Tantripp, stooping to light the fire. "There's a reason +in mourning, as I've always said; and three folds at the bottom of your +skirt and a plain quilling in your bonnet--and if ever anybody looked +like an angel, it's you in a net quilling--is what's consistent for a +second year. At least, that's _my_ thinking," ended Tantripp, looking +anxiously at the fire; "and if anybody was to marry me flattering +himself I should wear those hijeous weepers two years for him, he'd be +deceived by his own vanity, that's all." + +"The fire will do, my good Tan," said Dorothea, speaking as she used to +do in the old Lausanne days, only with a very low voice; "get me the +coffee." + +She folded herself in the large chair, and leaned her head against it +in fatigued quiescence, while Tantripp went away wondering at this +strange contrariness in her young mistress--that just the morning when +she had more of a widow's face than ever, she should have asked for her +lighter mourning which she had waived before. Tantripp would never +have found the clew to this mystery. Dorothea wished to acknowledge +that she had not the less an active life before her because she had +buried a private joy; and the tradition that fresh garments belonged to +all initiation, haunting her mind, made her grasp after even that +slight outward help towards calm resolve. For the resolve was not easy. + +Nevertheless at eleven o'clock she was walking towards Middlemarch, +having made up her mind that she would make as quietly and unnoticeably +as possible her second attempt to see and save Rosamond. + + + +CHAPTER LXXXI. + + "Du Erde warst auch diese Nacht bestandig, + Und athmest neu erquickt zu meinen Fussen, + Beginnest schon mit Lust mich zu umgeben, + Zum regst und ruhrst ein kraftiges Reschliessen + Zum hochsten Dasein immerfort zu streben. + --Faust: 2r Theil. + + +When Dorothea was again at Lydgate's door speaking to Martha, he was in +the room close by with the door ajar, preparing to go out. He heard +her voice, and immediately came to her. + +"Do you think that Mrs. Lydgate can receive me this morning?" she said, +having reflected that it would be better to leave out all allusion to +her previous visit. + +"I have no doubt she will," said Lydgate, suppressing his thought about +Dorothea's looks, which were as much changed as Rosamond's, "if you +will be kind enough to come in and let me tell her that you are here. +She has not been very well since you were here yesterday, but she is +better this morning, and I think it is very likely that she will be +cheered by seeing you again." + +It was plain that Lydgate, as Dorothea had expected, knew nothing about +the circumstances of her yesterday's visit; nay, he appeared to imagine +that she had carried it out according to her intention. She had +prepared a little note asking Rosamond to see her, which she would have +given to the servant if he had not been in the way, but now she was in +much anxiety as to the result of his announcement. + +After leading her into the drawing-room, he paused to take a letter +from his pocket and put it into her hands, saying, "I wrote this last +night, and was going to carry it to Lowick in my ride. When one is +grateful for something too good for common thanks, writing is less +unsatisfactory than speech--one does not at least _hear_ how inadequate +the words are." + +Dorothea's face brightened. "It is I who have most to thank for, since +you have let me take that place. You _have_ consented?" she said, +suddenly doubting. + +"Yes, the check is going to Bulstrode to-day." + +He said no more, but went up-stairs to Rosamond, who had but lately +finished dressing herself, and sat languidly wondering what she should +do next, her habitual industry in small things, even in the days of her +sadness, prompting her to begin some kind of occupation, which she +dragged through slowly or paused in from lack of interest. She looked +ill, but had recovered her usual quietude of manner, and Lydgate had +feared to disturb her by any questions. He had told her of Dorothea's +letter containing the check, and afterwards he had said, "Ladislaw is +come, Rosy; he sat with me last night; I dare say he will be here again +to-day. I thought he looked rather battered and depressed." And +Rosamond had made no reply. + +Now, when he came up, he said to her very gently, "Rosy, dear, Mrs. +Casaubon is come to see you again; you would like to see her, would you +not?" That she colored and gave rather a startled movement did not +surprise him after the agitation produced by the interview yesterday--a +beneficent agitation, he thought, since it seemed to have made her turn +to him again. + +Rosamond dared not say no. She dared not with a tone of her voice +touch the facts of yesterday. Why had Mrs. Casaubon come again? The +answer was a blank which Rosamond could only fill up with dread, for +Will Ladislaw's lacerating words had made every thought of Dorothea a +fresh smart to her. Nevertheless, in her new humiliating uncertainty +she dared do nothing but comply. She did not say yes, but she rose and +let Lydgate put a light shawl over her shoulders, while he said, "I am +going out immediately." Then something crossed her mind which prompted +her to say, "Pray tell Martha not to bring any one else into the +drawing-room." And Lydgate assented, thinking that he fully understood +this wish. He led her down to the drawing-room door, and then turned +away, observing to himself that he was rather a blundering husband to +be dependent for his wife's trust in him on the influence of another +woman. + +Rosamond, wrapping her soft shawl around her as she walked towards +Dorothea, was inwardly wrapping her soul in cold reserve. Had Mrs. +Casaubon come to say anything to her about Will? If so, it was a +liberty that Rosamond resented; and she prepared herself to meet every +word with polite impassibility. Will had bruised her pride too sorely +for her to feel any compunction towards him and Dorothea: her own +injury seemed much the greater. Dorothea was not only the "preferred" +woman, but had also a formidable advantage in being Lydgate's +benefactor; and to poor Rosamond's pained confused vision it seemed +that this Mrs. Casaubon--this woman who predominated in all things +concerning her--must have come now with the sense of having the +advantage, and with animosity prompting her to use it. Indeed, not +Rosamond only, but any one else, knowing the outer facts of the case, +and not the simple inspiration on which Dorothea acted, might well have +wondered why she came. + +Looking like the lovely ghost of herself, her graceful slimness wrapped +in her soft white shawl, the rounded infantine mouth and cheek +inevitably suggesting mildness and innocence, Rosamond paused at three +yards' distance from her visitor and bowed. But Dorothea, who had +taken off her gloves, from an impulse which she could never resist when +she wanted a sense of freedom, came forward, and with her face full of +a sad yet sweet openness, put out her hand. Rosamond could not avoid +meeting her glance, could not avoid putting her small hand into +Dorothea's, which clasped it with gentle motherliness; and immediately +a doubt of her own prepossessions began to stir within her. Rosamond's +eye was quick for faces; she saw that Mrs. Casaubon's face looked pale +and changed since yesterday, yet gentle, and like the firm softness of +her hand. But Dorothea had counted a little too much on her own +strength: the clearness and intensity of her mental action this morning +were the continuance of a nervous exaltation which made her frame as +dangerously responsive as a bit of finest Venetian crystal; and in +looking at Rosamond, she suddenly found her heart swelling, and was +unable to speak--all her effort was required to keep back tears. She +succeeded in that, and the emotion only passed over her face like the +spirit of a sob; but it added to Rosamond's impression that Mrs. +Casaubon's state of mind must be something quite different from what +she had imagined. + +So they sat down without a word of preface on the two chairs that +happened to be nearest, and happened also to be close together; though +Rosamond's notion when she first bowed was that she should stay a long +way off from Mrs. Casaubon. But she ceased thinking how anything would +turn out--merely wondering what would come. And Dorothea began to +speak quite simply, gathering firmness as she went on. + +"I had an errand yesterday which I did not finish; that is why I am +here again so soon. You will not think me too troublesome when I tell +you that I came to talk to you about the injustice that has been shown +towards Mr. Lydgate. It will cheer you--will it not?--to know a great +deal about him, that he may not like to speak about himself just +because it is in his own vindication and to his own honor. You will +like to know that your husband has warm friends, who have not left off +believing in his high character? You will let me speak of this without +thinking that I take a liberty?" + +The cordial, pleading tones which seemed to flow with generous +heedlessness above all the facts which had filled Rosamond's mind as +grounds of obstruction and hatred between her and this woman, came as +soothingly as a warm stream over her shrinking fears. Of course Mrs. +Casaubon had the facts in her mind, but she was not going to speak of +anything connected with them. That relief was too great for Rosamond +to feel much else at the moment. She answered prettily, in the new +ease of her soul-- + +"I know you have been very good. I shall like to hear anything you +will say to me about Tertius." + +"The day before yesterday," said Dorothea, "when I had asked him to +come to Lowick to give me his opinion on the affairs of the Hospital, +he told me everything about his conduct and feelings in this sad event +which has made ignorant people cast suspicions on him. The reason he +told me was because I was very bold and asked him. I believed that he +had never acted dishonorably, and I begged him to tell me the history. +He confessed to me that he had never told it before, not even to you, +because he had a great dislike to say, 'I was not wrong,' as if that +were proof, when there are guilty people who will say so. The truth +is, he knew nothing of this man Raffles, or that there were any bad +secrets about him; and he thought that Mr. Bulstrode offered him the +money because he repented, out of kindness, of having refused it +before. All his anxiety about his patient was to treat him rightly, +and he was a little uncomfortable that the case did not end as he had +expected; but he thought then and still thinks that there may have been +no wrong in it on any one's part. And I have told Mr. Farebrother, and +Mr. Brooke, and Sir James Chettam: they all believe in your husband. +That will cheer you, will it not? That will give you courage?" + +Dorothea's face had become animated, and as it beamed on Rosamond very +close to her, she felt something like bashful timidity before a +superior, in the presence of this self-forgetful ardor. She said, with +blushing embarrassment, "Thank you: you are very kind." + +"And he felt that he had been so wrong not to pour out everything about +this to you. But you will forgive him. It was because he feels so +much more about your happiness than anything else--he feels his life +bound into one with yours, and it hurts him more than anything, that +his misfortunes must hurt you. He could speak to me because I am an +indifferent person. And then I asked him if I might come to see you; +because I felt so much for his trouble and yours. That is why I came +yesterday, and why I am come to-day. Trouble is so hard to bear, is it +not?-- How can we live and think that any one has trouble--piercing +trouble--and we could help them, and never try?" + +Dorothea, completely swayed by the feeling that she was uttering, +forgot everything but that she was speaking from out the heart of her +own trial to Rosamond's. The emotion had wrought itself more and more +into her utterance, till the tones might have gone to one's very +marrow, like a low cry from some suffering creature in the darkness. +And she had unconsciously laid her hand again on the little hand that +she had pressed before. + +Rosamond, with an overmastering pang, as if a wound within her had been +probed, burst into hysterical crying as she had done the day before +when she clung to her husband. Poor Dorothea was feeling a great wave +of her own sorrow returning over her--her thought being drawn to the +possible share that Will Ladislaw might have in Rosamond's mental +tumult. She was beginning to fear that she should not be able to +suppress herself enough to the end of this meeting, and while her hand +was still resting on Rosamond's lap, though the hand underneath it was +withdrawn, she was struggling against her own rising sobs. She tried +to master herself with the thought that this might be a turning-point +in three lives--not in her own; no, there the irrevocable had +happened, but--in those three lives which were touching hers with the +solemn neighborhood of danger and distress. The fragile creature who +was crying close to her--there might still be time to rescue her from +the misery of false incompatible bonds; and this moment was unlike any +other: she and Rosamond could never be together again with the same +thrilling consciousness of yesterday within them both. She felt the +relation between them to be peculiar enough to give her a peculiar +influence, though she had no conception that the way in which her own +feelings were involved was fully known to Mrs. Lydgate. + +It was a newer crisis in Rosamond's experience than even Dorothea could +imagine: she was under the first great shock that had shattered her +dream-world in which she had been easily confident of herself and +critical of others; and this strange unexpected manifestation of +feeling in a woman whom she had approached with a shrinking aversion +and dread, as one who must necessarily have a jealous hatred towards +her, made her soul totter all the more with a sense that she had been +walking in an unknown world which had just broken in upon her. + +When Rosamond's convulsed throat was subsiding into calm, and she +withdrew the handkerchief with which she had been hiding her face, her +eyes met Dorothea's as helplessly as if they had been blue flowers. +What was the use of thinking about behavior after this crying? And +Dorothea looked almost as childish, with the neglected trace of a +silent tear. Pride was broken down between these two. + +"We were talking about your husband," Dorothea said, with some +timidity. "I thought his looks were sadly changed with suffering the +other day. I had not seen him for many weeks before. He said he had +been feeling very lonely in his trial; but I think he would have borne +it all better if he had been able to be quite open with you." + +"Tertius is so angry and impatient if I say anything," said Rosamond, +imagining that he had been complaining of her to Dorothea. "He ought +not to wonder that I object to speak to him on painful subjects." + +"It was himself he blamed for not speaking," said Dorothea. "What he +said of you was, that he could not be happy in doing anything which +made you unhappy--that his marriage was of course a bond which must +affect his choice about everything; and for that reason he refused my +proposal that he should keep his position at the Hospital, because that +would bind him to stay in Middlemarch, and he would not undertake to do +anything which would be painful to you. He could say that to me, +because he knows that I had much trial in my marriage, from my +husband's illness, which hindered his plans and saddened him; and he +knows that I have felt how hard it is to walk always in fear of hurting +another who is tied to us." + +Dorothea waited a little; she had discerned a faint pleasure stealing +over Rosamond's face. But there was no answer, and she went on, with a +gathering tremor, "Marriage is so unlike everything else. There is +something even awful in the nearness it brings. Even if we loved some +one else better than--than those we were married to, it would be no +use"--poor Dorothea, in her palpitating anxiety, could only seize her +language brokenly--"I mean, marriage drinks up all our power of giving +or getting any blessedness in that sort of love. I know it may be very +dear--but it murders our marriage--and then the marriage stays with us +like a murder--and everything else is gone. And then our husband--if +he loved and trusted us, and we have not helped him, but made a curse +in his life--" + +Her voice had sunk very low: there was a dread upon her of presuming +too far, and of speaking as if she herself were perfection addressing +error. She was too much preoccupied with her own anxiety, to be aware +that Rosamond was trembling too; and filled with the need to express +pitying fellowship rather than rebuke, she put her hands on Rosamond's, +and said with more agitated rapidity,--"I know, I know that the feeling +may be very dear--it has taken hold of us unawares--it is so hard, it +may seem like death to part with it--and we are weak--I am weak--" + +The waves of her own sorrow, from out of which she was struggling to +save another, rushed over Dorothea with conquering force. She stopped +in speechless agitation, not crying, but feeling as if she were being +inwardly grappled. Her face had become of a deathlier paleness, her +lips trembled, and she pressed her hands helplessly on the hands that +lay under them. + +Rosamond, taken hold of by an emotion stronger than her own--hurried +along in a new movement which gave all things some new, awful, +undefined aspect--could find no words, but involuntarily she put her +lips to Dorothea's forehead which was very near her, and then for a +minute the two women clasped each other as if they had been in a +shipwreck. + +"You are thinking what is not true," said Rosamond, in an eager +half-whisper, while she was still feeling Dorothea's arms round +her--urged by a mysterious necessity to free herself from something +that oppressed her as if it were blood guiltiness. + +They moved apart, looking at each other. + +"When you came in yesterday--it was not as you thought," said Rosamond +in the same tone. + +There was a movement of surprised attention in Dorothea. She expected +a vindication of Rosamond herself. + +"He was telling me how he loved another woman, that I might know he +could never love me," said Rosamond, getting more and more hurried as +she went on. "And now I think he hates me because--because you +mistook him yesterday. He says it is through me that you will think +ill of him--think that he is a false person. But it shall not be +through me. He has never had any love for me--I know he has not--he +has always thought slightly of me. He said yesterday that no other +woman existed for him beside you. The blame of what happened is +entirely mine. He said he could never explain to you--because of me. +He said you could never think well of him again. But now I have told +you, and he cannot reproach me any more." + +Rosamond had delivered her soul under impulses which she had not known +before. She had begun her confession under the subduing influence of +Dorothea's emotion; and as she went on she had gathered the sense that +she was repelling Will's reproaches, which were still like a +knife-wound within her. + +The revulsion of feeling in Dorothea was too strong to be called joy. +It was a tumult in which the terrible strain of the night and morning +made a resistant pain:--she could only perceive that this would be joy +when she had recovered her power of feeling it. Her immediate +consciousness was one of immense sympathy without check; she cared for +Rosamond without struggle now, and responded earnestly to her last +words-- + +"No, he cannot reproach you any more." + +With her usual tendency to over-estimate the good in others, she felt a +great outgoing of her heart towards Rosamond, for the generous effort +which had redeemed her from suffering, not counting that the effort was +a reflex of her own energy. After they had been silent a little, she +said-- + +"You are not sorry that I came this morning?" + +"No, you have been very good to me," said Rosamond. "I did not think +that you would be so good. I was very unhappy. I am not happy now. +Everything is so sad." + +"But better days will come. Your husband will be rightly valued. And +he depends on you for comfort. He loves you best. The worst loss +would be to lose that--and you have not lost it," said Dorothea. + +She tried to thrust away the too overpowering thought of her own +relief, lest she should fail to win some sign that Rosamond's affection +was yearning back towards her husband. + +"Tertius did not find fault with me, then?" said Rosamond, +understanding now that Lydgate might have said anything to Mrs. +Casaubon, and that she certainly was different from other women. +Perhaps there was a faint taste of jealousy in the question. A smile +began to play over Dorothea's face as she said-- + +"No, indeed! How could you imagine it?" But here the door opened, and +Lydgate entered. + +"I am come back in my quality of doctor," he said. "After I went away, +I was haunted by two pale faces: Mrs. Casaubon looked as much in need +of care as you, Rosy. And I thought that I had not done my duty in +leaving you together; so when I had been to Coleman's I came home +again. I noticed that you were walking, Mrs. Casaubon, and the sky has +changed--I think we may have rain. May I send some one to order your +carriage to come for you?" + +"Oh, no! I am strong: I need the walk," said Dorothea, rising with +animation in her face. "Mrs. Lydgate and I have chatted a great deal, +and it is time for me to go. I have always been accused of being +immoderate and saying too much." + +She put out her hand to Rosamond, and they said an earnest, quiet +good-by without kiss or other show of effusion: there had been between +them too much serious emotion for them to use the signs of it +superficially. + +As Lydgate took her to the door she said nothing of Rosamond, but told +him of Mr. Farebrother and the other friends who had listened with +belief to his story. + +When he came back to Rosamond, she had already thrown herself on the +sofa, in resigned fatigue. + +"Well, Rosy," he said, standing over her, and touching her hair, "what +do you think of Mrs. Casaubon now you have seen so much of her?" + +"I think she must be better than any one," said Rosamond, "and she is +very beautiful. If you go to talk to her so often, you will be more +discontented with me than ever!" + +Lydgate laughed at the "so often." "But has she made you any less +discontented with me?" + +"I think she has," said Rosamond, looking up in his face. "How heavy +your eyes are, Tertius--and do push your hair back." He lifted up his +large white hand to obey her, and felt thankful for this little mark of +interest in him. Poor Rosamond's vagrant fancy had come back terribly +scourged--meek enough to nestle under the old despised shelter. And +the shelter was still there: Lydgate had accepted his narrowed lot with +sad resignation. He had chosen this fragile creature, and had taken +the burthen of her life upon his arms. He must walk as he could, +carrying that burthen pitifully. + + + +CHAPTER LXXXII. + + "My grief lies onward and my joy behind." + --SHAKESPEARE: Sonnets. + + +Exiles notoriously feed much on hopes, and are unlikely to stay in +banishment unless they are obliged. When Will Ladislaw exiled himself +from Middlemarch he had placed no stronger obstacle to his return than +his own resolve, which was by no means an iron barrier, but simply a +state of mind liable to melt into a minuet with other states of mind, +and to find itself bowing, smiling, and giving place with polite +facility. As the months went on, it had seemed more and more difficult +to him to say why he should not run down to Middlemarch--merely for the +sake of hearing something about Dorothea; and if on such a flying visit +he should chance by some strange coincidence to meet with her, there +was no reason for him to be ashamed of having taken an innocent journey +which he had beforehand supposed that he should not take. Since he was +hopelessly divided from her, he might surely venture into her +neighborhood; and as to the suspicious friends who kept a dragon watch +over her--their opinions seemed less and less important with time and +change of air. + +And there had come a reason quite irrespective of Dorothea, which +seemed to make a journey to Middlemarch a sort of philanthropic duty. +Will had given a disinterested attention to an intended settlement on a +new plan in the Far West, and the need for funds in order to carry out +a good design had set him on debating with himself whether it would not +be a laudable use to make of his claim on Bulstrode, to urge the +application of that money which had been offered to himself as a means +of carrying out a scheme likely to be largely beneficial. The question +seemed a very dubious one to Will, and his repugnance to again entering +into any relation with the banker might have made him dismiss it +quickly, if there had not arisen in his imagination the probability +that his judgment might be more safely determined by a visit to +Middlemarch. + +That was the object which Will stated to himself as a reason for coming +down. He had meant to confide in Lydgate, and discuss the money +question with him, and he had meant to amuse himself for the few +evenings of his stay by having a great deal of music and badinage with +fair Rosamond, without neglecting his friends at Lowick Parsonage:--if +the Parsonage was close to the Manor, that was no fault of his. He had +neglected the Farebrothers before his departure, from a proud +resistance to the possible accusation of indirectly seeking interviews +with Dorothea; but hunger tames us, and Will had become very hungry for +the vision of a certain form and the sound of a certain voice. +Nothing, had done instead--not the opera, or the converse of zealous +politicians, or the flattering reception (in dim corners) of his new +hand in leading articles. + +Thus he had come down, foreseeing with confidence how almost everything +would be in his familiar little world; fearing, indeed, that there +would be no surprises in his visit. But he had found that humdrum +world in a terribly dynamic condition, in which even badinage and +lyrism had turned explosive; and the first day of this visit had become +the most fatal epoch of his life. The next morning he felt so harassed +with the nightmare of consequences--he dreaded so much the immediate +issues before him--that seeing while he breakfasted the arrival of the +Riverston coach, he went out hurriedly and took his place on it, that +he might be relieved, at least for a day, from the necessity of doing +or saying anything in Middlemarch. Will Ladislaw was in one of those +tangled crises which are commoner in experience than one might imagine, +from the shallow absoluteness of men's judgments. He had found +Lydgate, for whom he had the sincerest respect, under circumstances +which claimed his thorough and frankly declared sympathy; and the +reason why, in spite of that claim, it would have been better for Will +to have avoided all further intimacy, or even contact, with Lydgate, +was precisely of the kind to make such a course appear impossible. To +a creature of Will's susceptible temperament--without any neutral +region of indifference in his nature, ready to turn everything that +befell him into the collisions of a passionate drama--the revelation +that Rosamond had made her happiness in any way dependent on him was a +difficulty which his outburst of rage towards her had immeasurably +increased for him. He hated his own cruelty, and yet he dreaded to +show the fulness of his relenting: he must go to her again; the +friendship could not be put to a sudden end; and her unhappiness was a +power which he dreaded. And all the while there was no more foretaste +of enjoyment in the life before him than if his limbs had been lopped +off and he was making his fresh start on crutches. In the night he had +debated whether he should not get on the coach, not for Riverston, but +for London, leaving a note to Lydgate which would give a makeshift +reason for his retreat. But there were strong cords pulling him back +from that abrupt departure: the blight on his happiness in thinking of +Dorothea, the crushing of that chief hope which had remained in spite +of the acknowledged necessity for renunciation, was too fresh a misery +for him to resign himself to it and go straightway into a distance +which was also despair. + +Thus he did nothing more decided than taking the Riverston coach. He +came back again by it while it was still daylight, having made up his +mind that he must go to Lydgate's that evening. The Rubicon, we know, +was a very insignificant stream to look at; its significance lay +entirely in certain invisible conditions. Will felt as if he were +forced to cross his small boundary ditch, and what he saw beyond it was +not empire, but discontented subjection. + +But it is given to us sometimes even in our every-day life to witness +the saving influence of a noble nature, the divine efficacy of rescue +that may lie in a self-subduing act of fellowship. If Dorothea, after +her night's anguish, had not taken that walk to Rosamond--why, she +perhaps would have been a woman who gained a higher character for +discretion, but it would certainly not have been as well for those +three who were on one hearth in Lydgate's house at half-past seven that +evening. + +Rosamond had been prepared for Will's visit, and she received him with +a languid coldness which Lydgate accounted for by her nervous +exhaustion, of which he could not suppose that it had any relation to +Will. And when she sat in silence bending over a bit of work, he +innocently apologized for her in an indirect way by begging her to lean +backward and rest. Will was miserable in the necessity for playing the +part of a friend who was making his first appearance and greeting to +Rosamond, while his thoughts were busy about her feeling since that +scene of yesterday, which seemed still inexorably to enclose them both, +like the painful vision of a double madness. It happened that nothing +called Lydgate out of the room; but when Rosamond poured out the tea, +and Will came near to fetch it, she placed a tiny bit of folded paper +in his saucer. He saw it and secured it quickly, but as he went back +to his inn he had no eagerness to unfold the paper. What Rosamond had +written to him would probably deepen the painful impressions of the +evening. Still, he opened and read it by his bed-candle. There were +only these few words in her neatly flowing hand:-- + +"I have told Mrs. Casaubon. She is not under any mistake about you. I +told her because she came to see me and was very kind. You will have +nothing to reproach me with now. I shall not have made any difference +to you." + +The effect of these words was not quite all gladness. As Will dwelt on +them with excited imagination, he felt his cheeks and ears burning at +the thought of what had occurred between Dorothea and Rosamond--at the +uncertainty how far Dorothea might still feel her dignity wounded in +having an explanation of his conduct offered to her. There might still +remain in her mind a changed association with him which made an +irremediable difference--a lasting flaw. With active fancy he wrought +himself into a state of doubt little more easy than that of the man who +has escaped from wreck by night and stands on unknown ground in the +darkness. Until that wretched yesterday--except the moment of +vexation long ago in the very same room and in the very same +presence--all their vision, all their thought of each other, had been +as in a world apart, where the sunshine fell on tall white lilies, +where no evil lurked, and no other soul entered. But now--would +Dorothea meet him in that world again? + + + +CHAPTER LXXXIII. + + "And now good-morrow to our waking souls + Which watch not one another out of fear; + For love all love of other sights controls, + And makes one little room, an everywhere." + --DR. DONNE. + + +On the second morning after Dorothea's visit to Rosamond, she had had +two nights of sound sleep, and had not only lost all traces of fatigue, +but felt as if she had a great deal of superfluous strength--that is +to say, more strength than she could manage to concentrate on any +occupation. The day before, she had taken long walks outside the +grounds, and had paid two visits to the Parsonage; but she never in her +life told any one the reason why she spent her time in that fruitless +manner, and this morning she was rather angry with herself for her +childish restlessness. To-day was to be spent quite differently. What +was there to be done in the village? Oh dear! nothing. Everybody was +well and had flannel; nobody's pig had died; and it was Saturday +morning, when there was a general scrubbing of doors and door-stones, +and when it was useless to go into the school. But there were various +subjects that Dorothea was trying to get clear upon, and she resolved +to throw herself energetically into the gravest of all. She sat down +in the library before her particular little heap of books on political +economy and kindred matters, out of which she was trying to get light +as to the best way of spending money so as not to injure one's +neighbors, or--what comes to the same thing--so as to do them the most +good. Here was a weighty subject which, if she could but lay hold of +it, would certainly keep her mind steady. Unhappily her mind slipped +off it for a whole hour; and at the end she found herself reading +sentences twice over with an intense consciousness of many things, but +not of any one thing contained in the text. This was hopeless. Should +she order the carriage and drive to Tipton? No; for some reason or +other she preferred staying at Lowick. But her vagrant mind must be +reduced to order: there was an art in self-discipline; and she walked +round and round the brown library considering by what sort of manoeuvre +she could arrest her wandering thoughts. Perhaps a mere task was the +best means--something to which she must go doggedly. Was there not the +geography of Asia Minor, in which her slackness had often been rebuked +by Mr. Casaubon? She went to the cabinet of maps and unrolled one: +this morning she might make herself finally sure that Paphlagonia was +not on the Levantine coast, and fix her total darkness about the +Chalybes firmly on the shores of the Euxine. A map was a fine thing to +study when you were disposed to think of something else, being made up +of names that would turn into a chime if you went back upon them. +Dorothea set earnestly to work, bending close to her map, and uttering +the names in an audible, subdued tone, which often got into a chime. +She looked amusingly girlish after all her deep experience--nodding +her head and marking the names off on her fingers, with a little +pursing of her lip, and now and then breaking off to put her hands on +each side of her face and say, "Oh dear! oh dear!" + +There was no reason why this should end any more than a merry-go-round; +but it was at last interrupted by the opening of the door and the +announcement of Miss Noble. + +The little old lady, whose bonnet hardly reached Dorothea's shoulder, +was warmly welcomed, but while her hand was being pressed she made many +of her beaver-like noises, as if she had something difficult to say. + +"Do sit down," said Dorothea, rolling a chair forward. "Am I wanted +for anything? I shall be so glad if I can do anything." + +"I will not stay," said Miss Noble, putting her hand into her small +basket, and holding some article inside it nervously; "I have left a +friend in the churchyard." She lapsed into her inarticulate sounds, +and unconsciously drew forth the article which she was fingering. It +was the tortoise-shell lozenge-box, and Dorothea felt the color +mounting to her cheeks. + +"Mr. Ladislaw," continued the timid little woman. "He fears he has +offended you, and has begged me to ask if you will see him for a few +minutes." + +Dorothea did not answer on the instant: it was crossing her mind that +she could not receive him in this library, where her husband's +prohibition seemed to dwell. She looked towards the window. Could she +go out and meet him in the grounds? The sky was heavy, and the trees +had begun to shiver as at a coming storm. Besides, she shrank from +going out to him. + +"Do see him, Mrs. Casaubon," said Miss Noble, pathetically; "else I +must go back and say No, and that will hurt him." + +"Yes, I will see him," said Dorothea. "Pray tell him to come." + +What else was there to be done? There was nothing that she longed for +at that moment except to see Will: the possibility of seeing him had +thrust itself insistently between her and every other object; and yet +she had a throbbing excitement like an alarm upon her--a sense that +she was doing something daringly defiant for his sake. + +When the little lady had trotted away on her mission, Dorothea stood in +the middle of the library with her hands falling clasped before her, +making no attempt to compose herself in an attitude of dignified +unconsciousness. What she was least conscious of just then was her own +body: she was thinking of what was likely to be in Will's mind, and of +the hard feelings that others had had about him. How could any duty +bind her to hardness? Resistance to unjust dispraise had mingled with +her feeling for him from the very first, and now in the rebound of her +heart after her anguish the resistance was stronger than ever. "If I +love him too much it is because he has been used so ill:"--there was a +voice within her saying this to some imagined audience in the library, +when the door was opened, and she saw Will before her. + +She did not move, and he came towards her with more doubt and timidity +in his face than she had ever seen before. He was in a state of +uncertainty which made him afraid lest some look or word of his should +condemn him to a new distance from her; and Dorothea was afraid of her +_own_ emotion. She looked as if there were a spell upon her, keeping +her motionless and hindering her from unclasping her hands, while some +intense, grave yearning was imprisoned within her eyes. Seeing that +she did not put out her hand as usual, Will paused a yard from her and +said with embarrassment, "I am so grateful to you for seeing me." + +"I wanted to see you," said Dorothea, having no other words at command. +It did not occur to her to sit down, and Will did not give a cheerful +interpretation to this queenly way of receiving him; but he went on to +say what he had made up his mind to say. + +"I fear you think me foolish and perhaps wrong for coming back so soon. +I have been punished for my impatience. You know--every one knows +now--a painful story about my parentage. I knew of it before I went +away, and I always meant to tell you of it if--if we ever met again." + +There was a slight movement in Dorothea, and she unclasped her hands, +but immediately folded them over each other. + +"But the affair is matter of gossip now," Will continued. "I wished +you to know that something connected with it--something which happened +before I went away, helped to bring me down here again. At least I +thought it excused my coming. It was the idea of getting Bulstrode to +apply some money to a public purpose--some money which he had thought +of giving me. Perhaps it is rather to Bulstrode's credit that he +privately offered me compensation for an old injury: he offered to give +me a good income to make amends; but I suppose you know the +disagreeable story?" + +Will looked doubtfully at Dorothea, but his manner was gathering some +of the defiant courage with which he always thought of this fact in his +destiny. He added, "You know that it must be altogether painful to me." + +"Yes--yes--I know," said Dorothea, hastily. + +"I did not choose to accept an income from such a source. I was sure +that you would not think well of me if I did so," said Will. Why +should he mind saying anything of that sort to her now? She knew that +he had avowed his love for her. "I felt that"--he broke off, +nevertheless. + +"You acted as I should have expected you to act," said Dorothea, her +face brightening and her head becoming a little more erect on its +beautiful stem. + +"I did not believe that you would let any circumstance of my birth +create a prejudice in you against me, though it was sure to do so in +others," said Will, shaking his head backward in his old way, and +looking with a grave appeal into her eyes. + +"If it were a new hardship it would be a new reason for me to cling to +you," said Dorothea, fervidly. "Nothing could have changed me but--" +her heart was swelling, and it was difficult to go on; she made a great +effort over herself to say in a low tremulous voice, "but thinking that +you were different--not so good as I had believed you to be." + +"You are sure to believe me better than I am in everything but one," +said Will, giving way to his own feeling in the evidence of hers. "I +mean, in my truth to you. When I thought you doubted of that, I didn't +care about anything that was left. I thought it was all over with me, +and there was nothing to try for--only things to endure." + +"I don't doubt you any longer," said Dorothea, putting out her hand; a +vague fear for him impelling her unutterable affection. + +He took her hand and raised it to his lips with something like a sob. +But he stood with his hat and gloves in the other hand, and might have +done for the portrait of a Royalist. Still it was difficult to loose +the hand, and Dorothea, withdrawing it in a confusion that distressed +her, looked and moved away. + +"See how dark the clouds have become, and how the trees are tossed," +she said, walking towards the window, yet speaking and moving with only +a dim sense of what she was doing. + +Will followed her at a little distance, and leaned against the tall +back of a leather chair, on which he ventured now to lay his hat and +gloves, and free himself from the intolerable durance of formality to +which he had been for the first time condemned in Dorothea's presence. +It must be confessed that he felt very happy at that moment leaning on +the chair. He was not much afraid of anything that she might feel now. + +They stood silent, not looking at each other, but looking at the +evergreens which were being tossed, and were showing the pale underside +of their leaves against the blackening sky. Will never enjoyed the +prospect of a storm so much: it delivered him from the necessity of +going away. Leaves and little branches were hurled about, and the +thunder was getting nearer. The light was more and more sombre, but +there came a flash of lightning which made them start and look at each +other, and then smile. Dorothea began to say what she had been +thinking of. + +"That was a wrong thing for you to say, that you would have had nothing +to try for. If we had lost our own chief good, other people's good +would remain, and that is worth trying for. Some can be happy. I +seemed to see that more clearly than ever, when I was the most +wretched. I can hardly think how I could have borne the trouble, if +that feeling had not come to me to make strength." + +"You have never felt the sort of misery I felt," said Will; "the misery +of knowing that you must despise me." + +"But I have felt worse--it was worse to think ill--" Dorothea had begun +impetuously, but broke off. + +Will colored. He had the sense that whatever she said was uttered in +the vision of a fatality that kept them apart. He was silent a moment, +and then said passionately-- + +"We may at least have the comfort of speaking to each other without +disguise. Since I must go away--since we must always be divided--you +may think of me as one on the brink of the grave." + +While he was speaking there came a vivid flash of lightning which lit +each of them up for the other--and the light seemed to be the terror of +a hopeless love. Dorothea darted instantaneously from the window; Will +followed her, seizing her hand with a spasmodic movement; and so they +stood, with their hands clasped, like two children, looking out on the +storm, while the thunder gave a tremendous crack and roll above them, +and the rain began to pour down. Then they turned their faces towards +each other, with the memory of his last words in them, and they did not +loose each other's hands. + +"There is no hope for me," said Will. "Even if you loved me as well as +I love you--even if I were everything to you--I shall most likely +always be very poor: on a sober calculation, one can count on nothing +but a creeping lot. It is impossible for us ever to belong to each +other. It is perhaps base of me to have asked for a word from you. I +meant to go away into silence, but I have not been able to do what I +meant." + +"Don't be sorry," said Dorothea, in her clear tender tones. "I would +rather share all the trouble of our parting." + +Her lips trembled, and so did his. It was never known which lips were +the first to move towards the other lips; but they kissed tremblingly, +and then they moved apart. + +The rain was dashing against the window-panes as if an angry spirit +were within it, and behind it was the great swoop of the wind; it was +one of those moments in which both the busy and the idle pause with a +certain awe. + +Dorothea sat down on the seat nearest to her, a long low ottoman in the +middle of the room, and with her hands folded over each other on her +lap, looked at the drear outer world. Will stood still an instant +looking at her, then seated himself beside her, and laid his hand on +hers, which turned itself upward to be clasped. They sat in that way +without looking at each other, until the rain abated and began to fall +in stillness. Each had been full of thoughts which neither of them +could begin to utter. + +But when the rain was quiet, Dorothea turned to look at Will. With +passionate exclamation, as if some torture screw were threatening him, +he started up and said, "It is impossible!" + +He went and leaned on the back of the chair again, and seemed to be +battling with his own anger, while she looked towards him sadly. + +"It is as fatal as a murder or any other horror that divides people," +he burst out again; "it is more intolerable--to have our life maimed by +petty accidents." + +"No--don't say that--your life need not be maimed," said Dorothea, +gently. + +"Yes, it must," said Will, angrily. "It is cruel of you to speak in +that way--as if there were any comfort. You may see beyond the misery +of it, but I don't. It is unkind--it is throwing back my love for you +as if it were a trifle, to speak in that way in the face of the fact. +We can never be married." + +"Some time--we might," said Dorothea, in a trembling voice. + +"When?" said Will, bitterly. "What is the use of counting on any +success of mine? It is a mere toss up whether I shall ever do more +than keep myself decently, unless I choose to sell myself as a mere pen +and a mouthpiece. I can see that clearly enough. I could not offer +myself to any woman, even if she had no luxuries to renounce." + +There was silence. Dorothea's heart was full of something that she +wanted to say, and yet the words were too difficult. She was wholly +possessed by them: at that moment debate was mute within her. And it +was very hard that she could not say what she wanted to say. Will was +looking out of the window angrily. If he would have looked at her and +not gone away from her side, she thought everything would have been +easier. At last he turned, still resting against the chair, and +stretching his hand automatically towards his hat, said with a sort of +exasperation, "Good-by." + +"Oh, I cannot bear it--my heart will break," said Dorothea, starting +from her seat, the flood of her young passion bearing down all the +obstructions which had kept her silent--the great tears rising and +falling in an instant: "I don't mind about poverty--I hate my wealth." + +In an instant Will was close to her and had his arms round her, but she +drew her head back and held his away gently that she might go on +speaking, her large tear-filled eyes looking at his very simply, while +she said in a sobbing childlike way, "We could live quite well on my +own fortune--it is too much--seven hundred a-year--I want so little--no +new clothes--and I will learn what everything costs." + + + +CHAPTER LXXXIV. + + "Though it be songe of old and yonge, + That I sholde be to blame, + Theyrs be the charge, that spoke so large + In hurtynge of my name." + --The Not-Browne Mayde. + + +It was just after the Lords had thrown out the Reform Bill: that +explains how Mr. Cadwallader came to be walking on the slope of the +lawn near the great conservatory at Freshitt Hall, holding the "Times" +in his hands behind him, while he talked with a trout-fisher's +dispassionateness about the prospects of the country to Sir James +Chettam. Mrs. Cadwallader, the Dowager Lady Chettam, and Celia were +sometimes seated on garden-chairs, sometimes walking to meet little +Arthur, who was being drawn in his chariot, and, as became the +infantine Bouddha, was sheltered by his sacred umbrella with handsome +silken fringe. + +The ladies also talked politics, though more fitfully. Mrs. +Cadwallader was strong on the intended creation of peers: she had it +for certain from her cousin that Truberry had gone over to the other +side entirely at the instigation of his wife, who had scented peerages +in the air from the very first introduction of the Reform question, and +would sign her soul away to take precedence of her younger sister, who +had married a baronet. Lady Chettam thought that such conduct was very +reprehensible, and remembered that Mrs. Truberry's mother was a Miss +Walsingham of Melspring. Celia confessed it was nicer to be "Lady" +than "Mrs.," and that Dodo never minded about precedence if she could +have her own way. Mrs. Cadwallader held that it was a poor +satisfaction to take precedence when everybody about you knew that you +had not a drop of good blood in your veins; and Celia again, stopping +to look at Arthur, said, "It would be very nice, though, if he were a +Viscount--and his lordship's little tooth coming through! He might +have been, if James had been an Earl." + +"My dear Celia," said the Dowager, "James's title is worth far more +than any new earldom. I never wished his father to be anything else +than Sir James." + +"Oh, I only meant about Arthur's little tooth," said Celia, +comfortably. "But see, here is my uncle coming." + +She tripped off to meet her uncle, while Sir James and Mr. Cadwallader +came forward to make one group with the ladies. Celia had slipped her +arm through her uncle's, and he patted her hand with a rather +melancholy "Well, my dear!" As they approached, it was evident that +Mr. Brooke was looking dejected, but this was fully accounted for by +the state of politics; and as he was shaking hands all round without +more greeting than a "Well, you're all here, you know," the Rector +said, laughingly-- + +"Don't take the throwing out of the Bill so much to heart, Brooke; +you've got all the riff-raff of the country on your side." + +"The Bill, eh? ah!" said Mr. Brooke, with a mild distractedness of +manner. "Thrown out, you know, eh? The Lords are going too far, +though. They'll have to pull up. Sad news, you know. I mean, here at +home--sad news. But you must not blame me, Chettam." + +"What is the matter?" said Sir James. "Not another gamekeeper shot, I +hope? It's what I should expect, when a fellow like Trapping Bass is +let off so easily." + +"Gamekeeper? No. Let us go in; I can tell you all in the house, you +know," said Mr. Brooke, nodding at the Cadwalladers, to show that he +included them in his confidence. "As to poachers like Trapping Bass, +you know, Chettam," he continued, as they were entering, "when you are +a magistrate, you'll not find it so easy to commit. Severity is all +very well, but it's a great deal easier when you've got somebody to do +it for you. You have a soft place in your heart yourself, you +know--you're not a Draco, a Jeffreys, that sort of thing." + +Mr. Brooke was evidently in a state of nervous perturbation. When he +had something painful to tell, it was usually his way to introduce it +among a number of disjointed particulars, as if it were a medicine that +would get a milder flavor by mixing. He continued his chat with Sir +James about the poachers until they were all seated, and Mrs. +Cadwallader, impatient of this drivelling, said-- + +"I'm dying to know the sad news. The gamekeeper is not shot: that is +settled. What is it, then?" + +"Well, it's a very trying thing, you know," said Mr. Brooke. "I'm glad +you and the Rector are here; it's a family matter--but you will help +us all to bear it, Cadwallader. I've got to break it to you, my dear." +Here Mr. Brooke looked at Celia--"You've no notion what it is, you +know. And, Chettam, it will annoy you uncommonly--but, you see, you +have not been able to hinder it, any more than I have. There's +something singular in things: they come round, you know." + +"It must be about Dodo," said Celia, who had been used to think of her +sister as the dangerous part of the family machinery. She had seated +herself on a low stool against her husband's knee. + +"For God's sake let us hear what it is!" said Sir James. + +"Well, you know, Chettam, I couldn't help Casaubon's will: it was a +sort of will to make things worse." + +"Exactly," said Sir James, hastily. "But _what_ is worse?" + +"Dorothea is going to be married again, you know," said Mr. Brooke, +nodding towards Celia, who immediately looked up at her husband with a +frightened glance, and put her hand on his knee. Sir James was almost +white with anger, but he did not speak. + +"Merciful heaven!" said Mrs. Cadwallader. "Not to _young_ Ladislaw?" + +Mr. Brooke nodded, saying, "Yes; to Ladislaw," and then fell into a +prudential silence. + +"You see, Humphrey!" said Mrs. Cadwallader, waving her arm towards her +husband. "Another time you will admit that I have some foresight; or +rather you will contradict me and be just as blind as ever. _You_ +supposed that the young gentleman was gone out of the country." + +"So he might be, and yet come back," said the Rector, quietly + +"When did you learn this?" said Sir James, not liking to hear any one +else speak, though finding it difficult to speak himself. + +"Yesterday," said Mr. Brooke, meekly. "I went to Lowick. Dorothea +sent for me, you know. It had come about quite suddenly--neither of +them had any idea two days ago--not any idea, you know. There's +something singular in things. But Dorothea is quite determined--it is +no use opposing. I put it strongly to her. I did my duty, Chettam. +But she can act as she likes, you know." + +"It would have been better if I had called him out and shot him a year +ago," said Sir James, not from bloody-mindedness, but because he needed +something strong to say. + +"Really, James, that would have been very disagreeable," said Celia. + +"Be reasonable, Chettam. Look at the affair more quietly," said Mr. +Cadwallader, sorry to see his good-natured friend so overmastered by +anger. + +"That is not so very easy for a man of any dignity--with any sense of +right--when the affair happens to be in his own family," said Sir +James, still in his white indignation. "It is perfectly scandalous. +If Ladislaw had had a spark of honor he would have gone out of the +country at once, and never shown his face in it again. However, I am +not surprised. The day after Casaubon's funeral I said what ought to +be done. But I was not listened to." + +"You wanted what was impossible, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke. +"You wanted him shipped off. I told you Ladislaw was not to be done as +we liked with: he had his ideas. He was a remarkable fellow--I always +said he was a remarkable fellow." + +"Yes," said Sir James, unable to repress a retort, "it is rather a pity +you formed that high opinion of him. We are indebted to that for his +being lodged in this neighborhood. We are indebted to that for seeing +a woman like Dorothea degrading herself by marrying him." Sir James +made little stoppages between his clauses, the words not coming easily. +"A man so marked out by her husband's will, that delicacy ought to have +forbidden her from seeing him again--who takes her out of her proper +rank--into poverty--has the meanness to accept such a sacrifice--has +always had an objectionable position--a bad origin--and, I _believe_, +is a man of little principle and light character. That is my opinion." +Sir James ended emphatically, turning aside and crossing his leg. + +"I pointed everything out to her," said Mr. Brooke, apologetically--"I +mean the poverty, and abandoning her position. I said, 'My dear, you +don't know what it is to live on seven hundred a-year, and have no +carriage, and that kind of thing, and go amongst people who don't know +who you are.' I put it strongly to her. But I advise you to talk to +Dorothea herself. The fact is, she has a dislike to Casaubon's +property. You will hear what she says, you know." + +"No--excuse me--I shall not," said Sir James, with more coolness. "I +cannot bear to see her again; it is too painful. It hurts me too much +that a woman like Dorothea should have done what is wrong." + +"Be just, Chettam," said the easy, large-lipped Rector, who objected to +all this unnecessary discomfort. "Mrs. Casaubon may be acting +imprudently: she is giving up a fortune for the sake of a man, and we +men have so poor an opinion of each other that we can hardly call a +woman wise who does that. But I think you should not condemn it as a +wrong action, in the strict sense of the word." + +"Yes, I do," answered Sir James. "I think that Dorothea commits a +wrong action in marrying Ladislaw." + +"My dear fellow, we are rather apt to consider an act wrong because it +is unpleasant to us," said the Rector, quietly. Like many men who take +life easily, he had the knack of saying a home truth occasionally to +those who felt themselves virtuously out of temper. Sir James took out +his handkerchief and began to bite the corner. + +"It is very dreadful of Dodo, though," said Celia, wishing to justify +her husband. "She said she _never would_ marry again--not anybody at +all." + +"I heard her say the same thing myself," said Lady Chettam, +majestically, as if this were royal evidence. + +"Oh, there is usually a silent exception in such cases," said Mrs. +Cadwallader. "The only wonder to me is, that any of you are surprised. +You did nothing to hinder it. If you would have had Lord Triton down +here to woo her with his philanthropy, he might have carried her off +before the year was over. There was no safety in anything else. Mr. +Casaubon had prepared all this as beautifully as possible. He made +himself disagreeable--or it pleased God to make him so--and then he +dared her to contradict him. It's the way to make any trumpery +tempting, to ticket it at a high price in that way." + +"I don't know what you mean by wrong, Cadwallader," said Sir James, +still feeling a little stung, and turning round in his chair towards +the Rector. "He's not a man we can take into the family. At least, I +must speak for myself," he continued, carefully keeping his eyes off +Mr. Brooke. "I suppose others will find his society too pleasant to +care about the propriety of the thing." + +"Well, you know, Chettam," said Mr. Brooke, good-humoredly, nursing his +leg, "I can't turn my back on Dorothea. I must be a father to her up +to a certain point. I said, 'My dear, I won't refuse to give you +away.' I had spoken strongly before. But I can cut off the entail, +you know. It will cost money and be troublesome; but I can do it, you +know." + +Mr. Brooke nodded at Sir James, and felt that he was both showing his +own force of resolution and propitiating what was just in the Baronet's +vexation. He had hit on a more ingenious mode of parrying than he was +aware of. He had touched a motive of which Sir James was ashamed. The +mass of his feeling about Dorothea's marriage to Ladislaw was due +partly to excusable prejudice, or even justifiable opinion, partly to a +jealous repugnance hardly less in Ladislaw's case than in Casaubon's. +He was convinced that the marriage was a fatal one for Dorothea. But +amid that mass ran a vein of which he was too good and honorable a man +to like the avowal even to himself: it was undeniable that the union of +the two estates--Tipton and Freshitt--lying charmingly within a +ring-fence, was a prospect that flattered him for his son and heir. +Hence when Mr. Brooke noddingly appealed to that motive, Sir James felt +a sudden embarrassment; there was a stoppage in his throat; he even +blushed. He had found more words than usual in the first jet of his +anger, but Mr. Brooke's propitiation was more clogging to his tongue +than Mr. Cadwallader's caustic hint. + +But Celia was glad to have room for speech after her uncle's suggestion +of the marriage ceremony, and she said, though with as little eagerness +of manner as if the question had turned on an invitation to dinner, "Do +you mean that Dodo is going to be married directly, uncle?" + +"In three weeks, you know," said Mr. Brooke, helplessly. "I can do +nothing to hinder it, Cadwallader," he added, turning for a little +countenance toward the Rector, who said-- + +"--I--should not make any fuss about it. If she likes to be poor, that +is her affair. Nobody would have said anything if she had married the +young fellow because he was rich. Plenty of beneficed clergy are +poorer than they will be. Here is Elinor," continued the provoking +husband; "she vexed her friends by me: I had hardly a thousand +a-year--I was a lout--nobody could see anything in me--my shoes were +not the right cut--all the men wondered how a woman could like me. +Upon my word, I must take Ladislaw's part until I hear more harm of +him." + +"Humphrey, that is all sophistry, and you know it," said his wife. +"Everything is all one--that is the beginning and end with you. As if +you had not been a Cadwallader! Does any one suppose that I would have +taken such a monster as you by any other name?" + +"And a clergyman too," observed Lady Chettam with approbation. "Elinor +cannot be said to have descended below her rank. It is difficult to +say what Mr. Ladislaw is, eh, James?" + +Sir James gave a small grunt, which was less respectful than his usual +mode of answering his mother. Celia looked up at him like a thoughtful +kitten. + +"It must be admitted that his blood is a frightful mixture!" said Mrs. +Cadwallader. "The Casaubon cuttle-fish fluid to begin with, and then a +rebellious Polish fiddler or dancing-master, was it?--and then an old +clo--" + +"Nonsense, Elinor," said the Rector, rising. "It is time for us to go." + +"After all, he is a pretty sprig," said Mrs. Cadwallader, rising too, +and wishing to make amends. "He is like the fine old Crichley +portraits before the idiots came in." + +"I'll go with you," said Mr. Brooke, starting up with alacrity. "You +must all come and dine with me to-morrow, you know--eh, Celia, my dear?" + +"You will, James--won't you?" said Celia, taking her husband's hand. + +"Oh, of course, if you like," said Sir James, pulling down his +waistcoat, but unable yet to adjust his face good-humoredly. "That is +to say, if it is not to meet anybody else.': + +"No, no, no," said Mr. Brooke, understanding the condition. "Dorothea +would not come, you know, unless you had been to see her." + +When Sir James and Celia were alone, she said, "Do you mind about my +having the carriage to go to Lowick, James?" + +"What, now, directly?" he answered, with some surprise. + +"Yes, it is very important," said Celia. + +"Remember, Celia, I cannot see her," said Sir James. + +"Not if she gave up marrying?" + +"What is the use of saying that?--however, I'm going to the stables. +I'll tell Briggs to bring the carriage round." + +Celia thought it was of great use, if not to say that, at least to take +a journey to Lowick in order to influence Dorothea's mind. All through +their girlhood she had felt that she could act on her sister by a word +judiciously placed--by opening a little window for the daylight of her +own understanding to enter among the strange colored lamps by which +Dodo habitually saw. And Celia the matron naturally felt more able to +advise her childless sister. How could any one understand Dodo so well +as Celia did or love her so tenderly? + +Dorothea, busy in her boudoir, felt a glow of pleasure at the sight of +her sister so soon after the revelation of her intended marriage. She +had prefigured to herself, even with exaggeration, the disgust of her +friends, and she had even feared that Celia might be kept aloof from +her. + +"O Kitty, I am delighted to see you!" said Dorothea, putting her hands +on Celia's shoulders, and beaming on her. "I almost thought you would +not come to me." + +"I have not brought Arthur, because I was in a hurry," said Celia, and +they sat down on two small chairs opposite each other, with their knees +touching. + +"You know, Dodo, it is very bad," said Celia, in her placid guttural, +looking as prettily free from humors as possible. "You have +disappointed us all so. And I can't think that it ever _will_ be--you +never can go and live in that way. And then there are all your plans! +You never can have thought of that. James would have taken any trouble +for you, and you might have gone on all your life doing what you liked." + +"On the contrary, dear," said Dorothea, "I never could do anything that +I liked. I have never carried out any plan yet." + +"Because you always wanted things that wouldn't do. But other plans +would have come. And how can you marry Mr. Ladislaw, that we none of +us ever thought you _could_ marry? It shocks James so dreadfully. And +then it is all so different from what you have always been. You would +have Mr. Casaubon because he had such a great soul, and was so and +dismal and learned; and now, to think of marrying Mr. Ladislaw, who has +got no estate or anything. I suppose it is because you must be making +yourself uncomfortable in some way or other." + +Dorothea laughed. + +"Well, it is very serious, Dodo," said Celia, becoming more impressive. +"How will you live? and you will go away among queer people. And I +shall never see you--and you won't mind about little Arthur--and I +thought you always would--" + +Celia's rare tears had got into her eyes, and the corners of her mouth +were agitated. + +"Dear Celia," said Dorothea, with tender gravity, "if you don't ever +see me, it will not be my fault." + +"Yes, it will," said Celia, with the same touching distortion of her +small features. "How can I come to you or have you with me when James +can't bear it?--that is because he thinks it is not right--he thinks +you are so wrong, Dodo. But you always were wrong: only I can't help +loving you. And nobody can think where you will live: where can you +go?" + +"I am going to London," said Dorothea. + +"How can you always live in a street? And you will be so poor. I +could give you half my things, only how can I, when I never see you?" + +"Bless you, Kitty," said Dorothea, with gentle warmth. "Take comfort: +perhaps James will forgive me some time." + +"But it would be much better if you would not be married," said Celia, +drying her eyes, and returning to her argument; "then there would be +nothing uncomfortable. And you would not do what nobody thought you +could do. James always said you ought to be a queen; but this is not +at all being like a queen. You know what mistakes you have always been +making, Dodo, and this is another. Nobody thinks Mr. Ladislaw a proper +husband for you. And you _said you_ would never be married again." + +"It is quite true that I might be a wiser person, Celia," said +Dorothea, "and that I might have done something better, if I had been +better. But this is what I am going to do. I have promised to marry +Mr. Ladislaw; and I am going to marry him." + +The tone in which Dorothea said this was a note that Celia had long +learned to recognize. She was silent a few moments, and then said, as +if she had dismissed all contest, "Is he very fond of you, Dodo?" + +"I hope so. I am very fond of him." + +"That is nice," said Celia, comfortably. "Only I rather you had such a +sort of husband as James is, with a place very near, that I could drive +to." + +Dorothea smiled, and Celia looked rather meditative. Presently she +said, "I cannot think how it all came about." Celia thought it would be +pleasant to hear the story. + +"I dare say not," said-Dorothea, pinching her sister's chin. "If you +knew how it came about, it would not seem wonderful to you." + +"Can't you tell me?" said Celia, settling her arms cozily. + +"No, dear, you would have to feel with me, else you would never know." + + + +CHAPTER LXXXV. + + "Then went the jury out whose names were Mr. Blindman, Mr. + No-good, Mr. Malice, Mr. Love-lust, Mr. Live-loose, Mr. + Heady, Mr. High-mind, Mr. Enmity, Mr. Liar, Mr. Cruelty, Mr. + Hate-light, Mr. Implacable, who every one gave in his + private verdict against him among themselves, and afterwards + unanimously concluded to bring him in guilty before the + judge. And first among themselves, Mr. Blindman, the + foreman, said, I see clearly that this man is a heretic. + Then said Mr. No-good, Away with such a fellow from the + earth! Ay, said Mr. Malice, for I hate the very look of him. + Then said Mr. Love-lust, I could never endure him. Nor I, + said Mr. Live-loose; for he would be always condemning my + way. Hang him, hang him, said Mr. Heady. A sorry scrub, said + Mr. High-mind. My heart riseth against him, said Mr. Enmity. + He is a rogue, said Mr. Liar. Hanging is too good for him, + said Mr. Cruelty. Let us despatch him out of the way said + Mr. Hate-light. Then said Mr. Implacable, Might I have all + the world given me, I could not be reconciled to him; + therefore let us forthwith bring him in guilty of death." + --Pilgrim's Progress. + + +When immortal Bunyan makes his picture of the persecuting passions +bringing in their verdict of guilty, who pities Faithful? That is a +rare and blessed lot which some greatest men have not attained, to know +ourselves guiltless before a condemning crowd--to be sure that what we +are denounced for is solely the good in us. The pitiable lot is that +of the man who could not call himself a martyr even though he were to +persuade himself that the men who stoned him were but ugly passions +incarnate--who knows that he is stoned, not for professing the Right, +but for not being the man he professed to be. + +This was the consciousness that Bulstrode was withering under while he +made his preparations for departing from Middlemarch, and going to end +his stricken life in that sad refuge, the indifference of new faces. +The duteous merciful constancy of his wife had delivered him from one +dread, but it could not hinder her presence from being still a tribunal +before which he shrank from confession and desired advocacy. His +equivocations with himself about the death of Raffles had sustained the +conception of an Omniscience whom he prayed to, yet he had a terror +upon him which would not let him expose them to judgment by a full +confession to his wife: the acts which he had washed and diluted with +inward argument and motive, and for which it seemed comparatively easy +to win invisible pardon--what name would she call them by? That she +should ever silently call his acts Murder was what he could not bear. +He felt shrouded by her doubt: he got strength to face her from the +sense that she could not yet feel warranted in pronouncing that worst +condemnation on him. Some time, perhaps--when he was dying--he would +tell her all: in the deep shadow of that time, when she held his hand +in the gathering darkness, she might listen without recoiling from his +touch. Perhaps: but concealment had been the habit of his life, and +the impulse to confession had no power against the dread of a deeper +humiliation. + +He was full of timid care for his wife, not only because he deprecated +any harshness of judgment from her, but because he felt a deep distress +at the sight of her suffering. She had sent her daughters away to +board at a school on the coast, that this crisis might be hidden from +them as far as possible. Set free by their absence from the +intolerable necessity of accounting for her grief or of beholding their +frightened wonder, she could live unconstrainedly with the sorrow that +was every day streaking her hair with whiteness and making her eyelids +languid. + +"Tell me anything that you would like to have me do, Harriet," +Bulstrode had said to her; "I mean with regard to arrangements of +property. It is my intention not to sell the land I possess in this +neighborhood, but to leave it to you as a safe provision. If you have +any wish on such subjects, do not conceal it from me." + +A few days afterwards, when she had returned from a visit to her +brother's, she began to speak to her husband on a subject which had for +some time been in her mind. + +"I _should_ like to do something for my brother's family, Nicholas; and +I think we are bound to make some amends to Rosamond and her husband. +Walter says Mr. Lydgate must leave the town, and his practice is almost +good for nothing, and they have very little left to settle anywhere +with. I would rather do without something for ourselves, to make some +amends to my poor brother's family." + +Mrs. Bulstrode did not wish to go nearer to the facts than in the +phrase "make some amends;" knowing that her husband must understand +her. He had a particular reason, which she was not aware of, for +wincing under her suggestion. He hesitated before he said-- + +"It is not possible to carry out your wish in the way you propose, my +dear. Mr. Lydgate has virtually rejected any further service from me. +He has returned the thousand pounds which I lent him. Mrs. Casaubon +advanced him the sum for that purpose. Here is his letter." + +The letter seemed to cut Mrs. Bulstrode severely. The mention of Mrs. +Casaubon's loan seemed a reflection of that public feeling which held +it a matter of course that every one would avoid a connection with her +husband. She was silent for some time; and the tears fell one after +the other, her chin trembling as she wiped them away. Bulstrode, +sitting opposite to her, ached at the sight of that grief-worn face, +which two months before had been bright and blooming. It had aged to +keep sad company with his own withered features. Urged into some +effort at comforting her, he said-- + +"There is another means, Harriet, by which I might do a service to your +brother's family, if you like to act in it. And it would, I think, be +beneficial to you: it would be an advantageous way of managing the land +which I mean to be yours." + +She looked attentive. + +"Garth once thought of undertaking the management of Stone Court in +order to place your nephew Fred there. The stock was to remain as it +is, and they were to pay a certain share of the profits instead of an +ordinary rent. That would be a desirable beginning for the young man, +in conjunction with his employment under Garth. Would it be a +satisfaction to you?" + +"Yes, it would," said Mrs. Bulstrode, with some return of energy. +"Poor Walter is so cast down; I would try anything in my power to do +him some good before I go away. We have always been brother and +sister." + +"You must make the proposal to Garth yourself, Harriet," said Mr. +Bulstrode, not liking what he had to say, but desiring the end he had +in view, for other reasons besides the consolation of his wife. "You +must state to him that the land is virtually yours, and that he need +have no transactions with me. Communications can be made through +Standish. I mention this, because Garth gave up being my agent. I can +put into your hands a paper which he himself drew up, stating +conditions; and you can propose his renewed acceptance of them. I +think it is not unlikely that he will accept when you propose the thing +for the sake of your nephew." + + + +CHAPTER LXXXVI. + + "Le coeur se sature d'amour comme d'un sel divin qui le + conserve; de la l'incorruptible adherence de ceux qui se + sont aimes des l'aube de la vie, et la fraicheur des vielles + amours prolonges. Il existe un embaumement d'amour. C'est de + Daphnis et Chloe que sont faits Philemon et Baucis. Cette + vieillesse la, ressemblance du soir avec l'aurore." + --VICTOR HUGO: L'homme qui rit. + + +Mrs. Garth, hearing Caleb enter the passage about tea-time, opened the +parlor-door and said, "There you are, Caleb. Have you had your +dinner?" (Mr. Garth's meals were much subordinated to "business.") + +"Oh yes, a good dinner--cold mutton and I don't know what. Where is +Mary?" + +"In the garden with Letty, I think." + +"Fred is not come yet?" + +"No. Are you going out again without taking tea, Caleb?" said Mrs. +Garth, seeing that her absent-minded husband was putting on again the +hat which he had just taken off. + +"No, no; I'm only going to Mary a minute." + +Mary was in a grassy corner of the garden, where there was a swing +loftily hung between two pear-trees. She had a pink kerchief tied over +her head, making a little poke to shade her eyes from the level +sunbeams, while she was giving a glorious swing to Letty, who laughed +and screamed wildly. + +Seeing her father, Mary left the swing and went to meet him, pushing +back the pink kerchief and smiling afar off at him with the involuntary +smile of loving pleasure. + +"I came to look for you, Mary," said Mr. Garth. "Let us walk about a +bit." + +Mary knew quite well that her father had something particular to say: +his eyebrows made their pathetic angle, and there was a tender gravity +in his voice: these things had been signs to her when she was Letty's +age. She put her arm within his, and they turned by the row of +nut-trees. + +"It will be a sad while before you can be married, Mary," said her +father, not looking at her, but at the end of the stick which he held +in his other hand. + +"Not a sad while, father--I mean to be merry," said Mary, laughingly. +"I have been single and merry for four-and-twenty years and more: I +suppose it will not be quite as long again as that." Then, after a +little pause, she said, more gravely, bending her face before her +father's, "If you are contented with Fred?" + +Caleb screwed up his mouth and turned his head aside wisely. + +"Now, father, you did praise him last Wednesday. You said he had an +uncommon notion of stock, and a good eye for things." + +"Did I?" said Caleb, rather slyly. + +"Yes, I put it all down, and the date, anno Domini, and everything," +said Mary. "You like things to be neatly booked. And then his +behavior to you, father, is really good; he has a deep respect for you; +and it is impossible to have a better temper than Fred has." + +"Ay, ay; you want to coax me into thinking him a fine match." + +"No, indeed, father. I don't love him because he is a fine match." + +"What for, then?" + +"Oh, dear, because I have always loved him. I should never like +scolding any one else so well; and that is a point to be thought of in +a husband." + +"Your mind is quite settled, then, Mary?" said Caleb, returning to his +first tone. "There's no other wish come into it since things have been +going on as they have been of late?" (Caleb meant a great deal in that +vague phrase;) "because, better late than never. A woman must not +force her heart--she'll do a man no good by that." + +"My feelings have not changed, father," said Mary, calmly. "I shall be +constant to Fred as long as he is constant to me. I don't think either +of us could spare the other, or like any one else better, however much +we might admire them. It would make too great a difference to us--like +seeing all the old places altered, and changing the name for +everything. We must wait for each other a long while; but Fred knows +that." + +Instead of speaking immediately, Caleb stood still and screwed his +stick on the grassy walk. Then he said, with emotion in his voice, +"Well, I've got a bit of news. What do you think of Fred going to live +at Stone Court, and managing the land there?" + +"How can that ever be, father?" said Mary, wonderingly. + +"He would manage it for his aunt Bulstrode. The poor woman has been to +me begging and praying. She wants to do the lad good, and it might be +a fine thing for him. With saving, he might gradually buy the stock, +and he has a turn for farming." + +"Oh, Fred would be so happy! It is too good to believe." + +"Ah, but mind you," said Caleb, turning his head warningly, "I must +take it on _my_ shoulders, and be responsible, and see after +everything; and that will grieve your mother a bit, though she mayn't +say so. Fred had need be careful." + +"Perhaps it is too much, father," said Mary, checked in her joy. +"There would be no happiness in bringing you any fresh trouble." + +"Nay, nay; work is my delight, child, when it doesn't vex your mother. +And then, if you and Fred get married," here Caleb's voice shook just +perceptibly, "he'll be steady and saving; and you've got your mother's +cleverness, and mine too, in a woman's sort of way; and you'll keep him +in order. He'll be coming by-and-by, so I wanted to tell you first, +because I think you'd like to tell _him_ by yourselves. After that, I +could talk it well over with him, and we could go into business and the +nature of things." + +"Oh, you dear good father!" cried Mary, putting her hands round her +father's neck, while he bent his head placidly, willing to be caressed. +"I wonder if any other girl thinks her father the best man in the +world!" + +"Nonsense, child; you'll think your husband better." + +"Impossible," said Mary, relapsing into her usual tone; "husbands are +an inferior class of men, who require keeping in order." + +When they were entering the house with Letty, who had run to join them, +Mary saw Fred at the orchard-gate, and went to meet him. + +"What fine clothes you wear, you extravagant youth!" said Mary, as Fred +stood still and raised his hat to her with playful formality. "You are +not learning economy." + +"Now that is too bad, Mary," said Fred. "Just look at the edges of +these coat-cuffs! It is only by dint of good brushing that I look +respectable. I am saving up three suits--one for a wedding-suit." + +"How very droll you will look!--like a gentleman in an old +fashion-book." + +"Oh no, they will keep two years." + +"Two years! be reasonable, Fred," said Mary, turning to walk. "Don't +encourage flattering expectations." + +"Why not? One lives on them better than on unflattering ones. If we +can't be married in two years, the truth will be quite bad enough when +it comes." + +"I have heard a story of a young gentleman who once encouraged +flattering expectations, and they did him harm." + +"Mary, if you've got something discouraging to tell me, I shall bolt; I +shall go into the house to Mr. Garth. I am out of spirits. My father +is so cut up--home is not like itself. I can't bear any more bad news." + +"Should you call it bad news to be told that you were to live at Stone +Court, and manage the farm, and be remarkably prudent, and save money +every year till all the stock and furniture were your own, and you were +a distinguished agricultural character, as Mr. Borthrop Trumbull +says--rather stout, I fear, and with the Greek and Latin sadly +weather-worn?" + +"You don't mean anything except nonsense, Mary?" said Fred, coloring +slightly nevertheless. + +"That is what my father has just told me of as what may happen, and he +never talks nonsense," said Mary, looking up at Fred now, while he +grasped her hand as they walked, till it rather hurt her; but she would +not complain. + +"Oh, I could be a tremendously good fellow then, Mary, and we could be +married directly." + +"Not so fast, sir; how do you know that I would not rather defer our +marriage for some years? That would leave you time to misbehave, and +then if I liked some one else better, I should have an excuse for +jilting you." + +"Pray don't joke, Mary," said Fred, with strong feeling. "Tell me +seriously that all this is true, and that you are happy because of +it--because you love me best." + +"It is all true, Fred, and I am happy because of it--because I love you +best," said Mary, in a tone of obedient recitation. + +They lingered on the door-step under the steep-roofed porch, and Fred +almost in a whisper said-- + +"When we were first engaged, with the umbrella-ring, Mary, you used +to--" + +The spirit of joy began to laugh more decidedly in Mary's eyes, but the +fatal Ben came running to the door with Brownie yapping behind him, +and, bouncing against them, said-- + +"Fred and Mary! are you ever coming in?--or may I eat your cake?" + + +FINALE. + + +Every limit is a beginning as well as an ending. Who can quit young +lives after being long in company with them, and not desire to know +what befell them in their after-years? For the fragment of a life, +however typical, is not the sample of an even web: promises may not be +kept, and an ardent outset may be followed by declension; latent powers +may find their long-waited opportunity; a past error may urge a grand +retrieval. + +Marriage, which has been the bourne of so many narratives, is still a +great beginning, as it was to Adam and Eve, who kept their honeymoon in +Eden, but had their first little one among the thorns and thistles of +the wilderness. It is still the beginning of the home epic--the +gradual conquest or irremediable loss of that complete union which +makes the advancing years a climax, and age the harvest of sweet +memories in common. + +Some set out, like Crusaders of old, with a glorious equipment of hope +and enthusiasm and get broken by the way, wanting patience with each +other and the world. + +All who have cared for Fred Vincy and Mary Garth will like to know that +these two made no such failure, but achieved a solid mutual happiness. +Fred surprised his neighbors in various ways. He became rather +distinguished in his side of the county as a theoretic and practical +farmer, and produced a work on the "Cultivation of Green Crops and the +Economy of Cattle-Feeding" which won him high congratulations at +agricultural meetings. In Middlemarch admiration was more reserved: +most persons there were inclined to believe that the merit of Fred's +authorship was due to his wife, since they had never expected Fred +Vincy to write on turnips and mangel-wurzel. + +But when Mary wrote a little book for her boys, called "Stories of +Great Men, taken from Plutarch," and had it printed and published by +Gripp & Co., Middlemarch, every one in the town was willing to give the +credit of this work to Fred, observing that he had been to the +University, "where the ancients were studied," and might have been a +clergyman if he had chosen. + +In this way it was made clear that Middlemarch had never been deceived, +and that there was no need to praise anybody for writing a book, since +it was always done by somebody else. + +Moreover, Fred remained unswervingly steady. Some years after his +marriage he told Mary that his happiness was half owing to Farebrother, +who gave him a strong pull-up at the right moment. I cannot say that +he was never again misled by his hopefulness: the yield of crops or the +profits of a cattle sale usually fell below his estimate; and he was +always prone to believe that he could make money by the purchase of a +horse which turned out badly--though this, Mary observed, was of +course the fault of the horse, not of Fred's judgment. He kept his +love of horsemanship, but he rarely allowed himself a day's hunting; +and when he did so, it was remarkable that he submitted to be laughed +at for cowardliness at the fences, seeming to see Mary and the boys +sitting on the five-barred gate, or showing their curly heads between +hedge and ditch. + +There were three boys: Mary was not discontented that she brought forth +men-children only; and when Fred wished to have a girl like her, she +said, laughingly, "that would be too great a trial to your mother." +Mrs. Vincy in her declining years, and in the diminished lustre of her +housekeeping, was much comforted by her perception that two at least of +Fred's boys were real Vincys, and did not "feature the Garths." But +Mary secretly rejoiced that the youngest of the three was very much +what her father must have been when he wore a round jacket, and showed +a marvellous nicety of aim in playing at marbles, or in throwing stones +to bring down the mellow pears. + +Ben and Letty Garth, who were uncle and aunt before they were well in +their teens, disputed much as to whether nephews or nieces were more +desirable; Ben contending that it was clear girls were good for less +than boys, else they would not be always in petticoats, which showed +how little they were meant for; whereupon Letty, who argued much from +books, got angry in replying that God made coats of skins for both Adam +and Eve alike--also it occurred to her that in the East the men too +wore petticoats. But this latter argument, obscuring the majesty of +the former, was one too many, for Ben answered contemptuously, "The +more spooneys they!" and immediately appealed to his mother whether +boys were not better than girls. Mrs. Garth pronounced that both were +alike naughty, but that boys were undoubtedly stronger, could run +faster, and throw with more precision to a greater distance. With this +oracular sentence Ben was well satisfied, not minding the naughtiness; +but Letty took it ill, her feeling of superiority being stronger than +her muscles. + +Fred never became rich--his hopefulness had not led him to expect that; +but he gradually saved enough to become owner of the stock and +furniture at Stone Court, and the work which Mr. Garth put into his +hands carried him in plenty through those "bad times" which are always +present with farmers. Mary, in her matronly days, became as solid in +figure as her mother; but, unlike her, gave the boys little formal +teaching, so that Mrs. Garth was alarmed lest they should never be well +grounded in grammar and geography. Nevertheless, they were found quite +forward enough when they went to school; perhaps, because they had +liked nothing so well as being with their mother. When Fred was riding +home on winter evenings he had a pleasant vision beforehand of the +bright hearth in the wainscoted parlor, and was sorry for other men who +could not have Mary for their wife; especially for Mr. Farebrother. +"He was ten times worthier of you than I was," Fred could now say to +her, magnanimously. "To be sure he was," Mary answered; "and for that +reason he could do better without me. But you--I shudder to think what +you would have been--a curate in debt for horse-hire and cambric +pocket-handkerchiefs!" + +On inquiry it might possibly be found that Fred and Mary still inhabit +Stone Court--that the creeping plants still cast the foam of their +blossoms over the fine stone-wall into the field where the walnut-trees +stand in stately row--and that on sunny days the two lovers who were +first engaged with the umbrella-ring may be seen in white-haired +placidity at the open window from which Mary Garth, in the days of old +Peter Featherstone, had often been ordered to look out for Mr. Lydgate. + +Lydgate's hair never became white. He died when he was only fifty, +leaving his wife and children provided for by a heavy insurance on his +life. He had gained an excellent practice, alternating, according to +the season, between London and a Continental bathing-place; having +written a treatise on Gout, a disease which has a good deal of wealth +on its side. His skill was relied on by many paying patients, but he +always regarded himself as a failure: he had not done what he once +meant to do. His acquaintances thought him enviable to have so +charming a wife, and nothing happened to shake their opinion. Rosamond +never committed a second compromising indiscretion. She simply +continued to be mild in her temper, inflexible in her judgment, +disposed to admonish her husband, and able to frustrate him by +stratagem. As the years went on he opposed her less and less, whence +Rosamond concluded that he had learned the value of her opinion; on the +other hand, she had a more thorough conviction of his talents now that +he gained a good income, and instead of the threatened cage in Bride +Street provided one all flowers and gilding, fit for the bird of +paradise that she resembled. In brief, Lydgate was what is called a +successful man. But he died prematurely of diphtheria, and Rosamond +afterwards married an elderly and wealthy physician, who took kindly to +her four children. She made a very pretty show with her daughters, +driving out in her carriage, and often spoke of her happiness as "a +reward"--she did not say for what, but probably she meant that it was a +reward for her patience with Tertius, whose temper never became +faultless, and to the last occasionally let slip a bitter speech which +was more memorable than the signs he made of his repentance. He once +called her his basil plant; and when she asked for an explanation, said +that basil was a plant which had flourished wonderfully on a murdered +man's brains. Rosamond had a placid but strong answer to such +speeches. Why then had he chosen her? It was a pity he had not had +Mrs. Ladislaw, whom he was always praising and placing above her. And +thus the conversation ended with the advantage on Rosamond's side. But +it would be unjust not to tell, that she never uttered a word in +depreciation of Dorothea, keeping in religious remembrance the +generosity which had come to her aid in the sharpest crisis of her life. + +Dorothea herself had no dreams of being praised above other women, +feeling that there was always something better which she might have +done, if she had only been better and known better. Still, she never +repented that she had given up position and fortune to marry Will +Ladislaw, and he would have held it the greatest shame as well as +sorrow to him if she had repented. They were bound to each other by a +love stronger than any impulses which could have marred it. No life +would have been possible to Dorothea which was not filled with emotion, +and she had now a life filled also with a beneficent activity which she +had not the doubtful pains of discovering and marking out for herself. +Will became an ardent public man, working well in those times when +reforms were begun with a young hopefulness of immediate good which has +been much checked in our days, and getting at last returned to +Parliament by a constituency who paid his expenses. Dorothea could +have liked nothing better, since wrongs existed, than that her husband +should be in the thick of a struggle against them, and that she should +give him wifely help. Many who knew her, thought it a pity that so +substantive and rare a creature should have been absorbed into the life +of another, and be only known in a certain circle as a wife and mother. +But no one stated exactly what else that was in her power she ought +rather to have done--not even Sir James Chettam, who went no further +than the negative prescription that she ought not to have married Will +Ladislaw. + +But this opinion of his did not cause a lasting alienation; and the way +in which the family was made whole again was characteristic of all +concerned. Mr. Brooke could not resist the pleasure of corresponding +with Will and Dorothea; and one morning when his pen had been +remarkably fluent on the prospects of Municipal Reform, it ran off into +an invitation to the Grange, which, once written, could not be done +away with at less cost than the sacrifice (hardly to be conceived) of +the whole valuable letter. During the months of this correspondence +Mr. Brooke had continually, in his talk with Sir James Chettam, been +presupposing or hinting that the intention of cutting off the entail +was still maintained; and the day on which his pen gave the daring +invitation, he went to Freshitt expressly to intimate that he had a +stronger sense than ever of the reasons for taking that energetic step +as a precaution against any mixture of low blood in the heir of the +Brookes. + +But that morning something exciting had happened at the Hall. A letter +had come to Celia which made her cry silently as she read it; and when +Sir James, unused to see her in tears, asked anxiously what was the +matter, she burst out in a wail such as he had never heard from her +before. + +"Dorothea has a little boy. And you will not let me go and see her. +And I am sure she wants to see me. And she will not know what to do +with the baby--she will do wrong things with it. And they thought she +would die. It is very dreadful! Suppose it had been me and little +Arthur, and Dodo had been hindered from coming to see me! I wish you +would be less unkind, James!" + +"Good heavens, Celia!" said Sir James, much wrought upon, "what do you +wish? I will do anything you like. I will take you to town to-morrow +if you wish it." And Celia did wish it. + +It was after this that Mr. Brooke came, and meeting the Baronet in the +grounds, began to chat with him in ignorance of the news, which Sir +James for some reason did not care to tell him immediately. But when +the entail was touched on in the usual way, he said, "My dear sir, it +is not for me to dictate to you, but for my part I would let that +alone. I would let things remain as they are." + +Mr. Brooke felt so much surprised that he did not at once find out how +much he was relieved by the sense that he was not expected to do +anything in particular. + +Such being the bent of Celia's heart, it was inevitable that Sir James +should consent to a reconciliation with Dorothea and her husband. +Where women love each other, men learn to smother their mutual dislike. +Sir James never liked Ladislaw, and Will always preferred to have Sir +James's company mixed with another kind: they were on a footing of +reciprocal tolerance which was made quite easy only when Dorothea and +Celia were present. + +It became an understood thing that Mr. and Mrs. Ladislaw should pay at +least two visits during the year to the Grange, and there came +gradually a small row of cousins at Freshitt who enjoyed playing with +the two cousins visiting Tipton as much as if the blood of these +cousins had been less dubiously mixed. + +Mr. Brooke lived to a good old age, and his estate was inherited by +Dorothea's son, who might have represented Middlemarch, but declined, +thinking that his opinions had less chance of being stifled if he +remained out of doors. + +Sir James never ceased to regard Dorothea's second marriage as a +mistake; and indeed this remained the tradition concerning it in +Middlemarch, where she was spoken of to a younger generation as a fine +girl who married a sickly clergyman, old enough to be her father, and +in little more than a year after his death gave up her estate to marry +his cousin--young enough to have been his son, with no property, and +not well-born. Those who had not seen anything of Dorothea usually +observed that she could not have been "a nice woman," else she would +not have married either the one or the other. + +Certainly those determining acts of her life were not ideally +beautiful. They were the mixed result of young and noble impulse +struggling amidst the conditions of an imperfect social state, in which +great feelings will often take the aspect of error, and great faith the +aspect of illusion. For there is no creature whose inward being is so +strong that it is not greatly determined by what lies outside it. A +new Theresa will hardly have the opportunity of reforming a conventual +life, any more than a new Antigone will spend her heroic piety in +daring all for the sake of a brother's burial: the medium in which +their ardent deeds took shape is forever gone. But we insignificant +people with our daily words and acts are preparing the lives of many +Dorotheas, some of which may present a far sadder sacrifice than that +of the Dorothea whose story we know. + +Her finely touched spirit had still its fine issues, though they were +not widely visible. Her full nature, like that river of which Cyrus +broke the strength, spent itself in channels which had no great name on +the earth. But the effect of her being on those around her was +incalculably diffusive: for the growing good of the world is partly +dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you +and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived +faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs. From 1b015468c215b84191c3ae5ce26603b0f1fdf20e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Milan Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2023 16:27:54 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 20/63] updated files needed --- ...etrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb | 670 ++++++++++++++++++ .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 9 +- 2 files changed, 673 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) create mode 100644 algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb diff --git a/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8d28eb --- /dev/null +++ b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,670 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Checking and retrieving character indexes from quotations\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "What you will need to run this notebook:\n", + "\n", + "+ The Project Gutenberg fulltext of your source text (text A). In this case, the Project Gutenberg version of *Middlemarch*: `middlemarch.txt`. This should already be in the Github repository.\n", + "+ The JSON file with the output of `text-matcher`. In this case, this is `jstor-middlemarch-articles.json`. You can download it from here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1N1IXEy5CGEKplru0R6KNzj5kDLwxMVDC?usp=share_link\n", + "\n", + "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly. You should move the JSON file into this directory, and remember to delete it and empty your Trash when you finish working on this task.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", + "\n", + "A match in text matcher takes the form of a pair, or a list of pairs, of character indexes. These character indexes store the position of a match and can be used to retrieve the corresponding text.\n", + "\n", + "Let's say you were looking at an output : [[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]. \n", + "\n", + "In each pair, the first number corresponds to the **starting character index**, and the second number corresponds to the **ending character index** of a quotation. \n", + "\n", + "So in this example, for match [173657, 173756].\n", + "+ the **starting charcter** is 173657\n", + "+ the **ending character** is 173756" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Import libraries\n", + "Run the cell below to import libraries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 1, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Load in our data files:" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load Middlemarch .txt file \n", + "# (Note: must have 'middlemarch.txt' in this directory)\n", + "with open('middlemarch.txt') as f: \n", + " rawMM = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Middlemarch')\n", + "\n", + "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", + "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", + "df = pd.read_json('default.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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creatordatePublisheddocSubTypedocTypefullTextididentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguage...titleurlvolumeNumberwordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in BabstractkeyphrasesubTitle
0[Rainer Emig]2006-01-01book-reviewarticle[Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l...http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name...Amerikastudien / American Studies3[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/411582445111090[][]NaNNaNNaN
1[Martin Green]1970-01-01book-reviewarticle[Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated...http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name...The Modern Language Review1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/37228196513420[][]NaNNaNNaN
2[Richard Exner]1982-01-01book-reviewarticle[Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne...http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name...World Literature Today1[eng]...Review Articlehttp://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021564930[][]NaNNaNNaN
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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " creator datePublished docSubType docType \\\n", + "0 [Rainer Emig] 2006-01-01 book-review article \n", + "1 [Martin Green] 1970-01-01 book-review article \n", + "2 [Richard Exner] 1982-01-01 book-review article \n", + "\n", + " fullText \\\n", + "0 [Monika Mueller, George Eliot U.S.: Transat- l... \n", + "1 [Reviews I57 Thackeray's Critics: An Annotated... \n", + "2 [Essays Mary McCarthy. Ideas and the Novel. Ne... \n", + "\n", + " id \\\n", + "0 http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 \n", + "1 http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 \n", + "2 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "0 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '03402827'}, {'name... \n", + "1 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00267937'}, {'name... \n", + "2 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01963570'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber language ... \\\n", + "0 Amerikastudien / American Studies 3 [eng] ... \n", + "1 The Modern Language Review 1 [eng] ... \n", + "2 World Literature Today 1 [eng] ... \n", + "\n", + " title url volumeNumber \\\n", + "0 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158244 51 \n", + "1 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/3722819 65 \n", + "2 Review Article http://www.jstor.org/stable/40137021 56 \n", + "\n", + " wordCount numMatches Locations in A Locations in B abstract keyphrase \\\n", + "0 1109 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "1 1342 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "2 493 0 [] [] NaN NaN \n", + "\n", + " subTitle \n", + "0 NaN \n", + "1 NaN \n", + "2 NaN \n", + "\n", + "[3 rows x 30 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Let's peek inside our DataFrame\n", + "df.head(3)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Check quotation matches for particular articles\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Set the `article_id` ‼️\n", + "\n", + "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to exampine.\n", + "\n", + "**Where can I find the article id?**\n", + "\n", + "+ This can be found in the `id` column of URL of a given article.\n", + "+ For *Middlemarch*, please use the following article IDs: \n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/41059781,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928567,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/462077,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827730,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933477,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873079,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932968,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827900,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2001.56.2.160,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/437748,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919123,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2872038,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044620,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/591341,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/4334358,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933096,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23539270,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3751142,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3825796,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3826242,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932697,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40754482,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2012.66.4.494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3828324,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23099626,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42965156,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt155j8bf.9,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044863,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873139,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044571,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533514,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/43028240,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40549795,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25733489,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/1345484,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708593,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708062,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044589,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827827,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25459494,\n", + "http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "*Note: JSTOR outputs the fulltext of articles text as a list of strings, so we have to concatenate them using text-matcher;s `Text()` function.*\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 6, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Title: Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's \"The Lifted Veil\"\n", + "\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "\n", + "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", + "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", + "article_text = df['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + "article_title = df['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + "\n", + "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "\n", + "# Print out the title and ID of the article we selected as confirmation\n", + "print(f\"\"\"\n", + "Article selected:\n", + "ID: {article_id}\n", + "Title: {article_title}\n", + "\"\"\")\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Part 1: Get quotes (& their character indexes) from `text-matcher` output\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the index positions of matches in our source text (Text \"A\")?\n", + "Retrieve the character indexes in for the source text (Text A):" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in A?\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in A'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches?\n", + "\n", + "Let's check the corresponding text in Middlemarch for one of the matches output above. \n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Middlemarch character indexes: [173657, 173756]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'all of\\nus, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act\\nfatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "mm_start = 173657 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "mm_end = 173756 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"A\" for the start and end characters selected above\n", + "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\", f\"[{mm_start}, {mm_end}]\")\n", + "mm.text[mm_start:mm_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What are the indexes positions of matches in our target text (Text \"B\")?\n", + "Retrieve the indexes in the B text (that is, the article index: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What are the locations in B?\n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\")\n", + "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in B'].item()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### What's the text of one of those matches in Text \"B\" (the article)?\n", + "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019: [14718, 14816]\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "\n", + "textB_start = 14718 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the starting character indexes\n", + "textB_end = 14816 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "\n", + "# Output the text in \"B\" for the start and end characters selected above \n", + "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\", f\"[{textB_start}, {textB_end}]\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[textB_start:textB_end]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "---" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", + "\n", + "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", + "\n", + "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 1: Locate the quotation in the PDF of the article." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", + "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", + "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the article text." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "print(cleaned_article_text.text)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 3: Copy that text of the quotation as it appears exactly in the article text above." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 4: Paste the text of the quotation in the `quotation` field below\n", + "Make sure that you enclose the quotation in quotation marks.\n", + "\n", + "If there are are quotation marks in the text of the quote, either place an escape character `\\` in front of them, or change the quotation marks that you use. (Eg, if there are single quotes (`'`) in the text, use double quotes (`\"`) to surround the text.\n", + "\n", + "Run the cell below." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", + "Starting index: 14718\n", + "Ending index: 14816\n", + "Character indexes for match: [14718, 14816]\n", + "\n", + " Corresponding text:\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", + "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", + "quotation = \"All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength\" #pas\n", + "\n", + "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", + "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", + "print('Starting index:', index) \n", + "print('Ending index:', index + len(quotation))\n", + "print(f'Character indexes for match: [{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", + "print(\"\\n Corresponding text:\")\n", + "cleaned_article_text.text[index:index + len(quotation)]\n", + "\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Step 5: Record the character indexes and article id in spreadsheet\n", + "Add the character indexes and article ID as a new row in a spreadsheet" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.5" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 1 +} diff --git a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index bd9e3dd..e8d28eb 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -9,13 +9,10 @@ "\n", "What you will need to run this notebook:\n", "\n", - "+ The Project Gutenberg fulltext of your source text (text A). In this case, the Project Gutenberg version of *Middlemarch*: `middlemarch.txt`\n", - "+ The JSON file with the output of `text-matcher`. In this case, this is `default.json`\n", + "+ The Project Gutenberg fulltext of your source text (text A). In this case, the Project Gutenberg version of *Middlemarch*: `middlemarch.txt`. This should already be in the Github repository.\n", + "+ The JSON file with the output of `text-matcher`. In this case, this is `jstor-middlemarch-articles.json`. You can download it from here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1N1IXEy5CGEKplru0R6KNzj5kDLwxMVDC?usp=share_link\n", "\n", - "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly.\n", - "\n", - "\n", - "In addition, you will need a list of the JSTOR article ids for the sample texts in the corpus.\n", + "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly. You should move the JSON file into this directory, and remember to delete it and empty your Trash when you finish working on this task.\n", "\n", "\n", "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", From d50236332620c805b88b0e54640c86093bc35c0f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Milan Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2023 16:41:53 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 21/63] update ID source in spreadsheet --- ...etrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb | 68 ++++--------------- .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 68 ++++--------------- 2 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 112 deletions(-) diff --git a/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb index e8d28eb..4890857 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb @@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ "\n", "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly. You should move the JSON file into this directory, and remember to delete it and empty your Trash when you finish working on this task.\n", "\n", + "In addition, you should open [the `middlemarch-ground-truth-indexes` Google Sheet](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I1xEVKGQIf9eGvfLs_l0rCRmSz5GYVmHmRbWzUBWIRc/edit?usp=share_link)\n", + "\n", "\n", "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", "\n", @@ -61,7 +63,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -74,12 +76,12 @@ "\n", "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", - "df = pd.read_json('default.json')" + "df = pd.read_json('jstor-middlemarch-articles.json')" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -248,7 +250,7 @@ "[3 rows x 30 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -271,64 +273,18 @@ "source": [ "## Set the `article_id` ‼️\n", "\n", - "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to exampine.\n", + "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to examine.\n", "\n", "**Where can I find the article id?**\n", "\n", - "+ This can be found in the `id` column of URL of a given article.\n", - "+ For *Middlemarch*, please use the following article IDs: \n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/41059781,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928567,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/462077,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827730,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933477,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873079,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932968,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827900,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2001.56.2.160,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/437748,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919123,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2872038,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044620,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/591341,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/4334358,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933096,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23539270,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3751142,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3825796,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3826242,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932697,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40754482,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2012.66.4.494,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3828324,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23099626,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42965156,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt155j8bf.9,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044863,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873139,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044571,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533514,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/43028240,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40549795,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25733489,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/1345484,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708593,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708062,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044589,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827827,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25459494,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034\n", - "\n", + "+ This can be found in the `id` column of the [Google Sheet](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I1xEVKGQIf9eGvfLs_l0rCRmSz5GYVmHmRbWzUBWIRc/edit?usp=share_link)\n", "\n", "*Note: JSTOR outputs the fulltext of articles text as a list of strings, so we have to concatenate them using text-matcher;s `Text()` function.*\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -337,15 +293,15 @@ "text": [ "\n", "Article selected:\n", - "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", - "Title: Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's \"The Lifted Veil\"\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", + "Title: Self-Suppression & Attachment: Mid-Victorian Emotional Life\n", "\n" ] } ], "source": [ "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/xxxxxxxxx' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", "\n", "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", diff --git a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index e8d28eb..4890857 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ "\n", "Both of these files must be in the same directory as this notebook for the filepaths below to run correctly. You should move the JSON file into this directory, and remember to delete it and empty your Trash when you finish working on this task.\n", "\n", + "In addition, you should open [the `middlemarch-ground-truth-indexes` Google Sheet](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I1xEVKGQIf9eGvfLs_l0rCRmSz5GYVmHmRbWzUBWIRc/edit?usp=share_link)\n", + "\n", "\n", "### A preliminary note about character indexes:\n", "\n", @@ -61,7 +63,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -74,12 +76,12 @@ "\n", "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", - "df = pd.read_json('default.json')" + "df = pd.read_json('jstor-middlemarch-articles.json')" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -248,7 +250,7 @@ "[3 rows x 30 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -271,64 +273,18 @@ "source": [ "## Set the `article_id` ‼️\n", "\n", - "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to exampine.\n", + "In the cell below, change the variable `article_id` to the id of the article you wish to examine.\n", "\n", "**Where can I find the article id?**\n", "\n", - "+ This can be found in the `id` column of URL of a given article.\n", - "+ For *Middlemarch*, please use the following article IDs: \n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/41059781,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2928567,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/462077,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827730,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933477,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873079,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932968,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827900,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2001.56.2.160,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/437748,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27919123,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2872038,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044620,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/591341,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/4334358,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2933096,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23539270,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3751142,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3825796,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3826242,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2932697,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40754482,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/ncl.2012.66.4.494,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3828324,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/23099626,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42965156,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt155j8bf.9,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044863,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/2873139,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044571,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/29533514,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/43028240,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40549795,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25733489,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/1345484,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708593,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/27708062,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/3044589,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827827,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/25459494,\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034\n", - "\n", + "+ This can be found in the `id` column of the [Google Sheet](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I1xEVKGQIf9eGvfLs_l0rCRmSz5GYVmHmRbWzUBWIRc/edit?usp=share_link)\n", "\n", "*Note: JSTOR outputs the fulltext of articles text as a list of strings, so we have to concatenate them using text-matcher;s `Text()` function.*\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -337,15 +293,15 @@ "text": [ "\n", "Article selected:\n", - "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", - "Title: Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's \"The Lifted Veil\"\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", + "Title: Self-Suppression & Attachment: Mid-Victorian Emotional Life\n", "\n" ] } ], "source": [ "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/xxxxxxxxx' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", "\n", "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", From 4ef2e0849e666a9c25b9a42d195cfe61f4275f3c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Milan Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2023 16:57:36 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 22/63] updated ID workflow --- ...etrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb | 242 ++++-------------- .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 242 ++++-------------- 2 files changed, 94 insertions(+), 390 deletions(-) diff --git a/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb index 4890857..9097fe6 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/.ipynb_checkpoints/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes-checkpoint.ipynb @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 1, + "execution_count": 12, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, + "execution_count": 13, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 14, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ "[3 rows x 30 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 14, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 17, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ ], "source": [ "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/xxxxxxxxx' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", "\n", "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", @@ -323,210 +323,60 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "## Part 1: Get quotes (& their character indexes) from `text-matcher` output\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### What are the index positions of matches in our source text (Text \"A\")?\n", - "Retrieve the character indexes in for the source text (Text A):" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, - "metadata": { - "scrolled": true - }, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Middlemarch character indexes:\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 7, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "# What are the locations in A?\n", - "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\")\n", - "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in A'].item()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### What's the text of one of those matches?\n", - "\n", - "Let's check the corresponding text in Middlemarch for one of the matches output above. \n", - "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above. " - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 8, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Middlemarch character indexes: [173657, 173756]\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "'all of\\nus, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act\\nfatally on the strength'" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 8, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", "\n", - "mm_start = 173657 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the starting character indexes\n", - "mm_end = 173756 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", "\n", - "# Output the text in \"A\" for the start and end characters selected above\n", - "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\", f\"[{mm_start}, {mm_end}]\")\n", - "mm.text[mm_start:mm_end]" + "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### What are the indexes positions of matches in our target text (Text \"B\")?\n", - "Retrieve the indexes in the B text (that is, the article index: " - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 9, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019:\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "[[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]]" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 9, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "# What are the locations in B?\n", - "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\")\n", - "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in B'].item()" + "### Step 1: Select the quotation in the ground truth spreadsheet\n", + "\n", + "Work through the quotations in your selected article one by one." ] }, { "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### What's the text of one of those matches in Text \"B\" (the article)?\n", - "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above." + "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", + "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", + "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the \"Quotation from PDF\" column on the spreadsheet.\n", + "\n", + "Look at the text below and see whether the \"Quotation from PDF\" text is actually a quotation from *Middlemarch*. Often it will include too much or too little, sometimes it won't be the quotation at all." ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 10, + "execution_count": 28, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019: [14718, 14816]\n" + "SELF-SUPPRESSION & ATTACHMENT MID-VICTORIAN EMOTIONAL LIFE Judith M. Hughes T tow can an historian hope to recreate the emotional life of the - - past, to discern the major features of an inner landscape that has disappeared from view? More specifically, how can I recall to life the psychic rhythms of the mid-Victorians? Where should I expect to hear the voices of the dead reverberate with sufficient clarity so that I could begin to interpret the sounds? Cultural artifacts, in particular the novel, provide a starting point. I can begin by trying to pinpoint prominent emotional configurations in a number of novels. Such artistic constructions condense inner experiences and render them immediate, thereby promising access to those deeper layers of the mind which have long since been buried. It is, of course, a promise that cannot be entirely fulfilled. Neverthe less, it would be a timid scholar indeed who would hesitate to exploit 541 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review a rich store of material simply because it offered insights rather than conclusive proof. Insights of what sort? Certain psychological dilemmas are in theory universal, and these are supposed to be the stuff of great literature. What is of interest, then, are the particular strategies adopted for coping with such dilemmas, the abortive or successful attempts to ward off despair and to buttress self-esteem. And in reflecting on fictional characters, I have, above all, been struck by the recurrent variations on themes regarded as universal. The mention of fictional characters is an indication of how I intend to approach the novels. Among literary critics with a psychoanalytic turn of mind, it is no longer fashionable to concentrate on the characters themselves. Rather, the emphasis has fallen on either the author or the reader. What the literary work can tell one about the mind of its crea tor or how it evokes emotional responses from the audience?these have become the major concerns.1 Clearly either focus would be inappro priate for me to adopt: I am not engaged in a study of novelists; as for the audience, I have access to the inner experiences of only one of its members, my own, and they are not relevant. Despite this disclaimer of interest in writers and readers, it is nonetheless incumbent upon me to choose works which may be considered representative, works which combined contemporary appeal with enduring artistic merit. As Freud early recognized, the authors of such works are usually good psychol ogists. Yet one must remember that fictional characters are not real people. One cannot produce case histories from novels; one can, how ever, delineate the emotional drama of the individual protagonists. If space and human frailty demand a radical selection, if three novels constitute a manageable sample, the identity of two of the authors can not long be in doubt?George Eliot and Anthony Trollope. No one can dispute their stature or their contemporary popularity, and as por traitists of mid-Victorian Britain they are the novelists most frequently cited. My third choice, Samuel Butler, may seem more eccentric. Yet the very fact of his critical stance compelled his inclusion, to provide a foil or a check against a too ready sympathy with the Victorian sensi bility. As a point of entry, one may start with the question of self-suppres sion. How does the belief that selflessness signifies personal strength?a striking feature of mid-Victorian interpersonal relations?correspond 1 See, for example, Norman Holland, The Dynamics of Literary Response (New York, Oxford University Press, 1968). 542 \n", + " Biography & Criticism with the emotional universe of fiction? Did those who exercised such restraint find emotional compensation? It is apparent that for the Vic torians compliance with an ethical precept which succeeding generations would regard as merely repressive did not necessarily cause psychic devastation. For them, an undemanding ego, whether radiating sym pathy or encased in diffidence, deserved to be met by mutual accom modation and to receive steady encouragement. What, one may now ask, in turning to the novels, was the emotional configuration that gave self-suppression its meaning? The central feature of Middlemarch, which George Eliot fin ished in 1872, is highlighted in the narrator's observation: \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves.\" Realizing that one is not supreme, that others have \"an equivalent centre of self\" constitutes the major experi ence of the novel's chief characters;2 but, as Mary Garth comments, \"the difficult task of knowing another soul is not for young gentlemen whose consciousness is chiefly made up of their own wishes\" (Chapter 12). Learning, then, must go hand in hand with the willing suppres sion of one's own egotistic desires. No scene so sharply and so eco nomically epitomizes this process as Mrs. Bulstrode's acceptance and sharing of her disgraced husband's fate: But this imperfectly-taught woman, whose phrases and habits were an odd patchwork, had a loyal spirit within her. The man whose prosperity she had shared through nearly half a life, and who had unvaryingly cherished her ?now that punishment had befallen him it was not possible to her in any sense to forsake him. There is forsaking which still sits at the same board and lies on the same couch with the forsaken soul, withering it the more by un loving proximity. She knew, when she locked her door, that she should unlock it ready to go down to her unhappy husband and espouse his sorrow, and say of his guilt, I will mourn and not reproach. But she needed time to gather up her strength; she needed to sob out her farewell to all the gladness and pride of her life. When she had resolved to go down, she prepared her self by some little acts which might seem mere folly to a hard onlooker; 2 Chapter 21. On George Eliot's moral vision see, for example, U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: George Eliot, Walter Pater, and Samuel Butler (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1965), pp. 24?115, and Bernard J. Paris, Exferiments in Life: George Eliot's Quest for Values (Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1965). 543 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review they were her way of expressing to all spectators visible or invisible that she had begun a new life in which she embraced humiliation. She took off all her ornaments and put on a plain black gown, and instead of wearing her much-adorned cap and large bows of hair, she brushed her hair down and put on a plain bonnet-cap, which made her look suddenly like an early Methodist. (Chapter 74) Throughout Middlemarch self-suppression serves to cement attach ments in the finely wrought context of everyday life. And the intricate design of the work, referred to repeatedly in the novel itself as a web, allows delicate shades of meaning to emerge from juxtaposition and comparison. The impact of the novel's structure is reenforced by the subtlety of the omniscient narrative voice: while the play of irony creates perspective, distance is foreshortened when the angle of vision shifts to a character's own inner consciousness. This double complexity suggests that Middlemarch cannot be read simply as a long and elevating ser mon. In the commanding figure of Dorothea, morality is never divorced from imagination; though forced to relinquish illusions, she is never obliged to abandon her dreams.3 Dorothea's quest is foreshadowed in the description of Saint Theresa of Avila, which appears in the Prelude. The Saint \"soared after some illimitable satisfaction, some object which would never justify weariness, which would reconcile self-despair with the rapturous consciousness of life beyond self.\" Dorothea's own nature, \"altogether ardent, theoretic, and intellectually consequent\" (Chapter 3), yearning \"after some lofty conception of the world\" (Chapter 1), resembles the passionate disposi tion of the Spanish saint. And though Dorothea's short-sightedness, which impairs her perception of those in her immediate vicinity, is sub ject to ironic comment, her idealism largely escapes such treatment. This sympathetic view does not make Dorothea's aspirations less opaque. Yet one suspects that the difficulty is not due to a lack of narrative dis tance; rather the very diffuseness is central to her emotional dilemma. The desolation of a world of separate souls, the frightening \"fragmen tariness\" of life (Chapter 20), is the nightmare from which she seeks to escape. This flight is both the counterpart of her idealism and what for so long prevents it from acquiring coherent form. In marrying Casaubon, whom the orphaned Dorothea likened to Milton, Hooker, and above all Locke, she thought she had found a 3 For a critique of George Eliot's handling of Dorothea, see F. R. Leavis, The Great Tradition (London, Chatto and Windus, 1948), pp. 72-79. 544 \n", + " Biography & Criticism \"man who could understand the higher inward life, and with whom there could be some spiritual communion\" (Chapter 2). For her \"the really delightful marriage must be where your husband was a sort of father, and could teach you even Hebrew, if you wished it\" (Chapter 1). Such a union \"would deliver her from her girlish subjection to her own ignorance, and give her the freedom of voluntary submission to a guide who would take her along the grandest path\" (Chapter 3). But Dorothea had \"not reached that point of renunciation at which she would have been satisfied with having a wise husband; she wished, poor child, to be wise herself\" (Chapter 7). Disillusionment came almost immediately: Casaubon's learning offered her no beacon light; she could see no \"wide opening where she followed him.\" Still she might have felt these intellectual disappointments less keenly if some other bond of intimacy had developed between them. \"With all her yearning to know what was afar from her and to be widely benignant, she had ardour enough for what was near, to have kissed Mr. Casaubon's coat-sleeve, or to have caressed his shoe-latchet, if he would have made any other sign of acceptance than pronouncing her, with his unfailing propriety, to be of a most affectionate and truly feminine nature, indicating at the same time by politely reaching a chair for her that he regarded these manifestations as rather crude and startling\" (Chapter 21). If Dorothea felt chilled by Casaubon's unresponsiveness, he too suf fered in the \"narrow cell\" of his own being. One of George Eliot's greatest achievements is her presentation of Casaubon from the inside. Though earlier commentary has prepared the reader for an interior view of the pedantic and aging husband, still when the author asks at the beginning of Chapter Twenty-Nine, \"but why always Dorothea?\" and then proceeds to depict Casaubon's \"intense consciousness,\" the effect is arresting. The dessicated scholar can never be \"liberated from a small hungry shivering self.\" \"His experience was of that pitiable kind which shrinks from pity, and fears most of all that it should be known: it was that proud narrow sensitiveness which has not mass enough to spare for transformation into sympathy, and quivers thread-like in small currents of self-preoccupation or at best of an egoistic scrupulosity.\" Slowly Dorothea comes to appreciate not only her husband's weak nesses, but the inner suffering which they produce. Though herself wounded, she strives to master her hurt, to exercise the self-suppression that will permit her to share Casaubon's sorrow. When Casaubon, in formed by his physician of the seriousness of his heart condition, rejects Dorothea's sympathy, her internal conflict reaches its dramatic climax. 545 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review Reacting with \"a rebellious anger stronger than any she had felt since her marriage,\" she meditates through the evening and into the night, and finally \"the resolved submission\" comes. In the ensuing exchange with her husband they more nearly approach communion than at any other time, and Dorothea feels \"something like the thankfulness that might well up in us if we had narrowly escaped hurting a lamed crea ture\" (Chapter 42). The intensity of Dorothea's struggle in her relation to Casaubon con vinces the reader both of her own earnestness and more generally, of the enduring quality of her vision. Though the object seems undeserv ing (and still more so when a codicil appended to his will reveals his deep suspicion of and isolation from his wife), the dream has lost none of its power. Yet it has been qualified by the recognition that self-sup pression without trust is insufficient. Indeed lack of trust appears as second only to egotism as a barrier to emotional attachments. And in the second half of the novel Dorothea's stature is depicted increasingly in terms of her ability to bestow trust where others doubt, to nourish by her compassion those most in need. Though critics may be dissatisfied with George Eliot's lack of dis tance from Dorothea's emotional richness, the contours of that pleni tude are clear: her capacity to transcend the boundaries of self and to offer reassurance \"without any check of proud reserve\" makes it possi ble for her to connect with other human beings and to create coherence out of \"fragmentariness\" (Chapter 76). The image which comes to mind is that of a mother's tender and purposeful solicitude, and ma ternal imagery is pervasive in the scene of Dorothea's last crisis. One would hesitate before suggesting that she has simply been transformed into a mothering figure; yet the change is striking from the daughter she initially sought to be. It is rather that the maternal image conveys the merging of fantasy and morality, the fusion of emotion and \"be neficent activity\" (Finale), and the fulfillment of someone who could not live without a \"loving reverent resolve\" (Chapter 20). A fter the spiritual quest of Middlemarch, Trollope's work The * *- Duke's Children, published in 1880, seems sober and sedate. Though the two main plots concern love relationships leading to mar riage, idealized in typical Trollopian fashion, it is the Duke of Omnium, never one to be driven by passionate fancy, who is the chief protagonist. In earlier novels in the Palliser series, of which this is the last, the Duke's fantasy life was largely occupied with dreams of introducing a 546 \n", + " Biography & Criticism system of decimal coinage. Though no subterranean change has taken place in his psyche, when he appears in The Duke's Children with his soul bared and his inner struggles revealed, he achieves a stature com parable to that of Dorothea. And in his efforts to forge new links with his grown children, one hears echoed the longings of George Eliot's spiritual protagonist.4 The poor Duke must begin his search in straitened emotional cir cumstances, trapped by his mute and haughty sensitivity in what George Eliot would have called a narrow cell of self. But how could it be otherwise, he wonders. \"The very pride of which he was accused was no more than that shrinking which comes from want of trust in one self. He was a shy man. All his friends and all his enemies knew that ... a shy, self-conscious, timid, shrinking, thin-skinned man!\" (Chapter 22). Still worse, the one person with whom he felt comfortable, his wife, Lady Glencora, was dead. The utter prostration of the bereft husband could not have been more com plete. It was not only that his heart was torn to pieces, but that he did not know how to look out into the world. It was as though a man should be suddenly called to live without hands or even arms. He was helpless, and knew himself to be helpless. Hitherto he had never specially acknowledged to himself that his wife was necessary to him as a component part of his life. Though he had loved her dearly, and had in all things consulted her welfare and happiness, he had at times been inclined to think that in the exuberance of her spirits she had been a trouble rather than a support to him. But now it was as though all outside appliances were taken away from him. There was no one of whom he could ask a question. (Chapter 1) The Duke must struggle as best he can with the task of becoming a father to his grown children, about whom he has \"never taken any trouble to inform himself\" (Chapter 24). In confronting their marital hopes, his attachment to his daughter Lady Mary and to his eldest son Lord Silverbridge acquires substance. Though both children bring him pain and sorrow in choosing what he considers unsuitable mates, they 4 The most helpful critical comment on The Duke's Children is John H. Hagan, \"The Duke's Children: Trollope's Psychological Masterpiece,\" Nine teenth-Century Fiction, XIII (1958-1959), 1-21. See also Ruth apRoberts, The Moral Trollofe (Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1971), pp. 147-149, and Arthur Mizener, \"Anthony Trollope: The Palliser Novels,\" in Robert C. Rathburn and Martin Steinmann, Jr., eds., From Jane Austen to Josefh Conrad: Essays Collected in Memory of James T. Hillhouse (Minneapolis, Minn., University of Minnesota Press, 1958), pp. 118?132. 547 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review are so precious to him that he finally must give way. Such an ending is standard fare. What is remarkable is the way it is achieved: respond ing to a combination of frontal assaults and enveloping movements, the Duke abandons his lonely standing ground and discovers a world of mutual affection or forebearance. In the story of Lord Silverbridge and the Duke, Trollope gives both a tender and a comic account of a father-son relationship. The imma ture young man, whose very diction suggests his want of seriousness and polish, repeatedly disappoints his father yet at the same time reaches out to soothe the older man. In so doing he demonstrates a protective concern that itself has a paternal quality. When Silverbridge, following the impulse of his unreserved nature, invites his father to dine with him at his club, the Duke reveals an emotion which is the psychological counterpart to his son's solicitude?a desire to see Silverbridge not only married but effectively the head of the house. Affection for his son is always associated in the Duke's mind with an eagerness to relinquish his own position. \"I should be glad to see you marry early,\" said the Duke, speaking in a low voice, almost solemnly, but in his quietest, sweetest tone of voice. \"You are peculiarly situated. Though as yet you are only the heir to the property and honors of our family, still, were you married, almost everything would be at your disposal. There is so much which I should only be too ready to give up to you!\" \"I can't bear to hear you talk of giving up anything,\" said Silverbridge energetically. Then the father looked round the room furtively, and seeing that the door was shut, and that they were assuredly alone, he put out his hand and gently stroked the young man's hair. It was almost a caress,?as though he would have said to himself, \"Were he my daughter, I would kiss him.\" (Chapter 26) Through the prospect of his son's marriage, the Duke hopes to find again a family life that will nurture him. After he sets aside his caste objections and accepts a young American as Silverbridge's bride, he gives her the ring which had been his first present to Lady Glencora, asking her to become his child so that he may have someone to love him. \"You shall be my child. And if you will love me you shall be very dear to me. You shall be my own child,?as dear as my own. I must either love his wife very dearly, or else I must be an unhappy man. And she must love me dearly, or I must be unhappy.\" (Chapter 72) 548 \n", + " Biography & Criticism Though the Duke laments being driven to yield to Silverbridge's marital choice, his inner struggle is less intense and the reconciliation more comforting than in the case of Lady Mary and her penniless suitor. From the start, the Duke's view of his daughter's romance is distorted by his memory of his wife and Burgo Fitzgerald. Lady Glencora had been forced to marry Plantagenet Palliser, the future Duke of Omnium, against her will; she was still in love with the handsome and dissolute Burgo and shortly after her marriage almost ran away with him. The fact that before her death Lady Glencora tacitly supported Mary's choice makes the Duke's recollections both more bitter and more appro priate. On top of this first haunting triangle, the Duke attempts to superimpose another. Hoping to detach Mary from her beloved, as her mother had been, he urges an insipid young lord to court her. Though the Duke does not relish the business at hand, he feels compelled to find someone to replicate his own earlier role. By thus insinuating himself into the competitive struggle for his daughter, he all but forfeits her trust and affection. Though the Duke may be obdurate, he cannot bring himself to think ill of Mary. In a moving scene, in which his daughter shakes his resis tance by flinging herself on his breast, he reflects on his feelings for her. This girl,?whether she should live and fade by his side, or whether she should give her hand to some fitting noble suitor,?or even though she might at last become the wife of this man who loved her, would always have been pure. It was sweet to him to have something to caress. Now in the solitude of his life, as years were coming on him, he felt how necessary it was that he should have someone who would love him. Since his wife had left him he had been debarred from these caresses by the necessity of showing his antag onism to her dearest wishes . . . but yet there had crept over him the feel ing that as he was half conquered, why should he not seek some recompense in his daughter's love? (Chapter 66) To save his image of Mary he must give way. He must admit that Mary's suitor is not Burgo Fitzgerald reincarnate; the young man may lack funds but he does not lack character. Once the Duke makes this distinction, the link with the past is broken; he can forget his anger at Lady Glencora?an anger that he had acknowledged only with great pain. Having yielded to both his children, he can now reclaim his daugh ter's love and look forward to a fond welcome in his son's home. 549 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review T) efore proceeding, it may be helpful to underline the themes com -*-* mon to both novels. One need not pause over the exhortation to self-suppression; it is fully evident. Its defensive quality?a retreat in the face of disappointment which short-circuits rage and hostility?is a major motif. But withdrawal does not exhaust the strategies which self suppression provides. There is also a positive way of dealing with emo tional dangers. Dorothea, striken with fear that she has been robbed of the man she loves and will eventually marry, curbs her resentment and acts as comforter to her presumed rival. The Duke's struggle?in this case to conquer his anger against those who have aroused his jealous feelings?is more protracted; by maintaining his faith in Mary and fostering her wishes, he eventually recovers the cherished memory of his dead wife. In brief, a nurturing disposition, toward rival or loved one, ensures that the path to communion will never be permanently blocked. This nurturing attitude, which enables trust to triumph over jealousy, suggests an almost exclusive identification with a satisfying mother figure. And this appears true regardless of the person's sex: qualities usually associated with women are not, in these novels, exclusively theirs. Examples are plentiful of men offering solace and emotional nourish ment. At the same time as such a self-image enshrines the earliest attachment, it mutes the difference between generations; it is as if the bond between parent and child formed a continuum permitting move ment in either direction. Caring for and being cared for?attitudes at once progressive and regressive?provide a mighty shield against despair. IN apparent contrast to Dorothea and the Duke of Omnium, the task Ernest Pontifex confronts in Samuel Butler's Bildungsroman, The Way of All Flesh, is to discover his true self and to arrange his life accordingly. That inner self, had it been given voice, would have conveyed a strikingly unconventional message to the beleaguered boy: \"You are surrounded on every side by lies which would deceive even the elect . . . the self of which you are conscious, your reasoning and reflecting self, will believe these lies and bid you act in accordance with them. This conscious self of yours, Ernest, is a prig begotten of prigs and trained in priggishness. . . . Obey me, your true self and things will go tolerably well with you, but only listen to that outward old husk of yours which is called your father, and I will rend you in pieces even unto the third and fourth generation as one who has hated God; for I, Ernest, am the God who made you.\" (Chapter 31) 550 \n", + " Biography & Criticism Surely to renounce one's father, to break from one's family, and to assign oneself the responsibility, as a writer, for stirring up the \"hornet's nest\" of \"marriage and the family system\" (Chapter 84), all of which Ernest attempts, would seem to set him at odds with his contemporaries. So shocking did Butler consider some of the portraits in the novel?par ticularly those drawn from his own parents?that he did not publish the book in his lifetime. Though he had begun writing it in 1873, finally putting it aside in 1884, it did not appear until a year after his death in 1903.5 Yet at the end of the novel, Ernest is not simply a defiant rebel. His is a curious war against society's orthodoxies. The final result of Ernest's literary efforts, the reader is informed, are \"conservative, quietistic, comforting. The arguments by which they were reached were taken from the most advanced writers of the day. All that these people con tended for was granted them, but the fruits of victory were for the most part handed over to those already in possession\" (Chapter 85). Earlier Butler's narrator had commented, \"Every man's work, whether it be literature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself, and the more he tries to conceal himself the more clearly will his character appear in spite of him\" (Chapter 14). Thus the conclusion of Ernest's intellectual battle suggests his own acceptance of a nurturing role. In a novel which is ostensibly an attack on the Vic torian family, the protagonist achieves a species of serenity by sifting out the charitable impulse from self-serving cant. Ernest's is not the only portrait glimpsed through literary production; that of Edward Overton is also unveiled as he narrates Ernest's growth and indicates his own involvement with the boy. In the course of com posing Ernest's biography within the novel, Overton sets forth his per sonal attitudes on the interlocking questions of marriage and family, indulgence and morality?attitudes representing the polar opposite of those taught to Ernest as a child?and which the younger man finally comes close to accepting. Overton and Ernest's views, however, are never identical. As a writer of burlesques?his principal literary occu pation?Overton has a capacity for light-hearted heterodoxy that Ernest can never equal. It is Overton who, with marvelous satire, recreates 5 On The Way of All Flesh as a dramatization of Butler's evolutionary theories, see U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel, pp. 257-295. See also William H. Marshall, The World of the Vic torian Novel (South Brunswick and New York, A. S. Barnes and Company, 1966), pp. 424-449. 551 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review the drama of Ernest's parents, Theobald and Christina, on their wed ding day. Similarly he turns inside out the usual notions of family ar rangements, when he mockingly asks: Why should the generations overlap one another at all? Why cannot we be buried as eggs in neat little cells with ten or twenty thousand pounds each wrapped around us in Bank of England notes, and wake up, as the sphex wasp does, to find that its papa and mamma have not only left ample pro vision at its elbow, but have been eaten by sparrows some weeks before it began to live consciously on its own account? (Chapter 18). Clearly Butler used Overton to embody his own opinions, just as he made Ernest relive the painful experience of his childhood. But in his autobiographical novel Butler split not only himself. By creating Over ton he also split his own father?or rather Ernest's?thus providing the boy with a surrogate parent. In the absence of Overton and his Aunt Alethea, who together serve as godparents, Butler would have left Ernest with scant emotional nourishment or moral support. Ernest's childhood was bleak indeed. Theobald, his father, never liked children and seemed to take almost sadistic delight in carrying out his presumed paternal responsibility of frightening the boy into submission. Against such treatment his mother offered no resistance: Christina did not remonstrate with Theobald concerning the severity of the tasks imposed upon their boy, nor yet as to the continual whippings that were found necessary at lesson times. Indeed, when during any absence of Theo bald's the lessons were entrusted to her, she found to her sorrow that it was the only thing to do, and she did it no less effectually than Theobald him self; nevertheless she was fond of the boy, which Theobald never was, and it was long before she could destroy all affection for herself in the mind of her first-born. But she persevered. (Chapter 20) Saddled with such horrendous parents, Ernest formulated a personal version of the facts of life that would break the biological pattern of family organization. In his fantasy of parthenogenesis, which at the age of seven he revealed to Overton, he abolished the paternal sexual role and imagined himself capable of giving birth to male children outside of wedlock. His Aunt Alethea, who appeared in the adolescent's life as a guardian angel, shared this fantasy. Unmarried, and hostile to matri mony, yet endowed with \"a woman's love of children\" (Chapter 33), she determined to be to Ernest \"in place of parents, and to find in him a son rather than a nephew\" (Chapter 34). Before her plan could be 552 \n", + " Biography & Criticism carried out, however, she died, bequeathing Ernest her substantial for tune. The neatly packaged banknotes would be his when he turned twenty-eight, by which time, she had calculated, he would have out grown his \"foolishness\" and would be ready, in Overton's words, \"to live consciously\" on his \"own account.\" In Alethea, then, one finds incarnated the alternative method of childrearing?both sexual and financial?that Ernest and Overton have been seeking. With Alethea's death Overton becomes Ernest's protector. But for a long time he remains at a distance, defining his function as that of financial watchdog, investing his godson's inheritance wisely and letting the capital accumulate. His personal attachment to the young man ebbs and flows: it runs strong when Ernest breaks with his parents, and it almost peters out while Ernest is married. With the dissolution of Ernest's marriage, Overton definitively enters the young man's life, nurses him back to health, encourages him to write, and finally estab lishes him as a wealthy man. For Overton, a bachelor, Ernest has be come \"a son and more than a son;\" and at times the older man is \"half afraid\" that he \"may have been . . . more like a father\" than he \"ought\" (Chapter 86). An odd sort of father, helping Ernest to undo his past, to enjoy as a grown man what was his birthright?a life of moderate self-indulgence and unfettered intellectual expression. Having regained his birthright, Ernest is determined to preserve it and to safeguard his children's equal rights. For his children, this means settling them happily with a bargeman's family and intervening in their lives only when his financial resources are necessary to make their wishes come true. For himself, it requires becoming something of a recluse: \"I am an Ishmael by instinct as much as by accident of circumstances, but if I keep out of society I shall be less vulnerable than Ishmaels generally are. The moment a man goes into society, he becomes vulnerable all round.\" (Chapter 84) But reclaiming one's birthright does not warrant dogmatic assertion of one's own righteousness: for \" cno man's opinions,' \" Ernest concludes, \" 'can be worth holding unless he knows how to deny them easily and gracefully upon occasion in the cause of charity' \" (Chapter 86). Most notably, toward his dying mother, Ernest demonstrates his gift for charitable empathy, for pardoning past injuries: \"Mother,\" he said, \"forgive me?the fault is mine, I ought not to have been so hard; I was wrong, very wrong\"; the poor blubbering fellow meant 553 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review what he said, and his heart yearned to his mother as he had never thought that it could yearn again. (Chapter 82) Whereas his father, Theobald, entrenches himself \"in a firm but dig nified manner behind the Lord's prayer,\" offering scant comfort to the poor woman, Ernest, \"sitting beside her,\" allows her to \"pour out her grief to him without let or hindrance.\" With a fine ear for his mother's simple emotional rhythm, he strikes the chords that might give her solace (Chapter 83): \"My dear mother, . . . you are ill and your mind is unstrung; others can now judge better about you than you can; I assure you that to me you seem to have been the most devotedly unselfish wife and mother that ever lived. ... I believe that you will not only be a saint, but a very distinguished one.\" With his money furnishing a protective cocoon, obviating the stresses usually associated with the adult world, Ernest is able not only to give leeway to that inner self whose voice he could not hear in his father's house; he can also comfort others. Here one discerns the same progres sive and regressive emotional configuration apparent in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children: a nurturing attitude which has dependency as its counterpart. In comparison with the other two novels, The Way of All Flesh mutes this nurture and dependence; but they must of necessity be muted to fulfill the fantasies of childbirth and childrearing that infuse the work. With the need for sexual differentiation blurred by these very fantasies, one mode predominates: the feminine alone re mains highly prized. So too has IT BEEN in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children. Yet to stress?as is commonplace?the idealization of women in Vic torian fiction, to emphasize the extravagant hopes of redemption through the love of these perfect creatures, is merely a first step. One should underline, rather, the fact that both sexes gravitate in a single direction which gives point and meaning to the Victorian emotional universe. One suspects that the magnetic quality of a nurturing ideal is not unconnected with the most striking instance of Victorian self-suppres sion: male sexual restraint. While sexuality among nineteenth-century upper-class women was checked both in Britain and on the continent, it was in Britain alone that similar prohibitions applied to men as well. The significance of this unparalled attempt to create a single standard of sexual behavior cannot be overestimated. At the very least, it placed 554 \n", + " Biography & Criticism the sexes on a more equal footing. In so doing, I should suggest, it opened the way for mutual trust and dependency?for a truce in the perennial battle of the sexes. Men may have paid a price in the form of nervous complaints?a price traditionally exacted from women?but the compensation was clear. A society that could provide a mother a secure standing ground offered emotional safety for all.\n" ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 10, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" } ], - "source": [ - "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", - "\n", - "textB_start = 14718 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the starting character indexes\n", - "textB_end = 14816 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the ending character indexes\n", - "\n", - "# Output the text in \"B\" for the start and end characters selected above \n", - "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\", f\"[{textB_start}, {textB_end}]\")\n", - "cleaned_article_text.text[textB_start:textB_end]" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "---" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", - "\n", - "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", - "\n", - "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### Step 1: Locate the quotation in the PDF of the article." - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", - "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", - "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the article text." - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], "source": [ "print(cleaned_article_text.text)" ] @@ -535,7 +385,7 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### Step 3: Copy that text of the quotation as it appears exactly in the article text above." + "### Step 3: Copy the actual quoted text from *Middlemarch* as it appears exactly in the article text above" ] }, { @@ -552,28 +402,30 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 12, + "execution_count": 27, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", - "Starting index: 14718\n", - "Ending index: 14816\n", - "Character indexes for match: [14718, 14816]\n", + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", + "Starting index: 4329\n", + "Ending index: 4426\n", + "Quotation text and indexes to paste into spreadsheet:\n", + "We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\t[4329, 4426]\n", + "\n", "\n", - " Corresponding text:\n" + "Sanity check (does this match the text above?):\n" ] }, { "data": { "text/plain": [ - "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + "'We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves'" ] }, - "execution_count": 12, + "execution_count": 27, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -581,14 +433,14 @@ "source": [ "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", - "quotation = \"All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength\" #pas\n", + "quotation = \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\" #pas\n", "\n", "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", "print('Starting index:', index) \n", "print('Ending index:', index + len(quotation))\n", - "print(f'Character indexes for match: [{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", - "print(\"\\n Corresponding text:\")\n", + "print(f'Quotation text and indexes to paste into spreadsheet:\\n{quotation}\\t[{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", + "print(\"\\n\\nSanity check (does this match the text above?):\")\n", "cleaned_article_text.text[index:index + len(quotation)]\n", "\n" ] diff --git a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index 4890857..9097fe6 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 1, + "execution_count": 12, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, + "execution_count": 13, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 14, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ "[3 rows x 30 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 14, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 17, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ ], "source": [ "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/xxxxxxxxx' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", "\n", "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", @@ -323,210 +323,60 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "## Part 1: Get quotes (& their character indexes) from `text-matcher` output\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### What are the index positions of matches in our source text (Text \"A\")?\n", - "Retrieve the character indexes in for the source text (Text A):" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, - "metadata": { - "scrolled": true - }, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Middlemarch character indexes:\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]]" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 7, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "# What are the locations in A?\n", - "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\")\n", - "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in A'].item()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### What's the text of one of those matches?\n", - "\n", - "Let's check the corresponding text in Middlemarch for one of the matches output above. \n", - "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above. " - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 8, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Middlemarch character indexes: [173657, 173756]\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "'all of\\nus, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors, and act\\nfatally on the strength'" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 8, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", + "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", "\n", - "mm_start = 173657 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the starting character indexes\n", - "mm_end = 173756 # 🛑 REPLACE the number with one of the ending character indexes\n", + "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", "\n", - "# Output the text in \"A\" for the start and end characters selected above\n", - "print(\"Middlemarch character indexes:\", f\"[{mm_start}, {mm_end}]\")\n", - "mm.text[mm_start:mm_end]" + "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### What are the indexes positions of matches in our target text (Text \"B\")?\n", - "Retrieve the indexes in the B text (that is, the article index: " - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 9, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019:\n" - ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "[[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]]" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 9, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "# What are the locations in B?\n", - "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\")\n", - "df.loc[df['id'] == article_id, 'Locations in B'].item()" + "### Step 1: Select the quotation in the ground truth spreadsheet\n", + "\n", + "Work through the quotations in your selected article one by one." ] }, { "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### What's the text of one of those matches in Text \"B\" (the article)?\n", - "Change the start and end character indexes to one of the index ranges in the cell above." + "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", + "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", + "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the \"Quotation from PDF\" column on the spreadsheet.\n", + "\n", + "Look at the text below and see whether the \"Quotation from PDF\" text is actually a quotation from *Middlemarch*. Often it will include too much or too little, sometimes it won't be the quotation at all." ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 10, + "execution_count": 28, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Character index locations for http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019: [14718, 14816]\n" + "SELF-SUPPRESSION & ATTACHMENT MID-VICTORIAN EMOTIONAL LIFE Judith M. Hughes T tow can an historian hope to recreate the emotional life of the - - past, to discern the major features of an inner landscape that has disappeared from view? More specifically, how can I recall to life the psychic rhythms of the mid-Victorians? Where should I expect to hear the voices of the dead reverberate with sufficient clarity so that I could begin to interpret the sounds? Cultural artifacts, in particular the novel, provide a starting point. I can begin by trying to pinpoint prominent emotional configurations in a number of novels. Such artistic constructions condense inner experiences and render them immediate, thereby promising access to those deeper layers of the mind which have long since been buried. It is, of course, a promise that cannot be entirely fulfilled. Neverthe less, it would be a timid scholar indeed who would hesitate to exploit 541 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review a rich store of material simply because it offered insights rather than conclusive proof. Insights of what sort? Certain psychological dilemmas are in theory universal, and these are supposed to be the stuff of great literature. What is of interest, then, are the particular strategies adopted for coping with such dilemmas, the abortive or successful attempts to ward off despair and to buttress self-esteem. And in reflecting on fictional characters, I have, above all, been struck by the recurrent variations on themes regarded as universal. The mention of fictional characters is an indication of how I intend to approach the novels. Among literary critics with a psychoanalytic turn of mind, it is no longer fashionable to concentrate on the characters themselves. Rather, the emphasis has fallen on either the author or the reader. What the literary work can tell one about the mind of its crea tor or how it evokes emotional responses from the audience?these have become the major concerns.1 Clearly either focus would be inappro priate for me to adopt: I am not engaged in a study of novelists; as for the audience, I have access to the inner experiences of only one of its members, my own, and they are not relevant. Despite this disclaimer of interest in writers and readers, it is nonetheless incumbent upon me to choose works which may be considered representative, works which combined contemporary appeal with enduring artistic merit. As Freud early recognized, the authors of such works are usually good psychol ogists. Yet one must remember that fictional characters are not real people. One cannot produce case histories from novels; one can, how ever, delineate the emotional drama of the individual protagonists. If space and human frailty demand a radical selection, if three novels constitute a manageable sample, the identity of two of the authors can not long be in doubt?George Eliot and Anthony Trollope. No one can dispute their stature or their contemporary popularity, and as por traitists of mid-Victorian Britain they are the novelists most frequently cited. My third choice, Samuel Butler, may seem more eccentric. Yet the very fact of his critical stance compelled his inclusion, to provide a foil or a check against a too ready sympathy with the Victorian sensi bility. As a point of entry, one may start with the question of self-suppres sion. How does the belief that selflessness signifies personal strength?a striking feature of mid-Victorian interpersonal relations?correspond 1 See, for example, Norman Holland, The Dynamics of Literary Response (New York, Oxford University Press, 1968). 542 \n", + " Biography & Criticism with the emotional universe of fiction? Did those who exercised such restraint find emotional compensation? It is apparent that for the Vic torians compliance with an ethical precept which succeeding generations would regard as merely repressive did not necessarily cause psychic devastation. For them, an undemanding ego, whether radiating sym pathy or encased in diffidence, deserved to be met by mutual accom modation and to receive steady encouragement. What, one may now ask, in turning to the novels, was the emotional configuration that gave self-suppression its meaning? The central feature of Middlemarch, which George Eliot fin ished in 1872, is highlighted in the narrator's observation: \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves.\" Realizing that one is not supreme, that others have \"an equivalent centre of self\" constitutes the major experi ence of the novel's chief characters;2 but, as Mary Garth comments, \"the difficult task of knowing another soul is not for young gentlemen whose consciousness is chiefly made up of their own wishes\" (Chapter 12). Learning, then, must go hand in hand with the willing suppres sion of one's own egotistic desires. No scene so sharply and so eco nomically epitomizes this process as Mrs. Bulstrode's acceptance and sharing of her disgraced husband's fate: But this imperfectly-taught woman, whose phrases and habits were an odd patchwork, had a loyal spirit within her. The man whose prosperity she had shared through nearly half a life, and who had unvaryingly cherished her ?now that punishment had befallen him it was not possible to her in any sense to forsake him. There is forsaking which still sits at the same board and lies on the same couch with the forsaken soul, withering it the more by un loving proximity. She knew, when she locked her door, that she should unlock it ready to go down to her unhappy husband and espouse his sorrow, and say of his guilt, I will mourn and not reproach. But she needed time to gather up her strength; she needed to sob out her farewell to all the gladness and pride of her life. When she had resolved to go down, she prepared her self by some little acts which might seem mere folly to a hard onlooker; 2 Chapter 21. On George Eliot's moral vision see, for example, U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: George Eliot, Walter Pater, and Samuel Butler (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1965), pp. 24?115, and Bernard J. Paris, Exferiments in Life: George Eliot's Quest for Values (Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1965). 543 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review they were her way of expressing to all spectators visible or invisible that she had begun a new life in which she embraced humiliation. She took off all her ornaments and put on a plain black gown, and instead of wearing her much-adorned cap and large bows of hair, she brushed her hair down and put on a plain bonnet-cap, which made her look suddenly like an early Methodist. (Chapter 74) Throughout Middlemarch self-suppression serves to cement attach ments in the finely wrought context of everyday life. And the intricate design of the work, referred to repeatedly in the novel itself as a web, allows delicate shades of meaning to emerge from juxtaposition and comparison. The impact of the novel's structure is reenforced by the subtlety of the omniscient narrative voice: while the play of irony creates perspective, distance is foreshortened when the angle of vision shifts to a character's own inner consciousness. This double complexity suggests that Middlemarch cannot be read simply as a long and elevating ser mon. In the commanding figure of Dorothea, morality is never divorced from imagination; though forced to relinquish illusions, she is never obliged to abandon her dreams.3 Dorothea's quest is foreshadowed in the description of Saint Theresa of Avila, which appears in the Prelude. The Saint \"soared after some illimitable satisfaction, some object which would never justify weariness, which would reconcile self-despair with the rapturous consciousness of life beyond self.\" Dorothea's own nature, \"altogether ardent, theoretic, and intellectually consequent\" (Chapter 3), yearning \"after some lofty conception of the world\" (Chapter 1), resembles the passionate disposi tion of the Spanish saint. And though Dorothea's short-sightedness, which impairs her perception of those in her immediate vicinity, is sub ject to ironic comment, her idealism largely escapes such treatment. This sympathetic view does not make Dorothea's aspirations less opaque. Yet one suspects that the difficulty is not due to a lack of narrative dis tance; rather the very diffuseness is central to her emotional dilemma. The desolation of a world of separate souls, the frightening \"fragmen tariness\" of life (Chapter 20), is the nightmare from which she seeks to escape. This flight is both the counterpart of her idealism and what for so long prevents it from acquiring coherent form. In marrying Casaubon, whom the orphaned Dorothea likened to Milton, Hooker, and above all Locke, she thought she had found a 3 For a critique of George Eliot's handling of Dorothea, see F. R. Leavis, The Great Tradition (London, Chatto and Windus, 1948), pp. 72-79. 544 \n", + " Biography & Criticism \"man who could understand the higher inward life, and with whom there could be some spiritual communion\" (Chapter 2). For her \"the really delightful marriage must be where your husband was a sort of father, and could teach you even Hebrew, if you wished it\" (Chapter 1). Such a union \"would deliver her from her girlish subjection to her own ignorance, and give her the freedom of voluntary submission to a guide who would take her along the grandest path\" (Chapter 3). But Dorothea had \"not reached that point of renunciation at which she would have been satisfied with having a wise husband; she wished, poor child, to be wise herself\" (Chapter 7). Disillusionment came almost immediately: Casaubon's learning offered her no beacon light; she could see no \"wide opening where she followed him.\" Still she might have felt these intellectual disappointments less keenly if some other bond of intimacy had developed between them. \"With all her yearning to know what was afar from her and to be widely benignant, she had ardour enough for what was near, to have kissed Mr. Casaubon's coat-sleeve, or to have caressed his shoe-latchet, if he would have made any other sign of acceptance than pronouncing her, with his unfailing propriety, to be of a most affectionate and truly feminine nature, indicating at the same time by politely reaching a chair for her that he regarded these manifestations as rather crude and startling\" (Chapter 21). If Dorothea felt chilled by Casaubon's unresponsiveness, he too suf fered in the \"narrow cell\" of his own being. One of George Eliot's greatest achievements is her presentation of Casaubon from the inside. Though earlier commentary has prepared the reader for an interior view of the pedantic and aging husband, still when the author asks at the beginning of Chapter Twenty-Nine, \"but why always Dorothea?\" and then proceeds to depict Casaubon's \"intense consciousness,\" the effect is arresting. The dessicated scholar can never be \"liberated from a small hungry shivering self.\" \"His experience was of that pitiable kind which shrinks from pity, and fears most of all that it should be known: it was that proud narrow sensitiveness which has not mass enough to spare for transformation into sympathy, and quivers thread-like in small currents of self-preoccupation or at best of an egoistic scrupulosity.\" Slowly Dorothea comes to appreciate not only her husband's weak nesses, but the inner suffering which they produce. Though herself wounded, she strives to master her hurt, to exercise the self-suppression that will permit her to share Casaubon's sorrow. When Casaubon, in formed by his physician of the seriousness of his heart condition, rejects Dorothea's sympathy, her internal conflict reaches its dramatic climax. 545 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review Reacting with \"a rebellious anger stronger than any she had felt since her marriage,\" she meditates through the evening and into the night, and finally \"the resolved submission\" comes. In the ensuing exchange with her husband they more nearly approach communion than at any other time, and Dorothea feels \"something like the thankfulness that might well up in us if we had narrowly escaped hurting a lamed crea ture\" (Chapter 42). The intensity of Dorothea's struggle in her relation to Casaubon con vinces the reader both of her own earnestness and more generally, of the enduring quality of her vision. Though the object seems undeserv ing (and still more so when a codicil appended to his will reveals his deep suspicion of and isolation from his wife), the dream has lost none of its power. Yet it has been qualified by the recognition that self-sup pression without trust is insufficient. Indeed lack of trust appears as second only to egotism as a barrier to emotional attachments. And in the second half of the novel Dorothea's stature is depicted increasingly in terms of her ability to bestow trust where others doubt, to nourish by her compassion those most in need. Though critics may be dissatisfied with George Eliot's lack of dis tance from Dorothea's emotional richness, the contours of that pleni tude are clear: her capacity to transcend the boundaries of self and to offer reassurance \"without any check of proud reserve\" makes it possi ble for her to connect with other human beings and to create coherence out of \"fragmentariness\" (Chapter 76). The image which comes to mind is that of a mother's tender and purposeful solicitude, and ma ternal imagery is pervasive in the scene of Dorothea's last crisis. One would hesitate before suggesting that she has simply been transformed into a mothering figure; yet the change is striking from the daughter she initially sought to be. It is rather that the maternal image conveys the merging of fantasy and morality, the fusion of emotion and \"be neficent activity\" (Finale), and the fulfillment of someone who could not live without a \"loving reverent resolve\" (Chapter 20). A fter the spiritual quest of Middlemarch, Trollope's work The * *- Duke's Children, published in 1880, seems sober and sedate. Though the two main plots concern love relationships leading to mar riage, idealized in typical Trollopian fashion, it is the Duke of Omnium, never one to be driven by passionate fancy, who is the chief protagonist. In earlier novels in the Palliser series, of which this is the last, the Duke's fantasy life was largely occupied with dreams of introducing a 546 \n", + " Biography & Criticism system of decimal coinage. Though no subterranean change has taken place in his psyche, when he appears in The Duke's Children with his soul bared and his inner struggles revealed, he achieves a stature com parable to that of Dorothea. And in his efforts to forge new links with his grown children, one hears echoed the longings of George Eliot's spiritual protagonist.4 The poor Duke must begin his search in straitened emotional cir cumstances, trapped by his mute and haughty sensitivity in what George Eliot would have called a narrow cell of self. But how could it be otherwise, he wonders. \"The very pride of which he was accused was no more than that shrinking which comes from want of trust in one self. He was a shy man. All his friends and all his enemies knew that ... a shy, self-conscious, timid, shrinking, thin-skinned man!\" (Chapter 22). Still worse, the one person with whom he felt comfortable, his wife, Lady Glencora, was dead. The utter prostration of the bereft husband could not have been more com plete. It was not only that his heart was torn to pieces, but that he did not know how to look out into the world. It was as though a man should be suddenly called to live without hands or even arms. He was helpless, and knew himself to be helpless. Hitherto he had never specially acknowledged to himself that his wife was necessary to him as a component part of his life. Though he had loved her dearly, and had in all things consulted her welfare and happiness, he had at times been inclined to think that in the exuberance of her spirits she had been a trouble rather than a support to him. But now it was as though all outside appliances were taken away from him. There was no one of whom he could ask a question. (Chapter 1) The Duke must struggle as best he can with the task of becoming a father to his grown children, about whom he has \"never taken any trouble to inform himself\" (Chapter 24). In confronting their marital hopes, his attachment to his daughter Lady Mary and to his eldest son Lord Silverbridge acquires substance. Though both children bring him pain and sorrow in choosing what he considers unsuitable mates, they 4 The most helpful critical comment on The Duke's Children is John H. Hagan, \"The Duke's Children: Trollope's Psychological Masterpiece,\" Nine teenth-Century Fiction, XIII (1958-1959), 1-21. See also Ruth apRoberts, The Moral Trollofe (Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1971), pp. 147-149, and Arthur Mizener, \"Anthony Trollope: The Palliser Novels,\" in Robert C. Rathburn and Martin Steinmann, Jr., eds., From Jane Austen to Josefh Conrad: Essays Collected in Memory of James T. Hillhouse (Minneapolis, Minn., University of Minnesota Press, 1958), pp. 118?132. 547 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review are so precious to him that he finally must give way. Such an ending is standard fare. What is remarkable is the way it is achieved: respond ing to a combination of frontal assaults and enveloping movements, the Duke abandons his lonely standing ground and discovers a world of mutual affection or forebearance. In the story of Lord Silverbridge and the Duke, Trollope gives both a tender and a comic account of a father-son relationship. The imma ture young man, whose very diction suggests his want of seriousness and polish, repeatedly disappoints his father yet at the same time reaches out to soothe the older man. In so doing he demonstrates a protective concern that itself has a paternal quality. When Silverbridge, following the impulse of his unreserved nature, invites his father to dine with him at his club, the Duke reveals an emotion which is the psychological counterpart to his son's solicitude?a desire to see Silverbridge not only married but effectively the head of the house. Affection for his son is always associated in the Duke's mind with an eagerness to relinquish his own position. \"I should be glad to see you marry early,\" said the Duke, speaking in a low voice, almost solemnly, but in his quietest, sweetest tone of voice. \"You are peculiarly situated. Though as yet you are only the heir to the property and honors of our family, still, were you married, almost everything would be at your disposal. There is so much which I should only be too ready to give up to you!\" \"I can't bear to hear you talk of giving up anything,\" said Silverbridge energetically. Then the father looked round the room furtively, and seeing that the door was shut, and that they were assuredly alone, he put out his hand and gently stroked the young man's hair. It was almost a caress,?as though he would have said to himself, \"Were he my daughter, I would kiss him.\" (Chapter 26) Through the prospect of his son's marriage, the Duke hopes to find again a family life that will nurture him. After he sets aside his caste objections and accepts a young American as Silverbridge's bride, he gives her the ring which had been his first present to Lady Glencora, asking her to become his child so that he may have someone to love him. \"You shall be my child. And if you will love me you shall be very dear to me. You shall be my own child,?as dear as my own. I must either love his wife very dearly, or else I must be an unhappy man. And she must love me dearly, or I must be unhappy.\" (Chapter 72) 548 \n", + " Biography & Criticism Though the Duke laments being driven to yield to Silverbridge's marital choice, his inner struggle is less intense and the reconciliation more comforting than in the case of Lady Mary and her penniless suitor. From the start, the Duke's view of his daughter's romance is distorted by his memory of his wife and Burgo Fitzgerald. Lady Glencora had been forced to marry Plantagenet Palliser, the future Duke of Omnium, against her will; she was still in love with the handsome and dissolute Burgo and shortly after her marriage almost ran away with him. The fact that before her death Lady Glencora tacitly supported Mary's choice makes the Duke's recollections both more bitter and more appro priate. On top of this first haunting triangle, the Duke attempts to superimpose another. Hoping to detach Mary from her beloved, as her mother had been, he urges an insipid young lord to court her. Though the Duke does not relish the business at hand, he feels compelled to find someone to replicate his own earlier role. By thus insinuating himself into the competitive struggle for his daughter, he all but forfeits her trust and affection. Though the Duke may be obdurate, he cannot bring himself to think ill of Mary. In a moving scene, in which his daughter shakes his resis tance by flinging herself on his breast, he reflects on his feelings for her. This girl,?whether she should live and fade by his side, or whether she should give her hand to some fitting noble suitor,?or even though she might at last become the wife of this man who loved her, would always have been pure. It was sweet to him to have something to caress. Now in the solitude of his life, as years were coming on him, he felt how necessary it was that he should have someone who would love him. Since his wife had left him he had been debarred from these caresses by the necessity of showing his antag onism to her dearest wishes . . . but yet there had crept over him the feel ing that as he was half conquered, why should he not seek some recompense in his daughter's love? (Chapter 66) To save his image of Mary he must give way. He must admit that Mary's suitor is not Burgo Fitzgerald reincarnate; the young man may lack funds but he does not lack character. Once the Duke makes this distinction, the link with the past is broken; he can forget his anger at Lady Glencora?an anger that he had acknowledged only with great pain. Having yielded to both his children, he can now reclaim his daugh ter's love and look forward to a fond welcome in his son's home. 549 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review T) efore proceeding, it may be helpful to underline the themes com -*-* mon to both novels. One need not pause over the exhortation to self-suppression; it is fully evident. Its defensive quality?a retreat in the face of disappointment which short-circuits rage and hostility?is a major motif. But withdrawal does not exhaust the strategies which self suppression provides. There is also a positive way of dealing with emo tional dangers. Dorothea, striken with fear that she has been robbed of the man she loves and will eventually marry, curbs her resentment and acts as comforter to her presumed rival. The Duke's struggle?in this case to conquer his anger against those who have aroused his jealous feelings?is more protracted; by maintaining his faith in Mary and fostering her wishes, he eventually recovers the cherished memory of his dead wife. In brief, a nurturing disposition, toward rival or loved one, ensures that the path to communion will never be permanently blocked. This nurturing attitude, which enables trust to triumph over jealousy, suggests an almost exclusive identification with a satisfying mother figure. And this appears true regardless of the person's sex: qualities usually associated with women are not, in these novels, exclusively theirs. Examples are plentiful of men offering solace and emotional nourish ment. At the same time as such a self-image enshrines the earliest attachment, it mutes the difference between generations; it is as if the bond between parent and child formed a continuum permitting move ment in either direction. Caring for and being cared for?attitudes at once progressive and regressive?provide a mighty shield against despair. IN apparent contrast to Dorothea and the Duke of Omnium, the task Ernest Pontifex confronts in Samuel Butler's Bildungsroman, The Way of All Flesh, is to discover his true self and to arrange his life accordingly. That inner self, had it been given voice, would have conveyed a strikingly unconventional message to the beleaguered boy: \"You are surrounded on every side by lies which would deceive even the elect . . . the self of which you are conscious, your reasoning and reflecting self, will believe these lies and bid you act in accordance with them. This conscious self of yours, Ernest, is a prig begotten of prigs and trained in priggishness. . . . Obey me, your true self and things will go tolerably well with you, but only listen to that outward old husk of yours which is called your father, and I will rend you in pieces even unto the third and fourth generation as one who has hated God; for I, Ernest, am the God who made you.\" (Chapter 31) 550 \n", + " Biography & Criticism Surely to renounce one's father, to break from one's family, and to assign oneself the responsibility, as a writer, for stirring up the \"hornet's nest\" of \"marriage and the family system\" (Chapter 84), all of which Ernest attempts, would seem to set him at odds with his contemporaries. So shocking did Butler consider some of the portraits in the novel?par ticularly those drawn from his own parents?that he did not publish the book in his lifetime. Though he had begun writing it in 1873, finally putting it aside in 1884, it did not appear until a year after his death in 1903.5 Yet at the end of the novel, Ernest is not simply a defiant rebel. His is a curious war against society's orthodoxies. The final result of Ernest's literary efforts, the reader is informed, are \"conservative, quietistic, comforting. The arguments by which they were reached were taken from the most advanced writers of the day. All that these people con tended for was granted them, but the fruits of victory were for the most part handed over to those already in possession\" (Chapter 85). Earlier Butler's narrator had commented, \"Every man's work, whether it be literature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself, and the more he tries to conceal himself the more clearly will his character appear in spite of him\" (Chapter 14). Thus the conclusion of Ernest's intellectual battle suggests his own acceptance of a nurturing role. In a novel which is ostensibly an attack on the Vic torian family, the protagonist achieves a species of serenity by sifting out the charitable impulse from self-serving cant. Ernest's is not the only portrait glimpsed through literary production; that of Edward Overton is also unveiled as he narrates Ernest's growth and indicates his own involvement with the boy. In the course of com posing Ernest's biography within the novel, Overton sets forth his per sonal attitudes on the interlocking questions of marriage and family, indulgence and morality?attitudes representing the polar opposite of those taught to Ernest as a child?and which the younger man finally comes close to accepting. Overton and Ernest's views, however, are never identical. As a writer of burlesques?his principal literary occu pation?Overton has a capacity for light-hearted heterodoxy that Ernest can never equal. It is Overton who, with marvelous satire, recreates 5 On The Way of All Flesh as a dramatization of Butler's evolutionary theories, see U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel, pp. 257-295. See also William H. Marshall, The World of the Vic torian Novel (South Brunswick and New York, A. S. Barnes and Company, 1966), pp. 424-449. 551 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review the drama of Ernest's parents, Theobald and Christina, on their wed ding day. Similarly he turns inside out the usual notions of family ar rangements, when he mockingly asks: Why should the generations overlap one another at all? Why cannot we be buried as eggs in neat little cells with ten or twenty thousand pounds each wrapped around us in Bank of England notes, and wake up, as the sphex wasp does, to find that its papa and mamma have not only left ample pro vision at its elbow, but have been eaten by sparrows some weeks before it began to live consciously on its own account? (Chapter 18). Clearly Butler used Overton to embody his own opinions, just as he made Ernest relive the painful experience of his childhood. But in his autobiographical novel Butler split not only himself. By creating Over ton he also split his own father?or rather Ernest's?thus providing the boy with a surrogate parent. In the absence of Overton and his Aunt Alethea, who together serve as godparents, Butler would have left Ernest with scant emotional nourishment or moral support. Ernest's childhood was bleak indeed. Theobald, his father, never liked children and seemed to take almost sadistic delight in carrying out his presumed paternal responsibility of frightening the boy into submission. Against such treatment his mother offered no resistance: Christina did not remonstrate with Theobald concerning the severity of the tasks imposed upon their boy, nor yet as to the continual whippings that were found necessary at lesson times. Indeed, when during any absence of Theo bald's the lessons were entrusted to her, she found to her sorrow that it was the only thing to do, and she did it no less effectually than Theobald him self; nevertheless she was fond of the boy, which Theobald never was, and it was long before she could destroy all affection for herself in the mind of her first-born. But she persevered. (Chapter 20) Saddled with such horrendous parents, Ernest formulated a personal version of the facts of life that would break the biological pattern of family organization. In his fantasy of parthenogenesis, which at the age of seven he revealed to Overton, he abolished the paternal sexual role and imagined himself capable of giving birth to male children outside of wedlock. His Aunt Alethea, who appeared in the adolescent's life as a guardian angel, shared this fantasy. Unmarried, and hostile to matri mony, yet endowed with \"a woman's love of children\" (Chapter 33), she determined to be to Ernest \"in place of parents, and to find in him a son rather than a nephew\" (Chapter 34). Before her plan could be 552 \n", + " Biography & Criticism carried out, however, she died, bequeathing Ernest her substantial for tune. The neatly packaged banknotes would be his when he turned twenty-eight, by which time, she had calculated, he would have out grown his \"foolishness\" and would be ready, in Overton's words, \"to live consciously\" on his \"own account.\" In Alethea, then, one finds incarnated the alternative method of childrearing?both sexual and financial?that Ernest and Overton have been seeking. With Alethea's death Overton becomes Ernest's protector. But for a long time he remains at a distance, defining his function as that of financial watchdog, investing his godson's inheritance wisely and letting the capital accumulate. His personal attachment to the young man ebbs and flows: it runs strong when Ernest breaks with his parents, and it almost peters out while Ernest is married. With the dissolution of Ernest's marriage, Overton definitively enters the young man's life, nurses him back to health, encourages him to write, and finally estab lishes him as a wealthy man. For Overton, a bachelor, Ernest has be come \"a son and more than a son;\" and at times the older man is \"half afraid\" that he \"may have been . . . more like a father\" than he \"ought\" (Chapter 86). An odd sort of father, helping Ernest to undo his past, to enjoy as a grown man what was his birthright?a life of moderate self-indulgence and unfettered intellectual expression. Having regained his birthright, Ernest is determined to preserve it and to safeguard his children's equal rights. For his children, this means settling them happily with a bargeman's family and intervening in their lives only when his financial resources are necessary to make their wishes come true. For himself, it requires becoming something of a recluse: \"I am an Ishmael by instinct as much as by accident of circumstances, but if I keep out of society I shall be less vulnerable than Ishmaels generally are. The moment a man goes into society, he becomes vulnerable all round.\" (Chapter 84) But reclaiming one's birthright does not warrant dogmatic assertion of one's own righteousness: for \" cno man's opinions,' \" Ernest concludes, \" 'can be worth holding unless he knows how to deny them easily and gracefully upon occasion in the cause of charity' \" (Chapter 86). Most notably, toward his dying mother, Ernest demonstrates his gift for charitable empathy, for pardoning past injuries: \"Mother,\" he said, \"forgive me?the fault is mine, I ought not to have been so hard; I was wrong, very wrong\"; the poor blubbering fellow meant 553 \n", + " The Massachusetts Review what he said, and his heart yearned to his mother as he had never thought that it could yearn again. (Chapter 82) Whereas his father, Theobald, entrenches himself \"in a firm but dig nified manner behind the Lord's prayer,\" offering scant comfort to the poor woman, Ernest, \"sitting beside her,\" allows her to \"pour out her grief to him without let or hindrance.\" With a fine ear for his mother's simple emotional rhythm, he strikes the chords that might give her solace (Chapter 83): \"My dear mother, . . . you are ill and your mind is unstrung; others can now judge better about you than you can; I assure you that to me you seem to have been the most devotedly unselfish wife and mother that ever lived. ... I believe that you will not only be a saint, but a very distinguished one.\" With his money furnishing a protective cocoon, obviating the stresses usually associated with the adult world, Ernest is able not only to give leeway to that inner self whose voice he could not hear in his father's house; he can also comfort others. Here one discerns the same progres sive and regressive emotional configuration apparent in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children: a nurturing attitude which has dependency as its counterpart. In comparison with the other two novels, The Way of All Flesh mutes this nurture and dependence; but they must of necessity be muted to fulfill the fantasies of childbirth and childrearing that infuse the work. With the need for sexual differentiation blurred by these very fantasies, one mode predominates: the feminine alone re mains highly prized. So too has IT BEEN in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children. Yet to stress?as is commonplace?the idealization of women in Vic torian fiction, to emphasize the extravagant hopes of redemption through the love of these perfect creatures, is merely a first step. One should underline, rather, the fact that both sexes gravitate in a single direction which gives point and meaning to the Victorian emotional universe. One suspects that the magnetic quality of a nurturing ideal is not unconnected with the most striking instance of Victorian self-suppres sion: male sexual restraint. While sexuality among nineteenth-century upper-class women was checked both in Britain and on the continent, it was in Britain alone that similar prohibitions applied to men as well. The significance of this unparalled attempt to create a single standard of sexual behavior cannot be overestimated. At the very least, it placed 554 \n", + " Biography & Criticism the sexes on a more equal footing. In so doing, I should suggest, it opened the way for mutual trust and dependency?for a truce in the perennial battle of the sexes. Men may have paid a price in the form of nervous complaints?a price traditionally exacted from women?but the compensation was clear. A society that could provide a mother a secure standing ground offered emotional safety for all.\n" ] - }, - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 10, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" } ], - "source": [ - "#‼️ 🛑 IMPORTANT: Change the start and end character indexes to one of the ouputs above\n", - "\n", - "textB_start = 14718 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the starting character indexes\n", - "textB_end = 14816 # 🛑 REPLACE the number to the left with one of the ending character indexes\n", - "\n", - "# Output the text in \"B\" for the start and end characters selected above \n", - "print(f\"Character index locations for {article_id}:\", f\"[{textB_start}, {textB_end}]\")\n", - "cleaned_article_text.text[textB_start:textB_end]" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "---" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "## Find the index positions of a given quotation\n", - "\n", - "To establish all of the \"ground truth\" quotations (and their character indexes), we'll want to get the index characters not just for quotations that text-matcher successfully matched, but for *all* quotations in that article.\n", - "\n", - "To retrieve the index characters for all quotations in an article legilbe to human eyes, follow the following steps.\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### Step 1: Locate the quotation in the PDF of the article." - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "### Step 2: Locate the text of that quotation as it appears in the JSON file in the \"\"fullText\" field\n", - "(🛑 Make sure you've entered the `article_id` for the article in the section \"Set the `article_id`\", first!!) \n", - "Run the cell below, and then use \"CTRL+F\" in your browser to find the quotation as it appears in the article text." - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], "source": [ "print(cleaned_article_text.text)" ] @@ -535,7 +385,7 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "### Step 3: Copy that text of the quotation as it appears exactly in the article text above." + "### Step 3: Copy the actual quoted text from *Middlemarch* as it appears exactly in the article text above" ] }, { @@ -552,28 +402,30 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 12, + "execution_count": 27, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019\n", - "Starting index: 14718\n", - "Ending index: 14816\n", - "Character indexes for match: [14718, 14816]\n", + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", + "Starting index: 4329\n", + "Ending index: 4426\n", + "Quotation text and indexes to paste into spreadsheet:\n", + "We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\t[4329, 4426]\n", + "\n", "\n", - " Corresponding text:\n" + "Sanity check (does this match the text above?):\n" ] }, { "data": { "text/plain": [ - "'All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength'" + "'We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves'" ] }, - "execution_count": 12, + "execution_count": 27, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -581,14 +433,14 @@ "source": [ "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", - "quotation = \"All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors and act fatally on the strength\" #pas\n", + "quotation = \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\" #pas\n", "\n", "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", "print('Starting index:', index) \n", "print('Ending index:', index + len(quotation))\n", - "print(f'Character indexes for match: [{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", - "print(\"\\n Corresponding text:\")\n", + "print(f'Quotation text and indexes to paste into spreadsheet:\\n{quotation}\\t[{index}, {index + len(quotation)}]')\n", + "print(\"\\n\\nSanity check (does this match the text above?):\")\n", "cleaned_article_text.text[index:index + len(quotation)]\n", "\n" ] From 9651a89a94044c3bbc5f92a4e50b5759769acf26 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2023 15:15:18 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 23/63] new branch --- .gitignore | 1 + .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 81 +++++++++++-------- package-lock.json | 6 ++ 3 files changed, 55 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) create mode 100644 package-lock.json diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index dcf02d5..7ed0c55 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -1,3 +1,4 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ +algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json diff --git a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index 9097fe6..10de693 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 12, + "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 13, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 14, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ "[3 rows x 30 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 14, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 17, + "execution_count": 48, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -293,15 +293,15 @@ "text": [ "\n", "Article selected:\n", - "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", - "Title: Self-Suppression & Attachment: Mid-Victorian Emotional Life\n", + "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934\n", + "Title: \"THE INSTRUMENT OF THE CENTURY\": THE PIANO AS AN ICON OF FEMALE SEXUALITY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY\n", "\n" ] } ], "source": [ "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", "\n", "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", @@ -352,28 +352,31 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 28, + "execution_count": 49, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "SELF-SUPPRESSION & ATTACHMENT MID-VICTORIAN EMOTIONAL LIFE Judith M. Hughes T tow can an historian hope to recreate the emotional life of the - - past, to discern the major features of an inner landscape that has disappeared from view? More specifically, how can I recall to life the psychic rhythms of the mid-Victorians? Where should I expect to hear the voices of the dead reverberate with sufficient clarity so that I could begin to interpret the sounds? Cultural artifacts, in particular the novel, provide a starting point. I can begin by trying to pinpoint prominent emotional configurations in a number of novels. Such artistic constructions condense inner experiences and render them immediate, thereby promising access to those deeper layers of the mind which have long since been buried. It is, of course, a promise that cannot be entirely fulfilled. Neverthe less, it would be a timid scholar indeed who would hesitate to exploit 541 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review a rich store of material simply because it offered insights rather than conclusive proof. Insights of what sort? Certain psychological dilemmas are in theory universal, and these are supposed to be the stuff of great literature. What is of interest, then, are the particular strategies adopted for coping with such dilemmas, the abortive or successful attempts to ward off despair and to buttress self-esteem. And in reflecting on fictional characters, I have, above all, been struck by the recurrent variations on themes regarded as universal. The mention of fictional characters is an indication of how I intend to approach the novels. Among literary critics with a psychoanalytic turn of mind, it is no longer fashionable to concentrate on the characters themselves. Rather, the emphasis has fallen on either the author or the reader. What the literary work can tell one about the mind of its crea tor or how it evokes emotional responses from the audience?these have become the major concerns.1 Clearly either focus would be inappro priate for me to adopt: I am not engaged in a study of novelists; as for the audience, I have access to the inner experiences of only one of its members, my own, and they are not relevant. Despite this disclaimer of interest in writers and readers, it is nonetheless incumbent upon me to choose works which may be considered representative, works which combined contemporary appeal with enduring artistic merit. As Freud early recognized, the authors of such works are usually good psychol ogists. Yet one must remember that fictional characters are not real people. One cannot produce case histories from novels; one can, how ever, delineate the emotional drama of the individual protagonists. If space and human frailty demand a radical selection, if three novels constitute a manageable sample, the identity of two of the authors can not long be in doubt?George Eliot and Anthony Trollope. No one can dispute their stature or their contemporary popularity, and as por traitists of mid-Victorian Britain they are the novelists most frequently cited. My third choice, Samuel Butler, may seem more eccentric. Yet the very fact of his critical stance compelled his inclusion, to provide a foil or a check against a too ready sympathy with the Victorian sensi bility. As a point of entry, one may start with the question of self-suppres sion. How does the belief that selflessness signifies personal strength?a striking feature of mid-Victorian interpersonal relations?correspond 1 See, for example, Norman Holland, The Dynamics of Literary Response (New York, Oxford University Press, 1968). 542 \n", - " Biography & Criticism with the emotional universe of fiction? Did those who exercised such restraint find emotional compensation? It is apparent that for the Vic torians compliance with an ethical precept which succeeding generations would regard as merely repressive did not necessarily cause psychic devastation. For them, an undemanding ego, whether radiating sym pathy or encased in diffidence, deserved to be met by mutual accom modation and to receive steady encouragement. What, one may now ask, in turning to the novels, was the emotional configuration that gave self-suppression its meaning? The central feature of Middlemarch, which George Eliot fin ished in 1872, is highlighted in the narrator's observation: \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves.\" Realizing that one is not supreme, that others have \"an equivalent centre of self\" constitutes the major experi ence of the novel's chief characters;2 but, as Mary Garth comments, \"the difficult task of knowing another soul is not for young gentlemen whose consciousness is chiefly made up of their own wishes\" (Chapter 12). Learning, then, must go hand in hand with the willing suppres sion of one's own egotistic desires. No scene so sharply and so eco nomically epitomizes this process as Mrs. Bulstrode's acceptance and sharing of her disgraced husband's fate: But this imperfectly-taught woman, whose phrases and habits were an odd patchwork, had a loyal spirit within her. The man whose prosperity she had shared through nearly half a life, and who had unvaryingly cherished her ?now that punishment had befallen him it was not possible to her in any sense to forsake him. There is forsaking which still sits at the same board and lies on the same couch with the forsaken soul, withering it the more by un loving proximity. She knew, when she locked her door, that she should unlock it ready to go down to her unhappy husband and espouse his sorrow, and say of his guilt, I will mourn and not reproach. But she needed time to gather up her strength; she needed to sob out her farewell to all the gladness and pride of her life. When she had resolved to go down, she prepared her self by some little acts which might seem mere folly to a hard onlooker; 2 Chapter 21. On George Eliot's moral vision see, for example, U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: George Eliot, Walter Pater, and Samuel Butler (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1965), pp. 24?115, and Bernard J. Paris, Exferiments in Life: George Eliot's Quest for Values (Detroit, Wayne State University Press, 1965). 543 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review they were her way of expressing to all spectators visible or invisible that she had begun a new life in which she embraced humiliation. She took off all her ornaments and put on a plain black gown, and instead of wearing her much-adorned cap and large bows of hair, she brushed her hair down and put on a plain bonnet-cap, which made her look suddenly like an early Methodist. (Chapter 74) Throughout Middlemarch self-suppression serves to cement attach ments in the finely wrought context of everyday life. And the intricate design of the work, referred to repeatedly in the novel itself as a web, allows delicate shades of meaning to emerge from juxtaposition and comparison. The impact of the novel's structure is reenforced by the subtlety of the omniscient narrative voice: while the play of irony creates perspective, distance is foreshortened when the angle of vision shifts to a character's own inner consciousness. This double complexity suggests that Middlemarch cannot be read simply as a long and elevating ser mon. In the commanding figure of Dorothea, morality is never divorced from imagination; though forced to relinquish illusions, she is never obliged to abandon her dreams.3 Dorothea's quest is foreshadowed in the description of Saint Theresa of Avila, which appears in the Prelude. The Saint \"soared after some illimitable satisfaction, some object which would never justify weariness, which would reconcile self-despair with the rapturous consciousness of life beyond self.\" Dorothea's own nature, \"altogether ardent, theoretic, and intellectually consequent\" (Chapter 3), yearning \"after some lofty conception of the world\" (Chapter 1), resembles the passionate disposi tion of the Spanish saint. And though Dorothea's short-sightedness, which impairs her perception of those in her immediate vicinity, is sub ject to ironic comment, her idealism largely escapes such treatment. This sympathetic view does not make Dorothea's aspirations less opaque. Yet one suspects that the difficulty is not due to a lack of narrative dis tance; rather the very diffuseness is central to her emotional dilemma. The desolation of a world of separate souls, the frightening \"fragmen tariness\" of life (Chapter 20), is the nightmare from which she seeks to escape. This flight is both the counterpart of her idealism and what for so long prevents it from acquiring coherent form. In marrying Casaubon, whom the orphaned Dorothea likened to Milton, Hooker, and above all Locke, she thought she had found a 3 For a critique of George Eliot's handling of Dorothea, see F. R. Leavis, The Great Tradition (London, Chatto and Windus, 1948), pp. 72-79. 544 \n", - " Biography & Criticism \"man who could understand the higher inward life, and with whom there could be some spiritual communion\" (Chapter 2). For her \"the really delightful marriage must be where your husband was a sort of father, and could teach you even Hebrew, if you wished it\" (Chapter 1). Such a union \"would deliver her from her girlish subjection to her own ignorance, and give her the freedom of voluntary submission to a guide who would take her along the grandest path\" (Chapter 3). But Dorothea had \"not reached that point of renunciation at which she would have been satisfied with having a wise husband; she wished, poor child, to be wise herself\" (Chapter 7). Disillusionment came almost immediately: Casaubon's learning offered her no beacon light; she could see no \"wide opening where she followed him.\" Still she might have felt these intellectual disappointments less keenly if some other bond of intimacy had developed between them. \"With all her yearning to know what was afar from her and to be widely benignant, she had ardour enough for what was near, to have kissed Mr. Casaubon's coat-sleeve, or to have caressed his shoe-latchet, if he would have made any other sign of acceptance than pronouncing her, with his unfailing propriety, to be of a most affectionate and truly feminine nature, indicating at the same time by politely reaching a chair for her that he regarded these manifestations as rather crude and startling\" (Chapter 21). If Dorothea felt chilled by Casaubon's unresponsiveness, he too suf fered in the \"narrow cell\" of his own being. One of George Eliot's greatest achievements is her presentation of Casaubon from the inside. Though earlier commentary has prepared the reader for an interior view of the pedantic and aging husband, still when the author asks at the beginning of Chapter Twenty-Nine, \"but why always Dorothea?\" and then proceeds to depict Casaubon's \"intense consciousness,\" the effect is arresting. The dessicated scholar can never be \"liberated from a small hungry shivering self.\" \"His experience was of that pitiable kind which shrinks from pity, and fears most of all that it should be known: it was that proud narrow sensitiveness which has not mass enough to spare for transformation into sympathy, and quivers thread-like in small currents of self-preoccupation or at best of an egoistic scrupulosity.\" Slowly Dorothea comes to appreciate not only her husband's weak nesses, but the inner suffering which they produce. Though herself wounded, she strives to master her hurt, to exercise the self-suppression that will permit her to share Casaubon's sorrow. When Casaubon, in formed by his physician of the seriousness of his heart condition, rejects Dorothea's sympathy, her internal conflict reaches its dramatic climax. 545 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review Reacting with \"a rebellious anger stronger than any she had felt since her marriage,\" she meditates through the evening and into the night, and finally \"the resolved submission\" comes. In the ensuing exchange with her husband they more nearly approach communion than at any other time, and Dorothea feels \"something like the thankfulness that might well up in us if we had narrowly escaped hurting a lamed crea ture\" (Chapter 42). The intensity of Dorothea's struggle in her relation to Casaubon con vinces the reader both of her own earnestness and more generally, of the enduring quality of her vision. Though the object seems undeserv ing (and still more so when a codicil appended to his will reveals his deep suspicion of and isolation from his wife), the dream has lost none of its power. Yet it has been qualified by the recognition that self-sup pression without trust is insufficient. Indeed lack of trust appears as second only to egotism as a barrier to emotional attachments. And in the second half of the novel Dorothea's stature is depicted increasingly in terms of her ability to bestow trust where others doubt, to nourish by her compassion those most in need. Though critics may be dissatisfied with George Eliot's lack of dis tance from Dorothea's emotional richness, the contours of that pleni tude are clear: her capacity to transcend the boundaries of self and to offer reassurance \"without any check of proud reserve\" makes it possi ble for her to connect with other human beings and to create coherence out of \"fragmentariness\" (Chapter 76). The image which comes to mind is that of a mother's tender and purposeful solicitude, and ma ternal imagery is pervasive in the scene of Dorothea's last crisis. One would hesitate before suggesting that she has simply been transformed into a mothering figure; yet the change is striking from the daughter she initially sought to be. It is rather that the maternal image conveys the merging of fantasy and morality, the fusion of emotion and \"be neficent activity\" (Finale), and the fulfillment of someone who could not live without a \"loving reverent resolve\" (Chapter 20). A fter the spiritual quest of Middlemarch, Trollope's work The * *- Duke's Children, published in 1880, seems sober and sedate. Though the two main plots concern love relationships leading to mar riage, idealized in typical Trollopian fashion, it is the Duke of Omnium, never one to be driven by passionate fancy, who is the chief protagonist. In earlier novels in the Palliser series, of which this is the last, the Duke's fantasy life was largely occupied with dreams of introducing a 546 \n", - " Biography & Criticism system of decimal coinage. Though no subterranean change has taken place in his psyche, when he appears in The Duke's Children with his soul bared and his inner struggles revealed, he achieves a stature com parable to that of Dorothea. And in his efforts to forge new links with his grown children, one hears echoed the longings of George Eliot's spiritual protagonist.4 The poor Duke must begin his search in straitened emotional cir cumstances, trapped by his mute and haughty sensitivity in what George Eliot would have called a narrow cell of self. But how could it be otherwise, he wonders. \"The very pride of which he was accused was no more than that shrinking which comes from want of trust in one self. He was a shy man. All his friends and all his enemies knew that ... a shy, self-conscious, timid, shrinking, thin-skinned man!\" (Chapter 22). Still worse, the one person with whom he felt comfortable, his wife, Lady Glencora, was dead. The utter prostration of the bereft husband could not have been more com plete. It was not only that his heart was torn to pieces, but that he did not know how to look out into the world. It was as though a man should be suddenly called to live without hands or even arms. He was helpless, and knew himself to be helpless. Hitherto he had never specially acknowledged to himself that his wife was necessary to him as a component part of his life. Though he had loved her dearly, and had in all things consulted her welfare and happiness, he had at times been inclined to think that in the exuberance of her spirits she had been a trouble rather than a support to him. But now it was as though all outside appliances were taken away from him. There was no one of whom he could ask a question. (Chapter 1) The Duke must struggle as best he can with the task of becoming a father to his grown children, about whom he has \"never taken any trouble to inform himself\" (Chapter 24). In confronting their marital hopes, his attachment to his daughter Lady Mary and to his eldest son Lord Silverbridge acquires substance. Though both children bring him pain and sorrow in choosing what he considers unsuitable mates, they 4 The most helpful critical comment on The Duke's Children is John H. Hagan, \"The Duke's Children: Trollope's Psychological Masterpiece,\" Nine teenth-Century Fiction, XIII (1958-1959), 1-21. See also Ruth apRoberts, The Moral Trollofe (Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1971), pp. 147-149, and Arthur Mizener, \"Anthony Trollope: The Palliser Novels,\" in Robert C. Rathburn and Martin Steinmann, Jr., eds., From Jane Austen to Josefh Conrad: Essays Collected in Memory of James T. Hillhouse (Minneapolis, Minn., University of Minnesota Press, 1958), pp. 118?132. 547 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review are so precious to him that he finally must give way. Such an ending is standard fare. What is remarkable is the way it is achieved: respond ing to a combination of frontal assaults and enveloping movements, the Duke abandons his lonely standing ground and discovers a world of mutual affection or forebearance. In the story of Lord Silverbridge and the Duke, Trollope gives both a tender and a comic account of a father-son relationship. The imma ture young man, whose very diction suggests his want of seriousness and polish, repeatedly disappoints his father yet at the same time reaches out to soothe the older man. In so doing he demonstrates a protective concern that itself has a paternal quality. When Silverbridge, following the impulse of his unreserved nature, invites his father to dine with him at his club, the Duke reveals an emotion which is the psychological counterpart to his son's solicitude?a desire to see Silverbridge not only married but effectively the head of the house. Affection for his son is always associated in the Duke's mind with an eagerness to relinquish his own position. \"I should be glad to see you marry early,\" said the Duke, speaking in a low voice, almost solemnly, but in his quietest, sweetest tone of voice. \"You are peculiarly situated. Though as yet you are only the heir to the property and honors of our family, still, were you married, almost everything would be at your disposal. There is so much which I should only be too ready to give up to you!\" \"I can't bear to hear you talk of giving up anything,\" said Silverbridge energetically. Then the father looked round the room furtively, and seeing that the door was shut, and that they were assuredly alone, he put out his hand and gently stroked the young man's hair. It was almost a caress,?as though he would have said to himself, \"Were he my daughter, I would kiss him.\" (Chapter 26) Through the prospect of his son's marriage, the Duke hopes to find again a family life that will nurture him. After he sets aside his caste objections and accepts a young American as Silverbridge's bride, he gives her the ring which had been his first present to Lady Glencora, asking her to become his child so that he may have someone to love him. \"You shall be my child. And if you will love me you shall be very dear to me. You shall be my own child,?as dear as my own. I must either love his wife very dearly, or else I must be an unhappy man. And she must love me dearly, or I must be unhappy.\" (Chapter 72) 548 \n", - " Biography & Criticism Though the Duke laments being driven to yield to Silverbridge's marital choice, his inner struggle is less intense and the reconciliation more comforting than in the case of Lady Mary and her penniless suitor. From the start, the Duke's view of his daughter's romance is distorted by his memory of his wife and Burgo Fitzgerald. Lady Glencora had been forced to marry Plantagenet Palliser, the future Duke of Omnium, against her will; she was still in love with the handsome and dissolute Burgo and shortly after her marriage almost ran away with him. The fact that before her death Lady Glencora tacitly supported Mary's choice makes the Duke's recollections both more bitter and more appro priate. On top of this first haunting triangle, the Duke attempts to superimpose another. Hoping to detach Mary from her beloved, as her mother had been, he urges an insipid young lord to court her. Though the Duke does not relish the business at hand, he feels compelled to find someone to replicate his own earlier role. By thus insinuating himself into the competitive struggle for his daughter, he all but forfeits her trust and affection. Though the Duke may be obdurate, he cannot bring himself to think ill of Mary. In a moving scene, in which his daughter shakes his resis tance by flinging herself on his breast, he reflects on his feelings for her. This girl,?whether she should live and fade by his side, or whether she should give her hand to some fitting noble suitor,?or even though she might at last become the wife of this man who loved her, would always have been pure. It was sweet to him to have something to caress. Now in the solitude of his life, as years were coming on him, he felt how necessary it was that he should have someone who would love him. Since his wife had left him he had been debarred from these caresses by the necessity of showing his antag onism to her dearest wishes . . . but yet there had crept over him the feel ing that as he was half conquered, why should he not seek some recompense in his daughter's love? (Chapter 66) To save his image of Mary he must give way. He must admit that Mary's suitor is not Burgo Fitzgerald reincarnate; the young man may lack funds but he does not lack character. Once the Duke makes this distinction, the link with the past is broken; he can forget his anger at Lady Glencora?an anger that he had acknowledged only with great pain. Having yielded to both his children, he can now reclaim his daugh ter's love and look forward to a fond welcome in his son's home. 549 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review T) efore proceeding, it may be helpful to underline the themes com -*-* mon to both novels. One need not pause over the exhortation to self-suppression; it is fully evident. Its defensive quality?a retreat in the face of disappointment which short-circuits rage and hostility?is a major motif. But withdrawal does not exhaust the strategies which self suppression provides. There is also a positive way of dealing with emo tional dangers. Dorothea, striken with fear that she has been robbed of the man she loves and will eventually marry, curbs her resentment and acts as comforter to her presumed rival. The Duke's struggle?in this case to conquer his anger against those who have aroused his jealous feelings?is more protracted; by maintaining his faith in Mary and fostering her wishes, he eventually recovers the cherished memory of his dead wife. In brief, a nurturing disposition, toward rival or loved one, ensures that the path to communion will never be permanently blocked. This nurturing attitude, which enables trust to triumph over jealousy, suggests an almost exclusive identification with a satisfying mother figure. And this appears true regardless of the person's sex: qualities usually associated with women are not, in these novels, exclusively theirs. Examples are plentiful of men offering solace and emotional nourish ment. At the same time as such a self-image enshrines the earliest attachment, it mutes the difference between generations; it is as if the bond between parent and child formed a continuum permitting move ment in either direction. Caring for and being cared for?attitudes at once progressive and regressive?provide a mighty shield against despair. IN apparent contrast to Dorothea and the Duke of Omnium, the task Ernest Pontifex confronts in Samuel Butler's Bildungsroman, The Way of All Flesh, is to discover his true self and to arrange his life accordingly. That inner self, had it been given voice, would have conveyed a strikingly unconventional message to the beleaguered boy: \"You are surrounded on every side by lies which would deceive even the elect . . . the self of which you are conscious, your reasoning and reflecting self, will believe these lies and bid you act in accordance with them. This conscious self of yours, Ernest, is a prig begotten of prigs and trained in priggishness. . . . Obey me, your true self and things will go tolerably well with you, but only listen to that outward old husk of yours which is called your father, and I will rend you in pieces even unto the third and fourth generation as one who has hated God; for I, Ernest, am the God who made you.\" (Chapter 31) 550 \n", - " Biography & Criticism Surely to renounce one's father, to break from one's family, and to assign oneself the responsibility, as a writer, for stirring up the \"hornet's nest\" of \"marriage and the family system\" (Chapter 84), all of which Ernest attempts, would seem to set him at odds with his contemporaries. So shocking did Butler consider some of the portraits in the novel?par ticularly those drawn from his own parents?that he did not publish the book in his lifetime. Though he had begun writing it in 1873, finally putting it aside in 1884, it did not appear until a year after his death in 1903.5 Yet at the end of the novel, Ernest is not simply a defiant rebel. His is a curious war against society's orthodoxies. The final result of Ernest's literary efforts, the reader is informed, are \"conservative, quietistic, comforting. The arguments by which they were reached were taken from the most advanced writers of the day. All that these people con tended for was granted them, but the fruits of victory were for the most part handed over to those already in possession\" (Chapter 85). Earlier Butler's narrator had commented, \"Every man's work, whether it be literature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a portrait of himself, and the more he tries to conceal himself the more clearly will his character appear in spite of him\" (Chapter 14). Thus the conclusion of Ernest's intellectual battle suggests his own acceptance of a nurturing role. In a novel which is ostensibly an attack on the Vic torian family, the protagonist achieves a species of serenity by sifting out the charitable impulse from self-serving cant. Ernest's is not the only portrait glimpsed through literary production; that of Edward Overton is also unveiled as he narrates Ernest's growth and indicates his own involvement with the boy. In the course of com posing Ernest's biography within the novel, Overton sets forth his per sonal attitudes on the interlocking questions of marriage and family, indulgence and morality?attitudes representing the polar opposite of those taught to Ernest as a child?and which the younger man finally comes close to accepting. Overton and Ernest's views, however, are never identical. As a writer of burlesques?his principal literary occu pation?Overton has a capacity for light-hearted heterodoxy that Ernest can never equal. It is Overton who, with marvelous satire, recreates 5 On The Way of All Flesh as a dramatization of Butler's evolutionary theories, see U. C. Knoepflmacher, Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel, pp. 257-295. See also William H. Marshall, The World of the Vic torian Novel (South Brunswick and New York, A. S. Barnes and Company, 1966), pp. 424-449. 551 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review the drama of Ernest's parents, Theobald and Christina, on their wed ding day. Similarly he turns inside out the usual notions of family ar rangements, when he mockingly asks: Why should the generations overlap one another at all? Why cannot we be buried as eggs in neat little cells with ten or twenty thousand pounds each wrapped around us in Bank of England notes, and wake up, as the sphex wasp does, to find that its papa and mamma have not only left ample pro vision at its elbow, but have been eaten by sparrows some weeks before it began to live consciously on its own account? (Chapter 18). Clearly Butler used Overton to embody his own opinions, just as he made Ernest relive the painful experience of his childhood. But in his autobiographical novel Butler split not only himself. By creating Over ton he also split his own father?or rather Ernest's?thus providing the boy with a surrogate parent. In the absence of Overton and his Aunt Alethea, who together serve as godparents, Butler would have left Ernest with scant emotional nourishment or moral support. Ernest's childhood was bleak indeed. Theobald, his father, never liked children and seemed to take almost sadistic delight in carrying out his presumed paternal responsibility of frightening the boy into submission. Against such treatment his mother offered no resistance: Christina did not remonstrate with Theobald concerning the severity of the tasks imposed upon their boy, nor yet as to the continual whippings that were found necessary at lesson times. Indeed, when during any absence of Theo bald's the lessons were entrusted to her, she found to her sorrow that it was the only thing to do, and she did it no less effectually than Theobald him self; nevertheless she was fond of the boy, which Theobald never was, and it was long before she could destroy all affection for herself in the mind of her first-born. But she persevered. (Chapter 20) Saddled with such horrendous parents, Ernest formulated a personal version of the facts of life that would break the biological pattern of family organization. In his fantasy of parthenogenesis, which at the age of seven he revealed to Overton, he abolished the paternal sexual role and imagined himself capable of giving birth to male children outside of wedlock. His Aunt Alethea, who appeared in the adolescent's life as a guardian angel, shared this fantasy. Unmarried, and hostile to matri mony, yet endowed with \"a woman's love of children\" (Chapter 33), she determined to be to Ernest \"in place of parents, and to find in him a son rather than a nephew\" (Chapter 34). Before her plan could be 552 \n", - " Biography & Criticism carried out, however, she died, bequeathing Ernest her substantial for tune. The neatly packaged banknotes would be his when he turned twenty-eight, by which time, she had calculated, he would have out grown his \"foolishness\" and would be ready, in Overton's words, \"to live consciously\" on his \"own account.\" In Alethea, then, one finds incarnated the alternative method of childrearing?both sexual and financial?that Ernest and Overton have been seeking. With Alethea's death Overton becomes Ernest's protector. But for a long time he remains at a distance, defining his function as that of financial watchdog, investing his godson's inheritance wisely and letting the capital accumulate. His personal attachment to the young man ebbs and flows: it runs strong when Ernest breaks with his parents, and it almost peters out while Ernest is married. With the dissolution of Ernest's marriage, Overton definitively enters the young man's life, nurses him back to health, encourages him to write, and finally estab lishes him as a wealthy man. For Overton, a bachelor, Ernest has be come \"a son and more than a son;\" and at times the older man is \"half afraid\" that he \"may have been . . . more like a father\" than he \"ought\" (Chapter 86). An odd sort of father, helping Ernest to undo his past, to enjoy as a grown man what was his birthright?a life of moderate self-indulgence and unfettered intellectual expression. Having regained his birthright, Ernest is determined to preserve it and to safeguard his children's equal rights. For his children, this means settling them happily with a bargeman's family and intervening in their lives only when his financial resources are necessary to make their wishes come true. For himself, it requires becoming something of a recluse: \"I am an Ishmael by instinct as much as by accident of circumstances, but if I keep out of society I shall be less vulnerable than Ishmaels generally are. The moment a man goes into society, he becomes vulnerable all round.\" (Chapter 84) But reclaiming one's birthright does not warrant dogmatic assertion of one's own righteousness: for \" cno man's opinions,' \" Ernest concludes, \" 'can be worth holding unless he knows how to deny them easily and gracefully upon occasion in the cause of charity' \" (Chapter 86). Most notably, toward his dying mother, Ernest demonstrates his gift for charitable empathy, for pardoning past injuries: \"Mother,\" he said, \"forgive me?the fault is mine, I ought not to have been so hard; I was wrong, very wrong\"; the poor blubbering fellow meant 553 \n", - " The Massachusetts Review what he said, and his heart yearned to his mother as he had never thought that it could yearn again. (Chapter 82) Whereas his father, Theobald, entrenches himself \"in a firm but dig nified manner behind the Lord's prayer,\" offering scant comfort to the poor woman, Ernest, \"sitting beside her,\" allows her to \"pour out her grief to him without let or hindrance.\" With a fine ear for his mother's simple emotional rhythm, he strikes the chords that might give her solace (Chapter 83): \"My dear mother, . . . you are ill and your mind is unstrung; others can now judge better about you than you can; I assure you that to me you seem to have been the most devotedly unselfish wife and mother that ever lived. ... I believe that you will not only be a saint, but a very distinguished one.\" With his money furnishing a protective cocoon, obviating the stresses usually associated with the adult world, Ernest is able not only to give leeway to that inner self whose voice he could not hear in his father's house; he can also comfort others. Here one discerns the same progres sive and regressive emotional configuration apparent in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children: a nurturing attitude which has dependency as its counterpart. In comparison with the other two novels, The Way of All Flesh mutes this nurture and dependence; but they must of necessity be muted to fulfill the fantasies of childbirth and childrearing that infuse the work. With the need for sexual differentiation blurred by these very fantasies, one mode predominates: the feminine alone re mains highly prized. So too has IT BEEN in Middlemarch and The Duke's Children. Yet to stress?as is commonplace?the idealization of women in Vic torian fiction, to emphasize the extravagant hopes of redemption through the love of these perfect creatures, is merely a first step. One should underline, rather, the fact that both sexes gravitate in a single direction which gives point and meaning to the Victorian emotional universe. One suspects that the magnetic quality of a nurturing ideal is not unconnected with the most striking instance of Victorian self-suppres sion: male sexual restraint. While sexuality among nineteenth-century upper-class women was checked both in Britain and on the continent, it was in Britain alone that similar prohibitions applied to men as well. The significance of this unparalled attempt to create a single standard of sexual behavior cannot be overestimated. At the very least, it placed 554 \n", - " Biography & Criticism the sexes on a more equal footing. In so doing, I should suggest, it opened the way for mutual trust and dependency?for a truce in the perennial battle of the sexes. Men may have paid a price in the form of nervous complaints?a price traditionally exacted from women?but the compensation was clear. A society that could provide a mother a secure standing ground offered emotional safety for all.\n" + "\"THE INSTRUMENT OF THE CENTURY\":1 THE PIANO AS AN ICON OF FEMALE SEXUALITY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY by LAURA VORACHEK University of Wisconsin-Madison The piano rapidly became the instrument of choice in the nineteenth century, a fixture in middle-class British households within 30 years of its first becoming available for domestic use in 1771. Absent from male education, learning to play the piano was a standard part of a middle-class girl's training since it was believed to provide discipline, diversion, and a skill that would help her attract a husband. The piano's specific class and gender associations suggest it functioned within a middle-class ideology which naturalized these distinctions, as well as defined women's sexuality. At the same time, both the piano and women's sexual purity were symbols of middle-class economic status. Due to their association, the piano came to embody the somewhat contradictory cultural conceptions of middle-class female sexuality in the art and literature of the period. Nineteenth-century debates about the nature of women's sexuality have resulted in disparate representations by twentieth-century theoreticians and historians. Michel Foucault argues that medical discourse sought to order and define women's sexuality in this period by hystericizing women's bodies - attributing nervous disorders to sexual organs. Complementing this discourse of illness was a view of women as asexual. Thomas Laqueur contends that a change in the perception of women's sexuality, from women as carnal beings to women as \"passionless,\" occurred in the eighteenth century. This redefinition of women's sexuality, part of a new stress on oppositional differentiation between men and women, was supported by evidence of automatic ovulation which indicated that female orgasm was not necessary for conception as previously believed. Both the hysterization of women's bodies and medical discoveries about automatic ovulation pathologized women's sexuality. Both theses also emphasize the influence of medical discourse in shaping lay opinion and, consequently, women's sexuality. Michael Mason argues, however, that lay opinion differed from that of elite medical researchers in that the uterus was believed to have an influence on a woman's whole being, dispersing sites of sexual arousal throughout a woman's body - a view certainly at odds with passionlessness. He does note, though, that it was widely believed, despite evidence to the contrary, that \"women may acquire or at least develop their sexual appetite through sexual activity\" (221). The 26 \n", + " work of these historians points to competing beliefs about and representations of women's sexuality during the century. I would suggest that these competing beliefs reflect the manipulation of women's sexuality in representing class difference. Cora Kaplan and Nancy Armstrong remind us that along with sexual differentiation, (middle-class) Victorians were concerned with class differentiation. Kaplan argues that since the working classes were feminized by contemporary discourse, middie-class women distanced themselves by \"projecting and displacing on to women of lower social standing and women of colour, as well as on to the 'traditionally' corrupt aristocracy, all that was deemed vicious and regressive in women as a sex\" (168). Armstrong contends that this distancing is represented in eighteenth and nineteenth-century conduct books which emphasized the qualities that made a middle-class woman a good wife - her sexual innocence and moral purity - in order to differentiate her from the bodily display of the aristocratic woman and the physical labor of the working-class woman. Furthermore, the cultural narrative of the fallen woman, whose loss of moral purity is accompanied by a loss of class status, served as a warning and a boundary for middle-class women's sexual behavior that favored, if not passionlessness, a less sexualized view of middleclass women.2 Thus cultural representations of bourgeois class status joined medical science in further circumscribing women's sexuality. As the middle-class woman is constructed with a bodiless, class-based sexuality, her desire, I will argue, is displaced onto the piano. The piano functions as a fetish, a location for her sex expression that allows her to remain innocent, her body chaste, yet her desire communicated or mediated through playing. To account for this association, I turn now to the history of the piano in the nineteenth century. The development of factory manufacturing during the Industrial Revolution made ownership of a piano an accessible symbol of respectability and pretension to gentility. Its rise to popularity and institution in the education of the middle-class girl occurred in a relatively short period of time (see Grover, Harding, and Loesser). In 1766 the first English piano was produced in the workshop of Johann Zumpe. Five years later, John Broadwood introduced the first square piano, which was amenable both in size and cost for the middle-class household. A new grand pianoforte is a sign of arrival for the upwardly mobile Cole family in Jane Austen's Emma (1816). \"[0]f low origin, in trade, and only moderately genteel,\" the Coles live quietly until experiencing a considerable increase in income (Austen 188). To mark their new economic status, the Coles increase the size of their house, the number of servants they employ and their general expenditures, including a grand pianoforte, purchased despite the fact that Mrs. Cole \"do[es] not know one note from another, and [her] little girls, who are but 27 \n", + " just beginning, perhaps may never make anything of it\" (196).3 By 1820, a piano was within the reach of even the lower-middle-class family. Aware of their middle-class female market, piano manufacturers in the early part of the century produced pianos that doubled as drawing-room tables, writing tables, storage cabinets, sewing tables and work boxes (Harding 264-65). By the middle of the century, the piano was well established as the principal source of home entertainment. Writing in 1876, the Rev. H. R. Haweis estimated that 20,000 pianos were manufactured annually in Great Britain, and another 10,000 foreign-made pianos were imported each year. He further estimated that one million people played 400,000 pianos in Great Britain at this time (435-36). The piano's importance in the middle-class household lasted until the end of the century when the arrival of the phonograph and the cinema began to threaten its popularity. The piano was both a public and domestic instrument during this period with specific associations which corresponded to gender ideology, skill level and economic spheres. Usually found in a domestic setting, the piano was employed for amateur music making, and the performers were mainly women, \"as piano playing - at not too advanced a level - was one of the most desired feminine accomplishments\" (Plantinga 1). In addition to family entertainment, the piano was commonly believed to provide both discipline and an emotional outlet for women. Haweis notes that \"the piano makes a girl sit upright and pay attention to details.\" Moreover, \"a good play on the piano has not infrequently taken the place of a good cry upstairs\" (346, 347). In William Thackeray's Vanity Fair , the piano aids Amelia Osborne in her expression of her grief at the death of her husband: she \"sate for long evening hours, touching, to the best of her simple art, melancholy harmonies on the keys, and weeping over them in silence\" (Thackeray 577). While the piano was considered the province of the female amateur musician, she was not thought capable of serious artistic achievement. Nicholas Temper ley suggests that one reason for this was that serious devotion to music might interfere with a young lady's attempts to find a husband (\"Ballroom\" 119), although gender ideology concerning women's intellectual capacity certainly played a role as well (Scott 96). Intellectual development in women was thought to have a negative effect on their reproductive capabilities, redirecting their limited energy resources from their \"natural\" function of childbearing.4 The music these young women played also may have had a hand in creating this bias against the skill of female pianists. While drawing-room music was similar to the high art music of the period,5 it was less challenging technically and intellectually, \"a pale reflection of the music of the great composers of an earlier generation\" (Temperley, \"Ballroom\" 119). Further, popular drawing-room ballads played on sentiment 28 \n", + " with lyrics that focused on domestic (British as well as home and family) virtues such as family loyalty, maternal love, patriotism and valor, 'Virtues lost in modern urban society or threatened by continental influences'' (Temperley, \"Ballroom\" 123). While not the stuff of high art music, the subject matter was appropriate for the middle-class woman's role as moral guide for her family.6 In addition to providing entertainment in her leisure hours, the middleclass woman could soothe away stresses of her husband's workplace with her playing. Lydgate's vision of married life, in George Eliot's Middlemarch, reflects this prevailing attitude. In his \"dreamland, ... Rosamond Vincy appeared to be that perfect piece of womanhood who would reverence her husband's mind after the fashion of an accomplished mermaid, using her comb and looking-glass and singing her song for the relaxation of his adored wisdom alone\" (Eliot 475). And, early in their marriage, she accommodates his fantasy: At home... he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious sea-breezes. (373) Insensitive to her art, Lydgate recognizes only that the music creates a relaxing atmosphere, naturalizing the harmony of his home. Haweis suggests, however, that the piano's primary function in the middle-class home is to relieve the stresses of domestic life by providing an outlet for a woman's enforced idleness and emotional restraint: \"That domestic and long-suffering instrument, the cottage piano, has probably done more to sweeten existence and bring peace and happiness to families in general, and to young women in particular, than all the homilies on the domestic virtues ever yet penned\" (104). Thus, the piano functioned as the \"visual-sonoric simulacrum of family, wife, and mother\" in the Victorian home, \"an analogical referent to social harmony and domestic order\" (Leppert 105, 115). This \"domestic order\" specifically belonged to the middle-class home, defined as it was against the economic sphere, thereby reinforcing the \"social harmony\" of a gender-based division of labor that supported middleclass economic stability. An emblem of middle-class respectability and status, the piano came to be gendered female by association. However, the piano was also a public instrument during the nineteenth century, most notably used by the increasingly popular international concert virtuosi. The rise of this new type of musician was tied to the evolution of the piano. Technical developments in the 1820s increased the piano's range and volume, making it a perfect vehicle for solo performance as it was a 29 \n", + " \"complete harmonic and melodic instrument\" (Sennett 197). Leon Plantinga notes that in addition to the popularity of solo piano playing, social and political conditions also fueled the rise of the concert virtuoso. The development of a bourgeois public which promoted individual achievement provided an audience which recognized this in the virtuosi's technical mastery of the instrument (4). The newly middle-class also had the time and money with which to support these rising musicians. Perhaps as a result, the virtuosi directed their work almost exclusively to this new public audience. Free from the obligations of church or aristocratic patronage, virtuosi were able to specialize in the piano, refining their skill and developing new keyboard techniques (Plantinga 6). Thus a middle-class ethos as well as middle-class audience was central to the appearance of this musical figure. As the focus in performance shifted to individual skill and technique, the performer rather than the music took center stage. In the spotlight, virtuosi infused music with their personalities and, perhaps as a result, their virtuosity was seen as a sign of sensitivity, their technical power a sign of personal power (Sennett 193). In contrast to the drawing-room ballad which relied on sentimental lyrics to evoke emotion, the compositions of virtuosi often incited strong emotions and overwhelmed the listener, which was taken as a testament to their personal power. The power to move listeners could take its toll on the musician as well, as is evidenced by Liszt's fainting after a performance in Paris in 1835. Perhaps because of scenes such as this, some feared that music would ef feminize men. While most concert virtuosi were men, it is important to note that almost none were British. British men of the aristocracy and middle classes were discouraged from playing the piano in domestic circles, which likely prevented many from becoming skilled enough for public performance.7 Nicholas Temperley cites the \"aristocratic idea that music was no pursuit for a gentleman, except as a dilettante\" and that among the middle classes a serious interest in music in men was considered effeminate and unpractical as attitudes discouraging male musical achievement in these ranks (Lost Chord 10, 11). The view of \"musical performance as a timewasting activity and a sign of degeneracy\" impeded the introduction of music into the curriculum of middle-class boys' boarding schools well into the second half of the century (Rainbow 34). Indeed, at mid-century, a \"Harrow [school] boy who went in for the study of music ... would have been looked upon as a veritable milksop.\" This view of music applied especially to the piano. Men with a musical inclination were steered toward different instruments, such as stringed or wind instruments like the violin or flute, or voice (Sennett 197). \"Gentlemen were not expected to play the piano in the drawing room: the only male pianists were professional, providers, not consumers of piano music\" (Temperley, \"Ballroom\" 120). The 30 \n", + " feminizing of the amateur musical world and a strong distinction between women as consumers of piano music and men as producers suggests that the gendered distinction between public and domestic spheres carried into the musical world, at least as far at the piano is concerned. However, the public life of the instrument was not divorced from its domestic life. Some prominent pianists performed at concerts and salons held in private homes and, in London, often held their annual benefit concerts, which were advertised in the press, in the homes of supporters (Weber 31). Additionally, many virtuosi endorsed pianos, published music for the home-music market and gave lessons, providing another connection with the domestic world of amateur music. And Richard Sennett contends that many women felt an affinity with virtuosi because they too played the piano, often virtuosi's compositions transcribed for amateurs (197). The virtuosi, then, were foreigners on British soil,8 known for their emotional intensity, and playing an instrument that had been gendered female in the British mind - they were, in their mastery of technique and ability to affect an audience, powerful yet effeminized men. Set apart from British conceptions of masculinity by their musicality, these men did not dislodge the piano as a feminized symbol of middle-class domestic harmony. My contention is that the piano became a sexual symbol at almost the same moment it became a symbol of middle-class domesticity. Its association with sexual desire was the result of several interrelated cultural phenomena. The piano's predecessors - the virginals, harpsichords and clavicords from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries - were commonly decorated with paintings, a tradition that sometimes carried onto the pianos of the nineteenth century. The wooden cases of harpsichords made by Hans Rucker in the seventeenth century were often decorated with paintings by Rubens, Van Dyck and Boucher (Swan 47). In the nineteenth century, Pre- Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones decorated the cases of several pianos, including one he received as a wedding present.9 This artwork indicates that the instrument was a source of visual as well as aural pleasure for the audience. Hunting scenes, a predominantly male activity, were a common subject of these paintings (Leppert 109). Given this subject matter, I would argue that a specifically male audience was implied for the decorated instrument. Furthermore, in response to the concerns of its domestic market, piano manufacturers in the early decades of the century developed the small, upright pianoforte to remedy the drawbacks of the tall upright, which obscured a view of the performer whose voice was muffled by the silk front of the instrument (Harding 226). As pianists in the domestic arena were predominantly women, the instrument's redesign indicates that the woman playing the piano was also a source of visual pleasure for men. Since a 31 \n", + " woman's ability to play the piano was considered a boon on the marriage market, the piano also carried connotations of sexual pleasure. Maria Edgeworth, in Practical Education (1798), advises her readers that musical skill improves \"a young lady's chance of a prize in the matrimonial lottery\" (6). Male desire, then, linked the woman and the piano. The piano was also sexualized in this period by popular Romantic male composers. Noting Chopin's affair with George Sand and Franz Liszt's numerous affairs with princesses, Anthony Burgess remarks: \"The piano, with them, seems to become a monstrous aphrodisiac\" (21). Liszt also excited a response more commonly associated with the modern rock star: women would fight for pieces of horsehair from his piano stool or faint when he approached the audience after concerts (Hueffer cited in Auerbach 32). Mary Burgan notes that \"[t]he great male virtuoso figures of the Victorian period were often depicted in demonic terms, suggesting a sexual source for sublime musical rapture\" and a corresponding \"fear that too powerful an inspiration [could] overwhelm impressionable female hearers, often in pathological ways\" (66). The infectious sexuality of these virtuosi, inciting lust, frenzy and fainting fits, suggests a veiled threat to the purity of Victorian women, and consequently domestic harmony, through the very instrument they called their own. George Eliot presents a fictionalized version of such a Romantic male composer in Daniel Deronda with Herr Klesmer, who \"was not yet a Liszt, understood to be adored by ladies of all European countries with the exception of Lapland\" (203).10 Not quite the Don Juan virtuoso, he is unaware that he is adored by his student Catherine Arrowpoint. Unable to verbally express his feelings for Catherine because of his social position, Klesmer uses the piano as a means of expressing his passion. \"[I]f Miss Arrowpoint had been poor he should have made ardent love to her instead of sending a storm through the piano\" (205). This situation comes to a crisis when a new suitor provokes an argument between them, with Catherine referring to the time Klesmer spends in her family's house as a sacrifice. \"'Why should I make the sacrifice?\"' said Klesmer, going to seat himself at the piano, and touching the keys so as to give with the delicacy of an echo in the far distance a melody which he had set to Heine's 'Ich hab' dich geliebvet und lieve dich noch'\" (\"I have loved you and I love you still\") as if subconsicously answering his own question with the piano (206). This tune serves as the prelude to both confessing their love for the other. The comparison between Liszt and Klesmer is apt since Klesmer has the power to arouse musical rapture in his listeners as well. At a gathering at the Arrowpoints, Klesmer plays his own composition, and he certainly fetched as much variety and depth of passion out of the piano as that moderately responsive instrument lends itself 32 \n", + " to, having an imperious magic in his fingers that seemed to send a nerve-thrill through ivory key and wooden hammer, and compel the strings to make a quivering lingering speech for him. Gwendolen, in spite of her wounded egoism, had fullness of nature enough to feel the power of this playing, and it gradually turned her inward sob of mortification into an excitement which lifted her for the moment into a desperate indifference about her own doings, or at least a determination to get a superiority over them by laughing at them as if they belonged to somebody else. Her eyes had become brighter, her cheeks slightly flushed, and her tongue ready for any mischievous remarks. (39-40) The piano responds to Klesmer's touch, the \"magic in his fingers,\" in sensual, human terms: the keys become nerve endings subject to \"nerve-thrill\" and the strings become vocal chords producing \"quivering lingering speech\" as he brings \"passion\" out of the instrument. Likewise, Klesmer elicits a sensual response from Gwendolen, an \"excitement\" which makes her forget herself, brightening her eyes and flushing cheeks. The sexual language used to depict both the instrument's and Gwendolen's response to Klesmer's performance suggests an analogy between women's sexuality and the piano. The piano was an instrument to awaken female sexual desire. To return to Emma, another piano figures prominently in the plot: Frank Churchill's anonymous gift to Jane Fairfax, a gift which suggests they may be keeping more than their engagement secret. All the characters in the novel remark upon Jane's skill at the piano, and Emma herself finds Jane's \"performance, both vocal and instrumental... infinitely superior to her own\" (208). Most feel it is a shame that one who plays so well should be without an instrument, and so it is a pleasant surprise, though one occasioning much gossip, when Jane mysteriously receives a square pianoforte. Emma, who speculates that Jane has retreated to Highbury after \"seduc[ing] Mr. Dixon's affections away from his wife,\" recognizes the gift as a token of his affection and proof of her suspicions of illicit activity (152). In Emma's mind, Nicholas Preus reminds us, this supposed relationship between Jane and Mr. Dixon is based on forbidden sexual attraction (204). Frank, the true giver, ironically concurs with Emma's suspicions, agreeing that he \"'can see it in no other light than as an offering of love'\" (199). The piano here metonymically represents relationships that do not conform to middle-class moral codes, either a single woman's seduction of a married man or a secret engagement that defies the social form of parental consent. Jane's noted skill at the piano suggests that her sexual desire plays a prominent role in both imagined and actual relationships. Frank is also a skilled musician, as he demonstrates when he joins Jane 33 \n", + " in singing duets at the Cole's dinner party. The duets are a means of reexperiencing the intimacy they had at Weymouth, where \"[t]hey had sung together once or twice\" and where they were secretly engaged (208). Indeed, as they must maintain silence about this illicit engagement, and therefore affect a distance in their acquaintance, they can communicate only indirectly via music about their true feelings. When Frank, Emma and others visit Jane to hear her play her new pianoforte, Frank comments to Emma, within hearing of Jane, \"'What felicity it is to hear a tune again which has made one happy! If I mistake not, that was danced at Weymouth'\" (221-22). He goes on to state that the thoughtfulness of the anonymous piano giver in also sending sheet music indicates true affection. Frank signals his love for Jane by his comments on music, recalling a dance they shared and designating his gift as from the heart, while Jane expresses her feelings by playing the piano. After playing the tune that was danced at Weymouth, she turns to an Irish melody which also has particular associations. Frank comments to Emma that Jane \"'is playing 'Robin Adair' at this moment - his favorite\"' (222). Patrick Piggot points out the ambiguity in this statement, indicating that it is as likely Frank's favorite as Mr. Dixon's. \"It would be a natural thing for her to do after playing 'their' waltz\" (Piggot 101). Emma misinterprets Jane's blushing and smiling response to Frank's comments as her \"cherishing very reprehensible feelings\" for Mr. Dixon, thus analogically highlighting the sexual nature of the musical exchange (222). 11 By coding Jane's sexual desire with the piano, the morality of her supposed and actual relationships, which defy the conventions governing courtship and hint at premarital sex, is side-stepped and her economic situation comes to the fore. Since Jane has no fortune, if she does not marry she must become a governess or live with her lower-middle-class aunt and grandmother. Both are dreary options. Becoming a governess is described in terms of entering a convent since Jane, the \"devoted novitiate,\" would have to \"sacrifice, and retire from all the pleasures of life, of rational intercourse, equal society, peace and hope, to penance and mortification for ever\" (149). But life with her relations would be on the same terms as her grandmother's income is barely enough to support their household. In either case Jane's sexual desire would have to be repressed since, as Emma aptly if unconsciously notes, Jane requires a man to \"giv[e] her independence\" (152). Thus, in raising the specter of female sexual desire with the piano, Austen's text illuminates the economic and sexual constraints that middle-class ideology places on women. We need only to look at The Awakening Conscience (1854) to be reminded of how women's sexual desire was regulated by economic threat. In this painting, William Holman Hunt depicts a woman sitting in the lap of her lover at the piano, half rising as she is awakened to the immorality of her 34 \n", + " present situation (Fig. 1). Critics often point to the \"literary\" nature of this painting, its images inviting narrative constructions. Indeed, Helene Roberts argues that during the first quarter of the Victorian period sentiment came to predominate over sensuality in painting, a shift which required the painter to \"tell enough about the heroine's character to prove her worthy of regard\" and to \"involve the heroine in a situation in which her response will win the viewer's sympathy. In other words, the artist must tell a story\" (46). Conveying this story to the viewer requires culturally recognizable symbols to be effective, and Roberts notes that \"Victorian painters became adroit at exploiting visual signs and contriving associative stimuli,\" relying on a literate audience to recognize character types and fill in backgrounds (46). Critics ranging from Holman Hunt's contemporary, John Ruskin, to the present day have remarked that The Awakening Conscience is replete with objects and iconography reflecting and reinforcing the narrative of the fallen woman. Everything from the wallpaper, to the furniture, to the objects in the room, to the woman's attire, to the man's physiogomy, to the frame of the painting itself, has been noted for its reflection of the theme of sexual seduction, everything except the piano. However, placing the woman and her lover at the piano further emphasizes that she has lost her virtue by raising the specter of her sexual desire. Significantly, the gentleman is playing her instrument while she sits in his lap, indicating that he exerts sexual power over her and that her fall likely was due to his seduction.12 The wealth of detail which provides a narrative of events leading to this moment of awakening conscience, however, renders the painting's moral ambiguous. For instance, Roberts argues that Holman Hunt relies on the fact that the lyrics of the song titles legible on the sheet music would be familiar to Victorian audiences, thereby giving clues to the woman's state of mind - her regret and remorse at her present situation (66). 13 Robert Peters, on the other hand, suggests that the painting's meticulous detail obscures Holman Hunt's didactic intentions. He argues that the room is \"so invitingly opulent\" that the story's moral is read with \"some difficulty\" (208). I would argue, however, that the room's opulency is meant to contrast with the dirty streets the woman will end up on as her downward trajectory from innocence to degradation, middle-class angel to working-class whore, continues. Nevertheless, Hunt makes this final outcome ambiguous as he depicts the woman at the moment of her epiphany. As she realizes her fall from moral purity, she becomes an object of pity for the viewer. Ruskin remarks in his letter to The Times that the scene is \"tragical\": \"the very hem of the girl's dress, at which the painter has laboured so closely, thread by thread, has a story in it, if we think how soon its pure whiteness may be soiled with the dust and rain, her outcast feet failing in the street\" (qtd. in Roberts 67). Not in her father's house nor her husband's, she is soon to be homeless. Pity 35 \n", + " Figure 1 W. Holman Hunt, The Awakening Conscience (1854) 36 \n", + " for this outcast woman \"deflects the power [she poses in defying middleclass codes of morality] and redistributes it in terms of a conventional paternalistic relationship organized around social conscience, compassion and philanthropy\" (Nead, \"Magdalen\" 31). Portraying the fallen woman as a victim neutralizes the transgressive threat she poses to middle-class ideology. In \"reading\" the painting, the viewer then reifies this ideology. By piecing together a narrative from the culturally-encoded symbols, the viewer diffuses the woman's sexual power by pitying her loss of purity and impending loss of class status and by accepting that the two are naturally and inextricably linked. However, figuring middle-class female sexual desire in the piano - outside the body but contained within the domestic realm - allows women access to it, allows them to arouse and manipulate their own sexuality, to seduce without contact.14 The piano, then, offered opportunities for representations of women's active sexual desire. In Middlemarch (1871-72), George Eliot explores all facets of the piano's symbolism through the character of Rosamond Vincy. From a newly middle-class family, the daughter of a manufacturer and an innkeeper's daughter, Rosamond learns to play the piano at Mrs. Lemon's finishing school where she acquires all the accomplishments of a woman with pretensions to gentility through marriage. In the hopes of landing a husband, Rosamond tightens the snare she has laid for Lydgate with her musical skills. The narrator describes her performance as follows: \"Rosamond, with the executant's instinct, had seized upon [her music teacher's] manner of playing, and gave forth his large rendering of noble music with the precision of an echo.... A hidden soul seemed to be flowing forth from Rosamond's fingers\" (132). Lydgate, mistaking this soul for hers, \"was taken possession of, and began to believe in her as something exceptional\" (132). His \"possession\" and deepened admiration for Rosamond indicate that she has aroused his desire with her \"exceptional\" talent. As the narrator's critique of Rosamond's performance indicates, however, her skill is not enough to entice Lydgate into marriage. Rather, it is the moment when Rosamond is uncharacteristically herself that causes Lydgate to fall in love with her. In an interview with Lydgate after Rosamond has begun to fear that he may not intend to marry her, she meets his eyes with tears in her own. \"At that moment she was as natural as she had ever been when she was five years old.... That moment of naturalness was the crystallizing feather-touch: it shook flirtation into love\" (247). Lydgate proposes to Rosamond on the spot. The piano does not disappear after this, however, but continues to preside over their courtship (Leng 55). Indeed, their lovemaking goes on \"in the corner of the drawing-room where the piano stood,\" indicating that sexual desire is decidedly a factor in this union (284). The association between sexual desire and the piano is plain to Mid- \n", + " dlemarch society. Wishing to speak with Lydgate, Dorothea Brooke visits Rosamond for the first time and finds her with Will Ladislaw, the two having been singing together at the piano just before her entrance. Dorothea decides to seek Lydgate at the hospital since she wishes to conceal her errand, but is \"urged also by a vague discomfort\" to leave immediately (355). This discomfort is attributed to the situation she has just encountered, and she recalls as she drives away \"the notes of the man's voice and the accompanying piano, which she had not noted much at the time... and she found herself thinking with some wonder that Will Ladislaw was passing his time with Mrs. Lydgate in her husband's absence\" (355). While part of Dorothea's response is due to her as yet unrealized feelings for Will, she also responds to the impropriety of a married woman entertaining a single man at the piano, the physical intimacy afforded by the instrument highlighting the possible sexual nature of such an activity.15 Ironically, Ladislaw's flustered response to Dorothea's interruption suggests to Rosamond for the first time that \"women, even after marriage, might make conquests and enslave men\" (357). Thus, when Lydgate begins to disappoint her, Rosamond imagines she is making a second conquest of Ladislaw with their duets over the piano. The impropriety of this musical activity is noted in local gossip which Mrs. Cadwallader, the voice of middle-class morality, cheerfully relates to Dorothea: Ladislaw is making a sad dark-blue scandal by warbling continually with your Mr. Lydgate's wife, who they tell me is as pretty as pretty can be. It seems nobody ever goes into the house without finding this young gentleman lying on the rug or warbling at the piano. (513) This gossip causes Dorothea to remember with \"a vague uneasiness... that day when she had found Will Ladislaw with Mrs. Lydgate, and had heard his voice accompanied by the piano\" (513). For both Mrs. Cadwallader and Dorothea the activity at the piano is scandalous, suggesting that Middlemarch society considers illicit sexual behavior implicit in it. Rosamond, too, believes that their duets indicate a mutual sexual desire. Imagining Ladislaw's manner toward her to be the \"disguise of a deeper feeling,\" Rosamond constructs a little romance which was to vary the flatness of her life: Will Ladislaw was to always be a bachelor and live near her, always to be at her command, and have an understood though never fully expressed passion for her, which would be sending out lambent flames every now and then in interesting scenes. (616, 617) In her fantasy, the sexual desire she imagines she excites in Ladislaw reverses contemporary conceptions of male and female sexuality, with Ladislaw's latent sexuality responding to her initiation. However, as her per- 38 \n", + " formance at the piano is a thin representation of her piano teacher's skill, so her sexual power is diluted by her artifice. She never is close to turning Will's affection from Dorothea. The piano can be metaphor for healthy female sexuality but, because it is a coded symbol, can be misread as a sign of an illicit sexual relationship, as Emma and Dorothea both misread piano-playing scenes. However, George Eliot mediates the reader's judgment of Rosamond: the pity generated by a falling woman which, as we have seen with The Awakening Conscience , reinforces patriarchal proscriptions on women's sexuality. Here, Dorothea's \"pitying fellowship\" for this woman at the piano causes her to visit Rosamond, to reassure her that not everyone believes the gossip about Lydgate, in spite of her certainty that Rosamond and Will are having an affair (651). Dorothea's selfless action, based on her sympathy for the state of Rosamond's marriage and consequent turn to Will, prevents Rosamond's eventual fall; she \"never committed a second compromising indiscretion\" (679). Sympathy replaces pity for the falling woman and, though mortified by Will's preference for Dorothea, she is not penalized for her active sexuality. Rather, she returns to relative domestic harmony with her husband, and the piano perhaps returns to the use Rev. Ha weis saw for it: relieving the stresses of middle-class domestic life. Thus the piano provides authors and artists of the nineteenth century a means of representing female sexual desire without overturning, and in some cases even endorsing, middle-class constructions of women's sexuality - but not without bringing the contradictions of its medical and class-bound definitions to the fore. NOTES 'Leon Plantinga terms the piano thus in \"The Piano and the Nineteenth Century\" (1). 2While women's sexuality then served as a class marker, within the middle classes there was no uniform representation of passionlessness. Nancy Cott contends that women's passionlessness was adopted by both feminists and social conservatives to argue in favor of women's participation in public life by the former, or for the value of separate spheres by the later. 3A grand pianoforte denotes a rather large increase in the Cole's income, not only because it would cost more than a smaller, square pianoforte, but also because of space limitations in middle-class homes. Leppert notes that grand pianos carried greater prestige because of their cost, \"[b]ut this prestige factor carried with it another sort of price tag; these large instruments, 'good' only for music, took up a lot of floor space\" at a time when living quarters were being downsized (113). Thus, the Cole's addi- 39 \n", + " tion to their home made have been made expressly for the purpose of accommodating so large an instrument. 4Cynthia Eagle Russett discusses this at some length in Chapter 4 of Sexual Science: The Victorian Construction of Womanhood. 5Nicholas Temperley defines high art music as that intended for cultivated audiences familiar with contemporary European art music and which was intended to engage an intellectual response. He contrasts this type of music with both functional music, which he defines as \"intended to assist some other action - working, dancing, marching, worshipping - and so is not greatly concerned with listeners/' and popular music which was meant to be listened to but avoided intellectually challenging the audience (\"Introduction\" 4). Drawing-room music falls into this last category. 6Moreover, Derek B. Scott's examination of Victorian musical aesthetics suggests that women who attempted to professionalize their musical skill were ghettoized as drawing-room ballad composers. \"Contemporary social theory, domestic sphere ideology, the new scientia sexualis, and aesthetics of the sublime and the beautiful ensured that certain musical styles were considered unsuitable or even unnatural for women composers\" (91). Infusing metaphorical musical terms with contemporary definitions of masculinity and femininity \"effectively fenced off the category of 'greatness' in music as a male domain\" by calling into question the womanliness of any female composer who aspired to the only musical forms considered sublime - \"masculine\" ones (99). Female composers were relegated to producing for a female audience popular, sentimental music which underscored traditional gender ideology. 7The lack of commentary on working-class men playing the piano was likely due to the fact that pianos, affordable for the middle classes, were above the reach of the average working-class income for most of the century. There was, however, a great interest in teaching working class children to sing and sight-read music in the early Victorian period. See Bernarr Rainbow, \"The Rise of Popular Music Education in Nineteenth-Century England\" in The Lost Chord (17-41). 8Mary Burgan notes that in Victorian fiction the male virtuoso was stereotypically foreign, arguing that this mirrors the bias against men playing the piano (69). I would suggest that the non-English character of these fictional virtuosi serves to further effeminize them. 9This piano and others are described in Leppert and Wainwright. Wainwright notes that Burne-Jones also two designed two grand pianos (209). Critics debate about which musician Klesmer was modeled on, most commonly citing Liszt and Anton Rubinstein. Emily Auerbach contends 40 \n", + " that the character is an amalgamation of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Rubinstein, Liszt and fictional German Romantic musicians (167). See also Gray for a discussion of possible models (102-03). Mary Ann O'Farrell argues Emma's misreading of Jane's blush in this scene highlights the fantasy that identity is legible in the body's somatic expression (4-5). 12Lynn Nead argues that the man is of the aristocracy and, consequently, that the painting is a critique of his licentiousness in seducing an innocent girl, further solidifying middle-class identity on the basis of its moral code (\"Magdalen\" 36). 13The sheet music on the piano is for \"Oft in the Stilly Night\" from The Light of Other Days by Thomas Moore, while music for Tennyson's \"Tears, Idle Tears\" from The Princess lies on the floor. Roberts provides excerpts of lyrics from both (66). 14Nineteenth-century French novelist and artist Edmond de Goncourt noted the association of the piano with one form of illicit female sexuality activity, masturbation (Corbin 533). 15Andrew Leng reads this scene as an allusion to The Awakening Conscience , with Will corresponding to the gentleman at the piano and Rosamond, an analogue for Dorothea, corresponding to the woman. Remembrance of this scene later spurs Dorothea's sympathy for Lydgate which causes her again to visit Rosamond, again finding Rosamond in a compromising situation with Will. Dorothea's emotional response to this second scene leads finally to her \"awakening consciousness\" of her love for Will. Thus, Leng argues, Dorothea's story is \"George Eliot's dechristianized equivalent of Holman Hunt's Awakening Conscience \" (61). WORKS CITED Armstrong, Nancy. \"The Rise of the Domestic Woman.\" The Ideology of Conduct: Essays on Literature and the History of Sexuality. 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Sexual Science: The Victorian Construction of Womanhood. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1989. Sambrook, James, ed. Pre-Raphaelitism: A Collection of Critical Essays. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1974. Scott, Derek B. \"The Sexual Politics of Victorian Musical Aesthetics.\" Journal of the Royal Musical Association 1119.1 (1994): 91-114. Sennett, Richard. \"Pianists in Their Time: A Memoir.\" Gaines 187-208. Swan, Annalyn. \"Enlightenment's Gift to the Age of Romance: How the Piano Came to Be.\" Gaines 41-73. Temperley, Nicholas. \"Introduction: The State of Research on Victorian Music.\" The Lost Chord: Essays on Victorian Music. Ed. Nicholas Temperley. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1989. 1-16. - , ed. Music in Britain : The Romantic Age 1800-1914. London: Athlone, 1981. - . \"Introduction.\" Temperley 1-8. - . \"Ballroom and Drawing-Room Music.\" Temperley 109-34. Thackeray, William. Vanity Fair. Boston: Houghton, 1963. Wainwright, David. Broadwood by Appointment : A History. London: Quiller, 1982. Weber, William. Music and the Middle Class: The Social Structure of Concert Life in London , Paris and Vienna. London: Croom Helm, 1975. 43\n" ] } ], @@ -402,18 +405,25 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 27, + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 50, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25088885\n", - "Starting index: 4329\n", - "Ending index: 4426\n", + "Article id: http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934\n", + "Starting index: 9601\n", + "Ending index: 9967\n", "Quotation text and indexes to paste into spreadsheet:\n", - "We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\t[4329, 4426]\n", + "At home... he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious sea-breezes\t[9601, 9967]\n", "\n", "\n", "Sanity check (does this match the text above?):\n" @@ -422,10 +432,10 @@ { "data": { "text/plain": [ - "'We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves'" + "'At home... he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious sea-breezes'" ] }, - "execution_count": 27, + "execution_count": 50, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -433,7 +443,7 @@ "source": [ "# PASTE the quotation below in the field, replacing the text below ‼️\n", "# Make sure to include quotation marks around the string\n", - "quotation = \"We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our supreme selves\" #pas\n", + "quotation = \"At home... he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and his hands clasped behind it according to his favorite ruminating attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious sea-breezes\" #pas\n", "\n", "index = cleaned_article_text.text.rindex(quotation)\n", "print(f\"Article id: {article_id}\")\n", @@ -470,7 +480,12 @@ "name": "python", "nbconvert_exporter": "python", "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.8.5" + "version": "3.10.7" + }, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "aee8b7b246df8f9039afb4144a1f6fd8d2ca17a180786b69acc140d282b71a49" + } } }, "nbformat": 4, diff --git a/package-lock.json b/package-lock.json new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a4ae2ad --- /dev/null +++ b/package-lock.json @@ -0,0 +1,6 @@ +{ + "name": "quotation-detection", + "lockfileVersion": 2, + "requires": true, + "packages": {} +} From 5bae9de529aa5a564893f9ef5be925bcf7c881f8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Mon, 6 Mar 2023 15:58:02 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 24/63] Create input_re-run-ocr.ipynb added spell check package for one article --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 142 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 142 insertions(+) create mode 100644 preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0db288a --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,142 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Import libraries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Load in our Data Files" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 6, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load Middlemarch .txt file \n", + "# (Note: must have 'middlemarch.txt' in this directory)\n", + "with open('../algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt') as f: \n", + " rawMM = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Middlemarch')\n", + "\n", + "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", + "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", + "df = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json')" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Importing the spell-check package\n", + "\n", + "## Input an article_id to run the spell-check on\n", + "\n", + "Languages tested:\n", + "* English - ‘en’\n", + "* Spanish - ‘es’\n", + "* French - ‘fr’\n", + "* German - ‘de’" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 21, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Percent incorrect: 0.16329941860465116\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "from spellchecker import SpellChecker\n", + "\n", + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", + "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "\n", + "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", + "\n", + "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", + "\n", + "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", + "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", + "article_text = df['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + "article_title = df['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + "\n", + "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "\n", + "word_list = ((\" \").join(article_text)).split(\" \")\n", + "\n", + "# find those words that may be misspelled\n", + "incorrect = []\n", + "for lang in ['en','fr','es','de']:\n", + " spell = SpellChecker(language = lang)\n", + " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", + " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", + "\n", + "incorrect_percentage = float(min(incorrect))/len(word_list)\n", + "\n", + "print(\"Percent incorrect:\", incorrect_percentage)\n" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3.10.7 64-bit", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.7" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "0ec7a46e504a03a6c262f47983dcd02ef89fa5cad4a702285fe6c94bffe2d9b0" + } + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Tue, 7 Mar 2023 17:59:41 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 25/63] added jupyter notebook for running matcher algorithm --- text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb | 112 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 112 insertions(+) create mode 100644 text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..089742d --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,112 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Run Text_Matcher Algorithm" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 3, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", + "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", + "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/testing.jsonl'\n", + "with open(articles) as f: \n", + " rawArticles = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "# Parse the data. \n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawArticles]\n", + "\n", + "# Load the text you want to find quotations from. Replace text with the text file you want to use.\n", + "\n", + "text = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "with open(text) as f: \n", + " rawText = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + " Matching article 22 of 231 total matches found.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "match 1:\n", + "\u001b[32mGender Trouble\u001b[0m: (50788, 50940) desire? Are these terms discrete \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the Heterosexual\n", + "\u001b[32mhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/23345044\u001b[0m: (21407, 21558) Gender Trouble, Judith Butler asks \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Butler, xxxii). Admittedly, application of the American feminist's\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", + " clear_output()\n", + " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", + " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", + " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", + " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", + " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 13, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", + "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", + "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 2b87e08f2680b1290a8ab8f124582c70127da980 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2023 15:53:08 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 26/63] finalized matcher --- text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl | 5185 ++++++++++ text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb | 105 - text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb | 134 + visualization/analysis_template.ipynb | 12219 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ 4 files changed, 17538 insertions(+), 105 deletions(-) create mode 100644 text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl delete mode 100644 text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb create mode 100644 text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb create mode 100644 visualization/analysis_template.ipynb diff --git a/text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl b/text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7003e1b --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl @@ -0,0 +1,5185 @@ +{"abstract":"This paper investigates the logic of explanation according to which identity is an attribute or a feature of subjects like states and nations. Drawing examples from the scholarship on identity in Central Europe, especially Estonia, it argues that the story by which identity is customarily told is circular, presupposing the very subject for which it seeks to give an account. The puzzle, then, is how to overcome the perspective of a subject already formed in order to account for its becoming. The paper deploys the concept of performativity to address that puzzle. Performative approaches do not treat identity as an attribute or a property of the subject - something that subjects such as individuals or states express. It conceives subjectivity explicitly in processual terms, not as a source but as an effect of identity claims. Identity then is not something that states, groups or individuals have, but something that groups and individuals do. Refraining identity research from doers to deeds opens up the discussions of actor-ness and subjectivity without dictating what kind of subjects can be realized.","creator":["Merje Kuus"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Puzzles from Central Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640001","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9633,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101032,101482]],"Locations in B":[[11865,12316]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Seeking to elucidate understandings of sexual difference held in the past, this article examines the emergence of one disease, hypertrichosis. Prior to 1930, hypertrichosis (\"excessive hairiness\") was a disease defined, in part, by a confusion of sexed appearances. Diagnosing and treating this condition, then, necessitated some operative definition of sex, an index of the normal against which to distinguish the truly pathological. The standard of normal female identity that emerges in discussions of hypertrichosis centered not (as one might now expect) on a distinguishing physical characteristic; rather, physicians represent sexual identity as revealed in their patients' yearning for hairlessness, their desire to \"run true to the female type.\" Patients and their physicians were both left to struggle to achieve this \"female type,\" an ideal which fluctuated with fashion, age, and culture. Historical analysis of hypertrichosis thus extends feminist scholarship which challenges the presumed universality and timeless permanence of \"the female body.\" Rather than presuming the nature of the \"women\" experiencing this woman's disease, this essay attends to the specific kinds of work involved in dividing hairy bodies into two distinct sexual categories.","creator":["Rebecca M. Herzig"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a060082e-54f9-3467-a7d4-292b08768c7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertrichosis, 1870-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316762","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7509,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[74475,74701],[476453,476563]],"Locations in B":[[4347,4571],[43201,43311]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fca9fbe-176a-3075-b176-fbe9268ce29c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"R\u00e9f\u00e9rences bibliographiques des ouvrages et articles cit\u00e9s par les auteurs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978757","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1510,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[6685,6747]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Regula Giuliani"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24361366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03428117"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24361366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phanfors"}],"isPartOf":"Ph\u00e4nomenologische Forschungen","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Felix Meiner Verlag GmbH","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Der \u00fcbergangene Leib: Simone de Beauvoir, Luce Irigaray und Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24361366","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diane Sippl"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35dee0fe-6a92-357f-aaa3-ff99ebe8ab5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Terrorist Acts and \"Legitimate\" Torture in Brazil: \"How Nice to See You Alive\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389351","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beatriz Preciado"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7018fd46-0c1b-38b6-a5c6-46bddca6ddf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00e9nero y performance: 3 episodios de un cybermanga feminista queer trans...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625118","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":5337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn R. King"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a247795-2b0c-3e96-a776-e89c16f607d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMALE DESIRE IN JANE BARKER'S \"A PATCH-WORK SCREEN FOR THE LADIES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467583","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8626,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[143468,143592]],"Locations in B":[[23255,23380]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chicago Cultural Studies Group"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdaeb518-ebd7-3cc1-9439-16fa05928214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"530","pagination":"pp. 530-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Multiculturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343815","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12324,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471]],"Locations in B":[[77772,77838]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, Professor Franke asks and answers a seemingly simple question: why is sexual harassment a form of sex discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964? She argues that the link between sexual harassment and sex discrimination has been undertheorized by the Supreme Court. In the absence of a principled theory of the wrong of sexual harassment, Professor Franke argues that lower courts have developed a body of sexual harassment law that trivializes the legal norm against sex discrimination. After illustrating how the Supreme Court has not provided an adequate theory of sexual harassment as sex discrimination, she traces the theoretical arguments advanced by feminist scholars on behalf of a cause of action for sexual harassment under Title VII: 1) it violates formal equality principles; 2) its sexism lies in the fact that the conduct is sexual; and 3) sexual harassment is an example of the subordination of women by men. Professor Franke provides a critique of each of these accounts of sexual harassment, in part, by showing how each is unable to provide an account of whether same-sex sexual harassment should be actionable under Title VII. She argues that flaws in both the theory and the doctrine are amplified in the marginal cases of same-sex harassment. Professor Franke then argues that the discriminatory wrong of sexual harassment, between parties of different or same sexes, should be understood as a technology of sexism. That is, the sexism in sexual harassment lies in its power as a regulatory practice that feminizes women and masculinizes men, renders women sexual objects and men sexual subjects.","creator":["Katherine M. Franke"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d623a43-a696-3907-bf76-3574a538667e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82,"pageEnd":"772","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-772","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"What's Wrong with Sexual Harassment?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229336","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":49960,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11105,11345]],"Locations in B":[[268530,268770]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Kegan Gardiner"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fdd1825-8300-315a-ae38-21cd1f5488d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"324","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-324","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Feminist Theory of Self: Repressive Dereification and the \"Subject-in-Process\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316279","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9894,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[60616,60791]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the practices of itinerant Indian Trinidadian ritual specialists, sadhus and priests, and their contestations with colonial institutions over the definition of their practices. It examines on the one hand Indians' norm-bending healing and spirit working, often construed as \"obeah\" or witchcraft in the Caribbean. At the same time, it looks at the role of laws that determined what practices got to count as religion, and the ways in which courtrooms became sites where religion was actively (though unequally) made and unmade, by both colonial elites and subalterns. By examining Indian ritual specialists on trial for obeah, the article analyzes Indians' participation in such religion-making: the construction and reinforcement of boundaries between reified categories and the redescription of Indians' ostensibly non-normative practices in accordance with regnant colonial norms for religion.","creator":["Alexander Rocklin"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24488181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5883fd38-0bee-3647-bc57-59cdccb57fd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24488181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"721","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-721","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Obeah and the Politics of Religion's Making and Unmaking in Colonial Trinidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24488181","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":11337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jesse M. Molesworth"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23131522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f314f73-6c6d-3cd4-85a4-643a0503e104"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23131522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SYLLEPSIS, MIMESIS, SIMULACRUM: \"THE MONK\" AND THE GRAMMAR OF AUTHENTICITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23131522","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9238,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437835,438272]],"Locations in B":[[52036,52477]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHUNG-KANG KIM"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40aeb91d-0373-3235-b347-e4faa69fb4d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation, Subculture, and Queer Representation: The Film \"Male Kisaeng\" and the Politics of Gender and Sexuality in 1960s South Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616518","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew J. Lavin"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb94bf8d-56b5-3bed-be72-545425b81a0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43025266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Clean Hands and an Iron Face: Frontier Masculinity and Boston Manliness in \"The Rise of Silas Lapham\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025266","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A disquieting window panel shows the crucified Christ locked in an intimate embrace with Caritas, who is thrusting a dagger into his chest. This 14th-century version of the Crucifixion with the Virtues assumes the place of the Crucifixion scene in the Passion cycle of the glazed upper cloister at the Cistercian women's abbey at Wienhausen in northern Germany. A comparison with related motifs in biblical exegesis and devotional literature, as well as with various visual media, especially manuscript illumination, shows that the window panel is unsurpassed in its display of seeming treachery and duplicity. The panel engaged this monastic community cognitively and emotionally amid an almost habituated display of images exhibiting blood, wounds, and weapons that surrounded the women, and within the recurrent Passion and Easter rituals performed by and for the nuns during the late Middle Ages. The article questions the functions of implicit sexual violence when used metaphorically.","creator":["Corine Schleif"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24191440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569508573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8b8d603-b008-3790-9067-a7fe927324dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24191440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglassstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Glass Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Corning Museum of Glass","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass: Wounds, Violent Sexualities, and Aesthetics of Engagement in the Wienhausen Cloister","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24191440","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":12566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Becoming the tallest building in the world in the mid-1990s, the Petronas Towers was the centre piece of an image of national progress and development that Malaysian authorities sought to project internationally. The release of Fox Movies' Entrapment in Malaysia in May 1999 provoked political outrage and popular disappointment at the way in which the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur had been spliced alongside riverside ' slums' filmed in the town of Malacca some 150 km away. This paper provides a critical reading of the spliced scene in the movie. At one level, the angry response of the Malaysian Prime Minister, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, to the scene diagnoses a geopolitics of asymmetrical representational power. However, I show how Mahathir's criticism of Entrapment in Malaysia was as much a defence of domestic political legitimacy (and national economic investibility) as it was ' opposition' or ' resistance' to hegemonic 'Western' (mis) representation. In addition, while the material and symbolic work of reimaging Kuala Lumpur had sought to negate (neo) orientalist imaginings of ' Asian' cities, the controversial scene rendered visible environmental ' underdevelopment' that has no place in a modern (vision of) Malaysia. Entrapment thus performed something in inducing Malaysian cities and citizens to ' clean up' their act, to practice ' fully developed' ways of seeing, being and being seen.","creator":["Tim Bunnell"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41147854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"287030b5-251d-3560-ab1e-90194b590eda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41147854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-viewing the \"Entrapment\" controversy: Megaprojection, (mis)representation and postcolonial performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41147854","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":8378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amalia Gladhart"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04f875e2-d975-3ae7-afad-af27d4132d1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Playing Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119721","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11527,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124582,124675],[147690,147813]],"Locations in B":[[1374,1465],[9172,9293]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maurice Apprey","Anne Eckman"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afabfcce-8303-32b3-8bf5-01a80c330038"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"910","pageStart":"889","pagination":"pp. 889-910","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Toward a Complicit System of Mutual Implications in the Study of Science and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469176","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9746,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442704,442873]],"Locations in B":[[54496,54665]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A survey of the literature published in English on the practice of the kabuki onnagata is given in relation to readings of contemporary gender theory and issues of female representation in and exclusion from the form. Scholarly cross-cultural readings in Japanese theatre are probed.","creator":["Frank Episale"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18b58f29-ae11-3278-8396-f4608a07ad01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23359546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender, Tradition, and Culture in Translation: Reading the \"Onnagata\" in English","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359546","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The recent controversial transformation of the humanities is due partly to the institutional acknowledgment of diversity and partly to critics' efforts to theorize difference and to destabilize the categories of identity on which programs devoted to the study of diversity are founded. This double agenda creates anxiety over the positions we find ourselves in as scholars and teachers in the newly configured university. My essay offers a means of working through this tension: a performative pedagogy based on a descriptive theory of the dynamics of passing. I exemplify this dynamic by reading debates on white feminists' appropriation of black women's writing, comparing student responses to the 1934 film Imitation of Life, and discussing Fannie Hurst's novel on which the film is based. I posit the pedagogical relation as the privileged site where passing, which is inevitable in any subject position, can be enacted and made explicit.","creator":["Pamela L. Caughie"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b54b3b5-e06b-3117-8354-e96b488bdf9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Let It Pass: Changing the Subject, Once Again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463051","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":10618,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62511,62663]],"Locations in B":[[11608,11760]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Otto Dix's Metropolis (1927-28), a triptych of an upper-class fashionable jazz club flanked by sauntering prostitutes, expresses a conflicted fascination with popular culture. Because of the artist's engagement with the mass media, Metropolis reveals his deep personal investment in dance, the centrality of women in a growing Weimar cultural discourse, and how these concerns meshed and clashed with prevalent notions of German identity, heritage, and crisis after World War I. Metropolis depicts paradoxical views of international and regional German styles in fashion, female liberation and containment, preoccupation with mass media, Renaissance painting, jubilance and misery.","creator":["Susan Laikin Funkenstein"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"863c32d5-89ef-37aa-b4f9-4d737ee04ed3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30038067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"German Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fashionable Dancing: Gender, the Charleston, and German Identity in Otto Dix's \"Metropolis\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038067","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"De-naturing the hierarchies of difference through which relations of power are established is one of the obsessions of contemporary feminist discourse. Among the writers who participate in this discussion, there is some agreement with regard to the content of this de-naturalization: seeking to understand howthe processesof constructing Identitiesand social ties are frequently dissociated from human agency, or how they appear to be rooted in nature, biology or some divine decree. Yet there also Is some disagreement about the limits of what can be thought of as constructed and what cannot. ln this text, I explore some of this discord in feminist anthropology. Focusing on the divergence in the ways of conceptualizing the relationships between sex, gender, and kinship, I examine how these disagreements give rise to questions concerning the limits of the natural. D\u00e9naturaliser les hi\u00e9rarchies de diff\u00e9rence \u00e0 travers lesquels s'\u00e9tablissent des relations de pouvoir est une des obsessions du d\u00e9bat f\u00e9ministe contemporain. Parmi les auteurs qui participent de cette discussion il y a accord en ce qui concerne le contenu de cette d\u00e9naturalisation. Il s'agit de comprendre comment les processus de construction d'identit\u00e9 et de liens sociaux sont fr\u00e9quemment dissoci\u00e9s de l'agence humaine. Il s'agit de comprendre comment ces processus surgissent ancr\u00e9s dans la nature, dans la biologie ou en une autre instance divine. Toutefois, il existe des divergences en ce qui concerne les limites de ce qui peut \u00eatre pens\u00e9 ou construits et ceux qui ne peut pas l'\u00eatre. J'exploite quelques-uns de ces d\u00e9saccords existants dans l'anthropologie f\u00e9ministe. En me fixant sur les divergences dans la fa\u00e7on de penser la relation entre sexe, genre et parent\u00e9, j'exploite la fa\u00e7on dont ces d\u00e9saccords soul\u00e8vent diverses questions sur les fronti\u00e8res du naturel. Desnaturalizar las jerarqu\u00edas de la diferencia, a trav\u00e9s de las cuales se establecen relaciones de poder, es una de las obsesiones del debate feminista contempor\u00e1neo. Entre las autoras que participan de esta discusi\u00f3n hay acuerdos en lo que se refiere al contenido de esta desnaturalizaci\u00f3n. Se trata de comprender c\u00f3mo los procesos de construcci\u00f3n de identidades y de lazos sociales frecuentemente est\u00e1n disociados de la agencia humana. Se trata de entender c\u00f3mo esos procesos se fundamentan en la naturaleza, en la biolog\u00eda o en alguna instancia divina. Hay divergencias en relaci\u00f3n a los l\u00edmites de lo que se puede pensar como construido y lo que no puede serlo. Exploro algunos de estos desacuerdos en la antropolog\u00eda feminista. Usando las divergencias en las maneras de pensar la relaci\u00f3n entre sexo, g\u00e9nero y parentesco como base, exploro c\u00f3mo estos desacuerdos plantean cuestiones sobre las fronteras de lo natural.","creator":["ADRIANA PISCITELLI"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2cb3f75-6c21-331d-871e-460a8468da80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"NAS FRONTEIRAS DO NATURAL: g\u00eanero e parentesco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904053","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":8665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the author provides an overview of existing literature addressing lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT), and queer issues in higher education. She argues that although colleges and universities are the source of much critical and postmodern writing about LGBT and queer topics, scholarship on LGBT\/queer people and organizations in higher education itself lacks theoretical depth. The author points to ways that existing research approaches and theoretical stances benefit higher education practice and suggests areas in which attention to methodological rigor and theoretical advancement is needed.","creator":["Kristen A. Renn"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013189X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48b1dffe-a092-33a1-808c-f81881772e60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educrese"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Researcher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education","Education - Educational resources"],"title":"LGBT and Queer Research in Higher Education: The State and Status of the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764565","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Children remain largely absent from sociolegal scholarship on sexual violence. Taking an intersectional approach to the analysis of attorneys' strategies during child sexual assault trials, this article argues that legal narratives draw on existing gender, racial, and age stereotypes to present legally compelling evidence of credibility. This work builds on Crenshaw s focus on women of color, emphasizing the role of structures of power and inequality in constituting the conditions of children's experiences of adjudication. Using ethnographic observations of courtroom jury trials, transcripts, and court records, three narrative themes of child credibility emerged: invisible wounds, rebellious adolescents, and dysfunctional families. Findings show how attorneys use these themes to emphasize the child's unmarked body, imperceptible emotional responses, rebellious character, and harmfulfamilial environments. The current study fills a gap in sexual assault research by moving beyond trial outcomes to address cultural narratives within the court that are inextricably embedded in intersectional dimensions of power and the reproduction of social status.","creator":["AMBER JOY POWELL","HEATHER R. HLAVKA","SAMEENA MULLA"],"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71456a3d-6798-34cf-9645-cc8b66bc1280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"INTERSECTIONALITY AND CREDIBILITY IN CHILD SEXUAL ASSAULT TRIALS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630955","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALETTA J. NORVAL"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40930570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-61, 63-71, 73-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A DEMOCRATIC POLITICS OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: POLITICAL JUDGMENT, IMAGINATION, AND EXEMPLARITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930570","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I look at the impact of the digital turn in sexual politics from the standpoint of emancipation and through the interpretative lenses of the dialectics of the real. I use the concept of \u2018dialectics of the real\u2019, to refer to an epistemological approach based on the idea that what we commonly refer to as \u2018reality\u2019 is an impermanent result of a process involving opposing tensions and itself a stake in a political competition. This approach allows me to formulate three arguments. First, the moral effects of the digital turn in sexual politics are fundamentally ambivalent and, consequently, it is virtually impossible to formulate any moral claims independently of identifiable standpoints and empirical instances (moral indeterminacy). Second, the inherent ambivalence of digital media infrastructure that enables and controls, promotes and represses, reveals and hides, and so on, is constitutive of technology and technological development itself, and is the whole point of the critical theory of technology (political indeterminacy). Third, the capacity of digital infrastructure to generate \u2018sexual geographies\u2019 can be interpreted in relation to the process of globalization and the relative influence, in the dialectics of the real, of an ideological project that seeks to enforce a single notion of reality worldwide - a project sometimes referred to as Neoliberalism (ideological indeterminacy). The approach of the dialectics of the real, engages with the digital turn in sexual politics in terms of moral, political and ideological indeterminacy and, at the same time, establishes an epistemological basis for the comparative empirical analysis and normative assessment of the impact of the digital turn in sexual politics.","creator":["Matteo Stocchetti"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17f452d7-70d2-3fbb-9950-2c0839206ac3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.6.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Emancipation and Sexual Politics in the Digital Age: Indeterminacy and the Dialectics of the Real","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.1","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":8011,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58180,58837]],"Locations in B":[[11694,12349]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While communities engaged in liberatory struggles have valued group loyalty and condemned betrayal, loyalty itself may be problematic, because remaining loyal to a community may require that one refrain from deconstructing the group identity on which the community is based. This essay investigates what loyalty is and whether loyalty is a virtue, and considers why, if loyalty is indeed a virtue, it may be one that is difficult to maintain in a context of oppression.","creator":["Lisa Tessman"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f168cdaf-e3a6-3914-9127-9aac49dcabcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dangerous Loyalties and Liberatory Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810501","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10607,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[59977,60127]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kellie Sharp-Hoskins","Amy E. Robillard"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41709684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"635882127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-204573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f93e04b-aaf9-3892-98b4-d76c9074c9f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41709684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrating the \"Good Teacher\" in Rhetoric and Composition: Ideology, Affect, Complicity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41709684","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":12101,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[422928,423041],[424504,424621]],"Locations in B":[[5711,5824],[5900,6017]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Liz Schwaiger"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7d81219-1a07-319c-97cb-2b0d9c0c32a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20444622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing One's Age: Cultural Constructions of Aging and Embodiment in Western Theatrical Dancers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444622","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fraser Easton"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fffc280b-c2fe-3190-bc93-db1630c3255d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"180","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Gender's Two Bodies: Women Warriors, Female Husbands and Plebeian Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600742","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u041f\u043e\u0441\u043b\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u0431\u0435\u0434\u044b \u0432 1945-\u043e\u043c \u0433\u043e\u0434\u0443 \u0432 \u0421\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u043c \u0421\u043e\u044e\u0437\u0435 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0438\u0437\u043e\u0448\u043b\u0430 \u0431\u044b\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u044f \u0434\u0435\u043c\u043e\u0431\u0438\u043b\u0438\u0437\u0430\u0446\u0438\u044f \u043f\u043e\u0447\u0442\u0438 \u0432\u0441\u0435\u0445 \u0436\u0435\u043d\u0449\u0438\u043d, \u0443\u0447\u0430\u0441\u0442\u0432\u043e\u0432\u0430\u0432\u0448\u0438\u0445 \u0432 \u0412\u0435\u043b\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u041e\u0442\u0435\u0447\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0412\u043e\u0439\u043d\u0435. \u041c. \u0418. 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\u0440\u0430\u0441\u0442\u0443\u0449\u0443\u044e \u043f\u043e\u043f\u0443\u043b\u044f\u0440\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u044c. \u042e. \u0414\u0440\u0443\u043d\u0438\u043d\u0430 \u0432\u044b\u0440\u0430\u0436\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u0432\u0437\u0433\u043b\u044f\u0434\u044b, \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0441\u043a\u0430\u0437\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u043e \u0444\u0440\u043e\u043d\u0442\u043e\u0432\u043e\u043c \u043e\u043f\u044b\u0442\u0435 \u0438 \u043f\u043e\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0432\u043e\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0436\u0438\u0437\u043d\u0438 \u0436\u0435\u043d\u0449\u0438\u043d-\u0441\u043e\u043b\u0434\u0430\u0442 \u0447\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0437 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0432\u0438\u0434\u044b \u0436\u0435\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 (\u0441\u043e\u043b\u0434\u0430\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439, \u043c\u0430\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0438\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439, \u0433\u0435\u0442\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0443\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0439).","creator":["Adrienne Harris"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8a5e840-a576-3ebc-9bd2-c8fcae061085"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23345044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"665","pageStart":"643","pagination":"pp. 643-665","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"YULIA DRUNINA: THE \"BLOND-BRAIDED SOLDIER\" ON THE POETIC FRONT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345044","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11045,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50788,50940]],"Locations in B":[[21407,21558]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Article considers what can be learned about humanizing the modern American prison from studying a small and unorthodox unit inside L.A. County's Men's Central Jail. This unit, known as K6G, has an inmate culture that contrasts dramatically with that of the Jail's general population (GP) units. Most notably, whereas life in the Jail's GP is governed by rules created and violently enforced by powerful inmate gangs, K6G is wholly free of gang politics and the threat of violence gang control brings. In addition, unlike residents of GP, who must take care in most instances to perform a hypermasculine identity or risk victimization, residents of K6G face no pressure to \"be hard and tough, and [not] show weakness\" and thus can just be themselves\u2014a safer and less stressful posture. The K6G unit is also relatively free of sexual assault, no small thing given that K6G exclusively houses gay and transgender prisoners, who would otherwise be among the Jail's most vulnerable residents. This Article draws on original research to provide an in-depth account of life in both K6G and the Jail's GP, with the aim of explaining K6G's distinctive character. The most obvious explanation may seem to lie in the sexual identity of K6G's residents, and this feature does help to account for many positive aspects of the K6G experience. But this Article argues that the primary explanation is far more basic: thanks to a variety of unrelated and almost accidental developments, residents experience K6G as a relatively safe space. They thus feel no need to resort to the self-help of gang membership or hypermasculine posturing and are able to forego the hypervigilance that often defines life in GP. As a consequence, life in K6G is less dehumanizing than life in GP and is even in some key respects affirmatively humanizing, providing space for residents to retain, express, and develop their personal identity and sense of self in a way that is psychologically healthier than the typical carceral experience. Understanding the implications of these differences and how they arose has much to offer those committed to making carceral conditions safer and more humane not only in L.A. County, but in prisons and jails all over the country.","creator":["SHARON DOLOVICH"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00914169"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082344"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236887"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d69dd065-166f-367d-8cef-21e4a0215f5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23415244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcrimlawcrim1973"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":153,"pageEnd":"1117","pageStart":"965","pagination":"pp. 965-1117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Northwestern University","sourceCategory":["Law","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"TWO MODELS OF THE PRISON: ACCIDENTAL HUMANITY AND HYPERMASCULINITY IN THE L.A. COUNTY JAIL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415244","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":80882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["FREDERICK A. LUBICH"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40574807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de0b00bb-f020-3cbf-b5af-0fe549a2d24f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40574807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"German Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40574807","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":3485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay argues that Bertolt Brecht's play, A Man's a Man (Mann ist Mann), is not merely about men, as its title suggests. Indeed, the play seems to tell the story of Galy Gay, a civilian who assumes the name and identity of another soldier. However, canteen owner widow Leocadia Begbick, who follows the British Army in India, not only drives the action of the play forward, but also analyzes the play's events as the narrator. Until it attracted the interest of feminist critics in the 1980s, her character had been almost ignored. Yet the gender critique put forward by Brecht persists through changing political circumstances and his deliberate adjustments to them in different versions of the play. Given the fundamental alterations that he made to the play without modifying Begbick's character, feminist inquiries might do well to examine Begbick's role in his texts, and particularly in contemporary interpretations.","creator":["Margaret Setje-Eilers"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Man's a Man, but What about Woman? Widow Leocadia Begbick in Bertolt Brecht's Play (1926\u20132006)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688295","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Antinarcissistic rhetoric refers to the ways in which women rhetors appropriate patriarchal discourses in order to create an ethos with their audience. This rhetoric often reinforces the social inequities that require women's silence in the first place. A look to the rhetoric of two historical women, Hortensia and Queen Elizabeth I, theorizes antinarcissistic rhetoric in three parts: the dual gender performance, the use of psogos, and the dismissal of the corporeal body.","creator":["Katherine Fredlund"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d94f664b-73a0-3b90-bcc8-a4856bf975cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43940398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Antinarcissistic Rhetoric: Reinforcing Social Inequities through Gender Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940398","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7595,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432777,433041]],"Locations in B":[[11074,11338]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O artigo procura, a partir de uma discuss\u00e3o sobre a complexidade hist\u00f3rica, social, cultural e racial de Mo\u00e7ambique, apontar para a necessidade de se pensar a epidemia de HIV\/AIDS no pa\u00eds como um fen\u00f4meno que tem implica\u00e7\u00f5es espec\u00edficas determinadas por tal quadro. As medicinas tradicionais e as concep\u00e7\u00f5es de deon\u00e7a formuladas a partir de seus pressupostos, que est\u00e3o intimamente relacionadas aos sistemas de parentesco, rela\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e cosmologias locais, e operam nas interpreta\u00e7\u00f5es que os sujeitos fazem de seu contexto e experi\u00eancias, devem ser levadas em considera\u00e7\u00e3o para se compreender as rela\u00e7\u00f5es que os mo\u00e7ambicanos estabelecem com a doen\u00e7a, determinando concep\u00e7\u00f5es e experi\u00eancias particulares de adoecimento pelo HIV\/AIDS. This article, through an analysis of Mozambican historical, social cultural and racial complexity, intends to point out the necessity of understanding HIV\/AIDS epidemics in that country as a phenomenon with specific implications, determined by those particular conditions. The traditional healing systems and their disease conceptions, which are intimately related to local kinship, gender relations and cosmologies, and affect the interpretations that subjects produce about their context and experiences, should be considered to understand the relations Mozambicans establish with the disease, determining their particular conceptions and experiences with HIV\/AIDS.","creator":["Luiz Henrique Passador","Omar Ribeiro Thomaz"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"016e821d-515b-347c-b7e3-a1b1bf253271"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ra\u00e7a, sexualidade e doen\u00e7a em Mo\u00e7ambique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327664","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9627,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[65154,65500]],"Locations in B":[[28081,28427]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven Seidman"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e13330b-bfac-3bf1-9f77-200ae770691d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/202074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The End of Sociological Theory: The Postmodern Hope","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202074","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9040,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472857,472932]],"Locations in B":[[57411,57483]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using citation data from Google Scholar (GS), this article situates IR within a much larger field of scholarship. This article compares Google Scholar citations numbers from influential publications within the traditional boundaries of disciplinary IR to publications which have influenced disciplinary IR using literature from outside its theoretical heartland. These citation numbers reveal a disciplinary geography in which the theoretical centre of the discipline is occupied by rationalist, neoliberal, realist, and increasingly, constructivist texts. The citations numbers also suggest that the theoretical hinterland of IR\u2019s disciplinary landscape is settled by post-colonial and feminist IR theory. However, when IR is treated as an inter-discipline and situated with a broader field of scholarship through Google Scholar, it becomes clear that a much larger body of the academy turns to literature from beyond IR\u2019s disciplinary gates as they grapple with and explore the effects and repercussions of international politics. On this interdisciplinary view, it is IR which occupies the theoretical periphery.","creator":["Oliver Richmond","J. Julian Graef"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26593336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21966923"},{"name":"oclc","value":"914477313"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"859798ff-4651-30e0-99f5-688626a4cd92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26593336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eriseurointestud"}],"isPartOf":"European Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Verlag Barbara Budrich","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Citing International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26593336","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":12498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Beyond the Boundaries of Disciplinary IR"} +{"abstract":"The Pauline letters regularly invoke children and related images. The children imagery assumed by Paul and ascribed to the communities being addressed are often ambiguous, even if generally representative of ancient sentiments about children. Children imagery appears to stand in a dialectical relationship to their (both Paul and the communities\u2019) social locations, particularly with regard to identity-constructions and negotiated positions of power. Children imagery was associated with kinship and household, and in these and other ways imbued with power and ideological interests, serving a range of social concerns related to social identity and the construction of boundaries. Some of these tendencies have remained to this day.","creator":["Jeremy Punt"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"000889e9-1785-3185-8441-917af2db0dab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Not Child\u2019s Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417498","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":11335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Paul and Children"} +{"abstract":"Although kinship studies have traditionally focused on 'solidarity' and 'mutuality', dis-alignment, exclusion, and difference are equally crucial foci for analysis. In this introduction, we explore articulations of mutuality and difference through the lens of materiality, particularly the matter of politics and value and the semiotics of material life. We suggest that non-mutuality and exclusion are especially apparent in contexts where kinship intersects with the consolidation of economic and human capital. We then draw attention to the ways in which material signs are productive forces of relatedness in day-to-day interactions between humans, non-humans, and other material things. By examining the gaps and fissures within kinship through the lens of material practice, the contributors to this special section uncover new opportunities for critical engagement with theories of difference, semiotics, and value.","creator":["Kathryn E. Goldfarb","Caroline E. Schuster"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26404911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52713944"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cdc6b6d-85bd-3ba4-a0c2-bd69c74f66b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26404911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SPECIAL SECTION: Introduction (De)materializing Kinship\u2014Holding Together Mutuality and Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26404911","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":5507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this anthology, Joan Scott reconfigures her understanding of feminist history and thus contributes to a long overdue theoretical discussion on how we can write feminist history in a globalizing world. She traces both the history of gender history and the history of feminist movements. Scott's main source of inspiration is the French version of psychoanalysis following Lacan. In a further development of her pioneering 1986 article, \"Gender: A Useful Category of Historical Analysis,\" she points out that gender is neither a mere social construction nor a somehow biological referent (such as \"sex\"). Integrating the constructive criticism of her approach elaborated prominently by Judith Butler during the 1990s, Scott argues instead that gender is a historically and culturally specific attempt to resolve the dilemma of sexual difference. Sexual difference, for its part, is also far from referring simply to physically different male\/female bodies. Sexual difference is, for Scott, a permanent quandary for modern subjects, a puzzle to which every society or culture finds specific answers. My reading of her book concentrates on two main questions that run like a thread through her considerations: First, how can we bridge the gap between a subject and a group? Second, how can we overcome binary oppositions and\/or fixed categories and entities\u2014a challenge that becomes even more important every day in a rapidly globalizing world. I broadly discuss the benefits and shortcomings of the pivotal role Scott ascribes to fantasy. Although the concept of fantasy is powerful and striking, particularly with reference to the concepts of \"imagined communities\" and \"invented traditions,\" coined by Eric Hobsbawm and Benedict Anderson, I find the Lacanian tone to be less convincing.","creator":["Angelika Epple"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5847467-3995-3445-b96f-69a0e3cc9e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE VERTIGO OF HISTORICAL ANALYSES IN A GLOBALIZING WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542971","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":5305,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[6455,6519]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANNA DESPOTOPOULOU"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42827870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23721901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42827870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georelioghlstud"}],"isPartOf":"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies","issueNumber":"58\/59","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GENDER TRANSFUSIONS IN GEORGE ELIOT'S \"THE LIFTED VEIL\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42827870","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7959,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431521,431865]],"Locations in B":[[28755,29099]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In March 2014, for an article in GQ magazine, Pharrell Williams invoked the term \u201cthe new black\u201d; he further elaborated on the phrase's definition in an interview with Oprah Winfrey for her show Oprah Prime. A little over a year later, in the summer of 2015, Rick Famuyiwa's film Dope, executively produced by Williams, was released to rave reviews. Although these two events appear disparate, this article asserts that the film is a cinematic interpretation of Williams's ideation. By highlighting the movie's aesthetic nods to hip-hop\u2014clothing, paraphernalia, music, and casting\u2014as forms of nostalgia, and reading the protagonist's preoccupation with attending Harvard as a form of cultural amnesia reminiscent of rhetoric from bygone cultural movements, the piece questions, what is the \u201cnew\u201d that constitutes blackness? In like manner, does the arrival of such a category suggest that \u201cthe old black\u201d no longer exists, or does it maintain a paradigmatic influence which stands to impart a lesson on culture and history to the \u201cnew\u201d?","creator":["I. Augustus Durham"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"163a713d-d3d3-3fa8-8132-94ad470b4103"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"U, (New) Black(?) Maybe: Nostalgia and Amnesia in Dope<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":7527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Stauffer","JUDITH BUTLER"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a03a9dda-7d87-3acf-bbec-581d18f3ec39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PEACE IS RESISTANCE TO THE TERRIBLE SATISFACTIONS OF WAR: AN INTERVIEW WITH JUDITH BUTLER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686167","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Gorman"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52c65676-059c-3022-811f-3ab529a650e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"416","pagination":"pp. 416-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Thinking with and about \"Same-Sex Desire\": Producing and Policing Female Sexuality in the \"Acts of Xanthippe and Polyxena\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704755","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13044,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[307472,307589]],"Locations in B":[[27471,27590]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Farnsworth-Alvear"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b426fdd-f7cd-3808-819b-8e0b214bdf39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Orthodox Virginity\/Heterodox Memories: Understanding Women's Stories of Mill Discipline in Medell\u00edn, Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175153","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on ethnographic material from East Java, Indonesia, this article examines the intersections of sorcery and gender and suggests that sorcery is a form of exchange, which, as well as inducing misfortune, pain and death, evinces gender. Key here are the invocation and inversion of marriage transactions and wedding rituals, and an underlying conception of the person as inherently androgynous. The article also calls for sorcery and other manifestations of violence to be moved away from the margins and towards the centre of anthropological descriptions of Javanese sociality.","creator":["Konstantinos Retsikas"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680421868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f7f3d5a-32ff-3ae9-8d7b-90c869a47e8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23750994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"The sorcery of gender: sex, death and difference in East Java, Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750994","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":13105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the beginning of this decade the gender discourse in anthropology shifts from the analysis of gender to the analysis of sex. Following Michel Foucault and Judith Butler, Heike Behrend stressed in her article \u201eMothers do not make Babies\u201d \u2014 in this journal, No.119, 1994 \u2014 the thesis of some scholars, that sex can no longer be regarded as an ontological category but as a social and discursive produced variable. The conception of sexual dimorphism which is supposed to be only a western folk model is replaced by the idea of sexual multiplicity. In this essay which is also a response to Behrend I will discuss the construction of sex in the writings of Thomas Laqueur, Unni Wikan and Anna S. Meigs. They all gave evidence of an ideology of sexual parallelism from which at least one categorial system focuses on the notion of sexual dualism.","creator":["Susanne Schr\u00f6ter"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25842410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00442666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddd4a932-5ebf-397b-a014-9230e29bd84c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25842410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitethn"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Ethnologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Dietrich Reimer Verlag GmbH","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Der Diskurs um die Kategorie \u201eSex\u201d in der Ethnologie. Anmerkungen zu Heike Behrends \"Mothers do not make Babies\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25842410","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":6162,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493927,493989]],"Locations in B":[[41463,41529]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article looks at teacher knowledge as a joint construction of teachers and researchers. It focuses on narrative discourse as a representational medium for formulating knowledge in the specific setting of the research interview. The article analyzes the contrasting narrative practices of two teachers in terms of how they formulate versions of self. These practices are seen as differentially situating the two teachers in terms of the largescale research networks within which knowledge is constituted.","creator":["Jan Nespor","Judith Barylske"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1163022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ebb65c-778f-3cc0-9550-1304c0be2e5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1163022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereducresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"823","pageStart":"805","pagination":"pp. 805-823","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Applied sciences - Systems science","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Narrative Discourse and Teacher Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1163022","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9384,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101653,101785]],"Locations in B":[[42129,42261]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the aestheticization of the politics of exclusion in a suburban American community. The research for this study focuses on the relationships among landscapes, social identity, exclusion, and the aesthetic attitudes of residents of Bedford, New York. By being thoroughly aestheticized, class relations are mystified and reduced to questions of lifestyle, consumption patterns, taste, and visual pleasure. Landscapes become possessions that play an active role in the performance of elite social identities. As such, social distinction is achieved and maintained by preserving and enhancing the beauty of places such as Bedford. This aestheticizing of place is managed through highly restrictive zoning policies for residential land and by \"protecting\" hundreds of acres of undeveloped land as nature preserves. This article explores the role of romantic ideology, localism, antiurbanism, antimodernism, and a class-based aesthetic in the construction of \"wild\" nature in these preserves. We argue that, in places such as Bedford, the celebration of localism, environmental beauty, and preservation mask the interrelatedness of issues of aesthetics and class identity on the one hand and residential land shortages in the New York metropolitan region on the other. The seemingly innocent pleasure in the aesthetic appreciation of landscapes and the desire to protect nature can act as a subtle but highly effective mechanism of social exclusion and the reaffirmation of elite class identities.","creator":["James S. Duncan","Nancy G. Duncan"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccf0423c-7b34-3167-a317-4e3d6686f729"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aestheticization of the Politics of Landscape Preservation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651267","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":17677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dieser Artikel blickt zun\u00e4chst auf ein breites Korpus von Filmen, die Vater-Tochter Beziehungen inszenieren. Er sp\u00fcrt den h\u00e4ufig vorhandenen patriarchalen Missbrauchsstrukturen nach und wirft Fragen nach der Marginalisierung\/Absenz der Mutter und einem damit verbundenen Dilemma der Triangulation auf. Schlie\u00dflich wendet sich der Blick von ausbeuterischen und missbr\u00e4uchlichen Bildern auf ein junges Kino, welches T\u00f6chtern neue Beziehungs- und Handlungsm\u00f6glichkeiten er\u00f6ffnet.","creator":["Klaus Rieser"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618945"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d43fd4ba-4c03-3aa3-a2fd-24cf9d156bbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24877203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Daddy's Girls: Vater-Tochter Beziehungen im Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877203","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Power is the ability to send and bind someone else to act on one's behalf, a relation that depends upon habits of interpretation. For persons attempting to complete projects, power involves communicating with, recruiting, and controlling subordinates and confronting those who are not in such a relationship of recruitment. This leads to a basic theoretical vocabulary about power players and their projects\u2014a model of rector, actor, and other. As multiple relations of sending and binding become mutually implicated, chains of power\u2014understood as simultaneously social and symbolic\u2014emerge. The vocabulary presented for analyzing power is developed with reference to a series of instances, including the exploitation of labor and police violence. Finally, the paper analyzes a case study of an imperial encounter on the American frontier and examines therein a shift in how political power was represented, with implications for the sociology of transitions to modernity.","creator":["Isaac Ariail Reed"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92121732-2956-373a-b267-7f79ff635263"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26382880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chains of Power and Their Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382880","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":19861,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Our mother-daughter collaboration on an English edition of Nanda Herbermann's The Blessed Abyss: Inmate #6582 in Ravensbr\u00fcck Concentration Camp for Women raised a series of questions for us about the relationships among our personal histories, political affiliations, generational and intellectual stances, and scholarly work. These questions emerged from our negotiations over our very different responses to this complicated concentration camp memoir by a German, Catholic woman, imprisoned for resistance to the Nazis, who is also a distant relative of ours. By reexamining the context of our collaboration here, we address the value of positionality and postmemory for studies of gender, National Socialism, and the Holocaust, and seek to problematize discourses of authenticity and legitimacy in Holocaust Studies today.","creator":["Elizabeth R. Baer","Hester Baer"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8affe5f4-ebcd-3276-91f0-9b9e22a34128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmemory Envy?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688959","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay attempts to demonstrate how transgender theories can inspire pedagogical methods that complement feminist compositionist pedagogical approaches to understanding the narration of gender as a social construct. By examining sample student writing generated by a prompt inspired by transgender theories, the author's analysis suggests how trans theories might usefully expand and extend-for both instructors and students-our analysis of the stories we tell personally, socially, and politically about gender. Ultimately, the author argues that trans theories and pedagogical activities built on them can enhance our understanding of gender performance by prompting us to consider gender as a material and embodied reality.","creator":["Jonathan Alexander"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30037898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709729"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"688e222b-9188-3da6-bffa-37fb3f15b41d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30037898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Transgender Rhetorics: (Re)Composing Narratives of the Gendered Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30037898","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":17642,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727]],"Locations in B":[[25993,26127]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the unintended outcomes of a neoliberal program designed to privatize Mexico's communal lands. Although postrevolutionary agrarian law excluded women from official landholding and leadership positions, steps toward land privatization inadvertently increased women's access to land, government resources, and political power. Using ethnographic and survey data collected in a Veracruz ejido, I demonstrate how Mexico's agrarian counterreforms triggered novel subjectivities and practices. While men acted as self-imagined private property owners and decreased participation in traditional governance institutions, women became registered land managers and leaders for the first time in the ejido's history. These interlocking processes stopped the land-titling program in its tracks and reinvigorated collective governance. Even state actors charged with carrying out ejido privatization were implicated in the empowerment of rural women and failure to fully privatize land. This research contributes to nature\u2013society debates by arguing neoliberalism does not always end economic self-determination and communal governance in agrarian contexts. Rather, I demonstrate the ways in which processual policy, subjectivity, authority formation, objects, and environmental narratives combine to produce new political trajectories with positive implications for rural women and the environment. \u672c\u6587\u68c0\u89c6\u7528\u6765\u79c1\u6709\u5316\u58a8\u897f\u54e5\u96c6\u4f53\u6240\u6709\u571f\u5730\u7684\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u4e49\u8ba1\u753b\u6240\u5bfc\u81f4\u7684\u975e\u9884\u671f\u6027\u7ed3\u679c\u3002\u5118\u7ba1\u9769\u547d\u7ed3\u675f\u540e\u7684\u519c\u4e1a\u6cd5\u5f8b, \u5c06\u5973\u6027\u6392\u9664\u4e8e\u6b63\u5f0f\u7684\u571f\u5730\u6301\u6709\u548c\u9886\u5bfc\u5730\u4f4d\u4e4b\u5916, \u4f46\u8fc8\u5411\u571f\u5730\u79c1\u6709\u5316\u7684\u8fdb\u7a0b, \u5374\u65e0\u610f\u4e2d\u589e\u52a0\u4e86\u5973\u6027\u83b7\u5f97\u571f\u5730\u3001\u653f\u5e9c\u8d44\u6e90\u548c\u653f\u6cbb\u6743\u529b\u7684\u7ba1\u9053\u3002\u6211\u8fd0\u7528\u5728\u58a8\u897f\u54e5\u97e6\u62c9\u514b\u9c81\u65af (Veracruz) \u4e2d\u7684\u4e00\u5ea7\u5408\u4f5c\u519c\u573a\u6240\u641c\u96c6\u7684\u6c11\u65cf\u5fd7\u4e0e\u8c03\u67e5\u7814\u7a76\u6570\u636e, \u663e\u793a\u58a8\u897f\u54e5\u7684\u53cd\u519c\u4e1a\u6539\u9769, \u5982\u4f55\u89e6\u53d1\u4e86\u5d2d\u65b0\u7684\u4e3b\u4f53\u6027\u4e0e\u5b9e\u8df5\u3002\u5f53\u7537\u6027\u81ea\u6211\u60f3\u50cf\u4e3a\u79c1\u6709\u4ea7\u6743\u7684\u6240\u6709\u8005\u3001\u5e76\u51cf\u5c11\u53c2\u4e0e\u4f20\u7edf\u7684\u6cbb\u7406\u5236\u5ea6\u65f6, \u5973\u6027\u5219\u5728\u5408\u4f5c\u519c\u573a\u7684\u5386\u53f2\u4e2d, \u9996\u6b21\u6210\u4e3a\u6ce8\u518c\u7684\u7ba1\u7406\u8005\u548c\u9886\u5bfc\u8005\u3002\u8fd9\u4e9b\u76f8\u4e92\u8fde\u7ed3\u7684\u8fc7\u7a0b, \u963b\u6b62\u4e86\u8fdb\u884c\u4e2d\u7684\u571f\u5730\u4ea7\u6743\u6388\u4e88\u8ba1\u753b, \u5e76\u91cd\u632f\u4e86\u96c6\u4f53\u6cbb\u7406\u3002\u5373\u4fbf\u63a8\u52a8\u5408\u4f5c\u519c\u573a\u79c1\u6709\u5316\u7684\u56fd\u5bb6\u884c\u52a8\u8005, \u4ea6\u4e0e\u519c\u6751\u5973\u6027\u57f9\u529b\u548c\u65e0\u6cd5\u5b8c\u5168\u5c06\u571f\u5730\u79c1\u6709\u5316\u6709\u5173\u3002\u672c\u7814\u7a76\u4e3b\u5f20, \u5728\u519c\u6751\u7684\u8109\u7edc\u4e2d, \u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u4e49\u5e76\u4e0d\u603b\u662f\u7ec8\u7ed3\u7ecf\u6d4e\u81ea\u6211\u51b3\u5b9a\u548c\u96c6\u4f53\u6cbb\u7406, \u5e76\u4ee5\u6b64\u5bf9\u81ea\u7136\u2014\u793e\u4f1a\u5173\u4fc2\u7684\u8fa9\u8bba\u505a\u51fa\u8d21\u732e\u3002\u53cd\u4e4b, \u6211\u5c06\u5c55\u73b0\u7a0b\u5e8f\u6027\u653f\u7b56\u3001\u4e3b\u4f53\u6027\u3001\u6743\u5a01\u5f62\u6210\u3001\u76ee\u6807\u4ee5\u53ca\u73af\u5883\u53d9\u4e8b\u7684\u7ed3\u5408, \u751f\u4ea7\u5bf9\u519c\u6751\u5973\u6027\u4e0e\u73af\u5883\u6709\u6b63\u9762\u610f\u6db5\u7684\u5d2d\u65b0\u653f\u6cbb\u8f68\u9053\u4e4b\u65b9\u5f0f\u3002 Este art\u00edculo examina los resultados inesperados de un programa neoliberal dise\u00f1ado para privatizar las tierras comunales de M\u00e9xico. Aunque la ley agraria posrevolucionaria excluy\u00f3 a las mujeres de las posiciones oficiales de tenencia de tierra y liderazgo, los pasos dados hacia la privatizaci\u00f3n de la tierra incrementaron involuntariamente el acceso a la tierra, a los recursos gubernamentales y al poder pol\u00edtico. Utilizando datos etnogr\u00e1ficos y de estudio de campo obtenidos en un ejido de Veracruz, demuestro c\u00f3mo la contrarreforma agraria de M\u00e9xico desencaden\u00f3 subjetividades y pr\u00e1cticas novedosas. Mientras por propia imaginaci\u00f3n los hombres siguieron creyendo como obvia su condici\u00f3n de due\u00f1os de propiedad privada y redujeron su participaci\u00f3n en las tradicionales instituciones de gobernanza, las mujeres se convirtieron en administradoras registradas de la tierra y l\u00edderes por primera vez en la historia del ejido. Estos procesos entrelazados pararon el programa de titulaci\u00f3n de tierras en mismo punto de arranque y dieron nuevo aliento a la gobernanza colectiva. Incluso los actores estatales encargados de ejecutar la privatizaci\u00f3n del ejido se vieron implicados en el empoderamiento de las mujeres rurales y el fracaso de la intenci\u00f3n de una tierra completamente privatizada. Esta investigaci\u00f3n contribuye a los debates sobre naturaleza-sociedad con el argumento de que el neoliberalismo no siempre termina la autodeterminaci\u00f3n econ\u00f3mica y la gobernanza comunal en los contextos agrarios. M\u00e1s que eso, pongo de manifiesto las maneras como las pol\u00edticas de proceso, subjetividad, formaci\u00f3n de autoridad, objetos y narrativas ambientales se combinan para producir nuevas trayectorias pol\u00edticas con implicaciones positivas para las mujeres del campo y para el medio ambiente.","creator":["Heidi E. Hausermann"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f629c3e-3d69-3334-b410-d3f5f55fc049"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"800","pageStart":"784","pagination":"pp. 784-800","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unintended Developments: Gender, Environment, and Collective Governance in a Mexican Ejido","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537594","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":12071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El objectivo de este trabajo es investigar las relaciones afectivosexuales desde una perspectiva feminista y sociol\u00f3gica. Dicho fen\u00f3meno no ha sido a\u00fan definido como objeto de estudio sociol\u00f3gico. La estrategia, entonces, es dotar al tema de fundamentaci\u00f3n socioestructural a partir de materiales pedag\u00f3gicos sobre la educaci\u00f3n afectivosexual y una teor\u00eda social feminista ampliamente desarrollada. Este texto recoge el trabajo de construcci\u00f3n de las categor\u00edas de investigaci\u00f3n que permiten dise\u00f1ar un modelo sociol\u00f3gico. The aim of this study is to investigate sex and relationships from a feminist, sociological perspective. This phenomenon has yet to be defined as an object of sociological study. The strategy, then, is to provide the theme with a socio-structural foundation based on pedagogical materials on sex and relationships education and a well-developed feminist social theory. This text describes the work of constructing research categories that make it possible to design a sociological model.","creator":["Mar Venegas"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23075419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01882503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73082733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236992"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23075419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revimexisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Mexicana de Sociolog\u00eda","issueNumber":"4","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"589","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-589","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales de la Universidad Nacional Aut\u00f3noma de M\u00e9xico","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Un modelo sociol\u00f3gico para investigar las relaciones afectivosexuales \/ A sociological model for investigating sex and relationships","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23075419","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":11814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shantanu DuttaAhmed"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56bad46c-82b2-33fc-adf5-4004ee9914c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Thought You Knew!\": Performing the Penis, the Phallus, and Otherness in Neil Jordan's \"The Crying Game\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018931","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DAVID ZIETSMA"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24916088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c441746-0d87-362e-94ae-fad71e0959ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24916088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Sin Has No History\": Religion, National Identity, and U.S. Intervention, 1937\u20131941","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24916088","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":18397,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27016,27172]],"Locations in B":[[687,843]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo visa analisar o contributo das teorias feministas para as epistemologias e pr\u00e1ticas metodol\u00f3gicas das ci\u00eancias sociais, nomeadamente da psicologia social. Partindo da apresenta\u00e7\u00e3o das propostas feministas da Terceira Vaga para as ci\u00eancias e da epistemologia dial\u00f3gica das representa\u00e7\u00f5es sociais, discutimos as possibilidades de uma conceptualiza\u00e7\u00e3o assente nos conhecimentos situados para o desenvolvimento de saberes cient\u00edficos emancipat\u00f3rios. Assim, analisaremos o modo como os conhecimentos situados e os desafios que colocam podem engendrar uma mudan\u00e7a nas pr\u00e1ticas cient\u00edficas da psicologia social e das ci\u00eancias sociais. This paper aims at analysing the contribution of feminist theories for the epistemology and methodological practices of the social sciences, namely of social psychology. Departing from the presentation of Third Wave feminist proposals and from the dialogical epistemology of social representations, we discuss the possibilities for a conceptualisation based on situated knowledges, for the development of emancipatory scientific knowledges. Hence, we will debate the way how situated knowledges and the challenges they pose can change scientific praxis in social psychology and in social sciences.","creator":["Jo\u00e3o Manuel de Oliveira","L\u00edgia Am\u00e2ncio"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72d54315-1464-3b0b-a52f-9644454aef56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"615","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-615","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Teorias feministas e representa\u00e7\u00f5es sociais: desafios dos conhecimentos situados para a psicologia social","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327550","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476047]],"Locations in B":[[42590,42652]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Illustrations of couples dining in a ritual frame involving wine are especially common in illuminated haggadah manuscripts for Passover, which were used in a family ceremony celebrated by men and women together. Producers with various agendas adopted existing formulas but also inserted changes which at first glance usually look minor. By defining the nuances of different variations of such traditions and analyzing them in a broad sociological and cultural context, this article aims to suggest a gendered reading of these illustrations and reveal the individual motivation embedded in each case. As we shall see, the images support the gender hierarchy based on the rules and customs that define the ritual; they may challenge this clear hierarchy, but they never revoke it totally. The spectrum of cases to be presented will enable us to shed new light on the flexibility, as well as the limits, of the gendered frame of medieval art and ritual.","creator":["Sarit Shalev-Eyni"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"oclc","value":"679709532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92bba0dc-d61c-39c4-9c90-b08fb1c6e5f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Manipulating the Cup of Blessing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617284","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":13346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Gendered Reading of Ritual Images in European Hebrew Books"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Norbert Sch\u00fcrer"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7c4aff4-7792-36c6-b593-d5f8f67b0f97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41468133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Sustaining Identity in I'tesamuddin's \"The Wonders of Vilayet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468133","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":9979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431066]],"Locations in B":[[3445,3523]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through an examination of reactions by practitioners of ayurvedic medicine to India's new WTO-mandated Patents Act, this article problematizes approaches to agency, resistance, and the intelligibility of systems of power in social theory. The coming together of law, science, and different practices of medicine in this case is challenging to decipher in terms of its potential effects on India's ayurvedic medical system, and ayurvedic medical practitioners have very divergent positions about how to protect their knowledge from misappropriation\u2014ranging from organized resistance to deliberate inaction\u2014and disagree over whether the new laws present a threat. I present theoretical approaches, largely from science and technology studies, that decenter the role of human agency and consider inaction an informed reaction to power in an effort to begin to focus more fully on problems of agency and intelligibility that social analysts have only peripherally acknowledged in their considerations of power and resistance.","creator":["MURPHY HALLIBURTON"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41241502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e9a035c-b513-37ff-be27-ac539bf9e75a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41241502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry"],"title":"Resistance or inaction? Protecting ayurvedic medical knowledge and problems of agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41241502","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":14856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist language researchers typically assume that gender is relevant to any interaction. Conversation analysis offers an interesting challenge for feminists to show how and that the pervasiveness of gender is achieved in talk-in-interaction. The aim of this article is to make a step towards understanding the interactional mechanisms underling the omnirelevance of gender in daily life. The present study draws upon the practices and principles of conversation analysis, particularly the notions of repair and membership categorization devices, to examine recordings of children's interactions. Evidence that supports the claim that the organization of repair may be implicated in the (re) production of gender is presented.","creator":["ANN WEATHERALL"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"918bb3fc-e4bd-3262-b440-4b29ec46ac3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"781","pageStart":"767","pagination":"pp. 767-781","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Towards understanding gender and talk-in-interaction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888536","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442728,442851]],"Locations in B":[[3372,3491]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bonnie Mann"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"World Alienation in Feminist Thought: The Sublime Epistemology of Emphatic Anti-Essentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339104","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12432,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400],[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[75618,75702],[76891,76953]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jessica Walsh"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c2a5167-f401-3c5c-8a12-2c4dd1e4a3bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Strangest Pain to Bear\": Corporeality and Fear of Insanity in Charlotte Mew's Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004327","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dentro de una sociedad material y moralmente ca\u00f3tica, los personajes de La Celestina construyen consecuentemente su subjetividad a trav\u00e9s de trasgresiones de g\u00e9nero y sociales ajenas a las convenciones culturales. En este sentido, mi intenci\u00f3n es explorar la idea de la normatividad fallida y de c\u00f3mo dichos des\u00f3rdenes sociales finalizan dram\u00e1ticamente. Se entiende por normatividad fallida la subversi\u00f3n del patriarcado fuera de los l\u00edmites culturalmente establecidos en relaci\u00f3n al g\u00e9nero, clase social, raza, etc. Bas\u00e1ndome en las teor\u00edas feministas de Judith Butler y en cr\u00edticas de la obra en cuesti\u00f3n como Hartunian o Swietlicki, me centrar\u00e9 en la carencia de la feminidad y de la masculinidad patentes en los principales personajes derivada de las limitaciones de un sistema ca\u00f3tico cuyo final tr\u00e1gico es f\u00e1cilmente prefigurado. Within a materialist and morally chaotic society, the characters of La Celestina thus construct their subjectivity through gender and social transgressions deviating from conventions and culture. In this sense, this essay explores the idea of a failed normativity and how those social disorders end up dramatically. By failed normativity, I mean the subversion of patriarchy with regards to gender, social issues or race due to the deficient and delimited Law of the Father. Resorting to Judith Butler, Hartunian or Swietlicki's theories on feminism, I will focus on feminine and masculine lack as part of the protagonists identity and how this lack emerges from the boundaries of a chaotic system whose tragic ending is previously anticipated.","creator":["Irune del Rio Gabiola"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44283202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01473085"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a5969a7-dcd7-30c6-8f37-b7a60710be5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44283202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"celestinesca"}],"isPartOf":"Celestinesca","issueNumber":"27","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Publicacions Universitat de Valencia","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La \"Celestina\" o la normatividad fallida","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44283202","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6392,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[106126,106346]],"Locations in B":[[5744,5964]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Seth Lerer"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3568083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3568083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hello, Dude: Philology, Performance, and Technology in Mark Twain's \"Connecticut Yankee\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3568083","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Holly A. Laird"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"318a8119-ef1f-3767-8121-97a60cfe2de3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"What Difference(s) Did \"She\" Make? Or, My Aunt, the Dragon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455300","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":3385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lex Boyle"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40005506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f5a6cd4-a629-33be-bcce-11fe2c49dd27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40005506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Flexing the Tensions of Female Muscularity: How Female Bodybuilders Negotiate Normative Femininity in Competitive Bodybuilding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40005506","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A hip\u00f3tese que gostar\u00edamos de levantar no presente ensaio \u00e9 a de que a inst\u00e2ncia autoral assume na literatura contempor\u00e2nea in\u00fameras facetas, transformando a voz autoral em exerc\u00edcio de fabrica\u00e7\u00e3o de personas que desestabilizam a no\u00e7\u00e3o de personas que desestabilizam a no\u00e7\u00e3o do autor como o princ\u00edpio de uma certa unidade de escritura, exercendo-se em uma fun\u00e7\u00e3o-autor que encontra na performance sua condi\u00e7\u00e3o de possibilidade. \/\/\/ The hypothesis we would like to raise in the present essay is that the autorship assumes in contemporary literature innumerable faces, thus transforming the author's voice into manufactoring of personas, which by their turn demobilize autorship as the principle of a given writing unity.","creator":["Luciene Azevedo"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01013505"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c373e4bb-4e98-3861-86fc-62f0a6190a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27666839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revistaletras"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Letras","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"UNESP Universidade Estadual Paulista Julio de Mesquita Filho","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Autoria e performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666839","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda Claudia Andr\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b0a84f7-fb29-3b4f-9742-3ff260d79912"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23022222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"N\u00f3madas, pol\u00edglotas y travestis: Subjetividades migrantes para el nuevo milenio en la m\u00e1s reciente narrativa de Isabel Allende","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022222","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7964,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[131646,132003],[131747,132014]],"Locations in B":[[43411,43768],[43513,43779]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El presente art\u00edculo aborda las ideas de Lourdes Casal sobre la discriminaci\u00f3n racial y el mestizaje en Cuba a trav\u00e9s de sus art\u00edculos acad\u00e9micos, sus cuentos y, sobre todo, su ensayo autobiogr\u00e1fico \u201cMemories of a Black Cuban Childhood\u201d (1978). A diferencia de otros autores que, en las d\u00e9cadas de 1960 y 1970, hicieron hincapi\u00e9 en el vigor del racismo en la isla, Casal resalta en sus estudios las posibilidades de la integraci\u00f3n racial. Pero si bien celebr\u00f3 los \u00e9xitos de la Revoluci\u00f3n cubana para eliminar legalmente la discriminaci\u00f3n racial, tampoco ignor\u00f3 los desaf\u00edos pendientes para alcanzar una \u201cverdadera cultura mestiza\u201d. El potencial del mestizaje es clave para entender el pensamiento de Casal sobre Cuba y su propia subjetividad. Si bien se atiene al mestizaje como intr\u00ednseco a la identidad nacional cubana, Casal lo asume subrayando el componente negro de la mezcla racial. Su experiencia diasp\u00f3rica, que la expuso a diferentes constructos de lo racial tanto en los Estados Unidos como en \u00c1frica, influy\u00f3 en su reformulaci\u00f3n del concepto, llev\u00e1ndola a realzar la negritud dentro de los l\u00edmites del mestizaje. Se trata de un mestizaje activista que en lugar de encubrir las diferencias, las trae a colaci\u00f3n. Through a review of her academic essays, short stories, and autobiographical essay \u201cMemories of a Black Cuban Childhood\u201d (1978), this article addresses Lourdes Casal\u2019s ideas about racial discrimination and mestizaje. In contrast with other authors who in the 1960s and 1970s called attention to the robust racism on the island, Casal in her work stresses the possibilities of racial integration. She celebrated the successes that had been legally achieved in Cuba under the revolution at the same time that she denounced the remnants of racism. There was much that still needed to be overcome to reach a \u201ctrue mulatto culture\u201d. The potential of mestizaje is key to an understanding of Casal\u2019s thoughts about race in Cuba and her own subjectivity. Although she adheres to mestizaje as intrinsic to Cuban national identity, Casal highlights the Black, devalued component of the racial mixture. Her diasporic experience, which exposed her to various constructs of race both in the United States and in Africa, had a major impact on this reconceptualization of race. Instead of concealing the differences, her advocacy of mestizaje brings them to the fore.","creator":["IRAIDA H. L\u00d3PEZ"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03614441"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54052869"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71eedc7c-aefd-34b8-a9c3-2181d7f2e102"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26614617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cubanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"46","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entre el ideal de la naci\u00f3n mestiza y la discordia racial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614617","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"\u201cMemories of a Black Cuban Childhood\u201d y otros textos de Lourdes Casal"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julien Talpin"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90005792","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"954718460"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f0ba369-c85f-3a8b-ae5e-ed9b6c688a50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90005792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revfranscipoleng"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique (English Edition)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REPRESENTATION AS PERFORMANCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90005792","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":14777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"WORKING TO EMBODY SUBALTERN GROUPS IN TWO COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS IN LOS ANGELES"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wayne J. Martino"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19bb6537-327b-3d8b-9246-d36b0d56d904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"CHAPTER TWELVE: \"Love the Sinner, Hate the Sin\": The Clash of Religious and Sexual Minority Rights in Ontario Catholic Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981940","volumeNumber":"437","wordCount":6008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kelvin A. Santiago-Valles"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Unruly City and the Mental Landscape of Colonized Identities: Internally Contested Nationality in Puerto Rico, 1945-1985","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466511","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6456,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[491224,491280]],"Locations in B":[[40754,40807]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Most research on underrepresented members in science focuses on gender or on race\/ethnicity, ignoring intersections embodied by women of color. This article, which draws from a qualitative, longitudinal study, addresses this gap by focusing on ten minority female physics students who negotiate three incongruent realms: field of study, gender, and race\/ethnicity. It examines ways in which these students sense that their belonging and competence in science are questioned because their bodies do not conform to prevalent images of the \u201cordinary\u201d white male physicist. To persevere in physics, they engage in bodily projects of (1) approximating ordinariness through fragmentation, which entails using strategies of racial or gendered \u201cpassing,\u201d or (2) rejecting these practices in favor of multiplicity, which entails employing stereotype manipulation or performances of superiority. By highlighting accounts of individuals who persevere in the elite physics field, this article provides insight into how university departments should reform to promote more women and underrepresented minorities in science.","creator":["MARIA ONG"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2005.52.4.593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a97877e9-cdae-3d1b-98d8-8a96dc744f19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2005.52.4.593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"617","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-617","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Body Projects of Young Women of Color in Physics: Intersections of Gender, Race, and Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2005.52.4.593","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":16166,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[92465,92534]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article provides a description of how a member of a college fraternity uses particular linguistic devices to display different masculinities. It is argued that masculinity can be understood as a repertoire of authoritative stances that implicate a social hierarchy. Speakers select from this repertoire depending on the speech activity and their interlocutors. Gender identity is a performance that is understood in a complex context that includes not only the immediate speech event, but knowledge of cultural expectations for gender and knowledge of social structures.","creator":["Scott Fabius Kiesling"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43103973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d020d405-ff0e-3137-87b2-2cf142c5770d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43103973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Now I Gotta Watch What I Say\": Shifting Constructions of Masculinity in Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43103973","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4b9912a-7e97-30f1-a611-2342a9c7a1b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463636","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":28043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the beginning of the HIV epidemic, school-based HIV prevention education targeting youth has taken many forms. Although there has been some success, educators continue to be challenged by situations in which youth are knowledgeable about HIV but continue to engage in risky sexual behavior. In this article, the authors propose that the underlying or implicit theories about teenagers' sexual risk behavior that guide most of these prevention activities are not accurate descriptions or valid explanations of sexual risk in this population. The article is divided into three major sections. First, the authors articulate the theories underlying HIV prevention activities that are typically found in standard school-based prevention curricula, discussing both their limitations and strengths. Second, they discuss their increased awareness of the role of gender ideologies and sexual scripts in the sexual lives of youth. Finally, the authors describe their current HIV prevention activity ('The Game\") as it emerges and is shaped by their increasing understanding of the critical role of gender-based ideologies and sexual scripts in young people's sexual risk behavior.","creator":["Carolyn Laub","Donnovan M. Somera","L. Kris Gowen","Rafael M. D\u00edaz"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45055031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10901981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7de83370-2357-3336-aab5-b4aade6076ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45055031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healeducbeha"}],"isPartOf":"Health Education & Behavior","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Targeting \"Risky\" Gender Ideologies: Constructing a Community-Driven, Theory-Based HTV Prevention Intervention for Youth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45055031","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Belmont"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44087102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e714a2c3-6ada-3933-bba7-794ba23b5342"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44087102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Claiming Queer Space in\/as Nature: An Ecofeminist Reading of \"Secretary\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44087102","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8165,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445000,445259]],"Locations in B":[[44288,44543]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is based on findings from a qualitative study that took place within the context of a four-year healthcare programme directed towards low-income travestis in the central area of S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil. Throughout the study the formation of social identity among travestis was investigated through a focus on four axes: gender, body, work and violence. This paper subjects the identity of the travestis to a critical analysis and proposes a view of their sense of self as a 'patchwork' assembled through the assimilation of various fragments of identity common in Brazilian society. The primary identities assimilated by the travestis under study were, in the area of femininity, the submissive woman, the puta ['whore'] and the super-seductive woman and, in the area of masculinity, the viado ['queer'], the malandro ['rascal'] and the bandido ['bandit']. The resulting travesti identity exhibited not only gender ambiguity, but also contradictions among the feminine identities described, as well as among the masculine ones. Cet article est bas\u00e9 sur les r\u00e9sultats d'une \u00e9tude qualitative men\u00e9e dans le cadre d'un programme de soins de sant\u00e9 ciblant sp\u00e9cifiquement des travestis vivant avec peu de moyens au centre de S\u00e3o Paulo, au Br\u00e9sil. L'\u00e9tude a permis d'explorer la formation de l'identit\u00e9 sociale chez les travestis sous quatre angles diff\u00e9rents: le genre, le corps, le travail et la violence. Cet article soumet l'identit\u00e9 des travestis \u00e0 une analyse critique et propose une vision de leur compr\u00e9hension du moi, \u00e0 savoir celle d'une sorte de \u00abpatchwork\u00bb assembl\u00e9 \u00e0 partir de l'assimilation de divers fragments identitaires courants dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 br\u00e9silienne. Les principales identit\u00e9s assimil\u00e9es par les travestis qui ont particip\u00e9 \u00e0 l'\u00e9tude sont, dans le champ de la f\u00e9minit\u00e9, la femme soumise, la pute et la super s\u00e9ductrice, et dans le domaine de la masculinit\u00e9, le viado, le malandro et le bandido. L'identit\u00e9 travesti qui r\u00e9sulte de cet assemblage a montr\u00e9 non seulement l'ambig\u00fcit\u00e9 du genre, mais aussi les contradictions, aussi bien entre les identit\u00e9s f\u00e9minines d\u00e9crites qu'entre les identit\u00e9s masculines. Este art\u00edculo se basa en los resultados de un estudio cualitativo que se llev\u00f3 a cabo en el marco de un programa sanitario de cuatro a\u00f1os de duraci\u00f3n en el que participaron travest\u00eds con bajos ingresos en la zona central de S\u00e3o Paulo, Brasil. Durante todo el estudio se investig\u00f3 la formaci\u00f3n de la identidad social entre travest\u00eds a trav\u00e9s de un foco formado por cuatro ejes: sexo, cuerpo, trabajo y violencia. En este ensayo sometemos la identidad de los travest\u00eds a un an\u00e1lisis cr\u00edtico y proponemos una perspectiva de su concepto de s\u00ed mismos en forma de un 'mosaico' agrupado a trav\u00e9s de la asimilaci\u00f3n de varios fragmentos de identidad com\u00fan en la sociedad brasile\u00f1a. Las identidades primarias asimiladas por los travest\u00eds que estudiamos aqu\u00ed fueron, en el campo de la feminidad, la mujer sumisa, la puta y la mujer super seductora y, en el campo de la masculinidad, el marica, el p\u00edcaro y el bandido. La identidad del travest\u00ed resultante no s\u00f3lo presenta un sexo ambiguo sino tambi\u00e9n muestra contradicciones entre las identidades femeninas y masculinas que se describen.","creator":["Marcos Roberto Vieira Garcia"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de25614d-5a6c-3fcf-9ad9-6ea950953e77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27784485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"623","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-623","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity as a 'patchwork': aspects of identity among low-income Brazilian travestis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784485","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peta Tait"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"931b9f67-062e-331e-a26a-cd0a28233ac2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Feminine Free Fall: A Fantasy of Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208712","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":4042,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[318396,318631]],"Locations in B":[[14223,14458]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aaron T. Norton","Ozzie Zehner"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d70232ce-f98d-39d8-978b-09d7af548489"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Which Half Is Mommy? Tetragametic Chimerism and Trans-Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649788","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7659,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[43961,44030]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From a European and U.S. American perspective at the millennium, Wolf's sex change story, \"Selbstversuch\" (1972) has gained a profound relevance for critical discourses on gender and the natural sciences. Since Wolf explores issues of bio-technology in the context of a sex change experiment, the story also raises questions about conventional notions of sex and gender. This analysis of \"Selbstversuch\" addresses both the gendered conventions of scientific discourse and the discourse on sex and gender. The article draws therefore on three interrelated strands of research: feminist approaches to the philosophy and history of science; studies on cyborgs and cyborgology, most prominently Haraway's \"Manifesto\"; and theoretical approaches within literary and cultural studies that challenge the sex\/gender system.","creator":["Friederike Eigler"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0af2d90c-00d1-35fb-97f9-b138b792448a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rereading Christa Wolf's \"Selbstversuch\": Cyborgs and Feminist Critiques of Scientific Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072759","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9159,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75071,75322]],"Locations in B":[[28349,28588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En Pologne, si la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 de construire la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile est une question fr\u00e9quemment \u00e9voqu\u00e9e dans le discours public depuis 1989, aux yeux de beaucoup sa structuration reste insatisfaisante. Le d\u00e9bat relatif au mouvement gay et lesbien suscite la m\u00eame r\u00e9action. Les mat\u00e9riaux recueillis par l'auteure au cours de ses enqu\u00eates parmi les groupes de gender et de queer studies d'une universit\u00e9 polonaise montrent toutefois que, m\u00eame invisibles, le genre et la sexualit\u00e9 sont importants dans la Pologne d'aujourd'hui. Mais, pour donner une visibilit\u00e9 \u00e0 l'invisible, la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile ne doit pas \u00eatre assimil\u00e9e aux seules organisations non gouvernementales qui jouent un r\u00f4le de m\u00e9diateur entre les citoyens et l'\u00c9tat. Le genre et la sexualit\u00e9 ne peuvent pas \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme des cat\u00e9gories identitaires fondant l'activisme politique. Pour construire la coh\u00e9sion sociale, les liens informels entre les individus, interpersonnels, comptent tout autant. Si la diversit\u00e9 des opinions sur l'identit\u00e9 et l'efficacit\u00e9 des strat\u00e9gies politiques engendre des conflits, elle n'exclut pas la possibilit\u00e9 d'actions communes en faveur des droits des minorit\u00e9s sexuelles. Despite the fact that a need for creating civil society has been highlighted in public discourse in Poland since 1989, in the eyes of many it still remains in a rather poor condition. Similar opinions qualify the debate on gay and lesbian movement. However, in the light of fieldwork material gathered among gender and queer studies groups active at one of the Polish universities, the author argues that even though hardly visible, gender and sexuality provide an important context for creating civil society in contemporary Poland. But, to make invisibility visible we should neither link civil society solely with non-governmental organizations that mediate between citizens and the state, nor approach gender and sexuality as identity categories necessary to proceed with political activism. Informal, interpersonal relations of particular individuals can contribute to social cohesion as well, while different ideas about identity and effective political strategies, although resulting in clashes, do not preclude common activities for sexual minorities rights. Wenngleich die Notwendigkeit des Aufbaus einer Zivilgesellschaft seit 1989 innerhalb der \u00f6ffentlichen Debatte eine viel diskutierte Frage ist, so ist das erzielte Ergebnis in den Augen vieler noch immer unzureichend. Gleiches gilt f\u00fcr die Debatte um die Schwulenund Lesbenbewegung. Das von der Autorin dieses Artikels ausgewertete Material ihrer Gender- und Queer-Studien an einer polnischen Universit\u00e4t zeigt, dass trotz ihrer augenscheinlichen Unsichtbarkeit, Gender und Sexualit\u00e4t im heutigen Polen von gro\u00dfer Bedeutung sind. Um allerdings dem Unsichtbaren ein Gesicht zu verleihen, reicht es nicht aus, eine Zivilgesellschaft zu schaffen, in der NGO's die Rolle der Mediatoren zwischen B\u00fcrger und Staat \u00fcbernehmen. Zur Schaffung sozialer Koh\u00e4sion ist es vielmehr n\u00f6tig auch die informellen, zwischenmenschlichen Beziehungen unter den B\u00fcrgern zu st\u00e4rken. Selbst wenn Themen wie Identit\u00e4t und politische Strategien oft kontrovers diskutiert werden, so sollte diese Tatsache neuen, gesamtgesellschaftlichen Aktionen f\u00fcr die Rechte sexueller Minderheiten nicht im Wege stehen. Mimo \u017ce konieczno\u015b\u0107 budowania spo\u0142ecze\u0144stwa obywatelskiego jest jednym z wa\u017cnych w\u0105tk\u00f3w dyskursu publicznego w Polsce po 1989, jego kondycja w oczach wielu do dzi\u015b pozostaje niezadowalaj\u0105ca. Podobne opinie dominuj\u0105 w debacie dotycz\u0105cej ruchu gejowsko-lesbijskiego, gdzie poj\u0119cie spo\u0142ecze\u0144stwa obywatelskiego jest negocjowane poprzez kategorie p\u0142ci i seksualno\u015bci. Niemniej, w oparciu o materia\u0142 zgromadzony w trakcie bada\u0144 terenowych prowadzonych w grupach gender i queer studies jednego z polskich uniwersytet\u00f3w, autorka pokazuje, \u017ce, mimo i\u017c niewidoczna, problematyka dotycz\u0105ca p\u0142ci i seksualno\u015bci jest istotnym kontekstem budowania spo\u0142ecze\u0144stwa obywatelskiego we wsp\u00f3\u0142czesnej Polsce, kt\u00f3rego forma nie jest a\u017c tak z\u0142a, jak wynika\u0142oby to z s\u0105d\u00f3w ekspert\u00f3w. Aby jednak ow\u0105 niewidoczno\u015b\u0107 uczyni\u0107 widoczn\u0105, spo\u0142ecze\u0144stwa obywatelskiego nie mo\u017cna uto\u017csamia\u0107 jedynie z organizacjami pozarz\u0105dowymi po\u015brednicz\u0105cymi mi\u0119dzy obywatelami a pa\u0144stwem, a p\u0142ci i seksualno\u015bci nie mo\u017cna traktowa\u0107 jako rzeczywistych kategorii to\u017csamo\u015bciowych stanowi\u0105cych niezb\u0119dn\u0105 podstaw\u0119 aktywizmu politycznego. Dla budowania kohezji spo\u0142ecznej r\u00f3wnie wa\u017cne s\u0105 nieformalne, interpersonalne powi\u0105zania pomi\u0119dzy poszczeg\u00f3lnymi jednostkami, a zr\u00f3\u017cnicowanie pogl\u0105d\u00f3w dotycz\u0105cych to\u017csamo\u015bci czy skutecznych strategii politycznych, mimo i\u017c rodzi konflikty, nie przekre\u015bla mo\u017cliwo\u015bci wsp\u00f3lnych dzia\u0142a\u0144 na rzecz praw mniejszo\u015bci seksualnych.","creator":["Monika Baer","Laurence Dy\u00e8vre"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40991314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462616"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567909409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235718"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"becea55e-ce23-3fb2-a439-ddb283857fd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40991314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnfran"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnologie fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'invisible visible: Genre, sexualit\u00e9 et soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40991314","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper analyzes Deborah Warner's controversial 1995-1996 production of \"Richard II\" for London's National Theatre, with Irish actress Fiona Shaw in the title role. It explores how the voices of the director and her leading actress, of the highly divided popular press, and of Shakespeare and performance critics have created the many different bodies of Shaw's performance. Her Richard becomes, through these conflicting discourses, a \"stereotypical girlie,\" a homosexual male, an adolescent boy, and a figure entirely devoid of gender identity. The article adds another voice to this mix, arguing that Shaw was androgynous, embodying a wide spectrum of gender identities and challenging the masculine \/ feminine binary. It insists on the importance of gender to the production, showing how Warner and Shaw asked the audience to read the actor's body as a dynamic dramatic text. The production also created a queer reading of Richard's relationship with Bolingbroke, intervening in the critical and performance tradition to present an androgynous alternative.","creator":["Elizabeth Klett"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f69a99a-781d-384a-a3b3-2575c07d8758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Many Bodies, Many Voices: Performing Androgyny in Fiona Shaw and Deborah Warner's \"Richard II\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069819","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":10738,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430988,431111],[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[14531,14654],[14671,14800]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sabine G\u00fcrtler"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24360463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03428117"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24360463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phanfors"}],"isPartOf":"Ph\u00e4nomenologische Forschungen","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Felix Meiner Verlag GmbH","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eHommage \u00e0 ELLE\u201c Die Kritik Jacques Derridas an den geschlechtertheoretischen Vorannahmen in der Elementarethik von Emmanuel L\u00e9vinas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24360463","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":15353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3d2c4d9-b976-340a-b078-002ec9c6c08c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"2008","pageStart":"1973","pagination":"pp. 1973-2008","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Patriarchy Is Such a Drag: The Strategic Possibilities of a Postmodern Account of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341950","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":18615,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434717,435063]],"Locations in B":[[46996,47338]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Philip Auslander"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99dafbb6-6c2a-311d-9385-5df7192457ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146472","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine M. Gray"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03095207"},{"name":"oclc","value":"647512503, 500984954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df1b9d7b-1d36-3278-b416-b8433d691748"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26468277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbeckettstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Beckett Studies","issueNumber":"1 & 2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Troubling the Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468277","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6594,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[39943,40018]],"subTitle":"Toward a Theory of Beckett\u2019s Use of the Human Body Onstage"} +{"abstract":"This article argues that, in addition to dismissing scientific and experiential challenges, John Paul II's theory of sexual complementarity ends up contradicting itself and therefore fails even on its own terms. In particular, Grimes contends, the Virgin Mary herself does not fulfill John Paul II's criteria of femininity. Both during the annunciation and afterward, she acts quite queerly. Drawing upon a critical appropriation of Virgilio Elizondo's theology of La Virgen de Guadalupe, this article argues that the interruptive of in-breaking of La Virgen into human history also serves to overturn the gender dynamics expressed during the annunciation.","creator":["Katie M. Grimes"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.32.1.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8bbe496-a186-3ec7-a4e3-a3dadc2e1ec0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.32.1.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Theology of Whose Body? Sexual Complementarity, Intersex Conditions, and La Virgen de Guadalupe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.32.1.06","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In times of globalisation and super-mobility, ideas of normality are in turmoil. In different societies in, across and beyond Europe, we face the challenge of undoing specific notions of normality and creating more inclusive societies with an open culture of learning to live with differences. The scope of the paper is to introduce some findings on encounters with difference and negotiations of social values in relation to a growing visibility of difference after 1989 in Poland, on the background of a critique of normality\/normalisation and normalcy. On the basis of interviews conducted in Warsaw, we investigate how normality\/normalisation discourses of visible homosexuality and physical disability are incorporated into individual self-reflections and justifications of prejudices (homophobia and disabilism). More specifically we argue that there are moments of 'cultural transgressions' present in everyday practices towards 'visible' sexual and (dis)ability difference.","creator":["ANETA PIEKUT","ULRIKE M. VIETEN","GILL VALENTINE"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24371603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607447092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-234699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4841eaa5-93ff-3040-a3b5-ba2d32788bab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24371603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"188","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeking 'the New Normal'? Troubled Spaces of Encountering Visible Differences in Warsaw","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24371603","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9444,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464789,465184]],"Locations in B":[[7374,7769]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In feminist linguistic analysis, women's speech has often been characterized as \"powerless\" or as \"over-polite\"; this paper aims to challenge this notion and to question the eliding of a feminine speech style with femaleness. In order to move beyond a position which judges speech as masculine or feminine, which are stereotypes of behavior, I propose the term \"discourse competence\" to describe speech where cooperative and competitive strategies are used appropriately.","creator":["Sara Mills"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"075ae7c6-7743-34c9-8b2a-86920e327aad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Discourse Competence: Or How to Theorize Strong Women Speakers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809995","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Prarthana Purkayastha"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Dancing Otherness: Nationalism, Transnationalism, and the Work of Uday Shankar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524558","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12425,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[521785,521882]],"Locations in B":[[73969,74072]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michele Pridmore-Brown"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27740576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc3085a3-6817-34fa-8eaa-5cba8a2a8277"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27740576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annie Leibovitz's Queer Consumption of Motherhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27740576","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Crystal Downing"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87bf3e96-7471-3d93-ab75-254064d2b0fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146600","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINE SYLVESTER"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b76c117-aa91-3449-b0ef-2018eb2fee70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26299643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Anatomy of a Footnote","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299643","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5459,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64063,64282]],"Locations in B":[[17921,18141]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy L. Fischer"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24581871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92bfdc04-34c2-3a2e-afe1-cca0174b21db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24581871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"SEEING \"STRAIGHT,\" Contemporary Critical Heterosexuality Studies and Sociology: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24581871","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":4314,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[31068,31124]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kerri Steinberg"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41674915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1ff460-0934-347b-a545-bf9d433d800f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41674915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ties That Bind: Americans, Ethiopians, and the Extended Jewish Family","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41674915","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":4901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Warren Hoffman"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9adbd42f-e850-37e9-9532-6c361711e0d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE RISE (AND FALL) OF DAVID LEVINSKY: PERFORMING JEWISH AMERICAN HETEROSEXUALITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286271","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":10121,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40469,40787]],"Locations in B":[[3992,4310]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amery Bodelson"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60c79553-b10c-39fd-9e09-899d9a37f854"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20464157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature"],"title":"Percy's Prologue: From Gender Play to Gender Panic in Eighteenth-Century England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/651232","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":21304,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73247,73307]],"Locations in B":[[120760,120820]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Attempts to normalize (some) variant sexualities assume that normativity leads at least to tolerance. Because it occurs in relationship to preestablished norms, normativity is achieved through assimilation. Judith Butler's (1993) theory of performativity demonstrates this in terms of gender\/sexuality by which the gendered\/sexualized subject is produced as an effect of repetitions of coercive (heterosexual) norms that precede the subject. Operating within a temporal logic of norms first, the subject second, performativity cites the past, projecting heterosexual subjects into the future, leaving queer subjects nowhere, unless we resignify those norms for an assumed transgressive future. Queer subjects must go along to get along: to be normal, but \u201cthe trouble with normal\u201d is that it obviates queer culture (Warner, 1999), bequeathing to queer subjects no past. In response to the double bind of no future and no past, I posit queer temporalities of LGBTQ studies and music education as saturated abundant presents in terms of Deleuzian becoming in the queer time of the infinitive: to become. Eliding the past and future, the infinitive is just before and just after. I argue LGBTQ studies, expressing a queer ethic of kinship, activates Sara Ahmed's (2006) \u201crefusal to inherit\u201d the norms of lack, and asserts ecstatic abundance as an exuberant queer erotic. Using Philip Auslander's (2004) performer-centered approach, I analyze Cris Williamson's (1975) song, \u201cShooting Star\u201d as ecstatic abundance, contingently constituting LGBTQ studies as unquenchable, inexhaustible, unruly.","creator":["Elizabeth Gould"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00109894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"436923044"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234974"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59d3429d-0ad5-3fda-a5d7-e9738d7160f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulcouresmusedu"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"207-208","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ecstatic Abundance: Queer Temporalities in LGBTQ Studies and Music Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0123","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using an analysis of child care books and parenting Web sites, this article asks if second-wave feminism 's vision of gender-neutral child rearing has been incorporated into contemporary advice on child rearing. The data suggest that while feminist understandings of gender have made significant inroads into popular advice, especially with regard to the social construction of gender, something akin to \"a stalled revolution \" has taken place. Children's gender nonconformity is still viewed as problematic because it is linked implicitly and explicitly to homosexuality.","creator":["Karin A. Martin"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0d33a7f-239d-3774-ac5c-99259b7911c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Psychology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"William Wants a Doll. Can He Have One? Feminists, Child Care Advisors, and Gender-Neutral Child Rearing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044612","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The author describes the technical and rhetorical strategies she employed in her recent CD-ROM, \"Mistaken Identities.\" This project is organized around the lives and work of 10 famous women: Josephine Baker, Simone de Beauvoir, Catherine the Great, Colette, Marie Curie, Marlene Dietrich, Isadora Duncan, Frida Kahlo, Margaret Mead and Gertrude Stein. Although the author selected these female role models because of their emblematic status, the CD-ROM examines them as complex figures whose identities are not essential or fixed, but contingent and mutable. Representing her subjects in this way, the author subverts their commodification as cultural icons.","creator":["Christine Tamblyn"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6db5576f-8257-3114-97ba-a4290366f913"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mistaken Identities: An Interactive CD-ROM Genealogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576470","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En este art\u00edculo, examino las implicaciones de la imagen de la madre en la poes\u00eda de \u00c1ngela Figuera Aymerich, quien se representa textualmente como madre en su obra temprana y m\u00e1s tarde intenta usar la imagen maternal para mitigar discursivamente el desequilibrio entre la burgues\u00eda y el denominado \"pueblo.\" El fin expl\u00edcito de esta segunda etapa de su poes\u00eda es la de contribuir a la eliminaci\u00f3n de la opresi\u00f3n socio-econ\u00f3mica de este \u00faltimo sector; la madre llega a representar para Figuera una cierta fuerza natural que se opone a los sistemas simb\u00f3licos\u2014el gobierno, la Iglesia, la burgues\u00eda\u2014responsables de tanta injusticia. Adem\u00e1s, la solidaridad femenina que se logra a trav\u00e9s de la identificaci\u00f3n global con la madre puede servir de modelo para el hombre, ya que las madres se negar\u00e1n a \"parir abeles y ca\u00ednes\" (OC 179). Existe en esta poes\u00eda, sin embargo, una continuada idealizaci\u00f3n de la madre, la cual tiene el efecto de reforzar el papel tradicional de la mujer como salvadora del hombre. Es m\u00e1s; la figura de \"la buena madre\" es problem\u00e1tica en esta poes\u00eda social por ser, en parte, una construcci\u00f3n del gobierno franquista. Como tal, es inevitable que represente un mecanismo de opresi\u00f3n social y sexual, ya que la maternidad fue el \u00fanico papel aceptable para la mujer burguesa en la posguerra espa\u00f1ola, debido en parte a la necesidad de aumentar la poblaci\u00f3n despu\u00e9s de la Guerra Civil. Adem\u00e1s, la limitaci\u00f3n de lo femenino a una maternidad dura, seca, asexual y pura es caracter\u00edstica de la imaginaci\u00f3n fascista. Por estas rezones, la madre idealizada en la poes\u00eda de Figuera no representa una rebeli\u00f3n absoluta sino la divisi\u00f3n radical dentro de la mujer, entre el hombre y la mujer, y entre la mujer burguesa, por una parte, y la mujer trabajadora o campesina, por la otra, condenando desde el principio su proyecto de solidaridad social. Se\u00f1ala a la vez la conexi\u00f3n entre el espacio interior dom\u00e9stico y la opresi\u00f3n en los espacios p\u00fablicos.","creator":["Jill Robbins"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15dd0cfc-9da8-3e24-99aa-26dcd4f4004f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27741485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La mujer en el umbral. La simbolog\u00eda de la madre en la poes\u00eda de \u00c1ngela Figuera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741485","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8070,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[305509,305781]],"Locations in B":[[41383,41657]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINE GRANDY"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adca8037-841f-399a-8c0e-eb4369e4fb70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Paying for Love: Women's Work and Love in Popular Film in Interwar Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986336","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses the conversational (re)production of research relations, focusing on gender and sexuality in relation to responses, laughter and consensus in interviews. It discusses links to access as an on-going issue, and to wider issues connected to the production of knowledge.","creator":["Tom Delph-Janiurek"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"(Un)Consensual Conversations: Betweenness, 'Material Access', Laughter and Reflexivity in Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004182","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mariselle Mel\u00e9ndez"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b51694c-bea7-3f8c-bb61-c888c66e8679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexuality and Hybridity in \"El lazarillo de ciegos caminantes\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119720","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6322,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[307318,307413]],"Locations in B":[[30883,30978]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e623532a-dcdd-311b-b017-1ba19fbf9ba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25504984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"IASIL Bibliography Bulletin for 2003","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504984","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":21051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Whitney Chadwick"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8590259-8dc1-3222-925d-a975a72cbbad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"384","pagination":"pp. 384-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177425","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":8143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nadia V. Celis"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"902081cd-2888-3b8b-bb1c-bab8d5c97f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29742270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La Traici\u00f3n De La Belleza: Cuerpos, Deseo y Subjetividad Femenina En Fanny Buitrago y Mayra Santos-Febres","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742270","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There is a crisis in drama studies that is reflected in the ways different disciplines understand dramatic texts and performance. Literary studies, absorbed with the functioning of language, often betrays a desire to locate the meanings of the stage in the dramatic text. Performance studies has developed a vivid account of nondramatic performance, which appears to depart from textual authority. Both disciplines, however, view drama as a species of performance driven by its text; as a result, drama appears as an unduly authorized mode of performance. Here, I read a range of critics (Andrew Parker, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, and Judith Butler on J. L. Austin; Dwight Conquergood on ethnography; Joseph Roach on surrogation) to suggest ways of rethinking the relations of authority that inform texts and performances. I conclude with a glance at the representation of the text in Baz Luhrmann's recent film William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.","creator":["W. B. Worthen"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a187c3cb-6b1d-3bd3-85b4-ed12d2654900"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"1107","pageStart":"1093","pagination":"pp. 1093-1107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Drama, Performativity, and Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463244","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":10986,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[62761,62830]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Drucilla Cornell"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25d9936a-4f71-3685-883a-2743a20f1784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"2275","pageStart":"2247","pagination":"pp. 2247-2275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Sexual Difference, the Feminine, and Equivalency: A Critique of MacKinnon's Toward a Feminist Theory of the State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796823","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":13987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article turns a queer eye upon \"Sir Gawain and the Green Knight\" to suggest that categories are continually elided through the workings of a perverse dynamics whose touchstone is not Gawain and the Green Knight as the title might indicate, but the semi-visible character of Morgan.","creator":["GAIL ASHTON"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85991ab4-1ed7-328d-9d17-aad182d354f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Perverse Dynamics of \"Sir Gawain and the Green Knight\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870701","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10439,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442641,442851]],"Locations in B":[[63137,63349]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mollie V. Blackburn","Jill M. Smith"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1687ec27-cc51-3b9f-92a3-d69342963a19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"634","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-634","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Moving Beyond the Inclusion of LGBT-Themed Literature in English Language Arts Classrooms: Interrogating Heteronormativity and Exploring Intersectionality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653923","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7039,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473846,473952]],"Locations in B":[[12770,12878]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The primary aim of this article is to put Rousseau's arguments against wet nursing into political context, by discussing their connections with theatricality and representation and their wider connotations for understanding Rousseau's thought. In the process, it positions Rousseau's ideas in a specific eighteenth-century context, one that connects his arguments about wet nursing and maternal feeding to a wider discussion of morals and manners. Through an examination of behavioral literature, particularly conduct and advice books, it explores how morals, manners and gender interacted as agents of social stability, and how the \"realm of aspirations\" connected political theory to the politics of everyday life. Having shown how gender operated in this realm of aspirations in the eighteenth century, the paper connects this preoccupation with display to Judith Butler's theory of gender as performance, and gives her arguments about the \"gender core\" and the maternal body a historical context.","creator":["Laura Brace"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b24ee44-cc7f-3068-bb1f-1aa34c29e5cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rousseau, Maternity and the Politics of Emptiness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500281","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10742,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431053]],"Locations in B":[[64686,64753]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bourdieus Praxistheorie stellt heute einen der erfolgreichsten Entw\u00fcrfe innerhalb des soziologischen Theoriekanons dar. Vor dem Hintergrund j\u00fcngster Debatten im Feld der Wissenschafts- und Technikforschung arbeitet der Artikel spezifische, auf die Materialit\u00e4t von Artefakten bezogene Desiderata der Praxistheorie heraus. Mit den Konzepten ,Objektsinn\u2018 und ,soziotechnische Rationalit\u00e4t' wird darauf aufbauend ein erweitertes Instrumentarium zur Analyse sozialer Praxis entwickelt, das die Schw\u00e4chen der Bourdieuschen Praxeologie kompensiert. Bourdieu's Theory of Practice has been one of the most successful approaches in social theory. This article, however, points to the desiderata in Bourdieu's framework. It draws on debates in the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS) to illustrate how the materiality of objects and artifacts is neglected in his Theory of Practice. Combining Bourdieu's work and approaches in STS, the article suggests two new concepts to analyze social practices and materiality: ,logic of artifacts\u2018 and ,sociotechnical rationality\u2018.","creator":["Regula Val\u00e9rie Burri"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00386073"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564429926"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235839"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40878603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sozialewelt"}],"isPartOf":"Soziale Welt","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Soziotechnische Rationalit\u00e4t: Praxistheorie und der \u201aObjektsinn\u2018 von Artefakten","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878603","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William E. Moddelmog"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disowning \"Personality\": Privacy and Subjectivity in The House of Mirth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902841","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":11456,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[450895,450985],[477205,477271]],"Locations in B":[[53828,53918],[54032,54098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The historically entrenched gender-based division of western society is also part of the cultural heritage of the Chicano community. The diverse cultural, literary and religious symbols that have defined the female and male roles have been transmitted through the generations, creating a clear gender-based hierarchy within the group. This binary division, however, has left no room for those considered (extremely) deviant such as the LGBT community. The aim of this essay is to observe the way Felicia Luna Lemus\u2019s Like Son (2007) addresses issues of visibility and invisibility and the integration of a family past and a cultural heritage into the life of a young Chicano transgender person, in an attempt to render this group visible and voiced within the community. La divisi\u00f3n de g\u00e9neros sobre la que se ha asentado la sociedad occidental a lo largo de los siglos est\u00e1 tambi\u00e9n presente en la tradici\u00f3n cultural chicana. Su construcci\u00f3n y transmisi\u00f3n se ha desarrollado a trav\u00e9s de diferentes s\u00edmbolos culturales, literarios y religiosos a lo largo de generaciones. En este contexto, otras realidades, consideradas an\u00f3malas, tales como la de la comunidad LGTB han quedado relegadas a una situaci\u00f3n de invisibilidad y falta de reconocimiento social. El objetivo de este trabajo es observar el modo en el que Like Son (2007), de Felicia Luna Lemus, enfoca aspectos relacionados con la visibilidad y la invisibilidad, la inclusi\u00f3n del pasado familiar y la herencia cultural en la vida de un joven chicano transg\u00e9nero, con el fin de dar visibilidad y voz a este colectivo en el seno de la comunidad chicana.","creator":["Amaia Ibarraran-Bigalondo"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26453063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76f25638-c54c-367f-896f-e0d8c46998ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26453063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Thin Frontera<\/em> between Visibility and Invisibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26453063","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8582,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64311,64450]],"Locations in B":[[49185,49324]],"subTitle":"Felicia Luna Lemus\u2019s Like Son<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"Past research finds that after menopause some women experience negative changes such as vaginal dryness, decreased libido, and decreased orgasm quality; very little research inquires about positive changes. In contrast, this study shifts the research focus from whether women experience menopausal changes to how women view any changes in sex life. Based on 30 in-depth interviews with heterosexual and lesbian women, the author finds that most women emphasize cultural and social issues, such as relationship status and quality, health, and sexual history, rather than menopausal changes when they describe sex after menopause. However, she finds a difference by sexual orientation in how women handle problems in sex. The author concludes by discussing the implication of this research for future menopause and sex research; most important, she emphasizes studying sex in the context of women's lives rather than as a result of the biological changes of menopause.","creator":["Julie A. Winterich"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b57a3383-6ae8-3ca4-a644-64672e24ace6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"627","pagination":"pp. 627-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sex, Menopause, and Culture: Sexual Orientation and the Meaning of Menopause for Women's Sex Lives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594661","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7756,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[46747,46835]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janice Haney Peritz"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31726de6-b2db-3448-b43d-7237ac186082"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexual Politics and the Subject of \"Nutting\": Questions of Ideology, Rhetoric, and Fantasy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601416","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":18039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mainstreaming gender in water governance through \u201chow to do gender\u201d toolkits has long been a development focus. It has been widely argued that such toolkits simplify the complex, nuanced realities of inequalities by gender in relation to water and fail to pay attention to the fact that the proposed users of such gender-water toolkits, i.e. mostly male water sector professionals, lack the skills, motivation and\/or incentives to apply these toolkits in their everyday work. We adopt a feminist political ecology lens to analyse some of the barriers to reduce social inequalities in the management of global commons such as international rivers. Our findings highlight the leap of faith made in the belief that gender toolkits, as they exist, will filter through layers of a predominantly masculine institutional culture to enable change in ground realities of complex inequalities by gender. Analysing the everyday workings of two hydropower development organisations in India, we show how organisational structures demonstrate a blatant culture of masculinity. These two organisations, like many others, are sites where hierarchies and inequalities based on gender are produced, performed and reproduced. This performance of masculinity promotes and rewards a culture of technical pride in re-shaping nature, abiding by and maintaining hierarchy and demonstrating physical strength and emotional hardiness. In such a setting, paying attention to vulnerabilities, inequalities and disparities are incompatible objectives.","creator":["Gitta Shrestha","Deepa Joshi","Floriane Clement"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632716","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"175299510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fd3e8f-00b9-3f7a-bebb-b8eb2e4b90cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcomm"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Commons","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"International Journal of the Commons","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Masculinities and hydropower in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632716","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10183,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475972,476047]],"Locations in B":[[60195,60282]],"subTitle":"a feminist political ecology perspective"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CLAIRE BUCK"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engendering the political for feminism: citizenship and American motherhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263549","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7693,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[237420,237581]],"Locations in B":[[1700,1863]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist approaches increasingly claim that their contribution to the field of International Relations is of major importance. However, claims not only need to be stated, but also have to made good. In the current state of feminist research in IR the most important task is therefore to clarify what these approaches offer. If feminist approaches want to be more than just a phenomenon of \u00bbpolitical correctness\u00ab, their constructive potential as well as their empirical fruitfulness need to be made explicit. Specifically, feminism promises to enhance our understanding of problems of political identity, which are currently becoming more and more urgent topics within IR. In addition, we have to examine more systematically the ontological intersections and tensions that differentiate or unite feminist theories and theories of IR, in order to provide a solid foundation for a dialog between feminism and IR. On a critical note, the article asks why dealing with the question of gender appears to be different from and more problematic than dealing with other research topics. In order to render issues of \u00bbgender and IR\u00ab communicable it is necessary to remove them from the area of personal sensibilities.","creator":["Birgit Locher"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40844111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09467165"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607255433"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40844111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitintebezi"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Internationale Beziehungen","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"397","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Feminismus ist mehr als \u00bbpolitical correctness\u00ab Anmerkungen und Erg\u00e4nzungen zu Gert Krells Literaturbericht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40844111","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":6959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The term fag hag is normally used in gay male culture to describe a straight woman who associates with gay men. This article uses intensive interviews with gay and bisexual men to explore what the term indicates about contradictions emerging from dominant views of gender and sexual identity. Other sociological studies provide explanations for why women and gay men form relationships and how these relationships are negotiated. This article explores what the term, residing at the nexus of discourses of sexuality and gender, tells us about (1) how dominant, heterosexual culture's assumptions threaten gay identity and culture; (2) the tensions present within gay male culture's own dominant discourses, tensions which certain straight women create and\/or highlight; and (3) the limitations imposed on political mobilization by a discourse that posits the existence of a coherent \"gay community.\"","creator":["Dawne Moon"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2580489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4fc523d-4af2-3a72-a832-e6874815ffc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2580489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Insult and Inclusion: The Term Fag Hag and Gay Male \"Community\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2580489","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":14096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the implications of the performative aspects of Julia Kristeva's Powers of Horror by situating this work in the context of similar aspects of her previous work. This construction and its relationship to abjection are integral components of Kristeva's notion of practice and as such are fundamental to her critique of Hegel and Freud.","creator":["Thea Harrington"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1656e322-be80-3cf6-a4c8-e518d9c78843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Speaking Abject in Kristeva's \"Powers of Horror\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810610","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Attraverso la lettura di alcuni passaggi della Tor\u00e0 alla luce della tradizione talmudica, Daniel Boyarin ha sviluppato un\u2019originale prospettiva di indagine intorno alle nozioni di omosessualit\u00e0 ed eterosessualit\u00e0 e, in particolare, ha indagato le complesse implicazioni morali, filosofiche, culturali che sono state prodotte nel corso dei secoli dalla tradizione ebraica. Per lo studioso, infatti, si pu\u00f2 parlare di orientamento sessuale solo se si sviluppa una pi\u00f9 ampia antropologia che mette in discussione la nozione stessa di \u201cidentit\u00e0\u201d prima di ogni sua ulteriore determinazione. Reading some passages of the Torah in light of the Talmudic tradition, Daniel Boyarin developed an original perspective of enquiry into the concepts of homosexuality and heterosexuality and, in particular, investigated the complex moral, philosophical, cultural implications that have been produced over the centuries by Jewish tradition. In this scholar\u2019s opinion, in fact, one can only speak of sexual orientation by developing a broader anthropology tthat - prior to any further classification - calls into question the very notion of \u201cidentity\u201d.","creator":["Silvano Facioni"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26870286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00339792"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609484479"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-221254"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2724a867-da5c-3d20-8b4d-455cbe322dd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26870286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rassmensisrael"}],"isPartOf":"La Rassegna Mensile di Israel","issueNumber":"1","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Unione delle Comunit\u00e1 Ebraiche Italiane","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"MARGINI, EMARGINAZIONI, RIMARGINAZIONI. DANIEL BOYARIN E GLI STUDI CULTURALI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26870286","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":6196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert L. A. Clark","Claire Sponsler"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54d9b3da-4854-3176-a8be-c7a8774691ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queer Play: The Cultural Work of Crossdressing in Medieval Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057418","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper seeks to examine the embodiment of female masculinity as experienced by 12 gender-non-conforming lesbians in Sri Lanka. By drawing on western feminist and queer theories, it critiques western theories in relation to a non-western subjectivity, attempting to unravel the seemingly empowering, albeit problematic, category of female masculinity. Data gathered through qualitative interviews address one key research question: how do gender-non-conforming lesbians in Sri Lankan embody female masculinity? As the discussion unfolds, this paper analyses the ways they view themselves, the extent to which their actions and behaviours fit within a masculine framework and the ways in which notions of desire are felt and understood in relation to their understanding of gender. In terms of theory, the analysis is located in social constructivist theory, while drawing on a postmodernist approach. Theoretically, the concept of female masculinity allows a woman embodying masculinity to dislodge men and maleness from it. The reality within a Sri Lankan experience, however, can at times be different, as this paper reveals. Cet article tente d'examiner l'incarnation de la virilit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine telle qu'elle est v\u00e9cue par 12 lesbiennes non conformes aux genres au Sri Lanka. En s'appuyant sur les th\u00e9ories f\u00e9ministes et queer occidentales, il critique les th\u00e9ories occidentales appliqu\u00e9es \u00e0 une subjectivit\u00e9 non occidentale en tentant de d\u00e9cortiquer le sens de la virilit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine qui apparemment renforce le pouvoir, bien qu'\u00e9tant probl\u00e9matique. Les donn\u00e9es collect\u00e9es au cours d'entretiens qualitatifs r\u00e9pondent \u00e0 une question cl\u00e9 pour la recherche : comment les lesbiennes non conformes aux genre au Sri Lanka incarnent-elles la virilit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine? Alors que la discussion progresse, l'article analyse comment ces femmes se per\u00e7oivent; jusqu'o\u00f9 leurs actions et leurs comportements sont en accord avec les repr\u00e9sentations masculines; et comment elles ressentent et comprennent les notions de d\u00e9sir par rapport \u00e0 leur compr\u00e9hension du genre. En termes de th\u00e9orie, l'analyse est situ\u00e9e dans la th\u00e9orie constructiviste sociale tout en exploitant une approche postmoderniste. Th\u00e9oriquement, le concept de virilit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine permet \u00e0 une femme qui incarne la virilit\u00e9 d'en d\u00e9loger les hommes et la masculinit\u00e9; cependant, comme le r\u00e9v\u00e8le cet article, la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 peut quelquefois \u00eatre diff\u00e9rente dans le contexte sri lankais. El presente art\u00edculo intenta examinar la encarnaci\u00f3n de la masculinidad femenina experimentada por 12 lesbianas srilanquesas inconformistas en cuestiones de g\u00e9nero. El art\u00edculo critica las teor\u00edas occidentales en torno a la subjetividad no occidental, apoy\u00e1ndose en teor\u00edas feministas y queer occidentales, a la vez que trata de descifrar la categor\u00eda, aparentemente empoderante pero problem\u00e1tica, de masculinidad femenina. Los datos recopilados a trav\u00e9s de entrevistas cualitativas se dirigen a responder una pregunta central en la investigaci\u00f3n: \u00bfc\u00f3mo encarnan la masculinidad femenina las lesbianas srilanquesas inconformes en cuesti\u00f3n de g\u00e9nero? En su desarrollo, el art\u00edculo analiza las maneras en que se autoperciben estas lesbianas; hasta qu\u00e9 punto sus acciones y comportamientos caben en un marco masculino; las maneras en que las nociones de deseo son sentidas y comprendidas en relaci\u00f3n a su comprensi\u00f3n de g\u00e9nero. En t\u00e9rminos te\u00f3ricos, el an\u00e1lisis forma parte de la teor\u00eda social constructivista que se apoya en un enfoque postmodernista. Te\u00f3ricamente, el concepto de masculinidad femenina permite que la mujer que encarne la masculinidad expulse a los hombres y a la masculinidad del concepto. Sin embargo, en el contexto de Sri Lanka, a veces la realidad puede ser diferente, aspecto demostrado por el art\u00edculo.","creator":["Jayanthi Kuru-Utumpala"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"071475fd-ca9e-3e51-a82f-d85ff70c82a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"S165","pageStart":"S153","pagination":"pp. S153-S165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Butching it up: an analysis of same-sex female masculinity in Sri Lanka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524458","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7746,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[395710,395975]],"Locations in B":[[34873,35138]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marek Kohn"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dope Girls 1918-1995, and Other Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289473","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A century ago, sociology emerged as a result of modernization. Three decades ago, gender studies emerged in the same way. Both disciplines are responses to the unsettling circumstances produced by the process of modernization. In trying to cope with these, however, they in turn unsettled society and developed into \"unsettling sciences\". The two disciplines are marked by corresponding shortcomings: While gender studies might derive some benefit from a theoretical and empirical foundation based on the social sciences, sociology might profit from a genderized analysis of its categories. Against this background, the article examines ways in which gender studies and sociology can complement each other. It discusses the methodological procedures of functional analysis and of queering and gives an empirical example for the unsettling effects produced by this.","creator":["Nina Degele"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00386073"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564429926"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235839"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40878398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sozialewelt"}],"isPartOf":"Soziale Welt","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Happy together: Soziologie und Gender Studies als paradigmatische Verunsicherungswissenschaften","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878398","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"'Festive transvestism' is an increasingly visible cross-dressing practice performed by young people in the Southern parts of contemporary Ghana. Based on participant observation in four cross-dressing events, 15 individual interviews and a focus-group discussion, festive cross-dressing is understood as a contemporary ritual that mainly serves the purpose of reinforcing and reproducing gender binaries as well as heteronormativity in Ghanaian society. Nevertheless cross-dressing events also provide a subjective, creative and exploratory space \u2014 although temporary and circumscribed \u2014for the transvestites as well as for the spectators to deconstruct sex, gender and sexuality through the performativity of transvestism. The opening of this exploratory space is made possible by the liminality of the social category of youth in Ghana, which grants young people, especially young men, more liberty and (gender) flexibility. Finally, the paper challenges the widely spread Western perception that feminine men and cross-dressers are necessarily homosexual by resituating the concept of homosexuality within the context of Ghanaian society, where it has recently started to occupy the public space. Le \u00ab travestissement festif \u00bb est une pratique de plus en plus visible parmi les jeunes des r\u00e9gions du Sud du Ghana contemporain. Une observation participante dans quatre \u00e9v\u00e9nements o\u00f9 il a \u00e9t\u00e9 pratiqu\u00e9, 15 entretiens individuels et un groupe de discussion th\u00e9matique ont amen\u00e9 \u00e0 consid\u00e9rer que le travestissement festif est compris comme un rituel contemporain qui r\u00e9pond principalement \u00e0 la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 de renforcer et reproduire la binarit\u00e9 de genre ainsi que l'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormativit\u00e9 de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 ghan\u00e9enne. Toutefois, les \u00e9v\u00e9nements d\u00e9di\u00e9s au travestissement festif constituent aussi un espace subjectif, cr\u00e9atif et exploratoire \u2014 bien que temporaire et circonscrit \u2014 aussi bien pour les travestis que pour les spectateurs, afin de d\u00e9construire le sexe, le genre et la sexualit\u00e9 \u00e0 travers la performativit\u00e9 du travestissement. L'ouverture de cet espace exploratoire est rendue possible par la liminalit\u00e9 de la cat\u00e9gorie sociale des jeunes au Ghana qui garantit aux jeunes, en particulier de sexe masculin, plus de libert\u00e9 et de flexibilit\u00e9 (de genre). Enfin, l'article remet en cause la perception occidentale largement r\u00e9pandue, selon laquelle les hommes f\u00e9minins et les travestis sont forc\u00e9ment des homosexuels, en resituant le concept de l'homosexualit\u00e9 dans le contexte de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 ghan\u00e9enne, o\u00f9 celle-ci a r\u00e9cemment commenc\u00e9 \u00e0 occuper l'espace public. El \"travestismo festivo\" es un tipo de travestismo cada vez m\u00e1s visible que realizan actualmente los j\u00f3venes en zonas del sur de Ghana. Bas\u00e1ndonos en la observaci\u00f3n de los participantes en cuatro eventos de travestismo, 15 entrevistas individuales y una charla en grupo, el travestismo festivo se entiende como un ritual contempor\u00e1neo que tiene por objeto sobre todo reforzar y reproducir los binarios de g\u00e9nero as\u00ed como la heteronormatividad en la sociedad ghanesa. Sin embargo, los eventos de travestismo tambi\u00e9n ofrecen un espacio subjetivo, creativo y exploratorio \u2014 aunque temporal y circunscrito \u2014 para los travestis y los espectadores a fin de deconstruir el sexo, el g\u00e9nero y la sexualidad a trav\u00e9s de la performatividad del travestismo. La apertura de este espacio exploratorio es posible gracias al car\u00e1cter liminal de la categor\u00eda social de los j\u00f3venes en Ghana que garantiza a los j\u00f3venes, especialmente a los hombres j\u00f3venes, m\u00e1s libertad y flexibilidad (de g\u00e9nero). Para terminar, en este art\u00edculo cuestionamos la percepci\u00f3n occidental ampliamente extendida de que los hombres femeninos y los travestis son necesariamente homosexuales, resituando el concepto de homosexualidad en el contexto de la sociedad ghanesa, donde recientemente ha empezado a ocupar el espacio p\u00fablico.","creator":["Karine Geoffrion"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49f45560-b695-3dc5-bb97-e89c9c915190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"S61","pageStart":"S48","pagination":"pp. S48-S61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ghanaian youth and festive transvestism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524928","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[434702,434977],[436729,437148],[436729,437148]],"Locations in B":[[1607,1882],[29363,29781],[29363,29781]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kevin Kopelson"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb16e20a-12c4-392a-a73c-3a28992a16fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/746570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tawdrily, I Adore Him","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746570","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7790,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite being a decade into the 21st century, sociological theory continues to be taught at the undergraduate and graduate level in nearly every program in the United States as if it were still 1970. 40 years ago, it made sense to dichotomize theory into two courses\u2014\"classical\" and \"contemporary\"\u2014 because the latter of the two only covered theory from about the 1930s to the \"present.\" Today a literal and figurative time crunch has emerged that makes teaching theory difficult and at times, arbitrary based on the professor's training, mentor, ideological\/epistemological biases, and structural factors like textbook choice and number of academic weeks allotted per course. That is, we spend a large amount of time debating who should be in or out, and not enough time preparing our students for the application of theory towards the ultimate goal: knowledge about the social world. Students, then, leave confused at how one uses theory, what theory actually is, and, often times, disengaged from theory because of the density with which some theories approach the social world. In the paper below, the time crunch and its tendency to produce a \"lost generation\" of theorists is examined. After elucidating how the time crunch constrains sociology, four possible solutions are presented. This list of solutions is neither definitive nor exhaustive, and is meant to generate a rich discussion about the direction the discipline should head in the new century.","creator":["Seth Abrutyn"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47441845"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e3346c2-923a-3494-9b78-30d422081faa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42635353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Teaching Sociological Theory for a New Century: Contending with the \"Time Crunch\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635353","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12386,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475972,476047]],"Locations in B":[[69096,69182]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["INDIGO ESMONDE"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41319563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02280671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a550003-ac8b-3b3b-923c-f871b34c30fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41319563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"forlearningmath"}],"isPartOf":"For the Learning of Mathematics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"FLM Publishing Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Mathematics","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"SNIPS AND SNAILS AND PUPPY DOGS' TAILS: GENDERISM AND MATHEMATICS EDUCATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41319563","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jana Argersinger"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.41.2.0138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d4befc7-9e47-3d18-9662-3e9e50a51317"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.41.2.0138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.41.2.0138","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":3559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily Allen"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ab80f32-6741-3901-90a1-bc58074e9f07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Shock to the System: \"Richard Feverel\" and the Actress in the House","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347125","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12237,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[66512,66623]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Naomi Cumming"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53ad4c19-6947-3010-972a-adac2e8f0b3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/854112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Subjectivities of 'Erbarme Dich'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854112","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":19426,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[116221,116315]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy M. Griffiths"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be8cc18f-ac57-3d1a-a5c3-e539bc75c53a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24589706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer.Black Politics, Queer.Black Communities: Touching the Utopian Frame in Delany's \"Through the Valley of the Nest of Spiders\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589706","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Article provides a critical analysis of the role of gender and sexuality in children's navigation of treacherous school journey terrains in one Lesotho rural primary school. It draws on data generated with 12 children (male = 6; female = 6) who travelled an average distance of 10 15 km to and from school every day. The study employed creative participatory and visual research methodology (for instance, route mapping, diamond ranking and photographic technique) to document the challenges that the children experienced as they traversed the treacherous terrains of their school journey. The findings denote how children resourcefully exploited the dominant discourses of gender and sexuality to mitigate the dangers of passing through dense forests with herd boys, muthi murderers and Basotho traditional circumcision initiates. Children's agency in navigating these obstacles and (albeit life-threatening) challenges included travelling in protective gender-based groupings, getting involved in heterosexual walking relationships and creatively harnessing the dominant homophobic discourses in these contexts in their favour. By foregrounding how gender and sexuality featured as a resource and recourse in how children navigated their school journey, the Article challenges the dominant discourses that view children as immature, sexually innocent (or asexual) and unable to determine their lives. It provides insights into why actively involving children in matters that affect their lives and foregrounding gender and children's sexuality could become a potential catalyst for policy and social action aimed at improving the schooling experiences of rural children.","creator":["Pholoho Morojele"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb37037-5430-3cfd-a688-05fe8a1b568e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (97)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Children speak out: Gender and sexuality in treacherous school journey terrains","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824408","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By clarifying the psychoanalytic notion of sexual difference (and contrasting it with a feminist analysis of gender as social reality), I argue that the symbolic dimension of psychical life cannot be discarded in developing political accounts of identity formation and the status of women in the public sphere. I discuss various bridges between social reality and symbolic structure, bridges such as body, language, law, and family. I conclude that feminist attention must be redirected to the unconscious since the political cannot be localized in, or segregated to, the sphere of social reality; sexual difference is an indispensable concept for a feminist politics.","creator":["Emily Zakin"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0f75b99-f3fa-3eee-aedb-ef711bcee3ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bridging the Social and the Symbolic: Toward a Feminist Politics of Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810523","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":13089,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[48406,48624],[477219,477271],[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[22824,23043],[77461,77513],[79286,79371]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With the normative demand to attend to social difference and an absence of universal evaluative terms with which to do so, recent theory has increasingly turned to the study of the affective rather than epistemological conditions of ethical encounter. This I call a \"dispositional ethics\" that construes responsibility as responsiveness. Recent articulations of such an ethics, notably in the most current work of Judith Butler, James Tully, Jade Larissa Schiff, and Ella Myers, highlight its connection to situated practices of concrete bodies-in-relation, but often stop short of developing an account of what such embodied practices might be. Based on interviews with thirteen experts who take the body as their primary vocational and intellectual field and characterize their practice as an art of listening, I distinguish three dimensions of a dispositional ethics in practice and some of the specific strategies available to cultivate the conditions for responsiveness in political life.","creator":["Emily Beausoleil"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1349d376-b77d-3310-8688-22560df7e38a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44509349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Responsibility as Responsiveness: Enacting a Dispositional Ethics of Encounter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509349","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":12589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catrin Gersdorf","Ralph Poole"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7703a1e0-f9ef-3b27-962b-b607c2163fb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157624","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":2393,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[7695,7886]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this chapter, we unpack intersectionality as an analytical framework. First, we cite Black Lives Matter as an impetus for discussing intersectionality's current traction. Second, we review the genealogy of \"intersectionality\" beginning with Kimberl\u00e9 Crenshaw's formulation, which brought a Black Studies provocation into legal discourse in order to challenge existing antidiscrimination doctrine and single-axis theorizing. The third, and most central, task of the chapter is our account of intersectionality's utility for social analysis. We examine some of the issues raised by the metaphor of the intersection and some of the debates surrounding the concept, such as the tension between fragmenting and universalizing perspectives mediated by the notion of \"strategic essentialism.\" Fourth, we review how education researchers have explained race and gender subordination in education since Ladson-Billings and Tate's Teachers College Record article. We conclude with some remarks concerning future research on intersectionality.","creator":["Angela Harris","Zeus Leonardo"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44668711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0091732X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236895"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4adafe1-f66b-386c-b51c-17622ff8191c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44668711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revireseeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Research in Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersectionality, Race-Gender Subordination, and Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44668711","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13592,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[449911,450118]],"Locations in B":[[69449,69611]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer F. Trimble"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19400977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"263448435"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008252976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"927ddd7a-07f6-37de-882a-3631fb9663f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4238453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"memoameracadrom2"}],"isPartOf":"Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. Supplementary Volumes","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Academy in Rome and University of Michigan Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Greek Myth, Gender, and Social Structure in a Roman House: Two Paintings of Achilles at Pompeii","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238453","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":13606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steve Fuller"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23961024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00488143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f599c59f-efb9-3474-9604-205e573bc488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23961024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuintephil"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Internationale de Philosophie","issueNumber":"251 (1)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Revue Internationale de Philosophie","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Postmodernism's Epistemological Legacies: Objects Without Purpose, Movement Without Direction And Freedom Without Necessity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23961024","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":8278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paula M. L. Moya"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5185c453-da2b-3a52-91bf-f56ba1ff88c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chicana Feminism and Postmodernist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175449","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":19589,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[123411,123525]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kenji Yoshino"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97268c1-f838-364f-910e-1a7d7b064047"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":171,"pageEnd":"939","pageStart":"769","pagination":"pp. 769-939","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Covering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797566","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":79121,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[74829,75056],[124359,124465],[124594,124727]],"Locations in B":[[290638,290842],[292228,292334],[292410,292543]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the construction of gender within men's accounts of domestic violence. Analyses of in-depth interviews conducted with 33 domestically violent heterosexual men indicate that these batterers used diverse strategies to present themselves as nonviolent, capable, and rational men. Respondents performed gender by contrasting effectual male violence with ineffectual female violence, by claiming that female partners were responsible for the violence in their relationships and by constructing men as victims of a biased criminal justice system. This study suggests that violence against female partners is a means by which batterers reproduce a binary framework of gender.","creator":["Kristin L. Anderson","Debra Umberson"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee3f305f-ae09-3c02-9f40-562d16fcd5da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3081889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Gendering Violence: Masculinity and Power in Men's Accounts of Domestic Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081889","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10283,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123954,124148]],"Locations in B":[[5111,5302]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within ESL, interest has been growing in the pedagogical implications of poststructuralist theories of identity and in the need for gay-friendly teaching practices. However, research on identity has largely neglected the domain of sexual identity, and efforts to develop gay-friendly pedagogies have not yet engaged with poststructuralism. This article introduces some of the key concepts of queer theory, which draws on poststructuralism, and suggests implications for teaching. The central argument is that a queer theoretical framework may be more useful pedagogically than a lesbian and gay one because it shifts the focus from inclusion to inquiry, that is, from including minority sexual identities to examining how language and culture work with regard to all sexual identities. This article then comments on an ESL class discussion in the United States that focused on lesbian and gay identities.","creator":["Cynthia Nelson"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3587670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sexual Identities in ESL: Queer Theory and Classroom Inquiry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587670","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Em 1996, a Companhia de Dan\u00e7a Corpo de Belo Horizonte apresentou o espet\u00e1culo Bach. A m\u00fasica, a coreografia e os elementos visuais como cen\u00e1rio e figurino se combinam de forma a revisitar a est\u00e9tica barroca. Neste contexto, os corpos dos bailarinos exercem fun\u00e7\u00e3o central ao inscrever estados de tens\u00e3o comuns ao barroco, principalmente na forma como performatizam a rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre os g\u00eaneros. In 1996, the dance company Corpo from Belo Horizonte presented the spectacle Bach. The music, the coreography and the visual elements as scenery and costumes are combined in a rereading of the baroque aesthetics. In this context, the dancers bodies play a major role in the inscription of tension, common in the baroque, especially through the way they perform gender relations.","creator":["Tereza Virginia de Almeida"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e63eb8a5-907b-3e81-87e1-e115b5d7b1e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Corpos em tens\u00e3o: feminino, masculino e barroco no espet\u00e1culo Bach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327271","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":5849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El t\u00e9rmino g\u00e9nero se torn\u00f3 un atajo, en la d\u00e9cada de los 1970s, para designar la construcci\u00f3n cultural y no las bases biol\u00f3gicas del tratamiento desigual entre hombres y mujeres, adem\u00e1s de la dominaci\u00f3n de las mujeres por los hombres. En las \u00faltimas tres d\u00e9cadas de teorizaci\u00f3n feminista ese vocablo se torn\u00f3 tan ub\u00edcuo como ambiguo pero, sorprendentemente, no existe una historia sem\u00e1ntica de sus or\u00edgenes, de sus significados, ni de los varios abordajes. En este art\u00edculo demuestro que sex\u00f3logos y psic\u00f3logos americanos introdujeron la palabra g\u00eanero en los a\u00f1os 1950s, con la intenci\u00f3n de distinguir el sexo anat\u00f3mico del g\u00e9nero social. Esa construcci\u00f3n biom\u00e9dica de g\u00e9nero es relevante para entender las dificultades epistemol\u00f3gicas, en la teor\u00eda feminista, con la conecci\u00f3n entre g\u00e9nero y sexo. El art\u00edculo aborda tres questiones relacionadas entre s\u00ed: 1) la costumbre, entre acad\u00e9micas feministas, de asociar el t\u00e9rmino g\u00e9nero a las diferencias sexuales; 2) el dualismo heterosexual que caracteriza la noci\u00f3n m\u00e9dica original de g\u00e9nero social y que persiste en gran parte de la teor\u00eda feminista, hasta fines de los a\u00f1os 1980s; y 3) la indisputada dicotom\u00eda cartesiana entre naturaleza y cultura que permanece como un hilv\u00e1n en las controversias sobre sexo y g\u00e9nero. Este art\u00edculo, inevitablemente, no es conclusivo. Como sugiero, avances de la biotecnolog\u00eda pueden abrir nuevos panoramas en relaci\u00f3n al dilema antropol\u00f3gico fundamental de conciliar la cultura con la naturaleza. The term gender has become the feminist shorthand, in the 1970s, to signal the cultural construction rather than biological basis of women's unequal treatment and domination by men. In the past three decades the term has become as ubiquitous as ambiguous in feminist theorizing but, surprisingly, there is no semantic history of the origins, changing approaches and meanings of the concept. In this article I show that US sexologists and psychologists introduced gender in the 1950s in their endeavour to distinguish anatomical sex from social gender. This biomedical construction of gender is relevant for the epistemological difficulties in feminist theory with the link between gender and sex. In this article I address three related issues: 1) the habit among feminist scholars to explicitly or implicitly root gender in sex differences, 2) the heterosexual dualism that characterized the original medical notion of social gender and persists in much feminist theorizing until the late 1980s, and 3) the unquestioned cartesian dichotomy between nature and culture that runs like a red thread through the controversy over sex and gender. The article is inevitably open-ended. As I suggest, developments in biotechnology may open new vistas on what is the fundamental anthropological dilemma, namely, how to reconcile culture with nature.","creator":["Verena Stolke"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e440d28f-331a-3e51-b882-a609cd828bff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La mujer es puro cuento: la cultura del g\u00e9nero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596615","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14141,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[475985,476141],[476173,476264]],"Locations in B":[[66198,66349],[66381,66474]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robyn Wiegman"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"895","pageStart":"893","pagination":"pp. 893-895","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927934","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Robert McAlmon's Berlin stories, written and set in the early years of Weimar Berlin, three Americans attempt to construct their homosexual identities. Their constructions are, however, informed by-and limited to-signs of queerness already in circulation. The city that offers all three characters the freedom to be queer thus also \"confines\" them to a degenerate, self-destructive lifestyle. Drawing on Judith Butler's theory that subjects are compelled to reiterate gender norms, the essay explore how these characters are constrained to repeat queer regulatory norms. Foster, \"Miss\" Knight, and \"Steve\" seemingly embrace the denigrated characteristics of queerness-casual sex, gender abnormality, excessive alcohol and cocaine usage, unproductive lifestyle-because the Berlin of McAlmon's text offers no alternative paradigm. McAlmon's stories alert us to the subtle, insidious workings of regulatory norms, whereby queer liberation re-enforces hetero-normativity.","creator":["Richard E. Zeikowitz"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c083db02-34b3-3461-881c-a06d9f1dfaba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Constrained in Liberation: Performative Queerness in Robert McAlmon's Berlin Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115206","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6746,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480],[434702,434920],[435105,435259],[440020,440100],[444961,445051],[445133,445246]],"Locations in B":[[501,743],[5736,5950],[5995,6146],[11557,11636],[28453,28543],[28636,28749]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this article is to deepen our understanding of twentieth-century masculinity by considering the social function of facial hair. The management of facial hair has always been a medium of gendered body language, and as such has elicited a nearly continuous private and public conversation about manliness. Careful attention to this conversation, and to trends in facial hairstyles, illuminates a distinct and consistent pattern of thought about masculinity in early twentieth-century America. The preeminent form of facial hair\u2014mustaches\u2014was used to distinguish between two elemental masculine types: sociable and autonomous. A man was neither wholly one nor the other, but the presence and size of a mustache-or its absence\u2014served to move a man one way or another along the continuum that stretched from one extreme to the other. According to the twentieth-century gender code, a clean-shaven man's virtue was his commitment to his male peers and to local, national or corporate institutions. The mustached man, by contrast, was much more his own man: a patriarch, authority figure or free agent who was able to play by his own rules. Men and women alike read these signals in their evaluation of men.","creator":["Christopher Oldstone-Moore"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e13531-ddc1-3d07-af28-9085b9c01f6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41678816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mustaches and Masculine Codes in Early Twentieth-Century America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678816","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses the Hapa movement as a case study in order to provide a framework for understanding identity as a goal of social movements and to expand on a theoretical understanding of multiracial social movements. In contrast to current understandings of identity-based movements, this article argues that the Hapa movement seeks simultaneously to deconstruct traditional notions of (mono)racial identities and to secure recognition for a multiracial \"Hapa\" identity. Movements that have identity as a goal are motivated by activists' understandings of how categories are constituted and how those categories, codes, and ways of thinking serve as axes of regulation and domination. The Hapa movement simultaneously challenges (mono)racial categories at both the institutional level through targeting the state and at the micro level through challenging the quotidian enactment of race and promulgating a Hapa identity. Activism by mixed-race individuals and organizations constitutes an important challenge to power that has significant implications for racial categorization and classification in contemporary American society.","creator":["Mary Bernstein","Marcie De la Cruz"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.4.722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12826e89-decf-3270-ab1b-3884fa867604"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2009.56.4.722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"745","pageStart":"722","pagination":"pp. 722-745","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"\"What are You?\": Explaining Identity as a Goal of the Multiracial Hapa Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.4.722","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":15678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how two American theorists, Gayle Rubin and Judith Butler, deploy geologic language during the 1990s moment when their feminist careers morphed into queer careers. I argue that the precise composition of this institutional shift \u2013 methodological, material, and epistemological \u2013 is both reflected and refracted in the figure of the rock. A symbol that connotes fixity in short time spans, but dynamism in long ones, the rock oscillates between facticity and dissolution, mirroring shifting notions of sex and gender in the 1990s. In her retrospective account of the emergence of queer theory, Rubin\u2019s use of a fossil metaphor ushers the field toward a non-reproductive and non-procreative genealogy, illuminating a different temporal texture to such seemingly fixed structures as sex, gender, and sexuality. Butler\u2019s inherited geologic language conceives of gender as the process of sedimentation that resists the biological determinism of identity-based feminist politics. Examining the rock provides crucial readings of Butler\u2019s materiality, one that oscillates between fixed being and dynamic becoming, stability and change, surface signification and depth excavation.","creator":["Samantha Pergadia"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d121afd-8fa7-3b44-b47f-00536be2fbae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Geologies of Sex and Gender: Excavating the Materialism of Gayle Rubin and Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0171","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10357,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[467,615],[254102,254169],[356558,356658],[439426,439766],[441998,442096]],"Locations in B":[[6272,6424],[24179,24254],[40865,40962],[43111,43451],[46690,46788]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Israeli readers were hardly prepared for Netiva Ben Yehuda's dramatic entry into the scene of Hebrew writing in 1981 with her first novel, 1948\u2014Bein hasfirot, and its two sequels (1985, 1991). This essay offers a corrective to the reception of the Palmach trilogy that mostly ignored the feminist slant of Ben Yehuda's historical revisionism. It highlights her ingenious invention of Hebrew gender avant la lettre, and places her as a precursor of the analysis of the ideological roots that lie behind the betrayal of the promise for sexual equality, which \u201cthe Palmach had inscribed on its flag.\u201d","creator":["Yael S. Feldman"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.20.1-2.0139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9da0116-bfda-361e-976e-8203e575a579"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.20.1-2.0139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hebrew Gender and Zionist Ideology: The Palmach Trilogy of Netiva Ben Yehuda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.20.1-2.0139","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The conventional portrayal of the formal\/informal economy dichotomy endows the formal economy with positive attributes and the informal economy with negative characteristics. Recently, this hierarchy has been inverted by scholars portraying the informal economy positively as a chosen alternative and path to progress. This paper evaluates critically this emergent representation. Reporting a study of the informal economy in the Ukraine conducted in 2005\/2006, a diverse array of informal economic practices are identified that amongst some groups represent an involuntary means of livelihood but amongst others a chosen alternative and some of which seem beneficial and others deleterious to economic development and social cohesion. The outcome is a call to transcend simplistic binary hierarchical depictions of the formal economy as \"bad\"\/informal economy as \"good\" (or the inverse) and towards a finer-grained and more nuanced understanding of the diverse forms of informal work and their varying consequences for economic development and social cohesion.","creator":["Colin C. Williams","John Round"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29770477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346764"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44714743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ffc2be8-349d-3cea-a32d-e9839a66a3e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29770477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revisociecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Social Economy","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Evaluation of Romantic Depictions of the Informal Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29770477","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"September 2009 saw publication of the third novel by one of the most admired writers currently working in the USA: Lorrie Moore, recipient of the prestigious REA and PEN\/Malamud Awards for short fiction. This article opens hitherto unexplored routes into Moore's fiction by reading two stories from Moore's 1998 collection Birds of America in light of Judith Butler's theories of performativity. Moore's work is widely praised for its linguistic virtuosity, wordplay, and verbal humor, but to date there has been little analysis of the link between these features of tone and style and her underlying theory of subjective identity. The argument developed here is that Moore represents identity as self-consciously constituted through reiterated linguistic and corporeal acts. In all her fiction, subjecthood is performed through ongoing processes of projection and reception involving language, gesture, embodiment, and motion or metaphors of motion, especially flight. The stories \"Willing\" and \"Charades\" reflexively dramatize this process of identity construction by presenting fictional worlds revolving around, respectively, a professional actress and a theatrical game. Both works portray enactment, staging, and consciousness of audience as essential to fully realized and socially viable identity.","creator":["Alison Kelly"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fafd4685-69ed-350e-9ce4-40b89d835051"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Enactment and Performance in Lorrie Moore's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158495","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":9194,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40836,41056]],"Locations in B":[[10945,11155]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En este art\u00edculo se estudia la conexi\u00f3n entre las pel\u00edculas argentinas La mujer sin cabeza (Lucrecia Martel, 2008) y El secreto de sus ojos (Juan Jos\u00e9 Campanella, 2009). Ambas obras muestran la tensi\u00f3n creada por las leyes de olvido y perd\u00f3n que siguieron a la Guerra Sucia en la Argentina de los 70 y los 80. Ambas pel\u00edculas sondean de qu\u00e9 manera se contamin\u00f3 la justicia ordinaria por las medidas tomadas en los cr\u00edmenes pol\u00edticos, a\u00fan d\u00e9cadas despu\u00e9s de los acontecimientos. Los personajes de estas pel\u00edculas tienen una compleja percepci\u00f3n de la justicia, distorsionada por el terrible impacto de los cr\u00edmenes de lesa humanidad y el incumplimiento de la justicia. La consecuencia inmediata fue la devaluaci\u00f3n de la vida humana, y los sentimientos de culpa y dolor de los personajes de ambas pel\u00edculas, al tiempo que presenciamos la compleja lucha entre la memoria y el olvido. This article explores the connection between the Argentine films The Headless Woman (Lucrecia Martel, 2008) and The Secret in Their Eyes Quan Jos\u00e9 Campanella, 2009). Both works show the tension created by the laws of impunity following the Dirty War in Argentina in the seventies and eighties. Both films probe the manner in which the civil law was contaminated by actions taken on political crimes, even decades after the events. The characters of these films have a complex perception of justice, distorted by the terrible impact of the crimes against humanity and breaches of justice. The immediate consequence was the devaluation of human life, and feelings of guilt and pain of the characters in both films, while witnessing the complex struggle between memory and forgetting.","creator":["Ana Mora\u00f1a"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8af36a0-df15-34b0-881f-b54841ede894"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41407244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"73","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Memoria E impunidad a trav\u00e9s del imaginario cinematogr\u00e1fico: \"La mujer sin cabeza\" (Lucrecia martel, 2008) y \"El secreto de sus ojos\" (Juan Jos\u00e9 Campanella, 2009)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407244","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10213,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the adequacy of various theories of the state, in relation to the restructuring of schooling and initial teacher education, and education more widely, in England and Wales between 1979 and 2000 by both Conservative and New Labour Governments. The critique advanced is a 'structuralist neo-Marxist' analysis. I distinguish this from a 'culturalist neo-Marxist' analysis, which lays greater stress on five aspects of agency and autonomy. I also briefly critique 'postmodernist' analysis and, in more detail, what I term 'quasi-postmodernist' analyses, associated with Stephen Ball.","creator":["Dave Hill"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22e1fe68-ab88-30dc-bae0-22b13771e535"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"State Theory and the Neo-Liberal Reconstruction of Schooling and Teacher Education: A Structuralist Neo-Marxist Critique of Postmodernist, Quasi-Postmodernist, and Culturalist Neo-Marxist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393219","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Tedlock"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746585372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235500"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85d1fb89-12d5-3244-8ef9-9812e9809b15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performativity, Cultural Memory and Reverse Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758165","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mariana Bol\u00edvar Rub\u00edn"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23617210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b093256-f7f7-3048-b359-391f5db5e5da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23617210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transgressive Rituals: Constructing the Santera's Body in the Photography of Mar\u00eda P\u00e9rez Bravo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23617210","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4657,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431480]],"Locations in B":[[19501,19996]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen Canning"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78ea259d-9aaf-368c-8a11-28e3647254ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist History after the Linguistic Turn: Historicizing Discourse and Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174803","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16906,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466],[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[90371,90433],[98913,98977]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d1\u05d7\u05df \u05db\u05d9\u05e6\u05d3 \u05ea\u05e4\u05e1\u05d5 \u05e8\u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05db\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05d4\u05df \u05db\u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d6\u05d5\u05d2 \u05d5\u05db\u05d9\u05e6\u05d3, \u05dc\u05d3\u05e2\u05ea\u05df, \u05d4\u05e9\u05e4\u05d9\u05e2\u05d4 \u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d4 \u05d6\u05d0\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4\u05df. \u05e2\u05e9\u05e8 \u05e8\u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05db\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e9\u05ea\u05ea\u05e4\u05d5 \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8. \u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d5\u05de\u05e7 \u05d7\u05e6\u05d9 \u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05ea\u05e7\u05d9\u05d9\u05de\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d3 \u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e1\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5 \u05de\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9 \u05dc\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d4\u05de\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e6\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5 \u05e7\u05d5\u05e0\u05e4\u05dc\u05d9\u05e7\u05d8 \u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05d1\u05d8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05d1\u05d8 \u05d4\u05e6\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d1\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \"\u05d0\u05e9\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d0\u05d9\". \u05e1\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05ea\u05ea\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d5\u05e9\u05e4\u05e2 \u05de\u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e1\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05e9\u05dc\u05d4\u05df \u05d5\u05e0\u05d1\u05d7\u05e8 \u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05d4\u05e2\u05d3\u05e4\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05de\u05ea\u05d0\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e8 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4\u05df. \u05d0\u05e8\u05d1\u05e2 \u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc\u05d5 \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1 \u05dc\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05d4\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d7 \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4\u05df. \u05d4\u05de\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05e9\u05d5 \u05d1\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d7\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05e2\u05d3\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea (preferences approach). This research examined how wives of senior politicians perceived their role as the politicians' spouses, of a politician, and how this perception affected their lives. Ten wives of senior Israeli senior politicians participated in the study. Semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted individually, with topics and issues definedspecified in advance. FindingsResults demonstrated an inherent, structural conflict between the personal and the public aspects of the role of '\"politician's wife.\"'. The Participants' lifestyle of the participants influenced their perception of their roles and they reported a selection by preference of the roles that best fit their existing lifestyle. Four different attitudes relating to the women's roles and lifestyles emerged from their personal stories. Findings were interpreted in terms of the preference approach.","creator":["\u05e1\u05d9\u05de\u05d4 \u05d6\u05da","\u05de\u05d9\u05db\u05d0\u05dc \u05d1\u05e8-\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9","\u05e9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05df","Sima Zach","Michael Bar-Eli","Sara Simon"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23979506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2308247X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394792"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8df9aa85-e793-3d91-ba40-e70ce1a7fc04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23979506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociissuisra"}],"isPartOf":"Social Issues in Israel \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc","issueNumber":"18","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Ariel University Center \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d6 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d0\u05d9 \u05d0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A \"Helpmate\"? Role perceptions of the wives of senior public figures in Israel \/ \"\u05e2\u05d6\u05e8 \u05db\u05e0\u05d2\u05d3\u05d5\"? \u2014 \u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e9\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e8\u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05db\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23979506","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist critiques of intention challenge some aspects of traditional just war reasoning, including the criteria of right intention and discrimination (particularly as interpreted using the doctrine of double effect). I take note of these challenges and propose some directions just war reasoners might take in response. First, right intention can be evaluated more accurately by judging what actors in war actually do than by attempting to uncover inward dispositions. Assessing whether agents in war have taken due care to minimize foreseeable collateral damage, avoided intentional targeting of noncombatants, corrected previous mistakes in their later actions, and taken responsibility to repair unintended damage they cause are examples of ways in which just war reasoners can evaluate intention by looking at actions.","creator":["Rosemary B. Kellison"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3799c081-fb5a-3487-87b0-f1d0a8ca3cd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Axiology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IMPURE AGENCY AND THE JUST WAR: A Feminist Reading of Right Intention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586093","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carmen Sanju\u00e1n-Pastor"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44734710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37b9fdd5-278b-3b95-a503-089059396b1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44734710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Im\u00e1genes del margen en la ciudad global espa\u00f1ola: la \u201cmujer de la calle\u201d como met\u00e1fora espacial en \"Todo sobre mi madre\" (1999) de Pedro Almod\u00f3var y en Princesas (2005) de Fernando Le\u00f3n de Aranoa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44734710","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9587,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[57005,57080]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I compare backstrap-loom weaving in three cultural contexts: the ancient Maya, the ancient Aztecs, and 20th-century Mesoamerica. Although continuities are present, important differences exist in the ways that weaving was situated historically. Among the Classic Maya, weaving defined class; in Aztec Mexico, weaving defined gender; and in 20th-century Mesoamerica, weaving defined ethnicity. A comparison of these cases suggests that historical study is a useful tool for both archaeologists and ethnographers. It promotes recognition of the diversity of practice and belief in ancient societies. It helps to define the scope of contemporary ethnographic study. It combats cultural essentialism and injects agency into our accounts. It enables us to acknowledge both the rich heritage of indigenous peoples and the fact of culture change. Comparative historical study provides a strong rationale for the continued association of archaeology and cultural anthropology as parts of a wider anthropological whole.","creator":["Elizabeth M. Brumfiel"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55f19855-307e-33c7-9209-34191bd4680b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4496525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"877","pageStart":"862","pagination":"pp. 862-877","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Cloth, Gender, Continuity, and Change: Fabricating Unity in Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496525","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":11707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Balsamo"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bb83a15-e7b6-384d-894f-14b952436b99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315025","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12840,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[75608,75683]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing on Otto Dix's 1922 painting To Beauty, this article explores how Dix, a German working-class artist, promoted himself in the work as an Americanized, bourgeois, jazz-loving dancer. In so doing, Dix utilized the painting's composition, symbolism, and cultural context to argue for a masculine, multiracial dominance in the female-associated world of dance. By fundamentally questioning gendered divisions within Weimar dance culture, Dix's example demonstrates how men were seminal participants in dance's vitality. This examination reconceptualizes historical gender alignments in cultural spheres, and thus envisions new modes of cultural participation in which masculinity, like femininity, changes over time.","creator":["Susan Laikin Funkenstein"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Man's Place in a Woman's World: Otto Dix, Social Dancing, and Constructions of Masculinity in Weimar Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688251","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a case study of Israeli men's friendships, this article examines the inter-relations between the experience of male relationships in everyday life and established representations of fraternal friendship. We delineate a script for male bonding that echoes ancient epics of heroism. This script holds a mythic structure for making sense of friendship in everyday life and places male relatedness under the spectral ideal of death. Whereas various male-to-male arenas present diverse and often displaced expressions of male affection, we contend that sites of commemoration present a unique instance in which desire between men is publicly declared and legitimized. The collective rituals for the dead hero-friends serve as a mask that transforms a repudiated personal sentiment into a national genre of relatedness. We interpret fraternal friendship as a form of private\/public identification\/desire whereby the citizen brother becomes, via collective rituals of commemoration, the desired brother.","creator":["Danny Kaplan","Niza Yanay"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23181945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af2d7ab4-0cd5-30ab-8e99-19b3018c733d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23181945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fraternal Friendship and Commemorative Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23181945","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477925]],"Locations in B":[[60006,60082]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Lutzker","Judy Rosenthal"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3094940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e724c972-fa29-3bed-90d1-7daa6110d328"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3094940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"923","pageStart":"909","pagination":"pp. 909-923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Unheimlich Man-Oeuvre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3094940","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean Walton"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28def0ef-159f-318c-ad2b-92448930b21e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dissenting in an Age of Frenzied Heterosexualism: Kinbote's Transparent Closet in Nabokov's \"Pale Fire\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112106","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8844,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[99981,100198],[103187,103458],[103619,103811],[103962,104047]],"Locations in B":[[13428,13645],[13845,14114],[14122,14309],[47195,47280]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Uptalk is the use of a rising, questioning intonation when making a statement, which has become quite prevalent in contemporary American speech. Women tend to use uptalk more frequently than men do, though the reasons behind this difference are contested. I use the popular game show Jeopardy! to study variation in the use of uptalk among the contestants 'responses, and argue that uptalk is a key way in which gender is constructed through interaction. While overall, Jeopardy! contestants use uptalk 37 percent of the time, there is much variation in the use of uptalk. The typical purveyor of uptalk is white, young, and female. Men use uptalk more when surrounded by women contestants, and when correcting a woman contestant after she makes an incorrect response. Success on the show produces different results for men and women. The more successful a man is, the less likely he is to use uptalk; the more successful a woman is, the more likely she is to use uptalk.","creator":["THOMAS J. LINNEMAN"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23486618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2defdc50-149f-314d-8103-23d7800750c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23486618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"GENDER IN JEOPARDY! Intonation Variation on a Television Game Show","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23486618","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9657,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455577,455708]],"Locations in B":[[18250,18377]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MIGLENA NIKOLCHINA"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminine erotic and paternal legacy: revisiting Plato\u2019s \"Symposium\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263410","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dianna Taylor"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"review-essay","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48511468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25742329"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0dd4f41-de8b-3943-830a-35c94600f0c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48511468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arendtstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Arendt Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Butler and Arendt on Appearance, Performativity, and Collective Political Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48511468","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":2584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabriela A. Genovese"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad40ec47-8c58-35ba-8756-6655885a073a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Homoerotismo: La resistencia cultural ante la incomodidad patriarcal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922739","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Hatten"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40374505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00695696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0791489c-1999-3637-9291-3012d0e93134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40374505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collmusisymp"}],"isPartOf":"College Music Symposium","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"College Music Society","sourceCategory":["Arts","Education","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Music Theory Pedagogy Panel: \"Analysis and Performance across the Canon\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40374505","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":1948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this study we study how homosexuality has legally gone from exclusion to inclusion in migration law and what ideological understandings that underpin this inclusion. The data corpus of the study consisted of the preparatory work concerning same-sex sexuality, cohabitation and migration. Data was coded for patterns concerning the public administrative understandings of same-sex sexuality as described in the preparatory works. The coding was theoretically driven by critical and Marxist approaches to ideology. Conducting a thematic analysis, four themes were identified in the data. The overall finding is that the preparatory works give precedence to sexuality in terms of disposition (l\u00e4ggning) when it is linked to identity and intensions to engage in a long-term relationship. This means that alternative sexual identities and practices not compatible with the \"heterosexual matrix\" have been excluded from the ideological lens. The ideological focus in the preparatory works could be seen as a reflection of the capitalist system, where some social categories are viewed as desirable to include in a capitalist society.","creator":["THOMAS WIMARK","DANIEL HEDLUND"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609706607"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90fdee62-a0e2-3f2d-a7ba-ef9e980d1b95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Samlevnad som ideologi i migrationslagstiftningen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632177","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review essay of gender in Dickens studies, 1992-2007, surveys ten books and over 100 book chapters and journal essays, aiming to give the reader a sense of the range, richness, and complexity of work done by scholars on this subject. Defining gender as \"the social process of dividing people and social practices along sexed identities. . . . creating hierarchies between the divisions it enacts\" (Beasley 11), the essay is divided into eight sections: Review Essays; Monographs; Biography; Sexualities; Masculinities; Femininities; Cultural Studies; and Gender and Narrative. The essay begins with a brief consideration of how Dickens began to imagine classes and genders different from his own early in his career in Sketches by Boz and links this to recent historical novelists' reconstructions of gender and how such reconstructions may play a part in shaping the literary criticism of contemporary scholars.","creator":["Natalie B. Cole"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1248a68e-74ec-3308-8222-c1303ba6883d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":92,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dickens and Gender: Recent Studies, 1992-2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372200","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":40434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Lofton"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44cd53d7-6c43-3d3d-be20-caa2e6ecd5ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20542702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering Fundamentalism: John Balcom Shaw and the Sexuality of a Protestant Orthodoxy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542702","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on recent insights from the study of legal consciousness and gender relations, the authors test the generality of Catharine MacKinnon's theory of the sexual harassment of adult women. Survey and interview data from the Youth Development Study and the General Social Survey are analyzed to identify a behavioral syndrome of sexual harassment for males and females during adolescence and young adulthood and to compare the syndrome against subjective reports of sexual harassment. A clear harassment syndrome is found for all age and sex groups and MacKinnon's predictions about the influence of workplace power and gender relations are generally supported. Financially vulnerable men as well as women are most likely to experience harassing behaviors, and men pursuing more egalitarian gender relationships are most likely to identify such behaviors as sexual harassment. Nevertheless, adult women remain the most frequent targets of classic sexual harassment markers, such as unwanted touching and invasion of personal space.","creator":["Christopher Uggen","Amy Blackstone"],"datePublished":"2004-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09a5059c-f598-3f3e-bb57-953acf872ed3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3593075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Sexual Harassment as a Gendered Expression of Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593075","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":17741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[108406,108490]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The discourse of contemporary country music creates a world permeated with religion and centered on the notion of salvific love. This form of salvation arises in the connection between people (or between people and God) and includes elements of sacrifice and transformation. Although highly conventional, country music must meet standards of \"authenticity\" and \"relevance,\" which require the incorporation of contemporary American religious values (including self-love and self-actualization). An analysis of recent country music lyrics reveals the remarkable openness to new religious messages. However, the only acceptable messages are those that can be harmonized with the implicit Protestant Christian sensibility of the music. Salvific love, for this reason, is always heterosexual and at least compatible with a Christian message. While the music industry does its best to erase minority sexualities, the music itself is often surprisingly open to a queer interpretation.","creator":["Maxine L. Grossman"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Jesus, Mama, and the Constraints on Salvific Love in Contemporary Country Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466370","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":15148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En su Arte nuevo (1609) Lope de Vega propone una nueva comedia que lleva a cabo en la pr\u00e1ctica en su prol\u00edfica producci\u00f3n dram\u00e1tica. Ese nuevo planteamiento te\u00f3rico se basa en la figura del monstruo, y m\u00e1s concretamente en el Minotauro de Pasifae, como s\u00edmbolo del h\u00edbrido teatral, mezcla de lo tr\u00e1gico y lo c\u00f3mico, de diferentes espacios y lugares ficcionales. En La prueba de los ingenios encontramos esa imagen del monstruo h\u00edbrido en la figura del propio Minotauro y en la del hermafrodita para representar una nueva forma no s\u00f3lo esc\u00e9nica, sino tambi\u00e9n sexual. Las dos protagonistas, Laura y Florela, desarrollan una relaci\u00f3n ambigua entre la amistad y el homoerotismo. Tres aspectos de esta relaci\u00f3n nos sirven para interpretar la hibridez del monstruo teatral y sexual de Lope: el aspecto est\u00e9tico, el legal y el m\u00e9dico. Mediante estas tres perspectivas interdisciplinares descubrimos un \u00e1ngulo nuevo de la revoluci\u00f3n lopesca: si con el Arte nuevo Lope desaf\u00eda todo un canon de tradici\u00f3n est\u00e9tico-normativa, con La prueba de los ingenios el F\u00e9nix consigue socavar el sistema patriarcal dominante.","creator":["JULIO GONZ\u00c1LEZ RUIZ"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7fe4fd1-7251-33be-afec-b0ad43744a1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Po\u00e9tica y monstruosidad: homoerotismo en La prueba de los ingenios, de Lope de Vega","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763974","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Oliver S. Buckton"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Reader Whom I Love\": Homoerotic Secrets in \"David Copperfield\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030251","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":14883,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[212788,212941],[213557,213695],[218341,218522]],"Locations in B":[[3687,3840],[23901,24037],[24482,24663]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Millner"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"616efb5d-f7a8-3df9-ab5e-ce3b08cb5f29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"554","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-554","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post 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\u0440\u0430\u043c\u043a\u0438 \u043e\u0440\u0438\u0435\u043d\u0442\u0430\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u043d\u0430 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0444\u043e\u0440\u043c\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438, \u043e\u043f\u0438\u0441\u0430\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0410\u043b\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0435\u0435\u043c \u042e\u0440\u0447\u0430\u043a\u043e\u043c \u0432 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0442\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0442\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u0437\u0434\u043d\u0435\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u044b.","creator":["Ann Komaromi"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d439a316-18c9-32cf-ac4d-a5a480a04f41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23349217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European 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Leikam"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"113c4113-47aa-366d-b098-8199785f4098"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Publications in American Studies from German-Speaking Countries, 2008","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158442","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":17469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Halifu Osumare"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1478458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0908eb36-5f7a-3843-9054-bde355dc524d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1478458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Global Breakdancing and the Intercultural Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1478458","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7645,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[47509,47578]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Walter"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"484","pagination":"pp. 484-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STRANGE ATTRACTIONS: SIBLING LOVE TRIANGLES IN FAULKNER'S ABSALOM, ABSALOM<\/italic>! AND BALZAC'S LA FILLE AUX YEUX D'OR<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659616","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay is a survey of some issues that have invigorated theoretical contests among American feminists, especially in the last two decades. I review these debates and suggest that American feminist writers are contemplating deep and important matters that have arisen, or can emerge, in contemporary American society. Counter-arguments to the project of contesting and the general feminist engagement with postmodernism, presented by both feminists and non-feminists in America, are also surveyed. One can note, on the whole, that for many American feminists, the socalled \"theory-wars\" have been worth fighting for they are being perceived as contributing to an evolving feminist culture and politics.","creator":["Ann R. Cacoullos"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0883105X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a90261c-55fe-3757-a8e8-4d25baa52973"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41279790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudinter"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279790","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":18424,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[443328,443393],[476394,476458],[478060,478195],[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[86299,86365],[110292,110356],[115217,115356],[115940,116015]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ERIC MARTONE"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02782308"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613770140"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013273431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1eb8e712-fc7e-38bf-83a6-5da6ba5f81b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41887387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intesociscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Social Science Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Pi Gamma Mu, International Honor Society in Social Sciences","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IN THE SHADOW OF ROUSSEAU: GENDER AND THE 2007 FRENCH PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887387","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":13235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[56956,57010]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contemporary women's autobiographical fiction not only articulates the painful position of having no place to call one's own but also both illustrates the construction of a space within alienating literary and cultural forms and the fracturing of those forms so that they might accommodate the marginal subject. The politics of location that arises in contemporary women's narratives of multi-cultural self-representation articulates a paradoxical position of dislocation even as the subject constructs a self within a perceived position of absence. It is from this position of paradoxical being that the ex-centric subject seeks to express herself. Such a subject is, of necessity, in the process of mapping new cultural spaces. In the autobiographics of Dorothy Allison, Kim Chernin, and Minnie Bruce Pratt, there is no final place of arrival, but rather a continual narrative enactment of the journey of self-discovery, a fluid, ongoing process that, even in the narratives' conclusions, opens out into yet another story of the shifting terrain of subjectivity. Drawing on metaphors of transformation that include scaling walls, shedding coats, and fracturing frames, these writers convey a continual process of cultural negotiation of those categories of identity through which the female subject may represent the self.","creator":["Connie D. Griffin"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ede25e6-c986-3721-a7c8-115afa1eebf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.35.2.321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ex-Centricities: Perspectives on Gender and Multi-Cultural Self-Representation in Contemporary American Women's Autobiographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.321","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Explanations for differences in political preferences between men and women continue to be debated, generating more heat than light in attempts to locate their source and potential influence. The reason for this confusion rests on the lack of conceptual clarity concerning the difference between sex, typically referring to biological differences, and gender, assumed to result from socialization, and the difference these constructs might elicit in political outcomes. Utilizing two gender scales, the authors find gender identity exerts an impact on voter preferences above and beyond sex. They also find that individual differences in gender identity are not found to result from social influences but largely derive from unique experiences and innate disposition. The results have substantial implications for social scientists who theorize about and investigate sex and gender in studies of political attitudes and behaviors.","creator":["Peter K. Hatemi","Rose McDermott","J.Michael Bailey","Nicholas G. Martin"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23209561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca5e80f1-f5a7-3bf5-8986-14ce44bc8d20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23209561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Different Effects of Gender and Sex on Vote Choice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23209561","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":12934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Radical feminism has critiqued heterosexuality both as a primary means through which people are constituted as women and as men, and as inherently oppressive for women. Two recent developments challenge this critique: the concept of \"virgin\" heterosexuality, a form of heterosexuality in which the performance of heterosexual sex, with or without sexual intercourse, is voluntarily chosen, and \"queer\" heterosexuality, a concept derived from postmodernist and queer theory, which does not only reinscribe, but also actively subverts and disrupts, oppressive categories of gender (\"maleness\" and \"femaleness\") and sexual orientation (e.g., the \"gay\"\/\"straight\" dichotomy). This article analyzes the attempts made in \"virgin\" and \"queer\" theory to rehabilitate heterosexuality, and finds both fundamentally flawed from a radical feminist perspective. It ends by considering why such rehabilitatory attempts are currently being made, and what they reveal about heterosexuality.","creator":["Celia Kitzinger","Sue Wilkinson"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6569677f-ade3-3b62-95b3-e36d48381b68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"444","pagination":"pp. 444-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Virgins and Queers: Rehabilitating Heterosexuality?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189715","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8220,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[431288,431480],[432114,432254],[459722,459819]],"Locations in B":[[23060,23251],[23259,23399],[28646,28741]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah P. Britzman"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42742229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8cc60ba-d9c1-3bcf-84d1-ed4a25dc19d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42742229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"DECENTERING DISCOURSES IN TEACHER EDUCATION: OR, THE UNLEASHING OF UNPOPULAR THINGS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42742229","volumeNumber":"173","wordCount":10296,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461319,461476]],"Locations in B":[[40314,40471]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A number of critics suggest that in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English literature femininity is portrayed as both similar to and different from colonial otherness in ways that destabilize the English woman's relation to empire. Maria Edgeworth's Belinda (1801) presents an opportunity to enrich this discussion because of the novel's synchronization of domestic and colon al authority, sustained attention to the sexual, national, and racial ambiguities posed by transvestites and Creoles, and chaotic variety of events that prohibits political fixity. Following the multiple allusions to \"home\" and \"abroad\" in Belinda, I argue that female homoeroticism and miscegenation become analogous dangers and reflect eighteenth-century concerns about the mutability of bodily and colonial boundaries.","creator":["Susan C. Greenfield"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8e5b095-5291-3b30-b46f-55e3f222db4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Abroad and at Home\": Sexual Ambiguity, Miscegenation, and Colonial Boundaries in Edgeworth's Belinda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463091","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":9242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["FOTINI APOSTOLOU"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a85cd2d-7b13-3de2-aab0-2d5b5089e191"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41557088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Textasy: The Seduction of the Text in Muriel Spark's Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557088","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shefali Chandra"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfe3b469-37be-35c3-865d-e6a35fe554e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mimicry, Masculinity, and the Mystique of Indian English: Western India, 1870-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619679","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":12760,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[76520,76589]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah E. Chinn"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6516f1e2-99f9-3fa7-b1dc-41dece8e4fc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41809539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"883","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-883","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Racialized Things","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809539","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":4759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Bateman"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7651d7fc-500b-3a41-b49c-deefd05cfb5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"722","pageStart":"719","pagination":"pp. 719-722","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069347","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the political and educational activism of Ladlad, the first lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) political party in the Philippines and the only existing LGBT political party in the world. Founded in 2003, Ladlad fielded candidates for the 2010 national election in the Philippines, amidst seemingly insurmountable institutional and societal barriers. Audaciously visionary and fiercely resilient, Ladlad's leaders enacted what can be called \"parrhesiastic pedagogy,\" a juxtaposition of Michel Foucault's notion of parrhesia and of activism as public pedagogy. Parrhesiastic pedagogy is an oppositional form of teaching by subordinated subjects who assert their freedom to tell truths that challenge hegemonic understandings, in this case regarding non-normative sexual orientations and gender identities. Ladlad utilized the fearless tactics of scandalous behavior, critical preaching, and provocative dialogue not to alter people's opinions, but to grapple with self-reflexive accounts of their contradictions and inconsistencies. Ladlad's politics and practices also offer new ways of conceptualizing queer of color epistemology from the vantage point of LGBTs from the Global South. They provide insights into LGBT civic engagement with dominant institutions like the federal government, organized religion, and mainstream media, and with a general populace that considers LGBTs as immoral, second-class citizens. The article's focus on LGBTs in the Global South serves to caution queer of color scholarship of its potential imperialist slippage if the latter remains embedded within a Global North logic, yet asserts itself as universal and applicable to all racialized and sexual minority others around the world.","creator":["ROLAND SINTOS COLOMA"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cca3b88-f92d-3b2d-9b9c-f59160947cb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ladlad and Parrhesiastic Pedagogy: Unfurling LGBT Politics and Education in the Global South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524369","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":14131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using disability theory as a framework and social science theories of identity to strengthen the arguments, this article explores empirically how working-age adults confront the medical diagnosis of hearing impairment. For most participants hearing impairment threatens the stability of social interaction and the construction of hearing disabled identities is seen as shaped in the interaction with the hearing impaired person's surroundings. In order to overcome the potential stigmatization the 'passing' as normal becomes predominant. For many the diagnosis provokes radical redefinitions of the self. The discursively produced categorization and subjectivity of senescence mean that rehabilitation technologies such as hearing aids identify a particular life-style (disabled) which determines their social significance. Thus wearing a hearing aid works against the contemporary attempt to create socially ideal bodily presentations of the self, as the hearing aid is a symbolic extension of the body's lack of function.","creator":["Anette Lykke Hindhede"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"627e1ed5-3f48-3ced-9c6f-9245a33f5ecf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26650138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Negotiating hearing disability and hearing disabled identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650138","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the relation between job insecurity, male breadwinner ideology and family forms drawing on qualitative, in-depth interviews with women and men working in three organizations in a specific travel-to-work area in South Wales. We argue that a modified form of male breadwinner family is still widespread in this part of Britain, but that the elements that constitute male breadwinner ideology and the male breadwinner family are disrupted by men's job insecurity. There are few signs of the emergence of a dual breadwinner\/dual carer family, although the families of 42 percent of our respondents conformed to a dual earner family form. The only circumstance where men took on more of the care work was in a situation of role reversal as a result of men's job insecurity and\/or job loss and was most evident amongst couples where both were on low incomes with insecure jobs.","creator":["Nickie Charles","Emma James"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23749045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ee1497c-f3d2-3ac5-b2c9-f80041bcfe62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23749045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"'He earns the bread and butter and I earn the cream': job insecurity and the male breadwinner family in South Wales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23749045","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brigitte Mahuzier"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36c2bb6b-014f-3efc-ae4e-60c9f1bf6e88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23538821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"350","pagination":"pp. 350-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538821","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay recounts my attempt to teach poetry through theory and theory through poetry by juxtaposing Bernard Heidsieck's sound poem Canal Street with Julia Kristeva's La r\u00e9volution du langage po\u00e9tique. The psychoanalytic model Kristeva applies to her exegesis of Mallarm\u00e9's \"Prose\" proves insufficient to account for Heidsieck's materialist poetics. However, by reading Kristeva beside Heidsieck, we can gain a glimpse of the resources held in reserve by both texts. Kristeva's attention to poetry's phonematic material facilitates a sound-sensitive approach to Heidsieck's poem. Heidsieck's poem, in turn, suggests that such material reveals not the libidinal drives of a subject but the nonlibidinal, impersonal, acoustico-physiological instrument undergirding the expressive potential of the human voice. The juxtaposition of theoretical and poetic texts demonstrates that poetry possesses an analytic force that can be applied to the theory meant to explicate it.","creator":["Carrie Noland"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9369dec7-c5ef-3d52-bb77-6d72c92b82a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25486148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Phonic Matters: French Sound Poetry, Julia Kristeva, and Bernard Heidsieck","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486148","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":12030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is the continuation of a previous research carried out on immigrant women forced to become street prostitutes in Italy. The research showed that, notwithstanding their violent exploitation, those women had maintained their trust in men. Such results prompted the need to understand whether the phenomenon was linked to the culture of their place of origin, which reduces women's critical abilities of managing social trust bonds. The current study has analyzed the representations of immigrant and non-immigrant women from northern Albania to determine their convictions about and descriptions of male and female roles. Particular importance has been given to the traditional Albanian culture associated to the Kanun code. Results have been linked to those obtained by important investigations carried out by some NGOs working in Albania to promote the culture of equality between men and women.","creator":["INES TESTONI","DANIELA BOCCHER","LUCIA RONCONI"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23004865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0039291X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85448329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac7d534d-6015-3b49-8daf-3a8b9e531b01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23004865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studisociologia"}],"isPartOf":"Studi di Sociologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Vita e Pensiero \u2013 Pubblicazioni dell\u2019Universit\u00e0 Cattolica del Sacro Cuore","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"FIDUCIA E ANOMIA. RUOLI FEMMINILI IN ALBANIA E NUOVA CITTADINANZA CULTURALE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23004865","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Myth-making has historically been an essential component of the modern state's quest for territorial control and legitimacy. As a sui generis post-national political entity in search for identity and recognition, the European Union (EU) seems to mimicking its more established national counterpart. By formulating and reproducing a narrative that hails Europe's border control regime ('Schengen') as a success story of European integration and by deploying evocative imagery at Europe's common borders, the EU is in fact trying to establish itself as an integral part of the European political landscape. This article argues that what we are witnessing today in Europe is indeed the emergence of the 'myth of Schengen'; however, the regime's mythopoiesis goes beyond the EU's official narrative and symbolic representations. To capture the full range of actors, locations and activities involved in the establishment and reproduction of this post-national myth, it is necessary to shift the attention to the performative dimension of this process. To support this argument, the article relies on the insights of anthropological and sociological works that have emphasised the role of rituality and performativity in constituting social structures and identities. These insights are then applied to examine the rituals and performances characterising four cases of 'unofficial' Schengen myth-making beyond Europe: a hotel in Beijing, street kids in Kinshasa, a British music band, and a group of Eastern European artists.","creator":["RUBEN ZAIOTTI"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16242810-f267-31f8-a563-02bc2edc8014"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"556","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Schengen: myths, rituals and the making of European territoriality beyond Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024608","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract:This essay indicates how the implicit normative framework in the texts of Michel Foucault can lead to a poststructural rhetorical praxis that is neither relativistic nor unrealistically utopian. In relation to the Enlightenment project broadly conceived, Foucault's work in this area shows both similarities to and differences from Kant and Habermas. Some normative standards are precluded within Foucault's system, but others are implied and can be articulated. There is a concept of limit work in Foucault, and the essay concludes by explaining this concept and applying it to Philipp Jenninger's Kristallnacht address.","creator":["M. Lane Bruner"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.1996.14.2.167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07348584"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45952466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c3e9f1a-2167-3036-aa94-7b44cbb0565b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rh.1996.14.2.167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetorica"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetorica: A Journal of the History of Rhetoric","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Toward a Poststructural Rhetorical Critical Praxis: Foucault, Limit Work, and Jenninger's Kristallnacht<\/em> Address","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.1996.14.2.167","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza el caso de los ensayos o simulaci\u00f3n de votaci\u00f3n por parte de las activistas por el voto femenino en tanto performances afectivas. Tomando centralmente como ejemplo los ensayos producidos en Argentina en marzo y noviembre de 1920, el objetivo central de esta presentaci\u00f3n consiste en argumentar que la destrucci\u00f3n de la estructura del sentir patriarcal llevada a cabo por el feminismo altera el sentido de realidad a trav\u00e9s de gestos propios de las vanguardias art\u00edsticas tal como estos actos de pre-enactment. Esta presentaci\u00f3n argumenta que no se trat\u00f3 meramente de un cambio en el sentido del lenguaje emancipatorio en su relaci\u00f3n con los afectos, sino que el orden perform\u00e1tico de esos afectos ayud\u00f3 a constituir una alteraci\u00f3n del sentido de la realidad. Este artigo analisa o caso dos ensaios ou simula\u00e7\u00f5es de vota\u00e7\u00e3o das ativistas pelo voto feminino como performances afetivas. Tomando como exemplo central os ensaios produzidos na Argentina em mar\u00e7o e novembro de 1920, o principal objetivo desta apresenta\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e9 argumentar que a destrui\u00e7\u00e3o da estrutura de sentimentos patriarcais realizada pelo feminismo altera o senso de realidade atrav\u00e9s de gestos pr\u00f3prios da vanguarda art\u00edstica como esses atos de pre-enactment. Esta apresenta\u00e7\u00e3o argumenta que n\u00e3o foi apenas uma mudan\u00e7a no sentido da linguagem emancipat\u00f3ria em sua rela\u00e7\u00e3o com os afetos, mas que a ordem performativa desses afetos ajudou a constituir uma altera\u00e7\u00e3o do sentido da realidade. This article scrutinizes the mocking elections conducted by suffragists in terms of affective performances. Through the analysis of the simulations carried out in Argentina in March and November 1920, I claim that the demolition of the patriarchal structure of feelings executed by feminism altered the understanding of reality through gestures typical of the artistic avant-gardes such as these acts of preenactment. Indeed, this article argues that such performances incarnated both a shift in the emancipatory language as linked to affect and \u2013most importantly \u2013, due to the performative order of such affect, an alteration of the understanding of reality.","creator":["Cecilia Mac\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f24a5a03-a75e-3875-b25b-c0acae4d1606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La simulaci\u00f3n como performance<\/em> afectiva en los or\u00edgenes del feminismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965113","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This investigation explores the ways in which discourses of security functioned to allow military intervention in Iraq to become 'thinkable', and how these actions serve to reconfigure not only the identities of states - the US and Iraq - but also the characteristics of the international as a spatial and conceptual domain. In the weeks preceding the military intervention in Iraq, significant negotiations were conducted between the US government and the UN that were commented on extensively in press statements and other documents released by both parties. Drawing on UNSC Resolutions, public debates and academic analyses, in this article I analyse the relations between the US and the UN in the build-up to the Iraq war, making two related claims. First, I argue that each discourse is organised around a particular logic of security. By 'logics of security', I mean the ways in which various concepts are organised within specific discourses of security. That is, each competing conceptualisation of security has a distinct primary focus, referent object and perspective on the arrangement of the international system. The ways in which these claims are made, the assumptions that inform them, and the policy prescriptions that issue from them, are what I refer to as 'logics of security'. Second, I argue that the intervention in Iraq, a violence undertaken in the name of 'security', has functioned to reproduce the international as a spatial and conceptual domain according to the logic of a highly conventional narrative of sovereigneity, and, ultimately, of state identity.","creator":["Laura J. Shepherd"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4edd2e9-e6dc-35ec-9ad0-8e1f585aa579"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40212522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"'To Save Succeeding Generations from the Scourge of War': The US, UN and the Violence of Security","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212522","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Les diff\u00e9rences (de sexe, de race, de culture, d'\u00e2ge, de sant\u00e9, d'intelligence...) qui avaient g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement servi \u00e0 hi\u00e9rarchiser les individus et les groupes dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s \u00ab pr\u00e9modernes \u00bb ne disparaissent pas avec le surgissement de l'universalisme \u00ab civique-bourgeois \u00bb, qui pose en principe l'acc\u00e8s de tout \u00eatre humain \u00e0 l'int\u00e9gralit\u00e9 des droits. Mais elles se trouvent red\u00e9finies, d'une fa\u00e7on \u00e0 la fois instable et violente. On en discute les modalit\u00e9s autour de trois questions : celle des \u00ab anormaux \u00bb, celle des \u00e9quivalences partielles de la race et de la culture, celle de la multiplicit\u00e9 des sexes et des sexualit\u00e9s. On ouvre ainsi la question du rapport entre inclusion exclusive et mal\u00eatre de la subjectivit\u00e9. The differences of sex, race, culture, age, health, intelligence, etc., that usually serve to rank individuals and groups in \u00ab premodern \u00bb societies have not vanished with the emergence of a \u00ab civic-bourgeois \u00bb universalism and its postulate of the access of everyone to all rights. These differences have been redefined in ways that are both unstable and violent. To demonstrate this, three issues are brought under discussion : people who are \u00ab abnormal \u00bb, partial equivalences between race and culture, and the multiplicity of sexes and sexualities. This opens onto the question of the relation between an exclusive inclusion and the ill-being of subjectivity.","creator":["\u00c9tienne Balibar"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04394216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5d68297-9483-32cf-a579-acc2894fed01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24699237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"homme"}],"isPartOf":"L'Homme","issueNumber":"203\/204","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'introuvable humanit\u00e9 du sujet moderne: L'universalit\u00e9 \u201ccivique-bourgeoise\u201d et la question des diff\u00e9rences anthropologiques","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699237","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses an anti-essentialist SF novel, focusing on the extent to which anti-foundationalism enables a more accurate as well as a more productive representation of postmodernity. My argument stresses the ways in which Pat Cadigan's novel Synners, mostly because of its remarkable narrative form, challenges some of the most dangerous norms and normativity of American thought and culture. I argue, that, in order to understand this complex novel correctly, we must approach technoscience and transnational capitalism as separate, interacting discourses and material practices. The representations of technoscience, in the novel, are definitely not 'figures' for late capitalism: they are representations of a discourse which interacts with capitalism in the fictional world as in the real world. Contrary to what has been suggested by a number of critics writing about Foucault, use of this notion of discourse does not preclude use of notions of agency. As the queer theorists who have drawn on Foucault's work show, agency can be theorized in terms compatible with the notions of discourses, material practices and technologies. My discussion of Synners thus focuses on questions of agency, showing how Cadigan uses a deconstruction of Judeo-Christian religious tropes to argue for a responsible, and knowledgable, 'incurably informed' approach to technology.","creator":["Laura Chernaik"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee134c2b-282b-3f95-b4a6-10b3675fd49c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"56","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pat Cadigan's \"Synners\": Refiguring Nature, Science and Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395816","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Common law courts have for centuries regarded corporations as artificial persons--colorless, invisible, intangible persons. Yet, recently some courts have ruled that corporations can and do possess racial identities \"as a matter of law.\" This Article explores the practical and theoretical implications of this ruling, both for our understanding of corporate personality and of race. In doing so, the Article develops an economic model of race based on representations and interpretations of racial signals and commitments. This model is used to suggest an approach to antidiscrimination law that avoids racial essentialism and an approach to corporate law that complicates shareholder primacy.","creator":["Richard R. W. Brooks"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40041692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4dcdb2d-e7fc-3570-859d-614773532b1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40041692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72,"pageEnd":"2094","pageStart":"2023","pagination":"pp. 2023-2094","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Incorporating Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40041692","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":40103,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[72662,72773],[73876,74053],[74434,74701]],"Locations in B":[[171042,171154],[171192,171369],[171382,171647]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter McLaren","Gustavo Fischman","Silvia Serra","Estanislao Antelo"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Specters of Gramsci: Revolutionary Praxis and the Committed Intellectual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589542","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":14332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William B. Warner","Clifford Siskin"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07406959"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-238251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"471240ee-5103-3a61-baab-eecc8b80d5d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25595887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"profession"}],"isPartOf":"Profession","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Stopping Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595887","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5782,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481548]],"Locations in B":[[35633,35737]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jorge Salessi"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe72a9c5-3896-3064-8999-3512ed1f2d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Argentine Dissemination of Homosexuality, 1890-1914","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704350","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":14120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We examine how two sociological traditions account for the role of femininities in social domination. The masculinities tradition theorizes gender as an independent structure of domination; consequently, femininities that complement hegemonic masculinities are treated as passively compliant in the reproduction of gender. In contrast, Patricia Hill Collins views cultural ideals of hegemonic femininity as simultaneously raced, classed, and gendered. This intersectional perspective allows us to recognize women striving to approximate hegemonic cultural ideals of femininity as actively complicit in reproducing a matrix of domination. We argue that hegemonic femininities reference a powerful location in the matrix from which some women draw considerable individual benefits (i.e., a femininity premium) while shoring up collective benefits along other dimensions of advantage. In the process, they engage in intersectional domination of other women and even some men. Our analysis re-enforces the utility of analyzing femininities and masculinities from within an intersectional feminist framework.","creator":["Laura T. Hamilton","Elizabeth A. Armstrong","J. Lotus Seeley","Elizabeth M. Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2019-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26870430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24c89f3e-b20d-3745-9950-81ffce2c9732"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26870430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hegemonic Femininities and Intersectional Domination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26870430","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15265,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[100656,100727]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Faith Wilding","Critical Art Ensemble"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce9dbf9-81e9-3edc-bc49-ee3293fac130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes on the Political Condition of Cyberfeminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778008","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":6361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O texto1 explora as rela\u00e7\u00f5es interdiscursivas entre as cria\u00e7\u00f5es do mundo privado e aquelas destinadas ao olhar p\u00fablico, questionando como realiza\u00e7\u00f5es \u00e0 margem da chamada Obra (conjunto das produ\u00e7\u00f5es reconhecidas publicamente) contribuem para a constru\u00e7\u00e3o da imagem identit\u00e1ria de seus art\u00edfices, no caso, duas excepcionais mulheres da cultura latino-americana da modernidade: Frida Kahlo e Clarice Lispector. This text explores the interdiscursive relations between private and public productions, interrogating the way in which those pieces which remain marginal to the publicly recognized works contribute to the construction of an identity for their authors, in this case two exceptional women in modern Latin American culture: Frida Kahlo and Clarice Lispector.","creator":["LUCIA HELENA VIANNA"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f48ffac-7687-3438-88e9-9870050b3f10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Tinta e sangue: o di\u00e1rio de Frida Kahlo e os 'quadros' de Clarice Lispector","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327268","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Griselda Pollock"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"499d43ca-14ef-3870-be26-f0462b8a8750"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23012707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"820","pageStart":"795","pagination":"pp. 795-820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Moments and Temporalities of the Avant-Garde \"in, of, and from the feminine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012707","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vincent W. Lloyd"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43250715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43250715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newblackfriars"}],"isPartOf":"New Blackfriars","issueNumber":"987","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radical Celibacy: Towards a Christian Postmodern Sexual Ethic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43250715","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":5540,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[91713,92010]],"Locations in B":[[16741,17042]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"L'int\u00e9r\u00eat des sciences sociales et humaines pour l'alimentation s'est d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 quasi simultan\u00e9ment dans les univers anglophones et francophones, mais selon des chemins diff\u00e9rents. \u00c0 partir des ann\u00e9es 2000 se d\u00e9veloppe en effet dans le monde anglo-saxon un mouvement appel\u00e9 food studies qui op\u00e8re sur le mod\u00e8le des cultural studies un recentrage th\u00e9matique pluridisciplinaire, \u00e0 l'oppos\u00e9 de l'approche europ\u00e9enne, et notamment fran\u00e7aise, qui privil\u00e9gie une perspective ouverte \u00e0 l'interdisciplinarit\u00e9 mais disciplinairement ancr\u00e9e. Cet article identifie trois polarisations disciplinaires : la premi\u00e8re sur la socio-anthropologie, la deuxi\u00e8me sur l'histoire et les civilisations et la troisi\u00e8me sur la g\u00e9ographie et l'agriculture. Il se propose d'analyser les dynamiques internes et externes \u00e0 l'oeuvre derri\u00e8re cette rapide th\u00e9matisation des \u00e9tudes sur l'alimentation. Il \u00e9tudie les relations qui se tissent entre les food studies et les diff\u00e9rents ancrages disciplinaires, les jeux de compl\u00e9mentarit\u00e9, de concurrences, mais aussi les risques et enjeux \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques pour ces deux voies de d\u00e9veloppement des \u00e9tudes sur l'alimentation. The interest of social sciences and humanities for food developed almost simultaneously in English and French speaking worlds, but in different ways. From the 2000s, a movement called food studies develops in the Anglo-Saxon world, which operates on the model of \"cultural studies\" a multidisciplinary thematic focus. In contrast, the European approach, including French, favours a perspective open to interdisciplinary but disciplinary anchored. This article landmark three disciplinary complexes centred on socio-anthropology, history and geography and agriculture. It analyse the internal and external dynamics at work behind this rapid theming of the research on socio-cultural aspects of food. He studies the relationships that develop between \"food studies\" and the different approaches rooted in disciplinary, complementary games, competitions, but also the risks and epistemol\u00f3gical issues of this two ways of development.","creator":["Jean-Pierre POULAIN"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44956073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00662399"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646834907"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235807"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d80e0189-cb41-3d78-b515-6e9e75367ffd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44956073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annesoci1940"}],"isPartOf":"L'Ann\u00e9e sociologique (1940\/1948-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"SOCIO-ANTHROPOLOGIE DU \u00ab FAIT ALIMENTAIRE \u00bb OU \"FOOD STUDIES.\" LES DEUX CHEMINS D'UNE TH\u00c9MATISATION SCIENTIFIQUE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44956073","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the construction of multiple gendered and national identities in the Israeli army. In Israel, hegemonic masculinity is identified with the masculinity of the Jewish combat soldier and is perceived as the emblem of good citizenship. This identity, I argue, assumes a central role in shaping a hierarchal order of gendered and civic identities that reflects and reproduces social stratification and reconstructs differential modes of participation in, and belonging to, the Israeli state. In-depth interviews with two marginalized groups in the Israeli army-women in \"masculine\" roles and male soldiers in blue-collar jobs-suggest two discernible practices of identity. While women in \"masculine\" roles structure their gender and national identities according to the masculinity of the combat soldier, the identity practices of male soldiers in blue-collar jobs challenge this hegemonic masculinity and its close link with citizenship in Israel. However, while both identity practices are empowering for the groups in question, neither undermines the hegemonic order, for the military's practice of \"limited inclusion\" prohibits the development of a collective consciousness that would challenge the differentiated structure of citizenship.","creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09daf87d-b707-340b-b720-c2aee79948f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing Identities at the Margins: Masculinities and Citizenship in the Israeli Army","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121532","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432819,432893]],"Locations in B":[[52933,53007]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Raka Ray"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b07b780a-91ce-3482-b861-2e3c73c6501d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","History - Historical methodology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Is the Revolution Missing or Are We Looking in the Wrong Places?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.459","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":4357,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[25460,25548]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael\u00a0J. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/421426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b948c71-10fd-37b1-b489-5fcd65b7799b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/421426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/421426","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":6407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robin Peel"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15694070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"668143808"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a332dc35-3d52-30ef-ac9d-f86f6f6efb72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fordmadoxford"}],"isPartOf":"International Ford Madox Ford Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"FORD AND THE SIMPLE LIFE: GENDER, SUBJECTIVITY AND CLASS IN A SATIRIZED UTOPIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871006","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Men are overwhelmingly responsible for sexual harassment against women in the workplace. However, the literature also points to less typical manifestations, including sexual harassment by men of other men and by women of men or other women. This article examines these atypical forms of sexual harassment, drawing on a census of all formal sexual harassment complaints lodged with Australian equal opportunity commissions over a six-month period. The analysis reveals some important distinctions and similarities across groups of atypical complaints, as well as between atypical groups and \u2018classic\u2019 sexual harassment complaints where men harass women. The article contributes to the relatively undeveloped literature on these less visible forms of sexual harassment and highlights both theoretical and pragmatic challenges in better understanding workplace sexual harassment \u2018at the margins\u2019.","creator":["Paula McDonald","Sara Charlesworth"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26655451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04d7e834-b6c2-3b0a-912b-c8a7a52a092e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26655451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Workplace sexual harassment at the margins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26655451","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews, this article delineates a process through which members of an Orthodox Jewish neighborhood in Los Angeles unintentionally delegate boundary work and membership-identification to anonymous others in everyday life. Living in the midst of a non-Jewish world, orthodox men are often approached by others, both Jews and non-Jews, who categorize them as \"religious Jews\" based on external marks such as the yarmulke and attire. These interactions, varying from mundane interactions to anti-Semitic incidents, are then tacitly anticipated by members even when they are not attending to their \"Jewishness\"\u2014when being a \"Jew\" is interactionally invisible. Through this case, I argue that, in addition to conceptualizing boundaries and identifications as either emerging in performance or institutionally given and stable, the study of boundaries should also chart the sites in which members anticipate categorization and the way these anticipations play out in everyday life.","creator":["Iddo Tavory"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c78d9df0-2a79-3c9d-9a90-ec7c4811c354"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Of yarmulkes and categories: Delegating boundaries and the phenomenology of interactional expectation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587558","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11713,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478839]],"Locations in B":[[68094,68154]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan Wallach Scott"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3111fcc0-be01-3e27-a664-623faf51f40d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"702","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-702","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comment on Hawkesworth's \"Confounding Gender\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175251","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Fran\u00e7oise de Graffigny's mid-eighteenth-century play Phaza features a main character who is unknowingly crossed dressed as male. The text provides a rich starting point for exploring questions of gender identity and performance. This article situates Phaza within the fairy-tale tradition in which women authors played a major role. Its analysis draws upon philosophies of narrative identity and theories of gender to show that identity comprises both permanence and performance. Reading Graffigny can make an important difference in our understanding of gender, authorship, and relations between the sexes in Enlightenment France. Phaza's masquerade sheds light on the ways in which women authors of the era approached and assumed various gender identities. Eighteenth-century texts like Phaza reveal a lineage of ideas that continue to influence feminist thought today and will do so in the future.","creator":["Heidi Bostic"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4e07804-ddce-31b3-960a-27a41f724f3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Difference She Makes: Staging Gender Identity in Graffigny's \"Phaza\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337280","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9053,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116367,116523]],"Locations in B":[[37210,37367]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Becky Francis"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4128707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0a705b1-be93-3172-a910-c0b70d3dcbbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4128707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4128707","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"More than any other recent social theorist, constructing a disquisition on Butler's ideas draws the writer into speculating on the formation of their own intellectual grammar, perhaps to confront the disconcerting truth of how often their own cherished analytical rationality is broken up by glimpses into the imagination of more provocative thinkers. I have come to the conclusion that it is not so much that we self-consciously assemble all of the resources for the making of research imaginaries as those vivid ideas (and frequently their authors) come to haunt us. Butler's work has been of this 'disturbing' order. The 'unconscious of intellectual work' is worthy of more attention than I can offer here but it is important to bear this in mind in the course of the following. In this paper I will describe the concept of 'performativity' and its theoretical elaboration in Gender Trouble, Bodies that Matter and subsequent and secondary texts. Performativity conceptualises the paradox of identity as apparently fixed but inherently unstable, revealing (gender) norms requiring continual maintenance. Her works thus contribute a new conceptual grammar in the inter-related concepts of performativity and citationality to denote a reading of gender not as essence nor socialisation, but as the consequence of the performative (i.e. recurring) 'citations' of gender thought as actions that institute 'girling', for example. Butler's insistence on seeing gender as constitutive (as literally making the material of the embodied self) signifies the social and cultural forces that come to sculpt femininity and masculinity as norms on the body and the psyche. In arguing that the Butlerian performative has complicated a reading of the discursive and material conditions of the processes of (gender) identification, I will review my own poststructuralist vocabulary with its focus on the sociality of subjectification as a way to interpret and interrogate the power and limitations of Butler's ideas. Despite the awkwardness entailed in transposing performativity to embodied practices of classed distinction, her work continues to expand the ethnographic imaginary. My exegesis of performativity also serves another purpose, as a methodological comment about academic praxis, as I simultaneously open up and share in the modes of translation used in coming to appreciate Butler's important and exhilarating theoretical landscape.","creator":["Valerie Hey"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8121592a-1f93-3338-8a89-72d1ef6b118a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Politics of Performative Resignification: Translating Judith Butler's Theoretical Discourse and Its Potential for a Sociology of Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036155","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9948,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[48406,48614],[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[15859,16071],[28787,28931]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1917 Marcel Duchamp purchased a mass-produced urinal, signed it 'R. Mutt', titled it \"Fountain,\" submitted it to the American Society of Independent Artists. While scholars often interpret it as a surrogate for the female body, this study contends that \"Fountain\" more appropriately may be understood as a reinscription of the all-male space of the public men's room. In both Paris and New York at the turn of the century, men frequented \"pissoirs\" in order to establish sexual contact with other men. Situating Duchamp's readymade within the contested history of these public conveniences as well as invoking both Freud's theory of sexual object choice and Judith Butler's notion of gender performativity, this essay argues that \"Fountain\" transformed the history of art by establishing a correspondence between avant-garde artistic production and queer sexualities.","creator":["Paul B. Franklin"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9518edc8-378b-3570-b0c0-dc5fb8c798c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Object Choice: Marcel Duchamp's Fountain and the Art of Queer Art History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600460","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":17916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a monitoring of 16 official social media profiles of three Danish jihadi-Salafi organizations over a five-year period, this article explores how these jihadi-Salafists motivate women to take part in defensive jihad (jih\u0101d al-daf \u2019a). The issue is explored through the analytical lens of discourse, and intersectionality theory as well as the theoretical perspective on affect and the social construction of gender. The article finds that women are motivated to take part in jihad by referencing classical doctrines of defensive jihad and by means of records of charismatic female fighters from the time of the Prophet. However, the female-specific motivation narratives are as contemporary and empowering as they are regressive and founded in classical sources such as the Quran, ahadith and S\u012bra. The motivation narratives show strong push-back against Western feminism and counter-narrate Western views of Muslim women as oppressed, passive victims of male-dominated ideologies. Instead they (de-)construct \u2018the Muslim woman\u2019 in motivation narratives in which jihadi-Salafism is an important source not only of authenticity but also of strong self-identity and (em)power(ment).","creator":["Sara Jul Jacobsen"],"datePublished":"2019-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26756700","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"244204101"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014200073"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfaf1e46-a7ca-3749-b581-86e20c39461e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26756700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persponterr"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Terrorism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Terrorism Research Initiative","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Calling on Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26756700","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Female-Specific Motivation Narratives in Danish Online Jihad Propaganda"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79295402-eab6-32e5-809c-e7ef1350cab1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Education - Formal education"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977133","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":7138,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[478793,478839],[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[16810,16868],[28867,28976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the symbiotic relationship between European modernity, its vision of woman and water. The union of these three metaconcepts is consecrated by the Ovidian story of Narcissus and his other, Echo. The West finally found itself completely through Hegel, the Ur-narcissist, who explains the immutable link between that European monopoly, history (by which he means the potential for becoming modern), and the sea. The narcissism of modernity is the great theme of Marx and Engels in the Communist Manifesto, which shows how the bourgeoisie seeks to remake the entire world in its own image. Psychoanalysis, through the writings of Ferenczi, joined in cementing the connection, likening woman to the primal sea to which the male ever yearns to return. And Foucault suggests a potential conclusion from this metaconceptual constellation: that Man, a Western creation, may well disappear like a face drawn on a sandy beach.","creator":["Alexis Wick"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77f8ab92-7a7e-36ab-bc27-744f2cc6b51e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"103","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narcissus: woman, water and the West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819668","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy C. Jurik"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5fae544-7dcf-34d2-9a43-de61ce59259a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"824","pageStart":"820","pagination":"pp. 820-824","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175343","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":2004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miriam Peskowitz"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1465996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"726","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-726","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identification Questions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465996","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":8635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay draws on Adorno's concept of the non-identical in conjunction with Lacan's concept of the Real to propose a \"theoretical outline of the subject\" as central for feminist political theorizing. A theoretical outline of the subject recognizes the limits of theorizing, the moment where meaning fails and we are confronted with the impossibility to fully grasp the subject. At the same time, it insists on the importance of a coherent (if not whole) subject through which to effect transformations in the sociopolitical sphere. Since the non-identical is more grounded in the material world than the Real, and the Real allows us more than the non-identical to grasp the anxieties and desires that lead to totalizing theories, it is a complementary Adornian-Lacanian theoretical framework that holds a central promise for feminist political theorizing.","creator":["Claudia Leeb"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e190c214-889d-309c-a5e7-de6b0c86ed1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20452637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Theoretical Outline of the Subject: The Centrality of Adorno and Lacan for Feminist Political Theorizing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452637","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[96813,96922]],"Locations in B":[[52895,53011]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sally Markowitz"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"970c54f3-66c0-3449-9ccd-5a3a4316ba8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pelvic Politics: Sexual Dimorphism and Racial Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175447","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11695,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[71037,71135]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05e1\u05e1 \u05e2\u05dc \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8\u05e4\u05d9 \u05e9\u05e0\u05e2\u05e8\u05da \u05d1\u05e7\u05e8\u05d1 \u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc. \u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05de\u05ea\u05de\u05e7\u05d3 \u05d1\u05de\u05d5\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1 \u05e9\u05e2\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea, \u05e9\u05d1\u05d4\u05dd \u05d3\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dc \u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3, \u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 (\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05e9\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2) \u05db\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea. \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05de\u05ea\u05d7\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3, \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05e0\u05e1\u05d4 \u05dc\u05e9\u05e8\u05d8\u05d8 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05ea\u05e7\u05e4\u05ea \u05de\u05d4\u05dd. \u05d4\u05d8\u05e2\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e2\u05ea \u05d1\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e9\u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3 \u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05db\u05e0\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d5\u05db\u05d7\u05dc\u05d5\u05e4\u05d4 \u05dc\u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea \u05de\u05e1\u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05e1\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05de\u05e0\u05d8\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d4\u05d9\u05e4\u05e8-\u05e8\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05d3\u05ea. \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05e0\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05de\u05de\u05d5\u05de\u05e9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d9\u05d3\u05df \u05d1\u05e9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d3\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05dd: \u05e2\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d2\u05de\u05d9\u05e9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d5\u05d6\u05de\u05df; \u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d9\u05d5\u05e6\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea-\u05de\u05e9\u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea; \u05d5\u05e9\u05de\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d2\u05d1\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5 \u05d5\u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05e8\u05ea \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05dd \u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9. \u05db\u05dc \u05d0\u05d7\u05ea \u05de\u05d3\u05e8\u05db\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e9\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e5 \u05e8\u05e4\u05dc\u05e7\u05e1\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9, \u05d4\u05d1\u05d0 \u05dc\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d5\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05e9\u05de\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05df \u05e2\u05dc \u05e2\u05d9\u05e1\u05d5\u05e7\u05df. \u05d7\u05dc\u05e7 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e8\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d1\u05d5\u05d7\u05df \u05d5\u05de\u05e0\u05ea\u05d7 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d3\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d5\u05e9\u05d5\u05d6\u05e8 \u05d1\u05d4\u05df \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e8\u05e4\u05dc\u05e7\u05e1\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9. \u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05db\u05da \u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d8\u05e2\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e9\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05ea \u05dc\u05d4\u05ea\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1 \u05d1\u05d5 \u05d5\u05dc\u05e9\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d4\u05df \u05d0\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05e9\u05d2 \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d9, \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05df \u05de\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5. This paper focuses on one aspect of an ethnographic research study of dance teachers in Israel. It examines the different ways in which female dance teachers speak of dance and their views on the studio and the body as home. It goes on to explore, through various prisms, how these spaces become home to them. The main argument presented is that \"dance as home\" is expressed by these teachers as opposition and alternative to a commercialized, hyper-rationalized and institutionalized social reality. Female dance teachers create home in three ways: (a) a flexible forming of space and time; (b) meaning-making bodily actions; and (c) a construction of rigid boundaries and private spaces in the studio setting. Each of these courses of action also involves a reflexive effort, which reveals itself in the narratives teachers create for themselves regarding their occupation. These elements enable me to argue that the concept \"dance and body as home\" stretches and changes the more general, self-evident idea of home.","creator":["\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05dc \u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05e8","Hodel Ophir"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41033bbd-9612-3a37-8692-7d82533f2dee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Dance and Body as Home: Dance Teachers' Experience \/ \u05e2\u05dc \u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d5\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05db\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea: \u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442957","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d2","wordCount":12597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Molly Anne Rothenberg"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"749","pageStart":"719","pagination":"pp. 719-749","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Articulating Social Agency in \"Our Mutual Friend\": Problems with Performances, Practices, and Political Efficacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029940","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":13487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464665,464780]],"Locations in B":[[23999,24110]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo afirma que la movilizaci\u00f3n del tema afrodescendiente en Cuba produce un saber sobre el momento de reforma del modelo econ\u00f3mico en la isla, lo que implica un cambio social con repercusiones importantes para el significado vivido de la racialidad. Argumenta que esa movilizaci\u00f3n se puede ver metaf\u00f3ricamente como una coreograf\u00eda social, un performance, en un escenario constituido por una larga historia tanto nacional como regional que determina las expectativas y percepci\u00f3n del desempe\u00f1o de la acci\u00f3n. Tomando la Articulaci\u00f3n Regional Afrodescendiente de Am\u00e9rica Latina y el Caribe\u2014Cap\u00edtulo Cuba (ARAAC-Cuba) como un estudio de caso, plantea que una mirada afrofeminista al performance es importante para entender las posibilidades del movimiento de los int\u00e9rpretes\/activistas en coordinaci\u00f3n con la movilizaci\u00f3n en la regi\u00f3n latinoamericana. El trabajo est\u00e1 basado en observaci\u00f3n-participativa y entrevistas abiertas individuales y grupales en La Habana, Cuba, durante los preparativos del Decenio Internacional para los Afrodescendientes (2015\u20132024) otorgado por la Organizaci\u00f3n de las Naciones Unidas. El estudio ofrece una reflexi\u00f3n sobre el papel de la academia en la producci\u00f3n de saberes sobre los afrodescendientes en general y durante el decenio en particular. This article affirms that the mobilization of Afro-decendency in Cuba produces knowledge about the moment of economic reform on the island, which implies a social change with important consequences for the lived meaning of race. It argues that this mobilization can be seen metaphorically as social choreography, performed on a stage constituted by a long national and regional history that determines the expectations and perceptions of the performed action. Taking the Articulaci\u00f3n Regional Afrodescendiente de Am\u00e9rica Latina y el Caribe\u2014Cap\u00edtulo Cuba (ARAAC-Cuba) as a case study, the article proposes that a black feminist approach to performance is important for understanding the possibilities of the movements of the performers\/activists in coordination with regional mobilization in Latin America. The work is based on participant observation and individual and group interviews in Havana, Cuba, during preparations for the inauguration of the UN International Decade for People of African Descent (2015\u20132024). The study offers a reflection on the role of academia in the production of knowledge about afrodescendent people in general and during the decade in particular.","creator":["MAYA J. BERRY"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26725396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03614441"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54052869"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27c24264-ebfa-3a60-90ae-758a0cec5a4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26725396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cubanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"48","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La movilizaci\u00f3n del tema afrodescendiente en La Habana, 2012\u20132014","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26725396","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Un estudio de las posibilidades del performance"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victor J. Seidler","Hortensia Moreno","Carlos Amador"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afe6ced8-c291-3be1-989b-652f37957527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Los hombres heterosexuales y su vida emocional","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625345","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":13247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kim Marie Phillips"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e1e1127-451f-3cb6-8355-59f3afa0f3ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/175940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Where Should We Be Going with Medieval Women and Gender?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175940","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":3195,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[4982,5061]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Margaret Cho rose to fame as the star of the first television sitcom to feature an all Asian American cast. Her one-woman show, I'm the One That I Want, recounts that disastrous experience, as it also maps American culture as a series of segregated spaces. Lee's article explores Cho's construction of her bodily excesses-her dirty vagina, collapsed bladder, inability to be decidable as either gay or straight-and theorizes these bodily tactics in terms of a spatial rather than temporal dialectic.","creator":["Rachel C. Lee"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4488556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9730842a-be6f-3dad-81f9-208c05fc71ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4488556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Where's My Parade?\": Margaret Cho and the Asian American Body in Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4488556","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":16745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En Memorial de Maria Moura (1992), \u00f9ltimo libro escrito por la brasilera Rachel de Queiroz, somos testigos de la creaci\u00f3n de una comunidad de proscritos bajo el mando de la mujer cuyo nombre da t\u00edtulo a la novela. La literatura latinoamericana sobre bandidos rurales pre-modernos est\u00e1 dominada por hombres tanto en sus personajes como en sus autores y es por ello que esta narraci\u00f3n resulta de particular importancia ya que es un texto sobre una bandida, escrita por una mujer. Nos acercamos a la novela para analizar c\u00f3mo y por qu\u00e9 Maria Moura crea una comunidad fuera de la ley y con el objeto de indagar qu\u00e9 sucede a los cuerpos que habita el poder. Argumentamos que, a trav\u00e9s de las consecuencias que sufre Moura por haber obtenido respeto y poder, el texto alude a una cr\u00edtica en cuanto a la forma en que el g\u00e9nero \u2013y c\u00f3mo lo entendemos\u2013, nos interviene, limita y determina. In Memorial de Maria Moura, the last book written in 1992 by Brazilian author Rachel de Queiroz, we are witness to the creation of a society of outlaws under the mandate of the woman whose name is also the novel's tide. Latin American literature about rural pre-modern bandits is dominated by men in both its characters and its authors, and thus comes the particular significance of this text, in which we encounter a female bandit written by a woman. I approach the novel in order to analyze how and why Maria Moura creates this outlaw community and to examine what happens to the bodies that power inhabits. I argue that, given the consequences suffered by Moura after obtaining so much respect and power, the text suggests a critique in terms of how gender \u2014and the way we understand it\u2013, intervenes, limits and determines us.","creator":["Sonia Barrios Tinoco"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9356f05-cdae-3c8f-bf6a-3abd1a7017ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"83","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Maria Moura, una mujer fuera de la ley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474341","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4769,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[13321,13497]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth A. Clark"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3654496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7a2c5d2-9d6e-3d60-aeff-15ea88569f4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3654496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Society of Church History","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Women, Gender, and the Study of Christian History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3654496","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":15458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478195]],"Locations in B":[[8756,77290]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Each of the eight movements of Johnson's performance reflects a different aspect of his identity around which his queerness pivots. The movements range from drag to black masculinity to how Johnson negotiated race, gender, and sexuality in Ghana. Johnson's performance-utilizing slides, music, voice-overs, and dance-encouraged audience participation.","creator":["E. Patrick Johnson"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1147012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"527b7f73-9234-3341-ac6b-a0cf0b38fe73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1147012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Strange Fruit: A Performance about Identity Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1147012","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":13218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mihaela Moscaliuc"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41402834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93293fce-73f7-3f82-a1f9-75e58b6f613c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41402834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on Behalf of the University of Georgia and the Georgia Review","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41402834","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":2052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Huntington"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"787a216e-dc5b-386c-9063-f1ea8ec05904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20011193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Between the Scylla of Discursivity and the Charybdis of Pantextualism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011193","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4083,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503621,503693]],"Locations in B":[[26771,26840]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Kramer"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57880992-5e3e-3216-a197-690448201afb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tracing the Vanishing Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146223","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":2366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Eugene Borowitz's treatment of sexuality correlates with his developing thought on what covenant demands of liberal Jews. Borowitz's understanding of the Jewish self is expressed as a kind of dynamic equilibrium, a \u201cdialectic\u201d between the promptings of the (historically constituted) individual conscience and the demands of the covenant between God and Israel. Questions around sexuality make the tensions inherent in the Borowitzian dialectic especially acute, because they involve both urgent questions of social duty and equally urgent personal desires and commitments. Borowitz's thought undergoes a protracted, complicated evolution on these intertwined questions of sexuality, autonomy, and community.","creator":["Rachel Adler","Robin Podolsky"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.1.0114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23341777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b9638a-7365-31e7-be47-31d931c6880d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.1.0114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjewiethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Jewish Ethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexuality, Autonomy, and Community in the Writings of Eugene Borowitz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.1.0114","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":7548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emma Renold"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23719663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719663","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Srinivas Aravamudan"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lady Mary Wortley Montagu in the Hammam: Masquerade, Womanliness, and Levantinization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030261","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":16024,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499406,499490]],"Locations in B":[[72644,72728]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leticia I. Romo"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4428ef8a-6614-39c2-b07e-e308db118149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"166","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"COLA DE LAGARTIJA\": THE CORRUPTIVE POWER OF THE HERMAPHRODITIC BODY IN THE NATION-BUILDING PROCESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808687","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10805,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[2121,2312]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Wicke"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodern Identities and the Politics of the (Legal) Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303531","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10637,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[68983,69150]],"Locations in B":[[4649,4816]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miriam David","Amanda Coffey","Paul Connolly","Anoop Nayak","Diane Reay"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccbaa561-bbfe-3d93-885d-777f6bf4e5a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Troubling Identities: Reflections on Judith Butler's Philosophy for the Sociology of Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036153","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":1813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Projects drawing upon Do-It-Yourself (DIY) culture and its relationship to third-wave feminism and post-feminism have received scant scholarly attention so far. Socially-engaged artists that employ DIY strategies, such as yarn bombing, rely on digital communities of like-minded people, mainly women, to bring attention to socially important issues such as gun control or use of contraceptives. Politic and civic actions involving public textile art projects are often considered explicitly feminist and therefore do not require additional examination, attention, and analysis vis-\u00e0-vis feminist ideas. My research looks at the intersections between the digital communities created through practice of DIY, such as www.countercraft.org and various versions of feminism that members of the DIY and digital communities adhere to. It looks at how these communities utilize implicitly or explicitly understood feminisms (plural is intentional) and empowerment while practicing craft techniques that are traditionally considered part of patriarchal society and thus presumably contributing to the disenfranchising of women. In addition, I look at how DIY-related websites, blogs, and discussion groups involve women in the political realm through use of seemingly traditional and apolitical techniques of knitting, sewing, crocheting, etc. Using contemporary feminist scholarship, and scholarship on digital communities, I argue that women use fiber-based materials to mitigate what they perceive to be a radical position of the social protesters. Yarn bombing and other public actions that involve needlework became popular in the early millennium due to the nature of third-wave feminism which aims to both empower women and negotiate femininity as an acceptable social standard.","creator":["Alla Myzelev"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24396693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08833680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c2cbc49-db95-3093-b95d-c139ca27c603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24396693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"materialculture"}],"isPartOf":"Material Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"International Society for Landscape, Place & Material Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creating Digital Materiality: Third-Wave Feminism, Public Art, and Yarn Bombing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24396693","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[194553,194669]],"Locations in B":[[35275,35391]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Paternotte"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43124243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f2cc168-7ccc-33b1-a71f-12f174f9d49b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43124243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne queer en France et en Europe. Hybridation et effets de circulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43124243","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":3882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Qu\u2019apporte le genre dans le champ des \u00e9tudes de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise de la Renaissance, et pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment pour l\u2019\u00e9tude des Euvres de Louise Lab\u00e9 ? Une \u00e9volution des pratiques est \u00e0 constater depuis les ann\u00e9es 1980 sous cette influence : l\u2019illusion autobiographique a r\u00e9gress\u00e9 au profit d\u2019une analyse des postures genr\u00e9es qui a permis de mettre au jour un p\u00e9trarquisme critique. Ce qui est troublant est que l\u2019interrogation sur le genre et les performances qui lui sont corr\u00e9l\u00e9es sont d\u00e9j\u00e0 pr\u00e9sentes dans les textes de Louise Lab\u00e9 en 1555. Le d\u00e9ni d\u2019existence de l\u2019autrice Louise Lab\u00e9 (2006) a-t-il un rapport avec ceci ? Le genre aurait-il des effets inattendus ? What bring the gender studies in the field of studies of the sixteenth century French literature, specially for the study of Louise Lab\u00e9\u2019s Euvres ? An evolution of the practices is to be noticed since the 1980s under this influence. The autobiographical illusion declined for the benefit of an analysis of the gendered positions who allowed to bring to light a critical petrarquism. What is amazing is that the interrogation on gender and the performances which are correlated is already present in Louise Lab\u00e9\u2019s texts in 1555. Has the denial of existence of the author Louise Lab\u00e9 (2006) something to do with this ? Would gender have unexpected effects ?","creator":["Mich\u00e8le Cl\u00e9ment"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1121953X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560432662"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10b3566f-ee06-3c15-addb-26a56c2ebdd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90021866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"francofonia"}],"isPartOf":"Francofonia","issueNumber":"74","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki s.r.l.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LES EUVRES <\/em> DE LOUISE LAB\u00c9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021866","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"QUAND LE GENRE D\u00c9RANGE"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Fuster Retali"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f5aa9f5-058f-3991-a52b-8e0eedbe923e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La Virgen y la Prostituta: Im\u00e1genes Contrapuestas Del Deseo Masculino a Trav\u00e9s Del Cine Argentino","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741684","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Roberts"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c04028f1-2a74-3e8a-a5e2-0dec1d56d713"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between Two \"Darknesses\": The Adoptive Condition in \"Ceremony\" and \"Jasmine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195372","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay I explore the dynamic between Luce Irigaray and Maurice Merleau-Ponty as it unfolds in An Ethics of Sexual Difference (1993). Irigaray's strategy of mimesis is a powerful feminist tool, both philosophically and politically. Regarding textual engagement as analogous for relations between self and other beyond the text, I deliver a cautionary message: mimetic strategy is powerful but runs the risk of silencing the voice of the other.","creator":["Susan Kozel"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a0400de-db1e-3a57-96bf-d57d2e3f3063"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Diabolical Strategy of Mimesis: Luce Irigaray's Reading of Maurice Merleau-Ponty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810324","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7634,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477951]],"Locations in B":[[45729,45832]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leonardo Garc\u00eda-Pab\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75225fac-84c3-3ab5-8fd3-ee71a6c1d145"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4531291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"58","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sensibilidades Callejeras: El trabajo est\u00e9tico y pol\u00edtico de \"Mujeres Creando\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531291","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6659,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[397679,397946]],"Locations in B":[[29350,29617]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, Andrea McKenzie argues that the scatological and bawdy humor for which early eighteenth-century highwayman lives were so notorious functioned as a particularly pungent form of social and political commentary. The invocation of both blackguard protagonists and authors reinforced the element of social shaming and inversion, while the common trope of the \u201cbiting the biter\u201d (implying that it is no crime to con, outwit, or despoil those who prey on others) was readily adaptable to a Tory or \u201cCountry\u201d satirical program. She also aims to shed new light on an old and vexed question: to what degree were representations of social inversion normative or subversive?","creator":["Andrea McKenzie"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2013.76.2.235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6ddeb08-5e90-3ecf-a7ef-0cac1fcbe5c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hlq.2013.76.2.235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Biting the Biter: Sex, Scatology, and Satirical Inversion in Augustan Highwayman \u201cLives\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2013.76.2.235","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":12249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Olga Bezhanova"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c53a4ad3-e1aa-3819-8cc0-e20b0d85ef71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"170","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INTERSEX, MONSTROSITY AND THE CIVIL WAR IN ALICIA GIM\u00c9NEZ BARTLETT'S \"DONDE NADIE TE ENCUENTRE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808768","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8063,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[431288,431620],[442609,442808],[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[13904,14236],[43539,43738],[45525,45605]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KAREN BASSI"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b93029a8-81f9-30b6-a2df-a40c07c6979f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"HELEN AND THE DISCOURSE OF DENIAL IN STESICHORUS' PALINODE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309576","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11232,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[84360,84576]],"Locations in B":[[55372,55588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vivian M. Patraka"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4e0e2f7-ac61-318e-bcb1-3bad72e63cb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Binary Terror and Feminist Performance: Reading Both Ways","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389223","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9552,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471775]],"Locations in B":[[54587,54657]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alison Lewis"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23975639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"910b3f98-65db-31da-ad46-bd026bbc2fa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23975639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Die Verk\u00f6rper(lich)ung der Freiheit: Geschlecht, K\u00f6rper und Macht in den Romanen Monika Marons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23975639","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Mossman"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea93868f-0c54-32d9-a73d-3b518bee5ae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"659","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-659","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Visible Disability in the College Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250769","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":7299,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[41889,41941]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristelle L. Baskins"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23925020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"(IN)FAMOUS MEN: THE CONTINENCE OF SCIPIO AND FORMATIONS OF MASCULINITY IN FIFTEENTH-CENTURY TUSCAN DOMESTIC PAINTING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925020","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay addresses the conditions and limits of artistic interventions in the contemporary landscape of border security. It argues that the theatrical rituals of border security \u2014 scanning, screening, verifying identity \u2014 have become domesticated and all-but-invisible in our daily scopic regimes. At the same time, the essay suggests that surprising, enchanting encounters with the techniques and technologies of security can interrupt border sequences and create invigorated possibilities for public engagement. An ethics of unanticipated worlds is proposed as an alternative to political action as always proximate to observable and visible violence. In a world where rituals of border security increasingly operate precisely by pre-deciding and pre-empting in advance, art that works in the absence of certainty and decidability offers a crucial window through which to evaluate and respond.","creator":["Louise Amoore","Alexandra Hall"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d99c28b-dc72-334b-8469-1698f0a947f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Border theatre: on the arts of security and resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251351","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11243,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514353,514430]],"Locations in B":[[61720,61796]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the nexus between gender and paternity around 1800. It shows that the emerging emphasis on the normative authority of the body, crystallized most poignantly in the concept of Geschlechtscharakter, gave rise to new and acute anxieties relating to fatherhood. In the wake of the French Revolution, paternity operated in a void: it could no longer rely on transcendental truth claims to legitimize social systems of order, and it could not yet take recourse to today's scientific methods. This crisis of paternity found expression in Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre. My analysis demonstrates that Goethe's novel first depicts ambiguities of patrilineal descent and then resolves them by taking recourse to homosocial bonding.","creator":["Elisabeth Krimmer"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5963cdd-d91e-383a-bc3a-e803092395d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3252257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mama's Baby, Papa's Maybe: Paternity and Bildung in Goethe's \"Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252257","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":10348,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[59788,59822]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mara Coelho de Souza Lago"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80d9f3b1-03e9-3cdb-898d-e25b3cb589fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Apresenta\u00e7\u00e1o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328197","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Traditional readings of Hardy which focus on romantic or idyllic themes may be aligned with traditional theologies which take no account of material realities for women. Alternative literary readings can challenge the foundations of such theologies. Using Judith Butler's work, this article argues that Hardy performs feminine genders through appropriating the subjectivity of his female characters. Their undeserved suffering and deaths are punishments for sexual misdemeanours, meted out by an ambivalent deity in the shape of Hardy's First Cause, or Providence. Fictional representations are politically and theologically situated, and feminists may wish to concur that any deity active in the material world may be similarly ambivalent.","creator":["Sarah Nicholson"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE WOMAN PAYS: DEATH AND THE AMBIVALENCE OF PROVIDENCE IN HARDY'S NOVELS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926845","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6295,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[443290,443454],[445323,445410],[446537,446619]],"Locations in B":[[4153,4317],[4390,4477],[4764,4847]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Courtnie N. Wolfgang"],"datePublished":"2013-07-04","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.39.1.0052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9032651-8239-32c8-b89f-c2f34ead8397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/visuartsrese.39.1.0052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Productive Uncertainties: Deleuze|Guattari, Feminist Theory, and Disciplinary Boundary Crossings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.39.1.0052","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[42072,42136]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANNE CLARK BARTLETT"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddc9ef41-aa08-34d2-89b3-0cb94babbb9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870451","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":1424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Candice M. Jenkins"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.4.0621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19a54357-9865-39df-ae2e-c560c667e694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.58.4.0621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"645","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-645","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"New Bourgeoisie, Old Bodies: Performing Post\u2013Civil Rights Black Privilege in Tar Baby<\/em> and School Daze<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.4.0621","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":10931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOSEPH LITVAK"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3169dd24-029e-36df-bb71-4fc8c8ccc464"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STRANGE GOURMET: TASTE, WASTE, PROUST","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533151","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9392,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[515047,515119]],"Locations in B":[[55923,55990]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynda L. Coon"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00387134"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bae30c5f-d43b-31aa-a567-edee84c2f1fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20466526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"speculum"}],"isPartOf":"Speculum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466526","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":1048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diana Hume George"],"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b87f27bb-287f-3e6a-85f0-065fc1717bc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4021295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sister Survivors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021295","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":3346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Gilroy"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02763605"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c46617bf-9ff6-3a46-b64a-b21078990f40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacmusiresej"}],"isPartOf":"Black Music Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sounds Authentic: Black Music, Ethnicity, and the Challenge of a \"Changing\" Same","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779262","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11090,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[427900,428127]],"Locations in B":[[36796,37019]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Deleuze's ethics constitutes the core of his philosophy, which proposes a post-humanistic but robust nomadic vision of the subject that respects the complexity of our times while avoiding the pitfalls of postmodern and other forms of relativism. Deleuze's neo-Spinozist ethics rests on an active relational ontology that looks for the ways in which otherness prompts, mobilises and allows for flows of affirmation of values and forces which are not yet sustained by the current conditions. Insofar as the conditions need to be brought about or actualised by collective efforts to induce qualitative transformations in our interactions, it requires the praxis of affirmative ethics. The process of becoming-minor, which necessarily involves becoming-woman, is central to this pragmatic ethical project that includes human as well as non-human actors. This paper addresses this ethics in terms of ontological relationality, affectivity and endurance.","creator":["Rosi Braidotti"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d342eda-a36c-3fda-9eca-0b0515c810b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nomadic Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331553","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The complex interplay between dress and identity has long been a subject of analysis in several fields of study, but until recently, the approach to gender in archaeological mortuary contexts has tended to default to a reductionist binary structure.The concept of intercategorical intersectionality (McCall Signs, 30(3), 1771-1800, 2005) as applied to dress and its material correlates both confounds and challenges this problematic and restricted view of gender in prehistoric societies. Data from an area of Europe in which Iron Age populations marked an interconnected set of social roles through the medium of personal adornment in mortuary contexts reveal significant ambiguities, including two related and apparently significant patterns: the relative under-representation of adult males as compared to females (with a correspondingly large \"indeterminate\" gender category) and what appears to be an exclusively (and improbably) \"female\" subadult elite group buried in tumuli. The complex interdigitization of gender with other social roles in mortuary contexts suggests that our interpretations of the early Iron Age burial program must be correspondingly flexible to do justice to this intersectional complexity.","creator":["Bettina Arnold"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1803a938-8b3e-3c6c-80a5-0041fab57bd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"853","pageStart":"832","pagination":"pp. 832-853","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Belts vs. Blades: the Binary Bind in Iron Age Mortuary Contexts in Southwest Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967043","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Past studies of Oceanic masculinities have tended to see masculinity in the singular, through the lens of unchanging cultural traditions, wherein types of men were iconic of cultural differences. This special issue considers masculinities in the plural, both within and between cultures, exploring the relations between hegemonic and subordinate masculinities and how masculinities are configured in the context of colonial histories, militarism, and globalization. It connects a historical and relational approach to masculinities to embodied experience and individual and collective memories across the diversity of Oceania.","creator":["Margaret Jolly"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3b29d87-7907-32c1-bf85-abbb20d80a23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Moving Masculinities: Memories and Bodies Across Oceania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724786","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BRITTA MCEWEN"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8067dfca-f7c5-33ff-b6c8-ee515e169da5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Emotional Expression and the Construction of Heterosexuality: Hugo Bettauer's Viennese Advice Columns","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616619","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article introduces performativity and processes of place-making into discussions about middle-class residents' place attachments. It draws on interviews with middle-class residents in two different London neighbourhoods, Peckham (inner urban, socially mixed) and West Horsley and Effingham (commuter belt villages), to argue that (1) the practice of place is key to understanding middle-class claims to belonging; and (2) ways of 'doing' neighbourhood must be understood within the context of other circulating representations. While respondents in Peckham work with or against prevailing discourses about their neighbourhood as they perform place, in the commuter belt, residents strive to uphold the image of their village as the rural idyll, a classed and racialised vision. The contrast between the inner city and commuter belt reveals the different performative registers through which place is practised; while in Peckham middle-class residents invest in processes of place-making, respondents in the commuter belt engage instead in active processes of place maintenance.","creator":["Michaela Benson","Emma Jackson"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d6a0d33-b525-377f-93f4-83ed8f84beb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24433232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"809","pageStart":"793","pagination":"pp. 793-809","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Place-making and Place Maintenance: Performativity, Place and Belonging among the Middle Classes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433232","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Young adults represent the most avid users of social network sites, and they are also the most concerned with their online identity management, according the Pew Internet and American Life Project (Lenhart, Purcell, Smith, & Zickuhr, 2010; Madden, 2012). These practices represent important literate activity today, as individuals who are writing online learn to negotiate interfaces, user agreements, and personal data, as well as rhetorical situations. Examining the social, technological, and structural factors that influence digital literacy practices in online environments is crucial to understanding the impact of these sites on writing practices. Applying Brooke's (2009) concept of an \"ecology of practice\" to writing in digital environments, this article examines the digital literacy practices of one undergraduate student through his self-presentation strategies. In considering the roles that social network sites play in individuals literacy and identity practices, writing researchers and educators can better understand the literacy practices that students engage in outside of the classroom and the experiences they bring to their academic writing.","creator":["Amber Buck"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41583603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48530054"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71186422-4a6b-35c5-9c74-bb0f09000674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41583603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Examining Digital Literacy Practices on Social Network Sites","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41583603","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CASEY LAWRENCE"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26798628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212528"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd6d23cf-37d0-3c62-b084-cb2a85468f8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26798628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The link between nations and generations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26798628","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Cissy Caffrey as Racialized and Sexualized Other in James Joyce's Ulysses<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brad Epps"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0cfd013-f92c-39b2-a52a-3f9bf7dca093"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Retos y riesgos, pautas y promesas de la teor\u00eda queer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625014","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":24203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RYAN WANDER"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297239810"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009202731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d63dfdf-6f85-33ca-93e1-1b10d7a023a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26530721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cQueer\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530721","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":2034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul R. Deslandes"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3218093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976310"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f044f0a-0725-3e88-8bb0-8c1a8d0e1a18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3218093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histeducquar"}],"isPartOf":"History of Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"578","pageStart":"544","pagination":"pp. 544-578","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"History of Education Society","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Competitive Examinations and the Culture of Masculinity in Oxbridge Undergraduate Life, 1850-1920","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3218093","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":16827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since 1970, the American-born Israeli director and acting teacher Nola Chilton has used documentary theatre to critique Israeli myths and to provide a space where groups generally excluded from the Israeli stage-Arabs, women, the poor, the elderly-can be seen and heard. Chilton's pioneering \"theatre of testimony\" bears a striking resemblance to recent documentary theatre practices proliferating in the U.S. and Europe.","creator":["Linda Ben-Zvi"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e184847-1880-3468-892d-74072d4a28b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4492694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging the Other Israel: The Documentary Theatre of Nola Chilton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492694","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeff Nunokawa"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Miser's Two Bodies: \"Silas Marner\" and the Sexual Possibilities of the Commodity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828324","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471794]],"Locations in B":[[57272,57362]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sue V. Rosser"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Through the Lenses of Feminist Theory: Focus on Women and Information Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137430","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8661,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467295,467400]],"Locations in B":[[54261,54370]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana Forcinito"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68b7aab0-c077-3dff-ad9a-8dc776a9ade1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Destejer suturas: neutralizaci\u00f3n y nomadismo de la cr\u00edtica cultural chicana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922790","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SUSAN M. KORBA"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da7dce36-9604-372d-9d9c-a01ff110d86f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"IMPROPER AND DANGEROUS DISTINCTIONS\": FEMALE RELATIONSHIPS AND EROTIC DOMINATION IN \"EMMA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533200","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12367,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[489892,489992],[500787,500920]],"Locations in B":[[66936,67033],[68644,68777]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/676576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f4742c6-9368-3de6-926e-98b9060272f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/676576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"symposium","pageStart":"symposium","pagination":"p. symposium","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Symposium in International Languages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/676576","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9342,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493656,493799]],"Locations in B":[[32780,32931]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article details the political significance of Booker Prize-winning novelist J. M. Coetzee queering a longstanding slave character trope. After briefly sketching how Shakespeare's Caliban and Daniel Defoe's Friday operate narratively, I demonstrate that Coetzee's Friday in Foe (1986), in contradistinction to his literary predecessors, refuses protocols attached to language, music, dance, and sex. That is, by disavowing all forms of intercourse with white heteropatriarchy, Coetzee's Friday averts his own erasure precisely by espousing a politics of castration. This castration\u2014or refusal to be made intelligible and thereby appropriable to European interlocutors during the time of slavery\u2014directs readerly scrutiny to the imperialist self-regard exemplified in Shakespeare's Prospero and Defoe's Crusoe. Distinct from the seeming critical consensus that dismisses Coetzee's Friday as \u201cthe castrated mute,\u201d I thus show that his castration produces a political alternative that commands recognition of the inconvenient, unsanitized history of the Atlantic.","creator":["Robinson O. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c9359eb-5e2d-3dd0-8bd4-db97a651ecd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black Friday, Queer Atlantic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8907,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[457053,457169]],"Locations in B":[[3604,3720]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KRISTINA HUNEAULT"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42615273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03154297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849047"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42615273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcanaarthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Canadian Art History \/ Annales d'histoire de l'art Canadien","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Journal of Canadian Art History","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"HEROES OF A DIFFERENT SORT: Gender and Patriotism in the War Workers of Frances Loring and Florence Wyle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42615273","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9515,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439506,439625]],"Locations in B":[[44972,45091]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Phillips"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b7b8ee9-6b8f-36df-9d7d-750cc143c2de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20709807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pedagogy, Theory, and the Scene of Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709807","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Antoine Idier"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43124268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"901a87f9-ca75-3112-a757-bea794c388cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43124268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43124268","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":1639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0212dd50-1006-3f28-a64d-3093634d8990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":208,"pageEnd":"2024","pageStart":"1817","pagination":"pp. 1817-2024","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program of the 2008 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501992","volumeNumber":"123","wordCount":105421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beatrice Hanssen"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3446374d-43d6-305b-b686-da9865c75cf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Elfriede Jelinek's Language of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108665","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14545,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[405263,405374]],"Locations in B":[[27721,27834]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mahdi Tourage"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4311782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72eff16f-7d22-3b72-9680-55496abdcbbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4311782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Phallocentric Esotericism in a Tale from Jalal al-Din Rumi's \"Masnavi-yi Ma'navi\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4311782","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Research on women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) has focused scant attention on how young women engage with the gendered construction of engineering as they decide whether or not to enter the field. Drawing on data from a study of more than a hundred diverse girls who participated in a National Science Foundation intervention and research project titled Female Recruits Explore Engineering (FREE), the article shows that their involvement with engineering is strongly gendered. The study participants were aware that engineering is maledominated and not particularly open to women. They, especially the white and economically privileged girls, were also skeptical regarding the gendered messages they were receiving via programs designed to attract them to engineering. However, once the participants began to engage with engineering\u2014through the selection of possible fields of study and by executing engineering projects\u2014they did so in stereotypically gendered ways. The article's findings indicate that the girls' perceptions and choices are influenced by the presentation of engineering on websites, at career fairs, and through other venues designed to attract young women to engineering.","creator":["Jill M. Bystydzienski","Adriane Brown"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73a806f2-1779-3673-bab5-c69292b15187"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Specialized education","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Just Want to Help People\": Young Women's Gendered Engagement with Engineering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819648","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the author examines popular written news media discourse from the United States concerning the \"boy crisis,\" the gender gap, and male teachers as role models employing genealogical methodologies and theoretical concepts suggested by Foucault (1984, 1990, 1995). It is argued that such discourses reveal how \"common sense\" beliefs operate to perpetuate unjust systems of patriarchal power by maintaining the socially superior status of White, middle-to-upper-class, heterosexual men. The discourse of male teachers as role models in particular exposes the popular desire to have such men demonstrate for their male students what \"proper\" masculinity looks like, to reassert male authority in the classroom and beyond, and to control the behaviors of African American males as well as boys and young men from fatherless homes. In other words, to serve as normalizing agents for youth. However, it is also argued that such discourse provides opportunities for tactical resistance. By focusing on discourses that are either marginalized or silenced in the popular written news media, the author reveals the possibility for the establishment of reverse discourses that could operate from within systems of power to disrupt taken-for-granted ideals and to problematize those masculine characteristics or traits often considered to be unquestionably innate.","creator":["BRANDON M. STERNOD"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3b0965c-cfeb-357f-ab45-650d06764657"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41238381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Role Models or Normalizing Agents? A Genealogical Analysis of Popular Written News Media Discourse Regarding Male Teachers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238381","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Black women are generally displaced as victims of rape. The police response to the sexual assault of black women in general and lower-class black women in particular is illustrative of how sexual ideologies help construct complex social hierarchies that in turn structure rights. How the law currently deals with rape places black women outside of the narrative frames that legitimate entitlement. Rape continues to stand in for, and effectively obscure, other social, political, and economic concerns. Unpublished and often ignored, the rape narrative is a ripe site to supply oppositional interpretations of national experience and transmit some of the structural problems in the criminal justice system. Pulling from over two thousand \"real\" rape cases of low-income black women ignored and not investigated in Philadelphia between 1995 and 2000, this article reads black female rape narratives as case studies in order to discuss the way personal narratives of rape victims are structured by competing and overwhelming sociolegal narratives that undercut their reception. As the fastest growing prison population, the presence of the law to punish black women stands in stark contrast to the absence of the law to protect them.","creator":["Toni Irving"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e6513a-af1c-3fd9-8baa-02623ce5a275"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Decoding Black Women: Policing Practices and Rape Prosecution on the Streets of Philadelphia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071277","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["TINEKE HELLWIG"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57b78c3d-b6d3-3ab0-8408-1927d24dd193"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Abidah El Khalieqy's novels: Challenging patriarchal Islam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203119","volumeNumber":"167","wordCount":6885,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147135,147222]],"Locations in B":[[11719,11806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers an allegorical reading of Perutz's novel, interpreting in the protagonist's performances a reflection of the fantasies and dilemmas of an author who, by writing, seeks liberation of his intellect but nevertheless remains dependent on the material world. Drawing upon Judith Butler's analysis of the \"sovereign performative\" and Ludwig Wittgenstein's critique of referentiality, the essay argues that the novel's narrative structure exemplifies the fantasy of mastery over language while at the same time demonstrating its unrealizability.","creator":["Gary Schmidt"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dc79c21-c0ef-38d3-a6fa-87d757df171c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24649894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Performing in Handcuffs: Leo Perutz's \"Zwischen neun und neun\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649894","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11231,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[68468,68537]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The gendered nature of the immigration experience is shaped and reinforced by law, legal consciousness, and the normative understandings they help constitute. This article provides an overview of the role of gender in migration processes from a law and society perspective, and includes an empirical focus on the new immigration to Italy and Spain as an illustration of the utility of such an approach. Beginning with a brief summary of the literatures of feminist jurisprudence and law and migration, respectively, the small body of scholarship at the intersection of these fields is reviewed. The author then examines the new immigration to Italy and Spain and argues that this immigration and the policies that shape it highlight the role of the state in gendering immigrant labor and offer new angles from which to consider the interplay of gender, race, migration status, and marginality. In concluding, the author proposes that such exploration of immigrants' experiences in southern Europe reveals the surprising complexity of immigrants' multiple marginalities, and exposes the powerful contingencies of economic context, prevailing stereotypes, the particulars of state policy, and the agentive power of people struggling to survive.","creator":["Kitty Calavita"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27645581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01979183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d713551-a134-33b5-984d-2685887b962a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27645581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intemigrrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The International Migration Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Center for Migration Studies of New York, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Migration, and Law: Crossing Borders and Bridging Disciplines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27645581","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KATHLEEN LENNON"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02643758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplphil"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353552","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":755,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[149651,149846],[149978,150055]],"Locations in B":[[492,687],[727,804]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Article argues that the Constitution might be understood to \"disestablish\" sex and gender. Religious and gender ideologies have acted and continue to act in similar harmful ways, legitimizing social dividing practices on the basis of the supposed extra-human authority of Nature or God, and thereby violating a congeries of constitutional principles. Under the disestablishment of sex and gender, proposed in this Article, government would be significantly constrained in its ability to rely upon or reinforce sex or gender beliefs or groups. Moving beyond current equal protection doctrine with its group-comparative focus on discrimination, this approach would focus analysis upon governmental support for and reinforcement of sex and gender beliefs and divisions, and it would impose greater constraints on government than courts and legislatures have commonly recognized. The Article examines how different conceptions of disestablishment would have different effects on such issues as governmental recognition of sex changes, sex-segregated education, and the mixed-sex requirement for civil marriage.","creator":["David B. Cruz"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d95ffc8f-65b6-3738-afab-a89c15963b04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90,"pageEnd":"1086","pageStart":"997","pagination":"pp. 997-1086","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disestablishing Sex and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481325","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":45901,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[10891,10964]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William N. Eskridge, Jr."],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e14219bb-4d32-3cb8-af69-2d8d6a221e99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1073379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":95,"pageEnd":"1513","pageStart":"1419","pagination":"pp. 1419-1513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Virginia Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"A History of Same-Sex Marriage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073379","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":38679,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489242,489354]],"Locations in B":[[40914,41031]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Church Order of the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) 2015, regulation 3 states that the organisational ministry of the DRC should be organised according to the directives given in 1 Timothy 3. The \u1f10\u03c0\u03af\u03c3\u03ba\u03bf\u03c0\u03bf\u03c2 (overseer) is exhorted to, amongst others, manage his \u03bf\u1f36\u03ba\u03bf\u03c2 (household) well (1 Tim 3:4) and keep his children submissive (1 Tim 3: ) in order to take care of God\u2019s church (1 Tim 3:5). Such normative and essentialist use of the Bible in regulations and articles in official church documents can be highly problematic. The kind of life-denying interpretations of the Bible in ministerial structuring that make simplistic use of, for example, 1 Timothy has led to dire problems in ecclesial contexts, and for women in particular. Is the inappropriate use of 1 Timothy 3 to justify male preference in ministerial positions the result of poor exegesis, or of the failure to read texts contextually and to engage the rhetoric of these ancient \u03bf\u1f36\u03ba\u03bf\u03c2 (womb) encoded texts, or are the texts inherently distorted and is their use therefore doomed to deliver unpalatable results? In this article, masculinities in 1 Timothy, with special reference to gender, leadership and power notions related to the term and role of \u1f10\u03c0\u03af\u03c3\u03ba\u03bf\u03c0\u03bf\u03c2, will be explored with the modern-day ecclesial contexts in mind.","creator":["Jacobie M. Helena Visser"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f16e1ed-74db-39ef-9991-828ba1468578"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Overseeing the Womb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417472","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":8882,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[12857,13084]],"subTitle":"A Rhetorical Investigation of Masculinities and \u1f18\u03c0\u03af\u03c3\u03ba\u03bf\u03c0\u03bf\u03c2 in 1 Timothy 3"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Br\u00f6lmann"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13854879"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33aed4aa-59ac-35f1-9357-fe8dfb282e58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24675122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jminogrourigh"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on Minority and Group Rights","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675122","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":2229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jessica Lewis Luck"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d596d1a-a2ee-33e3-9c10-140778aba068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Exploring the \"Mind of the Hive\": Embodied Cognition in Sylvia Plath's Bee Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455330","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10562,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439455,439527]],"Locations in B":[[5345,5417]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In exploring the history of the social construction of gender\/race\/class in Western scientific discourse and examining the legacy of these persisting constructions in modern research on women's health, the authors join in a growing debate about sexism\/racism\/classism in women's health research\u2014a debate being forwarded most forcefully by feminist epidemiologists. A major purpose of this article is to aid in the development of a new research paradigm for examining the relationship between gender, race, and class, one that considers the interdisciplinary theorizing of Third World feminists and European\/American feminists of color. Following the examination of both historical and epistemological issues surrounding interlocking forms of oppression based on gender\/race\/class, the authors propose a feminist research agenda that not only is responsive to different women's health needs, but can potentially contribute to a process for understanding and answering the health needs of all persons.","creator":["K. Lisa Whittle","Marcia C. Inhorn"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45131478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78d48390-5f77-3af8-976c-7ae1c9de8fe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45131478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RETHINKING DIFFERENCE: A FEMINIST REFRAMING OF GENDER\/RACE\/CLASS FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF WOMEN'S HEALTH RESEARCH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45131478","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8894,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[51371,51447]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Paniccia Carden"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0086d3e-e140-389f-959a-b0f029ba5e79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remembering\/Engendering the Heartland: Sexed Language, Embodied Space, and America's Foundational Fictions in Jane Smiley's \"A Thousand Acres\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346974","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10089,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[488024,488084],[495025,495125]],"Locations in B":[[56336,56396],[56793,56893]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Camille A. Gear"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4163a3ff-dddb-36de-a4cb-162667a29231"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"2508","pageStart":"2473","pagination":"pp. 2473-2508","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law","Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Ideology of Domination: Barriers to Client Autonomy in Legal Ethics Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797348","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":19456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["D. Diane Davis"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"195114c9-4db3-3a7b-8902-bd716d208294"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"656","pageStart":"633","pagination":"pp. 633-656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Addicted to Love\"; Or, Toward an Inessential Solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866280","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Parkes"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d5260e7-7795-350e-a426-57a0a9eb9ef5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lesbianism, History, and Censorship: The Well of Loneliness and the Suppressed Randiness of Virginia Woolf's Orlando","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441599","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines public response to Madame Josephine Clofullia, the United States' first famed \"bearded lady,\" who toured the country in the 1850s. It argues that, though most contemporaries found Clofullia's appearance unusual, few found it transgressive. With the exception of America's cultural and medical elite, few believed that Clofullia's beard compromised her claims to womanhood or confounded the categories of man and woman. What explains this response? Considering the public's reaction to Clofullia in light of scholarship on intersex bodies, I contend that Americans\u2014especially nonelites\u2014continued to give priority to behavior over sexual characteristics in determining the gender of persons with ambiguously formed bodies. The essay concludes by emphasizing the plasticity of gender norms, arguing that even the most \"natural\" biological markers of sex have an unpredictable, historically constructed relationship to gender.","creator":["SEAN TRAINOR"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e833267c-e1c6-3699-8748-d12af03d3fcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24474870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"548","pagination":"pp. 548-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fair Bosom\/Black Beard: Facial Hair, Gender Determination, and the Strange Career of Madame Clofullia, \"Bearded Lady\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474870","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10426,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[56381,56460]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Desde finales del siglo XIX la concepci\u00f3n cartesiana del sujeto humano ha sido debatida y problematizada sucesivamente desde diversas disciplinas. Frente a la consideraci\u00f3n del individuo como un ser homog\u00e9neo, estable y centrado, fil\u00f3sofos, psicoanalistas y artistas contempor\u00e1neos han postulado el inevitable descentramiento y fragmentaci\u00f3n de nuestra subjetividad. Ya que la producci\u00f3n literaria de Gloria Anzald\u00faa responde, como ha indicado la cr\u00edtica, al deseo de (re)construir una identidad personal y colectiva, cabe preguntarse c\u00f3mo ha manejado la autora chicana las distintas teor\u00edas que han revolucionado la comprensi\u00f3n de qui\u00e9nes somos. En otras palabras, \u00bfest\u00e1 su visi\u00f3n del yo\/nosotros anclada en concepciones tradicionales o no? El examen de Borderlands\/La Frontera y otros escritos autobiogr\u00e1ficos de Anzald\u00faa pone de relieve el cuestionamiento y rechazo de los rasgos atribuidos hist\u00f3ricamente a esta poblaci\u00f3n y simult\u00e1neamente al ser humano. Aunque Anzald\u00faa interpreta, por lo general, las \"se\u00f1as de identidad\" chicana como resultado de las opresivas condiciones socio-culturales en las que ha vivido este grupo, en realidad muchas de esas \"se\u00f1as\" nos definen igualmente a todos los habitantes de este planeta. En otras palabras, cabe argumentar que la escritora llega a esa particular concepci\u00f3n de la identidad chicana porque los discursos en los que se sustenta presentan ya esa construcci\u00f3n de la identidad humana. Con esto no pretendo insinuar que Anzald\u00faa haya aceptado o asimilado ciegamente todas las nociones posmodernas sobre la subjetividad. Por el contrario, ha eludido algunas de esas nociones por ser incompatibles con su posici\u00f3n pol\u00edtica e ideol\u00f3gica.","creator":["MAR\u00cdA VICTORIA GARC\u00cdA-SERRANO"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0364bdb3-3433-321f-a872-14c634bf9fb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"494","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Gloria Anzald\u00faa y la pol\u00edtica de la identidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763213","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7387,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481409,481466]],"Locations in B":[[45539,45596]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The subaltern has frequently been understood as a figure of exclusion ever since it was first highlighted by the early Subaltern Studies collective\u2019s creative reading of Antonio Gramsci\u2019s carceral writings. In this article, I argue that a contextualist and diachronic study of the development of the notion of subaltern classes throughout Gramsci\u2019s full Prison Notebooks reveals new resources for \u201crefiguring\u201d the subaltern. I propose three alternative figures to comprehend specific dimensions of Gramsci\u2019s theorizations: the \u201cirrepressible subaltern,\u201d the \u201chegemonic subaltern,\u201d and the \u201ccitizen-subaltern.\u201d Far from being exhausted by the eclipse of the conditions it was initially called upon to theorize in Subaltern Studies, such a refigured notion of the subaltern has the potential to cast light both on the contradictory development of political modernity and on contemporary political processes.","creator":["Peter D. Thomas"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f97367a0-c931-3985-b03e-5c5461940403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"884","pageStart":"861","pagination":"pp. 861-884","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Refiguring the Subaltern","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617620","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10241,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55358,55431]],"Locations in B":[[53919,53990]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SARA MILLS"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a223269-5528-3446-9be8-21e78936e31e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41555650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Minding your language: implementing gender-free language policies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555650","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RICHARD FOX"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6787b3ee-fb04-3d11-9dce-cf3e1b2c2fac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27868201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"1","language":["jav"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Plus \u00e7a change... Recent developments in Old Javanese studies and their implications for the study of religion in contemporary Bali","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868201","volumeNumber":"161","wordCount":15823,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[16481,16608],[16854,17268],[443961,444257],[444961,445233]],"Locations in B":[[84527,84654],[84691,85103],[86677,86973],[89377,89649]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay engages in a debate with Nancy Fraser and Dorothy Leland concerning the contribution of Lacanian-inspired psychoanalytic feminism to feminist theory and practice. Teresa Brennan's analysis of the impasse in psychoanalysis and feminism and Judith Butler's proposal for a radically democratic feminism are employed in examining the issues at stake. I argue, with Brennan, that the impasse confronting psychoanalysis and feminism is the result of different conceptions of the relationship between the psychical and the social. I suggest Lacanian-inspired feminist conceptions are useful and deserve our consideration.","creator":["Patricia Elliot"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34dba544-dd89-3f00-b9be-a248950f9c19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politics, Identity, and Social Change: Contested Grounds in Psychoanalytic Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810278","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A trav\u00e9s del an\u00e1lisis de la parodia del g\u00e9nero y la sexualidad en Los empe\u00f1os de una casa, en este art\u00edculo se ofrece una aproximaci\u00f3n al teatro barroco que difiere de la cr\u00edtica tradicional. Seg\u00fan los tradicionalistas, la convenci\u00f3n dram\u00e1tica del desenlace feliz por medio del matrimonio siempre apoya las normas sociales tal y como el estado y la iglesia las dictan, eliminando cualquier posibilidad de trasgresi\u00f3n de dichas normas. Aunque sor Juana In\u00e9s de la Cruz cierra su comedia secular respetando las convenciones de este g\u00e9nero dram\u00e1tico, el autor mantiene que es precisamente por medio de estas que la dramaturga subvierte las normas sociales del periodo. La promesa de casarse con uno de los galanes, hecha por el gracioso travestido, constituye una subversi\u00f3n a la vez que permite que dos parejas tradicionales se casen al final. Seg\u00fan el autor, Los empe\u00f1os de una casa representa una apertura subversiva a pesar de su cierre convencional, una din\u00e1mica que tiene importantes ramificaciones para la interpretaci\u00f3n de otras comedias barrocas.","creator":["SIDNEY DONNELL"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb98e648-139e-326b-b611-9d4c97c45934"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Cross Gender to Generic Closure: Sor Juana In\u00e9s de la Cruz's Los empe\u00f1os de una casa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764249","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8143,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443943,444265]],"Locations in B":[[40727,41049]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Theresa Edlmann"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a10c49f6-473f-32cb-b4d5-4a6a2754bf38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"1 (95)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825651","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recently, the study of gender has focused on processes by which gender is brought into social relations through interaction. This article explores implications of a two-sided dynamic-gendering practices and practicing of gender-for understanding gendering processes in formal organizations. Using stories from interviews and participant observation in multinational corporations, the author explores the practicing of gender at work. She defines practicing gender as a moving phenomenon that is done quickly, directionally (in time), and (often) nonreflexively; is informed (often) by liminal awareness; and is in concert with others. She notes how other conceptions of gender dynamics and practice inform the analysis and argues that adequate conceptualization (and potential elimination) of harmful aspects of gendering practices\/practicing will require attention to (1) agency, intentionality, awareness, and reflexivity; (2) positions, power, and experience; and (3) choice, accountability, and audience. She calls for incorporating the \"sayings and doings\" of gender into organization theory and research.","creator":["Patricia Yancey Martin"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca9d1cc5-f4fc-3771-99f6-80e6593e7ccd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"\"Said and Done\" versus \"Saying and Doing\": Gendering Practices, Practicing Gender at Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594636","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En contraste con las utop\u00edas de autores precedentes como Antonio de Guevara, la de Mar\u00eda de Guevara presentada en su a\u00fan in\u00e9dito \"Desenga\u00f1os de la Corte y mujeres valerosas\" (1664), est\u00e1 en gran parte moldeada por un discurso feminista heredero de la querelle des femmes. El resultado es una obra que propone una \"feminizaci\u00f3n de la corte\"; esto es, una reapropiaci\u00f3n femenina del concepto de virtud y la integraci\u00f3n de \u00e9sta y de la mujer en la vida p\u00fablica, como requisitos para lograr el para\u00edso perdido. Adem\u00e1s, la propuesta ut\u00f3pica de Guevara y su reconceptualizaci\u00f3n del orden social se dan paralelamente a una narrativa sobre el proceso de formaci\u00f3n de la autor\u00eda femenina, y sobre la adquisici\u00f3n de autoridad de \u00e9sta dentro de la tradici\u00f3n masculina de la utop\u00eda y de la cultura escrita en general.","creator":["Teresa Langle de Paz"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20062874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e974a3e-8d59-38a0-829c-6d6630073669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20062874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"En busca del para\u00edso ausente: \"Mujer varonil\" y \"Autor femenil\" en una utop\u00eda feminista in\u00e9dita del siglo XVII espa\u00f1ol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20062874","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":8546,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[376972,377187]],"Locations in B":[[8765,8976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The figure of the tough heroine in early 1990s action films crosses variable gender boundaries; she is a performance of masculinity in \"Aliens\" and \"Terminator\" and is the reinscription of a feminine masquerade in \"Point of No Return.\"","creator":["Jeffrey A. Brown"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d505ee41-0178-38cd-a16d-990a097e2ce4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and the Action Heroine: Hardbodies and the \"Point of No Return\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225765","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10718,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[431239,431620],[435522,435631],[436586,437276],[443403,443525]],"Locations in B":[[8753,9134],[10444,10553],[11061,11751],[53899,54021]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Projansky"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"516d9a30-09ea-37b7-91e2-569f3bcd9676"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"807","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-807","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Girls Who Act like Women Who Fly: Jessica Dubroff as Cultural Troublemaker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175310","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":16888,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[455260,455552],[458604,458782]],"Locations in B":[[15072,15363],[15567,15745]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aliocha Wald Lasowski"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12995495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6aa261d-ad9a-38a7-8907-5ff320869839"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40621448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cites"}],"isPartOf":"Cit\u00e9s","issueNumber":"33","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621448","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers a historical overview, explores current trends, and suggests future directions of gender research and pedagogical approaches that inform TESOL. It highlights key theories, research paradigms, and subjects of study that contribute to SLA knowledge while addressing inequitable gendered social, pedagogical, and linguistic relationships in and out of ESL and EFL classrooms. The article also introduces the contributions to this volume by indicating how they represent broader dialogues about directions in second language acquisition, applied linguistics, and TESOL.","creator":["Kathryn A. Davis","Ellen Skilton-Sylvester"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3588346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3588346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Looking Back, Taking Stock, Moving Forward: Investigating Gender in TESOL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3588346","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JULIA SAVILLE"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"953cc307-0ffd-3603-b28d-cfc7ed6660f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Fleshly Garments: Ascesis and Desire in the Ethic of Psychoanalysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304067","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[210724,210892]],"Locations in B":[[1149,1318]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Libu\u0161e Mon\u00edkov\u00e1 presents in The Fa\u00e7ade (1987) a range of cultures between Bohemia and Siberia, a Renaissance castle whose symbols are constantly redefined, and a range of gender roles enacted in relation to narratives of the nation-state in Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union. As the process of German unification casts women's concerns as secondary to the \"genderless\" goal of building a new German state, Mon\u00edkov\u00e1's depiction of intersections of gender and nation grows in importance. References to nation from Homi Bhabha and Benedict Andersen and to gender constructions from Judith Butler and Marjorie Garber inform the investigation theoretically.","creator":["Karen Hermine Jankowsky"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9ffa06f-40fa-3bb5-94da-476f1fa7f6e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remembering Eastern Europe: Libu\u0161e Mon\u00edkov\u00e1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688843","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":5434,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103187,103448]],"Locations in B":[[30298,30557]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the authors argue that teachers and researchers must expand current verbo- and logo-centric definitions of critical literacy to recognize how texts and responses are embodied. Ethnographic data illustrate the ways that youth perform critical literacy in ways that educators might not always be prepared to see, hear, or acknowledge.","creator":["Elisabeth Johnson","Lalitha Vasudevan"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41331070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f42732df-7d8d-3bdd-b14d-637a9e541bba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41331070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theointoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Theory into Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Seeing and Hearing Students' Lived and Embodied Critical Literacy Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41331070","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":4850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Identity politics have been much maligned by the Left as politically divisive and philosophically untenable. But the need for identification in the process of countering demeaned identities and fostering counter-hegemonic projects has been underestimated by poststructuralist critics. Good at dismantling identities and deconstructing existing strategies of inclusion, the poststructuralists are not particularly helpful in thinking through forms of subjectivity and\/or collective action that would contribute to coalition building. Beauvoir provides a worthy model for coalitional politics. Her theory of relational subjectivity avoids essentialism and fosters collaboration, if that work is premised upon connected existences, rather than identity. Her theory of alterity, or Othering, acknowledges power differentials and accommodates both cultural and economic forces of oppression, moving away from static, centralized and binary relations of power that have become associated with second-wave feminism and conventional Marxism. \/\/\/ La politique identitaire a \u00e9t\u00e9 largement d\u00e9cri\u00e9e par la gauche qui l'accuse de cr\u00e9er des dissensions et d'\u00eatre philosophiquement insoutenable. Pourtant, le besoin d'identification dans le processus de soutien des identit\u00e9s d\u00e9valu\u00e9es et de promotion de projets anti-h\u00e9g\u00e9moniques a \u00e9t\u00e9 sous-estim\u00e9 par la critique post-structuraliste. Dou\u00e9s pour la d\u00e9construction des identit\u00e9s et le d\u00e9mant\u00e8lement des strat\u00e9gies d'inclusion, les post-structuralistes ont moins de talent pour concevoir des formes de subjectivit\u00e9 ou d'action collective qui contribueraient \u00e0 la construction de coalitions. Simone de Beauvoir fournit un mod\u00e8le pr\u00e9cieux de politique de coalition. Sa th\u00e9orie de la subjectivit\u00e9 relationnelle \u00e9vite l'essentialisme et encourage la collaboration, si cet effort est bas\u00e9 sur des existences li\u00e9es les unes aux autres plut\u00f4t que sur l'identit\u00e9. Sa th\u00e9orie de l'alt\u00e9rit\u00e9 reconna\u00eet les diff\u00e9rentiels de pouvoir et tient compte des forces oppressives, \u00e0 la fois culturelles et \u00e9conomiques, abandonnant ainsi les rapports de pouvoir statiques, centralis\u00e9s et binaires qui ont \u00e9t\u00e9 associ\u00e9s avec le f\u00e9minisme \" deuxi\u00e8me vague \" et le marxisme conventionnel.","creator":["Elaine Stavro"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25166106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49251980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46a75b62-9b77-3397-a55c-a72cb2db1a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25166106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Identity and Coalitional Politics, Insights from Simone de Beauvoir","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25166106","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11502,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[63579,63708],[64184,64293],[68247,68331]],"Locations in B":[[16947,17075],[17675,17784],[18823,18907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an introduction to contemporary experimental poetry by women. It considers the reasons for the resistance to such work in this country. It refutes arguments made against it, for example that avant-garde writing is elitist or not related to women's experience. It further suggests why this writing, in particular in its complex engagement with issues of language, subjectivity and gender, should in fact be of great interest to the woman\/feminist reader. In particular, it suggests parallels between the concerns of this work and those of feminist poststructuralism. Above all, throughout the piece, it attempts to introduce the 'provisional pleasures' of the contemporary avant-garde to the reader, introducing, quoting and providing multiple interpretations of the work of several diverse writers in this tradition. It aims to provide a sense of the linguistic and formal innovations of these writings, alongside a sense of their relevance to questions of female subjectivity and of women's relationship to the dominant discourses of our time.","creator":["Harriet Tarlo"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a4b4c53-8456-338b-bd61-9ed4373dea59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"62","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Provisional Pleasures: The Challenge of Contemporary Experimental Women Poets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395651","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7592,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[43362,43421]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The penetration of K-Pop in Brazil has occurred in tandem with the unfolding of a process of social mobility in the country. The fans which K-Pop attracts in the country mostly stem from families who are part of this process of social mobility. K-Pop somehow resonates with these young people in search of a new social position, as their place in society is no longer that of their parents or grandparents. The brave new world that K-Pop offers may appeal to them especially as an index of future of upward mobility, glamour and consumption. K-Pop is itself the result of South Korean compressed modernity and its Brazilian fans have themselves been undergoing a process of social change in the past ten years. The relation between the latter process and the diffusion of K-Pop in the South American country is the focus of this article. K-Pop in Brazil is approached as a class-based and gendered phenomenon, which mobilizes a dream of society and lifestyle.","creator":["Ricardo Pagliuso Regatieri"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15988074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"593021084"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0baaa96a-b7b4-3de6-a050-b4920530cc5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90017818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deveandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Development and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Institute for Social Development and Policy Research (ISDPR)","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Development and Dream","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017818","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"On the Dynamics of K-Pop in Brazil"} +{"abstract":"Drawing on in-depth qualitative data, this article critically examines disability geography as a subfield where the personal is highly valued. The value and the risks inherent in this personal approach will be evaluated, including the usefulness of being an 'insider' and the difficulties of being reflexive and critically making use of one's positionality. The article concludes with reflections regarding how disability geography can confront its marginal status, appealing to researchers who claim no experience of disability while also supporting and encouraging those with personal experiences of disability to participate in the field.","creator":["Nancy Worth"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40346134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Significance of the Personal within Disability Geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346134","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When assumed by positions of dominance, the impersonal, analytical perspectives of scholar-narrators may serve to flatten, simplify, or render invisible the differences of constructed Others. Strategies of resistance necessarily correspond to where narrator-subjects enter relations of power. Without the presence of Others' narrations, dominance can neither value newly visible subjective agency nor confront the complicity in its own subjectivity. Intersubjectivity suggests a dialogical process that utilizes differences in lived experience to reconceive relationality.","creator":["Carole Anne Taylor"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"081f622b-1530-335d-b21a-3df6260274c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Positioning Subjects and Objects: Agency, Narration, Relationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810301","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11408,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[68881,69051]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jorge Sacido Romero"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29752986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00174181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1d53274-8931-35bb-9051-a2bb2fefdc40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29752986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"grial"}],"isPartOf":"Grial","issueNumber":"176","language":["glg"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Editorial Galaxia S.A.","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Slavoj \u017di\u017eek con e contra Judith Butler A diferenza sexual a debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29752986","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irit Koren"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aaa0407-1193-3c2e-a35a-db5dbe7e9523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40326596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Bride's Voice: Religious Women Challenge the Wedding Ritual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326596","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9683,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47090,47260]],"Locations in B":[[41281,41445]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although too much perhaps has been made of the divide between second-wave feminists and poststructuralist feminists, some differences between these groups need to be delineated, concerning alternative theories of feminist subjectivity, varying notions of what constitutes politics or struggle, and the claim that \"poststructuralisms\" are \"conspiracy theories\" that silence women. An overview of these issues of contention in the negotiation of feminisms and poststructuralisms is followed by annotations of feminist scholarship published between the early 1980s and the present.","creator":["Pamela Moore","Devoney Looser"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ff53fbd-625d-364f-a97f-1c003cc127f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"530","pagination":"pp. 530-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theoretical Feminisms: Subjectivity, Struggle, and the \"Conspiracy\" of Poststructuralisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946073","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14448,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[62210,62497],[74829,75029],[75045,75322],[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[9029,9315],[11153,11334],[11350,11627],[48251,48341]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"African-American autobiographers, Zora Neale Hurston, Anne Moody, and Maya Angelou engage a feminine quest in order to develop their self-awareness and overcome oppression. The writers present the trope of patriarchal domination by describing their father-daughter relationships, which affect their involvement with the larger society. The women describe their battle with not only the Caucasian patriarchy, which would restrict them, but also African-American men adhering to its standards as well. The women must overcome both races' stereotypical pretenses in order to be represented not only physically but also intellectually. The authors offset their fathers' negative presences by locating role models in their mothers and other women in order to establish their identities and pursue the American Dream on their own terms. Refusing a male paradigm, the writers invent their own forms and cease to be bodies without voices as they attempt to forge a society devoid of sexism and racism.","creator":["Tara Hembrough"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56210516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007215116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cb576e8-02d7-31b8-ad79-a77f5a73ca70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44508174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing as an Act of Self-Embodiment: Hurston, Moody, and Angelou Combat Systemic Racial and Sexual Oppression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508174","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Moore Howard"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b42a9eb7-380e-33ce-b850-e3ed31376646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24046437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046437","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":1104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour was notoriously successful in its premi\u00e8re in 1934, and its revival in 1952, because of its inclusion of a lesbian theme. Paradoxically, the play's reception has largely focused on its symbolic depiction of the effects of slander, instead of on its depiction of female homosexuality. In recent years, the representation of same-sex desire in Hellman's play has begun to be broached, being critically read as blatantly homophobic. In this article, we would like to revise the play's agenda by proposing that its articulation of lesbianism is an indictment of the patriarchal containment of women's political and sexual desire. La calumnia de Lillian Hellman obtuvo un \u00e9xito notorio cuando se estren\u00f3 en 1934, y tambi\u00e9n cuando se reestreno en 1952, debido a su tratamiento del lesbianismo. Parad\u00f3jicamente, las lecturas cr\u00edticas de esta obra de teatro se han centrado en la representaci\u00f3n simb\u00f3lica de los efectos de la difamaci\u00f3n, no en la representaci\u00f3n de la homosexualidad femenina. Recientemente, se ha empezado a abordar el tema de la representaci\u00f3n del deseo homosexual en la obra de Hellman; representaci\u00f3n que se ha considerado expl\u00edcitamente hom\u00f3foba. En este art\u00edculo proponemos una relectura de la ideolog\u00eda inherente a la obra de teatro; argumentamos que la autora utiliza el lesbianismo para criticar la contenci\u00f3n del deseo femenino, tanto pol\u00edtico como sexual, que realiza el sistema patriarcal.","creator":["Merc\u00e8 Cuenca","Mar\u00eda Isabel Seguro"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55bb5b0e-db0a-3a32-9ef1-76f0043f192d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Making Something Out of Nothing': Lesbianism as Liberating Fantasy in \"The Children's Hour\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055310","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[177727,177919]],"Locations in B":[[19866,20058]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Milagros L\u00f3pez-Pel\u00e1ez Casellas"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"379e2fce-a3bb-33a0-8a35-e3a77ff6413b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24894409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Chastising the evil spirit\": estrategias femeninas de resistencia en \"Dew on the Thorn\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894409","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12714,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[256339,256494],[256596,256701]],"Locations in B":[[34110,34264],[34347,34452]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers reflection on the relationship between the researcher and the field of research, within the sport of men's boxing, which is strongly characterized by polarized oppositions: between winning and losing, success and failure, women and men and, perhaps most importantly for the researcher, 'insiders' and 'outsiders'. It is this interrelationship between 'insiders' and 'outsiders' and the embodiment, not only of the practitioners of the sport but also the embodied presence of the researcher, which is used here to explore methodological questions about the research process and debates about how the researcher is situated in relation to the research site, by addressing questions about ontological complicity that are implicated in the distinction between 'hanging out' and 'hanging about' at the gym and as part of the culture of boxing.","creator":["Kath Woodward"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d35e2efd-8c2a-3bd5-a3cb-cf74f4d120c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"536","pagination":"pp. 536-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hanging out and hanging about: Insider\/outsider research in the sport of boxing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047914","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan D. Mandle"],"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a285e871-806e-3128-96e2-a3ccea924476"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189855","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An analysis of some of the varying historical and cross-cultural meanings of effeminacy and their relationship to hegemonic masculinity provides a unique perspective on the social construction of the sex\/gender system currently operating in most industrialized societies of the West. In this paper I present a brief review of the historical uses of effeminacy in Europe and the US and develop a five point typology. My survey reveals a plethora of meanings, linking effeminacy alternately with deficient citizenship, a general lack of sexual restraint, excessive heterosexual behavior, exclusive connection with passive homosexual activity, and finally as an incorrigible proposition that utilizes a naturalistic narrative to link it with homosexual orientation regardless of sexual role. I then employ the typology introduced here to expand and augment an argument advanced by Randolph Trumbach to explain the emergence of the strong cultural link between effeminacy and homosexuality during the 18th century.","creator":["Peter Hennen"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d412bf9-ff22-318b-9d95-6e2e1e273a0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Powder, Pomp, Power: Toward A Typology and Genealogy of Effeminacies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250077","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In rural western Turkey, villagers have replaced male performances of davul (bass drum) and zuma (double-reed wind instrument) as well as men's dancing with mevluts, special prayer services, and they have replaced women's dances to taped or live electric harmonium music with sohbets, sermons. Villagers are motivated to transform \"cultural practices\" that appear \"backward\" from the perspective of state-based ideologies of cultural progress and that are considered sinful from the perspective of Islamists. I trace their quests for spiritual and secular salvation and how they relate to the construction of a modernist Islamic worldview.","creator":["Kimberly Hart"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40389839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"408b6645-d453-3906-9fab-3ee6ef0248de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40389839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"749","pageStart":"735","pagination":"pp. 735-749","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Orthodoxization of Ritual Practice in Western Anatolia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40389839","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The history of 20th century Delhi is an intertwined history of the city and the slum. Investigating strategies of being and belonging deployed by the urban poor in the Delhi basti of Nangla Matchi, which was demolished in 2006, this paper explores three varied individual biographies as sites of meanings regarding processes of the state, the unstable contexts of livelihoods, and histories of intra-national displacement. The paper also seeks to make an ethnographic contribution to studies of the urban margins by examining the overlapping careers of \"margin\" and \"centre\" as cultural, political and economic contexts. The life-stories described in this paper thus concern the ways in which the metropolises of power, comfort, pleasure, and hygiene are built over and through the provinces of powerlessness, pain, suffering and displacement.","creator":["SANJAY SRIVASTAVA"],"datePublished":"2011-12-17","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23065548","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a237a260-4561-3ac9-b011-711f0f0a078d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23065548"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"51","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"A Hijra, a Female Pradhan and a Real Estate Dealer: Between the Market, the State and 'Community'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23065548","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay situates Kristeva's theory of semiotics in the context of the controversial debate about the status of the maternal body in her work. I argue that, if we rethink the opposition between the semiotic and the symbolic as the relation between the trace and the sign, it becomes clear that the maternal semiotic is irreducible either to the prelinguistic plenitude or to the alternative symbolic position. The second part of the essay develops the connection between Kristeva's linguistic theory and the alterity of the maternal body, articulated here as the in-fold of the other and the same.","creator":["Ewa Ziarek"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8859cb56-2b3a-3887-a25c-1532c56f98fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"At the Limits of Discourse: Heterogeneity, Alterity, and the Maternal Body in Kristeva's Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810000","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8631,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[288945,289233],[295900,296080],[494609,494699],[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[17912,18170],[46050,46230],[52803,52893],[53657,53832]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristin L. Dowell"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.20.1.0131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10525017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233138860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9380c2e-24da-3fbe-af4e-03f30b4b0dd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/trajincschped.20.1.0131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trajincschped"}],"isPartOf":"Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Culture: Beauty, Cultural Knowledge, and Womanhood in Miss Navajo<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.20.1.0131","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":4642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracey Sedinger"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ee49143-f5b5-3be1-87de-2cc7bd8e8694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation and Identification: Psychoanalysis, Race, and Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354688","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12996,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[487765,487820],[497226,497354]],"Locations in B":[[75153,75222],[78651,78778]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Scott Selisker"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e985e079-5e2e-3885-acea-22ee6f27a3d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Bechdel Test and the Social Form of Character Networks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542676","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8757,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430156,430290]],"Locations in B":[[32135,32269]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The National Assessment of Educational Progress statistics show that boys are underachieving in literacy compared to girls. Attempts to redress the problem in various Global North countries and particularly Australia and the United Kingdom have failed to make any impact. However, there are boys who are doing well in literacy. The aim of this article is to explore how high-status constructions of masculinity are maintained alongside \"successfully literate\" identities. Using existing studies of successfully literate boys and data collected from an investigation into high achievers and popularity, the article will show how a \"real boy\" construction of masculinity is being reworked by some groups of academically successful boys to produce \"Renaissance Masculinity.\" The argument here is that tackling the gender gap in literacy requires attention to social success and aesthetic factors as much as to the structural variables of gender, social class and \"race.\"","creator":["CHRISTINE SKELTON","BECKY FRANCIS"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ebebe37-9d87-3d28-a265-4f6e9d35d806"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41238498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Successful Boys and Literacy: Are \"Literate Boys\" Challenging or Repackaging Hegemonic Masculinity?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238498","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the early 2000s there has been an undeniable global escalation of negative othering discourses concerning migrants and refugees. 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Here, I also argue for the importance of \u2018unusual\u2019 friendships and their potential to unsettle normalised practices of othering, thereby producing new narratives of connections in a variety of urban settings. 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Literature"],"title":"'Dirty Mamma': Horror, Vampires, and the Maternal in Late Nineteenth-Century Gothic Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557221","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7720,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[234100,234641]],"Locations in B":[[13579,14122]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ren\u00e9e Cox Lorraine"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43200d14-d5ad-375e-bee3-4d1ac27fade0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/746722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746722","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Mexican state's use of revolutionary history to invoke nationalistic sentiments nurtures a lively tradition of storytelling. Ironically, Buena Vista's storytellers criticize the inauthenticity of official representations of the past even as they draw on the images and ideals of \"official\" history to weave their own tales. This article argues that discourses of authenticity reinscribe historic distinctions between the community and the state in a language which evokes modern notions of purity and truth. The article highlights the political role of discourses of authenticity within the hegemonic structures of modern state power in Mexico.","creator":["JoAnn Martin"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/481863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227248"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/481863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnohistory"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnohistory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"438","pagination":"pp. 438-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Contesting Authenticity: Battles over the Representation of History in Morelos, Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/481863","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela Fox"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50c49ff8-2f51-3f73-a204-19d6b0d5f4f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recycled \"Trash\": Gender and Authenticity in Country Music Autobiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041614","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":13148,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[512556,512647]],"Locations in B":[[83596,83696]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Murphy Halliburton"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53bb8d96-3e6a-3676-b690-685329af637e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"817","pageStart":"793","pagination":"pp. 793-817","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Social Thought & Commentary: Gandhi or Gramsci? The Use of Authoritative Sources in Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150858","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":10749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arthur Saint-Aubin"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.34042\/claj.61.4.0218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"398749a3-4918-326d-a010-27efa75c6fc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.34042\/claj.61.4.0218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chuck Berry's Autobiography: Rock Music, Racial Practice, and One Black Man's Problematic Relationship with White Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.34042\/claj.61.4.0218","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":17065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MICHAEL DAVIDSON"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d819d681-417c-3945-a0c7-9a3b405275d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40959703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Pregnant Men: Modernism, Disability, and Biofuturity in Djuna Barnes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959703","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret G. Frohlich"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fed61e2-d619-3422-9a4e-1b6698771228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23022339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lesbian Desire and (Dis)identification in Beatriz Preciado's \"Testo yonqui\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022339","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6263,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[390785,390885]],"Locations in B":[[17711,17811]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3accca1a-289a-367c-bf9b-bfafe4b0c6f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Information science - Information resources","Linguistics - Language","Mathematics - Mathematical logic","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859487","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David A.B. Murray"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7efac29a-ba2d-3730-8e09-b85ae2fdd7de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23170130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queering The Culture Cult","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170130","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":3991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I use a double theoretical lens of Bourdieuian (1985, 1991) and Bakhtinian (1981, 1986) perspectives on social space and the dialogism of everyday literacy events to analyze and discuss a classroom literacy event. In this event, which takes place in a diversely populated classroom with a social justice language arts curriculum, four boys read aloud intertextual stories while managing the shifting power dynamics of their social hierarchies. At stake in this analysis are the following two understandings: first, of the ways the boys' texts reflected and produced their ideological positioning in relation to issues of gender, race, and class; and second, of the ways that these positionings were linked to their struggles for the symbolic \"right\" to speak in literacy events. Findings highlight the usefulness of such a combined theoretical framework for understanding the ways children's social hierarchy maintenance might reproduce social inequalities and might also allow them to struggle against hierarchies and claim new identities for themselves.","creator":["Jessica C. Zacher"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c41cd6c-480f-3fd9-97c7-3749e8f389f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Analyzing Children's Social Positioning and Struggles for Recognition in a Classroom Literacy Event","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171816","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark K. Burns"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43022524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43022524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Ineffectual Chase\": Indians, Prairies, Buffalo, and the Quest for the Authentic West in Washington Irving's \"A Tour on the Prairies\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43022524","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10711,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[83314,83382],[83497,83752]],"Locations in B":[[60313,60381],[60442,60703]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cornelia H. Dayton","Lisa Levenstein"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44308391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b5ececf-6750-32e6-aa0c-db8f06e8bfce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44308391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"817","pageStart":"793","pagination":"pp. 793-817","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Big Tent of U.S. Women's and Gender History: A State of the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44308391","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":15870,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[36833,36913]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle M. Falter"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24034683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5684cfc-9816-304f-b0c4-4af92623debf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24034683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"You're Wearing Kurt's Necklace!\": THE RHETORICAL POWER OF GLEE IN THE LITERACY CLASSROOM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24034683","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":6896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay asserts that British playwright Caryl Churchill, through a careerlong examination of sexuality and gender, has created dramaturgical safe spaces in which narrow paradigms of socially prescribed masculinity can be interrogated. These safe spaces of masculine interrogation have influenced and inflected the work of several female playwrights from Britain and Ireland throughout the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Drawing from Peter Middleton's theories of masculine subjectivity, in particular the \"fantasy of manhood,\" and from Lauren Berlant's queer critique of neoliberal socio-cultural structures, especially her thinking on the \"cruel optimism\" of contemporary quotidian existence, the essay maps Churchill's safe spaces of masculine interrogation across a 2006 drama by Northern Irish playwright Rosemary Jenkinson, The Bonefire. This essay thus analyses the ways in which Jenkinson's male characters aspire to a culturally constructed fantasy of Loyalist manhood that is, in the final analysis, not only harmful and limiting, but also toxic and fatal. Furthermore, it explores the dynamics of masculine peer surveillance and examines how the ultimate failure of this intrinsic aspect of masculine identity points to the constructed nature of the fantasy of manhood. Throughout the essay the post-conflict culture of Northern Ireland is explored, where die-hard Loyalist masculinity as performed by the men of The Bonefire is perceived as anachronistic and regressive. (CO)","creator":["Cormac O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44789686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d3f8d9b-5534-3801-a30e-dd1d60ff0007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44789686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Following in Caryl Churchill's Footsteps: Rosemary Jenkinson's Spaces of Masculine Interrogation in \"The Bonefire\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44789686","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7688,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442704,442808]],"Locations in B":[[45670,45774]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper provides an overview of twenty years of feminist philosophy in Northamerica. The professionalization of feminist theory that has occurred through the mainstreaming of feminist philosophy creates a danger of a gap between theory and practice that creates the danger of co-optation. Three stages of feminist philosophizing are outlined, including the radical critique, gender difference and difference\/post-modernist stages. The last stage, it is argued, leads to an conceptual impasse about feminist strategies for social change.","creator":["Ann Ferguson"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22cfbb51-bffa-3951-ab55-b7cc00154f88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Twenty Years of Feminist Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810196","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8536,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[489858,489992],[493927,494005]],"Locations in B":[[45513,45646],[54313,54388]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study examines the maintenance of gender and sexuality within a female-dominated sport, focusing specifically on men who cheer. Data were collected at a northeastern Ohio university using focus group discussions and one-on-one interviews. The interviews and discussions provided themes regarding stigmatization of male cheerleaders, the need to project a heterosexual image, and methods of saving face. Findings indicate that the gender and sexuality of men who cheer are called into question. In order to affirm their gender and sexuality as masculine and heterosexual, the men engage in behavior that sexualizes women and desexualizes their relationships with men. Overall, the findings demonstrate how the patriarchal superstructure manifests in smaller institutions in society. Implications of these findings and areas of future research are further addressed within the study.","creator":["MICHELLE BEMILLER"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380237"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617066"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200248"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80e5d3fb-678f-3dc2-8baf-f4a83079e126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20832269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociofocus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Focus","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MEN WHO CHEER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832269","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay advances same-sex romantic correspondence as a pre-Stonewall site of rhetoric's queer extracurriculum. Grounded in archival research on African American women Addie Brown and Rebecca Primus, I argue their epistolary exchange was animated by queer erotics that enabled their participation in self-education for racial uplift.","creator":["Pamela VanHaitsma"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44783612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709729"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f54a742-583e-3033-bec9-b2699ed8380c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44783612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Romantic Correspondence as Queer Extracurriculum: The Self-Education for Racial Uplift of Addie Brown and Rebecca Primus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44783612","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":10353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jehanne M Gheith"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/131838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/131838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Superfluous Man and the Necessary Woman: A \"Re-Vision\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/131838","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Mielly"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Filling the Continental Split: Subjective Emergence in Ken Bugul's \"Le baobab fou\" and Sylvia Molloy's \"En breve c\u00e1rcel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125354","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9066,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[521846,521949]],"Locations in B":[[55219,55319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Issues of race, dance, and the performativity of fashion intersect in Rick Owens's Spring\/Summer 2014 ready-to-wear fashion runway presentation \"Vicious,\" a collaboration with choreographer LeeAn\u00e9t Noble and 40 American step dancers. Asking how this event intervenes in the racial and body politics of the fashion industry interrogates how black lives are allowed to matter, in fashion and in performance scholarship.","creator":["Michael J. Morris"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d413edda-e8c8-328c-8e8c-a3fb49b5312d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24917079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Team Vicious: Four Sections and a Coda, or #BlackLivesMatter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917079","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":16322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Clement"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43293788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Tennessee","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Elizabeth I and the Politics of Gender: Empire and Masculinity in John Banks' \"The Unhappy Favourite\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293788","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11205,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[57950,58113]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents a stylized account of legal work involved in doing a corporate deal transnationally, drawing inspiration from the work of American legal realist, Robert Hale. In so doing, it seeks to show that legal institutions on which transnational corporate power depends are far more plastic, discordant, and irresolute than commonly recorded. By tethering global legal order to the decisive inferiority of the transnational corporation, while taking that interior for granted, recent accounts (such as those of Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri or A. Claire Cutler) may do more to fortify than query the contemporary 'rule' of global capital.","creator":["Fleur Johns"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4129584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Power: The Deal, Corporate Rule, and the Constitution of Global Legal Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129584","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":11214,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443425,443517]],"Locations in B":[[4786,4879]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANJA BRUNNER"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00654019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"616280295"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"669497ad-7e16-3cd2-9f6f-783b539edbbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24877314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrimusi"}],"isPartOf":"African Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"International Library of African Music","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE SINGER ANNE-MARIE NZI\u00c9 AND THE SONG \"LIBERT\u00c9\": ON POPULAR MUSIC AND THE POSTCOLONIAL STATE IN CAMEROON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877314","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LISA FEATHERSTONE"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7925c57e-ebfb-3f9e-b6fb-68c491554f90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Fitful Rambles of an Unruly Pencil\": George Southern's Challenge to Sexual Normativity in 1920s Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986332","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gad Barzilai"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1555097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"824be6bf-bbd4-3954-9d39-fcd11877893b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1555097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"884","pageStart":"867","pagination":"pp. 867-884","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture of Patriarchy in Law: Violence from Antiquity to Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1555097","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7401,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467394]],"Locations in B":[[44247,44319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper concerns gender aspects of children's play in nature environments. In an ethnographic study, children between 1\u00bd and 6 years in a Swedish outdoor preschool were videotaped during time for free play. Four different play themes were particularly popular among the children: war and superhero play, family play, animal play and physical play. Each one of these themes has been analyzed from two perspectives: how nature resources are used and which gender positions they provide. Within the themes, nature's affordances are used in various ways. Similarly, a range of gender positions is evident across the themes. The superhero theme includes exclusively gender-stereotyped masculine play positions, while the family theme includes both traditional gender positions and possibilities for transgressions. Further, animal play as well as physical play provides non-gendered play positions. Natural environments are not gender-coded in themselves and they invite certain play activities where girls and boys play together. Thus, nature spaces seem to offer good opportunities to promote gender equity.","creator":["Eva \u00c4ngg\u00e5rd"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.21.2.0005","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"52938983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215589"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32f51c9b-fcea-3980-bb9e-54d0880b2f48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.21.2.0005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chilyoutenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Children, Youth and Environments","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Cincinnati","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Children's Gendered and Non-Gendered Play in Natural Spaces","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.21.2.0005","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11661,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[67979,68054]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay I argue that in any country, the realization of sexual equality requires a certain level of economic development. I support this general theme by examining a particular case-a dilemma faced by Chinese feminists today. I intend to show that in a developing country such as China, where heavy physical labor is still in great demand in daily life and productive activity, full sexual equality cannot be a reality.","creator":["Xinyan Jiang"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a059820-13bd-3408-a8e3-9cc7ac8d1f59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Dilemma Faced by Chinese Feminists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810528","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10368,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[61689,61773]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PATRICIA BROOKE"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5f60c34-936f-31ea-8c00-e3f80c7191de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41557251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lyons and Tigers and Wolves - Oh My! Revisionary Fairy Tales in the Work of Angela Carter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557251","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9406,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[74988,75056],[438865,438948]],"Locations in B":[[7124,7192],[55235,55317]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hasta ahora, la novela \"Las dos doncellas\" de Cervantes ha recibido menos atenci\u00f3n por parte de los cr\u00edticos que otras de las \"Novelas ejemplares\". En este estudio se ha de investigar desde la perspectiva de los \"Gender Studies\". En el centro del an\u00e1lisis est\u00e1n las diferentes figuraciones de masculinidad y feminidad: El texto, as\u00ed la tesis defendida, presenta un continuo en el cual no existen atribuciones de g\u00e9nero absolutos, sino s\u00f3lo graduales. Con eso resulta posible alcanzar un nuevo entendimiento del contenido ejemplar de la novela, seg\u00fan el cual Cervantes, de manera s\u00fatil, se manifestar\u00eda aqu\u00ed en favor de un concepto m\u00e1s flexible del matrimonio cristiano: Determina el matrimonio como un espacio que, a\u00fan siendo definido normativamente por las leyes religiosas y sociales, puede estar aprovechado de maneras muy diferentes en la pr\u00e1ctica.","creator":["Cornelia Ruhe"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27942655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00358126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"383ecf79-00ba-3c26-a331-e82090b042d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27942655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romafors"}],"isPartOf":"Romanische Forschungen","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Vittorio Klostermann GmbH","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"PREK\u00c4RE EXEMPLARIT\u00c4T: Geschlechterkonfigurationen in \"Las dos doncellas\" von Miguel de Cervantes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27942655","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":11391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article, the focus of which is on girls in mathematics, engages poststructural debates over knowledge and power to explore how female subjectivity is lived within the classroom, and the first section looks at some recent feminist reconstructionists' proposals developed from the idea of \"different experience.\" The second section is set within the context of the poststructuralists' undermining of the \"light\" of progressive development, central to the Enlightenment project. Foucauldian ideas are introduced for a theoretical discussion about the ways in which the girl becomes gendered through available discourses and practices. Building on this discussion, the third section provides an analysis of some moments of classroom life and offers a different story about girls in school mathematics.","creator":["Margaret Walshaw"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/749802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01a7637b-a094-3298-a39e-974f591a5ee4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/749802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresematheduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Research in Mathematics Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Education","Mathematics","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Foucauldian Gaze on Gender Research: What Do You Do When Confronted with the Tunnel at the End of the Light?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/749802","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HELLE BR\u00d8NS"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41684283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e8acd92-f1e7-30ea-b084-55ede73925b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41684283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Masculine Resistance: Expressions and Experiences of Gender in the Work of Asger Jorn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41684283","volumeNumber":"141","wordCount":10133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-02-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f238d8c-bdf5-35b5-8677-fbcc57e9ceb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4020689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"35","pagination":"p. 35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"This Month's Bookshelf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020689","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":1672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing upon a one-year-long ethnography of boys' constructions of their gender and sexual identities in one South African high school, this paper seeks to empirically explore and theorise how 58 grade 10 and grade 11 working-class boys create and seek out spaces among their male peers from which to cultivate their masculinities through heterosexual discourses, including being 'at risk' of getting AIDS. In this study, boys' daily struggles of trying to straddle the divide between hypersexual versus homosexual\/effeminate versions of masculinity both subverted and reinforced hegemonic gender\/sexual relations in the school context. Being caught up in this restrictive grip of heteronormativity meant that there were few spaces in male peer culture to resist hegemonic masculinity. The 'responsible male\/controlled' position is indicative of one such space in which boys attempted to resist forms of hyper-sexuality. While this position cannot really be viewed as progressive, it nevertheless allowed boys to re-position themselves as moral agents through an assertion of control over their sexuality. Given the presence of these identity struggles, this paper, in general, suggests that interventions with boys need to cautiously explore these tensions\/contradictions in identity making as opportunities to cultivate more gender sensitive and less violent discourses on masculinity. Cet article s'inspire d'une recherche ethnographique d'une dur\u00e9e d'un an sur la construction des identit\u00e9s de genre et des identit\u00e9s sexuelles chez les gar\u00e7ons, dans une \u00e9cole secondaire en Afrique du Sud. Il cherche \u00e0 explorer et \u00e0 th\u00e9oriser, de mani\u00e8re empirique, comment 58 gar\u00e7ons issus de la classe ouvri\u00e8re, en classes de seconde et de premi\u00e8re, cr\u00e9ent et sont en recherche d'espaces parmi leurs pairs masculins, \u00e0 partir desquels ils peuvent cultiver leur masculinit\u00e9 avec des discours h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuels qui englobent la notion d'\u00eatre \u226a\u00e0 risque\u226b vis-\u00e0-vis du sida. Dans cette \u00e9tude, les efforts quotidiens des gar\u00e7ons pour ne pas tomber dans le pi\u00e8ge de la s\u00e9paration entre les perceptions de la masculinit\u00e9 fond\u00e9es sur l'opposition entre \u226ahypersexuel\u226b et \u226ahomosexuel\/eff\u00e9min\u00e9\u226b, ont \u00e0 la fois \u00e9branl\u00e9 et renforc\u00e9 les relations de genre\/sexuelles dans le contexte scolaire. Dans cette \u00e9tude, \u00eatre pris \u00e0 ce pi\u00e8ge de l'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormativit\u00e9 restrictive a eu pour signification une absence presque totale d'espaces dans la culture masculine des pairs, pour pouvoir r\u00e9sister \u00e0 la virilit\u00e9 h\u00e9g\u00e9monique. La position \u226ad'homme responsable\/contr\u00f4l\u00e9\u226b a indiqu\u00e9 l'existence de l'un de ces espaces au sein duquel les gar\u00e7ons tentaient de r\u00e9sister aux formes d'hypersexualit\u00e9. Alors que cette position ne peut r\u00e9ellement \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme progressiste, elle a n\u00e9anmoins permis aux gar\u00e7ons de se repositionner en tant qu'agents moraux, \u00e0 travers l'affirmation du contr\u00f4le de leur sexualit\u00e9. \u00c9tant donn\u00e9 l'existence de ces conflits d'identit\u00e9, cet article sugg\u00e8re, d'une mani\u00e8re g\u00e9n\u00e9rale, que les interventions aupr\u00e8s des gar\u00e7ons doivent explorer ces tensions\/contradictions que l'on rencontre dans la construction des identit\u00e9s, en tant qu'opportunit\u00e9s pour cultiver des discours moins violents et plus sensibles aux questions de genre, en ce qui concerne la virilit\u00e9, mais ceci, avec prudence. Bas\u00e1ndonos en una etnograf\u00eda de un a\u00f1o de duraci\u00f3n sobre c\u00f3mo los chicos de una escuela de secundaria en Sud\u00e1frica construyen su identidades sexuales y de g\u00e9nero, en este art\u00edculo pretendemos analizar emp\u00edricamente y teorizar el modo en que 58 chicos de clase trabajadora de los grados 10 y 11 crean y buscan espacios entre sus compa\u00f1eros para desarrollar sus masculinidades mediante discursos heterosexuales, incluyendo 'correr el riesgo' de contraer el sida. En este estudio, el esfuerzo diario de los chicos por intentar superar las diferencias entre las versiones de hipersexual y homosexual\/afeminado de la masculinidad, socava y refuerza las relaciones hegem\u00f3nicas entre los g\u00e9neros\/sexos en el contexto de la escuela. Verse atrapados en este control restrictivo de heteronormatividad significaba que hab\u00eda pocos espacios en la cultura coet\u00e1nea masculina para resistirse a la masculinidad hegem\u00f3nica. La posici\u00f3n de hombre responsable y controlado da una idea de este espacio en el que los chicos intentaban resistirse a formas de hipersexualidad. Mientras que esta posici\u00f3n no puede considerarse realmente como progresista, no obstante, permit\u00eda que los chicos pudiesen reorientarse como agentes morales mediante una autoafirmaci\u00f3n del control sobre su sexualidad. Dada la presencia de estas luchas de identidad, en general en este art\u00edculo sugerimos que en las intervenciones con chicos se deber\u00eda analizar con cuidado estas tensiones o contradicciones en la b\u00fasqueda de su identidad para aprovechar la oportunidad de mantener discursos sobre la masculinidad que tengan m\u00e1s en cuenta las cuestiones de g\u00e9nero y que sean menos violentos.","creator":["Kaymarlin Govender"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23047723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07b03af2-0a62-30e0-80c5-5a7efd1468ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23047723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"901","pageStart":"887","pagination":"pp. 887-901","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The cool, the bad, the ugly, and the powerful: identity struggles in schoolboy peer culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23047723","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88aad0a3-bab6-357d-bff3-fe3a49310c39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463515","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":30415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although Korean director Choo Min Ju translation and adaptation of Scottish playwright Douglas Maxwell's coming-of-age drama Our Bad Magnet may look like a straightforward case of East-to-West intercultural appropriation, this essay argues that Choo's insertion of a new romantic narrative between two male characters not only \"queers\" the text, but offers the Western observer an alternative entrance into the discussion of appropriation that queers the idea of the intercultural itself. Rather than approaching Maxwell's text as a source to which the director remains indebted in the creation of her own intercultural synthesis, the essay reads Choo's Our Bad Magnet as the transcultural consumption of a resource, not only on the part of Choo, but also by the very active online theatre fan community in Seoul. Her production intervenes not only in contemporary mainstream Korean culture's dominant attitudes toward the LGBTQ community, but also the Western theatre scholar's assumptions about the relationship between \"source\" and \"target\" cultures in acts of intercultural transference and consumption.","creator":["Claire Maria Chambers"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a9e85e9-34d1-3797-8aa6-a30729c85637"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24582594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Transcultural Consumption through a \"Queer\" Narrative: Douglas Maxwell's \"Our Bad Magnet\" in Seoul","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582594","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":10696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Lucretia's principal virtue is her undoing. Her chastity is vaunted as the guarantor of Collatinus's honour and standing, as the trigger for Tarquinius's lust, and its brutal loss as the symbol of the corruption of the Etruscans and thus the catalyst for Junius's ascent to power. She is established in a patriarchal system as a desexed woman, as innocent as a child, who can only exist as a chaste wife. When her virtue is polluted by rape, she has no choice but to kill herself in an attempt to restore her function as chaste wife. Britten's opera encodes the naming of Lucretia in terms redolent of the oppressive 'speechacts' of Peter Grimes. Through tonal and motivic association the projection of her innocence and the 'stain' introduced by her rape are worked into the opera's design at the level of longrange musical structure. Through analysis of the thematic implications of musical process in the work, this article opens to view the complex and at times conflicting moral hermeneutics of the work.","creator":["J. P. E. HARPER-SCOTT"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f293c80-08d6-3972-8b26-1e7eb72cf21c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Britten's opera about rape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664821","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12098,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147117,147232]],"Locations in B":[[15453,15570]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84f04d52-57fa-3dfe-9fd8-2808678650ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23481083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Education - Educational resources","Business - Industry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481083","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lee Wiles"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24243852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947342"},{"name":"oclc","value":"623716902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de24e70c-808f-3481-908a-66569ea23f76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24243852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmormhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Mormon History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"vi","pagination":"pp. vi, 1-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Mormon History Association","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Monogamy Underground: The Burial of Mormon Plural Marriage in the Graves of Joseph and Emma Smith","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24243852","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":23132,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[453618,453724]],"Locations in B":[[69308,69414]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"J\u00fcrgen Schlaeger describes autobiography (\"a discourse of anxiety\") and biography (\"a discourse of usurpation\") as \"distinctly different kinds of rhetorical constructions with different legitimizing strategies, grounds of authority, and points of view.\" Focusing on the memoirs of Teresa and Anna, daughters of the poet and writer, Roy Campbell (1901\u20141957) and his wife Mary (1898\u20141979), this essay examines the challenges arising when autobiography arbitrates biography.","creator":["JUDITH L\u00dcTGE COULLIE"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TELLING THE LIFE STORY, ANXIOUSLY: THE MEMOIRS OF TERESA AND ANNA CAMPBELL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540966","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10843,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101617,101785]],"Locations in B":[[54067,54227]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the power of fitness in American history since the American Revolution and shows how the modern concept of fitness demands activity, agency, and constant self-improvement. It begins by demonstrating how this understanding of fitness began to take shape from the mid-nineteenth century as liberal, competitive, and Darwinist thinking gained ground and intensified. With the end of the New Deal order in the 1970s, fitness acquired unprecedented power as a \"regulatory ideal\"(Judith Butler) of a neoliberal America. Into the present, it has established differences between fit and healthy people who are granted recognition as productive citizens and others who are not.","creator":["J\u00fcrgen Martschukat"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0340613X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618142"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235708"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc564a8f-a1e4-33e6-8332-f39174e02b9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24891243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gescgese"}],"isPartOf":"Geschichte und Gesellschaft","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Pursuit of Fitness: Von Freiheit und Leistungsf\u00e4higkeit in der Geschichte der USA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891243","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mahan L. Ellison"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edd54396-a704-304d-8c0d-407bb3193b51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Easier Said Than Done: Masculinity on the Front Line in Rolando Hinojosa's \"The Useless Servants\" and \"Korean Love Songs\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490412","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10074,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[141117,141226]],"Locations in B":[[33255,33364]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victoria Warren"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e17ca782-ddbe-3ca6-887b-24510f6a5442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25096149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Mis)Reading the \"Text\" of Criseyde: Context and Identity in Chaucer's \"Troilus and Criseyde\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096149","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARK LIPOVETSKY","ILYA KUKULIN"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c68cc272-8bc9-3f6d-981e-ea089ec3c941"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43919393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Art of Penultimate Truth\": Dmitrii Prigov's Aesthetic Principles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919393","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":12337,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[454310,454554]],"Locations in B":[[21124,21681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article puts Marxist and queer theories in conversation with one another to advance thinking about gender and sexuality. I argue that Marxist concepts such as class, mode of production, and struggle need to be \"borrowed\" to sharpen queer theory. My arguments are situated in the context of the Philippine literature that has examined the local queer experience. Such approach productively re-imagines contemporary discourses and performances of sexuality in Philippine society.","creator":["JOHN ANDREW G. EVANGELISTA"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0573f555-7e17-374a-aa38-7101c8e8f2aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Sociological Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Philippine Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Queer and Capital: Borrowing Key Marxist Concepts to Enrich Queer Theorizing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486379","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6623,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[37993,38099]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["K. K. Seet"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40155576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40155576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Discourse from the Margin: A Triptych of Negotiations in Contemporary Singapore English-Language Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40155576","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":5839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Phallogocentrism as cultural abuse of sex is a difficult issue that has been addressed by many modern Western feminist philosophers. By comparing their insights with those deriving from Chinese Confucianism and Daoism, I propose the concept of \u201caffectionate respect\u201d as an intellectual counterbalance to phallogocentrism. In this essay, I have discussed certain arbitrary fallacies based on masculine predominance and spotlighted the merits of being female in balancing emotion and reason, justice and fairness, and institutionally-biased powers and the human rights of innate dignity. To achieve gender justice and equality before God and under Heaven must be logically and morally extended to law and politics.","creator":["Jiangdong SHAN"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16733436"},{"name":"oclc","value":"75971161"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-249215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3ed8ec3-a024-30ce-88e2-d65c79ed5d27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26571913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frontphilchina"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers of Philosophy in China","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Affectionate Respect in Gender Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571913","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8947,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[56631,56719]],"subTitle":"An Inquiry into the Cultural Abuse of Sex"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joellen Masters"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7eef7a87-ab1a-315e-8000-d02b52919610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Nothing More\" and \"Nothing Definite\": First Wives in Elizabeth Gaskell's \"Wives and Daughters\" (1866)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225793","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9984,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58219,58292]],"Locations in B":[[21612,21688]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo examina la significaci\u00f3n, y el impacto sobre el p\u00fablico, de la presencia de las mujeres en las tablas de los corrales, mujeres a quienes se les conced\u00edan no solamente una voz y una alta visibilidad f\u00edsica, sino tambi\u00e9n papeles de contundente relieve e inter\u00e9s destinados a explorar y comentar la condici\u00f3n femenina. En un mundo en que las mujeres estaban condenadas, por lo menos en teor\u00eda, al silencio, a la sumisi\u00f3n y al encierro, no deber\u00edamos subestimar la trascendencia sociocultural de una ampliaci\u00f3n tan extraordinaria, chocante para muchos, de los recursos y tem\u00e1tica del teatro en Espa\u00f1a. Utilizando algunas de las aportaciones de Pierre Bourdieu sobre la relaci\u00f3n entre el lenguaje y el poder simb\u00f3lico, propongo que las protagonistas femeninas, sobre todo por medio de sus apasionados y elocuentes parlamentos, se apropian del lenguaje, el lenguaje del orden simb\u00f3lico, y lo hacen suyo. La comedia da la palabra a las mujeres, ubic\u00e1ndolas firmemente dentro de las estructuras filos\u00f3ficas, intelectuales y morales, de manera que la voz femenina forma una parte integral de lo que las obras nos est\u00e1n diciendo acerca del mundo. Este fen\u00f3meno y sus circunstancias \u2013 marco sociopol\u00edtico, expectativas, actuaci\u00f3n femenina, recepci\u00f3n, autoridad masculina prestada por los dramaturgos \u2013 forman la sustancia del presente estudio.","creator":["MELVEENA McKENDRICK"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16afa41b-a89d-308e-bbef-37b966e69e03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Breaking the Silence: Women and the Word in the Comedia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763966","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the authors examine White parents' endeavors toward the racial enculturation and inculcation of their transracially adopted Black children. Drawing on in-depth interviews, the authors identify and analyze themes across the specific race socialization strategies and practices White adoptive parents used to help their adopted Black children to develop a positive racial identity and learn how to effectively cope with issues of race and racism. The central aim of this article is to examine how these lessons about race help to connect family members to U. S. society's existing racial hierarchy and how these associations position individuals to help perpetuate or challenge the deeply embedded and historical structures of White supremacy. The authors use the notion of White racial framing to move outside of the traditional arguments for or against transracial adoption to instead explore how a close analysis of the adoptive parents' racial instructions may serve as a learning tool to foster more democratic and inclusive forms of family and community.","creator":["Darron T. Smith","Brenda G. Juarez","Cardell K. Jacobson"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76c92e97-5dc1-33ff-bfd5-880af587dfaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"1230","pageStart":"1195","pagination":"pp. 1195-1230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Coding theory","Philosophy - Logic","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"White on Black: Can White Parents Teach Black Adoptive Children How to Understand and Cope With Racism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304581","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":15018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracy Fessenden"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da515c04-eee7-3f76-8d47-479b249eeb49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Convent, the Brothel, and the Protestant Woman's Sphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175562","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven Mullaney"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2871215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mourning and Misogyny: Hamlet, The Revenger's Tragedy, and the Final Progress of Elizabeth I, 1600-1607","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871215","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":13487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[228626,228747]],"Locations in B":[[66929,67050]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alon Rachamimov"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.111.2.362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4520518-4a02-38da-beca-d42d197e5334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/ahr.111.2.362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Disruptive Comforts of Drag: (Trans)Gender Performances among Prisoners of War in Russia, 1914\u20131920","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.111.2.362","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":10367,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433944,434025]],"Locations in B":[[34401,34480]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa H. Schwartzman"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"668","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-668","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439351","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper we describe a UK-based participatory action research project that looks beyond the discourse of tolerance to investigate and challenge heteronormative processes in primary schools through reflective action research. This 28-month ESRC-funded project supports 15 primary teachers working in schools in three regions of the UK to develop action research projects that address lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender equality in their own schools and classrooms. In this paper we will examine how the original principles on which the project design was based have manifested themselves throughout the course of the project, drawing upon examples of classroom practice and reflective discussions among project team members. We will explore how designing intentionally for collective participation has produced spaces for people to do and think in ways that have not only gone beyond what we imagined but have also challenged and sometimes contradicted our own ways of thinking.","creator":["Ren\u00e9e DePalma","Elizabeth Atkinson"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4a03a8c-c21b-33e0-affe-e85f6aa038d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"855","pageStart":"837","pagination":"pp. 837-855","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"'No Outsiders': Moving Beyond a Discourse of Tolerance to Challenge Heteronormativity in Primary Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375617","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b891d1a-af17-3ad3-8818-3b61c09de3f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620288","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":2140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores political cartoons published in various journals in 1917, and investigates the legacy of that year\u2019s graphic satire. As many previous works have noted, the revolutions of 1917 brought struggles for the meaning of signs, and in political cartoons there were marked changes in subject matter and visual vocabulary. While previous studies have interpreted these developments as illustrations of political revolution, this essay, which is based on original research, will argue that the fundamental shift that began in 1917 was towards a kind of visual satirical discourse that possessed performative power. Proposing a new conceptual framework for analysis based on theories of performativity, the theoretical contribution of this essay will be to show how graphic satire reveals the performative force of cartoons, by arguing that Soviet graphic satire\u2019s aesthetic invites readers\u2019 critical engagement with contemporary discourses, a vision that derives from the political cartoons of 1917.","creator":["John Etty"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26565172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e29991fc-13f1-3fd4-bba2-6e14ea684162"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26565172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"674","pageStart":"664","pagination":"pp. 664-674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Legacy of 1917 in Graphic Satire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26565172","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":3839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann M. Ciasullo"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76edc80f-4f5e-3991-b066-47911a2ead56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"608","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-608","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Making Her (In)Visible: Cultural Representations of Lesbianism and the Lesbian Body in the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178806","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although Eve of John Diyden's The State of Innocence embodies many egregious womanly flaws of misogynist rhetoric, recalcitrant elements of the opera suggest a profound degree of uncertainty about the degree of Eve's culpability for the Fall. Eve's pride leads to mankind's destruction, but the opera creates a structural parallel between Adam and Lucifer, intimating that Eve's disobedience is partially learned. Not all husbands are alike; if Adam is an appropriate ruler over Eve, Lucifer, that other Adam in paradise, is not. Transgressive female behavior may therefore originate in illegitimate domestic rulership, masculine deceit, and intellectual neglect.","creator":["JENNIFER L. AIREY"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35779792-8b34-39c8-b3e9-6d4cca4416d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40927923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Eve's Nature, Eve's Nurture in Dryden's Edenic Opera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927923","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":6607,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[155161,155365]],"Locations in B":[[3486,3690]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler","Stanley Aronowitz","Ernesto Laclau","Joan Scott","Chantal Mouffe","Cornel West"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"563dab4f-80d9-3ecd-bf53-2fdcea655cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Discussion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778790","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Douglas Cazaux Sackman"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487511"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40611904"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23320"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"Reviews in American History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gender Trouble with Wilderness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031557","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2762,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alison Rieke"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Plunder\" or \"Accessibility to Experience\": Consumer Culture and Marianne Moore's Modernist Self-Fashioning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831843","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147682,147832]],"Locations in B":[[7332,7482]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jay Prosser"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41b3c2a8-390c-305a-be47-8428662c2576"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NO PLACE LIKE HOME: THE TRANSGENDERED NARRATIVE OF LESLIE FEINBERG'S \"STONE BUTCH BLUES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285752","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Starting from the distinctive communication styles that Deborah Tannen associates with men and women, we probe for the bases of gender differences. We suggest that these contrasting communication styles, which contribute to systematic miscommunication between women and men, are indices of deeper differences that serve the more fundamental purpose of providing individuals with the benefits of multiple distinctive world views, thus improving their chances for dealing successfully with the range of contingencies with which life confronts them. In essence, our argument runs that the imperfect empirical associations between communication styles and gender that have attracted Tannen's attention are consequences of the constellations of basic personality characteristics that form Carl Jung's personality types. Various gender-associated personality types are, in turn, socially cultivated by disparate organizations faithful to the principles of the rival cultures that constitute Mary Douglas' grid-group theory. These distinctive ways of life are thus crucial to the social maintenance of evolutionarily constructive cultural diversity among human groupings as small as mating pairs. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Exploramos las bases de las diferencias de g\u00e9nero que Deborah Tannen, en su estilo \u00fanico de communicaci\u00f3n, asocia con los hombres y las mujeres. Sugerimos que estos estilos contrastantes de comunicaci\u00f3n, los cuales contribuyen a un sistem\u00e1tico malentendido entre mujeres y hombres, son \u00edndices de diferencias m\u00e1s profundas que sirve a un prop\u00f3sito m\u00e1s fundamental de suministrar a individuos con los beneficios de puntos de vista distintivos, m\u00faltiples y universales, por lo que perfeccionar sus oportunidades para resolver exitosamente con un sin n\u00famero de contingencias con los que la vida los confronta. En essencia, nuestro argumento est\u00e1 relacionado con las asociaciones emp\u00edricas e imperfectas entre estilos de comunicaci\u00f3n y g\u00e9nero que ha atra\u00eddo la atenci\u00f3n de Tannen, \u00e9stas son consecuencias de las constelaciones de caracter\u00edsticas b\u00e1sicas de personalidad que forman los tipos de personalidad de Carl Jung. De hecho, varias asociaciones de g\u00e9nero son tipos de personalidad, socialmente cultivadas por organizaciones dispares y leales a los principios de las culturas rivales que constituye la teor\u00eda de red grupal de Mary Douglas. Estas formas distintivas de vida son cruciales al mantenimiento social de la diversidad cultural evolutiva y constructiva entre agrupaciones humanas tan peque\u00f1as como una pareja en acoplamiento. \/\/\/ [Chinese] (Unicode for Chinese abstract). \/\/\/ [Japanese] (Unicode for Japanese abstract).","creator":["Gregg Franzwa","Charles Lockhart"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a3e6344-4b60-3d44-aff0-4615b062d726"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1389359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Social Origins and Maintenance of Gender: Communication Styles, Personality Types and Grid-Group Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389359","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este ensaio prop\u00f5e uma discuss\u00e3o do artigo de Claire Hemmings \"Telling Feminist Stories\", publicado pela Feminist Theory, buscando verificar de que forma a est\u00f3ria constru\u00eddadesconstru\u00edda que a autora do artigo apresenta sobre o feminismo recente encontra ou n\u00e3o ecos na circula\u00e7\u00e3o de textos feministas considerados fundamentais para a pr\u00f3pria estrutura\u00e7\u00e3o te\u00f3rica da \u00e1rea. Tamb\u00e9m discutimos como a utiliza\u00e7\u00e3o de alguns textos representativos influencia a consolida\u00e7\u00e3o de teorias do feminismo na contemporaneidade, principalmente aquelas afinadas com perspectiva p\u00f3s-estruturalista. Discutimos as teses defendidas pela autora, buscando exemplificar nossa concord\u00e2ncia ou discord\u00e2ncia em rela\u00e7\u00e3o aos argumentos fundamentais apresentados ao longo do texto atrav\u00e9s de exemplos cr\u00edtico-liter\u00e1rios. This essay discusses the article \"Telling Feminist Stories\" published by Claire Hemmings in Feminist Theory, trying to verify the ways through which the construction\/deconstruction of the story of recent feminist discussed by the author influences (or not) the more frequent circulation of some texts considered fundamental for the structuring of feminist studies. We also discuss the way references influence the consolidation of specific theories, mainly those connected to the poststructuralist perspective. We discuss the main points defended by the author, exemplifying our agreement or disagreement through examples taken from the critic-literary sphere.","creator":["Liane Schneider"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2989b1bc-a03b-3525-93fa-7a0cbc15011f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Contando est\u00f3rias feministas\" e a reconstru\u00e7\u00e3o do feminismo recente","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327588","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Malini Johar Schueller"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/431372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40491181-709d-398a-99de-4602bbe5d0b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/431372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Analogy and (White) Feminist Theory: Thinking Race and the Color of the Cyborg Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/431372","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10867,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[449831,449977]],"Locations in B":[[55267,55419]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2568597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a2c9e51-d350-3ce8-afe6-40116c76104b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2568597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2568597","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":35378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Models of judicial decisionmaking have traditionally relied on legal, political, and contextual variables, emphasizing judges' background, litigants' rights claims, and the relative social status of the parties involved. A recent scholarly expansion has brought cultural variables into the equation, indicating that judicial scholarship might usefully include narrative and rhetoric as measures of legal consciousness. This project examines AIDS-related litigation from the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals between 1983 and 1995, emphasizing the social construction of sexuality. It uses content-based coding and stepwise probit analysis to evaluate the importance of controlling for language that depicts AIDS as a \"gay disease\" and its association with death and plague metaphors.","creator":["Joe Rollins"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bca88381-6f40-3a49-b1cd-461f0dc4a0b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"AIDS, Law, and the Rhetoric of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512196","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13825,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[82606,82689]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Graham Ward"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23925127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EDITORIAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925127","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":2093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346164","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay provides an overview of feminist methodology and its potential to enhance the study of higher education. Foregrounding the multiple purposes and research relationships developed through feminist research, the essay urges higher education scholars to engage feminist theories, epistemologies, and methods to inform policy, research, and practice.","creator":["Rebecca Ropers-Huilman","Kelly T. Winters"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45164a0f-11d8-3b4a-a8c2-1c397c5d95ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"667","pagination":"pp. 667-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Research in Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337166","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":9829,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500768]],"Locations in B":[[57949,58023]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evelyn Blackwood"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25075902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c44e8057-14bc-392a-9fbe-6cd64583b551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25075902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"879","pageStart":"849","pagination":"pp. 849-879","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Gender Transgression in Colonial and Postcolonial Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25075902","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":16997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Webb","Kirsti Cole","Thomas Skeen"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af74ab8d-b56d-3a0a-925d-07b968b77470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Social Projects: Building Bridges between Communities and Universities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472208","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":9729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Scott R. MacKenzie"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40039933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Breeches of Decorum: The Figure of a Barbarian in Montaigne and Addison","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039933","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13005,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435597]],"Locations in B":[[62036,62111]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81fa16f0-ee71-3bec-8bcb-3b7c8c254f31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"496","pagination":"pp. 496-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178694","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent memoirs by mathematicians Edward Frenkel, Michael Harris, and C\u00e9dric Villani emphasize the role of emotion in their lives and culture. This essay argues that the authors advance a vision of a just, inclusive, and creative mathematical community both sustained and transformed by socially aware mathematical passion.","creator":["JOE DeLONG"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90015603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cc20f86-f9b7-3214-8834-ae5ba8f33748"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90015603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contemporary Memoirs of Mathematical Passion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90015603","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7748,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[38488,38678]],"Locations in B":[[23889,24079]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer M. Cotter"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c85a5ed6-fee2-3b8d-882e-1c2f92391817"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112150","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Gubar"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75cd64ee-621e-38a0-8e6f-f61841bb2659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 452-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminist Misogyny: Mary Wollstonecraft and the Paradox of \"It Takes One to Know One\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178182","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9539,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62337,62497]],"Locations in B":[[27495,27659]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Sayrs"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40374248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00695696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0e02975-e2e1-3ac7-a0ba-4d584b2993e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40374248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collmusisymp"}],"isPartOf":"College Music Symposium","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"College Music Society","sourceCategory":["Arts","Education","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Deconstructing McClary: Narrative, Feminine Sexuality, and Feminism in Susan McClary's Feminine Endings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40374248","volumeNumber":"33\/34","wordCount":8337,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[137588,137865],[139303,139469],[139956,140199],[315911,316114]],"Locations in B":[[30037,30313],[31791,31957],[31964,32203],[32515,32718]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mobility and travel have recently attracted the interest of many people, both inside and outside geography. This interest has often focused on issues of gender. Mobile women, in particular, have been seen to be indicative of wider social and cultural themes of power, exclusion, resistance and emancipation. In this paper, I consider the gendered dimensions of a moral panic in the United States between 1869 and 1940, known as the 'tramp scare'. I argue that the construction of the panic around threats to women's bodies and the actual experience of female tramps illuminates a clearly gendered and embodied politics of mobility.","creator":["Tim Cresswell"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/623295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Embodiment, Power and the Politics of Mobility: The Case of Female Tramps and Hobos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623295","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13488,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46022,46230]],"Locations in B":[[63348,63556]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lucy Mulroney"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5202dfb-26c5-328a-9382-e4739c651f0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"592","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-592","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"One Blue Pussy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0559","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":13507,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[142546,142785]],"Locations in B":[[50112,50352]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew Spicer"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95c7da2c-83d3-3397-bd9b-01f75097c28c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Film Studies and the Turn to History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180676","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":4450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LORI HOPE LEFKOVITZ"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216682"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56634092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213347"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1a850a7-308c-3e35-bd7e-5873307dc5e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41300146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewiquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Jewish Quarterly Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"408","pagination":"pp. 408-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Genesis of Gender Transgression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300146","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":5203,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[199893,200133]],"Locations in B":[[21876,22207]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Kurdish novel emerged in 1935 and, towards the end of the twentieth century, established itself as a literary genre with a significant quantity and quality. However, until the last decade of the previous century the Kurdish novel was entirely dominated by Kurdish men and there is no single novel written by a Kurdish woman. During recent years, however, Kurdish women novelists have contributed to the development of this genre. This article aims to assess Kurdish women's novel-writing and, through analyzing and discussing their style and themes, tries to find out their main characteristic generic features. An attempt is made to see if there are thematic and stylistic differences between Kurdish novels written by the women and their male counterparts.","creator":["Hashem Ahmadzadeh"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31bee1ab-e988-3eed-bcaf-5ef93b9265ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25597510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"738","pageStart":"719","pagination":"pp. 719-738","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The World of Kurdish Women's Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597510","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANDREAS BJ\u00d8RNERUD"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sexual politics: a re-trait?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263417","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4986,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[68430,68668],[99385,99504],[487948,488011]],"Locations in B":[[1093,1352],[1408,1528],[29226,29290]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Parvathi Menon"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27003151","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1010805715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8536d72-2a94-3530-9b42-e0409568f61b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27003151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ajilunbounded"}],"isPartOf":"AJIL Unbound","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"SELF-REFERRING TO THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27003151","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":3125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A CONTINUATION OF WAR BY OTHER MEANS"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Burt"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Slammin' Shakespeare in Acc(id)ents Yet Unknown: Liveness, Cinem(edi)a, and Racial Dis-Integration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844074","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":13338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"State-led urban development projects, especially in non-democratic settings, are conducive to a top\u2013down analytic that focuses on state planners and architects. The goal of this article is to explore how we might decentre this narrative and jointly consider elite and non-elite narratives, through an analysis of discourses of modernity as enacted in and through these statist urban projects. Deploying a practice-based analytic, I explore how notions of 'modernity' are performed and enacted through the exclusionary practices of elites and non-elites alike. Taking the case of Kazakhstan's new capital city, Astana, I examine how the state-led urban modernisation agenda simultaneously draws upon and re-inscribes a set of interlocking popular geographic imaginaries (Soviet\/modern, urban\/rural, north\/south), and demonstrate how ordinary citizens are not just passive spectators, but active participants in the political drama of state- and city-building.","creator":["Natalie Koch"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a62052a-5296-3844-a522-8640a9e425ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24582877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"432","pagination":"pp. 432-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bordering on the modern: power, practice and exclusion in Astana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582877","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This introduction to the thematic section entitled \u201cEthnography, Performance and Imagination\u201d explores performance as \u201cimaginative ethnography\u201d (Elliott and Culhane 2017), a transdisciplinary, collaborative, embodied, critical and engaged research practice that draws from anthropology and the creative arts. In particular, it focuses on the performativity of performance (an event intentionally staged for an audience) employed as both an ethnographic process (fieldwork) and a mode of ethnographic representation. It asks: can performance help us research and better understand imaginative lifeworlds as they unfold in the present moment? Can performance potentially assist us in re-envisioning what an anthropology of imagination might look like? It also inquires whether working at the intersections of anthropology, ethnography, performance and imagination could transform how we attend to ethnographic processes and products, questions of reflexivity and representation, ethnographer-participant relations and ethnographic audiences. It considers how performance employed as ethnography might help us reconceptualise public engagement and ethnographic activism, collaborative\/participatory ethnography and interdisciplinary research within and beyond the academy. Finally, this introduction provides a brief overview of the contributions to this thematic section, which address these questions from a variety of theoretical, methodological and topical standpoints. Cette Introduction \u00e0 la section th\u00e9matique \u00ab Ethno\u00adgraphie, performance et imagination \u00bb explore la performance comme \u00ab ethnographie imaginative \u00bb (Elliott et Culhane 2017), c\u2019est-\u00e0-dire comme pratique de recherche transdisciplinaire, collaborative, incarn\u00e9e, critique et engag\u00e9e qui s\u2019inspire de l\u2019anthropologie et des arts cr\u00e9atifs. L\u2019accent est mis en parti\u00adculier sur la performativit\u00e9 de la performance (un \u00e9v\u00e9nement d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment mis en sc\u00e8ne pour un public), employ\u00e9e \u00e0 la fois comme processus ethnographique (travail de terrain) et comme mode de repr\u00e9sentation ethnographique. Les questions pos\u00e9es sont les suivantes : La performance peut-elle nous aider \u00e0 \u00e9tudier et \u00e0 mieux comprendre les mondes imaginaires tels qu\u2019ils se d\u00e9ploient dans le moment pr\u00e9sent ? La performance nous permet-elle de repenser l\u2019anthropologie de l\u2019imagination ? Est \u00e9galement pos\u00e9e la question de savoir si le travail men\u00e9 \u00e0 la crois\u00e9e de l\u2019anthropologie, de l\u2019ethnographie, de la perfor\u00admance et de l\u2019imagination permet de transformer la fa\u00e7on dont sont abord\u00e9s les processus et les produits ethnographiques, les questions de r\u00e9flexivit\u00e9 et de repr\u00e9sentation, les relations ethnographes-participants et les publics ethnographiques. La mani\u00e8re dont la performance employ\u00e9e comme ethnographie peut nous aider \u00e0 reconceptualiser l\u2019engagement public et l\u2019activisme ethnographique, l\u2019ethnographie collaborative\/participante, ainsi que la recherche interdisciplinaire au sein et au-del\u00e0 du monde universitaire, est aussi examin\u00e9e. Enfin, cette Introduction donne un bref aper\u00e7u des contributions \u00e0 cette section th\u00e9matique, lesquelles abordent ces questions de diff\u00e9rents points de vue th\u00e9oriques, m\u00e9thodologiques et th\u00e9matiques.","creator":["Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston","Virginie Magnat"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"877aa86b-a639-3b0d-a7c2-1e11822ce258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26794620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794620","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Ethnography, Performance and Imagination"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHI-YUN SHIN"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reclaiming the Corporeal: The Black Male Body and the 'Racial' Mountain in \"Looking for Langston\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263724","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439426,439517]],"Locations in B":[[5205,5298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra Runzo"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dickinson, Performance, and the Homoerotic Lyric","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928301","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":6425,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[199893,200133],[499374,499507]],"Locations in B":[[11375,11615],[36854,36996]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["bonnie wheeler"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ed0d1db-ca91-3c0d-a8ac-5a55434580b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"ii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-ii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Editor's Note","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869218","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines contrasting but complementary narrative and filmic representations of the Guadeloupean resistance to Napoleon's attempt to reimpose a slavery regime in the French colonies. This underrepresented and under-analyzed event, one of landmark importance in the Caribbean tradition of rebellion and self-liberation, focuses our attention more closely on the extended arc of liberatory acts \u2013 inscribed in a variety of locations but always espousing the same goal \u2013 that mark the identitarian activities of Caribbean slaves almost from the inception of the colonial moment to the act of emancipation. In a large sense, the resistance to Napoleon's invading forces, although ultimately doomed to failure in Guadeloupe, emerged from and was shaped by the specificities of social, economic, and political structures that transformed Guadeloupe during this critical period, and was driven by principles of liberation and self-emancipation emerging from the path adopted by Guadeloupe's governor, Victor Hugues, and the various communities over which he presided. Resistance in Guadeloupe was a fight to preserve a way of life. Analyzing this resistance compels us to acknowledge individual and collective expressions of the idea and practice of freedom that were originally erased by those charged with constructing the colonial script, and draws attention to the still-marginal inscription of these events in contemporary culture.","creator":["H. ADLAI MURDOCH"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"401a2c2e-0295-38fa-8cd4-51732a5beea2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24485630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Locating History within Fiction's Frame: Re-presenting the \"Epop\u00e9e Delgr\u00e8s\" in Maximin and Lara","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485630","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11747,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480]],"Locations in B":[[28371,28613]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article raises questions about the heuristic and political effects of \"normalizing\" sociological identities, the state and space through discussing gendered identities on commercial farms in Hurungwe District, Zimbabwe. It discusses how the various \"interests\" of men and women farm workers cannot be \"read\" off their gender but must be situated within the jural identities that have emerged within the specific legal space of commercial farms. Through approaching farm workers this way, it is suggested that academic studies and political interventions can better understand the jural identities and power relations involved on the commercial farms and in our own representations. \/\/\/ Cet expos\u00e9 traite de questions concernant les effets heuristiques et politiques des identit\u00e9s sociologiques \"normalisantes\", de l'\u00e9tat et de l'espace \u00e0 travers les identit\u00e9s de genre portant \u00e0 discussion dans les fermes commerciales du Hurungwe District au Zimbabwe. Il traite de la mani\u00e8re dont les divers \"int\u00e9r\u00eats\" des ouvriers agricoles hommes ou femmes ne peuvent \u00eatre dans l'annonce de leur genre mais doivent \u00eatre repr\u00e9sent\u00e9s dans les identit\u00e9s l\u00e9gales qui ont \u00e9merg\u00e9es \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de l'espace sp\u00e9cifique des fermes commerciales requis par la loi. Par cette approche des ouvriers agricoles, on sugg\u00e8re que les \u00e9tudes acad\u00e9miques et les interventions politiques puissent \u00eatre plus compr\u00e9hensives \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des identit\u00e9s l\u00e9gales et des relations de pouvoir inh\u00e9rentes des fermes commerciales et de nos propres repr\u00e9sentations.","creator":["Blair Rutherford"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b819472b-124a-3ecb-a7ea-9a1852aac482"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25605856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"The Power Plays of Identities on Commercial Farms in Zimbabwe: \"Law and Gender\" in Southern Africa Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605856","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper analyzes Enda Walsh\u2019s three major new plays between 2006 and 2014: The Walworth Farce (2006), Penelope (2010), and Ballyturk (2014). In this period Walsh\u2019s work shifts from being primarily linguistically oriented to becoming much more attentive to the shape and modalities of performance. Bedbound, Misterman, The Small Things, and The Walworth Farce share a focus on aberrant and confining narrative performance, but a fault line lies between The Small Things and The Walworth Farce. The frenetic pace and surreal tone of the plays remains constant; however, there is a crucial difference in emphasis between carrying on and carrying out such a performance. In this new phase in Walsh\u2019s dramaturgy an elaboration of ritualized, repetitive, and carefully choreographed action in symbolically charged spaces is accompanied by the fragmentation of mimetic and diegetic readability. At the heart of this work is a fundamental set of anxieties. The Walworth Farce, Penelope, and Ballyturk, each in different ways, are plays about performance and performativity vis \u00e0 vis creativity and death. (CW)","creator":["Clare Wallace"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26894855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"811b4b6c-10c9-3a01-b18f-2e49fa9f91b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26894855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201c. . . ultimately alone and walking around in your own private universe\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26894855","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6559,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455558,455751]],"Locations in B":[[19039,19214]],"subTitle":"Metatheatre and Metaphysics in Three Plays by Enda Walsh"} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I argue that contemporary democratic theory gives insufficient attention to the important contributions dissenting citizens make to democratic life. Guided by the dissident practices of activist women, I develop a more expansive conception of citizenship that recognizes dissent and an ethic of political courage as vital elements of democratic participation. I illustrate how this perspective on citizenship recasts and reclaims women's courageous dissidence by reconsidering the well-known story of Rosa Parks.","creator":["Holloway Sparks"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eba8f87b-fcf8-3843-bc2b-df4a1da17aed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dissident Citizenship: Democratic Theory, Political Courage, and Activist Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810734","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":16596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adriana Cavarero","Anne Tordi"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24016419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Judith Butler and the Belligerent Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016419","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anthony Lioi"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE GREAT WORK BEGINS: Theater as Theurgy in \"Angels in America\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460595","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David G. Riede","Donald E. Hall","Clinton Machann","Marjorie Stone","Mary Ellis Gibson","Rosemarie Morgan","Jeffrey B. Loomis","Benjamin F. Fisher","Florence S. Boos","Margot K. Louis","Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67123598-a644-347f-93e8-6ba1d95ad5df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":94,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002254","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":42865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A surgeon participating in a 2008 congress on the topic of trans-identified people posed the question of whether doctors would have to defend themselves when \"judgment day\" comes for having employed surgical means to turn men into women or vice versa? What might be viewed as a certain level of (medical) irrationality surrounding transgender life, coupled with widely documented cases of violence directed at these groups may well partly be attributable to the deeply internalized doctrine of creation in Judeo-Christian culture. Objections, however, to the use of transgender medicine \"in the name of normalization\" cannot relate to the biblical tradition, for there is no normative concept of gender and no text whose scope is to articulate theory of gender. In the vast expanse and freedom of the Judeo-Christian creator there is space for diversity, variations, and, above all, for the development of individual freedom.","creator":["Mathias Wirth"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224197"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44707874"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eef8c830-fde5-3ea0-a372-30194579e74f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24485309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrelihealth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion and Health","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1597","pageStart":"1584","pagination":"pp. 1584-1597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Living in a Shell of Something I'm Not\": Transsexuality, Medical Ethics, and the Judeo-Christian Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485309","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The perfect market is the end of all actual markets - it is their ideal form. In normative economics, actual markets are the means of achieving the end or ideal of the perfect market. But this means that to achieve a perfect market would result in the end of all actual markets. Despite the centrality of the ideal of the perfect market in the subset of law and economics scholarship based on classical price theory, there is surprisingly little literature on its parameters. In this Commentary, Professor Schroeder examines this literature in order to explicate the nature of this ideal. A careful examination reveals that the perfect market is not merely impossible to attain, it is also logically impossible. The perfect market is a strange world without time, space, objects, subjects - or market exchange. An empirically impossible ideal defines the actual by serving as that which the actual should be. In contrast, a logically impossible ideal defines the actual by serving as that which the actual is not. Accordingly, unlike an empirically impossible ideal, the logically impossible perfect market cannot serve as an asymptote that actual markets might approach, because the perfect market is the death of the actual market. Professor Schroeder analyzes the ideal of the perfect market and the Coase Theorem through a feminist theory based on the jurisprudence of G. W. F. Hegel and the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan. She suggests reasons for both the continuing appeal of this deadly ideal and the lack of meaningful discussion of its contours. In Lacanian terms, the perfect market is located in the psychic realm of the Real, while actual markets (like law and language) are located in the realm of the Symbolic. Transaction costs, as understood by the Coase Theorem, serve a role parallel to Lacan's notion of castration - they are the \"cut\" that forever separates the actual market (the Symbolic) from the perfect market (the Real). Ironically, then, it is only the presence of transaction costs that enables the market to function.","creator":["Jeanne L. Schroeder"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9aee9c9-150c-3bdb-8dc1-b09d62e13b73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The End of the Market: A Psychoanalysis of Law and Economics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342427","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":44100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The American Graduation Initiative stands as the cornerstone of the Obama administration's higher education agenda. To investigate the state of the politics of education in the Age of Obama, this article employs critical discourse analysis to unveil the hidden meanings and ideological commitments inherent in Obama's policy discourse. Read within and against the backdrop of what Apple (2006) called the era of conservative modernization, Obama's policy discourse relies on a logic of abstraction that serves to promote a falsely \"postracial\" society in which hegemonic notions of education are perpetuated.","creator":["Aaron M. Kuntz","Ryan Evely Gildersleeve","Penny A. Pasque"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23120510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd6257e9-a7f7-3756-b082-c012e0628e21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23120510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"505","pageStart":"488","pagination":"pp. 488-505","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Obama's American Graduation Initiative: Race, Conservative Modernization, and a Logic of Abstraction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23120510","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":10361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This examination of the images of femininity and the eroticization of the woman-child in Botho Strau\u00df's Paare Passanten argues against a hasty reconciliation between a critique of enlightenment and a feminist critique of patriarchy. Pointing out the inherent contradiction of a criticism operating with gender-specific definitions of writing, it takes issue with the postulation of an affinity between Strau\u00df's text and an \u00e9criture feminine. Despite the historical distance and the differences between Strau\u00df's narrator and the flaneur of modernity, his images of the feminine as well as his disdain for the masses and his fear of losing a clearly defined male identity place Paare Passanten in the tradition of aesthetic modernity.","creator":["Karin Bauer"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f849b7f3-b7d4-3890-8a6d-e924dfd7fc18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Gegenwartskritik und nostalgische R\u00fcckgriffe: Die Abdankung der Frau als Objekt m\u00e4nnlichen Begehrens und die Erotisierung der Kindfrau in Botho Strau\u00df' Paare Passanten","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408340","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":7921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Discussions of the spatiality of globalization have largely focused on place-based attributes that fix globalization locally, on globalization as the construction of scale, and on networks as a distinctive feature of contemporary globalization. By contrast, position within the global economy is frequently regarded as anachronistic in a shrinking, networked world. A critical review of how place, scale, and networks are used as metaphors for the spatiality of globalization suggests that space\/time still matters. Positionality (position in relational space\/time within the global economy) is conceptualized as both shaping and shaped by the trajectories of globalization and as influencing the conditions of possibility of places in a globalizing world. The wormhole is invoked as a way of describing the concrete geographies of positionality and their non-Euclidean relationship to the Earth's surface. The inclusion of positionality challenges the simplicity of pro- and antiglobalization narratives and can change how we think about globalization and devise strategies to alter its trajectory.","creator":["Eric Sheppard"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c793e96-6bdd-39f4-a043-5c4bd0a4cb1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Spaces and Times of Globalization: Place, Scale, Networks, and Positionality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140812","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":14750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As Greece currently experiences severe economic, political, and social crises, this essay examines the uncritical understanding of Greek sovereignty by studying the cultural productions of undocumented transnational migrants working and living in the country. Through an analysis of three works by the performance group ELANADISTIKANOUME (Come and see what we do), the essay argues that minoritarian figures denied citizenship and an official Greek identity are pivotal contributors to activism and culture. Against the backdrop of rising nationalism and alongside the social movements of the last few years, it critiques the separation of citizens and non-citizens within representations of class struggle. The essay seeks to draw attention to a negotiation with and refusal of the nation-state and its discourse enacted through fugitive performances that grapple with the politics and aesthetics of border struggles, illegality, and political presence.","creator":["Hypatia Vourloumis"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2eb3da7-307a-3864-9438-59412f7d4c12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Come and see what we do\": Contemporary Migrant Performances in Athens, Greece","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580308","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":8147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vicky Unruh","Vicki Unruh"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a26c7fb-d371-3bcd-9ada-226dc823c87f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"48","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Una equivoca Eva moderna: \"Performance\" y pesqusa en el proyecto cultural de Antonieta Rivas Mercado","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530995","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11717,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[68429,68541]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LYNDAL ROPER"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23302574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1bc1876-8a08-3066-aefc-4312ffa89176"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23302574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Martin Luther's Body: The \"Stout Doctor\" and His Biographers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23302574","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":19193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Liesl Allingham"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44729999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f90d2ac5-caf6-3c58-bd3a-65454af402a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44729999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and Narrative Crisis in Christoph Martin Wieland's \"Novella without a Title\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44729999","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":9065,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467060,467110]],"Locations in B":[[56827,56878]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALEX EVANS"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fef8551-31be-3660-93fc-0afdacf9b32e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"How Homo Can Hollywood Be? Remaking Queer Authenticity from To Wong Foo to Brokeback Mountain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688647","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":9068,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438428,438587]],"Locations in B":[[37090,37249]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ausgehend von der j\u00fcngsten Diagnose eines \u201aPractice Turn\u2018 in der Sozialtheorie und empirischen Forschungspraxis arbeitet der Artikel Strukturmerkmale einer \u201aPraxistheorie\u2018 oder \u201aTheorie sozialer Praktiken\u2018 im Vergleich zu alternativen Sozial- und Kulturtheorien heraus. Von besonderer Bedeutung erweisen sich dabei drei Grundannahmen: eine \u201aimplizite\u2018, \u201ainformelle\u2018 Logik der Praxis und Verankerung des Sozialen im praktischen Wissen und \u201aK\u00f6nnen\u2018; eine \u201aMaterialit\u00e4t\u2018 sozialer Praktiken in ihrer Abh\u00e4ngigkeit von K\u00f6rpern und Artefakten; schlie\u00dflich ein Spannungsfeld von Routinisiertheit und systematisch begr\u00fcndbarer Unberechenbarkeit von Praktiken. Against the background of the recent diagnosis of a \"practice turn\" in social theory and cultural analysis, this article works out basic elements of what a \"practice theory\" can be in contrast to alternative social and cultural theories. Three features are of particular relevance for a theory of social practices: the \"informal\", tacit logic of practices and the location of the social in practical understanding and know-how techniques; the materiality of practices as dependent on bodies and artefacts; finally, the tension between routinization and basic incalculabilities of social practices.","creator":["Andreas Reckwitz"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23772286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03401804"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b0ed651-11ac-3d15-962d-425d7013e4d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23772286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitsozi"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"282","pagination":"pp. 282-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Lucius & Lucius Verlagsgesellscheft mbH","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Grundelemente einer Theorie sozialer Praktiken: Eine sozialtheoretische Perspektive \/ Basic Elements of a Theory of Social Practices: A Perspective in Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23772286","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":13678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theories are the ways we see things, and there seem to be three possible kinds of theories: transparent, opaque, and translucent. Transparent theories assume there is no theory at all or that we need none; opaque theories are those that are so dense or intricate that we cannot see through them to anything beyond; translucent theories (such as Freud's and Phillips's) keep us critically aware of where we are in relation to the things we want to see. In his several recent books, Phillips has developed in a very imaginative and compelling way, a tradition of thinking about children and their theories of difference that reaches back to Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and D.W.Winnicott. Phillips's ideas provide a fruitful medium between ideas about childhood and about children's literature and culture.","creator":["Michael Payne"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d5fd575-3ae1-3898-b7c4-6b5f4ed72bc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Difference Has Theory Made? From Freud to Adam Phillips","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115264","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6939,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124675]],"Locations in B":[[35533,35620]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shalini Shah"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8df6352e-443f-331e-bb0f-55676fc7b53f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26778565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"7\/8 (554-555)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Engendering the Material Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778565","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Study of Sanskrit Literature"} +{"abstract":"In 1905 Canadian explorer Mina Benson Hubbard successfully completed an expedition through Labrador that enabled her to map uncharted territory and write about her experiences. Her story of this expedition exists in several forms, including her 1908 autobiography, but this study explores her self-discovery as much as her discovery of unknown Labrador.","creator":["SHERRILL GRACE"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"HIDDEN COUNTRY\": DISCOVERING MINA BENSON HUBBARD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540323","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helen Berry"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23278599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"656af63f-1cae-39a3-a7c7-41ccecfe82a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23278599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"74","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering the History of Marriage: the Social Recognition of a Castrato Husband in Eighteenth-Century Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23278599","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11656,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489242,489343]],"Locations in B":[[59244,59356]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carla Lam"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b106208c-63b9-3dd0-9af9-f0e3ef603924"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"493","pageStart":"486","pagination":"pp. 486-493","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Know(ing) the Difference: Onto-epistem-ology and the Story of Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542169","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":3751,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[469408,469497]],"Locations in B":[[24081,24169]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the complex relationships between changing forms of commodity production and consumption and changing styles of religiosity in Zabid, the Republic of Yemen. I examine a couple of prominent logics of veiling in Fin-de-Si\u00e8cle Yemen: Some reformist women add \"Islamic socks\" and gloves to their already fully modest garb, while other women don chadors that decorate these garments with embroidery, making them into items of fashionable consumption and adornment. Other commodities, like a Chador Barbie that I found in Yemen's suq, are used to think through changing practices of consumption, adornment, and women's sociability in Zabid.","creator":["Anne Meneley"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d40f3b54-1b87-3382-8784-d000467c58c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Fashions and Fundamentalisms in Fin-De-Si\u00e8cle Yemen: Chador Barbie and Islamic Socks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497772","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12760,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[73771,73843]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meghana Nayak"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77de8f0e-944f-3653-8f4d-6a70bd77a7e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thinking About Queer International Relations' Allies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758509","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":4373,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[26516,26609]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Heilmann","Mark Llewellyn"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65cba7a7-5566-33bf-89d0-1d8274c7af32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30140901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"85","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial: Political Hystories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140901","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3252,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[63900,63982],[64063,64329]],"Locations in B":[[3479,3559],[3552,3818]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Literature relating to gender and discourse has shown that the features and structure of women's talk are highly cooperative. The implicature taken from this research has led to a binary opposition of gender stereotyping that allows for the inference that if women's talk is stylistically cooperative then it follows that cooperativity is a characteristic feature of women's social lives. Further, in opposition to this, men are seen as competitive and, as Cameron (1997) has rightly noted, analysis that focuses on the 'style rather than the substance of what is said' obscures the complex nature of talk and results in unhelpful 'competitive\/cooperative oppositions'. This article explores the genre of gossip and suggests two main sub-genres 'bitching' and 'peer group news-giving'. Analysis of instances of women's 'bitching' reveals that while women's conversations may rely on interlocutor cooperativity and a collaborative floor, the conversations are underpinned by a need to discursively claim symbolic capital through competition for socially acceptable images of femininity which reproduce a hegemonic ideology of gender.","creator":["JACKIE GUENDOUZI"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3232945f-9793-3820-a0af-8fca07682976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"'You'll think we're always bitching': the functions of cooperativity and competition in women's gossip","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047552","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lily H. Chi"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3baeea8b-ed73-3d0f-a975-9860a6d19cc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425792","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Levi R. Bryant"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"556b6a7a-04ae-3a29-9f85-dabef804dd12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Knots: Notes for a Daemonic Naturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0027","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Behavioral models in economic geography, and even in Marxist social science, are increasingly dominated by the postulate of the rational actor. Three parables are intimately associated with the rational choice model: that individual action dictates a social organization of maximum benefit to all individual members of society; that rational choices have rational consequences; and that self-interested individual behavior dominates collective action (the free rider problem). The first parable has been logically negated by Marxian applications of the rational choice model, but the second and third parables are not questioned by Marxist work. If the presumption that the rational actor can be abstracted from his\/her geographical context is rejected, however, the second and third parables are also fundamentally challenged. Rational economic choices made in a spatially differentiated but integrated economy can lead to actions that have the unintended consequence of undermining the very intentions those actions were supposed to realize. Rational actions need not have rational consequences in a space economy. The places in which everyday life is constituted provide all the conditions necessary for denying the general validity of the assumptions that legitimize the free rider argument.","creator":["Trevor J. Barnes","Eric Sheppard"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e18071-1554-3d78-9142-11eb0129e79a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/144038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is There a Place for the Rational Actor? A Geographical Critique of the Rational Choice Paradigm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144038","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":12676,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523960]],"Locations in B":[[75669,75761]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Science fiction by women in Spain has received little attention, as demonstrated in Spanish sf anthologies of both the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The anthology Alucinadas (2014, forthcoming in English as Spanish Women of Wonder) responds to this situation, and it includes work by twelve women writers (ten Spanish, two Argentinean). Alucinadas II (2016) features ten writers (eight Spanish, one Argentinean, and one Cuban). This article studies three thematic clusters found in these stories\u2014ecocriticism and (de)colonization, sexuality(ies), and cyberspace\u2014highlighting a wide range of social and political issues. Relevant motifs in science fiction, including dystopia\/utopia, time travel, the preservation of a balanced ecosystem, cybersex, virtual reality, space travel, and planetary colonization, are reimagined with a new critical feminist perspective. Most of these stories feature societies in which natural and sexual diversity co-exist.","creator":["Teresa L\u00f3pez-Pellisa"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f78f52d8-bd65-3a11-a861-95876c89c4b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"308","pagination":"pp. 308-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Alucinadas<\/em>: Women Writers of Spanish Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0308","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the theory of individual agency that propels the central thesis in Kenneth Mack's Representing the Race: The Creation of the Civil Rights Lawyer (2012)\u2014namely, that an important yet understudied means by which African American civil rights lawyers changed conceptions of race through their work was through their very performance of the professional role of lawyer. Mack shows that this performance was inevitably fraught with tension and contradiction because African American lawyers were called upon to act both as exemplary representatives of their race and as performers of a professional role that traditionally had been reserved for whites only. Mack focuses especially on the tensions of this role in courtrooms, where African American lawyers were necessarily called upon to act as the equals of white judges, opposing counsel, and witnesses. Mack's thesis, focused on the contradictions and tensions embodied in the performance of a racially loaded identity, reflects the influence of postmodern identity performance theory as articulated by Judith Butler and others. Mack and others belong to a new generation of civil rights history scholars who are asking new questions about contested identities related to race, gender, sexuality, and class. This essay offers an evaluation of this new direction for civil rights scholarship, focusing especially on its implicit normative orientation and what it contributes to the decade-old debate over how to conceive of agency in social movement scholarship.","creator":["Susan D. Carle"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4cb3968-0f5f-385a-bb44-8716d73dd63b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24545821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"522","pagination":"pp. 522-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceptions of Agency in Social Movement Scholarship: Mack on African American Civil Rights Lawyers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545821","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14253,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456129,456411]],"Locations in B":[[23400,23687]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the first part of the paper, we begin by attempting to establish the parameters of the eclectic concept of postmodernism. We then evaluate what have been described as two different strands of postmodernism; 'postmodernism of reaction' and 'postmodernism of resistance' and conclude that, while there are clear differences in intention and in emphasis, the 'two postmodernisms' have too much in common to be thought of as separate discourses. Next, we try to identify some key problems with postmodernism per se. Our central argument is that, contra the postmodern rejection of the metanarrative, a Marxist analysis still has most purchase in explaining economic, political, social and cultural changes and current developments in capitalist societies. We argue that postmodernist analyses in general, in their marginalisation and\/or neglect of the determining effects of the relations of production, are essentially reactionary. While noting a range of problems with postmodernism, we focus on its methodology and on its politics. In particular, we suggest that postmodernism, whether unwittingly or not, by denying the notion of 'emancipation in a general sense', serves to disempower the oppressed. In the second part of the paper, we look at postmodernism and education. We argue that recent major processes of restructuring, underpinned by market-led strategies, are in line with the latest requirements of capitalism. This is either denied, ignored or underplayed, or else the changes are designated merely as 'postmodern', in the discourse of postmodernism. In rejecting the determining effects of capital, or in denying or underemphasising the dualism of social class inherent in capitalism, postmodernism, we argue, serves to uphold the Radical Right in its two nation hegemonic project.","creator":["Mike Cole","Dave Hill"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19816a0e-bcc0-32c7-9cfa-c3715a77a407"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Games of Despair and Rhetorics of Resistance: Postmodernism, Education and Reaction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393366","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10432,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[53358,53578],[149651,150110],[438602,438674]],"Locations in B":[[31408,31628],[32009,32464],[32876,32948]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist theory draws heavily upon the work of Michel Foucault, primarily in three broad areas: bodies\/sex, authors\/readers, and histories\/academic disciplines. Although there are many feminist readings of Foucault's texts, some feminists find the appeal to his authority to be ludicrous if not traitorous. Others draw on or r\u00e9fashion that authority for their own critical ends, and still others combine sympathy with antipathy for Foucault's texts. Foucauldian-inspired work has proven and will continue to prove useful to feminists dealing with issues of solidarity and identity.","creator":["Devoney Looser"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd428bfb-9ddd-32a8-9970-62e840e28eaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"603","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-603","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Theory and Foucault: A Bibliographic Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946008","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4549,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[48647,48745],[432798,432974]],"Locations in B":[[2283,2382],[2440,2605]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Letitia Guran"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43050923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bb5e414-f166-357f-a532-1215df686084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43050923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Suzan-Lori Parks: Rearticulating the Laws of Race and Gender in African American History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43050923","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":11248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah M. Dunnigan"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f36e088d-ac46-3081-a075-8b372802493f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 298-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Undoing the Double Tress: Scotland, Early Modern Women's Writing, and the Location of Critical Desires","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178511","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481166,481301]],"Locations in B":[[57783,57918]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Ellsworth"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7371b14-5896-36f4-99c7-08742ecdf239"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20709735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching to Support Unassimilated Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709735","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Svetlana Alpers","Emily Apter","Carol Armstrong","Susan Buck-Morss","Tom Conley","Jonathan Crary","Thomas Crow","Tom Gunning","Michael Ann Holly","Martin Jay","Thomas Dacosta Kaufmann","Silvia Kolbowski","Sylvia Lavin","Stephen Melville","Helen Molesworth","Keith Moxey","D. N. Rodowick","Geoff Waite","Christopher Wood"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b6d3c63-7f60-392e-891e-64dd0558dbec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visual Culture Questionnaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778959","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":20909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the turn of the twentieth century, urban reformers across the United States became preoccupied with providing recreation facilities for urban children. Municipal park departments, boards of education and local philanthropic associations established supervised playgrounds, recreation parks, and vacation schools, in order to energize America's youth and transform its fledgling bodies into healthy future citizens. In addition to the daily schedule of physical exercise and games, playground groups also organized a series of exhibitions, field days and parades to demonstrate the positive effects of physical education on the nation's young bodies. Such demonstrations were overtly patriotic spectacles, incorporating transparently nationalistic rituals and symbols. Rather than focus on the symbolic currency of these events, however, I argue that the scientific logic of physical education renders a symbolic reading quite incongruent. Playgrounds drew from the emerging fields of child psychology and popular theories of psychosocial disorder. From these, a new field of play and physical education theory constructed the development of child consciousness as a mechanical and, more importantly, muscular process. Aspects of character, including national identity, were increasingly sought directly through children's physicality. The paper therefore rejects the seemingly symbolic function of public spectacles of fitness. Likewise, while recent interventions by non-representational theory might appear to coincide with the psychological rationale of playgrounds, they too must be treated with caution or risk affirming the success of an explicitly nation-building project. Instead, this paper seeks to do justice to the logic of playground reform as a real and potent strategy to produce socially useful subjects without according that logic permanent and efficacious status.","creator":["Elizabeth A. Gagen"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c70a0d78-9bcb-34f0-bf48-3ed2884b5a34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44250996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making America flesh: physicality and nationhood in early twentieth-century physical education reform","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250996","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carla Rodrigues"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acc8cc9b-df97-3547-9aa0-0521535a831e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Butler e a desconstru\u00e7\u00e3o do g\u00eanero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596444","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey B. Falla"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97029b89-db34-376f-8225-543c56afd5ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41207002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disembodying the Body: Allen Ginsberg's Passional Subversion of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207002","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7229,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[149133,149308],[439531,439625],[442176,442369]],"Locations in B":[[8336,8497],[28763,28857],[28999,29192]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie Zuckman"],"datePublished":"1989-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03f103f3-8fd0-3bc1-8d45-b29727f95b77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4020510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Survival Strategies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020510","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":3889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DAVID A. GRANGER"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.44.3.0069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3abe35e-7054-3cb7-a233-d69b2ad3a78f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.44.3.0069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Somaesthetics and Racism: Toward an Embodied Pedagogy of Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.44.3.0069","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Danish cartoon crisis, which attracted international media attention in 2006, has largely been debated as an issue of freedom of speech, feeding into broader debates about the 'clash of civilizations'. This article aims to explore the dominant discourses that performed a seemingly stable and consistent Danish identity at the domestic and external levels. Domestically, the discourse of a progressive Danish identity under threat from unmodern others was performed via discourses of a 'culture struggle' and a restrictive immigration policy designed to keep intact a narrow definition of Danishness. Externally, Danish identity and security was performed and defended via participation in the 'war on terror', democracy promotion and overseas development assistance, which became tools that were not simply associated with security in the liberal sense but also contained a spatial dimension designed to keep consistent the image of the complete nation-state. By adopting a discursive approach, the article aims to explore the performance of Danish identity that animated the cartoon crisis in order to highlight the complexities and contestations that animate ideas of self.","creator":["Christine Agius"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe3a7a33-25dd-3383-9b26-3bd75036fa83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26302248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing identity: The Danish cartoon crisis and discourses of identity and security","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302248","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DAVID DEUTSCH"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26365197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e39bc88f-4c99-3038-a015-e7ccbc31ef99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26365197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"ROBUST BODY AND SOCIAL SOULS: REASSESSING RONALD FIRBANK'S EFFEMINATE QUEER MEN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26365197","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MATTHEW H. SOMMER"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b40df2d-f7fd-3527-9f0a-068c2c3d0d42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Gendered Body in the Qing Courtroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616672","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":15200,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[370247,370326]],"Locations in B":[[5487,5566]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler has produced a body of highly influential feminist work, focused on the concept of gender as a social construct and a \"performance\". I analyze those concepts, arguing that, although earlier feminists had already defended many of Butler's key ideas, the idea of performance is an interesting and original contribution. However, key elements of her conception are insufficiently explored, and complex issues are obscured by the hermetic and unnecessarily obscure character of her style. Moreover, the work appears insufficiently related to practical political concerns and, in general to the material side of life. Insofar as it does address practical concerns, the work urges a quietism that appears at odds with feminist attempts to achieve material and institutional change.","creator":["Martha C. Nussbaum"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23984550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03400425"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23984550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leviathan"}],"isPartOf":"Leviathan","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Judith Butlers modischer Def\u00e4tismus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23984550","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An important theme within postmodern feminism is that essentialist notions of women and naturalized conceptions of the human subject are unnecessary and troubling ingredients for feminist political theory and practice (Alcoff 1988; Ferguson 1988; Hekman 1990; Mouffe 1992). Perhaps no one has advanced this claim more forcefully than Judith Butler through her use of the idea of performativity. According to Butler, our gender, sex and self are the effects of publicly regulated performances. In contrast, I argue that her notion of performativity is too pure to provide an account of our identities. Moreover, it is not obvious that we would be better off understanding ourselves as the effect of publicly regulated performances. This does not mean that a feminist politics would be better off with essentialism. Rather, I suggest that political practice can probably do without either an essentialist or performative understanding of the subject.","creator":["Peter Digeser"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/448847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de923283-8333-3087-9b3d-7b1d26d89490"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/448847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"673","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-673","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Performativity Trouble: Postmodern Feminism and Essential Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/448847","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9104,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[431997,432254],[433315,433476],[436836,436962],[466027,466383],[466454,466599],[523982,524252]],"Locations in B":[[11172,11429],[15553,15714],[16524,16651],[17232,17585],[17590,17735],[53787,55201]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stefanie Schulte Strathaus"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03437736"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606455008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a115530d-665c-3f2c-8f94-c1d6aeb2f301"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24058417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frauenfilm"}],"isPartOf":"Frauen und Film","issueNumber":"63","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Stroemfeld Verlag Buchversand GmbH","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Der Sprung der Lemminge im Rhythmus der Wiederholung: Sharon Sanduskys Film C'MON BABE (DANKE SCH\u00d6N)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058417","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Pelle"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.33.3.0031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa0bb1b3-e8b6-3c57-b730-1e10248bfb67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.33.3.0031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cWhen Is a Tulip Not a Tulip?\u201d: Grafting, Exoticism, and Pleasure Gardens in Jeanette Winterson's The PowerBook<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.33.3.0031","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9617,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[48540,48593]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines problems of the canonization of women's literature, using two adaptations of Schiller's Maria Stuart, Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer's Elisabeth (1841) and Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach's Maria Stuart in Schottland (1860). The obvious interpretations-as Schiller-adaptations, or as the authors' rejection of late eighteenth-century gender theories exemplified in Schiller's play and his poem \"Macht des Weibes\"-read Birch-Pfeiffer's and Ebner-Eschenbach's dramas as imitative, epigonal literature. Here, two alternative contexts are suggested: the tradition of women's historical drama, and the theory of gender performativity. These alternative contexts enable us to dispense with the traditional canon as a necessary point of reference for literature by women, a context which predetermines the assessment of women's literature as inferior.","creator":["Susanne Kord"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f297ec3-096e-3d8d-b558-1e00c92ac6cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30153276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Genders: Three Plays on the Power of Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153276","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":10354,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524098]],"Locations in B":[[66414,66781]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dagmar Freist"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40185768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0340613X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3765b1f-8db1-3bb2-a170-3227b90a571b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40185768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gescgese"}],"isPartOf":"Geschichte und Gesellschaft","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Zeitschriften zur Historischen Frauenforschung. Ein internationaler Vergleich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40185768","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheshire Calhoun"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d94648e6-b72e-30c8-8194-566d28b42c12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Gender Closet: Lesbian Disappearance under the Sign \"Women\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178313","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[11018,11080]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wendy K. Kolmar"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b46dd4fa-16a5-31c7-a00a-3d72b3657a00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Filming American Feminisms: Teaching Through Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0141","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen K. White"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2647658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223816"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38309773"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"282c62e8-bdc8-3177-aba7-9680aa987c95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2647658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"884","pageStart":"881","pagination":"pp. 881-884","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2647658","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":1520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carol Siegel"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"697956937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e0c948f-f20c-3718-a48a-dbea21ad1945"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26475515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"D. H. Lawrence, Mentor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475515","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article discusses how the seemingly contradictory construction of many early television comedy stars bespeaks rather coherent symbolic constructions of ethnicity, masculinity, and anxieties over the changing demographics of the American cultural landscape.","creator":["Susan Murray"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ebf1f3a-13b4-36f1-80c5-aa4de9ed2ff7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ethnic Masculinity and Early Television's Vaudeo Star","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225544","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11107,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431386,431480]],"Locations in B":[[10746,10840]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["R\u00fcdiger Schnell","Andrew Shields"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2887497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00387134"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fc791d8-2d16-34a1-a53e-ebb2994cebcf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2887497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"speculum"}],"isPartOf":"Speculum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"786","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-786","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Medieval Academy of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Discourse on Marriage in the Middle Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2887497","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary McIntosh"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26217db1-0313-32fa-98bf-e2f44ab52347"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395391","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1010,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[64790,64971],[65154,65297],[70771,70866],[116517,116849],[143759,143880]],"Locations in B":[[1263,1444],[1454,1598],[1898,1993],[2185,2519],[2561,2678]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen M. Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6ca76df-e5ee-35a7-b51c-1720121e023b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Negotiating Sovereignty in the Context of Global Environmental Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497540","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8585,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[50353,50422]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susana S. Martins"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"700e1ed7-8de8-3b21-927b-6802804c79c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3347225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Trouble and Lesbian Desire in Djuna Barnes's \"Nightwood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347225","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8897,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[63152,63329],[156130,156273]],"Locations in B":[[20611,20788],[24178,24321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Why have peace-building and reconstruction efforts so frequently failed to create durable institutions that can deter or withstand resurgent violence in volatile sites of cyclical conflict? Extant theory predicts that new institutions can help overcome violence and mitigate commitment problems in postconflict contexts by reducing uncertainty in inherently uncertain environments. By contrast, this article argues that postconflict institutions often prove limited in their abilities to contribute to durable peace because they offer wartime elites new venues in which to pursue conflict-era agendas. Through a micro-analysis of efforts to build the rule of law in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, I demonstrate that wartime elites capture and instrumentalize new legal institutions to maximize their intra- and inter-organizational survival; to pursue economic, military, and political agendas behind the scenes; and, in some cases, to prepare for an imminent return to war.","creator":["Milli Lake"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44651942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40611891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23319"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13dc962c-6d1a-354e-b5f5-b9f37c9ca74c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44651942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteorga"}],"isPartOf":"International Organization","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Building the Rule of War: Postconflict Institutions and the Micro-Dynamics of Conflict in Eastern DR Congo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44651942","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":16767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Liz Constable"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Economies of Lethal Emotions in \"La Condition humaine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251307","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":11198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Bradley"],"datePublished":"2011-11-17","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.4.0079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b24d923b-21ed-3f78-b53f-1991e3723357"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.4.0079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In the Space Between the Rock and the Hard Place: State Teacher Certification Guidelines and Music Education for Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.4.0079","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8532,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[91687,92010]],"Locations in B":[[38998,39321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines tensions between post-structuralist theories of subjectivity and essentialist constructions of identity in the context of a lesbian studies course co-taught by the authors. We describe the goals, organizing principles, content, and outcomes of this engagement in the production of \"queer pedagogy\"--a radical form of educative praxis implemented deliberately to interfere with, to intervene in, the production of \"normalcy\" in schooled subjects. We argue for an explicit \"ethics of consumption\" in relation to curricular inclusions of marginalized subjects and subjugated knowledges. We conclude with a critical analysis of the way that, despite our explicit interventions, all of our discourses, all of our actions in this course were permeated with the continuous and inescapable backdrop of white heterosexual dominance, such that: (a) any subordinated identity always remained marginal and (b) \"lesbian identity\" in this institutional context was always fixed and stable, even in a course that explicitly critiqued, challenged, and deconstructed a monolithic \"lesbian identity.\" \/\/\/ Cet article porte sur la tension qui existe entre les th\u00e9ories de la subjectivit\u00e9 et les constructions essentialistes de l'identit\u00e9 dans le contexte d'un cours sur le lesbianisme donn\u00e9 par les auteures. Ces derni\u00e8res d\u00e9crivent les buts, les principes organisateurs, le contenu et les r\u00e9sultats de leur d\u00e9marche en vue de cr\u00e9er ce qu'elles d\u00e9signent sous le nom de \"queer pedagogy\"-une forme radicale de la praxis \u00e9ducative implant\u00e9e d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment pour contrecarrer le concept de \"normalit\u00e9\" dans les mati\u00e8res enseign\u00e9es. Les auteures pr\u00f4nent une \"\u00e9thique de la consommation\" explicite pour ce qui a trait \u00e0 l'inclusion des mati\u00e8res marginalis\u00e9es et des connaissances subordonn\u00e9es. Elles concluent avec une analyse critique de la fa\u00e7on dont tous leurs discours et toutes leurs actions au sein du cours, en d\u00e9pit de leurs interventions explicites, avaient pour toile de fond in\u00e9vitable la pr\u00e9\u00e9minence de l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9 des Blancs si bien que: a) toute identit\u00e9 subordonn\u00e9e est toujours demeur\u00e9e marginale, et b) l'\"identit\u00e9 lesbienne\" dans ce contexte \u00e9tait toujours fixe et stable, et ce, m\u00eame dans un cours qui critiquait et mettait explicitement en question une \"identit\u00e9 lesbienne\" monolithique.","creator":["Mary Bryson","Suzanne de Castell"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1495388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59ead902-872d-3ebb-9ad0-0cd6bdcd8baf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1495388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Pedagogy: Praxis Makes Im\/Perfect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1495388","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9838,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[60876,60961]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Rom\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf9dbaa9-03a9-39e5-b879-499f6d701f9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Spectacular Women: Sites of Gender Strife and Negotiation in Calder\u00f3n's \"No hay burlas con el amor\" and on the Early Modern Spanish Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207975","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6490,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495025,495125]],"Locations in B":[[22977,23077]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc9925c7-4d3d-3a66-9678-c549d43b2f19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20444324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444324","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Kalu Uwaoma\u2019s social mobility from slave to slaver, warrant chief, Presbyterian elder, and British knight between 1865 and 1940 provides a subaltern view of enslavement and the attainment of freedom in the Bight of Biafra. In securing freedom without legal manumission, Kalu harnessed the muscles of emerging colonialism, Western education, and Christian modernity as well as local configurations of power and masculinity. This study restores Kalu to historical memory by drawing attention to his autobiography, one of two known personal narratives of pre-twentieth- century Igbo-Africans. Kalu\u2019s biography was an argument against re-enslavement, a social projection of his freedom, and a rebellious manipulation of a new form of masculinity known as ogaranya (wealth-power), which signaled the masculinization of wealth and the emergence of men as arbiters of more powerful political institutions. R\u00e9sum\u00e9 La mobilit\u00e9 sociale de Kalu Uwaoma d\u2019esclave \u00e0 n\u00e9grier, adjudant-chef, a\u00een\u00e9 presbyt\u00e9rien, et chevalier britannique entre 1865 et 1940, offre une perspective subalterne de l\u2019asservissement \u00e0 l\u2019affranchissement dans le Golfe du Biafra. En obtenant sa libert\u00e9 sans passer par l\u2019affranchissement juridique, Kalu a exploit\u00e9 la force naissante du colonialisme, de l\u2019\u00e9ducation occidentale, et de la Chr\u00e9tient\u00e9 moderne, ainsi que les configurations locales du pouvoir et de la masculinit\u00e9. Cette \u00e9tude rappelle Kalu \u00e0 la m\u00e9moire historique en attirant l\u2019attention sur son autobiographie, un des deux r\u00e9cits personnels Igbo pr\u00e9-datant le vingti\u00e8me si\u00e8cle. La biographie de Kalu \u00e9tait \u00e0 la fois un argument contre l\u2019asservissement, une projection sociale de sa propre libert\u00e9, et la manipulation r\u00e9volutionnaire d\u2019une nouvelle forme de masculinit\u00e9 appell\u00e9e ogaranya (richesse-pouvoir), qui indiquait la masculinisation de la richesse et l\u2019\u00e9mergence des hommes en tant que juges d\u2019institutions politiques plus puissantes.","creator":["Ndubueze L. Mbah"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.1.0027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271868"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829373364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a362b21-84ed-3042-b351-3917cd3ccc22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.1.0027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestafrihist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West African History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Performing Ogaranya: Kalu Ezelu Uwaoma, Male Slavery, and Freedom Politics in Southeastern Nigeria, c. 1860\u20131940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.1.0027","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":12392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0c4254e-496b-30b2-95c9-c128bacbecf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463252","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":26482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper seeks to look beyond criminalization models to examine what is known about building less violent societies, at the macro, middle and micro levels. It argues that criminalization is a flawed strategy for dealing with male violence against women caused by a failure to theorize social control adequately, a failure that has led feminists and other progressive social movements to mis-identify penality as synonymous with social control. The first part examines the realities of agendas of criminalization and increased punitiveness through incarceration rates. The second part seeks to explain the dependence on criminal law and institutions of criminal justice by feminists and new social movements. Focusing on wife assault and battery, it points out that strategies of criminalization have benefited privileged white women at the expense of women of colour, aboriginal and immigrant women, and points out problems with the failure to engender concepts of social control. The third part looks at what we know about policies, strategies and identities with the potential to transcend criminalization and facilitate social transformation, paying special attention to the construction, roots and maintenance of hegemonic masculinity. Overall it is argued that effective social control of aberrant behaviour must be sought outside criminal justice institutions, and that the feminist and progressive focus should shift towards examining how to create less violent people (particularly men), families, communities and societies.","creator":["Laureen Snider"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f05a96ed-86cd-3c90-8cd3-cdc447548069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23638580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TOWARDS SAFER SOCIETIES: Punishment, Masculinities and Violence Against Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638580","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":21038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Munchausen's syndrome is the term applied to patients who chronically perform or feign illness with seemingly no ulterior motive. In the absence of an apparent motive, the diagnosis of Munchausen's effectively pathologizes performance\u2014 a pathologization arising in response to virtuosic performances of illness that often succeed, for a time, in duping doctors. This essay examines Munchausen's as a performative illness wherein the simulated symptom has the potential to produce the symptom, leading to an understanding of the body as not merely extension or materiality, but also as psyche.In this psychophysiological understanding, the performer-patient who simulates the symptom effectively undergoes it, becoming in turn both ill and not ill.","creator":["Natalie Alvarez"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f1154a8-bc63-3bff-8a08-b1fbcc4cc157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41307539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Performance as Pathology: The Case of Munchausen's Syndrome and Performative Illness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307539","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":8706,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[458339,458456]],"Locations in B":[[32622,32739]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan J. Bandy"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40005523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae0f2307-826d-31c8-be4d-94becace226f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40005523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Women in Sport to Cultural Critique: A Review of Books About Women in Sport and Physical Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40005523","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The androgyne, whether as a symbol, a concept, or a bodily reality, appears to be employed in different and sometimes apparently contradictory ways within gnostic discourse. On the one hand, the heavenly father himself is an androgyne (Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit 51\u201352); the divine Barbelo, herself, is a \"mother-father\" and a \"thrice-named androgyne\" (Apocryphon of John 12.1\u20138), and Adam can only long for his ungendered days, when s\/he was higher than the creator god (Apocalypse of Adam 64.5\u201365.25). On the other hand, we also learn that Ialdabaoth himself, that same evil material creator, the most abject entity in gnostic myth, is also an androgyne (Hypostasis of the Archons 94.8\u201319). This apparent discrepancy serves as the focal point of this paper, which aims to explain the complex, albeit largely consistent, use of the concept of the queered gender in gnostic myth. By reading this myth according to its internal order of events, I attempt to show that gnostic androgyny, far from being a ratification of Greco-Roman discourse (as has been sometimes suggested), is actually a subversion of this very discourse, constructed so as to reify the gnostic disapproval of an important Greco-Roman cultural premise \u2014 one that has been aptly defined by David Halperin as \"the ancients' deeply felt and somewhat anxiously defended sense of congruence between a person's gender, sexual practices, and social identity\" (1990:23).","creator":["Jonathan Cahana"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557232"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0210f77c-2271-3403-a3a4-1a59f9e5437d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24644821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"numen"}],"isPartOf":"Numen","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Androgyne or Undrogyne?: Queering the Gnostic Myth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644821","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7117,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[149827,150088],[393618,393729],[474128,474306]],"Locations in B":[[20343,20599],[36986,37097],[37426,37590]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the roles of interdisciplinarity as both scholarly activity and social process and their implications for both academia and society. In addressing the interdisciplinarity between the sciences and humanities, rather than emphasizing antagonism, the article asserts that as science grows and expands, so will the humanities, because they both ask and answer separate sets of questions that have distinct intellectual significance and fulfill distinct social needs, which are not necessarily transposed onto neat hierarchical categories, disciplinary or otherwise. These distinctions between the sciences and the humanities are maintained through disciplinary programs emphasizing the epistemic foundations of science and the rhetorical basis of the humanities. In other words, it comes down to episteme. The article also considers the disciplinary confines of science studies and the interdisciplinary program of bioethics and suggests similar epistemic cross talk between the two. It concludes by stating that pursuing interdisciplinarity meets both scholarly and social needs more than would be achieved through solely disciplinary specialization.","creator":["Priya Venkatesan Hays"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646892547"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011202778"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0570c76-dffc-39a1-8c3e-125b4c60a289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epistemic Cross Talk:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Why We Need\u2014and Should Desire\u2014Interdisciplinarity"} +{"abstract":"This study examines the constructions of masculine discourse by Chinese fans of European football through online discussions. A critical discourse analysis of 50 online discussions by Chinese Arsenal fans shows how these fans use \u2018gaofushuai\u2019 and \u2018diaosi\u2019 to reproduce, contest, and racialize the dominant masculine order originally embedded in these two masculine terms. It also discovers these fans\u2019 enactment of fluid gender identities in their self-reference to the terms during interactions. Yet the patriarchal assumption still prevails in their discursive struggles, forming football and its fandom as completely gendered practices. This complex process is seen as the negotiation between the globalized European football culture and the local cultural meanings for Chinese masculinities. It offers implications for how the cyberspace of transnational sports fandom can form a site for discursive struggles over the hegemonic masculinity in contemporary China.","creator":["Yuan Gong"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fea01be0-fb5a-390c-a09a-3f6cd73eb1fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26376413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Online discourse of masculinities in transnational football fandom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376413","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Chinese Arsenal fans\u2019 talk around \u2018gaofushuai\u2019 and \u2018diaosi\u2019"} +{"abstract":"Cette \u00e9tude examine l'emploi des femmes immigrantes appartenant \u00e0 divers groupes ethnoculturels durant une p\u00e9riode de d\u00e9sindustrialisation rapide \u00e0 Toronto, soit du d\u00e9but des ann\u00e9es 80 jusqu'en 1991. En 1991, trois cat\u00e9gories de femmes immigrantes pouvaient \u00eatre identifi\u00e9es: des femmes appartenant \u00e0 des groupes ethniques bien implant\u00e9s et bien int\u00e9gr\u00e9s, principalement les groupes d'origine britannique, fran\u00e7aise et juive; des femmes appartenant \u00e0 d'importants groupes ethniques \u00e9tablis de longue date et venant de l'Europe du Sud et de l'Est; et des immigrantes appartenant \u00e0 une immigration non europ\u00e9enne r\u00e9cente. La derni\u00e8re vague de d\u00e9sindustrialisation a acc\u00e9l\u00e9r\u00e9 la tendance au retrait des femmes immigrantes du secteur manufacturier. Toutefois, les femmes des diff\u00e9rents groupes ethniques ne sont pas touch\u00e9es de la m\u00eame mani\u00e8re par les transformations de l'\u00e9conomie locale. Il s'ensuit que les revenus annuels des femmes varient selon les groupes ethniques. This study examines the employment of immigrant women from various ethnocultural groups during a period of rapid deindustrialization (the early 1980s to 1991) in Toronto, Canada. In 1991, three categories of immigrant women could be identified: well established and well integrated ethnic groups, principally British, French and Jewish women; large and longstanding ethnic groups from Southern and Eastern Europe; and recent non-European immigrants. The most recent round of deindustrialization has accelerated the movement of immigrant women out of the goods-producing sector, but women from each ethnic group were affected differently by the changing local economy. As a result, women's annual earnings differed across ethnic groups.","creator":["Valerie Preston","Wenona Giles"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11883774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607568918"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a1705fe-48f7-3bfc-91b2-4bd89b52bd99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44321226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajurbarese"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Urban Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Institute of Urban Studies, University of Winnipeg","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Human geography"],"title":"Ethnicity, Gender and Labour Markets in Canada: A Case Study of Immigrant Women in Toronto","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321226","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sean Moiles"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09adcd8a-b329-36c4-9333-594ebc739a76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Search for Utopia, Desire for the Sublime: Cristina Garc\u00eda's \"Monkey Hunting\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618105","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8878,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[54630,54705]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tanya Thresher"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb8a3fd2-ae55-34f1-8146-990240941ad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40920708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Performance of Sex and Gender in Oslo Nye Dukketeatrets \"Hedda Gabler\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920708","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":5485,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431390,431480],[437407,437618]],"Locations in B":[[26021,26111],[26179,26390]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The descriptions of Do\u00f1a Marina\/La Malinche by contemporary scholars involve two opposing philosophies: the patriarchal hegemony of premodern essentialist tradition led by Octavio Paz or the feminist approach privileging a constructionist form of identity development led by Adelaida Del Castillo, Norma Alarc\u00f3n, and others. I suggest a third approach: a psychological view arising from an examination of her behavior. Marina displays behavior consistent with dominant society psychological theories as well as with the Mexican American interactive model created by Raymond T. Garza and Jack P. Lipton. Thus, through the application of discourse theory, I suggest that Do\u00f1a Marina\/ La Malinche can be reconstructed using a literary naturalistic approach that reveals previously unexplored psychological aspects that possibly led to her behavior and that she can be read as the archetype of Gloria Anzald\u00faa's new mestiza.","creator":["Elizabeth Rodriguez Kessler"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15502546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4fffebd-17b0-3e08-9790-cd94d0d77803"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatistud"}],"isPartOf":"Chicana\/Latina Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"SHE'S THE DREAMWORK INSIDE SOMEONE ELSE'S SKULL\": \"La Malinche\" and the Battles Waged for Her Autonomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014640","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471]],"Locations in B":[[67501,67567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlotte Hammond"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20203e4b-b21e-3d96-a787-898d4b681a65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Children\" of the Gods: Filming the Private Rituals of Haitian Vodou","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949204","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Richard Bauman's theory of performance has supported feminist work in folklore but proves incompatible with contemporary concepts of gendered subjectivity. Bauman's combination of formalist and behaviorist perspectives paradoxically de-emphasized and undertheorized audience and emotion. The threat posed by women's performance is better explained by exploring how performance constructs reciprocal positions for audience and performer, mobilizes desire, and motivates investment in gendered subject positions. Analysis of two stories Bessie Eldreth tells about audience response to her singing exemplifies the power of this gender-informed approach.","creator":["Patricia E. Sawin"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/542078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/542078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"455","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Performance at the Nexus of Gender, Power, and Desire: Reconsidering Bauman's Verbal Art from the Perspective of Gendered Subjectivity as Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/542078","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":19471,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[442571,442873],[443068,443537],[443943,444257],[444961,445410]],"Locations in B":[[60339,60641],[60647,61121],[61108,61421],[61430,62882]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicholas A. Wolters"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7c91f75-1b06-342e-91d4-b278cd817ba2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90011958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"175","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"OUTFITTING THE AVANT-GARDE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011958","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"MEN\u2019S FASHION AND RAM\u00d3N G\u00d3MEZ DE LA SERNA"} +{"abstract":"Criticisms of Donnersmarck's highly successful film Das Leben der Anderen (2006) have focused primarily on historical inaccuracies, but the issues at stake in the film have little to do with the reality of life in the GDR and far more with the film's self-legitimation within a humanist aesthetic tradition. I argue that the film's semiotics of gender\u2014which ascribe to the masculine the qualities of spirit, intellect, and reason, and to the feminine the qualities associated with materiality and corporeality\u2014form the cornerstone of a manifesto for affirmative culture that, surprisingly, even enlists Brecht in order to create a consensus on the apolitical timelessness of art. The vanishing of the feminine at the end of the film coincides with playwright Dreyman's turn to the novelistic form, which eschews the problematic feminine vehicle (Sieland as actress) and allows direct communication between the minds of agent Wiesler and author Dreyman.","creator":["GARY SCHMIDT"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2bc71da-6448-3e6c-8eab-0261aa3929bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between Authors and Agents: Gender and Affirmative Culture in Das Leben der Anderen<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653550","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":9163,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[89115,89419],[156526,157054]],"Locations in B":[[8725,9027],[31094,31622]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Shields Jenkins"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa964247-a0bf-31bf-b66d-9458dcdaff02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41307880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"STAMPED ON HOT WAX\": GEORGE MEREDITH'S NARRATIVES OF INHERITANCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307880","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a material substance, essential to every organic process, water literally constitutes human \"being\", providing a vital \"natural symbol\" of sociality and of human-environmental interdependence. Its particular qualities of fluidity and transmutability lend themselves to a stream of metaphors about flows and interconnections, and to ideas about spatio-temporal change and transformation. Moving constantly between internal and external environments, water facilitates scheme transfers between conceptual models of physiological, social and ecological processes. Representing \"orderly\" flows and balances in each of these, it is vulnerable to pollution at various levels, with concerns about material pollution readily transferred to ideas about social and cultural disorder. In particular, metaphors employing water imagery dominate discourses about individual and cultural identities and the maintenance\u2014or dissolution\u2014of social boundaries. Based on ethnographic research in Dorset, this paper explores these themes and considers how human engagements with water\u2014in the home, and through interaction with rivers and water supply infrastructure\u2014mediate individual, familial and wider collective identities in a shifting cultural \"fluidscape\" of social, spatial, economic and political relationships. It suggests that, in a post-modern social milieu, images of water and identity vie with more grounded metaphors of landscape, place and location, assisting debates about the potential for fluidity in human constructions of identity.","creator":["Veronica Strang"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43809683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13635247"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b415d2c9-e10f-33b1-89db-feda1cd101ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43809683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldviews"}],"isPartOf":"Worldviews","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Religion","Science & Mathematics","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Political science - Politics","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"SUBSTANTIAL CONNECTIONS: WATER AND IDENTITY IN AN ENGLISH CULTURAL LANDSCAPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43809683","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ingrid Ranum","M. Arnold"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43810477"},{"name":"lccn","value":"215448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81be663e-0c55-38cc-be0d-eb4995fe14f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Woman's Castle Is Her Home: Matthew Arnold's \"Tristram and Iseult\" as Domestic Fairy Tale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347053","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12199,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[61153,61388]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo reflexiona cr\u00edticamente sobre un conjunto de trabajos que contemplan procesos de inclusi\u00f3n de inmigrantes; en particular aquella literatura que concibe estos grupos como minor\u00edas culturales definidas por sus identidades colectivas. En su lugar se propone la conceptualizaci\u00f3n de los mismos como grupos sociales estructurales. Su construcci\u00f3n tratar\u00e1 de explicarse a partir de su posicionamiento similar en ejes sociales de desventaja a trav\u00e9s de procesos sociales estructurales de desigualdad como son el racismo sist\u00e9mico, la division del trabajo o la normalizaci\u00f3n. Por \u00faltimo se incluye una perspectiva de g\u00e9nero para explicar procesos relacionales de la estructura social generados espec\u00edficamente por razones de g\u00e9nero, que sin embargo tienden a invisibilizarse tanto en debates te\u00f3ricos como en discusiones sobre pol\u00edticas de inclusi\u00f3n de inmigrantes. This article reflects critically on a number of works which consider immigrant inclusion processes from perspectives which view groups of immigrants as cultural minorities defined by their collective identities. In contrast to such perspectives, it proposes a conceptualisation of these cultural groups as structural social groups, and their construction will therefore be explained as arising from a similar position on social axes of disadvantage, through structural social processes of inequality, such as systemic racism, the division of labour, or the process of normalization. Finally, a gender perspective is included in order to explain relational processes of the social structure generated specifically by motives of gender which, nonetheless, tend to be rendered invisible not only in theoretical debates, but also in political discussions concerning immigrant inclusion policies.","creator":["M\u00e1riam Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02105233"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13947c83-4a7a-3e7c-b512-bf2c46a4f3fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reis"}],"isPartOf":"Reis","issueNumber":"135","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00bfEs el multiculturalismo bueno para los inmigrantes? \/ Is Multiculturalism Good for Immigrants?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304945","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Inge Stephan"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e34d0b3-c5b7-3200-aca4-f40a77eb52d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23977890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"687","pageStart":"684","pagination":"pp. 684-687","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977890","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Nombre d\u2019analyses et de r\u00e9flexions d\u2019Anglo-Saxons (mais aussi de Scandinaves et de N\u00e9erlandais) sur les interactions entre genre et culture \u00e9crite en Angleterre \u00e0 la fin du Moyen \u00c2ge ont \u00e9t\u00e9, ces derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, d\u2019une grande richesse. Elles m\u00e9ritent d\u2019\u00eatre appr\u00e9hend\u00e9es dans toute leur complexit\u00e9 et d\u2019\u00eatre confront\u00e9es aux r\u00e9cents questionnements de l\u2019historiographie fran\u00e7aise. Une grande partie de ces travaux s\u2019est inscrite dans le cadre d\u2019une analyse renouvel\u00e9e du triptyque \u00ab literacy\/orality\/aurality \u00bb et insiste sur la complexit\u00e9 des contenus et des formes de savoirs f\u00e9minins et de leurs transmissions \u00e0 tous les niveaux. Ces \u00e9tudes soulignent la multiplicit\u00e9 des situations et des mod\u00e8les selon les contextes sociaux, politiques et religieux. Elles \u00e9largissent et probl\u00e9matisent la notion de literacy ainsi que les rapports de domination hommes\/femmes qui en r\u00e9sultent, dessinant un paysage culturel toujours plus dense.","creator":["Aude Mairey"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e80541c-44f6-30c6-8b84-70ecb2080a09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26264846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"38","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Genre et culture de l\u2019\u00e9crit en Angleterre \u00e0 la fin du Moyen \u00c2ge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264846","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[58538,58609]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathy Rudy"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63e03a55-619d-3b76-afdb-05f896fb799b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 190-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radical Feminism, Lesbian Separatism, and Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178457","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13707,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727],[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[45460,45604],[79845,79907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben Murtagh"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85345ef-9c97-34d9-890e-6371ca6ae0bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23752576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"889","pageStart":"887","pagination":"pp. 887-889","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752576","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":1163,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147743]],"Locations in B":[[5037,5140]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"L'adaptation du drame carc\u00e9ral de John Herbert, Fortune and Men's Eyes, r\u00e9alis\u00e9e en 1971 par Harvey Hart, nous permet de r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir \u00e0 certains codes binaires qui contr\u00f4lent les repr\u00e9sentations de la sexualit\u00e9 et des r\u00f4les sexuels dans les espaces institutionnels. S'attardant \u00e0 l'adaptation comme acte transformateur dans la repr\u00e9sentation gaie, l'auteur propose que les diff\u00e9rences entre la pi\u00e8ce de Herbert et le film de Hart impliquent des diff\u00e9rences \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques narratives et sexuelles. Tout en faisant r\u00e9f\u00e9rence \u00e0 d'autres films pertinents, l'auteur se concentre particuli\u00e8rement sur le r\u00f4le crucial et hautement visuel que joue le travesti et \u00ab m\u00e8re de cellule \u00bb Queenie, dans Fortune and Men's Eyes. L'article sugg\u00e8re que ce personnage offre un mod\u00e8le iconographique puissant de la repr\u00e9sentation et de la r\u00e9ception du travestisme dans les cin\u00e9mas canadien et qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois.","creator":["PETER DICKINSON"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"218c1a6e-5064-3fa5-8713-af6906e11a5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24405526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CRITICALLY QUEENIE: THE LESSONS OF \"FORTUNE AND MEN'S EYES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405526","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10803,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433304,433476]],"Locations in B":[[45597,45769]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Male to female cross-dressing and performing have a long indigenous history in the Cook Islands. In recent years, Western-style drag shows have also been included in the Cook Islands cross-dressing repertoire. This article takes the highly cosmopolitan vehicle of the drag show and uses it to track the relationship between local and global models of gender and sexuality. It examines ways in which the iconography of domesticity and motherhood has been used to signify an uneasy relationship between local and global ideas of sexuality and gender.","creator":["Kalissa Alexeyeff"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29c85c64-46a3-3fa2-af21-20432ec08007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Globalizing Drag in the Cook Islands: Friction, Repulsion, and Abjection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724791","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ryan Claycomb"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f330b86d-9dfb-31f1-a976-247129c4fd65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging Psychic Excess: Parodic Narrative and Transgressive Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304852","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicole Edelman"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbf69c03-bce1-3270-be41-249a6b408311"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26264801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"37","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00c9ditorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264801","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5951163c-1190-3add-a4db-6d4288231263"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979450","volumeNumber":"303","wordCount":5588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What are the experiences of beginning queer educators? We followed four LGBTQ-identified teachers as they began their teaching careers. As pre-service teachers, they took on leadership roles advocating for LGBTQ-inclusive education. Their stories were diverse: from feeling empowered and accepted, to being conflicted about coming out, to being the sole advocate for LGBTQ-inclusive education, to experiencing school leadership and climates that ranged from supportive to hostile. We are encouraged by their resilience and agency, yet deeply concerned by some of their negative experiences. Systemic work remains to be done not only for LGBTQ youth but also for LGBTQ educators in schools. Quelles sont les exp\u00e9riences des \u00e9ducateurs homosexuels en d\u00e9but de carri\u00e8re ? Nous avons suivi le parcours de quatre enseignants qui s\u2019identifient LGBTQ \u00e0 leur d\u00e9but dans leur carri\u00e8re d\u2019enseignant. En tant qu\u2019enseignants en formation, ils ont pris l\u2019initiative de jouer un r\u00f4le militant pour l\u2019inclusion \u00e9ducative des LGBTQ. Leurs histoires sont diverses : partant du sentiment d\u2019avoir du pouvoir et d\u2019\u00eatre accept\u00e9s, \u00e0 \u00eatre troubl\u00e9s par le fait de s\u2019afficher, \u00e0 \u00eatre les seuls \u00e0 d\u00e9fendre l\u2019inclusion \u00e9ducative des LGBTQ, jusqu\u2019\u00e0 exp\u00e9rimenter une ambiance de travail et avec la direction scolaire oscillant de coop\u00e9rative \u00e0 hostile. Nous sommes encourag\u00e9s par leur r\u00e9silience et leur capacit\u00e9 d\u2019action, mais aussi profond\u00e9ment pr\u00e9occup\u00e9s par certaines de leurs exp\u00e9riences n\u00e9gatives. Un travail syst\u00e9mique reste encore \u00e0 accomplir, non seulement en ce qui concerne les jeunes LGBTQ, mais \u00e9galement pour les \u00e9ducateurs LGBTQ dans les \u00e9coles.","creator":["Joanne Tompkins","Laura-Lee Kearns","Jennifer Mitton-K\u00fckner"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26823252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33673e6c-91b5-3a9a-884a-8148fbc1ef97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26823252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"384","pagination":"pp. 384-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Queer Educators in Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26823252","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Experiences of Four Beginning Teachers"} +{"abstract":"El prop\u00f3sito central de este trabajo es exponer resultados preliminares de un estudio sobre las representaciones sociales que construyen los aymara del norte chileno respecto del cuerpo, la sexualidad y la reproducci\u00f3n. Se trata de alcanzar una aproximaci\u00f3n a las categor\u00edas de las diferenciaciones sexuales que permiten a los actores sentar las bases para establecer las relaciones de g\u00e9nero. Se indaga en dos \u00e1mbitos de la vida social aymara, por un lado en las pr\u00e1cticas religiosas y, por el otro, en las narrativas acerca del cuerpo, el sexo y la sexualidad. Consideradas dos formas de entrada para rastrear las asociaciones simb\u00f3licas y contenidos significativos que pudieran permitir la comprensi\u00f3n de las diferencias sexuales; como asimismo, abrir la mirada a c\u00f3mo las representaciones del cuerpo, sexo y g\u00e9nero se relacionan con las identidades \u00e9tnicas y de g\u00e9nero de este grupo social. The main purpose of this paper is to present the preliminary results of a study of the social representations created by the Aymara of Northern Chile with respect to the body, sexuality and reproduction. This article is an approach to identify the categories of sexual differentiation that allow actors to lay the foundation for gender relations. We inquire into two spheres of Aymara social life: religious practices and narratives about the body, gender and sexuality. We consider two approaches to trace symbolic associations and meaningful content which could allow an understanding of sexual differences, and bring an awareness to how the representations of the body, sex and gender are related to the ethnic and gender identities of this social group.","creator":["Ana Mar\u00eda Carrasco G.","Vivian Gavil\u00e1n Vega"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27802537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07161182"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54040270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84fd125f-d494-3294-8a95-9180a65523ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27802537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chungara"}],"isPartOf":"Chungara: Revista de Antropolog\u00eda Chilena","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Universidad de Tarapaca","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"REPRESENTACIONES DEL CUERPO, SEXO Y G\u00c9NERO ENTRE LOS AYMARA DEL NORTE DE CHILE \/ REPRESENTATIONS OF THE BODY, SEX AND GENDER IN AYMARA COMMUNITIES OF NORTHERN CHILE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27802537","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":13784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A piece of music presupposes, even before the attempt to create a shape in time, a step back, away from the stuff, so that its substance is clearly distinguished from my own mood, phantasy, feeling, activity. The ultimate problem of the musical work of art lies toward the negative side of autonomy, toward distance and isolation. It is not so much to free music from words, representation, or function, as to free it from ourselves, to externalize it. The musical object must not only be made whole, but also given body, located at a distance and kept there. It must be 'spatialized', so to speak. The problem of musical form conceived as a piece is the making of the musical thing. (Patricia Carpenter, 'The Musical Object', 1967)","creator":["Matthew Butterfield"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23b560e9-8d44-300f-9a55-2f1c95c9a069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Musical Object Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840795","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":24053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Cocca"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a525c886-d4af-34c9-a8b5-a8bc8656d1ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43284491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Negotiating the Third Wave of Feminism in \"Wonder Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284491","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6733,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[37519,37581]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I will recover the issue of the \"third gender\" in archaeological analysis in order to argue that the use of a \"third,\" despite what it may appear at first sight, does not challenge the logic inherent in gender and sexual binaries, that is, the use of universal, ahistorical, and stagnated categories. As an alternative, I will rely on Almudena Hernando's genealogical work on gender and identity, as well as on Luc\u00eda Morag\u00f3n-Mart\u00ednez's arguments regarding corporeality, to state that in \"oral societies\" (like prehistoric ones), body and person cannot be ontologically distinguished and, as a consequence, the anatomical features that we categorize as \"sex\" can neither be thought nor defined abstractly. I will further examine the implications of this claim in relation to the sex-gender fluidity that can be seen in those oral societies, formerly pigeonholed into the third gender category. In addition, I will analyze current literature developed by gender archaeologists in order to show the strengths and limitations of my proposal in relation to recent works on the topic.","creator":["Enrique Moral"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a295cf0-2eaa-3098-ac62-1a39e5172c52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"809","pageStart":"788","pagination":"pp. 788-809","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Qu(e)erying Sex and Gender in Archaeology: a Critique of the \"Third\" and Other Sexual Categories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967041","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13051,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147763,147832],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[36239,36306],[74897,74971]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article attempts to interpret morality in Haitian Vodou by illustrating its ethical framework in the day-to-day realities of its followers. In so doing, I demonstrate how Vodou as a living system of belief and practice has historically served as the informal infrastructure for morality in Haiti. To this end, I draw upon the work of Karen McCarthy Brown whose work on Mama Lola, a Haitian priestess living in Brooklyn, is an insightful venture into the heart of this widely misunderstood religious and social system. Furthermore, this essay offers the perspective of a very distinctive single voice which emerges from the long and complex dialogue between the multiple voices of the researcher\/observer\/participant and the many-faceted voices of the priestess\/informant. Their diverse perspectives and individual utterances fuse successfully in a powerful articulation of feminist intervention and cultural understanding. Their lives and their work clearly establish how the Haitian religion empowers women and how the manbo subtly manifests Haitian female power.","creator":["Claudine Michel"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3270556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557232"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"041521cc-5ef8-340f-8b95-91af3e7e774a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3270556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"numen"}],"isPartOf":"Numen","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le pouvoir moral et spirituel des femmes dans le vodou Ha\u00eftien: La Voix de Mama Lola et de Karen McCarthy Brown","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3270556","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":13688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The concept of power is central to international relations. Yet disciplinary discussions tend to privilege only one, albeit important, form: an actor controlling another to do what that other would not otherwise do. By showing conceptual favoritism, the discipline not only overlooks the different forms of power in international politics, but also fails to develop sophisticated understandings of how global outcomes are produced and how actors are differentially enabled and constrained to determine their fates. We argue that scholars of international relations should employ multiple conceptions of power and develop a conceptual framework that encourages rigorous attention to power in its different forms. We first begin by producing a taxonomy of power. Power is the production, in and through social relations, of effects that shape the capacities of actors to determine their circumstances and fate. This general concept entails two crucial, analytical dimensions: the kinds of social relations through which power works (in relations of interaction or in social relations of constitution); and the specificity of social relations through which effects are produced (specific\/direct or diffuse\/indirect). These distinctions generate our taxonomy and four concepts of power: compulsory, institutional, structural, and productive. We then illustrate how attention to the multiple forms of power matters for the analysis of global governance and American empire. We conclude by urging scholars to beware of the idea that the multiple concepts are competing, and instead to see connections between them in order to generate more robust understandings of how power works in international politics.","creator":["Michael Barnett","Raymond Duvall"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40611891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23319"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3864bf1c-22a0-3e5c-836d-e9126f005ff4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteorga"}],"isPartOf":"International Organization","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Power in International Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877878","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":17491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan W. Scott"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c609f6a9-6259-3abe-9b9c-860a09c8f369"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"797","pageStart":"773","pagination":"pp. 773-797","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Evidence of Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343743","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11886,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[45254,45331]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna K\u00e9rchy"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41bac79a-1e0d-3985-b002-93d8044202f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE WOMAN 69 TIMES: CINDY SHERMAN'S \"UNTITLED FILM STILLS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274221","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":3942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In an era of declining labor power, police unions stand as a success story for worker organizing\u2014they exert political clout and negotiate favorable terms for their members. Yet, despite support for unionization on the political left, police unions have become public enemy number one for commentators concerned about race and police violence. Much criticism of police unions focuses on their obstructionism and their prioritization of members\u2019 interests over the interests of the communities they police. These critiques are compelling. But, taken seriously, they often sound like critiques of unions in general, not just police unions. If public-sector unionism remains a social good, wholeheartedly embracing these critiques seems like a risky proposition. This Essay examines the strange case of police unions and asks how they are (and are not) representative of U.S. unionism. More pointedly, this Essay asks what critiques of police unions should mean for policing reform and the future of public-sector unionism. How are police unions different from other public-sector unions, and how might critiques of police unions apply to other public-sector unions? Ultimately, I argue that the challenge in articulating a theory of what makes police unions different highlights both the problem with police and the problem with how scholars think about unions. If police unions are objectionable because of their views and police conduct, this concern speaks to a problem with police\u2014full stop. The problems with unions are only issues by extension. If the unions are objectionable because they prioritize their members\u2019 interests, the critiques are properly understood as undercutting public-sector unions generally.","creator":["Benjamin Levin"],"datePublished":"2020-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6717c6e-6623-3061-8f27-0fa43830ce0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26921067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70,"pageEnd":"1402","pageStart":"1333","pagination":"pp. 1333-1402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WHAT\u2019S WRONG WITH POLICE UNIONS?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921067","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":36369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark C. Hill"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44259600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"437a8d81-0635-325f-b45d-662407575c54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44259600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Alternative Masculine Performances in American Comics: Brian K. Vaughan and Pia Guerra's \"Y: the Last Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44259600","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jodi Dean"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a8eb4d2-23f8-3fd5-b689-8cc779d35693"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810533","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Scandinavian countries are currently experiencing a change in the social construction of fatherhood. This article explores the character of the change within the domain of the relationship between fatherhood and work. Against the backdrop of a theoretical understanding of gender as a cultural dynamic that is formed by the constant interplay between institutional and interactional processes and the symbolic universe of masculine and feminine, the construction of fatherhood is discussed on three levels: in the institutional context of welfare state policies, in the interactional processes of the work place and on the individual level. The analysis reveals the precarious situation that working fathers are currently facing, where state policies challenge, albeit ambiguously, the symbolic order of masculinity and the work cultures support a strengthening of the masculine work ethic with the effect that the choice of being an active father is jeopardized by evoking a very basic conflict in the symbolic universe of masculinity.","creator":["Lis H\u00f8jgaard"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4201030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57eb9e88-5ffc-35d9-a5ed-8161df7cf716"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4201030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Working Fathers: Caught in the Web of the Symbolic Order of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4201030","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This research uses survey marginalia to differentiate the housing and child welfare experiences of youth identifying as gender non-conforming from their peers identifying as cisgender LGB. Marginalia references the unexpected responses people provide by writing in instrument margins or not complying with research tools. Findings indicate that data-cleaning and discrete questions about identity can erase youth identifying as gender queer or gender fluid from sampling as data noise, prompting an underreported incidence of risk. The inclusion of marginalia surfaces youth who are otherwise miscategorized or eliminated from sampling and alters the findings on trajectories from foster care to homelessness, experiences with violence, and incidence of harassment within social services. The paper presents an alternative method of including these youth in measurement bringing visibility to the intersection of housing insecurity, child welfare, and gender identity.","creator":["Amy Castro Baker","Kel Kroehle","Henisha Patel","Carrie Jacobs"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48628038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00094021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68533f78-5240-3b5c-a3c8-0bb95d0c542c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48628038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"childwelfare"}],"isPartOf":"Child Welfare","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Child Welfare League of America","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Social Work","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering the Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48628038","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":6308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Using Survey Marginalia to Capture Gender Fluidity in Housing and Child Welfare"} +{"abstract":"This article is based on the observation that in African women's interactional practices, there is a space 'between speech and silence' (Gal, 1991), an ambiguous space between norm and sanction (Jaworski et al.,2005:4), which allows for the negotiation of socially and culturally adequate gendered behaviour. As it is a space of negotiation, it is also one of social change. Notions of gender, ambiguity and risk, which are characteristic for this kind of space, are thus transferred also to social change, or in more general terms, innovation. I take two widely diverging examples from the Swahili (in eastern Africa) and Herero (in south-western Africa) societies to demonstrate this hypothesis, which aims at bringing together two threads of widely discussed topics: that of gender and social change (or development); and that of gender and language. Methodologically, this article is based on a micro-analysis and contextualized reconstruction of interactional practices, which provides a privileged path into understanding local processes of social change.","creator":["ROSE MARIE BECK"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf96c1a0-353b-3c1f-892c-46211c2e4022"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"553","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-553","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Gender, innovation and ambiguity: speech prohibitions as a resource for 'space to move'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889282","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Boyarin"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ebdaa51-5e74-39ab-966b-80d56fa6ddbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Paul and the Genealogy of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928675","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18647,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[86870,87882]],"Locations in B":[[510,1519]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Anne C. Case"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f27c155-485c-3ebb-a306-ba36d92a626c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":105,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Disaggregating Gender from Sex and Sexual Orientation: The Effeminate Man in the Law and Feminist Jurisprudence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797140","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":66211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper rethinks geographical explorations of social difference by interrogating ameliorative and pleasurable aspects of marginal spaces. Re-introducing womyn's separatist spaces contests feminist geographical writing in this area, requiring an examination of both the alternative ways of living that are created, and the pain of producing 'womyn-only' spaces in order for such spaces to exist. The paper draws on qualitative research with 238 attendees at the 31st Michigan Womyn's Music Festival. Womyn spoke of the pleasures of the festival and positive affinities with other womyn, as well as the festival's herstory of conflict, negotiation and compromise. Although accounts relay 'growing pains' that constitute the festival's current form, the current temporal and spatial segregations of 'womyn', through the womyn-born womyn policy, has resulted in something of an impasse. Rather than reductively posing 'the latest problem' of feminist separatism as the exclusion of trans women because of this policy, or unequivocally celebrating the festival's role in womyn's lives and herstory, these polarised conceptualisations are held in tension. This enables a consideration of the paradoxes and juxtaposition of womyn's space and Camp Trans (a protest camp that opposes the womyn-born womyn policy) as productive. In this way, the paper argues for an engagement with marginalised and alternative spaces of difference that allow for positive affectivities and productive tensions that do not neglect relations of power.","creator":["Kath Browne"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"663e2b6e-ad28-3d37-b1e5-03eb010a9a90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40270736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"556","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Womyn's Separatist Spaces: Rethinking Spaces of Difference and Exclusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270736","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":12263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I argue that the essentialism\/antiessentialism debate among feminists is a variety of the idealist\/realist split that Dewey addressed in The Quest for Certainty. I attempt to use Dewey's thought to subvert this opposition so that we can remove the feminist discussion from the structure of an idealist\/realist either\/or.","creator":["Ann Clark"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6c764c4-2ad2-333a-a1fc-03c7c910d32a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Quest for Certainty in Feminist Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810406","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4558,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481835]],"Locations in B":[[26699,26780]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bonnie Honig"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40666482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9473834-f1af-3ad2-8837-fa0f43fe7f74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40666482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Antigone's Two Laws: Greek Tragedy and the Politics of Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40666482","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":16163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Archaeological research can draw on material remains to understand the ways that individuals may have expressed their identities in pursuit of specific goals. Here ritual performances in ancient Mesoamerica are considered for their role in shaping identities deployed to gain social and political power. The Late to Terminal Classic period (A.D. 650\u2013960) site of Las Canoas, Honduras, is offered as a case study. In particular, the monumental Main Plaza Group at Las Canoas is examined as a spatial setting for the performance of rituals involving the use of incense burners and ceramic anthropomorphic figurines. These performances are argued to have facilitated the efforts of certain members of the community to take advantage of shifting political and economic alliances in the region and make a bid for power. Ultimately, however, their efforts to establish spiritual and political leadership did not endure. Este trabajo trata la materialidad del ritual en la Mesoam\u00e9rica precolombina, con la habilidad que tiene la ejecuci\u00f3n ritual de integrar las comunidades y generar diferencias de estatus dentro de ellas, y con la naturaleza de la identidad en s\u00ed misma. Investiga la integraci\u00f3n de estos temas, sosteniendo que las identidades no son abstractas e inaccesibles para los investigadores, pero que son sumamente materiales y, por ende, arqueol\u00f3gicamente recuperables. Se sostiene que la investigaci\u00f3n arqueol\u00f3gica puede, por lo tanto, servirse de los restos materiales para comprender la forma en que los individuos pueden haber ejecutado determinadas identidades para lograr metas espec\u00edficas. Para elaborar estos reclamos, el papel de la ejecuci\u00f3n ritual en la Mesoam\u00e9rica antigua es emprendida con relaci\u00f3n a su rol de formar identidades desplegadas con el fin de alcanzar el poder social y pol\u00edtico. Un estudio del per\u00edodo cl\u00e1sico \u00faltimo a terminal (650\u2013960 d.C.) sito en Las Canoas, Honduras, provee el trasfondo para estos debates. Los restos materiales recuperados del monumental Grupo Plaza Principal en Las Canoas iluminan las ejecuciones contextualizadas de las identidades distintivas, identidades que eran dependientes de reclamos de conocimiento especializado y el fr\u00e1gil poder social que puede haber surgido de dichos reclamos. En particular, se trata la interacci\u00f3n de espacios construidos, los movimientos de ejecutantes, y el uso de quemadores de incienso y figuras de cer\u00e1mica. Se sostiene que los comportamientos que provienen de esta interacci\u00f3n han ayudado a ciertos miembros de la comunidad en sus esfuerzos para aprovechar las alianzas pol\u00edticas y econ\u00f3micas cambiantes en la regi\u00f3n al hacer un esfuerzo para conseguir el poder. Finalmente, sin embargo, sus reclamos para un liderazgo espiritual y pol\u00edtico no perduraron; a la larga, miembros de la comunidad de Las Canoas parecen haber preferido expresiones de solidaridad social y observancias familiares en vez de la ostentaci\u00f3n de ejecuciones rituales motivadas por la pol\u00edtica y la pompa de las distinciones de estatus.","creator":["Miranda K. Stockett"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09565361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ef2a8a1-44dc-391c-91cc-d45beed124f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ancimeso"}],"isPartOf":"Ancient Mesoamerica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"PERFORMING POWER: Identity, ritual, and materiality in a Late Classic southeast Mesoamerican crafting community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309323","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Esmail al-Nashif"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd91ad21-83f2-34f0-8497-a6ed85acdd87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27933909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","issueNumber":"2\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Arab Studies Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Attempts at Liberation: Materializing the Body and Building Community Among Palestinian Political Captives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933909","volumeNumber":"12\/13","wordCount":13785,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[416461,416927]],"Locations in B":[[65042,65509]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Lewin"],"datePublished":"1991-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a75f8a1-7af4-3b54-9f15-f1f65258cb2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/645453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"792","pageStart":"786","pagination":"pp. 786-792","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Writing Lesbian and Gay Culture: What the Natives Have to Say for Themselves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645453","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4401,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[26123,26185]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the substantial challenges of doing research with citizens living in nation-states on different sides of a geopolitical dispute. It draws on an on-going research project being undertaken in Argentina, the Falkland Islands and the UK focusing on tensions in the South Atlantic over the status of the Falkland\/Malvinas Islands. Geographical research that looks to examine the impacts of geopolitics on everyday lives is increasingly commonplace and some of this work is being undertaken in politically volatile and (post)conflict settings. Set in this context, the paper argues that more attention needs to be placed on the process of doing this kind of research in ways that take account of researcher\u2013researched relations, performance and positionality. First, it argues that doing multi-sited geographical research of this nature can enable and disable relations with respondents in ways that require constant analysis during fieldwork. The prevailing historical, socio-cultural, (geo)political and temporal dynamics of research encounters must be sensitively considered. Second, national identity was consistently referenced in my field diary entries and the paper contends that this aspect of researcher identity has been neglected in discussions of positionality. Drawing on theoretical literatures that discuss the performance of national identity, the paper suggests how researchers might think more self-reflexively about nationality and its performativity through the doing of research.","creator":["Matthew C Benwell"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da96c4b0-04d8-3df7-b5b1-1d2bdf3cd3ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24029962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Considering nationality and performativity: undertaking research across the geopolitical divide in the Falkland Islands and Argentina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029962","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":5856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How is the older female body represented in visual mass culture? Contrasting the performance of age in two recent feature films-About Schmidt and Pauline and Paulette-I draw on the strategy of Pauline and Paulette, which focuses on the older female body to the exclusion of the male body. I turn to the work of the artists Louise Bourgeois, Rachel Rosenthal, and Nettie Harris, exploring how they expose, critique, subvert, and exceed what I call \"the youthful structure of the look,\" one that exhorts women to pass for younger once they are a \"certain\" age. In their work, the female body is presented boldly and bracingly as the continuing site of gender and sexuality. At stake is what I call \"feminist aging.\"","creator":["Kathleen Woodward"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b013a90-2453-3ca3-bfd7-4452a8d942bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4317191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Age, Performing Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317191","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11506,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499389,499507]],"Locations in B":[[67918,68047]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Betty Vanderwielen"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfeff9c3-be70-392b-8eb3-3270ef66deb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24634849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Texas Tech University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"GENDER PERFORMANCE IN \"VICTORY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634849","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4924,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477898]],"Locations in B":[[27538,27603]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Project is about the way in which social and legal actors frustrate existing prohibitions against sex and gender discrimination by manipulating, whether through ignorance or calculation, the conflation of sex, gender, and sexual orientation. What Professor Valdes calls the \"conflation\" is the historic and contemporary confusion and distortion of sex, gender, and sexual orientation as social and legal constructs. As this Project makes clear, this conflation's long history and pervasive presence in our thinking and institutions combine to make it self-perpetuating and often invisible, but never absent. This confused and confusing history and status quo is what enables dominant forces to use the conflation-and more specifically the symbiotic roles of gender and sexual orientation within it-as a key means of achieving unprincipled and unwarranted results in sex and gender discrimination cases. To help discipline the uses of these three constructs in legal venues, this Project documents and unpacks how sex, gender, and sexual orientation are conceived and applied in tight relation to each other both intellectually and normatively. In this way, Professor Valdes invites and urges scholars, judges, and policymakers alike to assess critically both the conflation itself and its detrimental effects on law and society. Professor Valdes also highlights how the conflation both reflects and projects androsexist and heterosexist values-a phenomenon he calls heteropatriarchy-to emphasize the mutual interrelationship of these twin biases in the Euro-American sex\/gender system. This Project's assessment of the conflation inexorably leads to the conclusion that the law cannot, and therefore will not, fulfill the nation's formal commitment to ending sex and gender discrimination while the conflation retains its force in legal culture. The Introduction and Foreword are intended not only to introduce the piece but also to summarize it. They also provide a roadmap of the piece so that readers may locate areas of particular interest. Chapter One provides a critical history of the conflation in Euro-American culture since the late nineteenth century, detailing its codification by the medical profession and its acceptance both by the sexual majority and by sexual minorities. Building on that history, Chapter Two traces the conflation's presence in and effect on the law of this nation. Focusing primarily on Title VII cases, Professor Valdes documents how courts have simultaneously embraced and denied aspects of the conflation, and in the process have rendered laws against sex and gender discrimination unjustifiably underinclusive. To provide a comparative perspective on the conflation, Chapter Three examines how Native American cultures conceptualized sex, gender, and sexual orientation in a relatively non-conflationary manner. The Native American example reveals that the conflation is socially constructed rather than natural, and provides a model for post-conflationary reform. Chapter Four gathers the lessons to be drawn from the first three chapters, while Chapter Five builds on these lessons in presenting principles to guide the reform of existing sex and gender anti-discrimination doctrine. Finally, the Afterword & Prologue closes the Project with a call for the initiation of Queer legal theory as a scholarly movement, and with some reflection on the role of that movement within critical legal thought and in legal culture generally. As with all good scholarship, our hope is that this piece will cause readers to examine the way(s) they think-in this case about sex, gender, and sexual orientation. Even for readers who disagree with Professor Valdes' suggestions for doctrinal reform, this Project presents overwhelming evidence of the conflation's widespread influence and negative impact on our society and legal system. Moreover, the Project presents a frame-work through which legal and social conceptions of sex, gender, and sexual orientation can be accurately and beneficially reexamined, free of conflationary influences. The clarity enabled by the deconstruction of the conflation presented here is essential in our nation's attempt to confront the pressing issues surrounding the roles and rights of women and sexual minorities. A final note: the publication of this Project in a law review is almost as unusual as the scope and depth of the Project itself. We believe the significance this piece has to the law and to society in general warrants its publication in a forum not generally reserved for works of this length. This law review's two-year association with Professor Valdes and this Project is a testament to the potential of the faculty\/student relationships borne of necessity from student-edited journals. We made the decision to publish the Project when parts of it were not yet finished drafts, in itself an unusual decision. As Professor Valdes wrote and rewrote, we had the privilege of sharing in an academic creation on a much more conceptual and personal level than is the norm. While this Project taxed the Review to its limits, it also was tremendously rewarding. We hope it has the impact it merits, both in its current form and as a book based on this work, which will be published by New York University Press in 1996-97.","creator":["Francisco Valdes"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5488666c-bc90-3456-8f42-60f27c57115b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3480882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":377,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queers, Sissies, Dykes, and Tomboys: Deconstructing the Conflation of \"Sex,\" \"Gender,\" and \"Sexual Orientation\" in Euro-American Law and Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480882","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":191860,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[254102,254169],[467295,467363],[474780,474869]],"Locations in B":[[34763,34837],[38695,38766],[744416,744505]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The manipulation of reality and appearance that figures so prominently in Philip K. Dick's fiction remain a subject of persistent interest. This interest extends from Dick's work through to some important themes in recent cultural studies. In both cases, purely philosophical speculation on the nature of 'reality' extends into theoretical and political reflection. In both Dick's work and cultural studies, faith in the existence of a single, present, 'given' world is shown to be theoretically questionable and politically compromised. Dick's Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch offers a particularly apt example of the interplay between metaphysics and politics in Dick's work, and a good example of the way recent cultural studies construes that interaction as well.","creator":["David Golumbia"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a87f1511-bdac-30f2-a4ad-0927c64a4099"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Resisting \"The World\": Philip K. Dick, Cultural Studies, and Metaphysical Realism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240479","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11261,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[498474,498591]],"Locations in B":[[67795,67909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CAROLE FABRICANT"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e2c80c8-6730-3ef0-ba86-a9458e4b9411"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23118172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Defining Self and Others: Pope and Eighteenth-Century Gender Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118172","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11750,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[96130,96374]],"Locations in B":[[44171,44416]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, Cornell first invokes the concept of 'imaginary domain' to challenge the legal legitimacy of heterosexism in any form. She then claims that the imposition of heterosexism on the imaginary is a trauma whose severity can be grasped only with the help of psychoanalysis. Second, she argues that we cannot understand or undermine the power of heterosexist ideas without an alternative ethic of love. In beginning to think about a love that would necessarily pit itself against heterosexism, Cornell draws on Jacques Derrida's metaphor of the lovance.","creator":["Drucilla Cornell"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74695a49-65f6-3d35-811a-d2fb9b9110b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Shadow of Heterosexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640053","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494747,494801]],"Locations in B":[[36583,36637]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Peterson"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bed41f86-f6dc-3e6f-8117-52b119450051"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Return of the Body: Judith Butler's Dialectical Corporealism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389757","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yael S. FELDMAN","\u05d9\u05e2\u05dc \u05e4\u05dc\u05d3\u05de\u05df"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23492455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12809640"},{"name":"oclc","value":"870548434"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23492455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revueuroetudhebr"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Europ\u00e9enne des \u00c9tudes H\u00e9bra\u00efques","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Institut Europe\u00e9n d'\u00c9tudes He'braiques (IEEH)","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u05e2\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e1\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05df \u05d3\u05d4-\u05d1\u05d5\u05d1\u05d5\u05d0\u05e8 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05e8\u05ea \u05d4\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \/ TRACES OF SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR IN ISRAELI FEMINISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23492455","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alex Dressler"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44808337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03926338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63a9817b-e1b2-3170-a025-d871fba38ad9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44808337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"matedisctestclas"}],"isPartOf":"Materiali e discussioni per l'analisi dei testi classici","issueNumber":"77","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Accademia Editoriale","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Plautus and the poetics of property: reification, recognition, and utopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44808337","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":22763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adriana Cavarero"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84c6a5dc-21d3-309a-a3eb-fd8ae293034b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"532","pageStart":"506","pagination":"pp. 506-532","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Politicizing Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072619","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women's efforts to influence policies have complex effects, which are often difficult to evaluate. This paper identifies four themes in feminist politics through which to analyse whether a particular intervention involving substantial numbers of women \u2013 that of counselling in the UK \u2013 can be understood as a feminist practice. These themes are concerned with gender equality, women's autonomy, recognition of diversity among women and the deconstruction of gender norms. In its early post-war origins prior to the emergence of second wave feminism, and in the stories recounted by women practitioners at the turn of millennium, counselling emerges as contradictory and ambivalent in relation to these themes in feminist politics.","creator":["Liz Bondi"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3639891c-62dd-3d11-8547-e240e70ee5fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41148052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is counselling a feminist practice?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148052","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":6875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Gremler"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24745363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09356983"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95fdc994-71f5-3f8c-9f19-f28a052322e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24745363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thommannjahr"}],"isPartOf":"Thomas Mann Jahrbuch","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Vittorio Klostermann GmbH","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eEtwas ganz Peinliches\u201c \u2013 \"queere\" Emotionalit\u00e4t im \"Zauberberg\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24745363","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8064,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[45372,45426]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mauricio Zabalgoitia Herrera"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22d5b808-ebe9-3a89-8aee-762f06d43488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"165","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ENUNCIACI\u00d3N DE ESTEREOTIPOS DE LA MEXICANIDAD EN \"EL LABERINTO DE LA SOLEDAD\" Y SU RELECTURA EN LA OBRA DE CARMEN BOULLOSA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808668","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alberto Medina Dom\u00ednguez"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"013f1d03-a445-3a8f-86e4-9caa84b10836"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Teatro de posesi\u00f3n: Pol\u00edtica de la melancol\u00eda en la Espa\u00f1a franquista","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641494","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10236,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[152527,152843]],"Locations in B":[[10854,11173]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Silvia Ross"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc92c8de-7ebb-38bf-b53a-476382711194"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24463599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"3S","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"S150","pageStart":"S140","pagination":"pp. S140-S150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Palazzeschi's vecchie inglesi and the Performance of Difference in \"Stampe dell'800\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463599","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":4569,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435264,436102]],"Locations in B":[[13261,14096]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Krug"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5967e810-88e8-33c9-907b-199eda3d193b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women Ovulate, Men Spermate: Elizabeth Blackwell as a Feminist Physiologist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840442","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Josephine Peyton Young"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0726107-3fc2-3925-8b02-68153f0cd241"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40007626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Displaying Practices of Masculinity: Critical Literacy and Social Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007626","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra K. Soto"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32de53b0-11d3-3521-b9f1-e13cf55ec30e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"xi","pageStart":"vii","pagination":"pp. vii-xi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860701","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2075,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[690,789]],"Locations in B":[[11906,12005]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, Solis contemplates how queercrip-both homosexual and disabled-readings of four editions of \"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs\" might be used to destabilize \"normative\" sexual identities. His goal is to argue against secrecy and for disclosure; thus, a main question guides the analysis: How might we (for example, parents, teachers, counselors) use picture books to reevaluate human sexuality in all its varied manifestations to avoid condemning to the closet all those who do not approximate a prescribed \"norm\"?","creator":["Santiago Solis"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac02be3d-42f9-3f57-9038-7e65b2480695"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Snow White and the Seven \"Dwarfs\"-Queercripped","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640047","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7816,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[30139,30245],[48484,48614]],"Locations in B":[[4734,4844],[7187,7318]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The most important predictors of early intercourse debut are reported to be poor social resources and early developing problem behaviors. In this study we have a new, additional emphasis on variables related to self-concept and social acceptance. In a population-based longitudinal study, 1,399 Norwegians were followed over a 7-year span. We analyzed data using multivariate Cox regression techniques. Early intercourse debut was part of a broader spectrum of problem behaviors, including early alcohol intoxication and early-developing conduct problems. A new finding was that a positive self-concept in the domain of \"romantic appeal\" was also a strong predictor, but only for boys. We suggest that the findings may have important implications for prevention and more research should be conducted along this line.","creator":["Willy Pedersen","Sven Ove Samuelsen","Lars Wichstr\u00f8m"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"027c1f79-097b-3533-9f06-2e6eb0925b05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Intercourse Debut Age: Poor Resources, Problem Behavior, or Romantic Appeal? A Population-Based Longitudinal Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813335","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In both her fiction and her essays on writing and feminist theory, Monique Wittig takes up and redeploys traditional themes and genres as well as recent theories of language, literature, and writing in order to force change in and through the dominant categories of thought and language. She has announced her project as one which would \"do away with the category of sex\" by way of reconfiguring the grammatically and conceptually enforced compulsory heterosexual order. I examine the specific linguistic mechanisms by which Wittig accomplishes this abolition of \"sex\" and the political\/philosophical\/linguistic consequences of her \"lesbianization\" of language. Through-out, I aim to suggest what the political importance of The Lesbian Body as a diversified and written corpus is.","creator":["Karin Cope"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70d1bed4-5934-3c4d-b556-1ec29f04a0e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Plastic Actions: Linguistic Strategies and Le Corps lesbien","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809840","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":11084,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[360409,360463],[385816,385889],[514360,514430]],"Locations in B":[[14903,14957],[22177,22251],[62956,63026]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Nelson"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f8fd070-2b84-3af9-85e6-01947e881273"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing and Negotiating Gender in Women's Police Stations in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633942","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Lucey"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2001.76.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce01cafb-a1fb-392b-b050-abc9044b8fb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2001.76.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Legal Melancholy: Balzac's Eug\u00e9nie Grandet<\/em> and the Napoleonic Code","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2001.76.1.1","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":14494,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[214286,214454]],"Locations in B":[[21228,21395]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rogers Brubaker","Frederick Cooper"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a421971-d70b-35b5-aa01-e5bf95c69b68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond \"Identity\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108478","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":19728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that French poststructuralist theory does not represent a movement antithetical to Classics and the Classical Tradition, but should be read as its extension. Major recurring themes of poststructuralist thought are articulated at the beginning of the 1960's in Lacan's commentaries on Sophocles' Antigone and Plato's Symposium. Derrida's reading of the Phaedrus as well as his citation of the Platonic tradition in his dispute with Foucault over the latter's Histoire de lafolie further confirm the importance of the Hellenic tradition to poststructuralism's engagement with occidental philosophy. Finally, Foucault's late turn to Stoicism and the philosophers of the Roman imperial period can be seen as a response to and criticism of the positions established by Lacan and Derrida. The Classics are not only relevant to understanding poststructuralist theory and philosophy, but actually define the terms of its debates.","creator":["Paul Allen Miller"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30222818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10730508"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2beb55b7-033e-37ee-b8af-fa7d222f381b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30222818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjclasstrad"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Classical Tradition","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Classical Roots of Poststructuralism: Lacan, Derrida, and Foucault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30222818","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robyn Henderson-Espinoza"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26605756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98048229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61c71c13-06aa-3397-99b6-b2cb022664bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26605756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"DIFFERENCE, BECOMING, AND INTERRELATEDNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26605756","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":3779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Material Resistance Becoming"} +{"abstract":"In this article, Matti Bunzl draws on ongoing ethnographic research on the social organization and cultural articulation of same-sex sexuality in contemporary Austria to ground a reading of the socio-discursive dimensions of 'inverted appellation' \u2013 the use of feminine references for 'male' persons (and vice versa). He presents his interpretation in the context of Judith Butler's work on the subversive potential of drag. As he argues, inverted appellation among gay men carries the possibility of a disruptive critique of the heterosexist reproduction of normative gender through the parodie exposure of its naturalizing strategies. In this manner, gay men can at once appropriate and resist their abject positioning in the larger socio-sexual field, contributing, in the process, to a resistive rearticulation and creative reimagination of the performative construction of gender and sexuality.","creator":["MATTI BUNZL"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95dbebe5-9f09-3914-81d0-cab2a9911ad1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Inverted appellation and discursive gender insubordination: an Austrian case study in gay male conversation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888308","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":14706,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[430988,431620],[431990,432254],[435902,436096]],"Locations in B":[[16363,16995],[17002,17266],[19548,19742]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review offers a critical analysis of Shannon Sullivan's \"feminist pragmatist standpoint theory\" as a framework for thinking about issues of identity and truth. Sullivan claims that Maurice Merleau-Ponty's emphasis on an anonymous or prepersonal quality to bodily experience commits him to a false universality and that his understanding of bodily intentionality traps him in a subjectivist philosophy that is incapable of doing justice to difference. She suggests that phenomenology in general is theoretically limited because of its alleged subjectivism and universalism, and she turns to Dewey's pragmatism to develop a \"transactional model\" of identity and truth. In response, I argue that Merleau-Ponty's descriptions of anonymity and intentionality do not entail either subjectivism or a false universality. I also challenge Sullivan's conception of truth as transactional flourishing by appealing to the \"terrible truths\" of violence and oppression.","creator":["Gail Weiss"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1485f7b8-bc10-350d-929f-e6226bcdbc7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Anonymous Intentions of Transactional Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810915","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1904, the Austrian sculptor Richard Luksch (1872\u2013\u20131936) produced two over-life-size ceramic figures of the female body for Josef Hoffmann's famous Kurhaus at the Purkersdorf Sanatorium located on the outskirts of Vienna. Despite Luksch's affiliation with one of central Europe's most progressive buildings of the time and his early involvement with the Viennese Workshops, these ceramics have been virtually written out of the history of Viennese modernism. This essay strives to reinsert Luksch's figures into this history by offering a new interpretation that contextualizes them as powerful articulations of a new type of femininity anchored in contemporary discourses on nerves and gender, namely, that of the femme fragile.","creator":["Sabine Wieber"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.27.2011.0058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcbc54a2-1d96-32c1-9eb6-1251c87a8f53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.27.2011.0058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sculpting the Sanatorium: Nervous Bodies and Femmes Fragiles in Vienna 1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.27.2011.0058","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines articulations of class, identity, and desire as performed by a community of kotis in northern India, a transgender group that impersonates a second transgender group known as hijras in a staged event called \"hijra-acting.\" Through a linguistic parody of lower-class hijras performing a birth celebration for their upperclass patrons, kotis critique the class-based animosity between hijra and gay sexualities in contemporary India, spoofing the sexual desires associated with both groups as inferior to their own. The analysis demonstrates that identity and desire are best understood as mutually constituted intertextual phenomena, with both importantly reliant on ideological linkages of language and socioeconomic class for their articulation.","creator":["Kira Hall"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce3c16de-52ae-3bd0-870f-909d5c62b051"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Intertextual Sexuality: Parodies of Class, Identity, and Desire in Liminal Delhi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104043","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kieran Keohane"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ddf5f3d-9bc4-305c-ba3f-378eed991f13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29736302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Accumulation of Cultural Capital in 'Cork: European City of Culture 2005'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736302","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Members of the Shiv Sena's women's wing have adopted a skilful negotiation of the public sphere through everyday \"visible\" performative strategies that get expressed at the local level in urban India. The politics of visibility is critical in the constitution of the political, gendered subject within a political party, where women despite their broad participation, remain structurally subordinate. Narratives and data from fieldwork in this article show how personal stories of political awakening are deeply embedded in the visual performances and urban imaginaries that frame them.","creator":["Tarini Bedi"],"datePublished":"2007-04-28","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224ba674-c080-38b6-b8d2-95a62209b4ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4419520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"17","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"1541","pageStart":"1534","pagination":"pp. 1534-1541","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dashing Ladies of the Shiv Sena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419520","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9241,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[54300,54381]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite a great deal of feminist work that has highlighted its social construction, menstruation seems a selfevidently \"natural\" bodily process. Yet, how menstruation is defined or what \"counts\" as menstruation is rarely questioned. Examining menstruation alongside technologies that alter it highlights these definitional questions. In this article, I examine menstrual suppression through an analysis of medical journal articles and FDA advisory committee transcripts, paired with websites used to market menstrual suppression to consumers. Across these contexts (clinical research, FDA regulation, and advertising), new definitions of menstruation converged on a distinction between bleeding that occurs when women are taking hormonal birth control and when they are not. The case of menstrual suppression birth control pills provides an opportunity to study the work of redefining a biological process understood as quintessentially natural and deeply significant for gendered embodiment, as well as a challenge to consider both the social and material construction of gendered bodies.","creator":["KATIE ANN HASSON"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c20851d-b9fa-3790-8f00-0a778726dbac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44280235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"983","pageStart":"958","pagination":"pp. 958-983","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"NOT A \"REAL\" PERIOD? Social and Material Constructions of Menstruation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280235","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10436,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[63612,63689]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Boys' underachievement and oppositional behavior in school has for a long time been the target of various public debates. Drawing on ethnographic data from fieldwork in two Swedish secondary schools, this article explores how the influential theory of boys' anti-school culture can be interpreted as a master narrative that is reproduced, but also contradicted and subverted, by students and teachers in social interaction within local school contexts.","creator":["Rickard Jonsson"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76f7c2ed-b872-3f86-bf36-88fbf8fb6a5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24029134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boys' Anti-School Culture? Narratives and School Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029134","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10389,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[4674,4819]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article critically examines the constitution of impairment in prenatal testing and screening practices and various discourses that surround these technologies. While technologies to test and screen (for impairment) prenatally are claimed to enhance women's capacity to be self-determining, make informed reproductive choices, and, in effect, wrest control of their bodies from a patriarchal medical establishment, I contend that this emerging relation between pregnant women and reproductive technologies is a new strategy of a form of power that began to emerge in the late eighteenth century. Indeed, my argument is that the constitution of prenatal impairment, by and through these practices and procedures, is a widening form of modern government that increasingly limits the field of possible conduct in response to pregnancy. Hence, the government of impairment in utero is inextricably intertwined with the government of the maternal body.","creator":["Shelley Tremain"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c44ffad-ab8b-3572-9867-ab9ea76675e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reproductive Freedom, Self-Regulation, and the Government of Impairment in Utero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811076","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The geography of religion can be explored from a number of different perspectives. This paper takes an autobiographical approach to explore the numinous experience of God from the point of view of a practising Christian geographer. Such geographical aspects of faith experience remain an under-researched area. The context for the exploration is an academic conference in the city of Bologna, which became, in turn, an experience of religious tourism, a pilgrimage and an unexpected encounter with God. It is contextualized in terms of debates on identity, the nature of pilgrimage, memorials of death, and time-space continuums and fractures.","creator":["Terry R. Slater"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Encountering God: Personal Reflections on 'Geographer as Pilgrim'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004389","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Charles Taylor has argued that recognition is a vital human need. This essay discusses recognition as a philosophical concept, following a line of argumentation that can be traced back to Hegel's early philosophy. An important premise of this tradition is that because a subject's freedom is conditioned by other subjects, individual agency cannot develop without recognition. Moreover, recognition implies struggle, through which self-realization fulfills the conditions of ethical growth. I will examine the educational implications of these ideas in relation to contemporary social philosophy and pedagogical theory, focusing especially on the potential of the theory of social recognition as a critique of calls for symmetric pedagogy. Using Axel Honneth's work as a reflective surface, I will then draw some conclusions as to how to develop the concept of recognition within the contemporary philosophy of music education.","creator":["Lauri V\u00e4kev\u00e4"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.24.1.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c659460e-505c-3783-9edf-a6626ba70e38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.24.1.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Struggling Musicians: Implications of the (Hegelian) Philosophy of Recognition for Music Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.24.1.05","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[512556,512647]],"Locations in B":[[58057,58145]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article foregrounds the notion of subcultural readings while at the same time interrogating the possibilities of locating and producing \"objective\" readings, in particular those readings which depend on a demonstration of authorial \"intent.\" Siting itself within current work in Queer Theory, the article problematizes readings of Sheri Tepper's \"Gate to Women's Country\" as a feminist utopia by looking at the ways in which the text can be read as anti-sexual. In identifying a climate within Women's Country which is both essentialist with regard to gender and highly conflicted with regard to the idea of women's sexuality, the article demonstrates the way in which female desire is diminished, controlled and normatized. The production of a heteronormative discourse both within and without Women's Country serves, in the end, only to focus the reader's attention on the contradictions inherent in the imposition of a highly regulated heterosexuality on the women in Women's Country. The elimination of choice parallels the elimination within the text of the homosexual as both a potential identity for characters and as an identity embodied within a single character. The article interrogates the text's anxiety around the vanished figure of the homosexual which is present within Stavia's story and is seen at its most glaring in the absence of the figure of Patroclus from the annual play about Achilles that structures and reinforces the central paradigms of Women's Country. Finally, the article asks whether it is possible in the age of AIDS to be wholly accepting of a text that uses the dominant discourses of homophobia to create a world after the homosexual, which is inevitably a world after the sexual.","creator":["Wendy Pearson"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b34bb85-0b23-300c-8ef7-bb9b8d6e2aad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"After the (Homo)Sexual: A Queer Analysis of Anti-Sexuality in Sheri S. Tepper's \"The Gate to Women's Country\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240504","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":15707,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[22703,22893]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CLAUDIA BREGER"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23981979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Hybrid Emperor: The Poetics of National Performance in Kantorowicz's Biography of Frederick II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981979","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper seeks to work through the heuristic device of marriage and female sexual bodily fluids, as they are constructed within particular strands of Hinduism. The paper applies the analytic lens of feminist Anthropology and proceeds through the contested site of female body and probes how the discursive body comes to be embedded within a discourse of matrimony and reproduction. By looking at an archetypal female or Goddess within a particular stream of Hinduism and the matrix of mythology within which she is installed, the paper unpacks how \"female\" has come to be strategically inscribed, constrained and performed upon through various religio-cultural devices in Hinduism. As much of the performance of female gender scripts appear to be drawn from the regulatory power of certain (male) canonized religious texts, the paper suggests re-installing the goddess within the liminal and interstitial space of fuzzy gender that might well allow for an alternate, more plastic reading of marriage and motherhood, and of female.","creator":["Maheshvari Naidu"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5959ff05-6e32-3971-be86-064041563e00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Inscribing the Female Body: Fuzzy Gender and Goddess in a South Indian Saiva Marriage Myth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764033","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7731,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493964,494011]],"Locations in B":[[47129,47176]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rishona Zimring"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Make-up of Jean Rhys's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346080","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11454,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[83302,83382],[437835,438062],[477984,478018],[491737,491841]],"Locations in B":[[3188,3268],[4607,4839],[68305,68339],[68669,68770]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tara Star Johnson","Shea Kerkhoff"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26797017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49194497"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212264"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c180c5f-18c9-362f-8fe9-7058ee7a6e6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26797017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26797017","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":5648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"#MeToo in English Education"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carla Freccero"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dab71541-c160-3b21-875f-6a7799f44e3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"EARLY MODERN PSYCHOANALYTICS: MONTAIGNE AND THE MELANCHOLIC SUBJECT OF HUMANISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686097","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheshire Calhoun"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a24fb9f-b136-302c-9196-ac8a336dbb62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1073389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"1875","pageStart":"1859","pagination":"pp. 1859-1875","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Virginia Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Denaturalizing and Desexualizing Lesbian and Gay Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073389","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":6597,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493958]],"Locations in B":[[14554,14647]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While researchers and concerned adults alike draw attention to relational aggression among girls, how this aggression is associated with girls' agency remains a matter of debate. In this paper we explore relational aggression among girls designated by their peers as 'popular' in order to understand how social power constructs girls' agency as aggression. We locate this power, hence girls' agency, in contradictory messages about girlhood that, although ever-present 'in girls heads,' are typically absent in adult panic about girls' aggression. Within peer culture, power comes from the ability to invoke the unspoken 'rules' that police the boundaries of acceptable femininity. We thus challenge the notion advanced by Pipher and others that girls' empowerment entails (re)gaining an 'authentic voice.' In contrast, we suggest that such projects must be informed by an interrogation of how girls are positioned as speaking subjects.","creator":["Dawn H. Currie","Deirdre M. Kelly","Shauna Pomerantz"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1859ad3e-21bd-3321-ae3f-6005fbcaf66f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'The Power to Squash People': Understanding Girls' Relational aggression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036182","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Fred Schepisi's \"Six Degrees of Separation\" (1993) is an art-house film that plays with the buddy film formula, highlighting its inconsistencies and its contrived resolutions of complex issues surrounding racial and sexual anxieties and looking relations.","creator":["Jennifer Gillan"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1350194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87facc46-36ec-3c97-905e-13b5f2afc1bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1350194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"No One Knows You're Black!\": \"Six Degrees of Separation\" and the Buddy Formula","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1350194","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris Reyns-Chikuma"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43489222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00d62b2d-7cb8-3500-93e0-db63b769274e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43489222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Jeux avec les droits de re\/production et de p\/maternit\u00e9 dans un livre pour enfants en France et aux USA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43489222","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":11182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tatiane Rosa Carvalho"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d2a7c9b-739a-3d09-8e86-76c641ad445d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00eanero no consult\u00f3rio m\u00e9dico: as contribui\u00e7\u00f5es da fala-em-intera\u00e7\u00e3o para a humaniza\u00e7\u00e3o da aten\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e1 sa\u00fade da mulher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328369","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O texto exp\u00f5e o ponto de vista de duas grandes fil\u00f5sofas feministas da atualidade, Adriana Cavarero e Judith Butler, sobre subjetividade e relacionalidade, mostrando como ambas distanciaram-se dos temas espec\u00edficos do feminismo de maneira a aprofundar e ampliar suas reflex\u00f5es sobre pol\u00edtica e \u00e9tica. Questionando a tradi\u00e7\u00e3o, Cavarero n\u00e3o compactua nem com o binarismo metaf\u00edsico nem com a impessoalidade p\u00f3s-moderna, combinando uma perspectiva feminista com a arendtiana da subjetividade embasada na relacionalidade. No entanto, diferentemente do pensamento de Cavarero, sob a perspectiva desconstrucionista de Butler a linguagem molda corpo e identidade. A subjetividade est\u00e1 presa \u00e0s normas e valores sociais. Butler e Cavarero repensam a subjetividade, alinhando-se quanto \u00e0 relacionalidade, ou seja, deslocando a pol\u00edtica para longe do ser imune e realocando-a no ser vulner\u00e1vel em rela\u00e7\u00e3o com o outro e com os efeitos das regras e valores sociais impostos. The work presents the standpoint of two important contemporary feminist philosophers, Adriana Cavarero and Judith Butler, on subjectivity and relationality, showing how both moved away from the specific feminism motif in order to deepen and broaden their reflection on politics and ethics. Calling tradition into question, Cavarero agrees neither with the metaphysical binary, nor with the post-modern impersonality, combining a feminist and the arendtian perspectives of the subjectivity based on relationality. Contrary to Cavarero's thought, though, under Butler's deconstructionist standpoint language shapes body and identity. Subjectivity is \"trapped\" into social norms and values. Both Butler and Cavarero rethink subjectivity based on relationality, that is, displacing politics from the immune individual and reallocating it on the vulnerable individual in relation with the other and with the social rules and values imposed on them.","creator":["Olivia Guaraldo","Maria Isabel de Castro Lima"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"593bcb4a-2c04-3a3c-8866-d6483bf3f253"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pensadoras de peso: o pensamento de Judith Butler e Adriana Cavarero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327607","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through tropes of work and sex, Robert Morgan's Gap Creek: The Story of a Marriage normalizes violations perpetrated by men against women. The book is set around the turn of the twentieth century, so as the protagonist, Julie, relates her story, it becomes a journey into an imagined past when women were women and knew how to help men become men, in the purest patriarchal sense of the terms. While Julie is cast as a strong mountain woman who is to be commended for her physical strength, maturity, and common sense, what actually underlies her admirable character traits is the novel's approbation for her subservience and silence. Yet since its publication in 1999, the novel has enjoyed immense popular appeal as well as critical praise. I argue that Morgan's insider status and his use of a contentedly subjugated woman narrator obfuscate the book's sexist ideology.","creator":["Michelle Justus"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jappastud.23.1.0099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10827161"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608201706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e882fb-a467-3e4e-bb4c-4387df5fb8b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jappastud.23.1.0099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Appalachian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Appalachian Studies Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gap Creek'<\/em>s Celebration of Women's Subjugation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jappastud.23.1.0099","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Greven"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/legacy.29.1.0037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"213222e8-52fd-3554-af95-579c122b8dc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/legacy.29.1.0037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Girls and Bandit Brides: Female Narcissism and Lesbian Desire in Margaret Fuller's Summer on the Lakes<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/legacy.29.1.0037","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":11033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tara M. Tuttle"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4ee7bb7-812a-306d-aa61-f0eaf6216084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43940358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering Country Music Autobiography: Chely Wright's \"Like Me\" and the Performance of Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940358","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7435,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[374363,374667]],"Locations in B":[[29259,29563]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Manka M. Varghese","Suhanthie Motha","Gloria Park","Jenelle Reeves","John Trent"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3b647cb-b9c3-3f59-a945-1c68d18a5d02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44984703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"In This Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984703","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":11787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the neighbourhood-based samba practices of working class Afro-Brazilians during the festas juninas (June Festivals) in Bahia, Brazil. In contrast to Bahia's famous Carnival, a recognised site for activism, the festas juninas appear apolitical, seeming to lack overt resistance to colour-based inequities that persist in Brazil despite national discourses of mesti\u00e7agem (mixing) and racial democracy. In recent years, however, June samba has (re-)emerged as a means for marginalised people to assert belonging in June events and festival narratives from which they have been excluded. Their activism draws on tactics used by Bahia's afro-centric activist carnival organisations, but with important differences. Most notably, rather than placing 'Africa' at the centre of their interventions, June samba participants express new notions of Black Bahian subjectivity through the critically informed embrace of local Afro-diasporic traditions\u2014especially a recently recognised UNESCO 'masterpiece' known as samba de roda\u2014and more cosmopolitan musical sensibilities.","creator":["Jeff Packman"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47fa2c66-da59-3130-86a9-b065b9c8df95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23271887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Carnavaliza\u00e7\u00e3o of S\u00e3o Jo\u00e3o: \"Forr\u00f3s\", \"Sambas\" and Festive Interventions during Bahia, Brazil's festas juninas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271887","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":13811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we demonstrate how I poems, part of the Listening Guide method, can help researchers to better understand the multiple voices that might comprise a student's mathematical identity. We provide an analysis of one student's interview as an example of this method. We argue that the use of the Listening Guide method illuminates the complexity of students' mathematical identities, especially their fluid, negotiated, and sometimes contested character. In the example shared here, we show how others' discourses become part of a student's developing mathematical identity, as well as highlight how the addition of drawings enhances the Listening Guide method.","creator":["Jennifer Hall","Jo Towers","Lyndon C. Martin"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45184656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131954"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74971c3c-10fc-3bbd-84de-460d3731ebda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45184656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educstudmath"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Studies in Mathematics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Using I poems to illuminate the complexity of students' mathematical identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45184656","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":8933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adrianna M. Paliyenko"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c8496e3-bfed-3aab-9b51-e20f67fb2c42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Is a Woman Poet Born or Made? Discourse of Maternity in Louisa Siefert and Louise Ackermann","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288199","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":4888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kaja Skowro\u0144ska"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41969470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e376702f-bc5c-3e68-80dc-c2b2540e2d05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41969470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"180","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41969470","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f43ce575-0c63-323f-9f84-adfc1668a256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455278","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":1230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theorists within and beyond the discipline of geography increasingly realize that boundaries are not simply lines that enclose and define territories. Boundaries also regulate and are reproduced by acts of movement. Movement, beyond and across, as well as within a bounded territory, serves to reproduce the territory that is being bounded. It follows that to understand the history of a territorial entity one must go beyond tracing the spatially fixed activities that occur within that territory or the discursive strategies through which the territory is made to appear natural. One must also trace the acts of movement that occur within, across, and outside the territory's boundaries and the designation of specific spaces of movement as beyond territorial control. In short, one cannot understand the construction of \"inside\" space as a series of territories of fixity, society, modernization, and development without simultaneously understanding the construction of \"outside\" space as an arena of mobility that is deemed unsuitable for territorial control. In this article, this perspective is applied to the preeminent normative territory of modernity\u2014the sovereign state\u2014and attention is directed specifically to the designation of the world-ocean as a space of mobility outside the boundaries of the state-society units that purportedly constitute the modern world. Through an analysis of representations of marine space on 591 world maps printed in Europe and the Americas between 1501 and 1800, this article traces the construction of the ocean as an external space of mobility, antithetical to the norm of the territorial state that also was emerging during this era. \/\/\/ \u5730\u7406\u5b66\u754c\u4e4b\u5185\u548c\u4e4b\u5916\u7684\u7406\u8bba\u5bb6\u4eec\u8d8a\u6765\u8d8a\u8ba4\u8bc6\u5230, \u8fb9\u754c\u4e0d\u4ec5\u4ec5\u53ea\u662f\u7b80\u5355\u7684\u5b9a\u4e49\u548c\u5305\u56f4\u9886\u571f\u7684\u90a3\u4e9b\u754c\u7ebf. \u8fb9\u754c\u89c4\u8303\u5e76\u4e14 \u5728\u5176\u79fb\u52a8\u4e2d\u88ab\u518d\u6b21\u751f\u6210. \u8d85\u8d8a\u548c\u8de8\u8d8a, \u4ee5\u53ca\u5728\u4e00\u4e2a\u9886\u571f\u8303\u56f4\u5185\u7684\u8fb9\u754c\u79fb\u52a8, \u91cd\u5efa\u4e86\u8fb9\u754c\u672c\u8eab\u6240\u9650\u5b9a\u7684\u9886\u571f. \u56e0\u6b64, \u8981\u60f3\u4e86\u89e3\u9886\u571f\u5b9e\u4f53\u7684\u5386\u53f2, \u6211\u4eec\u5fc5\u987b\u8d85\u8d8a\u8be5\u9886\u571f\u5f97\u4ee5\u81ea\u7136\u4ea7\u751f\u7684\u56fa\u5b9a\u9886\u571f\u7a7a\u95f4\u5185\u7684\u90a3\u4e9b\u6d3b\u52a8\u6216\u63a8\u8bba\u7684\u7b56\u7565. \u6211\u4eec\u5fc5 \u987b\u8ffd\u8e2a\u9886\u571f\u5185\u90e8 \u8de8\u8d8a\u8fb9\u754c\u548c\u5916\u90e8\u7684\u79fb\u52a8\u884c\u4e3a, \u5e76\u8ffd\u67e5\u8d85\u8d8a\u9886\u571f\u63a7\u5236\u7684\u7279\u5b9a\u7684\u5177\u4f53\u7a7a\u95f4\u8fd0\u52a8. \u603b\u4e4b, \u5982\u679c\u4e0d\u80fd\u540c\u65f6 \u4e86\u89e3\u5efa\u8bbe\u88ab\u8ba4\u4e3a\u4e0d\u9002\u5408\u9886\u571f\u63a7\u5236\u7684 \"\u5916\u90e8\" \u7684\u6d41\u52a8\u6027\u7684\u821e\u53f0\u7a7a\u95f4, \u5c31\u4e0d\u80fd\u7406\u89e3\u5efa\u8bbe \"\u5185\u90e8\" \u7a7a\u95f4\u7684\u4e00\u7cfb\u5217\u9886\u571f\u7684\u56fa\u5b9a\u5316, \u793e\u4f1a\u5316, \u73b0\u4ee3\u5316\u548c\u53d1\u5c55. \u5728\u8fd9\u7bc7\u6587\u7ae0\u4e2d, \u8fd9\u4e2a\u89d2\u5ea6\u662f\u9002\u7528\u4e8e\u73b0\u4ee3\u6027\u7684\u4e3b\u6743\u56fd\u5bb6\u5bf9\u9886\u571f\u7684\u89c4\u8303\u5b9a\u4e49\u7684, \u5e76\u4e14\u7279\u522b\u5173\u6ce8 \u4e16\u754c\u6d77\u6d0b\u8fd9\u4e00\u4f4d\u4e8e\u73b0\u4ee3\u4e16\u754c\u4e2d\u7684\u56fd\u5bb6\u548c\u793e\u4f1a\u5355\u5143\u8fb9\u754c\u4e4b\u5916\u7684\u6d41\u52a8\u7a7a\u95f4. \u901a\u8fc7\u5206\u6790 1501 \u5e74\u5230 1800 \u5e74\u4e4b\u95f4\u5728\u6b27\u6d32\u548c \u7f8e\u6d32\u5370\u5236\u7684 591 \u5e45\u8868\u8ff0\u6d77\u6d0b\u7a7a\u95f4\u7684\u4e16\u754c\u5730\u56fe, \u672c\u6587\u5bf9\u6d77\u6d0b\u4f5c\u4e3a\u4e00\u4e2a\u5916\u90e8\u6d41\u52a8\u7a7a\u95f4\u548c\u5176\u5f62\u6210\u52a0\u4ee5\u8ffd\u6eaf\u7814\u7a76, \u4e0e\u6b64\u5bf9\u7acb \u7684\u9886\u571f\u56fd\u5bb6\u89c4\u8303\u4e5f\u662f\u5728\u8fd9\u4e2a\u65f6\u671f\u5f97\u4ee5\u5f62\u6210\u7684. \/\/\/ Los te\u00f3ricos dentro y fuera de la disciplina geogr\u00e1fica cada vez m\u00e1s se percatan de que los l\u00edmites no son simplemente l\u00edneas que encierran y definen territorios. Los l\u00edmites tambi\u00e9n regulan los actos de movimiento y son reproducidos por \u00e9ste. El movimiento, m\u00e1s all\u00e1 y al trav\u00e9s de un territorio demarcado, lo mismo que dentro del mismo, sirve para reproducir el territorio as\u00ed delimitado. De hecho, para entender la historia de una entidad territorial se debe ir m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la simple indagaci\u00f3n de las actividades fijadas espacialmente que ocurren dentro de ese territorio, o de las estrategias del discurso mediante el cual se quiere dar apariencia natural al territorio. Tambi\u00e9n se deben rastrear los actos de movimiento que ocurren dentro, a trav\u00e9s y por fuera de los l\u00edmites del territorio, y la designaci\u00f3n de espacios espec\u00edficos de movimiento fuera del control territorial. En pocas palabras, uno no puede entender la construcci\u00f3n del espacio \"interno\" como una serie de de territorios de fijeza, de sociedad, modernizaci\u00f3n y de desarrollo, sin comprender de manera simult\u00e1nea la construcci\u00f3n del espacio \"externo\" como un escenario de movilidad que se considera inadecuado para control territorial. Esta perspectiva se aplica en este art\u00edculo al preeminente territorio normativo de la modernidad\u2014el estado soberano\u2014y la atenci\u00f3n es orientada espec\u00edficamente al la designaci\u00f3n del oc\u00e9ano mundial como un espacio de movilidad situado fuera de los l\u00edmites de las unidades estado-sociedad que supuestamente constituyen el mundo moderno. Mediante un an\u00e1lisis de las representaciones del espacio mar\u00edtimo en 591 mapas del mundo, impresos en Europa y las Am\u00e9ricas entre 1501 y 1800, este art\u00edculo traza la construcci\u00f3n del oc\u00e9ano como un espacio exterior de movilidad, antit\u00e9tico de la norma del estado territorial que tambi\u00e9n estaba emergiendo durante esta \u00e9poca.","creator":["Philip E. Steinberg"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20621216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0616fec-77bb-3c20-8315-bb86a0ee9114"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20621216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sovereignty, Territory, and the Mapping of Mobility: A View from the Outside","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20621216","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":18968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The latest novel by Monika Maron, Animal Triste (1996) was initially received as a departure from the political and historical concerns of earlier novels and a return to the themes her struggle against communism had repressed. But in the East-West German love affair at the center of the novel the effects of the communist past are ever-present. The end of communism holds out the promise of redemption through love and in the beginning love appears to liberate from the burden of the past. Instead, the love affair heralds a repetition of the past, its disappointments, betrayals and traumas. The 'prehistoric' past returns to haunt the couple in the form of the divergent trajectories of their familial, personal histories and the vastly different histories of the two Germanies. The repressed past returns as barbarism. Recollection of the past-remembering the barbarian-is, however, subject to the vagaries of memory and the undoing of repression which act as structuring devices of the narrative. This article explores the themes of personal and collective remembrance and the effects of repression and repetition on memory. The lessons that can be extrapolated from the novel are finally examined in the context of the return of Maron's own repressed past in her involvement with the Stasi, which emerged in 1995.","creator":["Alison Lewis"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80d9efc5-24d9-3168-8aa5-25f6b695a784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/407514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-Membering the Barbarian: Memory and Repression in Monika Maron's Animal Triste","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407514","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":10685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J\u00fcrgen Kohler"],"datePublished":"2014-05-02","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24552382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00226882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60629720"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3a91058-e8c4-3958-8244-e50c13278cfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24552382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"juristenzeitung"}],"isPartOf":"JuristenZeitung","issueNumber":"9","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Post Gender Trouble \u2013 oder: Ein Lehrst\u00fcck \u00fcber die Not notwendiger Konsequenz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24552382","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":3564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KATE MEHURON"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00855553"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db022e07-e40a-3a90-83b5-d2a7644eb383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24654559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resephen"}],"isPartOf":"Research in Phenomenology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Flesh Memory\/Skin Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654559","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8968,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[495025,495125],[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[42711,42811],[42850,42907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris T. Schulenberg"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc3942dc-c605-3155-ad96-8bdfa21d0e50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Feminine Identity as an Urban Exploration: \"A Cidade Sitiada\" and the Case of Lucr\u00e9cia Neves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741844","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5975,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123883,124077]],"Locations in B":[[2516,2709]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Lloyd Taylor"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1204419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c271dd6-84c1-32c9-a81d-a27a0e8ac4fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1204419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Ishmael's (m)Other: Gender, Jesus, and God in Melville's \"Moby-Dick\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1204419","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":12162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the development of Girls' Studies as a field of critical inquiry. Although scholars from across the academy and around the world currently conduct girl-centered research, considerable barriers prevented the coalescence of Girls' Studies until the late twentieth century. The first section of the essay explores the marginalization of girls in youth research and feminist scholarship prior to the 1990s, two fields where one would expect girls, girlhood, and girls' culture to be of interest. The second section focuses on transformations within and outside the academy that led to the rapid growth of girl-centered research in recent years. The third section provides a map of Girls' Studies scholarship to date, including a survey of topics explored in specific disciplines and those that deserve more attention, as well as an analysis of broader trends in such research across the academy over the past fifteen years.","creator":["Mary Celeste Kearney"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad74fa5a-79ce-33c7-8ae6-59422aad3ff3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coalescing: The Development of Girls' Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628153","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how higher education is being conceptualized as part of a neo-liberal 'feminist' social change project in the post-imperial context of the Arab Gulf. Challenging the tendency to essentialised treatments of gender and women in Muslim countries, it makes visible the diverse experiences and views of a particular group of Gulf purposively sampled women \u2014 students, graduates and academics \u2014 as it explores how they are situating themselves against available feminist narratives, how they are seeing themselves as citizens and political actors, and how higher education's spaces and constraints are mediating these processes. A conflicted picture emerges, of mass higher education helping provide women with radical ideas and ambitions, and helping to make public demands and assert self-representation, while their freedoms to act are limited by underlying hegemonic structures that are still predominantly male and against which women variously rationalize their strategic conformity.","creator":["Sally Findlow"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0046e0f2-0bde-33f3-b9d5-aecddb27ea79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23357011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Higher education and feminism in the Arab Gulf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357011","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanna Danuta Walters"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcf7c906-5780-3b75-b993-e596231a4c14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"869","pageStart":"830","pagination":"pp. 830-869","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Here to Queer: Radical Feminism, Postmodernism, and the Lesbian Menace (Or, Why Can't a Woman Be More like a Fag?)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175026","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":19173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05de\u05e0\u05e1\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d4\u05ea\u05d7\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d4\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05e6\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05e7\u05d9\u05d1\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dc \u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05df \u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05e8\u05d0\u05e9 \u05d7\u05d5\u05d2, \u05d5\u05dc\u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d4\u05df \u05dc\u05d2\u05d1\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8\u05ea \u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05df, \u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e2\u05e9\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea (\u05e4\u05e8\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea) \u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea, \u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d9\u05d1\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05df \u05d4\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea. \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df-\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05de\u05d9 (\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05e8\u05d3\u05d9\u05e1\u05e6\u05d9\u05e4\u05dc\u05d9\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9) \u05d5\u05de\u05e9\u05dc\u05d1 \u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e4\u05e1\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea (\u05d1\u05d3\u05d2\u05e9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1 \u05dc\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05dc \u05d1\u05db\u05dc\u05dc, \u05d5\u05d1\u05d0\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d8), \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d4\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d5\u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d4\u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05d3\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05ea\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea: \u05d0\u05d9\u05e1\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05e0\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d0\u05de\u05e6\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d5\u05de\u05e7 \u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd-\u05dc\u05de\u05d7\u05e6\u05d4, \u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7 \u05ea\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e7\u05d8\u05d2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d6\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05db\u05dd. \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e9\u05ea\u05ea\u05e4\u05d5 11 \u05de\u05e8\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05e8\u05d0\u05e9 \u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05d1\u05d0\u05e8\u05d1\u05e2 \u05de\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05e6\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d4\u05ea\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d6\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05e2\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d5: ( 1) \u05db\u05d9\u05e6\u05d3 \u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05d4 \u05e7\u05d9\u05d1\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3 \u05e8\u05d0\u05e9 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2; (2) \u05de\u05d7\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3; (3) \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\"\u05de \u05e2\u05dc \u05ea\u05e0\u05d0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3\u05d4; ( 4) \u05d7\u05d5\u05e0\u05da (mentor) \u05d5\u05e8\u05e9\u05ea \u05ea\u05de\u05d9\u05db\u05d4;(5) \u05ea\u05e4\u05d9\u05e1\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05e6\u05dc\u05d7\u05d4; (6) \u05e8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea - \u05de\u05e0\u05d4\u05dc\u05ea, \u05d0\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d0\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d4 (\u05d0\u05dd). \u05d4\u05de\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d4\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05dd \u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8 \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e8\u05dc\u05d1\u05e0\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd. Our research, designed as a learning community in which we participate and assume an active role, aims at studying the experiences of female lecturers who accept executive positions as chairs of departments in public colleges. The study explores questions such as: How do we construe the meaning and definition of our roles? What is our managerial policy and how is it implemented? How do our professional socialization, gender, career patterns, and personal-familial life shape our professional identity and determine our working style? We examined the fit between participants' (including ourselves) rhetoric and their actual practices. This research is interdisciplinary in nature, merging the fields of social psychology (emphasizing women's perceptions of their practices), gender studies, and organization studies. We collected data via in-depth semi-structured interviews of eleven women who are heads of department in several public colleges in Israel, and performed content analysis to reveal the main themes and categories. Six main themes emerged from the data analysis: (1) How and why participants accepted the post; (2) The cost of the post; (3) Negotiations concerning work conditions; (4) Mentors and support groups; (5) Perceptions of success, and; (6) Multiple identities \u2014 being a manager, a scholar, and a woman (and\/or mother). Findings are discussed in light of relevant theories and previous studies.","creator":["\u05d3\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05d9\u05e1\u05e2\u05d5\u05e8-\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05db\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05e5","\u05d4\u05dc\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d3\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d1\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4","\u05de\u05d9\u05db\u05dc \u05e4\u05dc\u05d2\u05d9","Dalit Yassour-Borocowitz","Helena Desivilya","Michal Palgi"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23389208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2308247X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d018007b-c7f9-3e9f-985e-b7ffb2192169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23389208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociissuisra"}],"isPartOf":"Social Issues in Israel \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc","issueNumber":"9","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Ariel University Center \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d6 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d0\u05d9 \u05d0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Women in executive roles in the academia: The story of women serving as department heads in public colleges \/ \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05dc \u05d1\u05d0\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d9\u05d4: \u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d4\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05db\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d7\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e6\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23389208","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article proposes a model of cultural mechanisms based on the premises of structuralist cultural sociology and symbolic interactionism. I argue that the models of cultural mechanisms provided by the developing analytical sociology movement are inadequate, while the dominant theories of culture in action from cultural sociology are limited by their adoption of the individual as the primordial unit of analysis. I instead propose a model of culture in action that takes social situations as its primordial unit and that understands culture as a system of meanings that actors laminate into the situations they face through interactive processes of interpretation and performance. I then illustrate and develop the model through an analysis of the Great Stink of London in 1858, a sewerage crisis that triggered significant institutional transformations.","creator":["Matthew Norton"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a75e18e0-18ab-3c87-bb4f-e9426ed222f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mechanisms and Meaning Structures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186669","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":15134,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[418841,419126]],"Locations in B":[[56966,57251]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This paper details an experiment with how the process of writing, specifically writing fictional narratives, can take my queries into teacher subjectivity in unexpected directions, into what St. Pierre (2011) called the post-qualitative landscape. Building on the idea of writing as inquiry (Richardson, 1994), I produce fictional texts that expand the boundaries of traditional qualitative research and push the limits of what counts as knowledge. Specifically, as a former high school teacher, I question conventional constructs of teacher by writing her as me\/not me, as fiction in search of a truth. Such methodological experiments work to develop epistemological elasticity and to resist movements toward a normative science that defines itself in opposition to artful expression.","creator":["Kristi Bruce Amatucci"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2012.5.2.271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2053962-461f-37cf-a29d-4ded46464861"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2012.5.2.271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Writing \u201cTeacher\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2012.5.2.271","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"An Experiment in Post- Qualitative Method"} +{"abstract":"Interviews with female physical geographers show that although the significance of gender in influencing a woman's position and identity in physical geography is contested, gender still remains an important social relation that structures the personal relations, institutional practices and material outcomes of academic physical geography.","creator":["Clare Madge","Anna Bee"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Women, Science and Identity: Interviews with Female Physical Geographers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004006","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Allen Miller"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0009837X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976274"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"495b7944-5e5b-393b-a435-4e48a008c596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasphil"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Philology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Why Propertius Is a Woman: French Feminism and Augustan Elegy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215485","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":11199,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497490,497534]],"Locations in B":[[64244,64298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Beloved, Toni Morrison expresses the dislocations and violence of slavery through disruptions in language. The novel tells the \"unspeakable\" story of Sethe, a slave mother whose act of infanticide leaves a gap in family narrative; bars her surviving daughter, Denver, from language use; and hinders her own ability to speak. Morrison's inclusion of voices previously left out of historical and literary narratives disturbs the language of the novel itself. The Africans piled on the slave ships, the preverbal child who comes back in the shape of the ghost Beloved, and a nursing mother who insists on the primacy of bodily connection: the expression of these subjects' heretofore unspoken experiences and desires distorts discursive structures, especially the demarcations that support normative language. Morrison's textual practice challenges Lacan's assumptions about language and language users, and her depiction of a social order that performs some of the functions of mothering challenges his vision of a paternal symbolic order based on a repudiation of maternal connection.","creator":["Jean Wyatt"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6594773-a157-312d-be09-818ca9e0a644"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"474","pagination":"pp. 474-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Giving Body to the Word: The Maternal Symbolic in Toni Morrison's Beloved","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462616","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":11575,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[507561,507723]],"Locations in B":[[63614,63772]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within this paper I draw on short vignettes and quotes taken from a two-year ethnographic study of boxing to think through the continuing academic merit of the notion of the male preserve. This is an important task due to evidence of shifts in social patterns of gender that have developed since the idea was first proposed in the 1970s. In aligning theoretical contributions from Lefebvre and Butler to discussions of the male preserve, we are able to add nuance to our understanding of how such social spaces are engrained with and produced by the lingering grasp of patriarchal narratives. In particular, by situating the male preserve within shifting social processes, whereby certain men's power is increasingly undermined, I highlight the production of space within which narratives connecting men to violence, aggression, and physical power can be consumed, performed, and reified in a relatively unrestricted form. This specific case study contributes to gender theory as an illustration of a way in which we might explore and understand social enclaves where certain people are able to lay claim to space and power. As such, I argue that the notion of the male preserve is still a useful conceptual, theoretical, and political device, especially when considered as produced by the tyranny of gender power through the dramatic representation and reification of behaviors symbolically linked to patriarchal narrations of manhood.","creator":["CHRISTOPHER R. MATTHEWS"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7eebd4b2-8fc7-3bd3-8c72-65d3877fc5d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24756203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE TYRANNY OF THE MALE PRESERVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756203","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"951a29ad-4b63-3b25-93f3-cecb8eec8818"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976719","volumeNumber":"242","wordCount":1233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2010, La Galigo, a Bugis mythological epic describing the founding of the human world, was included in UNESCO's Memory of the World register. This accolade again brought La Galigo into the international spotlight, as had occurred when Robert Wilson's stage play I La Galigo, based on this epic, debuted in Singapore in 2004. Wilson's production received acclaim and critique, with reviews primarily focusing on his ability to achieve an authentic representation of Bugis identity and their past. These responses raise questions around the presupposition that there is an authentic Bugis identity and past that can be publicly recreated. This article analyses the concept of authenticity through reviews of Wilsons production and the work of key theorists to show that f or many people, authenticity is achievable and of critical importance in underpinning any sense of a unified and singular ethnic identity, while for others, identity is always already a mix of different global influences and as such is either irrelevant, or liberated from a sense of a singular heritage.","creator":["Sharyn Graham Davies"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43863201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49342616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4da492f-99f7-36e5-b4e2-75d64fa7bd80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43863201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing selves: The trope of authenticity and Robert Wilson's stage production of I La Galigo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43863201","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Economic geographical theories of both firm and regional development have increasingly placed significance on the sociological aspects of business activity. In particular, debates about clustering, embeddedness, and relational networks have led to an implicit emphasis on face-to-face interaction as a key factor behind more effective explanation of economic activity in the global economy. However, much of the debate around the nature and role of face-to-face interaction has been limited to wider discussions about the forces behind agglomeration, and has not considered how it is important to transnational firms (TNCs) as key global economic actors. Drawing on research into transnationalizing UK-based law firms, this work proposes a theoretical framework for understanding the nature and significance of face-to-face interactions to TNCs. It argues that face-to-face interaction continues to have a crucial role in shaping both firm and industry success or failure in the context of transnationalization. Whilst recognizing that legal services may have specific requirements for face-to-face interaction, the study argues that many of the factors behind its ongoing key significance are likely to be common to TNCs more widely. Thus, this form of economic practice warrants much greater empirical attention in theories of global economic development.","creator":["Andrew Jones"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26161034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14682702"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7572598c-4e6c-31ca-9ad6-4d8d2f3fc3b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26161034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jecongeog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","Economics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"More than 'managing across borders?' the complex role of face-to-face interaction in globalizing law firms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26161034","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":12200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Moore Goslee"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24045017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Soul\" in Blake's Writing: Redeeming the Word","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045017","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5424,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524242]],"Locations in B":[[29888,29956]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christina Baker"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26535349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02710986"},{"name":"oclc","value":"558813762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69523e9a-f6ca-376e-930d-3f399793c378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26535349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicj"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University of Pennsylvania","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ranchera Rebel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26535349","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":6371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Transgressive Expression and the Voice of Lucha Reyes"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clara Mengolini"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3999ace2-eb2f-37c4-9f6f-fea74b5f15af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26795307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LA PERFORMANCE COMO HERRAMIENTA DE REBELD\u00cdA SOCIAL EN LOS CUENTOS DE SILVINA OCAMPO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795307","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7451,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440102,440300]],"Locations in B":[[14758,14956]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how gender shift occurs in p'ansori, especially with a female storyteller: in the style of narration, in the timbre and inflection of the voice, between characters from the story, and between the roles of a narrator and a performer. Understanding the sociohistorical conditions that helped bear and nurture the vocal art of p'ansori is crucial to an understanding of how singers handle the process of cross-gender vocalization, particularly with Korea's strict Neo-Confucian heritage that emphasizes segregation of masculinity and femininity. The role of gender is also examined within the stories of the p'ansori, especially how their portrayal fits with the modern feminist view that women in p'ansori are sexual objects performing before the dominant male audience. Finally, this study discusses the performative identity that women singers of p'ansori have constructed upon the already complex stage gender shaped by male singers of the past era.","creator":["Chan E. Park"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0145840X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43627024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00214388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad14276a-3029-323e-b7a4-4c53788654b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23719384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"koreanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Korean Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playful Reconstruction of Gender in P'ansori Storytelling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719384","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Hennen"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"445c50c2-b87e-301e-888a-b044d0923d2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Stuff of Gender Dreams","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186115","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":3024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NEIL CAMPBELL"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297239810"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009202731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bdc4ce8-bdbb-3cb8-ad3d-baaeaeab4d73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26530677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cThe Seam of Something Else Unnamed\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530677","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":8948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Sebastian Barry\u2019s Days Without End<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANNA Y. SUMIDA"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41483070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ee48a43-5c10-311b-9cba-863d2ab18e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41483070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading a Child's Writing as a Social Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41483070","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":4867,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503315,503384]],"Locations in B":[[27704,27786]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this response to Kathleen Martindale and Martha Saunders's \"Realizing Love and Justice: Lesbian Ethics in the Upper and Lower Case,\" which appeared in Hypatia 7(4), I argue that a worldly separatism depends upon taking attention from those in positions of dominance and redirecting it to members of nondominant groups, as a political, worldly act of resistance.","creator":["Debra Shogan"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"226e6b87-1a86-38ac-b8bd-4c2e231e9ec4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In Defense of a Worldly Separatism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810376","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":2086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["M. Bianet Castellanos"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Adolescent Migration to Canc\u00fan: Reconfiguring Maya Households and Gender Relations in Mexico's Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071907","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11646,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Ambondromifehy, a sapphire-mining town in northern Madagascar, young men earn and spend a great deal of what some call \"hot money.\" Rather than invest their earnings with long-term intentions considered responsible and proper by some around them, they consume \"daringly\" by spending money to fulfill immediate desires. I argue that such \"daring consumption\" might be understood as the active response of young men who refuse the passive roles allotted them by both the sapphire trade and traditional systems of social organization.","creator":["Andrew Walsh"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5de62a9b-915e-38b3-b37a-e1f04e54acb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Hot Money\" and Daring Consumption in a Northern Malagasy Sapphire-Mining Town","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805378","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":14775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wilson Chacko Jacob"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a993e22a-d808-380c-a443-0de3f43143b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"712","pageStart":"689","pagination":"pp. 689-712","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eventful Transformations: Al-Futuwwa between History and the Everyday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497699","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":12556,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[27903,27972]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the early 1990s, feminist challenges to mainstream architectural discourses were taken upon by queer space theorists, who broadened the focus from understanding how space is gendered and sexualised to suggest new ways of inhabiting space. In the last decade, a new generation, exemplified by artists Elmgreen & Dragset's transformation of architectural spaces, further pushed the challenges, offering a communitarian ideal that puts aside traditional public and private divisions. These spatial experiences can be linked to the ideas of queer theorist Jos\u00e9 Esteban Mu\u00f1oz who proposes a queer futurity tainted with political idealism which can inspire architecture to emulate a queer collectivity.","creator":["OLIVIER VALLERAND"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42570000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07c01606-c4dd-3b2b-a560-a6f825e07837"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42570000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Home Is the Place We All Share: Building Queer Collective Utopias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42570000","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":9170,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[48600,48706]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Kleppinger"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14c4a546-99ba-3706-93d2-ac7bdc35fdde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378252","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":1947,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[10106,10175]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Brennen"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f61434f0-b72d-3cb7-a3f5-f7f600e6e441"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Sociology of (Public) Mourning?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856258","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While southern Africa is defined by deep rifts of homophobia and transphobia, queer youth navigate this environment in innovative and creative ways. In this Profile I will explore, through the use of a participatory visual workshop, dubbed Art for Activism, the experiences of queer youth in this region. The Profile will explore the possibilities which this workshop offers to queer youth, the challenges experienced by queer youth and the strategies they use to deal with these challenges. I argue that creative approaches, like the Art for Activism workshop, allows for dislocation to be a successful strategy to engage queer youth.","creator":["Gabriel Hoosain Khan"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2f8b8db-3c2e-33aa-83c5-1c41c5e29d14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (102)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Cross-border art and queer incursion: On working with queer youth from southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825249","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay will attempt to show how Virginia Woolf's Orlando acts as a parodic contestation againts the late Victorian sexual codes prescribed and enforced upon individuals in the first decades of the twentieth century. Woolf's conceptualisation of androgyny in Orlando (as a prelude to A Room of One's Own) poses a major theoretical problem that this paper will address. The contradictory manly and womanly appearances of Orlando are resolved with the creation of an androgynous being whose gender is constantly mocked. Woolf's fetishistic vision of a genderless being is a desire that supports her idea of the neutralization of gender. Together with androgyny, as a Bloomsbury intellectual, one of Woolf s central concerns in Orlando turns out to be same sex love. The gender binary, the main foundation of heterosexuality, is deconstructed with a critical and subversive impulse similar to those present in Strachey, Wilde, Barnes, Lawrence, and Joyce.","creator":["Esther S\u00e1nchez-Pardo Gonz\u00e1lez"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3efa8444-b4b4-3437-be7f-5aac96967138"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"What Phantasmagoria the Mind Is\": Reading Virginia Woolf's Parody of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055162","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6529,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[199893,200133],[481756,481824],[497226,497378]],"Locations in B":[[15402,15640],[39129,39198],[39314,39462]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Currently, affect and emotions are a widely discussed political topic. At least since the early 1990s, different disciplines\u2014from the social sciences and humanities to science and technoscience\u2014have increasingly engaged in studying and conceptualizing affect, emotion, feeling, and sensation, evoking yet another turn that is frequently framed as the \"affective turn.\" Within queer feminist affect theory, two positions have emerged: following Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick's well-known critique, there are either more \"paranoid\" or more \"reparative\" approaches toward affect. Whereas the latter emphasize the potentialities of affect, the former argue that one should question the mere idea of affect as liberation and promise. Here, I suggest moving beyond a critique or celebration of affect by embracing the political ambivalence of affect. For this queer feminist theorizing of affective politics, I adapt Jacques Ranci\u00e8re's theory of the political and particularly his understanding of emancipation. Ranci\u00e8re takes emancipation into account without, however, uncritically endorsing or celebrating a politics of liberation. I draw on his famous idea of the \"distribution of the sensible\" and reframe it as the \"distribution of emotions,\" by which I develop a multilayered approach toward a nonidentitarian, nondichotomous, and emancipatory queer feminist theory of affective politics.","creator":["BRIGITTE BARGETZ"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd106798-765c-3593-8b7a-b7f14cf25765"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"580","pagination":"pp. 580-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Distribution of Emotions: Affective Politics of Emancipation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542144","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8407,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62369,62497]],"Locations in B":[[18065,18193]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Michel Foucault, no texto \u201cUn Plaisir si Simple\u201d, mostra-nos que a mis\u00e9ria do amor moderno se fundaria sobre a ressignifica\u00e7\u00e3o psicanal\u00edtica do remorso crist\u00e3o. Por outro lado, Judith Butler nos explica, ao problematizar a rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre a psican\u00e1lise e a matriz heterossexual, que o amor \u00e9 melanc\u00f3lico e que o mecanismo da melancolia constitui a identidade de g\u00eanero. Conforme Butler, a melancolia parece ter duas disposi\u00e7\u00f5es, uma estruturada e outra desviante. A melancolia estruturada garantiria a \u201ccura\u201d dos desvios sexuais mediante a aplica\u00e7\u00e3o dos c\u00f3digos f\u00e1licos ao desejo do sujeito. Inversamente, a melancolia desviante estaria ligada \u00e0 subvers\u00e3o da heteronormatividade. A partir disso, interessa-nos interrogar em que medida a interpreta\u00e7\u00e3o foucaultiana do prazer concernente \u00e0s transgress\u00f5es amorosas se articularia \u00e0 disposi\u00e7\u00e3o desviante da melancolia butleriana; e, finalmente, gostar\u00edamos de indicar algumas converg\u00eancias entre a melancolia criativa e a \u00e9tica antiga do cuidado de si. Michel Foucault, in the text \u201cUn Plaisir si Simple\u201d, shows us that the misery of the modern love is based on the psychoanalytic resignification of the Christian remorse. On the other hand, Judith Butler explains, when she problematizes the relation between the psychoanalysis and the heterosexual matrix, that love is melancholic and that the mechanism of the melancholy constitutes the gender identity. According to Butler, the melancholy seems to have two dispositions, one structured and another deviant. The structured melancholy ensures the \u201chealing\u201d of the sexual deviations by applying the phallic codes to the desire of the subject. Conversely, the deviant melancholy would be linked to the subversion of the heteronormativity. On this basis, we are interested in questioning in what extend the Foucauldian interpretation of the pleasure concerning to the love transgressions is articulated to the deviant disposition of the Butlerian melancholy; and, finally, we would like to indicate some links between the creative melancholy and the ancient ethics of the care of the self.","creator":["Cassiana Lopes Stephan"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"947feb6e-b365-35ed-b29a-bcd3eb0ad376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Notas sobre o amor e a melancolia - Notes on Love and Melancholy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965107","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"da estrutura \u00e0 resist\u00eancia"} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the discourse of masculinity in contemporary Chinese popular culture by critical readings of TV drama serials (dianshi lianxuju), a crucial and underresearched site for the study of ideology, shown on prime-time national channels in recent years (2003\u20132007). In particular, it examines the male images in three sweepingly popular TV programs\u2014The Big Dye House (Da ranfang), Halfway Couples (Banlu fuqi), and Unsheathing the Sword (Liangjian)\u2014as \"cultural types.\" It looks at the social, economic, and cultural factors that have affected men and representations of men in today's China against the backdrop of the dynamic interplay between nationalism, globalization, and consumerism. Building on the burgeoning research on Chinese masculinity in the past decade, it argues that forms of masculinity are becoming increasingly hybrid in a globalizing China and that the male images in these dramas are a product of social changes tied in with new formations of power.","creator":["Geng Song"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00977004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533388"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b12370c-a3eb-3b67-8f55-735d72331c7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25699442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernchina"}],"isPartOf":"Modern China","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"404","pagination":"pp. 404-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chinese Masculinities Revisited: Male Images in Contemporary Television Drama Serials","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699442","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Don Kraemer"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4c36c0c-c5e4-3aa4-a961-9c9b2f2a8925"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Abstracting the Bodies of\/in Academic Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465510","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8521,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430911,431620]],"Locations in B":[[16277,16986]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kenda Mutongi"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/220256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac7c6aac-586b-3938-904a-7ce8028657c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/220256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Dear Dolly's\" Advice: Representations of Youth, Courtship, and Sexualities in Africa, 1960-1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/220256","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The critique of whiteness furthers important critiques of static notions of ethnicity and identity. Interesting work on 'white-blind' geographers working on race and ethnicity has recently been initiated, yet a more systematic and wide ranging critique of the norms and assumptions of contemporary geographical research has yet to be fully established. After reviewing the recent White Studies literature, this paper examines an influential piece of contemporary geographical writing and suggests that if geography really is to matter, geographers need to consider more self-consciously how they themselves might be (unwittingly) complicit in such constructions.","creator":["Mark McGuinness"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geography Matters? Whiteness and Contemporary Geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004061","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":4447,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOSEPH C. CARROLL"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24694546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bbb59db-995c-3dda-a3eb-e428641057c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24694546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Biocultural Theory and the Study of Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24694546","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":3904,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[521846,521932]],"Locations in B":[[19129,19212]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the last 20 years, Latin American countries have experienced a boom in conservation territories. At the same time, neoliberal restructuring of Latin American economies has devolved funding and management responsibilities to international NGOs. In this context, conservation projects have become important zones of encounter and contact, wherein those inhabiting protected areas are necessarily subject to and subjected by the discourses and practices of conservation institutions. How do local actors engage with these processes? This paper examines the cultural politics of conservation encounters in the Maya Biosphere Reserve, a protected area in Guatemala's northern department of Peten. Drawing upon the concept of transculturation and anti-essentialist framings of subject formation as performative, I outline how differently situated social groups in the reserve negotiate, contest and enact the daily discourses and practices of conservation as articulated by powerful US based international organizations.","creator":["Juanita Sundberg"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dd06998-44fc-3c07-a34a-20a9dd931eda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conservation encounters: transculturation in the 'contact zones' of empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251085","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":13059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. E. Elliott"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da5b295c-4f04-3b2b-9ee5-b21baf0e0fcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Language to Medium: A Small Apology for Cultural Theory as Challenge to Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057489","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14061,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[96651,96939],[99265,99660]],"Locations in B":[[16226,16540],[16534,16928]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HOWARD CHIANG"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23509623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205048"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227222"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb77e460-5f08-3ae6-af51-7fc785657b6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23509623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The China Quarterly","issueNumber":"214","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23509623","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Roman arena is often described as an exotic or peripheral institution. Alternatively, it has been seen as a culturally central institution. In this case one traditionally assumes either that the arena is used to pacify the lower classes or that it expresses themes of violence at the heart of Roman society. In the first view the arena's politics are cynical; in the second they are often described as decadent or full of despair. While none of these readings should be neglected, this essay argues that the arena can be examined as a productive institution which helps in the maintenance of Roman social relations from the top to the bottom and from the violent to the banal. When viewed in the light of Louis Althusser's idea of the ideological state apparatus, the arena can be read as political and psychological without recourse to notions of cunning calculation or psychic crisis. The arena is not only normal, but it participates in the production of normativity. This study pays particular attention to the ways in which the arena enables a specific kind of vision of the Roman world. In this vision the Roman nobiles in general and, later, the emperor in particular are reaffirmed as legitimate authorities: the rulers perhaps need the arena more than does the mob. The arena is also a locus at which the relations of domination which subsist between Rome and its subjects and between the sexes are reproduced in both the social and theatrical senses: the arena stages culturally vital spectacles. Indeed the export of the arena into the Roman provinces also entails the exportation of the Roman social structures which the arena serves. The Romanness of the arena is in fact so pervasive that even many of the hostile appraisals of the arena which come to us from antiquity reproduce the hierarchical social vision which the arena enables even as the institution itself is repudiated. Accordingly all representations of the arena need to be read within the logic of the arena itself. The ideology of the arena has no outside.","creator":["Erik Gunderson"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f71e27cd-3678-3e33-ab07-b61123fd829d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25011033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ideology of the Arena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011033","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":21427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the lecture she gave at the Day of Celebration to mark twenty-fi ve years of ordaining LGBT rabbis by Leo Baeck College on 23 June 2014, Rabbi Dr Rachel Adler spoke persuasively and encouragingly of 'newcomers' to the ongoing Jewish 'conversation', 'affecting the tradition' by teaching the tradition 'to re-understand its own stories', and also by telling 'stories that the tradition does not know at all'. For most of my rabbinate, I was engaged in the first kind of storytelling. More recently, I have been doing more of the second kind. In my response to Rachel Adler 's lecture, I trace my journey, both within the context of the developing women's rabbinate and as a particular journey taken by a lesbian feminist queer rabbi determined that the voices, perspectives and lives of LGBTQ Jews are included within and transform Jewish life and teaching.","creator":["Elli Tikvah Sarah"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00143006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617852"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250522"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"986e1421-48bb-3539-8ffd-70a2d7ebd96f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"europeanjudaism"}],"isPartOf":"European Judaism: A Journal for the New Europe","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"TALKING MY WAY IN: Reflections on the Journey of a Lesbian Feminist Queer Rabbi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630866","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":3865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Joseph Rouse is one of the most distinctive and innovative proponents of practice theory today. This article focuses in section I on two extended elaborations with systematic intent from Rouse's corpus over the last two decades regarding the nature of practices, highlighting in particular the concept of normativity. Toward this end, this article explains why Rouse argues that we need to bring about something like a Copernican revolution in our understanding of the intrinsic normativity of practices as an essentially interactive, temporal, contestable, and open-ended process. In section II, this article then examines some commonalities and apparent divergences of Rouse's practice theory from the existential phenomenology of the early Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty. The article draws to a close by considering two apparent divergences between Rouse's conception of practices and existential phenomenology: (1) the degree of compatibility between the claim of existential phenomenology to reveal necessary enabling background conditions of our lived experience and Rouse's normative conception of practices; and (2) the compatibility of \"quasi-transcendental\" constitution, as this is at work according to existential phenomenology, and Rouse's argument that it is wrong to understand practices as exclusively centered on the activities of human beings.","creator":["Jo-Jo Koo"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03428117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608971423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40489989-ecd5-35eb-87d1-6ac3f8caddc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44645956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phanfors"}],"isPartOf":"Ph\u00e4nomenologische Forschungen","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Felix Meiner Verlag GmbH","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rouse's Conception of Practice Theory and Existential Phenomenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645956","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephanie May"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98949e8b-b7a7-3437-8372-6c17df890702"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Mothers and Sons: Feminist Parenting and the Conundrums of Raising Males","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.121","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6003,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[473233,473294],[477177,477236]],"Locations in B":[[4388,4450],[4700,4757]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study illustrates how body-part vocabulary can contribute to linguistic gender construction. As a starting point, gendering mechanisms pertinent to body-part terms are delineated. On a theoretical plane, the study is indebted to poststructuralism and the notion of performativity in identity construction. Gender performativity via body-part vocabulary is explored by quantitatively and qualitatively analyzing material from a corpus of 2,000 advertisements from the two magazines, Cosmopolitan and Men's Health, yielding evidence on how two specific commercial versions of femininity and masculinity are discursively constructed. The findings are highly stereotypical and therefore bear witness to body-part lexemes as traces of dominant gender discourses whose gender indexicality can be strategically exploited. The concluding discussion advances a theorization of linguistic identity construction in line with performativity, which departs from more traditional variationist approaches that see identity as a pre-discursive fact.","creator":["Heiko Motschenbacher"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40207912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f18a1adb-0d08-3f5e-8e16-3e38d153c58f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40207912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Speaking the Gendered Body: The Performative Construction of Commercial Femininities and Masculinities via Body-Part Vocabulary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40207912","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christy L. Burns"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Parodic Irishness: Joyce's Reconfigurations of the Nation in Finnegans Wake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346200","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10719,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455722,455887]],"Locations in B":[[6916,7081]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew W. Bartlett"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ef22a41-96cf-33dc-b38b-10f38e8b01ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cecil Taylor, Identity Energy, and the Avant-Garde African American Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833708","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7211,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[426219,426378]],"Locations in B":[[31484,31643]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Valerie Rohy"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41698740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e711424-e78d-36f8-89cb-929d5935fc7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41698740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hemingway, Literalism, and Transgender Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41698740","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":13078,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74829,75056]],"Locations in B":[[34798,35005]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper recognizes the perils of forcing queer subjects into tick boxes but argues that the urgent need for transgender-accessible bathrooms requires a more inclusive count of this vulnerable population. Most estimates of the transgender population are flawed because they measure only the transsexual population. This paper uses a more broadly defined transgender subjectivity that includes transsexuals and cross-dressers, as well as intersex, gender-flux, or gender-nonconforming individuals for a total of 9,318,597 individuals or nearly 3 percent (2.92) of the U.S. population.","creator":["Petra L. Doan"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f948822c-be8b-327f-a13c-ea919fc0d40b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"To Count or Not to Count: Queering Measurement and the Transgender Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474064","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the postmodern turn has profound implications for the social sciences, its reception in sociology has been mixed. In this article I briefly review these encounters and suggest an embrace of a \"strategic postmodernism.\" Such an approach explicitly integrates both the institutional basis of discursive understandings of the self and the empirical project of knowledge construction within the context of change and transformation. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Mientras que el tono postmodernista tiene implicaciones profundas para las ciencias sociales, su recibimiento por la sociologia ha sido mixto. En este trabajo, brevemente reviso estos encuentros y sugiero un brazo de la \"estrategia postmodernista.\" (Lemert 1995) se preocupa con la \u00e9tica de la pr\u00e1xis e impl\u00edcitamente integra ambas, las bases institucionales de los entendimientos discursivos de s\u00ed mismo (self) y el proyecto emp\u00edrico de la construcci\u00f3n del conocimiento. \/\/\/ [Chinese] (Unicode for Chinese abstract). \/\/\/ [Japanese] (Unicode for Japanese abstract).","creator":["Janet Lee"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80e4c596-3474-356e-b56e-1c7bfd6f35a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1389582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"753","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-753","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Utility of a Strategic Postmodernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389582","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7449,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[466027,466317]],"Locations in B":[[13111,13398]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay revisits J. L. Austin's exclusion of jokes (infamously paired with literature as \u201cnon\u2013serious\u201d speech acts) from his performative theory of language. Through a linkage to Jacques Derrida's work on Austin (as well as Derrida's satirically polemical exchange with John Searle concerning Austin's work), the essay both argues and tries to demonstrate that jokes are not merely the excluded other of the performative but are in fact the skeleton key to understanding performativity. The essay ends with some thoughts on the performative power of the joke in contemporary political theory.","creator":["Jeffrey T. Nealon"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.95.2017.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"749eb70e-bc4d-3130-9bda-77edfa72577c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.95.2017.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Jokes and the Performative in Austin and Derrida; or, The Truth is a Joke?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.95.2017.0001","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":9938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LAURA A. BELMONTE","MARK PHILIP BRADLEY","JULIO CAP\u00d3 Jr.","PAUL FARBER","SHANON FITZPATRICK","MELANI McALISTER","DAVID MINTO","MICHAEL SHERRY","NAOKO SHIBUSAWA","PENNY VON ESCHEN"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1fa05e7-ad39-39d6-b493-3f1d88afc361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26376734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colloquy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376734","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":31641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Queering America and the World"} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT The present article examines the way Zakia Tahiri's film Number One (2009) foregrounds a renewed understanding of gender and gender relations in contemporary Morocco, especially in the wake of the New Family Code Reform (Moudawana), which has revolutionized women's status by increasing their power in the private as well as the public spheres. It centers not on the oft-studied subject of women and the regulation of femininity in Arab countries, but on the complex relationship between masculinity and performance, highlighting the sociocultural norms that have shaped and affected the performance of masculinity in Arabo-Muslim contexts. In particular, this study examines how Tahiri uses subversive comedy to challenge traditional views and constructions of male and female roles, to expose and dismantle the normative constructions of masculinity, and to promote the emergence of a new social frame that begs for different gender performances.","creator":["Jimia Boutouba"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.1.24","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f97d6ac9-917f-35f2-baa0-a9302350766a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.1.24"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Moudawana Syndrome: Gender Trouble in Contemporary Morocco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.1.24","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fec9a66-ddfd-3ba2-a650-cd74c2ef2fea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"S188","pageStart":"S129","pagination":"pp. S129-S188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Author Index, Books Reviewed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175020","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":27487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474931,474998]],"Locations in B":[[118183,118250]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While Rachilde was one of the first women writers to introduce lesbians in her work, her lesbians are not exempt from the clich\u00e9s of the time, those of decadent aesthetics, French universalism and exceptionality: they are invisible and perceived as pederasts. Rachilde herself was accused of pederasty, of \"Rachildisme.\" This article examines how lesbians in Rachilde's novels are subjected to contradictory positions: on one hand her work shows a strong fascination for lesbians, but on the other it is embedded in misogyny. Rachilde's work praises dominant male homosexuals, but presents lesbians as \"petits fr\u00e8res inf\u00e9rieurs.\" She often hypersexualizes or desexualizes lesbians and sentences them to death.","creator":["DOMINIQUE D. FISHER"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23537816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A propos du \"Rachildisme\" ou Rachilde et les lesbiennes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537816","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article illustrates some interactional properties of the 'gender attribution process' - that is, the methodical procedures through which members come to identify others as male or female (Kessler and McKenna, 1978). Drawing on data from interviews and group discussions where respondents were asked to comment on a series of pictures containing gendered images, I explore instances where members have trouble identifying the gender of the person in the picture. I analyse the procedures through which they manage that trouble, and collectively assign a coherent gender identity to the person in the image - thus re-establishing what Garfinkel (1967) has termed the 'natural attitude' toward 'normally sexed persons'. Although, in most instances, an 'uncertain' or 'incorrect' gender attribution is treated as an accountable phenomenon which requires identity work on the part of the speaker; in some cases, members' displayed 'doubt' or failure to attribute, itself becomes an interactional resource, used as a relatively 'safe' form of negative identity attribution.","creator":["Susan A. Speer"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f6d183e-aa81-3994-8511-f4e66eba2bc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Interactional Organization of the Gender Attribution Process","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856713","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.fm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50e6f7d0-b645-329a-a1d9-49002b714601"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.fm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"xvii","pageStart":"vii","pagination":"pp. vii-xvii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.fm","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Frankenberry"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01943448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe256bee-02b2-39ba-a510-10f36a0bcb75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27944273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjtheophil"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Theology & Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"PRAGMATISTS, PREDATORY MALES, AND TOUGH BROADS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944273","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5111,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124621,124745]],"Locations in B":[[20984,21106]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patrick Paul Garlinger"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Homo-Ness\" and the Fear of Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566370","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reveals that not all formal jobs in the European Union (EU) are quite as pure, wholesome, and legitimate as is often supposed. Although it is commonly assumed that the formal economy is separate from the informal economy, this article draws attention to a \"hybrid\" semiformal work practice where formal employees receive two wages from their formal employer, one declared and the other an undeclared (\"envelope\") wage. To evaluate the prevalence and nature of this hybrid practice, the results of a 2007 survey composed of 26,659 face-to-face interviews in the twenty-seven European Union (EU) member states are reported. This reveals that some 5 percent of all formal employees receive envelope wages and that these undeclared wages amount on average to two-fifths of their wage packet. However, this hybrid semiformal work is not evenly distributed across the EU. It is markedly more prevalent in East-Central Europe, where envelope wages are commonly paid for regular employment hours, while in Continental Europe and Nordic countries such undeclared wages are less common and paid mostly for overtime or extra work. Given the prevalence of such a hybrid work practice in the EU, the article concludes by calling for a move beyond depicting the formal and informal economies as separate and for greater understanding of how informality permeates the so-called formal economy.","creator":["Colin C. Williams"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388384"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213772"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49081001-d5d5-3a8e-81f0-86b49fe96534"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"From the Formal\/Informal Work Dichotomy to Hybrid Semiformal Work Practices: The Case of Envelope Wages in the European Union","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628365","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the significance of the \"struggling reader\" identity on students' classroom experiences. Drawing upon sociocultural theories of literacy, performance theories of education, and psychosocial qualities of identity, I argue that such an identity is felt, lived, and embodied throughout students' daily interactions. Once identified as struggling readers, students internalized a sense of loss and exclusion while reading in the classroom and attempted to reposition themselves as readers through various embodied performances with print.","creator":["Grace Enriquez"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a6daaac-c26f-3003-b0ee-d82736693c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24029055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Embodiments of \"Struggle\": The Melancholy, Loss, and Interactions with Print of Two \"Struggling Readers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029055","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9953,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102335,102568]],"Locations in B":[[54903,55136]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Um die Entwicklungslinien der deutschsprachigen politischen Theorie im internationalen Kontext nachzuzeichnen, orientieren wir uns an zentralen politiktheoretischen Begriffen, welche die wissenschaftlichen Auseinandersetzungen besonders gepr\u00e4gt haben. Dabei unterscheiden wir zwischen Ordnungsbegriffen (Demokratie, Staat, Macht, System, Institution), normativen Leitideen (Gerechtigkeit, Gemeinwohl, Anerkennung) und neueil Thematisierungen (Geschlecht, Diskurs, Globalisierung). Gegen\u00fcber g\u00e4ngigen Vorstellungen ergibt sich ein neues Bild: An die Stelle einer Entwicklung in drei Phasen tritt eine Z\u00e4sur zu Beginn der 1980er Jahre. In this article we map out the development of German political theory since 1945 and locate it within the international context. For this purpose we track concepts which were central in shaping the scholarly controversies within the field. We distinguish between organizational concepts (democracy, state, power, system, institution), normative ideas (justice, common welfare, recognition) and new themes (gender, discourse, globalization). The resulting picture of the development of political theory replaces the common idea of three phases with a decisive break at the beginning of the 1980s.","creator":["Gerhard G\u00f6hler","Mattias Iser","Ina Kerner"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24201689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323470"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80412dd8-65fe-3095-8376-8c30c7b1a57e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24201689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polivier"}],"isPartOf":"Politische Vierteljahresschrift","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"372","pagination":"pp. 372-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entwicklungslinien der Politischen Theorie in Deutschland seit 1945","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24201689","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":16046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This letter documents the conversations of a participatory action research team consisting of one doctoral student and eight New York City high school students. The letter documents the process of creating the instrument that was used to collect data from other lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer and questioning students. The dissertation research seeks to understand the language, policies, and behavior about sexuality and gender expression in schools, and LGBTQ young people's interpretations of them. Using Foucault and Butler to explain how young people interact with norms of sexuality and gender in contingent and contextualized ways, the researchers began to think about the discourses around sexuality and gender with a more historicized and complex lens and to examine subjectivity within those discourses. The researchers elected to use a modified Q sort to understand the intersection of the school community's attitudes and beliefs with individual student attitudes and beliefs, ultimately to understand LGBTQ students' sense of belonging in their schools.","creator":["Darla Linville"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2011.3.4.433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8c87e52-c894-32be-9c3a-32dbe137b2cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2011.3.4.433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sorting Out the Sort","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2011.3.4.433","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7569,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124610,124745]],"Locations in B":[[13493,13628]],"subTitle":"Letter to the Youth Researchers of a Participatory Action Research Team"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adelaida L\u00f3pez-Mej\u00eda"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd5c1e61-392e-3424-a997-386cf3234232"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng","spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Women Who Bleed to Death: Gabriel Garc\u00eda Marquez's \"Sense of an Ending\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203556","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":8820,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[160236,160323],[160597,160747]],"Locations in B":[[13173,13260],[13270,13420]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bryan S. Turner"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2076481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a4c6f8d-ef11-3894-8195-21d9033dd6e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2076481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2076481","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas H. Luxon"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"937","pageStart":"899","pagination":"pp. 899-937","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"\"Not I, But Christ\": Allegory and the Puritan Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873322","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":19236,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[311674,311862],[491737,491870],[515047,515119]],"Locations in B":[[165,353],[95906,96037],[116688,116755]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["TORUNN HAALAND"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709751"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e489a31-c946-3f7c-9666-94032b3eef7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24368405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"596","pagination":"pp. 596-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Fl\u00e2nerie\", Spatial Practices and Nomadic Thought in Antonioni's \"La notte\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368405","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":11151,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How do proto-state organizations achieve an initial accumulation of power, such that they are in a position to grow (or shrink) as an organization, maintain their prestige (or lose it), and be viewed, by elite and populace, as something real and consequential that can be argued about, supported, or attacked? This article argues that state-formation has a performative dimension, in which the publicity of acts of violence, coercion, and negotiation made by agents of the proto-state, and the variable interpretation of these acts, are paramount to the state\u2019s success (or failure) and developing character. In the model developed here, agents of a would-be state act in response to emergencies, and when public interpretations of those actions assign their character and effectiveness to \u201cthe state,\u201d the state is performed into being. In particular, public performance solves, in part, agency problems obtaining between state rulers and their staff and elite allies. The formation of the federal government in the early American republic (1783 to 1801), whose success is insufficiently accounted for by extant theory, provides an opportunity to develop a model of the performative dimension of state-formation.","creator":["Isaac Ariail Reed"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48595814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3d778f0-22b2-3dc1-9cb5-50b46d39e248"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48595814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"367","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-367","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Performative State-Formation in the Early American Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48595814","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":22743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This is an experimental, mixed-genre narrative, combining autoethnography with other evocative writing forms, including narratives of the self. Using the techniques of fiction, I tell a story about myself and my experiences with nature, the sacred, and a small Montana river named Rock Creek. Kittridge asks for narratives that embed the self in storied histories of sacred spaces. These stories chart the outlines of an epistemology that stresses the sacredness, of human life and its relationship to nature. Accordingly, this performance-based project attempts to enact a sacred epistemology and a form of writing that honors our relationship to nature and the natural world.","creator":["Norman K. Denzin"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2000.23.1.71","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24f8d59b-7347-339b-93c1-2bb1a535caaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2000.23.1.71"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rock Creek History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2000.23.1.71","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through 32 in-depth surveys with drag kings, I ask how do trans*\/nonbinary individuals find a way to make a home in the Southeastern United States? I answer this by examining the use of drag kinging as a resource to explore gender identity and find resources for gender transition. This study adds to previous research on drag kinging by expanding beyond large cities and college towns to include a broader look at the Southeast, where queer lives have often been rendered invisible. I highlight the importance of geographic location on attitudes about gender and resources available to trans*\/nonbinary people. In contrast to other areas of the country, trans*\/nonbinary drag kings in the Southeast use drag as a place to explore a \u201cfelt\u201d identity that is stifled in the broader culture.","creator":["BAKER A. ROGERS"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26597116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89975750-e75e-3343-8948-167a74dd07eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26597116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"910","pageStart":"889","pagination":"pp. 889-910","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"DRAG AS A RESOURCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26597116","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Trans* and Nonbinary Individuals in the Southeastern United States"} +{"abstract":"A national emphasis in Britain on community cohesion and citizenship has highlighted the need to explore understandings of difference within and between communities, particularly in school contexts. This paper reports on the first phase of a larger project exploring pupils' understandings and experiences of identity and diversity within secondary schools. Questionnaires were collected from 51 Year 8 pupils in two urban and ethnically diverse secondary schools in England. The findings suggest that pupils have a complex range of views about identity, diversity and Britishness.","creator":["Jasmine Rhamie","Kalwant Bhopal","Ghazala Bhatti"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23270126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fb28da8-3d83-38c6-a567-20bae15f2e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23270126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Philosophy","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"STICK TO YOUR OWN KIND: PUPILS' EXPERIENCES OF IDENTITY AND DIVERSITY IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23270126","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9629,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[54249,54354]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Greg Jacobs"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/455791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709499"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/455791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanspeech"}],"isPartOf":"American Speech","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lavender Linguistics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/455791","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":4182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martina Reuter"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"276a537b-d3da-3cfa-9294-76123d5c8289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811146","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since 2002 a network of independent Orthodox Jewish prayer groups known as partnership minyanim have revolutionized gender roles within the prayer service. In these worship communities, women chant from the Torah and lead musically rich prayer services accompanied by the congregation's robust harmonies. The first partnership minyan, Shira Hadasha (\"A New Song\"), has become known in Jerusalem as \"the best show in town,\" due to the exceptionally musical nature of their prayer services. Approximately 30 partnership minyanim have since emerged in Israel, America, Canada, and Australia, which have all retained this emphasis on song. This paper examines the importance of music in these prayer groups, exploring the relationship between music and the negotiation of fixed tradition. I suggest that the musical opportunities provided by partnership minyanim are very significant to worshipers in these settings, making space for women to gain a physical voice in the synagogue. In addition, the musical environment of partnership minyanim also facilitates a dramatic change for men, as they shift from being the outward projecting voice to the inward receiving, but also enabling, ear. Through an investigation of music's role in gender performance and the exploration of the habitus, this paper suggests that through this new gendering of musical roles, partnership minyanim produce an alternative identity for the children who attend these services, which may have large implications for the future of Jewish Orthodoxy.","creator":["Gordon Dale"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43548401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61124234"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012233122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de9432f0-9a00-3ff7-bbf0-ffdf00d5b906"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43548401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contjewry"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Jewry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Music and the Negotiation of Orthodox Jewish Gender Roles in Partnership \"Minyanim\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43548401","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9027,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[447625,448048]],"Locations in B":[[34523,34946]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paula Ressler","Becca Chase"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40503255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93d267f7-a094-390c-aece-97918f1855ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40503255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"EJ in Focus: Sexual Identity and Gender Variance: Meeting the Educational Challenges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40503255","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":5648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent evidence suggests that there have been significant increases in the number of problems reported by students who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual. This paper seeks to describe, by means of autobiographical account, the educational implications of being identified as 'queer' within schools. It draws on experiential stories to illustrate the injurious effects of homophobic speech acts and attempts to show how reconstructed narratives of the self can be used in educational research. The stories told in this article speak about the impact of heteronormative practices in education and how a sense of self can become constituted through the authorising, performative utterances of wounding words.","creator":["Mark Vicars"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4edae418-2a83-3c5c-a3c1-86cf92179272"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Who Are You Calling Queer? Sticks and Stones Can Break My Bones but Names Will Always Hurt Me","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032673","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the American theater of the 1930s and 1940s, the designation \"queer star\" was an oxymoron \u2014 except when applied to Clifton Webb. The Indiana-born singer and dancer was (according to colleagues) homosexual and (according to critics and audiences) queer. He was also, after 1932, a star on Broadway and the road as well as a reliably queer presence in the gossip columns and arts pages of the daily paper. Unlike any other show business personality of his rank, he used his star text to raise the visibility of queerness in early twentieth-century entertainment culture.","creator":["LEONARD J. LEFF"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"656ee7de-5719-3dbb-9e40-31c1978d4d14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23016788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Representing Queerness: Clifton Webb on the American Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016788","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This research examines the gendered nature of cultural legitimacy and consecration in popular music. We explore two related questions. First, which factors affect the likelihood that female performers achieve consecrated status? Second, how are those decisions discursively legitimated? Using a mixed-methods research design, we find that in both direct and indirect ways, gender significantly shapes a performer's likelihood of consecration, leaving female artists at a disadvantage in this process. Moreover, the discursive strategies employed to justify artists' inclusion among the all-time greats are shaped by existing cultural frameworks about art and gender, limiting in more subtle and indirect ways the amount and type of legitimacy that female artists can accrue.","creator":["Vaughn Schmutz","Alison Faupel"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d59099c0-c130-352a-b399-340a6f88cfb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"685","pagination":"pp. 685-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender and Cultural Consecration in Popular Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984552","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":10089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Breines"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f89aa803-3c58-30ed-880d-0943e8f2776a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"541","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-541","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Comments on Smith and Wagner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657708","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The metaphor of inscription on the body and the constitution of the body through those inscriptions have been widely used in recent attempts to theorize the body. Michel Foucault calls the body the 'inscribed surface of events' (Foucault, 1984: 83) and Elizabeth Grosz argues that the 'female (or male) body can no longer be regarded as a fixed, concrete substance, a pre-cultural given. It has a determinate form only by being socially inscribed' (Grosz, 1987: 2). The body becomes plastic, inscribed with gender and cultural standards. While Foucault assumes the existence of a pre-inscriptive body, many theorists reject that idea and argue that 'there is no recourse to a body that has not always already been interpreted by cultural meanings' (Butler, 1990: 8). The constitution of the body rests in its inscription; the body becomes the text which is written upon it and from which it is indistinguishable. Starting from Catherine Belsey's suggestion that to 'give the metaphor literal significance... is to... isolate it for contemplation' (Belsey, 1988: 100), I discuss this metaphor of inscription, using cosmetic surgery as one literal example. While some theorists reject the pre-inscriptive body, the popular discourses advocating changing one's body assume unproblematically the existence of a body prior to these 'elective' procedures and reinforce the mind\/body dualism which recent theory has sought so insistently to reject. I examine how popular discourses of body modification enforce a disciplinary regime (in Foucault's sense) and impose degrees of both literal and figurative inscription. Juxtaposing these two perspectives, I explore how both discourses efface the materiality of the body and the social contexts within which bodies are experienced and constructed. While the rhetoric surrounding cosmetic surgery denies the physical process and the economic constraints, so theories of the body which stress the body's plasticity also deny the materiality of that process and the cultural and social contexts within which the body is always placed.","creator":["Pippa Brush"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5c3ed99-30d6-358c-92c6-f180083c97cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Metaphors of Inscription: Discipline, Plasticity and the Rhetoric of Choice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395678","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9913,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[78124,78219]],"Locations in B":[[14579,14674]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sander L. Gilman"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02761114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33893606"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6655"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1396725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernjudaism"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Judaism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"We're Not Jews\": Imagining Jewish History and Jewish Bodies in Contemporary Multicultural Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396725","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":14562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALEXANDER GARC\u00cdA D\u00dcTTMANN"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71abebf4-659d-3330-b358-25a406e1a425"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26303873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"What is called love in all the languages and silences of the world\": Nietzsche, Genealogy, Contingency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303873","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":18755,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74201,74274]],"Locations in B":[[84902,84975]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emma Wilson"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dff08f33-c9ee-35b9-a978-54a30922092d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40837306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab Duras mon amour \u00bb : identit\u00e9 et mensonge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837306","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":5117,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442609,442697]],"Locations in B":[[7879,7968]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher R. Lawton"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27740408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56199c7c-29c8-3dde-b201-36e3fcc19933"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27740408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virghistbiog"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Virginia Historical Society","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"The Pilgrim's Progress: Thomas J. Jackson's Journey toward Civility and Citizenship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27740408","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":15056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew van der Vlies"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40283202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36c4495d-d1bc-3788-b6fc-4780d00d8aae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40283202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"961","pageStart":"949","pagination":"pp. 949-961","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Ambiguities of Narrative and of History: Writing (About) the Past in Recent South African Literary Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40283202","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En este trabajo presentamos la explotaci\u00f3n did\u00e1ctica de dos pel\u00edculas del director de cine Pedro Almod\u00f3var para ser utilizadas con estudiantes de Espa\u00f1ol como Lengua Extranjera (E\/LE) de nivel avanzado. Con este corpus se pretende introducir y discutir la construcci\u00f3n cultural del g\u00e9nero en la d\u00e9cada de los 80 que este cineasta plasma en \u00bfQu\u00e9 he hecho yo para merecer esto!! y en La ley del deseo. Centramos nuestro trabajo en la importancia axiol\u00f3gica y ling\u00fc\u00edstica que tienen los discursos del g\u00e9nero para el aula de E\/LE, as\u00ed como en su potencial para el desarrollo de un conocimiento transcultural m\u00e1s profundo de la lengua estudiada.","creator":["Juan R. Guijarro-Ojeda","Ra\u00fal Ruiz-Cecilia"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23032081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9909c70-0136-335c-b437-cd99581560dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23032081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Los discursos del g\u00e9nero en espa\u00f1ol como lengua extranjera: A prop\u00f3sito de Pedro Almod\u00f3var","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23032081","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":7515,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147006,147232]],"Locations in B":[[36595,36805]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Abrams"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"243fc0c8-7dc0-3f56-aa8f-2873310f9fcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"304","pagination":"pp. 304-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex Wars Redux: Agency and Coercion in Feminist Legal Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123232","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":39562,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[139878,140105],[142612,142700]],"Locations in B":[[122093,122320],[122592,122679]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article takes a new direction in exploring HIV-related fatigue by adopting a qualitative interactionist approach. We analyse the social meanings attributed to fatigue among people living with HIV in France, the social gains and losses of its visibility and the social frames that condition its discursive and physical expression. The two-part methodology combines grounded theory analysis of 50 transcribed unstructured interviews conducted across France and participant observations within four HIV-related associations. Results reveal that the visibility of fatigue is in part dependent on the visibility of this stigmatized illness. The expression of fatigue is therefore closely linked with disclosure and concerns about HIV stigma. The degree to which HIV and HIV-related fatigue are rendered (in)visible also depends on structural factors including gender prescriptions, as well as context effects such as the type of social or \u2018care\u2019 relations involved in the social frame of interaction.","creator":["Laura Schuft","Estelle Duval","Julie Thomas","Sylvain Ferez"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26652433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41384844"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a357c906-9b2d-3feb-b452-f73f647645df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26652433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"To be or not to be sick and tired","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26652433","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Managing the visibility of HIV and HIV-related fatigue"} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article considers a number of Tchaikovsky's songs\u2014specifically those with texts by Apukhtin, Romanov, Heine, Goethe, and Tchaikovsky himself\u2014to explore how silence constitutes a powerful yet elusive form of expression. It argues that Tchaikovsky's songs, an underappreciated and underexplored aspect of his output (at least in the West), are characterized by a degree of literary and musical sophistication seldom attributed to the composer. Their self-consciousness is held to be the product of a combination of three main social and aesthetic forces characteristic of Russian culture in the second half of the nineteenth century. Drawing first on the work of Bakhtin, the article argues that the nature of Tchaikovsky's songs as lyric forms in an age dominated by the realist novel invests them with a creative tension between the need to conceal (an imperative inherited from the lyric poetry of the 1820s and 1830s) and the need to reveal (a feature of the novel's tendency to intimacy and confession). Then, turning to the work of Foucault, it traces how a coherent discourse of homosexual identity (as opposed to an otherwise unrelated series of individual homosexual acts) arose in the later nineteenth century, forcing queer artists to address (whether consciously or otherwise) the question of how best to relate this identity to their creativity. Finally, it looks at the evolving status of the artist in late Imperial Russia and suggests that an uneasy relationship between revealing and concealing was imposed upon personalities in the public eye by an audience that wished to feel close to the artist, yet also required discretion and the avoidance of scandal. At the heart of the article lies a study of silence as a particularly expressive form of apparent non-expression, dealing with frequent instances in Tchaikovsky's songs of silence as a poetic trope, as well as with equivocation on matters of gender and identity in lyric forms as indicative of a potentially queer sensibility. Also, the article refuses to reimpose a categorically and reductively homosexual reading, posited on some presumed opposed heterosexual norm. Rather, it argues that Tchaikovsky was able to discern the peculiar appeal of lyric forms as referentially incomplete yet aesthetically self-sufficient fragments, and that he approached such lyrics in a way that emphasized qualities of ambiguity, allusion, and the uncanny. Although drawing extensively on literary models, the article also considers how music is paradoxically well placed to enact poetic silence. The relationship between words and music, and between composition, performance, and reception, is a further instance of how song became an apt medium in which the thoughtful composer could explore issues of personal and creative identity in an age of profound artistic and social transformation.","creator":["Philip Ross Bullock"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.1.094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af08754f-c544-3fcf-bdda-b0858211199b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.1.094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ambiguous Speech and Eloquent Silence: The Queerness of Tchaikovsky's Songs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.1.094","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":21166,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434044,434127]],"Locations in B":[[82682,82765]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reviews the memoirs of Ph\u1ea1m Duy, a famous Vietnamese composer, who in the late 1930s and 1940s composed some of the first modern Vietnamese songs. His memoirs describe his time with the anti-French Resistance, his break with it in 1950, and his years in Saigon and the United States. My review focuses on curious aspects of these memoirs: Ph\u1ea1m Duy's careful listing of his many love affairs; his insistence that he needed lovers to compose songs; and his failure to acknowledge that he profited from a culture that glorifies the self-sacrifice of women. After considering whether Ph\u1ea1m Duy s behaviour as depicted in his memoirs conforms to cultural norms for Vietnamese male artists, I argue that it is best seen as, in Judith Butler's expression, a ' hyperbolic exhibition of the natural. I conclude by speculating about how Ph\u1ea1m Duy and his memoirs may be viewed in future years.","creator":["John C. Schafer"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bd65a6d-3de4-30a9-af5a-e1c1da857b92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41490297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The curious memoirs of the Vietnamese composer Ph\u1ea1m Duy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490297","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":20915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Death is a disturbing subject. While a strong tradition of aesthetically framing female corpses exists, thus rendering them safe for male consumption, a dead male body confronts artists and audiences with a much greater problem. How, then, can the death of John F. Kennedy be safely represented? This article presents three texts re-membering the president's assassination: Don DeLillo's bestseller Libra (1988), Oliver Stone's movie JFK (1991), and the CD-ROM The JFK Assassination: A Visual Investigation (1993). The discursive plotting of Kennedy's death by white, heterosexual males is considered intratextually as a means of stabilizing male identity in the sixties. Read intertextually, the book, the movie, and the CD-ROM also confront their recipients with their mode of controlling remembering through 'postmodern' notions of masculinity and its Others - femininity, homosexuality, and modernism. The past is read through the present, the present through its plottings of the past.","creator":["Randi Gunzenh\u00e4user"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edccc64a-3203-38e1-bb08-3ef5f41bf67b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"All plots lead toward death\": Memory, History, and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157352","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on popular-press assessments of New York City Ballet principal dancer Wendy Whelan as a way to consider, first, how gender norms affect dance criticism, specifically in ballet, and, second, what might constitute a feminist approach to ballet criticism. In the reviews selected for analysis, critics return to three themes, all of which circumscribe Whelan's artistic agency: her onstage relationship to male partners, her relationship to choreographers, and her relationship to the iconic figures of femininity in ballet. Drawing upon the specifics of how each theme limits the representation of Whelan's agency, at least in print, I conclude by offering practical guidelines for practicing feminist dance criticism in mainstream publications.","creator":["CLARE CROFT"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24252572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48483212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bf6eb2c-3f25-3439-a73b-b75cbd4e0560"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24252572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminist Dance Criticism and Ballet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24252572","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study aims to understand the process by which female-to-male transgender young people come to identify as transgender through in-depth interviews with 13 selfidentified female-to-male transgender youth. A grounded theory was created of the process that young people go through in coming to identify as transgender. We identified three stages: (1) a growing sense of gender: school, puberty, sexuality and exposure to diverse gender options impact upon each young person's sense of his own gender; (2) recognition of transgender identity: a young person experiences a growing sense of discomfort with his female birth gender and comes to recognise himself as transgender; and (3) social adjustment: after becoming aware of himself as transgender, a young person adapts to life as a male. Although individual experiences may vary, understanding the typical trajectory of the female-to-male transgender experience can help inform appropriate health care and support services. Cette \u00e9tude avait pour objectif d'approfondir la compr\u00e9hension du processus selon lequel les jeunes transgenres de type femmes vers hommes en arrivent \u00e0 s'identifier en tant que transgenres, \u00e0 travers des entretiens en profondeur avec treize personnes issues de cette population. L'approche d'une th\u00e9orie enracin\u00e9e a \u00e9t\u00e9 d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e relativement au processus par lequel les jeunes passent pour pouvoir s'identifier en tant que transgenres. Nous avons identifi\u00e9 trois \u00e9tapes: (1) une perception croissante du genre: l'\u00e9cole, la pubert\u00e9, la sexualit\u00e9 et l'exposition \u00e0 diff\u00e9rents choix de genres ont un impact sur la perception de son propre genre par une jeune personne; (2) la reconnaissance de l'identit\u00e9 transgenre: une jeune personne \u00e9prouve un sentiment grandissant de malaise d\u00fb au genre acquis \u00e0 sa naissance et finit par se reconna\u00eetre en tant que transgenre; et (3) l'ajustement social: apr\u00e8s avoir pris conscience de sa propre identit\u00e9 transgenre, une jeune personne s'adapte \u00e0 la vie en tant qu'\u00eatre de sexe masculin. Bien que les exp\u00e9riences individuelles puissent varier, la compr\u00e9hension de la trajectoire typique de la transsexualit\u00e9 de type femmes vers hommes peut contribuer \u00e0 informer des services de soins et de soutien appropri\u00e9s. A trav\u00e9s de entrevistas exhaustivas con trece j\u00f3venes autoidentificados como transexuales de mujer a hombre, el objetivo de este estudio es comprender el proceso en el que los j\u00f3venes transexuales de mujer a hombre se identifican como transexuales. Se cre\u00f3 una teor\u00eda fundamentada del proceso por el que pasan los j\u00f3venes para identificarse como transexuales. Identificamos tres etapas: (1) un creciente sentido de la identidad del g\u00e9nero: el colegio, la pubertad, la sexualidad y la exposici\u00f3n a las diferentes opciones sexuales tienen un efecto en el sentido de cada persona joven de su propio sexo; (2) reconocimiento de la identidad transexual: una persona joven experimenta una creciente sensaci\u00f3n de incomodidad con su identidad femenina de nacimiento y se acaba reconociendo como transexual; y (3) la adaptaci\u00f3n social: despu\u00e9s de darse cuenta que es transexual, una persona joven se adapta a la vida como hombre. Aunque las experiencias de cada persona pueden variar, entender la trayectoria t\u00edpica de los transexuales de mujer a hombre podr\u00eda servir de ayuda para desarrollar servicios apropiados del cuidado de la salud y de apoyo.","creator":["Lealah Pollock","Stephen L. Eyre"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41426457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"604edd6a-257c-3569-b498-c6a885b790c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41426457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Growth into manhood: identity development among female-to-male transgender youth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41426457","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the circuits of migration among American prostitutes in Mexican border towns between the years 1910 and 1930. After California\u2019s Progressive movement shut down the state\u2019s red light districts, American prostitutes found that the vice districts of Mexicali and Tijuana offered opportunities for economic and social advancement not available to them in the United States. As transnational subjects, these U.S. women exploited the ethno-cultural complexities of the border to claim \u201cwhiteness\u201d as \u201cAmericans\u201d and yet also relied on the Mexican state to guarantee their rights and liberties. Their story contributes to scholarly debates about prostitution and speaks to the absence of research on American women in the historiography of the twentieth-century U.S.-Mexican border.","creator":["Catherine Christensen"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2013.82.2.215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4d28cb4-c5b0-3ecf-9c05-ede182be3994"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/phr.2013.82.2.215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacihistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Mujeres P\u00fablicas<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2013.82.2.215","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":13323,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467295,467374]],"Locations in B":[[8161,8240]],"subTitle":"American Prostitutes in Baja California, 1910\u20131930"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SCOTT CUTLER SHERSHOW"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f017e7a-f3b0-3071-bf10-88ca1ee0fc7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Idols of the Marketplace: Rethinking the Economic Determination of Renaissance Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917316","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11230,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524260]],"Locations in B":[[66070,66157]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper addresses how the wombs of women and the absent skin on the circumcised penises of men become the predominant sites on which racialized and gendered discourses operating during the Bangladesh War are inscribed. This is explored by examining instances of sexual violence by Pakistani soldiers and their local Bengali collaborators. The prevalence of these discourses in colonial documents about the Bengali Muslims underscores the role of history, the politics of identity and in the process, establishes its link with the rapes of Bangladeshi women and men. Through this, the relationship between sexual violence and historical contexts is highlighted. I locate the accounts of male violations by the West Pakistani army within the historical and colonial discourses relating to the construction of the Bengali Muslim and its intertextual, contemporary citational references in photographs and interviews. I draw on Judith Butler's and Marilyn Strathern's work on gendering and performativity to address the citational role of various practices of discourses of gender and race within colonial documents and its application in a newer context of colonization and sexual violence of women and men during wars. The role of photographs and image-making is intrinsic to these practices. The open semiotic of the photographs allows an exploration of the territorial identities within these images and leads to traces of the silence relating to male violations. Through an examination of the silence surrounding male sexual violence vis-\u00e0-vis the emphasis on the rape of women in independent Bangladesh, it is argued that these racialized and gendered discourses are intricately associated to the link between sexuality and the state in relation to masculinity.","creator":["NAYANIKA MOOKHERJEE"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41683038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"927be895-22ba-3397-b20b-8a6301ea8c06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41683038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"1601","pageStart":"1572","pagination":"pp. 1572-1601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The absent piece of skin: Gendered, racialized and territorial inscriptions of sexual violence during the Bangladesh war","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41683038","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10852,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443416,443517]],"Locations in B":[[8561,8662]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper explores the ways in which spirits called masheitani or majinni (singl. sheitani or jinni) engage in people's daily lives in Zanzibar Town, Zanzibar. It is argued that the phenomenon of spirits and other forms of 'spectral' beings may offer clues to an improved understanding of society and a more precise perception of the various concerns and paradoxes people cope with in their everyday lives. Reflecting on matters of identity, the concept of the person, and the human condition, it is suggested that to most people the human world appears to be rather unpredictable and chaotic while the world of spirits, in contrast, is seen as stable and predictable. The spirits' involvement in people's everyday lives and, moreover, the extent to which peoples' relationships with different kinds of spirits affect negotiations of identity and social positioning are discussed with reference to the ethnographic material.","creator":["Kjersti Larsen"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43303296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac4472a6-40ce-3d77-a113-f6533e4fd911"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43303296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Bodily Selves: Identity and Shared Realities among Humans and Spirits in Zanzibar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43303296","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11211,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[55589,55670]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amaleena Daml\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c997f632-0ee2-3242-9fde-86e818668062"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23621667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Truismes\": The Simulation of a Pig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621667","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":7255,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[32952,33063]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martine Motard-Noar"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/397577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/397577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Manne ou Man: o\u00f9 en est l'\u00e9criture d'H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Cixous?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/397577","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":4079,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[91687,92010]],"Locations in B":[[19851,20174]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gerald Graff","Christopher Looby"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and the Politics of Conflict-Pedagogy: A Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489822","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lois W. Banner"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30223919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f04f3636-221e-3a48-aa51-bceba08f1153"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30223919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"586","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-586","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Biography as History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30223919","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":4143,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[5500,5564]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Togolese novelist Sami Tchak\u2019s Place des f\u00eates (2001) is a torrential narrative of sex, including rape, incest, homosexuality, and prostitution, delivered in a crude, humorous slang by its protagonist-narrator. Tchak intertwines sexual representations and a humorous narrative style in a purposeful manner. Using Judith Butler\u2019s concept of \u201cpractices of parody\u201d as tools against gender normativity, I argue that Tchak inscribes gendered hierarchies, normative thought, and conformist social constructions based in African migrant identity, community, and literature in his novel, and then proceeds to defile them with sexual parody, allowing its corrosive power to reveal the failure of these categories.","creator":["Devin Bryson"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"310a9d3a-a489-3cd2-8fb7-f7658ecdf294"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24550192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Play the Man: Parody, Sex, and Masculinity in Sami Tchak\u2019s \"Place des f\u00eates\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550192","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":5480,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460074,460244]],"Locations in B":[[9930,10100]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johanna Dehler"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43025522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Traces of Desire: Encodings and Recordings of Sexual Identity in H.D.'s \"Paint It Today\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025522","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6690,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[242009,242123]],"Locations in B":[[12207,12321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the possible intersections of recent technocultural and gender theory, focusing in particular on their respective theorizations of the body. It works from the premise that \"the body\" is to some extent the product of our understanding of it and concerns itself, therefore, with the relationship between the material and the discursive in the \"production\" of the body and with the reconceptualization and resignification of \"matter\" within technocultural and gender theory. Both of these theoretical discourses are moving towards an understanding of matter as constructed and non-natural; this emphasis on constructionism contrasts with earlier, more utopian views of the \"transcendence\" of the body in cyberspace and the radical gender possibilities of cyborgs. These ideas are then explored further via readings of Justina Robson's Natural History (2003) and Pat Cadigan's Tea from an Empty Cup (1998). These two sf novels reformulate the social and cultural meanings of the gendered body through their representations of sexually indeterminate, identity-shifting, hybrid, and radically other bodies. Science fiction, then, facilitates a dialogue between theories of technology and theories of gender, and tests the boundaries of the intelligible as far as our understanding of the gendered body is concerned.","creator":["Kaye Mitchell"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"917c57a8-3e27-36ee-a9f3-bc7eafdbb883"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Bodies That Matter: Science Fiction, Technoculture, and the Gendered Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241411","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10503,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439426,439625]],"Locations in B":[[21836,22035]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DANA SEITLER"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a2786ec-1e9d-3090-a787-b81a5fc573b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23127339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Physiognomies; Or, How Many Ways Can We Do the History of Sexuality?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127339","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article explores how masculinity as a colonial model is figured in nationalist discourse through a case study of Palestinian nationalism. It demonstrates how Palestinian nationalism conceives of nationalist agency in masculine terms. Its conclusion is that nationalist agency is constituted through performances that are said to be its results. Nationalist masculinity is shown to be a new type of masculinity, which is implicated in temporal, cultural, and class schemas that define its limitations and have little to do with \"tradition.\"","creator":["Joseph Massad"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4328835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6468d0e1-1851-35af-8757-2c09094750bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4328835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceiving the Masculine: Gender and Palestinian Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4328835","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeanne Halgren Kilde"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f47ebd69-e240-3b62-bc43-2c4d461ddefd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Predominance of the Feminine\" at Chautauqua: Rethinking the Gender-Space Relationship in Victorian America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175649","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":14973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I argue that Monique Wittig's view that lesbians are not women neglects the complexities involved in the composition of the category \"woman.\" I develop an articulation of the concept \"woman\" in the contemporary United States, with thirteen distinct defining characteristics, none of which are necessary nor sufficient. I argue that Wittig's emphasis on the material production of \"woman\" through the political regime of heterosexuality, however, is enormously fruitful for feminist and queer strategizing.","creator":["Jacob Hale"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acfa35d0-0e36-3ff4-a527-1ebc34689742"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Are Lesbians Women?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810266","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12270,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083],[486513,486653]],"Locations in B":[[73606,73691],[77362,77500]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the last 30 years, linguistic practices of young people in highly dense urban environments in Sweden (also called Rinkeby Swedish) have become something of a Foucauldian conundrum: a phenomenon to be investigated, a problem to be regulated. The present article will explore the dynamic interplay between the ideologies and practices with regard to Rinkeby Swedish. The article will focus on(1) a panel debate that took place in the context of the annual School Forum (Skolforum) in Stockholm in 2009, and (2) a few school interactions among those adolescents whose linguistic practices have generated so much public concern. The main argument of the article is that both the public debate and the school practices are examples of stylized performances in which the participants simultaneously reproduce and complexify or resist dominant language ideologies, together with the (local) cultural meanings and stereotypes associated with them.","creator":["Tommaso M. Milani","Rickard Jonsson"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f276ec-324f-3136-b986-9a9b8872a274"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Who's Afraid of Rinkeby Swedish? Stylization, Complicity, Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104293","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12543,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[70252,70321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy A. Naples"],"datePublished":"2019-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26825112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b76bcb1-53f5-3b23-ab6f-44346f304f85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26825112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26825112","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":1961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Yaeger"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4c75bb6-d9e1-3b8c-a0f6-2d37983b2061"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pre-Postmodernism: Academic Feminism and the Kitchen Sink","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315055","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[61108,61176]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Families are a challenge to the lesbian and gay movement in the United States, since homosexuality is largely construed as antithetical to \"the family\". By creating a wide variety of alternative families gays and lesbians however articulate an identity claim which may not be framed exclusively either in terms of assimilationism, or of differentialism. For this reason these alternative families present American society with a transformative potential which is in a position to exert its influence beyond the bounds of the gay and lesbian community. Far from being a hindrance in terms of efficiency, the very fact that these families constitute a private locus of gay and lesbian experience furthermore contributes to the lesbian and gay movement's expressive dimension, which is of crucial strategic importance in contemporary American society.","creator":["Guillaume Marche"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac47598b-bf43-302a-ab96-644a6b15f8ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","issueNumber":"97","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les familles homosexuelles aux \u00c9tats-Unis: dissolution d'un mouvement social ou red\u00e9finition de sa port\u00e9e politique?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874918","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489892,490008]],"Locations in B":[[47772,47885]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vicki Schultz"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d8b40c8-b129-3765-b243-c239396ae57a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":123,"pageEnd":"1805","pageStart":"1683","pagination":"pp. 1683-1805","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconceptualizing Sexual Harassment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797337","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":68651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses material from a large sample of 11-year-old children's essays about their imagined lives at age 25 to explore the ways in which these children constructed a gendered identity and gendered future. These essays were written in 1969 as part of the National Child Development Study. The article provides a preliminary quantitative analysis of the themes within the children's essays and how these were patterned by gender and social class. It then goes on to consider the ways in which the children used gender as a resource to establish and maintain their own narrated identities. This article, therefore, aims to go beyond a simple description of the differences in the style and content of essays written by boys and girls from different social class backgrounds to conduct analysis which adopts the spirit of recent work on the performance of gender and class.","creator":["Jane Elliott"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f944bb2-98d2-30b4-baf7-231ae8225f52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"1090","pageStart":"1073","pagination":"pp. 1073-1090","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Imagining a Gendered Future: Children's Essays from the National Child Development Study in 1969","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857492","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sex and race are strained, if not strange, bedfellows. Sexual depictions and denigrations of racial, ethnic, and national \"others\" and the regulation of in-group sexual behavior are important mechanisms by which ethnic boundaries are constructed, maintained, and defended. Race, ethnicity, and the nation are sexualized, and sexuality is racialized, ethnicized, and nationalized. The sexual systems that prop up ethnic boundaries and define ethnic identities and communities tend to be inherently conservative blueprints for ethnosexual living. These systems stress endogamy, heterosexuality, and reproduction under the rubric of traditional, often patriarchal family life for ethnic group members and tend to demonize and denigrate the sexuality of those outside ethnic boundaries or of those within ethnic communities who do not conform to heteronormative, heteroconventional models of sexuality. I present several examples of the intersections of race, ethnicity, nationalism, and sexuality\/ ies from U.S. and international settings, and I argue that the symbolic interaction between ethnicity and sexuality is central to their mutual constitution.","creator":["Joane Nagel"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2001.24.2.123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f7c6d56-289c-32ca-9d69-45f795ee7a4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2001.24.2.123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racial, Ethnic, and National Boundaries: Sexual Intersections and Symbolic Interactions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2001.24.2.123","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8542,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[53659,53711]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John McGowan"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23740706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TEACHING LITERATURE: WHERE, HOW, AND WHY?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740706","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JUDITH STILL"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Horror in Kristeva and Bataille: Sex and Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263665","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8794,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[422928,423041],[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[36388,36501],[38049,38100]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Earlier discussions of care have both insisted on its importance to political life and decried the unequal burden borne by women in care work. Yet they have failed to demonstrate why for reasons above and beyond the instrumental ends it serves. We ought to make the cultivation of an ongoing practice of caregiving a political priority. This article redefines and reframes care as a thoroughly critical and deeply embodied practice that is central to the flourishing of human beings. By way of Aristotle, I situate philia and embodied practices of care at the center of the shaping of the citizen and demonstrate a deeper significance of relations of care to our political life. When this is done alongside attention to habituation to right action and thinking, we can see more clearly how a particular kind of embodied politics can activate and sustain an ethic that cultivates citizens' capacities and desires to care.","creator":["Hollie Sue Mann"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41502602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"130ba07f-a199-3fbd-bcf6-6b16b34c6660"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41502602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ancient Virtues, Contemporary Practices: An Aristotelian Approach to Embodied Care","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41502602","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["I. A. Ruffell"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3184638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754358"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a567f87-5f47-3b82-8267-e648015f6b09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3184638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jromanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Roman Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond Satire: Horace, Popular Invective and the Segregation of Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3184638","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":22657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents a critique of the commonplace trope that holds genre to have declined in relevance under modernism. Contrary to the widespread notion that composers' repudiation of received tradition rendered the very idea of genre categories obsolete, this article argues that such categories have never ceased playing a decisive role in the production, circulation, and reception of post-1945 art music. In interrogating the assumptions that underpin the \"decline-of-genre\" thesis, this article underlines the utility that renewed attention to genre and its framing effects may have for the analysis of this repertoire. To this end, an alternative to standard theories of genre is advanced, one that draws on actor-network theory to destabilize categories too often conceived as fixed, solid, and binding. This revised theory of genre is applied to G\u00e9rard Grisey's six-part cycle, Les espaces acoustiques (1974-85). Habitually regarded as an exemplar of spectral music, Grisey's cycle may be understood as participating in a number of additional generic contexts at the same time. Taking such generic overdetermination into account not only sheds light on the range of conflicting interpretations that Les espaces acoustiques affords but also suggests how music analysis might better address the heterogeneous contexts and multiple listener competences that this and other musics engage.","creator":["Eric Drott"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"616e229d-70a7-356a-8d23-f8844a6b6f58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43305043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusictheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Music Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The End(s) of Genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305043","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":21870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the construction of hegemonic discourses and the resistance to those discourses depicted in Naomi Mitchison's Arthurian novel, To the Chapel Perilous.","creator":["MICHAEL D. AMEY"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e968d82-d494-3f32-be83-03134e3e459d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing a Perilous Chapel: Contesting Power Structures in Naomi Mitchison's \"To The Chapel Perilous\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870631","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents two parallel narratives of mid-nineteenth-century guano extraction in the Pacific Islands, one from the perspective of nesting seabirds and the other from the perspective of migrant Hawaiian guano workers. In utilizing a parallel narrative approach, this article contends that Pacific seabirds and Hawaiian laborers were both active participants in the making and remaking of guano island environments. Yet these processes occurred within radically different frameworks of space and time for each group. This article builds on historiography at the intersections of work, body, and environment to investigate ways in which seabirds and Hawaiian migrant laborers both interacted with and altered their surrounding environments through processes of work and through the medium of their bodies. By reading against the grain of Anglophone documentary sources that have too long silenced the voices of both native Hawaiian and nonhuman actors, as well as making use of neglected Hawaiian-language writings by the guano laborers themselves, this article resurrects an untold history of guano work from the mid-nineteenth century.","creator":["Gregory Rosenthal"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41721444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10845453"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b60ace7f-8569-3bf1-ace2-e78a14ae02e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41721444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihist"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"782","pageStart":"744","pagination":"pp. 744-782","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Forest History Society","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","History","History","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Life and Labor in a Seabird Colony: Hawaiian Guano Workers, 1857-70","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41721444","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":18602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although it has been widely interpreted and criticized as a lesbian novel, Radclyffe Hall's \"The Well of Loneliness\" is more accurately seen as the story of an alternatively gendered person. Just as two-spirit people in traditional Native American cultures have assumed alternative gender identities by undertaking the dress, work, and behavior patterns associated with the other gender, so Stephen Gordon attempts to assume a male gendered identity as defined by Edwardian English culture. Reading the novel from this perspective clarifies the distinction between gender and sexual orientation and recognizes the novel's own cultural context.","creator":["Tara Prince-Hughes"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6bcc766-52cf-302b-a403-44f77eeb34c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1348204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"A Curious Double Insight\": \"The Well of Loneliness\" and Native American Alternative Gender Traditions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348204","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":5917,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474804,474891]],"Locations in B":[[36400,36487]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Instructors frequently utilize breaching experiments in an attempt to \"bring sociology to life.\" However, an uncritical embrace of breaching experiments obscures the complexity of their possible effects on participants and subjects. These experiments have real potential to inflict deleterious consequences on individuals and groups. Additionally, the presence of videos of breaching experiments on the Internet raises questions about activities students are carrying out and publicly touting as sociological practice. By giving greater consideration to the embeddedness of the breaching experiment and its practitioners in the broader social world, students and instructors can create breaching experiments that are enlightening while still manifesting an appreciation of their effects on the experiments' \"subjects\" and perhaps even making a contribution to the amelioration or transformation of the structures within which they take place.","creator":["Matthew Braswell"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b741fa46-edd3-3a41-a855-47af386a868d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43187476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Once More unto the Breaching Experiment: Reconsidering a Popular Pedagogical Tool","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187476","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JANE NICHOLAS"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00445851"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607655017"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9b65ed3-ec6d-37ec-9771-9d43b5535d13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24877283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadiensis"}],"isPartOf":"Acadiensis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law and Order: Recent Works on Canadian Legal History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877283","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Galatians 3:28 has been influential over many years within the Christian church as a prominent, charter text, often understood to proclaim gender equity and hailed as a positive note in Paul's otherwise problematic position on gender matters. Building on earlier work on the intersections between postcolonial and queer theoretical positions and stances, and their value for biblical interpretation, Gal 3:28 is read in this contribution through a postcolonial, queer perspective. As theoretical positions for both of which the body is central, a postcolonial, queer reading of this text explores the ideological embeddedness of body, sex and gender in this biblical text, while a renewed focus on the body as expression of liminality foregrounds the interplay between body and power in Gal 3:28.","creator":["Jeremy Punt"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43048740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POWER AND LIMINALITY, SEX AND GENDER, AND GAL 3:28. A POSTCOLONIAL, QUEER READING OF AN INFLUENTIAL TEXT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048740","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13776,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440874,440992]],"Locations in B":[[70907,71025]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catrin Lundstr\u00f6m"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.89.2.0179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1375add-7a7d-3b2e-b40b-70b6923a0d10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/scanstud.89.2.0179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Embodying Exoticism: Gendered Nuances of Swedish Hyper-Whiteness in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.89.2.0179","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":8224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Elfriede Jelinek's \"Die Klavierspielerin\" has often been seen as a work that is strident in its closeness to unmediated pathological confession. This article seeks to suggest that the aesthetic configuration of the text is richer than has hitherto been allowed. The interplay of literal and metaphorical statement and the force of such key motif-clusters as animality, repetition, space, seeing, and temporality give the text a resonance well in excess of its foregrounded statement.","creator":["Erika Swales"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3736144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"437","pagination":"pp. 437-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pathography as Metaphor: Elfriede Jelinek's \"Die Klavierspielerin\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736144","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":7249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brett Lunceford"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42578870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0014164X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cb77213-e752-3d11-be33-a873d88234db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42578870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etcrevgensem"}],"isPartOf":"ETC: A Review of General Semantics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of General Semantics","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE WALK OF SHAME: A NORMATIVE DESCRIPTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42578870","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":4941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah E. S. Sinwell"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20799369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b791fe8-d074-37a4-9223-0defcaa66acf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20799369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sex, Bugs, and Isabella Rossellini: The Making and Marketing of \"Green Porno\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20799369","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Rothberg"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6ba3d49-be11-38f4-bb4b-a3c4fffdba7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Documenting Barbarism: Yourcenar's \"Male Fantasies\", Theweleit's \"Coup\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354422","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Homans"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11d123ba-666a-3092-a6a0-7d388ea4f660"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Women of Color\" Writers and Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469441","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10669,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[69612,70024],[484900,485020]],"Locations in B":[[22000,22412],[25141,25261]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper traces how the concern with political transformation is central both to arguments for and against essentialism. But while pro-essential argumentation is concerned with identity, as a condition of change, anti-essentialist reasoning sees change as dependent on the historical mutability of identity. Using Freud, this paper attempts to reconcile these positions through focusing first, on identification rather than identity; and second, on an unorthodox concept of essence, stressing its energetic commonality between beings.","creator":["TERESA BRENNAN"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ESSENCE AGAINST IDENTITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439166","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5556,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[34235,34286]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gay Scoutmasters contest what it means to be a \"Boy Scout.\" Female Pueblo Indians denounce tribal rules as sexist. Muslim women reinterpret the Koran and emphasize women's right to religion and equality. In the twenty-first century, exposure to modernity and globalization has created a society that now more than ever is characterized by cultural dissent: challenges by individuals within a culture to modernize, or broaden, the traditional terms of cultural membership. Cultural dissent symbolizes a movement away from imposed cultural identities to a new age of autonomy, choice and reason within culture. But current law, stuck in a nineteenth-century view of culture as imposed, distinct, and homogeneous, elides cultural dissent. Under current law, cultural dissenters have either a right to culture (with no right to contest cultural meaning) or a right to equality (with no right to cultural membership), but not to both. Through a close reading of Boy Scouts of America v. Dale, Professor Sunder illustrates how, in the name of preserving cultural distinctiveness, freedom of association law authorizes the exclusion of those whose speech challenges cultural norms., Law's conception of culture matters. As cultures become more internally diverse and members appeal to courts to determine a culture's meaning, increasingly, it will be law, not culture, that regulates cultural borders. Law's outmoded view of culture leads it to reestablish traditional cultural boundaries, in some cases making them stronger than ever. This need not be the case. Professor Sunder describes how a \"cultural dissent\" approach to cultural conflict-which recognizes dissent within culture-would prevent law from becoming complicit in the backlash project of suppressing internal cultural reform.","creator":["Madhavi Sunder"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d9f6b7e-bb86-3e9d-9683-4bf902717ec6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Dissent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229465","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":38302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on the work of Pierre Bourdieu and Judith Butler, we develop a detailed ethnography of a social space in a major law school and explore its socialization of the students there. \"Coffee House\" is a weekly social event sponsored by Canadian law firms and offering free drink and food to the students present. We argue that this event and the actors involved profoundly change student identities and alter educational aspirations. Although the students themselves insist that \"nothing is going on,\" our ethnography suggests that in \"Coffee House\" identity is developed through performances, and in the accumulation of symbolic capital, until ultimately students come to feel their future career path is not a matter of choice, but destiny. We explore the important work of Bourdieu through this setting, but ultimately we resist his determinism, and suggest instead that, following the work of Butler, identity is a more complicated and fluid dynamic between space, repetition, and performance. It appears that a personal unconscious transformation among law students attending Coffee House is underway; yet opportunities to change the meaning of this space and these performances remain.","creator":["Desmond Manderson","Sarah Turner"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4092721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4092721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Coffee House: Habitus and Performance among Law Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4092721","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11193,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699],[515047,515125]],"Locations in B":[[63781,63871],[63883,63961]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63fb4deb-c048-39c9-b5cf-0a4e854b2017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55,"pageEnd":"1233","pageStart":"1179","pagination":"pp. 1179-1233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977771","volumeNumber":"163","wordCount":25244,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514370,514474]],"Locations in B":[[54697,54803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie St-Laurent"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92db304f-2ed4-3ccf-9a7d-68820618b56b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26380214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Baudelaire apais\u00e9 ou la troisi\u00e8me voie dans \"Sphinx\" d'Anne Garr\u00e9ta","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380214","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":11094,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[314272,314347]],"Locations in B":[[51420,51495]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly Kono"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c70a73ce-8076-3ca3-94b1-2b816761e86e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30038889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Mediating Modern Love in Manchuria: Performing Ethnicity, Gender, and Romance in Yokota Fumiko's \"Love Letter\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038889","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14361,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478786,478845]],"Locations in B":[[83418,83478]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ricardo Castells"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df844ba7-0351-35df-980f-b50fd4430386"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"165","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ESSENTIAL DIFFERENCE: CONTRASTING MALE AND FEMALE THINKING IN CALDER\u00d3N'S \"A SECRETO AGRAVIO, SECRETA VENGANZA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808663","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6963,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476489,476555]],"Locations in B":[[38546,38612]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Baumgardner"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26501083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c1181ef-3dc3-386c-b771-0370ea444968"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26501083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1,"pageEnd":"3","pageStart":"3","pagination":"p. 3","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Dear Readers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26501083","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper focuses on the importance of transgender education in public affairs programs, particularly as its students prepare to enter an increasingly diverse workforce in the 21st century. The paper first connects transgender awareness and education to the social equity literature. To date, attention within the social equity literature has primarily focused on race\/ethnicity and, to a lesser extent, on women. However, issues of gender identity and sexual orientation have largely been missing from the social equity dialogue. This paper aims to fill the void. Next, the paper examines the transgender movement as a means to eliminate transgender oppression from the workplace. The paper also includes a survey conducted with 26 University of Vermont public affairs graduate students and 68 undergraduate students across disciplines also enrolled at the university. The surveys revealed attitudes about transgender citizens and their rights. The paper concludes with tangible strategies for working with transgender organizations and infusing transgender education into the public affairs curriculum.","creator":["Richard Greggory Johnson III"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15236803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22753cbf-3d57-3939-bb8b-723835612cdd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23036110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpubaffeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Public Affairs Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA)","sourceCategory":["Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Social Equity in the New 21st-Century America: A Case for Transgender Competence Within Public Affairs Graduate Programs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036110","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We employ Raymond Williams's concept of \"emergence\" to capture new forms of embodied masculinities in the Middle East and Mexico, two sites marked by powerful local stereotypes of manliness. Men there are enacting \"emergent masculinities\"\u2014 living out new ways of being men in attempts to counter forms of manhood that they see as harmfully hegemonic. They do this partly through engagements with emergent health technologies, including assisted reproductive technologies for male infertility and pharmaceutical technologies for erectile dysfunction that today are reshaping sociopolitical and intimate realities. We argue that masculinities research within anthropology must account for these ongoing, embodied changes in men's enactments of masculinities over time on both individual and societal levels. Furthermore, we heed R. W. Connell's advice that reformulations of hegemonic masculinity theory must consider new comparative geographies, forms of masculine embodiment, and social dynamics of masculinity around the globe.","creator":["MARCIA C. INHORN","EMILY A. WENTZELL"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37efc024-2443-34ea-ad24-623ec98d2fbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"815","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-815","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Embodying emergent masculinities: Men engaging with reproductive and sexual health technologies in the Middle East and Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410434","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12938,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474931,474998]],"Locations in B":[[77440,77511]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NICHOLAS F. RADEL"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"095f517d-a09d-31fd-9080-d7fbc709d608"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fletcherian Tragicomedy, Cross-dressing, and the Constriction of Homoerotic Desire in Early Modern England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917318","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12632,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[267258,267635]],"Locations in B":[[70729,71106]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marta Boris Tarr\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b7db49b-ef07-3dfb-9056-c09372c7797b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hacia una construcci\u00f3n psicol\u00f3gico-cultural de g\u00e9nero en la mujer traficada en \"La mosca en la ceniza\" (2009) de Gabriela David","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490108","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay deciphers the complexities of early twentieth century American male sports spectator behavior by examining how baseball fans responded to one of the most controversial athletes of the early 20th century\u2014Ty Cobb. By exploring the ways in which fans interpreted Cobb's fierce style of play, this essay argues baseball fans were active agents in the early stages of the emerging mass culture. Though they went to the ballpark for escape and release, fans responded to events on the field in ways that gave these events personal meaning. By cheering and booing, that is to say endorsing some behaviors and censuring others, early 20th century baseball fans projected their collective concerns about changing conceptions of masculinity onto the ball field. Specifically, they looked to stars like Cobb for evidence of ideal manhood. By their active participation in the game, fans tested Cobb, challenging him to display those attributes of manhood that they valued the most\u2014especially that quality of manhood that they called nerve. More times than not, Cobb succeeded and thus became their hero\u2014the personification of their hopes and dreams amidst the changing conceptions of manhood in the early 20th century.","creator":["Steve Tripp"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf6b5cb1-923b-3b27-80b2-591c62ae435c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE MOST POPULAR UNPOPULAR MAN IN BASEBALL\": BASEBALL FANS AND TY COBB IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685348","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bridge Markland (b. 1961) is a German performance artist who is best known for her virtuosity in gender role-play. She has been performing in various venues, including drag shows, since the early 1990s. Currently, she focuses on her \u201cclassic in the box\u201d series, which comprises performance pieces based on well-known classical plays. In her one-woman shows, she combines text and music in innovative ways to challenge prevalent societal gender constructions. The interview took place via Skype on 12 August 2013.","creator":["Britta Kallin"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"619d2254-5c44-37b6-884e-4ad5d01966f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"In and Out of the Box: An Interview with Performance Artist Bridge Markland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0074","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[36557,36663]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study assesses how variations in heteronormative culture in high schools affect the well-being of same-sex-attracted youth. The authors focus on the stigmatization of same-sex attraction (rather than identity or behavior) to better understand how heteronormativity may marginalize a wide range of youth. Specifically, the authors use data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to examine how variation across schools in football participation, religious attendance, and urban locale affects same-sex-attracted adolescents' depressive symptoms, self-esteem, fighting, and academic failure. The results suggest that though same-sex-attracted youth are at greater risk for decreased well-being, these youth are at higher risk in nonurban schools and in schools where football and religion have a larger presence. Results vary for boys and girls: The urban locale of a school has a larger impact for boys, while school religiosity has a greater impact for girls.","creator":["LINDSEY WILKINSON","JENNIFER PEARSON"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c2ea3c6-587f-3ca4-bb5b-bd8d24800f4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"542","pagination":"pp. 542-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"SCHOOL CULTURE AND THE WELL-BEING OF SAME-SEX-ATTRACTED YOUTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676802","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the American Girl Just Like You doll through a variety of feminist lenses. It was inspired by my experiences chaperoning my friend Grace (aged eleven) to the American Girl Store in New York City, and returning to the store to shop for my own doll. I returned to the store because I was not sure why I was so extremely disturbed by this doll. The doll is not emaciated, not overtly sexy, and marketed along with outfits that supposedly send girls the message that they can achieve their goals. She comes in a variety of skin, eye, and hair colors, and the line is therefore marketed as racially and ethnically sensitive. I argue that although the Just Like You line appears to be empowering and racially sensitive on a superficial level, an in-depth feminist analysis indicates that it is not. In fact, the Just Like You line is highly problematic from a feminist perspective.","creator":["VICTORIA DAVION"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26602383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49883085"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238567"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96a80efd-68f6-3544-9651-03d2c8ec8196"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26602383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"THE AMERICAN GIRL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26602383","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"PLAYING WITH THE WRONG DOLLIE?"} +{"abstract":"In this essay, the author describes theory-informed methods for training Secondary teachers and administrators to support students who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and otherwise outside of heterosexual and cisgender identities (LGBTQ+). Rather than focus on anti-bullying initiatives, the ideas presented here are intended to educate participants on recognizing systemic oppressions of heteronormativity and sexism and view LGBTQ+ people from a positive perspective. Three activities are described so that readers can conduct their own trainings: a heteronormativity scavenger hunt, a gender spectrum activity, and viewing LGBTQ+ people using a queer cultural capital lens. This essay combines ideas from social theories, education research, and the author\u2019s own experiences training pre- and in-service educators on queer issues.","creator":["Summer Melody Pennell"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90024226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46322850"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001227186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47888bd0-5a23-3d74-9dd2-952befb48421"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90024226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highschooljour"}],"isPartOf":"The High School Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Training Secondary Teachers to Support LGBTQ+ Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90024226","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":6076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Practical Applications from Theory and Research"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARINA LESLIE"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20719470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9885c3ac-4d0d-3247-967c-66feb3f5d9b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20719470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, Genre and the Utopian Body in Margaret Cavendish's Blazing World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20719470","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9627,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[152117,152195],[152991,153728]],"Locations in B":[[40168,40240],[48331,49070]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Burns Neveldine"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Wordsworth's \"Nutting\" and the Violent End of Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030119","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":10767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea von Kameke"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26422476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233857144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"177a33e1-29a1-39b7-9905-b5016e7cd315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26422476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Filmische K\u00f6rper, mediales Geschlecht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26422476","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":2024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I analyze a sequence of dirty jokes embedded in a monologue performed on the south Indian Tamil popular stage. In this performance I do not find vulgarity but rather a reflection of its practiced, anxious use-in-avoidance. I analyze the two separate linguistic footings the performer uses for making moral and immoral comments and the social values that are affirmed by this split. I highlight the narrative connections established in this context between fear of the foreign and fear of the female, consider what such connections index about the remnants of Victorian sexuality in postcolonial Tamilnadu, and discuss the locally reinscriptive effects of such a gendered performance. [gender, humor, verbal performance, south India, theater, postcolonialism, vulgarity]","creator":["Susan Seizer"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69fd3259-1c80-3ee5-961a-d78961d0a23a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Jokes, Gender, and Discursive Distance on the Tamil Popular Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646566","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":18578,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438602,438684]],"Locations in B":[[6592,6677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we explore the ways in which a divided and segmented migrant labor force is assembled to serve guests in a London hotel. We draw on previous studies of hotel work, as well as on cultural analyses of the ways in which employers and managers use stereotypical assumptions about the embodied attributes of workers to name workers as suitable for particular types of labor. We argue that a dual process of interpellation operates within service-sector workplaces that is reinforced and resisted in daily social practices and relationships between managers, workers, and guests in a hotel. The article, which draws on a case study of employment practices in a large London hotel, looks in detail at the micropolitics of everyday working lives, the representation of workers of different nationalities, and the performance of service work.","creator":["Linda McDowell","Adina Batnitzky","Sarah Dyer"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30033097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b7f652e-b731-339b-a2b8-f0ee73df2d4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30033097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Division, Segmentation, and Interpellation: The Embodied Labors of Migrant Workers in a Greater London Hotel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30033097","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":16380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nathen Clerici"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24dbb6d8-7709-3046-819d-1bdfa5402dd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44508417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performance and Nonsense: Osaki Midori's \"Strange Love\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508417","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":13145,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[199893,200133],[435653,435893],[436701,437148],[436701,437148],[438512,438587]],"Locations in B":[[49359,49599],[54701,54941],[55039,55486],[55039,55486],[55711,55786]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper interrogates the history of same-sex dancing among women in Buenos Aires\u2019 tango scene, focusing on its increasing visibility since 2005. Two overlapping communities of women are invoked. Queer tangueras are queer-identified female tango dancers and their allies who dance tango in a way that attempts to de-link tango\u2019s two roles from gender. Rebellious wallflowers are women who practice, teach, perform, and dance with other women in predominantly straight environments. It is argued that the growing acceptance of same-sex dancing in Argentina is due to the confluence of four developments: 1) the rise of tango commerce, 2) innovations of tango nuevo, 3) changing laws and social norms around lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights, and 4) synergy between queer tango dancers and heterosexual women who are frustrated by the limits of tango\u2019s gender matrix. The author advocates for increased alliances between rebellious wallflowers and queer tangueras, who are often segregated from each other in Buenos Aires\u2019 commercial tango industry.","creator":["JULIET MCMAINS"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90025984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"462d5bdd-e59c-3348-990a-b697bfbebb78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90025984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rebellious Wallflowers and Queer Tangueras<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90025984","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12429,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124649,124745]],"Locations in B":[[33708,33804]],"subTitle":"The Rise of Female Leaders in Buenos Aires\u2019 Tango Scene"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eduardo Barros Grela"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41756603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f7b7fab-f745-3570-8910-ee0026eaa739"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41756603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","issueNumber":"81","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Universidad de Chile","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"PERFORMATIVIDAD L\u00daDICA Y ESPACIOS DE G\u00c9NERO EN RAYUELA Y EL T\u00daNEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41756603","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Attention to bodies has transformed the study of religion in the past thirty years, aiding the effort to overcome the discipline's Protestant biases by shifting interest from beliefs to practices. And yet much of this work has unwittingly perpetuated an individualist notion of the religious subject. Although religionists are now well aware that bodies cannot be studied apart from the social forces that shape them, all too often the religious subject stands alone in a crowd, participating in communal rituals, subject to religious authorities and disciplinary practices, but oddly detached from intimate relationships. In this article, I first argue that the turn to the body was motivated by what it appeared to reject: theoretical questions about subjectivity. I then seek to challenge prevailing trends by arguing that these same theoretical insights should now prod us to attend to the import of intimacy and personal relationships.","creator":["Constance M. Furey"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41348768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d510b5a-20c4-3b12-8a53-4935fb2dd744"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41348768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Body, Society, and Subjectivity in Religious Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41348768","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9985,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496563]],"Locations in B":[[55566,55649]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Darcy C. Plymire"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a08a02f-f9ab-32b5-8919-33c1165f8adb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Teaching Gender in Lesbian and Gay Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316716","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Earle"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Two Pairs of Pink Satin Shoes!!' Race, Clothing and Identity in the Americas (17th-19th Centuries)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289752","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much can be learned about (old) age-identity and age-related oppression by noting their similarities to, respectively, impairment and ableism. Drawing upon the work of Shelley Tremain, I show that old age, like impairment, is not a biological given but is socially constructed, both conceptually and materially. I also describe the striking similarities and connections between ableism and ageism as systems of oppression. That disability and aging both rest upon a biological given is a fiction that functions to excuse and perpetuate the very social mechanisms that perpetuate ableist and ageist oppression.","creator":["Christine Overall"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f446180a-0a92-3c2d-9ec5-4cb959bdeafb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4317189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Old Age and Ageism, Impairment and Ableism: Exploring the Conceptual and Material Connections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317189","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5225,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,74701]],"Locations in B":[[27841,28106]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PATRICIA DUNCKER"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f4aa35b-e8f1-363c-83e2-58192903a913"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41555969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queer Gothic: Angela Carter and the lost narratives of sexual subversion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555969","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6418,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499422,499518]],"Locations in B":[[38286,38384]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Man up and take the punch for what is right! Such phrases illustrate the fundamental impact that the construction of Christ, as the central figure of the Christian religion, has had in the >violent history of humanity. The manly Christ has been depicted as the ultimate model for every human being, and even more specifically, every man. The image of Christ is often seen as the so-called model of an ideal masculine image. Such essentialist and normative interpretations of Christ\u2019s image have had severe consequences for the lived realities of men. Although the emphasis is shifting from having the ultimate answer to posing frequent questions about Christ the Man, Christ is still used as a life-threatening weapon on grass-roots level in the context of gender-based violence in South Africa. This contribution acknowledges that the gendered construction of Christ matters in a violent South African society. Investigating the Christ-image as it is presented in 1 Peter 2:19\u201325 might shed some light on the problematic notion of men following the example of the noble, suffering Christ (2:19, 21, 23), the Shepherd and Guardian (2:25), while they are being beaten for it (2:20), especially amidst the very real actuality of gender-based violence in South Africa today.","creator":["Jacobie M. Helena Visser"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d24fe08-f912-3efe-8276-da2bee4da6c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Following the Man on the Slippery Slide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417502","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8742,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[24104,24728]],"subTitle":"Christ in 1 Peter"} +{"abstract":"Organisations of Xhosa-speaking youth - predominantly boys and young men - in the 1950s and 1960s were critical spaces for the construction of masculine identities in rural Ciskei and Transkei. In the context of post-Second World War industrialisation, collapsing reserve agriculture and apartheid rule, these organisations were critical sites for filtering influences and fashioning values and lifestyles. While boys and young men constantly reconstructed a distinction between boyhood and manhood around the axis of circumcision, they reinvented notions of masculinity in the shadow of decreasing prospects of establishing themselves as men with rural homesteads and herds of cattle. Moreover, in the absence of migrant fathers, youth organisations operated with considerable autonomy in rural localities. Concomitantly, the terrain on which boys and young men constructed their identities was shaped more by inter-group rivalry, aggressive behaviour and control over girls than by generational conflict.","creator":["Anne Mager"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0717c705-3588-3009-9e89-5e9fd35c2039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"667","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-667","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Youth Organisations and the Construction of Masculine Identities in the Ciskei and Transkei, 1945-1960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637468","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mitzi Lewison","Lee Heffernan"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78950310-79a8-35d1-b630-4093e9f6baf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rewriting Writers Workshop: Creating Safe Spaces for Disruptive Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171811","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14241,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper provides a review of fertility research in advanced societies, societies in which birth control is the default option. The central aim is to provide a comprehensive review that summarizes how contemporary research has explained ongoing and expected fertility changes across time and space (i.e., cross-and within-country heterogeneity). A secondary aim is to provide an analytical synthesis of the core determinants of fertility, grouping them within the analytical level in which they operate. Determinants are positioned at the individual and\/or couple level (micro-level), social relationships and social networks (meso-level); and, by cultural and institutional settings (macro-level). The focus is both on the quantum and on the tempo of fertility, with a particular focus on the postponement of childbearing. The review incorporates both theoretical and empirical contributions, with attention placed on empirically tested research and whether results support or falsify existing theoretical expectations. Attention is also devoted to causality and endogeneity issues. The paper concludes with an outline of the current challenges and opportunities for future research. Cet article pr\u00e9sente un aper\u00e7u des recherches dans le domaine de la f\u00e9condit\u00e9 r\u00e9alis\u00e9es dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s dites avanc\u00e9es, c'est-\u00e0-dire les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s dans lesquelles le contr\u00f4le des naissances est l'option par d\u00e9faut. L'objectif principal est de fournir une vue d'ensemble compl\u00e8te r\u00e9sumant comment la recherche contemporaine explique les changements de f\u00e9condit\u00e9 actuelle et pr\u00e9vue dans le temps et dans l'espace (c'est-\u00e0-dire l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rog\u00e9n\u00e9it\u00e9 \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur d'un pays ou entre pays). Un second objectif vise \u00e0 fournir une synth\u00e8se des principaux d\u00e9terminants de la f\u00e9condit\u00e9 en les regroupant par niveau d'analyse dans lequel ils se situent. Les d\u00e9terminants sont ainsi situ\u00e9s au niveau individuel ou au niveau du couple (niveau micro), au niveau des relations sociales et des r\u00e9seaux sociaux (niveaux m\u00e9so) et au niveau des cadres institutionnels et culturels (niveau macro). L'accent est mis tant sur l'intensit\u00e9 que le calendrier de la f\u00e9condit\u00e9 avec un int\u00e9r\u00eat particulier sur le report de la procr\u00e9ation. Cette synth\u00e8se de la litt\u00e9rature concerne les recherches tant th\u00e9oriques qu'empiriques, une attention particuli\u00e8re \u00e9tant port\u00e9e \u00e0 celles qui sont test\u00e9es empiriquement et dont les r\u00e9sultats confirment ou infirment les th\u00e9ories explicatives existantes. De m\u00eame nous nous sommes particuli\u00e8rement int\u00e9ress\u00e9s aux probl\u00e8mes de causalit\u00e9 et d'endog\u00e9n\u00e9it\u00e9. En conclusion, un tableau des d\u00e9fis actuels et des perspectives futures en mati\u00e8re de recherche est esquiss\u00e9.","creator":["Nicoletta Balbo","Francesco C. Billari","Melinda Mills"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42636100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01686577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e74d508-ab7a-3072-a028-134a7f5e885c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42636100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojpopu"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Population \/ Revue Europ\u00e9enne de D\u00e9mographie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Fertility in Advanced Societies: A Review of Research \/ La f\u00e9condit\u00e9 dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s avanc\u00e9es: un examen des recherches","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42636100","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":20547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although typically marginal to conceptions of citizenship, children also negotiate their belonging to the nation. This article explores the ways adolescent girls in a rural region of Bolivia use clothing to identify themselves with various collectivities: nation, region, and family. Their consumption and displays of fashion are shaped by national and local discourses of gender, race, and the civilized. Navigating multiple identifications simultaneously, their everyday and ritual practices disrupt assumed oppositions between \"Indian\" and \"Bolivian.\"","creator":["Krista E. Van Vleet"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3773834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141828"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab856b70-c95a-3747-8156-18369c382399"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3773834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh- Of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Adolescent Ambiguities and the Negotiation of Belonging in the Andes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3773834","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joni Adamson Clarke"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20736582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a251ce8-bb33-3477-a325-64c4b4d4afc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20736582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WHY BEARS ARE GOOD TO THINK AND THEORY DOESN'T HAVE TO BE MURDER: TRANSFORMATION AND ORAL TRADITION IN LOUISE ERDRICH'S TRACKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20736582","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8701,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436706,436834]],"Locations in B":[[16916,17044]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The role of language in relation to identity formation has received relatively little attention from geographers. Here, drawing on empirical research with Somali young people (aged 11-18) now living in the UK, we explore the role that choice and use of language play in how young people make sense of their identities and affiliations within the specific situated context of everyday encounters at home, and school. In doing so, we explore the role of language as a situated practice in (re)making identities in local contexts, and the possibility that language can change the way that spaces are ordered.","creator":["Gill Valentine","Deborah Sporton","Katrine Bang Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"376","pagination":"pp. 376-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Language Use on the Move: Sites of Encounter, Identities and Belonging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131224","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay uses the controversies surrounding the enigmatic Ismet Ali, a yogi working in Chicago and New York in the 1920s, to illuminate the complexities of how the performativity of religion and race are interrelated. I examine several moments in which Ali's \"authenticity\" as Indian is brought into doubt to open up larger questions regarding the global flows of colonial knowledge, racial tropes, and groups of people between India, the United States, and the Caribbean. I explore the ways in which, in the early twentieth-century United States, East Indian \"authenticity\" only became legible via identificatory practices that engaged with and adapted orientalized stereotypes. The practices of the yogi persona and its sartorial stylings meant to signify \"East Indianness\" in the United States, particularly the donning of a turban and beard, were one mode through which both South Asian and African Americans repurposed \"Hindoo\" stereotypes as models for self-formation. By taking on \"Hindoo\" identities, peoples of color could circumvent the U.S. black\/white racial binary and the violence of Jim Crow. This act of racial passing was also an act of religious passing. However, the ways in which identities had to and could be performed changed with context as individuals moved across national and colonial boundaries.","creator":["ALEXANDER ROCKLIN"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca156f1b-8016-3bea-9f60-d3bf36e8244c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Hindu is white although he is black\": Hindu Alterity and the Performativity of Religion and Race between the United States and the Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908387","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":14373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Molly Anne Rothenberg","Joseph Valente"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94937528-b573-3f89-8bab-a1eb987b0e0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performative Chic: The Fantasy of a Performative Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099643","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4575,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[435522,435587],[435684,435967],[459061,459199]],"Locations in B":[[10393,10458],[10557,10840],[11325,11457]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2516ba6-7ff2-381f-8be9-ad440004d6b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870421","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":3614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Until 1999, major works in disability studies tended to ignore the influential body theories of Judith Butler, or to argue that her theories relied upon the disabled body as a constitutive Other. Between 1999 and 2001, however, a number of works have appeared which apply Butler's theories to disability. I consider both the original disregard for Butler and her recent adoption in disability studies to shed light upon possibilities for developing integrated feminist disability theory and praxis in the future. I suggest that applying Butler's theories to disability should take place in a contextualized and critical mode, and that substituting disability for Butler's own terms of sex or gender without fully considering the implications of such a substitution may obscure important differences between identity-categories. Finally, I challenge feminist and gender theorists such as Butler to include and account for the disabled body in their future work.","creator":["Ellen Samuels"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"500e9acf-01e1-3707-bcd6-18ee4f3e0d67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Divides: Judith Butler's Body Theory and the Question of Disability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316924","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8223,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[48903,48972]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Vetter","Joy Myers","Jeanie Reynolds","Adrienne Stumb","Coley Barrier"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26630709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9a90a36-afdb-3a09-becc-763d82e79a1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26630709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Daybook Defense: How Reflection Fosters the Identity Work of Readers and Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26630709","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A long-standing contention in the public and private management literatures is that women use rule abidance as a way to compensate for their relative lack of organizational power. Many of the studies making this assertion rely on anecdotal evidence rather than theory-guided empirical studies. In this paper, the authors use survey data collected from four cities in a midwestern state to empirically test gender dimensions of rule abidance. The findings support long-asserted gender differences in rule abidance. Contrary to recent scholarship, however, the findings suggest that rule abidance among women is inversely related to organizational status, with higher-level women abiding by rules more so than women lower in the hierarchy.","creator":["Shannon Portillo","Leisha DeHart-Davis"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27697868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00333352"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46614557"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3299c68-2eaa-3d9d-962f-5f56c3204784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27697868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publadmirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Public Administration Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Society for Public Administration","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender and Organizational Rule Abidance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27697868","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":6249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review essay illustrates how changes in the conception of gender define the historical production of feminist ethnography in four distinct periods. In the first period (1880-1920), biological sex was seen to determine social roles, and gender was not seen as separable from sex, though it was beginning to emerge as an analytical category. The second period (1920-1960) marks the separation of sex from gender as sex was increasingly seen as indeterminative of gender roles. In the third period (1960-1980), the distinction between sex and gender was elaborated into the notion of a sex\/gender system--the idea that different societies organized brute biological facts into particular gender regimes. By the contemporary period (1980-1996), critiques of \"gender essentialism\" (the reification of \"woman\" as a biological or universal category) suggest that the analytical separation between sex and gender is miscast because \"sex\" is itself a social category.","creator":["Kamala Visweswaran"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b432cbba-dc93-366d-83d6-1a3839ea71f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2952536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"591","pagination":"pp. 591-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Histories of Feminist Ethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952536","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":14992,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[74483,74782],[75071,75322],[500702,500774],[510986,511095]],"Locations in B":[[61499,61794],[62089,62340],[84802,84880],[91498,91613]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris Richards"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ac11956-e1b5-3bbc-b6db-7b55605af32e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Live Through This: Music, Adolescence, and Autobiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975840","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":13987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie Buscatto","Anne Monjaret"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462616"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567909409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235718"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f8a315e-725a-3e67-87e0-27851e618390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnfran"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnologie fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introduction: Jouer et d\u00e9jouer le genre en arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967486","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":4373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reports on an ethnographic study of male homosexuality in contemporary Chinese society. The study focused on how men negotiated with the mainstream Chinese heterosexual society and in so doing constructed their sexual identities. The factors found to inform sexual identity were: the cultural imperative of heterosexual marriage, normative family obligations, desired gender roles, emotional experiences and a need for social belonging. The four types of sexual identities constructed included: establishing a deliberate non-homosexual identity, accumulating an individual homosexual identity, forming a collective homosexual identity and adopting a flexible sexual identity. For the men interviewed, sexual identity was both fluid and fragmented, derived from highly personalised negotiations between individualised needs and social and cultural constructs. The analysis is set against the background of China's rapid and recent economic development, shifting national and international social environments and improved access to the Internet. Cet article rend compte d'une \u00e9tude ethnographique sur l'homosexualit\u00e9 dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 chinoise contemporaine. L'\u00e9tude s'est concentr\u00e9e sur la mani\u00e8re avec laquelle certains hommes homosexuels n\u00e9gocient avec la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelle dominante, construisant par-l\u00e0 m\u00eame leurs identit\u00e9s sexuelles. Elle r\u00e9v\u00e8le que les facteurs influen\u00e7ant l'identit\u00e9 sexuelle sont: l'obligation culturelle de se marier, les obligations familiales normatives, les r\u00f4les de genre d\u00e9sir\u00e9s, les exp\u00e9riences \u00e9motionnelles et un besion d'appartenance sociale. Les quatre types d'identit\u00e9s sexuelles construites incluent: l'\u00e9tablissement d'une identit\u00e9 d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment non homosexuelle; l'accumulation d'une identit\u00e9 homosexuelle individuelle; la formation d'une identit\u00e9 homosexuelle collective et l'adoption d'une identit\u00e9 sexuelle flexible. Pour les hommes qui ont \u00e9t\u00e9 interrog\u00e9s, l'identit\u00e9 sexuelle \u00e9tait \u00e0 la fois fluide et fragment\u00e9e, suite aux n\u00e9gociations fortement personnalis\u00e9es entre les besoins individualis\u00e9s et les constructions sociales et culturelles. L'analyse a \u00e9t\u00e9 effectu\u00e9e avec pour arri\u00e8re plan le d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique rapide et r\u00e9cent de la Chine, les changements des environnements sociaux nationaux et internationaux, et les progr\u00e8s dans l'acc\u00e8s \u00e0 Internet. En este art\u00edculo mostramos un estudio etnogr\u00e1fico sobre la homosexualidad en la sociedad china contempor\u00e1nea. En el estudio prestamos atenci\u00f3n en c\u00f3mo los hombres negociaban con la sociedad heterosexual china en general constru\u00edan sus identidades sexuales. Los factores que, seg\u00fan nuestras observaciones, informan la identidad sexual fueron: el imperativo cultural del matrimonio heterosexual, las obligaciones normativas de la familia, los roles deseados de los diferentes sexos, las experiencias emocionales y la necesidad de una pertenencia social. Los cuatro tipos de identidades sexuales construidas inclu\u00edan: establecer una identidad no homosexual deliberada, acumular una identidad homosexual individual, formar una identidad homosexual colectiva y adoptar una identidad sexual flexible. Para los hombres entrevistados, la identidad sexual fue fluida y fragmentada, definida a partir de negociaciones altamente personalizadas entre las necesidades individualizadas y las construcciones sociales y culturales. El an\u00e1lisis se ha elaborado en el contexto del r\u00e1pido desarrollo econ\u00f3mico reciente de China, el cambio de entornos sociales nacionales e internacionales y la mejora del acceso a Internet.","creator":["Haochu (Howard) Li","Eleanor Holroyd","Joseph T.F. Lau"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27806659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1126539a-6d14-3fc1-bdaf-c8dfca00536a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27806659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Negotiating homosexual identities: the experiences of men who have sex with men in Guangzhou","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27806659","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diane Davis"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fc8ec60-6ccb-38d2-901c-61891a78c352"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Breaking up\" [At] Phallocracy: Postfeminism's Chortling Hammer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465665","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8054,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[432048,432254],[432777,433041],[465389,465505],[477848,477925]],"Locations in B":[[18065,18275],[18321,18585],[26249,26364],[47317,47394]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Allen"],"datePublished":"1991-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a02b10ce-bda5-3a72-a411-666948092d6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/438075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438075","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":3133,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[11352,11403]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anthropologists study human diversity but are sharply divided over the roles of culture and biology in that diversity. The division is clearly represented in distinctions between sex and gender as biological and cultural categories, respectively. The disciplinary divide is further reflected in the contrast between the study of sex differences and hormones by biological anthropologists and the critique by cultural anthropologists of the value of biological approaches to sex or gender differences. This review considers anthropological ideas and debates about sex, gender, and hormones and about the relationships among them. The rationale for such a review is that divisions over conceptualization and study of sex, gender, and sex or gender differences are partly grounded in misunderstanding or ignorance of current biological understandings of sex differentiation in particular and individual differences in general.","creator":["Carol M. Worthman"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a3b0787-0b78-32ad-9b58-b386129b523e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2155951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"617","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-617","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Hormones, Sex, and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155951","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12072,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[59376,59467]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Canuel"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec0b7119-1eae-38b4-bdd1-39eca76d3ed0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Jane Austen and the Importance of Being Wrong","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601724","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[10439,10543]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how students and teachers at an urban public high school embodied and understood various social categories of difference. Although ascriptions and experiences of racial and gender identities varied, these identities were often viewed as biological in origin and static in nature. The complexities and contradictions evident in the everyday conversations about difference at the school might serve as effective starting points for discussions about the social construction of difference.","creator":["Anita Chikkatur"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cf0c0cd-08be-3ead-951f-71949f15e668"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Difference Matters: Embodiment of and Discourse on Difference at an Urban Public High School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410158","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauren Chattman"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Actresses at Home and on Stage: Spectacular Domesticity and the Victorian Theatrical Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345914","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8438,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499389,499507]],"Locations in B":[[52139,52253]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paula Bennett"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36a28d8c-505f-3b41-954e-8e9e27be3191"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Critical Clitoridectomy: Female Sexual Imagery and Feminist Psychoanalytic Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174975","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11433,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477848,477951],[497226,497354]],"Locations in B":[[68241,68350],[68796,68923]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yv Scarlett Maciel"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10727140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d762e7df-7e48-3766-9e78-ec5f7dd047d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45367706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espelho"}],"isPartOf":"Espelho","issueNumber":"10\/11","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Paul B. Dixon","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"MEN, MASCULINITIES, ANDROGYNY, AND TEXTUAL DISAPPEARANCE IN MACHADO DE ASSIS' \"A M\u00c3O E A LUVA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367706","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberto J. Gonzalez"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"134ba895-8813-365d-8209-309be9c5b3b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"2227","pageStart":"2195","pagination":"pp. 2195-2227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Rights and the Immutability Requirement in Disparate Impact Doctrine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229647","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":17163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Modern Western society has framed fashion in opposition to hegemonic masculinity. However, fashion functions as a principal means by which men\u2019s visible gender identities are established as not only different from women but also from other men. This article draws on the concept of hybrid masculinities and on wardrobe interviews with Canadian men across social identities to explore how men enact masculinities through dress. I illustrate three ways men do hybrid masculinities by selecting, styling, and wearing clothing in their everyday lives. The differences between these three hybrid masculine configurations of practice are based on the extent to which men\u2019s personal and professional social identities were associated with hegemonic masculine ideals as well as the extent to which those ideals shaped the settings in which they were situated. Although participants had different constellations of gender privilege, they all used dress to reinforce hegemonic masculinity, gain social advantages, and subsequently preserve the gender order. Failing to do so could put them personally and professionally at risk. My research nuances the hybrid masculinities framework by demonstrating how its enactment is shaped by the intersection between men\u2019s social identities and social contexts.","creator":["BEN BARRY"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26967021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f316fedc-d8b4-341d-ab87-c71a09060c4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26967021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"638","pagination":"pp. 638-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(RE)FASHIONING MASCULINITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26967021","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Social Identity and Context in Men\u2019s Hybrid Masculinities through Dress"} +{"abstract":"The paper discusses and defends the analytical usefulness of the concept of identity which has been pervasively criticized by authors like Richard Handler or Rogers Brubaker and Frederick Cooper. Starting with reviewing the problematic of concepts in social anthropology and continuing with discussing the rise of identity discourse, it is argued that concepts in social and cultural sciences are always suspended between their employment in scientific and in nonscientific discourse. This dual hermeneutics of concepts is, however, not a shortcoming which has to be overcome but a productive element that contributes to their refinement. It is argued that in the case of identity dual hermeneutics leads to a reconceptualization of identity as qualified by the conditions of difference, multiplicity, and intersectionality. In the final parts of the paper, implications of this reconceptualization of identity for a concept of self are explored.","creator":["Martin S\u00f6kefeld"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40465555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02579774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564825312"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"484ed9ec-a30b-3c84-890e-3a9b5540c8ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40465555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropos"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Anthropos Institut","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reconsidering Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40465555","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":13834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article we seek to rehabilitate the radical insights of the pragmatist\/interactionist tradition and to establish its continued relevance to a distinctively sociological and feminist analysis of sexuality. We argue for the importance of the contribution of Gagnon and Simon in arguing for a fully social understanding of sexuality. We offer an account of the process whereby interactionism has been rendered all but invisible and make a case for recovering its insights. We argue that interactionism accounts for the processes through which sexuality is constituted culturally, interpersonally and intrapsychically and addresses the actualities of everyday social practices and is therefore ideally suited to grappling with the complexities of contemporary sexual life.","creator":["Stevi Jackson","Sue Scott"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2725e57-7094-3550-a771-57f761a24c88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"826","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-826","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Rehabilitating Interactionism for a Feminist Sociology of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857475","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Due to its problematic political and social position between two opposed sexual cultures, bisexuality has often been ignored by feminist and lesbian theorists both as a concept and a realm of experiences. The essay argues that bisexuality, precisely because it transgresses bipolar notions of fixed gendered and sexed identities, is usefully explored by lesbian and feminist theorists, enhancing our effort to devise an ethics of difference and to develop nonoppressive ways of responding to alterity.","creator":["Elisabeth D. D\u00e4umer"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38834d89-5c44-3be2-85ca-75f139cae0d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Ethics; Or, The Challenge of Bisexuality to Lesbian Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810080","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores Willa Cather's erotic investment in melancholic seclusion. Her 1925 novel The Professor's House has been interpreted as an exemplary work showcasing the author's ambivalence about her closeted homoeroticism. Rather than seeing Cather's evasiveness about her own and her characters' sexuality as an indication of a backward sexual politics, however, I argue that it constitutes a refusal to participate in a bifurcated discourse of modern sexuality. The novel's representation of the protagonist's profound attachment to the quasi-closet that is his den disrupts an object-choice-based sexual binary by suggesting an erotics of the closet. When read in light of Sigmund Freud's and Julia Kristeva's ideas about melancholia, the professor's closet becomes not a symbol of repression, but a locus of a self-sufficient erotic economy of narcissism, whereby melancholic identification makes it possible for the subject to merge with a lost object.","creator":["Madoka Kishi"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.3.157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ade74348-a3ed-3d81-8c5a-d27d6f098656"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.36.3.157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cMore than Anything Else, I Like My Closets\u201d: Willa Cather's Melancholic Erotics in The Professor's House<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.3.157","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9146,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[214249,214454],[276226,276371]],"Locations in B":[[12174,12379],[51951,52098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Hallock"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cde375d0-9fbf-39b0-b191-39ef249918dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3491445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"718","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-718","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Male Pleasure and the Genders of Eighteenth-Century Botanic Exchange: A Garden Tour","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491445","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":9404,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513845,514099]],"Locations in B":[[14863,15126]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Abernethy Lunsford"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"377e18ef-e5d0-38fb-b51b-9a88f15ff014"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/378972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rhetoric, Feminism, and the Politics of Textual Ownership","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378972","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A major challenge that confronts South Africa is the increasing percentage of its population, especially young women, being infected with HIV daily. This article looks at how young researchers develop an understanding of the influence of gender and the spread of HIV through critical and reflexive engagement with the data that they have gathered. The article is based on a study that used the principles of feminist theory to focus on gender roles and the related issues of power and risky behaviour among young people. It discusses how young researchers' perceptions of gender become transformed through the process of engaging with photovoice inquiry.","creator":["Ronicka Mudaly","Reshma Sookrajh"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff201c72-44a8-3e71-913f-ddaef1f11917"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27739382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"75","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Young HIV and AIDS Researchers - Calling the Gender Shots through Photovoice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739382","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The diva inhabits and elicits desire that exceeds and implicates the normal. Lena Horne's 1963 duet with July Garland embodies a model for the ways a Black diva disciplines her body to occupy desire while simultaneously maneuvering against the disciplining clutches of racist desires that circumscribe her body.","creator":["Deborah Paredez"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daf276f7-5e75-3c32-a1c1-f70ac826a778"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lena Horne and Judy Garland: Divas, Desire, and Discipline in the Civil Rights Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584986","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lorna Jowett"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23416181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6d0306d-5e74-34dd-846b-930676d12883"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23416181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Not Like Other Men\"?: The Vampire Body in Joss Whedon's \"Angel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23416181","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Furlough"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00161071"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976306"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/286955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenhiststud"}],"isPartOf":"French Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Packaging Pleasures: Club M\u00e9diterran\u00e9e and French Consumer Culture, 1950-1968","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286955","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miriam L. Wallace"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d683a5a-6e95-39e9-b407-906db78454be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theorizing Relational Subjects: Metonymic Narrative in \"The Waves\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107220","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":16446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477882,477945]],"Locations in B":[[101093,101150]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Rooney"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"758","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-758","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Can the Matter Be?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490122","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This paper deconstructs the concept voice, situating it in the same discursive formation as other concepts that organize conventional, interpretive qualitative inquiry, including presence, narrative, and experience. The author suggests that the overturning of an epistemology and methodology grounded in phonocentrism enables an inquiry that may no longer be recognized as \u201cqualitative.\u201d","creator":["Elizabeth A. St. Pierre"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"355401ff-703d-3d67-9825-25884fc11cf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Decentering Voice in Qualitative Inquiry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.319","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8001,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[88767,88910],[124339,124442],[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[3243,3397],[21863,21966],[39682,39787]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Mazella"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07406959"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-238251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26b0f341-1fa5-3e98-95e9-f65fa439d3a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25595641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"profession"}],"isPartOf":"Profession","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Some Implications of Curricular Change at the University of Houston","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595641","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jay Geller"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4467723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Spinoza's Election of the Jews: The Problem of Jewish Persistence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467723","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The genetic algorithm (GA) is a computational procedure that 'evolves' solutions to optimization problems by generating populations of possible solutions, and then by treating these solutions metaphorically as individuals that can 'mate' and 'compete' to 'survive' and 'reproduce'. In this paper, I explore how culturally specific notions of evolution, population, reproduction, sex\/gender, and kinship inflect the ways GAs are assembled and understood. Combining the results of fieldwork among GA workers with analysis of GA texts, I contend that the picture of 'nature' embedded in GAs is resonant with the values of secularized Judeo-Christian white middle-class US-American and European heterosexual culture. I also maintain that GA formulations are accented by languages inherited from sociobiology. I argue that examining GAs can help us track how dominant meanings of 'nature' are being stabilized and refigured in an age in which exchanges of metaphor between biology and computer science are increasingly common.","creator":["Stefan Helmreich"],"datePublished":"1998-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bb64ae3-14ee-3aaf-aaa9-452d6e423e92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Recombination, Rationality, Reductionism and Romantic Reactions: Culture, Computers, and the Genetic Algorithm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285750","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":15482,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58033,58110]],"Locations in B":[[69296,69373]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From the feminist 'sex wars' of the 1980s to the queer theory and politics of the 1990s, debates about the politics of sexuality have been at the forefront of contemporary theoretical, social, and political demands. This article seeks to intervene in these debates by challenging the terms through which they have been defined. Investigating the importance of 'sex positivity' and transgression as conceptual features of feminist and queer discourses, this essay calls for a new focus on the political and material effects of pro-sexuality.","creator":["Elisa Glick"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8100e6ba-0d71-3f64-a287-9b0c5c22d9bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"64","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex Positive: Feminism, Queer Theory, and the Politics of Transgression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395699","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11800,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[139216,139761],[139878,140519],[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[10577,11131],[11140,11781],[39186,39376]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Megan Sweeney"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"557c6e48-ca4c-3a3b-b8a8-bfc2af90275e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"To Succeed in Becoming Criminal Without Crime\": The Algorithm of True Crime Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550429","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":4764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carsten Balzer"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6903a23e-b9b0-34c9-8466-e0e8526759b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40341889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Great Drag Queen Hype: Thoughts on Cultural Globalisation and Autochthony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341889","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While not a monolithic movement, ecofeminists are united in their conviction that there are important connections between the exploitation of both women and nature. They are internally divided, however, on the propriety of applying their theoretical claims and activist strategies across social contexts. This paper explores three debates within ecofeminism that largely turn on this universalist versus particularist tension: whether ecofeminist theorizing can adequately account for cultural variation; whether its common usage of essentialist rhetoric is productive or troubling; and whether resources for social activism could legitimately be culled from an assembly of heterogeneous and foreign sources. I conclude that the universalism of the women-nature connection can indeed be justified if perceived in multivalent ways, that \"earthcare\" or \"ecomaternalist\" discourse can be helpful in some contexts but harmful in others, and that selective retrieval of other cultures for the purposes of advocacy should not be ruled out as necessarily imperialistic or otherwise inappropriate.","creator":["Grace Y. Kao"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a676408-f041-3ac3-8184-bde0850f124e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40925926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"616","pagination":"pp. 616-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE UNIVERSAL VERSUS THE PARTICULAR IN ECOFEMINIST ETHICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925926","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas F. Haddox"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26c417da-e7b5-32e4-a486-42b5637f5673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ALICE RANDALL'S \"THE WIND DONE GONE\" AND THE LUDIC IN AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORICAL FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287077","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":8714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stanley Aronowitz"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb730f56-c270-3269-a61b-50fe5f7cb428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778789","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6524,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475965,476047]],"Locations in B":[[25496,25578]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article proposes a framework for the analysis of identity as produced in linguistic interaction, based on the following principles: (1) identity is the product rather than the source of linguistic and other semiotic practices and therefore is a social and cultural rather than primarily internal psychological phenomenon; (2) identities encompass macro-level demographic categories, temporary and interactionally specific stances and participant roles, and local, ethnographically emergent cultural positions; (3) identities may be linguistically indexed through labels, implicatures, stances, styles, or linguistic structures and systems; (4) identities are relationally constructed through several, often overlapping, aspects of the relationship between self and other, including similarity\/difference, genuineness\/artifice and authority\/delegitimacy; and (5) identity may be in part intentional, in part habitual and less than fully conscious, in part an outcome of interactional negotiation, in part a construct of others' perceptions and representations, and in part an outcome of larger ideological processes and structures. The principles are illustrated through examination of a variety of linguistic interactions.","creator":["MARY BUCHOLTZ","KIRA HALL"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b324335c-f4f3-3b48-9252-e12dc4a15877"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Identity and interaction: a sociocultural linguistic approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048525","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":13822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gertrude Stein's 1933 The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas and experimental writings from the 1910s and the 1920s are animated by a circuit of desire in which Toklas's gaze establishes and recognizes Stein's masculinity. Challenging earlier scholarship that viewed Stein's masculinity as a manifestation of self-hatred, this essay argues that Stein's gender is best described as \"transmasculine\" and that her masculinity is akin to contemporary forms of transgenderism. A feminist form of masculinity emerges in her radically experimental texts from the 1910s and 1920s.","creator":["CHRIS COFFMAN"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44866226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"360b1dab-cca3-3896-89c6-08c7e578f51b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44866226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Stein's Genders: Transmasculine Signification in the 1910s and 1920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44866226","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":11214,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503394]],"Locations in B":[[67537,67613]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris Coffman"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"519d2735-8ae5-323e-9981-86289e837667"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43280537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Migrating Look: Visual Economies of Queer Desire in \"The Book of Salt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280537","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":16171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f6afa84-651e-386a-98ea-5c335a360e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature","Religion - Theology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809852","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Yona Wallach introduced to Hebrew poetry an innovative discourse on gender and sexuality. The article claims that one of the issues that preoccupied Wallach throughout her poetic career was that of female sexual subjectivity, of the ways in which a woman can occupy the position of a sexual subject. From the outset, her approach to this question was radically different from that of her predecessors in Hebrew poetry, and the answers she devised changed with the evolution of her poetics, leading her eventually to a performative understanding of gender that anticipated formulations generated by feminist and queer thought in the 1990s. Beginning with a comparison of Wallach's \"Cornelia\" to Dahlia Ravikovitch's \"Mechanical Doll\" that highlights the refusal of the former to identify with the traditional feminine position of objectification and victimization, the paper proceeds to show her appropriation of a male voice in order to produce sexual discourse. In her later poetry Wallach develops an understanding of gender as non-dichotomous, performative, and fluid, one that enables her to produce sexual discourse in the first person feminine. This understanding receives overt expression in her didactic poems, but it is also enacted performatively in the sexual fantasy poems of the book Wild Light.","creator":["Amalia Ziv"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43631646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01464094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298955990"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202565"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdd8d8e9-b1a1-3810-b6f2-192d0b780721"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43631646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hebrewstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Hebrew Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"National Association of Professors of Hebrew (NAPH)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"OUR VIRGIN FRIENDS AND WIVES\"? FEMALE SEXUAL SUBJECTIVITY IN YONA WALLACH'S POETRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43631646","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":10472,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[72504,72629],[72775,73179]],"Locations in B":[[42222,42347],[42355,42759]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article endeavours to present an overview rather than a complete inventory of LGBTQ studies undertaken in France, in French, mainly in the social and human sciences, in particular in history, but also in law, psychology and psychiatry. A number of explanatory hypotheses will also be advanced to account for why France has lagged behind in this particular area, as well as more broadly in feminist, gender and sexuality studies.","creator":["R\u00e9gis Revenin","Oliver Davis"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"849b9831-bf88-3351-8548-5847a58037b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Preliminary Assessment of the First Four Decades of LGBTQ Studies in France (1970-2010)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263832","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In recent years, social scientists have identified not just heterosexism and homophobia as social problems, but also heteronormativity\u2014the mundane, everyday ways that heterosexuality is privileged and taken for granted as normal and natural. There is little empirical research, however, on how heterosexuality is reproduced and then normalized for individuals. Using survey data from more than 600 mothers of young children, ages 3 to 6 years old, this article examines how mothers normalize heterosexuality for young children. The data suggest that most mothers, who are parenting in a gendered and heteronormative context to begin with, assume that their children are heterosexual, describe romantic and adult relationships to children as only heterosexual, and make gays and lesbians invisible to their children. Those who consider that their children could some day be gay tend to adopt one of three strategies in response: Most pursue a passive strategy of \"crossing their fingers\" and hoping otherwise. A very few try to prepare their children for the possibility of being gay. A larger group, primarily mothers from conservative Protestant religions, work to prevent homosexuality. I conclude by discussing the implications of these findings for understanding sexual identity development and the construction of heteronormativity.","creator":["Karin A. Martin"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27736057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1087e76a-a47f-30bd-8452-cfb643d7d48f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27736057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Normalizing Heterosexuality: Mothers' Assumptions, Talk, and Strategies with Young Children","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27736057","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":11971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Iris Marion Young"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d2b09c8-0997-3181-90f4-304b90461da1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"738","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-738","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender as Seriality: Thinking about Women as a Social Collective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174775","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12532,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[116537,116653],[116866,116989]],"Locations in B":[[9758,9873],[9879,10002]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SARAH RAHMAN NIAZI"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03769771"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557596396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e95b9878-cbe6-35a6-ae91-3f322b93bc21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24394285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaintecentq"}],"isPartOf":"India International Centre Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"India International Centre","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"RECASTING BODIES AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE SELF: Women Performers in the Bombay Film Industry (1925\u20131947)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394285","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,148125]],"Locations in B":[[5156,5639]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In urban Japan, it is not just public expressions of affection or touch between adult men and women that are uncommon, but opportunities for dancing among adults are very limited in Japanese daily life. This article explores the choreography of 'parasexuality' delimited yet intensified sensuality \u2013 that is created through sensual touching among salsa dancers. While public expression of intimacy is highly charged and best avoided in Tokyo, I argue that the bracketed 'pleasure zone' of Latin dance legitimates and intensifies sensual interactions in the form of explicitly tactile 'parasexuality' for both men and women. What marks salsa as a romantic fantasy space is the disembeddeness of sensuality and sexuality from everyday routines, on the one hand, and participants' individual expression of aesthetic pursuits that liberates them from the responsibilities of everyday gender ideology, on the other hand.","creator":["Nana Okura Gagn\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"137349448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e1bb330-eac5-34c4-bfdb-d62c5d141706"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24467152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"446","pagination":"pp. 446-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Romance and sexuality in Japanese Latin dance clubs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467152","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erin Wyble"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc6023d0-607b-393d-9fa7-4f24db658c90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40017575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017575","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":1075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Lambright"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adf63a28-7636-3e83-8e19-bc4e5ab9a5d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43807485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"134","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"HISTORY, GENDER, AND UNSUCCESSFUL REVOLUTIONS IN MARTA LYNCH'S \"LA SE\u00d1ORA ORD\u00d3\u00d1EZ\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807485","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6936,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74829,75216]],"Locations in B":[[2413,2755]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Million Mom March (favoring gun control) and Code Pink: Women for Peace (focusing on foreign policy, especially the war in Iraq) are organizations that have mobilized women as women in an era when other women's groups struggled to maintain critical mass and turned away from non-gender-specific public issues. This article addresses how these organizations fostered collective consciousness among women, a large and diverse group, while confronting the echoes of backlash against previous mobilization efforts by women. We argue that the March and Code Pink achieved mobilization success by creating hybrid organizations that blended elements of three major collective action frames: maternalism, egalitarianism, and feminine expression. These innovative organizations invented hybrid forms that cut across movements, constituencies, and political institutions. Using surveys, interviews, and content analysis of organizational documents, this article explains how the March and Code Pink met the contemporary challenges facing women's collective action in similar yet distinct ways. It highlights the role of feminine expression and concerns about the intersectional marginalization of women in resolving the historic tensions between maternalism and egalitarianism. It demonstrates hybridity as a useful analytical lens to understand gendered organizing and other forms of grassroots collective action.","creator":["Kristin A. Goss","Michael T. Heaney"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2ee8a74-09ab-361d-a455-8fa123163738"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25698514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Organizing Women as Women<\/em> : Hybridity and Grassroots Collective Action in the 21 st<\/sup> Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698514","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":18734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia S. Mann"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"WHITHER FEMINIST PHILOSOPHY?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439182","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4827,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455722,455887]],"Locations in B":[[10022,10187]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eve Chuen Ng"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"726ee2a3-8aa1-3c6f-a4d4-eb26f468ef96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489701","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":1226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen Whitworth"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b1782e1-803d-3c00-abec-972b96afe39b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3885989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Passing for Mean: Barnfield and the Aristotelian Poetics of Copulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885989","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7601,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly J. Devlin"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Bloom and the Police: Regulatory Vision and Visions in \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345539","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9320,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[249654,250278]],"Locations in B":[[43266,43892]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay considers the social effects of the strategy of \"speaking out\" about sexual violence to transform rape culture. I articulate the paradox that women's identification as victims in the public sphere reinscribes the gendered norms that enable the victimization of women. I suggest we create a more diversified public narrative of sexual violence and sexuality within the context of the movement against sexual violence in order to deconstruct masculinist power in feminine victimization.","creator":["Renee Heberle"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec00f2e8-3eab-3ea3-a2bc-9acb4b61e67b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Deconstructive Strategies and the Movement against Sexual Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810392","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter McNeil"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"'Put Your Best Face Forward': The Impact of the Second World War on British Dress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316093","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler","Ernesto Laclau","Reinaldo Laddaga","M\u00f3nica Mansour"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01407888-a82b-34ec-b6ef-442e37b81599"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Los usos de la igualdad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624536","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay proposes that sociology can learn from social theory developed in the humanities. In the face of recent challenges to sociological explanations of social outcomes (from rational choice and economic theory, cognitive psychological theories of intelligence, and communitarian social philosophy), social theory should specify the constitutive force of social signification. After identifying a key weakness in theoretical approaches currently available in sociology, the inadequacy of various conceptions of the social, I analyze three significant new works in cultural studies in order to sketch out alternative ways of defining and measuring the force of social signification. The essay concludes with an attempt to establish the basis of a dialogue between cultural studies and sociology.","creator":["Orville Lee"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/685074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/685074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Theory across Disciplinary Boundaries: Cultural Studies and Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/685074","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":15780,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[103948,104019]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Mart\u00edn Alcoff"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6d74429-ae85-3e65-94e6-6f9a65f8ef1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"882","pageStart":"841","pagination":"pp. 841-882","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Philosophy Matters: A Review of Recent Work in Feminist Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175419","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":18944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Allen Cave"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a9fd412-1d64-398c-b06a-b59481bd5f91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25504961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revaluations: Representations of Women in the Tragedies of Gregory and Yeats","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504961","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANGELA SCHARFENBERGER"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23319435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00654019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"616280295"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4473821b-04fe-3d1a-9b36-723c3ddb58fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23319435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrimusi"}],"isPartOf":"African Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"International Library of African Music","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"WEST AFRICAN WOMEN IN MUSIC: AN ANALYSIS OF SCHOLARSHIP: Women's participation in music in west Africa: a reflection on fieldwork, self, and understanding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23319435","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the authors provide an overview of mathematics education as a research domain, identifying and briefly discussing four shifts or historical moments. They illustrate how researchers working in various moments conceptualize not only the interactions among teachers, students, and mathematics differently but also teachers, students, and mathematics as subjects of inquiry as they ask different questions made possible by different theoretical perspectives. The authors then provide brief descriptions of critical theory and postmodern theory, and suggest critical postmodern theory as a hybrid theory that offers a praxis of uncertainty for reconceptualizing and conducting mathematics education research.They conclude by summarizing three research articles that they believe exemplify the empowering and humanizing uncertainties of how teachers, students, mathematics, and the multiplicity of interactions therein might indeed be reconceptualized with\/in critical postmodern theory.","creator":["David W. Stinson","Erika C. Bullock"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131954"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5022ea56-98a3-33ba-a449-0e04c88b48fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41485966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educstudmath"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Studies in Mathematics","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Critical postmodern theory in mathematics education research: a praxis of uncertainty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485966","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":8995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the barrio chino (Chinatown) as a space from which to analyze the perception of China in Mexico through Cristina Rivera Garza's novel Verde Shanghai (2011). Building on Jean-Luc Nancy's \u201cbeing singular plural\u201d and Sara Ahmed's notion of \u201cstrange encounters,\u201d and using Graham Huggan's notions on how the \u201cexotic\u201d can be put into play, this article argues that the Chinatown depicted in the novel lays bare the refusal of boundaries and challenges fixed identities. Embracing ambiguity, the novel opens up the meaning of a mestizo Mexico, and the Chinatown becomes a constitutive part of the cityscape of Mexico City. The novel thus challenges discourses of national homogeneity, informing our understanding of alterity and community.","creator":["Maria Montt Strabucchi"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.3.2.0144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"881318624"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014200220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3da25397-0d89-3c94-86eb-f84ea1456066"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.3.2.0144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergstudglobasia"}],"isPartOf":"Verge: Studies in Global Asias","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mexico City's \u201cChinos\u201d and \u201cBarrio Chino\u201d: Strangerness and Community in Cristina Rivera Garza's Verde Shanghai<\/em> (2011)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.3.2.0144","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10462,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620]],"Locations in B":[[25755,25830]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["W. W. Allman","D. Thomas Hanks, Jr."],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2e54e59-9cb8-381d-bc3b-3b45c66fa16d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rough Love: Notes toward an Erotics of the \"Canterbury Tales\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094234","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":15724,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[93386,93480]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Los argumentos neurocient\u00edficos focalizados en demostrar diferencias sexuales en el cerebro gozan de una gran popularidad. Algunas de las conclusiones de dichos experimentos han derivado en propuestas neuroeducativas que promueven la educaci\u00f3n segregada por sexos. Estas propuestas carecen del rigor necesario para poder ser aplicadas. No s\u00f3lo porque los estudios neurocient\u00edficos est\u00e1n lejos de poder aseverar diferencias sexuales significativas en el cerebro, sino porque falta un di\u00e1logo cr\u00edtico entre las ciencias que fundamente estrategias educativas adecuadas en el \u00e1mbito de las diferencias sexuales del cerebro. Concluimos que es necesario establecer un di\u00e1logo entre los diferentes \u00e1mbitos que conforman la neuroeducaci\u00f3n, porque solamente de este modo se pueden fundamentar modelos educativos democr\u00e1ticos donde la igualdad de g\u00e9nero sea un valor irrenunciable. Neuro-scientific arguments focused on demonstrating sexual differences in the brain are very popular. Some of the conclusions of these experiments have derived in neuro-educational proposals aimed at fostering single-sex education projects. Such proposals are insufficiently rigorous for their application to be justified, not only because neuro-scientific studies are far from being able to identify significant sexual differences in the brain, but because the necessary critical dialogue between sciences that might sustain appropriate educational strategies is lacking. We conclude that there is a need to establish such a dialogue between the different areas involved in the neuro-education field. Only through a dialogue of this kind would we be able to base democratic educational models where gender equality is an inalienable value.","creator":["Sonia Reverter-Ba\u00f1\u00f3n","Maria Medina-Vicent"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26639807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232113709"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235269"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72afaaec-8f42-3801-9b54-8a02a03477a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26639807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"critrevihispfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Cr\u00edtica: Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosof\u00eda","issueNumber":"150","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Filos\u00f3ficas","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LA DIFERENCIA SEXUAL EN LAS NEUROCIENCIAS Y LA NEUROEDUCACI\u00d3N","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26639807","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary A. Joyce"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing the Body in Pre-Hispanic Central America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167006","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9036,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[75656,75794],[362765,362849]],"Locations in B":[[649,787],[40350,40442]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El entorno cr\u00edtico-literario actual frecuentemente se centra en la recuperaci\u00f3n de voces perdidas y la incorporaci\u00f3n a la historia de grupos marginalizados. La novela La Tierra del Fuego (1998), de la argentina Sylvia Iparraguirre, debe incluirse en esta corriente debido a su intenci\u00f3n de contar la historia del ind\u00edgena Jemmy Button y de construir un contradiscurso que desaf\u00eda a la memoria oficial al valorizar los elementos humanos silenciados en el proceso de colonizar la Patagonia Austral. Este art\u00edculo examina las interrelaciones entre la representaci\u00f3n y el poder en la novela, prestando atenci\u00f3n particular al papel del lenguaje en la creaci\u00f3n de la identidad propia y en la construcci\u00f3n del Otro. Aunque la novela contribuye a la recuperaci\u00f3n del sujeto ind\u00edgena y la problematizaci\u00f3n de la identidad personal y nacional, las estructuras ling\u00fc\u00edsticas y las representaciones de s\u00ed mismo y de otros hechas por el narrador, John William Guevara, traicionan el proyecto de revisi\u00f3n y revelan vestigios importantes del poder colonial en el discurso textual. El silencio constante de Jemmy Button y sus compatriotas en la novela evoca el desgraciado destino real de los ind\u00edgenas patag\u00f3nicos.","creator":["ASHLEY KERR"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1290df45-d608-3c1e-ae66-378b55105505"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24388729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Sound of Silence: Representing the Other in Sylvia Iparraguirre's \"La Tierra del Fuego\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388729","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Luc\u00eda Guerra"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40c5d319-3a36-36fb-84ea-c80761a1c2a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cuerpo de mujer y rituales del adorno en \"Ifigenia\" de Teresa de la Parra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021427","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tahar Ben Jelloun's novel \"L'enfant de sable\" proposes that gender is a colonization of the body. This essay considers that proposition by placing it in a theoretical dialogue with postcolonial and gender studies and analyzing it in the context of Morocco. I critique the language of natural development common to both gender and colonization, examining its processes of abjection, reliance on distinct genres, and dependence on \"style.\" Arguing that Ben Jelloun's proposition is an invitation to scrutinize the historical specificities of colonization, I turn to an investigation of the Moroccan protectorate, to the ideological work done by its terminological distinction from colonization and the material and discursive forms of its implementation. These specificities, I argue, disclose significant nuances in the way gender operates: as a protective envelope from its own disciplinary effects, a safeguard from uncertainty, and an inculcation of desire subtended by violence.","creator":["Rebecca Saunders"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing the Body: Gender, Nation, and Narration in Tahar Ben Jelloun's \"L'enfant de sable\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821233","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":14057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article looks in detail at a form of kinship that is contingently crafted and mobilized to achieve specific purposes. On the basis of ethnographic material collected among local actors within bodies that regulate kidney transplants in Israel, the objective of this article is to expand the sociolegal definition of fictive kinship. I use transplant relatedness to refer to the set of formal and informal norms that grow out of social and medico-legal practices in the field of kidney donations and sales; however, the form of fictive kinship that appears in this specific field tells us something broader about kinship as it is constructed and performed in legal processes more generally. The configuration of fictive kinship that is examined is the shared history (historia mesh-outefet). I argue that in the present case, the shared history alters social and legal deep-seated understandings of kinship and ultimately makes the distinctions between allegedly real and pseudo-kinship collapse.","creator":["Marie-Andr\u00e9e Jacob"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82190052-f1db-34b5-922c-89954bad7450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29734172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Shared History: Unknotting Fictive Kinship and Legal Process","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734172","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":14639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Because of the lover's figuration as author and the beloved's as reader\/addressee, Shakespeare's first 126 sonnets may seem to offer a model for representing loving a man asnot necessarily entailing loss of the lover's power. They suggest that the literary text constitutes a space free from restrictive gendering of affective modes. But the intertextual connections between Middlemarch and the sonnets demonstrate Eliot's bitter recognition of the impossibility of translating this vision of authorship as erotic power into available discourses of nineteenth-century heterosexuality. In the details of Will Ladislaw's failure to fulfill his initial promise, Eliot reveals both her sense of what sorts of self-stylings are possible to a Victorian woman writer and how they are determined by her era's construction of gender and its consequent delineation of an erotics inseparable from domesticity.","creator":["Carol Siegel"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ae8d0ec-30aa-3fb4-96d6-2a0124e31581"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"This thing I like my sister may not do\": Shakespearean Erotics and a Clash of Wills in \"Middlemarch\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946408","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hospitals have adopted a rhetoric of family-centered maternity care, and one of the ways in which they show their commitment to it is through the integration of the husband-as-coach model of childbirth (the Bradley method) into delivery practices. I argue that this model's widespread popularity testifies less to the culture's endorsement of a woman-centered approach than to healthcare's appropriation of \"natural\" childbirth as a site for the production and reproduction of patriarchal and capitalist power.","creator":["Carine M. Mardorossian"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a636d0e2-f74a-3f5d-9d98-3aa7511c3d87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Laboring Women, Coaching Men: Masculinity and Childbirth Education in the Contemporary United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810866","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10747,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147755,147832]],"Locations in B":[[15611,15687]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sujata Moorti"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fb4d1e3-b9cd-345b-8755-22346a15f428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.3.2.0018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"A Queer Romance with the Hijra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0018","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gay men occupy a strange position when masculinity is discussed or studied; neither truly inside nor entirely outside its domains. There is a growing gap between gay and non-gay men and women, which this paper describes with regard to relations with women, differences to feminist thinking, concerns of daily life, dealing with the HIV\/AIDS epidemic and, most troubling and difficult to resolve, with regard to sex. An international gay community has evolved and a gay life style and masculinity have been defined and developed within it, which from both outside and inside are seen as 'other' and separate. To overcome this growing divide and its negative consequences, this paper challenges feminists and heterosexual men to take on board the issues of homosexuality and homophobia as an integral part of trying to understand masculine heterosexual sex, masculinity and sexual politics. \/\/\/ Dans les discussions ou les \u00e9tudes sur la masculinit\u00e9, les hommes homosexuels occupent une position assez particuli\u00e8re, car ils ne sont ni tout \u00e0 fait dedans, ni tout \u00e0 fait en dehors. Le foss\u00e9 qui va s'\u00e9largissant entre les homosexuels, hommes et femmes, et les autres est pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment l'objet de cet article, qui traite des relations avec les femmes, des diff\u00e9rences avec la pens\u00e9e f\u00e9ministe, des pr\u00e9occupations de la vie quotidienne, de l'\u00e9pid\u00e9mie de VIH\/SIDA, et - question plus troublante et difficile \u00e0 r\u00e9soudre - des rapports sexuels. Contre cette s\u00e9paration croissante et ses cons\u00e9quences n\u00e9gatives, l'article incite les f\u00e9ministes et les hommes h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuels \u00e0 discuter de l'homosexualit\u00e9 et de l'homophobie pour tenter de comprendre les relations h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles masculines, la masculinit\u00e9 et les politiques touchant \u00e0 la sexualit\u00e9. \/\/\/ Los homosexuales ocupan un extra\u00f1a posici\u00f3n cuando se discute o estudia la masculinidad: no est\u00e1n realmente dentro ni totalmente fuera de la esfera de la misma. Existe una creciente brecha entre los hombres y mujeres homosexuales y los heterosexuales, discutida en este ensayo en lo referente a las relaciones con las mujeres, differencias en cuanto al pensamiento feminista, preocupaciones de la vida diaria, forma de enfrentar la epidemia del VIH\/SIDA y, lo m\u00e1s preocupante y dif\u00edcil de resolver, en relaci\u00f3n al sexo. Para superar esta creciente divisi\u00f3n y sus negativas consecuencias, este ensayo reta a las feministas y a los hombres heterosexuales a tener en consideraci\u00f3n los temas vinculados a la homosexualidad y a la homofobia, como parte integral del proceso de intentar comprender el sexo heterosexual masculino, la masculinidad y la pol\u00edtica sexual.","creator":["Gary W. Dowsett"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3775347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09688080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51091171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233050"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d47f9e46-cac4-3388-8614-2896cbf10ec2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3775347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reprhealmatt"}],"isPartOf":"Reproductive Health Matters","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Population Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"I'll Show You Mine If You'll Show Me Yours","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3775347","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e94f7432-22b1-350e-bf2a-8f489c5404c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975908","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":2069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514360,514430]],"Locations in B":[[6077,6160]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Salvador Oropesa"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2034ad4-d837-35a5-987f-cad88ed3bf1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La representaci\u00f3n del yo y del t\u00fa en la poes\u00eda sat\u00edrica de Salvador Novo: La influencia del albur","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741174","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8302,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[118149,118505],[142546,142808]],"Locations in B":[[890,1243],[44100,44363]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bruno PERREAU"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43120133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"737385de-2a0b-3238-8fe3-95c29532896a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43120133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique","issueNumber":"6","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"1038","pageStart":"1037","pagination":"pp. 1037-1038","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43120133","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1145,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[3559,3666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Stoneley"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"483629fc-0898-3858-b5f6-a31c24750543"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27556114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rewriting the Gold Rush: Twain, Harte and Homosociality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556114","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9479,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[142561,142808],[142887,142985]],"Locations in B":[[10632,10880],[10904,10998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u0412 \u044d\u0442\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0435 \u0430\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437\u0438\u0440\u0443\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \"\u0440\u0435\u0442\u0440\u043e\u0434\u0440\u0430\u043c\u0430\" \u0421\u0435\u0440\u0433\u0435\u044f \u041b\u0438\u0432\u043d\u0435\u0432\u0430 \"\u0421\u0435\u0440\u043f \u0438 \u043c\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0442\" (1994 \u0433.). \u041e\u0434\u0438\u043d \u0438\u0437 \u0441\u0435\u0440\u0438\u0438 \u043f\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u0444\u0438\u043b\u044c\u043c\u043e\u0432, \u0447\u044c\u0435 \u0434\u0435\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u0435 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0432\u0438\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u043d\u0430 \u0444\u043e\u043d\u0435 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u043b\u0438\u043d\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u043a\u043e\u0448\u043c\u0430\u0440\u043e\u0432, \u0444\u0438\u043b\u044c\u043c \u041b\u0438\u0432\u043d\u0435\u0432\u0430 \u043e\u043f\u0438\u0441\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u043f\u0440\u0435\u0432\u0440\u0430\u0449\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0434\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0432\u0435\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0434\u0435\u0432\u0443\u0448\u043a\u0438 \u0415\u0432\u0434\u043e\u043a\u0438\u0438 \u041a\u0443\u0437\u043d\u0435\u0446\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0439 \u0432 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0445\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u0446\u0430 \u0415\u0432\u0434\u043e\u043a\u0438\u043c\u0430. \u0422\u0435\u043c\u0430 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435\u043c\u0435\u043d\u044b \u043f\u043e\u043b\u0430 \u0437\u0434\u0435\u0441\u044c \u043f\u0440\u0435\u043f\u043e\u0434\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0438\u0442\u0441\u044f \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0447\u0430\u0441\u0442\u044c \u044d\u0441\u0442\u0435\u0442\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u0438 \u043c\u0438\u0444\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0433\u0438\u0438 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u043b\u0438\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u044b, \u0430 \u043c\u0438\u0440 \"\u0421\u0435\u0440\u043f\u0430 \u0438 \u043c\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0442\u0430\"--\u044d\u043d\u0446\u0438\u043a\u043b\u043e\u043f\u0435\u0434\u0438\u044f \u0433\u043b\u0430\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0432 \u0442\u0440\u0438\u0434\u0446\u0430\u0442\u044b\u0445 \u0433\u043e\u0434\u043e\u0432, \u043e\u0442 \u043f\u0430\u043c\u044f\u0442\u043d\u0438\u043a\u0430 \u0412\u0435\u0440\u044b \u041c\u0443\u0445\u0438\u043d\u043e\u0439 \"\u0420\u0430\u0431\u043e\u0447\u0438\u0439 \u0438 \u043a\u043e\u043b\u0445\u043e\u0437\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0430\", \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0445\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u0446\u0435\u0432, \u0438 \u0443\u0434\u0430\u0440\u043d\u0438\u0446\u0442\u0440\u0430\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0441\u0442\u043e\u043a, \u0434\u043e \u0438\u0441\u043f\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u0434\u0435\u0442\u0435\u0439, \u041d\u0438\u043a\u043e\u043b\u0430\u044f \u041e\u0441\u0442\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e, \u0438 \u0432\u0440\u0430\u0433\u043e\u0432, \u0433\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0432\u044b\u0445 \u0443\u0431\u0438\u0442\u044c \u0421\u0442\u0430\u043b\u0438\u043d\u0430. \u0424\u0438\u043b\u044c\u043c \u043c\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0438\u0440\u0443\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0448\u043b\u043e\u0435, \u0440\u0430\u0441\u043a\u0440\u044b\u0432\u0430\u044f \u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0437\u043c\u044b \u0444\u043e\u0440\u043c\u0438\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \"\u043d\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0447\u0435\u043b\u043e\u0432\u0435\u043a\u0430\". \u0412 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0435 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0440\u0430\u0431\u043e\u0442\u0430\u043d\u044b \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0446\u0435\u043f\u0446\u0438\u0438 \"\u043c\u0443\u0436\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438\/\u043f\u043e\u043b\u0430\" \u0438 \"masculinity\/gender\" \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0441\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043c\u044b \u0444\u043e\u0440\u043c\u0438\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0442\u0438\u0447\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438, \u0430 \u0442\u0430\u043a \u0436\u0435, \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0441\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043c\u044b \u043d\u0430\u0434\u0437\u043e\u0440\u0430 \u0438 \u043d\u0430\u043a\u0430\u0437\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f, \u043b\u0438\u043c\u0438\u0442\u0438\u0440\u0443\u044e\u0449\u0438\u0435 \u0432\u043e\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0441\u0430\u043c\u043e\u043e\u043f\u0440\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u0443\u0431\u044a\u0435\u043a\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438.","creator":["Lilya Kaganovsky"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08cc2233-d11d-344a-abf7-f8503f343f45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Men Wanted: Female Masculinity in Sergei Livnev's \"Hammer and Sickle\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459475","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8375,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72504,72915]],"Locations in B":[[17207,17619]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers why gender mainstreaming (GM), a strategy that many have claimed holds promise for transforming public policy and working towards social justice, is inherently limited and flawed. The paper begins with a brief overview of GM, specifically focusing on the Canadian context, and highlights current discussions in the literature regarding issues of implementation and best practices. It then moves on to reveal that a critical but overlooked dimension of GM is its theoretical foundation. In contextualizing GM within a contemporary feminist theory framework, the paper seeks to illuminate the problematic relationship that currently exists between GM and feminist theory and, moreover, demonstrates why the theoretical premises of GM need significant reworking. The argument put forward is that if insights of recent feminist theorizing are taken seriously, it becomes clear that GM should be replaced by an alternative and broader strategy of diversity mainstreaming. Through the use of practical examples, the paper illustrates how diversity mainstreaming is able to better capture, articulate and make visible the relationship between simultaneously interlocking forms of oppressions that include but are not limited to gender. \/\/\/ Cet article \u00e9tudie pourquoi l'int\u00e9gration d'une perspective de genre (IPG), une strat\u00e9gie dans laquelle beaucoup ont vu la promesse d'une transformation de la politique publique et d'un progr\u00e8s vers la justice sociale, est en soi limit\u00e9e et d\u00e9fectueuse. L'article d\u00e9bute par un bref expos\u00e9 sur l'IPG, s'int\u00e9ressant principalement au contexte canadien, et il met en \u00e9vidence les discussions actuelles dans la litt\u00e9rature au sujet de probl\u00e8mes de mise en oeuvre et de pratiques exemplaires. Il r\u00e9v\u00e8le ensuite qu'une dimension critique mais n\u00e9glig\u00e9e de l'IPG est son fondement th\u00e9orique. En contextualisant l'IPG dans un cadre de th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe contemporaine, l'article cherche \u00e0 \u00e9clairer la relation probl\u00e9matique qui existe actuellement entre l'IPG et la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe et, de surcro\u00eet, d\u00e9montre pourquoi les pr\u00e9misses th\u00e9oriques de l'IPG n\u00e9cessitent une r\u00e9vision significative. L'argument avanc\u00e9 est que, si l'on prend au s\u00e9rieux les conclusions des th\u00e9ories f\u00e9ministes r\u00e9centes, il semble \u00e9vident que l'IPG devrait \u00eatre remplac\u00e9e par une strat\u00e9gie plus vaste d'int\u00e9gration d'une perspective de diversit\u00e9. S'appuyant sur des exemples pratiques, l'article montre que l'int\u00e9gration d'une perspective de diversit\u00e9 r\u00e9ussit \u00e0 mieux capturer, mettre en rapport et rendre visible la relation entre des formes d'oppression qui s'entrecroisent simultan\u00e9ment et qui incluent mais ne se limitent pas au genre.","creator":["Olena Hankivsky"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"379ac890-4f5e-3642-99c4-d55b54ff088c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25165888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"1001","pageStart":"977","pagination":"pp. 977-1001","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender vs. Diversity Mainstreaming: A Preliminary Examination of the Role and Transformative Potential of Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165888","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11527,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467305,467400]],"Locations in B":[[70988,71098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill M. Dahlmann"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fcc3b40-a8ae-399a-b7e2-8e4a6b890c34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1289620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1942","pageStart":"1929","pagination":"pp. 1929-1942","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289620","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":7036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Discussions about the legitimacy of private security companies (PSCs) in multilateral military interventions abound. This article looks at how the United States has sought to legitimize the outsourcing of security services to PSCs through performance-based contracting and performance assessments. Both mechanisms aim to demonstrate the effective provision of publicly desirable outcomes. However, the immaterial and socially constructed nature of security presents major problems for performance assessments in terms of observable and measurable outcomes. Performance has therefore given way to performativity \u2013 that is, the repetitive enactment of particular forms of behaviour and capabilities that are simply equated with security as an outcome. The implications of this development for the ways in which security has been conceptualized, implemented and experienced within US interventions have been profound. Ironically, the concern with performance has not encouraged PSCs to pay increased attention to their impacts on security environments and civilian populations, but has fostered a preoccupation with activities and measurable capabilities that can be easily assessed by government auditors.","creator":["Elke Krahmann"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c2a6627-c9f9-3789-9973-58664c9d26c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26294210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"From performance to performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294210","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10803,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[27819,27980]],"subTitle":"The legitimization of US security contracting and its consequences"} +{"abstract":"In 2008, the tabloid story of a pregnant transgendered man from Oregon provoked a flurry of responses\u2014mostly negative\u2014thus proving that even in the 21 st -century blurring of gender boundaries arouses both morbid fascination and deep anxiety. Medieval tales about male pregnancy suggest a similar preoccupation with masculinity and maleness. Most of these humorous stories of folly or sexual na\u00efvet\u00e9 push the gender boundaries only to reinforce them: they portray their feminized protagonists as incorrigible idiots, reaffirm child-bearing as a prerogative of women, and reinforce popular misogynous stereotypes. However, the 14 th -century medieval German m\u0153re \"Des munches not\" goes beyond a mere juxtaposition of masculinity and femininity This particular comic tale complicates the common plot by making its protagonist a celibate monk and therefore focusing on the tensions among several medieval masculinities. This paper uncovers the disputatious nature of late-medieval culture, ridden by deep anxiety about clerical celibacy. \"Des munches not\" repudiates the clergy's masculinity and simultaneously insists upon it, thus reaffirming that despite all the effeminate aspects of the monastic lifestyle, late-medieval laity nevertheless saw the clergy as both male and emotionally masculine.","creator":["Olga V. Trokhimenko"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41494744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78310b19-f785-3585-aeed-a0cef26bc4e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41494744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Believing That Which Cannot Be\": (De)Constructing Medieval Clerical Masculinity in \"Des m\u00fcnches not\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41494744","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":7315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Josef \u0160ebek"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43322213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567949564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab34baaf-ee48-3fa1-9aee-b2faa2936c96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43322213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","issueNumber":"1","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cesk\u00e1 literatura","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pr\u016fvodce a jeho dvojenec","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43322213","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":4148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I argue that Propertius 4.9 connects the religious framework of the cults of Bona Dea and Ara Maxima with geographical distinctions between East and West. Hercules' association with the West grants him a place in early Roman religion by situating his worship alongside that of the native Italian goddess Bona Dea. The poem, however, also connects Hercules with the East, thus complicating his Roman identity. I argue that the poem uses the etiology of religious custom as a means to explore notions of inclusion and exclusion with regard to Roman identity, and, in particular, that it posits a model of inclusivity associated with female authority. This model, although ultimately rejected by Hercules, offers an alternative ideological proposition to the one the poem ostensibly affirms.","creator":["VASSILIKI PANOUSSI"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098418"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617990"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215837"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe574c50-c866-345c-95dd-ad918932ebab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24699985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"classworl"}],"isPartOf":"The Classical World","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Spinning Hercules: Gender, Religion, and Geography in Propertius 4.9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699985","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":7032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Archaeology faces the unique challenge of stretching social theories of sexuality in new chronological and methodological directions. This essay uses an analysis of citational practices to consider how feminist and queer theories articulate with archaeological investigations of sexuality. Both queer theories and feminist archaeological practices are shown to be powerful tools that can be used to expand archaeological interpretations of gender and sexuality.","creator":["Barbara L. Voss"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535549"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbded58f-db4b-361f-aef2-dea4fb54956c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminisms, Queer Theories, and the Archaeological Study of Past Sexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827864","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Feminism owes a great deal to my blond hair,\" declared Marguerite Durand, the editor of La Fronde, the women's fin de siecle daily paper. Durand argued that feminism could be advanced by conventional feminine wiles. She exploited the contradiction implicit in the nineteenth-century conception of the actress--that by remaining an object of pleasure, one could become an independent, powerful subject. In founding La Fronde, Durand set out to create a feminist aesthetics--to take the notion of power implicit in the discourse of beauty and reinscribe it in the context of feminist politics. But the wealth of erotic associations in Durand's public image rendered her vulnerable to trivialization and earned her the scorn of other feminists. Still, Durand's life suggests that the acting profession served as a site for the transgression of conventional gender identities at the fin de siecle. The links between \"acting\" and \"acting up\" were key to the gender transformations in this period.","creator":["Mary Louise Roberts"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00161071"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976306"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/286666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenhiststud"}],"isPartOf":"French Historical Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"1138","pageStart":"1103","pagination":"pp. 1103-1138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Acting Up: The Feminist Theatrics of Marguerite Durand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286666","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477925]],"Locations in B":[[73460,73552]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Macarena Garc\u00eda-Avello"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26854142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44f700f1-088c-3f47-8b85-697f555562d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26854142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Colorado State University","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"(Re)visiones de las di\u00e1sporas latinas estadounidenses en Days of Awe<\/em> de Achy Obejas y Rosas de abolengo<\/em> de Sonia Rivera-Vald\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26854142","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the cleanup and conversion of former plutonium production facility Rocky Flats, located near Denver, Colorado, into a wildlife refuge. The article addresses the ethical demands of the 'post-nuclear' nature refuge and offers transnatural ethics and aesthetics in response, a relational ethics that seeks to take waste as inspiration. The article employs the performative persona of Denver-based drag queen comedienne Nuclia Waste to explore how transnatural ethical practice might figuratively reconstruct subjectivity in waste and develop a queer-ecology approach. The paper asks: what might the irreverent performances of a 'radioactive' drag queen open up, particularly for those living as the remains of the nuclear facility? Through detailed empirical analysis of the cleanup of Rocky Flats, the paper outlines the ethical framework historically employed at the site, which has relied upon and reproduced a waste\/nature divide; the cleanup and management of the site have further naturalized this binarism. I argue that any effective response to such ongoing containment efforts requires a fundamental reorientation of environmental ethics toward waste. Drawing on ideas about 'naturecultures' and Donna Haraway's work, Michel Foucault's relational ethics, and the work of \u00c9ric Darier and Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands on 'queer ecology,' the article seeks to delineate an alternative: a relational ethics that recognizes and politicizes the permutation of waste and human, nature and waste. I utilize the digital performances and mutant drag of Nuclia Waste to revisit Rocky Flats and make broad connections between contamination and militarism, sexuality and the environment. The article speculates that experimental politicizations of subjectivity in waste might potentially foster coalitions between queer, labor, and environmental activisms.","creator":["Shiloh R. Krupar"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e719394-2d9c-3b99-bd01-e5460e48bbd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transnatural ethics: revisiting the nuclear cleanup of Rocky Flats, CO, through the queer ecology of Nuclia Waste","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251483","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":15487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the motivational role of ambivalence in the genesis and reproduction of drag performance ritual, focusing on a particular drag cabaret in Atlanta, Georgia. Drag ritual has evolved as an institutionalized performance genre in response to a core set of ambivalent conflicts in the culturally modeled subjectivities of gay men due to the psychocultural hegemony of hetero-normative models of gender and sexuality. This situation means that the gay male life-course is characterized by a dialectic of transgression and conformity stemming from conflict derived from both masculine and feminine self-representations, understood here as the \"double-bind of gay selfhood.\" The paper argues for theoretical expansion within cultural models analysis and emphasizes the relevance of performance theory, feminism, and the analysis of culture and power in psychological anthropology.","creator":["Keith E. McNeal"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7d81005-4570-37a2-87cf-a0c498c7fbc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/640593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Behind the Make-Up: Gender Ambivalence and the Double-Bind of Gay Selfhood in Drag Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640593","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":16220,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524346,524428]],"Locations in B":[[97408,97490]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wendy Graham"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9747b2de-ab87-3bf9-88d9-a817add1ba1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"HENRY JAMES'S SUBTERRANEAN BLUES: A REREADING OF \"THE PRINCESS CASAMASSIMA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284269","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":14365,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437358,437663]],"Locations in B":[[52910,53229]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Common-pool resource theory (CPR theory) emerged to understand the limitations of the tragedy of the commons narrative, and the theory of human behavior underlying it. Over time, diverse critiques of CPR theory have also emerged. Prominent critiques include inattention to power and coercion, assumptions that institutions can be crafted, and analyses that exclude history and context, among others. We label this literature critical commons scholarship. In this review paper, we define a typology of five types of critical commons scholarship. The functionalist critique (type 1) argues that a narrow focus on institutions that excludes history, context, and contingencies causes erroneous conclusions about the causes of resource sustainability. The apolitical management critique (type 2) argues that a focus on resource sustainability causes commons scholars to ignore how power is used to create and maintain inequalities through rules and norms structuring resource access. The methodological critique (type 3) argues that methodological incompatibilities, such as CPR theory\u2019s dependence on general, abstract models, necessarily prevent these scholars from responding to type 1 and type 2 critiques. The project of government critique (type 4) argues that common-pool resource theory is used to support neoliberal and hegemonic practices. Finally, the ethical critique (type 5) argues that common-pool resource theory is premised on problematic north-south relationships where expert scholars in the global north provide information to be consumed by \u201ccommoners\u201d in the global south. Mainstream CPR theory has been limited in engaging with critical commons scholarship, but there are new tools (such as the social-ecological systems framework and the critical institutionalism approach) for addressing each type of critique. Our goal in developing this typology is to make critiques of CPR theory legible and potentially actionable, while acknowledging the challenges associated with addressing them.","creator":["Anastasia Quintana","Lisa M. Campbell"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26819590","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"175299510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51abf233-ad0c-309b-84f8-7a38e77c2edf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26819590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcomm"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Commons","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"1127","pageStart":"1112","pagination":"pp. 1112-1127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"International Journal of the Commons","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Critical Commons Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26819590","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Typology"} +{"abstract":"This study uses data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to examine how high school locale moderates the association between same-sex sexuality (SSS) and postsecondary outcomes, including four-year college enrollment and four-year degree completion. Our results suggest that the link between same-sex sexuality and college completion is complex, varying by gender, high school locale, and the timing of same-sex sexuality. We find that sexual minority men who attended a rural high school enroll in and complete college at higher rates than their heterosexual peers, although this varies by the timing of same-sex sexuality. Sexual minority women are less likely than heterosexual women to enroll in and complete college, and high school locale does not moderate this association. We discuss these gender differences and the role of high school locale in shaping both high school and college outcomes.","creator":["Lindsey Wilkinson","Jennifer Pearson"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44290119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c45cff9-8ead-3d10-b11c-e37aa6932127"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44290119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"380","pagination":"pp. 380-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Same-sex Sexuality and Postsecondary Outcomes: The Role of High School Locale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44290119","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":12391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I argue that the manner in which piety is perceived and propagated among Muslims in Sri Lanka must be understood as located within the context of ethnic conflict and the polarization between ethnic groups that occurred in its wake. I explore the work of one Muslim women's da'wa (preaching) group--Al Muslimaat--that pioneered the process of making piety popular among lower-middle and middle-income Muslim women in a semi-urban Colombo neighbourhood. Looking at the group's activities and specifically through analyses of the bayan or lay sermons delivered by their most charismatic member, I look at the nature of the pious practice that is preached. I argue that in making a self-consciously pious Muslim female subject, Al Muslimaat bayans are affecting ideas of masculinity and femininity among the suburban Muslims with whom they work, and recasting Muslimness in a manner exclusive of ethnic others. I argue also that by marginalizing the kafir in propagating the new Muslim, Al Muslimaat and the greater piety movement in Sri Lanka is mirroring the particular incommensurable identities already espoused by the violently strident Sinhala and Tamil nationalisms in the country.","creator":["Farzana Haniffa"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20488023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c821b8c7-998d-3626-b3b1-cc4cefdadec8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20488023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Piety as Politics Amongst Muslim Women in Contemporary Sri Lanka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20488023","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"105aac7c-1e89-3bdb-8bf8-f815c8d8f132"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Colaboraron en este n\u00famero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625392","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1151,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By juxtaposing readings of selected feminist critics with a reading of Ovid's account of Philomela's rape and silencing, this essay interrogates the rhetorical, political, and epistemological implications of the feminist \"we.\" As a political intervention that comes into being as a response to women's oppression, feminism must posit a collective \"we.\" But this feminist \"we\" is best understood as an impersonal, performative pronoun whose political force is not derived from a knowable referent.","creator":["Elissa Marder"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c7d110d-ac67-3903-97f6-88aebbb32f8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Disarticulated Voices: Feminism and Philomela","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810003","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8939,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[446805,447072]],"Locations in B":[[53037,53304]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist STS analyses of contemporary reproductive medicine have illustrated the proliferation of practices that position fetuses as individual subjects, and have highlighted the major implications of such practices for pregnant women. In an attempt to challenge medicine's claims to 'know' the fetus, this body of literature has also demonstrated the renegotiable basis of pregnant\/fetal subjectivity, using detailed empirical analyses of the practices through which particular pregnant and fetal subjects emerge in particular contexts. In this paper I contribute to this endeavour utilizing an empirical case study of an important, but neglected aspect of reproductive healthcare: the demarcation of temporal thresholds on abortion provision in the absence of diagnosed fetal abnormality. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with Scottish health professionals, I explore the discursive practices through which they demarcate 'later' abortion as a problematic decision. I argue that such practices are intimately dependent on particular co-constructions of temporality and pregnant\/fetal subjectivity, and support this argument with reference to the counter-representations of the gestational timing of abortion that emerge from a minority of health professionals' accounts. I suggest that, collectively, this body of data illustrates the opportunities that (re)presenting temporality would afford those engaged in attempts to foster the construction of less oppressive pregnant\/fetal subjectivities. My broader aim is to illustrate the insights that feminist theorizations of pregnant\/fetal subjectivity gain from explicit engagement with another important theme of contemporary STS scholarship, namely, the constitutive role played by representations of temporality in technoscientific innovation and practice.","creator":["Si\u00e2n M. Beynon-Jones"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c96b2fc-efb2-31bd-8789-6e3279ea9c7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23210228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Timing is everything: The demarcation of 'later' abortions in Scotland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210228","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, buscamos descrever as caracter\u00edsticas da literatura sobre linguagem e g\u00eanero que infl uencia as pesquisas da lingu\u00edstica feminista publicadas em artigos p\u00f3s-anos 2000, cinco d\u00e9cadas depois do estabelecimento do campo, em 1975. Estudamos esses mesmos artigos quanto ao seu posicionamento expl\u00edcito acerca da relev\u00e2ncia do g\u00eanero para a pesquisa em lingu\u00edstica feminista. Para tanto, selecionamos artigos angl\u00f3fonos e brasileiros, publicados de 2000 a 2017. Os resultados indicam que o conjunto de publica\u00e7\u00f5es mais citadas como apoio te\u00f3rico dos artigos analisados \u00e9 o de autoria da linguista brit\u00e2nica Deborah Cameron. J\u00e1 a obra individual mais consultada trata-se de Gender of Trouble, de Judith Butler (1990). Sobre a relev\u00e2ncia de quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero para a pesquisa, percebemos que os artigos assumem como certa sua import\u00e2ncia, o que pode ser tomado como um \u00edndice da consolida\u00e7\u00e3o do campo. In this article, we search to find out, five decades after the field\u2019s foundation in 1975, the main language and gender literature, which has been infl uencing post 2000 articles of Feminist linguistic researches. We studied these same articles regarding their explicit positioning about the relevance of the gender for feminist linguistics research. For that, we selected articles produced in Anglophone and Brazilian contexts, published from 2000 to 2017. The results suggest that the set of publications most cited as theoretical support by the analysed articles is those of the British linguist Deborah Cameron. The most individually consulted work is Judith Butler\u2019s Gender Trouble (1990). Regarding the relevance of gender issues for research, we notice that most of the articles take its importance for granted, which can be taken as an index of the consolidation of the field.","creator":["Amanda Diniz Vallada","Joana Plaza Pinto"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be2e68d9-8f0f-3b31-8749-983442c39943"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48618872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cinco d\u00e9cadas de lingu\u00edstica feminista","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618872","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"\u00edndices de consolida\u00e7\u00e3o do campo"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u00c9va Federmayer"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41273917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0788c96f-be33-357e-aa59-6a90a9926230"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41273917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BLACK WOMAN AND THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE BLACK FAMILY: JESSIE FAUSET'S \"THERE IS CONFUSION\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41273917","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4725,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477848,477934],[497226,497396]],"Locations in B":[[28686,28771],[28803,28970]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neuere politische und soziologische Ans\u00e4tze untersuchen die Performativit\u00e4t des Finanzsystems, also die Frage, wie Politik, Finanzpraktiken und Wirtschaftswissenschaft das Finanzsystem gestalten und konstituieren, wobei sich bislang zwei Forschungsrichtungen herausgebildet haben. W\u00e4hrend der eine Ansatz mit R\u00fcckgriff auf Callon die Performativit\u00e4t konkreter Handlungen der Finanzakteure in den Blick nimmt, bezieht sich der andere auf Foucault und Butler und betont, dass die diskursive Struktur des Finanzsystems der analytische Ausgangspunkt sein sollte, um deren Auswirkungen auf die allt\u00e4glichen Lebensverh\u00e4ltnisse zu untersuchen. Beiden Ans\u00e4tzen fehlt allerdings ein Konzept, das Mikround Makroebene analytisch zusammenbringt und insbesondere die politischen Konflikte um die Gestaltung des globalen Finanzsystems ber\u00fccksichtigt. Diese L\u00fccke, so wird dargelegt, kann mit der poststrukturalistischen Hegemonietheorie geschlossen werden. Zugleich wird die sozio\u00f6konomische Selektivit\u00e4t sedimentierter Finanzstrukturen durch das Konzept der stratifizierten Hegemonie erkl\u00e4rt. Am Beispiel der politischen Governance der Euro-Krise wird die performative Kraft der Austerit\u00e4tspolitik diskutiert. New political and sociological approaches are emerging to explore the performativity of finance, i.e. the question, how politics, financial practices and economics shape and constitute finance. Research in this area to date has taken two different directions. Whereas one stream is based on the work of Callon and focuses on the performativity of concrete financial practices, the other draws on Foucault and Butler and takes the discursive structure of the financial system as its analytical point of departure, studying its impacts on daily life. Both approaches, however, lack a concept that can bridge the gap between micro- and macro perspectives and elucidate the political struggles that seek to shape the realm of global finance. The article shows how poststructural hegemony theory can fill these gaps. At the same time it introduces the concept of stratified hegemony to explain the socio-economic selectivity of financial structures. The governance of the eurozone crisis is discussed as an example to illustrate the performative power of austerity policies.","creator":["Joscha Wullweber"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03400425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"558930277"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bb525e9-068b-32b6-8e45-37f20d30e94c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24886437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leviathan"}],"isPartOf":"Leviathan","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Die Performativit\u00e4t des Finanzsystems und die Selektivit\u00e4t stratifizierter Finanzstrukturen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886437","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay takes stock of recent historical literature on terrorism in West Germany, Italy and the U. S. and argues that the almost obsessive attention to this narrow topic now needs to be integrated into a larger history of the 1970s. It contends that the best work on terrorism deepens our understanding of the decade as a whole, while the history of the 1970s exposes the shortcomings of a history of terrorism that excludes the concept of state terror. The potential payoff for bringing these literatures closer together is thus twofold: a Gesellschaftsgeschichte of the 1970s along both national and transnational lines and an even greater understanding of terrorism.","creator":["Karrin Hanshew"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0340613X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618142"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235708"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"622427ac-cfdc-3d62-bda0-414eee9155d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24891230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gescgese"}],"isPartOf":"Geschichte und Gesellschaft","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Friend or Foe? Terrorism, Counterterrorism and a (Transnational) \"Gesellschaftsgeschichte\" of the 1970s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891230","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Norman K. Denzin"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27700306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3a14d50-8c6a-3d6e-a3bc-0725dd414ce0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27700306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Much Ado about Goffman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27700306","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6514,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[36225,36294]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that modern constructions of \"race\" are inherent in specifically modern constructions of heterosexuality and that both of them inform the normative familial quadrad: Mother, Father, Son, and the Repressed (Bestial). These mythic familial categories constitute the basis of the \"oedipal\" family and are instrumentally interconnected. Here the oedipal triad of Mother-Son-Father is ideationally encoded as white, the repressed bestial being \"colored\"-typically \"black.\" I argue racism's immanence to oedipal familial constructions by spatially reworking Fredric Jameson's notion of the political unconscious. In so doing, I develop ways for thinking through how the psyche can be understood as a structured and libidinized spatial effect, a repository of colonial violences of body and place, unspoken and hence repressed (\"unconscious\"). I propose the term racist-oedipalization (after Deleuze and Guattari's oedipalization) to connote the processual ways in which racist thinking and practices are integral to white oedipal family structures and norms. In so doing, I explore how racist-oedipal configurations have worked variably, in the interests of contemporary and past colonialisms, to great embodied geographical effect. The paper begins by theoretically linking blackness to incestuousness and colonization to productions of the psychical \"unconscious.\" The core of the paper threads the theory through particular racialized geographies in the U.S. These include, on the one hand, southern plantation slave and post-Reconstruction settings, and, on the other hand, urban segregationary practices impelled by the University of Chicago, culminating in their racialized plans for urban renewal in the 1950s.","creator":["Heidi J. Nast"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"765e36ff-4c28-37cd-bcc6-b03af1db4b9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1515234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mapping the \"Unconscious\": Racism and the Oedipal Family","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515234","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":26291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478786,478845]],"Locations in B":[[121150,160128]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jacob Schiff"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10890017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49210134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89aa1ae8-f1d6-3b69-bd5d-d54b11646f5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goodsociety"}],"isPartOf":"The Good Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Inclusion and the Cultivation of Responsiveness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711322","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5440,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477898]],"Locations in B":[[33068,33133]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gary A. Olson","Lynn Worsham"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e184255-b766-361b-8c09-895f3a965987"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"765","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-765","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Changing the Subject: Judith Butler's Politics of Radical Resignification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866363","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":18120,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[49048,49311],[92014,92368],[390605,390774]],"Locations in B":[[39823,40085],[48853,49203],[71689,71859]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Attentive to a wide range of signs that mark queerness, \"Becoming Clifton Webb\" not only shows that Webb was perceived as queer in the midtwentieth century but argues that, coincident with Sexual Behavior and the Human Male (1948), he helped introduce moviegoers to the \"new\" homosexual of the postwar era.","creator":["Leonard Leff"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30136114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aa0678f-974b-38ec-a890-b98ffd2f1596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30136114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Becoming Clifton Webb: A Queer Star in Mid-Century Hollywood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30136114","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the filmic fairy-tale adaptations Mirror Mirror (2012) and Snow White and the Huntsman (2012) by unpacking the films\u2019 depictions of female ageing. The article demonstrates how the films frame the aged woman as a spectral, atemporal figure who resides within the logic of the disappearing older woman in postfeminist popular culture. It demonstrates how the films expand the central conflict beyond Snow White and the queen to multiple generations of women, illustrating how these adaptations feed into generational frictions and perpetuate the erasure of the older woman on screen through the intersection of form and content.","creator":["Katherine Whitehurst"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/marvelstales.32.2.0388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eba8708-127b-3ec9-badd-a12961fe70c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/marvelstales.32.2.0388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Aged Woman as Specter in Two Filmic Adaptations of \u201cSnow White\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/marvelstales.32.2.0388","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8182,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432114,432254]],"Locations in B":[[2354,2494]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Ryan"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095280X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014-200023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42573396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerhumor"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Humor","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Humor Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573396","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1339,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[695,855]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender must be taken into account in a full understanding of technologies. Equally, technologies must be taken into account in a full understanding of gender. This poses a challenge for the individual scholarships of feminist studies and science and technology studies (S&TS), which, for the most part, can competently theorize either gender relations or technological relations, but neither school has the theoretical wherewithal to tackle the co-construction of genders and technologies. This paper elaborates the developing theory coalition between feminist studies and S&TS in feminist technology studies. The discussion centres on four main points of tension between the disciplines that I have found particularly challenging in my study of the co-construction of masculinities and (domestic) technology. These points of tension relate to: research sites, analytic lenses, power relations and reflexivity. The objective of working through the points of tension is to elaborate the mutual learning process between the two traditions when conducting empirical research on gender and technology.","creator":["Maria Lohan"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b90ed3b3-edb8-3ec7-9acf-659da6623ce3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"916","pageStart":"895","pagination":"pp. 895-916","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructive Tensions in Feminist Technology Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285790","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay brings together two contemporary literatures: theories of pluralism that focus our attention on inequality between groups and theories of identity that emphasize its multiple and constructed character. I use these debates to construct a lens through which to analyze the institutional representation of disadvantaged groups. Group identity is orchestrated and produced in part through political institutional processes; thus attempts at democratic reform have to address normative questions about what forms of citizenship should be produced and enabled by representative institutions. I argue that representative reforms must take into account multiple forms of political collectivity and provide political space for citizens to deliberate about the effects of social structures on their lives and identities. Democratic theorists cannot treat group identity as fixed, but neither can we dismiss \"identity politics.\" Guinier's (1994) model enables a multiple and variegated citizen identity, encourages coalitions between groups, and has the potential to engender citizen action beyond the electoral moment.","creator":["Susan Bickford"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2991786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00925853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38310017"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23013"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2991786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Midwest Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconfiguring Pluralism: Identity and Institutions in the Inegalitarian Polity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2991786","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10849,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[68994,69150]],"Locations in B":[[31104,31260]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10599770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646832089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d7f145b-ecf8-31d5-84b5-65c456c759b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomjengsup"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal. English Supplement","issueNumber":"11","language":["eng","jpn"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772104","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Schechner"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3236fe79-1227-3f4a-a34f-1184fbdc2136"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23012712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"913","pageStart":"895","pagination":"pp. 895-913","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Conservative Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012712","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Maiwald"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"401facf8-ecde-3fbc-bf5e-58fe3d16a12d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"857","pageStart":"825","pagination":"pp. 825-857","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"RACE, CAPITALISM, AND THE THIRD-SEX IDEAL: CLAUDE MCKAY'S \"HOME TO HARLEM\" AND THE LEGACY OF EDWARD CARPENTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286252","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":13010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Gery"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3189711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Subversive Parody in the Early Poems of Gwendolyn Brooks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189711","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6572,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[443290,443757],[443531,443762],[445613,445848],[458791,459825],[459571,459964]],"Locations in B":[[8457,9067],[8841,9072],[9196,9446],[9815,11402],[11147,11557]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Case studies are often presented as self-evident. However, of what the material is a case is actually less evident. It is argued in this article that the analytical movements of generalization, specification, abstraction, and concretization can make us more conscious of what our work might be a case, and that the same data have the potential to make different cases depending on these analytical movements. An analytical matrix is developed, and the four movements and various pitfalls are discussed.","creator":["Christian Lund"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44148783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187259"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72bd6ce0-eb22-39d0-8cea-00a585644ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44148783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humaorga"}],"isPartOf":"Human Organization","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Society for Applied Anthropology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of What is This a Case?: Analytical Movements in Qualitative Social Science Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44148783","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Edward H. Friedman"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47e98d0e-c256-3b8e-a109-0ae523f63112"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27923328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Clothes Unmake the Woman: The Idiosyncrasies of Cross-dressing in Ana Caro's \"Valor, agravio y mujer\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923328","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["T. M. Lemos"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27638359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2322887a-b1fe-3e0e-8566-e95083e02850"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27638359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Shame and Mutilation of Enemies in the Hebrew Bible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27638359","volumeNumber":"125","wordCount":9335,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[494609,494682],[515047,515125]],"Locations in B":[[12374,12447],[12477,12555]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Tehranian"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c72cb24-47c7-38c5-94ae-4855d1d61637"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"848","pageStart":"817","pagination":"pp. 817-848","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Performing Whiteness: Naturalization Litigation and the Construction of Racial Identity in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797505","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":15231,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157],[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[35344,35439],[35445,35590]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Fraiman"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63bba911-4e66-3169-9e62-71bf86d31f7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shelter Writing: Desperate Housekeeping from \"Crusoe\" to \"Queer Eye\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057948","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Partiendo de un estudio etnogr\u00e1fico y ling\u00fc\u00edstico sobre la mortalidad materna en Bolivia, este trabajo etno-obst\u00e9trico trata de la concepci\u00f3n, la gestaci\u00f3n y el parto en una comunidad quechua hablante de Potos\u00ed. Analiza el paralelismo planteado entre la formaci\u00f3n temprana de la persona y los or\u00edgenes mito-hist\u00f3ricos de la sociedad. La sustancia pagana prehisp\u00e1nica fluye constantemente hacia una sociedad de conversos, dando realidad al concepto jur\u00eddico de \"indio originario\". Se propone superar la oposici\u00f3n entre las interpretaciones \"esencialistas\" e \"hibridistas\" de la sociedad ind\u00edgena, al mostrar que el \"originario\" necesariamente se construye por los comuneros como \"esencial\", pero sin por eso negar su constante transformaci\u00f3n hist\u00f3rica. Los ritos de separaci\u00f3n del \"feto agresivo\" de la madre tambi\u00e9n plantean preguntas a los psicoanalistas sobre la influencia que pueden tener las experiencias perinatales sobre la formaci\u00f3n individual en diferentes contextos hist\u00f3ricos y culturales. On the basis of an ethnographic and linguistic study of maternal mortality in Bolivia, this ethno\u2014obstetric research deals with conception, gestation and childbirth in a Quechua\u2014speaking community near Potos\u00ed. It analyzes the parallelism established between the early formation of the person and the mytho\u2014historical origins of society. Prehispanic pagan substance flows constantly into a society of \"converts\" (conversos), thereby giving reality to the juridical concept of the \"originary indian\" (indio originario). The article aims to transcend the opposition between \"essentialist\" and \"hybridist\" interpretations of indian society by showing that the originario is necessarily constructed by indian commoners as \"essential\" without therefore denying his\/her constant historical transformation. The rites of separation of the \"aggressive foetus\" from the mother also pose questions to psychoanalysts concerning the influence that perinatal experiences can have on the formation of the individual person in different historical and cultural contexts.","creator":["Tristan Platt"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25671176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07160925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ab021c8-1f9b-3f80-93f2-b646a1685f86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25671176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estuatac"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Atacame\u00f1os","issueNumber":"22","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Arqueol\u00f3gicas y Museo, Universidad Cat\u00f3lica del Norte","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El feto agresivo. Parto, formaci\u00f3n de la persona y mito-historia en los Andes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25671176","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":22721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The art of Tai Chi can be examined as both a spiritual practice as well as a form of meditative exercise; in doing Tai Chi, the corporeal practice is transformative. This paper expands on recent research on the geography of religion and examines individual, bodily experiences of sacred space through a qualitative, empirical investigation of the Tallahassee branch of the Taoist Tai Chi society. Interviews conducted with members reflect both an awareness that the body is transformed through the practice of Tai Chi as well as an understanding of the body as something separate from oneself, and thus something that is capable of being transformed. The practice of Tai Chi presents evidence of the importance of examining the body\u2019s physical engagement with the spiritual as well as reflects the notion of Eliade\u2019s hierophanic conception of sacred space. The performance of Tai Chi triggers a hierophanic, transformative event with the body at the center of the spiritual experience.","creator":["CAITLIN C. FINLAYSON"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26233745","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038366X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fea3b4ae-a145-32a0-9ccf-eadf709bc609"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26233745"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Southeastern Geographer","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Performativity and the Art of Tai Chi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26233745","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":7210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Understanding the Body as Transformative"} +{"abstract":"This article explores the formation of British imperial identity through a focus on the career of Sir James Mackintosh (1765-1832), a well-known Whig intellectual and imperial careerist who originally hailed from the Highlands of Scotland. Using Mackintosh's unpublished letters and autobiography, the article shows how he imagined and narrated his relationship to the Scottish Highlands from the vantage points of Bombay and London. In contrast to recent historiography that has focused on the translation of Scottish society, culture, and identity in British imperial spaces, this article argues that disidentification from the Highlands of Scotland and the erasure of different peoples, cultures, and textures of life was integral to Mackintosh's configuration of a British imperial identity.","creator":["Onni Gust"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41999354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d601e1b9-e63e-3ade-a2af-b3db898eedf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41999354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remembering and Forgetting the Scottish Highlands: Sir James Mackintosh and the Forging of a British Imperial Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41999354","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":13024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Colleen Ballerino Cohen","Karen Robertson"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29d16f6c-2d02-3ae6-a345-b6012097b3b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Historical Presences, Present Silences: A Critical Analysis of \"Fragments for a History of the Human Body\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704375","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":5505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tractate Yebamot 61b-66a contains a series of discussions relating to the commandment to 'be fruitful and multiply'. The article addresses these discussions, drawing a distinction between two types of discourse: normative and narrative. Normative discourse refers to general, theoretical discussion, detached from the context of any particular person, time, or place. Narrative discourse is characterized mainly by sketches of human incidents involving individuals in certain circumstances, in a specific context. This distinction neither conforms nor clashes with the familiar distinction between 'halakha' and 'aggada'; instead, it offers a different perspective for study and exegesis of Talmudic discussions. Normative and narrative discourse are interwoven in the Talmudic text in a complex and fascinating relationship. The aim of the article is two-fold: (1) it proposes a methodology with unique emphasis for study of Talmudic discussions, illustrated by means of a test case; (2) both the methodological proposal and the selected discussions and proposed analysis of parts of them rest on gender sensitivities. In this sense, the article proposes a gender reading of the Talmudic text. The article demonstrates how the distinction between normative and narrative discourse can enhance our understanding of the text. Our discussion starts with a review of a tosefta as a first example. Thereafter it proposes a theoretical survey regarding the need for the distinction between normative and narrative discourse, and the significance and ramifications of this distinction. The rest of the paper offers an analysis of normative or narrative sequences in the text and their meanings.","creator":["\u05e6\u05d9\u05e4\u05d9 \u05e7\u05d5\u05d9\u05e4\u05de\u05df","\u05d0\u05d9\u05ea\u05de\u05e8 \u05d1\u05e8\u05e0\u05e8","Tsippi Kauffman","Itamar Brenner"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26328419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03337081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563138252"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98984d2a-61e5-3add-84f5-203b9185efef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26328419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudjewithou"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Thought \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e9\u05d1\u05ea \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Narrative and Normative Discourse in the Sugiyot of Procreation \/ \u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05e0\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9 \u05d5\u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05e0\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e1\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26328419","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d4","wordCount":17036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patria Rom\u00e1n-vel\u00e1zquez"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b705123f-3a42-3586-9989-e5fb122511a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Embodiment of Salsa: Musicians, Instruments and the Performance of a Latin Style and Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853571","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"What Feminism?\" is an extended reflection upon several generations of readers of Simone de Beauvoir, including those readers the author herself has been, from the early 1960s to the present. Of particular interest are the serious readers of Beauvoir since her death in 1986, as opposed to the many detractors who have worked hard to tarnish Beauvoir's productive influence. Among the many groups of such serious readers there are, for example, the social theorist feminists such as Susan Buck Morss; the postcolonial\/transnational feminist philosophers such as Chandra Mohanty; the poststructuralist-inspired feminist writers such as Teresa Brennan; and the queer\/trans readers such as Judith Butler. What we learn from them is that, going forward, the important thing is to keep excavating the deep structures of Beauvoir's thought so as to forge new pathways for new generations to address the obviously gendered and more than sobering global crises of the twenty-first century.","creator":["Alice A. Jardine"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3ad9f73-8289-3875-8c01-2c594e157c9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What Feminism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843656","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on gender mainstreaming policies and advocacy on gender equality in the post-tsunami context in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam. Through the analysis, this article illustrates how gender mainstreaming policy documents and gender advocacy of the provincial and central government, when drawing from sex\/gender division and binary of genders, reproduce heteronormative boundaries. By focusing on details, I argue that the image of the heteronormative nuclear family participates in normalising other identity categories; such as urban and middle-class. I also provide examples of how simultaneous to the production of dominant norms, gender advocacy challenges heteronormativity and norms governing heterosexuality and actively question the dominant gender norms. Drawing from postcolonial feminist and recent queer critiques, I argue that advocacy that solely focuses on gender and\/or sexuality reduces human bodies and their desires to simplistic stick figures. Thus, it remains blind to other forms of violence, such as global economic and political frameworks that define 'building back better' primarily as recovery and rehabilitation of economy, assets and labour force.","creator":["MARJAANA JAUHOLA"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"484697d8-4571-3628-bdbf-944899f3bf07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40588103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Building back better? \u2014 negotiating normative boundaries of gender mainstreaming and post-tsunami reconstruction in Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam, Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588103","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janine Bowechop","Patricia Pierce Erikson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4138811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629413"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212072"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4138811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Forging Indigenous Methodologies on Cape Flattery: The Makah Museum as a Center of Collaborative Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4138811","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sueann Caulfield"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"943c3503-a9a6-3edc-a587-525ee7524596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Getting into Trouble: Dishonest Women, Modern Girls, and Women-Men in the Conceptual Language of \"Vida Policial\", 1925-1927","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174748","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":14693,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[44247,44442],[328240,328529],[328561,328634]],"Locations in B":[[5469,5664],[86203,86471],[86478,86551]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Departing from tendencies to bound precarity in particular time periods and world regions, this article develops an expansive view of precarity over time and across space.Beyond effects of specific global events and macroscale structures, precarity inhabits the microspaces of everyday life. However, people attempt to disengage the stress of precarious life by constructing the illusion of certainty. Reflexive denial of precarious life entails essentialist strategies that implicitly or explicitly classify and homogenize people and phenomena, legitimize the constructed boundaries, and in the process aim at eliminating difference and possibilities for negotiation; the tension between these goals and material realities helps explain misrepresentations that can be catastrophic at multiple scales, re-creating precarity. Reactions to 9\/11 by the Bush administration represent a case in point of reflexive denial of precarity through strategies that created illusions of certainty with deleterious results. Normatively, the paradox of precarious life and reflexive denials prompts questions as to how urges for certainty in the context of precarity might be constructively channeled, the author approaches this challenge in the final section by drawing from a nexus of concerns about post-Habermasian radical democracy, individual thought and feeling, and network dynamics. Whereas Hardt and Negri reverse the direction of the Foucauldian concept of biopower from top-down to bottom-up, the author draws from Foucault's concept of governmentality in relation to resistance to imagine a cooperative politics operating within as well as across scales","creator":["Nancy Ettlinger"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fb1e5d4-c162-3f93-a13a-51a1fdcf35c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Precarity Unbound","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645223","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the second Palestinian intifada (uprising), which began in September 2000, martyr funerals and posters were the most predominant form of memorialization. These practices did not constitute simple expressions of nationalist sentiment; they created a public sphere in which participants and observers were hailed as national subjects, while simultaneously generating a forum in which public political debate occurred. This article explores the tensions among different visions of the Palestinian national project that appeared through these commemorative practices as the normative effects of martyr memorialization dissolved into criticism, cynicism and apathy.","creator":["Lori A. Allen"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2006.18.2.107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1157558f-ad9f-3cc8-b404-d41294d3be70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/his.2006.18.2.107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Polyvalent Politics of Martyr Commemorations in the Palestinian Intifada<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2006.18.2.107","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Richard Wagner's Siegfried constitutes something of an anomaly within the Ring cycle: the epic narrative of the Nibelungs and Valsungs grinds to a virtual halt, while two characters, Mime and Siegfried, reenact the fairy tale of the \u201cyouth who went forth to learn what fear is.\u201d The fairy tale's mythic framework nevertheless reasserts itself within the fairytale enclosure in the guise of sexuality, in particular sexual difference: As Siegfried begins asking troubling questions about his paternity, Mime is thrust into the role of unitary origin, culminating in his desperate claim that he is Siegfried's \u201cfather and mother.\u201d This article explores how exactly Wagner stages the tug of war between Siegfried and Mime over sexual difference, in particular in act I of Siegfried, allying different ways of conceiving descent, knowledge, and love with either the epic or the anti-epic (which Wagner associates with the fairy tale). This turns the generic struggle at the heart of Siegfried into a struggle between two kinds of families laying claim to Siegfried's paternity: the Gods of Valhalla who reproduce sexually, and the Nibelungs who are capable only of asexual reproduction of the self-same. This article argues that Wagner draws on his own speculations on sexuality, race, and history, in particular his idiosyncratic reading of Schopenhauer, to overlay this opposition not only with moral significations, but racial ones as well.","creator":["Adrian Daub"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.2.160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db84a22a-7441-3b02-b1a1-9056992fa029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.2.160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mother Mime: Siegfried<\/em>, the Fairy Tale, and the Metaphysics of Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2008.32.2.160","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":13353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SHELDON BRIVIC"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4c9ef0a-145f-3806-bb8c-814ccf965571"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Toni Morrison's Funk at \"Finnegans Wake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285193","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6411,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[422928,423290]],"Locations in B":[[26100,26463]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Claims that emotional well-being is synonymous with successful educational practices and outcomes resonate with contemporary political portrayal of well-being as integral to 'social justice'. In Britain, diverse concerns are creating an ad hoc array of therapeutic interventions to develop and assess attributes, dispositions and attitudes associated with emotional well-being, alongside growing calls to harness subject content and teaching activities as vehicles for a widening array of affective outcomes. There has been little public or academic debate about the educational implications of these developments for the aspirations of liberal humanist education. This article addresses this gap. Drawing on philosophical, political and sociological studies, it explores how preoccupation with emotional well-being attacks the 'subject' in two inter-related senses; the human subject and subject knowledge. It argues that it is essential to challenge claims and assumptions about well-being and the government-sponsored academic, professional and commercial industry which promotes them.","creator":["Kathryn Ecclestone","Dennis Hayes"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03054985"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979800"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"201df33f-2f78-3932-b499-a919b0bf5423"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27784567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxforevieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Review of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing the subject: the educational implications of developing emotional well-being","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784567","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. Hillis Miller"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cad707cb-dc8a-3cdb-ae77-b4d7b8529958"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE OTHER'S OTHER: JEALOUSY AND ART IN PROUST","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686038","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah M. Pike"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45217808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018593"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26366185-b5ad-3e7a-8dc7-15de78522149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45217808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Response to Tracing Associations in Pilgrimage and Festival: Applications of Bruno Latour's Actor-Network Theory to Ritual Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45217808","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen E. Soud"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Borges the Golem-Maker: Intimations of \"Presence\" in \"The Circular Ruins\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251202","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":6642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ricardo Krauel"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08348d63-fa6a-3355-a644-4d130bc877c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Misticismo, androginia y homoerotismo en la narrativa de la Restauraci\u00f3n: \"La familia de Le\u00f3n Roch\" y \"Marta y Mar\u00eda\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203580","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10596,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523990]],"Locations in B":[[60249,60368]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly Lamm"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d5dbb8c-47ae-3a20-8625-a169feae9dc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"835","pageStart":"813","pagination":"pp. 813-835","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visuality and Black Masculinity in Ralph Ellison's \"Invisible Man\" and Romare Bearden's Photomontages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300728","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,74619]],"Locations in B":[[60161,60344]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines gender symbolism in competing representations of nationalism in Meiji Japan. Through an analysis of contesting images of masculinity, it reveals how questions of national identity were articulated in the idiom of gender. In response to the perceived threat of the feminization of culture represented by the intensification of consumption, fashion, and artifice, a vigorous masculinity asserted itself that rejected Western materialism and instead extolled notions of primitivism, national spirit, and imperialism. These two opposing representations of masculinity, a \"masculinized\" and \"feminized\" masculinity, each constituted differing responses to the problem of modernity.","creator":["Jason G. Karlin"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00956848"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2acd245d-9f4d-3649-9a88-3228559de91a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4126775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjapanesestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Japanese Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Society for Japanese Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gender of Nationalism: Competing Masculinities in Meiji Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126775","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":15061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores whether young men and women, the main target market for mainstream nightclubs and bars, have similar or different preference priorities in respect of a first and subsequent visit to these venues. It suggests that an understanding of the gendered nature of place and the differing preferences of men and women can assist businesses in shaping their products and services around the needs of their customers. It suggests that this can be done through a study of preferences and expectations for price and non-price mechanisms of differentiation. In Phase 1 of the research, purposive sampling examined men and women's attitudes to the servicescape and offerings by mainstream nightclubs and bars. In Phase 2 of the research, the emerging themes were tested using quantitative data gathered by means of a questionnaire. The results highlight differences as well as similarities, in terms of the importance to men and women of various elements of the servicescape and service offering. In a saturated and competitive marketplace, these findings can assist mainstream venues within the late-night economy improve their competitive position. They can do this by isolating the elements that are gendered, thereby providing the venues with the opportunity to deliver service offerings that match these preferences and expectations.","creator":["Gloria A. Moss","Scott Parfitt","Heather Skinner"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23745331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14673584"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51089251"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d7dc62f-7fb7-3bc6-ac4f-5d178e0b5130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23745331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tourhosprese"}],"isPartOf":"Tourism and Hospitality Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Men and women: Do they value the same things in mainstream nightclubs and bars?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23745331","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review presents an overview of research on identity politics. First, I distinguish between various approaches to defining identity politics and the challenges presented by each approach. In the process, I show that these approaches reflect competing theoretical understandings of the relationship between experience, culture, identity, politics, and power. These debates raise theoretical issues that I address in the second section, including (a) how to understand the relationship between personal experience and political stance, (b) why status identities are understood and\/or portrayed as essentialist or socially constructed, (c) the strategic dilemmas activists face when the identities around which a movement is organized are also the basis for oppression, (d) when to attribute certain movement outcomes to status identities, and (e) how to link collective action to specific notions of power to help explain the cultural and political goals at which identity politics is aimed. I conclude by recommending some promising avenues for future research.","creator":["Mary Bernstein"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29737711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35f83fcb-bd17-3704-b9f4-86a512ec1280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29737711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29737711","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":13866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Women's language\" is a critical cultural category and an unavoidable part of practical social knowledge in contemporary Japan. In this article, I examine the genealogy of Japanese women's language by locating its emergence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when state formation, capitalist accumulation, industrialization, and radical class reconfiguration were taking off. I show how particular speech forms were carved out as women's language in a network of diverse modernization practices. I theorize the historical relationship between Japan's linguistic modernity-language standardization, the rise of the novel, and print capitalism-and the emergence of Japanese women's language.","creator":["Miyako Inoue"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ce2e08f-e577-3874-afb4-1208a1e2a059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3095173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Gender, Language, and Modernity: Toward an Effective History of Japanese Women's Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095173","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":17356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the ways in which Dariush Mehrjui's Gav uses cinematic free indirect discourse to complicate our understanding of how the human comes to be recognized within a social field. In so doing, the film not only exposes a perceptual differential or lacuna in how the human is perceived but also posits itself as a medium with the power to help bridge this gap of intelligibility between a community and those individuals whose desire for recognition goes unrecognized by their community.","creator":["Richard Gabri"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"148eb12e-e44e-3530-88de-0ba192c7c2d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recognizing the Unrecognizable in Dariush Mehrjui's \"Gav\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653091","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":13259,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[19393,19493]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c7e9c1e-9be0-3c73-aa33-9f6e23e4bcec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982113","volumeNumber":"432","wordCount":9057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Russett"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"203e7b8c-a03d-35ed-bef7-7de7b40550c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"Caraboo\" Hoax: Romantic Woman as Mirror and Mirage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389367","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8084,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497314,497396]],"Locations in B":[[49192,49273]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sherril Dodds"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aed28cb9-cad0-3498-af6c-e23727746ad8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Embodied Transformations in Neo-Burlesque Striptease","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966084","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses the linguistic and multimodal interactions of a group of seven cancer patients and two carers, who had previously met on a residential course and subsequently set up an online support group. I explore how this group of participants constructs relationships of support and solidarity online over 7 months using a range of multimodal resources including web links, video clips, avatars and songs. This is a semi-ethnographic case study that arose from my own experiences as a participant in the support group. I gathered the data directly from the WhatsApp facility on a \u2018smartphone\u2019 and then analysed the interactions and their use of diverse resources by means of Interactional Sociolinguistics analysis. The article finds that participants construct support and solidarity in highly inventive ways: by using diverse modes and types of expression, by means of humour, building a \u2018special\u2019 sense of in-group togetherness, and biographical work, that is, recasting \u2018who they are\u2019 in light of their illness.","creator":["Judith Baxter"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26499897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1432c0a6-8439-3c08-83e4-dcf700fc4135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26499897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\u2018Keep strong, remember everything you have learnt\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26499897","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Constructing support and solidarity through online interaction within a UK cancer support group"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec6f0c37-6022-3cf4-89ab-386c0315ac61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Critical Distance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151935","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rom\u00e1n de la Campa"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20539805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03630471"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297290668"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a46dc7ca-9f8c-3fd5-8462-9367d2b34c8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20539805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispamerica"}],"isPartOf":"Hispam\u00e9rica","issueNumber":"69","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Saul Sosnowski","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hibridez posmoderna y transculturaci\u00f3n: Pol\u00edticas de montaje en torno a Latinoam\u00e9rica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20539805","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Forensic mental health inpatients in medium-secure settings have a limited capacity for sexual expression during their stay in hospital. This is due to a number of factors, including a lack of willingness on behalf of staff to engage with sexual issues, as a result of safety fears and ambiguity regarding the ability of the patient to consent Furthermore, UK forensic medium-secure units do not provide conjugal suites for patients to have sexual relations, with their spouse or other patients. To date, there is no empirical research on how forensic psychiatric patients (or service users) manage their sexuality, while in hospital and when released into the community. Here, we present an analysis of semi-structured interviews with patients at a UK medium forensic unit, in order to explore these issues further. More specifically, we examine how the public exclusion of sexuality from these units results in sexuality being experienced as sectioned off or amputated, such that a new form of sexuality emerges, one that has been cultivated by the psychologically informed practices operating within the unit. This process, we argue, produces a psychologically modified experience, a new form of self-relation that continues to modify when released into the broader ecology of the community.","creator":["Steven D Brown","Paula Reavey","Ava Kanyeredzi","Richard Batty"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64504d36-e2e7-3b45-be8c-2c0d1a50d04e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26650238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transformations of self and sexuality: Psychologically modified experiences in the context of forensic mental health","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650238","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b14519f2-0e3b-34fe-a818-422e61cbf1d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"978","pageStart":"976","pagination":"pp. 976-978","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174701","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brian Hyer"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3128802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"516d96dc-9903-37c7-a4ce-b592e8a7a5c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3128802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3128802","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":5369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women's movements are increasingly divided along lines of race, sexuality, ethnicity, and class. When such division obstructs cooperation, women lose their most effective advocates in the public sphere. How can movements overcome these divisions and improve their influence on policy and society? In some contexts, it seems that activists are able to overcome such divisions without denying politically salient conflicts. The transnational movement against gender violence, for example, mobilizes people not only across differences of race, class and sexuality but also across differences of language, national context, level of development, and the like. How do they do this? I argue that the movement against gender violence has achieved cooperation through the development of norms of inclusivity. Such norms include a commitment to descriptive representation, the facilitation of separate organization for disadvantaged social groups, and a commitment to building consensus with institutionalized dissent. Developing such norms is not the only possible path to cooperation, but it is an important and overlooked one. It illuminates a way of maintaining solidarity and improving policy influence without denying or sublimating the differences and conflicts among activists. Existing scholarship on social movements that attributes successful cooperation to shared interests, identities, or opportunities, is incomplete because it does not take account of relations of domination among activists who cooperate. Attending to the context of structural inequality in which social movements operate improves our understanding of social mobilization and illuminates overlooked paths to cooperation.","creator":["S. Laurel Weldon"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3688626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef3708aa-8eb1-3aa2-83e8-938b33ffabc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3688626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Inclusion, Solidarity, and Social Movements: The Global Movement against Gender Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3688626","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":15458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500711,500774]],"Locations in B":[[91985,92048]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Freeman"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0696ac23-7439-3b27-bcde-2b5e05794c28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"744","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-744","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Packing History, Count(er)ing Generations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057633","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Mills"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1500085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0043373X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50529929"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"137317ac-91be-30c8-83b0-f7c168e6df18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1500085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westernfolklore"}],"isPartOf":"Western Folklore","issueNumber":"2\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Western States Folklore Society","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Theory and the Study of Folklore: A Twenty-Year Trajectory toward Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1500085","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":7617,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500711,500774]],"Locations in B":[[44076,44139]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Uzzie T. Cannon"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567693616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cc6a506-8bcd-38e5-93a8-f42aa93abbbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Tears, Fears, and Queers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574796","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":6612,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[64071,64293],[72662,72773]],"Locations in B":[[7556,7771],[22960,23071]],"subTitle":"Transgendering Black Masculinity in Daniel Black's Perfect Peace<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda In\u00e9s Lagos"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Confessing to the Father: Marks of Gender and Class in Ursula Su\u00e1rez's \"Relaci\u00f3n\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251109","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":14300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"My essay incorporates Irigaray's notion of the sensible transcendental, a dynamic attempt to reconstitute the body\/mind dualism which founds Western thought, into a reading of the practice of European concert dance. I contend that Irigaray's efforts toward articulating a language of the body as active agent have much to offer (feminist) analyses of dance practice, and develop this claim through a reading which reflects philosophically on the changing nature of my own dance activity.","creator":["Eluned Summers-Bremner"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80440124-487d-3119-9fcd-377e715ecbf0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Reading Irigaray, Dancing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810513","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":17885,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477848,477951],[495817,495899]],"Locations in B":[[103603,103706],[105146,105228]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The practice of Islamic veiling has over the last ten years emerged into a popular site of investigation. Different researchers have focused on the various significations of this bodily practice, both in its gendered dimensions, its identity components, its empowering potentials, as a satorial practice or as part of a broader economy of bodily practices which shape pious dispositions in accordance with the Islamic tradition. Lesser, however, has this been the case for the practice of not veiling or unveiling. If and when attention is accorded to the latter, it is often grasped as a product of integration or an effect secular governmentality, but only rarely as a bodily practice. Drawing on narratives of second generation secular and religious Maghrebi Muslims in Belgium, this paper pursues this second perspective by examining to which extent not-veiling can be understood as a technique of the self (Foucault) that is functional to shaping a liberal (Musilm) subject. While a first part of this article will unpack the ethical substance of such discursive interrogations and point to the ways in which they are intertwined with the enactment of a liberal self, the second part will examine the embodied contours of this problematization, which appeared through the labour upon one's affect and bodily dispositions that this refusal of the hijab, or the act of unveiling, implies.","creator":["Nadia Fadil"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"609b24c2-4ff0-3c99-934e-3e2701e1ec29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41288862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"98","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"not-\/unveiling as an ethical practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288862","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14490,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[414762,414868]],"Locations in B":[[45522,45630]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hanna J\u00e4rvinen"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e972010-bc22-3cf3-aebe-9a683fc6956f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664455","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":1458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Garfinkel"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20355387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08879885"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71305819"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20355387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persvernarch"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Vernacular Architecture Forum","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Recovering Performance for Vernacular Architecture Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20355387","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer L. Eagan"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df65da65-3bd9-3d5c-b79d-749e624a4bb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"407","pagination":"pp. 407-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Denaturing Fixed Identities: A Project for Feminist Public Administration Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610738","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fran\u00e7ois Furstenberg"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3092544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75a4f13f-2db7-3089-8500-7d7d5eb892a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3092544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"1330","pageStart":"1295","pagination":"pp. 1295-1330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Freedom and Slavery: Autonomy, Virtue, and Resistance in Early American Political Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3092544","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":19912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Manu Goswami","Gabrielle Hecht","Adeeb Khalid","Anna Krylova","Elizabeth F. Thompson","Jonathan R. Zatlin","Andrew Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c846ed24-bf28-3756-afd2-77544ce95cd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26576348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"1607","pageStart":"1567","pagination":"pp. 1567-1607","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AHR Conversation<\/em> History after the End of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576348","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":24543,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55358,55431]],"Locations in B":[[153071,153137]],"subTitle":"Reconceptualizing the Twentieth Century"} +{"abstract":"Birth, in many societies, is considered to be a private affair. Although health and medical professionals usually assist, the only other people who share the birth process with mothers are their nearest and dearest. With the rise of information communication technologies, however, birth is no longer an exclusively private event. Some women are now sharing their birthing experiences with millions of viewers who are part of the online video 'community' youTube Broadcast yourself. Searching the word 'birth' on youTube results in close to one million 'hits'. This article is based on a small-scale, qualitative research project, which involved viewing and making notes on several hundred online videos of birth on youTube and the accompanying posts and commentaries about the videos. These data were analysed through a feminist, poststructuralist and geographical lens. Throughout the article the term 'cyber\/space' is used to highlight the mutually constituted nature of 'real' and virtual spaces. The article concludes that although youTube has the potential to open up new windows on birth, this potential is not yet being realized. youTube does not overcome or render insignificant material expressions of power, instead it typically privileges US experiences of birth, reiterates discourses of 'good' mothering and censors particular (mainly vaginal) representations of birth.","creator":["Robyn Longhurst"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5256dd0-cfeb-331d-8a05-11c5eec27271"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"93","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"YouTube: A new space for birth?<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664053","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Mixtec transnational community of San Miguel Cuevas stretches from Oaxaca to California and touches on various other Mexican and U.S. states. As a result, community members, particularly the transnational second generation, have become both accidental and purposeful practitioners of transnational and transcultural life. The community's young people in San Miguel Cuevas, Oaxaca, and in Fresno, California, employ diverse strategies to operate in this reality, among them gang involvement and education, explored in this paper. Increasing numbers of them now have a border-crossing consciousness born of their experiences as indigenous migrants, access to higher education, and interaction with others, especially through the Internet. This allows them greater success in a range of situations and may lead to the development of a shared transnational and transcultural standpoint. La comunidad transnacional mixteca de San Miguel Cuevas se extiende desde Oaxaca hasta California y toca en varios otros estados de M\u00e9xico y Estados Unidos. Como resultado, miembros de la comunidad, particularmente la segunda generaci\u00f3n transnacional, se han convertido en practicantes tanto accidentales como intencionales de la vida transnacional y transcultural. Los j\u00f3venes de la comunidad en San Miguel Cuevas, Oaxaca y en Fresno, California, emplean diversas estrategias para operar en esta realidad, entre ellas la participaci\u00f3n en pandillas y la educaci\u00f3n, exploradas en este art\u00edculo. Un n\u00famero creciente de ellos ahora tiene una conciencia del cruce de fronteras que nace de sus experiencias como migrantes ind\u00edgenas, el acceso a la educaci\u00f3n superior y la interacci\u00f3n con otros, especialmente a trav\u00e9s del Internet. Esto les permite un mayor \u00e9xito en una variedad de situaciones y puede conducir al desarrollo de un punto de vista compartido transcultural y transnacional.","creator":["Georgia Melville"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d01a7e16-c457-3ac7-b4b5-992ad72cee52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24573922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Identity Strategies and Consciousness Shifts of Sanmiguelense Mixtec Youth in Transnational and Transcultural Spaces","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573922","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8490,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478800,478845]],"Locations in B":[[48348,48393]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"L'oeuvre provocante de Marcel Duchamp intitul\u00e9e, Etant donn\u00e9s: 1. La chute d'eau, 2. Le gaz d'\u00e9clairage, 1946-1966, construite en secret pendant les vingt derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es de sa vie, est l'objet de cet article. Cette oeuvre, selon l'auteure, a \u00e9t\u00e9 con\u00e7ue pour \u00eatre vue in situ, non seulement pour produire un effet de choc mais aussi pour embrouiller le spectateur. Transform\u00e9(e) en voyeur, le spectateur se sent g\u00ean\u00e9(e) devant ce corps de femme exhibitionniste expos\u00e9 dans un mus\u00e9e. L'auteure d\u00e9crit cette exp\u00e9rience de g\u00eane comme un \u00abtr\u00e9buchet\u00bb (aussi le titre d'une autre oeuvre) de l'artiste. Elle raconte comment, une fois lib\u00e9r\u00e9 de ce pi\u00e8ge, on peut voir cette oeuvre comme un jeu de miroir un jeu sp\u00e9culaire jou\u00e9 entre deux partenaires, Marcel Duchamp (en guise d'homme rationnel) et son alter ego, Rrose S\u00e9lavy (en guise de corps de femme subversif). Elle explique comment ce jeu sp\u00e9culaire est bas\u00e9 sur les principes cartesiens, et se joue surtout entre \u00abcorps\u00bb et \u00abesprit\u00bb. L'auteure finit par d\u00e9montrer que cette oeuvre (ou jeu) n'est qu'une repr\u00e9sentation de Marcel Duchamp, en tant qu'homme, qui regarde sa r\u00e9flection invers\u00e9e (de femme) dans un miroir. Il s'agit donc de la repr\u00e9sentation d'un androgyne, Rrose\/Duchamp. Une discussion des probl\u00e8mes de l'androgynit\u00e9 am\u00e8ne l'auteure \u00e0 r\u00e9aliser que ce jeu de miroir r\u00e9v\u00e8le un aveuglement de la part de l'artiste; un aveuglement qui, par contre, apporte des \u00e9laircissements importants sur la question de l'identit\u00e9, et surtout sur le probl\u00e8me de l'articulation de la diff\u00e9rence entre le moi et l'autre.","creator":["Ernestine Daubner"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d1bc7a6-a82a-3a79-a377-aa89cc8f56df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Etant donn\u00e9s: Rrose\/Duchamp in a Mirror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630538","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7362,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[90274,90343],[495025,495099]],"Locations in B":[[10273,10342],[39954,40028]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much recent scholarship on performance has treated it as a disappearing act or \"missed event,\" overlooking how performance overflows any one historical context and mobilizes across time. In contrast, taking the performance of Ophelia as an example, this essay describes performance as a nonlinear and recursive dispensation of time that draws on a shared repertoire of actions and styles, which it calls \"intertheatricality.\" Rather than presenting a straightforward performance history of Ophelia, the essay uses Ophelia to advance a view of performance as itself a kind of history of theatre. Actors playing Ophelia do not build on or inherit earlier performances so much as gather and recycle them, setting out familiar elements for future enaction. Each performance gesture makes a history as much as it is made from one, and each contributes to a future repertoire.","creator":["Gina Bloom","Anston Bosman","William N. West"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40c5291e-ece7-3354-9772-4dc2b0ae0cec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ophelia's Intertheatricality, or, How Performance Is History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580384","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":10685,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[55742,55848]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Communitarian critiques of liberalism and feminist critiques of traditional political theory have much in common, most notably the rejection of the rational, disembodied subject of the liberal tradition. Despite the similarities of the two critiques, however, feminist and communitarian attempts to embody the subject lead them in significantly different directions. This study argues that one aspect of the feminist critique of the subject, the attempt to articulate the discursive subject, offers the most promising alternative to the communitarian\/liberalism debate that has polarized both political theory and feminist theory.","creator":["Susan Hekman"],"datePublished":"1992-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2132110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223816"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38309773"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b0d1a1-86f0-3627-81dc-dcc5c5fd8566"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2132110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Politics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"1119","pageStart":"1098","pagination":"pp. 1098-1119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Embodiment of the Subject: Feminism and the Communitarian Critique of Liberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2132110","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461387,461476]],"Locations in B":[[56821,56912]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Neville Hoad"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Miss HIV and Us: Beauty Queens Against the HIV\/AIDS Pandemic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949668","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Une analyse de la formation genre que nous avons mise en place \u00e0 l'IUFM (Institut universitaire de formation des ma\u00eetres) de Grenoble est pr\u00e9sent\u00e9e dans cet article. Malgr\u00e9 l'acceptation politiquement proclam\u00e9e de cette th\u00e9matique en \u00e9ducation, nous avons rencontr\u00e9 de nombreux obstacles que nous avons progressivement appris \u00e0 contourner. Le bilan finalement positif de cette exp\u00e9rience de six ans d\u00e9crit les nombreux arrangements n\u00e9cessaires pour contribuer \u00e0 la mise en mouvement des stagiaires et de l'institution vers l'\u00e9galit\u00e9 filles-gar\u00e7ons \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole. In this article, the authors present the gender course they have put into place in the teachers' training University Institute in Grenoble (Institut Universitaire de Formation des Ma\u00eetres). Despite the proclaimed political recognition of the topic in the educational system, the authors have faced several obstacles that they have gradually learned to overcome. Therefore, their assessment describes how a 6 years experience has proved positive, as well as the numerous required arrangements they resorted to, allowing both the teacher-trainees and the institution to move forwards towards girls and boys' equality at school.","creator":["Mireille Baurens","Caroline Schreiber"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f146163a-be98-3a3e-a184-b38bd29752c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25750789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Comment troubler les jeunes enseignant\u00b7e\u00b7s sur la question du genr\u00e8 \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole? Analyse d'une exp\u00e9rience de six ans de formation en IUFM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750789","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Written in the German Language by a native Turkish speaker, Emine Sevgi \u00d6zdamar's Das Leben ist eine Karawanserei is a novel which is located in the hybrid and in-between realms of language, voice and the writing of identity. \u00d6zdamar illustrates how expressions which re-construct subjectivity through the medium of hybrid, unauthorized, and often subjugated voice are entwined with constructions of femaleness and \"femininity.\" The novel examines power relations inherent in questions concerning hegemonic and non-hegemonic voices, particularly women's voices, which are typically repressed or derogated within dominant as well as minority discourses. \u00d6zdamar re-imagines and re-members these subjugated voices in such a way that it is the women who shape the dominant discourse of the novel. Here, \u00d6zdamar is careful to avoid the construction of a \"feminine writing\" as yet another dominating master narrative. Instead, the voices we hear in the novel remain \"nomadic,\" and do not exhibit a nostalgic desire for fixity and authority.","creator":["Sohelia Ghaussy"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1414fcc0-d588-3e1e-bf8a-2a52e7ac5133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/407900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Das Vaterland verlassen: Nomadic Language and \"Feminine Writing\" in Emine Sevgi \u00d6zdamar's Das Leben ist eine Karawanserei","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407900","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":9849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Greene"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62142494-9f28-3158-a274-6608990d8c7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41301681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301681","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":1199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vincent A. Lankewish"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Love among the Ruins: The Catacombs, the Closet, and the Victorian \"Early Christian\" Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058518","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":20967,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[125438,125491]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper critically explores the ways in which power has been conceptualised within Foucauldian feminism. I focus on two facets within this framework: power as productive and power as relational. Although Foucauldian feminism combines both, tensions between them exist, particularly when it comes to understanding resistance. I argue for the need to focus on a productive or generative paradigm of power which perceives power neutrally as neither inherently oppressive nor liberatory, yet with the capacity to be both. In this way, power can be conceived of as ubiquitous and trans-historical without inhibiting the possibilities for social change.","creator":["Davina Cooper"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df455d97-2aca-31c2-87ae-59d5358b6473"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PRODUCTIVE, RELATIONAL AND EVERYWHERE? CONCEPTUALISING POWER AND RESISTANCE WITHIN FOUCAULDIAN FEMINISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857701","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9572,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[511312,511413]],"Locations in B":[[58559,58661]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Cocks"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25144430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15377814"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d5aef38-40b4-3a58-8939-952ed7bcd3dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25144430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgildageprogera"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Society for Historians of the Gilded Age & Progressive Era","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Sexuality in the Progressive Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25144430","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eva Rieger"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41125052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65191639-7384-3e2f-9425-675dcb1e8e48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41125052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musikforschung"}],"isPartOf":"Die Musikforschung","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"B\u00e4renreiter","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eGender Studies\u201d und Musikwissenschaft \u2014 ein Forschungsbericht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41125052","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Post"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5bfe05d-7ac3-3939-b950-c360501f6d6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"1998-99 Brennan Center Symposium Lecture: Prejudicial Appearances: The Logic of American Antidiscrimination Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481271","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":20602,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445281,445593]],"Locations in B":[[4604,4853]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The central argument of this article is twofold. First, contemporary feminist gender theory, particularly as it has been used by feminist sociologists in recent years, has been misinterpreted by sexual difference theory in ways that may prevent scholars from fully appreciating current feminist work in the social sciences. Second, gender theory and sexual difference theory rely on different conceptualizations of fundamental concepts in feminist theory, including notions of \"gender,\" \"sexuality,\" and \"symbolic.\" An analysis of three key texts that critique the turn to \"gender\" in favor of an allegorical notion of \"sexual difference\" suggests that feminist gender theory is a more useful perspective for feminist theory and research. The article concludes that gender theory allows feminist scholars to ask a wider range of empirical questions that are more readily of use for political action than does a sexual difference paradigm.","creator":["Johanna Foster"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aff7dca6-06f4-38a7-93f4-47ddc12326be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"An Invitation to Dialogue: Clarifying the Position of Feminist Gender Theory in Relation to Sexual Difference Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190308","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":13897,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[70425,70517],[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[36606,36698],[85318,85416]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shelley Feldman"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1578e9b7-190b-387a-887b-cfc26019c8eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"1127","pageStart":"1097","pagination":"pp. 1097-1127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exploring Theories of Patriarchy: A Perspective from Contemporary Bangladesh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175358","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":13269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At first glance, present literary theory (poststructuralism) and ecology seem to be going in opposite directions. Roland Barthes, for example, used the words \"to naturalize\" to describe the falsification of historically motivated conventional truth. For Barthes, culture is always a semiological system. Forget nature. Ecology, on the other hand advocates a return to nature. The looming catastrophe that awaits us is due to anthropocentrism. Our relation to nature is bogus; we must get back to a more genuine relationship with nature by paying attention to nature's requirements. Each position opposed in their use of nature seeks emancipation from the bondage of a misperception. However, it does not take long for a postmodern literary theorist to feel comfortable in the \"natural\" abode of the ecologist. Both seek emancipation from an inadequate cultural habitation inherited from the past. Both agree that a naive \"objectivity\" or absolute is not available. But the literary theorist has to solve the problem of proliferating points of view and trivialization of standpoints. Ecology has to solve the essentializing of the new holistic paradigm as promoted by the deep ecologists. Using the lessons learned from feminist literary theory \u2014 a progress from essentialism (C. Spretnak and C. Wolf) to deconstruction (J. Butler) to dialogism (L. Alcoff and T. Lauretis) \u2014 ecology can also embrace dialogism as illustrated by William Cronon, Michael Pollan, and Carolyn Merchant. That ecology could also replace worn out patriarchal religions is a needed and hoped for prospect though still only speculation. F. Capra's The Web of Life (1996) embodies that prospect in an appealing non-idolatrous way.","creator":["Vernon Gras"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24707129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10744827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb811f93-e1e2-32c5-85a7-8a702bb7af9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24707129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humaecolrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Human Ecology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Society for Human Ecology","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Literary Theory and Ecology: Some Common Problems and a Solution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24707129","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cosetta Seno Reed"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4490793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Partire Da S\u00e9 E Non Farsi Trovare.\" Il Porto Di Toledo: Storia Di Un'autobiografia Fantastica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490793","volumeNumber":"122","wordCount":7828,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123890,124038]],"Locations in B":[[26547,26693]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben Hickman"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c61b52a1-ed24-3371-8c0b-dc4a8e589eca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"657","pageStart":"631","pagination":"pp. 631-657","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cAtlantis Buried Outside\u201d: Muriel Rukeyser, Myth, and the Crises of War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0631","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Simpson"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e701e41-51e3-3def-9f03-451530d33cb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nat Turner at the Limits of Travel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354540","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12720,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[77076,77129]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is, perhaps, time to move beyond the postmodernism debate if only because the challenges it poses cannot be solved from within its terms. In fact, there is every good reason to believe that modernity is ending but the facts of this matter will not be discovered by theory alone. It is, thus, time for social theory to return to original purposes-to write the history of the present. Accordingly, social theory must reread its classics, not to return to origins, but to recognize just how difficult it was for even the best of the modernists to face the reality of modernity's divided and multiplied natures. Thus disabused, it might be possible for social theory to study the present for what it is.","creator":["Charles Lemert"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44ee80c3-7c55-3d7e-9650-5ae5e292b0c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Social Theory at the Early End of a Short Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201860","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9004,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430072,430388],[515047,515125]],"Locations in B":[[20818,21134],[51824,51909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, Esther Fuchs analyzes and critiques the resurgence in the past decade of neoliberal feminist recuperations of the Hebrew Bible. This approach is essentialist, ignores the mediation of patriarchal ideology, tends to reauthorize the \"fathers\" of the field, and is generally dismissive of feminist critique. Fuchs traces the roots of this approach to Elizabeth Cady Stanton's \"The Woman's Bible,\" which was largely grounded in the humanist, liberal ideals of European modernism that were closely allied to the rise of capitalism in the nineteenth century. Neoliberalism defines feminism in terms of equality, independence, rationalism, individualism, competitiveness, and power over others--liberal ideals that are often projected on biblical women in an attempt to recuperate and reappropriate them as feminist models. The quest for women's voices, types, and powerful historical personalities often ignores poststructuralist theories of representation, discourse, and ideology. The essay then politicizes and interrogates a broadly accepted reading procedure that can be seen as dominant in contemporary feminist biblical studies.","creator":["Esther Fuchs"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ee83718-febf-3b31-8ded-54fb4794f7d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reclaiming the Hebrew Bible for Women: The Neoliberal Turn in Contemporary Feminist Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487926","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9886,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[99265,99652],[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[18937,19326],[21162,21225]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynda Hart","Peggy Phelan"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95e2973b-c6a9-34e1-9425-893c0621547e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queerer than Thou: Being and Deb Margolin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208487","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Os estudos de performance desenvolvidos por Victor Turner e Richard Schechner n\u00e3o deixam de sinalizar um campo emergente. Ao mesmo tempo, ali se encontram rochas antigas e materials incandescentes. E os ruidos de movimentos s\u00edsmicos. Convido os leitores com ouvidos abertos a urna esp\u00e9cie de viagem, tal como quem busca explorar os substratos sonoros de uma forma\u00e7\u00e3o cultural. Tr\u00eas categorias sinalizam a descida. Em primeiro lugar, o ritual. Depois, o drama. Em terceiro, play \u2013 termo dif\u00edcil de traduzir, mas que evoca \"brincadeira\", \"jogo\" e \"pe\u00e7a teatral\". Nas interfaces da antropologia e do teatro \u2013 ou seja, em lugares onde se \"calcula o lugar sentido das coisas\" \u2014, propomos urna incurs\u00e3o geol\u00f3gica. Enfim, um desafio: a elabora\u00e7\u00e3o de urna sismologia da performance. Performance studies developed by Victor Turner and Richard Schechner may suggest the contours of a still emerging field. At the same time, here may be found ancient rock formations and signs of igneous matter. Here, also, may be detected the noise of seismic movements. I would like to invite readers with open ears to take part in a kind of journey, as we explore the sonorous substrata of a landscape. Three categories signal our descent. In first place, ritual. Then, drama. Thirdly, in deeper regions, play. Between theater and anthropology \u2013 or in fields where one is led to \"calculate places where things are sensed\" \u2013 I would like to propose a geological incursion. Or, even better, a seismology of performance.","creator":["John C. Dawsey"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00347701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b46b192e-09bd-33c1-886d-fc82c15198e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41616690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviantr"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Antropologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"570","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-570","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Revista de Antropologia","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sismologia da performance: Ritual, drama e play na teoria antropol\u00f3gica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616690","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12240,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478800,478845]],"Locations in B":[[67471,67518]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The work of Elisabeth Sch\u00fcssler Fiorenza (ESF) has been celebrated as a significant and ground-breaking contribution to the fields of biblical and religious studies. Her emancipatory paradigm has been used to situate scholarship o f biblical studies as an ally of liberationist religion, and conceive of early Christian texts as sites of struggle, the interpretation of which indicates more about the individual interpreter's ethical-political posture than a particular \"truth\" inhering in the text itself. The overall project overlaps in many ways with the work of Michel Foucault, yet comes short of critically engaging his theories. This article demonstrates areas of confluence between these two theorists, and raises the question of how ESF's project would be altered if Foucault were more directly addressed. The article argues that the alterations would be significant.","creator":["David A. Kaden"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad15dbed-f948-365d-bfa6-c173e9d5a2d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43048846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"FOUCAULT, FEMINISM, AND LIBERATIONIST RELIGION: DISCOURSE, POWER, AND THE POLITICS OF INTERPRETATION IN THE FEMINIST EMANCIPATORY PROJECT OF ELISABETH SCH\u00dcSSLER FIORENZA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048846","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JENNY NILSSON"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23820667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8e9296f-4b9a-3464-b7e1-5af2aceb061c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23820667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"'THE SENSE OF A LADY': AN EXPLORATION OF TRANSVESTITE ROLES IN KATHAKALI AND THEIR RELATION TO KERALAN GENDER CONSTRUCTIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23820667","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":14984,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[432914,433032],[443290,443362],[445078,445164]],"Locations in B":[[56653,56771],[56996,57068],[59044,59129]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia D. Schrager"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07293dda-3890-39a4-9bcb-551c4df945ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 176-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Questioning the Promise of Self-Help: A Reading of \"Women Who Love Too Much\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178359","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alan D. Lewis"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0948a1c6-683c-371b-8f57-80b70bf3f5f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespearean Seductions, or, What's with Harold Bloom as Falstaff?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755480","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":13903,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[214249,214454],[228413,228851],[228857,229591]],"Locations in B":[[33008,33213],[81218,81653],[81679,82393]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roger Deacon"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8619e7c4-5719-3937-a27c-97ebf84a6d52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"92","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strategies of Governance Michel Foucault on Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802104","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14491,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[134351,134468],[511312,511413]],"Locations in B":[[50315,50434],[85580,85681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this research is to investigate the masculinity politics of the ex-gay movement, a loose-knit network of religious, scientific, and political organizations that advocates change for homosexuals. Guided by Risman's gender structure theory, the authors analyze the individual, interactional, and institutional dimensions of gender in ex-gay discourses. The authors employ critical discourse analysis of representative ex-gay texts to deconstruct the movement's gender ideology and to discuss the social implications of its masculinity politics. They argue that gender is one of the ex-gay movement's most potent social movement resources, enabling it to consolidate power by enlisting new populations and to globalize by adapting to cultural contexts beyond the United States. The authors conclude that the ex-gay movement is an antigay countermovement and an antifeminist Christian Right men's movement.","creator":["Christine M. Robinson","Sue E. Spivey"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27641004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a4d358b-169c-31de-99eb-d29112b0b78e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27641004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"650","pagination":"pp. 650-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Politics of Masculinity and the Ex-Gay Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27641004","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores \"Prince Jussuf,\" the fantastic autobiographical \"I\" created by the German-Jewish poet Else Lasker-Sch\u00fcler. Brought into being through performance, \"he\" forms a link between body and text, masculinity and femininity, enabling Lasker-Sch\u00fcler to create a mythical autobiography that is, for her, more real than \"real\" life could ever be.","creator":["ANTJE LINDENMEYER"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I AM PRINCE JUSSUF\": ELSE LASKER-SCH\u00dcLER'S AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL PERFORMANCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540306","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4223,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443721]],"Locations in B":[[10621,10940]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Postmodern pastiche and hybridity informed the performance La Dame aux Cam\u00e9lias (Taipei, 2011) directed by Tadashi Suzuki (1939\u2014). Suzuki's production concaved for Taiwan had visual theatrical innovation and contemporary setting, yet the music design could lead to cultural misunderstandings.","creator":["Iris Hsin-chun Tuan"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80e6cc52-4adb-3caa-9a52-fb4e5a5a66d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43187294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Suzuki Tadashi's \"La Dame aux Cam\u00e9lias\" in Taiwan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187294","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Wayland-Smith"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8fa60de-dac6-3a6e-b994-7531ca7ce733"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40552007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"En m\u00e9moire dun site\": Freud, Mallarm\u00e9, and the Space of the Uncanny","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552007","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7865,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[132901,133261]],"Locations in B":[[47385,47746]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The major focus of this article is on the transformative effects of the positioning of feminine identities of tennis players within the adversarial framework of the genre of a post-match press conference. What is investigated is how female tennis players discursively construct their identities through continual face work and a multitude of persuasive strategies of self-presentation. Furthermore, articulations of a variety of discourses are foregrounded as contributing to the construction of players' communicative styles. Preponderant emphasis in the characterization of players' identities is on the dimension of power. The article draws upon the tools of pragmatic analysis coupled with critical discourse analysis. The major strategies of positive self-presentation are discursively realized in a variety of ways which encompass semantic, formal and interactional structures (Van Dijk, 2000), each comprising multifarious analytical categories pertinent for the present study.","creator":["Karolina Sznycer"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b34a62cc-91d2-3478-8bc4-ea709f8b06f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"458","pagination":"pp. 458-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Grammar","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Strategies of powerful self-presentations in the discourse of female tennis players","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889683","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"US bias crime jurisprudence follows the discrimination model and ejects \"hate\" from scrutiny. It is suggestive of improvements that should be made to Canadian law insofar as it also better tracks the enactment of discrimination against difference occasioned in the everyday. Criminal law, however, remains weak at preventing crime. And where the law requires evidence of discrimination, it iterates the stereotypes and social backdrop of hate crime. But this view on law and culture underestimates how outgroups may produce countermeanings and influence the law. Turning to the more material basis of identity, neoconservatism has given the law a broad ambit whereby coercion as opposed to investment in human capacities is promoted as the means to social order. Where scholars argue that discursive collaboration with retributionist policy requires outgroups to pursue cultural revalorization, given the decreasing freedom under the contemporary authoritarian paradigm, I argue that they must also pursue distributional justice.","creator":["Sean Robertson"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5254baf9-c811-3ab0-bdb1-0ab559d54e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23252268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exception to Excess: Tactical Use of the Law by Outgroups in Bias Crime Legislation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252268","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10266,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[57665,57734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rodney D. Loeppky"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4428216e-b14d-3c91-92fd-7015a41733a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Control from Within? Power, Identity, and the Human Genome Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644915","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524252]],"Locations in B":[[48936,49014]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Health promotion materials on hepatitis C prevention and safe injecting enjoin injecting drug users to produce ethical selves through relatively rigid social and hygiene-related conduct. This article examines a sample of safe injecting and hepatitis C prevention health promotion materials, and interview data gathered from injecting drug users, to consider the ways in which the notion of individual responsibility functions within them. I argue that the primacy of the individual in western culture is indeed reflected in hepatitis C and safe injecting materials and, that for a range of reasons, injecting drug users also make use of notions of individual responsibility. The article concludes by considering the social and health implications of this individualist approach to injecting drug use and health promotion, and by suggesting ways in which effective materials which do not focus solely on the individual can be created.","creator":["Suzanne Fraser"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66f3b261-8eb6-35a0-9e77-6fadee068d14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26649610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"'It's your life!': injecting drug users, individual responsibility and hepatitis C prevention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649610","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Responding to some of the recent work of Michael V. Fox on the narrative frame of the book of Job, this article explores the possibilities for placing Job in a different framework than has been the custom in contemporary biblical research, namely, that of ritual mourning. I suggest that the work can be understood as a story of mourning, the failure of consolation, and its eventual, forceful accomplishment. In particular, the connection between mourning and protest has not always been appreciated, and this article ultimately provides another way of thinking about the book of Job as a unity. Finally, I consider the implications of this view for Job's place in the canon. I note throughout how contemporary notions of individual subjectivity inform and limit current readings of Job. Incorporated into the discussion are a close treatment of Job 42:6, a philological inquiry into the terms \u05de\u05d0\u05e1 and \u05e0\u05d7\u05dd, consideration of other biblical narratives of mourning, and an inquiry into the place of national mourning in Second Isaiah.","creator":["David A. Lambert"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1343.2015.2878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c875c68f-2bd9-3d53-86d2-2dbaa6f0ce7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15699\/jbl.1343.2015.2878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Book of Job in Ritual Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1343.2015.2878","volumeNumber":"134","wordCount":10333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The biographies of eight highly professional women form the material for discussing how women live, understand, and 'perform' success. After identifying macro-topics related to success, the authors carry out an analysis of the women's discursive strategies of self-representation. They examine features that are indicative of suppression or backgrounding of social actors and, related to this, sources of ambivalence, activeness, and passiveness. The authors also describe the metaphors the women use for constructing specific event models, which serve to establish coherent self-representations and unique life trajectories. Four event models were identified, systematizing the narratives: symbiosis, self-made woman, creating one's space and work, as well as coincidence and luck. Finally, the article investigates the ways in which the women's stories reflect relevant aspects of the professional and organizational cultures they find, concluding that although all of them are cooperating and non-antagonistic, they build their own success stories in small but important ways.","creator":["INA WAGNER","RUTH WODAK"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6dba6e04-2ae2-3acd-b69d-c47efa9d494e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Performing success: identifying strategies of self-presentation in women's biographical narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889056","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert A. Nye"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4136608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"631eebf0-a0c9-3718-8f60-11e5ffb7c678"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4136608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Western Masculinities in War and Peace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4136608","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":12354,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495198,495272]],"Locations in B":[[9832,9905]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Bernstein"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f6bde1a-2197-314f-a6d2-752c9a48499b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing the Lives of \"Travestis\" and \"Jotas\": Ethnographies of Gender Transgression and Commercial Sexual Exchange in Latin America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035539","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":4289,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[26679,26775]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bryan Reynolds"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15f44398-bda1-3662-a1a5-1146d83ec243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 142-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Devil's House, \"or worse\": Transversal Power and Antitheatrical Discourse in Early Modern England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208679","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":13366,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433382,433476]],"Locations in B":[[73637,73731]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Erdrich","J. JAMES IOVANNONE"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54533161"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-214188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d84d37d-7bcc-3c76-b3bc-70809db0b321"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20737461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Mix-Ups, Messes, Confinements, and Double-Dealings\": Transgendered Performances in Three Novels by Louise Erdrich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737461","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11055,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[438353,438587],[443290,443762]],"Locations in B":[[28862,29096],[49590,50063]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When we hear discourse that does not fit our own life schema but could with some subtle (or not so subtle) adjustments, the path of least resistance, in many cases, is simply to internally adjust the discourse to fit our schema. This article explores the injustice of students having to translate teacher discourse to apply to their own stories. I assert that translation is a socialized human process. The first part of this article argues that the necessity of engaging in translation is a microaggression continually encountered by individuals who embody difference. I focus specifically on the manifestations of this practice on the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, intersex, and asexual (LGBTQQIA) community and speak directly to the injustices of heteronormative and gender normative discourses in the context of school music. Drawing on different music education settings, I point to strategic practical choices educators can employ in classroom discourse to ensure that their language and other classroom representations include all students in the classroom. The discussion portion of this article interrogates the uncomplicated nature of the discursive suggestions I put forward in light of the biopolitical issues faced by the LGBTQQIA community.","creator":["Juliet Hess"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00109894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"436923044"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234974"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11958984-adf0-3e7a-8967-0cc2e3a368d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulcouresmusedu"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"207-208","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cHow Does That Apply to Me?\u201d The Gross Injustice of Having to Translate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0081","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay is concerned with the status of dramatic texts within queer theory. The dominant paradigm of Performance Theory together with a specific reception of Judith Butler's theory of performativity have effected the loss of drama as an object in theoretically advanced queer discourse. By rereading Bodies That Matter and suggesting a queer strategy of metatheatricality which can be linked to Tony Kushner's ideas on a theatre of the fabulous, I argue for a queer theoretical framework which allows for the discussion of 'traditional' stage drama without falling back behind the deessentializing impetus of queer scholarship. Against the background of the commodification and mainstreaming of gay culture, I furthermore argue for the political necessity to reintegrate drama into queer academic debates.","creator":["Torsten Graff"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35742f95-c819-3714-b99b-50c70bf582a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gay Drama \/ Queer Performance?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157625","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frauke Berndt","Sebastian Meixner","Anthony Mahler"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44a64b60-df53-3c76-a3a4-3372359391ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43932984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"629","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-629","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Goethe's Archaeology of the Modern Curse (Orest, Faust, Manfred)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932984","volumeNumber":"131","wordCount":12191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda del Mar L\u00f3pez-Cabrales"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4388c66-0097-3930-964e-2b9cb8f8ff40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27923072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Desde las entra\u00f1as del deseo homoer\u00f3tico en Cuba. Ena Luc\u00eda Portela y Karla Su\u00e1rez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923072","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e44400f-0a61-3806-8122-1b9627001fe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981038","volumeNumber":"392","wordCount":4083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In contemporary Western culture, death is often made separate from life. The dying body is rendered invisible, even though sociocultural performances of death foreshadow and signify death and dying. This article challenges this signifying by arguing that death and dying are constituted performatively through the inscriptive surfaces of living, dying, and dead bodies, rendered visible by breath and breathing. The article begins by reflecting on the experience of witnessing the author's mentor's dying breath. Thinking through the dying breath, it then questions to what extent the separation of death from life is maintained by what is unspoken of the dying and dead body. Finally, the article considers the analytical implications of the argument for those who remain behind to grieve for, and remember, the dying bodies, and those to whom those bodies once belonged","creator":["Katrina Jaworski"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.86.2014.0065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb3063ea-a7b8-3ea1-90b2-a0ba35e4c5c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.86.2014.0065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"THE BREATH OF LIFE AND DEATH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.86.2014.0065","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":11583,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[66209,66306]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay focuses on Lochhead's retelling of memorable and notable fairy-tale motifs, conventions, and topoi, in which she challenges how traditional folktales (and, more generally, cultural memory and legend) have been used to construct women's social experiences. The poems create an awareness of stories as tools for challenging the sense of social interrelationships established in masculine gender regimes, revisiting the legitimacy of the social goals these regimes enshrine. Lochhead's storyteller reconstructs the realms of fantasy wherein identity is forged, thus proposing disjunctive stories that rematerialize an empowering women's identity.","creator":["Tudor Balinisteanu"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd3b6855-9f8a-3610-82a2-e3fb833b8956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tangled Up in Blue: Liz Lochhead's Grimm Sisters Tales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388929","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn M. Voskuil"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3469dec-95b3-31e1-b938-32489a4264c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3070749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"617","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-617","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Acting like a Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070749","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":5440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} 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\u05d4\"\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d3\u05e9\". \u05d0\u05d1\u05dc \u05dc\u05e6\u05d3 \u05d4\u05e8\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e8\u05e4\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05db\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05dc\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d4\u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d5\u05d5\u05e1\u05ea \u05de\u05ea\u05de\u05d9\u05d3 \u05dc\u05ea\u05d0\u05e8 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e0\u05e2\u05e8\u05d4 \u05db\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d7\u05dc\u05e9\u05d4, \u05e0\u05d7\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4, \u05e1\u05d1\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4, \u05d7\u05e1\u05e8\u05ea \u05d3\u05d7\u05e4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3\u05d3\u05ea. \u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e8 \u05de\u05e9\u05d4\u05d8\u05e7\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e1\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d0\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9 (description) \u05e9\u05dc 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(prescriptions) \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0624\u0643\u0651\u062f\u060c \u0637\u0648\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u062a\u0631\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0630\u0643\u0648\u0631\u0629\u060c \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062d\u0638\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u0647\u0648\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0628\u062f\u0646\u064a\u0651 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0643\u0631\u064a\u0651 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u0642\u062f \u064a\u0636\u0631\u0651 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0642\u0644\u064a\u0651\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u0641\u062a\u0627\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0642\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0627\u0647\u0646 \u0648\u0628\u0635\u062d\u0651\u062a\u0647\u0627 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u062a\u0642\u0628\u0644 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062d\u062f\u0651 \u0633\u0648\u0627\u0621\u060c \u0648\u0628\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0644\u064a \u064a\u0636\u0631\u0651 \u0628\u0642\u062f\u0631\u062a\u0647\u0627 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0646\u062c\u0627\u0628 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0639\u062f\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u062c\u0648\u0651 \u0644\u0645\u0648\u0627\u0635\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0643\u0645\u0651\u0644 \u0648\u0628\u0627\u0644\u062c\u0648\u062f\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u062f\u0646\u064a\u0651\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0639\u0642\u0644\u064a\u0651\u0629 \u0644\u0623\u0628\u0646\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0634\u0639\u0628. \u064a\u0634\u0643\u0651\u0644 \u0647\u0630\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0638\u0631 \u0631\u0633\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0647\u062f\u0641\u0647\u0627 \u0639\u062f\u0645 \u0625\u062a\u0627\u062d\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0635 \u0644\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u0639\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0627\u062a\u060c \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0628\u0627\u062f\u0631\u0629\u060c \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0627\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0651 \u0623\u0648 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0642\u062f\u0651\u0645 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0639\u0644\u064a\u0645 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0648\u0638\u064a\u0641 \u0641\u064a \u0635\u0641\u0648\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0621. This paper deals with medical and educational texts on girls\u2019 menstruation. It focuses on analysis of texts in Hebrew. These texts were dissaminated amongst Jewish communities in Central Europe from the beginning of 19th century to the establishment of the Jewish settlement and the foundation of Israel. It identifies changing ideologies that offered prescriptions for the benefit of girls and of the society in general, such as organicism and psychoanalysis. During the decades, despite the development of knowledge about the reproductive system of the woman, the message remains similar: girls must rest during this critical period for the benefit of their mental and physical conditions and for the health of the next generation of the Jewish People. The social and political implications of this \u201cscientific\u201d message construct the position of the girls as inferior, passive, dependent. Since the girl is subjugated by her deterministic and biological tragedy, she has no agency and no avenues to social mobility.","creator":["\u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc \u05e7\u05d0\u05d1\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05df","Gabriel Cavaglion","\u063a\u0627\u0628\u0631\u064a\u0626\u0644 \u0643\u0627\u0628\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0648\u0646"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26725434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db6b9a07-2da4-35ff-a8b6-530457512f3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26725434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u05e0\u05e2\u05e8\u05d4 \u05db\u05e0\u05d2\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05e0\u05e2\u05e8 - The girl as a Negative of the Boy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26725434","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d8","wordCount":9252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"\u05d4\u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05d4\u05de\u05e7\u05e6\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da \u05d5\u05d1\u05d4\u05e1\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05e9\u05d0 \u05d4\u05d5\u05d5\u05e1\u05ea \u05d1\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd 1948-1821"} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I draw on my own experiences to question some of the boundaries constructed around notions of activism and academia. Firstly, I introduce activism as a discursively produced concept with potential both to challenge and to support social exclusion. I propose an inclusive, reflexive view of activism that places us all as 'activists'. Using this understanding of activism and the work of feminist and other critical geographers, I consider the role of reflexivity within research and other activist projects. Drawing on my own experiences of activism, I then explore some of the boundaries that reproduce the academic-activist binary. I suggest such boundaries are actively constructed and may compromise the liberatory potential of academic research. I conclude the article by suggesting that a reflexivity grounded in the contingency of our lives can support activism within the academy and beyond.","creator":["Ian Maxey"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20003985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20003985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Boundaries? Activism, Academia, Reflexivity and Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20003985","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Scott Stanfield"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75293f4a-c989-311d-a7a2-34fde6e194b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"This Implacable Doctrine\": Behaviorism in Wyndham Lewis's \"Snooty Baronet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827851","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10481,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[448164,448263]],"Locations in B":[[14267,14372]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Imput\u00e9 aux cons\u00e9quences socio-\u00e9conomiques de la domination coloniale, le c\u00e9libat des hommes dans les villes tanzaniennes perdure aujourd'hui dans un anonymat relatif. Entre la diffusion des mod\u00e8les de la famille nucl\u00e9aire h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexu\u00e9e occidentale, auxquels est attribu\u00e9 un caract\u00e8re \u00ab moderne \u00bb, et la possibilit\u00e9 de s'en affranchir via l'affirmation de soi, les hommes c\u00e9libataires participent plus ou moins consciemment \u00e0 un processus de refonte sociale de la ville en mutations. Un rappel des influences th\u00e9oriques qui ont favoris\u00e9 l'\u00e9mergence actuelle du champ des masculinit\u00e9s au sein des sciences sociales africaines permettra de mieux situer o\u00f9 en est l'anthropologie par rapport \u00e0 leur prise en compte. L'exploration de l'organisation intime de ces hommes montrera par ailleurs l'importance des performances quotidiennes dans le processus de cr\u00e9ation de leur masculinit\u00e9, en lien avec leur autonomie et leur urbanit\u00e9. Single Men in The City. Everyday Life, Self Performance and Autonomy (Tanzania Mainland). \u2014 Attributed to socioeconomic consequences of colonial rule, the celibacy of men in urban Tanzania continues today in relative anonymity. Between the diffusion models of the nuclear heterosexual western family, which is assigned as \"modern\", and the ability to overcome it through assertiveness, single men participate more or less consciously in the process of recasting social of the city. A reminder of the theoretical influences that have fostered the current field of masculinities within the African social science will better place in which anthropology is in relation to their consideration. The exploration of the inner organization of these men will show the importance of daily performances in the process of creating their masculinity, in connection with their autonomy and urbanity.","creator":["Mathilde de Bligni\u00e8res"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174145640"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33d84f6a-34fe-39eb-99df-6db014bca197"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"209\/210","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Des hommes c\u00e9libataires dans la ville: Entre autonomie, quotidien et performance de soi (Tanzanie continentale)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475015","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":8031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents and analyzes the construction and performance of Australian Aboriginal cultural practice, a sandpainting, at a major art exhibition at the Asia Society in New York. Drawing on an ethnography for which anthropological knowledge is part of the event itself, I examine the multiple constructions of Aboriginal identity in the performance. Such intercultural performances represent an important form of cultural production and constitute salient contexts for the contemporary negotiation and circulation of indigenous peoples' identities. The focus of the analysis is on the unsettled and pragmatic quality of the performance as a form of social action, emphasizing the goals and trajectories of the differing participants and the specificities of context and discourses involved. [Australian Aborigines, performance, intercultural, identity]","creator":["Fred R. Myers"],"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"079fab2b-2c0e-3d6e-b025-9f58aec4b142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"699","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-699","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Culture-Making: Performing Aboriginality at the Asia Society Gallery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646835","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":13624,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[86168,86230]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["R. Richard Banks"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ac299d4-6165-3d0f-9858-fa8527d69175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90,"pageEnd":"964","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-964","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"The Color of Desire: Fulfilling Adoptive Parents' Racial Preferences through Discriminatory State Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797203","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":49427,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43938,44442]],"Locations in B":[[251389,251894]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephanie Brown"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"478ef988-354f-3614-8213-cb063c0042e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On Kitsch, Nostalgia, and Nineties Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414521","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women who participate in outdoor recreational activities reap many physical and emotional benefits from their experiences. However, gender-related feelings of objectification, vulnerability, and fear in this space limit women's participation. In this study, the authors investigate how women pursue their enjoyment of urban outdoor recreation at South Mountain Park in Phoenix, Arizona, despite their perceptions and experiences related to fear of violence. Through surveys and interviews with women who recreate at South Mountain, the authors look at the ways the women cope with their fear using various strategies. This study reveals the gender-related conflicts that persist for participants, who grapple with their appreciation of uncompromised nature and their need to feel safe in this environment. Ultimately, they illustrate how an ongoing negotiation exists for the women as the authors balance choices and concerns related to their outdoor recreation and what aspects of surveillance and control they consider, reject, or accept.","creator":["Jennifer K. Wesely","Emily Gaarder"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5aaa1a6-5743-3aa0-9d97-8c89fa7fa545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"663","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-663","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Gendered \"Nature\" of the Urban Outdoors: Women Negotiating Fear of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149423","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Drawing on the perspective of doing gender, Berit Brandth and Marit S. Haugen explore how women and men do gender in farm tourist work. On the basis of five case studies of farms that have shifted from farm production to hosting tourists, the expectation is that the new occupation of tourism may create conditions for (un)doing gender at the interactional level and reshuffling power within the couple. The segmented work and unequal work statuses of men and women known from research on family farming seem to be less distinct in farm tourism as women are managers and men do cleaning, catering, and caring. However, the symbolic meaning of the indoor\u2010outdoor dichotomy plays a defining role. And even if women and men have changed their performances, gender and work are still interpreted and perceived according to the heterosexual matrix.","creator":["Berit Brandth","Marit\u00a0S. Haugen"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/605480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfd190b7-8ee9-3fb8-8415-9776f9a0e5f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/605480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Doing Farm Tourism: The Intertwining Practices of Gender and Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/605480","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kory Sorrell"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40320842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00091774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615710"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215848"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40320842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trancharpeirsoc"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Peirce and a Pragmatic Reconception of Substance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40320842","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly A. Hamlin"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83c533e2-0d52-30eb-aca8-65f1c557b451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41412800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"981","pageStart":"955","pagination":"pp. 955-981","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The \"Case of a Bearded Woman\": Hypertrichosis and the Construction of Gender in the Age of Darwin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412800","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":12534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c11d018c-0326-3c2f-8c82-3cfc8eff3dd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Fin-de-Si\u00e8cle Beauty and the Beast: Configuring the Body in Works by \"Graham R. Tomson\" (Rosamund Marriott Watson)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464250","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[404135,404625]],"Locations in B":[[67276,67767]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The importance assigned to the distinction between live and mediated performances is influenced by historical circumstances. Performance is often assumed to be something that can only be authentic if experienced live, yet mediated performances have the ability to disrupt this assumption in two primary ways: by creating a \"shared,\" though asymmetric, experience and by imploding the idea of a \"live\" original performance to be recorded. In this paper we bring Walter Benjamin's concepts of aura and authenticity into conversation with Katie King's theorizations of reenactments to explore how mediated experiences can still constitutes authentic, \"shared\" performance. That is, we deploy the concept of the pastpresent to problematize, complicate, and begin to break down the assumed division between live and mediated performance based on Benjamin's ideas of aura and authenticity. As we'll discuss, what makes this especially interesting is the relationship between space and time in mediated performances. We illustrate this basic argument using three examples: (1) dance through the medium of film; (2) street performance through the medium of the internet; and (3) pop music through the medium of digitally recorded music. In all cases, the \"authenticity\" of the mediated performance is based on the imagined authenticity of its first rendering, thus the viewer\/listener becomes an active participant in making meaning out of the past, in the present. The changing relationships between space, time, and authenticity within performance are important for understanding how their audiences experience modern mediated performances.","creator":["Katrinka Somdahl-Sands","John C. Finn"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41566699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82940367-6199-3fd8-8c96-17f97b0a808b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44076336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"819","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-819","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Media, performance, and pastpresents: authenticity in the digital age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076336","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":6508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the outcome of longitudinal research conducted in Italy between December 2005 and March 2007 with nine women from four Romanian Roma communities. Specifically, the study investigated the links between the economic strategies of Roma women settled in Rome and the dynamics of gender identity within the Italian anti-Roma context. The qualitative fieldwork for this research was conducted during the political campaign for the election of a new prime minister in April 2008. At the time, immigration and anti-Roma feelings were being strategically employed by both left- and right-wing coalitions in order to gain political consensus. To do so, openly racist and xenophobic anti-immigration laws were enacted and aimed to \"sanitise\" Italian society from the \"dangerous\" foreign presence. Roma communities, coming from Eastern Europe, were identified as one of the main targets of the political campaign, transforming Italy into what Agamben calls a temporary \"state of exception\". The aim of this article is to highlight particular forms of agency enacted by some Roma women in this hostile environment. Through processes of mediation and negotiation between moral values demanded by their \"belonging\" community and new economic took and opportunities offered by the host society, these women have excavated exploitable economic niches in order to achieve a better lifestyle, despite the racism and segregation experienced in everyday life.","creator":["Angelica Pesarini"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45054958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10204067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30e1ebef-7ac2-3ea3-9b21-c18483e2485f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45054958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refusurvquar"}],"isPartOf":"Refugee Survey Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE REINVENTION OF TRADITION: NEW CONFIGURATIONS OF GENDER IDENTITY AND ECONOMIC STRATEGIES WITHIN ROMA COMMUNITIES IN ITALY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45054958","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A queer feminist lens is used to present a selected review of the demographic and descriptive literature related to how same-sex couples in the United States begin and dissolve relationships. We argue that despite research suggesting a uniformity of same-sex coupling that reflects a heteronormative nuclear family, there is actually great diversity in same-sex relationships. As legal recognition of same-sex couples increases from state to state, however, the dissolution of same-sex relationships has become as challenging as legally establishing them. This review explores several current cases representing the difficulties experienced by couples who marry or have a civil union in states requiring residency prior to dissolution and try to dissolve a relationship when they reside in a state that does not recognize same-sex unions.","creator":["Brad van Eeden-Moorefield","Christopher R. Martell","Mark Williams","Marilyn Preston"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01976664"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d70d1ac-19e9-3c5d-9962-b50bea098771"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41403626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"familyrelations"}],"isPartOf":"Family Relations","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"562","pagination":"pp. 562-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"National Council on Family Relations","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Same-Sex Relationships and Dissolution: The Connection Between Heteronormativity and Homonormativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403626","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":7079,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I examine the circulation of jokes about sexual violence among young middle-class women in the South Indian city of Chennai. Drawing on ethnographic research with undergraduate students in this city, I locate the rape joke in an ambivalent discourse of risk that conflates the possibility of sexual assault with the perceived 'risks' of women's sexual autonomy. In this context, I argue that humour about sexual violence functions as a form of lateral agency, facilitating a break from the task of reproducing middle-class respectability. Le pr\u00e9sent article examine la circulation de plaisanteries sur le th\u00e8me des violences sexuelles parmi les jeunes femmes des classes moyennes de la ville de Chennai (Madras), dans le sud de l'Inde. \u00c0 partir de recherches ethnographiques avec des \u00e9tudiantes de premier cycle de Chennai, il replace les blagues sur le viol dans un discours ambivalent sur le risque, qui t\u00e9lescope la possibilit\u00e9 d'une agression sexuelle avec les \u00ab risques \u00bb per\u00e7us de l'autonomie sexuelle des femmes. Dans ce contexte, l'auteure avance que l'humour appliqu\u00e9 aux violences sexuelles a une fonction d'agenc\u00e9it\u00e9 lat\u00e9rale, qui permet d'\u00e9chapper plus facilement \u00e0 la mission de reproduire la respectabilit\u00e9 de la classe moyenne.","creator":["Sneha Krishnan"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9046919d-0510-3317-93df-9da76ceb81ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Agency, intimacy, and rape jokes: an ethnographic study of young women and sexual risk in Chennai","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908084","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Langland"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcf1f435-8957-31e4-ae80-c07ed75c28e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexing the Text: Narrative Drag as Feminist Poetics and Politics in Jeanette Winterson's \"Sexing the Cherry\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107105","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":4830,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[434702,434965],[434882,435082],[435087,435211]],"Locations in B":[[9625,9886],[9804,12506],[12507,12631]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David McCarthy"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62266454"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5bb724f-0d5d-3c09-96fb-ba6aea5da0f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archamerartj"}],"isPartOf":"Archives of American Art Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Smithsonian American Art Museum","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Social Nudism, Masculinity, and the Male Nude in the Work of William Theo Brown and Wynn Chamberlain in the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557770","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers the advantages of incorporating Foucault's anti-essentialist theory of the body into feminist explanations of women's oppression. There are also problems in that Foucault neglects to examine the gendered character of the body and reproduces a sexism endemic in \"gender neutral\" social theory. The Foucauldian body is essentially passive resulting in a limited account of identity and agency. This conflicts with an aim of feminism: to rediscover and revalue the experiences of women.","creator":["Lois McNay"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63df68e2-3856-3c27-b96d-c061e8e72eeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Foucauldian Body and the Exclusion of Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809843","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6870,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[72504,72593],[72685,72773],[73495,73644],[316982,317322]],"Locations in B":[[11924,12013],[12646,12734],[12783,12924],[16516,16847]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Magnarelli"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9ed1c82-61d3-374f-bef2-8dfdbff9690d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Refiguring Shakespeare: Griselda Gambaro's \"La se\u00f1ora Macbeth\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024075","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia L. Selfe","Richard J. Selfe, Jr."],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d171aeca-091b-3225-b584-1f18bcd3614c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/358761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"480","pagination":"pp. 480-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Politics of the Interface: Power and Its Exercise in Electronic Contact Zones","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358761","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":11117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Rodr\u00edguez Garc\u00eda"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07340591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4211f32f-5965-3a67-a0f5-ff7372063a9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dispositio"}],"isPartOf":"Dispositio","issueNumber":"48","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"JOHN DONNE AFTER OCTAVIO PAZ: TRANSLATION AS TRANSCULTURATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491532","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":14065,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[459571,459819],[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[73842,74090],[84282,84374]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e16cda3-8e16-30e4-88b0-cc1b86c94d65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40621786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621786","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Schmenk"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3588352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3588352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"514","pagination":"pp. 514-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Language Learning: A Feminine Domain? The Role of Stereotyping in Constructing Gendered Learner Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3588352","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":4238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article explores the relationships between diaspora and nationalism, heterosexuality and queerness in two Israeli films: Three Mothers (Dina Zvi-Riklis, 2006) and Late Marriage (Dover Koshashvili, 2001). These films reconfigure home as both nation and diaspora outside the heteronormative logics of the family, kinship, and heteropatriarchal inheritance and genealogy. Although the films are about heterosexual romances, I argue that they offer a radical critique of both national and diasporic narratives that rely on a patrilineal family tree structured by heterosexual marriage and reproduction, and which therefore exclude non-heteronormative sexuality and desire. They expose and challenge the politics of the Oedipal organization and normative kinship systems by deploying modes of melancholia to reimagine and reassemble new forms of desire, identification, pleasure, and belonging to spaces such as home and family, diaspora and nation, which have traditionally denied anti-heteronormative existence. The films link ethnic to heterosexual melancholia and show that the loss of the diasporic past conceals the even deeper and more hidden loss of queer familial sexual ties.","creator":["Raz Yosef"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/jewifilmnewmedi.4.2.0161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21690324"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be90f1b-eb2f-36e4-a2e7-d603475b9e11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/jewifilmnewmedi.4.2.0161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewifilmnewmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Film & New Media","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Resisting Genealogy: Diasporic Grief and Heterosexual Melancholia in the Israeli Films Three Mothers<\/em> and Late Marriage<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/jewifilmnewmedi.4.2.0161","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10288,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[245251,245495],[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[49739,49983],[62113,62257]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers the psychic and social dynamics reported by student teachers when learning to embody their teacher persona in the secondary school environment. Focusing on gender dimensions of embodiment and drawing on qualitative interview data from a UK study of postgraduate teacher-training students, teaching is examined as a physical experience. The paper conceptualises findings under two related headings: the appropriately gendered body, signified by heteronormative readings of gender and sexuality; and the gendered authoritative body, conceptualised as male. The 'teacher body' emerges as an important element of student teachers' stories of trying to fit with the new professional environment and the paper concludes by arguing for a consideration of gender and body politics in the practice and training of teachers, thus challenging the assumption that professional occupations are essentially ' disembodied' and gender neutral.","creator":["Annette Braun"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28172d1f-eda8-3fe0-84a5-654f5126c08a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"'Walking yourself around as a teacher' : gender and embodiment in student teachers' working lives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237661","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[363486,363597]],"Locations in B":[[13665,13776]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["OMAR KASMANI"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24710604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00305472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564800386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65c0aff3-f360-3d6a-aaae-93a429f00cfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24710604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"orientemoderno"}],"isPartOf":"Oriente Moderno","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"OF DISCONTINUITY AND DIFFERENCE: GENDER AND EMBODIMENT AMONG FAKIRS OF SEHWAN SHARIF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24710604","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":9885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo O artigo analisa as articula\u00e7\u00f5es entre a governamentalidade neoliberal, a biopol\u00edtica e o esquadrinhamento das rela\u00e7\u00f5es entre sexo, g\u00eanero e sexualidade. Busca demonstrar como a desestabiliza\u00e7\u00e3o da l\u00f3gica identit\u00e1ria bin\u00e1ria de g\u00eanero amea\u00e7a determinadas formas de governar e, tamb\u00e9m, como a norma pode se reconfigurar produzindo estrat\u00e9gias para incorporar corpos produzidos no avesso do padr\u00e3o cissexista. Para tanto, o \u201cproblema de g\u00eanero\u201d causado por Indianara, que se identifica como uma pessoa trans e que foi detida durante uma Marcha das Vadias ao andar com os seios despidos, serviu de analisador dessas articula\u00e7\u00f5es, a partir da composi\u00e7\u00e3o conceitual escolhida.","creator":["Felipe Luckmann","Henrique Caetano Nardi"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb1ad629-e5f7-32aa-a740-e22c638d58fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90013349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"1255","pageStart":"1239","pagination":"pp. 1239-1255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Um corpo (des)governado","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013349","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"hierarquias de g\u00eanero, governamentalidade e biopol\u00edtica"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Roof"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6db0dfa4-5398-3e6b-9386-578f32867906"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"478","pagination":"pp. 478-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175077","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":1542,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477195,477262]],"Locations in B":[[1956,2023]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Chisholm"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/426845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1058acc9-d5fa-38cf-b4d5-e93a2d68a2dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/426845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"1980","pageStart":"1975","pagination":"pp. 1975-1980","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/426845","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":1976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven Z. Levine"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c02b9d3-4ade-35bb-9766-c863399ab328"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1358984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358984","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patrick Morgan"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23395199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10685359"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea1ff52f-cdbc-31ee-a162-7466e09a9451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23395199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"concordsaunterer"}],"isPartOf":"The Concord Saunterer","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Thoreau Society, Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetic Inflections: Thoreau, Gender, and Geology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23395199","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9026,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439426,439594]],"Locations in B":[[40626,40776]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the research project that led to the development of facial feminization surgery, a set of bone and soft tissue reconstructive surgical procedures intended to feminize the faces of male-to-female trans-women. Conducted by a pioneering surgeon in the mid-1980s, this research consisted of three steps: (1) assessments of sexual differences of the skull taken from early 20thcentury physical anthropology, (2) the application of statistical analyses taken from late 20th-century orthodontic research, and (3) the vetting of this new morphological and metric knowledge in a dry skull collection. When the 'feminine type' of early 20th-century physical anthropology was made to articulate with the 'female mean' of 1970s' statistical analysis, these two very different epistemological artifacts worked together to produce something new: a singular model of a distinctively female skull. In this article, I show how the development of facial feminization surgery worked across epistemic styles, transforming historically racialized and gendered descriptions of sex difference into contemporary surgical prescriptions for sex change. Fundamental to this transformation was an explicit invocation of the scientific origins of facial sexual dimorphism, a claim that frames surgical sex change of the face as not only possible, but objectively certain.","creator":["Eric D Plemons"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ad25636-bc46-3e2d-8f9d-fc0f2a965184"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43284244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"679","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-679","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Description of sex difference as prescription for sex Change: On the origins of facial feminization surgery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284244","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11221,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476786,476864]],"Locations in B":[[69335,69419]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers the way in which Christian Religious Education (RE) teachers articulate the difficulties and challenges they experience both in school and with their peers as they navigate their way through their Initial Teacher Education. The paper offers a unique exploration of the relationship between elements of the three discourses of faith identity, emerging professional identity and the requirements of a performative teacher training context. Semi-structured interviews were undertaken with 184 student RE teachers across three universities. It became clear that all students interpreted the Standards and policy guidelines ambiguously, as being value-laden or value-free. The idea of the 'good teacher' as someone who was, by very definition, neutral and objective immediately made the faith position of students problematic. This is a key point in relation to the notion of performativity and education and the disproportionate impact it made on Christian students. It appeared as though many Christian students were concerned to stress that although their faith was personally important for them it was not something that contributed to their understanding of a 'good teacher'.","creator":["Hazel Bryan","Lynn Revell"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cf1b7a6-e39d-3e9f-8801-ba6a46cebfe4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Philosophy","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"PERFORMATIVITY, FAITH AND PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY: STUDENT RELIGIOUS EDUCATION TEACHERS AND THE AMBIGUITIES OF OBJECTIVITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427676","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":8515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes modern and postmodern concepts of freedom and contrasts them to a Heideggerian understanding. Positive, negative, and what might be called Foucaultian or Nietzschean liberty are demonstrated to bear a common trait. In such modern and postmodern formulations, freedom is consistently identified with a form of mastery. This identification of freedom with mastery, I argue, encourages ecological abuse, supports the dangerous prerogatives of statist sovereignty, and strengthens the resilience of patriarchy. The political significance of Heidegger's alternative vision is addressed.","creator":["Leslie Paul Thiele"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2944703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43a54b04-5963-3af3-8668-3431f5684ae6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2944703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Heidegger on Freedom: Political not Metaphysical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2944703","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":13660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dieser Beitrag befasst sich mit der bestehenden Literatur zu militarisierter M\u00e4nnlichkeit, milit\u00e4rischer M\u00e4nnlichkeit und Hypermaskulinit\u00e4t und deckt drei grundlegende Schw\u00e4chen auf: die Begriffe werden diffus verwendet, zwischen verschiedenen Analyseebenen wird nicht ausreichend differenziert, und eine Unterscheidung zwischen gesellschaftlichen Konstruktionen und individuellen Identit\u00e4ten findet nur selten statt. Dadurch wird erhebliches analytisches Potential verschenkt. Wir schlagen unter R\u00fcckgriff auf praxistheoretische Ans\u00e4tze vor, den Begriff der militarisierten M\u00e4nnlichkeit f\u00fcr die gesellschaftliche Konstruktion von M\u00e4nnlichkeit in bewaffneten Konflikten zu reservieren. Milit\u00e4rische M\u00e4nnlichkeit beziehen wir auf die von Streitkr\u00e4ften oder bewaffneten Gruppen gef\u00f6rderten M\u00e4nnlichkeitskonstruktionen. Hypermaskulinit\u00e4t schlie\u03b2lich wollen wir zur Erfassung der Identit\u00e4t von Kleingruppen oder Individuen verwenden. Zwischen allen drei Ebenen nehmen wir ein ko-konstitutives Wechselverh\u00e4ltnis an. Wir nutzen die neue Konzeptualisierung, um die existierenden Erkenntnisse klarer zu strukturieren und so f\u00fcr weitere Forschung nutzbar zu machen. Auf diese Weise wird es erm\u00f6glicht, M\u00e4nnlichkeiten in bewaffneten Konflikten und in Friedenskonsolidierungsprozessen zielf\u00fchrend und koh\u00e4renter zu untersuchen. This contribution examines the existing literature on militarised masculinity, military masculinity, and hypermasculinity and uncovers three general weaknesses: the terms are used diffusely, different levels of analysis are not considered, and there is no differentiation between societal constructions and gender identities. This constitutes a considerable waste of theoretical potential. Using a practice theoretical approach, we suggest reserving the concept of militarised masculinity for the societal construction of masculinity in times of armed conflict. Military masculinity describes the type of masculinity that is encouraged within armed groups and armed forces. We want to use hypermasculinity, lastly, to grasp the gender identity of individuals and small groups. We assume a co-constitutive interrelation between all three concepts. We use the new conceptualisation to structure the existing findings more clearly in order to use them as a basis for further research. By this, it becomes possible to analyse masculinities in armed conflict and peace processes more coherently.","creator":["Hendrik Quest","Maike Messerschmidt"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48518888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21921741"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26992afa-6e4c-3fc4-bb01-9e246738c418"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48518888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfriekonf"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Friedens- und Konfliktforschung","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":null,"title":"M\u00e4nnlichkeiten im Konflikt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48518888","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Zum theoretischen Verh\u00e4ltnis von militarisierter M\u00e4nnlichkeit, milit\u00e4rischer M\u00e4nnlichkeit und Hypermaskulinit\u00e4t"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Pia Lara","Joan B. Landes"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7893452-39f7-30b4-b593-c565aa611410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810491","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":3544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne Meyerowitz"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30223445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0110657-3aa7-328c-b055-b0fbacd9761f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30223445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"1356","pageStart":"1346","pagination":"pp. 1346-1356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A History of \"Gender\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30223445","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":6435,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475189,475274]],"Locations in B":[[37867,37953]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynne Segal"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e58740ff-8a38-3696-a3df-e14998ad16a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20460984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460984","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":1632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A principios de los a\u00f1os setenta en Espa\u00f1a la comedia cinematogr\u00e1fica adquiere un cariz sexual sin precedente en la historia del cine espa\u00f1ol, que da como resultado la denominada comedia sexy (celt)ib\u00e9rica. Seg\u00fan la mayor\u00eda de la cr\u00edtica, estos filmes proyectan al protot\u00edpico \"homo franquista\" (machista, conservador, perfecto ejemplo de la ideolog\u00eda dictatorial), por lo que la poca atenci\u00f3n que reciben es com\u00fanmente reprobatoria. Sin embargo, pocos reconocen dichas pel\u00edculas como pioneras en dar visibilidad p\u00fablica a la sexualidad, tentando frecuentemente los l\u00edmites de la censura franquista. Como propongo en este art\u00edculo a partir del ejemplo de Los d\u00edas de Cabirio (Fernando Merino, 1971), desde la \u00f3ptica de los estudios de g\u00e9nero sexual\/queer es posible leer dichas proyecciones de sujetos masculinos como una resignificaci\u00f3n de la monol\u00edtica masculinidad heteronormativa de influencia nacional-cat\u00f3lica. Esta masculinidad emergente, alternativa y disidente, se puede entender no solo como la consecuencia de los cambios sociopol\u00edticos del momento, sino como uno de los loci clave donde se da la batalla entre tradici\u00f3n y modernidad en la Espa\u00f1a de principios de los setenta. Es decir, la comedia sexy deviene no solo un espacio de proyecci\u00f3n sino tambi\u00e9n de construcci\u00f3n de imaginarios de masculinidades espec\u00edficamente espa\u00f1olas, y reflejo\/reflexi\u00f3n de su entorno sociopol\u00edtico.","creator":["JULI C\u00c1CERES GARC\u00cdA"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32db003b-bd2b-30b6-ad75-b2d3823756c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Masculinidad disidente en la comedia sexy ib\u00e9rica: Los d\u00edas de Cabirio (1971)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764276","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439455,439625]],"Locations in B":[[9752,9922]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the ways in which 'Palestine' and 'Palestinianess' are culturally, socially and symbolically produced and regulated through formal and non-formal institutional sites in Palestinian camps in south Lebanon. It argues that although institutional power, processes and outcomes help to construct shared notions of 'Palestinianess', they also produce contestations and internal 'others'. Moreover, since Palestinian youth identities are produced inter-textually across multiple civil society institutions, the artificial divide between the school and the community is challenged, the school is decentred as the primary learning site for the construction of youth identities, and notions of 'student' and 'teacher' are destabilised. This has important implications for how citizenship education is theorised and practised in the contexts of transience, political instability and conflict.","creator":["Kathleen Fincham"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"586a4e28-a3bc-3323-87d3-b81db57bf0ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Learning the nation in exile: constructing youth identities, belonging and 'citizenship' in Palestinian refugee camps in south Lebanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267832","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using the threat of a severe AIDS epidemic in a collection of rural villages in South Africa, we illustrate how men and women reconsider gendered sexualities through conversations and interactions in everyday life. We draw from data collected by local ethnographers and focus on the processes through which men and women collectively respond to the threat posed by AIDS to relationships, families, and communities. Whereas previous research has shown that individuals often reaffirm hegemonic norms about gender and sexuality in response to disruptions to heteronormative gender relations, we find that the threat of AIDS provokes reconsideration of gendered sexualities at the community level. That is, our data demonstrate how men and women\u2014through the interactions and exchanges that make up their daily lives\u2014debate, challenge, make sense of, and attempt to come to terms with social norms circumscribing gendered sexual practices in a context where the threat of a fatal disease transmitted through sex looms large. We argue that ethnographic data are particularly useful for capturing communal responses to events that threaten heteronormative gender relations and reflect on how our findings inform theories of gender relations and processes.","creator":["CHRISTIE SENNOTT","NICOLE ANGOTTI"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56c587e5-4265-38d4-bb88-bac16ab632c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44280234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"957","pageStart":"935","pagination":"pp. 935-957","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"RECONSIDERING GENDERED SEXUALITIES IN A GENERALIZED AIDS EPIDEMIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280234","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9555,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The question of how space matters to the mobilisation, practices and trajectories of contentious politics has frequently been represented as a politics of scale. Others have focused on place and networks as key spatialities of contentious politics. Yet there are multiple spatialities - scale, place, networks, positionality and mobility - that are implicated in and shape contentious politics. No one of these should be privileged: in practice, participants in contentious politics frequently draw on several at once. It is thus important to consider all of them and the complex ways in which they are co-implicated with one another, with unexpected consequences for contentious politics. This co-implication in practice, and its impact on social movements, is illustrated with the Immigrant Workers' Freedom Ride in the United States.","creator":["Helga Leitner","Eric Sheppard","Kristin M. Sziarto"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30133354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30133354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Spatialities of Contentious Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30133354","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As presently constructed, equal protection doctrine is an identitybased jurisprudence, meaning that the level of scrutiny applied to an alleged act of discrimination turns on the identity category at issue. In that sense, equal protection relies on identity as a proxy, standing in to signify the types of discnmination we find most troubling. Equal protection's current use of identity as proxy leads to a number of problems, including difficulties in defining identity categories; the tendency to privilege a dominant-identity narrative; failure to distinguish among the expenences of subgroups within larger identity categones; and psychological and emotional harm that can result from being forced to identify in a particular way to lay claim to legal protection. Moreover, because the Court's identity-as-proxy jurisprudence relies on superficial notions of identity to fulfill a substantive commitment to equality, it is susceptible to co-option by majority groups. This Essay aims to engage readers in a thought experiment, to envision what equal protection doctrine might look like if it were structured to reflect the values identity is intended to serve without explicitly invoking identity categories as a way to delineate permissible and impermissible forms of discrimination. In doing so, it aims to incorporate directly into equal protection jurisprudence the notion that identities like race and gender are not merely a collection of individual traits, but the product of structural forces that create and maintain subordination. Under the \"value-based\" approach proposed herein, the primary concern of equal protection is not to eliminate differential treatment, but instead to deconstruct status hierarchies. Therefore, rather than applying heightened scrutiny to government actions based on race or gender, it applies heightened scrutiny to government actions that have the effect of perpetuating or exacerbating a history of discrimination or that frustrate access to the political process. The clearest impact of such a model would be in the context of affirmative action, where a majority ptointiff could no longer simply claim discrimination on the basis of race. Yet, the potential of a valuebased model extends to other contexts as well\u2014for example, challenges to voter identification laws, in which political exclusion would displace discriminatory intent and disparate impact as the relevant measure for analysis; and the treatment of pregnant women, in which discrimination on the basis of pregnancy would no longer have to align with gender to receive heightened scrutiny. This shift has several advantages: It allows the law to make important distinctions between groups and within groups; it alleviates the need for comparative treatment and solutions that favor taking from all over giving to some; it is less likely to generate identity-based harms; it is fact-driven rather than identity-driven and thus better suited to the judicial function; and it serves an important rhetorical function by changing the nature of rights discourse.","creator":["Lauren Sudeall Lucas"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43580908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea95a408-21a0-302b-aab1-ea482c8b0b09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43580908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70,"pageEnd":"1674","pageStart":"1605","pagination":"pp. 1605-1674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"IDENTITY AS PROXY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43580908","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":36989,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[107880,108037]],"Locations in B":[[66404,66561]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how we can engage \"looking-glass\" youth in art through the visual narratives of the transforming self in popular culture. Part of the theoretical framework of two descriptive studies will be presented by focusing on the concepts of a permuting identity, prophetic reality, and technologies of self through the metaphor of the mirror and the screen of critical theories. Visual narratives from popular culture, artists' work, and children's play that use graphic or electronic genres such as comic strips, paper dolls, and coloring books will be described throughout. A special focus will be given on art projects on the topic of permutable identity, and on the relations between body and machine. In a posthuman era of mass communications and biotechnological extensions, art educators should encourage students to understand how popular culture creates identity by engaging them in playful yet critical practices of the transforming self.","creator":["Moniques Richard"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92f2212a-3907-3376-b281-98294726d3d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20715446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Engaging \"Looking-Glass\" Youth in Art through the Visual Narratives of the Transforming Self in Popular Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715446","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dans l'\u0153uvre de Bertrand Tavernier, les personnages f\u00e9minins occupent une place \u00e0 la fois essentielle et ambigu\u00eb: form\u00e9s d'\u00e9l\u00e9ments composites et r\u00e9currents, r\u00e9duits au statut de forme sans profondeur, improductifs et marginalis\u00e9s, souvent associ\u00e9s \u00e0 l'image de la femme-enfant, objets de la violence et du regard masculins, ils contribuent a la repr\u00e9sentation des dysfonctionnements de la cellule familiale qui caract\u00e9risent la plupart des films de Tavernier. Pourtant c'est pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment par sa fonction dans la structure du r\u00e9cit filmique et son r\u00f4le de catalyseur voire d'embrayeur que le personnage f\u00e9minin parvient a favoriser chez les spectateurs le passage de l'image \u00e0 l'id\u00e9e.","creator":["Caroline Eades"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25480509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25480509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"1221","pageStart":"1206","pagination":"pp. 1206-1221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les Personnages f\u00e9minins de Bertrand Tavernier: entre image et id\u00e9e","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25480509","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":7738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reports the findings of a study identifying the experiences of gay and lesbian adopters and foster-carers in England and Wales. Qualitative interviews were conducted with twenty-four lesbians and gay men who had undertaken any part of the adoption or fostering application process since the implementation of the Adoption and Children Act of 2002. The study suggests that, whilst increasing numbers of lesbians and gay men are accessing fostering and adoption services, gender and sexuality are still problematic areas of contestation within this context. As a result, participants were required to present themselves to assessing professionals in distinct ways, in order to be recognised as 'legitimate' in their applications. Using the concept of 'displaying family', this paper illustrates the ways in which sexuality can complicate such displays, as they fall outside prevailing cultural and familial scripts. However, taking an intersectional perspective, this paper will also demonstrate that this was dependent upon the complex subjectivities of each participant. Finally, it will analyse what this means for the assessment of gay and lesbian adopters and foster-carers, and how social workers can respond to both individual identities and diverse family forms.","creator":["Kate Wood"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4e92783-241f-3f47-9a69-634060e70c71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26363582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"1723","pageStart":"1708","pagination":"pp. 1708-1723","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'It's All a Bit Pantomime': An Exploratory Study of Gay and Lesbian Adopters and Foster-Carers in England and Wales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363582","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana G\u00f3mez-P\u00e9rez"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d7c1320-bd9b-3261-92fb-9f304c891b84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43807162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"133","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LA MANIPULACI\u00d3N DE LA NATURALEZA EN \"FORTUNATA Y JACINTA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807162","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6785,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[304921,305049]],"Locations in B":[[13257,13385]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the social realities that Austrian and German heterosexual men, all in their reproductive age, confronted in the aftermath of World War II; the kind of sexual and gendered configurations produced under Nazism and during the postwar period; and theways in which these social and emotional realities were publically and privately dealt with after the war. It draws on reports in, and letters-to-the-editor of, the journal Liebe und Ehe from 1949 to 1951, as well as on a sample of fourteen private letters written by an Austrian policeman in 1951 about his love relationship with a nurse. Such early postwar narratives not only point at issues and conflicts between the sexes, but also suggest the rehabilitation of traditional gender roles in West Germany and Austria. Men struggled to conform to new guidelines of heterosexual domesticity, a development that hints not only at traumatic war experiences, but also at the ideological residuals of Nazism. Dieser Beitrag untersucht die geschlechterspezifischen Probleme, mit denen sich deutsche und \u00f6sterreichische heterosexuelle M\u00e4nner im zeugungsf\u00e4higen Alter nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg konfrontiert sahen. Der Nationalsozialismus und die Nachkriegszeit schufen jeweils spezifische gesellschaftliche und sexualit\u00e4tspolitische Realit\u00e4ten, die nach dem Krieg, emotional aufgeladen, privat wie \u00f6ffentlich ausgehandelt wurden. Als Quellengrundlage dienen Berichte und Leserbriefe der Zeitschrift \u201eLiebe und Ehe\u201d aus den Jahren 1949 bis 1951 sowie eine Reihe privater Briefe eines \u00f6sterreichischen Polizisten \u00fcber seine Liebesbeziehung mit einer Krankenschwester aus dem Jahr 1951. Diese Texte aus der fr\u00fchen Nachkriegszeit weisen nicht nur auf Probleme und Konflikte zwischen den Geschlechtern hin, sie zeigen auch, wie es in Westdeutschland und \u00d6sterreich zu einer Rehabilitierung traditioneller Geschlechterrollen kam. M\u00e4nner hatten Schwierigkeiten, sich an die neuen Richtlinien heterosexueller H\u00e4uslichkeit anzupassen, was sich zum einen mit ihren traumatischen Kriegserfahrungen, aber auch mit ideologischen R\u00fcckst\u00e4nden des Nationalsozialismus erkl\u00e4rt.","creator":["Elissa Mail\u00e4nder"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00089389"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47795498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227108"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c31182e7-4f56-3421-9dfb-dfede5eef6f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26567850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centeurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Central European History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"488","pagination":"pp. 488-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Whining and Winning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567850","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":14699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Male Narratives of Love, Marriage, and Divorce in the Shadow of the Third Reich"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Tapper Goldman"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ce4c9a2-e352-3ed2-8043-4e74e01b4de0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"What's Love Got to Do With It? Lust in Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876553","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1983,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59907,59997]],"Locations in B":[[7498,7588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article gauges the progress that sociologists of gender and sexuality have made in employing the insights of queer theory by examining four recent monographs that have utilized aspects of queer theory in their empirical work: Rupp and Taylor (2003), Seidman (2002), Bettie (2003), and Schippers (2000). The article uses the insights of queer theory to push the monographs in an even \"queerer\" theoretical direction. This direction involves taking more seriously the nonnormative alignments of sex, gender, sexuality, resisting the tendency to essentialize identity or conflate it with the broad range of gender and sexual expression and treating the construction of intersectional subjectivities as both performed and performative in nature. The analysis of these texts also insists that a queer sociological theory situate its emphasis on discursive power more firmly in economic, political, and other institutional processes. Ethnographic methods are proposed as the most useful way of combining queer theory with sociological analysis.","creator":["Stephen Valocchi"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c3d8a90-db6d-33dc-bbc3-c656fbfa873c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27640849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"770","pageStart":"750","pagination":"pp. 750-770","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Not Yet Queer Enough: The Lessons of Queer Theory for the Sociology of Gender and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640849","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas's second collection of short stories, \"Los altillos de Brumal\" (1983), foregrounds sexual roles that govern what Judith Butler would call the re-presentation or performativity of gender: the process of fashioning the self according to socially created codes of sexuality. To date, numerous critical studies from a woman-centered perspective have read Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas's work as privileging the feminine over the masculine as a paradigm for agency. While her stories evoke images of the feminine as sources of inspiration, creativity, and agency, they also call into question which characters benefit from projecting such a discourse of essentialized femininity. If gender is an ongoing re-presentation and performance, as Butler proposes, what choices are made that perpetuate or, conversely, that deconstruct the masquerade of masculine and feminine? These tales explore how the apparent binary opposition of masculine\/feminine dictates the actions of individuals as gendered beings. I argue that, instead of inverting the binomial hierarchy in an elevation of the feminine, the stories blend certainty with forgetfulness, \"masculine\" order with \"feminine\" fluidity, in an alteration of the stakes of power. In all her texts, Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas demonstrates an awareness that one can never escape the discursive power structures that condition identity; however, her tales suggest that one can manipulate the codes that those power structures advance, as well as what they ostracize, to create agency for the self. Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas explores what is left out of polarities of power, at the very limits of discursive constructions, as the foundational borderland of the subject.","creator":["Jessica A. Folkart"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22b2f7d2-c2c2-328f-8815-b2c003e88094"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27741479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interpretations of Gender: Performing Subjectivity in Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas's \"Los altillos de Brumal\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741479","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8240,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[48853,48965]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ileana Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58250ede-efe6-3e93-b262-c3617108dc8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"TENDERNESS: A MEDIATOR OF IDENTITY AND GENDER CONSTRUCTION IN POLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285695","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,123881]],"Locations in B":[[5624,5779]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article seeks to cast light on a halakhic responsum of Rabbi Joseph Messas, one of the great halakhic authorities of the twentieth century in North Africa. The responsum deals with the questions of whether a barrier between men and women in the synagogue is necessary, and of whether women may be \u201ccalled up\u201d to the Torah. It offers a new understanding of the concept of \u201cthe dignity of the congregation\u201d as well as fascinating accounts of Jewish women being called to the Torah, wearing the attire of Muslim women. Through analysis of this responsum, I shall map out various views and understandings of \u201cthe dignity of the congregation\u201d and look at R. Messas's position through the prism of contemporary gender research.","creator":["Avinoam Rosenak"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8799b9b0-6cc4-37c6-b0a8-fc276b44bec3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"\u201cDignity of the Congregation\u201d as a Defense Mechanism: A Halakhic Ruling by Rabbi Joseph Messas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.183","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Henrietta Bannerman"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23266985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Martha Graham's House of the Pelvic Truth: The Figuration of Sexual Identities and Female Empowerment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266985","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7779,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72185,72273]],"Locations in B":[[11654,11742]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En d\u00e9clarant qu' \"on ne na\u00eet pas femme, on le devient\", Simone de Beauvoir a pos\u00e9 les fondements d'une conception f\u00e9ministe du genre. L'analyse d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e dans Le Deuxi\u00e8me sexe a anticip\u00e9 la distinction ult\u00e9rieure entre sexe et genre, et a \u00e9galement soulev\u00e9 certains probl\u00e8mes li\u00e9s \u00e0 cette distinction. Plut\u00f4t que l'oeuvre m\u00eame de Beauvoir, ce sont les discussions r\u00e9centes autour de la distinction sexe\/genre qui font l'objet de cet article. Plus particuli\u00e8rement, j'examine la mani\u00e8re dont les f\u00e9ministes mat\u00e9rialistes fran\u00e7aises, avec qui Beauvoir elle-m\u00eame a travaill\u00e9, ont fait fructifier son h\u00e9ritage. En affirmant que le \"sexe\" est un ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne tout aussi social que le \"genre\", ces f\u00e9ministes ont maintenu une tradition anti-essentialiste fondamentalement oppos\u00e9e aux perspectives \"diff\u00e9rentialistes\" si souvent associ\u00e9es \u00e0 la construction anglophone du \"French feminism\". Je confronte la contribution de ces f\u00e9ministes, notamment Christine Delphy et Monique Wittig, aux conceptions f\u00e9ministes du genre, avec l'approche plus d\u00e9constructive associ\u00e9e \u00e0 des th\u00e9oriciennes comme Judith Butler. Ce faisant, je plaide pour une analyse mat\u00e9rialiste du genre et pour une vision d'un monde sans genre plut\u00f4t que d'un monde avec de multiples genres. In claiming that 'one is not born, but rather becomes, a woman', Simone de Beauvoir laid the foundations for a feminist understanding of gender. The analysis developed in The Second Sex anticipated the later distinction between sex and gender, and also evinced some of the problems associated with that distinction. It is these more recent discussions of the sex\/gender distinction which are the focus of this paper, rather than Beauvoir's work itself. More specifically, I consider the ways in which French materialist feminists, with whom Beauvoir herself worked, carry forward her legacy. In arguing that ' sex' is as much a social phenomenon as 'gender', these feminists have kept alive an anti-essentialist tradition which is fundamentally opposed to the 'difference' perspectives so often associated with the anglophone construction of ' French Feminism'. I compare the contribution that these feminists, especially Christine Delphy and Monique Wittig, have made to feminist understandings of gender with the more deconstructive approach associated with thinkers such as Judith Butler. In so doing I argue the case for a materialist analysis of gender and for a vision of a world without gender rather than a world with many genders.","creator":["Stevi Jackson"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40619720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Th\u00e9oriser le genre : l'h\u00e9ritage de Beauvoir","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619720","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6757,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MANDY KOOLEN"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d517ed5-c15c-3f49-baa9-669dda1ab9fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"397","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Historical Fiction and the Revaluing of Historical Continuity in Sarah Waters's \"Tipping the Velvet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983499","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":11257,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157],[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[54968,55064],[55105,55295]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article focuses on the Internet as a \u201cdigital closet\u201d in the context of Turkish lesbian and gay activism in the 1990s and early 2000s. In its analysis of media and sexual discourse, the article first discusses traditional media, such as the printing press and television. While the printing press and political reforms during the late Ottoman Empire and the early Turkish republic silenced sexual discourses, television brought them back as part of the new gender regime and disseminated a gender \u201cdeviance\u201d model of homosexuality. Against this background, the rest of the article analyzes the metaphor of the Internet as a digital closet as it relates to collegiate lesbian and gay activism. The conclusion reflects on the significance and functions of this media metaphor for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and transsexual agency and subjectivities in Turkey, suggesting similar venues of research regarding sexuality and the Arab Spring in the Middle East.","creator":["Serkan Gorkemli"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.63","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5df2f425-7e8b-38c5-9242-c5deebb99bdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.63"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cComing Out of the Internet\u201d: Lesbian and Gay Activism and the Internet as a \u201cDigital Closet\u201d in Turkey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.63","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barry Shank"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe7640a8-156b-3c98-ae52-839bc2dae648"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44982585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Music Studies, American Studies, and the Popular History of the Normal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982585","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":4851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We apply Gramsci's concept of counter-hegemonic subversion, key concepts in queer game studies, and Butler's construct of gender performativity to the field of critical game studies. Using qualitative videogame content analysis, we investigate how games such as Life is Strange or The Sims can enable players to act out a non-heteronormative gender role. Results show that gender and non-heteronormative enactment in games can essentially take two forms, depending on the genre and the possibilities for action presented in the mechanics. Directed games are characterised by a more or less fixed narrative or a strict path towards a desired ending, directing the player towards one specific type of (identity) performance. In semi-directed games, players are granted freedom in terms of performance, albeit to a limited degree as made possible within the constraints of game technology and aesthetics. In conclusion we posit that the interplay between game rules, narrative elements and player context marks the essence of counter-hegemonic enactment of gender roles and norms concerning sexuality in digital games.","creator":["Kilian Biscop","Steven Malliet","Alexander Dhoest"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.2","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5867262b-8d15-3375-801d-62e75b03ae47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.6.2.2"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Subversive Ludic Performance: An Analysis of Gender and Sexuality Performance in Digital Games","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.2","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sex discrimination law has not kept pace with the lived experience of discrimination. In the early years of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, courts settled on an idea of what sex discrimination looks like\u2014formal practices that exclude employees based on their group membership. The problem is that sex discrimination has become highly individualized. Modern sex discrimination does not target all men or all women, nor does it target subgroups of men or women. The victims of modern sex discrimination are particular men and women who face discrimination because they do not or cannot conform to the norms of the workplace. These employees have been shut out of a sex discrimination regime that still expects employees to anchor their claims to a narrative of group subordination. I argue that the lived experience of discrimination should determine employment discrimination doctrine and not the other way around. Accordingly, I propose a new regime for sex discrimination law. The model for the new sex discrimination regime is religious discrimination law. Unlike other areas of employment discrimination law, religious discrimination law offers a dynamic conception of identity and a greater array of different theories of discrimination. I argue that sex discrimination law can and should work this way, too. On a broader level, the paper makes a strong normative claim about the substance of Title VII's sex equality project. I argue that sex discrimination law needs to recalibrate its vision of equality. Difference is universal. No two women (or men) are the same, and this is a good thing. Thus the central task of sex discrimination law should be to better recognize\u2014and, in turn, protect\u2014the distinctive ways in which employees express their maleness and femaleness. It is these differences, after all, that shape the way employees experience modern sex discrimination.","creator":["Zachary A. Kramer"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23792740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44197618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-25383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ea272bd-ab25-3142-b6a2-c2446f8bd849"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23792740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63,"pageEnd":"953","pageStart":"891","pagination":"pp. 891-953","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"THE NEW SEX DISCRIMINATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23792740","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":27576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A broad array of authors and schools have influenced Barry Buzan and Ole W\u00e6ver's formulation of securitization theory, including John L. Austin, Jacques Derrida and Carl Schmitt. This article draws attention to and strengthens the post-structuralist elements in the writings of Buzan and W\u00e6ver, as this part of the theory has received less attention than those attributable to Schmitt and Austin. Starting from securitization theory as developed by Buzan and W\u00e6ver and engaging with later expansions of the theory, I suggest a post-structuralist framework built around three questions: Through which discursive structures are cases and phenomena represented and incorporated into a larger discursive field? What is the epistemic terrain through which phenomena are known? And, what are the substantial modalities that define what kind of an issue a security problem is? The last part of the article brings this framework to bear on the 'Muhammad cartoon crisis' that began with the publication of 12 cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in 2005.","creator":["Lene Hansen"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44854d19-27a2-33b8-bede-a436b5aa1bae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26301794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The politics of securitization and the Muhammad cartoon crisis: A post-structuralist perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301794","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KYLE HARPER"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43698889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b344d034-9c65-3253-9e1f-f0fa94ebffa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43698889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"1562","pageStart":"1547","pagination":"pp. 1547-1562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Sentimental Family: A Biohistorical Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43698889","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":9020,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[2578,2642]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ideology critique has traditionally proceeded either by contrasting science and ideology or by distinguishing genuine interests from the distortions of false consciousness. At the same time that the sociology of scientific knowledge has opened up the content of science to social analysis, it has undermined the bases for such ideology critique. Barnes's attempt to rehabilitate a critical conception of ideology fails to provide for robust critique, and reintroduces an asymmetry - earlier banished - between instrumentalism and concealed social interest. An alternative approach to ideology is proposed, that dispenses with appeals to demarcation criteria or the interrogation of motives. Instead, ideology should be seen as a particular effect of many signifying practices within and outside science - the establishment or maintenance of disparities of power in society. The role that social studies of science can play in identifying potential remedies for ideology is discussed.","creator":["William T. Lynch"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca2ea31c-7126-3281-bb4c-1380be209d54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology and the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285431","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents an overview of \"Performative Social Science,\" which is defined as the deployment of different forms of artistic performance in the execution of a scientific project. Such forms may include art, theater, poetry, music, dance, photography, fiction writing, and multi-media applications. Performative research practices are in their developmental stage, with most of the major work appearing in the last two decades. Frequently based on a social constructionist metatheory, supporters reject a realist, or mapping view of representation, and explore varieties of expressive forms for constructing worlds relevant to the social sciences. The performative orientation often relies on a dramaturgical approach that encompasses value-laden, emotionally charged topics and presentations. Social scientists invested in social justice issues and political perspectives have been especially drawn to this approach. Performative social science invites productive collaborations among various disciplinary fields and between the sciences and arts.","creator":["Mary M. Gergen","Kenneth J. Gergen"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23032295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff2640c6-2b85-39df-aaaf-b1e63d215769"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23032295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"4 (138)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performative Social Science and Psychology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23032295","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Lane"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"908","pageStart":"876","pagination":"pp. 876-908","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Voided Role: On Genet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251423","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":14111,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018],[499406,499490]],"Locations in B":[[73790,73824],[75839,75931]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88a11165-3aa7-3ac3-be92-81973457c24d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0361","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12739,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[518726,518806]],"Locations in B":[[57166,57246]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J\u00fcrgen Buchenau"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4baa3386-820e-3356-9d60-db07ed79a546"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26744338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"647","pageStart":"639","pagination":"pp. 639-647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond the Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744338","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":6363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"New Perspectives on Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Mexico"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Graham Crow","Catherine Pope"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c94d3cf-8331-3ccc-80b2-d38f2022f50a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial Foreword: Sociology and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857140","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":1333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the face of mounting militarism in south Asia, this essay turns to anti-state, 'liberatory' movements in the region that employ violence to achieve their political aims. It explores some of the ethical quandaries that arise from the embrace of such violence, particularly for feminists for whom political violence and militarism is today a moot point. Feminist responses towards resistant political violence have, however, been less straightforward than towards the violence of the state, suggesting a more ambivalent ethical position towards the former than the latter. The nature of this ambivalence can be located in a postcolonial feminist ethics that is conceptually committed to the use of political violence in certain, albeit exceptional circumstances on the basis of the ethical ends that this violence (as opposed to other oppressive violence) serves. In opening up this ethical ambivalence \u2014 or the ethics of ambiguity, as Simone de Beauvoir says -to interrogation and reflection, I underscore the difficulties involved in ethically discriminating between forms of violence, especially when we consider the manner in which such distinctions rely on and reproduce gendered modes of power. This raises particular problems for current feminist appraisals of resistant political violence as an expression of women's empowerment and 'agency'.","creator":["Srila Roy"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e99f982-1b60-3eb5-9b59-2e988159b3d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40663984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"91","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"the ethical ambivalence of resistant violence: notes from postcolonial south Asia<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663984","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9845,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62337,62487]],"Locations in B":[[47977,48127]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rose Marie Brougham"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9c74640-ffa7-3b7e-a46f-ce7569edeb78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"CONSUMING MOTHER IN DIANA RAZNOVICH'S \"CASA MATRIZ\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803111","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":3052,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147749]],"Locations in B":[[15471,15581]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Jurisdictions around the world are increasingly adopting, or considering the adoption of, legislation to legalize same-sex marriage. The dominant approach in analyzing these reforms has been universalist. According to this view, same-sex marriage represents a legal trend at the global level and will eventually become a global norm. This description lumps together different family law reforms and depicts them as contributing to a broader convergionist global dynamic. This Article argues that universalism has theoretical and practical shortcomings, since it tends to downplay the diversity of processes of legal change by isolating law from local cultural and political dynamics, and, in so doing, obscures arguments and social dynamics that perpetuate the marginalization of gays and lesbians and their families. Using the pluralist socio-legal framework that sees law as a cultural and political artifact, this Article compares two such legal reforms, one in the United States and one in France. It argues that four aspects distinguish these two reforms: First, the different roles played by rights and equality-based arguments, the divergent understandings of law in relation to gay and lesbian historical marginalization and social change, the focus of the debates (on the definition of marriage in the United States and on filiation in France), and finally, the type of expertise underpinning the legal arguments. Pointing to these differences allows us to better appreciate the political, legal, and cultural processes that drive legal change and the obstacles to achieving equality for gays, lesbians, and their families.","creator":["IVANA ISAILOVIC"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26497410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52899623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff04d50-5b66-3602-9154-2cadd2bc2c4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26497410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjcomplaw"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Comparative Law","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Same Sex but Not the Same","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26497410","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":24434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Same-Sex Marriage in the United States and France and the Universalist Narrative"} +{"abstract":"This paper is based on a critical analysis of a chain of retail outlets called 'Girl Heaven', aimed primarily at 3-13-year-old girls, described variously as 'a piece of retail folklore' (Lumsden, 1999) and as 'Guardian Wimmin Hell' (Kettle, 1999), It argues that while on the one hand Girl Heaven appears to provide a celebratory social space in which girls can affirm their femininity, it also seems to epitomize the commercial appropriation of childhood femininity As a way into exploring these two alternatives, this article is concerned initially with what it means to 'do' femmine childhood against the backdrop of contemporary consumer culture, It then outlines the methodological approach that we take to researching Girl Heaven, and the ways in which we explore young girls' lived experience of consumer culture and gender acquisition.We then consider the commercial context of Girl Heaven in relation to the increasing market recognition of 'tweenies', as well as the significance of pester power and branding in childhood approaches to consumption. We subsequently focus on Girl Heaven as a cultural text, concentrating on its construction of femininity, Our analysis culminates in an attempt to reflect critically on the complex relationship between consumer culture and the process of becoming a woman. We reflect on Girl Heaven - with which, our research suggests, young girts themselves are acutely aware of having a relationship that is far from traightforward - as a notable manifestation of this complexity.","creator":["Rachel Russell","Melissa Tyler"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d301504d-98c0-3dbe-91ef-f671862017b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"619","pagination":"pp. 619-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thank Heaven for Little Girls: 'Girl Heaven' and the Commercial Context of Feminine Childhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856432","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues for the utility of psychoanalytic theory within the sociology of gender for exploring subjective meaning. Using data drawn from indepth interviews of 83 heterosexual young men and women, the author connects the degree to which the subject expresses agency within sexual encounters to their subjective experience of gender\u2014that is, to the specific meaning (including raced and classed meaning) and dominant emotions (conscious and unconscious) that the subject attributes to masculinity and femininity. This article presents an analysis of two cases selected from the larger study representing the subset of subjects that avoid expressing sexual agency.","creator":["Heather Powers Albanesi"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41658863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"043d5327-3602-3138-88b1-8bee856e70b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41658863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Eschewing Sexual Agency: A Gender Subjectivity Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41658863","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":14072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauren M. E. Goodlad"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Victorianist's Theory of Androgynous Experiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829852","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6023,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[39117,39255]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Gubar"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd96e4d9-055b-3529-acfe-ba7996c944d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"902","pageStart":"878","pagination":"pp. 878-902","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Ails Feminist Criticism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344111","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12332,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[111188,111312],[163594,163678]],"Locations in B":[[58522,58646],[61038,61122]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Scantlebury"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"316aa595-9c8d-39c6-9f26-2dbb500afc51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"CHAPTER 5: A Feminist Pedagogy in Undergraduate Science: Conflicting Concepts?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977038","volumeNumber":"189","wordCount":9753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JUDITH BUTLER"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d528ba99-2c97-37c7-a30c-9aeb66979879"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 1: The Question of Social Transformation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976712","volumeNumber":"242","wordCount":12218,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489356,489409]],"Locations in B":[[68488,68541]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew Mossin"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25167540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4211e91-5b0f-307b-826a-9e93b316ba9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25167540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"In Thicket\": Charles Olson, Frances Boldereff, Robert Creeley and the Crisis of Masculinity at Mid-Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25167540","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11615,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[71181,71235]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This work examines how fans of popular culture forms materialize and embody various semiotic elements from mass mediated public texts through acts of replication, revision, and modulation in a practice know as cosplay. I argue for a more phenomenological approach to the study of fandom, participatory culture, and vernacular media reception and for increased intellectual exchange between media and cultural studies scholars and folklorists.","creator":["Matthew Hale"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0043373X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50529929"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d9f263b-a061-38cf-a4b9-de5a9ec7a2eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24550744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westernfolklore"}],"isPartOf":"Western Folklore","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Western States Folklore Society","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Cosplay: Intertextuality, Public Texts, and the Body Fantastic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550744","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Madden Dempsey","Jonathan Herring"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4494595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42756970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-252115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4494595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfojlegastud"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Journal of Legal Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Sexual Penetration Requires Justification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4494595","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Trish Thomas Henley"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40314237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"460bd15f-f99c-3ffd-a48f-de8cb098cf96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40314237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing the Material Body: Enacting Passion, Madness, and Death on the Shakespearean Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40314237","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LYNN SHUTTERS"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"119e6f45-0220-3f1a-8a55-4d7399c6dfe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44211305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boccaccio, Christine de Pizan, and Marital Affection: The Case for Common Ground","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211305","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":12695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Ede","Andrea A. Lunsford"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edfa71b7-504d-3054-bd9a-66485f6f0ab1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Collaboration and Concepts of Authorship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463522","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":10704,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471]],"Locations in B":[[56382,56448]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Ismael Guti\u00e9rrez"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95e3e084-699b-35c5-9c79-03c4691f6f01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29742065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mujer y Pirater\u00eda en Lobas de Mar, de Zo\u00e9 Vald\u00e9s: G\u00e9nero, Travestismo y Subversi\u00f3n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742065","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The playful eroticism of girls' speech in \"Nausicaa\" provides an opportunity for Joyce to explore the power and the limits of both master narrative and subversive speech in the novel. Gerty and Cissy's use of euphemism, baby talk, and transgressive erotic speech positions them in a complex relationship with social dictates for Edwardian girls and women. They both restrict their speech to allowable social norms and press against them, sometimes subtly but, especially in Cissy's case, more often boldly. As such, the speech of these characters reveals much about narrative power and narrative resistance as it allows Joyce an opportunity to disrupt his own control within Ulysses.","creator":["Jen Shelton"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed82fd72-1dff-311f-8fe8-10e35d402523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bad Girls: Gerty, Cissy, and the Erotics of Unruly Speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598783","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7294,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[142887,142985]],"Locations in B":[[17639,17737]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing primarily from the work of Julia Kristeva and Judith Butler, the author suggests that a postmodern approach to identity can be used to challenge the essentialism that pervades both feminist empiricism and standpoint theory, and thus move feminist psychology in a more emancipatory direction. A major premise of this paper is that an engagement with postmodernism redirects our attention to symbolic constructions of femininity and to the sociopolitical grounding of experience.","creator":["Lisa Cosgrove"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"164370d3-2975-3e15-9cbf-4fd8022c606f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism, Postmodernism, and Psychological Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810865","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12266,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[441492,441578],[460836,460936],[471706,471794],[477853,477925],[503424,503495]],"Locations in B":[[26364,26450],[27111,27209],[72725,72813],[75818,75892],[76531,76602]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Kyratzis"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26763832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018716X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66fc0a81-2696-3269-8a7d-c47fef37c809"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26763832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humandevelopment"}],"isPartOf":"Human Development","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"S. Karger AG","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Language and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26763832","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":2594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Socialization through Personal Story-Telling Practice"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William Echard"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f412a3c-7500-343d-b10b-63fd2f5c9d23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"An Analysis of Neil Young's 'Powderfinger' Based on Mark Johnson's Image Schemata","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853572","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines two aspects of subjectivity-sexuality and singularity-that are considered fundamental to a modernist notion of the person. These aspects of subjectivity are under siege as new technologies of reproduction challenge our understanding of sexed bodies and as, simultaneously, a postmodern world-view brings forward the multiplicity of sexual subject positions and embodied hybridity that modernist thinking sought to control or dismiss. In this time of conceptual crisis regarding subjectivity and embodiment, the popular culture media of many advanced countries have produced increasing numbers of narratives about cyborgs, those embodied amalgams of the organic and the machinic. I begin by explaining why the concepts \"sexuality\" and \"singularity\" are so important in this context, and why Japanese popular culture is a particularly fruitful ground for exploration of cyborg subjectivities. Then I discuss two recent anime narratives-Shinseiki Evangelion (1995-96, Neon Genesis Evangelion) and K\u00f4kaku kid\u00f4tai (1995, Ghost in the Shell)-in terms of their depictions of specific aspects of sexuality and as the nexus of contemporary fears or desires regarding subjectivity that is being negotiated through those depictions. I conclude with observations about what these narratives reveal about new, postmodern conceptions of subjectivity.","creator":["Sharalyn Orbaugh"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a273356-9d96-3431-805f-0fe190193fbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"436","pagination":"pp. 436-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Sex and the Single Cyborg: Japanese Popular Culture Experiments in Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241109","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8888,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[421463,421570]],"Locations in B":[[42011,42114]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At present, the figure of the muxe occupies a queer position trapped between narratives of death and life that reaffirm both a notion of straight time and a state of coloniality. Through Guadalupe (2012), a graphic novel by the Brazilian poet Ang\u00e9lica Freitas and the cartoonist Odyr Bernardi, and the Mexican film Carm\u00edn tropical (2014) by Rigoberto Perezcano, I explore the possibility of a Latin American queer future that envisions other emancipatory models that do not reproduce hegemonic western LGBTQ identity politics. I argue that the possibility for this Latin American queer future lies in understanding queerness as a decolonial project that is always-already imbricated in a process of translation, linked to questions of temporality and space. I analyze the figure of the muxe as an outcome of strange temporalities and space\u2014that is, as a result of puzzling past, present and future in a single moment of time. This allows me to detach the muxe from identity and to explore how their positionality could potentially help defuse a binary (male) hierarchy implicit in the state of coloniality through a queer temporality that ultimately could lead to what I call a cuir Latin American future. En el presente, lo muxe ocupa una posici\u00f3n queer atrapada entre narrativas de vida y muerte que reafirman tanto un noci\u00f3n de tiempo lineal como un estado de colonialidad. A trav\u00e9s de Guadalupe (2010)\u2014novela gr\u00e1fica escrita por la poeta brasile\u00f1a Ang\u00e9lica Freitas y por el caricaturista Odyr Bernardi\u2014y la pel\u00edcula mexicana Carm\u00edn tropical (2014) dirigida por Rigoberto Perezcano, exploro la posibilidad de un futuro queer latinoamericano, visualizando otros modelos emancipatorios que no reproduzcan los modelos hegem\u00f3nicos-occidentales de las pol\u00edticas de identidad GLBTQ. Argumento que la posibilidad de un futuro queer Latinoamericano recae en entender lo queer como un proyecto decolonial que est\u00e1 siempre imbricado en procesos de traducci\u00f3n que, a su vez, est\u00e1n ligados a cuestiones de temporalidad y espacio. Para ello, analizo lo muxe como el resultado de una temporalidad y un espacio raro: como consecuencia de combinar pasado, presente y futuro en un solo momento en el tiempo. Esto me permite separar lo muxe de procesos de identidad y explorar c\u00f3mo su posicionalidad podr\u00eda potencialmente difuminar una jerarqu\u00eda binaria (masculina) impl\u00edcita en los discursos sobre la colonialidad a trav\u00e9s de una temporalidad queer que finalmente, podr\u00eda llevarnos a lo que llamo un futuro cuir latinoamericano.","creator":["Francesca Dennstedt"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48581723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"136c3d4e-97bc-3a59-925e-3b1f91bd4548"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48581723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cBetween Utopian Longings and Everyday Failures\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48581723","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Imagining a Latin American Cuir<\/span> Future"} +{"abstract":"Southern African historiography has become increasingly gender-sensitive in the last decade. Primarily as a result of the impact of feminism in the world of work and in universities, research on women has burgeoned. The inclusion of women in the study of the past and the recognition of their agency has filled an important lacuna but also has made evident the corresponding gap in knowledge about men. The dominance of men in the public record has obscured the fact that little is known about masculinity. Men have generally been treated in essentialist terms. The socially constructed nature of masculinity is widely acknowledged and it is this insight that needs to be applied to a study of the region's history. This article introduces readers to the inter-disciplinary work on masculinity, reviews how research on gender in South Africa has handled issues of men and masculinity and then suggests how insights taken from Men's Studies might help to broaden gender analysis and enrich the study of the South African past. In this article, a range of masculinities is identified. Colonialism created new and transformed existing masculinities. Race and class featured prominently in the configuration of these masculinities. Under colonialism positions of domination and subordination were created along the lines of race, bequeathing to the region the language of white men and black `boys'. The particular trajectory of colonialism ended the political independence of the indigenous polities and destroyed their economic independence but the success of the defeated polities in retaining possession of land and of the policies of segregation and apartheid meant that key African institutions survived. These were the basis for an African masculinity that in certain geographical and social areas disputed hegemony with white masculinities.","creator":["Robert Morrell"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1500f7f-d9ad-3eb1-969f-6bf790b3eff0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"630","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605-630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Boys and Men: Masculinity and Gender in Southern African Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637466","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":17054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the author's reflections after being interviewed as an \"expert\" on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, transsexual, and queer (LGBTQ) parents for a newspaper article. The socio-legal context of LGBTQ parenting has changed radically in recent years. In this shifting but still heteronormative environment, how should social work researchers construct \"lesbian parents\" in their work? Existing literature offers contradictions and prohibitions regarding the \"appropriate\" stance and methodology for researchers. Post-structuralism, queer theory, and feminism each offer theoretical framings of lesbian parents. New possibilities emerge for a political neo-pragmatism that is based on a commitment to social justice and that endorses continued flexibility in social work's use of language, methodology, epistemology, and practice. Cet article se penche sur les r\u00e9flexions que tient l'auteure apr\u00e8s avoir \u00e9t\u00e9 interview\u00e9e en tant que \u00absp\u00e9cialiste\u00bb de la question des parents lesbiens, gais, bisexuels, transgenre, transsexuels et queer (LGBTQ) pour un article de journal. Le contexte socio-juridique de l'\u00e9ducation des enfants par des parents LGBTQ a chang\u00e9 radicalement ces derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es. Dans cet environnement \u00e9volutif mais encore h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormatif, comment les chercheurs en travail social devraientils construire les \u00abparents lesbiens\u00bb dans leurs travaux? La litt\u00e9rature existante renferme des contradictions et des interdictions quant aux positions et aux m\u00e9thodes de recherche dites \u00abappropri\u00e9es\u00bb. Le poststructuralisme, la th\u00e9orie queer et le f\u00e9minisme peuvent tous servir de cadre th\u00e9orique \u00e0 la notion de parents lesbiens. Il en \u00e9merge de nouvelles possibilit\u00e9s pour l'\u00e9dification d'un n\u00e9opragmatisme politique qui se fonde sur le souci de la justice sociale et qui favorise la souplesse en tout temps des choix en service social \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard du langage, de la m\u00e9thodologie, de l'\u00e9pist\u00e9mologie et de la pratique.","creator":["Margaret F. Gibson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41669938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0820909X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7459e85e-0428-395d-848a-0f8b55b0ab65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41669938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canasociworkrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Social Work Review \/ Revue canadienne de service social","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Canadian Association for Social Work Education (CASWE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BUILDING RESEARCH, BUILDING JUSTICE: Epistemology, Social Work, and Lesbian Parents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41669938","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristelle L. Baskins"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23923574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23923574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DONATELLO'S BRONZE \"DAVID\": GRILLANDA, GOLIATH, GROOM?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23923574","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7431,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472921]],"Locations in B":[[30567,30658]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I argue that BDSM sexuality should be conceptualized as a form of \"working at play.\" Considering two dominant models of sexuality, identity and lifestyle, I argue that BDSM is more fluid and less binary than identity. Moreover, while lifestyle focusses attention on BDSM as consumptive labour, this model does not adequately address the pleasure or sociality BDSM practitioners themselves emphasize. Instead, I argue that \"working at play\" recognizes the ways that practitioners move between registers of work (productive labour) and play (creative recombination). This analysis situates BDSM (and other sexualities) within the shifting cultural geography of U.S. late-modernity, drawing attention to the ways sexuality blurs boundaries between individual\u2014social, real\u2014pretend and leisure\u2014labour. \/\/\/ Cet article soutient que la pratique sexuelle du BDSM [bondage, domination\/soumission, sadomasochisme] devrait \u00eatre con\u00e7ue comme une fa\u00e7on de travailler en jouant. En prenant en compte deux interpr\u00e9tations dominantes de la sexualit\u00e9, l'identit\u00e9 et le mode de vie, je soutiens que la pratique du BDSM est plus changeante et moins binaire que ne le suppose une conception identitaire de la sexualit\u00e9. De plus, si le fait de concevoir la sexualit\u00e9 comme un mode de vie focalise l'attention sur le BDSM en tant que travail de consommation, ce mod\u00e8le n'aborde cependant pas ad\u00e9quatement les questions du plaisir et de la sociabilit\u00e9 auxquelles les adeptes du BDSM accordent eux-m\u00eames de l'importance. Je soutiens que penser le BDSM comme une mani\u00e8re de travailler en jouant tient compte des fa\u00e7ons dont les adeptes naviguent entre les registres du travail (travail de production) et du jeu (recombinaison cr\u00e9ative), travaillant ainsi \u00e0 l'interface des cat\u00e9gories suivantes: individuel\u2014social, r\u00e9el\u2014simul\u00e9 et loisir\u2014travail. Cette analyse situe le BDSM (et d'autres types de sexualit\u00e9 mill\u00e9naire) dans le cadre de la g\u00e9ographie culturelle changeante des \u00c9tats-Unis en p\u00e9riode de modernit\u00e9 avanc\u00e9e.","creator":["Margot D. Weiss"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9cb49fe-69be-3639-9edd-92e31f2e3a1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25605313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Working at Play: BDSM Sexuality in the San Francisco Bay Area","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605313","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":14442,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157]],"Locations in B":[[22506,22602]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nina Miller"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"920db66b-2ad7-3c9c-aaf1-b9c2c984bd74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3042355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Femininity, Publicity, and the Class Division of Cultural Labor: Jessie Redmon Fauset's There is Confusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042355","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores alternative food initiatives (AFIs) and their relational ontological forms. Demonstrations of pervasive and dynamic \u201cintra-actions\u201d in the urban foodscape can offer hope for a transformation away from disenfranchising associations of the conventional food system, despite the challenge of unequal dispositions of different actors and activities involved. This participatory ethnographic study of AFIs in Auckland, New Zealand, included following, observing and actively practicing with AFIs. The practices seen and done are read through the work of Barad to consider how a more just food system can be materialized through participants\u2019 engagement with AFIs. Here, several case studies of AFIs disturb dominant thinking, to: highlight the abundance, prominence and dynamism of these models of alternative food; explore how doing differently is regularly and actively embodied by actors in the alternative foodscape; and, how these novel expressions of alternative food can engender hope in the urban food landscape through their intra-action.","creator":["EMMA SHARP"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26805961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19489145"},{"name":"oclc","value":"732289208"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014202796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"926e2bdf-dee3-3df6-8c46-fbb7d145e20a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26805961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geophistinterela"}],"isPartOf":"Geopolitics, History, and International Relations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Addleton Academic Publishers","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(INTRA-)ACTIVITY OF ALTERNATIVE FOOD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26805961","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"PERFORMING A HOPEFUL FOOD FUTURE"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lheisa Dustin"],"datePublished":"2015-01-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.1.0109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ecd1926-94f4-33a2-a134-748c7a349e90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.57.1.0109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ghost Words: Nightwood<\/em>'s Cryptic Imperatives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.1.0109","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":12282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mich\u00e8le A. Schaal"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76789c7c-68a1-3dfd-b487-95b4d8e4a64a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23621670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le \u00ab je \u00bb comme \u00ab jeu \u00bb : genre f\u00e9minin et performance dans \"Truismes\" de Marie Darrieussecq","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621670","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":6251,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[100125,100252],[444259,444425]],"Locations in B":[[23102,23229],[29619,29785]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara J. Thayer-Bacon"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3041ce1e-41d1-3b33-9f65-4e992b741cfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45177694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"WATER: JAMES'S PURE EXPERIENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177694","volumeNumber":"505","wordCount":7892,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433394,433476]],"Locations in B":[[24533,24608]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theoreticians and practitioners in the American criminal justice system increasingly debate the role of racial identity, racialized narratives, and race-neutral representation in law, lawyering, and ethics. This debate holds special bearing on the growing prosecution and defense of acts of racially motivated violence. In this continuing investigation of the prosecution and defense of such violence, Professor Alfieri examines the recent federal prosecution of five white New York City police officers charged with assaulting Abner Louima, a young male Haitian immigrant, in 1997. Professor Alfieri presents a raceconscious, community-oriented model of prosecutorial discretion guided by constitutional precepts, citizenship ideals, professionalism values, racial traditions, and moral customs. This model provides an alternative to the dominant colorblind prosecutorial canon of race reutrality in cases of racially motivated violence.","creator":["Anthony V. Alfieri"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1373016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45bfa9d0-918a-345a-946d-8725ac9fa626"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1373016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":108,"pageEnd":"1264","pageStart":"1157","pagination":"pp. 1157-1264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Prosecuting Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1373016","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":49747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlene Merithew"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83f126d8-9b8e-3342-8b21-3cd094cf1dfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La b\u00fasqueda eterna de 'otro modo de ser humano y libre': los ensayos de Rosario Castellanos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021665","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6121,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[63900,64282]],"Locations in B":[[19279,19677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Kirkpatrick"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3270176e-c16a-3eec-8827-e239679d89a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"TransFormers: \"Identity\" Compromised","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653489","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":5312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Henrietta Mondry"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/310184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c8eca7f-4de2-3bfd-b0b1-5b7eeedd5e0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/310184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"How \"Straight\" Is the Venus of Milo? Regendering Statues and Women's Bodies in Gleb Uspensky's \"Vypriamila\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/310184","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeff Packman"],"datePublished":"2011-09-17","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.55.3.0414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13e7b83b-5e2e-3179-aeef-6ffb6ed72243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.55.3.0414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Society for Ethnomusicology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Musicians' Performances and Performances of \"Musician\" in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.55.3.0414","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":15034,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431357,431480]],"Locations in B":[[78744,78866]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joy Ladin"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.34.1.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e25c47a-e1ec-301f-9698-c3172d6ee442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.34.1.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"FSR, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In the Image of God, God Created Them: Toward Trans Theology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.34.1.06","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines poetic, theoretical, and epistolary texts by Rainer Maria Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salom\u00e9 as reflections on their personal friendship and their debates about psychoanalysis and sexuality between 1897 and 1914. Both authors investigate the potentials of sexual intercourse to conquer or transgress individual differences and are driven by the question whether and how sexuality leads to the construction of a harmonius \"we.\" For Rilke these issues are intimately linked to linguistic questions about the references of the personal pronouns \"ich,\" \"du,\" \"wir.\" Andreas-Salom\u00e9 focuses on the differentiating and harmonizing capacities of physiological and psychological processes stimulated by sex. Thus the essay investigates the clashes between poetic self-reflexivity and the author-specific fictionalizations of psychological and physiological realities of sex.","creator":["Dorothee Ostmeier"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3f5191b-73d5-386f-95db-640b09ef0184"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender Debates between Rainer Maria Rilke and Lou Andreas-Salom\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072860","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9751,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[47708,47839]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pascale Gaitet"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3816a6c-045e-3f24-b1de-177c749b23d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Politics of Camp in Jean Genet's \"Our Lady of the Flowers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287554","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4467,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[6965,7094]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Russia's anti-gay propaganda laws and anti-gay sentiment have shocked many in the West. They shouldn't have. In Soviet Russia, the homosexual was seen as a sign of foreign pollution, a temporary aberration\u2014like a criminal or a disease\u2014that will disappear in a more socialist future. As a result, queer Russians were not so much the stable homosexual species that they have been in the past 150 years in the West as much as momentary communities of desire. In the post-Soviet era, this history of the homosexual as foreign is now confronted with American understandings of gays and lesbians as \u201cborn this way\u201d as well as American homophobia that posits the homosexual as a threat to children and the \u201ctraditional\u201d family. By examining the clash between Russian and American histories of sexuality, we can see that the current anti-gay politics in Russia was not predetermined by its history, but certainly shaped by it. With the confluence of an insecure state, growing nationalism, and the increasing importance of conservative Orthodox Christianity, Russia's history of sexuality has shaped the homosexual into its current form as a threat from outside, akin to Central Asian immigrants in the nationalist imagination, and a threat that must be eliminated.","creator":["Laurie Essig"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.3.0039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"824a2909-c7fb-3e1b-a637-fd3c0626a2a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.1.3.0039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cBury Their Hearts\u201d: Some Thoughts on the Specter of Homosexuality Haunting Russia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.3.0039","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Clayton"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a915648-b02a-3d57-81a6-4432e1854176"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25651700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phoenix"}],"isPartOf":"Phoenix","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Classical Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"AFTERWORD: BEGINNINGS AND ORIGIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651700","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":2843,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra Parsons"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61314128"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006213903"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca970023-ee43-3d82-a719-b33071b6e2ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26355049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"History, Activism, and the Queer Child in Derek Jarman\u2019s Queer Edward II<\/em> (1991)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355049","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article propose une interpr\u00e9tation sociologique, esth\u00e9tique et f\u00e9ministe des Chiennes savantes, deuxi\u00e8me roman de Virginie Despentes qui demeure peu \u00e9tudi\u00e9. Despentes r\u00e9v\u00e8le les processus de socialisation menant \u00e0 la construction de l\u2019identit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine qui, selon Pierre Bourdieu, repose sur la domination masculine. Cette socialisation conduit \u00e0 la construction binaire et \u00e0 la naturalisation des identit\u00e9s de genre. \u00c0 travers la caract\u00e9risation des personnages, les dynamiques de pouvoir et l\u2019ironie dramatique, Despentes d\u00e9nonce la mise en sc\u00e8ne de l\u2019opposition entre le masculin et le f\u00e9minin. Cette ironie fonctionne comme une resignification et subversion qui engendrent l\u2019\u00ab agency, \u00bb selon Judith Butler, de la protagoniste.","creator":["Merc\u00e9d\u00e8s Baillargeon"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d51c582-a642-392b-9775-bb10789b95e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Zones de tension","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023692","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":7349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"(d\u00e9)construction et subversion des genres dans Les Chiennes savantes <\/em> de Virginie Despentes"} +{"abstract":"Abstract In this article, I problematize the historical development of quasi-institutionalized lesbianism on the Caribbean island of Carriacou, addressing veiled references to its \u201cIgbo\u201d origins in popular music and culture. How do we interpret such muted intimations and the forms of historicity they suggest? I argue that a case for Igbo origins can be made if we separate gender from sexuality. Reading Ifi Amadiume and Nwando Achebe on \u201cfemale husbands\u201d in Igboland in relation to M. G. Smith\u2019s documentation of lesbianism in Carriacou, I identify related logics of lineage organization, prostitution, and property devolution linking both cases to \u201cqueer\u201d conjugal forms. But whereas such unions were eroticized in Carriacou, in West Africa they remained strictly jural. That an Igbo form of woman-to- woman marriage was sexualized in Carriacou shows how flexible West African gender ideologies shaped queer sexualities under radically different historical conditions than in the Americas. R\u00e9sum\u00e9 Dans cet article, je probl\u00e9matise le d\u00e9veloppement d\u2019un lesbianisme quasi institutionnel sur l\u2019\u00eele des Cara\u00efbes Carriacou en examinant des allusions \u00e0 peine voil\u00e9es \u00e0 ses origines \u00ab Igbo \u00bb dans la musique et la culture populaire. Comment peut-on interpr\u00e9ter ces indices discrets et les types d\u2019historicit\u00e9 qu\u2019ils sugg\u00e8rent? Je soutiens que la th\u00e8se des origines Igbo se tient si l\u2019ont s\u00e9pare le genre de la sexualit\u00e9. En analysant Ifi Amadiume et Nwando Achebe sur les \u00ab maris femme \u00bb en Igboland en conjonction avec les documents de M. G. Smith sur le lesbianisme \u00e0 Carriacou, j\u2019identifie similarit\u00e9s dans l\u2019organisation des lign\u00e9es, la prostitution, et la d\u00e9volution des biens qui relient les deux cas \u00e0 des relations conjugales \u00ab queer \u00bb. Cependant, alors que ces unions \u00e9taient \u00e9rotis\u00e9es \u00e0 Carricacou, en Afrique de l\u2019ouest elles \u00e9taient strictement de droit. Le fait qu\u2019une forme Igbo de mariage femme-\u00e0- femme \u00e9tait sexualis\u00e9e \u00e0 Carriacou montre comment la flexibilit\u00e9 des id\u00e9ologies de genre d\u2019Afrique de l\u2019ouest a influenc\u00e9 les sexualit\u00e9s homosexuelles dans un contexte historique radicalement diff\u00e9rent de celui des Am\u00e9riques.","creator":["Andrew Apter"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271868"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829373364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6adcfebd-6d0a-3c30-8f00-f6871d51d564"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestafrihist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queer Crossings: Kinship, Marriage, and Sexuality in Igboland and Carriacou","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0039","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"If social critique is to play a role in broad social transformation, then it must be able to engage with the terms that people use to understand their lives. This essay argues that we can find an important model for performing social critique in the quite different work of Jeffrey Stout and Judith Butler. For both, social critique must be immanent and it must make explicit the character of the norms by which people currently live. This model is especially important in a situation where various moral and cultural traditions are confronting one another, and where it is necessary to work towards shared social and political goals. Stout and Butler present a method for achieving one's political goals by engaging with others on terms that they would recognize and seeking to transform the political structures they inhabit. Furthermore, their approaches provide helpful insights for further reflection on the critical possibilities in current ethnographic work.","creator":["Nicholas Aaron Friesner"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26450384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8d4919e-adab-369e-a4e0-ce0c4806481c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26450384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOCIAL CRITIQUE AND TRANSFORMATION IN STOUT AND BUTLER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26450384","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9466,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2344,2531]],"Locations in B":[[33716,33903]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Individualism continues to have a notable impact on social work. The personalisation of services and the individualisation of care are just two examples of this societal trend. While helping service users to articulate their aspirationsfor a better future, individualism, if taken too far, undermines the social aspects of life. In response to this concern, this paper argues that social work must appreciate the interplay between the individual and the collective spheres, and its impact on identity formation, in order to enhance human well-being. To give substance to this argument, Jenkins's model of social identity is appropriated and augmented to take account of four interlinked, yet distinct, orders of experience, namely the individual, interactional, institutional and societal orders. This reworked conceptualisation is then considered in terms of its implications for social work practice.","creator":["Stan Houston"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a2118c5-d45f-3954-8098-138c43841d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43905470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"532","pagination":"pp. 532-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Individualism: Social Work and Social Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905470","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Lugones"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62e7d8a8-184f-3f55-9e25-902b400b9d29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"458","pagination":"pp. 458-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Purity, Impurity, and Separation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174808","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Abby Russell","Ana Elisa Gomez Laris"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23a51de0-4ab5-3131-a3c5-e6946ca8c66b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44982328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Publications in American Studies from German-Speaking Countries, 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982328","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":22988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The grassroots assistance that Muslim women activists provide to victims of domestic abuse in Kazakhstan differs significantly from approaches commonly used by service providers in the United States. Yet the activists' informal remedies, which are shaped by discourses of religion and ethnicity and which have attracted women who seek something other than safety or formal justice, are implicitly regulated by cultural politics. By examining particular cases, I show how activists prescribe gender ideologies that guide victims' choices while supporting their own group's broader political goals. These findings may help in understanding the dynamics of women's political agency outside the state.","creator":["Edward Snajdr"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6974ed3a-1ec8-355e-931e-299c31d05dc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Power, and the Performance of Justice: Muslim Women's Responses to Domestic Violence in Kazakhstan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805284","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":17089,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[103216,103267]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ngaire Naffine"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1096698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44543741"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1096698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Modern Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Possession: Erotic Love in the Law of Rape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1096698","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":19704,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[63900,64293]],"Locations in B":[[7618,8011]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cecilia Sayad"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a205c57-6421-3c6c-b6e5-1cca9de1faf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"VARIATIONS ON THE AUTHOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413685","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":3847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01628493-e0bd-3bdb-8a20-1124891bc646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859509","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":2065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Betina Entzminger"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6dc26b93-6c07-334c-a4df-5a23897aaa79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Passing as Miscegenation: Whiteness and Homoeroticism in Faulkner's \"Absalom, Absalom!\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908285","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8389,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents research which suggests that college women's friendships are learning relationships in which intellectual play and performance are risk-free and in which college women reconcile the constructed barrier between autonomous and interdependent learning and engage in a dynamic articulation of thinking and knowing. The implications of the value and power of this relationship for higher education pedagogy, research, and practice are discussed.","creator":["Ana M. Martinez Aleman"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2959954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d00e3d4d-3d01-352e-abc3-aa39dd21d352"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2959954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Understanding and Investigating Female Friendship's Educative Value","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2959954","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":16509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Breyan Strickler"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44086674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce217612-df73-3e98-959c-c07327a8006b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44086674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Pathologization of Environmental Discourse: Melding Disability Studies and Ecocriticism in Urban Grunge Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44086674","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10769,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[418202,418602],[433304,433476],[434702,434977],[435237,435597],[439426,439594],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[48713,49109],[49168,49340],[49354,49629],[49611,49973],[50112,50280],[65011,65086]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth A. Castelli"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f1a198d-9c93-345f-82a8-7716d8a657d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Heteroglossia, Hermeneutics, and History: A Review Essay of Recent Feminist Studies of Early Christianity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002233","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12571,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[21447,21526]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One of the precepts of \u00e9criture f\u00e9minine is that relationships between women are not adequately articulated within a phallocentric symbolic system, that is, within conventional language. Luce Irigaray suggests that the construction of a subject inevitably establishes a power struggle through grammatical structure between the subject and object in \"the economy of discourse.\" She speculates about what would happen \"if the 'object' started to speak.\" Irigaray's utopian linguistic structures identify the need for a radical approach to subject positions in terms of gender politics. Canadian writer Daphne Marlatt attempts to articulate a new kind of subjectivity for women in her poetics and in her subversive novel ana historic. There are demands for alternatives to phallogocentric language from the \u00e9criture f\u00e9minine and the ways in which Marlatt herself gives voice to the \"object,\" by creating a nonexclusive pronominal system and a deliberately inclusive, active, and feminized second person. A reconceptualized subjectivity is produced by philosophers such as Irigaray and Monique Wittig, and Marlatt's work offers a literary realization of such theories developed through her pronominal use.","creator":["Keith Green","Jill LeBihan"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93c692f4-f248-34ea-86a7-2257fb108f31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"432","pagination":"pp. 432-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Speaking Object: Daphne Marlatt's Pronouns and Lesbian Poetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946260","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6138,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[37716,37781]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tanya Augsburg"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e21b7739-f5b5-3253-b462-678556807f63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584879","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":1237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tamar El-Or"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4467523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Multi-Literacies and Democracy: Religious Zionist Women Reading Actuality in Antiquities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467523","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diane Downer Anderson"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41962280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ab1d1d2-04dc-3d15-8efb-99c08f1f96a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41962280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading \"Salt and Pepper\": Social Practices, Unfinished Narratives, and Critical Interpretations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41962280","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":8393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"TOTALITY AND COMPLEMENTARITY ARE PROMINENT TERMS IN CATHOLIC discussions of sexuality and gender. In this essay I explore these terms as they relate to the concept of integrity. I argue that although these terms were originally intended to describe the importance of physical integrity or wholeness, recent moves toward a more personalistic sexual ethic have rendered them problematic. More precisely, although these two terms appear to have integrity as their goal, uncertainty about the object of integrity results in fragmentation.","creator":["Aline H. Kalbian"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23561551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56717329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221984"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23561551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Integrity in Catholic Sexual Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23561551","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although Vergil\u2019s Georgics is a poem that elaborates on the beauty and bounty of Nature at great length, the word natura appears only a handful of times across its four books. I argue here that the noun\u2019s seven discrete appearances are judiciously placed and carefully nuanced to constitute a response to one of the central concepts of Lucretius\u2019s De rerum natura. In Lucretius\u2019s poem, Nature is a female-bodied personification inextricably entwined with the poet\u2019s materialist universe. Vergil distances natura in the Georgics from the female embodiment that Lucretius put forth, thereby reasserting the role of the gods\u2014in particular of male gods\u2014in Earth\u2019s manifold acts of creation, as part of his larger critique of Epicurean materialism.","creator":["Erin M. Hanses"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27078499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05067294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567713383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e0f1b5-6e48-32fa-9530-0c796abb7923"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27078499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergilius1959"}],"isPartOf":"Vergilius (1959-)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"The Vergilian Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"EMBODYING NATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27078499","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":7624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"VERGIL\u2019S DEFEMINIZATION OF LUCRETIAN NATURA<\/em> IN THE GEORGICS<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["D. A. Boxwell"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1ad9bd7-0d9e-3db0-8301-530ca357df23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Dis)orienting Spectacle: The Politics of Orlando's Sapphic Camp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441812","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9484,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[439426,439625],[439923,440300]],"Locations in B":[[14290,14615],[14691,15090]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Drucilla Cornell"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5a90d69-812f-39d0-8762-3dfe9fd0b895"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"1039","pageStart":"1033","pagination":"pp. 1033-1039","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Las Gre\u00f1udas: Recollections on Consciousness-Raising","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175482","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[18122,18185]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An evaluation of the politics of drag needs to take into account how queer performances stage the signs of royal power to which its major protagonists\u2014the drag queen and, more recently, the drag king\u2014are connected by virtue of their name, and often also by virtue of the historical images re-played in queer drag scenarios. Drag queens and kings challenge hegemonic distributions of power by engaging the force of signifiers with ambiguous authority in the modern imaginary. Pursuing the 'royal genealogy' of queer drag, I read the drag performance of the 1933 film Queen Christina as a displacement from premodern, monarchical Europe to (queer) America; the staged concept of European monarchical power is both challenged and preserved in the royal figure of the star. While the kingdom of the queer star is a kingdom of theatrical femininity, the recent emergence of the \"drag king\" challenges the association of femininity and masquerade. While the presentation of a spectacle of masculinity as an artificial construction constitutes the specific critical potential of the drag king act, its name has no queer history analogous to that of the queen. Keeping this asymmetry in mind, the critical evaluation of the drag king needs to address the ways in which individual performances succeed to queer the 'royal legacy' of masculine domination they refer to.","creator":["Claudia Breger"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecfd21b6-e250-3bb0-82ad-7d4e93b76b7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Queens\" und \"Kings\", oder: \"Performing Power\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157631","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7887,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[52716,52785]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELISABETH B. THOMPSON-HARDY"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"210ebfea-5c85-39c2-b191-da81d67ae974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Three: Bricolage: Cultural Studies, Poststructural Feminism, and Poststructuralist Ethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136443","volumeNumber":"522","wordCount":16420,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[447642,447753],[454432,454559],[455440,455708],[456289,456411],[466319,466611]],"Locations in B":[[37182,37288],[37433,37560],[37566,37834],[38162,38284],[41258,41554]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In recent years, feminist theorists have begun to explore how sexual difference and patriarchal conceptions of gender permeate the epistemological structures as well as the substantive content of dominant forms of knowledge. This project discloses the fraudulence of universal truth claims and argues for situated knowledges. But developing situated knowledges is not straightforward: the deep-seated and pervasive character of gender biases poses difficult problems for those seeking to further feminist aims within the academy. Focusing on gender biases in language, this article advocates a strategy of unsettling existing intellectual structures from within and seeks to make this kind of strategy accessible to geographers whose primary interests are not theoretical or linguistic. Non-sexist language and gynocentric language are criticized for underestimating the significance of gender asymmetry in language and for oversimplifying the relationship between language and corporeality. Feminist readings of Lacanian psychoanalytic theory are explored to advance a more promising account of the interconnections between writing\/speaking positions and gender identities. This allows for the development of a strategy of subverting phallic authority through marking the previously unmarked position of masculinity.","creator":["Liz Bondi"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/622312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"In Whose Words? On Gender Identities, Knowledge and Writing Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622312","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Genie Babb"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3874fb52-61cb-3ce8-bc54-3e1c21ce7ee2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Where the Bodies Are Buried: Cartesian Dispositions in Narrative Theories of Character","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107290","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":14244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Hebrew poetry of Rachel Bluvstein is strikingly different from the Yiddish poetry of Anna Margolin, yet both poets are remembered in the popular imagination and in scholarly literature first and foremost as women. While the appearance of these writers during the 1920s reflects the changing place of women in Jewish culture, it also calls attention to constructions of gendered authorial selves in poetry and in public. Moving between Rachel's iconic face and Margolin's self-described shattered visage, this article explores differences between modernist writing by women in Hebrew and in Yiddish, as well as similarities between poets confronting literary establishments that presume a male author. Both Rachel and Margolin draw on minimalist models, specifically aspects of Russian Acmeism, to fashion sophisticated lyric personas that negotiate gender and identity, but their aesthetic efforts are overshadowed by widespread critical and popular constructions of femininity.","creator":["Naomi Brenner"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"988efe1e-f360-35f6-a5fc-2399ae5ab242"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Slippery Selves: Rachel Bluvstein and Anna Margolin in Poetry and in Public","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.100","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12975,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[15427,15659]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Minaz Jooma"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Alimentary Structures of Incest in Paradise Lost","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030272","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the center of all my previous work on gender and sexuality has been the goal of shrinking both the relevance and the reach of the male\/female dichotomy by trying, insofar as possible, to make it as minimal a presence in human social and psychological life as, say, eye color or foot size. Here, however, I argue that a more effective way to undo the privileged status of the two-and-only-two categories of sex\/gender\/desire that are currently treated in Western culture as normal and natural may be to explode or proliferate such categories (i.e., to turn the volume up) rather than try to eliminate them (i.e., to turn the volume down). In making this argument, I discuss the work of three scholars whose ideas are central: philosopher Judith Butler, anthropologist Mary Douglas, and developmental geneticist Anne Fausto-Sterling.","creator":["Sandra Lipsitz Bem"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"275223a8-54ca-351f-a35a-88630cff7180"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dismantling Gender Polarization and Compulsory Heterosexuality: Should We Turn the Volume down or up?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813357","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5375,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[46319,46409],[48406,48614],[54057,54147]],"Locations in B":[[9443,9533],[9746,9959],[10008,10098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the use of extended-voice technique and \"extreme\" vocalizations in Peter Maxwell Davies's avant-garde music-theatre work Eight Songs for a Mad King. Using poststructuralist and musicological theories of voice, the essay makes the case for a conception of \"queer vocality\" that disrupts and subverts socio-cultural and aesthetic norms.","creator":["ADRIAN CURTIN"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb53d6e9-5f41-38b2-9bcf-11bd7c83580c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Alternative Vocalities: Listening Awry to Peter Maxwell Davies's \"Eight Songs for a Mad King\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030217","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7998,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dominique D. Fisher"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d67bd68-bfd4-34e0-bf22-0ed914642055"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Du corps travesti \u00e0 l'enveloppe transparente: \"Monsieur V\u00e9nus\" ou la politique du leurre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288054","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":4972,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[6949,7058]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tom Cohen"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"086a4456-8f4f-3c81-8e00-c2f674eb8edf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ideology of Dialogue: The Bakhtin\/De Man (Dis)Connection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354387","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18769,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[450777,451164],[457176,457773],[457529,457785]],"Locations in B":[[114769,115159],[115169,115794],[115550,115806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is anticipated that a colorectal cancer (CRC) screening programme will be introduced in New Zealand making it the first screening programme in this country to include both males and females. In-depth interviews were carried out with 80 participants (53 females and 27 males) about their knowledge and attitudes to screening programmes in general, as well as their understanding and perceptions of CRC screening in particular. The study highlighted the perceived marginalization of men's health with a sense that women had advocated for, and therefore monopolized, screening while men's health had been left unattended. There were also perceptions of women's responsibility for ensuring men's access to health services. There are arguments that such perceptions disempower or 'infantalize' men which have no long term benefits. While health is perceived as being a feminine matter, it may be difficult to encourage men to engage in preventative behaviours, such as taking up the offer of screening. This article also highlights the heterogeneity of men, where different performances of masculinities were presented. A stereotypical 'staunch' or 'macho image' discourse was evident in some of the interviews where much emphasis was on maintaining and controlling bodily boundaries. Letting the barrier of embodied 'staunchness' down to access health services is a threat to identity. What is required for successful implementation of the CRC screening programme is a normalization of men's health help-seeking, taking into account the fact that men are not homogenous. Studies in relation to men's health need to attend to cultural diversity which is likely to present a challenge to individualism. Critical studies of men would be enhanced by more engagement with the work of black male scholars.","creator":["Lee Thompson","Tony Reeder","Gillian Abel"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4be9d452-153d-3c9e-96e4-7e0526de01b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26650187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"'I can't get my husband to go and have a colonoscopy': Gender and screening for colorectal cancer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650187","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23557099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557099","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":1594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clarence Orsi"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44841518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10531297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46728412"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250653"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b4c4363-74f7-3e09-875e-c471d69c00a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44841518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newenglandrev"}],"isPartOf":"New England Review (1990-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Middlebury College Publications","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Take Stock","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44841518","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":2902,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Guy Oakes"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"085ab0d1-1844-3624-8b0b-bc2f8e19718b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20007198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Straight Thinking about Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007198","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4400,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[24162,24246]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines a single large outdoor fire pit (Feature 5) from the ca. 1715-1754 Seneca Iroquois Townley-Read site, exploring the untidy intersection of contemporary gender theory, archaeological remains (encompassing artifacts, subsistence remains, features, spatial relations, and contemporaneous mortuary data from the region), and normative conceptions of Iroquois gender roles. While many social categories of people presumably circulated through the feature area, women were consistently present and likely controlled most of the work that took place. The Feature 5 assemblage suggests that Seneca women smoked pipes and worked brass, were involved in complex sets of tasks and \"changes of hands\" that contributed to subsistence and trade, and labored and demonstrated control over resources and personnel in a way that was not in any sense \"private.\" The spatial separation of gendered areas of control was one way in which both Seneca kinship and gender identities were performed and reproduced.","creator":["Kurt A. Jordan"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43491392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"642074684"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14db7c02-80ce-3e11-99a9-8105514fa704"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43491392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Enacting Gender and Kinship around a Large Outdoor Fire Pit at the Seneca Iroquois Townley-Read Site, 1715-1754","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43491392","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":18078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Attfield"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"What Does History Have to Do with It? Feminism and Design History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316324","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. Martin Favor"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"818e6213-e46f-345e-991c-c9ffe264fba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2932296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"705","pageStart":"694","pagination":"pp. 694-705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Ain't Nothin' Like the Real Thing, Baby\": Trey Ellis' Search for New Black Voices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932296","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6352,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[38711,38842]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Driscoll"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b087f04c-6e1e-3a77-a107-55f72dfa02f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Girl-Doll: Barbie as Puberty Manual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978702","volumeNumber":"245","wordCount":7819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[33259,33431]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What ought 'foundations' for political thought look like in a postmetaphysical world? I argue for a \"weak\" ontological model of 'foundations' and employ it in a critical reconstruction of Judith Butler's work. My specific intention is to show that this model provides a better understanding of both the strengths and weaknesses of Butler's writings than does her own notion-shared by many poststructuralists-that one does not need ontology to sustain ethical and political reflection, or, at best, only an austerely minimal one.","creator":["Stephen K. White"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ebdfe1d-1c33-3783-b234-0c592773c263"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3235281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"As the World Turns: Ontology and Politics in Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235281","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10767,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465229,465345]],"Locations in B":[[2514,2630]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eugene de Klerk"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2156c924-129f-3e44-86cb-2f23bcdbdace"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27807129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"White Curtains, Dark Thoughts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807129","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9514,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496573]],"Locations in B":[[53599,53687]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RACHEL GREENSPAN"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26254722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba8604de-ca82-3edd-8334-11b3d58c3b41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26254722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cI\u2019ll Have What She\u2019s Having\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26254722","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8762,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[183526,183695]],"Locations in B":[[50102,50271]],"subTitle":"Fake Orgasm, Affectation, and Other S(t)imulations"} +{"abstract":"In this article, the work of Judith Butler and Eve Sedgwick is used to analyze responses to gender performances in the author's elementary classroom. Beginning with the story of one \"gender-bending\" boy, Butler's theories are used to understand how incidents in the daily life of the classroom point to the phallologocentrism and heterosexism that, when articulated and strengthened through a shared logic of \"normalcy,\" lend intelligible identities to each member of the classroom community. Challenging her young students to accept a broader range of gender and sexual performances, Boldt points out many ways in which this is both problematic for the students and resisted by them. The author ends by revealing how some of her major assumptions about how to address the problems caused in the classroom by the operative gender and sexual normativities were themselves locked into a heterosexist logic, and she offers a very partial but hopeful glance at how she now tries to respond to problems of sexism and heterosexism faced by all her students.","creator":["Gail Masuchika Boldt"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51f5240c-247f-3940-b61e-f9c98dcfa3e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1180039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexist and Heterosexist Responses to Gender Bending in an Elementary Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180039","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10200,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[443374,443762]],"Locations in B":[[12843,12998],[14818,15206]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Truffaut, impersonating\/performing Dr. Itard, represents multiple layers of autobiographical content through allusions to film history, his life, cultural ideals, colonial upheavals, and critiques of the Enlightenment. Instead of the optimism critics have seen in this film, I suggest that it offers a criticism of colonialism and the Enlightenment through a convoluted autobiographicality that shifts its central subjectivity from Itard to Victor.","creator":["JULIE F. CODELL"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23541018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PLAYING DOCTOR: FRAN\u00c7OIS TRUFFAUT'S \"L'ENFANT SAUVAGE\" AND THE AUTEUR\/AUTOBIOGRAPHER AS IMPERSONATOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541018","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Coline Cardi","Genevi\u00e8ve Pruvost"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.5.2.0200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21599785"},{"name":"oclc","value":"702124609"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"863fac21-1fe9-306b-bd1e-875df5fa9acc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/historypresent.5.2.0200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historypresent"}],"isPartOf":"History of the Present","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Thinking Women\u2019s Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.5.2.0200","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"186ba73d-898c-3822-9d5f-d7d4f45a7a32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"2081","pageStart":"2074","pagination":"pp. 2074-2081","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Employment Law. Title VII. Sex Discrimination. Ninth Circuit Holds That Male Coworkers' and Supervisor's Harassment of Male Employee for Failing to Meet Sex Stereotype Constitutes Sex Discrimination. Nichols v. Azteca Restaurant Enterprises, 256 F.3d 864 (9th Cir. 2001)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342606","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":4160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lindsey Tucker"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70a36da4-76e1-33cc-8bbd-c37c7a9d127c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GAY IDENTITY, CONJURE, AND THE USES OF POSTMODERN ETHNOGRAPHY IN THE FICTIONS OF RANDALL KENAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286839","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11476,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[68905,68964]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article looks at the ways in which young people reflexively construct their self within a rapidly changing society. Drawing on texts written by young people aged 14-17 years, it explores the existence of patterns identified by theorists of late modernity as regards relationships, fateful moments, a search for authenticity, life plans and life styles and looks at gender-differentiated trends in these areas drawing on a 'weak cultural feminist tradition' (Evans, 1995:91). These texts are part of a sub-sample of approximately 34,000 texts written by young people in a school context in response to an invitation to 'tell their life stories' by writing a page 'describing themselves and the Ireland they inhabit'. The article suggests that gender is a repressed but crucially important framework in the construction of young people's sense of self, while also identifying areas where consumer society is eroding gender difference.","creator":["Pat O'Connor"],"datePublished":"2006-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71a1f076-36fc-3b4d-a539-b382cf419ad3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Young People's Constructions of the Self: Late Modern Elements and Gender Differences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856824","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexander Doty","Gast\u00f3n Alzate"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16c63136-0c0a-396b-8e4a-5ddce19f590b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00bfQu\u00e9 es lo que m\u00e1s produce el queerness?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624439","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88e978b7-534a-3850-b718-7618815ceb66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"863","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-863","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174530","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Parama Roy"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c357bc50-8520-3450-b5b4-4886850e4cb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"731","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-731","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"At Home in the World? The Gendered Cartographies of Globality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178815","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9536,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[60028,60090]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gustavus Stadler"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Louisa May Alcott's Queer Geniuses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902628","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":8680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Joseph Joachim, Johannes Brahms, and other members of their circle were important figures in the ascendancy of the Werktreue paradigm of performance in the second half of the nineteenth century. This article explores the ways in which their approach to Werktreue intersected with a broader ideal of \u201cauthentic\u201d subjectivity. An authentic performer, according to this ideal, would be true to himself or herself, absorbed in the music, oblivious of the audience, and restrained in gestures and overall expressivity. I examine how these musicians performed authenticity in different types of self-representation, including autobiographical writings, portraits, and musical performances. Furthermore, I explore the connection between the subjectivity modeled in their performances and the aesthetic ideology of nonprogrammatic instrumental music. Concerns about authenticity played an important role in the struggle over the ownership of the Austro-German musical tradition; debates about which performers were \u201cauthentic\u201d often hinged on the question of who could claim the cultural and spiritual aptitude necessary to inhabit the thoughts of master composers. In this context, the performative strategies associated with authenticity also evoked social codes associated with gender, nationality, and race during a period in which participation in Germanic culture was being conceived of in increasingly exclusive terms.","creator":["Karen Leistra-Jones"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2013.66.2.397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f058f14a-c90f-3a8a-bc22-0e55f40c7f47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jams.2013.66.2.397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Staging Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2013.66.2.397","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":17728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Joachim, Brahms, and the Politics of Werktreue<\/em> Performance"} +{"abstract":"In geography as well as other human\/social sciences, issues on the body and embodiment have increasingly come to the fore over recent decades. In the same period, and in particular following the English translation of The Production of Space, Henri Lefebvre has been a central figure in the geographical discourse. However, even though a range of writers on Lefebvre do acknowledge his emphasis on embodiment, it seems that he has only partially found his way into the core of the body literature. The aim of this paper is to explore Lefebvre's contribution to a geographical theory of the body, in particular when it comes to the conception of a generative and creative social body as an intrinsic part of social practice. I start by exploring the way in which Lefebvre's conception of the body is developed in creative dialoque with other philosophers, such as Marx, Heideggger and Nietzsche, and continue by way of an explication of his own contribution. This is done under the headings of 'spatial bodies' and 'temporal bodies', in this way also emphasizing creative, moving bodies. Instead of a conclusion the paper argues that Lefebvre's contribution could gainfully interact with later (not least feminist) approaches, and through such interactions add to current discussions on 'body politics' and 'performativity'.","creator":["Kirsten Simonsen"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3554441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3554441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bodies, Sensations, Space and Time: The Contribution from Henri Lefebvre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3554441","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":10697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This ethnography examines how an African-American congregation in Los Angeles has created an oppositional religious culture in the context of the AIDS pandemic. The congregation is able to address the unique needs of its marginalized members because it engages in a variety of tactics that appear to challenge the status quo. It destabilizes and subverts gender and sexual categories, fosters open dialogue and the disclosure of secrets, affirms and legitimizes differences, reinterprets theology, and openly challenges and resists systems of oppression. As a separatist religious organization, the congregation offers alternative and oppositional religious and social culture, providing familiar and empowering sites for the unique experiences of individuals who are lowincome, black, GLBT, and HIV-positive.","creator":["Pamela Leong"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9578d622-f7aa-3acb-973a-6acd46b96d75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The African-American Church and the Politics of Difference: Creating an Oppositional Religious Culture in the Context of HIV\/AIDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675267","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7520,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46331,46409]],"Locations in B":[[12042,12124]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Popular socio-medical discourses surrounding the sexuality of disabled people have tended to subjugate young people with disabilities as de-gendered and asexual. As a result, very little attention has been given to how young people with disabilities in the African context construct their sexual identities. Based on findings from a participatory research study conducted amongst Zulu-speaking youth with physical and visual disabilities in KwaZulu-Natal, this paper argues that young people with disabilities are similar to other non-disabled youth in the way they construct their sexual identities. Using a post-structural framework, it outlines how the young participants construct discursive truths surrounding disability, culture and gender through their discussions of love and relationships. In this context, it is argued that the sexual identities' of young people with physical and visual disabilities actually emerges within the intersectionality of identity discourses. Les discours socio-m\u00e9dicaux populaires sur la sexualit\u00e9 des personnes en situation de handicap ont tendance \u00e0 d\u00e9nier aux jeunes dans cette situation une identit\u00e9 de genre et une sexualit\u00e9. Il en r\u00e9sulte que peu d'int\u00e9r\u00eat a \u00e9t\u00e9 accord\u00e9 \u00e0 la construction de l'identit\u00e9 sexuelle des jeunes en situation de handicap dans le contexte africain. En se basant sur les r\u00e9sultats d'une \u00e9tude participative conduite parmi des jeunes parlant le zoulou et vivant avec des handicaps physiques et visuels dans le Kwazulu-Natal, cet article soutient que les jeunes en situation de handicap construisent leur identit\u00e9 sexuelle comme le font les jeunes sans handicaps. En utilisant un cadre post-structurel, il d\u00e9crit comment les jeunes participants construisent des v\u00e9rit\u00e9s discursives autour du handicap, de la culture et du genre \u00e0 travers leurs discussions sur l'amour et les relations. Dans ce contexte, nous soutenons que les identit\u00e9s sexuelles des jeunes vivant en situation de handicaps physiques et visuels \u00e9mergent, en r\u00e9alit\u00e9, de l'intersectionnalit\u00e9 des discours sur l'identit\u00e9. Los discursos populares sobre asuntos sociosanitarios con respecto a la sexualidad de personas discapacitadas suelen relegar a los j\u00f3venes con discapacidades a una posici\u00f3n de seres sin g\u00e9nero y asexuales. En consecuencia, se ha prestado muy poca atenci\u00f3n a c\u00f3mo los j\u00f3venes con discapacidades construyen sus identidades sexuales en el contexto africano. A partir de los resultados de un estudio de investigaci\u00f3n participativo entre j\u00f3venes de habla zul\u00fa con discapacidades f\u00edsicas y visuales en KwaZulu-Natal, en este art\u00edculo se argumenta que los j\u00f3venes con discapacidades son similares a otros j\u00f3venes no discapacitados en la forma en que construyen sus identidades sexuales. Con el uso de un marco postestructural, se pone de relieve c\u00f3mo los j\u00f3venes participantes construyen las verdades discursivas en torno a la discapacidad, la cultura y el sexo mediante sus charlas sobre el amor y las relaciones. En este contexto, se argumenta que las identidades sexuales de los j\u00f3venes con discapacidades f\u00edsicas y visuales en realidad surgen de la interseccionalidad de los discursos de identidad.","creator":["Paul Chappell"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"008fba95-0f66-3770-bff1-947e7f0e91e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24741685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"1168","pageStart":"1156","pagination":"pp. 1156-1168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"How Zulu-speaking youth with physical and visual disabilities understand love and relationships in constructing their sexual identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741685","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ce1e788-4d0f-3202-9af3-628e1e372bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809890","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines and critiques the implications of Judith Butler's theory of the construction of the subject in The Psychic Life of Power by means of an application to Joyce's figure of James Duffy, the central character of the story \"A Painful Case\" in Dubliners, whose subjectivation does not allow of any sexual relations.","creator":["COLLEEN LAMOS"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8345c03-38c7-3bab-9c84-3ab42ea6ef2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"DUFFY'S SUBJECTIVATION: THE PSYCHIC LIFE OF \"A PAINFUL CASE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871085","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":3550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist knowledge and its impact on other academic disciplines arose in the 1970s, but it has had an uneven impact in different disciplines. We argue that gender as a theoretical concept has challenged both sociology and archaeology but analyses of gender practices and embodiment which challenge the homogenous categories of 'women' and 'men' have made much less impact in archaeology - particularly the archaeology of deep time. The paper concludes by suggesting that feminist archaeology's exploration of the origins of gender offers critical insights concerning the ways in which feminist sociologists define their theories with and against the 'Western folk model' of sex and gender.","creator":["Jane Balme","Chilla Bulbeck"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40288018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03122417"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616224"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235329"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39d971b0-94c9-329e-9512-1562c3c5f31d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40288018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austarch"}],"isPartOf":"Australian Archaeology","issueNumber":"67","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Australian Archaeological Association","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Engendering Origins: Theories of Gender in Sociology and Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40288018","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9086,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493484,493564]],"Locations in B":[[55721,55806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kurt Spellmeyer"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ff02fb5-1d03-356c-a7c3-e898c1840b56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/378228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"913","pageStart":"893","pagination":"pp. 893-913","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"After Theory: From Textuality to Attunement with the World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378228","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":10801,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[64622,64684]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jon Lawrence"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43299554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6983fd2-71d1-33ea-ace4-a16b38c89b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43299554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"77","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social-Science Encounters and the Negotiation of Difference in early 1960s England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43299554","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12843,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le Deuxi\u00e8me sexe, en identifiant de fa\u00e7on claire la codification culturelle de l'oppression des femmes \u00e0 travers leur objectivation en tant que \"l'Autre\", et en analysant l' \"\u00eatre-femme\" comme construit socioculturellement plut\u00f4t que d\u00e9termin\u00e9 biologiquement, est depuis longtemps reconnu comme un texte \"pionnier\" du f\u00e9minisme contemporain. Cependant, l'analyse r\u00e9volutionnaire de Beauvoir a \u00e9t\u00e9 par la suite d\u00e9form\u00e9e et mal interpr\u00e9t\u00e9e dans les pays anglophones, tout comme l'a \u00e9t\u00e9 le travail des f\u00e9ministes radicales qui ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 cette analyse, en d\u00e9signant le syst\u00e8me politique de domination masculine comme base de notre soci\u00e9t\u00e9 et des relations humaines qui s'y construisent. Celles qui critiquent le travail de Beauvoir et des \"radicales\" les ont trait\u00e9es d' \"essentialistes\", alors que d'autres ont cherch\u00e9 \u00e0 s'approprier l'id\u00e9e d' \"alt\u00e9rit\u00e9\", ainsi que la phrase c\u00e9l\u00e8bre: \"On ne na\u00eet pas femme, on le devient\", \u00e0 des fins antif\u00e9ministes. En identifiant et en analysant certains de ces d\u00e9tournements et de ces \"probl\u00e8mes\" d'interpr\u00e9tation, cet article expose quelques failles dans le raisonnement de ce qui se fait passer actuellement pour la recherche \"f\u00e9ministe\". The Second Sex, in its clear identification of the oppression of women as culturally codified through our objectification as \"the Other\", and its corresponding analysis of \"womanhood\" as a sociocultural construct rather than a biological given, has long been recognised as a groundbreaking feminist text. However, Beauvoir's revolutionary analysis has since been deformed and misinterpreted within English-speaking countries, as has the work of radical feminists of the socalled \"second wave\", who have built on Beauvoir's work, naming the political system of male domination as the basis of our society. Critics of this work have accused both Beauvoir and radical feminists of \"essentialism\", among other things, while others have sought to appropriate Beauvoir's ideas of \"otherness\" or \"becoming a woman\" to antifeminist ends. In identifying and analysing some of these misappropriations and misinterpretations, this article will address some of the major flaws in logic in much of what currently passes for \"feminist\" theory.","creator":["Bronwyn Winter"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40619723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'essentialisat\u00edon de l'alt\u00e9rit\u00e9 et l'invisibilisation de l'oppression : l'histoire bizarre mais vraie de la d\u00e9formation d'un concept","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619723","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Mandingization,\" the gradual process of cultural change whereby Jola peoples of the Casamance region of southern Senegal are becoming more like their Mandinka neighbors, is analyzed in this article as comprising four distinguishable processes: ethnogenesis, ethnocultural drift, ethnic osmosis, and ethnic strategizing. By distinguishing among these four processes and analyzing their interaction, we can understand the dynamics of Mandingization more clearly and also derive insights for understanding ethnic change generally. The current moment of ethnic change in The Gambia includes a resurgence in Karon Jola ethnic identity, but we need to view this process as contingent, not yet accomplished, and a challenge to the pattern of Mandinka dominance in a time of broader social change. La \"mandingisation\" est le processus graduel de changement culturel par lequel le peuple Jola de la r\u00e9gion du Casamance dans le sud du S\u00e9n\u00e9gal devient de plus en plus similaire \u00e0 ses voisins les Mandinka. Ce processus est analys\u00e9 dans cet article dans l'ensemble de ses quatre formes: ethnogen\u00e8se, courant ethnoculturel, osmose ethnique, et \u00e9laboration de strat\u00e9gies ethniques. En distinguant ces quatre processus et en analysant leur interaction, on peut mieux comprendre les dynamiques de la \"mandingisation\" et aussi en tirer des conclusions applicables au changement ethnique en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral. L'\u00e9volution ethnique pr\u00e9sente en Gambie inclut une r\u00e9surgence de l'identit\u00e9 ethnique Karon Jola, mais il est n\u00e9cessaire de consid\u00e9rer ce processus comme une contingence pas encore aboutie, ainsi qu'un obstacle \u00e0 la tendance dominante de l'ethnie Mandinka dans un contexte plus large de changement social.","creator":["Steven Thomson"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d8a0121-6317-38ea-bddd-923fa3beca49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Revisiting \"Mandingization\" in Coastal Gambia and Casamance (Senegal): Four Approaches to Ethnic Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304777","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12176,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela K. Smith"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bc76530-9e95-3284-99f3-2ccdbd7b9a12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 11: The Prom as a Spectacle of Heteronormativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981024","volumeNumber":"392","wordCount":6561,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99265,99380]],"Locations in B":[[36236,36351]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9365056e-3d96-3364-ac1a-331e3abb27db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859497","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":2647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Salsa dance and music has become popular worldwide and Salsa communities outside of Latin America offer a fertile environment for studying gender and heteronormativity in cultural contact zones. Often, the desire to reconstruct 'traditional' heteronormative gender roles in these contexts is striking. Interestingly, informants of the qualitative, ethnographic study presented here display high degrees of reflexive consciousness regarding the constructed nature of their gendered performance. This article also discusses and analyses non-heteronormative performances that do not adhere to 'traditional' gender roles, which may be understood as queer performances. These are found frequently; however, an analysis of discursive data that relates to these performances makes their subversive potential debatable.","creator":["Britta Schneider"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69f8a2c8-eabd-3521-a32d-f6672b1b2d46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24441612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Heteronormativity and queerness in transnational heterosexual Salsa communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441612","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8996,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435902,436096]],"Locations in B":[[46713,46908]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Delphy"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5422faa-0d7b-38d6-ab80-d07e5f154926"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2903219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"97","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Invention of French Feminism: An Essential Move","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903219","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miriam Peskowitz","Laura Levitt"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42942205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42942205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"EDITORS' INTRODUCTION: ENGENDERING JEWISH KNOWLEDGES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42942205","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":2962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The novels of Antje R\u00e1vic Strubel, one of Germany's most prolific and acclaimed writers, explore ideas about post-Wende identity and agency, from the legacy of the Stasi to the social challenges posed by incestuous or homosexual relationships. Meanwhile, her two nonfiction \u201cuser manuals\u201d to Sweden and Potsdam\/Brandenburg offer affectionate yet critical insights into her Scandinavian Sehnsuchtsland (land of longing), her place of birth, and her current residence. Strubel's many prizes and achievements include the Klagenfurt Ernst Willner Prize, received for her debut novel Offene Blende in 2001, and a recent long-listing for the German Book Prize for her latest novel, Sturz der Tage in die Nacht (2011).","creator":["Beret Norman","Katie Sutton"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9be05b8e-5b3c-34c7-9988-f81ce4e23e68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cMemory Is Always a Story\u201d: An Interview with Antje R\u00e1vic Strubel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0098","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay argues that there is currently a cultural prohibition in Jewish literature against rewriting history. Jewish artists cannot abandon history and cannot condone historical revisionism, but they can present alternatives within history either to redeem it or critique it. Poets Rachel Blau DuPlessis and Charles Bernstein have turned to the counterfactual (the \"what if\") as a narrative and poetic structure in order to imagine a different, and Jewish, relation to history and to take stock of the dangers of this intervention. For both poets, the counterfactual device is used to imagine a leftist Jewish relation to history, particularly at points where history has been damaged or drained of these ways of relating to it. However, Benjamin Friedlander's poetry and essays play the foil\u2014his poetry fakes history to show that there really is no taboo in inventing history, but the consequence is that Jewish poetry has drifted increasingly further away from anything like Jewish historical action.","creator":["Joshua Schuster"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"728469282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12b75b4-1ef5-3fa8-9ab9-14f4c914f834"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42944569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Jewish Counterfactualism in Recent American Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944569","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores why many advocates concerned with lesbian, gay, and transgendered (LGBT) rights in the US have not chosen to frame their struggles in human rights terms. The article recognizes that framing a cause in human rights terms can be an effective way of claiming the moral high ground and of asserting affinity with others throughout the world who seek to condemn human wrongs and promote human dignity. However, this is not always the case. This article uses a historical review of LGBT organizing in the US to explain why human rights framings also may be viewed as unduly restrictive and even detrimental when identity is the central organizing factor.","creator":["Julie Mertus"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20072835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"1064","pageStart":"1036","pagination":"pp. 1036-1064","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Rejection of Human Rights Framings: The Case of LGBT Advocacy in the US","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072835","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":13468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra G. Bennett"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3da23e2-4508-3ba0-940b-0bcabb3b9bec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1556130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Female Performativity in \"The Tragedy of Mariam\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556130","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7275,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430988,431111],[431403,431480]],"Locations in B":[[36241,36364],[36526,36603]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study examines Tirso de Molina's creation of cross-dressed women in three comedies\u2014La villana de la Sagra, La mujer por fuerza, and La huerta de Juan Fern\u00e1ndez\u2014in order to explore the extent to which the dramatist uses the type to broach questions of sexual ambiguity. The argument, pace some recent scholarship inspired by feminist and psychoanalytic theory, is that Tirso (along with some of his fellow dramatists) used different forms of role-play, including cross-dressing, to undermine comically some of the social and behavioural norms of the period but did not prioritize an exploration of sexual ambiguity among these.","creator":["Jonathan Thacker"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.113.2.0338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08e94d33-5042-3cee-984b-8af3f322dcb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/modelangrevi.113.2.0338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u2018Ser\u00e9 lo que t\u00fa quisieres\u2019: Female Cross-Dressers in Three Comedies by Tirso de Molina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.113.2.0338","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":11132,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431997,432146]],"Locations in B":[[48901,49050]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist and trans theory challenges \"the\" binary sex\/gender system, but can create a new binary opposition of subversive transgender versus conservative transsexual. This paper aims to shift debate concerning bodies as authentic\/real versus constructed\/mutable, arguing that such debate establishes a false dichotomy that may be overcome by reappraising scientific understandings of sex\/gender. Much recent biology and neurology stresses nonlinearity, contingency, self-organization, and open-endedness. Engaging with this research offers ways around apparently interminable theoretical impasses.","creator":["Riki Lane"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da5491bb-02c5-3752-a8be-6aa2ca311469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trans as Bodily Becoming: Rethinking the Biological as Diversity, Not Dichotomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618168","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Commeyras"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afa021f3-037c-3980-8e18-3f68058e64dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40017021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"How Interested Are Literacy Educators in Gender Issues? Survey Results from the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017021","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CAROLE MCGRANAHAN"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40864896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1b3b86-60f8-3ceb-b29d-644b3adfd753"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40864896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"797","pageStart":"768","pagination":"pp. 768-797","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Narrative Dispossession: Tibet and the Gendered Logics of Historical Possibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40864896","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":14525,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[88258,88329]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barry Shank"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dbedc35-6692-3420-9282-c2335001fe23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40642905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Continuing Embarrassment of Culture: From the Culture Concept to Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642905","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dorinne Kondo"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"700730d9-8a79-35d5-b87c-32e1dce7770b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Re)Visions of Race: Contemporary Race Theory and the Cultural Politics of Racial Crossover in Documentary Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068742","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12876,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524390]],"Locations in B":[[13390,13449]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Celeste Condit"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3886262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a58fea5d-cb53-34cb-a1cd-afdd749a8cac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3886262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Bad Science Stays That Way: Brain Sex, Demarcation, and the Status of Truth in the Rhetoric of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3886262","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler's presence in Europe during the Paris attacks provides an opportunity to reflect on the contours of her rich, philosophical legacy. Butler's most recent work can be characterised by way of a shift towards more explicit global and biopolitical concerns, as exemplified in her post 9\/11 texts Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence (2004) and Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? (2009). This paper will explore specific aspects of public discourse in the wake of the Paris massacre through Butler's concept of grievability. Butler contends that the ability to be mourned within the West illustrates which lives are valued or disposable in our contemporary geopolitical context. Examining the way in which certain social media platforms facilitated and circumscribed displays of public grief enables us to contend with the complex relationship between recognition, vulnerability, and the violence of defining \u201cthe human\u201d.","creator":["Holly Brown"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c34aaa0f-2896-39be-b132-8fbe529f4bf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Judith Butler in Belgium: Reflections on Public Grief and Precarity in the Wake of the Paris Attacks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0007","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":4339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La R\u00e9volution fran\u00e7aise a brouill\u00e9 les marqueurs de la distinction sociale et rendu l'ordre social peu \u00ab lisible \u00bb. L'une des r\u00e9ponses \u00e0 la confusion sociale et politique a \u00e9t\u00e9 un d\u00e9sir de voir et d'\u00eatre vu en public, particuli\u00e8rement \u00e0 Paris pendant le Directoire et le Consulat. Une \u00e9tude de la vie quotidienne dans des villes provinciales pendant la p\u00e9riode napol\u00e9onienne montre que des m\u00e9canismes semblables y ont \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e0 l'oeuvre, tant les habitants s'inscrivent dans (ou y d\u00e9crivent) les nouvelles cat\u00e9gories d'identit\u00e9 qui prennent forme dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 post-r\u00e9volutionnaire. The French Revolution destabilized markers of social distinction, and thus rendered the social order \"illegible\". One response to social and political confusion was a desire to see and be seen in public, a trend which was particularly visible in Paris during the Directory and the Consulate. An examination of everyday life in provincial cities during the Napoleonic period shows that similar mechanisms were at play in these locations, where inhabitants observed and expressed new categories of identity taking shape in post-revolutionary society.","creator":["Denise DAVIDSON"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41890420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00034436"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fdbdb9a-9ac6-3bb9-bd4a-c12f15d8092a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41890420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annahistrevofran"}],"isPartOf":"Annales historiques de la R\u00e9volution fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"359","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'IDENTIT\u00c9 POLITIQUE ET SOCIALE AU QUOTIDIEN, 1795-1815","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41890420","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARK S. R. JENNER"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23307699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"854cdd17-8dec-3c94-b65e-e294f8252514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23307699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Follow Your Nose? Smell, Smelling, and Their Histories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23307699","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":10490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the role of Balkanism in Bulgarian EU accession discourses during the period that preceded the country's membership of the EU. It focuses on political cartoons - regarded as indicative of broader societal discourses - which activate the 'journey' or 'motion' metaphor that dominated the imagery of EU integration. The article was prompted by a perceived incongruity in the study of the discursive encounter between the West and the Balkans. While most analysis concentrates on the Western or European self, by examining EU accession discourses in Bulgaria, this article turns to the Balkans' responses to Western constructions. The study brings to light a decidedly mixed picture. Even though the crucial role of Balkanist representations and interpretations in Bulgarian EU accession discourses cannot be denied, alternative constructions are certainly present. They range from ambiguity and indifference to more overt challenges to the binary oppositions that characterize Balkanism.","creator":["ALINA CURTICAPEAN"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23616089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1210762X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0544e924-2c6a-3313-a31c-a2bd39ad19a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23616089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspectives"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of International Relations, NGO","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bai Ganio and Other Men's Journeys to Europe: the Boundaries of Balkanism in Bulgarian EU-Accession Discourses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23616089","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":15344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Reported discourse\u2014as theorized by Bakhtin, bringing the voices of others our own writing through quotation, citation and paraphrase, as well as more subtle means\u2014is at the heart of all academic writing, including basic writing. This article, both in its texture and its analysis, demonstrates that reported discourse must be regarded, and taught, as more than a simple set of surface conventions, but differently\u2014as a resource for student writers simultaneously to be read as insiders (to harness the power provided through academic discourse), and to maintain outsider status and perspectives (to push at the constraints of academic discourse). Several intertwining metaphors and theories will be used to illustrate these seemingly paradoxical desires, including musical composition, mental illness, and queerness. These representations help this essay find its tonic as a call for contesting coercive conventions.","creator":["Hannah Ashley"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43443835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43443835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbasicwriting"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Basic Writing","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Art of Queering Voices: A Fugue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43443835","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Article discusses the regulation and adjudication of honor killings in the Arab world and traces the distributive and disciplinary impact of such regulation\/adjudication on Arab men and Arab women's sexuality. In the afterword, the Article outlines the transformative effect of Islamicization of culture in the Arab world in the past twenty years on the practice of honor and killings committed in its name.","creator":["LAMA ABU ODEH"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52899623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ba6c724-5152-3212-ac73-024aabea20b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25766172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjcomplaw"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Comparative Law","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"952","pageStart":"911","pagination":"pp. 911-952","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Honor Killings and the Construction of Gender in Arab Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766172","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":19881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u05d9\u05d5\u05d1\u05dc \u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d0\u05d9","\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05e1\u05e4\u05d9\u05d1\u05e7","Yuval Yonai","Dori Spivak"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e837708a-5d7e-3d89-9196-1c45bdbdf851"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Between Silence and Damnation: The Construction of Gay Identity in the Israeli Legal Discourse \/ \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e9\u05ea\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05d9: \u05d4\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d4\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05e4\u05d8\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc 1948\u20141988","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442215","volumeNumber":"\u05d0","wordCount":15778,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467305,467400]],"Locations in B":[[93186,93292]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Andrae"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"300cd5c1-24f5-3aad-a645-e6da4e792ceb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Television's First Feminist: \"The Avengers\" and Female Spectatorship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389423","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9332,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433304,433476]],"Locations in B":[[30675,30872]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lesley Higgins"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30091992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea87d1b0-4da8-3fb1-b278-eba306af94a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30091992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesirishrev"}],"isPartOf":"Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review","issueNumber":"334","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Irish Province of the Society of Jesus","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"She Rears Herself\": Feminist Possibilities in Hopkins's Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30091992","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":4556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosi Braidotti","Eva Almaz\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26528155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00174181"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563751280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234569"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b150df1e-23ce-3959-919c-b8352953063d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26528155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"grial"}],"isPartOf":"Grial","issueNumber":"211","language":["glg"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Editorial Galaxia S.A.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Catro teses verbo do feminismo posthumano","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26528155","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"To explain causality between ethnic consciousness and indigenous political activism in the Andes, scholars have proposed two perspectives. Some argue that ethnic consciousness was pre-existing; others claim that it was the product of political organizational processes. In this study, I demonstrate that the ethnic consciousness of Ecuadorian indigenous Andeans has been a dialogical work-in-progress that has hinged significantly on the emergence of self-conscious cultural performance. I analyze the trajectory from submission to asserti veness of Ecuadorian indigenous Andeans and compare it with the Peruvian and Bolivian cases, focusing on the ways in which performance and performativity have constructed indigeneity as a social reality. Performance implies a bounded act done by a subject who consciously performs, whereas performativity refers to the construction of the subject by the reiteration of norms. The research investigates three interrelated fields that are crucial in the constitution of indigeneity: the performativity of racial and ethnic hierarchies, the performance of indigenous culture during protest, and the performance of indigenous festivities. Considering that social hierarchies are iteratively constructed and that cultural performance is part and parcel of the political redress of cultural difference, I argue that through cultural performance Ecuadorian and Bolivian indigenous Andeans have been able to undermine the ways in which performativity has constituted them as subaltern subjects. This transformation has not happened in the Peru, where indigenous Andeans still feel that indigeneity is a stigmatized condition.","creator":["SERGIO MIGUEL HUARCAYA"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"694b90d8-8755-356b-8ae1-d0d0e6f6e0d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"837","pageStart":"806","pagination":"pp. 806-837","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performativity, Performance, and Indigenous Activism in Ecuador and the Andes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908372","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":14957,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo temos como objetivo caracterizar uma configura\u00e7\u00e3o em torno da percep\u00e7\u00e3o da fertilidade e descrever sua articula\u00e7\u00e3o ao aparato de g\u00eanero e \u00e0 biomedicaliza\u00e7\u00e3o. Com uma abordagem etnogr\u00e1fica, tomamos como ponto de partida um grupo no Facebook sobre percep\u00e7\u00e3o da fertilidade e realizamos entrevistas semiestruturadas com seis de suas porta-vozes. Al\u00e9m disso, analisamos livros e s\u00edtios que nos foram indicados nessas entrevistas e fizemos observa\u00e7\u00e3o participante em um curso presencial ministrado por uma das interlocutoras. Conclu\u00edmos que concomitante a projetos coletivos de empoderamento de corpos e subjetividades com ciclos menstruais, h\u00e1 responsabiliza\u00e7\u00e3o individual pela sa\u00fade e pelo autoaprimoramento. Ademais, refor\u00e7a-se a substancializa\u00e7\u00e3o do binarismo sexual com a produ\u00e7\u00e3o de uma \u201cnatureza hormonal\u201d, ainda que seja mais associada \u00e0 sa\u00fade que ao g\u00eanero. The article aims to characterize fertility awareness and describe its articulation with the gender apparatus and biomedicalization. With an ethnographic approach, we took a group on Facebook as a starting point and conducted semi-structured interviews with six of its spokespersons. In addition, we analyzed books and sites recommended in these interviews and made participant observation in a face-to-face course given by one of the interlocutors. We conclude that fertility awareness practices are related to collective projects for empowering bodies and subjectivities with menstrual cycles and at the same time to individual responsibilisation for health and self-improvement. Furthermore, it reinforces the substantialization of sexual binarism with the production of a \u201chormonal nature\u201d, although it is linked to health instead of gender.","creator":["Bruna Kl\u00f6ppel","Fab\u00edola Rohden"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"defa0927-fe3b-37bd-808c-6b2ace2f2bd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48618888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14, 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Pr\u00e1ticas de percep\u00e7\u00e3o da fertilidade entre mulheres jovens - Fertility Awareness Practices among Young Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618888","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":21611,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102961,103835]],"Locations in B":[[81590,82464]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that identity politics is a form of high-risk activism. We draw from collective identity approaches to social movements to describe how the Sociologists' Lesbian and Gay Caucus has used identity-based organizing, assimilationist politics, and personalized political strategies during the past two decades to challenge stigmatized representations of same-sex sexuality and promote equal treatment of gays and lesbians in sociology and the larger society. Using survey data collected in 1981 and 1992 from caucus members, supplemented by intensive interviews, we assess the extent to which an increase in reported rates of discrimination and bias during the past ten years is linked to variations in activist experience and political consciousness. We then present a qualitative analysis of five career consequences suffered by gay, lesbian, and bisexual sociologists who engage in various forms of personalized political resistance: 1) discrimination in hiring; 2) bias in tenure and promotion; 3) exclusion from social and professional networks; 4) devaluation of scholarly work on gay and lesbian topics; and 5) harassment and intimidation. We conclude by examining the implications of our findings for the social movement literature that addresses the formation, use, and impact of identity politics.","creator":["Verta Taylor","Nicole C. Raeburn"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3096904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Identity Politics as High-Risk Activism: Career Consequences for Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Sociologists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096904","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Garry Leonard"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1618793-34aa-3efb-8d0e-63a3da6ce901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"196","pagination":"pp. 196-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099636","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":3079,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The following paper attempts to show the dilemma between the position of subjecthood and the urgent wish to interfere with social systems in order to influence or control them\u2014a wish which seems to presuppose a subject. I will present 'the parasite' as a possible option of how to tease systems into change or even (r) evolution. Specifically, I will describe the role of the 'techno-parasite' as one of intentional and creative 'bugging' of a system, viz. edging an orderly state closer to chaos in order to boost its flexibility and inclination to change. Ralph Ellison's novel Invisible Man 1 has been read predominantly either as an existentialist novel in the wake of Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground or as an anti-communist treatment of American 'race' problems. I will try to show here to what extent this novel is a pr\u00e9figuration of the 'techno-parasite' and, moreover, a thorough investigation of the precarious constellation 'subject-order-change-chaos.' 'The para-site' will not only be gleaned from the topographical and ideological position of the Invisible Man (short: I. M.) in the prologue and epilogue of the novel, but also developed by reading the trickster figure of Rinehart, whose 'chaotic' influence is vital in leading the nameless anti-hero of the novel to a position 'around the corner' of ('para' or next to) the dilemma between organized action against and desire for identification with the bourgeois, male, white subject of modern social orders.","creator":["Dagmar Buchwald"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"502c5b85-95dc-34ca-a9ee-0b105f8ea633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Let 'em swoller you till they vomit or bust wide open\": 'Doing the Para-Site' between Chaos and Control in Ralph Ellison's \"Invisible Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157537","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonia Kruks"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"936b4577-c221-3af1-993d-467d7c1a75b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beauvoir's Time\/Our Time: The Renaissance in Simone De Beauvoir Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459027","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9580,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[89282,89458]],"Locations in B":[[24101,24277]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Sanchez"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24506229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1224d848-eea0-31f7-bbd6-2ed236e8f169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24506229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Spatial Practices and Bodily Maneuvers: Negotiating at the Margins of a Local Sexual Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24506229","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8193,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[465351,465505],[478800,478845],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[6391,6545],[47342,47388],[48366,48441]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Daniell"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cd862ef-535e-3d15-963b-5cfef99e65c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Spiritual Body: Incarnations of Pauline and Butlerian Embodiment Themes for Constructive Theologizing toward the Parousia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002373","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9036,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[78132,78228],[78308,78371],[258578,258814],[370344,370591]],"Locations in B":[[21260,21356],[21927,21990],[23425,23660],[32963,33211]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johanna Ayala-Walsh"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235525"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48738928-4487-3001-a45c-efed524d6131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24615449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-Imaging Sexy: Modifying Machismo in Ana Men\u00e9ndez's \"Loving Che\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615449","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9453,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47078,47382]],"Locations in B":[[31119,31422]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this grounded theory study was to discover the process of social identity development for adolescent high school women\u2019s choir participants. Purposive maximum variation sampling was used to identify three public high school women\u2019s choirs where 54 interviews were conducted with 40 different public school singers. Three waves of data collection and analysis revealed a seven-step process beginning with coming in singing and ending with envisioning myself. The central phenomenon was identified as opening up my voice and me and emphasized singers\u2019 increased self-confidence. Intervening conditions included competition, the absence of choral opportunities, and lack of understanding from those outside of the choral program. Amount of time in the choral program, number of groups, and community recognition were identified as contextual conditions. Dimensionalized properties, a temporal matrix, and propositional statements are presented.","creator":["Elizabeth Cassidy Parker"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48588722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44683915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236973"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31d0b56f-0391-36b1-ba20-0676063175cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48588722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"MENC: The National Association for Music Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Grounded Theory of Adolescent High School Women\u2019s Choir Singers\u2019 Process of Social Identity Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48588722","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":9098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandy","Anne Store"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b363e06-886f-3f5b-a037-da7d18dc2a4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4065753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"28","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Surviving Sex Work from a Lesbian Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065753","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Rogers"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a7e1511-c77e-3728-aa4c-846bd7659bd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Masculinity of Faded Blue: V. K. Ratliff and Faulkner's Creation of Transpositional Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907818","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Magda Lewis","Barbara Karin"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1476507","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405841"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288842"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215655"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5572f03-aeb5-3cf2-b064-781cbb2c6f81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1476507"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theointoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Theory Into Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Queer Stories\/Straight Talk: Tales from the School Playground","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1476507","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Magnarelli"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"061d6719-a552-30d0-b4e3-cd90fda1cead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Simulacra and Commodification in Diana Raznovich's \"Casa Matriz\" (or Whose Life Is This Anyway?)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024119","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Saba Mahmood"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f34a9aa3-eeb0-3093-b548-33a7314ce5c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Feminist Theory, Embodiment, and the Docile Agent: Some Reflections on the Egyptian Islamic Revival","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656537","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":17913,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[100503,100572]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Akiko Tsuchiya"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7353418f-9a62-3105-876e-ad863ac0e031"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616482","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From its very beginnings, the social study of culture has been polarized between structuralist theories that treat meaning as a text and investigate the patterning that provides relative autonomy and pragmatist theories that treat meaning as emerging from the contingencies of individual and collective action-so-called practices-and that analyze cultural patterns as reflections of power and material interest. In this article, I present a theory of cultural pragmatics that transcends this division, bringing meaning structures, contingency, power, and materiality together in a new way. My argument is that the materiality of practices should be replaced by the more multidimensional concept of performances. Drawing on the new field of performance studies, cultural pragmatics demonstrates how social performances, whether individual or collective, can be analogized systematically to theatrical ones. After defining the elements of social performance, I suggest that these elements have become \"de-fused\" as societies have become more complex. Performances are successful only insofar as they can \"re-fuse\" these increasingly disentangled elements. In a fused performance, audiences identify with actors, and cultural scripts achieve verisimilitude through effective mise-en-sc\u00e8ne. Performances fail when this relinking process is incomplete: the elements of performance remain apart, and social action seems inauthentic and artificial, failing to persuade. Refusion, by contrast, allows actors to communicate the meanings of their actions successfully and thus to pursue their interests effectively.","creator":["Jeffrey C. Alexander"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"398a7836-7244-3331-9bdf-b74cbe1a9e8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3648932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Pragmatics: Social Performance between Ritual and Strategy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648932","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":26266,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442609,442873]],"Locations in B":[[78498,78764]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT The Kenyan television program The XYZ Show satirically scrutinizes controversies that surround contemporary political leaders. Through diverse parodies, caricatured puppets engage in humorous scenarios designed to challenge the authority of politicians. This article discusses how XYZ utilizes elements of Kenyan society that are already marginalized to critique the legitimacy of male political leaders. The discussion focuses on the show's representation of the politician as hip hop artist, wife, and homosexual and how these portrayals attack the politicians' masculinity and are a central tactic in questioning their authority and aptitude. Postcolonial discourses of political power have coalesced around the constructed figure of the mzee, or male elder, and the show depends on these historical formations to challenge male leaders. By yoking concepts that are already socially othered, like rap artists and feminized males, these critiques paradoxically reinforce elder masculinity as a normative attribute of political leadership.","creator":["RaShelle Peck"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0c9c78e-0a99-32dc-b248-e2596aa5053f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Political Strictures and Latex Caricatures in Kenya: Buttressing Mzee<\/em> Masculinity in The XYZ Show<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.146","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo identifica e analisa as est\u00f3rias dominantes que acad\u00eamico\/as contam a respeito do desenvolvimento da segunda onda da teoria feminista ocidental. Atrav\u00e9s do exame da produ\u00e7\u00e3o recente de publica\u00e7\u00f5es interdisciplinares feministas e de teoria cultural, sugiro que, a despeito de uma ret\u00f3rica insistente sobre m\u00faltiplos feminismos, as trajet\u00f3rias feministas ocidentais emergem de forma surpreendentemente singular. Critico, particularmente, uma narrativa insistente que v\u00ea o desenvolvimento do pensamento feminista como uma marcha incans\u00e1vel de progresso ou perda. Essa abordagem dominante simplifica a complexa hist\u00f3ria dos feminismos ocidentais, fixa autoras e perspectivas dentro de uma d\u00e9cada espec\u00edfica e, repetida e erroneamente, posiciona feministas p\u00f3s-estruturalistas como as 'primeiras' a desafiar a categoria \"mulher\" como sujeito e objeto do conhecimento feminista. Ao inv\u00e9s de propor uma hist\u00f3ria corretiva da teoria feminista ocidental, o artigo questiona as t\u00e9cnicas atrav\u00e9s das quais essa narrativa dominante \u00e9 garantida, apesar de que tenhamos (n\u00f3s, te\u00f3ricas feministas) consci\u00eancia disso. Meu foco, ent\u00e3o, recai sobre padr\u00f5es de cita\u00e7\u00f5es, recortes discursivos e alguns de seus efeitos textuais, te\u00f3ricos e pol\u00edticos. Como alternativa, sugiro um realinhamento das principais te\u00f3ricas (aquelas que efetuaram uma interrup\u00e7\u00e3o cr\u00edtica na teoria feminista) com seus tra\u00e7os feministas no uso de cita\u00e7\u00f5es, for\u00e7ando assim o concomitante re-imaginar de nosso legado hist\u00f3rico e de nosso lugar dentro dele. This article identifies and analyses the dominant stories that academics tell about the development of Western second wave feminist theory. Through an examination of recent production of interdisciplinary feminist and cultural theory journals, I suggest that despite a rhetorical insistence on multiple feminisms, Western feminist trajectories emerge as startlingly singular. In particular, I am critical of an insistent narrative that sees the development of feminist thought as a relentless march of progress or loss. This dominant approach oversimplifies the complex history of Western feminisms, fixes writers and perspectives within a particular decade, and repeatedly (and erroneously) positions poststructuralist feminists as 'the first' to challenge the category 'woman' as the subject and object of feminist knowledge. Rather than provide a corrective history of Western feminist theory, the article interrogates the techniques through which this dominant story is secured, despite the fact that we (feminist theorists) know better. My focus, therefore, is on citation patterns, discursive framings and some of their textual, theoretical and political effects. As an alternative, I suggest a realignment of key theorists purported to provide a critical break in feminist theory with their feminist citational traces, to force a concomitant re-imagining of our historical legacy and our place within it.","creator":["Clare Hemmings","Ramayana Lira","Claudia de Lima Costa"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4481e0a-9b55-3867-895e-bfe51c61e06e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Contando est\u00f3rias feministas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327586","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12607,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477925]],"Locations in B":[[77441,77518]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew Eatough"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0215f9e0-7c93-3a9a-b801-e61ba57d6277"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Accommodating Intimacy, Compromising Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246998","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":3166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANDREA LANOUX"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43662081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e583ce8-58ed-3551-b6e3-ff26d784a1a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43662081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"404","pagination":"pp. 404-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Laundry, Potatoes, and the Everlasting Soul: Russian Advice Literature for Girls after Communism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43662081","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":11638,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[18505,18626]],"Locations in B":[[113,234]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DIANA SPENCER"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31864718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78047ed3-9dbf-3b9f-89ae-07ba976b0d8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44578438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PROPERTIUS, HERCULES, AND THE DYNAMICS OF ROMAN MYTHIC SPACE IN \"ELEGY\" 4.9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578438","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c7aee0f-c578-34a0-af17-cc9ac520fa51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869545","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":1965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Sch\u00fc\u00fcssler Fiorenza"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.1.97","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b6e652b-be04-357c-95c1-84279adb560d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.1.97"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Celebrating Feminist Work by Knowing It","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.1.97","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4177,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472911]],"Locations in B":[[8177,8259]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dydia DeLyser"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Do You Really Live Here?\" Thoughts on Insider Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250847","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":6391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Teaching \"the Bible as literature\" can be a knotty task, and the very phrase implies a host of implicit questions about pedagogical and hermeneutical approaches to sacred and secular texts. With a network of thoughtful reflections from an international and multidisciplinary collection of scholars in universities with secular, Jewish, and Christian affiliations, this forum considers a variety of approaches to the fascinating challenge of teaching the Bible as literature. Some describe it as a task of defamiliarization that applies the best methods of literary analysis to the uniquely complex biblical text, eventually training students to read all texts through new lenses. Some attempt a fundamentally integrated pedagogy that facilitates mutual dialogue between biblical and literary texts, highlighting various interpretive communities and inviting students to join the conversation. Some attempt to expand our estimations of the capacious and transcendent nature of literature to the point that literary and religious binaries become moot. Some emphasize the unique provocations of the biblical text, describing the classroom as a place of encounter with a confrontational text that makes personal demands upon its reader. By bringing these voices together, this forum not only provides practical resources for educators interested in possible methods of teaching sacred and secular texts, but it also invites us to reconsider why and how we approach any text on our syllabi or on our bookshelves.","creator":["Michal Beth Dinkler"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08883769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f11fd33c-4179-397c-b368-740ff986db0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24752963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reliandliter"}],"isPartOf":"Religion & Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Notre Dame","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STORIES, SECULAR AND SACRED: WHAT'S AT STAKE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752963","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gillian Price"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"291038fa-f08d-33dd-9ec4-2602ed7b148a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26492238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"MIRANDO POR DENTRO\": DOUBLING, VIOLENCE, AND IDENTITY IN CRISTINA RIVERA GARZA'S \"LA MUERTE ME DA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492238","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116367,116523]],"Locations in B":[[38266,38423]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Rodgers"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10632042"},{"name":"oclc","value":"891456947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caf033a6-d9fa-3ca5-b99d-abf74a5a4727"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45170457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"simobeaustud"}],"isPartOf":"Simone de Beauvoir Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Contemporary French Feminism and \"Le Deuxi\u00e8me Sexe\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170457","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":4791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Merlin and Silence wage a final metaphoric \/ metonymic battle in the evolution of allegory: Merlin's laughter exiles him to perpetual selfgeneration, as women are restored to the reign of Silence.","creator":["GLORIA THOMAS GILMORE"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21794fe3-b28d-3163-af36-85329a6a4504"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Le Roman de Silence\": Allegory in Ruin or Womb of Irony?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869258","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7186,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493896,494011]],"Locations in B":[[42976,43083]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"On the occasion of the re-publication of Erving Goffman's Relations in Public: Microstudies of the Public Order, including the remarkable appendix, \"Insanity of Place,\" the authors propose new ways of reading Goffman's work in order to highlight his attention to havoc and containment. Goffman's \"Insanity of Place,\" explores the phenomenon of mental illness by asserting that it is an instance of havoc, a symbolic and practical condition that disrupts the social order of life, and one that must be contained. By situating this essay at the center of Gof\u00edman's oeuvre they examine Gof\u00edman's \"philosophy of containment,\" and trace its trajectory from Asylums, Stigma and \"The Insanity of Place\" to its full crystallization in Frame Analysis. The authors offer a generative reading of havoc and containment in order to understand the incoherence, irrationality, unreason, incomprehensibility and unbearableness of social life and the imperative to preserve social order from collapsing, dissolving or imploding. This reading enables us to see the cracks in the social order and understand containment as the constant effort exerted to recuperate transgressions and deviations back into that order. Goffman's analysis becomes an opening into engagements with the work of Judith Butler and Michel Foucault around the notion of the normative order and the issues of containment and transgression. Thinking through Goffman's philosophy of containment as the framework for an analysis of socialization, normalization, and social ordering affords an approach to thinking macro-micro linkages of order and instability that confront both our contemporary society and the discipline of sociology.","creator":["Black Hawk Hancock","Roberta Garner"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47441845"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afd4b073-ebf0-3205-8740-ec614fa2cd63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41485719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Philosophy of Containment: Reading Goffman in the 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485719","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As is well known, traditional Japanese theatre has been customarily a male domain, with women physically absent for the most part. The representative classical genres: n\u014d, ky\u014dgen, kabuki, and bunraku are performed only by men. The aim of this article is to look for and map a trajectory of the \"female presence\" on this predominantly all-male public stage, by exploring a phenomenon that has been largely overlooked: female versions of the popular all-male performing arts since medieval times, including reworking stories of the most prominent masculine heroes in kabuki. It could be argued that this practice did have a lasting presence in Japanese popular culture well into the twentieth century. I have come to denote this type of female-centered performances within the androcentric traditional Japanese theatre discourse as onna mono (\u304a\u3093\u306a\u3082\u306e \"female things\")\u2014an expression that I would like to propose here as a general term inclusive of all related art forms.","creator":["Galia Todorova Gabrovska"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24737038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce25e06-d578-3576-b09f-7151c71ff033"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24737038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Onna Mono: The \"Female Presence\" on the Stage of the All-Male Traditional Japanese Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24737038","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The postmodernism debate in the social sciences has been misunderstood as primarily an epistemological problem concerning method. The evolution of the postmodernism debate into the science wars has raised the same issues. Critics blame postmodernism and science studies for epistemological relativism and hostility toward science, while supporters attempt to use postmodernism as a part of a project to replace positivism with interpretive methods. Both critics and supporters of postmodernism miss the most important aspect of the postmodern perspective: the attempt to break out of epistemology and the Kantian conceptual framework. Critics of postmodernism and science studies also mistakenly argue that postmodernism is the sole creation of the humanities. Many of the key concepts of the postmodern perspective, however, were developed through reflections on novel developments in the natural sciences. Because critics and supporters of postmodernism in the social sciences remain within a Kantian conceptual framework, the postmodern break from epistemology has been overlooked. A close reading of reflexive texts on the natural sciences rules out any claim that the postmodern perspective is simply a relativistic methodology that dislikes science. The pages below focus on key texts by Gaston Bachelard, Georges Canguilhem, Michel Foucault and Bruno Latour as an attempt to re-orient the postmodernism debate in the social sciences. A reexamination of these texts reveals how the postmodernism debate in the social sciences has mistakenly understood postmodernism as a problem of method and epistemology. Science studies represents the maturation of the postmodern perspective by building a non-epistemologically oriented social theory. The possibility of rebuilding social theory after the dismantling of epistemology is the unique hallmark of science studies, the most recent development of the postmodern perspective.","creator":["Michael Roberts"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"353aef2c-a8c0-3a3a-b157-1be38c19f8a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"698","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-698","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rethinking the Postmodern Perspective: Excavating the Kantian System to Rebuild Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121124","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[65587,65661]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article engages in a gender analysis of the stories of Joseph and Esther in the Hebrew Bible, two characters who rise to prominence within the imperial palace in the Diaspora. Both are distinguished by their beauty and charm, their double-names, and feminine guile; both delay the revelation of their identity (as Hebrew\/Jew) until the crisis point. In this study, Adelman appropriates classic midrashic interpretations that sharpen the ironies in the biblical text and adapt them in an explicitly feminist hermeneutics. The question remains: How is this reading both continuous with and subversive of the classic rabbinic reading? By noting the seeming absence of God in these two narratives, Adelman suggests a parallel between the increasing autonomy of the characters in exile as they break gender boundaries, and the awakening of our feminist voices as interpreters.","creator":["Rachel Adelman"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.30.2.81","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"622dc953-da46-3dc4-88f0-a4df2efd7cce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.30.2.81"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cPassing Strange\u201d\u2014Reading Transgender across Genre: Rabbinic Midrash and Feminist Hermeneutics on Esther","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.30.2.81","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article begins with a simple premise: sex matters, particularly in the context of marriage. While determinations of an individual's sex are often taken for granted, situations involving the marriage of transsexual and intersex individuals present hard cases, cases that require the examination and reexamination of how sex, and the ability of individuals to change their sex, are understood. Using marriage as a lens, this article explores and critiques the various ways in which a variety of courts have come to grips with the ontology and mutability of sex. Lastly, this article explores potential answers to this question, ultimately arguing that hard cases require hard answers, and proposes a general analytic structure capable of accounting for hard cases, while avoiding the more politically polarizing question of same-sex marriage.","creator":["Michael Boulette"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29763036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08971277"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61283474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-228720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29763036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jurimetrics"}],"isPartOf":"Jurimetrics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Bar Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"THAT KIND OF SEXE WHICH DOTH PREVAILE: SHIFTING LEGAL PARADIGMS ON THE ONTOLOGY AND MUTABILITY OF SEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29763036","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":22762,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[367047,367183]],"Locations in B":[[26328,26466]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Human geographers are increasingly employing mixed-method approaches in their research, including in children's geographies, where 'child-centred' methods are often used alongside participant observation and semi-structured interviews to investigate children's perceptions and experiences. Mixing qualitative methods in this way raises a number of ethical and methodological issues, particularly regarding the changing power relationships between researchers and participants. This article considers the challenges and potential benefits of combining methods from participatory and interpretive approaches through triangulation or 'crystallisation'. The issues are illustrated through an empirical case study on children, health and exercise in the everyday spaces of the primary school.","creator":["Peter J. Hemming"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40346110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Mixing Qualitative Research Methods in Children's Geographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346110","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In feminist and cultural studies, there is a growing body of work concerned with how people's lives are subjected to multiple, intersecting axes of differentiation and power. There is growing concern that we seem unable to address more than one difference at a time, thus failing to interrogate enactments of class, race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality in science, technology, and medicine. This article aims to contribute to the effort to conceptualize the making of and interactions between differences. It explores how differences such as disability, gender, and class are made and unmade in sociotechnical practices. It shows that interactions between enactments of differences are complex, contradictory, unpredictable, and surprising and defy simple conclusions about effects and politics. These patterns of interference need to be investigated in situated practices, and we have to examine carefully how processes of differentiation interact to support and reinforce but also to challenge and undermine each other.","creator":["Ingunn Moser"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29733956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"621407ef-163f-35ff-bf45-bbdcdc2e5a00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29733956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"564","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-564","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sociotechnical Practices and Difference: On the Interferences between Disability, Gender, and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29733956","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":13048,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[75058,75150]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In West Java, Indonesia, hosts of hajat (life-cycle event celebrations) hire performing arts troupes to provide entertainment. In addition to typical music and dance acts, one troupe\u2014the Rawit Group\u2014presents a comedy skit called lawakan. This article analyzes one such skit from 1999\u2014just after the fall of President Soeharto's New Order government. The centerpiece of the skit is a parody of two performing traditions that feature professional female entertainers: pop Sunda (diatonic pop songs in Sundanese language) and wayang golek (rod puppet theatre with accompaniment that includes virtuosic female singing). In both traditions, female performers routinely exaggerate their feminine attributes. This female entertainer, however, is portrayed by a man in comically unconvincing drag. Hilarity ensues as the other comedians urge the drag performer to conform to New Order feminine ideals of appearance and behavior, but s\/he confounds them at every turn. In the process, the three men reinforce traditional Sundanese understandings of how the illusion of femininity is actively created through visual means (e.g., artifices of dress) and sonic elements (e.g., singing and speaking styles), and conventions of movement. In the process, they challenge New Order gender policies and point the way toward a return to tried and true Sundanese ideologies of gender.","creator":["Henry Spiller"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5a46e73-87bb-3a91-9500-56894bc0b06f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23359543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"How Not to Act like a Woman: Gender Ideology and Humor in West Java, Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359543","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jody Freeman"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/825754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420220"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51785050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235681"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bd0151b-c3d4-3445-a19d-7a02b197e4f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/825754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univtorolawj"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Toronto Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Defining Family in Mossop v. DSS: The Challenge of Anti-Essentialism and Interactive Discrimination for Human Rights Litigation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/825754","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":27381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b5bb1a7-a58d-3eb2-8cc9-c8941c2b9339"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208111","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses an underreported aspect of contemporary warring in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC): the experiences of women soldiers and officers in the Congolese national armed forces (Forces Arm\u00e9es de la R\u00e9publique D\u00e9mocratique du Congo [FARDC]). It thus addresses an empirical gap in scholarly and policy knowledge about female soldiers in national armies on the African continent, and the DRC in particular. Based on original interviews, the article explores the way female soldiers in the FARDC understand their identities as \u201cwomen soldiers\u201d and offers new insight into women soldiers\u2019 role and responsibilities in the widespread violence committed against civilians in the DRC. Moreover, it explores how their understanding of themselves as \u201cwomen soldiers\u201d both challenges and confirms familiar notions of the army as a masculine sphere. Such insight is important for better understanding the gendered makeup of the military and for contributing to a knowledge base for Security Sector Reform in this violent (post)conflict setting.","creator":["Maria Eriksson Baaz","Maria Stern"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48609159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095327X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"800ee124-adfe-3757-8332-c0c4d27db618"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48609159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"armedforcessoc"}],"isPartOf":"Armed Forces & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"739","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-739","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fearless Fighters and Submissive Wives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48609159","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Negotiating Identity among Women Soldiers in the Congo (DRC)"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2185365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318108"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39648313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2185365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Philosophical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2185365","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":4525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia Gardner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14830889-91ee-32f8-9d7b-0e82a6767cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Neither Monsters nor Temptresses nor Terrors\": Representing Desire in Charlotte Bront\u00eb's \"Shirley\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058425","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Guy Roberts-Holmes"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4122416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50069179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e304753-2071-3b69-a1ec-017ccde9990c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4122416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"496","pagination":"pp. 496-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4122416","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Pellegrini"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46c02de9-1c9c-3065-8275-1c828c7c3762"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women on Top, Boys on the Side, but Some of Us Are Brave: Blackness, Lesbianism, and the Visible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099628","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Somalis have been one of the largest groups to migrate to Australia under its provisions for refugee and humanitarian resettlement. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in Melbourne in 2000-2001, we explore how the loss of social relationships as a result of civil war and displacement contribute to women's distress and sadness. To explore the erosion of social relationships among Somalis in Australia, and how this affects everyday life and women's well-being, we draw on the concepts of social capital and social networks. We suggest that social networks among Somalis in Melbourne are problematic, restricting women's capacity to use and create social capital to settle in Australia. However, the concept of social capital only partially accounts for women's continued sense of displacement. Well-being is not just about contemporary social structures and activities, it is also affected by how women use the past to give meaning to the present. We argue that women's understandings of contemporary social relations are given comparative meaning through their juxtaposition with memories of social worlds in Somalia.","creator":["Celia McMichael","Lenore Manderson"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44126994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187259"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6902e672-3f73-3afc-8fa4-ae3b1d9e2657"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44126994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humaorga"}],"isPartOf":"Human Organization","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Society for Applied Anthropology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Somali Women and Well-Being: Social Networks and Social Capital among Immigrant Women in Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44126994","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":10481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores gender bias in halakhic discourse and examines the relationship between subjective discretion, seen as legitimate in the halakhic corpus, and gender bias, perceived as negative. After discussing and comparing legal-scientific critiques of formalism to Halakhah, it shows how leading halakhists like Rabbis Aaron Lichtenstein and Jonathan Sacks acknowledge the legitimacy of subjective discretion and similarly oppose halakhic formalism. Essentially, this article seeks to explain why subjective discretion is recognized as legitimate in Halakhah, whereas other subjective dimensions, such as gender bias, are denied. Using three models of feminist jurisprudence, which suggest ways in which law is exposed to gender bias, it analyzes their applicability to the world of Halakhah and the different meanings of the claims of gender bias in Halakhah. The article claims that gender biases often are denied in the Halakhah because they are truly transparent to halakhic decisors, all men, with shared gender assumptions about women. Put differently, because masculine ideology is the accepted, dominant norm, it remains latent and invisible, thereby enabling the ostensible appearance of gender neutrality and objectivity. Any exposure, even theoretical, of such a bias arouses opposition, because it reveals what supposedly does not exist. Assuming that masculinity and femininity are the products of social construction and not innate, this does not mean that men cannot share feminine ideology or create gender justice for women and vice versa. The main problem within the halakhic corpus today is not simply the existence of masculine gender biases (women have their own biases) but their one-sidedness. The entrance of women into the realm of halakhic discourse may change this picture dramatically, at least in the sense of creating bias balance between the genders.","creator":["\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05e2\u05d9\u05e8-\u05e9\u05d9","Ronit Irshal"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24148054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15650316"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24148054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"democult"}],"isPartOf":"Democratic Culture \/ \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d3\u05de\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Bar Ilan University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Halakhic Discretion and Gender Bias: A Conceptual Analysis \/ \u05e9\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc \u05d3\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05dc\u05db\u05ea\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e1 \u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8\u05d9 \u2014 \u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7 \u05de\u05d5\u05e9\u05d2\u05d9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24148054","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":17281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"According to the standard interpretation of mid- to late twentieth-century historiography, Jean-Jacques Dessalines was literally Creole\u2014born in the colony\u2014yet performatively and ideologically African. The vexed narrative of the origins of the first leader of independent Haiti shapes our understanding of the Haitian Revolution as what Laurent Dubois calls \u201can African revolution,\u201d whose African-born majority is only obliquely reflected in the historiography of revolutionary leadership. Analysis of sources and interpretations reveals that the few individuals from Dessalines\u2019s lifetime who spoke of his background at all described him as African-born. Some accounts traced his origins to the \u201cGold Coast\u201d (in its eighteenth-century French acceptation), and others alluded to his tribal scarification. Political tensions over Haitian elites and their relationships to the nonelite majority heralded the gradual transition from the African to the Creole narrative of Dessalines\u2019s origins in the middle of the nineteenth century. The possibility that Dessalines was not Creole but African represents a critical link for renewed theorization of how the Middle Passage informed African revolutionary agency in colonial Saint Domingue. The oral traditions of Vodou provide a valuable source of alternative historiography for study of the African character of the Haitian Revolution.","creator":["Deborah Jenson"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5309\/willmaryquar.69.3.0615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c6457b3-5e71-3cae-a48c-956a96c2f675"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5309\/willmaryquar.69.3.0615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"638","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-638","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Jean-Jacques Dessalines and the African Character of the Haitian Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5309\/willmaryquar.69.3.0615","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11119,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434722,434824]],"Locations in B":[[5626,5728]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There is a fundamental revolution under way regarding the relationship between gender and the state, both domestically and internationally. Across the world, the rise and visibility of transgender rights movements have forced a persistent rethinking of the cornerstone legal presumptions associated with science, sex, and gender. As many people, along with multiple courts, colleges, and workplaces, now recognize, the binary presumptions of male and female identity are largely outdated and often fail to capture the complexity of identity and expression. The question for legal scholars and legislatures is how the law can and should respond to this complexity. Taking this observation as an invitation, this Article provides a different way to conceive of the relationship between sex and gender that might provide another vantage point in demonstrating the limits of our jurisprudence. Drawing on Professor Cheryl Harris's groundbreaking article exploring whiteness as property published in the Harvard Law Review over twenty years ago, this Article argues that, in order to understand the relationship between sex and gender, it might be helpful to explore a parallel type of affiliation between identity, property, and intellectual property. My thesis is that sex is to gender as property is to intellectual property. Unpacking this further, this Article argues that, instead of thinking of sex as a construct of biology alone, it might be helpful for us to reconceptualize state-assigned sex along the lines of tangible property\u2014bordered, seemingly fixed, rivalrous, and premised on a juridical presumption of scarcity in terms of its rigid polarities of male and female. In contrast, regarding gender, I argue that thinking through gender as a performance, if taken seriously, also suggests that gender is more akin to intellectual property\u2014permeable, malleable, unfixed, nonrivalrous\u2014and ultimately deeply nonexclusive. Normatively, I argue that a model of gender pluralism is an important framework with which to examine the importance of gender diversity and fluidity.","creator":["Sonia K. Katyal"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2844e350-fcbc-33c8-aa23-4263d549fa3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44211837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106,"pageEnd":"494","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The \"Numerus Clausus\" of Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211837","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":44224,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73644]],"Locations in B":[[141528,141822]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In spite of research showing that pupils\u2014particularly boys\u2014tend to experience tension between high academic achievement and popularity with peers at school, some pupils continue to maintain simultaneous production of both. This article focuses on a sample of 12\u201313 year-old pupils, identified as high achieving and popular, to examine classroom subjectivities, with attention to their practices around gender and educational achievement. Data are drawn from a qualitative study funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, which involved observation of classes at nine different co-educational state schools in England, and interviews with 71 high-achieving pupils, including 22 that were identified as high achieving and popular. The study findings belie the notion that high-achieving pupils necessarily jeopardise their social standing with classmates. However, it also demonstrates the importance of embodiment and even essential attributes in productions of subjectivity that successfully 'balance' popularity and achievement. Nevertheless, high-achieving and popular pupils are shown to undertake significant identity work, employing particular gendered performances and practices in order to maintain this simultaneous production.","creator":["Becky Francis","Christine Skelton","Barbara Read"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e18f7771-e2a1-3c79-84c6-dc05e1215d0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27823608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The simultaneous production of educational achievement and popularity: how do some pupils accomplish it?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823608","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c0 partir d'une enqu\u00eate ethnographique et historique men\u00e9e aupr\u00e8s de communaut\u00e9s initiatiques d'artisans, les compagnons du Tour de France, l'auteur avance l'hypoth\u00e8se que l'attention que ces communaut\u00e9s ont port\u00e9 au genre est le reflet d'un rapport au genre particuli\u00e8rement d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s occidentales entre la fin du xviiie si\u00e8cle et le milieu du xxe si\u00e8cle. Ce paradigme est qualifi\u00e9 de masque en raison de l'importance qu'il accorde \u00e0 la question des r\u00f4les de genre, \u00e0 l'id\u00e9e de sexe social, postures qui dessinent, en creux, une naturalisation in\u00e9dite du genre et cristallise la bicat\u00e9gorisation des sexes. \u00c0 l'oppos\u00e9 de cette attitude, l'auteur d\u00e9crit une autre modalit\u00e9 d'appr\u00e9hension du genre, le paradigme w'soge. Celui-ci, que l'on retrouve \u00e0 l'oeuvre dans certaines soci\u00e9t\u00e9s extra-occidentales ainsi que dans une certaine avant-garde des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s europ\u00e9ennes actuelles, fournit les ressources pour penser un genre en mouvement, non fond\u00e9 sur la nature (du corps ou de l'esprit), mais \u00e9tabli sur des crit\u00e8res fondamentalement relationnels. From a historical and ethnographie study conducted among initiation groups of craftsmen, compagnons du Tour de France, the author speculates that the attention that these communities have focused on gender is a reflection of a specific relation to gender developed in Western societies from the late eighteenth to the mid-twentieth century. This paradigm is called mask because ofthe importance it attaches to the issue of gender roles, to the idea of social sex. That attitudes draw, by contrast, an unprecedented naturalization of gender and crystallizes sex-duality. In contrast to this posture, the author describes another kind of gender conception, the paradigm face. This one, which is at work in some non-Western societies as well as in the avant-garde of contemporary European societies, provides the resources to think about gender in motion, not based on the nature (of the body or mind), but on fundamentally relational criteria.","creator":["NICOLAS ADELL"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00488046"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fabcc0d6-5657-3b98-87c4-0a38c58f6cb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revueurosciesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revue europ\u00e9enne des sciences sociales","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Librairie Droz","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LE GENRE EN FACES: VARIATIONS AUTOUR DE DEUX PARADIGMES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445038","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10222,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471827,471893]],"Locations in B":[[61913,61980]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Did 'feminist' writers of the 1790s produce narratives in which women could find self-respect and authenticity? Before this 'positive' endeavour came the 'negative' task of constructing narratives revealing women's oppression. More positive images may be found in narratives which relate women to political discourses and events. But the main type of narrative pointing the way towards authentic selfhood for women, free from the prisonhouse of gender, is the narrative of Bildung or development, so common in novels, conduct books, treatises on education and polemics. This narrative, criticized by some twentieth-century feminists but treated sympathetically here, may be a middle-class assertion of Kultur against decadent aristocratic Zivilisation; it is also formed by Stoic, republican and Protestant discourses, and is turned into a woman's narrative not only by republicans such as Macaulay, Wollstonecraft and Hays but also by conservatives such as Chapone and More. It is concerned with a rich and rational inner life rather than surface appearance and superficial accomplishments, and encourages women to be self-controlled rather than other-determined, to some extent selves for themselves rather than for men.","creator":["WILLIAM STAFFORD"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24423573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182648"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24423573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"history"}],"isPartOf":"History","issueNumber":"265","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narratives of Women: English Feminists of the 1790s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24423573","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":10067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15572455"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61836701"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-212500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41805095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israstudforu"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender Performance in a Changing Military: Women Soldiers in \"Masculine\" Roles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805095","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432819,432893]],"Locations in B":[[11058,11132]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elijah C. Nealy"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.1.0139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cc574c0-90c5-3f53-a111-d82a3c5661cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.4.1.0139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Intersections and Transformers: A Transgender Autoethnographic Reflection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.1.0139","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela Peden Sanders"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a45390a-bc48-3f79-a8b5-89686fd1349f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Feminism of Dorothy West's \"The Living Is Easy\": A Critique of the Limitations of the Female Sphere through Performative Gender Roles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512207","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7752,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73644]],"Locations in B":[[41395,41676]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Parliamentary discourse (PD) is shaped by pre-defined rules, which may be strategically transgressed to achieve political goals. Here, we examine a relatively unique form of PD, the discourse of the 'Shadow Assembly', which was tasked with establishing the procedures of the new Northern Ireland Assembly (1998). Using a discursive construction ist perspective, which emphasizes the intersection between social theory and sociolinguistics, we examine how Members of the Assembly vie to discursively establish the fundamental parameters of political behaviour within the Assembly. These included address terms, speaking rights and, indeed, which language members should speak. Hence, we have a rare opportunity to examine how discursive construction mediates the future forms of interactional limits and constraints. In particular, we consider PD in a context where the rules are not pre-established and there is, moreover, a strong history of socio-political conflict We also consider the role of culture in shaping and constituting PD.","creator":["John Wilson","Karyn Stapleton"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3983ed9-185c-362d-b44c-605f4ca05d15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Political science - Government"],"title":"Discourse in the shadows: Discursive construction and the construction and the Northern Ireland Assembly","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496346","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Social researchers have extensively addressed the immigration of one million Russian speakers to Israel\/Palestine over the past twenty-five years. However, the immigrants\u2019 incorporation into the Israeli occupation regime and the ongoing colonisation of Palestine have rarely been questioned as such. In the interviews informing this article, Russian-speaking immigrant women living in Arab-Palestinian communities discuss their complex relations with Palestinian, Jewish-Israeli and Russian-Israeli communities. Sharing a background with Russian-speaking Jewish Israelis on the one hand, and marital kinship ties to Palestinians on the other, these women encounter multiple boundaries of territory and identity in their everyday lives. Drawing on feminist border thinking, I explore these encounters as a navigation through geopolitical and epistemic borderlands in a dense colonial reality. I am particularly interested in the potential of such an exploration to question essentialism and destabilise binary ethno-national categories of identity, such as Arab\/Jew and Israeli\/Palestinian, that dominate not only hegemonic but also emancipatory discourses. These binary divisions are not a straightforward outcome of political regimes but rather the result of ongoing border-making processes, which are vulnerable to disorder and disruption. This perspective aims to enrich understandings of the roles that gendered ethno-national identities play in sustaining the colonial relations of power in Israel\/Palestine.","creator":["Inna Michaeli"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cce71dc3-ef80-33f7-999c-6ef3b071a60f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"immigrating into the occupation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776516","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Russian-speaking women in Palestinian societies"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary D. Garrard"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23739358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"468","pagination":"pp. 468-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FEMINIST ART AND THE ESSENTIALISM CONTROVERSY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739358","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9607,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[477195,477271],[477838,477934],[497254,497396],[497485,497534],[500697,500768]],"Locations in B":[[55834,55917],[56078,56174],[56293,56435],[59537,59586],[59911,59980]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LOURDES ESTRADA-L\u00d3PEZ"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17ba717e-bf71-3899-b3a5-ea4637f17cd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40927299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Transici\u00f3n\/TRaNSgresi\u00f3n del cuerpo en \"Una mala noche la tiene cualquiera\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927299","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":7929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Gunther Kodat"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"1029","pageStart":"997","pagination":"pp. 997-1029","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Making Camp: \"Go down, Moses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497020","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":14841,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493979]],"Locations in B":[[74595,74705]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the women's press is generally denigrated worldwide, including in Israel, and is not considered a serious or an elite press, it is a press with a consistently high circulation. The secret of its success puzzles readers, journalists and researchers alike, although the topic has not yet been studied in depth in Israel. Sharp criticism of the women's press was voiced in the 1960s with the rise of the feminist movement in Europe and the U.S. Such leaders of the movement as Betty Friedan charged that the women's press represented a stereotypical and discriminatory perception of women, and that reading such material repruducing the repression of women. Later research revealed that control of women was only one aspect of a more complex perception of the duality and inferiority of the feminine\/domestic\/private domain vis-a-vis the male\/rational\/public one. During the 1980s, heightened interest in the study of the role of popular culture embraced the field of the women's press as well. Women's magazines, it was found, were a source of entertainment and pleasure. The feminist movement developed a love-hate relationship with the women's press and the promise it held out to transform the woman. The movement viewed criticism of this press as a sign of patronization, similar to that of patriarchialism. Research in the 1990s questioned the very definition of society's expectations of women, as this was constantly in flux, influenced by history, class, ethnicity and nationality. The question of the construction of gender, and the role played by the media in the construction of the gender discourse is relevant to this discussion. So many factors are involved in the media-gender discourse, that the argument that the media create a stereotypical image of the woman is untenable. The women's press first emerged in England in the 18th century, growing significantly with the spread of women's literacy. Initially geared to the upper middle class woman, women's magazines eventually became a general model of femininity. The woman as a consumer began to be targeted in this press in the 1880s, a trend that continues to this day. Consumerism became an integral element of femininity, with women's magazines containing approximately an equal number of advertising pages as editorial pages by the end of the 19th century. During the second half of the 20th century, the very distinction between advertising and editorial content became blurred, a development enhanced by sophisticated print and photo technologies. The perception of the existence of separate social sphere for men and for women, reflected in separate columns for women in general newspapers and a separate women's press, held true for the early Hebrew press in Eretz Yisrael as well. The first women's periodical was Zvi Lebeit Ya'akov, a biweekly edited by Haya Hirschenson (1893) aimed at \"influencing the women of Jerusalem toward love of Torah, Israel, the people and...the land.\" A different image was projected by Hemda Ben-Yehuda, who wrote items of interest to women in the newspaper edited by her husband (Eliezer Ben-Yehuda), Hashkafah (\"Viewpoint\"), centered on manners, home and beauty (1904). Regular women's columns in the daily press began to appear in the 1930s, pioneered by Do'ar Hayom (\"The Daily Mail\") in the style of such columns in the European press, focusing on advice and guidance. Interestingly, during the 1940s and early '50s these columns also dealt with issues of legislation, women's organizations, women's equality and women's welfare alongside proper nutrition during a period of food rationing. The daily Davar opposed the appearance of a fashion column as contradictory to the pioneering spirit. The Hebrew women's press has not projected a uniform image of women and has aired issues that depart from the stereotypes that are widespread in this press. Significantly, women's political movements during the pre-state period published their own periodicals, preceding the women's commercial press. The earliest of these was Ha'isha (\"The Woman\"), sub-titled \"On the Life and Interests of the Woman in Eretz Yisrael\" (1926-28), published by the Federation of Hebrew Women in Eretz Yisrael (see article on this by Michael Keren, p. 8e). Decidedly feminist, it dealt with issues relevant to women from all sectors, including women at work, marriage of minors, the status of women in politics, Jewish women of various traditional communities, relations between Ashkenazi and Sephardi women, and the absence of contact between the Jewish women's movement and Arab women in Eretz Yisrael. A monthly published by the Jewish National Fund during 1930-40, Bat Yisrael Ve'eretz Yisrael (\"Daughter of Israel and of the Land of Israel\"), later renamed Bat Ami (\"Daughter of My People\"), came out in Yiddish and reported on the activities of various women's organizations. Dvar Hapo'elet (\"Women Workers' News\"), published by the Histadrut-General Federation of Labor, first appeared in 1934, changing its name to Yarhon Na'amat (\"Na'amat Monthly\") in 1988 with the change of name of the Women Workers' Council. A monthly published by the Women's International Zionist Organization (WIZO) appeared in 1948, titled WIZO Bemedinat Yisrael (\"WIZO in the State of Israel\"). Later, WIZO published a monthly, Bamat Ha'isha (\"The Woman's Platform\"). The National Religious Women's movement began publishing a periodical, Dapei Pe'ulah (\"Activity Pages\"), in 1961. Women's newspapers in Arabic were published by the Women Workers' Council in 1964. All these periodicals dealt with issues related to the status of women in society. Purely feminist journals that appeared included Noga (1980), Isha Le'isha (\"Woman to Woman\") and Bit'on Shdulat Hanashim (\"Women's Lobby Newsletter\"). The first commercial women's magazine was Olam Ha'isha (\"Woman's World,\" 1940-48), aimed at the woman as a consumer. La'isha (\"For the Woman\"), the longest-running women's magazine, appeared in 1947 and is still being published (see article on this by Sonia Leiden, p.-). Profitable from the start, the magazine actually helped cover the losses of its parent newspaper, the daily Yedi'ot Aharonot. It played an active role in the construction of a woman's world that distanced itself from the country's political and economic problems and focused on a lighthearted, enjoyable milieu centering on women and femininity. It was integral to the establishment of such institutions as the country's first national beauty contest (1950) and Mother's Day. A competitor was the weekly Olam Ha'isha (\"Woman's World,\" 1958-61), published by the daily Ma'ariv. Ma'ariv later came out with a monthly, At (\"You\"), in 1967, while Olam Ha'isha was revived as a monthly in 1984. Women's magazines that appeared in the 1990s included Lady Globes, geared to career women, and Bat Melekh (\"King's Daughter\"), for religious women. An interesting observation by journalist Zvia Cohen in a seminal article on the women's press is that the content of the women's political journals and the women's commercial magazines eventually began to merge, each anxious to attract the other's readership. An analysis of articles written about the women's press in Israel during 1986-98 in various newspapers reveals four findings: 1. The women's press is an industry. Content strategies aim first and foremost at selling the newspaper so that it will continue to attract advertisement. This press has the additional attraction of having a long shelf life, as it is often found in waiting rooms. 2. The women's press functions as a platform for airing feminist issues. Even though the solutions proposed in this press do not always involve changing the traditional images of the woman, the very fact of the discourse exposes readers to various options. 3. The women's press aims at different target audiences, depending on the focus of the periodical. All, however, assiduously cultivate the reader as a consumer. All also assume the role of educator, giving advice and guidance on femininity while also publishing authentic accounts of women's lives. 4. It is a vehicle for reproducing and for challenge. Significantly, the trend in the general press in Israel is toward supplements focusing on the \"soft\" facets of life, with titles such as \"Style,\" \"Gallery\" and \"Modern Times.\" Moreover, the entire press has undergone a change in writing style, incorporating the private realm into that of the public, as epitomized by the treatment of the Clinton-Lewinsky affair in the American press. Paradoxically, side by side with the promotion of beauty contests, the Israeli women's press challenges the status quo. It does so by means of the economic status it has acquired, as well as by the barrier-breaking side effect of the promotion of beauty, namely that beauty is not the preserve of any single class or ethnicity.","creator":["\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2","Hanna Herzog"],"datePublished":"2000-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23916356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07920113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"182a96fc-ee32-3a07-b03d-391df463a68e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23916356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kesher"}],"isPartOf":"Kesher \/ \u05e7\u05e9\u05e8","issueNumber":"28","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Tel Aviv University \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Communication Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Women's Press in Israel: An Arena for Reproduction or For Challenge? \/ \u05e2\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd: \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05de\u05e9\u05e2\u05ea\u05e7 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05dc\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05d9\u05d2\u05e8?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23916356","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It has become standard practice within feminist anthropology to repudiate any essential relationship between the biological body and cultural identity. In recent years, the ongoing deconstruction of the body has come to seem the only 'natural' fact. By contrast, this article seeks to reconnect sex, power, and culture in a positive sense, by identifying a political system in which power is kept in motion through the body. Literally dancing it out, organized Mbuti or Yaka gender groups perform a recurrent ritual repartee where power is continually churned up and funnelled back and forth between coalitions. The graphic somatic language that emerges through these dances suggests an alternative power-principle: kinetic, erotic, and fundamentally non-coercive. Here, the drawing back of the collective eye to the anatomical nature of power, with the simultaneous ritual de-privatization of 'biology', explodes the body out into a collective political force. The cultural visibility of the female procreative body in such contexts is striking. Using the core theme of dialogism, I rethink the creative potential of sexual duality, and work towards a new understanding of gender, power, and the body. L'anthropologie f\u00e9ministe r\u00e9fute aujourd'hui syst\u00e9matiquement toute relation essentielle entre corps biologique et identit\u00e9 culturelle. Au fil des ann\u00e9es, la d\u00e9construction du corps est devenue, en apparence, le seul fait \u00ab naturel \u00bb. En r\u00e9action, le pr\u00e9sent article cherche \u00e0 r\u00e9tablir des liens entre sexe, pouvoir et culture selon une approche positive, en identifiant un syst\u00e8me politique dans lequel le pouvoir est maintenu en mouvement \u00e0 travers le corps. Ainsi, dans les \u00e9changes r\u00e9currents de reparties rituelles chez les Mbuti et les Aka, le pouvoir est sans cesse extorqu\u00e9 et \u00e9chang\u00e9 des uns aux autres entre groupes d'hommes et de femmes. Le langage graphique des corps qui \u00e9merge de ces danses sugg\u00e8re un autre principe de pouvoir, un pouvoir en mouvement, erotique et fondamentalement d\u00e9pourvu de coercition. Le regard collectif, ramen\u00e9 vers la nature anatomique du pouvoir par le rituel simultan\u00e9 de privatisation du \u00ab biologique \u00bb , fait exploser le corps en le rendant force politique collective. La visibilit\u00e9 culturelle du corps de la femme en tant qu'instrument de procr\u00e9ation est frappante dans ce contexte. En faisant du dialogisme sa th\u00e9matique centrale, l'auteure repense le potentiel cr\u00e9atif de la dualit\u00e9 sexuelle dans ce type de contextes et cherche \u00e0 \u00e9laborer une nouvelle compr\u00e9hension du genre, du pouvoir et du corps.","creator":["Morna Finnegan"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7272f466-1821-3f78-b562-a1d6fd14b943"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"715","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-715","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The politics of Eros: ritual dialogue and egalitarianism in three Central African hunter-gatherer societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001679","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a discipline that bridges the biological and social sciences, bioarchaeology has much to contribute to a contextualized and theoretically sophisticated understanding of social identities. Here, we discuss the growing methodological sophistication of bioarchaeology and highlight new developments in osteological age and sex estimation, paleodemography, biodistance analysis, biogeochemistry, and taphonomy, particularly anthropologie de terrain. We then discuss how these methodological developments, when united with social theory, can elucidate social identities. More specifically, we highlight past and future bioarchaeological work on disability and impairment, gender identity, identities of age and the life course, social identity and body modification, embodiment, and ethnic and community identities.","creator":["Kelly J. Knudson","Christopher M. Stojanowski"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10590161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee0d481c-1225-32c0-be08-22f03c391c13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41053255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"New Directions in Bioarchaeology: Recent Contributions to the Study of Human Social Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053255","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":20567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses the sexual politics of anti-normalization within the context of the sociological discussions of civil society and the public sphere. The sexual politics of anti-normalization is less centered around \"identity\" as a means of securing group solidarity and representing sexual communities in civil society. A politics of anti-normalization comprehends identity as a means of normalizing and regulating sexual desire and difference. Anti-normalization entails the politicization of ethical-moral issues concerning sex and desire and the production of sexual differences beyond the usual opposition of heterosexuality to homosexuality. I discuss the ways that the theoretical discourses on civil society reduce conceptions of difference to identity and develop a framework for analyzing the sexual politics of difference \"beyond identity\" in the public sphere.","creator":["Chet Meeks"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f010d9e6-1559-3824-b767-32bdc73699e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Civil Society and the Sexual Politics of Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108599","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosalind S. Simson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23558685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90dd08ca-1d0f-301b-86cd-1bb4ffe150f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23558685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Feminine Thinking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23558685","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11845,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475965,476141]],"Locations in B":[[16227,28875]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a89e93d-2335-3618-b07f-10c0b6ed343b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772300","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3732,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503404,503495]],"Locations in B":[[15922,16062]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This analysis of Reinig's Geometrie has two aims: to discuss the aesthetics of a historically-specific female subjectivity as constituted in the text, and to explore the relation between gender identity and GDR national identity. The overlay of three structuring narrative principles, thematic, chronological, and reverse chronological, creates the effect of a fragmented, heterogeneous subjectivity. Yet, the picaresque, laconic style chosen in the face of personal disaster communicates a sense of agency. Although Reinig does not reflect consciously her memories as a woman, the basis of her portrayal of political repression, ideological dogma, and discrepancy between ideological claims versus reality is a socio-historically feminine experience. By correlating morality with bodily functions, Reinig degrades ideology in a carnivalesque way, and shows a subject not subsumed in subjection to political pressure and performance of gender roles, but able to develop a certain degree of agency.","creator":["Ricarda Schmidt"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39a4bbf3-6735-336f-a418-ea6421c1c900"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sockelfigur am \"gu\u00dfeisernen Paradepferd der Weltgeschichte\": Christa Reinigs autobiographischer Roman Die himmlische und die irdische Geometrie als \"Weibsgeschichte\" aus der Zeit des kalten Krieges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408475","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":8039,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[49321,49390]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KRISTINA FAGAN"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20739554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54533161"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-214188"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20739554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Delicate Dance of Reasoning and Togetherness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20739554","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist scholars and popular writers of women's history have traditionally ignored the possibility of transgenderism among \"female-to-male\" cross-dressers of the late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century West. This article examines the multiple reasons for this, including the role that the taint of western myth and the frontier thesis had in coloring available evidence.","creator":["Peter Boag"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25443237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a16800d-9153-331f-ae57-89805b63ae34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25443237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"Western Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Western Historical Quarterly, Utah State University","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Go West Young Man, Go East Young Woman: Searching for the Trans in Western Gender History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25443237","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[19934,20170]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay historicizes the genre of women\u2019s autobiography and the concept of genius in the context of Gertrude Stein\u2019s popular work, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas. It argues that Stein draws on the form, content, and style of the domestic memoir, a type of self-writing that was popularized in the nineteenth century as a specifically feminine form of autobiography and remained central to women's self-writing into the twentieth century. Because of its relational and anecdotal nature, the domestic memoir provides Stein a canvas on which to play with the gendered categories of \"wife\" and \"genius.\" Ultimately, Stein's playful reimagining of gender roles and domesticity serves to redefine the modernist notion of the genius as autonomous and male in favor of a feminine, domestic, and collaborative conception of genius.","creator":["Nora Doyle"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82accbff-093b-3d39-9c00-775c79ea8e56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gertrude Stein and the Domestication of Genius in The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.44.1.0043","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10542,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124649,124745]],"Locations in B":[[8714,8810]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DONALD HEDRICK"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e938ec58-76dd-3bcb-ac82-20f2c47ad443"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Male Surplus Value","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917367","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":16396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Same-sex marriage is the centre of a vitriolic debate in mainline Christian denominations in the United States. Both those who advocate for same-sex marriage and those who repudiate it employ naturalizing discourses to legitimate their claims. Feminists argue that naturalizing discourses are used to authorize social power. Liberals and evangelicals vie for the power to frame the debate over same-sex marriage. LGBT Christians, on the other hand, both contribute to and resist these discourses; most claim that their sexual orientation is beyond their control, while other evoke a sense of personal agency thereby rejecting the premise of the entire debate. \/\/\/ Le mariage entre personnes de m\u00eame sexe est au centre d'un d\u00e9bat au vitriol au sein des grandes confessions chr\u00e9tiennes aux \u00c9tats-Unis. Qu'ils soient en faveur du mariage gai ou qu'ils s'y opposent, les participants au d\u00e9bat font usage d'un discours de naturalisation pour l\u00e9gitimer leurs propos. Pour les f\u00e9ministes, les discours de naturalisation servent \u00e0 autoriser le pouvoir social. Si les mouvements lib\u00e9raux et \u00e9vang\u00e9listes se disputent le pouvoir de formuler la question sur le mariage gai, les Chr\u00e9tiens LGBT, pour leur part, contribuent \u00e0 renforcer ces discours tout en leur opposant une r\u00e9sistance. Ils affirment d'une part que leurs orientations sexuelles sont ind\u00e9pendantes de leur volont\u00e9; de l'autre, ils \u00e9voquent leur capacit\u00e9 individuelle d'action, rejetant par le fait m\u00eame les pr\u00e9misses qui soustendent le d\u00e9bat.","creator":["Constance R. Sullivan-Blum"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2baaff1-0606-3e6e-9cfd-eab9e5ff2888"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25605311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Natural Order of Creation\": Naturalizing Discourses in the Christian Same-Sex Marriage Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25605311","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10001,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[58096,58189]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MERCEDES CARBAYO AB\u00c9NGOZAR"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e82825c7-3b04-3cc6-9875-db7917a97974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24431762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DRAMATIZANDO LA CONSTRUCCI\u00d3N NACIONAL DESDE EL G\u00c9NERO Y LA M\u00daSICA POPULAR: LA COPLA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431762","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANDREA LEWIS"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ea2d770-7e33-3f3c-9ede-4d3ec588e676"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"GLORIOUS PAGAN THAT I ADORE\": RESISTING THE NATIONAL REPRODUCTIVE IMPERATIVE IN ROSAMOND LEHMANN'S \"DUSTY ANSWER\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533345","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6621,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[394285,394358]],"Locations in B":[[31685,31759]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The study of naming practices offers valuable information about power relations between the sexes and the process of their symbolic differentiation. Men and women may have powers of naming that vary as between societies. Such power may reinforce or counterbalance the structuring effect exerted by any given kinship system on intra-family relations, and may convey a image of greater or lesser prestige for men and women. It is also possible to study inequality between the sexes, by observing the differences which may sometimes exist in the construction, symbolic content and use of male and female given names. But the name can also be a powerful weapon, including for women in patrilinear societies, in the battle of the sexes, or rivalry between persons of the same sex. The extreme case of societies where it is possible to take a name usually given to the opposite sex offers an opportunity to test the performative theory of naming, whereby the name creates the gender, and to perceive some of the factors by which the gender effects of a name may vary.","creator":["Bernard Vernier","Ethan Rundell"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610846","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27212b75-5dfa-36c8-a6ad-2b94e898e9e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26610846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The power of naming and its gendered effects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610846","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"materials for a comparative anthropology"} +{"abstract":"\"Johnny Guitar's\" allegorical uses of politics and gender are highly contradictory. The film mounts a \"liberal\" critique of McCarthyism that is undermined by its binary politics, which merely shift blame onto another 1950s bad object: repression in the form of a sexually pathological woman. This apparent misogyny is tempered by other characters' performance of Joan Riviere's masquerade, which ultimately validates a playful gender mobility.","creator":["Jennifer Peterson"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43c4413b-1200-3277-9894-2d20d3dd14a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Competing Tunes of \"Johnny Guitar\": Liberalism, Sexuality, Masquerade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225762","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8395,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[184111,184236],[184420,184703],[199893,200133]],"Locations in B":[[30205,30330],[30681,31010],[33419,33657]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The past two decades have witnessed a minor explosion in publications dealing with the ways in which gay men and lesbians use language. In fact, though, work on the topic has been appearing in several disciplines (philology, linguistics, women's studies, anthropology, and speech communication) since the 1940s. This review charts the history of research on \"gay and lesbian language,\" detailing earlier concerns and showing how work of the 1980s and 1990s both grows out of and differs from previous scholarship. Through a critical analysis of key assumptions that guide research, this review argues that gay and lesbian language does not and cannot exist in the way it is widely imagined to do. The review concludes with the suggestion that scholars abandon the search for gay and lesbian language and move on to develop and refine concepts that permit the study of language and sexuality, and language and desire.","creator":["Don Kulick"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10dcb3e6-9203-3110-bae9-be7b14c8021e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Gay and Lesbian Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223422","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":22387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Williams"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Provoking Agent: The Pornography and Performance Art of Annie Sprinkle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466263","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7778,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[455567,455708],[472833,472911],[477829,477951]],"Locations in B":[[12292,12432],[44803,44880],[46942,47069]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Scholars have argued that there were women who immigrated to Eretz Israel (Land of Israel) in order to find gender equality. The image of the emancipated Halutzah, the female proletarian and field worker, was broadly publicized. From 1948 on, the socialist Women's Workers Movement and its image of the Halutzah continued to influence Israeli society. They admired hard-working women who sacrificed their bodies for the national collective\u2014 in the media, their lives and sacrifices were celebrated and glorified through the act of remembering. Shortly after the state was formed, beauty pageants began to take place and expressed values in sharp contrast with the Halutzah. The women's magazine Laisha (For the Woman) started the selection of the Israeli Beauty Queen in 1950 and created a public arena for the adoration of the beautiful female body. During young Israel's struggle in forming a unified nation, both constructs competed for the ideal image of the Israeli woman\u2014one in creating a heroic past, the other in drawing a picture of a glamorous future. This paper explores the dynamics behind gendered national images and evaluates patterns of persistence and\/or change.","creator":["Julie Grimmeisen"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.20.2.27","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10849513"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388186"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83cdaff3-016d-3f5b-a808-6a3232c42663"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/israelstudies.20.2.27"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Halutzah or Beauty Queen? National Images of Women in Early Israeli Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.20.2.27","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Whereas early liberal thinkers developed the concept of the ethically accountable continuous forensic modern European person in contrast to what they saw as the discontinuous and hence unaccountable mimetic person, I argue that forensic and mimetic are better understood both as ideologies of personhood and as dimensions of all persons rather than as fully distinctive kinds of persons. I present an account of persons as accountable for their acts but show that this is not limited to the maximally continuous and autonomous person of liberal ideology. I review other forms of personhood encountered cross-culturally and suggest that the mimetic dimension offsets some of the problems inherent in an exclusively forensic model. Les premiers penseurs lib\u00e9raux ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 le concept d'une personne l\u00e9gale europ\u00e9enne moderne qui serait continue et \u00e9thiquement responsable, par opposition \u00e0 la personne mim\u00e9tique qu'ils percevaient comme discontinue donc irresponsable. L'auteur avance que le l\u00e9gal et le mim\u00e9tique sont \u00e0 envisager \u00e0 la fois comme des id\u00e9ologies de la personne et comme des dimensions de toute personne plut\u00f4t que comme des types distincts de personne. Il avance que la personne responsable de ses actes ne se limite pas \u00e0 la personne int\u00e9gralement continue et autonome de l'id\u00e9ologie lib\u00e9rale. Il passe en revue d'autres conceptions de la personne dans diff\u00e9rentes cultures et sugg\u00e8re que la dimension mim\u00e9tique permet de compenser certaines d\u00e9ficiences du mod\u00e8le exclusivement l\u00e9gal.","creator":["Michael Lambek"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"075fe3df-0749-3fba-a3c9-ad9e96ac21ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"858","pageStart":"837","pagination":"pp. 837-858","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The continuous and discontinuous person: two dimensions of ethical life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001686","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The theory of performativity, as proposed by Judith Butler in \"Bodies That Matter,\" offers the analytical framework that elucidates Surrealism's undermining of intelligibility. The present analysis studies Luis Bu\u00f1uel's \"The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie\" and \"The Phantom of Liberty\" by applying the theory of performativity to the Spanish director's revolutionary ways of representation. Bu\u00f1uel's exploration of alternative semiological methods of signification based on the icon is intended to subvert narrative as the traditional method of communication. Performativity's study of the normative nature of intelligibility contributes the theoretical framework to Bu\u00f1uel's surrealist and iconoclastic artistic innovations.","creator":["Ibon Izurieta"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20467910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78b2aa33-3fda-3d54-b4fc-dd3097dff7cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20467910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"766","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-766","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performativity in Bu\u00f1Uel's \"The Phantom of Liberty\" and \"The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20467910","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":7900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Crowley"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21e9ab38-ff89-32f7-b6e5-a8493c16c511"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Judith Butler, Professor of Rhetoric","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866391","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":2014,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[11878,11947]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Wingrove"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d8993a0-12ae-389d-95f9-28318a06ece4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"893","pageStart":"869","pagination":"pp. 869-893","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interpellating Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175596","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11454,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[70027,70096]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Harding"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42631158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d37bacbe-fde2-327a-9473-7da468a07c60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42631158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42631158","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":2725,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Perspective offers a feminist engagement with the 'dancing body' and the languages which it articulates and which it inscribes, in order to examine how social, cultural and political discourse and ideology permeate the use and reading of this body. This is done through the lens of looking at Flatfoot Dance Company's dance education and youth dance development programmes run in KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa), and their focus on challenging (amongst other things) the construction of sexual subjectivity of both the male and female youth and children who dance in their various programmes. This Perspective asks that in stepping into the difficult terrain of looking at childhood sexuality and how it is constructed, normalised, challenged, gendered and expressed, there is the need to include the arena of cultural practice as a terrain that teaches, negotiates and enacts sexuality. Flatfoot Dance Company works from the critical understanding that children's sexuality and its expression, should not be assumed to be non-existent.","creator":["Lliane Loots"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4736735-45b7-3527-98af-b140d8dd9583"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (97)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"'Body Politics' and negotiating gender violence and child sexuality through Flatfoot Dance Company's youth arts intervention programmes in KwaZulu - Natal - a case study (2003 - 2013)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824409","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses the Stockholm Pride parade as an effective contemporary political stage, built on laughter and festivity. Taking its political point of departure in what is seen as being highly private and intimate, sexuality and the sexed body, the parade turns upside down one of the most central ideas of modernity: the dichotomy of public and private. Combining the theory of carnival laughter with queer theory, the article illustrates the way in which humour and politics work together in this contemporary blend of politics and popular culture.","creator":["Anna Lundberg"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4dba22a-4ffb-30b8-afc9-e3d4c138611c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26405488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queering Laughter in the Stockholm Pride Parade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405488","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":8396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay argues that the work of a lesser-known mid-eighteenth-century satirist Charles Churchill (1732\u20131764) provides a rich literary source for queer historical considerations of the conflation of xenophobia with effeminophobia in colonial imaginings of Ireland. This article analyzes Churchill's verse-satire The Rosciad (1761) through a queer lens in order to reengage the complex history of queer figurations of Ireland and the Irish within the British popular imagination. In the eighth edition of The Rosciad \u2013 a popular and controversial survey of London's contemporary players \u2013 Churchill portrays the Irish actor Thady Fitzpatrick as an effeminate fribble, before championing the manly acting abilities of the English actor David Garrick. The phobic attack on Fitzpatrick in The Rosciad is a direct response to Fitzpatrick's involvement in the 'Fitzgiggo' riots of January 1763 at the Drury Lane and Covent-Garden theatres. While Churchill's lampooning of the actor recalls Garrick's earlier satirizing of Fitzpatrick as a fribble in The Fribbleriad (1741) and Miss in her Teens (1747), The Rosciad is unique in its explicit conflation of androgyny with ethnicity through Irish classification. The portraiture of Fitzpatrick functions, alongside interrelated axes of ethnicity, class and gender, to prohibit access to a 'normative' middle-class English identity, figured through the 'manly' theatrical sensibility of the poem's hero, Garrick. Moreover, in celebrating a 'Truly British Age', the poem privileges English female players, in essentialist and curiously de-eroticized terms, as 'natural' though flawed performers. By analyzing Churchill's phobic juxtaposition of Garrick and the female players against the Irish fribble, this article evinces how mid-century discourses of effeminacy were also instrumental in enforcing racial taxonomies.","creator":["Declan William Kavanagh"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24576815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fbedbf6-f944-3bd0-8ed3-8d470b44e10a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24576815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Of \"Neuter\" Gender, tho' of \"Irish\" growth': Charles Churchill's Fribble","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24576815","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":4831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article notes the historical tendency in Anglo-American queer theory to draw extensively on French thought to formulate its theoretical positions and explores the extent to which this tendency is manifest in more recent writings which take Anglo-American queer thought in a new direction. To this end, it examines writings on the emerging concept of the 'post-queer', tracing their debts to French thought\u2014particularly that of Deleuze and Guattari. The article also evaluates how adequately such analyses translate to the context in which sexual minorities and queer theory exist in France and thus how likely it is that the concept of 'post-queer', as formulated in North America, will be adopted in French queer thought. It is suggested that French queer theory should not be seen as a consumer of Anglo-American queer theorization, but rather as its critical interlocutor.","creator":["Claire Boyle"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39fe1ba3-d37b-3dad-8fcf-e026eacf8cb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Queer (Un)Made in France?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263838","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terri J. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40541603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003049X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3626f88d-0d27-3b19-a214-5df9eacdc76b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40541603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"440","pagination":"pp. 440-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Philosophical Society","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Film in the Second Degree: \"Cabaret\" and the Dark Side of Laughter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40541603","volumeNumber":"152","wordCount":12402,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[434044,434288],[434315,434697]],"Locations in B":[[54993,55237],[55399,55785]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suad Joseph"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bffdd16-602b-3c7d-93b3-42469484e6a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40326850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Learning Desire: Relational Pedagogies and the Desiring Female Subject in Lebanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326850","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":12820,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[71231,71337]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The study of identity forms a critical cornerstone within modern sociological thought. Introduced by the works of Cooley and Mead, identity studies have evolved and grown central to current sociological discourse. Microsociological perspectives dominated work published through the 1970s. Sociologists focused primarily on the formation of the \"me,\" exploring the ways in which interpersonal interactions mold an individual's sense of self. Recent literature constitutes an antithesis to such concerns. Many works refocus attention from the individual to the collective; others prioritize discourse over the systematic scrutiny of behavior; some researchers approach identity as a source of mobilization rather than a product of it; and the analysis of virtual identities now competes with research on identities established in the copresent world. This essay explores all such agenda as raised in key works published since 1980. I close with a look toward the future, suggesting trajectories aimed at synthesizing traditional and current concerns.","creator":["Karen A. Cerulo"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce86623a-43a1-3072-95dd-6057888f4736"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2952557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identity Construction: New Issues, New Directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952557","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12270,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[476453,476555],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[60716,60813],[64299,64374]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kenji Yoshino"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691edb2e-bd26-3cb1-80bf-fa41c9abee62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":87,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"485","pagination":"pp. 485-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Assimilationist Bias in Equal Protection: The Visibility Presumption and the Case of \"Don't Ask, Don't Tell\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797496","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":43969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"General suggestions about the 'sexual\u00a1zation of culture' pay too little attention to the ways in which gender shapes the media's representation of men and women as sexy men and women. As a result, claims to the effect that 'we are all objectified now' (i.e. that idealized-sexualized representational strategies are no longer limited to women's bodies) have proliferated in recent years. In this article, however, it is argued that such claims result from too generic and undifferentiated an understanding of 'sexualization'. Rather than thinking in terms of 'the' process of sexualization, this article seeks to foreground 'a' diverse array of practices that tend to coalesce under the heading 'sexualization'. To do so, it performs a critical discourse analysis on a corpus of national UK newspaper articles in which both a male and a female celebrity scientist are profiled. A discussion of the referential strategies, transitivity choices and strategies of fragmentation and focalization on display in those articles leads not to the claim that 'we are all objectified now', but, rather, to the suggestion that the plural pronoun 'we' conceals and maintains a definite gender asymmetry.","creator":["Frederick Thomas Attenborough"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42890113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08af294d-e71d-363c-9326-575de7c5ad4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42890113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"659","pagination":"pp. 659-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Complicating the sexualization thesis: The media, gender and 'sci-candy'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42890113","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores rabbinic constructions of gender and ethnicity by reading two apparently disparate biblical characters together: Mordechai and Zipporah. Zipporah and Mordechai transgress gender boundaries both in the biblical text and subsequent rabbinic traditions. In the book of Exodus (4:25), Zipporah circumcises her son, and in rabbinic literature (Gen. Rab. 30:8) Mordechai nurses Esther-his adopted daughter. Yet in rabbinic literature, a father is obligated to circumcise his son, and a mother is obligated to nurse a child. I examine rabbinic traditions concerned not only with these gender transgressions but also with Mordechai and Zipporah's ethnic ambiguities in order to ask what might these traditions teach us about the fluidity and\/or fixedness of gender and ethnicity in rabbinic literature. Finally, I explore the ways in which their gender and ethnicity are connected. In other words, I ask what are some of the \"interarticulations\" of gender and ethnicity played out in rabbinic literature, specifically in the textual traditions surrounding Mordechai and Zipporah.","creator":["Gwynn Kessler"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f751e4d9-7142-3edf-b405-e2a5f98ad97a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4139801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Let's Cross That Body When We Get to It: Gender and Ethnicity in Rabbinic Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139801","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":13670,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443943,444257]],"Locations in B":[[2189,2503]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael John Pinfold"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f4dc061-4ca2-379f-a028-a6bf5b9dedb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Performance of Queer Masculinity in Derek Jarman's \"Sebastiane\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018932","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":3728,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[390605,390723],[440138,440300]],"Locations in B":[[7540,7655],[16074,16232]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Tunisian Jewish female body was subjected to a dramatic fattening process in preparation for marriage. Immediately following the girl's engagement, her body became the focus of an intense transformative regimen aimed at achieving the aesthetic ideals of dramatic weight gain and \u201c\u201cshining and whitening\u201d\u201d of the skin. This paper offers a critical reading of the representation of the female body in postcards and travelogues, in descriptions written by members of the Tunisian Jewish community, and in interviews conducted with group members now living in Israel. The meeting of these voices called for a multidimensional examination of central themes including the ideal female body, its boundaries, and transgressions of those boundaries; mechanisms of control; and the complex relationships between honor and shame and between attraction and repulsion. Hence, the full, rounded bodies of Tunisian Jewish brides were sites of transformation where these multiple meanings came together in complex and at times contrasting ways.","creator":["Hagar Salamon","Esther Juhasz"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.2011.7.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b655237-ca67-3935-a845-9f9f52abbc78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.2011.7.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cGoddesses of Flesh and Metal\u201d: Gazes on the Tradition of Fattening Jewish Brides in Tunisia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.2011.7.1.1","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":11877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Owen Heathcote"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a000396f-3320-371d-b1f2-da334865003d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Subject-splitting: Nicole Ward Jouve's \"Shades of Grey\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151743","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7290,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503443,503495]],"Locations in B":[[39292,39344]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, Riggs demonstrates how heterosexism shapes foster-care assessment practices in Australia. Through an examination of lesbian and gay foster-care applicants' assessment reports and with a focus on the heteronormative assumptions contained within them, Riggs demonstrates that foster-care public policy and research on lesbian and gay parenting both promote the idea that lesbian and gay parents are always already \"just like\" heterosexual parents. To counter this idea of \"sameness,\" Riggs proposes an approach to both assessing and researching lesbian and gay parents that privileges the specific experiences of lesbians and gay men and resists the heterosexualization of lesbian and gay families by focusing on some potentially radical differences shaping lesbian and gay lives.","creator":["Damien W. Riggs"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2f7fa19-658a-3167-a46e-9aa6f0b1e44e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reassessing the Foster-Care System: Examining the Impact of Heterosexism on Lesbian and Gay Applicants","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640048","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7751,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen Green"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0eda2a56-d83e-36af-adee-cac2f97302e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389357","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Transgender survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV) face unique struggles in finding safe and inclusive housing as they seek reprieve from violence. Domestic violence shelters are often marked \u201cwomen-only\u201d with the goal of creating spaces for female empowerment, wherein women learn feminist principles of liberation and find a \u201csisterhood\u201d of support by forging healthy female relationships. However, as a result, shelters frequently deny transgender women access because staff perceive them to be a threat to survivor comfort and to be disruptive to shelters\u2019 female-empowerment model. Consequently, though transgender women face similar gender-based oppression and a relatively higher risk of violence as compared to cisgender women, shelters commonly deny transgender women equal protection. This Note conceptualizes how a Fourteenth Amendment equal protection challenge by transgender litigants to women-only shelters might proceed in federal courts. By situating transgender identity within the Supreme Court\u2019s broader equal protection jurisprudence, it outlines three ways that the Court could analyze a transgender equal protection challenge: as an issue of first impression, as a sex-based discrimination claim, or as a sexual orientation claim.","creator":["Rishita Apsani"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"292a4a5b-ff0b-30b3-957b-563d106459d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26577750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67,"pageEnd":"1754","pageStart":"1689","pagination":"pp. 1689-1754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Are Women\u2019s Spaces Transgender Spaces? Single-Sex Domestic Violence Shelters, Transgender Inclusion, and the Equal Protection Clause","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577750","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":29809,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article develops the concept of \"televisionary\" activism--a mediated form of social justice messaging that attempts to transform culture. Focusing on a locally produced and very popular television show in Nicaragua, I consider how social justice knowledge is produced through television characters' scripting and performance. The ideological underpinnings aspire to a dialogic engagement with the audience, as producers aim to both generate public discourse and benefit from audiences' suggestions and active engagement. Several levels of media advocacy interventions are considered including the production, scripting, and translation of transnational material into local registers. Televisionary activism offers challenges to several conservative social values in Nicaragua by placing topics such as abortion, domestic violence, sexual abuse, homosexuality, and lesbianism very explicitly into the public sphere. At the same time, sexual subjects on the small screen must be framed in particular ways, as, for instance, with the homosexual subjects who are carefully coiffed in normalized human dramas. Finally, many of these televisionary tactics draw from and engage with transnational tropes of identity politics, and \"gay\" and \"lesbian\" subjectivity in particular, confounding the relationship between real and idealized sexual subjects in Nicaragua. That is, these televisionary tactics \"market\" transnational identity politics but derive legitimacy through their very \"localness\".","creator":["Cymene Howe"],"datePublished":"2008-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe1f4934-f2cc-307f-a937-0645633ca280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20484495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Spectacles of Sexuality: Televisionary Activism in Nicaragua","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484495","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":15976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The dominant model of administering in public administration is fundamentally liberal and, we contend, significantly restricts the potential for ongoing feminist praxis. Although we have witnessed progress in achieving women's rights and improving their status in the public sphere following the liberal tradition, our work continues in a narrow conceptual framework that leaves many frustrated and wondering if real change for women will ever be fully realized. This paper addresses some of the challenges to traditional feminist theories of organizing and to conventional approaches to feminist praxis in public administration. We propose a multicultural, multigendered administration that challenges the restrictive constructs that define us and determine our relationships to one another and to the organizations in which we work. We suggest that this new paradigm, grounded in postmodern feminist and queer theories, problematizes extant PA methods and encourages engagement in an introspective evaluation of our own cultural and gendered boundaries. It also suggests ways in which we might cross those boundaries and enter entirely new worlds.","creator":["Janet R. Hutchinson","Hollie S. Mann"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c41dcd77-45b8-3a9c-8a3e-1ae050c8331c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Praxis: Administering for a Multicultural, Multigendered Public","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610650","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An examination of the interplay of cultural models of prediction and lie helps explain why climate forecasts are negatively evaluated by subsistence farmers in Cear\u00e1, Northeast Brazil. Analysis of linguistic differences between farmers and meteorologists reveals underlying conceptual differences that result in farmers interpreting the forecasts as false statements. Distrust of government, the unmet expectation of optimistic predictions, and the existence of alternative forecasts by traditional \"rain prophets\" create a context in which state meteorologists are called liars. Material context and emotions are shown to be crucial components of the models.","creator":["Karen Pennesi"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb28efe-c2be-39e3-8c1d-51cd96e5d7cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43652636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"789","pageStart":"759","pagination":"pp. 759-789","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Predictions as Lies in Cear\u00e1, Brazil: The Intersection of Two Cultural Models","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652636","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":12880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KATHERINE TURK"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07382480"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d352501c-481e-319f-8a08-3afd90fd5fe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawhistoryreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law and History Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Society for Legal History","sourceCategory":["History","History","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Our Militancy is in Our Openness\": Gay Employment Rights Activism in California and the Question of Sexual Orientation in Sex Equality Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489486","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":22269,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[139431,139512]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/395587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/395587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/395587","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":5855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Little can be said about music during the last century without encountering the men and women who supported it financially. Pierre Bourdieu's impression that the services rendered freely for the good of society reinforce a symbolic debt between giver and recipient complicates motivations behind patronage. Indeed, applying Bourdieu's theory to altruism in general -here, patronage in particular -highlights what could be thought of as a performance of futility: both giver and receiver understand the tenacious terms yet agree nonetheless to act out the process of reaching equilibrium. In the case of iconic music patron Betty Freeman (1921-2009), her support of the avant-garde seems, at times, to call into question on what side of this 'performed futility' she existed. This article considers ways in which Freeman's work as patron of the musical avant-garde allowed her to perform her identity as a woman and mother among a community on the fringe.","creator":["Jake Johnson"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00402982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52740292"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9f417b7-d08c-36d9-9b60-0238eec791d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43932617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tempo"}],"isPartOf":"Tempo","issueNumber":"269","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PERFORMING THE PATRON: BETTY FREEMAN AND THE AVANT-GARDE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932617","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":4374,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431390,431474]],"Locations in B":[[24576,24660]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O\u00f9 en sont les historiens fran\u00e7ais avec l'histoire des sexualit\u00e9s? C'est \u00e0 cette interrogation que r\u00e9pond ici Sylvie Chaperon. Attentive aux sources dans lesquelles puise ce secteur de l'histoire en pleine expansion, l'auteur dresse un panorama de productions somme toute peu nombreuses. Couple, viol, \u00e9ducation sentimentale, pornographie, homosexualit\u00e9s: aucun de ces chantiers n'est laiss\u00e9 de c\u00f4t\u00e9. L'article n'en reste cependant pas l\u00e0: le lecteur est invit\u00e9 \u00e0 r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir plus avant aux probl\u00e8mes, notamment institutionnels et \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques, rencontr\u00e9s par une histoire o\u00f9 militantisme et savoir scientifique ont souvent partie li\u00e9e. Puisque aujourd'hui l'histoire de la sexualit\u00e9 conna\u00eet un engouement certain, il est sans doute temps d'en dresser le bilan. C'est ce que tente cet article qui d\u00e9gage trois origines historiographiques \u00e0 ce champ en plein essor: l'histoire sociale, l'histoire des femmes et l'histoire de l'homosexualit\u00e9. Les chantiers privil\u00e9gi\u00e9s, finalement peu nombreux, sont explor\u00e9s - prostitution, couple, \u00e9ducation sentimentale, pornographie, viol, homosexualit\u00e9s. La marginalisation relative des chercheurs est ensuite interrog\u00e9e tandis que plusieurs probl\u00e8mes r\u00e9currents sont mis en avant: difficult\u00e9 d'aborder de front la sexualit\u00e9, faiblesse de la r\u00e9flexion \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique et complexit\u00e9 des rapports entre savoir scientifique et militantisme. \/\/\/ Since the history of sexuality today is rather fashionable, it is probably time to look at the record. There are three historiographical origins of this growing field: social history, women's history and history of homosexuality. The relatively limited number of areas that are the most dealt with are prostitution, the couple, romantic education, pornography, rape and homosexuality. The relative marginalization of the scholars is brought up and several recurrent problems are pointed out: the difficulty of dealing with sexuality directly, the lack of epistemological thinking and the complexity of the relations between scientific knowledge and activism.","creator":["Sylvie Chaperon"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3771857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02941759"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618979"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96c6f26a-8c8d-3fd8-9782-76d90b7e08e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3771857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vingsiecrevuhist"}],"isPartOf":"Vingti\u00e8me Si\u00e8cle. Revue d'histoire","issueNumber":"75","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'histoire contemporaine des sexualit\u00e9s en France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3771857","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Expand the focus on diversity and equity to discuss the importance of gender and sexual identity for mathematics education.","creator":["Laurie H. Rubel"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/mathteacher.109.6.0434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00255769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60640259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235154"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e4ce058-4909-3c46-9037-cfc99a33d4ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5951\/mathteacher.109.6.0434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mathteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Mathematics Teacher","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"439","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-439","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Speaking Up and Speaking Out about Gender in Mathematics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/mathteacher.109.6.0434","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":3333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay focuses on the relationship within western humanism between attitudes toward textual interpretation and views of the human self in an attempt to unsettle the dichotomy between humanist and antihumanist approaches to the past. It has three main parts. First, it uses Umberto Eco's recent reflections on the limits of interpretation to explore current debates about the aims of interpretation. In particular, it asks what it means to frame the problem of interpretation specifically as a problem of establishing limits. Given the many possible vocabularies to compare and evaluate competing hermeneutic approaches, what are the implications of adopting one that speaks in terms of limits, of an \"in bounds\" and an \"out of bounds?\" Second, the essay draws on the work of Donna Haraway and Stephanie Jed to argue that a discourse about interpretation that seeks to establish the limits of interpretation excludes as out of bounds precisely those methodological strategies that most effectively analyze the mutually sustaining relationship between assumptions about texts and assumptions about selves. Third, the essay explores the relationship between interpretation and subjectivity at one key historical moment to show how to move beyond the strict dichotomy between humanist and antihumanist assumptions.","creator":["Carol E. Quillen"],"datePublished":"1998-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2505639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Crossing the Line: Limits and Desire in Historical Interpretation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505639","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["H.\u00a0G. Cocks"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/341442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2996701-a1a9-31a0-b600-4f881f07dec9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/341442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"536","pageStart":"526","pagination":"pp. 526-536","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Naughty Narrative Nineties: Sex, Scandal, and Representation in the Fin de Si\u00e8cle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/341442","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4678,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[28505,28585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlotte Schubert"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40494688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00171417"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5141a890-65e2-30e3-8c02-bada659b8d09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40494688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gnomon"}],"isPartOf":"Gnomon","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Verlag C.H.Beck","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40494688","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":2673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1979 R\u00fcdiger Krohn suggested for the first time that King Marke can be viewed as a homosexual character in the early part of his relationship with Tristan. This article builds upon Krohn's thesis to show in the Morold-scene how Tristan's transition from adolescence to adulthood is acted out as a struggle for authority on the thematic level, but as a negation of homoerotic bonds to father-figures on the psycho-symbolic level. The paternal homoerotic is represented by the desire of the father-figures, Marke and Morold, to keep Tristan in a subordinate position to them, either by seduction or force. Marke, the good father, is portrayed as a weak ruler who lost any claim to paternal authority, while Morold, Marke's evil double, offers Tristan the choices of dependence or castration. When Tristan decapitates Morold, he symbolically separates the super-ego (the head) from the tyrannical physical presence of the father-figure (the body). (CBP)","creator":["Craig Palmer"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbf6945a-1ad3-3325-8e20-05626e07f0ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30153488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Question of Manhood: Overcoming the Paternal Homoerotic in Gottfried's \"Tristan\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153488","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":6236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The growth of the black middle class in \u2018post-apartheid\u2019 South Africa has become the subject of scholarly and public interest. Applying elements of discourse analysis to interview and group discussion based data, this article provides a qualitative thematic exploration of two pressures that confront a group of black middle-class professionals residing in Johannesburg, South Africa. The first pressure is the experience of being black under the hegemonic white gaze and the second is the experience of the marshalling black gaze. The complexities of occupying the positions of being black and middle class and of living with the scrutiny of two gazes concurrently, is explored. The findings suggest that the white gaze persists in seeking to negatively mark and destabilise black professionals and profiting off covert and paradoxical mobilisations of race discourses as a means of bolstering whiteness. On the other hand, the black gaze serves to police the boundaries of what acceptable blackness is. Under this gaze, the professional, black middle class is perceived as having sold out to whiteness and abandoned given conceptions of blackness. The tensions arising out of navigating these dialectical disciplining gazes suggests that this group holds the tenuous position of being corralled from the \u2018outside\u2019 and \u2018inside.\u2019 The research, however, reveals the complex ways in which racialisation continues to shape black lives alongside the less rigid identity possibilities for blackness that move beyond essentialised identity performances.","creator":["Hugo Canham","Rejane Williams"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac24da15-13e6-36e8-8ec4-372deb67c5cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Being black, middle class and the object of two gazes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413933","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11352,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478845]],"Locations in B":[[66000,66060]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Jacobi","Annette Freyberg-Inan","Richard Ned Lebow","Chris Brown","Duncan Bell","Elisabeth Pr\u00fcgl","Benjamin Herborth"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41804168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d986ff0-2109-3de9-a7e6-e59231b68eca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41804168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"665","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-665","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Human Being(s) in International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41804168","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amanda Lock Swarr"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7436cd9a-4141-3cfb-bcce-bbe57b9e89d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"524","pagination":"pp. 524-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Stabane,\" Intersexuality, and Same-Sex Relationships in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608390","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9527,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474113,474461]],"Locations in B":[[40651,40998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O jovem antrop\u00f3logo Buell Quain, colega de Claude L\u00e9vi-Strauss e aluno predileto de Ruth Benedict, prometia tornar-se uma figura proeminente na sua \u00e1rea. Aos 27 anos, o ambicioso antrop\u00f3logo viajou ao interior do Brasil para estudar a remota tribo Krah\u00f4 que vivia na fronteira entre os atuais estados de Tocantins e Maranh\u00e3o. Em 2001, o ficcionista e jornalista brasileiro Bernardo Carvalho descobriu uma nota num artigo de jornal a respeito da morte assustadora do antrop\u00f3logo norte-americano. O mist\u00e9rio tornou-se sua obsess\u00e3o e a base do seu romance Nove noites, publicado em 2002. Carvalho cria duas vozes narrativas para destrinchar as incertezas relacionadas com a vida de Quain e a irresolu\u00e7\u00e3o na tentativa de descortinar sua morte. O romance ressalta a rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre a realidade e a fi\u00e7\u00e3o, o ato de construir uma personagem e os desafios inerentes \u00e0 narra\u00e7\u00e3o. Este ensaio examina como a ambig\u00fcidade atrav\u00e9s da qual Carvalho constr\u00f3i as identidades das suas personagens recusa entendimentos redutivos da verdade, e incentiva oportunidades para a criatividade e agenciamento do leitor.","creator":["Sophia Beal"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e29bb19c-2475-353f-bb6d-85928697566a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4490625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Becoming a Character: An Analysis of Bernardo Carvalho's \"Nove Noites\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490625","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7165,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25053,25170]],"Locations in B":[[13054,13171]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Avtar Brah"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8bcfd6d-cdee-375f-adac-2ef4f2ac66d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Framing Europe: En-Gendered Racisms, Ethnicities and Nationalisms in Contemporary Western Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395344","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9298,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[76854,77078],[77127,77361]],"Locations in B":[[12875,13102],[13142,13374]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Guerrero"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e0b658-e827-3665-8096-7d9cd0a231b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20778323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES: ROSA BELTR\u00c1N'S \"LA CORTE DE LOS ILUSOS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778323","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7397,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[34215,34324]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["K.H. ADLER"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25639911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daef8523-bfb4-3b57-92b9-df6803718ada"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25639911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","issueNumber":"511","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"1544","pageStart":"1542","pagination":"pp. 1542-1544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25639911","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Berry"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20111313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00666637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0c1fe53-cb1a-3815-ab26-21292156d862"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20111313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archasiaart"}],"isPartOf":"Archives of Asian Art","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rethinking \"Shunga\": The Interpretation of Sexual Imagery of the Edo Period","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20111313","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":13812,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443551,443762]],"Locations in B":[[26186,26397]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Demographic shifts in public school enrollment within the United States necessitate preparing preservice teachers to teach students with backgrounds that differ from their own ethnically, linguistically, racially, and economically. Culturally responsive education (CRE) is a pedagogy used to validate students\u2019 varied experiences, and to teach to and through their strengths. CRE emphasizes high expectations, the formation of cultural competence, and development of a critical consciousness. Although the philosophical principles of culturally responsive education have been addressed in general education literature for over thirty years, the presence of the term culturally responsive education in music education dialogue is a relatively recent phenomenon. The purpose of this literature review was to describe how and for what purposes culturally responsive education has been addressed in music education.","creator":["Vanessa L. Bond"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26367441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01904922"},{"name":"oclc","value":"639542402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014247555"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"337a8c9e-e7e2-3cd8-a616-82dd48781a90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26367441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contmusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Contributions to Music Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Ohio Music Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Culturally Responsive Education in Music Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26367441","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Literature Review"} +{"abstract":"Scholars have argued for reading and discussing children's and young adult literature containing lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and\/or questioning (LGBTQ) characters and related themes with youths. Yet, we know very little about how to do this among LGBTQ people and their allies. This study examined 18 transcripts of talk from a literature discussion group of 32 adolescents and adults, including the authors, using 24 texts over 3 years in an LGBTQ youth center. The goal was to identify the nature of the talk and the ways it was liberatory and\/or oppressive. A Foucaultian analysis of the talk, combined with ethnographically collected information, was conducted, identifying discourses, uses, and ways of operating to reveal possibilities and limitations of LGBT-inclusive and queering discourses. Findings suggest a complex, reciprocal process among texts, talk, and context in which no discourse is monolithically liberatory or oppressive. Complementary and competing discourses in conversation with each other around diverse texts and in complex contexts, however, provide opportunities for conflicts and potential for change.","creator":["Mollie V. Blackburn","Caroline T. Clark"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41228652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Analyzing Talk in a Long-Term Literature Discussion Group: Ways of Operating Within LGBT-Inclusive and Queer Discourses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228652","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":21906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the social and political significance of the Indian term jug\u0101d, which, crudely, means \"make do and mend\" or \"find a way around\"\u2014for example, fixing a car fan belt with a pair of tights. Building on research conducted by Craig Jeffrey in 2004 and 2005 in western Uttar Pradesh, we show that a set of lower middle-class \"fixers\" has emerged among underemployed male youth in north India, who make large amounts of money acting as brokers between private educational entrepreneurs and universities and who use the idea of jug\u0101d to euphemize their involvement in corruption. We then employ more recent research, carried out between 2007 and 2012 by both authors, to show how the idea of jug\u0101d has gained traction among low castes (Dalits), who have also entered the world of local-level brokerage. In a rather extraordinary development, the Indian state has also picked up on jug\u0101d as a model for a distinctly Indian neoliberal development strategy. By adopting a critical Bourdieuian approach to analysis of young people's enterprise we provide a model for how scholars might investigate youth action, also highlighting the dangers of assuming that people on the ground straightforwardly parrot or reject neoliberal ideas. \u672c\u6587\u68c0\u89c6\u5370\u5ea6\u8bcd\u5f59 \u201cjug\u0101d\u201d \u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u53ca\u653f\u6cbb\u663e\u7740\u6027, \u8be5\u8bcd\u5f59\u7b3c\u7edf\u5730\u610f\u5473\u7740 \u201c\u5c06\u5c31\u5e76\u53d8\u901a\u201d \u6216 \u201c\u7ed5\u9053\u800c\u884c\u201d\u2014\u2014\u4f8b\u5982\u7528\u7d27\u8eab\u8863\u4fee\u8865\u6c7d\u8f66\u7684\u98ce\u6247\u76ae\u5e26\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u6839\u636e Craig Jeffrey \u5728 2004 \u5e74\u4e0e 2005 \u5e74\u95f4\u4e8e\u5317\u65b9\u7701\u7684\u897f\u90e8\u6240\u8fdb\u884c\u7684\u7814\u7a76, \u663e\u793a\u5370\u5ea6\u5317\u65b9\u7684\u4f4e\u5ea6\u5c31\u4e1a\u7537\u6027\u9752\u5e74\u4e2d, \u6b63\u5728\u6d6e\u73b0\u4e00\u7fa4\u4e2d\u4f4e\u9636\u5c42\u7684 \u201c\u7ef4\u4fee\u8005\u201d, \u8fd9\u4e9b\u4eba\u900f\u8fc7\u4e3a\u79c1\u4eba\u6559\u80b2\u4f01\u4e1a\u4e0e\u5927\u5b66\u8fdb\u884c\u4e2d\u4ecb\u5de5\u4f5c\u800c\u8d5a\u53d6\u66b4\u5229, \u5e76\u4e14\u7528 \u201cjug\u0101d\u201d \u505a\u4e3a\u59d4\u5a49\u8868\u8fbe\u4ed6\u4eec\u6d89\u5165\u8d2a\u6c61\u7684\u6982\u5ff5\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u63a5\u7740\u8fd0\u7528\u4e24\u4f4d\u4f5c\u8005\u4e8e 2007 \u5e74\u81f3 2012 \u5e74\u95f4\u8fdb\u884c\u7684\u665a\u8fd1\u7814\u7a76, \u5c55\u793a\u2009 \u201cjug\u0101d\u201d\u2009 \u7684\u6982\u5ff5\u5982\u4f55\u5728\u4f4e\u4e0b\u9636\u5c42 (\u8d31\u6c11\u9636\u5c42) \u4e2d\u83b7\u5f97\u6b22\u8fce, \u8fd9\u4e9b\u4eba\u540c\u65f6\u8fdb\u5165\u4e86\u5728\u5730\u5c42\u7ea7\u7684\u63ae\u5ba2\u4e16\u754c\u3002 \u5728\u4e00\u4e2a\u76f8\u5f53\u7279\u522b\u7684\u53d1\u5c55\u4e2d, \u5370\u5ea6\u56fd\u5bb6\u540c\u65f6\u5c06 \u201cjug\u0101d\u201d \u9009\u4f5c\u5370\u5ea6\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u4e49\u53d1\u5c55\u7b56\u7565\u7684\u7279\u6b8a\u6a21\u578b\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u8fd0\u7528\u6279\u5224\u6027\u7684\u5e03\u8fea\u5384\u7814\u7a76\u53d6\u5f84\u5bf9\u5e74\u8f7b\u4eba\u7684\u4e8b\u4e1a\u8fdb\u884c\u5206\u6790, \u4ee5\u6b64\u63d0\u4f9b\u5b66\u8005\u5982\u4f55\u63a2\u8ba8\u9752\u5e74\u884c\u52a8\u7684\u6a21\u578b, \u5e76\u51f8\u663e\u4e86\u9884\u8bbe\u4e00\u822c\u4eba\u6c11\u4f1a\u76f4\u63a5\u5f77\u6548\u6216\u62d2\u65a5\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u4e49\u6982\u5ff5\u7684\u5371\u9669\u6027\u3002 Este art\u00edculo examina el significado social y pol\u00edtico del t\u00e9rmino jug\u0101d, que, a grandes rasgos, quiere decir \"h\u00e1galo y corrija\" o \"busque otra salida\"\u2014por ejemplo, el reparar la correa del ventilador de un carro con un par de medias. Avanzando en la investigaci\u00f3n realizada por Craig Jeffrey en 2004 y 2005 en Uttar Pradesh, demostramos la aparici\u00f3n de un conjunto de \"arregladores\" de clase media baja entre j\u00f3venes desempleados del sexo masculino, en el norte de la India, que ganan buenas sumas de dinero sirviendo como intermediarios entre empresarios de educaci\u00f3n privada y las universidades, que usan la idea de la jug\u0101d como eufemismo de excusa por su involucramiento en corrupci\u00f3n. Despu\u00e9s utilizamos investigaci\u00f3n m\u00e1s reciente, llevada a cabo entre 2007 y 2012 por ambos autores, para mostrar c\u00f3mo la idea de la jug\u0101d ha ganado impulso entre las castas bajas (Dalits), quienes tambi\u00e9n han ingresado al mundo del corretaje a nivel local. En un desarrollo ciertamente sorprendente, el estado indio tambi\u00e9n ha adoptado la jug\u0101d como modelo para una estrategia de desarrollo neoliberal t\u00edpicamente india. Adoptando un enfoque cr\u00edtico bourdieuista para el an\u00e1lisis de actividades empresariales de la gente joven, suministramos un modelo sobre c\u00f3mo podr\u00edan los eruditos investigar este tipo de acciones, destacando tambi\u00e9n los peligro de asumir que en la vida real sin m\u00e1s ni m\u00e1s la gente imite o rechace las ideas neoliberales.","creator":["Craig Jeffrey","Stephen Young"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ddb2630-1a54-3721-9bd6-7685cc791b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Jug\u0101d: Youth and Enterprise in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537744","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Growing recognition of the contested nature of heritage has prompted critical reassessments of official heritage discourses and the demand for more inclusive heritage processes. Field research in Surin, Thailand, reveals the challenges of implementing participatory approaches in a context in which the concept of cultural heritage is employed to domesticate the nation's ethnic Others. The history of state-sponsored, folklorized performances of the ethnic Khmer genre of kantruem demonstrates the ways in which the recent listing of kantruem on Thailand's national registry of \"intangible culture\" elides histories of cross-border linkage with Cambodia and meanings of kantruem as a site of memory and affect.","creator":["Alexandra Denes"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24779828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02179520"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62bc2681-b1d8-3180-90b4-74020218bb72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24779828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sojourn"}],"isPartOf":"Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Folklorizing Northern Khmer Identity in Thailand: Intangible Cultural Heritage and the Production of \"Good Culture\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24779828","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11134,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[67266,67335]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Polaschegg"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52c9ffc5-8f39-3a9c-92d1-c638a5e7e549"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23977338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"725","pageStart":"723","pagination":"pp. 723-725","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977338","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":1518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30810446-fae5-3778-8b7d-df71e2695fc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27655002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"1361","pageStart":"1336","pagination":"pp. 1336-1361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neither Their Perch nor Their Terror: Al-Qaida Limited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655002","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":16153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Jean Moore","Adele E. Clarke"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9e309e5-4c6d-3893-86b3-b9e6eed3aafc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Clitoral Conventions and Transgressions: Graphic Representations in Anatomy Texts, c1900-1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178262","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":15015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article explore la question du travestissement et de la repr\u00e9sentation du corps dans trois livres de Monique Wittig: Virgile, non, Les Gu\u00e9rill\u00e8res, Le Corps lesbien. Dans Virgile, non, l'apparence f\u00e9minine est un accoutrement humiliant, signe de servitude, qui efface le corps de chaque individu au nom du mythe de la femme. Les lesbiennes qui ont fui l'enfer h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel, comme les h\u00e9ro\u00efnes des Gu\u00e9rill\u00e8res cherchent une apparence qui donne \u00e0 voir qu'elles ne sont ni des femmes ni des hommes. Mais cet audel\u00e0 des sexes impensable ne peut prendre forme que dans la litt\u00e9rature. Il prend forme notamment dans le texte le plus po\u00e9tique de Monique Wittig, Le Corps lesbien, qui fait voler en \u00e9clat les repr\u00e9sentations traditionnelles du corps f\u00e9minin et lui substitue un corps en mutation constante, polys\u00e9mique, au-del\u00e0 de l'unit\u00e9 comme du binaire. This article examines the issue of tranvestism and representation of the body, in three books by Monique Wittig: Across the Acheron, The Gu\u00e9rill\u00e8res and The Lesbian Body. In Across the Acheron, the female appearance is an humiliating get-up, a sign of servility, which erases everyone's body in favor of The Woman's Myth. Lesbians, who escaped from the heterosexual Hell, like the heroines of The Gu\u00e9rill\u00e8res, look for an appearance showing that they are neither women nor men. But this unthinkable beyond-sexes can only take shape in literature. It is expressed in Monique Wittig's most poetical text, namely The Lesbian Body, which breaks the traditional representations of the female body and creates a polysemous, shimmering body, defying both unity and duality.","creator":["Catherine ROGNON-ECARNOT"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89b25674-333b-32b6-8a99-5d06a399cef4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"10","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Politique et po\u00e9tique du travestissement dans les fictions de Monique Wittig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405328","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Race\/dasse\/genre. Parcours dans l'historiographie am\u00e9ricaine des femmes du Sud, autour de la guerre de S\u00e9cession : comment articuler des in\u00e9galit\u00e9s de genre avec d'autres types d'in\u00e9galit\u00e9s sociales ? Au lieu de proposer une (improbable) th\u00e9orie de l'articulation, j'interroge ici un champ historiographique particulier o\u00f9 a \u00e9t\u00e9 mis en oeuvre pratiquement ce type de questionnements. Ce texte peut \u00eatre lu comme un review article qui fait le point sur les d\u00e9bats intellectuels dans un champ de l'histoire des femmes, peu connu en France : l'histoire des femmes du Sud est un domaine r\u00e9cent de l'histoire am\u00e9ricaine, confront\u00e9 d\u00e8s sa naissance \u00e0 l'articulation de rapports de pouvoirs fond\u00e9s sur la race, le genre et la classe et qui pr\u00e9sente une tr\u00e8s forte \u201ccumulativit\u00e9\u201d dans ce domaine. Ce parcours dans une historiographie am\u00e9ricaine ne propose pas de solution th\u00e9orique d\u00e9finitive aux questions d'articulation de diff\u00e9rents types d'in\u00e9galit\u00e9s, mais il souhaite fournir, quelques jalons et pistes de travail utiles pour les sociologues et historiens, qui se posent ces questions. Race\/Class\/Gender. Exploring Southern American women's history: how do gender and other social inequalities interact with one another? In order to articulate to articulate Race, Class and Gender I'd rather not come up with an (unlikely) theory of interaction. Rather I shall focus here on a specific moment in the South, from the Antebellum years to Reconstruction. This article can first be read as a review of southern women's history, as its recent historiography is still not well known in France. Southern women's history is a quite recent field of research in American history and it has always been confronted to the interaction of power relations based on race, gender and class. Beyond providing historical landmarks necessary to understanding the period, this article deals with larger theoretical issues. Although in the final analysis I shall not suggest a theory that would articulate gender with other social inequalities, I hope that the spreading of these issues will provide sociologists and historians with useful tools and landmarks.","creator":["C\u00e9line BESSI\u00c8RE"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbfe345d-2a81-3d5b-9a66-e080cd6876ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"17","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Race, classe, genre. Parcours dans l'historiographie am\u00e9ricaine des femmes du Sud autour de la guerre de S\u00e9cession","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405475","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12104,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471827,471893]],"Locations in B":[[70885,70952]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how Theodor Fontane's novels Frau Jenny Treibel (1892) and Mathilde M\u00f6hring (1891\/1895\/1896) engage nineteenth-century literary and scientific discourses on degeneration. Although the young bourgeois men Leopold Treibel and Hugo Grossmann both share a devotion to a life of leisure and consumption and embody symptoms of degeneration, their portrayals are embedded with irony. Whereas both critical and celebratory accounts of the condition presuppose a normative bourgeois masculinity that is in need of either reinvigoration or continued subversion, Fontane's novels provide cynical and ambivalent assessments of the state of bourgeois masculinity. Leopold's and Hugo's symptoms of degeneration not only demonstrate that conventional views about the role and capabilities of bourgeois men are no longer credible, but also point to the inability of any model of masculinity to possess and convey legitimacy, authority, and hegemony. (DSJ)","creator":["David S. Johnson"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20764187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd2b625e-7798-3b8c-b181-a898a5eff8d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20764187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ironies of Degeneration: The Dilemmas of Bourgeois Masculinity in Theodor \"Fontane's Frau Jenny Treibel\" and \"Mathilde M\u00f6hring\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20764187","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":7252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["WENDY LUCAS"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26783535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"59670962"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a31381c5-7349-3c58-946a-afa8b839e0c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26783535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"masshistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Massachusetts Historical Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Damned by a Red Paragon Bodice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26783535","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":13467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Witchcraft and the Power of Cloth and Clothing in Puritan Society"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maureen A. Mahoney","Barbara Yngvesson"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f91d30f-f1da-398c-bd0b-94e30ca268ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Construction of Subjectivity and the Paradox of Resistance: Reintegrating Feminist Anthropology and Psychology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174726","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anna Mitgutsch and Vladimir Vertlib trace the trajectories of children of immigration and transmigration. In Familienfest and Letzter Wunsch, both published in 2003, Mitgutsch and Vertlib seem eager to meet the challenges of a changing world by reflecting on the category of Jewishness in an emerging transnational world spanning Europe, Israel, and the United States. Both writers privilege and problematize the performative aspects of Jewish ritual and its constitutive role with regard to Jewish identity, especially within the diaspora. In this paper I investigate the new figurations of transnational community in Mitgutsch's and Vertlib's novels.","creator":["Christina Guenther"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2165669X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a29aa62-6a92-3d73-b6c2-485b84f66c2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaustrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Austrian Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Poetics of Ritual in Diaspora: Anna Mitgutsch's \"Familienfest\" and Vladimir Vertlib's \"Letzter Wunsch\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048702","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Just as marriage has a legal history, so too does nonmarriage--the decision couples make to live together without formally marrying. This Article argues that the legal trend in the first decades of the twentieth century away from recognizing the doctrine of common law marriage constituted a critical turning point in this history, a moment in which states redrew the boundary between marriage and nonmarriage so that couples who \"acted married\" were no longer legally married. By analyzing the 1931--1932 New York trial to determine whether Charlotte Fixel-Erlanger was the common law wife of the multimillionaire theater producer Abraham Lincoln Erlanger, this Article posits that a revised understanding of femininity--one that viewed women as conniving and deceitful, thus severing the necessary link between wifely performance and a wifely identity--contributed to the demise of common law marriage. Despite the decline of common law marriage, however, various legal standards continue to grant rights based on sustained patterns of marriage-like behavior. Focusing on the more contemporary New York same-sex cohabitation case of Braschi v. Stahl Associates Co., this Article concludes by pointing to the \"paradox of performance\": Legal standards that grant rights based on acting married simultaneously subvert and bolster traditional understandings of marriage and its place in the social polity.","creator":["Ariela R. Dubler"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be07cca3-8bb2-3228-88e1-4ba5849d044e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65,"pageEnd":"1021","pageStart":"957","pagination":"pp. 957-1021","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Wifely Behavior: A Legal History of Acting Married","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123535","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":32605,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442877,442980]],"Locations in B":[[67244,67347]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Teresa L. Ebert"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40e6dbfb-c670-314e-93dd-061af2882db6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ludic Feminism, the Body, Performance, and Labor: Bringing \"Materialism\" Back into Feminist Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354189","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17839,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[439455,439625],[455896,456111],[456226,456411],[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[73124,73294],[80523,80745],[80757,80942],[111825,111893]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rhoda Kanaaneh"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23061578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f17953e3-fee2-3d7d-8f92-45d33ee713fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23061578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudasbu"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Studies Association Bulletin","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Middle East Studies Association of North America (MESA)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23061578","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":552,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64177,64254]],"Locations in B":[[1899,1976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Keith Reader"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2479f092-a217-3fd9-8d21-0ce7a40a7e33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"If I were a girl\u2014and I am not\": Cross-dressing in Alain Berliner's \"Ma vie en rose\" and Jean Renoir's \"La Grande Illusion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288386","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4503,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727]],"Locations in B":[[2593,2726]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although politics are meant to be of the future, the very material practices that are essential to the practice of politics impose a temporal fixity upon then, making them not of the future, but of the present. Scholarship focusing on the effects and possibilities of performativity has largely attended to individuals unmoored from the specificity of the places within which they exist, focusing instead solely on material practices that are removed from their spatial peculiarities; by examining the way in which places \"perform,\" it can be shown how actors within those places are limited in their possible performances. In this article, I offer the case of Arise!, a Marxist-Anarchist bookstore and resource center located in Minneapolis. By examining the ways in which the place of Arise! itself performs, Arise! can be shown to circumscribe the performances of those who participate in the place and the way it wards off potential participants in the Arise! community.","creator":["Matthew Wolf-Meyer"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9be23885-5a25-302b-b12d-d46957f6d8b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Politics of Materiality, or \"The Left Is Always Late\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497579","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9751,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[57751,57820]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher L. Miller"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Postidentitarian Predicament in the Footnotes of A Thousand Plateaus: Nomadology, Anthropology, and Authority","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465398","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":17595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This is an essay about bodies in revolt. Tattooed women complicate recent body theory by staging an aesthetic revolution in \"feminine\" beauty. My research combines elements of participant observation, oral history, archival research, and the use of secondary sources in order to trace the motives of, and cultural responses to, tattooed women. This essay will proceed through several competitive venues, from the nineteenth century to the present, where the meaning of tattoos for women, and the concomitant authority over women's bodies, has been challenged: from beauty salons to courtrooms, high society to the working class, freak shows to tattoo contests, soft porn to novels. By demonstrating the ruptures that have occurred at various points of conflicts between and among these sites, I will show how aspects of what I am calling monster beauty have developed. I will argue that we read the risks women have taken in becoming tattooed in terms of a revolutionary aesthetic for women.","creator":["Christine Braunberger"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b23ae7-1943-3d86-9cd4-6052e08a9d91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revolting Bodies: The Monster Beauty of Tattooed Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316734","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10115,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article argues that while introductory women and gender studies courses typically take social construction theory as foundational, their textbooks, supplemental materials, and teaching strategies simultaneously rely on a definition of \"woman\" that assumes particular body parts. Such a linkage elides the existence and particularities of transgender and gender-nonconforming bodies and subjects on the one hand, yet posits them as exceptions on the other. This combination stabilizes the normativity of hegemonic sex and gender embodiments by naturalizing nontransgender bodies. Rather than simply arguing for greater inclusion of trans subjects under the sign of woman or man, the article suggests that careful attention to the positioning of transgender bodies necessitates a broad theoretical reframing of how women's studies textbooks and curriculum are designed, and how gendered bodies more broadly are taught and conceptualized.","creator":["Toby Beauchamp","Benjamin D'Harlingue"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2c363c4-84e0-3712-a8da-7f42af16c07b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23275103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Beyond Additions and Exceptions: The Category of Transgender and New Pedagogical Approaches for Women's Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275103","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12367,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48406,48614]],"Locations in B":[[77263,77471]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist theories of technology have come a long way over the last quarter of a century. The expanding engagement at the intersection of feminist scholarship and science and technology studies (STS) has enriched both fields immeasurably, and I will largely focus my reflections on the literature associated with these sites. I begin by highlighting the continuities as well as the differences between contemporary and earlier feminist debates on technology. Current approaches focus on the mutual shaping of gender and technology, in which technology is conceptualised as both a source and consequence of gender relations. In avoiding both technological determinism and gender essentialism, such theories emphasise that the gender-technology relationship is fluid and situated. These deliberations highlight how processes of technical change can influence gender power relations. A feminist politics of technology is thus key to achieving gender equality.","creator":["Judy Wajcman"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24232027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0309166X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41964126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06e87914-2543-3a3d-9dc8-3372e3be445e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24232027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambjecon"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Journal of Economics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist theories of technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24232027","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article looks again at the figure of the Pardoner in the Canterbury Tales and reconsiders the possibility that \u2018he\u2019is a woman passing as a man. The importance of such a reading is revealed by exploring the anxieties this raises over the relationship between outward appearance and inner substance or reality, and demonstrating parallels with medieval anxieties over the authenticity of relics and the validity of religious speech acts, including those involved in the transubstantiation of the elements of the Eucharist.","creator":["Alex da Costa"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48561403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63572d3e-f60b-3e06-8f71-72600f93986f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48561403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Pardoner\u2019s Passing and How It Matters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48561403","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9321,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33513,34005]],"Locations in B":[[8531,8945]],"subTitle":"Gender, Relics and Speech Acts"} +{"abstract":"This essay shows that Jean-Luc Nancy's reconceptualization of corporeality in such texts as L'Intrus and Corpus can be an important ally to feminist theories of body. I introduce Nancy's ontology and argue that his rejection of the unified, integrated body of humanist discourses in favor of dis-integrated bodies constituted by multiple alterities and his consequent reinterpretation of body as a \"being-exscribed\" begin the task of thinking bodies beyond traditional dualisms and their ahistorical and rationalist frameworks. I then address three potential criticisms of Nancy's work and suggest that though there may be reasons to move cautiously in adopting the framework he provides, his work harbors resources directly beneficial to critiques of prevailing forms of gender normativity.","creator":["Diane Perpich"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d08163a0-5687-3a3d-a794-0e5bb801f410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Corpus Meum: Disintegrating Bodies and the Ideal of Integrity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811115","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Juliana Spahr"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Resignifying Autobiography: Lyn Hejinian's My Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927544","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":8511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le \"genre\" fut cr\u00e9\u00e9 dans les ann\u00e9es 1950 et 1960 par des psychologues am\u00e9ricains afin de m\u00e9dicaliser l'intersexualit\u00e9 et la transsexualit\u00e9. Dans les ann\u00e9es 1970, les f\u00e9ministes se sont appropri\u00e9 le terme pour d\u00e9naturaliser la f\u00e9minit\u00e9, transformant cette cat\u00e9gorie normative en outil critique. Dans les ann\u00e9es 1980, tandis que les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes jouissent aux \u00c9tats-Unis d'une reconnaissance institutionnelle, les f\u00e9ministes ne sont pas accept\u00e9es dans le champ universitaire en France. Lorsque les questions f\u00e9ministes redeviennent d'actualit\u00e9 \u00e0 partir de 1989, cette politisation est rejet\u00e9e au nom de la R\u00e9publique : le concept de \"genre\" devient un enjeu national. \u00c0 la fin des ann\u00e9es 1990, les d\u00e9bats publics reprennent sur les questions sexuelles, et apr\u00e8s le 11 septembre, la l\u00e9gitimit\u00e9 nouvelle du genre est prise dans un imp\u00e9rialisme nouveau de la d\u00e9mocratie sexuelle. La nature ambigu\u00eb du genre, \u00e0 la fois normatif et critique, est aujourd'hui une tension qui d\u00e9finit les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes. \/\/\/ \"Gender\" was created in the 1950s and 60s by American psychologists in order to medicalize intersexuality and transsexuality. In the 1970s, feminists in the U. S. appropriated the term to denaturalize femininity, while transforming this normative category into a critical tool. In the 1980s, while in the U. S., women's studies benefited from an institutional recognition, feminists were not welcomed in French academia. When feminist issues got a new start after 1989, this politicization was rejected in the name of the Republic: the concept of \"gender\" became a matter of national culture. In the late 1990s, public debates about sexual issues were rekindled, and since 911, the newfound legitimacy of gender has become entangled in the new imperialism of sexual democracy. Gender's ambiguous nature - both normative and critical -is today a defining tension in feminist studies.","creator":["\u00c9ric Fassin"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40379519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04394216"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7db53f9-b8d5-31b1-a338-4a4da8d85669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40379519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"homme"}],"isPartOf":"L'Homme","issueNumber":"187\/188","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'empire du genre. L'histoire politique ambigu\u00eb d'un outil conceptuel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40379519","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8764,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[51895,51966]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabriela E. Romero-Ghiretti"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74682cf3-09db-3c32-bff7-8707b1d73666"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fleeing Subjectivities and Politics of Resistance in Alicia Borinsky's \"Cine continuado\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024087","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8886,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459844,460251]],"Locations in B":[[15140,15546]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Virginie Despentes\u2019s Apocalypse Baby responds to the censorship she received following Baise-moi\u2019s film release and unsettles distinctions between men\/women, detectives\/criminals, and censors\/censored. I argue that Despentes is a Braidottian nomad who constructs genre, gender, and sexuality borders to collapse them, demonstrating that women\u2019s fluid sexual identities are necessary for subversion. However, with the novel\u2019s explosive ending, I contend that the author reveals how crossing genre, gender, and sexuality boundaries is insufficient if we do not collectively embrace a more expansive feminism and dismantle patriarchal values that perpetuate hegemony within contemporary literature, culture, and society.","creator":["Leah E. Wilson"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c061d84-3d5d-3b70-b284-af4deb1535a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Collapsing Boundaries to Expose Censorship and Expand Feminism in Virginie Despentes\u2019s Apocalypse Baby<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023696","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":7313,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[358159,358269]],"Locations in B":[[5306,5416]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne Quimby"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"010434e8-7513-3049-b299-ed652b9d7c9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"How to Write \"Women's Poetry\" without Being a \"Woman Poet\": Public Persona in It\u014d Hiromi's Early Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772294","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11410,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[65655,65753]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Current feminist scholarship assumes that gender in western culture is a social construct founded on a system of linguistic encoding that has traditionally been a male preserve. The written language of the eighteenth century, as represented in Louis T. Milic's \u201cCentury of Prose Corpus,\u201d challenges this assumption. A group of target words chosen from the lexical subset pertaining to the roles of eighteenth-century women reveals two distinct patterns in the way men and women used language; each gender used the same words to express distinctly different, if complementary, understandings of their experience. Eighteenth-century women had their own \u201cpreserve\u201d of words and their own semantic preserve within the lexical pool available to all speakers of the time. The patriarchal model of the gender construct offered by contemporary feminist theory is deficient. Gender roles in modern social history are in fact the product of language use by members of both sexes.","creator":["Joyce Kessler","Louis T. Milic"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45108902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce0fc74d-56d8-32a7-89a6-df8623b44c19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45108902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Words of One's Own: Some Evidence Against Men's Use of Language as a Tool of Domination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45108902","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7883,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477934]],"Locations in B":[[47648,47734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The focus of this paper is the impact of the 'new urban order' on sexualised spaces in cities. The paper explores how sexual 'others' are conscripted into the process of urban transformation and, by turn, how city branding has become part of the sexual citizenship agenda. The interweaving of urban governance and sexual citizenship agendas produces particular kinds of sexual spaces, at the exclusion of other kinds. The paper considers the extent to which the idea of sexual citizenship has been woven into the tournament of urban entrepreneurialism and how this affects sexualised spaces. This process is read as an instance of 'the new homonormativity', producing a global repertoire of themed gay villages, as cities throughout the world weave commodified gay space into their promotional campaigns.","creator":["David Bell","Jon Binnie"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43201480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43201480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1820","pageStart":"1807","pagination":"pp. 1807-1820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Authenticating Queer Space: Citizenship, Urbanism and Governance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43201480","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8914,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates Marie Claire Blais's representation of the female commune in \"L'Ange de la solitude\" as an exploratory site of language performativity and the nature of the social contract in relation to women. The aim of the article is to investigate Blais's tragic depiction of the fate of the commune as the inescapable consequence of the violence of language, and seeks to unravel these issues in relation to \"Monique Wittig's\" configuration of the heterosexual contract. In a significant departure from traditional \"Quebec discourse of female citizenship,\" Blais's novel reveals a marked poststructuralist preoccupation with linguistic sovereignty and the representation of female identity, which the novel examines in the context of socio-political structures.","creator":["Susan White"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3736137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"350","pagination":"pp. 350-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Political Borders of Language in Marie-Claire Blais's \"L'Ange de la solitude\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736137","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":7176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[388285,388535]],"Locations in B":[[15304,16183]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erick Gordon","Kerry McKibbin","Lalitha Vasudevan","Ruth Vinz"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3630950e-37ac-3162-8d7d-5b2ab78c6576"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40173261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing out of the Unexpected: Narrative Inquiry and the Weight of Small Moments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173261","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Toril Moi","Susana Born\u00e9o Funck","Rita Terezinha Schmidt","Maria Isabel de Castro Lima"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ed700d9-0dbb-37cc-b40d-623e0d4f25c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Liberdade, justi\u00e7a e igualdade para as mulheres: uma entrevista com Toril Moi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327632","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Si\u00e2n Beynon-Jones"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"994576d4-900a-31ea-9bc6-a1ca8e98b6f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27655161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655161","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":1697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Brophy"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc148127-f3b2-397a-abba-e62ad1b5d13d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Women, Aging, and Gossip in Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's Letters of the 1720s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467932","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marjorie Worthington"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54663119"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212165"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18bd40bc-811d-3759-89ee-39022b875e42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30224666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Journal of Narrative Theory","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Texts of Tech: Technology and Authorial Control in \"Geek Love\" and \"Galatea 2.2\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224666","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Culture is a central yet underexamined concept in TESOL. In comparison to other fields such as anthropology and cultural studies, there has been little serious discussion and critique of the concept in TESOL over the last two decades. This article offers a reassessment of the notion of culture in TESOL, taking recent work in critical anthropology and cultural studies, and to a lesser degree TESOL itself, as a starting point. It proposes a revised view of culture that is intended to serve TESOL practitioners into the 21st century, or that can at least provide a takeoff point from which such a view may be developed.","creator":["Dwight Atkinson"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3587880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"TESOL and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587880","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":13289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There are multiple gender discourses and gender representations in contemporary Japan, but a \"traditional\" gender ideology-men working soto (outside the home) and women managing uchi (home)-keeps its dominant position among them. Japanese women care about their complexion and put foundation on their faces when they go outside (soto). This article illustrates how the women's white faces serve as a symbolic language, which communicates gender relations. Women present the white face in public, performing the subjectivity of ideal women based on the gender ideology. The practice of face whitening enacts the gender ideology of the tradition and the past, and this bodily practice itself is a mode of knowledge about the gender ideology. In other words, the gender ideology is authorized through the public representation of \"ideal\" gender relations.","creator":["Mikiko Ashikari"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38c17666-c4cf-39d0-9724-6c6b409be192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Urban Middle-Class Japanese Women and Their White Faces: Gender, Ideology, and Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651863","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":16046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article outlines two theoretical and methodological approaches that take a queer intellectual curiosity about figurations of \"homosexuality\" and \"the homosexual\" as their core. These offer ways to conduct international relations (IR) research on \"the homosexual\" and on international relations figurations more broadly, for example, from \"the woman\" to \"the human rights holder.\" The first approach provides a method for analyzing figurations of \"the homosexual\" and sexualized orders of IR that are inscribed in IR as either normal or perverse. The second approach offers instructions on how to read plural figures and plural logics that signify as normal and\/or perverse (and which might be described as queer). Together, they propose techniques, devices, and research questions to investigate singular and plural IR figurations\u2014including but not exclusively those of \"the homosexual\"\u2014that map international phenomena as diverse as colonialism, human rights, and the formation of states and international communities in ways that exceed IR survey research techniques that, for example, incorporate \"the homosexual\" into IR research through a \"sexuality variable.\"","creator":["Cynthia Weber"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43868302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47a21baf-977a-35ae-9f8f-05128f23b556"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43868302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Intellectual Curiosity as International Relations Method: Developing Queer International Relations Theoretical and Methodological Frameworks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43868302","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":13427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marta Lamas"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c70a977-9a7d-3424-8be6-1437064f1606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00e9nero, diferencias de sexo y diferencia sexual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625720","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy Foster"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24719d7b-b576-33d0-985f-9c518cf8af58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Transgressions in Literature, Politics and Gender: Peri Rossi's \"La nave de los locos\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922575","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Giving nicknames is a common and cross-generational folkloric practice of Israeli Arabs. In our paper we examine the nickname as a verbal unit reflecting socio-cultural identity as well as social and linguistic reality, while focusing on the role of the Hebrew language in the nicknaming practice. The conclusions of this research are based on extensive fieldwork conducted in villages and cities in Israel. The array of Hebrew nicknames given to Israeli Arabs has a double-edged ideological role: on the one hand it is a measure of their integration in Israel and their adaptation to the dominant language as it becomes an essential component of their personal and collective identity, but on the other hand the function of the Hebrew language in the nicknaming practice is to provide an irony that generates defamiliarisation and alienation. The conspicuous humorous effect of Hebrew nicknames stems from their oxymoronic contrast with the Arabic identity of the nicknamed persons. They point out the inter lingua and cultural situation of Israeli Arabs, and the complexity that defines and shapes their identity.","creator":["\u05e0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e4\u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05d5-\u05d0\u05d1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d9\u05e1","\u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05d0","Nina Pinto-Abecasis","Hani Musa"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23792122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03337030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a27db23a-426a-3f65-9e53-bdcfdf374b95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23792122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudjewifolk"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Folklore \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05dc\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"753","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-753","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Identity of Israeli Arabs as Reflected in Hebrew-Based Nicknames \/ \u05d4\u05e9\u05ea\u05e7\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d1\u05db\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05e1\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23792122","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d7","wordCount":6134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BONNIE GORDON"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"review-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2006.59.2.473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d064adc3-9c0a-377d-94c7-c8c5bce11a76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jams.2006.59.2.473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2006.59.2.473","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":4912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Grantmyre"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ed20327-7f88-3996-a9a0-f0e5b10a4739"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41412801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"1011","pageStart":"983","pagination":"pp. 983-1011","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"They lived their life and they didn't bother anybody\": African American Female Impersonators and Pittsburgh's Hill District, 1920-1960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412801","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":12639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evelyn Blackwood"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d92902f-0b0e-3fe3-a0f9-4123029732fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"454","pagination":"pp. 454-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Trans Identities and Contingent Masculinities: Being Tombois in Everyday Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608385","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10631,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524390]],"Locations in B":[[64945,65004]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Several decades ago, feminists differentiated between the biologically given basis of sex identity (sex) and the socially constructed cultural practices anchored by sex identity (gender). In recent years, many feminists have challenged that distinction, arguing that biological sex is as much a social construct as are the practices comprising gender. I survey two examples from biological studies of sex identity that, by contrast (I maintain), warrant saving the concept of biologically given sex identity. The result is not antithetical to feminism, however, since these studies also suggest that sex identity proliferates beyond the rigid female\/male dichotomy. If articulated carefully, this view can avoid metaphysically essentialist baggage while enriching feminist conceptions of sex identity.","creator":["MARILYN FRIEDMAN"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE UNHOLY ALLIANCE OF SEX AND GENDER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439165","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6284,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[475831,475929],[476472,476545],[477848,477925],[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[36520,36624],[37422,37507],[38153,38231],[40424,40495]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alan Sinfield"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/368000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92ce0f0f-1cef-3623-9b3e-3b9d5b23a3d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/368000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lesbian and Gay Taxonomies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/368000","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7896,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[393890,394358],[489242,489329]],"Locations in B":[[21950,22418],[44038,44131]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article looks at the constitution and uses of homosexuality in Juan Goytisolo's two autobiographical volumes to date: Coto vedado (1985) and En los reinos de taifa (1986). Building on a comparison between Lee Edelman's ideas on the metaleptic nature of the 'primal scene' as described in Freud's The 'Wolf Man' and Lacan's theory of the subject's 'extimate' relationship to the Other, the article attempts to show that the subject of Goytisolo's autobiography constructs his own ontological coherence always in retrospect and a tergo (from behind), hence in a series of anti-existentialist movements in which it is the metaleptic (be)hindsight of homosexuality that determines both the subject's constitution and his chronology.","creator":["David Vilaseca"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3737120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3737120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"426","pagination":"pp. 426-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Juan Goytisolo's Queer (Be)Hindsight: Homosexuality, Epistemology, and the \"Extimacy\" of the Subject in Coto Vedado and En los reinos de taifa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3737120","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":7636,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[178827,178997]],"Locations in B":[[24337,24507]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A concep\u00e7\u00e3o de identidade p\u00f3s-estruturalista, em uma perspectiva etnometodol\u00f3gica, trouxe profundas mudan\u00e7as na maneira como se estabelecem as rela\u00e7\u00f5es entre g\u00eanero e linguagem. G\u00eanero passa a ser entendido como uma constru\u00e7\u00e3o social que precisa ser (re)negociada a cada nova intera\u00e7\u00e3o e, por n\u00e3o existir fora do discurso, n\u00e3o tem um status fixo e est\u00e1vel. Para entender como as identidades de g\u00eanero s\u00e3o interacionalmente negociadas, e aqui especificamente os aspectos relacionados \u00e0 maternidade, apresento a import\u00e2ncia da An\u00e1lise da Conversa, atrav\u00e9s da an\u00e1lise qualitativa de intera\u00e7\u00f5es natural\u00edsticas entre uma psic\u00f5loga e candidatos\/as \u00e0 vasectomia e \u00e0 laqueadura, em um posto de sa\u00fade do SUS, na regi\u00e3o Sul do Brasil. O que mostro, atrav\u00e9s da an\u00e1lise de tr\u00eas excertos, \u00e9 que pequenas fissuras nas performances de maternidade fazem colidir a no\u00e7\u00e3o de uma maternidade est\u00e1vel, o que nos d\u00e1 uma ideia pr\u00e1tica do conceito de agentividade. The post-structuralist conception of identity, from an ethnomethodological perspective, brought deep changes to the way gender and language relations are established. Gender is thus taken as a social construction, which needs to be (re)negotiated in every and each new interaction and, since it does not exist outside discourse, it does not have a fixed and stable status. To understand how gender identities are interactionally negotiated, and here considering specifically the aspects related to maternity, I present the importance of Conversation Analysis, through the qualitative analysis of naturalistic interactions between a psychologist and candidates for vasectomy and tubal ligation, which occurred at a public health center in the south of Brazil. What is shown, through the analysis of three excerpts of interaction, is that small perturbations in the performances of maternity trouble the notion of a stable maternity, which gives us a practical idea of the concept of agency.","creator":["Maril\u00e9ia Sell"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ee05344-8c69-384d-92b4-bcdda14352b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Minha m\u00e3e ficou amarga\": expectativas de performances de maternidade negociadas na fala-em-intera\u00e7\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328102","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Julia Kristeva is known as rejecting feminism, nonetheless her work is useful for feminist theory. I reconsider Kristeva's rejection of feminism and her theories of difference, identity, and maternity, elaborating on Kristeva's contributions to debates over the necessity of identity politics, indicating how Kristeva's theory suggests the cause of and possible solutions to women's oppression in Western culture, and, using Kristeva's theory, setting up a framework for a feminist rethinking of politics and ethics.","creator":["Kelly Oliver"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"206b1306-2206-3bf5-9214-bc183c442c3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Julia Kristeva's Feminist Revolutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810407","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[276103,276220],[290299,290396],[301867,301963],[481404,481466],[503386,503495]],"Locations in B":[[17380,17497],[17750,17847],[17994,18090],[53569,53631],[58942,59047]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SARAH E. MAIER"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27794793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"342cc928-121b-3629-908f-b5608a29f094"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27794793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DANGEROUS DISCOURSES: THEORIZING SEXUALITY, FRIENDSHIP AND GENDER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27794793","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":1739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan M. Alexander"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2df840d-d779-35bb-993f-786680519bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41308977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308977","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":1026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathaleen Amende"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2ba003c-d8cf-3444-85fb-b7c555bc3f39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A man with such an appearance was capable of anything\": Imaginary Rape and the Violent \"Other\" in Faulkner's \"Dry September\" and Oz's \"Nomad and Viper\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908376","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study is concerned with experiences of ethnic identity amongst a group of three-year-old and four-year-old children, four-fifths of whom are of Pakistani heritage and the remainder of white indigenous heritage. Focused on a nursery school in the United Kingdom, the study explores the relationship between the individual and the social and cultural, initially in the home and then as the children start nursery school. An ethnographic approach is used to record the children's daily experiences and relationships as contexts where they reveal, shape and reshape who they are. Children's ethnic identities are explored in relation to boundaries where different communities of practice collide, alongside other aspects such as gender and sexuality and under the influence of factors such as power and religion. What appears to emerge is a sense of ethnic identity as social practice and performance rather than as the result of maturation or of internal cognitive development.","creator":["Ian Barron"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6bb2117-23b0-3d7d-918d-75100504e293"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"752","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"An Exploration of Young Children's Ethnic Identities as Communities of Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036252","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7178,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443971,444257]],"Locations in B":[[6392,6647]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beatrice Hanssen","M\u00f3nica Mansour","Julia Constantino"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"439e4121-3e14-3ec5-8920-ec49bf2076ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Los l\u00edmites de la representaci\u00f3n feminista: El lenguaje de la violencia de Elfriede Jelinek","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624701","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16686,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497485,497527]],"Locations in B":[[17512,17554]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erika Wolf"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10184252"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d06c24a-79ee-3793-811a-202c5e9fb81d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23412155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificarts"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Arts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Pacific Arts Association","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Shigeyuki Kihara's \"Fa'a fafine; In a Manner of a Woman\": The Photographic Theater of Cross-Cultural Encounter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412155","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7071,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,123888]],"Locations in B":[[26288,26450]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Rody"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1209005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5801570-22d2-321c-9c0d-14b75a4a4c07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1209005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"641","pageStart":"618","pagination":"pp. 618-641","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Impossible Voices: Ethnic Postmodern Narration in Toni Morrison's \"Jazz\" and Karen Tei Yamashita's \"Through the Arc of the Rain Forest\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1209005","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terrell Carver","Marysia Zalewski","Helen Kinsella","R. Charli Carpenter"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3186423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236630"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3186423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"International Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3186423","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8808,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476047]],"Locations in B":[[53947,54009]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Chapman"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3054539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054539","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann M. Little"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27774056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314528"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eafa5d62-3a41-3ead-bd4b-b81c7befb428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27774056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Men on Top? The Farmer, the Minister, and Marriage in Early New England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27774056","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":15142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janet L. Coryell"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1571498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b646e78-0a46-3c4d-8f60-3f10cf3126a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1571498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1571498","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":1877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mainstream transitional justice and peacebuilding practices tend to re-entrench gendered hierarchies by ignoring women or circumscribing their presence to passive victims in need of protection. As a consequence we have limited knowledge about the multifaceted ways women do justice and build peace. To address this lacuna we conceptualize and unpack the meaning of gendered agency, by identifying its critical elements and by locating it in space and in time. The conceptual work that we undertake is underpinned by empirical mapping of the transitional justice spaces in post-conflict Bosnia-Herzegovina, where we point out instances of critical, creative, and transformative agency performed by women that challenge or negotiate patterns of gendered relations of domination. We collect women\u2019s oral narratives and explore new sets of questions to capture women\u2019s unique experiences in doing justice. Such research enables us to engage with the subjects of post-conflict peacebuilding and transitional justice processes directly and in their own spaces. This article thus renders women\u2019s agency visible and attempts to grasp its contributions and consequences for transformations from war to peace.","creator":["Annika Bj\u00f6rkdahl","Johanna Mannergren Selimovic"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caf77800-4cac-3201-b3b2-edd183db5e57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendering agency in transitional justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292336","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Article examines the role of the media in the pornification of society and the subsequent rise of laddism and raunch culture, by looking specifically at lad culture and lad magazines as a genre. Comparisons are drawn between 2008 issues of the local lad magazine FHM and the international pornographic magazine Playboy in order to show how these magazines function as soft pornography. The research was conducted prior to the launch of the South African version of Playboy. The Article examines raunch culture and its subsequent influence on contemporary women and how they respond to its representations, illustrating the manner in which lad and raunch culture can be seen as part of an anti-feminist backlash, rather than being post-feminist, as the latter has claimed.","creator":["Dominique Rizos"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0c28649-da55-3785-b17e-acc713f3eace"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (93)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lad magazines, raunch culture and the pornification of South African media","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824482","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dana Seitler"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"289b9326-8570-387d-9eb5-ff5b3130e1ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unnatural Selection: Mothers, Eugenic Feminism, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Regeneration Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041957","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":11818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Third World and transnational feminisms have emerged in opposition to white second-wave feminists' single-pronged analyses of gender oppression that elided Third World women's multiple and complex oppressions in their various social locations. Consequently, these feminisms share two \u201cThird World feminist\u201d mandates: First, feminist analyses of Third World women's oppression and resistance should be historically situated; and second, Third World women's agency and voices should be respected. Despite these shared mandates, they have diverged in their proper domains of investigation, with transnational feminism concentrating on the transnational level and Third World feminism focusing on local and national contexts. Further, their respective positions regarding nation-states and nationalism have been antithetical, as leading transnational feminists have categorically rejected nation-states and nationalism as detrimental to feminism. In recent decades, transnational feminism has become the dominant feminist position on Third World women, overshadowing Third World feminism, and the dismissal of nation-states and nationalism as irrelevant to feminism has become fashionable. Against this current trend, this article argues for the relevance of nation-states and nationalism for transnational feminism and the urgency of reclaiming Third World feminism.","creator":["Ranjoo Seodu Herr"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.12.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5842a468-7e08-3c4e-bd9f-5789ed4eb6e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.12.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reclaiming Third World Feminism: or Why Transnational Feminism Needs Third World Feminism<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.12.1.1","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431403,431480]],"Locations in B":[[42341,42418]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["W. B. Worthen"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25145530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9088d57c-b29a-349e-8246-a97a3ca3d81e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25145530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Antigone's Bones","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25145530","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":13696,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[83781,83850]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the arguments of two of the central positions in the debate over assimilationism in the gay and lesbian community as a means of exploring the meaning of resistance, opposition, struggle, and agency within the context of a dominant and generative field of power. Instead of debating which position is better or most effective, or which involves \"true resistance,\" we use Foucault's formulations to suggest that each represents but one among a multiplicity of strategies, all existing simultaneously in a field of power. Because this field is composed of a plurality of dissonant, multilayered, multidimensional relations of power, we argue that no single form of resistance can be identified and uniquely practiced. Instead, each struggle contributes its own partial modification to the overall transformation of the field of power, and simultaneously highlights the inconsistencies faced by agents who attempt to present a coherent identity in opposition to structures of domination.","creator":["Amy Hequembourg","Jorge Arditi"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"862d49ac-a7d2-39b7-ac69-310f403d6c8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fractured Resistances: The Debate over Assimilationism among Gays and Lesbians in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121259","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10437,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[68015,68134],[147067,147314]],"Locations in B":[[9054,9173],[53471,53719]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GRA\u017bYNA J. KOZACZKA"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25779410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00322970"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69c35e72-ef58-3702-9e2d-eb700fc8ddbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25779410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polishreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Polish Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE INVENTION OF ETHNICITY AND GENDER IN SUZANNE STREMPEK SHEA'S FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25779410","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Discourse theoretical concepts and poststructuralist approaches have widely been discussed within German human geography in recent years. They argue that language plays a decisive role for the constitution of social realities in general and the formation of power-knowledge structures in particular. However, the question of how these theoretical insights could adequately be implemented in empirical studies has remained a matter of ongoing debate especially as the assumptions underlying the methods of qualitative social research have been criticized by poststructuralist thinkers. This paper draws on writings of the \"French School of Discourse Analysis\" (Williams 1999) in order to develop a methodical mix of quantitative-statistical and proposition-based techniques that is able to address the meaning effects derived from the formal characteristics of texts. Using a print media analysis of the city image of Leipzig as an empirical example, the potential that this approach has for the depiction of both structural aspects of discourses as well as inconsistencies and conflicts within them is discussed. Diskurstheoretische Konzepte und poststrukturalistische Ans\u00e4tze sind in der deutschsprachigen Humangeographie in den letzten Jahren intensiv diskutiert worden. Sie argumentieren, dass Sprache eine entscheidende Rolle f\u00fcr die Konstitution sozialer Wirklichkeiten im Allgemeinen und die Etablierung von Macht-Wissen-Strukturen im Besonderen spielt. Gleichwohl ist die Frage, wie diese theoretischen Erkenntnisse angemessen in empirischen Studien operationalisiert werden k\u00f6nnen, Gegenstand intensiver Debatten, insbesondere, weil viele der Grundannahmen der qualitativen Sozialforschung von poststrukturalistischen Autorinnen und Autoren kritisiert wurden. Der Aufsatz entwickelt mit R\u00fcckgriff auf die Arbeiten der \u201eFranz\u00f6sischen Schule der Diskursanalyse\u201d (Williams 1999) einen methodischen Mix aus quantitativ-statistischen und aussagenanalytischen Verfahren. Dieser ist in der Lage, Bedeutung als Effekt der formalen Charakteristika von Texten zu untersuchen. Am empirischen Beispiel einer Printmedienanalyse des Stadtimages von Leipzig werden die Potentiale dieses Ansatzes f\u00fcr die Analyse der strukturellen Merkmale von Diskursen sowie f\u00fcr deren Inkonsistenzen und innere Widerspr\u00fcche diskutiert.","creator":["Annika Mattissek"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25822105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140015"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62aae142-dfdc-3560-a63b-fd287913494b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25822105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"erdkunde"}],"isPartOf":"Erdkunde","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Erdkunde","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"ANALYZING CITY IMAGES POTENTIALS OF THE \"FRENCH SCHOOL OF DISCOURSE ANALYSIS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25822105","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":7759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Natasha Kraus"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2574f0c3-00ba-34c1-a079-794398a2289d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Desire Work, Performativity, and the Structuring of a Community: Butch\/Fem Relations of the 1940s and 1950s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346893","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11562,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[395977,396037]],"Locations in B":[[6890,6950]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"449f6683-e3f5-310c-b752-3d57f3ddb357"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41850748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes on Contributors \/ \ufe97\ufecc\ufeae\ufef3\ufed2 \ufe91\ufedc\ufe98\u0651\ufe8e\ufe8f \ufe8d\ufedf\ufecc\ufeaa\ufea9 \ufe91\ufe8e\ufef9\ufee7\ufea0\ufee0\ufef4\ufeb0\ufef3\ufe94","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850748","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article describes the development of a data bank of 25 male voices spanning the range from very gay-sounding to very straight-sounding, according to listener ratings. These ratings allowed the researchers to examine the effects of different discourse types (scientific, dramatic, and spontaneous) and listener groups (gay males vs. a mix of males and females of unknown sexual orientation) on how listeners perceived the voices. The effects of lexical and pragmatic content were explored by a comparison of spoken and written presentations of the same spontaneous speech samples. The effect of asking participants to rate the voices using different constructs (e.g., masculine\/feminine vs. gay-sounding\/straight-sounding) is discussed. The ultimate goal of this research program is to examine correlations between these ratings and a range of phonetic variables in order to shed light on the specific features to which listeners attend when judging whether a man's voice sounds gay or straight.","creator":["Ron Smyth","Greg Jacobs","Henry Rogers"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26c96d0b-7089-3470-9566-c69606b257aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Male Voices and Perceived Sexual Orientation: An Experimental and Theoretical Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169267","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10468,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147813]],"Locations in B":[[52460,52625]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How might teachers help students investigate the relationship between gender and homophobia? This article describes an exercise that uses fingernail polish to do just that. The authors uses anecdotal evidence to describe the exercise in which students pair with someone of the opposite gender and paint each other's fingernails. Additionally, the author uses a randomly selected sample of 19 students to formally evaluate the teaching goals of this assignment. Students regard the nail polish assignment favorably, with average scores ranging from 3.37 to 4.26 (out of 5). The evaluation and anecdotal evidence confirms a continuing need to address homophobia in everyday life and in the classroom. This activity offers an innovative approach to doing so.","creator":["Nelta M. Edwards"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691ba53d-e695-3bdf-85ba-31d674d87720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27896551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Using Nail Polish to Teach about Gender and Homophobia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896551","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite its imprecision, the native-nonnative dichotomy has become the dominant paradigm for examining language teacher identity development. The nonnative English speaking teacher (NNEST) movement in particular has considered the impact of deficit framings of nonnativeness on \"NNEST\" preservice teachers. Although these efforts have contributed significantly towards increasing awareness of NNEST-hood, they also risk reifying the notion that nativeness and nonnativeness are objectively distinct categories. This article adopts a poststructuralist lens to reconceptualize native and nonnative speakers as complex, negotiated social subjectivities that emerge through a discursive process that the author terms (non)native speakering. It then applies this dynamic framework to analyze \"narrative portraits\" of four different archetypical language teachers, two of whom seem to fit neatly into (non)native speakerist frames of language and culture and two of whom deviate from them. It then reflects on how these preservice teachers negotiate, re-create, and resist the produced (non)native speaker subjectivities, and considers the complexity, fluidity, and heterogeneity within each archetype. In the conclusion, the author consider implications of (non)native speakering as a theoretical and analytical frame, as well as possible applications of the data for teacher education.","creator":["GEETA A. ANEJA"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2537fb87-5c2f-3b3b-a629-8670057e3958"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44984704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"572","pagination":"pp. 572-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"(Non)native Speakered: Rethinking (Non)nativeness and Teacher Identity in TESOL Teacher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984704","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert G. Wood"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07316755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71ab5685-2da7-308e-a730-779dfff3545a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20865893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadvacomp"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Advanced Composition","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dialectic Suppression of Feminist Thought in Radical Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865893","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8129,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[86589,87364]],"Locations in B":[[21478,22253]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Ma Vie En Rose (My Life in Pink)\" (1997) puts at center-screen a figure never before seen in cinema: an effeminate, cross-dressing, boy-loving, girl-identified, pre-pubescent male. Whether in print or on screen, gay, effeminate, transvestite, and\/or transsexual characters seldom receive fully-realized narrative treatment-particularly not in the case of a seven-year old protagonist. Far more typical is the portrayal of such (necessarily adolescent or adult) characters as simple comic relief or readily-dispatched problems. This article analyzes ways in which director Alain Berliner and co-screenwriter Chris Vander Stappen keep their young protagonist's life-narrative, against the vigilance of parents, school, and the medical community, under his own fabulous control. Little Ludo's precocious relationship to spectatorship and feminine performance saves him from narrative oblivion; it also signals to viewers the countless stories yet untold by and about non-masculine boys.","creator":["Michael R. Schiavi"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"479a58d8-8786-3548-96fb-7e4e7d31a979"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A \"Girlboy's\" Own Story: Non-Masculine Narrativity in \"Ma Vie en Rose\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115205","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12150,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437407,437618]],"Locations in B":[[22328,22540]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Just as becoming-woman is a divided concept, looking back to a seemingly redemptive figure of the feminine beyond rigid being, but also forward to a positive annihilation of fixed genders, so modernism was also a doubled movement. But modernism was a pulverisation of 'the' subject for the sake of a plural and multiplying point of view, and like 'becoming-woman', should be read as a defiant and affirmative refusal.","creator":["Claire Colebrook"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74002403-601a-3ada-af61-0919ec09e293"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"455","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-455","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Modernism without Women: The Refusal of Becoming-Woman (and Post-Feminism)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331708","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":13077,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[78173,78347]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Theodore Hovet"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27746684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5723f4f-948f-3dd8-b914-6b6b214747f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27746684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal1870"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism, 1870-1910","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Power of the Popular: The Subversion of Realism in Harriet Beecher Stowe's \"My Wife and I\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27746684","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5937,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[183629,183764],[456028,456111],[460034,460171],[461339,461463]],"Locations in B":[[25485,25620],[32278,32360],[32858,32992],[33262,33382]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa A. Fitch"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6d06993-8f37-3581-8ffe-7254dfe88e80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CARMEN, KITSCH, CAMP AND MY QUEST FOR COORDINATED DINNERWARE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342243","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Angela L. Willis"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f56ed89-1ea4-3750-8ba3-3b1f627a139d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Fleeing the Model Home: Mar\u00eda de Zayas Rewrites the Rules of Feminine Sensuality and \"Honra\" in the Boccaccesca \"Novela Cortesana\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024076","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Pollmann"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23680825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00012343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f57b44f-a4a6-3c84-969f-f03c7c7f1420"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23680825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arsparchrechsozi"}],"isPartOf":"ARSP: Archiv f\u00fcr Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie \/ Archives for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Law","Law","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23680825","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":4915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In her short Mauthausen stories, Elisabeth Reichart offers counter-narratives to the dominant mode of \"Vergangenheitsdiskurs.\" Since she correlates a lack of historical consciousness with loss of selfhood, Reichart insists on memory as an indispensable tool to develop self-determination. In order to provide women with \"memory space,\" the cultural archive of remembrance needs to be reconfigured and reorganized.","creator":["Maria-Regina Kecht"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564699596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cbdab08-77c1-3705-b15d-c13edf788570"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24649144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Wo ist Mauthausen?\u2014Weibliche Erinnerungsr\u00e4ume bei Elisabeth Reichart","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649144","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumos A la hora de llevar adelante proyectos pol\u00edticos, el uso de las distinciones homosexual\/ heterosexual o trans*\/cis como categor\u00edas exclusivas de an\u00e1lisis puede limitar la comprensi\u00f3n de la complejidad de pertenencias en las que cada sujeto se posiciona. En muchos casos, incluidas ciertas perspectivas queer, esta estrategia conlleva una simplificaci\u00f3n que atribuye un car\u00e1cter radical o subversivo al primer t\u00e9rmino del binomio, y uno normal o incluso represivo al segundo. En el primer caso, se constituye lo que denominamos aqu\u00ed una \u201ccadena homo-trans*- revoluci\u00f3n\u201d; en el otro, una \u201ccadena hetero-cis-represi\u00f3n\u201d. Mediante un pasaje generalizaci\u00f3nreducci\u00f3n- invisibilizaci\u00f3n, ambas instancias obturan la comprensi\u00f3n tanto de las posturas conservadoras en el \u00e1mbito de lo homo\/trans*, como de las subversivas o radicales en la esfera hetero\/cis. Exponer ambas permite comprender que un proyecto pol\u00edtico colectivo disidente f\u00e9rtil no podr\u00e1 fundarse exclusivamente en la sexualidad o el g\u00e9nero, sino que deber\u00e1 construir puentes interseccionales sobre la base del posicionamiento y los objetivos pol\u00edticos, sin caer en generalizaciones y manteniendo la flexibilidad que aportan los posicionamientos queer.","creator":["Moira P\u00e9rez"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb1823ad-313e-33a8-8c69-d64c43742dcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201cLa cadena sexo-g\u00e9nero-revoluci\u00f3n\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007970","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan V. Donaldson"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"149ce2d9-80c0-33fb-82e3-ddca4c31049a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Faulkner and Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907812","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4773,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443328,443525]],"Locations in B":[[1962,2159]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Even before 9\/11, madrasas in India were being vilified for teaching hatred against the majority Hindu community. Such an understanding of madrasas was not restricted to the Hindu Right alone but even among parties of the Left. This paper argues that such a notion, which is fast becoming common sense, is erroneous. Far from teaching hatred against other communities, madrasas are primarily concerned with the ideological reproduction of their own maslak. The paper describes processes and strategies within a madrasa in North India through which such ideological reproduction takes place. The paper contends that sites of ideological transmission are located outside the formal curriculum of the madrasa. It focuses on some key texts and debating forums that are important sites of ideological transmission and play a key role in constituting a particular identity of students. Through an understanding of such pedagogical processes, the paper has shown that for students of this madrasa, the 'other' is not a Hindu, but a Muslim from another maslak. It follows from the paper that Islam itself is a matter of fierce interpretative debate 'within' madrasas. While it is important to understand how madrasas relate to other religions, an analysis of madrasas from 'within' leads us to different results.","creator":["Arshad Alam"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20488032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b16e33d-86ee-322e-b221-e2e17f99ae0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20488032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"627","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605-627","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Enemy within: Madrasa and Muslim Identity in North India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20488032","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bryce Traister"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0cdfd2d-ad75-38e3-b900-6a78bf440c26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Academic Viagra: The Rise of American Masculinity Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041839","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12721,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727],[143769,143906],[147682,147864]],"Locations in B":[[51915,52048],[52161,52294],[52756,52935]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann R. Cacoullos"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41262075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0883105X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6ca2dec-2a23-3dac-a70a-32f76f51ad68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41262075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudinter"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies International","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Ruptures in Women's Studies and American Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41262075","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":3808,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[22916,22985]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Private military and security companies (PMSCs) have gained increasingly in importance over the course of the past two decades. Yet, given the intransparency of the industry and the heterogeneity of the companies that comprise it, we thus far know little about the actors involved. In this article, we offer preliminary insights into the self-representation of PMSCs, based on a gender-discourse analysis of the homepages of select companies and their main professional associations. We argue that survival in an increasingly competitive industry not only hinges on size, market share or effectiveness, but is also inherently gendered. PMSCs and their associations draw on the one hand on civilized and accepted forms of masculinity and femininity, presenting themselves as 'highly skilled professional' military strategists and ordinary businesses akin to banks or insurance companies. At the same time, however, PMSCs also engage in strategies of (hyper) masculinization and pathologization to set themselves apart from mercenaries, their private competitors and state security forces. In this respect, companies appear to view themselves as 'ethical hero warriors'. Whether intended or not, their strategies have political consequences. Within the security industry, they contribute to the creation and maintenance of a norm regarding what constitutes a legitimate PMSC, to which more or less all companies strive to adhere. Vis-\u00e0-vis other security actors, these strategies seek to establish PMSCs as being superior because, unlike these actors, such companies are super-masculine and able to live up to the growing and sometimes contradictory demands of changing security contexts.","creator":["Jutta Joachim","Andrea Schneiker"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e9c8d0e-73c0-3008-a053-52da449c8b3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26302213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Of 'true professionals' and 'ethical hero warriors': A gender-discourse analysis of private military and security companies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302213","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["THOMAS P. ANDERSON"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d3c849f-717a-3a9d-9573-08fa2a1ee411"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23126254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"What Is Written Shall Be Executed\": \"Nude Contracts\" and \"Lively Warrants\" in \"Titus Andronicus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126254","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10221,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[373999,374151]],"Locations in B":[[59213,59365]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pregnancy makes visible and immediate many critical issues in introductory courses in gender, including compulsory heterosexuality, balancing work and family life, and the processes by which we become gendered subjects. The pregnant professor appears to have a body that upholds normative beliefs about marriage and reproduction, an appearance that softens students' introduction to the critical interrogation of such beliefs. Yet the pregnant body also takes up too much space\u2014both literally and metaphorically\u2014potentially undermining the teacher's institutional authority by aligning her with \"mom\" in a setting that has historically depended upon the absence of the (female) body. This essay thus considers the ways that both the classroom and the university are pregnant with opportunities to reconsider power dynamics surrounding the body.","creator":["Robin Silbergleid"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"044088d6-82e0-3d6e-936f-092013b115bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"An Introduction to Gender Studies: Pregnancy, Parenting, and Authority in the University","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628158","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A articula\u00e7\u00e3o de uma epistemologia queer permite pensar a textualidade como o lugar de encena\u00e7\u00e3o de uma fic\u00e7\u00e3o pol\u00edtica que questiona os regimes heteronomativos do sexo e do g\u00eanero, e prop\u00f5e uma estrat\u00e9gia de resist\u00eancia baseada tanto nos corpos e nos prazeres quanto nas pol\u00edticas de representa\u00e7\u00e3o e reinven\u00e7\u00e3o das masculinidades e das feminilidades. A partir de uma retomada dos princ\u00edpios da narratologia, investiga-se de que forma (ou formas) o texto narrativo configura-se como espa\u00e7o de negocia\u00e7\u00e3o de uma perspectiva queer sobre a nacionalidade, a sexualidade e o g\u00eanero na enuncia\u00e7\u00e3o. Nesse sentido, a literatura reescreve tanto o corpo sexual, tido como o lugar da subjetividade individual, quanto o corpo social\/nacional, entendido como uma fic\u00e7\u00e3o reguladora das sociabilidades corporais e sexuais. Com vistas a uma po\u00e9tica queer, busca-se evidenciar as contradi\u00e7\u00f5es e impasses que emergem na literatura, particularmente em rela\u00e7\u00e3o a quest\u00f5es de ra\u00e7a, classe e g\u00eanero, bem como as potencialidades e os pontos problem\u00e1ticos da po\u00e9tica queer como lugar de interven\u00e7\u00e3o cultural, no qual s\u00e3o performativamente projetados novos arranjos de legibilidade social. The articulation of a queer epistemology allows us to think about textuality as a place of dramatization of a politic fiction that questions the heteronormative patterns of sex and gender, and proposes a strategy of resistance based both on bodies and pleasures and on politics of representation and reinvention of masculinities and femininities. Through the principles of narratology, it is studied in which way (or ways) the narrative is configured as a space of negotiation, from a queer perspective, of nationality, sexuality, and gender in the enunciation. In this sense, literature rewrites both the sexual body, seen as the place of individual subjectivity, and the social\/national body, understood as a fiction that balances body and sexual sociabilities. At last, the contradictions and impasses that emerge from literature are analyzed, particularly in which concerns questions of race, class, and gender, as well as the potentialities and problematic points of a queer poetics as a place of cultural intervention, intending the construction and the comprehension of this queer poetics, where new arranges of social legibility are projected in a performative way.","creator":["Anselmo Peres Al\u00f3s"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b49f8b0d-11d3-36f7-938d-125b27729105"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"864","pageStart":"837","pagination":"pp. 837-864","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Narrativas da sexualidade: Pressupostos para uma po\u00e9tica queer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328223","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20443827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b915459-8905-3b70-888a-ffc5659722e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20443827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Education - Educational resources","Law - Computer law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20443827","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345921","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":1885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many black Zimbabweans believe that homosexuality was introduced to the country by white settlers and is now mainly propagated by `the West'. The denial of indigenous homosexual behaviours and identities is often so strong that critics have been quick with accusations of homophobia. Yet those critics unfairly impose a rather crude and ultimately unhelpful analysis. Without denying that violent forms of homophobia do exist in Zimbabwe, the invisibility of indigenous homosexualities has more complex origins. This article examines the many, overlapping discourses that are constructed into the dominant ideology of masculinity and that contrive to `unsay' indigenous male-to-male sexualities. It seeks in that way to gain insight into the overdetermination of assertively masculinist behaviour among Zimbabwean men today. It also draws lessons for researchers on the importance of interrogating the silences around masculinity.","creator":["Marc Epprecht"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7495730d-3379-38fd-acc2-8c9e0c2632da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"631","pagination":"pp. 631-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The 'Unsaying' of Indigenous Homosexualities in Zimbabwe: Mapping a Blindspot in an African Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637467","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":14306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Miss Galaxy beauty pageant held annually in Nuku'alofa, the capital of Tonga, is, at first glance, a show of transgendered glamour, but it is equally a display of translocality. Through the performance of an exotic otherness (through costumes, names, dances, etc.), the socially marginalized contestants claim to define the local, in ways that may oppose the received order, in which the difference between locality and nonlocality is controlled by the privileged. The juxtaposition of gender transformation and translocality in the same event reinforces their stereotypical linking in the eyes of both transgendered and mainstream Tongans. For transgendered persons, this linking provides an escape route from local dynamics of social exclusion and poverty, but it also potentially offers mainstream persons a pretext to marginalize transgendered persons from their local groundings. Privileged transgendered persons are less vulnerable to these dynamics of exclusion and use tokens of translocality to assert their social standing vis-\u00e0-vis both underprivileged transgendered persons and society at large.","creator":["Niko Besnier"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1f38e2e-b838-3dfa-ae15-6fa85bf33d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"566","pageStart":"534","pagination":"pp. 534-566","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Transgenderism, Locality, and the Miss Galaxy Beauty Pageant in Tonga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805464","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":16319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Against the backdrop of the intense debates on flight currently taking place, the introductory contribution discusses insights that can be gained by exploring migration, mobility, and sedentariness from a relational perspective. Analyzing transitions between mobile and sedentary life phases and life worlds allows us to identify not only interpretative ambivalences, and changes in how mobility is differentiated and evaluated. As we come to understand that human movement and immobility are mutually constituted, we also gain insights into the dynamics shaping social life and the societal order, as well as into ways in which these processes intersect with one another. This new research perspective enables us to get a better understanding of the conflicts between the norms and values that define a collective or society and thus contributes to a historiography that is sensitive to the historical variability of what is perceived as \u201cdistance\u201d or \u201cnearness\u201d and that reflects different actors\u2019 perspectives in its analytical categories.","creator":["Anne Friedrichs"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26534543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0340613X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618142"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235708"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c43c07f1-f1d9-329d-ba06-cee3978b3395"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26534543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gescgese"}],"isPartOf":"Geschichte und Gesellschaft","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Placing Migration in Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26534543","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Neue Wege einer relationalen Geschichtsschreibung"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Schwarz"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fearful Simile: Stealing the Breech in Shakespeare's Chronicle Plays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902298","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":15846,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443525]],"Locations in B":[[8863,8986]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jon Simons"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b385bb80-12b9-3dc9-b52b-b11b7d94581b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Knowing and Doing, Skepticism and Coherence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192237","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This roundtable features six position papers by key scholars and activists enquiring into the past, present and future of Irish Queer Studies, LGBT\/Queer activism and politics in Ireland, and the position of an Irish-based Queer Theory in a global frame. The roundtable addresses such issues as the problematic dominance of US-based Queer Theory for the international field (Ireland included); the relationship between queer activism and academic fields of queer enquiry; the 'quare pair' that constitutes the uniquely productive relations between Feminist and Queer Theory and Studies in and about Ireland; the problematics of advocating for social justice and systemic change for LGBT youth during a time of neoliberal focus on the individual and their atomised rights; and the spaces and places from which LGBT, Feminist and Queer activism, pedagogy, critique and knowledge-production emerged most influentially over the last twenty odd years. The roundtable provides us with an invaluable and multiplicitous archaeology of Queer in Ireland, thinks through both the deflations and the generative energies of the present moment in the development of an Irish Queer Studies, and points toward future horizons for the field. Michael O'Rourke, 'How Queer Is Now'; Aideen Quilty, 'Naming a Politics of Place on a Queerly Irish Landscape: Remembering WERRC'; \u00c9ibhear Walshe, 'From Gay to Queer in Irish Studies'; Moynagh Sullivan, 'A Quare Pair: Feminist and Queer Ecologies in Irish Cultural Criticism'; Kathryn Conrad, '\"You Won't Re-route this Fruit\": Northern Ireland, \"Queer\", and a Geopolitics of Affection'; Michael Barron, 'Advocating for LGBT Youth: Seeking Social Justice in a Culture of Individual Rights'.","creator":["Michael O'Rourke","Aideen Quilty","Michael Barron","BeLonG To","Kathryn Conrad","\u00c9ibhear Walshe","Moynagh Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24576810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e459fd0-6293-32cd-bf54-b9f2990df431"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24576810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Roundtable: Are We Queer Yet?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24576810","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":19334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the spoken interactions of a group of British construction workers to discover whether it is possible to identify a distinctive 'builders' discourse'. Given that builders work for a mostly all-male profession (Curjao, 2006), we ask whether the ways in which male builders converse with each other while 'on the job' can be held in any way responsible for the under-representation of women within this major occupational sector in the UK. This article reports on a case study of the conversations of three white, working-class, male builders, which took place while travelling in a truck between different building sites. This forms part of a larger ethnographic study of builders' discourse in different work locations. The analysis shows that male builders are highly collaborative in constructing narratives of in-group and out-group identities (Duszak, 2002; Tajfel, 1978). Various other male groups are demonized in these conversations: Polish immigrant builders, rude clients and rival builders. However, there is almost no reference to women. The article concludes that women are viewed as so unthreatening to male ascendancy in the building industry that they do not even feature within the 'out-group'.","creator":["JUDITH BAXTER","KIERAN WALLACE"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b23e2491-e106-3358-b596-e6f272f30ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Outside in-group and out-group identities? Constructing male solidarity and female exclusion in UK builders' talk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889271","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo analisa o trabalho de Nagao Nishikawa, um importante pensador social japon\u00eas cuja \"teoria do estado-na\u00e7\u00e3o\" (kokuminkokkaron) tem exercido grande influ\u00eancia nos debates recentes sobre identidade e cultura no Jap\u00e3o. A interpreta\u00e7\u00e3o de Nishikawa se concentra no processo de forma\u00e7\u00e3o do estado-na\u00e7\u00e3o japon\u00eas a partir do per\u00edodo Meiji (1868-1912) e se insere numa corrente cr\u00edtica de pensamento social contempor\u00e2neo que tem procurado questionar vis\u00f5es tradicionais sobre o Jap\u00e3o enquanto sociedade coesa e homog\u00eanea. O argumento de Nishikawa enfatiza, ao contr\u00e1rio, os conflitos que permeiam as pr\u00e1ticas culturais no Jap\u00e3o. Al\u00e9m disso, aponta para a necessidade de pensar o Jap\u00e3o n\u00e3o como unidade isolada, mas como parte de um sistema mais amplo em que as rela\u00e7\u00f5es entre a sociedade japonesa e as demais regi\u00f5es do mundo revelam uma realidade mais complexa. No entanto, ao mesmo tempo em que abre espa\u00e7o para novas perspectivas, essa interpreta\u00e7\u00e3o tem tamb\u00e9m dificuldades e limita\u00e7\u00f5es importantes, especialmente com rela\u00e7\u00e3o a certas implica\u00e7\u00f5es normativas controversas, que ser\u00e3o tamb\u00e9m discutidas. In this paper I discuss the work of Nagao Nishikawa, an important Japanese social theorist whose \"theory of the nation-state\" (kokuminkokkaron) has greatly influenced recent debates on identity and culture in Japan. Nishikawa's interpretation focuses on nation-state formation in Japan since the Meiji Period (1868-1912) and it follows a more general line of contemporary social thought that has tried to question traditional views of Japan as a homogeneous society. In contrast, Nishikawa's argument stresses the conflicts that are pervasive in cultural practices in Japan. Moreover, he points to the need to think of Japan not as an isolated unit, but rather as part of a wider system in which the relations between Japanese society and the rest of the world play a crucial role in revealing a more complex reality. However, despite allowing for illuminating new perspectives, this interpretation also has its own difficulties and limitations, especially in regard to its normative consequences, which remain controversial. I conclude this article with a discussion of some of these issues.","creator":["Ernani ODA"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01013505"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297316707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ad49269-4665-3082-b7d0-d114dee786b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26939944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revistaletras"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Letras","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"UNESP Universidade Estadual Paulista Julio de Mesquita Filho","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ESTADO-NA\u00c7\u00c3O E IDENTIDADE NO JAP\u00c3O","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939944","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El art\u00edculo presenta los elementos constitutivos de una aproximaci\u00f3n interpretativa a las Ciencias Sociales. Empieza explicando por qu\u00e9 los marcos interpretativos constituyen un tamiz ineludible de nuestra apropiaci\u00f3n cognitiva del mundo que nos rodea, y c\u00f3mo las met\u00e1foras (entendidas como una forma particular de adquirir conocimientos) pueden proveer los principios que los organizan. Explica adem\u00e1s el sentido en el cual la interacci\u00f3n social constituye un proceso de creaci\u00f3n de significados, y por qu\u00e9 la interpretaci\u00f3n de esos significados debe ser el prop\u00f3sito fundamental de las Ciencias Sociales. \/\/\/ The article presents the constituent elements of an interpretive approach to Social Sciences. It begins by explaining why interpretive frames constitute an inevitable filter for our cognitive appropriation of the world that surrounds us and how metaphors (understood as a particular way of acquiring knowledge) can provide the principles that organize them. It also explains the way in which social interaction constitutes a process of creating meaning and why the interpretation of these meanings should constitute the fundamental purpose of Social Sciences.","creator":["Farid Kahhat"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3541570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01882503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73082733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236992"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3541570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revimexisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Mexicana de Sociolog\u00eda","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales de la Universidad Nacional Aut\u00f3noma de M\u00e9xico","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Elementos de una aproximaci\u00f3n interpretativa a las Ciencias Sociales (Elements of an Interpretive Approach to Social Sciences)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3541570","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":11183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay questions claims by psychoanalyst Joan Riviere (\"Womanliness as Masquerade\"), sociologist James Scott (Domination and the Arts of Resistance) and gender theorist Judith Butler (Gender Trouble) regarding the political potential of masquerade by using the 1913 National American Woman's Suffrage Association's parade and pageant in Washington as a case study. While the parade defied the popular \"Angel in the House\" role by insisting on women's active participation in the public sphere, the pageant that followed retreated to more traditional representations of women as silent, static icons of \"Liberty,\" \"Justice,\" and \"Hope\" as if to mask the more radical claims of the parade. While positive press coverage suggests that the demonstration succeeded in \"averting ... retribution\" feared from opponents to woman suffrage, press reports also repressed the political goals of the demonstration, thereby inviting spectators who did not recognize the rhetoric of masquerade to feel comfortable in their beliefs in the prevailing gender ideology.","creator":["Mary Chapman"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63fccf1b-08d6-32d6-a129-b71d4e5a0fc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women and Masquerade in the 1913 Suffrage Demonstration in Washington","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157477","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6577,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[194563,194669],[438602,438780]],"Locations in B":[[1450,1556],[4243,4421]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Hill Collins","Lionel A. Maldonado","Dana Y. Takagi","Barrie Thorne","Lynn Weber","Howard Winant"],"datePublished":"1995-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28db1d6e-8057-3d3c-bb96-855d94d115ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189785","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7472,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441193,441417]],"Locations in B":[[23370,23594]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Craft-Fairchild"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cf5219b-a8ab-3dfc-9df0-cd5ca1c2c3a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Same Person...Just a Different Sex\": Sally Potter's Construction of Gender in \"Orlando\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906451","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":11438,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[61201,61310]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paula Wolfe"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23018018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4355de38-d05e-3b09-b831-36bbc7f1751e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23018018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Preservice Teachers Planning for Critical Literacy Teaching","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23018018","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Lennox"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce3aad7e-0f84-3d8d-8bd6-f52f4ae3fde0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23976163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"574","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-574","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Feminismus und German Studies in den USA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976163","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6908,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472840,472921]],"Locations in B":[[32379,32459]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Kotsko"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/525565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66f0fc87-025f-3b4a-a31c-ede77619033e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/525565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Failed Divine Performative: Reading Judith Butler\u2019s Critique of Theology with Anselm\u2019s On the Fall <\/em>of the Devil<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/525565","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":7352,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[133344,133588],[134267,134424],[209218,209426],[209930,210093],[210219,210348],[212119,212214],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[3994,4238],[4261,4428],[5128,5334],[5378,5541],[5593,5722],[6595,6695],[41597,41666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly Bohman-Kalaja"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/shaw.30.1.0108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07415842"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43626814"},{"name":"lccn","value":"214387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad0a6110-e921-32ca-a62f-57656206b1ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/shaw.30.1.0108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shaw"}],"isPartOf":"Shaw","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"UNDOING IDENTITIES IN TWO<\/em> IRISH SHAW PLAYS:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/shaw.30.1.0108","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":23008,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[411512,411824]],"Locations in B":[[3395,3705]],"subTitle":"JOHN BULL\u2019S OTHER ISLAND AND PYGMALION"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["V. SPIKE PETERSON"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45288848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10461868"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9ceaa1f-adee-3c06-9d00-1e04866b7db1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45288848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fletcherforum"}],"isPartOf":"The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45288848","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5960,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475965,476119]],"Locations in B":[[23537,23936]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mainstream hip hop videos have long been known for their images of scantily clad women, extreme materialism, and misogynist and homophobic lyrics. In this article I focus on how rapper 50 Cent's masculinity is constructed and expressed through music, lyrics and images in his video 'Candy Shop' from 2005. This is a classically modelled hip hop video, replete with markers of hypermasculinity: fancy cars, 'bling', and lots of beautiful, sexually available women. Several scholars have discussed how women are exploited in videos like this and reduced to props for the male star. However, few have explored how this macho masculinity is constructed. Through a close reading of this video, using socio-musicology and audiovisual analysis as my approach, I propose that the macho masculinity presented here is threatened when the male body is on display, but 50 Cent reassures himself (and his audience) through selective framing, involving both other performers and the music.","creator":["MARITA B. DJUPVIK"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20d0bd1e-29ad-3a3d-91c4-bee89594fdd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24736805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Welcome to the candy shop! Conflicting representations of black masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736805","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay reads Sacher-Masoch's narrative Venus im Pelz as an oppositional parody of the German Bildungsroman in which male, female, Slavic, Black, and \"Greek\" (i.e., \"German\") coordinates collapse into each other under the sign of \"Jewish\" representational and gender fluidity\u2014that is, a fluidity that was widely coded in Masoch's day as Jewish. The resulting figure, a Greek-Jewish composite of the Austro-Hungarian Empire's dominant and subaltern ethnicities, physically materializes a new Bild (image) and Bildung (formation, education) in which opposites occupy the same bodily space. The novella, written just before the consolidation of Austria's rival, the Prussian-dominated German Reich, destabilizes topoi of identity formation that were increasingly associated with the colonizing power of a Prussian-German monoculture. By mixing and mimicking the overdetermined signifying fields of \"Jewishness\" and Bildung, Venus fractures strategies of Germanic self-fashioning and the anti-Semitic discourses frequently deployed in that self-fashioning, yet simultaneously articulates Masoch's own \"borderland\" colonial ambivalence.","creator":["Joseph Metz"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2165669X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"685ec44d-beb2-34c2-a89d-b2d5a28307cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43947342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaustrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Austrian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sacher-Masoch and the Jewish Bildungsroman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947342","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From the 1950s through the 1990s, the trope of performance was elaborated across a range of academic disciplines, providing a platform for comparing the construction of identities through mimetic embodiment in ritual, work, and everyday life. Today, as animation is being remediated through digital media, both scholars and participants in various types of online communities are beginning to use animation as a trope for human action on\/in the world. This essay attempts to bring together the insights of recent scholarship in various disciplines in order to outline a general animation model, first presenting some of the characteristics of animation that allow it to draw connections between social, technological, and psychic structures, and then examining some of the ways that the models of animation and performance interact in contemporary subcultural practices.","creator":["Teri Silvio"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c8a99d5-df11-3636-aefb-90048e710e07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"422","pagination":"pp. 422-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Animation: The New Performance?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104272","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alana Reid"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"454d7efa-0d00-3fc8-9564-2a16b98aae41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23022102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Erotic Union of Marxist and Feminist Thought in Gioconda Belli's \"La mujer habitada\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022102","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Elizabeth Spelman has famously argued against gender realism (the view that women have some feature in common that makes them women). By and large, feminist philosophers have embraced Spelman's arguments and deemed gender realist positions counterproductive. To the contrary, Mikkola shows that Spelman's arguments do not in actual fact give good reason to reject gender realism in general. She then suggests a way to understand gender realism that does not have the adverse consequences feminist philosophers commonly think gender realist positions have.","creator":["Mari Mikkola"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18079751-8c78-3834-9af5-838cd57e6683"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Elizabeth Spelman, Gender Realism, and Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640023","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The author examines the experiences of gay and bisexual college males through a subcultural framework. The article's goal is to contextualize the diversity of gay and bisexual male expression and move away from monolithic analyses of gay student identity based on \"homosexual\" developmental models.","creator":["Robert A. Rhoads"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2960012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aea77523-611f-39d7-81f9-43a7ca2a4985"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2960012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A Subcultural Study of Gay and Bisexual College Males: Resisting Developmental Inclinations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2960012","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":10500,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[58143,58226]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses psychoanalytic object relations theory to construct a way to understand why interviews in IR research\u2014viewed here as encounters between strangers\u2014can be felt as \u201ccatastrophic.\u201d The theory supports critical theoretical approaches that suggest that the world is structured through self\u2013other relations and argues that encounters with \u201cothers\u201d are unsettling because they can undermine the ways we constitute ourselves in relation to the wider world. Yet such challenges are inevitable if research is to challenge existing object constructions and the power relations that attend them. The article illustrates this argument with a detailed discussion of research interviews conducted in Zimbabwe.","creator":["Julia Gallagher"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26393454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15283577"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43371478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211506"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9376f2b-0590-399a-8207-7376ee6f32c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26393454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudpers"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interviews as Catastrophic Encounters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26393454","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10934,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503621,503693]],"Locations in B":[[65638,65710]],"subTitle":"An Object Relations Methodology for IR Research"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lucy Walker"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30163672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30163672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30163672","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":4166,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25548,25707]],"Locations in B":[[6549,6708]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article examines representations of same-sex desire in recent francophone postcolonial literature written by gay and lesbian authors from the Maghreb, where long-established traditions pertaining to gender and sexuality are brought into contact with new forms of gender and sexual difference, resulting from the inflection of globally circulating discourses and embodiments of queerness in Africa and the experience of emigration and settlement by the writers concerned in France. The paper analyzes how Rachid O., Abdellah Ta\u00efa, and Nina Bouraoui foreground translation and narrative reflexivity around incommensurable spaces of queerness in order to index their negotiations of multiple languages, histories, cultures, and audiences. By writing in French, these writers are not merely mimicking the language of their former colonizers, but inflecting a European language with vocabularies and turns of phrase indigenous to North African cultures, thus creating new possibilities of meaning and expression to name their lived experience of sexual alterity\u2014a form of (queer) translational praxis that destabilizes received gender\/sexual categories both within the Maghreb and in Europe.","creator":["William J. Spurlin"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.2.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f933274e-383d-3ca2-ade8-56179b5aafbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.2.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contested Borders: Cultural Translation and Queer Politics in Contemporary Francophone Writing from the Maghreb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.2.07","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9709,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75237,75322]],"Locations in B":[[38611,38699]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kumiko Murata"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169439","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rob Conkie"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"595d2ebd-a67a-39af-907f-70624d18d5b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26347778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"566","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-566","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shakespeare Aftershocks: Shylock","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347778","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on the practice of sodomy, between the sixteenth and seventeenth century, in the rural context of the diocese of Monreale, a large territory in the west of Sicily under the jurisdiction of a bishop. The study of a number of cases prosecuted by the bishop's court of Monreale questions the traditional assumption of a severe repression on this crime in the early modern times, which was based on sources drawn from the urban context. Notwithstanding the stiff condemnation of the canon and state law, in the villages and in the countryside of Sicily sodomy remained a relatively tolerated behaviour, which became sanctioned by the community and the court once it overcame the boundaries of what the community considered licit. Sodomy existed inscribed within the social relations of an agricultural and pastoral economy and therefore cannot be equated to the much recent category of homosexuality. The article also compares the narration of sodomy in court with that of rape, finding that in the former the theological definition of crime \u00abcontra natura\u00bb required a detailed investigation of the physical circumstance of the act, which was not necessary in the case of rape, important mainly for its consequences on the woman's honour.","creator":["Nicola Pizzolato"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43779547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03016307"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e840b2b3-bd58-3015-94b9-c348b62d894d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43779547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quadernistorici"}],"isPartOf":"Quaderni storici","issueNumber":"122 (2)","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Societ\u00e0 editrice Il Mulino S.p.A.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00abLO DIAVOLO MI INGANNAO\u00bb LA SODOMIA NELLE CAMPAGNE SICILIANE (1572-1664)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43779547","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":14988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephany Slaughter"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83382b81-9589-347f-993b-d43dbe85c843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering the Memory of the Mexican Revolution: Cabaret as a Space for Contesting National Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021843","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8593,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[434702,435259],[435902,436102]],"Locations in B":[[25925,26482],[26611,26811]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane E. Hindman"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1350111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ebdb192-4c3f-3d0e-b095-57b20b92608c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1350111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Making Writing Matter: Using \"The Personal\" to Recover[y] an Essential[ist] Tension in Academic Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1350111","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":10376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Moritz Renner"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43203035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01792830"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc184be0-382d-384c-a557-b036eaaaac4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43203035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kritviergeserech"}],"isPartOf":"Kritische Vierteljahresschrift f\u00fcr Gesetzgebung und Rechtswissenschaft (KritV)","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Paradigmen des Antidiskriminierungsrechts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43203035","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":3177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article links feminist political ecology with the academic debate about commoning by focusing on the gendered distribution of common pool resources, in particular land and water. The research is set in the context of a coastal land reclamation project in Egypt\u2019s Nile Delta, in a region where conflicts over resources such as arable land and fresh water are intensifying. Drawing on recent literature on commoning, we analyse the conditions under which different groups of resource users are constrained or enabled to act together. The article presents three case studies of women who represent different groups using land and water resources along the same irrigation canal. Through the concepts of intersectionality, performativity, and gendered subjectivity, this article explores how these women negotiate access to land and water resources to sustain viable livelihoods. The case studies unpack how the intersection of gender, class, culture, and place produces gendered subject positions in everyday resource access, and how this intersectionality either facilitates or constrains commoning. We argue that commoning practices are culturally and spatially specific and shaped by pre-existing resource access. Such access is often unequally structured along categories of class and gender in land reclamation and irrigation projects.","creator":["Edwin Rap","Martina Jaskolski"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632714","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"175299510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"478e8b14-8eb2-30f3-b6e3-f7151331d904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcomm"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Commons","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"International Journal of the Commons","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The lives of women in a land reclamation project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632714","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"gender, class, culture and place in Egyptian land and water management"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonia Ryang"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0a42abe-3082-3c50-a251-3a412cf923f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"770","pageStart":"747","pagination":"pp. 747-770","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Thought & Commentary: A Note on Transnational Consanguinity, or, Kinship in the Age of Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150856","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":10646,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"008bd3eb-1f6e-3bf3-a4cc-64587eb252f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859520","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses the reception and impact of Berger and Luckmann's The Social Construction of Reality (SCR). The article will, first, address Berger and Luckmann themselves and their approach to the book (see section 1). In the next part, we will sketch the diffusion of the basic concept of the book (see section 2a). Then we want to show that the reception exhibits a particular open form, which allowed it to disperse into extremely different disciplines not only of the social sciences and the humanities (see section 2b). It is the disciplinary distance in particular that detaches the diffusion of the concept from reference to the book (see section 3). In the next part, we can see that this detachment leads to the variation of approaches to social construction (see section 4). Particularly, it is the misidentification with constructivism (see section 5) that leads to misunderstandings, which will then be clarified in contrast to our reconsideration of the basic thesis of SCR (see section 6). The conclusion (section 7) will state that Berger and Luckmann's concept therefore constitutes the common denominator of social constructivist approaches.","creator":["Hubert Knoblauch","Ren\u00e9 Wilke"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e68439cf-b68b-387a-86fa-126781c57ec2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Common Denominator: The Reception and Impact of Berger and Luckmann's \"The Social Construction of Reality\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757471","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In revisiting Michael Murphy's critique of the cultural test adopted by the Supreme Court of Canada to interpret Aboriginal rights, this article takes up the suggestion that the works of Charles Taylor and Will Kymlicka support an inherent understanding of Aboriginal rights. An assessment of the jurisprudence suggests that the Court's approach reflects, rather than contradicts, Taylor's and Kymlicka's rights frameworks, which invoke the same discourse of culture and identity embraced by the Court. The article also contends that the role played by culture in Canada's Aboriginal rights jurisprudence extends well beyond the cultural rationale adopted by the Court. \/\/\/ En revisitant la critique de Michael Murphy sur l'examen culturel adopt\u00e9 par la Court Supr\u00eame du Canada dans l'interpr\u00e9tation des droits indig\u00e8nes, cet article adopte la suggestion que les travaux de Charles Taylor et Kymlicka supportent une d\u00e9finition inh\u00e9rente des droits indig\u00e8nes. Une \u00e9valuation de la jurisprudence sugg\u00e8re que la position de la cour refl\u00e8te, plut\u00f4t que contredit, l'approche des droits mise en avant par Taylor et Kymlicka. Celle-ci, en effet accepte le m\u00eame discours culturel et identitaire que la court. L'article affirme \u00e9galement que le r\u00f4le jou\u00e9 par la culture dans la jurisprudence Canadienne sur les droits indig\u00e8nes se prolonge bien au del\u00e0 du raisonnement culturel adopt\u00e9 par la court.","creator":["Caroline Dick"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27754539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49251980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a383d651-a8d7-31c1-8232-7ac87487911b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27754539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"979","pageStart":"957","pagination":"pp. 957-979","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Culture and the Courts\" Revisited: Group-Rights Scholarship and the Evolution of s.35(1)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27754539","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10714,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[63348,63482]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"To be sure, The Gambia is a male-dominated society. Yet male dominion should not be taken for granted whether in the public arena or in the intimate sphere of family and gender relations. Both its negotiated nature, and the plurality of models on which the constructions and experiences of masculinity are based, are particularly evident when we take into account the variable of age. This essay is prompted, by the life-trajectories and the ordinary strategies of three elderly Gambian men, to discuss the transition from a phase of strong masculinity to a state of submissive dependence on their spouses in the later part of life. This submission not only shifted gender relations within the household, but also undermined social presence out of it. Crucial to this argument is that only a robust ethnographic approach focusing on apparently insignificant and intimate details has the potential to shed light onto the broader predicaments of contemporary African masculinities. Incontestablement, la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 gambienne est domin\u00e9e par les hommes. Toutefois, la domination masculine ne doit pas \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme allant de soi, ni dans la sph\u00e8re publique, ni dans l'intimit\u00e9 des relations familiales ou de genre. Sa nature n\u00e9goci\u00e9e, autant que la pluralit\u00e9 des mod\u00e8les qui fondent les constructions et les exp\u00e9riences de la masculinit\u00e9, apparaissent de mani\u00e8re particuli\u00e8rement \u00e9vidente si l'on prend en consid\u00e9ration la variable de l'\u00e2ge. Cet article s'appuie sur les trajectoires de vie et les strat\u00e9gies ordinaires de trois hommes gambiens \u00e2g\u00e9s, dans le but d'\u00e9clairer la transition entre une phase de masculinit\u00e9 puissante et un \u00e9tat de d\u00e9pendance et de soumission \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des \u00e9pouses au cours de la derni\u00e8re partie de la vie. Cet \u00e9tat de soumission non seulement transforme les relations de genre \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de la maison, mais aussi sape la pr\u00e9sence sociale \u00e0 l'ext\u00e9rieur. Ce texte soutient l'id\u00e9e que seule une ethnographie minutieuse focalis\u00e9e sur des d\u00e9tails insignifiants et intimes permet de mettre au jour la situation plus g\u00e9n\u00e9rale des masculinit\u00e9s contemporaines en Afrique.","creator":["Alice Bellagamba"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174145640"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f20d467-03d4-3268-bcd1-a4fe07385736"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"209\/210","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"My Elderly Friends of The Gambia: Masculinity and Social Presence in the Later Part of Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475027","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rapidly increasing numbers of women entered the field of real estate brokerage from the 1930s through the 1950s. \"Rosie the Realtor\" took advantage of the postwar building boom to create an expanding career niche, capturing residential brokerage as a female domain. In the process, she stretched gendered boundaries in the masculine world of brokerage to the breaking point. Employing a complex and internally antagonistic mix of liberal feminist and conservative ideologies, female realtors created their own professional space, expanding career opportunities for women at the same time that their economic and political practices reinforced the constraints of domesticity.","creator":["JEFFREY M. HORNSTEIN"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14672227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47860649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-253338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57f2092d-27d0-367a-9752-5c6c5b250f89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23699690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"entesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Enterprise & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Rosie the Realtor\" and the Re-Gendering of Real Estate Brokerage, 1930\u20141960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699690","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":14716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Kawaii, an adjective meaning 'cute', 'adorable', and 'lovable', is an important aspect of Japanese material culture and a key affect word used to describe things that are small, delicate, and immature. While \"cuteness\" has been widely discussed in relation to Japanese society and psychology and the globalization of Japanese culture, there has been little analysis of the word kawaii in interaction. This article explores the use of kawaii in interaction in a Japanese preschool. In particular, it analyzes ways teachers use multimodal resources, including talk, embodied actions, material objects, and participation frameworks, in making assessments of things in the social world and in \"glossing\" children's actions as thoughts and feelings, and it examines children's emerging use of kawaii with teachers and peers. The findings shed light on ways everyday communicative practices shape children's understandings and use of language in relation to affect, gender, and relationships in preschool.","creator":["Matthew Burdelski","Koji Mitsuhashi"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29065872-3137-306c-944f-c797583fdfa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20622704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"\"She Thinks You're Kawaii\": Socializing Affect, Gender, and Relationships in a Japanese Preschool","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622704","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Samuel A. Chambers"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f04fa482-35f3-301d-91c1-ac45f0dfadd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"54","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ghostly Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354662","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[66694,66800]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that analysis of metapoetics centered on the poet, the seer Amphiaraus, and Pluto can fruitfully be related to a paradigm of Roman military manhood. The paper engages recent scholarship on intertextuality and gender (as well as on the \"Thebaid\"). \/\/\/ Cet article soutient que l'analyse de la m\u00e9tapo\u00e9tique centr\u00e9e sur le po\u00e8te, le proph\u00e8te Amphiaraus, et sur Pluton peut avec profit \u00eatre mis en parall\u00e8le avec un mod\u00e8le militaire romain de la masculinit\u00e9. L'article utilise les recherches r\u00e9centes sur l'intertextualit\u00e9 et sur les genres (de m\u00eame que sur la \"Th\u00e9ba\u00efde\").","creator":["Mark Masterson"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cf13591-d1a5-3ca0-986e-c059b2e3602b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phoenix"}],"isPartOf":"Phoenix","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Classical Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Statius' \"Thebaid\" and the Realization of Roman Manhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067778","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":13363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[458184,458321]],"Locations in B":[[61543,61681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo ofrece un an\u00e1lisis jur\u00eddico-constitucional del emergente derecho al reconocimiento de la identidad de g\u00e9nero de las personas trans y muestra c\u00f3mo tal derecho se ha ido fraguando a trav\u00e9s del equilibrio entre derechos y principios del constitucionalismo moderno. Tomando como referencia las jurisdicciones de Italia, India, Colombia, y B\u00e9lgica (jurisdicciones en las que la jurisprudencia constitucional ha jugado un rol central en la batalla por el reconocimiento del derecho en cuesti\u00f3n), el art\u00edculo ilustra la variedad de su alcance y establece una taxonom\u00eda que distingue entre modelos de categorizaci\u00f3n por asignaci\u00f3n y electivos, binarios y no binarios, y fluidos y no fluidos. El art\u00edculo muestra c\u00f3mo el proceso de creaci\u00f3n y control de las categor\u00edas de g\u00e9nero sigue jugando un rol central a\u00fan en aquellos sistemas que aceptan la posibilidad de la reasignaci\u00f3n de sexo\/g\u00e9nero. The article provides a constitutional analysis of the emerging constitutional right to gender recognition of trans people. It shows that the right to gender recognition has been shaped by the balancing of opposing rights and principles inscribed in modern constitutionalism. Focusing on four jurisdictions (Italy, India, Colombia and Belgium) in which constitutional case law has significantly shaped the battle for legal recognition, the article shows the variety of its reach and establishes a taxonomy of classificatory regimes that differentiates between ascriptive and elective; binary\/non-binary and fluid versus non-fluid models of categorization. The article shows how, the process of creating and policing gender boundaries continues to play a central role even in those jurisdictions that have accepted sex reassignment.","creator":["RUTH RUBIO MAR\u00cdN","STEFANO OSELLA"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02115743"},{"name":"oclc","value":"166882474"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf23c9ce-1b9c-396b-9027-4eafd7fdc732"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviespaderecons"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Espa\u00f1ola de Derecho Constitucional","issueNumber":"118","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Pol\u00edticos y Constitucionales","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"EL NUEVO DERECHO CONSTITUCIONAL A LA IDENTIDAD DE G\u00c9NERO - The New Constitutional Right to Gender Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976501","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"ENTRE LA LIBERTAD DE ELECCI\u00d3N, EL INCREMENTO DE CATEGOR\u00cdAS Y LA SUBJETIVIDAD Y FLUIDEZ DE SUS CONTENIDOS. UN AN\u00c1LISIS DESDE EL DERECHO COMPARADO"} +{"abstract":"Political agency is vital to the formulation of a feminist politics so feminists have attempted to create a subject that eschews the sexism of the Cartesian subject while at the same time retaining agency. This paper examines some of the principal feminist attempts to reconstitute the subject along these lines. It assesses the success of these attempts in light of the question of whether the subject is a necessary component of feminist theory and practice.","creator":["Susan Hekman"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"179eca77-11cb-32aa-96da-002f72969784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reconstituting the Subject: Feminism, Modernism, and Postmodernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810095","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9098,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461319,461440]],"Locations in B":[[49063,49184]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Fast"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3052664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4724cd2d-eac5-3b1a-bb0b-651b2f3d5df7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3052664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rethinking Issues of Gender and Sexuality in Led Zeppelin: A Woman's View of Pleasure and Power in Hard Rock","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3052664","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":25986,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[375305,375424],[375561,375661]],"Locations in B":[[33923,34045],[34037,34135]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Broadly accepting of the greater tolerance and visibility of gay men in artistic circles in interwar London, Wyndham Lewis nonetheless frequently wrote of this phenomenon with misgivings, even anxiety. Judith Butler's suggestion that such anxiety may be a form of melancholia\u2014blocked mourning for the loss of a love that cannot be acknowledged \u2014 and Lewis's estrangement at an early age from his father may together account for his feelings about male homosexuality. His polemical and critical works of the interwar period (The Art of Being Ruled, The Doom of Youth, The Lion and the Fox) link homosexuality with violence against fathers, and his early play Enemy of the Stars can be read as an erotically-inflected agon between a father and a son.","creator":["Paul Scott Stanfield"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.40.3.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36c5b034-d1bb-36f1-8c01-789b7119cfe5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.40.3.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Betrayed Father: Wyndham Lewis, Homosexuality, and Enemy of the Stars<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.40.3.07","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9432,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[246907,247058]],"Locations in B":[[8732,8883]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Brooks"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41956954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41956954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Homosexuality, Homosociality, and Gender Blending in Australian Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41956954","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":4663,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103187,103835]],"Locations in B":[[25694,26340]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fleur Johns"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11a1b36c-6424-3c08-87d3-6c3e37f3f860"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27654673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawcontprob"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Contemporary Problems","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Party Autonomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654673","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":15719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article examine en trois phases les tentatives des Anglais d'arr\u00eater la mutilation g\u00e9nitale dans le nord du Soudan colonial. La premi\u00e8re phase est une p\u00e9riode initiale de r\u00e9forme de l'obst\u00e9trique qui s'est alors impliqu\u00e9e dans les pratiques locales pour entra\u00eener des changements; la deuxi\u00e8me durant laquelle les pratiques locales ont \u00e9t\u00e9 supprim\u00e9es et une \u00e9ducation de style occidental a \u00e9t\u00e9 appliqu\u00e9e dans le but de changer les sensibilit\u00e9s soudanaises par rapport aux sexes. La phase finale a vu la mise en application de mesures l\u00e9gales destin\u00e9es \u00e0 restreindre la s\u00e9v\u00e9rit\u00e9 dela coutume. Ces m\u00e9thodes ont chacune eu des r\u00e9sultats contradictoires d\u00fbs en grande partie \u00e0 une incompatibilit\u00e9 entre les fa\u00e7ons anglaises et soudanaises de concevoir le moi. \/\/\/ This article examines British attempts to stop female genital cutting in colonial northern Sudan through three phases: an initial period of midwifery reform which engaged with local practice in order to bring about change-, a period in which local practice was suppressed and west- em-style education was deployed in an effort to reshape Sudanese gender sensibilities; and a final phase that saw the enactment of legal measures to curtail the severity of the custom. I suggest that each of these methods produced contradictory results that owed much to an incompatibility between British and Sudanese concepts of self.","creator":["Janice Boddy"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfba1190-1a0c-3dd9-bd70-95b4e1de5e1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40380097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Clash of Selves: Gender, Personhood, and Human Rights Discourse in Colonial Sudan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380097","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ali Rattansi"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42855554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3887c13c-53ba-37b4-8ddc-c8a60dc0d6be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42855554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"FORGET POSTMODERNISM? NOTES FROM DE BUNKER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42855554","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cathy Birkenstein"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd448763-807e-3108-9fc4-0910d2714e90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"We Got the Wrong Gal: Rethinking the \"Bad\" Academic Writing of Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653028","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":7140,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[43681,43933],[48212,48614],[49109,49311],[58180,58493]],"Locations in B":[[15582,15833],[19739,20141],[20345,20547],[21135,21448]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberta Tabanelli"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24016291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","issueNumber":null,"language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Il post-umano (femmineo) di Simona Vinci","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016291","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4516,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[373169,373298]],"Locations in B":[[19529,19661]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The transnational and global flows of people, ideas and capital across borders inescapably shape and develop people's gendered and sexual meanings, processes and identities. Drawing on our extended fieldwork, including interviews and participant observation in different social spaces, we seek to examine the negotiation and contestation of gendered and sexual identities among Zimbabwean migrants in Britain. Within transnational diaspora communities, women's bodies and their sexualities are not only symbols of homeland traditions, and cultural markers that distinguish migrants from the indigenous population, they are also sites of ideological and material struggles between different social actors. As Zimbabwean patriarchal traditions compete with liberal and egalitarian values in Britain, the diaspora becomes a site of cultural conflict. Empirical evidence suggests that, within the diaspora, sexuality has been decoupled from traditional marriage and is often expressed in non-normative sexual relationships. We illustrate how the boundaries of gendered practices and sexual behaviours deemed 'acceptable' and 'unacceptable', 'good' and 'bad' also seem to be shifting.","creator":["Moreblessing Tandeka Tinarwo","Dominic Pasura"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"887c9a1c-ce7c-3250-b149-733b627ed5cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"521","pagination":"pp. 521-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Negotiating and Contesting Gendered and Sexual Identities in the Zimbabwean Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566489","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sami Zeidan"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26211235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15210235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9d89bbc-4d98-3088-ba2a-1a7d10df856a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26211235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willintelawdisp"}],"isPartOf":"Willamette Journal of International Law and Dispute Resolution","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Willamette University College of Law","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"THE LIMITS OF QUEER THEORY IN LGBT LITIGATION AND THE INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS DISCOURSE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26211235","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9735,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62511,62701]],"Locations in B":[[11472,11662]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper questions the troubled links between norms, normality, and normalisation in the case of Shan, a young woman affected by Angelman syndrome and severely genetically disabled (absence of speech, disability, behavioural and sleep disorders). Firstly, it explains Shan's life, regulated by a classical approach to the normalisation of life (Nirje, 1969) and ethically guided by theories of care (Gilligan, 1982; Tronto, 1993; Kittay, 2011), leading to a conception of autonomy in high dependence. Secondly, it unpacks the controversy that occurred with the arrival of a medication that might \u201ccure\u201d Angelman's syndrome. Beyond analytical descriptions, the paper attempts to open the black box of Shan's body's materialities in order to show how several regulatory fictions, such as genetics and personalised care, are intertwined and correlated to different normative processes.","creator":["Nathalie Grandjean"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.4.2.2","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ace999c-ac9d-346b-bdf1-0c29d497a900"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.4.2.2"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Normalising What? About a GMO Body and Shan's Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.4.2.2","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6535,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[39566,39630]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El conflicto de Edipo sigue siendo un pivote del psicoan\u00e1lisis freudiano. En el acontecer ps\u00edquico al que hace alusi\u00f3n se establecen la diferencia, tanto a nivel de g\u00e9nero como a nivel de generaciones, as\u00ed como la ambig\u00fcedad, dos aspectos que parecen ser indispensables para la conformaci\u00f3n de la estructura psicol\u00f3gica. Sin embargo, en muchos casos, esta triangulaci\u00f3n est\u00e1 vinculada a las diferencias de g\u00e9nero y a las relaciones sociales y biol\u00f3gicas que no resisten un an\u00e1lisis desde el presente, lo que pareciera implicar un cuestionamiento de su validez y actualidad. Se exploran las posibilidades de un modelo ed\u00edpico estructural m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la heteronormatividad y de las limitaciones derivadas de las condiciones hist\u00f3ricas de su formulaci\u00f3n y recepci\u00f3n. The Oedipus conflict remains a pivot of Freudian psychoanalysis. In the psychic event referred to, the difference is established, both at the level of gender and at the level of generations, as well as ambiguity, two aspects that appear to be indispensable for the conformation of the psychological structure. However, in many cases, this triangulation is linked to gender differences and social and biological relationships that do not resist an analysis of the present, which seems to imply a question of its validity and actuality. The possibilities of a structural oedipal model beyond heteronormativity and the limitations derived from the historical conditions of its formulation and reception are explored.","creator":["Niklas Bornhauser","Ilka Quindeau"],"datePublished":"2020-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26954640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78948c43-5abd-34d6-a876-ed7d1a06efac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26954640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","issueNumber":"102","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Universidad de Chile","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ACTUALIDAD Y POSIBILIDADES DEL CONFLICTO DE EDIPO EN EL CONTEXTO DEL DEBATE EN TORNO AL BINARISMO SEXUAL. CONSIDERACIONES TRADUCTIVAS EN TORNO AL GESCHLECHT<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26954640","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba5baca1-14ce-3a0f-ad23-d318d373a1ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"S238","pageStart":"S189","pagination":"pp. S189-S238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Title Index, Books Reviewed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175021","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":23466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract There is a distinct possibility that, in the twenty-first century, Religious Studies as a discipline could come into its own. Its multidisciplinary orientation, if handled with due critical awareness as to its own former grandiose ambitions and present entanglements, could provide insight into the various problems that beset contemporary existence. Religious Studies has been involved in a number of internal debates that have sapped its energies and prevented it from advancing theoretically in ways that would help it address these problems. In this article I survey some of the developments that have taken place in other disciplines that could be of benefit in helping Religious Studies take its place as a discipline that is relevant for the twenty-first century.","creator":["Morny Joy"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24799455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03d9c01e-6352-3b45-97bf-48b9b280452a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24799455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Method and Theory in Religious Studies:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24799455","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9935,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[63782,63853]],"subTitle":"Retrospect and Future Prospects"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Esther Ravent\u00f3s-Pons"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e953852a-d1bd-3b1b-98ae-2c3d4c234c02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27923123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ouka Lele y sus autorretratos: la ficcionalizaci\u00f3n del ego","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923123","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47000,47182]],"Locations in B":[[9762,9944]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Kazanjian"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23345512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Re-flexion: Genocide in Ruins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345512","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9611,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522874,522938]],"Locations in B":[[51235,51299]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.40.3.518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"086812d6-1110-3d9f-8896-7bc39f70b8f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.40.3.518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"518","pagination":"pp. 518-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Gender from the South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.40.3.518","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8507,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[17192,17339]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The deconstruction of gender symbolism is one of the methods and goals of contemporary feminist theory and practice -politics. The article deals with four strategies. First, there is lesbianism as a deconstructive practice which denaturalises the institutions of ' compulsory heterosexuality'. Second, there are the deconstructive approaches to the issue of sexual violence, in order to question the belief that sexual violence is the natural expression of male aggressivity and women are men's victims. A better strategy seems to be to take the violence as a discursive matter that can be redescribed. If the narrative about a successful resistance prevails over the narrative of woman as a natural victim, the aggressor's expectations can be changed. Third, there is the deconstruction of beauty discourses showing that these discourses lead women to be weak, unable to resist violence, and susceptible to mental diseases like anorexia. Fourth, there is the deconstruction of maternity discourses, associating women with maternity and seeing a woman's body as the subject of necessary control by the psychomedical sciences. They form an idea of woman's nature that is invariable and unchangeable. This notion is questioned by feminism as a serious limit on women's agency.","creator":["MARTIN FAFEJTA"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41131844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0ebdd0f-0cd4-3d59-9dcb-a6cfd218d84b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41131844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"K n\u011bkter\u00fdm strategi\u00edm feministick\u00e9 politiky: dekonstrukce rodov\u00e9\/genderov\u00e9 symboliky \/ On Some Strategies of Feminist Politics - The Deconstruction of Gender Symbolism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41131844","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":6844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laurie Fuller"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2609fe52-9701-3556-98cb-588359341484"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Chapter Five: Where's My Body and What's On It? Theoretical Twists on Notions of Race and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976123","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":11430,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[404907,405374],[433382,433476],[434702,434824]],"Locations in B":[[32083,33106],[38042,38125],[38133,38255]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A growing appreciation for the physiological dimensions of human behavorial problems is evident in Renaissance therapeutics. Both physicians and moral philosophers came to admit that passionate impulses like blasphemy and fist-fighting frequently erupted prior to conscious thought. Instead of relying exclusively on ascetic discipline and rational reflection as means to subdue undesirable emotions, post-medieval therapeutics added a number of mood-altering techniques such as music, dance, conversation, baths, and meditation on graphic images. The psychological premise of the new morality of the Renaissance was not flight from the body but respectful acceptance of its passionate interests.","creator":["Maureen Flynn"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00344338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032182"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97e8645a-d13b-30b6-9d7c-d5229eaca375"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2901748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renaquar"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"864","pagination":"pp. 864-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Taming Anger's Daughters: New Treatment for Emotional Problems in Renaissance Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901748","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":10324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Lee Johnson"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/970703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06f02bc8-4bee-38e3-b9c2-72138c201a7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/970703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Western Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"517","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-517","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Western Historical Quarterly, Utah State University","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Memory Sweet to Soldiers\": The Significance of Gender in the History of the \"American West\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/970703","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[257014,257144]],"Locations in B":[[48676,48806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay deals with the essentialism controversy concerning Luce Irigaray through looking into her strategic use of mimicry, which has not been fully addressed by her critics. The author argues that what appear to be essentialist elements in Irigaray's writings are in fact the \"sites\" where she is mimicking the phallogocentric discourse in order to uncover its essentialist and \"sexed\" nature and at the same time to resist being reabsorbed into its reductive order.","creator":["Ping Xu"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90c57771-7686-3675-a294-406625d71527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Irigaray's Mimicry and the Problem of Essentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810206","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6225,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[138078,138218],[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[2155,2311],[37502,37584]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mita Banerjee","Carmen Birkle","Wilfried Raussert"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be5e1b7-5c64-3d6e-ad1f-41ff8e013b44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158234","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":5119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Nash"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41d10383-07b6-39bf-8db2-9a739bedbb79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809989","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":2329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ilona M. Turner"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e29b7061-d698-332f-b282-f08893927098"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20439102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Sex Stereotyping per Se: Transgender Employees and Title VII","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439102","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":16244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maya De Leo"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24653811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11273070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609705995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afd7d826-9809-33b9-8664-da1238e30c3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24653811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contemporanea"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporanea","issueNumber":"4","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"702","pageStart":"696","pagination":"pp. 696-702","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Societ\u00e0 editrice Il Mulino S.p.A.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"No lesbian-free zones\"! Percorsi di storiografia lesbica per una lettura del Novecento","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24653811","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3652,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[12834,12914]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Biesecker"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40237735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dea9014-406f-3071-a216-5c999f2c529f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40237735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrhet"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Rhetoric","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Michel Foucault and the Question of Rhetoric","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40237735","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6159,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[332080,332264],[332285,332520],[513340,513629]],"Locations in B":[[23933,24117],[24138,24371],[32804,36742]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Rhiel"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e6fe86e-a381-3344-9a4b-bfe135c7e526"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072746","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The process of race-thinking has constituted a problem for African American identity formation ever since the pseudo-scientific notion of race was established in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. By approaching Bigger Thomas, the protagonist of Richard Wright's Native Son through a focus on gender and racial performativity (Butler, Ehlers, Fleetwood) and signifyin(g) (Gates), the article contributes to existing scholarship on race-thinking and subjection to racialized discourses. It argues that Bigger's identity is not only socially and culturally constructed by race-thinking but through dimensions of performativity that allow Bigger to question, contest, and reinscribe his own (African American) identity in transformative, creative ways that counter racial stereotypes fixed by the process of race-thinking. Bigger's performative signifyin(g), however, also runs the risk of reinforcing stereotypes through imitative practices, which limits the usefulness of performative signifyin(g) as a subversive practice.","creator":["Sebastian M\u00fcller"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45340995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33d9d5d2-d79e-37a2-a39e-d19d1034cd37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45340995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bigger('s) Agency: Performative Signifyin(g) and African American Identity in Richard Wright's \"Native Son\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45340995","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":7063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary R. Hicks"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6996c190-f3fb-3ab5-8afc-a2a2ec26eee4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Religion and Remedies Reunited: Rethinking Christian Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002503","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":16844,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[510986,511136]],"Locations in B":[[7533,7683]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Retracing my own research experience in creating a sociological narrative about a famous industrial engineer and mother, I describe how I began to question modernist images of self, interests, and power. As I reflected on how best to characterize Gilbreth's management of women, I began to see that my notion of how to write critical, historical biography rested heavily on a binary, modernist conceptual foundation. My research experience rocked this foundation by convincing me that we should see selves as multiple and interests as malleable, and that we should broaden our conception of power to include disciplinary power which circulates through people rather than belonging to them. The paper concludes by affirming the merits of new ways of writing about people that acknowledge their multiple selves without sacrificing the political strength of modernist language.","creator":["Laurel D. Graham"],"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6440c43-aa40-35ee-8205-26e1a643a967"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"643","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Biography without Subjects and Objects: An Encounter with Dr. Lillian Moller Gilbreth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121522","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12928,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[45455,45852]],"Locations in B":[[52484,52879]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo presenta la teatralidad en la poes\u00eda de Enrique Lihn como forma de articular lo colectivo y lo pol\u00edtico en el espacio urbano y el espect\u00e1culo medi\u00e1tico. Tres momentos se presentan. Primero, el mendigo como espect\u00e1culo urbano de la pobreza. Segundo, el travesti como sujeto en donde las miradas se cruzan. Por \u00faltimo, la figura de la televisi\u00f3n y la tortura como dobles opuestos de visibilidad e invisibilidad medi\u00e1tica e importancia pol\u00edtica. This article focuses on theatricality in Enrique Lihn's poetry as a way of articulating the collective, the urban, and the media spectacle in three moments of expression. Firstly, the beggar as urban spectacle of poverty. Secondly, the transvestite as a subject upon whom gazes intersect. Finally, the figures of television and torture as opposed in terms of media and political influence, visibility and invisibility.","creator":["Mat\u00edas Ayala"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41756615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fab9cd6-d458-362d-9fb1-5f6606a00213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41756615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","issueNumber":"82","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Universidad de Chile","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"EL MENDIGO, EL TRAVESTI, LA TELEVISI\u00d3N. TEATRALIDAD URBANA Y ESPECT\u00c1CULO EN LA POES\u00cdA DE ENRIQUE LIHN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41756615","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bigenderism maintains there are only two genders, which correspond with the two sexes, male and female. Basic bigenderism requires that legal documents and public institutions designate a single invariant gender (that is, sex). Strict bigenderism applies these categories in a social context that stigmatizes \"imperfect\" men and women who do not reach ideals set by the bigenderist schema. I discuss these concepts and their implications, present three models that successively weaken bigenderist assumptions, and argue for the most radical of the three.","creator":["Miqqi Alicia Gilbert"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0187e182-da00-31a0-bf94-b8ae1a3195df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Defeating Bigenderism: Changing Gender Assumptions in the Twenty-First Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618166","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9034,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[100125,100252]],"Locations in B":[[2021,2147]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Megan Ammirati"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c7d8ff5-66fb-326a-a3da-0948971d9a64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24886567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hong Shen and the \"Natural Death\" of Female Impersonation: Rethinking the History of Gender-Appropriate Performance in \"Huaju\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886567","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13026,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[47078,47260],[47477,47604]],"Locations in B":[[27079,27261],[27424,27549]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BETH WIDMAIER CAPO"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25684493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b87302c6-d2a4-3f65-a050-44c6040506a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25684493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"She is herself a poem\": Caresse Crosby, Feminine Identity, and Literary History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25684493","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article identifies and analyses links between conceptualisations of trans-gender and trans-national, and aims for a critical redefinition of political agency. Through an examination of theories on transing, passing and performativity in queer-, trans- and transnational feminist knowledge production-illustrated by discursive examples from transgender communities and Romanian migrant communities\u2014I call for a conceptualisation of entangled power relations that does not rely on fixed, pre-established categories, but defines subjectivity through risk in political struggle. I suggest that 'transing' the nation and 'transing' gender could be thought as critical moves for a radical deconstruction of gendered and national belonging. Rather than provide a static definition of the term 'transnationalism', the article explores potentials and limits of going beyond 'the national' and 'gender', and intervenes in forms of minority nationalism that reproduce racism, sexism, heteronormativity and gender binary as the norm of Western national belonging. In particular, building on Jasbir Puar's (2007) conceptualisation of homonationalism, the article shows how forms of nationalism in Western transgender and migrant communities rely on a combination of heteronormative binary gendering and the exertion of racism. While a conventionalised approach to transnationalism defines the term as a political strategy based on transnational politics, I play with suggesting different dimensions of transnationalism: it could mean 'transgender nationalism'; the 'assimilation of transgendered persons to the Western nation'; or 'cross-border-nationalism', a form of nationalism often established in migrant communities that constructs the diaspora as a nationalist extension of the homeland. My focus, therefore, is on analysing privilegings, contradictions and ambivalences in gendering, racialising and nationalising ascriptions of (non)belonging. Overall, and as an alternative to romanticised knowledge productions of crossing national and gendered borders, I suggest a power-sensitive epistemological and methodological shift in thinking entangled power relations, belonging and subjectivity in transnational feminist knowledge productions.","creator":["Alyosxa Tudor"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ca3271-8d8f-301f-9714-d2cd8bd2aaf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"117","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"dimensions of transnationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987325","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabriela Cano"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5daeab3a-2245-3e07-ae64-9b999e98da62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Amelio Robles, andar de soldado viejo. Masculinidad (trang\u00e9nero) en la Revoluci\u00f3n Mexicana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625542","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The present article seeks to explore how aesthetic discourses by adoptee artists from South Korea can be said to place the adoptee figure at the intersection between race and gender. By looking at how the adopted self uses art as a site in which to negotiate the question of identity formation, I hope to make apparent the constructive relation between adoptee aesthetic discourse, gender, and race. The analysis thus intends to challenge our notions of identity, gender, and self, precisely by looking at how discourse is performed in order to transform and, eventually, engender our selves.","creator":["Aino Rinhaug"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/racethmulglocon.2010.4.1.9","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19358644"},{"name":"oclc","value":"82470510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66adee92-035b-3e8c-971d-731cb9f777f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/racethmulglocon.2010.4.1.9"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racethmulglocon"}],"isPartOf":"Race\/Ethnicity: Multidisciplinary Global Contexts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Adoptee Aesthetics: A Gendered Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/racethmulglocon.2010.4.1.9","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article \u00e9tudie les diff\u00e9rentes fa\u00e7ons dont la lecture, la visualisation et l'interpr\u00e9tation travaillent de pair dans la tradition manuscrite de Reggimento e costumi di donna, un pr\u00e9cis de bonne conduite r\u00e9dig\u00e9 par Francesco da Barberino \u00e0 l'intention des femmes. Le public de la fin du Moyen-\u00c2ge \u00e9tait capable de naviguer entre des images verbales et visuelles du bon et du mauvais comportement selon une exp\u00e9rience corporelle de la lecture, alors que les lecteurs \u00e9prouvaient leur adh\u00e9sion aux objectifs moraux pr\u00f4n\u00e9s par la pens\u00e9e chr\u00e9tienne. Ce texte pouvait s'adresser \u00e0 des hommes, des femmes et des enfants se trouvant dans un contexte familial. Le livre se termine par l'invocation d'un splendide joyau qui fonctionne comme un puissant proc\u00e9d\u00e9 mn\u00e9motechnique destin\u00e9 \u00e0 aider le lecteur \u00e0 se souvenir du texte et \u00e0 activer le message dans son esprit.","creator":["Catherine Harding"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a6b6d62-0986-3c1f-9b4a-d68e00ea12db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Speaking in Pictures: Reading, Memory and Interpretation in Francesco da Barberino's Advice to Women in his Reggimento e costumi di donna","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630832","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In situating the study of diversity within the sociology of knowledge, this article questions the uncritical use of social science in the politics of affirmative action. It argues that such use may have the unintended consequences of naturalizing racial differences, legitimating the institutional processes that use them, and ensuring their continued relevance in organizing society.","creator":["Benjamin Baez"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3838817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e871843f-2550-3e0f-bbb1-d349eea640c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3838817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Study of Diversity: The \"Knowledge of Difference\" and the Limits of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3838817","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":9522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Following the renewed interest in the role of motherhood in Germany, a wave of articles and books has recently reassessed the women's movement of the 1970s. The author Julia Franck, winner of the 2007 German Book Prize, is an active participant in these discussions, not only in speeches and essays but also in her works of fiction. In telling the story of an unwilling mother, her latest novel, Die Mittagsfrau (Lady Midday, 2007), both participates in and fundamentally undermines the terms of the motherhood debates. In this essay I contextualize Franck's work within popular discourse around feminism, focusing in particular on Franck's own term \"female sobriety,\" which she uses to characterize her style of writing and that of many female colleagues. Based on Silvia Bovenschen's theory of a feminine aesthetic, \"female sobriety\" is just one facet of Franck's engagement with women's issues and feminist theory.","creator":["Alexandra Merley Hill"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Female Sobriety\": Feminism, Motherhood, and the Works of Julia Franck","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688300","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the mid-19th century, European nations consolidated their identities. Leaders defined who belonged to the nation and who did not-excluding both ethnic and ideological Others, such as the Roma (\"Gypsies\") and nonconforming artists who were identified with the Roma and dubbed \"Bohemians.\" Understading how \"Bohemians\" were dealt with illuminates not only the avantgarde but strategies used to police cultural activism for the last century and a half.","creator":["Mike Sell"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0a6d941-a24b-3c3b-a547-b558799fc79e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4492759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bohemianism, the Cultural Turn of the Avantgarde, and Forgetting the Roma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492759","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":11353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Bickford"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"244346df-380a-33ce-a451-1b56fecaa01f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Constructing Inequality: City Spaces and the Architecture of Citizenship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192210","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10054,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[57083,57128]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura J. Beard"],"datePublished":"1995-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24a4196b-f4d9-313f-82b1-e5bce4c5505b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Mirrored Self: Helena Parente Cunha's \"Mulher No Espelho\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112167","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99761,99889]],"Locations in B":[[4026,4154]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Annamarie Jagose"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92a9509f-9edf-3132-911c-0c854cb19aeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Way Out: The Category \"Lesbian\" and the Fantasy of the Utopic Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704290","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10076,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465351,465505]],"Locations in B":[[29098,29252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Beedham"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3734387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3734387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3734387","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using narrative analysis, this study uses survey data to explore the social, psychological and economic challenges faced by transgender individuals and their significant others. With over 300 participants, this study not only validates the findings of previous yet smaller scale studies surrounding the transgender experience, it adds greater context to our current understanding, specifically because of its inclusion of significant others. Findings include participants' reports of social stigma coupled with psychological pain and economic hardship. The authors discuss the intersectionality of these three variables and the possible implications for understanding the transgender experience and that of their partners. En exploitant les donn\u00e9es d'une enqu\u00eate \u00e0 travers l'analyse narrative, cette \u00e9tude explore les difficult\u00e9s sociales, psychologiques et \u00e9conomiques auxquelles sont confront\u00e9es les personnes transgenres et leurs partenaires. Avec plus de 300 participants, l'\u00e9tude valide les r\u00e9sultats de pr\u00e9c\u00e9dents travaux sur l'exp\u00e9rience transgenre \u2014 quoique moins importants en nombre de participants \u2014 et nourrit notre compr\u00e9hension actuelle de bien d'autres \u00e9l\u00e9ments contextuels, notamment en raison de la participation des partenaires. Les r\u00e9sultats tiennent compte des d\u00e9clarations des participants sur le stigma social, coupl\u00e9 \u00e0 la souffrance psychologique et aux difficult\u00e9s \u00e9conomiques. Les auteurs discutent ensuite de la corr\u00e9lation entre ces trois variables et des possibles implications pour la compr\u00e9hension de l'exp\u00e9rience transgenre et de celle de leurs partenaires. A partir del uso del an\u00e1lisis narrativo, este art\u00edculo estudia datos resultantes de encuestas con el fin de examinar los retos sociales, psicol\u00f3gicos y econ\u00f3micos enfrentados por los individuos transg\u00e9neros y sus parejas. Tomando en cuenta que el estudio comprende a m\u00e1s de 300 participantes, el mismo no s\u00f3lo valida los resultados de estudios anteriores de menor alcance sobre la experiencia transg\u00e9nera; adem\u00e1s, incorpora un contexto m\u00e1s amplio, en especial, debido a la participaci\u00f3n de las parejas. Las conclusiones integran las valoraciones de los y las participantes en relaci\u00f3n sus vivencias de estigmatizaci\u00f3n social, dolor psicol\u00f3gico y dificultades econ\u00f3micas. Las autoras analizan la interseccionalidad de estas tres variables y sus posibles implicaciones en la comprensi\u00f3n de la experiencia transg\u00e9nera y en la de las parejas.","creator":["Emily Lenning","Carrie L. Buist"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"485933dc-e71c-3a80-894c-bd3182c0dba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Social, psychological and economic challenges faced by transgender individuals and their significant others: gaining insight through personal narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524967","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristopher Imbrigotta"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30157815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ae88613-3871-3066-aff4-b7b16fd966e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30157815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53,"pageEnd":"612","pageStart":"560","pagination":"pp. 560-612","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Personalia 2008","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30157815","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":21234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alejandro Mej\u00edas-L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Textualidad y sexualidad en la construcci\u00f3n de la selva: Genealog\u00edas discursivas en \"La vor\u00e1gine\" de Jos\u00e9 Eustasio Rivera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840675","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":10529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beate Jahn"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40843772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09467165"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607255433"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40843772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitintebezi"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Internationale Beziehungen","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Globale Kulturk\u00e4mpfe oder einheitliche Weltkultur? Zur Relevanz von Kultur in den Internationalen Beziehungen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40843772","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":10875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Bernstein"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01455532"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42413348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4904"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e2b8d62-003a-39f8-9914-fc462588f67e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciehist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identities and Politics: Toward a Historical Understanding of the Lesbian and Gay Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267789","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":20423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Weigert"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b40033e9-c6be-3a7f-af2c-86c4d5d67cd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23924272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"PERFORMANCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924272","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5407,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[24957,25026]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates how expansive new security projects have gained both legitimacy and immediacy as part of the 'global war on terror' by analysing the process that led to the fencing and securitising of the border between India and Bangladesh. The framing of the 'enemy other' in the global war on terror relies on two crucial shifts from previous geopolitical boundary narratives. First, the enemy other is described as not only being violent but also as outside the boundaries of modernity. Second, the enemy other is represented as posing a global and interconnected threat that is no longer limited by geography. These two shifts are used to justify the new preventative responses of pre-emptive military action abroad and the securitisation of the borders of the state. This article argues that in India the good and evil framing of the global war on terror was mapped onto longstanding communal distinctions between Hindus and Muslims. In the process, Pakistan, Bangladesh and increasingly Muslims generally are described as violent, irrational and a threat to the security of the Indian state. These changes led to a profound shift in the borderlands of the Indian state of West Bengal, where fencing and securitising the border with Bangladesh was previously resisted, but now is deemed essential. The article concludes that the framing of the war on terror as a global and interconnected problem has allowed sovereign states to consolidate power and move substantially closer to the territorial ideal of a closed and bounded container of an orderly population by attempting to lock down political borders.","creator":["Reece Jones"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51dd05b1-b7f7-3b47-aea8-8049785a9053"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40270718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geopolitical Boundary Narratives, the Global War on Terror and Border Fencing in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270718","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":12089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Allucqu\u00e9re Rosanne Stone"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41796614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10684220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7fc7fab-40bb-307b-82fc-229e682f150c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41796614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anyarchnewyork"}],"isPartOf":"ANY: Architecture New York","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sex, Death, and Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41796614","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the utility of current feminist scholarship for rethinking the ethical subject and its prospects for moral agency. Specifically it employs and appropriates Judith Butler's early insights on the deconstruction of gender wherein she makes explicit connections between gender binarism and subject formation. I make the case that by deconstructing the social institution of gender we can also dismantle the epistemological power of the binary paradigm. My goal is to find some moral possibilities in the midst of highly abstract theory about subject formation. In a rather unorthodox reading of Butler, I suggest that we can combine the potential of a poststructural analysis of subject formation with a feminist preference for egalitarianism. The result is a modified moral subject that finds both its constraints and its agency in the material world. This compromised moral agent can serve as a starting point for rethinking ethics in a postmodern context.","creator":["Marilyn Gottschall"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Ethical Implications of the Deconstruction of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466463","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":8768,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[456994,457130]],"Locations in B":[[21534,21726],[40197,40333]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The model of feminism as humanist in practice and postmodern in theory is inadequate. Feminist practice and theory directly inform each other to displace both humanist and postmodern conceptions of the subject. An examination of feminism's use of rights discourse suggests that feminist practice questions the humanist conception of the subject as a self-identity. Likewise, feminist theory undermines the postmodern emphasis on the constitutive instability and indeterminacy of the subject.","creator":["Sara Ahmed"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfc230ad-f035-375a-9699-a5c46417e738"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Humanism and Postmodernism: Theorizing a Feminist Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810265","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10830,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[65742,65832]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines intentional ambiguities of identity in four of Antje R\u00e1vic Strubel's novels: Offene Blende (2001, Open shutter), Snowed Under (2008, Unter Schnee, 2001), Tupolew 134 (2004, Tupolev 134), and K\u00e4ltere Schichten der Luft (2007, Colder layers of air). Strubel's characters fight prescribed roles, travel in search of exits and loopholes, and take on different identities. Strubel plays with uncertainties in these characters to expose fractures in societal norms and traditions and to disrupt society's habitual ways of thinking about identity. Using these various ambiguities, she intentionally disrupts the realistic parameters she has set for her texts.","creator":["Beret Norman"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdc9169b-2593-3b8b-87fe-e8b4663b5bed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Antje R\u00e1vic Strubel's Ambiguities of Identity as Social Disruption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0065","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jordan L. Von Cannon"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19312555"},{"name":"oclc","value":"86222266"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008216369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55468566-e5ee-3620-8c7a-f91b6c74877a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26300791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamernatu"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Naturalism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Prostitution, Primitivism, Performativity: The Bare Life in Stephen Crane's \"Maggie: A Girl of the Streets\" and Upton Sinclair's \"The Jungle\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300791","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jani Klotz"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c4a6caf-3e2f-3523-9b5d-c4c5e95b2141"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4151007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151007","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":2923,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[17408,17483]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PATRICIA MURPHY"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680371818"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235180"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96cd1fb1-709b-31d2-b419-7813b0067ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"In \"the Sumptuous Rank of the Signifier\" The Gendered Tattoo in Mr. Meeson's Will<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793713","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12128,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[415762,415843]],"Locations in B":[[52592,52673]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine BARD","Nicole PELLEGRIN"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"242eb9ac-718c-3c6e-941e-e1bfe3e663a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"10","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405316","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459599,459837]],"Locations in B":[[5889,6132]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Law","Vicky Singleton"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25147597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aba608dc-dde4-3a02-9b06-ee00207b2c60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25147597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"775","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-775","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Technology's Stories: On Social Constructivism, Performance, and Performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25147597","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":5345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Virginia MacKenny"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db34db13-95b9-31a2-83d3-9c9010b68374"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"49","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Post-Apartheid Performance Art as a Site of Gender Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066488","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6090,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[27451,27532]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["VASSILIKI MARKIDOU"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9012d1f4-c52c-35c8-a14f-ddb6b71eef25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41556578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Bubble[s]' and Female Verse: A Reading of Anna Laeticia Barbauld's 'Washing Day'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556578","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6251,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431990,432254],[442641,442873]],"Locations in B":[[7598,7862],[7876,8109]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meredith Izon"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c880380-bfff-37a1-a296-31c2abe589c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889741","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3400,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the embodiment and expressions of femininity in seven young Ghanaian men studying at the University of Cape Coast in Ghana. First, I examine the role of the participants' mothers in their feminization. Second, I explore their gendered, as well as their intimate and sexual experiences with both men and women. It appears that, for the participants, gender is perceived as a natural inclination, which can be masculine or feminine regardless of the person's sex. I suggest that the \"biologization\" of gender facilitates a certain acceptance of femininity in Ghanaian males. However, the young men experienced tensions between hegemonic forms of youth masculinity and their own effeminacy, especially since the recent increase of homophobic discourses in the media. They constantly re-negotiate their (feminine) masculinity according to the contexts they find themselves in and the interlocutors they face. Cet article explore l'incorporation et les expressions de la f\u00e9minit\u00e9 chez sept jeunes \u00e9tudiants ghan\u00e9ens de l'Universit\u00e9 de Cape Coast au Ghana. J'examine d'abord le r\u00f4le des m\u00e8res dans leur f\u00e9minisation. Ensuite, j'explore leur exp\u00e9rience genr\u00e9e ainsi que leurs exp\u00e9riences intimes et sexuelles avec des hommes et des femmes. Il appara\u00eet qu'ils per\u00e7oivent le genre comme une inclination naturelle, qui peut \u00eatre masculine ou f\u00e9minine, ind\u00e9pendamment du sexe de la personne. Je sugg\u00e8re que la \u00ab biologisation \u00bb du genre facilite une certaine acceptation de la f\u00e9minit\u00e9 chez les hommes ghan\u00e9ens. Cependant, ces jeunes hommes \u00e9prouvent des tensions entre les formes h\u00e9g\u00e9moniques de la masculinit\u00e9 chez les jeunes et leur propre caract\u00e8re eff\u00e9min\u00e9, surtout depuis le d\u00e9veloppement r\u00e9cent dans les m\u00e9dias de discours homophobes. Ces hommes ren\u00e9gocient constamment leur masculinit\u00e9 (f\u00e9minine) en fonction des contextes et de leurs interlocuteurs.","creator":["Karine Geoffrion"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174145640"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ac5f3ab-a67f-3b48-a160-9bd22682d6b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"209\/210","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"I Wish our Gender Could Be Dual\": Male Femininities in Ghanaian University Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475030","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":12004,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[70443,70496]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Calvin Thomas"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dda66f4b-36a4-3d9d-9b7e-6fc6ae292c6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Cultural Droppings: Bersani's Beckett","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827848","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10509,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[521876,521932]],"Locations in B":[[63984,64037]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"L'ambition de cet article est d'apporter une contribution en mati\u00e8re d'analyse interpr\u00e9tative du ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne guerrier. Dans cette optique, il s'interroge sur les m\u00e9canismes de la pens\u00e9e strat\u00e9gique qui ont contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 faire de la guerre moderne une pratique sociale jug\u00e9e techniquement faisable et, partant de l\u00e0, l\u00e9gitime pour les militaires. Pour ce faire, l'analyse propos\u00e9e s'inscrit dans les champs, tr\u00e8s proches sur le plan th\u00e9orique, de la sociologie pragmatique (en s'inspirant d'auteurs tels que Luc Boltanski, Nicolas Dodier et Francis Chateauraynaud) et de la sociologie des sciences (en s'appuyant surtout sur les travaux de Bruno Latour). D'une part, la sociologie des sciences a d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 un tr\u00e8s fertile questionnement portant sur la construction des faits scientifiques dont la pr\u00e9sente \u00e9tude s'inspirera largement. D'autre part, la sociologie pragmatique a \u00e9labor\u00e9 un cadre de compr\u00e9hension des actions collectives qui s'articule \u00e0 l'enqu\u00eate sur la construction sociale des faits. Gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 ces deux approches, nous nous proposons d'enqu\u00eater sur la formation d'un r\u00e9gime d'expertise strat\u00e9gique qui soutient la l\u00e9gitimit\u00e9 technique de l'emploi de la force militaire. Ensemble, la sociologie des sciences et la sociologie pragmatique apportent un \u00e9clairage particuli\u00e8rement pertinent \u00e0 la question de la guerre. This article is intended to contribute to the interpretative analysis of war. For that purpose, I investigate how some apparatuses located in strategic thinking help making modern war a social practice considered as technically feasible and, at the same time, legitimate for soldiers. In order to do that, I made use of two different but closely related theoretical fields, i.e., pragmatic sociology (finding inspiration in the work of scholars such as Luc Boltanski, Nicolas Dodier and Francis Chateauraynaud), and sociology of scientific knowledge (mostly by referring to the work of Bruno Latour). On the one hand, the sociology of scientific knowledge has developed a productive questioning on the construction of scientific facts that was particularly relevant in the context of the following research. On the other hand, pragmatic sociology bequeath a compatible frame able to describe collective actions. The combination of both approaches allows to describe the formation of a strategic expertise regime that supports the technical legitimacy of the use of military force. Together, the sociology of scientific knowledge and the pragmatic sociology bring a particularly relevant perspective to the research partaining to war.","creator":["Christophe WASINSKI"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23703529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1157996X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38402778"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-255343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95d49e5d-fba6-3701-92c6-0c8f6b7513bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23703529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturesconflits"}],"isPartOf":"Cultures et Conflits","issueNumber":"77","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Valider la guerre : la construction du r\u00e9gime d'expertise strat\u00e9gique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23703529","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DAVID GREVEN"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19474644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58d7cae0-e1cb-33eb-82f0-5a577b8bdf2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48599316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poestud"}],"isPartOf":"Poe Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cThe Whole Numerous Race of the Melancholy among Men\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599316","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":16153,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[231373,231595]],"Locations in B":[[23790,24012]],"subTitle":"Mourning, Hypocrisy, and Same-Sex Desire in Poe\u2019s Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Lake"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee18c3ec-0fc4-3d58-8d5d-a36ab06a6e24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"504","pagination":"pp. 504-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175651","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1202,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[7507,7588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ida Dominijanni","Sara Alcina Zayas"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2586c94c-5fe8-3ee7-b2b8-63bede8c1ff8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El estrabismo de Venus: una mirada a la crisis de la pol\u00edtica desde la pol\u00edtica de la diferencia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625243","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon R. Ullman"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4617203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"709262f3-398a-371f-8a80-da367fb7ae1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4617203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"600","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-600","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Twentieth Century Way\": Female Impersonation and Sexual Practice in Turn-of-the-Century America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4617203","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12347,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[435522,435597],[435949,436102]],"Locations in B":[[20520,20595],[20653,20806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article seeks to give an account of the emergence of late modern subjectivity as it can be glimpsed in the workings of Wordsworth's long autobiographical poem The Prelude. The theoretical instruments of Luhmann's systems theory are implemented in order to analyze the historical emergence of modern individual subjectivity. Using the insights of systems theory, Wordsworth's text can be seen to elaborate a notion of 'bounded', 'autopoetic' subjectivity, whose aporia are the very basis for its self-perpetuation. It can be plausibly claimed that such aporia continue to further the systemic self-maintenance of individual subjectivity and its social narratives in their present-day manifestations.","creator":["Russell West"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43025718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Selfhood as System: Autobiography and Poetic Subjectivity in Wordsworth's \"The Prelude\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025718","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8687,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523992,524098]],"Locations in B":[[13687,13794]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05e6\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd (\u05e7\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd) \u05dc\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d9\u05d7\u05d3 \u05e2\u05dd \u05d6\u05d0\u05ea, \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e0\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d0\u05d3\u05dd \u05dc\u05e9\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d2\u05de\u05d9\u05e9 \u05d1\u05e6\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e9\u05d5\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d2\u05dd \u05dc\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05dd \u05dc\u05e9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05d9 \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05d5 \u05dc\u05d8\u05e9\u05d8\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d1\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05df. \u05dc\u05e9\u05e4\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9 \u05d2\u05dd \u05d4\u05d9\u05d1\u05d8 \u05e8\u05e4\u05dc\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9 \u2014 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05db\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d0\u05d3\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc\u05d5, \u05d0\u05dc \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5. \u05e2\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d6\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05d7\u05dc\u05e7 \u05de\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dc \u05ea\u05d4\u05dc\u05d9\u05da \u05e1\u05d3\u05e0\u05d0\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d1\u05ea\u05d9 \u05db\u05dc\u05d0, \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5 \u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05e0\u05d5, 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\u05d5\u05e0\u05d3\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d2\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d4\u05d0\u05e1\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05e2\u05e9\u05d5 \u05d1\u05d5 \u05e9\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9. Social identities can be characterized by different linguistic codes. The ability to use codes flexibly can help change social identities and blur their boundaries. Language is also reflective. It allows people reference to themselves, to their own identity. This paper is based on a research aimed to examine workshop processes in prisons. Observations and interviews were used in relationship workshops to examine the importance prisoners ascribed to learning a new linguistic code which differed from their usual code. Prisoners were taught a new code which allowed them to convey understanding, consideration, and reciprocity as opposed to harsh, domineering language showing disregard for their partner. The findings show that workshop participants could see that the new code helped them to build a different kind of relationship with their partner and could also help them transform themselves. Interestingly, the new linguistic code was occasionally met with suspicion and distrust by the prisoners' partners. The paper explores the importance of the new linguistic code to the workshop participants and the possibility that they might use it manipulatively.","creator":["\u05e9\u05de\u05d7\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc\u05e1\u05e7\u05d9","\u05d6\u05d0\u05d1 \u05d0\u05e4\u05dc","Simha Shlasky","Zeev Appel"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23660090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258679"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564383393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53cac4a3-1255-3af6-a59a-19a5a08a86d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23660090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"megamot"}],"isPartOf":"Megamot \/ \u05de\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea","issueNumber":"1","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Henrietta Szold Institute \/ \u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d0\u05dc\u05d3","sourceCategory":["History","History","Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"I Need to Learn a Language That Will Bring Me Closer to People...\": Prisoners Experience a Different Talk with Their Mates \/ \"\u05d0\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05d1 \u05dc\u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05d3 \u05e9\u05e4\u05d4 \u05e9\u05de\u05e7\u05e8\u05d1\u05ea \u05d0\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd...\": \u05d0\u05e1\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05ea\u05e0\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d3\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dd \u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d5\u05d2","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23660090","volumeNumber":"\u05de\u05d6","wordCount":7338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I take up the lives of women with persistent vulvar pain for what they can reveal about the enmeshment of gender, (hetero)sexuality and bodily practices. Women with vulvodynia are unable to perform the central heterogendering act of penetrative intercourse with a male partner. They describe this inability as rendering them effectively 'genderless', described as being 'not a real woman' or a 'fake woman'. I analyse their perceptions of gender and bodily performance in relation to feminist theorizing about gender and sexuality, and I argue for the centrality of the lived body to the epistemology of feminist efforts to theorize gender. This paper is based on in-person interviews with 20 women and web-based open-ended interactions with 70 women with vulvodynia.","creator":["Amy Kaler"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4db126d6-dd11-36a1-b463-73a04b72cc41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3874447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"82","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Unreal Women: Sex, Gender, Identity and the Lived Experience of Vulvar Pain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874447","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jedediah Purdy"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"676686bf-6ab3-3ba1-8942-b73e76a2676e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30038502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"1817","pageStart":"1773","pagination":"pp. 1773-1817","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ethics of Empire, Again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038502","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":22634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A key component of peace processes and post-conflict reconstruction is the disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration (DDR) of ex-combatants. I argue that DDR programs imply multiple transitions: from the combatants who lay down their weapons, to the governments that seek an end to armed conflict, to the communities that receive--or reject--these demobilized fighters. At each level, these transitions imply a complex equation between the demands of peace and the clamor for justice. However, traditional approaches to DDR have focused on military and security objectives, which have resulted in these programs being developed in relative isolation from the field of transitional justice and its concerns with historical clarification, justice, reparations, and reconciliation. Drawing upon my research with former combatants in Colombia, I argue that successful reintegration not only requires fusing the processes and goals of DDR programs with transitional justice measures, but that both DDR and transitional justice require a gendered analysis that includes an examination of the salient links between weapons, masculinities, and violence. Constructing certain forms of masculinity is not incidental to militarism: rather, it is essential to its maintenance. What might it mean to \"add gender\" to DDR and transitional justice processes if one defined gender to include men and masculinities, thus making these forms of identity visible and a focus of research and intervention? I explore how one might \"add gender\" to the DDR program in Colombia as one step toward successful reintegration, peace-building, and sustainable social change.","creator":["Kimberly Theidon"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20486735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b72522f1-dcb1-3ac5-a29a-ebe5413ad156"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20486735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconstructing Masculinities: The Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration of Former Combatants in Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20486735","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":15901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberta Lamb"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40327073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Feminism as Critique in Philosophy of Music Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327073","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9888,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[51623,51680]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While the return of queer is usually explained locally as an oppressed minority's positive reunderstanding of a negative word, as the adoption of an umbrella to cover diverse marginal subjectivities, or as a sign of generational difference, the term's reappearance must instead be historicized-systematically and globally-as one of the theoretical, cultural, and social changes that result from the uncritical acceptance (for class reasons) of the premises of ludic (post)modern theory in the dominant academy and the culture industry. By elevating the category of desire (mode of signification) and occluding the category of need (mode of production), ludic theory encourages the notion that in advanced techno-culture, mutant subjectivities-such as the \"cyberqueer\"-occupy a new and freeing virtual reality of desire beyond mere need where they can write their own histories instead of being written by history. In the end, (cyber)queerity is but a new expression of an old class ideology.","creator":["Donald Morton"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92fd6d39-0d98-34c3-943c-e00582c159a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Birth of the Cyberqueer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462933","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":9100,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727],[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[20136,20265],[54660,54713]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Juliet McMains"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1477804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1477804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Brownface: Representations of Latin-Ness in Dancesport","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1477804","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study analyzes the marketplace performances that are enacted in the field of women\u2019s flat track roller derby using the theoretical lens of gender performativity. Rather than treating the roller derby field as an autonomous enclave of gender resistance, this study focuses on the interrelationships between derby grrrls\u2019 resignifying performances of femininity and the gender constraints that have been naturalized in their everyday lives. The market-mediated nature of derby grrrls\u2019 ideological edgework enables them to challenge orthodox gender boundaries, without losing sociocultural legitimacy. This analysis casts new theoretical light on the gendered habitus and reveals key differences to the outcomes that would follow from Bourdieusian assumptions about the deployment of cultural capital in zero-sum status competitions. The concept of ideological edgework also presents a theoretical alternative to critical arguments, such as the commodity feminism thesis, that assume an inherently paradoxical and, ultimately co-opting, relationship exists between practices of countercultural resistance and marketplace performances. We further argue that ideological edgework redresses some of the conceptual ambiguities that can lead gender researchers to conflate gender performativity with social performances.","creator":["CRAIG J. THOMPSON","TUBA \u00dcST\u00dcNER"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26570201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00935301"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48417873"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227346"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0510680b-4320-32d2-86c1-43bfbf9e5046"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26570201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Consumer Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Women Skating on the Edge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26570201","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":26736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Marketplace Performances as Ideological Edgework"} +{"abstract":"Utilizing a bricolage of interactionist cultural studies, ethnic foodways, and situational analysis this paper examines how Latino immigrants, representing six countries and multiple preimmigration class positions, come to perform Latinidad through the lay health practice of comiendo bien (eating well). Comiendo bien was examined through participant observation of 15 families living in San Francisco and 27 key informant interviews. Comiendo bien is a performance that exists through the convergence of multiple identity positions. Latina\/o immigrants not only enact the Latinidad in the United States through artistic expression or political strategizing, but also by sharing an idealized practice of healthy eating.","creator":["Air\u00edn D. Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.39.1.66","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7898cfad-b160-3475-8bc6-7e7fe2adc1b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/symbinte.39.1.66"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Comiendo Bien: The Production of Latinidad<\/em> through the Performance of Healthy Eating among Latino Immigrant Families in San Francisco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.39.1.66","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KRISTEN M. HYLENSKI"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586760"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a924c1e1-615a-3a3b-8bf1-1a758fd8a1c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23982218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u00abKaleidoskop meines Lebens\u00bb: Valeska Gert's Performances of the Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982218","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that the introduction of serpentine line in Ingres's first major work, Achilles Receiving the Ambassadors of Agamemnon, does more than announce the artist's signature style. Here serpentine line is used primarily to represent a post-revolutionary world in which men, unlike women, can choose between negotium (action) and otium (leisure). At the same time, serpentine line functions to suggest a sexual relationship between Achilles and Patroclus and to deny the stable gender identities implied by the painting's overdetermined binary oppositions.","creator":["Carol Ockman"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"248301e7-13f9-3ef2-bc02-a27c2c2de3d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3045948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Profiling Homoeroticism: Ingres's Achilles Receiving the Ambassadors of Agamemnon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045948","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":9133,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495198,495272]],"Locations in B":[[23479,23552]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses current issues of a cultural history of medicine. Based on selected examples from the history of bodies, gender and experience, and visual cultures, the paper invites historians of medicine to become more deeply engaged with cultural historical approaches. Dieser Beitrag diskutiert aktuelle Fragen einer Kulturgeschichte der Medizin. Anhand ausgew\u00e4hlter Themenbereiche wie K\u00f6rper und Geschlecht, der Erfahrungswelt sowie der visuellen Kultur will der Aufsatz zu einer intensiveren Auseinandersetzung der Medizingeschichte mit kulturwissenschaftlichen Herangehensweisen und Diskussionsangeboten anregen.","creator":["Hans-Georg Hofer","Lutz Sauerteig"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25805420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01f58fa3-af34-3f6e-89cb-97046f59cd4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25805420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medizinhistj"}],"isPartOf":"Medizinhistorisches Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Perspektiven einer Kulturgeschichte der Medizin \/ Perspectives of a cultural history of medicine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25805420","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13767,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476489,476555]],"Locations in B":[[84248,84314]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fran Bartkowski"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5254c22-3741-3287-8fb5-0f63a3b6711f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Travelers v. Ethnics: Discourses of Displacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389290","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8022,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[46254,46321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the deployment of the concept of psychological trauma in the field of sexual assault service provision, a field in which a feminist understanding of sexual violence has achieved a position of 'truth'. Using a Foucauldian methodological approach, the investigation centred on service provision in New South Wales, Australia, and analysis focused on the everyday practices of workers illuminated through documents collected from the field, in particular the interview texts produced from interviews with thirty sexual assault practitioners. The paper focuses on the adult survivor of child sexual assault who emerged in the study as the most traumatised category of victim. I lay out how 'trauma', specifically the concept of 'complex trauma', operates as the conceptual (emotional, relational, neurobiological) link between past abuse and current problems, redefining them not as 'problems' but as the symptoms or effects of untreated childhood trauma. I argue that in the local field this deployment is simultaneously enabling and problematic. The production of a subject position of ongoing ontological vulnerability has the effect of repositioning the 'adult survivor' outside the socio-political context of their current lives and as such appears misaligned with a feminist 'regime' centred on enabling practices and structural gender inequality. However, I demonstrate how this same knowledge of the neurobiological, relational and emotional effects of trauma on the survivor self is used by practitioners as part of their established feminist practices of enabling victims to regain a sense of power and control, of interrupting blame and working for victims at a broader systemic level. The research adds to feminist research and commentary that has drawn critical attention to uptake of trauma in sexual assault work by showing the specificity of how trauma operates in a specific location, and illustrating both the potential and the problematic aspects of trauma as a feminist knowledge practice.","creator":["Suzanne Egan"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e443f364-5753-3784-93a2-6bb40b7ddb7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"112","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"sexual assault as trauma: a Foucauldian examination of knowledge practices in the field of sexual assault service provision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987254","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RACHEL HOPE CLEVES"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"960c3d7c-7dee-3c60-bfe8-013c5d773abb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24474866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond the Binaries in Early America: Special Issue Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474866","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":4276,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[363607,363794]],"Locations in B":[[6856,7043]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This think piece on the intersectionality of multiple oppressive markers incorporates critical race feminism, fat studies, body\/embodiment studies, and dis\/ability studies. It discusses the cases of two African Americans deemed irresolvable nuisances, treated as threats to police, and dealt with, with undue force, resulting in their untimely deaths. Eleanor Bumpurs, 66, was a black female of older age, ample size, with physical and mental disabilities; she was arthritic, fighting off hallucinations, and was economically disadvantaged. Eric Garner, 43, was a black male of ample size, with physical disabilities; he was diabetic, asthmatic, with sleep apnea and a heart condition, all of which made employment difficult for him. Intersectional identities identities determined what happened when each crossed paths with law enforcement. Intersecting oppressions of racism\/classism\/fat hatred\/ageism\/ableism\/healthism resulted in the murder of Bumpurs in 1984 and Garner in 2014. Following Garner's execution, police supporters used multiple, intersecting forms of discrimination to sidestep the brutality: \"Garner would've died going up a flight of stairs\u2014he died because of preexisting medical conditions.\" This article argues that besides perpetuating the long history of portraying African American men as hulking brutes or as genetically inferior, such justifications aim to divert attention away from structural racism, cloaking it in sizeism\/ableism\/healthism.","creator":["Jason Whitesel"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26625966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3649e870-dbfb-34db-b7ce-bb5ffbf4d8bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26625966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"426","pagination":"pp. 426-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersections of Multiple Oppressions: Racism, Sizeism, Ableism, and the \"Illimitable Etceteras\" in Encounters With Law Enforcement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26625966","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":3691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lori Hope Lefkovitz"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88fcf2d4-3c4a-3daa-bbca-ba54f1c45dcf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Passing as a Man: Narratives of Jewish Gender Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107274","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7046,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[465627,465852],[465853,466022]],"Locations in B":[[3478,3705],[3710,3879]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within Marxism, class is commonly understood as a social grouping that is constituted by consciousness or solidary practices upon the foundation of (capitalist) relations of production. In our view, this structural conception of class has contributed to images of the decline of class politics that are frequently found in the geographic literature on industrial restructuring. We argue that an alternative understanding of class as a social process of exploitation renders visible a wide variety of capitalist and noncapitalist class processes in industrialized social formations. This conception allows us to see individuals as participating in multiple class processes at a single moment and over time. Understanding both the individual and society as having a decentered, complex, and changing relationship to class also enables us to see a previously invisible politics of class transformation. We examine some recent narratives of industrial change, interpreting them as stories of class struggle and class politics in unexpected social locations. In the process, we introduce a new connection between women and class.","creator":["Katherine Gibson","Julie Graham"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd1e5301-bc9a-383d-921d-65d7a0879246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/144197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Class in Industrial Geography: Creating a Space for an Alternative Politics of Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144197","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":11300,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432777,433041]],"Locations in B":[[40923,41186]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew P. Brown"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddefbe6d-c5d4-381c-b92f-5f5705bb3bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"BOSTON\/SOB NOT\": Elegiac Performance in Early New England and Materialist Studies of the Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041616","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":13803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"After playing a major role in promoting the Palestinian national cause, the Palestinian women's movement seeks to influence policy-making and improve the legal status of women in the emerging state. The counter-campaign of the Islamic movement and the ambivalent position of the Palestinian Authority mirror the emerging \"matrix of domination\" in Palestine. A broad political coalition of all democratic forces in Palestinian society is needed if any real change in women's status is to take place.","creator":["Amal Jamal"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4329617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8aab671-57d6-37ee-95d0-618795d0c49b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4329617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engendering State-Building: The Women's Movement and Gender-Regime in Palestine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4329617","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Northern researchers and service providers espousing modernist theories of development in order to understand and aid countries and peoples of the South ignore their own non-universal starting points of knowledge and their own vested interests. Universal ethics are rejected in favor of situated ethics, while a modified empowerment development model for aiding women in the South based on poststructuralism requires building a bridge identity politics to promote participatory democracy and challenge Northern power knowledges.","creator":["Ann Ferguson"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f079273-832c-3c30-aa49-02f4fb66e474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Resisting the Veil of Privilege: Building Bridge Identities as an Ethico-Politics of Global Feminisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810701","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8227,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523641,523718]],"Locations in B":[[47634,47710]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary A. Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9df8681-8baa-39f1-955c-33c2e4710ebe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading a Head: \"Jane Eyre,\" Phrenology, and the Homoerotics of Legibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058698","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":14373,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474128,474461]],"Locations in B":[[56544,56876]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alice Gabriel"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0d20562-a3bc-3cc4-a86b-9919fd538896"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ecofeminismo e ecologias queer: uma apresenta\u00e7\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328015","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":3693,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[23781,23833]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"John Fowles's \"Mantissa\" defines its title, and by implication, its whole enterprise, as a mere \"addition of comparatively small importance, especially to a literary effort or discourse\" (Fowles 182). This paper offers a feminist and poststructuralist re-reading which reveals that the text's use of parody in its representation of feminism, poststructuralism, and postmodernism, actually constitutes a most reactionary detournement. In effect, \"Mantissa\" reaffirms assumptions and practices of such ideological and literary precursors as patriarchal authority, structuralism and classic realism. Nevertheless, \"Mantissa's\" parodic strategy of combining in its female protagonist an exaggerated representation of postmodernist mutability, and an equally distorted depiction of a feminist, poststructuralist notion of subjectivity, has something to offer a feminist reader. Here it is argued that \"Mantissa\" allows a recouperative reading in which a feminst postmodernist subject emerges with a level of mutability suggestive of some value in the combined \"complicitous and contesting\" operations of both goddess and cyborg.","creator":["Jane O'Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a7ddc95-bb25-3baa-ad61-49735f76f954"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Cyborg or Goddess: Postmodernism and Its Others in John Fowles's \"Mantissa\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112741","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6247,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[88738,88965]],"Locations in B":[[9209,9470]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02643758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplphil"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received for the \"Journal of Applied Philosophy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353601","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":1371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jasmine Yong Hall"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41c97779-9e48-35f7-b29d-af9023369fc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44371843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"What's Troubling About Esther? Narrating, Policing and Resisting Arrest in \"Bleak House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371843","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10364,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[44003,44119],[45006,45225]],"Locations in B":[[4285,4400],[7300,7518]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Litvak"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kiss Me, Stupid: Sophistication, Sexuality, and \"Vanity Fair\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345860","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cary J. Nederman","Jacqui True"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4617219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a480691e-50ca-3495-bd49-532d9d5ca16d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4617219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"517","pageStart":"497","pagination":"pp. 497-517","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Third Sex: The Idea of the Hermaphrodite in Twelfth-Century Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4617219","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Imprisoned sex offenders face abjection because of their criminality and are the most victimized group of adult male prisoners. Drawing on Judith Butlers work on gender, abjection and precarity, and scholarship focused on prison masculinities, we examine the experiences of sex offenders while incarcerated and the role of various agents in exposing their convictions to other prisoners and, ultimately, to victimization. Given each prisoners convictions are not immediately known when they enter the penitentiary and recognizing that prison is unsafe for sex offenders, we sought to understand how sex offenders attempt to pass among the general prisoner population and the methods through which their convictions become known. Utilizing interviews with 59 formerly incarcerated men, we analyse the modalities that sex offenders employ to 'pass' as non-sex offenders and the anxieties associated with awaiting their inevitable exposure. Former prisoners reveal the methods used by staff and prisoners to expose those with sex-related convictions.","creator":["Rosemary Ricciardelli","Dale Spencer"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99cf56de-cd51-313c-a6e0-ceb3a33aae03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43819192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"428","pagination":"pp. 428-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EXPOSING 'SEX' OFFENDERS: Precarity, Abjection and Violence in the Canadian Federal Prison System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819192","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["THEODORE SCHATZKI"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45173996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167479"},{"name":"oclc","value":"558527514"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7828207f-a925-3f4f-b477-bdc2cd3e99c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45173996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogzeit"}],"isPartOf":"Geographische Zeitschrift","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Keeping Track of Large Phenomena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45173996","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":10960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claire Grino"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26535845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567369753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36559342-6636-3595-99c6-74797426f175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26535845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"580","pageStart":"578","pagination":"pp. 578-580","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26535845","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":2329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Felicia Kornbluh"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ebeb6aa-f760-3411-92e1-53d687a45462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4021649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Too Close for Comfort","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021649","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":2428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dennis W. Allen"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96f32c3f-97ee-3539-bb33-f716dd02ba5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"282","pagination":"pp. 282-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Marketing of Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112368","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robin Waugh"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23075472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"488ca12f-2635-3dd1-ab0e-5e36c3a4a3c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23075472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Foster Mother's Language: Anti-representation, Pseudo-feminization, and Other Consequences of a Mistake of Gender Charm in \"Hei\u00f0arv\u00edga saga\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23075472","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":25135,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[404479,404567],[429947,430054],[436706,436834],[471741,471794],[503324,503458]],"Locations in B":[[85798,85886],[100195,100302],[129193,129323],[147755,147808],[151964,152081]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Development partnerships are frequently represented as a way of giving recipient countries 'ownership' of their development programmes, whereas critics argue that partnerships are little more than conditionality by another name. Drawing on analyses of governmentality in modern liberal societies, this article advances an alternative understanding and argues that development partnerships can be regarded as a form of advanced liberal rule that increasingly govern through the explicit commitment to the self-government and agency of recipient states. Focusing in particular on the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) and Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), it argues that as a form of advanced liberal power, partnerships work not primarily as direct domination and imposition, but through promises of incorporation and inclusion. They derive their power through simultaneously excluding and incorporating, and by using freedom as a formula of rule partnerships help produce modern, self-disciplined citizens and states by enlisting them as responsible agents in their own development.","creator":["Rita Abrahamsen"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13c39a95-7e74-3e0a-9c36-f13849d41798"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3993796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"1467","pageStart":"1453","pagination":"pp. 1453-1467","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"The Power of Partnerships in Global Governance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993796","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Allen J. Frantzen"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2864560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00387134"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b23b22b-11f0-3c96-b4dd-7b454bde84a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2864560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"speculum"}],"isPartOf":"Speculum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"471","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-471","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Medieval Academy of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"When Women Aren't Enough","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2864560","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":14818,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[43681,43877],[363290,363602],[431984,432254],[432819,433041]],"Locations in B":[[35657,35853],[36776,37088],[38025,38295],[38373,38553]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study investigates meetmarket, a South African online community for men who are looking for other men. Utilising a quantitative approach to queer linguistics, the article presents a textual analysis of a large corpus of personal profiles in order to map meetmarket's 'libidinal economy'. More specifically, the article seeks to tease out the ways in which the members of this community valorise, and thereby make more desirable, certain identities at the expense of others. This then makes it possible to understand the extent to which these men (re)produce or, conversely, contest and overturn dominant forms of social categorisation in their expressions of same-sex desire.","creator":["Tommaso M Milani"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e553d2a6-e153-3803-896f-2239548a14fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24441615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"633","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-633","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Are 'queers' really 'queer'? Language, identity and same-sex desire in a South African online community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441615","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8974,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[50711,50780]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Auteure-cin\u00e9aste, Virginie Despentes a adapt\u00e9 trois de ses romans en film. Elle met en relation ces m\u00e9dias ind\u00e9pendants, mais compl\u00e9mentaires pour interroger le concept de la \u00ab femme \u00bb. Une analyse narratologique et philosophique de ses livres-films r\u00e9v\u00e8le un mod\u00e8le d'interaction qui transcende les cat\u00e9gories identitaires limitant l'\u00eatre humain.","creator":["TOM ARMBRECHT"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45158929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e5ee2b2-7579-3c49-8549-53debec47f40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45158929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Comment y faire face : La parole faite chair de Virginie Despentes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45158929","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7850,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471827,471893]],"Locations in B":[[45183,45250]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Viviana Comensoli"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43502092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12069078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43502092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlytheatre"}],"isPartOf":"Early Theatre","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Early Theatre: A Journal Associated with the Records of Early English Drama","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identifying Othello: Race and the Colonial (non)Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43502092","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":2401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel V. Harrison","Peter A. Jackson"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680421868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae271ff8-b752-3bcf-b9ea-11cd3869a95c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23750879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Siam's\/Thailand's constructions of modernity under the influence of the colonial West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750879","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ces vingt derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es ont vu le d\u00e9veloppement de l'histoire du corps et de la sexualit\u00e9. Cherchant \u00e0 historiciser les diff\u00e9rences entre les sexes, les historiens ont pour la plupart int\u00e9gr\u00e9 l'\u00e9tude du corps et de la sexualit\u00e9 \u00e0 l'histoire des femmes et du genre. L'objet de cet article est la place du corps et de la sexualit\u00e9 dans l'histoire des femmes et du genre. De r\u00e9cents travaux avancent l'id\u00e9e que le XVIIIe si\u00e8cle \u2013 envisag\u00e9 dans des bornes chronologiques larges \u2013, a \u00e9t\u00e9 le si\u00e8cle du changement dans les conceptions du corps, de la sexualit\u00e9 et de l'activit\u00e9 sexuelle. Cependant, l'incorporation de sujets d'\u00e9tudes aussi nouveaux revigore aussi des sc\u00e9narios plus anciens ayant trait aux transformations \u00e9conomiques et politiques. L'article passe en revue ces travaux r\u00e9cents, en soutenant la th\u00e8se que certains \u00e9l\u00e9ments cl\u00e9s de l'historiographie doivent \u00eatre r\u00e9examin\u00e9s. Les mod\u00e8les d'explication du changement historique doivent incorporer des questions telles que les changements observables dans les cycles de vie et la notion de permanence historique. Des \u00e9tudes sur les \u00e9changes culturels doivent se d\u00e9velopper, approches qui prendraient en compte la diversit\u00e9 culturelle et la complexit\u00e9 de la transmission culturelle. Enfin, des analyses du contexte concret dans lesquels sont ins\u00e9r\u00e9s le corps et la sexualit\u00e9 \u2013 tant sur le plan corporel que textuel \u2013 doivent \u00eatre entreprises. The past two decades have witnessed a burgeoning of the history of the body and sexuality. Seeking to historicize sex differences, historians have widely incorporated the study of the body and sexuality into the history of women and gender. This review considers the place of the body and sexuality in women's in which bodies were understood, sexuality constructed, and sexual activity carried out. Yet in turn, the incorporation of such new topics also reinvigorates older narratives of economic and political transformation. This historiographical review assesses this recent work, arguing the key facets of the historiography need to be reconsidered. Explanatory models of historical change need to incorporate issues such as life-cycle changes and historical persistence. Approaches to cultural exchange have to develop which can accommodate cultural diversity, and the complexities of cultural transmission. Finally, analyses of the material contexts of the body and sexuality \u2013 both corporeal and textual \u2013 need to be undertaken.","creator":["Karen Harvey"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44406314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5eb1109-e74f-3454-bcac-2b5a4be4193e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44406314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"31","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le Si\u00e8cle du sexe ? Genre, corps et sexualit\u00e9 au dixhuiti\u00e8me si\u00e8cle (vers 1650-vers 1850)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44406314","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11896,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476786,476900]],"Locations in B":[[71605,71725]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Las ONG, como cualquier otro tipo de organizaciones sociales, reflejan las desigualdades de g\u00e9nero en su estructura y funcionamiento interno. Este art\u00edculo va dirigido a analizar dichas desigualdades en las ONG de desarrollo, a trav\u00e9s del estudio de las pr\u00e1cticas, din\u00e1micas y discursos que se producen en el interior de las mismas. En este art\u00edculo se va a hacer especial hincapi\u00e9 en uno de los efectos de la desigualdad, la (in)visibilidad de las mujeres en este tipo de entidades, considerando las dos dimensiones de este fen\u00f3meno. Por un lado, se profundizar\u00e1 en la invisibilidad de las cuestiones de g\u00e9nero, derivada de la desigualdad existente dentro de este tipo de organizaciones. Y, por otro, se estudiar\u00e1 la excesiva visibilidad de aquello que se sale de la norma, a partir de los procesos de cambio en los roles de g\u00e9nero que se est\u00e1n produciendo en algunas ONGD. \/\/\/ In the same way as any other type of social organization, NGOs evidence the existence of gender inequalities in their structure and internal functioning. This paper aims at analysing this issue in the case of Development NGOs, through the study of the practices, dynamics and rhetoric that go on inside them. Particular attention is paid to one of its effects: the (in)visibility of women in this kind of organization, an examination being made of the two dimensions of this phenomenon. On the one hand, the paper studies the invisibility of gender issues, which arises out of the inequality that exists in such organizations. On the other hand, we focus on the excessive visibility of anything that goes against established rules, starting out from the processes of change in the gender roles that are occurring in some Development NGOs.","creator":["Sandra Dema Moreno"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02105233"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35887388-59f9-3c87-8aa5-024be398c98c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40184882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reis"}],"isPartOf":"Reis","issueNumber":"122","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Las desigualdades de g\u00e9nero en las ONG de desarrollo: discursos, pr\u00e1cticas y procesos de cambio (Gender Inequalities in Development NGOs: Discourses, Practices and Process of Change)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184882","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the role of Enron, an American corporation, in its promotion of the electric power sector in the Dabhol Power Project in India. Under the new economic regime in India, policy changes were followed by nine fast-track private electric power projects in different parts of the country with foreign companies as primary promoters or major collaborators. The new, privately promoted power projects brought into focus the power of foreign capital and neoliberal discourse. Neoliberalism is not about free markets, nor about freedom, nor development of the global South or postsocialist economies but rather a form of power that creates congenial spaces for the extraction of revenue by corporations in countries that were, until recently, relatively less accessible to capitalist exploitation. The research is based on interviews with key informants and archival data. \u672c\u6587\u63a2\u4ed8\u4e86\u5b89\u7136\u516c\u53f8, \u4f5c\u65b9\u4e00\u5bb6\u7f8e\u95bb\u516c\u53f8, \u5728\u5370\u5ea6\u8ff7\u6ce2\u5747\u53ef\u5c6f\u529b\u9805\u76ee\u4e0a\u6ed1\u5c6f\u529b\u90e8\u520a\u7684\u4fc3\u904a\u4f5c\u7528\u3002\u6839\u6398\u5370\u5ea6\u7684\u65b0\u8a6e\u6fdf\u4f53\u5236, \u5728\u653f\u7b56\u711a\u5316\u4e4b\u540e, \u5916\u5718\u516c\u53f8\u4f5c\u65b9\u4e3b\u8981\u6295\u8d77\u4eba\u6216\u4e3b\u8981\u5408\u4f5c\u8005, \u5728i\u4ea5\u56fa\u4e0d\u540c\u5730\u5340\u904a\u884c\u4e86 9 \u5c0f\u5feb\u674e\u9053\u5f0f\u7965\u7684\u79c1\u4eba\u5c6f\u529b\u9805\u76ee\u3002\u9001\u4e9b\u65b0\u7684\u79c1\u818f\u4fc3\u907f\u7684\u5c6f\u529b\u9805\u76ee\u5f15\u8d77\u4e86\u4eba\u5011\u8a0e\u5916\u8cc7\u548c\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u6587\u6d3b\u6d3b\u7d0b\u7684\u7f8e\u6ce8\u3002\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u706b\u5e76\u975e\u81ea\u7531\u5e02\u5834, \u52fb\u81ea\u7531\u5b8c\u7f8e, \u65e2\u4e0d\u662f\u5357\u534a\u7403\u7684\u53cb\u5c55, \u4e5f\u4e0d\u662f\u540e\u793e\u91d1\u4e3b\u9293\u52d9, \u5b83\u66f4\u591a\u7684\u662f\u4e00\u79d1\u6756\u529b\u5f62\u5f0f, \u5275\u9020\u4e86\u9020\u5b9c\u7684\u7a7a\u9593\u4ee5\u4fbf\u4e8e\u516c\u53f8\u4ee5\u4e00\u4e9b\u56e0\u5bb6\u837b\u5f97\u6536\u5165, \u800c\u9019\u4e9b\u56e0\u5bb6, \u76f4\u5230\u6700\u8fd1, \u76f8\u624d\u8f03\u8cb4\u5728\u63a5\u8755\u5230\u8cc7\u672c\u4e3bJ\u53f2\u7684\u525d\u524a\u3002\u672c\u9805\u7814\u7a76\u7684\u4f9d\u6398\u662f\u8ca1\u4e3b\u8981\u77e5\u60c5\u8005\u7684\u679c\u8a2a\u548c\u6a94\u6848\u8cc7\u6599\u3002 Este art\u00edculo examina el papel de Enron, una corporaci\u00f3n norteamericana, en la promoci\u00f3n del sector de energ\u00eda el\u00e9ctrica del Proyecto Dabhol de Energ\u00eda, en la India. Bajo el nuevo r\u00e9gimen econ\u00f3mico de ese pa\u00eds, sobrevinieron cambios de pol\u00edtica en nueve proyectos energ\u00e9ticos privados, en diferentes partes del pa\u00eds, en los que compa\u00f1\u00edas extranjeras figuran como promotores primarios o colaboradores principales. Los nuevos proyectos energ\u00e9ticos promovidos desde el sector privado coloc\u00f3 en primer plano el poder del capital for\u00e1neo y el discurso neoliberal. El neoliberalismo no se refiere a mercados libres, ni es acerca de la libertad, ni del desarrollo del Sur global o de las econom\u00edas possocialistas; en vez de eso es una forma de poder que crea espacios congeniales para que las compa\u00f1\u00edas obtengan ingresos en pa\u00edses que hasta hace poco tiempo eran relativamente poco accesibles a la explotaci\u00f3n capitalista. La investigaci\u00f3n se bas\u00f3 en entrevistas con informantes claves y datos de archivos.","creator":["Waquar Ahmed"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40863552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"821b75a0-dc0c-3194-b421-e309df822667"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40863552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"639","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-639","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Neoliberalism, Corporations, and Power: Enron in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40863552","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":15513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Utilizing data from two ethnographic case studies, one of high-end service workers in a powerful corporate law firm (paralegals) and another of low-end service workers in a small family-run restaurant (food servers), this article presents a comparative analysis of the consequences of the transformation of the US economy and accompanying changes in the culture(s) of work for women and men and specifically of the meanings of loyalty in our contemporary service society. Drawing from the cultural repertoires available, women and men make gendered sense of loyalty. Women, the vast majority of workers in these two jobs, tell stories of investment in their jobs and personal loyalty to their co-workers, customers, and bosses. But men mobilize their masculinity to detach their sense of self from perceived feminized work, seeing themselves as occupational transients who are on their way to more appropriate careers or, in the case of waiters, rejecting narratives of professional masculinity in defiance of the unsatisfying occupational landscape available to them as working-class men.","creator":["Karla Erickson","Jennifer L. Pierce"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e92a709f-a9eb-3fd1-b6ae-54b4b2c8f891"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Farewell to the organization man: The feminization of loyalty in high-end and low-end service jobs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047861","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":13830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2be66948-b786-30ee-87df-bb9838d27677"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Information science - Informetrics","Applied sciences - Engineering","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859473","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within the context of a critical discourse historiographical (CDH) approach to critical discourse studies (CDS), this article applies a range of theories to the Hong Kong Umbrella Movement, or Hong Kong Occupy Movement, to understand it as a discursive event. The CDH approach argues that a diachronic, historiographical approach can contribute to historiography, the writing of history, in that it can create first readings and interpretations of important events. The approach focuses on critical moments in discourse, of which the Hong Kong Umbrella Movement is considered an important one in the context of Hong Kong\u2019s ongoing socio-historical development. Four theories are applied, in addition to the historical analysis, to further interpret the Hong Kong Umbrella Movement phenomenon: social movement theory, performance theory, identity theory and social action as text theory. It is concluded that the CDH approach to CDS and findings of the study may be useful in the consideration of other social movements and Occupy movements globally.","creator":["John Flowerdew"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58c54dea-2fcd-36f5-b51a-0783dd5af082"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding the Hong Kong Umbrella Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377332","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A critical discourse historiographical approach"} +{"abstract":"Literature about whiteness and white identities has proliferated across the social sciences and humanities over recent years. However, there has so far been only a small amount of writing in social work, almost all concerned with social work education, which has attempted to make use of ideas developed in this body of literature. This paper summarises the major themes examined in the field of whiteness studies and discusses two broad critiques of approaches to the topic, concerned with the reiflacation of whiteness and the reflexive focus of much work in this field. It then evaluates social work education's engagement so far with these concepts and finds that, while social work education literature has started to discuss whiteness, it has not so far considered critical approaches to whiteness studies and has not engaged with recent, more situated and nuanced work about whiteness, such as studies that are concerned with performativity. The paper makes some suggestions about how whiteness studies can be used in social work education to enable more complex understandings of race and power.","creator":["Dharman Jeyasingham"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45a9906b-a4d0-3e01-8b16-3d4049cf9a83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43771677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"White Noise: A Critical Evaluation of Social Work Education's Engagement with Whiteness Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771677","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janice Stewart"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afa05113-b5d9-39d6-98f2-f60a9456a8f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"A Thoroughly Modern Melancholia: Virginia Woolf, Author, Daughter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907143","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10281,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440934,441079]],"Locations in B":[[34425,34570]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew Parker"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unthinking Sex: Marx, Engels and the Scene of Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466297","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9477,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[237791,238032]],"Locations in B":[[52036,52274]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper demonstrates how John Dewey's notion of habit can help us understand gender as a constitutive structure of bodily existence. Bringing Dewey's pragmatism in conjunction with Judith Butler's concept of performativity, I provide an account of how rigid binary configurations of gender might be transformed at the level of both individual habit and cultural construct.","creator":["Shannon Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d573957-9c6b-33ff-89f8-73a84885fc69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reconfiguring Gender with John Dewey: Habit, Bodies, and Cultural Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810510","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9844,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[461339,461476],[464317,464456],[464601,464780],[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[29667,29804],[30446,30585],[30602,30780],[57229,57362]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. G. Zerilli"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97e851fa-b936-30d2-a392-dc7276274672"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Doing without Knowing: Feminism's Politics of the Ordinary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192199","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12858,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477195,477271]],"Locations in B":[[64967,65043]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gail Finney"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c2a958c-421f-3963-a799-90d5e0b54f7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering the Stage: Critical Displacement in the Theater of Else Lasker-Sch\u00fcler and Mae West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247372","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8463,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[498519,498591]],"Locations in B":[[45169,45241]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From saints to transvestite beauty queens-gay Filipino American culture in the San Francisco Bay Area as expressed in a two-year series of performance installations.","creator":["Lydia Matthews"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d03202a-8a07-34a1-955f-7ff247b30f27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Camp out: DIWA Arts and the Bayanihan Spirit","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146721","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hugh Grady"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Renewing Modernity: Changing Contexts and Contents of a Nearly Invisible Concept","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902359","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9856,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[37898,38002]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SUSANNE LETTOW"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c229ceb-abf2-37a4-bbf4-102bc443a8a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editor's Introduction\u2013Emancipation: Rethinking Subjectivity, Power, and Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542139","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":5860,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62323,62497]],"Locations in B":[[2656,2900]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Domna C. Stanton"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2928c9b-f26e-31c6-93ee-21c44597da04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexual Pleasure and Sacred Law: Transgression and Complicity in \"V\u00e9nus dans le clo\u00eetre\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287816","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We sometimes violate social norms in order to express our views and to trigger public debates. Many extant accounts of social norms don't give us any insight into this phenomenon. Drawing on Cristina Bicchieri's work, I am putting forward an empirical hypothesis that helps us to understand such norm violations. The hypothesis says, roughly, that we often adhere to norms because we are systematically blind to norm-violating options. I argue that this hypothesis is independently plausible and has interesting consequences. It implies, e.g., that some experimental paradigms for investigating social norms have hitherto unnoticed shortcomings.","creator":["Ulf Hlobil"],"datePublished":"2016-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43921231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00397857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233322"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbe21ec3-0f6a-3741-865d-f5d8a5453307"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43921231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"synthese"}],"isPartOf":"Synthese","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"2537","pageStart":"2519","pagination":"pp. 2519-2537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Social norms and unthinkable options","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43921231","volumeNumber":"193","wordCount":10460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Items of personal adornment are an important class of material culture with great potential for understanding constructions of identity in the historical period. Archaeologically recoverable remains of dress\u2014clothing and clothing fasteners, jewelry, hair accessories, and miscellaneous accessories\u2014are included in this category of material culture. Performative aspects of identity construction, the presentation of a person as an individual and as a member of a socially defined group, and the centrality of the body in perception and self-perception are a means for examining the construction of identity along gender, class, age, and ethnicity lines. Personal adornment artifacts are the physical remains of the ways people inscribed the body as reflective of their alignment with individual and group identities and the performances of identity that were enacted through mundane daily acts and gestures in the past. Artifacts recovered at the Sherburne site in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, manifest these identities.","creator":["Carolyn L. White"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25617494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16186240-d237-3293-b59d-17c787128528"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25617494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Personal Adornment and Interlaced Identities at the Sherburne Site, Portsmouth, New Hampshire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25617494","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10211,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[442641,442873],[442988,443148]],"Locations in B":[[6569,6803],[6843,7003]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In drawing on selected interviews with adolescent boys from both Australia and North America, we present an analysis of boys' own capacities for interrogating gender normalisation in their school lives. We set this analysis against a critique of the public media debates about boys' education, which continue to be fuelled by a moral panic about the status of boys as the new disadvantaged. Our aim is to raise questions about boys' existing capacities for problematizing social relations of masculinity and how these might be mobilized in schools to support a counter-hegemonic practice committed to interrogating gender oppression. \/\/\/ \u00c0 partir d'un choix d'entrevues effectu\u00e9es aupr\u00e8s d'adolescents venant de l'Australie et de l'Am\u00e9rique du Nord, les auteurs pr\u00e9sentent une analyse des capacit\u00e9s de ces gar\u00e7ons de remettre en question la normalisation en fonction des sexes dans leur vie scolaire. Les auteurs opposent cette analyse \u00e0 une critique des d\u00e9bats dans les m\u00e9dias sur l'\u00e9ducation des gar\u00e7ons, lesquels continuent \u00e0 \u00eatre aliment\u00e9s par une panique morale au sujet du statut des gar\u00e7ons consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme les nouveaux d\u00e9favoris\u00e9s. L'objectif vis\u00e9 est de soulever des questions sur les capacit\u00e9s des gar\u00e7ons de probl\u00e9matiser les relations sociales masculines et de voir comment ces aptitudes pourraient \u00eatre mobilis\u00e9es dans les \u00e9coles pour appuyer une d\u00e9marche antih\u00e9g\u00e9monique visant \u00e0 remettre en question l'oppression bas\u00e9e sur le sexe.","creator":["Michael Kehler","Wayne Martino"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dce607b-d897-3ea7-97ef-1e351e6c7048"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20466627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Questioning Masculinities: Interrogating Boys' Capacities for Self-Problematization in Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466627","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The subject matter of this article emerged in part out of research for the author's thesis project and first game patch, Madame Polly, a \"first-person shooter gender hack.\" Since the time it was written, there has been an up-surge of interest and research in computer games among artists and media theoreticians. Considerable shifts in gaming culture at large have taken place, most notably a shift toward on-line games, as well as an increase in the number of female players. The multidirectional information space of the network offers increasing possibilities for interventions and gender reconfigurations such as those discussed at the end of the article.","creator":["Anne-Marie Schleiner"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43488f39-1663-36e4-8703-3cc780f7abc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Does Lara Croft Wear Fake Polygons? Gender and Gender-Role Subversion in Computer Adventure Games","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576939","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers the difficulties in reconciling a fluid and ambiguous conceptualization of gender difference with policy-based efforts to define women as 'target groups' in development interventions. The issue is explored with reference to gender issues in a transmigration resettlement area in Indonesia, where the instability of gender identities is particularly marked, and where gendered resource use and control are particularly blurred.","creator":["Rebecca Elmhirst"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20003899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20003899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Reconciling Feminist Theory and Gendered Resource Management in Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20003899","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, discuto as experi\u00eancias de aprendizado de uma sexualidade heterossexual, racializada e classista atrav\u00e9s da an\u00e1lise de relatos biogr\u00e1ficos de um grupo de homens entre 43 e 60 anos, do Rio de Janeiro, que se autodefinem corno brancos. Em particular, examino os relatos dos entrevistados sobre aquelas que, durante a entrevista, foram definidas como \"rela\u00e7\u00f5es sexuais de inicia\u00e7\u00e3o\" com trabalhadoras dom\u00e9sticas e, em menor escala, com prostitutas, tidas durante a adolesc\u00eancia. Tratase da an\u00e1lise de uma rela\u00e7\u00e3o de poder descrita por quem a exerceu. A an\u00e1lise das entrevistas evidencia como essas experi\u00eancias n\u00e3o s\u00f3 contribu\u00edram para a produ\u00e7\u00e3o da sexualidade dos homens entrevistados, mas tamb\u00e9m s\u00e3o elemento central na defini\u00e7\u00e3o do pertencimento de classe e cor. In this paper I discuss apprenticeship experiences of a heterosexual, raciaiized and class based sexuality in a group of upper-middle class men self-identifying as white, ranging from 43 to 60 years old, in Rio de Janeiro. I examine respondents' accounts on what was defined during the interview as \"sexual initiation\" with female domestic workers or prostitutes during their adolescence. I concentrate on the analysis of a relationship of domination as it is described by who exercises domination. This analysis discloses how these experiences participate in the production of men's sexuality, and at the same time determine their color and class identity.","creator":["Valeria Ribeiro Corossacz"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bdf608d7-6a59-3b93-9e92-68c383be8c9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"521","pagination":"pp. 521-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cor, classe, g\u00eanero: aprendizado sexual e rela\u00e7\u00f5es de dom\u00ednio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904228","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ross Chambers"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3190026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190026","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Fifty years ago, the philosopher John Macmurray responded to calls for education to redesign itself around the exigencies of international competition with a robust rebuttal of such instrumentalism. He argued instead that the purpose of education was 'learning to be human'. This paper explores how Macmurray's ideas might be applied to contemporary use of technology in education. In so doing, it argues that the use of technologies in education should be guided by the aspiration to create socio-technical practices that are personal (located with the person), relational (a resource for friendship and collaboration) and beautiful (designed to promote reflection and contemplation).","creator":["Keri Facer"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03054985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12eaffdd-0c55-3512-a00f-80b98c0bea6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxforevieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Review of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"725","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-725","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Personal, relational and beautiful: education, technologies and John Macmurray's philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001787","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Kaivola"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe09085e-2f03-3afe-91eb-c598b9298c84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Virginia Woolf, Vita Sackville-West, and the Question of Sexual Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906336","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10877,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430072,430290]],"Locations in B":[[13435,13653]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c1b9445-a0e3-38eb-9b93-66d7bac8c4fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859460","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Teresa L. Ebert"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98235ce8-060a-3d89-af6a-e485b06b703f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4020985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodernism's Infinite Variety","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4020985","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":3042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tobin Siebers"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"778","pageStart":"756","pagination":"pp. 756-778","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethics ad Nauseam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489964","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-12-31","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24753040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235607"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d045d43-48fc-36f2-842a-8564cedf4f29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24753040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"PERSPECTIVES OF NEW MUSIC: Index to Volumes 30, 31, and 32","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24753040","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What survival strategies, mechanisms and tactics do gender rights activists in Romania and Poland use, in an environment of changing foreign aid? In order to tackle these aspects, the first part of the article analyses the issue of foreign aid and civil society sector in the two countries. In the second part, the analysis focuses on organizational mechanisms and procedures aimed at replacing resources when donors withdraw aid. The last part discusses unintentional positive and negative effects of scarce financial resources on the local and national level and aid reduction from international donors. The article shows that regardless of financial aspects, activists struggle to keep organizations alive, while adopting similar strategies in different cultural and political contexts.","creator":["Andrada Nimu"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45105451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09578765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44514128"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d37d41e7-24db-3968-ab2d-62f7b261b8e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45105451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluntas"}],"isPartOf":"Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Surviving Mechanisms and Strategies of Gender Equality NGOs in Romania and Poland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45105451","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":19059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2075054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"892d90d3-fb3b-3358-bf66-0a65116265bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2075054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Publications Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2075054","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11414,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victoria Pileggi","Joanna Holliday","Carm de Santis","Andrea Lamarre","Nicole Jeffrey","Maria Tetro","Carla Rice"],"datePublished":"2015-12-30","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.1.0029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4a15d19-85c1-30af-8e8b-bef221c85109"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.26.1.0029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Becoming Scholars in an Interdisciplinary, Feminist Learning Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.1.0029","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that Malory undermines paradigms of divine, sovereign, and common law justice while suggesting embodied justice as a viable alternative that depends upon the agency of the body in debate. It explores the implications for women who gain greater access to judicial process via the mechanism of embodied justice and rejection of prescriptive law.","creator":["AMANDA D. TAYLOR"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e881bfc-18bb-37cf-bdf7-e756487088c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24643530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Body of Law: Embodied Justice in Sir Thomas Malory's \"Morte Darthur\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643530","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":15802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many critics today are trying to link the homosexuality of an author with his or her writings in not only a thematic, but structural, formal way. Such studies of \"homotextuality\" have focused on usually male homosexuals' subversive or \"coded\" use of language in order to show how a homosexual author confronts his sexuality in the structure of a text. While such analyses are useful, they are often ahistorical; they also hypostatize what it might mean to write \"like a homosexual.\" That is, such studies tend to posit a universal homosexual essence that appears in texts and do not understand how a concept of homosexuality (or homotextuality) can equally be a cultural and ideological construct. However, an emphasis on cultural and historical context as well as recent narrative theory directs an exploration of the structure of narrative in Forster's Maurice and The Longest Journey in terms of how it \"inverts\" the traditional, homosocial narrative contract. \"Narrative inversion,\" then, describes how narrative in the novels is structured both by socialized homosexual desire and homophobic social constraints within a particular set of historical forces.","creator":["Scott R. Nelson"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42945974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3250cb71-ae4c-3296-87fd-0657220c99af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42945974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Narrative Inversion: The Textual Construction of Homosexuality in E. M. Forster's Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42945974","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8195,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[267837,267918],[268926,269432]],"Locations in B":[[35997,36079],[36228,36734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study concerns the convergence of electronic literacy, collaboration, and critical pedagogy in the classroom. I argue that teachers in the humanities must relinquish the vestiges of non-electronic criteria in their assessments of electronic literacy. Instead, the interplay of human and technological factors in the classroom leads to a reaffirmation of literacy as a social process. The radical democratization and multivocality of the corporate or collaborativelywritten text demands a critical problematizing of our roles and actions as teacher-readers. The viability of static criteria for good literacy practices vanishes with electronic literacy. Feminist cyborg theory offers a useful paradigm for understanding the corporate text by bridging theories of electronic literacy and theories of collaborative learning. The cyborg is a dynamic techno-fusion of difference and contradiction: much like the corporate text. A cyborgian perspective reaffirms the polyvocalic, instable nature of postmodern literacy and calls for contextual writing criteria.","creator":["Carol L. Winkelmann"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30200367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65703fcc-2cfb-3835-8323-27eaa3d037d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30200367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comphuma"}],"isPartOf":"Computers and the Humanities","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Electronic Literacy, Critical Pedagogy, and Collaboration: A Case for Cyborg Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30200367","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":13622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"589326af-5633-33f0-8b56-5486f5babfde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41468083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468083","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":4568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne C. Dailey"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16860b5f-2255-3a07-afae-35b755785594"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"1286","pageStart":"1265","pagination":"pp. 1265-1286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism's Return to Liberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796796","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":11916,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[467295,467363],[472829,472911]],"Locations in B":[[14966,15037],[31354,31437]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Foster"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e10bbf1-5af4-34dd-af05-054d29413eae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"742","pageStart":"708","pagination":"pp. 708-742","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"TRAPPED BY THE BODY\"? TELEPRESENCE TECHNOLOGIES AND TRANSGENDERED PERFORMANCE IN FEMINIST AND LESBIAN REWRITINGS OF CYBERPUNK FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285657","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":13783,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[32897,33038]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Berkowitz"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3688632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fd1073b-04dc-39fa-a627-a5249bf8dc91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3688632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ambiguities of Rawls's Influence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3688632","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Johns Blackwell"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40919756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d35dae62-787f-35e0-b393-22a829ad6390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40919756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"196","pagination":"pp. 196-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ideology and Specularity in Per Olov Enquist's \"Tribadernas natt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40919756","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8475,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103187,103458]],"Locations in B":[[11931,12200]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The concerns of this paper come from an attempt to develop sociological inquiry from women's standpoint and to create a sociology for people. It is a project that must rely on the possibility of \u201ctelling the truth.\u201d The poststructuralist\/postmodernist critique of representation and reference creates a fundamental problem for this project. It challenges the very possibility of a sociology committed to inquiry into the actualities of the social as people live them. The poststructuralist\/postmodernist critique of the unitary subject of modernity is central. It is argued that the subject and subject-object relations are inescapably in and of discourse and language. Both subject and object are discursively constituted and there is no beyond to which reference can be made in establishing the truth of statements. Rather subjects are constituted only in discourse and are fragmented, multiple, diverse. This paper argues that, though the unitary subject is rejected, an individuated subject survives though multiplied and that a central failure of poststructuralism\/postmodernism is to come to grips with the social as actual socially organized practices. Using the theories of George Herbert Mead and Mikhail Bakhtin, the paper goes on to offer an alternative understanding of referring and \u201ctelling the truth.\u201d Observations of sequences in which people are identifying an object for one another are described to demonstrate the radically and ineluctably social character of the process. The argument is then extrapolated with further examples to offer an alternative account of referring. A description of using a street map in an actual context of \u201cfinding our way\u201d exemplifies how a science might be inserted into a local practice. Telling the truth, it is argued, is always and only in just such actual sequences of dialogue among people directly present to one another or indirectly present in the texts they have produced. My own and others' observations are used to reconceptualize \u201creferring\u201d in general as integral to a social act of finding and recognizing an object as a local performance. In conclusion, I suggest that the example of a map offers to sociology a model that does not displace and subordinate people's experience but can be used by them to expand their knowledge beyond it.","creator":["Dorothy E. Smith"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1996.19.3.171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"890ca91b-d540-3ccf-98ab-355f49ea01c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1996.19.3.171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Telling the Truth after Postmodernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1996.19.3.171","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":18703,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64169,64293]],"Locations in B":[[28576,28700]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben. Sifuentes-J\u00e1uregui"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90d28664-32d9-3d52-9a93-fd81f32d2e0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Loss, Identification and Heterosexual Tendencies in Poniatowska's \"Querido Diego, te abraza Quiela\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119848","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6867,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[473861,473952],[474197,474461]],"Locations in B":[[22225,22316],[22364,22628]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heather Ondercin"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63ca4b77-4fd1-3332-a2e7-8b1f3f13067c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628166","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":2619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I problematize traditional notions of statistical literacy by juxtaposing it with critical literacy. At the school level statistical literacy is vitally important for students who are preparing to become citizens in modern societies that are increasingly shaped and driven by data based arguments. The teaching of statistics, which is the science of data, is firmly rooted in the mathematics curriculum at the K-12 school level, making statistical literacy a crucial goal in mathematics education. I discuss key ideas from critical literacy in formal school contexts, especially within the field of mathematics education and intersect those with key ideas from statistical literacy to create a critical statistical literacy framework. Potential contributions of and barriers to the implementation of a critical statistical literacy are discussed.","creator":["Travis Weiland"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45184577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131954"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4b261a3-116f-39e7-ac50-ffc75bcfa567"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45184577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educstudmath"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Studies in Mathematics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Problematizing statistical literacy: An intersection of critical and statistical literacies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45184577","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":8287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article tries to find out whether \"the glass ceiling\" concept, coined and used to describe the woman's status, is also applicable to men. Gender theory and empirical research based on this theory will help us to realize this objective. Analysis of empirical data covering a brief period (1998-2002) within the transformation process allowed us to formulate an intriguing yet optimistic conclusion as far as men are concerned. If the hypothetical identification of the male \"glass ceiling\" with an unfortunate pattern of sex-typing is confirmed, we will be able to say that the men's situation is paradoxically rather good. The presented results show that the changes in gender self-definition which men have undergone in so short a time and which have led to a shift from the former dominant poor gender definition to cultural masculinity, and the simultaneous enrichment of this self-definition with traits conducive to relation building (\"caring,\" \"emotional,\" \"affectionate\"), place men in the position of individuals who are more social adapted than before. Our sociological diagnosis suggests that the proportion of culturally androgynous men may increase in Poland.","creator":["ANNA TITKOW"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41275171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b4492d4-7dc3-3843-a08c-a7c9947b95c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41275171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"172","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Do Men Have Their Own Glass Ceiling?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41275171","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheryl A. Koos"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00161071"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976306"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/286641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenhiststud"}],"isPartOf":"French Historical Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"723","pageStart":"699","pagination":"pp. 699-723","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Anti-Individualism, and Nationalism: The Alliance Nationale and the Pronatalist Backlash against the Femme Moderne, 1933-1940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286641","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article aims to expand the scope of research on international teaching assistants (ITAs) by fore-grounding identities as pedagogical resources. Employing an ethnographic multiple case study approach, the study examined the experiences of 2 English department ITAs in learning to teach College Composition classes at a public university in the United States. Guided by Morgan's (2004) \"identity as pedagogy\" and Canagarajah's (2013) conceptualization of \"translingualism,\" the study found that the ITAs' becoming of translingual teachers was constrained by their perceived linguistic membership and competence, which intersected with other identity categories such as accent, nationality, ethnicity, and religion. In addition, they adopted different orientations to their multilingualism to manage the challenges of teaching diverse groups of students, and were able to deploy various identities as pedagogy. The findings suggest that the ability to re-imagine oneself as a translingual and to draw on translingual identities to enact a translingual pedagogy should not be taken for granted: Only when the ITAs become aware and critical of the link between identity and pedagogy can they utilize their translingual identity-as-pedagogy more fully in ways that benefit both the teacher and the diverse student body.","creator":["XUAN ZHENG"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44981291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62203972-c6a4-38b5-b4b0-78f728c10c86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44981291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Translingual Identity as Pedagogy: International Teaching Assistants of English in College Composition Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44981291","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":11871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eleanor Hersey"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca36598c-1611-32cf-aaf8-69bd82929f6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I am not a Monster\": Homophobia, Nostalgia, and Edith Wharton's The Buccaneers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679302","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10080,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[103619,103898],[103899,104087],[144707,144876]],"Locations in B":[[8472,8749],[8755,8943],[48070,48240]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Freedman","Gabrielle M. Spiegel"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2650568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fd4aede-5a67-34d1-b11d-d8b7dd952131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2650568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"704","pageStart":"677","pagination":"pp. 677-704","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Medievalisms Old and New: The Rediscovery of Alterity in North American Medieval Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2650568","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":16562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent critiques of the identity literature have bemoaned the lack of clarity in conceptualizations of identity. R. W. Connell's (1987) theory of practice and Dorothy Smith's (1987, pp. 88-97) notion of \"the everday as problematic\" provide the foundation for articulating the construct of identity practices. Identity practices refer to the routine actions and ways of thinking, as well as the representations of those acts and thoughts, that enable people to claim collective identities. Although identity practices mark group membership, they also signal marginality to or exclusion from other groups. This paper explores the importance of understanding identity practices at micro levels of interaction as well as macro-level structures and dominant culture narratives. The specific empirical focus-on German Jewish immigrants who fled Nazi Germany and arrived in the United States by 1945-enables an interrogation of the meanings associated with national identity practices.","creator":["Judith M. Gerson"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3791911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In between States: National Identity Practices among German Jewish Immigrants","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791911","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9318,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475218,475303]],"Locations in B":[[59151,59248]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["AXEL NISSEN"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26477037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fb35315-7218-3496-9221-6a1b68ee456c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26477037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Welty Studies at the Millennium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26477037","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":2794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513429]],"Locations in B":[[14200,14289]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract The collective \u2018Las Patronas\u2019 is one of Mexico\u2019s most famous and most decorated activist groups. For the past 20 years, they have given food, water, and clothing to migrants on moving freight trains, without reciprocation. This article considers the centrality of the kitchen and of kitchenspace to the group\u2019s project, especially as part of their strategy for becoming and remaining \u2018public\u2019. In Mexico, \u2018the kitchen\u2019 may be two different kitchens and two types of kitchenspace, one for the everyday, the other for the singular and special. The ceremonial cocina de humo figures prominently in the Patronas\u2019 day-to-day lives as well as media representations. It legitimates their public place and enacts a ritual importance to their provisioning. In tracing the importance of kitchenspace, how the Patronas\u2019 project becomes translated in media accounts such as the documentary De Nadie and the television show Tiempo de H\u00e9roes, and how the Patronas perform maternal domesticity to take up a form of authority, this article argues that the Patronas spatially perform publicness and domesticity non-exclusively. The Patronas\u2019 strategy produces a spatially expansive, rather than exclusive, domesticity, and in so doing, the group explodes the domestic\u2013public binary.","creator":["Mario Bruzzone"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50996597"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52148ce3-9f25-36b0-acfe-61da0197c5fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Respatializing the domestic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168812","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"gender, extensive domesticity, and activist kitchenspace in Mexican migration politics"} +{"abstract":"This article aims to develop a theoretical model of the evolution of Israeli feminist scholarship in the last three decades. This model focuses on critical disciplinary discourses that deconstruct existing institutional and academic frameworks in the interest of social and cultural change. I insist here on feminist critical inquiry, the critique of the nation, and the critique of knowledge as emerging consistent concerns in all three phases of its evolution. These phases are liberal criticism (1970s-80s), radical criticism (1990s), and postmodern criticism (2000s). Documenting the manifestations of inequality in the workplace, the army, and the family was the central theme in much feminist writing of the 1980s. The focus of scholarly inquiry in literature, sociology, and anthropology is gender rather than sexual difference, and the basic problem is diagnosed as oppression rather than discrimination; power and discourse are the terms of reference. This radical approach no longer sought reform, inclusion, and accommodation, but rather social and cultural transformation.","creator":["Esther Fuchs"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30245861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10849513"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388186"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24c81364-ec1c-3922-bba7-86459e18da03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30245861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Evolution of Critical Paradigms in Israeli Feminist Scholarship: A Theoretical Model","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30245861","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9597,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99265,99660]],"Locations in B":[[61173,61565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Liebelt"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380377"},{"name":"oclc","value":"458296085"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7ed387e-eceb-3f2f-834c-b02c2186196b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24755103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociologus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duncker & Humblot GmbH","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Manufacturing Beauty, Grooming Selves: The Creation of Femininities in the Global Economy \u2013 An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755103","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":6571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sheila Hassell Hughes"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"213dbf6f-4f65-390f-a438-0f2b6b90b1bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tongue-Tied: Rhetoric and Relation in Louise Erdrich's Tracks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468238","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There is much debate within feminist theology about which construal of subjectivity and agency best promotes the feminist aim to promote justice and flourishing for humanity and the rest of creation. A growing number of feminist theologians argue for the need to dismiss modern construals of subjectivity and agency and adopt a poststructuralist framework. This article examines the poststructuralist concepts of subjectivity and agency according to criteria of how well they attend to the effects of severe bodily harm and how well they can provide theoretical resources to foster healing and recovery for persons traumatized by child sexual abuse.","creator":["Jennifer Beste"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e79cbe4a-b003-38e2-9af0-6943ca84ff5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Limits of Poststructuralism for Feminist Theology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487851","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6863,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[99761,99880],[448376,448469],[454742,454820]],"Locations in B":[[11581,11700],[12981,13073],[16284,16362]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although contemporary spaceflight no longer represents the cutting edge of technological or social speculation, its rhetoric of frontier, freedom, escape, and renewal remains a useful resource for writers of politically engaged fiction. Vonda N. McIntyre reworks this old rhetoric to create anti-racist feminist narratives of space exploration. I argue that the space-future narratives of her Star Trek novelizations and her Starfarer series eschew the boys' own nostalgia that is the dominant mode of post-Heinlein hard science fiction. Opting for a strategy of respectful parody, McIntyre does not so much \"feminize\" a masculinist genre as hold it to its own claims of enabling new ways of thinking about the future. Her critics are wrong to claim that her turn to popular and mainstream sf represents the disavowal of a recognizably feminist sensibility. Because it allows spaceflight narratives to imaginatively authorize social transformations, McIntyre's parodic astrofuturism is feminism under different rules of engagement. McIntyre creates a future in which the race and gender markers of subject constitution are open to resignification. In so doing she exchanges the conquest of space for an exploration that avoids reinscribing the patriarchal and racial stratifications that dominate conventional space-future speculation.","creator":["De Witt Douglas Kilgore"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d5d5df-7e7d-379c-8a4a-27eb885f5b76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Regimes: Vonda N. McIntyre's Parodic Astrofuturism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240879","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Swan"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"review-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2001.54.3.47","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c640e3cb-ca6e-3619-ada5-050df892ad86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2001.54.3.47"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boys Don't Cry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2001.54.3.47","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":4257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Some sociologists have recently argued that a major aim of sociological inquiry is to identify the mechanisms by which cause and effect relationships in the social world come about. This article argues that existing accounts of social mechanisms are problematic because they rest on either inadequately developed or questionable understandings of social action. Building on an insight increasingly common among sociological theorists\u2014that action should be conceptualized in terms of social practices\u2014I mobilize ideas from the tradition of classical American pragmatism to develop a more adequate theory of mechanisms. I identify three kinds of analytical problems the theory is especially well poised to address and then lay out an agenda for future research.","creator":["Neil Gross"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27736068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8d4aa94-1063-3a64-895a-32d775360c2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27736068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"A Pragmatist Theory of Social Mechanisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27736068","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":15057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist philosophers and social theorists have engaged in an extensive critique of the project of modernity during the past three decades. However, many feminists seem to assume that the critique of religion essential to this project remains valid. Radical criticism of religion in the European tradition presupposes a theory of religion that is highly ethnocentric, and Marx's theory of religion serves as a case in point.","creator":["Amy Newman"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7e0733f-a59c-3c3a-967a-293cdb391284"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Social Criticism and Marx's Theory of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810420","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10472,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[92014,92522]],"Locations in B":[[14229,14749]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kane Race"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfa05aab-c8c1-329d-8389-ced01c37c865"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44508131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Difficult Pleasures of \"Orgasmology\": Multiple Orgasm and Paradigmatic Estrangement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508131","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":4429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jacques Barchilon"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0d7edb6-7680-3586-84e8-29338b258f9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388462","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas L. Cooksey"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26669787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26878267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"427418196"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2019200491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb9a86f7-8f6c-318c-b65b-45844539c0d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26669787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"flanneryoconnor"}],"isPartOf":"Flannery O'Connor Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System by and on behalf of Georgia College and State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Been Believing in Nothing!\": Flannery O'Connor Reads Simone de Beauvoir","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26669787","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":6244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cette Introduction \u00e0 la section th\u00e9matique \u00ab Ethnographie, performance et imagination \u00bb explore la performance comme \u00ab ethnographie imaginative \u00bb (Elliott et Culhane 2017), c\u2019est-\u00e0-dire comme pratique de recherche transdisciplinaire, collaborative, incarn\u00e9e, critique et engag\u00e9e qui s\u2019inspire de l\u2019anthropologie et des arts cr\u00e9atifs. L\u2019accent est mis en particulier sur la performativit\u00e9 de la performance (un \u00e9v\u00e9nement d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment mis en sc\u00e8ne pour un public), employ\u00e9e \u00e0 la fois comme processus ethnographique (travail de terrain) et comme mode de repr\u00e9sentation ethnographique. Les questions pos\u00e9es sont les suivantes: La performance peut-elle nous aider \u00e0 \u00e9tudier et \u00e0 mieux comprendre les mondes de la vie imaginative tels qu\u2019ils se d\u00e9ploient dans le moment pr\u00e9sent? La performance nous permet-elle de repenser l\u2019anthropologie de l\u2019imagination? Est \u00e9galement pos\u00e9e la question de savoir si le travail men\u00e9 \u00e0 la crois\u00e9e de l\u2019anthropologie, de l\u2019ethnographie, de la performance et de l\u2019imagination permet de transformer la fa\u00e7on dont sont abord\u00e9s les processus et les produits ethnographiques, les questions de r\u00e9flexivit\u00e9 et de repr\u00e9sentation, les relations ethnographes-participants et les publics ethnographiques. La mani\u00e8re dont la performance employ\u00e9e comme ethnographie peut nous aider \u00e0 reconceptualiser l\u2019engagement public et l\u2019activisme ethnographique, l\u2019ethnographie collaborative\/participante, ainsi que la recherche interdisciplinaire au sein et au-del\u00e0 du monde universitaire, est aussi examin\u00e9e. Enfin, cette Introduction donne un bref aper\u00e7u des contributions \u00e0 cette section th\u00e9matique, lesquelles abordent ces questions de diff\u00e9rents points de vue th\u00e9oriques, m\u00e9thodologiques et th\u00e9matiques. This introduction to the thematic section entitled \u201cEthnography, Performance and Imagination\u201d explores performance as \u201cimaginative ethnography\u201d (Elliott and Culhane 2017), a transdisciplinary, collaborative, embodied, critical and engaged research practice that draws from anthropology and the creative arts. In particular, it focuses on the performativity of performance (an event intentionally staged for an audience) employed as both an ethnographic process (fieldwork) and a mode of ethnographic representation. It asks: can performance help us research and better understand imaginative lifeworlds as they unfold in the present moment? Can performance potentially assist us in re-envisioning what an anthropology of imagination might look like? It also inquires whether working at the intersections of anthropology, ethnography, performance and imagination could transform how we attend to ethnographic processes and products, questions of reflexivity and representation, ethnographer-participant relations and ethnographic audiences. It considers how performance employed as ethnography might help us reconceptualise public engagement and ethnographic activism, collaborative\/participatory ethnography and interdisciplinary research within and beyond the academy. Finally, this introduction provides a brief overview of the contributions to this thematic section, which address these questions from a variety of theoretical, methodological and topical standpoints.","creator":["Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston","Virginie Magnat"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fa50b9f-f370-3c55-9b83-d218332de76c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26794621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794621","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":11880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Ethnographie, performance et imagination"} +{"abstract":"In an examination of the psychological aspect of passing, this essay challenges Sandy Stone's conceptualization and subsequent request for transsexuals to forego the act. Employing an auto-ethnographical approach, this essay contends that considering the \"psychic\" dimensions of passing requires different, and more hopeful, articulations about transsexual bodies, such that gendered and racialized transsexual bodies are produced not simply in terms of social reading and physical embodiment, but also through psychic affirmation and disavowal.","creator":["C. Riley Snorton"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c09cc523-05f5-3638-a697-be982f912076"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A New Hope\": The Psychic Life of Passing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618165","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Johnston"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab290f98-ca75-3b5a-9457-1f8af89bcdf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Not for Queers Only: Pedagogy and Postmodernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316382","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Theodore"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8da5b2e1-6fe8-3aa3-a85f-311faff7929d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44840733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Turning Architecture Upside-down: From Inigo Jones To Phenomenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840733","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476786,476900]],"Locations in B":[[26098,26217]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fred Moten"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2d1f8af-05d6-3437-b23f-c1cd7b398164"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23128740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"THE CASE OF BLACKNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128740","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":19388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vek Lewis"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cfd0438-6d0f-3bf8-bb77-2102726b5dc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29742308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Grotesque Spectacles: The Janus Face of the State and Gender Variant Bodies in Reinaldo Arenas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742308","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471785]],"Locations in B":[[75748,75827]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dianne Harris"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c58fe641-6b48-388b-9879-0500190ebce3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","History - Historical methodology","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social History: Identity, Performance, Politics, and Architectural Histories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068193","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":2038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This contribution explores the popularity of coming out videos in contemporary media culture. Examining coming out videos as a collection of popular media practices, it demonstrates how media cultures are shaping and regulating the meanings of coming out videos in queer youth culture. The aim of this paper is to deconstruct the functionalistic logics in which society and academic insights are taken the emancipatory potentials of an online coming out for granted. This paper argues that the politics of coming out stories on YouTube should be seen in relation to how media authenticate value in the form of symbolic capital to coming out stories. It is shown how these values relate to sexual hierarchies; such popular media practices silence the emotional investment of queer teens necessary to acquire such symbolic capital. Thereby, media cultures attain a value (economic or symbolic) to queer youths' most vulnerable and defining moment.","creator":["Sander De Ridder","Frederik Dhaenens"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.3","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4cafae5-7ab3-36ab-b038-08e65585788b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.6.2.3"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coming Out as Popular Media Practice: The Politics of Queer Youth Coming Out on YouTube","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.6.2.3","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":8497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Puerto Rican theater, the debate on the production and interpretation of national culture has played out primarily in the space of the family. In Luis Rafael S\u00e1nchez's Qu\u00edntuples (1984) and in Myrna Casas's \"El gran circo eukraniano\" (1988), the motif of traveling family acting troupes provides ways of imagining Puerto Rican identity beyond the colonialist-nationalist polarity that has framed long-standing discussions on the island's political status and cultural identity. In both plays, the construction of multiple performance spaces implicit in the migratory condition of the troupes and the lack of a set distinguished by the family home, a structure that could delimit a particular vision of the nation, highlight a desire to investigate and defend identities not bound by nationalism. Likewise, the presence of performing families and the use of performance as an activity to explore identity exposes the instability of the national family construct as a foundation for collective identity.","creator":["Camilla Stevens"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8916b72-f221-363c-98d0-4670b62215d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Traveling Troupes: The Performance of Puerto Rican Identity in Plays by Luis Rafael S\u00e1nchez and Myrna Casas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141051","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":6931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Margolis"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/431570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconciling Analytic and Feminist Philosophy and Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431570","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":6256,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477833,477898],[503309,503458]],"Locations in B":[[37992,38057],[38093,38238]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study proposes a new reading of a well-known episode in the Hebrew chronicles of the First Crusade (1096), the brutal martyrdom of the virgin bride Sarit. It argues that the story addresses the concern for maintaining the social and religious boundaries of the Jewish community in times of turmoil, and that this concern is focused on the virgin female body. Sarit's virginal body becomes the site where internal and external struggles of the medieval Jewish community attain their resolution, both actual and metaphorical. Sarit's virginity is viewed as an essential key for understanding the story and its social logic. Juxtaposing the description of her murder with contemporary Christian exegesis concerning the biblical figure of Jephthah's daughter exposes conceptual proximity and a symbolic discourse of sacrifice shared by Jews and Christians. In both worlds, the virginal body is a symbolic arena which can be employed to alleviate internal social tensions and inter-religious conflict.","creator":["\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d8\u05dc \u05d3\u05d5\u05d9\u05d3\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05e5'-\u05d0\u05e9\u05d3","Avital Davidovich-Eshed"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24120597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0333693X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607467872"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af71ce17-a98f-3239-9dfb-aa84843589d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24120597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudhebrlite"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sanctified God, Desecrated Woman: The Female Body as a Site of Cultural Conflict. Rereading the Story of the Murder of Sarit from a Hebrew Chronicle of 1096 \/ \u05d7\u05d9\u05dc\u05d5\u05dc \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d4\u05e9\u05dd: \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9 \u05db\u05d0\u05ea\u05e8 \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df-\u05d3\u05ea\u05d9: \u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05d4 \u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05d3\u05e9\u05ea \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05e8\u05e6\u05d7 \u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05de\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d2\u05d6\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05ea\u05ea\u05e0\"\u05d5","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24120597","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d6","wordCount":12502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karina Kellermann"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20659234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00442518"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ecc7e29-f46a-3165-821c-b22115b9b098"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20659234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitdeutaltedeut"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr deutsches Altertum und deutsche Literatur","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"S. Hirzel Verlag","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20659234","volumeNumber":"130","wordCount":5032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite high rates of gendered violence among youth, very few young women report these incidents to authority figures. This study moves the discussion from the question of why young women do not report them toward how violence is produced, maintained, and normalized among youth. The girls in this study often did not name what law, researchers, and educators commonly identify as sexual harassment and abuse. How then, do girls name and make sense of victimization? Exploring violence via the lens of compulsory heterosexuality highlights the relational dynamics at play in this naming process. Forensic interviews with youth revealed patterns of heteronormative scripts appropriated to make sense of everyday harassment, violence, coercion, and consent. Findings inform discussions about the links between dominant discourses and sexual subjectivities as we try to better understand why many regard violence a normal part of life.","creator":["HEATHER R. HLAVKA"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1440f9c-64f8-3b5e-83cb-191fa50f4140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NORMALIZING SEXUAL VIOLENCE: Young Women Account for Harassment and Abuse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669888","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Human freedom resides primarily in exercise of that capacity that humans employ more abundantly than any other species on earth: the capacity for judgement. And in particular: that special judgement in relation to Self that we call aspiration. Freedom is not the absence of a field of (other) powers; instead, freedom shows up only against the reticulations of power impinging from without. For freedom worthy of the name must be construed as an exercise of power within an already-present field of power. Thus, liberty and causal necessity are not obverses.","creator":["Mariam Thalos"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77a3ea58-1094-35b7-bebf-6c0801214633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"134","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Towards a Theory of Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705246","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":12759,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477202,477262]],"Locations in B":[[71836,71913]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["V. Spike Peterson"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24590519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800786"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ac8b5ba-7597-30e6-b7c7-4465f7f7388a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24590519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"browjworlaffa"}],"isPartOf":"The Brown Journal of World Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brown Journal of World Affairs","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Theories Within, Invisible To, and Beyond IR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24590519","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theoretical models of how policewomen have emerged in modern nation-states\u2014from segregated policewomen's units to full integration\u2014were built without theoretical or empirical contributions derived from the experiences of policewomen in Arab\/Muslim countries. Meaningful analytics for how societies allow for female police, and whether these officers serve in integrated units with policemen, cannot be divorced from a description of cultural process. In particular, the emergence of modern policewomen in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries has important cultural and social meaning that challenges the dominant notions of women and policing in academic discourse. Using postcolonial and comparative feminist theory, this article challenges dominant theories within the discourse on policewomen, taking a critical approach to the identity politics that fuels the gender-related rhetoric of \u201cus vs. them.\u201d Any new, culturally specific model should not necessarily exhibit a zero-sum game of either segregation or integration; both can be operating simultaneously in the same historical moment as legitimate and coherent policy given particular social, political, and cultural contexts, as the GCC example suggests.","creator":["Staci Strobl"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40980984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b8a67e7-a1d4-3957-9756-c6a81fa37142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40980984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Progressive or Neo-Traditional? Policewomen in Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Countries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40980984","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tony Jackson"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07f7d889-c250-313e-a393-1a945167a8d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Nihilism, Relativism, and Literary Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685006","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8933,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456226,456411]],"Locations in B":[[19668,19853]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contextual definitions of success are situated within specific schools and informal learning environments and, within those situated contexts, impact the identities that youth develop. This article explores what it means to be successful outside of mainstream education and the resources youth use to reorient to alternative definitions of success, contributing to literature on supporting the identity development and success of youth on the margins of public education. In this study, ethnographic methods were used to conduct case analyses of two youth in an alternative high school. Specifically, case youths\u2019 perspectives were examined to identify ideational resources \u2013 defined as ideas about oneself, one\u2019s place in the world, and an understanding of what is valued within specific communities. Findings highlight two themes of ideational resources \u2013 a critique of normative education and a focus on community education \u2013 that allowed youth to redefine school and become successful members of the alternative school community.","creator":["Gavin Tierney"],"datePublished":"2020-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26986632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46322850"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001227186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6868aa25-ec12-3981-a98c-e65fecfdff62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26986632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highschooljour"}],"isPartOf":"The High School Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Ideational Resources and Alternative Definitions of Success","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26986632","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":11766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Reorienting to Education and Developing Identities in an Alternative High School"} +{"abstract":"Wislawa Szymborska's poetry (Nobel Prize for Literature, 1996) has gained wide acclaim not only in her native Poland but also abroad, including the Englishspeaking countries, where translations of her work have appeared both in book form and in numerous periodicals. Yet the critical response has been largely disappointing. This may be due to the fact that Szymborska's poetry transcends both patriarchal and feminist categories. It creates models of sensibility and outlook that seem to represent what Julia Kristeva has called \"the new generation of women,\" with their \"mixture of two attitudes\u2014 insertion into history and the radical refusal of the subjective limitations imposed by this history's time.\" The article shows how this \"avant-garde\" attitude manifests itself in various features characteristic of Szymborska's poetry and its poetics, including the poetic persona, irony, the concept of \"the other,\" \"mirthful pity\" and a revalorization of traditional womanhood.","creator":["Bo\u017cena Karwowska"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40871114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00085006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1d2a651-46e3-3fdd-bee7-065fd9ca90fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40871114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canaslavpape"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Slavonic Papers \/ Revue Canadienne des Slavistes","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Female Persona in Wis\u0142awa Szymborska's Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40871114","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A multifaceted feminist theoretical framework provides insights into relationships between patriarchal Western gender ideology and the materialization of ideology and methods for addressing poverty in institutions in the northeastern United States. This research found that institutions for the poor were instrumental in reinforcing social structures of gender inequality. The author's feminist framework of a heterarchy of powers leads to an analysis of institutional male supervisory powers, used to enforce inmate performance of work rituals that inscribed their bodies with normative insignia of gender. The framework also reveals evidence of muted voices of inmates and their gendered social agency in resisting incarceration. Finally, some archaeological and documentary evidence indicated ways that supervisors used \"powers with\" inmates. Excavations provided data not available in documents concerning the extent to which ideal practices for reforming inmates were followed, as well as undocumented foodstuffs and medicines, both usually served by women.","creator":["Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25762270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9968a3c5-a903-3b0f-8a93-7cc6d0f291b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25762270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Feminist Theoretical Perspectives on the Archaeology of Poverty: Gendering Institutional Lifeways in the Northeastern United States from the Eighteenth Century through the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25762270","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523956]],"Locations in B":[[76266,76354]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"842a9ba4-c14a-3f18-9ecd-9da9db362ae1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25619823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"72","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Performativity and Becoming","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619823","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14013,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[2344,2531],[488108,488180]],"Locations in B":[[60157,60344],[84878,84962]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Can feminists count on welfare states\u2014or at least some aspects of these complex systems\u2014as resources in the struggle for gender equality? Gender analysts of \"welfare states\" investigate this question and the broader set of issues around the mutually constitutive relationship between systems of social provision and regulation and gender. Feminist scholars have moved to bring the contingent practice of politics back into grounded fields of action and social change and away from the reification and abstractions that had come to dominate models of politics focused on \"big\" structures and systems, including those focused on \"welfare states.\" Conceptual innovations and reconceptualizations of foundational terms have been especially prominent in the comparative scholarship on welfare states, starting with gender, and including care, autonomy, citizenship, (in) dependence, political agency, and equality. In contrast to other subfields of political science and sociology, gendered insights have to some extent been incorporated into mainstream comparative scholarship on welfare states. The arguments between feminists and mainstream scholars over the course of the last two decades have been productive, powering the development of key themes and concepts pioneered by gender scholars, including \"defamilialization,\" the significance of unpaid care work in families and the difficulties of work-family \"reconciliation,\" gendered welfare state institutions, the relation between fertility and women's employment, and the partisan correlates of different family and gender policy models. Yet the mainstream still resists the deeper implications of feminist work, and has difficulties assimilating concepts of care, gendered power, dependency, and interdependency. Thus, the agenda of gendering comparative welfare state studies remains unfinished. To develop an understanding of what might be needed to finish that agenda, I assess the gendered contributions to the analysis of modern systems of social provision, starting with the concept of gender itself then moving to studies of the gendered division of labor (including care) and of gendered political power.","creator":["Ann Shola Orloff"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"350c093c-d9dc-3d53-99d1-46d1ecb4850e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40376139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendering the Comparative Analysis of Welfare States: An Unfinished Agenda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376139","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":17177,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[95062,95137]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Disability theory privileges masculinist notions of presence, visibility, material \"reality,\" and identity as \"given.\" One effect of this has been the erasure of \"sensibility,\" which, it is argued, inscribes, materializes, and performs the critique of binary thought. Therefore, sensibility must be re-articulated in order to escape the \"necessary error\" of identity implicit in accounts of cultural diversity, and to dialogue across difference in ways that dislocate disability from its position of dis-value in feminist thought.","creator":["Mairian Corker"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c11175a-43ad-31ef-9f16-cf7003bb3a0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sensing Disability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810782","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8293,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[49650,49739]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite the acknowledgment of gender roles in the academy, little is known regard\" ing the specific ways in which women faculty members manage those roles. This study applies impression-management theories and performativity to understand the specific ways in which women faculty intentionally or unintentionally alter their performances to align with gender roles. Results from this study indicate that women faculty perform their roles in close refotionship to the dominant discourse characterized by the specific context, and actively and intentionally use various dramaturgical techniques (demeanor, dress, and body language) to appear in a way that is acceptable to the particular context. Furthermore, results indicate that the continuous managing of impressions led to a reconstruction of their identity, merging the identity and intentional forms of impression management.","creator":["Jaime Lester"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24a0c4a5-799d-386b-84e3-e307a7ecd017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41301643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration"],"title":"Acting on the Collegiate Stage: Managing Impressions in the Workplace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301643","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Floyd W. Hayes, III"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.1.1.47","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21623244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740919793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd2a519f-be2b-354f-a546-21f57bd442b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/spectrum.1.1.47"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"spectrum"}],"isPartOf":"Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Womanizing Richard Wright: Constructing the Black Feminine in The Outsider<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.1.1.47","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Busco mostrar em que os Estudos de G\u00eanero podem colaborar com a Hist\u00f3ria Social, argumentando a partir de tr\u00eas eixos: 1) avalia\u00e7\u00e3o da import\u00e2ncia do olhar preocupado com g\u00eanero para uma compreens\u00e3o mais acurada do social sob uma perspectiva hist\u00f3rica; 2) an\u00e1lise das abordagens te\u00f3rico-metodol\/zgicas atentas \u00e0 constru\u00e7\u00e3o social das diferen\u00e7as sexuais que dialogam com a disciplina hist\u00f3rica \u2013 a desenvolvida dentro dos marcos da Hist\u00f3ria Social e a ligada ao p\u00f3s-estruturalismo de Joan Scott \" a partir de duas preocupa\u00e7\u00f5es: a) destacar as possibilidades de a\u00e7\u00e3o humana e b) enfrentar quest\u00f5es gerais da disciplina; e 3) exposi\u00e7\u00e3o de como o debate em torno dessas abordagens colabora para as atividades de pesquisa e a reflex\u00e3o te\u00f3rica. Meu objetivo \u00faltimo \u00e9 tentar ajudar a aumentar o n\u00famero de trabalhos de pesquisa em Hist\u00f3ria que lan\u00e7am m\u00e3o do conceito de g\u00eanero no Brasil. This text intends to show how Gender Studies can collaborate with Social History from three axis of argumentation: 1) it discusses the relevance of Gender Studies for a more accurate understanding of the social characteristics under a historical perspective. 2) It examines two of the theoretical-methodological approaches on the social construction of sexual differences adopted in History works; revisits the proposal developed from the angle of Social History confronted with post-structuralist proposal of J. Scott based in two programs clearly adopted by both: a) highlight human agency possibilities and b) face general questions of historical discipline from a gender perspective. 3) It shows how the debate concerning those approaches collaborates for research activities and theoretical reflection.","creator":["Carla Bassanezi Pinsky"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b022ff3f-cd46-3599-a46c-556aca66dd12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Estudos de G\u00eanero e Hist\u00f3ria Social","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327583","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13670,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[87591,87662]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Magdalena G\u00f3rsk\u00e1","Jan Matonoha"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0da609d8-9e59-35b2-b27b-2fa48bb3d856"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42687478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","issueNumber":"6","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"829","pageStart":"805","pagination":"pp. 805-829","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of Czech Literature, The Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Popis mnoha z\u00e1pas\u016f: diskurz, subjekt a moc v my\u0161len\u00ed Judith Butlerov\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687478","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":10243,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[65077,65182]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ute Berns"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03034178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43028223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poetica"}],"isPartOf":"Poetica","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wilhelm Fink GmbH & Co. Verlags-KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"MODI DER FREMDKONSTRUKTION: Orientalismus in Charlotte Bront\u00ebs Roman \"Villette\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028223","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Marriage remains an important future goal for most young adults and continues to be a significant personal, social, cultural and economic way in which they accord value to their lives. Given the dominant culture of heterosexuality within which marriage is located, this Article seeks to understand the meanings that young men and women attach to love and marriage, and how these meanings interface with dominant patriarchal ideals. The data interrogated in this Article draws on a larger study that aimed to explore young adults' understandings of and preparedness for marriage, carried out with a diverse group comprising 208 fourth year students (127 females and 81 males) at a South African university. The findings indicate that the majority of the young men and women see marriage as an important future goal and that love continues to emerge as a gendered discourse, with young women mainly presenting idealised notions of love and romance and young men mainly presenting emotionally detached (practical) explanations in their future marriage goals. The data suggests that young men and young women are entrapped within gendered discourses of romantic love that restrict both men and women from exploring alternative positions within future ideals of marriage. It is argued that while there is some evidence of resistance underway, young men and young women largely comply with existing gender regimes that perpetuate gender inequalities and place women in subordinate positions.","creator":["Shakila Singh"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a4784c7-5216-30b2-bc62-830dee18ba6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"2 (96)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Women want love, men want wives: The discourse of romantic love in young adults' future marriage goals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824389","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Oyeronke Oyewumi"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cddf3fb-ceee-34fc-8f46-438a26649d80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1062","pageStart":"1049","pagination":"pp. 1049-1062","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"De-Confounding Gender: Feminist Theorizing and Western Culture, a Comment on Hawkesworth's \"Confounding Gender\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175203","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary E. Curran"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"705a9c9e-c50b-3555-b27c-3963bfa2d97d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"380","pagination":"pp. 380-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geographic Theorizations of Sexuality: A Review of Recent Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459032","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Tablighi Jama'at\u2014a transnational Islamic missionary movement that propagates greater religious devotion and observance in The Gambia\u2014opens the door to a new experience of gendered Muslim piety. Tabligh or Islamic missionary work results in novel roles for women, who are now actively involved in the public sphere\u2014a domain usually defined as male. To provide their wives with more time to engage in tabligh, Tablighi men share the domestic workload, although this is generally considered 'women's work' in Gambian society. Contrary to the conventional approach in scholarship on gender and Islam to study such inversion of gender roles in terms of Muslim women's 'empowerment' and Muslim men's 'emancipation', in the Gambian branch of the Jama'at the reconfiguration of gender norms seems to be motivated by Tablighis' wish to return to the purported origins of Islam. Following the example of the Prophet's wives, Tablighi women actively engage in tabligh and, taking Muhammad as their example, Tablighi men have taken over part of their wives' household chores. Paradoxically, by reconfiguring gender norms Gambian Tablighis eventually reinstate the patriarchal gender order.","creator":["Marloes Janson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f62a4a6-d079-397e-b86c-6ce4b37457dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26358838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Male Wives and Female Husbands: Reconfiguring Gender in the Tablighi Jama'at in The Gambia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358838","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":14087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the role of fl\u00e2nerie in Ralph Werther's 1918 Autobiography of an Androgyne. In his everyday male existence, Werther lived a life of self-alienation. Strolls through urban slums in search of same-sex pickups, however, allowed him to become the woman he felt himself to be at his core. Critical assessments of the memoir largely overlook his preferred model of femininity, which derived from Victorian-era assumptions that women were, psychologically and morally, little more than children. Autobiography shows that fl\u00e2nerie was an ontology built on a paradox, for just as the fl\u00e2neur's static identity consists of constant movement, Werther based his identity on the notion that childhood, itself transitional and peripatetic, was the destination of Victorian womanhood. By aligning fl\u00e2nerie with Victorian womanhood we might better understand how the latter is not antithetical to modern notions of sexuality but is the foundation on which the parameters of modern sexuality were constructed.","creator":["AARON SHAHEEN"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5be6fca-1e6e-3caa-8cef-bf6b455a89ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"937","pageStart":"923","pagination":"pp. 923-937","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Strolling through the Slums of the Past: Ralph Werther's Love Affair with Victorian Womanhood in \"Autobiography of an Androgyne\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489164","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":10237,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[331955,332018],[471741,471794],[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[11992,12053],[58557,58610],[58641,58720]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jacquelyn Scott Lynch"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f4baa28-2e54-3c91-acdc-4a6b9c6fae1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Postwar Play: Gender Performatives in Faulkner's \"Soldiers' Pay\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907785","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra Allan","Elizabeth Atkinson","Elizabeth Brace","Ren\u00e9e DePalma","Judy Hemingway"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4620587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50069179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80dd867a-7eae-3090-8aaf-65af4a1de5b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4620587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"470","pagination":"pp. 470-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4620587","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana Mora\u00f1a"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b51c88b1-e18f-3623-9619-f22615c39379"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Alfonsina Storni: la mujer y la ciudad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021926","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7577,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123764,124038]],"Locations in B":[[27483,27757]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Phillip Brian Harper"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"The Subversive Edge\": Paris Is Burning, Social Critique, and the Limits of Subjective Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465166","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7816,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[430994,431066],[431288,431480],[432006,432753]],"Locations in B":[[15170,15242],[15255,15447],[15463,16292]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Smith"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f43cf28-486d-340a-a605-1f29067be2b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Studies without America: Native Feminisms and the Nation-State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068540","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":3103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through his metaphor of landscapes of meaning, Reed provides a way of looking at meaning in terms of how it explains action, with the assumption that action occurs within landscapes of meaning. However, my ethnographic evidence suggests that Reed\u2019s metaphor needs to enlarge its scope. In doing this I use my research on immigrant girls in Sweden. The aim is to demonstrate that people can and do live across, within and between landscapes of meaning. This interstitiality can both produce extreme hardship and possibilities of freedom and agency. I share the story of one person, Nazira, who is negotiating with different social and cultural worlds. This allows her to criticize different cultural contexts and to work towards emergent cultural forms. I conclude by arguing that my ethnographical accounts could be used in support and as a critique of the theoretical understanding of landscapes of meaning within Reed\u2019s interpretivist sociology.","creator":["Anna Lund"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"137349448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1f71839-2282-3553-b49b-e66fc12cb6b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From pregnancy out of place to pregnancy in place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359163","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6114,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[33036,33117]],"subTitle":"Across, within and between landscapes of meaning"} +{"abstract":"The following essay considers the ways in which masculinity and femininity can be seen as potentially fluid, rather than rigid, categories in the ancient Near East, and furthermore understood as part of shifting nexus of power and agency \u2013 or lack thereof. Specifically gendered insults exploited the fluidity of these categories by focusing in particular on the forced emasculation and feminization of men in the ancient Near East, and these insults were often used as binding threats in treaty texts. Such punishments, as they invariably were, had close associations with the goddess I\u0161tar, who was often responsible for acting as the agent of such enforced change. While the majority of these situations moved one from a position of greater to lesser agency and power (and thus from the masculine to feminine category), the opposite was possible in the ancient Near East. In limited and specific circumstances, women could also gain, in part, some of the agency that was normally reserved for men, a status that could be reflected in the ways in which they were indicated and referred to in texts.","creator":["Gina Konstantopoulos"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26977773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432547"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565113989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234575"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e907c809-3355-3e14-994a-86e834c52363"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26977773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltorients"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Orients","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"My Men Have Become Women, and My Women Men","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26977773","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9725,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443328,443393]],"Locations in B":[[8896,8962]],"subTitle":"Gender, Identity, and Cursing in Mesopotamia"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Josh Epstein"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa7f9535-c4f2-34a6-813d-e8e38fb9fccb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Neutral Physiognomy\": The Unreadable Faces of \"Middlemarch\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347597","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studies of heteronormativity have emphasized its normative content and repressive functions, but few have considered the strategic use of heteronormative and homonormative precepts to shape sexual selves, public identities, and social relations. Adopting an interactionist approach, this article analyzes interviews with homosexual elders to uncover their use of heteronormative premises (specifically, the presumption of heterosexuality, and the gender binary) to pass as heterosexual. Informants also used homonormative precepts, grounded in a postwar, pre-gay liberation assimilationist homosexual politics they adopted in their early years and maintained in later life, to justify passing and to frame their understanding and evaluation of past and present homosexual practices. Viewed through a homonormative lens, heteronormativity provided the tools for personal survival in a hostile society and for the collective production of a respectable homosexual culture. Informants' strategic use of heteronormativity can help explain heteronormativity's survival despite the incoherence and fragility of its content.","creator":["DANA ROSENFELD"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42d4b9b2-9012-3a61-bcef-3b86a0525a92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"638","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-638","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"HETERONORMATIVITY AND HOMONORMATIVITY AS PRACTICAL AND MORAL RESOURCES: The Case of Lesbian and Gay Elders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676814","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erin V. Obermueller"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43499412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12069078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43499412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlytheatre"}],"isPartOf":"Early Theatre","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Early Theatre: A Journal Associated with the Records of Early English Drama","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u2018On Cheating Pictures\u2019: Gender and Portrait Miniatures in Philip Massingers \"The Picture\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43499412","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8901,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[81571,81673]],"Locations in B":[[32400,32502]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By the late fifteenth century, academic celibacy gradually gave way to a new type of family household in northern Europe \u2014 scholarly families. The article, part of a larger research project dedicated to the modalities of this secular change and its implications, discusses this change, its perception and various modes of coming to terms with it by focusing on the life of the Swiss humanist and hebraist, Konrad Pellikan (1478-1556). His 'private chronicle' offers a rare opportunity for exploring several crucial issues across the great divide separating the celibate Catholic scholars of the early sixteenth century from their married Protestant successors. What kind of kinship strategies were developed by humanists in response to the new situation? What kind of domestic arrangements evolved? What role did they expect from their wives \u2014 and what type of relationship did they establish with their children?","creator":["\u05d2\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d0\u05dc\u05d2\u05d6\u05d9","Gadi Algazi"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03344843"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e13da05a-92a0-3dbc-aa63-35e27dc1726d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23257004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historia"}],"isPartOf":"Historia: Journal of the Historical Society of Israel \/ \u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d4: \u05db\u05ea\u05d1 \u05e2\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"14","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Historical Society of Israel \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Religion"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"'For This Boy I Prayed': Konrad Pellikan and the Making of Scholarly Families in Northern Europe \/ \u05d0\u05dc \u05d4\u05e0\u05e2\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4 \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05dc\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9': \u05e7\u05d5\u05e0\u05e8\u05d3 \u05e4\u05dc\u05d9\u05e7\u05df \u05d5\u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05e8\u05ea\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05e9\u05e4\u05d7\u05ea \u05d9\u05d3\u05e2 \u05d1\u05e6\u05e4\u05d5\u05df \u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d4'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257004","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra Shostak"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27563803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"730abd1f-9bb9-34bf-aa10-b787c44c4d74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27563803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Theory Uncompromised by Practicality\": Hybridity in Jeffrey Eugenides' \"Middlesex\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27563803","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANNMARIE ADAMS"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20839336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19360886"},{"name":"oclc","value":"180188625"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216167"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20839336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"buildland"}],"isPartOf":"Buildings & Landscapes: Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sex and the Single Building: The Weston Havens House, 1941\u20142001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20839336","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["K. M. Sibbald"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25833987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"563dabb0-0f91-3d93-8e09-d81336a90c86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25833987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"376","pagination":"pp. 376-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"LITERATURE, 1898\u20131936","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25833987","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":8174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the notion of \u201crhetorical androgyny\u201d in medieval and contemporary Franciscan hagiography. Rhetorical androgyny is androgyny that exists as spiritual motivation in religious texts but finds no corollary in everyday life due to social constraints. Depictions of St. Francis of Assisi's transformation stress his assumption of feminine characteristics, but even as androgynous existence is upheld as the epitome of pious achievement, the very definition of androgyny is problematized. A demonstration of feminine qualities enhances the male saint while the woman saint closest to him, Clare of Assisi, may not assimilate masculinity. Nevertheless, the female saint achieves a higher state of androgyny in medieval sources than she does in modern representation due to a foregrounding of the tension between social constraints and spiritual ideals in religious texts of the Middle Ages.","creator":["Christina Cedillo"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.65","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e8b92fc-6114-3fdd-abad-d3ba35000052"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.65"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Habitual Gender: Rhetorical Androgyny in Franciscan Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.65","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While Herder's essay \"Liebe und Selbstheit\" (1781) ostensibly moves from love to selfhood, this article reads it as narrating a transformation between two modes of constituting the self through enjoyment. In view of the Lacanian argument that Kant was the first to theorize sexual difference and move beyond the pleasure principle, it proposes that Herder's narrative makes the historical emergence of sexual difference intelligible as the solution to a conflict of pleasure.","creator":["Christoph F. E. Holzhey"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27675882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e87ccc69-d283-3b7e-a212-cc3461bbf7e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27675882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On the Emergence of Sexual Difference in the 18th Century: Economies of Pleasure in Herder's \"Liebe und Selbstheit\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27675882","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":12514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Waria (better known as banci or b\u00e9ncong), who can be provisionally defined as male-to-female transvestites, are wellknown members of contemporary Indonesian society. Waria are best understood not as a third gender but a male femininity. By exploring how waria reconfigure concepts of authenticity, I address the relationship between the waria subject position and Indonesian national culture.","creator":["Tom Boellstorff"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e8bdf3a-3ecb-3cb9-8748-d200b08bd280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Playing Back the Nation: Waria, Indonesian Transvestites","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651553","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":19318,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122850,122940]],"Locations in B":[[76217,76305]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Archaeologists - feminist or otherwise - use biologically sexed human remains to make inferences about cultures' conceptions of gender. Creating an easy link between 'sex' and 'gender', however, is not without problems. Recent debates within the social sciences have centered on the evolving, historical definition and cultural relevance of both of these terms. Interestingly, skeletal analysts' voices tend to remain silent in this debate. What do paradigmatic twists and turns in feminist and queer theorizing mean for burial analysis? To answer this question, I advocate a bioarchaeological approach that facilitates reconciliation of biological classifications, cultural constructions of gender and feminist theories that complicate 'sex' and 'gender'. As an example, I look to the pre-Columbian Maya.","creator":["Pamela L. Geller"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40025095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535549"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8aca5cc5-7fcd-3b29-a83c-1c0193059256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40025095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"609","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-609","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Skeletal Analysis and Theoretical Complications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40025095","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heidi Safia Mirza"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11592971-dff2-36fc-9d78-3d7d58866eed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 14: Postcolonial Subjects, Black Feminism, and the Intersectionality of Race and Gender in Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980391","volumeNumber":"369","wordCount":6825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En las \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas se ha visto un incremento en la representaci\u00f3n de la figura del travesti, tanto dentro de la ficci\u00f3n como dentro de los estudios literarios, hist\u00f3ricos y culturales. Sin embargo, la mayor\u00eda de estos estudios se enfocan en el travesti masculino (male-to-female). La travesti femenina ha sido poco estudiada, sobre todo, en el mundo hispano, a excepci\u00f3n de la conocida Monja Alf\u00e9rez. No existe, hasta el momento, ning\u00fan trabajo cr\u00edtico sobre la representaci\u00f3n de Enriqueta Faber, a pesar de formar parte ya de tres novelas, dos de fines del siglo XIX (\"Enriqueta Faber: novela hist\u00f3rica\" de Clemente V\u00e1zquez y \"Un casamiento misterioso\" de Francisco Calcagno) y la novela de Antonio Ben\u00edtez Rojo, \"Mujer en traje de batalla,\" de 2001. Lo que nos interesa resaltar en la lectura de estos textos no es s\u00f3lo el car\u00e1cter legendario de esta extraordinaria figura, sino tambi\u00e9n la manera en que se trata la problem\u00e1tica gen\u00e9rica y las estrategias que estos tres autores cubanos utilizan para representar este personaje hist\u00f3rico.","creator":["Ivonne Cuadra"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20140826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43d4d1bf-9617-3de9-9436-c7c3d23ff35d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20140826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entre la historia y la ficci\u00f3n: El travestismo de Enriqueta Faber","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20140826","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":5179,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445905,446267]],"Locations in B":[[1874,2236]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb5b2b26-9a69-314c-a8c4-68fb92818e33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"639","pageStart":"627","pagination":"pp. 627-639","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Books of Critical Interest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344301","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4809,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478151,478206]],"Locations in B":[[594,652]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew H. Miller"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editor's Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828323","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fanny Gallot","Regan Kramer"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26273595","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"390d231e-9b9f-3b89-8fcd-5c6094a51e12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26273595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The revenge of the bra. Seamstresses\u2019 bodies in the lingerie industry (1968-2012)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26273595","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper draws on Judith Butler's notion of 'gender melancholia' as conceived in The Psychic Life of Power: Theories in Subjection, and Emmanuel Levinas' notion of the face of the Other mobilized in Butler's more recent work. In particular, I will focus on gender melancholia in order to consider why non-heteronormative identities might cause such consternation when they appear in a specific pedagogical context. I also consider how the notion of gender melancholia may be useful in gaining a more in-depth understanding of the prohibitions placed on the production and dissemination of texts that introduce young children to non-normative representations of sexual and gender identity. In addition, the Levinasian notion of the face, as mobilized by Butler, prompts a consideration of the ethical implications of having certain faces that appear to be unrepresentable in particular pedagogical domains.","creator":["Mary Lou Rasmussen"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08e25a39-fb50-3183-830a-17a43ea43450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Play School\", Melancholia, and the Politics of Recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036157","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7643,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[46532,46601]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I analyze the jointly racial and spatial politics of representing slavery in contemporary Liverpool, England. I show how central space and place are to black Liverpudlians' theories of racial processes and therefore to their antiracist activism. While I highlight the agency of subalterns in constituting the white identity of the city and its population, I also point to some of the limitations of their antiracist practice and that of their white supporters. Toward that goal, I draw lessons from the antebellum slave narrative because its authors also understood and reappropriated slavery's geopolitics, navigating similarly racialized terrain. [whiteness, space, place, locality, transnationalism, slavery, Britain]","creator":["Jacqueline Nassy Brown"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c45da7fe-d8f5-315c-b4f5-6abd2144ae6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"340","pagination":"pp. 340-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enslaving History: Narratives on Local Whiteness in a Black Atlantic Port","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647176","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":19076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There has been much academic work outlining the complex links between women and the nation. Women provide legitimacy to the political projects of the nation in particular social and historical contexts. This article focuses on the gendered symbolization of the nation through the rhetoric of the 'motherland' and the manipulation of this rhetoric in the context of national struggle in Bangladesh. I show the ways in which the visual representation of this 'motherland' as fertile countryside, and its idealization primarily through rural landscapes has enabled a crystallization of essentialist gender roles for women. This article is particularly interested in how these images had to be reconciled with the subjectivities of women raped during the Bangladesh Liberation War (Muktijuddho) and the role of the aestheticizing sensibilities of Bangladesh's middle class in that process.","creator":["Nayanika Mookherjee"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfcbf85c-c68e-3f4c-9c5f-0515802d2da0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30140874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"88","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendered Embodiments: Mapping the Body-Politic of the Raped Woman and the Nation in Bangladesh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140874","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8388,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443517]],"Locations in B":[[11170,11284]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on my fieldwork experience with Brazilian travesti1 sex workers in Rio de Janeiro, I argue that travestis' desire for beauty both structures their daily experiences and empowers them. Travestis have to engage with a complicated, dangerous and expensive career in order to construct their identities. The attainment of a beautiful body is at the heart of their interest. Travestis seek a sense of 'perfection', that is, they strive to be like women, but beautiful and desirable ones. Their aim is to create bodies that can achieve feminine and glamorous shapes. Every bodily improvement reinforces their self-identity and status within the group. Although their lives can be very hard \u2013 it is difficult to be a travesti in Brazilian society, which is rather intolerant of sexual and gender diversity \u2013 it is through the processes they engage in to produce beautiful and feminine bodies that travestis give meaning to their existence and find a place for themselves in their communities and in the world, despite that place being uncertain and marginalised. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, the article focuses on the embodied experiences of a group of Brazilian travestis. Instead of considering travestis' beauty as a mere imitation of normative femininity, my goal is to redefine beauty in relation to its capacity to create identities and subjects who feel empowered and desired. Finally, travestis' creation of agency through beauty is analysed against the background of heteronormativity and ongoing transphobic violence in Brazil.","creator":["Julieta Vartabedian"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380377"},{"name":"oclc","value":"458296085"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ead7980-e1f2-3863-b47a-2d26d410cd6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24755106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociologus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duncker & Humblot GmbH","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beauty that Matters: Brazilian \"Travesti\" Sex Workers Feeling Beautiful","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755106","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":10597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper traces the conjunction of two interrelated epistemic phenomena that have begun to shape the discipline since the early 1990s. The first entails theorizing social identity in past societies: specifically, how social lives are inscribed by the experiences of gender, ethnicity, sexuality, and so on. The other constitutes the rise of a politicized and ethical archaeology that now recognizes its active role in contemporary culture and is enunciated through the discourses of nationalism, sociopolitics, postcolonialism, diaspora, and globalism. Both trends have been tacitly shaped by anthropological and social theory, but they are fundamentally driven by the powerful voices of once marginalized groups and their newfound place in the circles of academic legitimacy. I argue that our disciplinary reticence to embrace the politics of identity, both in our investigations of the past and our imbrications in the present, has much to do with archaeology's lack of reflexivity, both personal and disciplinary, concurrent with its antitheoretical tendencies. The residual force of the latter should not be underestimated, specifically in regard to field practices and the tenacity of academic boundaries.","creator":["Lynn Meskell"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86b78518-e9a9-337f-930d-cbfbb98bff1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4132881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Intersections of Identity and Politics in Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132881","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11279,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478839]],"Locations in B":[[57789,57843]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How should inquiry into ethical-political life come to terms with \"depth experience?\" By this, I mean extraordinary experience that breaks into the familiar frames of meaning and reasoning that undergird everyday life, bringing some sort of tranformation or significant solidification of basic commitments or identity. Stated in this abstract fashion, my question is likely to seem rather bewildering or uninteresting for the study of politics. But its potential significance becomes apparent if one mentions Geroge W. Bush and being \"born again\" This artical speculates more broadly about such experience, expanding the focus beyond theists and \"limit\" experiences. When one does this, depth in such a way as to animate an admirable \"bearing\" on the part of citizens of affluent, late-modern societies and cohere with certain fundamentals of deliberative democracy.","creator":["STEPHEN K. WHITE"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40982898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"073fff6d-44fc-368b-828d-e10c96889af0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40982898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"816","pageStart":"800","pagination":"pp. 800-816","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fullness and Dearth: Depth Experience and Democratic Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40982898","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":17634,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27401,28484]],"Locations in B":[[24716,27539]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Virginia Blain"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c53d35c-a97d-376b-9acd-e877df35a6a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Period Pains: The Changing Body of Victorian Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002729","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristine Henriksen Garroway"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205137"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3b0ed0c-f5ef-39b7-8b17-0f1ae109e720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/664454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jneareaststud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Near Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":null,"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Gendered or Ungendered? The Perception of Children in Ancient Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664454","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":16505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James S. Duncan","Nancy G. Duncan"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory in the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250842","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":3934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Wood Sweet"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10525017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233138860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59afcc41-07ee-333e-8d46-e5e155d2d4dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trajincschped"}],"isPartOf":"Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Unsettling Sex: Lessons from Colonial North America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0059","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Jobling"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316327","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":1615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christy L. Burns"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"1009","pageStart":"1006","pagination":"pp. 1006-1009","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904902","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":1349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98be91ad-9d83-3a70-af78-a01eaf934ed5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810520","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dane Barca"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"147c5559-1022-3c4b-bd5e-8caad0df4f35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Adah Isaacs Menken: Race and Transgendered Performance in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141856","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jan Cooper"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a23aaa7a-4d0b-3a10-928c-5e540e31044f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queering the Contact Zone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866611","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PATRICIA WAREH"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26550033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5759c392-b4ee-3eba-8582-418160a72a43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26550033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Honorable Action Upstaged by Theatrical Wordplay in The Faerie Queene<\/em> 2.4 and Much Ado about Nothing<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26550033","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":10811,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124636,124745]],"Locations in B":[[3613,3722]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the process of identity construction and its relationship to discursive and representational acts in producing students as academic and social beings. Drawing on Judith Butler's work on gender performativity, I focus on two student populations-black females and Southeast Asian American males-and analyze the symbolic and material effects of the production of them as racialized, gendered Other through the repeated stylization of their bodies and behavior. The materialization of the students as \"loud black girls\" and \"quiet Asian boys,\" however, opens up the potential for disrupting the hegemonic forces of regulatory norms.","creator":["Joy L. Lei"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3196282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41156082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dbfd612-3ae7-31c3-a5df-a7c28ae5cedb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3196282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"(Un)Necessary Toughness?: Those \"Loud Black Girls\" and Those \"Quiet Asian Boys\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3196282","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":11448,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[147104,147314],[147640,147832],[443634,443762],[444040,444257]],"Locations in B":[[7170,7377],[7441,7632],[8189,8317],[8580,8797]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debbie Epstein","Sarah O'Flynn","David Telford"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1167323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0091732X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236895"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"556d9c53-e8fb-33cf-b8d9-a7b41a750e65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1167323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revireseeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Research in Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Othering\" Education: Sexualities, Silences, and Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1167323","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":28416,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467305,467400]],"Locations in B":[[169717,169826]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary D. Sheriff"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e81894de-ca09-3367-bc38-7702959e30d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"WOMAN? HERMAPHRODITE? HISTORY PAINTER? ON THE SELF-IMAGING OF ELISABETH VIG\u00c9E-LEBRUN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467571","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10480,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430072,430388],[434109,434205]],"Locations in B":[[29370,29688],[51524,51625]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59242bc0-5e5b-3f02-9f10-45b063f4b0ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Social sciences - Human geography"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189839","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article takes issue with depictions of masculinity and male gender identity in the South African Constitutional Court's judgements on gender equality and sexuality. It argues that, while the Court rightly acknowledges that male gender identity is problematic and that societal norms and expectations relating to masculinity are core causes of the subordination of women, many of its judgements uphold and reinforce outdated, essentialist, hetero-normative and restrictive conceptions of masculinity. These notions appear to leave little room for men to transcend conventional gender stereotypes, to form and adapt their identities freely and to participate in the transformation of gendered norms.","creator":["Marius Pieterse"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c6b3b04-6498-3b58-8477-4eea4a6dbfac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"May Real Men Cry in Court? Masculinity, Equality and the South African Constitutional Court","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566534","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MICHAEL C. CLODY"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"183c13e0-e479-3ff2-b425-1f3d8a8e432a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"661","pagination":"pp. 661-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE MIRROR AND THE FEATHER: TRAGEDY AND ANIMAL VOICE IN \"KING LEAR\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475538","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9354,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494724,494795]],"Locations in B":[[46266,46332]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women's participation in slut shaming is often viewed as internalized oppression: they apply disadvantageous sexual double standards established by men. This perspective grants women little agency and neglects their simultaneous location in other social structures. In this article we synthesize insights from social psychology, gender, and culture to argue that undergraduate women use slut stigma to draw boundaries around status groups linked to social class\u2014while also regulating sexual behavior and gender performance. High-status women employ slut discourse to assert class advantage, defining themselves as classy rather than trashy, while low-status women express class resentment\u2014deriding rich, bitchy sluts for their exclusivity. Slut discourse enables, rather than constrains, sexual experimentation for the high-status women whose definitions prevail in the dominant social scene. This is a form of sexual privilege. In contrast, low-status women risk public shaming when they attempt to enter dominant social worlds.","creator":["Elizabeth A. Armstrong","Laura T. Hamilton","Elizabeth M. Armstrong","J. Lotus Seeley"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01902725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb7c54bf-d8cd-36fd-b418-dce765ccfc2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipsycquar"}],"isPartOf":"Social Psychology Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Good Girls\": Gender, Social Class, and Slut Discourse on Campus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186719","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":13219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scholars of gender and work have considered the gendered interpretation of embodied skill, and have shown how discourses about gender inform the visibility of skill and the value attributed to it. In their focus on discourse, they have overlooked the impact of institutional structures in shaping how skill is valued. This essay considers the situation of male workers in Qatar\u2019s construction industry to argue that gender analyses of work should pay attention to the legal and institutional constraints placed on workers. These structures abet understandings of gender that enable employers to erase the embodied skill of workers and their contribution to the production process, even as they limit the ability of workers to perform their gender identity in a way that assigns value to their expertise.","creator":["Natasha N. Iskander"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d05f67f-4593-3737-bcad-a360d3f08aeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Right to Have \u201cSociety in the Bones\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421136","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":4445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Skill and Bodies of Male Workers in Qatar"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Foster","Roger Gomm","Martin Hammersley","John Eggleston","Jo-Anne Dillabough","Gill Crozier","Peter Foster","Roger Gomm","Martin Hammersley"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3122036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50069179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67a1c023-7e99-3a4f-beae-caf1338145d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3122036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"406","pagination":"pp. 406-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3122036","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Denis Flannery"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30002692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13513818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"241298187"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-236266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"913c03c3-3f50-3f4d-a608-edf385341e7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30002692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisjamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Irish Association for American Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Seven's Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30002692","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8626,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[231161,231311]],"Locations in B":[[23711,23857]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jessica L. Willis"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.20.2.0138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10525017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233138860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5106081e-cef6-33c6-87ce-a107d10a053b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/trajincschped.20.2.0138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trajincschped"}],"isPartOf":"Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Scholarship and the Interrogation of Spatial Formation: Mapping as a Tool for Exploring Gender and Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.20.2.0138","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Hollywood"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/422478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"106afcb8-703f-3e92-8b37-0faa373728a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/422478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"528","pageStart":"514","pagination":"pp. 514-528","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Agency, and the Divine in Religious Historiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/422478","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":6993,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[33992,34061]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Organizations are not only gendered; they are also classed\u2014that is, they articulate ideas and presentations of gender that are mediated by class position. This article pursues the idea of organizations as gendered and classed by means of a comparative ethnographic analysis of the performance of sexuality in four exotic dance clubs in the Southwestern United States. Strip clubs construct sexuality to be consistent with client class norms and assumptions and with how the clubs and dancers think working-class or middle-class sexuality should be expressed. Class differences are represented as sexual differences in very concrete ways: the appearance of dancers and other staff, dancing and performance styles, and interactions that take place between dancers and customers.","creator":["Mary Nell Trautner"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"795f4263-c55c-3633-a39c-95ec61d2f833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27640850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"788","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-788","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Doing Gender, Doing Class: The Performance of Sexuality in Exotic Dance Clubs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640850","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines Jean Genet's Les Bonnes (The Maids) from a fresh angle, applying recent feminist cultural studies criticism on the topic of murder (notably by Lisa Downing) to Genet's depiction of the figure of the murderess in this play. It identifies how certain clich\u00e9s related to the figure in Western culture are potentially destabilized in Les Bonnes, and pinpoints the interrogation of the female killer as a stereotyped \"masculine woman\" in the original 1947 playtext of the play to argue that this sits in tension with the gender-conformist implications of its ending. From this discussion, which is fruitful for feminist inquiry, the essay continues to consider the ways in which selected mises en sc\u00e8ne of Les Bonnes impugn a view of the murderess as an aberration of nature (as \"monster\" or \"psycho\"). This view requires deconstruction because it blocks insight into what female killers reveal about ideological scripts that seek to constrain women.","creator":["Lara Cox"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66fd282d-7d41-3865-8080-ade071355ee5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Misogyny, Maids, and Murderesses: Toward a Feminist Reappraisal of Jean Genet's \"Les Bonnes\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580307","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":8906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438602,438780]],"Locations in B":[[47079,47257]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill M. Hermann-Wilmarth","Caitlin L. Ryan"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24577535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"244388221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212320"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4eea2f7-8674-3e6d-8c8e-75b6b7c40a9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24577535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"436","pagination":"pp. 436-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Research and Policy: Doing What You Can: Considering Ways to Address LGBT Topics in Language Arts Curricula","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24577535","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":5464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lennard J. Davis"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who Put the \"The\" in \"the Novel\"?: Identity Politics and Disability in Novel Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346103","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9894,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99725,99889]],"Locations in B":[[10657,10821]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le titre de cet article est tir\u00e9 de la r\u00e9plique de Christine Delphy \u00e0 ses critiques marxistes, formul\u00e9e \u00e0 une \u00e9poque o\u00f9 les in\u00e9galit\u00e9s sociales \u00e9taient la pr\u00e9occupation centrale de la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe. Depuis, nous avons \u00e9t\u00e9 t\u00e9moins de ce qu'on appelle le \u00abtournant culturel\u00bb, qui a eu pour effet la marginalisation des perspectives centr\u00e9es sur les structures sociales ainsi que sur les relations et les pratiques sociales. Cependant, toutes les f\u00e9ministes n'ont pas embo\u00eet\u00e9 le pas, et r\u00e9cemment, des indices sont apparus d'une reviviscence du f\u00e9minisme mat\u00e9rialiste. En \u00e9valuant les effets de ces changements th\u00e9oriques et en affirmant la persistante pertinence du f\u00e9minisme mat\u00e9rialiste, je me concentre ici sur l'analyse du genre et de la sexualit\u00e9. \u00c0 ce propos, je soutiens qu'une approche mat\u00e9rialiste sociologiquement inform\u00e9e offre davantage de ressources au f\u00e9minisme que les perspectives postmodernes et queer plus orient\u00e9es vers le point de vue culturel. The title of this paper derives from Christine Delphy's (1980) rejoinder to her Marxist critics, formulated at a time when feminist theory was centrally preoccupied with material social inequalities. Since then, we have witnessed the so-called \u00abcultural turn\u00bb as a result of which perspectives that focus on social structures, relations, and practices have been sidelined. Not all feminists, however, took this turn, and there have recently been signs of a revival of materialist feminism. In assessing the effects of these theoretical shifts, and in making a case for the continued relevance of materialist feminism, I will focus on the analysis of gender and sexuality. Here, I will argue that a sociologically informed, materialist approach has more to offer feminism than more culturally oriented postmodern and queer perspectives.","creator":["Stevi Jackson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"febea334-bfc9-3747-8a2c-eae77fc136a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pourquoi un f\u00e9minisme mat\u00e9rialiste est (encore) possible \u2014 et n\u00e9cessaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620538","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9255,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[57009,57109]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Lang","Jane Sloan"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7444013a-4c08-385b-98d1-1f87bdc4d527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Professional Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225863","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Collier"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"After Dunblane: Crime, Corporeality, and the (Hetero-) Sexing of the Bodies of Men","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410391","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hope Munro Smith"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3598700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01630350"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770670"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211163"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9134222f-8eec-3538-854c-24941bcdfddf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3598700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamermusirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Music Review \/ Revista de M\u00fasica Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Gender in the Trinidad Calypso","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3598700","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11129,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[5196,5356]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Boyarin"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e16acc4e-3b95-393a-bdb8-042c58fedd5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Death and the Minyan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656289","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Marshall"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10525017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233138860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5abb21f8-4120-3841-8645-08ff4710ec15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trajincschped"}],"isPartOf":"Transformations: The Journal of Inclusive Scholarship and Pedagogy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Queer Archive: Teaching and Learning Sexualities in Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/trajincschped.21.2.0036","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4697,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[137021,137272],[144406,144628]],"Locations in B":[[24653,24904],[25235,25457]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRIS PERRIAM"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d59c8336-b7ba-35c5-8172-fb2943360f14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"542","pagination":"pp. 542-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763652","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Birr Moje","Josephine Peyton Young","John E. Readence","David W. Moore"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86dec21d-a637-3db5-b215-ddefa149987f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40017077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"400","pagination":"pp. 400-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Commentary: Reinventing Adolescent Literacy for New Times: Perennial and Millennial Issues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40017077","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Three Lives, Gertrude Stein explores the heterosexual and lesbian relationships of three common women\u2014Anna, Melanctha, and Lena. In \u201cThe Good Anna,\u201d the first of these three stories, Stein uses repetition to criticize the cultural norms that have tried to shape women's sexual identity through repression. Structurally, each part of \u201cThe Good Anna\u201d hinges on particular reiterated sentences, and as these recur the narrative exposes Anna's absurd and futile attempts to repress both the sexual behavior of young heterosexual men and women and Anna's own homoerotic impulses. As one reads and becomes increasingly critical of Anna's behavior, one must revaluate what Anna represents\u2014mainstream patriarchal beliefs that privilege heterosexuality, disavow lesbianism, oppose premarital sex, and support the subordination of women to men. As Stein uses linguistic repetition to put her readers in a position to mock the way Anna understands and upholds these beliefs, she forces her audience to examine their own cultural and moral assumptions about female sexuality and homosexual relationships. As a result, these ironic reiterations subvert the reader's cultural biases and make a space for accepting sexual freedom for both heterosexual and homosexual women.","creator":["Thomas Fahy"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.34.1.25","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"630e4798-4408-377d-8811-796887d59e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.34.1.25"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Iteration as a Form of Narrative Control in Gertrude Stein's \u201cThe Good Anna\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.34.1.25","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5396,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493896,494005]],"Locations in B":[[33289,33391]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Oliver S. Buckton"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"An Unnatural State\": Gender, \"Perversion,\" and Newman's \"Apologia Pro Vita Sua\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828462","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12570,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[419184,419333]],"Locations in B":[[45791,45935]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anti- or non-essentialist ideas about the self have been common enough in contemporary thought since Nietzsche, especially in modern feminism. But these ideas are easier to state as a matter of philosophical principle than to show. The work of Judith Butler, for instance, is not free from this difficulty, despite her emphasis on the importance of \"performativity.\" This paper proposes that literature may offer a more fruitful and productive approach than philosophy to the general philosophical problem of selfhood and to the particular version of it found in the work of Buder and others. Here I consider the depiction of gender relations in Musil's Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften, in particular its exploration of hermaphrodism in the relationship between Ulrich and his sister Agathe.","creator":["Zeynep Talay"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39e4bbc0-96c5-316b-b3a9-36ef5c7077d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42751385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Self and Other in \"Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751385","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":5704,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[100951,101029],[101215,101482],[124582,124727],[423731,423930],[424504,424621]],"Locations in B":[[17433,17511],[17691,17958],[19362,19506],[23143,23342],[23416,23533]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MAYA NITIS"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43304253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44702921-a3bd-3d68-9e13-90a8a345d086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43304253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TEACHING WITHOUT MASTERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43304253","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":13282,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59311,59378]],"Locations in B":[[26305,26372]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amber Moore","Deborah Begoray"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26631096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f202523f-31ec-3cda-a5f7-32c32e03a3c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26631096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Last Block of Ice\": Trauma Literature in the High School Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26631096","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay offers a feminist critique of theories of the mythopoetic men's movement involved in the current debate about \"boys in crisis.\" The essay argues that texts such as Secret Men's Business, by Australian author John Marsden, hinder rather than help boys and gender relations.","creator":["SHARYN PEARCE"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70031632-2058-3024-9c2d-f5dcef77d368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Secret Men's Business\": New Millennium Advice for Australian Boys","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029445","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reports on a study of Western male English language teachers and considers the ways in which their identities were shaped in relation to discourses of masculinity and heterosexuality. The article first argues that masculinity and heterosexuality have remained unmarked categories in research on TESOL teacher identities. It then draws on interview data with 11 White Australian men and considers the discourses of gender and sexuality in their accounts of English language teaching in Japanese commercial eikaiwa gakk\u00f4 (English language conversation schools). The analysis suggests that although some enjoy the privileges that attach to being a White, Western male, they also struggle to negotiate the eikaiwa gakk\u00f4 as a contact zone where the professional and personal, the educational and commercial, the pedagogical and the sexual coexist. In this ambiguous space, discourses of White male embodiment, and of sexualised desire between teacher and student, are perceived to be in conflict with discourses of an acceptable masculine professional identity, and may limit the professional and pedagogical aspirations of the male teachers. The article concludes that it is timely for conversations about gender and sexuality as aspects of professional identity to include accounts of masculinity and heterosexuality as integral to professional practice in TESOL.","creator":["ROSLYN APPLEBY"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43267776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee692083-63b6-3b25-99cc-0aa038875b98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43267776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Desire in Translation: White Masculinity and TESOL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43267776","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147726]],"Locations in B":[[23949,24021]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Juliana Chang"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa29ff8c-e04c-3e86-ba61-9d7a382aa65f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"663","pageStart":"637","pagination":"pp. 637-663","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masquerade, Hysteria, and Neocolonial Femininity in Jessica Hagedorn's \"Dogeaters\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250589","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10193,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499389,499507]],"Locations in B":[[63714,63836]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shantel Ehrenberg"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"753838df-a63b-3e83-b9c3-ffd5fe8d2225"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Kinesthetic Mode of Attention in Contemporary Dance Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966874","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an attempt to demonstrate the basic weakness of gender as a theoretical concept when studying prehistoric embodiment. 'Gender 'is theoretically linked to 'sex', known as the 'sex-gender system'. The study of past genders, in the sense of prehistoric normative roles and symbols, has decreased in interest among archaeologists, in favor of studying sex, i.e., sexual practice and orientation. This switch to sex is part of archaeologists' endeavors to understand prehistoric bodily subjects. I will here recapitulate on the concept of gender and its serious limitations. I will furthermore try to shed light on how the turn to sex involves an encounter with almost exactly the same fallacies as did the focus on gender. As an alternative for the fixture, I suggest social identity and embodiment be studied under the theoretical label of 'sexe'.","creator":["Ingrid Fuglestvedt"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43654891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9683e8d-ae7d-3b9e-94f4-985ec7ece438"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43654891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Declaration on Behalf of an Archaeology of \"Sexe\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43654891","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":18082,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[74475,74701],[382380,382505],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[41450,41674],[59779,59904],[103366,103440]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cultural criminological scholarship has impressively theorized and explored the cultural complexities, negotiated meanings and experiential immediacy of urban crime and its spatializing effects. Nonetheless, this important work tends to gloss over the political dynamics of spatial contestation, and assumes an urban politics which is relatively fixed and static and is locked into a dichotomy of control and resistance. This paper opens up to scrutiny the heterogeneity of political relationalities at the interstices of crime and 'the urban'. Core cultural criminological concepts of resistance, transgression, affect and performance are critically reappraised and put to work in a critical case study that centres on an offence of 'outraging public decency' at the Blackpool Cenotaph, UK. This provides the empirical ground for delineating some of the myriad ways in which crime continually reconfigures the political coordinates of 'the urban'.","creator":["Elaine Campbell"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e376da0-c2f0-3690-8fff-5d39aaa59fbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23639966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TRANSGRESSION, AFFECT AND PERFORMANCE: Choreographing a Politics of Urban Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639966","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jodi Dean"],"datePublished":"1994-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69b2ab69-9a57-30ae-a87c-4a796af90983"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192110","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A high school teacher and college teacher collaborate to describe successful approaches to teaching not just antihomophobia but also queer theory.","creator":["Nicole Sieben","Laraine Wallowitz"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40503260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8bc1894-b991-3f07-bce3-05f5b3a4daeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40503260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Watch What You Teach\": A First-Year Teacher Refuses to Play It Safe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40503260","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":4196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reports on empirical research on youth as active citizens in Senegal with specific reference to their education and their sexual and reproductive health rights. In a context of postcoloniality which claims to have privileged secular, republican understandings of the constitution, the authors seek to illuminate how youth activists sustain patriarchal, metropolitan views of citizenship and reinforce ethnic and locational (urban\/rural) hierarchies. Their analysis is based on a case study of active youth citizenship, as reflected in youth engagement in the recent presidential elections in Senegal. This included involvement in youth protests against pre-election constitutional abuse and in a project monitoring the subsequent elections using digital technologies. The authors compare how youth activists enacted different notions of citizenship, in some instances involving a vigorous defence of Senegal's democratic constitution, while in others dismissing this as being irrelevant to youth concerns. Here the authors make an analytic distinction between youth engagement in politics, seen as the public sphere of constitutional democracy, and the political, which they relate to the inherently conflictual and agonistic processes through which (youth) identities are policed, in ways which may legitimate or marginalise. Despite the frequent construction of youth as being agents of change, this analysis shows how potentially productive and open spaces for active citizenship were drawn towards conformity and the reproduction of existing hegemonies, in particular through patriarchal gender relations and sexual norms within which female youth remained particularly vulnerable. Cet article pr\u00e9sente une \u00e9tude de recherche empirique sur les jeunes en tant que citoyens actifs au S\u00e9n\u00e9gal, en r\u00e9f\u00e9rence sp\u00e9cifique \u00e0 leurs droits \u00e0 l'\u00e9ducation et \u00e0 la sant\u00e9 sexuelle et reproductive. Dans un contexte de postcolonialisme qui se promulgue d'avoir privil\u00e9gi\u00e9 une conception la\u00efque et r\u00e9publicaine de la constitution, les auteures tentent d'\u00e9clairer comment les jeunes militants entretiennent des conceptions patriarcales et m\u00e9tropolitaines de la citoyennet\u00e9 et renforcent les hi\u00e9rarchies ethniques et g\u00e9ographiques (urbain\/rural). Leur analyse s'appuie sur une \u00e9tude de cas relative \u00e0 la citoyennet\u00e9 active des jeunes, surtout vis-\u00e0-vis leur engagement lors de la r\u00e9cente \u00e9lection pr\u00e9sidentielle au S\u00e9n\u00e9gal. Cet engagement a compris des protestations contre l'abus constitutionnel avant l'\u00e9lection et leur participation dans une initiative contr\u00f4lant le d\u00e9roulement de l'\u00e9lection au moyen de technologies num\u00e9riques. Les auteures comparent les diff\u00e9rentes fa\u00e7ons d'agir en tant que citoyen de la part des jeunes militants, o\u00f9 certains r\u00e9clament une d\u00e9fense \u00e9nergique de la constitution d\u00e9mocratique du S\u00e9n\u00e9gal, et d'autres l'\u00e9cartent comme \u00e9tant sans rapport avec leurs pr\u00e9occupations. Les auteures font ici une distinction analytique entre la politique, ou l'engagement dans la sph\u00e8re politique de la d\u00e9mocratie constitutionnelle, et le politique, qu'elles rattachent aux processus intrins\u00e8quement conflictuels et agonistiques par lesquels les identit\u00e9s (des jeunes) sont r\u00e9gul\u00e9es, de sorte \u00e0 l\u00e9gitimer ou \u00e0 marginaliser. Bien que les jeunes soient g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme les agents du changement, cette analyse d\u00e9montre que des espaces potentiellement productifs et ouverts \u00e0 la citoyennet\u00e9 active ont \u00e9t\u00e9 orient\u00e9s vers la conformit\u00e9 et la reproduction des h\u00e9g\u00e9monies existantes, notamment \u00e0 travers des relations du gendre et des normes sexuelles de type patriarcal, qui maintiennent les jeunes femmes dans une situation particuli\u00e8rement d\u00e9favoris\u00e9e.","creator":["Barbara Crossouard","M\u00e1ir\u00e9ad Dunne"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24637239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208566"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41569093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233329"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46ce2f89-3e33-3c05-96d0-dfdaa8a97ca0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24637239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevieducinte"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Education \/ Internationale Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Erziehungswissenschaft \/ Revue Internationale de l'Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politics, gender and youth citizenship in Senegal: Youth policing of dissent and diversity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24637239","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":8837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465351,465505]],"Locations in B":[[14711,14865]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Smith"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2814606-0476-3ad4-b883-0da174022e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23365026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Juba's \"Black Face\" \/ Lady Delacour's \"Mask\": Plotting Domesticity in Maria Edgeworth's \"Belinda\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365026","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"THE USE of broad theories of reading, social cognition, and social history to frame the study of literacy was investigated, and implications of this relatively recent trend were considered. Sixty-nine articles published between 1992 and 2003 in \"Journal of Literacy Research\/Journal of Reading Behavior, Reading Research Quarterly,\" and \"Research in the Teaching of English\" were selected for analysis. An inventory was made of the general topic and the schools of theory used, of the specific sections of the article in which theory was cited, and of the relation between the citation of theory and previous research. From this inventory, a typology of four patterns of theory use was generated. Findings suggest that social theory matters in literacy research in at least three ways: (a) rhetorically, as support for researchers' claims; (b) as a source of new insight on the social nature of literacy and to articulate researchers' desires for a more fully literate world; and (c) for relating findings derived from local investigations to more general principles. In conclusion, it is argued that social theory is potentially a powerful tool in the production of general bodies of knowledge about literacy contingent upon increased precision, rigor, and reflexivity in its application. \/\/\/ SE INVESTIG\u00d3 el uso de teor\u00edas de la lectura, la cognici\u00f3n social y la historia social como marco del estudio de la alfabetizaci\u00f3n y se consideraron las implicancias de esta tendencia relativamente reciente. Se seleccionaron para el an\u00e1lisis 69 art\u00edculos publicados entre 1992 y 2003 en las revistas \"Journal of Literacy Research\/Journal of Reading Behavior, Reading Research Quarterly y Reading in the Teaching of English.\" Se hizo un inventario del t\u00f3pico general y de las escuelas te\u00f3ricas usadas, de las secciones espec\u00edficas de los art\u00edculos en las que se citaba la teor\u00eda y de la relaci\u00f3n entre la cita te\u00f3rica y la investigaci\u00f3n previa. De este inventario se obtuvo una tipolog\u00eda de cuatro patrones de uso de teor\u00edas. Los resultados sugieren que la teor\u00eda social incide en la investigaci\u00f3n en alfabetizaci\u00f3n en, al menos, tres formas: a) ret\u00f3ricamente, como fundamento de las afirmaciones de los investigadores, b) como fuente de nuevas perspectivas sobre la naturaleza social de la alfabetizaci\u00f3n y para articular los deseos de los investigadores de un mundo m\u00e1s plenamente alfabetizado y c) para relacionar los resultados de investigaciones locales con principios m\u00e1s generales. En conclusi\u00f3n, se argumenta que la teor\u00eda social es una herramienta potencialmente poderosa en la producci\u00f3n de cuerpos generales de conocimientos acerca de la alfabetizaci\u00f3n eventualmente m\u00e1s precisos, rigurosos y reflexivos en su aplicaci\u00f3n. \/\/\/ DIE ANWENDUNG umfassender Theorien des Lesens, der Sozialerkenntnis und Sozialhistorie als Rahmen f\u00fcr das Studium \u00fcber das Schreiben und Lesen wurde untersucht und die Auswirkungen dieses relativ neuen Trends wurden betrachter. Neunundsechzig publizierte Abhandlungen wurden zwischen 1992 und 2003 im \"Journal of Literacy Research\/Journal of Reading Behavior, Reading Research Quarterly und Research in the Teaching of English\" zur Analyse ausgew\u00e4hlt. Es wurde eine Aufstellung \u00fcber das Hauptthema und die Lehren der benutzten Unterrichtstheorie angefertigt, aus jenen spezifischen Abschnitten des Artikels in denen die Theorie zitiert war und der Relation zwischen dem Zitieren von Theorie und vorausgegangener Forschung. Aus diesem Inventar wurde eine Typologie aus vier Modellen der Theorieanwendung entwickelt. Die Erkenntnisse lassen darauf schlie\u00dfen, dass in der Schreib- und Leseforschung die Sozialtheorie auf mindestens dreierlei Weise von Bedeutung ist: a) rhetorisch als Grundlage f\u00fcr die Anspr\u00fcche der Forscher; b) als eine Quelle neuer Einsichten in die gesellschaftliche Natur des Schreibens und Lesens und um W\u00fcnsche der Forscher f\u00fcr eine mehr erf\u00fcllte Schreib- und Lesewelt zu artikulieren und c) f\u00fcr verwandte Erkenntnisse, hervorgegangen aus lokalen Untersuchungen bis hin zu mehr allgemeinen Prinzipien. Als Schlu\u00dffolgerung wird er\u00f6rtert, dass die Sozialtheorie ein potenziell m\u00e4chtiges Werkzeug bei der Schaffung des Allgemeingehalts an Wissen \u00fcber das Schreib- und Lesekontingent aufgrund gesteigerter Pr\u00e4zision, Strenge und der Reflexivit\u00e4t bei ihrer Anwendung ist. \/\/\/ [Abstract in Japanese]. \/\/\/ ON A examin\u00e9 l'utilisation de th\u00e9ories g\u00e9n\u00e9rales de la lecture, de la cognition sociale, et de l'histoire sociale pour structurer l'\u00e9tude du lettrisme, ainsi que les implications de cette tendance relativement r\u00e9cente. On a s\u00e9lectionn\u00e9 pour cette analyse 69 articles publi\u00e9s entre 1992 et 2003 dans le \"Journal of Literacy Research\/Journal of Reading Behavior, Reading Research Quarterly, et Research in the Teaching of English.\" On a fait un inventaire du th\u00e8me g\u00e9n\u00e9ral et des \u00e9coles de pens\u00e9e utilis\u00e9es, des parties sp\u00e9cifiques de l'article se r\u00e9f\u00e9rant \u00e0 une th\u00e9orie, ainsi que de la relation entre r\u00e9f\u00e9rence \u00e0 la th\u00e9orie et recherches ant\u00e9rieures. A partir de cet inventaire, on a produit une typologie comportant quatre types d'utilisation de la th\u00e9orie. Les r\u00e9sultats sugg\u00e8rent que la th\u00e9orie sociologique est importante dans la recherche en litt\u00e9ratie d'au moins trois fa\u00e7ons diff\u00e9rentes: a) de fa\u00e7on rh\u00e9torique, comme support aux propositions des chercheurs; b) comme source d'inspiration d'id\u00e9es nouvelles relatives \u00e0 la nature sociale du lettrisme, et pour articuler le d\u00e9sir des chercheurs d'un monde plus lettr\u00e9; et c) pour lier les r\u00e9sultats issus des investigations locales \u00e0 des principes plus g\u00e9n\u00e9raux. On consid\u00e8re, en conclusion, que la th\u00e9orie sociologique est potentiellement un puissant outil de production d'un corpus de connaissances sur le lettrisme mais qui demande plus de pr\u00e9cision, de rigueur et de r\u00e9flexion dans l'utilisation qui en est faite. \/\/\/ [Abstract in Russian(Cyrillic)].","creator":["Mark Dressman"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Theoretically Framed: Argument and Desire in the Production of General Knowledge about Literacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068300","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":24501,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[136939,137022]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bill Albertini","Ben Lee","Heather Love","Mike Millner","Ken Parille","Alice Rutkowski","Bryan Wagner"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9464a43-b270-3679-91af-9aa99f826d3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057627","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":2356,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[466027,466317]],"Locations in B":[[910,1197]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nino Tsitsishvili"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"493","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-493","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"A Man Can Sing and Play Better than a Woman\": Singing and Patriarchy at the Georgian Supra Feast","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174470","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":17410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rey Chow"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e3b86ad-bf3b-32e5-874d-93f216bea6cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20533102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"580","pageStart":"565","pagination":"pp. 565-580","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Translator, Traitor; Translator, Mourner (Or, Dreaming of Intercultural Equivalence)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533102","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study examines the relationship between urbanization and the development of social identities in Jordan using the anthropological methodology of conducting field research in Irbid city. The following are the main results: - Primordial tribal attachments have constantly been reproduced as basis for the urban or national identities. The major difference between identity in Irbid in both pre and post-urbanization periods was that relations between individuals became impersonal in addition to the personal ones. Individuals had ethnic, national and class affiliations beside the tribal ones. - Moreover, considering that the collective national sense prevailed before independence and before the Palestinian exodus, process of producing and reproducing a collective Jordanian national identity cannot be considered as counter practice or strategy against other groups of communities. Cette \u00e9tude vise \u00e0 examiner le rapport entre l'urbanisation et l'\u00e9volution des identit\u00e9s sociales en Jordanie tout en s'appuyant sur une approche anthropologique. Cela a consist\u00e9 \u00e0 un travail intensif sur le terrain dans la ville d'Irbid au nord de Jordanie. On peut r\u00e9sumer les r\u00e9sultats de cette \u00e9tude comme le suivant: - Les attachements \u00e0 la tribu ont \u00e9t\u00e9 constamment reproduits au sein des identit\u00e9s urbaines et nationales. La diff\u00e9rence majeure entre identit\u00e9 dans la ville Irbid d'avant et d'apr\u00e8s l'\u00e8re de l'urbanisation se r\u00e9sume au fait que des relations impersonnelles entre individus se sont \u00e9merg\u00e9es et qui coexistent avec des relations personnels d\u00e9j\u00e0 omnipr\u00e9sentes. La population a gard\u00e9 des attachements \u00e0 caract\u00e8re ethnique, national ainsi que des attachements aux classes sociales et aux leurs propres tribus. - Alors que le sentiment national collectif existait avant l'Independence et l'exode palestinien, le processus de produire et reproduire une identit\u00e9 nationale et collective jordanienne ne peut pas \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme un contre intuitif contre les autres groupes de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9. Este estudio examina la relaci\u00f3n entre la urbanizaci\u00f3n y el desarrollo de las identidades sociales en Jordania mediante la metodolog\u00eda antropol\u00f3gica en este trabajo en la ciudad de Irbid. Los siguientes son los principales resultados: -los ajuntos tribales primordiales se han reproducirse dentro de las identidades urbanas o nacional. La diferencia principal entre la identidad en Irbid, tanto en per\u00edodos pre y post urbanizaci\u00f3n fue las relaciones entre los individuos se convirti\u00f3 en impersonal, adem\u00e1s de las personales. Los ciudadanos ten\u00edan afiliaci\u00f3n \u00e9tnica, nacional y de clase al lado de las tribus. -Por otra parte, teniendo en cuenta que el sentido colectivo nacional prevaleci\u00f3 antes de la independencia y antes del \u00e9xodo palestino, el proceso de producci\u00f3n y reproducci\u00f3n de una identidad colectiva jordano no se puede considerar como en contra del sentido contra otros grupos de las omunidades.","creator":["Mohamed Fayez Tarawneh","Mahmood Naamneh"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41604471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472328"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b24bfa10-3d33-30d5-bd3d-7df406681221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41604471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcompfamistud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Comparative Family Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"635","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-635","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Dr. George Kurian","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Urbanization and Social Identities in Jordan: The Case of Irbid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41604471","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the performance of non-heteronormative modes of gender in Malaysia\u2019s longest-running Malay sitcom, Senario. My close textual reading centres on two episodes to identify the show\u2019s linkages with broader Malay socio-cultural attitudes about gender fluidity. Three facets of Senario\u2019s non-heteronormativity are foregrounded: (1) the religio-cultural belief that gender fluidity, sexual deviancy, and non-heteronormative identities are \u2018conditions\u2019that can be \u2018corrected\u2019; (2) that this gender \u2018correction\u2019 is a recourse that privileges the masculine, and (3) that heteronormative binary roles are sustained even when imagining inversions of gender. By correlating these performances with wider religious and cultural beliefs\/practices, and historical developments, it is observed that Senario\u2019s gender performatives were heavily influenced by, and inflected with, real-world biases towards non-heteronormative communities. This work represents a meaningful step towards addressing the present lacuna of critical scholarship on Malay television representations of non-heteronormative gender identities.","creator":["Luqman Lee"],"datePublished":"2022-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48673682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5d48e28-afe4-3e35-8d58-f019f755be59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48673682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Binary Inversions and Gender Fluidity in the Malay Sitcom Senario<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48673682","volumeNumber":"178","wordCount":9763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Students of the intersection between monetary transfers and intimate social relations face a choice among three ways of analyzing that relationship: as hostile worlds whose contact contaminates one or the other; as nothing but market transactions, cultural constructions, or coercion; or as differentiated ties, each marked by a distinctive set of monetary transfers. A review of payment practices, legal disputes, and recent legal theory illustrates the weakness of the first two views and the desirability of further pursuing the third alternative.","creator":["Viviana A. Zelizer"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"848","pageStart":"817","pagination":"pp. 817-848","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Purchase of Intimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829137","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":14399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on empirical data from a project exploring the experiences and identities of London school children who were identified by their schools as being 'at risk of dropping out' of education, this paper highlights schools as important local spaces in urban children's identity constructions. It is argued that the way in which schools and local areas are materially and discursively constructed can impact on children's identities as learners and their engagement with education. The paper shows that urban children's relationships to their school and local area are complex and contradictory, generating feelings of attachment and positive identification, but also fear and disgust. It is also argued that these feelings about place impact on children's relationships to education.","creator":["Sumi Hollingworth","Louise Archer"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43079810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e08c6f69-3755-3c97-ae74-458d6aa6c593"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43079810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"603","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-603","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Urban Schools as Urban Places: School Reputation, Children's Identities and Engagement with Education in London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43079810","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12011,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[64188,64257]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Assen Kokalov"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6b6ee16-864e-3631-9c33-9b100242f130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26795290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"CONTRASEXUALIDAD, PERFORMATIVIDADES POSPORNO Y CORPORALIDADES MARGINADAS EN LA NARRATIVA DE NATY MENSTRUAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795290","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ewa Plonowska Ziarek"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baeb532a-a21d-379c-99a7-36fa7d0dcb60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810212","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":2327,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[1282,1344]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the connections among music making, identity, and belonging within the context of a jals\u0101, a celebratory rite of initiation for a h\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101 (South Asian \u201cthird gender\u201d individual) entering her ghar\u0101n\u0101 (family). Drawing connections to Ali Jihad Racy's (2004) analysis of \u1e6darab (ecstasy) performance in the West Asian jalsah (informal gathering), the article reveals how music making within the larger architecture of the jals\u0101\u2014in particular, the liminal period in which the h\u012bjr\u0101 \u201cpasses through\u201d to become nirv\u0101\u1e47 (liberated)\u2014enables the visceral embodiment of values concerning h\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101 social transitioning and self-understanding. I argue that the discourses and performance practices involved in becoming h\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101 enact a strategic essentialism through the sanctification of different relational configurations of identity within ghar\u0101nedar society. This gives shape to a symbolic representation about what it means to be h\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101 that is ambiguously cited, multiplicative, and materially unavailable for those from outside the community who seek to enter, define, or otherwise control it. This article is accompanied by a one-hour film (http:\/\/www.ethnomusicologyofthecloset.com\/jalsa, password: pehchaan) that was edited to convey the physical and emotional sensation of a nirv\u0101\u1e47 h\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101's journey.","creator":["Jeff Roy"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.61.3.0389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fed02ec8-b904-3cf9-8827-aa17b1d98b30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.61.3.0389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"From Jalsah<\/em> to Jals\u0101:<\/em> Music, Identity, and (Gender) Transitioning at a H\u012bj\u1e5b\u0101<\/em> Rite of Initiation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.61.3.0389","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":12353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo se prop\u00f5e a problematizar a categoria da representa\u00e7\u00e3o, em suas esferas pol\u00edtica, social e est\u00e9tica, a partir das contribui\u00e7\u00f5es trazidas por algumas teorias feministas \u2014 compreendidas aqui em seu sentido mais amplo. Em sua parte inicial, apresentar\u00e1 um breve mapeamento de alguns poss\u00edveis significados da representa\u00e7\u00e3o; em seguida introduzir\u00e1 as cr\u00edticas dos estudos feministas a essa categoria; por fim, na \u00faltima parte do artigo, utilizaremos alguns conceitos dos Genders Studies. This article intends to debate the notion of representation including the social, political and aesthetic aspects. The point of departure will be some feminists theories' contributions to the concept of representation. Firstly, we will present some possible meanings of representation; then, in the second part, we will present the feminists' critics to this concept; finally, we will work with some Gender Studies categories.","creator":["Eduardo Ramalho Rabenhorst","Raquel Peixoto do Amaral Camargo"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0089a336-0c11-38c1-a770-c7e87addaa21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1000","pageStart":"981","pagination":"pp. 981-1000","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"(Re)presentar: contribui\u00e7\u00f5es das teorias feministas \u00e0 no\u00e7\u00e3o da representa\u00e7\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328074","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michele M. Moody-Adams"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d68f3ac-47cb-356c-8c74-cc9274c190a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26433449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy and Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433449","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Freeman"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/519203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eabd25ce-b142-332c-bbd7-0ec62c973031"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/519203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"594","pagination":"pp. 594-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/519203","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":2069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rob Wilkie"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56af740a-e2e5-3ea7-95ae-50cc1922ada3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"W\" as a Floating Signifier: Class and Politics after the \"Post\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866512","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79d460db-b050-3cf5-aee1-892f50553adf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975726","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":3855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[760,822]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a9c6f8e-86ee-3f3b-9b9b-aadf281c22da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"xxvii","pageStart":"xxi","pagination":"pp. xxi-xxvii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977216","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":3488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean-Paul Rocchi"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"512e3207-f0f3-3cc3-a349-a0c103190e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24599403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"31","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Litt\u00e9rature et m\u00e9tapsychanalyse de la race (Apr\u00e8s et avec Fanon)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599403","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Hawkesworth"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67dd8380-39ba-3a4b-9c3e-c314584c784c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20452461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gendered Ontology of \"Multitude\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452461","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The main purpose of this paper is to critique the concepts of 'teacher professionalism' and 'professional identity' as they are currently manifest in the field of teaching and teacher education from two related feminist perspectives. In the first instance, feminist critiques of liberal democracy are drawn upon to expose the gendered assumptions which underlie dominant conceptions of the 'professional' teacher. Particular attention is paid to the now dominant view of the teacher as a rational and instrumental actor, and its gendered dimensions are explored. Second, the gender dualisms which reside at the heart of the concept 'teacher professionalism' are identified and discussed. The discussion is then widened to examine the role of gender politics in shaping the epistemological premises upon which teacher professionalism is developed and its more formative role in the exploitation of women teachers' labours. Drawing upon examples of current feminist research and my own preliminary empirical data, the paper concludes by presenting an alternative conceptual framework for assessing the gendered nature of identity formation in teaching.","creator":["Jo-Anne Dillabough"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c87f4293-bec5-3687-9be9-0efcf4570559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"394","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-394","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Politics and Conceptions of the Modern Teacher: Women, Identity and Professionalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393253","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":12666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From a sample of 51 major international airlines, we offer a critical discourse analysis of so-called loyalty or frequent-flyer programmes and their related business-class services. As examples of cultural capital par excellence, these seemingly innocuous discursive formations act as significant agents of, and channels for, globalist relations of power in the context of international travel and tourism. The principal logic of frequent-flyer programmes hinges on establishing a synthetically personalized (see Fairclough, 1989) framework by which 'loyalty' is defined and rewarded, and by which privilege is then awarded and regulated. However, what actually sustains this commodified interpersonal appeal is the airlines' skilful reworking of symbolic capital, their manipulation of the illusion of distinction, and the exploitation of social anxieties about status. This is all achieved through a series of discursive strategies that stylize (see Cameron, 2000a) 'preferred' passengers as elite. Our analysis of frequent-flyer programmes and business-class services exposes some of the ways social privilege and superiority are nowadays measured, as well as the normative production of luxury. We argue that, for the sake of global marketability and profit, the semiotic realization of super-elitism by the airline industry powerfully 're-organizes' anachronistic modes of tourism while also reformulating very traditional notions of class distinction.","creator":["CRISPIN THURLOW","ADAM JAWORSKI"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fd17c7c-5ba0-3a02-a695-2ee7abc88be3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The alchemy of the upwardly mobile: symbolic capital and the stylization of elites in frequent-flyer programmes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889034","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":17456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa M. Logan"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27750153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07a5317f-4fa0-347e-b398-2699cc3eb669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27750153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"648","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-648","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Importance of Women to Early American Study: A Social Justice Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27750153","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":2963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia S. Mann"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a938258-15b9-3e1a-aefb-fa2ae8b3cad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810554","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":2421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandy Petrey","Copp\u00e9lia Kahn"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0007fd6-8f17-3945-a27f-019f31276966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Figuring Gender: Two Views","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462593","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":1829,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48525,48614]],"Locations in B":[[8612,8701]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Chaucer studies is in the midst of transformation as critics struggle with the efficacy of postmodern literary theory in medieval studies in general. The resulting work is at times passionate and convincing, at times defensive and skeptical.","creator":["Faye Walker"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a242e6d9-7814-37df-89a2-f55cb59dc4de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"592","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-592","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Making Trouble: Postmodern Theory With\/In Chaucer Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946007","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studying anthropologists and making the culture of culture professionals into an object of research not only foregrounds the quandaries of feminist, postmodernist, and postcolonial critiques as cultural practice, but also demonstrates that such quandaries are coincident with the representational politics of anthropology. In this essay my ethnographic writing draws on theorizations of abjection to make intelligible the quandaries of my anthropology among anthropologists.","creator":["Sarah Williams"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3317105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"210f4c78-790a-3c3c-bfb5-d423ba50786c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3317105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Abjection and Anthropological Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3317105","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":6156,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[491827,491870]],"Locations in B":[[38754,38797]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["FRANCES RESTUCCIA"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d15d5c2-6c5a-31f3-8cd0-14dad2d58c74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tales of Beauty: Aestheticizing Female Melancholia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304522","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11971,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[215549,215645]],"Locations in B":[[28512,28608]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An examination of animate from reveals corporeal archetypes that underlie both human sexual behavior and the reigning Western biological paradigm of human sexuality that reworks the archetypes to enforce female oppression. Viewed within the framework of present-day social constructionist theory and Western biology, I show how both social constructionist feminists who disavow biology and biologists who reduce human biology to anatomy forget evolution and thereby forego understandings essential to the political liberation of women.","creator":["Maxine Sheets-Johnstone"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"435210b5-6c69-3843-884c-0d4dfe5b6608"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Corporeal Archetypes and Power: Preliminary Clarifications and Considerations of Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809872","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":18804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rajeswari Sunder Rajan"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44244504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d7388f8-0520-3cba-a8b4-291464efa3fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44244504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Ameena: Gender, Crisis and National Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44244504","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan F. Hirsch"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"857","pageStart":"839","pagination":"pp. 839-857","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subjects in Spite of Themselves: Legal Consciousness among Working-Class New Englanders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828690","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8433,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472911]],"Locations in B":[[20017,20107]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lian Sinclair"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26815986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01469339"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ff6ee69-57e9-31b5-9238-bc8ac821df5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26815986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mythlore"}],"isPartOf":"Mythlore","issueNumber":"2 (126)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Mythopoeic Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Magical Genders: The Gender(s) of Witches in the Historical Imagination of Terry Pratchett's Discworld","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26815986","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5862,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[43800,43877],[54057,54147]],"Locations in B":[[14761,14838],[22677,22767]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Phenomenology says that every knowledge is a perspective knowledge, because every knowledge is situated in a time and in a space. The human's embodiment discloses a perspective overview on the world. The paper claims the aim to analyze how the sexual and gender dimensions, which are incarnated in a determinate body, are present in the qualitative research, specifically into the ethnographic observation. First for all, we hypothesize that the gender is a border for the access into a field and not in other, so to be man or woman is not neutral for the knowledge of a specific social context. Moreover, the performative dimension of the gender, which shows the norms that pre-exist and that conduct the role's interaction (i.e. the role's gendered content and the role's gendered language) is another tie in the participant observation. The awareness that all the knowledge is gendered, requires to the fieldworker to play a double competence (ability). The researcher must use the self reflexivity to point out his gender identity and his background on this theme: he must point out his background frame relatively to the gender, his gender behaviour's expectations in the interaction, and his correlated opinions. The researcher, moreover, must know that exist a cultural mainstream about the gender, but that the concrete gender playing is based on the interaction in a concrete frame. So, we have a lot of concrete ways in which the gender is embodied. The researcher on the field, so, must enter in a knowledge's circulation in which must point attention to: the epistemic interdependence, i.e. the knowledge borns in the symbolic interaction between the researcher and the subject; the gendered nature of the communicative interaction between the researcher and the subject; the negotiable nature of the concrete managing of the gendered role in the interaction.","creator":["NICOLETTA PAVESI"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23005136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0039291X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85448329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"434d1a6b-ff81-35e5-a8b7-2355fa47277f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23005136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studisociologia"}],"isPartOf":"Studi di Sociologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Vita e Pensiero \u2013 Pubblicazioni dell\u2019Universit\u00e0 Cattolica del Sacro Cuore","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"IL GENERE SUL CAMPO: ALCUNE RIFLESSIONI METODOLOGICHE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23005136","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas A. King"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cf7c3dd-8066-36c6-9c15-6821c8ff5462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207598","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":1016,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[452750,452843]],"Locations in B":[[5400,5493]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Paul"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0342121X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a6febc5-1fa7-34b1-aa66-7f9ba9fc67eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1348733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marbjahrkuns"}],"isPartOf":"Marburger Jahrbuch f\u00fcr Kunstwissenschaft","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Verlag des Kunstgeschichtlichen Seminars der Philipps-Universit\u00e4t Marburg","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mythos Mann. Ulrike Rosenbachs Videoinstallation 'Herakles - Herkules - King Kong' (1977)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348733","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Molly Anne Rothenberg","Joseph Valente"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"476d5572-fccc-363d-b788-03976d272b0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"372","pagination":"pp. 372-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fashionable Theory and Fashion-Able Women: Returning Fuss's Homospectatorial Look","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343976","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4877,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[215549,215645]],"Locations in B":[[26464,26560]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Il est courant, tant dans les cultures euro-am\u00e9ricaines que dans celles du Moyen-Orient, que les noms constituent la personne sociale et lui assignent une cat\u00e9gorie sexuelle sp\u00e9cifique. Malgr\u00e9 l'importance accord\u00e9e \u00e0 une appellation appropri\u00e9e selon l'appartenance sexuelle, la conception de l'honneur due au statut et celle du corps f\u00e9minin requ\u00e9raient que les femmes de la derni\u00e8re dynastie royale y\u00e9m\u00e9nite portent un nom d'homme. Au cours de leurs interactions avec certaines cat\u00e9gories d'hommes, les femmes devaient dissimuler leur nom f\u00e9minin, tout comme les parties de leur corps. \u00c9tudiant le lien de d\u00e9pendance existant entre les activit\u00e9s sociales et le nom, cet article souligne un paradoxe qui se situe au c\u0153ur de cette pratique d'appellation. En acqu\u00e9rant un nom masculin, ces femmes \u00e0 la fois se soumettaient aux imp\u00e9ratifs sociaux de l'ancienne hi\u00e9rarchie fond\u00e9e sur le statut et accroissaient leur pouvoir d'action. L'article examine la th\u00e9orie performative des noms de Judith Butler, selon laquelle les pratiques discursives telles que l'appellation ne contribuent pas n\u00e9cessairement \u00e0 assigner une appartenance sexuelle \u00e0 des \u00eatres biologiques de sexe f\u00e9minin, et l'appellation d'une femme par un nom de sexe oppos\u00e9 n'alt\u00e8re pas non plus son identit\u00e9 en tant que membre du sexe f\u00e9minin. \/\/\/ It is a commonplace in both Euro-American and Middle Eastern cultures that names constitute the social person and assign her or him to a specific gender category. In spite of the emphasis on appropriate naming in accordance with gender, cultural notions of status honour and the female body required the female members of the last Yemeni royal dynasty to carry male names. In interaction with certain categories of men, the women's female names had to ber concealed like other parts of the body. Exploring how interpretations of social activities depend on names, the article highlights a paradox at the heart of this naming practice. By acquiring male names, these women are once subjected themselves to the social imperatives of the old status hierarchy and increased their capacity for agency. The article discusses Judith Butler's performative theory of names, according to which gendered subjects come into being through being named. It is argued that in the case examined, discursive pratices such as naming need not contribute to gendering biological females in the way suggested by her, nor does cross-gender naming serve to destabilize their feminine gender identity.","creator":["Gabriele Vom Bruck","Pauline Baggio"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27586542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03952649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e71e3e6d-b9d3-3bee-83c6-22f7ce892ddd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27586542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annahistscisoc"}],"isPartOf":"Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le nom comme signe corporel: L'exemple des femmes de la noblesse y\u00e9m\u00e9nite","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27586542","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":15698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anja Peters"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25834011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9344c76d-8050-3561-b197-6743a4e1b408"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25834011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"780","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-780","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"LITERATURE, 1830\u20131880","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25834011","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":13785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susannah Radstone"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"617f02a9-0cac-3eb6-a344-ac4a159d2444"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"40","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Postcard from the Edge: Thoughts on the 'Feminist Theory: An International Debate' Conference Held at Glasgow University, Scotland, 12-15 July 1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395279","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Breyan Strickler"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44086433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259735452"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008213757"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d9f2cfb-ec84-3739-8f37-f4e48dfed7da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44086433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex in the City: An Ecocritical Perspective on the Place of Gender and Race in Othello","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44086433","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anthony L. Geist","Jeff Hitchin","Lynn Purl","Yvonne Unnold","Michael Weingrad"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5eda6e74-6b18-3ab9-bbc0-7b2d453de3f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Aesthetic of Cognitive Mapping: The Boundaries of the Unseminar: In Memoriam Ernst Behler (1928-1997)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641396","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8712,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[45230,45538]],"Locations in B":[[25407,25717]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo tra\u00e7a o tema do transexualismo em seis obras de literatura luso-brasileira do s\u00e9culo XIX at\u00e9 \u00e0 atualidade. Argumenta-se que a marginalidade do g\u00e9nero defic\u00e7\u00e3o especulativa fornece um rico solo para o tema, produzindo urna vis\u00e4o progressista em quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e sexualidade. Os primeiros textos a serem analisados, \u201cAs academias de Si\u00e3o\u201d (1884) de Machado de Assis e Esfinge (1908), de Coelho Neto, s\u00e3o brasileiros, enquanto a novela Confiss\u00e3o de Lucio (1914), de Mario S\u00e1 Carneiro, \u00e9 portuguesa. S\u00f3 d\u00e9cadas depots publicam-se textos da mesma tem\u00e1tica transexual, representados no Brasil pelos contos \u201cTransplante de c\u00e9rebro\u201d (1978) de Andr\u00e9 Carneiro e \u201cA mulher\u201d (1995) de Roberto de Sousa Causo, e em Portugal, por \u201cShelob\u201d (2002) de Sacha Ramos. Analisadas atrav\u00e9s de teor\u00edas de Derrida, Sedgwick, Kristeva e Butler, as seis obras exploram a arbitrariedade de conven\u00e7\u00f5es sociais, ressaltada pela presen\u00e7a de personagens transexuais. Esta presen\u00e7a, ora amea\u00e7adora, ora libertadora, possibilita a articula\u00e7\u00e3o de uma sensibilidade transexual, fornecendo uma vis\u00e3o alternativa da realidade social Enquanto estas sociedades tradicionais procuravam controlar o corpo atrav\u00e9s de institui\u00e7\u00f5es como a escravid\u00e3o, a Igreja e o Estado, descobre-se que, \u00f1as margens culturais, a literatura fant\u00e1stica d\u00e1 ampia oportunidade para representar a alteridade sexual.","creator":["Mary Elizabeth Ginway"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9297bf36-03a8-3f27-b1cf-740b163dbd28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40985172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Transgendering in Luso-Brazilian Speculative Fiction from Machado de Assis to the Present","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985172","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9472,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[55713,55813]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this paper is to investigate the question of gender difference in the entrepreneurial orientation of managers in the post-transition economy of Slovenia. The concept of intervening variables as parts of the conative components of entrepreneurial orientation is introduced and gender differences are examined between variables. 183 Slovene top and middle managers were analysed in this respect. The results indicate that there are no gender differences in the variable to spot opportunities, to risk, to innovate, and in the intervening variable to plan, and to follow procedures, but a gender difference exists in the intervening variable to analyse, to quantify, and to justify and in the intervening variables of dexterity and craftsmanship, which could be attributed to gender occupational concentration. Der Zweck dieses Beitrags ist es, die Frage der geschlechterspezifischen Unterschiede zwischen Managern in Bezug auf ihre unternehmerische Orientierung im Kontext der Transformationsituation in Slowenien zu untersuchen. Dazu wird das Konzept der intervenierenden Variablen als Teile der konativen Komponenten unternehmerischer Orientierung eingef\u00fchrt und die Geschlechterunterschiede anhand von Variablen untersucht. 183 obere und mitllere Manager wurden dazu befragt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass es keine Geschlechterunterschiede gibt bez\u00fcglich der Nutzung von M\u00f6glichkeiten, dem Risiko- und dem Innovationsverhalten und in Bezug auf die Planung und Befolgung von Verfahren. Allerdings bestehen geschlechterspezifische Unterschiede bei den intervenierenden Variablen zu analysieren, zu quantifizieren and zu beurteilen sowie bei der Geschicklichkeit und dem handwerklichen K\u00f6nnens, die in einer berufsbedingten Konzentration der Geschlechter begr\u00fcndet liegen k\u00f6nnten.","creator":["Andrej Bertoncelj","Darko Kova\u010d"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23281809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09496181"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618192"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"087c62b5-4123-30b1-8e0d-6dc6f64dfa3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23281809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeasteuromanastu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of East European Management Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","European Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender difference in the conative componet of entrepreneurial orientation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23281809","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Giving nicknames is a common and cross-generational folkloric practice of Israeli Arabs. In our paper we examine the nickname as a verbal unit reflecting socio-cultural identity as well as social and linguistic reality, while focusing on the role of the Hebrew language in the nicknaming practice. The conclusions of this research are based on extensive fieldwork conducted in villages and cities in Israel. The array of Hebrew nicknames given to Israeli Arabs has a double-edged ideological role: on the one hand it is a measure of their integration in Israel and their adaptation to the dominant language as it becomes an essential component of their personal and collective identity, but on the other hand the function of the Hebrew language in the nicknaming practice is to provide an irony that generates defamiliarisation and alienation. The conspicuous humorous effect of Hebrew nicknames stems from their oxymoronic contrast with the Arabic identity of the nicknamed persons. They point out the inter lingua and cultural situation of Israeli Arabs, and the complexity that defines and shapes their identity.","creator":["\u05e0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e4\u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05d5-\u05d0\u05d1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d9\u05e1","\u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05d0","Nina Pinto-Abecasis","Hani Musa"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23790526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0333693X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b19affd5-53e0-312b-b4db-3efc86891131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23790526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudhebrlite"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"753","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-753","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Identity of Israeli Arabs as Reflected in Hebrew-Based Nicknames \/ \u05d4\u05e9\u05ea\u05e7\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d1\u05db\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05e1\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23790526","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d4","wordCount":6120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws attention to the production and circulation of genetic knowledge among three constituencies-laboratory researchers, clinicians, and health advocates-all of whom have a stake in research on a heritable connective tissue condition known as Marfan syndrome. National and international conferences provide a context that brings members of these groups together. Such meetings are performance settings, which include the display of visual images depicting various aspects of Marfan syndrome and of the bodies and lived experience of those who have it. The article examines how these images are interpreted, appropriated, and exchanged and how their circulation is both grounded in local knowledge and the grounds for transformative translocal practice.","creator":["Deborah Heath"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/689949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2faa56ed-f846-37a1-8297-ef91c3e71bed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/689949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Locating Genetic Knowledge: Picturing Marfan Syndrome and Its Traveling Constituencies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/689949","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10663,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[63605,63678]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that, in order to take place, space and scale more seriously in the study of our discipline, we have to complement the pervasive understanding of geography as a tradition of thought or an extended conversation with an understanding of our discipline as a tradition of practice, in which the main focus is on the becoming of geographers. It is argued that the theme of 'what it takes to be a good geographer' is a fertile way to study this process of becoming. The four main advantages of this approach are illustrated empirically in the body of the argument by the author's reflections on his socializing within two very different geographical traditions.","creator":["Dragos Simandan"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On What It Takes to Be a Good Geographer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004245","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Minrose C. Gwin"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10c82608-e81e-3ec9-9619-c766c086c9c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Mosquitoes'\" Missing Bite: The Four Deletions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907653","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RICHARD BROWN"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7e4b3c6-bad0-33ed-b16e-f5bb15bdc817"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"When in doubt do gender\": Constructing Masculinities in \"Penelope,\" \"theyre all Buttons men\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285162","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":5594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper investigates the reasoning processes of social workers in child protection social work as they make decisions. Within this interpretive process, they assign meaning to clients' behaviours in a context containing a multitude of competing discourses relating to the nature and cause of clients' problems. The study used a qualitative approach, specifically a critical incident framework. It asked workers to describe cases they felt 'pleased with' and explain the reasoning processes they used in those cases. It also asked clients their views of decisions made about them. This article draws on social construction ist theorising to describe and analyse the discourses used to frame the aims of practice and the causes of clients' problems. It found that workers valued family maintenance and sought to bolster this while managing potential risk. In the cases selected by workers, they constructed the causes of clients' problems in non-blaming but individualised ways, viewed clients as being capable of change and honest in their dealings with workers. It is proposed that these ways of viewing contributed to maintaining relationships with clients despite the challenges of balancing risk, care, control and power.","creator":["Emily Keddell"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bccac3e-43da-3ca8-a62f-1b2d1fb9e7e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43771514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1270","pageStart":"1251","pagination":"pp. 1251-1270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Reasoning Processes in Child Protection Decision Making: Negotiating Moral Minefields and Risky Relationships","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771514","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article constitutes a conversation between professionals of differing generations and nationalities: a North American tenured academic Baby Boomer born in 1951 and a vintage 1986 Millennial South American neophyte professor from Brazil. In this article, we merge our voices in pursuing a literature review and exploring pedagogical practices within arts education classrooms through visual culture studies. We discuss our approaches to introducing queer sexuality subjects within the classroom, define key concepts and terms, tease out our queer theoretical standpoints, and concretely illustrate how we have attempted to perform our queer theorizing through our pedagogical practices.","creator":["JAMES H. SANDERS III","TALES GUBES VAZ"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6dce5d9f-dfb5-3570-8b84-f0d4f30cf474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24465531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dialogue on Queering Arts Education Across the Americas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465531","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":8398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I revisit debates about so-called matrifocal societies as a way to critique the centrality of heteronormative marriage and family in anthropology. Using gender as a tool of analysis, I argue that anthropologists have relied on the trope of the dominant heterosexual man, what I call the \"Patriarchal Man,\" to create and sustain concepts of \"marriage\" and \"family.\" By examining the discourse on matrifocality in studies of Afro-Caribbean and Minangkabau households, I show how it is the \"missing man,\" the dominant heterosexual man, who is the key to the construction and perpetuation of the matrifocal concept and, by extension, the motor of marriage, family, and kinship. This fixity on the dominant heterosexual man has led anthropologists to misrecognize other forms of relatedness as less than or weaker than heteronormative marriage. I suggest that, rather than positing a foundational model for human sociality, intimacy, or relatedness, researchers look for webs of meaningful relationships in their historical and social specificity.","creator":["Evelyn Blackwood"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd3a123b-9033-34ab-82df-0fc775027deb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wedding Bell Blues: Marriage, Missing Men, and Matrifocal Follies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805140","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":14565,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[171843,171928]],"Locations in B":[[11012,11097]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article about Sammy Berdugo's novel Kakha \u02beAni Medaberet \u02bfim Harua\u1e96 [This is How I talk to the Wind] (2002) is part of a project dealing with the recent writings of Mizra\u1e96i authors in Israel, and about the complex dialogue between them and the poetics that dominate the Israeli canon. The article focuses on how Berdugo's novel makes its way into the literary scene by avoiding a head-on collision with the canonic conventions and by not having his heroes wave the banner of revolution against the reigning order. Rather, the novel offers a tactics of an 'Other' revolution \u2014 a revolution of displacement and camouflage: partial collaboration and partial transparent camouflage, but also an intentionally flawed imitation of dominant practices. The article refers to the work of the cultural critic Michel de Certeau in order to examine the tactics of the novel's heroine to avoid falling victim to the large-scale strategies employed by the hegemonic power. Berdugo appears to situate himself outside the field of 'whiteness', in an Israel that consists wholly of Mizra\u1e96i Jews and of Arabs. But 'the first Israel' necessarily intrudes through use of disciplining mechanisms, the hegemonic discourse, and the Zionist space in which the novel's protagonist moves about. Thus Berdugo manages, on the one hand, to point out the oppressive but transparent power of the hegemonic, and 'to tell what it means to live a life negotiated by whiteness' \u2014 in Homi Bhabha's words. On the other hand, by exposing its inner contradictions and by revealing it as an unstable and disjointed form of authority, Berdugo manages to question this very power. Ostensibly, Berdugo pulls his story away from ethnic discourse and does not play the game of identity politics. Instead he offers a territory made up entirely of borderlands, entirely in-between; this territory is never either simply white or, indeed, only black.","creator":["\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8-\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8","Hanna Soker-Schwager"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0333693X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f02981f-2c3c-3d50-9b1c-aa0543427887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23361188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudhebrlite"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"'Transparent Camouflage' \u2014 Tactics of an 'Other' Revolution: On \"Kakha Ani Medaberet\u02bfim Haru'ah\" by Sammy Berdugo \/ '\u05d4\u05e1\u05d5\u05d5\u05d0\u05d4 \u05e9\u05e7\u05d5\u05e4\u05d4' \u2014 \u05d8\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05e8\u05d3 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8: \u05e2\u05dc '\u05db\u05db\u05d4 \u05d0\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05d3\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05d7' \u05de\u05d0\u05ea \u05e1\u05de\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e8\u05d3\u05d5\u05d2\u05d5","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361188","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d1","wordCount":9097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"South African research on same-sex sexuality is sparse. Black men living in rural areas, and particularly coloured men, have often been neglected in same-sex sexuality research. This paper describes the findings from a study that explored the sexuality constructions of a group of young, coloured, self-identified gay men who live in a semi-rural, low-income, South African community. Social constructionist grounded theory was used to analyse interviews conducted with 12 men between the ages of 20 and 31. It was found that these men construct their sexuality as being 'like a woman'. In our exploration of this core category, we show how men use notions of femininity to construct their sexuality. We conclude by considering how this group of gay men's performance of femininity could be viewed as reproducing mainstream ideas of gender within their community, while at the same time functioning as acts of subversion. Les recherches sur la sexualit\u00e9 avec des personnes de m\u00eame sexe sont rares en Afrique du Sud. Les hommes noirs qui vivent dans les zones rurales, en particulier les hommes \u00abde couleur\u00bb, ont souvent \u00e9t\u00e9 n\u00e9glig\u00e9s par ces recherches. Cet article d\u00e9crit les r\u00e9sultats d'une \u00e9tude qui a explor\u00e9 les constructions de la sexualit\u00e9 dans un groupe d'hommes - jeunes, \u00abde couleur\u00bb et s'identifiant comme gays - qui vivent dans une communaut\u00e9 semi rurale et \u00e0 faibles revenus en Afrique du Sud. L'analyse des entretiens men\u00e9s avec 12 hommes \u00e2g\u00e9s de 20 \u00e0 31 ans a \u00e9t\u00e9 effectu\u00e9e, avec pour base la th\u00e9orie du constructionnisme social. Elle a r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9 que ces hommes construisent leur sexualit\u00e9 mmes\u00bb. Gr\u00e2ce a l'exploration de cette cat\u00e9gorie de base, nous montrons comment les hommes emploient des notions de f\u00e9minit\u00e9 pour construire leur sexualit\u00e9. Nous concluons notre article en prenant en compte les modes selon lesquels l'interpr\u00e9tation de la f\u00e9minit\u00e9 par ce groupe d'hommes gays pourrait \u00eatre per\u00e7ue comme une reproduction des id\u00e9es g\u00e9n\u00e9rales sur le genre au sein de leur communaut\u00e9, en fonctionnant simultan\u00e9ment comme un acte de subversion. Los estudios surafricanos sobre la sexualidad con personas del mismo sexo es escasa. En las investigaciones sobre la sexualidad con personas del mismo sexo con frecuencia se ignora a los hombres de raza negra que viven en zonas rurales, especialmente los hombres de color. En este art\u00edculo describimos los resultados de un estudio en el que se analizaron las construcciones de sexualidad de un grupo de j\u00f3venes de color, identificados ellos mismos como homosexuales, que viven en una comunidad semi-rural surafricana con bajos ingresos. Para analizar las entrevistas, llevadas a cabo con 12 hombres con edades comprendidas entre los 20 y 31 a\u00f1os, nos basamos en la teor\u00eda fundamentada socio-construccionista. Se observ\u00f3 que estos hombres construyen su sexualidad en torno a sentirse \"como mujeres\". En nuestro an\u00e1lisis de esta categor\u00eda central, mostramos c\u00f3mo los hombres usan nociones de feminidad para construir su sexualidad. Terminamos el art\u00edculo analizando c\u00f3mo se ver\u00eda la actuaci\u00f3n de feminidad de este grupo de hombres homosexuales como una reproducci\u00f3n de las ideas generales sobre los sexos en su comunidad, si bien al mismo tiempo funcionan como actos de subversion.","creator":["Francois Rabie","Elmien Lesch"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6c15c88-fef4-3c3c-9f14-fb6706e80df3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27784497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"729","pageStart":"717","pagination":"pp. 717-729","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Specialized education","Arts - Art history"],"title":"'I am like a woman': constructions of sexuality among gay men in a low-income South African community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784497","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7152,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489252,489358]],"Locations in B":[[41735,41848]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["IAN FREDERICK MOULTON"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43918944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034429X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646848243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2f674f9-b5f3-3862-8550-123dbc8ce053"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43918944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renarefo"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43918944","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":4639,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513447]],"Locations in B":[[1738,1847]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the nature of the relationship between the kind of textual politics, here referred to as \u2018women\u2019s writing\u2019, and the dominant discursive practice of Czech culture, whose logic and functioning is best encapsulated in the Derridean term \u2018phallogocentrism\u2019. Women\u2019s writing is defined here as the kind of writing which locates itself outside the domain and logic of a phallogocentric discourse, trying to challenge and undermine its hegemonic status. In this respect, women\u2019s writing is not delimited by the sex of an author, but by his\/her gendered subjectivity, his\/her position within the discursive formation, and his\/her attitude to hegemonic language practices. Women\u2019s writing, as understood in this thesis, critically reflects upon the role of language as a decisive medium for our thinking, and questions the notion of subjectivity, which is usually equated with the Cartesian Ego and conceived as an autonomous entity. Through its textual strategies, women\u2019s writing reflects upon the fact that we all are inevitably \u2018inserted\u2019 into language. Consequently, rather than striving to free itself of - inevitable - discursive formation and constraints, it highlights the formative role of language by means of an ironic, palimpsest-like re-writing of conventional literary narratives, as well as by means of textual politics defined by the continuous displacement of meaning. The criticism of the phallogocentric concept of subjectivity is on the one hand informed by the decentring of the identity of the narrating subject, and on the other by one\u2019s awareness of one\u2019s epistemic situatedness within a particular discursive space. The logic and economy of women\u2019s writing is determined by the tension between its drive towards non-phallogocentric discourse, and its paradoxical, yet inevitable dependence on symbolic codes and hegemonic discursive practices. The subversive potential of women\u2019s writing, as understood here, is thus not situated within a space seen as a radical \u2018beyond\u2019, but is directed inwards, into the fissures of the phallogocentric discourse itself. In order to exemplify the features of women\u2019s writing, the article discusses a novel Slabik\u00e1\u0159 otcovsk\u00e9ho jazyka (A Primer of the Father Tongue) by Sylvie Richterov\u00e1 (who is, apart from Sou\u010dkov\u00e1, Linhartov\u00e1, Hodrov\u00e1, and Hrabal, one of the authors discussed in a monograph of which the present article is an excerpt). Richterov\u00e1\u2019s novel, which may be read as a radical reassessment of the genre of autobiography, is considered in the article a fragmented space of memory, which provides an ambiguous ground for an attempt to integrate a discontinuous identity, an integration that can never be fully accomplished. The paper then argues that one\u2019s identity can never be grasped as a full and unmediated presence due to both the nature of language based on the mechanism of constant deferral (Derrida) and the nature of always already split subjectivity based on an essential and constitutive lack (Lacan). Given this crucial yet impossible task of achieving one\u2019s identity in its full presence, what the text does is to enact textually the process of inevitable, benign \u2018failure\u2019. Thus, rather than a simple proposition, a meaning or a function of the text resides in recording textual traces of this profoundly meaningful \u2018failure\u2019. Ultimately, the article argues, the subversive potential of women\u2019s writing can paradoxically only reside in a strategie staging and performance of its very own discursive and epistemological limits in process, or, as Miroslav Pet\u0159\u00ed\u010dek puts it, as a pragmatic contradiction, which means that at the textual and stylistic level, the text performs the exact opposite of what it conveys at the level of its proposition.","creator":["Jan Matonoha"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d8140f5-e6ec-359a-8515-cb626398769b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42687390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","issueNumber":"2","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of Czech Literature, The Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201e\u017densk\u00e9 psan\u00ed\u201c jako inscenace limit textu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687390","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":11749,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[74855,75004]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Algorithms, or rather algorithmic actions, are seen as problematic because they are inscrutable, automatic, and subsumed in the flow of daily practices. Yet, they are also seen to be playing an important role in organizing opportunities, enacting certain categories, and doing what David Lyon calls \"social sorting.\" Thus, there is a general concern that this increasingly prevalent mode of ordering and organizing should be governed more explicitly. Some have argued for more transparency and openness, others have argued for more democratic or value-centered design of such actors. In this article, we argue that governing practices\u2014of, and through algorithmic actors\u2014are best understood in terms of what Foucault calls governmentality. Governmentality allows us to consider the performative nature of these governing practices. They allow us to show how practice becomes problematized, how calculative practices are enacted as technologies of governance, how such calculative practices produce domains of knowledge and expertise, and finally, how such domains of knowledge become internalized in order to enact self-governing subjects. In other words, it allows us to show the mutually constitutive nature of problems, domains of knowledge, and subjectivities enacted through governing practices. In order to demonstrate this, we present attempts to govern academic writing with a specific focus on the algorithmic action of Turnitin.","creator":["Lucas D. Introna"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43671281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9544632b-ea61-3fd3-b6ab-48c55773ec43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43671281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Algorithms, Governance, and Governmentality: On Governing Academic Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43671281","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":13218,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727]],"Locations in B":[[16084,16217]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah M. Mix","Daphne Marlatt","Betsy Warland"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"602f9f50-44b4-3b91-8d69-21962b657cfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Erotics of Collaboration: Daphne Marlatt and Betsy Warland's \"Double Negative\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208762","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I argue that evolutionary theorizing can help sociologists and feminists better understand gender inequality. Evolutionary theory explains why control of the sexuality of young women is a priority across most human societies both past and present. Evolutionary psychology has extended our understanding of male violence against women. Here I add to these theories and present a sexual selection argument to postulate possible evolved predispositions that promote young female deference to adult males in interaction and the converse, lack of male deference to young females. According to this argument, the pattern of greater female deference disappears when the women involved are past menopause. Put together, these ideas form an evolutionary account of gender inequality that complements and extends traditional sociological and feminist theories.","creator":["Rosemary L. Hopcroft"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40345001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6984affe-095b-3b6b-913c-deef69ea4dd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40345001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"1871","pageStart":"1845","pagination":"pp. 1845-1871","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender Inequality in Interaction - An Evolutionary Account","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40345001","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":11012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine M. Franke"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"379295bf-167f-360b-ba2b-fc3860a97665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"2683","pageStart":"2661","pagination":"pp. 2661-2683","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Homosexuals, Torts, and Dangerous Things","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797229","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":11358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shari J. Stenberg"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15349322"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43501960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstud"}],"isPartOf":"Composition Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Cincinnati on behalf of Composition Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Embodied Classrooms, Embodied Knowledges: Re-thinking the Mind\/Body Split","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501960","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8225,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[432777,432893],[435902,436102]],"Locations in B":[[10541,10656],[11080,11305]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew Gumpert"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629419"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20d7760a-4731-3ab2-8eba-4c2e5b576c5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40552399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Supplementarity and the Sonnet: A Reading of Ronsard's Les Amours Diverses 45","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552399","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12373,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[70932,71017]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The boundary between the personal and the political is contested.Feminist interventions in this contest since 1970 have been particularly significant.A brief discussion of how feminists have theorised the personal\/political division serves as an introduction to my analysis of current struggles over that division in Western liberal democracies.My analysis focuses on the workings of representative processes.Efforts to represent interests are strongly interlinked with the representation of meanings or images. Representations rely on, even if they resist, dominant discourses which privilege certain meanings and interests over others. To illustrate this analysis I use media representations of the Clinton versus Paula Jones case,which has produced considerable debate about the personal\/political boundary.The continued high poll ratings Clinton received at that time suggest that his sexual behaviour was not seen as interfering with his political performance.In contrast, assessments of Jones's political credibility appear considerably tied to evaluations of her 'personal' life. The difficulties of representing marginalised gender and class positions within current representative systems are explored in order to account for these differences.","creator":["Mary Holmes"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54ab6221-1627-3e08-bffc-fa36291099a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42858037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When Is the Personal Political? The President's Penis and Other Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858037","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GERRY SMYTH"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Crying Game\": postcolonial or postmodern?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263516","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Stanford Friedman"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99d6dbf5-7877-3cca-af5f-5f386336b358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Beyond\" Gynocriticism and Gynesis: The Geographics of Identity and the Future of Feminist Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463970","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12959,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[62389,62440]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claire Bond Potter"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5d52a40-c1ff-35bf-9eb6-41b0b076b1b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Problem of the Color Line: Segregation, Politics, and Historical Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354378","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa A. Lindsay"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271868"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829373364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce7ff7a6-e6ec-311d-b721-b30a202efce8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestafrihist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Male Daughters, Female Husbands at Thirty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.3.2.0093","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":3734,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745],[435522,435631],[478060,478195]],"Locations in B":[[3870,4049],[4698,4808],[19280,19485]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roger N. Lancaster"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c25ed35-3280-303b-9b5d-54747545a15a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/682727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"604","pagination":"pp. 604-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Coming-Out Stories: Recent Videos on Gay and Lesbian Themes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682727","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":9977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Neil Leach"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00790958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62483181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31004967-796a-3522-bff7-84fdc33aedfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1567305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspecta"}],"isPartOf":"Perspecta","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Yale University, School of Architecture","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Belonging: Towards a Theory of Identification with Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567305","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5517,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441466,441578]],"Locations in B":[[11849,11960]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Physical and moral regeneration was one of the great aspirations of the French Revolution. Revolutionaries fashioned new cultural practices to emphasize collective rebirth and the individual citizen's own break with a degenerate past. Often associated with radical politics, this article emphasizes regeneration's conservative manifestations after the Reign of Terror and the Thermidorean reaction of 1794. Against the backdrop of revolutionary transformations in medical theory and practice, doctors and surgeons sought to bring new biomedical knowledge upon previous regenerative projects, arguing that unrestrained biological passions had enervated the polity and caused social disaggregation. By studying domestic hygiene and the 'limited sensibility' of living matter, practitioners hoped they could reverse the Jacobin excess and popular upheaval through physical and moral education. These doctors claimed that recent clinical discoveries showed that human nature was less malleable than earlier revolutionaries had believed. Therefore, greater elements of emotional and corporal self-control, taught by practitioners and internalized within the family, could heal civil society and encourage social improvement. This bio-medical programme of regeneration radiated out across three levels, moving from elite clinical theorists to a kind of 'literary underground' of medical practice: a hygienic regimen aimed at controlling limited amounts of vital energy in the human body; a 'physical and moral' rehabilitation of women to anchor them in the domestic sphere; and reproductive strategies to breed new generations of rejuvenated citizens. In their efforts to incorporate republican hygienic sensibilities within traditional law and custom, doctors helped efface revolutionary memory and contributed to the paternalistic family law of the Civil Code in 1804.","creator":["Sean M. Quinlan"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4287075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03071022"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45096141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0937276b-8796-3271-ad5a-0d87aff7e1fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4287075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socihist"}],"isPartOf":"Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Physical and Moral Regeneration after the Terror: Medical Culture, Sensibility and Family Politics in France, 1794-1804","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4287075","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":15900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ANALYZED THROUGH THE WORK OF FEMINIST AND QUEER THEORIST JUDITH Butler, anthropologist Saba Mahmood, and philosopher Martha Nussbaum, motherhood complicates theories of performativity that separate sex from gender and that equate women's agency with progressive politics. Motherhood should be understood as performative, that is, entailing self-reflective agency but not entirely separable from women's bodies. While motherhood may be manipulated to support patriarchal institutions, experiences of motherhood also inspire fresh interpretations and critiques of anthropocentric Christian theology and Muslim religious texts. Given the political dimensions of motherhood, the appearance of Hillary Clinton and Sarah Palin as prominent politicians attests to the variety of performativity and the need to protect women's agency.","creator":["Irene Oh"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56717329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221984"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af7c3a8b-ff7a-344c-8442-7d486b1f0c0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23562795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Performativity of Motherhood: Embodying Theology and Political Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562795","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[37316,37385]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alex Cockain"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13249347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41170782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f8f2fb0-5231-3e56-97a1-05deb2480eac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25790559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaj"}],"isPartOf":"The China Journal","issueNumber":"65","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"STUDENTS' AMBIVALENCE TOWARD THEIR EXPERIENCES IN SECONDARY EDUCATION: VIEWS FROM A GROUP OF YOUNG CHINESE STUDYING ON AN INTERNATIONAL FOUNDATION PROGRAM IN BEIJING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790559","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ranjoo Seodu Herr"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23562076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Third World Feminist Defense of Multiculturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562076","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":15801,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431403,431480]],"Locations in B":[[20978,21055]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Betsy Erkkila"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"174f9e72-d3e3-32c0-be40-f0cfa3c0c2c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminism without Tears","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041587","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4222,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[27161,27223]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that Tibullus' practice of altering the gender of his intertextual references destabilizes gender as a biological, social, and even grammatical category in his elegies. In 1.8, Tibullus draws on images of women's adornment from Callimachus, Philitas, and Propertius to create the opening image of the puer Marathus. In 2.6, Tibullus draws from Catullus' lament for his brother in carmen 101 as he describes Nemesis' dead young sister and demonstrates his technical skill in manipulating the flexibility of grammatical gender in Latin.","creator":["ERIKA ZIMMERMANN DAMER"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098418"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617990"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215837"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e99c3b5-402c-3fb9-8ea7-0ee2dab7638e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24699732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"classworl"}],"isPartOf":"The Classical World","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Reversals and Intertextuality in Tibullus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24699732","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":9739,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147626,147832]],"Locations in B":[[57715,57918]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy Scheie"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0fd9fcf-9e15-3572-b618-f3adaeccc4fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Addicted to Race: Performativity, Agency, and C\u00e9saire's \"A Tempest\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112375","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6365,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[441419,441697],[441848,441980]],"Locations in B":[[33810,34082],[34165,34297]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Increasing attention to existentialist thought by criminologists and other social scientists in recent decades has created an opportunity to envision new possibilities in critical theoretic inquiry that extend well beyond the classical formulations of this tradition. In this essay, I draw on existentialist ideas to outline a critical perspective rooted in recent developments associated with Ulrich Beck's notion of \"risk society\" and the related theory of reflexive modernization. I argue that, though the detraditionalization consequences of reflexive modernization give greater scope to agency in the risk society, transcendence in the existentialist sense is found in the hermeneutic reflexivity one experiences in high risk practices I call \"edgework\". Finally, I explore several options for using existential transcendence in hermeneutic reflexivity as a reference for critical analysis and, in doing so, suggest an alternative to Beck's own critical approach\u2014cosmopolitanism\u2014as a foundation for a critical theory of the second modern social order.","creator":["Stephen Lyng"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"818b7316-296a-37bf-a02f-444e9e7c5e81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23257673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Existential Transcendence in Late Modernity: Edgework and Hermeneutic Reflexivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257673","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brian Woodman"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"446d3d62-0d52-3c32-b427-3d374d6a6341"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Why Don't You Take Your Dress Off and Fight Like a Man?: Homosexuality and the 1960s Crisis of Masculinity in \"The Gay Deceivers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250053","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cormac McCarthy's novel Suttree has rightly and widely been read as harboring a distaste for material bodies and for sensual flesh. This aversion to materiality often takes the form of an unsettling misogyny that recurs throughout the novel in key scenes and characters. Critics have discerned various gnostic references throughout the novel which can and do support a reading of Suttree's material aversion. But Gnosticism is not the only Christianity referenced in this text. There are other incarnational and sacramental traditions that routinely arise, and they complicate the novel's relationship to human bodies and embodied identities. This essay draws upon both incarnational Christian theology and contemporary feminist theory in order to read more deeply into the novel's deep ambivalence around materiality and human identity.","creator":["Matthew Potts"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08883769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de09c5f9-b1c0-3b8b-889a-14d7330a8088"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24752887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reliandliter"}],"isPartOf":"Religion & Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Notre Dame","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"THEIR RAGGED BIBLICAL FORMS\": MATERIALITY, MISOGYNY, AND THE CORPORAL WORKS OF MERCY IN \"SUTTREE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752887","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When Judith Butler's Gender Trouble appeared in German translation in 1991, the book launched a heated debate among German academic feminists about the status of gender as a category of analysis, and about the future of feminist theory. The anxieties were quite fundamental. Is \"gender\" a category of \"nature\" or \"culture\"? And if its \"nature\" is entirely cultural, a social construction, how can we then speak and act in the name of a gender, i.e., in the name of women? Much of this debate was coded as a conflict between different feminist generations. This trope of \"generation\" served as a strategy of displacement: \"queer issues\" figured as a kind of absent\/present threat haunting the coherence of Gender Studies as a legitimate field of knowledge, but they were hardly made an explicit subject of discussion. This essay will look at the conscious and unconscious levels of discourse: What is the \"positive unconscious\" of the socalled \"Butler debate\"? Who gets to say what and how? What defines an \"intelligible\" object of study? Who gets to define it? In short, what is the \"order of things\" that frames discourse? Even if queer theory has had no manifest impact on the definition of Women's and Gender Studies, how did the specter of \"queer\" structure feminist theory on an unconscious level? And above all, what does all this mean for the future of German academic feminism(s)?","creator":["Sabine Hark"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a61dac2-efab-33e3-899e-2511de9d3201"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disputed Territory: Feminist Studies in Germany and Its Queer Discontents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157630","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8977,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[446805,447072]],"Locations in B":[[6583,6850]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristian Berco"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2ef5db-0a38-3f70-a072-ee8233e8cd5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20542699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Producing Patriarchy: Male Sodomy and Gender in Early Modern Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542699","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sylvia R. Lazos Vargas"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a42007a7-023c-31c4-9441-b29b7b4ef514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Introduction: Critical Race Theory in Education: Theory, Praxis, and Recommendations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978078","volumeNumber":"195","wordCount":6598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past few years, right-wing political groups in France have made sexuality a focus of their concerns. Since the debate about political lesbianism in 1980, feminist research on sexuality in France has been markedly limited to research on abortion, contraception, and sexual violence. In this article, I look back at the US feminist \u201csex wars\u201d as a crucial turning point in feminist thought on sexuality and examine different aspects feminists address when speaking about sexuality. I argue that the multiplicity of levels of thinking sex brought up by US feminists opposes a structural- and an individual-based perspective. These multiple levels crosscut on the topics of sexual practices, identities, and morals, the very themes of the sex wars. Together they compose the technology of power (Foucault 1976) that has been constructed under the name of sexuality in the nineteenth century. The contributions of the US feminist debate on sexuality help to broaden an understanding of sexuality in today's politics in France. But in taking a closer look at the US feminist sex wars, it appears that they actually coincide with the US construction of French feminism and French theory. The trajectories of Monique Wittig's and Michel Foucault's works provide examples of the productivity of translations. They also stand for different feminist strategies of thinking sex that after a closer examination do not seem so radically opposed any more. Through this analysis the deconstruction of sexuality as an entity is suggested in re-embracing the critical questions set by the authors of the sex wars.","creator":["Cornelia M\u00f6ser"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.16.1.09","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e158402b-1a73-37fd-8a9d-4e31b61985ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.16.1.09"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex Wars and the Contemporary French Moral Panic: The Productivity and Pitfalls of Feminist Conflicts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.16.1.09","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":12054,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6892,7000],[477984,478011]],"Locations in B":[[59226,59334],[70441,70468]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marianne Kamp"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pilgrimage and Performance: Uzbek Women and the Imagining of Uzbekistan in the 1920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879827","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALLISON MARGARET BIGELOW"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20356b9b-bbb1-3066-8b51-a583b36d2344"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90000857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gendered Language and the Science of Colonial Silk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000857","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":21366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HEATHER ONDERCIN"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23563305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"befa95b0-5ad2-3fc0-8200-7dad52910a2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23563305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Academy of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"What Scarlett O'Hara Thinks: Political Attitudes of Southern Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23563305","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":11014,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[7665,7727]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laurie Cohen","Melissa Tyler"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23748156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71c286d3-09e0-3515-92d6-837872a4ec1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23748156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"629","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-629","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23748156","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":2777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Comparing Edith Summers Kelley's Weeds, Paule Marshall's Brown Girl, Brownstones and works by Meridel Le Sueur to selected works of William Faulkner and Erskine Caldwell reveals how working-class women's sexuality is represented, and suggests that gender performance differs by class.","creator":["Lisa Orr"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6e47e8b-b607-361d-916d-1cc9e41e7465"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Cotton Patch Strumpets and Masculine Women: Performing Classed Genders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675309","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8225,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[430988,431111],[431239,431698],[431710,431979]],"Locations in B":[[7198,7321],[7332,7782],[7794,8056]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper outlines the main tenets of poststructuralism and considers how they are applied by practitioners of queer theory. Drawing on both Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida, queer theory explores the ways in which homosexual subjectivity is at once produced and excluded within culture, both inside and outside its borders. This approach is contrasted with more sociological studies of sexuality (labeling theory, social constructionism). Whereas queer theory investigates the relations between heterosexuality and homosexuality, sociologists tend to examine homosexual identities and communities, paradoxically ignoring the social construction of heterosexuality. Poststructuralism can inform a sociological approach to sexuality by emphasizing the generative character of all sexual identities. A sociological study of sexuality which is informed by poststructuralism would examine the exclusions implicit in a heterosexual\/homosexual opposition. In this process, bisexual and transgender identities can become viable cultural possibilities, and a broad-based political coalition established. Whereas mainstream sociology focuses on the ways in which homosexuals are outside social norms, and whereas queer theory exploits the ways in which this outside is already inside, this perspective suggests that a critical sexual politics seeks to move beyond an inside\/outside model.","creator":["Ki Namaste"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"761641b4-26f3-3cde-ba9e-d5322a55de10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Inside\/Out: Queer Theory, Poststructuralism, and a Sociological Approach to Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201866","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494630,494699]],"Locations in B":[[44724,44792]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past two decades, household studies have coalesced into a recognized subfield within archaeology. Despite this relatively short history, household archaeologists are now taking a leading role in epistemological shifts that are placing people and their practices and differences at the center of archaeological interpretations of the past, rather than subsuming these into the \"noise\" of passive and depersonalized depictions of ancient social systems. As Maya archaeologists have played a critical role in the development of household archaeology, examining recent trends in Maya household research provides a perspective on the directions of both Maya studies and household archaeology more generally. This article explores three interrelated trends: (1) understanding ordinary people; (2) understanding social diversity among households; (3) understanding households in articulation with the broder social universe. Through a discussion of these three trends, this review uses Classic Maya household archaeology as a case study to illustrate how household research has led to the development of theoretically rich and empirically substantive understandings of an ancient society, which repeople the past and foreground the active roles of and structural constraints on ancient people.","creator":["Cynthia Robin"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10590161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b80a3629-f561-33a1-aebe-0d245c89cede"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41053202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"New Directions in Classic Maya Household Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053202","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":25225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Freedom of conscience is widely claimed as a central principle of liberal democracy, but what is conscience and how do we know what it looks like? Rather than treat conscience as a transcendent category, this paper examines claims of conscience as rooted in distinct cultural and political histories. I focus on debates about conscientious objection in Second World War Britain, and argue that, there, persuasive claims of conscience were widely associated with a form of \"detached conviction.\" Yet evidence of such \"detached convictions\" always verged on being interpreted as deliberate manipulation and calculation. More broadly, I argue that the protection of freedom of conscience is necessarily incomplete and unstable. The difficulties in recognizing individual conscience point to anxieties within liberal democracy. Not only strangers are suspect and mistrusted, but also those who claim to stand most strongly by the principles of liberal citizenship.","creator":["TOBIAS KELLY"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f65c3ed-8347-3bcc-a552-adcf5a99d7cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"722","pageStart":"694","pagination":"pp. 694-722","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Citizenship, Cowardice, and Freedom of Conscience: British Pacifists in the Second World War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908368","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":13643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo de revis\u00e3o te\u00f3rica tem como objetivo abordar a cisgeneridade, ou o termo cisg\u00eanero, e sua ramifica\u00e7\u00e3o nas intera\u00e7\u00f5es cotidianas de modo a compreender as inteligibilidades que a acompanham, bem como os efeitos que s\u00e3o (re)produzidos. O pensamento de Foucault e de algumas autoras trans foi o referencial te\u00f3rico utilizado para a investiga\u00e7\u00e3o cient\u00edfica dos regimes de verdade, da produ\u00e7\u00e3o de resist\u00eancia e de experi\u00eancias \u00e9ticas e est\u00e9ticas. Assim, foi poss\u00edvel demonstrar os atravessamentos percebidos entre discursos e biopol\u00edticas que modulam formas de ser e de estar no mundo, convocando novos avan\u00e7os para os estudos de g\u00eanero e sexualidades, al\u00e9m de expor importantes elementos para os processos de subjetiva\u00e7\u00e3o e da busca de problematiza\u00e7\u00e3o da cisgeneridade para reconhecer a import\u00e2ncia da utiliza\u00e7\u00e3o do termo para uma an\u00e1lise mais igual da experi\u00eancia humana. This theoretical review article investigates cisgenderedness, or the cisgender category, and its ramifications in daily interactions to understand its intelligibility, as well as the effects it (re) produces. The thinking of Foucault and of some trans authors was the theoretical reference used for the scientific investigation of the regimes of truth, of the production of resistance and of ethical and aesthetic experiences. It was possible to demonstrate the crossings between the discourses and biopolitics which modulate ways of being, calling for new advances in the studies of gender and sexuality, besides bringing to light important elements for the processes of subjectivation and for the problematization of cisgenderedness, thus recognizing the importance of the term for a more equal analysis of human experience.","creator":["Felipe Cazeiro da Silva","Emilly Mel Fernandes de Souza","Marlos Alves Bezerra"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab86cde3-a825-3f90-9378-1f0c036b8d42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26748021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"(Trans)tornando a norma cisg\u00eanera e seus derivados - (Dis)ordering the Cisgender Norm and its Derivatives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748021","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Lumsden"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.35.3.0303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50574305"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cf30f66-82b7-392e-ae55-bf506461c87a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/americanmusic.35.3.0303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cThe Pulse Of Life Today\u201d: borrowing in Johanna Beyer's String Quartet No. 2","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.35.3.0303","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":18417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88cb84c1-33e7-305c-9a22-7f7c0559383c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"1380","pageStart":"1377","pagination":"pp. 1377-1380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342172","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":1768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie Taylor"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0466226-66d6-3cbc-98cc-a316ffed844c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"738","pageStart":"716","pagination":"pp. 716-738","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE VOICE OF THE PROPHET\": FROM ASTROLOGICAL QUACKERY TO SEXOLOGICAL AUTHORITY IN DJUNA BARNES'S \"LADIES ALMANACK\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287380","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":9771,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[249070,249161],[249667,249744]],"Locations in B":[[23235,23323],[23424,23501]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Cardonne-Arlyck"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35f635ed-27a6-3e59-9fd9-02fa5ae7fcb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201cUn n\u00e9ant follement attif\u00e9\u201d: modernit\u00e9 de Ren\u00e9e Vivien et Catherine Pozzi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288059","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tomando como punto de partida el trabajo de Peter Rudnytsky sobre la presencia ubicua de la historia de Edipo en la literatura y filosof\u00eda alemanas durante los dos \u00faltimos siglos, en este art\u00edculo comentamos una presencia semejante en la literatura rom\u00e1ntica en Espa\u00f1a y analizamos una obra que ha recibido poca atenci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica: el drama Alfredo, de Joaqu\u00edn Francisco Pacheco. Mediante un acercamiento psicoanal\u00edtico y feminista, investigamos tres temas constantes y entrelazados del teatro rom\u00e1ntico. Adem\u00e1s del conflicto ed\u00edpico, se estudia el tema del sino, aspecto que se vincula en el drama de Pacheco con la melancol\u00eda, de la cual ya padece el protagonista cuando se levanta el tel\u00f3n. Gracias a esta melancol\u00eda, Alfredo forja su identidad \u2013 otro tema representativo del teatro de este per\u00edodo \u2013 pero a consecuencia de la incorporaci\u00f3n de la imagen de su padre supuestamente muerto, su identidad le conduce a enamorarse de su madrastra y a imponer su voluntad sobre los dem\u00e1s, llevando a cabo una rebeli\u00f3n que desemboca en el triunfo del padre y el suicidio del hijo. As\u00ed se cumple el sino tr\u00e1gico del h\u00e9roe rom\u00e1ntico.","creator":["KAREN L. RAUCH"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e118218-ebcd-3673-9455-abb3033c3d2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Spanish Oedipus: Melancholia and Gender in Pacheco's Alfredo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763643","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4957,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[231423,231586]],"Locations in B":[[9345,9508]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Henry A. Giroux"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfcecf96-09d6-388a-969b-f855fc8a38e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rewriting the Politics of Identity and Difference: Critical Pedagogy Without Illusions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136432","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arnaldo Cruz-Malav\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ea97275-5379-3d19-96f1-d2ff086ca605"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"45","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"What a Tangled Web...!\": Masculinidad, abyeccion y la fundacion de la literatura puertorrique\u00f1a en los Estados Unidos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530913","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist film theory has too long equated representation with alienation and error, causing it to become embroiled unnecessarily in questions of epistemology. The struggle should not be over representation, but over representations; what is needed to challenge patriarchy is not an altered epistemological relation to the real, but altered representations.","creator":["Jennifer Hammett"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4615103-d26f-363a-a80f-e5139a7d5d21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Ideological Impediment: Feminism and Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225776","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the meaning of the citizen subject from a feminist perspective. I argue that a poststructuralist feminist account provides the best interpretation of the subject, how it is formed through governmental practices and discourses, but is still capable of practicing ethics. The subject in contemporary society is overly determined by naturalized accounts of gender and the body. These essentialized notions are imported into the liberal view of the subject. Administrators who approach citizen subjects as free and autonomous, but gendered in irrevocable ways, presume too much about who they are serving. I argue that administrators should practice the art of not governing too much, and be careful about the presumptions they make about citizens' identities.","creator":["Jennifer L. Eagan"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f49ffe-add0-3000-a495-a0ccd65cf78a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who Are We Dealing with? Re-Visioning Citizen Subjects from a Feminist Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610806","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7417,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[43920,43995]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia Grant"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976310"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c535634f-d270-35ad-875d-ea665f585b72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20461996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histeducquar"}],"isPartOf":"History of Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"468","pagination":"pp. 468-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"History of Education Society","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Children versus Childhood: Writing Children into the Historical Record, or Reflections on Paula Fass's \"Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood in History and Society\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461996","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10501,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478060,478195]],"Locations in B":[[23109,23249]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen M. Sands"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1465959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ifs, Ands, and Butts: Theological Reflections on Humor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465959","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":10013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Under the influence of phenomenological approaches, a semiotic perspective on the body is being replaced in archaeology by analysis of the production and experience of lived bodies in the past through the juxtaposition of traces of body practices, idealized representations, and evidence of the effects of habitual gestures, postures, and consumption practices on the corporal body. On the basis of a shared assumption that social understandings of the body were created and reproduced through associations with material culture, archaeology of the body has proceeded from two theoretical positions: the body as the scene of display and the body as artifact. Today, the body as a site of lived experience, a social body, and site of embodied agency, is replacing prior static conceptions of an archaeology of the body as a public, legible surface.","creator":["Rosemary A. Joyce"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a97c4024-6e64-3fb6-92f6-867c6f685fd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Archaeology of the Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064880","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within musicological research, gender studies have become an increasingly important area of analysis in recent years, especially in its association with Anglo-American Critical or New Musicology. Although this interpretative approach is both attractive and constructive, it runs the risk of generating misleading conceptions of gender. When in the process of musical analysis the categories of 'male' and 'female' are made synonymous with musical parameters, the reality of gender as a social construct fails to be acknowledged. Some of these problems will be discussed in the examination of two musical analyses from representatives of New Musicology-Lawrence Kramer (Mozart's Divertimento, KV 563) and Susan McClary (Brahms's Third Symphony, op. 90). Methodological approaches to gender issues in musicological research which attempt to take into account the dynamics and complexities of gender as a social, historical, and cultural construct are presented.","creator":["Kordula Knaus"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/930943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c19bb9b-ea78-32b3-88ad-c8bb2f1e05de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/930943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Archiv f\u00fcr Musikwissenschaft","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Einige \u00dcberlegungen zur Geschlechterforschung in der Musikwissenschaft","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/930943","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":4821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephanie Hsu"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23035264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a38cf966-9f6a-39a9-b50c-35c02044803b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23035264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnicity and the Biopolitics of Intersex in Jeffrey Eugenides's \"Middlesex\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23035264","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10603,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[67435,67488]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article engages Yossi Avni's 1988 novella She'eino yode'a lish'ol through an aspect usually left underexamined in Israeli culture: gay Mizrahi identity. In the cultural context of the 1990s, which typically associated homosexuality exclusively with Ashkenazim and the West, this groundbreaking novella opened new avenues in the representation of non-Ashkenazi sexual minorities. Continuously negotiating what he sees as conflicting parts of his self, Yossi, the narrator of the novella, strives to find a safe space in which he can voice his position as a double minority that is trapped between different exclusionary social systems. Destabilizing essentialist conventions about sexuality and ethnicity, the text offers various ways to resist marginalization.","creator":["Oren Segal"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.35.2-3.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d72535f3-cebf-3640-b9db-e00cf867b30a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.35.2-3.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Ashkenizing Homosexuality? Yossi Avni's \u201cThe One Who Does Not Know How to Ask\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.35.2-3.03","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9843,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73462,73654]],"Locations in B":[[46279,46510]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["URSULA FABIJANCIC"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10632042"},{"name":"oclc","value":"891456947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc0eb3e3-986a-3821-b81c-b95119214933"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45170511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"simobeaustud"}],"isPartOf":"Simone de Beauvoir Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"LE DEUXIEME SEXE\" 1949-1999: OUR CONTINUING DIALOGUE WITH SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170511","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7048,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485290,485350]],"Locations in B":[[40261,40321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on several feminist and anti-racist theorists, I use the trope of the vampire to unravel how whiteness, maleness, and heterosexuality feed on the same set of disavowals-of the body, of the Other, of fluidity, of dependency itself. I then turn to Jewelle Gomez's The Gilda Stories (1991) for a counternarrative that, along with Donna Haraway's reading of vampires (1997), retools concepts of kinship and self that undergird racism, sexism, and heterosexism in contemporary U.S. culture.","creator":["Shannon Winnubst"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcc0eb0b-3e34-35c1-bd75-9ce2f03eba1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Vampires, Anxieties, and Dreams: Race and Sex in the Contemporary United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810861","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9219,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841],[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[56870,56955],[56993,57050]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tania Modleski"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57aeb945-5455-35b8-9727-01665f6ce398"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On the Existence of Women: A Brief History of the Relations Between Women's Studies and Film Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004634","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dianne Harris"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20355386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08879885"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71305819"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20355386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persvernarch"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Vernacular Architecture Forum","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","History - Historical methodology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Seeing the Invisible: Reexamining Race and Vernacular Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20355386","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El prop\u00f3sito del presente art\u00edculo es analizar las categor\u00edas: cuerpo, desnudez y cabellera, articuladas por la violencia simb\u00f3lica en contra de las mujeres. Asimismo, se busca evidenciar el grado de \u201cnaturalizaci\u00f3n\u201d de los estereotipos femeninos, en este caso, el uso de cabellera larga como rasgo identitario de g\u00e9nero, cuyo manejo discrecional permite el ejercicio indiscriminado del poder masculino. Entre otros casos, se muestra el uso del yihab musulm\u00e1n, por el enorme parecido al velo de monjas cat\u00f3licas, cuya funci\u00f3n es, precisamente, la negaci\u00f3n de la cabellera, impidiendo el disfrute y erotizaci\u00f3n por parte del var\u00f3n. Esto, en situaci\u00f3n contraria al de la exhibici\u00f3n de la desnudez y la cabellera de la mujer ante el espectador masculino, especialmente en espacios \u00edntimos, tanto familiares como los de encuentro sexual. Para los fines de este art\u00edculo, se entiende la desnudez como una de las expresiones de la corporalidad, en este caso, femenina, que ha sido el canal de recepci\u00f3n u objeto para el ejercicio permanente del poder masculino, es decir, como manifestaci\u00f3n inequ\u00edvoca del orden social androc\u00e9ntrico. Se plantean aqu\u00ed las tres categor\u00edas de an\u00e1lisis entrecruzadas por el eje transversal de la violencia simb\u00f3lica, aludiendo en ocasiones a referentes hist\u00f3ricos, art\u00edsticos y semi\u00f3ticos. The purpose of this article is to analyze the categories: body, nudity and hair, articulated by symbolic violence against women. Likewise, it seeks to demonstrate the degree of \u201cnaturalization\u201d of female stereotypes, in this case, the use of long hair as a gender identity characteristic, whose discretionary use allows the indiscriminate exercise of male power. Among other cases, the use of the Muslim yihab is shown, due to the enormous resemblance to the veil of catholic nuns, and its function is, precisely, the denial of the hair, preventing the enjoyment and eroticization of men. This situation is opposite to that of the exhibition of the nudity and the hair of women before the male spectator, especially within intimate spaces, both familiar and for sexual encounter. For the purpose of this article, nudity is understood as one of the expressions of corporality, in this case, feminine, which has been the channel of reception or object for the permanent exercise of male power, that is, seen as an unequivocal manifestation of the androcentric social order. The three categories of analysis are interwoven with the transversal axis of symbolic violence, sometimes referring to historical, artistic and semiotic references. O presente artigo tem como prop\u00f3sito analisar as categorias: corpo, nudez e cabeleira, articuladas pela viol\u00eancia simb\u00f3lica contra as mulheres. Desse modo, busca evidenciar o grau de \u201cnaturalidade\u201d dos estere\u00f3tipos femininos, neste caso, o uso de cabeleira longa como tra\u00e7o de identidade de g\u00eanero, cujo uso discreto permite o exerc\u00edcio indiscriminado do poder masculino. Entre outros casos, mostra o uso do hijab mu\u00e7ulmano, pela grande semelhan\u00e7a com o v\u00e9u das freiras cat\u00f3licas, cuja fun\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e9 precisamente a nega\u00e7\u00e3o da cabeleira longa, impedindo o desfrute e a erotiza\u00e7\u00e3o por parte do homem. Isto, em situa\u00e7\u00e3o contr\u00e1ria \u00e0 exibi\u00e7\u00e3o da nudez e da cabeleira da mulher ao espectador masculino, que ocorre especialmente em espa\u00e7os \u00edntimos, tanto em espa\u00e7os familiares, como tamb\u00e9m de encontros sexuais. Para os fins deste artigo, se entende a nudez como uma das express\u00f5es da corporeidade, neste caso, feminina, que tem sido o canal de recep\u00e7\u00e3o ou objeto para o exerc\u00edcio permanente do poder masculino, ou seja, como uma manifesta\u00e7\u00e3o inequ\u00edvoca da ordem social androc\u00eantrica. Aqui as tr\u00eas categorias de an\u00e1lise se entrecruzam com o eixo transversal da viol\u00eancia simb\u00f3lica, aludindo, em ocasi\u00f5es, aos referentes hist\u00f3ricos, art\u00edsticos e semi\u00f3ticos.","creator":["Carolina Serrano-Barqu\u00edn","H\u00e9ctor Serrano-Barqu\u00edn","Patricia Zarza-Delgado","Graciela V\u00e9lez-Bautista"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f08c5f03-0482-3d8d-864b-edf7db536db9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26538490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Estereotipos de g\u00e9nero que fomentan violencia simb\u00f3lica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538490","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"desnudez y cabellera"} +{"abstract":"Neste trabalho evidenciase a contribui\u00e7\u00e3o do Caderno Espa\u00e7o Feminino, na busca de urna adequa\u00e7\u00e3o cada vez maior \u00e0s exig\u00eancias de urna produ\u00e7\u00e0o editorial de qualidade, a sua articula\u00e7\u00e3o NEGUEM - N\u00facleo de Estudos de G\u00e8nero e Pesquisa sobre a Mulher\/UFU e a sua contribui\u00e7\u00e3o para a constru\u00e7\u00e3o das reflex\u00f5es sobre g\u00eanero. Balan\u00e7o do Caderno Espa\u00e7o Feminino para II Encontr\u00f3 de Publica\u00e7\u00f5es Feministas, realizado em Florian\u00f3polis, no periodo de 28 a 30 de Outubro de 2003, organizado pela Revista Estudos Feministas apoio da Funda\u00e7\u00e3o Ford. In this work the contribution of the magazines is evidenced for the construction of a theoretical field and the adaptation to the demands which require editorial productions with a good quality. Here we have a review of the Publications of the NEGUEM for the II Encontr\u00f3 de Publica\u00e7oes Feministas accomplished in Florian\u00f3polis, in the period of October 28-30 of 2003, organized by the Revista Estudos Feministas with the support of the Funda\u00e7ao Ford.","creator":["EUANE SCHMALTZ FERREIRA","DULCINA TEREZA BONATI BORGES"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f80c8e86-a7b3-3739-bc03-459ee9a40c84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"CADERNO ESPA\u00c7O FEMININO: AMPLIANDO ESPA\u00c7OS E ENFRENTANDO DESAFIOS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596677","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":3421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Culbertson"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2fe7a2c-2e4a-3bb4-9c56-43fe7608f031"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"118","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776495","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Jewish filmmakers, producers and critics had a key role in the German film industry before 1933. However, ongoing research of their contribution to the public discourse in post-WWI Germany is still limited. This article adds to this endeavor through an examination of comedy films that were made in Germany during the 1920s by Jewish filmmakers that were considered by the contemporary reviewers to be a truthful portrayal of the 'Jewish milieu'. Emphasizing the uses of familiar derogatory stereotypes, it analyzes the films' tendency to distinguish between 'fake' and 'genuine' differences in people of diverse ethnic or cultural backgrounds. Though the effort of the foreigner to blend into society is a recurring theme in these films, the act of assimilation is always subsequent to recognition of the 'authentic' characteristics that differentiate him from the rest. Stereotypes which are based on visual appearance and recognizable behavior, are ridiculed in these films, as the protagonists try unsuccessfully to imitate appearances and behavior of the social group into which they wish to integrate. Notably, the protagonist of the 'Jewish comedies' does not aspire to integrate into the (German) national community, but rather to be an integral part of the modern urban middle-class. Jewish filmmakers exploited the comedy genre to envisage an ideal bourgeois society. Within this society the genuine disparities among the individuals would be recognized and cherished. Instead of inherited ethnicity and cultural traditions, the members of this ideal community share liberal moral values. Thus, towards the end of the 1920s, the 'Jewish-comedies' focused on the ability to maintain these values in the reality of the post World War I modern city, and the social reforms it required. This emphasis accentuates the fundamental tension in the work of liberal Jewish filmmakers in Germany of the 1920s between the desire to assimilate into the German middle-class and the aspiration to rectify the faults of that society. A glance at the comedies that were made in the early 1930s reveals that the urge to reform bourgeois society and to assimilate into it gradually faded in the years preceding the downfall of the first German democracy.","creator":["\u05e2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e8 \u05d0\u05e9\u05db\u05e0\u05d6\u05d9","Ofer Ashkenazi"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23568003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00444758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4914aef5-21b4-3394-8369-755571c834dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23568003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zion"}],"isPartOf":"Zion \/ \u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05df","issueNumber":"\u05d2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Historical Society of Israel \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Stereotypes and Assimilation in the 'Jewish-Comedies' of 1920s in Germany \/ \u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2 \u05e1\u05d8\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05d8\u05d9\u05e4\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05e1\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05dc\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea '\u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea' \u05e9\u05dc \u05e9\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d2\u05e8\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23568003","volumeNumber":"\u05e2\u05d1","wordCount":10307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Prior research on fundamentalist religious movements has focused attention on the complicated relationship among gender, family, and religion. Using data from a nationally representative survey of 30,000 Hindu and Muslim women, this study compares the daily public and private behaviors of women in India to examine how gender and family norms are shaped in the context of communalized identity politics. Building on the theoretical framework of \"doing gender,\" we argue that because communal identities are expressed through externally visible behaviors, greater religious differences are expected in external markers of gendered behaviors and family norms. Results indicate that Muslim women are more likely to engage in veiling and less likely to venture outside the home for recreation and employment. However, religious differences are absent when attention is directed at private behaviors, such as household decision-making power, gender segregation within households, and discrimination against daughters. Results underscore the multidimensionality of gender.","creator":["Sonalde Desai","Gheda Temsah"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00703370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037333"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"469e43b7-4b4d-3229-b596-0e4fcf87241c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43697506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"demography"}],"isPartOf":"Demography","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"2332","pageStart":"2307","pagination":"pp. 2307-2332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Population Association of America","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Muslim and Hindu Women's Public and Private Behaviors: Gender, Family, and Communalized Politics in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697506","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":12722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper investigates social transitions, constructions of masculinity and coping among men in commercialized gay spaces, such as nightclubs and dance parties ('the gay scene'). The findings are derived from two qualitative studies involving individual samples of 24 and 12 younger (aged 19 to 36) same-sex attracted men living in Melbourne, Australia. The analysis recasts 'coming out' into the gay scene as a passage into a 'new world' and a 'new self'. On the scene, notions of selfhood are challenged and men enter various states of liminality as they (re)construct themselves. New ways of performing the self can be tried on through ritualized behaviours, including performing various masculinities. While successful performances of masculinity can promote social acceptance, those who express less valued forms of masculinity can struggle harder. Internalized homophobia influences rituals on the scene, and men reported feeling like perpetual outsiders, regardless of the success of their performances. The emotional dangers to selfhood lurking in performance and ritual are explored, as well as the ways that men find to prevail. Invariably, liminality ends, and the men who do well approach themselves, the rituals and the performances with insight. \/\/\/ Cet article examine les transitions sociales, les constructions de la masculinit\u00e9 et le coping chez les hommes qui fr\u00e9quentent les espaces commerciaux gay, tels que les bo\u00eetes de nuit et les dance parties (la \"sc\u00e8ne gay\"). Les r\u00e9sultats proviennent de deux \u00e9tudes qualitatives men\u00e9es sur des \u00e9chantillons repr\u00e9sentatifs de cette population: 24 et 12 hommes \u00e2g\u00e9s de 19 \u00e0 36 ans, attir\u00e9s par le m\u00eame sexe et vivant \u00e0 Melbourne, en Australie. L'analyse donne au coming out sur la sc\u00e8ne gay un nouveau r\u00f4le de passage vers un \"nouveau monde\" et un \"nouveau soi\". Les notions de soi sont r\u00e9cus\u00e9es et les hommes atteignent divers \u00e9tats de liminalit\u00e9, \u00e0 mesure qu'ils se (re)construisent. De nouvelles formes de repr\u00e9sentation du soi peuvent \u00eatre test\u00e9es \u00e0 travers des comportements ritualis\u00e9s, parmi lesquels la repr\u00e9sentation de masculinit\u00e9s diverses. Tandis que certaines repr\u00e9sentations r\u00e9ussies de la masculinit\u00e9 peuvent favoriser l'acceptation sociale, celles qui expriment des formes non h\u00e9g\u00e9moniques peuvent s'imposer plus difficilement. L'homophobie int\u00e9rioris\u00e9e influence les rituels sur la sc\u00e8ne gay, et les hommes d\u00e9clarent se sentir comme des outsiders permanents, ind\u00e9pendamment du succ\u00e8s de leurs repr\u00e9sentations. Sont explor\u00e9s les dangers \u00e9motionnels vis-\u00e0-vis du soi qui subsistent dans les repr\u00e9sentations et les rituels, ainsi que les diff\u00e9rentes approaches utilis\u00e9es par les hommes pour l'emporter. Invariablement, la liminalit\u00e9 s'ach\u00e8ve, et les hommes qui s'en sortent bien ont une approche intuitive d'euxm\u00eames, des rituels et des repr\u00e9sentations. \/\/\/ En este ensayo investigamos las transiciones sociales, la construcci\u00f3n de la masculinidad y los mecanismos de defensa entre hombres en ambientes de comercio homosexual, por ejemplo clubes y fiestas de baile (el \"ambiente gay\"). Los resultados proceden de dos estudios cualitativos con muestras individuales de 24 y 12 hombres j\u00f3venes (de edades comprendidas entre 19 y 36 a\u00f1os) que sienten atracci\u00f3n por otros hombres y que viven en Melbourne, Australia. El an\u00e1lisis redefine la \"salida del armario\" en el ambiente gay como un paso a un \"nuevo mundo\" y a una \"nueva identidad\". En estos ambientes, se ponen a prueba las nociones de identidad y cuando los hombres se regeneran pasan a varios estados de car\u00e1cter liminal. Existen nuevas formas de expresi\u00f3n de la identidad individual a trav\u00e9s de rituales, como por ejemplo mostrando los diferentes caracteres de la masculinidad. Aunque expresar con \u00e9xito la identidad masculina puede fomentar la aceptaci\u00f3n social, los que expresan formas no hegem\u00f3nicas de masculinidad pueden encontrarse con dificultades. La homofobia interiorizada influye en los rituales en estos ambientes y los hombres informaron que se sent\u00edan rechazados continuamente, independientemente del \u00e9xito que tuviesen en su desempe\u00f1o. Aqu\u00ed analizamos los peligros emocionales para la identidad que implican la expresi\u00f3n la identidad masculina y los rituales, y estudiamos c\u00f3mo consiguen los hombres su objetivo. Al final, el car\u00e1cter liminal termina y los hombres que salen airosos tienen una actitud positiva hacia ellos mismos, los rituales y en su modo de expresar la masculinidad.","creator":["Damien Ridge","David Plummer","David Peasley"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c876c07-b289-310b-adf5-8e570ae8a562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Remaking the Masculine Self and Coping in the Liminal World of the Gay 'Scene'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005561","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article shows that Michel Foucault's account of the sexual body is not a na\u00efve return to a prediscursive body, nor does it amount to discourse reductionism and to the exclusion of experience, as some feminists have argued. Instead, Foucault's idea of bodies and pleasures as a possibility of the counterattack against normalizing power presupposes an experiential understanding of the body. The experiential body can become a locus of resistance because it is the possibility of an unpredictable event.","creator":["Johanna Oksala"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76741eaf-2108-3336-8320-8f6e62bcb551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Anarchic Bodies: Foucault and the Feminist Question of Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811058","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10650,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[119380,119559],[119573,119670],[307055,307316],[312552,312847],[414762,414872],[439426,439625]],"Locations in B":[[13439,13612],[13617,13711],[13907,14265],[14701,14995],[20143,20251],[20840,21038]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many feminist scholars argue that the seeming naturalness of gender differences, particularly bodily difference, underlies gender inequality. Yet few researchers ask how these bodily differences are constructed. Through semistructured observation in five preschool classrooms, I examine one way that everyday movements, comportment, and use of physical space become gendered. I find that the hidden school curriculum that controls children's bodily practices in order to shape them cognitively serves another purpose as well. This hidden curriculum also turns children who are similar in bodily comportment, movement, and practice into girls and boys-children whose bodily practices differ. I identify five sets of practices that create these differences: dressing up, permitting relaxed behaviors or requiring formal behaviors, controlling voices, verbal and physical instructions regarding children's bodies by teachers, and physical interactions among children. This hidden curriculum that (partially) creates bodily differences between the genders also makes these physical differences appear and feel natural.","creator":["Karin A. Martin"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2657264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9847689-a87e-33dd-9c88-086b73b440dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2657264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Becoming a Gendered Body: Practices of Preschools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2657264","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":13029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judy El-Bushra"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13552074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44523373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"238532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1226bedc-134d-3e0d-bd6b-06fc01c16c50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4030307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genddeve"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Gender and Development Practice for the Twenty-First Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030307","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[306718,306956]],"Locations in B":[[15443,15681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Freud's \"riddle\" that women are, themselves, \"the problem\" takes on new significance in thinking back through the \"remimetic\" strategies and tactics of mid-century feminist performance art. What sorts of \"problems\" arise with the stellar success of women artists in the 2000s, and the new status of \"global art star\" for artists such as Marina Abramovi\u0107 and Cindy Sherman? What may have been left out of the picture? Perhaps the recent \"living archive\" re.act.feminism installation by curators Bettina Knaup and Beatrice Stammer may provide some clues.","creator":["Rebecca Schneider"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"754f29ad-595d-3dd5-9c10-e2eb4f0da20f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Remembering Feminist Remimesis: A Riddle in Three Parts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584866","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":10401,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[487765,487820]],"Locations in B":[[62618,62681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Spencer Jackson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40801074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c508481-ebc8-359b-8b2a-8936f8fa2c97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40801074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Subject of Time in Foucault's Tale of Jouy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40801074","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6341,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[320630,320744],[321067,321191],[471755,471893]],"Locations in B":[[20547,20661],[20694,20814],[38264,38387]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna Morcom"],"datePublished":"2013-09-13","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd63289-0fcf-3d7d-a0b1-cf269f2586bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"536","pagination":"pp. 536-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Society for Ethnomusicology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0536","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":1772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[9946,10000]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Is listening a performance? How do \"invisible\" practices like Sufi Muslim samac, or sacred listening, impact the public and secular spaces of contemporary France? What do listening acts reveal about the political viability and performativity of sacred listening in a secular nation?","creator":["Deborah Kapchan"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69075514-38f7-37cb-9ba9-74dca7b6e4cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aesthetics of the Invisible: Sacred Music in Secular (French) Places","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584897","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This ethnography of a prison treatment programme for sex offenders examines the meaning of rehabilitation in the context of the 'new penology'. As it explores how cognitive\u2014behaviourism structures treatment, it uncovers a therapeutics grounded in risk that actively constructs the identity of the sex offender. It shows how the management of risk relies on techniques of introspection and self-discipline\u2014a patient's internalization of his crime cycle and relapse prevention plan\u2014that target primarily sexual fantasies. These self-policing techniques radically transform the sex offender into a species entirely consumed by sex.","creator":["Dany Lacombe"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"090c0da4-d22b-30ea-a30d-30deda65ee9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23639113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"CONSUMED WITH SEX: THE TREATMENT OF SEX OFFENDERS IN RISK SOCIETY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639113","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467305,467400]],"Locations in B":[[67301,67407]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Parizad Dejbord"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35bd9256-e3aa-3f8f-b788-33d0533ad344"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Nuevas configuraciones del exilio en \"La nave de los locos\", \"Solitario de amor\" y \"Babel b\u00e1rbara\" de Cristina Peri Rossi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203476","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7804,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434044,434205]],"Locations in B":[[30990,31151]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Antonio Jes\u00fas Mart\u00ednez Pleguezuelos"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26426339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03feaccc-0ce0-35f2-9cde-1d00acb4b60e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26426339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26426339","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":2753,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[17227,17291]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This narrative reveals various ways in which my psyche as an African woman has been subjected to assaults. Assaults on my psyche are traced from girlhood and growing up in a male-centred, sexist and misogynistic community to academia which neglected contributions of women of colour. Using intersectionality as a theoretical framework, the narrative contends that gender issues are inextricably linked with racial and global positioning issues. It is asserted that gender equity cannot be achieved in the absence of other human rights.","creator":["Shirley Mthethwa-Sommers"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"060c4555-b79b-33eb-858b-653e2fe0a8c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"1 (99)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"It is the body I inhabit: The story of an unrelenting assault on my psyche","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824459","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SABINE WILKE"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Body Politic of Performance, Literature, and Film: Mimesis and Citation in Valie Export, Elfriede Jelinek, and Monika Treut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263570","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8758,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[430988,431480],[433309,433467],[434137,434205]],"Locations in B":[[19577,20069],[20157,20315],[20433,20497]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How is it that the nation became an object of scholarly research? As this article intends to show, not until what we call the \"genealogical view\" (which assumes the \"natural\" and \"objective\" character of the nation) eroded away could the nation be subjected to critical scrutiny by historians. The starting point and the premise for studies in the field was the revelation of the blind spot in the genealogical view, that is, the discovery of the \"modern\" and \"constructed\" character of nations. Historians' views would thus be intimately tied to the \"antigenealogical\" perspectives of them. However, this antigenealogical view would eventually reveal its own blind spots. This paper traces the different stages of reflection on the nation, and how the antigenealogical approach would finally be rendered problematic, exposing, in turn, its own internal fissures.","creator":["El\u00edas Jos\u00e9 Palti"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2677969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Nation as a Problem: Historians and the \"National Question\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677969","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11936,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[275991,276371]],"Locations in B":[[75203,75583]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo parte de um estudo de caso sobre as representa\u00e7\u00f5es de m\u00e9dicos e juizes acerca da maternidade l\u00e9sbica medicamente assistida. Entre os m\u00e9dicos, a figura de um pai \u00e9 central, sendo a maternidade l\u00e9sbica entendida como uma transforma\u00e7\u00e3o perturbadora; entre os juizes, a presen\u00e7a de um pai n\u00e3o \u00e9 considerada essencial \u00e0 concretiza\u00e7\u00e3o da maternidade, surgindo a maternidade l\u00e9sbica como um modelo que deve ter express\u00e3o legal. Todavia, o cen\u00e1rio restrito do modelo dominante de maternidade, o do casamento e da fam\u00edlia nuclear, continua subjacente em ambos os casos. This article focuses on a case-study about the representations of medical doctors and judges regarding medically assisted lesbian motherhood. Among medical doctors, the figure of \"the father\" is vital and lesbian motherhood is seen as a disturbing change; among judges, the presence of a father figure is not considered essential to motherhood. Accordingly, among the latter, lesbian motherhood is a maternal model that should have legal expression. However, in both cases, the underlying scenario is the dominant model of motherhood: marriage and the nuclear family.","creator":["T\u00c2NIA CRISTINA MACHADO"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43234391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43234391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","issueNumber":"213","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"819","pageStart":"794","pagination":"pp. 794-819","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Duas mulheres (n\u00e3o) \u00e9 igual a um homem e uma mulher\": representa\u00e7\u00f5es de m\u00e9dicos e juizes acerca da maternidade l\u00e9sbica medicamente assistida","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43234391","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stacy Wolf"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac3abf31-4ad5-340d-a40c-1b64ef7b6525"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389255","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How did gays in the military go from being characterized as dangerous perverts threatening the state to potential heroes fighting on behalf of the state? Numerous studies have identified various legal and political conditions that can account for resistance to this change. This article explores popular culture as a contributor to public understanding that, in turn, supported these political developments. Using the James Bond film series to track shifts in public understanding of gender and sexuality norms, I argue that such developments can be seen as a contributing factor leading to lifting the ban on gays in the military, an important step in a classic civil rights narrative in the United States in which the interests of a previously excluded minority group and the liberal state gradually converge, leading to greater political inclusion over time. I conclude by suggesting that popular culture analysis may also provide the basis for a more critical civil rights narrative that reveals persistent divergences between state and minority group interests, highlighting an ongoing basis for dissent from state power.","creator":["Susan Burgess"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56364330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68e86bee-b756-3f42-aefa-4e663fa915ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Sexuality Politics in the James Bond Film Series: Cultural Origins of Gay Inclusion in the U.S Military","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540298","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Due to the emphasis on \"traditional\" gender roles, the \"nuclear family,\" procreation and conservative religious values, many gay and lesbian Jews feel a sense of alienation from the Jewish community and develop an ambivalent or conflicted relationship about their own Jewish identity. As a result, gay Jews often struggle to find ways to successfully negotiate their ethno-religious and sexual identities. Based upon in-depth interviews of thirty gay Jewish men in Toronto, this work offers a case study to empirically and theoretically explore the varied experiences of these intersecting identities for this under-studied population. Recent research on other ethnic minority gays and lesbians tend to simplify this question by suggesting that the minority gay individual will simply choose to prioritize one of these identities while repressing the other. Building upon studies of gay Christians that stress more fluid, dynamic and evolving approaches to identity construction, this paper underscores the complexity and variability of this phenomenon as it applies to gay Jews.","creator":["Randal F. Schnoor"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3712419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Being Gay and Jewish: Negotiating Intersecting Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712419","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reviews the developing literature on anti-oppressive education (i.e., education that works against various forms of oppression) by summarizing and critiquing the four primary approaches that educational researchers have taken in conceptualizing (1) the nature of oppression and (2) the curricula, pedagogies, and policies needed to bring about change. These four approaches to anti-oppressive education are Education for the Other, Education About the Other, Education that Is Critical of Privileging and Othering, and Education that Changes Students and Society. Engaging in anti-oppressive education requires not only using an amalgam of these four approaches. In order to address the multiplicity and situatedness of oppression and the complexities of teaching and learning educators also constantly need to \"look beyond\" the field of educational research to explore the possibilities of theories that remain marginalized, including post-structuralist and psychoanalytic perspectives. This article concludes with implications for future research.","creator":["Kevin K. Kumashiro"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1170593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d159937-9371-3ddf-a5fe-0ff20d16778f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1170593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Toward a Theory of Anti-Oppressive Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1170593","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":15444,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[84449,84518]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy MacLean"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3216670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f4304a0-834b-3fee-b716-83c3bc9ddda6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3216670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 42-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Hidden History of Affirmative Action: Working Women's Struggles in the 1970s and the Gender of Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3216670","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris R. Vanden Bossche"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efec3866-3e5c-3880-b1de-2c80cf2c7b6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What Did \"Jane Eyre\" Do? Ideology, Agency, Class and the Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107362","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Adams"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4acc604-c787-3937-8c35-21b8530c3d8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43817582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disability Studies Now","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817582","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne Passaro"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9af085c7-0bc9-3386-b9df-00f1c48dfc28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2744425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"882","pageStart":"881","pagination":"pp. 881-882","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Cracks in the Feminist Foundations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744425","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":1501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Kubek"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2205a58a-10f6-31a3-add8-3caf1ae9f4f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315311","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73,"pageEnd":"611","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-611","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"General Shakespeareana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902175","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":62766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Masterson"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1562141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjphil"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562141","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":2303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article rend compte des travaux en sciences sociales qui se sont int\u00e9ress\u00e9s aux sciences et \u00e0 leur r\u00f4le dans la construction des identit\u00e9s sexu\u00e9es. Il poursuit trois objectifs: introduire \u00e0 une r\u00e9flexion sur ce qu'a \u00e9t\u00e9 dans le pass\u00e9 le savoir sur la diff\u00e9rence des sexes et sur ce qui constitue dans diff\u00e9rents corpus de connaissances scientifiques le f\u00e9minin et le masculin, les femmes et les hommes; repousser au plus loin les fronti\u00e8res commun\u00e9ment admises de la naturalit\u00e9 du corps f\u00e9minin, interroger le \"fait\" ou le \"donn\u00e9\" du sexe - d'autres diraient la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 et la discursivit\u00e9 du sexe; insister sur les fa\u00e7ons dont les sciences contemporaines se m\u00ealent et s'emm\u00ealent dans la construction des identit\u00e9s sexu\u00e9es, en focalisant l'attention sur les travaux qui montrent comment les sciences et les techniques transforment litt\u00e9ralement les corps. Il n'est alors plus seulement question de fabrication des sexes et du genre, mais de red\u00e9finition des fronti\u00e8res et des limites des corps. Au-del\u00e0 de la contribution historienne \u00e0 ces r\u00e9flexions, l'article met en \u00e9vidence l'affirmation d'un champ de recherche \u00e0 l'intersection des \u00e9tudes de genre et des \u00e9tudes sociales des sciences et des techniques qui emprunte \u00e0 des traditions disciplinaires et m\u00e9thodologiques et d\u00e9finit de nouveaux objets et de nouvelles mani\u00e8res de faire les sciences sociales. \/\/\/ This article reviews the work in the social sciences that treats the natural sciences and their role in the shaping of gender identities. It has three aims; first, to reflect on the history of thinking about sexual difference; how feminine and masculine, women and men have been constituted in different scientific fields. Second, to challenge the commonly accepted boundaries of the naturalness of the female body, questioning the \"fact\" or the \"given\" of sex - or, as some would have it, its materiality or discursive nature. Third, to emphasize the ways in which contemporary science has become caught up in the shaping of gender identity, focusing on work that shows how science and technology literally transform the body. This reflection takes us beyond the construction of sex and gender to consider a redefinition of the frontiers and limits of the body itself. Beyond adding the insight of a historian, this article presents to a French audience a field of research at the intersection of gender studies and the social studies of science and technology, which borrows from various disciplinary and methodological traditions to define new objects and new ways of doing social science.","creator":["Delphine Gardey"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27587859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03952649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50ab5e59-cb26-359f-a19e-656ed9ba379c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27587859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annahistscisoc"}],"isPartOf":"Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"673","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-673","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les sciences et la construction des identit\u00e9s sexu\u00e9es: Une revue critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27587859","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":13423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Aims: The aim of this study is to describe how the mental health service users experienced social inclusion and employment in the European Union EMILIA project. Methods: The study design is an intervention group follow-up study, with data collection at three points: baseline (TO), at 10-month follow-up (T1), and at 20-month follow-up (T2). The data for this study were collected with thematically interviews from mental health service users and were thematic analyzed with content analysis. The number of participants was 23, including two to four service users per each demonstration site. Results: Most users experienced improvement in their social life. Employment and participation in meaningful activities continued to improve to the end of the EMILIA project, although at a slower pace. In addition, users were motivated for work and actively searched for employment. Having a mental illness, stigma, and discrimination were reported to be obstacles to social inclusion. The difficulties identified in social relationships continued to exist. Conclusions: Training intervention had a positine impact on mental health service users' social inclusion and employment. However, stigma, discrimination, and mental illness are still barriers to users' integration.","creator":["Irja Nieminen","Shulamit Ramon","Ian Dawson","Paz Flores","Eithne Leahy","Maria Louise Pedersen","Marja Kaunonen"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"790b408a-7e25-3a7c-9afd-933c7172b1f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42003821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmentheal"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Mental Health","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health","Psychology","Public Health","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Experiences of Social Inclusion and Employment of Mental Health Service Users in a European Union Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003821","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINA MILLETTI"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bc07899-1b2b-3a96-8539-1478eeece385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20831901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENT ACTS, VOLATILE WORDS: KATHY ACKER'S TERRORIST AESTHETIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831901","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOANNE RENDELL"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91f63506-d030-3649-b438-bd61c70ab2fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41557168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Drag Acts: Performativity, Subversion and the AIDS Poetry of Rafael Campo and Mark Doty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557168","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4605,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480],[431997,432254],[435522,435597]],"Locations in B":[[114,355],[370,638],[647,722]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Di Stefano"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b7eab88-de6f-3b38-b717-1ed5c9cd4f21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072560","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terrell Carver"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24591034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800786"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b30c000-9072-3ab0-9e1c-c28759818b08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24591034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"browjworlaffa"}],"isPartOf":"The Brown Journal of World Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brown Journal of World Affairs","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Men and Masculinities in International Relations Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24591034","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"New ritual practices performed by Jewish women can serve as test cases for an examination of the phenomenon of the creation of religious rituals by women. These food-related rituals, which have been termed \"amen meals\" were developed in Israel beginning in the year 2000 and subsequently spread to Jewish women in Europe and the United States. This study employs a qualitative-ethnographic methodology grounded in participant-observation and in-depth interviews to describe these nonobligatory, extra-halakhic rituals. What makes these rituals stand out is the women's sense that through these rituals they experience a direct connection to God and, thus, can change reality, i.e., bring about jobs, marriages, children, health, and salvation for friends and loved ones. The \"amen\" rituals also create an open, inclusive woman's space imbued with strong spiritual-emotional energies that counter the women's religious marginality. Finally, the purposes and functions of these rituals, including identity building and displays of cultural capital, are considered within a theoretical framework that views \"doing gender\" and \"doing religion\" as an integrated experience.","creator":["Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43548412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61124234"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012233122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e6d1f22-ed0a-37d2-832a-4e9b65ffcdef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43548412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contjewry"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Jewry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"At 'Amen Meals' It's Me and God\" Religion and Gender: A New Jewish Women's Ritual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43548412","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c0 partir d'une enqu\u00eate men\u00e9e aupr\u00e8s des \u00e9l\u00e8ves de l'\u00e9cole de danse de l'Op\u00e9ra de Paris et de leurs familles, l'article interroge les trajectoires des jeunes gar\u00e7ons dans un devenir de danseur professionnel. Parce que la pratique de la danse classique est consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme une pratique \u00ab f\u00e9minine \u00bb, les gar\u00e7ons qui s'y engagent se trouvent bien souvent dans une situation qui conduit \u00e0 des mises en cause de leur identit\u00e9 sexu\u00e9e. L'article montre ce que l'entr\u00e9e dans la carri\u00e8re de danseur doit \u00e0 un travail sur les identit\u00e9s sexu\u00e9es et sexuelles qui rel\u00e8ve des conditions sociales et familiales mais aussi de l'action des diff\u00e9rentes sph\u00e8res de socialisation. Based on a study about Paris Opera Ballet students and their families, this article questions the role of gender to understand how boys become ballet dancers. Because classical ballet is considered a girl's activity, young boys engaged in professionnel ballet school are in a complex situation : on the one hand they are facing social stigma related to the transgression of the gender order, on the other, they take advantage of their atypical calling. The research shows that responding to a dancer calling requires to negociate the gender identity for which social and familial conditions play a decisive role. Auf Grundlage einer Studie, die bei Sch\u00fclern der Tanzschule der Op\u00e9ra de Paris und ihren Familien durchgef\u00fchrt wurde, hinterfragt dieser Artikel den Werdegang der Jungen als berufliche T\u00e4nzer. Da der klassische Tanz als \u201eweibliche\u201d Praktik angesehen wird, finden sich die Jungen, die ihn praktizieren h\u00e4ufig in einer Situation wieder, die zu einer Hinterfragung ihrer geschlechterspezifischen Identit\u00e4t fuhrt. Der Artikel zeigt auf, dass zu Beginn der Tanzkarriere eine Auseinandersetzung mit der geschlechterspezifischen und sexuellen Identit\u00e4t notwendig ist. Dieser h\u00e4ngt von den sozialen und famili\u00e4ren Bedingungen ab, aber auch vom Eingreifen verschiedener Sph\u00e4ren der Sozialisierung. A partir de una encuesta realizada con los alumnos de la escuela de ballet de la Opera de Paris, y con sus familias, el articulo plantea la trayectoria de estos chicos en un futuro de bailar\u00edn profesional. Porque la pr\u00e1ctica del baile cl\u00e1sico est\u00e1 considerada como una actividad \"femenina\", los chicos que la elijen se encuentran a menudo en una situaci\u00f3n que les lleva a replantearse su identidad sexual. El articulo muestra que lo que la entrada en la carrera de bailar\u00edn debe a un trabajo sobre las identidades sexuadas y sexuales que d\u00e9pende de las condiciones sociales y familiares pero tambi\u00e9n de la acci\u00f3n de las distinctas esferas de socializaci\u00f3n.","creator":["Jo\u00ebl Laillier"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462616"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567909409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235718"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df47373f-83b7-307a-8d72-c942c4c6b479"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnfran"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnologie fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Des petits rats et des hommes La mise \u00e0 l'\u00e9preuve de l'identit\u00e9 sexu\u00e9e des apprentis danseurs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967488","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Arguing that drag performance which is inflected by a camp sensibility disrupts gender and sexual binaries, this essay examines a tradition of female camp androgyny. Annie Lennox's performances as a camp androgyne are used to illuminate the textual strategies of Virginia Woolf's Orlando, a work that undercuts a binaristic, Freudian model of sex.","creator":["GEORGE PIGGFORD"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf450c2-56e7-3467-93d7-ae2d95dee5f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Who's That Girl?\": Annie Lennox, Woolf's \"Orlando\", and Female Camp Androgyny","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029821","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8397,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620],[432040,432109]],"Locations in B":[[8533,8608],[8661,8730]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fatou Sow"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bc5284c-59a5-3e44-8749-cd328e4ddef1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24599468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"37","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"F\u00e9minisme : une question politique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599468","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The post-Holocaust poems of Nelly Sachs and Rose Ausl\u00e4nder demonstrate shifts toward experimentation in form and message, particularly in relation to religious belief and the expressive potential of poetic language. The experience of the Holocaust forced both authors to confront the interconnections between their Jewishness, their relationship to the German language, and their displacements as homeless exiles. They turned to poetry as a means of mediating the past in the present, and their post-Holocaust writings represent acts of both remembrance and reproduction. As victims and witnesses to suffering, devastation, and loss, Sachs and Ausl\u00e4nder appealed to images of the maternal in an effort to recreate the intimacy and security of the irretrievably lost past, adapting the multivalence of the Mother for their own purposes in the pursuit of a new language of faith.","creator":["Kathrin Bower"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcc64122-988f-3018-902e-d780aea789f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Searching for the (M)Other: The Rhetoric of Longing in Post-Holocaust Poems by Nelly Sachs and Rose Ausl\u00e4nder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688839","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10295,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[295711,295895],[503404,503478]],"Locations in B":[[57687,57871],[61235,61309]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meredith Miller"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e8bdc43-9a49-39de-b0c8-19c8c90041b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Enslaved to Both These Others: Gender and Inheritance in H. D.'s \"Secret Name: Excavator's Egypt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464041","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":14036,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[293305,293439],[503324,503394]],"Locations in B":[[81149,81283],[86117,86191]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article critically examines the performative politics of resilience in the context of the current UK Civil Contingencies (UKCC) agenda. It places resilience within a wider politics of (in)security that seeks to govern risk by folding uncertainty into everyday practices that plan for, pre-empt, and imagine extreme events. Moving beyond existing diagnoses of resilience based either on ecological adaptation or neoliberal governmentality, we develop a performative approach that highlights the instability, contingency, and ambiguity within attempts to govern uncertainties. This performative politics of resilience is investigated via two case studies that explore 1) critical national infrastructure protection and 2) humanitarian emergency preparedness. By drawing attention to the particularities of how resilient knowledge is performed and what it does in diverse contexts, we repoliticize resilience as an ongoing, incomplete, and potentially self-undermining discourse.","creator":["James Brassett","Nick Vaughan-Williams"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ed62571-3484-3425-b34f-91552255736d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Security and the performative politics of resilience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292937","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":11096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Critical infrastructure protection and humanitarian emergency preparedness"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ea2966f-1f46-3492-885f-4f9a3a3aa7e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809991","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tadashi Dozono"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44507259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182745"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff96a8e3-4809-364a-b0d1-f6c323e6ec54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44507259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The History Teacher","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Society for History Education","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Teaching Alternative and Indigenous Gender Systems in World History: A Queer Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44507259","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":8691,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36344,36453]],"Locations in B":[[13489,13598]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"That women tend to see harassment where men see harmless fun or normal gendered interaction is one of the more robust findings in sexual harassment research. Using in-depth interviews with employed men and women, this article argues that these differences may be partially explained by the performative requirements of masculinity. The ambiguous practice of \"girl watching\" is centered, and the production of its meaning analyzed. The data suggest that men's refusal to see their behavior as harassing may be partially explained through the objectification and attenuated empathy that the production of masculine identities may require. Thus, some forms of harassment and their interpretations may more accurately be seen as acts of ignoring than states of ignorance (of the effects of the behavior or the law). Implications for anti-sexual harassment policies and training are explored.","creator":["Beth A. Quinn"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cffdefd-385f-3508-ae5d-61f00cf32032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3081785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"386","pagination":"pp. 386-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Sexual Harassment and Masculinity: The Power and Meaning of \"Girl Watching\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081785","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8463,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[45122,45225]],"Locations in B":[[35532,35633]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With its roots in American pragmatism, symbolic interactionism has created a distinctive perspective and produced numerous im portant contributions and now offers significant prospects for the future. In this article, I review my intellectual journey with this perspective over forty years. This journey was initiated within the American society, sociology, and symbolic interaction of circa 1960. I note many of the contributions made by interactionists since that time, with particular focus on those who have contributed to the study of social organization and social process. I offer an agenda for the future based on currently underdeveloped areas that have potential. These are inequality orders, institutional analysis, collective action across space and time, and the integration of temporal and spatial orders. The article concludes with calls for further efforts at cross-perspective dialogues, more attention to feminist scholars, and an elaborated critical pragmatism.","creator":["Peter M. Hall"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2003.26.1.33","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4739efc2-4830-34e8-90f1-78e72fbabad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2003.26.1.33"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Interactionism, Social Organization, and Social Processes: Looking Back and Moving Ahead","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2003.26.1.33","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chun Chun Ting"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43492534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"846598be-74f4-3dc2-89bc-8bc89b335525"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43492534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Star and the Queen: Heritage Conservation and the Emergence of a New Hong Kong Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43492534","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa M. Walker"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87f1de90-55d0-3f0e-aee7-e3d6ed71bbec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"890","pageStart":"866","pagination":"pp. 866-890","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How to Recognize a Lesbian: The Cultural Politics of Looking like What You Are","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174910","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12007,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[394074,394685],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[57778,58383],[72237,72320]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El concepto de g\u00e9nero est\u00e1 en crisis. Como ya lo hab\u00edan demostrado las te\u00f3ricas feministas, aquello que se suele denominar g\u00e9nero constituye un principio estructural fundamental pero cambiable en cualquier sociedad. Desde la d\u00e9cada de los noventa la certidumbre acerca de la construcci\u00f3n social y el significado de las relaciones de g\u00e9nero ha dejado, no obstante, de ser tal. En este art\u00edculo reconstruyo la genealog\u00eda sem\u00e1ntica del controvertido concepto de g\u00e9nero comenzando por la c\u00e9lebre declaraci\u00f3n de Simone de Beauvoir, \"la biolog\u00eda no es destino\". Descubro el hecho ir\u00f3nico de que el t\u00e9rmino ingl\u00e9s gender tiene sus or\u00edgenes en el paradigma biom\u00e9dico y de la sexolog\u00eda de los a\u00f1os sesenta, los supuestos sexuales dualistas y heterosexuales as\u00ed como cartesianos de \u00e9stos. Estas ra\u00edces cient\u00edficas del concepto revelan cu\u00e1l ha sido y contin\u00faa siendo el dilema anal\u00edtico del estudio de las relaciones de sexo\/g\u00e9nero, a saber, \u00bfqu\u00e9 tiene que ver el sexo con el g\u00e9nero o viceversa? \/\/\/ The gender concept is in crisis. As feminist scholars have shown, gender relations constitute a basic structuring principle in any society, open to change. Since the nineties certainties about the social construction and meaning of gender relations have, however, been eroded. This article presents a semantic genealogy of the controversial gender concept since Simone de Beauvoir's celebrated dictum \"biology is not destiny\". I discover the irony that the term gender in actual fact has its origin in the biomedical and sexological paradigm of the sixties and its, dualist sexual, heterosexual and cartesian assumptions. These scientific roots of the concept highlight the persistent analytical dilemma in sex\/gender studies, namely, what has sex to do with gender or vice-versa?","creator":["Verena Stolcke"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0046001X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70711265"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac7e1e1b-6e86-3e67-af81-f5189a676177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3655879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"desaecon"}],"isPartOf":"Desarrollo Econ\u00f3mico","issueNumber":"180","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Instituto de Desarrollo Econ\u00f3mico Y Social","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Latin American Studies","Economics","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La mujer es puro cuento: La cultura del g\u00e9nero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655879","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":13757,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[475972,476041],[476101,476276],[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[65100,65176],[65225,65400],[65478,65570]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa A. Costello"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66fe685f-b85f-35d5-90f1-a09ab618ed16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20464185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"History and Memory in a Dialogic of \"Performative Memorialization\" in Art Spiegelman's \"Maus: A Survivor's Tale\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464185","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8473,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524786,524876]],"Locations in B":[[52425,52512]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rural women's active support for the decade-long Maoist insurrection in Nepal has captured the attention of academics, military strategists, and the development industry. This essay considers two theories that have been proposed to account for this phenomenon. The \"failed development\" hypothesis suggests that popular discontent with the government is the result of uneven, incomplete, or poorly executed development efforts and recommends more and better aid as the route to peace. In contrast, the \"conscientization\" model proposes that, at least in some cases, women's politicization may be the unexpected result of successful development programs that aimed to \"empower\" women by raising their consciousness of gender and class-based oppression. Drawing on the testimonies of women who participated in such programs in Gorkha district\u2014a Maoist stronghold where women are reported to have been especially active\u2014I argue that both of these explanations reflect assumptions about social subjectivity that are critically out of synch with the realities of rural Nepal. Gorkhali women's support for the rebels embodies a powerful critique of neoliberal democracy and the Nepal state, but one that is based on morally-grounded ideas about social personhood in which self-realization is bound up in mutual obligation and entails personal sacrifice\u2014not the culturally-disembedded valorizations of autonomy, agency, and choice that most models presume. Theorists of subaltern political consciousness\u2014 and of the relations between development and violence\u2014must engage with the gendered moral economies of the people they aim to empower if they ultimately hope to promote sustainable peace.","creator":["Lauren Leve"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3574242-e904-31ae-8105-e8cf4eba206c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Failed Development\" and Rural Revolution in Nepal: Rethinking Subaltern Consciousness and Women's Empowerment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150946","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":20309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Representation politics of ethnic minorities in Lithuania and Latvia subsumes different minor ethnic groups under one category of minorities' ethnicity. This model of common identity is shaped by juridical and political discourses representing an out-group definition. Differences in everyday cultural practices and social distance among ethnic groups set ethnic boundaries and indicate different strategies of social identity construction for each group. An in-group perspective challenges an image of a common identity and demonstrates its fictive nature.","creator":["LIUTAURAS KRANIAUSKAS"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adea3d16-82a6-304f-92df-c694c559b8c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"134","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Minorities' Ethnicity: Two Different Cases of Legislation, Political Struggle and Cultural Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274798","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6529,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[60024,60119],[60485,60572]],"Locations in B":[[4947,5041],[6320,6406]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mathias Delori"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43550634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567369753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27ec1807-f58d-3caa-b5c1-997c8156bf7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43550634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le sacrifice politique de soi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43550634","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":3177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary A. Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ab75a1-5bb5-3eba-9407-4c57b8f5c7c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40346963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Queer Pedagogy of Conflicted Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346963","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Most folklorists' readings of \"transvestite,\" \"female-warrior,\" or cross-dressing ballads have assumed that these songs were about men and their experiences. Recent feminist readings have asserted that they are also about women. However, both assume that the ballads focus upon heterosexual relationships. This \"perverse\" reading of ten cross-dressing ballads from Peacock's Newfoundland collection suggests that these songs may explore a range of sexual orientations.","creator":["Pauline Greenhill"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcb72d0d-6d92-39c2-8aa4-c952e309a1db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"428","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Neither a Man nor a Maid\": Sexualities and Gendered Meanings in Cross-Dressing Ballads","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541377","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":11270,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[441438,441772],[493864,493979]],"Locations in B":[[28394,28727],[70336,70450]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Why consider music, movement, and masculinities together? This introduction begins by probing the historical circumstances that have contributed to ethnomusicology's squeamishness about dance and gender. After summarizing some current approaches to thinking about movement, sex and gender, and the differences between performance and performativity, the author considers how the six contributing authors engage with the complex relationships between masculine subject positions, masculine behaviors, symbols of masculinity, and how these variables operate and change in different contexts. The essay concludes with some thoughts about how these interrogations of masculinities on stage contribute to broader discussions.","creator":["Henry Spiller"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24318173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"620000756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08ce31cf-6624-3009-9de6-8b4630ed1ed9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24318173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldofmusic"}],"isPartOf":"The World of Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Florian Noetzel GmbH Verlag","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Music, Movement, and Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24318173","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":4078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew Hale","Richard Hawkins","Michael Partridge"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2599886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b643824a-0df5-353f-a3c4-6c0f7105f5df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2599886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"832","pageStart":"792","pagination":"pp. 792-832","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Economic History Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"List of Publications on the Economic and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland Published in 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2599886","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":27821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In order to analyze the gender performance and empowerment of Brazilian female drug traffickers, this article compares the character of Marta in Patr\u00edcia Melo\u2019s novel Inferno (2000) with the testimonies of four real female drug traffickers collected in MV Bill and Celso Athayde\u2019s book Falc\u00e3o: Mulheres e o tr\u00e1fico (2007). It argues that while female drug traffickers highlight their experience and use their kinship relations, Marta\u2019s access to power and gender transgression are temporary because her community and other drug traffickers do not support her. The article also proposes the term \u201cthe most desired positions\u201d to replace \u201chegemonic masculinities\u201d because of the prominence that cisgender and trans women have begun to have in the world of drug trade. Com o prop\u00f3sito de analisar a performance de g\u00eanero e o empoderamento de mulheres traficantes brasileiras, este ensaio compara a personagem de Marta no romance Inferno (2000) da autora Patr\u00edcia Melo com os testemunhos de quatro mulheres traficantes que foram recolhidos no livro Falc\u00e3o: Mulheres e o tr\u00e1fico (2007) de MV Bill e Celso Athayde. O ensaio argumenta que, enquanto as mulheres traficantes salientam sua experi\u00eancia e uso de rela\u00e7\u00f5es de parentesco, o acesso de Marta ao poder e sua transgress\u00e3o de g\u00eanero s\u00e3o tempor\u00e1rios porque sua comunidade e outros traficantes n\u00e3o a apoiam. O ensaio tamb\u00e9m prop\u00f5e usar o termo \u201cposi\u00e7\u00f5es mais desejadas\u201d para substituir a express\u00e3o \u201cmasculinidades hegem\u00f4nicas\u201d devido \u00e0 promin\u00eancia que as mulheres trans e cisg\u00eanero come\u00e7aram a ter no mundo do tr\u00e1fico de narc\u00f3ticos.","creator":["Carolina Castellanos Gonella"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e10cc560-7156-33bb-b373-8dd64e905012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26743696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Most Desired Positions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743696","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Brazilian Female Drug Traffickers in Inferno<\/em> and Falc\u00e3o: Mulheres e o tr\u00e1fico<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Green"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83cd5e69-d2da-3b23-9bb0-804109c7d891"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Recognized Myself in Her\": Identifying with the Reader in George Eliot's \"The Mill on the Floss\" and Simone de Beauvoir's \"Memoirs of a Dutiful Daughter\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455211","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da6c5f3d-940d-388b-b6c3-51906fad8254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976113","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":2434,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[2324,2405]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tara Prince-Hughes"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20739470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf712189-eb5a-33fd-bc28-534ee67db526"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20739470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Contemporary Two-Spirit Identity in the Fiction of Paula Gunn Allen and Beth Brant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20739470","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara LeSavoy"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66902019-7737-3790-8f56-6fd19884135c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Bloom's Normal<\/em> (2002) and Tarttelin's Golden Boy<\/em> (2013): Teaching Gender Fluidity Written across Time and Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0142","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a theoretical support for the aims of theorizing the Viking Age as a diaspora, this paper reflects on the impact of diaspora on identity, especially gender. The concept of gender is considered from three positions and within the intellectual framework of gender archaeology. First, the development of a concept of gender as a fluid negotiated identity, made not given, is introduced. Thereafter the relationship between material culture and gender is considered, arguing that it is through material things and practices that gender gains substance and is experienced. Thirdly, the disruptive yet formative effects of diaspora are outlined from a gender perspective. Throughout the intellectual arguments are related to Viking-Age studies by reference to case studies within Viking-Age archaeology.","creator":["Marie Louise Stig S\u00f8rensen"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45019127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17827183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"648789599"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39262a43-9a53-31d7-aa66-4971332f7a50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45019127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vikimediscan"}],"isPartOf":"Viking and Medieval Scandinavia","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Brepols","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Gender, Material Culture, and Identity in the Viking Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45019127","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["REGINA U. GRAMER"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24912402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"505b2d25-71a5-317a-9d0a-2c3a417fb477"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24912402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Poststructuralisms, Revisionisms, and Cold Wars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24912402","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the 1990s the educational community has witnessed a proliferation of 'bullying' discourses, primarily within the field of educational developmental social psychology. Drawing on ethnographic and qualitative interview data of primary and secondary school girls and boys, this article argues that the discourse 'bullying' operates to simplify and individualise complex gendered\/classed\/sexualised\/racialised power relations embedded in children's school-based cultures. Using a feminist post-structural approach, this article critically traces the discursive production of how the signifiers 'bully' and 'victim' are implicated in the 'normative cruelties' of performing and policing 'intelligible' heteronormative masculinities and femininities. It shows how these everyday gender performances are frequently passed over by staff and pupils as 'natural'. The analysis also illustrates how bully discourses operate in complex racialised and classed ways that mark children out as either gender deviants, or as not adequately performing normative ideals of masculinity and femininity. In conclusion, it is argued that bully discourses offer few symbolic resources and\/or practical tools for addressing and coping with everyday school-based gender violence, and some new reserach directions are suggested.","creator":["Jessica Ringrose","Emma Renold"],"datePublished":"2010-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10d0b3bc-d8dd-3ff6-bb46-3aae1d1ca3f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27823633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Normative cruelties and gender deviants: the performative effects of bully discourses for girls and boys in school","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823633","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11710,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[424101,424429]],"Locations in B":[[29358,29643]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza la capacidad de rearticulaci\u00f3n y redefinici\u00f3n identitaria desarrollada por parte de mujeres convertidas al Islam. La adopci\u00f3n de una perspectiva te\u00f3rica comprometida con los feminismos contempor\u00e1neos permite superar los l\u00edmites conceptuales de algunos estudios sobre las conversiones. Unos estudios que, dentro de la tradici\u00f3n funcionalista, focalizan el an\u00e1lisis en un gen\u00e9rico \u00abobjeto\u00bb mujer que relega a mero epifen\u00f3meno sus capacidades interpretativas subjetivamente desarrolladas. Sin embargo, la atenci\u00f3n a algunos \u00absujetos\u00bb mujeres conversas permite describir la performatividad y la originalidad desplegadas en la construcci\u00f3n de sus identidades religiosas. La conversi\u00f3n se muestra por tanto como un proceso complejo, m\u00faltiple y continuo que supone una progresiva construcci\u00f3n de sentido en un contexto sociocultural, el europeo, en el cual no existe todav\u00eda una visi\u00f3n determinada del ser musulmana. This article analyses the capacity for re-articulation and redefinition of identity developed by women converted to Islam. The adoption of a theoretical perspective committed to current feminisms allows us to go beyond the conceptual limits of other studies on conversion. These studies, following the functionalist tradition, focus the analysis on a generic \u00abobject\u00bb woman of academic construction, relegating their subjectively developed interpretative capacities to a mere epiphenomenon. However, focusing on some \u00absubject\u00bb women converted to Islam allows us to describe the performativity and originality deployed in the construction of their new religious identities. The conversion is thereby a complex, multiple and continuous process which implies a gradual construction of meaning in a sociocultural context, pertaining to Europe, where a particular view of what it means to be a Muslim woman does not yet exist.","creator":["Salvatore Madonia"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02105233"},{"name":"oclc","value":"191572839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008263040"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41762467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reis"}],"isPartOf":"Reis: Revista Espa\u00f1ola de Investigaciones Sociol\u00f3gicas","issueNumber":"140","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Experiencia y rearticulaci\u00f3n identitaria en mujeres espa\u00f1olas convertidas al Islam \/ Experience and Re-articulation of Identity in Spanish Women Converted to Islam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762467","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With its longstanding commitment to intersectional analysis, ecofeminism has always concerned itself with understanding the unique experiences of those who face discrimination, but it is only recently that ecofeminists have come to label their work as explicitly intersectional. This paper will examine the changing nature of ecofeminism and the importance of continuing to work within an intersectional framework. I will begin by reviewing the genealogy of intersectionality and ecofeminism, before exploring the current directions which intersectional ecofeminism is taking and the limitations which challenge intersectional theorisation. I will demonstrate the importance of an intersectional Indian ecofeminist approach, by exploring the complex circumstances surrounding the management of menstrual hygiene amongst young women in rural India: an issue which if approached non-intersectionally, would effectively silence their struggle.","creator":["A.E. Kings"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ethicsenviro.22.1.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"001205e1-7070-3401-8886-fb19eac9277e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ethicsenviro.22.1.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersectionality and the Changing Face of Ecofeminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ethicsenviro.22.1.04","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maia Boswell"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"215e1c55-dcdc-3930-851d-f27194e4e9b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Ladies,\" \"Gentlemen,\" and \"Colored\": \"The Agency of (Lacan's Black) Letter\" in the Outhouse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354522","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13452,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[488108,488180]],"Locations in B":[[80645,80723]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ROSA VALLS"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cd329ec-06c7-3ab5-97bf-07f0421fe4b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"ix","pageStart":"vii","pagination":"pp. vii-ix","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Preface","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976711","volumeNumber":"242","wordCount":746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy R. Baehr"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27652645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01675249"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ca28cee-94f8-3fc5-9b14-05e56672c30b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27652645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Law","Law","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Perfectionism, Feminism and Public Reason","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27652645","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the workings of the sexual closet within the enormously popular genre of the Russian detektiv, or detective story. Informed by the work of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and D. A. Miller, the article focuses on the dramatization of homosexual panic among various male characters in Aleksandra Marinina's Stilist (1996) and Boris Akunin's Koronatsiia (2001) in order to explore the experience of masculine subjectivity in post-Soviet culture. In both novels, a perceived crisis in patriarchal authority unleashes suspicions and anxieties regarding the experience of being and becoming a man, which is defined against the feminine and the homosexual. Figured both as an effect of and as a threat to male-male bonds, homosexual panic testifies to the interiorization of sexual and gender norms, which makes being male a highly self-conscious enterprise and fuels nostalgia for a mythic time before the appearance of homosexuality.","creator":["Brian James Baer"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3650065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16f4e29c-8301-3b30-b6ad-a834d8b86fc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3650065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Engendering Suspicion: Homosexual Panic in the Post-Soviet Detektiv","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3650065","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much queer theory in America is based on white male experience and privilege, excluding people of color and severely limiting its relevance to third-world activism. Within the last decade and a half, chronicles from gay lesbian bisexual transgender intersex queer (GLBTIQ) communities within the South Asian diaspora in the United States have appeared, but the richness and contradictions that characterize these communities have been stifled. Too often, the limitations due to undertheorized South Asian-American lesbian, bisexual, and transsexual histories--compounded by a queer canon overwrought with the East\/West and tradition\/modern equations--render queer South Asian-Americans as a monolithic homogenous category with little or no agency. In this paper, I visit paradoxes, difficulties, unity, and diversity by unraveling the lives of two gender-queer-identified second-generation South Asian-American \"women,\" Rupa and Ronica. This article addresses the ways in which an often invisible and marginalized group--gender-queer second-generation South Asian-Americans--accepts, manipulates, and resists hegemonic powers. I accomplish this by presenting partial data from a year-long cross-national feminist ethnographic study conducted in 2004.","creator":["Roksana Badruddoja"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f992abe-ed72-3931-ab9d-d101a8db73ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Queer Spaces, Places, and Gender: The Tropologies of Rupa and Ronica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071280","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":15123,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[89626,89728]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alex HUGHES"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40551897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4561b3a0-7f53-37db-bcf6-5919220a0f5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40551897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Serge Doubrovsky's \"Gender Trouble\": Writing the (Homo)textual Self in Un amour de soi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40551897","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article demonstrates that the concepts of gender and nation illuminate the Swedish-Soviet submarine crisis in February 1981, when a nuclear-armed Soviet submarine was stranded for ten days in the Swedish archipelago. The crisis challenged both the Swedish armed forces\u2019 status as protectors of the national territory and the government's foreign policy doctrine of neutrality. The article analyzes Swedish media from 1981 to identify the interpretive frames, with a particular emphasis on emotions and body imagery. Gendered notions of protection permeated the crisis narratives. Male bodies embodied national and military agency, whereas women's bodies symbolically merged with the Swedish nation's territory. The Soviet intruders were disparaged and Swedish military prestige redeemed through gendered and corporeal representations. The article improves our understanding of the way the Swedish ideal of the neutral soldier and the foreign policy doctrine of neutrality incorporated gender.","creator":["Cecilia \u00c5se"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26925578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15203972"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740963532"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85e59ab-0aa1-31f7-90b1-f27362e38360"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26925578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcoldwarstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Cold War Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Ship of Shame","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26925578","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9032,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[5202,5266]],"subTitle":"Gender and Nation in Narratives of the 1981 Soviet Submarine Crisis in Sweden"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Leigh Foster"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ab68956-e1f4-34e2-9b06-5baf9083b3fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Choreographies of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175670","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":14392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Vicars"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dc9fb4a-2dd1-3556-9a16-b436690a7b48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45177504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Subaltern Desires: Queer (in) Southern Story Lines: Looking at Movies and the Queering of\/in the South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177504","volumeNumber":"434","wordCount":4712,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102378,102461]],"Locations in B":[[14520,14603]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62bcdd08-51de-31fa-b4a1-9c65953cf1c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43284366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DISSERTATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284366","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheryl Narumi Naruse"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c073b3d-e309-3df6-ae87-62d9ca638bba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergstudglobasia"}],"isPartOf":"Verge: Studies in Global Asias","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Bodies That Map: Overseas Singaporeans and the Urban Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0044","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALAN BEWELL"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50573849"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aed073b2-3d0e-3ecd-b70c-4566d7ecf97f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24247279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"397","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hyena Trouble","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247279","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meryl Altman"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b09d6568-611b-36e8-bc8b-ec8eb05269c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Simone De Beauvoir and Lesbian Lived Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459130","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The spread of the HIV\/AIDS pandemic in Africa is driven, at least in part, by particular expressions of heterosexual masculinities, especially those that entail aggressive sexuality. More needs to be known about how boys come to construct, experience and define themselves as men and about how hegemonic constructions are, and might be, contested. The recognition that masculinities are historically, socially and economically constructed, and that gender is a process, offers the potential for change. Many studies have described women's vulnerability to HIV along a number of dimensions, among them biological, economic, social and cultural. What is perhaps less self-evident in view of the real power exercised by many men in everyday life in Zambia and elsewhere is the vulnerability of men because of the demands made upon them by particular constructions of masculinity. This article draws upon life-histories collected from a cohort of men educated at a Zambian Catholic mission to explore their recollections of how they learnt to be men and their discovery of themselves as engendered sexual beings. The roots of many understandings of masculinity are to be found in domestic and extra-domestic worlds where boys observed the ways in which men took precedence and exercised power over women and children. The particular contributions of the father and the male peer group to the development of masculine identities are the focus of this discussion.","creator":["Anthony Simpson"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25065025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a02d920d-3346-3885-9d0b-0d3f1e44b1f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25065025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"586","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-586","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Sons and Fathers\/Boys to Men in the Time of AIDS: Learning Masculinity in Zambia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25065025","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Paul Johnson's (2008) article 'Rude Boys', published in an earlier issue of Sociology, scrutinizes critically the commodification of the male chav for consumption by middle-class homosexual men. This phenomenon, which Andrew Fraser (2005) calls 'chavinism', takes a number of different forms: pornography, sex lines, club nights etc. In part as a response to Johnson's arguments concerning the ways in which chavinism 'further devalue[s] the individuals and groups' it depicts, creating a form of 'symbolic violence' (2008: 67), our article speculates further on the ambiguous implications of this minority consumer culture. To do this, we develop Connell's (1992, 2002; Connell and Messerschmidt, 2005) concept of 'hegemonic masculinity' to discuss what gay chavinism might mean for 'hegemonic homosexuality'.","creator":["Joanna Brewis","Gavin Jack"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb8ae9a5-a750-31dd-bfb0-fda2068cb45b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Consuming Chavs: The Ambiguous Politics of Gay Chavinism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857393","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helena Gurfinkel"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e6ccae3-3709-3adf-b093-1bc213d3eb1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Intercourse between the Squire and His Son\": The Father-Son Marriage Plot and the Creation of the English Gentleman in Anthony Trollope's \"Doctor Thorne\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347168","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11463,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[231395,231465]],"Locations in B":[[68383,68453]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper critiques the rise of scientific approaches to central questions in the humanities, specifically questions about human nature, ethics, identity, and experience. In particular, I look at how an increasing number of philosophers are turning to evolutionary psychology and neuroscience as sources of answers to philosophical problems. This approach constitutes what I term a biological turn in the humanities. I argue that the biological turn, especially its reliance on evolutionary psychology, is best understood as an epistemology of ignorance that contributes to a climate of hostility and intolerance regarding feminist insights about gender, identity, and the body.","creator":["KIM Q. HALL"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"145aa521-489e-3e9a-83f4-dd74e61ced35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Not Much to Praise in Such Seeking and Finding\": Evolutionary Psychology, the Biological Turn in the Humanities, and the Epistemology of Ignorance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328896","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Glenn M. Hudak"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1381928d-fdc5-349e-924e-ed7ee04cd398"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"Sound\" Identity: Music-Making & Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975847","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":11288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses perspectives from science and technology studies to understand the working knowledge used by operators to understand and handle machines. Industrial production is seen as a heterogeneous assemblage of sociomaterial practices, where machines and humans interact in processes of mutual inscription and modification. Working knowledge is analysed as situated practices of knowing, or performances. This perspective is used in a meta-interpretation of earlier ethnographic research and other accounts of manual, industrial work, focusing on the mental, bodily and emotional understanding employed in crucial situations, as when learning to work, localizing machines, or coping with difficult or recalcitrant machines.","creator":["Boel Berner"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23748648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"372de59d-5a22-34b4-85d1-d3d2c9b10534"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23748648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Working knowledge as performance: on the practical understanding of machines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23748648","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Harriette Richards"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/antipodes.31.2.0291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9663c9c-e599-3aa0-841d-889230ed5317"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/antipodes.31.2.0291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Lady Barker: Fashioning Femininity in Colonial New Zealand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/antipodes.31.2.0291","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel C. Lee"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92ce5305-32e1-3251-8178-9833ee63da08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175457","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":2122,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499374,499498]],"Locations in B":[[13415,13539]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This introduction contextualises the nine papers that make up the special issue Gender and Person in Oceania. Gender and personhood represent core orienting concepts within Pacific anthropology, from the pioneering work of Marilyn Strathern's Gender of the Gift to more recent scholarly attention to the impact of Christianity and modernity. The papers in this volume offer a comparative and critical perspective on long-standing ideas of 'relational' and 'individual' personhood across multiple sites in Oceania, highlighting several key insights, including the importance of situated and relational understandings of agency and the centrality of those 'things' typically seen as non-agentive to the formation of personhood. Most importantly, while re-establishing the inseparable articulation of personhood with gendered dynamics, the contributors to this volume also highlight the differential, transforming, and shifting nature of engendered personhood, revealed through close attention to local knowledge, conditions, and practices.","creator":["Rachel Morgain","John P. Taylor"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44161317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2700b514-30f1-3612-a8e5-67f5c26aff19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44161317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Transforming Relations of Gender, Person, and Agency in Oceania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44161317","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":5345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender system can be understood as a cultural system rooted on biological differences. Semiotically speaking, it is a binary sign system (male : female) with some variation involved (transsexuals, homosexuals etc.). In the process of modernity, the biological motivation of the gender system is being loosened by technological innovations such as contraception and mother's milk substitute. At the same time, the state has replaced family and kin as the organising structure of society and the cultural ideal of equality has gained a strong position. These and similar changes together have made gender flow in 'posttraditional' societies. The paper deals this process in paying attention to the three theoretically possible constellations in the determination of semiotic identities in social process: functional order in Parsonian sense, formation of struggling parties in the sense of Weber and Bourdieu, and anomie in the sense of Durkheim and Berger & Luckmann. It turns out that elements of all these three theoretical constellations are present in the current transformation of the gender system. This is elaborated with empirical material drawn from the change of the Finnish gender system from the 1950s to the 1990s.","creator":["RISTO HEISKALA"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"361d8e69-3c92-3aad-82d2-f67dd7b546a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"146","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Modernity and the Articulation of the Gender System\u2014Order, Conflict, and Chaos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274889","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The ambivalence towards the Pauline documents and their legacy is probably nowhere as strong as in the interplay between morality, and the materiality\u2014and corporeality in particular\u2014of human existence. Paul is often quoted in the formulation of Christian thought and ethics, but his position on the human body, sexual ethics and gender politics is, as frequently, considered problematical. In the articulation of Pauline theology and ethics, the human body plays an important role, and constitutes an important reference point for morality as it emerges in the Pauline letters. Paul's body theology is explored within the broader socio-historical as well as reception-historical contexts, and the link between his body theology and Paul's moral stance is considered.","creator":["Jeremy Punt"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43048551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"PAUL, BODY THEOLOGY, AND MORALITY: PARAMETERS FOR A DISCUSSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048551","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12259,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439455,439527]],"Locations in B":[[10884,10956]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Skinner"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20527593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20527593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Women Dancing Back- and Forth: Resistance and Self-Regulation in Belfast Salsa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20527593","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter McLaren","Rhonda Hammer"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f578078d-377a-346e-bf19-47cadb6d26a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter VI: Media Knowledges, Warrior Citizenry, and Postmodern Literacies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974977","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tania Ramalho"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6d26511-c549-3d37-8a0e-f394dadcd3c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29742028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Life Trajectory of Mariana de Lancastre in Ana Miranda's \"O Retrato Do Rei\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742028","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article we critically consider the idea that feminism has performatively failed within the discipline of International Relations. One aspect of this failure relates to the production of sexgender through feminism which we suggest is partly responsible for a weariness inflecting feminist scholarship, in particular as a critical theoretical resource. We reflect on this weariness in the context of the study and practice of international politics -- arenas still reaping the potent benefits of the virile political energies reverberating since 9\/11. To illustrate our arguments we re-count a familiar feminist fable of militarisation -- a story which we use to exemplify how the production of feminist IR is 'set' up to 'fail'. In so doing we clarify our depiction of feminism as seemingly haunted by its inherent paradoxes as well as explaining why it matters to discuss feminism within the locale of the academic study of international politics. We conclude with a consideration of the grammar of temporality that delimits representations of feminism and move to recast feminist failure as aporetic and concomitantly implicated in the process of intervening politically.","creator":["Maria Stern","Marysia Zalewski"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b67572e4-132d-38ea-85e0-1f05285cb00f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20542806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"630","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Fatigue(s): Reflections on Feminism and Familiar Fables of Militarisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542806","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10746,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[21983,22054]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Valentine","Riki Anne Wilchins"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"52\/53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"One Percent on the Burn Chart: Gender, Genitals, and Hermaphrodites with Attitude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466740","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3742,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489246,489409]],"Locations in B":[[21308,21496]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite recent efforts to construct gender theory in archaeology, I assert that no methodological or theoretical breakthroughs have occurred. This lack of progress is due to several factors. First, fundamental terms such as \"theory,\" \"gender,\" and \"sex\" have been used inconsistently; I suggest some working definitions for these terms. Second, researchers have resorted to the use of analogical arguments that implicitly deny the role of gender in the organization of human relations. Third, feminist political agendas have been conflated with research questions. In order to address some of these issues, I suggest that the application of a multivariate approach to the study of gender can avoid the problems inherent in any one line of evidence. Finally, I argue that a consideration of the scale of gender questions is essential to the application of existing theoretical frameworks to gender archaeologically.","creator":["Erica Hill"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20177379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8aa050e-496c-3647-8e68-17b23a34ed40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20177379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Gender-Informed Archaeology: The Priority of Definition, the Use of Analogy, and the Multivariate Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20177379","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":13424,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[510986,511136]],"Locations in B":[[83600,83762]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The present study examines two unprompted versions of the same story, related by a mother and daughter in separate sociolinguistic interviews. Following a quantitative intraspeaker comparison of their use of grammatical features associated with Appalachian English within the entirety of their interviews, this study undertakes a close reading of the narratives (along with additional passages from the daughter) to demonstrate the manner in which the two women construct their identities as \"mother\" and as \"other\" through conversational narrative and the use of local dialect features. Specifically, this article addresses the use of regional grammatical variables to enact speaker stances toward mothering, focusing on two women's independent recollections of a single incident and how these narratives dialogically construct the (m)other.","creator":["ALLISON BURKETTE"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23473600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9772b7c-3be3-3c21-8814-9370a4ee9830"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23473600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Constructing the (m)other: A-prefixing, stance, and the lessons of motherhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23473600","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hope Sabanpan-Yu"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01150243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"566025042"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcd128a5-7e9c-3298-b45c-9f0ce691e858"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philquarcultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"346","pagination":"pp. 346-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of San Carlos Publications","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Ina-Ina\" in Three Cebuano Novels by Hilda Montaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940832","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9880,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435409,435491]],"Locations in B":[[9688,9770]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although research demonstrates the influence of identity negotiation on language learning for both heritage learners and study-abroad students, there is little research on the experiences of heritage language learners studying abroad in their ancestral homelands (Petrucci 2007). This article focuses on the experiences of language learners of Arab heritage studying Arabic in Egypt. It describes the various ways in which they used Arabic and English abroad, and how they negotiated identities as heritage learners, Arabs, and Egyptians in ways that both helped and hindered their opportunities to gain access to local social networks and use Arabic.","creator":["Emma Trentman"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44654042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08898731"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565308566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c258e229-223d-379b-9730-90006ad58632"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44654042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabiyya"}],"isPartOf":"Al-'Arabiyya","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Arabic Heritage Learners Abroad: LANGUAGE USE AND IDENTITY NEGOTIATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44654042","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When African-American entertainer Josephine Baker first arrived in Paris in 1925, her dancing to the 'jazz hot' of La Revue n\u00e8gre was, famously, perceived as 'primitive'. But her 1934 performances in Offenbach's La Cr\u00e9ole completed the construction - and tested the limits - of a complex redefinition of Baker as French. Substantially revised, the operetta in effect staged her own assimilation, a new black character serving as a foil for the 'creole' Josephine and marking her as 'in-between'. If most observers saw Baker's transformation as an affirmation of France's civilising mission, the few dissenters paradoxically risked insisting on her difference in terms of an essentialised blackness. Recognising both personas as 'performative' relocates Baker's agency. It helps move beyond fixed racial categories to dynamic cultural processes: 'creolisation'.","creator":["Andy Fry"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3878304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd855c71-a4e8-348c-b52e-89d5cb9ef1e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3878304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Du jazz hot \u00e0 \"La Cr\u00e9ole\"': Josephine Baker Sings Offenbach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3878304","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":15451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Abrams"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d94cbc3b-6f06-3658-bbfd-a7bb2b6275cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"782","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-782","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cross-Dressing in the Master's Clothes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797503","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":19070,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[434702,435517],[435902,436102]],"Locations in B":[[8749,9573],[9585,9785]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catriona Sandilands"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"538ccca5-3e7a-3e5a-84c4-b4034310dd22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mother Earth, the Cyborg, and the Queer: Ecofeminism and (More) Questions of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316528","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10307,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[421230,421454]],"Locations in B":[[893,1126]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This collaborative essay addresses feminist politics in contemporary German culture and in German studies. In both spheres we identify a troubling circularity that is not to be seen as failure but instead as a starting point for feminist academics working to create politically engaged scholarship for the twenty-first century. Here, we propose such a starting point to be found in the concept of \u201cawkwardness\u201d and offer a model that replicates in form and content much of the messy trouble seen in feminist politics today. The essay is written in a manner to demarcate our voices, including the places where they intersect; Carrie's writing is italicized, whereas Maria's writing is not. By so doing, we wish to highlight our collaboration as part of the sticky, circular, messy, and jarring process that is feminist political work today.","creator":["Carrie Smith-Prei","Maria Stehle"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8424a322-5c30-3be8-8aa9-c9a9a0b1506f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"w<\/span>ig<\/span>-Trouble: Awkwardness and Feminist Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0209","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459973,460251]],"Locations in B":[[9250,9531]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheryl Kader"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52f64ee8-9d1f-39ca-a317-5a24daf9659b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389254","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The value and importance of both Postcolonial theory and Queer theory for biblical interpretation has been argued in different ways over the last decade or two. However, since little has been done so far\u2014notwithstanding their affinities\u2014in linking postcolonial and queer theories within biblical hermeneutics, the attraction between these theories in applying their insights to NT texts, is explored. Building on earlier work on these theoretical positions and stances and their value for biblical interpretation, this contribution focuses on liminality in particular. In this brief contribution, liminality is investigated as a heuristic concept and use for plotting sex and gender positions in a few biblical texts. The use and value of a postcolonial, queer approach in biblical hermeneutics and its value in generating useful and appropriate readings of the texts, is argued and briefly demonstrated.","creator":["Jeremy Punt"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43048642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SEX AND GENDER, AND LIMINALITY IN BIBLICAL TEXTS: VENTURING INTO POSTCOLONIAL, QUEER BIBLICAL INTERPRETATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048642","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7343,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[440874,440992],[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[31525,31643],[31650,31885]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["EMMA KARIN BRANDIN"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45179721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20418582"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe620d09-563b-3b61-9f80-99d7a7e2cec8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45179721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gaskellj"}],"isPartOf":"The Gaskell Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Gaskell Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Domestic Performance and Comedy in \"Cranford\" and \"Wives and Daughters\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45179721","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8033,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,124157]],"Locations in B":[[43904,44336]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay we discuss a theory of identity development through the elaboration of American Pragmatists\u2019 conception of how individuals develop awareness of the self, others, and the environment. We then outline the potential contributions of Pragmatic Identity Theory as a practical conceptual framework and a method of analysis that can provide insights into identity formation, self-conceptions, and well-being for educators in day-to-day interactions. The literature on learning and identity can benefit from a more practical understanding of identity development, as identity development is relevant to how individuals form their values, beliefs, and behavioral dispositions. Based upon a gap in the current literature, this article explores four premises that educators can use to understand identity formation, and then argues for Pragmatic Identity Theory\u2019s potential contributions to research and practice as an analytical framework. Gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 l\u2019\u00e9laboration de la cr\u00e9ation am\u00e9ricaine du pragmatisme, la th\u00e9orie du sentiment identitaire est ici abord\u00e9e ; c\u2019est-\u00e0-dire la fa\u00e7on dont les individus prennent conscience d\u2019eux-m\u00eames, prennent conscience des autres et prennent conscience du milieu environnant. Ensuite, les contributions \u00e9ventuelles de la th\u00e9orie pragmatique sur l\u2019identit\u00e9 sont expos\u00e9es dans les grandes lignes pour servir de contexte pratique au concept et \u00e0 la m\u00e9thode d\u2019analyse, ce qui peut apporter des id\u00e9es sur la formation identitaire, sur la conception du soi et sur le bien-\u00eatre des \u00e9ducateurs dans les \u00e9changes quotidiens. Les travaux sur le r\u00f4le de l\u2019apprentissage et sur l\u2019identit\u00e9, peuvent b\u00e9n\u00e9ficier d\u2019une compr\u00e9hension plus pratique sur l\u2019approfondissement de l\u2019identit\u00e9 puisqu\u2019il est en rapport avec la mani\u00e8re dont les individus constituent leurs valeurs, leurs croyances et leurs aptitudes comportementales. Parce qu\u2019il existe une lacune dans les travaux d\u2019aujourd\u2019hui, les \u00e9ducateurs peuvent employer quatre postulats, pr\u00e9sent\u00e9s ici, pour comprendre la formation de l\u2019identit\u00e9. Ensuite, et pour servir de cadre analytique, on sugg\u00e8re fortement les contributions \u00e9ventuelles de la th\u00e9orie pragmatique sur l\u2019identit\u00e9 pour la recherche et le travail.","creator":["JOSEPH LEVITAN","DAVIN CARR-CHELLMAN"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26873061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c43b97a8-fcc2-3762-b78a-6e36f22e4e33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26873061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Learning, Selfhood, and Pragmatic Identity Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26873061","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":6808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Towards a Practical and Comprehensive Framework of Identity Development in Education"} +{"abstract":"Although sociocultural theories emphasize the mutually constitutive nature of persons, activity, and environment, little attention has been paid to environmental features organized across sensory dimensions. I examine sound as a dimension of learning and practice, an organizing presence that connects the sonic with the social. This ethnographic study of taiko drumming underscores an acoustemological sense of knowing that configures the practice and performance of taiko as an Asian American soundscape of (re)composed cultural identity.","creator":["Kimberly A. Powell"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05204e49-3d39-3c14-88d8-fe9e474d85df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Composing Sound Identity in Taiko Drumming","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410159","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Essay describes the evolution of feminist legal scholarship, using six articles published by the California Law Review as exemplars. This short history provides a window on the most important contributions of feminist scholarship to understandings about gender and law. It explores alternative formulations of equality, and the competing assumptions, ideals, and implications of these formulations. It describes frameworks of thought intended to compensate for the limitations of equality doctrine, including critical legal feminism, different voice theory, and nonsubordination theory, and the relationships between these frameworks. Finally, it identifies feminist legal scholarship that has crossed the disciplinary boundaries of law. Among its conclusions, the Essay points out that as feminist scholarship has become more mainstream, its assumptions and methods are less distinct. It observes that even as feminist legal scholarship has generated important, insightful critiques of equality doctrine, it remains committed to the concept of equality, as continually revised and refined. The Essay also highlights the importance of feminist activism and practice in sharpening and refining feminist legal scholarship.","creator":["Katharine T. Bartlett"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23239883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"accd283e-5b53-369c-80cf-6e52e07e4557"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23239883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Legal Scholarship: A History Through the Lens of the \"California Law Review\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23239883","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":25567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the intense orchestration of the bride's appearance-both her physical beauty and her ability to appear to captivate her groom-in Taiwanese bridal salons. Historical circumstance, competitive consumption, and family politics combine to render young women willing if not always eager subjects. Photographers, in turn, attempt to provoke specific subjective states in their clients so as to produce attractive, naturalistic poses and facial expressions. Through attention to positioning processes, the subtleties of the relationships among subjective experience, social performance, and cultural belief are examined.","creator":["Bonnie Adrian"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c55cedd0-70d6-3972-94a8-5b16449a12d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Camera's Positioning: Brides, Grooms, and Their Photographers in Taipei's Bridal Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651831","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this article is to disseminate the construction of manliness and womanliness in Swedish sport. Of particular interest is gender equity policy in sport as a new way of creating sexual\/gender difference. Michel FOUCAULT's concept \"a history of the present\"\u2014a genealogical approach\u2014serves as an important tool in this work. Interviews with athletes in their teens (track & field athletics) and texts published by the Swedish Sports Confederation serve as empirical material. When asked about themselves as track & field athletes and their ways of seeing others participating in track & field, the boys often speak about themselves and other boys in a straightforward and unproblematic way. The girls on the other hand, speak about themselves and other girls in a problematic way. This is not an unexpected result, but the conventional interpretation is that it is a sign of gender inequalities in sport. From a genealogical point of view, it might rather be seen as an effect of gender equity policies. Gender equity policy can be seen as a practical strategy of guaranteeing women and men the opportunities to do the same thing\u2014sport, simultaneously performing two distinct and clearly differentiated gendered subjects, to be equalised. As such, gender equity policies might be perceived as an apparatus that produces and regulates sexual\/gender difference.","creator":["H\u00e5kan Larsson"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af0cc615-c3cd-3f16-8540-b26321a3ae20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20762109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"1 (115)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A History of the Present on the \"Sportsman\" and the \"Sportswoman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762109","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48234,48548]],"Locations in B":[[7786,8098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In her best-selling first volume of autobiography, \"La B\u00e2tarde\" (1964), Violette Leduc's textual avatar attempts to take on a number of diverse personae, but is consistently revealed to be an imperfect performer of the roles she seeks to appropriate. During the Occupation, however, she assumes two new and transgressive identities: those of writer and black-marketeer. This article asks why the roles of trafiquante and \u00e9crivaine are intimately linked in \"La B\u00e2tarde,\" discussing what it is about these apparently dissimilar, even conflicting, enterprises that renders Leduc's Occupation narrative a rare success story.","creator":["Alison S. Fell"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3737930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66731e93-3080-3b1e-80ea-2af66a40ebcb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3737930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"880","pageStart":"870","pagination":"pp. 870-880","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literary Trafficking: Performing Identity in Violette Leduc's \"La B\u00e2tarde\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3737930","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":6012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[9095,9260]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Teaching Sociology's emphasis on the scholarship of teaching and learning has moved the field well beyond simple description of teaching methods. There is no doubt that the journal is more scholarly than in the past. Still, we do not take advantage of our rich theoretical disciplinary work. There is much to learn sociologically about the classroom and other sites of interaction between teachers and students. Our classrooms are social sites and our analysis of them can be of help to scholars both inside and outside the discipline. In this article, we propose a sensitizing concept, the sociology of the college classroom-the application of sociological theory and\/or concepts to understand social phenomena that take place at the level of the classroom and other sites of faculty-student interaction. We situate the sociology of the college classroom as a subset of the scholarship of teaching and learning and the sociology of higher education. Sociology of the college classroom can be a place not only where research meets teaching, but it can also be a site where sociological theory meets pedagogical praxis.","creator":["Maxine P. Atkinson","Alison R. Buck","Andrea N. Hunt"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eba08e6-39d0-3956-bd4e-1ea3d8575b26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25594007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Sociology of the College Classroom: Applying Sociological Theory at the Classroom Level","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594007","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martin Ingram"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3489413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3489413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","issueNumber":"487","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"758","pageStart":"732","pagination":"pp. 732-758","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Men and Women in Late Medieval and Early Modern Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3489413","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":13492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ona Russell"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08924a6e-ca10-39e2-9dc4-9df0a343c28d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40642685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What's in a Name Anyway?: The Calamity of Calamity Jane","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642685","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8849,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[29037,29189]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann W. Astell"],"datePublished":"2013-06-17","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jenglgermphil.112.3.0377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03636941"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-247631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8856ea97-0cfe-310c-a431-348343999eb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jenglgermphil.112.3.0377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jenglgermphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of English and Germanic Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jenglgermphil.112.3.0377","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":2352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Language and gender in works by female West African writers are examined in this paper. The prevalence of linguistic and ideological gendering in the corpus is illustrated, and questions raised about the rationale and functionality of the gendered representations. In addition, answers are sought to questions such as \"What drives co-wives to wickedness or insanity?\" and \"What accounts for female rivalries, and female-female invectives, including ageism?\" Finally, whether the creative writers in question empower the subordinated or propose enabling measures is another aspect explored, before recommendations are offered for the unwritten songs and tales of West Africa's Lawinos.","creator":["Anita Pandey"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Language and Representation: Linguistic Aesthetics of Female West African Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821297","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11782,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARIE-H\u00c9L\u00c8NE BOURCIER"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1ffb6a4-fa18-370d-bfb2-b5556fcdd2b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab Trafic queer \u00bb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978752","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"China Mi\u00e9ville's Iron Council (2004), as one of the major texts of the New Weird, is a prime example of weird fiction; as a novel concerned with the establishment and extension of territorial and economic boundaries, however, it is also a western in its thematic ethos, its aesthetic sensibilities, and its preoccupation with notions of the frontier. This article explores the social boundaries of the titular train, the Iron Council. Using Judith Butler's notion of the social abject and the materialized\/dematerialized body, the article first looks at the abjected bodies of the Remade and how they are discursively and socially constructed, finding parallels with the queer figures in the novel. It then uses cyborg theory to theorize the ways these abjected bodies can be rewritten and recuperated (made to matter, in Butler's terms) and examines the ways in which the novel troubles notions of stable ontological and social boundaries, blurring distinctions among human, animal, and machine and locating, in this dissolution, the opportunity for transgression and revolution.","creator":["Jonathan Newell"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.3.0496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6086566-f06f-3f57-a0b2-79173333323b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.3.0496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"496","pagination":"pp. 496-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Abject Cyborgs: Discursive Boundaries and the Remade in China Mi\u00e9ville's Iron Council<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.3.0496","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6915,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[424299,424444],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[12519,12664],[43774,43848]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NORA MARTIN PETERSON"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c2068b9-57df-3dd8-abc1-63a72afb3437"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Innocence, Interrupted: Bewusstsein and the Body in Heinrich von Kleist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653055","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7334,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123954,124077]],"Locations in B":[[36446,36571]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In fall 1995, a major show at the Centre Pompidou in Paris engaged, for the first time in France, a plethora of questions relating to gender and sexuality as they have been posed through the art of the 20th century. Focusing on the exhibit catalogue, this review essay argues that the theoretical framework for the project suffered from ignoring the work done by Anglo-American feminists, particularly the political ramifications of Judith Butler's Bodies that Matter. Also reviewing Mary Louise Roberts's Civilization Without Sexes, this essay explores the way that her emphasis upon historical specificity in her treatment of gender issues in post-WWI France serves to highlight this kind of grounding that is missing in the commentaries provided in the catalogue.","creator":["JANN MATLOCK"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a24c81db-4444-3a72-aa36-f27e17b73975"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hedonism and Hegemony: Bodily Matters at a Loss","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029832","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":13466,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[53434,53584],[101225,101298],[149230,149308],[228653,228789]],"Locations in B":[[2230,2380],[25858,25931],[26419,26497],[29302,29438]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roland Sintos Coloma"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba62e0ca-01b0-3080-9866-90de0e91299e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: What's Queer Gotto Do with It?: Interrogating Nationalism and Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981404","volumeNumber":"367","wordCount":7360,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157]],"Locations in B":[[31581,31677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terralee Bensinger"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56b3e8e8-4306-30bd-9f11-e02a0d08d445"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lesbian Pornography: The Re\/Making of (a) Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389249","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With its self-conscious intertextuality and thirty-year-old female narrator, \"Capriolo's Il doppio regno\" invites interpretation as a form of 'fictitious autobiography'. This reading emphasizes the novel's importance as an exploration of female authorial anxiety in relation to a predominantly male-authored canon. Focusing upon Capriolo's admiration for Gottfried Benn and his privileging of art as absolute, the article shows how women's alienation from language is dramatized through the depiction of a fantastic space. The protagonist's encounter with a labyrinthine hotel is also the author's encounter with a language that claims to speak for the universal subject, but in fact excludes the female.","creator":["Danielle Hipkins"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3738411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df5a6f23-228a-3abc-806a-ea540675344b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3738411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lost in the Art(ifice) of Male Language: Finding the Female Author in Paola Capriolo's \"Il doppio regno\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3738411","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":8829,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[79786,79922]],"Locations in B":[[23904,24040]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael P. Steinberg"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/674116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61d77a2e-aad5-3165-afb4-dd59f23aee40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/674116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Music and Melancholy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/674116","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9989,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503649]],"Locations in B":[[20606,20677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Traber"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac232d97-63a5-3ee6-b740-41d31bc703a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41809571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Identity Joke: Race, Rap, Performance in CB4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809571","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":11210,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455440,455617]],"Locations in B":[[6357,6526]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Realizing the constructed nature of gender is often described as a twentieth-century Western phenomenon. Nevertheless, in several South Asian religious traditions, practitioners are instructed through songs and oral teachings to exchange and ultimately transcend gender identities. In this article I discuss the practices aimed at transcending gender identity among some contemporary Bengali lineages that have been defined as \u201cheterodox\u201d by nineteenth-century reformers. Several lineages in West Bengal and Bangladesh perform cross-dressing and meditative identification with the opposite sex. I discuss such practices using songs, riddles, and oral sources collected during fieldwork conducted between 2011 and 2015. I then briefly trace the history of religious transvestism in South Asian literature, while contextualizing this practice within Vaishnava and Sufi traditions. Finally, I discuss how similar phenomena have been interpreted by modern and postmodern scholarship to conclude with a conceptual framework for interpreting \u201cpregnant males\u201d and \u201cbarren mothers\u201d in light of contemporary gender theories, with reference to performativity and ritual liminality.","creator":["Carola Erika Lorea"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26604838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18826865"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298239510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-266704"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45d0b678-937f-3da0-8b1e-465b8c59ebe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26604838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianeth"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Ethnology","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Nanzan University","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Religion","Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Pregnant Males, Barren Mothers, and Religious Transvestism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26604838","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":21657,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[75773,75883]],"subTitle":"Transcending Gender in the Songs and Practices of \u201cHeterodox\u201d Bengali Lineages"} +{"abstract":"Carmen de Icaza, una de las escritoras m\u00e1s populares de los a\u00f1os 30, 40 y 50 en Espa\u00f1a, es conocida sobre todo por su novela m\u00e1s exitosa comercialmente, Cristina Guzm\u00e1n, profesora de idiomas (1936). La trama de f\u00f3rmula de esta novela ha hecho que muchos cr\u00edticos caractericen a Icaza como una t\u00edpica escritora de novela rosa, ya que Cristina Guzm\u00e1n contiene un mensaje que establece el matrimonio y la maternidad como el final feliz para todas las mujeres. Al mismo tiempo, como Icaza era partidaria de la Secci\u00f3n Femenina de Falange, sus novelas se han interpretado como una reflexi\u00f3n simplista de la ideolog\u00eda fascista. Aunque sea verdad que las novelas de Icaza son conservadoras en algunos aspectos, varios cr\u00edticos, como Benjam\u00edn Manzano Bad\u00eda, no han identificado los aspectos subversivos de sus novelas, los cuales subvierten el mensaje aparentemente conservador. A diferencia de Cristina Guzm\u00e1n, tres de las novelas que escribi\u00f3 en los a\u00f1os 40 son oscuras y pesimistas, y reflejan el trauma y la incertidumbre de la Guerra Civil y sus efectos en la sociedad espa\u00f1ola. Ninguna de estas novelas termina con el final feliz esperado, lo cual implica una matizaci\u00f3n mucho m\u00e1s compleja en relaci\u00f3n a la postulada por la cr\u00edtica.","creator":["DEBBIE AVILA"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7076059f-2243-39a2-b8b9-89aee7121ca6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41636555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"No Happy Endings: Carmen de Icaza's (Anti)Romance Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636555","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Donald C. Ainslie"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00930334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38867822"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212569"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"870947a1-26a0-3af3-a891-4fa173483b52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3527734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hastcentrepo"}],"isPartOf":"The Hastings Center Report","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hastings Center","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Questioning Bioethics AIDS, Sexual Ethics, and the Duty to Warn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527734","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Taking seriously Linda Martin Alcoff s suggestion that we reevaluate the extent to which poststructuralist artkuhtions of the subject are truly socially constituted, as well as the centrality of Latina identity to her own account of such constitution, I argue that the discussion Alcoff and other Latina feminists offer of the experience of being Latina in North America is illustrative of the extent to which the refotional and globally situated constitution of subjects needs further development in many social-constructionist accounts of selfhood. I argue, however \u2014 contra Alcoff \u2014 that Michel Foucault I s mode of investigating subjectivation, particularly as it is articulated in his later work, has room for just such an account, especially when it is supplemented by postcohnial theory. With this end in mind, I take as a case study the public discourse surrounding Sonia Sotomayor prior to her confirmation as the first Latina woman to serve on the United States Supreme Court, suggesting that an analysis of this discourse (including its position within and contribution to wider discourses of ethnicity, race, gender, and chss) shows why the accounts of relational subject-constitution offered by both Foucault and Alcoff are indispensable.","creator":["ERIN C. TARVER"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d617f2e2-9e10-3864-8757-046fe29b2694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"825","pageStart":"804","pagination":"pp. 804-825","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Forms of Subjectivity: Theorizing the Relational Self with Foucault and Alcoff","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328881","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the 1930s and 1940s, neurosurgeons and clinical neurologists engaged in a fierce exchange on the scope of their specialties. Neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield's rhetoric of therapeutic superiority had a strong impact both on the Rockefeller Foundation's support for his institute and on the self-fashioning of neurologists. Neurologists articulated their identity in spirited performances at the meetings of specialist societies, their response shifting from a combative approach to a focus on internal organization. In light of the neurosurgeons' discourse, by the 1950s a new generation of neurologists created a revisionist narrative that inaccurately portrayed the clinical neurologists of the past as having been uninterested in therapeutics.","creator":["DELIA GAVRUS"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44451908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e2d731a-c921-37f6-b8c6-3cf33be9ac72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44451908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Men of Dreams and Men of Action: Neurologists, Neurosurgeons, and the Performance of Professional Identity, 1920\u20131950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44451908","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":14017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract In our engagement with Lars and the Real Girl (LRG), we encourage a reading of the film that emphasizes how it playfully and performatively reproduces and, in the process, undoes norms of temporality and collectivity. In particular, LRG queers normative understandings of public culture, identity, and community in three primary ways. First, the film queers typical understandings of time, challenging the presumed distinctions between past, present, and future. Second, LRG forwards a prosthetic understanding of identity, asserting that all identities are relationally contingent and therefore queering the subject-object binary. Finally, the film envisions queer kinship structures that not only critique hegemonic gender norms but also call attention to the performativity of gendered identities. Ultimately, we deploy LRG to respond to those who advocate antirelationality as the properly queer way of moving through space and time.","creator":["Claire Sisco King","Isaac West"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.3.0059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33a43741-51eb-3230-bc08-093accc390ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.1.3.0059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"This Could Be the Place: Queer Acceptance in Lars and the Real Girl<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.3.0059","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":11647,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443425,443525]],"Locations in B":[[58424,58524]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Though the names \"Judith Butler\" and \"Martin Heidegger\" rarely come together in Butler and Heidegger scholarship, the critical encounter between these philosophers might help us conceptualize the relationship between freedom and marginalization. In this paper, I will read Butler from the perspective of the Heidegger of Being and Time and claim that what Butler's philosophy suggests is the radical dependency of one's freedom on the cultural resuscitation of socially murdered racial, sexual, ethnic, religious, and sectarian\/confessional minorities. More specifically, I will claim that the socially sanctioned subject's freedom is dependent on the marginalized Other's freedom, and, conversely, the marginalized Other's freedom is dependent on the socially sanctioned subject's freedom.","creator":["ARET KARADEMIR"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4be45abe-6714-3c8d-bc8c-e29e07de63e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"839","pageStart":"824","pagination":"pp. 824-839","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Butler and Heidegger: On the Relation between Freedom and Marginalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542105","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8277,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[33285,33390],[33479,33673],[34513,35088],[101993,102151],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[30286,30391],[30441,30635],[30648,31211],[37492,37650],[49846,49915]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Cressy"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/176000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31b11dec-5956-35f4-8697-6e2b256b7833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/176000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"438","pagination":"pp. 438-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Trouble and Cross-Dressing in Early Modern England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/176000","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Disch"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d724ee20-b660-3575-932e-ca2d3c943078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Judith Butler and the Politics of the Performative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192305","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6920,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[75237,75322],[232725,232827],[510986,511095]],"Locations in B":[[8660,8745],[10484,10586],[38936,39045]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article outlines the research being undertaken to develop the Assembling Queer Displacements Archive (AQDA). This open digital archive is the central focus of a research project that will address the lack of understanding of LGBTIQ+\u00b9 experiences of forced displacement. These experiences are unique but have not received adequate attention. The existing body of work on \u2018queering archives\u2019 has been focused on challenging the archival approaches and practices in order to either queer these practices and\/or make them more inclusive. However, this work has tended to ignore LGBTIQ+ stories of forced displacement. One reason for this lack of engagement is the lack of direct knowledge and experience of such stories by the researchers and archivists themselves. My positionality as an LGBTIQ+ forcibly displaced person has motivated me to embark on the present research project and to demonstrate inclusive practices to address these gaps in archives. In this article I explore the role that positionality plays in creating an LGBTIQ+ forced displacement archive. I offer solutions for creating an inclusive practice to collect stories of LGBTIQ+ forcibly displaced people. These solutions have the potential to support a range of digital archival projects that engage with structurally marginalised and oppressed communities.","creator":["Renee E. Dixson"],"datePublished":"2021-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641979","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1001437536"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e01a18bd-b13d-3b95-8453-84f286c46ce2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48641979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intljinfodive"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, and Inclusion (IJIDI)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What About Us? Preserving LGBTIQ+ History of Forced Displacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641979","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":13812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the question of how the relationship between gender and sexuality has been theorized. Five strands of argument which draw on different epistemological concerns, are identified. These have structured the study of gender and sexuality, providing a contested understanding of both the meaning of these categories and their relationship. A challenge for future work is to elaborate frameworks that allow more complex analyses of the dynamic, historically and socially specific relationship between sexuality and gender, as well as the gendered and sexualized nature of their interconnections. To achieve this we need to consider the question of the relationship of gender and sexuality at a number of levels of social analysis. These issues are explored by drawing on three areas of research: on transsexualfty\/transgenden homosexuality and heterosexuality. Finally, a new metaphor for (re) imagining how we think about the interconnections between gender and sexuality is proposed.","creator":["Diane Richardson"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ca11bd8-30de-300e-bb57-a0f3c3ce06c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Patterned Fluidities: (Re) Imagining the Relationship between Gender and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857007","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8365,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[53800,53852]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Germaine de Stael was a liberally and constitutionally minded historian, but she also fashioned herself as a genius at doing history. Her genius, however, rested on a bioepistemology--a narcotic, erotic, and baroque one--incompatible with modern forms of knowledge. The ingredients of her genius are additionally incompatible with the accepted biographical treatment of her as a constitutionalist daughter of Englightenment insiders. Because these several interpretations are useful, the article suggests that her life be read in terms of irreducible multiplicity.","creator":["Bonnie G. Smith"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00161071"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976306"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/286664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenhiststud"}],"isPartOf":"French Historical Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"1081","pageStart":"1059","pagination":"pp. 1059-1081","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"History and Genius: The Narcotic, Erotic, and Baroque Life of Germaine de Stael","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286664","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10445,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522882]],"Locations in B":[[49037,49107]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Naila Ceriba\u0161i\u0107","Ana Hofman","Ljerka Vidi\u0107 Rasmussen"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20465065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07401558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53166061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20465065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yeartradmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Yearbook for Traditional Music","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"International Council for Traditional Music","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Post-Yugoslavian Ethnomusicologies in Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20465065","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":5886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En este trabajo discuto las estrategias desarrolladas por la \u00faltima dictadura militar en Argentina (1976-1983) para definir y remodelar las subjetividades de sus opositores, destacando los significados y experiencias asociados a los discursos y pr\u00e1cticas impuestos sobre su cuerpo y vestido. Documentos oficiales, relatos de sobrevivientes y restos arqueol\u00f3gicos de vestimenta recuperados por el Equipo Argentino de Antropolog\u00eda Forense (EAAF) durante la exhumaci\u00f3n de cuerpos de personas \"desaparecidas\" conforman la evidencia utilizada para alcanzar este objetivo. In this paper I discuss the strategies used by Argentinean military forces during last dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983) to define and reshape the subjectivities of political opponents, pointing out the meanings and experiences associated with the discourses and practices imposed upon their bodies and clothing. Official documents, survivors' stories and archaeological remains of clothing recovered by the Argentinean Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF) during the exhumation of bodies of \"disappeared\" people constitute the evidence used to accomplish this goal. Je discute des strat\u00e9gies utilis\u00e9es par les forces militaires de l'Argentine pendant la derni\u00e8re dictature en ce pays (1976-1983) pour d\u00e9finir et remodeler les subjectivit\u00e9s des ennemis politiques, soulignant les sens et les exp\u00e9riences associ\u00e9s avec les discours et les pratiques impos\u00e9s sur leurs corps et leurs v\u00eatements. Les documents officiels, les t\u00e9moignages des survivants et les restes de v\u00eatements trouv\u00e9s arch\u00e9ologiquement par la Argentinean Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF) lors de l' exhumation des corps des \"disparus\" constituent les donn\u00e9es utilis\u00e9es pour r\u00e9aliser cet objectif. Neste trabalho discuto as estrat\u00e9gias geradas pelos militares argentinos da ditadura dos anos 1976-1983, para definir e modificar as subjetividades de seus opositores, com destaque para os significados e experi\u00eancias associados a discursos e pr\u00e1ticas impostos sobre seus corpos e vestidos. Documentos oficiais, relatos de sobreviventes, e restos arqueol\u00f3gicos de vestimenta recuperados pela Equipe de Antropologia Forense Argentino (EAAF), durante a exuma\u00e7\u00e3o de corpos de desaparecidos, s\u00e3o a evid\u00eancia empregada para alcan\u00e7ar este objetivo.","creator":["Melisa Anabella SALERMO"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27768501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01883631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc24235e-567e-3eb0-9145-c89fd5dc5543"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27768501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviarquamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Arqueolog\u00eda Americana","issueNumber":"24","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Pan American Institute of Geography and History","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\" ALGO HABR\u00c1N HECHO<\/italic>...\" LA CONSTRUCCI\u00d3N DE LA CATEGOR\u00cdA \"SUBVERSIVO\" Y LOS PROCESOS DE REMODELACI\u00d3N DE SUBJETIVIDADES A TRAV\u00c9S DEL CUERPO Y EL VESTIDO (ARGENTINA, 1976-1983)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27768501","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Safe sex\" discourse attempts to protect women from dangers assumed inherent in erotic life, such as domination, submissiveness, and loss of freedom and self-control. However, Beauvoir's and Merleau-Ponty's revision of Sartre's ontology suggests that erotic life involves a kind of generosity that transforms existence; sex neither liberates personal existence nor poses a necessary threat to women's freedom. I also reconsider the conditions under which sex is assumed to involve a violation of being.","creator":["Rosalyn Diprose"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f2a01b7-d60f-30be-8c52-bf21ecc6422a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Generosity: Between Love and Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810604","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract In her recently rediscovered manuscript, The Hermaphrodite, Julia Ward Howe uses Laurence, a hermaphroditic aristocrat, to problematize English novelistic conventions. Howe's use of a hermaphroditic protagonist not only reveals how completely the Victorian novel depends on gender-stable bodies for narrative progression, but also illustrates how a body that is neither wholly male nor female activates alternate plotlines that seek to classify, restrict, and, ultimately, expel the abnormal body from the narrative altogether. This essay analyzes the ways in which Laurence's unusual body collapses the gender-stable identity categories on which the novel's two marriage plots depend. Moreover, this essay demonstrates the ways in which science and culture collude in an attempt to categorize and expel Laurence's body from the plotlines that it problematizes.","creator":["Derek Bedenbaugh"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb11e72f-a786-330f-84dd-0f427c25a020"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Novel Violations: The Hermaphrodite<\/em> and the Failure of Form","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.413","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":7978,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[347125,347208]],"Locations in B":[[18164,18240]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Kirkpatrick"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bfc0bd7-b202-3f71-995f-32723a845488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"116","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"'you need to learn to see yourself through the Fathers' eyes': feminism, representation, and the dystopian space of \"Bitch Planet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987316","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4933,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20005,20111]],"Locations in B":[[9722,9828]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eleanor Ruth Hayman"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26240358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21905088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b3db5ba-d742-33e9-b7cf-e924553acc12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26240358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rccperspectives"}],"isPartOf":"RCC Perspectives","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Rachel Carson Center","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Shaped by the Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26240358","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Myths of Water, Women, and Purity"} +{"abstract":"It is widely accepted that the category of 'Muslim' in Europe is patterned by a variety of subjective and objective features. Despite internal difference, some argue that there emerges something overarching that furnishes Muslims in Europe with a collective sense of self, evidenced by empirically observable Muslim identities at local, national and supra-national levels. Amongst those who share this view at least three prevailing interpretations have emerged. The first is theologically grounded but socially iterative. It maintains that Europe's Muslims are redefining Islam in the context of their identities as European Muslims and that the result is a 'Euro-Islam', illustrated by how Muslims view Europe as their home while being guided by a renewed Islamic doctrine. A second interpretation of a 'Muslim subject' in Europe can be described as the 'Eurabia' trajectory. This predicts the numerical and cultural domination of Europe by Muslims and Islam. The third is more formally sociological and employs a methodology of political claims-making to report that Muslims in Europe are exceptional in not following pathdependent institutional opportunity structures of minority integration. This article argues that these formulations are open to the charge that each places the burden of adaptation upon Muslim minorities. As such each displays a normative 'position' or Weltanschauung that misrecognizes dynamic components of what may be termed 'Muslim-consciousness'. The article maintains that the components of Muslim consciousness contain compelling evidence that Muslims in Europe are meeting standards of reasonableness in their political claims-making, often from contexts in which they face profound social and political adversity.","creator":["Nasar Meer"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43572643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31aeda55-ab60-353c-85da-49fcf5667535"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43572643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Misrecognizing Muslim consciousness in Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43572643","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Current US counterinsurgency doctrine is gendered diversely in the different geographic locations where it is formulated, put in practice, and experienced. Where Iraqi and Afghan populations are subjected to counterinsurgency and its attendant development policy, spaces are made legible in gendered ways, and people are targeted \u2014 for violence or 'nation-building' \u2014 on the basis of gender-categorisation. Second, this gendering takes its most incendiary form in the seam of encounter between counterinsurgent foot-soldiers and the locals, where sexuality is weaponised and gender is most starkly cross-hatched with class and race. Finally, in the Metropole, new masculinities and femininities are forged in the domain of counterinsurgency policymaking: While new soldier-scholars represent a softened masculinity, counterinsurgent women increasingly become visible in policy circles, with both using ostensibly feminist justifications for their involvement.","creator":["LALEH KHALILI"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9bb623d-7beb-33e7-ad1d-2f7c768a0084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23025562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"1491","pageStart":"1471","pagination":"pp. 1471-1491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendered practices of counterinsurgency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025562","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11732,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[10195,10266]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this essay is to rethink classic issues of freedom and moral responsibility in the context of feminist and antiracist theories of male and white domination. If personal identities are socially constructed by gender, race and ethnicity, class and sexual orientation, how are social change and moral responsibility possible? An aspects theory of selfhood and three reinterpretations of identity politics show how individuals are morally responsible and nonessentialist ways to resist social oppression.","creator":["Ann Ferguson"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10694e8b-3a30-3111-9a77-d0122ecb14e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Moral Responsibility and Social Change: A New Theory of Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810225","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12091,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[75136,75311]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine J. Walley"],"datePublished":"1997-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2abafa8-455f-33d6-84a2-36f20e5505a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Searching for \"Voices\": Feminism, Anthropology, and the Global Debate over Female Genital Operations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656558","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":16247,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[101974,102036]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Last Stone"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431500"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54394554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b5582e8-fd44-3ce9-9aa2-4e2ad8250ff7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/743461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cardstudlawlite"}],"isPartOf":"Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Justice, Mercy, and Gender in Rabbinic Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743461","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":16378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Biddy Martin"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexualities without Genders and Other Queer Utopias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465167","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10628,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[394520,395145]],"Locations in B":[[26044,26894]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender is perhaps the most pervasive, fundamental, and universally accepted way we separate and categorize human beings. Yet in recent years, U.S. courts and administrative state agencies have confronted a growing challenge from individuals demanding to have their gender reclassified. Transgender people create a profound category crisis for social institutions built on the idea that biological sex is both immutable and dichotomous. During the past four decades, the central legal question shifted from how to allocate specific individuals to categories to the permeability of gender categories themselves. This analysis of 38 judicial gender determinations provides a glimpse of the literal construction of the gender order and of the ways institutions gender individuals. It also provides powerful evidence that cultural anxieties about reproduction and the heterosexual, conjugal family underscore institutional efforts to manage the uncertainty of postmodern gender identities.","creator":["TEY MEADOW"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25789908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62bc44d5-f6c0-39fd-8b8c-65a4ce62f318"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25789908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"837","pageStart":"814","pagination":"pp. 814-837","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A ROSE IS A ROSE\": On Producing Legal Gender Classifications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25789908","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9435,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[56996,57142]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that gender was invented in the 1950s as a new sexual apparatus of biopower. Through a reading of mid-century sexological studies against the background of structural\u2013functionalist and behaviorist theories of social order, it shows how gender was born in the clinic to discipline the reproduction of life in new ways. The truth of sex was no longer found in the genitals or mind, but in the contingent cognitive processes of a behavioral control system. The gender apparatus produced systematized protocols for sex reassignment surgeries for infants with ambiguous genitalia and rendered the family a panoptic institution, all to ensure that children were socialized into normative gender roles guaranteeing the continued reproduction of the life of the species. The violence of this new life-administering technology was crystallized in the pedagogical techniques employed by physicians designed to persuade their child patients to submit themselves to the normalizing care of surgeons and psychiatrists.","creator":["Jemima Repo"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6307e013-3915-357f-963b-f70a9ffe8c9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Biopolitical Birth of Gender: Social Control, Hermaphroditism, and the New Sexual Apparatus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569452","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10405,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[58898,58969],[60807,60881]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper on Ofelia Schutte's work discusses five main themes: gender oppression in the context of Latin American theories of social liberation; normative heterosexuality in Beauvoir and Irigaray; Schutte's analysis of women and capitalist globalization processes; her work on cultural identities; and the possibility of feminist transnational identities. I conclude with a comment on her postcolonial epistemological method in addressing cultural incommensurability and the possibility of a common agenda for transnational feminism.","creator":["Ann Ferguson"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbc7fdba-a00a-3455-b31d-cde1f89cc97d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comments on Ofelia Schutte's Work in Feminist Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811099","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The first reviews of the two-part \"Sensationsfilm\" series Dr. Mabuse, der gro\u03b2e Spieler: Ein Bild unserer Zeit and Das Inferno: Ein Spiel von Menschen unserer Zeit heralded the films' ability to document the tumult of the early Weimar Republic. This essay explores the reviewers' reliance on the reflection model in order to complicate our understanding of the relationship between the film text, film history, and audience history. Through its examination of the processes of identification at work both in the film's plot and in its viewers, this reading challenges the notion that Dr. Mabuse satisfies the public's need to blame a single, identifiable individual for events like inflation and political assassinations. By invoking feminist scholarship on spectatorship and audience pleasure, the author locates the thrill of the Mabuse films (and thus the critics' eagerness to see their own lives projected on the screen) in the fluidity of identity they display and in their visible disruption of the dominant economy of sexual desire.","creator":["Sara Hall"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb604461-1e41-3f0b-bb1f-73099b3f909f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3252238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"397","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Trading Places: \"Dr. Mabuse\" and the Pleasure of Role Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252238","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":11262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler","Ernesto Laclau","Reinaldo Laddaga"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 2-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Uses of Equality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566266","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea A. Lunsford","Susan West"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3293fee3-cf26-37af-9e77-80a0e53382f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/358295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Intellectual Property and Composition Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358295","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15184,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494682]],"Locations in B":[[87457,87530]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa283c7e-9eac-3f7e-8535-98068c2b3be9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"vi","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-vi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809970","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janet McCabe"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20168977-34c2-3e7b-8d23-9e8742709575"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"74","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395961","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINA G. BUCHER"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b17ff1e-ef27-33cf-b14e-7b17f9646211"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Perversely Reading Kate Chopin's \"Fedora\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476748","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":6980,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[395780,395975]],"Locations in B":[[19234,19429]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Todd W. Reeser"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"oclc","value":"65211423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006212212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dffb15f-bfe2-3a43-b23d-4b39e217c9d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cTrans<\/em>France\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378820","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":5045,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74988,75056]],"Locations in B":[[22881,22949]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One way of exploring the paradox of (in)security and its implications for the reproduction of violence is to inquire into how the promise of a secure subject is inscribed in discourses of (in)security. Why is the successful securing of 'we' impossible? How might the supplementary relationship between security and insecurity inform the inscription of 'we' as the sovereign subject of security? Arguably, integral to the promise of an assured security is the concealment of the impossibility of fulfilling this very promise. This article aims to closely examine how a specific 'we', as the 'subject' of security, is constructed. Reading from the (in)security narratives of Mayan women \u2013 narratives that reflect the lived experiences of marginalized peoples struggling for security in resistance \u2013 it explores how the inscription of a specific and multiple identity, 'Mayan women', as the subject of security enacts and resists many of the dangers of securitizing identity that seem to be attendant to modern logics or grammars of security. Looking at how the impossible promise (or the ultimate failure) of securing identity plays out in a particular site among people whose voices are not often heard in writings on security invites reflection over failure as an opening for rethinking (in)securing identity.","creator":["MARIA STERN"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d20c189c-2f05-3eb8-8835-b3a496b56457"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26299460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'We' the Subject: The Power and Failure of (In)Security","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299460","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LUKE SUNDERLAND"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40600347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cf56f91-a18a-328c-bccd-0bcf4c6d5d3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40600347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Art of Revolt: Rebellion in the Works of Bertran de Born and Julia Kristeva","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40600347","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":10740,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[277261,277336]],"Locations in B":[[10171,10246]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Religious studies cannot agree on a common definition of its subject matter. To break the impasse, important insights from recent discussions about post-foundational political theory might be of some help. However, they can only be of benefit in conversations about \"religion\" when the previous debate on the subject matter of religious studies is framed slightly differently. This is done in the first part of the article. It is, then, shown on closer inspection of past discussions on \"religion\" that a consensuscapable, contemporary, everyday understanding of \"religion,\" here called Religion 2, is assumed, though it remains unexplained and unreflected upon. The second part of the article shows how Religion 2 can be newly conceptualized through the lens of Ernesto Laclau's political theory, combined with concepts from Judith Butler and Michel Foucault, and how Religion 2 can be established as the historical subject matter of religious studies. Though concrete historical reconstructions of Religion 2 always remain contested, I argue that this does not prevent it from being generally accepted as the subject matter of religious studies. The third part discusses the previous findings in the light of postcolonial concerns about potential Eurocentrism in the concept of \"religion.\" It is argued that Religion 2 has to be understood in a fully global perspective, and, as a consequence, more research on the global religious history of the 19th and 20th centuries is urgently needed.","creator":["Michael Bergunder"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26507448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66e10194-fa69-355c-bbb0-2849aa4a8d64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26507448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"What is Religion?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26507448","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":17350,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[100853,100922]],"subTitle":"The Unexplained Subject Matter of Religious Studies"} +{"abstract":"Pedagogical theories celebrate and romanticize literacy narratives as emancipatory to the lives of students and teachers. In the particular context of basic writing, such discussions warrant critique. The author argues that perceptions of literacy narratives as transformative to writers and readers often reinforce a \"model minority\" belief along with \"storyteller-subject\" and \"pedagogue-master\" asymmetries, even when intending to challenge these dynamics. Furthermore, these perceptions enable and sustain a problematic trajectory that polarizes darkness and enlightenment. Through an examination of coming out narrative conventions that align with and depart from literacy narratives, this article explores key debates about closetedness that can reframe storytellers as making performative choices rather than being characterized as passive objects of study.","creator":["Shereen Inayatulla"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43744165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c657ee27-3f4a-3c84-9a1d-1ff9edcc49a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43744165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbasicwriting"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Basic Writing","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond the Dark Closet: Reconsidering Literacy Narratives as Performative Artifacts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43744165","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9259,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431480]],"Locations in B":[[52329,52821]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Amar","Omnia El Shakry"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f82d06-af71-3674-b148-67bb845c1169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43302998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Curiosities of Middle East Studies in Queer Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302998","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":2298,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[13934,13988]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LeiLani Nishime"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b370a59-e468-3040-9db3-c4b9b9adaa54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Engendering Genre: Gender and Nationalism in China Men and The Woman Warrior","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467854","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terri Carney"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43802728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b54da5cc-b04a-3638-ac88-1186e19ac3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43802728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"SEX, THE BODY, AND HUMAN SUBJECTIVITY IN LUIS GOYTISOLO'S EROTIC NOVEL \"ESCALERA HACIA EL CIELO\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43802728","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":2565,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[424957,425073]],"Locations in B":[[10887,11003]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Analysing the various contributions to the present volume, the article attempts to define the type of relations to be established between the concepts of class and the concepts of gender. The purpose is not however to evaluate \u00ab feminism \u00bb according to a putative \u00ab Marxist \u00bb yardstick. The aim, on the contrary, is to weigh up both the contributions of the former to social theory and the limitations of the latter. It is the consideration of the interferences between the two fields of inquiry, and of the resulting two-way process of reinterpretation, which leads to the invention of what is both the most vital notion, and the one most difficult to apprehend; that of the \u00ab social relations of sex \u00bb.","creator":["Annie BIDET-MORDREL","Jacques BIDET"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c61ca001-04c4-3378-8bd5-c0cecdfee7c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45300284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"30","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les rapports de sexe comme rapports sociaux","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300284","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Being men and being healthy seem to be contradictory sociospatial states. Although research on the interrelationships between gender and health is strongly represented in geography, and masculinity has been examined, geographical perspectives examining the contradictory spatialities of men's health are lacking. This article addresses this absence by working through a feminist and relational framework to examine how sociospatial forces linking gender, health, and emotion intertwine in the process of being (un)healthy men. We argue that any representation of men's health as situated within a singular narrative of hegemonic masculinity is refuted by tracing the multiple processes of how gender, health, and emotion intersect to define (un)healthy men's bodies and spaces. To flesh out the conceptual argument, we employ two illustrative case studies: (1) a set of narratives of living with HIV from gay and bisexual men in the United States and (2) a set of veterans' responses to a posttraumatic stress disorder program in Canada. These examples demonstrate men's fraught practices of their masculinities in relation to health and illustrate how variegated sociospatial practices of hegemonic masculinity affect men's health, men's affective relationships with support systems for health, and the contexts within which men's health takes place. This article offers a modest beginning to the inclusion of men in health geography and to an extended conceptual terrain for geographies of health encouraging the rethinking of linkages between health and gender and gender and emotion. \u6210\u4e3a\u7537\u4eba\u548c\u8eab\u4f53\u5065\u5eb7\uff0c\u4f3c\u4e4e\u662f\u77db\u76fe\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u7a7a\u95f4\u5206\u5f02\u72b6\u6001\u3002\u867d\u7136\u6027\u522b\u548c\u5065\u5eb7\u4e4b\u95f4\u7684\u76f8\u4e92\u5173\u7cfb\u5728\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4e2d\u7814\u7a76\u5f97\u5f88\u591a\uff0c\u9633\u521a\u4e4b\u6c14\u5df2\u7ecf\u88ab\u7814\u7a76\u8fc7\uff0c\u4f46\u662f\u7814\u7a76\u7537\u6027\u5065\u5eb7\u7684\u77db\u76fe\u7a7a\u95f4\u6027\u7684\u5730\u7406\u89c2\u70b9\u8fd8\u5f88\u7f3a\u4e4f\u3002\u672c\u6587\u9488\u5bf9\u8fd9\u4e00\u73b0\u51b5\uff0c\u901a\u8fc7\u4e00\u4e2a\u5973\u6743\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u548c\u5173\u7cfb\u7684\u6846\u67b6\uff0c\u5ba1\u67e5\u793e\u4f1a\u7a7a\u95f4\u5206\u5f02\u7684\u529b\u91cf\u662f\u5982\u4f55\u5728\u6210\u4e3a\uff08\u4e0d\uff09\u5065\u5eb7\u7537\u6027\u7684\u8fc7\u7a0b\u4e2d\uff0c\u4e0e\u6027\u522b\uff0c\u5065\u5eb7\u548c\u60c5\u611f\u4ea4\u7ec7\u8fde\u63a5\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u8ba4\u4e3a\uff0c\u5728\u9738\u6743\u9633\u521a\u4e4b\u6c14\u7684\u5947\u7279\u53d9\u8ff0\u8303\u56f4\u5185\u7684\u7537\u6027\u5065\u5eb7\u7684\u4efb\u4f55\u4ee3\u8868\u6027\u8a00\u8bba\uff0c\u90fd\u53ef\u4ee5\u901a\u8fc7\u8ddf\u8e2a\u4ea4\u9519\u7684\u6027\u522b\uff0c\u5065\u5eb7\uff0c\u60c5\u611f\u7b49\u591a\u4e2a\u8fdb\u7a0b\u6765\u5b9a\u4e49\uff08\u4e0d\uff09\u5065\u5eb7\u7537\u6027\u7684\u8eab\u4f53\u548c\u7a7a\u95f4\u800c\u88ab\u9a73\u65a5\u3002\u4e3a\u4e86\u5145\u5b9e\u6982\u5ff5\u4e0a\u7684\u53c2\u6570\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u4f7f\u7528\u4e86\u4e24\u4e2a\u5178\u578b\u6848\u4f8b\u7814\u7a76\uff1a\uff081\uff09\u4e00\u5957\u6765\u81ea\u7f8e\u56fd\u540c\u6027\u604b\u548c\u53cc\u6027\u604b\u7537\u5b50\u7684\u827e\u6ecb\u75c5\u6bd2\u611f\u67d3\u8005\u7684\u751f\u6d3b\u53d9\u8ff0\uff0c\u548c\uff082\uff09\u4e00\u5957\u52a0\u62ff\u5927\u9000\u4f0d\u519b\u4eba\u5bf9\u521b\u4f24\u540e\u5e94\u6fc0\u969c\u788d\u65b9\u6848\u7684\u53cd\u5e94\u3002\u8fd9\u4e9b\u4f8b\u5b50\u663e\u793a\u4e86\u8fd9\u4e9b\u4eba\u7684\u4e0e\u5065\u5eb7\u76f8\u5173\u7684\u7537\u5b50\u6c14\u6168\u7684\u5b9e\u8df5\uff0c\u4e5f\u8bf4\u660e\u9738\u6743\u9633\u521a\u4e4b\u6c14\u7684\u6742\u8272\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u7a7a\u95f4\u5206\u5f02\u7684\u505a\u6cd5\u662f\u5982\u4f55\u5f71\u54cd\u7537\u6027\u7684\u5065\u5eb7\uff0c\u7537\u4eba\u5065\u5eb7\u652f\u6301\u7cfb\u7edf\u7684\u60c5\u611f\u5173\u7cfb\uff0c\u548c\u7537\u6027\u5065\u5eb7\u53d1\u751f\u7684\u80cc\u666f\u3002\u672c\u6587\u63d0\u4f9b\u4e86\u4e00\u4e2a\u628a\u7537\u6027\u5217\u5165\u5065\u5eb7\u5730\u7406\u7814\u7a76\u7684\u6e29\u548c\u5f00\u7aef\uff0c\u5e76\u901a\u8fc7\u9f13\u52b1\u5bf9\u5065\u5eb7\u548c\u6027\u522b\uff0c\u4ee5\u53ca\u6027\u522b\u548c\u60c5\u611f\u4e4b\u95f4\u8054\u7cfb\u7684\u91cd\u65b0\u8003\u8651\uff0c\u62d3\u5c55\u4e86\u5065\u5eb7\u5730\u7406\u7684\u6982\u5ff5\u5730\u57df\u3002 Ser hombres, y ser hombres saludables, parecieran ser estados socio-espaciales contradictorios. Aunque la investigaci\u00f3n sobre las interrelaciones entre g\u00e9nero y salud se encuentra muy bien representada en geograf\u00eda, y tambi\u00e9n algo los estudios sobre masculinidad, todav\u00eda son pobres las perspectivas geogr\u00e1ficas para examinar las espacialidades contradictorias de la salud de los varones. Este art\u00edculo aboca esa limitaci\u00f3n trabajando por medio de un marco feminista y relacional con el fin de explorar c\u00f3mo interact\u00faan las fuerzas socio-espaciales que ligan g\u00e9nero, salud y emoci\u00f3n en el proceso por el cual los hombres llegan a estar saludables o no. Lo que arg\u00fcimos es que cualquier representaci\u00f3n que sit\u00fae la salud de los hombres dentro de una narrativa singular de masculinidad hegem\u00f3nica queda refutada al trazar los m\u00faltiples procesos de c\u00f3mo el g\u00e9nero, la salud y emoci\u00f3n se intersectan para definir lo que son cuerpos y espacios saludables o no. Para darle cuerpo al argumento conceptual, empleamos dos estudios de caso ilustrativos: (1) un conjunto de narrativas de hombres gay y bisexuales sobre vivir afectados con VIH en los Estados Unidos y (2) un conjunto de las respuestas de veteranos a un programa sobre trastorno por estr\u00e9s postraum\u00e1tico en Canad\u00e1. Estos ejemplos demuestran las tensas pr\u00e1cticas de sus masculinidades en los hombres en relaci\u00f3n con la salud e ilustran c\u00f3mo las variadas pr\u00e1cticas socio-espaciales de masculinidad hegem\u00f3nica afectan su salud, sus relaciones afectivas con los sistemas de apoyo para la salud y los contextos dentro de los cuales se fragua la salud masculina. Este art\u00edculo es un modesto aporte al comienzo de la incorporaci\u00f3n de los varones en la geograf\u00eda de la salud y a un terreno conceptual ampliado para las geograf\u00edas de la salud, promoviendo una nueva forma de pensar sobre los v\u00ednculos que se dan entre salud y g\u00e9nero, y entre g\u00e9nero y emoci\u00f3n.","creator":["Deborah Thien","Vincent J. Del Casino Jr."],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f049e2-2240-35dc-b6e3-66037f9775aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23275589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"1156","pageStart":"1146","pagination":"pp. 1146-1156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"(Un)Healthy Men, Masculinities, and the Geographies of Health","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275589","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":8465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Les rendez-vous d'Anna (1978) et Histoire d'Am\u00e9rique: Food, Family and Philosophy (1988) de Chantal Akerman sont des films qu'on pourrait situer dans les discours du cin\u00e9ma belge, du cin\u00e9ma des femmes, du cin\u00e9ma juif ou encore du cin\u00e9ma d'art europ\u00e9en. Toutefois, ce texte sugg\u00e9re que la mobilisation de telles cat\u00e9gories esth\u00e9tiques ne fait que perp\u00e9tuer une logique de l'identit\u00e9 qui efface la complexit\u00e9 de l'identit\u00e9 elle-m\u00eame. Les discours de l'identit\u00e9 op\u00e8rent pr\u00e9alablement \u00e0 travers la validation, la legitimation et la perp\u00e9tuation de la cat\u00e9gorie elle-m\u00eame; l'identit\u00e9 n'est pertinente qu'en autant qu'elle s'identifie \u00e0 de tels buts. Ces deux films d'Akerman \u00e9voquent la complexit\u00e9 de l'identit\u00e9 et en ceci compl\u00e8mentent le projet postmoderne de d\u00e9noncer l'illogique de l'identit\u00e9. Ces films demandent \u00e0 la critique de probl\u00e9matiser ses propres cat\u00e9gories et de th\u00e9oriser la tension entre le d\u00e9sir de saisir une identit\u00e9 et l'impossibilit\u00e9 d'un tel d\u00e9sir.","creator":["Angela Stukator"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc651ff8-a19a-36e3-819a-390caca4d2ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24402194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Critical Categories and the (Il)logic of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402194","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Collegiate hookup culture advances ideas of masculinity but contradicts notions of appropriate feminine sexuality. Drawing on focus group and interview data with college students, I examine how a group of class- and race-privileged fraternitymen face dilemmas as they enact a group constructed masculinity focused on sexual performance and the objectification of women. I employ a symbolic interactionist framework to illustrate how men, attentive to peer status yet anxious about the sexual stigmatization of women, draw on cultural ideas about appropriate feminine sexuality as they account for their approaches to sex and women (both with whom they interact sexually and how) along a range of intimacy\u2014from hookups to committed relationships. I demonstrate that heterosexual interaction does not unequivocally link to masculine status and that men sometimes strive to limit the impact of casual sex or avoid it altogether.","creator":["Brian N. Sweeney"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.37.3.369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c90d183e-6c2a-3107-b048-0dd97f5741c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/symbinte.37.3.369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Masculine Status, Sexual Performance, and the Sexual Stigmatization of Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.37.3.369","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Jay Lewis"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23260793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8383e66-e255-38d1-ac8b-7a65c845b410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23260793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contingency, Narrative, Fiction: Vogler, Brenkman, Poe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23260793","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Steans"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0db439fd-3bf7-3fb3-bf78-5af60d4a4a7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Debating Women's Human Rights as a Universal Feminist Project: Defending Women's Human Rights as a Political Tool","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097947","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine M. Franke"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac43d134-273b-39c0-9d41-d376aad9ffe0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Central Mistake of Sex Discrimination Law: The Disaggregation of Sex from Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312679","volumeNumber":"144","wordCount":45428,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524390]],"Locations in B":[[156975,157034]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3189424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Detailed Schedule of Sessions with Abstracts of Papers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189424","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":35277,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101215,101298]],"Locations in B":[[139491,139574]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Derek Pacheco"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.38.2.0047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2e5d6d0-4c8c-308d-ad37-778363dc903a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.38.2.0047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cDwarves and Hobgoblins\u201d: Nathaniel Hawthorne, Gothic Children's Literature, and A Wonder Book for Girls and Boys<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.38.2.0047","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pour aborder le cycle d'Albertine et ses repr\u00e9sentations de l'homosexualit\u00e9, deux aspects des gender studies nous ont \u00e9t\u00e9 utiles. Premi\u00e8rement, les points de vue modernes sur les notions telles que sexualit\u00e9 et gender, ainsi que les manifestations diff\u00e9rentes auxquelles celles-ci donnent lieu, lesquelles, compte tenu de l'\u00e9poque, \u00e9clairent \u00e0 leur tour celles qu'on rencontre chez Proust. Deuxi\u00e8mement, la consid\u00e9ration des instances du cadre \u00e9nonciatif du texte (narrateur, destinataire) \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de ces diff\u00e9rentes manifestations. L'application \u00e0 la sc\u00e8ne de Nissim Bernard d'un mod\u00e8le th\u00e9orique, con\u00e7u par Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick pour rendre compte de l'implication discursive du narrateur dans la zone de tension entre sexualit\u00e9 et gender, invite \u00e0 \u00e9tudier la dimension g\u00e9n\u00e9tique du texte. Ce sont surtout les remaniements tardifs qui, \u00e0 l'encontre d'une interpr\u00e9tation que propose Antoine Compagnon, sugg\u00e8rent une volont\u00e9 persistante \u00e0 mettre en sc\u00e8ne l'intersection probl\u00e9matique de la sexualit\u00e9 et du gender. La d\u00e9stabilisation des cat\u00e9gories symboliques que cette mise en sc\u00e8ne soutenue op\u00e8re est ensuite \u00e9tudi\u00e9e \u00e0 l'aide de deux sc\u00e8nes-cl\u00e9 pour la figuration de l'homosexualit\u00e9, ce toujours \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de la qualit\u00e9 \u00e9nonciative du texte.","creator":["Wouter van Diepen"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44869740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15715647"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608212591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c7dd16c-0aec-353d-98d8-31982a1c13fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44869740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mproustahui"}],"isPartOf":"Marcel Proust Aujourd'hui","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"UNE MISE EN SCENE TROUBLANTE : L'homosexualit\u00e9 dans le cycle d'Albertine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44869740","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8703,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[51749,51829]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACTThis essay explores the gendered lifestyle of early twentieth-century physics and chemistry and shows how that way of life was produced through linking science and home. In 1905, the Swedish physical chemist Svante Arrhenius married Maja Johansson and established a scientific household at the Nobel Institute for Physical Chemistry in Stockholm. He created a productive context for research in which ideas about marriage and family were pivotal. He also socialized in similar scientific sites abroad. This essay displays how scholars in the international community circulated the gendered lifestyle through frequent travel and by reproducing gendered behavior. Everywhere, husbands and wives were expected to perform distinct duties. Shared performances created loyalties across national divides. The essay thus situates the physical sciences at the turn of the twentieth century in a bourgeois gender ideology. Moreover, it argues that the gendered lifestyle was not external to knowledge making but, rather, foundational to laboratory life. A legitimate and culturally intelligible lifestyle produced the trust and support needed for collaboration. In addition, it enabled access to prestigious facilities for Svante Arrhenius, ultimately securing his position in international physical chemistry.","creator":["Staffan Bergwik"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/676567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8aef31c-24a6-347d-81bf-ca2fc8221d97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/676567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"An Assemblage of Science and Home: The Gendered Lifestyle of Svante Arrhenius and Early Twentieth-Century Physical Chemistry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/676567","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":13344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wen-Chin Chang"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9b77701-e9d7-3ce1-82af-342c74c4ae10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"572","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Venturing into \"Barbarous\" Regions: Transborder Trade among Migrant Yunnanese between Thailand and Burma, 1960s-1980s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619738","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":13977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William W. Young III"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Art history"],"title":"HEALING RELIGION: Aesthetics and Analysis in the Work of Kristeva and Cl\u00e9ment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460801","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":4208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patty Ahn","Julia Himberg","Damon R. Young"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b3b5d70-e263-3dfc-bb9f-1d4a122a7685"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653571","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":2767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Kopelson"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22fad9ab-67cb-3297-82af-a643aa28b61b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Dis\/Integrating the Gay\/Queer Binary: \"Reconstructed Identity Politics\" for a Performative Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250728","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":8888,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[54726,54785]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BLAISE ASTRA PARKER"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.20.1.0071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73877902-03f2-396c-b07b-e7de31db2741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.20.1.0071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Losing Jay: A Meditation on Teaching while Grieving","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.20.1.0071","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. G. Zerilli"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 2-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"This Universalism Which Is Not One","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566241","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11224,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495817,495882]],"Locations in B":[[69539,69604]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Richmond Ellis"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"320","pagination":"pp. 320-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Camping It up in the Francoist Camp: Reflections on and in \"Ante el espejo\" of Luis Antonio de Villena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251107","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":6380,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[142887,142985]],"Locations in B":[[17040,17138]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANN MARIE LESHKOWICH"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1559372X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62763830"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-228027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ea1dfca-c19d-3cb0-953d-b1d3bae581d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvietstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vietnamese Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Radicalism<\/em> and Ethnographic Research on Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Vietnam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377962","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":4480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elena Giusti","Victoria Rimell"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27078490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05067294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567713383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82afcee8-ddcf-3c10-ac62-9a6a7b17df7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27078490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergilius1959"}],"isPartOf":"Vergilius (1959-)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"The Vergilian Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"VERGIL AND THE FEMININE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27078490","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8905,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[45230,45337]],"Locations in B":[[24508,24615]],"subTitle":"INTRODUCTION"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shelly Jarenski"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25759559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2696cc63-c657-3e8a-a3a9-4258571c744f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25759559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Invisibility Embraced: The Abject as a Site of Agency in Ellison's \"Invisible Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25759559","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11534,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430994,431232],[456994,457130]],"Locations in B":[[65099,65337],[65539,65670]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on interviews, participant observation, and Internet postings, this article analyzes gender in a local Goth scene. These Goths use the confines of the subcultural scene, where they are relatively safe from outsider view, and the scene's celebration of sexuality as resources to resist mainstream notions of passive femininity. This article probes the struggles of women in this Goth scene to examine the broader possibilities and limitations of strategies of active feminine sexuality in gaining gender egalitarianism. I argue that although these women do transform sexual expectations and experiences, their gains are hampered by an overly narrow vision of gender egalitarianism that both obfuscates the broader landscape of gender inequality and blurs the reproduction of an ideological system in which romance trumps sex.","creator":["Amy C. Wilkins"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56ea6c65-c4c6-3093-8e31-d7d03f2835ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"So Full of Myself as a Chick\": Goth Women, Sexual Independence, and Gender Egalitarianism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149405","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For over a century, the Marshall Islands have been entangled between the United States and Japan in their conquest of the Central Pacific; yet because of this, these islands have also been a place where multiple masculinities have converged, competed, and transformed each other. This is especially true around the site of Kwajalein Atoll, where terrain understood in Marshallese terms as female or maternal has been reshaped and masculinized through the semiotics of colonialism and militarization. This article focuses specifically on three local representations of masculinity: the knowledgeable but strategic Marshallese \"Etao,\" symbolized by a creative and resourceful male trickster spirit; the heroic but paternalistic American \"Patriot,\" as enacted via the perpetual battlefield of military and weaponstesting missions; and the adventurous but self-sacrificing \"Dankichi,\" deployed in Japan during the 1930s and echoed nowadays in the long-distance tuna-fishing industry. Cross-reading Judith Butler and R W Connell, this is an exploration of the \"theater\" of these masculinities in relationship to one another, and the story of how different superpowers strive for domination by emasculating a third colonial site and its subjects.","creator":["Greg Dvorak"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f39947d9-f0c1-3070-982a-9e65f0be42f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Martial Islands\": Making Marshallese Masculinities between American and Japanese Militarism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724788","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11265,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524068]],"Locations in B":[[62790,62868]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amrohini Sahay"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11791b9c-b13d-3bf3-b9ab-17719693a1e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Cybermaterialism\" and the Invention of the Cybercultural Everyday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057436","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11759,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[480833,480983]],"Locations in B":[[28867,29020]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The present paper explores the conceptual limitations of the bully discourses that ground UK anti-bullying policy frameworks and psychological research literatures on school bullying, suggesting they largely ignore gender, (hetero) sexuality and the social, cultural and subjective dynamics of conflict and aggression among teen-aged girls. To explore the limitations of bully discourses in practice, the paper draws on a pilot, interview-based study of girls' experiences of aggression and bullying, illustrating how friendships and conflicts among the girls are thoroughly heterosexualized, en-cultured and classed. Drawing on girls and parent interview narratives, I also trace some of the effects of bully discourses set in motion in schools to intervene into conflicts among girls. I suggest these practices miss the complexity of the dynamics at play among girls and also neglect the power relations of parenting, ethnicity, class and school choice, which can inform how, why and when bullying discourses are mobilized.","creator":["Jessica Ringrose"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"552097fb-e837-353c-bebf-a7d6ff73f258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"'Just Be Friends': Exposing the Limits of Educational Bully Discourses for Understanding Teen Girls' Heterosexualized Friendships and Conflicts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375373","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8564,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473846,473940]],"Locations in B":[[10204,10297]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the politics and explanatory plausibility of performative accounts of state action through a critical analysis of the themes of continuity and change in the work of David Campbell. As political interventions, performative models reproduce a number of taken-for-granted conceptual distinctions. As explanations, performative models are undermined by an account of the social that privileges representation. Drawing on materialist feminist critiques of performativity, I argue for the necessity of locating accounts of subject formation and state action in the multiple logics that constitute the social.","creator":["Mark Laffey"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34999403-a9be-3104-b63a-05647adb2611"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Locating Identity: Performativity, Foreign Policy and State Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097687","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9084,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[10598,10667]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JEMIMA REPO"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0a04028-c4c4-37fa-a0ce-1c2064eb3d85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45084501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engagements with Feminist Knowledge and Methodology in International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084501","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":2177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay offers a critical engagement with the ideal of policy relevant environmental knowledge. Using examples in environmental governance and conservation, it argues that by packaging knowledge in terms and categories that are considered politically salient, scientists do not just inform policy-making by providing information about presumed pre-existing objects in nature and environment; rather, science is constitutive of those objects and renders them amenable for policy and governance. These political implications of scientific knowledge imply a need for critical scrutiny of the interests that science serves and fails to serve as well as mechanisms to ensure the accountability of science. This essay is a modified and expanded version of the inaugural lecture with the same title that was delivered on June 2, 2016 at Wageningen University, the Netherlands.","creator":["Esther Turnhout"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26500647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09724923"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60639179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235485"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"335ee4f5-8281-35aa-b64b-b592d2f234ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26500647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conssoci"}],"isPartOf":"Conservation & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Environmental Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26500647","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"293db447-868c-3bb5-8e44-fe054d245117"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25517320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"IASIL Bibliography Bulletin for 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517320","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":25597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using Judith Butler's notion that bodies are materialized via performances, \"resignifying\" disability involves a \"democratizing contestation\" of staircases because they exclude those in wheelchairs. Paleoanthropologist Maxine Sheets-Johnstone shows how consistent bipedal locomotion, together with the knowledge that we will die (upon which mutuality is based), are ingredients of our pan-hominid speciation, not contingent constructions. As axiologically important as contestation is, it forecloses the possibility of achieving a mutuality with others that is wonderfully possible.","creator":["Susan S. Stocker"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7252cbc7-f291-31d4-94e8-947c742f5b08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Problems of Embodiment and Problematic Embodiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810559","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11976,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439426,439574]],"Locations in B":[[28185,28333]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JANIS P. STOUT"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49ed271f-757d-3ffa-bcbf-6b6904923654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533287","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":1586,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[92117,92191]],"Locations in B":[[7210,7282]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Weimann"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing with a Difference: Revisiting \"Pen\" and \"Voice\" in Shakespeare's Theater","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902278","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":11085,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[448650,448736]],"Locations in B":[[52067,52153]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores sociologist Jane Ward's gender and sexuality theory: the notion of \"gender labour\" in which a cisgender (not crossdressed or trans*) partner participates in co-creating his or her partner's queer gender. While work on gender labour thus far has focused on contemporary subjects, this article demonstrates the ways in which the concept can be generatively applied to an early modern context. The concept is pushed to its extremes in John Lyly's Gallathea, in which the two genderqueer crossdressers, Gallathea and Phillida, each thinking that the other is male, create and enact romantic love scenes that involve gender play and a co-created divestment from biological sex. Cet article examine la th\u00e9orie du sexe et du genre de la sociologue Jane Ward, en particulier la notion de \u00abn\u00e9gociation du genre\u00bb dans laquelle des partenaires cissexuel (ni travesti, ni trans) contribuent \u00e0 cr\u00e9er l'identit\u00e9 homosexuelle de l'un et de l'autre. Alors que la recherche sur cette \u00abn\u00e9gociation du genre\u00bb s'est surtout pench\u00e9e sur des questions contemporaines, cet article montre comment cette notion peut \u00eatre appliqu\u00e9e \u00e0 des contextes relevant des d\u00e9buts de la modernit\u00e9. Cette notion est pouss\u00e9e \u00e0 l'extr\u00eame limite dans le Gallathea de John Lyly, pi\u00e8ce dans laquelle deux personnages travestis et homosexuels, Gallathea et Phillida, qui pensent que leur vis-\u00e0-vis est un autre homme, cr\u00e9ent et r\u00e9alisent des sc\u00e8nes d'amour entra\u00eenant des jeux de genre et une r\u00e9v\u00e9lation commune de leur sexe biologique.","creator":["SIMONE CHESS"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43918950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034429X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646848243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"273c1eff-8824-399b-807b-249fb5d4ad9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43918950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renarefo"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Or whatever you be\": Crossdressing, Sex, and Gender Labour in John Lyly's \"Gallathea\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43918950","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David S. Churchill"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976310"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9deead57-41f4-360f-8255-2e3fee4008cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20462241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histeducquar"}],"isPartOf":"History of Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"History of Education Society","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Broad Shoulders: Body-Building and Physical Culture in Chicago 1890-1920","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462241","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":12721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Two central debates about power converged in debate around the work of Laclau and Mouffe. On the one hand, they were key figures in Western Marxism, responsible for reconceptualizing its central concept\u2014hegemony. On the other hand, they did so in a way that seemed to capitulate to the anti-Marxist politics of Foucault. Foucault is unable to find any place for error or falsehood. Without a correct means for identifying the fallacies of consciousness there can be no question of politics being bounded by truth and falsehood, by real and false interests, by full and occuluded knowledge. Laclau and Mouffe dissolve the boundaries defining the critical, radical project of power in Western Marxism. Once the sovereignty of consciousness is cast in terms of popular consumer preferences, rather than radical intellectual, preferences, the central radical debates about power become evident as a matter of the distaste of elites.","creator":["Stewart Clegg"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b24aba6-c781-3287-8ce0-0ef763df4d4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25611501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Concepts of Power, Changing Concepts of Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611501","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10638,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147845,148055]],"Locations in B":[[61863,62072]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers language learner agency from a poststructuralist perspective, focusing on how agency is discursively constituted as individuals position themselves and are positioned as (potential) agents within ideologically defined spaces. As such, I regard agency as inherently unstable and as a discursively mobilized capacity to act. Drawing on a corpus of 18 interviews with adult immigrant small business owners in the United States, this study uses both quantitative and qualitative discourse analytic approaches in considering (a) recurrent linguistic constructs used across interviews to position interviewees as (in)agentive characters in the story worlds of their autobiographical accounts; (b) how these constructs are mobilized in the co-constructed positioning work of interviewer and interviewees; and (c) so-called common sense ideological discourses by which the interviewees are constituted as agents who rationally and responsibly make self-generated choices and act on them. This multilayered positioning work constrained interviewees to speaking from positions of language learner or immigrant or small business owner, but at the same time such positioning mobilized recognizable subjectivities for them, enabling them to act in interpretable and meaningful ways.","creator":["ELIZABETH R. MILLER","Elisabeth R. Miller"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27896742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Agency in the Making: Adult Immigrants' Accounts of Language Learning and Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896742","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9296,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147690,147813]],"Locations in B":[[9676,9797]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4024107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51c3f9c6-20d1-32d0-a68a-e18bd75ee1a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4024107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"A8","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-A8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4024107","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra M. Gustafson"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eafd414e-1463-315b-9fe1-0256f587c338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20492241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Literature and the Public Sphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492241","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay engages with Maadathy (dir. Leena Manimekalai, 2019) to explore how space is constructed as a marker of caste and interrogate the concomitant intersection of caste and gender in a divided community. Through the retooling of myth, Maadathy explores the horror at the heart of a patriarchal society that is invested in caste as a means of oppression, violence, and inequity. However, such a perverse agenda comes back to haunt the community, which is invested in destroying an adolescent girl without any concern for her desires and finally trying to deify her and find a way for the catharsis of their guilt. Untouchability runs as a subtext throughout Maadathy as Yosana and her family are marked, even more inhumanely and unjustly, as unseeable people, wherein the onus to be not seen falls on them. They are abused verbally and physically when they are going about their mundane chores. Nonetheless, the focus on the joyful demeanor of the pleasure-seeking Yosana through the Lacanian lens of the gaze initially enables the understanding of the yearning for subjective mastery from the other side of the village community whose men repeatedly target and try to contain her. However, Yosana\u2019s gaze does not allow itself to be domesticated. The jouissance of Yosana, marking her singularity as the casteless adolescent girl, troubles those who want to contain and destroy her effervescence and, even after her death, continues to haunt them as they are blind to the impossibility of knowing the secret of her desire.","creator":["Swarnavel Eswaran"],"datePublished":"2022-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48674178","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1055204157"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2018203760"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c8f2bca-34b9-3be5-b22b-403887806ea1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48674178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"castjsociexcl"}],"isPartOf":"CASTE: A Global Journal on Social Exclusion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"Brandeis University, Center for Global Development and Sustainability","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Maadathy-An Unfairy Tale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48674178","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10111,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[62369,62440]],"subTitle":"Caste, Space, and Gaze"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ageeth Sluis"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031615"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45202766"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49f2cada-cdd8-3e42-b9d8-b79db223ec08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americas"}],"isPartOf":"The Americas","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"BATACLANISMO! Or, How Female Deco Bodies Transformed Postrevolutionary Mexico City<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664974","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":14624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Toril Moi"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a938ddf2-ac30-30f9-aad1-6c78e5cdc834"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Thinking Through Examples: What Ordinary Language Philosophy Can Do for Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542758","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12209,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477205,477271]],"Locations in B":[[65860,65926]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELISSA MAIL\u00c4NDER"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e336e36d-0e99-3a01-a54d-13a2b5e2d2b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Sense of a Rape Photograph: Sexual Violence as Social Performance on the Eastern Front, 1939-1944","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862408","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":15688,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[25955,26061]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Angelina C. Yee"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2719347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"200e0ccf-ff57-34f3-beac-be2531fe2f1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2719347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Self, Sexuality, and Writing in Honglou meng","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2719347","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":13567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines low-income white rural teenagers' management of race and class-based inequality. It analyzes how these teenagers constructed boundaries to distinguish themselves from outsiders, but also to distinguish themselves from the local abject category of \u201crutter.\u201d The findings reveal hidden interconnections between race and class in interactional practice, and highlight local processes of differentiation through which actors attempt to deflect stigma and attain credibility. The paper discusses how interactional mechanisms such as \u201cinternal othering\u201d and \u201cstigma-theory\u201d bolster race and class credibility, but reproduce inequality.","creator":["Edward W. Morris"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.3.301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1e6e42-063b-3d47-8ebc-3e471176d92a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/symbinte.35.3.301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Repelling the \u201cRutter\u201d: Social Differentiation Among Rural Teenagers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.3.301","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Tunisian Jewish female body was subjected to a dramatic fattening process in preparation for marriage. Immediately following the girl's engagement, her body became the focus of an intense transformative regimen aimed at achieving the aesthetic ideals of dramatic weight gain and 'shining and whitening' of the skin. This paper offers a critical reading of the representation of the female body in postcards and travelogues, in descriptions written by members of the Tunisian Jewish community, and in interviews conducted with Tunisian Jews now living in Israel. Taken together, these voices called for a multidimensional examination of central themes including the ideal female body, its boundaries, and transgressions of those boundaries; mechanisms of control; and the complex relationships between honor and shame and between attraction and repulsion. The full, rounded bodies of Tunisian Jewish brides were sites of transformation where these multiple meanings came together in complex and at times contrasting ways.","creator":["\u05d4\u05d2\u05e8 \u05e1\u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05df","\u05d0\u05e1\u05ea\u05e8 \u05d9\u05d5\u05d4\u05e1","Hagar Salamon","Esther Juhasz"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03337030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4a7451b-12c0-3b3f-8324-39d5181dc89d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23358608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudjewifolk"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Folklore \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05dc\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"'Goddesses of Flesh and Metal': Gazes on the Tradition of Fattening Jewish Brides in Tunisia \/ '\u05d0\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d1\u05e9\u05e8 \u05d5\u05de\u05ea\u05db\u05ea': \u05d4\u05de\u05d1\u05d8 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05db\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05e1\u05d9\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358608","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d6","wordCount":9726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carol Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e329b7-8be4-3bae-971c-373cda7a7376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"This Photography Which Is Not One: In the Gray Zone with Tina Modotti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779192","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":14345,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477195,477271],[477829,477898]],"Locations in B":[[60500,60576],[78762,78831]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on the author's experience in devising a localized version of The Vagina Monologues in Hong Kong, this paper critically appraises the 'global vaginahood' in the globalization of The Vagina Monologues and the V-Day movement that reproduces a core-periphery relationship in the transnational women's movement. As a theatrical performance and a worldwide movement, these productions are remarkable for the manner in which they raise awareness about women's sexuality and violence against women in different parts of the world. Critical questions, however, remain on the rhetoric of universalism and the ethnocentric methods of the global campaign, with US women's experiences and agenda defining those of women in other parts of the world. As a worldwide campaign, the V-Day movement reproduces a hierarchical model between the global North and South, with an emphasis on Western leadership rather than coalition between partners with different experiences, priorities, and strategies. The paper argues that feminists may develop more effective coalitions with local women by recognizing and identifying locally derived creative efforts to respond to issues that are pertinent to their lives. As such, the paper is a push for dialogues in the V-Day campaign and transnational women's movement in general.","creator":["Sealing Cheng"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"652e7b06-88db-3406-93f3-dfc81c416e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"92","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"questioning global vaginahood: reflections from adapting<\/strong> The Vagina Monologues<\/em> in Hong Kong<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664030","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Hawkesworth"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5bd4d87-2525-361d-a0d7-aba6e0b620ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Confundir el g\u00e9nero (Confounding gender)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625714","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":18192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[115883,115966]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The central argument of this article is that the most valued female bodies in Rio de Janeiro are those of white Brazilians who are able to embody the symbolic qualities of mulattoes. In particular, I focus on the characteristics associated with mulatto women in the context of carnival, and look at how in recent years white women have progressively come to occupy the spotlight in this setting. The article explores the Brazilian fascination with the mulata in terms of stereotypes that organize images of social difference and convey specific longings and desire. It situates the emergence of this fascination within the context of colonial gender and race relations and, later, the development of a national ideology focused on the value of whitening through \"mixing.\" While showing how women's bodies have become surfaces upon which masculinist and nationalist desires are deployed, the article argues that morenidade (brownness), while commonly thought of as interchangeable with mulatice (mulattoness) as a central value and self-concept in Brazilian society, is in fact the preferred social type. The article concludes that morenidade is one aspect of the idealized \"perfect body\" in Rio's society, where locals manipulate their physiques using numerous techniques to obtain such an ideal for themselves. El argumento central de este art\u00edculo es que los cuerpos femeninos m\u00e1s valorizados en R\u00edo de Janeiro son los de las brasile\u00f1as blancas que logran incorporar simb\u00f3licamente las caracter\u00edsticas de las mulatas. En particular, me centro en las caracter\u00edsticas asociadas con las mulatas en el contexto del carnaval, y analizo c\u00f3mo en a\u00f1os recientes mujeres blancas han comenzado a ocupar el centro de la atenci\u00f3n p\u00fablica en este \u00e1mbito. El art\u00edculo investiga la fascinaci\u00f3n brasile\u00f1a con la mulata en cuanto estereotipo que organiza im\u00e1genes de diferencia social y comunica a\u00f1oranzas y deseos espec\u00edficos. En este sentido, sit\u00fao la emergencia de esta fascinaci\u00f3n en el contexto de relaciones coloniales de raza y g\u00e9nero, y posteriormente, del desarrollo de una ideolog\u00eda nacionalista centrada en el valor social del blanqueamiento a trav\u00e9s de la \"mezcla\". A la vez que demuestro la forma en que los cuerpos femeninos se han transformado en superficies sobre las que se despliegan deseos nacionalistas y machistas, propongo que la morenidad, aunque com\u00fanmente definida como sin\u00f3nimo de mulatice en cuanto valor central y auto-concepto en la sociedad brasile\u00f1a, es en \u00faltima instancia el tipo social preferido. El art\u00edculo concluye con la idea de que la morenidades un aspecto del \"cuerpo perfecto\" idealizado por la sociedad en R\u00edo de Janeiro, donde los locales se auto-aplican variadas t\u00e9cnicas corporales con el fin de obtener el ideal social local.","creator":["NATASHA PRAVAZ"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41800448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08263663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f437cc15-bc67-3117-aee0-bb4e9f4296ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41800448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajlatiamercar"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies \/ Revue canadienne des \u00e9tudes latino-am\u00e9ricaines et cara\u00efbes","issueNumber":"67","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE TAN FROM IPANEMA: FREYRE, MORENIDADE, AND THE CULT OF THE BODY IN RIO DE JANEIRO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41800448","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kendall Thomas"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1122999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ea51e83-d76a-3df9-a24b-303e1fb9013d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1122999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86,"pageEnd":"1516","pageStart":"1431","pagination":"pp. 1431-1516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Beyond the Privacy Principle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1122999","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":44990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I distill the complex discourse of queer theory into four claims and then employ those claims to construct an original interpretation of the 2003 decision of Lawrence v. Texas in which the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Texas law criminalizing same-sex sodomy and overturned the 1986 case of Bowers v. Hardwick. Drawing on the queer performance in the reality television show Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, I characterize Lawrence as a makeover of Bowers. Using Queer Eye's parody of sexual identity as a model, I offer a parody of judicial power, and conclude that my application of queer theory produces a better account of the complexity of constitutional change and a more savvy understanding of the persistence of power than that which is typically offered in conventional constitutional discourse.","creator":["Susan Burgess"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4148040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1764b81-84fa-3dec-adc9-e805e6bbd4f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4148040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Queer (Theory) Eye for the Straight (Legal) Guy: Lawrence v. Texas' Makeover of Bowers v. Hardwick","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4148040","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":13890,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495217,495282]],"Locations in B":[[84366,84431]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I argue that there is an important analogy between sex selection and selective abortion of fetuses diagnosed with Down syndrome. There are surprising parallels between the social construction of Down syndrome as a disability and the deeply entrenched institutionalization of sexual difference in many societies. Prevailing concepts of gender and mental retardation exert a powerful influence in constructing the sexual identities and life plans of people with Down syndrome, and also affect their families' lives.","creator":["Sophia Isako Wong"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1580e501-0a82-3837-af2d-28d2c1a8bfb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"At Home with down Syndrome and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810797","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":14269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The authors suggest that social movements research should recognize more the potential of the protesting body as an agent of social and political change. This contention is based on studying the relations among the body, gender, and knowledge in social protest by comparing two Israeli-Jewish leftist protest movements, a woman-only movement (Women in Black) and a mixed-gender one (The 21st Year), which protested against the Israeli Occupation in the early 1990s. The comparison reveals reversed patterns of body\/knowledge relations, each connoting a different meaning and outcome of the social protest. In the mixed movement, the body served as an instrument in carrying out the political knowledge and thus was left unmarked. In Women in Black, on the other hand, the body was the message, as it produced and articulated political ideology, simultaneously challenging the national security legacy and the gender order in Israel.","creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy","Tamar Rapoport"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c2fa416-fa24-3934-9c94-926b3305f2e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Body, Gender, and Knowledge in Protest Movements: The Israeli Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594640","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret E. Dorsey"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3598688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01630350"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770670"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211163"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b6cfdee-0e5e-37eb-a474-5bfcee6e3989"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3598688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamermusirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Music Review \/ Revista de M\u00fasica Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Borderland Music as Symbolic Forms of Nationalisms: The Best of the Texas Tornados, Partners, and \u00a1Viva Luckenbach!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3598688","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":13380,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[417340,417655],[431710,431963],[443403,443762]],"Locations in B":[[6434,6750],[47441,47690],[65083,65466]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent consumer research has examined contexts where market-based exchange, gift-giving, sharing, and other modes of exchange occur simultaneously and obey several intersecting logics, but consumer research has not conceptualized these so-called hybrid economic forms nor explained how these hybrids are shaped and sustained. Using ethnographic and netnographic data from the collaborative network of geocaching, this study explains the emergence of hybrid economies. Performativity theory is mobilized to demonstrate that the hybrid status of these economies is constantly under threat of destabilization by the struggle between competing performativities of market and nonmarket modes of exchange. Despite latent tension between competing performativities, the hybrid economy is sustained through consumer\u2013producer engagements in collaborative consumption and production, the creation of zones of indeterminacy, and the enactment of tournaments of value that dissipate controversies around hybrid transactions. Implications are drawn for consumer research on the interplay between market and nonmarket economies.","creator":["DAIANE SCARABOTO"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26570191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00935301"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48417873"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227346"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb72ef9e-61ab-3e39-b7a2-5a26d086d050"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26570191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Consumer Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Business - Business operations"],"title":"Selling, Sharing, and Everything In Between","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26570191","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":20456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Hybrid Economies of Collaborative Networks"} +{"abstract":"This article aims to identify a lesser-known generation of female writers that has given a new direction to US Latina literature in the twenty-first century. Beyond the significance of the Latina boom that marked the 1980s and 1990s, the latest generation differs from their predecessors in important ways, amounting to a paradigm shift in US Latina literature that needs to be thoroughly explored. To carry out this task, I have selected three canonical Latina boom novels: Sandra Cisneros\u2019s The House on Mango Street (1984), Julia \u00c1lvarez\u2019s How the Garc\u00eda Girls Lost Their Accents (1991) and Cristina Garc\u00eda\u2019s Dreaming in Cuban (1992). These texts will be contrasted with Angie Cruz\u2019s Soledad (2001), Achy Obejas\u2019s Days of Awe (2001) and Felicia Luna Lemus\u2019s Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties (2004). My contention is that while the US Latina literary boom might have sought synthesis or the creation of a third space, associated with Gloria Anzald\u00faa\u2019s consciousness of the borderlands, these twenty-first century female writers offer representations of nonnormative sexualities that take indeterminacy and ambiguity to a limit that defies all resolution. Este art\u00edculo pretende identificar una generaci\u00f3n de autoras, a\u00fan poco conocidas, que ha promovido una nueva corriente dentro del campo de la literatura latina estadounidense del siglo XXI. M\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la relevancia del boom latino de la d\u00e9cada de los ochenta y noventa, esta nueva generaci\u00f3n difiere de sus precesoras en importantes aspectos, evidenciando as\u00ed un cambio de paradigma que se examinar\u00e1 a lo largo de este art\u00edculo. Para ello, se analizar\u00e1n tres de las novelas can\u00f3nicas del boom: The House on Mango Street (1984) de Sandra Cisneros, How the Garc\u00eda Girls Lost Their Accents (1991) de Julia \u00c1lvarez y Dreaming in Cuban (1992) de Cristina Garc\u00eda. Estos textos se contrastar\u00e1n con Soledad (2001) de Angie Cruz, Days of Awe (2001) de Achy Obejas y Trace Elements of Random Tea Parties (2004) de Felicia Luna Lemus. La tesis de la que parto es que mientras las autoras del boom crean una s\u00edntesis o un tercer espacio asociado a la conciencia de la frontera de Gloria Anzald\u00faa, la generaci\u00f3n m\u00e1s reciente de escritoras ofrece representaciones de sexualidades no normativas que ahondan en la ambig\u00fcedad impidiendo toda resoluci\u00f3n.","creator":["Macarena Garc\u00eda-Avello"],"datePublished":"2019-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26732509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65d33d87-d407-3eec-bb71-d7093633d584"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26732509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond the Latina Boom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26732509","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9093,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[37026,37202]],"subTitle":"New Directions within the Field of US Latina Literature"} +{"abstract":"This Comment reflects upon the relationship between gender and technology, and how it has been theorized in recent decades. I argue that while feminist approaches have had considerable influence on mainstream social studies of science and technology, tensions remain. I go on to explore the proliferation of feminist research which conceptualizes technology as culture. I suggest that the contemporary focus on cultural representation and consumption, exciting and productive as it is in many respects, has contributed to the neglect of design studies. These are necessary to fully elucidate how gender relations figure in the construction of technology.","creator":["Judy Wajcman"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4383dfbf-0c84-3066-adb0-3361c9b8739d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Reflections on Gender and Technology Studies: In What State is the Art?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285810","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although many teachers explore art images with students as a source of personal inspiration for artmaking, they rarely interpret images as visual culture. Such images exist within networks of culturally learned meanings and power relations that surround the production and consumption of images. Teachers rarely consider how viewers negotiate meanings by linking images with cultural narratives that help them understand the ways cultural knowledge is learned, performed, and may be transformed. This study shows how elementary preservice teachers in an art methods class investigated an image using codes of representation; their own subjectivities; cultural-historical contexts; intertextual connections and modalities; cultural narratives; potential social consequences; and, responsive action.","creator":["Nancy Pauly"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61220476-a8a2-3ce9-802b-9c501ff72a3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1321013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Interpreting Visual Culture as Cultural Narratives in Teacher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321013","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we take a queer linguistics approach to the analysis of data from British newspaper articles that discuss the introduction of same-sex marriage. Drawing on methods from critical discourse analysis (CDA) and corpus linguistics, we focus on the construction of agency in relation to the government extending marriage to same-sex couples, and those resisting this. We show that opponents to same-sex marriage are represented and represent themselves as victims whose moral values, traditions and civil liberties are being threatened by the state. Specifically, we argue that victimhood is invoked in a way that both enables and permits discourses of implicit homophobia.","creator":["Georgina Turner","Sara Mills","Isabelle van der Bom","Laura Coffey-Glover","Laura L Paterson","Lucy Jones"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ff3668e-9e23-36c4-90ca-4adc129b00e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Opposition as victimhood in newspaper debates about same-sex marriage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377403","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Delphy"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b50099d-804c-3437-8cae-e8537207aff7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"87","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Invention of French Feminism: An Essential Move","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930332","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BRIAN CONNOLLY"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751275"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44849568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1530c9d7-70bc-3ee8-b79b-bdee9d6223cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40925935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlyrepublic"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Early Republic","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Every Family Become a School of Abominable Impurity\": Incest and Theology in the Early Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925935","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493989]],"Locations in B":[[7095,7220]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u05d2\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05e1\u05de\u05dc"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23687757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2312492X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"743142169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fdee6a5-9dc9-3210-bdb5-40eb70588ea0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23687757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tavmusiartssoci"}],"isPartOf":"Tav+: Music, Arts, Society \/ \u05ea\u05d5+: \u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4, \u05d0\u05de\u05e0\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea, \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4","issueNumber":"6","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Dr. Bat-Sheva Shapira","sourceCategory":["Music","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"'\u05dc\u05d0 \u05d1\u05d5\u05d1\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05e3 \u05d0\u05d7\u05d3'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23687757","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the prevalence of HIV infection in Cuba remains among the lowest in the world, recent data suggest that the rate of infection has risen sharply since 1996, particularly among men who have sex with men. A key factor that creates conditions of risk among homosexual and bisexual men in Cuba is the stigmatization of homosexuality, a mechanism that drives the epidemic underground and poses obstacles to targeted educational efforts. This article examines and theoretically contextualizes both the devaluation of homosexuality in Cuba and recent efforts to promote sexual diversity and to create inclusive spaces for HIV education. Drawing in particular on the theoretical work of Judith Butler and Michel Foucault, I argue that in early postrevolutionary Cuba, the fusion of patriarchal machista values and authoritarian socialism heightened the stigmatization of homosexuality because, in such a context, challenges to the symbolic laws of patriarchy also posed challenges to revolutionary rhetoric. Recent efforts to destigmatize homosexuality, led in particular by the National Center for Sex Education (El Centro Nacional de Educaci\u00f3n Sexual, or CENESEX) and its director, Mariela Castro, have not only contributed to HIV educational efforts; the destigmatization of homosexuality is also important to moving the revolutionary goal of equality toward meaningful realization. Mientras la incidencia de VIH en Cuba se mantiene entre la m\u00e1s baja del mundo, datos recientes sugieren que ha aumentado de forma significativa desde 1996, especialmente entre hombres que tienen sexo con hombres. Un factor clave que crea las condiciones de riesgo entre hombres homosexuales y bisexuales en Cuba es la estigmatizaci\u00f3n de la homosexualidad como mecanismo que pone soterr\u00e1nea la epidemia y obstaculiza los esfuerzos educativos dirigidos. Este art\u00edculo examina y contextualiza te\u00f3ricamente tanto la devaloraci\u00f3n de la homosexualidad en Cuba como los esfuerzos recientes para promover la diversidad sexual y crear espacios inclusivos para la educaci\u00f3n sobre VIH. Refiri\u00e9ndome en particular al trabajo te\u00f3rico de Judith Butler y Michel Foucault, sostengo que en los primeros a\u00f1os de la revoluci\u00f3n, la fusi\u00f3n de valores patriarcales machistas y un socialismo autoritario agudizo la estigmatizaci\u00f3n de la homosexualidad ya que desaf\u00edos a las leyes simb\u00f3licas del patriarcado fueron tambi\u00e9n desaf\u00edos a la ret\u00f3rica revolucionaria. Los esfuerzos recientes para de-estigmatizar a la homosexualidad, encabezados especialmente por el Centro Nacional de Educaci\u00f3n Sexual (CENESEX) y su directora Mariela Castro, no solo han contribuido al esfuerzo educativo en cuanto a VIH; la de-estigmatizaci\u00f3n de la homosexualidad es tambi\u00e9n de importancia en llevar la meta revolucionaria de igualdad hacia su plena realizaci\u00f3n.","creator":["JANELLE HIPPE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03614441"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cubanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Cuban Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performance, Power, and Resistance: Theorizing the Links among Stigma, Sexuality, and HIV\/AIDS in Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487511","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8826,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephan Palmi\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9ae1750-6bf6-3ace-932e-5bf65452d009"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"852","pagination":"pp. 852-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Thinking with Ngangas: Reflections on Embodiment and the Limits of \"Objectively Necessary Appearances\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879367","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":17423,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101653,101785]],"Locations in B":[[74290,74424]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KATHRYN R. FININ-FARBER"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fca7322a-8890-3f73-8cc1-7e51044ba92a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Framing (the) Woman: \"The White Devil\" and the Deployment of Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917312","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonia Mehta","Peter Ninnes"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/376538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49882921"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bb17513-8a89-346c-97b2-bb355de007f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/376538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Postmodernism Debates and Comparative Education: A Critical Discourse Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/376538","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8759,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[55530,55620]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lee Clark Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"And Rescue Us from Ourselves\": Becoming Someone in Jack London's The Sea-Wolf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902840","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":7553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[42726,42915]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A question intimated by some contemporary scholarship (but not yet fully explored) is how cultural practices that law both enables and limits might be related to new styles of politics and redefinitions of community. This query is first explored in the context of Queer Nation's response to the decision in Bowers v. Hardwick (1986), which reduced homosexual identity to a single behavior. Queers' subsequent embrace of a cultural politics of \"direct address\" suggests that the transformation of identities and communities must be built from social and cultural practices that seek to redefine citizens' affiliations. While \"turning away from the law\" is one strategy for redefining political practice, the case of Karen Ulane-a transsexual who was fired after having sex reassignment surgery-suggests another: The articulation of a queer notion of \"nonidentity\" within the legal field may afford possibilities for destabilizing dominant legal classifications such as \"sex\" and \"gender.\"","creator":["Lisa C. Bower"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4575c1fd-adbf-329f-a1e0-3e8e88370a45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3054022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"1033","pageStart":"1009","pagination":"pp. 1009-1034","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Acts and the Politics of \"Direct Address\": Rethinking Law, Culture, and Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054022","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12678,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[60824,60924]],"Locations in B":[[38376,38472]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the features and functions of a specific aspect of sexual invective levelled against Demosthenes in Aeschines' Against Timarchus (1.131, 181) and On the False Embassy (2.88, 99, 150-151): that of being a kinaidos, \"catamite\". Aeschines attributes two fundamental features to Demosthenes as a kinaidos: one moral, referring to a lack of military prowess, civic unworthiness and ethical flaws; and the other physical, denoting bodily anomalies and womanish attire. The goal of this derisory vignette is to portray Demosthenes as not being well-integrated into the Athenian community, thereby activating out-group hostility and turning the law-court audience against him.","creator":["Andreas Serafim"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07919417"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34820883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn96-027092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cf6633f-43d5-37c7-a857-6ddedf9e2b87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26530658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"classicsireland"}],"isPartOf":"Classics Ireland","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Classical Association of Ireland","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revisiting Sexual Invective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530658","volumeNumber":"23-24","wordCount":6900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Demosthenes as Kinaidos<\/em> in Aeschines' Speeches"} +{"abstract":"The term bodyscape encourages thinking about representation of bodies at multiple scales\u2014from different bodies as they move through space to the microlandscape of individual bodily differences. A hegemonic bodyscape's representations tend to idealize and essentialize bodies' differences to reinforce normative ideas about a society's socioeconomic organization. But, a dominant bodyscape is never absolute. Bodyscapes that depart from or subvert hegemonic representations may simultaneously exist. In Western society, the biomedical bodyscape predominates in scientific understandings of bodily difference. Its representation of sex differences conveys heteronormative notions about gender and sexuality. Because the biomedical bodyscape frames studies of ancient bodies, investigators need recognize how their considerations of labor divisions, familial organization, and reproduction may situate modern (hetero)sexist representations deep within antiquity. To innovate analyses of socioeconomic relations, queer theory allows scholars to interrogate human nature. Doing so produces alternative bodyscapes that represent the diversity of past peoples' social and sexual lives.","creator":["Pamela L. Geller"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e67d3c4-db34-357c-ad5d-9ee6fef357f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20638722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"504","pagination":"pp. 504-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Bodyscapes, Biology, and Heteronormativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638722","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":11383,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[71369,71462]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria B. Clark"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23285725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e95d6254-0b7f-3ef5-8a7c-0fb32b016ebb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23285725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","issueNumber":"40\/41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"FEMINIZATION AS AN EXPERIENCE OF LIMITS: SHIFTING GENDER ROLES IN THE FANTASTIC NARRATIVE OF SILVINA OCAMPO AND CRISTINA PERI ROSSI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23285725","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9529,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[102195,102313],[175100,175186],[175274,175388],[363607,363886]],"Locations in B":[[34526,34644],[38987,39075],[39068,39182],[52433,52712]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shirley R. Steinberg"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"894aec3a-45f4-33c5-afa5-876308451ae0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EARLY EDUCATION AS A GENDERED CONSTRUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157425","volumeNumber":"491","wordCount":3596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using the turn of the century blackface performer Bert Williams as a case study, this essay explores how we might think about black male performativity in the New World as a historical formation, one that extends both over the time of modernity and across the space of diaspora. I draw from contemporary theories of circum-atlantic performance and black feminist studies of the impact of slavery on black racial and gendered identities, to argue that performance affords a unique window into how blackness is constructed in a space between the black male performer and his equally racialized New World audience. The essay theorizes a notion of key black male performances as 'signature acts', then explores discussions of minstrelsy by other black American writers such as Ralph Ellison, Ishmael Reed, and the black British writer Caryl Phillips. Using Fanon's notions of triple-consciousness in tandem with Brechtian and Freudian theories of alienated performances and jokes, the essay concludes with a brief analysis of some of the gendered significations in lyrics from Bert Williams' first musical comedy and then also in a novel about the performer by Caryl Phillips.","creator":["Michelle Ann Stephens"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31bb666a-4bed-3daf-86eb-d3cf016acbaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40663942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"90","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"the comic side of gender trouble and Bert Williams' signature act<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663942","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leah Leone"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24881632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13960482"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"433db996-dee0-30f9-ab66-66e749b19fe5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24881632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"variborg"}],"isPartOf":"Variaciones Borges","issueNumber":"39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Borges Center, University of Pittsburgh","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"An Inventory of Masculinities: Borges in Denevi's \"Enciclopedia secreta de una familia argentina\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24881632","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8114,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471794]],"Locations in B":[[49772,49859]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Autobiographical writings by the late Victorian actresses Irene Vanbrugh and Elizabeth Robins enact old and new conventions for feminine identity, with a vocabulary drawn from theatrical performance that also governs their textual production. Imagining autobiography itself as another part to play, each actress differently develops conceptions of both femininity and autobiography as performative acts that challenge even as they affirm conventional norms for womanhood.","creator":["MARY JEAN CORBETT"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PERFORMING IDENTITIES: ACTRESSES AND AUTOBIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540305","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":3805,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[22423,22534]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The facticity of sexuality is a key driver of the asylum procedure in \"LGBT\" cases, where non-heterosexual identities can be grounds for gaining\" refugee status.\" The procedure becomes a test of sexual veracity by means of a truthful performance. This performance is primarily discursive, but it is also bodily in terms of the way bodily comportment is considered indicative of a \"true story.\" Underlying this process is a conception of sexuality as a fixed, invisible but ever present identity. Sexuality, we argue, gets configured in ways akin to what is commonly called an \"infrastructure.\" The veracity and facticity of accounts of, and for, this 'infrastructure of selfhood' can only be ascertained in live encounters during the asylum procedure. This article ethnographically highlights how such a particular facticity is composed in the Dutch asylum procedures. Building on Judith Butler's work on narrative accounts of the self, we show how the state intervenes in crucial ways in asserting the authority to assign truth to such a narrative account.","creator":["Maja Hertoghs","Willem Schinkel"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45200345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54a63fe9-642e-36ba-89d6-725c0b4249bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45200345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The state's sexual desires: the performance of sexuality in the Dutch asylum procedure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45200345","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":13762,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores changes in eighteenth-century male clothing in the context of the history of sexual difference, gender roles, and masculinity. The essay contributes to a history of dress by reconstructing a range of meanings and social practices through which men's clothing was understood by its consumers. Furthermore, critically engaging with work on the \"great male renunciation,\" the essay argues that the public authority that accrued to men through their clothing was based not on a new image of a rational disembodied man but instead on an emphasis on the male anatomy and masculinity as intrinsically embodied. Drawing on findings from the material objects of eighteenth-century clothing, visual representations, and evidence from the archival records of male consumers, the essay adopts an interdisciplinary approach that allows historians to study sex and gender as embodied, rather than simply performed. In so doing, the essay not only treats \"embodiment\" as an historical category but also responds to recent shifts in the historical discipline and the wider academy towards a more corporealist approach to the body.","creator":["Karen Harvey"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24702175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f0fa29d-29ac-381d-8380-173901fc58af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24702175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"821","pageStart":"797","pagination":"pp. 797-821","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Men of Parts: Masculine Embodiment and the Male Leg in Eighteenth-Century England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24702175","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines how ethnic Shan singers use the Burmese language to redefine their own ethnic identity, in the process helping to construct Shans' place in the Burmese national imaginary. The paper focuses on the songs of two Shan artists, Sai Htee Saing and Sai Sai Mao. These two singers have been singing in Burmese for three decades. Both have gained nationwide popularity and are now among the most famous singers in Burma's music industry. The paper consists of two parts. The first one discusses the dynamics of self-representation, examining how Shan artists select and adapt dominant discourses about them to their own task of crafting themselves. The second part investigates the audience reception of these two singers, exploring how particular groups of audience members bring their own ethnicity into interpreting a media text. Through participant observation, interviews with audiences and with the singers themselves, the author seeks to illuminate how such self-fashioning and listening practices reveal complex relations between ethnicity and the popular construction of identity.","creator":["Amporn Jirattikorn"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680421868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d32e767f-49ed-36db-bb83-ea0e07a2ee09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23750954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shan noises, Burmese sound: crafting selves through pop music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750954","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jocelyn Sharlet"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5764f33-119e-3a34-9871-a85ec326e1ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25766921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameroriesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Oriental Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"702","pageStart":"698","pagination":"pp. 698-702","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Oriental Society","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766921","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":3161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What makes the figure of the passenger distinctive as both a subject and an object of mobility and transportation systems? What distinguishes the passenger from other mobile subjectivities, from nomad, flaneur to consumer? How is the passenger represented, practiced and performed? How has the passenger and their experiences been conceived, imagined, manipulated, regulated and engineered? And what kind of human-technology assemblages do passengers enact? Through four short perspectives, this paper seeks to 'profile' the passenger as a distinctive historical and conceptual figure that can help to add greater precision to the analysis of our mobile ways of life. The passenger is explored as an object of speculative theoretical debate, a figure entangled in a host of identities, practices, performances and contexts, and an important way to illuminate key conceptual problematics, from representation to embodiment.","creator":["Peter Adey","David Bissell","Derek McCormack","Peter Merriman"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd1a13b-9879-35b7-84ac-a187a19c241b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Profiling the passenger: mobilities, identities, embodiments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251468","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":15352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The language of community is ubiquitous in academic, public health, and policy discourse about drug using populations. Yet, it has been argued that in some settings, the parameters of \"the drug user community\" are far from self-evident. We undertook this ethnographic investigation to explore experiences and understandings of a \"drug user community\" (sometimes referred to more specifically as a \"street youth community\") among young people entrenched in Vancouver's inner city drug scene. Our findings revealed that in this context, conventional notions of community\u2014that is, a social network characterized by commonality, mutual responsibility, solidarity, and\/or stability\u2014resonated with some youth. However, most questioned the value of membership within this community, in which what they had in common with other youth were ongoing experiences of poverty, marginalization, and social exclusion. Many felt membership in the drug user community precluded their ability to be responsible and productive citizens within the wider community of \"mainstream society.\" Experiences of resource deprivation and everyday violence on the streets led many participants to emphasize the limited possibilities for community among their peers. We argue that it is important to critically examine heretofore essentializing assumptions about the nature of inner city drug user or street youth communities in order to better understand young people's needs and desires in these settings.","creator":["Danya Fast","Jean Shoveller","Will Small","Thomas Kerr"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44148701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187259"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3375c40e-33e6-372f-99ef-e548e6f607f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44148701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humaorga"}],"isPartOf":"Human Organization","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Society for Applied Anthropology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Did Somebody Say Community? Young People's Critiques of Conventional Community Narratives in the Context of a Local Drug Scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44148701","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":11808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joellen Masters"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Great Part to Play\": Gender, Genre, and Literary Fame in George Moore's \"A Mummer's Wife\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058555","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9468,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455517,455887]],"Locations in B":[[7467,7837]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we explore performance and the \u201cdramatic realization\u201d of local female social elites in popular mass-market magazines in Slovenia and Croatia between 2008 and 2011. We argue that popular culture\u2014and, more specifically, celebrity discourse\u2014is one of the central locations for analyzing cultural shifts in gender, nationality, and class in postsocialist society. At the center of the discussion is the argument that ethnicity should not be seen as an independent social process; the rise of national distinctions in the Balkans and the reframing of the nation need to be examined by stressing the rearticulations of class, ethnicity, and gender as they are experienced as organizing categories of social differences. We focus on two genres: social chronicles, or \u201csociety pages,\u201d and photo interviews with elite professionals. We investigate the key intersections of gender, class, and nationality and, more generally, reflect on the transformations in discourses of Balkan identity.","creator":["Breda Luthar","Andreja Trdina"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.74.2.265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e0b5a98-3fb9-3156-b898-69788e4983f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.74.2.265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation, Gender, Class: Celebrity Culture and the Performance of Identity in the Balkans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.74.2.265","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":11523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara A. White"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02718022"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24044491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inditheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Theory Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Department of Music Theory, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Difference or Silence?: Women Composers between Scylla and Charybdis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044491","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper examines how qualitative feminist research can inform the study of engendered practices in organizational settings. It reviews current debates about feminist research, including Oakley's (1998, 2000) critique of the ways in which qualitative methods and data are used by feminists. The work of Skeggs (2001) on feminist principles for undertaking qualitative research is also examined. The paper then considers two pieces of research on work and engendered organizations that used mixed methods and data. Finally the paper considers some of the methodological challenges faced by the author in two recent qualitative projects about manager-academics. Using qualitative data, it is argued, does not necessarily restrict the wider policy applicability of the project findings. However, working in teams with those not committed to feminist research can present other challenges, which may also throw light on the phenomena being researched.","creator":["Rosemary Deem"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d31e2106-f0f0-34fa-b3ac-2161c5bd2ded"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"855","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-855","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Talking to Manager\u2014Academics: Methodological Dilemmas and Feminist Research Strategies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856469","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Just as the French language allows for ambiguity when it comes to hosts and guests, so too does literature that takes into account postcolonial encounters in both North Africa and France. Mireille Rosello's concept of the continuum of the host\/guest relationship is applied to two works of contemporary fiction: Le\u00efla Sebbar's Marguerite and Nina Bouraoui's Gar\u00e7on manqu\u00e9. Reading the protagonists's roles with this continuum in mind allows us to better understand the contemporary relationship between France and Algeria, one that extends beyond national borders and ends up questioning the very positions of guest and host, especially in the case of women.","creator":["Pamela Pears"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23120601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca0b1ede-075f-3979-b87a-53aef2ab5226"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23120601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The Guest\/Host Dichotomy of \"L'H\u00f4te\" in Le\u00efla Sebbar's \"Marguerite\" and Nina Bourauoi's \"Gar\u00e7on manqu\u00e9\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23120601","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":5358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article proposes that an understanding of transphobic \u2018honour\u2019-based abuse can be employed as a conceptual tool to explore trans people\u2019s experiences of familial abuse. This conception has evolved by connecting a sociology of shame, Goffman\u2019s work on stigma and \u2018honour\u2019-based ideology. The discussion draws upon findings of a qualitative study which explored trans people\u2019s experiences of domestic violence and abuse. Narrative interviews were undertaken with 15 trans people who had either experienced abuse or whose perceptions were informed experientially through their support of others. Transcripts were analysed using the Listening Guide. Findings indicate that trans people can experience abuse as a result of a family\u2019s perceptions of shame and stigma. This article offers a novel way of conceptualising trans people\u2019s experiences of family-based abuse, but it also holds potential for understanding other relational contexts, for example, those of intimate partnerships.","creator":["Michaela Rogers"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26558627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f10d982d-310f-3e4b-9171-957ea8c7f21f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26558627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Transphobic \u2018Honour\u2019-Based Abuse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26558627","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8251,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73622]],"Locations in B":[[6673,6932]],"subTitle":"A Conceptual Tool"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dennis Denisoff"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9af50140-6469-35df-8bb5-02249b8b6da3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Grave Passions: Enclosure and Exposure in Charlotte Mew's Graveyard Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004296","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7425,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460746,460962]],"Locations in B":[[17614,17830]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shane Phelan"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf0aa5a7-417a-3ea2-93dd-131b8203d782"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"790","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-790","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Be)Coming Out: Lesbian Identity and Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174906","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11776,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[125847,126109],[475985,476047],[481756,481841],[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[34440,34702],[69596,69664],[70426,70517],[70555,70617]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carly (Frankie) Laird"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26877137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10646051"},{"name":"oclc","value":"320298829"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf17a508-cd32-33d0-ae3d-70f566348767"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26877137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"writingontheedge"}],"isPartOf":"Writing on the Edge","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California, on behalf of its Davis University Writing Program","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Poetry of Embodiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26877137","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7525,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[424033,424247]],"Locations in B":[[34912,35132]],"subTitle":"Queering the Canon with Slam"} +{"abstract":"This study draws on queer theory, critical feminism, Critical Race Theory, and New Literacy Studies to explore the ways in which queer youth read and wrote words and worlds in ways that both challenged and reinforced power dynamics in and beyond a youth-run center for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) youth. I conceive of literacy performances as a series of performances in which both worlds and words are read and written. Each performance is both similar to and different from others and both confirms and disrupts the others. I examine the literacy performances of youth who were a part of the Speakers' Bureau, a smaller group within the center who were educated as activists against heterosexism and homophobia. Through their efforts to interrogate and disrupt inequitable power dynamics outside the center, participants at times replicated such dynamics within it. By considering literacy broadly I was able to see the significant work these youth did to advocate for social change, and by recognizing literacy as series of performances I was able to see that in working for social change outside the center they both challenged and replicated inequitable power dynamics within the center. Possibilities for social change are thus situated in the perpetual interrogation of the relationships between literacy performances and power dynamics.","creator":["Mollie Blackburn"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a5733fc-af14-3f0a-9f1d-65c6e12d5961"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Exploring Literacy Performances and Power Dynamics at the Loft: \"Queer Youth Reading the World and the Word\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171600","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOHN BAK"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a931fc4-88fc-3054-a735-4b49c65c54ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Dying Gaul: The Signifying Phallus and Tennessee Williams's \"Three Players of a Summer Game\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476615","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":13567,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[181737,182024],[218103,218522],[239471,240045]],"Locations in B":[[58703,58991],[60834,63100],[73002,73572]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jacqueline Urla"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8125ba2-630f-3767-97e5-83ff8a0a9ce0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"532","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-532","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647211","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":1447,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Zina Petersen"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20717278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abfba1b4-6192-39ac-aba6-16928182cfba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20717278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mysticsquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Mystics Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Every Manner of Thing Shall Be Well\": Mirroring Serenity in the<\/italic> Shewings of Julian of Norwich<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20717278","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4664,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[205007,205293],[208216,208616]],"Locations in B":[[3374,3610],[22081,22481]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JAMES CREECH"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed660d7f-8bb4-3e2b-a196-61f25e1896d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"FORGED IN CRISIS: QUEER BEGINNINGS OF MODERN MASCULINITY IN A CANONICAL FRENCH NOVEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533149","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9564,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493896,494011]],"Locations in B":[[46993,47104]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Dixon"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23488714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00387134"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a6991e5-77a7-3539-83a1-cea96bfa1ed6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23488714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"speculum"}],"isPartOf":"Speculum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Enigma as Display in the Fifteenth-Century Chastellain de Coucy: Veiled Performances","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23488714","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":18766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"'Sorcerers', said R. Yochanan, 'contradict the heavenly household' and oppose the divine will. So begins one of the major Talmudic discussions of magic (BT Sanhedrin 67b). This conception of magic bestows tremendous power in the hands of the magician, creating an autonomous realm where the human and the divine vie for supremacy. How did the Rabbis imagine the realm of magic and what brought them to so empower their adversaries? This is the question I wish to address by examining some of the 'contest-narratives' between rabbis and magicians in rabbinic literature, concentrating mostly on a comparison between a discussion that appears in the Babylonian Talmud (BT Sanhedrin 67b-68a) and its Palestinian parallel (PT Sanhedrin 25d). I suggest that there are marked differences between the ways in which the two Talmudic discussions represent magic and its menace. While the Palestinian Talmud presents these contests through a discourse of power and identity, the Babylonian constructs its view of magic by means of a discourse of knowledge.","creator":["\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05e9\u05e2 \u05dc\u05d5\u05d9\u05e0\u05e1\u05d5\u05df","Joshua Levinson"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23603317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03343650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"565d0ac1-f331-3f89-a47f-151ecfb00cad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23603317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tarbiz"}],"isPartOf":"Tarbiz \/ \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05e5","issueNumber":"\u05d2\/\u05d3","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Religion"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Enchanting Rabbis: Contest Narratives between Rabbis and Magicians in Rabbinic Literature of Late Antiquity \/ \u05d2\u05d1\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05db\u05e9\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea: \u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05e2\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e8\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05de\u05db\u05e9\u05e4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d6\"\u05dc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23603317","volumeNumber":"\u05e2\u05d4","wordCount":15742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The academic achievement gap, particularly the mathematics achievement gap, between Black students and their White counterparts has been well documented with numerical facts. As mathematics education researchers attempt to develop theories and practices that assist in eradicating the gap, they would serve mathematics education well if they would expand the sphere of their research into the sociocultural arena. To assist in expanding the sphere, this article presents a review of key historical and current theoretical perspectives regarding the schooling experiences of African American students, with an emphasis on African American male students, borrowed from the disciplines of anthropology, social psychology, and sociology. The review is organized around three discourse clusters: the discourse of deficiency, the discourse of rejection, and the discourse of achievement. The author suggests that researchers move away from the discourses of deficiency and rejection and toward the discourse of achievement when developing sound education theories and classroom practices that assist in eradicating the academic (and mathematics) achievement gap.","creator":["David W. Stinson"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c44382a6-6e34-3472-a054-ae838e1caeca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4124412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"African American Male Adolescents, Schooling (and Mathematics): Deficiency, Rejection, and Achievement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124412","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":15481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I take A Midsummer Might's Dream and The Faerie Queene as case studies that show how critical commonplaces may become so entrenched that they limt the horizons of that we can see in a given text, genre, or period. The essay has two purposes. The first is theoretical. I aim to make explicit the often unspoken (perhaps even unconscious) theoretical subtexts that have shaped readings of female sexuality, and I propose some historical reasons for the dominance of certain strains of feminism\u2212those best known as \"subordination feminism\" and \"cultural feminism\"\u2212in criticism of early modern literature. The second purpose is hermeneutic. I explore the alternative readings that become available if we approach Shakespeare's and Spenser's work through the lens of one competing strand of feminist thought, described by its practitioners as \"prosex\" or \"sex-radical\" feminism. In this essay, my reading of A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Faerie Queene limits its interpretive frameworks to those offered by sex-radical feminism and the strands of queer theory that emerged from it. Drawing on these often overlooked frameworks, I explore the tensions and hierarchies among women in the play and the poem to challenge the assumption that women's relationships are always egalitarian and nuturing; I propose that homo-and heteroerotic desires are not mutually exclusive but may coexist in these works; and I argue that female masochism is not always a pathology that enables patriarchy but can be legitimate form of desire that challenges traditional ideas of normal and proper female behavior.","creator":["MELISSA E. SANCHEZ"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beccfaf9-8559-3b7d-92a7-97b096b81ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41616842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Use Me But as Your Spaniel\": Feminism, Queer Theory, and Early Modern Sexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616842","volumeNumber":"127","wordCount":12562,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[490134,490235]],"Locations in B":[[66916,67022]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on interviews with twenty-six dog owners in northeast Georgia, this article examines how people rely on gender norms to organize their relationships with their dogs. Owners use gender norms to (1) select what they consider to be suitable dogs, (2) describe their dogs' behaviors and personalities, and (3) use their dogs as props to display their own gender identities. Although these findings are specific to dog owners, they suggest ways individuals may attempt to display gender in other relationships characterized by a power imbalance.","creator":["Michael Ramirez"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"review-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"414abeb7-2649-3c49-b8a2-15c868580699"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"\"My Dog's Just Like Me\": Dog Ownership as a Gender Display","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.373","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recently, the women's studies PhD has been charged, in its multiplicty, as lacking a unified subjectivity and epistemology that, in other contexts, feminist scholars seek to transform. In this paper, I analyze gaps between feminist theories of multiplicty and intersectionality and women's studies' practices valuing oneness and disciplinary coherence and suggest that Women's Studies has not gone far enough in drawing from its own theoretical and political insights. By further engaging feminist theory as a resource for institutional and political practices, the field will not only expand possibilities for social change, but will also demonstrate that it takes itself seriously. However, institutionalization of Women's Studies does not necessarily require an oppositional approach to disciplinary border patrol. The challenge for the field and for NWSA (National Women's Studies Association) in particular, lies in forging both\/and institutional models that resist closure, sustain coalition politics, and foster ecological knowledge practices without replicating modes of colonialist nation-building.","creator":["Vivian M. May"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"689c8801-3b93-3a3c-8da1-d1c48952dad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Disciplinary Desires and Undisciplined Daughters: Negotiating the Politics of a Women's Studies Doctoral Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316875","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11404,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[74786,74837]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In their original historical context, burlesque films of the period 1945 to 1960 displayed excess, parody, polymorphous desire, and gender fluidity, qualities that challenged normative gender roles and restrictions on sexual expression.","creator":["Eric Schaefer"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8130428-e8ba-3c60-88e7-8bbef7d3bfe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Obscene Seen: Spectacle and Transgression in Postwar Burlesque Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225774","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13488,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[431288,431480],[431984,432254],[433304,433476],[435522,436096],[445637,445812],[446126,446267]],"Locations in B":[[48921,49114],[49123,49393],[58199,58371],[58379,58947],[71085,71283],[71453,71593]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laurie A. Finke"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fb2dea6-df55-3054-bd9e-951e86fa92e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Educational psychology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Performing Collegiality, Troubling Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550621","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":5838,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443328,443525]],"Locations in B":[[10290,10474]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sousan Arafeh"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8738fc3f-9a7a-3db6-8687-bc7301b068c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Chapter Five: Women, Telephones, and Subtle Solidarity: A Counternarrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976096","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03cd545c-3932-363a-8789-90421e9271b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157328","volumeNumber":"498","wordCount":6813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist standpoint theory and critical realism both offer resources to sociologists interested in making arguments that account for causal complexity and epistemic distortion. However, the impasse between these paradigms limits their utility. In this article, I argue that critical realism has much to gain from a confrontation with feminist theory. Feminist theory\u2019s emphasis on boundary-crossing epistemologies and gendered bodies can help critical realism complicate its notion of the bifurcation between epistemology and ontology. But taking feminist theory seriously also involves careful attention to the risks of epistemic violence, to questions about credible witnesses. I argue that both paradigms will be improved by better theorization of (1) ideology as part of social ontology and (2) interactions between the context of knowledge production and social ontology. Attending to what is missing, distorted, or occluded between the knower, knowledge, and object of knowledge can provide resources for theorizing social ontology.","creator":["Paige L. Sweet"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26541788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b650d406-b4f4-3610-8c13-24383e825ba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26541788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Feminist Question in Realism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26541788","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yoko Suzuki"],"datePublished":"2013-12-31","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacmusiresej.33.2.0207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02763605"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810536"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235625"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"079fb273-83d8-34a6-b24b-5447b1428a81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/blacmusiresej.33.2.0207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacmusiresej"}],"isPartOf":"Black Music Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Two Strikes and the Double Negative: The Intersections of Gender and Race in the Cases of Female Jazz Saxophonists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacmusiresej.33.2.0207","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"According to the theory of representative bureaucracy, passive representation among public employees will lead to active representation in bureaucratic outputs. Existing research demonstrates that the link between passive and active representation exists for race but not for sex. Past research on this topic has not, however, taken into account the contextual environment that affects whether sex will translate into gender and lead to active representation in the bureaucracy. In this paper, we create a framework that specifies the conditions that affect whether passive representation results in active representation for sex and then test this framework using the case of education. We find that passive representation of women in education leads to active representation and that the institutional context affects the extent to which this link between passive and active representation occurs.","creator":["Lael R. Keiser","Vicky M. Wilkins","Kenneth J. Meier","Catherine A. Holland"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38835735-0ec2-31c6-81f4-de8ddbfd5c7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3117929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"564","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-564","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Lipstick and Logarithms: Gender, Institutional Context, and Representative Bureaucracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117929","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":10713,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[68790,68931]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26350429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05711371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312224"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f47fb687-eacc-306f-b80f-96eec7289844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26350429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arsorie"}],"isPartOf":"Ars Orientalis","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Regents of the University of Michigan","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26350429","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":2781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In contrast to the paradoxes of chastity that appear to limit women's options, prescriptive literature often portrays obedience as a virtue that is both performative and reformative. Early modern women were not taught to be unquestioningly obedient but rather that they had a responsibility to be virtuous: to perform submission in order to reform others. This model of performance requires women critically to analyze behavioral prescriptions, because the proper performance necessitates interpretation on their part; this shows that self-reflection is possible and even encouraged. Texts discussed include Robert Snawsel's A Looking-glasse for Married Folkes and Robert Greene's Penelope's Web.","creator":["Jessica C. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41511148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39cb7197-fd38-3be1-8758-5024b1073b3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41511148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminine Virtue's Network of Influence in Early Modern England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41511148","volumeNumber":"109","wordCount":9887,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[100125,100236]],"Locations in B":[[10323,10434]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ric Knowles"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07313403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24322620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medirenadramengl"}],"isPartOf":"Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rosemont Publishing & Printing Corp DBA Associated University Presses","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Experience Means Nothing till It Repeats Itself\": Elizabeth Bowen's \"The Death of the Heart\" and Jane Austen's \"Emma\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195363","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":11198,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[515047,515125]],"Locations in B":[[4728,4806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chelsea Ray","Natalie Clifford Barney"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40039993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Decadent Heroines or Modernist Lovers: Natalie Clifford Barney's Unpublished \"Feminine Lovers or the Third Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039993","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":13232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy DeRogatis"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8288df6e-8917-3e81-a10b-64aa96772dd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4146314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Society of Church History","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Sexuality and Salvation in Protestant Evangelical Sex Manuals, 1950s to the Present","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146314","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":16863,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[12618,12719]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Adkins"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7a71460-df27-3a52-a5cb-498035113d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"695","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-695","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Feminization: \"Money, Sex and Power\" for Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175536","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12080,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[73546,73610]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"188b1a20-1043-3358-bc45-c4a6b986bec0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African-American Women's History and the Metalanguage of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174464","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11393,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195],[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[1638,1709],[2368,2477]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Bordo"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4553785c-f3b7-344e-a6b5-5944965f9e76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodern Subjects, Postmodern Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178218","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6196,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[29519,29628]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas B. Byers"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ce12b86-8f5a-3ff7-9a8d-75f7be5d23d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TERMINATING THE POSTMODERN: MASCULINITY AND POMOPHOBIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285766","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11941,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[101920,102151],[516489,516584]],"Locations in B":[[23634,23866],[24009,24104]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roger N. Lancaster","Gloria Elena Bernal"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41635a70-7bba-3bb6-8ae9-cc8411a5ceda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La actuaci\u00f3n de Guto notas sobre el travestismo en la vida cotidiana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624444","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":13480,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524428]],"Locations in B":[[8443,8540]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Madeline H. Caviness"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8afa6940-50eb-3951-a514-bd4d6a2d1cab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23924250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Western Michigan University through its Medieval Institute Publications","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"GIVING \"THE MIDDLE AGES\" A BAD NAME: BLOOD PUNISHMENTS IN THE \"SACHSENSPIEGEL\" AND TOWN LAWBOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924250","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":24634,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123764,123881]],"Locations in B":[[21179,21296]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper follows the mobilities between 1958 and 1990 of the dead body of Dr Petru Groza (1884\u20131958), a significant political figure in post-World War II socialist Romania, to explore the implications for human geography of engaging with the dead. Although there has been a considerable interest in 'geographies of the body' and 'deathscapes', human geography has had relatively little to say about dead bodies. The paper draws on literatures from death studies and dead body politics, as well as research in memory studies, history, anthropology and law, to develop an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the role of the corpse in society, and argues that human geography should do more to consider how dead bodies contribute to the formation of contemporary geographies. To illustrate these points the analysis first explores how the treatment of Groza's corpse and the 'deathwork' associated with it is an example of 'dead body politics'. Second, the analysis draws out the agency of the corpse and its role in a variety of 'deathscapes'. The conclusion considers the implications for human geography of engaging with 'corpse geographies' more generally.","creator":["Craig Young","Duncan Light"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64f56248-2349-32cf-97f7-466be2e3bb94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24582446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Corpses, dead body politics and agency in human geography: following the corpse of Dr Petru Groza","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24582446","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Zoila Clark"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdd55210-3286-3687-91b0-d3984cd75cc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Parodia del g\u00e9nero y del discurso primitivista en \"La ciudad de las bestias\" de Isabel Allende","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021995","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5791,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[434702,434977],[435426,435631]],"Locations in B":[[12900,13175],[13184,13389]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Few evaluated classroom exercises to date have addressed one of the most cited and compelling explanations of gender formation over the life course: interactionist gender theory. This theory posits that people actively \"do\" or \"perform\" their gender in every interaction, and as such, they often subconsciously reshape their public gendered personas based on the degree to which they find social acceptance within a given social context. This paper presents a highly engaging and temporally compact classroom exercise utilizing simulated speed dating to illustrate and generate discussion about interactionist gender theory among undergraduate social sciences and gender studies students. An evaluation study indicates that the exercise improves students' perceived understanding of interactionist gender theory and that it is both highly helpful and enjoyable.","creator":["Adam M. Messinger"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24887578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cca25f99-ef3b-395d-ae6c-11ef3ab9f960"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24887578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Teaching Interactionist Gender Theory through Speed Dating","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24887578","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses the world's contemporary crisis of care, despite the abundance of information about distant others, by exploring motivations for caring and the rok of imagination. The ethical significance of caring is found in performance. Applying Victor Vroom's expectancy theory, caring performances are viewed as extensions of rational expectations regarding the efficacy of actions. The imagination creates these positive or negative expectations regarding the ability to effectively care. William James s notion of the will to believe offers a unique twist on rational expectations in that he regards humans as having the capacity to work within uncertainty to take decisive action. Applying this idea to caring performance is, this artick argues that peopk can have the will to care, beyond strict rational calculations or limits of social norms. Historically, caring has been associated with the imagination s ability to empathize, but the will to care offers another rok for the imagination in envisioning effective action. Given the significance of the imagination for ethical behavior, this artick explores the implications for cultivating care in terms of what educating for care might hok like. The work of feminist care ethicists, particularly Nel Noddings, is discussed, and contemporary case examples of caring performances are investigated.","creator":["MAURICE HAMINGTON"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc64fb61-189f-3add-b4c4-fbdd56673a85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40928645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"695","pageStart":"675","pagination":"pp. 675-695","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Will to Care: Performance, Expectation, and Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928645","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[9740,9869]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Zaborskis"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43958475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"268c3cb0-7f01-3e3a-abfc-b454391783a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43958475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Age Drag","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43958475","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6198,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[435426,435531],[435949,436102]],"Locations in B":[[8515,8618],[8804,8957]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bears comprise a subculture of gay men who valorize the larger, hirsute body. This research interrogates Bear culture as a gendered strategy for repudiating effeminacy that simultaneously challenges and reproduces norms of hegemonic masculinity. In this research, the author situates his ethnographic study of a major metropolitan Bear community in its social and historical context to illuminate this paradox, with special emphasis on the embodiment of Bear masculinity and its effect on sexual practice. The author concludes that through a process of embodied agency, Bear culture yields a number of sexually innovative practices that disperse pleasure across the body and disrupt genitally centered, phallus-and-receptacle interpretations of sex. However, the subversive potential of these practices is significantly undermined by an attendant set of practices that reflect heteronormative and hegemonically masculine interpretations of sex.","creator":["Peter Hennen"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24399617-d1c1-301b-978e-419de729ac54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bear Bodies, Bear Masculinity: Recuperation, Resistance, or Retreat?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044567","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barry E. Laga"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1185730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdd21d77-5620-30e7-bc7c-97f5bc7a578b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1185730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Gerald Vizenor and His \"Heirs of Columbus\": A Postmodern Quest for More Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1185730","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7459,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[58506,58837],[68611,68777]],"Locations in B":[[33054,33381],[34153,34319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tristin K. Green"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2154f70d-6ae9-3bb5-b6e8-bb35227f9782"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62,"pageEnd":"684","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-684","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Work Culture and Discrimination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481474","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":32626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dce76a7-e17b-3b5e-8add-93abe5b38bea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686169","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":722,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496553]],"Locations in B":[[364,432]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article takes an empirical measure of the extent to which feminism has altered the discipline of Political Science in Canada and Qu\u00e9bec since the mid\u2010 1980s. The authors, members of the second cadre of female political scientists in the field of women and politics, single out for particular attention the current relation between anglophone and francophone feminist scholarship in the field. They maintain that the two linguistic solitudes remain fundamental to the women and politics field as much as was the case before the emergence of feminist perspectives in the discipline. \/\/\/ Adoptant une perspective empirique, cet article a pour objectif de cerner quelques-uns des effets du f\u00e9minisme sur les sciences politiques au Canada et au Qu\u00e9bec depuis le milieu des ann\u00e9es quatre-vingt. En tant que femmes politologues de la seconde g\u00e9n\u00e9ration qui travaillons la th\u00e9matique << Femmes et politique >>, les auteures insistent sur les relations pr\u00e9sentes entre les f\u00e9ministes anglophones et francophones qui s'int\u00e9ressent \u00e0 ce domaine. Elles soutiennent qu'aujourd'hui comme hier, c'est-\u00e0-dire avant l'av\u00e8nement d'une perspective f\u00e9ministe dans la discipline, l'id\u00e9e des deux solitudes, particuli\u00e8rement dans ses dimensions linguistiques, marque toujours la th\u00e9matique << Femmes et politique >>.","creator":["Jane Arscott","Manon Tremblay"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3232775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3853d9ef-f033-3452-8963-6a9d0a00cdca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3232775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Il reste encore des travaux \u00e0 faire: Feminism and Political Science in Canada and Qu\u00e9bec","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3232775","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":12575,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[55476,55551]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For indigenous Tzotzil Protestants in Chiapas, the emergence of a new discourse about God is restructuring social interactions. Discourse data point to an arresting intersection of Protestant beliefs, discourse strategies, and gender. This case study supports recent theorizing in language and gender concerning the need to attend to shifting identities and contexts where gender can become less salient. The performance of a Protestant identity in which gender is transcended opens up new possibilities for agency, particularly for women who otherwise lack sanctioned authority. Strategic manipulation of Protestant discourse in verbal performances allows one woman to enact a position of moral authority that empowers her to pursue an innovative plan. As an important means through which Tzotzil Protestants dictate and create their lives, praying in the evangelical world provides a useful site for the study of unusual kinds of performative utterances.","creator":["Akesha Baron"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa623755-f549-3ee3-8905-a64c38a22e7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"\"I'm a Woman but I Know God Leads My Way\": Agency and Tzotzil Evangelical Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169339","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":19259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a693e71-685a-353a-8164-d2717beabaf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"649","pageStart":"642","pagination":"pp. 642-649","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190092","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":3426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1593 a new Moroccan monarch inaugurated a compelling national performance of the Prophet's Birthday that created a distinctive version of person and political community, one that survived not just in the national memory but as a performative repertoire from which Moroccans continually drew. It elaborated particular images of male and female, put forward a compelling poetics and politics of their relationship, and offered a means of their popular integration through the emblematic focus on the white robed king. Popularly renewed\u2014in local and national performances\u2014in the 400 years that followed, the performance succeeded in annually diffusing its images throughout the land through the kinds of localizing processes Foucault has highlighted as crucial for effective political regimes. The performance mobilized sensual persuasion, mimesis, gender polarization, and emblematic configuration to draw the population into it. In 1993, the reigning king, confronted with new economic problems and political assault tried to reconfigure the performance and the nation and to resecure his place in it by altering the performance's color, cloth, and gender arrangements.","creator":["M. Elaine Combs-Schilling"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44398867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37a8c796-7f1c-326f-9e3d-1e7b1d9478ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44398867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Casablanca 1993: Negotiating Gender and Nation in Performative Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44398867","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":15553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shari L. Dworkin","Amanda Lock Swarr","Cheryl Cooky"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c8863a-e118-39d0-a521-c234d1594ac4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23719289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(In) Justice in Sport: The Treatment of South African Track Star Caster Semenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719289","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Often described by Latinas\/os in South Florida as a low-class, slutty, tough, and crass young woman, the hypervisible figure known as the \"chonga\" is practically invisible in feminist scholarship. This paper examines the meanings associated with the chonga identity and the emergence of visual representations of chongas in order to understand how these bodies produce and reflect discourses about Latina girls' sexuality, ethnicity, and class. I argue that the sexual-aesthetic excess of chonga bodies complicates dichotomies of \"good\" versus \"bad\" girls and signifies non-normative politics that trouble the disciplining of behavior and dress for girls of color. I offer sexual-aesthetic excess as a concept in order to theorize modes of dress and comportment that are often considered \"too much\": too ethnic, too sexy, too young, too cheap, too loud. My arguments are based on a questionnaire regarding chongas that I administered to South Florida residents and analyses of related visual representations. The questionnaire responses illustrate the meanings associated with the chonga identity and reflect the discursive field in which images of these young women circulate. The chonga images and questionnaire responses inform each other, as there is a recursive relationship between social discourse and visual production.","creator":["Jillian Hernandez"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21879a19-4d19-3c3d-a056-b7f571c837f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Miss, You Look like a Bratz Doll\": On Chonga Girls and Sexual-Aesthetic Excess","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628195","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A large body of scholarship across several disciplines has convincingly illustrated how the gender binary \u2014 the distinction between males and females as complementary and desirable opposites \u2014 is constantly reproduced through everyday, apparently 'banal', practices. Such process is not innocuous but is part and parcel of hegemonic ideological formations of gender and sexuality that contribute to positioning some individuals as 'normal' and 'desirable' whilst recasting others as 'unwanted' and 'deviant'. Against this backdrop, this Article seeks to offer a different perspective, one that focuses less on the reproduction than on the ambivalence of collusion and contestation in relation to the gender binary. In order to do so, it investigates a drawing made by Gabrielle Le Roux in collaboration with Silva, a Namibian trans activist, which featured as part of the exhibition queer & trans Art-iculations at Wits Art Museum in 2014. With the help of an eclectic theoretical apparatus that brings together visual analysis with an African perspective on queer theory, the Article shows how the portrait simultaneously reproduces and contests normative gendered and sexualised scripts. Moreover, it is argued that Le Roux's work and collaboration with transgender and intersex activists can be seen as the beginning of a decolonising project that emerges from Africa, questioning northern, colonial ideologies.","creator":["Tommaso M Milani"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80585ff4-7233-3e9c-bdd7-b8325e3db18f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (102)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Querying the queer from Africa: Precarious bodies \u2014 precarious gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825244","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7337,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473861,473952]],"Locations in B":[[32042,32133]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on the ageing process among drug-using women, proceeded on the basis of a critical post-structural approach to the life course (Holstein and Gubrium 2000; Halberstam 2005; Ahmed 2006; Mattsson 2014). The objective is to provide an alternative perspective on the life course to that which dominates current criminology. This perspective challenges prevailing norms and conceptions regarding the other, and in doing so focuses the analysis on the social mechanisms that lie behind social exclusion, crime and drug use. By means of the retrospective narratives of 4 women, who describe a rambling journey along crooked paths on the margins of the welfare state, the article reveals the nature of prevailing norms and conceptions regarding ageing, gender and drug use.","creator":["Ingrid Lander"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc152c87-32c6-3187-8dda-e8be634b6c9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43819276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"GENDER, AGING AND DRUG USE: A POST-STRUCTURAL APPROACH TO THE LIFE COURSE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819276","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":9804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is based on interviews with a small number of cohabitants who are critical of conventional marriage. It examines some of the ways in which the distinction between heterosexual cohabitation and marriage is rendered in the New Zealand context. Culturally available distinctions, like that between cohabitation and marriage, are used in the production of resistant counterdiscourses. However, difference can be rewritten as deviance and in this form is central to the exercise of disciplinary power. Contextual shifts in the assertion of a cohabitational self and a marital self contribute to the blurring of the distinction, further exposing the dilemmas of resistance based on difference.","creator":["Vivienne Elizabeth"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a76677c6-fe2a-3255-a184-6b4a2b3d8ff7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cohabitation, Marriage, and the Unruly Consequences of Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190423","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How can performance studies sharpen our modes of historical analysis and writing? This essay proposes \"three theses\" that demonstrate the multifold ways in which attention to performance, theatrical and social, can highlight aspects of cultural, political, and festive life in the hybrid spaces of empire that that would otherwise be ignored. Performance, for historians and critics, functions in this sense as both optic and event: a methodological lens through which meanings can be conveyed as well as an act of cultural transfer, an embodied form of creating, preserving, or transmitting knowledge, memory, and history.","creator":["Kathleen Wilson"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24690302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7acc0e1-78d8-3d3d-bf4e-a8ea5643ba1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24690302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Three Theses on Performance and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24690302","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8698,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494724,494795]],"Locations in B":[[46099,46164]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay considers one of the most underexamined characters in Harriet Beecher Stowe's \"Uncle Tom's Cabin\": Augustine St. Clare's effeminate manservant, Adolph. I evaluate Adolph's critical elision to illustrate how the success of critiques centered on race and gender unintentionally permits other minority identities (and stereotypes) in the book to continue unremarked. While revisionist readings of Stowe's novel complicate racial and gender stereotypes, they nevertheless accept stable (even conventional) categories to describe minority identity. Such formulations foreclose the possibility of seeing other minority identities in the book that intertwine race and gender in ways different from normative standards. In examining Adolph's character, this essay considers how intersectional analysis reveals important representations of social difference-including differences not always acknowledged in present-day culture.","creator":["Michael Borgstrom"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db8a555d-ad7b-3fb2-ae6c-8ac2808ce450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"1304","pageStart":"1290","pagination":"pp. 1290-1304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Passing over: Setting the Record Straight in \"Uncle Tom's Cabin\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261465","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":10066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sexuality\u2014here referring to a set of words and acts potentially exchangeable between a male or female researcher and a male or female informant and involving sexualized bodies and\/or imaginations\u2014raises important methodological issues in sociology. Manifestations of sexuality have been known to impede or facilitate fieldwork, and to cause incidents that can be more or less serious. Fears or discomfort around sexuality are also likely to affect how studies are constructed and the initial research question defined. And yet with the exception of studies bearing directly on the subject, sexuality is almost never mentioned and is therefore extremely unlikely to be analyzed in connection with methodology. This article, based on a critical review of French methodological literature, deciphers the reasons for this remarkable silence. To counter its adverse effects on knowledge acquisition, and in the interests of risk prevention, I argue here that all fieldwork relations contain a hidden sexual script, and that recognizing that script would help us to objectivize manifestations of sexuality in the field.","creator":["Isabelle Clair","Amy Jacobs"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567185","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"859484807"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5206a0bc-645f-3891-830f-bcb37efcce01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26567185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revfransocieng"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de sociologie (English Edition)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sexuality in Researcher\u2013Informant Fieldwork Study Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567185","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":13129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Deciphering a Methodological Taboo"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Weckerle"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43512963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23303964"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43512963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"editwharrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Edith Wharton Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Taming the Transgressive: A Feminist Analysis of the Film Adaptation of \"The Old Maid\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43512963","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6027,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[458604,458782]],"Locations in B":[[18524,18702]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A contemporary Flemish festival raises the stakes of ongoing critical conversations about reenactments, theatre historiography, and performativity in the service of social change. The Witch Festival of Nieuwpoort, or Heksenfeest, reenacts (as medieval) the trial and unjust conviction of Jeanne Panne, who was burned at the stake for witchcraft in 1650. In 2012, prior to a theatrical representation of the unlikely heroine's life and death, the town's mayor proclaimed that he was pardoning Jeanne Panne, along with sixteen other executed witches. In addition to rehearsing complex questions about anachronism, linguistic and cultural translation, gallows humor, and the appropriation or rejection of the past, the Heksenfeest places front and center theatre's capacity for true Austinian performativity as it seeks to make history. To theorize such unusual events, the essay proposes two terms, pseudoperformativity and paraperformativity, the better to underscore the common ground among medieval studies, reenactment studies, and the history of rhetoric.","creator":["Jody Enders"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fd92c37-10ed-3cb2-adce-14988d6ba6ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"History Trouble: Reenactment and Pseudoperformativity at the Witch Festival of Nieuwpoort","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580388","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":10387,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524252]],"Locations in B":[[24052,24147]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Horan","Seonghoon Kim"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/studamerindilite.25.1.0027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54533161"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-214188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"551458ad-45e6-3afb-afda-159a78de6571"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/studamerindilite.25.1.0027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cThen One Day We Create Something Unexpected\u201d: Tribalography's Decolonizing Strategies in LeAnne Howe's Evidence of Red<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/studamerindilite.25.1.0027","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10159,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[56051,56180]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"482740e6-a98e-3951-9e0d-fc7d86b543c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"960","pageStart":"959","pagination":"pp. 959-960","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469386","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Allen Miller"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40493008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4e025d5-9dab-3e67-92a7-48a283738526"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40493008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ethics and Irony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40493008","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459571,460251]],"Locations in B":[[52332,53012]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory M. Pflugfelder"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2385103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00270741"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42882501"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23444"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c85d484-f48f-37ac-9cca-c8ecd451dd38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2385103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monunipp"}],"isPartOf":"Monumenta Nipponica","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sophia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Strange Fates. Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Torikaebaya Monogatari","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2385103","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arnaldo Manuel Cruz-Malav\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5acd282-79d6-3ec6-9365-f8e90aaceff6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43823431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"818","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-818","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Under the Skirt of Liberty\": Giannina Braschi Rewrites Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823431","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":8757,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wendy Zierler"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4131665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03640094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51479789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237228"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33374eac-6741-3c70-b5de-7ccce5fbe471"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4131665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ajsreview"}],"isPartOf":"AJS Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","History","Jewish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Dignitary in the Land? Literary Representations of the American Rabbi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4131665","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11003,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[65627,65736]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Dellamora"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0af192b0-1644-39d7-9c7a-dd2f477e59b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Productive Decadence: \"The Queer Comradeship of Outlawed Thought\": Vernon Lee, Max Nordau, and Oscar Wilde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057858","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8239,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[43695,43779]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ken-fang Lee"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a30c679-cb35-3049-a367-87f97e0fb3e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cultural Translation and the Exorcist: A Reading of Kingston's and Tan's \"Ghost Stories\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141821","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Previous discussions of Minangkabau marriage focus on how the \"exchange of men\" poses an exception to L\u00e9vi-Strauss's theory that marriage can be universally described as the exchange of women, whom he views as the most supreme of social and natural valuables in all societies (1969:65). In keeping with these discussions, I show that in some cases of Minangkabau marriage it appears that men are exchanged as bearers of social value. I also move beyond the focus on marriage as the transaction and subjugation of value. Instead, I describe marriage as a process of social production in which husbands and wives engage in strategic projects to secure social value over time--in the form of claims to rank. Viewing marriage as a project or ongoing process of production leads to a reappraisal of both Minangkabau gender relations and anthropological notions about the nature and role of exchange. Minangkabau husbands are not objects of value but empowered agents who, along with their wives, struggle to create and manage rank differentiation within their wives lineages. Rather than enhancing lineage cohesion, as L\u00e9vi-Strauss's exchange theory would suggest, the exchange of men and the production of value in Minangkabau marriage lead to lineage fragmentation. [marriage, exchange, matriliny, gender, Minangkabau]","creator":["Jennifer Krier"],"datePublished":"2000-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ad30d8-a7fd-396d-b191-dff0aa5c1102"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"897","pageStart":"877","pagination":"pp. 877-897","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Marital Project: Beyond the Exchange of Men in Minangkabau Marriage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647399","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12078,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493958]],"Locations in B":[[74063,74156]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adelaide H. Villmoare"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Jurisprudence and Political Vision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829104","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":15896,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[104416,104480]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Carvalho"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40492985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9664ab13-d615-30dd-abbb-2b7773c726b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40492985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Subtle Bodies and the Other \"Jouissance\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40492985","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[466027,466317]],"Locations in B":[[347,651]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Evans"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fe44180-fda2-376f-9d59-49401880c11e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395268","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Israeli doctors enjoy the dubious reputation of being unfeeling, arrogant and altogether incapable of listening to patients\u2019 concerns, to such an extent that the success of treatment can be seriously compromised, on both a scientific and human level. In an attempt to combat these shortcomings, Israel has followed other countries\u2019lead in incorporating exposure to the humanities as an integral part of the medical curriculum. I argue that Shakespeare\u2019s theatre provides a unique platform for discussion of the ways in which we approach our own and our patients\u2019 mental and physical pain. I address the particular challenges of teaching Shakespeare to multicultural Israeli medical students and the value of drawing on performances in Hebrew and Arabic as well as English. I employ performance theory and cultural studies to shed light on the insights to be gained by exposure to Shakespeare performance which can directly impact these future medical practitioners\u2019experience.","creator":["Rebecca Gillis"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48587005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00143006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617852"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250522"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8dc1b17-b588-3464-837c-a727e9effa42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48587005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"europeanjudaism"}],"isPartOf":"European Judaism: A Journal for the New Europe","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Teatrum Mundi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48587005","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":3744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Teaching Shakespeare Performance to Israeli Medical Students"} +{"abstract":"This article draws on some of the existing literature on the politics of identity and representation as related to minority group formation. It applies this to constructions of Deaf identity from a cultural and linguistic perspective and contrasts this with dominant constructions of Deaf people as disabled. It highlights a number of ways in which Deaf identity differs from disabled identity, demonstrating that the cultural and linguistic construction of Deaf people is a more useful tool for analysis. It raises questions aimed to examine the discourse on deafness and seeks further debate on how best the discourse can be progressed. The article raises issues related to the use of terminology and labeling in the field of deafness. It contends that the continued use of the word deafness is unworkable and should be more widely recognized as a social construct, which has current usage beyond the paradigm in which it was originally intended. The article concludes by recognizing the importance of diversity in identity formation, while simultaneously calling for an appreciation of the need to incorporate this diversity within wider theorizing, focused on commonality and cohesion in identity as a source of collective expression and political mobilization.","creator":["Chijioke Obasi"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42658958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10814159"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"461567d8-f625-37c4-92fc-56a23255d455"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42658958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdeafstuddeafedu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeing the Deaf in \"Deafness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42658958","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael B\u00e9rub\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa1d112e-f996-3de3-a31a-61af813a1c5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20492240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"\"Canons and Contexts\" in Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492240","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Farang (foreign, Caucasian) men have played a significant role in Thai society for several decades as sex tourists and, more recently, as farang sons-in-law, men who marry Thai wives and often settle down in rural Thai villages. While both of these phenomena have received considerable attention, in neither case have the experiences and motivations of the farang men involved been adequately examined. Based on fieldwork in Bangkok and the northeast region of Isan, we examine the relationship between emergent masculinities of sex tourist and son-in-law at a societal level and the transient subjectivities of men who experience them. Anthropological theory regularly conflates subjectivities and the cultural and social formations, particularly \u201cidentities,\u201d that shape them. On the basis of our analysis, we argue that a distinction between the two is needed in order to adequately theorize changing masculinities. The ways in which men\u2019s subjective experiences of masculinity change are different from the ways in which culturally shared, socially constructed, and politically-economically facilitated masculine identities emerge. We caution that evidence of the former\u2014transient subjectivity at an individual level\u2014is not evidence of the latter\u2014changing or emergent masculine identities at a societal level.","creator":["Eric C. Thompson","Pattana Kitiarsa","Suriya Smutkupt","Marcia C. Inhorn","Patcharin Lapanun","Johan Lindquist","Sirijit Sunanta"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26544043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e578db8-e6cf-3516-a7ea-fafb47314cc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26544043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"From Sex Tourist to Son-in-Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26544043","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":23138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Emergent Masculinities and Transient Subjectivities of Farang<\/em> Men in Thailand"} +{"abstract":"In society and on college campuses, whiteness has staked a claim as the default race for queerness. This has manifested in queer and trans people of color feeling like outsiders who must resist hegemonic whiteness at personal and institutional levels. This qualitative study explores how queer white men negotiate their relationship to race and racism on and off their campuses. These men oscillate between normalizing whiteness, working through whiteness, and working with their whiteness. Implications for improving campus climate and the experiences of queer and trans people of color (QTPOC) students, staff, and faculty are discussed.","creator":["Nicholas F. Havey"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645158","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"961888507"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5728b2c-f657-3bcd-8157-6cdf8498cb69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48645158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichangrace"}],"isPartOf":"Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity (JCSCORE)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Southwest Center for Human Relations Studies at the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Education","African American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cI Can\u2019t Be Racist, I\u2019m Gay\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645158","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":11203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Exploring Queer White Men\u2019s Views on Race and Racism"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dawn E. Keetley"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"484a3c07-c483-374b-8198-43dd9cd6de06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Unsettling the Frontier: Gender and Racial Identity in Caroline Kirkland's A New Home, Who'll Follow? and Forest Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679149","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Villalobos"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf3b2a43-b06a-397a-8f01-28b3a059e7cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24810876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"CARTOGRAF\u00cdAS CORPORALES: LA VIOLENCIA TRAVESTI COMO RECODIFICACI\u00d3N DE LA MASCULINIDAD EN LA FRONTERA SUR DE M\u00c9XICO EN \"\u00bfTE GUSTA EL L\u00c1TEX, CIELO?\" DE NADIA VILLAFUERTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810876","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6957,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149921,150110]],"Locations in B":[[31129,31318]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In a study of dyadic conversations between four female and four male pairs of friends, the use of the phrase you know and questions are examined within three types of discourse. Women and men are found to use these features with equal frequency; and all speakers, regardless of sex or gender, use them in comparable ways. Although these particular discourse features have been previously associated with a female speech style, the results of this study show that it is the particular requirements associated with the three types of talk that motivate their use, and not the sex or gender of the individual speaker. The problems of generalizing about the characteristics of female or male speech, outside of a particular conversational context, are discussed; and it is shown that a gendered style cannot be adequately defined by counting individual speech variables removed from the specifics of the talk context.","creator":["Alice F. Freed","Alice Greenwood"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f11962a-ee71-3a38-881e-1b28035fc825"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4168671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Women, Men, and Type of Talk: What Makes the Difference?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168671","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Individual agency is necessary for the possibility of rhetoric, and especially for deliberative rhetoric, which enables the composition of what Latour calls a good common world. Drawing on neurophenomenology, this essay defines individual agency as the process through which organisms create meanings through acting into the world and changing their structure in response to the perceived consequences of their actions. Conceiving of agency in this way enables writers to recognize their rhetorical acts, whether conscious or nonconscious, as acts that make them who they are, that affect others, and that can contribute to the common good. Responsible rhetorical agency entails being open to and responsive to the meanings of concrete others, and thus seeing persuasion as an invitation to listeners as also always agents in persuasion.","creator":["Marilyn M. Cooper"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68243e14-ec61-3a12-a261-0dce1b15ebc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rhetorical Agency as Emergent and Enacted","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917907","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":12770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Narrative analysis produces strategies to inform the conduct, interpretation and presentation of interview talk, and encourages and enables researchers to take account of research participants' own evaluations. We suggest this to be a useful method for geographers because it focuses on how people talk about and evaluate places, experiences and situations, as well as what they say. With an example from health geography, we show how it allows for interactive texts, thus providing a tool for geographers doing qualitative research to connect intimate details of experience to broader social and spatial relations.","creator":["Janine L. Wiles","Mark W. Rosenberg","Robin A. Kearns"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative Analysis as a Strategy for Understanding Interview Talk in Geographic Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004433","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Defining gender difference as a result of performance, enforced by shame, this essay moves beyond questioning the origins of the nature\/nature debate, examining instead what stakes the dominant culture has in understanding as original the identity categories that are only the effects of that culture's institutions and discourses.","creator":["ELIZABETH A. WATERS"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3906baa7-8fe4-3bcd-94a5-5ec7909a91e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Third Path: Alternative Sex, Alternative Gender in \"Le Roman de Silence\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869253","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Talia Bettcher","Ann Garry"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"954912ee-da48-3242-9d58-e3f65b70a85f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618161","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4230,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[23976,24051]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christina Simmons"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25143856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25143856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Proper Account of Improper Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25143856","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The recent visibility of transgender lives demonstrates the dawning of a new period in the potential to include transgender topics in sociology courses. The focus on transgender individuals, communities, and inclusive initiatives are gaining momentum on many public and private college and university campuses, awakening old and new curiosities, igniting student activists and advocates everywhere. Such developments provide an important opportunity for instructors who are motivated to create trans-friendly syllabi, courses, and classrooms. In this article, we briefly explore how transgender people have been used to teach sociological concepts and provide strategies to positively integrate transgender communities into the classroom. Ultimately, we intend this article to show new and more sensitive ways to include transgender experiences into a wide range of sociological courses.","creator":["Tre Wentling","Kristen Schilt","Elroi J. Windsor","Betsy Lucal"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd67bc7c-c222-36c0-a2b3-a5a3410527fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20058627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching Transgender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058627","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Between gynocriticism and the Freudian psychoanalytic interpretation of femininity the divide seems difficult to bridge. Yet some conceptual haze has obscured the issue. While gynocriticism has mapped a new literary landscape for women, psychoanalytic criticism is probing textual traces. The invention of a new reading style combining theory and autobiography stems from an intimate inquiry into what a woman wants.","creator":["Marie-Christine LEMARDELEY-CUNCI"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20872571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3af8f9a-4c2a-30ea-b82b-0356a0072ce9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20872571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","issueNumber":"65","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Qu'est-ce qu'elles veulent encore? Un regard freudien sur la critique litt\u00e9raire f\u00e9ministe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20872571","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ernst A. Schmidt"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30222385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10730508"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"132b4d20-f55b-35b3-8aa3-efccf52da790"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30222385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjclasstrad"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Classical Tradition","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Approaches to Ancient Poetry: Theory and Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30222385","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynne Huffer"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bc221e2-3f5c-37c9-8e58-afab5c2145a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"87","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Luce et veritas: Toward an Ethics of Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930322","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10253,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[456129,456221],[458670,458782],[459635,459825],[465529,465638],[466239,466317],[477984,478011]],"Locations in B":[[14743,14835],[14986,15098],[16219,16411],[17582,17691],[19804,19879],[58272,58299]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nad\u00e8ge Mezi\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40990915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7744b6ac-0a34-3e61-9aa1-2a8527e6d17f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40990915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnfran"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnologie fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"743","pageStart":"735","pagination":"pp. 735-743","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Informer, d\u00e9former la cat\u00e9gorie d'identit\u00e9: Lecture de deux auteurs am\u00e9ricains : George Chauncey et Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40990915","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8413,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[50352,50434]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article disputes the view that systems of gender identity are so extraordinarily variable cross-culturally as to suggest that they are wholly culturally constructed, and, therefore, not open to universal explanation. Instead, we argue, these systems are underlain by a universal unresolved tension between being masculine and being feminine. This tension can best be understood in terms of the psychoanalytic concept of splitting, as developed by Melanie Klein and extended by feminist theorists Nancy Chodorow and Jessica Benjamin. We illustrate our argument with a detailed reanalysis of ethnographic material, published by Anna Meigs, on the Hua of Papua New Guinea. Our analysis challenges anthropologist Henrietta Moore's construal of the Hua case as evidence against the cross-cultural applicability of Western categories of gender identity.","creator":["Naomi Quinn","Wendy Luttrell"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a78f80fb-86f6-34ff-923b-4030cd7b1488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Psychodynamic Universals, Cultural Particulars in Feminist Anthropology: Rethinking Hua Gender Beliefs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651896","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The growing research on tourism and gender has emphasised the descriptive patterns of tourism employment by gender and related constraints, with little focus on women's active agency. Based on feminist understandings, this paper discusses how women in Mukono Parish, Southwestern Uganda, are navigating their local gender relations in order to work in tourism. The research followed a qualitative approach and utilized semi-structured interviews, participant observation and document reviews over an extended period of fieldwork between 2009 and 2011. Findings indicate women's willingness to exploit tourism work opportunities but still constrained by gender relations, which they keep negotiating. Mukono women are cautiously considering their immediate gains and losses for working in tourism, thereby associating with gender discourses and practices that limit their work opportunities. However, as women begin to work in and earn through tourism, some dominant local gender discourses and practices are slowly being challenged. Conclusions have broad-reaching implications for the field of tourism development and gender.","creator":["Brenda Boonabaana"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43575081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14673584"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51089251"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c74e6e96-2d93-369a-bd23-d6b17666a12c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43575081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tourhosprese"}],"isPartOf":"Tourism and Hospitality Research","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Negotiating gender and tourism work: Women's lived experiences in Uganda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43575081","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arielle Greenberg"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23461622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03603709"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38377183"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011236564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e264645-d852-3cdb-b4af-4a0f36746c26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23461622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoetrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Poetry Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Poetry Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Feminist Poetics, in Waves: A Two-Part Column","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23461622","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew Stephenson"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"386ce3c0-37ca-3f83-a1ed-4860ac43d313"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Anxious Performances: Aestheticism, The Art Gallery And The Ambulatory Geographies Of Late Nineteenth-Century London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793465","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6173,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439033,439417]],"Locations in B":[[167,556]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Starr"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baa2c9a3-fbb7-3352-852a-3e44c415f5d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cRien n'est Tout\u201d: Lacan and the Legacy of May '68","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288294","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":3872,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[20539,20573]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennie Klein"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1520281X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5676e5a2-5dbe-34a2-96b8-06c0e9ab61a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3246338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pajjperfart"}],"isPartOf":"PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"What a Drag!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246338","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":3578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carmen Ramos Escand\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"becc0d3a-6458-3d5a-8e0b-41691049c330"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Historiograf\u00eda, apuntes para una definici\u00f3n en femenino","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625722","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11006,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[9347,9408]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A woman of African descent born in Cuba, Eusebia Cosme relocated to the United States during the late 1930s. She quickly became an internationally renowned performer of \u201cAfro-Antillean\u201d poetry, dressing in elaborate costumes as she recited the works of prominent poets who included Nicolas Guill\u00e9n, Luis P\u00e1les Matos, and Langston Hughes. This article argues that Cosme utilized male-written texts, in addition to attire and choreography, to engage discourses of blackness on the transatlantic stage. The article compares her performances to those of her female contemporaries who included Josephine Baker, Carmen Miranda, and Katherine Dunham. It analyzes how Cosme employed a range of identity maneuvers that allowed her to challenge depictions of African culture as primitive, and to address the history and legacies of African enslavement. Finally, the article explores the ways in which various audiences\u2014African American, white American, white Latin American, and Afro-Caribbean\u2014translated her performances of blackness. Cosme's success stemmed from her ability to construct a nuanced representation of blackness within both Cuban and Afro-diasporic perspective.","creator":["Takkara Brunson"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.15.2.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e9ed827-675c-3574-bb05-14e0782376e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.15.2.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eusebia Cosme and Black Womanhood on the Transatlantic Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.15.2.06","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Although women have long been participants in martial sports, norms of \u2018\u2018proper\u2019\u2019 feminine comportment can interfere with their success. Iris Marion Young\u2019s \u2018\u2018Throwing Like a Girl\u2019\u2019 argues that, in physical activities, many women experience an inhibited intentionality. I extend this idea and argue that norms of proper feminine comportment make it harder for women to conceptualize their bodies as standing in agential physical relationships to others\u2019 bodies. This hampers many women starting out in combat sports and needs to be accounted for in women\u2019s self-defense training.","creator":["Audrey Yap"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90b61437-462c-3ea5-ae9e-c36432257c50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90012240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"(HIP) THROWING LIKE A GIRL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012240","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"MARTIAL ARTS AND NORMS OF FEMININE BODY COMPORTMENT"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Ballif"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"628142c3-88b1-3cb9-9845-e741bdcfbdb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3885657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Re\/Dressing Histories; Or, on Re\/Covering Figures Who Have Been Laid Bare by Our Gaze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885657","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4155,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[461864,462141],[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[16632,16909],[23698,23757]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Haulman"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"816e6dd4-4e50-32b5-b6fc-e1bea635c14e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3491443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fashion and the Culture Wars of Revolutionary Philadelphia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491443","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":16868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A coherent account of emotional change must find a dynamic, a vector of alteration, outside the discursive structures and normative practices that have monopolized ethnographic attention in research on affect. But this dynamic can be found in the very character of emotional expression. Emotion talk and emotional gestures are not well characterized by the notion of \u201cdiscourse\u201d derived from the poststructuralist theories of Foucault or by that of \u201cpractice\u201d derived from the theoretical writings of Bourdieu, Giddens, and others. These concepts do not capture the two\u2010way character of emotional utterances and acts, their unique capacity to alter what they \u201crefer\u201d to or what they \u201crepresent\u201d\u2013\u2010a capacity which makes them neither \u201cconstative\u201d nor \u201cperformative\u201d utterances but a third type of communicative utterance entirely, one that has never received adequate theoretical formulation. An attempt is made to formulate a framework for emotional utterances, and the framework is applied to a number of examples.","creator":["William\u00a0M. Reddy"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ebb75fc-8a33-32ef-85ac-ce53d4057462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/204622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Against Constructionism: The Historical Ethnography of Emotions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204622","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":24275,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[129628,129715]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra Fitts"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"900e93d0-bbb1-3149-b693-120b85e72d4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43894982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"137","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ARMON\u00cdA SOMERS' PERMEABLE BOUNDARIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894982","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6739,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[76837,77091],[78885,78991]],"Locations in B":[[26535,26789],[26804,26910]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Andersson"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.3.0295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88f738f0-e3c4-3791-8201-10d91aa6d8f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/scanstud.88.3.0295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The New Woman as a Boy: Female Masculinity in Ellen Idstr\u00f6m's Tvillingsystrarna<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.3.0295","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":9921,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147690,147832]],"Locations in B":[[29671,29811]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.29","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92233df6-c3aa-3818-8c96-4d242455006d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.29"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Notion of \u201cRights\u201d and the Paradoxes of Postcolonial Modernity: Indigenous Peoples and Women in Bolivia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.29","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines how Korean gays and lesbians negotiate South Korea's heteronormative system anchored in the heterosexual and patriarchal family through marriages of convenience (\"contract marriages\"). Korean gays and lesbians pursue contract marriages in order to fulfill their filial duties to marry, while maintaining their gay and lesbian lifestyles. Yet, in pursuing contract marriages as individuals but in the service of conforming to the family, they both reinscribe and transform the heteronormative values of marriage, family, and children. They also challenge the Westernized model of the \"out and proud\" gay or lesbian.","creator":["John (Song Pae) Cho"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25488277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cd620a6-9c40-336b-9237-f3b6870e1d65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25488277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wedding Banquet Revisited: \"Contract Marriages\" between Korean Gays and Lesbians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25488277","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":9812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article conducts a negative reading of Weber\u2019s ideal type of charismatic authority, seeking to anticipate and discern hidden social interactants that are implicated in his descriptions of charismatic social processes. In so doing, this article advances the \u201ccharismatic counter-role\u201d as an umbrella term that captures the performative bearing of a variety of actors on processes of charismatic interaction. Specifically, in addition to devoted followers (already much discussed in the literature), this typology contains unworthy challengers (competitors who fall short when judged by the new terms of legitimacy that the charismatic leader creatively establishes); and colossal players (interlocutors that are appropriately \u201cto scale\u201d for highlighting the extraordinary missions to which the charismatic leader aspires). Together, these charismatic counter-roles interact in ways that comprise a charismatic social system that gives a better account than has heretofore been available for the unstoppable momentum of charismatic challenges. Using the \u201cTrump phenomenon\u201d of 2015\u20132016 as its empirical source, and employing analytical tools from symbolic interactionist and performative approaches to social theory, this article has implications for future studies of how charisma destabilizes traditional and\/or rational-legal social orders.","creator":["Paul Joosse"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"817ba8df-4847-3640-97d1-356c17325a57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26563390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"944","pageStart":"921","pagination":"pp. 921-944","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Countering Trump","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563390","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":12108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Toward a Theory of Charismatic Counter-Roles"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ulf Reichardt"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"315d6fe9-9e9e-3dae-8685-35f3a60c2377"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"302","pagination":"pp. 302-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157279","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":1700,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58864,58996]],"Locations in B":[[456,588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2008, Johannesburg, and the rest of South Africa, began experiencing an energy crisis, resulting in blackouts pointing to a colloquialism now known as 'load shedding'. This occurred during a collaborative performance-based project at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) School of the Arts. The project called Skin of Memory (2008) was inspired by Charlotte Delbo's (1995) dilemma of how to explain the inexplicable; an audacious task of translating trauma into testimony by conjuring up the metaphor of a snake shedding its old skin. Skin of Memory was a project that became troublesome, intensified by particular notions of the participants, including myself, performing specific types of roles. The project was not resolved. This outcome presupposed the on-going process of crises. Trouble in this case meant locating a methodology of practice and reflection reconfiguring the arrangement of the modes of masculinity inherent within works created by male artists (such as myself). It is an attempt to subvert the innate tendencies such as patriarchy, power and authority that might emanate from these works. In reflecting upon these intersections, I want to reconsider how memory and identity intersect through the metaphor of load shedding. I aim to represent this argument through a retrospective of the events leading up to the performed presentation at the colloquium ' Collaborative art activism: A tool for decolonising genders and sexualities in the global South' in 2014. In this performed lecture I provoked how a performer is able to load and shed identity. I consider performance strategies as interventions that subvert marginalised identities in order to understand how the categorisation of identity might be redeemed and transformed through performance.","creator":["Myer Taub"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdbc889d-95ee-33e8-bd8a-6a7953fb97b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (102)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SKIN OF MEMORY: Performing load shedding as a means to present trouble as a tactic towards reconsidering power, difference and authority","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825250","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":4235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46319,46409]],"Locations in B":[[2403,2489]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the early twentieth century, landscape architecture was frequently considered a \"natural\" profession for women. Women as professional landscape architects designed diverse landscapes with a strong focus on residential landscapes. Collectively their works reveal investigations into the social politics and the potential of designed landscapes to meet the needs and visions of contemporary society. This paper draws on archival texts, drawings, and photographs alongside contemporary critiques and reviews of the residential work of three successful female landscape architects: Martha Brookes Hutcheson, Annette Hoyt Flanders, and Marjone L. Sewell Cautley. By exploring their diverse approaches to suburban landscapes, housing projects, and model gardens, the essay traces a political thread connecting what might appear to be individual garden designs reflecting private concerns. This thread reveals a shared commitment to home and garden as transformational spaces with the power to modernize and improve the lives of American residents. While men shared an interest in residential landscape design, women were granted the public's authority in residential matters, and many focused spedfically on the potential of such domestic space to modernize and improve women's daily lives. This investigation challenges us to reconsider how we discuss the history of landscape design, the vital role of residential landscapes, and women's role in the profession of landscape architecture.","creator":["Tha\u00efsa Way"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43332472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02772426"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43332472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landscapej"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Early Social Agendas of Women in Landscape Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43332472","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":14500,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[63900,63982],[64063,64450]],"Locations in B":[[8156,8240],[8233,8623]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Group sex has consistently been identified as one of a group of risk behaviours among gay men associated with HIV seroconversion. This paper presents a detailed description of how gender, and specifically masculinity, operates as an aspect of the discourse of gay men's group sex. The findings presented in this paper are one part of a multi-aspected discourse analysis through which we are aiming to develop an account of the discourse of gay men's group sex as it was produced in a series of qualitative interviews conducted with gay men who participate in group sex. The interviews were conducted as part of the Three or More Study (TOMS), a larger project that involved a substantial quantitative component. The overarching intent of the discourse analysis is to provide as comprehensive a mapping as possible of this discursive terrain to facilitate the targeted development of HIV and sexual health educational initiatives. The discourse of gay men's group sex reproduces some key formations of masculinity within discourses of gender, which present specific challenges for HIV prevention education. These challenges are outlined at the conclusion of this paper. Le sexe en groupe est syst\u00e9matiquement identifi\u00e9 comme un \u00e9l\u00e9ment d'un ensemble de comportements \u00e0 risque parmi les hommes gays, associ\u00e9s \u00e0 la s\u00e9roconversion au VIH. Cet article d\u00e9crit en d\u00e9tail comment le genre - en particulier la masculinit\u00e9 - op\u00e8re en tant que composante du discours sur le sexe en groupe chez les hommes gays. Les r\u00e9sultats qu'il pr\u00e9sente ne constituent qu'une partie d'une analyse multi-aspect du discours, \u00e0 travers laquelle nous visons \u00e0 \u00e9laborer une explication du discours sur le sexe en groupe chez les hommes gays, telle qu'elle a \u00e9merg\u00e9 d'une s\u00e9rie d'entretiens qualitatifs men\u00e9s avec quelques hommes gays qui partiquent le sexe en groupe. Les entretiens doivent \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme une phase de l'\u00e9tude \u00abThree or More\u00bb (TOMS), un plus vaste projet de recherche, avec une composante quantitative substantielle. L'objectif principal de l'analyse du discours est de fournir une cartographie aussi compl\u00e8te que possible de ce terrain discursif, afin de faciliter le d\u00e9veloppement vis\u00e9 d'initiatives en mati\u00e8re d'\u00e9ducation sur le VIH et sur la sant\u00e9 sexuelle. Le discours sur le sexe en groupe des hommes gays reproduit certains aspects cl\u00e9 de la formation de la masculinit\u00e9 dans les discours de genre, qui repr\u00e9sentent des d\u00e9fis sp\u00e9cifiques pour l'\u00e9ducation \u00e0 la pr\u00e9vention du VIH. Ces d\u00e9fis sont d\u00e9taill\u00e9s dans la conclusion de l'article. Las relaciones sexuales en grupo se han identificado continuamente como una de las conductas de riesgo entre hombres homosexuales que participan en la seroconversi\u00f3n del VIH. En este art\u00edculo presentamos una descripci\u00f3n detallada de c\u00f3mo funciona el g\u00e9nero, y en concreto la masculinidad, como un aspecto del discurso de las relaciones sexuales en grupo entre hombres homosexuales. Los resultados presentados en este art\u00edculo forman parte de un an\u00e1lisis discursivo en el que se incluyen varios aspectos y mediante el cual queremos desarrollar un relato del discurso de hombres homosexuales que participan en sexo en grupo. Estos datos se obtuvieron a partir de una serie de entrevistas cualitativas llevadas a cabo con homosexuales que participaban en estas sesiones de sexo en grupo. Las entrevistas se llevaron a cabo en el marco del Three or More Study (TOMS), un proyecto mayor con un importante componente cuantitativo. El objetivo general del an\u00e1lisis discursivo es ofrecer un estudio lo m\u00e1s exhaustivo posible de este terreno discursivo para facilitar el desarrollo dirigido de iniciativas educativas en materia del virus del sida y de la salud sexual. El discurso de las relaciones sexuales en grupo entre hombres homosexuales reproduce algunas formaciones clave de masculinidad en los discursos de g\u00e9nero que presentan retos espec\u00edficos para la educaci\u00f3n en la prevenci\u00f3n del contagio del sida. Estos retos se describen al final de este art\u00edculo.","creator":["David McIannes","Jack Bradley","Garrett Prestage"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ac10aa5-0b78-3970-91b0-25a146154a44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27784487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The discourse of gay men's group sex: the importance of masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784487","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses how low frequency electromagnetic fields (EMFs) emitted from power lines, computers and electrical appliances have become a form of environmental pollution. At the heart of this controversy is a growing public and scientific preoccupation with measuring EMF 'level', quantifying EMF 'exposure', and calculating the EMF 'risk' to human health. Increasingly sophisticated measurement devices (dosimeters) are offered on the market to 'detect' an invisible topography of 'field levels', 'non-sinusoidal wave forms', 'hot spots', 'peak intensities' and 'high frequency transients'. We thus approach the representation, constitution and management of EMFs by considering how dosimeters are used in epidemiological studies to construct EMF risks, and in particular environments (homes, schools, offices) to construct an invisible topography. We argue that EMF measurements are not just representations of pollution, but also regulatory devices constitutive of the boundaries between individual bodies, social bodies and the environment.","creator":["Lisa M. Mitchell","Alberto Cambrosio"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"697621ec-5a97-3dbf-baa0-02225c36edde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Invisible Topography of Power: Electromagnetic Fields, Bodies and the Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285470","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":20794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[100329,100404]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GREG ANDERSON"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43db59b0-968a-39e9-b350-0fb5f4771742"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26577257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"810","pageStart":"787","pagination":"pp. 787-810","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Retrieving the Lost Worlds of the Past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577257","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":15057,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[74732,74796]],"subTitle":"The Case for an Ontological Turn"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bridget Fowler","Esther Blay"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11372354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e0380f1-e5e0-3cd9-8e3d-15868e7cf49d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25596233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"guaraguao"}],"isPartOf":"Guaraguao","issueNumber":"13","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Asociacion Centro de Estudios y Cooperacion Para America Latina","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La dominaci\u00f3n masculina en la obra de Pierre Bourdieu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596233","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Bender"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0a2b2f2-5019-3219-80b6-68ff929bf5ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20027407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politics, Intellect, and the American University, 1945-1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027407","volumeNumber":"126","wordCount":14458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476031,476119]],"Locations in B":[[91650,91738]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Murphy"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a11bb41b-9c7d-3c23-8e0a-aabdc5ec2a33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reevaluating Female \"Inferiority\": Sarah Grand versus Charles Darwin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058416","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8902,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[55269,55381]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary J. Coombe"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"014df024-d559-34f9-9a91-61284f33ae70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Celebrity Image and Cultural Identity: Publicity Rights and the Subaltern Politics of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389233","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11667,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[53434,53584],[142612,142700]],"Locations in B":[[24164,24314],[25207,25298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AbstractResponding to a conference paper on queer psychoanalysis whose examples centered on the lives of gay men, a prominent lesbian feminist asked, \u201cWhere are the women?\u201d Alluding to the truism that queer theory is gay male theory cloaked in more inclusive language, this comment reminds us that at the juncture of gender and \u201cqueer\u201d sexuality lurks a perpetual question as to what such a nebulous term assumes and what it effaces. But a further question goes unasked in the grammar of \u201cWhere are the women?\u201d\u2014a question I propose we take seriously. That is, in any given work of queer theory, why should there necessarily be women (or for that matter gay men, bisexuals, etc.)? This article challenges the efficaciousness of an everything-and-the-kitchen-sink approach to queer theorizing\u2014as well as the paradoxically heteronormative presumption that lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and transsexuals ought a priori to have anything in common culturally, politically, or otherwise\u2014through a comparison of drag king and queen performance cultures at a Cleveland gay bar. Although they are discursively equated under the heading of drag, these iconically queer institutions overlap little with respect to demographics, movement vocabulary, audience repartee and etiquette, stage persona, self-styling, and treatment of gender, class, race, and sexuality. The radical (in)difference between king and queen cultures testifies to \u201cqueer\u201d\u2019s inadequacies at the nexus of gender and sexuality and offers some suggestions for theorizing identity categories as relatively coherent cultural iterations while avoiding the hazards of essentialism inherent to an umbrella term like \u201cqueer.\u201d","creator":["Katie R. Horowitz"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bbaf793-99af-38be-8380-645709da7c58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/667199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Trouble with \u201cQueerness\u201d: Drag and the Making of Two Cultures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667199","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8892,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[146476,146684]],"Locations in B":[[29090,29298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Detailed study of microcommunities of transgender sex workers in Guadalajara and San Francisco reveals a close relationship between migratory motives, economic aspirations, and sexuality. The resonance of both cities as \"gay meccas\" in their respective nation-states provides a background for the operation of these imagined sites of tolerance in transgender sex workers' lives. Migration is gendered and sexualized, and, despite infrastructural support in San Francisco, these workers find more holistic support \"at home.\"","creator":["Cymene Howe","Susanna Zaraysky","Lois Lorentzen"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"771a5a0d-b073-376e-bb4d-6c0bfcc08433"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27648072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Transgender Sex Workers and Sexual Transmigration between Guadalajara and San Francisco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648072","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wendy Somerson"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44367022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53c918ba-0110-375e-bb31-c4fd2412aed3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44367022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"BECOMING RASTA: RECENTERING WHITE MASCULINITY IN THE ERA OF TRANSNATIONALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44367022","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6497,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[421514,421791],[425464,425686]],"Locations in B":[[11701,11978],[12184,12408]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"After the unsuccessful end of the spring 2009 French university movement, faculty and student activists searched for new political strategies. One promising option was an internationalist project that sought to unite anti-Bologna Project movements across Europe. Yet an ethnographic study of two international counter-summits in Brussels (March 2010) and Dijon (May 2011) shows that this strategy was unsuccessful. This article explores the causes of these failures, arguing that activist internationalism became caught in a trap of political mimesis, and that the form of official international summits was incompatible with activists\u2019 temporal, representational, and reflexive needs.","creator":["Eli Thorkelson"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68861695-b911-336b-a68b-417dcde4075c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26892996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Two Failures of Left Internationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892996","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Political Mimesis at French University Counter-Summits, 2010\u20132011"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3189250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Detailed Schedule of Sessions with Abstracts of Papers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189250","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":36800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Claire"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26627884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c267d1e-379f-3372-9a6f-5f77210d4e91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26627884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"46","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Dance Studies<\/em>, genre et enjeux de l\u2019histoire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26627884","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Social constructionist explanations of human thought and behavior hold that our representations (e.g. of race, or gender, or mental illness, or emotion) produce and regulate the categories, thoughts, and behaviors of those they represent. Performative versions of constructionist accounts explain these thoughts and behaviors as part of an intentional, strategic performance that is elicited and regulated by our representations of ourselves. This paper has four aims. First, I sketch a causal model of performative social constructionist claims. Second, I articulate a puzzling feature of performative claims that makes them seem especially implausible: the puzzle of intention and ignorance. Like other constructionists, performative constructionists are especially interested in explaining thoughts and behaviors that are widely but mistakenly believed to be the unintentional consequences of membership in a natural kind. But why doesn't the intentional performance of a category undermine this ignorance? My third aim is to resolve this puzzle. I suggest that a plausible understanding can be found in the failure to locate one's mental states in a causal explanation of one's thoughts and actions. Finally, I argue that this model implies that the sorts of theories we (as a community or as a culture) offer of particular behaviors can create or destroy agency and responsibility with regard to those behaviors.","creator":["Ron Mallon"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24703955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318116"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41976996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cd7e5f4-5e09-3f96-848d-cd9bd6633465"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24703955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Studies: An International Journal for Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"2798","pageStart":"2777","pagination":"pp. 2777-2798","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Performance, self-explanation, and agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24703955","volumeNumber":"172","wordCount":10538,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431491,431620],[431984,432109]],"Locations in B":[[17257,17386],[17393,17518]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studies framing \"belonging\" as a key focus and a central concept of research have increased significantly in the 2000s. This article explores the dimensions of belonging as a scholarly concept. The investigation is based on a qualitative content analysis of articles published in academic journals covering a large number of different disciplines. The article poses and answers the following research questions: How is belonging understood and used in contemporary research? What added value does the concept bring to scholarly discussions? In the analysis, five topoi of conceptualizing belonging \u2013 spatiality, intersectionality, multiplicity, materiality, and non-belonging \u2013 were identified. After introducing the topoi, the article explores their cross-cutting dimensions, such as the emphasis on the political, emotional, and affective dimensions of belonging, and discusses key observations made from the data, such as the substantial proportion of research on minorities and \"vulnerable\" people. The analysis of the data suggests that by choosing to use the concept of belonging, scholars seek to emphasize the fluid, unfixed, and processual nature of diverse social and spatial attachments.","creator":["Tuuli L\u00e4hdesm\u00e4ki","Tuija Saresma","Kaisa Hiltunen","Saara J\u00e4ntti","Nina S\u00e4\u00e4skilahti","Antti Vallius","Kaisa Ahvenj\u00e4rvi"],"datePublished":"2016-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24859900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04f0fb2b-4b58-3976-bd18-906daa1479d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24859900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fluidity and flexibility of \"belonging\": Uses of the concept in contemporary research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24859900","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":8619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen NAKAMURA"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43920512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691465"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48058473"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238604"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0a6decb-ae57-3b81-9494-89ec23b964df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43920512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciejapaj"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science Japan Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43920512","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Essentialist and postmodern feminisms are often regarded as incompatible. I propose that Buddhist theories of subjectivity change the nature of the tension between them as presently construed because Buddhist traditions describe a mind not wholly governed by language, and a subjective mental dimension that is entirely integrated with the body and its sensations. A corollary is the compatibility Buddhists perceive between conditioned subjective states (akin to postmodern feminisms) and the unconditioned (akin to essentialist feminisms).","creator":["Anne C. Klein"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15fbec25-517e-36d3-929b-2e929c8787f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Presence with a Difference: Buddhists and Feminists on Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810425","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8871,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[454481,454559]],"Locations in B":[[9094,9172]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Questions of gender and sexuality have oftentimes been portrayed as taboo in traditionalist conservative societies. Gloria Anzald\u00faa claims in Borderlands\/La Frontera (1999) that \u201cshe [the lesbian of color] goes against two moral prohibitions: sexuality and homosexuality. The Chicana lesbian, as a matter of survival and motivated by sexual impulses, struggles to surpass the passive role repression assigns to her and refuses to accept the heteronormative rule. In the present paper, I investigate how the narrative strategies and cultural references bring to surface the emotions and experiences that form subjectivity and sexual desire in Emma P\u00e9rez\u2019s Gulf Dreams (1996) and Carla Trujillo\u2019s What Night Brings (2003). Such transgressive narrators are of different ages and thus undergoing different maturity processes, but they begin both novels as young Chicana women attempting to explore their sexuality and uncover their own prohibited desires while becoming aware of the patriarchal and machista system in which they are inscribed. Here female sexuality and lesbian desire intertwine. The chosen novels enable a debate on women\u2019s sexual development and exploration and society\u2019s influence, judgement and punishment on female sexuality. Writings of Gloria Anzald\u00faa, Cherrie Moraga, Carla Trujillo, Emma P\u00e9rez and other feminist Chicana critics aid this analysis. Quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e sexualidade v\u00eam sendo tratadas como tabu em sociedades tradicionais e conservadoras. Gloria Anzald\u00faa alega em Borderlands\/La Frontera (1999) que \u201cela [a l\u00e9sbica de cor] depara-se contra duas proibi\u00e7\u00f5es morais: sexualidade e homossexualidade\u201d. A Chicana l\u00e9sbica, como forma de sobreviv\u00eancia e motivada por impulsos sexuais, batalha para superar o papel social passivo que a repress\u00e3o atribui a ela e recusa-se a aceitar o sistema heteronormativo. Na presente pesquisa, pretendo investigar como as estrat\u00e9gias narrativas e as refer\u00eancias culturais trazem \u00e0 superf\u00edcie emo\u00e7\u00f5es e experi\u00eancias que formam a subjetividade e o desejo sexual em What Night Brings (2003) de Carla Trujillo e Gulf Dreams (1996) de Emma P\u00e9rez. Suas narradoras transgressoras s\u00e3o de diferentes idades e processos de maturidade, por\u00e9m iniciam ambos os romances como jovens Chicanas buscando explorar sua sexualidade e desvendar seus desejos proibidos enquanto se conscientizam do sistema patriarcal e machista no qual est\u00e3o inseridas. Aqui a sexualidade da mulher e o desejo l\u00e9sbico se entrela\u00e7am. Ambos os romances possibilitam discuss\u00f5es sobre o desenvolvimento e a explora\u00e7\u00e3o sexual e tamb\u00e9m sobre a influ\u00eancia, julgamento e puni\u00e7\u00e3o da comunidade com rela\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 sexualidade da mulher. Escritos de Gloria Anzald\u00faa, Cherrie Moraga, Carla Trujillo, Emma P\u00e9rez e outras cr\u00edticas Chicanas feministas auxiliam a pesquisa.","creator":["Nath\u00e1lia Ara\u00fajo Duarte de Gouv\u00eaa"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"110b61ca-bbe7-3bb7-a631-598cd9eb826f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26538497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cA Detour in Longing\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538497","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4926,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102961,103458]],"Locations in B":[[17993,18595]],"subTitle":"Gender, Sexuality and Lesbian Desire in Carla Trujillo\u2019s What Night Brings<\/em> and Emma P\u00e9rez\u2019s Gulf Dreams<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Auxiliadora P\u00e9rez-Vides","Roc\u00edo Carrasco-Carrasco"],"datePublished":"2015-02-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.1.0014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c14cc2bc-d165-3455-a739-ad521fc3d8ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.1.0014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Painful Embodiment in Aisling Walsh's Song for a Raggy Boy and Pedro Almod\u00f3var's Bad Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.1.0014","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":11207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article discusses Research Capacity Development (RCD), in a Faculty of Education at a South African university. It employs the notions of performativity and performance to argue that specific local sites at universities have complex stories to tell about their responsiveness to research output imperatives. The article emphasizes that there is a formative relationship between the specific RCD discursive text of this Faculty and the performance-based activities of its management and academics. The career of RCD in the Faculty is established in the light of specific activities against the background of a small Faculty environment. The article specifically considers the basis for its relative success in the area of doctoral completion by its academic staff and its diminishing article writing output. It draws the conclusion that efforts to secure a vigorous RCD platform depend on the ability to establish a nurturing institutional environment in which a scholarly culture can be encouraged and protected. Cet article traite du d\u00e9veloppement de capacit\u00e9s de recherche (RCD) dans la Facult\u00e9 d\u2019\u00e9ducation d\u2019une universit\u00e9 sud-africaine. Il utilise les notions de performativit\u00e9 et de performance pour affirmer que des lieux sp\u00e9cifiques dans les universit\u00e9s ont des histoires complexes \u00e0 raconter sur leur r\u00e9activit\u00e9 aux imp\u00e9ratifs de production de recherche. L\u2019article souligne qu\u2019il existe une relation formative entre le discours sp\u00e9cifique de cette facult\u00e9 sur le d\u00e9veloppement de capacit\u00e9s de recherche et les activit\u00e9s de performance de son personnel administratif et de ses universitaires. Le processus de d\u00e9veloppement de capacit\u00e9s de recherche au sein de la facult\u00e9 est \u00e9tabli \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re d\u2019activit\u00e9s sp\u00e9cifiques dans un environnement facultaire restreint. L\u2019article examine en particulier les raisons de son succ\u00e8s relatif dans la compl\u00e9tion en doctorat par son personnel acad\u00e9mique et la baisse de sa production d\u2019articles. Il en conclut que la mise en place d\u2019une plateforme dynamique de d\u00e9veloppement de capacit\u00e9s de recherche d\u00e9pend de la capacit\u00e9 \u00e0 cr\u00e9er un environnement institutionnel stimulant dans lequel une culture savante peut \u00eatre encourag\u00e9e et prot\u00e9g\u00e9e.","creator":["Aslam Fataar"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26640370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"227c433d-4abd-3f37-aac2-d2ac635039f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26640370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Performative Injunctions in the Higher Education Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26640370","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Discursive Career of Research Capacity Development in a South African University Faculty of Education"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth J. Meyer"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7808115-cf48-3615-9154-664eab13aca0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: From Here to Queer: Mapping Sexualities in Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981378","volumeNumber":"367","wordCount":5178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diana Fuss"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92c634c7-b09b-306a-98bf-ff2b765f659b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"737","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-737","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fashion and the Homospectatorial Look","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343827","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8009,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477925]],"Locations in B":[[15249,15346]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Duncan"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41351017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a4112ae-1a40-33f4-a61a-c9cd3c74f861"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41351017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Eroticism and Sexual Transgression in \"Dos mujeres and Amora\": Shaping the Voice of Lesbian Fiction in Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41351017","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article asks what anthropology can contribute to public and scholarly debates about politics of knowledge in global governance and argues that bringing together insights from aesthetics of governance, science and technology studies, and theories of performativity offers a productive reorientation to existing approaches. My specific question is: how did WHO research that was intended to counter alarmist discourses about female genital cutting end up legitimizing them? For anthropologists who participated in the scientific controversy, the answer was clear: the study was driven by ideology. To expand the range of analytical responses, I suggest, we need to understand the rearrangements of knowledge and power in neoliberal governance, as well as a conception of authorship that uncouples scientific statements from sovereign subjects. Deadly harms were not made certain by ideology, I argue, but by aesthetics of expertise, WHO bundling of governance by emergency and governance by evidence, and performative iterations at the cultural boundaries of science. To make this argument, I analyze the historical conditions of possibility for the WHO study, offer an ethnography of knowledge production, and trace the social and governmental lives of fact and meaning-making.","creator":["SAIDA HOD\u017dI\u0106"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e4b825a-5a34-36e9-97fe-3df7781713e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23360307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ASCERTAINING DEADLY HARMS: Aesthetics and Politics of Global Evidence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360307","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9725,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[56345,56414]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6002fde0-1bfc-3951-8e91-d0deb6083fd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"217","pagination":"p. 217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354577","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Magnarelli"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"571bce67-486f-31a6-bd97-6f09037cf5f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Re)Negotiating the Family Romance: Luisa Valenzuela's \"Cuchillo y madre\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021269","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Intervening at the nexus of queer anthropology, black resistance, and Latin American and Caribbean culture and politics, I examine sites, modalities, and limits of \"erotic \"subjectivity\" during Cuba's Special Period in Time of Peace (Per\u00edodo Especial en Tiempo de Paz)\u2014the economic crisis of the 1990s. I trace how nonheteronormative black Cubans have been reinventing ways to participate, officially and unofficially, in a number of fraught, uneven exchanges on the ground. I aim to outline a genealogy of the political possibilities for nonheteronormative black Cubans.","creator":["JAFARI ALLEN"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8d0f5cb-e829-32e2-ad7b-10c2a87ea75e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"One way or another: Erotic subjectivity in Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250825","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12125,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524346,524428]],"Locations in B":[[74102,74184]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vinnie Oliveri"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30037163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787469"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f772058-82c0-3145-9814-00b7d487149f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30037163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacicoasphil"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Coast Philology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex, Gender, and Death in \"The Sea-Wolf\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30037163","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8273,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[186607,186709]],"Locations in B":[[13438,13529]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The implications of smoking refusal for personal identity style were studied through conversations in six small focus groups or dyads of 13- and 14-year-old non-smokers from an urban New Zealand secondary school. The approach to analyzing their talk was informed by notions of 'performativity' and 'social space' to focus on the connections between identity and social relations. Smoking emerged as a key signifier of power and status. It was salient at both top and bottom ends of the social hierarchy depending upon the competence displayed in smoking as part of a larger ensemble of personal deportment and behavior. Being a non-smoker therefore inevitably carried connotations of being 'average' or 'in the middle', presenting non-smoking adolescents with the problem of accrediting themselves against superior 'smoker cool' groups. A discourse analytic approach was used to examine the resources and strategies participants brought to bear on this 'problem', which was then seen to be solved differently by boys and girls. Boys could establish alternatives to 'smoker cool' through physical activity, girls had little recourse but to accept their inferior status. The implications of this for health education and promotion are discussed","creator":["E. W. Plumridge","L. J. Fitzgerald","G. M. Abel"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45109807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02681153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd018b81-37c5-34ec-9e46-119664463990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45109807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healeducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Health Education Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Performing coolness: smoking refusal and adolescent identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45109807","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The goal of this article is to propose a dialectical model representing gender discourse in families. A brief review of literature in sociology, psychology, and gender studies focuses on three dialectical issues: nature versus culture, similarity versus difference, and stability versus fluidity. Deconstructing gender theories from a postmodern feminist perspective, the authors discuss agency and context in families' gender discourse. Narrative excerpts from interviews with an adolescent daughter and her mother illustrate three emergent themes in the social construction of gender: body, identity, and sexuality. The article concludes with recommendations for family researchers.","creator":["Libby Balter Blume","Thomas W. Blume"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3599890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222445"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976459"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227020"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3599890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmarriagefamily"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Marriage and Family","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"794","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-794","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Dialectical Model of Family Gender Discourse: Body, Identity, and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3599890","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":7094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1993 Italian newspapers published the membership lists of all major Masonic Orders in the country. The lists were part of an ongoing campaign waged in the name of transparency against the secrecy of Freemasons, long suspected of political conspiracies. The lists, however, omitted women's names, thus reifying Freemasonry as a brotherhood of men. Drawing on 18 months of fieldwork among Freemason men and women in Italy, I examine historically and ethnographically the significance of women's absence from the lists, the aftermath of those publications for Masonic experiences in Italy, and the paradoxes of transparency as a gendered discourse.","creator":["Lilith Mahmud"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1e1eaf1-7399-3c5f-9b8f-da6ca9c9c59a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41857296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"1207","pageStart":"1177","pagination":"pp. 1177-1207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"In The Name of Transparency: Gender, Terrorism, and Masonic Conspiracies in Italy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857296","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":13545,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59718,59885]],"Locations in B":[[44784,44951]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"357d6600-3f3b-3e9c-a7d4-29b5dadb9f0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Publications Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177962","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8868,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478206]],"Locations in B":[[46430,46511]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Considerando o car\u00e1ter multifacetado e socialmente heterog\u00eaneo da epidemia do HIV\/AIDS, gostaria de refletir sobre as formas pragm\u00e1ticas de apropria\u00e7\u00e3o, negocia\u00e7\u00e3o e conflito de g\u00eanero em termos das disposi\u00e7\u00f5es poss\u00edveis de masculinidade e feminilidade ou, ainda, suas amplas combina\u00e7\u00f5es entre homens e mulheres de diferentes identidades sexuais e diversos status sorol\u00f3gicos. Os contextos a serem explorados e descritos s\u00e3o aqueles particulares ao mundo social da AIDS, incluindo tanto o cotidiano de uma ONG AIDS espec\u00edfica, bem como os que se apresentam em situa\u00e7\u00f5es tanto p\u00fablicas como privadas na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. Pretendo discutir como novas subjetividades podem se constituir a partir dos usos de categorias sexuais e sorol\u00f3gicas, valores morais e de express\u00f5es performativas de g\u00eanero. Considering the plural and socially heterogeneous character of HIV\/AIDS epidemics, I intend to present the pragmatic forms and ways of gender appropriation, negotiation and conflict in regard to the meaningful dispositions of masculinity and femininity as well as the broad combinations between men and women of different sexual identities and\/or specific s\u00e9rologie status. I will describe and discuss the particular contexts in which the HIV\/AIDS social world was developed. Above all, I focused the everyday activities in one important Brazilian AIDS NGO. Public and private situations in Rio de Janeiro will be also approached. I intend to discuss how new subjectivities can be created and made through the use of sexual and serologie categories, moral values and gender performances.","creator":["Carlos Guilherme Octaviano do Valle"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00347701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2759799-dfb7-3779-b3e1-b421f1b47770"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41616509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviantr"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Antropologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"698","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-698","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Revista de Antropologia","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Apropria\u00e7\u00f5es, conflitos e negocia\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero, classe e sorologia: etnografando situa\u00e7\u00f5es e performances no mundo social do HIV\/AIDS (Rio de Janeiro)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616509","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":14607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ASTRID LAC"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24694584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3242a61b-b38a-3f0c-8124-9bea4f3ed7bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24694584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Becoming Mad Bio-graphically: The Styling Body in Modern Japanese Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24694584","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":12873,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25174,25307]],"Locations in B":[[33698,33831]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carl F. Stychin"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constituting Sexuality: The Struggle for Sexual Orientation in the South African Bill of Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410476","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":14687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Experience has recently reemerged as an important analytical category for historians of the Old Regime and the French Revolution. Reacting against the perceived excesses of discourse analysis, which made political language independent of any social determinants, certain post-revisionists are now seeking to contextualize political language by relating it to the experience of those who use it. Political agency, in these analyses, is understood to be the effect of particular formative experiences. This article suggests that the search for an experiential antidote to discourse is misconceived because it perpetuates an untenable dichotomy between thought and reality. Access to the phenomenon of historical agency should be pursued not through experience or discourse but through the category of consciousness, since the make-up of the subject's consciousness determines how he\/she engages the world and decides to attempt changing it. After a brief discussion of an important study that exemplifies both the allure and the functionality of the notion of experience, Timothy Tackett's Becoming a Revolutionary, the article focuses on the evolving political consciousness of a man who became a revolutionary agitator in 1789, J.-M.-A. Servan. Analysis of his writings between 1770 and 1789 shows that the way in which his perspective was constructed, rather than the lessons of experience per se, determined the shape of his revolutionary intentions in 1789.","creator":["Jay M. Smith"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2677990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Discourse and Experience: Agency and Ideas in the French Pre-Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677990","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":14764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Juan Gil"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"887","pageStart":"861","pagination":"pp. 861-887","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Before Intimacy: Modernity and Emotion in the Early Modern Discourse of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032048","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PAULINE PHIPPS"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d139d83a-bffc-32ee-829d-15eaa4aa44c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40663353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Faith, Desire, and Sexual Identity: Constance Maynard's Atonement for Passion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40663353","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11043,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[511166,511266]],"Locations in B":[[24482,24588]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I consider the activities of a group of individuals who tinker with and build radio hardware in an informal setting called 'Geek Group'. They conceive of Geek Group as a radical pedagogical activity, which constitutes an aspect of activism surrounding citizen access to low-power FM radio. They are also concerned with combating the gendered nature of hardware skills, yet in spite of their efforts men tend to have more skill and familiarity with radio hardware than women. Radio tinkering has a long history as a masculine undertaking and a site of masculine identity construction. I argue that this case represents an interplay between geek, activist, and gendered identities, all of which are salient for this group, but which do not occur together without some tension.","creator":["Christina Dunbar-Hester"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef31a5a7-1bde-3a98-91b7-f07e2f7699b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25474574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Geeks, Meta-Geeks, and Gender Trouble: Activism, Identity, and Low-Power FM Radio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474574","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":17702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Leeb"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10890017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49210134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bae75001-cad9-391b-8ae6-aa7322ff3ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goodsociety"}],"isPartOf":"The Good Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Politics of 'Misrecognition': A Feminist Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711323","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5108,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99390,99512]],"Locations in B":[[23201,23320]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The gendered body is constructed and performative. Androgyny involves the scrambling of gender markers (clothes, gestures, speech patterns) in a \"surface politics of the body.\" I explore the politics of androgyny in Japan as they have been embodied and enacted by same-sex theater actors and expressed in Japanese society at large. The referent of androgyny, or the body of the androgyne, has changed over the past 300 years from male to female. Since the early 20th century, androgyny has been deployed in both dominant and marginal discourses to camouflage \"unconventional\" female sexual choices and practices by creating the illusion of an asexual identity. It has also been evoked in reference to females who \"do\" both \"female\" and \"male\" gender without being constrained by either. [androgyny, gender, sexuality, theater, girls and women, Japan]","creator":["Jennifer Robertson"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12c3732-d570-36b3-86d1-287d4922102c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/645194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Politics of Androgyny in Japan: Sexuality and Subversion in the Theater and Beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645194","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13935,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73512,73644]],"Locations in B":[[8754,8886]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas M. Keck"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4148042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6115cb9a-747f-3937-8970-131ef7f3596e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4148042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Queering the Rehnquist Court","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4148042","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":1901,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124727]],"Locations in B":[[8154,8287]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Longmuir"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10d20391-8093-318d-8ddb-990d58c71245"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"528","pagination":"pp. 528-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PERFORMING THE BODY IN DON DELILLO'S \"THE BODY ARTIST\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287115","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":6970,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[276164,276371]],"Locations in B":[[40649,40856]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sue-Ellen Case"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05694fe5-093e-378f-af74-639599d6c1d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Lesbian in the Space of Technology: Part I","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208803","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9280,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[59091,59148]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86141798-1a00-32e8-bdbc-4c9e8fb27b95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"1398","pageStart":"1362","pagination":"pp. 1362-1398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A German Alabama in Africa: The Tuskegee Expedition to German Togo and the Transnational Origins of West African Cotton Growers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1362","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":22324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul A. Custer"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55c2b02f-c0a6-3538-b9a5-b6b740d3deb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25096671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"195","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Refiguring Jemima: Gender, Work and Politics in Lancashire 1770-1820","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096671","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Los libros y las narrativas de viaje suponen un rico material para la comprensi\u00f3n de la apropiaci\u00f3n intelectual que Europa hizo del \"Oriente\" en tanto que parte integrante y, a la vez, producto del vasto proceso conocido como colonialismo en el que la geograf\u00eda estuvo tan profundamente involucrada. En particular, quiero rescatar del olvido las narrativas escritas por viajeras y exploradoras y que tambi\u00e9n est\u00e1n en la base de la formaci\u00f3n de nuestra disciplina. Este texto se divide en tres partes: la primera revisa la recepci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica de los planteamientos de Edward Said sobre el Orientalismo y la Otredad. La segunda parte se centra en dos viajeras europeas en el mundo \u00e1rabe a principios del siglo xx, Gertrude Bell e Isabelle Eberhardt. La selecci\u00f3n se debe a que una y otra encarnan maneras muy diferentes de enfrentarse a la Otredad con may\u00fasculas que el mundo del Islam supon\u00eda para la Europa de su tiempo. Al final esbozo unas conclusiones comparativas y hago unas reflexiones finales sobre los dos casos presentados. Travel books and narratives constitute a rich source for the understanding of Europe's intellectual appropriation of the Orient, as both an integral part and the result of the vast process known as colonialism in which geography was so deeply involved. In particular, I wish to recover the narratives of female travelers and explorers, who also constitute the basis of the training in our discipline. This text is divided into three sections: the first reviews the critical reception of Edward Said's views on Orientalism and \"Otherness\". The second focuses on two female European travelers in the Arab world at the beginning of the 20th century, Gertrude Bell and Isabelle Eberhardt. These two women were selected since they embody very different ways of coping with the Otherness that the world of Islam represented for Europe at the time. Os livros e as narra\u00e7\u00f5es de viagem oferecem urn rico material para compreender a apropria\u00e7\u00e3o intelectual europeia do \"Oriente\", que se constitu\u00ed como parte e produto do vasto processo do colonialismo no qual a geograf\u00eda era t\u00e3o profundamente envolvida. Em particular, interessa-me resgatar do esquecimento as narra\u00e7\u00f5es escritas por mulheres viajantes exploradoras que tamb\u00e9m est\u00e3o na base da forma\u00e7\u00e3o de nossa disciplina. Este texto \u00e9 dividido em duas partes: a primeira revisa os comentarios cr\u00edticos das ideias de Edward Said sobre o Orientalismo e a \"Alteridade\"; a segunda tem como foco Gertrude Bell e Isabelle Eberhardt, passageiras europeias no mundo \u00e1rabe no inicio do s\u00e9culo xx. A sele\u00e7\u00e3o se justifica na medida em que as duas lidam de urna forma distinta com a Alteridade (com mai\u00fascula) que o mundo do Isl\u00e3 pressupunha para a Europa do seu tempo.","creator":["Maria-Dolors Garcia-Ramon"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fff7c2e8-3ebb-3075-8e1b-2edb98cd5f4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44735296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Geograf\u00eda del g\u00e9nero y los espacios de encuentro colonial: una nueva mirada a las narrativas de viaje \/ Geography of gender and spaces of colonial encounter: a new perspective on travel narratives \/ Geografia de g\u00e9nero e espa\u00e7os de encontro colonial: um novo olhar para as narra\u00e7\u00f5es de viagem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735296","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":7822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using the film \"Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind\" as its object, this paper embodies, explores, and performs the connections and disjunctions between the critical perspectives of psychoanalysis and schizoanalysis. In so doing, we reject the perspectives that have heretofore binarized the two modes of thought as well as the applications that have oversimplified and fetishized their critical vocabularies. This paper is therefore a form of performance that endorses both psychoanalysis and schizoanalysis as modes of thought and being, but most importantly sets forth a mode of embodied critique that transcends the simple deployment of critical vocabulary.","creator":["Benjamin R. Bates","Kristopher Stroup"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20176760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"299e65fd-080f-30ca-9466-d0e237c1dfd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20176760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Eternal Sunshine of the Solar Anus: A Schizoanalytic Perspective on Critical Methodology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20176760","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9086,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[70476,70664]],"Locations in B":[[9228,9419]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sabrina H\u00fcttner"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e774231f-8df9-3200-869c-c42443f209f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41635632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Dirty Sexy Money\": Commodified Identities and Acts of Consumption in Christopher Shinn's \"Other People and Where We Come From\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635632","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":6619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gail Schwab"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sexual Difference as Model: An Ethics for the Global Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566325","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9872,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[59433,59467]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Agnes I. Lugo-Ortiz"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41671658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03421864"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b676793d-bc17-3623-ae2a-e7ddba6b32d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41671658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iberoamer"}],"isPartOf":"Iberoamericana (1977-2000)","issueNumber":"3\/4 (67\/68)","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Figuraciones del cuerpo lesbiano: nacionalismo y ansiedad en la narrativa puertorrique\u00f1a de los a\u00f1os cincuenta","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41671658","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9843,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[175215,175583],[175598,175680]],"Locations in B":[[24340,24708],[24723,24806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The macro-micro distinction is one of the most powerful in the human and physical sciences. In this article we challenge the macro by positing an alternative that recognises the intricacies and complexities of material geographies. We employ the Latin proverb - Aquila non captat muscas (Eagles don't catch flies) - to epitomise our position. Instead of looking to general theory - the bird's eye view - we argue for interrogating the ontologica\/and methodological implications of a reciprocal, but antithetical, perspective - that of the flies. We call this alternative the site, an ontology that attempts to account for the different and varying political possibilities -virtually infinite and 'un-catalogue-able' - constantly at work in the world. The site is a formulation that recognises social life as a realm of infinite singularity and variability, where matter is immanently self-organising and pure difference unfolds. We explore the spatiality of the site through the concepts of topology and difference and then develop four methodological orientations for exploring the terrain of situated practices enmeshed in and unfolding through sites.","creator":["Keith Woodward","John Paul Jones III","Sallie A Marston"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40890881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3cf5598-27bf-37a8-8f96-d2b7c13642b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40890881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of eagles and flies: orientations toward the site","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40890881","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that an androcentric Basque nationalist pedagogy is enacted in secondary schools in San Sebastian (Donostia), Spain. Textbooks present men as the exemplary Basque speakers and cultural agents by erasing women's contributions to Basque language and culture. Schools also contribute to a recursive language ideology, linking \"authentic\" ethnic identity, \"naturalness,\" and solidarity with vernacular Basque, of which the most pragmatically salient marker is the familiar form of address hi. Hi, in turn, indirectly indexes male speakers and masculinity, thereby creating an iconic relationship between authentic Basque identity, Basque culture, and masculinity. However, many women in Basque society have challenged this male privilege in various domains, thereby opening up the possibility of a Basque nation that embraces its female as well as its male members. As such, the Basque case has interesting implications for theorizing the relationships among language, gender, and nation.","creator":["Bego\u00f1a Echeverria"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97015cb0-9d2b-37c6-b060-0e476ac9f11a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Language Ideologies and Practices in (En)gendering the Basque Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169269","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":13244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing from a multiyear ethnography and a longitudinal case study, this article examines how one Guatemalan American teenager negotiates the multiple socializations to ethnic and gender identities in her home, her Pentecostal church, and her high school. She must face processes of Americanization and Mexicanization. Americanization's thrust is to replace the languages and cultures of Latino\/a students with English and mainstream middle-class European American ways while Mexicanization pushes Central Americans to Mexican and Chicano dialects of Spanish and ways of being. With respect to gender, Amalia confronts a process of sexualization, particularly in school. Tensions between the socializations create spaces where Amalia enacts her agency and constructs her identities. The article is informed by research on multiple socializations, scholarship on identity and agency, and studies of Latino\/a language and identities.","creator":["Lucila D. Ek"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41156082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19d4be99-a65d-35b1-81a8-99df31f2ebac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25602246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"\"It's Different Lives\": A Guatemalan American Adolescent's Construction of Ethnic and Gender Identities across Educational Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602246","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how choral directors negotiate personal and professional identity in relation to gender discourse. Many music teachers have tried hypermasculine messages, such as \"Real men sing,\" used as recruitment tools for getting adolescent boys to join choir. Designed to counter the perception that \"singing is for sissies,\" these messages reinforce limited views of masculinity that can present a problem for choral directors. Gay male teachers especially may feel obligated to divide aspects of their personal identity from their professional identity for the benefit of male involvement in their program. Given these circumstances, the question of what defines a man as \"real\" must be considered within the context of gender, gender performance, sexuality, and teacher identity.","creator":["Nicholas R. McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9afdae1a-3e9c-3713-ac9f-30a242e771a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24755679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Singing, Sissies, and Sexual Identity: How LGBTQ Choral Directors Negotiate Gender Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24755679","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":5061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gustavo Verdesio"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07340591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4842310-8b35-319b-b32d-0da4dcac7b33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dispositio"}],"isPartOf":"Dispositio","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: LATIN AMERICAN SUBALTERN STUDIES REVISITED: IS THERE LIFE AFTER THE DEMISE OF THE GROUP?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491785","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":15932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study seeks to understand women's use of makeup in the workplace. The authors analyze 20 in-depth interviews with a diverse group of women who work in a variety of settings to examine the appearance rules that women confront at work and how these rules reproduce assumptions about sexuality and gender. The authors found that appropriate makeup use is strongly associated with assumptions about health, heterosexuality, and credibility in the workplace. They describe how these norms shape women's personal choices to wear makeup. Next, they examine how some women transform the meanings of wearing makeup and, in rare instances, attempt to subvert the institutionalized norms. Although many women find pleasure in wearing makeup, the authors conclude that the institutional constraints imposed by the workplace effectively limit the possibilities for resistance.","creator":["Kirsten Dellinger","Christine L. Williams"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a910c15-1059-3c48-9130-24a07c1e75be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Specialized education","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Makeup at Work: Negotiating Appearance Rules in the Workplace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190541","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":13420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Akiko Tsuchiya"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6807321c-70b0-3e94-a9a1-2235d452d114"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"280","pagination":"pp. 280-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Margins of Subjectivity: Sex, Gender, and the Body in Gald\u00f3s's \"Lo prohibido\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203470","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":5274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marsha A. Hewitt"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1a83427-f319-37f5-ab37-adad9bdad165"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23549515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cyborgs, drag queens, and goddesses: Emancipatoryregressive paths in feminist theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549515","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8282,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[68786,68890],[74738,75216],[75221,75322],[124582,124675],[445613,445848]],"Locations in B":[[18161,18265],[18472,18950],[19011,19112],[19128,19221],[19826,20061]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes how three Margaret Thatcher biopics, produced twenty years or so after she stepped down from power, have portrayed the highly controversial former British Prime Minister. In keeping with the conventional approach of the biopic genre, the three films typically shift focus from the public to the private figure, but they also bring a more specific answer, reading Thatcher\u2019s career from a gendered perspective. Thus the films \u201chumanize\u201d their main character by \u201cfeminizing\u201d her, but this perspective also allows Thatcher\u2019s image to be deconstructed through the notion of gender and political performance. Ultimately, the films turn the political figure into a proper heroine within different generic conventions that all share proleptic and dramatic irony as their main propelling narrative device.","creator":["NICOLE CLOAREC"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26606332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1d40e80-aaf1-3a65-b7b8-cca854c741e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26606332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"653","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-653","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"RECASTING THE IRON LADY INTO FLESH AND BLOOD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26606332","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"GENDER PERFORMANCE AND POLITICS IN THREE THATCHER BIOPICS"} +{"abstract":"Confessional modes of self-representation have become crucial in feminist epistemologies that broaden and contextualize the location and production of knowledge. In some versions of confessional feminism, the insertion of \"I\" is reflective, the product of an uncomplicated notion of experience that shuttles into academic discourse a personal truth. In contrast to reflective intrusions of the first person, reflexive confessing is primarily a questioning mode that imposes self-vigilance on the process of self positioning.","creator":["Susan David Bernstein"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"644fd0e3-9c17-3b5c-aa41-1af8884f3ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Confessing Feminist Theory: What's \"I\" Got to Do with It?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810002","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":12673,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48212,48614]],"Locations in B":[[80780,81188]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Siddons"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23784069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7a523a7-eb78-323e-a4fd-a6dec5936ffd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23784069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"African Past or American Present?: The Visual Eloquence of James VanDerZee's \"Identical Twins\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23784069","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":13278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This collective case study examined the experiences of four African American gay band students attending historically Black colleges or universities (HCBUs) in the southern United States. This study explored influences that shaped the participants' identities as they negotiated numerous complex sociocultural discourses pervasive and challenging to gay African American band students. Utilizing participative inquiry, participants were asked to read, reflect on, and respond to historical and current research literature concerning the schooling experiences of Black students. Their responses were analyzed within a multifaceted theoretical framework, including poststructual theory, critical race theory, critical theory, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning (LGBT2Q) studies. Present throughout the participants' descriptions was an ever-evolving and renegotiated gay African American identity within the HBCU band setting. Findings indicate that the construction of an African American gay male identity within an HBCU band setting was a source of tremendous consternation concurrent with positive experiences of acceptance and community. Numerous implications for music educators in K\u201312 settings are provided, including recognizing and stemming bullying and harassment in classroom settings.","creator":["Bruce Allen Carter"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41999565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a19adad8-3949-3e5b-a66c-fb9e2ad97af0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41999565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Arts","Education","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Nothing Better or Worse Than Being Black, Gay, and in the Band\": A Qualitative Examination of Gay Undergraduates Participating in Historically Black College or University Marching Bands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41999565","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":8279,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay postulates that the gendering of women in Western societies has assumed a conscious, systematic, therefore educational form over the last 500 years. Given the proliferation of advice literature whose intention was to domesticate women into a new heterosexualized bourgeois family model which reflected a burgeoning capitalist socio-economic policy the sites of female experience have become increasingly privatized. This educational discourse, made potent through recourse to the proliferation of the printed word, emphasised a sexual script which reflected a trope of separate spheres which socially constructed women into social roles at the same time as it narrowed their productive contributions by emphasising their reproductive functions. The author analyses these historical processes then addresses radical feminist positions whose ideological assumptions suggest the transformative possibilities of a new sexual script. The conclusion to this argument is that such separatist views do not, in fact, effectively break with the discourse of the last centuries despite the deconstructionist reversal postulated by contemporary gender-theorists such as Monique Wittig. Dans cet article, nous croyons que, dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s occidentales, la f\u00e9minisation a assum\u00e9e une position consciente, syst\u00e9matique et cons\u00e9quemment \u00e9ducative depuis plus de cinq cents ans. En tenant compte de la profusion de la litt\u00e9rature, dont l'intention \u00e9tait de localiser les femmes dans un nouveau mod\u00e8le familial bourgeois et h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel et qui r\u00e9fl\u00e9tait une politique socio-\u00e9conomique capitaliste, l'exp\u00e9rience f\u00e9minine est devenue de plus en plus une affairs personelle. Ce discours \u00e9ducationnel, mis de l'avant par l'ampleur de la documentation \u00e9crite, a plac\u00e9 beaucoup d'importance sur des \u00e9crits dont l'orientation est sexuelle. Cela se retrouve sp\u00e9cialement dans un ensemble de domaines qui ont rel\u00e9gu\u00e9 les femmes dans des r\u00f4les sociaux bien sp\u00e9cifiques. En m\u00eame temps, cela a r\u00e9duit la valeur de leurs contributions parce que trop d'importance a \u00e9t\u00e9 mise sur leurs fonctions de reproduction. L'auteur de cet article analyse ces processus historiques et s'adresse ensuite aux positions f\u00e9ministes radicales qui proposent une nouvelle \u00e9criture f\u00e9ministe. Nous concluons en croyant que de telles orientations ne s'\u00e9loignent pas des positions traditionnelles m\u00eame en tenant compte des consid\u00e9rations de th\u00e9oriciens qui croient, comme Monique Wittig, \u00e0 un reversement de ces positions.","creator":["Patricia T. Rooke"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23767308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Faculty of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Woman as Artifact: Sexual Scripts and a Female Education From the Reformation to Monique Wittig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767308","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Chuck Palahniuk\u2019s short story \u201cGuts\u201d is a work of transgressive fiction that exists at the intersections between literature, affect, and queer theory. This essay examines how the affects of shame and disgust function in relation to masculinity and, specifically, the highly policed and stigmatized non-normative sexuality of male youth.","creator":["ANNA KOZAK"],"datePublished":"2019-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26974143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff7af25b-de80-39f3-a812-364c43676251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26974143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"No Guts, No Glory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26974143","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":7562,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443961,444220]],"Locations in B":[[6450,6715]],"subTitle":"Non-Normative Sexuality and Affect in Chuck Palahniuk\u2019s \u201cGuts\u201d"} +{"abstract":"The Alberta Francophone Games (AFG), a yearly weekend-long sporting and cultural event, were instituted in 1992 to create an attractive space where young French speakers would produce themselves as \"francophones.\" In the newspaper version of \"Coach's Corner,\" hockey commentator Don Cherry has argued that it is \"unfair\" to allocate government funding to the AFG because participation is restricted to French speakers. In this article, we relate Cherry's comment not only to the discourses of francophone identity produced at the Alberta Francophone Games, but also to those that circulate in Canadian society in general, all of which generate competing \"truths\" that make the francophone subject discursively unstable. We offer an analysis of \"francophone\" performance at the intersection of the AFG's main identity discourses which play their small, but revealing, part in the overall Canadian production of uncertain \"francophone\" communities and identities. The paper also suggests that Canada's minority francophonies provide a rich ground for the development of discourse theory along the problematic of identity\/difference. \/\/\/ Institu\u00e9s en 1992, les Jeux francophones de l'Alberta (JFA) sont un \u00e9v\u00e9nement sportif et culturel qui vise \u00e0 encourager les jeunes d'expression fran\u00e7aise \u00e0 se produire en tant que \"francophones.\" Dans la chronique \"Coach's Corner\" publi\u00e9e dans les journaux, le commentateur de hockey Don Cherry a d\u00e9clar\u00e9 \"injuste\" l'allocation de fonds gouvernementaux aux JFA puisque seuls les parlants fran\u00e7ais peuvent y participer. Notre analyse porte initialement sur la performance \"francophone\" produite \u00e0 l'intersection des principaux discours identitaires aux JFA, discours qui jouent un r\u00f4le -- petit, mais r\u00e9v\u00e9lateur -- dans la production d'identit\u00e9s et de communaut\u00e9s \"francophones\" incertaines. Ainsi, nous compons le commentaire de Cherry non seulement dans le cadre des discours sur l'identit\u00e9 francophone aux JFA, mais aussi dans le cadre de discours circulant dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 canadienne en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral. Comme ces discours sur l'identit\u00e9 francophone produisent des \"v\u00e9rit\u00e9s\" contest\u00e9es, le sujet francophone est discursivement instable. L'article sugg\u00e8re aussi que les francophonies minoritaires canadiennes offrent un contexte opportun au d\u00e9veloppement d'une probl\u00e9matique d'identit\u00e9\/diff\u00e9rence dans le cadre de la th\u00e9orie du discours.","creator":["Christine Dallaire","Claude Denis"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3920977-2474-3661-9503-0292ac49e747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3341607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"If You Don't Speak French, You're out\": Don Cherry, the Alberta Francophone Games, and the Discursive Construction of Canada's Francophones","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341607","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Renate Dohmen"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c6d9e5e-e098-3b76-9099-3a0c41a6718a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41413826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MEMSAHIBS AND THE \"SUNNY EAST\": REPRESENTATIONS OF BRITISH INDIA BY MILLICENT DOUGLAS PILKINGTON AND BERYL WHITE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413826","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues for a re-conceptualization of Wolfgang Iser's \u201cimplied reader.\u201d To this end, the notion of the \u201cdefault reader\u201d is introduced as a theoretical tool for (queer) textual analysis. Like the implied reader, the default reader is the reader role called for by a text's response-inviting textual structures; yet, in contrast to the implied reader, the default reader incorporates the idea that texts usually expect the reader to comply with certain standard parameters, or default settings. One such default setting is for the reader's sexual orientation to be \u201cheterosexual.\u201d However, in order to gain access to texts which at first glance exclude him\/her, the actual reader who deviates from one or more of the default settings, i.e. a marginalized, non-default reader, can apply certain inclusionary reading strategies. In the case of the reader who is marginalized on the basis of her\/his (non-heterosexual) sexual orientation, such strategies are likely to be queer reading strategies. In view of these assumptions the article introduces a cognitive model of queer reading and writing strategies and offers a preliminary catalogue of queer textual structures.","creator":["Hanna Kubowitz"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.46.2.201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f69188a-125c-3705-a8e7-ca07712cd18e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.46.2.201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Default Reader and a Model of Queer Reading and Writing Strategies Or: Obituary for the Implied Reader","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.46.2.201","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":11286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo defiende la posibilidad de un \u201cfeminismo sin sujeto\u201d siguiendo la estela de la propuesta del \u201cFeminismo de lo com\u00fan\u201d de Cristina Moreiras-Menor y el \u201cInfrafeminismo\u201d de Gabriela M\u00e9ndez Cota. La primera parte del art\u00edculo desmonta la sincron\u00eda entre el sentimiento de culpa y el concepto de deuda en el contexto de lo que Walter Benjamin y Werner Hamacher denominaron \u201cCapitalismo como religi\u00f3n\u201d. Este an\u00e1lisis se desarrolla de la mano del documental Tres Mujeres, del cineasta Alexis Delgado B\u00fardalo. A continuaci\u00f3n, bajo la influencia de la fil\u00f3sofa Catherine Malabou y la escritora espa\u00f1ola Marta Sanz, el autor relaciona la primera parte de su an\u00e1lisis a la noci\u00f3n de \u201cempoderamiento\u201d en la medida en que \u00e9ste constituye una supuesta subjetividad (femenina). A partir del an\u00e1lisis sobre la culpa y el empoderamiento en la subjetivaci\u00f3n femenina, se infiere una apuesta por la descentralizaci\u00f3n de la noci\u00f3n de sujeto en las reivindicaciones feministas. La posibilidad de pensar un \u201cfeminismo sin sujeto\u201d no critica ni impide las demandas concretas y materiales feministas, sino que cuestiona la subjetivaci\u00f3n de nuestra existencia y cuestiona asimismo que la liberaci\u00f3n femenina se limite a la demanda y al empoderamiento de los sujetos. En \u00faltima instancia, se propone despejar la existencia libre y singular no cubierta por la subjetividad.","creator":["Pedro A. Aguilera-Mellado"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jgendsexustud.44.2.0076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26379961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1047730093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2018202863"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e60689f-c166-3c4f-937b-839db0faa63e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jgendsexustud.44.2.0076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgendsexustud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Gender and Sexuality Studies \/ Revista de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00bfFeminismo sin sujeto? Culpa, empoderamiento y nuevos feminismos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jgendsexustud.44.2.0076","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Juxtaposing Cherr\u00ede Moraga's Loving in the War Years and Luce Irigaray's Speculum of the Other Woman, I explore the ways that sex and race intersect to complicate an Irigarayan account of the relations between mother and daughter. Irigaray's work is an effective tool for understanding the disruptive and potentially healing desire between mothers and daughters, but her insistence on sex as primary difference must be challenged in order to acknowledge the intersectionality of sex and race. Working from recent work on the psychoanalysis of race, I argue that whiteness functions as a master signifier in its own right, and as a means of differentiation between the light-skinned Moraga and her brown-skinned mother. Irigaray's concept of blood deepens Moraga's account of her healing and subversive return to her mother. The juxtaposition of Moraga, Irigaray, and contemporary psychoanalysis of race can allow for a necessary revision of Irigaray's psychoanalysis that acknowledges the ways in which sexual difference is indexed by race and sheds new light on her account of the mother\u2013daughter relation.","creator":["SABRINA L. HOM"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c1d2c25-525c-3636-8e7e-479b12df8f98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24541994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between Races and Generations: Materializing Race and Kinship in Moraga and Irigaray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541994","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8526,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[52382,52473]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scholars frequently recount the ups and downs, the purportedly embarrassing \u2013 although always heroically turned to account \u2013 mishaps of research. However, acknowledging that one has rethought an analysis in the absence of new data makes explicit that social science is an interpretive project, and as such is rarely discussed in print. In this article I break that taboo, analyzing how I began to doubt my claim that a global shop floor was organized around an ungendered shop-floor subject. I then detail the more contextually sensitive reading of my fieldnotes that allowed me to grasp the fundamental masculinization of the shop floor in question. In the process, I theorize the aspects of gendered structure that enabled the error at the outset. Thus, the discussion reconstructs the life history of an argument \u2013 tracing the shifting development of analysis in a particular ethnographic case. In so doing, it follows epistemic problems back to their ontological roots, looking at how the tricky, obdurate situatedness of meanings \u2013 gendered and ungendered alike \u2013 requires an ongoing analysis of context in interpreting even our most minute and focused observations.","creator":["Leslie Salzinger"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5af48d7b-edd6-337e-b561-faee64bfcc89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Revealing the unmarked: Finding masculinity in a global factory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047917","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10384,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[63542,63613]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Los autores, textos e ideas siempre han cruzado las fronteras internacionales; sin embargo, no se ha estudiado con la debida atenci\u00f3n el reto que estos textos proponen a los proyectos monoling\u00fces y nacionales. Los cuentos incluidos en las dos colecciones de Concha Alborg, Una noche en casa y Beyond Jet-Lag, ofrecen una meditaci\u00f3n multiling\u00fce y bicultural sobre la vida de una transnacional con lazos emocionales tanto en Estados Unidos como en Europa. Sin embargo, \u00bfse la podr\u00eda considerar como autora latina? La pregunta presupone la necesidad de repensar el significado del t\u00e9rmino, ya que los latinos en los Estados Unidos pocas veces incluyen a inmigrantes de Espa\u00f1a dentro de un grupo que normalmente est\u00e1 compuesto s\u00f3lo de nativos de las Am\u00e9ricas. Felipe Alfau, otro autor espa\u00f1ol inmigrado a los Estados Unidos, inventa el neologismo \"Americaniards\" para describir a sus personajes y captar esta ambig\u00fcedad de identidad. A trav\u00e9s de una lectura de algunas selecciones de los cuentos de Alborg, este art\u00edculo explora las implicaciones de ese tipo de problem\u00e1tica ideol\u00f3gica y epistemol\u00f3gica sugerida por la dificultad terminol\u00f3gica.","creator":["DEBRA A. CASTILLO"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"654c3179-6173-3591-a731-dbd581957187"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Latina or Americaniard?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764035","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6020,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49450,49601]],"Locations in B":[[9005,9157]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the association of homosexuality with madness in two contemporary novels, Hanan al-Shaykh's Innaha London ya \u02bfAzizi (Only in London) and Hamdi Abu Golayyel's (Julayyil) Lusus Mutaqa\u02bfidun (Thieves in Retirement). Through a comparative reading of the figure of Majnun, an impassioned lover and mad rebel, I argue that literary articulations of queer desire operate as embodied resistance to social and political normativity, both in the Arab world and in the diaspora. Discussing the aesthetic transformation of the contemporary novel and drawing on the Arab-Islamic literary and philosophical tradition, I critically engage Michel Foucault's reading of sexual and epistemological developments in light of current debates about Arab homosexuality. I show how discursive models of sexuality are situated in modernity's intertwinement with other structures of power and systems of belief, crossing cultural contexts and linguistic registers.","creator":["Tarek El-Ariss"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e9d4dcc-dba7-3672-892f-627b88dc624a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43302996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MAJNUN STRIKES BACK: CROSSINGS OF MADNESS AND HOMOSEXUALITY IN CONTEMPORARY ARABIC LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302996","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":11156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Lesbian sexual visibility, when mediated through the pornographic medium, is not a simple matter. Lesbian pornographers' decision to use this medium, in light of pornography's historical marginalization and misrepresentation of women's desire and feminists' contradictory reactions to this marginalization and misrepresentation, exposes that pornographic representational strategies can function as a double edge sword. While some may argue that resistance is an important arena for political change, I investigate how notions of resistance are complicated through the production of lesbian-identified pornography. In order to highlight the historical, political and social significance of this pornographic form, I consider three areas of ideological significance in its production: (1) The emergence of lesbian pornography out of the feminist sexuality debates, (2) sexual imagery and text which appear in three lesbian sex publications which include On Our Backs: Entertainment for the Adventurous Lesbian, Venus Infers and Brat Attack, and (3) interviews with women involved with the production process of at least one of these publications. Lesbian pornographers are (re)articulating their relationship to politicized sexualities. I found that these projects are not conventionally political projects and that by stepping into the realm of cultural politics one inevitably is confronted with a complex negotiation of political histories. Importantly, lesbian pornographic work exposes moments where everyday life experience does not fit neatly into concrete political agendas. Lesbian pornography is an historical project that in many ways leans towards questions of curiosity and creation that at times need to be begrudgingly legitimated through political means.","creator":["Dana Collins"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc5348ee-569d-366d-a7b2-d61bdef6c6bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lesbian Pornographic Production: Creating Social\/Cultural Space for Subverting Representations of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035536","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne B. Waugh"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27903265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269662"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60532856"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-233200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0b779ba-e65f-3a97-a7ab-8a9cfacb1155"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27903265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"themonist"}],"isPartOf":"The Monist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"623","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605-623","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"HERACLITUS: THE POSTMODERN PRESOCRATIC?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27903265","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":8962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This paper proposes a comparative analysis of the award-winning Quebec police television drama 19-2 (Ici Radio-Canada T\u00e9l\u00e9, 2011\u20132015) and its English Canadian adaptation (Bravo, 2014\u2013). This case study gives us a rare opportunity to examine the process of TV adaptation in Canada. The English version of 19-2 has obviously been designed to be \u201cfaithful,\u201d in many respects, to the original: the story and narrative arcs are quite similar; many characters still bear the name of their French predecessors; the formal features and narrative conventions of the series have mostly been reproduced. However, through the analysis of a few pivotal scenes and narrative arcs, we will argue that these productions, conceived as distinct \u201cperformances\u201d of the same story or \u201cformat,\u201d differ significantly in terms of gender politics\u2014their narrative construction of televised masculinities, their negotiation of hegemonic and ideal identity models, and their representation of gender relations.","creator":["ST\u00c9FANY BOISVERT"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90008144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0e9ec70-037e-38e9-8e87-8fda5e398c6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90008144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DU DIX-NEUF<\/em> AU NINETEEN<\/em>. UNE \u00c9TUDE COMPARATIVE DES VERSIONS QU\u00c9B\u00c9COISE FRANCOPHONE ET CANADIENNE ANGLOPHONE DE LA S\u00c9RIE T\u00c9L\u00c9VIS\u00c9E 19-2<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90008144","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a survey of empirical research on gender in organizations published over a twenty-year period, we argue that, cumulatively, studies of sex difference tend to neglect organizational features. Drawing on concepts from feminist theory about gender as a system, as identity, and as power, we outline how greater attention to the links between gender identity and organizational structures and practices would enrich the field. We conclude with a research agenda that retains a focus on the individual while incorporating an analysis of the impact of organizations.","creator":["Robin Ely","Irene Padavic"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20159359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03637425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0780ee86-c34d-3427-be52-0d262f8c8223"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20159359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Academy of Management Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"1143","pageStart":"1121","pagination":"pp. 1121-1143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Feminist Analysis of Organizational Research on Sex Differences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20159359","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":16363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although recent scholarship has, for the most part, discarded theories that assign Brecht's work to three distinct phases, little attention has been given to Baal and the function of the asocial in Brecht's larger project for the theater. By examining the role of the body in interrupting the logic of totalizing institutions, including the theater, this paper underlines Baal's crucial role in Brecht's \"theater of the new\" and his on-going fascination with a figure for whom he, on more than one occasion, offered his disdain.","creator":["Richard Block"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a26e8c6-7286-3814-b2b3-0f0730700fbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Baal Dancing: The Unsettling Position of Baal in Brecht's Theater of the New","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408285","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":8837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper drawing on a study about school dress code policies and related issues\u2014such as multiculturalism, racism, sexism, and homophobia, in the professional discourse\u2014I show how similar the two patriarchal and White supremacist structures of education (school) and law enforcement (police) work. I argue that sexism, racism, homophobia, and classism in formal and hidden curriculum could be as mortal and brutal as it happened in cases of Tamir Rice, Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, and others. Dress codes convey sexism with a male center gaze and racism with White middle-class norms that serve as a hidden curriculum with inherent biases. That is, not acting White, not being lady-like, wearing butch-tomboy or ragged clothing, is disruptive to academic success. Discussing a dress code in a high school in a working-class Black community, I argue that like police officers, educators tend to make dangerous judgments about bodies. Finally, to stop the harmful reproduction of such judgments, I suggest what Judith Butler calls \"subversive repetition\" and \"subversive citation\" (Butler 1990, p. 147) which allows resisting the everyday experiences that produce oneself to address the question that how can we, as teachers, school administrations, and teacher educators, resist those practices that produce our bodies as vulnerable and potential victims and others' bodies as dangerous and potential violators. To problematize, to conceptualize, and to enhance the above-mentioned argument, I will draw on several feminist frameworks such as performativity (Butler 1990), intersectionality (Crenshaw 1989), and objectification (Fredrickson and Roberts 1997).","creator":["Rouhollah Aghasaleh"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45200244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56210516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007215116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8448b9f-71b9-3fa0-a292-49c3dac62dbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45200244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Oppressive Curriculum: Sexist, Racist, Classist, and Homophobic Practice of Dress Codes in Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45200244","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8068,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444155,444257]],"Locations in B":[[34313,34415]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANGELA LEA NEMECEK"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c1f5ab9-d98f-3e2b-b0c1-50f33f8c2956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading the Disabled Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288758","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12410,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435264,435631]],"Locations in B":[[23540,23882]],"subTitle":"Gerty MacDowell and the Stigmaphilic Space of \"Nausicaa\""} +{"abstract":"This article considers how, in the light of contemporary military transformations, feminist theorizing about women\u2019s military participation might be developed to take account of an emergent reality: the inclusion of increasing numbers of women in a range of roles within armed forces. A brief overview of established debates within feminist scholarship on women\u2019s military participation is provided, and we explore the trajectory of feminist strategies for change within both militaries and other institutions. The promise and limitations of mainstreaming gender into security institutions, as a consequence of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, are discussed. The article argues that existing feminist critiques often remain deterministic and have too readily dismissed the possibilities for change created by women\u2019s military participation, given the context of military transformations. Drawing on the idea of the regendered military, the article presents a conceptual strategy for considering how feminist theorizing about the gender\u2013military nexus can take seriously women\u2019s military participation while remaining alert to feminist political goals of gender equality, peace and justice.","creator":["Claire Duncanson","Rachel Woodward"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26293582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c60103d-81bb-3a58-89e3-abdc19e5b41a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26293582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Regendering the military","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26293582","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Theorizing women\u2019s military participation"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["E. Ann Kaplan"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b374866-6dc2-3d69-9629-4323e1edff31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"848","pageStart":"843","pagination":"pp. 843-848","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174544","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2557,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[51040,51250],[466105,466317]],"Locations in B":[[5976,6186],[8573,8875]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Evangelical Protestants are known as vocal opponents of equal rights for gays and lesbians. Yet there is growing ambivalence among evangelicals who oppose homosexuality but support equal rights. The authors extend the concept of 'structured ambivalence' to explain why tolerance toward gays and lesbians continues to grow, even within subcultures that promote traditional views of human sexuality. The Evangelical subculture has institutionalized competing scripts and expectations about how to \"do\" religion with regard to gays and lesbians, which creates structured ambivalence at the overlap of social positions and institutions. Using national survey data, the authors find that 35% of Evangelicals have consistently progressive attitudes toward homosexuality, but are less religiously observant. Conversely, 24% of Evangelicals support gay civil unions, even though they are morally opposed to homosexuality. Yet these Ambivalent Evangelicals exhibit the same levels of religiosity as Gay Rights Opponents. Ambivalent support for gay rights has taken root at the core of Evangelical subculture, not just at the margins.","creator":["Lydia Bean","Brandon C. Martinez"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48dc3bb5-eb99-308f-a81c-0f86c7aab850"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Evangelical Ambivalence toward Gays and Lesbians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580039","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":10286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie Goyon-Manas"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"391df231-cf43-33e6-9297-29d19681900e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24467391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467391","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicky Marsh"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51981372-8c8f-3530-b150-ed69011cf3f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Out of My Texts I Am Not What I Play\": Politics and Self in the Poetry of Susan Howe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112332","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra Kumamoto Stanley"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81ce839f-7ff1-36d6-9dac-33bc6b1cc3e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20059158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Eroticism of Class and the Enigma of Margaret Atwood's \"Alias Grace\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059158","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7329,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[42562,42666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Disabled women's issues, experiences, and embodiments have been misunderstood, if not largely ignored, by feminist as well as mainstream disability theorists. The reason for this, I argue, is embedded in the use of materialist and constructivist approaches to bodies that do not recognize the interaction between \"sex\" and \"gender\" and \"impairment\" and \"disability\" as material-semiotic. Until an interactionist paradigm is taken up, we will not be able to uncover fully the intersection between sexist and ableist biases (among others) that form disabled women's oppressions. Relying on the understanding that sexuality is one such material-semiotic phenomenon, I examine the operation of interwoven biases in two disabled women's narratives.","creator":["Alexa Schriempf"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a0a5996-c7e3-3fe9-b0c6-759c20c60f74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"(Re)fusing the Amputated Body: An Interactionist Bridge for Feminism and Disability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810783","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":12610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Graham Hammill"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Faustus's Fortunes: Commodification, Exchange, and the Form of Literary Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030223","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":12082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MORAG SHIACH"],"datePublished":"2000-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Millennial Fears: Fear, Hope and Transformation in Contemporary Feminist Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263611","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Peter Schneider's skepticism toward the unification process can already be seen in his tale Der Mauerspringer (1982). Schneider's ironic focus on the interrelationship of political and personal identity crises reveals the pitfalls inherent in efforts at becoming whole. In the context of current notions of subjectivity and difference, this article examines how Schneider uses the image of the Berlin Wall, contrasts in geography, politics, and language, as well as the figure of the transvestite, to criticize entrenched manners of thinking that help maintain divisions. His narrative is a provocation to develop new formulations of public and private identity which would acknowledge heterogeneity.","creator":["Susan C. Anderson"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c188c523-9165-36bd-81e8-39c98d2b40f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Walls and Other Obstacles: Peter Schneider's Critique of Unity in Der Mauerspringer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408447","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":6417,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[97397,97892]],"Locations in B":[[34267,34762]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza varias obras del poemario publicado en 1991 con un enfoque sobre la voz po\u00e9tica que habla desde los cuerpos y experiencias vividas de las mujeres. Entre ellas se incluyen a la abuela de la poeta y figuras hist\u00f3ricas puertorrique\u00f1as que no se conformaron con los papeles aceptables para las mujeres de su \u00e9poca. En su tratamiento del cuerpo Santos Febres desaf\u00eda la dualidad mente\/cuerpo que ha limitado la representaci\u00f3n y la capacidad aut\u00f3noma de decisi\u00f3n de las mujeres afro-descendientes en sociedades que han sufrido colonizaci\u00f3n y esclavitud. Demuestro aqu\u00ed c\u00f3mo la autora contribuye a debates contempor\u00e1neos de la teor\u00eda feminista acerca del papel de la materialidady en particular la teor\u00eda de Judith Butler seg\u00fan la cual los cuerpos se constituyen y se materializan por medio del discurso. Frente a la insuficiencia de los acercamientos esencialistas y construccionistas radicales, los poemas de Anam\u00fa y manigua sugieren un cuerpo material capaz de relacionarse con y participar en la creaci\u00f3n de discursos sobre femineidad y raza y entre otras facetas de la identidad.","creator":["ANDREA E. MORRIS"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28be427f-2165-32ca-9cbf-5561db5b7797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41636647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Between Discourse and Materiality: Conjuring the Bodies of Puerto Rican Women in Mayra Santos Febres's \"Anam\u00fa y manigua\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636647","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9177,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[411668,411824]],"Locations in B":[[3111,3266]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, exploro a experi\u00eancia de se tornar feminista na era digital. Atualmente, sua constru\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e9 feita intensamente atrav\u00e9s das redes digitais. Isso \u00e9 feito com base em dois estudos de caso: primeiro, coletivos estudantis feministas, onde mapeamos o uso da tecnologia e das representa\u00e7\u00f5es sobre o feminismo, e, segundo, o feminismo radical no ciberespa\u00e7o, onde nos aprofundamos na rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre feminismo e tecnologia. Tecida entre as redes sociais e as ruas, se tornar feminista na era digital mobiliza viv\u00eancias, reconhecimento e sistemas de conhecimento (teoria feminista), a partir de onde \u00e9 gerada uma nova epistemologia feminista mais atual e atenta aos sujeitos e suas viv\u00eancias. This work explores the experience of becoming a feminist in the digital age. This is done based on two case studies: first, feminist student collectives, where we map the use of technology and representations of feminism, and second, radical feminism in cyberspace, where we delve deeper into the relationship between feminism and technology. Woven between social networks and the streets, becoming a feminist in the digital age mobilizes experiences, recognition and knowledge systems (feminist theory), from where a new feminist epistemology is generated more current, attentive and articulated to the subjects. Este trabajo explora la experiencia de convertirse en feminista en la era digital. Si hay un aspecto que es capaz de definir esta experiencia es que se ha construido intensamente a trav\u00e9s de las redes digitales. Esto se realiza en base a dos casos de estudio: primero, colectivos de estudiantes feministas, donde mapeamos el uso de la tecnolog\u00eda y representaciones sobre el feminismo, y segundo, el feminismo radical en el ciberespacio, donde profundizamos en la relaci\u00f3n entre feminismo y tecnolog\u00eda. Tejida entre las redes sociales y las calles, convertirse en feminista en la era digital moviliza experiencias, sistemas de reconocimiento y conocimiento (teor\u00eda feminista), desde donde se genera una nueva epistemolog\u00eda feminista m\u00e1s actual, atenta y articulada a los sujetos y sus vivencias.","creator":["Fabiana Jord\u00e3o Martinez"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48633544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87347d91-9cca-33f6-abcf-98f19301485b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48633544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Militantes e radicais da quarta onda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48633544","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"o feminismo na era digital"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GRETA GAARD"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74992f87-4aed-349e-975d-4281ab2fb558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44085420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Hiking Without a Map: Reflections on Teaching Ecofemihist Literary Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085420","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11217,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[65662,65754]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rupal Oza"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"664e0656-f295-3f92-b4c9-5e75751e0f5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"1095","pageStart":"1067","pagination":"pp. 1067-1095","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Showcasing India: Gender, Geography, and Globalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175357","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The \u2018reflexive turn\u2019 transcended disciplinary boundaries within the social sciences. Feminist scholars in particular have taken up its core concerns, establishing a wide-ranging literature on reflexivity in feminist theory and practice. In this paper, I contribute to this scholarship by deconstructing the \u2018story\u2019 of my own research as a white, genderqueer, masculine-presenting researcher in Ghana. This deconstruction is based on thirteen months of field research exploring LGBT activism in the capital city of Accra. Using a series of ethnographic vignettes, I examine questions of queer subjectivity, embodiment and self\/Other dynamics in the research encounter. Specifically, I interrogate what a reflexive concern for power relations means when researchers share moments of commonality and difference with research participants, here in relation to axes of gender, sexuality, race and class. Finally, I explore the challenge of theorising resistance in light of feminist postcolonial critiques of the politics of representation. I conclude that it is only by locating these tensions and dissonances in the foreground of our inquiries that reflexivity becomes meaningful as a way of rendering knowledge production more accountable and transparent, of practising feminist solidarity, and of excavating our own queer research journeys.","creator":["Ellie Gore"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e6f91aa-4300-3260-b1a0-739f628a14db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"reflexivity and queer embodiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776521","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10017,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[62671,62746]],"subTitle":"some reflections on sexualities research in Ghana"} +{"abstract":"The incorporation of new fields of study in the university tends to be a contested process. This has been the case for women's studies despite its many conceptual, theoretical, and methodological contributions. Moreover, these programs have constantly suffered financial vulnerability and struggled for academic recognition and autonomy. Comparative data about women's studies programs exist but could be enhanced by explicit cross-national studies. At the crossroads today, women's studies can chose to adopt more feminist political concerns and engage in socially transformative research projects or succumb to forces of globalization that, in making the university increasingly entrepreneurial, preempt concerns for equity and social justice.","creator":["Nelly P. Stromquist"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3448130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181560"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f3f3853-ca5f-34b5-8f15-717019269c95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3448130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highereducation"}],"isPartOf":"Higher Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Studies: A Global Perspective of Their Evolution Contribution, and Challenges to Comparative Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3448130","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6233,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[40791,40862]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan V. Donaldson"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3189943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender and History in Eudora Welty's \"Delta Wedding\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189943","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheryl A. McLean"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b142f8a6-3fd6-3964-a4c4-a5b13ecd2759"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"A Space Called Home: An Immigrant Adolescent's Digital Literacy Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749072","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":6699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert C. Schehr","Dragan Milovanovic"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68fa05e6-4225-3606-9a20-8d094edfa0cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29767119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"1 (75)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conflict Mediation and the Postmodern: Chaos, Catastrophe, and Psychoanalytic Semiotics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767119","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este estudio contribuye a la comprensi\u00f3n de la conformaci\u00f3n de las identidades de mujeres que realizan una actividad emprendedora econ\u00f3mica desde la Teor\u00eda de la Identidad Performativa. Se analizaron tres casos a partir de la t\u00e9cnica etnogr\u00e1fica del Shadowing y entrevistas en profundidad, analizadas a partir del An\u00e1lisis del Discurso. Se pudo establecer que la identidad de las mujeres se construye a partir de los distintos discursos y escenarios con los cuales ellas interact\u00faan, marcadas principalmente por su clase social. Estos contextos heterog\u00e9neos determinan identidades que transitan entre acciones que las aproximan y las alejan constantemente del imaginario colectivo de las masculinidades del hombre de negocios, pero que las aproxima a un imaginario de mujer emprendedora construido socialmente con m\u00faltiples roles y demandas. Este estudo, apoiado na Teoria da Identidade Performativa, contribui para a compreens\u00e3o da conforma\u00e7\u00e3o das identidades das mulheres que realizam uma atividade comercial econ\u00f3mica. Tr\u00eas casos foram analisados utilizando a t\u00e9cnica etnogr\u00e1fica Shadowing e entrevistas detalhadas em profundidade analisadas a partir da An\u00e1lise do Discurso. Foi poss\u00edvel estabelecer que a identidade das mulheres \u00e9 constru\u00edda a partir dos diferentes discursos e cen\u00e1rios com os quais elas interagem, marcadas principalmente por sua classe social. Estes contextos heterog\u00eaneos determinam as identidades que se movem entre as a\u00e7\u00f5es que as aproximam e as afastam constantemente do imagin\u00e1rio coletivo das masculinidades do homem de neg\u00f3cios, mas que as aproximam de um imagin\u00e1rio de mulher empreendedora constru\u00eddo socialmente com m\u00faltiplos pap\u00e9is e demandas. Based on the Performative Identity Theory, this study contributes to understand how the identities of women who carry out an economic business activity is shaped. Three cases were analyzed using the Shadowing ethnographic technique and in-depth interviews, analyzed from the Discourse Analysis. It was possible to establish that the identity of women is built from the different discourses and scenarios with which they interact, marked mainly by their social class. These heterogeneous contexts determine identities that move between actions that approach them and keep them away from the collective imagination of the masculinities of the businessman, but which bring them closer to a socially constructed imaginary of an entrepreneurial woman with multiple roles and demands.","creator":["Paulina Soledad Santander Astorga"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26851989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8bd4501-b187-3aa3-ae49-3fb9cf87a4eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26851989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mujeres emprendedoras","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26851989","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Abordaje desde la Teor\u00eda de la Identidad Performativa"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joe Parker"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20541065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21a9a363-d344-3697-b418-d67d40aaecb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20541065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dreaming Gender: Ky\u014dgoku School Japanese Women Poets (Re)writing the Feminine Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20541065","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13892,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444434,444545]],"Locations in B":[[44127,44239]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the uptake of suzhi\u2014roughly glossed as \"quality\"\u2014in China's recent curriculum reform called suzhi jiaoyu (Education for Quality) in the rural ethnic context of Qiandongnan. It engages with three layers of analysis. First is a brief etymological overview of suzhi to map out its cultural politics in contemporary China. Agamben's theorization of People\/people is invoked to elucidate how the keyword embeds the differentiation of bodies and the fabrication of the \"others\" through a civilizing mission. Second, the article surveys the genealogy of suzhi ideas-practices as the historical project of making the ideal personhood. It examines how suzhi's entanglement in Chinese historiography constitutes the moving target for the formation of educational subjects. Third, the article draws from my ethnographic research in southwest China to investigate suzhi's enactment in compulsory schooling and current curriculum reform. It provides nuanced empirical accounts to illuminate how suzhi\/quality is understood, contested, and reappropriated in everyday pedagogical practices; how the bifurcated front- and backstage maneuvering in two village schools trouble the salvationary overtone of the suzhi-oriented curriculum reform. The lens of performativity is harnessed to move beyond the \"loose coupling\" theory and suggest undecidable interstices in the production of pedagogical subjectivity. Furthermore, this section explores how suzhi jiaoyu sits in a jarring relationship with indigenous cosmology to produce epistemic dissonance and disenchantment towards schooling. The article concludes with a call for provincializing the \"universal\" notion of quality and for a productive aporia in thinking about the limit-points of schooling.","creator":["JINTING WU"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23324007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e69cd41c-1a3d-3e29-a26f-ff8924bb4fc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23324007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"681","pageStart":"652","pagination":"pp. 652-681","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Governing Suzhi and Curriculum Reform in Rural Ethnic China: Viewpoints From the Miao and Dong Communities in Qiandongnan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23324007","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract In this essay, I argue that pronatalism\u2014a social bias in favor of gestational motherhood\u2014and geneticism\u2014a social bias in favor of genetic motherhood\u2014are conceptually and operationally distinct social forces that influence some women\u2019s reproductive decision making. Each of these social forces shapes the reproductive landscape, relates differently to women\u2019s identities, and causes different social stigmatization and harm. Pronatalism and geneticism warrant feminist concern because they can compromise some women\u2019s reproductive autonomy and well-being. I suggest that combating pronatalism and geneticism will require different sets of media, policy, education, and health care practice strategies.","creator":["Angel Petropanagos"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b18d213-0159-3dfa-bbe2-6d24561ad7bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90012259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"PRONATALISM, GENETICISM, AND ART","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012259","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":10803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Atherton"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae5838a-f95f-3de8-9646-e1cecec0bc78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"STAGING THE SELF: GENDER, DIFFERENCE, AND PERFORMANCE IN JEAN RHYS'S \"VOYAGE IN THE DARK\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274218","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6843,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431774,431865]],"Locations in B":[[5618,5710]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theater, while the province of both Literature and the Fine Arts, has been parceled out in our universities into separate disciplines. This essay recounts a collaboration that successfully reunited the seemingly long-lost relatives of text, performance, and stage production. Our experiment involved two faculty members and two groups of students-in French and in Theater. This joint class and production facilitated interdisciplinary, cross-cultural study that meaningfully linked the Colleges of Arts and Sciences and Fine Arts; the reader and the performer of Moli\u00e8re's Le Tartuffe; the French and English languages; and seventeenth-century French and contemporary American culture.","creator":["Suzanne R. Pucci"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25479914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25479914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"696","pagination":"pp. 696-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Tartuffe\" in Text and Performance 2000: A Blueprint for Collaboration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25479914","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":9174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Lope de Vega's El primer Fajardo (c. 1610-12) chronicles the rise of a hero of the Christian Reconquest who triumphs over a Moorish opponent, Abenalfajar, and thereby earns the Moor's Castilianized name and a place in history. A gambler, he \"plays [or \"wagers\"] a Moor\" and, in the process, subdues the images of Spanish orientalism. His parodies \"transcontextualize\" Moorish motifs and challenge the Reconquest's codes. During a key re-creation of a traditional ballad, \"Jugando estaba el rey moro\" 'The Moorish king was playing,' Fajardo attacks the metaphorical depiction of Muslim-Christian tolerance. His transgressive moves colonize the domain of balladry, while his Morisco servant's malapropisms mock conventions that are elsewhere an enabling legacy. Lope's official writing as secretary to the duque de Sessa parallels some of these motifs: the aptness of a name is borne out in performance, and playing the Moor involves impersonating cultural differences, even when the aim is to eliminate the communities of represented \"others.\"","creator":["Israel Burshatin"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8bdf906-7fbb-38f0-82fe-c770919d301d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"566","pagination":"pp. 566-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing the Moor: Parody and Performance in Lope de Vega's El primer Fajardo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462762","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":10536,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436844,436962]],"Locations in B":[[51073,51200]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baa562d1-9281-342e-8a4f-27048d065156"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":189,"pageEnd":"1536","pageStart":"1350","pagination":"pp. 1350-1536","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463225","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":62887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kit Dobson"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ead4e49-6846-3529-be62-76cd58cdf244"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"An Insuperable Repugnance to Hearing Vice Called by Its Proper Name\": Englishness, Gender, and the Performed Identities of Rebecca and Amelia in Thackeray's Vanity Fair<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793597","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8665,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[437365,437618],[445918,446276]],"Locations in B":[[3793,4051],[4791,5148]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RAVINDER KAUR","AYO WAHLBERG"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41507190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9770d87e-4775-3db5-9a88-a2371615868d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41507190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"580","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-580","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Governing Difference in India and China: an introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41507190","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":4302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Marshall"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2870997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2870997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Man of Steel Done Got the Blues: Melancholic Subversion of Presence in Antony and Cleopatra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2870997","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13245,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[191779,191917],[228520,228851],[240154,240379],[503324,503489]],"Locations in B":[[19850,19988],[21587,21918],[22397,22620],[48050,48214]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tey Meadow"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08e3a298-8332-3ef7-a46b-ad3a2d8155ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Toward Trans* Epistemology: Imagining the Lives of Transgender People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474090","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":1753,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474138,474306]],"Locations in B":[[8379,8549]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Easley Morris"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8b5ea34-c384-3181-9c66-0600df6a4045"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Testimony of the Displaced: \"Rachel's Song\" and the Performance of Race and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054466","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine E. Browne"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13822373"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613124167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"481ca167-4a81-3091-9e44-a9144867f780"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41850317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwignewwesindgui"}],"isPartOf":"NWIG: New West Indian Guide \/ Nieuwe West-Indische Gids","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"KITLV, Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850317","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":1002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Do Boys Have to Be Boys?\" examines the famous \"John\/Joan\" case of twin sex reassignment in order to comment upon the way that gender as a concept operates in the nature vs. nurture debate concerning the development of gender identity. I use basic elements of narrative theory to investigate how scientific assumptions about what gender is ignore the ways in which stories about gender overdetermine what counts as a legitimate way to be a sex. In the end, I challenge scientific and medical uses of gender that promote simplistic ontologies of gendered being, and demonstrate that utilizing an epistemological approach to gender allows the researcher to destabilize and undo the \"natural attitude\" toward gender that supports traditional gender ontologies.","creator":["Bernice L. Hausman"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6020a3d2-8fab-3fca-af08-ded61455c79b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Do Boys Have to Be Boys? Gender, Narrativity, and the John\/Joan Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316765","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11778,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[70175,70270]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Asexuality is art emerging identity category that challenges the common assumption that everyone is defined by some type of sexual attraction. Asexuals\u2014 those who report feeling no sexual attraction to others\u2014constitute one percent of the population, according to one prominent study. In recent years, some individuals have begun to identify as asexual and to connect around their experiences interacting with a sexual society. Asexuality has also become a protected classification under the antidiscrimination law of one state and several localities, but legal scholarship has thus far neglected the subject. This Article introduces asexuality to the legal literature as a category of analysis, an object of empirical study, and a phenomenon of medical science. It then offers a close examination of the growing community of self-identified asexuals. Asexual identity has revealing intersections with the more familiar categories of gender, sexual orientation, and disability, and inspires new models for understanding sexuality. Thinking about asexuality also sheds light on our legal system. Ours is arguably a sexual law, predicated on the assumption that sex is important. This Article uses asexuality to develop a framework for identifying the ways that law privileges sexuality. Across various fields, these interactions include legal requirements of sexual activity, special carve-outs to shield sexuality from law, legal protections from others ' sexuality, and legal protections for sexual identity. Applying this framework, the Article traces several ways that our sexual law burdens, and occasionally benefits, asexuals. This Article concludes by closely examining asexuality's prospects for broader inclusion into federal, state, and local antidiscrimination laws.","creator":["Elizabeth F. Emens"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236898"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b7d306a-355f-30b6-9db1-f676e0f23e86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":84,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Compulsory Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246965","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":40781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467295,467363]],"Locations in B":[[173933,174004]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Coventry","Peter Felten","David Jaffee","Cecilia O'Leary","Tracey Weis","Susannah McGowan"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4485897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"952a7bd0-39aa-3cf7-82d7-ae857721032b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4485897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"1402","pageStart":"1371","pagination":"pp. 1371-1402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ways of Seeing: Evidence and Learning in the History Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4485897","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":17191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily Snyder Laugesen"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd0bafd5-af4f-3425-9743-050f656d2e38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"June in Rochester Feminist Theory and Music II: A Continuing Dialogue 17-20 June 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833615","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":1296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marla Morris"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8a2133f-b7b1-3a88-8de4-f08044fecf6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"412","pagination":"pp. 412-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chapter Twenty-six: Toward a Ludic Pedagogy: An Uncertain Occasion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975685","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":5645,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[435153,435259],[435522,435597]],"Locations in B":[[11610,11719],[11727,11802]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c2e0630-95fe-37a4-8634-080acad2e7b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 106-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Obscene, Abject, Traumatic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778908","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":8047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[491737,491841]],"Locations in B":[[41868,41972]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In recent years, gender has factored heavily into the study of Inuit archaeological remains. Frequently, archaeologists have used diagnostic men\u2019s and women\u2019s tools to \u201csee\u201d gender in the archaeological record. However, recent anthropological literature attests to the existence of nonbinary gender categories in Inuit tradition. While the concept of nonbinary gender is not new in anthropological literature, it has not commonly been translated into meaningful archaeological research. Although many archaeologists studying Inuit gender have acknowledged the possibility of Inuit gender fluidity, virtually no archaeological research has directly addressed Inuit nonbinary gender. In this article, I discuss the anthropological concept of nonbinary gender and its diversity within Inuit culture, and then propose a variety of ways in which archaeologists conducting research on pre-contact Inuit gender might begin to study sites and materials within an interpretive framework that is more inclusive of these gender categories. These approaches include examination of artifacts, studies of the spatial distribution of sites, and re-examination of mortuary data. Through this work, I emphasize that gender occurs as a complex system rather than as two or three distinct sets of static social roles and that archaeologists need to adjust our approaches to past genders in order to see them through a culturally specific and meaningful lens. Au cours des derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, le genre a \u00e9t\u00e9 fortement pris en compte dans l\u2019\u00e9tude des vestiges arch\u00e9ologiques Inuit. Fr\u00e9quemment, les arch\u00e9ologues ont utilis\u00e9 des outils de diagnostic masculins et f\u00e9minins pour \u00ab voir \u00bb le genre dans les archives arch\u00e9ologiques Cependant, la litt\u00e9rature anthropologique r\u00e9cente t\u00e9moigne de l\u2019existence de cat\u00e9gories de genre non binaires dans la tradition Inuit. Bien que le concept de genre non-binaire ne soit pas nouveau dans la litt\u00e9rature anthropologique, il ne s\u2019est g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement pas traduit en une recherche arch\u00e9ologique significative. Si de nombreux arch\u00e9ologues qui \u00e9tudient le genre inuit ont bien reconnu la possibilit\u00e9 d\u2019une fluidit\u00e9 inuit entre les sexes, pratiquement aucune recherche arch\u00e9ologique n\u2019a abord\u00e9 directement le genre non binaire inuit. Dans cet article, je discute du concept anthropologique du genre non-binaire et de sa diversit\u00e9 au sein de la culture inuit, puis je propose diverses fa\u00e7ons pour les arch\u00e9ologues de mener des recherches sur le genre inuit avant le contact incluant ces cat\u00e9gories de genre. Ces approches comprennent l\u2019examen des artefacts, les \u00e9tudes de la distribution spatiale des sites et le r\u00e9examen des donn\u00e9es mortuaires. \u00c0 travers ce travail, je souligne que le genre se pr\u00e9sente comme un syst\u00e8me complexe plut\u00f4t que comme deux ou trois ensembles distincts de r\u00f4les sociaux statiques et que les arch\u00e9ologues doivent ajuster leurs approches aux genres pass\u00e9s afin de les consid\u00e9rer dans une optique culturellement sp\u00e9cifique et significative.","creator":["Meghan Walley"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26775769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07011008"},{"name":"oclc","value":"705760199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4342c378-2e22-3012-93b8-0d5ef7e91262"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26775769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etudinuistud"}],"isPartOf":"\u00c9tudes\/Inuit\/Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Universit\u00e9 Laval","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Exploring Potential Archaeological Expressions of Nonbinary Gender in Pre-Contact Inuit Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26775769","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8783,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474804,474891]],"Locations in B":[[59288,59375]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eve Rachele Sanders"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4123493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4123493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Body of the Actor in \"Coriolanus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4123493","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":11856,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[29423,29532]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The human body is said, by critics of mainstream, modern economics, to have 'disappeared' from economic theory over the past century. Like subjectivity, the body is thought to have been displaced through mathematical formalism. In this paper, we present the story of this purported disappearance, from the emergence of the 'full' desiring and labouring body in Classical economics to its supposed elimination in contemporary neoclassical theory. We also present a critique of this narrative, since the story of the body's disappearance presumes a universal 'real' body as a norm. In criticising this story for its humanism and universalism, we provide an alternative reading of contemporary neoclassical economics in which a decentred, fragmented, 'postmodern' body (rather than no body at all) can be seen to emerge.","creator":["Jack Amariglio","David F. Ruccio"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23600359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0309166X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41964126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238244"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23600359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambjecon"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Journal of Economics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Modern economics: the case of the disappearing body?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23600359","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":14703,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477202,477262]],"Locations in B":[[88474,88543]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Levine"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"657","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-657","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strategic Formalism: Toward a New Method in Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618909","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":13602,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524242]],"Locations in B":[[84314,84382]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pia Resnik"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26430934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618945"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44072717-954a-3326-95d3-61ecdd1182f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26430934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26430934","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The collection of data about the identity characteristics of library users is the latest development in a long history of contested categorisation practices. In this article, I highlight how the collection of data about lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer (LGBTQ) people has implications for the undertaking of diversity monitoring exercises in academic and public libraries. Based on experiences in the United Kingdom, I argue that recuperative efforts to \u2018fix\u2019 categorisation practices are not enough and overlook how categories of gender, sex and sexuality are constructed through the practice of diversity monitoring, how categories are positioned in time and space, and who is involved in decision-making about who to include and exclude from the category of \u2018LGBTQ\u2019. To encourage those working in the field to uncover and challenge the shortcomings of traditional approaches to categorisation, I conclude with six practical considerations for information professionals engaged in the collection of gender, sex and sexuality data. My critical account of diversity monitoring practices is not a question of (further) politicising the library nor simply a question of doing the right thing; an overhaul of categorisation practices, so that they meaningfully recognise the lives and experiences of people from minoritised groups, is central to the survival of libraries.","creator":["Kevin Guyan"],"datePublished":"2021-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641977","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1001437536"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ad79d1a-1311-36e6-bfb5-aa798a18572c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48641977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intljinfodive"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, and Inclusion (IJIDI)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Diversity Monitoring in the Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641977","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Categorisation Practices and the Exclusion of LGBTQ Library Users"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Bachner"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Spaces for Literature: Can Xue and H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Cixous on Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247490","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12339,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[96117,96636]],"Locations in B":[[11824,12342]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines Elia Barcel\u00f3's collection of stories Sagrada [Sacred, 1989]. Firmly within the conventions of science fiction (high technology, exploration and colonization of other worlds, alien species, etc.), the collection stands out for its intense reflection on emotional bonds between humans and nonhumans and for placing female characters at the center of this web of relationships. This paper shows how women's roles in these stories not only renew the generic codes of sf, giving prominence to mother and goddess figures, but also deconstruct the literary representations of the feminine by challenging the idea of woman as life-giver and rejecting the idea of women in love as passive and defenseless.","creator":["Isabel Cl\u00faa"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"161e0e7d-5963-372d-8128-6bbe932ba7f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dark Mothers and Lovelorn Heroines: Avatars of the Feminine in Elia Barcel\u00f3's Sagrada<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.2.0268","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7009,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[41502,41576]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brian Russell Roberts"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40301211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e8743f6-3663-362c-8eb6-9a0d9b8a1228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40301211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lost Theaters of African American Internationalism: Diplomacy and Henry Francis Downing in Luanda and London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40301211","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Ferry"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41472345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78617031-4726-3aae-9aa0-46a944361ab3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41472345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41472345","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":3375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is concerned with the construction of feminist literary studies in the last twenty years and points out how we have created a literary history which is both selective and schematic. It suggests that we should be more critically aware of what we are constructing, how we are constructing it and of the political consequences of those constructs. It stresses three critical modes which might help us to complicate our history: a greater awareness of institutional contexts, a concern with empirical detail, and an ongoing analysis of the cultural and political significance of feminist literary practice. This article briefly applies these critical modes in a survey of eleven introductions to feminist literary studies - introductions which feature frequently and influentially in the teaching situation. The final section focuses on the key problem of inclusion and exclusion. Considering arguments from Third World feminism and postmodernist feminism, the study concludes that white, academic feminists should confront the privilege of their own inclusion as a necessary spur to political action.","creator":["Mary Eagleton"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ca1ddac-f4fc-3c67-824f-e1e9b6a06213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who's Who and Where's Where: Constructing Feminist Literary Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395659","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9672,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[449808,450475],[466066,466317]],"Locations in B":[[38676,39341],[46639,46887]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Dinshaw"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 204-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Kiss Is Just a Kiss: Heterosexuality and Its Consolations in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465173","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13102,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[471728,471794],[497254,497396]],"Locations in B":[[78671,78743],[80098,80241]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In comparing very different cultural, theoretical, or methodological standpoints, the nature of truth itself becomes a problem. If the standpoints have different conceptions of truth, a comparative approach that respects both involves the contradiction of conflicting legitimate claims to truth. But if we reject this contradiction, we eliminate the possibility that standpoints can have legitimately different conceptions of truth. And with that we reject the sense of a genuine comparison in this respect, rather than a reading of one framework in the light of the other. Davidson and Rorty have mounted especially powerful arguments against the very sense of this kind of contradiction between frameworks, and so against the sense of a comparative approach in this respect. Through a detailed discussion of their work, this paper argues that the contradictory conception of truth is the right one. It also argues that this contradiction is manageable. As a result, a properly comparative framework is both possible and necessary, even where the nature of truth itself is concerned. In particular, this conception makes room for ideas of truth as both absolute and relative, and also (contradictorily but with due respect for many of the cultural and theoretical frameworks available for comparison) for non-contradictory conceptions of truth.","creator":["Jeremy Barris"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23551760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35e542ae-b829-3b06-91fb-d9b1081bc3c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23551760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"THE PROBLEM OF COMPARING DIFFERENT CULTURAL OR THEORETICAL FRAMEWORKS: DAVIDSON, RORTY, AND THE NATURE OF TRUTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23551760","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist self-identification influences women's voting practices, perceptions of gender discrimination, and views about their bodies. However, there is little information on how feminist self-identification influences women's experiences of high-risk pregnancy, if at all. The article focuses on women's identification with feminism within a neoliberal US context to examine how women make sense of and experience the medical prescription of pregnancy bed rest. Each year, medical professionals prescribe pregnancy bed rest for 700,000 to 1 million women in the United States. On the one hand, women's overwhelming expectation of control over their bodies and reproduction suggests that they cannot easily be divided into feminist and nonfeminist camps; on the other, preliminary findings from a small-scale qualitative study suggest ways in which feminist identification may affect women's experiences of pregnancy bed rest. Feminists were more likely to be in an egalitarian relationship that facilitated the redistribution of household chores during bed rest.","creator":["M. Cristina Alcalde"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef7af3cf-b192-3dba-96c3-7909b276ed8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Women's Control over Their Bodies in a Neoliberal Context: A Closer Look at Pregnant Women on Bed Rest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860703","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that we need to broaden the understanding of political economy beyond the circulation of 'things' so as to include forms of production, transformation and exchange of meanings. To illustrate the argument, the paper focuses on the contradictory encounter between two regimes of representation in nineteenth-century Colombia: the 'will to civilization' and laissez-faire. Because political economy was founded upon the desire to civilize classes, races and gender, the premises for laissez-faire could not be achieved. Arguments about local artisanship, the causes of poverty or the international division of labour were embedded in distinctions between the local and the European: ignorant artisans were contrasted with English workers, theory was preferred to reality and coarse textiles were compared to imported ones. Negative representation of female and Indian dresses increased the desire for imported textiles, which in turn led to the displacement of local manufactures in favour of European ones. In those nations imagined as deprived of civilization, the idea of a self-regulatory principle did not prosper. In Colombia, the formation of gender, class and racial identities within the 'will to civilization' regime of representation arrested the formation of an 'indifferent' capitalist labour market.","creator":["Cristina Rojas de Ferro"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4177139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09692290"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238789"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0103c2a6-d26c-3021-96a9-0390ef98f56d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4177139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviintepoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Political Economy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The 'Will to Civilization' and Its Encounter with Laissez-Faire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4177139","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":14573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When Europeans first arrived in Tahiti in the mid-18th century, they were sometimes greeted by performances that were aesthetic, ludic, and sexual. These performances of sex constitute another pole to a colonial history otherwise characterized by antagonism and violence.","creator":["Christopher B. Balme"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fee6280-05cc-313f-ae9e-cced4d778f97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sexual Spectacles: Theatricality and the Performance of Sex in Early Encounters in the Pacific","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146863","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Hiltner"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baa9afe4-53a8-3162-9842-40651dc32407"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Example of our Heroine\": Deborah Sampson and the Legacy of Herman Mann's The Female Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643118","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martine Fernandes"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6bc00ba-f5be-32e9-9ef7-056de86bc125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Confessions d'une enfant du si\u00e8cle: Nina Bouraoui ou la \u00abb\u00e2tarde\u00bb dans \"Gar\u00e7on manqu\u00e9\" et \"La Vie heureuse\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288959","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":5363,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[23022,23202],[23510,23861]],"Locations in B":[[22458,22641],[22685,23062]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Critics of Margaret Cavendish's \"The Convent of Pleasure\" frequently tackle the question of the play's genre, debating whether it is a stage play or a closet drama. Yet when the play is examined through theories of performativity, the clear distinction between the two categories becomes less clear. Through the play's rapidly shifting spaces and the characters' varying gender and sexual identities, the play highlights the instability of all performing bodies, material or not. The play also reveals the proximity of the terms \"performance\" and \"performativity,\" terms often opposed, by both flaunting theatricality and questioning the stability of its own bodies.","creator":["Katherine R. Kellett"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caab7b75-02e7-38d5-9a48-7cb2759143c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performance, Performativity, and Identity in Margaret Cavendish's \"The Convent of Pleasure\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071341","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10064,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[396086,396185]],"Locations in B":[[60643,60742]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Holt McGavran"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24045030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Fluidity and Nature Writing: William Wordsworth and Edward Abbey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045030","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":4604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bradley A. Areheart"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07408048"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8259c8d-23f5-32e5-83e7-fad4bb7d692c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41308534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawpolirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Yale Law & Policy Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Yale Law & Policy Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Disability Trouble","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308534","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":19055,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[73186,73644],[74576,74701]],"Locations in B":[[25949,42074],[82079,82204]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"After the decline of literary and cultural theory in the West, it has witnessed the coming of a post-theoretic era in which there is no such thing as a dominant theory as it used to be. The same is true of China where theory, especially that from the West, was extremely popular among Chinese literary and cultural theorists. But contrary to the situation in the West, some Western theories are still attractive to Chinese literary and cultural theorists, such as gender theory. In this article, the author argues that when theory travels to other places, its function and significance would change more or less, and sometimes, a different phenomenon would appear, which manifests itself in the continuous popularity and flourishing of theory in China in the past decades. Even in such a post-theoretical era, various theoretical and cultural trends still function in a limited sphere. But Western theory could function effectively in China only when it is contextualized. That is, it should be relocated in the Chinese context. This has been particularly proved by the popularity of gender theory, especially that of Judith Butler, and gender studies in present day China.","creator":["Ning Wang"],"datePublished":"2017-03-31","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.54.1.0014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9a4eac3-e069-3a9b-a413-2a0658e2b711"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.54.1.0014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Studies in the Post-Theoretical Era: A Chinese Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.54.1.0014","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":6150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["V\u00edctor Figueroa"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85c42292-1772-3d92-811b-3f5cab047361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"173","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DE \"CIUDADES HUNDIDAS\" A LA \"CIUDAD ILEGAL\": PRESENCIA Y TRANSFORMACI\u00d3N DE LA POES\u00cdA DE LUIS PAL\u00c9S MATOS EN \"BOAT PEOPLE\" DE MAYRA SANTOS FEBRES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808858","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10902,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[422928,423290]],"Locations in B":[[53982,54345]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irit Rogoff","David van Leer"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9f21725-c9e6-3cb4-9d73-6b74559fe888"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"762","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-762","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Afterthoughts... A Dossier on Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657994","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although feminists have historically engaged the law for political purposes, this article traces critiques of such engagements from early feminist legal theory to poststructuralist feminist thought. While early feminist legal theorists understood the law as patriarchal and oppressive, poststructuralists suggest that the law is productive. This theory of law would seem to necessitate reimagining how feminists might engage law. However, poststructuralist feminist thinkers argue that activists should eschew legal tactics in favor of political practices of resignification, collectivity, and agonistic democracy. Thus, these thinkers construct an opposition between law and politics that fundamentally contradicts their understanding of law as productive. Through an examination of this contradiction, the article shows that these thinkers implicitly share a conception of law as oppressive with early feminist legal theorists. Therefore, the poststructuralists fail to fully develop the insights of their own theory. Through a case study of the unionization of San Francisco's Lusty Lady strip club in 1996, the article demonstrates how law is both productive and not inherently opposed to politics; it not only shows how law and politics are dynamically connected, but also how law can, at times, bolster politics. Thus, the article rethinks the place of law in feminist politics.","creator":["Nikki Karalekas"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8231af5f-22bc-3430-891b-4b460aad423e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Is Law Opposed to Politics for Feminists? The Case of the Lusty Lady","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860725","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10483,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62210,62497]],"Locations in B":[[17603,17886]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"R\u00c9SUM\u00c9.\u2013 Alors que la g\u00e9ographie du genre et de la sexualit\u00e9 est en cours de structuration en France, cet article propose quelques pistes de r\u00e9flexions \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques et m\u00e9thodologiques, n\u00e9es d\u2019un dialogue pluridisciplinaire. La sexualit\u00e9 est une nouvelle voie pour questionner la g\u00e9ographie sociale et culturelle. Cet article critique le mythe de la lib\u00e9ration gay, souvent d\u00e9duite de la simple cartographie des quartiers gays urbains, de la sc\u00e8ne commerciale ou des lieux de sexualit\u00e9. L\u2019auteur propose de porter l\u2019attention sur les questions de distance, \u00e0 toutes les \u00e9chelles, afin de mieux comprendre \u00e0 la fois la question gay et le poids des normes sociales.","creator":["Marianne Blidon"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26236133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b75baa02-5a10-3a9f-bd78-0e386fd63ab9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26236133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espageog"}],"isPartOf":"L'Espace g\u00e9ographique","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Jalons pour une g\u00e9ographiedes homosexualit\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26236133","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9561,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474790,474891]],"Locations in B":[[62484,62598]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263354","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy McGovern"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6391b89b-789f-35ba-8986-cea23e28ca2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Visions of Mexican Cinema and the Queer Film Script","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389693","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,124157]],"Locations in B":[[4310,4777]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le Carnaval de Binche est, depuis 2003, inscrit au Patrimoine Immat\u00e9riel de l'Humanit\u00e9. Cette reconnaissance traduit non seulement la renomm\u00e9e d'une tradition s\u00e9culaire, mais \u00e9galement l'attachement d'une ville \u00e0 ses racines. Tradition hybride, le Carnaval de Binche pr\u00e9sente les strates s\u00e9dimentaires de son \u00e9volution: d'un rite pa\u00efen de printemps, \u00e0 un mythe bourgeois, il symbolise aujourd'hui le sentiment culturel identitaire d'une r\u00e9gion de Wallonie. Cette analyse replace Binche et son Carnaval dans le contexte g\u00e9ographique, historique et social de la communaut\u00e9 francophone de Belgique et entreprend de d\u00e9coder cette tradition \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re des th\u00e9ories de la \"f\u00eate\".","creator":["Th\u00e9r\u00e8se Saint Paul"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25481399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a01d574-a7b4-3b51-9d0a-e60fe18eccbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25481399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"1172","pageStart":"1154","pagination":"pp. 1154-1172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le Carnaval de Binche: signe et symbole d'une culture r\u00e9gionale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25481399","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":7703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristie Soares"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a872b54-1ea5-326b-87ef-88be6d3074f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Garzona<\/em> Nationalism: The Confluence of Gender, Sexuality, and Citizenship in the Cuban Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0154","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anthropologists have lately sought a subject not containable within the institutions that we analyze. This article suggests we should do the same for institutionality. I define \"institutions\" as things with the authority of the no\/name\u2014to confer the taboo\u2014which includes discourses, rituals, and bureaucracies. The article calls for extending to the institution what we usually ascribe to the subject\u2014violence, but also whatever we oppose to that, such as care or love. Anthropologists and psychoanalysts have an institution long considered a source of love through violence, and violence in love: kinship. This article works through contemporary anthropological queries on the subject, violence, and love in order to explore the possibilities in approaching all institutionality as acting like kinship. Drawing on Claude L\u00e9vi-Strauss, E. E. Evans-Pritchard, and Jacques Lacan, kinship is shown to be an institution comprised of a plurality of hierarchies, each of which might undermine the other, creating taboos that call for their own transgression. The article argues that this radical ambivalence in the institution finds desires within needs, displaces the individual as the source of possibility, and locates any radical potential of love within the institution. I call such ambivalence, following Lacan, the no\/name of the institution.","creator":["Ian Whitmarsh"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1d5e578-4a99-357a-bcb6-532ba7314a59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"881","pageStart":"855","pagination":"pp. 855-881","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The No\/Name of the Institution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653032","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":11416,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[161608,161800],[311674,312039],[478800,478845]],"Locations in B":[[58089,58281],[59237,59601],[65932,65978]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helena Antolin Cochrane"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23c65cda-b3a5-33a9-a004-08ed3a59ac03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021732","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":1035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pope Benedict XVI's encyclical Deus Caritas Est continues the magisterium's twentieth-century shift from an act-oriented, procreative approach to sexual ethics to what I will term a heterosexually personalistic one. Situating a heterosexual anthropology within a heterosexual cosmology, Benedict argues that just as God loves humanity with heterosexual eros, so must human beings love each other heterosexually. Although Benedict depends upon the explanatory power of heterosexuality, he perhaps unwittingly ends up depicting God's love not as iconically heterosexual, but as queer. In casting God's love as queer, I do not, even analogously, impute to God a type of homosexuality as Benedict does a heterosexuality. Instead, by drawing attention to the discursive specificity and historical instability of both homosexuality and heterosexuality, I use \"queer\" to recognize God's love as beyond categorization and as strange; it cannot be corralled into or contained by the historically specific notions of heterosexual and homosexual. But this essay does not merely deconstruct Benedict's heterosexually personalistic cosmology. It uncovers in Benedict's Eucharistic transfiguration of marital love a new and promising way of situating discussions about the ethics of sex.","creator":["Katie M. Grimes"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26450387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d9cad53-e304-3df4-a542-a42ac5e63786"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26450387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"517","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-517","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE EROTIC EUCHARIST: \"Deus Caritas Est\" and the Queerness of God's Love","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26450387","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Keller"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e6c9605-66a2-3ca3-94d6-599103f8ae5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Does he think we are not watching?\": Straight Guys and the Queer Eye Panopticon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414933","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4476,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524260]],"Locations in B":[[27171,27258]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dangdut, Indonesia\u2019s most popular music genre, is a realm of gender contestation. Since the 1990s, the role of professional dangdut singer\u2014once equally filled by men and women\u2014has been dominated by women. In an atmosphere of increasing Islamic fervour, pious consumption, and moral panic, the public perception of gender and sexuality has serious implications for men who sing dangdut on television. Regardless of their gender identity and sexual orientation, male singers must prove themselves to be properly gendered to maintain their positions as entertainers. However, proper masculinity is a difficult target to hit, especially considering the gender diversity of off-air and backstage realities. Men use several tactics to boost perceptions of masculinity and acceptability. One way in which men who sing dangdut endeavour to prove themselves cowok banget, or super manly, is by employing symbols of Islam and the Middle East\u2014filtered through an Indonesian lens\u2014to communicate masculinity.","creator":["Andrea Decker"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26910983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dda23805-f820-30bc-9282-8bc1ece54d54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26910983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Hidden for Their Protection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26910983","volumeNumber":"176","wordCount":12663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Gendered Power, Provocation, and Representation in Dangdut Competition Television"} +{"abstract":"Against the background of the Christlike model incarnated by Perceval's sister, this \"essay\" reviews the central 'masculinities' presented in Malory's text to argue that Lancelot tries on and rejects the various modes of masculinity until accepting his final role which includes the Christlike and the feminine.","creator":["donald l. hoffman"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e51e7f4-34e6-34e4-bf54-ed09d5c0baea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Perceval's Sister: Malory's 'Rejected' Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869223","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5528,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[31019,31129]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite a conventional view that bodily impairments are necessarily interpreted as emasculating and negative, this article \u2014 drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with men affected by leprosy and by cerebral palsy (CP) in India \u2014 offers a more nuanced account of how disabled men negotiate their gendered identities. Different kinds of impairments have very specific, context-defined, meanings that, in turn, have different implications for how gender and disability might intersect. Rather than diminishing masculinity in all instances \u2014 some bodily differences, as the article demonstrates, might even be enacted as hyper-masculine \u2014 impairments are shown rather to reshape understandings of the masculine in sometimes unexpected ways. And while my informants were constrained both by ableist norms and by the biological limitations of their own bodies, ambivalence towards certain forms of masculinity also afforded them space to perform their identities more creatively, sometimes to potentially positive effect. Bien que l'id\u00e9e re\u00e7ue veuille que les handicaps physiques sont forc\u00e9ment interpr\u00e9t\u00e9s comme castrateurs et n\u00e9gatifs, le pr\u00e9sent article, bas\u00e9 sur un travail de terrain ethnographique aupr\u00e8s de l\u00e9preux et d'infirmes moteurs c\u00e9r\u00e9braux en Inde, brosse un tableau plus nuanc\u00e9 de la mani\u00e8re dont les hommes handicap\u00e9s n\u00e9gocient leur identit\u00e9 sexu\u00e9e. Les diff\u00e9rents types de handicap ont des significations tr\u00e8s sp\u00e9cifiques, contextuelles, qui ont \u00e0 leur tour des implications diff\u00e9rentes sur l'intersection entre genre et handicap. Au lieu de syst\u00e9matiquement d\u00e9valoriser la masculinit\u00e9, puisque l'article montre que certaines diff\u00e9rences physiques peuvent m\u00eame \u00eatre v\u00e9cues comme hyperviriles, les handicaps redonnent forme aux notions de masculinit\u00e9, parfois de mani\u00e8re inattendue. Alors que mes informateurs \u00e9taient contraints aussi bien par les normes fonctionnalistes que par les limitations biologiques de leurs propres corps, l'ambivalence envers certaines formes de masculinit\u00e9 leur laissait la libert\u00e9 de vivre leur identit\u00e9 de fa\u00e7on plus cr\u00e9ative, avec parfois un effet potentiellement positif.","creator":["James Staples"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23011313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dba91cd1-81dd-3a5b-b7ea-03e6500768cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23011313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"At the intersection of disability and masculinity: exploring gender and bodily difference in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23011313","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOSHUA PALKKI"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00095028"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54674537"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83438d06-9325-3ab8-83b1-d25890c90473"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24769318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"choralj"}],"isPartOf":"The Choral Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"American Choral Directors Association","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"GENDER TROUBLE: MALES, ADOLESCENCE, AND MASCULINITY IN THE CHORAL CONTEXT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769318","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":13698,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,123881]],"Locations in B":[[5060,5215]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper will report on the findings from classroom observations and focus group discussions conducted on the topic of popularity and fitting in at school with girls and boys from four government secondary schools in Antigua. The findings show that whilst boys did experience difficulties negotiating academic success and acceptable masculinities, the consensus was that popularity was associated with low achievement for both girls and boys. However, there was evidence that some girls were able to work hard and maintain better peer relations than other high achieving students, but that this 'balancing' required conformity to hetero-feminine norms as well as the espousal of rigid views about what girls can and can't do. This suggests that real equality is far from being reached.","creator":["Mary Cobbett"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24464005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70aaad21-02c9-34c7-98e2-fa487b3aded2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24464005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Being 'nuff' and 'scudding class': exploring girls' and boys' perceptions of popularity, gender and achievement in Antiguan secondary schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24464005","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"According to the Webster's dictionary, being respectable means being \"decent or correct in character or behavior\" or being \"fit to be seen.\" In this article, I approach \"decent behavior\" and \"fitness to be seen\" as the staple factor in the negotiation and the struggle over the place of women in the streets of an Italian city. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in Genoa between 2002 and 2005, this article explores how middle-class women perform a classed and gendered respectability to resist their exclusion from an intensely masculinized public realm.","creator":["Emanuela Guano"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"475","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Respectable Ladies and Uncouth Men: The Performative Politics of Class and Gender in the Public Realm of an Italian City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137863","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":13619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article suggests that a performative reading of discrimination cases allows for the recognition of intersectional harms and facilitates a broader systemic account of exclusion from resources and opportunities. Revealing the protected category of sex as a prohibition against discrimination on the basis of gender performance, the article considers how signifiers marked on the gendered body shape the protected categories relating to race and ethnicity. The article suggests that racial\/ethnic signifiers and sex\/gender performance function reciprocally to construct material realities of exclusion from resources and opportunities. Drawing on the trans position in anti-discrimination, the article offers a nuanced reading of discrimination suffered by Jews of Arab decent, the Mizrahim, under Israeli law. It shows that courts could address systemic aspects of individual claims by looking for the intersecting differentiating logics at the root of private discrimination. The article argues that protected legal categories do not reflect pre-legal truths but, rather, constitute them; that when the law prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex, it prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender performance and that gendered performance is always already marked by racial signifiers. Thus, by turning the legal gaze to the racial signifiers of gender performance, intersecting harm can be better accounted for.","creator":["Ido Katri"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420220"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51785050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235681"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9653f32c-5963-30de-ad9f-ded35d620df8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90019660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univtorolawj"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Toronto Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"THE BANISHMENT OF ISAAC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019660","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":10053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"RACIAL SIGNIFIERS OF GENDER PERFORMANCE"} +{"abstract":"Transsexual and transgendered people, despite their exclusion from most civil rights laws, nonetheless occasionally prevail as plaintiffs in litigation. What should feminist legal theorists make of these victories? The theory one uses to win has implications for future conceptions of gender and sexuality in the law as well as for understanding contemporary conflicts and alliances among sex and gender theorists, lawyers, and activists. Conflicting theories of how to ground law's liberation claims abound, however. Evidence suggests that transsexuals secure legal victories only through a disheartening process of medicalization, normalization, and demonstration of traditional sex and gender role adherence. Recent cases, however, reveal some interesting destabilizations in law's account of the transsexual, and they provide critical legal scholars with a new perspective on rights-claiming as a liberation strategy. Attention to the diversity of transsexual and transgendered priorities as well as to the properties of the legal process shows feminist legal theorists how to navigate the problems of identity construction and legal protection raised here sympathetically but unromantically.","creator":["Anna Kirkland"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Victorious Transsexuals in the Courtroom: A Challenge for Feminist Legal Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215765","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":18560,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62210,62701]],"Locations in B":[[104745,105236]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shannon Steen"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a14de6d-3775-3a73-8717-65626469cf5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Melancholy Bodies: Racial Subjectivity and Whiteness in O'Neill's \"The Emperor Jones\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068809","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily M. Hinnov"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d692468-3bc5-31b1-898b-b14d0654fe90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Shufflings of Kristeva: The Choran Moment in Virginia Woolf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906482","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11618,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503324,503458]],"Locations in B":[[67768,67907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Monica Miller"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26878267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"427418196"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2019200491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72460519-e2ce-3454-b79b-1d742177e090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26671274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"flanneryoconnor"}],"isPartOf":"Flannery O'Connor Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System by and on behalf of Georgia College and State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cNo man with a good car needs to be justified\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671274","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Preaching Rock and Roll Salvation from O\u2019Connor\u2019s Wise Blood<\/em> to Ministry\u2019s \u201cJesus Built My Hotrod\u201d"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["R. H. Britnell","Steve Hindle","R. C. Nash","Sue Bowden","D. M. Higgins"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3698758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57daaa26-f17d-3905-a624-9e756309868c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3698758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Economic History Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review of Periodical Literature, 2001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3698758","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":30690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan McClary","Robert Walser"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02763605"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63fb0792-7586-3801-a65a-c2e0c4d3dd01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacmusiresej"}],"isPartOf":"Black Music Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Theorizing the Body in African-American Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779459","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Gooding-Williams"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25090301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28120c1d-d590-3a2d-ad68-e9d694cd6abc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25090301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Evading Narrative Myth, Evading Prophetic Pragmatism: Cornel West's \"The American Evasion of Philosophy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25090301","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Liz Bondi","Marta Lamas"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9230b939-eb24-3275-ae25-1a573b850afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ubicar las pol\u00edticas de la identidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624360","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The LGBT (Lesbian-Gay-Bisexual-Transgender) activism has raised the issue of sexuality and, in particular, alternative sexuality, and argues for its 'normalcy'. The state, on the other hand, has taken exception to such d\u00e9mocratisation of 'desire' and has tried to 'discipline' it. The LGBT activism challenges the hegemony of the 'heterosexual' state. This paper explores the issue of sexuality and its alternate forms in India with special reference to the form, content, and spaces of lesbian and gay activism vis-\u00e0-vis Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC); strategies of assertion; and its problematic relation with the women's movements.","creator":["Sumit Saurabh Srivastava"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43854980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380229"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565192286"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0907332-0680-331c-a74b-bd583c9bf955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43854980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socibull"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indian Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Law - Computer law","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Disciplining the 'Desire': 'Straight' State and LGBT Activism in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43854980","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":7755,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72054,72349]],"Locations in B":[[31569,31862]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Keller"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1465769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lost Fragrance: Protestantism and the Nature of What Matters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1465769","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":6203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LYN PARKER"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47f50075-d6db-3098-ba81-1be4f299fca0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43817801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817801","volumeNumber":"165","wordCount":15546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I argue that Alisa Carse's call for antipornography legislation sets a potentially dangerous legal move that could threaten to shut off the dialogue women need to redefine the meanings and terms of our sexualities. I also argue that the terms of legitimacy need to be re-examined outside a legal system that systematically fails to protect the rights of sexual minorities.","creator":["Consuelo M. Concepcion"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2282a18a-1b85-35d2-b04e-ae91f6ea87c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Pornography, Representation and Sexual Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810625","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":1324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d1974a3-e06a-3208-80f9-4b85cdc95023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395811","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nathan Snaza"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.22.1-2.0215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"685143c7-fe6b-3b3c-b9a9-4f8268545155"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.22.1-2.0215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cThe Reign of Man is Over\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.22.1-2.0215","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9782,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[242563,242781],[243349,243648]],"Locations in B":[[32952,33169],[33383,33681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shameem Black"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed689701-aecf-33ab-914d-80789414c7a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fertile Cosmofeminism: Ruth L. Ozeki and Transnational Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338656","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12034,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[72490,72585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Lenzo"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1176293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013189X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93849a95-d658-3793-bb22-1f3ca2502e42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1176293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educrese"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Researcher","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-23+45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Validity and Self-Reflexivity Meet Poststructuralism: Scientific Ethos and the Transgressive Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1176293","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7513,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[460746,460962],[461319,462141]],"Locations in B":[[9014,9227],[28370,29190]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne G. Cusick"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ee955cd-7f3a-3a05-9d60-82d5c8578df4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Feminist Theory, Music Theory, and the Mind\/Body Problem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833149","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7328,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478060,478195]],"Locations in B":[[35860,35992]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GEERTJE A. MAK"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"950ed815-5b32-3c77-b6ae-477009ea6aed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conflicting Heterosexualities: Hermaphroditism and the Emergence of Surgery around 1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616516","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rujuta Chincholkar-Mandelia"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34d3e435-d940-32df-91be-71c581dd4185"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45194227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"FIRE: A SUBALTERN EXISTENCE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194227","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4603,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[12776,12940]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Weiterf\u00fchrung meines Beitrages \u00bbBe a somebody with a body\u00ab (in dem von Franziska Metzger und mir verantworteten Band Orte und R\u00e4ume des Religi\u00f6sen, Paderborn 2016, 223\u2013245) wird die Bedeutung des K\u00f6rpers in den Erinnerungskulturen des Christentums anhand von drei Thesen umrissen. Erstens: Im Christentum ist der K\u00f6rper gerade nicht nur \u2013 wie Schrift, Papier, Text \u2013 ein sekund\u00e4res Speichermedium und Symbolisierungsfeld, welches das Heil auf somatische Weise repr\u00e4sentiert, transformiert und reproduziert. Vielmehr hat das Heil selber eine Anatomie \u2013 es ist K\u00f6rper (\u00bbDies ist mein Leib\u00ab). Zweitens: Dieses somatisch verfasste Heil wird nun seinerseits somatisch repr\u00e4sentiert, transponiert und multipliziert. Die Partizipation am Heil wird ihrerseits leiblich vollzogen. Es lassen sich verschiedene Modelle respektive Typen der Body@Performance herausarbeiten, die auch anhand von Bildmaterial illustriert werden und auch unter dem Terminus somatischer Religiosit\u00e4t gefasst werden k\u00f6nnen. Drittens: K\u00f6rper sind nicht anatomisch eindeutige, statische, gleichsam \u00fcberzeitliche, nat\u00fcrliche Ged\u00e4chtnistr\u00e4ger und Ged\u00e4chtnisspeicher, sondern sie sind immer schon Teil kommunikativer Prozesse in verschiedenen Diskursgemeinschaften, die ihrerseits Auslegetraditionen, Rezeptionsprozesse, Kontexte produzieren und Lesarten bereitstellen. Das gilt ganz besonders auch f\u00fcr die Codierung des K\u00f6rpers als Geschlechtsk\u00f6rper und seine Wahrnehmung als m\u00e4nnlich oder weiblich. Weshalb sich die Frage stellt: Hat also das Heil auch ein Geschlecht? Building upon my contribution \u00bbBe a somebody with a body\u00ab (in the volume Orte und R\u00e4ume des Religi\u00f6sen, edited by Franziska Metzger and me, Paderborn 2016, 223\u2013245), this article seeks to evaluate the meaning of the body in the memory cultures of Christianity since three theses. Firstly, in Christianity, the body is not just a secondary storage medium and symbolizing field \u2013 like writing, paper or a text \u2013 which represents, transforms and reproduces salvation in a somatic way. On the contrary, salvation itself has an anatomy \u2013 it is a body (\u00bbThis is my body\u00ab). Secondly: this somatically-written salvation is, in turn, somatically represented, transposed and multiplied. The participation in salvation is, in turn, performed physically. Various models or types of Body@ Performance or somatic religiosity can be established, which are illustrated by means of pictorial material. Thirdly, bodies are not anatomically static or supra-temporal with an allegedly natural meaning or memory of meaning, but are part of communicative processes in various discourse communities. These, in turn, produce interpretative traditions, reception processes, contexts and readings. This is especially true for the coding of the body as a gender body and its perception as male or female. Hence, the question arises: Does salvation also have a specific sex?","creator":["Elke Pahud de Mortanges"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26742811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09329951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"229136314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88d605cf-5afc-3886-b39a-2a43858b1bd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26742811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kirczeit"}],"isPartOf":"Kirchliche Zeitgeschichte","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Body@Performance und Ged\u00e4chtnis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26742811","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Zur Anatomie des Heils in den Erinnerungskulturen des Christentums"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roger N. Lancaster"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1007500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031615"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45202766"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3617ea13-4b24-3a14-910b-23557d9148a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1007500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americas"}],"isPartOf":"The Americas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexual Positions: Caveats and Second Thoughts on \"Categories\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1007500","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":6515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how essentializing ideologies of language and identity in Toronto's Portuguese ethnic market, constructed as monolingual and monocultural within the larger mainstream market of English-speaking Canada, provide the background for humorous sociolinguistic performances that playfully acknowledge, reproduce, and challenge ethnolinguistic stratification. After more than sixty years, the dominant spaces of the local Portuguese market continue to exclude most Portuguese-Canadian youth by rarely legitimizing the use of English, bilingual code-switching, or 'broken' or 'Azorean' Portuguese. By choosing YouTube as a space in which to engage audiences in ideologies of language and identity through performances of sociolinguistic caricatures, three young Portuguese-Canadian amateur comedians negotiate sociolinguistic boundaries with an ambivalent agency. The mocking performances are legitimized by the performers' in-group status and reveal, among other things, how a stigmatized variety of Azorean Portuguese and certain ethnolinguistic stereotypes can be reappropriated and reinforced relative to sociolinguistic hierarchies.","creator":["EMANUEL DA SILVA"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e53dfa27-068b-363f-920d-9d1543302359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Humor (re)positioning ethnolinguistic ideologies: \"You tink is funny?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904110","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tania Modleski"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95c9a114-7fc6-31a9-aa87-3d0c44fa38f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20638644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Clint Eastwood and Male Weepies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638644","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper juxtaposes Deleuze's notion of the virtual alongside Oyama's notion of a developmental system in order to explore the promises and perils of thinking bodily identity as indeterminate at a time when new technologies render bodily ambiguity increasingly productive of both economic profit and power relations.","creator":["Ann Burlein"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40345e55-fc83-3b8b-9b00-ec32a03d65ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Productive Power of Ambiguity: Rethinking Homosexuality through the Virtual and Developmental Systems Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810842","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":15467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KELLY A. MARSH"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28e90c2b-508b-307d-ba9a-1a8fbf9a5895"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"ALL MY HABITS OF MIND\": PERFORMANCE AND IDENTITY IN THE NOVELS OF MARY MCCARTHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533517","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8456,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455322,455598]],"Locations in B":[[7278,7739]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the conference to celebrate 25 years of publishing Work, Employment and Society, held at the British Library in 2012, I had the privilege of being asked to talk about feminist approaches to the changing nature of work and employment. Despite being something of an interloper \u2013 I am a geographer, not a sociologist \u2013 as a committed reader of the journal I was delighted to be invited. I was even more delighted when the organizers suggested that I turn my remarks into this comment.","creator":["Linda McDowell"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24442082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdb85b14-05d5-3426-86b9-78d1cb34cd3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24442082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"837","pageStart":"825","pagination":"pp. 825-837","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Gender, work, employment and society: feminist reflections on continuity and change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24442082","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Don Kulick"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43185292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0498da4-a7bd-3397-8167-81b76caaef46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43185292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43185292","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c0ed093-491b-3cae-b41a-6da1edc7acb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427144","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":1789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within a broadly competent framework, this essay sketches a revisionist reading of Friedrich Schiller's dramas against a cluster of concerns: the nostalgia for childhood, the obsession with return, history as repetition, and the paradoxes of homosocial masculinity. A discussion of Die R\u00e4uber, Die Verschw\u00f6rung des Fiesco zu Genua, and the Wallenstein trilogy, in conjunction with Russell Hoban's science fiction novel Riddley Walker and the Terminator films, yields a new understanding of Schiller: he was both a quintessentially modern writer, whose use of time foreshadows the temporal preoccupations of 20th-century Western culture, and an important critic of history as a violent and violently gendered masculine construction.","creator":["Stephanie Barb\u00e9 Hammer"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ac1133c-cc3b-311c-85f4-bf1efc4d75cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Schiller, Time and Again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408404","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":12436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the months from October 1907 through March 1910, first Winston Churchill and then Theodore Roosevelt traveled through British East Africa on nearly identical routes. Both published a series of magazine articles and widely read books from their travels. At that time both were not only politicians but also popular authors who wrote and spoke on race, nation, and empire, and their travel accounts reflect these interests. This article analyzes the materials (visual, textual, published, and archival) produced from these travels to achieve two overarching objectives. One goal is to use these materials to understand how embodied encounters with and representations of imperial landscapes interact in mediating the performance of national and racial subjectivities. A second, more explicitly theoretical, purpose is to engage with the current \"landscape debate\" regarding representational and nonrepresentational approaches. Landscape's dual meaning as domain and scenery creates tension that can be productively explored through engagement with both representational and nonrepresentational approaches. I investigate how the tension between dwelling and scenery manifests in specific ways among different subjects in different contexts and reflect on what this might mean for integrating representational and nonrepresentational approaches to landscape. 1907 \u5e74\u5341\u6708\u81f3 1910 \u5e74\u4e09\u6708\u4e4b\u95f4, \u6e29\u65af\u987f. \u4e18\u5409\u5c14\u4ee5\u53ca\u897f\u5965\u591a. \u7f57\u65af\u798f\u5148\u540e\u5728\u82f1\u5c5e\u4e1c\u975e\u8fdb\u884c\u4e86\u8def\u7ebf\u8fd1\u4e4e\u5b8c\u5168\u4e00\u81f4\u7684\u65c5\u7a0b\u3002\u4e24\u4eba\u4ea6\u7686\u53d1\u8868\u4e86\u6709\u5173\u8be5\u65c5\u7a0b\u7684\u4e00\u7cfb\u5217\u6742\u5fd7\u6587\u7ae0\u4e0e\u7545\u9500\u4e66\u7c4d\u3002\u5728\u5f53\u65f6, \u4e18\u5409\u5c14\u548c\u7f57\u65af\u798f\u4e0d\u4ec5\u662f\u653f\u6cbb\u5bb6, \u4ea6\u662f\u4e66\u5199\u5e76\u8c08\u8bba\u79cd\u65cf\u3001\u56fd\u5bb6\u3001\u5e1d\u56fd\u8bae\u9898, \u800c\u5176\u65c5\u884c\u8bb0\u8ff0\u4ea6\u53cd\u5e94\u4e0a\u8ff0\u8bae\u9898\u7684\u6d41\u884c\u4f5c\u5bb6\u3002\u672c\u6587\u5206\u6790\u8fd9\u4e9b\u65c5\u884c\u6240\u751f\u4ea7\u7684\u7d20\u6750 (\u5f71\u50cf\u3001\u6587\u672c\u3001\u51fa\u7248\u54c1\u4ee5\u53ca\u6863\u6848\u8d44\u6599) \u4ee5\u8fbe\u6210\u4e24\u9879\u4e3b\u8981\u76ee\u6807\u3002\u7b2c\u4e00\u9879\u76ee\u6807\u4fbf\u662f\u8fd0\u7528\u8fd9\u4e9b\u7d20\u6750, \u7406\u89e3\u4e0e\u5e1d\u56fd\u5730\u666f\u7684\u8eab\u4f53\u5316\u63a5\u89e6\u548c\u5e1d\u56fd\u5730\u666f\u7684\u518d\u73b0, \u5982\u4f55\u5728\u4e2d\u4ecb\u56fd\u65cf\u4e0e\u79cd\u65cf\u4e3b\u4f53\u7684\u5c55\u6f14\u4e2d\u4e92\u52a8\u3002\u7b2c\u4e8c\u9879\u76ee\u6807\u5219\u5177\u6709\u66f4\u786e\u5207\u7684\u7406\u8bba\u6027, \u610f\u5373\u6d89\u5165\u5f53\u524d\u6709\u5173\u518d\u73b0\u548c\u975e\u518d\u73b0\u65b9\u6cd5\u7684 \u201c\u5730\u666f\u8fa9\u8bba\u201d\u3002\u5730\u666f\u505a\u4e3a\u9886\u57df\u548c\u666f\u89c2\u53cc\u91cd\u610f\u6db5\u6240\u521b\u9020\u7684\u5f20\u529b, \u53ef\u4ee5\u751f\u4ea7\u6027\u5730\u900f\u8fc7\u540c\u65f6\u6d89\u5165\u518d\u73b0\u4e0e\u975e\u518d\u73b0\u65b9\u6cd5\u63a2\u7d22\u4e4b\u3002\u6211\u5c06\u63a2\u8ba8\u4ecb\u4e4e\u5c45\u4f4f\u548c\u98ce\u666f\u7684\u5f20\u529b, \u5982\u4f55\u5728\u4e0d\u540c\u7684\u4e3b\u4f53\u4e0e\u76f8\u5f02\u7684\u8109\u7edc\u4e2d, \u4ee5\u7279\u5b9a\u7684\u65b9\u5f0f\u5c55\u73b0, \u5e76\u53cd\u601d\u6574\u5408\u6027\u7684\u5730\u666f\u518d\u73b0\u4e0e\u975e\u518d\u73b0\u65b9\u6cd5\u6240\u8c13\u4f55\u610f\u3002 Uno tras otro, Winston Churchill y Teodoro Roosevelt, viajaron a trav\u00e9s del \u00c1frica Oriental brit\u00e1nica por casi id\u00e9nticas rutas, entre octubre de 1907 y marzo de 1910. Ambos publicaron una muy le\u00edda serie de art\u00edculos de revista y libros sobre sus viajes. En esa \u00e9poca los dos no solo eran pol\u00edticos sino autores muy populares que escrib\u00edan y hablaban de raza, naci\u00f3n e imperio, y los recuentos que hac\u00edan de sus viajes reflejaban estos intereses. Este art\u00edculo analiza los materiales producidos en estos viajes (visuales, textuales, publicados y archivados), en procura de dos objetivos sobresalientes. Uno es utilizar esos materiales para entender c\u00f3mo interact\u00faan los encuentros con los paisajes imperiales y sus representaciones, para mediar la realizaci\u00f3n de las subjetividades nacional y racial. El otro objetivo, m\u00e1s expl\u00edcitamente te\u00f3rico, es el de involucrarse en el actual \"debate del paisaje\" en t\u00e9rminos de los enfoques representacionales y no representacionales. El significado dual del paisaje, como dominio y como elemento esc\u00e9nico, crea una tensi\u00f3n que puede ser explorada productivamente mediante el compromiso con enfoques representacionales y no representacionales. Yo investigo c\u00f3mo se manifiesta la tensi\u00f3n entre vivienda y escenario de maneras espec\u00edficas, entre diferentes sujetos en diferentes contextos, y reflexiono sobre lo que esto podr\u00eda significar para integrar los enfoques representacionales y no representacionales del paisaje.","creator":["Roderick P. Neumann"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"088866c7-7672-3092-927a-d94fa23e4d2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"1388","pageStart":"1371","pagination":"pp. 1371-1388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Churchill and Roosevelt in Africa: Performing and Writing Landscapes of Race, Empire, and Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537557","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":12085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For nearly twenty years, Anglo-American feminist theory has posed its own epistemological questions by looking at the lives and bodies of transsexuals and transvestites. This paper examines the impact of such scholarship on improving the everyday lives of the people central to such feminist argumentation. Drawing on indigenous scholarship and activisms, I conclude with a consideration of some central principles necessary to engage in feminist research and theory\u2014to involve marginal people in the production of knowledge and to transform the knowledge-production process itself.","creator":["Viviane Namaste"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1f62100-5bb1-3d8f-a0f0-e7c9686a52c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Undoing Theory: The \"Transgender Question\" and the Epistemic Violence of Anglo-American Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618162","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Muslim women's leadership cannot be reduced to its social manifestations and formation. While analyzing a case study of leadership provided by some Muslim women in Uzbekistan, a post-Soviet Central Asian country, the author demonstrates that this leadership is essentially personal, propelled from within individuals and driven by their motivations. At the same time, Muslim women's leadership is relational\u2014conceptualized and enacted always in relation to someone or something, including the self. By highlighting the importance of individual experiences, this article highlights the personal-relational dynamic and calls for an analytical reassessment of the role of the human body beyond its expected use in cultivating certain dispositions and sensibilities in the debates about Muslim women's leadership. As a venue for a more detailed understanding of existing forms of leadership among Muslim women, this dynamic helps us better comprehend human leadership in general.","creator":["Svetlana A. Peshkova"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.23","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c715530-8df7-3e3f-bfde-b03b7fbecae4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.23"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leading against Odds: Muslim Women Leaders and Teachers in Uzbekistan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.31.1.23","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Accompanying the recent surge in the number of women and people of color attending law school has been an explosion of legal scholarship devoted to examining the marginalization of law students on the basis of gender and race. Much of this work has focused specifically on the law school classroom, and three of the leading self-denominated feminist studies of the law school classroom have combined empirical work with theories that attempt to explain the results and conclude with proposals for change. The author examines these studies and places them in the context of a history of feminist theories in order to illuminate the omissions of these dominant critiques. In particular, the author demonstrates that, although these proposals purport to escape feminist theory's recurring tendency to erase differences among women, they culminate in the same result of excluding various groups of women--in this instance, those women historically viewed as unfeminine. Upon closely examining the extant proposals' inattention to the problem of lesbian-baiting in the law school, the author argues that this inattention arises from their underlying view of gender and of the category of experience. This Note argues that by re-reading difference in itself--that is, by using the information of experience as a window onto the forces that produce it, rather than as a source of truth in itself--feminists can act without reproducing the exclusions of early feminist theory. This revised understanding can allow feminists to re-politicize their proposals for reforming the law school classroom.","creator":["Banu Ramachandran"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0a1c845-b601-34f9-a5f7-51c4c2eacf26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"1794","pageStart":"1757","pagination":"pp. 1757-1794","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Re-Reading Difference: Feminist Critiques of the Law School Classroom and the Problem with Speaking from Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123465","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":19740,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[89176,89458]],"Locations in B":[[87660,87940]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan V. Donaldson"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b039527f-cd66-3d3c-9acd-1de8c68a75ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Faulkner and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907651","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Greene"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03605949"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976301"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7217a0fe-b640-3526-8bb4-baff51e45711"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/284285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilass2"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Apostrophe and Women's Erotics in the Poetry of Sappho","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284285","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":6740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MELANIE OTTO"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26234255","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b4a3836-7187-3834-9afe-997e7ae4028f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26234255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ijasonline"}],"isPartOf":"IJAS Online","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Irish Association for American Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cTIERRA ENTRE MEDIO\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26234255","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9039,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481468,481554]],"Locations in B":[[52019,52106]],"subTitle":"BORDERLANDS OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE ART OF FRIDA KAHLO"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Walter Johnson"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2567914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b494e86-bb4d-3f23-8ae7-2c373126c476"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2567914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Slave Trader, the White Slave, and the Politics of Racial Determination in the 1850s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2567914","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":14957,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A critical application of Ruddick's model of maternal thinking is the best way to grapple with the ethical dilemmas posed by sex-selective abortion which I view as a \"moral mistake.\" Chief among these is the need to be sensitive to local cultural practices in countries where sex-selective abortion is prevalent, while simultaneously developing consistent international standards to deal with the dangers posed by the use of sex-selective abortion to eliminate female fetuses.","creator":["Gail Weiss"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"963f89f7-a5d1-349a-99a4-a3f0c85a0ef7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex-Selective Abortion: A Relational Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810465","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7895,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503676]],"Locations in B":[[47387,47485]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the contradictions inherent in blind women's appearance management. Based on an anthropological analysis of interviews with 40 blind women in Israel, the article argues that while serving as a valuable tool within stigma management, appearance management operates simultaneously as a site of rigorous discipline of the body in an effort to comply with feminine visual norms, and as a vehicle for the expression and reception of sensory pleasure. It argues for the significant role of blind women's appearance in negotiating normalcy and rejecting the normative, stigmatizing script written for them as disabled-blind-women. By studying the role of appearance in the lives of women who do not rely on sight as a central mode of perception, the article addresses the complicated position of blind women in visual culture and challenges the traditional ocular focus of the study of feminine identity and gender performance.","creator":["GILI HAMMER"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23212269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e7ab7f2-593b-3b60-b26e-bd319c2c4500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23212269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"406","pagination":"pp. 406-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"BLIND WOMEN'S APPEARANCE MANAGEMENT: Negotiating Normalcy between Discipline and Pleasure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23212269","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANDREW J. HOSTETLER","GILBERT H. HERDT"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a2da890-a64a-3059-b3af-62c928e5cdcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40971272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture, Sexual Lifeways, and Developmental Subjectivities: Rethinking Sexual Taxonomies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971272","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":13639,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524338,524428]],"Locations in B":[[83949,84043]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The shackling of pregnant prisoners during labor and childbirth is endemic within women's penal institutions in the United States. This Article investigates the factors that account for the pervasiveness of this practice and suggests doctrinal innovations that may be leveraged to prevent its continuation. At a general level, this Article asserts that we cannot understand the persistence of the shackling of female prisoners without understanding how historical constructions of race and gender operate structurally to both motivate and mask its use. More specifically, this Article contends that while shackling affects female prisoners of all races today, the persistent practice attaches to Black women in particular through the historical devaluation, regulation, and punishment of their exercise of reproductive capacity in three contexts: slavery, convict leasing, and chain gangs in the South. The regulation and punishment of Black women within these oppressive systems reinforced and reproduced stereotypes of these women as deviant and dangerous. In turn, as Southern penal practices proliferated in the United States and Black women became a significant percentage of the female prison population, these images began to animate harsh practices against all female prisoners. Moreover, this Article asserts that current jurisprudence concerning the Eighth Amendment, the primary constitutional vehicle for challenging conditions of confinement, such as shackling, is insufficient to combat racialized practices at the structural level. Current doctrine focuses on the subjective intentions of prison officials at the individual level and omits any consideration of how race underlies institutional practices. Instead, this Article suggests an expanded reading of the Eighth Amendment and the \"evolving standards of decency\" language that undergirds the \"cruel and unusual punishments\" clause. Specifically, this Article argues that evolving standards of decency should be guided by other constitutional provisions, such as the Thirteenth Amendment. This expanded reading, which this Article refers to as the \"antisubordination approach,\" draws upon Justice Harlan's oft-cited dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson and his underappreciated reading of the Thirteenth Amendment therein. Under such a reading, conditions of confinement that result from or are related to repudiated mechanisms of racial domination should be deemed \"cruel and unusual punishments.\" By challenging race and gender subordination at the structural level, this Article suggests that we can move from an aspiration to the actualization of humane justice.","creator":["Priscilla A. Ocen"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23408737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4967878a-4470-3ef3-bc68-4278512d12fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23408737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73,"pageEnd":"1311","pageStart":"1239","pagination":"pp. 1239-1311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Punishing Pregnancy: Race, Incarceration, and the Shackling of Pregnant Prisoners","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23408737","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":35287,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[73370,73515]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith A. Peraino"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.0151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e7235e4-d755-32aa-8cf4-def6015be50a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.0151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Plumbing the Surface of Sound and Vision: David Bowie, Andy Warhol, and the Art of Posing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.0151","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11659,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497254,497396]],"Locations in B":[[57295,57437]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers two accounts of the self that have gained prominence in contemporary feminist psychoanalytic theory and draws out the implications of these views with respect to the problem of moral reflection. I argue that our account of moral reflection will be impoverished unless it mobilizes the capacity to empathize with others and the rhetoric of figurative language. To make my case for this claim, I argue that John Rawls's account of reflective equilibrium suffers from his exclusive reliance on impartial reason.","creator":["Diana Tietjens Meyers"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1d9d83b-7b24-3e2e-bdd6-f932f7481c31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Axiology"],"title":"Moral Reflection: Beyond Impartial Reason","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810403","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":12661,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[477219,477271],[503404,503495],[503621,503676]],"Locations in B":[[78204,78256],[80405,80496],[80599,80658]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shirley R. Steinberg"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac5d2c65-e1c7-316f-9dda-cf7a542265ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"474","pagination":"pp. 474-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Twenty-nine: Early Education as a Gendered Construction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975688","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":3563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Heinrich Popitz's Phenomena of Power aims to uncover power as \"a universal component in the genesis and operation of human societies\". In order to uncover this \"universal\" concept of power, Popitz employs Husserl's method of the \"imaginative variation\" [Phantasievariation]. Yet, contrary to phenomenology's traditionally descriptive posture, Phenomena of Power's project is at once descriptive and normative\u2014seeking not only to describe power, but to also describe the way in which power can be remade. In the present paper it is argued that this normative component of Popitz's project oifers the burgeoning field of critical phenomenology an illustration of the way in which Husserl's \"imaginative variation\" might be employed not only as a descriptive tool of pure essences, but also as an instrument in the refashioning of social reality.","creator":["J. Leavitt Pearl"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d96b25c-258b-3f32-b318-0d23f3831c4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44979930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Popitz's Imaginative Variation on Power as Model for Critical Phenomenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979930","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4548,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[164370,164581]],"Locations in B":[[6225,6436]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In contemporary media and scientific contexts, it has become increasingly popular to launch today's elderly as different from previous generations of older people, especially emphasized is that today's elderly will have more attitude and set higher demands on society. The TV-series Pension\u00e4rsj\u00e4vlar is based on this idea of today's and tomorrow's elderly as different and more rebellious than previous generations. The purpose of this article is to analyze and discuss how age and age codes are used as a prerequisite for, but also are challenged in the series. The result shows that chronological age is almost absent in the series, instead age coding is performed by physical attributes and verbal acts. Most common attributes are those connected to decreased functionality, such as walker, wheelchair, walking stick etcetera. The most common taboo joked about is sexuality, and other common themes are decreased functionality, child\/youth- like behavior and traffic. In the article I discuss how these themes and attributes are negotiated in relation to age.","creator":["Janicke Andersson"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609706607"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011235861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb30a09b-8a32-3f24-96f4-f36e170873e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24393123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pension\u00e4rsj\u00e4vlar \u2013 revolt mot eller ett upprepande av negativa \u00e5lderskoder?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393123","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELLA HOWARD"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10698825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9561c5a9-3dbe-3d44-b9d7-e6216dcf0a22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40662756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studdecoarts"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Decorative Arts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Feminist Writings on Twentieth-Century Design History, 1970-1995: Furniture, Interiors, Fashion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662756","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1992, to mark the five-hundreth anniversary of Columbus's arrival in the New World, San Francisco's Mexican Museum produced an exhibit titled The Chicano Codices: Encountering Art of the Americas. Chicana photographer Delilah Montoya created an artist's book, Codex Delilah, Six-Deer: Journey from Mexicatl to Chicana, whose central character, an indigenous girl named Six-Deer, meets iconic figures from the Mexicana\/Chicana pantheon over a 520-year period. This essay examines a character from the work's fifth panel, Lucha-Adelucha, a representation of La Adelita, the soldadera figure associated with the Mexican Revolution. The work traces representations of La Adelita within historical documents, the pictorial archive, the corrido, Chicana feminist recuperations, and Codex Delilah. Braiding together approaches from Chicana feminism, anthropology, art history, and queer theory, the study adopts the trenza paradigm as its analytical frame. Positioning Lucha-Adelucha as emblematic of multiple border crossings that include gender, sexual expression, and femininity\/masculinity, and as an example of a nepantlera, the work argues for an interpretation of this figure as a visual representation that transgresses the confines of heteronormativity.","creator":["Ann Marie Leimer"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15502546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3913e78f-05f4-3eb6-af15-6844681d8b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatistud"}],"isPartOf":"Chicana\/Latina Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CROSSING THE BORDER WITH \"LA ADELITA\": Lucha-Adelucha as \"Nepantlera\" in Delilah Montoya's \"Codex Delilah\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014481","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":14278,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[90190,90252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jason Haslam"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc9e2d49-2fc9-39fa-af9f-b8d4e864717b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pits, Pendulums, and Penitentiaries: Reframing the Detained Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755512","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While some recent gay scholarship attempts to appropriate a naturalized position within the patriarchal tradition that apparently excludes it, this essay aims to situate the gay within an expanded concept of maleness. The critical response to homophobia does not overcome the binary-opposition codes that form the basis of conventional sexual difference. Jean Cocteau's 1926 essay on transvestism, \"Une le\u00e7on de th\u00e9\u00e2tre: Le num\u00e9ro Barbette,\" shows those binary codes in operation as the female impersonator Barbette moves across gender boundaries only in a death-defying high-wire act. The Butoh dancer Kazuo Ohno's 1988 performance piece Suiren 'Water Lilies' offers an alternative to the traditional sexual polarities asserted by Barbette's cross-dressing. Embodying \"through-dressing\" in a model of mutual inclusion, Ohno suggests the unconventional sexuality of a middle voice that preserves the ability of sensation or inner experience to fashion appearance.","creator":["Mark Franko"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"496e6418-198c-3265-befe-eef67d417742"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"607","pageStart":"594","pagination":"pp. 594-607","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Where He Danced: Cocteau's Barbette and Ohno's Water Lilies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462764","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":9012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the preconditions for a determinative role of the postulate of autonomy with respect to music. Contrary to the usual approach in musicology, which accordingly defines autonomy of music by a musical work's immanence, its characteristics (form, compositional technique, and aesthetics), and its \"musical logic,\" it is instead considered here within a socio-praxeological context. It is argued that this claim for validity is conceived, represented, maintained, and legitimized in a process that is dependent on a symbiosis between the elements and complexes of disparate, discursive, and sensory practices.","creator":["JIN-AH KIM"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039292"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235605"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebf1389c-57a0-35a7-901f-4c275d50956f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43818935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Archiv f\u00fcr Musikwissenschaft","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Autonomie der Musik: Zu Geltungsbedingungen eines umstrittenen Postulats aus praxissoziologischer Perspektive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818935","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":6612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karin Littau"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"912","pageStart":"888","pagination":"pp. 888-912","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Refractions of the Feminine: The Monstrous Transformations of Lulu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251208","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":10300,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147034,147162],[477195,477252]],"Locations in B":[[50964,51092],[53284,53340]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christian Meyer"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16de0910-25ca-36c0-b245-5c2da4243ffe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40341982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Persuasive Interaktion und soziale Beeinflussung. Zur Mikrophysik der Macht in einem Wolof-Dorf Nordwest-Senegals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341982","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper provides a linguistic analysis of depictions of female characters in selected West African fiction with a view to illustrating the role language plays in overtly and covertly conveying sexist language and ideology. Unequal representation of the genders by male and female writers is noted. Sexist language appears to be more frequently employed in female writers' works, while a covert chauvinistic ideology is more evident in male writers' works. Asymmetries in equivalent gender-specific terms and other linguistic devices are demonstrably revealing of societal gender inequities that tend to favor males. Whether innocent or purposeful, these devices play a vital role in creating perspective. As demonstrated, West African females are simultaneously demeaned and celebrated in the literature.","creator":["Anita Pandey"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8569b92f-5c24-3c31-995e-9c88561319f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4187595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"\"Woman Palava No Be Small, Woman Wahala No Be Small\": Linguistic Gendering and Patriarchal Ideology in West African Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187595","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":11881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adrienne L. Hiegel"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98d7da4c-4766-3521-850a-3168b5a1713c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"1494","pageStart":"1451","pagination":"pp. 1451-1494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Sexual Exclusions: The Americans with Disabilities Act as a Moral Code","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123290","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":22906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524390]],"Locations in B":[[81439,81498]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using Google\u2122 as an example, this essay considers how two shifts in common thinking about gender might deepen our understanding of technologies of everyday life: first, a shift from thinking about gender as something one 'has' to something one does; and second, from thinking about the gendered use or character of specific artifacts to the gendered infrastructures and networks enabling individual encounters with technology.","creator":["Rebecca Herzig"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48a78a14-ebac-3958-9464-c4272015eca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23791377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Does Google TM<\/sup> Have Gender? Technologies of Everyday Life in Affluent Industrial Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791377","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":2817,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478060,478195]],"Locations in B":[[13928,14058]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Warshauer Freedman","Deborah Appleman"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23478984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07375328"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24db4b61-b324-3764-9f37-06adb771e52b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23478984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teaceducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Teacher Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"What Else Would I Be Doing?\": Teacher Identity and Teacher Retention in Urban Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23478984","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LISA DICKSON"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a30c5879-f9e7-3471-a1d1-6c9f6cd4dfe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Tent Him to the Quick: Vision, Violence, and Penalty in Shakespeare's 2 \"Henry VI\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917376","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11205,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431545,431790],[431984,432109]],"Locations in B":[[51460,51705],[51716,51837]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing from the perspectives of transgender individuals, this article offers an empirical investigation of recent critiques of West and Zimmerman's \"doing gender\" theory. This analysis uses 19 in-depth interviews with transpeople about their negotiation and management of gendered interactions at work to explore how their experiences potentially contribute to the doing, undoing, or redoing of gender in the workplace. I find that transpeople face unique challenges in making interactional sense of their sex, gender, and sex category and simultaneously engage in doing, undoing, and redoing gender in the process of managing these challenges. Consequently, I argue that their interactional gender accomplishments are not adequately captured under the rubric of \"doing gender\" and suggest instead that they be understood as \"doing transgender.\" This article outlines the process of and consequences of \"doing transgender\" and its potential implications for the experience of and transformation of gender inequality at work.","creator":["CATHERINE CONNELL"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00224c9b-44c9-37b5-869a-9776ca10f38e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DOING, UNDOING, OR REDOING GENDER? Learning from the Workplace Experiences of Transpeople","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676845","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10298,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475218,475303]],"Locations in B":[[61662,61754]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05e0\u05d1\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d4\u05de\u05d2\u05d6\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e0\u05d2\u05d1 (\u05d1\u05d3\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd), 1 \u05db\u05e4\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d6\u05d5 \u05de\u05e6\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05e8\u05ea \u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05dd \u05d5\u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05e2\u05de\u05dd \u05d4\u05dd \u05e0\u05e4\u05d2\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05e1\u05d2\u05e8\u05ea \u05de\u05d9\u05d6\u05dd \u05dc\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05de\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e3. \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05e0\u05d1\u05d7\u05e0\u05d5 \u05d2\u05dd \u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d1\u05d3\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u2014 \u05d3\u05e4\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d7\u05e9\u05d9\u05d1\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d4\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05d2\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05d1. \u05d1\u05d4\u05e0\u05d7\u05d4 \u05db\u05d9 \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05de\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d1-\u05de\u05de\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05db\u05d1, 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\u05d4\u05de\u05d2\u05d6\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd. The study examined the identity construction of Negev Arab (Bedouin) adolescents, as portrayed in their own eyes and in the eyes of their Jewish counterparts, in the context of a joint school project. Recognizing the complex nature of identity structure and applying our Identity Representation Model (Orr, Mana, & Mana, 2003), I analyzed the identity structure for the Negev Arab students \u2014 as seen by both the Jewish and Arab students. I also analyzed the interactions between the various identity components and the Bedouin and Jewish students' sense of interpersonal threat during the inter-group encounter. The research examined 567 outstanding tenth to twelfth grade students \u2014 445 Jewish (232 girls) and 122 Negev Arabs (79 girls) \u2014 from 28 schools in southern Israel, who participated in a joint study project. Participants completed three anonymous questionnaires: the Identity Representations Questionnaire (Mana, Orr, & Mana, 2007), adapted to the context of Jews-Arabs relations; the Collective Identity Definitions Questionnaire (Hujierat, 2006); and the Interpersonal Threat Questionnaire (Stephan, Ybarra, & Bachman, 1999). The results indicate that the Negev Arab students expressed mainly adversarial identity representations though they also showed some attempt to integrate the Arab components of their identity with Jewish-Israeli identity components. The findings further show that the Negev Arab students had a stronger Arab, Muslim and Palestinian identities than their Jewish counterparts imagined. This may suggest that the Arab students tended to reinforce their distinct social identity whereas the Jewish students tended to reduce the power of these trends. The research offers a partial answer to the question of whether these trends relate to feelings of interpersonal threat. With some differences between boys and girls from both sectors, negative correlations were found between the sense of interpersonal threat and shared identities (the Expanded and the Israeli identities), and positive correlations between the sense of interpersonal threat and conflictual identities (Rival and Palestinian identities).","creator":["\u05e2\u05d3\u05d9 \u05de\u05d0\u05e0\u05e2","Adi Mana"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23660160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"452613a2-9082-3893-871f-87ccd860b98c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23660160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"megamot"}],"isPartOf":"Megamot \/ \u05de\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Henrietta Szold Institute \/ \u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d0\u05dc\u05d3","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Identity Construction and Sense of Interpersonal Threat Among Bedouin and Jewish Adolescents \/ \u05d4\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05e9\u05ea \u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df-\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d1\u05de\u05e4\u05d2\u05e9 \u05dc\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd-\u05d1\u05d3\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e0\u05d2\u05d1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23660160","volumeNumber":"\u05de\u05d6","wordCount":13661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers a rereading of Brenner's oeuvre with Freud, as it were, through the peeping hole furnished by the anecdotal and incongruous tale \u201cNerves\u201d and its connections with the Jewish joke. Like the latter, the article argues, this story by Brenner originates in a fabric of deceit, error, and disruption, in incongruousness and a questioning of the very conditions of truth and falsity. Like the Jewish joke, Brenner's poetics is presented as marked by disruption and disproportionateness. In lieu of the coherent and full national story, Brenner proposes the alternative poetic of the \u201cgenre of nerves.\u201d Here, he replaces the \u201cbeautiful\u201d with two key \u201cartifacts\u201d: the abject and the sublime, both involving the negative, the incongruous, and a breach with the very possibility of representation. The article argues that a rereading of Brenner's work with a view to Freud requires abandoning the realistic-psychological-biographical perspective and approaching the oedipal model with suspicion. \u201cNerves\u201d should be read with reference to the tension between two clashing psychoanalytical perspectives: the Jewish joke, on the one hand, and the oedipal meta-narrative, on the other. Rather than uncritically adopting the latter, as is common in Brenner criticism, this article examines how Brenner subtly builds the oedipal-familial construct as a basis from which to imagine the national community. It will however to an equal extent show how Brenner punctures the over-inflated oedipal bubble by using the \u201cdouble face\u201d of the Jewish joke, disruption, and fragments of Jewish khokhmes.","creator":["Hanna Soker-Schwager"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.31.1-2.60","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdb84e73-024a-3c2b-ac1c-98ab32911614"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.31.1-2.60"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Brenner and the \u201cNerves\u201d Genre<\/strong>: Between the Oedipal Narrative, the Jewish Joke, and the National Sublime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.31.1-2.60","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":14193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Though there is a vast literature on performances of drag, performances of gender and sexual transgressions outside of drag clubs are less studied. This case study of men's marches protesting violence against women\u2014\"Walk a Mile in Her Shoes\" marches\u2014examines the politics of such transgressions. Cross-dressing to various degrees is strategically utilized at these events in an attempt to encourage men to become empathetic allies. This article suggests, however, that context is critical to the political potential of performances of drag. The author's observations of the interactions at the marches suggest that drag at \"Walk a Mile\" marches often symbolically reproduces gender and sexual inequality despite good intentions. At these marches, feminism is gendered when performances of politics and protest are contextually framed as gender and\/or sexual transgressions when \"feminism\" is understood as \"feminine.\"","creator":["TRISTAN S. BRIDGES"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b680263-01cf-3591-8ac4-486f038e4c24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEN JUST WEREN'T MADE TO DO THIS: Performances of Drag at \"Walk a Mile in Her Shoes\" Marches","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676844","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10968,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524346,524428]],"Locations in B":[[65213,65295]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Daisy Miller\" is a story about American Exceptionalism; about the banal and tawdry tragedy that comes of having faith in it; about Daisy's (the lawyer Giovanelli's \"new found land\") tragic flaw\u2014that she is unaware of how others perceive her, or she doesn't care; or about ambiguities, or seeing things. It can be made to speak volumes about the power of perception, as about what Tayyab Mahmoud has called \"[a]doption and deployment of identity.\" Or about the seductive power of fictions of specifically national identity: for James critic Leslie Fiedler, \"the American Girl is innocent by definition, mythically innocent; and her purity depends upon nothing she says or does. . . .\" A contemporary American anti\/heroine, Judith Miller, is likewise figured as interpretable: did she need a \"freely given\" \"personal\" waiver of confidentiality to identify her source, and when did she get one; was she a \"good, honorable principled reporter\" or \"A Woman of Mass Destruction\"; and what did New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller's accusation of an \"entanglement\" with \"Scooter\" Libby connote? This essay takes the intrigues generated around \"the Miller Girls\" as a guide to reading the stories told by, surrounding, excised from, and immanent in the 2005 decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in In re Grand Jury Subpoena, Judith Miller, and explores some fictions of American Exceptionalism cultivated both by \"common law constitutionalism,\" and by a federal judiciary laying down the law in the shadows cast by the \"War on Terror\"and the jurisdictions of expatriation.","creator":["Penelope Pether"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0484937-21f1-327e-978d-0127c4aa514e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Regarding the Miller Girls: Daisy, Judith, and the Seeming Paradox of In Re Grand Jury Subpoena, Judith Miller<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.187","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9723,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30139,30245]],"Locations in B":[[5870,5978]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Yelin"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recuperating Radical Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466446","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3701,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[19316,19387]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Hardack"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0f5eb58-dd40-367e-8e34-be4435c86d1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"1053","pageStart":"1028","pagination":"pp. 1028-1053","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Black Skin, White Tissues: Local Color and Universal Solvents in the Novels of Charles Johnson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299870","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14595,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124399,124465]],"Locations in B":[[44153,44219]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the construction of masculinity in medieval culture. Heroism and sanctity organize the masculine body into a cultural coherence that is always both powerful and fragile. Identity in the Middle Ages depends upon an array of changing phenomena\u2014from medical theory and manner of dress to martial activity and relation to other gendered bodies.","creator":["jeffrey jerome cohen","the members of interscripta"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bf1ad44-99cb-32a0-929a-b84e0dd4353d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Armour of an Alienating Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869219","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10988,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431288,431620]],"Locations in B":[[6593,6924]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Jennings"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4287333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03071022"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45096141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5bd0e93-89ea-35eb-81e1-12cc67446e36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4287333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socihist"}],"isPartOf":"Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Gateways Club and the Emergence of a Post-Second World War Lesbian Subculture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4287333","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is about recent attempts by scholars, database practitioners, and curators to experiment in theoretically interesting ways with the conceptual design and the building of databases, archives, and other information systems. This article uses the term \"archive\" (following Derrida's Archive Fever 1998\/1995 and Bowker's Memory Practices in the Sciences 2005) as an overarching category to include a diversity of technologies used to inventory objects and knowledge, to commit them to memory and for future use. The category of \"archive\" might include forms as diverse as the simple spreadsheet, the species inventory, the computerized database, and the museum. Using this protean concept, this study suggests that we are currently witnessing a time where close convergences are occurring between social theory and archive construction. It identifies a \"move\" toward exposure of the guts of our archives and databases, toward exposing the contingencies, the framing, the reflexivity, and the politics embedded within them. Within this move, the study examines ways in which theories of performance and emergence have begun to influence the way that archives of different kinds are conceived and reflects on the role of Science and Technology Studies (STS) scholars in their construction.","creator":["Claire Waterton"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d96a284-9a1a-3383-b152-faf75332a3f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25746389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Experimenting with the Archive: STS-ers As Analysts and Co-constructors of Databases and Other Archival Forms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746389","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12907,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[73156,73223]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how lesbian, gay, and straight-but-affirming members of lesbian- and gay-affirming churches in the South challenged a deep-rooted Christian belief in homosexual sin. Data are taken from 200 hours of participant observation and 25 in-depth interviews in two Protestant churches: one predominantly black, working class, lesbian, and evangelical, and the other mostly white, middle class, heterosexual, and liberal. I identify three strategies lesbian, gay, and straight-but-affirming church members used to accommodate\u2014but not assimilate\u2014to heteronormative conceptions of the \"good Christian.\" First, some black lesbians minimized their sexuality as secondary to the Christian identity. Second, most lesbian and gay members\u2014both black and white\u2014normalized their sexuality by enacting Christian morals of monogamy, manhood, and motherhood. Third, a small group of black lesbian\/gay and white, straight-but-affirming members moralized their sexuality as grounds for challenging homophobia in the church. Using these strategies, church members both resisted notions of homosexual sin and reproduced a \"politics of respectability\" (Warner 1999) among lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people. Findings shed empirical light on two issues in the social problems literature: (1) the inseparability of race and gender from sexual identity; and (2) the importance of an intersectional analysis in assessing the possibilities of faith-based strategies for sexual equality.","creator":["Krista McQueeney"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.1.151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd691a23-add7-3b71-9e76-c37657cd3904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2009.56.1.151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"We are God's Children, Y'All:\" Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Lesbian- and Gay-Affirming Congregations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.1.151","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":15305,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clay Motley"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02719274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298783050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-202682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41228658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerjewilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Jewish Literature (1981-)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Dot'sh a'Kin' a man I am!\": Abraham Cahan, Masculinity, and Jewish Assimilation in Nineteenth-Century America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228658","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a response to the march of privatization and neoliberal individualism, the commons have recently re-emerged as an attractive alternative. In this article, I bring a feminist political ecology critique to the burgeoning literature on commoning to develop a conceptualisation of how political communities of commoning emerge through socionatural subjectification and affective relations. All commoning efforts involve a renegotiation of the (contested) political relationships through which everyday community affairs, production and exchange are organised and governed. Drawing on critical property studies, diverse economies, feminist theory and commoning literatures, this analysis critically explores the relationship between property and commoning to reveal how the commons emerge from the exercise of power. Central to my conceptualisation is that commoning is a set of practices and performances that foster new relations and subjectivities, but these relations are always contingent, ambivalent outcomes of the exercise of power. As such, commoning creates socionatural inclusions and exclusions, and any moment of coming together can be succeeded by new challenges and relations that un-common. I argue for the need to focus on doing commoning, becoming in common, rather than seeking to cement property rights, relations of sharing and collective practices as the backbone of durable commoning efforts. Becoming in common then, is a partial, transitory becoming, one which needs to be (re)performed to remain stable over time and space.","creator":["Andrea J. Nightingale"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632711","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"175299510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9a4f9f3-c559-366e-ac6d-da4c64be30af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcomm"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Commons","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"International Journal of the Commons","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Commoning for inclusion? Political communities, commons, exclusion, property and socio-natural becomings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632711","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9125,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[95801,95909]],"Locations in B":[[3183,3291]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using ethnographic data, this article explores how Muslim women teachers from low-income Pakistani communities employ the notion of \"wisdom\" to construct and perform their educated subjectivity in a transnational women's education project. Through Butler's performativity framework, I demonstrate how local and global discourses overlap to shape narratives that define individual rights as well as family honor as part of the educated subjectivity of Pakistani Muslim women.","creator":["Ayesha Khurshid"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b297d0-8631-3078-9347-831595180db4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23249758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"A Transnational Community of Pakistani Muslim Women: Narratives of Rights, Honor, and Wisdom in a Women's Education Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249758","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores western theatre dance as meaningful, despite its difference from language or discourse. I contend that although like language dance communicates through cultural codes, it does not convey literal messages but then neither is dance dominated by a requirement for factual specificity. I argue, however, that dance is structured like a language and I provide an analysis of the methods according to which language functions on an everyday basis. I review linguistic categories and argue for their counterparts in dance including vocabulary and syntax, the utterance and the speech act. The speech act is an important instance of language use which I hold is represented in dance; and in addressing this topic I shed new light on the performative quality of dance. The various theoretical issues discussed in the essay are illustrated by examples taken from modern and postmodern dance as well as from classical ballet.","creator":["HENRIETTA BANNERMAN"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43281347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"596f0c6d-c167-3e5c-a142-d786136d357d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43281347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is Dance a Language? Movement, Meaning and Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43281347","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7848,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[16695,16825],[17143,17259]],"Locations in B":[[27549,27675],[27797,27916]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolina Castellanos Gonella"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa55ebb4-b7f3-33ef-a3ca-4e8d4bf48946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24810775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"272","pagination":"pp. 272-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BEAUTIFUL MALE BODIES: GAY AND MALE HOMOEROTIC RELATIONSHIPS IN CAIO FERNANDO ABREU'S \"MORANGOS MOFADOS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810775","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Neal","Karim Murji"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e822887a-68cf-339e-91e2-11abe8da38f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44016751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"819","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-819","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Sociologies of Everyday Life: Editors' Introduction to the Special Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016751","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Two Bourbon kings, Louis XIII and XIV, were ballet dancers. What were the aesthetic, political, and ritual functions of court ballet? Did the monarch's stage appearances sustain his political identity? Franko argues that dance and music, rather than reinforcing, in their blatant magnificence, the political message of power's presence, were actually the formally subversive means through which the performance sustained the ambiguity and contradiction of personal sovereignty.","creator":["Mark Franko"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1147011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a01d8c4-fc25-32cd-93e6-74db3c5b760f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1147011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Majestic Drag: Monarchical Performativity and the King's Body Theatrical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1147011","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8121,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477631,477816]],"Locations in B":[[1061,1243]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Godden"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50901653"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24d919aa-f422-3c30-adc7-a16b25cbb900"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"The Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Bear, Man, and Black: Hunting the Hidden in Faulkner's Big Woods","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908345","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12180,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[191042,191581]],"Locations in B":[[25910,26484]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adriano Udani"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"490d0206-a45b-30fb-b194-13a50a7aa3c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When Anonymity Is Revealed and Otherness Becomes Privileged: The Marginalization of Immigrant Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610926","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":2125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra R. Joshel"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6549906-42b6-3d51-9e3e-e08c946497d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Female Desire and the Discourse of Empire: Tacitus's Messalina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175122","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":15538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SEAN DEMPSEY"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50573849"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f2d33e7-86de-3e85-8e4b-940534629a09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24247321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Blank Splendour\": Keats, Romantic Visuality, and Wonder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247321","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f8b3dac-507e-328d-ab67-607f4b860cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3070740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"290","pagination":"p. 290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070740","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f55fa874-3539-3d80-b68b-a8067465f83d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/660768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","issueNumber":"S1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":334,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"I","pagination":"pp. I-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2010","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660768","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":246837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James L. 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In this article, we provide a critical review of some of the major contributions from the field of educational research. We first provide an overall description of the classic concept of bullying, including certain characteristics of bullies and victims that have received particular attention, and then describe what we consider to be the principal limitations of these predominant academic and professional discourses. These include the following three concerns: (1) the restrictive definition employed, (2) a pathologizing bully-victim dichotomy, and (3) a gender-blind or at best genderessentialist approach to gender difference. Finally, we propose a conceptual shift toward a more comprehensive understanding that is based, in part, on constructivist and poststructuralist perspectives on gender.","creator":["Mar\u00eda Victoria Carrera","Ren\u00e9e DePalma","Mar\u00eda Lameiras"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23883162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1040726X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f35464aa-fe81-3864-b422-16537ba9f60c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23883162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educpsycrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Psychology Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Psychology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Toward a More Comprehensive Understanding of Bullying in School Settings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23883162","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["R. 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Connell"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f10c65cc-f0a9-3b61-a667-db05f8f1e8d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"702","pagination":"pp. 702-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comment on Hawkesworth's \"Confounding Gender\": Re-Structuring Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175252","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Erotics of Aryanism\/Histories of Empire: How \"White Supremacy\" and \"Hellenomania\" Construct \"Discourses of Sexuality\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949873","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7975,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[50476,50560]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory Jones"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9dbf82c-f16a-39cb-86dd-698646ad403c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Rude Intercourse\": Uncensoring Wordsworth's \"Nutting\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601167","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13804,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[263472,263589]],"Locations in B":[[76249,76366]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the past decade, archaeologists have given considerable attention to research on gender in the human past. In this review, we attempt to acknowledge much of this diverse and abundant work from an explicitly feminist perspective. We focus on reviewing a selection of approaches to gender that are anchored to specific theoretical standpoints. In addition, we highlight several approaches that challenge an archaeology of gender that does not explicitly engage with the implications of this topic for research, practice, and interpretation. From our perspective, we suggest the value of situating gender research within an explicitly feminist framework, and we draw attention to some of the important insights for archaeology from the wider field of feminist critiques of science. Last, we draw attention to the crucial implications for the practice of archaeology.","creator":["Margaret W. Conkey","Joan M. Gero"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c28faee3-f937-39f5-aff3-6e44f2c91156"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2952529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Programme to Practice: Gender and Feminism in Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2952529","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":13080,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[70528,70606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There seems to be a general penchant for dichotomous styles of thought in engineering, in which hierarchies and gender are often evident - both symbolically and organizationally. This paper explores these themes, drawing in part on a pilot ethnographic study of software developers. The technical\/social distinction is strongly gendered inasmuch as it maps on to masculine instrumentalism and feminine expressiveness. Also, the two sides of this dualism are seen as mutually exclusive such that 'the technical', which defines the core of engineering expertise and identity, specifically excludes 'the social'. Still, the related distinction between specialist and heterogeneous roles becomes valued, and gendered, in contradictory ways. The abstract\/concrete dualism is even more contradictory. The privileging of analytical abstraction in science and education sits sometimes uncomfortably alongside the obvious practical importance of, and pleasures in, a hands-on relationship with technological artefacts - conflicting versions of masculinity. Multiple tensions coexist around such dualisms, yet they endure. The concluding discussion considers possible factors related to the co-existence of certainty and uncertainty around technology, and to the performance of gender more generally.","creator":["Wendy Faulkner"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/285764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2501ada-9024-32ae-9203-24568849b8be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/285764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"792","pageStart":"759","pagination":"pp. 759-792","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Publications Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178548","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GRAHAM HAMMILL"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31a20b38-3139-3df1-beb3-75864b0f76e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Instituting Modern Time: Citizen Comedy and Heywood's \"Wise Woman of Hogsdon\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917347","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14165,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[443403,443525],[458791,459014]],"Locations in B":[[2211,2333],[2342,2565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Tabili"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3de2e815-46a3-3e3e-822e-f4c6b1139a4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/175850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Construction of Racial Difference in Twentieth-Century Britain: The Special Restriction (Coloured Alien Seamen) Order, 1925","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175850","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":21982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clare Hemmings"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c97ce4d0-645f-3b43-a9d4-92a2a84721bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395683","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kirstin Hotelling Zona"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8f7f4af-eea9-3599-80ee-e0888986522e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A \"Dangerous Game of Change\": Images of Desire in the Love Poems of May Swenson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441872","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9687,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[55431,55500]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean Noble"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9871d1b-ab46-3a3b-a2c2-344eaa019b23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Bound\" and Invested: Lesbian Desire and Hollywood Ethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018916","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The focus of this article is the celebration of the Dai New Year in the Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, an area of great diversity in Yunnan Province, China. The Dai are a people of southwest China and Southeast Asia and are classified by the Chinese state as one of the country's fifty-five 'minority nationalities' or 'ethnic groups'. Through an exploration of the spectacular processions and boisterous practices of water splashing which are important features of Dai New Year, complex power plays among the diverse peoples of Xishuangbanna are illuminated. These festivities reveal the intricate processes by which aspects of Dai experience (including Theravada Buddhism, increasing 'ethnic tourism', and interaction with the state) interplay in such a way as to contribute to the changing and multiple images of what it is to be Dai. Attention is also given to the carnivalesque cacophony of the water splashing engaged in by celebrants, which subtly signals the possibility of other ways of being whilst also generating a sense of solidarity amongst the peoples of Banna as distinguished from outsiders. \/ Le pr\u00e9sent article est consacr\u00e9 \u00e0 la c\u00e9l\u00e9bration du Nouvel An Dai dans le d\u00e9partement autonome Dai de Xishuangbanna, zone de grande diversit\u00e9 situ\u00e9e dans la province chinoise du Yunnan. Peuple du sud-ouest de la Chine et d'Asie du Sud-Est, les Dai sont compt\u00e9s au nombre des cinquante-cinq \u00ab minorit\u00e9s nationales \u00bb ou \u00ab groupes ethniques \u00bb que d\u00e9nombre l'administration chinoise. En \u00e9tudiant les spectaculaires processions et la turbulente pratique des aspersions d'eau qui marquent le Nouvel An Dai, l'auteur met en lumi\u00e8re les interactions complexes des pouvoirs parmi les diff\u00e9rentes populations de Xishuangbanna. Ces festivit\u00e9s r\u00e9v\u00e8lent des processus complexes par lesquels diff\u00e9rents aspects du v\u00e9cu des Dai (bouddhisme Theravada, expansion du tourisme \u00ab ethnique \u00bb et relations avec l'\u00c9tat chinois) se combinent pour donner une image multiple et changeante de ce que c'est que d'\u00eatre Dai. L'auteur s'int\u00e9resse \u00e9galement \u00e0 la cacophonie carnavalesque des aspersions d'eau par les c\u00e9l\u00e9brants, o\u00f9 s'insinue qu'il peut exister d'autres mani\u00e8res d'\u00eatre, en m\u00eame temps que se cr\u00e9e un sens de solidarit\u00e9 entre les peuples de Banna qui les d\u00e9marque des \u00e9trangers.","creator":["Anouska Komlosy"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Procession and Water Splashing: Expressions of Locality and Nationality during Dai New Year in Xishuangbanna","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804155","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":10007,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article propose de reconsid\u00e9rer l'\u0153uvre de l'artiste contemporain am\u00e9ricain Andres Serrano, notamment de sa s\u00e9rie d'\u00e9preuves chromog\u00e9niques datant de 1992 et intitul\u00e9e The Morgue qui expose un groupe de cadavres photographi\u00e9s dans une morgue r\u00e9elle. Je parle de reconsid\u00e9rer l'\u0153uvre de Serrano parce que la s\u00e9rie en question a d\u00e9j\u00e0 fait l'objet de plusieurs \u00e9tudes. Cependant, les discours critiques \u00e0 propos de cette s\u00e9rie ne se sont jamais pench\u00e9s sur les cons\u00e9quences de cette invasion de la vie priv\u00e9e pour les morts. Dans cet article, j'explore la mani\u00e8re dont Serrano manifeste sa prise de conscience face \u00e0 la vuln\u00e9rabilit\u00e9 des morts, non pas en abordant l'\u00e9thique de ses choix, mais en examinant comment cette r\u00e9ification des corps perp\u00e9tue n\u00e9anmoins une forme de subjectivit\u00e9 posthume, question rarement abord\u00e9e dans les domaines de l'histoire de l'art et de la th\u00e9orie culturelle. L'encadrement et la mise au point, les titres, les choix esth\u00e9tiques, la fragmentation des corps (qui tant\u00f4t dissimule, tant\u00f4t privil\u00e9gie le visage), ainsi que le caract\u00e8re d'infraction d'une intervention faite \u00e0 la d\u00e9rob\u00e9e en milieu mortuaire : tous ces \u00e9l\u00e9ments affectent les types d'identit\u00e9 qui \u00e9manent de la sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 des sexes et de connotations diverses accordant \u00e0 la pathologie et \u00e0 la criminalit\u00e9 une part significative. La capacit\u00e9 d'agir de Serrano se r\u00e9v\u00e8le indirectement dans ses travaux, lorsque l'artiste transgresse l'ordre du pouvoir g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement accord\u00e9 aux vivants et retir\u00e9 aux morts (effet de pr\u00e9sence des corps, capacit\u00e9 de contact, d'acc\u00e8s visuel). En \u00e9tendant aux morts une notion de subjectivit\u00e9 qui emprunte \u00e0 la pens\u00e9e de Judith Butler, je d\u00e9montrerai que les cadavres de Serrano restent intens\u00e9ment vuln\u00e9rables \u00e0 la violence qu'implique toute repr\u00e9sentation.","creator":["Andrea D. Fitzpatrick"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5ff2004-0f77-326b-b35f-d9d1bb2eafba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reconsidering the Dead in Andres Serrano's \"The Morgue\": Identity, Agency, Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630764","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Partindo de uma an\u00e1lise dos discursos jur\u00eddicos e cl\u00ednicos produzidos em Portugal acerca do homo-erotismo feminino na transi\u00e7\u00e3o do s\u00e9culo XIX para o s\u00e9culo XX, pretende-se dar conta do modo como este come\u00e7ou por ser definido em estreita articula\u00e7\u00e3o com o g\u00e9nero, desembocando numa representa\u00e7\u00e3o da l\u00e9sbica enquanto mulher m\u00e1scula. \u00c0 semelhan\u00e7a de outras sociedades europeias, tamb\u00e9m em Portugal a estabiliza\u00e7\u00e3o dos sistemas classificat\u00f3rios propostos pela ent\u00e3o emergente sexologia foi acompanhada por dificuldades em tra\u00e7ar claramente as fronteiras entre as novas categorias sexuais e as apropria\u00e7\u00f5es externas ao seu campo de produ\u00e7\u00e3o, impedindo urna leitura linear dos seus conte\u00fados. Based on an analysis of the juridical and clinical discourses about female homo-eroticism produced in Portugal during the transition from the 19th to the 20th century, this article highlights the way it began to be closely aligned with gender, leading to a representation of the lesbian as a mannish woman. As in other European societies, in Portugal the crystallization of classification systems emerging along with sexology struggled to clearly define the boundaries between the new sexual categories and their use by others outside the scope of their origin, clouding a clear reading of their contents.","creator":["Ana Maria Brand\u00e3o"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41012799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41012799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","issueNumber":"195","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Da sodomita \u00e0 l\u00e9sbica: o g\u00e9nero nas representa\u00e7\u00f5es do homo-erotismo feminino","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41012799","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bruce M. Knauft"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2abf7b83-8281-32f9-97db-676653beb974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/640544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Foucault Meets South New Guinea: Knowledge, Power, Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640544","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":17583,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[92167,92272]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wai-Chee Dimock"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2926870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2926870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminism, New Historicism, and the Reader","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2926870","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":9490,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[491224,491280]],"Locations in B":[[43135,43188]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the biomedical diagnosis of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) from the perspectives of medical anthropology and science and technology studies (STS), addressing two main questions: what does a historical, medical anthropology and STS perspective reveal about how PCOS is described and understood in contemporary North America, and what are the lived experiences of people with this diagnosis? Common descriptions of PCOS are based in normative gendered assumptions. Drawing on interviews with people diagnosed with PCOS and on analysis of historical and contemporary biomedical literature discussing PCOS, I argue that the lived experiences of people with PCOS vary significantly from mainstream (biomedical and popular) descriptions of the diagnosis. Dans cet article, j\u2019affirme que les exp\u00e9riences v\u00e9cues du syndrome des ovaires polykystiques (SOPK) diff\u00e8rent consid\u00e9rablement des descriptions courantes (biom\u00e9dicales et populaires) de la maladie. A partir d\u2019une analyse des sources historiques et contemporaines traitant du SOPK, je soutiens que deux approches du corps, de sa sant\u00e9 et de son fonctionnement, se refl\u00e8tent dans le diagnostic: l\u2019un centr\u00e9e sur les hormones et l\u2019autre sur le m\u00e9tabolisme. Sur la base d\u2019entrevues men\u00e9es avec des personnes ayant re\u00e7u un diagnostic de la maladie, j\u2019aborde quatre th\u00e8mes majeurs. Premi\u00e8rement, je montre que la perte de poids est pr\u00e9sent\u00e9e comme un forme de traitement du SOPK et que cela renforce la rh\u00e9torique selon laquelle le corps (en particulier celui de la femme) doit \u00eatre ma\u00eetris\u00e9 gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 un r\u00e9gime alimentaire et de l\u2019exercice physique. Deuxi\u00e8mement, j\u2019affirme que les nombreuses sources qui consid\u00e8rent que le SOPK a principalement une incidence sur la f\u00e9condit\u00e9 contribuent \u00e0 essentialiser les femmes en tant que m\u00e8res et n\u00e9gligent les autres pr\u00e9occupations que peuvent avoir les individus au sujet de la maladie. Troisi\u00e8mement, je maintiens que la construction du SOPK comme une question de \u00ab sant\u00e9 des femmes \u00bb et sa description en termes genr\u00e9s normatifs - comme \u00e9tant \u00e0 l\u2019origine de niveaux plus \u00e9lev\u00e9s d\u2019hormones \u00ab m\u00e2les \u00bb chez les femmes - exclut les personnes transgenres et non binaires qui peuvent \u00eatre elles aussi atteintes de cette maladie. Enfin, j\u2019explore les pratiques de prise en charge du corps et les pratiques de soi.","creator":["Kaitlyn Vleming"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"666c0c51-c457-312e-81d5-f7dea8faf07d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26794631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\u201cYou Think You\u2019re the Only One\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794631","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":13655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Comparing Descriptions and Lived Experiences of Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bettina Soestwohner"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b0483fd-73f6-31f5-be41-1ed3bb1b3cd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"706","pageStart":"690","pagination":"pp. 690-706","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Uprooting Antillean Identity: Maryse Cond\u00e9's \"La colonie du nouveau monde\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299154","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9577,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432914,433041]],"Locations in B":[[50635,50761]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carey Jewitt"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20185117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0091732X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236895"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9baccc65-7c5c-3806-9a83-caf08e3e8bff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20185117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revireseeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Research in Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Applied sciences - Systems science","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Multimodality and Literacy in School Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20185117","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":14186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Moore"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"She Was Too Fond of Her Mistaken Bargain\": The Scandalous Relations of Gender and Sexuality in Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465192","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7512,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[47746,47877]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With the expansion of access to HIV testing and antiretroviral therapy in sub-Saharan Africa, questions have emerged as to whether stigma remains a useful concept for understanding the effects of AIDS. There is, however, a paucity of research on how HIV-positive Africans - especially African men - experience living with AIDS. This paper addresses this gap and draws on findings from ethnographic fieldwork in 2004 and 2009 with a support group for HIV-positive men in Kampala, Uganda. The paper demonstrates that stigma is central to how men in this context coped with HIV and AIDS and it provides a conceptual framework that links men's experiences of AIDS stigma to conceptions of masculinity. In so doing, findings highlight both the possibilities and challenges of involving African men more fully in HIV prevention. Parall\u00e8lement \u00e0 l'\u00e9largissement de l'acc\u00e8s au d\u00e9pistage du VIH et \u00e0 la th\u00e9rapie antir\u00e9tro virale en Afrique sub-saharienne, des questions ont \u00e9merg\u00e9 quant \u00e0 la stigmatisation: est-elle encore un concept permettant de comprendre les effets du sida? Cependant peu de recherches ont explor\u00e9 comment les Africains s\u00e9ropositifs au VIH - en particulier les hommes - exp\u00e9rimentent la vie avec le sida. Cet article aborde ces lacunes et exploite les r\u00e9sultats d'un travail de terrain ethnographique men\u00e9 entre 2004 et 2009 avec un groupe de soutien pour des hommes s\u00e9ropositifs au VIH, \u00e0 Kampala, Ouganda. Il d\u00e9montre que la stigmatisation est au c\u0153ur des processus mis en place par ces hommes pour faire face au VIH et au sida, et propose une base conceptuelle rapprochant les exp\u00e9riences de stigmatisation li\u00e9es au sida aux conceptions de la virilit\u00e9. Ainsi, les r\u00e9sultats mettent l'accent \u00e0 la fois sur les opportunit\u00e9s et sur les d\u00e9fis repr\u00e9sent\u00e9s par une plus forte implication des hommes africains dans la pr\u00e9vention du VIH. Con la ampliaci\u00f3n del acceso a las pruebas del VIH y el tratamiento con antirretrovirales en el \u00c1frica subsahariana, se ha planteado si el estigma sigue siendo un concepto \u00fatil para entender los efectos del sida. Sin embargo, hay una escasez de investigaciones sobre c\u00f3mo es la experiencia de los africanos seropositivos, especialmente los hombres africanos, de vivir con el sida. En este art\u00edculo analizamos esta laguna bas\u00e1ndonos en los resultados de un trabajo de campo etnogr\u00e1fico Ilevado a cabo en 2004 y 2009 con un grupo de apoyo para hombres seropositivos de Kampala, Uganda. En este art\u00edculo demostramos que el estigma es un aspecto central en el modo en que los hombres en este contexto sobrellevan el VIH y el sida. Asimismo proporcionamos una estructura conceptual que vincula las experiencias de los hombres que sufren estigma por ser seropositivos con las concepciones de masculinidad. De este modo, los resultados ponen de relieve las posibilidades y los retos de que los hombres africanos participen con m\u00e1s plenitud en la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH.","creator":["Robert Wyrod"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78007304-6dad-38c8-9e3f-08596abae7ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41148810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Masculinity and the persistence of AIDS stigma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148810","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the second-hand marketplace in Nuku'alofa, the capital of Tonga, Tongans buy and sell objects that their diasporic relatives send them instead of remittances. While selling objects goes against the grain of a traditional moral order, the marketplace is immensely popular but dominated by local Others. It enables participants to articulate and practice consumption and, more generally, a modern but locally relevant self, while at the same time quietly challenge the generally accepted assumption that high-ranking or wealthy elites control modernity.","creator":["Niko Besnier"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30954c07-86ad-3f14-978a-22379be413ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Consumption and Cosmopolitanism: Practicing Modernity at the Second-Hand Marketplace in Nuku'alofa, Tonga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149867","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":16008,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474910,474998]],"Locations in B":[[99436,99523]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Research on identity suggests that a critical factor in identity concerns presentation or the behaviors actors perform in order to convince others of their identity. Yet identity also involves the attributions others make on the basis of these behaviors. In this paper, I argue that all acts do not fare equally in the process of attribution. Rather, individuals making attributions engage in a process of mental weighing as a way to determine which acts \u201ccount\u201d toward identity and to what extent. While various components of the act contribute to its social weight\u2014its presence or absence, markedness, frequency, context, and the manner in which it is performed\u2014the lens through which the attributer views the act also influences the weighing process.","creator":["Jamie L. Mullaney"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1999.22.3.269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b904f4e-6716-3307-95ca-a3d92165979c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1999.22.3.269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Making It \u201cCount\u201d: Mental Weighing and Identity Attribution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1999.22.3.269","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7641,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745],[147755,147832]],"Locations in B":[[2750,2913],[3090,3165]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mainstream theory and research in the field of social movements and political sociology has, by and large, ignored the influence of gender on social protest. A growing body of feminist research demonstrates that gender is an explanatory factor in the emergence, nature, and outcomes of all social movements, even those that do not evoke the language of gender conflict or explicitly embrace gender change. This article draws from a case study of the postpartum depression self-help movement to outline the relationship between gender and social movements. Linking theories of gender to mainstream theories on social movements allows us to recognize gender as a key explanatory factor in social movements and, in turn, to identify the role that social movements play in the social construction of gender.","creator":["Verta Taylor"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8bf8d92-2cb6-3769-827e-69fb0d14030f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Social Movements: Gender Processes in Women's Self-Help Movements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190238","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":12559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robyn Wiegman"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43425d18-a88e-3ff4-a43c-4994fc401bb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Object Lessons: Men, Masculinity, and the Sign Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175446","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":15668,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525],[443764,443941]],"Locations in B":[[53332,53567],[53572,53749]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Allen"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e010880-8214-3f04-9880-d34cb728fa81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Erotics of Nora's Narrative in Djuna Barnes's \"Nightwood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174749","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11069,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[397832,397914],[477848,477951],[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[6250,6331],[66113,66230],[68597,68745]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How can constructivism and feminism inform and strengthen one another? The author of this text is a constructivist-feminist hermaphrodite, and so s\/he addresses this question in the form of an inner dialogue. Instead of taking sex as a characteristic of individuals, s\/he analyzes it as something performed locally in ways that vary from one situation to another. Investigating these performances offers constructivism an interesting theoretical opportunity and a chance to turn away from a sterile anti-epistemological stance. For feminism, a radicalized notion of the construction of sexes opens up new political spaces and strategies. Constructivist texts, moreover, have the potential to \"do\" both the contingency and the necessity of our forms of life in their very style.","creator":["Stefan Hirschauer","Annemarie Mol"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c7d2b1c-e30d-3128-8fb0-d697d12b5542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Shifting Sexes, Moving Stories: Feminist\/Constructivist Dialogues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690021","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents ethnographic research on women's self-defense training and suggests that women's self-defense culture prompts feminists to refigure our understanding of the body and violence. The body in feminist discourse is often construed as the object of patriarchal violence (actual or symbolic), and violence has been construed as something that is variously oppressive, diminishing, inappropriate, and masculinist. Hence, many feminists have been apathetic to women's self-defense. As a practice that rehearses, and even celebrates women's potential for violence, women's self-defense illustrates how and why feminism can frame the body as both a social construction and as politically significant for theory and activism.","creator":["Martha McCaughey"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c34c8096-2cbc-3789-9d74-34bf2d8fed08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Fighting Spirit: Women's Self-Defense Training and the Discourse of Sexed Embodiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190286","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the avant-garde poetry of Medbh McGuckian, and argues that these poems destabilize ideological discourses that delimit the role of women in contemporary Northern Ireland. McGuckian's poetry, therefore, shares with some contemporary feminist theory, and the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein, an interest in how excessive uses of language can rework existing social codes.","creator":["ROBERT BRAZEAU"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"768fc7f3-e96d-3a7a-8721-b619ee6a8057"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Troubling Language: Avant-Garde Strategies in the Poetry of Medbh McGuckian","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030384","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[24958,25087]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7529837c-0adb-3099-9a48-bb7aab676954"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":120,"pageEnd":"1349","pageStart":"1230","pagination":"pp. 1230-1349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463224","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":62746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By developing characters with unstable and changeable sex identification, Paul Gadzikowski creates an Arthurian world with fluid gender boundaries in his webcomic Arthur, King of Time and Space. The effect of this fluidity is a cast of Arthurian characters that continuously confronts sex and gender stereotypes, inviting audiences to reconsider their own assumptions about sex and gender. (CF)","creator":["CHRISTINA FRANCIS"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59cd365f-e24a-3496-99dd-33118517124c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23238216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing with Gender in \"Arthur, King of Time and Space\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238216","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7790,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480]],"Locations in B":[[2091,2332]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The relationship between chat and gender is a topic that has been discussed for more than 20 years now. Feminist theorists have claimed that virtual reality effaces gender. Others have pointed to the fact that gender matters online as well as offline; linguists in particular have shown that 'real-life' gender leaves traces online in the form of discourse styles and patterns. This article has a somewhat different focus. It analyzes blatant plays with gender in Swiss internet relay chats (IRCs). In these games, chatters make use of gender, and put it on stage. These plays are possible because the construction of the gender in IRCs is achieved almost exclusively by communicative means. They might also be possible because the IRC releases the pressures of social constraints with regard to gender. And they have an effect, which could be described in gender theoretic terms as 'queering.' But it has to be observed that these plays are made visible as plays, marked, and temporally limited; afterwards, gender constraints are effective again.","creator":["DANIEL H. RELLSTAB"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d36280a0-d64b-3ee3-b3c2-f78462f34cd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging gender online: gender plays in Swiss internet relay chats","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889165","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9999,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[49425,49495]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le genre n'appara\u00eet pas toujours comme une cat\u00e9gorie d'analyse utile dans les \u00e9tudes de d\u00e9veloppement malgr\u00e9 son apparition depuis pr\u00e8s de 40 ans dans les sciences sociales. La richesse de la pens\u00e9e f\u00e9ministe et l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rog\u00e9n\u00e9it\u00e9 des femmes ont longtemps \u00e9t\u00e9 m\u00e9connues dans les \u00e9tudes de d\u00e9veloppement. Gr\u00e2ce aux apports des \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes postcoloniales, le genre en tant que cat\u00e9gorie d'analyse, articul\u00e9e avec les cat\u00e9gories de classe et de race, contribue \u00e0 renouveler la pens\u00e9e sur le d\u00e9veloppement. Gender doesn't always appear to be a useful category of analysis in development studies, in spite of its existence since about 40 years in social sciences. Both the complexity of feminist thinking and women's heterogeneity were unrecognized for a long time in development studies. Thanks to the contributions of feminist postcolonial studies, gender, as a category of analysis, intertwined with class and race categories, contributes to renew the thinking in development studies. El g\u00e9nero no aparece siempre como una categor\u00eda de an\u00e1lisis \u00fatil en los estudios del desarrollo, pese a su aparici\u00f3n desde hace casi 40 a\u00f1os en las ciencias sociales. La riqueza del pensamiento feminista y la heterogeneidad de las mujeres han sido ignoradas durante largo tiempo en los estudios del desarrollo. Gracias a los aportes de los estudios feministas post-coloniales, el g\u00e9nero en tanto categor\u00eda de an\u00e1lisis, articulado con las categor\u00edas de clase y de raza, contribuye a renovar el pensamiento sobre el desarrollo.","creator":["Christine Verschuur"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23593514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12938882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568524002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"748b8292-e5d7-3a9d-8ee8-7eba0ab7411d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23593514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuetiersmonde"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Tiers Monde","issueNumber":"200","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"803","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-803","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Publications de la Sorbonne","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"QUEL GENRE? R\u00c9SISTANCES ET M\u00c9SENTENTES AUTOUR DU MOT \u00ab GENRE \u00bb DANS LE D\u00c9VELOPPEMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23593514","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Trask"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40800580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f1b360b-f3d6-39af-986f-75936da923d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40800580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Patricia Highsmith's Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40800580","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14096,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460867,460962]],"Locations in B":[[14933,15028]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is standard within the Christian tradition to characterize God in predominantly masculine terms. Let 'traditionalism' refer to the view that this pattern of characterization is theologically mandatory. In this article, I seek to undercut the main motivations for traditionalism by showing that it is not more accurate to characterize God as masculine rather than feminine (or vice versa). The novelty of my argument lies in the fact that it presupposes neither theological anti-realism nor a robust doctrine of divine transcendence, but instead rests heavy theoretical weight on the imago Dei doctrine and the method of perfect-being theology. The article closes by examining the implications of the article's main argument for the moral and liturgical propriety of characterizing God in predominantly masculine terms.","creator":["MICHAEL REA"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26159844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00344125"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931201"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008233983"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc7bba7d-2f75-323d-aceb-6e21fa697a83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26159844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"relistu"}],"isPartOf":"Religious Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender as a divine attribute","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26159844","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses two judgments by the ECHR on granting authorization to adopt to non-heterosexual people. E.B. v. France overturned Frett\u00e9 v. France, establishing that refusing to grant adoption licences to gay, lesbian, and bisexual applicants is against the provisions of Article 14 (in conjunction with Article 8) of the European Convention. In Frett\u00e9, an adoption licence was not granted to a single gay man due to, notably, 'lack of scientific consensus' on the advisability of child rearing by non-heterosexuals. In E.B., it was established that prejudice against sexual minorities had 'contaminated' the reasoning of the French administrative courts. The cases are considered from a sociological viewpoint, stressing that it is of vital importance to look at the non-legal expertise, knowledge, and theories referred to. Because of the politicized nature of the issue, scientific consensus or lack of it cannot be considered the final yardstick, and judges and decision-makers are faced with an inevitable political choice.","creator":["Linda Hart"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c433cbd8-e972-3288-b692-c1f41daa7a9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25621993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"557","pageStart":"536","pagination":"pp. 536-557","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Individual Adoption by Non-Heterosexuals and the Order of Family Life in the European Court of Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621993","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evie Shockley"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f276bed4-bf18-3d76-94cd-95dd86efac77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40027383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Buried Alive: Gothic Homelessness, Black Women's Sexuality, and (Living) Death in Ann Petry's \"The Street\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027383","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":14869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Kapczynski"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3657519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74c4232c-7004-3d20-b1be-173867152c57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3657519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"1293","pageStart":"1257","pagination":"pp. 1257-1293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Same-Sex Privacy and the Limits of Antidiscrimination Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3657519","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":19026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brenda Cossman"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/825753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420220"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51785050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235681"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8719f01-e0c1-3646-96f7-30c0251497c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/825753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univtorolawj"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Toronto Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Family inside\/out","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/825753","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":19073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472899]],"Locations in B":[[5450,5522]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alwyn Spies"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eca8729d-5b32-346b-89db-b369a1067e8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"pink-ness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771902","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8196,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[46712,46781]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carlos Jerez-Farr\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"932ac121-6c83-3cd3-93ab-fa671dfa79f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Esta ni\u00f1a tan mona... pero tan perversa.\" Nuevo acercamiento a \"La llamada de Lauren\", de Paloma Pedrero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742384","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11092,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[101787,102122],[103842,103987],[433505,433874]],"Locations in B":[[42345,42670],[42717,42863],[45467,45791]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article develops critical feminist engagement with human security by interrogating the taken-for-granted category of the 'human' therein. Failure to reflectively deconstruct this category has contributed to human security's reproduction of dominant norms and the emptiness of its apparent radical promise. The article shows how the 'human' has historically been constructed as an exclusionary \u2013 and fundamentally gendered \u2013 category, and examines its construction in human security discourse and the capabilities approach in which the latter is rooted, as well as its discursive effects. The article troubles the model of the autonomous, rational human subject who is the bearer of capabilities, which human security inherits from the liberal humanist tradition of thought, and which obscures the matrices of power through which individuals become socially differentiated. It then considers the implication of human security in demarcating differences as 'morally relevant', including its instrumentalization in the 'war on terror'.","creator":["Natasha Marhia"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31fc985a-6d1d-33ba-ab87-05ff96548297"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26302230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some humans are more \"Human\" than Others: Troubling the 'human' in human security from a critical feminist perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302230","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"There are clear signs that digitalization attempts such as Industry 4.0 will become more apparent in workplaces. This development requires reflections and considerations so we do not create more problems than we solve. In our paper, we have raised several questions related to the Industry 4.0 that need answers: Is Industry 4.0 a discourse, an organizational model, or just technology? Does the requirement for flexibility call for a new labour market? How will Industry 4.0 affect competence and skill requirements? Will Industry 4.0 encourage a new gender order? Will Industry 4.0 take over dangerous routine work or will old work environmental problems appear in new contexts and for other groups of workers? Can we rely on robots as work mates or will they spy on us and report to management? Based on our analysis, we addressed four knowledge gaps that need more research in relation to the digitalization of work: The relationship between new technology, working conditions, qualifications, identity, and gender; the future of the workers' collective; crowdsourcing in an industrial context; and human-machine interaction with a focus on integrity issues.","creator":["Jan Johansson","Lena Abrahamsson","Birgitta Bergvall K\u00e5reborn","Ylva F\u00e4ltholm","Camilla Grane","Agnieszka Wykowska"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26381577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09359915"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321350201"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dabf24f2-b927-327c-b5bf-ab69693ac500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26381577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"managementrevue"}],"isPartOf":"Management Revue","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Rainer Hampp Verlag","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Work and Organization in a Digital Industrial Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26381577","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gwendolyn Audrey Foster"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2ee5039-cbec-323c-a4c5-a668f4dbcf61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editor's Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018926","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":1748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo procura discutir as articula\u00e7\u00f5es|tens\u00f5es entre teorias feministas e psican\u00e1lise, comentando autoras tradicionalmente conhecidas no campo dos estudos de g\u00eanero no Brasil. Considerando a quest\u00e3o das teorias, atrav\u00e9s da tradu\u00e7\u00e3o de textos fundadores e relevantes, det\u00e9m-se nos acidentes e percal\u00e7os que invariavelmente ocorrem nas \"viagens de teorias\" para outras l\u00ednguas, pa\u00edses, continentes, contextos, ressaltando, no entanto, e a despeito deles, a import\u00e2ncia da tradu\u00e7\u00e3o para a difus\u00e3o e o di\u00e1logo das teorias. This article investigates the articulations|tensions between feminist theory and psychoanalysis, discussing traditionally known women authors on gender studies in Brazil. Considering the issue of dissemination of theories, through the translation of basic and relevant texts, they focus on accidents and predicaments that invariably occur in the \"travel of theories\" (COSTA, 2000) to other languages, countries, continents and contexts, highliting, however, and in spite of them, the importance of translation in the dissemination and dialogue of theories.","creator":["Mara Coelho de Souza Lago"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1c4c679-c72a-3516-9bd7-c902b5d1f30d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Feminismo, psican\u00e1lise, g\u00eanero: viagens e tradu\u00e7\u00f5es","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328199","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Shelley Jackson's Patchwork Girl is not simply a new recreation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein in hypertext format; it also tries to develop some of the implications in the original text from the paradigms of contemporary science and criticism. This study is an attempt to bring to light the ways in which these paradigms, characterized by their emphasis on fragmentariness, are made to interact dialogically with Shelley's novel in order to produce a postmodern version of the old Promethean myth. Apart from exploring the filial connections that one might expect in any rewriting exercise, this essay focuses on the way Jackson questions the concept of authorship, origin(ality) and literary property, and related issues such as intertextuality and assemblage, all of which are indices of the theoretical concerns underlying Jackson's text and of the ways in which it follows, re-writes or invites us to re-read Shelley's \"hideous progeny.\"","creator":["Carolina S\u00e1nchez-Palencia Carazo","Manuel Almagro Jim\u00e9nez"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bc3de35-d89d-3ce4-aff7-5ce27a509fd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gathering the Limbs of the Text in Shelley Jackson's \"Patchwork Girl\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055233","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[51438,51515]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lawrence Buell"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Circling the Spheres: A Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902706","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":10266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Female underrepresentation in postcompulsory physics is an ongoing issue for science education research, policy, and practice. In this article, we apply Bourdieusian and Butlerian conceptual lenses to qualitative and quantitative data collected as part of a wider longitudinal study of students' science and career aspirations age 10-16. Drawing on survey data from more than 13,000 year 11 (age 15\/16) students and interviews with 70 students (who had been tracked from age 10 to 16), we focus in particular on seven girls who aspired to continue with physics post-16, discussing how the cultural arbitrary of physics requires these girls to be highly \"exceptional,\" undertaking considerable identity work and deployment of capital in order to \"possibilize\" a physics identity\u2014an endeavor in which some girls are better positioned to be successful than others.","creator":["Louise Archer","Julie Moote","Becky Francis","Jennifer DeWitt","Lucy Yeomans"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44245372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b5c2466-4d50-3613-b443-50ff2e1fc958"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44245372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereducresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Formal education"],"title":"The \"Exceptional\" Physics Girl: A Sociological Analysis of Multimethod Data From Young Women Aged 10-16 to Explore Gendered Patterns of Post-16 Participation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44245372","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":18317,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[101617,101785],[102154,102313]],"Locations in B":[[16828,16995],[17836,17995]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ren\u00e9 Ranc\u0153ur"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40532815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d24fde7b-afff-3676-9458-d0e86d63e62d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40532815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":322,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVIe \u2013 XXe si\u00e8cles). Ann\u00e9e 1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40532815","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":155838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicholas Thomas"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf710b5f-da3e-3e35-a4be-b6a5cdc5648f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pedagogy and the Work of Michel Foucault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866830","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10404,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514353,514485]],"Locations in B":[[62705,62839]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Persistent health inequalities exist globally, affecting high-income countries and blighting the developing world. Health inequalities currently are one of the greatest challenges facing realisation of the human right to health. This article argues that the struggle for the right to health in the face of such inequalities requires embracing three critical considerations: redistribution, representation, and recognition. While the analysis of the right to health has been formulated predominantly around theories of distributive justice, I suggest that a more normatively compelling account will link the politics of economic redistribution to the politics of sociocultural recognition. A recognition approach, which views rights claims as grounded on the vulnerability of the human condition, can show how rights are emergent in political action and that the ability to claim and exercise the human right to health is contingent upon recognition of diverse sociopolitical statuses. From this perspective, there are no 'neutral' constructions of the rights-bearing subject and conflict between different political framings of the right to health is a consequence of the struggle for recognition. This theme is illustrated by comparing conservative, affirmative, and transformative processes of recognition in the struggle for access to essential antiretroviral medicines by South Africa's Treatment Action Campaign.","creator":["PATRICK HAYDEN"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d31861a3-8127-3249-b914-aa16a1cb3de7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41681479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The human right to health and the struggle for recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681479","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11668,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478845]],"Locations in B":[[41328,41381]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charles R. Batson"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48483212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea1d8a51-0032-386a-b4c2-f48a8e8d114f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1567951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Borlin, Masculinity, and \"L'Homme et son d\u00e9sir\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567951","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Madalina Nicolaescu"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26352850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0832f1b5-1376-309c-b3fc-61b73d265f1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26352850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespeare in Romania: Postmodern Stagings in a Post-Communist Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26352850","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":4312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jaime Ronaldo Balboa"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"789","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-789","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"\"Church Dogmatics,\" Natural Theology, and the Slippery Slope of \"Geschlecht\": A Constructivist-Gay Liberationist Reading of Barth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466171","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":7937,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[74434,74841],[74852,75322]],"Locations in B":[[29735,30130],[30612,31084]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45212240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3dab00a0-9046-3a0a-9f36-4ce3a551511f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45212240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education","Political science - Politics"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45212240","volumeNumber":"472","wordCount":4391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven Maynard"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25148885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25148885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queer Musings on Masculinity and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25148885","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article introduces the four case studies in the volume by outlining salient issues relating to musical instruments and gender. The basis of argument is that gendered meanings are constructed within relationships between humans and musical instruments. The article first examines various ways in which gendered meanings are invested in instruments. Consideration is then given to the general question of male dominance over instrumental musicianship, highlighting issues such as male exclusivity, gendered divisions of labour, gendered space, and male control over technology. Some typical female relationships with instruments are outlined, whereby certain instruments are deemed to be suitable or acceptable for women. Finally, the construction of gender by instrumentalists is related to issues of sexuality, gender role-reversals, and enactments that transcend gender.","creator":["Veronica Doubleday"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56722533"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"105cb8a1-6c36-3612-8e4e-4a79f7eb36af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20184604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sounds of Power: An Overview of Musical Instruments and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184604","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":16675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine S. Ram\u00edrez"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddb4b1b2-4d28-3990-8360-4fbb7d9dac0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Saying \"Nothin\": Pachucas and the Languages of Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137381","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine van Boheemen"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"008c39bb-e708-3754-b675-9ae43c6c66b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473710","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":1984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Hartman"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26779039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"244388221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212320"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"402cb727-3aa2-31b0-b4dc-24e88bddb965"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26779039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Queer Approach to Addressing Gender and Sexuality through Literature Discussions with Second Graders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26779039","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":7272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leslie Salzinger"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91134d73-b6e0-3836-9953-bf5d12cde364"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"574","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-574","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"From High Heels to Swathed Bodies: Gendered Meanings under Production in Mexico's Export-Processing Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178386","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10258,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[55738,55809]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharif Youssef"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bbbff1a-bc17-30c0-9387-cd8e449eed82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"521","pageStart":"513","pagination":"pp. 513-521","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Are You My Internal Object?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0513","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":3756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Valentine"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b32f7d18-b889-3f01-994a-94db6c665f4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23269176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sue E. Generous: Toward a Theory of Non-Transexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269176","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Samuel Richardson \u00fcberarbeitet sein Erstlingswerk Pamela (1739\/40) 22 Jahre lang. Auf dem Weg dieser Revisionen schreibt und gestaltet der Autor die gesellschaftlichen und k\u00fcnstlerischen Widerspr\u00fcchlichkeiten in der Entwicklung der Epoche literaturhistorisch mit, denn er revidiert nicht nur die Textoberfl\u00e4che des Romans, sondern modifiziert in erster Linie Ideologie und \u00c4sthetik des Werks auf der Folie der Progression der Empfindsamkeit. Die Analyse ist vornehmlich auf die Interdependenzen von K\u00f6rper und Sprache in Pamela gerichtet mit besonderem Augenmerk auf der Substitution von Sprache durch paralinguistische Zeichensysteme, n\u00e4mlich K\u00f6rpersemiotik und Unsagbarkeitstopos. Richardsons Arbeitsweise ger\u00e4t im Zuge der Revision zum Paradoxon, da er eigentlich den b\u00fcrgerlichen Diskurs formulieren will, statt dessen aber auf dem Weg der \u00dcberarbeitungen die Ideologie des Romans zunehmend reaktion\u00e4r gestaltet. Dies erscheint zun\u00e4chst als R\u00fcckschritt, ist jedoch zukunftsweisend f\u00fcr das viktorianische Zeitalter. Samuel Richardson keeps revising his first novel Pamela (1739\/40) for 22 years. As it is not merely the novel's textual surface which is continually rewritten, but first and foremost its ideology and aesthetics against the foil of the progressing Age of Sensibility, the author takes an active part not only in devising the literary conventions of the evolving sentimental mentality, but he also plays a vital role in shaping the changing social and artistic inconsistencies inherent to the period. The main focus of this analysis is on the interdependency of body and language in Pamela concentrating primarily on the substitution of language by paralinguistic sign systems, i.e. body semiotics and the topos of ineffability. In the course of the revision processes, Richardson's working method turns into a paradox: instead of articulating the bourgeois discourse, as intended, the revisions increasingly introduce status-related reactionary elements into the text. At first glance, this may appear as a regression. It is, however, already setting the trend for the Victorian Age.","creator":["Svenja Weidinger"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24361739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01787128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24361739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aufklarung"}],"isPartOf":"Aufkl\u00e4rung","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Felix Meiner Verlag GmbH","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Erz\u00e4hlstrategien der Empfindsamkeit: Paralinguistische Zeichensysteme in Samuel Richardsons \"Pamela\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24361739","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adalaide Morris"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5e223e9-14ce-3016-b6ef-56975ce20a5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"First Persons Plural in Contemporary Feminist Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463778","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As subordinate workers, migrants and foreigners are an essential labor force for industrialized economies. The author extends Pierre Bourdieu's ideas of capital to suggest that citizenship constitutes a key mechanism of distinction between migrant and nonmigrant workers. From this perspective, citizenship is a strategically produced form of capital, which manifests itself in formal (legal and institutional) as well as informal (practiced and cultural) aspects. Both aspects of citizenship can render migrant labor more vulnerable than nonmigrant labor and often channel migrants into the secondary labor market or the informal economy. The author presents examples from Germany and Canada to illustrate how legal and cultural processes associated with citizenship facilitate economic subordination and exploitation of migrant labor. The value of conceptualizing citizenship as a form of capital lies in integrating processes of inclusion and exclusion into a framework of distinction and in locating the strategic nature of citizenship with the motivation of reproduction. Based on the situation of migrants in the labor market, the author proposes that the logic of distinction and reproduction is an important underlying force in the construction and transformation of the concept of citizenship.","creator":["Harald Bauder"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ab3a806-c6d3-3007-9063-3045d5999915"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Human geography","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Citizenship as Capital: The Distinction of Migrant Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645243","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra Merley Hill"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"798ef50c-e91e-32e2-9301-6ed0b219669b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43555185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"747","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-747","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"German Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555185","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article seeks to open up a new avenue for feminist technology studies-genderaware research on engineers and engineering practice-on the grounds that engineers are powerful symbols of the equation between masculinity and technology and occupy significant roles in shaping new technologies. Drawing on the disparate evidence available, the author explores four themes. The first asks why the equation between masculinity and technology is so durable when there are such huge mismatches between image and practice. The second examines this mismatch in the detail of engineering knowledge and practice to reveal that fractured and contradictory constructions of masculinity frequently coexist. The third theme addresses the suggestion that women and men might bring different styles to engineering. Finally, the author explores subjective experiences of engineering to argue that engineers' shared pleasures in and identification with technology both define what it means to be an engineer and provide appealing symbols of power that act to compensate for a perceived lack of power or competence in other arenas.","creator":["Wendy Faulkner"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc9f1ed1-d91a-322b-8219-531b08314a64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Power and the Pleasure? A Research Agenda for \"Making Gender Stick\" to Engineers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690201","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":15023,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[94230,94301]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mollie V. Blackburn"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48530054"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49a9253f-9058-3a7a-b172-d61adecacbf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"398","pagination":"pp. 398-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Disrupting Dichotomies for Social Change: A Review of, Critique of, and Complement to Current Educational Literacy Scholarship on Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171645","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[148992,149113]],"Locations in B":[[29132,29253]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINA SUNARDI"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5451e6ce-6d55-36db-9e59-d1cb821fb5c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43817774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Pushing at the boundaries of the body: Cultural politics and cross-gender dance in East Java","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817774","volumeNumber":"165","wordCount":12809,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tina Goethals","Elisabeth De Schauwer","Geert Van Hove"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d54dd00e-b1bc-3c59-a20d-2c1d09a839cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Weaving Intersectionality into Disability Studies Research: Inclusion, Reflexivity and Anti-Essentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0075","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leah DeVun"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30134036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50d13453-7e6a-3e4b-81c5-7a319a81adf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30134036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistoryideas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Ideas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Science & Technology Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Jesus Hermaphrodite: Science and Sex Difference in Premodern Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30134036","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":9805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dead young men were commonly represented as athletes on classical Attic grave stelai, either alone or with a smaller subsidiary slave figure. This paper explores the ways in which the context of death re-figures the athlete, playing on the connotations of victory statues while simultaneously exploiting the gap between the athletic body on display and the absent presence of the dead body beneath the surface. Bodies are at issue on the grave stelai, not least since Greek athletes train and compete naked. By interrogating the ways in which the athletic body is mobilized in different contexts \u2014 the commemoration of victory and the commemoration of death \u2014 I explore the ways in which ancient Greek culture puts to work sport and the sportsman.","creator":["Susanne Turner"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7071f256-c0ce-3258-88c0-30328770f2b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23210596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"In cold blood: dead athletes in Classical Athens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210596","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7205,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444276,444415]],"Locations in B":[[9986,10125]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sun Hee Teresa Lee"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bb27139-48e0-3743-8ea5-dcf0cf7d74d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Will Make of My Scaffold, a Stage\": Performing the Asian American Subject in Maxine Hong Kingston's \"Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001242","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480]],"Locations in B":[[64955,65196]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Seongho Yoon"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44377605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b3c153a-42c2-3d00-b67d-0d3b9f476ca3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44377605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Home for the Outdoored: Geographies of Exclusion, Gendered Space, and Postethnicity in Toni Morrison's \"Paradise\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44377605","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8000,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[137096,137272]],"Locations in B":[[32027,32203]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Disch","Mary Jo Kane"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1703b1be-1b02-3093-b672-6af4ddfede54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When a Looker Is Really a Bitch: Lisa Olson, Sport, and the Heterosexual Matrix","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175065","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":14848,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[195557,195659]],"Locations in B":[[71038,71140]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The term queer has recently come into wide use to designate distinctive emphases in the politics and the intellectual study of sexuality. This article explores the unfortunate irony that most work falling under the rubric of queer theory has been undertaken largely at some remove from the discipline of sociology, despite the pioneering role that an earlier generation of sociologists played in formulating influential conceptions of the social construction of sexuality. The article suggests important continuities between the earlier sociological theories and recent queer theory, but also analyzes the new challenges that queer theorists have posed by insisting on the indispensability of questions of sexual \"marginality\" to the larger understanding of social and cultural organization. The article concludes by suggesting how sociologists might engage with such a project.","creator":["Steven Epstein"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c180fe55-d3a9-333a-92e9-6a58fb8a769b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Queer Encounter: Sociology and the Study of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201864","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9223,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[56679,60614]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69546999-715b-3736-89e7-8415267ec3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24769411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":214,"pageEnd":"1262","pageStart":"1049","pagination":"pp. 1049-1262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Program of the 2014 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769411","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":115441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHIARA FERRARI"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709751"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4c8f477-a2aa-3c29-972c-853e999c3bb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24368479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","issueNumber":"2","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La scena di seduzione come necropoli. Il mausoleo retorico di Don Giovanni tra letteratura e teoria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368479","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":7677,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[186375,186826],[251361,251562]],"Locations in B":[[11789,12249],[31518,31719]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2926868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2926868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"800","pageStart":"789","pagination":"pp. 789-800","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2926868","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":6054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346178","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"444","pagination":"p. 444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346178","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031967","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shannon Bell"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d852a155-b69b-3cc6-a49a-79743b3f29e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pictures Don't Lie. Pictures Tell It All","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704124","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":17094,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147783]],"Locations in B":[[99808,99937]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the overlaps and divergences between network sociologist Harrison White's second edition of Identity and Control: How Social Formations Emerge (2008) and poststructuralist theories from the past three decades. Although poststructuralist thought is barely discussed in White's work, comparing the approaches reveals significant convergence.I detail two major overlaps: White's ideas of control compared to Foucault's concept of discipline, and White's conception of identity compared to that of feminist poststructuralists.Differences are apparent also, especially as regards treatment of categorical identities such as gender and race. Then, I turn to two ways poststructuralism and White can be put into productive conversation: how focusing on gender as discursive rather than attributional can help network analysts develop theories that better explain the gendered dimensions of social life, and how using blockmodeling methods can aid feminist Poststructuralism in understanding what gender looks like without men's and women's bodies present.","creator":["J. Lotus Seeley"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7de4f8e-3736-3bcb-8344-eb1013035d1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Harrison White as (Not Quite) Poststructuralist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186660","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[30480,30621]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MELISSA MARTIN"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15423166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9d5a1a5-c461-34cf-bddf-18d66f04cb33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peacebuilding"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peacebuilding & Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SRI LANKA\u2019S EX-COMBATANT REHABILITATION PROGRAMME","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602937","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"RECONSTRUCTING GENDERED IDENTITIES"} +{"abstract":"Recent post-modernist trends in feminist theorising and organising have opened up important debates on organising politics around difference. The paper seeks to enter these debates by contextualising its analysis in the Indian reality. A major concern here is the sectarian and divisive tendencies within the women's movement in India. The article seeks to explore ways to counter such tendencies within movement politics by asserting that the question of difference between women need not become a point of immobility, but a focus of solidarity.","creator":["Supriya Akerkar"],"datePublished":"1995-04-29","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4402686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"defae30a-1c08-32ca-ae59-ae8ff39ac7e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4402686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"17","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"WS23","pageStart":"WS2","pagination":"pp. WS2-WS23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory and Practice of Women's Movement in India: A Discourse Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4402686","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":28117,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432098,432238]],"Locations in B":[[170981,171121]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlotte Ross"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709751"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d395848-d4ee-3142-ba89-b3e90eb368d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creating the Ideal Posthuman Body? Cyborg Sex and Gender in the Work of Buzzati, Vacca, and Ammaniti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669002","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":11756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"177bc9ef-9140-36d9-b76f-3c79859457fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810044","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":4303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Numerous Czech studies have been conducted on how the education system reproduces inequalities. While most of them have dealt with the reproduction of class inequalities, relatively few have focused on the reproduction of gender inequalities. In this article, the authors apply a conceptual understanding of the category of gender to research on education, an approach that avoids both universalising the category of woman, as well as the opposite extreme of individualisation. We claim that female students, even though they differ among themselves in various social and personal ways, are serialised as women by institutions in the education system. They are expected to perform differently, with different motivations, their performance is valued differently and they are expected to follow different professions than male students. The paper focuses in detail on the gendered nature of educational institutions, both in terms of the gender segregation of fields and levels of study, as well as in terms of the importance of the interaction that occurs during the processes of teaching and ascribing value and significance to the performance of male and female students. The authors argue that education, generally expected to function as a social ladder and a route to better-paid jobs in the labour market, serves men and women in segregated ways.","creator":["LUCIE JARKOVSK\u00c1","KATE\u0158INA LI\u0160KOV\u00c1"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66824abc-e0a0-3e62-9aed-fe56dba8800e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41132616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"683","pagination":"pp. 683-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Genderov\u00e9 aspekty \u010desk\u00e9ho \u0161kolstv\u00ed \/ Gender Aspects of Czech Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132616","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7840,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476047]],"Locations in B":[[49986,50048]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Two distinct doctrines of the will operate in Nietzsche. On one, each person has a will that grows out of their engagement with life. This view can be the basis for a feminist epistemology. On the other, the will must be stimulated through the creation of unattainable goals and games of seduction. This view of the will is misogynist, as it posits a self that must constitute for itself a dominated and silenced other.","creator":["Cynthia Kaufman"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f03740f-4f49-35b6-9b15-70b3c7376824"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Knowledge as Masculine Heroism or Embodied Perception: Knowledge, Will, and Desire in Nietzsche","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810503","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":12181,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495840,495899]],"Locations in B":[[72238,72294]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay contributes to existing scholarship on Julia Alvarez's How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents by considering how gesture functions in the novel's exploration of Spanish-English bilingualism. Though gesture is construed as a more authentic register, the novel actually links it to nationally specific codes of class and gender performance.","creator":["PATRICK S. LAWRENCE"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3fd13be-7a62-34f0-9b54-e179377d89d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"Vocabulary of Human Behavior\": Gesture in \"How the Garc\u00eda Girls Lost Their Accents\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030583","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dirk Gindt"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48630839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10976035"},{"name":"oclc","value":"244293982"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 98000116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0e1f0e8-46b9-3822-ba8f-2b11f6776d0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48630839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tennwillannurevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Tennessee Williams Annual Review","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Historic New Orleans Collection","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cat without Claws","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48630839","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Death and Homophobia in Ingmar Bergman\u2019s Production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"Recent lifelong learning policies have been criticised for creating an illusion of freedom whilst simultaneously reducing choice. The concept of desire permits engagement with the conscious and unconscious drives that underpin individual decision-making, which direct the life course. Utilising the ideas of Hume and Spinoza, the present article articulates the interrelated nature of desire and learning. Evidence is drawn from Learning Lives, a Teaching and Learning Research Programme-funded research project that uses the life history method to explore themes of agency, identity and learning across the life course. Boltanski and Thevenot's sociology of critical capacity is used as a heuristic tool that illuminates the mechanics of desire as described by eight contributors. Their stories provide a basis from which to critique policies for lifelong learning that appear limited in relation to the multiple desires that drive their life choices.","creator":["Heather Lynch"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"883e4c3a-d045-31c5-821c-cc4242761b29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"689","pageStart":"677","pagination":"pp. 677-689","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lifelong Learning, Policy and Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375391","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women academics have been the subject of suprisingly little academic research; this is particularly true of women legal academics. This article argues that it is important that research into women legal academics is carried out, not just to gain empirical evidence about the working lives of these women, but because in exploring these members of the 'academic tribe' of lawyers, important insights may be gained into the university as an institution, the development of law as a discipline, and the nature of law itself.","creator":["Fiona Cownie"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women Legal Academics: A New Research Agenda?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410458","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ian Biddle"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/766473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d840b0b4-c226-3677-9db6-f327edce67c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/766473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"196","pagination":"pp. 196-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Royal Musical Association","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Policing Masculinity: Schumann, Berlioz and the Gendering of the Music-Critical Idiom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/766473","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":12852,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503649]],"Locations in B":[[15875,15946]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the ways soliders in the Congo speak about the massive amount of rape committed by the armed forces in the recent war in the DRC. It focuses on the reasons that the soliders give to why rape occurs. It discusses how the soldiers distinguish between \"lust rapes\" and \"evil rapes\" and argues that their explanations of rape must be understood in relation to notions of different (impossible) masculinities. Ultimately, through reading the soliders' words, we can glimpse the logics\u2014arguably informed by the increasingly globalized context of soldiering\u2014through which rape becomes possible, and even \"normalized\" in particular warscapes.","creator":["Maria Eriksson Baaz","Maria Stern"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac088441-2cce-3f19-a6c2-8474fa9e64cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27735106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Do Soldiers Rape? Masculinity, Violence, and Sexuality in the Armed Forces in the Congo (DRC)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735106","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":14949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan Wallach Scott"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91ba19a6-5f0a-3161-b519-c80a7d8bde57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Comentario sobre \u201cConfounding Gender\u201d de Hawkesworth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625717","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":2348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In casting gift exchange as an inscriptive performance of embodied gender relations, the Sabarl of Papua New Guinea reveal an indigenous valuation of forgetting as a willed transformation of memory and resist the opposition between inscribed and enacted cultural traditions that is so pervasive in the anthropological literature on social memory. Sabarl mortuary exchanges that feature \"corpses\" of gendered wealth serve here as a case in point. [exchange theory, gender performances, embodiment, memory and forgetting, Melanesia, mortuary rituals]","creator":["Debbora Battaglia"],"datePublished":"1992-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"997c706f-ebe5-3790-87b0-bbe57f6e4abd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/644822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Body in the Gift: Memory and Forgetting in Sabarl Mortuary Exchange","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644822","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10349,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74969,75056]],"Locations in B":[[38730,38817]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carmen Rabell"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15773388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d463ea7-6603-3cd3-a8aa-f4dce1b33dd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23720462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iberoamericana"}],"isPartOf":"Iberoamericana (2001-)","issueNumber":"48","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720462","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Revisiting the history of sex hormones, this article explores nonhuman contributions to the politics of sex. It argues that the development of steroid chemistry during the twentieth century not only produced a profit for pharmaceutical companies with hormone products designed to control reproduction and femininity, but it also resulted in a tension between the technological possibilities of steroids and the intelligibility of sex, where the boundaries of sexed life became contested in new ways. The article suggests that a focus on scientific and societal endeavors\u2014in which the formation of sex characteristics was considered an unwanted side effect or risk rather than the effect that determined what sex hormones were\u2014enables a reinterpretation of steroids as disruptive in the public sphere. The article draws on poststructuralist and material feminism as well as political science, including scholars such as Karen Barad, Myra Hird, Celia Roberts, Jane Bennett, and Jacques Ranci\u00e9re. Instead of further widening the sphere of political subjectivity in order to include nonhumans, as in previous accounts by Bennett and Hird, the article suggests an alternative: the notion of a political act as disruption. It goes on to discuss three cases from the 1960s onward (regarding menopause treatment, anabolic steroids in elite sports, and legislation on sex reassignment) and argues that the history of sex be explored as a history of recurring provocations to the binary of the two sexes in which the specific and visible enactments of the phenomenon called \u201csex hormones\u201d have been indispensable.","creator":["Sari Irni"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27c637e1-2e50-314d-87fe-789a8c3dbc9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26552831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Steroid Provocations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552831","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"On the Materiality of Politics in the History of Sex Hormones"} +{"abstract":"A recent wave of commentary on Sophocles's Antigone by critics from Judith Butler to Bracha Ettinger to Simon Goldhill has begun to emerge from the shadow of two paradigmatic interpretations: Lacan's reading of the title character in splendid structural isolation and Hegel's dialectical opposition of familial and political spheres. Even the newer criticism, however, continues the critical elision of Antigone's siblings (particularly her sister, Ismene) and of her relationship to them. This oversight is emblematic of the problematic omission of the sibling from theoretical discourses in general. The neglected sibling is a model that allows us to move beyond both self-other dualisms and the motherchild dyad, which form the only grounds for intersubjectivity in contemporary debates. Sibling logic recognizes the subject as embedded in a transsubjective network of partial others, whose subjectivities are nonetheless partially, though differentially, shared. This article thereby provides a new approach to poststructuralist debates on subjectivity and the political.","creator":["STEFANI ENGELSTEIN"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41414080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"968a8af0-da29-31a9-9e95-927fb307fc87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41414080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sibling Logic; or, Antigone Again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41414080","volumeNumber":"126","wordCount":11080,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[65177,65245]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The relationship between interiority, privacy, and somatic selfhood has long intrigued literary and cultural historians writing about early modern Europe. It has been commonplace to connect assertions of nascent individuality with changes in architecture and physical space that took place during the period. Most claims have been made without reference to convents despite the fact that they were the living spaces of many thousands of English women in exile in continental Europe. Manuscripts written by Carmelite nuns in and near Antwerp cast light on their reading practices and their understanding of the \"closet\" as a space for personal withdrawal. By reviewing the nuns' papers we can understand the ways in which they conceptualized space and appreciate how they made use of particular convent areas for reading and for writing. We can then distinguish connections and disparities between domestic and devotional habitus, and adduce a politics of place affecting nuns' religious reading.","creator":["NICKY HALLETT"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23242198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04b979c2-01d5-35bd-a6b5-6083e9ddc956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23242198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Philip Sidney in the Cloister: The Reading Habits of English Nuns in Seventeenth-Century Antwerp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23242198","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":13001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses the theory of Gilles Deleuze to address the disjuncture between (1) the mechanical, chemical, and thermal processes of transduction that determine the biogeographical life of the mosquito; and (2) the spatialities of historic and contemporary management strategies. The history of mosquito management reveals two operative spatial ontologies, one an immanent horizontalism underwriting an intimate strategy of detection and destruction of breeding sites, the other a transcendent verticalism appropriate for the partitioning of space in support of widespread chemical spraying of adult populations. We find that two institutions in contemporary, mosquito-rich Arizona\u2014the Pima County Health Department and Maricopa County Vector Control\u2014are representative of this split in management. In this article we attempt to account for the observed interagency differences. Doing so, we suggest, requires an assemblage theory that brings together managers, institutions, and sociocultural-environmental-technological-political contexts with the flights of the mosquito itself. \u672c\u6587\u4f7f)IJ [\u5fb7\u52d2\uffe1\u4e3b\u7406\u8bba\u4ee5\u89e3\u51b3\u5361\u5217\u5206\u6790\u4e4b\u95f4\u7684\u8131\u8282\u95ee\u9898(1)\u673a\u68b0\uff0c\u5316\u6b62\u548c\u70ed\u4f20\u5401\uff0c\u8fc7\u7a0b\uff0c\u4ee5\u786e\u5b9a\u868a\u5b50\u7684\u751f\u7269\u5730\u7406\u751f\u6d3b\uff0c(2) \u5386\u53f2\u548c\u73b0\u4ee3\u7ba1\u7406\u6218\u7565\u7684\u5168\u95ee\u6027\u3002\u868a\u866b\u6cbb\u7406\u7684\u5386\u53f2\u519c\u660e\u4e5f\u5728\u4e24\u4e2a\u6267\u884c\u7684\u7a7a\u95f4\u672c\u4f53\uff0c\u4e00\u4e2a\u662f\u5185\u5728\u7684\u6c34\u5e73\u5f0f\u7ba1\u7406\uff0c\u627fN\u63a2 \u6d4b\u548cl\u6467\u6bc1\u868a\u866b\u6ecb\u751f\u5730\u7684\u5bc6\u5207\u7b56\u7565\uff0c J~--\u4e2a\u662f\u8d8a\u8d8aff.J\u00edlid\u00fct\u7ba1\u7406\uff0c\u901a\u8fc7\u5bf9\u6210\u868a\u8fdb\u884c\u5e7f\u6cdb\u7684\u5316\u5b66\u55b7\u6d12\u800c\u5b9e\u73b0\u7a7a\u95f4\u5206\u5272\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u53d1 \u73b0\u5f53\u4ee3\u7684\u4e24\u4e2a\u673a\u6784\u662f\u8fd9\u79cd\u5206\u88c2\u5f0f\u7ba1\u7406\u7684\u4ee3\u8868\u5728\u868a[1\"'.\u5bcc\u7684\u7f8e\u95f7\u3001\u4e9a\u5229\u6851\u90a3\u5dde\u4e2a\u662f\u76ae\u9a6c\u53bf\u7684\u536b\u751f\u7f72\uff0c\u53e6\u4e00\u4e2a\u662f\u9a6c\u91cc\u79d1\u5e15 \u53bf\u7684\u77e2\u6c11\u63a7\u5236\u3002\u5728\u672c\u6587'\\'\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u8bd5\u56fe\u8bf4\u660e\u89c2\u6d4b\u95f4\u7684\u5dee\u5f02\u3002\u4e3a\u6b64\uff0c\u627e\u4eec\u5efa\u8bae\uff0c\u9700\u8981\u4e95\u4e2d\u7ec4\u5408\u7406\u8bba\uff0c\u6c47\u96c6\u7ba1\u7406\u4eba\u5458\uff0c\u673a\u6784\uff0c\u4ee5 \u53ca\u868a\u5b50\u6cbb\u7406\u6d89\u53ca\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u4e00\u6587\u5316-.f+\u6320\u4e00\u79d1\u6280\u4e00\u653f\u6cbb\u80cc\u666f\u3002\u8d70\u953aiiij\uff0cfD\u4e61\u5374\u59cb\uff0c~\u4f24\u5fcd\uff0c\u5162\u5162\u9769\u547d'\u00ce':\"'JIl\uff0c i:t 7, ~'!J.\u4e0e\u5e73t\u4e94\u62f4\u5728~o Este art\u00edculo hace uso de la teor\u00eda de Gil\u00edes Deleuze para abocar la disyunci\u00f3n entre (1) los procesos mec\u00e1nicos, qu\u00edmicos y t\u00e9rmicos de transducci\u00f3n que determinan la existencia biogeogr\u00e1fica del mosquito; y (2) las espaciali-dades hist\u00f3ricas y contempor\u00e1neas de estrategias de manejo. La historia del manejo del mosquito pone de presente dos ontolog\u00edas espaciales operativas, una de las cuales es un horizontalismo inmanente que asegura una estrategia \u00edntima de detecci\u00f3n y destrucci\u00f3n de sitios de reproducci\u00f3n, la otra un verticalismo trascendente apropiado para parcelar el espacio en apoyo de fumigaci\u00f3n qu\u00edmica generalizada de poblaciones adultas. Encontramos que dos instituciones de la Arizona contempor\u00e1nea, pr\u00f3diga en mosquitos\u2014el Departamento de Salubridad del Condado Pima y el Control de Vectores del Condado Maricopa\u2014son representativas de esta divisi\u00f3n de enfoques de manejo. En este art\u00edculo intentamos explicar las diferencias registradas entre las dos agencias. Hacer esto, sugerimos, requiere una teor\u00eda de ensamblaje o encaje [assemblage theory] que integre a los administradores, instituciones y los contextos socioculturales-ambientales-tecnol\u00f3gicos-pol\u00edticos con los vuelos del propio mosquito.","creator":["Ian Graham Ronald Shaw","Paul F. Robbins","John Paul Jones III"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c8c29f6-f96f-34e0-87e9-adeef8c1b979"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"A Bug's Life and the Spatial Ontologies of Mosquito Management","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645359","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":14424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leela Fernandes"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cfc27fe-d576-3435-9ff5-e53693a315cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading \"India's Bandit Queen\": A Trans\/national Feminist Perspective on the Discrepancies of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175617","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[80528,80628]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper presents some results of a qualitative study carried out in a secondary school in the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina). It examines how two students from poor families responded to, and viewed, aggression by peers at their school. This paper argues that the examination of students' narratives about aggression (based on classism and sexism) illustrates the analytical usefulness of the moral dimension of social life to unpack crucial aspects of the micro politics of class and gender and processes of identity-making. Following Sayer, this article maps students' responses to immoral sentiments and misrecognition: the search for respect and respectability, and moral boundary drawing. It demonstrates that these reactions are entangled in students' class and gender identity-making. It also shows how 'victims' are able to regain respect. However, the individualized nature of these processes and the spirals of aggression they instigate demonstrate the fragile and temporary nature of this achievement.","creator":["Anal\u00eda In\u00e9s Meo"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41343692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e96252b1-7265-3a5c-b560-2724bcf8c771"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41343692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"860","pageStart":"843","pagination":"pp. 843-860","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The moral dimension of class and gender identity-making: poverty and aggression in a secondary school in the city of Buenos Aires","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41343692","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BARBARA K. GOLD"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4d0b898-8551-381d-9728-70e009ab7e97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE HOUSE I LIVE IN IS NOT MY OWN\": WOMEN'S BODIES IN JUVENAL'S \"SATIRES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309672","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7568,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522882]],"Locations in B":[[45125,45199]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El locus amoenus es un t\u00f3pico literario que por regla general se ha estudiado desde premisas estrictamente formalistas. En este sentido, el paisaje ideal ha sido objeto de una manipulaci\u00f3n ideol\u00f3gica destinada a la ratificaci\u00f3n de determinados discursos de poder en el espacio social. Sin embargo, la continua manifestaci\u00f3n de la violencia en el locus amoenus cuestiona su pretendida idealidad, lo cual constituye una paradoja sem\u00e1ntica consustancial con las representaciones m\u00e1s arquet\u00edpicas de este topos. Por otra parte, a diferencia de lo que ocurre en otras disciplinas, en los estudios literarios peninsulares el locus amoenus se asocia sistem\u00e1ticamente con la literatura medieval y renacentista, y pr\u00e1cticamente desaparece del inter\u00e9s cr\u00edtico con Miguel de Cervantes. Tomando como objeto de estudio el \"Poema doble del lago Eden,\" de Federico Garc\u00eda Lorca, este trabajo recupera las posibilidades cr\u00edticas del locus amoenus como herramienta discursiva en la literatura peninsular del siglo XX. El argumento se desarrolla desde el marco te\u00f3rico que proporciona la intersecci\u00f3n de la geograf\u00eda cultural y la teor\u00eda queer. Desde este \u00e1ngulo, el recurso lorquiano al locus amoenus supone la construcci\u00f3n de un paisaje cultural a trav\u00e9s del cual se reinscribe la masculinidad como un discurso de poder que desestabiliza el r\u00e9gimen de la sexualidad dominante.","creator":["ENRIQUE \u00c1LVAREZ"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d8baa22-77ca-34dc-81a7-df519036ec89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20779177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queer Arcadia: On Cultural Landscapes, Violence, and Power in Federico Garc\u00eda Lorca's \"Poema doble del lago Eden\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779177","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8296,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456129,456221]],"Locations in B":[[47839,47931]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"South Africa is one of those countries that openly rejected racism and this is entrenched in its Bill of rights. Despite the acceptance and incorporation of racial integration into the South Africa Constitution, the implementation within some sectors, most especially the educational sector, seems difficult. Recent occurrences of racism in some higher institutions of learning in South Africa are indications that racial integration\/racial transformation is still farfetched in the country\u2019s higher educational sector.It is against this background that this study was conducted to understand how gender and residential background influence racial integration in a South African university which was predominantly a white Afrikaner institution.Using a quantitative method to test the attitude of different categories of undergraduate students at theuniversity, this study found that the factors-residential background and gender- used in measuring student\u2019s attitude do not necessarily have a significant relationship towards racial integration. However, this study concludes with a call for more research with a range of other factors in order to better understand how racial integration can be promoted in South African institutions of higher learning. L\u2019Afrique du Sud est l\u2019un de ces pays qui ont ouvertement rejet\u00e9 le racisme et cela est inscrit dans sa D\u00e9claration des droits. Malgr\u00e9 l\u2019acceptation et l\u2019int\u00e9gration de l\u2019int\u00e9gration raciale dans la Constitution de l\u2019Afrique du Sud, la mise en oeuvre dans certains secteurs, en particulier dans le secteur de l\u2019\u00e9ducation, semble difficile. Des manifestations r\u00e9centes de racisme dans certains \u00e9tablissements d\u2019enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique du Sud indiquent que l\u2019int\u00e9gration raciale \/ la transformation raciale sont toujours farfelues dans le secteur de l\u2019enseignement sup\u00e9rieur du pays. C\u2019est dans ce contexte que cette \u00e9tude a \u00e9t\u00e9 men\u00e9e pour comprendre l\u2019influence raciale et r\u00e9sidentielle. En utilisant une m\u00e9thode quantitative pour tester l\u2019attitude des diff\u00e9rentes cat\u00e9gories d\u2019\u00e9tudiants de premier cycle \u00e0 l\u2019universit\u00e9, cette \u00e9tude a r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9 que les facteurs - ant\u00e9c\u00e9dents r\u00e9sidentiels et genre - utilis\u00e9s pour mesurer l\u2019attitude de l\u2019\u00e9tudiant ne le sont pas. n\u00e9cessairement avoir une relation significative avec l\u2019int\u00e9gration raciale. Cependant, cette comprendre comment l\u2019int\u00e9gration raciale peut \u00eatre promue dans les institutions sud-africaines d\u2019enseignement sup\u00e9rieur.","creator":["Josephine Morolake Adeagbo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b1b8617-4034-3bf0-9daa-24b5c7c82187"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"The Impact of Gender and Residential Background on Racial Integration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023847","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Evidence from a South African University."} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Sch\u00fcssler Fiorenza"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1510095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e09b9004-3924-3478-b11b-b01d5beace10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1510095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Jesus and the Politics of Interpretation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1510095","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":6906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472911]],"Locations in B":[[27811,27892]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The proliferation of feminist foreign policies has become a sign of commitment to another world order. Governments that adopt such action envision a world where women\u2019s rights are equally important to those of men. They commit to empowering women and ensuring their meaningful participation across various issues. Such commitments, therefore, are understood as the objectives of a feminist foreign policy. This article explains that, while a commitment to women\u2019s rights is important, the current practices of purportedly feminist foreign policies do not reflect an authentically feminist approach. We look into the theoretical background of feminist analysis in international relations, propose criteria for a feminist foreign policy based on feminist theory, and use these criteria to analyze and conduct gap analysis of existing feminist foreign policies. Overall, this study helps unpack the definition of feminist foreign policy and highlight areas that can be addressed by those willing to commit to redefining security and peace in the current world order.","creator":["Victoria Scheyer","Marina Kumskova"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26760832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022197X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39098532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff4e87b7-9bd5-300a-a409-0b641472e140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26760832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Journal of International Affairs Editorial Board","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FEMINIST FOREIGN POLICY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26760832","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":7682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A FINE LINE BETWEEN \u201cADDING WOMEN\u201d AND PURSUING A FEMINIST AGENDA"} +{"abstract":"Advances and changes in globalised culture are responsible for a wide variety of ways in which families are formed and in which children grow up. Although members of the gay community have in the past been associated with a childless lifestyle, gay people are increasingly opting for motherhood and fatherhood by creating families of their own or by continuing to live with their children from former heterosexual relationships. This article addresses the concept of same-gendered families as an example of the changing face of families, relating it to the heteronormativity that is embedded in Westernised societies. The dichotomies of sexuality are confronted and used to illuminate the cultural assumptions embedded in the concept 'family' from a postmodern perspective. Special attention is given to a postmodern and social constructionist perspective on the concept of family, by examining the gendered and sexualised perceptions that underlie same-gendered families. The interfaces between parenting, gender, sexuality and reproduction are examined and critically scrutinised. The same-gendered couple as a family challenges the normative conceptions of the traditional model of the two-parent (hetero-gender) family because the latter is socially and legally constructed from a biological model of reproduction. The article concludes that structural variables, such as the gender composition of families and the division of parental performances, are less important than process variables, such as the quality of relationships and the quality of care given to the children.","creator":["Carien Lubbe"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"670e9793-29eb-3dc4-9f49-d8bcad3a59ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27739398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"76","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Mothers, Fathers or Parents: Same-Gendered Families in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739398","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sherry Velasco"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4d90554-1c25-3f38-b443-8ff6bb536c88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"230","pagination":"p. 230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641766","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT: The television situation comedy Will and Grace is notable as the first successful network prime-time series to feature gay characters in gay milieu. The show's considerable popularity begs the question of how the show's gay sensibility and humor, particularly the gay trickster character, Jack, is received by a heterosexual audience. This article discusses the notion of gay humor, considers the show's history, analyzes several episodes, and scrutinizes the responses of 136 college students who watched the show. Viewers do not identify with Jack and regard him as the most frequent butt of humor on the show, but they also consider him the funniest character and, by a very slight margin, their favorite. Contrary to my original hypotheses, respondent characterizations of Jack tend to reflect appreciation for all aspects of his trickster personality, though his ostentatious sexuality tends to be ignored.","creator":["EVAN COOPER"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2003.46.4.513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a33d688-f391-3476-bd17-ed9fe1e41c98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sop.2003.46.4.513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"513","pagination":"pp. 513-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"DECODING WILL AND GRACE<\/em>: MASS AUDIENCE RECEPTION OF A POPULAR NETWORK SITUATION COMEDY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2003.46.4.513","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cathy McClive"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b251051-d255-3ed6-8ca7-7054728afb14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40646164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Masculinity on Trial: Penises, Hermaphrodites and the Uncertain Male Body in Early Modern France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646164","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11739,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[68136,68215]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on the discursive characteristics of peer assessment interactions, drawing upon recent research into formative assessment within a task design involving extended project-based work tackled in groups by pupils. Case studies were conducted within two schools in socially deprived areas of Scotland. They included classroom observation, digital video and audio data collection, and a series of interviews with pupils and teachers. The task design created opportunities for interdisciplinary, collaborative learning and generated strong pupil engagement. However, a disjuncture is seen between the conflictual characteristics of peer assessment, which are suggested to have gendered and social class dimensions, and the discourses of teamwork and community-building that were privileged in the classrooms observed. Although recognised more in research conversations, the article argues that teachers could be better supported in considering how social class and gender are implicated in peer assessment and in developing classroom discourse that addresses social equity issues.","creator":["Barbara Crossouard"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dee0680a-08fc-399e-85f7-4762c31194a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23263776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"748","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-748","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Absent presences: the recognition of social class and gender dimensions within peer assessment interactions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263776","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the role that orientalism has played in shaping ethnic inequality among Jews in Israel. Earlier works usually explain ethnic exclusion as a function of Jewish life on Israeli territory. Here, however, exclusion is located within an earlier history of a Jewish encounter with orientalism and Western European colonialism. It is argued that prior to their immigration to Israel, Jews the world-over had been stigmatized as Oriental. Through a complex process, they accepted this stigma, and they arrived in Israel deeply invested in developing the new country as \"western\" and uncomfortable with anything identified as \"eastern.\" It is the imperatives of this westernization \"identity project\" that account for the initial impetus to exclude Middle Eastern Jews, as well as non-Jewish Arabs, from emerging Israeli society. Viewing history from this perspective, ethnic cleavages in the Jewish world appear to have a historical stability and consistency that is at odds with the current focus on contingency and historical indeterminacy.","creator":["Aziza Khazzoom"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1519736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55b0a882-c9f1-33ab-99bc-565650e0c448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1519736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Great Chain of Orientalism: Jewish Identity, Stigma Management, and Ethnic Exclusion in Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1519736","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":20722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Robbins"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43799142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f275b76-038b-3dee-ac49-81a82b9347f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43799142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"128","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"SEDUCTION, SIMULATION, TRANSGRESSION AND TABOO: EROTICISM IN THE WORK OF ANA ROSSETTI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43799142","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kerry Rittich","Hilary Charlesworth","Brenda Cossman","Leslye Obiora","Celina Romany"],"datePublished":"1999-03-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02725037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43545563"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235319"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procannmeetasil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Annual Meeting (American Society of International Law)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Society of International Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gender of International Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659291","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":2194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ingrid Ranum"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43810477"},{"name":"lccn","value":"215448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b7d54fd-7a33-38f5-a9a5-414421eb1862"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Adventure in Modern Marriage: Domestic Development in Tennyson's \"Geraint and Enid\" and \"The Marriage of Geraint\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347433","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7755,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445483,446267]],"Locations in B":[[7486,8271]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2016d14-d0b4-3a55-8fbf-686cf3c254f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45300303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"30","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Auteurs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300303","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1332,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496553]],"Locations in B":[[1043,1112]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Current theories of radical pedagogy stress the constant undermining, on the part of both professors and students, of fixed essential identities. This article examines the way three feminist, queer teachers of writing experience and perform their gender, class, and sexual identities. We critique both the academy's tendency to neutralize the political aspects of identity performance and the essentialist identity politics that still inform many academic discussions.","creator":["Michelle Gibson","Martha Marinara","Deborah Meem"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a56c33a9-d99a-3cc3-92e7-d16456188652"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/358545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bi, Butch, and Bar Dyke: Pedagogical Performances of Class, Gender, and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/358545","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12213,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[393941,394065]],"Locations in B":[[40139,40263]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the complex relationships between bodily change and psychic disturbance as represented in the stories of Jean Stafford. It is argued that Stafford is intensely aware of the significance of the material body in the formation of identity. Drawing on Freud's concept of the 'body ego', that is, the complex map of the body formed through interaction with the material world and with others, it is suggested that Stafford's fiction discloses the hidden, often disavowed connections between 'bodily sensations' or 'internal perceptions' and the ego.","creator":["Clare Hanson"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcc5aa4d-62fa-36bc-8f8f-1fb17a2729b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Dis\/figuration in the Stories of Jean Stafford","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509377","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana\u00efs Albert","Fanny Gallot","Anne Jusseaume","Eve Meuret-Campfort","Clyde Plumauzille","Mathilde Rossigneux-M\u00e9heust"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11553219"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85449429"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009242062"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3e3229f-152f-3b47-b854-3f1e54cc80f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26614690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geneses"}],"isPartOf":"Gen\u00e8ses","issueNumber":"111","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"[Introduction]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614690","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Alan Williams"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24240052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afb69ba4-b92f-3fcf-957b-1cec08cb015a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24240052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","History - Historical methodology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Transformations: Locating Agency and Difference in Student Accounts of Religious Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24240052","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":11687,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441312,441425]],"Locations in B":[[33976,34105]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yuan Shu"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12c5c603-64a2-3ad9-b180-d5bd1cd614af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"40","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Information Technologies, the U. S. Nation-State, and Asian American Subjectivities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354470","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Les hormones sexuelles sont des objets hybrides et complexes \u00e0 la fronti\u00e8re du sexe et du genre. D\u00e8s lors qu\u2019elles sont synth\u00e9tis\u00e9es sous forme pharmaceutique, elles peuvent attribuer des caract\u00e9ristiques sexuelles au corps de mani\u00e8re partiellement exog\u00e8ne \u00e0 celui-ci. Il s\u2019en suit que l\u2019utilisation clinique qui en est faite est socialement r\u00e9glement\u00e9e. \u00c0 travers une analyse de divers contextes d\u2019utilisation des hormones observ\u00e9s \u00e0 Bahia, au Br\u00e9sil, cet article montre que le dualisme sexuel est le produit de pratiques de r\u00e9gulation biom\u00e9dicales qui visent \u00e0 encadrer la circulation des hormones. Le sens du terme local \u00ab horm\u00f4nio \u00bb n\u2019est pas pleinement recoup\u00e9 par celui d\u2019hormone, qu\u2019il exc\u00e8de. L\u2019emploi commun qui est fait au Br\u00e9sil du singulier procure au terme \u00ab horm\u00f4nio \u00bb une qualit\u00e9 fluide et homog\u00e8ne. Dans ce contexte, les hormones sont comprises comme une sorte de substance qui peut circuler entre les corps. Cette conceptualisation des hormones comme une substance a des implications pour le statut ontologique des corps et r\u00e9v\u00e8le la relative plasticit\u00e9 de la relation sexe\/genre.","creator":["Emilia Sanabria"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"269d9125-9861-3731-bd25-ee287a20ab6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26264805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"37","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hormones et reconfiguration des identit\u00e9s sexuelles au Br\u00e9sil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264805","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tara Williams"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43359050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211250"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Host, His Wife, and Their Communities in the \"Canterbury Tales\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094411","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article continues the discussion on creativity in human geographical research. Drawing on Alain Badiou's writing on \"two theatres\", I argue that the theatre-research cooperation as a landscape in motion can bring about creative landscapes. In this article, I discuss a collaborative project of participatory research and theatre that tested drama as a tool for urban planning. In the beginning of the project, theatre appears as a tool of inclusive exclusive politics: the research aims to deal with inter-cultural relations in a hypothetical planning situation and, further, on theatre's potential to motivate those who usually do not participate in planning. Thus, this initial setting is the first theatre in which the elements of a constellation are seen as static. However, during the process, there were moments of doubt, dealing with the representational politics of multiculturalism. Contrary to Badiou's first theatre, in the second theatre the elements are vivid and capable of breaking the state of a situation. This rupture occurs in the second theatre when the spectators feel uncomfortable in their seats, or here when the participatory researcher feel their aims generate an inconvenience. It is in the event that theatre changes from being of the state to saying something about the state. This change represents a rupture in thinking, and brings forth the creative landscape of the theatre-research cooperation.","creator":["Paulina Nordstr\u00f6m"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b08054d-4784-3811-a90a-a2fcbc68441c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE CREATIVE LANDSCAPE OF THEATRE-RESEARCH COOPERATION: A CASE FROM TURKU, FINLAND","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966321","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":14765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The chapter \"Spectacles in Color\" in Langston Hughes's first autobiography, The Big Sea (1940), envisions modernist Harlem culture as a drag performance and offers a useful rubric for understanding Hughes's The Weary Blues (1926), a lyric history of that culture whose poems characteristically cross gender, sexual, racial, and even formal lines. The Weary Blues employs a low-down, or nature-based, and down-low, or queer, aesthetic of racial and gender crossing that I term \"primitive drag,\" an aesthetic that ironically coincides with the stereotypes of African Americans and queers that were propagated by early-twentieth-century sexological science and degeneration theory: namely, that blacks and queers were unnatural and degenerate because they, unlike whites and heterosexuals, exhibited a lack of racial and gender differentiation. Dis-identifying with those stereotypes, the primitive drag in The Weary Blues depicts queer feeling as natural and nature as queer, thus offering a productive paradox for rethinking literary histories of modernism and theories of sexuality by the rather Darwinian notion that \"the nature of the universe,\" as Hughes calls it, is always subject to change, or queering.","creator":["Sam See"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fb85e36-6727-3b61-a6bd-4c0f85b1bc48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25614324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"816","pageStart":"798","pagination":"pp. 798-816","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Spectacles in Color\": The Primitive Drag of Langston Hughes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614324","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":11433,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439264,439383]],"Locations in B":[[10035,10161]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rodney Mader"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4372299f-e549-3125-9491-7cf21507366a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"New World\" or \"American\" Empire?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112681","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":2696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This is a critique of capitalist conceptions of \"value\" that draws on Di\u00f1naga's and Dharmak\u00efrti's \"exclusion of the other\" semantics, Marxist philosophy, and poststructuralist feminist and queer theories. It diagnoses sufferings that are integral to the legal subject of capitalist economics, and raises questions about current interpretations of Buddhist appeals to \"conventional truth.\"","creator":["Amy K. Donahue"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43643554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214400"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2539b9ec-1a7b-377c-8240-71347ed5c41e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43285928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phileastwest"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy East and West","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"866","pagination":"pp. 866-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SUFFERING FREE MARKETS: A \"CLASSICAL\" BUDDHIST CRITIQUE OF CAPITALIST CONCEPTIONS OF \"VALUE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285928","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arlene Stein","Ken Plummer"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0178d710-5ba7-3c4e-a63e-bc8d9100d388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"I Can't Even Think Straight\" \"Queer\" Theory and the Missing Sexual Revolution in Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201863","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":5867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Eve Sedgwick critiques paranoid methodologies for denying a plurality of affective approaches. Instead, she emphasizes affects such as hope, but her description of hope's openness does not address how hope can avoid discourses that appear to offer amelioration while deceptively masking subjugation. In this context, I will argue that suspicion in feminist political philosophy, as shown in the earlier work of Carole Pateman and Judith Butler, provides a cautious approach toward hope's openness without precluding hope altogether. This analysis will reconsider the domination and empowerment debates in relation to affect, pointing toward compatibilities between the two perspectives. First, I will expand Sedgwick's analysis of hope to explain its potential as a feminist political affect. Second, I will examine the techniques of suspicion employed by Pateman and Butler and how they risk denying possibilities for hope. This will lead to a discussion of how Amy Allen's theory of power indicates that suspicion is compatible with hope. Finally, I will explain how the suspicious approaches of Pateman and Butler illuminate hope as an inherently risky, fragile project. This will show that suspicion does not necessarily take up the totalizing position of paranoia, but rather can productively ensure that hope is not led astray.","creator":["AMY BILLINGSLEY"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caef886b-b055-3169-a99f-10550e40abd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"612","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-612","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hope in a Vice: Carole Pateman, Judith Butler, and Suspicious Hope","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542145","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chad Montuori"],"datePublished":"2011-09-21","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.5.2.0044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19352743"},{"name":"oclc","value":"277050143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008216364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0196f9a7-54dc-3f3b-b213-cd2d3b438977"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.5.2.0044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacwomegendfami"}],"isPartOf":"Black Women, Gender + Families","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representing Gender on the Move from Africa to Spain: Donato Ndongo's El metro","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.5.2.0044","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9228,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64177,64293]],"Locations in B":[[6559,6675]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Los elementos que han construido los conceptos de identidad cultural y nacional mexicana e ind\u00edgena se dan cita en la novela Ese pr\u00edncipe que fui (2015) de Jordi Soler. En ella se cuenta la historia de Federico Grau, \u00faltimo descendiente de la princesa Xipaguazin, una de las hijas del emperador azteca Moctezuma que lleg\u00f3 a Barcelona desposada por Juan de Grau, uno de los conquistadores que acompa\u00f1\u00f3 a Cort\u00e9s. Este ensayo propone una lectura que (de)construye los conceptos de identidad cultural y nacional a partir del performance y la parodia. Es decir, el protagonista construye una identidad mexicana con elementos ind\u00edgenas y los presenta a partir de varios performances donde se observan elementos par\u00f3dicos, ya que subyacen textos que van desde discursos y ensayos can\u00f3nicos, hasta s\u00edmbolos visuales, entre otros. The elements that have been used to construct concepts of Mexican cultural identity and nationality as well as indigenous identity are present in the novel Ese pr\u00edncipe que fui (2015) by Jordi Soler. This novel tells the story of Federico Grau, last descendent of the princess Xipaguazin, one of the daughters of the Aztec emperor Moctezuma, who arrived in Barcelona married to Juan de Grau, one of the conquerors that accompanied Cortes. This essay proposes a (de)constructive reading of the concepts of cultural and national identity through performance and parody. The protagonist constructs a Mexican identity with indigenous elements and presents them in performances, in which different parodic elements can be identified. Such elements are drawn from canonic essays, cultural discourses, and visual symbols among other sources.","creator":["Milvet Alonso"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26629892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c89c1b0a-9e3c-3496-9d75-99a72f0f9ad2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26629892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"87","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La (de) construcci\u00f3n par\u00f3dica de una identidad cultural y nacional a trav\u00e9s del performance en Ese pr\u00edncipe que fui<\/em> de Jordi Soler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26629892","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7454,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443943,444257]],"Locations in B":[[30094,30469]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maurice Westmoreland"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ab07300-05e9-30ae-a194-d2935fca7b43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Camp in the Works of Luis Zapata","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195289","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7403,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[10501,10610]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carrie Lambert-Beatty"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6e4d822-395e-3ed6-b809-3d55129d6a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40368563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Make-Believe : Parafiction and Plausibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368563","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":16598,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444085,444265]],"Locations in B":[[44243,44428]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alyssa Cymene Howe"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe5bd75c-2b6c-3333-b540-1c1f87a44b55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queer Pilgrimage: The San Francisco Homeland and Identity Tourism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656601","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":12673,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[450878,451164]],"Locations in B":[[19388,19674]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41100118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00353833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48f13493-18df-3025-abf7-57c9e0a78495"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41100118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuphilfranetra"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Philosophique de la France et de l'\u00c9tranger","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"OUVRAGES D\u00c9POS\u00c9S AU BUREAU DE LA REVUE (novembre 2006 - janvier 2007)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41100118","volumeNumber":"197","wordCount":2251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article sketches out developments in mainly English language scholarship from the past twenty years that apply the critical tools of gender analysis to the study of dance. The exercise aims first to highlight the principal perspectives brought forward in this interdisciplinary debate, at once deeply influenced by theories of performance and of subaltern studies; and second, to underscore how theoretical trends in scholarship served to isolate and in some respects disqualify the pertinence of historical approaches to dance. Whereas the study of dance in the social sciences remains a still-emergent research field in France, a recent generation of French scholarship has engaged explicitly with the tools and methods of cultural history, including a dialogue with the history of gender. This essay proposes to unite these divergent historiographies (Anglophone and French dance scholarship), by inviting scholars from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond to engage in a critical, situated, and connected history of dance practices as a means to better understand the embodied history of gender and dancing\u2019s role in that history.","creator":["Elizabeth Claire"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795731","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78683800-32e5-32a4-bb13-013fc8b8c1aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26795731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Dance Studies, gender and the question of history","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795731","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert McGill"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20067788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384291"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212093"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aca194b3-1d1d-3339-b0d4-3da5492b3703"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20067788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southlitj"}],"isPartOf":"The Southern Literary Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Life You Write May Be Your Own: Epistolary Autobiography and the Reluctant Resurrection of Flannery O'Connor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20067788","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Fudge"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20476604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ee4e322-ff2b-3e8b-9189-53d411e94450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20476604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Grrrls and Womyn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20476604","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ENIKO BOLLOB\u00c1S"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efa29795-fee8-3a08-a1ed-1cf381d01727"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24726701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma2"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Poetry Foundation","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CANON POLITICS AND EXPERIMENTAL WRITING: THE EXAMPLE OF \"L'ENCRE SYMPATHIQUE\" OF ROBERT DUNCAN'S \"H.D. BOOK\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726701","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Block"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca36e531-361e-39d8-a520-656634ff25af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I'm nothin. I'm nowhere\": Echoes of Queer Messianism in \"Brokeback Mountain\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949637","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa has prompted renewed concerns about women's rights in Muslim societies. It has also raised questions about women's agency and activism in religious contexts. This article draws on ethnographic research with women activists in Indonesia, the country with the worlds largest Muslim population, to address such concerns. My fleldwork shows that some Muslim women activists in democratizing Indonesia manifest pious critical agency. Pious critical agency is the capacity to engage critically and publicly with religious texts. While some scholars have argued that pious and feminist subjectivity are inherently at odds, the emergence of pious critical agency in Indonesia demonstrates that piety and feminism can intersect in surprising and unexpected ways. Moreover, it shows that women's agency can draw on both secular and religious resources and that religion can be used to promote critical discourses on gender.","creator":["RACHEL RINALDO"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f3dbe0e-a65a-3337-8be8-ddd3c1bc045f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"846","pageStart":"824","pagination":"pp. 824-846","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"PIOUS AND CRITICAL: Muslim Women Activists and the Question of Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669923","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elena M. Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7f0f3a3-6fd3-34a0-855f-440ac0caa5aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TWO POETRY BOOKS OF MAGALI ALABAU","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922139","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article shows how equity research in mathematics education can be decentered by reporting the \u201cvoices\u201d of mathematically successful African American male students as they recount their experiences with school mathematics, illustrating, in essence, how they negotiated the White male math myth. Using post-structural theory, the concepts discourse, person\/identity, and power\/agency are reinscribed or redefined. The article also shows that using a post-structural reinscription of these concepts, a more complex analysis of the multiplicitous and fragmented robust mathematics identities of African American male students is possible\u2014an analysis that refutes simple explanations of effort. The article concludes, not with \u201canswers,\u201d but with questions to facilitate dialogue among those who are interested in the mathematics achievement and persistence of African American male students\u2014and equity and justice in the mathematics classroom for all students.","creator":["David W. Stinson"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218251"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36308865"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a3a6aee-3cd1-33c8-9826-bc36805e85ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresematheduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Research in Mathematics Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Negotiating the \u201cWhite Male Math Myth\u201d: African American Male Students and Success in School Mathematics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0069","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":16596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the subversive strategy of parody in John Yau's poetic series entitled \"Genghis Chan: Private Eye,\" by situating Yau's work in the contexts of postmodern poetics, Hollywood films, and Asian American history and culture. While engaging with some major critical views on Yau's poetry, its reading of Yau's \"Genghis Chan\" series breaks away from those critical approaches to postmodern poetry and minority literature, which assume a false dichotomy that renders agency of the Othered subject and postmodern poetics mutually exclusive. This essay argues that Yau's historically situated and ethnically inflected postmodern poems enact a critical engagement with postmodern aesthetics and poststructuralist theories-an engagement which at once interrogates and reinvents the private self and raced subject. Its close-reading of Yau's poems foregrounds the ways in which Yau deploys postmodern aesthetics to expose the constituent historical, conceptual, and representational elements of ethnicity, and to re-articulate an Asian American Otherness that refuses to be defined.","creator":["Zhou Xiaojing"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db4a0509-d683-3142-be69-8a6f4d2d6963"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Postmodernism and Subversive Parody: John Yau's \"Genghis Chan: Private Eye\" Series","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115174","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12213,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[453304,453460]],"Locations in B":[[13044,13203]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alyson Cole"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8af66f7-dc48-3f1d-bffb-41e25e2efa4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Trading Places: From Black Power Activist to \"Anti-Negro Negro\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643485","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":19099,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[113538,113622]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lucy R. Lippard","DAVID MCCARTHY"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62266454"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ded0c0ff-4477-3f74-b896-6085196cfad8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23025798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archamerartj"}],"isPartOf":"Archives of American Art Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Smithsonian American Art Museum","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Open Drawer: Archives for Archives' Sake: Social Nudism, Masculinity, and the Male Nude in the Work of William Theo Brown and Wynn Chamberlain in the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025798","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the interdisciplinary research area of Transgender studies, Transfeminist theoretical perspectives have witnessed much innovation over the last few years.1 This has culminated in an increase in the acknowledgement of Transgender people in the West, as well as a growing affirmation of gender-plural identities across the world.2 In the academy, however, Transfeminism continues to be sidelined, not making waves beyond the interdisciplinary research areas of Transgender studies and queer studies. The research field of international politics continues to subscribe to a cisnormative understanding of feminist politics. This article advances the point that Transfeminist thought, far from forming a fringe current, possesses the potential of being strongly informative, influential, and beneficial to the study of international relations and in advocating for comprehensive gender equality and justice agendas in world politics.","creator":["Chamindra Weerawardhana"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.16.1.18","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"443aa454-c183-3602-98db-c3e047d744a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.16.1.18"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Profoundly Decolonizing? Reflections on a Transfeminist Perspective of International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.16.1.18","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie E. Cohen"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20141904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d16ff8b-786a-3078-8a68-deefa17b5dbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20141904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Chicago Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Privacy, Visibility, Transparency, and Exposure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20141904","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":9425,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524233]],"Locations in B":[[11151,11243]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lucy Noakes"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b86d25a-bf93-34d6-8b58-a6b6cea728f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"672","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-672","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, War and Memory: Discourse and Experience in History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180779","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4614,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461319,461476]],"Locations in B":[[10173,10330]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Discourses borne out of United Nations Security Council resolution (UNSCR) 1325 (adopted in 2000) and UNSCR 2242 (adopted in 2015) argue that the current global security environment requires more women peacekeepers to support the specific needs of women and girls caught up in conflict. The emphasis is on increasing numbers of women peacekeepers in visible and interactive tasks with civilians, as well as in senior decision-making roles. In the UN discourse, women peacekeepers are positioned as role models who can inspire local women to become formally involved in post-conflict reconstruction. However, numbers of women peacekeepers remain low, at three per cent globally. National militaries, such as the Irish Defence Forces (DF), are encouraging women to join their ranks by using targeted recruitment campaigns. Yet still the numbers remain fairly static: between five and six per cent of personnel. This article discusses some of the gender discourses active amongst officers in the DF prior to the adoption of Ireland's national action plan on UNSCR 1325. The participant accounts reveal how the dominant discourse on gender\u2014\u2018equal but different\u2019\u2014can inhibit women's inclusion in peacekeeping missions. While women's difference is deemed a positive in the UN discourse on UNSCR 1325, this difference can be perceived as problematic for women soldiers and the militaries in which they serve. This article unpacks this paradox of women's difference and discusses what is being done in the UN and the DF to increase women's participation in peacekeeping missions. It argues that discourses that position women \u2018as a problem\u2019 will need to shift before the numbers of women will increase in peacekeeping missions.","creator":["Shirley Graham"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3318\/isia.2016.27.15","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03321460"},{"name":"oclc","value":"160064644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-236265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ab72b54-0ba9-3110-b9ca-027f8345d247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3318\/isia.2016.27.15"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisstudinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Studies in International Affairs","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Royal Irish Academy","sourceCategory":["History","Irish Studies","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"A Gender Paradox: Discourses on Women in UN Peacekeeping","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3318\/isia.2016.27.15","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jenn Fishman"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43293615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tennessee","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Identities: Female Cross-Dressing in \"She Ventures and He Wins\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293615","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8753,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436489,436592]],"Locations in B":[[14596,14699]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An experiment in 'writing culture' through biographical positioning, this article identifies the central symbol of Israeli military and masculine identity as 'the chosen body' and traces through some of the practices that support and exemplify it. Within and against this masculinization and militarization of Israeli society, I explore my own and other women's experiences as citizen, daughter, mother and writer, to argue for resistance of and in the female body which finds a non-discursive expression in 'somatic dissidence'.","creator":["Meira Weiss"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7822d9a5-f2e9-304f-975e-aeb4dd122f2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Writing culture' under the gaze of my country","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047719","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":6515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sherrie A. Inness","Michele Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b576f03-9f1f-366e-8251-528480bebfa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"G.I. Joes in Barbie Land\": Recontextualizing Butch in Twentieth-Century Lesbian Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316399","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10409,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[393890,394358]],"Locations in B":[[18976,19166],[22006,22474]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joyce W. Warren","Fanny Fern"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095280X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014-200023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42573373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerhumor"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Humor","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Humor Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fanny Fern, Performative Incivilities and Rap","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573373","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article calls for greater attention to be paid to the way that sex and sexuality impact on geographical fieldwork. By concentrating in particular on cross-cultural fieldwork, the article focuses on the ways in which attention to these questions has the potential to bring about greater self-reflexivity and to expose the contingency of the researcher's sexuality.","creator":["Julie Cupples"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Field as a Landscape of Desire: Sex and Sexuality in Geographical Fieldwork","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004269","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dariusz Jemielniak"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de25cdbd-e172-388e-9b53-af61b287db1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"113","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law"],"title":"breaking the glass ceiling on Wikipedia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987268","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret D. Kamitsuka"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"638c2119-2897-3194-a826-751e17ec6d32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading the Raced and Sexed Body in \"The Color Purple\": Repatterning White Feminist and Womanist Theological Hermeneutics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002474","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10614,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116561,116653]],"Locations in B":[[53949,54041]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper identifies the phenomenal rise of increasingly invasive forms of elective cosmetic surgery targeted primarily at women and explores its significance in the context of contemporary biotechnology. A Foucauldian analysis of the significance of the normalization of technologized women's bodies is argued for. Three \"Paradoxes of Choice\" affecting women who \"elect\" cosmetic surgery are examined. Finally, two utopian feminist political responses are discussed: a Response of Refusal and a Response of Appropriation.","creator":["Kathryn Pauly Morgan"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"687980ae-915e-3ddb-b345-938139fd40ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women and the Knife: Cosmetic Surgery and the Colonization of Women's Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809838","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":12860,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[421463,421570],[422362,422458]],"Locations in B":[[55218,55325],[55373,55469]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Following the publication of David Solomon's winning Young Scholar paper, \"Toward a Post-modern Agenda in Instructional Technology,\" in issue 48(4) of ETR&D, several readers inquired asking for more concrete information on the meaning of postmodernism and its implications for practice and research in instructional technology. One reader in particular, Rick Voithofer from Ohio State University, asked if he could submit a reaction to Solomon's paper. I agreed to examine a draft, on which I provided feedback and encouragement to continue. I then invited David Solomon to provide a brief rejoinder. The products of these efforts follow.","creator":["Rick Voithofer","Alan Foley"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30220319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10421629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8759ced-e75b-3a49-8e0a-97e0febe7753"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30220319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"edutechresedeve"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Technology Research and Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Post-IT: Putting Postmodern Perspectives to Use in Instructional Technology \u2014 A Response to Solomon's \"Toward a Post-Modern Agenda in Instructional Technology\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30220319","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":5921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Maness Mehaffy"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65f72440-d0b6-3d16-83e6-8936a5b82397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Manipulating the Metaphors: \"The House of Mirth\" and \"The Volcanic Nether-Side\" of \"Sexuality\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112103","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7704,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824],[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[50293,50361],[51401,51492]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article approaches gender as a means of understanding cultural identity in Italy before the Roman conquest. Most scholars have assumed based on written sources that the ancient inhabitants of Samnium, who are noted for their fierce resistance to Rome, shared a gender system in which men were primarily regarded as warriors and women as caretakers of the household. Archaeological support for this view has been sought in the contrast between burials containing weapons (assumed to belong to men) and those containing jewelry or personal ornaments (attributed to women). In line with recent studies that challenge such a view, I employ statistical methods to verify correlations between grave goods, sex, age, and social status. Results reveal that cultural attitudes toward gender among the Samnites were complex. In many cases, gender configurations were structured in such a way that both men and women performed similar social activities and may have participated as equals in commensal politics. These findings demonstrate the potential for quantitative archaeological analysis to enhance our knowledge of cultural identity and social organization in an area of the ancient world for which there is very little written evidence.","creator":["Rafael Scopacasa"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3764\/aja.118.2.0241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"388b0671-00d0-31e6-8946-40f881f21731"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3764\/aja.118.2.0241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Gender and Ritual in Ancient Italy: A Quantitative Approach to Grave Goods and Skeletal Data in Pre-Roman Samnium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3764\/aja.118.2.0241","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":16149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AbstractTranssexual women provide rich data for feminist theory but have had a conflict-ridden relationship with feminism since the 1970s. Deconstructionist theory and transgender politics mean greater acceptance but have not escaped the problem of identity. Feminist social science offers vital resources for understanding transition as a gender project, starting with contradictory embodiment. The intransigence, not the fluidity, of gender is central. Transsexual women\u2019s lives unfold through gendered structures of family, economy, and state, in which new embodied relationships must be built in an ontoformative process. Social realities of poverty, vulnerability, and gender violence point to a politics of social justice as the basis for a new relationship between transsexual women and feminism, both within the metropole and internationally.","creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6485ece2-9e99-3ec4-8827-0dcb5d368916"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/664478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"881","pageStart":"857","pagination":"pp. 857-881","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transsexual Women and Feminist Thought: Toward New Understanding and New Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664478","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Employing a critically disenchanted analysis influenced by Luce Irigaray and other contemporary feminist thinkers and cultural scholars, this paper offers a subversive reading that highlights the disruptive subtext of the Grimm tale, \"The Worn-Out Dancing Shoes\" (KHM 133). I argue that the princesses' nightly forays into the wondrous and festive netherworld they construct explicitly rejects the deep paralysis commonly prescribed for Grimm heroines. At the same time, they remain vulnerable to the socioeconomic imperatives of the typical male career marchen. If only momentarily, the princesses' nocturnal activities suspend and undermine the compulsory heteronormative enactments of femininity and masculinity.","creator":["Hayley S. Thomas"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49e467e9-96c2-376c-ad1f-fcb51a812c3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Undermining a Grimm Tale: A Feminist Reading of \"The Worn-Out Dancing Shoes\" (KHM 133)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388541","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brigitte ROLLET","Genevi\u00e8ve SELLIER"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79772c35-d709-3f8d-8750-0a11c1072403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"10","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cin\u00e9ma et genre en France: \u00e9tat des lieux","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405332","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emanuelle Oliveira"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"933a433d-8e23-395f-803a-8d269153f0fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mulheres E Jogos Sociais Em Machado de Assis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741399","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[177961,178084]],"Locations in B":[[23845,23968]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Salsa, a global urban music and dance phenomenon, is an interesting example for the emergence of transnational cultural spheres. Salsa has its roots in the Americas and in many Salsa communities outside of Latin America, the Spanish language is seen as the authentic means of expression. However, attitudes to multilingualism can differ strongly from Salsa community to Salsa community. In this paper, the Salsa-scene of Sydney is introduced with its various stances towards multilingualism. These are connected to different styles of the dance, where one style is practiced in English only, while dancers of another style are often bilingual speakers of Spanish and English. Monolingualism and multilingualism here mediate the affiliation to different local scenes. Simultaneously, both language ideologies relate to different global discourses of competitive and cosmopolitan culture. It will be asked whether the introduced language ideologies challenge traditional frameworks of society and reified discursive concepts of language. (Multilingualism - Transnationalism - Cosmopolitanism)","creator":["BRITTA SCHNEIDER"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14bffebc-b721-34c0-9a4f-6865f2bb3df8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40925815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"668","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-668","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Multilingual Cosmopolitanism and Monolingual Commodification: Language Ideologies in Transnational Salsa Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925815","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret A. Farley"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3d7fcc0-7cd3-3737-bc15-6098f23828c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Axiology"],"title":"A Feminist Version of Respect for Persons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002208","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7758,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481661,481841]],"Locations in B":[[16891,17079]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eric Berlatsky"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25733406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e889d78-2a08-3ca1-ab5e-a2d5ad4bd133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25733406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Madame Bovary, c'est moi!\": Julian Barnes's \"Flaubert's Parrot\" and Sexual \"Perversion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25733406","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":13693,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[433526,433592],[435522,435631],[471706,471794]],"Locations in B":[[58524,58589],[60151,60260],[84757,84850]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation has been an important site for the construction of gendered power and hegemonic masculinities. The strong connection between masculinities and irrigation cultures may provide an important explanation of why hydraulic bureaucracies are so resistant to change. The continued masculinity of irrigation requires critical investigation of masculinities, technology and organisations. Such studies will serve both as a first step to creating more space for women engineers in government water agencies, and contribute to unravelling important aspects of the cultural politics of water.","creator":["MARGREET ZWARTEVEEN"],"datePublished":"2011-04-30","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d95c790-026a-3afb-80b0-aa3136af1132"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41152342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"18","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Questioning Masculinities in Water","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152342","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Secret identity\" adventure narratives such as \"The Mark of Zorro\" invoke queer textuality when one character runs the spectrum of gender identities. Such queerness is always contained, however, by the text's conservative political agenda.","creator":["Catherine Williamson"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09001406-f423-3abe-bb5d-2b83b31267e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Draped Crusaders\": Disrobing Gender in \"The Mark of Zorro\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225772","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7877,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430072,430388],[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[44392,44707],[48042,48096]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Interest in the concept of identity has grown exponentially within both the humanities and social sciences, but the discussion of identity has had less impact than might be expected on the quantitative study of political behavior in general and on political psychology more specifically. One of the approaches that holds the most promise for political psychologists is social identity theory, as reflected in the thinking of Henri Tajfel, John Turner, and colleagues. Although the theory addresses the kinds of problems of interest to political psychologists, it has had limited impact on political psychology because of social identity theorists' disinclination to examine the sources of social identity in a real world complicated by history and culture. In this review, four key issues are examined that hinder the successful application of social identity theory to political phenomena. These key issues are the existence of identity choice, the subjective meaning of identities, gradations in identity strength, and the considerable stability of many social and political identities.","creator":["Leonie Huddy"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3791909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"From Social to Political Identity: A Critical Examination of Social Identity Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791909","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents a genealogy of social work approaches to sexuality via critical examination of the relevance of queer and post-queer theory. The key tenets of queer theory are outlined before the authors go on to assess how social work has responded to this body of work. The authors offer some critical comments on social work's engagement with queer theory before moving on to discuss a range of post-queer developments, focused on race, empire, the neo-liberal state, class, austerity, gender and anti-normativity. As social work has yet to engage with post-queer theory, the authors assess some of its key contributions and, finally, discuss their suggestions for ways in which this literature might offer opportunities for the reinvigoration of research, theory and practice in the contemporary field of social work and sexuality.","creator":["Stephen Hicks","Dharman Jeyasingham"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"058faa8f-51ba-3fc1-9abd-346efbc0918d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26363562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"2373","pageStart":"2357","pagination":"pp. 2357-2373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Work, Queer Theory and After: A Genealogy of Sexuality Theory in Neo-Liberal Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363562","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7476,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[49465,49517]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Belief is important in some religious experiences and not in others. Why? I address the question here through an analysis of belief in two different religious communities in Northern Thailand. In the Northern Thai Buddhist community of Mae Jaeng the Thai term for belief is rarely evoked, while in the nearby Christian community of Mae Min it occurs often. Tying belief to ideas about causation, I argue that the different prominence of belief in the two communities relates to ideas about personal agency. In the Christian community belief creates personal agency through the mediation of an external agentive Other, while in the Buddhist community personal agency is seen to be constructed through natural processes that render belief unnecessary. In making this argument I offer a critique of the ubiquity of belief as part of religious experience, and push for further research on the intersections of belief, agency, and intersubjectivity in psychological anthropology.","creator":["Julia Cassaniti"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23254141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be68eaec-5768-3f00-bbd1-f0eee47fe6ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23254141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Agency and the Other: The Role of Agency for the Importance of Belief in Buddhist and Christian Traditions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23254141","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the construction of motherhood as a form of political agency in Turkey with particular references to the Saturday Mothers and the Peace Mothers, respectively, the mothers of the disappeared and the mothers of the Kurdistan Workers\u2019 Party (PKK) fighters. Interviews with the mothers of soldiers will also be part of the final analysis. Focusing on these three organizations, the article answers the following questions: (1) How has the conflict between the military\/paramilitary forces and oppositional organizations transformed the lives of some ordinary women across the country? (2) How have some sociopolitically marked and wounded women perceived the state and responded to its violence through the identity of motherhood? (3) To what extent can the power of motherhood activism, which derives from the sharing of personal experiences in the public domain as an expression of collective traumas and silenced pasts, contribute to peace building in Turkey?","creator":["EMINE REZZAN KARAMAN"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e9bfc9c-55c5-3f0f-b333-f09b2b126fa4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26571786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remember, S\/he Was Here Once","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571786","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":13249,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431367,431480]],"Locations in B":[[30958,31071]],"subTitle":"Mothers Call for Justice and Peace in Turkey"} +{"abstract":"This article revisits the concept of the total institution (TI), critically assessing the extent to which it has changed from being repressively coercive to relatively voluntaristic. I propose two new concepts, the 'Reinventive Institution' (RI) and 'performative regulation', to take the debate forward. The model of the TI outlined in Goffman's Asylums has been (mis-)interpreted as rendering its inmates powerless, but they also demonstrated agency through gestures of resistance. Conversely, RIs, which members elect to join for purposes of self-improvement, appear to celebrate the subject's autonomy but suggest a unique form of social control based on mutual surveillance. This performative regulation is enacted through the interaction order, as members actively produce, negotiate and legitimate the exercise of power.","creator":["Susie Scott"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d27965b-7d5c-3e7c-8b88-2c66029bd613"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revisiting the Total Institution: Performative Regulation in the Reinventive Institution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857391","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Magarey","Susan Sheridan"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12f0ba0e-f2d8-39a3-866d-1e84cf0a2f99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Local, Global, Regional: Women's Studies in Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178497","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10911,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477195,477252]],"Locations in B":[[66014,66070]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this study, the author uses ethnographic and interview data from a women's floor in a university residence hall to examine how some heterosexual women's gender strategies contribute to their homophobia. The author describes a prevailing heterosexual erotic market on campus\u2014the Greek party scene\u2014and the status hierarchy linked to it. Within this hierarchy, heterosexual women assign lesbians low rank because of their assumed disinterest in the erotic market and perceived inability to acquire men's erotic attention. Active partiers invest more in this social world and prefer higher levels of social distance from lesbians than do others. These women also engage in same-sex eroticism primarily designated for a male audience. They define their behaviors as heterosexual, reducing the spaces in which lesbians can be comfortable. Finally, the author concludes by discussing the unique nature of women's homophobia and the links between sexism and heterosexism.","creator":["Laura Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c50f9b81-c934-3f7f-8ada-edb58e401ec5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27640957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Trading on Heterosexuality: College Women's Gender Strategies and Homophobia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640957","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Chaput"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd53aabe-f9de-3f85-84f7-2ed155971836"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity, Postmodernity, and an Ethics of Activism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866299","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11461,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[72284,72359]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Queer Yiddishkeit\u2014a cluster of works in literature, journalism, filmmaking, and performance art\u2014constitutes one of the most revealing and provocative developments in contemporary Jewish culture. These works all juxtapose queerness and Yiddish in some way and do so as a means of challenging some cultural status quo. Queer Yiddishkeit epitomizes how, a half-century since the Holocaust, cultural engagements with Yiddish have been reconceiving the possibilities of the language and its relationship to culture and peoplehood. Several examples of Queer Yiddish culture are examined herein, especially performances that link Yiddish with drag, focusing on the different ways that they interrelate Yiddishness and queerness. This essay then considers what the practices of Queer Yiddishkeit suggest for the theorizing of Yiddish now, at a crucial juncture in the languages history, marked, on one hand, by the imminent passing of the last speakers who used Yiddish as a vernacular before World War II, and, on the other hand, by the expansion of what the author terms postvernacular engagements with Yiddish.","creator":["Jeffrey Shandler"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42944382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queer Yiddishkeit: Practice and Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944382","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines two examples of archival visual information with potentially transgender and non-binary representation to interrogate the descriptive challenges latent within such materials. By using gender theory and queer historiography, this paper deploys a critical case study to consider the particularities of naming gender when contextual evidence provides little to no authoritative guidance. By talking through the way gender makes itself visible within visual information, the paper guides readers through the way transgender or non-binary identity might exist within both pieces of visual information. The paper then provides suggestions on how to provide respectful and inclusive descriptive records that attend to the complexities of a stillevolving queer history. By offering both a statement on the impossibility of naming identity within intersecting forms of queer embodiment alongside reference points for methods of discussing potential gendered identities, the paper offers practical approaches to describing transgender and non-binary identities for information professionals.","creator":["Travis L. Wagner"],"datePublished":"2021-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641978","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1001437536"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1d1ec07-6769-3778-8a24-09148d530eba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48641978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intljinfodive"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, & Inclusion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"The International Journal of Information, Diversity, and Inclusion (IJIDI)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Library science","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cShe Started Wearing Men\u2019s Clothes and Acting More Masculine\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48641978","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10921,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73203,73346]],"Locations in B":[[5058,5199]],"subTitle":"Queering Historical Knowledge, Gendered Identity Making, and Trans Potentialities in Visual Information"} +{"abstract":"El presente trabajo aborda el an\u00e1lisis de la \"cultura femenina\" en la obra de Simmel, tomando en consideraci\u00f3n su car\u00e1cter oculto dentro de la cultura objetiva, predominantemente masculina. Aspectos como el g\u00e9nero, el amor y la sexualidad son considerados a la luz de las contribuciones realizadas por la cr\u00edtica social contempor\u00e1nea representada en los enfoques de Goffman, Foucault, Benhabib, Butler y Beck. \/\/\/ This papper focuse on the analysis of the \"femenine culture\" in the work of Georg Simmel, taking into account its hidden being within the objective culture, predominantly masculine. Aspects like gender, love and sexuality are considered assuming the contributions made by the contemporary social critique represented by Goffman, Foucault, Benhabib, Butler and Beck.","creator":["Josetxo Beriain"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02105233"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b872da5-e8c9-3fc8-8a3b-29659bbf112e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40184229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reis"}],"isPartOf":"Reis","issueNumber":"89","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El ser oculto de la cultura femenina en la obra de Georg Simmel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184229","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":20731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily Bowles"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a77ae31-d8d7-3685-bdd6-0bd59b93b8ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20462729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"It Would Ever Seem to Me a Dowry\": Human Ecology and Domestic Economies in Janisse Ray's \"Wild Card Quilt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462729","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":6069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Harris"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"588576d1-5efd-3662-b616-55e037f4b983"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Butler Saw: Cross-Dressing and Spectatorship in Seventeenth-Century France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151932","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5083,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[391670,391756]],"Locations in B":[[2696,2783]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler's philosophical writings on identity have provided inspiring, if occasionally 'troubling', ways of rethinking gender. A key contribution has been the challenge to conventional social constructionist ideas and thinking on subjectivity. In developing a paradigm of performativity, Butler's work takes us beyond the territory of identity secured in much previous feminist poststructuralist debate. She does so in part by providing an ontological critique-a type of 'queering' if you will-of such seemingly knowable categories as 'man', 'woman', 'girl' or 'boy'. In addressing the radical interruption in identity theorising offered in Butler's writing, we consider the arresting claim that identity is a type of 'doing' that is only made manifest at the point of action. To explore the theoretical, empirical and political issues at stake, we draw especially upon Butler's writings on identity and ally this to some of our own ethnographic research on gender, youth and schooling. Here, we explore young people's compulsion to enact and display stylised forms of gender embodiment, and the spectacular enactments of transgression that can elicit a practice of gender dissimulation. Our focus is upon the subversion, regulation and embodiment of gender identities and its implications for the sociology of education.","creator":["Anoop Nayak","Mary Jane Kehily"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e787689-f6ac-3eb3-8970-ce317f443c2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Undone: Subversion, Regulation and Embodiment in the Work of Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036156","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7140,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727],[432777,433041],[458247,458321],[459844,460078]],"Locations in B":[[6277,6422],[12372,12635],[30267,30341],[35278,35512]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adriana Novoa","M\u00f3nica Szurmuk"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5341d241-d767-32e3-8d2e-eb813bc51ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Desnaturalizando la naci\u00f3n autoritaria: una propuesta queer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624805","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Starting from the observation that \"queerness\" has increasingly been promoted as a new media trend during the past decade, this essay examines possible explanations for this phenomenon: Firstly, so-called \"queer styles\" are particularly easy to use by a consumer industry in constant search of 'difference' and new trends. Secondly, striking parallels exist between common definitions of the \"postmodern condition\" and what might be called a \"queer sensibility.\" This conceptual move from the specificities of homosexuality to more global concerns of postmodern societies may be criticized for its abstracting and dehistoricizing implications. However, much of the same move can be found in the current turn, within literary and cultural theory, away from \"gay and lesbian studies\" and toward \"queer studies.\" This essay will provide a closer look at this new concept of \"queerness\" (both a deconstruction and broadening of the concept of \"gayness\") in order to weigh some of its strategic dangers against its positive hermeneutic and political potential.","creator":["Nadine Milde"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b9ee2ee-5010-324d-9ecc-30ee75af2bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pop Goes the Queerness, or, (Homo) Sexuality and Its Metaphors: On the Importance of Gay Sensibilities in Postmodern Culture and Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157633","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristine Gritter","Deborah Vriend Van Duinen","Kimberly Montgomery","Devony Blowers","Dan Bishop"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340561"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618570"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007214265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56069c69-f264-398f-b1a3-47d59e9286fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readingteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Reading Teacher","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boy Troubles? Male Literacy Depictions in Children's Choices Picture Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632439","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":7291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147690,147832]],"Locations in B":[[1245,1385]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay is a discussion of gender and ethnic stereotypes in M. Butterfly, which Hwang examines and reverses by rewriting the Butterfly myth of Puccini's opera. Referring to contemporary feminist and post-colonial criticism, the essay demonstrates how gender and cultural identities are negotiated in interaction and are thus always performative. Moreover, such performance is only effective in cooperation with an audience. Performance and perception are ultimately flip sides of a coin. Choosing an Asian transvestite for the protagonist of the play, Hwang exposes preconceived notions of man and woman, as well as Occident and Orient. He tackles the very foundations of Western consciousness and identity by rearranging its binary structure. Yet, after having caused some gender and cultural trouble, he ties all loose ends neatly up in a perfect role reversal. The binary structure remains intact after all. Against this background, I also discuss Hwang's portrayal of sexuality. Playing down the homosexual desire of his two protagonists, he forsakes the play's potential to queer and collapse Western binaries. The playwright uses the figure of the transvestite to lay bare the construction and performativity of gender and culture. Yet he stops short of questioning compulsory heterosexuality at its base, and thereby fails to use queer desire in order to open up interstices, categories of \"thirdness,\" in this tight homophobic structure.","creator":["Ilka Saal"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b746e6d-9268-3616-9e0c-9d5191a84f1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"644","pageStart":"629","pagination":"pp. 629-644","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performance and Perception: Gender, Sexuality, and Culture in David Henry Hwang's \"M. Butterfly\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157422","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9118,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[80570,80761]],"Locations in B":[[39107,39298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the artistry of the nineteenth-century Italian singer Giuditta Pasta within the broad context of an 'artwork' (Goehr) and ideas of 'presence' (Gumbrecht). Pasta was the acknowledged diva del mondo during the 1820s, famed not only for an extraordinary if flawed voice, but also for the physicality of her performance modes. Her innovative practices contributed to the development and reconceptualisation of opera's dramatic potential on the early Romantic stage. Making her reputation in roles such as Medea (Mayr) and Semiramide (Rossini), Pasta later inspired the composition of three of the most striking operatic heroines of the period: Amina in La sonnambula (Bellini) and the title-roles of Norma (again Bellini) and Anna Bolena (Donizetti). Focusing on her performance as Norma, I consider a polemical debate in 1835 in the Italian periodicals Il Figaro and Il corriere delle dame that illuminates aspects of Pasta's gestural style in relation to those of her younger colleague and rival, Maria Malibran, and ultimately raises questions about the 'authenticity' of performance in the emerging economy of the operatic marketplace.","creator":["Susan Rutherford"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7a26140-cd77-37d2-92b8-f55ae3406e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27607154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'La cantante delle passioni': Giuditta Pasta and the Idea of Operatic Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607154","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[50089,50170]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jana Sawicki"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42bb6fb5-3315-35d5-b1c1-98a171de7a36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810598","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the last few decades there has been a distinct shift in Masai pastoral livelihoods in Kenya's rangelands, creating new livelihood activities and new gendered demands on labor. This article builds on new feminist political ecologies (FPEs) that incorporate recent developments in postructuralist and performative theorizations of gender. I extend new FPE theoretically, through the incorporation of Arendt's theory of action, especially her theorization of plurality. Plurality allows us to capture the unique dynamics of the performance of negotiation for labor control displayed by Masai husbands and wives. I also extend FPE empirically, through the examination of an African and pastoralist context. I pay attention to the role that space plays in the process of negotiating gendered inequality. Based on forty in-depth interviews complemented by ethnographic fieldwork, the research demonstrates that the women and men interviewed are deeply aware of how space conveys particular meanings during negotiations. In all instances, the effectiveness of each man and woman's performance cannot be understood outside of this spatial context. As pastoral livelihoods shift, the boundaries of what it means to be a Masai are pushed. In this context, the disciplinary power of culture and the meanings of gender become destabilized, allowing for a renegotiation and forging of gender norms and subjectivities. \u8fc7\u53bb\u6570\u5341\u5e74\u6765, \u9a6c\u585e\u65cf\u4eba\u4e8e\u80af\u4e9a\u7267\u573a\u4e2d\u7684\u4e61\u6751\u751f\u6d3b\u6709\u4e86\u663e\u7740\u7684\u8f6c\u53d8, \u521b\u9020\u4e86\u65b0\u7684\u751f\u8ba1\u6d3b\u52a8\u4e0e\u5d2d\u65b0\u7684\u6027\u522b\u5316\u52b3\u52a8\u9700\u6c42\u3002\u672c\u6587\u5efa\u7acb\u4e8e\u6574\u5408\u540e\u7ed3\u6784\u4e0e\u5c55\u6f14\u6027\u522b\u7406\u8bba\u7684\u665a\u8fd1\u53d1\u5c55\u7684\u65b0\u5973\u6027\u4e3b\u4e49\u653f\u6cbb\u751f\u6001\u5b66 (FPEs) \u4e4b\u4e0a\u3002\u6211\u5c06\u900f\u8fc7\u7eb3\u5165\u6c49\u5a1c\u9102\u5170\u7684\u884c\u52a8\u7406\u8bba, \u7279\u522b\u662f\u5979\u5bf9\u591a\u5143\u6027\u7684\u7406\u8bba\u5316\u5de5\u4f5c, \u4ee5\u6b64\u5728\u7406\u8bba\u4e0a\u5ef6\u4f38\u65b0 FPE\u3002\u591a\u5143\u6027\u8ba9\u6211\u4eec\u6355\u6349\u9a6c\u585e\u65cf\u4e08\u592b\u548c\u59bb\u5b50\u6240\u5c55\u73b0\u7684\u52b3\u52a8\u63a7\u5236\u534f\u5546\u5c55\u6f14\u7684\u7279\u6b8a\u52a8\u6001\u3002\u6211\u540c\u65f6\u900f\u8fc7\u68c0\u89c6\u975e\u6d32\u653e\u7267\u7684\u8109\u7edc, \u5728\u7ecf\u9a8c\u4e0a\u5ef6\u4f38 FPE\u3002\u6211\u5c06\u5173\u6ce8\u7a7a\u95f4\u5728\u534f\u5546\u6027\u522b\u5316\u4e0d\u5747\u7684\u8fc7\u7a0b\u4e2d\u6240\u626e\u6f14\u7684\u89d2\u8272\u3002\u672c\u7814\u7a76\u6839\u636e\u56db\u5341\u4e2a\u6df1\u5ea6\u8bbf\u8c08, \u5e76\u4ee5\u6c11\u65cf\u5fd7\u7530\u91ce\u5de5\u4f5c\u8865\u5145\u4e4b, \u5c55\u793a\u53d7\u8bbf\u7684\u7537\u6027\u53ca\u5973\u6027\u7686\u6df1\u523b\u5730\u610f\u8bc6\u5230\u7a7a\u95f4\u5982\u4f55\u5728\u534f\u5546\u65f6\u4f20\u8fbe\u7279\u5b9a\u7684\u610f\u4e49\u3002\u5728\u6240\u6709\u7684\u573a\u5408\u4e2d, \u6bcf\u4f4d\u7537\u6027\u4e0e\u5973\u6027\u7684\u5c55\u6f14\u6709\u6548\u6027, \u65e0\u6cd5\u5728\u6b64\u7a7a\u95f4\u8109\u7edc\u4e4b\u5916\u88ab\u7406\u89e3\u3002\u968f\u7740\u653e\u7267\u751f\u8ba1\u7684\u8f6c\u53d8, \u8eab\u4e3a\u9a6c\u585e\u65cf\u4eba\u7684\u610f\u4e49\u8fb9\u754c\u53d7\u5230\u4e86\u63a8\u79fb\u3002\u5728\u6b64\u8109\u7edc\u4e2d, \u6587\u5316\u7684\u89c4\u8bad\u6743\u529b\u4e0e\u6027\u522b\u7684\u610f\u6db5\u53d7\u5230\u4e86\u9b06\u52a8, \u5141\u8bb8\u6027\u522b\u5e38\u89c4\u4e0e\u4e3b\u4f53\u6027\u7684\u518d\u534f\u5546\u4e0e\u6253\u9020\u3002 Durante las pocas d\u00e9cadas anteriores ha ocurrido una notable transformaci\u00f3n en el sistema de vida pastoral masai de Kenia, en las tierras de pastaje abierto, generando nuevas actividades de subsistencia y nuevas exigencias por g\u00e9nero en el trabajo. Este art\u00edculo es una construcci\u00f3n m\u00e1s a las nuevas ecolog\u00edas pol\u00edticas feministas (FPEs) que utilizan desarrollos recientes en teorizaciones posestructuralistas y representacionales de g\u00e9nero. Ampl\u00edo te\u00f3ricamente la nueva FPE con la incorporaci\u00f3n de la teor\u00eda de la acci\u00f3n de Arendt, en especial su formulaci\u00f3n de la pluralidad. La pluralidad nos permite captar la singular din\u00e1mica del papel de la negociaci\u00f3n en el control laboral que exhiben los esposos y esposas masai. Tambi\u00e9n contribuyo al desarrollo de la FPE emp\u00edricamente, por medio del examen de un contexto africano y pastoralista. Concentro mi atenci\u00f3n sobre el papel que juega el espacio en el proceso de discutir la desigualdad por g\u00e9nero. Con base en cuarenta entrevistas a profundidad, complementadas con trabajo de campo etnogr\u00e1fico, la investigaci\u00f3n pone de manifiesto que las mujeres y varones entrevistados est\u00e1n profundamente conscientes de la manera como el espacio transmite significaciones particulares durante las discusiones. En todos los casos, la efectividad de la representaci\u00f3n de cada hombre y mujer no puede entenderse por fuera de este contexto espacial. A medida que los sistemas de subsistencia se transforman, los l\u00edmites de lo que significa ser masai son presionados. En tal contexto, el poder disciplinario de la cultura y los significados de g\u00e9nero se desestabilizan, permitiendo as\u00ed una renegociaci\u00f3n y formulaci\u00f3n de reglas de g\u00e9nero y subjetividades.","creator":["Elizabeth Edna Wangui"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46379446-6aef-313c-b639-9fe72fa64e53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1081","pageStart":"1068","pagination":"pp. 1068-1081","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Livelihood Shifts and Gender Performances: Space and the Negotiation for Labor among East Africa's Pastoralists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537584","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11525,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[29942,30002]],"Locations in B":[[50743,50803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Walker"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24577305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd47cfa9-1516-3cb0-943d-dade0cd95a1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24577305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SELF-MADE MAIDS: BRITISH EMIGRATION TO THE PACIFIC RIM AND SELF-HELP NARRATIVES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24577305","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":13755,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[79562,79752]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article compares Philo\u2019s portrayal of the lecture event among the Therapeutae with other reading and philosophical communities throughout the high Roman Empire. It shows how learning to listen properly plays an important role in constructing and defending one\u2019s masculinity in certain elite communities of that time. Philo constructs a portrayal of the Therapeutae that places them well within the social codes of lecture listening and proper masculine virtues of the time, describing the Therapeutae, especially their ideal masculinity vis-\u00e0-vis their lecture event, with imperial mimicry and resistance. Situating Philo\u2019s portrayal of the Therapeutae\u2019s lecture event within its historical context enhances our understanding Philo within the Roman Empire as well as his portrayal of the ethos of the Therapeutae.","creator":["Matthew David Larsen"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26551189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472212"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50514051"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f7808e4-e57f-323f-8e7d-0da3746ed931"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26551189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudjudapershel"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Judaism in the Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman Period","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Listening with the Body, Seeing through the Ears","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26551189","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12367,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477853,477925]],"Locations in B":[[51608,51683]],"subTitle":"Contextualizing Philo\u2019s Lecture Event in On the Contemplative Life<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Kvidera"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70b73b57-b85c-3d57-9569-20945f055d8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25750719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ethnic Identity and Cultural Catholicism in Pietro di Donato's \"Christ in Concrete\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750719","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Card"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9ee8ed8-3ef3-3193-8f5e-0f11524fb5d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Selected Bibliography of Lesbian Philosophy and Related Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810088","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3559,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474804,474891]],"Locations in B":[[23499,23586]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"On April 1, 1999 one-fifth of Canada's landmass became Nunavut, a new Arctic territory in which eighty-five percent of the population of 28,000 is Inuit. In this paper, I explore how overlapping vocabularies of nationalism and citizenship, so successful in external negotiations with the Canadian state, were brought home and utilized to defend competing positions in the internal debate over a unique proposal that would have ensured gender parity in Nunavut's territorial legislature. The gender parity debate is analyzed to illustrate the way that different political actors mobilized the concepts of nationalism and citizenship to support competing positions and how these two discourses influenced notions of the spaces in which gender difference can be acknowledged legitimately.","creator":["Elana Wilson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40316648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00666939"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49393077"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"883da8d4-5fe3-3bcb-8833-034305959432"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40316648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arctanth"}],"isPartOf":"Arctic Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Nationalism, Citizenship, and Nunavut's Territorial \"House\": A Case Study of the Gender Parity Proposal Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40316648","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["YVONNE MARSHALL"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20707431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00324000"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557485930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235457"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a107a9d-1357-3f80-8bd4-2d95e0acbff8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20707431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolynesiansoc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Polynesian Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Polynesian Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"THE SOCIAL LIVES OF LIVED AND INSCRIBED OBJECTS: A LAPITA PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20707431","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":16445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Fitch Lockhart"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae31d614-222a-37d1-90ae-84adcb619a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Erotic Subversions in Helena Parente Cunha's \"Mulher No Espelho\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741395","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4773,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[48212,48559],[477063,477125]],"Locations in B":[[7634,7987],[26770,26831]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Marie E. Zakrzewska (1829\u20131902) is known among historians of women and medicine for her advocacy of the natural sciences at a time when most women physicians preferred to emphasize their nurturing qualities. This article suggests that Zakrzewska\u2019s views have been poorly understood because scholars have tried to position them along a fault line that divides femininity and sympathy from masculinity and science. It suggests instead that feminist scholarship on the \u201csituatedness of gender\u201d offers a more promising conceptual framework for understanding the diverse strategies women (and men) have utilized in trying to achieve their goals. Zakrzewska, unlike many of her colleagues, did not seek to empower feminine virtues as a way of justifying women\u2019s entry into the medical profession. Instead, she tried to reappropriate science for women and to use it as a weapon against the barriers designed to keep women out of the public sphere. She was fighting her own battle against the gendering of science.","creator":["Arleen\u00a0Marcia Tuchman"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/423510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e2158b2-c603-3ab6-b2fa-3f3e3915ec6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/423510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Situating Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/423510","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":12628,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476056,476119]],"Locations in B":[[14651,14714]],"subTitle":"Marie E. Zakrzewska and the Place of Science in Women\u2019s Medical Education"} +{"abstract":"This article examines immigrants' and long-term residents' intertwining practices of flexible labour and social reproduction in the American South. It analyses neoliberal globalisation's flexible-labour demands through the body and social reproduction's spatial forms and politics through place, arguing for the centrality of these processes to both recent political shifts in the South and broader theorisations of globalisation and social reproduction. As immigrants and long-term southern residents grapple with factors from casualised employment to militarised borders, they work to situate themselves in place as community members. The frictions between these processes create political initiatives into which our analysis offers new insight.","creator":["Barbara Ellen Smith","Jamie Winders"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'We're Here to Stay': Economic Restructuring, Latino Migration and Place-Making in the US South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131208","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrew H. Miller"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Bruising, Laceration, and Lifelong Maiming; Or, How We Encourage Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029875","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":7392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marjolaine Roger"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23749235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcce6d78-76a3-3cb2-9c9b-258e3bdf222d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23749235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Reconfiguring gender in late modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23749235","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":3220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mick Smith"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"458","pagination":"pp. 458-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004488","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":1386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the issue of the subject in feminism and queer theory and the complications of these theoretical perspectives in application to sociological research. While feminism has historically focused on the subject category of \"woman'' queer theory has concentrated on radically unfixing normative subject positions. This paper acknowledges these histories while also recognizing the diversification of approaches that has occurred in feminist and queer thought more recently, particularly in interaction with one another. Considering the benefits of challenging the discrete subject, as well as the value of founded subject positions, this paper suggests ethnography as a fruitful method for social research wishing to adopt a contemporary queer perspective.","creator":["Hannah McCann"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"419455bc-3040-3909-9eff-40314d1fd6c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epistemology of the Subject: Queer Theory's Challenge to Feminist Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474071","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The seemingly intransigent nature of gender inequalities in the organisation of work has led to a somewhat gloomy portrayal of what is possible. Women's increased labour market participation has led to neither parity with men in terms of earnings and status nor a corresponding re-negotiation of labour in the home. Theorising on gender and work, however, tends to assume that workers, parents and households are heterosexual. This paper extends debate by considering the role of sexual identity for shaping the experience of work. It focuses on divisions of labour between lesbian women who are parenting together, and compares their arrangements with parents more generally. It seeks to illuminate what is achievable when actors are informed by broadly similar gender ideologies and negotiate from a position of gender parity in terms of power.","creator":["Gillian A. Dunne"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23747545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b02c1fa-2866-3407-bdc5-e7d6e11fb7e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23747545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"'PIONEERS BEHIND OUR OWN FRONT DOORS': TOWARDS GREATER BALANCE IN THE ORGANISATION OF WORK IN PARTNERSHIPS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23747545","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo presenta los resultados de una investigaci\u00f3n que analiza la sentencia T-622\/14 de la Corte Constitucional Colombiana en torno a la reasignaci\u00f3n de sexo de ni\u00f1os intersexuales. El an\u00e1lisis se centra en el estudio de las voces involucradas y en el examen de las estrategias discursivas utilizadas para construir el concepto de intersexualidad. El estudio \u2014cuyo enfoque metodol\u00f3gico es el an\u00e1lisis cr\u00edtico del discurso y la teor\u00eda queer\u2014 permite evidenciar c\u00f3mo el discurso judicial se apropia de otras instancias discursivas para definir, moldear y construir los cuerpos y las vidas que son dignas de existir en una sociedad heterocentrada. Se concluye que para la Corte Constitucional la autonom\u00eda y la capacidad de decisi\u00f3n personal son aspectos fundamentales en los casos en los que los sujetos intersexuales desean modificar quir\u00fargicamente sus cuerpos; sin embargo, en la sentencia se omiten las relaciones de poder que la matriz heterosexual produce sobre estos sujetos. This article presents the results of a research project that analyzes the T-622\/14 ruling by the Colombian Constitutional Court regarding the sex reassignment of intersex children. The analysis focuses primarily on the study of the voices involved and on the examination of the discourse strategies used to build the concept of intersexuality. Furthermore, the study, with its methodological focus on critical discourse analysis and queer theory, makes evident how the judicial discourse appropriates other discourse instances, such as medical discourse, so as to define, shape, and construct the bodies that matter and the lives that are worth living in a heterocentric society. We conclude that, for the Constitutional Court, autonomy and personal decision capacity are key aspects in cases where intersex individuals want to modify their bodies surgically; however, within the ruling the power relations that the dominant heterosexual matrix produces on these subjects are omitted.","creator":["Javier Enrique Garc\u00eda Le\u00f3n","David Leonardo Garc\u00eda Le\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9ea52fc-af73-3843-9522-2299a5aeb7a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26743670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sujetos intersexuales y matriz heterosexual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743670","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Los cuerpos que le importan a la jurisprudencia colombiana; Una lectura queer<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"This paper explores how the emergence of an aerial subjectivity \u2014 an airmindedness \u2014 was engineered, manufacturing a reactive and militarized subject-citizen who would defend and promote the nation. Questioning the tendency to see airmindedness as an abstract notion promulgated by messages and propaganda, this paper explores how the British population were made airminded by being encouraged to act and move in specific ways and in particular geographical contexts. Examining the bodily performances, physiological and affective techniques of training embarked upon, the paper departs from the symbolic performativity of mobile national subjectivities.","creator":["Peter Adey"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"586b2932-3cf1-3ef9-a8c0-b9f5427140cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Ten thousand lads with shining eyes are dreaming and their dreams are wings': affect, airmindedness and the birth of the aerial subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251390","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":16049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the concept of mestiza consciousness, how technology subsumes physical identity, and how the writer\/artist can respond to that disembodiment on the (World Wide) Web. Laura Molina's http:\/\/www.Nakeddave.com and Bianca Ortiz's http:\/\/www.messtiza.com are the focal point of this essay. Through their work I address the following questions: I) should the mestiza consciousness be an \"ideological football\" (Nakamura, 102) used to explain racial experiences online for everyone; 2) does the Web provide Xican@s a place to write their bodies, minds, and identity while opening up a critical discussion about embodiment; and 3) how does the language in which Xican@s write affect the perception of a racialized and gendered body on the World Wide Web in reference to the off-line world? This essay focuses on the way Molina and Ortiz offer a fuller understanding of the mestiza consciousness online because of the way their bodies and ideologies are often seen as \"outsiders\" of the World Wide Web.","creator":["Dora Ramirez-Dhoore"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15502546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f73108e6-518b-3dab-bac3-c40f6be3d118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatistud"}],"isPartOf":"Chicana\/Latina Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE CYBERBORDERLAND: Surfing the Web for Xicanidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014638","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[81489,81569]],"Locations in B":[[40832,40912]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The gender-based response to HIV in sub-Saharan Africa has tended to reinforce normative stereotypes of women as subordinated, passive and powerless victims, in particular in sexual relations. However, based on qualitative data from Rwanda, this paper argues that such conceptualisations fail to recognise that while women do comply with prevalent social norms, they also challenge these norms and sex becomes a domain in which they can exert power. Female sexuality and sexual gratification \u2013 acknowledged and valued by women as well as men \u2013 play a pivotal role in the Rwandese mode of sexual intercourse. This provides women a central position in sexual relations, which affords them sexual power. Recognising their sexuality as a resource and drawing upon this 'sexual capital', women are active social agents who have the capacity to manipulate and challenge male dominance in a deliberate strategy both to practice safer sex and to access decision-making power and material resources. This suggests that inherent in sexual relations is a potential for the empowerment of women and the transformation of gender relations. En Afrique subsaharienne, la riposte au VIH bas\u00e9e sur le genre tend \u00e0 renforcer les st\u00e9r\u00e9otypes normatifs selon lesquels les femmes sont des victimes soumises, passives et impuissantes, en particulier dans le cadre des relations sexuelles. En se basant sur des donn\u00e9es qualitatives obtenues au Rwanda, cette \u00e9tude soutient n\u00e9anmoins que de telles conceptualisations ne reconnaissent pas que, si elles s'y soumettent, les femmes sont \u00e9galement capables de remettre en question les normes sociales pr\u00e9dominantes, les rapports sexuels devenant alors pour elle un domaine dans lequel exercer un certain pouvoir. La sexualit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine et la gratification sexuelle \u2013 reconnues et valoris\u00e9es aussi bien par les femmes que par les hommes \u2013 jouent un r\u00f4le cl\u00e9 dans le mod\u00e9le Rwandais pour les relations sexuelles. Ainsi les femmes obtiennent-elles une position centrale dans leurs relations sexuelles qui leur procure du pouvoir sexuel. En reconnaissant que leur sexualit\u00e9 est une ressource et en exploitant ce \u00ab capital sexuel \u00bb, les femmes se r\u00e9v\u00e9lent en tant qu'agents sociaux actifs ayant la capacit\u00e9 de manipuler et de d\u00e9fier la domination masculine de mani\u00e9re d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment strat\u00e9gique, \u00e0 la fois pour avoir des rapports sexuels \u00e0 moindre risque et acc\u00e9der au pouvoir de d\u00e9cision et aux ressources mat\u00e9rielles. Tout cela sugg\u00e9re que le potentiel pour une autonomisation des femmes et pour la transformation des relations de genre est inh\u00e9rent aux relations sexuelles. La respuesta al VIH en el \u00c1frica subsahariana basada en el g\u00e9nero ha tendido a reforzar los estereotipos normativos de las mujeres como v\u00edctimas subordinadas, pasivas e indefensas, en particular en lo que se refiere a las relaciones sexuales. Sin embargo, seg\u00fan datos cualitativos de Ruanda, en este estudio se destaca que en tales conceptualizaciones no se reconoce que si bien las mujeres cumplen con las normas sociales predominantes, tambi\u00e9n las desaf\u00edan, y las relaciones sexuales se convierten en un dominio en el que ellas pueden ejercer su poder. La sexualidad femenina y la satisfacci\u00f3n sexual, reconocidas y valoradas por las mujeres al igual que por los hombres, desempe\u00f1an un papel central en las relaciones sexuales de los ruandeses. Esto permite a las mujeres ocupar una posici\u00f3n central en las relaciones sexuales, lo que les proporciona poder sexual. Al reconocer su sexualidad como un recurso y aprovechar este \u201acapital sexual\u2019, las mujeres se convierten en agentes sociales activas con la capacidad de manipular y desafiar el dominio masculino mediante una estrategia deliberada que les permite tener relaciones sexuales seguras y acceder a la toma de decisiones y los recursos materiales. Esto indica que las relaciones sexuales ofrecen un potencial inherente a las mujeres de llevar las riendas y transformar las relaciones de g\u00e9nero.","creator":["Ina Skafte","Margrethe silberschmidt"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5184e624-b1a2-381f-bbca-f75b7f598857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24741252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Female gratification, sexual power and safer sex: female sexuality as an empowering resource among women in Rwanda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741252","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lise Waxer"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e036209a-8a36-3755-b591-38942a14ea76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/852674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Las Cale\u00f1as Son Como Las Flores: The Rise of All-Women Salsa Bands in Cali, Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852674","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":14094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Coombs"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26444123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40c5138c-c6c4-3ed3-82d5-46928079af6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26444123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queer Oedipal Drag in \"Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song\" and \"Baadasssss\"!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26444123","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the sound of Gertrude Stein's \u201cPatriarchal Poetry\u201d as a complex accompaniment to its script. Paying particular attention to the interpretive challenges and possibilities of reading aloud, the paper engages the sound and rhythm of the long prose poem as a supplement that simultaneously reinforces and exceeds the anti-patriarchal logic of its argument. The paper listens to Stein's language for the phonotext which resonates with meaning's excess. In addition, it argues that a reader's vocalization of the piece constitutes a collaborative alternative to conventional vocabularies of interpretation and identity. Confronting the difficulty of Stein's dense, repetitive passages, I suggest that readers have a responsibility to sound them out in order to generate the text's music, and I conclude by arguing that this music is the evidence of possibilities outside the conventional vocabulary of inter-subjectivity.","creator":["Eric S. Neel"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.1.88","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe6c117b-59ea-324a-8393-05db5a66cd4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.33.1.88"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Talking Being Listening: Gertrude Stein's \u201cPatriarchal Poetry\u201d and the Sound of Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.1.88","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9120,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101970,102122]],"Locations in B":[[26745,26889]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Roof"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c1b2376-3bdd-3d21-a9ff-b0fd514b8e85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Is There Sex after Gender? Ungendering\/\"The Unnameable\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315318","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8488,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467060,467127]],"Locations in B":[[49280,49347]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Josefina Salda\u00f1a-Portillo"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Consuming Malcolm X: Prophecy and Performative Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345757","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430742,431480]],"Locations in B":[[55069,55807]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, o conceito de g\u00eanero \u00e9 apresentado e discutido em suas rela\u00e7\u00f5es com a no\u00e7\u00e3o de performatividade, advinda da filosofia da linguagem, na esteira das reflex\u00f5es de Judith Butler. Se o g\u00eanero for considerado como uma ferramenta anal\u00edtica no campo dos estudos pedag\u00f3gicos, \u00e9 poss\u00edvel discutir o conceito dando aten\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0s maneiras pelas quais o g\u00eanero \u00e9 constru\u00eddo pelas pedagogias culturais. Esta discuss\u00e3o pretende problematizar ideias naturalizadas com rela\u00e7\u00e3o ao g\u00eanero e \u00e0 sexualidade, sublinhando a import\u00e2ncia dos processos performativos que constituem g\u00eanero, corpo e heterossexualidade como constructos culturais marcados pela historicidade. In this paper, the concept of gender is presented and discussed in its relations with the idea of performativity, according the reflexions made by Judith Butler. If gender is considered as an analytical tool in the field of pedagogical studies, we can discuss this concept giving attention to the ways in which gender is constructed by cultural pedagogies. This discussion intends to contribute to the discussion of naturalized ideas of gender and sexuality, underlining the importance of the performative process that constitutes gender, body and heterossexuality as cultural constructs marked by historicity.","creator":["Anselmo Peres Al\u00f3s"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b58a0ff1-6154-3870-9494-c8d81e3d7360"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00eanero, epistemologia e performatividade: estrat\u00e9gias pedag\u00f3gicas de subvers\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327947","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vasu Reddy","Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfd79c47-492c-3ed0-b675-92bbddaf4b0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"62","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Troubling Genders, Subverting Identities: Interview with Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066688","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5707,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[20869,21147],[32707,32928]],"Locations in B":[[1597,1875],[2112,2332]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the debate over female impersonation in theatre in early Republican China (1912-1937). The adversaries of nandan (female impersonators) saw the social equity between the sexes and the normalcy of gender, sex, and sexuality as integral parts of the process of building a modern nation and contended that theatre should contribute to this endeavor. Supporters of female impersonation saw female actors as hedonistic, underscored women's infenonty in xiqu performance, and emphasized that female impersonation was essential to the artistry of xiqu's distinct aesthetic.","creator":["Guanda Wu"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e2f4282-f0e2-3570-b90e-8ed145480677"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43187413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Should Nandan Be Abolished? The Debate over Female Impersonation in Early Republican China and Its Underlying Cultural Logic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43187413","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler's Kritik der ethischen Gewalt represents a significant refinement of her position on the relationship between the construction of the subject and her social subjection. While Butler's earlier texts reflect a somewhat restricted notion of agency, her Adorno Lectures formulate a notion of agency that extends beyond mere resistance. This essay traces the development of Butler's account of agency and evaluates it in light of feminist projects of social transformation.","creator":["Kathy Dow Magnus"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"366c33c6-9197-3fd2-bd72-9e3606f938b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Unaccountable Subject: Judith Butler and the Social Conditions of Intersubjective Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810993","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[68098,68167]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The acquisition of an appropriate and theoretically informed knowledge base constitutes an important requirement for the development of competent social work practice with lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) people. This article discusses problems and potentials of addressing LGBT issues in social work and presents the findings of an inventory on LGBT-related content in European social work journal publishing from 2010 to 2015. Although the number of contributions is very limited, the findings confirm an attention to social aspects of LGBT issues and a strong focus on LGBT people's needs in social work debates. More attention is, however, required in relation to theoretical choices capable of challenging heteronormativity on a more radical level.","creator":["Urban Nothdurfter","Andrea Nagy"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bea686d-247f-33ef-8425-3e67db23a4f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26363555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"2244","pageStart":"2227","pagination":"pp. 2227-2244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Few and Far from Radical? LGBT-Related Contributions in European Social Work Journal Publishing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26363555","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the early U.S. republic, indigenous writers have learned to cope with their (mis-)representation as potential threats by confronting readers with the inherent paradoxes of American society, employing imitation and mirroring as narrative strategies. Both rhetorical devices, grounded in acts of performance, reveal the gap between the nation's promises and its sobering reality. In such Native American 'performances,' the specter of the 'American Indian' that has so long haunted the white imagination is used to articulate and reveal the hidden power and omnipresence of Indian figures in the U.S. cultural imaginary. From early indigenous writers like William Apess to representatives of the Native American Renaissance, such as Sherman Alexie, mimicry and specularity are used as forms of resistance, empowering Native American speakers to find their voices in order to confront whites with their privileges and prejudices. If the notion of doing can be connected to the postcolonial concepts of mimicry and specularity, performativity emerges as the capacity to construct identity, to shape the voice of the subaltern, and to transform it into an instrument of power and resistance. Through the rhetorical means of appropriation and reflection, Apess transcends the discourse of colonization and effectively articulates a formerly subjugated voice. Alexie, on the other hand, offers us a mirror image of dominant prejudices, assumptions and fears regarding American Indians, putting the reader into the role of the subaltern.","creator":["Stefan L. Brandt"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26379457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618945"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"970038cc-fb99-3e6c-9a67-2872c6bf241e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26379457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The American Revolution and Its Other: Indigenous Resistance Writing from William Apess to Sherman Alexie","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26379457","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Debates about secularism in post-independence India have often revolved around the visions of two of the country's founding fathers\u2014M. K. Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. A sharp distinction is drawn between them by those who argue that the Gandhian model (or, what in common parlance and state discourses is called communal harmony) stems from Indian cultural and religious values, and lies beyond the realm of the state. The Nehruvian model, however, is a state project through and through. This article transcends this dichotomy to show that the association of Nehru and Gandhi with these models does not necessarily mean that secularism and communal harmony faithfully reflect their ideas and, despite the differences in their aims and methods, both models are united in the discourses and practices of the state as strategies of 'governmentality'. After redefining the core of communal harmony as reciprocity (rather than tolerance), I show how it is performed, how it supplements the state's efforts to keep the peace in a religiously plural society by the force of law, and shores up the state's legitimacy deficit. However, the state's simultaneous involvement in Nehruvian and Gandhian projects is not an innocuous fact because it undermines the state's constitutional and secular obligations to non-discriminatory citizenship in the Indian nation. The argument is that the state's endorsement of dargah-centred Islamic piety as an exemplary site of communal harmony and particular ideas of the Indian nation legitimized by communal harmony 'problematizes' the national belonging of certain kinds of pious Muslims.","creator":["NANDAGOPAL R. MENON"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24495407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c6b3264-e48a-3bbd-a2d4-4eeeb01a0d10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24495407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Communal Harmony as Governmentality: Reciprocity, peace-keeping, state legitimacy, and citizenship in contemporary India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24495407","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":15081,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514353,514430]],"Locations in B":[[95027,95104]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary Hennessy"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ce53e2f-f92a-35f2-9c17-f8cd27449bc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Visibility in Commodity Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354421","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17970,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[64640,64772],[64862,64971],[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[80126,80258],[80327,80434],[109121,109221]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Se presentan los aprendizajes te\u00f3rico-conceptuales obtenidos como resultado de 20 a\u00f1os de trabajar en el campo de los estudios de g\u00e9nero, a partir de la revisi\u00f3n de la evoluci\u00f3n de este t\u00e9rmino y de la experiencia en dos \u00e1mbitos: la investigaci\u00f3n emp\u00edrica y la coordinaci\u00f3n de un centro de estudios de g\u00e9nero, que tuvo implicadas cuestiones te\u00f3ricas, \u00e9ticas y pol\u00edticas. El punto de partida de este ejercicio reflexivo es la revisi\u00f3n de lo que significa o quiere significar el t\u00e9rmino g\u00e9nero, para luego explicar lo que ha llegado a ser en nuestros d\u00edas; de su utilidad, sus abusos, su potencial explicativo, sus l\u00edmites y sus efectos perversos. Se concluye con el planteamiento de algunas cuestiones te\u00f3ricas que abren nuevas l\u00edneas de reflexi\u00f3n sobre el campo de trabajo. The author presents the conceptual theoretical learning obtained through 20 years' work in the field of gender studies on the basis of a review of the evolution of this term and experience in two areas: empirical research and the coordination of a gender studies center, which involved theoretical, ethical and political issues. The starting point of this reflexive exercise is a review of what the term \"gender\" means or is intended to mean, and then to explain what it has become today; its usefulness, abuses, explanatory potential, limits and perverse effects. It concludes by putting forward a number of theoretical questions that open up new lines of reflection in the field of work. Apresentam-se aqui os aprendizados te\u00f3ricos conceituais obtidos como resultado de 20 anos de trabalho no campo dos estudos de g\u00eanero, a partir da an\u00e1lise da evolu\u00e7\u00e3o deste voc\u00e1bulo e da experi\u00eancia em duas \u00e1reas: pesquisa emp\u00edrica e coordena\u00e7\u00e3o de um centro de estudos de g\u00eanero que envolveu quest\u00f5es te\u00f3ricas, \u00e9ticas e pol\u00edticas. O ponto de partida deste exerc\u00edcio \u00e9 a revis\u00e3o do que significa ou quer significar o termo g\u00eanero, para em seguida explicar o que tornou-se hoje; sua utilidade, seus abusos, o seu potencial explicativo, seus limites e seus efeitos perversos. Conclui-se com a abordagem de algumas questo\u0304es te\u00f3ricas que abrem novas linhas de reflex\u00e3o sobre o campo.","creator":["Cristina Palomar Verea"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a08329ea-d27d-3653-b4d2-c19626383cd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44735229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Veinte a\u00f1os de pensar el g\u00e9nero \/ Twenty years of thinking about gender \/ Vinte anos de pensar o g\u00eanero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735229","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":9961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The feminist pedagogical approach introduced here can raise self-awareness about gender inscriptions that people bestow on what they perceive. Gender inscriptions are normative assumptions formed as abstract idealized perceptions of gender (Hayles, 1992). These inscriptions are embedded in society's signs and discourse and appear natural, yet they are often at odds with our lived-experiences. As we expose these \"normative\" stereotypes we recognize that these constructed perceptions are attitudes that prejudice art as noteworthy or insignificant. Stereotypes of females tend to be aligned with qualities not highly valued in this society and do not match prevalent definitions of art and artists. My goal in presenting this study is to encourage its use as a teaching approach that exposes gender stereotypes and the devaluation of women artists. In this interpretive content analysis, I studied viewer rationales used for inscribing an artist's gender when looking at art in order to render visible gendered cultural inscriptions. Responses suggest that gender inscription impacts how viewers interpret a work, and how men and women diverge in describing similar themes.","creator":["Karen Keifer-Boyd"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d35e225-58f6-3c5b-a02c-c11728876045"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1321020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A Pedagogy to Expose and Critique Gendered Cultural Stereotypes Embedded in Art Interpretations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321020","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9212,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149661,150110]],"Locations in B":[[9045,9478]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beatriz Celaya"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f6bafc2-3865-3a27-a5a3-bad25defd72b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Identidades lesbianas en Espa\u00f1a: Construcci\u00f3n y articulaci\u00f3n de una identidad colectiva en tres revistas espa\u00f1olas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641417","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7993,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464601,464780]],"Locations in B":[[30135,30314]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeanne Prinsloo","Relebohile Moletsane"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0caa4ea6-71e3-3c82-87ce-dae4ebdbd324"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (97)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The complexities of sex, gender and childhood in present-day South Africa: Mapping the issues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824407","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eva Hohenberger","Karin Jurschick"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03437736"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606455008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a0a55cc-55b9-3c7b-9ea2-52255ec29fe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24058294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frauenfilm"}],"isPartOf":"Frauen und Film","issueNumber":"54\/55","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Stroemfeld Verlag Buchversand GmbH","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"As women, as people of colour, as lesbians...: Diskussionen und Filme \u00fcber race und gender bei den Gay and Lesbian Film Festivals in New York und San Francisco 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058294","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Carol Jones"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baca90d6-5f6b-305a-8dc5-0e008ac90a6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"FIGURING WOOLF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284313","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":6528,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522892]],"Locations in B":[[39368,39451]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women furniture designers played a key role in Italian post-war design, and yet their presence has been overlooked and their contribution under-acknowledged. This article is part of continuing research into the existence, experience and representation of women designers and architects in post-war Italy. It uses a feminist approach to focus on those women who engaged predominantly with furniture design in Milan from 1945 to the early 1970s. Furniture design was a marginal option for women in post-war Italy; its links with architecture and the wider sociocultural context are used to understand their minority status. Women designers employed strategies to overcome this gender marginality and these influenced both their experiences within the profession and the recognition they have received. From the trend of male-female partnership to those who either embraced or rejected female solidarity, these women designers demonstrate multiple and contradictory relationships with their own sex, the idea of the feminine and feminism. The use of female imagery by male designers in the 1960s and 1970s suggests that both the feminine and feminism were problematic as forms of expression for women furniture designers, pointing to the embryonic status of the women's movement at this time and its marginal impact on the profession.","creator":["Catharine Rossi"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40301449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c15c47d-939e-31fe-9409-0384539dd45f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40301449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Furniture, Feminism and the Feminine: Women Designers in Post-War Italy, 1945 to 1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40301449","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8242,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[67711,67817]],"Locations in B":[[26530,26636]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article engages the relationships between information systems, antiracist protest, and race today. Building on the body of work that describes the ways institutional racism has shifted from an overt system during the (pre-) civil rights era, to a covert, color-blind system today, this article argues, first, that this shift mirrors the cultural change in information processing from analog systems to digital systems and, second, that signs of race articulated as racial protest have similarly changed over this historical period. Using the Black Lives Matter movement as a contemporary frame, the article focuses on three cultural objects that recall and revise civil rights protests to articulate this change: Ernest Withers's 1968 photograph of the Memphis sanitation workers' strike, Glenn Ligon's 1988 untitled painting (\u201cI Am a Man\u201d), and the 2000 condition report of Ligon's painting. Forming a historical network of racial protest, these images perform the changing semiotics of race and racial protest from signs that float as in an analog system to those that flicker as in a digital system. It is as a \u201cdigital,\u201d flickering signifier of protest that blackness is rematerialized as visible matter to operate against color-blind systems today.","creator":["Sarah Whitcomb Laiola"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38129446-5a5b-3e3d-b9dd-9237ba777439"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"From Float to Flicker: Information Processing, Racial Semiotics, and Anti-Racist Protest, from \u201cI am a Man\u201d to \u201cBlack Lives Matter\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0247","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Kopelson"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ef2917f-3b67-32a2-a620-7c5584bc66d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"608","pageStart":"587","pagination":"pp. 587-608","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Back at the Bar of Utility: Theory and\/as Practice in Composition Studies (Reprise)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866858","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7932,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25825,26010]],"Locations in B":[[23659,23842]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Familiar binary categories of architecture such as Western\/regional, high style\/vernacular and modern\/primitive are crucial in guarding its disciplinary boundaries. In the first part of my article, by analyzing a number of paradigmatic architectural texts, I argue that notions of lack and excess are instrumental in maintaining the largely superimposed binary constructions of West\/non-West and architecture\/nonarchitecture. Then, through a particular reading of a non-Western site, I explore ways of rethinking the categories of architecture and non-Western beyond such binary oppositions.","creator":["G\u00fcls\u00fcm Baydar Nalbanto\u011flu"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e498bf7-276a-3fcc-ad41-50eb7da77f40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond Lack and Excess: Other Architectures\/Other Landscapes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425644","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":7158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dbefe77-e4e6-3142-9623-e49a0d89cb50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":135,"pageEnd":"1445","pageStart":"1311","pagination":"pp. 1311-1445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463386","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":73477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24002895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00443492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24002895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurslavphil"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Slavische Philologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Slavic Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24002895","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":2082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"All roles on the Athenian stage were played by men. It has been generally overlooked in this context that the sex\/gender system of ancient Athens was not the same as our own. I provide a new framework for understanding the tradition of transvestite theatre in Athens by looking at three moments when Sophoclean heroes are made feminine. Each of my texts demonstrates an understanding of cross-gendering that is not linked to homosexuality and establishes a broader semantic range for the practice of cross-gendering than does modern drag performance.","creator":["Kirk Ormand"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"145c3e28-935c-3005-b67e-f51c567819eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Oedipus the Queen: Cross-Gendering without Drag","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069177","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":16782,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102961,103167]],"Locations in B":[[13394,13601]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing particularly on the role of the clock in social life, this article explores the conventions we use to \"tell the time.\" I argue that although clock time generally appears to be an all-encompassing tool for social coordination, it is actually failing to coordinate us with some of the most pressing ecological changes currently taking place. Utilizing philosophical approaches to performativity to explore what might be going wrong, I then draw on Derrida's and Haraway's understandings of social change in order to suggest a fairly unconventional, but perhaps more accurate, mode of reckoning time in the context of climate change, resource depletion, and mass extinctions.","creator":["Michelle Bastian"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26169394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17180198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"527387769"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201325"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a490efa-cf2d-3a46-8bfc-809c7e317bba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26169394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"enviphil"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Fatally Confused","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26169394","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Telling the Time in the Midst of Ecological Crises"} +{"abstract":"We argue that Shogan's critique, as well as that of Fox, fails to engage with the central focus of our article, which was to characterize and evaluate different approaches to lesbian ethics and to propose an alternative to the more familiar approaches.","creator":["Kathleen Martindale","Martha J. Saunders"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04c0d209-292b-31c7-aab0-3ab4b1d55513"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Response to Shogan, Fox","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810378","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay begins with a discussion of recent debates about the value of \u201ccritique\u201d and other forms of adversarial reading, arguing that influential proposals for \u201cpost-critical\u201d alternatives have privileged the role of fixed psychic states in the practice of interpretation rather than attending to the blur of emotional life. Turning to Roland Barthes's 1977\u201378 lecture course at the Coll\u00e8ge de France, an understudied precursor to post-critical agitation, I argue that he offers us concepts, \u201cthe neutral\u201d and \u201cthe panorama,\u201d that invite reflection on the affective conditions of reading. Yet here the \u201cpanorama\u201d is no more than an intriguing sketch; Milton enriches our understanding of this concept by developing a detailed description of wayward visual attention. Exploring this dimension of Paradise Regained, I depart from the near-consensus view among scholars that the poem should be understood as a celebration of self-mastery. Ultimately, I show how Milton's account of the wandering eye both anticipates and challenges recent \u201cpost-critical\u201d perspectives by modeling a knowingly unpredictable version of irenic reading.","creator":["David Carroll Simon"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36965d06-0e95-30b8-93eb-c87a586105fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Milton's Panorama: Paradise Regained<\/em> in the Age of Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0533","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10901,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[50713,50817]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Rogin"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cdfe216-7418-3bb2-a211-ca4da87bd3c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Blackface, White Noise: The Jewish Jazz Singer Finds His Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343811","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paula Sandrine Machado","Luis L. Esparza"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"991de541-b6c9-3d11-b409-c36e6a6d84f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"En los l\u00edmites del g\u00e9nero. Apuntes para una discusi\u00f3n acerca del sexo y el g\u00e9nero ante los desaf\u00edos de la diversidad sexual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832463","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen Moll"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f61bf119-f4b9-3767-92f9-5d0679a01ec2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24615365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender, Authenticity, and Diasporic Identities in Adebayo's \"Moj of the Antarctic\" and Iizuka's \"36 Views\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615365","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":12673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tilottama Rajan"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a95e728d-5636-3509-80ba-2f1db43e0e5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/450754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63,"pageEnd":"937","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-937","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450754","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":26600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is an exploration of what poststructuralist theories of the subject and discourse analysis can bring to theories of labor market segmentation, namely an understanding of how individuals come to understand and are limited in their occupational options. I examine three discursive constructions of \"Filipina\" and argue that they work to structure Filipinas' labor market experiences in Vancouver. Filipinas who come to Canada through the Live-in Caregiver Program often come with university educations and professional experiences (e.g., as registered nurses) but then become members of the most occupationally segregated of ethnic groups in Vancouver. As domestic workers in Vancouver, they are defined as \"supplicant, preimmigrants,\" as inferior \"housekeepers,\" and, within the Filipino community, as \"husband stealers.\" I demonstrate that geography has much to bring to discourse analysis; there are geographies written into discourses of \"Filipina\" that work to position Filipinas in Vancouver as inferior. While the examined discourses overlap and reinforce the marginalization of Filipinas, I also explore how discursive analysis can function as ideology critique, by examining the internal inconsistencies and silences within particular discourses and the points of resistance that emerge when different discourses come into contact and tension.","creator":["Geraldine Pratt"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7452354c-6c90-3160-9900-5aca7557b168"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/144575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Registered Nurse to Registered Nanny: Discursive Geographies of Filipina Domestic Workers in Vancouver, B.C.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/144575","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":13007,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[76676,76751]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marya McFadden"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4eb3b97-fcb0-3f90-92f9-ad7ceb4fc17a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"QUEERNESS AT SHREWSBURY: HOMOEROTIC DESIRE IN \"GAUDY NIGHT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286205","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9236,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[118066,118330]],"Locations in B":[[4657,4924]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alys Eve Weinbaum"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cc200a0-7e68-3394-bc9f-5a24bcafb202"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175883","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michiel Leezenberg"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40890273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1370575X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608869614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a6130b7-84f8-3d25-8e59-25713a5184d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40890273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tijdfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Tijdschrift voor Filosofie","issueNumber":"4","language":["dut"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"712","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-712","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Tijdschrift voor Filosofie","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"...RELIGIE: EEN REACTIE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40890273","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":2554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yolanda Mart\u00ednez-San Miguel"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94f87a73-e869-38d5-bb86-a693183738b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"62","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Otra vez Sor Juana: leer la heterogeneidad colonial en un contexto transatl\u00e1ntico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070293","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8574,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[54743,54805]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is possible to use Freudian concepts of sadomasochism as a model for reading contemporary romances such as those in the Harlequin and Silhouette Desire series. Freud's model explains the appeal of so-called \"rape sagas\" for an audience of women who find popular romance pleasurable and self-affirming. Freud helps us revaluate the female reader's identification with the heroine. That identification involves a more dialectical power-relation between the hero and heroine than scholars have generally allowed. Illustrating this reading dynamic, a close analysis of Linda Howard's popular Silhouette romance McKenzie's Mission illuminates what Lynn Chancer has recently called the \"sadomasochism in everyday life.\"","creator":["Stephanie Wardrop"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49907ef8-44f3-32e7-be0a-3bbbfc43837c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Heroine is Being Beaten: Freud, Sadomasochism, and Reading the Romance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946298","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7312,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[136843,137272],[430994,431480]],"Locations in B":[[6228,6657],[7015,7499]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heather Findlay"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1024f66a-3e36-3851-9be0-304783980c29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"579","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-579","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Freud's \"Fetishism\" and the Lesbian Dildo Debates","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178083","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6497,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496948,497067]],"Locations in B":[[38573,38692]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KIENE BRILLENBURG WURTH"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e5d2568-cac8-3f0f-ab79-6bc698390c16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41238503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Oregon","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Posthumanities and Post-Textualities: Reading \"The Raw Shark Texts and Woman's World\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238503","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":10928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dror Wahrman"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adc7b9a6-110b-3588-8dd9-1d8bb1f2f5f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"65","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender in Translation: How the English Wrote Their Juvenal, 1644-1815","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902960","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19852,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73247,73307]],"Locations in B":[[6617,6677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stavroula Kontovourki","Marjorie Siegel"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41484228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"244388221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212320"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5334ad6-04d6-3f13-ad1b-041b425c63cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41484228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Discipline and Play with\/in a Mandated Literacy Curriculum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41484228","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":7449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the Cold War, North Koreans arriving in the South were named the \"North's defected soldiers\" and were openly welcomed as symbols of victory over the communist regime. However, the emergence of the post-Cold War era led to their redefinition as \"defected ethnic North Koreans,\" \"North Korean refugees,\" \"defected North Korean residents\" and recently \"North Korean migrants\" These new names clearly indicate the historical changes in discourse surrounding North Korean migration and their social and cultural positions in South Korea. By tracing these discursive shifts alongside social policy toward North Korean migration, this paper aims to investigate the processes in which \"arrivals\" have been ideologically and socially located in the post-Cold War South, where, nevertheless, ideological legacies remain powerful.","creator":["Sung Kyung Kim"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15512789"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6614b7f-8879-3fc3-afe4-dd039cce283e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43910315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortkorerevi"}],"isPartOf":"North Korean Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"McFarland & Company","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Defector,\" \"Refugee,\" or \"Migrant\"? North Korean Settlers in South Korea's Changing Social Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910315","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Larin McLaughlin"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f544ebb0-d5af-3118-9ecf-b17367e17bb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Androgyny and Transcendence in Contemporary Corporate and Popular Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354596","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e0\u05d5\u05d9","Chaim Noy"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9c4a658-ea25-3ae6-b420-309bbccec2de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"1","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Narratives of Hegemonic Masculinity: Presentations of Body and Space in Israeli Backpackers' Narratives \/ \u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea: \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d5\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05ea\u05e8\u05de\u05d9\u05dc\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442298","volumeNumber":"\u05d4","wordCount":18760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra J. Ochoa"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"802a3aea-9e09-3bc1-8656-be346c56a350"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23022337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Re-membering Lesbian Desire in \"Belle Epoque, Soldados de Salamina\", and \"Las trece rosas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022337","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Schwarz"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27654632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"766","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-766","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Will in Overplus: Recasting Misogyny in Shakespeare's \"Sonnets\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654632","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":13488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The authors of this article argue that cyborg myth serves as a critical metaphor by which to expose, examine, and critique the social, political, and aesthetic impact of information technology on the posthuman body and its identity. The works of performance artists Stelarc, Eduardo Kac, Orlan, and Guillermo G\u00f3mez-Pe\u00f1a and Roberto Sifuentes are characterized as \"cyborg pedagogies\" that critique the inscriptions of digital culture on their bodies and identities. Drawing upon the work of these performance artists, and the \"poor curriculum\" of Pinar and Grumet, De Certeau's subversive \"tactics,\" and Ross's \"hacking\" metaphors, the authors conceptualize five attributes of cyborg pedagogy for art education in the digital age.","creator":["Charles R. Garoian","Yvonne M. Gaudelius"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b0d3fe9-1322-340a-a8d6-7045c61b84d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1321078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cyborg Pedagogy: Performing Resistance in the Digital Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321078","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terry Lovell","Esther Blay"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11372354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b87d2ff-0974-3b01-b1a6-c8adcd14e7a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25596149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"guaraguao"}],"isPartOf":"Guaraguao","issueNumber":"10","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Asociacion Centro de Estudios y Cooperacion Para America Latina","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Los estudios culturales feministas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596149","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper aims to offer a critical analysis of the identity politics of recent Korean radical feminism that is based on the category \u201cbiological woman.\u201d For these purposes, it will provide a critical analysis of the Korean urban imaginary and show why Korean radical feminists had to choose such transgender-exclusive identity politics based on biological sex in the digital era. In addition to neoliberal competition, fear of disintegration caused by image exploitation led them to transgender exclusive radical feminism. They desire to become subjects in the biological dichotomy by excluding abjects from their spaces. Finally, this paper argues that Korean feminists must turn to a politics of recognition in accordance with the status model. This deconstructive approach to the politics of recognition gives us the possibility of guaranteeing the equal parity of women without the trap of exclusion or reification.","creator":["Hyun-Jae Lee"],"datePublished":"2020-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26979894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26714574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1111768468"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23c24ca4-977a-3093-9565-63ceaf067ceb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26979894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasiasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Asian Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Institute for Social Development and Policy Research (ISDPR)","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Study of Identity Politics Based on the Category \u2018Biological Woman\u2019 in the Digital Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26979894","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9168,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[397672,397946]],"Locations in B":[[21966,22240]],"subTitle":"How Young Korean Women Became Transgender Exclusive Radical Feminists"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johannes Birringer"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f7d1a4f-0189-3d0a-b354-29bae6564256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3245709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"performingartsj"}],"isPartOf":"Performing Arts Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Imprints and Re-Visions: Carolee Schneemann's Visual Archeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245709","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I explore the gendered nature of religious revitalization in the Tibetan Buddhist monastery town of Labrang in southwest Gansu Province, China. Post-Mao reforms in China allowed Tibetans to resume religious practices and rebuild Buddhist institutions proscribed during the Cultural Revolution, and by the early 1990s Tibetans in Labrang were rapidly revitalizing the famous monastery that had once ruled this region along the Sino-Tibetan frontier. I draw on the work of recent theorists of space, place, and identity to analyze the complex identity politics surrounding this project by conceptualizing spatial, ethnic, and national boundaries as emergent intersections of gendered practices among differently positioned actors. I focus on the Tibetan practice of circumambulation as the key activity that reproduced the sacred centricity and power of the monastery. I demonstrate that in contemporary Labrang, women, as principal circumambulators and household laborers, were doubly burdened with shoring up the core of the Tibetan community in the midst of intense assimilation pressures.","creator":["Charlene E. Makley"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc4891f7-7906-33c3-bd69-07e5157ab36d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Gendered Boundaries in Motion: Space and Identity on the Sino-Tibetan Frontier","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805251","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":17042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Wilson Becerril"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58906839-d266-399b-88c9-3a98008ed747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018invisibilise\u2019 this","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776524","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"ocular bias and ableist metaphors in anti-oppressive discourse"} +{"abstract":"Dans une perspective contrastive, l'article pr\u00e9sente d'abord le syst\u00e8me de d\u00e9nomination humaine en fran\u00e7ais, caract\u00e9ris\u00e9 par l'alternance massive masculin\/f\u00e9minin. En comparaison, on expose ensuite le syst\u00e8me anglosaxon en principe non genr\u00e9 de d\u00e9nomination professionnelle avec ses avantages et ses \u00e9ventuels inconv\u00e9nients quant \u00e0 la visibilit\u00e9 des femmes en discours g\u00e9n\u00e9ralisant. On poursuit la comparaison avec le syst\u00e8me polonais de suffixation diminutive du f\u00e9minin, qui d\u00e9favorise la d\u00e9nomination professionnelle individuelle de la femme, pour terminer sur plusieurs langues romanes dont le roumain. La derni\u00e8re partie propose une r\u00e9flexion sur le rapport entre ces langues et les grands syst\u00e8mes de cat\u00e9gorisation binaire des concepts tels qu'ils ont \u00e9t\u00e9 observ\u00e9s en ethnologie, anthropologie et sociologie, pour conclure sur la n\u00e9cessaire \u00e9volution des mentalit\u00e9s quant \u00e0 la place sociale des femmes \u00e0 travers la puissance symbolique du langage, \u00e9volution objectivement r\u00e9alisable avec le syst\u00e8me de d\u00e9nomination humaine fran\u00e7ais.","creator":["Edwige Khaznadar"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25702188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15523152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"656426483"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200860"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b219a450-de8e-37dd-b068-8cd38b2b51c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25702188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvetudfran"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles \u00c9tudes Francophones","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Apport de la francophonie dans la d\u00e9nomination de la femme et de l'homme","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25702188","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mollie V. Blackburn"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fa62054-8ba0-3fe0-9e89-445039f066cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4151787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Essay Book Review: Boys and Literacies: What Difference Does Gender Make?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151787","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article provides an empirical example and an analytic argument for how queer theory can be useful for sociological inquiries of gender relations. Using data collected through participant observation of a rock music subculture, the author addresses the importance of conceptualizing sexuality and gender as analytically distinct. There are five major findings drawn from this analysis. First, members of this sub-culture queered sexuality despite identifying as heterosexual. Second, there is a dissonance between how members talked about sexuality and how they enacted sexuality. Third, queering sexuality opened space for subverting hegemonic gender relations. Fourth, some forms of gender resistance relied on and reinscribed hegemonic sexual relations. Fifth, only by analyzing sexuality at multiple levels of analysis was this play of resistance and hegemony revealed. Both empirical and theoretical implications are suggested.","creator":["Mimi Schippers"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"480dbdec-3190-3a04-b5b9-ad46256c1234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"764","pageStart":"747","pagination":"pp. 747-764","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Social Organization of Sexuality and Gender in Alternative Hard Rock: An Analysis of Intersectionality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190372","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Offering online programs that target men and women separately, Weight Watchers communicates, represents, and manipulates gender in its program marketing and materials. In this article, I demonstrate how Weight Watchers engages aspects of hegemonic masculinity as they endeavor to construct \u201cmasculine\u201d versus \u201cfeminine\u201d dieting through contrasting depictions of food, the body, and technology use. By analyzing the difference in the weight loss experiences that Weight Watchers Online promises, I argue that limited types of self are made available to women and men. Weight Watchers portrays female dieters on a difficult but actualizing and empowering journey toward a new and better self. Conversely, Weight Watchers depicts male clients losing weight easily, even effortlessly, but retaining a stable and immutable masculine selfhood throughout the process. This constraint upon self-making exposes how patriarchy subordinates even the men assumed to profit the most from its power, as the male weight loss promise withholds transformative potentials.","creator":["Emily Contois"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15293262"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955183"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214640"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a4db684-cff5-3b0e-8db6-9d8502fd6ad6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26362417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gastronomica"}],"isPartOf":"Gastronomica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Food Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cLose Like a Man\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362417","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Gender and the Constraints of Self-Making in Weight Watchers Online"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Novotny"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66ea8eea-933b-38b0-b8c2-39537cfafd6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"565","pagination":"pp. 565-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175458","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":1814,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499374,499498]],"Locations in B":[[2142,2266]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumen En idioma espa\u00f1ol, las ideas y conceptualizaciones de Judith Butler han circulado por m\u00e1s de dos d\u00e9cadas. Su recepci\u00f3n no fue uniforme ya que, en cada pa\u00eds de habla hispana, estuvo condicionada por el inter\u00e9s y las resistencias que generaron sus arriesgadas tesis en los feminismos y en los Estudios de G\u00e9nero, por los anacronismos propios de la traducci\u00f3n y por las din\u00e1micas propias de la academia y de la industria editorial. En Argentina, las primeras traducciones de textos de Butler comienzan a publicarse y circular en la d\u00e9cada del noventa en revistas que no estaban totalmente dedicadas a la teor\u00eda o al quehacer acad\u00e9mico, pero tampoco al activismo desprovisto de conceptos y modos de pensar acad\u00e9micos. Este art\u00edculo explora las distintas v\u00edas de recepci\u00f3n, lectura y utilizaci\u00f3n de los conceptos de la teor\u00eda de la performatividad del g\u00e9nero en Argentina, as\u00ed como tambi\u00e9n las pol\u00e9micas que se generaron en torno a ella, focalizando sobre las tensiones y los cruces entre el activismo y la academia, dos campos que propongo pensar como espacios de disputas con fronteras mucho m\u00e1s fr\u00e1giles y porosas de lo que muchas veces se supone.","creator":["Nayla Luz Vacarezza"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed305a23-1397-3f36-93cd-2b18f5fddbb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90013350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1276","pageStart":"1257","pagination":"pp. 1257-1276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Judith Butler en Argentina. Recepci\u00f3n y pol\u00e9micas en torno a la teor\u00eda de la performatividad del g\u00e9nero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013350","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"931","pageStart":"879","pagination":"pp. 879-931","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179175","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":21609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The vectors by which the question of the animal has confronted the discipline of anthropology are both diverse\u2014from paleoarchaeological fascination with the transition from ape to man to sociocultural accounts of human-animal conflict\u2014and fraught insofar as they tend to loop back into one another. For instance, while posthumanism is intellectually novel, to take its line of critique seriously is to recognize that the science of man has depended on the philosophical animal from the start. A still tighter loop could be drawn around L\u00e9vi-Strausss foundational interest in animal symbolism and the Amazonian ontologies undergirding Latours amodern philosophy. Three related interdependencies pull hard on these loops: 1) philosophy and anthropology; 2) the human and the animal; 3) modernity and indigeneity. This last interdependency is notably undertheorized in the present efflorescence of human-animal scholarship. This article attends to some of the consequences of modernity\/indigeneity s clandestine operations in the literature.","creator":["Danielle DiNovelli-Lang"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21506779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7acdb6a5-e4c4-3aa3-a25f-e3b2de390838"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43297041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Environment & Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Science & Mathematics","Sociology","Environmental Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Return of the Animal: Posthumanism, Indigeneity, and Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297041","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sociological contributions to debates surrounding sustainable consumption have presented strong critiques of methodological individualism and technological determinism. Drawing from a range of sociological insights from the fields of consumption, everyday life and science and technology studies, these critiques emphasize the recursivity between (a) everyday performances and object use, and (b) how those performances are socially ordered. Empirical studies have, however, been criticized as being descriptive of micro-level phenomena to the exclusion of explanations of processes of reproduction or change. Developing a methodological approach that examines sequences of activities this article explores different forms of coordination (activity, inter-personal and material) that condition the temporal and material flows of laundry practices. Doing so produces an analysis that de-centres technologies and individual performances, allowing for the identification of mechanisms that order the practice of laundry at the personal, household and societal levels. These are: social relations; cultural conventions; domestic materiality; and institutionalized temporal rhythms. In conclusion, we suggest that addressing such mechanisms offers fruitful avenues for fostering more sustainable consumption, compared to dominant approaches that are founded within \u2018deficit models\u2019 of action.","creator":["Josephine Mylan","Dale Southerton"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26558758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"150be7ca-f038-37a2-bb2c-3111ccc838dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26558758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"1151","pageStart":"1134","pagination":"pp. 1134-1151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Social Ordering of an Everyday Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26558758","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":8653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Case of Laundry"} +{"abstract":"This article offers interpretations of play, in a school playground, where adult regulation and surveillance framed its enactment. Children, well aware of being watched, negotiated this through various forms of play, circumscribed by, but also playing with, adult supervision. The children were also subject to the rules governing particular age cohorts and both age and gender figured significantly in the patterns of play observed. The article argues further that, with a strong institutional emphasis on the divisions of the school day and of playtime itself, children also learnt the habits of shifting - from participation to non-participation and between modes of self-conduct. They thus became accustomed to the demands of frequent emotional and behavioural transitions and to the rhythms of the school's organisation of time.","creator":["Chris Richards"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e62c49f-5d9d-3fc8-af5a-cace79d1b0e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41485443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing under surveillance: gender, performance and the conduct of the self in a primary school playground","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485443","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8358,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[430988,431232]],"Locations in B":[[9198,9388],[9421,9665]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Paul Eburne"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5244941e-9506-3fe0-ab3a-610db2360da8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TRAFFICKING IN THE VOID: BURROUGHS, KEROUAC, AND THE CONSUMPTION OF OTHERNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285464","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Does sexuality have a past? A growing body of archaeological research on sexuality demonstrates that the sexual politics of the past were as richly varied and complex as those of the present. Furthermore, investigations of past sexualities have much to say about conventional archaeological topics such as state formation, subsistence and settlement systems, and the emergence and elaboration of symbolic systems, and they have made methodological and theoretical contributions to the archaeology of social identities and visual representations. To date, most research has clustered into five groupings: reproduction management, sexual representations, sexual identities, prostitution, and the sexual politics of institutions. The most intriguing new development is the growing application of queer theory as an archaeological methodology for investigating nonsexual as well as sexual matters. In particular, queer theory provides a methodological bridge between archaeological research on sexuality and research on other aspects of social identity.","creator":["Barbara L. Voss"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b74da1-8c12-3cce-b27f-6875fa0fc276"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20622628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Sociology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Sexuality Studies in Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622628","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan Judge"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2692323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7736b56d-f694-38dd-afc7-12bcbd26c712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2692323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"803","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-803","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Talent, Virtue, and the Nation: Chinese Nationalisms and Female Subjectivities in the Early Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2692323","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":22285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sylvia Kelso"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43308315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","issueNumber":"4 (32)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"472","pagination":"pp. 472-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Feminist And The Vampire: Constructing Postmodern Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308315","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6110,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[142561,142700]],"Locations in B":[[10982,11121]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"'Gender', understood as the social construction of sex, is a key concept for feminists working at the interface of theory and policy. This article examines challenges to the concept which emerged from different groups at the UN Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, September 1995, an important arena for struggles over feminist public policies. The first half of the article explores contradictory uses of the concept in the field of gender and development. Viewpoints from some southern activist women at the NGO Forum of the Beijing Conference are presented. Some of them argued that the way 'gender' has been deployed in development institutions has led to a depoliticization of the term, where feminist policy ambitions are sacrificed to the imperative of ease of institutionalization. 'Gender' becomes a synonym for 'women', rather than a form of shorthand for gender difference and conflict and the project of transformation in gender relations. 'Gender sensitivity' can be interpreted by non-feminists as encouragement to use gender-disaggregated statistics for development planning, but without consideration of relational aspects of gender, of power and ideology, and of how patterns of subordination are reproduced. A completely different attack on 'gender' came from right-wing groups and was battled out over the text of the Platform for Action agreed at the official conference. Six months prior to the conference, conservative groups had tried to bracket for possible removal the term 'gender' in this document, out of opposition to the notion of socially constructed, and hence mutable, gender identity. Conservative views on gender as the 'deconstruction of woman' are discussed here. The article points out certain contradictions and inconsistencies in feminist thinking on gender which are raised by the conservative backlash attack on feminism and the term 'gender'.","creator":["Sally Baden","Anne Marie Goetz"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c103a85-5cba-3be2-9f8a-4b5e1969a133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"56","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who Needs [Sex] When You Can Have [Gender]? Conflicting Discourses on Gender at Beijing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395814","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9535,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[78308,78365]],"Locations in B":[[37581,37638]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Angus Fletcher"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.2.0114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f60796a9-f5e0-3e45-a482-03e6f2e360ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.2.0114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Willa Cather and the Upside-Down Politics of Feminist Darwinism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.2.0114","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I explore the question of what constitutes a participant's orientation to gender within conversation analysis (CA), suggesting that CA's notion of participant orientation may be too narrow and restrictive to adequately capture the significance of gender as an organizing principle of institutions. The data that I analyze are drawn from legal settings, specifically a Canadian criminal trial dealing with sexual assault. Significant to an investigation of talk-in-interaction in such contexts is the fact that participants' orientations to the talk are not only discernible in the talk's local sequential properties but also in the (nonlocal) assessments and judgments of the nonspeaking recipients, the jury or judge. Indeed, a turn-by-turn analysis of these proceedings shows that conversational participants were not explicitly orienting to gender, but rather were orienting to the type of trial they were involved in (i.e., a sexual assault trial) and to the positioning of the accused as a possible agent of sexual acts of aggression. Nonetheless, orientations to or understandings of gender were made explicit in the judge's decision and thus seemed extremely significant to the outcome of the court's proceedings.","creator":["SUSAN EHRLICH"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"114c6694-8fac-3ef7-8096-aeed9081bb9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"747","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-747","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Legal institutions, nonspeaking recipiency and participants' orientations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888534","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay is a first attempt at thinking through the ways in which Native American Coyote stories can illuminate options for lesbian and feminist politics. I follow the metaphors of trickery and shape-shifting common to the stories and recommend the laughter they evoke as we engage in feminist politics and philosophy.","creator":["Shane Phelan"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e554fd6a-e410-3ab5-8562-c484aebac126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Coyote Politics: Trickster Tales and Feminist Futures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810325","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9748,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[57839,57910]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David F. Richter"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"584d1d3d-589a-39b8-995a-2c25feb16d05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24894398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genre Trouble: Metafictive Writing, Imagination, and Madness in Rosa Montero's \"La loca de la casa\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894398","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este ensayo investiga los conceptos interrelacionados del vampiro y prostituto, y su aplicaci\u00f3n cambiante al protagonista urbano en El vampiro de la colonia Roma. Aunque se considera que la novela de Zapata forma parte del canon literario por ser un pilar principal de la literatura mexicana gay, este estudio propone que \"queer\" y \"queerness\" son epistemes m\u00e1s adecuadas para \"leer\" a su protagonista, Adonis Garc\u00eda. \"Queer\", m\u00e1s que gay, sugiere m\u00faltiples redes de resistencia que abarcan esferas econ\u00f3micas, pol\u00edticas y espaciales, y se relaciona, asimismo, con la ubicaci\u00f3n figurativa vulnerable y, al mismo tiempo, privilegiada de Adonis como \"historiografeador\" y como sujeto nebuloso que consume y\/o produce bajo el capitalismo. El protagonista construye su identidad de vampiro y de prostituto de forma performativa y discursiva y, en este proceso, incorpora algunos de los estereotipos asociados a estas figuras, pero, ante todo, re-inventa sus significados y con ello rechaza asimilarse a muchas normas de la sociedad dominante.","creator":["ARIEL WIND"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bb1f4ee-6388-3bdd-83b0-ef69e889c6c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24388661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"604","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-604","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mexico City and its Monsters: Queer Identity and Cultural Capitalism in Luis Zapata's \"El vampiro de la colonia Roma\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388661","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper will examine the violence of heteronormativity: the violence that constitutes and regulates bodies according to normative notions of sex, gender, and sexuality. This violence, I will argue, requires more than a focus on gendered or sexualized physical harms of the kinds normally examined when studying violence against sexual minorities or women. Rather, it necessitates focusing on the multiple modalities through which heteronormativity performs its violence on, through, and against bodies and persons, including through the production of certain bodies and persons as inciting violence in their very being. To establish my argument, I explore the killing in 2002 of trans woman Gwen Araujo and the violence of the legal strategy (the trans panic defense) used in the legal trials that followed her killing. Both forms of violence, I suggest, operate in a similar way, albeit through different mechanisms, to maintain and extend the system of binary morphology that itself entails the perpetual violent materialization of sexed bodies.","creator":["MOYA LLOYD"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad083231-8c14-3c03-b666-ba52c6696188"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"834","pageStart":"818","pagination":"pp. 818-834","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Heteronormativity and\/as Violence: The \"Sexing\" of Gwen Araujo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542088","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8384,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[306776,306861]],"Locations in B":[[23975,24060]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As an inherent part of the human condition, disability is a universal experience. Yet, the manner in which disability is embodied or \"lived-in\" is not universal and is often antithetical to its construction within social policy. Drawing on a material-discursive perspective of disabled embodiment that integrates interpretive sociology with queer theory, I introduce the notion of \"episodic\" or fluctuating disabilities to conceptually diversify how we think about the nature and interpretive construction of disability. Employing examples from the Ontario Disability Support Program and the Canada Pension Plan Disability Program, I demonstrate how these income support programs define \"disability\" in ways that exclude the complex embodiment of persons with episodic disabilities. I conclude by discussing the significance of what I term an \"embodied politics\" that recognizes the reciprocity between the lived experience of disability and its institutional interpretation for social policy. Implications for social work practice are considered. L'invalidit\u00e9, indissociable de la condition humaine, fait partie inh\u00e9rente de l'exp\u00e9rience universelle. Pourtant, la mani\u00e8re dont l'invalidit\u00e9 s'exprime ou \u00ab est v\u00e9cu \u00bb n'est pas universelle et, souvent, est antith\u00e9tique \u00e0 sa contexture \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur d'une politique sociale. S'appuyant sur la perspective mat\u00e9rielle-discursive d'invalidit\u00e9 tangible qui int\u00e8gre la sociologie interpr\u00e9tante \u00e0 la \u00ab Queer Theory \u00bb, je pr\u00e9sente la notion d'invalidit\u00e9 \u00e9pisodique ou fluctuante afin de conceptuellement diversifier notre fa\u00e7on de concevoir la nature et la construction interpr\u00e9tative de l'invalidit\u00e9. Faisant appel \u00e0 des exemples tir\u00e9s du Programme ontarien de soutien aux personnes handicap\u00e9es et du Programme de prestations d'invalidit\u00e9 du R\u00e9gime de pensions du Canada, je montre comment ces programmes de soutien \u00e9conomique d\u00e9finissent \u00ab invalidit\u00e9 \u00bb de fa\u00e7on \u00e0 exclure l'int\u00e9gration complexe de personnes souffrant d'invalidit\u00e9 \u00e9pisodique. Je termine en discutant de l'importance de ce que j'appelle \u00ab une politique d'action personnelle \u00bb qui reconna\u00eet la r\u00e9ciprocit\u00e9 entre l'exp\u00e9rience v\u00e9cue de l'invalidit\u00e9 et de son interpr\u00e9tation institutionnelle au sein d'une politique sociale. Nous consid\u00e9rons aussi son importance dans la pratique du travail social.","creator":["Andrea Vick"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0820909X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31fd9849-2089-33d2-a4bf-911b05ca3aec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canasociworkrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Social Work Review \/ Revue canadienne de service social","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Canadian Association for Social Work Education (CASWE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THEORIZING EPISODIC DISABILITIES: The Case for an Embodied Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486268","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Curlin"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e98e233-8a72-33a2-ba21-7c8181c6c2ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25485251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485251","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":1280,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43711,43877]],"Locations in B":[[6086,6252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"My essay is framed by Hypatia's first special issue on Motherhood and Sexuality at one end, and by the most recent special issue (as of this writing) on the work of Iris Young, whose work on pregnant embodiment has become canonical, at the other. The questions driving this essay are: When we look back over the last twenty-five years, what has changed in our conceptions of pregnancy and maternity, both in feminist theory and in popular culture? What aspects of feminist debates from the 1970s and 1980s are still relevant today? And, how might what appear to be radical shifts in popular perceptions of pregnancy actually continue traditional values that objectify and \"abjectify\" the maternal body? Here, I will focus on three central elements of the revaluation of pregnancy and maternity as they show up in feminist philosophy and in popuhr culture: I. The relationship between pregnancy and sexuality, both in terms of pregnant sexuality and in terms of the pregnant body as sexual object; 2. The \"choice\" to become a mother as a \"feminist choice\"; 3. The temporality of pregnancy and birth as marking something like \"women's time.\"","creator":["KELLY OLIVER"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a19e563-f7b4-33a9-9843-fb79a772e7c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40928655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"777","pageStart":"760","pagination":"pp. 760-777","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Motherhood, Sexuality, and Pregnant Embodiment: Twenty-Five Years of Gestation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928655","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8489,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[302042,302164],[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[5871,5993],[49534,49586]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While digitally mediated environments have altered how human communication takes place, they do not necessarily alter the human condition of alienation. Applying key principles from Goffman's Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity (1963), the popular blog PostSecret offers ways in which anonymous users attempt to remedy the alienations linked with the stigmatic act of secret keeping. Through imaginative, associative, and vicarious conversations, the blog purports to offer the unconditional acceptance necessary to remedy the alienations. Because of the complications of anonymity in the nonreal reality of the internet, the blog can offer only echoes of acceptance. Although some of the stigma literature argues that self-acceptance or assertions of power are the strongest solutions to stigma's negative effects, this article extends the stigma construct with the suggestion that vulnerability might be a viable option to remedy the attendant alienations correlated with stigma.","creator":["Naaman Wood","Susan Ward"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.4.578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cccbf63-8fd2-3970-a884-e821cfd544f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2010.33.4.578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"578","pagination":"pp. 578-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Stigma, Secrets, and the Human Condition: Seeking to Remedy Alienation in PostSecret's Digitally Mediated Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.4.578","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract It is possible to see that still today, since computing is considered a demanding and difficult science to understand, it is mostly dominated by men. This reflects the culture that considers women unfit to handle complex tasks. Also, it is possible to observe that the entry of social minorities in the area programs, such as women, is declining. This article describes a survey conducted to explore gender issues in an undergraduate course in Computer Science. The survey mapped out the path of female students to investigate their motivations, difficulties, facilities and expectations regarding the program. Based on interviews, a qualitative analysis indicated the need for actions to discuss gender issues and encourage women\u2019s participation in Computer Sciences.","creator":["Mar\u00edlia Abrah\u00e3o Amaral","Maria Claudia Figueiredo Pereira Emer","Silvia Am\u00e9lia Bim","Mariangela Gomes Setti","Marcelo Mikosz Gon\u00e7alves"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"619b5b2a-3fb4-3f49-ad1c-753f556805d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"857","pagination":"pp. 857-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Investigating Gender Issues in an Undergraduate Computing Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007990","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay provides a nonessentializing account of how gender affects the social construction of time in communicative interactions. Niklas Luhmann's systems theory serves as the theoretical framework for explaining how time is constructed through communication codes. Using Luhmann's model, the essay argues that gender is a communication code that operates to align social participants' perspectives towards a socially constructed \u201cpresent.\u201d However, the essay notes that participants' experience of that present will be contingent upon the specific cultural and historical criteria that constitute their use of the gender code. The criteria specific to Anglo-American culture are used to illustrate how this instanciation of the gender code might affect temporal experience.","creator":["Majia Holmer Nadesan"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1997.20.1.21","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3957a20d-5187-32eb-9ec8-4bbf1f7ee538"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1997.20.1.21"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Gender and Temporality in Interpersonal Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1997.20.1.21","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11568,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[72705,72783]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sally O'Driscoll"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15fe0882-7c55-3226-9b2d-51f4570ad3b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Outlaw Readings: Beyond Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175040","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10334,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794],[493864,494005],[510503,510597]],"Locations in B":[[57422,57475],[61898,62045],[62056,62150]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20743814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f17358f-5e68-358a-bfbd-431fb804e42e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20743814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Works Cited \/ Ouvrages cit\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20743814","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey A. Brown"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4537dbec-565f-31e1-9ee1-9fc3b8ae95fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"They can imagine anything they want . . .\": Identification, Desire, and the Celebrity Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389460","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the role of women's marches among the Iraqw in rural Tanzania. It focuses on the role of mothers in gender identity and how this role gives women the moral authority to act collectively. It shows how gender roles have been redefined in the colonial and postcolonial era. In particular, it focuses on the effects of the imposition of a divided public\/private sphere and the subsequent devaluation of the social roles of women, and specifically mothers. Finally, it examines how Iraqw mothers, through the cultural institution of the protest march, are seeking to reclaim a role in the public sphere.","creator":["Katherine A. Snyder"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a82a2b4c-c552-3b5b-b808-2e552535bf85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4187757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Mothers on the March: Iraqw Women Negotiating the Public Sphere in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187757","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9953,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443525]],"Locations in B":[[43123,43245]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article\u00b9 uses the notion of 'gaze' as a tool in attempting to probe how the Muslim female is discursively constructed through the act of a particular gaze on her veiled body. The hijab (headscarf) and purdah (face covering) as forms of veiling are not publicly contested symbols in South Africa. However, local Muslim women who practice veiling are seen by other non-veiling females as embodying a practice that is a visible signifier of a particular religious 'worldview on body'. This signification lends itself to be 'seen' within particular gazes which are in turn embedded in their own sets of observational exigencies and gaze politics. The paper reveals that in the South African context, the gaze of the 'non wearer' sees veiling as performatively oppressing women and rendering them unapproachable. The women who practise veiling, however, possess alternative understandings, as the interviews reveal. The paper uses ethnographic interviews and conversations, and illustrates through the narratives of both local Muslim women who practice veiling, as well as the non-Muslim female 'gazers', that the polyvalent material object of the veil is rendered visible through a particular way of gazing. Finally the paper suggests a possible alternative and de-contextualised way of a potentially transformative gaze that may allow for a degree of mutual 'seeing', and greater complicit rapprochement of seer and seen.","creator":["Maheshvari Naidu"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bc3645a-971f-326b-92bf-bd9df8c0c037"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeing (through) the Gaze: Marking Religious and Cultural Differences onto Muslim Female Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764317","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d6d4b6f-5a4d-3ec4-b85b-a2fb26caf01f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"references","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978919","volumeNumber":"272","wordCount":13889,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[57274,57345]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Ann Smart"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3128803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f18c16-edd4-3fe3-8e61-b317bdb39f0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3128803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"549","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-549","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3128803","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":4805,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[24319,24370]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen W. Tice"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10827161"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608201706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ddafb8f-6630-3117-9e44-c203c0d36b01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41446384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Appalachian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Appalachian Studies Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"School-Work and Mother-Work: The Interplay of Maternalism and Cultural Politics in the Educational Narratives of Kentucky Settlement Workers, 1910-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446384","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Dolan"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41309730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1520281X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2c7104c-7e1c-3950-8311-907c5a5178ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41309730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pajjperfart"}],"isPartOf":"PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"UNASSUMING GENDER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41309730","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":3399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["G\u00fcls\u00fcm Baydar","Nalbanto\u1e21lu"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f2f2777-53de-3681-89cb-c0bee5861cad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 6-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Toward Postcolonial Openings: Rereading Sir Banister Fletcher's \"History of Architecture\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171235","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Supplementing the insights of Georgio Agamben with feminist research contributions, this article develops a biopolitical reading of the debate surrounding the \"feminization\" of the U.S. military. We argue that an examination of the role gender plays in myths of sacrifice reveals that the military is already fully \"feminized.\" Critical engagement with the scripting of Jessica Lynch re-introduces the political to the question of military sacrifice by rendering its impossibility conspicuous.","creator":["V\u00e9ronique Pin-Fat","Maria Stern"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5fc4829-99f4-3f5b-adf5-7a07571d7f7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Scripting of Private Jessica Lynch: Biopolitics, Gender, and the \"Feminization\" of the U.S. Military","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645147","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":13114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The recent proliferation of film adaptations from novels written by women reflects the concern of female filmmakers for capturing women's voices on film. A focus on Potter's claims of fidelity to Woolf's authorial voice in Orlando dismantles the interpretive predispositions Potter evidences in her depiction of key scenes and concepts in the novel. In particular, the post-feminist utopian vision Potter puts forth at the film's end relies heavily on her conviction that she has captured the novel's authorial \u201cessence,\u201d especially as she identifies it in Woolf's depiction of androgyny. But Potter's filmic conclusions seem oddly discordant with the critique of patriarchal power and sites of lesbian resistance Woolf constructs in her novel. This examination of Potter's film does not claim an inherent superiority in the literary source, as has so frequently been done in past studies of adaptation, but explores the voice the film itself constructs in relation to its source text.","creator":["Karen Hollinger","Teresa Winterhalter"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79141431-1bf3-332d-bc17-6460f600908d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.35.2.237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Orlando's Sister, Or Sally Potter Does Virginia Woolf in a Voice of Her Own","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.237","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Rottenberg"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"547e2a49-d0ae-36a0-968b-08c4403b0d7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Salome of the Tenements, the American Dream and Class Performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643618","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9722,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20031,20131]],"Locations in B":[[48583,48677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eleanor Salotto"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fcc26c-637f-334f-9b58-948c33915370"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtechnique"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Narrative Technique","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Frankenstein\" and Dis(re)membered Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225415","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10209,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494747,494801]],"Locations in B":[[61179,61233]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gendered identities in Jane Eyre are inseparable from Jane's working-class affiliations and from her role as a young wife to an older husband. Class and age complicate readings of masculinity and femininity in the text; and as governess and as \"girl-bride,\" Jane evokes nineteenth-century notions of androgyny and female masculinity, effectively using what are often interpreted as her subservient positions to her advantage. Though Charlotte Bront\u00eb avoids simplistic power reversals, the novel suggests possibilities for gender subversion within a seemingly normative romance narrative.","creator":["Esther Godfrey"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"794b91a0-9b2b-3f5b-801c-89ed20d9fbc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"871","pageStart":"853","pagination":"pp. 853-871","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Jane Eyre\", from Governess to Girl Bride","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844618","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7893,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149357,149616]],"Locations in B":[[28985,29244]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores a unique and undervalued text by Rochester, Alexander Bendo's Brochure (1676). More exactly, it focuses on a wholly unconsidered element of this satire: its live enactment. Rochester not only wrote using the persona of Dr. Alexander Bendo, an Italian Mountebank, but for several weeks in the City of London he played the part of Bendo as well. I argue that the theatrical presentation must take precedence over the textual presentation in our assessment of this work, and that Rochester's piece is best studied as a performance satire. Rochester's staging of Bendo is a striking example of seventeenth-century libertine culture combining political and social critique with the sensuous experience of baroque theatricality. Moreover, in their condemnation of the politics of Charles II, Rochester's dramatic and printed texts enact important innovations in the practice of early modern satire as a means to comment on the emerging modern state. In substance and mood, Rochester's innovations anticipate certain kinds of political satire seen on television today.","creator":["KIRK COMBE"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23242164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44af6f9f-972a-3c01-92b4-780a04edec4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23242164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Monkeys of Important Men: Performance Satire and Rochester's \"Alexander Bendo's Brochure\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23242164","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9708,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17494,17592]],"Locations in B":[[52860,52958]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria T. Pramaggiore"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7849ea44-fd9a-311d-b5e6-3ae75a12243f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Resisting\/Performing\/Femininity: Words, Flesh, and Feminism in Karen Finley's \"The Constant State of Desire\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208549","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12148,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[73390,73465]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La fan fiction permet aux fans d'\u00e9laborer \u00e0 leur guise des \u00e9v\u00e9nements et des personnages \u00e0 partir d'un univers fictif \u00e9tabli (litt\u00e9raire, filmique, etc.), tout en respectant les caract\u00e9ristiques de celui-ci. Les textes de fans \u00e9tudi\u00e9s dans cet article d\u00e9veloppent une histoire d'amour entre les deux tueuses Buffy et Faith de Buffy contre les vampires, deux femmes qui ne forment pas un couple dans la s\u00e9rie t\u00e9l\u00e9vis\u00e9e. Les descriptions de leurs relations ont trait au r\u00e9cit sentimental mais transgressent l'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronorme sur laquelle il se fonde. Tout en s'inspirant du genre erotique, les sc\u00e8nes d'amour ne sont d\u00e8s lors pas r\u00e9gies par \u00ab le regard masculin \u00bb de l'\u00e9rotisme conventionnel. Fan fiction writers use an existing fictional universe (literature, film, etc.) to develop scenarios and characters in a creative way within the logic of the original universe. The fan fictions examined in this article revolve around the romantic relationship between two characters of the TV show Buffy the Vampire Slayer: the two Slayers, Buffy and Faith, who are not a couple in the original story. These representations of love and sex between two women reflect certain conventions of the romance, even as they challenge its heteronormative gender stereotypes. Although inspired by the erotic genre, the sex scenes are no longer structured by \u00ab the male gaze \u00bb of traditional erotica.","creator":["Malin Isaksson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"688191aa-937b-3e9c-84c4-aeb9dee123be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Quand les internautes rencontrent Buffy: la fan fiction sur l'amour entre femmes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620475","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"247ab80c-d8c1-36c9-a03e-a1dc2cf7a0c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40380182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"597","pageStart":"560","pagination":"pp. 560-597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380182","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Bryant-Bertail"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3836597b-2af7-32a6-92e6-358266d919ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender, Empire and Body Politic as Mise en Sc\u00e8ne: Mnouchkine's \"Les Atrides\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208952","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":15135,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433185,433271]],"Locations in B":[[21960,22045]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie\u2010Paule Ha"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/591088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25195e3a-01c3-3683-9402-d57679c22e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/591088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Double Trouble: Doing Gender in Hong Kong","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/591088","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8958,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48525,48614]],"Locations in B":[[428,517]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean Walton"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9f5231d-43b8-340b-8f35-39ae658c8044"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"804","pageStart":"775","pagination":"pp. 775-804","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Re-Placing Race in (White) Psychoanalytic Discourse: Founding Narratives of Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344067","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":15029,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[194553,194669],[200801,200954],[201583,201849]],"Locations in B":[[20424,20540],[38344,38497],[38642,38906]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review essay tackles the problem of identity formation and aesthetic representation in light of the recent translation of Elisabeth Bronfen's monograph Night Passages (2013). From the nocturnal to the diurnal, from the feminine to the masculine, and from film noir to the classic melodrama, it discusses Bronfen's investigation of the night as feminized from antiquity to the contemporary period, while simultaneously highlighting the problem with framing identity within confined categories. Using a model of differentiation instead, the essay turns to the nuances of Alfred Hitchcock's 1943 film Shadow of a Doubt in order to argue that Hitchcock encourages us to acquire a much more complex vision of cinema and spectatorship, of gender and identity, and of theory and thought.","creator":["Markos Hadjioannou"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.94.2016.0127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b02bc9b-39bd-30da-a119-6dc588551b6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.94.2016.0127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In the Cold Night of the Day: On Film Noir, Hitchcock, and Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.94.2016.0127","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":11453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite the congruence between critical feminist values and the cardinal values of the social work profession, feminist research in social work has lagged behind its feminist cousins in the social sciences, particularly in terms of critical uses of theory, reflexivity, and the troubling of binaries. This article presents as praxis our reflections as researchers, teachers, and feminists inside social work. We draw from a review of feminist social work research and offer suggestions for teaching critical feminist approaches in social work research. Incorporating critical feminist values and research practices into social work research courses creates the potential for greater integration of research, practice, and the principal values of our profession.","creator":["Ben Anderson-Nathe","Christina Gringeri","St\u00e9phanie Wahab"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42000164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10437797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41157004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d84815f-9201-309f-b180-ae950284caeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42000164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocworked"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social Work Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nurturing \"Critical Hope\" in Teaching Feminist Social Work Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42000164","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adri\u00e1n P\u00e9rez Melgosa"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"540977bc-35b7-37fd-9890-5912a88cf24e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23273516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Opening the Cabaret America Allegory: Hemispheric Politics, Performance, and Utopia in \"Flying Down to Rio\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273516","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":12845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist metaphysics is guided by the insight that gender is socially constructed, yet the metaphysics behind social construction remains obscure. Barnes and Mikkola charge that current metaphysical frameworks\u2014including my grounding framework\u2014are hostile to feminist metaphysics. I argue that not only is a grounding framework hospitable to feminist metaphysics, but also that a grounding framework can help shed light on the metaphysics behind social construction. By treating social construction claims as grounding claims, the feminist metaphysician and the social ontologist both gain a way to integrate social construction claims into a general metaphysics, while accounting for the inferential connections between social construction and attendant notions such as dependence and explanation. So I conclude that a grounding framework can be helpful for feminist metaphysics and social ontology.","creator":["Jonathan Schaffer"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45094194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318116"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41976996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c395f7b-60ae-36eb-ae54-726c3616c90a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45094194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Studies: An International Journal for Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"2465","pageStart":"2449","pagination":"pp. 2449-2465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Social construction as grounding; or: fundamentality for feminists, a reply to Barnes and Mikkola","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45094194","volumeNumber":"174","wordCount":8336,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74591,74701]],"Locations in B":[[7887,8001]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Speciality has always been a threat to order, to the logic of difference and binary opposites \u2014 a threat therefore to the classic law of ontology, which deconstructionist thinkers and writers have consistently sought to subvert, prominently among them Jacques Derrida and H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Cixous. While also engaging in an implicit dialogue with Louis Althusser s theory of 'interpellation', Cixous and Derrida have reinvented the psychoanalysis of gender-production through their reading of each other. Spectrality is for them an injunction to preserve otherness and safeguard the presence\/absence of what in fact does not yet exist, the almost unnameable which pushes at the boundaries of language and thought, and whose mystery writing aspires to attend to. Burials should not thus be performed according to established practice: they must be faulty.","creator":["Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Regard"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91b4808b-f9d3-3d28-82af-e7e51f990c1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Faulty Burials: Reinventing Psychoanalysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151979","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6410,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[440008,440082],[443403,443762]],"Locations in B":[[16575,16645],[17049,17406]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sewers are perhaps the most enigmatic of urban infrastructures. Most citizens of modern cities are aware of their existence, yet few could accurately describe their layout or appearance. This paper takes as its starting point a key moment in the cultural representation of urban space: the photographs of the Paris sewers taken by F\u00e9lix Nadar in the early 1860s. These images capture a dramatic transformation in subterranean Paris, initiated in the early 1850s by Baron Georges Haussmann and his chief engineer Eug\u00e8ne Belgrand as part of the comprehensive reconstruction of the city's infrastructure during the Second Empire of Napol\u00e9on III. This paper argues, however, that with respect to the underground city, we cannot consider the Haussmann era to be the unproblematic epitome of modernity. The reconstruction of subterranean Paris revealed a series of tensions that were only to be resolved in the post-Haussmann era in response to the combined influence of growing water usage, the persistent threat of disease and changing conceptions of public health policy. It is concluded that the flow of water in Second Empire Paris is best conceived as a transitional phase in the radical reworking of relations between the body and urban form engendered by the process of capitalist urbanization.","creator":["Matthew Gandy"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/623339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Paris Sewers and the Rationalization of Urban Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623339","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":15523,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[424627,424878]],"Locations in B":[[92316,92567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Cormack"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1622907-7c77-35e9-b9fd-1241a01af54a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/658057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Paradox of Durkheim's Manifesto: Reconsidering \"The Rules of Sociological Method\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658057","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matti Bunzl"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e68a045-a5e7-3834-9e2e-efa89dcacb68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Outing as Performance\/Outing as Resistance: A Queer Reading of Austrian (Homo)Sexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656616","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay shifts the critical focus away from representations of variant gender identities during the interwar period and turns to the issue of representation itself. Hence, my reading of Gertrude Stein's \"The Making of Americans\" as a \"poetics of difference\" moves the site of confrontation from the material body to the materiality of language. My discussion focuses on aspects of the text's anti-narrative techniques and includes a consideration of its resistance to principles of origin and closure, its punning, and its highly self-referential narrative voice. In light of modernist representations of sex and gender changes that both challenge and, with varying degrees of ambiguity, continue to uphold binary models of identity, Stein's text is shown partly to critique that paradoxical effect through a self-conscious dismantling of its own and (by inference) other texts' linguistic process.","creator":["Melanie Taylor"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad74c123-12f7-36ca-99f6-0248f41d3139"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4317008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Poetics of Difference: \"The Making of Americans\" and Unreadable Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317008","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455517,455887]],"Locations in B":[[5068,5465]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Alcibiades is one of the most explicitly sexualized figures in fifth-century Athens, a \"lover of the people\" whom the demos \"love and hate and long to possess\" (Ar. Frogs 1425). But his eros fits ill with the normative sexuality of the democratic citizen as we usually imagine it. Simultaneously lover and beloved, effeminate and womanizer, Alcibiades is essentially paranomos, lawless or perverse. This paper explores the relation between Alcibiades' paranomia and the norms of Athenian sexuality, and argues that his eros reveals an intrinsic instability within the sexual economy of the democracy: the desire he embodied blurred the categories that defined Athenian masculinity; the desire he inspired rendered the demos passive and \"soft.\" This same instability can be seen in Thucydides' juxtaposition of the mutilation of the Herms and the legend of Harmodius and Aristogeiton. These two episodes (obscurely linked by Thucydides) together tell of an idealized citizen body under threat. The tyrannicide story figures the democratic citizen as an elite lover, whose sexual dominance is vital to his political autonomy. The Herms, with their prominent phalloi, symbolized this citizen-lover, and thus their mutilation was an assault on the masculinity, as well as political power, of the demos. The tyrannicide legend seems to promise a defense against this threat of civic castration; but instead of shoring up the sexually-dominant citizen, Thucydides' version of the legend merely reveals his frailty and fictionality: even in Athens' heroic past there is no inviolable democratic eros to cure the impotence of mutilation and tyranny. Reading these two episodes against the backdrop of Alcibiades' paranomia (as described by Plutarch and Plato), this paper examines the nature of democratic masculinity, the (eroticized) relation between demagogue and demos, and the place of perverse desire within the protocols of sex.","creator":["Victoria Wohl"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e1e2ed5-3d7d-3c9a-8960-6c22e7c4ff30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25011105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Eros of Alcibiades","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011105","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":19787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana Amado"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a215bae-e7b1-3802-8a13-235179912f36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cuerpos intransitivos. Los debates feministas sobre la identidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624578","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scholarship in recent years has been increasingly interested in Joyce's relationship to the burgeoning late-nineteenth\/early-twentieth century discourses of sexuality, as well as the ways in which his texts embody contemporary notions of homosexuality and homosociality. Following up on the important work of scholars like Joseph Valente, this essay attempts to ground the analysis of homosocial desire in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man with reference to a constellation of intertexual references to homosocial writers (Pater, Wilde, Whitman, etc.) and to specific public crises regarding homosexuality which would have played out in the background of Joyce's text: the trials of Oscar Wilde, the Cleveland Street scandal, and the Dublin Castle scandals. In answering the call to become a poet, then, we can see that Stephen Dedalus had simultaneously to come to terms with the claims of homosocial bonds, provoking in him \u2014 as well as in the worried priests at Clongowes Wood School after Stephen's first Christmas holiday \u2014 what Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick has called \"homosexual panic.\"","creator":["Kevin Dettmar"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"721797d0-feb5-352b-aa9d-e8cb6587a19c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Vocation, Vacation, Perversion: Stephen Dedalus and Homosexual Panic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871105","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn FitzGerald"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43492544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7df5db4-d2e3-3fb1-9892-b87d3ef229f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43492544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Diary of a Madwoman\" Traversing the Diaspora: Rewriting Lu Xun in Hualing Nieh's \"Mulberry and Peach\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43492544","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":19927,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[112219,112300]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracy B. Strong"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Philosophy and the Politics of Cultural Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154733","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11683,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[57173,57225]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05de\u05ea\u05d0\u05e8 \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4 \u05e0\u05d9\u05e1\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05e4\u05d2\u05e9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd. \u05e9\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3\u05d4 \u05e0\u05d1\u05e0\u05ea\u05d4 \u05e2\u05dc \u05e4\u05d9 \u05e2\u05e7\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \"\u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea\" \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d2\u05d9\u05e9\u05d4 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05e8\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d3\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05e0\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05e0\u05e9\u05dc\u05d8\u05ea. \u05d4\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4, \u05e9\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d4 16 \u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05d3\u05e0\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05ea\u05d5\u05d0\u05e8 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\u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d9\u05ea\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dc-\u05db\u05df, \u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05de\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05e0\u05d5\u05e9\u05d0\u05ea \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05d9\u05d7\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05db\u05da \u05e9\u05d7\u05dc\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d3\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05db\u05e4\u05d9\u05e4\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d7\u05ea \u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05db\u05dc \u05d0\u05d7\u05d3 \u05de\u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd. In this article we describe an experimental encounter group between men and women. The experimental method adhered to the principles outlined in \"Social Identity Theory\" (Tajfel & Turner, 1979), which emphasized the dynamics of the relationship between a dominant majority group and a subordinate minority group. The group, which was composed of 16 undergraduate students (8 male, 8 female), was conducted by a man and a woman. The group met 13 times during one school semester. In some of these sessions, each of the gender subgroups met separately. All sessions were comprehensively documented by outside observers. In the first part of the analysis of the group process, we introduce a developmental model with 6 hierarchical stages. For each of these stages we highlight the different patterns that characterize both the relationships between the two gender subgroups and the internal relationships within each. In the second part of the analysis we discuss the central themes that arose in the process of each of the groups. While the aim of the women's group process was to achieve a sense of power by employing creative ways to change the status quo, the male group struggled to connect to sources of intimacy and emotion without losing confidence in their sense of masculinity. An examination of the political discourse between genders through the lens of intergroup conflict exposes many parallels that arise between groups based on other categorizations such as ethnicity. In addition, the dynamics between gender groups have unique characteristics that derive from the fact that masculine and feminine aspects coexist in each of the individual group members.","creator":["\u05e9\u05d7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05dc","\u05d0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05d3\u05de\u05df","\u05dc\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05d8\u05dc","\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e8","Shahar Ayal","Ariella Friedman","Liron Tal","Uri Gopher"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23490713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23102063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a1c45ad-5fad-3c20-9377-9d85d96bbc9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23490713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mikbatz"}],"isPartOf":"Mikbatz: The Israel Journal of Group Psychotherapy \/ \u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05e5: \u05db\u05ea\u05d1 \u05d4\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d7\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d8\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05d9","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Israeli Association of Group Psychotherapy \/ \u05e2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d7\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d8\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05d9 (\u05e2\"\u05e8)","sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Encounter Between Social Identities: The Case of Women and Men \/ \u05de\u05e4\u05d2\u05e9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea: \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23490713","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William F. Pinar"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31dd762e-5ab5-386c-9982-fdb4916a54c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"CHRISTIAN FEMINISM and the DESTABILIZATION of GENDER in the LATE NINETEENTH CENTURY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977755","volumeNumber":"163","wordCount":25657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon M. Rowley"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ea260b8-9abb-3c63-9f48-cad8db833b5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Textual Studies, Feminism, and Performance in \"Sir Gawain and the Green Knight\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094243","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9391,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[124359,124465],[124554,124745],[273710,273839],[276527,276658]],"Locations in B":[[4636,4742],[4756,4947],[39744,39873],[39962,40093]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper describes the experiences of a hitherto invisible and possibly increasing population in England, namely young homeless lesbian, gay and bisexual people. It draws on preliminary findings from research into transitions for young lesbian, gay and bisexual people that took homelessness as one theoretically informed focus. The paper explores two main questions. Firstly, how far and in what ways does sexuality play a role in a housing crisis? Secondly, why have the experiences of young people who may be questioning their sexuality been neglected in service provision and in the mainstream literature on leaving home and homelessness? Qualitative and quantitative evidence is brought together to suggest that a sizeable proportion of young homeless people may be lesbian, gay and bisexual, and that issues of sexuality have had an important bearing on their circumstances. At a time when it may be easier than before for a person to come out at a younger age, the risks associated with constructing identity and lifestyles against the norm should not be underestimated. Accounts of sexuality that ignore wider material circumstances do so at their peril. \/\/\/ Cet article d\u00e9crit les exp\u00e9riences d'une population jusqu'ici invisible et peut\u00eatre en augmentation en Angleterre, \u00e0 savoir les jeunes gays, lesbiennes et bisexuel(le)s sans domicile fixe. Il s'inspire des r\u00e9sultats pr\u00e9liminaires d'une \u00e9tude sur les processus de transition dans cette population, cette \u00e9tude ayant pour centre d'int\u00e9r\u00eat th\u00e9orique et document\u00e9, le statut de sans domicile fixe. L'article explore deux questions principales. Premi\u00e8rement, jusqu'o\u00f9 et de quelle fa\u00e7on la sexualit\u00e9 joue-t-elle un r\u00f4le dans une crise du logement? Deuxi\u00e8mement, pourquoi les exp\u00e9riences des jeunes s'interrogeant sur leur sexualit\u00e9 ne sont-elles pas prises en compte dans la mise \u00e0 disposition des services et dans la litt\u00e9rature g\u00e9n\u00e9rale sur l'abandon du foyer et sur le statut de sans domicile fixe? Des donn\u00e9es qualitatives et quantitatives sont rassembl\u00e9es, sugg\u00e9rant qu'une proportion non n\u00e9gligeable de jeunes sans domicile fixe pourrait \u00eatre compos\u00e9e de lesbiennes, de gays et de bisexuel(le)s, et que les probl\u00e8mes de sexualit\u00e9 ont une influence importante sur leur situation. Au moment o\u00f9 il doit \u00eatre plus facile que jamais auparavant de faire son \"coming out\" de plus en plus jeune, les risques associ\u00e9s \u00e0 la construction de l'identit\u00e9 et des styles de vie en opposition \u00e0 la norme ne devraient pas \u00eatre sous-estim\u00e9s. \/\/\/ En este documento, se describen las experiencias de una poblaci\u00f3n hasta ahora invisible y, posiblemente, cada vez m\u00e1s numerosa en Inglaterra: j\u00f3venes lesbianas, homosexuales y bisexuales sin hogar. Se inspira en los resultados preliminares de un estudio sobre la transici\u00f3n en j\u00f3venes lesbianas, gays y bisexuales cuyo centro de inter\u00e9s t\u00e9orico era la condici\u00f3n de no tener hogar. En el documento, se analizan dos cuestiones principales. En primer lugar, qu\u00e9 importancia tiene la sexualidad para llegar una crisis de perder la vivienda. En segundo lugar, por qu\u00e9 se han ignorado las experiencias de los j\u00f3venes, que se han planteado su sexualidad, en lo que afecta a la prestaci\u00f3n de servicios y en la literatura general sobre el abandono del hogar para convertirse en ciudadanos sin techo. Se han reunido a los cualitativos y cuantitativos que indican que un gran n\u00famero de j\u00f3venes sin hogar podr\u00eda pertenecer al colectivo de lesbianas, homosexuales y bisexuales y que la cuesti\u00f3n de la sexualidad ha tenido una importante influencia en su situacion. En una epoca en la que es mucho m\u00e1s f\u00e1cil que antes \"salir del armario\" a una edad m\u00e1s joven, no deber\u00edan subestimarse los peligros relacionados con el desarrollo de la propia identidad y los estilos de vida construidos contra las normas tradicionales. En los estudios sobre sexualidad no deber\u00edan ignorarse las circumstancias materiales m\u00e1s amplias.","creator":["Gillian A. Dunne","Shirley Prendergast","David Telford"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52d328ed-3a02-3fa1-97c8-e75da44372a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Young, Gay, Homeless and Invisible: A Growing Population?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005231","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":7302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mireille Rosello"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f80cfd1-c2c0-3370-b198-4e2605ee427a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Auto-portraits glan\u00e9s et plaisirs partag\u00e9s: \"Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse et Le Fabuleux Destin d'Am\u00e9lie Poulain\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288382","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"299d8470-f251-3bac-a854-46a61bbc5bbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975061","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5456,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471785]],"Locations in B":[[10283,10363]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines survival strategies of urban households in post-socialist cities during the transition from the Soviet system to a market economy. The article links the outcomes of systemic transformation to the daily lives of households and connects urban change induced by mass privatization to class and gender processes inside the households. These \"other transitions\" in everyday class and gender processes are consistently overlooked by macroeconomic approaches that dominate among transition theorists and policy consultants. The focus is on households in a Moscow neighborhood who attempt to meet the competing demands of earning income, fulfilling domestic responsibilities, and securing child care in a rapidly changing urban context. The diverse formal and informal economic practices of households are analyzed using the model of \"multiple economies\" that include paid work, informal work for cash, unpaid domestic labor, and help in kind, labor, and cash from networks of extended family, friends, and neighbors. Mapping the typically invisible transformations of multiple economies of households contributes to creating alternative geographies of transition that are rooted in daily household experiences, acknowledges the existence of multiple economies practices, and emphasizes their importance for household social reproduction. The research combined qualitative interviewing with GIS (geographic information systems) in order to develop the model of multiple economies, elicit household perspectives on urban change, and provide the information for mapping of the landscape of multiple economies. GIS was also used to understand the dynamics of local urban change resulting from privatization.","creator":["Marianna Pavlovskaya"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3693991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecac3744-6ace-3d01-b2bc-c5396088cd1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3693991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Other Transitions: Multiple Economies of Moscow Households in the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3693991","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":17536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Cowan"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"review-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2006.9.2.655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10933514"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49374779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"632ba3fc-eade-3f17-9b1b-63ed69840957"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nclr.2006.9.2.655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"buffcrimlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Buffalo Criminal Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Beyond the War on Crime: Personhood, Punishment, and the State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2006.9.2.655","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the first part of this study (Oceania, 76\/1) I presented the general cosmo-ontological background of Yagwoia (Papua New Guinea) dreaming and the fundamental dialectics of the contra-sexual self-identity of a conjugal couple (Tilm and QANG) manifest in their oneiric encounters. The second part (Oceania, 76\/2) was focused on the man, QANG, and the vicissitudes of his soul's power to affect gambling outcomes. I showed that Yagwoia gambling exhibits its true characteristic as an extension and modification of the male-exclusive domain of hunting, warfare, and the ceaseless in-\/ex-corporation of the cosmic lifedeath flow. In this third and final part I deal with the vicissitudes of his favourite wife's presence in his life following her death whereby she became a spirit of the dead. Here my focus is on the practice and intersubjective dynamics of mourning, a process which with singular force realises the Yagwoia life-world as an indissoluble socius of the living and the dead. It is in this context that the ethnographer also comes to experience and appreciate the palpability of spirits as the real denizens of the Yagwoia world.","creator":["Jadran Mimica"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40332037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Dreams, Laki, and Mourning: A Psychoanalytic Ethnography of the Yagwoia 'Inner Feminine' Part III. Soul and the Work of Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332037","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":14119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article we are interested in the negotiation of identities in women's narratives of their gynaecological examination and more particularly, the shifts of identity positions that permeate their stories. Taking a constructionist view of discourse and identity, we make two arguments in the article. First, we demonstrate that women talking about their gynaecological examinations constructed their selves ambiguously. The identity spaces that they discursively opened in the narratives were not inhabited. Second, we show that the embodiment of their identities \u2013 the inclusion of the body into the construction of self \u2013 fluctuates depending on the stage of the narrative of the examination.","creator":["Dariusz Galasi\u0144ski","Justyna Zi\u00f3\u0142kowska"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a75755c8-2c3f-3a94-af1f-3abe1379665c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26649845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identity ambivalence and embodiment in women's accounts of the gynaecological examination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649845","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Ortiz"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f649778-7e87-3b0c-b181-53a44df492ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1213209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213209","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":980,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["George Fisher","Judy Lochhead"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41054335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07416156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f97f5a23-429b-3754-9cf8-ed43c11ae0fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41054335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorypractice"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Practice","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Music Theory Society of New York State","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Analyzing from the Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41054335","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11933,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[65630,65734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Castro-Klar\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07340591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dfb30b3-07bf-33e8-94d5-f1ea58cb1d31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dispositio"}],"isPartOf":"Dispositio","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE RECOGNITION OF CONVERGENCE: SUBALTERN STUDIES IN PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491789","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":4515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the extent to which classical gender stereotypes are transmitted in the public space of higher education institutions and how this contributes to maintaining a social vision in which an unequal distribution of gender persists. This study analyzes, from a multimodal perspective, posters hung on walls in secondary schools and a university in a Spanish city over a period of several months. Results show that although the linguistic messages used in these posters avoid any reference to gender, images continue to represent classical stereotypes in a subtle and an inexplicit way. Images depict daily life activities, unexceptional and apparently without gender ideology. However, they still associate gender with classical roles. In this context, the explicit institutional educational discourse contrasts with the still persistent implicit transmission of a sexist idea of the genders in the visual representations analyzed.","creator":["Magdalena Romera"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26865799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb4db66c-f119-3997-aadf-be09ad7dc7bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26865799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The transmission of gender stereotypes in the discourse of public educational spaces","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26865799","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Lapolla Swier"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44284894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02710986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4495e6b8-9e96-322b-80bb-1575e83d8357"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44284894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicj"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University of Pennsylvania","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transgendering and the Emergence of Ambiguous National Subjects in R\u00f3mulo Gallegos's \"Do\u00f1a B\u00e1rbara\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44284894","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5617,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73512,73644]],"Locations in B":[[20120,20252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joshua Dubler"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-200154"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f348618-efa9-3496-b7e5-8a2f3333c257"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41179237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SECULAR BAD FAITH OF HARRY THERIAULT, THE BISHOP OF TELLUS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179237","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":12684,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436475,436592]],"Locations in B":[[67762,67879]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I examine Lennox s earliest performance strategies, and her reasons for employing them, as well as some of the reactions to her adoption of transvestism as a sartorial style. I discuss three videos from Lennox's 1988 LP Savage, which, in my view, marked a radical shift in her approach to depicting gender through performance. I argue that Lennox may be more productively viewed by keeping in mind performance ideals of music hall and other popular musical theatre styles of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Finally I discuss Lennox's challenge to late twentieth-century gender construction using Judith Butler's theories of the performative nature of gender and of the subversive reiteration of gender, outlined in her books Gender Trouble and Bodies that Matter, and suggesting ways in which Lennox s performance embodies these theories, while extending them to include a broader range of sexualities.","creator":["Gillian Rodger"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1415f72-0141-3d31-8d69-8a4961486869"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Drag, Camp and Gender Subversion in the Music and Videos of Annie Lennox","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877623","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8068,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[34704,34899]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the early-twenty-first century, extended cycle oral contraception (ECOC) became available by physician prescription in North America. Researchers speculate that this drug, with its capacity to reduce or eliminate menstrual bleeding, may shift not only women's biological processes but also their experiences of menstruation. In this paper, I discuss women's experiences of menstrual suppression drawing on findings from a qualitative study conducted before ECOC was available, and examine these findings against recently published research on menstrual suppression in an ECOC era. Findings suggest that the body as a natural entity figures strongly in women's discourses on suppression. They further suggest that suppression is a contingent, paradoxical and practical achievement, not a securely or fully realised embodied state. This paper reads women's accounts of menstrual suppression prior to ECOC as a challenge to the modern artifice of a mind\/body split, and questions whether this challenge is perhaps made less discernible in an ECOC era, where attention may no longer be paid to the daily practices of menstrual suppression. Hence, a case is made for the varied political effects of ongoing non-menstruation versus event-specific practices of non-menstruation. Aujourd'hui, le contraceptif oral \u00e0 cycle prolong\u00e9 peut \u00eatre obtenu en Am\u00e9rique du Nord sur pr\u00e9sentation d'une prescription m\u00e9dicale. Les chercheurs se sont demand\u00e9s si ce produit, avec sa capacit\u00e9 de r\u00e9duire ou d'\u00e9liminer les saignements menstruels, pourrait modifier non seulement la biologie des femmes mais aussi leur exp\u00e9rience de la menstruation. Dans cet article, je me concentre sur les r\u00e9sultats d'une \u00e9tude qualitative, conduite avant que le contraceptif oral \u00e0 cycle prolong\u00e9 soit disponible, sur l'exp\u00e9rience de la suppression des r\u00e8gles chez les femmes; et j'examine ces r\u00e9sultats au regard d'une \u00e9tude r\u00e9cente (2013) sur le m\u00eame th\u00e8me, \u00e0 l'\u00e8re o\u00f9 le produit est disponible. Les r\u00e9sultats des deux \u00e9tudes sugg\u00e8rent que le corps, en tant que entit\u00e9 \u00ab naturelle \u00bb, est tr\u00e8s pr\u00e9sent dans le discours des femmes sur la suppression des r\u00e8gles. En 2001, les femmes identifiaient le corps comme \u00e9tant actif (non passif) dans le processus de suppression de la menstruation. En outre, les r\u00e9sultats sugg\u00e8rent que la suppression menstruelle est un accomplissement conditionnel, paradoxal et pratique, et non un \u00e9tat solidement incarn\u00e9 ou compl\u00e8tement r\u00e9alis\u00e9. Alors que la suppression de la menstruation existait chez les femmes en 2001 et en 2013, avec le contraceptif oral \u00e0 cycle prolong\u00e9, cette pratique pourrait \u00eatre moins risqu\u00e9e. Dans cet article, je reviens sur les r\u00e9cits des femmes concernant leurs pratiques de suppression menstruelle, avant l'arriv\u00e9e du m\u00e9dicament, en consid\u00e9rant celles-ci comme un d\u00e9fi \u00e0 l'artifice moderne d'une rupture esprit\/corps, moins discernable \u00e0 l'\u00e8re du contraceptif oral \u00e0 cycle prolong\u00e9, dans laquelle 1) le corps est plus susceptible de se soumettre 2) il n'est plus n\u00e9cessaire d'accorder autant d'attention \u00e0 \u00ab quand-comment-et pour-combien-de-temps \u00bb la suppression menstruelle doit \u00eatre pratiqu\u00e9e. \u00c0 partir de l\u00e0, je d\u00e9veloppe une justification des divers effets politiques de la non-menstruation continue, en opposition aux pratiques de non-menstruation li\u00e9es \u00e0 des \u00e9v\u00e9nements sp\u00e9cifiques. En este nuevo milenio, el anticonceptivo oral de ciclo extendido (aoce) puede obtenerse en Norteam\u00e9rica por medio de una receta m\u00e9dica. Los investigadores han especulado con que este medicamento, capaz de reducir o de eliminar el sangrado menstrual, podr\u00eda alterar no solo la biolog\u00eda de la mujer sino tambi\u00e9n sus per\u00edodos menstruales. En el presente art\u00edculo, la autora se centra en los resultados surgidos de un estudio cualitativo (realizado antes de que estuviera disponible el aoce) que analiz\u00f3 las vivencias experimentadas por varias mujeres en torno a la supresi\u00f3n menstrual. Asimismo, compara dichos resultados con los hallazgos obtenidos por un estudio reciente (2013) sobre el mismo tema, realizado despu\u00e9s de que apareci\u00f3 el aoce. Las conclusiones de ambos estudios dan cuenta de que el cuerpo, visto como una entidad \u00abnatural\u00bb, aparece prominentemente en los discursos sobre la supresi\u00f3n menstrual articulados por las mujeres. En 2001, las mujeres asignaron al cuerpo un rol activo y no pasivo en la supresi\u00f3n de la menstruaci\u00f3n. Asimismo, las conclusiones indican que la supresi\u00f3n menstrual constituye un logro dependiente, parad\u00f3jico y pr\u00e1ctico, y no un estado encarnado, firme y totalmente materializado. Si bien tanto en 2001 como en 2013 algunas mujeres suprimieron su menstruaci\u00f3n, a partir de la aparici\u00f3n del aoce tales pr\u00e1cticas podr\u00edan haberse vuelto menos estresantes. Para fines de este art\u00edculo, la autora interpret\u00f3 las vivencias de las mujeres en torno a su supresi\u00f3n menstrual, antes de la existencia del aoce, como un cuestionamiento del artificio moderno que establece una disyuntiva mente\/cuerpo; dicho cuestionamiento es menos perceptible despu\u00e9s de la aparici\u00f3n del aoce, ya que es m\u00e1s probable que el cuerpo responda. En este sentido, se vuelve menos necesario prestar atenci\u00f3n a cu\u00e1ndo, c\u00f3mo y por cu\u00e1nto tiempo se suprimir\u00e1 la menstruaci\u00f3n. Por lo tanto, se sostiene que el no menstruar continuamente tiene varios efectos pol\u00edticos versus la pr\u00e1ctica de no menstruar en momentos espec\u00edficos.","creator":["Kara Granzow"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b5412d8-4331-3206-b60d-eac7009efdb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24741310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"633","pageStart":"620","pagination":"pp. 620-633","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The 'nonmenstrual woman' in the new millennium? Discourses on menstrual suppression in the first decade of Extended Cycle Oral Contraception use in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741310","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Throughout the early twentieth century, psychologists, medical doctors, and sexologists debated and determined our modern understanding of the female homosexual. Rooted in a dialectic between the theories of Sigmund Freud and Havelock Ellis, the discourses of the lesbian emphasized the perversity and deviancy of the homosexual woman. Radclyffe Hall and Virginia Woolf engage this discussion and offer two powerful fictional portraits of women who challenge the developed notion of the lesbian as either a broken heterosexual or a mannish woman. The characters of Hall and Woolf, moreover, resist the heterosexualization of culture which mandates that individuals must be stable agents as either male or female, heterosexual or homosexual.","creator":["Michael Kramp"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f9a1e5c-4eca-32d0-8292-d11ca71c9cf0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1348183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Resistant Social\/Sexual Subjectivity of Hall's Ogilvy and Woolf's Rhoda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348183","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":15756,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471794]],"Locations in B":[[88740,88828]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes illustrative classroom events documented during an ethnographic study of bilingual classrooms in a \"high-achieving\" school. Through a performativity lens that emphasizes the discursive constitution of subjectivities, I demonstrate how discourses around achievement and success in the current reform context exacerbated one bilingual teacher's deficit-oriented ideologies about English learners and their families. This analysis has implications for practitioners and researchers interested in effectively supporting our most vulnerable student populations, and their teachers, in public schools.","creator":["Mariana Pacheco"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41156082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3121a604-da1c-35bd-89a8-c48f3a11ffe0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40732208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Performativity in the Bilingual Classroom: The Plight of English Learners in the Current Reform Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732208","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10694,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465351,465490]],"Locations in B":[[7953,8092]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La re-escritura de la mitolog\u00eda en \"El mismo mar\" es, a la vez, expresi\u00f3n de ciertos postulados metaf\u00edsicos y de teor\u00edas sobre la construcci\u00f3n cultural de la identidad sexual. La afiliaci\u00f3n de los personajes a m\u00faltiples figuras mitol\u00f3gicas va acompa\u00f1ada no s\u00f3lo de la re-escritura feminizadora, sino tambi\u00e9n de una fluctuaci\u00f3n entre roles masculinos y femeninos y entre lesbianismo y heterosexualidad. Se produce, as\u00ed, una oscilaci\u00f3n que se\u00f1ala la precariedad ontol\u00f3gica del sujeto. La fluidez de las fronteras sexuales, por otra parte, descarta tanto el esencialismo del sujeto, como el de la identidad sexual. De este modo, la noci\u00f3n de \"disfraz,\" tanto individual como colectivo, se convierte en la novela de Tusquets en met\u00e1fora de una identidad entendida como representaci\u00f3n: una identidad precaria que se basa en la escenificaci\u00f3n de un gui\u00f3n construido sobre jerarqu\u00edas ficticias, un gui\u00f3n escrito, ensayado y repetido p\u00fablicamente.","creator":["Rosal\u00eda V. Cornejo-Parriego"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f69052e9-46a6-3784-a80a-6eb743c4fc57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27741240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mitolog\u00eda, representaci\u00f3n e identidad en \"El mismo mar de todos los veranos\" de Esther Tusquets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741240","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7204,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431521,431620],[439455,439625]],"Locations in B":[[26981,27080],[33888,34058]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I consider how to conceptualize \"diasporic\" subjects, namely those whose identities and homes cannot be easily attributed, with regard to the political and racial dynamics of intra-group tensions, alliances, and divergences of interest. These concerns are important relatives to topics that Critical Race Theorists and Critical Race Feminists have readily addressed, such as the war on terror, the not-so-gradual erosion of dignity and rights protections accorded to non-citizens, and the increasing antagonism, surveillance, and brutality toward Latino and Muslim migrants. As such, the former issues should become central concerns for Critical Race Theorists. In what follows, I want to introduce a framework called \"interstitiality\" as a way to address them.\u00b9","creator":["FALGUNI A. SHETH"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23ef26a4-3d73-3c47-a112-6a0d3befbe39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24541954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interstitiality: Making Space for Migration, Diaspora, and Racial Complexity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541954","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8898,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481457]],"Locations in B":[[55281,55334]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a neo-Confucian vision that the monarch's mandate relied on listening to his people's grievances, the Chos\u014fn state (1392-1910) empowered subjects regardless of gender or status to address grievances to the sovereign that had not been rectified in lower courts. Contrary to the preconceived notion that women of the Chos\u014fn were silent subjects outside their domestic boundary, their petitioning activity shows that women, irrespective of their status, had the same legal capacity as their male counterparts to appeal grievances at heal and capital levels. This article focuses on women's petitions and their linguistic practices to show how their petitioning activity complicated the gender dynamics of Confucian society. While the gender hierarchy was reinforced through women's narrative strategy as they appropriated the discourse of domesticity, I posit that women as legal agents were regendering legal identity by constructing a sense of personhood via their petitioning practice. Through articulating their gendered narratives, women struggled to defend not only themselves and their own sense of morality but also their entire family.","creator":["JISOO M. KIM"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43552758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f75c4fb6-8e52-31f4-b66a-7ffeaf2b5fed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43552758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"667","pagination":"pp. 667-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Political science - Government"],"title":"Women's Legal Voice: Language, Power, and Gender Performativity in Late Chos\u014fn Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43552758","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":10494,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[59349,59460]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AbstractThis article traces a genealogy of intersexuality\u2019s underrecognized but historically pivotal role in the development of gender as a concept in twentieth-century American biomedicine, feminism, and their globalizing circuits. Using a queer feminist science studies approach, I argue that intersex has been and remains central to the history of gender as a classificatory schema, object of knowledge, technology of subject formation, and paradigm of sociality in late modernity. This genealogy pushes beyond current scholarship on intersexuality to suggest that, while dominant understandings of sex and gender have overdetermined the meaning of intersex, historically speaking, the concept of intersex paradoxically preceded and inaugurated what we would today call the sex\/gender distinction. Through a close reading of psychoendocrinologist John Money\u2019s biomedical research, I show that intersex was integral to the historical emergence of the category gender as distinct from sex in the mid-twentieth-century English-speaking world. I argue that Money used the concept of gender to cover over and displace the biological instability of the body he discovered through his research on intersex and that Money\u2019s conception of gender produced new technologies of psychosomatic normalization. Situating Money\u2019s work within the history of feminist theorizing about sex and gender, I conclude by reflecting on what the intertwined histories of intersex, biomedicine, and feminism might mean for the field of women\u2019s and gender studies.","creator":["David A. Rubin"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67f19312-3b7f-3233-8f6e-fee59bddab98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/664471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"908","pageStart":"883","pagination":"pp. 883-908","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cAn Unnamed Blank That Craved a Name\u201d: A Genealogy of Intersex as Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664471","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8746,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74829,75056]],"Locations in B":[[17463,17690]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Todd Kontje"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1431582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b31dda40-ac5d-34e2-a2f1-1d7b4e436ea4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1431582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"German Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Passing for German: Politics and Patriarchy in Kleist, K\u00f6rner, and Fischer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1431582","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["VIRGINIA BURRUS"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31864718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46bad4e9-e5f0-3ccc-87b8-6ee9d6e06c6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44578106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MIMICKING VIRGINS: COLONIAL AMBIVALENCE AND THE ANCIENT ROMANCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578106","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":17656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Lane"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20c3ce3b-75be-315d-bdae-bb5834ff6369"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Savage Ecstasy\": Colonialism and the Death Drive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389447","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Halina Filipowicz"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3086124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4587135c-e79e-3a50-afd0-a2fab987d388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3086124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"623","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-623","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"[Introduction]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3086124","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What do feminists want? What visions of an ideal society have we conceptualised or dreamt of? What are the possibilities and limits of iterations of a feminist futurity? Even as we ask, however, we are brought up short by a more fundamental question: is such a teleological conception of any theory or social movement\u2014however we define feminism\u2014valid? Can we expect feminism to function with a single blueprint of an ideal political order or society \"to come\"?","creator":["RAJESWARI SUNDER RAJAN"],"datePublished":"2015-10-10","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44002713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"277f3769-2438-3218-b928-f87227c3b65e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44002713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism's Futures: The Limits and Ambitions of Rokeya's Dream","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44002713","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7068,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14216,14334]],"Locations in B":[[28554,28672]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Rose Gruner"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa027288-fe8e-308e-92c8-6c69bc93c66e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Born and Made: Sisters, Brothers, and the Deceased Wife's Sister Bill","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175648","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11930,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[60024,60107]],"Locations in B":[[20467,20550]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I try to rethink Gloria Anzald\u00faa\u2019s concept of the borderlands in the context of contemporary Poland and its borders; that is, I rethink these particular borderlands with her. This operation is embedded in the process of translation and in the analysis of the politics of translation. I refer to Walter Benjamin to show how Anzald\u00faa\u2019s work can be seen as crossing the foreignness of language. I emphasize her claim that the multiplicity of languages she uses is itself a legitimate language. I also try to show how other authors were inspired by her writing and scholarship, since I think this has not yet been sufficiently emphasized. Finally, I suggest that Borderlands\/La Frontera can be read as an inspiration for a feminist critique of Giorgio Agamben\u2019s genderless homo sacer.","creator":["Ewa Majewska"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"discussion","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b661bc6-3bcc-33e0-a1f8-958a7ab100b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/660173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"La Mestiza from Ukraine? Border Crossing with Gloria Anzald\u00faa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660173","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":2342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Wiesenthal"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8365d10-733e-396b-835b-9c2bff3deb8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Regarding Christina Rossetti's '''Reflection'''","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002252","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheryl Chase","Carmen Romero Bachiller","Silvia Garc\u00eda Dauder","Carlos Bargueiras Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3330b1e2-d891-3c2f-875a-b9fa3ec7535c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hermafroditas con actitud: cartografiando la emergencia del activismo pol\u00edtico intersexual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832465","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11517,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[68075,68160]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth DeMarrais"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535549"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"312ab17d-d936-3500-a6c8-c60e98bd2458"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26160169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction: the archaeology of performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160169","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":4061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"'Prove first you're a male' considers the case of a farmhand's claim for wages through the civil legal system in 1929 Australia, in which the claimant, William Smith, was exposed to be 'female'. The article examines the court case and the press coverage, and considers the treatment of William Smith by the legal system, the press, the medical profession and rural communities. Smith's gender-crossing challenged a legal, wages and arbitration system based on divisions between male and female. Once defined as biologically female, Smith posed the threat of trespassing on the domain of male labour and receiving male wages. The article analyses why Smith was glorified in the press as an Australian rural battler and heroine, when other 'men-women' at this time faced severe condemnation. The article contends that rural nationalism and settler colonialism enabled Smith to be recast into a national legend which glorified hard work, courage and refusing convention.","creator":["Ruth Ford"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27516111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00236942"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36403c38-9856-3303-bb49-9789259b4025"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27516111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Labour History","issueNumber":"90","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"'Prove First You're a Male': A Farmhand's Claim for Wages in 1929 Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27516111","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Appelbaum"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2871016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Standing to the Wall\": The Pressures of Masculinity in Romeo and Juliet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871016","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":13314,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[248191,248287],[431288,431499]],"Locations in B":[[13262,13359],[13563,13765]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elana Gomel"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b30eda17-9b44-3327-bf44-16a84ae48881"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Spirits in the Material World\": Spiritualism and Identity in the \"Fin De Si\u00e8cle\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347131","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":14438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ken Coates"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40512259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622800"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235774"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40512259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arctic"}],"isPartOf":"Arctic","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"462","pagination":"pp. 462-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Arctic Institute of North America","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40512259","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dbd4aa7-4317-3447-8111-f63a9d72ef95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979325","volumeNumber":"282","wordCount":6568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender is a ubiquitous social construct that wields power over every individual in our society. The traditional dichotomous gender paradigm is oppressive, especially for transgendered people whose sense of themselves as gendered people is incongruent with the gender they were assigned at birth. Transgendered individuals are targeted for mistreatment when others attempt to enforce conventional gender boundaries. This article discusses gender-based oppression and the resulting psychosocial difficulties experienced by many transgendered individuals. The discussion advances a critical analysis of the dominant gender paradigm using two alternative theoretical perspectives on gender\u2014queer theory and social constructionism. The article argues that the transgender community is an at-risk population and that empowering practice with this population calls on social workers to target society's traditional gender dichotomy for change. An overview of practice implications and research needs is provided.","creator":["Barb J. Burdge"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23721115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23721115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Bending Gender, Ending Gender: Theoretical Foundations for Social Work Practice with the Transgender Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23721115","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":5635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helen Molesworth"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7f13dfc-6321-3c97-ae5c-c8df7a948c78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"House Work and Art Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779234","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":10383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Starting from the premise that space is a purveyor of discourse, this article attempts to probe the work of three women writers narrating the Gulf. The Kuwaiti Layl\u0101 al-'Uthm\u0101n, the Saudi Arabian Raj\u0101' '\u0100lim and the Iraqi Hadiyya \u1e24usayn write the spaces to which they belong within representational modes specific to each region. The conservative Kuwaiti society and the holy land of Saudi Arabia generate strategies of camouflage including humor, pardoy, and allegory. The bloody history of Iraq, especially during the second half of the twentieth century, yields a subversive confessional mood and a dominating atmosphere of pain. While diverging in tone and narrative strategies, these three women writers converge in presenting a Gulf of their own: a personalized landscape wherein the physical world overlaps with psychological scenes. These writers also succeed in bridging the gap between the private and public and offer narratives in which the personal is relocated in the political, cultural, and historical.","creator":["Hager Ben Driss"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07d27baa-275e-34a8-9a20-7441b9576c3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4183539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Women Narrating the Gulf: A Gulf of Their Own","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183539","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9357,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72241,72356]],"Locations in B":[[37096,37209]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Juli A. Kroll"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44287582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02710986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9ce02cb-7108-3828-9b5f-cce397cdfdb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44287582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicj"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University of Pennsylvania","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Conciencia desdoblada: Agencia femenina y melancol\u00eda en la poes\u00eda de Alfonsina Storni, Rosario Castellanos, y Alejandra Pizarnik","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44287582","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5694,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[213912,214454]],"Locations in B":[[16807,17351]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Myra J. Hird"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a321d45-99b4-364e-a1a8-3ca23a6a0ca6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40607971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Engagements with Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607971","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6366,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476031,476141]],"Locations in B":[[42007,42118]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Castro-Klar\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edf40c5e-aff7-3a76-b48a-1385dad6a671"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"40","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Situations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119620","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper will discuss Edna Millay's influence on Anne Sexton, with particular reference to issues such as gender politics, femininity, performativity, and the female body. Through close comparative readings of some of the two women's most representative poems, I analyze, firstly, how Millay's outspokenness and daring self-presentation as a woman writer facilitated Sexton's handling of material that was previously considered unacceptable for poetry and, secondly, how Sexton expanded the scope of women's writing in a manner that paid tribute to the earlier poet's innovation. My paper maintains that Millay's repeated attempts to explore gender and interrogate the concept of 'authentic' femininity anticipated Sexton's overtly feminist works. Ultimately, I am arguing that, despite the literary climate of the 1960s (which urged the rejection of poets like Millay) and despite her own ambiguous feelings for the earlier poet, Sexton eventually recovered Millay as an important literary predecessor for her generation, consistently imitated her artistic posturing, performance strategies, and self-presentation, and finally acknowledged her unique contribution to women's writing.","creator":["Artemis Michailidou"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce41d5d0-dcde-3e7a-bc16-81e646755be6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3874409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"78","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, Body, and Feminine Performance: Edna St. Vincent Millay's Impact on Anne Sexton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874409","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12017,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[17473,17592],[101499,101574]],"Locations in B":[[21739,21858],[22069,22144]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Models of successful aging based primarily on the avoidance of disease, disability, and functional loss set up the majority of the older adult population for failure\u2014a majority of whom are women, in particular, women of color. This article explores the ableism embedded in successful aging, as enacted through a medical model approach to disability. The authors propose understandings of aging that integrate a social model of disability, to de-pathologize disability, acknowledge the complex experiences of disability and disease, strengthen gerontology\u2019s interdisciplinary work, and avoid leveraging ableism to combat ageism.","creator":["Clara W. Berridge","Marty Martinson"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07387806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3e2e1fb-e339-36ed-8503-b3cede2d9943"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26556322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genethejamersoci"}],"isPartOf":"Generations: Journal of the American Society on Aging","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Society on Aging","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Biological sciences - Biology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Valuing Old Age Without Leveraging Ableism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556322","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":5883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay tracks George Eliot's sustained interest in the epistemological problems surrounding the Victorian tendency to envision the future through the body's materiality. It argues that her nuanced criticism of phrenology in \"The Lifted Veil\" (1859) and \"A Minor Prophet\" (1865) addresses the delimiting psychological and social effects that attend an applied theory of physiological determinism. Returning to this problem in Daniel Deronda (1876), Eliot offers Mordecai's plan to posit Deronda's body as a living emblem as a radical alternative to racial iconography and typological meaning\u2014a move that allowed her to reconcile the body's legibility with a future beyond socially inscribed possibilities.","creator":["SHALYN CLAGGETT"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0129af0a-065f-329d-b70b-6d3de5e93e19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41349040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"864","pageStart":"849","pagination":"pp. 849-864","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"George Eliot's Interrogation of Physiological Future Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349040","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":6750,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[79201,79329]],"Locations in B":[[33306,33434]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cette contribution se propose de lier deux observations, l'une sur le public de l'iambe archa\u00efque, l'autre sur les publics des traditions iambiques post\u00e9rieures. Le public d'Archiloque ressemble aux pr\u00e9tendants de l' Odyss\u00e9e et par leur structure sociale commune et par les sujets abord\u00e9s par leurs textes. Comme les centaures, ce public c\u00e9libataire poss\u00e8de une structure hybride: ils sont biologiquement des adultes (barbus), mais ils sont des non initi\u00e9s (animaux) du point de vue des r\u00e8gles sociales. Ce public hybride de \u00ab jeunes \u00bb - \u00ab hommes \u00bb comme dit Archiloque qui ont \u00e0 la fois une origine de riches et un avenir de pauvres dispara\u00eet avec les Guerres M\u00e9diques et l'enseignement des Sophistes. Mais sa structure ambivalente semble se refl\u00e9ter dans la bifurcation de la tradition iambique apr\u00e8s Socrate. Demetrios (100 av. n. \u00e8.) distingue pour cette \u00e9poque un rire \u00e9thique et un rire cynique. Ainsi la tradition iambique \u00ab \u00e9thique \u00bb qui se moque du langage des victimes en les faisant parler dans les textes, commence-telle avec Platon, et se poursuit avec Callimaque, H\u00e9rodas, Horace, Lucien et Julien. Cette \u00ab attaque convenable \u00bb (kal\u00ea makh\u00e9) s'adresse \u00e0 un public ais\u00e9 alors que la tradition cynique de l'iambe qui ne se cache pas derri\u00e8re la voix d'un autre, mais attaque directement, s'adresse, du moins virtuellement, \u00e0 un public pauvre: Crat\u00e8s de Th\u00e8bes, Cercidas de M\u00e9galopolis, Dion de Pruse, Peregrinos et Gr\u00e9goire de Nazianze sont les repr\u00e9sentants de cette tradition. This contribution purports to bind together two observations, one on the audience of the archaic iamb, the other on the audiences of the later iambic traditions. Archilochus' audience resembles the pretenders in the Odysseus, at once through their common social structure and the topics dealt with in their texts. Like centaurs, that celibate audience is possessed of a mixed structure: they are biologically grown-ups (bearded) but they are uninitiated (animah) as regards social rules. That mixed audience of \u00ab young \u00bb - \u00ab men \u00bb, as Archilochus puts it, rich through their ascent but with poor prospects, disappears with the Medic wars and the teaching of the Sophists. But their ambivalent structure reflects itself, it seems, in the branching off in the iambic tradition after Socrates. Demetrios (100 B.C.) distinguishes for that era two kinds of laughter: one ethical, the other cynical. The \u00ab ethical \u00bb iambic tradition which laughs at the language of the victims by making them speak in the texts thus begins with Plato and lives on with Callimacus, Herodas, Lucian and Julian. That \u00ab decent assault \u00bb (kal\u00ea makh\u00e9) addresses a well-to-do audience while the cynical tradition of the iamb which does not hide itself behind somebody else's voice, but attacks directly, addresses at least virtually a poor audience: Crates of Thebes, Cercidas of Megalopolis, Dion of Pruse, Peregrinos and Gregory of Naziansus are the representatives of that tradition.","creator":["Martin Steinr\u00fcck"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43606101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00310387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a38b32d0-5d70-37bf-9f2e-dc28cb3739bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43606101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pallas"}],"isPartOf":"Pallas","issueNumber":"77","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires du Midi","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les publics d'Archiloque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43606101","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Helen Dupree"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"243f5fe4-11ed-3ac2-8479-6b11bfc046fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44968481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"500","pagination":"pp. 500-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968481","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":1296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martha A. Ackelsberg"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c9154af-2f51-39eb-8365-d18ff5aa3885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Politics, Political Identities: Thoughts toward a Multicultural Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346926","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6159,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[465351,465505],[481404,481471],[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[17466,17620],[33297,33363],[33544,33619]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I argue that recent leftist criticisms of \"identity politics\" do not address problems of inequality and interaction that are central in thinking about contemporary democratic politics. I turn instead to a set of feminist thinkers who share these critics' vision of politics, but who critically mobilize identity in a way that provides a conception of democratic citizenship for our inegalitarian and diverse polity.","creator":["Susan Bickford"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fe61e2-3da0-3753-af22-c167c53c41cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anti-Anti-Identity Politics: Feminism, Democracy, and the Complexities of Citizenship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810735","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9576,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[71470,71681],[99419,99512]],"Locations in B":[[16287,16498],[40384,40477]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Seaton"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e346b5-f827-3f55-8fb4-44a930799ead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"CHAPTER TWO: Tween Social and Biological Reproduction: Early Puberty in Girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978690","volumeNumber":"245","wordCount":8946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses the coherencies linking subjectivity, power, and gender in the Austrian performance art of the late 1960s. It focuses especially on cross-dressing, that is, on performative gender-switching. Based on the confrontation of two exemplary works by G\u00fcnter Brus and VALIE EXPORT, the following questions are crucial to this study: What kind of subjectivity is negotiated through this identification with \"the other\"? Furthermore, what type of role-playing challenges traditional sexual power relations and, finally, what differences result from the opposing approaches of the two artists?","creator":["Rosemarie Brucher"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2165669X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"205f6b81-50dd-3f5d-af1e-2fdec6e26bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaustrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Austrian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00c4sthetische Travestie: Zur Inszenierung des Geschlechts in der \u00f6sterreichischen Aktionskunst der 1960er Jahre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048533","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rita Sch\u00e4fer"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26524862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03400255"},{"name":"oclc","value":"631963503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39f8a604-545e-3b53-931f-99d425b323b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26524862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"friedenswarte"}],"isPartOf":"Die Friedens-Warte","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26524862","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":1119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louis Bergonzi","Bruce L. Carter","Matthew L. Garrett"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00109894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"436923044"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234974"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afadd2fd-5f6c-3aa7-9512-80349b3bdba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulcouresmusedu"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"207-208","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Establishing Identity, Finding Community, and Embracing Fluidity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.207-208.0009","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria DiFrancesco"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b841d41-5fb0-38af-9c6a-7ba12413c6b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23024121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sisterhood and Violence in Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez Cubas's \"Hermanas de sangre\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23024121","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6102,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[67394,67527]],"Locations in B":[[5221,5360]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses Michel Foucault's challenge to historians by historicizing his work on the history of sexuality. First, it summarizes recent scholarly literature about sexuality by historians and literary critics in order to clarify the theoretical and historical groundwork that has thus far been laid. It also places interdisciplinary scholarship in a frame-work historians will find meaningful. Second, the essay argues that Foucault's work is the product of crises in male subjectivity originating after the Great War. In so doing, it seeks to explain the absence of gender as a category of analysis in his own work, as well as his inability to account for the historical processes through which sexuality is produced.","creator":["Carolyn J. Dean"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2505475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Productive Hypothesis: Foucault, Gender, and the History of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505475","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":13839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The \u201cperformativity thesis\u201d is the claim that parts of contemporary economics and finance, when carried out into the world by professionals and popularizers, reformat and reorganize the phenomena they purport to describe, in ways that bring the world into line with theory. Practical technologies, calculative devices and portable algorithms give actors tools to implement particular models of action. I argue that social network analysis is performative in the same sense as the cases studied in this literature. Social network analysis and finance theory are similar in key aspects of their development and effects. For the case of economics, evidence for weaker versions of the performativity thesis is quite good, and the strong formulation is circumstantially supported. Network theory easily meets the evidential threshold for the weaker versions. I offer empirical examples that support the strong (or \u201cBarnesian\u201d) formulation. Whether these parallels are a mark in favor of the thesis or a strike against it is an open question. I argue that the social network technologies and models now being \u201cperformed\u201d build out systems of generalized reciprocity, connectivity, and commons-based production. This is in contrast both to an earlier network imagery that emphasized self-interest and entrepreneurial exploitation of structural opportunities, and to the model of action typically considered to be performed by economic technologies. La \u00ab th\u00e8se de la performativit\u00e9 \u00bb est l\u2019affirmation selon laquelle des \u00e9l\u00e9ments de la finance et de l\u2019\u00e9conomie contemporaines, une fois import\u00e9s dans le monde par des professionnels ou des vulgarisateurs, contribuent \u00e0 reformater et \u00e0 r\u00e9organiser le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne qu\u2019ils cherchent \u00e0 d\u00e9crire, de telle mani\u00e8re que le monde se conforme \u00e0 la th\u00e9orie. Technologies pratiques, dispositifs calculatoires et algorithmes mobiles donnent aux acteurs des outils pour mettre en \u0153uvre des mod\u00e8les d\u2019action particuliers. Il est montr\u00e9 ici que l\u2019analyse des r\u00e9seaux sociaux est performative au sens d\u00e9fini dans cette litt\u00e9rature. L\u2019analyse des r\u00e9seaux sociaux et la th\u00e9orie de la finance sont similaires dans des aspects cl\u00e9s de leur d\u00e9veloppement et de leur effets. Pour le cas de l\u2019\u00e9conomie, les preuves pour les versions faibles de la th\u00e8se de la performativit\u00e9 sont bonnes, et certains \u00e9l\u00e9ments circonstantiels viennent \u00e0 l\u2019appui de versions fortes. La th\u00e9orie des r\u00e9seaux satisfait non seulement sans difficult\u00e9 aux crit\u00e8res des versions faibles, mais cet article propose diff\u00e9rents exemples empiriques \u00e0 l\u2019appui d\u2019une version forte, de type Barnesienne. Savoir si ces parall\u00e8les renforcent ou affaiblissent la th\u00e8se de la performativit\u00e9 demeure une question ouverte. Je soutiens que les technologies et les mod\u00e8les de r\u00e9seaux sociaux, consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme des entit\u00e9s performatives, construisent des syst\u00e8mes de r\u00e9ciprocit\u00e9 g\u00e9n\u00e9ralis\u00e9e, de connectivit\u00e9 et de production partag\u00e9. Cela s\u2019oppose \u00e0 la fois \u00e0 l\u2019image d\u2019un r\u00e9seau d\u00e9fini en termes d\u2019int\u00e9r\u00eat individuel et d\u2019exploitation entrepreneuriale des structures d\u2019opportunit\u00e9s, mais \u00e9galement \u00e0 un mod\u00e8le d\u2019action \u00ab perform\u00e9 \u00bb par les techniques \u00e9conomiques. Die Performativit\u00e4tstheorie stellt die Behauptung auf, dass Elemente der heutigen Finanz- und Wirtschaftswelt, einmal von Profis und \u201eVulgarisatoren\u201c \u00fcbernommen, dazu beitragen, das von ihnen beschriebene Ph\u00e4nomen neu zu formatieren und zu organisieren, und zwar derart, dass die Welt sich der Theorie anpasst. Praktische Technologien, Rechenger\u00e4te und mobile Algorhythmen geben den Handelnden Mittel, um spezifische Handlungsmodelle umzusetzen. Ich zeige hier, dass die Analyse der sozialen Netzwerke im Sinne dieser Literatur performativ ist. Die Analyse der sozialen Netzwerke und der Finanztheorie sind in wichtigen Bereichen ihrer Entwicklung und Auswirkungen vergleichbar. Im Falle der Wirtschaft gibt es gute Beweise f\u00fcr die schwache Version der Performativit\u00e4tstheorie, und gewisse Umst\u00e4nde best\u00e4tigen die starken Versionen. Die Netzwerktheorie erf\u00fcllt nicht nur problemlos die Kriterien der schw\u00e4cheren Versionen, sondern ich schlage gleichfalls verschiedene empirische Beispiele vor, die die starke Version, so die von Barnes, bekr\u00e4ftigen. Die Frage, ob diese Parallelen die Performativit\u00e4tstheorie verst\u00e4rken oder schw\u00e4chen, bleibt jedoch offen. Ich behaupte, dass die als performativen Einheiten betrachteten Technologien und sozialen Netzwerkmodelle Systeme verallgemeinernder Gegenseitigkeit, Vernetzung und Produktionsteilung schaffen. Dies widerspricht sowohl der Vorstellung eines begrenzten Netzes bez\u00fcglich der individuellen Interessen und der gesch\u00e4ftlichen Nutzung von Gelegenheitsstrukturen, als auch einem \u201eperformierten\u201c Aktionsmodell durch wirtschaftliche Techniken.","creator":["KIERAN HEALY"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50951428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233851"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7ddc6cf-30a5-3b0b-98e2-3589a54539cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26573206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Computer science","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"The Performativity of Networks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573206","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":13563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Given that care duties are central to the definition of motherhood across contexts, an extended separation from the woman's family due to migration presents a major threat to her social identity as a mother and wife. Drawing on West and Zimmerman's notion of \"doinggender\" and ethnographic research on Vietnamese low-waged contract workers in Taiwan, I provide vital insights into the discursive processes and everyday practices that underlie migrant women's negotiations of motherhood and femininity. Specifically, I examine the various ways migrant women perform and negotiate meanings of hy sinh (self-sacrifice) and chiu dung (endurance) that are core values of Vietnamese womanhood. Combating the stigma of bad motherhood and failed femininity, I emphasize, is not just about reasserting one's sense of gendered self but also about reassuring her access to the future support and care of the family. The study emphasizes intentionality and pragmatism in women's social doings of gender and highlights moral dilemmas in gender politics.","creator":["LAN ANH HOANG"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6d43013-685b-3309-8e4b-eb5088bc34a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44280232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"911","pageStart":"890","pagination":"pp. 890-911","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MORAL DILEMMAS OF TRANSNATIONAL MIGRATION: Vietnamese Women in Taiwan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44280232","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Some portion of the political left in the United States has called for the restriction of pornography and hate speech. Those who advocate such censorship do so on the ground that pornography and hate speech cause harm to disadvantaged \"outsider\" groups in society. For this reason, the leftist censorship advocates do not accept traditional First Amendment doctrines that protect much pornography and hate speech. In calling for censorship, the author argues, leftists endanger a great deal of activist speech, particularly in the form of artwork, that in fact seeks to undermine the very pornography and hate speech the censorship advocates target. Because much postmodern art appropriates the language and images of hate speech and pornography in order to deconstruct or otherwise subvert them, leftist attempts at censorship carry a grave danger of silencing leftist activists. Furthermore, the author maintains, leftist advocates of censorship have not, and ultimately cannot, develop theories of interpretation capable of protecting activist expression while still restricting or banning pornography and hate speech. Because of the indeterminacy of language, censorship advocates must choose whether to sacrifice vital voices of protest and criticism from within the left or whether to suppress pornography and hate speech.","creator":["Amy Adler"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59f031d8-d4b0-3101-b2c3-8a88ed2deacb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74,"pageEnd":"1572","pageStart":"1499","pagination":"pp. 1499-1572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What's Left?: Hate Speech, Pornography, and the Problem for Artistic Expression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481093","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":39594,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[139878,140252]],"Locations in B":[[74656,75030]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miriam Thaggert"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a0d3dd9-f9fe-3839-8179-0e6ccf99517a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Racial Etiquette: Nella Larsen's \"Passing and the Rhinelander Case\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338664","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12088,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443634,443762]],"Locations in B":[[8853,8981]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sueann Caulfield","Martha de Abreu Esteves"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ded394ff-c05a-36c9-b0d5-fcf56aafd018"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3514196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"50 Years of Virginity in Rio de Janeiro: Sexual Politics and Gender Roles in Juridical and Popular Discourse, 1890-1940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514196","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":15477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Even though the American Civil Rights Movement consolidated the norm of racial equality, material inequality between whites and non-whites has persisted. The norm of racial equality, meanwhile, has generated a crisis in locating and combating contemporary racism. Michel Foucault's concept of power and his lesser-known work on racism allow us to think through this crisis. His arguments suggest that racism in the post-Civil Rights era operates largely through the abandonment of non-whites to a state of war, which liberal democratic societies, via the social contract, are organized to prevent. Rather than waging war on non-whites, post-Civil Rights America normalizes whiteness. This normalization exposes non-whites to death or the risk of death by forcing them both to fend for themselves and to battle one another, as well as the elements, in a struggle for survival.","creator":["Deepa Bhandaru"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56364330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c0a901a-4cbd-339f-a990-89f1d96a1203"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is White Normativity Racist? Michel Foucault and Post-Civil Rights Racism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540205","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ernest Cline's Ready Player One (2011) illustrates the anxieties and uncertainties of embodiment and identity in the digital age by constructing a pop culture \u201ccanon\u201d of texts that all participants in video game culture must know. The texts in this canon are \u201ctaught\u201d via a series of references and puzzles that the characters in the novel (as well as the reader) must solve. Being a \u201cgamer\u201d thus becomes synonymous with having proper knowledge of the canon. However, the construction of this canon privileges certain kinds of bodies and identities over others. The result is an image of gamer culture in which white maleness is the default assumption against which all participants are measured.","creator":["Megan Amber Condis"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1679bb0b-45a8-3b6b-a253-bd4063116826"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing the Game of Literature: Ready Player One<\/em>, the Ludic Novel, and the Geeky \u201cCanon\u201d of White Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In popular culture and psychiatry, the question of transgender affect is one still mired in pain: we are commonly thought to experience \"dysphoria\" and to have been \"born in the wrong body.\" With Woolf's Orlando: A Biography as its focus, this essay offers an alternative theory of transgender affect as one of Einf\u00fchlung, or aesthetic empathy.","creator":["LUCAS CRAWFORD"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0914ca6c-7808-3622-beb9-00354afdd05c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Woolf's \"Einf\u00fchlung\": An Alternative Theory of Transgender Affect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030741","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7998,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436489,436592]],"Locations in B":[[12788,12891]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3648719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":216,"pageEnd":"857","pageStart":"642","pagination":"pp. 642-857","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Studies of Particular Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648719","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":181170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although intersectional analyses of gender have been widely adopted by feminist theonsts in many disciplines, controversy remains over their character, limitations, and implications. I support intersectionality, cautioning against asking too much of it. It provides standards for the uses of methods or frameworks rather than theories of power, oppression, agency, or identity. I want feminist philosophers to incorporate intersec\u00faonal analyses more fully into our work so that our theones can, in fact, have the pluralistic and inclusive character to which we give lip service. To this end, I advocate an intersec\u00fconal family resembhnce strategy that does not create philosophical problems for feminists. I test my approach against Mar\u00eda Lugones's argument in \"Heterosexualism and the Colonial\/Modern Gender System\" (Lugones 2007) to determine, in particular, whether we can successfully resist a move to create multiple genders for women. If we can successfully resist this move, then we can answer the objection that intersectionality fragments women both theoretically and politically. I also argue that my approach avoids Lugones s cntique of forms of intersectionality that fall within \"the logic of purity.\"","creator":["ANN GARRY"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"834043a3-d925-35a2-8b8d-7e81714489ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"850","pageStart":"826","pagination":"pp. 826-850","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Intersectionality, Metaphors, and the Multiplicity of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328882","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This paper follows the authors' collective biographical inquiry into \u201cbecoming men\u201d (Gale and Wyatt, 2008), and pursues questions about \u201cmen-ness\u201d in their writing relationship. Drawing primarily from Deleuze, both his philosophical concepts \u2014 lines of flight, nomadic inquiry, the rhizome, and more \u2014 and his insights into his collaborations with others, the authors work together on collaborative research ventures, mostly in an ebb and flow of writings that they exchange across the ether. They write with\/to each other about writing, about their respective work, about love, about loss, about subjectivities. They are aware that in the intertextuality of this writing they perform themselves. Using rhizomatic and nomadic inquiry, in this paper they explore the experience of being two men talking, asking: how is this relationship constituted? How does writing create this relationship? What \u2014 gendered, sexualized \u2014 subjectivities do they perform to\/with each other?","creator":["Ken Gale","Jonathan Wyatt"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50e3d759-40bb-356b-8c33-b22dff1502cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Two Men Talking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.3.361","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9210,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[146077,146481]],"Locations in B":[[35146,35557]],"subTitle":"A Nomadic Inquiry into Collaborative Writing"} +{"abstract":"'Emo', an abbreviation of the word 'emotional', is a term both used to describe music which places public emphasis on introspective displays of emotion and a pejorative phrase applied to fans of a diverse range of music. It is overwhelmingly male-dominated in terms of production and it has been suggested that the development of emo can be explained with reference to a 'crisis in masculinity'. This implies that explicit, male emotional expression is historically incompatible with the performance of Western 'masculinity'. This article first briefly explores how emo emerged and how it has been linked to the idea of a crisis. It then moves on to conduct a lyrical, discursive analysis around three themes: emotional expression and relationships; overt chauvinism; and 'beta male misogyny'. Through these concepts I suggest that, rather than indicating a crisis or 'softening' of masculinity, there are actually a number of historical continuities with masculinities as a means of sustaining gendered inequalities.","creator":["SAM DE BOISE"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"016fcc91-f88c-3b3e-9758-0a2deb9adda3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24736806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cheer up emo kid: rethinking the 'crisis of masculinity' in emo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736806","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10407,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[62889,63030]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rather than being merely a physiological stage, adolescence is variously constructed through social institutions. The media plays a significant role in such constructions, including that of adolescent sexuality. In the recent past there have been several cases of sexual acts involving adolescents that have received prominent media coverage as they have been considered shocking. The Jules High School sex scandal related to sex acts between a single adolescent girl and two adolescent boys. It was recorded on mobile phones by their peers and circulated on their mobile networks, or 'went viral' as the media continuously noted. The press coverage surrounding this incident and the legal process that ensued is the focus of this Article which undertakes a critical textual analysis of the coverage in the popular tabloid, the Daily Sun, in order to make explicit the contesting sets of discourses around adolescence and sexuality that were articulated in this popular public sphere. The Article uses a Foucauldian framework in order to probe the discourses of sexuality that are articulated and contested in this space. As the most widely read newspaper in South Africa it serves as a powerful site of definition of teen sexuality. The analysis suggests that, rather than allowing for teen sexuality, it is disavowed by villainising teen sex and responsibility for such 'deviance' is directed to various adult and social adult actors.","creator":["Priscilla Boshoff","Jeanne Prinsloo"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d59461e1-f66e-3afb-ac1b-afef87816c71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (97)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Face the music!\" The \"Daily Sun's\" representation of adolescent sex in the Jules High sex scandal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824410","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within the context of early-twentieth-century medical discourses, this article focuses on the masking and unmasking of identity in N. O. Body's Memoirs of a Man's Maiden Years (Aus eines Mannes M\u00e4dchenjahren), an autobiography of a German \"pseudo-hermaphrodite\" published in 1907. Highlighting the author's attempts to normalize the protagonist's indeterminate body within both a medical and a narrative framework that attempt to negate the body's \"otherness,\" I argue that Body's autobiography actually exposes the protagonist's ambiguity and multiple positionalities that threaten to spill out of the structures set up to contain them. Furthermore, the author's attempt to mask his own Jewish identity while at the same time superimposing \"Jewishness' back on the body of the protagonist illustrates the complex intersectionality in this text that is simultaneously hidden and on display.","creator":["Helga Thorson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3204797a-dbc1-3d10-9d74-8e5145156e88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masking\/Unmasking Identity in Early Twentieth-Century Germany: The Importance of N.O. Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688317","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Carter's posthumously published story \"Ashputtle or The Mother's Ghost: Three Versions of One Story\" (1987) foregrounds a preoccupation with anonymity in relation to the fairy-tale tradition, weaving together the genealogy of the Cinderella tale with questions of motherhood and generating allegory about culture and authorship. However, Carter's reiterative play is infused with irony, thus placing an impression of political will in tension with the instability of this trope. This article studies the potential impact of Carter's authorial postures on the reader and suggests implications for her place in the canon.","creator":["Michelle Ryan-Sautour"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Authorial Ghosts and Maternal Identity in Angela Carter's \"Ashputtle or The Mother's Ghost: Three Versions of One Story\" (1987)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388976","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8211,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17055,17268]],"Locations in B":[[23018,23230]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article historicizes the making of a fur coat in post-1940 Canada, exploring the social relationships and forms of labour that made the fur coat possible: skinning, sewing, and selling. Focusing especially on women's labour, the author examines the significance of Aboriginal women's work, often unwaged, and seldom recognized in many fur-trade sources, as well as the way in which racial constructions of Aboriginal women intersected with the appropriation of their labour. The wage labour of women in a manufacturing sector dominated by eastern European Jewish immigrants, and by a masculine hierarchy of skill, as well as working women's protests and unionization, are also examined, as is retail selling labour in large and small stores. An exploration of these forms of labour, with a focus on gender, provides insights into discussions about the body and workingclass history. While many feminist works have emphasized the cultural and discursive in their explorations of fur, the author argues for a theoretical perspective that fuses a feminist critique of race and gender hierarchies with a materialist understanding of labour, class, and alienation. While embracing a feminist scepticism about the existence of a \"natural\" body, she argues for the need to avoid the dematerialized body of much postmodern theory in explorations of the body and working-class history. Cet article historicise la fabrication d'un manteau de fourrure au Canada apr\u00e8s les ann\u00e9es 1940, en \u00e9tudiant les relations sociales et les formes de travail qui rendaient le manteau de fourrure possible: le d\u00e9pouillement, la couture et la vente. En me concentrant particuli\u00e8rement sur le travail des femmes, j'examine l'importance du travail des femmes aborig\u00e8nes, souvent impay\u00e9es et non reconnues dans de nombreuses sources du commerce de la fourrure, et la fa\u00e7on dont les constructions raciales des femmes aborig\u00e8nes se croisaient avec l'appropriation de leur travail. Le travail salari\u00e9 des femmes dans un secteur manufacturier domin\u00e9 par les immigrants juifs de l'Europe orientale et par une hi\u00e9rarchie masculine de la comp\u00e9tence, ainsi que les protestations des travailleuses et leur syndicalisation, sont \u00e9galement examin\u00e9es, de m\u00eame que le travail de la vente au d\u00e9tail dans des magasins de grandes et petites dimensions. L'\u00e9tude de ces formes de travail, en se concentrant sur le genre, jette \u00e9galement une lumi\u00e8re nouvelle sur les discussions concernant l'histoire du corps et l'histoire de la classe ouvri\u00e8re. Tandis que de nombreux travaux de f\u00e9ministes ont mis en valeur l'aspect culturel et discursif dans leurs \u00e9tudes sur la fourrure, je d\u00e9fends une perspective th\u00e9orique qui allie une critique f\u00e9ministe des hi\u00e9rarchies de la race et du genre \u00e0 une compr\u00e9hension mat\u00e9rialiste du travail, de la classe et de l'ali\u00e9nation. Tout en adoptant un scepticisme f\u00e9ministe sur l'existence d'un corps \u201cnaturel\u201d, nous devons \u00e9viter le corps des travailleurs d\u00e9mat\u00e9rialis\u00e9 d'une grande partie de la th\u00e9orie postmoderne dans nos \u00e9tudes sur l'histoire du corps et l'histoire de la classe ouvri\u00e8re. Die Autorin historisiert die Herstellung Pelzm\u00e4nteln in den 1940er Jahren in Kanada, indem sie die sozialen Beziehungen und Formen der Arbeit, die die Herstellung von Pelzm\u00e4nteln erm\u00f6glichten \u2013 h\u00e4uten, n\u00e4hen, verkaufen \u2013 untersucht. Die Autorin konzentriert sich speziell auf Frauenarbeit, pr\u00fcft die Bedeutung der Arbeit von Aboriginalfrauen, die oft nicht bezahlt und in vielen Bereichen des Pelzhandels nicht anerkannt wurde. Und sie untersucht die Weise, in der rassistische Konstruktionen von Aboriginalfrauen deren Zuteilung von Arbeit bestimmen. Die Lohnarbeit von Frauen im Manufaktorsektor, der von osteurop\u00e4ischen j\u00fcdischen Immigranten dominiert wurde, und die maskuline Hierarchie handwerklicher Fertigkeit wird ebenso gepr\u00fcft wie der Protest von Arbeiterfrauen und deren Vereinigung sowie die Einzelhandelsarbeit in gro\u00dfen und kleinen L\u00e4den. Eine Untersuchung dieser Formen der Arbeit, mit einem Fokus auf Gender, erbringt auch Einsichten in die Diskussionen \u00fcber den K\u00f6rper und die Geschichte der Arbeiterklasse. W\u00e4hrend viele feministische Arbeiten das kulturelle und diskursive in ihren Untersuchung \u00fcber die Arbeit mit Pelzen betont haben, votiert die Autorin f\u00fcr eine theoretische Perspektive, die eine feministische Kritik der Rassen- und Genderhierarchien mit einem materialistischen Verst\u00e4ndnis von Arbeit, Klasse und Entfremdung fusioniert. Bei der \u00dcbernahme eines feministischen Skeptizismus \u00fcber die Existenz eines \u201enat\u00fcrlichen\u201d K\u00f6rpers muss der entmaterialisierte K\u00f6rper vieler postmoderner Theorien bei der Erforschung des K\u00f6rpers und der Geschichte der Arbeiterklasse vermieden werden. Este art\u00edculo intenta historiar la fabricaci\u00f3n de un abrigo de piel en Canad\u00e1 despu\u00e9s del 1940 y estudia las relaciones sociales y las formas de trabajo que hac\u00edan posible el abrigo de piel: desollar, coser y vender. Con un enfoque especial en el trabajo de las mujeres se examina el significado del trabajo de las mujeres ind\u00edgenas, a menudo sin pago y no reconocido en muchas fuentes relativas a la peleter\u00eda, y tambi\u00e9n se examina el modo en que las construcciones raciales de mujeres ind\u00edgenas se intersecaron con la apropiaci\u00f3n de su trabajo. Se examinan tambi\u00e9n el trabajo asalariado de mujeres en un sector industrial dominado por inmigrantes jud\u00edos de Europa del Este y por una jerarqu\u00eda masculina de habilidades; las protestas y la sindicaci\u00f3n de las mujeres activas y el trabajo de la venta al detalle en tiendas grandes y peque\u00f1as. Un estudio de estas formas de trabajo que se enfoca en el g\u00e9nero tambi\u00e9n permite comprender mejor las discusiones sobre el cuerpo y la historia de la clase obrera. Aunque muchas obras feministas han puesto \u00e9nfasis en lo cultural y lo discursivo en sus estudios de peleter\u00eda, en este art\u00edculo se da razones a favor de una perspectiva te\u00f3rica que fusione una cr\u00edtica feminista de jerarqu\u00edas de raza y g\u00e9nero con una noci\u00f3n materialista del trabajo, de la clase y de la alienaci\u00f3n. Aunque abrazamos un escepticismo feminista acerca de la existencia de un cuerpo \u201cnatural\u201d, en nuestros estudios del cuerpo y de la historia obrera hay que evitar el cuerpo desmaterializado de mucha teor\u00eda posmoderna.","creator":["Joan Sangster"],"datePublished":"2007-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e92599ad-6011-3516-9714-965255d0347f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44582984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making a Fur Coat: Women, the Labouring Body, and Working-Class History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582984","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":13132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Crystal Downing"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45297139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d03ff03-359f-3e0b-9c42-3571e7fdb2a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45297139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"seven"}],"isPartOf":"VII: Journal of the Marion E. Wade Center","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton College","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Feminist Nay-Sayers: Are Women Human?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45297139","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":2551,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[15171,15238]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Achieving equality between women and men was declared one of the main targets of the Cuban Socialist revolution in 1961. Disparities related to gender such as unequal opportunities and access to the labour market, sexism, or sexual harassment were together identified as a product of capitalism and therefore had to be expunged. During Cuba's pre-1959 capitalist past, inequalities related to gender prevailed in a variety of forms, but it was presumed that they would disappear with the building of a 'new' socialist society. Today, 50 years later, the question arises as to if and how these ambitious goals have been reached. In this article I explore challenges women are facing, grounded on qualitative field research and thereby include qualitative field research material as well as statistics. In this context I will shed light on the re-evolving practice of labelling oneself as a 'housewife'. Furthermore, I will analyse whether this signifies a re-identification with 'traditional' role divisions between men and women or rather refers to a hidden - and not yet discussed academically - form of entrepreneurial success. To conclude, I will investigate the possible implications of these changes for both individuals and Cuban society as a whole.","creator":["Angelica Wehrli"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41945886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17563461"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41945886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcubastud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"\"AMA DE CASA\" - A HIDDEN FORM OF ENTREPRENEURIAL SUCCESS? RE-CHALLENGING GENDERED ROLES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41945886","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Laplace once argued that if one could \"comprehend all the forces by which nature is animated,\" it would be possible to predict the future and explain the past. The advent of analysis of large-scale data sets has been accompanied by newfound concerns about \"Laplace's Demon\" as it relates to certain fields of science as well as management, evaluation, and audit. I begin by asking how statistical data are constructed, illustrating the hermeneutic acts necessary to create a variable. These include attributing a certain characteristic to a particular phenomenon, isolating the characteristic of interest, and assigning a value to it. In addition, a population must be identified and a sample must be \"taken\" from that population. Next, I examine how statistical analyses are conducted, examining the interpretive acts there as well. In each case, I show how big data add new challenges. I then show how statistics are incorporated into audits and evaluations, emphasizing how alternative interpretations are concealed in the audit process. I conclude by noting that these issues cannot be \"resolved\" as Laplace suggested. His Demon, already banished from physics, needs to be banished from other fields of science, management, audits, and evaluations as well.","creator":["Lawrence Busch"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c760568c-fdb8-3708-97bb-e537ce7d93cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26405597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"678","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-678","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Looking in the Wrong (La)place? The Promise and Perils of Becoming Big Data","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405597","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Bracke"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.1.1.0041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f9e396b-722e-30fe-9277-56e0fc88ef7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/jdivegendstud.1.1.0041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Unbearable Lightness of \u2018Gender and Diversity\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.1.1.0041","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Epstein","David Karr"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/517980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d41a8cf-841f-393f-9982-ea6f2ec9aa77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/517980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Playing at Revolution: British \u201cJacobin\u201d Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/517980","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":16867,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461319,461476]],"Locations in B":[[98470,98627]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Violence features in human life, not only as actual physical confrontation but also as stories. Stories of violence are particularly important in violence-prone subcultures and among those partaking in the illegal drug economy. Drawing on narrative analysis, this study examines stories of violence among a population of incarcerated Norwegian drug dealers. Four widespread story types are identified: business narratives, intimidation narratives, moral narratives and survivor narratives. We explore the content of these stories and the work they do for tellers while keeping a keen eye on their ambiguous nature. We argue that stories and storytellers plurivocality is often missed when stories of violence are described within established criminological traditions.","creator":["Sveinung Sandberg","S\u00e9bastien Tutenges","Heith Copes"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e939b752-e686-336e-971d-bc6527d947ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43819349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"1186","pageStart":"1168","pagination":"pp. 1168-1186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STORIES OF VIOLENCE: A NARRATIVE CRIMINOLOGICAL STUDY OF AMBIGUITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43819349","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10439,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[164405,164567]],"Locations in B":[[10860,11022]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carine\u00a0M. Mardorossian"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/337938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f35f45d1-3b06-3989-b611-3d20014be2ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/337938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"775","pageStart":"743","pagination":"pp. 743-775","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a New Feminist Theory of Rape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/337938","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1614 Lope de Vega, recently ordained, published the Rimas sacras, a confessional canzoniere replete with allusions to his past promiscuity and recent religious conversion. I argue that Lope addressed his collection not only to a public of anonymous readers but also to a specific, private reader: his patron, the duke of Sessa. For the previous eight years, Lope had served as Sessa's erotic amanuensis, writing love letters and poems for the duke's various mistresses. I propose that the collection as a whole and several sonnets in particular constitute an implicit reproach to Sessa. Through his religious poetry, Lope sought to repudiate his degraded masculine identity as the duke's epistolary pimp (and reputed lover) and affirm his status as a priest who served a more exalted and loving patron. In the Rimas sacras, the discourses of clientage and Petrarchan love are imbricated in the dominant religious discourse, rendering it more available for contestatory practices than is often recognized.","creator":["Alison Weber"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f775df7-dc47-384e-95ce-62a4be2c6b1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25486168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"404","pagination":"pp. 404-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Lope de Vega's \"Rimas sacras\": Conversion, Clientage, and the Performance of Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486168","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":12402,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147682,147832]],"Locations in B":[[54088,54237]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Aksumite elites electively identified themselves as \u201cblack\u201d in relation to the paler integument of other Mediterranean peoples. Prior to the fourth century CE, the proper noun Aithiop\u00eda referred to the area of northern Sudan. Aksum, however, deliberately appropriated the Greek term for its own geopolitical purposes, partly as a way to write itself both into the grand narratives of Graeco-Roman history, where \u201cEthiopians\u201d recurrently figure as morally \u201cblameless,\u201d as well as\u2014with their conversion to Christianity\u2014into Old and New Testamental eschatologies that consistently position \u201cEthiopians\u201d as first in the sight of God. This process of self-definition\u2014achieved under the formative gaze of Hellenic, Roman, and Levantine Others\u2014ultimately allowed \u2018Ityoy\u0101 to become a key, if nonetheless still liminal and rogue, player in the post-Constantinian politico-religious arena, in such a way that both economic and cultural capital accrued to the benefit of Aksum.","creator":["D. Selden"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2013.32.2.322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7504e5d-f98d-3fa1-8206-dbd7296ae58a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ca.2013.32.2.322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"How the Ethiopian Changed His Skin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2013.32.2.322","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":28141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mae G. Henderson"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299564","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c6ca1fe-7ff4-33d5-b1b2-11610eebc358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299564"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"James Baldwin: Expatriation, Homosexual Panic, and Man's Estate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299564","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8314,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[423731,423930]],"Locations in B":[[21313,21512]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reconsiders Marcuse's Eros and Civilization from the perspective of Gayle Rubin's classic article \"The Traffic in Women.\" The primary goals of this comparison are to investigate the social and psychological mechanisms that perpetuate the archaic sex\/gender system Rubin describes under current conditions of post-industrial capitalism; to open possible new avenues of analysis and liberatory praxis based on these authors' applications of Marxist insights to cultural interpretations of Freud's writings; and to make clearer the role sexual repression continues to play in all forms of oppression, even in a public world seemingly saturated with sex.","creator":["NANCY J. HOLLAND"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9da010fc-2db6-33ba-9ccb-c99740065760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23016679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Looking Backwards: A Feminist Revisits Herbert Marcuse's \"Eros and Civilization\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016679","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6198,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[148129,148210],[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[4156,4237],[38485,38548]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["STUART HENDERSON"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41879238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41879238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"They're Both the Same Thing?: Transnational Politics and Identity Performance in 1960s Toronto","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41879238","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Patterns of kin-making among devadasis in northern Karnataka pose problems for anthropological charting of kinship and for state projects of family normalization. Given to the goddess Yellamma by her family in a rite of marriage, a devadasi becomes a person who is both a woman and a son. Such a person cannot be mapped within a structuralist calculus of kin in which every position is always already gendered. I elaborate kin-making as a technology for producing gender and value in persons who can inhabit, but may confound, alignments between sex, gender, and kin position that have been smuggled into the anthropological project as kinship.","creator":["LUCINDA RAMBERG"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24027406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f42f176d-62a5-378e-900b-36e0240982ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24027406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"661","pagination":"pp. 661-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Troubling kinship: Sacred marriage and gender configuration in South India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24027406","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13475,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124610,124727]],"Locations in B":[[68968,69084]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much research in social science concludes that uncertainty surrounding individual beliefs and identities is negative and anxiety-inducing, and that people are continuously searching for certainty. In the context of rising rates of religious disaffiliation in the United States, and the rise of social and political organizations created to promote nonreligious beliefs and values, the nonreligious offer a strategic case to explore the meaning and lived experience of certainty and uncertainty surrounding belief and identity formation. Drawing on an analysis of identity narratives from 50 nonreligious Americans, I find that uncertainty is just as often experienced as positive and motivating as it is isolating or anxiety-inducing, and although certainty-filled beliefs and identities are available for the nonreligious, they are just as often rejected for more uncertain ones. I reveal how some nonreligious individuals fluctuate between different orientations toward certainty and uncertainty regarding their nonreligion, whereas others exhibit more trait-like orientations to certainty and uncertainty. These findings have important implications for understanding how orientations to certainty and uncertainty shape identity and belief development in the modern world.","creator":["Jacqui Frost"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9122e83-7395-3117-8304-2b48118999aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"850","pageStart":"828","pagination":"pp. 828-850","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Certainty, Uncertainty, or Indifference? Examining Variation in the Identity Narratives of Nonreligious Americans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602117","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":14730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper offers a close reading of two stories in rabbinic literature: 'The Prostitute and the Fringes' (Sifre Numbers 115) and the story of Elazar b. Dordiya (bAvoda Zara 17a). Both these stories depict a journey taken by a Rabbinic Jew to get to a prostitute who lives 'in the towns of the sea'. Furthermore, both these stories also depict a journey back, which is marked by repentance and transition of identity. I discuss these stories using the concept of heterotopia, which was coined by Michel Foucault. In both stories, the territory where the prostitute resides and to which the 'client' travels is a quintessential example of a heterotopia, i.e. a space contrasted with normative culture; not only because it is characterized with prostitution, which is in itself a symbol of deviance, but also because the prostitutes in both stories are located near the sea, which is clearly an unfamiliar and threatening space to rabbinic Jews who reside only in a mountainous area. In my view, both stories attempt to use the heterotopic space as a way to redefine and reaffirm the homotopias, i.e. the rabbinic world. Although the main protagonists in these stories initiate the journey and endure physical and financial hardship in order to get to the prostitutes, they eventually resist sexual temptation, since their subjection to normative rabbinic internalized 'home' is stronger than they have assumed. Moreover, the fact that both stories include repentant return journeys to the normative sphere, constructs the rabbinic world as a cultural and metaphysical utopia.","creator":["\u05de\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05dc\u05d1\u05e8\u05d2","Mira Balberg"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0333693X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"414315a3-6dbc-3045-aaa6-46623d8a21e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23361190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jerustudhebrlite"}],"isPartOf":"Jerusalem Studies in Hebrew Literature \/ \u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\"\u05e9 \u05de\u05e0\u05d3\u05dc","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Between Heterotopias and Utopias: Two Rabbinic Stories about Journeys to Prostitutes \/ \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05d8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05d8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05d4: \u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05de\u05e1\u05e2 \u05d0\u05dc \u05d6\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d1\u05d7\u05d6\u05e8\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361190","volumeNumber":"\u05db\u05d1","wordCount":9148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Murphy Augustine","Michelle Zoss"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"697fa23d-9d02-3ad0-8d1f-57f73e39a1f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40173237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetic Flow Experience in the Teaching of Preservice Language Arts Teachers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173237","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this case study, the author investigated how students' gender affected their participation in a secondary popular music class in which participants wrote and performed original music. Three same-gendered rock groups and two mixedgendered rock groups were observed. Would students of different genders rehearse and compose differently? How would same-gendered processes compare to mixedgendered processes? Research suggests that girls learn differently from boys and that gender\u2014as distinct from sex\u2014is formed in social environments. In research on popular music education, however, the participation of girls has been underdocumented and under-theorized. This study found that boys and girls rehearsed and composed differently: Whereas the boys combined musical gestures and nonverbal communication into a seamless sonic process, the girls separated talk and musical production. In the mixed-gendered groups, tensions arose because participants used different learning styles that members of the opposite gender misunderstood. Broadening popular music pedagogies to incorporate different practices is suggested.","creator":["Joseph Michael Abramo"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44683915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236973"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d072f871-e702-33db-984c-81147fa0b9b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"MENC: The National Association for Music Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender Differences of Popular Music Production in Secondary Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019435","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":10346,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[15785,15925]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Travis Rozier"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26155350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd12bd2c-9cf1-3ad1-aedd-f748fb4e05d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26155350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"282","pagination":"pp. 282-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Melancholia and Memorialization in Eudora Welty's \"Delta Wedding\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26155350","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10486,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[247781,247885]],"Locations in B":[[59095,59199]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Initi\u00e9 avec I'Administration Clinton, le sida a peu \u00e0 peu \u00e9t\u00e9 abord\u00e9 dans son traitement, \u00e0 la fois comme une question de sant\u00e9 publique et comme un \u226a nouveau \u226b probl\u00e8me s\u00e9curitaire auquel les Etats-Unis doivent maintenant faire face. Cette transformation discursive contient plusieurs implications qu'il faut aborder. En adoptant l'optique du f\u00e9minisme postmoderne, cet article cherche \u00e0 analyser comment les repre\u00e9sentations discursives am\u00e9ricaines de la pand\u00e9mie du sida en Afrique visent \u00e0 prot\u00e9ger une certaine conception de l'identit\u00e9 masculine de l'Etat et des structures du pouvoir. Une attention particuli\u00e8re est pr\u00eat\u00e9e aux liens qui s'\u00e9tablissent entre le corps politique et le corps physique dans les discours touchant au sida, et aux implications sur le plan du genre de la loi de 2003 intitul\u00e9e \u226a United States Leadership Against HIV\/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Act \u226b adopt\u00e9e par l'Administration de George W. Bush. Starting with the Clinton Administration, AIDS has progressively been treated both as a public health matter and as a \u226a new \u226b security issue that the United States now has to face. This discursive transformation contains several political implications that need to be addressed. Adopting postmodern feminism lenses, this article seeks to analyze how the American discursive representations of the African AIDS pandemic aim to protect a certain conception of the state's masculine identity and structures of power. Particular attention is paid to the links established between the political and the physical body in AIDS-related discourses and to the gendered implications of the \u226a United States Leadership Against HIV\/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria Act \u226b of 2003 adopted under the George W. Bush Administration.","creator":["Anne-Marie D'AOUST"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1157996X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38402778"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-255343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"771868ca-30af-3b37-a8b8-a0e5bc04bc85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23699205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturesconflits"}],"isPartOf":"Cultures et Conflits","issueNumber":"54","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Un dilemme de sexualit\u00e9\/s\u00e9curit\u00e9 : la logique identitaire am\u00e9ricaine face \u00e0 la menace \u00e9pid\u00e9mique en Afrique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699205","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shane Phelan"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2586023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea67067c-bd23-3562-83aa-586b2f42c8f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2586023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Liberalism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2586023","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":12058,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[72294,72363]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vincent Crapanzano"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dccf1bf8-2a4b-3fe7-8993-1591833de0d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"767","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-767","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"\"Lacking Now Is Only the Leading Idea, That Is: We, the Rays, Have No Thoughts\": Interlocutory Collapse in Daniel Paul Schreber's \"Memoirs of My Nervous Illness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344088","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":15993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carolyn Strange"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25144117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25144117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Bad Girls and Masked Men: Recent Works on Sexuality in US History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25144117","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7158,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[21249,21387]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Antonella Corsani","Timothy S. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2870b89d-35b1-3a62-8394-1e2d829c7b25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4152857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond the Myth of Woman: The Becoming-Transfeminist of (Post-)Marxism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152857","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14599,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[450120,450224],[450376,450502],[459620,459819]],"Locations in B":[[13392,13497],[13518,13643],[85971,86170]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo analisamos a constru\u00e7\u00e3o da identidade de g\u00eanero entre meninas adolescentes, a partir da sua dimens\u00e3o performativa. A pesquisa etnogr\u00e1fica foi realizada em uma escola p\u00fablica de Ensino Fundamental II, em Salvador. A produ\u00e7\u00e3o discursiva de diferen\u00e7as, semelhan\u00e7as e desigualdades entre categorias de menina \u00e9 um dos modos pelos quais o g\u00eanero vai sendo (re)constru\u00eddo e negociado nas intera\u00e7\u00f5es cotidianas. Tendo como pano de fundo a regula\u00e7\u00e3o moral exercida pelos pares, exp\u00f5e-se como cada posi\u00e7\u00e3o de sujeito assimila, contesta e ressignifica comportamentos e caracter\u00edsticas socialmente convencionados como femininos e masculinos. Em um continuum de conformidades e subvers\u00f5es, \u201cnormais\u201d, \u201catiradas\u201d e \u201cevolu\u00eddas\u201d exibem tra\u00e7os de perman\u00eancias e mudan\u00e7as culturais, evidenciando a heterogeneidade marcadamente contradit\u00f3ria da constitui\u00e7\u00e3o de identidades generificadas. This study analyzes the construction of the gender identity among adolescent girls, based on their performative dimension. The ethnographic research was carried out in a public school of Middle School, in Salvador, Brazil. The discursive construction of differences, similarities and inequalities between categories of girl is one of the ways in which gender is being (re)constructed and negotiated in everyday interactions. From the background the moral regulation exercised by the peers, it is exposed how each subject positions assimilates, contests and resignifies behaviors and characteristics socially agreed as feminine and masculine. In a continuum of conformities and subversions, \u201cnormal\u201d, \u201cforward\u201d and \u201cevolved\u201d exhibit traces of cultural permanence and change, evidencing the markedly contradictory heterogeneity of the constitution of generalized identities.","creator":["Jamile Guimar\u00e3es","Cristiane da Silva Cabral"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e65fa9c-fcc8-364f-bec8-01ec558fd2ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Negociando normalidade(s)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965141","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"constru\u00e7\u00f5es da identidade de g\u00eanero entre meninas"} +{"abstract":"Ways of dressing play an important role in bodily self-representations and in communicating one's self-image to the outside world. In Malaysia, a country with a predominantly Muslim population, a trend has emerged of Muslim Malay women increasingly wearing the abaya, the long black cloak which is usually worn by Arab women. Some female Arab tourists, however, take off the abaya when on holiday in Malaysia, thus evading bodily restrictions in their home countries. In this article I argue that, through the use of the abaya, Muslim women (and, to a certain extent, men as well), are negotiating not just their respective interpretations and concepts of Islam, but modernity as well.","creator":["Viola Thimm"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44242876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297263330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235318"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0459296-00ba-3363-a3c4-14f5697962de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44242876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DIE ARABISCHE \"ABAYA\" IN MALAYSIA: Verhandlungen von muslimischen Kleidungspraktiken, weiblicher K\u00f6rperlichkeit und Modernit\u00e4t","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44242876","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is based on statistical and qualitative analysis of library and information science (LIS) literature. Our study asks the question of whether, and if so, how, and how often, the discourse generated by scholarly literature in LIS engages discussion about identity in LIS, what topics are covered, and whether the articles engage praxis, or the application of theory to practice. Through searches in LISTA database that cross-referenced identity terms (e.g., Gender, LGBT) with terms describing prominent areas in the LIS field, we collected quantitative data and analyzed the co-occurrence of keywords and created network visualizations. We used a qualitative coding scheme to rate abstracts in terms of their relevance and actionability. Both modes of analysis show that generalized conversations about identity are most common, and praxis is rarely achieved. Using critical approaches to LIS, we explore the ramifications of silences within LIS literature upon the pedagogical and professional discourse.","creator":["S.E. Hackney","Dinah Handel","Bianca Hezekiah","Jessica Hochman","Amy Lau","Chris Alen Sula"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07485786"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617146"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce6e0d7-7fe1-33a8-bdcd-eaf4443a31b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jedulibinfosci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Education for Library and Information Science","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Visualizing Identities in LIS Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023014","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":7860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d0666bc-437d-35b1-bb2c-5d7c4a99125e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"1354","pageStart":"1331","pagination":"pp. 1331-1354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175474","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How are relocated witnesses in the US federal witness security program equipped to \"hide in plain sight\" and remain untraceable? Two models of social identity combine to account for this\u2014social role play (Goffman) and performativity (Butler, Barad, Braidotti)\u2014as an immanent process of \"becoming-imperceptible.\"","creator":["Tracy C. Davis"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2086975f-ccee-32e0-a2f6-d78734ddd02d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24585009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Witness Security Program: Becoming Imperceptible in the Relocation Matrix","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585009","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[55322,55403]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lina Aguirre"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcb67abc-a446-3ddf-a553-cf34b406846b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"UN A\u00d1O SIN AMOR\": MASCULINIDAD, PLACER Y PODER EN EL NUEVO CINE ARGENTINO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342179","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["W. DANIEL WILSON"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e469414a-3a21-36ad-a1e5-5051666595ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masturbation, Prostitution, Sodomy: The Imagination and Non-Reproductive Sexuality in Goethe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653011","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Situated in an English as a foreign language (EFL) context, this study navigates the intersection of language learner identity and foreign language engagement. Specifically, drawing on the concept of voice (Canagarajah, 2013; Johnstone, 1996; Kramsch, 2003), Bakhtin's (1981) theory of language, and the notion of investment (Darvin & Norton, 2015; Norton Peirce, 1995), it presents two case studies of voice construction by EFL learners in Iran. Through classroom observations, biographical and sociolinguistic interviews, and learner metalinguistic commentary, the study reveals how the two participants invest in two different voices that index their efforts toward the construction of a second language-mediated identity. The two learners are shown to gravitate toward informal and formal English words and use them in their speech in ways that are illustrative of how they envision their engagement with English both in the present and in the future. The pedagogical implications of the study are then discussed.","creator":["MOHAMMAD NASEH NASROLLAHI SHAHRI"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a346739-7a38-37da-b745-ace2274e2473"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44984813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Constructing a Voice in English as a Foreign Language: Identity and Engagement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44984813","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":9803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Doris Weichselbaumer"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00945056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"694fe3e0-a775-3777-9e45-46de435fadfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40326127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"easteconj"}],"isPartOf":"Eastern Economic Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Is It Sex or Personality? The Impact of Sex Stereotypes on Discrimination in Applicant Selection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40326127","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":14073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Frye"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94e4d5db-745f-3af0-97ee-eceb28dc4add"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1010","pageStart":"991","pagination":"pp. 991-1010","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Necessity of Differences: Constructing a Positive Category of Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175031","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert McRuer"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34b027f2-24e4-34f3-947d-d2408e06c892"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Composing Bodies; or, De-Composition: Queer Theory, Disability Studies, and Alternative Corporealities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866612","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12519,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[391355,391628],[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[10363,10637],[80699,80799]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Berthold"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b82a398a-511c-3194-86dd-3faf95ff1bbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cross-Dressing and Forgetfulness of Self in William Wells Brown's \"Clotel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112055","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mollie V. Blackburn"],"datePublished":"2006-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"effe47dd-b0f1-358b-8e80-764d9b301002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Risky, Generous, Gender Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171679","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Verena Olejniczak Lobsien"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23979192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"521dc3af-11dd-30bd-ad70-482f7be33140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23979192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eProve true, imagination!\u201c Proklamation und Dissimulation von Geschlecht in Wissen und Literatur der englischen Renaissance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23979192","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Wallace Thurman's short-lived magazine Fire!! (1926) adapted the aesthetic manifesto of the Anglo-American avant-garde to represent the various sexual and racial subject positions in 1920s Harlem in an effort to break away from a Harlem intellectual bourgeoisie that Thurman thought relied too much on the normalizing tendencies of sociology. Aesthetically reproducing the dynamic milieu of Harlem sexual life, Thurman's Fire!! deviated from the racial uplift efforts of figures such as W.E.B. Du Bois and Charles S. Johnson and advocated a queer modernism that attacked what Thurman saw as Victorian mores in sociological studies and idealistic aesthetic representations of black city life. Instead of merely using sexuality to offend censors, Thurman \u201cqueers\u201d the modernist manifesto, promoting an alternative aesthetic to that practiced in such periodicals as The Crisis and Opportunity.","creator":["Matthew N. Hannah"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"120b3b74-5092-31d4-8c27-1b008940cae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Desires Made Manifest: The Queer Modernism of Wallace Thurman's Fire!!<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.162","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Neus Carbonell"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11372354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dd53ff0-44ac-3fdc-b8dc-0e6569854090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25596277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"guaraguao"}],"isPartOf":"Guaraguao","issueNumber":"14","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Asociacion Centro de Estudios y Cooperacion Para America Latina","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596277","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Danai S Mupotsa"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ae171cb-a88e-3af4-94ac-dfdd64c341c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (98)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The subject, real bodies and the performative in the political","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825108","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Group identity serves as a mechanism for claiming rights of control and access to land in the United States. Public land managers face myriad identity-based claims to land in their care. Identity shapes claims that must appear valid within the strictures of a legal system created by a dominant culture to serve its interests. The very form of those systems-of which public lands are a large part-makes possible the expression of particular forms of identity. The story of the Coast Miwok community and the Point Reyes National Seashore suggests that geographical links among identity, landscape, and history are actively constructed through political work and rarely are as obvious as they first appear. Both the formal legal process of federal tribal recognition and restoration and the far less formal Coast Miwok claims to land at Point Reyes National Seashore teach important lessons about neotraditional identity-based claims to public land.","creator":["Jennifer Sokolove","Sally K. Fairfax","Breena Holland"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Managing Place and Identity: The Marin Coast Miwok Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140949","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":11352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the discursive construction of collective identity in several feminist organizations, as a way of shedding new light on the debate over \"essentializing\" or \"totalizing\" terms in contemporary feminist\/postmodernist theory. We argue that while this debate is about language, it has remained largely untouched by the insights of a discursive approach. The latter as we take it up here treats language as irremediably \"strategic\" or \"interested.\" In contrast, the feminist argument over essentializing terms appears to hold to a correspondence version of language, a position which limits the debate in fatal ways. Part 1 reviews the argument that terms such as \"women\", \"feminist\" and \"feminist identity\" are essentializing discourses which dominate by silencing difference. Part 2 then considers the way one such concept -- feminist identity -- is actually constructed and used in the routine talk of members of feminist organizations. In Part 3 we draw out the implications of a discursive approach to such terms for the feminist\/postmodernist debate.","creator":["Leslie J. Miller","Jana Metcalfe"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c749a5ac-7e89-3efe-b17a-01b30de90207"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20011200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strategically Speaking: The Problem of Essentializing Terms in Feminist Theory and Feminist Organizational Talk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011200","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10450,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430072,430164]],"Locations in B":[[47780,47871]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Zeynep Bulut"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23076407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23076407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Theorizing Voice in Performance: Gy\u00f6rgy Ligeti's \"Aventures\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23076407","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":5774,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[510329,510382]],"Locations in B":[[33890,33944]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05ea\u05e7\u05e6\u05d9\u05e8. \u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05d7\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05e6\u05d8\u05dc\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e4\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea, \u05d0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8, \u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e2\u05db\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9. \u05d1\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d8\u05e2\u05d5\u05df \u05db\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e1\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \"\u05e9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d0\u05d9\u05de\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\" (\u05d1\u05d1\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e6\u05d1\u05d9-\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05dc\u05d9\u05e1, 2006) \u05d5\"\u05d7\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05de\u05d0\u05d5\u05d7\u05e8\u05ea\" (\u05d1\u05d1\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d3\u05d5\u05d1\u05e8 \u05e7\u05d5\u05e1\u05d0\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9, 2001) \u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea \u05e8\u05d3\u05d9\u05e7\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc \u05e0\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e4\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e0\u05e9\u05e2\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05dc \u05d0\u05d9\u05dc\u05df \u05d9\u05d5\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9\u05df \u05e4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05e8\u05db\u05dc\u05d9, \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d5\u05e9\u05de\u05e1\u05dc\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05ea\u05e9\u05d5\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05d0-\u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d4\u05e1\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d7\u05d5\u05e9\u05e4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05de\u05d0\u05ea\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d0\u05d3\u05d9\u05e4\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d5\u05e9\u05dc \u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e9\u05d0\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05de\u05e9\u05ea\u05de\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05dc\u05e0\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4 \u05db\u05d3\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d3\u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05df \u05d5\u05dc\u05d4\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d1 \u05de\u05d7\u05d3\u05e9 \u05e6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d6\u05d3\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e9\u05d9\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05e4\u05d7\u05d4, \u05d4\u05e4\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05d4, \u05e9\u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9 \u05d4\u05ea\u05db\u05d7\u05e9\u05d5 \u05dc\u05e7\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05dc\u05d0-\u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9. \u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05dc\u05e1\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d8\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d4\u05d2\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4, \u05d8\u05e7\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05de\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05d1\u05d3\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e4\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05d1\u05d3\u05df \u05e2\u05de\u05d5\u05e7 \u05d5\u05d7\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e9\u05e4\u05d7\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05e0\u05d8\u05d9-\u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd - \u05d0\u05e9\u05e8 \u05de\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d4\u05dd \u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d7\u05dc\u05de\u05d4, \u05e8\u05e7 \u05d0\u05d1\u05dc \u05dc\u05d0 \u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05e8.","creator":["\u05e8\u05d6 \u05d9\u05d5\u05e1\u05e3","Raz Yosef"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26234096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72225297-635f-37ff-b018-fe40890ee84a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26234096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"1","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Melancholic Attachments: Diaspora, Ethnicity and Sexuality in Contemporary Israeli Cinema \/ \u05d4\u05ea\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05dc\u05e0\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea: \u05e4\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4, \u05d0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e2\u05db\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26234096","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susie Jacobs","Christian Klesse"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6c95e3e-dde6-36df-a474-a3b685bf5290"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24713309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Special Issue on \"Gender, Sexuality and Political Economy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713309","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rather than reading the work of Richard K. Ashley as iconic - as some dead, stable image used to signify the whole of post-modern or post-structural International Relations (IR) in a single swoop - this article considers Ashley's work as an interruption to the discipline of IR (mainstream and critical). In so doing, the article suggests that what is important about Ashley's work is how it creates a thinking space where it is possible to think again about international politics, about international theory, about what Ashley's interruption itself permits and limits and about how this interruption unfolds and sometimes folds back on itself.","creator":["CYNTHIA WEBER"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0aad5a1f-f538-3d73-87a7-b64bbf16ac85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40961963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"987","pageStart":"975","pagination":"pp. 975-987","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interruption Ashley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961963","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Qadri Ismail"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Batting against the Break: On Cricket, Nationalism, and the Swashbuckling Sri Lankans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466813","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11738,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64085,64163]],"Locations in B":[[60213,60299]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Educational literacy scholars have demonstrated the rich possibilities of the English language arts, and of queer-inclusive and critical literacy practices in particular, to disrupt heteronormativity and affirm gender and sexual diversity (GSD). However, there are few empirical studies that report what's involved in preparing literacy teachers to organize classrooms in which recommendations for inclusive practice can land safely. In this article, we provide an account of what happened when we endeavored to prepare a group of secondary preservice literacy teachers for GSD-inclusive education in the context of a university-based literacy methods course and the negotiation of discomfort that ensued. Drawing on queer theoretical perspectives and Kumashiro's (2001) framework of anti-oppressive education\u2014which figures an important relationship among the concepts of desire, resistance, and crisis in unlearning common sense\u2014we explore how the methods curriculum put many students into a state of emotional crisis. The sources of participants' discomfort included learning that teachers have been complicit with the oppression of queer youth and wrestling with questions about how to bring their commitments to GSD-inclusive literacy instruction to bear in practice. Our findings suggest that participants who were willing to move toward their discomfort\u2014what we call a deliberate move to lean in\u2014positioned themselves to become strong advocates for queer youth. We argue that emotional discomfort should be figured as a productive tension in queer interventions in English education. Toward that end, we offer leaning in as a generative tool for grappling with the dynamics of heterosexism, homophobia, and broader oppression.","creator":["Sara Staley","Bethy Leonardi"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24889915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48530054"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e6bd314-1fbf-3fd6-9387-0a5ceba7bce1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24889915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Leaning In to Discomfort: Preparing Literacy Teachers for Gender and Sexual Diversity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24889915","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":10446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[60627,60696]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist standpoint theory posits feminism as a way of conceptualizing from the vantage point of women's lives. However, in current work on feminist standpoint the material links between lives and knowledges are often not explained. This essay argues that the radical marxist tradition standpoint theory draws on-specifically theories of ideology post-Althusser-offers a systemic mode of reading that can redress this problem and provide the resources to elaborate further feminism's oppositional practice and collective subject.","creator":["Rosemary Hennessy"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e9e2396-bd83-3f86-abf3-d048a21e2eb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women's Lives \/ Feminist Knowledge: Feminist Standpoint as Ideology Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810299","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9862,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[61378,61508]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The factors of 'place\/space' and 'philosophical instruction' both shape the specific points of Epictetus' gender discourse. The place\/space gives rise to a hierarchic situation of teaching exclusively young boys of the upper class, but no women, it creates a distance from home that is a test for the boys' developing manlihood, and it relocates the philosophical ideal of masculinity in two literary quotations from the Iliad and Plato's Phaedo. Philosophical instruction, however, is more important in shaping Epictetus' gender discourse. Emotional behaviour is stigmatized as effeminate, which is an efficious rhetoric device to convince the young boys in the audience, but does not imply or go along with essentialistic discrimination concerning women's rational abilities. This pragmatic use of gender stereotypes is due to the strong insistence on conviction which Epictetus shows in comparison with his teacher Musonius Rufus and corresponds to Epictetus' caustic style of teaching which follows the Cynics' example.","creator":["Lothar Willms"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0084005X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e771c894-2440-335b-bc2e-5d997c30807f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24752219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wienerstudien"}],"isPartOf":"Wiener Studien","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Austrian Academy of Sciences Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'\u00e9cole des hommes: Geschlechter, Zeichen, Raum und Lehre bei Epiktet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24752219","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":16235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ishay Rosen-Zvi"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/pft.2005.25.1-2.217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae0f2851-82e4-3e0b-9aa7-9f88a96121a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/pft.2005.25.1-2.217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"REVIEW: Judith R. Baskin.MISOGYNY AND ITS DISCONTENTS:<\/strong> MIDRASHIC WOMEN: FORMATIONS OF THE FEMININE IN RABBINIC LITERARURE<\/em>. Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England for Brandeis University Press, 2002","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/pft.2005.25.1-2.217","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":4320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this ethnographic comparative study of the Jeux de l'Acadie, the Jeux franco-ontariens and the Alberta Francophone Games is to explore further how minority youth identities are produced and manifested in Canada's francophonies. Through interviews, drawings and questionnaires adolescents express and give meaning to their francophoneness in the context of the Games. The analysis reveals that francophone identities are reproduced as a component of hybrid identities. This hybridity refers to youths' integration of once distinct francophone and anglophone cultural identities into a \"hybrid\" identity. This paper examines the different configurations of these hybrid cultural and linguistic identities, where some youths spontaneously and mostly live in French but insist on their hybridity, while other youths perform predominantly as anglophones but remain attached to their francophoneness. Indeed, Acadian youths primarily perform a singular francophone identity while Franco-Ontarian and Alberta francophone youths manifest a rather complex and asymmetrical m\u00e9lange of francophoneness and anglophoneness. \/\/\/ Le but de cette ethnographie comparative des Jeux de l'Acadie, des Jeux franco-ontariens et des Jeux francophones de l'Alberta est de mieux comprendre comment les jeunes minoritaires des francophonies canadiennes produisent et manifestent leur identit\u00e9. \u00c0 travers des entrevues, des dessins et des questionnaires, les adolescents expriment et donnent un sens \u00e0 leur francit\u00e9 dans le contexte des Jeux. L'analyse r\u00e9v\u00e8le que les identit\u00e9s francophones sont reproduites en tant que composante d'identit\u00e9s hybrides. Cette hybridit\u00e9 renvoie \u00e0 l'int\u00e9gration par les jeunes d'identit\u00e9s culturelles auparavant distinctes, les identit\u00e9s francophone et anglophone, en une nouvelle identit\u00e9 \"hybride\". Cet article examine les diff\u00e9rentes configurations de ces identit\u00e9s culturelles et linguistiques hybrides qui m\u00e8nent certains jeunes \u00e0 vivre spontan\u00e9ment et surtout en fran\u00e7ais mais \u00e0 insister sur leur hybridit\u00e9 tandis que d'autres jeunes vivent surtout en anglais mais demeurent attach\u00e9s \u00e0 leur francit\u00e9. En effet, les jeunes acadiens manifestent une identit\u00e9 francophone monolithique alors que les jeunes franco-ontariens et franco-albertains reproduisent un m\u00e9lange complexe et asym\u00e9trique, combinant francit\u00e9 et identit\u00e9 anglophone.","creator":["Christine Dallaire","Claude Denis"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e07cb895-9f04-3036-b7f1-f0a5abcb091b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4146128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Asymmetrical Hybridities: Youths at Francophone Games in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146128","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10903,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study qualitatively examines the synergetic relationship between identity projects and the marketplace. The sample consisted of 20 men between the ages of 18 and 29 years; 10 selfidentified as black, and 10 self-identified as white. Consumers must navigate multiple sites of identification that constantly shift in importance and involvement. To more closely reflect actual consumers, this study incorporated gender orientation, age, and race into an intersectional analysis. By taking a more \"true-to-life\" approach to consumption\/identity research, this project unearths new knowledge that is proximate to the lived experience of consumers. While both white and black informants use the symbolic meaning of commodities as a mode of self-expression, key differences exist. Dominant discourse pertaining to white and black male identity appears to influence how informants perceive possibilities of self, which in turn affects marketplace interaction. The author concludes with a discussion of ways public policy can be used to remedy marketplace inequities.","creator":["Kevin D. Thomas"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07439156"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53816554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-214072"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"033664cc-c00a-3103-b939-5b5df351f7d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43305318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpublpolimark"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Public Policy & Marketing","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Endlessly Creating Myself: Examining Marketplace Inclusion Through the Lived Experience of Black and White Male Millennial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305318","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9683,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478800,478845]],"Locations in B":[[55936,55983]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Agn\u00e8s Vannouvong"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acb93ffb-ee9d-37a1-b53c-9fe83339f6cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40837729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le r\u00eave de l'identit\u00e9 et de l'alt\u00e9rit\u00e9 dans le th\u00e9\u00e2tre de Jean Genet - Lecture des Bonnes et de Haute surveillance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837729","volumeNumber":"74\/75","wordCount":12327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05de\u05ea\u05de\u05e7\u05d3 \u05d1\"\u05db\u05dc\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05dd\" (\u05d0\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d0\u05dc-\u05d1\u05db\u05e8), \u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e7\u05d4\u05d9\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d4\u05e2\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d1- 2008 \u05e9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d0\u05d9\u05de\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea-\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d6 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc, \u05d1\u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e8\u05d1 \u05ea\u05db\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5-\u05e7\u05e0\u05d3\u05d4 \u05e9\u05d1\u05dc\u05d1 \u05d9\u05e4\u05d5. \u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d1\u05d5\u05d7\u05df \u05db\u05d9\u05e6\u05d3 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05d9\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9 \u05d0\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05de\u05dc\u05de\u05d8\u05d4, \u05d5\u05d6\u05d5 \u05d7\u05e9\u05e4\u05d4 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d5, \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05d2\u05d1\u05d5\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05e1\u05d1\u05da \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05e9\u05d8\u05e8\u05d9 \u05db\u05d5\u05d7 \u05e4\u05e0\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05d7\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d2 \u05d2\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e4\u05d2\u05e9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05d7\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05e6\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e0\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e7\u05e6\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05dc \u05d0\u05ea \u05d0\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d1\u05d5\u05dc \u05e9\u05de\u05de\u05e0\u05d5 \u05e6\u05de\u05d7 \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2 \"\u05db\u05dc\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05dd\". \u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05db\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e2 \u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05e9\u05ea \u05d4\u05db\u05d5\u05ea\u05d1\u05ea \u05d2\u05dd \u05dc\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d4, \u05dc\u05de\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9-\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05de\u05e7\u05e6\u05d5\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05e2\u05d5\u05e8\u05e8\u05d5 \u05d1\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2 \u05d5\u05db\u05ea\u05d9\u05d1\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8. I focus on the community performance \"The Bride from the Sea\" \"[placeholder for Arabic characters]\" performed by three young Israeli-Palestinian mothers in a sand box in a Jewish-Arab kindergarten in Jaffa (2008). From the beginning of the creative process the group struggled to overcome the barriers erected by their intricate, oppressive daily life, trying their best to push forward the original text to the stage of a full production. They eventually managed to perform a short incomplete performance. My deep emotional response has led me to discuss it as a special form of women-based community theatre reflecting the harsh daily life of these young mothers trapped between in-group and out-group power regimes.","creator":["\u05e9\u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05d9\u05ea \u05dc\u05d1-\u05d0\u05dc\u05d2'\u05dd","Shulamith Lev-Aladgem"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6681d7e3-0b24-3e61-b293-e2e084a22682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Bride from the Sea: Three Israeli-Palestinian Mothers Playing in the Sand Box \/ \u05db\u05dc\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05dd: \u05e9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d0\u05d9\u05de\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea-\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d6 \u05d7\u05d5\u05dc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442802","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d1","wordCount":8948,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524098]],"Locations in B":[[50727,50840]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar Mart\u00ednez-G\u00f3ngora"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ab80a97-5639-34ec-bc87-f34f7c99d990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"153","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LOS PERSONAJES FABULOSOS DEL \"JARD\u00cdN DE FLORES CURIOSAS\" DE ANTONIO DE TORQUEMADA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808526","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8760,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[357668,358040]],"Locations in B":[[22810,23179]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The enduring inequities experienced by African-Caribbean students in UK schools has been well documented. This paper aims to better understand how these inequities have come to be so enduring. Through detailed analyses of data generated through a school ethnography, this paper demonstrates the processes through which African-Caribbean students are identified as undesirable, or even intolerable, learners. The paper builds on the insights offered by earlier school ethnographies while deploying and developing a new theoretical framework. This framework suggests that the discursive practices of students and teachers contribute to the performative constitution of intelligible selves and others. Drawing on this framework, the paper demonstrates how African-Caribbean race and sub-cultural identities, and further intersecting biographical identities including gender and sexuality, are deployed within organisational discourse as evidence of these students' undesirable learner identities.","creator":["Deborah Youdell"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4562159d-4137-3dad-8f82-142d306a5269"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3593301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identity Traps or How Black [1] Students Fail: The Interactions between Biographical, Sub-Cultural, and Learner Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593301","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bernard E. Harcourt"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00914169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcb3b8bc-a695-3c3c-96e4-80c4664ae1b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3491390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcrimlawcrim1973"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"550","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Northwestern University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Foreword: \"You Are Entering a Gay and Lesbian Free Zone\": On the Radical Dissents of Justice Scalia and Other (Post-) Queers. [Raising Questions about Lawrence, Sex Wars, and the Criminal Law]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491390","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":22388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Seb Franklin"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23333441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94192456-5e51-3efb-b49c-7890e0882db4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23333441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Virality, Informatics, and Critique; or, Can There Be Such a Thing as Radical Computation?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23333441","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7165,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[449808,450463]],"Locations in B":[[38618,39273]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02643758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplphil"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353535","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Douglas"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.28.1.102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2680d56c-c2ce-3794-b8b8-23adec40c438"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.28.1.102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Experience and Relevance: Continuing to Learn from Niebuhr and Saiving","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.28.1.102","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2978,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464789,464959]],"Locations in B":[[7395,7565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How does a person come to understand his or her problems in terms of rights? This is a critical problem for the battered women's movement as well as for other human rights movements that rely on rights awareness to encourage victims to seek help from the law. The adoption of a rights consciousness requires experiences with the legal system that confirm that subjectivity. Rights-defined selves emerge from supportive encounters with police, prosecutors, judges, and probation officers. This empirical study shows how victims of violence against women come to take on rights consciousness.","creator":["Sally Engle Merry"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20069668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20069668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rights Talk and the Experience of Law: Implementing Women's Human Rights to Protection from Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20069668","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":20106,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61966,62133]],"Locations in B":[[24866,25032]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este \u00e9 um estudo sobre g\u00eanero na produ\u00e7\u0101o art\u00edstica de pe\u00e7as de cer\u00e2mica em algumas comunidades de artes\u0101os do Vale do Jequitinhonha, Minos Gerais, onde tradicionalmente apenas as mulheres chamadas \"paneleiras\" praticavam esse of\u00edcio, que era transmitido de m\u0101e para filha. Naquela regi\u0101o, assim que a arte do barro se tornou uma fonte altenativa de renda, v\u00e1rios homens decidiram entrar para o of\u00edcio. A entrada de homens na arte do barro provocou reconfigura\u00e7\u014des nas rela\u00e7\u014des de g\u00eanero. Um ponto muito importante a ser observado aqui \u00e9 que apesar de tradicionalmente transmitida por mulheres e pela a\u00e7\u0101o feminina. a arte do barro tem incorporado valores de masculinidade: ao se aproximarem de um of\u00edcio tradicionalmente feminino, os homens passaram a retirar dele recursos simb\u00f3licos de representa\u00e7\u0101o de masculinidade. This is a gender study on the artistic production of ceramic in some communities of Jequitinhonha Valley Minas Gerais, Brazil. Traditionally only women, who were called 'potters', produced this kind of craft in that region and it used to be taught from mothers to daughters. As ceramic artifacts became an alternative source of income, men decided to produce them. The entrance of men in the craft caused some re-elaboration of gender relations in those communities, and allowed us to detect gender not as a set of fixed corporifications, but as something under constant construction. A very important point here is that, although transmitted by women and a result of feminine activity, the production of ceramic incorporated male values. When men gained access to a traditionally defined feminine activity, they were able to draw from the craft symbolic resources for the representation of masculinity.","creator":["S\u00d4NIA MISSAGIA DE MATOS"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87e32151-841d-3310-9af5-02c1cfa965b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Artefatos de g\u00eanero na arte do barro: masculinidades e femininidades","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596774","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12497,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493500,493564]],"Locations in B":[[69139,69202]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PAUL ALEXANDER CANTRELL"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a08c5838-7164-3c19-805b-136a59bd26dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26468023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Flounder, Flounder\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468023","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":9860,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438398,438495]],"Locations in B":[[25844,25941]],"subTitle":"Doubling in Eudora Welty's \"Music from Spain\""} +{"abstract":"Members of Italian Masonic lodges, esoteric organizations widely perceived as secret societies, prefer to explain their elaborate practices of concealment and disclosure in terms of discretion. Through the aesthetics and epistemology of discretion, Freemasons view the world as a \"forest of symbols\" hidden in plain sight and awaiting interpretation. Taking \"discretion\" as both an ethnographic and analytic category, I ask how an anthropological study of discretion may reveal not only forms of cultural practice deemed secret but also the interpretive art of decoding that underlies the process of knowledge formation at the heart of Masonic communities of practice.","creator":["LILITH MAHMUD"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1ef22d-60da-35ca-89ed-e82f6ed08b82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The world is a forest of symbols\": Italian Freemasonry and the practice of discretion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250831","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper draws on data from a research project investigating gendered identities and interactions of high-achieving students in Year Eight in England (12-13 years old), particularly in relation to students' 'popularity' amongst their peers. As part of this study 71 students were interviewed from nine different schools in urban, rural and small town locations. From an analysis of participants' conceptions of the characteristics of 'popular' and 'unpopular' students, this paper looks in depth at notions of in\/authenticity and how it is perceived and judged in relation to the self and others. In particular, the paper focuses on the genderedness of such discourses of in\/authenticity as constructed by these students, and relates such concerns to theorizations of 'impossible' femininity.","creator":["Barbara Read","Becky Francis","Christine Skelton"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3c44b69-fec8-3a2d-9ff5-f88cfcee5bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender, popularity and notions of in\/authenticity amongst 12-year-old to 13-year-old school girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237655","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract The Amsterdam Red-Light district is a globalised mass-entertainment place for sex consumption. But the visitors touring the Red-Light district are far more diverse than sex tourists: men, women, gay, straight, stag or cultural tourists tour this place to feel the thrill of desire and disgust. The paper documents this process of commodification by these visitors, engaging with their lived experiences through ethnographic research and in-depth interviews. The paper shows the diversity of the consumption practices and representations of the spectacle of commodified sex, explaining how the emotions experienced by those touring the sex district draw on intersectional belongings (gender, sexuality, class, ethnicity). Intertwining affective and moral geographies, it concludes by arguing that the symbolic consumption of the Red-Light district cannot necessarily be predicted by virtue of standard categories of belonging, with identity formation and the consumption of sex being shaped by a complex dynamic of looks and gazes.","creator":["Amandine Chapuis"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26151367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915650"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233805"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acb1fec9-fc8d-3b0f-b3b5-28704b8c5308"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26151367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"632","pageStart":"616","pagination":"pp. 616-632","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Touring the immoral. Affective geographies of visitors to the Amsterdam Red-Light district","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26151367","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on selected writings on women's experiences of and reflections on dress and travel published in the Hong Kong feminist journal Nuliu, this paper discusses the politics of female subjectivity in relation to the everyday. The context of the discussion is the changing actualization of the well-known feminist slogan 'the personal is political' within the local feminist movement in Hong Kong between the 1980s and the 1990s. The paper aims to create a new paradigm for analysing agency \u2014 the key concept in subject formation \u2014 by critiquing the ideology of choice, which is a liberal value system that connects people's imagination with the notion of personal 'liberation'. As demonstrated by the examples of dress and travel, the everyday is a site of both possibilities and conflict for women, who generate new strategies or tactics to negotiate not only with institutions, structures and policies, but also with 'interpellations', 'temporality', 'spatiality', 'performativity', 'symbolism' and 'psyche'.","creator":["Chan Shun-hing"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5860383c-4cb2-3f93-bc1f-ff3c71c595ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"92","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"politics of female subjectivities and the everyday: the case of the Hong Kong feminist journal<\/strong> Nuliu<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664031","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9713,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430975,431963]],"Locations in B":[[15665,16734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberta Johnson"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ffb9f5b-16f8-30ef-8185-6f087d549831"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Spanish Feminist Theory Then and Now","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742201","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Archer Mann","Michael D. Grimes"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41674969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d40f1b7-4704-3666-b332-92bc01aa71d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41674969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Common and Contested Ground: Marxism and Race, Gender & Class Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41674969","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9762,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[63807,63851]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article proposes a philosophical reconstruction of the subject of the educator as the agent of curriculum. Starting from recent work in critical theory and philosophy, it describes the process of the existential crisis of the educator as the first step toward a truly critical education. The article argues that philosophy of curriculum must be concerned not just with forms of thought but also with forms of being\u2014with the very ground of the subject and its real. This political ontology of the subject suggests a process of reconstruction consisting of several stages: the disclosure of ideology and complicity, the investigation of the process of interpellation, and the creation of a fundamentally collective educational practice. It is only on the basis of the effective staging of this crisis at the heart of the teaching subject that a meaningful critical pedagogy and curriculum can be articulated. The article concludes with a description of the outlines of such a critical education, as they emerge through the process of reconstruction described above.","creator":["NOAH DE LISSOVOY"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15ee5c87-bf4c-348a-b7ae-d591c6154069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Staging the Crisis: Teaching, Capital, and the Politics of the Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962975","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44d51a2a-b581-3f15-b2eb-7bb924332d14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23481102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481102","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["George S. Larke-Walsh"],"datePublished":"2012-08-18","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.64.3.0053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96cb9783-d6e0-393e-b666-bec88351b563"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.64.3.0053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cPoint Your Finger and Say, \u2018That\u2019s the Bad Guy\u2019\u201d: Performativity in Donal MacIntyre\u2019s A Very British Gangster<\/em> (2007)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.64.3.0053","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Della Pollock"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00f0e12c-370f-3bc4-8bd3-003e343e9ed9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Origins in Absence: Performing Birth Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146570","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":16918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[285989,286370]],"Locations in B":[[79402,79781]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the juxtaposition of prostitution, masculinity, and nationalism in the works of Hebrew writers at the beginning of the twentieth century. By discussing the psycho-poetical elements that underlie David Vogel's depiction of prostitution and the ideological elements in Gershon Shofman's work, and by exposing their dialogue with Hayim Nahman Bialik, this project explores power, vulnerability, gender, sexuality, and nationalism in Hebrew literature of the first half of the twentieth century. My study argues that the trope of the prostitute enables writers of early Hebrew literature to negotiate questions of strength and weakness in the Jewish world. Although Bialik's option of sovereign masculinity became the norm for the Zionist discourse, Shofman, Vogel, Brenner, Reuveni and others expressed different perceptions of gender and power. Hence, in order to understand the intensity of the poetic, national, and gendered dilemmas and struggles of this generation, this study offers to listen not only to their concepts of revival, renewal and empowerment, but also to their expressions of weakness, frustration, loss, anger and aggression.","creator":["Ilana Szobel"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.34.2.170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b445ca5-fb05-3b59-a713-2ae6c850fd71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.34.2.170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cLights in the Darkness\u201d: Prostitution, Power and Vulnerability in Early Twentieth-Century Hebrew Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.34.2.170","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":14694,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[499422,499498],[503309,503495]],"Locations in B":[[75140,75219],[90742,90912]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sherry C. M. Lindquist"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6f8231a-0140-37dc-88c8-16425e47ed43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23924277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Art history"],"title":"GENDER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924277","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6852,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443616,443762]],"Locations in B":[[3437,3587]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Questo saggio fornisce una rassegna di precedenti approcci allo studio della figura femminile nell'arte rinascimentale italiana e dei recenti sviluppi negli studi femministi e sull' identit\u00e0 sessuale. Mentre gli storici hanno in anni recenti adottato nuovi metodi e domande di ricerca nell'esplorare in maniera produttiva il ruolo economico e sociale della donna, gli storici dell'arte rinascimentale si sono mostrati pi\u00f9 reticenti verso queste innovazioni. Solo di recente sono venuti alla luce nuovi libri ed articoli che trattano della donna come pittrice, mecenate e come oggetto di rappresentazioni figurate. Tuttavia queste pubblicazioni vanno viste come episodi isolati in un campo che si mostra restio allo studio del ruolo della donna. In questo saggio l'attuale diversit\u00e0 di approcci allo studio dell storia dell'arte viene illustrato. L'importanza degli studi di identit\u00e0 sessuale come un concetto cruciale per gli studi rinascimentali viene proposta come un concetto fondamentale affinch\u00e8 il campo mantenga la sua vitalit\u00e0 nel XXI secolo.","creator":["Evelyn Welch"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40311029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00682462"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b3d520c-1af7-3c4c-a064-c407d3d770d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40311029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papbritschrome"}],"isPartOf":"Papers of the British School at Rome","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"British School at Rome","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Art & Art History","Arts","Classical Studies","History","History","Humanities","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Engendering Italian Renaissance Art \u2014 A Bibliographic Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40311029","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":8069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503315,503384]],"Locations in B":[[23437,23509]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist film theory sees the instruments of both gynecology and filmmaking as tools for examining women; this equation is made in a different register by David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers, a film that subordinates the examination of women to the relationship between twin brothers who are gynecologists. Dead Ringers imagines that the camera and the speculum extend each other's province, thus drawing our attention to the way women are figured in the film even when they do not appear. Cronenberg also uses the camera, however, to establish identities where they do not otherwise exist. His film therefore occasions questions about the analogous status that film theory has given to its various analytical devices. By making us ask about the similarities and differences between the functions of the camera and those of the speculum in investigation and representation, Dead Ringers interrogates the ways feminist film theory can integrate psychoanalysis.","creator":["Marcie Frank"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c10097c-4f96-3ce7-9963-eac198d010e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Camera and the Speculum: David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462779","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":8108,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[48064,48132]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contemporary theorists have become increasingly receptive to the selective incorporation of Foucaultian theory within feminist frameworks. However, the reception of Foucault within feminist legal critique has been less enthusiastic. The most celebrated theorist to argue for the incorporation of Foucaultian insight within the feminist analysis of law is Carol Smart. While conceding the significant contribution of her work, this article will argue that her interpretation of the Foucaultian thesis on law is considerably more problematic. Illustrating the extent to which she adopts an unnecessarily pessimistic prognosis for the development of Foucault within legal analysis and reform, this article will examine an emerging counter-interpretation of Foucault that presents the possibility for a more promising application, seeking to provide a defence both of the utility of Foucault for feminist jurisprudence, and of the utility of legal reform strategies being exercised for feminist purposes.","creator":["Vanessa E. Munro"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3657960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3657960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"546","pagination":"pp. 546-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Legal Feminism and Foucault: A Critique of the Expulsion of Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3657960","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Wingrove"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04d90bd5-115d-332e-bfd7-e89a2656acfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Republican Romance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902916","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522882]],"Locations in B":[[71526,71596]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy J. Hirschmann"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"569b58c7-fa49-37ce-a155-ccd54c461573"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Feminist Theory of Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192090","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10340,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494724,494801]],"Locations in B":[[57250,57327]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shaul Magid"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02719274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298783050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-202682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81a62058-4a08-3ef7-8756-fa111f05216e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerjewilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Jewish Literature (1981-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Butler Trouble:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0237","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8459,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20630,20862]],"Locations in B":[[14336,14565]],"subTitle":"Zionism, Excommunication, and the Reception of Judith Butler's Work on Israel\/Palestine"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vic Mu\u00f1oz","Ednie Kaeh Garrison","Anne Enke","Darcy A. Freedman","Jeni Hart","Diana L. Jones","Ambrose Kirby","Jamie Lester","Mia Nakamura","Clark A. Pomerleau","Sarah E. VanHooser"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bec65c4-82a1-33bc-ae4b-89361260171b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Transpedagogies: A Roundtable Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649803","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7477,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75253,75322]],"Locations in B":[[5950,6019]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The field of social work ethics is changing. While more established positions, such as utilitarianism and deontology, continue to influence social work thinking and practice, emergent approaches are taking hold, leading to a radical examination of social work as an ethical discipline. To contribute to this unfolding debate, this article examines Isaiah Berlin's notion of value pluralism and its contribution to social work. The argument proceeds by summarising and categorising some of the traditional and emergent theories shaping social work according to metaphors of the 'head' (the justice-oriented, rational approaches) and the 'heart' (the grounded, particularistic and care-focused approaches). Berlin's value pluralism is then adopted to contend that social work needs to hold both 'head' and 'heart' ethics in a vital equilibrium to generate the ethics of the 'hand' (i.e. the practical response to contested areas of need) and the 'feet' (the commitment to change and well-being). These metaphors are then mapped on to a decision-making process and applied to the fraught area of adoption without parental consent.","creator":["Stan Houston"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cc12ea5-e3df-31a4-b7c1-7b81b421b539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43771676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"668","pageStart":"652","pagination":"pp. 652-668","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Engaging with the Crooked Timber of Humanity: Value Pluralism and Social Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43771676","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing on the link between politics and art in Griselda Gamharo's play Information for Foreigners, this essay explores the ways that she represents both the overt mechanisms at work in Argentina and the unconscious and culturally-produced ideologies operating in its psyche during the repressive regime of the 1970s.","creator":["MYRIAM YVONNE JEHENSON"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba99d98e-8335-3e57-9620-90eacef4f5d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Staging Cultural Violence: Griselda Gambaro and Argentina's \"Dirty War\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029421","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8503,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[417352,417655]],"Locations in B":[[34600,34909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anorexia is a disorder based on the negation of desire and the pleasure that results from it. The anorexic rebels by demonstrating that she gains pleasure despite her pain and upon her self-cancellation. Three first-person narratives of supposedly recovered anorexics published in the United States during the late 70s and early 80s are Solitaire, by Aimee Liu (1979), The Obsession, by Kim Chernin (1981), and Sheila MacLeod's The Art of Starvation: A Story of Anorexia and Survival (1982). Writing reactivates in these women the desire to go hungry because it imitates the act of fasting and restores its pleasures. But these women never find the language with which to say their needs. In addition, this writing entails denial of what happened and the invention of narratives that gloss over trauma into scenarios acceptable to the writers and the readers. So not only does it sustain the authors' desire and inaugurate their hunger, but it also promotes the wish to catch the illness in readers who see in anorexia a fundamental ontological experience.","creator":["Nieves Pascual"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5febae06-be36-3cf4-a0a2-619b5f871595"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.35.2.341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Depathologizing Anorexia: The Risks of Life Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.341","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5964,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503659]],"Locations in B":[[34870,34951]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brett Ashley Kaplan"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5141be1-6eba-3f64-8741-9c7dff424ea3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pleasure, Memory, and Time Suspension in Holocaust Literature: Celan and Delbo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247314","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8535,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[242488,242660]],"Locations in B":[[19453,19625]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper aims to contribute to understanding of emergent gender\/sexual identities in Thailand. Thailand has become a popular destination for sex change operations by providing the medical technology for a complete transformation, with relatively few procedures and satisfactory results at a reasonable price. Data were gathered from 24 transsexual male-to-female sex workers working in Pattaya and Patpong, well-known sex-tourism hot spots in Thailand. Findings suggest the emergence of new understandings of gender\/sexual identity. Sex-tourism\/sex work significantly illuminates the process through which gender is contested and re-imagined. The coming together of cultures in Thailand's sex industry, coupled with advances in medical technology, has resulted in the emergence of new concepts of gender. Cet article vise \u00e0 apporter sa contribution \u00e0 la compr\u00e9hension des identit\u00e9s de genre\/sexuelles \u00e9mergentes en Tha\u00eflande. Ce pays est devenu une destination pris\u00e9e pour la chirurgie de transformation sexuelle en fournissant la technologie m\u00e9dicale qui permet la transformation compl\u00e8te, sans trop de proc\u00e9dures op\u00e9ratoires et avec des r\u00e9sultats satisfaisants \u00e0 des prix raisonnables. Les donn\u00e9es ont \u00e9t\u00e9 collect\u00e9es \u00e0 partir d'entretiens avec 24 transgenres mtf (hommes vers femmes) exer\u00e7ant le commerce du sexe \u00e0 Pattaya et \u00e0 Patpong, des lieux tr\u00e8s connus pour le tourisme sexuel en Tha\u00eflande. Les r\u00e9sultats sugg\u00e8rent l'\u00e9mergence de nouvelles compr\u00e9hensions de l'identit\u00e9 de genre\/sexuelle. Le tourisme sexuel et le commerce du sexe apportent un \u00e9clairage important sur le processus \u00e0 travers lequel le genre est contest\u00e9 et repens\u00e9. La rencontre des cultures dans l'industrie du sexe en Tha\u00eflande, associ\u00e9e aux progr\u00e8s de la technologie m\u00e9dicale, a pour r\u00e9sultat l'\u00e9mergence de nouvelles conceptions du genre. El objetivo de este art\u00edculo es ayudar a entender las nuevas identidades sexuales\/de g\u00e9nero en Tailandia. Tailandia se ha convertido en un destino popular para las operaciones de combio de sexo porque dispone de la tecnolog\u00eda m\u00e9dica para una completa transformaci\u00f3n, con relativamente pocos procedimientos y resultados satisfactorios a un precio razonable. Para este estudio, se recogieron los datos de 24 transexuales de hombre a mujer que trabajan en la industria sexual de Pattaya y Patpong, centros activos bien conocidos del turismo sexual en Tailandia. Los resultados indican la aparici\u00f3n de nuevos conceptos de la identidad sexual\/de g\u00e9nero. El turismo y el trabajo sexual destacan en gran medida el proceso por el que se cuestiona y reimagina cada sexo. El encuentro de las culturas en la industria sexual de Tailandia, unido a los avances de tecnolog\u00eda m\u00e9dica, ha dado lugar a la aparici\u00f3n de nuevos conceptos del sexo.","creator":["Witchayanee Ocha"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23265705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8946e75-0a78-3191-ac16-be300877e2e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23265705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SHORT REPORT: Transsexual emergence: gender variant identities in Thailand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23265705","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7168,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103342,103448]],"Locations in B":[[10329,10435]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tison Pugh"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43359050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211250"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queering Harry Bailly: Gendered Carnival, Social Ideologies, and Masculinity under Duress in the \"Canterbury Tales\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094340","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":13951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Nye"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaf486d8-16c1-30c6-a497-7eddbcd2ec3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810112","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":2684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Youth who identify as LGBTQ are overrepresented in the child welfare system, making up approximately 20% of youth in care. At the same time, youth in foster care who are LGBTQ often are rendered invisible as a result of various interpersonal and structural forces that make the child welfare system reluctant to acknowledge and take accountability for them. Despite improvements in some areas, many child welfare agencies and foster care placements remain unsupportive, and are sometimes explicitly hostile. Consequently, youth in foster care who are LGBTQ experience poorer treatment and worse outcomes than their peers who are heterosexual and cisgender. Within this Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR) study, 25 youth formerly in foster care who are LGBTQ and between the ages of 18\u201326 years old had the opportunity to share stories about their lives before, during, and after care. This article will present one cluster of findings from our Consensual Qualitative Research coding process of participant interviews, highlighting the various relational and structural changes to the child welfare system that are recommended by youth formerly in foster care who are LGBTQ. Specific recommendations included the need for more and extended services beyond the age of 21, comprehensive training of foster parents and social workers around working with youth who identify as LGBTQ, enhanced recruitment of foster parents who identify as LGBTQ, and the need for LGBTQ-affirming and trauma-informed counseling.","creator":["Sarah Mountz","Moshoula Capous-Desyllas","Nayeli Perez"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48626870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00094021"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560242985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfd60f2b-2619-32fe-b137-fe6856efc244"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48626870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"childwelfare"}],"isPartOf":"Child Welfare","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Child Welfare League of America","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Social Work","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Speaking Back to the System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48626870","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":7741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Recommendations for Practice and Policy from the Perspectives of Youth Formerly in Foster Care who are LGBTQ"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheshire Calhoun"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2381979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42799275"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23442"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6328e82a-42d3-364d-ba2b-5b99043c272c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2381979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethics"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"558","pagination":"pp. 558-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Separating Lesbian Theory from Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2381979","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":10821,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[102168,102313],[393941,394129],[394230,394498]],"Locations in B":[[25151,25296],[37000,37188],[37198,37466]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper calls for the application of concepts and ideas in queer theory to childhood studies. Following Philippe Ari\u00e9s' deconstruction of childhood (1962), sociologists of children have reconstructed it, influenced by feminist thinking; and the dominance of the latter in childhood studies has yielded discussions on children's rights and participation. I claim that the adoption of queer theory conceptions is necessary if the discourse of childhood studies aspires to participate in efforts to change social power structures. Therefore, I propose to rethink childishness. In this respect, I argue for releasing the prevailing bounds of the children\/adult dichotomy and challenging the call for 'seriousness', which controls and supervises children and adults alike.","creator":["\u05d9\u05d5\u05e2\u05d3 \u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05e2\u05d6","YOAD ELIAZ"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07934637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568031965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a747f946-3f0b-350f-9db8-78e8494eacdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23981954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studieseducation"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Education \/ \u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Haifa \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05d7\u05d9\u05e4\u05d4","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"CHILDHOOD STUDIES, QUEERNESS AND EDUCATION \/ \u05dc\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d9\u05dc\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd, \u05e7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981954","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberta Barker"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tragical-Comical-Historical Hotspur","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844096","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Given recent social and political transformations as well as our cultural landscape's dominance by narratives of threat and victimization, it is understandable that fear has occupied an ever-expanding role in our lives. Although these instabilities and insecurities have inspired a resurgence of various explanatory and mollifying fundamentalisms, radical democrats suggest that the conditions of this \"postmetaphysica\" age might instead facilitate unprecedented commitments to democracy. As such, radical democrats welcome the very conditions of contingency that contemporary citizen-subjects tend to find so frightening. In attacking the drive towards fundamentalism that they identify in various ideologies from Islam through liberalism, radical democrats betray an inattention to the functional consolation they offer. If fundamentalisms are opiates, radical democrats offer a prescription for addiction treatment that few have any interest in taking.","creator":["Chad Lavin"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a403a2b6-a98d-377b-bfa9-c8cc3409eab8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fear, Radical Democracy, and Ontological Methadone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877056","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lesley Erin Bartlett"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5ea97ac-3549-3413-82a1-be361e642c42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Critical Generosity in the Feminist Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0091","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aaron S. Lecklider"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23048514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a21e326-4513-3e84-9fe4-8368f832faa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23048514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"H. T. Tsiang's Proletarian Burlesque: Performance and Perversion in \"The Hanging on Union Square\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23048514","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11352,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430072,430259]],"Locations in B":[[40294,40481]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Noah D. Zatz"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8550d32c-6ad1-3e43-8e73-29df9cc2983b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex Work\/Sex Act: Law, Labor, and Desire in Constructions of Prostitution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175273","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":15164,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[489356,489409],[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[92291,92349],[95904,96051]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda Claudia Andr\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99cace3c-acba-33bd-81ec-c6c3aa948667"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Machismo, capitalismo y poder en \"De la cintura para abajo\" de Diana Raznovich y \"El suplicio del placer\" de Sabina Berman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021845","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6022,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[36043,36123]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The study of African religious cultures has long been hindered by inadequate \u201ctranslational resources,\u201d to use Robin Horton's phrase, that privilege Western and Christian normative social standards over local ideologies. Biased Western translational practices not only reflect the problems inherent to interpreting the Other but also do discursive violence to African embodied experiences. Tracing this violence of translation through a case-study analysis of Edna Bay's Wives of the Leopard (1998), this article interrogates Bay's assertion that \u201cprostitution\u201d was an institutionalized practice in the precolonial Dahomean kingdom. Through an analysis of primary documents, linguistic studies, and secondary historical and theoretical sources, this study finds that Euro-Western gender assumptions may conceal the inner workings of African social institutions and that European travelers' musings about African \u201cwhores\u201d are inadequate evidence of \u201cprostitution.\u201d Devising an alternative interpretation of the Dahomean royal social institution, this article instead suggests the operation of an indigenous matrimony system.","creator":["Elana Jefferson-Tatum"],"datePublished":"2015-07-16","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jafrireli.3.3.0279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21655405"},{"name":"oclc","value":"773296540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200072"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3a789fb-a164-3947-8730-e37e27f5587f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jafrireli.3.3.0279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafrireli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Africana Religions","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"324","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-324","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Violence of Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jafrireli.3.3.0279","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":14014,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[8466,8565],[65825,66051]],"Locations in B":[[16913,17012],[17349,17575]],"subTitle":"An Indigenous World-Sense and the Western \u201cProstitution\u201d of Dahomean Bodies"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Herrmann"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eb9052a-70a0-3439-873c-8d1f870de57a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704117","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2411,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[14576,14685]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marla Morris"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"317ce781-0bfc-32c4-bc89-b544dea6bae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Chapter 2: Dante's Left Foot Kicks Queer Theory into Gear","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136095","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":6666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[39425,39499]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the Bolivian Andes although violence between spouses is more frequent, violence also erupts between women who are affines. By examining events of violence through the discourses and practices that sustain asymmetries of power among affines, I demonstrate that kinship and violence in the highland Andean region of Sullk'ata are shaped by multiple inequalities and embedded in, yet extend beyond, the domestic arena. Incorporating violence into an analysis of kinship further highlights the lived interactions of individuals rather than static structures of kinship.","creator":["Krista E. Van Vleet"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcf311a9-06a1-321f-a2eb-dd5940d5b3f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"601","pageStart":"567","pagination":"pp. 567-601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Intimacies of Power: Rethinking Violence and Affinity in the Bolivian Andes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805465","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":20394,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[112758,112833]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David A. Hollinger"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b16faf7d-f8a6-3d4a-97a9-554c8db03dd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20027420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Disciplines and the Identity Debates, 1970-1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027420","volumeNumber":"126","wordCount":7070,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46022,46230]],"Locations in B":[[26358,26566]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Viewing culture as a dynamic process which is played out on the individual as well as the social level, this essay examines the autobiographical narratives of three American women of Hispanic descent: Esmeralda Santiago, Sandra Cisneros, and Cherr\u00ede Moraga. Focus is on the metaphor of culture-as-travel and on the differing ways that progressive removal from ethnic roots is regarded and expressed.","creator":["MARIA SZADZIUK"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01940659-5a1d-3c6a-af53-8255f3884b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Culture As Transition: Becoming a Woman in Bi-ethnic Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029803","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9143,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[55614,55676]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler has stood out among current feminist thinkers because of the controversial tone of her writing. Her critical views of contemporary feminism have succeeded in establishing a dialogue with the new academic and political demands raised by a poststructuralist concept of power and subjective formation, while avoiding the nihilism of shallow and apocalyptic analyses that decree the end of \"everything\". This article analyzes some of her more controversial points, like her radical critique of philosophy and identity psychoanalysis and her unique focus on subjective positions and expressions of gender (that mock and subvert the naturalist illusion of binary sexuality and compulsory heterosexuality), including the performing activity of drag queens, transvestites, and queers. Such subjective formations bear subversive potential and imply a new path for feminist theory and militancy, while suggesting new perspectives for the human sciences. Parmiles penseurs f\u00e9ministes de l'actualit\u00e9, Judith Butler se d\u00e9tache parle ton pol\u00e9mique de ses textes. Ses propositions critiques au sujet du f\u00e9minisme contemporain permettent en m\u00eame temps de dialoguer avec les nouvelles exigences (acad\u00e9miques et politiques) pos\u00e9es \u00e0 partird' une conception post-structuraliste de pou voir et de formation subjective et d'\u00e9viter le nihilisme des analyses simplistes et apocalyptiques que d\u00e9cr\u00e8tent la fin de \"tout\". Dans cet article sont analys\u00e9es quelques points pol\u00e9miques de sa pens\u00e9e, tels que la radicalisme avec laquelle elle critique la philosophie et la psychanalyse identitaires, et la fa\u00e7on unique dont elle met en lumi\u00e8re les positions de sujet, les actions de genre - qui d\u00e9jouent et subvertissent l'illusion naturaliste de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 binaire et de l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexsualit\u00e9 obligatoire - telles que l'action artistique des drag-queens, les travestis, les queers. Ces formations subjectives portent le potentiel subversif et sugg\u00e8rent de nouvelles perspectives pour les sciences humaines. Entre las pensadoras feministas de la actualidad, Judith Butler se ha destacado gracias al tono pol\u00e9mico de sus textos. Sus proposiciones cr\u00edticas en relaci\u00f3n al feminismo contempor\u00e1neo, al analizar algunos puntos pol\u00e9micos de su pensamiento, tales como la fuerza radical con que critica la filosof\u00eda y por la manera sin igual con que trae a colaci\u00f3n posiciones de sujeto, actuaciones de g\u00e9nero - que burlan y subvierten la ilusi\u00f3n naturalista de la sexualidad binaria y la heterosexualidad obligatoria -, tales como la actividad histri\u00f3nica de las drag-queens, los travestis, los queers. Estas formaciones subjetivas insin\u00faan un nuevo camino para la teor\u00eda y la militancia feminista, as\u00ed como sugieren nuevas perspectivas para las ciencias humanas.","creator":["KARLA ADRIANA M. BESSA"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94d48aea-d153-34b7-b4e3-41f2487960a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"POSI\u00c7\u00d5ES DE SUJEITO, ATUA\u00c7\u00d5ES DE G\u00caNERO...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904022","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6367,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465389,465638]],"Locations in B":[[23220,23469]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Semi-structured interviews with adolescent boys attending a Catholic coeducational high school in Perth, Western Australia, were analyzed using a Foucauldian approach to establish how these boys relate to one another and respond to their experiences of schooling. Their rejection of academic achievement and their peer group relations are tied to acting out problematic forms of \"cool\" masculinity. The ability of some boys to identify the social dynamics and the consequences of their behaviour for themselves and others suggests entry points and thresholds for school programs in masculinity education. \/\/\/ Des entrevues semi-dirig\u00e9es aupr\u00e8s d'adolescents fr\u00e9quentant une \u00e9cole secondaire mixte catholique \u00e0 Perth, Westerm Australia, ont \u00e9t\u00e9 analys\u00e9es \u00e0 l'aide d'une approche foucauldienne afin de d\u00e9terminer le type de relations qu'entretiennent ces gar\u00e7ons entre eux et leurs r\u00e9actions aux exp\u00e9riences scolaires. Leur rejet de la r\u00e9ussite scolaire et leurs relations avec leurs pairs sont reli\u00e9s \u00e0 des comportements probl\u00e9matiques de masculinit\u00e9 jug\u00e9s \"chics\". La capacit\u00e9 de certains gar\u00e7ons d'identifier la dynamique sociale et les cons\u00e9quences de leur comportement sur eux-m\u00eames et autrui permet d'envisager des points d'entr\u00e9e pour des programmes scolaires portant sur la masculinit\u00e9.","creator":["Wayne Martino"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1585744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ab4d95f-cbdb-35cf-91d3-380a63e26b73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1585744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mucking around in Class, Giving Crap, and Acting Cool: Adolescent Boys Enacting Masculinites at School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1585744","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":4788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist scholars have begun to ask how existing conceptual schemes and organizational structures in academic disciplines have excluded women and feminist ideas, and to provide suggestions for transformation. One strand of this work has been the exploration of how canons of thought are constructed in such fields as economics, sociology, and sociocultural anthropology. This article begins such an investigation for sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology by reviewing how gender correlates with publication and citation over a 35-year period (1965-2000) in five key journals, and in 16 textbooks published in the 1990s. It describes some marked differences in the publication of works by women and on gender in the five journals, as well as some significant differences in the degree to which men and women cite the work of women. It also considers how the rate of publication of articles on sex, gender, and women is correlated with publication of female authors. It concludes with a discussion of the implications of this study for changing institutional practices in our field.","creator":["Bonnie Mcelhinny","Marijke Hols","Jeff Holtzkener","Susanne Unger","Claire Hicks"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3737af29-01f2-3591-9fdf-657653758c66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender, Publication and Citation in Sociolinguistics and Linguistic Anthropology: The Construction of a Scholarly Canon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169266","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":15278,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476047]],"Locations in B":[[90929,90991]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pratima Prasad"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8969cbfb-6585-3649-b15c-dabac65e8859"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40552059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Deceiving Disclosures: Androgyny and George Sand's Gabriel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552059","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8886,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434833,435259]],"Locations in B":[[20760,21185]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the connections among place, identity and visual art with reference to the Harris Tapestry, created to mark the beginning of a new Millennium on the Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. I focus on the material practices through which the Tapestry was created and the historical and cultural metaphors evoked through its embroidered motifs with a view to considering what it means to belong on the island. As a site where people's stories of the past and present are translated into the visual field, the Tapestry is a deeply politicized aesthetics, making visible social relations through which both island and aesthetic spaces are constituted. Centrally, these concern rights to land, the Tapestry exposing tensions through which metaphors of belonging have been challenged and resisted through time. In this sense, the Tapestry is iconic of a 'culture of resistance' (Said, 1994) whose geography is island-centred rather than globally peripheral.","creator":["A. Fiona D. Mackenzie"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afbfb138-b497-31ee-903d-fcc2649d44b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44250968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Place and the art of belonging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250968","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Synecdochic representation reproduces commonplace identity categories in the attempt to question them. Could there be another way to represent that does not fall into this trap? This study explores the possibility of an ironic mode of political representation and posits femme gender performance as an example. The femme goes forth into the heterosexual mainstream as \"straight\" and returns as \"queer\" a surprising reversal that casts heteronormative assumptions into doubt. Yet irony has its own limits. Ironic and synecdochic representation gain ground by working together in a productive tension, alternately opening up new possibilities and appealing to existing commonplaces.","creator":["Elizabeth Galewski"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Playing Up Being a Woman\": Femme Performance and the Potential for Ironic Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940359","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gwendolyn Audrey Foster"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f0f5aec-ef6d-3949-8130-18f8deb1f2dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performativity and Gender in Alice Guy's \"La Vie du Christ\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018927","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":4200,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431288,431453]],"Locations in B":[[12364,12530]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the discourses of spirituality represented in Jane Eyre within the context of the Evangelical upheaval in the Britain of Charlotte Bront\u00eb's childhood and the mixing of supernatural with Christian elements in the \"popular religion\" of early-nineteenth-century British rural society. In addition to a dominant Christian spiritualism and a supernatural spiritualism, however, a third discrete discourse is identified in the text-the discourse of spiritual love. The novel stages a contest between these three competing discourses. Christianity is itself conflictually represented, being torn between the repressive, masculine Evangelicalism of Mr. Brocklehurst and the healing communion (among women) represented by Helen Burns and the figure of \"sympathy.\" The supernatural is equally conflicted: it is shown to empower Jane and to be a necessary vehicle for bringing Christian discourse in contact with the discourse of spiritual love, but then it is denied and left, like the madwoman in the attic, as the excluded term. Finally, spiritual love is offered by the text as that which solves these contradictions, revising and merging Christianity and the supernatural to produce a rejuvenated spirituality, one that fosters what is conceived of as the \"whole\" person, her need for mutual human relationship, her spiritual needs, and her desire.","creator":["J. Jeffrey Franklin"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6673dad-45e4-3087-9f7a-d51492a9a4b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2933729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Merging of Spiritualities: Jane Eyre as Missionary of Love","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933729","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10188,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[428511,428602]],"Locations in B":[[14188,14279]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studies of the application of research in policy and service delivery suggest that the translation of research findings into practice is not straightforward. Practitioners are criticized for failing to base actions on research evidence, while academic research is sometimes condemned as 'irrelevant' to practice. This paper argues that this conflict derives in part from an academic model of research constructed in opposition to practice. Reflections on scientific iogocentrism (claims to possess unmediated knowledge of reality) and 'transgressive' action research provide a critique of traditional research and suggest an alternative, practice-based research model. Three propositions for generating 'practice-based evidence' are identified. Firstly, the pursuit of knowledge should be acknowledged as a local and contingent process. Secondly, research activity should be constitutive of difference, questioning the legitimation and repression of particular aspects of the world. Finally, theory-building should be seen as an adjunct to practical activity. Together; these positions dissolve the researcher\/researched and research\/practice oppositions in traditional research and supply an ethically and politically engaged research. Practice-based research is explored in terms of four moments in the research process.","creator":["Nick J. Fox"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1fbd2fa-73cd-3829-ada9-0fb0f28c3bdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Practice-based Evidence: Towards Collaborative and Transgressive Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856495","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on three twentieth-century composers -Weill, Krenek and Stravinsky -whose stylistic ' voices' underwent radical changes during their compositional careers. It reflects on how these transformations have been received by critics and musicologists, and asks how far the criteria of value found within musicological and compositional practice have been contingent upon the requirement that composers possess a distinctive, and original, personal style.","creator":["CLAIRE TAYLOR-JAY"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"615ec3c2-5b8e-373f-9e89-935218cbfea0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40783131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Royal Musical Association","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Composer's Voice? Compositional Style and Criteria of Value in Weill, Krenek and Stravinsky","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783131","volumeNumber":"134","wordCount":14856,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101617,101766]],"Locations in B":[[54486,54635]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the dynamics among diasporic Chinese in Central America and Panama by analyzing a beauty contest and the convention in which it takes place. I argue that diasporic identity and belonging are negotiated through and alongside gender by showing how gender difference is structured into the convention and how the beauty contest, as a microcosm of the Chinese in this region, reflects the broader social conflicts and cultural transformations of the diaspora. Examining the contestants' performances and the debates they inspired, I illustrate how ethnicity, national difference, immigrant generations, and racial background become key sites where diasporic Chineseness and belonging are negotiated and reworked.","creator":["Lok Siu"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff0c9814-098f-3dc9-93fb-c8b81483e9e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Queen of the Chinese Colony: Gender, Nation, and Belonging in Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150980","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":13340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Samuels"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"968497ee-b417-3952-9ec9-16eb4cdf8813"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"These Are the Stories That the Dogs Tell\": Discourses of Identity and Difference in Ethnography and Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656210","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":15281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The notion of the continuum is applied to special education in diverse contexts across many nations. This article explores its conceptual underpinnings, drawing on a systematic search of the literature to review recurring ideas associated with the notion and to explicate both its uses and shortcomings. Through a thematic analysis of the literature, the research team derived 29 continua, situated within six broad groupings (space, students, staffing, support, strategies, and systems). This provides a clear structure for reconsidering the issues that the notion of the continuum is supposed to describe and enables a reconceptualization of how the delivery of services is represented. We present the initial underpinnings for a community of provision in which settings and services work together to provide learning and support for all children and young people in their locality.","creator":["Jonathan Rix","Kieron Sheehy","Felicity Fletcher-Campbell","Martin Crisp","Amanda Harper"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44667624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcaf744e-60dc-3328-9614-c11cc703204d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44667624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Moving From a Continuum to a Community: Reconceptualizing the Provision of Support","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44667624","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":16563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper evaluates critically the validity of the competing conceptualizations of informal employment that variously read such work as a leftover of a previous mode of production, a by-product of, alternative or complement to formal employment. Until now, the common tendency has been for commentators to universally privilege one conceptualization over the others. Reporting data collected through 861 face-to-face interviews in Il deprived and affluent urban and rural English localities, the finding is that each conceptualization is a valid portrayal of particular types of informal employment, and that only by combining and using them all is it possible to achieve a finer-grained and comprehensive understanding of the complex and diverse nature of informal employment as a whole. The paper concludes by discussing the implications for both the way in which informal employment is conceptualized as well as how it is tackled by governments.","creator":["Colin C. Williams"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346764"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44714743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22e1749c-a645-31c0-9507-5856a3f71318"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41288538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revisociecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Social Economy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Evaluation of Competing Conceptualizations of Informal Employment: Some Lessons from England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288538","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":9675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09512314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cc77bc7-f5ef-34f1-8ff4-de907e6756f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradian"}],"isPartOf":"The Conradian","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Joseph Conrad Society UK","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874049","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how local resistance against government attempts to reduce poverty to a technical problem ironically reinforces the precarious state of the poor. It looks at the workings of the minimum livelihood guarantee (dibao) through mundane interactions between street-level officials and poor residents in a workers' village on the periphery of Harbin. As the party-state's primary policy for urban poverty, dibao has introduced a new rationality that poverty is calculable and flexible. Urban laid-off workers have resisted this by invoking the socialist claim that they are \"the people.\" I examine how this resistance has led street-level officials to be preoccupied with the old socialist norm of \"an ability to work\" rather than with \"income\" as dibao's official criterion. The new local criterion has produced the ironic effect that urban laid-off workers, who were understood to be dibao's main target, have been mostly excluded from the scheme.","creator":["Mun Young Cho"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205048"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227222"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b872eb64-5287-3a98-8b40-8b2b813e4144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The China Quarterly","issueNumber":"201","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Edge between \"the People\" and \"the Population\": Ethnographic Research on the Minimum Livelihood Guarantee","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749346","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although planning researchers and practitioners may see planning theory as interesting, its utility for addressing 'real' planning practice remains moot. A model is proposed that draws on Bourdieu's concept of habitus that collapses both the agency\/structure problematic and the theory\/practice divide. This model draws on the socio-developmentalism of Vygotsky and the philosophical insights of Wittgenstein that are brought together to understand innovation for sustainability in a master-planned community. This is not a one-to-one borrowing of theory from another discipline to shed light on planning processes, but a response to a particular planning problem that draws on multiple conceptual frameworks. The propositions of the model include, first, that practices are embodied social structures that aconsciously define 'the way things are done around here'; second, that existing practices prime our responses to change; and third, that agency is a bid to either extend or defend one's practices. The implications for planning professionals and researchers are discussed.","creator":["Geoffrey Binder"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26004269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14730952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62fad974-dd19-31c1-aa43-e6799f75b0e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26004269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"planningtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Planning Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory(izing)\/practice: The model of recursive cultural adaptation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26004269","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dieter Ingenschay"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15773388"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607189719"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95767b82-5481-3975-946e-88423e8be19f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iberoamericana"}],"isPartOf":"Iberoamericana (2001-)","issueNumber":"20","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hemispheric Looks at Literary AIDS Discourses in Latin America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675888","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We present a qualitative analysis of students' written narratives of gender norm violation projects-for example, women smoking cigars, repairing cars, wearing moustaches; men doing housework, carrying purses, wearing nail polish, crying in public-in terms relevant to theoretical literature that problematizes heterosexuality. We show that routinely unquestioned heteronormative expectations and proscriptions that exist as background context in contemporary culture come to the fore when traditional gender boundaries are crossed. Further, we show that heteronormativity itself is gendered via the homosexualization of disruptive men and heterosexualization of disruptive women. This article discusses and compares how compulsory heterosexuality operates differently for women and men. We describe and give examples of different ways in which students and others sexualize even unexplicitly sexual actions and appearances. These tactics of sexualization include homophobic disclaimers, homophobic labeling, and heterosexualization. The concept \"heterogender\" best captures these common ways of interpreting gender norm violations. We discuss findings in terms of the importance of empirical inquiry to a primarily theoretical literature, the fact that gender differences are actively maintained, and the distinction between institutionalized and experienced heterosexuality. Our findings generally support radical feminist, cultural feminist, and queer theories of gender inequality, all of which focus on enforced heterosexuality.","creator":["Joyce McCarl Nielson","Glenda Walden","Charlotte A. Kunkel"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"135c1813-9de8-3672-90e3-d891a2aded48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gendered Heteronormativity: Empirical Illustrations in Everyday Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121025","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study contrasts findings from two Delphi studies that investigated how women and men who are higher education academic administrators in educational leadership programs and colleges define and describe resiliency in their leadership. Using gender theories, both studies revealed a multidimensional gendering of leadership, a gendering more complicated than the social constraints of biological sex.","creator":["Dana E. Christman","Rhonda L. McClellan"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36886922"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a67aa02e-cddb-3c7c-bc0e-013a6cac2513"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23256880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"648","pagination":"pp. 648-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Discovering Middle Space: Distinctions of Sex and Gender in Resilient Leadership","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256880","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":9467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Luz Horne"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"265d9d40-c015-314b-8a27-ffe7c8bbe209"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"61","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La interrupci\u00f3n de un banquete de hombres solos: una lectura de Teresa de la Parra como contracanon del ensayo latinoamericano","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070256","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8208,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62210,62333]],"Locations in B":[[45216,45340]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Walker"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Before the Name: Ovid's Deformulated Lesbianism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125343","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":9821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[62401,62455]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, we examine the multiple significations of the \u201cfrontline\u201d metaphor in the UK during the first ten months of COVID-19. We argue that the term \u201cfrontline\u201d has operated as a performative frame, which has helped to produce the very notion and the materialization of the \u201cCOVID-19 frontline\u201d and keyworkers. Showing how the UK government has repeatedly cited this metaphor, we outline the contradictory effects it has generated through an interplay of hyper-visibility and opaqueness. The frontline metaphor has been used to justify the government's injection of massive amounts of public money into the economy, render hyper-visible workers who had previously been invisible, whilst generating a sense of civic responsibility. Simultaneously, however, the metaphor has created a smokescreen for corrupt practices, deflecting attention away from resource-starved health and social care infrastructures and intensifying forms of \u201ceveryday bordering\u201d and \u201ceveryday racism\u201d that deepen structural injustices in the UK.","creator":["Sara Farris","Nira Yuval-Davis","Catherine Rottenberg"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/statecrime.10.2.0284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20466056"},{"name":"oclc","value":"815648384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0a6fda6-140c-378d-a701-38667ff866e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/statecrime.10.2.0284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"statecrime"}],"isPartOf":"State Crime Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"The Frontline as Performative Frame: An Analysis of the UK COVID Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/statecrime.10.2.0284","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"RESUMEN Este art\u00edculo analiza el discurso de la subjetividad y la teor\u00eda cr\u00edtica de la interseccionalidad a trav\u00e9s de un an\u00e1lisis detallado de las tres anti-hero\u00ednas picaresca-celestinescas: Elena, Zara\/Mar\u00eda, y M\u00e9ndez, retratadas en la novela medievalizadora, La hija de Celestina (1612), de Alonso Jer\u00f3nimo de Salas Barbadillo. Se profundiza en la protagonista Elena, que emerge como un personaje atropellado y subyugado, as\u00ed como gravemente condicionado por la raza, el g\u00e9nero\/sexo y la clase (un producto cl\u00e1sico de la interseccionalidad). As\u00ed, ella radicalmente personifica la subjetividad. Elena tambi\u00e9n surge como el producto mal\u00e9ficamente hermoso del capitalismo explotador que sobresale como un \u2018Yo\u2019 monstruoso y frankensteiniano, cuando trata de invertir la pir\u00e1mide social del poder y del control masculino. Hay un tercer aspecto de la subyugaci\u00f3n de las mujeres en la novela, en la que debido al temor y misoginia predominantes en el Siglo de Oro, el estado patriarcal y autoritario vigila los cuerpos femeninos invariablemente en un estilo pan\u00f3ptico foucaultiano. Les disciplina y castiga groseramente, especialmente a Elena, la mujer fatal, y posteriormente los convierte en cuerpos d\u00f3ciles.","creator":["Debarati Byabartta"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26269455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01473085"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"386aac85-502e-325d-8025-46fe23cf27a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26269455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"celestinesca"}],"isPartOf":"Celestinesca","issueNumber":"41","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Publicacions Universitat de Valencia","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Tres anti-hero\u00ednas picaresca-celestinescas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26269455","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"los cuerpos femeninos radicalmente subyugados en La hija de Celestina<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jorge Luis Galindo"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87838dea-ec13-3747-b8a0-2fef5f8b0f2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La Est\u00e9tica Camp en \"Melodrama\" de Luis Zapata","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741686","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El trabajo aporta una mirada integradora entre los estudios de g\u00e9nero y los estudios de la cultura visual. Se busca interpretar las figuraciones de mujeres en revistas ilustradas argentinas de amplia difusi\u00f3n, hacia 1920, para reflexionar sobre las convenciones de las distinciones gen\u00e9ricas, los comportamientos de emulaci\u00f3n, las representaciones de exclusi\u00f3n social y las articulaciones que se establecen entre ellos. Se propone que los modos de caracterizar los cuerpos desempe\u00f1an un rol crucial; as\u00ed, la apariencia, la gestualidad y la evocaci\u00f3n a un estilo de vida dada por los elementos que componen la escena act\u00faan como f\u00f3rmulas iconogr\u00e1ficas que sustentan la agencia del reconocimiento social. Se presta atenci\u00f3n a las condiciones de producci\u00f3n y dise\u00f1o de los discursos, los temas que se desarrollan, los dispositivos que se utilizan desde los lenguajes y los significados potenciales de reconocimiento. The article provides an integrated view between gender studies and visual culture studies. It seeks to interpret the figurations of women in argentine glossy magazines widely available, around 1920, to reflect on the conventions of generic distinctions, behavior emulation, social exclusion representations and articulations between them. It is proposed that the ways of characterizing bodies plays a crucial role so, the appearance, gestures and the evocation of a life style given for the elements of the scene act as iconographic formulas that support the agency of social recognition. Attention is paid to the design and production conditions of discourses, the themes developed, the devices that are used from the languages, and the potential meanings of recognition.","creator":["Gisela Paola Kaczan"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45fe8d0d-d0b9-344e-ba85-bd1f45b2b852"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1058","pageStart":"1039","pagination":"pp. 1039-1058","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Alegor\u00edas de distinci\u00f3n y presagios de exclusi\u00f3n social en im\u00e1genes de mujeres (circa 1920)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328077","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article underscores the theoretical practices underlying the ethnography of tourism and indicates possible itineraries to compare myths, encounters and structures in many areas of fieldwork. It examines the problematic issue of the unit of analysis, which encompasses a space but also the mobility, travel and texts of the players directly involved. Also emphasised is the epochal nature of tourism and its central role at the juncture of the modern and postmodern eras, and with respect to self-formation, way of life and the exercise of power. The third aspect involves the constructed character of the 'site' and performative practices, which start with a selective viewpoint and emerge in unique productions of subjectivity. Lastly, it will analyse the important social role played by the rhetoric of 'authenticity' in the representation and staging of reality.","creator":["Alessandro Simonicca"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40205577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919099"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496677"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d90ab179-1b68-3e4a-9e10-fcc46803bcd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40205577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ricefolk"}],"isPartOf":"La Ricerca Folklorica","issueNumber":"56","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Grafo Spa","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Turismo fra discorso, narrativa e potere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40205577","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LYNNE LAYTON"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3e7e8a8-9450-384b-83ec-e8b7ddc9448c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trauma, Gender Identity and Sexuality: Discourses of Fragmentation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304374","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":7572,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[328477,328717]],"Locations in B":[[8118,8360]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Plaskow","Tamar Ross"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14c1884a-e3af-3fb5-98bb-31d8d9891277"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The View From Here: Gender Theory and Gendered Realities: An Exchange between Tamar Ross and Judith Plaskow","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2007.-.13.207","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within recent theory, cultural memory affirms itself in 'group-related fictions of continuity\/establishing (and often defending) some Gestalt of collective identity. It is also seen as a complex miertextual operation, based not only on imitation and interpretation of some 'founding' texts, but also on dissent. Furthermore, it is becoming clearer that the politics of cultural memory, from the Odyssee through Pound's Cantos, have been distinctly gender-marktd. While the act of remembering itself has been celebrated as an unmistakably male gesture, its other, oblivion, has in insiduous ways become associated with the feminine. The essay proposes to read Irving's \"Legend\" as a remarkable early American text of cultural memory. It not only reflects an acute moment of collective 'liminality,' but is also densely and surprisingly intertextual, re-writing - however modestly - one of the major 'mnemotopes' of our culture. This mnemotope centers on a violent opposition of remembering and forgetting, and Irving's re-envisioning takes on some rather dramatic contours of revision.","creator":["Klaus Poenicke"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d47182ab-2e06-36fa-a098-db1e7850d378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Engendering Cultural Memory: \"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow\" as Text and Intertext","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157349","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susanne Lanwerd"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac72c430-72e9-3430-a885-28ec1a1d8b3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40341998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341998","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gill Rye"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be63b12d-2928-38e3-bad7-de6e8725a176"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41705559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Public Places, Intimate Spaces: Christine Angot's Incest Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705559","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":6697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Divine"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78a6c4c7-a778-3860-a5e8-ca237d5160e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90012379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"178","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"RECUPERATING LOSSES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012379","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101215,101594]],"Locations in B":[[39283,39661]],"subTitle":"HISTORY, SPECTACLE, MOTILITY IN JULIO MEDEM\u2019S ROOM IN ROME\/HABITACI\u00d3N EN ROMA<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabete Lopes"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41506388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21500428"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acb0b68c-81b5-3f36-9ff7-335eb523729a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41506388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"edgallpoerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Edgar Allan Poe Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unburying the Wife: A Reflection Upon the Female Uncanny in Poe's \"Ligeia\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41506388","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":3998,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[81364,81569]],"Locations in B":[[4010,4218]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In response to the critics who charged that his money was tainted, Andrew Carnage devised an ideology that came to be known as the \"Gospel of Wealth.\" Carnegie's \"gospel\" mostly helped the ambitious, young white men. But wealthy women like Phoebe Apperson Hearst also played a major role in redefining the \"Gospel of Wealth.\" The goal of this article is to define and explain Hearst's \"gospel\" and show how it made her the complementary equal of such men as Carnegie. Hearst's \"gospel\" declared that leisure women had a sacred duty to give to causes, especially progressive education and reform, that would benefit their communities and help those excluded or marginalized from America's mainstream, as well as advance these women's careers as reformers and political leaders. While Hearst's approach helped those left out by Carnegie's style of philanthropy, namely women, it also was a reasoned but intuitive plan to advance her career and status, silence her critics, obtain and wield the power to define political issues, and realize reform goals. As such, Phoebe Apperson Hearst became the complementary equal of prominent, powerful men like Andrew Carnegie.","creator":["Alexandra M. Nickliss"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2002.71.4.575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e19bff8-380b-3103-b8b6-b5601a52c926"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/phr.2002.71.4.575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacihistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"605","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-605","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Phoebe Apperson Hearst's \"Gospel of Wealth,\" 1883\u20131901","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2002.71.4.575","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":13968,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[4153,4218]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael du Plessis"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2060873-678f-39a4-b742-a4146327b037"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mother's Boys: Maternity, Male \"Homosexuality,\" and Melancholia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389305","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11863,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824],[503582,503659]],"Locations in B":[[67890,67958],[67986,68067]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an examination of four Bengali folktales, which are woven around the marriage of a newborn male child to a girl who has just reached puberty, the exile of the couple and the bringing up of the child-husband by the pubescent girl, and their subsequent return home where they carry out their \"normal\" roles as man and wife. It seeks to answer whether the tales bear any relevance to the daily lives of the Bengali people and their impossible and forbidden wishes. It proceeds in four parts: the first briefly recounts the tale of M\u0101lan\u0304cam\u0101l\u0101, suggests its proximity to the \"reverse Oedipus\" (Indian) tale discussed by Ramanujan (1984, 237-42); the second summarizes three variant tales (R\u016bpb\u0101n, N\u016br B\u0101nu y and Madanama\u0101jar\u012b) as belonging to the same type; the third part is a Freudian unpacking of the tales as aesthetic phantasies manifesting an Oedipus complex among the Bengali males; and the fourth examines the notion of the wife-mother through the critical lenses of Gririndrasekhar Bose's \"wish to be female\" and the \"Oedipus mother,\" and Sudhir Kakar's \"maternal-feminine.\" The article ends with a self-reflexive afterword that attempts to recuperate traces of feminist agency embedded in the tales, and the play of \"gender performativity,\" by means of which patriarchal norms are continuously redeployed.","creator":["Syed Jamil Ahmed"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18826865"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298239510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-266704"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e20bb08-108b-33e1-8644-029a3b7cc422"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41407272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianeth"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Ethnology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Nanzan University","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Religion","Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Psychoanalytic Reading of \"M\u0101lan\u0304cam\u0101l\u0101\", \"R\u016bpb\u0101n\", \"N\u016br B\u0101nu\", and \"Madanaman\u0304jar\u012b\": Popular Imaginings of the Wife-Mother by the Bengali People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407272","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":16618,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441286,441417]],"Locations in B":[[90686,90818]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The role and place of South African Black theology in post-apartheid South Africa has been questioned since the advent of democracy in 1994. Recognising that South African Black theology was essentially \u2018protest theology\u2019 against an unjust White government, its utility in a post-apartheid context with a Black government in place, has been questioned. Predominant within this questioning is the political usefulness of Black Theology. What has remained largely un-examined in the literature is a focus on the prefix \u2018Black\u2019 in \u2018black theology\u2019. It is this that forms the focus of this article. Scrutiny of the prefix \u2018black\u2019 requires a scrutiny of the complexity of racial identity in South Africa. Notwithstanding the ways in which scholars reach for the \u2018inclusive Biko notion of Black\u2019 as a means to almost \u2018get on\u2019 with the political task of black theology, as opposed to debating identity, in this article I argue that critical race and identity theory are central to discussions on resurrecting Black Theologies. I offer a disclaimer that I will not be focusing so much on the matter of theology in this paper, but my focus will be on how identity is racially constructed and I offer suggestions as to how we may begin to think more critically regarding this category within a subject such as black theology. I bring my experiences of being \u2018Coloured\u2019 in South Africa into dialogue with critical identity theorists and argue that we need to \u2018make the circle bigger,\u2019 to include diverse perspectives on identity and that while Spivak\u2019s notion of \u2018strategic essentialism\u2019 (i.e. stressing uniformity in blackness) was important in Apartheid South Africa, in post-apartheid South Africa, our ideas of race need to be far more nuanced, if we are to achieve the political ends of Black Theology.","creator":["Johnathan Jodamus"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26489070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b43b1b87-4eac-34bd-b700-4ae3cbdc0158"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26489070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Make the circle bigger\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26489070","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7664,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[414762,414872]],"Locations in B":[[15236,15348]],"subTitle":"Alternate Discourses of Identity Construction in Black Theologies"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carl F. Stychin"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1e675f8-b12d-34c8-968b-9ebf8877cfae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44483102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POLITICS OF IDENTITY \u2013 VII: Being Gay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483102","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["STEPHANIE JORDAN"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41428398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e70957a-9463-3e47-b708-c236e03c1727"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41428398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Mark Morris Marks Purcell: \"Dido and Aeneas\" as Danced Opera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41428398","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":22771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane C. Sugarman"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.2.0341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c7190f4-4612-3de8-af7d-5b24dcbd41bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.2.0341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Society for Ethnomusicology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Building and Teaching Theory in Ethnomusicology: A Response to Rice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.2.0341","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo pretende dar conta da traject\u00f3ria do g\u00e9nero nas ci\u00eancias sociais, desde as resist\u00eancias que o conceito encontrou nas v\u00e1rias disciplinas at\u00e9 \u00e0s ambival\u00eancias com que foi tratado pelas v\u00e1rias correntes feministas, ao desenvolvimento da teoria feminista p\u00f3s-moderna dos anos 90. Le but de cet article est de d\u00e9crire la trajectoire du genre dans les sciences sociales tant en mati\u00e8re des r\u00e9sistances que le concept a rencontr\u00e9es dans les diff\u00e9rentes disciplines que des ambivalences de traitement par les diff\u00e9rents courants f\u00e9ministes, voire du d\u00e9veloppement de la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe post-moderne des ann\u00e9es 90. Dans cette perspective, qui s'est construite \u00e0 partir du regard critique sur la pratique scientifique du pass\u00e9, l'objet de l'\u00e9tude a \u00e9t\u00e9 d\u00e9vi\u00e9 des sexes pour se centrer sur les processus de construction de la diff\u00e9rence entre ces derniers. Cette d\u00e9viation de l'int\u00e9r\u00eat de la recherche a \u00e9t\u00e9 accompagn\u00e9e par une red\u00e9finition du concept de genre. The aim of this article is to describe the trajectory of gender in the social sciences, starting with the resistance which the concept encountered in the various disciplines, leading on to the ambiguity with which the topic was dealt with by the various feminist tendencies, and culminating in the development of post-modern feminist theory in the 90s. Looked at with this type of approach, which has been built up from a critical appreciation of scientific practice in the past, the object of study has shifted from the sexes themselves to the processes whereby differences between them are constructed. This shift in the focal point of research in this field was accompanied by a redefinition of the concept of gender.","creator":["L\u00edgia Am\u00e2ncio"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41011822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41011822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","issueNumber":"168","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"687","pagination":"pp. 687-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"O g\u00e9nero no discurso das ci\u00eancias sociais","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41011822","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":13122,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478060,478158]],"Locations in B":[[80673,80784]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alesha E. Doan"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb965e7d-810a-34d0-bffd-839203ed64cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"What's Wrong with Being Sexy?\" Why Political Science Needs to Get Serious about Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984479","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3297,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[21159,21243]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Davidson"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d45360b-0c48-3472-8a5f-65705988347b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"170","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dover, Foucault and Greek Homosexuality: Penetration and the Truth of Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600793","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":21084,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485515]],"Locations in B":[[111499,111592]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The United States has declared a war on fat. I examine this campaign as a biopolitical field of science and governance that has emerged to manage the \"obesity epidemic\" by remaking overweight and obese subjects into thin, fit, proper Americans. Drawing on research in Southern California, I examine the impact of the campaign on the bodies, selves, and lives of the heavyset young people who are its main targets. At least in this corner of the country, I argue, the war on fat, far from alleviating the problem of fatness, is creating a new fat problem by expanding the number of weight-obsessed, self-identified \"abnormal\" \"fat subjects,\" who may not be technically obese but whose desperate efforts to lower their weight endanger their health and bring intense socioemotional suffering. These developments have implications for larger issues of social suffering and social justice.","creator":["SUSAN GREENHALGH"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26b8ce57-d26b-3892-aa27-5c8f951d1a8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Weighty subjects: The biopolitics of the U.S. war on fat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250779","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses the Sankofa principle of going back and getting that which can enable a community to imagine new possibilities. In this article, four waves of current research in race and ethnicity in higher education are offered, as well as some lessons learned from them. These considerations provide the backdrop for imagining how a fifth wave may be ontologically and epistemologically oriented, what themes it might take up, and its possible implications.","creator":["D-L Stewart"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645350","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"961888507"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40f5e8c0-1103-34f2-bd61-fe1fddf81784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48645350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichangrace"}],"isPartOf":"Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity (JCSCORE)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Southwest Center for Human Relations Studies at the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Education","African American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Envisioning Possibilities for Innovations in Higher Education Research on Race and Ethnicity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645350","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437407,437618]],"Locations in B":[[29846,30057]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since 2003 children in England have been formally assessed at the age of 5 after their first year in school, and their numerical scores reported to parents and analysed at school and national levels. The use of statutory assessment for this age group is unique in the UK, where other regions use less formal methods of assessment. It is also unusual internationally. This paper examines the peculiarity of this assessment system, the Early Years Foundation Stage Profile, using data from two ethnographic case studies of classrooms of four- and five-year-old children in London. The study revealed tensions between the construction of teachers' knowledge, their ambivalence in relation to the numerical data they report, and the use of the data for school accountability purposes. Alternative methods of assessing this age group in other parts of the UK are used to consider the implications of the production of numerical assessment data in early childhood education.","creator":["Alice Bradbury"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49631317"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdba28d1-3cff-3388-a442-d39e302f04eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43926598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Early childhood assessment: observation, teacher 'knowledge' and the production of attainment data in early years settings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926598","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The relationship between feminism and metaphysics has historically been strained. Metaphysics has until recently remained dismissive of feminist insights, and many feminist philosophers have been deeply skeptical about any value that metaphysics might have when thinking about advancing gender justice. Nevertheless, feminist philosophers have in recent years increasingly taken up explicitly metaphysical investigations. Such feminist investigations have expanded the scope of metaphysics in holding that metaphysical tools can help advance debates on topics outside of traditional metaphysical inquiry (e.g. the nature of gender, sex, or sexuality). Moreover, feminist philosophers typically bring new methodological insights to bear on traditional ways of doing philosophy. Feminist metaphysicians have also recently begun interrogating the methods of metaphysics and they have raised questions about what metaphysics as a discipline is in the business of doing. In discussing such methodological issues, Elizabeth Barnes has recently argued that some prevalent conceptions of metaphysics rule out feminist metaphysics from the start and render it impossible. This is bad news for self-proclaimed feminist metaphysicians in suggesting that they are mistaken about the metaphysical status of their work. With this worry in mind, the paper asks: how does feminist metaphysics fare relative to 'mainstream' metaphysics? More specifically, it explores how feminist and 'mainstream' debates intersect, on what grounds do they come apart (if at all), and whether feminist metaphysics qualifies as metaphysics 'proper'.","creator":["Mari Mikkola"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45094193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318116"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41976996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7d5916c-5280-3070-9e3f-071daa43a5dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45094193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Studies: An International Journal for Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"2448","pageStart":"2435","pagination":"pp. 2435-2448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On the apparent antagonism between feminist and mainstream metaphysics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45094193","volumeNumber":"174","wordCount":6721,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476489,476555]],"Locations in B":[[40059,40125]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Elliott"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fdb7df5-91b8-3fed-ace7-bd2b3f3412e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"1703","pageStart":"1697","pagination":"pp. 1697-1703","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Currency of Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501649","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":4231,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[24602,24677]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Two film retellings of fairy tales from the 1990s exemplify how familiar fairy tales can be reshaped to address major cultural preoccupations. On the one hand, the Utopian narrative Ever After affirms neohumanistic values such as deep memory, knowable origins, and teleology in narrative and culture. In contrast, The Grimm Brothers' Snow White is postmodernist and dystopian, hybridizing apocalyptic and Gothic narrative structures and themes, and drawing on modern phenomena such as \"the beauty myth,\" to present characters playing out an old story to an outcome which resists both teleology and closure.","creator":["John Stephens","Robyn McCallum"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4e567d0-0c96-3e18-9341-e1e695e32588"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Utopia, Dystopia, and Cultural Controversy in \"Ever After\" and \"The Grimm Brothers' Snow White\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388628","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6046,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[34667,34835]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Burt"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd069fcd-1611-348f-a5ab-2adefb754a3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3245788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"performingartsj"}],"isPartOf":"Performing Arts Journal","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Getting off the Subject: Iconoclasm, Queer Sexuality, and the Celebrity Intellectual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245788","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theories that explain the origins of communal violence in South Asia often point to the discursive creation of the perception of distinct and adversarial Hindu and Muslim identity categories at the beginning of the twentieth century. This paper argues that these theories overemphasize imagined social differences without adequately considering how these boundaries were territorialized in everyday life through performative place-making practices. In order to fill this gap, 'zones of tradition', areas where religious or cultural practices are reified into official tradition, are suggested as one way of conceptualizing how group-making discourses are linked to places. As examples, the cow protection movement that campaigned to institute local bans on the slaughter of cattle and conflicts over Hindu processions playing music as they passed in front of mosques are considered. As these practices were contested, it is argued that zones of tradition were established across British India symbolically and tangibly dividing the territory before it was officially partitioned.","creator":["Reece Jones"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sacred Cows and Thumping Drums: Claiming Territory as 'Zones of Tradition' in British India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004585","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studies of prostitution have overlooked the role of law in constituting the identities and sexual practices of women in the sex trade and defining the boundary between legitimate and illegitimate violence in the sexual economy. Drawing on field work with sex trade participants in a northwestern United States city, this paper explores how the cultural logic of modern liberal law shapes women's identities and interpretations of their actions. In positioning women in the sex trade as \"sexual outlaws\" to be managed and subjected to the full scope of legal authority, the law simultaneously limits women's citizenship and withdraws its protection. Moreover, in restricting women's capacity to invoke fundamental legal rights, the law effectively sanctions \"private\" or extralegal forms of discipline and creates a space for violence. Given the paradoxical position these women hold as sexual outlaws on the one hand and frequent victims of physical and sexual assault on the other, I explore how they negotiate consent and resist violence.","creator":["Lisa E. Sanchez"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"580","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-580","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Boundaries of Legitimacy: Sex, Violence, Citizenship, and Community in a Local Sexual Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828811","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":18691,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[106313,106396]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Angela McRobbie","Nattie Golubov"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6f200f4-29f5-31a0-acb7-a176c37fd2c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00bfLas chicas arriba? Las mujeres j\u00f3venes y el contrato sexual posfeminista","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625139","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Most Overseas Chinese living in the United States during the 19th century were men. Correspondingly, the archaeology of Overseas Chinese communities in the United States is primarily the archaeology of Chinese men: their behaviors, dispositions, activities, and identities. Despite this acknowledged focus, masculinity is rarely an explicit object of study in Overseas Chinese archaeology. Drawing from methods and theories in archaeology, cultural anthropology, history, and Asian American studies, a framework for the archaeological investigation of masculinities at Overseas Chinese communities is developed. This framework is used to describe how material culture from the Market Street Chinatown in San Jose, California, was interpolated in multiple hegemonic discourses of masculinity.","creator":["Bryn Williams"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25617511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00bfc8d2-330f-3389-948f-3a0bedd439f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25617511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chinese Masculinities and Material Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25617511","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Worley"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"592083d4-1fbb-36d3-9cab-c8ca2f48412e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"517","pageStart":"513","pagination":"pp. 513-517","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704599","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":2226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article revisits the debate about recent American torture practices, particularly the use of discredited anthropological texts to validate long-held Orientalist assumptions about the sexual vulnerability of Muslim males. Such practices are placed in an historical context of older imperial constructions of sexually deviant Muslims as well as of more general forms of gendered and sexual subordination required for war. American torturers intended to produce very particular objects of torture\u2014ones willing and able to confess their 'true' orientation in terms of a binary hetero\/homo sexual code established in 19th-century Europe. The torturers had the power to confirm through confession and re-enactment their crude assumptions, irrespective of the actual sexualities of those being tortured, with consequences for the transnational and reactionary politics of sexual identity.","creator":["PATRICIA OWENS"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31a7af86-e05b-3dfd-99c7-4feddbf611c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27896599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"1056","pageStart":"1041","pagination":"pp. 1041-1056","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Tortune, Sex and Military Orientalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896599","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeanice Brooks"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/763959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edae065a-fd05-3247-8b08-a0f964f52ada"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/763959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Noble et grande servante de la musique: Telling the Story of Nadia Boulanger's Conducting Career","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/763959","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Demetrakis Z. Demetriou"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c9761b2-5cb3-3514-ba56-624b96d6d4d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Connell's Concept of Hegemonic Masculinity: A Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657965","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores a gendered dimension of war and conflict analysis that has up until now received little attention at the intersection of gender studies and studies of global politics: queer bodies in, and genderqueer significations of, war and conflict. In doing so, the article introduces the concept of cisprivilege to International Relations as a discipline and security studies as a core sub-field. Cisprivilege is an important, but under-explored, element of the constitution of gender and conflict. Whether it be in controversial reactions to the suggestion of United Nations Special Rapporteur Martin Scheinin that airport screenings for terrorists not discriminate against transgendered people, or in structural violence that is ever-present in the daily lives of many individuals seeking to navigate the heterosexist and cissexist power structures of social and political life, war and conflict is embodied and reifies cissexism. This article makes two inter-related arguments: first, that both the invisibility of genderqueer bodies in historical accounts of warfare and the visibility of genderqueer bodies in contemporary security strategy are forms of discursive violence; and second, that these violences have specific performative functions that can and should be interrogated. After constructing these core arguments, the article explores some of the potential benefits of an interdisciplinary research agenda that moves towards the theorisation of cisprivilege in security theory and practice.","creator":["Laura J. Shepherd","Laura Sjoberg"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dae34018-6fdf-3cf0-953e-40c8fbc59c00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41495230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"101","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"trans- bodies in\/of war(s): cisprivilege and contemporary security strategy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495230","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9066,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102176,102301]],"Locations in B":[[45534,45659]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although Judith Butler's theorization of violence has begun to receive growing scholarly attention, the feminist theoretical background of her notion of violence remains unexplored. In order to fill this lacuna, this article explicates the feminist genealogy of Butler's notion of violence. I argue that Butler's theorization of violence can be traced back to Gender Trouble, to her discussion of Monique Wittig's argument that the binary categorization of sex can be conceived as a form of discursive violence. I contend, first, that Butler starts to develop her notion of \"gender violence\" on the basis of her reading of Wittig, and second, that Butler's more recent writings on military violence and the ethics of nonviolence build on her early interpretation of Wittig. On the basis of my reading, I suggest, in contrast to recent criticism, that Butler's later critique of violence is not at odds with but rather expands upon her prior work on violence.","creator":["SANNA KARHU"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a5ea102-6064-3a83-8f6a-f866381b3d63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44076540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"843","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-843","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Judith Butler's Critique of Violence and the Legacy of Monique Wittig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076540","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8396,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[369244,369535],[373546,373601],[375466,375556],[516489,516653],[516818,516931],[517596,517686]],"Locations in B":[[9124,9420],[14581,14635],[14678,14768],[18352,18520],[18521,18634],[53644,53733]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article places Foucault's 1977 suggestions regarding the reform of French rape law in the context of ongoing feminist debates as to whether rape should be considered a sex crime or a species of assault. When viewed as a disciplinary matrix with both physical and discursive effects, rape and the rape trial clearly contribute to the \"hysterization\" of women by cultivating complainants' confessions in order to demonstrate their supposed lack of self-knowledge.","creator":["Laura Hengehold"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a45622b0-2f28-34aa-b2c5-9479c793e713"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An Immodest Proposal: Foucault, Hysterization, and the \"Second Rape\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810190","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9113,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[53979,54064]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Belgrad"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e70a93d0-51db-35a3-bfef-f3b033b2c3e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Lo Chicano","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141828","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The famous baths of two biblical women, Bathsheba and Susanna, captured the lust of their respective onlookers. Despite what is not a hint of seductive intent in their stories, many interpreters have portrayed these two characters as, essentially, \u201casking for it.\u201d Feminist scholars have worked to rehabilitate Bathsheba and Susanna's reputations. Curiously, though, neither traditional scholars portraying the characters as femmes fatales nor feminist interpreters defending them have brought a third biblical bathing woman, Judith, into the discussion. This paper argues that Judith is the only one of the three to whom the biblical text actually does attribute seductive motives. Judith uses the idea that a bathing woman is an irresistible object of desire to her advantage and so arranges semipublic baths while she is in an Assyrian military camp. Using close readings of the three texts and feminist interpretive strategies, Tamber-Rosenau argues that Judith, unlike the other two bathing women, choreographs her exposure for maximum effect. Judith's baths, unlike those of Bathsheba and Susanna, are a calculated part of a larger seduction routine.","creator":["Caryn Tamber-Rosenau"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.33.2.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b96b073-14a4-30d8-917f-b22cf00de9d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.33.2.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Biblical Bathing Beauties and the Manipulation of the Male Gaze: What Judith Can Tell Us about Bathsheba and Susanna","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.33.2.05","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9362,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[434044,434298],[436118,436282]],"Locations in B":[[40647,40901],[41812,41976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diane Watt"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Behaving like a Man? Incest, Lesbian Desire, and Gender Play in Yde et Olive and Its Adaptations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771525","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10039,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[61259,61313]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This ethnographic essay focuses on the relationship between religious performances and the \"strong discourse\" of contemporary global capitalism. It explores the subjective meaning and social significance of religious practice in the context of a rapidly expanding mass religious phenomenon in India. The narrative draws on Weber's insights on the intersections between religion and economy, phenomenological theory, performance studies, and Indian philosophy and popular culture. It shows that religion here is primarily a means of performing to and preparing for an informal economy. It gives the chance to live meaningful social lives while challenging the inequities and symbolic violence of an imposing global capitalist social ethic. Unlike exclusive formal institutions that are increasingly governed by neoliberal rationalities, the religious event provides an open and freely accessible yet challenging stage for participants to practice and prove their resolve, gifts, and sincerity. In contrast to the focus on social anomie and the reactionary characterization of contemporary religion in identity-based arguments, this essay demonstrates that religious practice here is simultaneously a way of performing to and performing against a totalizing capitalist social order.","creator":["Vikash Singh"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c535cf0-7cec-3fb6-a89a-e4fa17d8e151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Work, Performance, and the Social Ethic of Global Capitalism: Understanding Religious Practice in Contemporary India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653876","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Hodges"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8f511b7-afcd-3cb6-87ba-c11aefa93475"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889108","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Weems"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b182ad84-4662-3839-a908-1847ebdb8997"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"CHAPTER FIVE: The Quare Agenda of \"RuPaul's Drag U\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981933","volumeNumber":"437","wordCount":5996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La autora ofrece un panorama generai de las condiciones del trabajo sexual de mujeres en lo que se denomina \"v\u00eda p\u00fablica\" (la calle), y analiza, a partir de un caso concreto, un cambio que se viene perfilando: la politizaci\u00f3n de estas trabajadoras. Plantea que lo que realmente afect\u00f3 la vida y modific\u00f3 las opciones de las prostitutas fue la epidemia del Sida. La prevenci\u00f3n del Sida permiti\u00f3 a muchas trabajadoras abordar su actividad de una manera diferente, con la posibilidad de organizarse y mejorar sus condiciones laborales y pol\u00edticas. El ensayo termina con una reflexi\u00f3n sobre el estigma que en generai supone, la actividad sexual para las mujeres, sea gratuita o comercial. La autora concluye que ahondar en la simbolog\u00eda cultural de la sexualidad femenina es una v\u00eda fecunda si se quiere establecer un nuevo contrato social menos injusto. \/\/\/ The author offers a generai view of female prostitution on the streets and analyzes, in a specifie case, an ongoing change: politization of sex labourers. She claims that what actually modified their lives and options was the AIDS epidemie. Protection against AIDS allowed many prostitutes to approach their activity in a different way, create organizations, and improve their labour and politicai conditions. The essay ends with a reflection on the stigma that sexual activity \u2014be it for business or for free\u2014 lays on women. The author concludes that deep examination of the cultural symbolism of feminine sexuality constitutes a fertile road towards the establishment of a fairer social contract.","creator":["Marta Lamas"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40420925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01854186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"509653e9-fcac-324c-aff1-a054f006ccc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40420925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estusoci"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Sociol\u00f3gicos","issueNumber":"40","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"El Colegio De Mexico","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Trabajadoras sexuales: del estigma a la conciencia pol\u00edtica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40420925","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8630,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474931,474998]],"Locations in B":[[52376,52451]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The college hookup scene is a profoundly gendered and heteronormative sexual field. Yet the party and bar scene that gives rise to hookups also fosters the practice of women kissing other women in public, generally to the enjoyment of male onlookers, and sometimes facilitates threesomes involving same-sex sexual behavior between women. In this article, we argue that the hookup scene serves as an opportunity structure to explore same-sex attractions and, at least for some women, to later verify bisexual, lesbian, or queer sexual identities. Based on quantitative and qualitative data and combining queer theory and identity theory, we offer a new interpretation of women's same-sex practices in the hookup culture. Our analysis contributes to gender theory by demonstrating the utility of identity theory for understanding how non-normative gender and sexual identities are negotiated within heteronormatively structured fields.","creator":["LEILA J. RUPP","VERTA TAYLOR","SHIRI REGEV-MESSALEM","ALISON FOGARTY","PAULA ENGLAND"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86d32c41-4339-3fa0-99c9-e25910b86684"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"QUEER WOMEN IN THE HOOKUP SCENE: Beyond the Closet?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669873","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Dumm","Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfdecadb-251f-3216-b8de-38880ba9d442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25091284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Giving Away, Giving over: A Conversation with Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091284","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, we argue that both traditional psychology-based group identity theories related to race and sexuality and perspectives on the politics of difference obtained from poststructuralist queer theory underdetermine identity as it is experienced by a distinct subset of individuals, emblematized by non-traditional, non-conforming, and transgressive Black queers. We offer a new explanatory model for these emerging identities that is rooted in metaphysical explanations of human experience. To support our model, we draw historical and contemporary illustrations from African American popular culture.","creator":["Layli Phillips","Marla R. Stewart"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1424d89-a45d-3ffd-a231-f98b80c50e4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"378","pagination":"pp. 378-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"\"I Am Just So Glad You Are Alive\": New Perspectives on Non-Traditional, Non-Conforming, and Transgressive Expressions of Gender, Sexuality, and Race Among African Americans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819183","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474790,474885]],"Locations in B":[[83546,83652]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite the integrated and co-dependent nature of crafting vessels and tools and the production of cuisine, the entangled identities of artisan, farmer and cook are rarely envisioned as part of a 'culinary continuum' in which the production of culinary equipment, food and cuisine constitutes different categories of people. Studies of cuisine tend to focus on the role of cuisine in negotiating social status and power in feasting contexts or in constituting normative social identities of gender, personhood and ethnicity. Presented is a study of potters, blacksmiths and farmers in eastern Tigray, Ethiopia. Similar to marginalized and casted occupational specialists in many societies across Africa, eastern Tigray's potters and smiths are marginalized, avoided and demeaned in contexts where food, drink or sex is shared. Normative gender identities are constituted in the enculturation of boys as they learn to grow food and in girls as they learn to cook. Men and women perform these gendered tasks in daily life using separate gendered technological practices and spaces. Potters and blacksmiths transgress normative gender expectations by using technological skills and space differently. The embodiment and performance of their respective crafts are perceived to transform them into different ontological categories of men and women who also are attributed with the dangerous capacity to consume fertility, landscape and people. Malgr\u00e9 la fa\u00e7on int\u00e9gr\u00e9e et cod\u00e9pendante de la production des r\u00e9ceptacles et outils et la production culinaire, les identit\u00e9s entrem\u00eal\u00e9es de l'artisan, le fermier et le cuisinier sont rarement per\u00e7us comme partie du m\u00eame \u00ab continuum culinaire \u00bb dans lequel la production des instruments culinaires, de la nourriture et de la cuisine constituent diverses cat\u00e9gories de personnes. Les \u00e9tudes concernant la cuisine mettent le point soit sur le r\u00f4le de la cuisine aux n\u00e9gociations du statut social et du pouvoir en contextes des festins, soit sur la constitution des identit\u00e9s normatives sociales du sexe, de l'\u00e9tat de personne, et de l'ethnicit\u00e9. Ce qui est pr\u00e9sent\u00e9 ici est une \u00e9tude concernant les potiers, les forgerons et les fermiers du Tigray oriental, Ethiopie. Semblable aux professions marginalis\u00e9es ou des castes inf\u00e9rieures de nombreuses soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines, les potiers et forgerons de Tigray oriental sont marginalis\u00e9s, \u00e9vit\u00e9s et avilis dans les situations ou la nourriture et les relations sexuelles sont partag\u00e9es. Les identit\u00e9s normatives de genre sont constitu\u00e9es dans l'acculturation des gar\u00e7ons et des filles pendant qu'ils apprennent \u00e0 cultiver des aliments et \u00e0 cuisiner, respectivement. Les hommes et les femmes effectuent ces t\u00e2ches genr\u00e9es dans la vie quotidienne utilisant des pratiques technologiques et des espaces \u00e9galement s\u00e9par\u00e9s et genr\u00e9es. Les potiers et forgerons transgressent ces attentes normatives genr\u00e9es par l'utilisation des comp\u00e9tences technologiques et espaces diff\u00e9remment. L'incarnation et l'effectuation de ses m\u00e9tiers respectives sont per\u00e7ues comme servant \u00e0 les transformer en cat\u00e9gories ontologiques diff\u00e9rents des hommes et des femmes qui sont aussi attribu\u00e9s avec la capacit\u00e9 dangereuse de consommer la fertilit\u00e9, la paysage et les personnes.","creator":["Diane Lyons"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43916696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02630338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44513179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233336"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfc4c69f-d077-31fa-8448-57cf2bd00b1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43916696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriarchrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The African Archaeological Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Perceptions of Consumption: Constituting Potters, Farmers and Blacksmiths in the Culinary Continuum in Eastern Tigray, Northern Highland Ethiopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43916696","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":14589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Building on insights from Zerubavel's (1991) version of cognitive sociology and Cagnon and Simon's (1974) sexual scripting theory, this study describes a \u201ccognitive scripting\u201d model of identity, outlining three ideal typical cultural scenarios of sexual identification as an example. Employing a variety of data sources\u2014including participant observation, informal interviews, and popular and scholarly media\u2014each type is distinguished through its conceptions of ontology, classification, and temporal continuity. Finally, individuals' interpersonal and intrapsychic negotiations of competing cognitive paradigms are explored.","creator":["C Lynn Carr"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1999.22.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c979d4e3-e8b3-3fc0-8e30-9ac022b412fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1999.22.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Cognitive Scripting and Sexual Identification: Essentialism, Anarchism, and Constructionism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1999.22.1.1","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11516,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101617,101766]],"Locations in B":[[38468,38617]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Questions of identity and disguise long fascinated English culture. A society made anxious by shifting class, gender, and racial relationships was naturally preoccupied by dress and role playing, by visual codes and clues. The investigation of the life of Willy Clarkson-the man who probably knew more about costumes and disguises than any other individual in the early twentieth century-allows us to understand why the public was at specific times particularly sensitive to the employment of certain disguises, and so provides us with a new view of the cultural preoccupations of the inter-war years. The purpose of the essay is not simply to tease out the reasons why one man led a double life, but to reveal how such disparate deviances as homosexuality, Jewishness, and criminality could be linked in the public mind and why a society, which in principle praised candor and condemned subterfuges, in practice fostered a culture of duplicity.","creator":["Angus McLaren"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4491940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"618","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-618","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Smoke and Mirrors: Willy Clarkson and the Role of Disguises in Inter-war England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491940","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La r\u00e9ponse critique \u00e0 la satire de la militance chez le dramaturge irlandais Sean O'Casey dans ses trois pi\u00e8ces The Shadow of a Gunman (1923), Juno and the Paycock (1924), et \"The Plough and the Stars\" (1926) a eu un impact aussi dramatique et militant que les pi\u00e8ces elle-m\u00eames. Le contenu des pi\u00e8ces tentait de guider la critique de fa\u00e7on \u00e0 passer sous silence certaines interpr\u00e9tations. Cons\u00e9quemment, ce travail analyse les pi\u00e8ces de O'Casey \u00e0 travers le th\u00e8me du genre en d\u00e9voilant les mani\u00e8res dont l'image et la rh\u00e9torique de l'anti-militance de O'Casey sont uniquement connect\u00e9es \u00e0 la masculinit\u00e9. Plus sp\u00e9cifiquement, ce texte met l'emphase sur les deux pi\u00e8ces Juno and the Paycock et \"The Plough and the Stars\" pour identifier ces moments o\u00f9 les constructions de la masculinit\u00e9 chez O'Casey sont effectivement des attaques subversives non seulement \u00e0 la militance mais aussi \u00e0 l'ethos de l'autorit\u00e9 masculine. \/\/\/ Critical response to Irish dramatist Sean O'Casey's satire of militancy in his three plays, The Shadow of a Gunman (1923), Juno and the Paycock (1924), and \"The Plough and the Stars\" (1926) has been as dramatic and militant as the plays themselves. The plays' content has tended to drive the criticism, passing over, as I see it, other ways of reading these plays. Consequently, this paper analyzes O'Casey's plays through the lens of gender by unveiling the ways in which O'Casey's anti-militancy imagery and rhetoric is uniquely connected to masculinity. Specifically, this paper focuses on Juno and the Paycock and \"The Plough and the Stars\" to locate those places where O'Casey's constructions of masculinity are, in fact, subversive attacks not only on militancy, but also on the whole ethos of masculine authority.","creator":["Cathy Airth"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68df3d08-2325-3efd-8db4-321e967bb71f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25515638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Canadian Association of Irish Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making the Least of Masculine Authority: Sean O'Casey's \"Paycock\" and \"Plough and the Stars\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515638","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris Lundberg"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42429544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn-99004676"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25655281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrhet"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Rhetoric","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655281","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the story \"Kikumushi\" (The Chrysanthemum Beetle) by the noted woman writer Tsushima Y\u016bko (b. 1947). Though most Japanese critics claim that Tsushima's writings have a narrow focus, revolving around a few, readily identifiable \"themes\" and \"motifs\" such as the brother-sister incest, the marginalization of single mothers and their children in contemporary Japanese society, the meaninglessness and absurdity of family ties\/blood relationships and the various ways in which lonely, defiant women challenge traditional discourses on motherhood and female sexuality, \"Kikumushi\" demonstrates that Tsushima's texts not only display a complex narrative structure, but articulate critiques that transcend the Japanese context and raise important questions for feminist cross-cultural analyses. By contrasting \"Kikumushi\" with the sarayashiki (Manor-of-the-Dishes) tradition which significantly structures Tsushima's narrative, by bringing several theoretical perspectives to bear on, and especially by highlighting the play of fantasy in the story, this study shows that, in the face of a non-anthropocentric, continually shifting mythical discursive space such as that envisioned by Tsushima our habitual interpretive strategies\u2014even the most \"subversive\" and \"politically correct\" ones\u2014are largely inadequate and that a new critical discourse has to be invented. \u8981\u65e8:\u6279\u8a55\u754c\u3084\u6587\u82b8\u30b8\u30e3\u30fc\u30ca\u30ea\u30ba\u30e0\u3067\u306f\u6d25\u5cf6\u4f51\u5b50\u306f\u598a\u5a20\u30fb\u51fa\u7523\u30fb\u80b2\u5150\u7b49\u3001\u5973\u6027\u7279\u6709\u306e\u7d4c\u9a13\u3092\u4e2d\u5fc3\u306b\u3001\u6570\u5c11\u306a\u3044\u7279\u5b9a\u306e\u30c6\u30fc\u30de\u3084\u30e2\u30c1\u30fc\u30d5\u3092\u7e70\u308a\u8fd4\u3057\u8ffd\u6c42\u3057\u3066\u3044\u308b\u4f5c\u8005\u306e\u3088\u3046\u306b\u601d\u308f\u308c\u3066\u3044\u308b\u3002\u3064\u307e\u308a\u6d25\u9ce5\u304c\u6349\u3048\u3088\u3046\u3068\u3057\u3066\u3044\u308b\u30c6\u30fc\u30de\u3084\u30e2\u30c1\u30fc\u30d5\u304c\u77e5\u6075\u9045\u308c\u306e\u5144(\u5f1f)\u3068\u305d\u306e\u59b9(\u59c9)\u3068\u306e\u8fd1\u89aa\u76f8\u59e6\u3001\u672a\u5a5a\u306e\u6bcd\u30fb\u96e2\u5a5a\u3057\u305f\u6bcd\u3084\u305d\u306e\u5b50\u4f9b\u306e\u3001\u751f\u3005\u3057\u3044\u3001\u611b\u3084\u66b4\u529b\u3084\u6bba\u610f\u306b\u6e80\u3061\u305f\u65e5\u5e38\u751f\u6d3b\u3001\u5973\u306e\u8eab\u4f53\u6027(\u30bb\u30af\u30b7\u30e5\u30a2\u30ea\u30c6\u30a4\u30fc)\u7b49\u3001\u73fe\u4ee3\u306b\u304a\u3051\u308b\u5973\u6027\u3092\u4e2d\u5fc3\u3068\u3057\u305f\u4eba\u9593\u95a2\u4fc2\u306e\u65b0\u305f\u306a\u69d8\u76f8\u306e\u8868\u73fe\u3078\u306e\u6a21\u7d22\u3067\u3042\u308b\u3002\u672c\u7a3f\u3067\u306f\u6d25\u5cf6\u306e\u77ed\u890a\u300c\u83ca\u866b\u300d(\u300e\u9022\u6469\u7269\u8a9e\u300f\u6240\u53ce\u30011984\u5e74\u767a\u884c)\u3092\u53d6\u308a\u4e0a\u3052\u308b\u3002\u4f5c\u54c1\u306e\u89e3\u8aad\u30fb\u89e3\u91c8\u3092\u884c\u306a\u3044\u306a\u304c\u3089\u3001\u6d25\u5cf6\u6587\u5b66\u306b\u3064\u3044\u3066\u306e\u3001\u4e0a\u8a18\u306e\u3088\u3046\u306a\u3001\u4e00\u822c\u7684\u306a\u8aad\u307f\u65b9\u306b\u3068\u3089\u308f\u308c\u305a\u3001\u4f5c\u8005\u306e\u30c6\u30af\u30b9\u30c8\u304c\u63a2\u308a\u7d9a\u3051\u308b\u6587\u5316\u7684\u30fb\u601d\u60f3\u7684\u30fb\u653f\u6cbb\u7684\u8a00\u8aac\u7a7a\u9593\u3092\u6349\u3048\u3088\u3046\u3068\u601d\u3046\u3002\u305d\u306e\u305f\u3081\u306b\u306f\u3001\u73fe\u5728\u306e\u56fd\u6587\u5b66\u7814\u7a76\u3084\u6587\u82b8\u6279\u8a55\u3001\u30d5\u30a7\u30df\u30cb\u30ba\u30e0\u6279\u8a55\u3084\u6240\u8b02\u201c\u653f\u6cbb\u7684\u306b\u6b63\u3057\u3044\u6279\u8a55\u201d(politically correct criticism)\u306e\u30c7\u30a3\u30b9\u30b3\u30fc\u30b9\u3055\u3048\u3082\u8d85\u8d8a\u3057\u305f\u3001\u65b0\u3057\u3044\u8aad\u307f\u30fb\u6279\u8a55\u306e\u30b9\u30c8\u30e9\u30c6\u30b8\u30fc\u3092\u5c55\u958b\u305b\u306d\u3070\u306a\u3089\u306a\u3044\u3002\u300c\u83ca\u866b\u300d\u306e\u5834\u5408\u3001\u4f5c\u8005\u306f\u3001\u4f5c\u54c1\u306e\u4e2d\u6838\u3067\u3042\u308b\u201c\u5ac9\u59ac\u201d\u3092\u30a2\u30a4\u30ed\u30cb\u30fc\u3084\u6ed1\u7a3d\u5473\u3084\u30d5\u30a1\u30f3\u5915\u30b8\u30fc\u306e\u4e16\u754c\u3068\u3057\u3066\u8868\u51fa\u3057\u3066\u3044\u308b\u304c\u3001\u3053\u306e\u9b45\u60d1\u7684\u8a00\u8aac\u7a7a\u9593\u3092\u89e3\u8aad\u3059\u308b\u305f\u3081\u306e\u3001\u65b0\u305f\u306a\u65b9\u6cd5\u8ad6\u306e\u63d0\u793a\u3092\u7b46\u8005\u306f\u610f\u56f3\u3059\u308b\u3082\u306e\u3067\u3042\u308b\u3002","creator":["Livia MONNET"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09150986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f9d20e2-5a84-38d8-bf96-02c197dc5a95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25790930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nichjaparevi"}],"isPartOf":"Japan Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"International Research Centre for Japanese Studies, National Institute for the Humanities","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Connaissance D\u00e9licieuse or the Science of Jealousy: Tsushima Y\u016bko's Story \"Kikumushi\" (The Chrysanthemum Beetle)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790930","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":21741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[429326,429436]],"Locations in B":[[61623,61733]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is about the impact of becoming Black on ESL learning, that is, the interrelation between identity and learning. It contends that a group of French-speaking immigrant and refugee continental African youths who are attending an urban Franco-Ontarian high school in southwestern Ontario, Canada, enters a social imaginary-a discursive space in which they are already imagined, constructed, and thus treated as Blacks by hegemonic discourses and groups. This imaginary is directly implicated in whom the students identify with (Black America), which in turn influences what and how they linguistically and culturally learn. They learn Black stylized English, which they access in hip-hop culture and rap lyrical and linguistic styles. This critical ethnography, conducted within an interdisciplinary framework, shows that ESL is neither neutral nor without its politics and pedagogy of desire and investment.","creator":["Awad El Karim M. Ibrahim"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3587669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Becoming Black: Rap and Hip-Hop, Race, Gender, Identity, and the Politics of ESL Learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587669","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8871,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478839]],"Locations in B":[[51165,51223]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What is the future of feminist movement? What can we learn about that future by looking to the performance of feminism in purportedly \"nonfeminist\" approaches to women's empowerment and community-building efforts? As participants in a male-dominated, transnational subculture heavily informed by patriarchal ideologies, female graffiti artists are making their presence known in major metropolitan centers across the globe\u2014even as many disidentify with feminist identities.","creator":["Jessica N. Pab\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26f2b60e-7bea-3cb5-8ebf-3a5b7b9946ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Be About It: Graffiteras Performing Feminist Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584895","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":14697,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[88765,88827]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Is there anything left to \"sex\" that is not the \"gender construction of biology\"? With the fruit fly, this article seeks to rethink the substance of sexual difference-here called \"naked sex\"-as that part of sex which rebuffs the gender microscope. Naked sex haunts the terms by which feminist scholars have deconstructed the (un)scientific construction of sex, and have challenged biological determinism and gender biases in science. The sex-determining genes appear as the minimal bundle for this returning residue which secures the epistemology of gender that is naked sex. The experimental history (1976-1979) of the Drosophila sex-determining gene, Sex-lethal, displaces the insistent question of \"what is real\/biological about biological sex\" toward an inquiry into the \"realization\" of sex through sexing and unsexing research practices, wherein sex becomes scientifically performative. Unexpectedly, sex never emerges as naked sex throughout this singular exploration of \"How to Do Scientific Things with Sex\" in the lab.","creator":["Cynthia Kraus"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85ded7d8-19a1-3be5-a1d1-69e195268d00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Naked Sex in Exile: On the Paradox of the \"Sex Question\" in Feminism and in Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316767","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11049,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[515764,515861]],"Locations in B":[[61544,61650]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katy Mahraj"],"datePublished":"2010-10-06","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.21.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b71b780-37e5-3fe4-b572-bad5ef0b2a67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.21.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Dis\/locating the Margins: Gloria Anzaldua and Dynamic Feminist Learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.21.1.0001","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yung-Chen Chiang"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8872581-6ff8-36e0-8dbb-35e057188b57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4133387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Masculinity and the Self: Love, Body, and Privacy in Hu Shi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133387","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":17120,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[423607,423715]],"Locations in B":[[44243,44351]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Adams"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"583","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-583","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"A Mixture of Delicious and Freak\": The Queer Fiction of Carson McCullers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902739","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":13452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helma Lutz"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14ca92e0-4a95-38f0-bcd2-810c0de7cd5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersectionality as Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.2.1-2.0039","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane M. Jacobs"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43195975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43195975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"848","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-848","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The City Unbound: Qualitative Approaches to the City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43195975","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":14325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Attention to gender in mathematics education research can be characterized by a lack of clarity (cf. Glasser & Smith, 2008). The importance of clarity in definitions of gender is discussed, and several conceptual models of gender are presented. Four of these models begin with biological sex differences but draw attention to other aspects of gender. Four models set biology aside and are based on social and cultural theories. Some of the advantages of the latter for mathematics education researchers are identified.","creator":["Suzanne Damarin","Diana B. Erchick"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41103878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218251"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36308865"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235685"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41103878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresematheduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Research in Mathematics Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Education","Mathematics","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Toward Clarifying the Meanings of \"Gender\" in Mathematics Education Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41103878","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tilda Swinton is hard to classify as a performer because flux and mutability have become her signature qualities. One enduring element in her repertoire, however, can be brought into focus through Lauren Berlant's concept of \"flat affect.\" Typically described as mysterious, otherworldly, or ethereal, Swinton often brings to her screen and live performances a quality or atmosphere that contradicts the conventional expectations of feminine emotional expressiveness and legibility in popular cinema. As a contribution to this special issue on Berlant's work, my article traces Swinton's styles of flat affect as an aesthetic relationality across a number of films, including Teknolust, Michael Clayton, The Deep End, and Orlando. My reading of Swinton's capacity for flatness places it within the history of her unusual facility to cross between independent and more popular cultural forms and to set femininity as genre in motion as she does so. Famous for embodying gender ambiguity since her performance as Orlando, Swinton's association with androgyny as a pre-queer promise of limitlessness folds femininity back upon its historical conventions and imperatives. In tracing the history of Swinton's gender fluctuations, this article concludes by reflecting on some of the failures of feminist and queer language to articulate the nuances of affective registers; androgyne, butch, tomboy, trans, and genderqueer designate styles of gendered and sexual embodiment, but these do not extend satisfactorily to aesthetic moods and atmospheres. Closing with a discussion of \"offgender\" flux, the article considers Swinton's recent twinning with David Bowie to open up how her performances reinvent affective genres while calling forth their histories and temporalities.","creator":["Jackie Stacey"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ea1740-ecb1-332f-af15-ec3e59040105"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24713012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Crossing over with Tilda Swinton\u2014the Mistress of \"Flat Affect\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713012","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":17386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karena Shaw"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3699723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236630"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3699723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"International Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Knowledge, Foundations, Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3699723","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":8918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478800,478839]],"Locations in B":[[56079,56118]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38de6598-a19a-3808-b497-0a2c7e51385f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23315068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315068","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":1876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Beatriz Gonz\u00e1lez Stephan"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad960501-afa3-3209-acfc-4405f25a0521"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4531124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"52","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Narrativas duras en tiempos blandos: Sensibilidades amenazadas de los hombres de letras","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531124","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":13133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Estela Serret"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f14b8c53-3c22-302a-8b64-0a045c1191a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Etica y feminismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624567","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nathan Stormer"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"739403ce-4aad-3211-b403-b28a84e555aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prenatal Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175382","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":15994,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794],[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[87234,87287],[90187,90278]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this study, we draw on findings from one year of participant observation and 12 in-depth interviews with men in a highly-ranked English university rugby team in order to nuance theoretical understandings concerning the re-production of homosexually-themed discourse in organised sport. We use ethnographic data to theorise the complex relationship between language, homosocial masculine relationships and organised sport. In examining the political, intentional and inadvertent effects of these men's discourses, we define and discuss the notion of gay discourse as a form of heteronormativity that is dissimilar to the traditional use of homophobic discourse. Highlighting that homosexually-themed discourse is best understood as a continuum, we stress the importance of context in interpreting the meaning and explicating the effects of this kind of discourse. Dans cette \u00e9tude, nous exploitons les r\u00e9sultats d'une observation participante d'une dur\u00e9e d'un an, et de douze entretiens en profondeur avec des hommes faisant partie d'une \u00e9quipe de rugby universitaire de haut rang en Angleterre, afin de nuancer les th\u00e9ories sur la reproduction du discours sur l'homosexualit\u00e9 dans le sport f\u00e9d\u00e9r\u00e9. Nous employons des donn\u00e9es ethnographiques pour th\u00e9oriser le rapport complexe entre le langage, les relations homosociales masculines, et le sport f\u00e9d\u00e9r\u00e9. En examinant les effets politiques, intentionnels et accidentels des discours de ces hommes, nous d\u00e9finissons et nous discutons la notion de discours gay en tant que forme d'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormativit\u00e9, qui se distingue du discours homophobe traditionnel. En soulignant que le discours sur l'homosexualit\u00e9 est mieux compris en tant qu'\u00e9l\u00e9ment d'un continuum, nous mettons l'accent sur l'importance du contexte, quand il s'agit d'interpr\u00e9ter la signification des effets de ce type de discours, et de les expliquer. En este art\u00edculo nos basamos en los resultados de un estudio de un a\u00f1o de duraci\u00f3n en el que se llevaron a cabo una observaci\u00f3n de los participantes y 12 entrevistas exhaustivas con hombres de un equipo de rugby de una universidad brit\u00e1nica de primer nivel. El objetivo de este estudio era hacer un an\u00e1lisis exhaustivo de la comprensi\u00f3n te\u00f3rica en cuanto a la reproducci\u00f3n del discurso sobre la homosexualidad en deportes organizados. Utilizamos datos etnogr\u00e1ficos para teorizar la compleja relaci\u00f3n entre el lenguaje, las relaciones masculinas homosociales y el deporte organizado. Al examinar los efectos pol\u00edticos, intencionales e involuntarios de los discursos de estos hombres, definimos y abordamos la noci\u00f3n del discurso homosexual como un tipo de heteronormatividad que es diferente al uso tradicional del discurso homof\u00f3bico. Al destacar que el discurso sobre el tema de la homosexualidad se comprende mejor como una secuencia, hacemos hincapi\u00e9 en la importancia del contexto a la hora de interpretar el significado y explicar los efectos de este tipo de discurso.","creator":["Mark McCormack"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20787289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7510d8ec-daf6-3c49-9b82-50000dc2400d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20787289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"927","pageStart":"913","pagination":"pp. 913-927","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The re-production of homosexually-themed discourse in educationally-based organised sport","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20787289","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amanda Anderson"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"54","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Debatable Performances: Restaging Contentious Feminisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466748","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11554,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[363720,363794]],"Locations in B":[[34020,34095]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARI MIKKOLA"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27822065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00455091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615706"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006-001081"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8562c977-c74d-3e6d-a232-faab857c7a4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27822065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canadianjph"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Philosophy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"583","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-583","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Gender Concepts and Intuitions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27822065","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that the sociology of contemporary family relationships should be developed to recognize the importance of'displaying as well as 'doing' family The addition of the concept of 'display' to the sociological tool kit is not only a necessary complement to the important conceptual developments which have taken place in recent years, but is also rich in its potential for further empirical and theoretical work. In developing this theme, the article examines empirical evidence from recent UK studies of family relationships, exploring why\u56d4'display' is important in contemporary family relationships as well as the process through which it occurs. The article represents an initial exploration of these themes. The author's principal aim is to open up this aspect of family life for debate within the relevant sociological research community, encouraging others to refine the concept as well as to use it.","creator":["Janet Finch"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38a931e7-5836-3593-b8dd-fed655a6a70c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Displaying Families","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856961","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexander Maxwell","Henrietta Mondry"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41759353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00288683"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60fca441-da52-3ef2-b737-ad4c64082370"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41759353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newzealslavjour"}],"isPartOf":"New Zealand Slavonic Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Australia and New Zealand Slavists\u2019 Association","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CORPOREALITY AND SEXUALITY IN EASTERN EUROPEAN STUDIES: TWO RECENT CONFERENCES IN WELLINGTON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41759353","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":4587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly J. Devlin"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9b9d189-2f8d-30a3-925b-857ac6a893e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473798","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the different perceptions of work for women in Zanzibar. Life in Zanzibar is dominated by highly gendered geo-spatial constructs, inextricably linked to private and public space. There are complex and layered perceptions about what is appropriate behaviour for women in public and private, thus work \u2014 particular work in the public space \u2014 is problematic for them. The central hypothesis is that for working women there is a fundamental tension between old and new: between traditional ideas of appropriate behaviour, and notions of modernity; and between what is situated and constructed (locally) as a traditional Zanzibar (\u2018Islamic\u2019) idea of womanhood, and the actual performativity of this, which involves an engagement with modernity. The paper explores the influence of what can loosely be called \u2018modernity\u2019, and traditional ideas of selfhood. This is set against the backdrop of a society dominated by notions of \u2018umma\u2019 (\u2018community\u2019 and \u2018not standing out\u2019), corruption \u2014 on a micro and macro level, and the role of gossip in maintaining the status quo and \u2018the order of things.\u2019 Part of the \u2018modernity project\u2019 includes the informalisation of roles (for example as worker and mother), the changing uses and definitions of what is \u2018public\u2019 and the increasingly fluid definitions of ideas about what constitutes new and old that impinge on this. The paper discusses how women often decide to work \u2018illegally\u2019 or as an extension of their domestic life (by making food, or running hair salons in their homes, or offering massage) to circumvent the public attention, of work and to disengage with the criticism they face operating in the public space. Whilst a few unusual women work in the public space, and in the public sphere, for all women in Zanzibar, working, whether in public or in private, is a heavily meaning-laden activity; and a problematic site of challenging decisions and re-visioning themselves.","creator":["Thembi Mutch"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/workorgalaboglob.6.1.0103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1745641X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298955595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"348169a1-cc10-31e6-ac85-efe0abedb04f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/workorgalaboglob.6.1.0103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workorgalaboglob"}],"isPartOf":"Work Organisation, Labour & Globalisation","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Even though I work, I am not a whore\u2019: women working in Zanzibar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/workorgalaboglob.6.1.0103","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Muslim societies, men use Islamism and its variants as means of self-actualization and directly in service of matters associated with personhood, masculinity, and particularly honor. This expressive trajectory i.e. exercising masculinity via Islamism holds true in Pakistan and can be broadly attributed to three elements. First, Pakistan's postcolonial baggage - a well-documented history of rise of Muslim nationalism, and Islamism in the subcontinent; second, western domination and interference in Pakistan's socio-economic and political domains (as in competition with Islamic heritage and governance frameworks) affecting some segments (and not all) among Muslim youth; and third, decades of authoritarian rule taking turns with weak democratic governments who have largely disappointed in terms of alleviating absolute to relative poverty, marginalization and alienation troubling Pakistani society. Pakistan's history and contemporary settings both reveal a dissonance between the prescribed, normative and idealized Muslim masculinity imperatives - and the socio-economic and political location of Pakistani men in the real world. Mostly leading dangerous, disenfranchised, and economically deprived lives it is difficult for them to uphold, for example, Quran's masculine imperative of being a qawwam or an ethnic normative of honor. Islamism becomes one such avenue that increases the possibility of selfassertion and actualization of masculinity imperatives and as they appear in religious and cultural texts, narratives and anecdotes - for instance the theme of martyrdom. The resulting death will not only be divine, but also heroic. In the presence of precedence i.e. in form of documented history highlighting jihadism - this becomes plausible and ultimately adds to individual and collective rationality among Muslims. To develop these ideas further, this article draws upon empirical data sets and historical archival records.","creator":["Maleeha Aslam"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24146118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607367784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66590588-550e-3b0f-acff-85fd9b2b4733"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24146118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"3 (149)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Islamism and Masculinity: Case Study Pakistan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24146118","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The workplace has been extensively and variously evaluated as an environment which \u2014 like others \u2014 contains risks to health. This paper unpacks such risk assessment by problematising the relation between hazards and risks. Three positions are set out. In the first (materialist or realist), risks map directly onto underlying real hazards. In the second (constructionist or culturalist), hazards are natural, while risks are social constructions. In the final (postmodern) position, both risks and hazards are seen as constructions. The paper goes on to consider the implications of the latter position for assessment of risks in the workplace, arguing that risks are often discounted in the on-going choices made by people who do some things called 'work' and evaluate their continuity of sense-of-self as their 'health'.","creator":["Nick Fox"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48a2cbee-d7d5-36cf-bd0e-e922465ec42a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"687","pageStart":"665","pagination":"pp. 665-687","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"'RISKS', 'HAZARDS' AND LIFE CHOICES: REFLECTIONS ON HEALTH AT WORK","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857873","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce8ef96c-a309-3905-a851-8af71b816147"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":198,"pageEnd":"1608","pageStart":"1413","pagination":"pp. 1413-1608","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462928","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":68175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELIZABETH A. SPILLER"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"385b9be8-6487-3ab1-ac6f-26c282faf7d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Imagination to Miscegenation: Race and Romance in Shakespeare's \"The Merchant of Venice\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917349","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The initial celebratory response that hailed the internet as some kind of utopia, both liberatory and democratic, has been tempered and gender scholars increasingly interrogate the internet in relation to gender politics. There is a scarcity of work that engages with non-normative identities, particularly transgender. Through the lens of gender theory and literature relating to the internet, the Article investigates the engagement of transgender people, both male to female (MTF) and female to male (FTM), as they negotiate their sexed and gendered identities on a single South African transgender online site, Gender DynamiX. This includes a critical discourse analysis of the postings on the forums, Boy Talk and Girl Talk, which is supplemented with interviews with members of the site about the relevance of the internet for them. While allowing that the gender constructions articulated can be viewed as conserving patriarchy in significant ways, the Article argues the significance of such sites for transgender people.","creator":["Jeanne Prinsloo"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7429ff83-696e-3749-895a-b670fc8daf88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23287200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (90)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Negotiating transgender identities on the internet - a South African study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287200","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminists often look to postmodern philosophy for a framework within which to treat difference. We might more productively look to a hermeneutic philosophy that emphasizes the interpretive dimensions of difference and allows us to acknowledge the partiality of our understanding. Hence, we might also recognize the importance of a hermeneutic conversation unconstrained by relations of power or ideology in which all nonexclusionary interpretive voices can be educated by one another.","creator":["Georgia Warnke"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac994534-5eee-3a96-b89d-8e4adefa30b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Hermeneutics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810302","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tudor Balinisteanu"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25505053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3338b35-d5e3-302d-9932-3953c9114035"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25505053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"492","pagination":"pp. 492-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Otherworldly Women and Neurotic Fairies: The Cultural Construction of Women in Angela Bourke's Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25505053","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476056,476119]],"Locations in B":[[59502,59565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper provides a provisional diagram of modern capitalist business. I argue that modern business managers are under greater and greater pressures of time. They are expected to work to sterner, more extensive, and shorter-term measures of performance, and they must cope with a general speed-up in the conduct of business. These pressures are, in turn, forcing managers to be more innovative. In this paper, I argue that these imperatives are linked through attempts to interpellate \"fast\" managerial subjects who are able to take the strain of permanent high performance. These subjects are being produced through three types of active and performative space which, taken together, constitute a new geographical machine, able to make new qualities and quantities visible and therefore available to be worked upon. I consider each of these spaces in turn: new spaces of visualization, represented here by the business magazine Fast Company; new spaces of embodiment, represented here by the use of performative ideas and techniques from the humanities; and new spaces of circulation, represented here by the phenomenon of increasingly mobile means of management. I conclude by arguing that these so-far hesitant and tentative spatialities may herald a new phase of \"caring imperialism.\"","creator":["Nigel Thrift"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9fe3328-59fa-3de7-9b52-7dabab6a7ecc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1515438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"692","pageStart":"674","pagination":"pp. 674-692","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Performing Cultures in the New Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515438","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":14862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tyler Hoffman"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095280X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014-200023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42573409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerhumor"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Humor","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Humor Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Treacherous Laughter: The Poetry Slam, Slam Poetry, and the Politics of Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573409","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7109,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444961,445246]],"Locations in B":[[33475,33758]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristelle L. Baskins"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01481029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23924090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studicon"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Iconography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Trustees of Princeton University","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"GENDER TROUBLE IN ITALIAN RENAISSANCE ART HISTORY: TWO CASE STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23924090","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":12159,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[79521,79592]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, a young man's narratives of violence are analysed, and a culturally shared storyline is identified as the basis of these narratives. It is argued that the stories are organized so as to construct a preferred self-presentation. One strategy to achieve this is to establish boundaries for what type of violence to use, whom to fight, where and for what reasons. I also argue that the narratives are structured to avoid being categorized as either victim or perpetrator, although both categories are drawn upon. Issues of masculinity are made relevant through categorization of the characters in the narrative, and positions are made available. Different masculine categories such as the hero\/villain\/non-man become relevant in the analysis. Different gendered positions are used in negotiating a masculine identity around narratives of and through telling about violence.","creator":["KJERSTIN ANDERSSON"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5903a52d-062a-35d3-9615-dc0ef28e2334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Constructing young masculinity: a case study of heroic discourse on violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889187","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4621040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ontology and Involution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621040","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":17973,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471],[496482,496553]],"Locations in B":[[102996,103062],[104809,104877]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hyun Sook Kim","Jyoti Puri","H. J. Kim-Puri"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6d8d541-76c6-3b26-8d00-ce654cea869f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceptualizing Gender-Sexuality-State-Nation: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044580","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janet C. Myers"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"320c20f6-f525-3bce-b3b0-b71c0da7c38f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing the Voyage out: Victorian Female Emigration and the Class Dynamics of Displacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058543","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Auto\/ethnography is not an apolitical endeavor, and as a queer researcher, I never lose sight of the sensibilities that influence my work. Leading with an explicit queer positionality and relying upon critical reflexivity, this essay focuses on my two-year fieldwork in rural, conservative Old Shawneetown, Illinois. I begin by navigating the natural landscape, illustrating how Shawneetown\u2019s flood-ravaged landscape implicates (my) queer identity\u2014as both a lens for reading queer sexuality and as a metaphor for queer loss. Then, I shift to the human landscape\u2014my interactions with the town\u2019s residents\u2014where I feel the necessity to stifle my queer persona in favor of a performance that passes as heterosexual. Both landscape contexts position geography as a catalyst for the autobiographical, complicating issues of ethnographic dialogue, ethics, and risk\u2014a queerscape\u2014as divergent selves and subjectivities challenge one another in a charged, site-specific space of heteronormativity.","creator":["Patrick Santoro"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b3d33a3-4680-3125-8abd-ffa488a79906"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26372184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queerscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372184","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Embodying Landscape and Rupture in Auto\/ethnography"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ulrike Bergermann"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43500294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03437736"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606455008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11df309f-ba89-3f0a-8dcd-627040400146"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43500294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frauenfilm"}],"isPartOf":"Frauen und Film","issueNumber":"66","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Stroemfeld Verlag Buchversand GmbH","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"We love to gendertain you: Sexualit\u00e4t digitaler Romantiker: Zu Could it be von monochrom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43500294","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary L. Gray"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ccbff88-7cfb-3dc4-956a-1b987eed0df2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Websites to Wal-Mart: Youth, Identity Work, and the Queering of Boundary Publics in Small Town, USA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644068","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":5999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Stern-Pettersson"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10857494"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85f3ac85-480a-3d0b-ab83-4a1b425ea20d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpeacstud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Peace Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"International Peace Research Association (IPRA)","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"READING MAYAN WOMEN'S IN\/SECURITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852859","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":16730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karlyn Kohrs Campbell"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41939428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41939428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Discursive Performance of Femininity: Hating Hillary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41939428","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9293,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72504,72629]],"Locations in B":[[3756,3907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leanne Trapedo Sims"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.2.0171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8249e4b2-caf4-3788-ab48-54ff030362f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.2.0171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Love Letters: Performative and Biological Families in Hawai\u2018i's Women's Prison","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.2.0171","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Stein"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02719274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298783050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-202682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4af387f-63bf-34ae-948c-e2cef25b58f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerjewilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Jewish Literature (1981-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performative Zion:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/studamerjewilite.33.2.0259","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Butler's Parting Ways<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Sypnowich"],"datePublished":"1993-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a59418e9-f826-370f-8630-827a86639f3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/191800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"484","pagination":"pp. 484-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Justice, Community, and the Antinomies of Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191800","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Miguel Gutierrez's body of choreographic work, developed in the post-9\/11 decade, converses with theories that glimpse potential utopias in performance and in the concept of queerness. Gutierrez's work is significant not just for envisaging desirable futures, but also for how its difficult aesthetics demonstrate, embody, and perform ways to be in and move through the non-utopias of now.","creator":["Amanda Hamp"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43835051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b245017a-02f0-31b7-bdce-c4a5a438f3ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43835051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"I want to understand (what is happening to me)!: Miguel Gutierrez Performs How to Be Okay in a Non-Utopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43835051","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9520,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[311674,312039]],"Locations in B":[[37725,38090]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on female editorship and sexual politics in late Ming and early Qing China, using Hua suo shi, an anthology edited by the courtesan poet Xue Susu, as a case study. It traces textual production and transmission, and reconstructs the literary and cultural contexts of this work to explore the courtesan's editorial gaze and representation of gender through a close reading of it. The analysis of its two main themes\u2014women as commodities, and women as agents\u2014shows how the courtesan editor re-imagined China's cultural landscape from her point of view. New examples of female agency are discovered in analyzing the cultural process of editing as a \"web of discourses,\" providing a window on the emergence of a new female editorial voice in early modern China's cultural discourse. Cet article se concentre sur le r\u00f4le \u00e9ditorial des femmes et sur les politiques sexuelles en Chine \u00e0 la fin des Ming et au d\u00e9but des Qing. Une anthologie \u00e9dit\u00e9e par la courtisane et po\u00e9tesse Xue Susu, le Hua suo shi, sert d'\u00e9tude de cas. Le processus de production et de transmission textuelle est examin\u00e9 et le contexte litt\u00e9raire et culturel de l'ouvrage restitu\u00e9, permettant d'explorer le regard \u00e9ditorial et le jeu de genre de la courtisane \u00e0 travers une lecture serr\u00e9e du texte. L'analyse des deux th\u00e8mes dominants \u2014 la femme comme marchandise, la femme comme agent \u2014 d\u00e9montre la fa\u00e7on dont la courtisane \u00e9ditrice r\u00e9-imagine le paysage culturel chinois de son propre point de vue. D'autres exemples d'intervention f\u00e9minine se r\u00e9v\u00e8lent lorsqu'on analyse le processus culturel d'\u00e9dition en tant que \"r\u00e9seau de discours\". Ainsi s'ouvre une fen\u00eatre sur l'\u00e9mergence d'une nouvelle voix \u00e9ditoriale f\u00e9minine au sein du discours culturel chinois au d\u00e9but des temps modernes.","creator":["Daria Berg"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24754909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00825433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47298280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83c0d333-5341-3ac0-89a6-119ff1ac8151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24754909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"toungpao"}],"isPartOf":"T'oung Pao","issueNumber":"1\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Courtesan Editor: Sexual Politics in Early Modern China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24754909","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":14943,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124657]],"Locations in B":[[41392,41465]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["C\u00e9cile Stephanie Stehrenberger"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"154b0767-3612-3244-8bc6-a3e478c48e18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41349286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Folklore, Nation, and Gender in a Colonial Encounter: Coros y Danzas of the Secci\u00f3n Femenina of the Falange in Equatorial Guinea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349286","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6383,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456226,456411]],"Locations in B":[[18830,19015]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kelly Oliver"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"395fbb76-3812-3506-8b9d-ebf0297c91a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809988","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Dahlberg"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20853566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb9a9c38-262a-3df0-bb93-a6f0f647190b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20853566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"4","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20853566","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":1078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Penelope J. Engelbrecht"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aee7fa9d-668e-3a1b-bf23-ecc18dc2e310"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Strange Company: Uncovering the Queer Anthology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316379","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00cc0701-9aa0-35b2-b0f0-1e52a5b29dbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Monstrosity, Race and Technology\/The Unentitled of the Earth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030914","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":15094,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461482,461578]],"Locations in B":[[48189,48285]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Essay reports the results of a survey experiment that we conducted on over eight hundred heterosexual respondents to compare associational attitudes toward gay men who engage in different types of sexual practices. Specifically, we randomly assigned respondents to hear one of three descriptions of a gay character, which differed only with regard to the character's penetrative preference: top (preferring to penetrate one's partner), bottom (preferring to be penetrated by one's partner), and versatile (having an equal preference). Overall, we find that heterosexuals displayed heightened and statistically significant associational aversion toward versatile characters and, to a lesser degree, toward bottom characters, relative to respondents' willingness to associate with top characters. We elaborate why heterosexuals seem to display systematically less associational aversion toward those men whose penetrative preference is most consistent with gender stereotypes. Based on those results, we revisit the notion, adopted by many courts, that Price Waterhouse sex-stereotyping doctrine cannot apply to sexuality claims because it would turn sexual orientation into a protected class after Congress has opted not to do so. Our results suggest that gender-motivated homophobia is not uniformly targeted toward all gay men or uniformly present among all who discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. We also further consider why respondents were most averse to versatility, drawing a potential distinction between \"trait opposition\" and \"trait intermediacy\" gender violations. Finally, we discuss the implications of our findings for the broader LGBT movement in law and society.","creator":["IAN AYRES","RICHARD LUEDEMAN"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23744387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47017193"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235686"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"395756f2-f53b-32c8-a7b7-1f3397a68137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23744387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55,"pageEnd":"768","pageStart":"714","pagination":"pp. 714-768","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Tops, Bottoms, and Versatiles: What Straight Views of Penetrative Preferences Could Mean for Sexuality Claims Under Price Waterhouse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23744387","volumeNumber":"123","wordCount":18348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper looks at the representation of some female figures in the Kit\u0101b al-A\u0121\u0101n\u012b by Ab\u016b al-Fara\u01e7 al-I\u1e63fah\u0101n\u012b. It examines the strategies through which medieval Arabic literary imagination constructs female characters, both positive and negative, between myth and historical reality. Some women, for instance, possess special powers or influence, such as Zarq\u0101' al-Yam\u0101ma, a lesbian who, thanks to her extraordinary sight, can see the enemy from miles away, or Zabb\u0101', who is able to imprison the king of 'Ir\u0101q and drink his blood. Basing itself methodologically on gender studies also in a literary perspective, the paper looks at processes through which a literary language is constructed and androcentricity is institutionalised and at Cultural paradigms justifying such representations of women in pre-Islamic and Islamic times. These aspects will be looked at in connection with themes such as relation between power and the supernatural, the feminine and the divine, and stereotypes concerning sexuality and gender.","creator":["Mirella Cassarino"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24640440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11212306"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607800314"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72980070-8cd3-3a20-8ef6-5aff00bf9719"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24640440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quadstudarab"}],"isPartOf":"Quaderni di Studi Arabi","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"INTERPRETING TWO STORIES OF THE \"KIT\u0100B AL-A\u0120\u0100N\u012a\": A GENDER-BASED APPROACH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24640440","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELLEN GREENE"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09743cfa-97aa-3892-87a9-7ac587026795"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SAPPHO, FOUCAULT, AND WOMEN'S EROTICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309742","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4845,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[321345,321404],[477063,477125]],"Locations in B":[[24608,24670],[27720,27782]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Hermann-Wilmarth","Teri Holbrook"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.1.0002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e33af297-454e-3c5d-ba22-d479320ac1b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.1.0002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Precarious Identities: Violent Disruptions and the (Re)constructions of Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.34.1.0002","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10268,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441438,441788]],"Locations in B":[[7046,7397]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AMONG THEOLOGICAL WRITERS, MANY HAVE SUSPECTED THAT JOHN Rawls's writings on justice add up to a de facto manifesto of secularism. His writings especially provoke anxiety about the potential exclusion of theological affirmations from public political discourse. Much of this anxiety focuses on his concept of the \"original position\" from which principles of justice are negotiated. Consideration of the anxiety provoked by this concept, however, suggests that it is theologically richer than Rawls's critics allow. A turn to S\u00f8ren Kierkegaard's The Concept of Anxiety enables interpretation of the original position as a device of representation that identifies every individual with the fact of original sin. Crucial to this interpretation is Kierkegaard's description of original sin in terms of anxiety that arises from the innocence that is ignorance in the comparable original position of Adam. Where anxiety arises, sin follows. Where sin arises, the need for justice follows. Reading Rawls and Kierkegaard together consequently offers insight into the relevance of the history of the doctrine of original sin to contemporary theorization of justice.","creator":["Geoffrey Rees"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23561814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56717329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221984"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23561814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Original Sin in the Original Position: A Kierkegaardian Reading of John Rawls's Writings on Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23561814","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":16232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Wendy Delorme\u2019s Insurrections! En territoire sexuel (Insurrections! in Sexual Territory, 2009) articulates a French third-wave feminism that builds upon both historical French feminisms and contemporary American gender and queer theories. This article considers two aspects of Delorme\u2019s syncretic feminism. Drawing on second-wave legacies, she articulates a \u201cfemmenism,\u201d or queer performative critique, that exposes gender as a performance and lingering sexist and homo\/lesbophobic discriminations. Delorme also belongs to the post-pornographic movement, itself linked to French third-wave feminism. Again bridging feminisms, Delorme uses explicitness when asserting her sexuality while also discussing ongoing issues regarding women\u2019s sexualities in contemporary French society.","creator":["Mich\u00e8le A. Schaal"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.70.2.175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2bc1af9-6cfd-356e-8a8a-4d98b8386935"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/rockmounrevi.70.2.175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bridging Feminist Waves:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.70.2.175","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":8472,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481548]],"Locations in B":[[53712,53865]],"subTitle":"Wendy Delorme\u2019s Insurrections! En territoire sexuel<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancie E. Caraway"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8946b718-e09f-3163-baaa-24b71042c391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Challenge and Theory of Feminist Identity Politics: Working on Racism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346851","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9177,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[50663,50738]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. D. H. Amador"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Biblical Hermeneutics: A Failure of Theoretical Nerve","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466240","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":7379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract In her 1997 study Schubert, M\u00fcller, and Die sch\u00f6ne M\u00fcllerin, Youens describes the collaborative Liederspiel (song play) that served as Wilhelm M\u00fcller's model for his poetic cycle Die sch\u00f6ne M\u00fcllerin and Schubert's more familiar work. This study removes Schubert and his masterwork from the picture to reconsider the Liederspiel as a sociable, performative event and address persistent questions concerning the self, its expression and development, and communicative relationships between selves as mediated through singing lyric poetry. Building upon Youens's suggestion that the event constituted \u201cserious play,\u201d the article considers the implications of such play for understanding the event and for performance-focused analyses of the Lied generally. \u201cSerious play\u201d thus operates in multiple registers, referring to the playful activity of the salon participants themselves; the discourses of \u201cIdealist play\u201d and of \u201crole play\u201d; and importantly to the necessarily \u201cplayful\u201d approach that I take to the mobile types of evidence at hand. The first section examines the culture within the St\u00e4gemann salon in relation to Berlin salon life before and immediately after the Napoleonic Wars, with special attention to the role of gender and related cultural expectations within the salons. The second section considers Schleiermacher's theory of free sociability as inspired by Romantic salon culture and the broader question of free play as viewed through (historical) idealist and more current critical lenses. After a brief description of the events, poetry, and music of the Liederspiel, the following sections analyze how Wilhelm M\u00fcller and Luise Hensel negotiated their way through Idealist play and role play in a salon colored by the growing limitations of Biedermeier culture and particularly the gender roles attending it. By thus viewing the Liederspiel events as multifaceted \u201cserious play,\u201d it becomes possible to advance a new approach to the sung performance of lyric poetry that builds upon but extends the more work-centered text-music approach to the Lied that has dominated the past several decades of research on the genre.","creator":["Jennifer Ronyak"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2010.34.2.141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5a629d8-64af-3570-aa37-207336201cb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2010.34.2.141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cSerious Play,\u201d Performance, and the Lied: The St\u00e4gemann Sch\u00f6ne M\u00fcllerin<\/em> Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2010.34.2.141","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":16771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Duggan"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e09f3592-7bbb-34cd-be41-8e12184bac68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"814","pageStart":"791","pagination":"pp. 791-814","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Trials of Alice Mitchell: Sensationalism, Sexology, and the Lesbian Subject in Turn-of-the-Century America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174907","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[63239,63323]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Barad"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.19.2.0121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd05f6ac-e355-3c0e-866b-28e34eeeb170"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.19.2.0121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Nature's Queer Performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.19.2.0121","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":14501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"To date, most inquiries into race and cyberspace have focused on the \"digital divide\" - whether racial minorities have access to advanced computing-communication technologies. This paper asks a more fundamental question: Can cyberspace change the way that race functions in American society? Professor Jerry Kang starts his analysis with a social-cognitive account of American racial mechanics that centers the role of racial schemas. These schemas consist of racial categories, rules of racial mapping that place individuals into these categories, and racial meanings associated with each category. He argues that cyberspace can disrupt racial schemas because it alters the architecture of both identity presentation (enabling racial anonymity and pseudonymity) and social interaction (enabling increased interracial interactions). Thus, cyberspace presents society with three design options: abolition, which challenges racial mapping by promoting racial anonymity; integration, which reforms racial meanings by promoting interracial social interaction; and transmutation, which disrupts the very notion of fixed racial categories by promoting racial pseudonymity (or \"cyber-passing\"). After analyzing each option's merits, Professor Kang concludes that society need not adopt a single, uniform design strategy for all of cyberspace. Instead, society can embrace a policy of digital diversification, which explicitly zones different cyber spaces according to different racial environments. For example, most market places could be zoned abolition, whereas most social spaces could be zoned integration. By encouraging a diversified policy portfolio, society can exploit synergies created by flexible zoning while avoiding policy lock-in. Although cyberspace is no panacea for the racial conflicts and inequality that persist, it offers new possibilities for furthering racial justice that should not be wasted.","creator":["Jerry Kang"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c67dc0f4-5c62-313c-9606-2c3dd9b38677"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79,"pageEnd":"1208","pageStart":"1130","pagination":"pp. 1130-1208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Cyber-Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342340","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":41979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[404893,405042]],"Locations in B":[[190745,190894]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Eva Leach"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/mts.2011.33.1.90","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eff77e64-8034-32b1-84b2-14e8df3ec864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/mts.2011.33.1.90"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musitheospec"}],"isPartOf":"Music Theory Spectrum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading and Theorizing Medieval Music Theory: Interpretation and Its Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/mts.2011.33.1.90","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En \"Las virtudes peligrosas,\" Ana Mar\u00eda Moix explora la capacidad transgresora de la mirada femenina rec\u00edproca. Dicha mirada constituye el veh\u00edculo fundamental de la creaci\u00f3n y transmisi\u00f3n de un deseo lesbiano \"imposible\" y logra una reconceptualizaci\u00f3n del placer visual. Al alejarse \u00e9ste de la especularizaci\u00f3n masculina heterosexual, destruye la jerarqu\u00eda sujeto\/objeto y sustituye el concepto de otredad por el de mismidad. Sin embargo, la marginalidad espacial, la carencia de un discurso amoroso exc\u00e9ntrico y la rebeli\u00f3n existencial de las protagonistas, representan graves limitaciones para el deseo l\u00e9sbico que se ver\u00e1 relegado al \u00e1mbito de lo innominado. Con el fracaso y la \"muerte visual\" de la relaci\u00f3n de los personajes, \"Las virtudes peligrosas\" plantea, asimismo, las (im)posibilidades de desligar homosexualidad y heterosexualidad y la necesidad de crear espacios que permitan la convivencia de una multiplicidad de deseos.","creator":["ROSAL\u00cdA CORNEJO-PARRIEGO"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25642024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a42c6550-0205-3e2d-8cd4-14d893c51bbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25642024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"DESDE EL INNOMINADO DESEO: TRANSGRESI\u00d3N Y MARGINALIDAD DE LA MIRADA EN \"LAS VIRTUDES PELIGROSAS\" DE ANA MAR\u00cdA MOIX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25642024","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6275,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[390477,390969],[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[32642,33134],[35277,35311]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The biological definition of family at the root of functionalist kinship theory has been rightly criticized by contemporary feminist and symbolic anthropologists, but in retreating into an antinatural position such critiques simply recapitulate the limitations of an opposition between nature and culture in which the former is prior and essential, the latter secondary and historical. From the perspective of Zumbagua, where people become parents by feeding and caring for children over extended periods of time, both schools of thought are not only inadequate to explain fully the material bases of local practice but are representative of a specific Western-bourgeois ideology that indigenous people actively oppose. [kinship, adoption, nature\/culture, materialism, Ecuador, Andes]","creator":["Mary Weismantel"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed73fde1-03d4-37d5-8bbd-66bb32272e8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"704","pageStart":"685","pagination":"pp. 685-704","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Kin: Kinship Theory and Zumbagua Adoptions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646380","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":13654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PASCAL LE BRUN-CORDIER"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d61d076f-9a6b-3398-9fb7-7df746cf7a75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Un cabinet de queeriosit\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978738","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yin-Zu Chen"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80209ea9-a524-34c3-a8fb-02a3cb5eecb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How to Become a Feminist Activist after the Institutionalization of the Women's Movements: The Generational Development of Feminist Identity and Politics in Mexico City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.3.0183","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ruth El Saffar"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/343855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f419791a-80ac-3644-ae74-9734fa3218a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/343855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"862","pagination":"pp. 862-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"I\" of the Beholder: Self and Other in Some Spanish Golden Age Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/343855","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":11840,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[175840,176280],[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[59517,59956],[66101,66160]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Human skin burns with prolonged exposure to ultraviolet light. This simple physiological process acquires meaning through social interaction\u2014whereby tanned skin assumes symbolic and semiotic properties. In this article we examine the meanings of tanned skin by focusing on the semiotic seductive power of the tanned body. Drawing from forty qualititative interviews, we examine the motives, beliefs, and experiences of people who tan their skin artificially, that is, through exposure to tanning lamps, in order to understand how tanned skin assumes meaning for them. We analyze the practice of artificial tanning and the interplay among processes of seduction, impression management, self-expression, and the construction, exchange, and interpretation of embodied sign-values.","creator":["Phillip Vannini","Aaron M. McCright"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2004.27.3.309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a700815-434d-332d-bf43-d4da1b291a6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2004.27.3.309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"To Die For: The Semiotic Seductive Power of the Tanned Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2004.27.3.309","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Hawkesworth"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8aefbdd-2be5-32ac-a7bf-c9f9c5d7512e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Confounding Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175248","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":16031,"numMatches":9,"Locations in A":[[47477,47604],[75237,75322],[102961,103088],[221773,222023],[232895,233053],[267258,267730],[390605,390774],[440686,440992],[481772,481841]],"Locations in B":[[42630,42755],[43980,44064],[45342,45470],[46655,46905],[47421,47579],[47867,48339],[50861,51023],[53128,53432],[102132,102204]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["E. Jane Burns"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d3aee4d-b787-3e3e-b2e4-f66ca114b849"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Courtly Love: Who Needs It? Recent Feminist Work in the Medieval French Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175865","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":15674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[90585,90655]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How have conceptualizations of \"culture\" been incorporated into sociological studies of class, racial\/ethnic, and gender inequality? This article first reviews the development of American scholarship on social inequalities during the past half century and the role of cultural analysis in this development. It goes on to consider culture-related responses to three central questions in the subdiscipline and closes with an examination of currently contentious issues. Likely future developments include movement toward more fluid, contextually contingent conceptualizations of class, race, and gender and an increasing prominence of analyses that explore the dynamic interplay between individual, interactional, and institutional processes of inequality.","creator":["Maria Charles"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db4bcf75-3934-3cb9-80c7-e130d8bfc5aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Inequality: Identity, Ideology, and Difference in \"Postascriptive Society\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375794","volumeNumber":"619","wordCount":8406,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[23584,23737]],"Locations in B":[[41450,41599]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on interviews with twenty-one women and fifteen men who expressed homosexual desires during the late Soviet period, this article seeks to shed light upon Soviet homosexual subjectivities in the Russian SFSR. As a result of the drive to \u201cclose off the entire topic of gay subjectivity to respectable inquiry, so as to prevent gayness from ever again being understood as a sickness,\u201d queer studies has for a long time been \u201csilent\u201d on this topic (David Halperin). My objective here is to take into account both the effects produced by Soviet medical and penal discourse on the subjectification of individuals who experience homosexual desire and the room to maneuver open to individuals for constructing the subject of their sexuality from their experience. I suggest that men and women were able to construct homosexual subjectivities that cannot be reduced to binary stigmatization as either sickness or criminality. In reality, men and women rendered themselves the subjects of their homosexuality in confrontation simultaneously and non-exclusively with both the pathologizing and criminalizing definitions of homosexuality.","creator":["Arthur Clech"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26565347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebea841e-874c-302d-b5e5-0a218d3df7f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26565347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Between the Labor Camp and the Clinic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26565347","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":13822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Tema<\/em> or the Shared Forms of Late Soviet Homosexual Subjectivities"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alice E. Adams"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d899a70a-df50-3141-ada3-584bbafb76c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Making Theoretical Space: Psychoanalysis and Lesbian Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175789","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12043,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[425464,425545],[426271,426360]],"Locations in B":[[13082,13163],[13410,13499]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Edward Slavishak"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20093637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b64aaab2-90bf-34b3-bfa7-18298761f3c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20093637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Historical Society of Pennsylvania","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Civic Physiques: Public Images of Workers in Pittsburgh, 1880-1910","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20093637","volumeNumber":"127","wordCount":13002,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124601,124727]],"Locations in B":[[16240,16366]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra Morris"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23557175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Feminist-Postmodernist Debate Over a Revitalized Public Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557175","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This current study explores three contemporary Brazilian films' depiction of commercial sexual exploitation of young girls and teenagers. It points out how the young female characters cope with the abuses they suffer and proposes that these filmic representations of the characters' experiences expose a significant social problem of contemporary Brazilian society: violence against women, teenage girls, and female children, particularly, regarding sex tourism, people trafficking, and domestic sexual abuse. It argues that by engaging with the problem of sexual violence against young females these three films show the consequences this has on their gender and sexual identities. Furthermore, it demonstrates that these are shaped according to their social experience within their patriarchal society, for example, by the latter's failure to lawfully protect these youngsters against such a crime. The study concludes by pointing out that because commercial sexual exploitation has a huge impact on the victims' lives, society needs to tackle the crime so that these youngsters develop appropriate gender and sexual identities for their age.","creator":["Antonio Marcio da Silvia"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44112857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d57ee99e-5ab5-346f-b1c7-8cfea92de20d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44112857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Little Adults: Child and Teenage Commercial Sexual Exploitation in Contemporary Brazilian Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44112857","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":7805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan Acker"],"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2075528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f09a1098-45e0-311f-abdd-3e4bb5c765b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2075528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"569","pageStart":"565","pagination":"pp. 565-569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Sex Roles to Gendered Institutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2075528","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":2860,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500711,500774]],"Locations in B":[[17946,18009]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Arguments about the meaning of genders and bodies, authority and nature, clothing and comportment ring throughout Paul's first letter to the Corinthians, and persist into a range of more contemporary contexts. Interpretation of one such passage within the letter (11:1\u201316) remains both difficult and important, but can be aided and altered by further engagement with queer theories outside of religious and theological studies. While in many ways queer forms of biblical studies are still just getting started, greater conversation with feminist and queer theories present different directions that prove particularly relevant for passages like these. Conceptualizations like gendered performativity, female masculinity, and queer temporality help readers reimagine the potential relations within ancient Corinth and between communities of the past, present, and future. Performativity highlights and critiques the practices of citation, repetition, and imitation that make regular appearances in texts like 1 Cor 11. Female masculinity, then, traces the citations of gendered orders and resignifies the potential changes in bodily comportment. Once combined with queer approaches to history and time, these concepts reconfigure persistent references to a range of times (both primordial and proximate), lagging and dragging into (twenty-)first-century concepts and practices of the body.","creator":["Joseph A. Marchal"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"722786f8-7d18-3277-9341-f97a0c858aab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43926975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Female Masculinity in Corinth?: Bodily Citations and the Drag of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926975","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Menzer"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18278c5d-5460-3664-a8e6-eafb0681051a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26349371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"That Old Saw: Early Modern Acting and the Infinite Regress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349371","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The applicability of Western concepts to an understanding of gender in other cultural settings has become increasingly problematic. We need to elicit an understanding of how particular societies define sexual difference, and derive locally grounded ideas of self and the materiality of the body as a starting point for analysis. This paper examines some of the wider implications of this view for notions of cultural context and comparison. Its ethnographic examples come from Latin America. They build on the regional interest in spiritual and symbolic forms as 'scripts' for gender identifications, exploring the diverse ways in which idealizations, images and icons are read in ways that encompass both 'local' and 'non-local' narratives. However, the discussion aims to be relevant beyond this geographical location, suggesting that both secular and sacred discourses appear to work at a number of different, sometimes contradictory, levels, often drawing together transcultural notions of being, and generating a field of meaning in which gender, value and morality are constituted.","creator":["Nanneke Redclift"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041977X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227387"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4146108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullschoorieafri"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"486","pagination":"pp. 486-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Reading Gender: Comparative Questions, Situated Meanings, Latin American Paradoxes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4146108","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws on in-depth interviews with nine white, middle-class, male-to-female transsexuals to examine how they produce and experience bodily transformation. Interviewees' bodywork entailed retraining, redecorating, and reshaping the physical body, which shaped their feelings, role-taking, and self-monitoring. These analyses make three contributions: They offer support for a perspective that embodies gender, further transsexual scholarship, and contribute to feminist debate over the sex\/gender distinction. The authors conclude by exploring how viewing gender as embodied could influence medical discourse on transsexualism and have personal and political consequences for transsexuals.","creator":["Douglas Schrock","Lori Reid","Emily M. Boyd"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f10ff147-d802-3392-80ff-4b4571df8342"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Transsexuals' Embodiment of Womanhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044596","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9452,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[74559,74701],[475212,475297],[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[7188,7328],[58640,58732],[60277,60423]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses the trope of 'hysterical motherhood' to elucidate one of the unique forms that women's protest action took at the height of the American anti-nuclear movement. It advances an understanding of 'hysterical motherhood' as both an embodied tactic and a performative act, arguing that its tactical effectiveness lay in its ability to redirect the societal gaze from the 'hystericized' bodies of women to the bodies and practices of militarised men. In so doing, it (re)structured the field of the possible: constraining and enabling performative enactments of masculinity and the nuclear state.","creator":["Tina Managhan"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82f88508-9f9d-3636-8f28-4865fa550816"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"637","pagination":"pp. 637-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Shifting the Gaze from Hysterical Mothers to 'Deadly Dads': Spectacle and the Anti-Nuclear Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097964","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10387,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[430857,431626],[445078,445246],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[25092,25858],[30632,30800],[35669,35738]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O objetivo deste artigo \u00e9 discutir a categoria \"monstro\" e sua \u00edntima rela\u00e7\u00e3o com a patologiza\u00e7\u00e3o e\/ou criminaliza\u00e7\u00e3o de determinadas pessoas vistas como 'desviantes sexuais', em especial travestis, transexuais e intersexuais. No in\u00edcio do s\u00e9culo XXI, com o questionamento da autoridade m\u00e9dica, a politiza\u00e7\u00e3o dos movimentos sociais de travestis e transexuais e a batalha por sua despatologiza\u00e7\u00e3o, para onde se encaminham os \"transtornos\" de sexo ou g\u00eanero, as \"parafilias\" e as \"pervers\u00f5es\" com toda a persistente estigmatiza\u00e7\u00e3o a elas referidas? Voltar\u00e3o a ser redimensionadas como algo potencialmente perigoso atrav\u00e9s da cada vez mais abrangente cultura da seguran\u00e7a? The aim of this paper is to discuss the category of \"monster\" and its close relation with the pathologization and criminalization of people seen as \"sexual deviants\", especially transvestites, transsexuals and intersex. At the beginning of the XXI century, with the questioning of medical authority, the politicization of the social movements of transvestites and transsexuals and their battle for despathologization, where to direct the \"disorders\" of sex or gender, \"paraphilias\"' and \"perversions\" with all the persistent stigma attached to them? Will they be understood again as potentially dangerous by the increasingly widespread culture of security?","creator":["Jorge Leite Junior"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9dcae9e-cbf8-376b-9d21-f6fb3e085228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"TRANSITAR PARA ONDE? MONSTRUOSIDADE, (DES)PATOLOGIZA\u00c7\u00c3O, (IN)SEGURAN\u00c7A SOCIAL E IDENTIDADES TRANSG\u00caNERAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328150","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent decades have seen the category of unemployment transformed into job-seeking. Attention has generally focused on the disciplining effects of interventions, procedures and techniques within social welfare offices, or on scrutinizing policy documents as political expressions of neo-liberalism. This article examines advice for unemployed people who are \u2018seeking a role\u2019, from the official leaflets of social welfare offices or Jobcentres, and state sponsored and associated careers websites and advice books. Such documents constitute an extension of the disciplinary apparatuses of government and particularly inculcate \u2018self-discipline\u2019 for actors in the labour market. Strikingly, these documents not only involve disciplining jobseekers to seek work, but to present themselves as an ideal candidate for any job, to become a protean thespian who can act convincingly. Jobseekers are required to manage, conceal and overcome the unpleasant economic and social consequences of unemployment and turn these negatives into a positive performance within a theatricalized labour market.","creator":["Tom Boland"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26655574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d22b0000-39a6-31c7-8c68-88ff29c5528c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26655574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeking a role","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26655574","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8309,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101599,101766]],"Locations in B":[[17049,17216]],"subTitle":"disciplining jobseekers as actors in the labour market"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gary Ettari"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26644421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bea964fd-be66-3b9e-b643-47bb0769cf64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26644421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"That's a lot of ones\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26644421","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6220,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[20733,20896]],"subTitle":"Labor, Fractured Masculinity, and the Commodification of Flesh in Steven Soderbergh's Magic Mike<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Weber"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6606a355-020c-3d23-8024-fed956642a1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Martin Wight's \"Why Is There No International Theory?\" as History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644924","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8454,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477951]],"Locations in B":[[49621,49745]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay interrogates the concept of \"clarity\" that has become an imperative of effective student writing. I show that clarity is neither axiomatic nor transparent, and that the clear\/unclear binary that informs the identification of clarity as a goal of effective student writing is itself unstable precisely because of the ideological baggage that undergirds its construction. I make this argument by finding the traces of compositions insistence on student writers' clarity in the attacks on the writing of critical theorists.","creator":["Ian Barnard"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40593334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9dd9b15-63e1-3b9e-abdf-6e4803b6017a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40593334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ruse of Clarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40593334","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7600,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[26773,27397]],"Locations in B":[[19105,19729]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The analysis of difference and identity questions brought Iris Marion Young to develop a metaphor of collective identity, the city, which included the diversity that characterizes all human groups. This article honors Iris Marion Young by challenging the question of identity in contemporary feminism and social sciences. Mar\u00eda Mart\u00ednez Gonz\u00e1lez argues that we need new identity and collective identity metaphors in order to understand the complexity of contemporary feminist praxis.","creator":["Mar\u00eda Mart\u00ednez Gonz\u00e1lez"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25483195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ead7276-bd8d-3083-a432-d83b16b91270"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25483195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Praxis Challenges the Identity Question: Toward New Collective Identity Metaphors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25483195","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7361,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[97384,97650],[481404,481466],[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[23340,23603],[42434,42496],[45205,45269]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3de5a60e-6f37-3f5e-af22-dc61563eacfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23315021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315021","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":1783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irune del Rio Gabiola"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c952c81-663a-3748-aa54-096ecf3739a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Al ni\u00f1o\" y \"La voza ti debida\": Dos realidades ideales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203900","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":7162,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[271913,272134],[281791,282217],[503324,503495]],"Locations in B":[[31769,31990],[34836,35262],[41588,41739]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract As the eminent (female) anthropologist Mary Douglas (1966) pointed out, the \u201csocial body\u201d constrains and contrives the way the physical body is perceived and obligated into performance. The physical experience of the body is in turn often modified by a clutch of regulatory and panoptic religio-social categories through which it is known and made to reflect a normative view of society. This paper wrestles with the assertion (DeNapoli 2013) that female gurus are transgressive bodies and irruptions into a predominantly malestream tradition of religious teachers. The paper works through the theoretical notion of intertextuality and attempts to deconstruct and read whether such irruptions (and interruptions) into the Hindu tradition are actually transgressive and gendered religious violations, or whether they work instead to discursively and differently perpetuate particular parochial and masculinised social constructions of \u201cwoman\u201d. The paper thus probes what could be conceived of as \u201cintertextual gaps\u201d in order to examine the assertion that particular gendered enactments of the female gurus are subversive. The paper suggests instead that the gendered enactments appear to present ambivalences and ambiguities in renunciate discourses on gender and female agency.","creator":["Maheshvari Naidu"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jstudyreligion.26.2.43","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e554aaa-82be-340b-a37d-d99c96655de1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jstudyreligion.26.2.43"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Transgressive Subversions?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jstudyreligion.26.2.43","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6313,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Female Religious Leaders in Hinduism"} +{"abstract":"In the introduction to this special issue, Hawhee sets the stage for the scholarly performances featured at the 2005 Pittsburgh symposium on ancient rhetoric by describing the context and foregrounding the lectures\/essays contained in this issue. She notes the shift to questions of performing rhetoric and considers that shift in relation to disciplinary identities which, she asserts, function performatively.","creator":["Debra Hawhee"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3886170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82b1a5b2-0396-3e87-bf07-eb6f0c219f3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3886170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Ancient Rhetorics: A Symposium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3886170","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":2990,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464317,464456]],"Locations in B":[[9881,10020]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I assess what premises underlie the categories berdache, \"alternate gender,\" \"gay,\" and \"two-spirit\"; and whether these premises are relevant to the ways in which many Navajos construct the \"alternate gender\" of those known as n\u00e1dleeh\u00ed. Proponents of these categories often extricate traits from their contexts and perceive male and female as mutually opposed, absolute values. Many Navajos, however, describe traits as inseparable from the universe and view male and female as situational values. [Native American, Navajo, gender, sexuality, worldview]","creator":["Carolyn Epple"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6761f6f-f157-36a7-9365-a8300401c663"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Coming to Terms with Navajo \"n\u00e1dleeh\u00ed\": A Critique of \"berdache,\" \"Gay,\" \"Alternate Gender,\" and \"Two-Spirit\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646695","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":17681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6a25385-9430-388b-9df8-e9e91439c056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119594","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9701,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[3403,10782]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mustafa Emirbayer","Mimi Sheller"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b52c3b5a-ca63-3501-a082-25667e1c2a08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Publics in History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108509","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":22478,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[109578,109649]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper questions the connection between vaginas and feminist embodiment in The Vagina Monologues and considers how the text both challenges and reinscribes (albeit unintentionally) systems of patriarchy, compulsory heterosexuality, and ableism. I use the Intersex Society of North America's critique as a point of departure and argue that the text offers theorists and activists in feminist, queer, and disability communities an opportunity to understand how power operates in both dominant discourses that degrade vaginas and strategies of feminist resistance that seek to reclaim and celebrate them.","creator":["Kim Q. Hall"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"484ba431-42eb-34f0-8d6f-3b3e7eaab8f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queerness, Disability, and the Vagina Monologues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810845","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9153,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[369244,369535]],"Locations in B":[[43373,43669]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What are the implications of living in a gender system that recognizes \"two and only two\" genders? For those individuals whose \"gender displays\" are inappropriate, there can be a variety of consequences, many of them negative. In this article, the author provides an analysis of her experiences as a woman whose appearance often leads to gender misattribution. She discusses the consequences of the gender system for her identity and her interactions. The author also examines Lorber's assertion that \"gender bending\" actually serves to perpetuate gender categories rather than to break them down, and she suggests how her experiences might contradict Lorber's argument. Using her biography to examine the social construction of gender, she both illustrates and extends theoretical work in this area.","creator":["Betsy Lucal"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c6b7a69-369d-3ea3-9c68-950f12a392e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"797","pageStart":"781","pagination":"pp. 781-797","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"What It Means to Be Gendered Me: Life on the Boundaries of a Dichotomous Gender System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190440","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Identity formation as it has been traditionally understood as predicated upon polarized sexual difference is under interrogation, particularly by feminist theorists who note that the oedipal constellation as the locus for a gendered identity inherently forecloses other possibilities. Offering a transcendent alternative, theorists such as Jessica Benjamin argue for a multiplicity of subject positionings, the destabilization of gender, and a concept of identity as fluctuating. Max Ophuls's Letter for an Unknown Woman (1948) offers an interesting opportunity for testing a revisionist frame of gender, for exploring the possibilities of a theoretical reading that exceeds the terms of gender complementarity. With its unconventional voiceover narrational strategy, the film can be understood as privileging a paradoxical notion of subjectivity in which the self and the other exist in a state of mutual identification and disavowal.","creator":["Glynis Kinnan"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15ff3946-6cdc-3e17-8de3-6a445923c52d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.35.2.258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"His Story Next to Hers: Masochism and (Inter)Subjectivity in Letter from an Unknown Woman<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.35.2.258","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5844,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149679,150128]],"Locations in B":[[1039,1487]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roslyn Wallach Bologh"],"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d4aea2f-0eec-3950-b155-3ae4e535a6ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Promise and Failure of Ethnomethodology from a Feminist Perspective: Comment on Rogers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189661","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":3203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hiromi Tsuchiya Dollase"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10599770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646832089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0cecced-8811-3caa-b927-b1720ee924de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomjengsup"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal. English Supplement","issueNumber":"20\/21","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Yoshiya Nobuko's \"Yaneura no nishojo\": In Search of Literary Possibilities in \"Sh\u014djo\" Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772176","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10601,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[293446,293604]],"Locations in B":[[59827,59988]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Travis Montgomery"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41057640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384291"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212093"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee118d56-7601-3d23-9fb9-77513e06f0be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41057640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southlitj"}],"isPartOf":"The Southern Literary Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Radicalizing Reunion: Helen Keller's \"The Story of My Life\" and Reconciliation Romance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41057640","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7380,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[141908,142540]],"Locations in B":[[12311,12943]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scholars have interpreted changes in sexual discourses from behaviouralist and structuralist perspectives, in the context of social movements, as expressions of power relations, among other approachesThis article advocates the study of shifting discourses of sexualities from the viewpoint of transformations in individuals' moral orientations over time. To this end, thematically, the article recovers Foucault's view of sexuality as a field of moral self-formation; conceptually, it follows Taylor and examines selfhood through the person's moral sources. The article uses this framework to observe reformulations in sexual narratives across three generations of Chilean women. From grandmothers' stories to granddaughters' accounts, this analysis identifies a deactivation of the equation between being a 'good woman' and sexual disengagement This movement reveals a change in the moral principle regulating Chilean women's sexualities (from a morality of decency to one of authenticity) and a displacement of moral authority from the community to the person.","creator":["Oriana Bernasconi"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a69a6632-6124-353d-9a53-cd09727d05b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"875","pageStart":"860","pagination":"pp. 860-875","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Being Decent, Being Authentic: The Moral Self in Shifting Discourses of Sexuality across Three Generations of Chilean Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857478","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper deals with the wrought relationship between psychoanalysis and feminism, broadly defined. Tracing the trajectory in which psychoanalysis leads feminism from sexuality to sexual difference then to the Phallus and the ideology of femininity, the paper takes on these 'f-words'\u2014femininity and 'f-allus', Freud and Foucault\u2014to foreground an unacknowledged challenge of Judith Butler by Toril Moi in 1999. In this paper, I read Freud closely and demonstrate that although Freud's theory of cure is obscured by the turn to the Phallus and the ideology of femininity, its language of fantasy, sexuality, desire and the unconscious remain important concepts for feminism of the new millennium. On the other hand, critiques of 'empire of the Phallus' such as the French feminists' affirmation of femininity and Judith Butler's concept of 'lesbian Phallus' only reproduce the master's system. Butler's misreading of Freud's 'tooth' and Lacan's 'eyes' as the Phallus shows that 'inversion, subversion and rebellion' by reversal or negation often leads to repetition without difference. In conclusion, I introduce Joan Copjec's critique of Foucaultian historicism and Toril Moi's turn to ordinary language philosophy to propose a new psychoanalytic feminism that can have sex without the Phallus.","creator":["Lili Hsieh"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e862f52-96ea-391e-a25a-fe0764561366"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"102","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"a queer sex, or, can feminism and psychoanalysis have sex without the phallus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819641","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9883,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[107911,108026],[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[18333,18448],[18583,18727]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emma Barker"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"805527cc-af1f-328f-9375-ad672c3f673b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25650864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rehabilitating the Rococo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650864","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Petra Munro"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"093d2867-7718-305d-957c-b2747ee38115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Twenty-seven: Resisting \"Resistance\": Stories Women Teachers Tell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975686","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":13880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dawn F. Stinchcomb"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d6ad9bc-b3f3-37f5-89b6-42dd22a6786f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43589559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE ARCHETYPES OF THE IMMATERIAL BODIES OF THE AFRICAN \"SUPERNATURAL\": TRANSIENCE, SEXUAL AMBIGUITY, AND SANTERIA IN CONTEMPORARY HISPANIC CARIBBEAN NOVELS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589559","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SARAH HENSTRA"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f330dc92-e822-378e-bb4d-ca04b1cfb897"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20831914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"FORD AND THE COSTS OF ENGLISHNESS: \"GOOD SOLDIERING\" AS PERFORMATIVE PRACTICE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831914","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Until ten to fifteen years ago, Jewish American literary history was construed and described in overwhelmingly mid-twentieth-century masculine terms. As a corrective to this longstanding trend, this essay undertakes to \"remake\" Jewish American literary history in feminist terms. First, in an act of feminist \"readerly resistance,\" it surveys recent efforts to remake the canon to include women writers and to reflect the experiences of women readers. Then it applies a variety of second-and third-wave feminist interpretive methodologies to readings of both classic and lesser-known works of Jewish American literature, including Henry Roth's Call it Sleep, Philip Roth's The Ghost Writer, Emma Lazarus' \"The New Colossus,\" Anzia Yezierska's \"The Lost Beautifulness,\" Cynthia Ozick's \"Puttermesser and Xanthippe,\" Jo Sinclair's, The Changelings, and Dara Horns In The Image.","creator":["Wendy Zierler"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"728469282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e46e7a-7ce5-3c70-9f11-abae59df36e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42944448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Making and Re-making of Jewish-American Literary History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944448","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14615,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[58180,58425],[59311,59378]],"Locations in B":[[73231,73477],[73553,73620]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eve Wiederhold"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bfbc8a0-96ff-3203-a56f-cc7c7bd3af99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Feminist Rhetoric and Representational Fatigue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866829","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9380,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[56553,56622]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Late modernity has been witnessing the erosion of the dimorphic sexual paradigm that, in both strong and weak forms, has characterized human history as we know it. Recent discoveries in biology and the social sciences have combined with altered patterns in human sexual behavior to raise critical new questions about the inherited paradigm. Religions of the West whose sacred texts, mythologies, and codes of behavior assume that maleness and femaleness are exclusive and complementary types of sexuality-each of which determines sexual identity, reproductive role, social role, and the sex of one's partner-increasingly must grapple with both theoretical evidence for and experiential evidence of polymorphous human sexuality. Inherited categories of dimorphic sexuality not only are challenged but become less and less intelligible.","creator":["Christine E. Gudorf"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"891","pageStart":"863","pagination":"pp. 863-891","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"The Erosion of Sexual Dimorphism: Challenges to Religion and Religious Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466344","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":12804,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474804,474885]],"Locations in B":[[80315,80401]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The strong genealogical tenor in the New Testament is uneven with regard to its roles and the value ascribed to it. This article explores along cultural-critical line the increasingly complex interplay between genealogy, masculinity and power with reference to the imperial context. The role of genealogies became ambivalent in imperial times, given challenges to agnatic lineage claims, in a context which both privileged masculinity but also maintained its ambiguity The persistent yet increasingly complex interplay between genealogies and masculinity forms an interesting context for reading Paul's strained allegory in Galatians 4:21-5:1, particularly with regard to this nexus of genealogy and masculinity.","creator":["Jeremy Punt"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98c462a7-7143-336a-b6d3-47f69ca13a27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43926992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Writing Genealogies, Constructing Men: Masculinity and Lineage in the New Testament in Roman Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926992","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["D. Diane Davis"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15ff21b6-9716-3b3b-8b06-672d03d51ba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Agonizing [With] Chantal Mouffe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866256","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Madonne M. Miner"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"912dbc59-66b8-3a72-8691-d2b2f25e6746"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Like a Natural Woman\": Nature, Technology, and Birthing Bodies in \"Murphy Brown\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346915","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JENNIFER A. WAGNER-LAWLOR"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50a00f07-3503-3293-9ef9-017633bb6551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20718412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Play of Irony: Theatricality and Utopian Transformation in Contemporary Women's Speculative Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718412","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11148,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[184731,184883]],"Locations in B":[[8503,8655]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In studies of immigration, generation is typically considered a static categorical system. I argue, however, that generation is a fluid construct and must be understood as place-based. Drawing on fieldwork conducted among Latino\/as along the Texas\u2013Mexico border, I seek to explore what current framings of generation leave out. Many in Laredo, Texas, see this border as allowing or preventing movement; these perceptions impact the constructions of generational categories. Cross-border travel, conceptualizations of place and immigration, and mixed-generational unions shape immigrant experiences, and in turn, affect concepts of generation. I conclude by offering ideas and inviting discussion on how the concept of generation can be re-worked to move beyond blunt categories and be re-conceptualized from the perspective of immigrants. Dans les \u00e9tudes portant sur l'immigration, la g\u00e9n\u00e9ration est g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme un syst\u00e8me rigide statique. Cependant, nous soutenons que la g\u00e9n\u00e9ration est une construction fluide et doit \u00eatre comprise comme une initiative locale. Partant d'un travail de terrain r\u00e9alis\u00e9 aupr\u00e8s des Latino \/ le long de la fronti\u00e8re entre le Texas et le Mexique, je cherche \u00e0 explorer les courants qui traversent cette g\u00e9n\u00e9ration l\u00e9s\u00e9e. Beaucoup \u00e0 Laredo, au Texas voient cette fronti\u00e8re comme un facteur favorisant ou emp\u00eachant les d\u00e9placements; ces perceptions influent sur la construction des cat\u00e9gories g\u00e9n\u00e9rationnelles. La migration transfrontali\u00e8re, les conceptualisations de l'espace et de l'immigration, et les mariages g\u00e9n\u00e9rationnels mixtes fa\u00e7onnent les exp\u00e9riences v\u00e9cues par les migrants, qui \u00e0 leur tour, influent sur les concepts de g\u00e9n\u00e9ration. Nous concluons en proposant des id\u00e9es et invitant \u00e0 la discussion sur la fa\u00e7on dont le concept de g\u00e9n\u00e9ration peut \u00eatre retravaill\u00e9 pour s'\u00e9tendre au-del\u00e0 des cat\u00e9gories franches et \u00eatre re-conceptualis\u00e9 du point de vue des immigr\u00e9s. Usualmente los estudios sobre inmigraci\u00f3n consideran la generaci\u00f3n c\u00f3mo un sistema categ\u00f3rico est\u00e1tico. Este art\u00edculo argumenta que es una construcci\u00f3n fluida que debe ser comprendida como una iniciativa local. Mediante un trabajo de campo realizado a latinos\/as en la frontera entre Texas y M\u00e9xico, el art\u00edculo explora qu\u00e9 corrientes actuales de generaciones est\u00e1n excluidas. Muchos en Laredo (Texas) ven esa frontera como un factor que permite o impide los desplazamientos, percepciones que influyen en las construcciones de categor\u00edas generacionales. Los viajes transfronterizos, las conceptualizaciones del lugar y de la inmigraci\u00f3n y las uniones generacionales mixtas, dibujan las experiencias de los inmigrantes, lo que a su vez, influye en los conceptos de las generaciones. El autor concluye abriendo un espacio de discusi\u00f3n sobre la manera de c\u00f3mo se debe de re-trabajar el concepto de generaci\u00f3n para sobrepasar las categor\u00edas terminantes y para ser re-conceptualizadas desde la perspectiva de los inmigrantes.","creator":["R. Tina Catania"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26452288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2152906X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b63618b-f557-32cc-bdb8-aa748789073c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26452288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"regioncohesion"}],"isPartOf":"Regions & Cohesion \/ Regiones y Cohesio\u0301n \/ Re\u0301gions et Cohe\u0301sion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Rethinking generational categories at the border for Latino immigrants","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26452288","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":14324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Benjamin D. Carson"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25745853","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00945366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"335366fa-eecc-32a5-b60b-164480fe1a02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25745853"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bilrevrevbil"}],"isPartOf":"Bilingual Review \/ La Revista Biling\u00fce","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Bilingual Press \/ Editorial Biling\u00fce","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Chicana Subject in Ana Castillo's Fiction and the Discursive Zone of Chicana\/o Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25745853","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10463,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[59747,59809]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd3c73a2-396b-33be-9c1f-569cfa0a439b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980557","volumeNumber":"351","wordCount":1667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478845]],"Locations in B":[[2619,2683]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Reading X Gonz\u00e1lez\u2019s, March 24, 2018, \u201cMarch For Our Lives\u201d speech\u2014their words and silences\u2014as an entry point into what I term a crip theory of trauma, this essay argues that the dominant narratives about and around Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) say more about the compulsivity of the \u201cproper\u201d citizen subject than they do the actual embodied experience and debilitation of trauma itself. The text reconceptualizes trauma narratives, like Gonz\u00e1lez\u2019s, through critical disability studies to argue that certain cripistemologies\u2014or crip ways of knowing\u2014trauma arise that are not otherwise available or readily accessible. Most notably, by rejecting dominant pathologizing forces and embracing crip ways of knowing, this analysis brings forth a new working definition of trauma, as an embodied, affective structure. These ways of knowing offer crucial insights for efforts to grapple with the ongoing forms of trauma enacted and perpetuated across the globe, and are particularly urgent against a political and cultural landscape that, as my reading of Gonz\u00e1lez\u2019s speech makes clear, in many ways refuses to hear, see, and learn from the knowledge that trauma produces.","creator":["Angela Carter"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671631","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab2dd0b4-df1d-3b5b-bc5a-6cda4cc24788"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When Silence Said Everything","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671631","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Reconceptualizing Trauma through Critical Disability Studies"} +{"abstract":"This article revisits the question of why some of the prophetic letters from Mari refer to the enclosure of the prophet's hair and fringe, and others do not - that is, why secondary verification was required or expected for some prophets and not for others. A thorough examination of the evidence demonstrates that the hair and fringe were enclosed quite disproportionately in the cases of the female prophets and of the assinn\u016b, whose gender role differed from their society's hegemonic masculinity. The women and assinn\u016b together thus comprise the category of the \"not-men\". Other deviations from the ideal of manhood, such as sickness, may also have been factors. Social rank and prophetic titles, however, were not. The numerical data show that the only statistically significant factor is the division along gender lines.","creator":["Esther J. Hamori"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432547"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565113989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234575"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2ba75da-896e-3fc9-bd62-80ff16001bc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23342110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltorients"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Orients","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Gender and the Verification of Prophecy at Mari","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342110","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le pr\u00e9sent article analyse, \u00e0 partir des r\u00e9sultats de la recherche des sources, les relations intertextuelles qui existent entre le Roland furieux et L'Olive, tout en pr\u00e9sentant par l\u00e0-m\u00eame la diff\u00e9rence m\u00e9thodologique qui s\u00e9pare ces deux approches. Dans le cadre d'une typologie des reprises on distingue trois types fondamentaux : I\u00b0 d\u00e9contextualisation et recontextualisation, 2\u00b0 \u00e9change de r\u00f4les et changement de gender, 3\u00b0 pluralisation des types de discours dans le contexte d'un recueil \u00e0 dominance p\u00e9trarquiste. L'article se conclut par une hypoth\u00e8se g\u00e9n\u00e9rale qui suppose une r\u00e9ception fragmentaire des canzonieri italiens par Du Bellay et d'autres po\u00e8tes fran\u00e7ais du XVI\u00e8me si\u00e8cle.","creator":["Klaus W. Hempfer"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40618562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00442747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a7d84ec-73aa-3600-a3cd-028301207855"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40618562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfranspralite"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr franz\u00f6sische Sprache und Literatur","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DISKURSTRADITIONEN UND FRAGMENTARISIERTE REZEPTION: ARIOSTS ORLANDO FURIOSO IN DU BELLAYS L'OLIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40618562","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":8523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper concerns a theoretical struggle to situate childless women within contemporary feminist debates about gender, the body and sexuality. Although psychoanalytic theory offers a compelling approach to the body, a Freudian account of childless women has largely escaped investigation. This paper will provide such an analysis, arguing that competing interpretations of psychoanalytic theory reveal a salient tension in the interpretation of gender identification. On the one hand, some theorists focus on a social development model of gender identification. This model emphasizes the sexual aim of reproduction as a salient feature of 'normal' gender identity development. In this paper, I argue this approach may pathologize childless women insofar as they 'fail' to socially develop in ways that conform to the imperative to sexually reproduce. On the other hand, a number of theorists argue against the foreclosure on gender identity that the social development model implies. An alternate interpretation of psychoanalytic theory calls attention to Freud's theory of 'psychic bisexuality' or 'polymorphous perversity'. This notion invites a much more complex and ambivalent notion of gender identity as it emphasizes the temporal, fragile and incomplete process of gender identification. I aim to argue that this latter interpretation offers a space for childless women as it attempts to lay bare the hegemonic relationship between femininity and sexual reproduction. I draw upon the work of a number of feminist theorists who variously take up these central themes in Freudian psychoanalytic theory to further contest the reification of the association between femininity and maternity.","creator":["Myra J. Hird"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48035ba4-080d-3734-b1df-8577545028ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"75","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","History - Historical methodology","Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Vacant Wombs: Feminist Challenges to Psychoanalytic Theories of Childless Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395859","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7265,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[215242,215339],[441492,441590],[481792,481858]],"Locations in B":[[20097,20195],[33869,33967],[45849,45909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While historians have provided insights into the ways women's work culture and labor organizing were infused with issues of sex, sexuality and appearance, they have not similarly examined the white male working body. This article discusses the significance of this different analysis for our understanding of men workers and for its ability to continue to marginalize women at the workplace. It considers how to incorporate the \"bodily turn\" in history by examining three conceptual themes in research on working-class masculinity: masculinity crises, muscular masculinity, and homosociality.","creator":["Ava Baron"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27673026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01475479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac311d02-ab7f-317b-92e3-761258cef48e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27673026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelaboworkhist"}],"isPartOf":"International Labor and Working-Class History","issueNumber":"69","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Masculinity, the Embodied Male Worker, and the Historian's Gaze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27673026","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johanna M. Wagner"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24897877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0775a6ef-40ad-390c-b861-571a21abfc18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24897877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Conventional and the Queer: Lily Bart, An Unlivable Ideal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24897877","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":12755,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[102220,102313],[369130,369535],[513910,514063]],"Locations in B":[[27116,27209],[58147,58631],[58878,59152]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this issue, RACAR's editorial team is pleased to present Polemics, a new section which, like the curated Practices section introduced last year, will bring up-to-the-minute and sometimes controversial issues into the journal, while featuring art and ideas of any place and time. Each spring issue of RACAR will include a Polemics or a Practices section. Polemics focuses on matters of pressing interest to the broad visual arts community in Canada. Each Polemics will be developed and introduced by a guest editor and will include brief, provocative essays that speak to a single contemporary topic from different perspectives. For the current issue, the guest editor; Natalie Loveless of the University of Alberta, brings together four voices from our community who reflect on research-creation as \"an important contemporary queering of the academy\" and a vigorous challenge to traditional disciplinary lines. Dans ce num\u00e9ro, l'\u00e9quipe \u00e9ditoriale de RACAR est heureuse de pr\u00e9senter Pol\u00e9miques, une nouvelle section qui, comme la section Pratiques introduite l'ann\u00e9e derni\u00e8re sous l'\u00e9gide d'une commissaire invit\u00e9e, proposera des d\u00e9bats sur des sujets d'actualit\u00e9 et parfois controvers\u00e9s, \u00e0 propos d'art et d'id\u00e9es de toute \u00e9poque et de tous pays. Chaque printemps, RACAR publiera une Pol\u00e9miques ou une Pratiques. Pol\u00e9miques examine des sujets d'int\u00e9r\u00eat pressant pour la communaut\u00e9 des arts visuels. Chaque Pol\u00e9miques sera d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e et introduite par un r\u00e9dacteur invit\u00e9 ou une r\u00e9dactrice invit\u00e9e et comprendra de brefs essais provocateurs qui se pencheront sur un sujet actuel abord\u00e9 de diff\u00e9rents points de vue. Dans ce num\u00e9ro, Natalie Loveless de l'University of Alberta a r\u00e9uni quatre voix de notre communaut\u00e9 r\u00e9fl\u00e9chissant \u00e0 la recherchecr\u00e9ation, qu'elles qualifient comme \u00e9tant un \u00ab queering \u00bb important de l'acad\u00e9mie et un d\u00e9fi de taille aux fronti\u00e8res disciplinaires traditionnelles.","creator":["Natalie S. Loveless"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e32733c-95c4-3d61-b568-7a93043c613f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327423","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For many Native Americans, the use of English in identity performance is problematized by a connection with dominant culture; the use of Tribal languages does not perform a broader Native American identity. This article considers several examples of the public use of Native American languages by nonfluent speakers, showing that foregrounding the metacommunicative\/pragmatic function of such language use over referential function highlights a broader Native American identity shared by speaker and audience and creates a discourse space in which a subsequent English speech event is understood by audience members to come from, and be informed by, a Native identity.","creator":["Jocelyn C. Ahlers"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7d8b9de-b320-3083-be2e-86491f333d88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Framing Discourse: Creating Community through Native Language Use","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104081","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gil Z. Hochberg"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4122319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4122319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The \"Problem of Immigration\" from a Child's Point of View: The Poetics of Abjection in Albert Swissa's \"Aqud\" and Farida Belghoul's \"Georgette!\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4122319","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10939,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[424542,424621],[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[29842,29920],[67326,67426]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many feminist sociologists would agree that most breastfeeding research to date has been primarily undertaken from the perspective of medical and public health discourses. While there is evidence of a shift in research on breastfeeding to qualitative studies that focus on the lived experiences of breastfeeding women, this article addresses a number of concerns remaining in the literature surrounding breastfeeding. First, it questions the absence of breastfeeding as a legitimate philosophical topic, and, as a corollary, the invisibility of breastfeeding women as moral or ethical subjects. Second, by drawing on Michel Foucault's account of ethics and Judith Butler's notion of performativity, it is suggested that breastfeeding is best conceptualized as a gendered and embodied ethical practice rather than an aspect of one's being. Finally, this materialist approach to theorizing breastfeeding is discussed in relation to the Lucy Lawless poster that was released in Aotearoa New Zealand to launch World Breastfeeding Week in August 2002.","creator":["Rhonda Shaw"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73afc6fd-51a7-37ad-9951-950fcb4c01e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3874408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"78","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Performing Breastfeeding: Embodiment, Ethics and the Maternal Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874408","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8358,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444109,444247]],"Locations in B":[[28867,29005]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Albrecht Classen"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27712460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03636941"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cca9fba-3035-317c-97b1-0739e7a0a270"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27712460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jenglgermphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of English and Germanic Philology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Moriz, Tristan, and Ulrich as Master Disguise Artists: Deconstruction and Reenactment of Courtliness in \"Moriz von Cra\u00fbn\", \"Tristan als M\u00f6nch\", and Ulrich von Liechtenstein's \"Frauendienst\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27712460","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":14444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Angela McRobbie"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4889dda0-cb33-3c78-9c9b-7f674114c542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"75","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mothers and Fathers, Who Needs Them?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395866","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven Seidman"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8096f6e-0ee4-314f-990b-f1387e60fb56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer-Ing Sociology, Sociologizing Queer Theory: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201862","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Orrin N. C. Wang"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e877990d-252f-3513-afb7-1872014e6223"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Coming Attractions: \"Lamia\" and Cinematic Sensation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601643","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":18387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Examining ways in which gender is marked in the press coverage of self-produced, folk-rock artist and record label owner Ani DiFranco, this paper explores how language employed in rock criticism frequently functions to devalue and marginalise women artists' musicianship, influence on fans, and contribution to the rock canon. Investigating how the readerships of different publications may influence the ways in which journalists mark gender in rock criticism, this study utilises a corpus of 100 articles on Ani DiFranco published between 1993 and 2003 from print and online magazines and newspapers in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom. Focusing on the use of inter- and intra-gender artist comparisons, adjectival gender markers and 'metaphorical gender' markers in artist background information, lyrical and musical analyses and descriptions of fans, this analysis maps the discursive conventions that music critics and theorists continue to rely on in reviews and profiles of women artists.","creator":["Anna Feigenbaum"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bab231a-00e1-317b-85b7-47f949ce3257"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Some Guy Designed This Room I'm Standing in': Marking Gender in Press Coverage of Ani DiFranco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877593","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tru Leverette"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"680f8f72-a6c6-36de-8ae8-e268fcac45e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44489344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Re-visions of Difference in Danzy Senna's \"Caucasia\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489344","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8266,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123726,123881]],"Locations in B":[[18816,18971]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article brings together a Muslim theologian from colonial India and a contemporary artist from postcolonial Pakistan, namely Ashraf 'Al\u012b Th\u0101nv\u012b and Naiza Khan, respectively. In their different yet related ways, Th\u0101nv\u012b and Khan both repurpose the idea of \u201cornamental femininity.\u201d Khan's artworks further problematize some of the key assumptions about sexual difference in Th\u0101nv\u012b's body of work, such as \u201cwomen's ruination,\u201d feminine fragility, and chastity. Khan eschews the reduction of the feminine to the ornamental, but also embraces the transcendental possibilities of the ornamental. She thus welcomes the mediating function of ornaments, which facilitate experiences of transcendence that are essential for becoming an aesthetic subject. Khan is able to achieve this because of an internal contradiction in the logic of ornamental femininity within Th\u0101nv\u012b's moral theological tradition. By becoming attuned to her art objects, we are in a better position to analyze how traditionalist theologians construct the idea of sexual difference in Muslim South Asia. The article also comments on Khan's more general theoretical contribution to contemporary art, which consists of highlighting the ongoing tension between our named, sexed bodies and the potentialities of flesh.","creator":["Ali Altaf Mian"],"datePublished":"2020-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.5.2.0257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20555601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"939666847"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016268510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f37745b-e171-366b-b820-5b48780ae320"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/reorient.5.2.0257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reorient"}],"isPartOf":"ReOrient","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Displaced Ornaments: Naiza Khan's Critique of Sexual Difference in Muslim South Asia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.5.2.0257","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["William Pinar","Carmel Borg","Peter Mayo"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f904e40-ea8a-364f-a2ac-1c4aebcb8f88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Curriculum as a Political Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979057","volumeNumber":"276","wordCount":3208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alisse Theodore Portnoy"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3595025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751275"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44849568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33c7e016-2ce0-3dd7-8b1e-7a5b538fad15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3595025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlyrepublic"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Early Republic","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"610","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-610","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Female Petitioners Can Lawfully Be Heard\": Negotiating Female Decorum, United States Politics, and Political Agency, 1829-1831","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3595025","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":16120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Kim"],"datePublished":"2016-06-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.38.2.0173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"819aafce-db8e-366f-a232-b5100a82a78e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.38.2.0173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Encounters with the Material: Krzysztof Wodiczko and Site-Specific Media Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.38.2.0173","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Situated within German feminist practices of the 1970s, Jutta Br\u00fcckner's Hungerjahre attempts not only to represent the director's youth during the years of the Economic Miracle, but also to find expressive forms to articulate experiences that evade language. While the voice-over searches for such a language, it is hindered, I argue, by its very embeddedness in the structures that produce such stunted subjectivities as Ursula's, the protagonist of the film. More compelling is the voice that Ursula herself constructs through the repressive mechanisms of socialization that shape her subjectivity. By examining how she speaks through the contradictions that characterize her socialization\u2014the double bind of consumption and denial\u2014I emphasize her ability to speak through such contradictions, to create her own language and unique voice through the very oppressive terms that otherwise deform her identity. Although her \"language\" is ultimately self-defeating and self-destructive, it still manifests the strands of a unique self emerging within the fabric of social, cultural, and historical conditions woven into her subjectivity.","creator":["Margaret McCarthy"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20ce2d56-9df6-3e1a-9522-a998736fb231"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Consolidating, Consuming, and Annulling Identity in Jutta Br\u00fcckner's Hungerjahre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688814","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9786,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59702,59790]],"Locations in B":[[4702,4792]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ra\u00e9l Jero Salley"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41721405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"178421d5-1946-300b-8d8c-ea7ceb9f7695"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41721405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Zanele Muholi's Elements of Survival","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41721405","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract \u201cRural drag\u201d is the appropriation, arrangement, and deployment of rural fashion, objects, practices, and aesthetics in order to assert membership in and support for white, settler heteropatriarchy. This rhetorical practice draws from a cultural repository of rural symbols and tropes called the \u201crural imaginary\u201d to establish a rhetorical link between rural space and the privileges of white supremacy, heteropatriarchy, and settler colonialism.","creator":["Garrett W. Nichols"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.3.0041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14ae4937-bd96-3833-a071-3268b221af68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.4.3.0041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rural Drag: Fashioning Rurality and Privilege","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.3.0041","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10308,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124745]],"Locations in B":[[10147,10298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Herrmann"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a6d882e-d8f8-3814-ad27-3a487382cdd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imitations of Marriage: Crossdressed Couples in Contemporary Lesbian Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178086","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cluster headache is a notoriously painful and dramatic disorder. Unlike other pain disorders, which tend to affect women, cluster headache is thought to predominantly affect men. Drawing on ethnography, interviews with headache researchers, and an analysis of the medical literature, this article describes how this epidemiological \"fact\"\u2014which recent research suggests may be overstated\u2014has become the central clue used by researchers who study cluster headache, fundamentally shaping how they identify and talk about the disorder. Cluster headache presents an extreme case of medicalized masculinity, magnifying the processes of gendering and bringing into relief features of the world whose routine operation we might otherwise overlook.","creator":["Joanna Kempner"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7768676-acc9-3385-bfbd-37592b64d9f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27640920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"656","pageStart":"632","pagination":"pp. 632-656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Uncovering the Man in Medicine: Lessons Learned from a Case Study of Cluster Headache","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640920","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9183,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555],[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[55692,55787],[59546,59695]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo Este artigo discute entendimentos metapragm\u00e1ticos e psicanal\u00edticos de linguagem, g\u00eanero e desejo. Discute o desafio que cada abordagem disciplinar sobre linguagem, g\u00eanero e desejo coloca uma para a outra. Argumenta que uma teoria robusta de linguagem e g\u00eanero precisa que a subjetividade seja vista como uma ordem de fen\u00f4meno distinta das ordens sem\u00e2ntica e pragm\u00e1tica do fen\u00f4meno lingu\u00edstico. O artigo sugere duas propostas modestas como uma maneira de come\u00e7ar a entender a inter-rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre linguagem e subjetividade. Come\u00e7a com um breve panorama das abordagens lingu\u00edstico-antropol\u00f3gicas para g\u00eanero e sexualidade. Ent\u00e3o descreve a pragm\u00e1tica \u00edntima do sujeito falante articulando trabalhos recentes sobre metapragm\u00e1tica e g\u00eanero com uma abordagem de inspira\u00e7\u00e3o psicanal\u00edtica sobre subjetividade e desejo.","creator":["Elizabeth A. Povinelli"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.1.205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b00ab67c-7ca1-3c96-b66c-35b78deead1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/estufemi.24.1.205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pragm\u00e1ticas ragm\u00e1ticas \u00edntimas:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.1.205","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13790,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"linguagem, subjetividade e g\u00eanero"} +{"abstract":"Abstract To achieve the transformational shift towards social accountability highlighted by UN post-2015 deliberations, more equitable and responsive relationships are necessary between marginalized communities and leaders. Of particular relevance to the sustainable development goal era is the need to build both local collective dynamics and longer-term exchange between excluded groups and state agencies as the foundation for accountable governance. Over the last decade, there has been a rapid expansion in the use of participatory video to unearth neglected perspectives, and transform communication dynamics within communities and across social levels, but it is only recently that claims of real-world influence have been interrogated critically. In this article, I propose that framing participatory video predominately as the means for participatory representation makes the curtailment of transformative social possibilities more likely. Therefore, I re-ground participatory video as a longer-term relational process (the means) towards community emergence (the consequence), in reference to key social psychological components. I draw on the use of participatory video by acutely marginalized communities in Kenya and Palestine to research the local enablers and barriers of change. Through exploring the possibilities and constraints in context I reflect on what such processes can contribute to community-driven development and how the key tensions can be negotiated. Looking ahead to SDGs, this raises key questions about the challenges faced in building longer-term accountability between the poorest and most marginalized groups and influential decision makers who can support them.","creator":["Jacqueline Shaw"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26165019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00103802"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49422397"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7701591-8693-3248-b410-b92b4ff26b62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26165019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"commdevej"}],"isPartOf":"Community Development Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"643","pageStart":"624","pagination":"pp. 624-643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-grounding participatory video within community emergence towards social accountability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26165019","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Despite the fame many castrated men gained on account of their singing voices, castrates rarely left personal accounts of their sense of self or their desires. In sharp contrast to the comparative silence of castrates, commentary about them was extensive and significantly shaped perceptions of desires ascribed to or circulating around them. Early modern interlocutors variously understood castrates to be deficient, excessive, or perverse in desire because of the physiological and social effects of being deprived of functional testicles. Denied access to normative modes of social and sexual legibility\u2014in addition to being unable to father children, they generally could not marry\u2014castrates nonetheless attempted to frame their desire in gender-normative terms. But the multiple and contradictory readings of the castrate body as defective and insufficient in terms of gender legibility facilitated the rendering of castrates as transgendered, disabled subjects.","creator":["Katherine Crawford"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.16.2.59","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58c3dad4-3a2b-3b72-adc2-efee77107db3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jearlmodcultstud.16.2.59"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Desiring Castrates, or How to Create Disabled Social Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.16.2.59","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":15057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Inge Stephan"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48016d20-d233-3a96-8d1c-0c41c8cec5b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23976808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201aGender\u2018. Eine n\u00fctzliche Kategorie f\u00fcr die Literaturwissenschaft","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976808","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":5984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JACQUES KHALIP"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67675fe3-91a3-3a4b-b918-f469bdfb89ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23127304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Disappearance in the World: Wollstonecraft and Melancholy Skepticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127304","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10567,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503676]],"Locations in B":[[52396,52494]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Havercraft"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee165a12-41fb-33e9-8d65-ae688f60f3e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40837277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Quand \u00e9crire, c'est agir : strat\u00e9gies narratives d'agentivit\u00e9 f\u00e9ministe dans Journal pour m\u00e9moire de France Th\u00e9oret","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40837277","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10501,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[455715,455887],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[24707,24879],[59706,59776]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gillian Rose"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58d9e0ee-9aa5-3654-9653-8a54911c5fb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44250866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Working on \"Women in white\", again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250866","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":3824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frederic Jameson"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Sartrean Origin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512981","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8635,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[434109,434205],[478955,479086],[479469,480082],[479724,480190]],"Locations in B":[[44706,44801],[45998,46129],[46135,46685],[46330,46794]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1359eb40-e7bd-3550-962f-24a2061b952a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981370","volumeNumber":"386","wordCount":3364,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524876]],"Locations in B":[[7261,7338]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marcia Stephenson"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Lesbian Trajectories in Sylvia Molloy's \"En breve c\u00e1rcel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251462","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":7161,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[200561,201138],[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[18142,18719],[19118,19186]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The essay follows the development of gender studies in Israel. It argues that from an invisible social category in the early stages of social research, women as a social category has been continuously viewed with different meanings through different epistemological lenses. A major shift has taken place from gender to genders, from 'women' as a social category to 'women' as fragmented, variegated, and multi-dimensional entities. This transition from gender to genders raises a dilemma, for feminism as theory and as a social movement, of what kind of feminist politics, if any at all, is possible or needed.","creator":["Hanna Herzog"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15572455"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61836701"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-212500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41805143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israstudforu"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Gender to Genders: Feminists Read Women's Locations in Israeli Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805143","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":12870,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[78418,78489]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Prior studies on innovation adoption have underscored that the refusal to adopt popular innovations becomes less accepted as such innovations spread. In this paper, I re-examine this prevailing account using the lens of gender. Focusing on the adoption of bird photography, a technologically advanced method to help save wild birds that became widespread in early twentieth-century America, I examine how gendered expectations in society shaped the adoption of an innovation. Using a unique database coded from archival documents of the first American bird protection movement, which was prominent between 1899 and 1920, I find that the non-adoption of a technological innovation is rather accepted when the meaning of the innovation is gendered and its (non)adoption is accountably masculine (or feminine). Stemming from that historical case, the results of this study have contemporary relevance to understanding the role of gendered expectations in shaping innovation adoption, particularly in science and technology.","creator":["Eun Young Song"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5cd9bbd-eb48-3bcc-b14d-0ceeff69c404"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26563388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"892","pageStart":"867","pagination":"pp. 867-892","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Gendered Innovation Adoption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563388","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":11097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Non-Adoption of Bird Photography, 1899\u20131920"} +{"abstract":"The article analyzes the relationship between naming and identity by reading \"Le Roman de Silence\" in the context of feminist and psychoanalytic theories. Silence's subjectivity is constituted by, and challenges, notions of a stable signifier.","creator":["ERIN F. LABBIE"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6e94d39-57e5-3721-8620-cca9caf94d7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Specular Image of the Gender-Neutral Name: Naming Silence in \"Le Roman de Silence\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869255","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Trechter"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45507304-b616-31b5-9636-f8c457057e1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/417667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"444","pagination":"pp. 444-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417667","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":1838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["STACY ALAIMO"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00014900-f58e-34a0-b9a7-3f8ea08e12c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44085415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Displacing Darwin and Descartes: The Bodily Transgressions of Fielding Burke, Octavia Butler, and Linda Hogan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085415","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7349,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476141]],"Locations in B":[[42979,44327]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Naomi E. Morgenstern"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Love Is Home-Sickness\": Nostalgia and Lesbian Desire in \"Sapphira and the Slave Girl\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345858","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12340,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[221942,222023]],"Locations in B":[[30725,30806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2026683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022362X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25dab87c-edc1-38c4-ab5b-14601e96154e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2026683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Philosophy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Journal of Philosophy, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2026683","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":3200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41683311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0458726X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60bb7893-9992-3e18-9028-d7bfa983dd1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41683311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lang"}],"isPartOf":"Langages","issueNumber":"134","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE CUMULATIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41683311","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["H. J. Jackson"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0cd9705-1cc1-3fa7-831f-d6aa9f6ee6c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"600","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-600","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coleridge's Women, or Girls, Girls, Girls Are Made to Love","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601034","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10795,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[306776,306861]],"Locations in B":[[11858,11947]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The problem of sexual violence against women has been analyzed with an eye to the causal significance of misogyny, but legal analysis has neglected the role played by other facets of sexism, including ostensibly \"benevolent\" sexism (or chivalry), in the perpetuation of rape culture, which normalizes this violence. Additionally, discussions of sexual violence often overlook the epidemic of acquaintance rape, although it accounts for the majority of sexual assaults committed. This Comment draws on social psychology and gender theory to posit that benevolent-sexist ideologies construct women as creatures devoid of agency, leading men to routinely presume women's consent to sexual activity whether or not such consent in fact exists. The legal treatment of women's rape and sexual harassment claims shows the catastrophic effects of this process as women are relegated cognitively, socially, and legally to a role of passive receptivity\u2014forced to prove an absence of consent as men are taught to assume its presence. This Comment reviews legal proposals to address rape and sexual harassment, some of which have been implemented, and concludes that direct legal reforms alone are insufficient. It asserts that gender norms, and the rigid binary division of gender, must be broken down if the rates at which rape is committed and acquitted are to decrease. It finally identifies possible steps that target the root of sexism and rape culture\u2014binary gender differentiation\u2014and concludes that the liberation of queer, trans, and intersex communities is essential to the feminist project of eradicating sexual violence.","creator":["Courtney Fraser"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"373a87c9-0b22-3b8f-9a4b-f6350c67c0c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From \"Ladies First\" to \"Asking for It\": Benevolent Sexism in the Maintenance of Rape Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758470","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":32589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle M. Lelwica"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adb19423-03a0-3311-b5ff-59a87da161b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Superstition to Enlightenment to the Race for Pure Consciousness: Antireligious Currents in Popular and Academic Feminist Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002342","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8861,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing on social dialogue and the sensory body within a tandem cycling group pairing blind and sighted riders, this article addresses the creation of a \u2018dialogical performance\u2019 (Conquergood, 1985), arguing for the ways integrated tandem cycling challenges distinct binary categories, bodily hierarchies, and constructs of social otherness. Based on one year of fieldwork conducted during cycling, I examine the form of \u2018togetherness\u2019 this activity creates, as well as the \u2018intersensory\u2019 aspects of this activity, discussing the ways it allows group members to critically reflect upon their bodily and sensory identities, and to re-embody sight as an active and somatic sense. Contributing to and integrating disability ethnography, anthropology of the senses, and the sociology of sporting bodies, I examine the ways this mutual experience enriches the meanings of both blindness and sight, and challenges rigid definitions of and boundaries around the senses, social identities, and bodily functions.","creator":["Gili Hammer"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"137349448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"144396b4-a2ce-3f73-b197-fdb3085c81ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Pedaling in pairs toward a \u2018dialogical performance\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359109","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Partnerships and the sensory body within a tandem cycling group"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c10e0ac2-42ff-3cc4-953d-42e88d6b3f4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395321","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["C. L. Cole","Shannon L. C. Cate"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2af7a00-4e1a-3427-8bfc-a8c0bfb8b3bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Compulsory Gender and Transgender Existence: Adrienne Rich's Queer Possibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649802","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kenneth W. Mack"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4486059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00ad8cf0-ed74-3c0f-b1e5-650f47fe15c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4486059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law and Mass Politics in the Making of the Civil Rights Lawyer, 1931-1941","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4486059","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":15940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael J. Shapiro"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0d1b734-70f6-3693-b883-5b7d955f1b88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sovereignty and Exchange in the Orders of Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644727","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":13175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Knights"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23316302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54355747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-214707"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be898ad6-b963-39b4-995b-bfeeba379d08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23316302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudmanaorga"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies of Management & Organization","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hanging out the Dirty Washing: Labor Process Theory and Its Dualistic Legacies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23316302","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah E. Chinn"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"441fe9f6-f121-376b-a09b-cb699fc7974c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649679","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":1261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is the first read through of Solve for X. [...] Kelvin [an actor] comes up to me and starts talking about the script, telling me that Judy is an amazing writer and even though things get changed he thinks it's not often needed. He is really enthusiastic about this play, he says he loves this part because he doesn 't have to be a 'bad guy', he gets to play love and sex, and he loves Judy's writing because it's like poetry. Jeff [the director] approaches us and asks me to put the scripts together with paper fasteners as I sit chatting. I make up a large box of scripts ready for each of us to have our own copy, even though everyone has already read it for auditions. [...] When everyone has organised themselves around the table Jeff gives us all a script. There is an air of anticipation and excitement as we are now starting a journey of exploration. Immediately everyone flicks through the script, and I notice that people start de and re-assembling it in folders, writing their names on it, some actors have highlighter pens at the ready. After a few minutes of fuss, Jeff calls us to attention and goes through the evening's agenda.","creator":["Amanda Rogers"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dfc862d-0cbe-3c79-aea1-3b6ef24d5e8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Geographies of performing scripted language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251313","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores racialization in the works of the Korean writer Yi Hyos\u014fk (1907-42) through the metaphor of intermarriage\u2014between Koreans and the Japanese, and Koreans and Russians\u2014at the peak of the Japanese Empire's expansion. It reads intermarriage against the \"archival grain,\" which used to link intermarriage solely with the Japanese colonial assimilation. Intermarriage opened many doors for Koreans to participate in empire building but also complicated the Japanese imperialism's assumed hierarchy. In the process, as a colonial Korean male intellectual writer, Yi shows that he is capable of \"reverse imperialism\" through the management of intimate sentiments of diverse subjects under the empire even while acutely aware of the fact that he can never fully become imperialist. This oscillation indicated both the Korean response to Japan's imperialism, and how it refined gender, race, and colonial spaces.","creator":["Su Yun Kim"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559530872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82ae8378-8707-3a5a-840c-4bd164f618d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44076776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies (1979-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Center for Korean Research in the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racialization and Colonial Space: Intermarriage in Yi Hyos\u014fk's Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076776","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":15114,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522874,522938]],"Locations in B":[[94784,94847]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Garth Andrew Myers"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Protecting Privacy in Foreign Fields","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250820","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":4482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses how the new type of worker is constructed in respect to gender in current management literature. It contributes to the increasing body of work in organisational theory and business ethics which interrogates management texts by analysing textual representations of gender. A discourse analysis of six texts reveals three inter-connected yet distinct ways in which gender is talked about. First, the awareness discourse attempts to be inclusive of gender yet reiterates stereotypes in its portrayal of women. Second, within the individualisation discourse, formerly discriminatory elements of gender lose their importance but a gender dimension reappears within the idea of 'Brand You'. Third, in the new ideal discourse, women are constructed as ideal workers of the future. The article argues that there is little space within this web of discourses for an awareness of the continued inequalities experienced by women in relation to men to be voiced and that this rhetorical aporia contributes to a 'post-feminist' climate.","creator":["Elisabeth K. Kelan"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25482224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01674544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83c4ca1c-755e-3e4c-974a-03525e608737"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25482224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbusiethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Business Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Discursive Construction of Gender in Contemporary Management Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25482224","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":13318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article examines how the phenomenon of the \u2018abaya-as-fashion is accommodated by the hegemonic order of Islamic patriarchy in the region of the Arab Gulf states. The traditional \u2018abaya, or body veil commonly worn by national women across the Arab Gulf, is juxtaposed against contemporary manifestations that have emerged in the context of fashion over the past ten years. It is proposed that, although the \u2018abaya-as-fashion presents a case of resistance and deviation from its original form, consent by the hegemonic order lies within the ultimate preservation of the \u2018abaya's essential qualities (long and black). Thus, in its reappropriation, the \u2018abaya-as-fashion notably disrupts its primary signification without ever fully displacing it, thereby constituting a form of passive resistance. This article interrogates the manner in which the \u2018abaya-as-fashion stands in contingent relation to the hegemonic order of Islamic patriarchy.","creator":["Noor Al-Qasimi"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/mew.2010.6.1.46","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7cff2cc-d748-320d-a7ce-2bee473682e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/mew.2010.6.1.46"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Immodest Modesty: Accommodating Dissent and the \u2018Abaya-as-Fashion in the Arab Gulf States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/mew.2010.6.1.46","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo examina as contribui\u00e7\u00f5es feministas e da teoria social contempor\u00e2nea a prop\u00f3sito das articula\u00e7\u00f5es entre viol\u00eancia, g\u00eanero e erotismo. O balan\u00e7o da bibliografia visa refinar os instrumentos conceituais que permitam apreender processos de reitera\u00e7\u00e3o e de mudan\u00e7as das normas de g\u00e9nero, a partir de experi\u00eancias sociais que se localizam no que a autora chama de limites da sexualidade. Os estudos relativos a diferentes modalidades de sadomasoquismo s\u00e3o analisados de modo a ilustrar algumas das alternativas situadas em tais limites. The present article examines the feminist contributions and the contemporary social theory on the articulations among violence, gender and eroticism. The balance of the bibliography aims at refining the conceptual instruments that permit the learning of processes of reiteration and of changes in the gender norms, from social experiences located in what the author calls edges of sexuality. The studies related to different modalities of sadomasochism are examined to illustrate some of the alternatives located within such limits.","creator":["Maria Filomena Gregori"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616507","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00347701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4763917-e212-3bc7-9367-5afc82e3fdb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41616507"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviantr"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Antropologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Revista de Antropologia","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Limites da sexualidade: viol\u00eancia, g\u00eanero e erotismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616507","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines how Austrian author Thomas Glavinic's novel Lisa (2011) challenges the necessity of corporeal presence as a precondition for becoming a subject with a legible and stable identity. Focusing on protagonist Tom's storytelling and his descriptions of Lisa, the mysterious criminal who is haunting him, this essay argues for an ontology of fluidity as an analytical framework for interrogating the ways in which relationality enables character construction through narration. Taking the concept of 'relationality' as its point of departure, this analysis of Glavinic's novel emphasizes how the text critically questions the necessity of physical presence as a precondition for existence as a subject and critiques normative conceptions of what constitutes an accepted and acceptable social body.","creator":["Simone Pfleger"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f06c1f58-878c-353f-babe-c530bc094ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44968639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrating Bodies into Existence: Negotiating the Necessity of Corporeality and Relationality for Subject Construction in Thomas Glavinic's novel \"Lisa\" (2011)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968639","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":7575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u00d6zlem Aslan","Zeynep Gambetti"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.1.1.0130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21599785"},{"name":"oclc","value":"702124609"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73c43663-c18c-3192-a0b1-719f40af0788"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/historypresent.1.1.0130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historypresent"}],"isPartOf":"History of the Present","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Provincializing Fraser's History: Feminism and Neoliberalism Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.1.1.0130","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":7290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This work argues from a social-theoretical perspective for the view that every concept of 'gender' remains bound to reproduction. As every culture is interested in its continuity, it distinguishes individuals according to their assumed possible contribution to reproduction and so develops a fundamental dual classification. Subsequent gender categories are necessarily derived from this one. The conceptual and empirical arguments for this thesis are illustrated through an imagined dystopia. There I envision under what conditions a complete dissociation of the concepts 'sex' and 'gender' from the old dual distinction would be possible and in what way a multiplicity of genders would be accomplished.","creator":["Hilge Landweer","Gertrude Postl"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bcd1343-688a-3e96-adf8-f2ad081a13df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Anthropological, Social, and Moral Limitations of a Multiplicity of Genders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811162","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shelley Tremain"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On the Government of Disability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559193","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8713,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[306765,306901],[493669,493799]],"Locations in B":[[28605,28741],[28775,28905]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eva Geulen"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9462ea6-647e-3570-b6dd-9948ad337108"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Resistance and Representation: A Case Study of Thomas Mann's \"Mario and the Magician\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108662","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11745,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513447]],"Locations in B":[[4027,4142]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louisa Schein"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5ceb1ca-3d66-3443-a190-11ca46802760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656655","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":16373,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[436146,436282],[436836,436962]],"Locations in B":[[90770,90906],[90911,91037]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margarita Vargas"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce29366-91e3-3a84-b559-de3a41719c28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging Identity through Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949492","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7162,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[58527,58837],[363448,363602],[430988,431111]],"Locations in B":[[4797,5105],[10825,10979],[26585,26708]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dennis A. Foster"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Pleasure and Community in Cultural Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489876","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lesley H. Walker"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30053986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30053986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sweet and Consoling Virtue: The Memoirs of Madame Roland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30053986","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NATHANIEL MYERS"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"542948fd-c286-38ec-b04c-58e3202811c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20779249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779249","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past decade, the mathematics education research community has incorporated more sociocultural perspectives into its ways of understanding and examining teaching and learning. However, researchers who have a long history of addressing anti-racism and social justice issues in mathematics have moved beyond this sociocultural view to espouse sociopolitical concepts and theories, highlighting identity and power at play. This article highlights some promising conceptual tools from critical theory and post-structuralism and makes an argument for why taking the sociopolitical turn is important for both researchers and practitioners.","creator":["Rochelle Guti\u00e9rrez"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218251"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36308865"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed261f82-d2ae-3e36-8163-31a1ff919355"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresematheduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Research in Mathematics Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sociopolitical Turn in Mathematics Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5951\/jresematheduc.44.1.0037","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":16140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pierre Saint-Amand","Jennifer Curtiss Gage"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b20d093e-9922-368f-880f-61ee1057377c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Terrorizing Marie Antoinette","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343862","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9013,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524252]],"Locations in B":[[53449,53544]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Ballif","D. Diane Davis","Roxanne Mountford"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9292e135-c77a-370e-9923-915444b55703"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"625","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-625","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Negotiating the Differend: A Feminist Trilogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866350","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":17215,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[518726,518789]],"Locations in B":[[98919,98982]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret\u00a0D. Kamitsuka"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/381210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfc55c08-adb7-31ab-9767-58e6f2cfea33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/381210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Feminist Postmodern and Postcolonial Interpretation of Sin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/381210","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":14517,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524252]],"Locations in B":[[23452,23547]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carlos A. Ball"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Essentialism and Universalism in Gay Rights Philosophy: Liberalism Meets Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829050","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10899,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[66226,66319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judy Garland is as \"obviously\" American as much as she is \"obviously\" a gay icon. While, on the one hand, the queer use of Garland depends on her hegemonic function for the national imaginary, it also queers its operation for and in what Lauren Berlant has called the National Symbolic. In this article, I concentrate in particular on the 1954 Cukor film A Star Is Born, crucial for her gay fans, and the ways it reveals Americanness as a structure of impersonation: I argue that we need to locate Garland's ordinariness within coordinates that determine American mass publicity as a whole: questions of \"race\" and the specificity of American identity, and the historic claim of \"Hollywood\" to a central place in the production of an American national imaginary. I then conclude with a number of suggestions for further discussion on the role of queer subcultural practice in this formation.","creator":["Brian Currid"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94a31f2d-10b9-3234-9d3d-d00649560c65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Judy Garland's American Drag","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157632","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":5862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b87cd598-99a3-3a4f-8c24-793740e450cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980850","volumeNumber":"364","wordCount":9984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The devastating Indian Ocean tsunami of 26 December 2004 caused massive destruction to coastal Aceh, Indonesia, and left countless numbers of people dead or wounded. This article focuses on the embodied narratives of three Acehnese women who survived the disaster and, like many others in Aceh, told their stories 'through' their bodies. A detailed ethnographic account of their narratives reveals how the body stretches temporally between the 'narrated event' and the 'narrative event', both through the representation of the body in narratives and through the embodied performance of narratives. Moving beyond meaning-centred analyses of narratives, I argue that the central accomplishment of these narratives is that they convey poignant bodily experiences to others and thereby create a shared, post-disaster, world. Ultimately, through these embodied narratives of disaster people remake their world, with others, in the wake of its 'unmaking'. Le terrible tsunami qui a d\u00e9vast\u00e9 les rivages de l'Oc\u00e9an Indien le 26 d\u00e9cembre 2004 a caus\u00e9 d'\u00e9normes destructions sur les c\u00f4tes de la province indon\u00e9sienne d'Aceh, faisant d'innombrables morts et bless\u00e9s. Le pr\u00e9sent article porte sur les narrations incorpor\u00e9es de trois femmes qui ont surv\u00e9cu \u00e0 la catastrophe. Comme beaucoup d'autres habitants de la province d'Aceh, elles ont racont\u00e9 leurs histoires \u00ab \u00e0 travers \u00bb leurs corps. Un compte-rendu ethnographique d\u00e9taill\u00e9 de leur narration r\u00e9v\u00e8le comment le corps s'\u00e9tire dans le temps entre \u00ab l'\u00e9v\u00e9nement narr\u00e9 \u00bb et \u00ab l'\u00e9v\u00e9nement narratif \u00bb, \u00e0 la fois par la repr\u00e9sentation du corps dans les r\u00e9cits et par la performance incarn\u00e9e de ceux-ci. Menant l'analyse au-del\u00e0 de la signification des r\u00e9cits, l'auteure avance que l'effet central de ces narrations est de transmettre aux autres des exp\u00e9riences corporelles poignantes et de cr\u00e9er ainsi un monde post-catastrophe partag\u00e9. Par ces r\u00e9cits incarn\u00e9s de la catastrophe, les gens refont leur monde avec les autres, apr\u00e8s qu'il a \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00ab d\u00e9fait \u00bb.","creator":["Annemarie Samuels"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45182881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"865984c1-c75e-347a-a3d0-f58c78d047b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45182881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"825","pageStart":"809","pagination":"pp. 809-825","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Embodied narratives of disaster: the expression of bodily experience in Aceh, Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45182881","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10646,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen Burt"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"69","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"As You Like It","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935243","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102335,102739]],"Locations in B":[[31665,32067]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, we focus on an initiative in England devised to prepare nonmathematics graduates to train as secondary mathematics teachers through a 6-month Mathematics Enhancement Course (MEC) to boost their subject knowledge. The course documentation focuses on the need to develop \"understanding mathematics in-depth\" in students in order for them to become successful mathematics teachers. We take a poststructural approach, so we are not interested in asking what such an understanding is, about the value of this approach or about the effectiveness of the MECs in developing this understanding in their participants. Instead we explore what positions this discourse of \"understanding mathematics in-depth\" makes available to MEC students. We do this by looking in detail at the \"identity work\" of two students, analysing how they use and are used by this discourse to position themselves as future mathematics teachers. In doing so, we show how even benign-looking social practices such as \"understanding mathematics in-depth\" are implicated in practices of inclusion and exclusion. We show this through detailed readings of interviews with two participants, one of whom fits with the dominant discourses in the MEC and the other who, despite passing the MEC, experiences tensions between her national identity work and MEC discourses. We argue that it is vital to explore \"identity work\" within teacher education contexts to ensure that becoming a successful mathematics teacher is equally available to all.","creator":["Sarmin Hossain","Heather Mendick","Jill Adler"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131954"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51bbaf43-69c3-30a7-8338-09225aacbfc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43589771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educstudmath"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Studies in Mathematics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Troubling \"understanding mathematics in-depth\": Its role in the identity work of student-teachers in England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589771","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":8577,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464317,464595]],"Locations in B":[[8536,8814]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Will"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"570","pagination":"pp. 570-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Pergolesi's \"Stabat Mater\" and the Politics of Feminine Virtue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600937","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":15670,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[304794,305049],[503621,503676]],"Locations in B":[[73462,73717],[79427,79486]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this Critical Review Essay, Professor Obiora brings together work from many traditions to address the issue of how differences among students beyond gender-and, in particular, differences in terms of race-might affect legal education. After situating the question in terms of the literature on legal education generally (including standard critiques), she delves into work on gender-in law generally, in legal education, in moral development and learning, in language use, and in education generally-to elucidate hypothesized differences between men and women that might affect differential experience in law school. She then moves on to make the picture more complex by drawing on work that indicates cross-cultural and class-based variation around conceptions of gender. Using research by sociolinguists on educational processes and work by historians and feminists of color on the intersection of gender, race, and class, Professor Obiora suggests specific ways in which women of color and working-class women might diverge from middle-class white women in their approach to legal education. In particular, she notes: (1) different speech patterns and linguistic socialization lend different meaning to \"voice,\" \"silence,\" and \"interruption\" in classroom interactions; (2) the historical distinction between public and private spheres has been much more sharply drawn for upper-middle-class white women than it has been for black and working-class women; (3) the exclusion of black women from male \"chivalry\" and feminine idealization necessitated the development of agency; black women could not afford to be passive. Given these points of divergence, but also given convergences among the experiences of women, Obiora suggests a complex and contextually sensitive approach to the issue of gender in legal education, one that takes seriously the differences that exist among women. Because of the richness of the literature reviewed here, we include a Bibliography at the end of the article.","creator":["L. Amede Obiora"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Neither Here nor There: Of the Female in American Legal Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828848","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":44680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"La th\u00e9orie que Michel Foucault d\u00e9veloppe dans l'Histoire de la sexualit\u00e9 peut sembler appropri\u00e9e pour amorcer une analyse f\u00e9ministe de la sexualit\u00e9. En Angleterre et en Am\u00e9rique du Nord, cet auteur est consid\u00e9r\u00e9 important pour les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes. Mais le discours de Foucault cache sous une forme non-conformiste un traitement arbitraire de l'histoire et une perception patriarcale de la sexualit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine. Son \u00e9tude pr\u00e9sente une vision dogmatique du pass\u00e9, c'est-\u00e0-dire une d\u00e9formation moderne de la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 historique et documentaire des si\u00e8cles qu'il \u00e9tudie. Tout comme les Anciens, il exclut les femmes de sa recherche sur la sexualit\u00e9, sauf dans le cadre institutionnel du mariage, et ent\u00e9rine mythes et pr\u00e9jug\u00e9s misogynes comme s'il s'agissait de la normalit\u00e9. Foucault perp\u00e9tue la vision de l'homme dominant \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des femmes. Michel Foucault's theory on sexuality as set forth in Histoire de la sexualit\u00e9 may seem appropriate to form the basis of a feminist critique of sexuality. In English and North American feminist studies, this author is regarded as important. But this treatise conceals in a non-conventional way an arbitrary approach to history and a patriarchal view of women's sexuality. Foucault's study investigates the past in a dogmatic way, namely via a contemporary distortion of the historic and documentary reality of the ages he studies. As the Ancients before him, he excludes women from his research on sexuality, except regarding sexuality in marriage. He endorses misogynous prejudices as though they were normal practices and thereby perpetuates the male-dominating view of women.","creator":["Jos\u00e9e N\u00e9ron"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40619650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Foucault, l'Histoire de la Sexualit\u00e9 et l'occultation de l'oppression des femmes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619650","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":18763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the last thirty years, the Supreme Court has steadily diminished the vigor of the Equal Protection Clause. It has turned away people of color who protest systems such as racialized mass incarceration because their oppression does not take the form of a \"racial classification.\" It has diluted the protections of intermediate scrutiny in gender discrimination and abortion cases. And it has turned its back on groups who once benefitted from \"animus\" review, including people with disabilities and poor people. Meanwhile, the only site of vitality in equal protection jurisprudence is the claims of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) individuals. Yet the Court, writing opinions that are rarely in conversation with one another, has made no effort to justify this growing divide. I call attention to this reordered equal protection landscape, which contrasts sharply with the conventional understanding of equal protection tiers of scrutiny. Specifically, I identify three manifestations of LGBT exceptionalism, advantages that LGBT people (especially gays and lesbians) enjoy compared to virtually every other civil rights constituency: (1) the Court has rigidly used the concept of a \"classification\" as a gatekeeping device, but it has ignored this requirement in sexual orientation cases; (2) LGBT people can invoke animus, a standard that emerged from cases brought by people of color, poor people, and people with disabilities but that the Court no longer recognizes in such cases; and (3) sexual orientation cases leave open important questions, including the legal standard that would apply to remedial policies based on sexual orientation\u2014quite unlike the Court's adverse resolution of these questions in race cases. The Supreme Court's recent Obergefell decision unveiled a uniquely capacious conception of animus, which indicates that sexual orientation is moving even further away from race and gender. These findings suggest that law professors and legal scholars reconsider how they teach and write about equal protection.","creator":["Russell K. Robinson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43921725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236898"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b406723-3d72-3a43-b069-4038c95e79ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43921725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unequal Protection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43921725","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":40064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite empirical findings on women's varied and often extensive participation in smallholder agriculture in Latin America, their participation continues to be largely invisible. In this article, largue that the intransigency of farming women's invisibility reflects, in part, a discursive construction of farmers as men. Through a mixture of quantitative and qualitative methods, including interviews with one hundred women in Calakmul, Mexico, I demonstrate the material implications of gendered farmer identities for women's control of resources, including land and conservation and development project resources. In particular, I relate the activities of one women's agricultural community-based organization and the members' collective adoption of transgressive identities as farmers. For these women, the process of becoming farmers resulted in increased access to and control over resources. This empirical case study illustrates the possibility of women's collective action to challenge and transform women's continued local invisibility as agricultural actors in rural Latin American spaces. A pesar de conclusiones emp\u00edricas sobre la variada y a menudo extensa participaci\u00f3n de la mujer en la agricultura minifundista en Am\u00e9rica Latina, esta participaci\u00f3n continua siendo en gran parte invisible. En este art\u00edculo, argumento que la intransigencia de la invisibilidad de la mujer agricultora refleja, en parte, una construcci\u00f3n discursiva que trata a todos los agricultores como hombres. Por una mezcla de m\u00e9todos cuantitativos y cualitativos, incluyendo entrevistas a cien mujeres en Calakmul, M\u00e9xico, demuestro las implicaciones materiales de las identidades agr\u00edcolas marcadas por g\u00e9nero, por el control de los recursos por parte de la mujer; incluyendo la tierra y su conservaci\u00f3n y los recursos para el desarrollo del proyecto. En particular, relaciono las actividades de una de las mujeres de la organizaci\u00f3n de la comunidad agr\u00edcola con la adopci\u00f3n colectiva de los miembros de identidades transgresivas como agricultores. Para estas mujeres, el proceso de hacerse agricultoras les dio mayor acceso a los recursos y a su control. Este caso pr\u00e1ctico emp\u00edrico ilustra la posibilidad de realizar una acci\u00f3n colectiva femenina para desafiar y transformar la continua invisibilidad local de la mujer como actoras de la agricultura en espacios rurales latinoamericanos.","creator":["Claudia Radel"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8754fb86-41bb-370f-9d9f-8fc6b9cd69ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41261456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Social sciences - Sociology","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"BECOMING FARMERS: Opening Spaces for Women's Resource Control in Calakmul, Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261456","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Teaching about intersecting, fluid and historically contingent identities has been taken up extensively within the sociology of race, class and gender and women's studies. Oddly, the case of Jewish women has been virtually left out of this robust literature. This article explores the challenges raised through teaching the course \"Jewish Women in Contemporary America,\" and links these challenges to the padagogy of race, class and gender more broadly. Using the classroom as a research site, the authors conducted post-course interviews with students and kept detailed field notes on class sessions. The authors use Judith Butler's theorization of performativity to analyze classroom dynamics. After redesigning and teaching the course a second time, the authors conclude that the relationship between \"experience\" and \"theory\" must be constantly interrogated by both instructor and students; that personal narratives merit space within the classroom, but must be problematized; and a critical Jewish Women's Studies, based on illuminating the socially constructed and hybrid character of contemporary Jewish American women's identities, can help to expose the tendency to methodological essentialism still prevalent in much of the feminist race, class, and gender literature.","creator":["Kathie Friedman","Karen Rosenberg"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6654067-cf62-31a8-8c87-1b608f331b2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20058595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Identities in the Classroom: Teaching Jewish Women's Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058595","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Educational barriers for youth in foster care are formidable and complex, with only 50% of youth in foster care receiving a high school or equivalency diploma by the time they age out of care, and 1% to 11% of current and former youth in foster care completing a college degree. Despite robust research about the educational outcomes of youth in foster care, little is known about the educational experiences of youth in foster care who are LGBTQ\u2014who represent nearly 20% of youth in care. Within this Community Based Participatory (CBPR) study, in depth qualitative interviews explored the experiences of 25 youth formerly in foster care, all of whom are LGBTQ, between the ages of 18 and 26 in Los Angeles County. Findings revealed that these youth shared educational barriers and challenges common to all youth in foster care, in addition to experiencing chronic bullying and harassment within K-12 settings. For those youth who were able to attend college, California\u2019s network of campus-based support programs for current and former youth in foster care were hugely supportive.","creator":["Sarah Mountz","Moshoula Capous-Desyllas","Lalaine Sevillano"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48626317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00094021"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560242985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8b3d02a-cac2-3ed8-b265-6e5ff64539e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48626317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"childwelfare"}],"isPartOf":"Child Welfare","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Child Welfare League of America","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Social Work","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Educational Trajectories of Youth Formerly in Foster Care who are LGBTQ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48626317","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":7759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Before, During, and After Emancipation"} +{"abstract":"Work on homicide has increasingly moved to cultural analysis that reframes basic sociological concepts like structure and value. In addition, symbolic interactionist work has increasingly focused on cultural structures. This study contributes to both efforts, framing homicide as variation in performances for group boundary production, that is, for the social distribution of prestige. Does gender and race identity represent different ways of performing homicide? The study uses Supplementary Homicide Reports, 2009 of the Unified Crime Reports data that the US Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation prepares. The study examines four direct effects of boundary production, namely black male, black female, white male, and white female statuses. It includes five performance regularities, gender and race, age, relationship to victim, condition of the homicide, and weapon used. The cross-classified analyses show cultural boundaries that associate with gender and race statuses. The study tests urban and southern residences of homicidal offenders using enter hierarchical logistic regressions and finds support for the hypothesis that cultural performances produce boundaries for geo-economic and geo-historical identifications.","creator":["Anthony J. Lemelle"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56210516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007215116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"232b60ee-f3ad-3efc-9832-f177a80a2eb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43525527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"546","pagination":"pp. 546-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Gender, Race, and Homicide: Precarious Gesture and Bringing the Generalized Other Back In","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525527","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As more states consider marriage recognition for same-sex couples, attention turns to the conflict between marriage equality and religious liberty. Legal scholars are contributing substantially to the debate, generating a robust academic literature and writing directly to state lawmakers urging them to include a \"marriage conscience protection\" containing a series of religious exemptions in marriage equality legislation. Yet the intense scrutiny of religious freedom specifically in the context of same-sex marriage obscures the root of the conflict. At stake is the central role of relationships in expressing one's sexual orientation; same-sex relationships constitute lesbian and gay identity, and religious objections arise largely in response to such relationships. Marriage is merely one form of sexual orientation identity enactment, and religious objections to same-sex marriage are merely a subset of objections to sexual orientation equality. This Article argues for an antidiscrimination regime that protects same-sex relationships under the rubric of sexual orientation, and it resists the use of marriage equality legislation as a vehicle for undermining current sexual orientation\u2014based nondiscrimination provisions. Even as the \"marriage conscience protection\" proposed by religious liberty scholars misapprehends the basis of the underlying conflict\u2014that same-sex relationships are an expression of identity and that religious objections largely relate to that identity\u2014its sweeping language threatens to undermine antidiscrimination protections and target lesbians and gay men based not primarily on their marriages but instead more generally on their same-sex relationships. It does so at a moment when antidiscrimination law is increasingly acknowledging the relational component of sexual orientation such that impermissible discrimination based on sexual orientation includes discrimination against same-sex relationships. By permitting religious organizations, as well as some employers, property owners, and small businesses, to discriminate against same-sex couples in situations far removed from marriage itself, the \"marriage conscience protection\" would threaten substantial progress made in antidiscrimination law. Worse yet, using the term \"marriage conscience protection\" to label instances of discrimination against same-sex relationships would hide an increasing amount of sexual orientation discrimination that antidiscrimination law is just beginning to adequately address.","creator":["Douglas NeJaime"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23408736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcf00fdc-2834-3d2f-8d74-a3e8d1ea7bcb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23408736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70,"pageEnd":"1238","pageStart":"1169","pagination":"pp. 1169-1238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marriage Inequality: Same-Sex Relationships, Religious Exemptions, and the Production of Sexual Orientation Discrimination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23408736","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":37849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. G. Zerilli"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"892b2033-3bd8-3df1-be2e-86fc638f5a96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Process without a Subject: Simone de Beauvoir and Julia Kristeva on Maternity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174729","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11677,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[302042,302220],[481756,481841],[503386,503495]],"Locations in B":[[16964,17142],[68505,68596],[69228,69348]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NANCY SORKIN RABINOWITZ"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31864718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3319412a-c392-3ea0-84cd-b43840853ce4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44578431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"PERSONAL VOICE\/FEMINIST VOICE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578431","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper offers a critical investigation of the theological assumptions that lie within three forms of modern feminist ethics, with a view to challenging feminist ethics to enter the new theological possibilities opened up in postmodernity for the conceiving of God. The first part of the paper considers the conceiving of God in modern feminisms, in which theology becomes ethics. The consequences of this development are considered. The second part of the paper investigates the turn into postmodernity which hears the saying of the death of God and the critique of onto-theology. This disturbance to the foundations of feminist ethics is understood as part of a wider critique of humanism manifest particularly in gender theory. That the end of the modern human subject might allow a conceiving of God through an understanding of the performative is the restored orthodoxy to which the paper points.","creator":["Susan F. Parsons"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27504209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13862820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c143c2ec-29ca-3b1c-ba1b-d7b4bd9b0b87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27504209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethitheomoraprac"}],"isPartOf":"Ethical Theory and Moral Practice","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceiving of God: Theological Arguments and Motives in Feminist Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27504209","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48245,48386]],"Locations in B":[[42074,42215]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Kegan Gardiner"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36b1dcc9-78df-3c99-a96e-50af8dab90ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23720196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Female Masculinity and Phallic Women\u2014 Unruly Concepts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720196","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dianna Niebylski"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b4c51d3-a9cb-3ab1-95fc-c1a06e4da0f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Spectacle and Nomadic Bodies in Alicia Borinsky's \"Mina cruel\" and \"Cine continuado\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021144","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roger Deacon"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4f71503-039d-37b2-8823-89320c5ec732"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"92","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802107","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary Hennessy"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b315301e-4e62-39bf-aff7-2b79ca957147"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"973","pageStart":"964","pagination":"pp. 964-973","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Theory: A Review of the \"Differences\" Special Issue and Wittig's \"The Straight Mind\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174918","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4210,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[27516,27567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Workplace narratives are one means of satisfying the complex demands of identity construction at work. Following reference to the relevant literature, this article discusses the range of narratives identified in our extensive New Zealand corpus of workplace interactions, distinguishing between more socially-oriented 'workplace anecdotes', and more transactionally-oriented 'working stories'. While both orientations are often relevant, the distinction is useful in examining how different types of narratives function in the construction of diverse facets of an individual's identity. In the final section, one particular workplace narrative illustrates the complexities involved in accomplishing a narrative in a formal meeting, and the analysis explores how two members of a senior management team use the narrative to negotiate contrasting aspects of their professional and social workplace identities.","creator":["JANET HOLMES"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c24a54e-1f68-3331-b399-eaa7d976bd0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"700","pageStart":"671","pagination":"pp. 671-700","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Story-telling at work: a complex discursive resource for integrating personal, professional and social identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048848","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":14071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses complications to how different disciplines define, study, and theorize sexuality, gender, gender identity, and other intersecting categories of subjectivity, like age, race, class, ethnicity, and so on. Categories that seem to get stabilized in empirical work are destabilized in theoretical and narrative research. These differences in key definitions and even refusal to make definitions mark how different disciplines approach research on gender identities and expression and sexualities. The contingency, relationality, and space-related aspects of gender and sexual identity, so key to humanitiesbased work and qualitative research, may not be amenable to measurement by some research methods. In trying to sort out methodological quandaries in quantitative work, complex subjectivities become a problem to work around, not focus on. What subjectivities mean to those who are developing them or grappling with their limitations may not get the same attention as more measurable things. This article advocates for thinking more capaciously about what counts as research, pushing for recognition of the work queer communities and theorists have been doing for generations and for the work that gender and sexual minority youth continue do now. Complexity, instability, and relationality have been queer practices for a long time, stimulating and responding to generative perversities.","creator":["Cris Mayo"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013189X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a699abe-2f01-3069-952f-2e3f52ab2bd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44972481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educrese"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Researcher","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"530","pagination":"pp. 530-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer and Trans Youth, Relational Subjectivity, and Uncertain Possibilities: Challenging Research in Complicated Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972481","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jules Law"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A \"Passing Corporeal Blight\": Political Bodies in \"Tess of the D'Urbervilles\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829203","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["D. Shane Combs","Erin A. Frost","Michelle F. Eble"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15349322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a63de703-90e5-3570-8a0a-fffc5bb447d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstud"}],"isPartOf":"Composition Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Cincinnati on behalf of Composition Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Collaborative Course Design in Scientific Writing: Experimentation and Productive Failure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157103","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7011,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[29929,30005]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Earth"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13552074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44523373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"238532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81a82153-a1d4-3eb2-b85e-434df89625b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20461141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genddeve"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Diversifying Gender: Male to Female Transgender Identities and HIV\/AIDS Programming in Phnom Penh, Cambodia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461141","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The experiences of men in traditional religions are complex, at times inconsistent, and not necessarily the direct result of religious teachings. This article draws from two qualitative case studies to examine the ways in which evangelical and Latter-Day Saint men understand masculinity and their spiritual beliefs in the context of sexual activity. The authors present two masculine practices\u2014acceptance of sexual rejection and sexual indifference\u2014that allow religious men in this study to simultaneously challenge and uphold the system of hegemonic masculinity that their traditions promote. These findings point to the moments when creative, interpretative work helps religious men to reconcile their experiences with religious expectations and to alleviate the tensions they face in their everyday lives. This article offers new insights into how gender and sexuality studies may be integrated into the sociology of religion.","creator":["Kelsy Burke","Amy Moff Hudec"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49890280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8020d6f4-5620-3738-9a2b-b998e9c2232d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24644344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsciestudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"330","pagination":"pp. 330-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Sexual Encounters and Manhood Acts: Evangelicals, Latter-Day Saints, and Religious Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644344","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist scholarship on gender-based violence in the Caribbean has examined how relations of power account for women's increased vulnerability. While such frameworks are useful, they run the risk of reproducing heteronormative theorising on gender-based violence, and fail to account for the multiple ways in which gender and sexuality are implicated in the violence experienced by diverse groups. This article examines the gendered and heterosexist production of violence in online Caribbean newspapers. Mobilizing insights from Caribbean gender and sexuality studies scholars, it takes as its archive a sample of images and articles on sexual violence, child sexual abuse, intimate partner violence, and violence against transgender, intersex, and gender non-conforming persons, exposing the heteronormative and gender normative framing of these accounts. The aim of this article is two-fold: to expose the heterosexist and gender normative assumptions in media reporting, and to make a case for the relevance of Caribbean feminist and queer theorising to understanding the gendered and heterosexist production of violence in the region. La escolaridad feminista sobre la violencia basada en g\u00e9nero en el Caribe ha examinado c\u00f3mo las relaciones de poder explican el aumento en la vulnerabilidad entre las mujeres. Aunque estos marcos son \u00fatiles, corren el riesgo de generar una teor\u00eda de Homosexualismo respecto la violencia de g\u00e9nero y no explica las m\u00faltiples maneras en que el g\u00e9nero y la sexualidad est\u00e1n implicados en la violencia experimentada por los diversos grupos. En este art\u00edculo se examina la producci\u00f3n de la violencia de g\u00e9nero y heterosexista en los peri\u00f3dicos en l\u00ednea del Caribe. Moviliza las ideas de los investigadores de estudios de g\u00e9nero y sexualidad Caribe\u00f1os, y utiliza como archivo una muestra de im\u00e1genes y art\u00edculos sobre la violencia sexual, el abuso sexual, violencia en la pareja y violencia contra transexuales, intersexuales y las personas con estilos de vida no convencionales en cuanto al g\u00e9nero, exponiendo el encuadre normativo heteronormat\u00edvo y el g\u00e9nero de estas explicaciones. El objetivo de este art\u00edculo es doble: exponer las suposiciones heterosexista y de g\u00e9nero en los informes de los medios de comunicaci\u00f3n y abogar por la importancia de la teor\u00eda feminista y homosexual Caribe\u00f1a para comprender la producci\u00f3n de la violencia de g\u00e9nero y heterosexista en la regi\u00f3n. L'\u00e9rudition f\u00e9ministe sur la violence sexiste dans r\u00e9gion des Cara\u00efbes a examin\u00e9 comment les relations de pouvoir tiennent compte de la vuln\u00e9rabilit\u00e9 accrue des femmes. Bien que de tels cadres soient utiles, ils courent le risque de reproduire une th\u00e9orie h\u00e9t\u00e9ro-th\u00e9orique sur la violence sexiste et ne tiennent pas compte des multiples fa\u00e7ons dont le genre et la sexualit\u00e9 sont impliqu\u00e9s dans la violence subie par divers groupes. Cet article examine la production de violence sexiste et h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexiste dans les journaux en ligne des Cara\u00efbes. En mobilisant les id\u00e9es des sp\u00e9cialistes des \u00e9tudes sexuelles et sexistes des Cara\u00efbes, il prend comme archives un \u00e9chantillon d'images et d'articles sur la violence sexuelle, l'abus sexuel des enfants, la violence conjugale et la violence contre les personnes transsexuelles, intersexu\u00e9s et non conformistes, exposant le cadre de l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rog\u00e9n\u00e9it\u00e9 et la normatif du genre de ces comptes. Le but de cet article est double: exposer les hypoth\u00e8ses des normatives h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexistes et de genre dans les rapports m\u00e9diatiques et faire valoir la pertinence de la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe de l'homosexualisme des Cara\u00efbes pour comprendre la production sexiste et h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexiste de la violence dans la r\u00e9gion.","creator":["Tonya Haynes","Halimah A. F. DeShong"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44732906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"561345841"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9ffc183-a398-32f2-a3b7-9c167dc9c4f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44732906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering Feminist Approaches to Gender-based Violence in the Anglophone Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44732906","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scheff (2000, 2003) has argued that shame, while recognised as a social emotion, is frequently explored outside of the social matrix and with limited reference to its role in human behaviour. Drawing on empirical qualitative research with adults living in poverty in the UK, this article illuminates a) how the co-construction of shame (feeling shame and being shamed) is fundamental in framing how people living in poverty respond to the social demands on them; and b) how shame as a phenomenon may also take on a dynamic of its own, ultimately used by those feeling shame to distance themselves from the socially constructed and denigrated 'Other' (Lister, 2004). The article shifts the analysis beyond shame arising from a threat to the immediate 'social bond' (Lewis, 1971), instead presenting it as a social fact which not only undermines human dignity but risks the atomisation of modern society.","creator":["Elaine Chase","Robert Walker"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63d1ab43-c19d-3774-b017-fa2227cfb74b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24433229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Co-construction of Shame in the Context of Poverty: Beyond a Threat to the Social Bond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433229","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The focus of this article is the proliferation of new charismatic Pentecostal churches in the South Pacific nation Vanuatu. The established Presbyterian Church on the island of Ambrym is compared to a new Pentecostal church in the capital Port Vila in terms of gender. The idea of a vanishing form of masculinity and the development of a form of ' gender nostalgia' is emphasized in the comparison. By looking at gender relations, new perspectives on the difference between the new churches and more established churches emerge, and these perspectives, I argue, might also give us an understanding of why fission seem to be inevitable for the new Pentecostal churches in Vanuatu. Le pr\u00e9sent article s'int\u00e9resse \u00e0 la prolif\u00e9ration des nouvelles \u00c9glises pentec\u00f4tistes charismatiques au Vanuatu, une nation du Pacifique Sud. Il propose un comparaison du point de vue des rapports de genre entre l'\u00c9glise presbyt\u00e9rienne \u00e9tablie dans l'\u00eele d'Ambrym et une nouvelle assembl\u00e9e pentec\u00f4tiste de la capitale, Port Vila. Cette comparaison met l'accent sur l'id\u00e9e d'une forme de masculinit\u00e9 en voie de disparition et sur le d\u00e9veloppement d'une certaine \u00ab nostalgie de genre \u00bb . L'examen des rapports sociaux de sexes fait appara\u00eetre de nouveaux angles d'approche de la diff\u00e9rence entre les nouvelles \u00c9glises et les plus \u00e9tablies. L'auteure affirme que ces approches peuvent permettre de comprendre pourquoi le schisme semble in\u00e9vitable pour les nouvelles \u00c9glises pentec\u00f4tistes du Vanuatu.","creator":["Annelin Eriksen"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b9a81ee-45ab-3219-8b66-5774997ea88f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41350809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The pastor and the prophetess: an analysis of gender and Christianity in Vanuatu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350809","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Die Geschlechtlichkeit des von Friedrich Schlegel initiierten und ma\u00dfgeblich bestimmten Projekts der Fr\u00fchromantik hat in den letzten Jahrzehnten zu einer Spaltung innerhalb der Literaturwissenschaft gef\u00fchrt. Auf der einen Seite stehen Interpretationen, die Schlegels fr\u00fchromantische \u00c4sthetik als androzentrisch und narzisstisch verurteilen und in Dorothea Veits Schriften eine Kritik und Subversion dieser \u00c4sthetik erkennen. Auf der anderen Seite finden sich von der Geschlechterfrage absehende Lekt\u00fcren der Fr\u00fchromantik, die ihr entweder \u00c4sthetizismus und Irrationalit\u00e4t vorwerfen oder ein innovatives Potential zuschreiben. In diesem Aufsatz wird versucht, zwischen diesen Forschungsrichtungen eine Br\u00fccke zu schlagen, indem ein kommunikativer Begriff der Schlegelschen Fr\u00fchromantik entwickelt wird. Das Projekt wird als ein paradoxes, ironisch-poetisches Streben nach vollendeter Mitteilung vermittels eines Gespr\u00e4chs \u00fcber die Poesie verstanden, das auch diejenigen mit einbezieht, die es in Frage stellen - sei es eine weibliche Schriftstellerin wie Dorothea Veit, ein romantikkritischer Dichter wie Friedrich Richter oder ein skeptischer Leser.","creator":["May Mergenthaler"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27676196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1021b228-7dab-3212-ba8b-b2a0629e9df2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27676196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"302","pagination":"pp. 302-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Die Fr\u00fchromantik als Projekt vollendeter Mitteilung zwischen den Geschlechtern: Friedrich Schlegel und Dorothea Veit im Gespr\u00e4ch \u00fcber Friedrich Richters Romane","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27676196","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":8355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SHARON MURPHY","CURT DUDLEY-MARLING"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41483065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fd97175-82c9-34be-8b1e-e8097126a492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41483065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editors' Pages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41483065","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":2104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Cooper Albright"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6450522f-3f69-326e-aecf-5531410b5fa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23266962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Situated Dancing: Notes from Three Decades in Contact with Phenomenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266962","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8318,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147800]],"Locations in B":[[26579,26763]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db9c850c-5f3f-3e07-a7e7-5b0f3f0f657f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157340","volumeNumber":"499","wordCount":12504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alexandra Gold"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d62aa28e-36e1-3cee-ad76-566eea73d273"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Not Our Regularly Scheduled Programming: Integrating Feminist Theory, Popular Culture, and Writing Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.26.2-3.0156","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine Arens","Elizabeth M. Richmond-Garza"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb1225b8-923b-3378-8f9e-4d13496b3288"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Canon of Theory: Report on an Institutional Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247126","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the 19th and early 20th centuries, despite the cultural ideal of private and public as separate spheres and a lack of formal voting rights, many middle-class women engaged in philanthropic and social work outside the home. Taking as its focus a group of middle-class women in Bolton, Lancashire, this paper conducts a prosopography, or group biography, in order to shed light on female citizenship and make a historical contribution to literature on citizenship beyond voting rights. The paper uses archive traces to reconstruct the experience of the female philanthropist and understand her motivations. The focus of the paper is a new theoretical approach to women's citizenship in the early 20th century. Using Michel Foucault's concept of biopolitics, or life politics, the paper reconceptualises women's social work as a form of biopolitical patriotism that was the basis of a scalar claim to citizenship. This historical evidence from Bolton reveals that biopolitical action was not solely the preserve of the state. Women claimed fitness for citizenship and the vote by nation-building, carrying out work that shaped children into the citizens of the future and safeguarded the moral and physical health of the nation.","creator":["Francesca Moore"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45147009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"580de55e-bb6b-3f18-8b94-e5192150d159"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45147009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'A band of public-spirited women': middle-class female philanthropy and citizenship in Bolton, Lancashire before 1918","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45147009","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judy Rohrer"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41287753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1f82896-2901-3b61-a2eb-ee9378debfd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41287753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Presidents, Gay Marriages, and Hawaiian Sovereignty: Reimagining Citizenship in the Age of Obama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41287753","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susanne Davies"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4629635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ae9d9ba-bf2d-368d-844e-eef48116f82e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4629635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Sexuality, Performance, and Spectatorship in Law: The Case of Gordon Lawrence, Melbourne, 1888","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4629635","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8555,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,74701]],"Locations in B":[[40003,40449]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dorinne K. Kondo"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc58937b-353f-3328-8adb-376065df469a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"16","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"M. Butterfly\": Orientalism, Gender, and a Critique of Essentialist Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354343","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past decade, sexual rumor spreading, slut-shaming, and homophobic labeling have become central examples of bullying among young women. This article examines the role these practices\u2014 what adults increasingly call \"bullying\" and what girls often call \"drama\"\u2014 play in girls' gendering processes. Through interviews with 54 class and racially diverse late adolescent girls, I explore the content and functions of \"sexual drama.\" All participants had experiences with this kind of conflict, and nearly a third had been the subject of other girls' rumors about their own sexual actions and\/or orientations. Their accounts indicate that sexual drama offers girls a socially acceptable site for making claims to, and sense of, gendered sexuality in adolescence. While they reproduce inequality through these practices, sexual drama is also a resource for girls\u2014one that is made useful through the institutional constraints of their high schools, which reinforce traditional gender norms and limit sexuality information.","creator":["SARAH A. MILLER"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b850849-b571-344a-ad4a-f45dbfa03bf8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24756233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"744","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-744","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"\"HOW YOU BULLY A GIRL\": Sexual Drama and the Negotiation of Gendered Sexuality in High School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756233","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Edgar Wideman","Sheri I. Hoem"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6808faed-c228-3820-8485-441e0eda295c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2901252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Shifting Spirits\": Ancestral Constructs in the Postmodern Writing of John Edgar Wideman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901252","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In theological discourse of sexuality, queer theory has often been regarded as an extension of the project of gay and lesbian liberation, when it actually challenges an organizing value of the entire discourse, because it challenges any ascription of ultimate value to \"sex,\" an imaginative formation of power relations. Rather than appeal to God to authorize the privileged status of sex, queer commentary suggests that theological writers should refuse assertions of the absolute importance of any particular formation of human imagination as a basis of relation between self and God. The goal is to recognize the violence\u2014symbolized and real\u2014that enforces the worth of certain imaginations of intelligibly sexed personal identity and stunts the formation of alternative imaginations of intelligible personal identity. Critical account of this violence as sentimental-homicidal-suicidal opens space to confess a theological discourse of personal identities that is entirely beyond sex.","creator":["Geoffrey Rees"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00fc8c47-9cd5-3adb-9ab3-791ccb428b8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23020029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"IS SEX WORTH DYING FOR? Sentimental-Homicidal-Suicidal Violence in Theological Discourse of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020029","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10916,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[315373,315650]],"Locations in B":[[9708,9985]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janine P. Holc"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2500923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a9c8665-992b-3ed8-b9ef-82110a76f037"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2500923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberalism and the Construction of the Democratic Subject in Postcommunism: The Case of Poland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2500923","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":13904,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[33097,33161]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Temma Balducci"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20358086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3a301eb-4106-3d49-ae43-8c832a587ea2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20358086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revisiting \"Womanhouse\": Welcome to the (Deconstructed) \"Dollhouse\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20358086","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The discrepancy in societal attitudes toward female genital cosmetic surgery for European women and female genital cutting in primarily African girl children and women raises the following fundamental question. How can it be that extensive genital modifications, including reduction of labial and clitoral tissue, are considered acceptable and perfectly legal in many European countries, while those same societies have legislation making female genital cutting illegal, and the World Health Organization bans even the \"pricking\" of the female genitals? At present, tensions are obvious as regards the modification of female genitalia, and current legislation and medical practice show inconsistencies in relation to women of different ethnic backgrounds. As regards the right to health, it is questionable both whether genital cosmetic surgery is always free of complications and whether female genital cutting always leads to them. Activists, national policymakers and other stakeholders, including cosmetic genital surgeons, need to be aware of these inconsistencies and find ways to resolve them and adopt non-discriminatory policies. This is not necessarily an issue of either permitting or banning all forms of genital cutting, but about identifying a consistent and coherent stance in which key social values \u2014 including protection of children, bodily integrity, bodily autonomy, and equality before the law \u2014 are upheld. Le d\u00e9calage des attitudes de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard de la chirurgie plastique des organes g\u00e9nitaux f\u00e9minins en Europe et de la mutilation sexuelle f\u00e9minine principalement chez les fillettes et les femmes africaines conduit \u00e0 poser une question fondamentale: pourquoi beaucoup de pays europ\u00e9ens jugent-ils acceptables et parfaitement l\u00e9gales des modifications g\u00e9nitales pouss\u00e9es, notamment la r\u00e9duction des l\u00e8vres et du clitoris, alors qu'ils interdisent les mutilations sexuelles f\u00e9minines et que l'Organisation mondiale de la sant\u00e9 proscrit m\u00eame de \u00ab piquer \u00bb les organes g\u00e9nitaux f\u00e9minins? Pr\u00e9sentement, la modification des organes g\u00e9nitaux f\u00e9minins suscite de toute \u00e9vidence des tensions, et la l\u00e9gislation et la pratique m\u00e9dicale sont contradictoires selon l'origine ethnique des femmes. En ce qui concerne le droit \u00e0 la sant\u00e9, on peut se demander si la chirurgie plastique des organes g\u00e9nitaux f\u00e9minins est toujours exempte de complications et si la mutilation sexuelle f\u00e9minine s'accompagne toujours de complications. Les militants, les d\u00e9cideurs et d'autres acteurs, dont les chirurgiens plastiques, doivent prendre conscience de ces incoh\u00e9rences et trouver le moyen de les r\u00e9soudre et d'adopter des politiques non discriminatoires. Il s'agit non pas forc\u00e9ment de permettre ou d'interdire toutes les formes d'incision g\u00e9nitale, mais plut\u00f4t d'adopter une position coh\u00e9rente qui respectera les valeurs sociales, y compris la protection de l'enfance, l'int\u00e9grit\u00e9 physique, l'autonomie corporelle et l'\u00e9galit\u00e9 devant la loi. La discrepancia en las actitudes de la sociedad hacia la cirug\u00eda cosm\u00e9tica genital femenina en mujeres europeas y la mutilaci\u00f3n genital femenina principalmente en ni\u00f1as y mujeres africanas suscita la siguiente interrogante fundamental. \u00bfC\u00f3mo puede ser que extensas modificaciones genitales, como la reducci\u00f3n del tejido de los labios y el cl\u00edtoris, se consideren aceptables y perfectamente legales en muchos pa\u00edses europeos, mientras que en esas mismas sociedades existe legislaci\u00f3n que penaliza la mutilaci\u00f3n genital femenina, y la Organizaci\u00f3n Mundial de la Salud proh\u00edbe incluso la perforaci\u00f3n de los genitales femeninos? Actualmente, las tensiones respecto a la modificaci\u00f3n de los genitales femeninos son obvias, y la legislaci\u00f3n y pr\u00e1cticas m\u00e9dicas en vigor muestran contradicciones con relaci\u00f3n a mujeres de diferentes etnias. En cuanto al derecho a la salud, es cuestionable si la cirug\u00eda cosm\u00e9tica genital siempre est\u00e1 libre de complicaciones y si la mutilaci\u00f3n genital femenina siempre las causa. Es imperativo que los activistas, formuladores de pol\u00edticas nacionales y otras partes interesadas, incluso los cirujanos cosm\u00e9ticos, sean conscientes de estas contradicciones, encuentren formas de resolverlas y adopten pol\u00edticas no discriminatorias. No se trata necesariamente de permitir o prohibir todas las formas de mutilaci\u00f3n genital, sino de identificar una postura constante y coherente, que respete importantes valores sociales como la protecci\u00f3n de los ni\u00f1os, la integridad corporal, la autonom\u00eda corporal y la igualdad ante la ley.","creator":["Sara Johnsdotter","Birgitta Ess\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25767326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09688080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51091171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233050"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e094ea6-6885-3cb4-8623-8f181737b249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25767326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reprhealmatt"}],"isPartOf":"Reproductive Health Matters","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Population Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Genitals and ethnicity: the politics of genital modifications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25767326","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Little Red Pioneers, the Chinese Communist Party's organization for children aged 7-12, seem anachronistic in China today. This article argues that the Pioneer organization, rather than being an outdated relic of the nation's Maoist past, provides insight into contemporary Chinese nationalism, particularly the theoretical question of how children are produced as national subjects. Based in Butler's concept of performativity this article argues that children's nationalism in China is performed through daily activities and practices structured by the Little Red Pioneers.","creator":["T. W. Woronov"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30052719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"553b080a-aff6-3ec7-8fe5-35bcdf2a0e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30052719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"672","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-672","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing the Nation: China's Children as Little Red Pioneers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30052719","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Halberstam"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"52\/53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 104-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Mackdaddy, Superfly, Rapper: Gender, Race, and Masculinity in the Drag King Scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466736","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11534,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524399]],"Locations in B":[[67006,67074]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dolls and action figures have long been an important part of material culture. Though ignored by much of art education, the critical analysis of the characteristics between girls and dolls\/action figures provides valuable insights into the continuities and changes of gender identities in American cultures. This article explores how art educators can engage students in a critical dialogue through dolls and action figures in order to uncover the multiplicity of preconceived ideas, attitudes, and values inherent in gendered objects and the resultant impact on gendered identities.","creator":["Anna Wagner-Ott"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1855324-5e61-33b5-a094-fb30513163ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1321088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Analysis of Gender Identity Through Doll and Action Figure Politics in Art Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321088","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kwadwo Osei-Nyame"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820564","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820564"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chinua Achebe Writing Culture: Representations of Gender and Tradition in \"Things Fall Apart\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820564","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper looks at the context-dependent nature of the gendering of technology. The case study reported on explores the relationship between scientists and machines \u2014 both inside and outside \u2014 the laboratory, and considers how this affects the gender division of labour in the company concerned. The stereotypical view, of women as technophobic and men as technophilic, is challenged. However, the results show how the dominant masculinised discourse around technology is implicated in the under-representation of women in senior positions. The paper argues that, in addition to structural analysis of occupational segregation, an understanding of the dynamics of gender symbolism and identity also need to be incorporated into the debate.","creator":["Kathryn Packer"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23745995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23151718-f6e2-3cc6-a56b-f3940dea2d9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23745995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration"],"title":"THE CONTEXT-DEPENDENT NATURE OF THE GENDERING OF TECHNICAL WORK: A CASE STUDY OF WORK IN A SCIENTIFIC LABORATORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23745995","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11328,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476067,476141]],"Locations in B":[[67998,68085]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary A. Joyce","Maria J. Rodriguez-Shadow","Patricia Plunket","Marcus Winter","Cira Martinez Lopez"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"editorial","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6107da77-7bf7-37fa-939d-a893f72fbbbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2744203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"On Engendering Monte Alban Tomb 7","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744203","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In a review of contributions to a special issue of Discourse & Society on queer linguistics, this article argues that the concept of indexicality, as theorized across diverse fields in sociocultural linguistics, has the potential to offer a much richer account of subjectivity than found in dominant strands of queer theory. While queer theory valorizes practice over identity, viewing the latter as fixed and necessarily allied with normativity, research on language and social interaction suggests that an analytic distinction between practice and identity is untenable. The indexical processes that work to produce social meaning are multi-layered and always shifting across time and space, even within systems of heteronormativity. It is this semiotic evolution that should become the cornerstone of a (new) queer linguistics.","creator":["Kira Hall"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50743fff-3f26-3251-8688-5de1b1482936"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24441616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"634","pagination":"pp. 634-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Commentary I: 'It's a hijra'! Queer linguistics revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441616","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I make a case for history that is both deconstructive and creative. I begin from my position of \u201cdeconstructionism\u201d and move towards queer engagement, which I argue, is a productive term that enables me to embrace deconstruction and subjective approaches to history making, without falling into the trap of writing a coherent \u201cself \u201d into the text. I create an example of a fragmented swimming history to illustrate what queer engagement might look like in practice.","creator":["Fiona McLachlan"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jsporthistory.39.3.431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00941700"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50704705"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010207980"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"014660d6-b312-3d40-8ff1-5648e904b946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jsporthistory.39.3.431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsporthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Sport History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Swimming History after Deconstruction: A Queer Engagement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jsporthistory.39.3.431","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["April Alliston","Elizabeth Ammons","Jean Arnold","Nina Baym","Sandra L. Beckett","Peter G. Beidler","Roger A. Berger","Sandra Bermann","J. J. Wilson","Troy Boone","Alison Booth","Wayne C. Booth","James Phelan","Marie Borroff","Ihab Hassan","Zack Bowen","Ulrich Weisstein","Jill Campbell","Dan Campion","Jay Caplan","Maurice Charney","Beverly Lyon Clark","Robert A. Colby","Thomas C. Coleman, III","Nicole Cooley","Richard Dellamora","Morris Dickstein","Terrell Dixon","Emory Elliott","Caryl Emerson","Ann W. Engar","Lars Engle","Kai Hammermeister","N. N. Feltes","Mary Anne Ferguson","Annie Finch","Shelley Fisher Fishkin","Jerry Aline Flieger","Norman Friedman","Rosemarie Garland-Thomson","Sandra M. Gilbert","Laurie Grobman","George Guida","Liselotte Gumpel","R. K. Gupta","Florence Howe","Cathy L. Jrade","Richard A. Kaye","Calhoun Winton","Murray Krieger","Robert Langbaum","Richard A. Lanham","Marilee Lindemann","Paul Michael L\u00fctzeler","Thomas J. Lynn","Juliet Flower MacCannell","Michelle A. Mass\u00e9","Irving Massey","Georges May","Christian W. Hallstein","Gita May","Lucy McDiarmid","Ellen Messer-Davidow","Koritha Mitchell","Robin Smiles","Kenyatta Albeny","George Monteiro","Joel Myerson","Alan Nadel","Ashton Nichols","Jeffrey Nishimura","Neal Oxenhandler","David Palumbo-Liu","Vincent P. Pecora","David Porter","Nancy Potter","Ronald C. Rosbottom","Elias L. Rivers","Gerhard F. Strasser","J. L. Styan","Marianna de Marco Torgovnick","Gary Totten","David van Leer","Asha Varadharajan","Orrin N. C. Wang","Sharon Willis","Louise E. Wright","Donald A. Yates","Takayuki Yokota-Murakami","Richard E. Zeikowitz","Angelika Bammer","Dale Bauer","Karl Beckson","Betsy A. Bowen","Stacey Donohue","Sheila Emerson","Gwendolyn Audrey Foster","Jay L. Halio","Karl Kroeber","Terence Hawkes","William B. Hunter","Mary Jacobus","Willard F. King","Nancy K. Miller","Jody Norton","Ann Pellegrini","S. P. Rosenbaum","Lorie Roth","Robert Scholes","Joanne Shattock","Rosemary T. VanArsdel","Alfred Bendixen","Alanna Kathleen Brown","Michael J. Kiskis","Debra A. Castillo","Rey Chow","John F. Crossen","Robert F. Fleissner","Regenia Gagnier","Nicholas Howe","M. Thomas Inge","Frank Mehring","Hyungji Park","Jahan Ramazani","Kenneth M. Roemer","Deborah D. Rogers","A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff","Regina M. Schwartz","John T. Shawcross","Brenda R. Silver","Andrew von Hendy","Virginia Wright Wexman","Britta Zangen","A. Owen Aldridge","Paula R. Backscheider","Roland Bartel","Milton Birnbaum","Jonathan Bishop","Crystal Downing","Frank H. Ellis","Roberto Forns-Broggi","James R. Giles","Mary E. Giles","Susan Blair Green","Madelyn Gutwirth","Constance B. Hieatt","Titi Adepitan","Edgar C. Knowlton, Jr.","Emanuel Mussman","Sally Todd Nelson","Robert O. Preyer","David Diego Rodriguez","Guy Stern","James Thorpe","Robert J. Wilson","Rebecca S. Beal","Joyce Simutis","Betsy Bowden","Sara Cooper","Wheeler Winston Dixon","Tarek el Ariss","Richard Jewell","John W. Kronik","Wendy Martin","Stuart Y. McDougal","Hugo M\u00e9ndez-Ram\u00edrez","Ivy Schweitzer","Armand E. Singer","G. Thomas Tanselle","Tom Bishop","Mary Ann Caws","Marcel Gutwirth","Christophe Ippolito","Lawrence D. Kritzman","James Longenbach","Tim McCracken","Wolfe S. Molitor","Diane Quantic","Gregory Rabassa","Ellen M. Tsagaris","Anthony C. Yu","Betty Jean Craige","Wendell V. Harris","J. Hillis Miller","Jesse G. Swan","Helene Zimmer-Loew","Peter Berek","James Chandler","Hanna K. Charney","Philip Cohen","Judith Fetterley","Herbert Lindenberger","Julia Reinhard Lupton","Maximillian E. Novak","Richard Ohmann","Marjorie Perloff","Mark Reynolds","James Sledd","Harriet Turner","Marie Umeh","Flavia Alaya","Regina Barreca","Konrad Bieber","Ellis Hanson","William J. Hyde","Holly A. Laird","David Leverenz","Allen Michie","J. Wesley Miller","Marvin Rosenberg","Daniel R. Schwarz","Elizabeth Welt Trahan","Jean Fagan Yellin"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54229be0-7195-36aa-90ec-c2101700e2df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":88,"pageEnd":"2076","pageStart":"1986","pagination":"pp. 1986-2024+2028-2076","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Looking Backward, Looking Forward: MLA Members Speak","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463623","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":50342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda Yazmina Moreno-Florido"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6364d3ec-aae2-3c0b-92de-3ca31b95bdf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Turismo queer por el Mediterr\u00e1neo: Catalu\u00f1a re-visitada en \"Costa Brava (Family Album)\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641944","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Anne Walshaw"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131954"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85a7fff1-ffd5-3001-8ee6-d8c5fa1f2c51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25619882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educstudmath"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Studies in Mathematics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teacher-Centredness and Student-Centredness under Interrogation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619882","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":2721,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[337728,337812]],"Locations in B":[[1631,1714]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study explored the nature and performance of masculinity portrayed in popular young adult novels featuring female protagonists. Although all had their limitations, the novels offered more complex renderings of gendered identity in the lives of female and male adolescent characters, addressed the effects of enforced traditional masculinity, and productively, if only momentarily, disrupted the connection between sex and gender in ways that allow for engagement with alternative notions of masculinity. Studying masculinity in these contemporary young adult novels about girls' lives offers much for students and teachers to consider in analyzing masculinity and femininity in texts and in life. \/\/\/ L'\u00e9tude porte sur la masculinit\u00e9 telle que repr\u00e9sent\u00e9e dans des romans populaires pour jeunes adultes mettant en sc\u00e8ne des protagonistes de sexe f\u00e9minin. Malgr\u00e9 les faiblesses de tous ces romans, ils pr\u00e9sentent des descriptions relativement complexes de l'identit\u00e9 masculine et f\u00e9minine \u00e0 l'adolescence, tiennent compte des effets de la masculinit\u00e9 traditionnelle et r\u00e9ussissent, ne serait-ce que momentan\u00e9ment, \u00e0 \u00e9branler le lien entre le sexe et le genre de mani\u00e8re \u00e0 permettre la prise en compte d'autres notions de la masculinit\u00e9. Ces romans contemporains pour adolescents sur la vie des filles offrent un mat\u00e9riau riche aux \u00e9l\u00e8ves et aux enseignants qui veulent r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir sur la masculinit\u00e9 et la f\u00e9minit\u00e9 dans les textes et dans la vie.","creator":["Helen Harper"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cad08c54-b6b8-31f6-8515-af829d6e6471"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20466648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"508","pagination":"pp. 508-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studying Masculinity(ies) in Books about Girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466648","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8247,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[48526,48606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the implications of understanding war crime trials as hybrid legal spaces. Drawing on twelve months of residential fieldwork in the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo, it examines the circulation of evidence, the choreography of the courtroom, and the nature and possibilities for legal observation. Analyzing hybrid legal geographies foregrounds the material and embodied nature of trials, illuminating the forms of comportment, categorization, and exclusion through which law establishes its legitimacy. Rather than emphasizing separation and distance, the lens of hybridity illuminates the multiple ways in which war crimes trials are grounded in the social and political context of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina. Consequently, this analysis traces the disjuncture between the imagined geographies of legal jurisdiction and the material and embodied spaces of trial practices. In conclusion, we argue that the establishment of the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina illustrates the tensions that emerge when an institution of trial justice is used to strengthen the coherence of a postconflict state. \u672c\u6587\u63a2\u8ba8\u5c06\u6218\u4e89\u72af\u7f6a\u5ba1\u5224\u7406\u89e3\u4e3a\u6df7\u6742\u7684\u6cd5\u5f8b\u7a7a\u95f4\u4e4b\u610f\u6db5\u3002\u6211\u8fd0\u7528\u5728\u6ce2\u65af\u5c3c\u4e9a\u4e0e\u8d5b\u62c9\u8036\u5f17\u8d6b\u8d5b\u54e5\u7ef4\u90a3\u6cd5\u5ead\u4e2d, \u4e3a\u671f\u5341\u4e8c\u4e2a\u6708\u7684\u7530\u91ce\u5de5\u4f5c, \u68c0\u89c6\u8bc1\u636e\u7684\u4f20\u64ad\u3001\u6cd5\u5ead\u7684\u7f16\u6392, \u4ee5\u53ca\u6cd5\u5f8b\u89c2\u5bdf\u7684\u672c\u8d28\u4e0e\u53ef\u80fd\u6027\u3002\u5206\u6790\u6df7\u6742\u7684\u6cd5\u5f8b\u5730\u7406, \u51f8\u663e\u51fa\u5ba1\u5224\u7684\u7269\u8d28\u53ca\u4f53\u73b0\u672c\u8d28, \u9610\u660e\u4e86\u6cd5\u5f8b\u900f\u8fc7\u533a\u5212\u3001\u5206\u7c7b\u4ee5\u53ca\u6392\u9664\u7684\u5f62\u5f0f\u6240\u5efa\u7acb\u7684\u6b63\u5f53\u6027\u3002\u4e0d\u540c\u4e8e\u5f3a\u8c03\u9694\u79bb\u4e0e\u8ddd\u79bb, \u6df7\u6742\u6027\u7684\u89c6\u89d2\u9610\u660e\u4e86\u6218\u4e89\u72af\u7f6a\u5ba1\u5224\u690d\u57fa\u4e8e\u5f53\u4ee3\u6ce2\u65af\u5c3c\u4e9a\u4e0e\u8d6b\u8d5b\u54e5\u7ef4\u90a3\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u53ca\u653f\u6cbb\u8109\u7edc\u7684\u591a\u91cd\u65b9\u5f0f\u3002\u672c\u5206\u6790\u56e0\u800c\u8ffd\u6eaf\u6cd5\u5f8b\u5ba1\u5224\u7684\u60f3\u50cf\u5730\u7406, \u53ca\u5176\u4e0e\u5ba1\u5224\u6267\u884c\u7684\u7269\u8d28\u4e0e\u4f53\u73b0\u7a7a\u95f4\u4e4b\u95f4\u7684\u65ad\u88c2\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u5c06\u4e8e\u7ed3\u8bba\u4e2d\u4e3b\u5f20, \u6ce2\u65af\u5c3c\u4e9a\u4e0e\u8d6b\u8d5b\u54e5\u7ef4\u90a3\u6cd5\u5ead\u7684\u5efa\u5236, \u663e\u793a\u51fa\u5f53\u4e00\u4e2a\u5ba1\u5224\u6b63\u4e49\u7684\u673a\u6784\u88ab\u7528\u6765\u5f3a\u5316\u540e\u51b2\u7a81\u56fd\u5bb6\u7684\u548c\u8c10\u6027\u65f6\u6240\u6d6e\u73b0\u7684\u5f20\u529b\u3002 En este art\u00edculo se exploran las implicaciones que tiene entender los juicios por cr\u00edmenes de guerra como espacios legales h\u00edbridos. Con base en doce meses de trabajo de campo residencial en la Corte de Bosnia y Herzegovina, en Sarajevo, se examina la circulaci\u00f3n de evidencia, la coreograf\u00eda del tribunal y la naturaleza y posibilidades de observaci\u00f3n legal. Analizando las geograf\u00edas legales h\u00edbridas, se destaca la naturaleza material y personalista de los juicios, iluminando las formas de comportamiento, categorizaci\u00f3n y exclusi\u00f3n por medio de los cuales la ley establece su legitimidad. M\u00e1s que enfatizar separaci\u00f3n y distancia, la lente de la hibridad ilumina las m\u00faltiples maneras en que se apoyan los juicios por cr\u00edmenes de guerra en el contexto social y pol\u00edtico de la Bosnia y Herzegovina de hoy. En consecuencia, este an\u00e1lisis traza la descoyuntura entre las geograf\u00edas imaginadas de la jurisdicci\u00f3n legal y los espacios materiales y personalistas de las pr\u00e1cticas de juzgamientos. En conclusi\u00f3n, sostenemos que el establecimiento de la Corte de Bosnia y Herzegovina ilustra las tensiones que aparecen cuando una instituci\u00f3n de justicia para juicios es utilizada para fortalecer la coherencia de un estado posconflicto.","creator":["Alex Jeffrey","Michaelina Jakala"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d483e53-9d83-3bcf-98c2-bee22863f7cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"667","pageStart":"652","pagination":"pp. 652-667","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Hybrid Legal Geographies of a War Crimes Court","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537762","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b57b1fb0-99d2-38fd-ac1e-283c3793faec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"1005","pageStart":"995","pagination":"pp. 995-1005","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175444","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anthony O'Brien"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73167c05-857e-33d8-afab-97e6de42fffc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Staging Whiteness: Beckett, Havel, Maponya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208954","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeanna Fuston-White"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f3ba77a-1248-3fd5-bd71-5fcd5114f654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"From the Seen to the Told\": The Construction of Subjectivity in Toni Morrison's \"Beloved\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512209","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8449,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461907,462152]],"Locations in B":[[21740,21992]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sheila L. Cavanagh","Heather Sykes","Marta Lamas"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6760cc7-ecc8-3a07-bb6d-0583fea6ac20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cuerpos transexuales en las Olimpiadas: las pol\u00edticas del Comit\u00e9 Internacional Ol\u00edmpico en relaci\u00f3n con l@s atletas transexuales en los Juegos de Verano, Atenas 2004","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625543","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The ways African American women negotiate the intersections of popular media, dominant discourses of beauty, and identity are rarely explored. This study engages a constellation of literature and theoretical perspectives, exploring historical representations of African American women and the beauty messages they contain. I examine concepts of identity formation; discuss connections between difference and the politics of imagery; and investigate linkages between structural racism, mass media, and forms of cultural production. Through an interrogation of the complexities in how African American women make meaning of images of themselves, in relationship to mainstream media, I seek to excavate a set of realities known to many, but rarely articulated in academia. This account of a larger study, that utilized empirical and qualitative methods that engage Black women, across four generational groups, through in-depth interviews, a series of three focus groups\/ women's healing circles, and individual journaling workshops, only discusses some findings from primarily the in depth interviews. The combination of methodologies however allowed for a documentation of the ideas, struggles, and attitudes of African American women pertaining to popular concepts of beauty, identity, and politics of media. With the goal of interrupting current hegemonic narratives, this study offers an analysis of the intersection of beauty, race, and feminisms while critiquing and interrupting cultural imperialism; and aims to join with Black feminist bodies of work in developing new theories that engage African American women to reflect and acknowledge the complex and varied realities of media's impact on gender, race, sex, equality, and identity as converging constructs.","creator":["Jennifer Richardson-Stovall"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26230038-e0fd-36fe-b585-c72cb1604dee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23345262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Image Slavery and Mass-Media Pollution: Popular Media, Beauty, and the Lives of Black Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23345262","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":12339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanna Levin"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lady MacBeth and the Daemonologie of Hysteria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032010","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":14971,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[304921,305049]],"Locations in B":[[68846,68974]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay follows the life of the character Jerry Cornelius from his initial appearance in New Worlds magazine in the short story \u201cPreliminary Data\u201d (1965) through his swan song in the final book of the Cornelius Quartet, The Condition of Muzak (1977). I argue that the character and the stories in which he appears disrupt narrative through ambiguity, irony, and experimental technique\u2014reflecting a supposed historic rupture in the late 1960s. In particular I posit a queer reading of Jerry Cornelius: the character moves or oscillates among different binary identity positions, focusing specifically on gender, sex, and sexuality, with the oscillation of the character finally rupturing the narrative form of the stories.","creator":["Tom Dillon"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.45.1.0161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adf026b5-1421-35aa-871b-cc4e8449baeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.45.1.0161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cJerry was oscillating badly\u201d: Gender and Sexuality in New Worlds<\/em> Magazine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.45.1.0161","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7882,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[115705,115854]],"Locations in B":[[45016,45165]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the cultural forms through which the young European-Australian stockmen who work on the cattle stations of north Queensland are socialised. Exploring their interactions with a social and physical landscape and their rites of passage, as manifested in everyday actions, performance and material culture, it reveals how \u2014 and why \u2014 they are given little choice in acquiring values which are intensely adversarial to the land and to the indigenous people of Australia. It also explores the relationship between the transmission of particular values to these young men and the wider political and hegemonic role of the pastoral sub-culture in defining Australian national identity.","creator":["Veronica Strang"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40332096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Of Human Bondage: The Breaking in of Stockmen in Northern Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332096","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":15329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the majority of research in gender and education has rightly focused on girls, recent research in the United States and elsewhere has focused much more on the learning, social outcomes, and schooling experiences of boys. This \"boy turn \" has produced a large corpus of theoretically oriented and practice-oriented research alongside popular and rhetorical works and feminist and pro-feminist responses, each of which this article reviews. To answer why boys have become such a concern at this time, this article explores the origins and motivations of the boy turn, examines major critiques of the distress about boys, and suggests possible directions for debates and research.","creator":["Marcus Weaver-Hightower"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3516000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e91df6c6-479f-3f59-899f-44227ba98191"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3516000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"The \"Boy Turn\" in Research on Gender and Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3516000","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":15067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jenifer Presto"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/309416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"144d1e89-ff86-3932-a396-a77e2a603a71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/309416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"635","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-635","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Zinaida Gippius: Over Her Dead Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/309416","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7028,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485515]],"Locations in B":[[39822,39916]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Gurney"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dc190de-c6f6-3cd4-90b7-bc8632081134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Intersex\" and \"Dirty Girls\": Mass-Observation and Working-Class Sexuality in England in the 1930s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704218","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":14953,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440138,440300]],"Locations in B":[[92259,92420]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Julia Kristeva describes three patterns of psychic identification: identification with the father and the symbolic, identification with the mother and the semiotic, and a refusal of either identification which results in a precarious balance in between. It is in the latter manner that a writer can access the paternal symbolic, or language, while nevertheless recalling and introducing the maternal semiotic into his or her writing. According to Kristeva, it is in this prevarication that a writer can revolutionize language. Against readings that take up other \"French feminists\" such as Irigaray to interpret Virginia Woolf's work, this article explores Kristeva's theory through a reading of The Waves. It argues that the characters in Woolf's book adhere to Kristeva's discussion of the gendering of relations to language, and, in particular, each of the three female characters can be understood as following one of the patterns of psychic identification as Kristeva describes them.","creator":["Chlo\u00eb Taylor"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec942a1e-164a-3d65-99e5-7f4139fbd005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kristevan Themes in Virginia Woolf's \"The Waves\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831688","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10537,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522892]],"Locations in B":[[59960,60043]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Nella Larsen's Quicksand is infamous for its lingering atmosphere of near-palpable yearning. Helga Crane, the novel's off-putting and conflicted protagonist exhibits a sense of longing that is not easily explained. Most often critics frame this longing through an heteronormative lens that presumes a craving to belong within a kinship system such as a conventional community and\/or nuclear family. By extension, however, that simple positioning of Helga within the kinship paradigm automatically associates her indescribable longing with heterosexual sex. Yet, Helga Crane's longing seems more perverse. Her desire to belong, in the conventional sense, is less so than many have suggested; and her desire for heterosexual sex appears arguable at best. Although critical interpretations of Helga do not, the character herself resides outside the heteronormative box, which upends such compulsory givens as kinship and desire. For this reason Helga Crane demands a new portrait. Helga can be framed more queerly, for framing her within conventional heteronormativy cuts short the subversive elements in her portrayal.","creator":["Johanna M. Wagner"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cac1f0f7-1810-3e54-b66e-c1e0e1df6ef3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23266059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"(Be)Longing in \"Quicksand\": Framing Kinship and Desire More Queerly","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266059","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14538,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[90779,90831]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Merlyn E. Mowrey"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07324928"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57252837"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221983"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annusocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Society of Christian Ethics","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Feminist Ethics and the \"Postmodernist Debates\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559642","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4236,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[20306,20351]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Teemu Ruskola"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8afa740c-e902-3c1b-babb-aab3c31211f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Legal Orientalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290419","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":30567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d0\u05e6\u05d8\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05dd \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5 \u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05df \u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05e8 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05d1 \u05d5\u05dc\u05ea\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea. \u05e2\u05dc \u05db\u05da \u05e2\u05de\u05d3\u05d4 \u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05ea \u05d1\u05d6\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05de\u05e9\u05d7\u05e7 \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05dc\u05e1\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5. \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d6\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d6\u05d5 \u05de\u05ea\u05d2\u05dc\u05de\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05e8\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc, \u05e9\u05d4\u05e4\u05db\u05d5 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\u05d5\u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d7\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9. \u05d6\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05db\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d9\u05e1\u05ea\u05dc\u05e7\u05d5 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05d9\u05ea\u05db\u05dc\u05d5 \u2014 \"\u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea\" \u05de\u05ea\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05d4\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e8. \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05e2\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9 \u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd, \u05d5\u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05e1\u05e1 \u05e2\u05dc \u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9 \u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9\u05ea \u05de\u05d7\u05de\u05e9 \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d5\u05ea \u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05de\u05dc\u05d9\u05d2\u05ea-\u05d4\u05e2\u05dc. \u05d1\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05e0\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d5 \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\"\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05dd \u05e8\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05dd\", \u05de\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea\u05dd \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05dc \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05ea\"\u05e8 \u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8\u05dd \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d4\u05dc \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05de\u05db\u05d1\u05d9 \u05e0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d9\u05d4. \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e8\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4, \u05d9\u05e9 \u05dc\u05e6\u05d9\u05d9\u05df, \u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05dd \u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d2\u05d9\u05dd \u05e4\u05dc\u05d7 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u2014 \u05d1\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05e8 \u05d1\u05e0\u05d9 18-14 \u2014 \u05e9\u05d2\u05dd \u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d0 \u05de\u05e2\u05d8 \u05de\u05d4\u05dd \u05d4\u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05dd \u05dc\u05e6\u05e0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e9 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d5\u05e8\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d2\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9\u05dc \u05dc\u05de\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9: \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05dd \u05e8\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05dd \u2014 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05dd \u05e8\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05db\u05dc\u05dc \u2014 \u05d4\u05dd \u05d9\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e7\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3 \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9-\u05e0\u05de\u05d5\u05da. \u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea-\u05e7\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e8 \u05de\u05db\u05dc \u05d3\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05dc\u05e2\u05de\u05d5\u05d3 \u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5 \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4, \u05de\u05e2\u05e6\u05d1\u05ea \u05d0\u05ea \u05e2\u05de\u05d3\u05ea\u05dd \u05d5\u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05db\u05dc\u05e4\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05e3 \u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05dd \u05d5\u05db\u05dc\u05e4\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05d1\u05db\u05dc\u05dc. \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d6\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e9\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e2\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9 \u05db\u05d6\u05e8 \u05de\u05d5\u05d7\u05dc\u05d8: \u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05dc\u05d5 \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05dd \u05d1\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05e9\u05dc\u05e0\u05d5, \u05d5\u05d0\u05dd \u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u2014 \u05d0\u05e3 \u05dc\u05d0 \u05d1\u05e9\u05d5\u05dd \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05ea. \u05d5\u05d1\u05db\u05dc\u05dc, \u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05dc\u05d5 \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05dd \u05d1\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05dd \u05e9\u05e0\u05d7\u05e9\u05d1 \u05d1\u05e7\u05e8\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05db\u05e8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05ea. The football stadium has become an arena for political, ethnic, nationalist protest. In Israel, certain groups of fans use the stadium's stands to vent their anti-Arab sentiments. \"Death to the Arabs\" has thus become a common chant in football stadiums. Although the phenomenon is not very new, it has grown increasingly popular over the last decade. This can be explained in terms of Simmel's concept of the \"stranger\" and the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Many Israelis consider the Israeli Arabs \"conditional strangers\", that is, temporary citizens. Some refuse to accept the presence of Arab citizens in Israel \u2014 they want them out of the country. The paper presents the findings of a study of football fans in Israel, specifically a group of fans (a vociferous minority) opposing the participation of Arab football players on \"their team\". Contrary to conventional expectations, these fans are not unsophisticated rowdies, but middle class, political-ideological, right-wingers whose rejection of Arab football players on their team is based on a definitive conception of Israel as a Jewish (Zionist) state.","creator":["\u05d0\u05de\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d1\u05df-\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea","Amir Ben-Porat"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23659400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ede23305-d444-3e39-b9b1-bc0b40b72048"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23659400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"megamot"}],"isPartOf":"Megamot \/ \u05de\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Henrietta Szold Institute \/ \u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d0\u05dc\u05d3","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Death to the Arabs: The Right Wing Fan's Anxiety \/ \u05de\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd: \u05d7\u05e8\u05d3\u05ea\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3 \u05de\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05df","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23659400","volumeNumber":"\u05de\u05d4","wordCount":9628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah M. Thomson","Julia T. Wood"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40545974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aceb2961-0b91-33a0-9240-8bae4c0da8fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40545974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rewriting Gendered Scripts: Using Forum Theatre to Teach Feminist Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40545974","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martha Vicinus"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bff8faa2-7ddb-3675-a898-24eec7d1b3c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23720195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"566","pagination":"pp. 566-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The History of Lesbian History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720195","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12246,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[62291,62353]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study analyzes the changes in physical presentation of several DC comic book superheroes, finding that the bodies of superheroes have become far more sexualized, exaggerated, and unrealistic in recent years. The comic reader's \"gaze\" upon the bodies of the characters produces an intersection of spectacle and narrative that cannot be disconnected from both the physical body and the costume of the hero. Literature on the bodies of male and female bodybuilders reveals a connection to the hyper-embodiment of male and female superheroes, which represent the ego ideal of Western representations of \"perfect\" gendered bodies. The study concludes by asking if contemporary comic books must shift from the \"Modern Age\" to the \"Postmodern Age\" in order to break out of their practices of reaffirming gender binaries. The argument expands on work by Jean Baudrillard and Judith Butler.","creator":["Edward Avery-Natale"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c617619a-f68c-355c-87cb-e1d6430f425f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24642398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Analysis of Embodiment among Six Superheroes in DC Comics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642398","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11254,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[67934,67997]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Athenian pots from the end of the fifth century B.C.E. show many scenes of women adorning themselves or bringing gifts to one another. In this essay, we ask what these scenes mean and hypothesize multiple ways of reading: they may reinforce women's subordination, or they may represent a potential site for women's resistance. La poterie ath\u00e9nienne de la fin du ve si\u00e8cle avant notre \u00e8re montre de nombreuses sc\u00e8nes de femmes \u00e0 la toilette ou s'offrant des cadeaux. Dans cet article, on s'interroge sur la signification de ces sc\u00e8nes et l'on formule plusieurs hypoth\u00e8ses de lecture: elles peuvent renforcer la subordination des femmes ou repr\u00e9senter un possible lieu de r\u00e9sistance f\u00e9minine.","creator":["Sue Blundell","Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4daae453-7ef5-326d-afd9-35822b0a3f97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25651701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phoenix"}],"isPartOf":"Phoenix","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Classical Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"WOMEN'S BONDS, WOMEN'S POTS: ADORNMENT SCENES IN ATTIC VASE-PAINTING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651701","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":15567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Holly M. Hapke","Devan Ayyankeril"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Of \"Loose\" Women and \"Guides,\" or, Relationships in the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250836","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":5368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Rereading Carolyn Merchant\u2019s The Death of Nature a quarter century after its publication and from the perspective of its contribution to feminist theory is a rewarding process. Merchant\u2019s book has garnered a sustained readership as a foundational text of ecofeminism. Simultaneously, however, ecofeminism itself has been sidelined within feminist theory because of critiques that it is marred by ethnocentrism and by an essentialist identification of women with nature. Rereading Merchant leads to three conclusions. First, Merchant explicitly repudiates ethnocentrism and essentialism, developing instead an archival methodology that grounds the universalizing claims of modern science in time and place, text and ideology. Second, the central claim of ecofeminism\u2014that the domination of women and of nature have shared roots in the logic of science and capitalism\u2014remains a powerful thesis. Third, ecofeminism brought together antimilitarist feminists and others whose voices are underrepresented in contemporary academic feminism. Combining the critiques of recent third\u2010wave feminisms with a reevaluation of ecofeminism would greatly strengthen the field.","creator":["Charis Thompson"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/508080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2468e87-369f-350f-b900-c7c788f312ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/508080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back to Nature?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/508080","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":4121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Resurrecting Ecofeminism after Poststructuralist and Third\u2010Wave Feminisms"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janet Moore Lindman"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2674480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c62256be-6a11-3df6-8cf4-5b5e576d61ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2674480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Acting the Manly Christian: White Evangelical Masculinity in Revolutionary Virginia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2674480","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":12168,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123786,123881]],"Locations in B":[[9072,9167]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How do young people who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual (lgb) experience secondary schooling? How do they feel that questions of sexuality are dealt with in the curriculum and do they find this treatment helpful? This article presents the findings of a project that replicated Trenchard and Warren's 1984 study, Something to tell you. The findings are analysed and some suggestions are made as to changes in lgb-identifying people's experiences of schooling from 1984 to 2001. Finally, the article considers these changes in relation to the question of the 'effect' of Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988.","creator":["Viv Ellis","Sue High"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1502221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36f73462-910b-397e-8423-2dd4ce1b85d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1502221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Something More to Tell You: Gay, Lesbian or Bisexual Young People's Experiences of Secondary Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1502221","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For men in the context of urban poverty in the Dominican Republic, Pentecostal conversion may lead to conditions of gender distress: frustration stemming from the challenges of reconciling the conflicting gender ideals of the church with those of the street. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted with members of a Pentecostal community in the town of Villa Altagracia, I discuss how many young men come to experience the initial trials of conversion as tormenting spiritual assaults on their manhood in the form of alluring succubi. At the same time, male converts adopt newly inspired antagonisms with women familiars whom they blame for their illicit desires. Elsewhere I have discussed the strategies Pentecostal men deploy in order to mediate the conflict between barrio masculinity and evangelical Christianity; here I am concerned with illustrating how this conflict is given personal and cultural expression and how the attending experience of gender distress and its symbolic elaboration shapes masculine identity and male subjectivity in the church and local faith communities. By focusing on male converts and their struggles to remain manly, this article contributes to a richer understanding of gender dynamics in Pentecostal churches and offers useful insight into how gender is variously troubled, performed, and remade through conversion and religious practice more broadly.","creator":["Brendan Jamal Thornton"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b0c26db-66e7-39d0-b0d5-ae181b9c6bf8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26646100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Victims of Illicit Desire: Pentecostal Men of God and the Specter of Sexual Temptation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646100","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":17455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Discussions of Eliot's \u201cThe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\u201d have focused on alienation and anxiety or the poem's formal elements. However, there seems to be a gap in explaining how these two aspects relate to each other. Throughout the monologue, Prufrock's attempts to assert his (idea of) masculinity seem to be related to how the poem uses and frustrates the sonnet form. If the sonnet is understood as an inherently masculine form and if its appearance (fully or partially) within the poem points toward an attempt to fulfil the social constraints of masculinity, then the poem will allow gender and structure to enter in dialogue, which suggests that Prufrock's inability to perform as masculine is related to his inability to both create and manipulate the sonnet structure.","creator":["Brian Clifton"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.42.1.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc717aef-af9c-3e5e-a467-be096c6223c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.42.1.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Textual Frustration:<\/strong> The Sonnet and Gender Performance in \u201cThe Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.42.1.05","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Juhasz"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25598141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48483212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d668484a-236f-359b-957d-c182a23ecf0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25598141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Queer Swans: Those Fabulous Avians in the Swan Lakes of Les Ballets Trockadero and Matthew Bourne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25598141","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler's Gender Trouble has been one of the most influential theoretical works of the past twenty-five years. Both within and without philosophy, it is a touchstone for discussions of subjectivity and identity of all kinds. In her writings, and in conversation, Butler has made clear her indebtedness to the phenomenological and existential tradition, while revising it within a poststructuralist framework. In this article, I explore just one strand ofthat indebtedness by comparing the performative account of gender identity, which she offers in Gender Trouble, with the imaginary personages which form the basis of Sartre's account of individual and social identities. I suggest that some of the problems encountered by performative accounts are a consequence of this inheritance.","creator":["Kathleen Lennon"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bedcca2-d3a9-3066-bb47-19863579ca89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44652904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Judith Butler and the Sartrean Imaginary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652904","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For guest editor George Henson, it's been a long journey from reading The Front Runner in 1977 in Sapulpa, Oklahoma, to writing about queer lit for World Literature Today. But just as he has found his place here, the writers featured in this issue have taken their place alongside a long list of notable world authors.","creator":["George Henson"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7588\/worllitetoda.87.5.0040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b1ea9b6-4c7b-3d1d-bb22-564b6ef03e92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7588\/worllitetoda.87.5.0040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Taking Their Place: Queer Lit in the Twenty-first Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7588\/worllitetoda.87.5.0040","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":2920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Allison Fraiberg"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07450983-bea8-3049-8534-265c8a4b5e7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Quilts. Soaps. Shopping, and the South: The Risk of Recuperation Projects in Contemporary Women Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112215","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4864,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[58186,58436],[60729,60941]],"Locations in B":[[1265,1515],[4059,4333]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Of all the aspects of Oscar Wilde's rich afterlife as a cultural icon, the most surprising is the revival of Wilde's brief encounter with the American West in the form of the Wilde Western. Wilde was linked to the West and the cowboy days after his arrival in America (1882), and this association continued into the twentieth century, finding its way into films, a play, a detective novel, and even a graphic novel. Although these texts dramatize the juxtaposition of the iconic heterosexual masculinity of the cowboy with the iconic effeminacy of the aesthete, they just as often stage their convergence. Reading two twentieth-century texts alongside nineteenth-century reactions to Wilde's American lecture tour, I explore how Wilde Westerns interrogate, realign, and sometimes tangle the lines between western masculinity, Wildean sexuality, and nationality.","creator":["Daniel A. Novak"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.54.3.451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32b2df92-42bf-3a2e-abaf-27062cacdde5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.54.3.451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing the \u201cWilde West\u201d: Victorian Afterlives, Sexual Performance, and the American West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.54.3.451","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":4517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este estudo examina a performance de Pornographic Angel, pe\u00e7a baseada em oito hist\u00f3rias de \u201cA vida como ela \u00e9,\u201d de Nelson Rodrigues. Com o intuito de tornar o universo deste \u201canjo pornogr\u00e1fico\u201d compreens\u00edvel a um p\u00fablico americano. Tantrum Theater se vale de tr\u00eas procedimentos c\u00eanicos fundament\u00e1is. Primeiro, cria rela\u00e7oes intertextuais que impedem a predomin\u00e2ncia de um tom espec\u00edfico, seja tr\u00e1gico ou seja melodram\u00e1tico. Segundo, apresenta a cena pornogr\u00e1fica rodrigueana como sendo, desde o princ\u00edpio, j\u00e1 vista, aproximando-a do concetto freudiano de \u201cposterioridade\u201d (Nachtr\u00e4glichkeit). Finalmente, a produ\u00e7\u00e3o do Tantrum Theater se utiliza de repeti\u00e7\u00f5es que, ao desnaturalizar as personagens, abrem a possibilidade de que a diferen\u00e7a emerja no pr\u00f3prio sexo daquilo que parece ser uma reprodu\u00e7\u00e3o do mesmo. Coloca assim o espectador no pr\u00f3prio lugar de onde se produziria a perspectiva rodrigueana de um \u201canjo pornogr\u00e1fico.\u201d","creator":["Fernando de Sousa Rocha"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be3899b4-7f7d-349e-95d5-4762fc180caa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40985174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Nelson Rodrigues through the Keyhole; And What We Saw There","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985174","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the rhetorical practice of liberation theology and how it has altered social relations of power in Latin America. Using the confrontational rhetoric of liberation theology as an example, we develop a rhetorical model that grounds postmodern theories of rhetorical performance in material relations to explain how marginalized or subaltern groups can effect social change.","creator":["Carl G. Herndl","Danny A. Bauer"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbacdfc8-e88c-379b-89fc-817ecf6b13d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"558","pagination":"pp. 558-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Speaking Matters: Liberation Theology, Rhetorical Performance, and Social Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594185","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12023,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[123652,124157],[440102,440289]],"Locations in B":[[46067,46572],[48062,48248]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HILARY PILKINGTON"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25677193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2a590a6-9fa5-3a5d-9a56-f13f7165f57b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25677193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"No Longer \"On Parade\": Style and the Performance of Skinhead in the Russian Far North","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25677193","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine A. Lugg"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8441b667-18ea-35ba-96f0-66f58f6fe36f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Sissies, Faggots, Lezzies, and Dykes: Gender, Sexual Orientation, and a New Politics of Education?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136058","volumeNumber":"305","wordCount":18280,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In French, the words tasse 'teacup' and th\u00e9i\u00e8re 'teapot' also denote a public rest room where men have sex-a \"tearoom\" in English-and prendre le th\u00e9 'to have tea' means \"to have homosexual sex.\" Most of the narrative of Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu is said to result from having tea with a madeleine. This essay examines the possibility that the passage in which Charlus engages in tearoom sex may imply that there are other such tea parties in the novel. More broadly, I consider the importance of coded or secret languages in the production of sexual knowledge. Revealing the tearoom's secret opens up a Trojan horse (to use Monique Wittig's term) of interpretive uncertainties in the novel, as well as a contagion of doubt concerning heterosexual masculinity and male subjectivity.","creator":["Jarrod Hayes"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"245e6d6e-aaee-3b4e-a8c4-503e4806428b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1005","pageStart":"992","pagination":"pp. 992-1005","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Proust in the Tearoom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463025","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":10548,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[391378,391628]],"Locations in B":[[30814,31064]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jana L. French"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43308390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","issueNumber":"3 (39)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I'm telling you stories.... Trust me\": Gender, Desire, and Identity in Jeanette Winterson's Historical Fantasies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308390","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":10629,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[430072,430740],[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[16699,17387],[62549,62680]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Some poststructuralist feminist theorists hold that the body is merely the product of cultural determinants and that gender is a free-floating artifice. I discuss how this \"denaturalization\" of gender and the body entrenches us yet deeper in the nature\/culture dichotomy. The body, I maintain, needs to be \"renaturalized\" so that its earthy significance is recognized. Through a feminist reappropriation of Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology of the body, I develop a noncausal linkage between gender and the body. I present the body as an indeterminate constancy that is culturally and historically contextualized, on the one hand, yet part of our embodied givenness on the other. Interspersed throughout the paper are passages that describe my own bodily condition as I wrote the paper.","creator":["Carol Bigwood"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e148c075-9e50-3aa2-b961-101c7f79bf28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Renaturalizing the Body (With the Help of Merleau-Ponty)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809839","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9773,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[400782,400857],[415210,415336]],"Locations in B":[[51045,51113],[51673,51797]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Monika Boehringer"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1062cbda-da8b-34b6-9d7b-8fccb2dd5be0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40836835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Donner la vie, donner la mort : \u00ab L'am\u00e8r \u00e9crite \u00bb chez Simone de Beauvoir et Annie Ernaux","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836835","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":5234,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[28336,28419]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this study was to describe, interpret, and explain the changes in four young adolescent boys' awareness of how masculinity constructs and is constructed by texts, both written and spoken. Specifically, the research question was: How do the critical literacy activities within a homeschooling setting sustain or transform the boys' awareness of gendered identities and inequities in texts? I used Fairclough's (1989, 1995) critical discourse analysis as the framework in which to analyze the boys' participation in critical literacy activities within a homeschooling setting. The boys and I participated in critical literacy activities that focused on masculinity, a topic that they had not talked much about before the study began. As the boys talked, they became more aware of the practices of masculinity and of how masculinities were portrayed in a variety of texts. They began to question the rigidity of these practices. However, as this analysis demonstrated, the boys' awareness of gendered identities and inequities was unstable and was at times, uncertain. Highlighted in this study were two themes: (a) the instability and uncertainty of the boys' awareness of gendered identities, and (b) the impact of power relations within and among the local, institutional, and societal contexts on the boys' participation in the critical literacy activities. These themes were discussed in relation to Bakhtin's (1984) notions of word with a loophole and dialogism. \/\/\/ [Spanish] El prop\u00f3sito de este estudio fue describir, interpretar y explicar los cambios en la toma de conciencia de cuatro adolescentes varones acerca de la forma en que la masculinidad construye y es construida por textos, tanto escritos como orales. Espec\u00edficamente la pregunta que gui\u00f3 la investigaci\u00f3n fue: \u00bfDe qu\u00e9 manera las actividades cr\u00edticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n en un contexto hogar-escuela sostienen o transforman la toma de conciencia de los varones acerca de las identidades e inequidades de g\u00e9nero en los textos? Utiliz\u00e9 el an\u00e1lisis del discurso cr\u00edtico de Fairclough (1989, 1995) como marco para analizar la participaci\u00f3n de los adolescentes en actividades cr\u00edticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n en un contexto hogar-escuela. Los adolescentes y yo participamos en actividades cr\u00edticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n que estaban enfocadas en la masculinidad, un t\u00f3pico del cual no hab\u00edan hablado mucho antes del inicio del estudio. A medida que el estudio avanzaba, los adolescentes se volvieron m\u00e1s conscientes de las pr\u00e1cticas de la masculinidad y la forma en que se presenta la masculinidad en una variedad de textos. Comenzaron a cuestionar la rigidez de esas pr\u00e1cticas. Sin embargo, como este an\u00e1lisis demuestra, la toma de conciencia de los varones acerca de las identidades e inequidades de g\u00e9nero era inestable y por momentos inciertas. Dos temas se destacaron en este estudio: (a) la inestabilidad e incertidumbre de la toma de conciencia de los varones acerca de las identidades de g\u00e9nero y (b) el impacto de las relaciones de poder en los contextos locales, institucionales y sociales sobre la participaci\u00f3n de los adolescentes en las actividades cr\u00edticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n. Estos temas se discutieron en relaci\u00f3n a las nociones de palabra evasora y dialogismo de Bakhtin (1984). \/\/\/ [German] Der Zweck dieser Studie war es, bei vier heranwachsenden Jungen Ver\u00e4nderungen zu beschreiben, zu interpretieren und zu erkl\u00e4ren, wie das Bewu\u00dftsein von M\u00e4nnlichkeit sich aufbaut und sich in Texten niederschl\u00e4gt, beides-gesprochen und geschrieben. Die Forschungsfrage hie\u00df spezifisch: Wie wirken oder ver\u00e4ndern sich die geschlechtsbedingten bewu\u00dft ausgef\u00fchrten Schreib- und Leseaktivit\u00e4ten und -m\u00e4ngel innerhalb einer vertrauten heimischen Schulumgebung bei den Jungen f\u00f6rdernd oder transformierend auf das Bewu\u00dftsein ihrer eigenen Geschlechtsidentit\u00e4t und Unausgeglichenheit in solchen Texten aus? Ich wandte Faircloughs (1989, 1995) kritisch-analytische Abhandlung als Rahmen an, in welchem die Teilnahme der Jungen an entscheidenden Lese- und Schreibaktivit\u00e4ten in vertrauter heimischer Schulumgebung analysiert wird. Die Jungen und ich nahmen an ausgew\u00e4hlten Schreib- und Leseaktivit\u00e4ten teil, die das Augenmerk auf die M\u00e4nnlichkeit richteten, ein Thema \u00fcber das sie vor Beginn der Studie nicht gern sprachen. Im Verlauf der Gespr\u00e4che mit den Jungen wurde ihnen mehr und mehr ihre praktizierte M\u00e4nnlichkeit bewu\u00dft und wie sich diese M\u00e4nnlichkeit aufs Unterschiedlichste in Texten widerspiegelt. Sie fingen an, die vorgegebene Strenge von Entscheidungen in Frage zu stellen. Wie jedoch diese Analyse beweist, war das Bewu\u00dftwerden geschlechtsorientierter Identit\u00e4ten und M\u00e4ngel noch instabil und zeitweilig recht unsicher. In dieser Studie wurden zwei Themen hervorgehoben: (a) die Instabilit\u00e4t und Unsicherheit des Bewu\u00dftseins der Jungen \u00fcber ihre geschlechtsbezogene Identit\u00e4t, und (b) die Auswirkungen des Einflusses innerhalb und unter lokalen, institutionellen und gesellschaftlichen Zusammenh\u00e4ngen in bezug auf Teilnahme und Mitarbeit der Jungen bei kritisch-entscheidenden Schreib- und Leseaktivit\u00e4ten. Diese Themen wurden unter Bezugnahme auf Bakhtins (1984) Ideen von der 'Ausflucht des Wortes' und der 'inneren Zwiesprache' (Dialogismen) diskutiert. \/\/\/ [French] Cette \u00e9tude avait pour but de d\u00e9crire, interpr\u00e9ter, et expliquer les changements chez quatre jeunes adolescents de la conscience dont la masculinit\u00e9 construit et est construite par des textes, tant \u00e9crits qu'oraux. La question sp\u00e9cifique de recherche \u00e9tait: comment des activit\u00e9s de litt\u00e9ratie critique dans une situation de scolarisation \u00e0 domicile peuvent soutenir ou transformer chez des gar\u00e7ons la conscience des identit\u00e9s et des in\u00e9galit\u00e9s de genre dans les textes? J'ai utilis\u00e9 l'analyse critique du discours de Fairclough (1989, 1995) comme cadre dans lequel analyser la participation aux activit\u00e9s de litt\u00e9ratie critique en situation de scolarisation \u00e0 domicile. Les gar\u00e7ons et moi avons particip\u00e9 \u00e0 des activit\u00e9s de litt\u00e9ratie critique qui ont mis l'accent sur la masculinit\u00e9, th\u00e8me dont ils n'avaient pas beaucoup parl\u00e9 avant le d\u00e9but de cette \u00e9tude. En parlant, les gar\u00e7ons ont pris davantage conscience des pratiques de masculinit\u00e9 et de la fa\u00e7on dont les masculinit\u00e9s sont pr\u00e9sent\u00e9es dans diff\u00e9rents textes. Ils ont commenc\u00e9 \u00e0 mettre en question la rigidit\u00e9 de ces pratiques. Cependant, comme l'analyse l'a d\u00e9montr\u00e9, la conscience qu'avaient les gar\u00e7ons des identit\u00e9s et des in\u00e9galit\u00e9s de genre \u00e9tait instable et parfois incertaine. Cette \u00e9tude a mis en lumi\u00e8re deux th\u00e8mes: a) l'instabilit\u00e9 et l'incertitude de la conscience qu'ont les gar\u00e7ons des identit\u00e9s de genre; et b) l'impact des relations de pouvoir dans et entre les contextes locaux, institutionnels et soci\u00e9taux de la participation des gar\u00e7ons aux activit\u00e9s de litt\u00e9ratie critique. La discute de ces th\u00e8mes est faite en relation avec les notions de mot et de loophole et de dialogisme chez Bakhtin (1984).","creator":["Josephine Peyton Young"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/748221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boy Talk: Critical Literacy and Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748221","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":20204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Committed White male teachers of inner-city students seeks to supersede previous research on White teacher and other White identities by narrating respondents' \"creative identifications\" and initiating a \"second wave\" of White identity studies. This research reflection articulates complex, viable, and creative White identities, reconceptualized here as creative identifications. Using life history methodology, this research reflection articulates respondents' identifications as they emerge in life histories. Critiquing, engaging, and extending scholarship on White teachers, this reflection reveals respondents' recodings of White identifications and articulates how these recodings become useful in classrooms. Specifically, respondents recode bounded identifications, at times in progressive ways, using alternative media, illegal drug experiences, process spirituality, and other cultural resources in processes of \"self \"identification. This reflection articulates these complex and nuanced White teacher identifications as they relate to classrooms and race visible, rather than color-blind, identifications. These findings critique activist-interventionist research on White teachers' \"false consciousnesses\" for its essentialzing tendencies and suggest a move toward creative identifications and a \"second wave\" of White identity studies illuminating them. The second wave of White identity studies, which this research exemplifies and calls for, emphasizes respondents' narrative becoming rather than essentialized being as a basis for a continued research on White identities.","creator":["JAMES C. JUPP","G. PATRICK SLATTERY JR."],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f40c42d-1a1e-39ec-b393-9e30fd0edeaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"454","pagination":"pp. 454-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Committed White Male Teachers and Identifications: Toward Creative Identifications and a \"Second Wave\" of White Identity Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962977","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["FRANCES RICHARD"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43591466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00322032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60638590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5625aec-f7fa-33a7-89c9-0c39c1f8930f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43591466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poetry"}],"isPartOf":"Poetry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Poetry Foundation","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Multitudes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43591466","volumeNumber":"204","wordCount":2962,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[1868,2531]],"Locations in B":[[548,2370]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael B\u00e9rub\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bite Size Theory: Popularizing Academic Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466390","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Warren Hedges"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f193b222-afb0-3f64-9d15-20600669d3be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Howells's \"Wretched Fetishes\": Character, Realism, and Other Modern Instances","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755089","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11270,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[67744,67803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mindy Blaise","Affrica Taylor"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42731139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15386619"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564133017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3087d35e-2a8b-33e9-8c23-e30a8bde52c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42731139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ycyoungchildren"}],"isPartOf":"YC Young Children","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-96, 98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Using Queer Theory to Rethink Gender Equity in Early Childhood Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42731139","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arved Ashby"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf8c3115-c209-3a0d-8c6f-755228126d90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Berg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840796","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":13924,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[431390,431474],[431753,431853],[443416,443517],[458691,458782]],"Locations in B":[[9532,9616],[9640,9740],[9930,10031],[13371,13462]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyzes the strategies of self-representation in the travel narratives of two women who visited Persia disguised as men. It demonstrates how cross-dressing can affect female subjectivity, and how radically the role of masquerade can change in situations that combine sensitive issues such as imperialism, religion, and gender.","creator":["HALIA KOO"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e467b96-ccca-39e1-81a3-e0e9c8b7fa1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Wo)men Travellers: Physical and Narrative Boundaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030184","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8209,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[13182,13327]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen Amico"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a00e0943-06b3-3f37-842a-cf40426fbf2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'I Want Muscles': House Music, Homosexuality and Masculine Signification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853627","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455440,455868]],"Locations in B":[[47419,47845]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adrienne Erazo"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3943d6e-fdac-3f57-bb5f-1f454ba7a185"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26492217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BLURRING BORDERS: CONSTRUCTION OF NARRATIVE AND GENDER IN ANA CLAVEL'S \"CUERPO N\u00c1UFRAGO\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492217","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RACHEL HEINRICHS"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aa57047-ca5a-31e2-9bf5-586fd202930d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Critical Masculinities in Lady Audley's Secret","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793628","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8870,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[56112,56166]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Foster"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208853","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"611c46af-6831-321b-bcbb-352dfcf943e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208853"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Kick[ing] the Perpendiculars Outa Right Anglos\": Edward Dorn's Multiculturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208853","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste ensaio, discuto a invisibilidade de pesquisadoras por conta das normas da L\u00edngua Portuguesa e das normas de referencia\u00e7\u00e3o das publica\u00e7\u00f5es acad\u00eamicas pelo vi\u00e9s de g\u00eanero com rela\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 credita\u00e7\u00e3o de mulheres. \u00c9 regra geral, com exce\u00e7\u00e3o de algumas revistas feministas, que autores e autoras sejam apresentados em artigos, disserta\u00e7\u00f5es e teses pelo sobrenome, o que pode reduzir a percep\u00e7\u00e3o das mulheres que s\u00e3o citadas em pesquisas cient\u00edficas. As discuss\u00f5es com rela\u00e7\u00e3o ao sexismo do idioma, trazidas por vezes pela imprensa a partir de discuss\u00f5es sociais, s\u00e3o considera\u00e7\u00f5es aqui tratadas. A pergunta que surge \u00e9 se pode haver um movimento de revis\u00e3o da forma de creditar as mulheres em trabalhos cient\u00edficos. Para tanto, ap\u00f3s a revis\u00e3o da literatura, haver\u00e1 uma proposta de que a credita\u00e7\u00e3o das autoras mulheres seja feita de forma completa, com nome, sobrenome e uso dos pronomes adequados. This essay discusses the invisibility of female researchers because of the Portuguese language standards and also because of the gender bias in relation to the accreditation of women present in the academic publication standards. It is a general rule, with the exception of some feminist magazines, that the authors are presented in articles, dissertations and theses, by surname, which can reduce the perception of women cited in scientific research. Discussions in relation to the language sexism brought up by the press from social discussions are also considered. Can there be a movement to revise the way of crediting women in scientific work? For such, after reviewing the literature, there will be a proposal that the female authors\u2019accreditation be done in full, with first and last name and with the appropriate pronouns. Este ensayo discute la invisibilidad de las investigadoras debido a las reglas de la lengua portuguesa y los est\u00e1ndares para referenciar publicaciones acad\u00e9micas por sesgo de g\u00e9nero en relaci\u00f3n a la acreditaci\u00f3n de mujeres. Es una regla general, a excepci\u00f3n de algunas revistas feministas, que las autoras se presenten en los art\u00edculos, disertaciones y tesis, por apellido, lo que puede reducir la percepci\u00f3n de mujeres citadas en las investigaciones cient\u00edficas. Tambi\u00e9n se consideran las discusiones en relaci\u00f3n al sexismo del lenguaje, a veces planteadas por la prensa a partir de las discusiones sociales. La pregunta que surge es si puede haber un movimiento para revisar la forma de acreditar a las mujeres en el trabajo cient\u00edfico. Por lo tanto, luego de revisar la literatura, se propondr\u00e1 que la acreditaci\u00f3n de las autoras se realice en su totalidad, con nombre y apellido y con los pronombres adecuados.","creator":["Sandra Nodari"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48633547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f68d9bd-cf94-3ac8-869f-dbc5a16cd94c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48633547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Nomes e pronomes na L\u00edngua Portuguesa - Names and Pronouns in the Portuguese Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48633547","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":18140,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147006,147314]],"Locations in B":[[75283,75706]],"subTitle":"a quest\u00e3o sexista no idioma e na academia"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brian Loftus"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac6674cd-abaa-3941-86f3-a200ec8b1585"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Speaking Silence: The Strategies and Structures of Queer Autobiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099624","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8429,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[374363,374705]],"Locations in B":[[15845,16187]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article we propose a rethinking of the concepts of center and margin in geography. We review extant literatures from structuralist political geography and science studies and explore alternative theoretical approaches to develop the concept of axes of centrality. Using theories of performativity to understand centers and margins as produced across an array of axes allows for an expansion of the concept. Contemporary experiences of transnational migration offer a useful way of thinking about how bodies produce places differently as global centers and margins. Drawing on material from two studies of transnational communities\u2014one of white, English-speaking South African return migrants and one of British East African Asians\u2014we take a biographical approach, demonstrating how two individuals with extensive migration histories have performed England, South Africa, Uganda, and India as variously central and marginal across the life course. We develop the concept of axes of centrality to demonstrate how centers and margins are most usefully conceptualized not as places in themselves but as located in and between bodies in a variety of ways as they move through and perform space at a variety of scales and over time. We propose an understanding of centrality and marginality that takes into account the embodied conditionalities under which places become imagined and reimagined as central, marginal, or both. \u6211\u4eec\u4e8e\u672c\u6587\u4e2d\uff0c\u63d0\u51fa\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4e2d\u6838\u5fc3\u4e0e\u8fb9\u9672\u6982\u5ff5\u7684\u518d\u601d\u8003\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u56de\u987e\u7ed3\u6784\u4e3b\u4e49\u653f\u6cbb\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4e0e\u79d1\u5b66\u7814\u7a76\u4e2d\u7684\u65e2\u6709\u6587\u732e\uff0c\u5e76\u63a2\u8ba8\u53e6\u7c7b\u7684\u7406\u8bba\u53d6\u5f84\uff0c\u4ee5\u53d1\u5c55\u6838\u5fc3\u8f74\u7ebf\u4e4b\u6982\u5ff5\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u8fd0\u7528\u5c55\u6f14\u6027\u7684\u7406\u8bba\uff0c\u5c06\u6838\u5fc3\u4e0e\u8fb9\u9672\u7406\u89e3\u4e3a\u900f\u8fc7\u4e00\u7cfb\u5217\u7684\u8f74\u7ebf\u751f\u4ea7\u800c\u6210\uff0c\u8ba9\u8be5\u6982\u5ff5\u5f97\u4ee5\u6269\u5145\u4e4b\u3002\u5f53\u4ee3\u7684\u8de8\u56fd\u8fc1\u5f99\u7ecf\u9a8c\uff0c\u63d0\u4f9b\u4e86\u6709\u6548\u7684\u65b9\u5f0f\uff0c\u601d\u8003\u8eab\u4f53\u5982\u4f55\u4e0d\u540c\u5730\u751f\u4ea7\u5168\u7403\u7684\u6838\u5fc3\u4e0e\u8fb9\u9672\u4e4b\u5730\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u8fd0\u7528\u4e24\u4e2a\u8de8\u56fd\u793e\u7fa4\u7684\u7814\u7a76\u7d20\u6750\u2014\u2014\u4e00\u4e2a\u662f\u8bf4\u82f1\u8bed\u7684\u5357\u975e\u56de\u6d41\u79fb\u6c11\uff0c\u53e6\u4e00\u4e2a\u5219\u662f\u82f1\u5c5e\u4e1c\u975e\u4e2d\u7684\u4e9a\u6d32\u4eba\u2014\u2014\u5e76\u63a1\u53d6\u4f20\u8bb0\u5f0f\u65b9\u6cd5\uff0c\u5c55\u73b0\u4e24\u4f4d\u7ecf\u5386\u5927\u91cf\u79fb\u6c11\u5386\u7a0b\u7684\u4e2a\u4eba\uff0c\u5982\u4f55\u5728\u5176\u751f\u547d\u8f68\u8ff9\u4e2d\uff0c\u5c06\u82f1\u683c\u5170\u3001\u5357\u975e\u3001\u4e4c\u5e72\u8fbe\u4e0e\u5370\u5ea6\uff0c\u5c55\u6f14\u4e3a\u5404\u5f0f\u5404\u6837\u7684\u6838\u5fc3\u4e0e\u8fb9\u9672\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u53d1\u5c55\u6838\u5fc3\u8f74\u7ebf\u7684\u6982\u5ff5\uff0c\u7528\u4ee5\u663e\u793a\u6982\u5ff5\u5316\u6838\u5fc3\u4e0e\u8fb9\u9672\u7684\u6700\u6709\u6548\u65b9\u6cd5\uff0c\u5e76\u4e0d\u662f\u5c06\u5176\u89c6\u4e3a\u4e0d\u8a3c\u81ea\u660e\u7684\u5730\u65b9\uff0c\u800c\u662f\u5c06\u5176\u6982\u5ff5\u5316\u4e3a\u8eab\u4f53\u5728\u4e0d\u540c\u7684\u5c3a\u5ea6\u4e0e\u65f6\u95f4\u4e2d\u79fb\u52a8\u5e76\u5c55\u6f14\u7a7a\u95f4\u4e4b\u65f6\uff0c\u4ee5\u5404\u79cd\u65b9\u5f0f\u5ea7\u843d\u4e8e\u8eab\u4f53\u4e4b\u4e2d\u53ca\u8eab\u4f53\u4e4b\u95f4\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u63d0\u51fa\u4e00\u79cd\u5bf9\u4e8e\u6838\u5fc3\u6027\u4e0e\u8fb9\u7f18\u6027\u7684\u7406\u89e3\uff0c\u8be5\u7406\u89e3\u80fd\u591f\u8003\u91cf\u8eab\u4f53\u5316\u7684\u5883\u51b5\uff0c\u5728\u8be5\u5883\u51b5\u4e2d\uff0c\u5730\u65b9\u88ab\u60f3\u50cf\u4e0e\u518d\u60f3\u50cf\u4e3a\u6838\u5fc3\u3001\u8fb9\u9672\u3001\u6216\u4e24\u8005\u7686\u662f\u3002 Proponemos en este art\u00edculo repensar los conceptos de centro y periferia en geograf\u00eda. Hacemos una revisi\u00f3n de las literaturas existentes sobre geograf\u00eda pol\u00edtica estructuralista y los estudios sobre ciencia, y exploramos enfoques te\u00f3ricos alternativos para desarrollar el concepto de ejes de centralidad. La aplicaci\u00f3n de teor\u00edas de performatividad [o capacidad de representar] para entender el significado de centros y periferias, como producciones que surgen del despliegue de ejes, nos permite acceder a la expansi\u00f3n del concepto. Las experiencias contempor\u00e1neas de migraci\u00f3n transnacional nos presentan un camino \u00fatil para llegar a entender c\u00f3mo producen los cuerpos lugares diferenciados de los centros y periferias globales. Bas\u00e1ndonos en material de dos estudios de comunidades transnacionales\u2014una de migrantes blancos sudafricanos de retorno de habla inglesa, y otra integrada por brit\u00e1nicos asi\u00e1ticos y del \u00c1frica oriental\u2014adoptamos un enfoque biogr\u00e1fico, demostrando c\u00f3mo en el curso de sus vidas dos individuos con amplias historias de migraci\u00f3n han representado Inglaterra, Sud\u00e1frica, Uganda e India variadamente de centrales o perif\u00e9ricas. Desarrollamos el concepto de ejes de centralidad para demostrar c\u00f3mo los centros y las periferias se conceptualizan con m\u00e1xima utilidad, no como lugares en s\u00ed mismos sino por su localizaci\u00f3n dentro o entre cuerpos, de muchas maneras a medida que se desplazan a trav\u00e9s del espacio y lo representan en una variedad de escalas y a trav\u00e9s del tiempo. Proponemos un entendimiento de la centralidad y la marginalidad que tome en cuenta las condicionalidades personificadas bajo las cuales lo lugares llegan a ser imaginados y re-imaginados como centrales, perif\u00e9ricos, o de ambas maneras.","creator":["Max J. Andrucki","Jen Dickinson"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80fadbff-5ced-3968-9c8b-18b38c03bd31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Political science - Political geography","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Rethinking Centers and Margins in Geography: Bodies, Life Course, and the Performance of Transnational Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537956","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":12712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the gender discourse surrounding the women soldiers implicated in the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal and the gender silence surrounding their male counterparts. The analysis suggests that the women soldiers in the abuse case, particularly Lynndie England, are held to gendered standards, while the male soldiers are discussed in terms that are nongendered. Further, analysis of widely disseminated photographs suggests that where the Iraqi male prisoners excessively gendered and homosexualized, the male soldiers have their presumed heterosexuality preserved. Examination of the Abu Ghraib case suggests implications for rhetorical scholars interested in gender, as well as larger cultural implications regarding the policy debates that arose as a result of the case.","creator":["Marita Gronnvoll"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender (In)Visibility at Abu Ghraib","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940152","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11938,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[80937,81153],[477195,477271]],"Locations in B":[[9600,9812],[62679,62756]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At present, most work examining the well-documented relationship between social inequality and body size treats fatness as an effect, caused either by some factor that determines weight and social class simultaneously, or by social class itself. However, the relationship between weight and social inequality is more complex than these explanations suggest. Recent studies by John Cawley (2004) and Charles Baum and William Ford (2004) suggest that fatness is often a contributor to inequality, not merely an effect. This article examines the causes of income inequalities between obese and nonobese workers, focusing on how gender interacts with body size to determine the size and duration of those inequalities. Drawing on data from the 1997\u20132008 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97), I introduce a positive test for discrimination, which provides a methodological advantage over previous research in this area. I then pose two questions: first, is anti-obesity discrimination to blame for income inequalities between obese and nonobese workers? Second, do women and men's experiences of those inequalities differ? The results indicate that very obese men do face one form of discrimination\u2014statistical discrimination\u2014but that they can overcome initial disadvantages with time. In contrast, obese women's income disadvantages persist over time, suggesting the presence of prejudicial discrimination. In combination with previous studies illustrating how fat women are disadvantaged in educational attainment and marriage outcomes\u2014two important means of accessing economic resources\u2014this research shows one mechanism by which weight, particularly in combination with gender, is a major vector of U.S. inequality.","creator":["Katherine Mason"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2012.59.3.411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50af4da8-8dd4-3c08-80c2-8d895d4ea311"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2012.59.3.411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"The Unequal Weight of Discrimination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2012.59.3.411","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":14185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Gender, Body Size, and Income Inequality"} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Employing the work of Jean Baudrillard and Judith Butler, this article considers the body as a site of meaning in Philip Roth's American Pastoral (1997). Concentrating on Seymour \u201cthe Swede\u201d Levov, the analysis discusses the impact of appearance on the formation of masculine identity. Also addressed are notions of ownership and interpretation within this process, and the article pays particular attention to evaluating the role that outside agency has on creating an individual's sense of self.","creator":["Alex Hobbs"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/philrothstud.6.1.69","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15473929"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67838384"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007252826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4a1b7fb-e258-3738-ab96-3f9e16f6d900"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5703\/philrothstud.6.1.69"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrothstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philip Roth Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Reading the Body in Philip Roth's American Pastoral<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/philrothstud.6.1.69","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7756,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[72504,72629],[72775,72974]],"Locations in B":[[42528,42652],[42660,42859]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article a pour but de mettre en lumi\u00e8re le processus de d\u00e9construction et de reconstruction identitaire dans le film de Jean-Marc Vall\u00e9e, C.R.A.Z.Y. paru en 2005. Le r\u00e9alisateur a fait le choix d'un sujet \u00e0 dimension universelle, \u00e0 savoir la famille, tout en incluant la probl\u00e9matique de l'homosexualit\u00e9. \u00c0 travers ce travail, nous verrons comment la technique cin\u00e9matographique sert \u00e0 cr\u00e9er des liens entre les probl\u00e8mes politiques, socio\u00e9conomiques et culturels du Qu\u00e9bec dans la p\u00e9riode d'apr\u00e8s R\u00e9volution Tranquille. Le personnage principal sera le reflet de ces changements, tout en ayant \u00e0 accepter sa propre unicit\u00e9, sa sexualit\u00e9 marginale dans une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 encore en proie \u00e0 la tradition et \u00e0 la religion. La rencontre avec l'autre de m\u00eame que le d\u00e9part seront des th\u00e8mes majeurs de cette analyse, afin de souligner l'impact, Tin\u00e9vitabilit\u00e9 et la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 de cet autre dans la mise en introspection, la d\u00e9construction et l'acceptation de soi. Ce travail prend comme points de r\u00e9f\u00e9rence les travaux de Julia Kristeva ou encore Judith Butler, dans la mesure o\u00f9 l'\u00e9tranget\u00e9 int\u00e9rieure et la performativit\u00e9 du genre sont au c\u0153ur des probl\u00e8mes identitaires mis en avant par Vall\u00e9e.","creator":["Lo\u00efc Bourdeau"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24245382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15523152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"656426483"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200860"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3673e213-c75e-3f78-b705-d80c4b2acc50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24245382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvetudfran"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles \u00c9tudes Francophones","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"F.O.L.L.E soci\u00e9t\u00e9: D\u00e9construction et reconstruction identitaire dans C.R.A.Z.Y.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24245382","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7252,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101800,101883]],"Locations in B":[[30515,30596]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bertrand Guillarme"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12995495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ed8483a-6911-3fe9-afba-28ae6631bdb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cites"}],"isPartOf":"Cit\u00e9s","issueNumber":"5","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La justice d\u00e9mocratique et l'effacement du genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620740","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contemporary behavioral endocrinology and biological psychology claim that sex hormones play an important role in the production of sex differences in human and other animal behaviors. This article critically examines these claims, which range from simple biologically determinist arguments through to more complex attempts to theorize the connected roles of the hormonal and the social. In each case, these sciences rely on a social\/biological distinction. Analyzing contemporary feminist work on the body as lived, and innovative scientific views of biology's \"co-action\" with the environment, it is suggested that this distinction is limiting and requires rethinking. Rather than accusing science of essentialism and rejecting the role of the biological outright, it may prove more fruitful for feminism to theorize the \"interimplication\" of the biological and the social in attempts to understand sex differences in behavior.","creator":["Celia Roberts"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eca49c93-3280-3dc0-9ae6-b9562e23df7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Biological Behavior? Hormones, Psychology, and Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316760","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9155,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[54123,54208]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo Este artigo explora a constru\u00e7\u00e3o da identidade sexual que n\u00e3o se enquadra na heteronorma a partir de um quadro te\u00f3rico que articula tr\u00eas dimens\u00f5es da experi\u00eancia sexual: integra\u00e7\u00e3o, estrat\u00e9gia e subjetiva\u00e7\u00e3o. Argumenta-se que a forma\u00e7\u00e3o destas identidades pode ser mais bem compreendida segundo o eixo da subjetiva\u00e7\u00e3o e, mais particularmente, na tens\u00e3o que se estabelece entre este e o da integra\u00e7\u00e3o. Isto acontece porque, entre os indiv\u00edduos que vivem para al\u00e9m dos limites convencionais da heteronorma, a experi\u00eancia sexual constr\u00f3ise, inevitavelmente, em confronto com a mesma, gerando uma reflexividade que contribui para operar um distanciamento do indiv\u00edduo face a pap\u00e9is e valores convencionais, problematizandoos ou, mesmo, adotando modelos alternativos.","creator":["Ver\u00f3nica Mafalda Nunes de Melo Policarpo"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.2.541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b20c9f0f-aae3-3b69-8b51-7547bd526829"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/estufemi.24.2.541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Para ara l\u00e1 da heteronorma:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.2.541","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"subjetiva\u00e7\u00e3o e constru\u00e7\u00e3o da identidade sexual"} +{"abstract":"The Women Lament (2014), a performance and installation artwork, explored the social, political, and visual cultural constructions of lamenting women. This article suggests that the lamenting woman is discursively constituted and that through visual culture her image comes to be used to support political perspectives and to represent national and world tragedies. As arts research, this article explores the disruption of artistic self-will as well as the unraveling of the \"I,\" and suggests that the unraveling\"I\" become an integral part of the artistic process expressed in the writing of arts research through an emphasis of artmaking as a process.","creator":["JENNIFER (EISENHAUER) RICHARDSON"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45149259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"596b97b7-6445-359a-860c-f454e8a05a3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45149259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Women Lament: Unraveling the \"I\" in Arts Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45149259","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":6860,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445483,445848]],"Locations in B":[[30165,30582]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article casts new light on the fifteenth-century \"acolyte tale\" Ashibiki (The mountain) as well as on the genre as a whole. In an archetypal acolyte tale, the protagonist (chigo)\u2014often an avatar of a bodhisattva\u2014dies a tragic death, awakening his surviving lover, a monk, to the emptiness of carnal desire. Perhaps due to the adversities the chigo endures in Ashibiki, previous scholarship has likened this tale to the archetype, although Ashibiki makes a stark contrast within the genre. By employing the \"stepchild story\" as a framework for re-interpretation, I argue that Ashibiki is a triumph story of a stepchild who is initiated into adulthood by surviving numerous hardships. Furthermore, based on careful analyses of several acolyte tales, this article challenges prevalent assumptions that chigo-monk relationships were inherently exploitative and acolyte tales were created for legitimating the institutional sexual abuse of adolescent boys. \u50e7\u3068\u7a1a\u5150\u306e\u60b2\u604b\u3092\u63cf\u304f\u7a1a\u5150\u7269\u8a9e\u306f\u3001\u4ecf\u6559\u5bfa\u9662\u306e\u7d44\u7e54\u7684\u306a\u5c11\u5e74\u8650\u5f85\u3092\u6b63\u5f53\u5316 \u3059\u308b\u8a00\u8aac\u3068\u3057\u3066\u89e3\u91c8\u3055\u308c\u304c\u3061\u3060\u304c\u3001\u672c\u7a3f\u306f\u7a1a\u5150\u5236\u5ea6\u304c\u30a2\u30d7\u30ea\u30aa\u30ea\u306b\u6027\u7684\u643e\u53d6\u306e\u69cb\u9020 \u3092\u6301\u3064\u3068\u3044\u3046\u524d\u63d0\u306b\u4f9d\u62e0\u305b\u305a\u3001\u300e\u3042\u3057\u3073\u304d\u300f\u306e\u5206\u6790\u3092\u901a\u3057\u3066\u3001\u7a1a\u5150\u7269\u8a9e\u306e\u518d\u691c\u8a0e\u3092\u8a66 \u307f\u308b\u3068\u3068\u3082\u306b\u3001\u300e\u3042\u3057\u3073\u304d\u300f\u306e\u7d99\u5b50\u8b5a\u3068\u3057\u3066\u306e\u69cb\u9020\u3092\u660e\u3089\u304b\u306b\u3059\u308b\u3002","creator":["SACHI SCHMIDT-HORI"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45276547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670097"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6441a75-95fb-3a1b-9971-7b6e3dfcfa6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45276547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Boy Who Lived: The Transfigurations of \"Chigo\" in the Medieval Japanese Short Story \"Ashibiki\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45276547","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":12781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442641,442873]],"Locations in B":[[57595,57828]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women's education has been central to discourses that have sought to modernize developing and Muslim societies. Based on ethnographic data collected from women teachers from rural and low-income communities of Pakistan, the article shows how being a parhi likhi (educated) woman implies acquiring a privileged subject position making claims to middleclass and Islamic morality, and engaging in specific struggles within, rather than against, the institutions of family, community, and Islam. This focus on the lived experiences of educated Muslim women complicates the prevalent narrative of modernity that presents women's education and gender empowerment as an expression of individual women's choice and free will against the oppressive frameworks of family, community, and Islam.","creator":["AYESHA KHURSHID"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3b8dd7c-0874-35c9-ab2f-86802a19e313"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ISLAMIC TRADITIONS OF MODERNITY: Gender, Class, and Islam in a Transnational Women's Education Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669944","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article develops the dancers\u2019 choreographic notebook as a cross-disciplinary documentational device in the representation and analysis of multi-sensual qualitative sources. Drawing upon fieldwork collected during a London-based research placement with the dance company BalletBoyz, I endeavour to extend critical debates around the body and performance within human geography to examine the \u2018more-than-representational\u2019 methodological possibilities affiliated with performativity and its allied body of literature. In performing this methodological approach, I first hope to encourage experimental and creative documentational methods for conducting vibrant, engaging geographies of the body. Second, I affirm the centrality of sensuous, embodied accounts in the research process. Finally, this article seeks to equip others in their investigations into re-imagining what \u2018physical\u2019 thinking might look like. In documenting the body, I hope a space may be created to rethink the ontology of the body beyond the dualisms of absence or present.","creator":["Charlotte Veal"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50996597"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af18938f-f883-32d5-8b16-51832b7a20fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A choreographic notebook","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168723","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"methodological developments in qualitative geographical research"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Cameron"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97e79606-7cdf-3581-afa6-883edb033768"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"973","pageStart":"945","pagination":"pp. 945-973","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, Language, and Discourse: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175199","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn Meskell"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/506141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1da3dc4-d1b0-3cdb-ad7b-2d25f99c2560"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/506141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article: Running the Gamut: Gender, Girls, and Goddesses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/506141","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":4080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Responding to the ethical and performative call of Judith Butler not to propagate the sex- and gender-related violence of the imbedded discourse that we study, this article inquires into the discursive strategies of Jewish scripture by analysing how it orchestrates certain norms of sex and gender and makes them serve the overall aim of securing cultural survival. Following this, it traces reflections on persons of ambiguous or indeterminate sex from rabbinic to modern Judaism so as to inquire into the rabbinic dependency on scripture when non-conforming individuals challenge its bipolar sex and gender system. Finally, the article considers if scripture, as suggested by Butler, can play a subversive role in how we attend to non-conforming others today. To do so, the author's distinction between hermeneutical and artifactual uses of scripture is presented to evaluate the extent to which modern Jews and non-Jews are able to influence their own representations of sex and gender and thus liberate themselves from the normativity implied by scriptural discourse.","creator":["Marianne Schleicher"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23927105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0205b6c-30fa-3bee-9ac7-782ce3ea71bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23927105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"422","pagination":"pp. 422-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"CONSTRUCTIONS OF SEX AND GENDER: ATTENDING TO ANDROGYNES AND \"TUMTUMIM\" THROUGH JEWISH SCRIPTURAL USE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23927105","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rivka Swenson"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8fa09d7-7865-348c-826f-4973f1a5685e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41468086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Optics, Gender, and the Eighteenth-Century Gaze: Looking at Eliza Haywood's \"Anti-Pamela\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468086","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9332,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524252]],"Locations in B":[[46650,46745]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this paper is to show that Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex has been mistakenly interpreted as a theory of gender, because interpreters have failed adequately to understand Beauvoir's aims. Beauvoir is not trying to explain facts, events, or states of affairs, but to reveal, unveil, or uncover (d\u00e9couvrir) meanings. She explicates the meanings of woman, female, and feminine. Instead of a theory, Beauvoir's book presents a phenomenological description of the sexual difference.","creator":["Sara Hein\u00e4maa"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d0b93c0-ce5b-309d-bcd9-a6ef38b23f14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Is a Woman? Butler and Beauvoir on the Foundations of the Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810249","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8752,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[361998,362536],[513850,513984]],"Locations in B":[[31922,32459],[37862,37998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlotte Sussman"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"122b5796-2864-3fcc-9382-9df78b5233dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Daughter of the Revolution: Mary Shelley in Our Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793781","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contrasting the work of Genevieve Lloyd, Elizabeth Grosz, and Moira Gatens with the poststructuralist philosophy of Judith Butler, this paper identifies a distinctive \"Australian\" feminism. It argues that while Butler remains trapped by the matter\/representation binary, the Spinozist turn in Lloyd and Gatens, and Grosz's work on Bergson and Deleuze, are attempts to think corporeality.","creator":["Claire Colebrook"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"427fec6c-e815-390a-a6d5-2e9e36781987"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Radical Representations to Corporeal Becomings: The Feminist Philosophy of Lloyd, Grosz, and Gatens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810656","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8715,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[53296,53381]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Eicher-Catt"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940065","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":1420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article examines the career of silent film comedian Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle in the light of early twentieth-century concerns with weight, appetite and conspicuous consumption in American culture. It examines the appeal of Arbuckle's films in terms of their 'willed regression' and indulgence in infantile play, and then examines the backlash against Arbuckle (including, most obviously, the infamous court case of 1921) as an exploration of wider cultural anxieties regarding feminization, infantilization and the masculine body. The essay thus explores the dieting craze of the early 1920's, youth-culture's disdain for the corpulent, and fears regarding unchecked consumption and over-abundance as contributing factors in Arbuckle's spectacular fall from grace, arguing that Roscoe's real misfortune was to embody a comic persona who made the key components of consumerism (regression, materialism, uninhibited carvings) simply too conspicuous for a popular audience to accept.","creator":["Alan J. Bilton"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23509458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f5ac58d-0fbf-35fc-baab-aac64f3a0885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23509458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nobody Loves a Fat Man: Fatty Arbuckle and Conspicuous Consumption in Nineteen Twenties America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23509458","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":8389,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[360409,360463]],"Locations in B":[[3513,3567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Marked by its rich revision of the stepmother archetype and ambitious attempt to infuse the classic fairy-tale structure with feminist subtext, Angela Carter's \"Snow Child\" provides a significant opportunity to move beyond current heroine-focused analyses of the postmodern fairy-tale genre. This study closely examines Carter's model of revision for \"Snow Child,\" which attempts to deconstruct fairy-tale and pornographic archetypes simultaneously by tracing their origin to the same source. By using Carter's The Saddan Woman as a companion text, we can determine her success in using subtext to dismantle three binary archetypes hidden in the Snow White tales: mother-daughter, sister-sister, virgin-whore.","creator":["Soman Chainani"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41388666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sadeian Tragedy: The Politics of Content Revision in Angela Carter's \"Snow Child\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41388666","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11629,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[151455,151618]],"Locations in B":[[14921,15082]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stavroula Kontovourki","Carolyn Campis"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340561"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618570"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007214265"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readingteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Reading Teacher","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Meaningful Practice: Test Prep in a Third-Grade Public School Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962074","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":6983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Depuis bient\u00f4t quinze ans, les f\u00e9ministes anglo-am\u00e9ricaines parlent du \"f\u00e9minisme fran\u00e7ais\". L'objet du pr\u00e9sent article est de d\u00e9montrer:\u2014 que le \"French Feminism\" a \u00e9t\u00e9enti\u00e8rement \"made in U.S.A.\", et accessoirement en Angleterre; \u2014 sans aucun souci de rendre compte de la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 soit du mouvement, soit des \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes en France; \u2014 qu'il s'agit done d'un courant intellectuel strictement anglo-am\u00e9ricain; qui s'est servi des \"Fran\u00e7aises\", ce qui est une d\u00e9marche imp\u00e9rialiste, pour des buts int\u00e9rieurs: attaquer aussi bien les d\u00e9marches militantes que les d\u00e9marches intellectuelles constructivistes et mat\u00e9rialistes dans le f\u00e9minisme de leur propre pays; que ce courant essaie en outre de redonner aux auteurs masculins un r\u00f4le \u00e9minent, et de brouiller la distinction entre le f\u00e9minisme et l'anti-f\u00e9minisme. In the last fifteen years, Anglo-American feminists have been talking of \"French Feminism\". This article aims at proving: \u2014 that \"French Feminism\" is a fabrication \"made in U.S.A.\" and in Great Britain; \u2014 which exhibits the greatest indifference to the actual Women's Movement and to feminist studies in France; \u2014 that it is a strictly anglo-american school of thought which uses the \"French\", in an imperialistic way, for domestic agendas: to attack the feminist movements as well as the constructionist and materialistic feminist approaches in their own countries; \u2014 that furthermore, this anglo-american strand tries to put male authors centre-stage once more, and to blur the distinction between feminism and anti-feminism.","creator":["Christine Delphy"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40619625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'invention du \"French Feminism\": une d\u00e9marche essentielle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619625","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":15527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean Wyatt"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ebed612-b0f5-36a5-a59b-c153ca013dba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On Not Being La Malinche: Border Negotiations of Gender in Sandra Cisneros's \"Never Marry a Mexican\" and \"Woman Hollering Creek\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463899","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13569,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[70706,70769]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo estudia la intersecci\u00f3n de la violencia y el cuerpo en las Novelas amorosas y ejemplares y los Desenga\u00f1os amorosos de Mar\u00eda de Zayas y Sotomayor para poner de relieve la importancia del discurso corporal en su est\u00e9tica y pol\u00edtica. A lo largo de los dos vol\u00famenes, Zayas comunica un feminismo mediante un enfoque en el cuerpo femenino y, en los Desenga\u00f1os en particular, a trav\u00e9s de la movilizaci\u00f3n de la subjetividad femenina. Estudiamos el pr\u00f3logo de las Novelas amorosas y la primera novela de los Desenga\u00f1os para mostrar que la clave de la expresi\u00f3n del feminismo de Zayas se encuentra precisamente en la violencia contra la mujer y en un discurso enfocado en el cuerpo femenino. Dada la importancia de lo corporal y la protesta contra la falta de control de la mujer sobre su propio cuerpo, el feminismo de Zayas tiene muchos puntos en com\u00fan con la teor\u00eda feminista contempor\u00e1nea, los cuales examinamos a partir de un estudio de Elizabeth Grosz para definir con m\u00e1s precisi\u00f3n no s\u00f3lo el feminismo de Zayas sino tambi\u00e9n la relaci\u00f3n problem\u00e1tica entre el feminismo y los estudios sobre el cuerpo femenino.","creator":["LISA VOLLENDORF"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"771e1913-87bc-3a33-9d46-445a8a12b5f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fleshing out Feminism in Early Modern Spain: Mar\u00eda de Zayas's Corporeal Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763431","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CORALINE JORTAY","JENNIFER BOND","CHANG LIU","Justine Rochot"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10219013"},{"name":"oclc","value":"535537065"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d2b1543-7a79-38aa-b7b9-f07b14d57192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspectiveschin"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives Chinoises","issueNumber":"3 (152)","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"French Centre for Research on Contemporary China","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00c9ditorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976363","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Lisible donc l\u00e9gitime ? Lire et brouiller le genre en Chine, hier comme aujourd\u2019hui"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Robinson"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bcf23ae-b3a3-3959-8e02-4a2bea42c1c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"557","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-557","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Authority and the Public Display of Identity: \"Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178185","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[454299,454559]],"Locations in B":[[35391,35650]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the function of the mask in Picasso's Portrait of Gertrude Stein, 1906, in relation to the artist's anxious confrontation with lesbian sexuality and his own gendered identity. In examining the portrait as a performative event between the artist and the sitter, the essay attempts to shed light on the significance of the delay in Picasso's completion of the painting and the problem of gender instability in his art over the course of 1906-7. Recent work in gender and queer studies provides the theoretical armature for the argument.","creator":["Robert S. Lubar"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd456b4a-a6d3-329c-9b36-57f05fe479e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3046230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 56-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Unmasking Pablo's Gertrude: Queer Desire and the Subject of Portraiture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046230","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":20246,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[179425,179514],[179602,180030],[200572,201138]],"Locations in B":[[86691,86780],[87675,88103],[89293,89860]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the fraught relationship between feminist and mainstream science and technology studies (STS). The diverse contributions of feminist and mainstream authors, particularly actor-network theorists, are outlined. It is argued that these two fields share many common themes, but that, while feminists have begun to integrate the insights of mainstream STS into their work, mainstream STS continues to treat feminist work and issues of inequality as a separate field of enquiry. Persistent tensions between feminist and mainstream STS are discussed, and some authors' recent attempts at integration are examined. It is suggested that greater cross-fertilization would substantially improve both feminist and mainstream studies of science and technology. \/\/\/ Cet article explore la relation souvent tendue entre les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes et les contributions au courant dominant dans le domaine de la science et de la technologie. Les multiples contributions des auteurs f\u00e9ministes et des auteurs qui s'incrivent dans la ligne du courant dominant, surtout celles des th\u00e9oriciens qui s'int\u00e9ressent aux analyses \"acteur-r\u00e9seau\", sont pr\u00e9sent\u00e9es. On s'efforce de d\u00e9montrer que ces champs d'\u00e9tude partagent des th\u00e8mes communs. Cependant, alors que les f\u00e9ministes not commenc\u00e9 \u00e0 int\u00e9grer certains \u00e9l\u00e9ments du courant dominant dans leurs analyses, les auteurs repres\u00e9ntant le courant dominant persistent encore \u00e0 cantonner l'analyse f\u00e9ministe et les th\u00e8mes d'in\u00e9galit\u00e9 dans un champ d'\u00e9tude distinct. En plus d'examiner les tensions qui persistent entre ces deux approches, on pr\u00e9sente aussi quelques tentatives r\u00e9centes d'int\u00e9gration de ces analyses. L'auteure sugg\u00e8re qu'un plus grand croisement entre ces approches am\u00e9liorerait consid\u00e9rablement les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes de m\u00eame que les contributions au courant dominant.","creator":["Emma Whelan"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ed600e4-1ddd-30f3-986b-3961c79ade5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3341492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politics by Other Means: Feminism and Mainstream Science Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341492","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":20685,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[118070,118153]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The ways in which young boys, masculinity and academic achievement intersect to impact upon boys' disposition to and experience of schooling is relatively under-researched. Drawing on data from an ethnographic exploration into children's gender and sexual identities in their final year of primary school (aged 10\/11), this paper sets out to illustrate how the discourses of hegemonic masculinity operate to shape and form boys' learner identities. The first half of the paper explores the processes and strategies by which different boys' negotiate the tensions between the perceived feminisation of academic success and\/or 'studiousness', and the need to project a coherent and stable hegemonic masculinity. The remainder of the paper examines the increasing pressures of hegemonic masculinity upon high-achieving boys, and the extent to which some boys managed to carve out and maintain alternative masculinities. The implications for current and future interventions and initiatives, directed at boys' attitudes and experiences of schooling and schoolwork, are briefly outlined in the concluding sections.","creator":["Emma Renold"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbf62491-bd68-32fa-8a9b-69b54895cdd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Learning the 'Hard' Way: Boys, Hegemonic Masculinity and the Negotiation of Learner Identities in the Primary School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393168","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon E. Preves"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fc3cbc7-f9ea-3a4e-a59f-3cc4f16a8adb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"556","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Sexing the Intersexed: An Analysis of Sociocultural Responses to Intersexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175791","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14136,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[84438,84536]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As the instructor of a multicultural education course for preservice teachers, I have attempted to guide my students in critiquing and reconceptualizing the deficit view of students, particularly minority students, endemic to the American school system. Yet I am faced with a dilemma: Is the fact that I believe my own students have deficit views of their future students not itself a deficit view, similar to the one I am trying to challenge? How can I escape this model of the teacher fixing the deficits of students in my own teaching? Bakhtin provides a framework within which I as a university professor can avoid the deficit trap with regard to my own students. Using a self-study methodology, this article analyzes ways in which adopting a pedagogy based on Bakhtin's (1986, pp. 292-293; 1999) notions of dialogism and polyphony has shifted my own and my students' participation patterns and describes some of the challenges I face in the continuous process of reflection on and redesign of my own teaching practice. After identifying potential patterns of dialogicity and developing some strategies for promoting these, I present a case study illustrating how these dialogic teaching strategies provided a framework for exploring heteronormativity.","creator":["REN\u00c9E DEPALMA"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"424053f0-bb5b-3209-a4e1-701f27b85998"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"436","pagination":"pp. 436-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Toward a Practice of Polyphonic Dialogue in Multicultural Teacher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962976","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy S. Love"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"571d6497-1789-30e3-b22b-6099fd7bf868"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811154","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":1143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In current health debates meat is often discussed as a health risk. Statistically, men consume more meat than women. Therefore they often appear as an especially vulnerable risk group. Based on current discussions about an increased health risk for men because of an above-average consumption of meat, this paper outlines aspects of the historical development of the relationship between masculinity and meat consumption from the 19th to the 21st century and emphasizes the importance of cultural constructed gender expectations for the eating habits of many men. In gegenw\u00e4rtigen Gesundheitsdiskussionen wird Fleisch h\u00e4ufig als Gesundheitsrisiko thematisiert. Da M\u00e4nner statistisch gesehen deutlich mehr Fleisch als Frauen konsumieren, erscheinen sie in entsprechenden Berichten oft als besonders gef\u00e4hrdete Risikogruppe. Ausgehend von den gegenw\u00e4rtigen Diskussionen um ein gesteigertes Gesundheitsrisiko f\u00fcr M\u00e4nner durch einen \u00fcberdurchschnittlichen Fleischkonsum wird in diesem Beitrag die historische Entwicklung des Zusammenhangs von M\u00e4nnlichkeit und Fleischkonsum vom 19. bis ins 21. Jahrhundert skizziert und die Bedeutung kulturell geformter Geschlechterleitbilder f\u00fcr die Ern\u00e4hrung vieler M\u00e4nner betont.","creator":["Ole Fischer"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746105965"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234712"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fcf3d2c-0597-3da9-9f6f-34ce30e02e61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24573321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medizinhistj"}],"isPartOf":"Medizinhistorisches Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"M\u00e4nnlichkeit und Fleischkonsum \u2013 historische Ann\u00e4herungen an eine gegenw\u00e4rtige Gesundheitsthematik \/ Masculinity and Meat Consumption \u2013 Historical Approchaes to a Current Health Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573321","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa K. Nelson"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"938c839e-b975-3194-bdbe-0863c24855af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masculinity, Menace, and American Mythologies of Race in Faulkner's Anti-Heroes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908206","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10681,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443454]],"Locations in B":[[52880,53044]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article discusses the novel by the Mexican writer Laura Esquivel, \"La ley del amor.\" It considers the novel in terms of its engagement with popular culture and the questions raised by its representation of the self and the gendered body in the light of this engagement. It argues that what is being enacted through the intermingling of genres and of bodies is, in effect, the dilemma of a feminine subjectivity in a postmodern era. The conclusion is that this novel moves between parody and pastiche, and that therefore the formulation of the feminine self is troubled.","creator":["Claire Louise Taylor"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fec6270-2f5f-38d8-bc99-ab7cbb84cce2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3736863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Body-Swapping and Genre-Crossing: Laura Esquivel's \"La ley del amor\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736863","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":7168,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[75136,75300],[102154,102313]],"Locations in B":[[40064,40226],[42447,42607]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Celina Bortolotto","May Summer Farnsworth"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58986957-43c0-349c-abc2-6f935217626e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"AUTISMO, ANTROPOCENTRISMU Y G\u00c9NERO EN \"LA MUJER QUE BUCE\u00d3 DENTRO DEL CORAZ\u00d3N DEL MUNDO\" (2010) DE SABINA BERMAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803425","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":5786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bonnie McElhinny"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23166587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"154e55c0-cc1a-373b-8d5e-abd94084fdfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23166587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"GENEALOGIES OF GENDER THEORY: Practice Theory and Feminism in Sociocultural and Linguistic Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23166587","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11920,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[82804,83188]],"Locations in B":[[53027,53408]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irene Costera Meijer","Baukje Prins"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"823fb8bc-aef4-3abc-abd1-dadf4d1f8824"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"How Bodies Come to Matter: An Interview with Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175091","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116866,117199]],"Locations in B":[[23119,23466]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Lewkowich"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jthought.47.3.67","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e03a317c-aaa2-3f05-bd2e-d2ffa4bbf863"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jthought.47.3.67"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Something from Within: Asking of Education's Desire and Impossibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jthought.47.3.67","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":4704,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16524,16619]],"Locations in B":[[6354,6449]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["STEPHEN A. MITCHELL"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40549162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdfabbf2-429b-3400-af3b-fb6a5d5974f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40549162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","issueNumber":"123","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Skidmore College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Where Are You in All of This? Leslie Farber's \"Will\" in Contemporary Psychoanalytic Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40549162","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eric Savoy"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18e48a50-9e03-3b28-b0ef-7fc71171d4b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Signifying Rabbit","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107053","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11035,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147800],[393805,393888]],"Locations in B":[[36237,36396],[42122,42205]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana Paula Ferreira"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5de5bec-9902-3bc2-87fa-776340ec47c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3514209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A \"Outra Arte\" das Soldadeiras","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514209","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6294,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497254,497354]],"Locations in B":[[37763,37862]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I assert that plagiarism is a literacy practice that involves social relationships, attitudes, and values as much as it involves rules of citation and students' texts. In addition, I show how plagiarism is complicated by a discourse about academic dishonesty, and I consider the implications that recognizing such complexity has for teaching.","creator":["Kathryn Valentine"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20456924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb22bd94-25ac-3c69-9b94-0f08e1a682c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20456924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Plagiarism as Literacy Practice: Recognizing and Rethinking Ethical Binaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20456924","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460867,460962]],"Locations in B":[[15634,15729]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article est fond\u00e9 sur une analyse qualitative de travaux d'\u00e9tudiant.e.s portant sur les transgressions de la norme de genre - lorsque par exemple des femmes fument le cigare, r\u00e9parent des voitures ou portent la moustache ou que des hommes font le m\u00e9nage, portent un sac \u00e0 main, se vernissent les ongles ou pleurent en public - en lien avec la litt\u00e9rature scientifique sur l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9. Les auteures montrent comment dans l'arri\u00e8re-plan culturel contemporain, des attentes et des interdits h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormatifs d'ordinaire incontest\u00e9s ressurgissent au moment o\u00f9 une personne franchit les fronti\u00e8res de genre. Elles montrent que l'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormativit\u00e9 elle-m\u00eame est genr\u00e9e, qu'elle \u00abhomosexualise\u00bb les hommes perturbateurs de la norme tandis qu'elle \u00abh\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualise\u00bb les femmes perturbatrices de cette m\u00eame norme. Cet article d\u00e9crit et compare des situations dans lesquelles des \u00e9tudiant.e.s et d'autres personnes sexualisent, y compris de mani\u00e8re non explicite, certaines attitudes ou certains actes sexuels. Ces proc\u00e9d\u00e9s de sexualisation ont recours \u00e0 des d\u00e9n\u00e9gations ou des \u00e9tiquetages homophobes ainsi qu'\u00e0 l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualisation. Le concept d'\u00abh\u00e9t\u00e9rogenre\u00bb permet de cerner au mieux ces mani\u00e8res convenues d'interpr\u00e9ter les transgressions de la norme de genre. This article presents a qualitative analysis of students' written narratives of gender norm violations projects - for example, women smoking cigars, repairing cars, wearing moustaches; men doing housework, carrying purses, wearing nail polish, crying in public - in terms relevant to theoretical literature that problematizes heterosexuality. The authors show that routinely unquestioned heteronormative expectations and proscriptions that exist as background context in contemporary culture come to the fore when traditional gender boundaries are crossed. Further, they show that heteronormativity itself is gendered via the homosexualization of disruptive men and heterosexualization of disruptive women. This article discusses and compares how compulsory heterosexuality operates differently for women and men. We describe and give examples of different ways in which students and others sexualize even unexplicitly sexual actions and appearances. These tactics of sexualization include homophobic disclaimers, homophobic labeling, and heterosexualization. The concept \u00abheterogender\u00bb best captures these common ways of interpreting gender norm violations.","creator":["Joyce McCarl Nielsen","Glenda Walden","Charlotte A. Kunkel"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fefe921-bb3a-314e-88f5-0b33c82d4b6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'h\u00e9t\u00e9ronormativit\u00e9 genr\u00e9e: exemples de la vie quotidienne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620541","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although a great deal of research and criticism has been done on homoerotic desire in Arabomedieval adab literature, very little has been written on its representation in modern Arabic literature. In order to address this scholarly gap, my study poses the following questions: why is there an increase of homosexual and lesbian characters, at this contemporary juncture, in Arabic fiction? And what are the effects of such an exposure on the status of Arab gay rights? I argue that depictions of male homosexuality in contemporary texts draw on power dialectics of master\/slave, active\/passive and local\/colonial, and as such reflect a sense of overall powerlessness, inferiority and alienation from the political process, while underscoring the Arab male's loss of manhood and of self. In contrast, female homosexuality remains locked into traditional, heterocentric discourse which claims that lesbianism exists only as a prelude to, or as a temporary replacement of \"normative\" heterosexuality, thus undermining the validity of lesbian body politics. Contrary to the medieval tradition which allowed more fluidity in the depiction of same-sex definitions and practices, and acknowledged the variants of homoerotic desire and action, contemporary Arab cultural and literary engagements of the topic overlook the biological aspect of this desire. Furthermore, they project gay encounters as a symptom of the social deterioration caused by political and economic oppression of the Arab citizen. I conclude that more attention must be given to the biological essence of sexual differentiation, to the body politics rather than gender politics, if the emergence of a recognized, outspoken Arab homosexual or lesbian identity is ever to be realized.","creator":["Hanadi Al-Samman"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53a1d158-9191-3ab7-aa78-77faa20064ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25597977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Out of the Closet: Representation of Homosexuals and Lesbians in Modern Arabic Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597977","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":19227,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[62584,62638]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brittany M. Charlton"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20620388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8f9202b-75ad-3265-b9b8-f032dc8de0a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20620388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sex, Gender, and Love on a Global Scale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20620388","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":1449,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[9363,9457]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabriela T. Richard","Kishonna L. Gray"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.1.0112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db43e657-d270-32f7-aa17-36b372ac164a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.1.0112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Gendered Play, Racialized Reality: Black Cyberfeminism, Inclusive Communities of Practice, and the Intersections of Learning, Socialization, and Resilience in Online Gaming","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.1.0112","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes college students' legends of apparitions in mirrors in relation This article analyzes college students' legends of apparitions in mirrors in relation modified Jungian analysis of their legends, it is possible to identify patterns of self-discovery in later adolescence that are underdiscussed in the literature. By telling legends about gender transformations, ghostly lovers, suicide, and violent death, college students undergo a quasi-initiatory experience that facilitates their development of a more complex sense of self.","creator":["Elizabeth Tucker"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6c0fb88-d939-3cac-bc8b-714e91f2d6a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"468","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ghosts in Mirrors: Reflections of the Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137701","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":9926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Breu"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7298b44e-1f97-35e4-8cac-ada6586b6c51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity vs. Embodiment: A Materialist Rethinking of Intersex and Queerness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0065","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"W. H. Auden's connections to the British documentary film movement invite us to consider the homoerotics of documentary's male-on-male gaze. This essay shows how coal miners\u2014\"real men\" of Britain's industrial North\u2014functioned as objects of bourgeois male identification and desire in literary and cinematic texts of the 1930s.","creator":["MARSHA BRYANT"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"160176c8-0e3d-3451-8f0f-33347c84627b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Auden and the Homoerotics of the 1930s Documentary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029888","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite first appearances it is the early work of Derrida, less concerned with questions of ethics, politics and justice, that is most pertinent for the Anthropocene era. Only an attention to what Derrida provisionally referred to as 'text', has the capacity to take the environmental imagination beyond homely conceptions of the earth as a horizon of sense and human projects, allowing for the anthropocene's imagination of the human scarring of the planet to be both read and misread. This misreading will be most fruitful when the thought experiment of the anthropocene allows us to imagine the human archive from an inhuman (and impossible) point of view.","creator":["Claire Colebrook"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0021bef4-c954-33d3-803a-9f69c23b97b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Not Symbiosis, Not Now: Why Anthropogenic Change Is Not Really Human","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030882","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores issues of abstraction and space in Sande Zeig's movie The Girl (2001), based on a novella by Monique Wittig, who also co-wrote the script. It argues that, with this movie, Zeig and Wittig strive to re-materialize the lesbian body abstracted by the 'Straight Mind' as defined by Wittig in her 1980 essay. The plot revolves around the love affair of two women, the narrator and the Girl (a lesbian painter and a straight B-grade jazz singer), under the oppressive scrutiny of the Man (the Girl's boss). Each part of this paper corresponds to one space where the characters interact: first, it shows how the nightclub stands as a space of transgression for the lesbian subject and how it opens a reflection on temporality as represented by space; then the analysis of the hotel room where the Girl lives and meets the narrator demonstrates how, notably through the use of close-ups in erotic scenes, Zeig redefines abstraction as a new way to envisage the materiality of the lesbian body; finally, in the third part, the discussion on abstraction moves on to the narrator's studio where, through her work as a painter, she also explores abstract representations of the female body. This approach reconciles Wittigian theory with post-modern queer theory, and confirms that the former still offers paths to positive reformulations of modes of relationality through the de-spatialization of gender \u2013 de-genderization; the rematerialization of the body outside of heteronormative conventions; and a reconfiguration of human relationships that refuses the inevitability of social and amorous hierarchy, and that shifts the representation of the erotic from possessiveness to disinterested reciprocity.","creator":["Annabelle Dolidon"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5f32589-8ed5-356b-8a1c-a2f709668c35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"92","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"shifting Wittigian binaries: abstraction and re-materialization of the Lesbian body in Sande Zeig's<\/strong> The Girl<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664033","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9242,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[360409,360463],[370993,371176],[390975,391103]],"Locations in B":[[8031,8085],[30044,30225],[52949,53077]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Viviana Zelizer's recent book, The Purchase of Intimacy (2005), presents an innovative theory of how social and lega actors negotiate nghts and obligations when money changes hands in intimate relationships\u2014a perspective that could change how we understand many things, from valuations of homemaking labor to the 9\/11 Victim Compensation Fund. This essay describes Zelizer's critique of the reductionist \"Hostile Worlds\" and \"Nothing But\" approaches to economic exchange in intimate relationships and then explains her more three-dimensional approach, \"Connected Lives.\" While Zelizer focuses on family law, the essay goes beyond that context, extending Zelizer's approach to transfers of genetic material and concluding that her approach could point toward a more equitable resolution of disputes in and about these markets.","creator":["Martha M. Ertman"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40539389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99e87d5d-2bde-3c86-95d2-01763753e382"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40539389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"1037","pageStart":"1017","pagination":"pp. 1017-1037","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"For Both Love and Money: Viviana Zelizer's the Purchase of Intimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40539389","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The author introduces queer theory and queer deconstruction to the advertising literature. First, he briefly outlines the theoretical and political concerns of queer theory--an emerging branch of radical thought from the humanities. Then he interprets an ad exemplar from an Australian gay newspaper by both a traditional structuralist approach and a queer deconstruction approach. He argues that queer theory and queer deconstruction are potentially powerful sources of ad critiques and productive perspectives for more perceptive marketing practices, for they generate meanings associated with the \"panoply of otherness\" and expose the ways in which heteronormative discourse informs various representations of gay men in advertising.","creator":["Steven M. Kates"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00913367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39037883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005213143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a98d389-f135-348a-a982-c7b94ccb2db4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4189098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadve"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Advertising","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making the Ad Perfectly Queer: Marketing \"Normality\" to the Gay Men's Community?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189098","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan C. Jarratt"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b89d192-12a9-3f11-8eb0-96165bbb9f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3885650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Feminisms, Histories, Rhetorics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3885650","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2308,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459973,460051]],"Locations in B":[[7174,7252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Beauty pageants in Nigeria have become highly popular spectacles, the crowned winners venerated for their beauty, success and ability to better society through charity. This paper focuses on the Carnival Calabar Queen pageant, highlighting how pageants, at the nexus of gender and the nation, are sites of social reproduction by creating feminine ideals. A divinely inspired initiative of a fervently Pentecostal First Lady, the pageant crowns an ambassador for young women's rights. While the queen must have 'grace and beauty' and be 'ever prayerful', the discussion unravels emic conceptions of feminine beauty, religiosity and respectability. Yet, young women also use pageantry as a 'platform' for success, hoping to challenge the double bind of gender and generation they experience in Nigeria. The discussion pays particular attention to how young women, trying to overcome the insecurities of (urban) Nigerian life, make choices to negotiate individualism with community, and piety with patriarchy. Ethnographically, this paper situates beauty pageants in the region's past and present practices that mould feminine subjectivities. Contributing young women's experiences to recent literature on the temporalities of African youth, the paper's explicit focus on how new subjectivities form through action illuminates important themes regarding agency, resistance and notions of the religious self. In doing so, it furthers current analyses of Pentecostalism, seeking a more nuanced understanding of gender reconfiguration and demonstrating how religious subjects can be formed outside church institutions. Au Nigeria, les concours de beaut\u00e9 sont devenus des spectacles tr\u00e8s populaires dont les candidates couronn\u00e9es sont v\u00e9n\u00e9r\u00e9es pour leur beaut\u00e9, leur succ\u00e8s et leur capacit\u00e9 \u00e0 rendre la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 meilleure par des actions caritatives. \u00c0 travers l'\u00e9lection de la Reine du Carnaval de Calabar, l'article montre que les concours de beaut\u00e9, \u00e0 la liaison entre le genre et la nation, sont des lieux de reproduction sociale en cr\u00e9ant des id\u00e9aux f\u00e9minins. Cette \u00e9lection, divinement inspir\u00e9e \u00e0 l'initiative d'une Premi\u00e8re dame pentec\u00f4tiste fervente, couronne une ambassadrice des droits des femmes jeunes. Alors que la Reine doit poss\u00e9der \u00ab gr\u00e2ce et beaut\u00e9 \u00bb et rester \u00ab concentr\u00e9e dans la pri\u00e8re \u00bb, la discussion d\u00e9voile des conceptions \u00e9miques de la beaut\u00e9 f\u00e9minine, de la religiosit\u00e9 et de la respectabilit\u00e9. Pourtant, les jeunes femmes utilisent \u00e9galement les concours de beaut\u00e9 comme un tremplin vers le succ\u00e8s, dans l'espoir de relever le double d\u00e9fi que repr\u00e9sentent pour elles le genre et la g\u00e9n\u00e9ration au Nigeria. La discussion pr\u00eate une attention particuli\u00e8re \u00e0 la mani\u00e8re dont les jeunes femmes, dans leur tentative de surmonter les ins\u00e9curit\u00e9s de la vie (urbaine) au Nigeria, font des choix pour n\u00e9gocier entre individualisme et communaut\u00e9, et entre pi\u00e9t\u00e9 et syst\u00e8me patriarcal. Sur le plan ethnographique, cet article situe les concours de beaut\u00e9 dans les pratiques pass\u00e9es et pr\u00e9sentes de la r\u00e9gion qui fa\u00e7onnent les subjectivit\u00e9s f\u00e9minines. En contribuant les exp\u00e9riences de ces jeunes femmes \u00e0 la litt\u00e9rature r\u00e9cente sur les temporalit\u00e9s de la jeunesse africaine, l'accent explicite de l'article sur le mode de formation de nouvelles subjectivit\u00e9s \u00e0 travers l'action met en lumi\u00e8re des th\u00e8mes importants concernant l'action, la r\u00e9sistance et les notions du soi religieux. Ce faisant, il fait progresser les analyses actuelles du pentec\u00f4tisme, en recherchant une compr\u00e9hension plus nuanc\u00e9e de la reconfiguration des genres et en d\u00e9montrant comment des th\u00e8mes religieux peuvent se former en dehors des institutions de l'\u00c9glise.","creator":["Juliet Gilbert"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"629ed76e-ef9f-3b01-bcb0-62f9009ace38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24525696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'BE GRACEFUL, PATIENT, EVER PRAYERFUL': NEGOTIATING FEMININITY, RESPECT AND THE RELIGIOUS SELF IN A NIGERIAN BEAUTY PAGEANT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525696","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":10486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meryl Altman"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78e85183-4656-3d8f-9e67-a76a1b97a7ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Bug That Dare Not Speak Its Name: Sex, Art, Faulkner's Worst Novel, and the Critics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907654","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12279,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nidesh Lawtoo"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa22327f-7702-3cbc-892f-ccbc901b357b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dissonant Voices in Richard Rodriguez's Hunger of Memory and Luce Irigaray's This Sex Which Is Not One","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755463","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":14438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margo Demello"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0268540X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23402"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthtoda"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology Today","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Convict Body: Tattooing Among Male American Prisoners","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783218","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel S. Traber"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6770a711-e114-3040-994c-5a6d04beff8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"48","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"L. A.'s \"White Minority\": Punk and the Contradictions of Self-Marginalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354396","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Reid Gilbert"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3209071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"555f304d-4461-3f59-b59b-72a9111245c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3209071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"That's Why I Go to the Gym\": Sexual Identity and the Body of the Male Performer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3209071","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6861,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[304,480]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anglo-American embodiments of poststructuralist and French feminism often align themselves with the texts of either Michel Foucault or Luce Irigaray. Interrogating this alleged distance between Foucault and Irigaray, I show how it reinscribes the phallic field of concepts and categories within feminist discourses. Framing both Foucault and Irigaray as exceeding Jacques Lacan's metamorphosis of G.W.F. Hegel's Concept, I suggest that engaging their styles might yield richer tools for articulating the differences within our different lives.","creator":["Shannon Winnubst"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7fb502e-db2c-331a-92b7-25b651a2c179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Exceeding Hegel and Lacan: Different Fields of Pleasure within Foucault and Irigaray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810621","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12165,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[181707,181781],[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[61635,61705],[75273,75358]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristelle L. Baskins"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Echoing Narcissus in Alberti's \"Della Pittura\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360534","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an offshoot of a research project on lesbian and gay self-organization in the UK's public sector union UNISON. The site upon which lesbians and gay men 'work together' is a complex and contradictory one, located at the juncture of several pathways - women's and men's movements, gendered politics and sexual politics, purist ghettos and queer rainbows. The UNISON group furnishes an ideal site for a case-study of sexual and gendered dynamics in lesbian-and-gay politics by dint of institutional arrangements whereby separate spaces for lesbians and gay men respectively encourage reflexivity in working through these hyphens. While reflections from the lesbian feminist mirror have been active ingredients in the ongoing resocialization of gay men, it is argued that reflections from a gay male mirror will also be necessary if we are to nurture greater wisdom and justice in gender relations. Since the lesbian and gay group co-exists with other self-organized groups for women, black people and disabled people within a broader pro-socialist movement, the potential for working across other sets of differences is also noteworthy. Nevertheless, it can be demonstrated that a sustained coalition between lesbians and gay men is not sufficient in bringing about coalitions with other oppressed minorities or majorities, and may even be at loggerheads with them.","creator":["Jill C. Humphrey"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9579efe-5a28-3d68-a38d-1fd7be293c3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"66","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cracks in the Feminist Mirror? Research and Reflections on Lesbians and Gay Men Working Together","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395834","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16558,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[98813,98857]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Our article aims to understand the participation of the \u2018backpacking neighbourhood\u2019 Ph\u1ea1m Ng\u0169 L\u00e3o in the current metropolization process of H\u1ed3 Ch\u00ed Minh City. This neighbourhood is representative of Vietnamese \u2018glocalization\u2019. By this term, we mean the abilities of local stakeholders to benefit from the opportunities created by an increasingly global economy. These skills are reflected not only in innovations and landscape transformations to attract tourists, but also in \u2018reactivations\u2019 based on older urban practices. We question not only the production of specific urban territories through backpacking activities, but also the spatial and social inequalities they generate. By doing so, our intention is to combine tourism studies and urban studies to \u2018unpack\u2019 the figure of the backpacking neighbourhood and to go beyond the idea of urban enclaves.","creator":["Marie Gibert","Emmanuelle Peyvel"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680421868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8161e090-d6a8-32ff-ae25-289f1eba3f8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26372055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"School of Oriental and African Studies","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Human geography","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Unpacking the figure of the backpacking neighbourhood Ph\u1ea1m Ng\u0169 L\u00e3o in the making of H\u1ed3 Ch\u00ed Minh city","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372055","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the preoccupation of English colonists with their state of dress during captivity by Indians as reflected in their subsequent narratives. This concern is linked to the conflation of clothing and person, and the anxieties exhibited by the colonists during their imprisonment illustrate how important clothing was to their construction of identity, particularly in the New World, where the fear of degeneration was ever present.","creator":["WENDY LUCAS CASTRO"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23546568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"019007f9-2bb1-3ecb-ac36-ae6050a7c9af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23546568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Stripped: Clothing and Identity in Colonial Captivity Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23546568","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":14659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Friedman"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"109a09b7-2d75-3bfb-b451-37afeb362c41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23170150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Champagne Liberals and the New 'Dangerous Classes': Reconfigurations of Class, Identity, and Cultural Production in the Contemporary Global System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170150","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory S. Hutcheson"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20204144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queering \"Buen Amor\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204144","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[171747,171887]],"Locations in B":[[43,182]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Lewis"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00a83b90-1c65-319a-ba44-6d670cb9f10f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Attaining Masculinity: Charles Brockden Brown and Woman Warriors of the 1790s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057380","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7831,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73644]],"Locations in B":[[113,394]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is based on long-term study of the relationship between time and space. It does not conceive space as a dimensionless, empty, and homogeneous container but draws instead on the concept of place as unique and meaningful. The conceptualisation of place is thus based on the classic works of the humanist geographers Yi-Fu Tuan and Edward Relph, who consider place to be integral, enclosed, and determinable. The issue of the determinability of integral and still meaningful place is examined using Michel Foucault's concept of heterotopia. A certain place in a city is linked to a number of other places, which in a way then become present in that place. The place cannot be considered a homotopia but, on the contrary, is a heterotopia. Place can also be conceived from a temporal point of view. Various times (rhythms) blend in a place and they refer to processes that were taking place in other (even temporally very remote) times. Similarly, just as place can be spatially considered a heterotopia, temporally it may be considered a heterochronia. The term heterochronotopia is used to refer to a place that opens out both spatially to other places and temporally to other times. Empirically the article focuses on one selected place in the post-socialist and post-industrial city of Brno (Czech Republic). The article seeks to (1) identify links connecting the researched place to other sites and times and to (2) describe the selected place as a system of associations. The research combines a very wide range of methods such as direct observation, informal interviews, and analyses of historical documents, photos, public transport timetables, etc. The article thus offers an example of a dense description of a place as a temporally or spatially undeterminable entity, provides material for critical reflection on the assumption that urban place is enclosed and determinable, and introduces 'heterochronotopia' as a new concept referring to a spatially and temporally undetermined place in a contemporary city.","creator":["ROBERT OSMAN","DANIEL SEIDENGLANZ","OND\u0158EJ MUL\u00cdC\u030cEK"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44817690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560909399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cc9283c-c76d-3a54-bb11-d40d9810a9af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44817690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"962","pageStart":"927","pagination":"pp. 927-962","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Urban Place as a Heterochronotopia: A Case Study of a Brno Locality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44817690","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":15361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores Fanon's thought on dance, beginning with his explicit treatment of it in Black Skin, White Masks and The Wretched of the Earth. It then broadens to consider his theorization of Black embodiment in racist and colonized societies, considering how these analyses can be reformulated as a phenomenology of dance. This will suggest possibilities for fruitful encounters between the two domains in which (a) dance can be valorized while (b) opening up sites of resignification and resistance for Black persons and communities\u2014including a revalorization of Black embodiment as a kind of empowering danced experience.","creator":["Joshua M. Hall"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23215213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7803b216-d6fe-35a2-8d3e-08da6f372c63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23215213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revalorized Black Embodiment: Dancing with Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23215213","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NICOLE KENLEY"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26467195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec953f09-1c7b-3c50-b8c7-734ad0323c63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26467195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Southern Hard(ly)boiled","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26467195","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":10833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Knight's Gambit, The Big Sleep<\/em>, and Faulkner's Construction of the Popular"} +{"abstract":"Tennessee Williams spent the better part of his career defending Brick's heterosexuality, and yet critics and scholars alike are still debating the fallout from Walter Kerr's 1955 polemic concerning Brick's homosexual \"mystery.\" This essay reopens that debate, not with the intent of siding for or against Williams in his response to Kerr and others but rather with trying to understand what Williams meant by refusing to label Brick's \"mystery\" as homosexuality. In reading the play against its Cold War and existential contexts, the essay argues that Williams was finally less interested in outing a gay character and more in demonstrating how that character's sexual uncertainty could belie his model heteromasculinity, both for himself and for his society. Such a message, one upheld by the play's original ending, is for Williams more socially significant (and politically subversive) because it debunks society's myth of polarized sexual identities. Though undoubedly queer, Brick in the play is not gay, and for Williams that fact is more troubling for audiences who need to see that Brick is finally not one of them.","creator":["John S. Bak"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41aff4d5-68d4-3051-a1ff-afab9b3fac38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Sneakin' and Spyin'\" from Broadway to the Beltway: Cold War Masculinity, Brick, and Homosexual Existentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069421","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":15082,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[71795,71933]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Reich"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23783543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1655b37d-e659-35e7-8f89-9ce2a18c9d07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23783543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A New Kind of Black Soldier: Performing Revolution in The Spook Who Sat by the Door","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23783543","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evelyn Nakano Glenn"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1171562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01455532"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42413348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4904"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c325c48a-554e-37e6-b108-849f7cb2afd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1171562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciehist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Race, and Class: Bridging the Language-Structure Divide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1171562","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores how desires are constituted as central to each person's gendered identity and to the very maintenance of the gender order. It works toward the deconstruction of this conception of desire and of gender identity. By examining what it means to be a female subject, and adopting a different attitude toward language, women can begin to generate alternative discursive practices to help us move beyond the male\/female dualism.","creator":["Bronwyn Davies"],"datePublished":"1990-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/800578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Problem of Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800578","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10332,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[60828,60924]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By embodying the paradoxes found in three webs of signification -- panaad (devotional promise), sacred camp and carnivalesque during the Ati-atihan festival -- Augusto Diangson, an individual of the 'third sex', was able to claim membership in the Roman Catholic community of Kalibo, Aklan in the Central Philippines while also negotiating the Church's institution of heterosexuality. The narratives of mischief and the gender ambiguity of the Santo Ni\u00f1o or the Holy Child Jesus, the centre of Ati-atihan's religious veneration, further enabled Diangson to interact with Kalibo's Roman Catholicism. Through an analysis of Diangson and his participation in the festival, this article exposes how ordinary individuals in extraordinary events localise their faith through crossdressing and dance performance. Seen throughout the Philippines, these processes of mimicry and gender transformation transport individuals into zones of ambivalence and contradictions in which they are able to navigate through the homogenising discourse of their culture and the Church's homogenising myth of Roman Catholicism.","creator":["Patrick Alcedo"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20071809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49342616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30255d4d-69e6-3e6f-a014-31c313b100cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20071809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sacred Camp: Transgendering Faith in a Philippine Festival","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20071809","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":15313,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474780,474891]],"Locations in B":[[79412,79523]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Anne Simpson"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23742764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10450300"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ed348d-1940-3030-9daf-28e640d06883"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23742764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germpolisoci"}],"isPartOf":"German Politics & Society","issueNumber":"2 (75)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Manche Menschen werden Br\u00fcder\": Contemporary Music and New Fraternities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23742764","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dawn K. Dreyer"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2da67a0c-d338-3821-ab1b-ea371e1ab7a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"In the Margins: An Exploration of Boundaries in a Student\/Teacher Response Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866076","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7456,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[424627,424930],[424866,425255]],"Locations in B":[[18612,18921],[18857,19722]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent scholarship has identified the modern wedding as a principal site for the construction of heteronormativity. This article examines whether and how the participation of same-sex couples in the wedding ritual can challenge this construction. Photographs from the 2004 San Francisco same-sex weddings were quantitatively content-coded for subjects' gender presentation and for the extent to which the couple embodied the heteronormative wedding standard of one bride and one groom. I find that all the men in these photographs conformed to gender norms and thus no male couple conformed to the wedding standard. In contrast, approximately one-fifth of the women presented non-normative gender, and more than two-thirds of the formally dressed lesbian couples conformed to the wedding standard of a bride and a groom. In a close reading of four photographs, I argue that these images have the potential to challenge assumptions about normative sex, gender, and sexuality at the level of the symbolic when understood in relation to the institution of marriage. Nonetheless, the enactment of weddings depicted in these images may also reify weddings as heteronormative by conforming to expectations about how individuals and couples present themselves when marrying. These findings point to the importance of distinguishing symbolic and enacted heteronormativity.","creator":["KATRINA KIMPORT"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e87416a9-bac9-3374-9334-b8a2ac5fe4c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41705740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"899","pageStart":"874","pagination":"pp. 874-899","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"REMAKING THE WHITE WEDDING? SAME-SEX WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHS' CHALLENGE TO SYMBOLIC HETERONORMATIVITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705740","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn Meskel","LYNN MESKELL"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24519691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d69d324-7caf-34b7-a739-c42d5c8b0566"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24519691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamersocipapy"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the American Society of Papyrologists","issueNumber":"1\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Society of Papyrologists","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Embodying Archaeology: Theory and Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24519691","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7634,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523956]],"Locations in B":[[43423,43510]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela Church Gibson"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23611781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"498f4263-6a0d-3556-9334-c44b890c68e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23611781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"To Care for Her Beauty, to Dress Up, Is a Kind of Work\": Simone de Beauvoir, Fashion, and Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23611781","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When Austin distinguished performative from constative utterances, he was trying to reintegrate in a philosophical reflection those aspects of language which are acts, and saw that language could always be seen as performative. His paradoxical literary offspring has reintegrated fiction to his analysis as precisely the proof of performativity because of linguistic utterances' repeatability (Derrida), or by the constitution of social norms and identities through performative and repeated utterances (Butler and genre studies).","creator":["JONATHAN CULLER"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474800"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bdef53d-0c55-31bd-9464-ad3be779ca38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41705146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litterature"}],"isPartOf":"Litt\u00e9rature","issueNumber":"144","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Philosophie et litt\u00e9rature : les fortunes du performatif","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705146","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Casey Charles"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4b3d995-6067-3643-a2d1-89986549fece"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender Trouble in \"Twelfth Night\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208678","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11885,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75656,75794]],"Locations in B":[[5386,5525]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1631e7d-45b4-379e-aca1-14b3b41630ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17+19-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Thirty-Ninth Annual Convention of the Midwest Modern Language Association","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315083","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":26752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"On the U.S.-Mexican border, the label \"Mexican\" refers simultaneously to both nationality and ethnicity. Playing with the multiple meanings of the word, border actors construct narratives about themselves and Others to deal with a local hegemonic discourse that states that \"poverty is Mexican.\" Thus, while border identities are constructed within a culturally specific system of classification, people also develop a sense of themselves as subjects by imagining themselves as protagonists in stories. To know border narratives is important because people generally act according to how they understand their place in any number of social relations whose meaning is narratively constructed.","creator":["Pablo Vila"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"591f920f-a138-32ec-a887-8e38cf6ff476"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative Identities: The Employment of the Mexican on the U.S.-Mexican Border","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121269","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":21504,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64169,64450]],"Locations in B":[[17209,17490]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gust A. Yep"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.2.0115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4a7944b-3114-3e7e-be45-1731895ad413"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.4.2.0115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Further Notes on Healing from \u201cThe Violence of Heteronormativity in Communication Studies\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.2.0115","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben A. Heller"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66e13b17-bc5f-3d56-a31f-365eb79777a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtechnique"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Narrative Technique","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Paternal Anxiety, Sexuality, and the Archive of Latin American Narrative: Or, up River with Tiresias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225454","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dominique Sipi\u00e8re"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f564b565-f258-3bf9-99c2-6553f5705ecd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","issueNumber":"88","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie s\u00e9lective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874770","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anthropology has represented marriage as the definitive ritual and universally translatable regulative ideal of human societies. Its relation to the assertion of privilege, to closure, death, abjection, and exclusion are rarely examined in anthropological analyses. In this article I analyze the specific and changing representations of marriage in anthropological literature. I ask what forms of inclusion and exclusion are derived from the use of marriage as a universal equivalent. I argue that there has been a metaphysical privileging of the categories marriage, gender, heterosexuality, and life, which obtain their privilege by functioning as part of violent hierarchies in occasions of symbolization. Given the high political stakes in this imagining of marriage in the age of AIDS, I conclude that anthropologists should pay more attention to variability and instability as well as to that which is denied articulation in the occasions of reiteration of marriage. [marriage, death, AIDS, kinship, gender, sex]","creator":["John Borneman"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61ec9f63-1310-3349-b02f-a51e4f2dc439"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Until Death Do Us Part: Marriage\/Death in Anthropological Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646539","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13560,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432136,432254]],"Locations in B":[[50319,50437]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sociomateriality has been attracting growing attention in the Organization Studies and Information Systems literatures since 2007, with more than 140 journal articles now referring to the concept. Over 80 percent of these articles have been published since January 2011 and almost all cite the work of Orlikowski (2007, 2010; Orlikowski and Scott 2008) as the source of the concept. Only a few, however, address all of the notions that Orlikowski suggests are entailed in sociomateriality, namely materiality, inseparability, relationality, performativity, and practices, with many employing the concept quite selectively. The contribution of sociomateriality to these literatures is, therefore, still unclear. Drawing on evidence from an ongoing study of the adoption of a computer-based clinical information system in a hospital critical care unit, this paper explores whether the notions, individually and collectively, offer a distinctive and coherent account of the relationship between the social and the material that may be useful in Information Systems research. It is argued that if sociomateriality is to be more than simply a label for research employing a number of loosely related existing theoretical approaches, then studies employing the concept need to pay greater attention to the notions entailed in it and to differences in their interpretation.","creator":["Matthew Jones"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02767783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df81b336-cbb9-3003-ba40-b87ae8765828"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26635006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"misquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"MIS Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"A6","pageStart":"895","pagination":"pp. 895-926, A1-A6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Management Information Systems Research Center, University of Minnesota","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A Matter of Life and Death","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635006","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":27168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Exploring Conceptualizations of Sociomateriality in the Context of Critical Care"} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article explores the relationships, or the lack thereof, between gender and grand corruption in Nigeria. Methodologically, Butler\u2019s theory of subject formation\/performativity, and Kothari\u2019s critique of participation, was used to interrogate selected Nigerian grand corruption literature and public indictment records. The objective was to tease-out and explain under-emphasized influences on grand corruption, such as the roles of godfathers, women\u2019s political socialization and self-interests. Findings indicate that powerful political, cultural, military and industrial godfathers and mothers regulate aspirants\u2019 selection, electoral funding, appointments and extraconstitutional protection from prosecution when they engage in grand corruption. Godfathers regulate political participation in a manner that encourage prot\u00e9g\u00e9es fantasies about, and imitative adoption of their patrons\u2019 corrupt worldviews and practices. Consequently, godfather political socialization, extra-constitutional pressures on office holders, and crass materialist accumulation interests of indicted female leaders seem to matter more than the gender binary.","creator":["Amaechi D. Okonkwo"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d74257d-ad7e-34b8-bb6b-b3f24d7dd09f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90001848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Corruption in Nigerian Politics.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001848","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":20430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147993,148059]],"Locations in B":[[41094,41160]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Eating disorders are now often approached as biopsychosocial problems, because they are widely recognised as multifactorial in origin. However, it has been suggested that there is a substantial and unwarranted imbalance within this biopsychosocial framework, with the \u2018social\u2019 aspects of the equation relegated to secondary or facilitating factors within treatment contexts. Drawing on data from 12 qualitative interviews with health professionals in a UK region, this article examines the extent to which sociocultural perspectives on eating disorders are valued and explored in eating disorder treatment, with a particular focus on the relationship between eating disorders and gender. As girls\/women are widely acknowledged to be disproportionately affected by eating problems, the article draws on feminist perspectives on eating disorders to explore whether the relationships between cultural constructions of femininity and experiences of body\/eating distress are actively addressed within treatment. The study reveals high levels of inconsistency in this regard, as while some participants see such issues as central to treatment, others have \u2018never really considered\u2019 them before. In addition, the study examines the potential limitations of how such sociocultural issues are conceptualised and addressed, as well as why they might be marginalised in the current climate of evidence-based eating disorder treatment. The article then considers the implications of the findings for thinking about feminist perspectives on eating disorders \u2013 and the significance of gender in treatment \u2013 at the level of both research and practice.","creator":["Su Holmes"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26652449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41384844"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e20b4414-0d8b-386a-aeb0-efd7bdbee28e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26652449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"557","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-557","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The role of sociocultural perspectives in eating disorder treatment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26652449","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A study of health professionals"} +{"abstract":"This paper is an attempt at exploring the contemporary neo-liberal contexts in which social and community services operate and the opportunities for undertaking struggles around rights and entitlements to social welfare within this context. It discusses the centrality of single motherhood for the redefinition of the relationships of shared well-being among citizens and proposes the frameworks of discourse analysis and identity construction as central in contemporary debates. The paper examines the discourses of an agency servicing teen mothers and explicates some strategies through which these discourses perform an entitled teen motherhood. Subverting the general identity assigned to these mothers by society, research and traditional social services, the discourses of this agency open a space in which poor young women are enacted as young parents, entitled to supports, respite and a voice in society. The discursive strategies have been successful in attracting resources for the mothers involved with the agency, though questions remain regarding the possibilities of their widespread application within other social welfare environments. A few concluding thoughts explore the new social welfare environment and call for a renewed understanding of the contexts of practice and the possibilities of subversion.","creator":["Iara Lessa"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23720912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Discursive Struggles Within Social Welfare: Restaging Teen Motherhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720912","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the authors examine how the debate over women's executions during the nineteenth and early twentieth century funneled and in various ways processed the contrary demands of gender and capital justice. They show how encounters with capital punishment both reflected and reinforced dominant interpretations of womanhood and as such contributed to the intricate web of normative strictures that affected all women at the time. At the same time, however, the often heated debates that accompanied such cases pried open some of the contradictions inherent in the dominant interpretations and, as a result, came to challenge the boundaries that separated not only women from men but also women from each other. Rather than viewing gender as a unidirectional influence on capital punishment, the authors argue that gender is best approached as an evolving social category that gets reconstructed, modified, and transformed whenever it is implicated in social practices and public debates.","creator":["ANNULLA LINDERS","ALANA VAN GUNDY-YODER"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f0758e4-61be-3a38-8c33-820255864c82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"GALL, GALLANTRY, AND THE GALLOWS: Capital Punishment and the Social Construction of Gender, 1840-1920","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821648","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Current models for individuation in academe exacerbate generational tensions between second and third wave feminists. Feminist pedagogues must be wary of getting caught in the \"vicious circle of contempt,\" where students are expected to compensate for a teacher's past narcissistic wounds. Instead, we must be willing to mourn the wounds we have received at the hands of a contemptuous culture and to acknowledge same-gender attachments that are disavowed in dialectical models of subject production.","creator":["Madelyn Detloff"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f17c550-5475-39e4-ab76-60ae21b9ea45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mean Spirits: The Politics of Contempt between Feminist Generations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810223","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11294,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[292592,292773],[294027,294184],[452235,452528],[455002,455241],[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[38144,38325],[38334,38491],[39409,39701],[39893,40132],[71363,71438]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia Robinson"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4134508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77a99390-648d-38cf-9fc2-cb0ecd4b749f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4134508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Sculpture of Indeterminacy: Alison Knowles's Beans and Variations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4134508","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":11814,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,436102]],"Locations in B":[[50119,50681]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2215855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00294624"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108866"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23307"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cfe9815-fc94-3bfd-bc3a-fc802448b0ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2215855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nous"}],"isPartOf":"No\u00fbs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"644","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-644","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Recent Publications in Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2215855","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the role of the Logos with regard to the expression of the mystical experience in the writings of St. John of the Cross. The term \"mystical expression\" is examined and a brief etymology of the Logos-concept is provided. The various writings of St. John are then examined with special attention to the influence of the Logos in the mystical expression of St. John of the Cross. After this, various aspects of the Logos are extrapolated from the latter analysis, such as the revelatory nature of the Logos, the creative nature of the Logos and the relationship between the Logos and the intellect. Finally, the significance of this excursus for the general study of spirituality is discussed.","creator":["Chris L. de Wet"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"MYSTICAL EXPRESSION AND THE \"LOGOS\" IN THE WRITINGS OF ST. JOHN OF THE CROSS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049254","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Slavoj \u017di\u017eek","Christopher Hanlon"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6c64a59-ba82-312e-8ed8-3805788b0049"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Psychoanalysis and the Post-Political: An Interview with Slavoj \u017di\u017eek","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057644","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the intersection of race, gender and sexuality in Nalo Hopkinson\u2019s young adult speculative novel The Chaos (2012) through a close reading of Scotch, a mixed-race teenager whose body becomes increasingly covered by black tar like patches. Scotch\u2019s bodily transformation occurs alongside a catastrophe characterized by the eruption of fantastic and supernatural elements across the globe. Weaving together the work of Gilles Deleuze and F\u00e9lix Guattari, theories of performativity, and critical race theory, I examine how race, sexuality and gender come to signify as a result of their positioning within a socio-material and affective network of relations. Employing this framework challenges theories of race as either purely biological or entirely socially inscribed, instead, considering how one\u2019s material and social positionality determines how certain bodies materialize and become legible. Subsequently, I argue that the narrative shift signaled by the emergence of the Chaos coincides with a re-coding of the black patches to represent Scotch\u2019s deterritorialization or becoming-anomalous. The third section of my argument examines how Scotch\u2019s eventual reterritorialization at the conclusion of the novel problematizes a reading of The Chaos as promoting, without qualification, the anomalous as a means of unsettling rigid identity categories and the set of binary oppositions upon which they rely. Despite her reterritorialization, I also explore how Scotch\u2019s experience becoming-anomalous acts as a catalyst for her acceptance of other, non-normative bodies, and for her transition from a state of solipsism to community engagement. In sum, Hopkinson\u2019s novel provides an alternative and affirmative ethics of the body and a model for accepting non-normative embodiment in different social and political contexts.","creator":["Kristen Shaw"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26508552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"497178420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010250503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7a8b811-cb38-3293-b742-66bfd86ce348"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26508552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","issueNumber":"3 (100)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cSticky\u201d Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26508552","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":24117,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440807,440872]],"Locations in B":[[16882,16947]],"subTitle":"Race, Gender, and Sexuality in Nalo Hopkinson\u2019s The Chaos<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"The decade since highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) arrived has been a time of change for gay men in the West. HIV incidence rates have been levelling off--and in some cities, increasing markedly--for the first time since the early years of the pandemic. New sexual subcultures have found expression, including Internet chat rooms, 'poz-only' sex parties, 'barebacking' and crystal methamphetamine use. These circumstances force a re-evaluation of HIV prevention targeting gay communities. We examine the antecedents of current HIV-prevention dilemmas in findings from a qualitative study of gay men who were personally and professionally engaged in HIV\/AIDS in Sydney, Australia, in 1997-1998, immediately after the 'protease moment'. The men's lives were characterized by constant and difficult negotiation of gay subjectivities. They did not find a place of uniform belonging in the gay community; rather, ambivalence--toward the gay community and HIV prevention--and fragmentation emerged as themes. Our findings suggest that by the late 1990s, the ethos of safe sex developed in the early HIV\/AIDS period was no longer a unifying cultural value. We explore the conditions that led to this shift and the implications for HIV prevention in the 21st century. \/\/\/ La d\u00e9cennie qui s'est \u00e9coul\u00e9e depuis l'arriv\u00e9e des th\u00e9rapies antir\u00e9trovirales puissantes repr\u00e9sente une \u00e8re de changements pour les hommes gay dans les pays occidentaux. L'incidence du VIH s'est stabilis\u00e9e \u00e0 un niveau \u00e9lev\u00e9 -- et dans certaines villes, elle augmente nettement -- pour la premi\u00e8re fois depuis les premi\u00e8res ann\u00e9es de la pand\u00e9mie de sida. De nouvelles sous cultures ont trouv\u00e9 des espaces d'expression, dont les forums de discussion sur Internet, les partouzes \" r\u00e9serv\u00e9es aux s\u00e9ropos \", le \" barebacking \" et l'usage du \" Cristal \". Ces circonstances obligent \u00e0 une r\u00e9\u00e9valuation de la pr\u00e9vention du VIH en direction des communaut\u00e9s gay. Nous examinons les ant\u00e9c\u00e9dents des dilemmes actuels dans la pr\u00e9vention \u00e0 partir d'une \u00e9tude qualitative qui a port\u00e9 sur des hommes gay, engag\u00e9s aux plans personnels et professionnels dans la lutte contre le sida \u00e0 Sydney, en 1997-98, imm\u00e9diatement apr\u00e8s \" l'av\u00e8nement des antiprot\u00e9ases \". La vie de ces hommes \u00e9tait caract\u00e9ris\u00e9e par une n\u00e9gociation constante et difficile des subjectivit\u00e9s gay. Ils ne trouvaient pas d'espace d'appartenance uniforme dans la communaut\u00e9 gay, mais plut\u00f4t de l'ambivalence -- envers la communaut\u00e9 gay et la pr\u00e9vention du VIH -- et une fragmentation qui \u00e9mergeaient en tant que th\u00e8mes. Nos r\u00e9sultats sugg\u00e8rent que vers la fin des ann\u00e9es 90, l'ethos du sexe sans risque d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 au cours de la premi\u00e8re p\u00e9riode de l'\u00e9pid\u00e9mie de sida, n'\u00e9tait plus une valeur culturelle unificatrice. Nous explorons les facteurs qui ont amen\u00e9 ce changement et leurs implications pour la pr\u00e9vention du VIH au 21\u00e8me si\u00e8cle. \/\/\/ La d\u00e9cada desde que se introdujo el tratamiento antirretroviral de alta eficacia ha demostrado ser un momento de cambio para los hombres homosexuales en occidente. Las tasas de incidencia del VIH se han equilibrado y en algunas ciudades han aumentado marcadamente, por primera vez desde los primeros a\u00f1os de la pandemia. Las nuevas subculturas sexuales han encontrado c\u00f3mo expresarse, por ejemplo a trav\u00e9s de las salas chat en Internet, las fiestas sexuales 's\u00f3lo para seropostivos', 'penetraci\u00f3n anal sin preservativo' y uso de cristal de metanfetamina. Estas circunstancias nos obligan a reevaluar la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH entre las comunidades homosexuales. Aqu\u00ed analizamos los antecedentes de los actuales dilemas de la prevenci\u00f3n del virus del sida en los resultados de un estudio cualitativo de hombres homosexuales que tuvieron una relaci\u00f3n personal y profesional con el VIH\/sida en Sydney, Australia, en 1997-98, inmediatamente despu\u00e9s del 'momento de la proteasa'. Las vidas de los hombres estaban caracterizadas por una negociaci\u00f3n constante y dif\u00edcil de las subjetividades homosexuales. No hallaban un lugar de pertenencia constante en la comunidad homosexual, sino que m\u00e1s bien surgieron los temas de la ambivalencia hacia la comunidad homosexual y la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH, y la fragmentaci\u00f3n. Nuestros resultados indican que a finales de los noventa, la \u00e9tica del sexo seguro desarrollada a principios del periodo del VIH\/sida dej\u00f3 de ser un valor cultural unificado. Aqu\u00ed analizamos las condiciones que desencadenaron este cambio y las implicaciones que esto tiene para la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH en el siglo XXI.","creator":["Matthew S. Rowe","Gary W. Dowsett"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4172006-f880-316a-9776-064dd7734a1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20461013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sex, Love, Friendship, Belonging and Place: Is There a Role for 'Gay Community' in HIV Prevention Today?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461013","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Cohler"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e13d24dd-1c5e-3bef-9076-e40bda722d6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704519","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":1791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ethnic identity has dominated the political and social landscape of Malaysia throughout most of the 20th century. Recent changes, including government development policies, feminization of the industrial workforce, and rural to urban migration, have transformed the underlying political economy of the country. In relationship to these changes, official discourse has sought to engender a \"New Malay\" subjectivity, dissociating the Malay-peasant complex of the early 20th century and associating Malayness, instead, with urbanism and entrepreneurship. Malay male migrants figure centrally in this articulation of identity and political economy. Focusing on the articulation of multiple fields of identity, I argue that social and cultural forces are shaping and reshaping the lives of Malay men, although their effects are felt differentially by subjects who must negotiate intersecting fields of ethnicity, gender, migrancy, religion, and class.","creator":["Eric C. Thompson"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e429603a-6eb6-32d5-b890-bce59b1e384b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Malay Male Migrants: Negotiating Contested Identities in Malaysia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805436","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":19300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on an integrated theoretical framework of symbolic interaction and queer theory, I analyze how forty-one mostly white middleclass gay men accomplish their parenting and family identities. Findings reveal how gay active and prospective parents are influenced by the normative family ideal and implicate themselves in dominant discourses about (hetero)sexuality, gender, family, and parenting. Data suggest that in order for gay men to understand themselves as parents, many identify with female-familial roles and frame their parenting experiences in maternal terms, using such terms as maternal instincts, biological clocks, and soccer moms. I argue that these patterns emerge because these men inhabit a rather liminal space that lacks any definitive models or guidelines. These men make sense of their liminality by framing their identities and experiences within established gendered and heterosexual parenting scripts, resulting in a narrative hybrid of heterosexual men's family and parenting trajectories and discourses about women, femininity, and mothering.","creator":["Dana Berkowitz"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2011.34.4.514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a55d5d6f-ec1e-3c34-849b-fd0e0d84ec43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2011.34.4.514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"535","pageStart":"514","pagination":"pp. 514-535","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Maternal Instincts, Biological Clocks, and Soccer Moms: Gay Men's Parenting and Family Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2011.34.4.514","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen J. Davis"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43948540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47922342"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"904b3dfc-92c9-31ce-a8a2-9037db65d386"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43948540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"593","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-593","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"From Women's Piety to Male Devotion: Gender Studies, the \"Acts of Paul and Thecla\", and the Evidence of an Arabic Manuscript","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43948540","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":6943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew R. Martin"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43499629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12069078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43499629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlytheatre"}],"isPartOf":"Early Theatre","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Early Theatre: A Journal Associated with the Records of Early English Drama","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Raw and the Cooked in Ford's \"'Tis Pity She's a Whore\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43499629","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6835,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[160236,160828]],"Locations in B":[[6572,7161]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This briefing explores the implications of the achievement of formal marriage rights for same-sex couples in South Africa for masculine and feminine subjectivities. It assumes as its starting point the regulatory character of marriage equality and its role in the reproduction of normative masculine\/feminine binaries. Marriage, as a legal and social discourse, is fundamental to the (re)production of hegemonic masculinities and femininities, and related constructions of homosexual on the one hand and heterosexual on the other. Does same-sex marriage destabilise dominant forms of 'the masculine' and 'the feminine'? Do marriage equality rights change the cultures of femininity and masculinity available to gay and lesbian citizens? Through the lens of marriage and murder, this briefing is a preliminary interrogation of the tensions and slippages between the achievement of formal equality on the one hand, and the realities of murderous abjection on the other. It proposes that the subversive character of non-conforming sexualities has the potential for a politics that pushes the limits of the masculine\/feminine binary and associated powers and desires.","creator":["Melanie Judge"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4f1a2d4-309c-3685-8ae9-ccf1c35df103"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"2 (100)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"For better or worse? Same-sex marriage and the (re)making of hegemonic masculinities and femininities in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825156","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":4606,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[21919,22109]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey Weeks"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23265593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d94c4119-972b-3fd3-8ab8-d3ab15845ea1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23265593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer(y)ing the \"Modern Homosexual\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23265593","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9640,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489242,489354]],"Locations in B":[[36613,36725]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay traces the ways in which damaged bodies function as readable traumatic testimonies of gendered and racialized postcolonial violence in Somalia. Characters in Nuruddin Farah's Maps read and learn from each other's marked bodies while simultaneously instructing the novel's reader on how to read the narrative. The novel represents traumatic suffering in images of bodily illness and mutilation to signify hypochondriacal responses to the psychic violence that accompanies the physical violation wrought by neocolonialism. Characters' bodies transgress patriarchal gender role and geographical boundaries, dismantling established constructions of postcolonial nation and personhood. Postcolonial motherhood becomes a new kind of subjectivity that transgresses both anatomical and national borders. As testimony, the narratives and marked bodies in Maps signify social change by suggesting new kinds of bodies rather than by reiterating the established alignment of birth and motherhood with the emerging nation. They suggest new ways of reading Anglophone African postcolonial literatures.","creator":["Michelle Lynn Brown"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"475b5acf-9858-3c3d-976f-28f52ec344ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bleeding for the Mother(Land): Reading Testimonial Bodies in Nuruddin Farah's Maps<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.125","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay demonstrates that Anthony Trollope was one of several Victorians aware of \"female marriage,\" a term that Elizabeth Barrett Browning used to describe committed unions between women. After establishing that Trollope knew women in female marriages at the time that he was composing his novel Can You Forgive Her? (1864-65), the essay analyzes how female marriage inscribes itself within the form of the marriage plot. Trollope's novel aligns female marriage with contractual marriage, associated with feminist demands to make unions between men and women more egalitarian as well as dissoluble. The novel works to discredit contractual forms of marriage and to celebrate indissoluble hierarchical marriage by associating the first with primitive savagery, the second with an ideal of civilization that can accommodate male violence.","creator":["SHARON MARCUS"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2005.60.3.291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c54613cb-2188-3846-bbd5-bba56eb3b0c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncl.2005.60.3.291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contracting Female Marriage in Anthony Trollope's Can You Forgive Her?<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2005.60.3.291","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":14192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485949,486020]],"Locations in B":[[74165,74236]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mechthild E. Nagel"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"706ec194-62d3-340b-8bd5-f3af39172c23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316835","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":1821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9563d80-4866-3c37-b565-a34727a157d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427160","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann Levett"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b842956a-d94a-37ef-acff-6fdbd9e87df7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4065480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Regimes of Truth: A Response to Diana Russell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065480","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susanne Hagemann"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e657949d-10a0-3f33-9aec-4771740ad0cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25504929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tales of a Nation: Territorial Pragmatism in Elizabeth Grant, Maria Edgeworth, and Sydney Owenson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504929","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay discusses the work of two female theatre-makers, and their strategic use of nudity on stage. The author appropriates signs of indignation in this work in order to re-visit the 'problem' of the female form being traditionally associated with bodily immanence rather than transcendence. Both Nic Green's Trilogy (2009\u20132010) and Ursula Martinez' My Stories, Your Emails (2010) use the naked female form to proffer statements about the experience of being a woman in the 2000s. Their use of nudity breaks with feminist theories popular in the 1990s, which argued that because the female form could never escape the symbolic logic of phallocentrism, it could never escape sexual objectification, and thus should operate on the margins of mainstream culture, cultivate agency by appropriating the means of production and be removed from view (radical negativity). By identifying as 'artists' and by insisting on their right to put their experience centre stage, Green and Martinez break with the anti-humanist theories of the 1990s and proffer a more individualistic strain of feminist performance. The author celebrates this work as a break away from the deadlock offered by theories of radical negativity.","creator":["Sarah Gorman"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5a431f5-cf66-32b9-80cf-f7e6f56073b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"105","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"feminist disavowal or return to immanence? the problem of poststructuralism and the naked female form in Nic Green's \"Trilogy\" and Ursula Martinez' \"My Stories, Your Emails\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571898","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[142887,142968]],"Locations in B":[[37708,37789]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using feminist psychoanalytical perspectives as frames of reference, Low analyzes the story of Lot's daughters (Gen 19:30\u201338 nrsv) in terms of sexual abuse and sexual taboo. She reads Gen 19 parallel to her unique perspective as a daughter of a sexually abused mother. Her personal account mingles with academic insights on the text, while she explores feminist psychoanalytical scholarship, the complexity of remembering sexual abuse, and biblical and societal kinship structures. The essay then offers alternative kinship theories than those from psychoanalysis, in conjunction with an interpretation of Lot's daughters that coincides with the author's personal experience as a new mother.","creator":["Katherine B. Low"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/fsr.2010.26.2.37","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be7a6b14-94fe-3363-a051-19ea719a2919"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/fsr.2010.26.2.37"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Sexual Abuse of Lot's Daughters: Reconceptualizing Kinship for the Sake of Our Daughters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/fsr.2010.26.2.37","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8536,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[254102,254169]],"Locations in B":[[33128,33203]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Flanagan"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a55ae94-e1b2-3bf2-a569-2170c22be6b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Navigating the Narrative in Space: Gender and Spatiality in Virtual Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778029","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":6625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines changes in the regulation of sexuality in Indonesia in the period since 1980 as seen through state, religious and lesbian and gay activist discourses on sexuality. Three different eras during that period of Indonesian history are compared. Under the New Order regime of Suharto, the Indonesian state sought to control sexuality through a deployment of gender. During the 1990s, state Islamic discourses of sexuality shifted in response to international pressures to support same-sex marriage and sexual rights. During the third period following the end of the Suharto regime in 1998, a conservative Islamic minority pushed for more restrictive laws in the State Penal Code, initiating intense public debate on the role of the state in questions of sexuality and morality. Over this time period, the dominant discourse on sexuality moved from strategically linking normative gender with heterosexuality and marriage to direct attempts to legislate heterosexual marriage by criminalizing a wide range of sexual practices. \/\/\/ Cet article examine les changements de la r\u00e9glementation de la sexualit\u00e9 en Indon\u00e9sie depuis 1980, tels qu'apparaissant dans les discours sur la sexualit\u00e9, qu'ils proviennent de l'\u00e9tat, des instances religieuses ou des activistes gays et lesbiennes. Trois diff\u00e9rentes p\u00e9riodes de l'histoire indon\u00e9sienne sont compar\u00e9es. Sous le \"Nouvel Ordre\" de Suharto, l'\u00e9tat indon\u00e9sien cherchait \u00e0 contr\u00f4ler la sexualit\u00e9 \u00e0 travers le d\u00e9ploiement du genre. Sous les gouvernements des ann\u00e9es 90, les discours islamiques sur la sexualit\u00e9 ont chang\u00e9 en r\u00e9ponse aux pressions internationales en faveur du mariage entre conjoints du m\u00eame sexe et des droits sexuels. Dans la troisi\u00e8me p\u00e9riode qui a suivi la fin du r\u00e9gime de Suharto en 1998, une minorit\u00e9 islamique conservatrice a fait pression pour que des lois plus restrictives soient inscrites au code p\u00e9nal national, ce qui a initi\u00e9 un d\u00e9bat public intense sur le r\u00f4le de l'\u00e9tat en mati\u00e8re de sexualit\u00e9 et de moralit\u00e9. Apr\u00e8s cette p\u00e9riode, le discours dominant sur la sexualit\u00e9 est pass\u00e9 d'un lien strat\u00e9gique entre normes de genre, h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9 et mariage, \u00e0 des tentatives directes de l\u00e9gif\u00e9rer sur le mariage h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel en criminalisant de nombreuses pratiques sexuelles. \/\/\/ En este art\u00edculo analizamos los cambios en la legislaci\u00f3n de la sexualidad en Indonesia durante el periodo desde 1980 examinada seg\u00fan los discursos estatales, religiosos y de los activistas de lesbianas y gays sobre la sexualidad. Comparamos tres \u00e9pocas diferentes del periodo hist\u00f3rico del Indonesia. Bajo el Nuevo Orden del r\u00e9gimen de Suharto, el estado de Indonesia pretendi\u00f3 controlar la sexualidad a trav\u00e9s de una distribuci\u00f3n de g\u00e9neros. Durante los noventa, los discursos isl\u00e1micos sobre la sexualidad cambiaron en respuesta a las presiones internacionales en apoyo de los matrimonios entre personas del mismo sexo y de sus derechos sexuales. Durante el tercer periodo al finalizar el r\u00e9gimen de Suharto en 1998, una minor\u00eda isl\u00e1mica conservadora exigi\u00f3 leyes m\u00e1s estrictas en el C\u00f3digo Penal, inici\u00e1ndose as\u00ed un debate p\u00fablico intenso sobre el papel del estado en cuestiones de sexualidad y moralidad. Durante este periodo de tiempo, el discurso dominante sobre sexualidad pas\u00f3 de vincular de forma estrat\u00e9gica a los sexos normativos con la heterosexualidad y el matrimonio e intent\u00f3 directamente legislar el matrimonio heterosexual criminalizando toda una serie de pr\u00e1cticas sexuales.","creator":["Evelyn Blackwood"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"433e28f3-e1b5-38ce-987f-ea5f12db3eb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20460931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Regulation of Sexuality in Indonesian Discourse: Normative Gender, Criminal Law and Shifting Strategies of Control","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460931","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8865,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74829,75069]],"Locations in B":[[6052,6297]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2007, Routledge published \"Theory for Performance Studies\" as part of its Theory 4 series, listing Philip Auslander as author. When, in August, The Chronicle of Higher Education revealed that much of the book was lifted word-for-word from the template for the series, Theory for Religious Studies by Timothy K. Beal and William E. Deal, TDR editor Richard Schechner convened via email and phone conversations a \"TDR Forum,\" asking leaders in the field to respond to the book and the series. Schechner and other respondents address issues of plagiarism, corporate takeovers of academic publishing, and the dumbing down of performance studies, asking why a notable scholar such as Auslander would undertake such an egregious piece of \"scholarship.\" Deal and Beal answer some questions put to them by Schechner, and Routledge's Claire L'Enfant and Talia Rodgers offer their perspectives.","creator":["Richard Schechner","Timothy K. Beal","William E. Deal","Talia Rodgers","Claire L'Enfant","Judith Butler","Marvin Carlson","Tracy C. Davis","David Savran","Shannon Jackson","Branislav Jakovljevic","Jill Dolan","Phillip Zarrilli","W. B. Worthen","Joseph Roach","Peggy Phelan"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c937716f-8d38-39b0-8a8f-3ec3fa402ef2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25599451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"TDR Comment: Concerning \"Theory for Performance Studies\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599451","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":25404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Walerstein"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45017404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839053"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f77b3731-3118-3dbc-a6d1-a55d92ea6741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45017404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"It Just Don't Do\" (What You Think It Does): The Periperformative Possibilities of Julie Harris's Face","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45017404","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9523,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[436475,436592],[438512,438587]],"Locations in B":[[51501,51618],[51730,51805]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"C.L. Moore's \"No Woman Born\" and James Tiptree Jr.'s \"The Girl Who Was Plugged In\" both present images of women who are technologically reincarnated, but the transcendence of the limitations of gendered human existence that is associated with the figure of the cyborg in Donna Haraway's \"Cyborg Manifesto\" is flawed in these stories by the abiding loneliness of their cyborg protagonists and the inability of these characters to achieve interpersonal connection. Previous readings of the stories have focused on the degrees of agency assigned to the figure of the female cyborg. In contrast, this essay examines the figure of the cyborg in terms of her ability or inability to form alliances and relationships with others.","creator":["Melissa Colleen Stevenson"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28da16a5-1dac-3a3c-8ac6-d6d71f44e79d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trying to Plug In: Posthuman Cyborgs and the Search for Connection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241495","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hannah Bacon"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24462298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98048229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ea95233-e787-3759-9e9d-79bb9039caff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24462298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"442","pagination":"pp. 442-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"THINKING\" THE TRINITY AS RESOURCE FOR FEMINIST THEOLOGY TODAY?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24462298","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":9296,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[57012,57071]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper argues that the act of looking, as defined between the story of Gyges, Candaules, and the offended queen and the story of Solon's visit to Lydia, functions in the first book of Herodotus, and perhaps also elsewhere throughout the Inquiry, as a metaphor for the relation of the hist\u00f4r to the object of his investigation. Further, by a careful comparison of the Gyges story in Herodotus with the queen's own narration in the enigmatic \"Gyges Tragedy\" (P. Oxy. 2382), we can define a Herodotean psychology of spectation that bears a striking resemblance to the specifically tragic psychology manifest in the fragment. Herodotus positions his readers, the paper argues, in the place of Gyges, forcing them to look-in their imaginations-on what does not belong to them, just as the theatai in the Theater of Dionysus must look in imagination on the scene described by the queen. While the tragic audience is protected from the fate of Candaules and of Gyges' descendant Croesus by the constitutive blindness of tragedy that prevents the spectators from seeing what happens in the mukhos, Herodotus' audience must seek some other reassurance that they will not face the voyeur's penalty. This paper finally argues that Solon's the\u00f4ria, with its crucial purpose of establishing the nomoi of Athens and its crucial ethic of looking not at the object of desire but at the end, installs in Herodotus' histori\u00ea the psychology of tragedy: to look desiringly is to lose, but to look inquiringly is to learn.","creator":["Roger Travis"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbeb0947-4a98-3c0e-90c7-1a067fdd822e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25011124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"330","pagination":"pp. 330-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Spectation of Gyges in P. Oxy. 2382 and Herodotus Book 1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25011124","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":15325,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524164,524252]],"Locations in B":[[89883,89980]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Schmidt"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384291"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212093"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fe86617-47ed-3244-aabb-336262641bad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24389065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southlitj"}],"isPartOf":"The Southern Literary Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Horses Chomping at the Global Bit: Ideology, Systemic Injustice, and Resistance in Zora Neale Hurston's \"Tell My Horse\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389065","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7869,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500711,500774]],"Locations in B":[[48754,48817]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The essay discusses how an analysis of the gendered practices of Brazilian transgendered prostitutes (travestis) can illuminate the ways in which gender in Latin America is bound up with sexuality. The article suggests that the particular configurations of sex, gender, and sexuality in Brazil and other Latin American societies differ importantly from the dominant configurations in northern Europe and North America and generate different arrangements of gender, consisting not of men and women, but of men and not-men.","creator":["Don Kulick"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/681744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a74360ee-eef4-33f4-b346-88c497022e6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/681744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"574","pagination":"pp. 574-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Gender of Brazilian Transgendered Prostitutes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/681744","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":11088,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73895,74701]],"Locations in B":[[42672,43469]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roxanne Rimstead"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58e5a5d2-cd8e-35cf-9227-201f8a5e089b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Theories and Anti-Theories: Moving toward Marginal Women's Subjectivities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004012","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1af01894-4609-3f97-a276-f6c1ced87fcf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136436","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":1778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catriona MacLeod"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pedagogy and Androgyny in Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904753","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":16039,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436701,436962]],"Locations in B":[[15267,15528]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One of the major lacunas in the field of youth studies is the lack of attention to, and thorough documentation of, the positive contributions of young people, especially in developing societies. The vast bulk of studies are skewed towards the view of youth as enfants terribles, without any attempt to understand and explain tactical ways in which youth have created and continue to create alternative lives for themselves under great adversity. Drawing on case studies from Northern Nigeria (youth as agents of counter-terrorism) and Northern Mali (youth as tactical agents of development), the burden of this article is to identify the multiple challenges facing youth in West Africa\u2019s Sahel region and, especially, to show how Sahelian youth are coping with these everyday challenges in tactical, ingenious and creative ways that underscore both their considerable social agency and their inherent capacity to make telling contributions to peacebuilding and development in their local communities.","creator":["DANIEL EGIEGBA AGBIBOA"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15423166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7789dfd3-de81-3e0d-8585-3c8a378d449a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peacebuilding"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peacebuilding & Development","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"YOUTH AS TACTICAL AGENTS OF PEACEBUILDING AND DEVELOPMENT IN THE SAHEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602945","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Myra Marx Ferree"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"257a2f7f-debc-31ad-ab3b-308b3ccd7e94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40376111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Practice Meets Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376111","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Troy Boone"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4d1a28c-abbc-3c75-811d-f8d2ccf52637"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41207013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"Titanic\" Century: Mourning and Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207013","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7561,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286744,287021]],"Locations in B":[[4834,5111]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Selby Wynn Schwartz"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bad Language: Transpositions in Mark Morris's \"Dido and Aeneas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524577","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":14695,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[14988,15097]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Morny Joy"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.29.1.52","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1faa95a-fb65-376c-bb28-000ea83b644f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.29.1.52"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women\u2019s Rights and Religions: A Contemporary Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.29.1.52","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines ethnic joking among young Ashkenazi and Syrian Jewish Mexican men in a Torah class. Jews in Mexico City are participating in social, economic, and political changes at multiple scales. These include the transition from mestizo to multicultural politics of Mexican national belonging, with its potential for greater inclusion of Jews and other ethno-religious minorities. Young Halebi (Aleppan) and Shami (Damascene\/Beiruti) Jews are often the first generation in their families to go to university and enter social and professional domains outside of communal networks. At the same time, many engage with the growing presence of Haredi, or ultra-Orthodox Jewish religious sectors. All of this prompts greater self-scrutiny and awareness of external gazes that negatively evaluate many Syrian Jewish beliefs and practices. Jewish Mexican ethnic joking reflects and refracts this context. Because of its similarities to other ethnographic accounts, I argue for characterizing this activity as a variation on relajo, a genre of collaborative verbal jousting known throughout Latin America. However, it is distinctive from other documented instances of relajo in key ways. One is the participants' frank rejection of the relajo label (as hinted in title of this article), which reveals tensions between emic and etic language ideologies. Another is the jokers' invocation of multiple socio-geographic-temporal scales or chronotopes (Bakhtin 1981b) in their wordplay, reflective of their experience as members of a diaspora. I characterize this simultaneity and multiplicity of scale using Peeren's (2006) notion of diasporic chronotope, which exists beyond the narrative event into the lived experience and identities of Jewish Mexicans. Finally, while many scholars have theorized relajo as a mode of empowerment for Mexicans contending with socioeconomic injustice, here I show it to be an effective tool for addressing challenges specific to diasporic and other ethnic\/religious minorities in modern Mexico.","creator":["Evelyn Dean-Olmsted"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fc6a0ee-174c-378e-bf6d-6c328932212f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26646216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"671","pagination":"pp. 671-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"It Was (Never) \"Relajo\": Diasporic Chronotope and the Social Work of Jewish Mexican Ethnic Joking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646216","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":16124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article se propose d'examiner la raison pour laquelle Fran\u00e7ois Truffaut, malgr\u00e9 la distance d'une vingtaine d'ann\u00e9es s\u00e9parant ses deux \u0153uvres, a pu d\u00e9clarer \u00e0 la sortie de la seconde: \"Le Dernier M\u00e9tro renvoie \u00e0 [...] Jules et Jim\". Si la litt\u00e9rature critique a pris note de la position interm\u00e9diaire occup\u00e9e par Catherine au sein d'un triangle dont le \"vrai\" couple semble \u00eatre Jules et Jim, \u00e0 notre connaissance, la th\u00e8se de la femme, tiers exclu, servant volens nolens l'int\u00e9r\u00eat homo-\u00e9rotique entre partenaires masculins, n'a pas \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e9mise \u00e0 propos de la configuration Lucas-Marion-Bernard.","creator":["C\u00e9line L\u00e9on"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bba1b7a-052b-3e65-9a01-af092bbca2ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Truffaut: la disparue du \"Dernier M\u00e9tro\" et de \"Jules et Jim\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758336","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":7832,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[48809,48843]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A large number of morphological, physiological and behavioural traits are differentially expressed by males and females in all vertebrates including humans. These sex differences, sometimes, reflect the different hormonal environment of the adults, but they often remain present after subjects of both sexes are placed in the same endocrine conditions following gonadectomy associated or not with hormonal replacement therapy. They are then the result of combined influences of organizational actions of sex steroids acting early during development, or genetic differences between the sexes, or epigenetic mechanisms differentially affecting males and females. Sexual partner preference is a sexually differentiated behavioural trait that is clearly controlled in animals by the same type of mechanisms. This is also probably true in humans, even if critical experiments that would be needed to obtain scientific proof of this assertion are often impossible for pragmatic or ethical reasons. Clinical, epidemiological and correlative studies provide, however, converging evidence strongly suggesting, if not demonstrating, that endocrine, genetic and epigenetic mechanisms acting during the preor perinatal life control human sexual orientation, i.e. homosexuality versus heterosexuality. Whether they interact with postnatal psychosexual influences remains, however, unclear at present.","creator":["Jacques Balthazart"],"datePublished":"2016-02-19","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24768676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09628436"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44150838"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64e7f2c3-411d-3daa-ac77-04909eb87751"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24768676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtranbiolscie"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences","issueNumber":"1688","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Royal Society","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Sex differences in partner preferences in humans and animals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24768676","volumeNumber":"371","wordCount":10952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"The Rites\" (Minori) chapter presents a pivotal event in The Tale ofGenji: the death of Genji: most beloved wife, Murasaki no Ue. In analyzing this scene, I focus on how her death magnifies melancholic attachment to strengthen ties between the bereaved male protagonists. Loss of this stunning woman lures two generations of men into a spell of deathbed fellowship. After Murasaki has died, Genji and his son, Y\u00fbgiri, together gaze at her cadaver. Such intimate viewing represents not only an instance of unchecked voyeurism but also signifies a pedagogical exercise in which beholding a dead female body fosters homosocial communion. This act stages a paternal object lesson in how to mourn and earn manhood through rituals of lurid staring. In tracing how dominative desires to look, grieve, and teach transpire in the scene, I argue that Murasaki s flawless corpse fuels patriarchal inheritance. \u7d2b\u306e\u4e0a\u306e\u6b7b\u5f8c\u3001\u5149\u6e90\u6c0f\u3068\u5915\u9727\u306f\u5171\u306b\u5f7c\u5973\u306e\u4ea1\u304d\u9ab8\u3092\u898b\u3064\u3081\u308b\u3002\u672c\u7a3f\u3067\u306f\u305d\u306e \u884c\u70ba\u306e\u679c\u305f\u3059\u5f79\u5272\u306b\u6ce8\u76ee\u3057\u305f\u3044\u3002\u305d\u308c\u306f\u54c0\u6101\u306e\u5100\u5f0f\u3068\u3057\u3066\u6a5f\u80fd\u3057\u3001\u7d2b\u306e\u4e0a\u306e\u6b7b\u3092\u901a \u3058\u3001\u907a\u3055\u308c\u305f\u4e8c\u4eba\u306e\u7537\u306e\u30db\u30e2\u30bd\u30fc\u30b7\u30e3\u30eb\u306a\u7d46\u306f\u5f37\u307e\u308a\u3001\u5915\u9727\u306e\u7537\u6027\u6027\u304c\u91b8\u6210\u3055\u308c\u308b\u304d \u3064\u304b\u3051\u306b\u3082\u306a\u308b\u3002","creator":["REGINALD JACKSON","\u30b8\u30e4\u30af\u30bd\u30f3\u2022 \u30ec\u30b8\u30ca\u30eb\u30c9"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44478335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670097"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dafbc9e6-e1e2-3d56-9eaf-3ba56f0f01b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44478335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Homosocial Mentorship and the Serviceable Female Corpse: Manhood Rituals in \"The Tale of Genji\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44478335","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":17112,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443328,443393]],"Locations in B":[[6383,6449]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terrell Carver"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5ded34a-b9a0-338e-931e-377ae1c5ead0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"673","pagination":"pp. 673-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Public Man\" and the Critique of Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192020","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5861,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467305,467400]],"Locations in B":[[29482,29581]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Max Saunders"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15694070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"668143808"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e92b3fe4-d45a-33ef-889d-a1c112b35b61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fordmadoxford"}],"isPartOf":"International Ford Madox Ford Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871002","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":3982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender archaeology has made significant strides toward deconstructing the hegemony of binary categorizations. Challenging dichotomies such as man\/woman, sex\/gender, and biology\/culture, approaches informed by poststructuralist, feminist, and queer theories have moved beyond essentialist and universalist identity constructs to more nuanced configurations. Despite the theoretical emphasis on context, multiplicity, and fluidity, binary starting points continue to streamline the spectrum of variability that is recognized, often reproducing normative assumptions in the evidence. The contributors to this special issue confront how sex, gender, and sexuality categories condition analytical visibility, aiming to develop approaches that respond to the complexity of theory in archaeological practice. The papers push the ontological and epistemological boundaries of bodies, personhood, and archaeological possibility, challenging a priori assumptions that contain how sex, gender, and sexuality categories are constituted and related to each other. Foregrounding intersectional approaches that engage with ambiguity, variability, and difference, this special issue seeks to \"de-contain\" categories, assumptions, and practices from \"binding\" our analytical gaze toward only certain kinds of persons and knowledges, in interpretations of the past and practices in the present.","creator":["Lara Ghisleni","Alexis M. Jordan","Emily Fioccoprile"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8ac2eb4-38aa-349b-b9be-e36b034bff23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Introduction to \"Binary Binds\": Deconstructing Sex and Gender Dichotomies in Archaeological Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967040","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12217,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,75056]],"Locations in B":[[18133,18741]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02643758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplphil"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received for the \"Journal of Applied Philosophy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353334","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Fraser"],"datePublished":"2013-09-13","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e9e510b-fd18-3c12-8f78-8a3b57ee34df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Society for Ethnomusicology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.57.3.0539","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":1771,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[1117,1171]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dorce Gamalama is one of Indonesian television\u2019s best-known celebrities. She first rose to fame in the 1980s and her career is very much based on her public profile as a transsexual woman. This article focuses on Dorce\u2019s performance of gender and class in two films: Dorce ketemu jodoh (Dorce meets her match, 1990) and Dorce sok akrab (Dorce up close, 1989). In Dorce ketemu jodoh, Dorce represents herself as a woman, albeit one who is unlike other women, and who is confident enough in her gender identity not to shy away from gender playfulness. In Dorce sok akrab, Dorce\u2019s character encapsulates the possibility for upward social mobility as an integral aspect of New Order development ideology, though it is a mobility which strongly resists notions of Westernization and elitism, and is instead firmly rooted in local forms of cultural identity.","creator":["Ben Murtagh"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26281590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1941d2b-10f3-3dc1-8e90-136fd7a51204"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26281590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Double Identities in Dorce\u2019s Comedies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26281590","volumeNumber":"173","wordCount":12448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Negotiating Gender and Class in New Order Indonesian Cinema"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57ab0d47-f754-3421-88a9-c2cdca8c8f5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Information science - Coding theory"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427177","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan C. Jarratt"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9869628f-2609-3eee-919b-3e1eece11831"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Encounters with Jane Tompkins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866030","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":2645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study is part of a comprehensive book project on concepts of identity and body in both feminist theories and modern literature by women in Germany and the USA. Referring to the dispute between Leslie Adelson and Sigrid Weigel (1988) about racist elements in feminist aesthetics, the article examines Anne Duden's Opening of the Mouth and Das Judasschaf. Both are seen to reproduce the idea of a universality of woman and the female body and exclude issues of race, nationality, ethnicity, and class from the concept of identity. My analysis presents a traumatic structure of the protagonist in Das Judasschaf and questions her imago as a surviving memory-body and the position of \"responsible sufferer.\"","creator":["Annette Meusinger"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43ae3c96-7eb0-3de7-bef6-81d65ad54383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Wired Mouth: On the Positionality of Perception in Anne Duden's Opening of the Mouth and Das Judasschaf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688862","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Penny Farfan","Lesley Ferris"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41000787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"989e7759-84d6-34fa-bf35-7f0e50295c09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41000787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Editorial Comment: Special Issue on Contemporary Women Playwrights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41000787","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":4206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Race, long discounted in Andean ethnography as relatively unimportant, is a social fact of great salience in the Andes. This essay introduces the articles in the special issue on race in the Andes with an overview of the interrelated intellectual histories of racism in the Andes, Europe and North America, from colonial proto-racism, to the totalising theories of the 19th century, to the heterogeneous 'neo-racism' found in the Andes today, in which both these earlier ideas and contemporary cultural racisms are at home. It concludes with a discussion of an oppositional ideology found in some indigenous communities, in which race is somatic but not biological in origin.","creator":["Mary Weismantel","Stephen F. Eisenman"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3339225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02613050"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38871257"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3339225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulllatiamerrese"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Latin American Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race in the Andes: Global Movements and Popular Ontologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3339225","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LINDA LAIDLAW"],"datePublished":"1998-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41962039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609170"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b5ac775-6e24-33cf-b362-1046d20de961"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41962039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"languagearts"}],"isPartOf":"Language Arts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Finding \"Real\" Lives: Writing and Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41962039","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":5215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mozambique's liberation struggle was fought mostly on the terrain of the northern provinces of Cabo Delgado, Niassa and Tete. Yet, though the rural landscapes of northern Mozambique are intrinsically tied to the country's national history, the public commemoration of the struggle in the present-day context is a state-led narrative more closely linked to the urban experience of the predominantly male political elite. In this article, I explore how female veterans living in the national capital, Maputo, in southern Mozambique, conceptualise national space and belonging, and construct its gendered meanings. Though significant numbers of girls and women were mobilised by the FRELIMO guerrilla army to fight in the struggle, to date little research exists on women's accounts of their experience. This article is based on life-history interviews conducted in Maputo with female war veterans in 2009 and 2011. On the one hand, I show how the abstract space of the nation is made sense of and personalised through the women's experience of the liberation struggle, and further juxtaposed with their current experience of the cityscape. On the other hand, I discuss how the capital city as the spatiotemporal location of the 'history-telling event' continues to shape the memory of the liberation struggle, contributing to the enactment of a particular gendered spatiality of belonging.","creator":["Jonna Katto"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf930d59-fafe-38eb-9905-1f29c5395aec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"557","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-557","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Landscapes of Belonging: Female Ex-Combatants Remembering the Liberation Struggle in Urban Maputo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566490","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article revisits well-travelled ethnographic portrayals of traditional Chinese family dynamics to draw attention to desire as a product of family life and to how crucial elements of family organization and ideology can be understood, in turn, as effects of desire - that is, as instituted fantasies. Although my case in point is the Chinese family, the analysis addresses the category ' family' cross-culturally. In any of its variations, the 'family' exists at two synergistically implicated levels: first, it comprises an important part of the reality into which individuals are socialized; second, it embodies in instituted form individuals' attempts to realize - to bring into being - social arrangements as they would like them to be. In the Chinese case, at least two ironies are embedded in this synergy. First, women are primary producers and reproducers of the family in the 'real world', despite the fact that patriliny as 'instituted fantasy' downplays or veils their agency. Second, the normative subordination of the son to a patriarchal father, expressed and mediated through institutions including ancestor worship and valorization of filial piety, veils a valorizing of the son as agent or protagonist of filial action. Although ultimately unrealizable, patrilineal and familial fantasies animate Chinese family life and are thus an important constituent of Chinese realities. To these ends the analysis re-purposes 'the symbolic' and 'imaginaries', categories widely employed in contemporary gender studies and social theory, arguing that understanding kinship enjoins incorporating desire's role both in defining institutions and in motivating their creators. L'article revisite des descriptions d\u00e9j\u00e0 bien connues de la dynamique de la famille chinoise traditionnelle, en attirant l'attention sur le d\u00e9sir en tant que produit de la vie familiale et sur la mani\u00e8re dont certains \u00e9l\u00e9ments cruciaux de l'organisation et de l'id\u00e9ologie de la famille peuvent \u00eatre compris comme les effets de celui-ci ou, en d'autres termes, comme des fantasmes institutionnalis\u00e9s. Bien que l'auteur s'appuie sur le cas de la famille chinoise, son approche de la cat\u00e9gorie \u00ab famille \u00bb est interculturelle. La \u00ab famille \u00bb, dans toutes ses variantes, existe \u00e0 deux niveaux synergiques : d'une part, elle constitue une part importante de la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 dans laquelle les individus sont socialis\u00e9s, et d'autre part elle incarne, sous une forme institutionnalis\u00e9e, les tentatives de l'individu de cr\u00e9er des arrangements sociaux qui soient tels qu'il les souhaite. Dans le cas chinois, cette synergie est ironique \u00e0 deux \u00e9gards au moins. Premi\u00e8rement, les femmes sont les premi\u00e8res productrices et reproductrices de la famille \u00ab dans le monde r\u00e9el \u00bb, alors m\u00eame que la patrilin\u00e9arit\u00e9, \u00ab fantasme institu\u00e9 \u00bb, minimise ou masque leur agenc\u00e9it\u00e9. D'autre part, la subordination normative du fils au p\u00e8re-patriarche, exprim\u00e9e et m\u00e9di\u00e9e par des institutions telles que le culte des anc\u00eatres et la valorisation de la pi\u00e9t\u00e9 filiale, masque une valorisation du fils en tant qu'agent ou protagoniste de l'action filiale. Bien qu'ils soient finalement irr\u00e9alisables, les fantasmes patrilin\u00e9aires et familiaux sous-tendent la vie familiale chinoise et sont donc un constituant important de la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 en Chine. Dans cette optique, l'analyse revisite les cat\u00e9gories du \u00ab symbolique \u00bb et de \u00ab l'imaginaire \u00bb, largement utilis\u00e9es aujourd'hui dans les \u00e9tudes de genre et les sciences sociales, pour affirmer que la compr\u00e9hension de la parent\u00e9 n\u00e9cessite que l'on int\u00e8gre le r\u00f4le du d\u00e9sir aussi bien dans la d\u00e9finition des institutions que dans la motivation de leurs cr\u00e9ateurs.","creator":["P. Steven Sangren"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a902539-6d76-307f-a0d2-56b1f8d6c308"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Chinese family as instituted fantasy: or, rescuing kinship imaginaries from the 'symbolic'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001586","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In our small scale, exploratory study of four black supplementary schools, we adopted a genealogical approach. By uncovering the subjugated knowledges and hidden histories of black supplementary schools we found evidence of a female centred new social movement. Our analysis of black female agency in these organic grassroots organisations enabled us to interrogate the normative mainstream discourse on 'race' and education. The narratives of black women educators consistently decentred assumptions of mainstream schooling. Supplementary schools provided a context in which whiteness is displaced as central and blackness is seen as normative. Parental involvement showed the effectiveness of black working class agency, in a discourse which assumes their passivity. We conclude by arguing that women's work within black supplementary schools embrace strategies for inclusion--such as emphasis on the formal 3Rs, and dialogue with the mainstream--which though appearing on the surface to be conservative and contradictory, in effect subverts the mainstream discourse on black underachievement and offer transformative possibilities from the margins.","creator":["Diane Reay","Heidi Safia Mirza"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94942300-c575-33fb-872a-b183af71efed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Uncovering Genealogies of the Margins: Black Supplementary Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393055","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay aims to construct strategic intersections between queer theory and feminist theory, in order to suggest how queer theory's attention to issues of gender and sexuality can enrich feminist critical reading. Through detailed readings of C.L. Moore's \"No Woman Born,\" James Tiptree Jr.'s \"The Girl Who Was Plugged In,\" and Joanna Russ's \"The Mystery of the Young Gentleman,\" I make use of some of the powerful insights of queer theory, such as its perspectives on gender performativity, in order to identify some of the complex ways in which sf, especially feminist sf, has ironized and problematized conventional concepts of gender and sexuality almost since its inception. Although science fiction tends to be an overwhelmingly straight imaginative discourse, queer theoretical perspectives, such as those developed by Judith Butler, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Sue-Ellen Case, and Monique Wittig, allow us to broaden our appreciation of the ways in which some sf has challenged the technologies of compulsory heterosexuality. These perspectives also suggest how queering feminist critical reading might help us to think against the grain of a naturalized heteronormativity. I aim to make a case in this essay for the utopian potential of queer as theory, strategy, and imaginative construction; it is my contention that such potential has already been outlined in a broad range of sf narratives by feminist and queer writers.","creator":["Veronica Hollinger"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02ee2980-5ece-389a-98d8-888f43744279"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Re)reading Queerly: Science Fiction, Feminism, and the Defamiliarization of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240749","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9264,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[70305,70766],[199893,200133],[474128,474306],[499422,499490]],"Locations in B":[[150,610],[16763,17003],[42427,42604],[56921,56991]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I examine how parental identities are negotiated in lesbian parent families. I argue that lesbian mothers' extraordinary maternity is not dependent on a feminist egalitarian ethic but instead comes from families' strategic articulation of same-sex parenthood, whereby gender is done and undone in multiple and contradictory ways. Focusing attention onto the 'other (non-biological) mother', I suggest that her lack of social status and (progenitor) maternal role disrupts simple readings of gendered parenthood. I demonstrate that children's creative familial-linguistic management of 'family' facilitates an inclusive conceptual framework, representing families as process. The data cited in this article comes from in-depth, semi-structured interviews with 18 lesbian mothers and 13 of their children, who live across the Yorkshire region in the UK.","creator":["Jacqui Gabb"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddc94832-b2ff-3f88-8cc0-44c8aa00f0d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"603","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-603","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lesbian M\/Otherhood: Strategies of Familial-linguistic Management in Lesbian Parent Families","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856777","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean-Marc Gabaude"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20849822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00142166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99907380-fce8-3355-bc4a-d011aa38c1fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20849822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etudphil"}],"isPartOf":"Les \u00c9tudes philosophiques","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20849822","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary Geisdorfer Feal"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6080d6c9-034f-328f-861e-ddabc00e470c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction: Gender Issues, Representational Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119842","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":2167,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431292,431480]],"Locations in B":[[1998,2186]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c23db964-8bf1-30ff-8638-5fc0452776d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"COLABORADORAS\/ES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596117","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":2845,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496590]],"Locations in B":[[8734,8839]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is primarily concerned with the possibility of alternative research methodologies that more fully capture and represent the experiences and narratives of marginalised and subjugated voices - in this case the voice and experiences of teenage girls on the theme of gender-based violence. Informed by the theoretical notions of narrative and performativity, it explores how Theatre of the Oppressed, developed by Augusto Boal, can be used to uncover representations of girls' subjectivity and social relations that are often eluded in interviews and focus groups. Drawing on reflections of Theatre of the Oppressed workshops with Grade 11 high school learners (females and males) and an overview of collective memory work (by Frigga Haug), it highlights the ways in which these methodologies can yield valuable research data while also being a powerful site for building girls' agency.","creator":["Jude Clark"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f0ade86-21b2-3fdf-9e9c-671d65ddb5ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27868947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"79","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Acting up and speaking out: Using Theatre of the Oppressed and collective memory work as alternative research methods and empowerment tools in work with girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868947","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[46328,46397]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Hornsby"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disempowered Speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154210","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pheng Cheah","Elizabeth Grosz","Judith Butler","Drucilla Cornell"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Future of Sexual Difference: An Interview with Judith Butler and Drucilla Cornell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566322","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13078,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477934]],"Locations in B":[[75315,75400]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An\u00e1lise do filme Tudo sobre minha m\u00e3e, do cineasta espanhol Pedro Almod\u00f3var, enfocando a personagem travesti Agrado. Depois de uma compara\u00e7\u00e3o com outros filmes que abordam o fen\u00f4meno transg\u00eanero, \u00e9 feita uma discuss\u00e3o em torno da no\u00e7\u00e3o de corporalidade e da constru\u00e7\u00e3o do sujeito, dialogando sobretudo com as teorias do corpo da etnologia amer\u00edndia brasileira. O ensaio busca propor alguns elementos para uma reflex\u00e3o sobre a import\u00e2ncia da an\u00e1lise de experi\u00eancias de margem na renova\u00e7\u00e3o te\u00f3rica no campo dos estudos feministas e de g\u00eanero. A experi\u00eancia corporificada de 'tornar-se outro' dramatiza os mecanismos de constru\u00e7\u00e3o da diferen\u00e7a e se apresenta como um empreendimento antihier\u00e1rquico desestabilizador de pol\u00edticas dominantes da subjetividade. This essays does a reading of Pedro Almodovar's film All About My Mother, focusing on the transvestite character, Agrado. After drawing a comparison with other films on the subject of transgendering, I discuss notions of embodiedness and the construction of the subject by placing them in the context of theories about the body in Brazilian ethnology. My purpose is to offer some elements for a reflection on the experiences at\/of the margins as a way of renewing the theoretical debates in feminist and gender studies. The bodily experience of 'becoming the other' dramatizes the mechanisms that are in play in the construction of difference and can be seen as an anti-hierarchical force destabilizing dominant politics of subjectivity.","creator":["S\u00d4NIA WEIDNER MALUF"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"251398ee-da7b-37c7-b26b-bd4ccc1735d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Corporalidade e desejo: \"Tudo sobre minha m\u00e3e\" e g\u00eanero na margem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596097","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05de\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e9\u05ea\u05d9 \u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d7\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea-\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u2014 \"\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e9\u05d7\u05d5\u05e8\" (\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05dc\u05d1\u05d3) \u05d5\"\u05d4\u05e9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4- 21\" (\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4 \u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d1\u05ea), \u05d0\u05e9\u05e8 \u05e4\u05e2\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d1\u05ea\u05e7\u05d5\u05e4\u05ea 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\u05dc\u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05e9\u05dc\u05db\u05dc \u05d0\u05d7\u05d3 \u05de\u05d4\u05dd \u05de\u05e9\u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05ea\u05d5\u05e6\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05d7\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea. \u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d1\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05ea \"\u05d4\u05e9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4- 21\", \u05d4\u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d1\u05ea, \u05e4\u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05db\u05de\u05db\u05e9\u05d9\u05e8 \u05dc\u05d4\u05e2\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d3\u05e2 \u05d4\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9 \u05d5\u05dc\u05db\u05df \u05e0\u05e9\u05d0\u05e8 \u05d1\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9 \u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05de\u05df, \u05d1\"\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e9\u05d7\u05d5\u05e8\" \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05e1\u05e8, \u05d5\u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05e4\u05e2\u05dc \u05db\"\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 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\u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05e7\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d9\u05d3\u05e2, \u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d5\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3. \u05d3\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d3\u05d5\u05de\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d0 \u05e7\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\"\u05d4\u05e9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4- 21\", \u05d5\u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e0\u05d1\u05dc\u05e2\u05d4 \u05d1\u05de\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d1\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d6\u05d9\u05db\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05d5\u05d1\u05e1\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9. \u05d7\u05e7\u05e8 \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e9\u05d4 \u05db\u05d0\u05ea\u05e8 \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05d7\u05d0\u05d4 \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05dc\u05e0\u05d5 \u05dc\u05d6\u05e8\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d0\u05d5\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d4\u05e9\u05dc\u05db\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d3\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc 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Relations between the body, gender and ideology in social protest were studied by comparing 2 Jewish-Israeli leftist protest movements: a women-only movement (Women in Black) and a mixed-gender movement (The 21st Year), which protested in the early 1990s against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza strip. The comparison reveals reversed patterns of body\/ideology relations, each connoting a different meaning and outcome of the social protest. In The 21st Year, the body served as an instrument for the political knowledge, and thus was left unchanged, whereas with the Women in Black, the body was the message. The case of Women in Black shows that when the body produces and articulates a political ideology, it becomes a medium and a cause of change. When the female body serves as a text of alternative knowledge, it simultaneously challenges the national security legacy and the gender order in Israel, while shattering the hierarchical distinctions between knowledge, gender, and body. Exploring the female body as a site of a political protest from a feminist perspective allows us to illuminate the different implications of new social movements for the gendered and national order within Israeli society. Thus, we suggest that research into social movements should recognize the potential of the protesting body as an agent of social and political change.","creator":["\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e9\u05e9\u05d5\u05df-\u05dc\u05d5\u05d9","\u05ea\u05de\u05e8 \u05e8\u05e4\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8","Orna Sasson-Levi","Tamar Rapoport"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23657947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e5a1137-b6e8-3e44-8213-135ca1945d2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23657947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"megamot"}],"isPartOf":"Megamot \/ \u05de\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea","issueNumber":"4","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Henrietta Szold Institute \/ \u05de\u05db\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05e1\u05d0\u05dc\u05d3","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Body, ideology, and gender in social protest \/ \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3, \u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d1\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23657947","volumeNumber":"\u05de\u05d0","wordCount":10052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicole Edelman","Si\u00e2n Reynolds"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238678","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc44d6ae-4ed6-3afe-a02c-52b44cf6b179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26238678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238678","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Evert Van Der Zweerde"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20099884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09259392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1db21bbc-0727-38f5-836e-2dfad58d15d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20099884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studeasteurothou"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in East European Thought","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: The Many Faces of Slavoj \u017di\u017eek's Radicalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20099884","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":2488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Scholarly interest in body size has increased in concert with recent efforts to shape and assess bodies in particular ways within industrialized social contexts. Attending to both overt and covert references to Eurocentric body projects, this chapter reviews literature in anthropology, sociology, and cultural studies that addresses the cultural politics of body size in various parts of the world. It begins with a discussion of biocultural paradigms, which accept certain biomedical categories even when challenging or reconfiguring their hegemonic power. Next is a survey of works analyzing body size within \"non-Western\" groups as well as European and North American subgroups. These studies often employ culturally powerful \"Western\" constructs as foils, an approach that risks cultural othering. The analysis then turns to the extensive literature that unpacks dominant Euro-American body practices and discourses. Here, diverse perspectives on several key concerns in sociocultural anthropology are considered; concepts of culture and power, theories of the body and embodiment, and understandings of human agency vary in instructive ways. The chapter concludes with a review of scholarship on postcolonial processes and representations that incorporates a critical perspective on Eurocentric preoccupations with body size.","creator":["Helen Gremillion"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1781c1db-4e91-35b6-97f0-af758fe3b64d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Cultural Politics of Body Size","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064873","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10738,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[60503,60567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Early sexual and gendered cultures amongst young South African children remain largely unquestioned and unproblematised under the presumption of childhood sexual innocence. Arguing against such representations that associate young children with sexual innocence, this Article shows how sexuality is an important resource through which boys and girls, between the ages of 6 and 8, construct and police their masculinities and femininities. By drawing on elements of an ethnographic and interview based study of young children in the early years of schooling, the Article highlights a range of sexualising practices through which boys and girls exercise their sexual agency analysing the implications for gender relations. The study makes two important claims. First, young children, whether adults approve or not, are already involved in heterosexual cultures and desires. They do so through the construction of boyfriend and girlfriend cultures, through sexualising practices which include kissing, games and love letters. Secondly, the insertion within heterosexual cultures does not only provide evidence of their pleasures, their agency and desires, as they debunk the myth of sexual innocence, but their sexualities are already caught up in normative constructions of gender through which power inequalities are manifest, underpinned by femininity as subordinate. The Article concludes that there is a need to examine the sexual and gendered cultures amongst South African children in the early years.","creator":["Deevia Bhana"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8920b834-ae1c-3ae9-8e82-4939051c787d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43824412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"3 (97)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kiss and tell: Boys, girls and sexualities in the early years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43824412","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Noriko J. Horiguchi"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54fcd612-93c1-3bed-a9c0-548028751ae1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"28","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Body, Migration, and the Empire: Tamura Toshiko's Writing in Vancouver from 1918 to 1924","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771927","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stuart Henry","Dragan Milovanovic"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e3cd156-08da-379f-a43f-2e872304f3e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29767218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"2 (80)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constitutive Criminology: Origins, Core Concepts, and Evaluation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767218","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10045,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[59231,59300]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amanda Anderson"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54d64f0f-6084-35d6-a88f-7486c8d29557"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"21","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cryptonormativism and Double Gestures: The Politics of Post-Structuralism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354117","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11944,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[70642,70766],[95050,95344],[511312,511413]],"Locations in B":[[27714,27838],[29255,29549],[74928,75029]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reviews current research on language and gender and discusses the implications of such work for gender-based research in second language acquisition. Recent work in sociolinguistics, generally, and language and gender research, more specifically, has rejected categorical and fixed notions of social identities in favor of more constructivist and dynamic ones. Thus, in this paper I elaborate a conception of gender that has not generally informed research in the field of second language acquisition, and point to more recent work in the field that theorizes and investigates gender as a construct shaped by historical, cultural, social, and interactional factors.","creator":["Susan Ehrlich"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44487988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02722631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cc2de36-1570-33b3-a10b-28f131f12b1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44487988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studsecolangacqu"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Second Language Acquisition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"GENDER AS SOCIAL PRACTICE : Implications for Second Language Acquisition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44487988","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":14109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey J. Williams"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6fef7d9-6153-31a9-a7d1-fa5fcb13bcaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Drag of Masculinity: An Interview with Judith \u201cJack\u201d Halberstam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0361","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"BACKGROUND Attitudes toward gender roles are one of the factors that have received most attention in the literature on housework division. Nevertheless, egalitarian attitudes often do not match egalitarian domestic behaviors. OBJECTIVE The paper\u2019s central hypothesis is that women\u2019s ability to assert their egalitarian beliefs is linked to having sufficient personal resources in economic and cultural terms. METHODS We use the 2013\u20132014 Italian time-use survey (N = 7,707 couples) and analyze how relative resources and women\u2019s education moderate the relationship between gender ideology and housework division. RESULTS Consistent with our hypothesis, for a woman, the effect of gender ideology is strongest when she earns roughly as much or more than her partner and when she holds a college degree. When the woman\u2019s income is lower than the man\u2019s, the effect of women\u2019s gender ideology is quite small. If the woman does not have a degree, her egalitarian attitudes will not translate into her doing less housework. CONCLUSIONS Gender ideology matters, but a solid bargaining position is needed in order to put it into practice. Social policies promoting gender equality in education and the labor market can increase women\u2019s capacity for translating egalitarian attitudes into actual behavior. CONTRIBUTION This paper\u2019s original contribution is in analyzing whether and how relative resources and education influence the effect of gender ideology on the division of housework. Moreover, our analysis goes beyond most existing studies in its rare combination of behavior measures collected through a reliable time-use diary procedure and information regarding partners\u2019 gender ideology.","creator":["Renzo Carriero","Lorenzo Todesco"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14359871"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43714181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0688b898-b219-3c4e-b1e4-f84d70bca6d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26585360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"demorese"}],"isPartOf":"Demographic Research","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"1064","pageStart":"1039","pagination":"pp. 1039-1064","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Foerderung der Wissenschaften","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Housework division and gender ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585360","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9914,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"When do attitudes really matter?"} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the similarities between the rhetoric put forth by select fundamentalist Christians in reaction to the Supreme Court case Brown vs. Board of Education and Lawrence vs. Texas. A race, class and gender analysis is applied to primary and secondary sources in order to compare statements made by three groups of white fundamentalist Christians, each of whom were responding either directly and \/or indirectly, to one of these two Supreme Court's decisions. The three groups of white fundamentalist Christians are: 1. State and federal judges, 2. Church leaders, and 3. White activist mothers \/women. The overall goal in is to show the similarities in these white fundamentalist Christians' reactionary discourses in terms of the theme of sexual contamination, in particular in relation to white children. This comparison shows how for many fundamentalist Christians, fears of interracial sex \/marriage and same-sex sexuality \/marriage have been and are still eschatological.","creator":["Phoebe C. Godfrey"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1748e9bd-29af-329b-9d01-d774d2d048c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43497493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eschatological Sexuality: Miscegenation and the 'Homosexual Agenda' from Brown vs. Board of Education (1954) Lawrence vs. Texas (2003)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497493","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Feinstein"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dc1a78d-37c4-37c5-bbef-c256c3a7bf67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25570993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Usurers and Usurpers: Race, Nation, and the Performance of Jewish Mercantilism in \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570993","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Simone Weil Davis"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3854dcac-abad-342b-b851-8a6d32d4e398"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Loose Lips Sink Ships","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178492","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13445,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477898]],"Locations in B":[[73218,73283]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauren M. E. Goodlad"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e3413a5-e7d8-3120-a86c-7bcd143f0e87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4539810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"66","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Looking for Something Forever Gone: Gothic Masculinity, Androgyny, and Ethics at the Turn of the Millennium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539810","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite considerable progress in recent geographic information systems (GIS) research (especially on public-participation GIS), the critical discourse on GIS in the 1990s does not seem to have affected GIS practices in geographic research in significant ways. Development in critical GIS practice has been quite limited to date, and GIS and critical geographies remain two separate, if not overtly antagonistic, worlds. This suggests that critical engagement that seeks to conceive and materialize the critical potential of GIS for geographic research is still sorely needed. In this article, I explore the possibilities for this kind of critical engagement through revisiting some of the central arguments in the critical discourse from feminist perspectives. I examine whether GIS methods are inherently incompatible with feminist epistemologies through interrogating their connection with positivist scientific practices and visualization technologies. Bearing in mind the limitations of current GIS, I explore several ways in which GIS methods may be used to enrich feminist geographic research. I propose to reimagine GIS as a method in feminist geography and describe feminist visualization as a possible critical practice in feminist research. I argue that GIS can be re-envisioned and used in feminist geography in ways that are congenial to feminist epistemologies and politics. These alternative practices represent a new kind of critical engagement with GIS that is grounded on the critical agency of the GIS user\/researcher.","creator":["Mei-Po Kwan"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27ecaee6-c71f-3187-9551-9ba5eea5e798"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1515293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"661","pageStart":"645","pagination":"pp. 645-661","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Feminist Visualization: Re-Envisioning GIS as a Method in Feminist Geographic Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515293","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":13560,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[72422,72497]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eileen Fegan"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Ideology' after 'Discourse': A Reconceptualization for Feminist Analyses of Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410415","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d2c6711-896b-37a7-9626-fa5a47b1599b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"14","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"302","pagination":"pp. 302-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354301","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article argumente en faveur de la prise en compte du corps humain comme objet g\u00e9ographique. Il constate que le corps reste, \u00e0 ce jour et \u00e0 quelques exceptions pr\u00e8s, plus nombreuses depuis le d\u00e9but des ann\u00e9es 2000, un impens\u00e9 de la g\u00e9ographie fran\u00e7aise, \u00e0 la diff\u00e9rence de ce que l'on observe dans les \u00e9crits g\u00e9ographiques en langue anglaise. C'est-\u00e0-dire une r\u00e9alit\u00e9 toujours pr\u00e9sente dans son propos, mais jamais explicit\u00e9e ni \u00e9voqu\u00e9e dans les probl\u00e9matiques, th\u00e9ories et m\u00e9thodes que construisent ou utilisent les g\u00e9ographes. L'auteur replace ici le corps dans une conception personnelle de la g\u00e9ographie sociale. Il en fait le point de rencontre des rapports du social, du spatial et du sujet. Le corps est envisag\u00e9 sous cinq angles qui en \u00e9clairent l'int\u00e9r\u00eat g\u00e9ographique. Il est d'abord con\u00e7u comme un espace g\u00e9n\u00e9rateur d'espaces, puis comme un organisme vivant, objet et sujet d'une \u00e9cologie humaine. L'accent est mis ensuite sur sa fonction de m\u00e9dium des interactions et de la communication des individus dans l'espace social. Les deux derni\u00e8res parties portent sur son r\u00f4le identitaire : d'abord observ\u00e9 en regard de l'image de soi qu'il contribue \u00e0 produire et du point de vue de la distinction sociale; puis analys\u00e9 en tant qu'incorporation du social, du sexe et du genre, mais aussi des attaches territoriales (embodiment). This article argues that the human body should be considered as a geographical object. The body is still largely unthought of in the field of French geography -very different from the situation in the English language texts-, even if more and more exceptions can be found, particularly since the beginning of the 2000s. Although always present, it never appears clearly in the problems, theories, and methods used or constructed by geographers. The author of this article puts the body in a personal conception of social geography. According to him, the body constitutes the place in which the relations between subject, space, and social factors intersect. The body is considered in five different ways that shed light on its geographical interest. First, it is seen as a space generating spaces, then as a living organism that is both the object and the subject of a human ecology. The article also lays stress on its function as medium allowing individuals to interact and to communicate within social space. The last two parts are devoted to the role the body plays regarding questions of identity : first, it is studied in relation to the self-image it contributes to produce and in relation to the point of view of social distinction; then it is studied as an incorporation of social, sex-related, gender and territorial dimensions (embodiment).","creator":["Guy Di M\u00e9o"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23457869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00034010"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98f01212-e636-339a-91d2-6f14fd6cb43a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23457869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annageog"}],"isPartOf":"Annales de G\u00e9ographie","issueNumber":"675","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Subjectivit\u00e9, socialit\u00e9, spatialit\u00e9 : le corps, cet impens\u00e9 de la g\u00e9ographie \/ Subjectivity, sociality, spatiality : The body in geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23457869","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":12127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The traumatic event of her father's death is a fundamental experience in Dahlia Ravikovitch's writing. This loss and the simultaneity of the death's presence and its concealment create an emotional mechanism of psychological imprisonment in the orphan's world. This study explores the effect of this emotional break on Ravikovitch's oeuvre and singles out a sort of \u201cpoetics of orphanhood.\u201d Using various psychoanalytic theories, it examines the connection between Ravikovitch's poetic preferences and the particular nature of her traumatic event.","creator":["Ilana Szobel"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c642293-2002-36dc-9329-b648020de5eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Forever Beholden: Orphanhood in the Work of Dahlia Ravikovitch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.228","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8005,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[276804,276892],[277240,277336]],"Locations in B":[[15204,15292],[15323,15419]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This contribution explores the recent debates over Jewish intermarriage and conversion in Colombia, and the extent to which they revived \"Old World\" and early-immigrant ethnic identities. To this effect it focuses on Bogota's Sephardic community and tries to elucidate through the speeches, letters, and resolutions stemming from a 1981 High Holiday controversy the non-linear nature of ethnicity and how ethnicity is transformed through struggle. In doing so, this piece also points to a pattern of gendered relations that crossed ethnic and religious boundaries among Jews in Colombia.","creator":["John Dizgun"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42943272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42943272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rights of Passage: The Struggle over Jewish Intermarriage and Conversion in Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42943272","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Axel K\u00f6rner","Valeria Lucentini","Livio Marcaletti"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11238615"},{"name":"oclc","value":"623516572"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d228278-8bf5-3fb9-8671-c949c301d902"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90017974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saggmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Il Saggiatore musicale","issueNumber":"1","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki s.r.l.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DALLA STORIA TRANSNAZIONALE ALL\u2019OPERA TRANSNAZIONALE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017974","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"PER UNA CRITICA DELLE CATEGORIE NAZIONALI"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Curran Nault"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.70.3-4.0063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97091f1-b41b-32fd-8df2-5b96fa7b7d84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.70.3-4.0063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Three Dollar Cinema: The Down and Dirty DIY of Queer Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.70.3-4.0063","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":14264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d9414d7-d03b-33c2-a849-1be3a06494d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25091299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091299","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":2298,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496553]],"Locations in B":[[3554,3622]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Employing duoethnography (Norris & Sawyer, 2012), we examine how whiteness and whiteness studies function in our lived experiences. Understanding our lived experiences as life curriculum or \u201ccurrere\u201d (Norris & Sawyer, 2012, p. 12), we build an interwoven and polyvocal text that critically questions, meaningfully complicates, and carefully moves whiteness studies in highly experiential manners, finally arriving at relational whiteness pedagogy. In addition to relational whiteness studies and pedagogy as its foci of investigation, this essay tells a methodological story (Ellis, 2004) of \u201cdoing\u201d duoethnography. We discuss implications of duoethnography for teaching cultures from a critical paradigm.","creator":["Gregory Sean Hummel","Satoshi Toyosaki"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2015.8.1.27","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9772f10-acb3-376d-b011-a19fea3dcca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2015.8.1.27"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Duoethnography as Relational Whiteness Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2015.8.1.27","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Human Orientation Toward Critical Cultural Labor"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bonnie Zare"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11d68b9e-006e-395a-947b-fbb717a615dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reclaiming Masculinist Texts for Feminist Readers: Sarah Woodruff's \"The French Lieutenant's Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195400","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8749,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464665,464780]],"Locations in B":[[14871,14986]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frank Mort"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3461ad57-a4ff-3397-b1da-d204112ef0ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44645692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"82","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Victorian Afterlives: Sexuality and Identity in the 1960s and 1970s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645692","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7037,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513429]],"Locations in B":[[35658,35744]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fabienne Malbois"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Fragments d'une ethnom\u00e9thodologie du genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620283","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4126,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[25527,25637]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The presence of rape narratives in the recorded work of rap artist Tyler, The Creator, offers compelling terrain to explore how the apparent post-feminist cultural landscape has given rise to masculine anxieties and the ways in which they are articulated in rap music. Via a feminist-informed content and film analysis, this article examines the instances of rape narratives in the audio and visual work of Tyler, The Creator, and suggests these texts might be understood as symptomatic of feelings of resentment towards women in an era of improved gender equity. This article further argues that such sexually hostile texts function as a 'therapeutic' and performative strategy to allay these anxieties whilst simultaneously revealing the patriarchal structures upon which Tyler, The Creator's particularly vulnerable, deviant masculine subjectivity is premised.","creator":["Penelope Eate"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56210516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007215116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ee25644-84d0-351b-a84e-10b94b631665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43525526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"545","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-545","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Scribblin' Sinnin' Sh*t: Narratives of Rape as Masculine Therapeutic Performance in the Strange Case For and Against Tyler, The Creator","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525526","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Why, nearly two decades into a new political democratic dispensation, with a well-established constitution and legal system, is gender inequality still perpetuated? The education of learners in this regard has been identified as critical. Teaching-learning of gender equality could be challenging for teachers who have not reflected on their own gender identity. This article focuses on the findings of a recent empirical study which explored the lived experiences of patriarchy of selected female teachers situated in four provinces in South Africa. The findings show that the participating teachers\u2019 gender identity is shaped by their religious and cultural discourses. Working within a feminist paradigm, narrative inquiry was employed as the research methodology. Creating a safe space, the opportunity was provided to hear the teachers\u2019 voices in response to the master narrative of patriarchy. Sharing their self-narrative both with an internal audience (in their \u2018society-of-mind\u2019) and with an external audience allowed them to reclaim themselves as they discovered the extent to which it is possible to become disentangled from their \u2018other\u2019 (men). This process initiated self-empowerment of the teachers and contributed to building \u2018identity capital\u2019 as they reflected on their gender identity, adopting a \u2018counter-position\u2019 to patriarchy. Increased extent and strength of \u2018gender identity capital\u2019, enabling the articulation of gender identity transformation in every domain of their lives, personal, social and professional, holds the possibility of developing teachers\u2019 classroom practice into classroom praxis. Effective teaching-learning about gender equality has the potential of informing the development of female and male learners and to be transformative for South African society.","creator":["Janet Jarvis"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24798875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3218c836-51fc-3eb5-8fb0-6417323e09d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24798875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on Gender Identity in a Safe Space for Transforming Classroom Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24798875","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["TIMOTHY MORTON"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f988775c-1bce-3dd0-a69c-2c3cc135d3a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25704424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guest Column: Queer Ecology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704424","volumeNumber":"125","wordCount":6028,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494682]],"Locations in B":[[33961,34034]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathrin Theumer"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22a36e5d-4846-3063-9603-b9ad97941e03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26492152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"GENDER AND POETIC VIOLENCE IN ALMA RUBENS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26492152","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper reports findings from a qualitative research study of twenty-six core assessments, concerning thirty-two children, completed over a six-month period in one Welsh local authority. The data reported in the paper come from the twenty-six written assessment reports and interviews with the thirteen social workers who completed the assessments. The study was concerned with how social workers assess and report on children's identities. Identity is one of the seven developmental needs of children categorised in the Framework for the Assessment of Children in Need and their Families (National Assembly for Wales, 2001b). It is noted that practitioners display a broad understanding of identities when discussing their own identities in interview and report a practice commitment to learning about the details of children's lives in an attempt to 'get to know' the children. However, the assessment reports tend to convey only narrowly defined and negative aspects of the children's identities, with many descriptions standardised and replicated between reports. Similarities to findings from a study conducted by one of the authors prior to the introduction of the Assessment Framework are noted, and it is suggested that bureaucratic constraints, the need to argue a case and defensive practices may have impeded change.","creator":["Jane Thomas","Sally Holland"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43687640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"674e542a-be8d-30be-bc7c-b3fbbdcdc0ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43687640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"2633","pageStart":"2617","pagination":"pp. 2617-2633","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Representing Children's Identities in Core Assessments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43687640","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. G. Zerilli","Teresa Arij\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ed6677a-f678-33c4-a0a7-7de20faa301a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Qu\u00e9 tienen en com\u00fan \"feminismo\" y \"libertad\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625062","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":22110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Wenying Xu"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f52fdd34-e840-3bf4-a7f9-9828491dabac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Agency via Guilt in Anchee Min's Red Azalea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468243","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6669,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[465351,465505]],"Locations in B":[[10561,10715]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carol Guess"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31cc1dfe-4ea5-3fbe-9d59-0d87064a0e60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Que(e)rying Lesbian Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315241","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses findings from a qualitative study conducted in four government secondary schools in the Caribbean state of Antigua and Barbuda on students' experiences at school in relation to sexuality. Both girls and boys experienced a range of anxieties and confusions in relation to sexuality, whilst also seeing (hetero)sexual attraction as an exciting part of schooling. Sexual harassment of girls emerged as a widespread and serious (as well as 'normalised') occurrence in all the schools studied. However, the data also showed that girls were far from passive. Instead, girls demonstrated complex and contradictory responses to boys' behaviour due to their own investments in being desirable within discourses of hetero-femininity, as well as the pleasure they gained from their relationships. Both genders would clearly benefit from opportunities to discuss their needs, beliefs and desires regarding sexuality and relationships. Cet article traite des r\u00e9sultats d'une \u00e9tude qualitative sur les exp\u00e9riences des lyc\u00e9ens \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole en mati\u00e8re de sexualit\u00e9, qui a \u00e9t\u00e9 conduite dans quatre \u00e9tablissements secondaires publics \u00e0 Antigua et Barbuda. Aussi bien les filles que les gar\u00e7ons \u00e9prouvaient des angoisses et une certaine confusion par rapport \u00e0 la sexualit\u00e9, tout en consid\u00e9rant l'attraction (h\u00e9t\u00e9ro)sexuelle comme un aspect excitant de la scolarit\u00e9. L'\u00e9tude a r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9 que le harc\u00e8lement sexuel des filles \u00e9tait un acte r\u00e9pandu et grave (ainsi que \u00ab normalis\u00e9 \u00bb) dans toutes les \u00e9coles o\u00f9 elle a \u00e9t\u00e9 conduite. Cependant les donn\u00e9es montrent aussi que les filles \u00e9taient loin d'\u00eatre passives; au contraire, elles ont d\u00e9montr\u00e9 leur capacit\u00e9 \u00e0 riposter de mani\u00e8re complexe et contradictoire aux comportements des gar\u00e7ons, en raison de leur investissement pour \u00eatre d\u00e9sirables, conform\u00e9ment aux discours sur l'h\u00e9t\u00e9ro-f\u00e9minit\u00e9, et du plaisir qu'elles obtenaient de leurs relations. L'\u00e9tude sugg\u00e8re que filles et gar\u00e7ons b\u00e9n\u00e9ficieraient clairement de l'opportunit\u00e9 de discuter de leurs besoins, de leurs croyances et de leurs d\u00e9sirs en ce qui concerne la sexualit\u00e9 et les relations. El presente art\u00edculo analiza las conclusiones obtenidas de un estudio cualitativo acerca de las vivencias de los alumnos respecto a su sexualidad en las escuelas, el cual fue llevado a cabo en cuatro escuelas secundarias p\u00fablicas del pa\u00eds caribe\u00f1o Antigua y Barbuda. En este sentido, se evidenci\u00f3 que tanto las muchachas como los muchachos experimentaron una gama de ansiedades y de confusiones con respecto a su sexualidad, a la vez que reconoc\u00edan que la atracci\u00f3n (hetero) sexual representaba una parte estimulante del \u00e1mbito escolar. En todas las escuelas estudiadas, se constat\u00f3 que el acoso a las muchachas constitu\u00eda una ocurrencia general y de preocupaci\u00f3n (as\u00ed como tambi\u00e9n \u201cnormalizada\u201d). Sin embargo, los resultados obtenidos tambi\u00e9n demuestran que las muchachas, lejos de ser pasivas, expresaron respuestas complejas y contradictorias ante el comportamiento de los muchachos, debido a su propio inter\u00e9s en ser deseadas dentro de los discursos de hetero-feminidad y al gusto que les proporcionaban sus relaciones. Sin duda, resulta claro que ambos g\u00e9neros se beneficiar\u00edan con las oportunidades que tuvieran para hablar de sus necesidades, de sus creencias y de sus deseos en torno a la sexualidad y a las relaciones.","creator":["Mary Cobbett","Molly Warrington"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"370155f2-47d2-33b8-bb7e-29b3af8e44b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24741231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1039","pageStart":"1026","pagination":"pp. 1026-1039","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"'Sometimes it's fun to play with them first': girls and boys talking about sexual harassment in Caribbean schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24741231","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7779,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474214,474482]],"Locations in B":[[6343,6606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Ruddy"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b031ae00-d943-3b0e-8063-a9a471588f13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40607972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"A Radiant Eye Yearns from Me\": Figuring Documentary in the Photography of Nan Goldin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607972","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10148,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[440138,440289],[444324,444690]],"Locations in B":[[14059,14208],[14732,15098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo trata da forma\u00e7\u00e3o dos movimentos e das teorias queer, da rela\u00e7\u00e3o que mant\u00eam com os feminismos e da utiliza\u00e7\u00e3o pol\u00edtica que fazem de Foucault e de Deleuze. Tamb\u00e9m explora as vantagens te\u00f3ricas e pol\u00edticas da no\u00e7\u00e3o de \"multid\u00e3o\" em rela\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 \"diferen\u00e7a sexual\" para a teoria e o movimento queer. Diferentemente do que ocorre nos Estados Unidos, os movimentos queer na Europa inspiram-se nas culturas anarquistas e nas emergentes culturas transg\u00eaneros para combater o \"Imp\u00e9rio Sexual\", propondo, notadamente, uma desontologiza\u00e7\u00e3o das pol\u00edticas de identidades. N\u00e3o h\u00e1 mais uma base natural (\"mulher\", \"gay\" etc.) que possa legitimar a a\u00e7\u00e3o pol\u00edtica. O que importa n\u00e3o \u00e9 a \"diferen\u00e7a sexual\" ou a \"diferen\u00e7a dos\/as homossexuais\", mas as multid\u00f5es queer. Uma multid\u00e3o de corpos: corpos transg\u00eaneros, homens sem p\u00eanis, gounis garous, ciborgues, femmes butchs, bichas lesbianas... A \"multid\u00e3o sexual\" aparece, assim, como o sujeito poss\u00edvel da pol\u00edtica queer. This article deals with the emergence of queer movements and theories, with their relations to feminisms, and with the political use they make of Foucault and Deleuze. It also explores the theoretical and political advantages of the notion of \"multitude\" in relation to that of \"sexual difference\" for queer theory and movements. Differently from what happens in the United States, queer movements in Europe follow the anarchist and the emerging transgender cultures to fight the \"Sexual Empire\", proposing a deontology of identity politics. There is no longer a natural basis (\"woman\", \"gay\", etc) to legitimate political action. What matters is not \"sexual difference\" or \"the difference of homosexuals\", but the queer multitudes. A multitude of bodies: transgender bodies, men without penises, gounis garous, cyborgs, butch women, lesbian gays... \"Sexual multitude\" appears, then, as the possible subject of queer politics.","creator":["Beatriz Preciado"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f44d98ff-5313-3cb8-bb23-5cd71deddfed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Multid\u00f5es queer: notas para uma pol\u00edtica dos \"anormais\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328004","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":3770,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[22997,23072]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ronald Cummings"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235525"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70fe7706-0084-3224-9dc7-1d2b0fed0d2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24615447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Jamaican Female Masculinities: Nanny of the Maroons and the Genealogy of the Man-Royal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615447","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8990,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[34313,34450]],"Locations in B":[[18188,18325]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susanne Hochreiter"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564699596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7aedc111-e2b6-3724-b3b1-5a500cbbdd10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24649759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649759","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine Pence","Andrew Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3aaff96-e230-35eb-84b6-d5f2f23a5ac5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43555795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"German Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Transnationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555795","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"'Denial of the victim' is one of the five classic techniques described by Sykes and Matza in their seminal work on techniques of neutralization. Based on ethnographic field work in a Norwegian remand prison, this article explores this particular technique as it is employed by prisoners in their narratives about how they came to be imprisoned. I will argue that this particular technique of neutralization, understood by Sykes and Matza as part of the etiology of crime, might fruitfully be re-conceptualized as a Foucauldian technique of the self tailored to the specific context of the prison. As both moral space and rehabilitation technology, a prison positions its prisoners as 'immoral others' who should confess and repent. This ascription of low morality may in fact be seen as one of the pains of imprisonment. Given this, victims represent problems for prisoners, as 'having' a victim equals being someone who has hurt another. I will show the narrative strategies prisoners employ when they reconstruct themselves as moral subjects in relation to their victims.","creator":["Thomas Ugelvik"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54467721-ded4-3e5b-ae27-430eeba45610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prisoners and their victims: Techniques of neutralization, techniques of the self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496449","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ulf Reichardt","Sabine Sielke"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c655253d-c64c-3ded-97b9-07596ce7ead7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Does Man Want? The Recent Debates on Manhood and Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157417","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7183,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[14769,14833]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Clark Bartlett"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20717192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0200af19-233b-3241-8622-34dd9bd6aaa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20717192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mysticsquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Mystics Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Foucault's \"Medievalism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20717192","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The emergence of a female presence in journalism marks is by far one of the most significant turns that the Israeli media have taken in recent years. Against the specific backdrop of the feminization of the media, one cannot but take notice of the minuscule number and the rather belated advent of female journalists in the field of sports journalism. This article showcases the point of view of a variety of female sports journalists on the unique experiences that characterize their line of work in order to identify the key elements that help to shape the practice of women in sports journalism. By understanding exactly how women experience being within and of this media as they cover sports events and by analyzing how they perceive their own roles\u2014including how they relate to feminist enterprise in women's sports\u2014a better understanding may be attained of the way the sports media relate to women's sports and of the fundamental differences that prevail among these media in this context. Seventeen Israeli female sports journalists were interviewed for this study. Ten of them worked or are still working in the print media; at the time this research was performed, they accounted for nearly the entire female presence in the sports departments of Israel's largest daily publications. The other participants included three journalists who worked for television sports channel and four employed by local online outlets. Male editors of various sports departments were interviewed as well. The analysis of the findings and, particularly, the breakdown of the female sports journalists' experiences reveal striking similarities between the place of women in sports media and the female presence in military combat units. The fact that gender segregation is practiced openly and officially in both the military and in sports has led inevitably to affinities and similar characteristics. In both instances, the body and physical activity appear to dictate the very essence of the experience, thus seemingly validating and justifying outright segregation between men and women and the marginalization of the latter in production and involvement. This said, the study also reveals emerging similarities between practices shaped by women in the sports media and those observed among female soldiers in combat roles. For instance, female sports journalists tend to rebuff traditional femininity in favor of emulating patterns of behavior more commonly seen among male journalists. One of the most conspicuous findings in this context is the trivialization by female sports journalists of the sexual harassment that they face at their news desks and in sporting events.","creator":["\u05d0\u05d9\u05dc\u05df \u05ea\u05de\u05d9\u05e8","\u05e2\u05dc\u05d9\u05e0\u05d0 \u05d1\u05e8\u05e0\u05e9\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05df","Ilan Tamir","Alina Bernstein"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23922273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07920113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"844d90bf-a3e7-37b6-8cb8-7eab83ba24c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23922273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kesher"}],"isPartOf":"Kesher \/ \u05e7\u05e9\u05e8","issueNumber":"44","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Tel Aviv University \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Communication Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Battlefield Sport: Female Sports Journalists in Israel \/ \u05e1\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8 \u05db\u05d9\u05d7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05e7\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea: \u05e2\u05d1\u05d5\u05d3\u05ea\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05e2\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23922273","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The contemporary world presents a serious challenge to the traditional liberal understanding of political participation. While both J\u00fcrgen Habermas and Michel Foucault have provided strong philosophical impetus for reconceptualizing participation, neither provides a fully satisfying solution to the difficulties of understanding political action in this postmodern world. However combining Habermas's vision of discursive politics with Foucault's focus on the micropolitics of resistance provides the basis for developing a more satisfying conception that defines political participation as performance and its purpose as resistance. Such a performative understanding of political participation not only enriches our understanding of discourse and resistance; it also makes better sense of the variety of political activities prevalent and efficacious today.","creator":["Jessica J. Kulynych"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b17fa59c-8d0e-3399-b7b0-481d60151012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3235221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Politics: Foucault, Habermas, and Postmodern Participation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235221","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12684,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431239,431620]],"Locations in B":[[43540,43921]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I indicate how the naturalized and individualized conception of disability that prevails in philosophy informs the indifference of philosophers to the predictable COVID-19 tragedy that has unfolded in nursing homes, supported living centers, psychiatric institutions, and other institutions in which elders and younger disabled people are placed. I maintain that, insofar as feminist and other discourses represent these institutions as sites of care and love, they enact structural gaslighting. I argue, therefore, that philosophers must engage in conceptual engineering with respect to how disability and these institutions are understood and represented. To substantiate my argument, I trace the sequence of catastrophic events that have occurred in nursing homes in Canada and in the Canadian province of Ontario in particular during the pandemic, tying these events to other past and current eugenic practices produced in the Canadian context. The crux of the article is that the COVID-19 pandemic has thrown into vivid relief the carceral character of nursing homes and other congregate settings in which elders and younger disabled people are confined.","creator":["Shelley Lynn Tremain"],"datePublished":"2021-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a372800-8126-3ea8-bdfd-a9f5931756cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Philosophy of Disability, Conceptual Engineering, and the Nursing Home-Industrial-Complex in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0010","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12466,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524164,524260]],"Locations in B":[[75944,76052]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, the aim is to address different forms of relationship between deconstruction, as coined by Jacques Derrida, and research perspectives on music education. Deconstruction represents a radical departure from Western ontology from Plato onward and its essentialistic notions of the metaphysics of presence. Instead, Derrida claims that signs, as well as texts, are decentered, that is, they are continually altering meaning in relation to other signs or texts, being in constant motion. Simultaneously, signs and texts, as well as existence and experience, constitute themselves by binary oppositions, like nature\/culture, content\/form, original\/copy, internal\/external, empirical! theoretical, and so on. Derrida argues that such differences are not inherent, but are instead socially produced and hierarchical mechanisms for providing systematic priority to one aspect of the dualism to the neglect of the other. Consequently, the ethical interest of music education research, from a deconstructive perspective, would be to expose what is marginalized in musical schooling, upbringing, and socialization. In that case, deconstruction might also be able to rectify some of its destructive reputation.","creator":["Petter Dyndahl"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40327297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Music Education in the Sign of Deconstruction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327297","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Valladares-Ruiz"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d27c60b9-c916-3626-a6f8-0601c6408ca8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23022347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Lo m\u00e1s prohibido: sexualidad femenina y relaciones de poder en Sonia Rivera-Vald\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23022347","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8197,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[139878,140252]],"Locations in B":[[42564,42939]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eleanor Salotto"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Detecting Esther Summerson's Secrets: Dickens's Bleak House of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058393","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10314,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[194553,194669],[196731,196854]],"Locations in B":[[4968,5084],[55150,55273]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist oral historians from the early 1970s, like other radical historians ofthat era, have begun to wonder about the current state of oral history: has it become respectable; lost its radical\/subversive edge? Because our work was anchored in the radical movements of the period, is it rudderless today in the absence of a unified social movement? Or, do our own autobiographical and political trajectories deter us from a critical reassessment of our early work and the radical and subversive potential of contemporary oral history? This paper discusses the nature of earlier and current feminist oral history by drawing both on the personal reflections of two generations of US and UK feminist oral historians and an analysis of some contemporary work. Ultimately, I conclude that despite the different political trajectories of the second and emergent generations, there is still a tradition of viewing\/treating oral history narrative as a 'discourse of oppositional consciousness and agency.'","creator":["Sherna Berger Gluck"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41332165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01430955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c111531-76dd-3e9f-b460-78c3f036d488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41332165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oralhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Oral History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oral History Society","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Has feminist oral history lost its radical\/subversive edge?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41332165","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5732,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461368,461476]],"Locations in B":[[10728,10836]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":".\u062a\u0647\u062f\u0641 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0648\u062c\u0647\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0642\u0627\u0637\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0628\u062d\u062b\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0623\u0646\u062a\u062c\u062a \u0631\u0624\u0649 \u0645\u0639\u0631\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0631\u062a\u0643\u0632\u062a \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0644\u0648\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a\u060c \u0648\u0647\u0648 \u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u064a\u062d\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0631\u0635\u062f \u0648\u062a\u062a\u0628\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0641\u0643\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0626\u064a\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0648\u062c\u0647\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0643\u0631\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0648\u064a \u0648\u062a\u0641\u0627\u0639\u0644\u062a \u0645\u0639\u0647 \u0628\u0634\u0643\u0644 \ufe83\ufea9\ufeef \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u0631\u0627\u0643\u0645 \u062e\u0628\u0631\u0629 \u0645\u0639\u0631\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0633\u0627\u0646\u062f\u062a\u0647 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u062c\u0627\u0628\u0629 \u0644\u0645\u062a\u063a\u064a\u0631\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0627\u0642\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u060c \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062b\u0645\u060c \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0634\u0641 \u0639\u0646 \u0645\u0646\u0627\u0637\u0642 \u0645\u0639\u062a\u0645\u0629 \u062c\u062f\u064a\u0631\u0629 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0628\u062d\u062b. \u0648\u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u060c \u0644\u0627 \u062a\u0633\u0639\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062c\u0645\u0639 \u0645\u0639\u0644\u0648\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0623\u0648 \u0631\u0635\u062f \u0623\u062d\u062f\u0627\u062b \u0645\u0637\u0644\u0642\u0627\u064b. \u0641\u0641\u064a \u0633\u0639\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u062d\u0627\u0648\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0645\u0633\u0627\u0643 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0645\u062d\u0637\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0643\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0643\u0627\u0646\u062a \u0646\u062a\u0627\u062c\u0627\u064b \u0644\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0627\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0627\u0641\u062a \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0645 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0642\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0629\u060c \u062a\u0631\u0643\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u062d\u062b\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0643\u0627\u062f\u064a\u0645\u064a \u0648\u0644\u0627 \u062a\u0646\u062e\u0631\u0637 \u0641\u064a \u0637\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0627\u0646\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0646\u0645\u0648\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0648\u064a This article traces the epistemological research directions and intersections on which feminism in the Arab world has been founded, especially in the humanities. It delineates the main ideas and visions that have guided and interacted with feminism, resulting in the formulation of an experience that corresponds to a changing socio-political reality; hence, revealing un-trodden areas worthy of research. In its attempt to highlight the main intellectual trajectories that resulted from remarkable mobility in the public sphere in different contexts, the article focuses on the academic manifestations of feminism without delving into the field of development.","creator":["\u0634\u064a\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0623\u0628\u0648 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u062c\u0627","Shereen Abouelnaga"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e15869ec-baf1-3e9d-8e18-0ff955c24f44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26924879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"40","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"\u0666\u0664","pageStart":"\u0663\u0662","pagination":"pp. \u0663\u0662-\u0666\u0664","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a\u0629 - Arab Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924879","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10417,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[491781,491841]],"Locations in B":[[60791,60851]],"subTitle":"\u0645\u0648\u0627\u0642\u0641 \u0648\u0645\u0645\u0627\u0631\u0633\u0627\u062a"} +{"abstract":"In this article, we argue how instant messaging (IM) is actively made into a communicative space of their own among migrant girls. Triangulating data gathered through large-scale surveys, interviews and textual analysis of IM transcripts, we focus on Moroccan-Dutch girls who use instant messaging as a space where they can negotiate several issues at the crossroads of national, ethnic, racial, age and linguistic specificities. We take an intersectional perspective to disentangle how they perform differential selves using IM both as an 'onstage' activity through which they express their communal, public and global youth cultural belongings and as a 'backstage' activity through which they articulate their individual, private and intimate identity expression. Instant messaging appears to be a space where they can strategically (re-) position themselves. The relationship between the online world of IM and the off-line world is shown to be intricate and complex; at certain points, both worlds overlap and at others they diverge. Despite all existing constraints that are both related to gender restrictions, often disenfranchised family backgrounds, religious dictums, and surveillance by parents, siblings and peers, which affect Moroccan-Dutch girls in specific ways, IM is also understood as a unique space for exerting their agency in autonomous, playful and intimate ways.","creator":["Koen Leurs","Sandra Ponzanesi"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed360a80-af91-3ff6-bbfa-2b3ee5acb03d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41288875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"99","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"communicative spaces of their own: migrant girls performing selves using instant messaging software","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288875","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11054,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102154,102238]],"Locations in B":[[17939,18023]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Frank McGuinness's Carthaginians (1988) uses the historical relation between Rome and Carthage as a metaphor for the contemporary struggles between Britain and the nationalist community in the North of Ireland. The play, an elegy for thirteen Irish civilians murdered by British paratroopers on Bloody Sunday (30 Jan. 1972) in Derry, draws subversive power from a trope that since the eighteenth century has focused imaginative Irish resistance to British colonial rule. I first explore the history and the gendering of the trope, from early English myths of Trojan descent and medieval Irish genealogies through eighteenth-century antiquarians and philologists, nineteenth-century novelists, Matthew Arnold, and James Joyce. I then examine poems from Seamus Heaney's North, Brian Friel's play Translations, and McGuinness's Carthaginians to show how the pressure of history has revitalized the Rome-Carthage trope, which functions as origin myth, colonial parable, and site of intersection between nationalism and sexuality.","creator":["Elizabeth Butler Cullingford"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"301d3936-d7ef-38a3-815b-650f685735f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"British Romans and Irish Carthaginians: Anticolonial Metaphor in Heaney, Friel, and McGuinness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463103","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":12033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eugene Victor Wolfenstein"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78324497-4dce-36c6-b9e0-0bdd5750e6cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4501769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hope Again Hope","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501769","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Queen Mary I was crowned in 1553, becoming the first reigning queen of England. In order to provide a powerful image of female rule to her people, Queen Mary invented a rhetorical strategy that reflected her society's oppressive gender expectations of chaste silence so that she could become a powerfully voiced ruler. Her sister and successor, Queen Elizabeth I, later mirrored Mary's strategy. England's first female monarchs created an image of female rule by employing the figures of the spouse, the mother, and the maiden, embodying conventional roles for women in Tudor society, and reclaiming them as images of power.","creator":["Cristy Beemer"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23064026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bac0f36-13b4-3992-ab56-0f52731062ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23064026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The Female Monarchy: A Rhetorical Strategy of Early Modern Rule","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23064026","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"If Weh dem, der l\u00fcgt! is anachronistic in its sententiousness about truth, it is forward-looking in its depiction of gender roles. Whereas the play's most negatively portrayed figures are limited to the gender roles associated by Biedermeier culture with their biological sex, the most sympathetic characters demonstrate a kind of psychological androgyny.","creator":["Gail Finney"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24648583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7baa2894-fa14-3372-9134-f430aa94647b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24648583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"(En)Gendering the Comic Body: Grillparzer's \"Weh dem, der l\u00fcgt!\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24648583","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":4647,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[72630,72773],[73375,73644]],"Locations in B":[[12033,12176],[12203,12512]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Keith D. Leonard"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3f03876-6cca-3ca6-9cf6-4965e0675fa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23274338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"777","pageStart":"758","pagination":"pp. 758-777","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"WHICH ME WILL SURVIVE\": Rethinking Identity, Reclaiming Audre Lorde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274338","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Whereas much has been written about migrants' visibility, the multiple and complex layers of migrants' invisibility invite further exploration. Migrants' in\/visibility is not clear-cut: it differs across various locations and, as such, demands a comparative, intersectional analysis. This paper seeks to explore it by investigating how recent migrants make sense of their own appearance, as well as those of others they encounter in their new places of residence. Specifically, I inquire into the notion of femininity as it is performed and perceived by Polish migrant mothers living in German and British cities. I discuss whose performances of femininity are visible and whose femininity is rendered invisible in the eyes of my research participants, and what implications this may carry for urban and migration research. Strikingly, the women I interviewed only seem to recognise white British and German women's performances of femininity for what they are. Non-white and Muslim femininities remain, at best, invisible or, in the not infrequent cases of racism and Islamophobia, are stripped not only of their unique gendered features, but of humanity altogether. As seemingly peaceful interactions in urban space do not exclude privately harboured racial, ethnic, religious and class prejudice, a feminist revision of encounters with diversity provides valuable insight into the structure of such metropolitan paradoxes, yielding new understandings of how racism, classism and sexism persist alongside ostensibly inclusive urban cultures.","creator":["Agata Lisiak"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46e5ab6f-cfa3-390c-b83c-84934f23a0d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"117","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"other mothers: encountering in\/visible femininities in migration and urban contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987326","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda C. McClain"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Liberal Future of Relational Feminism: Robin West's Caring for Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829105","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":19508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa2fb55b-870b-3253-bbf1-2af39806ca51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178611","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":3787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers a psychoanalytic exploration of the possibilities and impossibilities of representing lesbian desire within the terms available for such a project. It pays attention to the implications of the assertion that all identity is constructed within a patriarchal economy. The article traces some of the major strands of thought within feminist and queer psychoanalytic theory which engage with the positioning of lesbianism as doubly perverse (because it bespeaks actively desiring women, and women actively desiring other women). Ultimately this piece gestures towards the complex positionalities found in the simultaneous existence of the psychoanalytic denial of lesbian sexuality and, concomitantly, the language to speak (of) the desiring lesbian subject; and the fact that lesbians have used both psychoanalysis and language to speak (of) themselves and their pleasures.","creator":["Natasha Distiller"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06b448bb-d7a7-32b8-816c-669a29272228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Another Story: The (Im)Possibility of Lesbian Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066629","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8230,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103949,104115]],"Locations in B":[[40430,40596]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia Robinson"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdc8cd09-8cd4-3d10-b87a-71707226199b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Maciunas as Producer: Performative Design in the Art of the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442808","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11068,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[415370,415635],[422985,423154]],"Locations in B":[[39554,39819],[41427,41597]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lawrence R. Schehr"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb430fae-9fde-3f97-bbb7-250f5ce8825e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"90","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Defense and Illustration of Gay Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930361","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gwen Kirkpatrick"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"473495af-c00e-3c68-b1c7-44d655f23412"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"42","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El feminismo en los tiempos del colera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530823","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We examine police decision making by focusing on police stories and drawing together contemporary thought about identities and police subculture. Our inquiry suggests that police decision making is both improvisational and patterned. Cops are moral agents who tag people with identities as they project identities of their own. They do engage in raw forms of division or stereotyping, marking some as others to be feared and themselves as protectors of society, while exercising their coercive powers to punish \"the bad.\" Due, in part, to the many ways that they identify themselves, cops also connect with people as unique individuals, including individuals whose categorical identities (e.g., drug dealers) put them at the margins of society. Rather than using their coercive powers to repress these individuals, cops infuse them with certain virtues (e.g., good family men) while cutting them breaks. As they complicate representations of themselves, cops also project complex notions of law and legality. Moral discourse seems to infuse their judgments, while they invoke law strategically as a tool to enforce their moral judgments.","creator":["Trish Oberweis","Michael Musheno"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"923","pageStart":"897","pagination":"pp. 897-923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Policing Identities: Cop Decision Making and the Constitution of Citizens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829149","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender discrimination can be overt and deliberate. It can be covert and indeliberate. In the latter case it is called 'asymmetry'. The gender studies community aims to reveal and eliminate any forms of gender asymmetry. However, insufficient methodological and theoretical reflection implies the reproduction of gender asymmetry throughout gender studies.","creator":["T. V. Barchunova"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20099815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09259392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d617a158-277d-3a99-9ba7-2663f2824c62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20099815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studeasteurothou"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in East European Thought","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Selfish Gender, or the Reproduction of Gender Asymmetry in Gender Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20099815","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":8325,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[60807,60967],[60968,61134]],"Locations in B":[[15945,16106],[16127,16291]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Goodburn","Beth Ina"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07316755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ad735e-bb7a-3e52-a070-adca307cf3e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20865951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadvacomp"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Advanced Composition","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Collaboration, Critical Pedagogy, and Struggles Over Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865951","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this qualitative multiple case study is to uncover various discourses that constituted the identity construction of three instrumental music teachers. I apply a poststructural theoretical framework--particularly the ideas of discourse, discursive field, and performativity--and narrative analysis to uncover a variety of discourses that shape music teacher identity. The data I collected includes interviews, journal entries, and observations of three band teachers over the course of one school year. I employ narrative analysis to analyze data and to uncover how the participants constructed their music teacher identities in the practice of teaching. I identified four themes related to the construction of their music teacher identities: (a) pedagogical discourses that conflict, (b) subordination of music as a discipline, (c) negotiation of class and race, and (d) performativity of sexuality. The findings suggest that these discourses constitute the performativity of instrumental music teacher identity and have implications for music teacher education and music teacher identity research.","creator":["Melissa Natale-Abramo"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.202.0051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00109894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"436923044"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234974"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b756e06e-69c1-33ee-ac9b-37a2ccfa331f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.202.0051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulcouresmusedu"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"202","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Construction of Instrumental Music Teacher Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/bulcouresmusedu.202.0051","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9408,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[447642,447753]],"Locations in B":[[9833,9944]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This project is an excerpt from an ongoing ethnographically based exploration of Black women hair care professionals in the Los Angeles area and the domesticity of public service. The work extrapolates and applies the narrated experiences of the Black woman hair care professional (BWHCP) into the interlocking spheres of race, culture, performance, and the social marketing of identity in both the formal and informal economy. The project is an experimental ethnography working at the intersections of critical and interpretive methodologies that foreground the author\/ethnographer's critical and poetic reflections on the process of interpreting ethnographic data and the experience of engaging the cultural familiar. The project further argues that in the practices and cultural performances of these women \u2014 the local is political and the political is global.","creator":["Bryant Keith Alexander"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34c3662b-a9ad-362d-9569-993741126a5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Gendered Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.145","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":12246,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[442721,442873],[524014,524252]],"Locations in B":[[19595,19747],[64171,65859]],"subTitle":"The Entanglements of Culture, Community and Commerce"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna Clark"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff6905e2-9ee9-352e-83b1-530b951ee9c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Anne Lister's Construction of Lesbian Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840441","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":12985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["A. Noelle Williams"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ec7194f-08e8-376f-806e-e2d9d57f68fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Parody and Pacifist Transformations in Maxine Hong Kingston's Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467855","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7685,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99385,99660]],"Locations in B":[[32747,33022]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bruce R. Smith"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6321aec2-b6b6-37ee-998d-ea571a94107f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23126316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126316","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":2177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauren Berlant","Elizabeth Freeman"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Nationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303454","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13866,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499841,499999]],"Locations in B":[[12161,12319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Vance"],"datePublished":"1993-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e26a609c-ead7-3498-a332-1409119ec55e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4021683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Down to Earth Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4021683","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":2405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Soper","Annie Dequeker","Nicole Gabriel"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9edb29b9-0bcb-3114-a9a8-836804cc651d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"23","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Adorno, le f\u00e9minisme et la promesse utopique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598464","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. Hillis Miller"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41290294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82e3c319-bb9e-3b02-998b-5b3a93fe4e3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41290294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Resignifying \"Excitable Speech\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41290294","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":1521,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[8955,9024]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sally Haslanger"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ontology and Social Construction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154209","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":16046,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478051,478118]],"Locations in B":[[75961,76026]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marina P\u00e9rez de Mendiola"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23285748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2318d72-a06f-32ae-8331-4a706d921bfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23285748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","issueNumber":"39","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"LAS PUBERES CANEFORAS\" DE JOSE JOAQUIN BLANCO Y LA INSCRIPCION DE LA IDENTIDAD SEXUAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23285748","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gail Schwab"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24438883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24438883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24438883","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2985,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018],[490726,490753]],"Locations in B":[[10706,10740],[13570,13597]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lilit Z. Thwaites"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3734386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3734386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"785","pageStart":"784","pagination":"pp. 784-785","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3734386","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Valentine"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd784736-576d-3e40-9fb7-e0f9415b7dba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175882","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Lichterman"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108507","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f8de08e-7f0e-3f18-a907-81ca74d35f1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108507"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Talking Identity in the Public Sphere: Broad Visions and Small Spaces in Sexual Identity Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108507","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":16890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the contributions of Argentinean poet Alfonsina Storni (1892-1938) and Brazilian novelist Chrice Lispector (1920-1977) to the women's column of newspapers and journals in their respective countries. The women's column or page was a section entirely dedicated to women's concerns, addressed specifically to a female readership, and generally authored by a woman or a female persona. As such, it operated under specific parameters of form and content. This article argues that both writers' transgression of this discursive space can be seen as resignifying gender meanings and potentially transforming readers' perception of female subjectivity. Analyzing selected pieces from the various columns authored overtly or covertly by Storni and Lispector, the article draws on Judith Butler's reflections on the performativity of gender and Mikhail Bakhtin's ideas on double-voiced discourse to focus on the \"acting out\" of gender as a means of subverting the presuppositions underlying the rigidly codified space of the women's page. This article explores a corpus that has gone forgely unnoticed until recently and generates new understandings of both women's works.","creator":["Mariela E. M\u00e9ndez"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44785092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da4d8887-6644-30eb-a36b-83cbb061a39d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44785092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"S\u00f3 para mulheres\" (Just for women): Alfonsina Storni's and Clarice Lispector's Transgression of the Women's Page","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44785092","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11800,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431357,431480],[437407,437535]],"Locations in B":[[31696,31819],[42440,42568]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In First-World-War Britain, women's ambition to perform noncombatant duties for the military faced considerable public opposition. Nevertheless, by late 1916 up to 10,000 members of the female volunteer corps were working for the army, laying the foundation for some 90,000 auxiliaries of the official Women's Services, who filled support positions in the armed forces in the second half of the war. This essay focuses on the public debate in which the volunteers overcame their critics to understand how they obtained sufficient popular consent for their martial work. I explain the process in terms of shifting hegemonic understandings of space. As critics' arguments in the debate indicate, the gender attribution of war participation was organized and represented spatially, assigning men to the warlike \"front\" as warriors and women to the peaceful \"home\" as civilians. To redefine the meaning of these gendered wartime spaces, women volunteers deployed rival spatial discourses and practices in their campaign for martial employment. The essay explores the progress of these competing definitions through feminist and spatial theories, including gender performativity, discursively constructed and constructive spaces, and heterotopias. I argue that the upheaval caused by the war in gender and spatial norms undermined absolute conceptualizations of space with dichotomous binary areas on which critics drew for their arguments and reinforced more recent, relative spatialities, including the cultural construction of militarized heterotopic sites in between and paralleling both \"home\" and \"front\" for soldiers in training or recovery. The volunteers' efforts to gain access to military employment both contributed to and were supported by this shift. Heterotopic sites offered ideal discursive locations for constructing the new gender role of auxiliary soldiering through the performance of martial training and work, and competing spatial definitions provided arguments through which they could justify their activities to both critics and supporters.","creator":["KRISZTINA ROBERT"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"480bb7f4-5f89-3361-82c6-4677930e85ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"CONSTRUCTIONS OF \"HOME,\" \"FRONT,\" AND WOMEN'S MILITARY EMPLOYMENT IN FIRST-WORLD-WAR BRITAIN: A SPATIAL INTERPRETATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542989","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charles Mueller"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00695696"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297388808"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3121eefe-266d-3924-a723-0e95965a8a4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collmusisymp"}],"isPartOf":"College Music Symposium","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"College Music Society","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Seduction and Subversion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574462","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Feminist Strategies of Siouxsie and the Banshees"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lea VanderVelde","Sandhya Subramanian"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c28685d-f60d-3e97-8f1d-bb7a9ff11c21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90,"pageEnd":"1122","pageStart":"1033","pagination":"pp. 1033-1122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Mrs. Dred Scott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797149","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":53591,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48245,48386]],"Locations in B":[[23889,24030]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In her essay \"Europe Divided: Politics, Ethics, Religion,\" Julia Kristeva investigates the many problems Europe has to overcome before becoming \"united.\" She elaborates a theory of difference that aims to illuminate the malady (the ailing Western European as well as the \"fundamentally damaged\" Orthodox subjects), and its potential cure: the profound transformation, or metanoia, of the (male) Orthodox self. Balkan male critics have taken issue with Kristeva's theory, arguing that it ultimately reaffirms the primacy of the Western existence as \"pure reason\" and \"civic nationalism.\" This paper adds yet another dimension to the response to Kristeva's construction of the Balkan abject, this time from a woman's point of view. How does the female Orthodox subject creation differ from the male one? What is the price that Balkan women in particular have to pay if the transition to a unified Europe is to be successful? The article addresses these and similar questions in the context of a recent novel by a young Bulgarian female writer: Emilia Dvorianova's Zemnite Gradini na Bogoroditsa (The earthly gardens of God's mother).","creator":["Margarita Marinova"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44784594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adbb7b58-d810-3898-ac44-0283b098683e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44784594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Bulgarian Women Write the New European Subject: Emilia Dvorianova's \"Zemnite Gradini na Bogoroditsa\" as a Response to Julia Kristeva's \"Crisis of the European Subject\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44784594","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10987,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[296082,296178],[503309,503384]],"Locations in B":[[23569,23665],[57691,57774]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a10ff29-799d-3280-860f-f2d1f4679c8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686042","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":2489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the temporal elements of identity construction, drawing parallels between the construction of ethnographic, legal, and personal identities. The article presents a case of transsexual identity, analyzing how people reference a transsexual in order to illuminate the temporal complexity of gendered identity construction and identity in general. The study consists of a micro-analysis of scientists and lawyers talking about transsexuals in and around a legal trial, and offers a model of identity that allows for disjuncture and incongruence over time. It argues that ethnographic and legal accounts of identity rely on a negotiation between coherence and discontinuity.","creator":["Robin Conley"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9627d07-f990-32cc-b867-8b6924482e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","History - Historical methodology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"\"At the Time She Was a Man\": The Temporal Dimension of Identity Construction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497556","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8601,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra Weber","Claudia Mitchell"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6caf722-79b7-315b-8d3b-6a4165c4f89b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER 32: Theorizing Dress Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978316","volumeNumber":"220","wordCount":10889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The challenge of demonstrating the value of the humanities can never be fully accomplished by showing that the humanities serve other disciplines. That argument assumes the value of those other disciplines, especially STEM fields, and relegates the humanities to a secondary position whose value is, at most, instrumental. The task is to show the distinctive contribution that the humanities can make to all fields of knowledge by keeping alive values that are irreducible to both instrumentality and profitability. The public humanities stand the best chance of accomplishing this task since it not only shows what the humanities have to offer the public sphere, but how various publics are framing what the humanities do within the university. Further, the public humanities have the potential to reorient the mission of the university. One reason the humanities are underfunded is that they have the power to challenge the hegemony of neoliberalism, its market metrics and financial rationality. Universities should be more fully engaged with public art, including literary and arts events, and the public for open debate as a way of demonstrating why the public requires the humanities, and is already engaged in its practices.","creator":["Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"2022-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48681142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-214140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57aefac4-fc42-3605-9630-cdf1227a3634"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48681142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"American Academy of Arts & Sciences","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"The Public Futures of the Humanities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48681142","volumeNumber":"151","wordCount":6936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ramchandran Sethuraman"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49bcdbc1-7f0b-3d45-8ccb-c230206dc73a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"EVIDENCE-CUM-WITNESS: SUBALTERN HISTORY, VIOLENCE, AND THE (DE)FORMATION OF NATION IN MICHELLE CLIFF'S \"NO TELEPHONE TO HEAVEN\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285471","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":14837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157]],"Locations in B":[[60142,60239]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan David Gross"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30213039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8d0eadf-77ac-3c77-872f-ea2b19aa8f5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30213039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30213039","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":44345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explains the discipline of somaesthetics, which emerges from pragmatism's concern with enhancing embodied experience and reconstructing the aesthetic in ways that make it more central to key philosophical concerns of knowledge, ethics, and politics. I then examine Beauvoir's complex treatment of the body in The Second Sex, assessing both her arguments that could support the pragmatic approach of somaesthetics but also those that challenge its bodily focus as a danger for feminism.","creator":["Richard Shusterman"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7de37c1c-04e0-3984-b6fe-33d84ec8b932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Somaesthetics and \"The Second Sex\": A Pragmatist Reading of a Feminist Classic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810977","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14881,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[91152,91203]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses a paradoxical stance taken by young straight men in three groups who identify aspects of themselves as \"gay\" to construct heterosexual masculine identities. By subjectively recognizing aspects of their identities as \"gay,\" these men discursively distance themselves from stereotypes of masculinity and privilege and\/or frame themselves as politically progressive. Yet, both of these practices obscure the ways they benefit from and participate in gender and sexual inequality. I develop a theory of \"sexual aesthetics\" to account for their behavior and its consequences, contributing to a growing body of theory regarding the hybridization of contemporary masculinities and complicating theories of sexual practice.","creator":["TRISTAN BRIDGES"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b8b3653-22eb-32f3-80cd-b8cae81814a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A VERY \"GAY\" STRAIGHT?: Hybrid Masculinities, Sexual Aesthetics, and the Changing Relationship between Masculinity and Homophobia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669856","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":199,"pageEnd":"778","pageStart":"580","pagination":"pp. 580-778","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Individual Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902229","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":165898,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566414","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":3554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the representation of incest in contemporary Chinese fiction. Specifically, it looks at three short stories by Chinese woman writers, focusing its discussion on their relation to psychoanalytic models, the significance of trauma and causality and the arising discourses on incestuous desire. It asks the following questions: To what extent do incest narratives challenge or reinforce extant norms on sexual relations? What are the ethical implications of these stories for (de)situating incest within the popular erotic imagination? The analysis indicates that in articulating the occurrence of incest, different narrative trajectories project divergent discourses on consanguineous sex. The various guises in which the Oedipal narrative is replayed also reveal the tensions and anxieties involved in representing the culturally tabooed.","creator":["Tong King Lee"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01619705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b943a6cc-0d6d-31c0-a273-11fe7dead3f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinliteessaarti"}],"isPartOf":"Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews (CLEAR)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Chinese Literature: essays, articles, reviews (CLEAR)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Forbidden Imaginations: Three Chinese Narratives on Mother-Son Incest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490198","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Autumn White"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23333513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe0d8879-394b-33f2-aac3-cbf7457c0d6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23333513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What's the Matter?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23333513","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":2675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen R. Lawrence"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"926c8aeb-165a-343d-bd3c-644387a2a410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ORLANDO'S VOYAGE OUT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284326","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12430,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[217618,217844],[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[7660,7886],[73184,73252]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The notion of 'the school' as a set of institutional processes and practices that shape the possibilities of educational research forms the focus of this article. It is argued that the discursive and material practices that render schools agencies of cultural reproduction also have effects for what research can be undertaken in them and how. With reference to a series of 'episodes' that occurred during research about young people and sexuality in New Zealand, evidence for how schools shape research endeavours is provided. These examples present a complex picture of the way in which schools simultaneously police and are regulated by symbolic boundaries of gender and sexuality. How school disciplinary power works to effect what it is possible to claim about the voluntary nature of student research participation is also explored. It is argued that through the powerful discursive and material practices that occur in schools, these institutions can impede research that attempts to transgress dominant meanings about gender and sexuality.","creator":["Louisa Allen"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bf07ad4-ac46-3411-9ea4-d665e1a3612b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Concrete and Classrooms: How Schools Shape Educational Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036086","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.48.3.bm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"423aaa36-349a-35f1-a97f-d6c2e6fec80f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.48.3.bm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.48.3.bm","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dawn Smith-Sherwood"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56de7161-a7b8-3652-82f4-eeef7b531f44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Genre Trouble: Metadramatic Fiction and Female Being in Montserrat Roig's \"L'\u00f2pera quotidiana\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021430","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["THOMAS JOHANSSON"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ba787db-2c5a-3295-aa3b-b0147e945e09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20850251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"VART TOG DET POSTMODERNA V\u00c4GEN? Om sociologi, ironi och framtiden","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850251","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While the past decade shows dramatic progress in tolerance, acceptance, and support for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer\/questioning (LGBTQ) people\/rights in the United States, this population remains underserved. Statistics on LGBTQ youth suicide remain troublingly high; yet, when LGBTQ youth attend schools with Gay-Straight Alliances (GSAs), open faculty support, anti-bullying programs and policies, and LGBTQ-inclusive curricula, they fully integrate and avoid many of the stresses and negative safety\/health consequences of homophobia (Kosciw, Greytak, Diaz, Bartkiewicz, Boesen, & Palmer, 2012, p. 6). An annual National Art Education Association Convention ensemble performance\u2014Big Gay Church\u2014 examines the material, physical, psychological, and spiritual impact of Conservative, fundamentalist, anti-LGBTQ religious doctrine in creating and maintaining the underserved, marginalized status of the LGBTQ community in the US. Big Gay Church advocates and demonstrates the power of creative, collaborative, arts- and inquiry-based scholarship for interrogating discrimination and injustice, accepting agency, and imagining and enacting more equitable possibilities.","creator":["MINDI RHOADES","MELANIE G. DAVENPORT","COURTNIE N. WOLFGANG","KIM COSIER","JAMES H. SANDERS III"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eaab2497-6941-34b9-b096-6f00a05a0a5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24465520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Big Gay Church: Sermons to and for an Underserved Population in Art Education Settings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465520","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":7722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I examine expressions of class and gender identity in a worker-peasant community in rural Galicia (Spain). While men who have worked for decades in migrant destinations define their own class positionality partly through reference to the unpaid, subsistence work that is performed mainly by women who remain in the community, these same women adeptly \"code switch\" between \"strong woman\" and \"pretty girl\" demeanors through their work activities, dress, and use of domestic spaces. Using the example of ethnographic data from this one part of rural Europe, I argue for the broader importance of anthropologists considering how laboring bodies become gendered; the intersections between gender and class identities; and connections among mixed livelihood strategies, the continuity of self-provisioning activities, and resistance to fully commoditized consumption.","creator":["Sharon R. Roseman"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"700510e1-3ec0-340e-8164-59cd7f0fca3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/683759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"\"Strong Women\" and \"Pretty Girls\": Self-Provisioning, Gender, and Class Identity in Rural Galicia (Spain)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683759","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":16019,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475985,476047]],"Locations in B":[[90753,90815]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Stouck"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43021963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43021963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cross-Writing and the Unconcluded Self in Sinclair Ross's \"As for Me and My House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43021963","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an attempt to bring sound studies discourses into dialogue with queer theory, to \"queer\" the field of sound studies, and to open up queer theory to the textual canon of sonic art. Concerned with notions of failure, this article deals with glitch and examines the result when error, malfunction and failure are amplified within systems. The author argues that the glitch, a key conceit of experimental music, is a productive framework for theorizing minoritarian politics and alternative modes of knowledge production.","creator":["ANDREW BROOKS"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44911674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"496c74be-ec65-3a85-8042-7c34e261624d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Glitch\/Failure: Constructing a Queer Politics of Listening","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832528","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Los Angeles County Men's Jail segregates gay and transgender inmates and says that it does so to protect them from sexual assault. But not all gay and transgender inmates qualify for admission to the K6G unit. Transgender inmates must appear transgender to staff that inspect them. Gay men must identify as gay in a public space and then satisfactorily answer a series of cultural questions designed to determine whether they really are gay. This policy creates harms for those who are excluded, including vulnerable heterosexual and bisexual men, men who have sex with men but do not embrace gay identity, and gay-identified men who do not mimic white, affluent gay culture. Further, the policy harms those who are included in that it stereotypes them as inherent victims, exposes them to a heightened risk of HIV transmission, and disrupts relationships that cut across gender identity and sexual orientation. Thus, this Article casts doubt on the claim that the policy is intended to and actually protects gay and transgender inmates. Moreover, it interrogates the Jail's failure to protect many other categories of inmates who have been shown to be vulnerable to sexual assault in jails, including those who are young, firsttime offenders and those with disabilities. The Jail's policy ultimately reflects and reinforces problematic social assumptions about masculinity, including the notion that gay men are not \"real men.\" This Article goes on to argue that the Jail's screening process implicates the constitutional right to privacy. The Jail encourages inmates to come out as gay and yet fails to protect their disclosure of sensitive sexual information or consider the long-lasting ramifications of coming out in jail. Indeed, the Jail requires K6G inmates to broadcast their sexuality by wearing powder blue uniforms \u2014 in contrast to the dark blue uniforms worn by inmates in the Jail's general population. Although the gay rights movement often has portrayed coming out as a duty for every man who has sex with men, this Article illustrates the double-edged nature of coming out, particularly in the violent context of incarceration. Especially for men who are black, Latino, and poor, the decision whether or not to come out should be left to the individual.","creator":["Russell K. Robinson"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41345385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db6db522-6c4c-3b54-a3c0-7818af17cc65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41345385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":100,"pageEnd":"1408","pageStart":"1309","pagination":"pp. 1309-1408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Masculinity as Prison: Sexual Identity, Race, and Incarceration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41345385","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":55819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[75810,75955]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article provides a critical analysis of how IPE might engage with the question of ethics. After reviewing existing calls to bring ethics and ethical considerations within the mainstream of the discipline several questions are made. Drawing from critical and post-structural thought, it is argued that existing accounts of ethics privilege a problematic separation between ethics and power. Power is depicted as obligation \u2014 as power over \u2014 while ethics is depicted as an ameliorative other to power. We draw out several limits in this separation \u2014 including the reification of market subjectivities of contract, individualism, and a problematic global scale \u2014 arguing that ethics should be seen as a constitutive discourse like any other. Power is re-phrased as productive, as the power to. We conclude by articulating a pragmatist research agenda that seeks to foster the kernel 'possibility' in discourses of ethics while retaining sensitivity to the potential constitutive 'violence' of ethics. Given this dilemma, we argue that ongoing practices of 'resistance' \u2014 in both practical and scholarly senses \u2014 should be a central problematic for engaging with the (political) question of ethics in IPE.","creator":["James Brassett","Christopher Holmes"],"datePublished":"2010-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09692290"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06fa9d7b-5698-3cd3-a194-e89207f0f6d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25746500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviintepoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Political Economy","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"International political economy and the question of ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746500","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13786,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[71161,71353],[71430,71722]],"Locations in B":[[23130,23322],[23442,23734]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MORAG SHIACH"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Gender' and cultural analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263419","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4326,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[49318,49436],[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[23905,24023],[24709,24780]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article examines how ethnicity is created, maintained, and perpetuated in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Research studies on ethnicity in the Israeli army have examined ethnicity while focusing on the macro, emphasizing the way the structure and the policy of the army, alongside its reciprocal relations with the greater society and the state, maintain and reproduce ethnicity. It focuses on the micro point of view, hitherto neglected, which emphasizes the soldiers' experience and interpretation. Using a case study of two Israeli infantry brigades, the article demonstrates how ethnicity is produced, maintained, and reproduced by individuals through practices, behavior, perceptions, and observations.","creator":["Dana Kachtan"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.17.3.150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10849513"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388186"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c85b5ba6-d341-3839-8dff-4e708f49cf5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/israelstudies.17.3.150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Construction of Ethnic Identity in the Military\u2014From the Bottom Up","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.17.3.150","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marcia Klotz"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"017f62b4-175f-3b87-9164-3ba5cc8eacaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"74","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epistemological Ambiguity and the Fascist Text: Jew S\u00fcss, Carl Peters, and Ohm Kr\u00fcger","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488493","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15033,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[310060,310119]],"Locations in B":[[48318,48377]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este trabajo se propone recuperar la contribuci\u00f3n de Joan Scott al pensamiento feminista contempor\u00e1neo. Desde sus primeros trabajos, Scott desplaza la pregunta por la causa o el por qu\u00e9 de la exclusi\u00f3n de las mujeres en la historia y la experiencia cotidiana y la redirecciona hacia el c\u00f3mo ocurre, logrando revelar sus mecanismos, as\u00ed como un desarrollo de la perspectiva de g\u00e9nero desde distintas disciplinas que hasta hoy contin\u00faa. En este sentido, rescatamos el debate posterior en torno a la condici\u00f3n de las mujeres, cuyo n\u00facleo se ha organizado a partir de una cr\u00edtica a la propuesta de Scott. Para ello nos apoyamos en dos corrientes vigentes del debate acad\u00e9mico contempor\u00e1neo: la postcolonial, fundada en una cr\u00edtica al feminismo occidental, y la postmoderna, representada por los primeros trabajos de Judith Butler, quien desde una postura esencialmente filos\u00f3fica y psicoanal\u00edtica cuestiona radicalmente la categor\u00eda de g\u00e9nero y su lugar en la construcci\u00f3n de las identidades subjetivas. This article is to Joan Scott's contribution to the contemporary feminist thought. From his early work, Scott moved the question in the cause or the reason for the exclusion of women in history and everyday experience, and redirects to the how it happens. She reveals its mechanisms and develops the perspective of gender from different disciplines that continues to this day. In this sense, we rescued the ensuing discussion about the status of women, whose nucleus is organized from a review of Scott's proposal. To do this, we rely on two existing currents of contemporary academic debate: the postcolonial, based on a critique to the Western feminism, and postmodern, represented by the early work of Judith Butler, who from a position essentially philosophical and psychoanalytic radically questions the category of gender and its place in the construction of subjective identities. Joan Scott, category of gender, social construction of sex differences, identities and gender relations, postcolonial feminism, postmodern feminism.","creator":["Mar\u00eda Luisa Tarr\u00e9s"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23622252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01854186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb6db660-e38c-30ba-8b4d-d36619943562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23622252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estusoci"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Sociol\u00f3gicos","issueNumber":"91","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"El Colegio De Mexico","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A prop\u00f3sito de la categor\u00eda g\u00e9nero: leer a Joan Scott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23622252","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Awad El Karim M. Ibrahim"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3587784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"744","pageStart":"741","pagination":"pp. 741-744","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Identity or Identification? A Response to Some Objections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587784","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":1608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adam Zachary Newton"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054564","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3054564"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Versions of Ethics; Or, The \"SARL\" of Criticism: Sonority, Arrogation, Letting-Be","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054564","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":14458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article outlines the field of FOUCAULTian discourse analysis. The FOUCAULTian concept of discourse is introduced, and methodological positions and methodological developments are sketched. Compared to other qualitative social research approaches, the different researchers and research groups that have adopted the FOUCAULTian concept of discourse are not linked by a fully integrated common research paradigm. However, they share common methodological problems and areas of methodological research resulting from various references to FOUCAULTian positions. In the last decade, different research groups have become aware of these shared commonalities, so that one can speak of an emerging field of FOUCAULTian discourse analysis rather than an emerging paradigm. The article gives an insight into discourse analytic research in selected countries, discusses the internalization of FOUCAULTian discourse analysis and highlights current trends and perspectives.","creator":["Rainer Diaz-Bone","Andrea D. B\u00fchrmann","Encarnaci\u00f3n Guti\u00e9rrez Rodr\u00edguez","Werner Schneider","Gavin Kendall","Francisco Tirado"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d86cf0d-8d57-37e7-924f-15eb180c6ec6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20762257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"1 (123)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Field of Foucaultian Discourse Analysis: Structures, Developments and Perspectives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762257","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9118,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[63970,64032]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth J. Meyer"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f28c777-864f-33fc-8a79-e5cd900e6147"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"CHAPTER 15: \"She's the Man\": Deconstructing the Gender and Sexuality Curriculum at \"Hollywood High\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981028","volumeNumber":"392","wordCount":6482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alex Owen"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58082319-2a18-3d38-9133-c571f62e43ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/175904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Sorcerer and His Apprentice: Aleister Crowley and the Magical Exploration of Edwardian Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175904","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":17123,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499445,499498]],"Locations in B":[[56395,56451]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leila J. Rupp"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10243965-8a64-3e61-85eb-02ea961d6873"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature","History - Historical methodology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Is the Feminist Revolution Still Missing? Reflections from Women's History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.466","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":4030,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[24122,24193]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While the body seems absent from much of Elizabeth Bishop's work, her poetry in fact yields many poetic bodies. Specifically, \"Pink Dog\" points to a desire for the body, a dread of the body, and an awareness of the cultural significance of the body. This poem, long recognized as a commentary on social inequity, delineates a body that simultaneously conforms to and rejects restraints placed upon it by society. While seeming to occupy the celebratory site of the grotesque, ultimately the body in \"Pink Dog\" emerges as the abjected female body. This recognition opens up a space in which to situate Bishop's poetics in relation to sexuality, gender, and the body as this poem points out the nonexistence of both the unmediated body and a coherent gender identity.","creator":["Catherine Cucinella"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e916b682-eda3-36af-86ec-d26d3b0b6e17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1348014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Dress up! Dress up and Dance at Carnival!\": The Body in Elizabeth Bishop's \"Pink Dog\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1348014","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":4469,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[185797,186060],[186375,186475]],"Locations in B":[[18518,18776],[21392,21486]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The social theory of Kenneth Burke is relevant to the contemporary controversy about identity. His theory of identity, developed in the 1930s, addresses several important issues at the heart of contemporary debate. Though not naively, Burke believed that identity can serve as an instrument of social critique. His own defense of this position is, I think, worthy of consideration.","creator":["Ann Branaman"],"datePublished":"1994-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ddc2361-17fb-3e10-acdf-892ffee1345f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"455","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-455","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconsidering Kenneth Burke: His Contributions to the Identity Controversy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121220","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary G. Dietz","Cecilia Olivares Mansuy"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79ff8fda-b725-3ddc-bdf2-677967fa1f09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Las discusiones actuales de la teor\u00eda feminista","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624899","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":18464,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[98583,98666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how two transgendered Fijian males navigate the intersections of sex, gender, and ethnicity or \"race\" in a Fiji secondary school. Their experiences illustrate, on the one hand, the negotiability of a transgendered category in Fiji. On the other hand, there is the potential for transgendered identity to open spaces for engagement with nonFijian ethnic markers in the face of essentialist discursive practices on ethnicity. The case study shows the individualized ways that two transgendered males negotiate and challenge notions of Fijian male authenticity.","creator":["Carmen M. White"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3774093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141828"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91c24eeb-d9b5-35dd-a0a3-16cd47c7cc36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3774093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh- Of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Fijian Males at the Crossroads of Gender and Ethnicity in a Fiji Secondary School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3774093","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10915,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73876,74274]],"Locations in B":[[1306,1700]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reflects on the place of technology in the ethnography of global manufacturing and puts relationships with tools and machines back into debates about the production of gender in transnational labour processes. Much ethnography of the global factory, I argue, has over-determined or underexplored worker engagements with their immediate material environment, with implications for the role of technology in the production of gendered persons and selves. This article outlines a different approach, derived from theories of technology as performance or technique, to explore the relationship between Telugu masculinity and machines on the floor of a large diamond factory in one of India's special economic zones. In doing so it opens new dialogue between the ethnography of work and labour and the social study of technology.","creator":["Jamie Cross"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"755d5390-d7b9-3084-a72c-e5d301a4d4e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Technological intimacy: Re-engaging with gender and technology in the global factory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496441","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["XAVIER LEMOINE"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5f99414-0a56-3c55-a3db-e58cedeaf2d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab Explorer l'innommable, l'irrepr\u00e9sentable \u00bb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978755","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosalyn Diprose"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c63cd16-3f77-3f2d-86ed-5e86ac9389c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20011231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Desire to Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011231","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3139,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436706,436834]],"Locations in B":[[5331,5459]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"319bc6b1-c6bd-33c8-8f58-96f2d8dfe35b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"795","pageStart":"759","pagination":"pp. 759-795","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976219","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":13811,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[511312,511391]],"Locations in B":[[19165,19244]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The search for explanatory coherence in language and gender research has fostered a variety of research methods and analyses; this article evaluates the contributions of the Communities of Practice approach, with its focus on the constructive practices of a group -- especially mutual engagement of learning a jointly negotiated practice of gender. Rather than presupposing gender differences as a starting point, CofP emphasizes the learning and mutability in gendered linguistic displays across groups; CofP theory thus naturalizes intragroup variation, not marking it as deviant. However, while the CofP approach focuses much-needed attention on the social construction of gender as local and cross-culturally variable, gender research must be augmented by critical study of two other facets of gender: ideology and innateness, which are critical components of a more comprehensive theory of gender for language research.","creator":["Victoria L. Bergvall"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4168929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Toward a Comprehensive Theory of Language and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168929","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10512,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[74434,74701],[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[11031,11296],[34679,34869]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["AHMED RAGAB"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11749b0a-4794-3271-aa44-8562aca88a31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24616517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"428","pagination":"pp. 428-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"One, Two, or Many Sexes: Sex Differentiation in Medieval Islamicate Medical Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24616517","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13981,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[78308,78371]],"Locations in B":[[85688,85749]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Dans une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 o\u00f9 le v\u00eatement doit rendre visibles toutes les hi\u00e9rarchies sociales, le port par les femmes de tout ou partie du costume masculin, a longtemps \u00e9t\u00e9 consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme une atteinte grave aux commandements divins, avant d'\u00eatre condamn\u00e9 par la loi civile et la morale dominante. Pour celles qui os\u00e8rent s'habiller en hommes, le transvestisme fut d'abord un moyen de survie: d\u00e9guisement des pers\u00e9cut\u00e9es et des amoureuses, habillement commode des pauvresses et des patriotes. Il leur permit aussi de rendre visibles des revendications de libert\u00e9 physique, d'\u00e9galit\u00e9 \u00e9conomique et de d\u00e9passement du cadre binaire des relations de sexe. Images de subversion politique et\/ou d'affirmation d'une identit\u00e9 sexuelle non conforme. In a society where clothing was directly associated with sexual and social status, women wearing men's clothing were seen as transgressing divine commandment, and, later, moral and legal codes. Nevertheless, many of them dared to dress as men as a way of surviving and\/or expressing their sexual preferences. For poor girls, runaways, patriots and lovers, transvestism was an opportunity to obtain physical freedom and equal pay. By not adhering to socially-defined gender roles, historic female transvestites may offer us (as they may have offered their contemporaries) images of political and sexual subversion.","creator":["Nicole PELLEGRIN"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3e4d043-3efc-32ed-8f5e-119a4789a91f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"10","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le genre et l'habit. Figures du transvestisme f\u00e9minin sous l'Ancien R\u00e9gime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405318","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This work builds on an interactive, interpretive approach to the study of cultural texts in an investigation of how images of gender and sexuality in music television (MTV) are read by the audience. After viewing a music video by Michael Jackson, 80 respondents described the video's portrayal of feminine and masculine images. A content analysis of the respondents' open-ended descriptions of the images indicate that there are significant gender differences in how young women and men socially construct the meaning of femininity in the video, particularly concerning the intersection of gender, sexuality and power. There are no major gender differences in the interpretations of the masculine image. The findings show that MTV texts have multiple meanings for the audience, and the interpretations of sexual imagery reflect traditional gender ideology about gender and sexuality.","creator":["Linda Kalof"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b2ee036-0ed0-3b2b-bcfc-4ec92efc6a5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"639","pagination":"pp. 639-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dilemmas of Femininity: Gender and the Social Construction of Sexual Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121372","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article charts the underlying logic and structure of a course titled \u201c\u2018Queer\u2019 Across Cultures,\u201d created to provide a transnational focus for the groundbreaking minor in Multicultural Queer Studies, spearheaded by Eric Rofes. Concerned that students would too easily revert to a practice of consuming diversity, I have attempted to weave together readings which complicate a colonial gaze by challenging hegemonic constructions of essential difference. My primary strategy in crafting this course has been to focus on the term \u201cacross\u201d in the title. In other words to foreground and theorize the transnational within the production of both similarities and differences in sexual and gender practices, categories, and meanings. Through examining the gendered and sexual dynamics of colonialism, nationalist movements, and contemporary economic and cultural globalization, I seek to engage with the history of relations within and across nations that shape contemporary meanings of sex, sexuality and gender.","creator":["Kim Berry"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.34.15","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75a0dffc-fd82-37ec-88f4-4683a31a711d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/humjsocrel.34.15"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Designing \u201c\u2018Queer\u2019 Across Cultures:\u201d Disrupting the Consumption of Diversity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.34.15","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we examine how leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS) discursively constructed homosexuality over the last 50 years. Based on textual analysis of LDS talks, magazines, and other publications, we analyze how LDS elites, responding to shifting historical, cultural, and religious interpretations of sexualities, discursively constructed homosexuality as problematic for (1) society from the 1950s to the 1990s, (2) the family from the 1970s to present, and (3) divinely inspired gender roles from the 1980s to present. Further, we show how LDS elites softened their rhetoric in the 1990s, and in so doing, established a new discursive construction of homosexuality as an ailment requiring sympathetic treatment. Throughout our analysis, we also examine how LDS elites accomplished such discursive work in response to shifting societal and religious attitudes concerning sexual minorities. In conclusion, we draw out implications for understanding how religious elites discursively construct sexual norms, the reciprocal relationship between sexual and religious discourse and advocacy, and the importance of examining how dominant religious discourses change over time.","creator":["Ryan T. Cragun","J. E. Sumerau","Emily Williams"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49890280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c26c4896-3d13-35d5-88dd-ab5204f51c2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24644342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsciestudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Sodomy to Sympathy: LDS Elites' Discursive Construction of Homosexuality Over Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644342","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a woman who performs rock music in an unabashedly 'masculine' fashion, Suzi Quatro is often criticised for trying to be 'one of the boys'. Through close examinations of Quatro's performance strategies, including her repertoire, physical performance and vocal presence, I hope to show that Quatro's performances of gender and sexual identity on sound recordings and video belie such an uncomplicated characterisation. Focusing particularly on Quatro's ability to construct multiple subject positions that are ambiguous or mutually contradictory with respect to gender and sexuality, I shall argue that the role of female cock-rocker, as she performs it, is a paradoxical one that destabilises the gender codings from which it is constructed and celebrates the polymorphousness and performativity of identity.","creator":["Philip Auslander"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87a63e82-24f3-3c3e-a058-56c66c556f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"I Wanna Be Your Man: Suzi Quatro's Musical Androgyny","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877622","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay contrasts the fin-de-si\u00e8cle erotic novel written by male writers like Felipe Trigo to the new current of erotic narrative written mostly by women in our own turn of the century, from the points of view of both the model of sexuality proposed and the canonical strategies that model implies. The first form depended on the gaze on the female body as a structural image establishing binary and unequal categories of gender and desire. The particular formulas favored by these writers linked their novelistic project to science's quest for knowledge, thus legitimizing it and separating it from the nonliterary discourse of pornography. A century later, writers like Ana Rossetti, Isabel Franc, and Almudena Grandes subvert the dualistic concept of desire on which the traditional erotic novel depended, as well as the analogical divide between erotic and pornographic, high and low, that characterizes the literary economy in which they participate.","creator":["WADDA C. R\u00cdOS-FONT"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25642013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"692b5d09-abc9-3709-982b-827c12256fa6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25642013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TO HOLD AND BEHOLD: EROTICISM AND CANONICITY AT THE SPANISH FINES DE SIGLO<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25642013","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9811,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[418650,418728],[422186,422335],[436858,436951],[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[31428,31506],[32071,32220],[36943,37036],[58662,58715]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The discourse on migration and refugee studies continues to be framed around two main principles: sovereignty and identity. In contemporary politics, however, the refugee subject is defined and managed from a universal framework where the language of rights elevates the potency of liberalism as both a discourse and an instrument of domination. This article examines refugeehood from a framework that transcends the sovereignty\/identity dichotomy. It offers a more nuanced contextual approach through which this mass socio-political phenomenon can be better understood. To validate the article's new methodology, it sets out to examine the Palestinian refugee question, the oldest unresolved refugee problem in the history of the modern Middle East. The article makes visible the performative role of question framing by giving particular attention to historical transfigurations in the conceptualization of the people's right to self-determination. As a discourse-based analysis, the article demonstrates how current discursive formations produce colonial knowledge that can facilitate the development of new social and political tools of population control. The article concludes by showing how conceptual transfiguration of the right to self-determination incited the orientalist scholarship on the Palestinian refugee question in the interest of legitimizing and normalizing Israel as a Western colonial establishment.","creator":["Muna S. Tareh"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a10f8d1e-beb0-30bf-bad0-039482bef12a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Violence of Self-Determination: The Palestinian Refugee as the Ontological Other","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":20469,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[61787,62198],[478800,478845]],"Locations in B":[[51874,52277],[131180,131226]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines discourse dynamics in Jewish law on sex-change surgery (SCS) and, in general, transitioning between genders. Orthodox medical ethics has moved beyond the abstract condemnation of SCS to the design of practical rules for transsexuals living in observant communities. The reasoning against SCS has also shifted, both in complexity and with implicit ties to Christian and secular tropes. By medicalizing or, conversely, spiritualizing the experiences of transgendered persons, a few Orthodox authors are opening up interpretive space for sympathetic responses to SCS. Such transitions reach their most elaborate expression in Israeli Orthodox rabbi Edan ben Ephraim's 2004 monograph, Generation of Perversions, which has taken center stage in Orthodox deliberations on transsexuality. Overall, halakhic discourse seems to be moving in innovative, unavoidably interdiscursive directions.","creator":["Hillel Gray"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.29.81","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0f73d25-13c9-3dd5-a74f-9d7190955b0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nashim.29.81"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Transitioning of Jewish Biomedical Law: Rhetorical and Practical Shifts in Halakhic Discourse on Sex-Change Surgery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.29.81","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13158,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475227,475303]],"Locations in B":[[60469,60546]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill O'Bryan"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe52575d-586d-3348-bca8-1db74e291f56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Saint Orlan Faces Reincarnation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777720","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":4775,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477195,477271]],"Locations in B":[[28101,28177]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicole Roberts"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dbceeeb-d35e-3168-a4b9-95a38341a558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Vultures, Vixens and Villains: Women Negotiating Identities in Hispanic Caribbean Short Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019922","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4924,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["WILL ROLLASON"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23820736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbe37bdb-4454-32b0-80b0-3bac6745b405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23820736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DIVING ONE MAN: DISCONNECTION AND RECONTEXTUALIZATION AMONGST PANAPOMPOM B\u00caCHE-DE-MER DIVERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23820736","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This introductory essay to the Discourse & Society special issue on Queer Linguistic Approaches to Discourse discusses the theoretical underpinnings of the connection between discourse studies and Queer Theory within Queer Linguistics \u2013 a strand of research that has recently gained great momentum. It outlines basic issues in Queer Theory and their repercussions in Queer Linguistic debates and research. The Queer Linguistic objective to provide critical heteronormativity research is then related to Queer Discourse Studies in its various forms and approaches. An overview of the contributions to the special issue and suggestions for future research conclude the article.","creator":["Heiko Motschenbacher","Martin Stegu"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e57d8d1e-fc2f-390d-a0fc-f0b276c10b24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24441610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"535","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-535","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Queer Linguistic approaches to discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441610","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Algerian author Boualem Sansal's 2008 novel Le Village de l'Allemand: Ou Le journal des fr\u00e8res Schiller (An Unfinished Business) focuses on the journal entries of two brothers\u2014Rachel and Malrich Schiller\u2014as they respond to the news that their father was a Nazi war criminal. In doing so, the novel engages with two major conceptual models: melancholia and victimhood. Both concepts have emerged as dominant paradigms in recent years, with melancholia in particular being reconceptualized as an ethico-political mode of resistance and agency. By focusing on the emergence of these concepts in Le Village de l'Allemand, however, the author demonstrates how melancholia can lead the grieving subject to conflate victims and perpetrators and to appropriate the victim subject-position. Sansal's novel thus calls into question the suitability of melancholia as an ethico-political paradigm, signaling the need for new modes of working through the past that attend to the singularity of historical events.","creator":["Lucy Brisley"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.55","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b09f6c45-c7d1-35d2-808b-3e5ffcc57cc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.55"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Melancholia and Victimhood in Boualem Sansal's Le Village de l'Allemand: Ou Le journal des fr\u00e8res Schiller<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.55","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11087,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[214249,214454],[224455,224740]],"Locations in B":[[19742,19947],[22343,22625]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay revisits Erving Goffman's question regarding the connection between couple relationships and gender construction, expanding upon it by examining the ambivalent relationship of couples towards gender (in)difference, in which the latter is constitutive of their formation. On the one hand, couples exploit the (in)equality of their gender composition, while, on the other, they systematically ignore it in order to establish individualized personal relationships. The article culminates in a sociological diagnosis of this ambivalence, with statistical inequalities between men and women emerging as an aggregate effect of millions of small dyadic entities, each searching for their own relational meaning. How might they reconstruct their sexual inequality in view of the fact that gender is losing its relevance? Meanwhile, what used to be thought of as homosexual and heterosexual relations are losing their meaning as gender relations.","creator":["Stefan Hirschauer"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65796674-d8ff-34d8-95ee-e828b4355e7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44979863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender (In)Difference in Gender (Un)Equal Couples. Intimate Dyads Between Gender Nostalgia and Post Genderism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979863","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aage A. Hansen-L\u00f6ve","P\u0159elo\u017eil Tom\u00e1\u0161 Chud\u00fd"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45117580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567949564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36d22003-ed4d-3e85-8fdc-02ba46126dfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45117580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","issueNumber":"2","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Cesk\u00e1 literatura","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eStvo\u0159en\u00fd \u2014 ne zrozen\u00fd\u201c ANTIGENERICK\u00c9 PSAN\u00cd","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45117580","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":16214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines preadolescent girls in a group setting as they coconstructed heteronormativity. The authors contend that heteronormativity is not the product of a coming-of-age transformation but instead an everyday part of life, even for very young social actors. It emerges from the gender divide between boys and girls but is also reproduced by and for girls themselves. In the Girl Project, the authors sought to understand younger girls' interests, skills, and concerns. They conducted nine focus groups with 43 elementary school girls, most of whom were age nine or younger. They observed these girls as they defined \"girls' interests\" as boy centered and as they performed heteronormativity for other girls. This article contributes to filling the gap in research on gender and sexuality from children's own points of view.","creator":["KRISTEN MYERS","LAURA RAYMOND"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27809264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eacce2f7-5504-35ea-8a02-74df2e418f98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27809264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ELEMENTARY SCHOOL GIRLS AND HETERONORMATIVITY: The Girl Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27809264","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review essay explores Josiah Young's project of developing a liberatory Pan-Africanism that is attuned to cultural diversity and Victor Anderson's advocacy of postmodern cultural criticism in African-American religious thought. After situating African-American religious thought as a branch of Africana thought, the author examines these two religious thinkers' work as an effort to forge a position on African-American religious thought--including its relation to theology--in an age where even theory is treated as a god that is about to die. At the conclusion, secularism emerges as a religious project that normatively undergirds the methodological dimensions of these works..","creator":["Lewis R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40018233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85a808ea-21cf-39ee-a34d-30894d213ecd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40018233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pan-Africanism and African-American Liberation in a Postmodern World: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40018233","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Neil Leach"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29544753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5df82d33-d93a-3c42-a83a-a36cbc4de9a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29544753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","issueNumber":"49","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Belonging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29544753","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5919,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431288,431979]],"Locations in B":[[8551,9238]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contemporary international criminal jurisprudence has fashioned a legal paradigm encoding the crime of genocide as a violation of moral law. Structured by an ethos of deontological retributivism, it has posited a set of institutional and conceptual mechanisms designed to situate and stabilize the meaning of genocide. The articulation of this paradigm has entailed the bracketing or suspending of alternative discursive strategies and institutions, particularly those inscribed with a traditional\/contextual value. Configuring the social fact of genocide under a normative framework of retribution often fails to address the realities and needs of the local populations who have suffered through severe social trauma. In the intensely unstable space of post-genocidal societies, such as Rwanda, the mandating of formal legal structures by international judicial authorities may constitute a genuine barrier to the critical appropriation of the fact of genocide into the communal memory by imposing a set of privileged frameworks without recognizing the formal integrity and constructive potential of local strategies.","creator":["Jason Benjamin Fink"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218553"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2927ebec-0695-3b72-8090-af0a66fe4e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27607943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanlaw"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Law","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Deontological Retributivism and the Legal Practice of International Jurisprudence: The Case of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607943","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":18141,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62841,63329]],"Locations in B":[[70737,71226]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yael Zerubavel"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1d774fe-4967-38a8-9b2b-bcfd73fd821b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40972062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Memory, the Rebirth of the Native, and the \"Hebrew Bedouin\" Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972062","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":11952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT Eighteenth-century British narratives describing female cross-dressers often attempt to explain how the cross-dresser performs maleness despite her lack of certain physical markers of masculinity. One of the elements of masculinity that these texts often focus on is facial hair. This absence of a facial beard is overcome by the cross-dresser\u2019s appeal to other women: the desires of other women become the cross-dresser\u2019s \u201cbeards.\u201d At the heart of these narratives, though, is an essential contradiction: although these texts posit that only a man can elicit desires from women, the cross-dresser appeals to other women precisely due to her gender ambiguity, not necessarily due to her performance of maleness. By portraying the female cross-dresser\u2019s act of acquiring a metaphorical beard to disguise her lack of facial hair, such narratives destabilize categories of gender and sexuality and reveal the cultural fantasies of gender fluidity that fascinated the reading public of the eighteenth century. Further, the notion of \u201cbearding\u201d opens up new avenues for understanding and analyzing female same-sex desire in the early modern period, as the desires of the cross-dresser\u2019s \u201cbeards\u201d suggest that desire is not founded on traditional gender binaries but can, and often does, exceed them.","creator":["ULA LUKSZO KLEIN"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.16.4.119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a22ed94f-fb34-38c9-84f4-61b63c659406"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jearlmodcultstud.16.4.119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Eighteenth-Century Female Cross-Dressers and Their Beards","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.16.4.119","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434702,434824]],"Locations in B":[[8452,8574]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth M. Cannon"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e1b2b01-8a20-3623-8d41-16150a49a035"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Following the Ghost of Lesbian Identity in Paula Martinac's \"Out of Time\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315244","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43938,44442]],"Locations in B":[[42535,43074]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I argue that educators can utilize mindfulness practices to enhance the efficacy of anti-oppressive pedagogy. The philosophies of Wittgenstein and Nagarjuna provide a holistic human ontology and show that learning affects students at all levels: mind, body, emotion, and spirit. My analysis of the phenomenology of thinking reveals the modes of relationship to ideation. I have proposed mindfulness practice as a proven technique to address the non-cognitive forms of attachment to ideation that may remain in force despite the most thorough-going intellectual change. \/\/\/ Dans cet article, l'auteure fait valoir que les enseignants peuvent utiliser des pratiques attentionn\u00e9es pour augmenter l'efficacit\u00e9 de la p\u00e9dagogie libertaire. Les philosophies de Wittgenstein et de Nagarjuna permettent une ontologie humaine holistique et d\u00e9montrent que l'apprentissage affecte les \u00e9tudiants sur tous les plans: l'intelligence, le corps, les \u00e9motions et l'esprit. Les analyses de la ph\u00e9nom\u00e9nologie de la pens\u00e9e r\u00e9v\u00e8lent les types de relation \u00e0 l'id\u00e9ation. La pratique attentionn\u00e9e est propos\u00e9e comme une technique qui a fait ses preuves pour traiter les formes d'attachement hors du champ cognitif \u00e0 l'id\u00e9ation qui demeure active malgr\u00e9 le plus profond changement intellectuel.","creator":["Deborah Orr"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1602246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd37d035-73a3-36e2-9794-bbc77e53d8a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1602246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Uses of Mindfulness in Anti-Oppressive Pedagogies: Philosophy and Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1602246","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kerry Fine"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43023001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e72e753d-8f36-3175-b807-5750e1a27f1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43023001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"She Hits Like a Man, but She Kisses Like a Girl: TV Heroines, Femininity, Violence, and Intimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43023001","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8438,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441150,441651]],"Locations in B":[[5797,6298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brett Levinson"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sex without Sex, Queering the Market, the Collapse of the Political, the Death of Difference, and Aids: Hailing Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566238","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[77268,77337]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard T. Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7698dd5-89e9-363a-9e77-5f22c41f547c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Intelligible\/Unintelligible: A Two-Pronged Proposition for Queer Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237430","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":2932,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473861,473952]],"Locations in B":[[1477,1568]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jonathan Crewe"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23131521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e61c7d24-0bfb-38a6-9306-a747908ff6d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23131521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"DISORDERLY LOVE: SODOMY REVISITED IN MARLOWE'S \"EDWARD II\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23131521","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":6559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JILL NEUMAYER-DEPIPER"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02280671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"503355356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234716"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c00edc6-7cc5-3a6a-8e0e-b4d2d0c8ab31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43894833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"forlearningmath"}],"isPartOf":"For the Learning of Mathematics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"FLM Publishing Association","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"TEACHER IDENTITY WORK IN MATHEMATICS TEACHER EDUCATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894833","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6381,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147006,147162],[450235,450568]],"Locations in B":[[12525,12686],[36108,36438]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yurika Tamura"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40795bb0-30c2-3e59-afc5-62d11806ff1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mimesis, Contention, and Corporeality of Otherness: Reading the Haircuts of Undocumented Immigrants' Daughters in Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11452,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477853,477925]],"Locations in B":[[66436,66507]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Commeyras","Marjorie Faulstich Orellana","Bertram C. Bruce","Lorri Neilsen"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/748186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"458","pagination":"pp. 458-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Conversations: What Do Feminist Theories Have to Offer to Literacy, Education, and Research?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748186","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9298,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475218,475303]],"Locations in B":[[53142,53239]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Professor Ertman engages Vicki Schultz's critique of proposals to remunerate homemaking labor on two fronts. First she questions the way Professor Schultz seems to assume a rigid barrier between love and work, suggesting instead that legal feminists need not choose between work for love and work for wages as the cornerstone of feminist legal reform. Second she challenges Schultz's suggestion that proposals to remunerate homemaking labor are backward thinking. Since wage labor is not the only route to citizenship, Professor Ertman contends, proposals to remunerate homemaking labor can buttress many women's citizenship claims. In particular, she explains, they have the potential to effect both positive change by getting cash to many economically marginalized women and normative change by reconstructing gender and sexual orientation.","creator":["Martha M. Ertman"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3640db3b-2b0d-308f-9b15-03a9cc9e3306"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"864","pageStart":"848","pagination":"pp. 848-864","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Love and Work: A Response to Vicki Schultz's \"Life's Work\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123763","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":8719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Peraino","Suzanne G. Cusick"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2013.66.3.825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be79fd98-20c3-35c5-8f67-ff9606b2d94d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jams.2013.66.3.825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"872","pageStart":"825","pagination":"pp. 825-872","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Music and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2013.66.3.825","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":22544,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[136737,136821]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Research with predominately minority, urban students has documented an educational \"gender gap,\" where girls tend to be more likely to go to college, make higher grades, and aspire to higher status occupations than boys. We know less, however, about inequality, gender, and schooling in rural contexts. Does a similar gap emerge among the rural poor? How does gender shape the educational experiences of rural students? This article explores these questions by drawing on participant observation and student interviews at a predominately white and low-income rural high school. I find a substantial gap favoring girls in this context, and I analyze how understandings of masculinity shaped schooling using the theory of hegemonic masculinity. The findings suggest that boys' underachievement is actually rooted in masculine dominance and related to particular constructions of gender and social class.","creator":["EDWARD M. MORRIS"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d5a5cef-9754-393b-9db4-392f641d7383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"751","pageStart":"728","pagination":"pp. 728-751","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"REDNECKS,\" \"RUTTERS,\" AND 'RITHMETIC: Social Class, Masculinity, and Schooling in a Rural Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821692","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bicycle was one of the most important consumer technologies in Finland during the interwar period, but that period of bicycle's history is largely unstudied. This article about Finnish rural cycling practices considers the mutual process of shaping between gender and the bicycle. The analysis is based on a large quantity of written memory sources that permit studying everyday bicycle use from the viewpoint of users. The bicycle's spread to the countryside from the late-nineteenth century on marked a new process in its development and use, separate from the preceding bicycle boom among prosperous city-dwellers. Looking at the cycling practices of elderly farmers' wives and young hired women, for example, shows us that the bicycle became a radical innovation in rural life. Its uses and success were closely connected to the changes happening in the culture of the countryside. Considering the performative construction of gender helps one to understand the many uses and meanings of the bicycle in the countryside. A concrete example of this is the bicycle rituals connected to the sexuality of rural youth.","creator":["Tiina M\u00e4nnist\u00f6-Funk"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f61073-16e1-3662-b7a2-6cc4982cff07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23791375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gendered Practices in Finnish Cycling, 1890\u20141939","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791375","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gina L. Hicks"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13667630-6d8b-3b38-a039-18e192ffcfbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reterritorializing Desire: The Failure of Ceremony in \"Absalom, Absalom!\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907774","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cristina Mathews"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b1fecb-9feb-31f4-bf3c-ce8bf287efac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30040422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"489","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-489","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Masquerade as Experiment Gender and Representation in Mercedes Cabello de Carbonera's El Conspirador. Autobiograf\u00eda de un hombre p\u00fablico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040422","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":9429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ecology and constructivism are motivated by broadly shared political aspirations and subscribe to similar critiques of technocratism, patriarchy, and \"instrumental rationality.\" But they diverge considerably in respect to the discourses they offer on \"nature.\" By staging an encounter between ecological argument and feminist constructivist theory, this article seeks to illuminate, and to indicate the means of resolving, the ontological tensions between these respective critiques of modernity. It recognizes that the constructivist emphasis on the \"discursivity\" of nature offers an important corrective to the more simplistic, and potentially reactionary, aspects of ecological rhetoric but defends a realist perspective as essential to the coherence of any gender theory and politics.","creator":["Kate Soper"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"115112b2-9776-3d50-8272-f47da7d22e06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Feminism and Ecology: Realism and Rhetoric in the Discourses of Nature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690018","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Fraiman"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/668051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8645829-02ab-39a4-be51-7164f9b9b7c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/668051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Pussy Panic versus Liking Animals: Tracking Gender in Animal Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/668051","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From the standpoint of feminism and Marxism, postmodernism is criticized, focusing upon its pr\u00e9tentions, passivism, and liberalism.","creator":["Catharine MACKINNON","Elizabeth Tuttle","Annie Bidet Mordrel"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f94e8a0e-d92d-3fa7-8148-16fdf7ada027"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45300288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"30","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"F\u00e9minisme, marxisme et postmodernisme","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45300288","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13954,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497485,497527]],"Locations in B":[[47112,47154]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This contribution revives the materialist approaches which featured prominently in second-wave feminism. The objective is to shed new light on current scholarship on migrant domestic services. The article starts by highlighting the most important materialist contributions to feminist theory. From there, a comprehensive review of the literature on (migrant) domestic services is mobilized in order to show the influence on research results of the inclusion or absence of a materialist perspective. The article then draws on the findings of a project investigating the \u201ccare chain\u201d linking Belgium, Poland, and Ukraine. These findings demonstrate that the (implicitly or explicitly) adopted feminist paradigm influences the presence or absence of redistribution in the findings of a research project. In order to avoid such partial results, the contribution proposes an innovative method of feminist data collection and\/or analysis. Based on the \u201casking the other question\u201d method of intersectionality, this new methodology guarantees that issues of importance to materialist and post-structuralist feminisms will be simultaneously and systematically addressed throughout the research process.","creator":["Anna Safuta"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d3e9259-aadf-3b2c-81cd-36be462afdcf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Migrant Domestic Services and the Revival of Marxist Feminisms: Asking the Other \u2018Other Question\u2019 as a New Research Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/jdivegendstud.3.1.0017","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Uma oficina de ONG na tem\u00e1tica de \u201cg\u00eanero\u201d e a atividade de criar pombos d\u00e3o as deixas para que este artigo exponha as dificuldades envolvidas na caracteriza\u00e7\u00e3o das experi\u00eancias de rapazes (shab\u00e2b) do campo de refugiados palestinos de Chatila, no L\u00edbano, como \u201cperformance de g\u00eanero\u201d. O conceito de \u201cg\u00eanero\u201d, com efeito, n\u00e3o funciona em todos os contextos e momentos. Se serve para iluminar as biografias dos pais dos atuais shab\u00e2b de Chatila - os fidaiyyin (combatentes), cuja passagem \u00e0 vida adulta foi acentuadamente informada pela luta para retornar \u00e0 terra natal - n\u00e3o d\u00e1 conta de apreender a experi\u00eancia daqueles que disp\u00f5em de acesso muito limitado a elementos de poder, caso dos shab\u00e2b. Em lugar de tom\u00e1-los como \u201cemasculados\u201d, por n\u00e3o poderem \u201cperformatizar\u201d adequadamente um \u201cg\u00eanero\u201d devido aos constrangimentos pol\u00edtico-econ\u00f4micos a que est\u00e3o submetidos, o que antes fa\u00e7o \u00e9 problematizar o pr\u00f3prio conceito de \u201cg\u00eanero\u201d. Assim, o estudo sugere que tal conceito, na medida em que se move num universo sem\u00e2ntico definido pela busca de poder pol\u00edtico, levanta questionamentos quando aplicado a ambientes anti-Estado, como \u00e9 o caso de Chatila nos dias correntes - uma problem\u00e1tica n\u00e3o de todo estranha \u00e0 linha clastriana de pensamento. Using a workshop on \"gender\" held at a NGO and pigeonraising as cues, this article exposes the difficulties entailed by framing the experiences of the young men (shab\u00e2b) from the Shatila Palestinian Refugee Camp in Lebanon as \"gender-performance\". Indeed, \"gender\" as a concept does not work at all settings and at all times. While it serves to illuminate the biographies of the shab\u00e2bs fathers, the fida iyy\u00ecn (fighters), whose coming-of-age was very much informed by the fight to return to their homeland, it fails to capture the experience of those, like todays shab\u00e2b from Shatila, with very limited access to elements of power. Rather than framing the shab\u00e2b as \"emasculated\", for not being able to properly \"perform\" a \"gender\", due to the political-economic constraints placed upon them, I rather take issue with \"gender\" itself. Accordingly, this study suggests that as \"gender\" circulates in a semantic universe defined by the quest for political power, the concept raises issues when applied to anti-State settings like todays Shatila -a problematic not at all alien to Clastress line of reasoning.","creator":["Gustavo Barbosa","Fernando Fedola L. B. Vianna"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00347701"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54031079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"584be8bd-be55-30ce-8ab8-c6850f0f7843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43923884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviantr"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Antropologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"677","pagination":"pp. 677-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Revista de Antropologia","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Brigas de galo pelo avesso: Fazendo \"sexo\" e desfazendo \"genero\" em Chatila, L\u00edbano","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923884","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The influence of feminist theory on philosophy has been less pervasive than it might have been. This is due in part to inherent tensions between feminist critique and the university as an institution, and to philosophy's place in the academy. These tensions, if explored rather than resisted, can result in a revitalized, more explicitly feminist conception of philosophy itself, wherein philosophy is seen as an attempt to rethink the deepest aspects of experience and culture.","creator":["David Golumbia"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eee0532e-4f80-3f53-a48b-cc6ec8adbcf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rethinking Philosophy in the Third Wave of Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810224","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7549,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524252]],"Locations in B":[[46111,46189]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Nash"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76b3b61f-2775-378d-bb48-7adff35d4908"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remapping and Renaming: New Cartographies of Identity, Gender and Landscape in Ireland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395194","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The fluid, slipping language of Marilynne Robinson's novel Housekeeping masterfully disrupts conventional narrative form. This essay draws on Judith Butler's work to argue that in the film Housekeeping, director Bill Forsyth translates the fluidity of Robinson's writing into its visual counterparts.","creator":["ERIKA SPOHRER"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f83f4eda-312c-36ff-81f4-37d8c5746c17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Translating from Language to Image in Bill Forsyth's \"Housekeeping\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029612","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7172,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[431239,431480],[436475,436592],[440792,440992],[455896,456221],[464458,464595]],"Locations in B":[[6294,6520],[8981,9098],[29246,29463],[39813,40138],[40411,40545]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Anglo-American lawmakers are in the midst of introducing a series of anti-discrimination protections for trans people. By and large, they are making this change by adding the terms \u2018gender identity\u2019 and \u2018gender expression\u2019 to a variety of human rights law instruments. In June 2017, for example, the Parliament of Canada passed Bill C-16, An Act to Amend the Canadian Human Rights Act and the Criminal Code. The legislation adds the terms \u2018gender identity or expression\u2019 to the Canadian Human Rights Act, along with the hate crimes provisions of the Criminal Code. Similar pieces of legislation have been introduced in the United States and the United Kingdom. While legal scholarship has spent considerable time debating the merits of such legislation, comparatively less attention has been paid to the plural, and often contradictory, history of \u2018gender identity\u2019 and \u2018gender expression.\u2019 This article traces the origins of these terms, arguing that \u2018gender identity\u2019 is the product of mid-century psychiatric discourses that constructed trans people as a narrow class of persons. \u2018Gender expression\u2019 is a comparatively newer concept, emerging in the 1990s in concert with performative theories of gender that sought to demonstrate how disciplinary norms are imposed on all members of society. The contemporary reliance on these terms reflects what Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick has called the tension between \u2018minoritizing\u2019 and \u2018universalizing\u2019 accounts of gender and sexuality. The article is organized in four parts. Part I traces the origins of the term \u2018gender identity,\u2019 along with how it migrated from clinical contexts to legal forums. In 1994, the City of San Francisco became the first Anglo-American jurisdiction to entrench the term in a human rights instrument. Part II tracks the comparatively shorter history of the term \u2018gender expression.\u2019 The Part then traces the term\u2019s reception into human rights discourse, with New York City becoming the first Anglo-American jurisdiction to use the term \u2018gender expression\u2019 in 2000. Part III examines how two terms emerging out of different historical moments and with different sets of normative preoccupations have recently fused together to capture how individuals internally identify their gender and externally perform it. The article concludes by anticipating future implications for the corpus of trans human rights law, which will inevitably continue to grapple with the tension between minoritizing and universalizing approaches.","creator":["Kyle Kirkup"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420220"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51785050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235681"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6211ff79-c85d-3f44-a305-808926baac46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90019659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univtorolawj"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Toronto Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ORIGINS OF GENDER IDENTITY AND GENDER EXPRESSION IN ANGLO-AMERICAN LEGAL DISCOURSE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019659","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":17470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124594,124745]],"Locations in B":[[74535,74686]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article we first reflect on the significant and positive impact of postmodernism for organizational theorizing during the past decade. Through several examples we point to contributions that poststructuralist perspectives have brought to the field. Finally, we consider four contemporary theoretical tendencies-feminist poststructuralist theorizing, postcolonial analyses, actor-network theory, and narrative approaches to knowledge-as heirs (apparent) of the postmodern turn for organizational theorizing past postmodernism.","creator":["Marta B. Cal\u00e1s","Linda Smircich"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/259347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03637425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d21ed82f-2de5-3972-ae0c-b576767726b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/259347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Academy of Management Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"671","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-671","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Past Postmodernism? Reflections and Tentative Directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/259347","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":16889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tamar Katz"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"150049cc-b462-3ff9-86f3-c1cc48cfebe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism, Subjectivity, and Narrative Form: Abstraction in \"The Waves\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107058","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tibetans in Lhasa negotiate development, as a hegemonic project, through idioms animated by situated practices and historically sedimented memories. Two related idioms through which development is experienced are a pervasive trope of Tibetan indolence and one that describes Tibetans as being spoiled. A Gramscian analysis of contradictory consciousness is critical to understanding the trope of indolence, which is both a performative speech act and a reference to patterns of labor and time allocation. The trope is informed by contemporary state development discourse and national value-codings of \"quality\" under economic reform, as well as culturally, historically, and religiously constituted notions of proper work. These idioms tie together ambivalence about multiple aspects of life as transformed by development, including underemployment, urbanization, and chemically intensive agriculture. Though culturally specific, these idioms of development are not \"merely cultural.\" Instead, they are shaped by specific policies for economic development and political control in the Tibet Autonomous Region. These idioms, in turn, also shape possibilities for maneuver within the larger trajectory of reform and development. This analysis builds on the work of geographers, anthropologists, and others who have recently argued that conceptualizations of development as a monolithic and globally uniform discourse elide the cultural effects of development as well as the grounded practices through which it is enacted and contested.","creator":["Emily T. Yeh"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4620291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"024a85fa-cbad-32e7-bda7-b8a7915b23e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4620291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"612","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-612","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tropes of Indolence and the Cultural Politics of Development in Lhasa, Tibet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4620291","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":16705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Janice Carlisle"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba7f667b-714d-335f-9a98-81539a9e1a01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Smell of Class: British Novels of the 1860s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058536","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":11649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonja Lynn Downing"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.1.0054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ab50585-e2e7-3aed-a323-698f27ada1f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.1.0054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Society for Ethnomusicology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Agency, Leadership, and Gender Negotiation in Balinese Girls\u2019 Gamelans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.54.1.0054","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b60620b-4ad8-3635-993c-296d92751aa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316041","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Megan Munson-Warnken"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340561"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618570"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007214265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46b7ea94-98be-398c-8e2b-29a24d18c76d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26632440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readingteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Reading Teacher","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"593","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-593","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The High Cost of \"Girl Books\" for Young Adolescent Boys","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26632440","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":7525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Les efforts d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s pour d\u00e9finir des droits visant \u00e0 limiter la discrimination contre les femmes ont conduit \u00e0 am\u00e9liorer la situation personnelle de beaucoup d'entre elles. Toutefois, dans la mesure o\u00f9 ils correspondent aux param\u00e8tres masculins de l'\u00e9galit\u00e9 et de l'ind\u00e9pendance des individus et les renforcent, les droits et le discours sur les droits ne sont pas suffisants pour d\u00e9construire les bases structurelles de la discrimination de genre. Cet article entend red\u00e9finir les rapports de genre gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 un nouveau mode de citoyennet\u00e9. Il propose d'abandonner le mythe de l'ind\u00e9pendance (masculine) qui d\u00e9termine les droits et la citoyennet\u00e9 modernes, et d'assumer la nature interd\u00e9pendante des \u00eatres humains en tant que dispensateurs \u2013 et r\u00e9cepteurs \u2013 de services. Fond\u00e9 sur la notion normative d'autonomie relationnelle, cet article se propose d'aller vers un mod\u00e8le de citoyennet\u00e9 con\u00e7u comme altruicit\u00e9. Efforts to create legal rights that would curtail discrimination against women has led to improvements in the situation of many individual women. In so far as they respond to and enforce masculine conceptions of equality and individual independence, however, rights and rights discourse do not suffice to deconstruct the structural grounds of gender discrimination. This paper sets out to redefine gender relations through a new model of citizenship. It proposes that we abandon the myth of (male) independence that shapes modern rights-based citizenship and take the full measure of human beings' interdependent and relational nature as care-givers and -receivers. Based on relational autonomy as a normative notion, this paper sets forth a model of citizenship conceived as caringzenship.","creator":["Blanca Rodr\u00edguez-Ruiz","Annick Boisset"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ec73bea-f1ec-35c4-bdcf-d4f84b17efce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"D\u00e9passer le patriarcat: la construction de la citoyennet\u00e9 comme \"altruicit\u00e9\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586489","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":12442,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[80413,80465]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"International research and policy interest in resilience has increased enormously during the last decade. Resilience is now considered to be a valuable asset or resource with which to promote health and well-being and forms part of a broader trend towards strength based as opposed to deficit models of health. And while there is a developing critique of resilience's conceptual limits and normative assumptions, to date there is less discussion of the subject underpinning these notions, nor related issues of subjectivity, identity or the body. Our aim in this article is to begin to address this gap. We do so by re-examining the subject within two established narratives of resilience, as 'found' and 'made'. We then explore the potential of a third narrative, which we term resilience 'unfinished'. This latter story is informed by feminist poststructural understandings of the subject, which in turn, resonate with recently articulated understandings of an emerging psychosocial subject and the contribution of psychoanalysis to these debates. We then consider the potential value of this poststructural, performative and embodied psychosocial subject and discuss the implications for resilience theory, practice and research.","creator":["Kay Aranda","Laetitia Zeeman","Julie Scholes","Arantxa Santa-Mar\u00eda Morales"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15fb1846-2acb-3867-a291-36ba42c62c21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26650201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"548","pagination":"pp. 548-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The resilient subject: Exploring subjectivity, identity and the body in narratives of resilience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650201","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While intersectionality has gained traction as a major empirical paradigm in the social sciences, it has not been incorporated equally within all subfields. Recent calls for greater attention to the interconnections among race, class, gender and sexuality as they shape organizing processes highlight the tenuous and uncertain position of intersectionality within organization studies. This study employs quantitative content analysis to analyze all articles published in three major organization studies journals over the most recent two decades. We find little evidence of intersectional research approaches, with less than 1% of articles employing intersectional theory or methods. Greater percentages (up to 12%) focus on unitary social location, with gender and nation predominant. We also provide specific exemplars of how intersectionality was employed in the 1% of the articles. We discuss implications of the marginalization of intersectionality within mainstream organization studies.","creator":["Rachel Allison","Pallavi Banerjee"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ef9823c-66eb-39a2-8345-7c5ea67d305f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Intersectionality and Social Location in Organization Studies, 1990-2009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496985","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8443,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[56922,56984]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Building on Tim Bergfelder's distinction between reputedly \"open\" Hollywood films and \"culturally specific\" European fare, this article focuses on the production and reception of Pedro Almod\u00f3var's Todo sobre mi madre (All about My Mother, 1999). Critics have pinpointed intertextual references but have assumed that the Spanish filmmaker draws on \"universal\" texts to make a \"culturally specific\" vision legible for international audiences. The binaries on which such a model is predicated do not withstand close cinematic or sociohistorical scrutiny. Todo sobre mi madre conveys distinct meanings in Spain as compared to the international arena; this is not exclusively, or even necessarily predominantly, the result of autochthonous reference points; it is also due to the contingencies of reception when Hollywood films are translated out of their domestic habitat. Tracing some of these journeys and identifying various interpretive communities will develop understanding of Almod\u00f3var's craft and commercial success, and also help contextualize and potentially reconcile some of the frequently embittered battles between Spanish and Anglo-American critics over the right to define and describe his cinematic output.","creator":["Duncan Wheeler"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26608645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25784900"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa2e1758-bdfc-33be-a45e-d8c74c70bbdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26608645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcinemedistud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Cinema and Media Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Michigan Publishing","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Dis)locating Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26608645","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":15371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Performance Intertextualities in Pedro Almod\u00f3var's Todo sobre mi madre<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David R. Shumway"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"103f0c48-69d0-366b-a840-2de6922cbd92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Disciplinary Identities; Or, Why is Walter Neff Telling this Story?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550453","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[30465,30516]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne O'Byrne"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439375","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":3138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While the social research of Henry Mayhew drew attention to the street sellers of London in the nineteenth century, Mayhew only hinted at the full scope of the threat these sellers posed to Victorian capitalism and bourgeois society. Street selling was taken up by many different types of workers who had become unemployed or frustrated with their previous employment. Distinguished by the performative qualities of their work as well as by the sale of inexpensive commodities to the poor, street sellers provide a distinctive example of class conflict in London. Such sellers were frequently associated with Chartism and other radical agitation, and they often took on roles as orators or social commentators at public meetings. Many elements of their subversive potential were virtually inherent to their class. Whether in their links to a precarious commons, their commitment to socialization amidst economic transactions, or their struggle for space on the streets, these sellers posed a continual threat to the discipline, values, and rhythms of the larger capitalist economy. They provided an alternative model of social and economic life that was, in many ways, immediately visible to the public and which took on, over the course of the century, a more respected status. Street sellers harnessed public sympathy, established an important presence amid the working class, and expressed a unique vision of freedom and solidarity.","creator":["Stephen Jankiewicz"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fff60370-137f-312d-8723-93911acbf1eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23354136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Dangerous Class: The Street Sellers of Nineteenth-Century London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354136","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This literature review of dance and sexual expression considers dance and religion, dance and sexuality as a source of power, manifestations of sexuality in Western theater art and social dance, plus ritual and non-Western social dance. Expressions of gender, sexual orientation, asexuality, ambiguity, and adult entertainment exotic dance are presented. Prominent concerns in the literature are the awareness, closeting, and denial of sexuality in dance; conflation of sexual expression and promiscuity of gender and sexuality, of nudity and sexuality, and of dancer intention and observer interpretation; and inspiration for infusing sexuality into dance. Numerous disciplines (American studies, anthropology, art history, comparative literature, criminology, cultural studies, communication, dance, drama, English, history, history of consciousness, journalism, law, performance studies, philosophy, planning, retail geography, psychology, social work, sociology, and theater arts) have explored dance and sexual expression, drawing upon the following concepts, which are not mutually exclusive: critical cultural theory, feminism, colonialism, Orientalism, postmodernism, poststructuralism, queer theory, and semiotics. Methods of inquiry include movement analysis, historical investigation, anthropological fieldwork, autoethnography, focus groups, surveys, and self-reflection or autobiographical narrative. Directions for future exploration are addressed.","creator":["Judith Lynne Hanna"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a89b349a-e9a4-38c1-8e22-e9a7eb1f3b1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25676451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dance and Sexuality: Many Moves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676451","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":27772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[268598,268717]],"Locations in B":[[37064,37183]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julio C. Gimenez"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10a0fe5c-761a-3f3b-9f91-aa3d3be8a83d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888666","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the new millennium, oppression will continue to affect social workers' clients. This article discusses training clinical practitioners to address oppression. Drawing on poststructural, postmodern, feminist, and social constructivist theories, the article argues that to challenge oppression, clinical practice must address the dialectical relationship between private troubles and public issues while transforming professional relationships that disempower clients. The article describes a second-year MSW clinical practice sequence taught from feminist, poststructuralist, postmodern, and social constructionist perspectives, where students learn to assess the impacts of oppression, discover clients' strengths, and respond in personal, social, and political contexts.","creator":["Christine A. Dietz"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23043527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10437797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41157004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a951198d-342d-3254-97fb-4cf643ddace4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23043527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocworked"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social Work Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"RESHAPING CLINICAL PRACTICE FOR THE NEW MILLENNIUM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23043527","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erin Graff Zivin"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aporias of Marranismo: Sabina Berman's \"En el Nombre de Dios\" and Jom Tob Azulay's \"O Judeu\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949807","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joachim Fiebach"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"066c2d85-24aa-3aad-826d-f73055a44423"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theatricality: From Oral Traditions to Televised \"Realities\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685476","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11124,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40469,41040]],"Locations in B":[[18146,18717]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tony E. Adams"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f989de8-80d6-3452-aab1-386a70f47302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41179130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SPEAKING FOR OTHERS: Finding the \"Whos\" of Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179130","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":5528,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[31675,31744]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jen Shelton"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb9c7100-905b-330f-9f1e-44254897a927"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bad Girls: Gerty, Cissy, and the Erotics of Unruly Speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473789","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The active participation of children and young men in armed conflicts has not lost its significance as a global phenomenon in the twenty-first century. In Eurasia, where numerous regions are plagued by violent conflicts, many of the everyday realities these young soldiers experienced still remain unclear and continue to be under-researched. Through the use of biographical interviews, this essay retrospectively explores the ways in which war in Nagorno-Karabakh impinged on male teenagers' identities. A biographical approach not only reveals these former young soldiers' experiences which may have otherwise never been told but also allows them to reflect on their war experiences more than ten years later. In this way, we aim to complement existing research on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with new insights.","creator":["NONA SHAHNAZARIAN","ULRIKE ZIEMER"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09668136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6b11797-ac22-3c43-8843-12dea15c16b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23274950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"euroasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Europe-Asia Studies","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"1683","pageStart":"1667","pagination":"pp. 1667-1683","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Young Soldiers' Tales of War in Nagorno-Karabakh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274950","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9093,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431221]],"Locations in B":[[11783,12024]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Gillett"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"318ad8b2-f9c6-33d5-bd32-ac3e4e6793e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40621760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Judith Butler (*1956), Das Unbehagen der Geschlechter<\/italic> (1990)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621760","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5597,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[48212,48614],[86448,86583],[102463,102739],[102961,103180],[445854,446479]],"Locations in B":[[8723,9126],[19851,19986],[27387,27662],[27676,27895],[29912,30537]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heather Love"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4024445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f82599a8-db35-34db-8571-b8c458b2a4fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4024445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Dwelling in Ambivalence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4024445","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Previously, cellphone ownership in South Africa was for a privileged few, but today it has become an essential part of the adolescent fashion accessory. Similarly, access to the internet is more widespread with the rise of the mobile internet, and online social networking applications are very popular in South Africa, particularly among young people across all social classes. This study explores young women's use of mobile and online social networking sites, with specific reference to expressions and experiences of sexual identity via their mobile phones and popular application Facebook. Through a qualitative approach, this study argues that Facebook and MXit provide a space for play, especially for those whose freedom of movement is limited by parental concerns about safety. Online social networks create a cult of femininity and reflect women's role in society and also socialise young women into these roles. Gender and sexuality are lived social relations and ongoing performative processes that are continuously being negotiated. The micro-narrative and practices highlighted in this study present a snapshot of the lived practices of young women and indicate similarities with global trends in terms of online youth cultures. Young women's use of online and mobile social networking resonates with a global youth culture, with tensions around relationships, self-presentation and sexuality located firmly at the centre.","creator":["Tanja Bosch"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ae9e86a-98bc-3167-8dc6-3da0c4ce3608"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23287205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"4 (90)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Young women and 'technologies of the self': Social networking and sexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287205","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Postmodernism refers to (1) postmodern social conditions, i.e. postmodernity, and (2) an allegedly new theory for understanding society. As the latter, postmodernism is a critique of the scientific paradigm which dominates in the Western world. Feminist theory is one of the most vigorous manifestations of postmodernist thought at this time. This paper argues that the postmodern analysis is an extension of important elements of classical social theory. For example, linguistic determinism, epistemological relativism, cultural criticism and left-liberal bias in favor of underdogs are characteristics of Symbolic Interactionism and of other types of interpretive\/humanistic sociology, if not\u2014to some extent\u2014of Sociology itself.","creator":["Tom Kando"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20752084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07423640"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebb2e7f2-ba25-3c7c-9694-aed51191f1d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20752084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejworlpeac"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on World Peace","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Professors World Peace Academy","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POSTMODERNISM: OLD WINE IN NEW BOTTLES?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20752084","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10390,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[60024,60094],[124399,124465]],"Locations in B":[[19225,19295],[25357,25423]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yasmin Nair"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"979fceea-436f-3016-a9c3-0894b306f624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.3.2.0007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"We Were There, We Are Here, Where Are We? Notes Toward a Study of Queer Theory in the Neoliberal University","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0007","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":5212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Scott McClintock"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bdad5cc-e9a0-37d0-8130-959cf2987030"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Penal Colony: Inscription of the Subject in Literature and Law, and Detainees as Legal Non-Persons at Camp X-Ray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468107","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7242,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472666,472800]],"Locations in B":[[40394,40533]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this study we examine how fishers negotiate the tensions and tradeoffs between self-governance and reliance on the state. We address this question using the case of cooperative fishers in Mexico, where the government has historically acted as benefactor to local communities while also positioning itself as the key actor holding the capacity to solve governance problems. We found that framings regarding the scale of the problem influence arguments about when the government should take responsibility and when fishers should be given autonomy. For Mexican cooperativist fishers, the intervention of the state is fundamental for many issues, particularly for problems that transcend fishers\u2019 capacity for action. To better understand how fishers articulate their responsibilities and those of the government in fisheries management, we designed a participatory methodological approach that allowed fishers the opportunity to articulate and prioritize their own needs and concerns. In the space created through our methodology, fishers were also able to reflect about what might be viable policies and interventions for effective fisheries governance on a national scale. Through the act of speech, fishers performed their own understandings of governance processes and at the same time proposed new institutional arrangements and collective governance strategies, while identifying roles that the state should play in nested, multi-level governance. Insights of this study contribute to the discussions about the value of examining the discursive practices as part of politicized performances that actors use to express policy preferences.","creator":["CRISOL M\u00c9NDEZ-MEDINA","ALEJANDRO GARC\u00cdA-LOZANO","AMY HUDSON WEAVER","SALVADOR RODR\u00cdGUEZ VAN DYCK","MAR\u00cdA TERCERO","MATEJA NENADOVIC","XAVIER BASURTO"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48656887","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"175299510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea5d3e48-4ecd-3ba1-a3a9-07702e1dfa90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48656887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcomm"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Commons","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"International Journal of the Commons","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding Collective Action from Mexican Fishers\u2019 Discourses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48656887","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"How Fishers Articulate the Need for the State Support and Self-Governance Capabilities"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RENATE BLUMENFELD-KOSINSKI"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"422695375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"35018315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b504dab-1faa-39dc-aab0-12122c5a86ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43630581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mediumaevum"}],"isPartOf":"Medium \u00c6vum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630581","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I argue for a Wittgensteinian reading of Judith Butler's performative conception of identity in light of Marilyn Frye's analysis of lesbian as nonexistent and Butler's analysis of abject. I suggest that the attempt to articulate a performative lesbian identity must take seriously the contexts within which abjection is vital to maintaining gender, exposing the intimate link between context and the formulation of intention, and shedding light on possible lesbian identities irreducible to abjection.","creator":["Wendy Lee-Lampshire"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e78019bf-89ce-3814-8d76-8158c01650f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Spilling All over the \"Wide Fields of Our Passions\": Frye, Butler, Wittgenstein and the Context(s) of Attention, Intention and Identity (Or: From Arm Wrestling Duck to Abject Being to Lesbian Feminist)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810483","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6743,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[458216,458782]],"Locations in B":[[34930,35499]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5b72894-4858-3334-bb7e-6e78b89ac750"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Colaboraron en este n\u00famero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624553","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ERIN STRIFF"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bda25bf-d4c8-3daf-a651-3858aa16d5f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41556049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bodies of Evidence: Feminist Performance Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556049","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7173,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436475,436962]],"Locations in B":[[11750,12239]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo Os estudos de g\u00eanero sobre o s\u00e9culo XIX cubano t\u00eam privilegiado as mulheres escritoras. Para a aproxima\u00e7\u00e3o a esses discursos, existem v\u00e1rias teorias nos campos liter\u00e1rios e feministas. Por\u00e9m, a incid\u00eancia da classe, da ra\u00e7a, do sexo nas rela\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e na forma\u00e7\u00e3o das subjetividades femininas entre setores populares \u00e9 um tema menos estudado e, sobretudo, a perman\u00eancia das matrizes africanas na nova situa\u00e7\u00e3o. Neste trabalho, busco relacionar esses conceitos com o foco nas negras e nas pardas escravas, sem abandonar a interpreta\u00e7\u00e3o social mais abrangente. As fontes escritas sobre o assunto s\u00e3o fragmentadas, al\u00e9m das distor\u00e7\u00f5es sofridas pela interpreta\u00e7\u00e3o de um terceiro: procurador de justi\u00e7a, s\u00edndico de escravos, escrevente e at\u00e9 historiadores e editores que participaram na organiza\u00e7\u00e3o das mesmas. O estudo aborda os processos de transforma\u00e7\u00e3o das rela\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e das subjetividades femininas, criando formas diferentes dentro do g\u00eanero, pela autonomia de negras e mulatas em rela\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0s normativas masculinas brancas dominantes. Tenta-se dar uma orienta\u00e7\u00e3o mais fluida aos conceitos com o intuito de aprofundar as transforma\u00e7\u00f5es operadas, tanto na rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre os sexos como entre os g\u00eaneros, assim como nos paradoxos que derivaram das mudan\u00e7as sociais no s\u00e9culo XIX cubano. Interessa conhecer o processo pelo qual as mulheres negras e pardas, ainda na marginalidade social \u00e0 qual foram lan\u00e7adas, j\u00e1 livres ou na escravid\u00e3o, foram capazes de reconstruir rela\u00e7\u00f5es sociais com um grande peso do acervo cultural africano, embora este fosse rejeitado pelas institui\u00e7\u00f5es dominantes: a Igreja, a fam\u00edlia branca e o Estado.","creator":["Olga Cabrera"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78db1597-b9e0-35df-a28b-bbc768436dd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90001005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00eanero, sexo e ra\u00e7a e a forma\u00e7\u00e3o de subjetividades femininas em Cuba, s\u00e9culo XIX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001005","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":14219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reviews recent work in the social study of science (Social Studies of Knowledge or SSK), as well as in cultural studies and feminist criticism of the physical sciences, in order to demonstrate the contribution made by these fields of study, and their reading of the history of very recent bio-medical innovations in the spheres of human reproduction and sexuality. In particular, publications in SSK have suggested a dense and complex reading of human-technological relations, and of the ways in which social and gender relations are implicated in them. Considering the parallel between some of these approaches (themselves part of the \u201cdescriptive turn\u201d in the social sciences) and broader economic and social change (the reconfiguration of the self through biotechnologies as an individual promise in a neo-liberal context) the article seeks to envisage how a revitalized historical approach might contribute to these subjects. It might, for example, make more explicit the density of the social and scientific context within which certain technological change occurs; demonstrate the historicity of what is at stake for gender and social relations; and propose a new set of narratives which would recognize the normative political and economic dimensions of technological change.","creator":["Delphine Gardey","Si\u00e2n Reynolds"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238685","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad95c897-5980-3968-8ca0-1bb1f8a0bfeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26238685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing the history of the relations between medicine, gender and the body in the twentieth century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238685","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6712,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476075,476141]],"Locations in B":[[38974,39041]],"subTitle":"a way forward?"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marianne Kielian-Gilbert"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d588d4d0-09ae-3a92-aad3-4608907b55d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of Poetics and Poiesis, Pleasure and Politics-Music Theory and Modes of the Feminine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833151","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7768,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64071,64293]],"Locations in B":[[43783,43998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["TEGAN ZIMMERMAN"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45237631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10632042"},{"name":"oclc","value":"891456947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa2135b4-96bd-3726-b739-d48affb454fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45237631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"simobeaustud"}],"isPartOf":"Simone de Beauvoir Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR'S DIALOGUE WITH PLATO IN \"THE SECOND SEX\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45237631","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4294,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147503,147579]],"Locations in B":[[17830,17906]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christy L. Burns"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a6b6abe-01e3-397e-9aea-6f895b7d8105"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-Dressing Feminist Identities: Tensions between Essential and Constructed Selves in Virginia Woolf's Orlando","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441560","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10104,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[62337,62497],[464613,464780]],"Locations in B":[[37296,37456],[37859,38026]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent anthropology of Melanesia has elaborated an understanding of gender and person through an understanding of exchange, and the notion of the partible person. This article puts into relief the concept of the partible person through a comparison, not with the West, but with South India, where the person has been similarly characterized in contradistinction to the Western bounded individual. Gender in South India is fixed and stable, based in bodily difference between women and men, and importantly focused on the capacity for procreation. In Melanesia gender is performative, shifting and contextually defined. This contrast relates to differences between the two areas in notions of the person and of the exchange of substances or parts of persons.","creator":["Cecilia Busby"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3035019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3035019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Permeable and Partible Persons: A Comparative Analysis of Gender and Body in South India and Melanesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3035019","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":9787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clayton J. Whisnant"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20457149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00089389"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47795498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227108"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22fb3f92-707c-350d-a0f4-31e5c262bad4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20457149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centeurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Central European History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Styles of Masculinity in the West German Gay Scene, 1950-1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20457149","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":18090,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431092,431232]],"Locations in B":[[56686,56826]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"515cd340-5f29-3066-b9f7-5a28a9c996b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":193,"pageEnd":"1480","pageStart":"1290","pagination":"pp. 1290-1480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462925","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":64310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Gergen"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1449092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1047840X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37663768"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d75cdc5-a597-3289-9afc-ff8ae8488b37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1449092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"psycinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Psychological Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epistemology, Gender, and History: Positioning the Lenses of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1449092","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5587,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[409560,409841],[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[30854,31135],[32771,32868]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Th\u00e9r\u00e8se Migraine-George"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43744452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c78f4f9d-5bf3-32fc-9029-1984d8110b43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43744452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Masisi to Activists: Same-Sex Relations and the Haitian Polity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43744452","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[423731,423930]],"Locations in B":[[1098,1297]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marlene Tromp"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"467","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-467","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Gwendolen's Madness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058529","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10081,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436706,436944]],"Locations in B":[[54255,54494]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent research has documented the persistence of unequal gender relations and homophobia in young people's lives. Feminist post-structural theories of gender and socio-cultural theories of learning suggest educators need to understand students' constructions of gender relations, masculine\/feminine desires, and sexuality if they hope to challenge these behaviors. In this article, we examine a diverse group of 47 preteens' constructions of gender relations, masculine\/feminine desires, and sexuality, using a survey, a story from the popular comic \"Archie,\" and individual interviews. We found that although participants produced feminist and patriarchal constructions of gender relations, they constructed masculine and feminine sexuality as uniformly heterosexual. \/\/\/ Des recherches r\u00e9centes indiquent la persistance de relations in\u00e9gales entre les hommes et les femmes et de l'homophobie chez les jeunes. Des th\u00e9ories d'apprentissage poststructuralistes f\u00e9ministes au sujet du genre ainsi que des th\u00e9ories socioculturelles donnent \u00e0 penser que les p\u00e9dagogues ont besoin de comprendre les constructions que se font les \u00e9l\u00e8ves des relations entre les sexes, des d\u00e9sirs masculins et f\u00e9minins et de la sexualit\u00e9 s'ils esp\u00e8rent remettre en question ces comportements. Dans cet article, les auteures analysent, \u00e0 l'aide d'un sondage, d'une histoire tir\u00e9e de la bande dessin\u00e9e \"Archie\" et d'entrevues individuelles, un \u00e9ventail diversifi\u00e9 de 47 constructions que se font des pr\u00e9adolescents des relations entre les sexes, des d\u00e9sirs masculins et f\u00e9minins et de la sexualit\u00e9. Elles ont d\u00e9couvert que les participants ont produit des constructions f\u00e9ministes et patriarcales des relations entre les sexes, mais h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles de la sexualit\u00e9 masculine et f\u00e9minine.","creator":["Lyndsay Moffatt","Bonny Norton","Lyndsay Moffat"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08748776-aee8-37c0-80f4-5dfe0ef92658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20466690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Reading Gender Relations and Sexuality: Preteens Speak Out","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466690","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["V\u00edctor Rodr\u00edguez N\u00fa\u00f1ez"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfd7730e-4315-39c2-bf71-fdc825a1a012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23287006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","issueNumber":"49\/50","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00c9NERO, NACI\u00d3N Y COMPROMISO EN LA L\u00cdRICA DE GERTRUDIS G\u00d3MEZ DE AVELLANEDA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287006","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rolf J. Goebel"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"173dc527-6e17-3866-b833-f1e9b3c43cec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30159675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"464","pagination":"pp. 464-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Unver\u00e4nderlichkeit der Schrift und Gleichzeitigkeit der Methoden-Ungleichzeitigkeiten: Neue Beitr\u00e4ge zur Kafka-Forschung","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159675","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":4501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine A. Fowkes"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095280X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014-200023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42573604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerhumor"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Humor","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Humor Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Gender to Genre: Blake Edwards' Rollercoaster of Comedy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573604","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MELANIE MASTERTON SHERAZI"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26467988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19e81591-cfda-3d6d-adc9-5fa7daeb3fe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26467988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Playing It Out Like a Play\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26467988","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":9405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Joe Christmas and Joanna Burden's Erotic Masquerade in William Faulkner's Light in August<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Betina Entzminger"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20077892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384291"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212093"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a18dfc0d-7c50-3244-acd0-5277beaec5f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20077892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southlitj"}],"isPartOf":"The Southern Literary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Come Back to the Raft Ag'in, Ed Gentry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20077892","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines women's strategic importance for the operation of global capitalism. I argue that women have a twofold strategic role in global capitalism: as (re)producers and consumers for the reproduction of capitalist relations. Within each of these spheres they are reproducing hierarchic relations of dominance necessary for capitalism to survive. As cheap and docile labor, they meet the labor needs of the new production processes. As consumers, their role is reinforced by collaborating with heterosexual discourse's emphasis on the sexual desirability of women for acquiring social acceptance. However both of these roles foster gender discrimination and social inequalities that may be overcome by the coming together of feminist and anticapitalist movements.","creator":["Ne\u015fe \u00d6ztimur"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41421257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09732047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e235c9f-0f8e-3282-8fd4-223a7c6bbfb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41421257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevmodsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Modern Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"International Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WOMEN AS STRATEGIC AGENTS OF GLOBAL CAPITALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41421257","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Os estudos decoloniais nos mostram que a colonialidade tem por dicotomia fundamental a divis\u00e3o entre humanos e n\u00e3o humanos. Que processos, contudo, produzem ou preenchem essa oposi\u00e7\u00e3o? No presente artigo buscamos discutir o sexo como produ\u00e7\u00e3o discursiva que faz parte dos processos de distribui\u00e7\u00e3o de humanidade da colonialidade ocidental. Para isso, trabalha a no\u00e7\u00e3o de corpos falantes, como modo de romper com a ideia do corpo como tela em branco, natureza a que se imprime sentido por meio da cultura. Com isso, torna-se poss\u00edvel questionar o dimorfismo sexual e pensar na amplia\u00e7\u00e3o dos modos pelos quais atribu\u00edmos a linguagem do sexo e, assim, reconstruirmos a linguagem sobre os corpos para permitirmos mais, para podermos dizer que, apesar de s\u00f3 conhecermos os corpos por meio da linguagem, esses sempre a excedem. The decolonial studies show us that coloniality has as its fundamental dichotomy the division between humans and non-humans. What processes, however, produce or fill this opposition? This article seeks to discuss sex as a discursive production that is part of the processes of humanity distribution of western coloniality. In order to do so, it works with the notion of talking bodies, as a way to break with the idea of the body as a blank canvas, nature to which a sense is imprinted through culture. In this way, it becomes possible to question sexual dimorphism and to think of the magnification of the ways in which we attribute the language of sex and thus reconstruct language over bodies in order to allow more, so that we can say that although we only know the bodies through of language, they always exceed it.","creator":["Camilla de Magalh\u00e3es Gomes"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3e7347c-4990-3c01-a78c-000307bc23bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"O corpo importa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965126","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[47634,47703]],"subTitle":"corpos falantes e a produ\u00e7\u00e3o discursiva do sexo"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan C. Jarratt"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69d8c9be-aa16-347c-b2c8-0cd02fbce774"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/378938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rhetoric and Feminism: Together Again","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378938","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":1635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much has been written on gender and translation over the last two decades with an emphasis on feminist translation, on the translation of woman's body or on the (re)discovery of a growing genealogy of translating\u2014and translated\u2014women in diverse languages and cultures. In this paper I wish to focus on the translation of sex-related language. Without a doubt, sex\u2014and more specifically, sex-related language\u2014is overwhelmingly present in our daily lives, in our texts, in our symbolic projections. Though traditionally proscribed for a number of reasons, the study of the translation of sex is nowadays more openly dealt with, though it has been given little attention in the field of translation studies (Larkosh 2007, 66). Translating the language of love or sex is a political act, a \"cas limite\" (Flotow 2000, 16) with important rhetorical and ideological implications, and is fully indicative of the translator's attitude towards existing conceptualisations of gender\/sexual identities, human sexual behaviors and society's moral norms. Here I explore the fluid, two-way relationships between sex and translation: first we explore the sex of translation, which might prove to be an essentialist search; and then we deal with the translation of sex, focusing on the treatment of love and sex in the Spanish or English translations of the works of John Cleland, Almudena Grandes and Mario Vargas Llosa. This is a privileged vantage point from which to explore the complex construction of women and men in different languages and cultures, and to gain ideological and discursive insights into the constitution of gender and sexual identities. En las dos \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas, mucho se ha escrito sobre g\u00e9nero y traducci\u00f3n, con especial atenci\u00f3n a la traducci\u00f3n feminista, la traducci\u00f3n del cuerpo femenino o el (re)descubrimiento de una creciente genealog\u00eda de mujeres traductoras (y traducidas) en diversas lenguas y culturas. En este art\u00edculo quiero centrarme en la traducci\u00f3n del lenguaje sexual. Sin duda, el sexo \u2014y, m\u00e1s concretamente, el lenguaje sexual\u2014 se halla presente en todos los aspectos de nuestra vida diaria, en nuestros textos, en nuestras proyecciones simb\u00f3licas. Aunque tradicionalmente proscrito por una serie de razones, en la actualidad el estudio de la traducci\u00f3n del sexo se acomete de una manera m\u00e1s abierta, aunque ha recibido escasa atenci\u00f3n en el campo de los estudios de traducci\u00f3n (Larkosh 2007, 66). Traducir el lenguaje del amor o del sexo es un acto pol\u00edtico, un \u201ccas limite\u201d (Flotow 2000, 16) con importantes implicaciones ret\u00f3ricas e ideol\u00f3gicas, y constituye un \u00edndice certero de la actitud del traductor(a) frente a las conceptualizaciones existentes en torno a las identidades de g\u00e9nero o sexuales, a los comportamientos sexuales humanos y a las normas morales de la sociedad. En este art\u00edculo exploro las relaciones fluidas, biun\u00edvocas, que unen sexo y traducci\u00f3n: en primer lugar, exploro el sexo de la traducci\u00f3n, que puede constituir una b\u00fasqueda esencialista; para pasar a continuaci\u00f3n a la traducci\u00f3n del sexo, centrado en el tratamiento del amor y el sexo en las traducciones (al espa\u00f1ol o al ingl\u00e9s) de las obras de John Cleland, Almudena Grandes y Mario Vargas Llosa. Se trata de un observatorio privilegiado para explorar la compleja construcci\u00f3n de mujeres y hombres en diferentes lenguas y culturas, de la que podemos extraer conclusiones ideol\u00f3gicas y discursivas para una mejor comprensi\u00f3n de la formaci\u00f3n de identidades sexuales y de g\u00e9nero.","creator":["Jos\u00e9 Santaemilia"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0a66967-3396-37ec-a392-648bce7a2fd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Translating Sex(uality) from English into Spanish and Vice-versa: A Cultural and Ideological Challenge \/ La traducci\u00f3n del sexo\/sexualidad del ingl\u00e9s al espa\u00f1ol y viceversa: un reto cultural e ideol\u00f3gico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757735","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147827]],"Locations in B":[[8055,8235]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["AARON LOUIS ROSENBERG"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01850164"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85446274"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62977bfd-29c5-3037-a212-6d7d2b888dcb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24368252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estuasiaafri"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios de Asia y Africa","issueNumber":"1 (156)","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"El Colegio de Mexico","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","African Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"EL PU\u00d1O SUENA IGUAL EN TODO EL MUNDO: CANTANDO EL ABUSO DOM\u00c9STICO EN M\u00c9XICO Y TANZANIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368252","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":4831,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524233]],"Locations in B":[[3811,3885]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Litvak"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2893431-22e8-30b5-a2c1-d00268daeec6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Delicacy and Disgust, Mourning and Melancholia, Privilege and Perversity: Pride and Prejudice<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685965","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6525,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503621,503676]],"Locations in B":[[38468,38527]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I offer here an analysis of contemporary foundation garments while exploring the ways in which these garments encourage, reinforce and protect normative femininity. In examining the performatives of contemporary normative, ideal femininity as they perpetuate inhibited intentionality, ambiguous transcendence, and discontinuous unity, I look to the possibility for subversive performativity vis-\u00e0-vis the strengths of women in order to proliferate categories of gender and to potentially displace current notions of what it means to become woman.","creator":["Wendy A. Burns-Ardolino"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f310778-9baa-315a-b953-3790975fe39b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading Woman: Displacing the Foundations of Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810863","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8476,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[445116,445246],[464601,464780],[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[3561,3686],[38037,38216],[49368,49452]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Extant research notes a tendency to propound the idea that female managers are secondary to men. Gender differences constitute an ethical issue and the discursive constructions of gender management are central to research in business ethics. Drawing on evidence gathered from a time-space intersection that has been widely neglected by research in this area, we address whether female business leaders develop gender-stereotypic management styles as well as their propensity to adopt masculine management patterns such as making risky decisions and implementing formal management systems (e.g. accounting reports). Our findings suggest that gender-stereotypic management styles are chosen strategically and target-driven, which implies a selective use of masculine and feminine management styles. Furthermore, as part of the masculine approach, female business owners adopt risk-taking decisions and implement formal management systems. Our results provide support for the argument that gender is context dependent and, hence, the findings of this study may be useful for contemporary jurisdictions featuring male-dominated societies and a strong intervention by the State in the economy.","creator":["Salvador Carmona","Mahmoud Ezzamel","Claudia Mogotocoro"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45022821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01674544"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38095061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ae10880-55f8-3a9b-822d-fc6b23fabfd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45022821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbusiethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Business Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business operations","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Gender, Management Styles, and Forms of Capital","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45022821","volumeNumber":"153","wordCount":14572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eleni Varikas"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95785dd1-daea-3941-a87f-d2e79b6e184d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"23","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab Choses importantes et accessoires \u00bb: Exp\u00e9rience singuli\u00e8re et historicit\u00e9 du genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598465","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7052,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[37493,37571]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Walter Johnson"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Inconsistency, Contradiction, and Complete Confusion: The Everyday Life of the Law of Slavery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828793","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The burgeoning economic inequality between the richest and the poorest is a cause of concern lor social political, and ethical reasons. While businesses are both implicated and affected by growing inequality, business schools have largely neglected to subject the phenomenon to sufficient critique. This is, in part, because far too many management educators rely on orthodox economic perspectives\u2014often represented by neoliberal capitalism\u2014which have dominated the curricula and the teaching philosophy of business schools. To address this issue, we underscore the need for business schools to critically examine the relationship between neoliberal capitalism and economic inequality, and to overtly engage with this nexus in pedagogical practice. We conclude by revisiting the concepts of relationality and answerability as paths by which to address the current predicament. Relationality and answerability collectively offer (1) conceptual and reflexive tools by which to reimagine business school education, and, (2) space for business schools to debate important questions about the taken-for-granted, but problematic, assumptions underlying the ideology of neoliberal capitalism.","creator":["MARIANNA FOTAKI","AJNESH PRASAD"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43698374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1537260X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54659710"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3afb0b5-b06a-3a13-bd5d-36c8904d4d7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43698374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanaleareduc"}],"isPartOf":"Academy of Management Learning & Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"556","pagination":"pp. 556-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Education","Business","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Questioning Neoliberal Capitalism and Economic Inequality in Business Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43698374","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women's responses in the context of focus groups to fashion photographs and clothing advertisements in Vogue magazine and to a brief questionnaire eliciting their attitudes toward clothing and fashion are used to examine the nature and extent of hegemonic influences in fashion. Participants' sources of information about fashion suggest that the authority of the fashion press is limited. The magazine's conceptions of women's roles as expressed in its fashion photography fit a model of \"conflicted\" hegemony characteristic of American media and popular culture in general. Empowered by the cultural context of conflicted hegemony, women were generally critical of fashion photographs. Their responses to photographs were influenced by their acceptance of traditional norms of feminine demeanor but varied by age and race. They rejected the magazine's orientation toward the use of fashionable clothing for postmodernist role-playing in favor of a modernist outlook.","creator":["Diana Crane"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75cc4a8b-d3d2-32fd-8d86-b18795161448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender and Hegemony in Fashion Magazines: Women's Interpretations of Fashion Photographs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121253","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12022,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It remains the case that, in spite of the consistently high quality and quantity of gender analysis, gender has not been able to achieve more than a marginal status in International Political Economy (IPE). Increasingly visible as a category of analysis, gender remains trivialized in the minds of both the mainstream and more critical IPE approaches, as a category pertaining only to the lives of women, women's labour rights and women's social movements. This essay therefore analyses what mainstream and critical IPE approaches do and do not say about the constitution of the global political economy. My central argument is that a gender(ed) IPE analysis is absolutely central to fully understanding and explaining the processes and practices of the global political economy, but that the dominant studies and practices of IPE tend not to take into account the contributions of gender based analyses. A critique of the detailed content of gender approaches in IPE is, however, not the main purpose of this review; rather, gender and feminist analyses are the lenses with which to view IPE, with its exclusions, silences and marginalisations, as well as its openings and future paths, not the other way around.","creator":["Penny Griffin"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25261936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09692290"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238789"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"420e700b-dd6e-319f-9886-b34598205ea5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25261936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviintepoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Political Economy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"736","pageStart":"719","pagination":"pp. 719-736","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Refashioning IPE: What and How Gender Analysis Teaches International (Global) Political Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25261936","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Yingling"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Sexual Preference\/ Cultural Reference: The Predicament of Gay Culture Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489741","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":6034,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620],[431739,431865]],"Locations in B":[[30244,30319],[30438,30565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Neill Matheson"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identifying (With) the Queerness of Melville's \"Pierre\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566260","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9696,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[215193,215324],[507561,507723],[513361,513447]],"Locations in B":[[57388,57519],[60270,60428],[60704,60792]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith A. Allen","Sally L. Kitch"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1eba3a0-6e27-3ce7-83d8-754a72a52c95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disciplined by Disciplines? The Need for an Interdisciplinary Research Mission in Women's Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178698","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9246,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473037,473141]],"Locations in B":[[54689,54792]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paulette Silva Beauregard"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35f6a57d-1f2e-3e85-ae9e-5f9d0404e9b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4531125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"52","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La feminizaci\u00f3n del h\u00e9roe moderno y la novela en \"Luc\u00eda Jerez\" y \"El hombre de hierro\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531125","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Blasius"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"828071ff-e19b-388d-b1cd-552028f00b73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"674","pageStart":"642","pagination":"pp. 642-674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Contemporary Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer Theories, and Their Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840413","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":15069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charles Altieri"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5c807b4-cd1a-3c65-935a-632dcc2a5bd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Temporality and the Necessity for Dialectic: The Missing Dimension of Contemporary Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469162","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11854,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[432274,432422],[432929,433041]],"Locations in B":[[20041,20185],[20349,20458]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article investigates the practice of female marriages in 19th century Great Britain and United States and argues that female marriages provided model for more progressive forms of the legal marriage between men and women. Unlike homosexuality in the 20 th century, the same-sex relationships between women in the 19 th century often enjoyed social recognition and some women in female marriages occupied prominent social positions. Because they were considered to rest on contract, female marriages served as inspiration for the contractual view of marriage advocated by many supporters of the Victorian marriage reform. The contribution of women in female couples to the success of the marriage reform was further underlined by their belonging to influential social networks. The author also argues that while the structuralist anthropology of mid-20th century, represented through the work of Claude L\u00e9vi-Strauss, had limited understanding of homosexuality as a socially legitimate phenomenon, the Victorian anthropology of the second half of the 19 th century was relatively more open regarding the same-sex relationships. It is contended that authors as diverse as Henry Maine, Johann Bachofen, or Frederick Engels provided impulses in their work both for a positive evaluation of the same-sex relationships and for a more egalitarian understanding of marriage.","creator":["SHARON MARCUS","Marek Skovajsa"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560909399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14f042f9-63eb-3fff-b2b3-3d2786c8fe11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41132760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"706","pageStart":"671","pagination":"pp. 671-706","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Genealogie man\u017eelstv\u00ed \/ The Genealogy of Marriage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132760","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":17411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Bynum"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87f4094e-ca11-3b9c-9102-cd28bbb61830"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why All the Fuss about the Body? A Medievalist's Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344005","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":17990,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[428928,429076],[472829,472921]],"Locations in B":[[74129,74277],[93051,93144]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pairing literature on constitutive rhetoric with Julia Kristeva's work on the abject as a theoretical framework, we examine the rhetoric of U.S. media that report with alarm and dismay on the activities of female suicide bombers in the so-called war on terrorism. By examining the media-described actions of female suicide bombers as abject, and their acts as a type of \"situated utterance,\" we are able to trace the ways in which both are articulated by U.S. mass media with cultural tropes that constitute a particular identity or subjectivity of the American audience in which these discourses circulate. Audiences are invited to articulate the violence of these women with already existing cultural understandings of violent women and their bodies. Through these mediated discourses, the U.S. audience is invited to understand these actions as the insane acts of uncontained sociopaths, not as meaningful, although acutely violent, situated utterances.","creator":["Marita Gronnvoll","Kristen McCauliff"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24753563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f898d2b-7a58-3e8d-adfb-e2e7a03f28d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24753563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"354","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Bodies that Shatter: A Rhetoric of Exteriors, the Abject, and Female Suicide Bombers in the \"War on Terrorism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24753563","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Transgender people in the United States change genders in relation to androcentric, heterocentric, and middle-class whitenormative cultural narratives. Drawing on ethnographic data primarily with transgender people of color, I analyze the ways in which gender, race, social class, and sexuality all combine to create specific background identities\u2014intersected identity frames\u2014which others attribute in interaction. We can better understand these intersected identity frames through the experiences of transgender people, who actively engage in identity management. The meanings others attach to specific combinations are foregrounded in the context of transitioning; some audiences employ dominant, white cultural narratives, while others draw upon ethnic cultural narratives. In all cases, transitioning throws the multi-dimensionality of intersected identity frames into sharp relief against the background of intersecting social and cultural structural arrangements.","creator":["Kylan Mattias de Vries"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.1.49","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94c5bc37-6561-324e-b714-9864af425615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/symbinte.35.1.49"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Intersectional Identities and Conceptions of the Self: The Experience of Transgender People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.1.49","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily A. Zakin"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82bca4a9-d483-3f7a-88c1-9d3553ace03f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810382","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Scott"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49adaa18-3f51-35a7-972d-df44c926c1ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Hawkeye Initiative: Pinning Down Transformative Feminisms in Comic-Book Culture through Superhero Crossplay Fan Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653492","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":5092,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433315,433476]],"Locations in B":[[6219,6380]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article reflects on how notions of \u2018the comic\u2019 may be of added value to geographers\u2019 research. It is formed around the idea that there are aspects of space and society that are by nature incongruous and unsuitable to be understood through frameworks of scholarship that privilege \u2018reason\u2019 and objectivity above all else. The author thus reflects on how these notions of \u2018the comic\u2019 as a mode of thought can be applied to understanding different fields of research. Ultimately, the article draws out how using this comic mode also forms an \u2018inward\u2019 reflective process which can help to understand the often complicated positions that researchers hold. This article thus calls for an inclusion of the often otherwise ignored comic aspects of the world into scholarship so that we, as geographers, may provide fuller and more human critical analyses of space, culture and society.","creator":["Phil Emmerson"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50996597"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f86ec7e4-d70d-31ed-9099-5a42c9e3aad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"725","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-725","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Doing comic geographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168772","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":2350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u0623\u0635\u0628\u062d \u0645\u0628\u062d\u062b \"\u0627\u0644\u062c\u0646\u0648\u0633\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u0623\u0647\u0645 \u062d\u0642\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \ufe8d\ufedf\ufed0\ufeae\ufe91\ufef4\ufe94 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631\u0629\u060c \u0625\u0630 \u064a\u0646\u062a\u0638\u0645 \u062d\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0627\ufe70 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0643\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0644\u0633\u0641\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0631\u0641\u064a \u0648\u064a\u062d\u062a\u0644 \u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u0627\ufe70 \u0647\u0627\u0645\u0627\ufe70 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0624\u0633\u0633\u0627\u062a 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\u0623\u0647\u0645\u064a\u062a\u0647\u0660 \u0648\u062a\u062e\u0644\u0635 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0645\u0633\u0643 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0627\u0635\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0646\u0648\u0633\u064a \u0648\u0633\u064a\u0644\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0643\u0627\u0645\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0648\u0627\u0631\u064a\u060c \u0625\u0630 \u0625\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 (\u062d\u062a\u0649 \u0644\u0648 \u0643\u0627\u0646\u062a \u062a\u0643\u0648\u064a\u0646\u0627\ufe70 \u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0627\ufe70 \u0648\u0644\u064a\u0633 \u0628\u064a\u0648\u0644\u0648\u062c\u064a\u0627) \u062a\u0642\u0648\u0645 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0647\u0630\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0627\u0635\u0644\u060c \u0648\u0645\u0627 \u0647\u062f\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0627\u0635\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0646\u0648\u0633\u064a \u0633\u0648\u0649 \u062d\u064a\u0644\u0629 \u0630\u0643\u0648\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u062a\u0633\u0627\u0647\u0645 \u0641\u064a \u0628\u0642\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u062c\u0644 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0642\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0631\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0631\u0641\u064a\u0660","creator":["Maijan Husayn al-Ruwaili","\ufee3\ufef4\ufea0\ufe8e\ufee5 \ufea3\ufeb4\ufef4\ufee6 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufeae\ufeed\ufef3\ufee0\ufef2"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/521911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3521c214-c183-37f0-a2ab-1f4b91c3153d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/521911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Degendering Knowledge\/Bridging the Sexual Difference? \/ \ufe97\ufea4\ufef4\ufef4\ufeaa \ufe8d\ufedf\ufe92\ufecc\ufeaa \ufe8d\ufedf\ufea0\ufee8\ufeee\ufeb3\ufef2 \ufed3\ufef2 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufee4\ufecc\ufeae\ufed3\ufe94\/\ufead\ufe83\ufe8f \ufe8d\ufedf\ufed4\ufe8e\ufebb\ufede \ufe8d\ufedf\ufea0\ufee8\ufeb4\ufef2\u061f","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/521911","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12314,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[74859,74923]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The concept of intersectionality is reviewed and further developed for more effective use. Six dilemmas in the debates on the concept are disentangled, addressed and resolved: the distinction between structural and political intersectionality; the tension between 'categories' and 'inequalities'; the significance of class; the balance between a fluidity and stability; the varyingly competitive, cooperative, hierarchical and hegemonic relations between inequalities and between projects; and the conundrum of 'Visibility' in the tension between the 'mutual shaping' and the 'mutual constitution' of inequalities. The analysis draws on critical realism and on complexity theory in order to find answers to the dilemmas in intersectionality theory.","creator":["Sylvia Walby","Jo Armstrong","Sofia Strid"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d57c4058-69b1-3b91-900c-9fa1f4dc11f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43497253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersectionality: Multiple Inequalities in Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497253","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"R. W. Connell's path-breaking notion of multiple masculinities (Connell, 1995) and hegemonic masculinity (Connell, 1987, 1995) have been taken up as central constructs in the sociology of gender. Although there has been a great deal of empirical research and theory published that has built upon and utilized Connell's concepts, an adequate conceptualization of hegemonic femininity and multiple femininities has not yet been developed. To redress this, the author presents a theoretical framework that builds upon the insights of Connell and others, offers a definition of hegemonic masculinity and hegemonic femininity that allows for multiple configurations within each, and that can be used empirically across settings and groups. The author also outlines how hegemonic masculinity and hegemonic femininity are implicated in and intersect with other systems of inequality such as class, race, and ethnicity.","creator":["Mimi Schippers"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fbf2e2e-644e-340e-9749-6724222176ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4501776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recovering the Feminine Other: Masculinity, Femininity, and Gender Hegemony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501776","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The term \"emotional practices\" is gaining currency in the historical study of emotions. This essay discusses the theoretical and methodological implications of this concept. A definition of emotion informed by practice theory promises to bridge persistent dichotomies with which historians of emotion grapple, such as body and mind, structure and agency, as well as expression and experience. Practice theory emphasizes the importance of habituation and social context and is thus consistent with, and could enrich, psychological models of situated, distributed, and embodied cognition and their approaches to the study of emotion. It is suggested here that practices not only generate emotions, but that emotions themselves can be viewed as a practical engagement with the world. Conceiving of emotions as practices means understanding them as emerging from bodily dispositions conditioned by a social context, which always has cultural and historical specificity. Emotion-as-practice is bound up with and dependent on \"emotional practices,\" defined here as practices involving the self (as body and mind), language, material artifacts, the environment, and other people. Drawing on Pierre Bourdieu's concept of habitus, the essay emphasizes that the body is not a static, timeless, universal foundation that produces ahistorical emotional arousal, but is itself socially situated, adaptive, trained, plastic, and thus historical. Four kinds of emotional practices that make use of the capacities of a body trained by specific social settings and power relations are sketched out\u2014mobilizing, naming, communicating, and regulating emotion\u2014as are consequences for method in historical research.","creator":["MONIQUE SCHEER"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23277639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dd3830a-d8dd-30a9-afe2-e87ceddd2ab8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23277639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ARE EMOTIONS A KIND OF PRACTICE (AND IS THAT WHAT MAKES THEM HAVE A HISTORY)? A BOURDIEUIAN APPROACH TO UNDERSTANDING EMOTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23277639","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":15616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist scholars have critically analyzed the effects of sex segregation in numerous social institutions, yet sex-segregated sport often remains unchallenged. Even critics of sex-segregated sport have tended to accept the merits of women-only teams at face value. In this article, we revisit this issue by examining the underlying assumptions supporting women's and girls 'teams and explore how they perpetuate gender inequality. Specifically, we analyze the 14 U.S. court cases wherein adolescent boys have sought to play on girls 'teams in their respective high schools. The courts 'decisions reveal taken-for-granted, essentialist assumptions about girls' innate fragility and athletic inferiority. While the courts, policy makers, and many feminist scholars see maintaining teams for girls and women as a solution to the problem of boys' and men's dominance in sport, the logic supporting this form of segregation further entrenches notions of women's inferiority.","creator":["ADAM LOVE","KIMBERLY KELLY"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0ebd703-f67f-3daa-b9f8-6b0256974d86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23044137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"EQUITY OR ESSENTIALISM? U.S. Courts and the Legitimation of Girls' Teams in High School Sport","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044137","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9600,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[59741,59829]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Liz Harrison"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6efde99b-d19e-3267-8130-2564947cb1c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"CHAPTER SIXTEEN: A Tinker's Quest: Embarking on an Autoethnographic Journey in Learning 'Doctoralness'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980350","volumeNumber":"357","wordCount":6480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the usefulness of Theodor Adorno's (1966\/2004) formulation of negative dialectics as prescriptive praxis under conditions where signifiers for humanity are made vaporous or otherwise elusive, as with current conditions of ersatz liberalism and diminished civil liberties. For exegetical purposes, this paper applies Adorno's praxis to one instance of resistance during the Nazi Third Reich that bears lingering, personal relevance to the author. The art work of the modernist painter, Georges Braque, makes entrance here to render more vivid the essential tenets of Adorno's provocative and still timely praxis.","creator":["Matthew T. Witt"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb70208-52e9-3a50-a12b-a44b49c75eaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sorrowful Empire, Distempered Union: Negative Dialectics and the Art(s) of Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610903","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":14541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While the loss of the second book of the Poetics has deprived us of Aristotle's most extensive account of laughter and comedy, his discussion of eutrapelia (wittiness) as a virtue in his ethical works and in the Rhetoric points toward the importance of humor for his ethical and political thought. This article offers a reconstruction of Aristotle's account of wittiness and attempts to explain how the virtue of wittiness would animate the everyday interactions of ordinary citizens. Placing Aristotle's account of wittiness in dialogue with recent work within the ethical turn in contemporary political theory can help articulate what a late-modern ethos of democratic laughter might look like.","creator":["John Lombardini"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f35cfe1-4bad-3dee-a7b1-db8ddcc8453b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23484419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Civic Laughter: Aristotle and the Political Virtue of Humor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484419","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I address the question: How is it that people come to choose mathematics and in what ways is this process gendered? I draw on the findings of a qualitative research study involving interviews with 43 young people all studying mathematics in post-compulsory education in England. Working within a post-structuralist framework, I argue that gender is a project and one that is achieved in interaction with others. Through a detailed reading of Toni and Claudia's stories I explore the tensions for young women who are engaging in mathematics, something that is discursively inscribed as masculine, while (understandably) being invested in producing themselves as female. I conclude by arguing that seeing 'doing mathematics' as 'doing masculinity' is a productive way of understanding why mathematics is so male dominated and by looking at the implications of this understanding for gender and mathematics reform work.","creator":["Heather Mendick"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef284916-6521-3b6b-ab1c-596410281496"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mathematical Stories: Why Do More Boys than Girls Choose to Study Mathematics at AS-Level in England?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036060","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8441,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124061,124148],[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[15130,15217],[15233,15378]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Hopkins"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34215166-57b4-3de0-bd64-f800b69f4319"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chapter 2: Living Dolls: femininity, subjectivity, postmodernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975050","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Reis"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1571497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2314be71-6d4f-3854-8630-cef59c70246f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1571497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1571497","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":1941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the ways in which narrative discourse contributes to the construction of Mapuche ethnic identities within a context of displacement and investigates how such identities are negotiated in interactional contexts of communication. The larger study comprised 12 focus groups and 36 in-depth semi-structured interviews with members of Mapuche families living in four comunas (neighborhoods) of Santiago, Chile. For this article, the analysis is based on 12 interviews and six focus groups directed by a native speaker Mapuche woman interviewer and complemented by participant observations of everyday life and ceremonial events in the comunas. From a social constructivist framework, we focus on narrative genres and topics based on their emergence in interaction. Our method is through De Fina and Georgakopoulou\u2019s \u2018Social Interactional\u2019 approach, which recognizes the discursive sedimented processes that produce, for example, recognizable genres and themes typical of a group or community. We demonstrate that storytelling has a crucial role in the connections of Mapuche to their southern roots through narrative references to family centered on traditional practices recreated in an urban context.","creator":["Mar\u00eda-Eugenia Merino","Sandra Becerra","Anna De Fina"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"349cec81-a507-3a54-88e5-969790b89f1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Narrative discourse in the construction of Mapuche ethnic identity in context of displacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377377","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bladimir Ruiz"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"001064d7-56cc-3f80-93e3-2fed281f1b73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Las fronteras sexuales de la identidad: lesbianismo y feminismo en \"Amora\" de Rosamar\u00eda Roffiel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021568","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8839,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[144281,144398]],"Locations in B":[[51571,51689]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the Israeli women's press is not generally regarded as serious or prestigious, it maintains a large circulation on a sustained basis. The reasons for this success, and the societal trends reflected in this press, have not been systematically explored. The first women's newspaper in the pre-state yishuv was Tzvi Lebeit Ya 'akov (1893), edited by Haya Hirschenson and addressed to religious women in Jerusalem. By 1904, the secularist Hemda Ben-Yehuda, writing in her husband Eliezer's newspaper, Hashkafah (\"Outlook\"), focused on women's manners, charm and the home. By the mid-1930s, regular women's columns appeared in all newspapers. A significant development in the 1940s and '50s was an emphasis in these columns on women's legislative issues, women's organizations, and women's equality and welfare, side by side with practical questions of family nutrition during the long period of rationing in the early years of the state. A fashion column that had begun to appear in Davar at that time was discontinued because of criticism that it negated the spirit of pioneering. Organs published by women's movements preceded commercial women's magazines during the pre-state period. Probably the first of these sponsored periodicals, Ha'ishah Lehayeha Ule'inyanah Shel Ha'ishah Be'eretz Yisrael (\"The Woman - On the Life and Interests of the Woman in Eretz Yisrael\"), was published during 1926-29 by Hadassah and the Jewish Women's Federation of Eretz Yisrael, and addressed various issues relevant to women of all political persuasions. These ranged from women's employment to women's status in politics to marriage among minors, all written from a decidedly feminist point of view. The Jewish National Fund published a monthly in Yiddish, \"Daughter of Israel and Land of Israel,\" later renamed \"Daughter of My People\" (1930-40), providing information on women's organizations and their activities for immigrant women who had not yet mastered Hebrew. Dvar Hapo'elet(\"Women Worker's News\"), published by the Histadrut (General Federation of Labor) from 1934, later became Yarhon Na'amat - (\"Na'amat Monthly\"). WIZO's organ, WIZO Bemedinat Yisrael (\"WIZO in the State of Israel\"), was launched in 1948. The National Religious Women's movement began publishing Dapei Pe'ulah (\"Activity Pages\") in 1961. Women's periodicals in Arabic began to be published in 1964 by the Working Women Council. All these periodicals dealt with issues related to the status of women in society. The first commercial women's magazine was Olam Ha 'ishah (\"Women's World,\" 1940-48). La'ishah (\"For the Woman\"), launched in 1947, proved more lasting, and is published to this day. Profitable from the start, La'ishah in fact made up for the losses incurred by its parent newspaper, Yediot Aharonot. It eschewed political and economic issues and created a light, pleasurable and feminine ambience, playing an important role in organizing the country's earliest national beauty pageant (1950), an \"Ideal Homemaker\" contest, and Israel's Mother's Day. The only serious competitor to La'ishah was a reincarnated Olam Ha 'ishah, a weekly begun in 1958 by Yediot's competitor, Ma'ariv, which lasted until 1961. Ma'ariv later launched a new monthly, At (\"You\"), in 1967, which continues publishing to the present. The feminist Noga began in 1980, joined during the '90s by Lady Globes, aimed at career women, and Bat Melekh (\"King's Daughter\"), aimed at religious and ultra-Orthodox women. Interestingly, the women's organization-sponsored press which aims to widen women's horizons and encourages involvement in public life-and the commercial press, have begun to move toward each other, the former in order to attract more circulation, and the latter adopting a more \"serious\" approach to appeal to the educated woman. Editors and writers in Israel's women's press agree on certain overall characteristics of it: (1) It is commercially profitable. It has a long \"shelf life,\" as women's magazines are often passed from hand to hand and are to be found in dentists' offices and at the hairdresser's. Moreover, the line between advertisements and editorial content is often blurred, with advertising material appearing in certain columns under the guise of editorial content, to the advertiser's delight. This is the case as well in the ultra-Orthodox women's press, where manufacturers of rabbinicly approved products are eager to advertize. (2) The women's press is an important arena for discourse on such feminist issues as women's work\/home conflict, women's femininity, and the status of the woman in society. The tensions engendered by new definitions of women's roles vis-a-vis the reality of their lives are reflected in this press, even if the proposed solutions do not always lean toward a change in the traditional image of the woman.","creator":["\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2","Hannah Herzog"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23916131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07920113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb597ea4-e2ba-36c2-8317-4861fe6a7142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23916131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kesher"}],"isPartOf":"Kesher \/ \u05e7\u05e9\u05e8","issueNumber":"25","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Tel Aviv University \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Communication Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Women's Press in Israel \/ \u05e2\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd: \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05de\u05e9\u05e2\u05ea\u05e7 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05dc\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05ea \u05ea\u05d9\u05d2\u05e8?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23916131","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article seeks to interrogate the moment of queer theory's 'birth' out of French influences, or what is designated by the umbrella term 'French Theory'. It specifically points to the operations of transformation and dislocation, subversion and perversion of French theoretical influences at work in two distinctive 'pairings' of French 'progenitor' and American queer 'offspring': Jacques Derrida with Eve Kosofiky Sedgwick and Jacques Lacan with Judith Butler.","creator":["Hector Kollias"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a14feb15-29f2-3f68-9696-19222a31ee2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering it Right, Getting it Wrong","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263831","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8211,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[134003,134468],[204404,204872],[207226,207637]],"Locations in B":[[34145,34608],[35170,35636],[36212,36623]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40217653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52792858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236953"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b96f05-1047-3ca6-9f58-1eda52c9cdb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40217653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de sociologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"648","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-648","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Livres re\u00e7us au premier semestre 2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40217653","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":1072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the course of the past two decades, male-male sexuality has become increasingly visible in Brazil. Today, there are homosocial\/sexual commercial establishments and homosexual\/gay political organizations in nearly all large--and many small--Brazilian cities, a growing gay press and regular mainstream press coverage of gay cultural and political issues. These changes in the landscape of male-male sexuality may be seen as marking the emergence of gay communities\/culture(s) in Brazil. Less clear is how the many different actors that make up the homoerotic sexual stage (e.g. travestis, bofes, bichas, gays, homens, passivos, etc.) fit into this (imagined) 'gay community' and its shifting spaces of desire, money, identity, cultural representation and social practice. In this article I will examine how 'gayness' and the 'gay community' have been conceived and experienced by participants in Porto Alegre's homosexual\/gay subcultures. I will centre my discussion around data obtained from ethnographic fieldwork at a group for travesti sex workers based out of GAPA, Porto Alegre's largest AIDS-related organization and at Nuances, Porto Alegre's principal homosexual\/gay rights group. My objective is to map out some of the key tensions and power dynamics involved in the apparent consolidation of gay communities\/culture in Brazil and to explore what might be gained and lost--and for whom--in these recent transformations of Brazilian (male) homosexualities. \/\/\/ Au cours deu vingt derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, la sexualit\u00e9 entre hommes au Br\u00e9sil est devenue de plus en plus visible. De nos jours dans presque toutes les grandes villes br\u00e9siliennes (et dans de nombreuses villes plus petites taille) abritent des \u00e9tablissements gay, ainsi que des associations politiques homosexuelles. Les probl\u00e8mes culturels et politiques concernant les homosexuels sont r\u00e9guli\u00e8rement couverts par la presse, et on assiste au d\u00e9veloppement d'une presse sp\u00e9cifiquement homosexuelle. Ces changements, dans la place de la sexualit\u00e9 entre hommes dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9, peuvent \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme le signe de l'\u00e9mergence d'une (ou plusieurs) culture(s) et communaut\u00e9s homosexuelles au Br\u00e9sil. Il apparait au revanche moins clairement comment les nombreux acteurs de la sc\u00e8ne sexuelle homo\u00e9rotique (par exemple les travestis, les \"bofes\", les \"homens\", les \"bichas\", les \"pasivos\", les gays, etc.) s'int\u00e8grent dans cette \"communaut\u00e9 homosexuelle\" (imaginaire) o\u00f9 \u00e9voluent les notions de d\u00e9sir, d'argent, d'identit\u00e9, de repr\u00e9sentation culturelle et de comportement social. Dans cet article, j'examine comment, \"identit\u00e9 gay\" et la \"communaut\u00e9 homosexuelle\" sont con\u00e7ues et v\u00e9cues par les personnes interrog\u00e9es, issues des sous-cultures homosexuelles \u00e0 Porto Alegre. Ma discussion est ax\u00e9e sur les donn\u00e9es obtenues \u00e0 partir d'un travail ethnographique centr\u00e9 \u00e0 la fois sur un groupe de travestis professionnels lies \u00e0 GAPA, la plus importante association li\u00e9e au SIDA de Porto Alegre et sur Nuances, le principal groupe pour la reconnaissance des droits homosexuels \u00e0 Porto Alegre. Mon double objectif est d'identifier certaines tensions-cl\u00e9s et dynamiques de pouvoir impliqu\u00e9es dans la consolidation apparente des communaut\u00e9s et de la culture homosexuelles au Br\u00e9sil, ainsi que d'examiner ce qui peut \u00eatre gagne ou perdu (et a qui) dans le cadre des transformations r\u00e9centes touchant les diff\u00e9rents types d'homosexualit\u00e9 masculine au Br\u00e9sil. \/\/\/ En el transcurso de las pasadas dos d\u00e9cadas, la homosexualidad masculina se ha hecho cada vez m\u00e1s visible en Brasil. En la actualidad, existen establecimientos comerciales para homosexuales, organizaciones pol\u00edticas de homosexuales o gays y se ha creado una prensa gay que va en aumento d\u00eda a d\u00eda. Por otra parte, la prensa general ofrece cobertura a los temas de cultura y pol\u00edtica gays, en casi todas las grandes ciudades brasile\u00f1as y en muchas peque\u00f1as. Estos cambios en el panorama de la homosexualidad masculina pueden contemplarse como se\u00f1ales de la salida a la luz de las comunidades y la cultura gay en Brasil. Lo que no est\u00e1 tan claro es c\u00f3mo encajan los diferentes actores que componen el escenario homoer\u00f3tico sexual, v.g.: travestis, bofes, bichas, gays, homens, passivos, en esta supuesta 'comunidad gay' y en sus cambiantes espacios de deseo, dinero, identidad, representaci\u00f3n cultural y pr\u00e1cticas sociales es que algunos sujetos de las subculturas gays\/homosexuales de Porto Alegre han concebido y han puesto en pr\u00e1ctica \"lo gay\" y la \"comunidad gay\". Voy a centrar mi argumentaci\u00f3n en los datos obtenidos a partir del trabajo etnogr\u00e1fico hecho en un grupo de trabajadores travest\u00edes, situado fuera de GAPA, la mayor organizaci\u00f3n relacionada con el sida de Porto Alegre y en Nuances, el principal grupo pro derechos de los gays\/homosexuales de la misma ciudad. Mi prop\u00f3sito es delimitar algunas de las tensiones m\u00e1s importantes y las din\u00e1micas de poder implicadas en la aparente consolidaci\u00f3n de las comunidades y de la cultura gay en Brasil, as\u00ed como estudiar qu\u00e9 puede ganarse y perderse y por qui\u00e9n, en estas transformaciones recientes en los grupos de homosexuales masculinos brasile\u00f1os.","creator":["Charles Klein"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3986620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bddb35c-926c-328d-b8c7-8a581de8b079"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3986620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'The Ghetto Is Over, Darling': Emerging Gay Communities and Gender and Sexual Politics in Contemporary Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3986620","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":11802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437292,437663]],"Locations in B":[[19598,19969]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the sex and gender identity rhetoric of members of the Intersex Society of North America, which is a self-help and advocacy group whose main goals are to stop unnecessary genital surgery in ambiguously sexed infants and make medical histories available to adult intersexuals. By examining the organization's indebtedness to feminist and gay\/lesbian\/transperson theory and practice, the article shows how these political movements have progressively challenged the equation of sex with gender and how intersexuality exemplifies the theoretical and practical problems of identity politics.","creator":["Stephanie S. Turner"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd089e17-ce05-3ea1-97b8-f5d57e40e462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Intersex Identities: Locating New Intersections of Sex and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190309","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11611,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476545]],"Locations in B":[[70925,71007]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Mobile and social media are blurring the social spaces in which teens construct and disseminate representations of identity to their peers. We refer to these representations as identity tableaux. In this paper, we present an unexpected finding from a long-term study investigating the use of mobile media, visual art, and civic engagement to reconnect at-risk youth with their education. Using a framework of hybrid spaces and multimodal media literacies, for our analysis, we looked at the processes adolescents utilize to create and share representations of their identity within the social and intimate spaces that they inhabit. From our analysis of social media posts and interviews, we saw that the participating teens defined their social relationships through representations of affective experiences using context-specific multimodal media literacies. Youth identity formation using mobile and social media is a synergetic relationship between the individual and the collective online.","creator":["Martin Lalonde","Juan Carlos Castro","David Pariser"],"datePublished":"2016-05-21","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.42.1.0038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac812024-67d5-3d18-a643-47a55a895afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/visuartsrese.42.1.0038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Identity Tableaux: Multimodal Contextual Constructions of Adolescent Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.42.1.0038","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Breger","Dorothea Dornhof","Dagmar von Hoff"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60d5ee46-e54d-3ad0-8cd8-20520be30047"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23976811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Gender Studies\/Gender Trouble. Tendenzen und Perspektiven der deutschsprachigen Forschung","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23976811","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":20281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Zerilli"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"25\/26","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Trojan Horse of Universalism: Language as a \"War Machine\" in the Writings of Monique Wittig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466245","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12449,"numMatches":12,"Locations in A":[[376132,376524],[376694,376782],[377192,377268],[377907,378002],[381371,381560],[383951,384045],[384366,384475],[384623,384780],[385816,385889],[484592,484666],[495025,495125],[517271,517346]],"Locations in B":[[114,515],[22679,22767],[42542,42618],[42704,42801],[44591,44780],[44970,45064],[45159,45268],[45278,45437],[67048,67121],[68801,68875],[70439,70545],[72788,72863]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Johnson"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49194497"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212264"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"617e100e-e343-35ec-86d7-3eb999644630"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24570972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Embodying English: Performing and Positioning the White Teacher in a High School English Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570972","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although it is often held to be a site of irredeemable gender exclusion, an examination of Black Bloc activity during the anti-globalization demonstrations of the last decade suggests that the contemporary riot marks the possibility of a post-representational politics pointing beyond \"inclusion\" and toward gender abolition. By reading Black Bloc activity into the history of women's political violence from the middle of the 18th Century onward, it becomes possible to see how the anti-globalization riot signaled a possible break from the paradigm of representational politics that dominated the 20th Century. These developments enjoin us to contemplate a post-representational politics founded on the capacity to wield \"law making\" violence.","creator":["A.K. Thompson"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5519923a-6127-3a5d-9367-aa2e920584a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"You Can't Do Gender in a Riot: Violence and Post-Representational Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035632","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10703,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[140309,140412],[144538,144628]],"Locations in B":[[54144,54247],[62688,62778]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that the Palestinians in Israel are undergoing a deep crisis of masculinity that is at once a reaction to, and a reflection of, their collective situation. Notwithstanding some important benefits that accrue to them as citizens, they are subjected to structural violence, which includes policing, racism, and discrimination. Their socio-economic conditions are poor, and their sense of identity and cultural vitality are on the defense. The paper describes several coexisting scripts of hegemonic masculinity and their inbuilt tensions and reads the seemingly inward-turned wave of violence as emanating from blocked paths to masculine performance. Despite the abundant literature on Palestinian women, the discussion of Palestinians as a national collective tends to be blind to the double role of gender, and particularly of masculinity, as a model of and model for the production of cultural meaning. Masculinity therefore is an apt site for a critical reading of the situation of Israeli Palestinians, whence to view the vulnerable side of what is usually considered the hub of power and control.","creator":["Amalia Sa'ar","Taghreed Yahia-Younis"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13530194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531621"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227374"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e9f4f6b-81aa-37ed-8934-b02e2c87b407"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Masculinity in Crisis: The Case of Palestinians in Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455612","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent research on children's worlds has revealed how gender varies in salience across social contexts. Building on this observation, the author examines a highly salient gendered moment of group life among four- and five-year-old children at a youth soccer opening ceremony, where gender boundaries were activated and enforced in ways that constructed an apparently \"natural\" categorical difference between the girls and the boys. The author employs a multilevel analytical framework to explore (1) how children \"do gender\" at the level of interaction or performance, (2) how the structured gender regime constrains and enables the actions of children and parents, and (3) how children's gendered immersion in popular culture provides symbolic resources with which children and parents actively create (or disrupt) categorical differences. The article ends with a discussion of how gendered interactions, structure, and cultural meanings are intertwined, in both mutually reinforcing and contradictory ways.","creator":["Michael A. Messner"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b3386b8-1b15-3df7-bb1a-0abca3c0df0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"784","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-784","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Barbie Girls versus Sea Monsters: Children Constructing Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190373","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2002, Stephen Frears directed Dirty Pretty Things\u2013one of the few mainstream fictional films to highlight the effects of exile, the complexities of refugee status, and the trials of migrant labour in the \u201cWestern\u201d world. Thus far, the minimal number of \u201crefugee\u201d films produced is mirrored by the minimal discussion about those films (or their absence). This essay examines Frears\u2019s film with a critical lens that incorporates both theoretical evaluations and aesthetic choices. For instance: how do media representations of refugees and migrants relegate the signification of refugee-ism to visceral, silent, repetitiv, e and subordinated signifiers? Additionally, this essay narrows its interest upon Senay, the female lead of Dirty Pretty Things, to open up a dialogue about fragmented body: missing hands\/hyperbolized eyes. Drawing on knowledge of the theoretical implications of those choices, this paper addresses refugees and illegal migrants in film with the hope of initiating conversation about an otherwise relatively silent and untouched cinematic subgenre. En 2002, Stephen Frears r\u00e9alisa Dirty Pretty Things \u2013 un des rares films de fiction grand public \u00e0 mettre en exergue les contrecoups de l\u2019exil, les complexit\u00e9s li\u00e9es au statut de r\u00e9fugi\u00e9 et les tribulations du travailleur immigr\u00e9 dans le monde \u201coccidental\u201d. Jusqu\u2019ici, le nombre infime de films r\u00e9alis\u00e9s sur le th\u00e8me des \u201cr\u00e9fugi\u00e9s\u201d est refl\u00e9t\u00e9 par le peu de d\u00e9bats sur ces films (ou sur leur absence). Cet essai examine le film de Frears avec un \u0153il critique qui int\u00e8gre aussi bien des \u00e9valuations th\u00e9oriques que des consid\u00e9rations esth\u00e9tiques. Par exemple: comment les repr\u00e9sentations des r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s et des immigrants dans les m\u00e9dias rel\u00e8guent-elles le sens du statut de r\u00e9fugi\u00e9 \u00e0 des signifiants visc\u00e9raux, muets, r\u00e9p\u00e9titifs et subordonn\u00e9s? De plus, cet essai porte un int\u00e9r\u00eat particulier \u00e0 Senay, l\u2019actrice principale de Dirty Pretty Things, dans le but de lancer un d\u00e9bat sur la fragmentation du corps: les mains absentes\/l\u2019hyperbolique des yeux. S\u2019appuyant sur la connaissance des significations th\u00e9oriques de ces choix, cet article traite du th\u00e8me des r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s et des migrants ill\u00e9gaux dans les films, dans l\u2019espoir de d\u00e9clencher un d\u00e9bat sur un sous-genre cin\u00e9matographique relativement confin\u00e9 au silence et tr\u00e8s peu abord\u00e9.","creator":["Jenny Wills"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02295113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a464c926-3167-3fed-837c-9ba4c5419529"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48648596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refucandjrefu"}],"isPartOf":"Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Centre for Refugee Studies, York University","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"I\u2019s Wide Shut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648596","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Examining the Depiction of Female Refugees\u2019 Eyes and Hands in Stephen Frears\u2019s Dirty Pretty Things<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"Los manuales de conducta surgieron durante el siglo XIX cubano como un instrumento de la \u00e9lite criolla en ascenso, para imponerse como modelo de un sujeto nacional imaginado en construcci\u00f3n. Estos textos, tambi\u00e9n llamados de \u201curbanidad y buenas maneras\u201d fueron importantes s\u00edmbolos de las aspiraciones de la \u00e9lite criolla, en tanto tecnolog\u00edas para la conformaci\u00f3n de un tipo de cuerpo \u2014burgu\u00e9s, blanco, heterosexual, cubano\u2014 moldeado para habitar las nuevas configuraciones espaciales urbanas que trajeron consigo las tendencias modernizadoras de inicios de siglo. El presente art\u00edculo examina las formas sin\u00e9rgicas en que los manuales de conducta, y su ideolog\u00eda motora, la urbanidad, se desarrollaron en estrecha relaci\u00f3n con otra importante tecnolog\u00eda de gobierno y diferenciaci\u00f3n de cuerpos en el espacio: el ornato. Bajo la premisa de adecentar, las pol\u00edticas de ornato ten\u00edan como objetivo transformar La Habana en una elegante capital, colonial y moderna a la vez, concebida como una imagen limpia de referencias sensoriales a cuerpos negros y femeninos marginales. Al examinar las conexiones discursivas entre el ornato y la urbanidad se evidencian las formas en que la respetabilidad moderna burguesa se negociaba, no s\u00f3lo en un plano simb\u00f3lico sino tambi\u00e9n a trav\u00e9s de la regulaci\u00f3n de las sensaciones y emociones. Books of etiquette emerged in Cuba during the nineteenth century as a tool that the creole class used to impose themselves as the model of an imagined national subject. Also known as manuals of urbanity and good manners, these texts projected the aspirations of the creole elite. They served as technologies to craft a kind of body\u2014bourgeois, white, heterosexual, Cuban\u2014molded to inhabit the new urban spatial configurations that the modernizing tendencies of the early century brought forth. I examine the synergistic ways in which manuals of conduct and their driving ideology, urbanity, developed in close relationship with the ornate\u2014another major technology of government and differentiation of bodies through space. Politics of the ornate aimed to transform Havana into an elegant capital which was modern and colonial at once, and make its image \u201cdecent,\u201d that is, clean from sensory references to black and female marginal bodies. I examine the discursive connections between the ornate and urbanity to unpack how modern bourgeois respectability was negotiated in a symbolic realm and through the regulation of sensations and emotions.","creator":["Pilar Eg\u00fcez Guevara"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"754d4350-a069-361b-8b43-927e8d9ee1ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26744352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"798","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-798","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Manuales de urbanidad y discursos sobre el ornato en Cuba en el siglo XIX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744352","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Hacia un gobierno de los sentidos, el cuerpo y la ciudad"} +{"abstract":"In spite of continuing patterning of curriculum subject preference and choice by gender, there has been little recent attention to the argument developed in the 1970s that children play with different toys according to their gender, and that these provide girls and boys with (different) curriculum-related skills. The article describes a small-scale empirical study that asked parents of 3\u20135 year old children to identify their child's favourite toys and viewing material, and analysed responses according to children's gender. The most frequently identified toys and viewing materials were subjected to content and discourse analysis, with the intention of identifying both educative aspects of content, and the gender discourses reflected. The article explores conceptual issues around categorisations of 'education' within toys and entertainment resources, positing the notion of 'didactic information' to delineate between overtly educational content and other social discourses. Analysis reveals toy preferences to be highly gendered, with boys' toys and resources concentrated on technology and action, and girls' on care and stereotypically feminine interests. Didactic information, and aspects developing construction and literacy skills, were identified in the selected toys and resources for boys, and were lacking in those for girls. All the toys and resources could be read as implicated in 'gendering': the various gender discourses, and other discourses around aspects of social identity reflected in the toys and resources are identified and analysed. The analysis presented suggests the value of reinvigorated attention to children's toys and entertainment resources in terms both of the education they afford, and their role in the production of social identities.","creator":["Becky Francis"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03054985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74ad19b2-2cbd-3da6-89bb-d747c1f8bd3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25699588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxforevieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Review of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Gender, toys and learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699588","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O ensaio busca entender a 'encrenca' que implica teorizar sobre g\u00eanero pela complexidade desse conceito, que necessariamente remete ao encontro com a diferen\u00e7a e \u00e0 necessidade de posicionamento nesse encontro, e, diante disso, \u00e0 tend\u00eancia da academia e da psicologia a domesticar e disciplinar o conceito. A narrativa liter\u00e1ria \u00e9 proposta como uma poss\u00edvel 'terapia' para essa situa\u00e7\u00e3o. This essay tries to understand the 'trouble' that theorizing gender implies given the complexity of this concept, which necessarily means to meet with difference and the need to position oneself in this encounter, and, before that, the tendency of the Academy and Psychology to domesticate and discipline the concept. The literary narrative is proposed as one possible \"therapy\" for this situation.","creator":["Sandra Azer\u00eado"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de2e0a71-9960-367c-b371-ed1ad1d40ac4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Encrenca de g\u00eanero nas teoriza\u00e7\u00f5es em psicologia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328198","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6154,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[44372,44442]],"Locations in B":[[658,728]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Responding to the relative neglect of gay themes in the critical literature on contemporary Berlin, this essay focuses on recent novels that explore new representational strategies for depicting the ambiguous relation between queer lifestyle performances, capitalist consumer society, and the media industry before and after the fall of the Wall. The protagonists' self-stylizations emerge vicariously through the adaptation of cultural reservoirs ranging from the myth of Weimar Republic modernity to post-reunification sexualized city space. While the texts generally affirm capitalism's commodifying spectacles, they also employ the classical language of subject-centered authenticity for potentially subversive purposes. These novels thus promote a renewed metacritical reflection on the possibilities and limits of contemporary queer theory in German Studies.","creator":["Rolf J. Goebel"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27675991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8508b37-afe1-352d-b9cd-db83ae098404"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27675991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"484","pagination":"pp. 484-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queer Berlin: Lifestyles, Performances, and Capitalist Consumer Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27675991","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":9767,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[435522,435631],[439991,440289]],"Locations in B":[[6678,6868],[7611,7720],[8180,8549]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Twark"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41330018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da420770-9ab8-340b-bcf8-84f5852be744"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41330018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41330018","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":1189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Kukla"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4d2d61c-a311-3c70-b4b0-2c4d620a3f45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810761","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4880,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[28470,28539]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brenda S. Helt"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41062468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22552fe8-088f-3b38-99ca-22f396bb86af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41062468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Passionate Debates on \"Odious Subjects\": Bisexuality and Woolf's Opposition to Theories of Androgyny and Sexual Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41062468","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":15213,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485551]],"Locations in B":[[88672,88809]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marvin Carlson"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d68048f3-a51f-3782-8a65-ed3aaf18ee2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Resistance to Theatricality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685489","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c3c015d-b799-3dca-9f20-e780f7b5be7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981585","volumeNumber":"399","wordCount":4908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Warren J. Blumenfeld"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"215f0fb4-fa02-3345-8a41-721cad2358aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER SEVEN: \"We're Here and We're Fabulous\": Contemporary U.S.-American LGBT Youth Activism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981385","volumeNumber":"367","wordCount":6054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past two decades, the activity of 'cage-fighting' has attracted massive audiences and significant attention from media and political outlets. Underlying the spectacle of these mass-consumed events is a growing world of underground sport fighting. By offering more brutal and less regulated forms of violence, this hidden variant of fighting lies at the blurry and shifting intersection between licit and illicit forms of recreation. This paper offers a theoretical and ethnographic exploration of the motivations and emotive frameworks of these unsanctioned fighters. We find that buried within the long-term process towards greater civility rest the seeds for social unrest, individual rebellion and ontological upheaval. By revealing the dialectical relationship between contemporary mechanisms of control and these uncivil performances, we argue these transgressions are a visceral reaction to today's highly rationalized modes of state and social governance. More broadly, we attempt to understand the interrelationship between contemporary controls and sport fighting as a microcosm of the long-running struggle between civility and barbarism.","creator":["John J. Brent","Peter B. Kraska"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23640221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92bb6f3a-b0df-3951-ae22-8c9add77210e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23640221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'FIGHTING IS THE MOST REAL AND HONEST THING': Violence and the Civilization\/Barbarism Dialectic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23640221","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study analyzes from an intersectional perspective how categorizations based on gender, class and ethnicity transform into inequalities in regard to school success. The study is based on data from an assessment in Sweden, where 6,788 students in ninth grade participated. Students' overall grade scores are compared on the basis of gender, class and ethnicity. Class is operationalized with the help of the parents' educational background, while ethnicity is rated based on the parents' country of birth. The three background variables interact and form different patterns of inequality. Although parents' educational level has considerable importance for school success, it interacts with gender and ethnicity in different ways. Boys as well as girls are disadvantaged by a low level of education in the home, while it is mainly girls who are disadvantaged by a foreign background.","creator":["Elisabeth Elmeroth"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83a66aec-920b-300a-86db-415dfe7da037"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43497491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Winners and Losers in the Swedish School System: An Intersectional Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497491","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Folklorists do not often use critical theory to help them in their analysis of folk culture(s). This article seeks to demonstrate one way that grounded folkloric research, ethnography, interviewing, and analysis can be enhanced by the application of current theoretical concepts. Primarily, this critique of lesbian identities and cultural configurations has been expanded by the application of critical theory, feminist theory, and cultural studies. These theories certainly do not provide us with absolute answers to our inquiries, but they do allow for a different kind of analysis, a new angle, a provocative framework that can, hopefully, bring folklore studies into dialogue with other disciplines concerned with the myriad cultural complexities we all face daily.","creator":["Elaine J. Lawless"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71fa9b9d-ae6f-3826-8694-c4ab91aa6c4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"439","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Claiming Inversion: Lesbian Constructions of Female Identity as Claims for Authority","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541317","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":11284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aude Mairey"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26273608","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb592d87-792d-3951-b76e-4a05a2eabbd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26273608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and written culture in England in the Late Middle Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26273608","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8597,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48525,48614]],"Locations in B":[[6317,6409]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ROSALIND GILL","KAREN HENWOOD","CARL MCLEAN"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Genealogical Approach to Idealized Male Body Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263723","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this review, the authors interrogate the recent identity turn in literacy studies by asking the following: How do particular views of identity shape how researchers think about literacy and, conversely, how does the view of literacy taken by a researcher shape meanings made about identity? To address this question, the authors review various ways of conceptualizing identity by using five metaphors for identity documented in the identity literature: identity as (1) difference, (2) sense of self\/subjectivity, (3) mind or consciousness, (4) narrative, and (5) position. Few literacy studies have acknowledged this range of perspectives on and views for conceptualizing identity and yet, subtle differences in identity theories have widely different implications for how one thinks about both how literacy matters to identity and how identity matters to literacy. The authors offer this review to encourage more theorizing of both literacy and identity as social practices and, most important, of how the two breathe life into each other.","creator":["Elizabeth Birr Moje","Allan Luke","Bronwyn Davies","Brian Street"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"958cbd12-2909-3a24-afa5-f1b7bd15aaa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25655467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literacy and Identity: Examining the Metaphors in History and Contemporary Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655467","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":20906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elyse Carter Vosen"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0285e82c-ecbe-3a3f-9920-0665ba54a371"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174411","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":2098,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503443,503495]],"Locations in B":[[14133,14185]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Holloway"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a432ad2-25a6-321a-8498-e0a2b5f64bf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24891980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender, Body, and Disappointment in Kanehara Hitomi's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24891980","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":11449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John Goshert"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15349322"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43501719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstud"}],"isPartOf":"Composition Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Cincinnati on behalf of Composition Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Reproductions of (Il)Literacy: Gay Cultural Knowledge and First-Year Composition Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501719","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although recent scholarship has overturned longstanding assumptions that English Protestants were uniformly hostile to drama and that popular early modern theatre was entirely secular in orientation by the end of the sixteenth century, it has not yet accounted for a notable cultural shift around 1580. Before this time, reform-minded authors, many of whom were ordained ministers, used plays as a medium through which to disseminate true Christian doctrine; after this date, while mainstream English Protestants and more radical reformers continued to encounter drama as part of their formal educations and even crafted drama-like texts such as catechisms and printed dialogues, they abandoned live performance, and the hotter among them voiced opposition to theatres, playgoing, and plays. Minister Nathaniel Woodes' play Conflict of Conscience\u2014perhaps first drafted as early as the 1570s but printed and altered in 1581\u2014might well be the latest instance of Protestant religious drama in England written for a popular audience by a member of the clergy. Considering the textual and contextual evidence of this curious play suggests new explanations for why reformers became suspicious of and ultimately rejected drama as an effective medium for propagating right religious belief. The case of Conflict of Conscience calls upon us to rethink continuities and changes in relationships between religious and drama across the sixteenth century as England experienced waves of religious reformation, revolution, and resistance.","creator":["ERIN E. KELLY"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43607780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50030946"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233854"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"715db32a-5c0f-33d8-8fd7-e2f66f6c3340"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43607780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englliterena"}],"isPartOf":"English Literary Renaissance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Conflict of Conscience\" and Sixteenth-Century Religious Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43607780","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The issues raised by different kinds of oral-historical research are explored here through a dialogue between two projects. In one case, the Alderley Sandhills Project, this work has been completed; in the other, the Ardnamurchan Transitions Project, the oral-historical research is in its early stages. Through a series of interactions, this article raises a number of different questions that oral-historical research posed at Alderley Sandhills, and it considers the ramifications of and the possible differences in these questions in the case of Ardnamurchan. Adoption of a nonlinear structure echoes one of the many fascinating aspects of oral-historical research itself.","creator":["Eleanor Conlin Casella","Hannah Cobb","Oliver J. T. Harris","H\u00e9l\u00e9na Gray","Phil Richardson","Richard Tuffin"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43491406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"642074684"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2efc0441-b6e5-3446-acf2-e1264af1a0a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43491406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Knowing into Telling: A Dialogue in Five Parts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43491406","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Siobhan Kilfeather"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70363506-47a4-3697-baeb-efb60c472bf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29735677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Look Who's Talking: Scandalous Memoirs and the Performance of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735677","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4001,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47630,47809]],"Locations in B":[[4059,4238]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the 1982 Barnard conference on sexuality, anthropologist Carole Vance observed that women\u2019s sexuality is marked by a persistent tension between pleasure on the one hand and danger on the other. In the years that followed, Vance\u2019s \u201cpleasure and danger\u201d formulation assumed an outsized influence both inside and outside the academy. This essay takes stock of the work performed by this influential couplet, particularly its influence on queer studies and activism and on scholars working at the intersection of women\u2019s\/gender history and the history of sexuality. While arguing for the continued relevance of \u201cpleasure and danger,\u201d I acknowledge that the political contentiousness of the 1980s\u2014the period of the feminist sex wars\u2014shifted the formulation\u2019s meaning in ways that have proven both limiting and productive.","creator":["Alice Echols"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b1fe105-5530-35e0-8a0f-bfaaceb85edd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26552881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Retrospective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552881","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Tangled Up in Pleasure and Danger"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ulrich Baltzer"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20483904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00443301"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d283a163-cfd5-36a5-889b-d795943ce178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20483904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitphilfors"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr philosophische Forschung","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"664","pageStart":"660","pagination":"pp. 660-664","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Vittorio Klostermann GmbH","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20483904","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":1786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay aims to amplify feminist theory by articulating and fostering feminist disability theory. It names feminist disability studies as an academic field of inquiry, describes work that is already underway, calls for needed study and sets an agenda for future work in feminist disability studies. Feminist disability theory augments the terms and confronts the limits of the ways we understand human diversity, the materiality of the body, multiculturalism, and the social formations that interpret bodily differences. The essay asserts that integrating disability as a category of analysis and a system of representation deepens, expands, and challenges feminist theory. To elaborate on these premises, the essay discusses four fundamental and interpenetrating domains of feminist theory: representation, the body, identity, and activism, suggesting some critical inquiries that considering disability can generate within these theoretical arenas.","creator":["Rosemarie Garland-Thomson"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"441269d6-c723-3512-b982-3cdec4bbf676"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Integrating Disability, Transforming Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316922","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12302,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[75713,75764]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brian Hyer"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"466b0f6c-ffad-3bab-9061-10828f48d090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/854279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"'Sighing Branches': Prosopopoeia in Rameau's 'Pigmalion'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854279","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":17879,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494724,494801]],"Locations in B":[[102278,102355]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudine Michel"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ebc3865-b4b7-3145-87f8-67bf5a31c091"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women's Moral and Spiritual Leadership in Haitian Vodou: The Voice of Mama Lola and Karen McCarthy Brown","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002412","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Niall Richardson"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf3c0997-21e8-3d60-8e05-d2910ac27cc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Queering a Gay Clich\u00e9: The Rough Trade\/Sugar Daddy Relationship in Derek Jarman's Camvaggio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151843","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7489,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[43478,43623]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Noel Polk"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"870d1c83-ed53-3bc7-93d0-c0c8fe08eac9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Testing Masculinity in the Snopes Trilogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908238","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9943,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[453923,454037],[454354,454559]],"Locations in B":[[6647,6761],[6828,7034]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy L. Smith"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41154130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"226ed9e4-1bc3-3ba2-b443-d11eec9ac45d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41154130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Marriage with a Difference: Wooing, Wedding, and Bedding in \"The Taming of the Shrew\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41154130","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13153,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442641,442808]],"Locations in B":[[4142,4309]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Contemporary art is a popular feature of the cultural landscape in the United Kingdom, and recent research has recommended introducing its practices into state education. Yet these practices are still rare in schools, and this paper argues that the many difficulties that arise from attempts to introduce them are indicative of their socially contingent character, which threatens to disrupt the ideological underpinnings of orthodox school practices. The school art projects 'Room 13' and 'Teaching through contemporary art' are used as prominent examples of contemporary art practices that support a relatively high degree of learner autonomy within state education, yet are situated outside of government initiatives. Through these projects the paper explores the dilemmas that the participants face, which include questions of learner agency, choice and creative risk, and the effects of regulatory assessment systems upon collaboration, experiment, play and ephemeral learning outcomes. The paper concludes by examining the possibilities of encouraging these more 'risky' contemporary practices in schools.","creator":["Jeff Adams"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"504cad70-a6d2-37bb-a3db-abeccfe8141f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"683","pagination":"pp. 683-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Risky choices: the dilemmas of introducing contemporary art practices into schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758492","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article examines the activities of and reception to Philochoros, the first Nordic folk dance association, established in 1880 at Uppsala University in Sweden. For several decades this association had only male members, although most of their performances were partner dances meant for male-female couples. During performances, half of the dancers dressed in female costumes and took on female roles. Philochoros's performances were extremely popular in Sweden and even in other Nordic countries, and their dances became an essential part of the repertoire of Nordic folk dance groups for almost a hundred years. In this article, I analyze the role of cross-dressing and the construction of gender in discourses related to the activities of Philochoros between the years 1880 and 1910 that appear in newspaper articles, private letters, and other archival documents.","creator":["Petri Hoppu"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.3.311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e3681a4-3f7f-3154-b5f7-795edc904412"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.3.311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Folk Dancers Cross-Dressed: Performing Gender in the Early Nordic Folk Dance Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.3.311","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["GAIL TURLEY HOUSTON"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"402ace26-1d33-3e22-a52f-aa12d156b84d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Using Performance in the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793666","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Seaboyer"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b3e95d4-5aeb-31ad-8c4b-127478f6cf9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Second Death in Venice: Romanticism and the Compulsion to Repeat in Jeanette Winterson's \"The Passion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208976","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is not until forty pages into The Witches that the word \"boy\" is explicitly used to describe the unnamed and previously unsexed narrator. Initially, this gesture of ambiguity seems to serve Dahl in making the narrator a blank palate on which child readers can project images of themselves. Midway through the text, however, the narrator undergoes a specific transformation: he is turned into a mouse while still maintaining his original mind and voice. The narrator, perhaps unlike most other children, finds that he is much more comfortable as a mouse. This new \"skin\" suits him more than his original skin as it affords him a degree of repositioning and invisibility impossible to achieve as a child. This article argues for a reading of the narrator's bodily shift as a model for transgender transformations, ultimately claiming that The Witches becomes a manifesto celebrating alternative self-body conceptions; furthermore, it is unquestionably useful to consider Dahl as presenting the reader with radical gender politics.","creator":["Jennifer Mitchell"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29ab73ac-ab16-338f-abff-7d0fadd3c6c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","issueNumber":"1 (84)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Sort of Mouse-Person\": Radicalizing Gender in \"The Witches\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353147","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7260,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73644]],"Locations in B":[[36939,37220]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lawrence S. Mayer","Paul R. McHugh"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43893424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15431215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56518547"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005213386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63a221ed-f010-3516-bf27-6f57f7e6ea1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43893424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newatlantis"}],"isPartOf":"The New Atlantis","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":134,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Center for the Study of Technology and Society","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Technology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Sexuality and Gender: Findings from the Biological, Psychological, and Social Sciences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43893424","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":54802,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[72282,72356],[73462,73654],[475189,475265]],"Locations in B":[[211595,211667],[211781,211976],[347920,347998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the course of debates over same-sex marriage, many scholars have proposed new legal definitions of sexual orientation to better account for the role of relationships in constituting identities. But these discussions have overlooked a large body of case law in which courts are already applying this model of sexual orientation, with inequitable results. This Article examines a set of fifteen years of sexual harassment decisions in which courts have endeavored to determine the sexual orientations of alleged harassers. Under federal law, sexual harassment is actionable because it is a subspecies of sex discrimination. A man who makes unwanted sexual advances toward a woman discriminates on the basis of sex, courts presume, because he would not have made sexual advances toward another man. In 1998, the Supreme Court ruled that the same presumption is available in a case of same-sex harassment, i.e., a man harassing a man, if there is \"credible evidence that the harasser was homosexual.\" Since then, federal courts have decided 154 cases on whether a harasser was homosexual or experienced same-sex desire, often conflating the two questions. Empirical assessment of these cases raises questions about legal determinations of sexual orientation and sexual desire. First, it finds that courts rely on overly simplistic assumptions about sexual orientation that are contradicted by social science research. Surprisingly, in searching for evidence of same-sex desire, courts compare the harasser's behavior to an idealized vision of romantic courtship that resonates with the picture of same-sex intimacy drawn by advocates of gay marriage. Second, these judicial inquiries into desire reinforce biases in favor of heterosexuality. Courts interpret sexually charged interactions to be devoid of desire when the harasser is involved in a heterosexual marriage, while reading desire into far less suggestive scenarios when the harasser self-identifies as nonheterosexual. And third, the judicial preoccupation with desire distracts from the purpose of sexual harassment law: eliminating invidious sex discrimination. This study has implications for other legal doctrines that may require definitions of sexual orientation or inferences of desire. It suggests that a relationship model of sexual orientation may not be appropriate in all legal contexts, and it calls into question the project of devising any all-purpose legal definition of sexual orientation. It also argues that reformers should be wary of how inquiries into sexual desire may operate as distractions and reinforce conventional notions of sexuality.","creator":["Jessica A. Clarke"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23793620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44197618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-25383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"502b601b-cf6a-3654-b7aa-9619bef5d731"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23793620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111,"pageEnd":"635","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-635","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"INFERRING DESIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23793620","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":49646,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489246,489354]],"Locations in B":[[24196,24302]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws on the work of the French philosopher, Michel Foucault, in order to problematize conventional approaches to the study of management and organizations that have been thought of as informed by a positive epistemology. Such a methodology encourages researchers to produce positive knowledge in the form of representations of what they consider to be the real world of management. This involves a concentration on what may be seen as the outcome of human activity in the form of second-order constructs, such as markets, demand and supply schedules, company accounts, selection techniques, or collective bargaining. Although those who conduct positive studies claim merely to report or represent the reality they observe, it is argued here that positive studies actually constitute the \"subjectivity\" of management through their representations. In so doing, these studies treat the subject, whether this be an individual, a group, or a class of activities (such as an organization) as if it were no different from an object in the natural sciences. But unlike those objects, \"subjectivity\" can never be finally fixed in knowledge. One reason for this is that once knowledge of the social world enters the public domain, the human conditions which rendered it possible are changed, thus undermining the original validity of such knowledge. Accordingly, positive knowledge is as precarious as the conditions (i.e., the social, political, and philosophical discourses and practices) that make it possible.","creator":["David Knights"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/258721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03637425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67e20980-03ba-3454-8caf-e1111874dee3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/258721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Academy of Management Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"536","pageStart":"514","pagination":"pp. 514-536","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Spaces: The Disruptive Impact of a New Epistemological Location for the Study of Management","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/258721","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosa Compos-Brito"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15502546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"070dccfd-a20d-37df-867d-72f1b5c2b0e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatistud"}],"isPartOf":"Chicana\/Latina Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"M\u00daLTIPLES INTERVENCIONES (DES)\"DEL OTRO LADO\": Frances Negr\u00f3n-Muntaner, la trans-naci\u00f3n puertorrique\u00f1a y el g\u00e9nero del documental","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014578","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the work of the literary and cultural theorist and philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin and acknowledges him as a new voice to social work. In a larger context the authors argue that his ideas can help the profession negotiate the tricky and unsettling transition from modernity to postmodernity. In particular the authors explore two of his key concepts\u2014dialogue and carnival\u2014and suggest that they offer creative and innovative ways to think about three enduring issues in social work practice: (1) empowerment and social justice, (2) the creation of knowledge for practice, and (3) diversity and difference. Overall Bakhtin's thoughts provide the profession with a paradigm for pluralism that the authors believe will add new credibility and strength to the profession and its practitioners.","creator":["Allan Irving","Tom Young"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23717916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23717916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Paradigm for Pluralism: Mikhail Bakhtin and Social Work Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23717916","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Stacey"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3e591d6-461c-371b-a355-163885fbab83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Sociology in 2005: What Are We Missing?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.479","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":2681,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[16830,16905]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michiko Suzuki"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25076082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8788e7d7-39de-3d5f-8637-5912c7afc234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25076082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing Same-Sex Love: Sexology and Literary Representation in Yoshiya Nobuko's Early Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25076082","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":14505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sociological concepts like identity theory, social identity theory, narrative theory of identity, and intersectionality are often cannibalized in discussions of ancient identity. Ancient identities were complex, multifaceted, and comparable to modern identities, but due to the fragmentary nature of the evidence, they are difficult to reach, and hence ought to be appreciated only as historical fictions. The bulk of the discourse on ancient identities seems to focus on questions of ethnicity because ancient texts allow for a more detailed discussion of the topic, but this does not make other kinds of identity in the ancient world less important. The author suggests that the concept of strategic essentialism might be applied in discussions of ancient identities to facilitate more nuanced discourse.","creator":["Joanna T\u00f6yr\u00e4\u00e4nvuori"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26977765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432547"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565113989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234575"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9405c113-d78a-3f72-8e2a-bf4188517e59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26977765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltorients"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Orients","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mapping the Margins of Scrolls and Clay Tablets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26977765","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":5713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"The Construction of Identity in the Ancient World"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ALAN LEWIS"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3885700c-9253-3fd2-afa1-35cb33dabab5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23127236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Shakespeare's Cupid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23127236","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":18491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jerry Frug"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bddc4e06-b225-38f1-a4b8-c313d5effe5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1600075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decentering Decentralization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600075","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":41669,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[112484,113055],[113066,113248],[442571,443288]],"Locations in B":[[21017,21587],[21597,21783],[162942,163723]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Di Stefano"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"361b03f1-ab75-3a5b-9826-87ec6884e5b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Who the Heck Are We? Theoretical Turns against Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346850","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10342,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[124049,124157],[437407,437663],[476031,476141],[489892,489992],[491458,491598]],"Locations in B":[[29963,30071],[30198,30461],[51195,51306],[51685,51786],[61839,61979]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c0 partir d\u2019une enqu\u00eate ethnographique \u00e0 Riyad, ville marqu\u00e9e par les fronti\u00e8res et la hi\u00e9rarchisation entre diff\u00e9rentes cat\u00e9gories de personnes, cet article montre comment la r\u00e9flexivit\u00e9 sur la socialisation aux contraintes de genre permet de mieux comprendre les sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9s de ce rapport social dans le contexte \u00e9tudi\u00e9. La confrontation quotidienne \u00e0 des contraintes comparables \u00e0 celles qui limitent les activit\u00e9s des Saoudiennes permet d\u2019analyser par comparaison comment celles-ci vivent et d\u00e9passent ces contraintes, ce qui est constitutif de leur exp\u00e9rience du genre.","creator":["Am\u00e9lie Le Renard"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26196585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11553219"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85449429"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009242062"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9de40c8-5457-3dcc-b4b1-005d7ce5efcb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26196585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geneses"}],"isPartOf":"Gen\u00e8ses","issueNumber":"81","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Partager des contraintes de genre avec les enqu\u00eat\u00e9es. Quelques r\u00e9flexions \u00e0 partir du cas saoudien","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26196585","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ann-Sofie L\u00f6nngren"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41925340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10757201"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63762999"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006213541"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41925340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contagion"}],"isPartOf":"Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Triangular, Homosocial, Lesbian: A Queer Approach to Desire in August Strindberg's Novel \"A Madman's Manifesto\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41925340","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00a79f4e-b92e-354e-87bf-8ea19fae752b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809969","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7263,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475831,475929]],"Locations in B":[[2732,2835]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a reaction to totalitarian constraints, after the break-up of the Soviet Union an astounding eruption and incorporation of sexually explicit imagery and iconography into diverse cultural forms occurred in Ukraine. These newly emerging discursive practices subverted the prescribed and officially enforced prudery of the sterilized Soviet society, which profoundly eroded any comfortable sense of the body in the sphere of representations that constitute social identity. While examining Yurko Pokalchuk's Ukrainian \"foundational\" pornographic fictions, this article explores how the writer's representations of sexuality are articulated through the dual discourse of erotic desire and transgression, focusing on the link between sexual transgression, the transgression of conventional discursive norms and regimes, and the subversion of social values, all of which are working against various social and cultural fixities. Pokalchuk's \"erotomaniac\" fictions, radically departing from totalitarian paradigms persistently promoted by socialist realist literature, are capable of invoking transgression through their imbrication of the public and private discourses of power and pleasure, of politics and the erotic. By employing the pornographic\u2014the consumption of which in itself is still widely regarded as a socially transgressive practice\u2014as the engine of transgression, he releases the sexual bodies that have been securely kept in the closet of dominant ideologies and literary conventions, public morals and societal prohibitions, uncertainties and self-censorship, into the representational sphere.","creator":["Maryna Romanets"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41708346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00085006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e16f747-4f7d-32b4-ae12-15690f4de1fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41708346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canaslavpape"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Slavonic Papers \/ Revue Canadienne des Slavistes","issueNumber":"2\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Out of the Soviet Closet: Yurko Pokalchuk's \"Erotomaniac\" Fictions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41708346","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7838,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439531,439625]],"Locations in B":[[2787,2881]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The present paper examines male and female teachers' language practices in relation to 'censuring' talk in the primary classroom, in the context of the debate around boys' 'underachievement' and the 'feminisation' of primary school culture. Through an analysis of classroom observations with 51 men and women teachers, it looks to see whether gender differences could be found in the ways individual men and women teachers communicated in terms of their 'censuring' comments of pupils' work or behaviour. Secondly, the paper takes issue with the notion that teachers operate within a 'feminised' educational culture, by looking at the ways in which teachers' classroom talk can be seen to be constrained by two contrasting discourses relating to the power relation between teacher and pupil: a 'traditional' disciplinarian discourse, and a more 'progressive' liberal discourse. Both discourses have complex gendered and class dimensions, challenging the conception of a 'feminised' primary school culture.","creator":["Barbara Read"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af4a795c-699b-3e35-922d-300b768831fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"'The World Must Stop When I'm Talking': Gender and Power Relations in Primary Teachers' Classroom Talk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375386","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7037,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[39259,39328]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["R. J. Ellis"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27557792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe55465f-6d08-37bf-99e3-0cdb16587f66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27557792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Latent Color\" and \"Exaggerated Snow\": Whiteness and Race in Harriet Prescott Spofford's \"The Amber Gods\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27557792","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johannes von Moltke"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95ac0e2a-5be8-3251-ab4e-3eb588083ecb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 76-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Camping in the Art Closet: The Politics of Camp and Nation in German Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488476","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13144,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524399]],"Locations in B":[[3958,4026]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article s'inscrit en faux d'une part (a) contre les dichotomies radicales entre transactions intimes et relations sociales impersonnelles avec les implications d'incommensurabilit\u00e9 que ces dichotomies impliquent, d'autre part (b) contre les approches r\u00e9ductrices qui n'envisagent les transactions intimes qu'\u00e0 travers des prismes analogues \u00e0 ceux utilis\u00e9s pour l'analyse des ph\u00e9nom\u00e8nes culturels, \u00e9conomiques ou politiques. L'auteur propose une perspective en termes de liens diff\u00e9renci\u00e9s. Elle \u00e9tablit d'abord qu'\u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de diff\u00e9rents contextes sociaux les gens distinguent nettement les relations interpersonnelles entre elles. Ils les rep\u00e8rent par des noms, des symboles, des pratiques et des canaux d'\u00e9change sp\u00e9cifiques. Ces liens diff\u00e9renci\u00e9s s'agr\u00e8gent en des ensembles qui se diff\u00e9rencient \u00e9galement les uns des autres par leurs modes de compr\u00e9hension mais aussi par les pratiques, les informations, les obligations, les droits, les symboles et les canaux d'\u00e9changes. Dans trois domaines apparemment ind\u00e9pendants les uns des autres \u2013 la sociologie \u00e9conomique, la philosophie du droit et les \u00e9tudes f\u00e9ministes \u2013 des probl\u00e8mes similaires sont envisag\u00e9s. La confrontation avec ces trois champs est propos\u00e9e comme programme de recherche. The paper rejects both (a) radical dichotomies between intimate and impersonal social relations, with their implication of utter incommensurability between the extremes, and (b) reduction of such social processes to purely cultural, economic, or political phenomena. It proposes a view of differentiated ties \u2013 recognition that in all sorts of social settings people differentiate strongly among different kinds of interpersonal relations, marking them with distinctive names, symbols, practices, and media of exchange. Such differentiated ties compound into distinctive circuits, each incorporating somewhat different understandings, practices, information, obligations, rights, symbols, and media of exchange.Parallel difficulties and possible resolutions in these regards appear in three apparently unconnected literatures: economic sociology, legal philosophy, and feminist arguments.","creator":["Viviana A. Zelizer","Michel Chambot"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26202529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11553219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfd64728-9b01-3fe7-9b07-b3bc2d62e06b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26202529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geneses"}],"isPartOf":"Gen\u00e8ses","issueNumber":"42","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Transactions intimes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26202529","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12140,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[254102,254169]],"Locations in B":[[17144,17219]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathryn Abrams"],"datePublished":"1994-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6e7ffef-61a8-37ca-9583-7d58f49162bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62,"pageEnd":"2540","pageStart":"2479","pagination":"pp. 2479-2540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Title VII and the Complex Female Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290001","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":32609,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489246,489354]],"Locations in B":[[76977,77083]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0212d728-bdb9-3597-aebc-4c2b3ef0b446"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979213","volumeNumber":"337","wordCount":6293,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524164,524260]],"Locations in B":[[11502,11612]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Jarman"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018702X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616103"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ae25f7c-a882-3424-a97f-0e0945bbc247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20464547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hudsonreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Hudson Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Hudson Review, Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theory's Umpires","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464547","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":3663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article describes a typological framework with axes relating to career and (non-work) relationship commitment to show how a specific cohort of women enact femininity(ies) in the context of the institutionalised practices that define science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) as a masculine domain. Based on the accounts of 25 women in such disciplines in an Irish university, four types are identified: careerist femininity; individualised femininity; vocational femininity; and family-oriented femininity. All of these are constituted in relation to the meanings attached to the masculinist STEM career which performatively render women outsiders. The typology moves beyond the career\/paid work and work\/life dichotomies to encompass both the re-envisioning of career as vocation (Type 3) and the development of a highly individualised lifestyle orientation based on a high commitment to both (Type 2). It points to the variation, complexity and contradictions in how women do femininities in the academic STEM environment.","creator":["Pat O\u2019Connor","Clare O\u2019Hagan","Breda Gray"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26969752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09500170"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"090f0678-f659-399a-872f-bf940339ec32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26969752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"workemplsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Work, Employment & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Femininities in STEM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26969752","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Outsiders Within"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert K. Martin"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a7e524d-2a4c-3d88-988f-26a289b8f2a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2713329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Very Queer Indeed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713329","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":2800,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435355,435449]],"Locations in B":[[4597,4691]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract In their collaborations over recent years the authors have worked, through their written dialogue, in pursuit of understanding subjectivities and their \u2018becomings\u2019. Until now they have not explicitly explored their subjectivities as men. Their starting point in this paper is that they do not take the assignation \u2018men\u2019 for granted. Using collective biography, they are interested in how the worlds that they inhabited and that inhabited them in their early lives produced, and continue to produce, \u2018boys\u2019 and \u2018men\u2019.","creator":["Ken Gale","Jonathan Wyatt"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bb484ba-01b5-3070-a5e3-74eee65622d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Becoming Men, Becoming-Men?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.2.235","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Collective Biography"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rosemary J. Coombe"],"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"646e6b6c-8181-3723-85e8-9f938db656fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law and Contemporary Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497939","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1851,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[3066,3149]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In trying to capture the power of Bollywood's commercial cinema, this paper looks at what is described in common parlance as an item number. The item number is a cine-segment comprising an item-girl\/boy, a racy song, a vivacious dance and a surround of erotic and immanent exuberance. At one remove from the cinema hall, item numbers circulate as video clips and off-screen performances that recreate the cinesexual in social life. At this second level, the item number, re-fashioned through spectacular familial and social practices of the middle classes, draws its sense from diverse, gendered and changing micro-contexts of cine-heterosexuality.","creator":["RITA BRARA"],"datePublished":"2010-06-05","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f655981-081c-32ad-9afa-0e10f9b316e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27807108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Item Number: Cinesexuality in Bollywood and Social Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807108","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper takes up the lens of Queer Theory to re-examine the Joseph story, as told in the Bible and as interpreted in rabbinic sources. It also looks at the way this reading relates to four modern works that re-imagine Joseph: Franz Kafka's \u201cJosephine the Singer, or: the Mouse Folk,\u201d Nurit Zarchi's \u201cShe is Joseph (Hi Yosef), and Esther Ettinger's \u201cA Wire Ladder\u201d (Sulam shel tayil) and \u201cPoem before Sleep\u201d (Hashir shelifnei hasheinah).","creator":["Wendy Zierler"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.24.97","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b34df130-b206-3d31-a71e-50ac78018165"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nashim.24.97"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"24","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Joseph(ine), the Singer: The Queer Joseph and Modern Jewish Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.24.97","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen D. Moore"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3169583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb24e01-c87f-3199-9e27-926740fc048b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3169583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Society of Church History","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Song of Songs in the History of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3169583","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11410,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434702,434824]],"Locations in B":[[38701,38823]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lori Reed"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1176436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013189X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36418a77-5ca2-3eb7-a292-45499ef227e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1176436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educrese"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Researcher","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Skin Cells: On the Limits of Gender-Bending and Bodily Transgression in Film and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1176436","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7308,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[102154,102313],[142546,142808],[142887,142985]],"Locations in B":[[22934,23101],[23379,23665],[23690,23784]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sybil E. Gohari"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc58e5db-d727-3003-9b46-8500d44a61bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24395361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gendered Reception: There and Back Again: An Analysis of the Critical Reception of Helen Frankenthaler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395361","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6550,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477195,477271]],"Locations in B":[[31154,31230]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rinaldo Walcott"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12f6b4f-3f41-3454-b327-ba0ace8eb379"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing the (Black) Postmodern: Rap as Incitement for Cultural Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975833","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":8022,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438602,438771]],"Locations in B":[[15312,15482]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NAIT\u014c CHIZUKO","Nathan Shockey"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342489"},{"name":"oclc","value":"493260789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-203474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41510971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mech"}],"isPartOf":"Mechademia","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reorganizations of Gender and Nationalism: Gender Bashing and Loliconized Japanese Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510971","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":3596,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[19407,19461]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sean Teuton","James Welch"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1186019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27ead587-d4ea-3d20-94e8-6ff5902cdea6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1186019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"650","pageStart":"626","pagination":"pp. 626-650","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Placing the Ancestors: Postmodernism, \"Realism,\" and American Indian Identity in James Welch's \"Winter in the Blood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1186019","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11303,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59718,59885]],"Locations in B":[[8581,8748]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"HIV prevention discourses concern lives, the protection of bodily rights and people's active involvement in the policies and programmes that affect them. HIV prevention discourses also create lives, relying upon the deployment of normative sexual identities at the same time as they invite complex and fluid youth identities to embody the norms of prevention. This paper examines a particular HIV prevention text that is available to teachers in the Western Cape province of South Africa to support the implementation of the national Life Orientation programme. Rather than considering this text as a neutral 'scaffold' upon which teachers and students add cultural meanings, it is important to interrogate the ways in which texts rely upon and reiterate particular discursive constructions of the youth sexual subject. This paper argues that the text deploys a particular discursive framework in order to construct a 'normal' (and hetero) sexuality that validates, rather than questions, social constructions of masculine privilege within heterosexuality. This is achieved through the deployment of a scientific expertise of sexuality; the mobilisation of a valued hetero\/homosexual binary to create a 'safe' heterosexuality; the normalisation of bourgeois sexuality through the ideology of marriage; and the naturalisation of heterosexual masculine and feminine identities. Les discours de la pr\u00e9vention du VIH traitent de vies diff\u00e9rentes, de la protection des droits corporels et de l'implication active des personnes dans les politiques et les programmes qui les concernent. Ces discours sont \u00e9galement cr\u00e9ateurs de vies, en s'appuyant sur l'\u00e9panouissement des identit\u00e9s sexuelles normatives et, simultan\u00e9ment, en invitant les identit\u00e9s complexes et instables des jeunes \u00e0 incarner les normes de la pr\u00e9vention. Cet article examine un texte sp\u00e9cifique pour la pr\u00e9vention du VIH, \u00e0 la disposition des enseignants de la province du Cap Occidental en Afrique du Sud pour appuyer la mise en \u0153uvre du programme national \u00abLife Orientation\u00bb. Plut\u00f4t que de consid\u00e9rer ce texte comme une \u00ab\u00e9bauche\u00bb neutre \u00e0 laquelle les enseignants et les \u00e9tudiants peuvent ajouter des significations culturelles, il est important de questionner les modes selon lesquels les textes s'appuient sur les constructions discursives particuli\u00e8res, quant au sujet sexuel que repr\u00e9sente le jeune, et r\u00e9it\u00e8rent ces derni\u00e8res. Cet article soutient que le texte d\u00e8ploie un cadre discursif particulier pour pousser \u00e0 la construction d'une sexualit\u00e9 \u00abnormale\u00bb (et h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelle) qui valide, plut\u00f4t que de les remettre en question, des constructions sociales du privil\u00e8ge masculin de l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9. Ce discours est obtenu gr\u00e2ce au d\u00e9ploiement d'une expertise scientifique de la sexualit\u00e9, \u00e0 la mobilisation d'un binaire h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel\/homosexuel valoris\u00e9 en vue de cr\u00e9er une h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9 \u00abs\u00fbre\u00bb, \u00e0 la normalisation de la sexualit\u00e9 bourgeoise \u00e0 travers l'id\u00e9ologie du mariage, et \u00e0 la naturalisation des identit\u00e9s h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles masculine et f\u00e9minine. Los discursos sobre la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH giran en torno a vidas, la protecci\u00f3n de los derechos corporales y la participaci\u00f3n activa de las personas en las pol\u00edticas y programas que les afectan. Los discursos sobre la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH tambi\u00e9n crean vidas y dependen del desarrollo de identidades normativas sexuales a la vez que invitan a identidades complejas y fluidas de j\u00f3venes que personifican las normas de prevenci\u00f3n. En este art\u00edculo se analiza un texto particular, sobre la prevenci\u00f3n del virus del sida, que est\u00e1 a disposici\u00f3n de profesores de la provincia Occidental del Cabo en Sud\u00e1frica y cuya finalidad es respaldar el cumplimiento del programa nacional Orientaci\u00f3n a la Vida. M\u00e1s que considerar este texto como un 'pat\u00edbulo' en el que profesores y estudiantes aportan significados culturales, es importante plantearnos el modo en que los textos se basan en determinadas construcciones discursivas del joven como sujeto sexual que se repiten. En este art\u00edculo argumento que el texto utiliza una estructura discursiva particular para construir una sexualidad 'normal' (y heterosexual) que da validez m\u00e1s que cuestiona las construcciones sociales del privilegio masculino dentro de la heterosexualidad. Esto se consigue utilizando la experiencia cient\u00edfica de la sexualidad, la movilizaci\u00f3n de un valor binario hetero\/homosexual para crear una heterosexualidad 'segura', la normalizaci\u00f3n de la sexualidad burguesa a trav\u00eds de la ideolog\u00eda del matrimonio y la naturalizaci\u00f3n de identidades masculinas y femeninas heterosexuales.","creator":["Andr\u00e9e Gacoin"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27806661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0acaea05-28c3-300d-a888-68df3db10006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27806661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexuality, gendered identities and exclusion: the deployment of proper (hetero)sexuality within an HIV-prevention text from South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27806661","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8619,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[50984,51038]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy Scheie"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b438dc3-3b53-3a7e-9245-259867171ee7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Body Trouble: Corporeal \"Presence\" and Performative Identity in Cixous's and Mnouchkine's \"L'Indiade ou l'Inde de leurs r\u00eaves\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208953","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7350,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438971,439417]],"Locations in B":[[7091,7537]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"On the basis of two parallel studies of school memories we compare individual life story interviews with collective biography interviews. We show how these related interview techniques offer graduated and complementary approaches to the production of interview-based memories. We further demonstrate how the use of individual life story interviews and collective biographies each allows its own mode of invitations that sets the stage for the narrations of past subjectivities. As we will exemplify, the methods chosen have an impact on the very construction of the field of research. We argue that this is connected to the way the compared techniques lend a different weight to horizontal as opposed to vertical perspectives of time.","creator":["Helle Bjerg","Lisa Ros\u00e9n Rasmussen"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41806584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01430955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec84ab2a-49ec-3a97-b018-c2d4a6bcbb99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41806584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oralhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Oral History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oral History Society","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Prompting techniques: researching subjectivities in educational history","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41806584","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7258,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The relationship between energy systems, on the one hand, and narratives and practices of identity building at different scales, on the other, has received little attention in the mainstream human geography and social science literature. There is still a paucity of integrated theoretical insights into the manner in which energy formations are implicated in the rise of particular cultural self-determinations, even though various strands of work on energy and identity are frequently present throughout the wide\u2014and rather disparate\u2014corpus of social science energy research. Therefore, this article explores the manner in which the exploitation and management of energy resources is woven into discourses and debates about national identity, international relations, a nation's path of future development, and its significance on the global arena using the case of Russia. We investigate some of the policies, narratives, and discourses that accompany the attempt to represent this country as a global \"energy superpower\" in relation to the resurrection of its domestic economy and material prosperity, on the one hand, and the restoration of its global status as a derzhava (or \"Great Power\"), on the other. Using ideas initially developed within the field of critical discourse analysis, we pay special attention to the national identity-building role played by geographical imaginations about the country's past and present energy exports to neighboring states. We argue that they have created a hydrocarbon landscape in which the discursive and material have become mutually entangled to create an infrastructurally grounded vision of national identity. \u4e00\u65b9\u9762\uff0c\u80fd\u6e90\u7cfb\u7edf\u4e4b\u95f4\u7684\u5173\u7cfb\uff0c\u53e6\u4e00\u65b9\u9762\uff0c\u5efa\u4e8e\u4e0d\u540c\u5c3a\u5ea6\u7684\u8eab\u4efd\u53d9\u8ff0\u548c\u5b9e\u8df5\uff0c\u5728\u4e3b\u6d41\u4eba\u6587\u5730\u7406\u548c\u793e\u4f1a\u79d1\u5b66\u6587\u732e\u4e2d\u53d7\u5230\u5f88\u5c11\u7684\u91cd\u89c6\u3002\u5176\u4e2d\u80fd\u6e90\u7684\u5f62\u6210\u4e0e\u7279\u5b9a\u7684\u6587\u5316\u81ea\u51b3\u4e0a\u5347\u76f8\u7275\u8fde\uff0c\u628a\u7406\u8bba\u89c1\u89e3\u4e0e\u505a\u6cd5\u8054\u5408\u7684\u7814\u7a76\u662f\u5f88\u5c11\u7684\uff0c\u5c3d\u7ba1\u6709\u5173\u80fd\u6e90\u548c\u8eab\u4efd\u7684\u5404\u9879\u5de5\u4f5c\u5728\u5e7f\u6cdb\u7684\u4e00\u800c\u4e0d\u662f\u5f02\u7c7b\u7684\u4e00\u793e\u4f1a\u79d1\u5b66\u80fd\u6e90\u7814\u7a76\u4e2d\u9891\u7e41\u5730\u5c55\u73b0\u3002\u56e0\u6b64\uff0c\u672c\u6587\u7528\u4fc4\u7f57\u65af\u4e3a\u4f8b\uff0c\u63a2\u8ba8\u4e86\u5176\u4e0e\u56fd\u5bb6\u8eab\u4efd\uff0c\u56fd\u9645\u5173\u7cfb\uff0c\u56fd\u5bb6\u7684\u672a\u6765\u53d1\u5c55\u8def\u5f84\uff0c\u548c\u5176\u5bf9\u5168\u7403\u821e\u53f0\u7684\u610f\u4e49\u7684\u6f14\u8bf4\u548c\u8fa9\u8bba\u7f16\u7ec7\u5728\u4e00\u8d77\u7684\u80fd\u6e90\u8d44\u6e90\u5f00\u53d1\u548c\u7ba1\u7406\u7684\u65b9\u5f0f\u3002\u4e00\u65b9\u9762\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u8c03\u67e5\u4f34\u968f\u628a\u8fd9\u4e2a\u56fd\u5bb6\u63cf\u8ff0\u4e3a\u4e00\u4e2a\u5168\u7403\u7684\u201c\u80fd\u6e90\u8d85\u7ea7\u5927\u56fd\u201d\u7684\u8bd5\u56fe\uff0c\u5173\u4e8e\u5b83\u7684\u56fd\u5185\u7ecf\u6d4e\u548c\u7269\u8d28\u7e41\u8363\u590d\u6d3b\u7684\u653f\u7b56\uff0c\u53d9\u8ff0\uff0c\u548c\u6f14\u8bf4\u3002\u53e6\u4e00\u65b9\u9762\uff0c\u6062\u590d\u5176\u4f5c\u4e3a\u6770\u5c14\u624e\u74e6\uff08\u6216\u201c\u5927\u56fd\u201d\uff09\u7684\u5168\u7403\u5730\u4f4d\u3002\u4f7f\u7528\u6700\u521d\u5728\u6279\u8bc4\u8bdd\u8bed\u5206\u6790\u9886\u57df\u53d1\u5c55\u7684\u601d\u60f3\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u7740\u91cd\u4e8e\u56e0\u56fd\u5bb6\u7684\u8fc7\u53bb\u548c\u73b0\u5728\u7684\u80fd\u6e90\u5bf9\u90bb\u56fd\u51fa\u53e3\u7684\u5730\u57df\u60f3\u8c61\u800c\u751f\u7684\u56fd\u5bb6\u8ba4\u540c\u5efa\u8bbe\u7684\u4f5c\u7528\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u8ba4\u4e3a\uff0c\u4ed6\u4eec\u5df2\u7ecf\u521b\u9020\u4e86\u4e00\u4e2a\u8bdd\u8bed\u548c\u6750\u6599\u76f8\u4e92\u7ea0\u7f20\u7684\uff0c\u4ee5\u53d1\u5c55\u56fd\u5bb6\u8ba4\u540c\u7684\u57fa\u7840\u7684\u7262\u56fa\u7684\u89c6\u89c9\u78b3\u6c22\u5316\u5408\u7269\u666f\u89c2\u3002 La relaci\u00f3n que existe, por una parte, entre sistemas energ\u00e9ticos y las narrativas y pr\u00e1cticas de construcci\u00f3n de identidad a diferentes escalas, por la otra, ha recibido poca atenci\u00f3n en las corrientes principales de la literatura de geograf\u00eda humana y las ciencias sociales. Se nota todav\u00eda la escasez de entradas te\u00f3ricas importantes en la manera como las formaciones energ\u00e9ticas tienen algo que ver con la elevaci\u00f3n de autodeterminaciones culturales particulares, aunque algunas sartas de trabajo sobre energ\u00eda e identidad frecuentemente est\u00e1n presentes a trav\u00e9s del amplio\u2014y muy desigual\u2014corpus de investigaci\u00f3n energ\u00e9tica en las ciencias sociales. En consecuencia, usando el caso de Rusia, este art\u00edculo explora la manera como la explotaci\u00f3n y manejo de los recursos energ\u00e9ticos se entreteje en discursos y debates acerca de identidad nacional, relaciones internacionales, la senda de una naci\u00f3n hacia el desarrollo futuro y su significancia en el escenario global. Investigamos algunas de las pol\u00edticas, narrativas y discursos que acompa\u00f1an el intento por representar a este pa\u00eds como una \"superpotencia energ\u00e9tica\" global en relaci\u00f3n con la resurrecci\u00f3n de su econom\u00eda dom\u00e9stica y prosperidad material, por un lado, y la restauraci\u00f3n de su estatus global como una derzhava (\"Gran Potencia\"), por el otro. Utilizando ideas desarrolladas inicialmente dentro del campo del an\u00e1lisis del discurso cr\u00edtico, ponemos especial atenci\u00f3n al papel de constructoras de identidad que juegan las imaginaciones geogr\u00e1ficas acerca de las exportaciones pasadas y presentes del pa\u00eds hacia los estados vecinos. Sostenemos que ellos han creado un paisaje de hidrocarburos en el que lo discursivo y lo material han llegado a estar mutuamente enredados para crear una visi\u00f3n de la identidad nacional infraestructuralmente encallada.","creator":["Stefan Bouzarovski","Mark Bassin"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27980226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"603aaac5-2bef-37bd-aaa4-3a36a8644c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27980226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"794","pageStart":"783","pagination":"pp. 783-794","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Energy and Identity: Imagining Russia as a Hydrocarbon Superpower","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27980226","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":8814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rajani Bhatia"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27919101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1779e0b5-bfe7-3e06-bf35-efbc94c7bbaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27919101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing Gender from the Inside Out: Sex-Selection Practices in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27919101","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11783,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73876,74053]],"Locations in B":[[30506,30682]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben A. Heller"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Landscape, Femininity, and Caribbean Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251533","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":11759,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477951]],"Locations in B":[[69806,69909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Hopkins","Peter Jackson"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94a3d087-27a4-382f-adbc-4b8284817936"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23358217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"Researching masculinities and the future of the WGSG","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358217","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":1511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claire Colebrookov\u00e1","Tereza Jiroutov\u00e1 Kyn\u010dlov\u00e1"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43322191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567949564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d75341b-56c4-3dc2-a5c7-81e2bb086dcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43322191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","issueNumber":"4","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"618","pageStart":"600","pagination":"pp. 600-618","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cesk\u00e1 literatura","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Od radik\u00e1ln\u00edch reprezentac\u00ed k t\u011blesn\u00e9mu \ufb06\u00e1v\u00e1n\u00ed se: FEMINISTICK\u00c1 FILOZOFIE GENEVIEVE LLOYDOV\u00c9, ELIZABETH GROSZOV\u00c9 A MOIRY GATENSOV\u00c9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43322191","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":8178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The HIV and AIDS pandemic has compelled societies and individuals to engage with issues of sexuality - which have been traditionally regarded as private - as a public issue in ways that were inconceivable in the past. This Focus looks at the ways in which sexuality straddles the public and private domains, and the implications of this dual positioning for young women's safer sex practices within the context of HIV and AIDS. There has been increasing recognition, especially by feminist writers that the division between public and private is not clear-cut and that women have been disadvantaged within this binary. I argue that dichotomising the public and the private has the effect of entrenching gender inequalities and maintaining repressive intergenerational interaction, which work separately and together to increase the vulnerability of young women to HIV infection. The feminist goal of diminishing the traditional public\/private dichotomy can contribute significantly towards facilitating young women's productive sexual identity constructions that reduce their vulnerability. The public-private binary is interrogated in the following ways: the first section, 'Heterosexuality: A public norm', discusses the dominance of heterosexuality and ways in which these public norms place females at risk to HIV infection; while the second, 'Making private issues public knowledge', deals with how public messages about sexuality restrict women.","creator":["Shakila Reddy"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"812a412b-dcf1-3517-b007-307cf38bd124"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Shifting public\/private boundaries: Young women's sexuality within the context of HIV and AIDS in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917338","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"After the late 1960s there is an increased affinity between cinema and poetry, as all genres discard objectivity, continuity, and \"direct\" representation as illusions in the service of authority and begin to foreground their own artificiality as a means of questioning the absolute ground of social and cultural authority. Poet Ana Rossetti (b. 1950) and director Pedro Almod\u00f3var (b. 1949) reflect this aesthetic shift, incorporating into their works many of the techniques of their immediate predecessors. In contrast to the nov\u00edsimos, however, Rossetti and Almod\u00f3var focus explicitly on sexuality and gender, which they simulate in their works, exposing the ways in which authors and directors use certain signifiers\u2014 including language, body images, and actors\u2014to create simulacra and stimulate desire. As they present the eroticized body as a coded construction of ambiguous gender, Rossetti and Almod\u00f3var heighten our awareness of the artificiality of the gendered and heterosexual erotic stimulus and thus seduce us away from accepted interpretations of gender and desire.","creator":["Jill Kruger-Robbins"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6993c599-52fd-3e84-b2a4-efb765398faf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27741354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Poetry and Film in Postmodern Spain: The Case of Pedro Almod\u00f3var and Ana Rossetti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27741354","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5884,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444147,444247]],"Locations in B":[[13961,14061]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Scholarship in the history of computer programming has demonstrated how the contributions of engineers have been erased due to gendered assumptions of labor and science. I argue that such erasure parallels a gendered epistemology of mastery embedded in computer programming itself. Towards this, I extrapolate and refine the concept of \u201ccomputational performativity,\u201d drawing from media theorists Katherine Hayles and Wendy Chun, to put forth a gender performativity of code. Looking at two queer code art objects\u2014Zach Blas\u2019s transCoder and Julie Levin Russo\u2019s Slash Goggles \u2014as well as production code in the C programming language, I argue for a critical move away from representation as the seat of meaning in code, and towards a performative understanding of gendered code through \u201ccontexts of complexity.\u201d Focusing on complexity and interrelationships allows scholars to read code as gendered, and to furthermore leverage such reading to propose and enact queer \u201cfailures\u201d in code as rhetorical critiques of software.","creator":["Gerald Stephen Jackson"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.2.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37a1a9e6-01e5-3e42-80bd-95070de7ca93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.4.2.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Transcoding Sexuality: Computational Performativity and Queer Code Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.4.2.0001","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9773,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[59632,59716]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article deals with sexual difference as a philosophy of subjectivity which, however inspired by poststructuralism, was further developed by feminists. The main features of this philosophy are outlined both in terms of its style and of its vision of woman as subject. The notion of 'difference' is analyzed in details, as the central concept that sustains the feminist nomadic philosophy of a subject that is both complex and situated, politically empowered and epistemologically legitimate.","creator":["Rosi Braidotti"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8537e454-1dc3-357e-884b-231433b2cba4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Embodiment, Sexual Difference, and the Nomadic Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810298","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Les jeunes femmes, principalement en Occident, sont aujourd'hui invit\u00e9es \u00e0 prendre part \u00e0 un nouveau contrat sexuel. Il s'agit en fait d'une incitation \u00e0 s'affirmer, \u00e0 faire bon usage de l'opportunit\u00e9 d'occuper un emploi, de contr\u00f4ler sa fertilit\u00e9, ainsi que de gagner suffisamment d'argent pour \u00eatre en mesure de participer \u00e0 la culture de la consommation, une participation qui tend \u00e0 devenir un trait essentiel des modalit\u00e9s contemporaines de la citoyennet\u00e9 f\u00e9minine. L'article interroge tout particuli\u00e8rement les termes et les conditions, les inclusions et les exclusions ainsi que les cons\u00e9quences sociales et politiques d'un tel contrat. This article presents an analysis of a new sexual contract currently being made available to young women, primarily in the West, to come forward and make good use of the opportunity to work, to gain qualifications, to control fertility and to earn enough money to participate in the consumer culture which in turn will become a defining feature of contemporary modes of feminine citizenship. The analysis interrogates the terms and conditions, the inclusions and exclusions, as well as the social and political consequences of such a contract.","creator":["Angela McRobbie"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a65a29d-6b47-3884-870e-b4f22bff793c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'\u00e8re des top girls: les jeunes femmes et le nouveau contrat sexuel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620473","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CAT MOSES"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4f28d32-7816-3c92-bda0-2d6b4014b17e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"QUEERING CLASS: LESLIE FEINBERG'S \"STONE BUTCH BLUES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533313","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The 1629 Thomas(ine) Hall case offers an invaluable account of seventeenth-century gender fluidity, ambiguous body presentation, and nonnormative sexual behavior; since 1978 it has inspired quite a range of different readings. The point of consistency across thirty-five years of scholarship on the case is the fact that Hall and the other parties present before the General Court in Jamestown on March 25, 1629, have been interpreted in ways that trace shifting models for theorizing gender and sexual identity during the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Much of the work on Hall and her\/his community is excellent; however, taken as a whole, this body of scholarship implies the historical possibility of an originary feminist or queer (or both) early American community, effectively eliding important distinctions among different groups as well as downplaying their significance in our own period. I argue that while we can and should apply the tools of gender theory and sexuality studies to early American subjects, the diversity in interpretations of the Hall case suggests that we need to be even more rigorous in avoiding descriptions that risk implying that our own notions of identity can be superimposed onto the past.","creator":["KATHRYN WICHELNS"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"251456ff-a35d-3423-818a-2e314ddf12c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24474868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"500","pagination":"pp. 500-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From \"The Scarlet Letter\" to Stonewall: Reading the 1629 Thomas(ine) Hall Case, 1978\u20132009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474868","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10075,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489246,489329]],"Locations in B":[[22201,22284]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The meanings of transgender invisibility in Namibian and South African lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) movements differ from those in LGBT movements in the United States. LGBT activists in Namibia and South Africa voluntarily included transgender rights and persons in the movement beginning in the mid-1990s, yet few constituents identified as transgender. Transgender invisibility in these movements indicates the discrepancy between collective and lived personal identities. Drawing on ethnographic observation of Namibian and South African LGBT activist organizations in 2005-06 and fifty-six interviews with LGBT activists, the article analyzes the contours of transgender invisibility within the Namibian and South African LGBT movements. A focus on transgender invisibility in LGBT movement organizations in Namibia and South Africa illuminates the uneven reception of identity terms and the identity work that LGBT activists in southern Africa perform to encourage constituents to align personal identities with prevailing collective-identity terms.","creator":["Ashley Currier"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"304430e3-1a13-345c-97e8-629738ff490c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Transgender Invisibility in Namibian and South African LGBT Organizing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860779","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11892,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CAMILLE PAGLIA","H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Volat"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22d87921-cd0d-3219-b000-1e00edbf25d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mode id\u00e9ologique et insularit\u00e9 arrogante","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978756","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Fred Matthews"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nature\/Nurture, Realism\/Nominalism: Our Fundamental Conflict Over Human Identity. A Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179150","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7344,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[109616,109817],[121628,121805],[144406,144628]],"Locations in B":[[6437,6638],[7527,7717],[10098,10321]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Kroll"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.3.136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c0a37dd-963a-39c6-8362-dc2c5173923d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.3.136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Domestic Disturbances: African Women's Cultural Production in the Postcolonial Continuum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.3.136","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":5126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Speculum of the Other Woman (1974), Luce Irigaray argues that \"any theory of the subject has always been appropriated by the masculine.\" This paper offers an analysis of Irigaray's critique of subjectivity and examines the psychological mechanism referred to as \"the phallic economy of castration.\" A different way of conceiving the relation between subject and object is explored by imagining a new subject of desire.","creator":["Ofelia Schutte"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73adbc75-5179-3ad7-bf84-2e1292c0ef31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Irigaray on the Problem of Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810096","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6149,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478011]],"Locations in B":[[35831,35858]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kelly Oliver"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Kristeva's Imaginary Father and the Crisis in the Paternal Function","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465190","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":13772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503582,503659]],"Locations in B":[[97,178]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victoria Warren"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43293740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Tennessee","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From the Restoration to Hollywood: John Dryden's \"Conquest of Granada\" and James Cameron's \"Terminator\" Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293740","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13158,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[76600,76683]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How do people come to participate in violent display? By \u2018violent display\u2019, I mean a collective effort to stage violence for people to see, notice, or take in. Violent displays occur in diverse contexts and involve a range of actors: state and non-state, men and women, adults and children. The puzzle is why they occur at all given the risks and costs. Socialization helps to resolve this puzzle by showing how actors who have consciously adopted or internalized group norms might take part, despite the risks. Socialization is more limited in explaining how and why actors who are not bound by group norms also manage to put violence on display. To account for these other pathways, I propose a theory of \u2018casting\u2019. Casting is the process by which actors take on roles and roles take on actors. Roles enable actors to do things they would not normally do. They give the display its form, content, and meaning. Paying attention to this process reveals how violent displays come into being and how the most eager actors as well as unwitting and unwilling participants come to take part in these grisly shows. To explore variation in the casting process, I investigate violent displays that occurred in two different contexts: the Bosnian war and Jim Crow Maryland. Data come from interviews, trial testimonies, and primary sources.","creator":["Lee Ann Fujii"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48590494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27ec62ab-1078-3c0a-8642-01765d99db26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48590494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"673","pageStart":"661","pagination":"pp. 661-673","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Talk of the town\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48590494","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Explaining pathways to participation in violent display"} +{"abstract":"Single-sex education for girls constitutes a focal point around which issues of gender, choice and educational decision-making coalesce. My concern is not to enter the debate about the merits of single-sex education for girls per se, but to examine the relationship between discourses of femininity and discourses around single-sex schooling to see how they interact in the choice of single-sex schools by girls and their parents. In this paper, I explore the ways in which aspects of feminist poststructuralist theory can be used to offer a more dynamic and complex account of the processes of school choice than that assumed by neo-liberal theorists. The theory I develop is illuminated by interviews with three girls and their parents, from different social-class backgrounds, at the point at which they were making decisions about which secondary school to apply for. A focus such as this enables me to do two things: firstly, to develop a more adequate understanding of the relationship between gender and educational decision-making; and secondly, to critique the underlying theory of instrumental rationality, and its relationship to school choice, which has underwritten the marketisation of education in Aotearoa\/New Zealand.","creator":["Susan Watson"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3e8ce4c-e646-3747-9f58-15f25b4ab121"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Single-Sex Education for Girls: Heterosexuality, Gendered Subjectivity and School Choice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393337","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay critiques feminist treatments of maternal-fetal \"relationality\" that unwittingly replicate features of Western individualism (for example, the Cartesian division between the asocial body and the social-cognitive person, or the conflation of social and biological birth). I argue for a more reflexive perspective on relationality that would acknowledge how we produce persons through our actions and rhetoric. Personhood and relationality can be better analyzed as dynamic, negotiated qualities realized through social practice.","creator":["Lynn M. Morgan"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a24759e-d770-35a2-bc29-2ad14f179925"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fetal Relationality in Feminist Philosophy: An Anthropological Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810321","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article challenges a key tacit assumption underpinning legal and ethical instruments in health care, namely, that people are ideally bounded, independent, and often also strategically rational individuals. Such an understanding of personhood has been criticized within feminist and other critical scholarship as being unfit to capture the deeply relational nature of human beings. In the field of medicine, however, it also causes tangible problems. I propose that a solidarity-based perspective entails a relational approach and as such helps to formulate new solutions to complex ethical and regulatory questions, ranging from caring for people at the end of their lives to improving policies for organ donation and better governance of health data. It also underscores the importance of universal health care. Although a solidarity-based perspective does not require health to be seen as an individually enforceable right, it does influence our understanding of individual rights: it draws attention to how their meaning is shaped by shared social practices. I conclude by arguing that, in light of current pressures for medicine to become more personalized, using a relational understanding of personhood to shape policies and practices is a much needed endeavor.","creator":["Barbara Prainsack"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26580368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7fdb012-8715-32a5-a849-ea3f7b0d0770"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26580368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"The \u201cWe\u201d in the \u201cMe\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26580368","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Solidarity and Health Care in the Era of Personalized Medicine"} +{"abstract":"This essay considers the significance of the relationship between Fanny Dorrit and her mother-in-law, Mrs. Merdle. I argue that these women form a homosocial bond via Edmund Sparkler, Fanny's husband and Mrs. Merdle's son, that is much like the relationship formed between men via a woman in common, as examined by Eve Kosofky Sedgwick. Fanny sets a socioeconomic goal for herself, to best Mrs. Merdle, and enacts her own class warfare. Her rhetoric is specifically economic, and her goal forces Mrs. Merdle to pay first literally, with material bribes, and later figuratively, with wounded pride. Fanny achieves her goal in this relationship through her manipulation of performance. Dickens thus offers a portrait of how women arrange such relationships and work within cultural and narrative constraints to exert power, and does so using a conventionally male-empowering Sedgwickian triangle. Little Dorrit suggests a way to consider relationships among women that are not nurturing, but are a matter of business, as well as a way to read destabilizing forces within ostensibly conventional narratives.","creator":["Katie R. Peel"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e1bb605-1401-3df7-a2df-311391f6ae4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"'Make Her Pay\"': Fanny Dorrit's Disruption in Charles Dickens's \"Little Dorrit\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372274","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7440,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494005]],"Locations in B":[[44153,44291]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The focus of this paper is on The American Scene, which is found to display a deep sensitivity to the spatiality of desire and to be motivated by a complex dynamic of erotic mastery and surrender: subjects assert their self-possession in the very act of submitting to the erotic power of another force-a force that may be human, nonhuman, or indeterminate. The desire for literal, physical mastery over the other is here rechanneled into an identification with the scene of desire that car dispense with the erotic object. This complex psychosexual mechanism, which I call oblique possession, thrives on a disruption of the dichotomies of sexuality and identity that queer theory has questioned. In tracing the circuits of oblique possession, the paper articulates a queer perspective on Henry James's work outside any necessary relationship between two individuals.","creator":["Gert Buelens"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5604ad3f-09fa-398f-a7f1-3cb01f15b005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Henry James's Oblique Possession: Plottings of Desire and Mastery in The American Scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463518","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":10032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Ann Abate"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"faa93cf1-2703-3eef-886a-78e9172b0c97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Red: The Man with the (Gay) Red Tie in Faulkner's \"The Sound and the Fury\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476961","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the contradictory ways in which adolescents just under the age of consent are represented in illegal sexual relations with both men and women who are over the age of consent. We are specifically interested in exploring the ways in which the gender of the adolescent and the adult affect public discourse, legal responses, and social perceptions of the harm of sexual relations. We argue that the development of an indiscriminate legal and policy narrative of child sexual abuse that increasingly includes all aspects of adolescent sexuality \u201cerases\u201d an adolescent subjectivity. By exploring the nuanced ways in which the historical construction of childhood as sexually innocent intersects with current cultural scripts of femininity and masculinity, this article hopes to add to the small but growing literature on the issue of sexual consent, sexual ethics, and sexual citizenship for young people.","creator":["Belinda Carpenter","Erin O\u2019Brien","Sharon Hayes","Jodi Death"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2014.17.1.23","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19334192"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71315089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b9edadf-9d29-32ba-942b-156c9845f910"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nclr.2014.17.1.23"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newcrimlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Criminal Law Review: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Harm, Responsibility, Age, and Consent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2014.17.1.23","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna Clark"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30054266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Chevalier d'Eon and Wilkes: Masculinity and Politics in the Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054266","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":17281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rural communities all over South East Asia are facing major challenges as they try to shape their economic futures in ways that will increase wellbeing for all. This paper argues that researchers who describe and explain rural change play a powerful role in shaping imagined futures and the practices of local development. We foreground the theoretical choices made in representing rural change and call for a rethinking of the dynamics of transformation, one that highlights complexity, uncertainty and possibility. Following Robert Chambers and Jane Jacobs we draw on ecological representations of habitat maintenance, diversity and interdependent development and co-development to help inspire new ways of thinking and performing change. We illustrate theoretical and practical choices that can strengthen resilience in rural communities, using examples from our action research intervention in the Philippines.","creator":["Katherine Gibson","Amanda Cahill","Deirdre McKay"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40647322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7618fa1-f6e9-3518-9aec-19bd3d2a9efb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40647322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Rethinking the dynamics of rural transformation: performing different development pathways in a Philippine municipality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40647322","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Gilmore"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"780","pageStart":"743","pagination":"pp. 743-780","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"De Genewine Artekil\": William Wells Brown, Blackface Minstrelsy, and Abolitionism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928342","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":15438,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[433304,433399],[436475,436592]],"Locations in B":[[71871,71966],[72025,72142]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Wingrove"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"666b3c8d-27ff-383e-b97c-f88e94abcd05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/191902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexual Performance as Political Performance in the Lettre a M. D'Alembert sur les Spectacles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191902","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":15276,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494638,494699]],"Locations in B":[[85793,85854]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jorge L. Catal\u00e1 Carrasco"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14bb3cbe-98e1-33da-95ba-f95e31f55638"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29742305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La Alteridad Sexual En Las Dos Caras Del Deseo (1994) De Carmen Oll\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29742305","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Cervetti"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In the Breeches, Petticoats, and Pleasures of \"Orlando\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831473","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5856,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46677,46826]],"Locations in B":[[33790,33940]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"If recent studies of homosexuality in Renaissance literature have helped to challenge the modern idea of an essential sexual identity, I aim to challenge the idea that homosexual desire has its source in sexual \"sameness,\" in an identity with another. Donne's \"Sapho to Philaenis\" participates in a common Renaissance discourse of likeness in love; his Sappho appeals to physical identity-the \"sameness\" of the bodies of two women-as the basis of an idealized passion. But in \"Sapho to Philaenis\" difference emerges as the only inviolable, invariable feature of erotic experience with another, and sameness is exposed as rhetorical rather than material, a contingency produced by Donne's comparative method. By comparing Sappho to Philaenis, Donne's poem suggests that sameness has to do not with the \"nature\" of homosexuality but with a cultural \"homopoetics\" that makes such likenesses and produces sexual identities.","creator":["Paula Blank"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1e8ebe8-8e4e-329c-b6cc-bc09c6f4179a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Comparing Sappho to Philaenis: John Donne's \"Homopoetics\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462932","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":8274,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75071,75258]],"Locations in B":[[40874,41062]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frann Michel"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bdecff0f-fc2d-3482-a9d6-d6815b314685"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"William Faulkner as a Lesbian Author","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907568","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456226,456411]],"Locations in B":[[19020,19205]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily Colbert Cairns"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67a6fdd6-52e4-360a-8ed0-c05ca4774a67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43589566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"ESTHER AMONG CRYPTO-JEWS AND CHRISTIANS: QUEEN ESTHER AND THE INQUISITION MANUSCRIPTS OF ISABEL DE CARVAJAL AND LOPE DE VEGA'S LA HERMOSA ESTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43589566","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7413,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[84374,84458]],"Locations in B":[[31719,31803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Wrazen"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41201379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07401558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53166061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41201379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yeartradmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Yearbook for Traditional Music","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"International Council for Traditional Music","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"DAUGHTERS OF TRADITION, MOTHERS OF INVENTION: MUSIC, TEACHING, AND GENDER IN EVOLVING CONTEXTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41201379","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AbstractIn African literature, a substantial body of scholarship deals with gender cleavages but the tension opposing the cultural construction of femininity and women's subjective consciousness lacks attention. This article examines the resistance against the cultural elements that mark women's bodies as female. A consideration of the novel Memoirs of a Woman Doctor by Nawal el Saadawi, one of the leading Egyptian feminist writers, reveals the contradictions embedded in women's self-oppressive struggle against patriarchy. The interconnection of resistance and oppression indicates how women's liberatory practices are inseparable from the patriarchal realm. The major flaw of the feminist discourse resides in the configuration of men and women in terms of oppressors and oppressed and the subsequent reinscription of the already existing and socially sanctioned sexual binaries. Reshaping the relationships between men and women in a new light of partnership rather than antagonism for a resolution of the problems they face together is more empowering for the feminist writer.","creator":["Khadidiatou Gu\u00e8ye"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"788f77ed-6855-3d33-9e53-937d76f8ce1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cTyrannical Femininity\u201d in Nawal El Saadawi's Memoirs of a Woman Doctor<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.160","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6412,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[92287,92368],[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[36422,36503],[39463,39515]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Western ideology takes biology as the cause, and behavior and social statuses as the effects, and then proceeds to construct biological dichotomies to justify the \"naturalness\" of gendered behavior and gendered social statuses. What we believe is what we see-two sexes producing two genders. The process, however, goes the other way: gender constructs social bodies to be different and unequal. The content of the two sets of constructed social categories, \"females and males\" and \"women and men,\" is so varied that their use in research without further specification renders the results spurious.","creator":["Judith Lorber"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e5a612d-8941-3eaa-9410-a744c519ec42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"568","pagination":"pp. 568-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Believing is Seeing: Biology as Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189514","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5982,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476453,476555]],"Locations in B":[[31749,31851]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Grant Stirling"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6b19c54-2c6e-3355-b61b-1b6deb9cb698"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"958","pageStart":"935","pagination":"pp. 935-958","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"EXHAUSTING HETERONARRATIVE: \"THE AMERICAN WOMAN IN THE CHINESE HAT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285324","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9606,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[228400,228828],[228845,229364],[233067,233179]],"Locations in B":[[53394,53823],[53841,54363],[54696,54811]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adeline Johns-Putra"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bee6b480-c133-3543-a98e-9aa6e096f863"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Environmental Care Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0125","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Leyla Hussein, a 32-year-old Londoner and leading activist against female genital cutting, conducted an experimental study to test the influence of \u201cpolitical correctness\u201d on attitudes toward female genital cutting. With a signed petition supporting female genital cutting, she approached shoppers and told them that she wanted \u201cto protect her \u2018culture, traditions and rights.\u2019\u201d She received nineteen signatures to her petition in thirty minutes. Some of those who signed the petition stated that they believed that female genital cutting was wrong, but they agreed to sign the petition out of respect of Ms. Hussein\u2019s culture. In a world that affirms both cultural and human rights, negotiation of both human and group rights tend to lead to \u201cpolitical correctness.\u201d When these values are justified by religion, they are even harder to negotiate. How can one reconcile human and corporate rights without compromising the rights of women? This essay explores implications of political correctness on efforts to affirm women\u2019s rights. Drawing examples from female genital cutting, the paper examines implications of moral theories like moral universalism and cultural relativism to argue for cross-cultural universals approach as possible reconciliatory approach towards affirming human rights.","creator":["Mary Nyangweso"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671486","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"699807153"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"537dba46-0076-34e0-8c50-54601daa3185"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26671486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliviol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion and Violence","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Religion","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NEGOTIATING CULTURAL RIGHTS TO AFFIRM HUMAN RIGHTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671486","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":7894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"CHALLENGES WOMEN FACE IN THE TW ENTY-FIRST CENTURY"} +{"abstract":"An explosion in the production of cultural data reflects the increasing influence of calculative reason in the cultural sector, a situation criticised as the 'instrumentalisation' of culture. This article argues that this criticism concedes too much to the logics of calculation, and that power and political agency are being worked out in the sector in more complex ways in the wake of calculation than simply acquiescing to it. This is illustrated through an ethnographic account of the work of a new stratum of calculative cultural expertise that has emerged in the sector as calculation has become more important. These experts construct political agency through relational work that is concerned with both calculative and non-calculative matters, including the performance of objectivity, the mobilisation of various effects, and the construction of coalitions of actors.","creator":["Russell Prince"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6e1b73c-85b8-3389-8ac0-5fb4c41df283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24433730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"762","pageStart":"747","pagination":"pp. 747-762","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Calculative Cultural Expertise? Consultants and Politics in the UK Cultural Sector","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433730","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dyan Elliott"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b40e1e64-8860-3a5f-a207-3d16e7f5898e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/532095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Seeing Double: John Gerson, the Discernment of Spirits, and Joan of Arc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532095","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":18651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judy Rohrer"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6f57a60-e200-3465-8358-038ca8321040"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Full-Inclusion Feminism: A Feminist Deployment of Disability Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459006","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10876,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[23570,23861]],"Locations in B":[[20001,20291]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Wild"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68c997f5-7d47-3352-b241-aa556ce01996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201225","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Dabakis"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3aaaa6f0-8a5e-3af4-bd81-c1f178f83342"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2713280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Douglas Tilden's Mechanics Fountain: Labor and the \"Crisis of Masculinity\" in the 1890s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713280","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Garc\u00eda-Moreno"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7be99647-82ac-367d-83cc-58f9b364c394"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Other Weapons, Other Words: Literary and Political Reconsiderations in Luisa Valenzuela's \"Other Weapons\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119598","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8451,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,523990]],"Locations in B":[[52162,52222]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In past decades, new studies have explored the role of gender in the shaping of colonial societies on the African continent. Yet, most of the scholarship has focused on the twentieth century and not much attention has been paid to previous periods. Records from Benguela allow us to see the role of African women in an earlier era, their access to land and labor, and to explore the impact of new forms of production and control. In this study, I explore mechanisms through which women had access to land and accumulated property and wealth in Benguela during the nineteenth century. The study explores the lives of African women, analyzing their family connections and commercial partnerships in order to understand land access, wealth accumulation, and social mobility. Colonial sources, including parish and land records, allow us to investigate how women built their wealth, established social networks, created new kinship relationships, and had access to property. In the process they claimed new social and economic positions in the colonial setting, accumulating dependents and properties. While processes of claiming land and developing agricultural exploitation were not available to all, some women managed to capitalize on their social connections. Gender, or the negotiation of relational identities with other social actors, became a key factor in this process. Land, perceived as genderless in the historiography, became a space for economic gain and the assertion of agency by local African women. Caught between shifting politics among the colonial power and local rulers, women negotiated new social and economic spaces.","creator":["MARIANA CANDIDO"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44329629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452258"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619248"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"619ff2b4-82d4-3421-b0c4-c2fb9638315c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44329629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrieconhist"}],"isPartOf":"African Economic History","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"WOMEN, FAMILY, AND LANDED PROPERTY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY BENGUELA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44329629","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12055,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478051,478195]],"Locations in B":[[50670,76567]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Thomas Flynn's work on Sartre and Foucault, the first of a two-volume project, offers a unique opportunity for examining an existential theory of history. It occasions re-thinking existential-social categories from the vantage point of the poststructuralist turn. And it contributes to developing existential variants of critical theory. The following questions guide me in each of the three above areas. First, how is human history intelligible, given not only our finite sense of ourselves but also claims that we have reached the end of history? Second, with the poststructuralist eclipse of dialectics, can we render existential categories in social terms and vice versa? Third, critics decry grand theorizing even in fallibilist reason, e.g., of Habermas, while others are worried by the normative deficits of poststructuralist nominalism, e.g., of Foucault. Can existential variants of critical social theory, anticipated before Sartre by Marcuse, split the difference?","creator":["Martin Beck Matu\u0161t\u00edk"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f88ac743-a55a-3fef-97e9-e432f96ff9e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20010265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Existential Social Theory after the Poststructuralist and Communication Turns","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010265","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8153,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477202,477271]],"Locations in B":[[50134,50213]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is widely accepted that Judith Butler's work represents a fundamental departure from that of Luce Irigaray. However, in a 2001 essay, Butler suggests that Irigaray's work plays a formative role in her own, and that the problematization of the biological and cultural distinction that Irigaray's notion of sexual difference accomplishes must be rethought and multiplied rather than simply rejected. In this essay, I place the notion of precarity in the work of Butler alongside that of sexual difference in Irigaray, to show how together they seek to address violence to certain bodies through an approach that is at once ecological and political. I show that Butler's concept of precarity has deep, largely unappreciated, roots in the work of Irigaray. Butler explores precarity as bodily multiplicity in ways that pluralize Irigaray's own ethics and politics of difference. Butler is, in other words, rewriting sexual difference as precarity.","creator":["Emily Anne Parker"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bfe513b-5e03-393d-8c4a-932cdd913738"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44509350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Precarity and Elemental Difference: On Butler's Re-writing of Irigarayan Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509350","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELISABETH B. THOMPSON-HARDY"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4425670-8231-34c1-bb3e-b457b07447d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Two: Situating the Bricolage: Research and the Critical Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136442","volumeNumber":"522","wordCount":16695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Inscriptions on the body, especially tattoo, scarification, and body paint, have been part of ethnographic literature since before the birth of anthropology as a discipline. Anthropology's origins as the study of the exotic Other can be seen in the early descriptions of the body art of non-Western peoples. Anthropologists have generally focused on how the inscribed body serves as a marker of identity in terms of gender, age, and political status. More recently, scholars interested in this subject have looked also at issues of modernity, authenticity, and representation. The recent focus on the inscribed body responds to postmodern theory, the importance of body art in contemporary Western culture, reflections on the meaning of representations of the exotic, and an interest in the visible surface of the body as the interface between the individual and society. This article reviews recent literature in anthropology and related disciplines pertaining to the cultural construction of the inscribed body.","creator":["Enid Schildkrout"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5019a993-2201-3669-a40e-8b750ebc69a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Inscribing the Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064856","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":13288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While it may be tempting to dismiss the broad humor and downright inaccuracies of politically oriented You Tube videos such as Brad Neely's animated short on George Washington, this article argues it would be a mistake. The campy exaggerations and absurd claims contained therein may offer new sources of populist resistance to dominant understandings of masculinity as played out in the relation between the founding fathers and contemporary constitutional politics. This article explores two parodies of masculinity and paternity, suggesting ways in which You Tube may be used to integrate or converge scholarly and popular understandings into a new discourse, called Constitutionalism 2.0.","creator":["Susan Burgess"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41058327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e52b8e0b-1b88-3ef6-a7ea-1539ccdf7efd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41058327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"You Tube on Masculinity and the Founding Fathers: Constitutionalism 2.0","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41058327","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":10189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Agnes I. Lugo-Ortiz"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9511bae-70ea-35e7-ad55-d21d53641cf8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"45","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sobre el trafico simbolico de mujeres: Homosocialidad, identidad nacional y modernidad literaria en Puerto Rico (Apuntes para una relectura de \"El puertorrique\u00f1o docil\" de Rene Marques)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530909","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8812,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[175100,175687]],"Locations in B":[[40038,40574]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joel Sanders"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26323730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3cf78c5-2f59-379d-942c-66094513c55d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26323730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Stud to Stalled! Architecture In Transition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26323730","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["KERSTIN BRANDES"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Morimura\/Duchamp: Image Recycling and Parody","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263713","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4466,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432966,433041]],"Locations in B":[[9617,9695]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Nesbet"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7c1d308-6889-3d8b-98ba-e38404c10143"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1213442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Inanimations: \"Snow White\" and \"Ivan the Terrible\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213442","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":8157,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435597]],"Locations in B":[[43295,43372]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Historians have noted that male bureaucrats and natural resource experts tended to dominate early twentieth-century national and hemispheric conservationist movements in Latin America, but a constellation of female activists, notable among them Gabriela Mistral, strengthened conservationism in the cultural sphere. Capitalizing on her leadership in Pan-Americanism, transnational feminist networks, and cutting-edge teaching, Mistral functioned throughout her career as an advocate for conservationism, gendering the natural environment in strategically essentialist ways. Important tropes throughout her poetry, Nature and Mother Earth became specific themes in Mistral's journalistic prose. Here, Mistral blended conservationism with anti-imperialism, arguing that Mother Earth was threatened both by man's failure to care for her and by predatory imperialists. Environmental stewardship also played a central role in her Pan-American initiatives and complimented the \"official\" Pan-American Conservation Movement of the interwar period. Mistral's de facto ecofeminism is echoed in Latin American women's writing of the 1920s, 30s, and 40s, suggesting that Nature represented an alternate sphere for women beyond the urban manifestations of modernization. The gathering of female voices around the gendered image of Mother Nature also represents a corpus of early environmental prophets in Latin American letters and culture.","creator":["Erin Finzer"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30d535d0-3005-353c-a6cc-50557aa69955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24368285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Mother Earth, Earth Mother: Gabriela Mistral as an Early Ecofeminist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368285","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":5626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kate Nash"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d393277-11b6-321b-b5b5-7a71be591c03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Feminist Production of Knowledge: Is Deconstruction a Practice for Women?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395254","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["NICHOLAS F. RADEL"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07313403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24322153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medirenadramengl"}],"isPartOf":"Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Rosemont Publishing & Printing Corp DBA Associated University Presses","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Homoeroticism, Discursive Change, and Politics: Reading \"Revolution\" in Seventeenth-Century English Tragicomedy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322153","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7487,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524260]],"Locations in B":[[39995,40082]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Wickberg"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3660528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1bb260e-40b1-3003-92fe-3e06f61ca848"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3660528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Heterosexual White Male: Some Recent Inversions in American Cultural History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3660528","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":14174,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[63341,63405]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Douglas"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2403baba-bbe2-3e5b-98ef-d9dab2a6b6d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630528","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":2736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Adapting elements of exotic dance, burlesque, and circus, fitness pole dancing is taught and practiced globally. Exemplifying post-feminism's putative \"freedoms,\" it represents a scene of precarious labor in the new economy, and evidences the continued purchase of older patriarchal constructions of \"women's work\" and \"precarity\" in capitalism.","creator":["Louise Owen"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8e118e7-228a-3374-b148-5c3cb7ffbe5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23362773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Work That Body\": Precarity and Femininity in the New Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362773","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":9798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LISA M. LOGAN"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"996ea94b-8383-3ba0-b4ee-5964881b4ccd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Race, Romanticism, and the Politics of Feminist Literary Study: Harriet Prescott Spofford's \"The Amber Gods\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679352","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay analyses skin bleaching among middle-class Tanzanian women as performative practice. It draws on empirical material from interviews with middle-class Tanzanian women as well as from advertisements in Dar es Salaam. Skin bleaching is situated at a \u2018site of ambivalence\u2019 (Butler), revolving around \u2018light beauty\u2019 as postcolonial regulatory ideal. Thus on the one hand, skin bleaching is analyzed as a practice of \u2018passing for light(-skinned), embodying urban \u2018modern\u2019 forms of subjectivation. On the other hand, the decolonizing potential of skin bleaching becomes apparent as the interviewed women\u2019s forms of embodiment renegotiate postcolonial Blackness putting forward notions of \u2018browning\u2019 (Tate). However, \u2018light beauty\u2019 then also appears as norm, according to which forms of embodiment can only \u2018fail\u2019. In this regard, skin bleaching challenges essentialized notions of Blackness, embodied in the color of one\u2019s skin, while it also illustrates the performativity of racialized embodiment and its intersections with other structural categories.","creator":["Katharina Fritsch"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1520ffc5-efa9-3be4-a733-83c2d5ce7e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"770","pageStart":"749","pagination":"pp. 749-770","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Trans-skin\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413987","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10079,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478793,478832]],"Locations in B":[[62417,62465]],"subTitle":"Analyzing the practice of skin bleaching among middle-class women in Dar es Salaam"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Philip Alperson"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Topography of Improvisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793268","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":6200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie Sims Steward"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3190326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ceci n'est pas un Hat: Stevie Smith and the Refashioning of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190326","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7790,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[74836,75056],[124582,124727],[460746,460962]],"Locations in B":[[2875,3073],[30876,31021],[42149,42365]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Trimble Alliaume"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Risks of Repeating Ourselves: Reading Feminist\/Womanist Figures of Jesus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460709","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Barad"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/345321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c13e4a9-4135-3375-a4e3-c99b070e5864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/345321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"831","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-831","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/345321","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11943,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[59999,60195],[60404,60941]],"Locations in B":[[9253,9448],[9460,10000]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHELSEA BAILEY"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5c2873c-72af-3d66-a3bc-f3f1403b0418"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER SEVEN: A PLACE FROM WHICH TO SPEAK: STORIES OF MEMORY, CRISIS AND STRUGGLE FROM THE PRESCHOOL CLASSROOM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975113","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7154,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431288,431480]],"Locations in B":[[17068,17260]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article explores news coverage from 2010\u20132013 of Chelsea (formerly known as Bradley) Manning\u2019s disclosures of both state and gender secrets to discover how government actors, journalists, and social movement leaders disciplined emergent truths in two modalities. The first modality is juridical, involving Manning\u2019s trial and reporting that focuses attention exclusively on Manning\u2019s crime against the state; the second is biopolitical, disciplining Manning by discrediting her body and voice as troubled, confused, damaged, weak, irrational, and pathological. That Manning\u2019s disclosures resulted in repressive and discursive discipline does not mean that such an outcome was inevitable. Rather than abandoning disclosure as a democratic project, we might ask ourselves how the rhetorical process of disclosure might open up a contradictory publicity that critically exposes the complexity of discipline itself.","creator":["Dana L. Cloud"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.1.0080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee81766b-c40d-3217-b6e3-02fabbc442e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.1.1.0080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Private Manning and the Chamber of Secrets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.1.1.0080","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article addresses implicit and underlying discrimination in public and private interactions in Denmark. In particular, it examines racial structural discrimination in regard to citizenship and belonging in Danish contexts. Two cases are presented in this analysis, both from the fall of 2015, in which mixed race figures either directly or indirectly. The first case is a public debate concerning Danish citizenship as presented in news coverage and the second is an everyday private interaction at a dinner party in which the author was a participant. The study assesses how (racialized) Danishness, citizenship, and entitlement are constructed in the two cases. Further, it introduces the notion of \u201cslipperiness\u201d as a mechanism in discriminatory interactions (in regard to defining \u201cDanishness\u201d) and discusses how this notion functions to maintain and enforce racial discrimination.","creator":["Mira C. Skadeg\u00e5rd"],"datePublished":"2022-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48680644","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"818654450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34446dea-75e2-313e-af8f-d7db1ffe8aa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48680644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcmrs"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"eScholarship Publishing, California Digital Library","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Slipping and Sliding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48680644","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":11831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Wielding Power with Slippery Constructions of Danishness"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara H. Lindheim"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1562066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjphil"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Philology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hercules Cross-Dressed, Hercules Undressed: Unmasking the Construction of the Propertian \"Amator\" in Elegy 4.9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562066","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":9949,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[363390,363602],[477882,477951]],"Locations in B":[[8376,8591],[59064,59133]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Punday"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91984ecc-a21f-3f8b-897a-d8eebc54b492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Involvement, Interruption, and Inevitability: Melancholy as an Aesthetic Principle in Game Narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685546","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One of the major debates of the nineteen nineties in France was the issue of equal opportunity for women in politics (parit\u00e9). For the noninitiated the discussion was difficult to follow. This article, based on the declarations of the major protagonists, attempts to clarify things and pinpoint the cultural stakes. The political outcome that amounts to the official recognition of affirmative action as an alternative to universalit\u00e9, the cornerstone of the Republic, is likely to have far-reaching consequences on the value system and attitudes. This debate also sheds light on mental processes and the mediation of conflict in France.","creator":["James Corbett"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/399765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/399765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"890","pageStart":"882","pagination":"pp. 882-890","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cherchez la femme! Sexual Equality in Politics and Affirmative Action in France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/399765","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":3859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara A. Potter"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26529287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3245f84-7317-3b0f-8dc4-adc41fb2243e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26529287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"In and Out of Bondage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26529287","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7663,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[250208,250484],[253515,253721]],"Locations in B":[[24026,24259],[42340,42547]],"subTitle":"Identity, Eroticism, and Desire in In\u00e9s Arredondo and Juan Garc\u00eda Ponce"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vasu Reddy"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"305c9d5f-78cc-3738-a10b-15e585d494dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"62","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial: Sexuality in Africa: Some Trends, Transgressions and Tirades","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066671","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6426,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[36020,36100]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Foley"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b117ba2-e139-3887-8422-1b6809d626e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2700501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"1127","pageStart":"1126","pagination":"pp. 1126-1127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700501","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the way in which female agency in political violence is enabled through gender. It looks at two examples of heroine stories \u2013 the cases of British Navy sailor Faye Turney and the popular film Female Agents (2008) \u2013 to illustrate how female agency in political violence is constructed at the expense of motherhood. The article argues that representations of female agency in political violence involve a tension between a life-giving and a life-taking identity, and that agency is only enabled if this tension is removed or overcome. This suggests that heroism, as agency in political violence, is in a symbiotic relationship with motherhood: heroism functions as motherhood's constitutive other and vice versa. This means not only that the writing of heroines depends on ideas about female bodies' association with motherhood but also that essentialist ideas about gender are reinforced. Accordingly, this article suggests that female agency in political violence is communicated and negotiated through motherhood, even in cases where this might not be immediately apparent.","creator":["Linda \u00c5h\u00e4ll"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc90e7a1-5525-3a22-967c-9254fc676160"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26301918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The writing of heroines: Motherhood and female agency in political violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301918","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emma Campbell"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexual Poetics and the Politics of Translation in the Tale of Griselda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125405","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":14707,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[438602,438771]],"Locations in B":[[87115,87285]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Domna C. Stanton"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"046cf59c-bf05-3964-95d8-1ac6f5d897f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Editor's Note","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462592","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":900,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[5833,5965]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We examined the post-publication period of six feminist articles (Hart, 2006) using citation indexing. From our findings, we argue that both indexes are embedded within an enduring system of academic patriarchy and neither index truly measures impact of scholarly work. Implications of current impact measures for promotion, tenure, and merit are discussed.","creator":["Jeni Hart","Amy Scott Metcalfe"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40606848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50711358-d0a2-377e-8303-d7af483be6c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40606848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Whose Web of Knowledge\u2122 is it Anyway?: Citing Feminist Research in the Field of Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40606848","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":10337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20617174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3949852f-a438-3956-b592-ac59ac83a78d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20617174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20617174","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joe Rollins"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c93a612-2707-3bc6-9ec8-3637a05a02f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Political Science, Political Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984478","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SERGIO DE LA MORA"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0720eaa4-f22e-3a99-93af-ec3c03322b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"FASCINATING MACHISMO: TOWARD AN UNMASKING OF HETEROSEXUAL MASCULINITY IN ARTURO RIPSTEIN'S EL LUGAR SIN L\u00cdMITES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687985","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Humanism\" is a term that has designated a remarkably disparate set of ideologies. Nonetheless, strains of religious, secular, existential, and Marxist humanism have tended to circumscribe the category of the human with reference to the themes of reason, autonomy, judgment, and freedom. This essay examines the emergence of a new humanistic discourse in feminist theory, one that instead finds its provocation in the unwilled passivity and vulnerability of the human body, and in the vulnerability of the human body to suffering and violence. Grounded in a descriptive ontology that privileges figures such as exposure, dispossession, vulnerability, and \"precariousness,\" this new humanism is a corporeal humanism. This essay probes both the promise and the limitations of this emergent humanism with particular reference to recent work by feminist philosophers Judith Butler and Adriana Cavarero.","creator":["ANN V. MURPHY"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcbb3772-0e52-3673-86c1-7c18b7f49128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23016569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"590","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-590","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Corporeal Vulnerability and the New Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016569","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean-Pierre Boul\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26289559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"oclc","value":"65211423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006212212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86461e69-9c34-396f-97a5-b67520538dbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26289559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender Melancholy in Doubrovsky's \"autofictions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26289559","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Toy Box is a unique twenty-year-old feminist sexual products business that stands out as an alternative in the sex industry, the business world, and within the realm of feminist organizing. Life at Toy Box is a daily struggle over meaning production, and this paper is an analysis of the major meaning-makers at Toy Box: feminism, merchandise, sexperts, and customers, and their roles in focusing, packaging, and constructing sexuality at Toy Box. This paper focuses on how a particular business produces and manages sexuality not only in the space the business provides, but also in bedrooms around the Western world. An important part of this project, then, is to consider Toy Box in light of its implications for the production of sexuality and the commodification of feminism in the millenium.","creator":["Meika Loe"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e51ee8df-fbf9-3f50-9640-168927b4719e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Dildos in our Toolboxes\" The production of sexuality at a pro-sex feminist sex toy store","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035538","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15663,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[92885,93016]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karin A. Martin"],"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55cb16b2-0930-3489-b7fb-6227f8011880"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189856","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48396,48503]],"Locations in B":[[3071,3179]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hitomi Yoshio"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02f0b1b5-2931-3470-9281-f617c7f36868"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24394405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing the Woman Writer: Literature, Media, and Gender Politics in Tamura Toshiko's Akirame and \"Onna sakusha\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394405","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":12025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Historically, embroidery demonstrated a Moroccan woman's worth as potential wife and homemaker. In recent decades it has come to serve as a widespread income-generating activity with the potential to upset normative notions of Moroccan womanhood even while it maintains a residual affiliation with proper feminine activity. The transitional statuses of Moroccan womanhood, on the one hand, and embroidery work and its objects, on the other, are interdependent. Both are linked to the intensified circulation of embroidered objects in markets throughout the twentieth century and into the present, and to women's increased participation in a formalized labor market. The marketization of women's labor and its products necessarily entails remaking producers, their work practices, and their orientation towards \"work.\" Thus, ongoing status transformations of Moroccan embroidery and embroiderers give insight into neoliberal reconfigurations of gender and work, and ambivalent recodings of their values today.","creator":["Claire Nicholas"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141828"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18618df5-564f-30f4-8a88-689c58cb50cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh- Of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MOROCCAN WOMEN EMBROIDERERS: TECHNICAL AND ETHICAL RECONFIGURATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410885","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10007,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The representations of Egyptian female king Hatshepsut are, as a consequence of a binary heteronormative sex\/gender bind, continuously queered in scholarship. Statements on her body and identity are often made by directly equating her representations with the corporeal. This paper offers a critique of the heteronormative interpretations of Hatshepsut, which often identify her as a cross-dresser, gender-bender or \"woman with a beard.\" An alternative approach will be attempted with the discussion of her imagery in the context of queer and Actor Network theoretical encounters. This paper argues that the binary bind of the sex\/gender system can be traversed through a complex network of actants, including bodies, ancestors, relatives, gods, and material culture.","creator":["Uro\u0161 Matic\u0301"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"412cdbb5-a855-3639-a610-37b2b1f33609"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"831","pageStart":"810","pagination":"pp. 810-831","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"(De)queering Hatshepsut: Binary Bind in Archaeology of Egypt and Kingship Beyond the Corporeal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967042","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DANIEL A. COHEN"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcf956da-eeac-3f0f-adfd-438a15f446b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23322008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Winnie Woodfern Comes Out in Print: Story-Paper Authorship and Protolesbian Self-Representation in Antebellum America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322008","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":22153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses the importance of female breasts in gender construction in Maya art and explains artistic conventions and choices in their deployment. The visual analysis focuses on Late Classic pictorial vases and ceramic figurines. Rather than reflecting a natural body, the female breast was filtered through a cultural lens that drove its highly conceptual rendering in Maya art, mirrored in a breast hieroglyph. Through the principle of contrast, including morphology and absence vs. presence of breasts in specific pictorial contexts, Maya artists constructed female personae varying in age, class, supernatural status, and gender ambiguity. In order to flesh out the layered meaning of the breast, the paper turns to ethnographic studies of modern Maya medicine concerning the hot-cold system. It is argued that ethnographic data on women's bodies in medical discourse shed light on how the breast served as an index of age-based female stereotypes. Los senos femeninos han sido un motivo importante en la historia del arte mundial y esto es igualmente cierto del arte maya prehisp\u00e1nico, donde las mujeres con los senos expuestos son com\u00fanmente representadas. Era un costumbre aceptable para las mujeres llevar s\u00f3lo una falda sin cubrir el pecho o llevar una blusa suelta, exponiendo as\u00ed los senos. Esta pr\u00e1ctica es confirmada en ejemplos numerosos del arte prehisp\u00e1nico, y tambi\u00e9n fue observada por el obispo de Yucatan, Diego de Landa, en el siglo XVI. Im\u00e1genes de las mujeres con los senos expuestos fueron producidas principalmente durante el per\u00edodo cl\u00e1sico tard\u00edo visto entre vasijas pintadas, figurillas de cer\u00e1mica y otros objetos port\u00e1tiles; por otro lado, son raros en el arte p\u00fablico monumental donde los cuerpos de las mujeres aristocr\u00e1ticas nunca se presentaron sin cubrir el pecho. En lugar de reflejar algunas cualidades universales de cuerpos naturales, los senos femeninos fueron concebidos seg\u00fan los gustos, valores y supuestos sobre el cuerpo humano predominante en la sociedad maya antigua. Por ejemplo, los senos ideales, normalmente para las mujeres fecundas, mostrados plenos y grandes, nunca aparec\u00edan decorados con pintura roja y frecuentemente eran coloreados en pintura blanca. El filtrado de los senos a trav\u00e9s de un lente cultural estimul\u00f3 las representaciones art\u00edsticas muy conceptuales, por ejemplo, hacer los senos visibles, aunque la figura es totalmente vestida. La representaci\u00f3n de los senos se ha normalizado en un jerogl\u00edfico cuya lectura todav\u00eda no se ha establecido; muchas im\u00e1genes muestran la misma estilizaci\u00f3n como el jerogl\u00edfico, es decir con el pez\u00f3n en la parte inferior del seno. La utilidad simb\u00f3lica de los senos deriva en parte del hecho de que su forma f\u00edsica no es est\u00e1tica sino que cambia de acuerdo a las etapas de la vida de las mujeres, como el envejecimiento o el embarazo. La forma de los senos, por lo tanto, podr\u00eda ser utilizado como un \u00edndice del estado biol\u00f3gico de la mujer. La distinci\u00f3n m\u00e1s b\u00e1sica se hizo entre los senos plenos de las mujeres fecundas y los senos delgados y planos de las mujeres viejas post-menop\u00e1usicas. Los artistas mayas entendieron el potencial semi\u00f3tico de los senos y utilizaron el principio de contraste, en la morfolog\u00eda de los senos y si fueron expuestos u ocultados por medio de la ropa, o fueron extra\u00f1amente ausentes, para construir los estereotipos femeninos que var\u00edan por la edad, la clase, el estado sobrenatural y la ambig\u00fcedad de g\u00e9nero. Los senos se\u00f1alaron m\u00e1s que la edad de la mujer o su capacidad reproductiva, sino tambi\u00e9n se refiere a las cualidades internas del cuerpo femenino que ten\u00edan connotaciones de la agencia, la competencia, el poder y el peligro. Estos significados m\u00e1s esot\u00e9ricos pueden extrapolarse a partir de estudios etnogr\u00e1ficos de la medicina maya del pasado reciente. El sistema de caliente-fr\u00edo atribu\u00eda un calor excesivo a las mujeres fecundas y otras calidades de poder y peligro. El cuerpo fr\u00edo de una mujer vieja, mientras que es \"d\u00e9bil,\" fue visto como liberado de la sexualidad excesiva y su peligro inherente, lo que sugiere otras formas de competencia. Estos datos etnogr\u00e1ficos sobre los cuerpos de las mujeres en el discurso m\u00e9dico arrojan luz sobre los senos como un \u00edndice de estereotipos femeninos basados en la edad y fertilidad de la mujer.","creator":["Andrea J. Stone"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09565361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fe1da35-af45-309c-a1f7-6529de79ab9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ancimeso"}],"isPartOf":"Ancient Mesoamerica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"KEEPING ABREAST OF THE MAYA: A STUDY OF THE FEMALE BODY IN MAYA ART","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309555","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues against a monolithic, essentialised reading of the Indian Muslim identity. Drawing from research in Mubarakpur, Azamgarh, it highlights the various schisms within the Muslim identity. Telling the story of identity through the eyes of lower caste Muslims, the paper shows that caste, class and maslaki affiliations remain important markers of identity within Muslim society. The very notion of \"Islamic identity\" is itself a matter of fierce interpretative debate among the Muslims. Drawing on evidence from madrasas, the paper argues that the \"other\" within the madrasa is not a Hindu but a fellow Muslim from another maslak.","creator":["Arshad Alam"],"datePublished":"2009-06-13","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cd0ef65-861e-3d1b-b5a4-47d0d4aca54e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40279110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"24","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Contextualising Muslim Identity: Ansaris, Deobandis, Barelwis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279110","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra Morris"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09941cc9-65ee-36db-a7d6-a3e423d786ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Privacy, Privation, Perversity: Toward New Representations of the Personal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175556","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13258,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444339,444425]],"Locations in B":[[54602,54688]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Di Stefano"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/420495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"297e8a25-5bed-398d-bd42-aa29bdfdec20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/420495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Integrating Gender into the Political Science Curriculum: Challenges, Pitfalls, and Opportunities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/420495","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":2236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne Gass"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d885688e-d55a-3f0f-90e3-92a94fc0e304"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43807486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"134","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"POLITICS OF THE HOUSE: DOMESTICITY IN MANUEL PUIG'S \"EL BESO DE LA MUJER ARA\u00d1A\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807486","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59999,60561]],"Locations in B":[[33219,33776]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen Perry"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44377301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b8bcd32-33cb-3873-9f90-7e1f7370dfb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44377301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Research Strategies for Literary and Film Criticism Using FirstSearch Databases: An Exploration of \"MLA\", \"WorldCat\", and \"AH Search\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44377301","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":10363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article provides an analysis of a pedagogy of desire from a Deleuzo-Guattarian perspective. A pedagogy of desire can be theorised in ways that mobilise creative, transgressive and pleasurable forces within teaching and learning environments. It also enables a new view on affect in education as a landscape of becoming in which forces, surfaces and flows of teachers\/students are caught up in a desiring ontology. This marks an attempt to reclaim the notion of desire away from a purely negative, repressive or libidinal framework. The claim of pedagogy of desire is that through the mobilisation and release of desiring production, teachers and students make available to themselves the powerful flows of desire, thereby turning themselves into subjects who subvert normalised representations and significations and find access to a radical self. Some strategies and practical implications are offered to suggest how this approach to pedagogy may function in educational contexts. Imagine a city where there is no desire. ... A city without desire is ... a city of no imagination. Here people think only what they already know. There is, in fact, a joy that is immanent to desire as though desire were filled by itself and its contemplations, a joy that implies no lack or impossibility and is not measured by pleasure since it is what distributes intensities of pleasure and prevents them from being suffused by anxiety, shame, and guilt.","creator":["Michalinos Zembylas"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83eb86d1-2af3-3578-9b39-a00e4c3fb40b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Risks and Pleasures: A Deleuzo-Guattarian Pedagogy of Desire in Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032614","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In many literacy classrooms, students engage in public performances in which they use various texts, movements of their bodies, and verbal interactions. How do we interpret such events? In this article, we critique a representational mode of interpretation and describe an alternate mode. We argue that literacy performances are often about creating differences, including differences in the moving, shifting relations of semiotic resources and differences in the performed identities of participants. Such differences-effects and affective intensities-are lost or overly stabilized within conventional interpretations, which focus on asking how meanings are represented, organized, and produced in performances. Conventionally, the texts of performances (e.g., print, images, speech) are imagined to signify (or re-present) a world that lies behind them. The task of interpretation is approached as reading for meaning. In this mode, we conceive of performances as primarily communicational or informational. Alternatively, using rhizornatic analysis, we follow the emergence of relations and differences by mapping performance-in-motion. We discuss how rhizornatic analysis shifts attention away from fixed meanings and toward action and the new \"becomings\" that are an important part of literacy performances. Data are drawn from an ethnographic study of interactions in a socially, culturally, and racially diverse high school American Studies classroom. \/\/\/ [Spanish] En las actividades de alfabetizaci\u00f3n en el aula los estudiantes tienen un desempe\u00f1o p\u00fablico en el que usan dirersos texros, movimientos corporales e interacciones verbales. \u00bfDe qu\u00e9 modo inrerpretamos esos eventos? En este art\u00edculo presentamos la cr\u00edtica de un modo de interpretaci\u00f3n representational y describimos un modo alrernativo. Argumentamos que el desempe\u00f1o en alfabetizaci\u00f3n a menudo crea diferencias, incluyendo diferencias en los movimientos, cambios en las relaciones de los recursos semi\u00f3ticos y diferencias en las identidades desempe\u00f1adas por los participantes. Dichas diferencias, efectos e intensidades afectivas se pierden o quedan fijadas en el marco de las nterpretaciones convencionales, que se centran en la cuesti\u00f3n sobre como se representan, organizan y producen los significados durante el desempe\u00f1o. Desde una perspectiva conventional, se supone que los textos producidos (escritura, imageries, habla) significan, o re-presentan, un mundo subyacente. La tarea interpretativa se aborda en t\u00e9rminos de leer para obrener significado. Desde la presente perspecriva, concebimos el desempefio como basicamente comunicacional o informativo. Usando un anilisis rizomitico, observamos el surgimiento de relaciones y diferencias a1 reoresentar el desemoeiio en movimiento. Discutimos c\u00f3mo el andisis rizomitico desv\u00eda la atenci\u00f3n desde los significados fijos hacia la acci\u00f3n y las \"transformaciones\" que son parte importante del desempe\u00f1o en alfabetizaci\u00f3n. Los datos se obtuvieron de un estudio etnogr\u00e1fico de inreracciones en un aula de Estudios Americanos de una escuela media con diversidad social, cultural y racial. \/\/\/ [German] In vielen Schreib- und Leseunterrichtsr\u00e4umen sind die Sch\u00fcler mit \u00f6ffentlichen Auff\u00fchrungen besch\u00e4ftigt, in denen sie unterschiedliche Texte, K\u00f6rperbewegungen und verbales Zusammenwirken venvenden. Wie interpretieren wir solche Vorg\u00e4nge? In dieser Abhandlung beschreiben wir einen repr\u00e4sentativ-rationalen Modus der Interpretation und beschreiben einen alternativen Modus. Wir argumentieren, dass Schreib- und Leseleistungen oft im Kreieren von Unrerschieden bestehen, einschlie\u00dflich der Bewegungsunterschiede. Relationsverschiebungen von semiotischen Ressourcen und Differenzen in den dargestellten Identit\u00e4ten der Teilnehmer. Solche Unrerschiede- Effekte und affekrive Intensit\u00e4ten-gehen verloren oder werden innerhalb konventionaler Interpretationen uberzogen festgelegr, die darauf ausgerichtet sind, danach zu flagen, wie Auslegungen und Deutungen in den AuffLhrungen repr\u00e4sentierr, organisiert und produzierr werden. Konuenrionell gilt, dass die Texte der Auff\u00fchrungen (d.h. Druck, Bilder und Sprache) erdacht werden, um eine Welt zu deuren (oder zu reprasentieren), die bereits vergangen und hinter ihnen liegt. Die Aufgabe der Interpretation wird als Lesen zur Sinnerfassung angegangen. In diesem Modus begreifen wir Auff\u00fchrungen als primar kommunikativ oder informativ. Alternativ, durch Anwendung der rhizomatischen Analyse, folgen wir der Schaffung von Beziehungen und Differenzen beim Aufzeichnen von Auffuhrungen-in-Motion, Wir diskutieren wie die rhizolnatische Analyse die Aufnlerksamkeit ablenkt, weg von festgelegten Auffassungen und hin zur Aktion und den neuen \"Entstehungen\", die ein wichtiger Teil der Schreib- und Lesedarsrellung sind. Daren werden aus einer ethn~~raphischeSntu die \u00fcber Interaktionen in einem sozial, kulturell und ethnisch diversifizierten Klassenraum fur American Studies in einer Oberschule abgeleitet. \/\/\/ [Japanese] \u591a\u304f\u306e\u30ea\u30c6\u30e9\u30b7\u30fc\u306e\u6559 \u5ba4\u306b\u304a\u3044\u30fc\u3050\u3001\u751f\u5f92\u9054 \u306f\u3001\u69d8\u3005\u306a\u30c6\u30af\u30b9\u30c8\u3084 \u8eab\u4f53\u306e\u52d5\u304d\u3001\u8a00\u8449\u306b\u3088 \u308b\u76f8 \u4e92\u884c\u70ba\u3092\u4f7f\u7528\u3059\u308b \u516c\u7684\u30ce\u304f\u30d5\u30aa\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9 \u306b\u5f93\u4e8b\u3059\u30fc\u308b\u3002\u79c1\u9054\u306f \u3001\u3069\u306e\u3088\u3046\u306b\u305d\u3046\u3057\u305f \u4e8b\u8c61\u3092\u89e3\u91c8 \u3059\u308b\u306e\u3067\u3042\u308d\u3046\u304b\u3002\u672c \u7a3f\u3067\u306f\u3001\u89e3\u91c8\u306e\u8868\u73fe\u5f62 \u614b\u3092\u6279\u8a55\u3057\u3001\u4ee3\u308f\u308a\u3068 \u306a\u308b\u5f62\u614b\u3092\u63cf\u5199\u3059\u308b\u3002 \u7b46 \u8005\u7b49\u306f\u3001\u30ea\u30c6\u30e9\u30b7\u30fc \u30d1\u30d5\u30aa\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u3068\u306f\u3001 \u3057\u3070\u3057\u3070\u3001\u8a18\u53f7\u7684\u30ea\u30bd \u30fc\u30b9\u304c\u6301\u3064\u3001\u6d3b\u52d5\u3057\u5909 \u5316\u3057 \u3066\u3044\u308b\u95a2\u4fc2\u306b\u304a\u3051 \u308b\u5dee\u7570\u3084\u53c2\u52a0\u8005\u9054\u306e\u6f14 \u3058\u3089\u308c\u305f\u30a2\u30a4\u30c7\u30f3\u30c6\u30a3 \u30c6\u30a3\u30fc\u306b\u304a\u3051\u308b\u5dee\u7570\u3092 \u542b\u3080\u5dee \u7570\u3092\u5275\u9020\u3059\u308b\u3053\u3068\u3067\u3042 \u308b\u3068\u8b70\u8ad6\u3059\u308b\u3002\u305d\u306e\u3088 \u3046\u306a\u5dee\u7570(\u52b9\u679c\u3068\u60c5\u610f \u7684\u5ea6\u5408\uff09\u306f\u3001\u6163\u7fd2\u7684\u306a \u89e3 \u91c8\u5185\u3067\u306f\u3001\u5931\u308f \u308c\u308b\u304b\u904e\u5ea6\u306b\u56fa\u5b9a\u5316\u3059 \u308b\u304c\u3001\u305d\u308c\u3089\u306f\u3001\u610f\u5473 \u304c\u30d1\u30d5\u30aa\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u306b\u304a \u3044\u3066\u3069\u306e \u3088\u3046\u306b\u8868\u73fe\u3055\u308c\u3001\u69cb\u6210 \u3055\u308c\u3001\u751f\u6210\u3055\u308c\u308b\u306e\u304b \u3092\u554f\u3046\u3053\u3068\u306b\u7126\uff0c?\u3092 \u5f53\u3066\u3066\u3044\u308b\u3002\u6163\u7fd2\u7684\u306b \u3001\u30d1 \u30d5\u30a9\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u306e\u30c6\u30af\u30b9 \u30c8\uff08\u6d3b\u5b57\u3001\u30a4\u30e1\u30fc\u30b8\u3001 \u30b9\u30d4\u30fc\u30c1\u7b49\uff09\u306f\u3001\u305d\u308c \u3089\u306e\u80cc\u5f8c\u306b\u3042\u308b\u4e16\u754c\u3092 \u610f \u5473\u3059\u308b(\u6216\u306f\u3001\u8868\u3059 \uff09\u3068\u8003\u3048\u3089\u308c\u3066\u3044\u308b\u3002 \u89e3\u91c8\u306e\u8ab2\u984c\u306f\u3001\u610f\u5473\u306e \u305f\u3081\u306e\u30ea\u30fc\u30c7\u30a3\u30f3\u30b0\u3068 \u3057\u3066 \u53d6\u308a\u7d44\u307e\u308c\u308b\u3002\u3053\u306e\u5f62 \u614b\u306b\u304a\u3044\u3066\u3001\u79c1\u9054\u306f\u3001 \u30d1\u30d5\u30a9\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u3092\u4e3b\u306b \u4f1d\u9054\u7684\u6216\u306f\u60c5\u5831\u7684\u306a\u3082 \u306e \u3068\u6349\u3048\u308b\u3002\u4ee3\u308f\u308a\u306b\u3001 \u30ea\u30be\u30fc\u30e0\u7684\u5206\u6790\u3092\u7528\u3044 \u3001\u6d3b\u52d5\u4e2d\u306e\u30d1\u304f\u30d5\u30aa\u30fc \u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u3092\u4f4d\u7f6e\u3065\u3051\u308b\u3053 \u3068\u306b \u3088\u3063\u3066\u3001\u95a2\u4fc2\u3084\u5dee \u7570\u306e\u767a\u751f\u3092\u305f\u3069\u308b\u3002\u30ea \u30be\u30fc\u30e0\u7684\u5206\u6790\u304c\u3001\u3069\u306e \u3001\u4e0a\u3046\u306b\u56fa\u5b9a\u3055\u308c\u305f\u610f \u5473\u304b\u3089\u6ce8 \u610f\u3092\u305d\u3089\u3057\u3001\u3069\u306e\u3088\u3046 \u306b\u884c\u70ba\u3084\u30ea\u30c6\u30e9\u30b7\u30fc\u30d1 \u30d5\u30aa\u30fc\u30de\u30f3\u30b9\u306e\u91cd\u8981\u306a \u3044\uff0d\u90e8\u3067\u3042\u308b\u65b0\u3057\u3044\u300e \u751f \u6210\u300f\u3078\u3068\u6ce8\u610f\u3092\u5411\u3051 \u308b\u306e\u304b\u3092\u8b70\u8ad6\u3059\u308b\u3002\u30c7 \u30fc\u30bf\u306f\u3001\u793e\u4f1a\u7684\u3001\u6587\u5316 \u7684\u3001\u305d\u3057\u3066\u4eba\u7a2e\u7684\u306b\u591a \u69d8\u306a \u9ad8\u7b49\u5b66\u6821\u306e\u30a2\u30e1\u30ea \u30ab\u7814\u7a76\u306e\u6559\u5ba4\u306b\u304a\u3051\u308b \u76f8\u4e92\u884c\u70ba\u306e\u6c11\u65cf\u5b66\u7684\u7814 \u7a76\u3067\u53ce\u96c6\u3055\u308c\u305f\u3082\u306e\u3067 \u3042\u308b\u3002 \/\/\/ [French] Dans beaucoup de classes de lecture-\u00e9criture, les \u00e9l\u00e8ves effectuent des repr\u00e9sentations publiques dans lesquelles ils utilisent des textes divers, des mouvements du corps, et des interactions verbales. Comment interpr\u00e9tons-nous ces repr\u00e9sentations? Dans cet article, nous faisons la critique d'un certain mode d'interpr\u00e9tation repr\u00e9sentationnel et proposons un autre mode. Nous soutenons que les repr\u00e9sentations littiraires portent souvent sur la production de diff\u00e9rences, y inclus des diff\u00e9rences dans les relations mobiles, changeantes des ressources s\u00e9miotiques et des diff\u00e9rences relatives aux identit\u00e9s represent\u00e9es des participants. Ces diff\u00e9rences - effets et intensit\u00e9s affectives - sont perdues ou recouvertes par les interpr'\u00f0ations conventionnelles qui sont centr\u00e9es sur la question de savoir comment les significations sont reprisenties, organisies et produites au cours de la reprisentation. De fa\u00e7on conventionnelle, on consid\u00e8re que les texres d'un spectacle (par exemple, l'\u00e9crit, les images, la parole) signifient (ou reprisentent) un monde qui se cache derri\u00e8re eux. Le travail d'interpr\u00e9tarion est dors de lire pour comprendre. Suivant ce mode, le spectacle est con\u00e7u avant tout comme communication ou information. De fa\u00e7on alternative, en urilisant une analyse rhizomatique, nous suivons I'imergence de relations et de diffirences en faisant la carte de la repr\u00e9sentation- en- mouvement. La question est de savoir comment l'analyse rhizomatique d\u00e9place l'attention des significations fix\u00e9es pour la tourner vers I'action et les nouveaux devenants, qui sont une partie importante des spectacles litt\u00e9raires. Les donn\u00e9es proviennent d'une \u00e9tude erhnographique des interactions dans une classe d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines dans un lyc\u00e9e o\u00f9 les \u00e9l\u00e8ves sont divers sur le plan social, culture1 et racial. \/\/\/ [Russian] \u041d\u0430 \u0443\u0440\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0445 \u043f\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0432\u0438\u0442\u0438\u044e \u0433 \u0440\u0430\u043c\u043e\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442 \u0438 \u0443\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u0441 \u043e\u0432\u0435\u0440\u0448\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u043c \u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e\"\u041d\u0430 \u0443\u0440\u043e \u043a\u0430\u0445 \u043f\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0432 \u0438\u0442\u0438\u044e \u0433\u0440\u0430\u043c\u043e \u0442\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0443\u0447\u0435 \u043d\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u0441\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0440 \u0448\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u043c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u039b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0445\"\u0410\u0435\u0439 \u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u0439\u0447\u0438\u0442\u0430 \u044e\u0442 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\u043e\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0448\u0435\u043d\u0438 \u0439 \u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u039b\u0438\u0447\u0438 \u0439 \u0438 \u0438\u0445 \u0438\u0437\u043c\u0435\u043d \u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f. \u0412 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442 \u044c\u0435 \u043e\u043f\u0438\u0441\u0430\u043d\u043e, \u043a\u0430\u043a\u0440\u0438\u0437\u043e\u043c\u0430 \u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0439 \u0430 \u043d\u0430\u039b\u0438\u0437 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435 \u043d\u043e\u0441\u0438\u0442 \u0430\u043a\u0446\u0435 \u043d\u0442 \u0441 \u0440\u0430\u0437 \u0438 \u043d\u0430 \u0432\u0441\u0435\u0433\u0410\u0430 \u0444\u0438\u043a \u0441\u0438\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u043d\u044b \u0445 \u0441\u043c\u044b\u0441\u039b\u043e\u0432\u043d \u0430 \u0410\u0435\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u044f \"\u043f\u0440\u0435\u0432\u0440\u0430\u0449\u0435\u043d \u0438\u044f \u039b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442 \u0438\", \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u044f \u0432\u039b\u044f\u044e\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0432\u0430 \u0436\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0447\u0430\u0441\u0442\u044c \u044e \u0441\u0442\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432\u039b\u0435 \u043d\u0438\u044f\u0433\u0440\u0430\u043c\u043e\u0442 \u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438. \u0410\u0430\u043d\u043d \u044b\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u039b\u0443\u0447\u0435\u043d \u044b \u0438\u0437 \u044d\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0433\u0440 \u0430\u0444\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433 \u043e \u0438\u0441\u0441\u039b\u0435\u0410\u043e\u0432 \u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0432\u0437\u0430\u0438\u043c \u043e\u0410\u0435\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u044f \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0440\u0448\u0435\u043a\u039b\u0430 \u0441\u0441\u043d\u0438\u043a\u043e\u0432 \u043d\u0430 \u0443\u0440\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0445 \u0430\u043c\u0435 \u0440\u0438\u043a\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0438\u0441\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0438 \u0438 \u043a \u0443\u039b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u044b \u0432 \u0441 \u043e\u0446\u0438\u0430\u039b\u044c\u043d\u043e, \u043a \u0443\u039b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u043d\u043e\u0438 \u043d\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u039b\u044c \u043d\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0437\u043d\u043e\u043e\u0431 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u043d\u043e\u043c \u0448\u043a\u043e \u039b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u043c \u0441\u043e\u043e\u0431 \u0449\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435.","creator":["Kevin M. Leander","Deborah Wells Rowe"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07c46d9c-0f0f-37dc-836a-368e0169521d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4151813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"428","pagination":"pp. 428-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Mapping Literacy Spaces in Motion: A Rhizomatic Analysis of a Classroom Literacy Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4151813","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":21940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie Wilhelm"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095280X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014-200023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ce6d5a8-ec2b-3281-85ea-105599e4879a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42573563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerhumor"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Humor","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Humor Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Don't laugh! Act as if it was all right!\" And Other Comical Interruptions in \"Little Women\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42573563","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richa Nagar"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8709bbf5-0080-3967-b654-314b9dbfdd90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"661","pagination":"pp. 661-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Religion, Race, and the Debate over Mut'a in Dar es Salaam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178645","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12717,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[439426,439625]],"Locations in B":[[15734,15932]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Abbey Zink"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5458ece0-9f21-3404-bf7b-d0c5e6bf7598"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26355627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Lady Was A Dame: Gender Performance and the Role of Cleopatra in the 1999 RSC and Globe Productions of \"Antony and Cleopatra\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355627","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4892,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[435522,435879]],"Locations in B":[[2149,2340],[17132,17476]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d2 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5-\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d0\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8\u05e4\u05d9 \u05d0\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05da \u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05de\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9, \u05de\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05d9\u05ea\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e9\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d0\u05e8\u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e2\u05d3 \u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5. \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05de\u05ea\u05de\u05e7\u05d3 \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05d5\u05d5\u05df \u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d9\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05db\u05dc \u05d1\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05de\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9, \u05db\u05e9\u05de\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e0\u05e2\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05dc \u05e4\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e8\u05e6\u05e3 \u05de\u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9 \u05d0\u05dc \u05d4\u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d2. \u05d1\u05e7\u05e6\u05d4\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d7\u05d3 \u05e0\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2 \u05db\u05d1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d5\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d3\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e6\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d9\u05e4\u05d9 \u05d4\u05ea\u05d5\u05d0\u05e8 \u05d5\u05e7\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4, \u05d5\u05d1\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05db\u05da \u05e0\u05e1\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05e2\u05dc \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05e8\u05d5\u05e7\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05de\u05dc\u05d7\u05de\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d1\u05e7\u05e6\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e0\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e8\u05e7\u05d3\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e2\u05dc\u05d9 \u05de\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05d5 \u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea, \u05d5\u05d1\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05dd \u05e0\u05db\u05d9 \u05e6\u05d4\"\u05dc. \u05d4\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9 \u05e2\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7 \u05d1\u05d4\u05d1\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05e1\u05de\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05e4\u05d9\u05d6\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d1\u05e1\u05d5\u05db\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05de\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05ea \u05db\u05d3\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8 \u05dc\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05e1\u05de\u05dc\u05d9. \u05dc\u05d8\u05e2\u05e0\u05ea\u05d9, \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05de\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05e7\u05d1\u05dc\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9\u05dd \u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d2\u05d9\u05dd, \u05db\u05dc \u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05e9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d5 \u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05ea \u05e2\u05e7\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9. \u05dc\u05e9\u05dd \u05db\u05da \u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05e4\u05d9\u05d6\u05d9 (\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05ea \u05d4\u05d1\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05e2 \u05d5\u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4) \u05dc\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3 \u05de\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e9\u05d3\u05d4, \u05d5\u05d1\u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05d5 \u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d7\u05e9\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05e1\u05de\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d5\u05e9\u05dc \u05dc\u05d2\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05e9\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d5\u05ea \u05dc\u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea. This article is a socio-historical and ethnographical analysis of the presentation of the Israeli body throughout the development of the Israeli folk dance movement from its inception in the 1940s until the present. Various presentations of body image are discussed, spanning a continuum from the representative to the impaired. On one end are the state folk dance ensembles, which include the performances of IDF dancing soldiers during the War of Independence, representing the ideal body image of the Sabra. On the other end are various groups of disabled participants, which include the performances of IDF disabled veterans. The theoretical discussion focuses on the differentiation between physical and symbolic body and on the self-mobilization processes of the impaired groups in order to become parts and parcels of the national collective body. I claim that the Israeli folk dance field is willing to accept the impaired as long as the latter conform to the values of this field. Thus, the physical body (having the ability to dance or even to move) gains a secondary importance, whereas the symbolic body, and the legitimacy of belonging to the Israeli culture, gains first priority.","creator":["\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05e1\u05e7\u05d9","Dina Roginsky"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aab386cd-eb53-33f2-a321-a59790dcb6a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"On the Symbolic and Physical Body: The Representative and Impaired Body in Israeli Folk Dancing \/ \u05e2\u05dc \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05e1\u05de\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05e4\u05d9\u05d6\u05d9: \u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05de\u05de\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442954","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d2","wordCount":11574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From at least as early as Varro, Roman scholars and grammarians occupy themselves with cataloguing peculiar instances of grammatical gender. The practice, with little extant precedent in Greek tradition, finds the grammarians consistently placing great importance upon the identification of grammatical gender with biological sex. I attempt to explain this fascination with \"sex and gender\" by assessing ancient explanations for the fluid gender of nouns, and by considering the commonest practitioners of grammatical gender-bending (in particular Vergil). By dividing the world into discrete sexual categories, Latin vocabulary works to encourage the pervasive heterosexualization of Roman culture.","creator":["Anthony Corbeill"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03605949"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976301"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffe2e7ce-e1b8-3d76-8cc9-94612eee04ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40212075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilass2"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"Genus Quid Est?\" Roman Scholars on Grammatical Gender and Biological Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212075","volumeNumber":"138","wordCount":14525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ZAHI ZALLOUA"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43445428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034429X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43445428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renarefo"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43445428","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2079,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Accounts of mothering have both contributed to feminist theory's development and depended on certain of its central concepts. Some of its critics, however, argue that feminist theory is undermined by the problems of exclusion and essentialism. Here I distinguish between these two problems and consider their implications for questions about mothering. I conclude that exclusion and essentialism do not present insurmountable obstacles to theorizing motherhood, but do suggest new directions for such theorizing.","creator":["Patrice Diquinzio"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"753bf3d8-b53b-3445-9e3c-ad8e4b76ac4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exclusion and Essentialism in Feminist Theory: The Problem of Mothering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810402","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8694,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[83619,83752],[99265,99380],[443403,443525],[458478,458782],[481509,481554],[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[19516,19649],[19656,19771],[38875,38998],[39094,39412],[54905,54949],[55606,55752]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["George E. Haggerty"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/439144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47ebcf71-adc8-3e50-a9af-52e195d6f540"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/439144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"705","pageStart":"699","pagination":"pp. 699-705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/439144","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":2726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Arnd Beise"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27b6227e-689d-3b68-a2c2-ae4f0e99db97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23977969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"512","pagination":"pp. 512-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Das Geschlecht eine Frage der \u201eGewonheit\u201c und \u201eAuferziehung\u201c Gender-Inszenierung in Kaspar Stielers \u201eDer Vermeinte Printz\u201c (1665)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23977969","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Webb-Sunderhaus"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44075153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f7828c2-0bfd-3d5a-b216-bf00fc630456"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44075153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"Keep the Appalachian, Drop the Redneck\": Tellable Student Narratives of Appalachian Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44075153","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":10514,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442658,442787]],"Locations in B":[[16307,16436]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amelia Jones","Geoffrey Batchen","Ken Gonzales-Day","Peggy Phelan","Christine Ross","Guillermo G\u00f3mez-Pe\u00f1a","Roberto Sifuentes","Matthew Finch"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e36e975e-5799-3701-a045-4ac92c65b8d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Body and Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778043","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":8942,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[13950,14025]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT With Spain\u2019s financial downturn beginning in 2007\u20132008, crime fiction authors have responded by focusing on how the crisis has affected certain marginalized groups. In \u201cEl enigma de su voz\u201d and \u201cSin tratamiento de cortes\u00eda,\u201d Isabel Franc reacts not only to the economic crisis in Spain, but also to a social crisis that could threaten the union of same-sex couples. This article studies how Emma Garc\u00eda, now a private detective in Barcelona, must double as a bodyguard, a protector of the lesbian couples that are now her clients, to defend them against a return to invisibility. The lesbian utopia of the Lola Van Guardia trilogy and the later No me llames cari\u00f1o is now in danger as lo masculino invades to disrupt the space for lesbian love and marriage in these two short stories.","creator":["Diana Aramburu"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3f97e2c-5f24-3825-91f6-31eb69973c09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90000308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Resisting Invisibility:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000308","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":9825,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[58619,58671]],"subTitle":"Lesbianizing the Public Space in Isabel Franc\u2019s Emma Garc\u00eda Stories"} +{"abstract":"Hate crimes are receiving increased attention in both the media and policy arenas. Legislation to document and punish hate crimes has been enacted at the federal, state, and local levels. A thorough analysis of these social regulatory policies is essential. Hate crime policy has engendered controversies and unintended consequences. Two sides of the debate have emerged, with one side arguing that hate crimes are a socially constructed category leading to the \u201cBalkanization\u201d of America and the other responding that hate crime policy is necessary to promote racial and religious harmony and equality. Criminalizing hate is a complex issue that social workers must become knowledgeable about in order to be active participants in shaping policy and conducting research.","creator":["Beverly A. McPhail"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/516428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46851131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fe679ea-403e-37ca-ad57-9f75e18bd832"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/516428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociservrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Social Service Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"653","pageStart":"635","pagination":"pp. 635-653","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Hating Hate: Policy Implications of Hate Crime Legislation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/516428","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":9096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws on a 2-year ethnographic study of the literate lives of two African Americans living in urban poverty. The study demonstrates how June Treader and her oldest daughter Vicky negotiate language and literacy in their home and community proficiently yet fail to capitalize on this proficiency within the school, to the extent that Vicky is placed in special education. Illustrating the complexity of literacy in June Treader's life, I present three discursive contexts: the Discourse of Schooling, the Discourse of Mothering, and the Discourse of the Committee on Special Education meeting. Each of these contexts provides cruces (Fairclough, 1995), or moments of tension, in which linguistic and institutional markers suggest the ways in which each discursive context insists on certain literate relationships and calls forth certain subjectivities. Using critical discourse analysis (Fairclough, 1995; Gee, 1996) the article goes beyond current explanations of why children and families who come from non-mainstream homes fail to do well in school. The study suggests that the nonalignment between home and school discourse communities is not the only, or even perhaps primary, problem for June and Vicky. At least as important is the ideological alignment among the discursive contexts. The study suggests that explanations must account for the complexity of literate subjectivities through the process by which split and fragmented subjectivities are acquired. In addition, there is evidence that the division between primary and secondary discourses and acquisition and learning (Gee, 1996) is not as clear as is sometimes assumed. As the secondary discourse is being learned, aspects of its ideology are being acquired. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Este trabajo se ocupa de un estudio etnogr\u00e1fico acerca de las experiencias de alfabetizaci\u00f3n de dos afroamericanas que viven en un marco de pobreza urbana. El estudio demuestra c\u00f3mo June Treader y su hija mayor Vicky negocian el lenguaje y las pr\u00e1cticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n en el hogar y la comunidad en forma eficiente, y sin embargo, no logran capitalizar esta eficiencia en el marco de la escuela, a tal punto que Vicky es derivada a educaci\u00f3n especial. Para ilustrar la complejidad del uso de la alfabetizaci\u00f3n en la vida de June Treader, presento tres contextos discursivos: el Discurso Escolar, el Discurso Materno y el Discurso de la reuni\u00f3n con el Comit\u00e9 de Educaci\u00f3n Especial. Cada uno de estos contextos proporciona puntos clave (cruces, Fairclough, 1995), o momentos de tensi\u00f3n en los que los marcadores ling\u00fc\u00edsticos e institucionales sugieren las formas en las cuales cada contexto discursivo acent\u00faa ciertas relaciones vinculadas a la alfabetizaci\u00f3n e induce a ciertas caracter\u00edsticas subjetivas. Mediante el an\u00e1lisis cr\u00edtico del discurso (Fairclough, 1995; Gee, 1996), el trabajo va m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de las explicaciones corrientes acerca de por qu\u00e9 los ni\u00f1os y las familias pertenecientes a grupos minoritarios fracasan en la escuela. El estudio sugiere que la falta de alineamiento entre las comunidades discursivas del hogar y la escuela no es el \u00fanico, y quiz\u00e1s tampoco el principal problema de June y Vicky. Igualmente importante es el alineamiento ideol\u00f3gico entre los contextos discursivos. El estudio sugiere que deben proporcionarse explicaciones sobre la complejidad de la subjetividad en las pr\u00e1cticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n a trav\u00e9s del proceso por medio del cual se adquieren subjetividades fragmentadas. Adicionalmente, existe evidencia acerca de que la divisi\u00f3n entre discursos primarios y secundarios y adquisici\u00f3n y aprendizaje (Gee, 1996) no es tan clara como se supone a menudo. Al aprenderse el discurso secundario, tambi\u00e9n se adquieren aspectos de su ideolog\u00eda. \/\/\/ [German] Dies Papier befa\u00dft sich mit einer zweij\u00e4hrigen ethnographischen Studie des literaten Lebens von zwei Afro-Amerikanerinnen, die in st\u00e4dtischer Armut leben. Die Studie zeigt auf, wie June Treader und ihre \u00e4lteste Tochter Vicky zuhause und in ihrer Nachbarschaft mit Sprache und Schrifttum beherrschend umgehen, es dennoch verfehlen, aus dieser F\u00e4higkeit innerhalb der Schule zu profitieren, was soweit f\u00fchrt, da\u00df Vicky in die Sonderschule versetzt wird. Durch Illustrieren der Lese-, Schreib- und Sprachkomplexit\u00e4t in June Treaders Leben stelle ich drei diskursive Kontexte dar: Schul-Diskurs, m\u00fctterlicher Diskurs, und der Diskurs in der Ausschu\u00dfsitzung zur Sonderschulausbildung. Jeder dieser Kontexte liefert schwierig zu entscheidende Auffassungen als Cruces (Fairclough, 1995) bezeichnet oder Konfliktmomente (Crux), in denen linguistische und institutionelle Standpunkte die Wege aufzeigen, durch die jeder diskursive Kontext auf bestimmte literate Voraussetzungen der Schreib- und Leseeigenschaften besteht und nach gewissen Subjektivit\u00e4ten verlangt. Durch Anwendung einer kritischen Meinungsanalyse (Fairclough, 1995; Gee, 1996) geht das Papier \u00fcber solche Gegenwartserkl\u00e4rungen hinaus, warum die aus unzul\u00e4nglichen Wohnbedingungen kommenden Kinder und Familien beim Vorankommen in der Schule nicht gut abschneiden. Die Studie bringt zum Ausdruck, da\u00df die fehlende Abstimmung (non-alignment) zwischen den Gemeinschaften bestehend aus dem Zuhause und dem Schul-Diskurs nicht das einzige oder vielleicht sogar prim\u00e4re Problem f\u00fcr June und Vicky ist. Wenigstens ebenso wichtig ist die ideologische Angleichung unter den diskursiven Kontexten. Die Studie schl\u00e4gt vor, da\u00df Erkl\u00e4rungen \u00fcber die Komplexit\u00e4t literater Schreib- und Lesesubjektivit\u00e4ten einbezogen werden m\u00fcssen, und zwar bereits im Verlauf des Prozesses, mit dem abgespaltene und fragmentierte Subjektivit\u00e4ten acquiriert werden. Zus\u00e4tzlich gibt es Beweise, da\u00df die Trennung zwischen prim\u00e4ren und sekund\u00e4ren Diskursen und Acquisition und Erlernen (Gee, 1996) nicht so klar verl\u00e4uft, wie dies manchmal angenommen wird. W\u00e4hrend der sekund\u00e4re Diskurs erlernt wird, werden Ideologieaspekte mit acquiriert. \/\/\/ [French] Ce texte est issu d'une recherche ethnographique conduite pendant deux ans sur la vie en litt\u00e9ratie de deux Am\u00e9ricains africains en situation de pauvret\u00e9 urbaine. La recherche d\u00e9montre que June Treader et sa soeur la plus jeune, Vicky, s'arrangent pour utiliser couramment le langage et l'\u00e9crit \u00e0 la maison et dans leur communaut\u00e9 et \u00e9chouent cependant \u00e0 en tirer b\u00e9n\u00e9fice \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole, puisque Vicky est en \u00e9ducation sp\u00e9ciale. Pour illustrer la complexit\u00e9 de la litt\u00e9ratie dans la vie de June Treader, je pr\u00e9sente trois contextes discursifs: le discours de la vie scolaire, le discours maternel, et le discours d'une rencontre du Comit\u00e9 pour l'\u00e9ducation sp\u00e9ciale. Chacun de ces contextes indique des \"n\u0153uds\" (Fairclough, 1995), ou moments de tension, dans lesquels des marqueurs linguistiques ou institutionnels sugg\u00e8rent de quelle fa\u00e7on chaque contexte linguistique met l'accent sur certaines relations de litt\u00e9ratie et fait appel \u00e0 certaines subjectivit\u00e9s. En utilisant l'analyse critique du discours (Fairclough, 1995; Gee, 1996), ce texte va plus loin que les explications courantes relatives aux raisons pour lesquelles les enfants et les familles de milieu d\u00e9favoris\u00e9 ne parviennent pas \u00e0 bien faire \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole. La recherche sugg\u00e8re que le nonalignement entre les communaut\u00e9s discursives familiale et scolaire n'est pas le seul et, peut \u00eatre m\u00eame, pas le probl\u00e8me premier de June et Vicky. Ce qui est au moins aussi important est l'alignement id\u00e9ologique entre les diff\u00e9rents contextes discursifs. La recherche sugg\u00e8re que les explications doivent rendre compte de la complexit\u00e9 des subjectivit\u00e9s en litt\u00e9ratie, en s'int\u00e9ressant au processus qui conduit \u00e0 des subjectivit\u00e9s cliv\u00e9es et fragment\u00e9es. En outre, on peut voir que la division entre discours primaire et secondaire, l'acquisition et l'apprentissage (Gee, 1996) n'est pas aussi clair que ce que l'on pense en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral. Quand on apprend le discours secondaire, on acquiert en m\u00eame temps certains aspects de son id\u00e9ologie. \/\/\/ [Cyrillic] \u0421\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u044f \u043e\u0441\u043d\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0430 \u043d\u0430 \u044d\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0433\u0440\u0430\u0444\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e\u043c \u0438\u0441\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0438, \u0434\u043b\u0438\u0432\u0448\u0435\u043c\u0441\u044f \u0434\u0432\u0430 \u0433\u043e\u0434\u0430. \u0418\u0437\u0443\u0447\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0441\u044c \u0432\u0437\u0430\u0438\u043c\u043e\u043e\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0448\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0441\u043e \u0441\u043b\u043e\u0432\u043e\u043c \u0432 \u0436\u0438\u0437\u043d\u0438 \u0434\u0432\u0443\u0445 \u0430\u0444\u0440\u043e-\u0430\u043c\u0435\u0440\u0438\u043a\u0430\u043d\u043e\u043a \u0438\u0437 \u0431\u0435\u0434\u043d\u044f\u0446\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u043a\u0432\u0430\u0440\u0442\u0430\u043b\u043e\u0432. \u0414\u043e\u043c\u0430 \u0438 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\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0435 \u0437\u0430\u0432\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435. \u0414\u043b\u044f \u0438\u043b\u043b\u044e\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u043b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0430\u0441\u043f\u0435\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0432 \u0433\u0440\u0430\u043c\u043e\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0432 \u0436\u0438\u0437\u043d\u0438 \u0414\u0436\u0443\u043d \u0422\u0440\u0435\u0434\u0435\u0440, \u0434\u0435\u043c\u043e\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0440\u0443\u044e\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0442\u0440\u0438 \u0434\u0438\u0441\u043a\u0443\u0440\u0441\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0442\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0442\u0430: \u0432 \u0448\u043a\u043e\u043b\u0435, \u0434\u043e\u043c\u0430 \u0441 \u0434\u0435\u0442\u044c\u043c\u0438 \u0438 \u0432 \u041a\u043e\u043c\u0438\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0438 \u043f\u043e \u0441\u043f\u0435\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u043c\u0443 \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044e. \u041a\u0430\u0436\u0434\u044b\u0439 \u0438\u0437 \u044d\u0442\u0438\u0445 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0442\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0442\u043e\u0432 \u0441\u043e\u0434\u0435\u0440\u0436\u0438\u0442 \u0432 \u0441\u0435\u0431\u0435 \u043e\u043f\u0440\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043c\u043e\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0442\u044b \u043d\u0430\u043f\u0440\u044f\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f (F\u0430\u0438\u0440c\u043b\u043e\u0443\u0433h, 1995), \u0432 \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0445 \u044f\u0437\u044b\u043a\u043e\u0432\u044b\u0435 \u0438 \u0441\u043e\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e \u043e\u0431\u0443\u0441\u043b\u043e\u0432\u043b\u0435\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043c\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0435\u0440\u044b \u0434\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u043f\u043e\u043d\u044f\u0442\u044c, \u043a\u0430\u043a\u0438\u0445 \u0441\u043f\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0432 \u0432\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f 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\u0448\u0438\u0440\u043e\u043a\u0438\u0439 \u0430\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0431\u043b\u0435\u043c\u044b, \u043d\u0435\u0436\u0435\u043b\u0438 \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u043f\u0440\u0438\u043d\u044f\u0442\u044b\u0435 \u043e\u0431\u042a\u044f\u0441\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0442\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0444\u0430\u043a\u0442\u0430, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u0434\u0435\u0442\u0438 \u0438\u0437 \u00ab\u043d\u0435 \u0441\u0440\u0435\u0434\u043d\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0445\u00bb \u0441\u0435\u043c\u0435\u0439 \u043f\u043b\u043e\u0445\u043e \u0443\u0441\u043f\u0435\u0432\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u0432 \u0448\u043a\u043e\u043b\u0435. \u041f\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0435 \u0438\u0441\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0437\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u043d\u0435\u0441\u043e\u0433\u043b\u0430\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u044c \u0434\u043e\u043c\u0430\u0448\u043d\u0435\u0439 \u0438 \u0448\u043a\u043e\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u0440\u0435\u0434\u044b \u044f\u0437\u044b\u043a\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f - \u043d\u0435 \u0435\u0434\u0438\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u0430\u044f \u0438\u043b\u0438, \u0432\u043e\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e, \u0434\u0430\u0436\u0435 \u043d\u0435 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0432\u0438\u0447\u043d\u0430\u044f \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0431\u043b\u0435\u043c\u0430 \u0434\u043b\u044f \u0414\u0436\u0443\u043d \u0438 \u0412\u0438\u043a\u0438. \u041d\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u0435 \u0432\u0430\u0436\u043d\u0443\u044e \u0440\u043e\u043b\u044c \u0437\u0434\u0435\u0441\u044c \u0438\u0433\u0440\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u0444\u0430\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440 \u0438\u0434\u0435\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0433\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043e\u0442\u0447\u0443\u0436\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u044d\u0442\u0438\u0445 \u0434\u0438\u0441\u043a\u0443\u0440\u0441\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0442\u0435\u043a\u0441\u0442\u043e\u0432. \u0418\u0441\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0437\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u0441\u043b\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e\u0435 \u0432\u0437\u0430\u0438\u043c\u043e\u0434\u0435\u0439\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u0435 \u0441\u0443\u0431\u042a\u0435\u043a\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0444\u0430\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0432 \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0441\u043e \u0441\u043b\u043e\u0432\u043e\u043c \u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u0443\u0435\u0442 \u043e\u0431\u042a\u044f\u0441\u043d\u044f\u0442\u044c \u0447\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0437 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441, \u043f\u043e\u0441\u0440\u0435\u0434\u0441\u0442\u0432\u043e\u043c \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0433\u043e \u044d\u0442\u0438 \u0441\u0443\u0431\u042a\u0435\u043a\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0444\u0430\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b \u0444\u043e\u0440\u043c\u0438\u0440\u0443\u044e\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0438 \u0434\u0440\u043e\u0431\u044f\u0442\u0441\u044f. \u041a\u0440\u043e\u043c\u0435 \u0442\u043e\u0433\u043e, \u0435\u0441\u0442\u044c \u0434\u0430\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043e \u0442\u043e\u043c, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0434\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0434\u0438\u0441\u043a\u0443\u0440\u0441\u0430 \u043d\u0430 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0432\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0438 \u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0432 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u0435 \u0432\u043e\u0441\u043f\u0440\u0438\u044f\u0442\u0438\u044f \u0438 \u043e\u0431\u0443\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f (\u0413\u0435\u0435, 1996) \u043d\u0435 \u0441\u0442\u043e\u043b\u044c \u043e\u0447\u0435\u0432\u0438\u0434\u043d\u043e, \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0438\u043d\u043e\u0433\u0434\u0430 \u043f\u0440\u0435\u0434\u043f\u043e\u043b\u0430\u0433\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f. \u041f\u043e \u043c\u0435\u0440\u0435 \u0442\u043e\u0433\u043e, \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0447\u0435\u043b\u043e\u0432\u0435\u043a \u043e\u0441\u0432\u0430\u0438\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0434\u0438\u0441\u043a\u0443\u0440\u0441, \u043e\u043d \u043e\u0441\u0432\u0430\u0438\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0437\u043b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0430\u0441\u043f\u0435\u043a\u0442\u044b \u0435\u0433\u043e \u0438\u0434\u0435\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0433\u0438\u0438.","creator":["Rebecca Rogers"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/748229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Between Contexts: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Family Literacy, Discursive Practices, and Literate Subjectivities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748229","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":22363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper identifies and challenges some prevailing scholarly assumptions concerning Germany's relationship to multiculturalism.The last years have seen increasingly harmonized narratives revolving around the central idea that the Germans assume an \"essentialist view of culture\" and believe in the \"cultural homogeneity\" of their country. This paper argues that these narratives not only essentialize the very groups of people they criticize but also create a false construct of culture that inaccurately represents the intricate dynamics of German society. Beginning with the premise that perception and representation of minorities are subject to historical transformation, a discussion of the 1976 film Shirins Hochzeit', by director Helma Sanders-Brahms, will form the backdrop for a consideration of how the complex phenomenon of German cultural heterogeneity might be addressed in new ways and from fresh perspectives.","creator":["Monika Albrecht"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae2432ed-c201-324f-8df6-af3e70f6fba6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44968473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Invention of an \"Essentialist View of Culture\": Thinking outside the Prevalent Cultural Studies Discourse on Culturally and Ethnically Heterogeneous Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968473","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":8178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In light of recent developments in feminist and postcolonial theory, the genre conventions of \"M. Butterfly\" remain consistent with David Cronenberg's earlier style of horror film.","creator":["Asuman Suner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"853e88f7-340e-3dd6-878f-08d3bf58753a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Postmodern Double Cross: Reading David Cronenberg's \"M. Butterfly\" as a Horror Story","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225642","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8634,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[46969,47068],[432777,432951]],"Locations in B":[[29831,29931],[30426,30600]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["V\u00edctor Rodr\u00edguez N\u00fa\u00f1ez"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f114e23f-0d7c-32ae-9e8e-b76fe7151291"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00e9nero, alteridad y poes\u00eda en \"Belleza cruel\", de \u00c1ngela Figuera Aymerich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203661","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":7139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jessica Burke"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43802691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70368dea-c955-3975-aecd-43d4e2ace0e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43802691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"FANTASIZING THE FEMININE: SEX AND GENDER IN DONOSO'S \"EL LUGAR SIN L\u00cdMITES\" AND PUIG'S \"EL BESO DE LA MUJER ARA\u00d1A\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43802691","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3986,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[5317,5494]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee27a7d2-c3bf-302e-aaab-6015c5d9f67b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208860","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":3958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOS\u00c9 BRUNNER"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9613b07-e645-3a9f-845e-ba25de897e0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Wordly Powers: A Political Reading of the Rat Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304703","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recognizing the importance of taking a multicultural approach in one's teaching, this article explores using the movie Paris is Burning in one's classes to illuminate the performative, relational, and situational basis of social statuses. Students' responses to viewing and discussing the movie are examined in terms how each of them performs inequality -race, class, gender and sexual orientation. The author ends the piece with some personal considerations about envisioning and realizing a non-oppressive future.","creator":["Steven P. Schacht"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34820eb7-a3a0-3372-abf9-b7c5f55e30b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Paris is Burning: How Society's Stratification Systems Make Drag Queens of Us All","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675316","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8557,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[311878,312039]],"Locations in B":[[40959,41117]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marla Morris"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f9cc264-e1e6-3344-85fb-08cdf6d2ca8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"GENDER CURRICULUM CONCEPTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157325","volumeNumber":"498","wordCount":12955,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[63900,64293],[147640,147749]],"Locations in B":[[8772,9123],[10264,10373]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This \"Focus\" explores the gendered dimension of women soccer players at Stellenbosch University (Maties). It is suggested that women soccer players at Stellenbosch University are active agents in shaping their own sporting experience, albeit in a dominantly male and patriarchal environment. The analysis focuses on two aspects of the women soccer players at Stellenbosch: firstly how they got involved in soccer, and secondly how their participation in soccer influences their perception of their gender identities.","creator":["Marizanne Grundlingh"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1edbc39-ef55-3f20-82b0-c6c8665296fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"85","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Boobs and balls: Exploring issues of gender and identity among women soccer players at Stellenbosch University","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917365","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4882,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16880,17109]],"Locations in B":[[7874,8118]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Lesbian, gay and bisexual teachers have struggled with managing their sexual identities in contexts where heteronormative policing has resulted in deep silences and misrepresentation. However, many teachers have tried to counter this by 'coming out' or engaging with a process of disclosure. This paper draws on qualitative research with eight self-identified lesbian and gay teachers in primary and second-level schools in Ireland. Findings suggest that, for these teachers, the process of disclosure is valuable and fulfils a desire for openness and honesty. However, they continue to struggle with their teacher identities and aspects of their school culture. This paper argues that the complexities faced by these teachers in negotiating the process of disclosure are an illustration of the privileged position afforded heterosexuality in the Irish education system and the dividends that accrue to those who occupy a 'normal' sexual identity.","creator":["Aoife Neary"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5658af04-c20b-3ea8-8915-e46b4595e4c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43818176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lesbian and gay teachers' experiences of 'coming out' in Irish schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818176","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8474,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473861,473940]],"Locations in B":[[1872,1950]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dana D. Nelson"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3190317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190317","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dorothy Holland","Kevin Leander"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa687a61-e3be-389c-827a-8a0c4fe32234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Ethnographic Studies of Positioning and Subjectivity: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651830","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores recent trends and major issues related to gay and lesbian philosophy in ethics (including issues concerning the morality of homosexuality, the natural function of sex, and outing and coming out); religion (covering past and present debates about the status of homosexuality and how biblical and qur'anic passages have been interpreted by both sides of the debate); the law (especially a discussion of the debates surroundings sodomy laws, same-sex marriage and its impact on transsexuals, and whether the law should be used to enforce morality); scientific research into the origins of homosexuality (including discussion of arguments against such research); and metaphysics (especially the question of whether homosexuality is socially constructed during particular times and in particular cultures, or whether sexual orientation is an essential trait cutting across times and cultures).","creator":["RAJA HALWANI","GARY JAEGER","JAMES S. STRAMEL","RICHARD NUNAN","WILLIAM S. WILKERSON","TIMOTHY F. MURPHY"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"471","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-471","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WHAT IS GAY AND LESBIAN PHILOSOPHY?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439686","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":18052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ainda que pensada de maneira plural, identidade tem sido tomada por muitos autores como o cerne da constitui\u00e7\u00e3o dos indiv\u00edduos que, todo o tempo, parecem ser interpelados sobre sua localiza\u00e7\u00e3o neste cen\u00e1rio cada vez mais diversificado. Este artigo prop\u00f5e explorar esses chamados \u00e0s identifica\u00e7\u00f5es permeadas, particularmente, por constru\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e sexualidade. O recorte aqui privilegiado centra-se em propagandas vencedoras de festivals nacionais e em pe\u00e7as veiculadas em revistas de entretenimento. A an\u00e1lise das imagens e dos recursos de linguagem utilizados busca apreender como a propaganda reifica ou desestabiliza no\u00e7\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e sexualidade percebidas como tradicionais. Although identity can be interpreted in many ways, it has been considered as the core of individual constitution and often seems to interpellate for one's localization in this diverse setting. The purpose of this article is to explore the demand for permeable identifications of gender and sexuality constructions. It focuses on National award-winning advertisements, as well as articles displayed in entertainment magazines. The image analysis and language resources used aim to apprehend how advertising reifies or destabilizes gender and sexuality notions taken as traditional.","creator":["lara Beleli"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eebe3106-fd4e-3b9e-95d7-528ea0b14147"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Corpo e identidade na propaganda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327637","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the stigma surrounding mental health, drawing out implications for Christian theological anthropology and ethics. As I argue, the stigma surrounding maternal madness engenders the sociocultural and religious veiling of affective and sexual difference within Western Christian milieu reflecting a heteropatriarchal framework for articulating the value of bodies, emotions, and control. In practice and theory, this framework places mothers with affective mood disorders outside of economies (structures and practices) of care and goodness. Such logic veils the ways in which maternal madness calls us to embrace the transformative power of grace as dis-ease through (a) welcoming unpredictability within God, self, and others; (b) resisting easy fixes; and (c) actively discerning the politics of emotion.","creator":["Elisabeth T. Vasko"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44504868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56717329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221984"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a35eb3e-60b1-3920-9aa7-7a14ac2df85a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44504868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Mad Mothers, Bad Mothers\": Resisting Stigma and Embracing Grace as Dis-ease","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44504868","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I explore the process of subjectification (sometimes also called subjectivation, or simply, subjection) through which one becomes a subject-a process that Butler describes in terms of simultaneous mastery and submission, entailing a necessary vulnerability to the other in order to be. I examine the conceptual work Butler has undertaken to extend the Foucauldian concept of subjectification, and I draw on some encounters between teachers and their students in order to make these processes of subjectification understandable in the context of education. I conclude the paper with some notes toward an ethics of classroom practice.","creator":["Bronwyn Davies"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce577e08-5b21-3a97-8517-f720aae43ee3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subjectification: The Relevance of Butler's Analysis for Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036154","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20082918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20082918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Female Aesthete at the Helm: \"Sylvia's Journal\" and \"Graham R. Tomson\", 1893-1894","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20082918","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9034,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430093,430217]],"Locations in B":[[31226,31350]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carey Snyder"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86e0179a-c3b4-3332-8f55-7a848243e969"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Woolf's Ethnographic Modernism: Self-Nativizing in \"The Voyage Out\" and Beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906504","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"031dbb8b-c362-3dcf-b813-10f1980b6e8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"COLABORADORAS\/ES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328210","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["IDA DOMINIJANNI"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"350e908f-51d6-33e4-9a46-3a601d9b60d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23256455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-141, 143-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WOUNDS OF THE COMMON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256455","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6518,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5964,6043]],"Locations in B":[[1218,1298]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article discusses the findings of a survey concerning the psychodynamics of work which was undertaken among employees in the pharmaceuticals industry. The survey sought to probe the psychological effects following from the closing-down of their company. The evocation of the bodies of their female fellow-employees who had suffered certain masculinising modifications, and of the premature death which was the fate of some, played a central role in the evocation of the current suffering of those who had earlier been their colleagues. The placenta, the scientific material with which they worked, thus became collated with the anxiety-laden fantasies of the two woman researchers. The author of the article therefore addresses the status of the researcher\u2019s body in the interpretation of her findings, and the place of fantasy, and the creation of an imaginary, in a protocol of research and action involving the socialisation of an actual trauma in a milieu where cases of the contamination of bodies are both secret and random. Gender mutation thus fulfils a metonymic function, insofar as it is the sole visible manifestation of the violation, whether real or imagined, of bodily integrity.","creator":["Pascale MOLINIER"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59724bf9-ab9f-3984-8537-9d868fd58aa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"41","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"UNE SOUFFRANCE QUI NE PASSE PAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603611","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Mutations du corps f\u00e9minin et cr\u00e9ation d\u2019imaginaire dans une industrie pharmaceutique"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Slavica Jakeli\u0107","Jessica Starling"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4094090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4094090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Religious Studies: A Bibliographic Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4094090","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":4982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Henrietta Moore"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79ee4236-acae-3fe0-8cfc-b9b47e1e608c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Divided We Stand': Sex, Gender and Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395255","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8957,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[306718,307063],[317919,317992]],"Locations in B":[[11345,11684],[14876,14949]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher B. Balme"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11456b6b-5198-3b9d-938e-6c5731820f22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Staging the Pacific: Framing Authenticity in Performances for Tourists at the Polynesian Cultural Center","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068483","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":8479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how new, globally-inflected patterns of consumption among young people in the state of Kerala, India are configured in relation to a specifically postcolonial cultural politics of gender, class, and caste, rooted in the colonialist and nationalist projects. Rather than focus on the presence or absence of agency and\/or resistance within consuming practices, the article elucidates the cultural-political terrain into which consumption as an objectified field of practice is inserted. By paying attention to this terrain, it becomes possible to examine the contradictions of consumption for young women and men who are both objects of commoditization and subjects of consumption. The article locates consumption within larger discursive domains, at both the national and regional level, which contest the meaning of globalization in ways that produce and circulate highly gendered constructions of consumer agency. Drawing on ethnographic material on gender, youth, and consumption in Kerala, the article traces the intersecting gender, class, and caste terrain that underlies this field of consumption. Negotiating the space of consumption under new conditions of globalization entails traversing a gendered terrain of masculinities and femininities in ways that reveal the link among youth, consumption, and globalization to be a fraught and contradictory.","creator":["Ritty Lukose"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3790482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"935","pageStart":"915","pagination":"pp. 915-935","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Consuming Globalization: Youth and Gender in Kerala, India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790482","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo reflexiona sobre las relaciones del ambiente familiar en que crecemos y su posible incidencia en la elecci\u00f3n de pareja, a partir de 24 entrevistas a profundidad semiestructuradas con mujeres. Las narrativas de las entrevistadas nos permiten ver que el contexto familiar en que crecieron y el tipo de relaci\u00f3n que tuvieron sus padres moldearon \u2014de manera consciente e inconsciente\u2014 sus propias decisiones y expectativas de la vida conyugal. Los hallazgos hechos por el estudio invitan a la reflexi\u00f3n sobre los discursos m\u00e1s tradicionales de la mayor\u00eda de las religiones, el Estado y los sectores m\u00e1s convencionales de la sociedad del mundo occidental moderno, que postulan que el matrimonio es el mayor anhelo femenino y que el amor es la base de relaciones de pareja duraderas. La discusi\u00f3n provee respuestas adicionales sobre la elecci\u00f3n de pareja, desde el contexto familiar y las expectativas personales, en donde tambi\u00e9n se usan y se discuten los hallazgos hechos por otros autores en torno a la relevancia de la homogamia geogr\u00e1fica, social y cultural. This article reflects upon the relationship between the family context in which women grow up and their choice of partner, based on 24 in-depth semi structured interviews to women. Their narratives allow us seeing that the family context in which they grew up and the kind of relationship their parents had, shaped \u2014whether consciously or unconsciously\u2014 their own choice and expectation of conjugal life. The findings done by the research invite to review the argument posed by most religions, State discourses, and the most conventional sectors of society in modern western world as marriage as the most desired stage of women and love as the starting point of a long term a relationship. Thus the discussion contributes to answer, from the family context and personal expectations, on how we choose partner by using and complementing the findings done by some authors in regards to the relevance of geographical, social, and cultural homogamy.","creator":["Ana Josefina Cuevas Hern\u00e1ndez"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23622290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01854186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9757042-480c-3527-84f8-6449f5b8cd85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23622290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estusoci"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Sociol\u00f3gicos","issueNumber":"92","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"El Colegio De Mexico","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Contexto familiar y elecci\u00f3n de pareja: una aproximaci\u00f3n a trav\u00e9s de madres solas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23622290","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":18962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1980 the Irish poet Eavan Boland published In Her Own Image a volume of poetry which stands as a landmark in her career as a writer for its subversive potential to revise creational myths that have contributed to the traditional construction of female subjectivity. The aim of this paper is to discuss Boland's textual strategies in In Her Own Image and see how she subverts the traditional female iconography that constrains the female psyche and disempowers women. Rather than a set of ornamental female figures, Boland's volume produces more authentic representations of women that move away from man's own image and from his icons, which have often been taken as \"natural\" within the construction of female subjectivity. Resistance to such genderings provides, as the volume illustrates, emancipatory possibilities for the woman writer who regains control over her own body image within the very terms of a culture and of a particular poetic tradition.","creator":["Laura M\u00aa Lojo Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84d97ee7-5514-37be-bb23-9196f6f296eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Female Iconography and Subjectivity in Eavan Boland's \"In Her Own Image\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055231","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6593,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[140045,140252]],"Locations in B":[[6540,6747]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Marriage promotion is a government strategy aimed at ensuring that children are raised in married, heterosexual families, preferably by their biological parents. This article places critical heterosexuality studies in dialogue with feminist state theory to examine marriage promotion as a reaction of the gendered and sexualized state to crisis tendencies of institutionalized heterosexuality. Drawing on the first in-depth study of marriage promotion politics, the author examines polycentric state practices that seek to stabilize the norm of the white, middle-class, heterosexual family. While explicit policy concerns focus on race and class, state-sponsored marriage workshops teach about gender hierarchy to rehearse an implicit ideology of marital heterosexuality. In contrast to feminist state theories that present a monolithic, top-down model of state control, the author offers a more nuanced examination of the relationship between macro and micro levels of power and their uneven consequences for social change.","creator":["MELANIE HEATH"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"437e37f9-82c9-3245-8e1a-d9eb65218487"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"STATE OF OUR UNIONS: Marriage Promotion and the Contested Power of Heterosexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676748","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The essay takes as its point of departure modern theories of subject-decentering and the ways in which they pertain to the question of feminine alterity. It provides a survey of feminist responses in the United States to these theories, responses that take into account both the decentered subject and differences among women. The essay then focuses on three approaches, suggested by the writings of Lennox, Adelson, and Martin. Without assuming any common consensus, the author suggests a re-examination of values that inform progressive practice, in order to develop languages for change.","creator":["Gisela Brinker-Gabler","Elizabeth Naylor Endres"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a8c7b2f-d67a-356a-ab41-13633b60301a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Alterity\u2014Marginality\u2014Difference: On Inventing Places for Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688769","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4551,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[74852,75056],[477848,477934],[478068,478178]],"Locations in B":[[18368,18573],[28185,28271],[29672,29777]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is a discussion of the application of social work knowledge and values in practice. It draws on ethnographic research in a child-care team in the UK which set out to explore the construction of clients as gendered. It is argued that social workers' accounts of practice reveal tensions between an emphasis on clients as individuals and an emphasis on social collectivity. These tensions could be seen as inherent in social work knowledge and values. There are various implications of these tensions between the individual and the social, but there is a particular focus in the paper on the implications for questions of gender. It concludes with some ideas for a theory for practice that would better equip social workers for the complex task of negotiating the gender tensions raised in the paper.","creator":["Jonathan B. Scourfield"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23716408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23716408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on Gender, Knowledge and Values in Social Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23716408","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristin Phillips"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"682a1f9a-73cf-3424-be3f-16f9fb5d2c04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Gender Regime of \"Women's Work\": A View from Tanzanian Internet Caf\u00e9s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003321","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nina Treadwell"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36cdc4ff-d6bf-31c6-a010-396b0723b839"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Female Operatic Cross-Dressing: Bernardo Saddumene's Libretto for Leonardo Vinci's \"Li zite 'n galera\" (1722)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823671","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435597]],"Locations in B":[[16831,16906]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CORINNE DATCHI"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"108b7a00-ad2a-3277-8343-9407ff04f905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"304","pagination":"pp. 304-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER FOURTEEN: Performance-Centered Research: From Theory to Critical Inquiry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981174","volumeNumber":"354","wordCount":10851,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75136,75269]],"Locations in B":[[3879,4011]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra Hawhee"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c516a94-96cd-3d70-8f7c-3b47239d34a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bodily Pedagogies: Rhetoric, Athletics, and the Sophists' Three Rs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250760","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":9937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The authors contend that studying emotional perspectives can facilitate under-standing of the complexities of socially just teaching. They explore the intersection between emotions and socially just teaching via a case study of a White novice teacher at one urban school as she struggles to formulate socially just teaching practices. Drawing from feminist and critical theory, the authors propose the term critical emotional praxis to denote criticalpraxis informed by emotional resistance to unjust pedagogical systems and practices. The authors' analysis may assist in the development of socially just teachers: First, emotions and their expression play an important, ongoing role in socially just teaching, and second, emotional negotiation related to socially just teaching can provide deeper understanding of possible change, perhaps even in counterresponse to wider social, political contexts of schools.","creator":["Sharon M. Chubbuck","Michalinos Zembylas"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b973ad5-7c49-3bdc-8b32-23649946a07f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30069448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereducresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"The Emotional Ambivalence of Socially Just Teaching: A Case Study of a Novice Urban Schoolteacher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069448","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":21809,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Dolan"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4336852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163075X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f75ca83e-e96b-3dc3-b002-57c77286414a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4336852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kenyrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Kenyon Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Kenyon College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender, Sexuality and \"My Life\" in the (University) Theater","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4336852","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PADMAJA CHALLAKERE"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"105fa09b-5785-39dc-b7ee-4d332a47d847"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"593","pageStart":"574","pagination":"pp. 574-593","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WITNESSING \"HISTORY\" OTHERWISE: MUKUL KESAVAN'S \"LOOKING THROUGH GLASS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533299","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pheng Cheah"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Mattering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566255","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":19074,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471728,471794]],"Locations in B":[[122101,122167]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Expressive culture provides a rich environment for investigating the power dynamics of culture, not just for ethnomusicologists, but for scholars in many fields. In my own work, I try to demonstrate how performances of music and dance in particular both (1) reify and reinforce a perception of immutable values and, at the same time, (2) provide a context for exploring alternatives and changing values. I think ethnomusicologists are in a unique position to illuminate this seeming contradiction: cultural behaviors simultaneously enact both stability and change. To reach scholars in other disciplines with our insights, however, ethnomusicologists must continue to question definitions of music and broaden our disciplinary limits to explicitly include a wide range of performances.","creator":["Henry Spiller"],"datePublished":"2014-05-19","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.58.2.0341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cf7a56d-3a8e-342f-b8a8-f52b3f3ff083"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.58.2.0341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Interdisciplinarity and Musical Exceptionalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.58.2.0341","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":2772,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[17923,17977]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Garcia-Moreno"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"420e7be2-7a11-3314-a209-586d026579b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"69","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Violent (Re-)inscriptions: Writing and Performance in Diamela Eltit's \"Lump\u00e9rica\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119991","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The prominence of the body in popular culture has prompted intense academic interest in recent decades. Seeking to overturn a naturalistic approach to the body as a biological given, this broad literature redefines the body as a sociocultural and historical phenomenon. Within anthropology, two primary theoretical orientations toward the body have emerged: the body as \"symbol\" and the body as \"agent.\" This review article provides an overview of these dominant theoretical approaches in the context of recent scholarship on body ideals and, in particular, the body beautiful. The review explores also the body beautiful as a primary site for the construction and performance of gender, and specifically of femininity, with examples drawn from the abundant literature on women's bodies.","creator":["Erica Reischer","Kathryn S. Koo"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a2a5e69-c853-3270-8c48-2cd6f167e37b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Body Beautiful: Symbolism and Agency in the Social World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064855","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11144,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441312,441425]],"Locations in B":[[46384,46516]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alireza Fakhrkonandeh"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02842a8f-91b8-3263-9663-2a5ac8d498e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26312072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Melancholy Ontology, Evental Ethics, and the Lost (m)Other in Howard Barker's Theatre of Catastrophe: An Analysis of \"13 Objects\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312072","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":16045,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[214249,214454]],"Locations in B":[[38651,38856]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler's conceptualisation of how gender is routinely spoken through a hegemonic heterosexual matrix has been pivotal for many social scientists researching within and beyond educational settings for exposing the ways in which children's normative gender identities ('intelligible genders') are inextricably tied to dominant notions of heterosexuality. In dialogue with a growing body of research queering children's gendered and sexualised childhoods, this paper addresses how being a 'normal' girl or boy involves investing in and actively pursuing hegemonic heterosexual identities and relations (from sexual bullying to relationship cultures). Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork into the sexualisation of gender and the gendering of sexuality in children's identity-work in their final year of primary school, I explore the ways in which a ubiquitous heterosexual matrix regulates boy-girl intimacies, from play and friendships to physical proximity. I also highlight the diverse and fluid ways in which children deploy discourses of (hetero)romance and sexual innocence in their role as 'girlfriends' and 'boyfriends', and how particular gendered subject positions (e.g. tomboy) offer an escape route from coercive and frequently compulsory heterosexual positionings. The paper concludes by highlighting how queer analyses of children's gendered and sexual cultures and identity-work needs to further scrutinise how discourses of generation (e.g. early or middle childhood) intersect with discourses of gender and sexuality.","creator":["Emma Renold"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f93b0882-e18a-39b5-bf9e-c9dc68a6db59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"'They Won't Let Us Play... Unless You're Going out with One of Them': Girls, Boys and Butler's 'Heterosexual Matrix' in the Primary Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036158","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10513,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473846,473952]],"Locations in B":[[14545,14651]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The focus of this paper is the construction of subjectivity at work. We examine the ways in which sexuality and gendered power relations in everyday social practices in the workplace are important in the maintenance of occupational sex segregation in the labor market. While the days of the ungendered worker and of labor as an undifferentiated \"location factor\" are long past in economic geography, economic geographers in their work on occupational segregation have tended to neglect the significance of the social construction of gendered identities in the labor market and the reproduction of gender relations in everyday social interactions in the workplace. The paper draws on case studies from other disciplines, suggesting their geographic significance, and then reports initial results of an ongoing study of the gendering of a range of occupations in the financial services sector in the City of London in order to argue for an expansion of the type of questions geographers address in their work on gender and occupational segregation.","creator":["Linda McDowell","Gillian Court"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/143992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0df7490-9197-3a8e-80a4-e759e268d99d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/143992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Clark University","sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Missing Subjects: Gender, Power, and Sexuality in Merchant Banking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/143992","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":14108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Caciola"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2696607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"391a5a91-06fe-329d-83f6-eced3a63c3ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2696607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Mystics, Demoniacs, and the Physiology of Spirit Possession in Medieval Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2696607","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":21224,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431665,431865]],"Locations in B":[[70254,70428]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the past decade educational researchers increasingly have turned to Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) as a set of approaches to answer questions about the relationships between language and society. In this article the authors review the findings of their literature review of CDA in educational research. The findings proceed in the following manner: the multiple ways in which CDA has been defined, the theories of language included in CDA frameworks, the relationship of CDA and context, the question of methods, and issues of reflexivity. The findings illustrate that as educational researchers bring CDA frameworks into educational contexts, they are reshaping the boundaries of CDA.","creator":["Rebecca Rogers","Elizabeth Malancharuvil-Berkes","Melissa Mosley","Diane Hui","Glynis O'Garro Joseph"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3515986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12af6387-f597-350e-9c4e-4f7001accbfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3515986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Critical Discourse Analysis in Education: A Review of the Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3515986","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":21872,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503315,503384]],"Locations in B":[[96531,96613]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sally Haslanger"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2671972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00294624"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108866"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23307"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed698d4c-e60c-335a-815e-78e7749e2bf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2671972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nous"}],"isPartOf":"No\u00fbs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Race: (What) Are They? (What) Do We Want Them to Be?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2671972","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":12863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hannah Arendt's early biography of Rahel Varnhagen, an eighteenth-century German-Jew, provides a revolutionary feminist component to her political theory. In it, Arendt grapples with the theoretical constitution of a female subject and relates Jewish alterity, identity, and history to feminist politics. Because she understood the \"female condition\" of difference as belonging to the political subject rather than an autonomous self, her theory entails a \"politics of alterity\" with applications for feminist practice.","creator":["Joanne Cutting-Gray"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dbdadab-e6a1-3e3d-9449-17e0bc9ad726"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hannah Arendt, Feminism, and the Politics of Alterity: \"What Will We Lose If We Win?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810300","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tsippi Kauffman"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/678534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0527cb3-1536-3585-a9ea-cc58c7fefd15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/678534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Hasidic Performance: Establishing a Religious (Non)Identity in the Tales about Rabbi Zusha of Annopol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/678534","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":8173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, problematizo os limites das institui\u00e7\u00f5es sociais em lidar com os sujeitos que fogem \u00e0s normas de g\u00eanero. Deter-me-ei principalmente nas respostas que a escola tem dado aos|\u00e0s estudantes que apresentam performances de g\u00eanero que fogem ao considerado normal. This article explores the limits of social institutions in dealing with the subjects fleeing gender norms. I will focus mainly on the responses given by schools to students whose gender performance departs from what is considered normal.","creator":["Berenice Bento"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"520607f2-ccee-3f98-8b8f-14f32f1e04dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"NA ESCOLA SE APRENDE QUE A DIFEREN\u00c7A FAZ A DIFEREN\u00c7A","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327956","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the construction of space and gender in the biblical Song of Songs, considering the connections that exist between spatial configuration, perception, and power in the poem. Can the obvious dyad of male\/female hold, or do we see the thresholds between spatial and gendered categories breaking down in the biblical text? And, moreover, is using theory to trumpet the dissolution of categories itself too simple an approach to literary spatiality and gendered identity? I argue that the social construction of space is not restricted to the making of \"real\" worlds on one side of the text and the making of spaces by character interactions on the other. Spatial production continues between person and page. Crucially, the social, sexual, and political geometries we use to construct our imaginary landscapes can, like the biblical lovers' own imaginarium, have a dramatic effect on the type of worlds in which we find ourselves participating.","creator":["Christopher Meredith"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08c65b3a-2346-359a-a5d9-88686eb81382"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Lattice and the Looking Glass: Gendered Space in Song of Songs 2:8\u201414","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250984","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9042,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[53439,53498]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Franko"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d5bd86f-c0d2-34cc-8784-52a63fd54da6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fragment of the Sovereign as Hermaphrodite: Time, History, and the Exception in \"Le Ballet de Madame\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004133","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines one of the contributions that Sandra Bartky makes to feminist theory. Bartky critiques Foucault for his gender blind treatment of the disciplines and social practices that create \"docile bodies.\" She introduces several gender specific disciplines and practices that illustrate that the production of bodies is itself gender coded. This essay argues that social practices are not monolithic, but are composed of various strands that may be in tension with one another.","creator":["Margaret McLaren"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71291538-84c5-377d-921d-ceb666aa43a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Possibilities for a Nondominated Female Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810306","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":2460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[15675,15803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Schleiner"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Voice, Ideology, and Gendered Subjects: The Case of As You Like It and Two Gentlemen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902360","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":15019,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503404,503478]],"Locations in B":[[46231,46305]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This is a three-part study of dream-experiences and their existential reality in the life-world of the Yagwoia of the Papua New Guinea highlands. The focus is on a single conjugal couple, their life-trajectory, and the articulation of their bond as specifically expressed in their dreams. In the first instalment is presented the general cosmo-ontological background of Yagwoia dreaming and the fundamental dialectics of the contra-sexual self-identity of the couple manifest in their oneiric encounters. The second part explores the intrinsic relationship between dreaming and the practice of gambling which in the Yagwoia life-world is a domain of men's homo-social participation in the self-generative life-death flow of the world-body at large. In this aspect, Yagwoia gambling exhibits its true characteristic as an extension and modification of the male-exclusive domain of hunting, warfare, and the ceaseless in-\/ex-corporation of the cosmic life-death flow. The third part continues to explore this cosmic dialectics in the context of the death of the woman and its impact on her man through the period of mourning. The study as a whole presents a cosmo-poetic ethnography of the Yagwoia dream life developed through the systematic long-term field-work grounded in phenomenology and psychoanalysis.","creator":["Jadran Mimica"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40332007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Dreams, Laki, and Mourning: A Psychoanalytic Ethnography of the Yagwoia 'Inner Feminine'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40332007","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":25082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As one of the intersecting hierarchical institutions of the capitalist world-system, global sexism includes heterosexism and ageism. Sexism constitutes and is constituted by other institutions, such as racism, the state, for-profit firms, and global divisions. As a fundamental institution of the world-system, global sexism sustains, embodies, and consolidates all forms of abstract to intimate domination by, for example, enabling the (re)creation of the house hold as the reproductive unit of labor (divorcing families from collective work for the common good), the (re)organization of adult heterosexual men against members of their households and ethnic-class groups, and--at any one moment in time--the simultaneous (re)production of a relatively small pro portion of global labor that is well paid by the state and firms and a large pool of global labor that is under-paid, unpaid and\/or self-sustaining (which experiences economic stress, chronic hunger, and sometimes starvation). Joan Smith and the Fernand Braudel Center's Household Research Working Group have demonstrated how gendered, household-organized work has generated non-monetized value that has supplemented unequal global wages. By examining Joan Smith's feminist writings on households and patriarchal domination, this article explores how global (hetero)sexism has shaped and consolidated global inequality, and why global social change includes the un raveling of sexism, and its hetero- and ageist aspects, as movements and or ganizations dismantle other intersecting institutions and cultivate change.","creator":["Torry D. Dickinson"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d40502c-2b67-34da-8bb3-b8385fe33876"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Hetero) Sexism as a Weapon of the World-System: Feminist Reflections on Household Research by Joan Smith and the Fernand Braudel Center","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241695","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 1954, the United States Supreme Court decided Brown v. Board of Education and ordered the desegregation of students by race in public schools. Many of the states as well as the federal executive branch of government expressed some level of opposition to this order. Over time, courts have taken alternative positions on the education of persons of color, some of which have the potential for undermining the original ruling in the Brown decision. This research will offer an analysis of these trends in American education, exposing the paradox of how an emphasis on supposed achievement tends to trump educational equality for African American students. The merits of transitioning to a supports-based system of accountability\u2014facilitated by collaboration among multiple stakeholders\u2014are analyzed for viability as both a conceptual and pragmatic next step for fulfilling the promise of Brown.","creator":["Philip T. K. Daniel","Todd Walker"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.83.3.0256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c939c6f4-e0de-39fd-951b-146c6b0d1129"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7709\/jnegroeducation.83.3.0256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Fulfilling the Promise of Brown:<\/em> Examining Laws and Policies for Remediation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.83.3.0256","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":10949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The feminification of theory draws attention to the fact that the postmodern insistence on reading everything as text finds its fullest efflorescence in the domain of feminist studies. Regardless of gender, the postmodern credo encourages a partisanship towards contemporary feminist scholarship and a concomitant downgrading of both theory and conceptual and disciplinary rigour.","creator":["Dipankar Gupta"],"datePublished":"1995-03-25","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4402534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0773153c-5b28-3a5e-806d-c7a4fc6f7ec4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4402534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminification of Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4402534","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":5121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth A. Povinelli"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"451c43af-c540-307b-93ac-55432add9d33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23178879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What's Love Got to Do with It? The Race of Freedom and the Drag of Descent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178879","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this article is to expose the existence of a recurring military grand narrative in the modern state-centric world. This narrative rests on techniques for codifying military discipline that appeared after the Middle Ages. It was then framed and diffused intertextually in classical military treatises thanks to the rediscovery of certain developments and concepts in the fields of geometry and perspective. According to the rules of this narrative, military actions are mostly described by mentioning the location and movements of (friendly or enemy) units deployed on a given terrain. This produced a geographical representation of war that is still largely relied upon by soldiers in contemporary armies (it will especially be found in current computerized systems available in contemporary military headquarters). The consequences of this narrative are manifold: (1) it participated in and assisted the reification and dehumanization of individuals as soldiers; (2) it acts as a rhetorical tool that rationalizes and naturalizes warfare; (3) and it strongly contributes to definitions of what war is in the modern state-centric world. In this way, it makes war possible.","creator":["Christophe Wasinski"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eeaa0eb-200b-3563-964d-7bcafcec2380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26301785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"On making war possible: Soldiers, strategy, and military grand narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301785","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"[Sally Haslanger] In debates over the existence and nature of social kinds such as 'race' and 'gender', philosophers often rely heavily on our intuitions about the nature of the kind. Following this strategy, philosophers often reject social constructionist analyses, suggesting that they change rather than capture the meaning of the kind terms. However, given that social constructionists are often trying to debunk our ordinary (and ideology-ridden?) understandings of social kinds, it is not surprising that their analyses are counterintuitive. This article argues that externalist insights from the critique of the analytic\/synthetic distinction can be extended to justify social constructionist analyses. \/\/\/ [Jennifer Saul] Sally Haslanger's 'What Good Are Our Intuitions? Philosophical Analysis and Social Kinds' is, among other things, a part of the theoretical underpinning for analyses of race and gender concepts that she discusses far more fully elsewhere. My reply focuses on these analyses of race and gender concepts, exploring the ways in which the theoretical work done in this paper and others can or cannot be used to defend these analyses against certain objections. I argue that the problems faced by Haslanger's analyses are in some ways less serious, and in some ways more serious, than they may at first appear. Along the way, I suggest that ordinary speakers may not in fact have race and gender concepts and I explore the ramifications of this claim.","creator":["Sally Haslanger","Jennifer Saul"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4107042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03097013"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40485681"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99e813c9-66dc-31a7-ba0f-74e2a44f9004"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4107042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procarissocisupp"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Supplementary Volumes","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Philosophical Analysis and Social Kinds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4107042","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":21640,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[131239,131331]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is based primarily on qualitative research carried out in Central Mexico during 2000-2001. The intent is to present a novel approach to the traditional Mexican kitchen, as well as some perspectives on nature\/society relations from that space, relating these to various central themes in Laura Esquivel's novel, Like water for chocolate. The research explores gender, nature and cultural identity issues in the everyday life of women in three semi-urban communities\u2014Xochimilco, Ocotepec, and Tetecala\u2014with roots in prehispanic Nahuatl culture. Despite constant transformations in landscapes and lifestyles as a result of local and global pressures over time, food remains a site of cultural resistance, and kitchens a place where women's knowledge is transmitted to younger generations. Kitchenspace it is at once the center of the household and, in times of traditional celebrations, the center of community life. It is a privileged site of cultural reproduction. Este art\u00edculo se basa principalmente en una investigaci\u00f3n cualitativa que se llev\u00f3 a cabo en el valle de M\u00e9xico durante los a\u00f1os 2000-2001. La intenci\u00f3n es presentar una aproximaci\u00f3n novedosa a la cocina tradicional mexicana, as\u00ed como algunas perspectivas sobre las relaciones sociedad\/naturaleza desde ese espacio, relacionando \u00e9stos con varios temas centrales en la novela Como agua para chocolate de Laura Esquivel. La investigaci\u00f3n explora cuestiones de g\u00e9nero, naturaleza e identidad cultural en la experiencia de vida cotidiana de varias mujeres en tres comunidades semi-urbanas\u2014Xochimilco, Ocotepec y Tetecala\u2014con ra\u00edces en la cultura nahua prehisp\u00e1nica. A pesar de las constantes transformaciones en los paisajes y los estilos de vida como resultado de las presiones tanto locales como globales a trav\u00e9s del tiempo, la comida se mantiene como un sitio de resistencia cultural y la cocina un espacio donde los conocimientos culturales se transmiten de mujer en mujer a las nuevas generaciones. La cocina es a la vez el centro del hogar y, en tiempos de celebraciones tradicionales, el centro de la comunidad. Es un lugar privilegiado para la reproducci\u00f3n cultural.","creator":["Maria Elisa Christie"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25765026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15452476"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54395462"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ece49db0-bbb3-3c35-b14f-d255a108d727"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25765026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatamergeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Naturaleza y Sociedad Desde la Perspectiva de la Cocina Tradicional Mexicana: G\u00e9nero, Adaptaci\u00f3n y Resistencia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25765026","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":17576,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475972,476141]],"Locations in B":[[95088,95957]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Will Roscoe"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1062813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42815961"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fd236db-853a-3e8f-8389-0f16c7fb685f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1062813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyreligions"}],"isPartOf":"History of Religions","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Priests of the Goddess: Gender Transgression in Ancient Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1062813","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":18364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jo\u00e3o Manuel de Oliveira"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84f95400-6092-355a-b3f2-e92c10a49f46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"733","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-733","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Como se faz o g\u00e9nero na escola? \u2013 uma etnografia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328305","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":1306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Calabrese"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20722676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03636941"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-247631"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20722676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jenglgermphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of English and Germanic Philology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"530","pagination":"pp. 530-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20722676","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":1651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTINA FISANICK"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0532987-b7ac-31eb-9416-485c614b1f1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40546029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"They Are Weighted with Authority\": Fat Female Professors in Academic and Popular Cultures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546029","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10500,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443572,443762]],"Locations in B":[[21522,21715]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christiane Hertel"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fd59dcd-5a60-3765-8c45-5f812ad1d461"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1358873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358873","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review considers the impact of recent performance theory, especially the theory of gender performativity, on anthropological efforts to theorize sex and gender. In brief, the theory of performativity defines gender as the effect of discourse, and sex as the effect of gender. The theory is characterized by a concern with the productive force rather than the meaning of discourse and by its privileging of ambiguity and indeterminacy. This review treats recent performance theory as the logical heir, but also the apotheosis, of two anthropological traditions. The first tradition is feminist anti-essentialism, which first distinguished between sex and gender in an effort to denaturalize asymmetry. The second tradition is practice theory, which emphasized habitual forms of embodiment in its effort to overcome the oppositions between individual and society. In concluding, questions are raised about the degree to which current versions of performance theory enact rather than critically engage the political economies of value and desire from which they arise.","creator":["Rosalind C. Morris"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16c63a28-f2fa-3342-a46f-6d5864010ae9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2155950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"592","pageStart":"567","pagination":"pp. 567-592","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"All Made Up: Performance Theory and the New Anthropology of Sex and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155950","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13270,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474939,475011]],"Locations in B":[[77321,77400]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JOHN LYNCH"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Support our boys': AIDS, Nationalism and the Male Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263722","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Milisava Petkovi\u0107"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f990f0b-1863-360c-bea6-e07a9c89fad0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540829","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":1707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Reading Hegel's 1827 Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion alongside his Phenomenology of Spirit, I argue that his vision for becoming a self-conscious subject-or seeing (oneself as) \"spirit\"-requires taking responsibility for the insight that every act of reason expresses an experience of sexual difference. It entails working to bring into being communities whose conceptions of gender and the absolute realize this idea.","creator":["Kimerer L. Lamothe"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"724879ec-12fa-3535-a23f-b2b0d9966240"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reason, Religion, and Sexual Difference: Resources for a Feminist Philosophy of Religion in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810846","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":15239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46d1e9c9-40ed-3920-996e-5df65329755b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166,"pageEnd":"1034","pageStart":"869","pagination":"pp. 869-1034","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974932","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":66027,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[478793,478845],[503315,503384]],"Locations in B":[[133637,133701],[241068,241150]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay argues for a reconceptualization of ecological politics that is appropriate for a postmodern era: a \"denaturalization\" of ecological politics that avoids both the overly romanticized view of nature that is present in some environmental discourses, and the radical skepticism of anti-foundationalist critiques of \"nature.\" Through a discussion of specific exemplars of postmodernism and ecocentrism, the two schools of thought are revealed to be mirror images of each other. Postmodernism, exemplified here by the social theory of Jean Baudrillard, can be shown to rely on naturalism to sustain its normative critique. Ecocentrism, on the other hand, must make some allowances for the ways in which our understanding of nature is socially constructed, if it is to advance coherent political arguments and avoid an endorsement of reactionary authoritarianism. The paper concludes by pointing in the direction of a way around this apparent impasse of postmodern ecological politics. It proposes a \"denaturalized\" ecological politics, theoretically informed by the Frankfurt School, and empirically focussed on a broadening of recent ecological analyses of urban environments.","creator":["Andrew Biro"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caf959b5-399e-37ed-996b-36168de008df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3235497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Towards a Denaturalized Ecological Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235497","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"According to some philosophers, gender is a social role or pattern of behavior in a social context. I argue that these accounts have problematic implications for transgender. I suggest that gender is a complex behavioral disposition, or cluster of dispositions. Furthermore, since gender norms are culturally relative, one's gender is partially constituted by extrinsic factors. I argue that this has advantages over thinking of gender as behavior, and has the added advantage of accommodating the possibility of an appearance\/reality dissonance with respect to one's gender.","creator":["Jennifer McKitrick"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24703941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318116"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41976996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85f28a4-4210-3b9b-b7fa-353008cc0c27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24703941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Studies: An International Journal for Philosophy in the Analytic Tradition","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"2589","pageStart":"2575","pagination":"pp. 2575-2589","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A dispositional account of gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24703941","volumeNumber":"172","wordCount":7033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ana Claudia Delfini Capistrano de Oliveira"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5b78bf5-496d-3b33-91ae-3d2223246c04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mulheres, homens, olhares e cenas na mira do g\u00eanero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328110","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":2662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANTONIO G\u00d3MEZ L-QUI\u00d1ONES"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c31dae6-0d9c-3918-83b8-a5e50d63cfba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24431924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"REIFICACI\u00d3N, IRON\u00cdA Y CRISIS. LA \u00daLTIMA NOVELA SOBRE LA MEMORIA HIST\u00d3RICA (UN ENSAYO DE ESPECULACI\u00d3N A PROP\u00d3SITO DE \"EL VANO AYER\")","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431924","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11565,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[409769,409841]],"Locations in B":[[62520,62591]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses queer performance theorist Jos\u00e9 Mu\u00f1oz's metaphor of disidentification to interpret digital narratives produced by adolescent girls in the juvenile arbitration program. Mu\u00f1oz views public artistic performances of marginalized subjects as a liminal strategy. While they cannot embody the normative (\"good\" middle class, White, heterosexual subject) image, their rebellious (\"bad\" subject) enactments can lead to further stigmatization. A third, liminal strategy of disidentification allows them to use dominant representations and narratives by shifting, altering, and subverting their logic and ultimately remaking their stigmatized social positions. For the girls in juvenile arbitration who carry an institutional label of law offenders and who are required to conceal their faces to avoid public recognition, working with a digital camera opened up an ambiguous, liminal space of visibility. Through their video and animation performances of disidentification in which they acted as disguised actors and doll animators to produce autobiographic fictions, the girls were able to enter public discourses that stigmatize and label them, and remake and reframe their own representations and subject positions.","creator":["OLGA IVASHKEVICH"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5132df58-ead8-3deb-a833-12a3870283e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24465518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Disidentifications: Girls \"in Trouble\" Experiment With Digital Narratives to Remake Self-Representations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465518","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":7254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Joyce allowed himself to be called \"Shame's Voice,\" and he makes the expression of shame central to his work because he recognizes shame as a central factor not only in personal feelings but in art, in gender, and in social economy. \"Circe\" develops Joyce's idea that shame is the crucial medium of exchange in modern society. Sylvan Tompkins's argument that shame plays a foundational role in political systems is parallel to Joyce's view of shame as the substance that holds social bonds together. Moreover, Leon Wurmser opposes shame, as the feeling of someone violated, to guilt, as the feeling of the violator, and this suggests that shame constitutes the stereotype of femininity, while guilt constitutes that of masculinity. Therefore Joyce reverses conventional genders and hierarchy by indicating through Leopold Bloom that shame is the grounding principle in the life of the average man.","creator":["SHELDON BRIVIC"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb1c1da0-782c-3b99-b121-bf4bd90e546a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"DEALING IN SHAME: POWER\/GENDER IN \"CIRCE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871091","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5486,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522909]],"Locations in B":[[17375,17475]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy L. Best"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5e02358-4fdb-3ede-863d-f5b246129d60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594651","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia C. Klaver"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28833342-2752-37cf-9b74-51f44edce8cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Economics: Harriet Martineau's \"Illustrations of Political Economy\" and the Narration of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347122","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11897,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522892]],"Locations in B":[[76875,76958]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay deals with the relations between gender, gender performity, and genre representation of gender and national identity in modern China. It argues that the issue of nation and impersonation, sexuality and political representation, constitutes a peculiar subject for modern Chinese writers, and that among these contests for leadership positions, traditional theatre and its transvestite dramaturgy are continuously called on, as true or false impersonations of China in the theatre of the world. The cases-in-point are two works about female impersonation, one by Ba Jin (b. 1904), champion of May Fourth literature, and the other by Qin Shouou (1908-1994), a popular middle-brow fiction writer in the Republican era.","creator":["David Der-wei Wang"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01619705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d707e63-127c-3b13-9fb8-36df8b17028d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinliteessaarti"}],"isPartOf":"Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews (CLEAR)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Chinese Literature: essays, articles, reviews (CLEAR)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Impersonating China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594285","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kimberly S. Latta"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Mistress of the Marriage Market: Gender and Economic Ideology in Defoe's \"Review\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032024","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":10727,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74829,75322]],"Locations in B":[[54077,54571]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maria Brettschneider"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"711dcdc1-b089-3241-917d-8d9e32f653ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Heterosexual Political Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984477","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Constructivism and intersectionality are used to explore one lesbian college student's multiple identities. These frameworks reveal how meaning-making contributes to power's influence on identity, while power shapes meaning-making. For this student, lesbian identity is a product of social class, dominant and subordinate norms, and interactions among marginalized and privileged identities.","creator":["Elisa S. Abes"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36886922"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a30c1963-21ed-3fa0-896d-c8eef5dfbf65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41478286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Constructivist and Intersectional Interpretations of a Lesbian College Student's Multiple Social Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478286","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":12493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sexuality scholars have noted the historical connection between appearance and gay or lesbian identity. However, as the social landscape for lesbian women and gay men has shifted over the past forty years, little research has documented how such changes influence gay and lesbian individuals' appearance choices as they form, manage, and maintain their identities. To explore the impact of this \"post-closet\" (Seidman 2002) era on the identities and appearances of lesbians and gays, in-depth interviews were conducted with twenty individuals, aged eighteen to thirty. Findings suggest that while most people use appearance to attain a sense of authenticity after \"coming out,\" achieving a feeling of authenticity in gay and lesbian spaces presents unique challenges as individuals come under scrutiny by the community.","creator":["David J. Hutson"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b7da25e-9629-3a5b-b49b-c105db7d163f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Standing OUT\/Fitting IN: Identity, Appearance, and Authenticity in Gay and Lesbian Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.213","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10658,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[62464,62562]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["EMILY S. ROSENBERG"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24913656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf6d9657-6c15-3a6c-9299-300ff8f9e8e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24913656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revisiting Dollar Diplomacy: Narratives of Money and Manliness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24913656","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bruce Curtis"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"067afdc6-e46b-3f78-99ec-40dbced415c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20460649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20460649","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":3545,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514658,514746]],"Locations in B":[[22249,22343]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie Orton"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24007519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24007519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"De-Monsterizing the Myth of the Terrorist Woman: Faranda, Braghetti, and Mambro","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24007519","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel Gates"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41154214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a2362b9-5497-3897-b81b-f59dab976228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41154214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unpardonable Sins: The Hazards of Performative Language in the Tragic Cases of Francesco Spiera and \"Doctor Faustas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41154214","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9071,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494724,494801]],"Locations in B":[[50726,50803]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the changing construction of masculine identities among working-class males in a large Canadian factory city, Hamilton, Ontario, in the half century before the Second World War. It argues that, long before individual working men embraced the patriarchal identity of breadwinner and head of family, they had learned and practiced how to be \"masculine\" in family homes, schools, city streets, workplaces, and pleasure sites. The result was a complex bundle of contradictory attitudes and practices in which the processes of class, ethnic\/racial, and gender formation were closely interwoven and in which the male body became a crucial vehicle for expressing gender. The article stresses that working-class masculinities were not fixed, static, or universal, but shaped in specific ways in different contexts and subject to challenges and re-negotiation over time. In the period under study here, working-class males faced new forms of institutional regulation in schools, workplaces, streets, and military trenches, the commercialization of many of their pleasures, and new independence and assertiveness in the pubic sphere among the women of their communities. Negotiating these challenges brought both continuities and significant changes in masculine identities.","creator":["Craig Heron"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27673020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01475479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99ef37f5-d2c9-3edb-86e2-a42ba39a2f50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27673020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelaboworkhist"}],"isPartOf":"International Labor and Working-Class History","issueNumber":"69","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Boys Will Be Boys: Working-Class Masculinities in the Age of Mass Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27673020","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Salvador Vidal-Ortiz"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b0438f0-ff20-3066-9890-a59be05d6dca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"A World of Its Own: Not the Best of Both Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813186","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":2355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The well-known ambiguity of \"L'Immoraliste\" owes much to friction between images of drama and text in the novel, to the gap separating scenes of performance from themes of reading or writing. In various ways, the novel associates texts with inauthentic living. By thematizing the theater, Gide validates Michel's turning to performance-based models of social identity in the course of his progressive rejection of the presumed authority of texts. But Michel fails to create a stable persona, as he fails to acculturate the initial layer of his personal \"palimpsest.\" Text does, however, have the ambiguous last word.","creator":["James T. Day"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3132712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3132712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theater, Texts, and Ambiguity in Gide's \"L'Immoraliste\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3132712","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":7003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An emerging sociological approach to the self reflects new emphases on power, reflexivity, and social constructionism. The significance of power in shaping the self is central to a new scholarship associated with Foucault. This body of work offers an important corrective to traditional sociological orientations associated with Mead and symbolic interactionism. The principle of reflexivity is at the core of the Meadian tradition and provides a pragmatic foundation for understanding agency and political action missing from much of the new scholarship. The principle of social construction is common to both new and traditional sociological approaches to the self and guides most recent empirical analyses. Promising avenues of research are evident in work that explores the sociological context of self-construction, the social resources employed in the construction process, and the growing importance of non-human objects in self-construction. The limitation of scholarship that overemphasizes the psychological products of self-construction is also examined.","creator":["Peter L. Callero"],"datePublished":"2003-12-31","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f61d310c-0dc0-36d0-a15d-d59b36142c63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sociology of the Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036963","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing from four Arendtian themes-plurality, the public realm, power, and perspective appreciation-I argue for citizenship as a \"politics of enlarged mentality.\" This term suggests an alternative conception of citizenship that surpasses the limits of both the liberal and civic republican traditions. Unlike the masculinized liberal ideal of the citizen and contrary to the gendered universality that defines the civic republican traditions, a politics based on enlarged mentality combines context sensitivity with principled judgments.","creator":["Patricia Moynagh"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f944d13-b73f-3126-a7d3-23481e4f38b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Politics of Enlarged Mentality: Hannah Arendt, Citizenship Responsibility, and Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810732","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11523,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[71947,72056]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tommasina Gabriele"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Prostitution to Transsexuality: Gender Identity and Subversive Sexuality in Dacia Maraini","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251850","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":6356,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[311609,311862],[318396,318653],[430072,430290]],"Locations in B":[[15903,16154],[20417,20674],[33462,33680]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This special issue is the result of concerns about the marginalized status of gender within the sociology of religion. The collection of exciting new research in this special issue advocates for the importance of a gender lens on questions of religion in order to highlight issues, practices, peoples, and theories that would otherwise not be central to the discipline. We encourage sociologists who study religion to engage more in interdisciplinary and intersectional scholarship, acknowledge developments in the global South, and develop more compelling theoretical frameworks that analyze religion from a gendered perspective. Our aim is to bring religion to the attention of gender and feminist scholars and to encourage religion scholars to consider gender not just as a variable but as a social structure. We hope that both groups of scholars will consider gender and religion as mutually constitutive social categories.","creator":["ORIT AVISHAI","AFSHAN JAFAR","RACHEL RINALDO"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ef76952-04d0-35d7-93ab-13fdc5849a58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43669940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A GENDER LENS ON RELIGION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43669940","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lidice Alem\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39816f39-0250-34fc-88b4-fa9421eb6c09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24585219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00e9nero, raza y poes\u00eda cubana de los ochenta en \"Entre mundo y juguete\" de Soleida R\u00edos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585219","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Der Aufsatz untersucht die leiblich-affektive Dimension der Geschlechtskonstruktion, die in der Soziologie bisher weitgehend vernachl\u00e4ssigt worden ist. Ausgehend von Plessners Begriff der \u201eexzentrischen Positionalit\u00e4t\u201c werden zwei Thesen entwickelt: 1. Affektivit\u00e4t und Leiblichkeit sind von zentraler Bedeutung f\u00fcr die Stabilit\u00e4t und Dauerhaftigkeit der sozialen Konstruktion Geschlecht. 2. Die konkrete Gestaltung leiblich-affektiver Erfahrungen ist sozial konstruiert, eine \u201enat\u00fcrliche\u201c Erfahrung des Leibes gibt es nicht. Im Zentrum der Aufmerksamkeit steht die Untersuchung der passiven Leiberfahrung; eine M\u00f6glichkeit, diese zu analysieren, boten die leiblichen Irritationen, denen sich Transsexuelle und ihre Interaktionspartner Innen im Proze\u00df der transsexuellen Geschlechtsver\u00e4nderung ausgesetzt sehen. This article concentrates on the affective and bodily dimension of gender construction, which has been widely neglected by sociological approaches. Based on Helmuth Plessner's term \"eccentric positionality\" two main points are made: 1. Individual body-experience and affectivity are important means of keeping gender construction stable and permanent. 2. There is nothing like \"natural\" body-experience; rather specific body-experiences are themselves subject to social construction. Within this area the analysis focuses mainly on passive body-experience. Specifically bodily irritations experienced by transsexuals or their friends\/partners during the process of gender-change offered a good opportunity for an exploration of this subject.","creator":["Gesa Lindemann"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23845769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03401804"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19347273-da63-3845-b86b-64f50fe7775b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23845769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitsozi"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"5","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"330","pagination":"pp. 330-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Lucius & Lucius Verlagsgesellscheft mbH","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Die leiblich-affektive Konstruktion des Geschlechts: F\u00fcr eine Mikrosoziologie des Geschlechts unter der Haut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23845769","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12280,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maxine Grossman"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4193325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09290761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46843572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93592657-647d-363b-aa80-600817e9ab60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4193325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deadseadisc"}],"isPartOf":"Dead Sea Discoveries","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Reading for Gender in the Damascus Document","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4193325","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12869,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[5129,5200]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo problematiza la construcci\u00f3n de las categor\u00edas de v\u00edctima y victimario en el Informe Rettig (1991) y el Informe Valech (2004) desde la \u00f3ptica de la teor\u00eda de g\u00e9nero. El estudio de estas construcciones discursivas compele a mirar hacia atr\u00e1s y adelante: atr\u00e1s en el sentido de localizar las ra\u00edces de ciertos discursos en los nuevos movimientos sociales y la lucha democr\u00e1tica de los a\u00f1os setenta y ochenta, y adelante en el sentido que la hegemon\u00eda de ciertos discursos elegidos por la Concertaci\u00f3n como leg\u00edtimos siguen estableciendo los par\u00e1metros del actual escenario pol\u00edtico chileno y probablemente lo seguir\u00e1n haciendo en el futuro cercano. Esta investigaci\u00f3n propone que una de las grandes desventajas de la pol\u00edtica actual y su forma de enmarcar los discursos, es su capacidad de producir una falsa ruptura entre la violencia de antes y la violencia de hoy, particularmente en relaci\u00f3n a la violencia de g\u00e9nero. This article uses gender theory to problematize the construction of the categories of victim and aggressor in the Rettig Report (1991) and the Valech Report (2004). The study of these discursive constructions compels us to look toward the future and toward the past. We must look back to localize the roots of certain discourses that belong to new social movements and the democratic struggles of the 1970s and 1980s. However, we must also look forward because the hegemony that certain discourses that the Concertaci\u00f3n has chosen as legitimate establish the parameters of the current Chilean political scene and will continue to do so in the immediate future. This article proposes that one of the great disadvantages of current policies, and their way of framing discourse, is the ability to produce a false rupture between the violence of yesterday and that of today, particularly in relation to gender violence.","creator":["Hillary Hiner"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bffa2d5-121a-387f-ba25-e71716557982"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40783670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"VOCES SOTERRADAS, VIOLENCIAS IGNORADAS: Discurso, violencia pol\u00edtica y g\u00e9nero en los Informes Rettig y Valech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783670","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Interesting parallels exist between the thought of George Herbert Mead and some of the writings of contemporary poststructuralists. Both stress the importance of language, the dynamic character of social and cultural life, and the unstable relations of difference. However, where poststructuralists tend to reduce subjectivity and meaning to discourse, Mead sees the subject in behavioral terms and as constituted in a social self. A comparison and contrast of the two approaches reveals limitations of the poststructuralist conception while demonstrating the strengths of Meadian pragmatism and social psychology. Of special importance, Meadian theory implicitly addresses questions of identity and difference, offering a social pragmatic foundation for a discussion of these contemporary themes. The weaknesses of poststructuralism are illustrated by a Meadian critique of the work of Judith Butler, a leading poststructuralist thinker. This critique faults Butler's poststructuralism for lacking an adequate conception of social relations and a notion of self.","creator":["Robert G. Dunn"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a54a5c6-9886-384f-8a8d-3a959e37dc2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"705","pageStart":"687","pagination":"pp. 687-705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Self, Identity, and Difference: Mead and the Poststructuralists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121086","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10793,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[430831,431374],[431133,431620],[431739,431877],[431984,432254],[447755,448048],[450860,450985]],"Locations in B":[[19062,19660],[19419,19911],[19998,20134],[20129,20397],[32572,32865],[34832,34955]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Yuki Kihara\u2019s 2016 work Der Pap\u0101lagi (The White Man) provides a critical reappropriation of an early twentieth-century account of a Samoan chief and his views on \u201cwhite people\u201d and the artifice of European \u201ccivilization.\u201d This work was popular as an invocation of island paradise that appealed to German sensibilities of the time. It has, however, been revealed as a literary masquerade written by Erich Scheurmann, who resided briefly in S\u0101moa in the early twentieth century. This tale has been further interpreted in a photographic project by artist Yuki Kihara who uses it to reexplore contemporary evocations of paradise and to disrupt hierarchical relations through a series of racial crossings and inversions of looking at relations that work to provincialize boundaries of race and question understandings of cultural appropriation. In both Scheurmann\u2019s and Kihara\u2019s works, as well as in the collaborative project of writing this essay, the dynamics of possessing paradise via colonial imaginaries, neocolonial leisure industries, and the practice of ethnography are explored to highlight the complexities of exploitation, cultural ownership, and desire.","creator":["Kalissa Alexeyeff","Yuki Kihara"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7ef2eed-00ec-3c70-95c4-fb826b2a4139"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Polyface in Paradise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776154","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Exploring the Politics of Race, Gender, and Place"} +{"abstract":"This article examines how contemporary forms of the ideal middle-class mother presented in popular South African women\u2019s magazines is taken up and re-coded by three Pentecostal Charismatic Christian churches in Johannesburg to construct their concept of the ideal Christian mother. With the following four biblical texts as a background\u20141 Timothy 2:13\u201315, Ephesians 5:21\u20136:9, Proverbs 31:9\u201331 and Titus 2:5\u2014this article, which does not offer an exegesis of these texts but rather draws on ethnographic research, shows how these texts are loosely used by these churches to inform their teaching on ideal mothering. All three churches in the study give women extensive support and help to show them that through the power of the Holy Spirit and the teaching of the church, they can attain the ideal of the perfect mother as portrayed in popular culture.","creator":["Maria Frahm-Arp"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85447859"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac288598-7f2c-398b-9ef8-761fb7d4545d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructions of Mothering in Pentecostal Charismatic Churches in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417473","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":7410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda A. Morris"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41582206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15530981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2903ede-abf8-3172-92ac-3668e859defd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41582206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marktwaij"}],"isPartOf":"The Mark Twain Annual","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Eloquent Silence in \"Hellfire Hotchkiss\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41582206","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4498,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445854,446094]],"Locations in B":[[24795,25035]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many contemporary liberals increasingly accept that plural societies must aspire to far more expansive and inclusive ideals of justice and citizenship than liberal doctrine would suggest. The dominant perception is that extending the set of rights is the most effective way to implement a just and stable multicultural society. In fact, this is not a very plausible description of what people seek in demanding greater respect for diversity. Nor does it offer a compelling vision of how things ought to be. First, social expectations regarding recognition are not uniquely linked to rights; they encompass intractable struggles over values, as well as ways of living and evaluating. For example, a central feature of feminist, black and multicultural politics is the attempt to change social culture into a medium through which personal integrity and self-esteem may be acquired. Second, liberalism cannot easily accommodate this type of struggle, since it takes for granted a narrowly constricted conception of politics that is based on instituting public laws that harmonize the freedom of everyone. Anyone who takes seriously the idea that recognition surpasses legal relations of respect will then surely wish to consider whether liberalism must not be corrected and extended to reveal the political significance of the social conditions that enable individuals to experience themselves as both autonomous and individuated.","creator":["MORAG PATRICK"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff79ddf-29fd-3793-b7b7-3919eaa76d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23889940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rights and recognition: Perspectives on multicultural democracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889940","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ex-gay ministries train people who are attracted to members of the same sex in gender and religious conventions that such ministries hope will effect changes in erotic desire. However, they reject efforts at denial and repression in favor of frank acknowledgment of homosexual desire, and advocate for the full inclusion of those who struggle with that desire in the church community. In carving out this space between rejection and acceptance of homosexuality, they utilize discursive and cultural strategies that resemble the gender indeterminacy and gender play celebrated by queer theorists\u2014who have very different socio-political aims. Using the work of queer theorist Judith Butler, this paper looks at the practice of ex-gay ministries, arguing that by grounding gender essentialism in creation rather than nature, these ministries are able to engage in and profit from strategies I call \"queerish\"\u2014ones that are similar to queer strategies in certain conceptual moves, yet quite distinct in normative ends.","creator":["Lynne Gerber"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2008.11.4.8","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10926690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50633713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8962876-5811-39ac-be64-e706d2d8067c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nr.2008.11.4.8"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"novareligio"}],"isPartOf":"Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Opposite of Gay: Nature, Creation, and Queerish Ex-Gay Experiments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2008.11.4.8","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ROSALIND MARSH"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23355542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"617fbf4e-0a96-311b-a1f0-4560bfe7da16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23355542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"Russian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Concepts of Gender, Citizenship, and Empire and Their Reflection in Post-Soviet Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23355542","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":13136,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497485,497534]],"Locations in B":[[17712,17762]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article examines constructions of the sexual in some writings by Gabriele St\u00f6tzer-Kachold, specifically through an analysis of the author's attempt to reclaim the derogatory term Votze. This aspect of St\u00f6tzer-Kachold's art is contextualized with reference to the general reception of her work as authentic autobiography, the notion of the sexual as taboo in GDR literature, and more general issues of feminism and feminist theories. Such a contextualization recognizes the importance of this author's feminist writing, while also evidencing the difficulties involved in such a project of revision and redefinition.","creator":["Beth Linklater"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23a3dbb9-87d7-362d-a671-8ac0af97bd58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Erotic Provocations: Gabriele St\u00f6tzer-Kachold's Reclaiming of the Female Body?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688860","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8399,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,74701]],"Locations in B":[[40881,41146]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peggy Schmeiser"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"860edb5d-5b11-3522-b6ca-71c19e0102a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Raising Sam: Mothering as a Secular Feminist Scholar of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfemistudreli.27.2.148","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf96f2c9-038b-3162-a6e5-6c90fb4df607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Trans\/Bolero\/Drag\/Migration: Music, Cultural Translation, and Diasporic Puerto Rican Theatricalities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649795","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hundreds of thousands of students in introductory human sexuality classes read text-books whose covert ideology reinforces dominant heteronormative narratives of sexual dimorphism, male hegemony, and heteronormativity. As such, the process of scientific discovery that proposes to provide description of existing sexual practices, identities, and physiologies instead succeeds in cultural prescription. This essay provides a feminist, queer content analysis of such textbooks to illuminate their implicit narratives and provide suggestions for writing more feminist, queer-friendly texts.","creator":["Marilyn Myerson","Sara L. Crawley","Erica Hesch Anstey","Justine Kessler","Cara Okopny"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46c332fc-73ef-35da-80dc-5cbae8736c48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Who's Zoomin' Who? A Feminist, Queer Content Analysis of \"Interdisciplinary\" Human Sexuality Textbooks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640046","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9516,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476453,476555]],"Locations in B":[[57001,57103]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws on data from a study of the transition to motherhood to contribute to feminist theorizing of embodiment. Three bodily aspects of women's gendered sense of self are identified as undergoing possible change during this period-sensuality, shape, and space. The work of Arthur Frank is drawn on to theorize shifts in women's experience of these dimensions, and the author shows how the white, middle-class women studied could use such discourses around the body as resources in renegotiating their social positioning. This empirical analysis demonstrates how physical changes may facilitate challenging the dominant body norms, although the work of Robert Connell indicates that social control may also be a consequence of such bodily conceptualizations. This article therefore uses its empirical analysis to contribute to theorizing the connections between bodily practices and gendered identity.","creator":["Lucy Bailey"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2d94d32-6174-3939-8f41-a84fb83e4f56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3081832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Shows: First-Time Mothers and Embodied Selves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081832","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although women worldwide are increasingly taking on breadwinner roles, little is known about the experiences of unmarried breadwinner daughters, particularly those in non-Western societies who belong to cultures with rigid gender role prescriptions. This study uses a life-story interview approach to explore the gender and cultural identity work of seven unmarried South African Indian daughters who are the breadwinners in their natal families. The findings of this study illuminate the gender and cultural identity work these women engage in to negotiate the contradictions between cultural prescriptions and their new roles as family breadwinners. In contradiction to the idea that women breadwinners who earn high salaries gain power in their families, the present study found financial control did not result in the kind of power traditionally associated with the breadwinner role. This research also demonstrates the ways in which the women resisted the constrictions of their family roles despite the fact that they were the breadwinners in their families. Bien que les femmes du monde entier assument de plus en plus le r\u00f4le de soutien de famille, on sait peu de choses sur les exp\u00e9riences des filles c\u00e9libataires soutiens de famille, particuli\u00e8rement celles des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s non-occidentales appartenant \u00e0 des cultures ayant des prescriptions rigides quant au r\u00f4le des sexes. Cette \u00e9tude utilise pour m\u00e9thode de faire raconter leur vie pour examiner le travail d'identit\u00e9 culturelle et de genre de sept filles c\u00e9libataires indiennes sud-africaines qui sont le soutien de famille dans leur famille d'origine. Les r\u00e9sultats de cette \u00e9tude montrent le travail d'identit\u00e9 culturelle et de genre fait par ces femmes pour surmonter les contradictions entre les prescriptions culturelles et leur nouveau r\u00f4le de soutien de famille. En contradiction avec l'id\u00e9e que les femmes soutiens de famille qui gagnent des salaires \u00e9lev\u00e9s ont plus de pouvoir dans leurs familles, cette \u00e9tude a trouv\u00e9 que le contr\u00f4le financier ne correspond pas au type de pouvoir associ\u00e9 traditionnellement avec le r\u00f4le de soutien de famille. Cette recherche montre aussi comment ces femmes ont r\u00e9sist\u00e9 aux contraintes de leur r\u00f4le familial malgr\u00e9 le fait qu'elles \u00e9taient le soutien de famille dans leurs familles. Aunque las mujeres en todo el mundo est\u00e1n tomando cada vez m\u00e1s el rol de sost\u00e9n de familia, poco se sabe acerca de las experiencias de hijas solteras que son sost\u00e9n de familia, en particular de aquellas provenientes de sociedades no occidentales con r\u00edgidas normas en sus roles de g\u00e9nero. Este estudio utiliza el enfoque de entrevista de historia de vida para explorar el g\u00e9nero y la identidad cultural laboral de siete hijas solteras indias sudafricanas las cuales son el sost\u00e9n de sus familias de nacimiento. Los resultados de este estudio contribuyen en la comprensi\u00f3n del g\u00e9nero y la identidad cultural laboral de estas mujeres dedicadas a tratar las contradicciones entre las normas culturales y su nuevo rol como sost\u00e9n de familia. En contradicci\u00f3n con la idea de que las mujeres sost\u00e9n de familia al ganar altos salarios, tambi\u00e9n ganan poder en sus familias, el presente estudio encontr\u00f3 que el control financiero no es un resultado con el poder tradicionalmente asociado con el rol de sost\u00e9n de familia. Esta investigaci\u00f3n tambi\u00e9n demuestra las formas en que las mujeres se oponen a las restricciones en sus roles familiares a pesar del hecho de que son el sost\u00e9n de sus familias.","creator":["Nasima Mohamed Hoosen Carrim"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44109639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472328"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"574548b3-8407-3716-984a-fc645c561938"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44109639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcompfamistud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Comparative Family Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Dr. George Kurian","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender and Cultural Identity Work of Unmarried Indian Breadwinner Daughters in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44109639","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33529,33586]],"Locations in B":[[13910,13969]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This artide explores how sprinter Michael Johnson was packaged by American media before, during, and after the 1996 Summer Olympic Games. Johnson's body and accomplishments were visually and verbally repositioned to reinforce the dominant social order rather than challenging or upsetting it. The emphasis in media coverage on methods of power and control suggests ways in which white anxieties about the black male body may be activated but contained through sport and the reward structure surrounding it.","creator":["Doug Battema"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10811753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63251f11-80ed-33b7-abc9-690ceeeb2397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanamermen"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Men","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Danger Zone\": Michael Johnson, Blackness, and Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819346","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":13826,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauryl Tucker"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e95e13e9-abb3-3957-96fb-fd036fb6d437"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"336","pagination":"pp. 336-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Progeny and Parody: Narcissus and Echo in Stevie Smith's Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246982","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":12812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ming Fang He","Angela Haynes","Sonia Janis","Consuela Ward","Michel Mitchell Pantin","Cynthia Mikell"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03eda101-275b-3027-9346-46b23879520f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching Courageously: In-Between Contested Race, Gender, Class, and Power in the U.S. South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981820","volumeNumber":"412","wordCount":14410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher A. Shinn"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"558b2fdb-6406-386c-b1a6-23d98dcc8e2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masquerade, Magic, and Carnival in Ralph Ellison's \"Invisible Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512258","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Fox"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3608bc2e-2fdf-3575-aff6-81dd66e97d5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44235567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"1\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235567","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the complexity associated with having two potentially conflicting social identities in the USA: being Asian Pacific Islander and being gay. Twenty-five gay Asian Pacific Islander men completed individual interviews regarding their racial and sexual identities and the intersection between the two. Data analysis revealed diversity in ways by which individuals integrated their dual identities and expressed themselves to others; pathways by which individuals combined their race and sexuality into a coherent self-concept; and strategies for maintaining harmony and balance in self understanding. Findings emphasized the role of situational factors in determining the salience and relevance of each component of identity. Their experiences are discussed in the light of theoretical models of psychosocial development and frameworks for understanding self-concept complexity. \/\/\/ Cet article examine la complexit\u00e9 associ\u00e9e \u00e0 la possession de deux identit\u00e9s sociales potentiellement conflictuelles aux USA: \u00eatre oc\u00e9anien et \u00eatre gay. Vingt-cinq hommes gays, originaires des \u00eeles du Pacifique, ont \u00e9t\u00e9 interrog\u00e9s individuellement sur leurs identit\u00e9s sexuelle et ethnique, et sur le croisement de ces deux identit\u00e9s. L'analyse des donn\u00e9es a r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9 la diversit\u00e9 des approaches par lesquelles ces hommes int\u00e9graient leur double identit\u00e9 et s'exprimaient envers les autres; les voies choisies par eux pour combiner leur appartenance ethnique et leur sexualit\u00e9 en un concept de soi coh\u00e9rent; et des strat\u00e9gies de maintien de l'harmonie et de l'\u00e9quilibre dans la compr\u00e9hension de soi. Les r\u00e9sultats mettent l'accent sur le r\u00f4le des facteurs situationnels dans la d\u00e9termination de la saillance et de la pertinence de chacune des composantes de l'identit\u00e9. Les exp\u00e9riences de ces hommes sont discut\u00e9es \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de mod\u00e8les th\u00e9oriques du d\u00e9veloppement psychosocial et de cadres de compr\u00e9hension de la complexit\u00e9 du concept de soi. \/\/\/ En este art\u00edculo examinamos la complejidad de tener dos identidades sociales potencialmente conflictivas en los EE.UU.: proceder de las islas del Pac\u00edfico y ser homosexual. Veinticinco homosexuales originariamente de las islas del Pac\u00edfico participaron en entrevistas individuales sobre sus identidades raciales y sexuales, y la intersecci\u00f3n entre las dos. Los an\u00e1lisis de los datos revelaron una diversidad en cuanto a c\u00f3mo los entrevistados compaginaban sus identidades duales y el modo en el que se expresaban con los dem\u00e1s; las v\u00edas que utilizaban para combinar su raza y sexualidad en un autoconcepto coherente y sus estrategias para mantener la armon\u00eda y el equilibrio para comprenderse ellos mismos. Los resultados recalcaron el rol de los factores de situaci\u00f3n a la hora de determinar la prominencia y relevancia de cada componente de identidad. Sus experiencias se eval\u00faan en vistas a los modelos te\u00f3ricos del desarrollo psicosocial y las estructuras para entender la complejidad del autoconcepto.","creator":["Don Operario","Chong-Suk Han","Kyung-Hee Choi"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a75a07d2-0ae0-3916-a6e4-d2bdc80ba188"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20461026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dual Identity among Gay Asian Pacific Islander Men","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461026","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Judith Butler is perhaps best known for her take-up of the debate between Derrida and Austin over the function of the performative and her subsequent suggestion that the subject be understood as performatively constituted. Another important but less often noted move within Butler's consideration of the processes through which the subject is constituted is her thinking between Althusser's notion of subjection and Foucault's notion of subjectivation. In this paper, I explore Butler's understanding of processes of subjectivation, examine the relationship between subjectivation and the performative suggested in and by Butler's work, and consider how the performative is implicated in processes of subjectivation-in 'who' the subject is, or might be, subjectivated as. Finally, I examine the usefulness of understanding the subjectivating effects of discourse for education, in particular for educationalists concerned to make better sense of and interrupt educational inequalities. In doing this I offer a reading of an episode of ethnographic data generated in an Australian high school. I suggest that it is through subjectivating processes of the sort that Butler helps us to understand that some students are rendered subjects inside the educational endeavour, and others are rendered outside this endeavour or, indeed, outside student-hood.","creator":["Deborah Youdell"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a1901ed-4a7e-35b9-8bc7-9e77ccfc7b4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"528","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-528","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subjectivation and Performative Politics: Butler Thinking Althusser and Foucault: Intelligibility, Agency and the Raced-Nationed-Religioned Subjects of Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036159","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9334,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514353,514430]],"Locations in B":[[57378,57456]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One of the central ways in which institutional racism is perpetuated is through the designation of the somatic norm. However, although the classed and gendered nature of the somatic norm underlying somataphobic representations of the universal 'individual' have been both theoretically and substantially explored, the racial character of this embodied being has received scant attention. This paper introduces race to the wider debates on the embodied nature of the political 'individual', before analysing the specific ways in which an institution that is deemed to be at the absolute apex of disembodied, neutral professionalism \u2013 the British senior civil service \u2013 is naturalised as the domain for white men. The somatic norm underlying the representation of the impartial senior civil service is brought to the fore in this paper by discussing the location of black senior civil servants, whose presence helps us to highlight the synchronie relationship between racialised bodies and elite spaces in the body politic. These 'Space Invaders' disturb the racialised nature of these spaces whilst at the same time adhering to the assimilative pressure of the somatic norm. An engagement with the interview accounts of black senior civil servants allows us to grasp some idea of what it is like for them to coexist in a place that is built on a 'racial contract' which has demarcated spaces in accordance with racialised corporealities. As matter out of place these 'different' bodies generate disorientation, undergo the burden of invisibility and abide by the racialised and classed informal rules of behaviour, particularly those of the legitimate language. All of which problematises the notion of 'difference' in organisations as entailing much more than the mere existence of 'different' bodies, on the basis of race or gender.","creator":["Nirmal Puwar"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe919504-2030-3c56-ba36-e56eb95d9932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42858214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Racialised Somatic Norm and the Senior Civil Service","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858214","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The influence of Wallace Stevens on modern writing is extensive, but in the case of gay American writers\u2014both in poetry and prose\u2014his impact is extraordinary. Focusing on the work of Mark Doty, this essay discusses the way that his debt to Stevens in both forms of writing can be located in a mutually shared \"poetics of androgyny.\"","creator":["DAVID R. JARRAWAY"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2dc87a5-a66d-3554-adb7-c00acb46aa2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Creatures of the Rainbow\": Wallace Stevens, Mark Doty, and the Poetics of Androgyny","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029829","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2002, Evolution and Human Behavior published a study purporting to show that the differences in toy preferences commonly attributed to girls and boys can also be found in male and female vervet monkeys, tracing the origin of these differing preferences back to a common ancestor. Despite some flaws in its design and the prima facie impfousibility of some of its central claims, this research received considerable attention in both scientific circles and the popular media. In what follows, I survey some of the problems with this study that seem to be characteristic of research into sex differences in a particular research program in evolutionary psychology. I suggest that an epistemology of ignorance is at work that suppresses the methods and insights of an earlier research program, which emphasized the complexity and contingency that ultimately grounds the variety of human behaviors, in favor of one that has been widely criticized as empirically flawed and politically pernicious. I conclude with some speculative remarks on the persistence of this problematic research program in evolutionary psychology.","creator":["LETITIA MEYNELL"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5ff6036-be28-36a0-adda-f6e11888381a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Evolutionary Psychology, Ethology, and Essentialism (Because What They Don't Know Can Hurt Us)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328895","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Cornwall"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13552074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44523373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"238532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"795933e8-d38d-34f0-a27f-0357940a3cd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4030434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genddeve"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Men, Masculinity and 'Gender in Development'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030434","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":3093,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[18705,18767]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clara Escoda Agust\u00ed"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5530268d-d28c-3d00-990d-fdb8f1b71f2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27668800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"I Carve Myself into My Hands\": The Body Experienced from within in Ana Mendieta's Work and Migdalia Cruz's Miriam's Flowers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668800","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":8588,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[148862,149113]],"Locations in B":[[20460,20691]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Foley Buedel"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23fa61d2-b624-3b9f-80dd-3ffed21181bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gender (In) Difference and the Articulation of Identity in \"B\u00e9same macho\" by Pedro V\u00edllora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742493","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6534,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[8171,8319]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Bruce Springsteen's body of work contains a striking number of songs with homoerotic or queerly suggestive content. Moreover, his live performances often push the limits of the homosocial, 'queering' onstage relationships through everything from lingering kisses with the late saxophonist Clarence Clemons to intimate microphone sharing with guitarist and real-life best friend Stevie Van Zandt. In this paper I trace Bruce Springsteen's consistent performative engagement with queer desire over the course of his 40-year career through a close reading of both lyrics and performance (including onstage, and in video and still photography). I examine how Springsteen's queer lyrical content and performative acts contrast critically with dominant readings of his hypermasculine, 'all-American' image, and suggest that Springsteen's regular deployment of homosocial and homoerotic imagery in both lyrics and performance \u2013 far from being an exception to his more mainstream persona \u2013 actually constitute a kind of queer aesthetic vital to, and consistent with, his artistic vision of love and community.","creator":["ROSALIE ZDZIENICKA FANSHEL"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1360cfb-7136-3d8b-af64-77466f998453"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24736780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Beyond blood brothers: queer Bruce Springsteen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736780","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":15021,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[87608,87662]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Virginie Dutoya","Samuel Hayat"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90005788","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"954718460"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"495dc7d8-e223-3760-9f89-0aaca811222e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90005788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revfranscipoleng"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique (English Edition)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MAKING REPRESENTATIVE CLAIMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90005788","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":11460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443762]],"Locations in B":[[46918,47276]],"subTitle":"THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF POLITICAL REPRESENTATION"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lori Merish"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Engendering Naturalism: Narrative Form and Commodity Spectacle in U.S. Naturalist Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345592","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14734,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[498495,498591]],"Locations in B":[[94963,95056]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne-Lise Fran\u00e7ois"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac5648e6-ca50-3a86-97cb-2e3c47a06a1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"442","pagination":"pp. 442-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Fakin' It\/Makin' It: Falsetto's Bid for Transcendence in 1970s Disco Highs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833714","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Rhodes"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and the Monstrous in \"El burlador de Sevilla\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251654","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":7682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay traces the intellectual journey of the Queer\/Cuir\/Cuyr Am\u00e9ricas Working Group, a dedicated network of queer scholars from across the Americas who came together to address how knowledge is produced and constructed as Anglocentric and North-centric and how it circulates across the hemisphere. I discuss how this occurs by placing heteronormativity at the center to cross-examine the multiple ways in which it feeds both socialist and capitalist regimes. Thinking cuir as well as thinking cuir feminista confronts gender, sexual, racial, and\/or ethnic determinism.","creator":["Mar\u00eda Amelia Viteri"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.43.2.0405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ba8dd02-b50e-3a94-86da-c5e75fa57518"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.43.2.0405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intensiones<\/em>: Tensions in Queer Agency and Activism in Latino Am\u00e9rica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.43.2.0405","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":4761,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[14097,14205]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Hauskeller","Steve Sturdy","Richard Tutton"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1603fb95-939d-3451-96ac-4a7737d63c4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24433282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial Foreward: Genetics and the Sociology of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24433282","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Weismantel"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09ecb407-ca65-30bf-bab0-18b248537e50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"709","pageStart":"706","pagination":"pp. 706-709","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Response to McKinnon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646382","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELOY LaBRADA"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ed6b5c1-6b1e-3efc-a38b-2ff698170d66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26158828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Categories We Die For: Ameliorating Gender in Analytic Feminist Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158828","volumeNumber":"131","wordCount":7100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Kyai Muzakkin is the spiritual leader of a Koranic school (pesantren) in East Java that he claims is the only pesantren in the world that is attended entirely by spirits (jin). Kyai Muzakkin is also the founder of an anti-corruption NGO. In 2009, he gained national notoriety and infamy when he combined his vocational interest in spirits and anti-corruption and sent a thousand spirits to Jakarta to protect the supporters of the Indonesian president at an anticorruption rally. The introduction of spirits into the increasingly 'occult' Indonesian politics of 2009 was as apt as it was embarrassing. Describing how the public revelation of the intimate link between political worlds and spirit worlds made good political sense while also constituting an intense embarrassment to both modernist ideas of secular politics and the sensibilities of many orthodox Muslims, this article argues that the embarrassing irruption of spirits into Indonesian politics reflected not only a haunting within Indonesian politics and Indonesian Islam but also a haunting of the spirit of global democracy. Embarrassment, the paper posits, provides a useful methodological entry point into the ethnographic study of politics and its effects.","creator":["Nils Bubandt"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44242845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297263330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235318"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd5ea80f-39d4-3e29-86ba-36db87a511c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44242845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'AN EMBARRASSMENT OF SPIRITS': Spirits, hauntology, and democracy in Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44242845","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10395,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[514353,514430]],"Locations in B":[[60250,60328]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JEAN ALLOUCH"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b85d880f-8f53-3c28-afd7-461b79f68df6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab Cet innommable qui ainsi se pr\u00e9sente \u00bb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978751","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diana E. Long"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7c217a4-2ef4-3e3a-bf7e-2551c504eb95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/301901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Hidden Persuaders: Medical Indexing and the Gendered Professionalism of American Medicine, 1880-1932","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301901","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vinodh Venkatesh"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aae2099-aedb-3a0e-91ce-04d4acf7f816"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"GENDER, PATRIARCHY AND THE PEN(IS) IN THREE REWRITINGS OF LATIN AMERICAN HISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342246","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9405,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[58420,58564]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Reva B. Siegel"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa004557-b302-3281-867f-46fe931376ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":91,"pageEnd":"2207","pageStart":"2117","pagination":"pp. 2117-2207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"The Rule of Love\": Wife Beating as Prerogative and Privacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797286","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":50937,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99265,99380]],"Locations in B":[[198250,198365]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract: In this essay, we explore the intersections of rhetoric and feminism and the resulting transformations to both disciplines. Rhetoric offers feminism a vibrant process of inquiring, organizing, and thinking, as well as a theorized space to talk about effective communication; feminism offers rhetoric a reason to bridge differences, to include, and to empower, as well as a politicized space to discuss rhetorical values. The fraditional rhetorical canons, with their enthymematic familiarity, mark the sections of this essay, for they emphasize the mutually heuristic nature of the border crossings between these two disdplines. Although the linearity of print demands that we treat the canons consecutively, they, nevertheless, have a tendency to overlap and interact. Our discussions of arrangement, style, and delivery, for instance, both assume and depend upon a rethinking of invention and memory\u2014a rethinking that recognizes the role that both these canons play in current efforts to reconceptualize and reenact what it means to know, speak, and write. As our essay argues, such attention to what we speak about, and how and why we speak, urges ail of us not only to continued exploration and interrogation but also to a renewed responsibility for our professional and personal discursive acts.","creator":["Lisa Ede","Cheryl Glenn","Andrea Lunsford"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.1995.13.4.401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07348584"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45952466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7101d01-adb8-3a31-807b-451fdbcbffe7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rh.1995.13.4.401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetorica"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetorica: A Journal of the History of Rhetoric","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Border Crossings: Intersections of Rhetoric and Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.1995.13.4.401","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":15404,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476056,476141]],"Locations in B":[[16685,16771]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Urban daughters have benefited from the demographic pattern produced by China's one-child policy. In the system of patrilineal kinship that has long characterized most of Chinese society, parents had little incentive to invest in their daughters. Singleton daughters, however, enjoy unprecedented parental support because they do not have to compete with brothers for parental investment. Low fertility enabled mothers to get paid work and, thus, gain the ability to demonstrate their filiality by providing their own parents with financial support. Because their mothers have already proven that daughters can provide their parents with old age support, and because singletons have no brothers for their parents to favor, daughters have more power than ever before to defy disadvantageous gender norms while using equivocal ones to their own advantage.","creator":["Vanessa L. Fong"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aabd2680-83fa-3b8d-8323-01b9e5313adf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3567099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"1109","pageStart":"1098","pagination":"pp. 1098-1109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"China's One-Child Policy and the Empowerment of Urban Daughters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567099","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11232,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464665,464780]],"Locations in B":[[29451,29566]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen Weiler"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/369227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976310"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"760ef08f-f667-3a3a-a958-62bbe6c37586"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/369227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histeducquar"}],"isPartOf":"History of Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"History of Education Society","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Women and Rural School Reform: California, 1900-1940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/369227","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":11363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[8220,8297]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the relationship between art, creation, excrement, and authorship as they pertain to the \"Haunted Inkbottle\" section of Finnegans Wake (FW 182.30-186.10). In this passage, the narrator, Shaun, repeatedly links his brother, Shem, to excrement and foulness; in so doing, he seeks to position himself (as author and authority) outside his brother's debasement. Shem's forced exile in the \"haunted inkbottle,\" however, offers him a space where he is free to wallow in the very filth for which Shaun denounces him. By examining aberrant or \"perverse\" pleasures, including excrement and homosexuality, Joyce raises several unique questions concerning the nature of language, the role of the artist, and the sublimation and desublimation of the body's functions and desires.","creator":["MICHAEL HEUMANN"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9695e7b8-ed37-3446-b0f1-6c3ca3bd708b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"THE HAUNTED INKBOTTLE: SHEM'S SHIT-SCRIPT AND ANAL EROTICISM IN FINNEGANS WAKE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871092","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6972,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[174772,174961]],"Locations in B":[[10059,10248]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Violence against women is a worldwide problem that transcends all boundaries - cultural, geographic, religious, social and economic. However, it is maintained that there are also added particular cultural 'dynamics' or constraints inherent in specific cultural groups. This focus attempts to sketch out the features of a category of Indian women who are assumed as being compelled by particular systemic cultural constraints or familial pressures to 'play the dutiful wife' at the expense of enduring sustained emotional and physical trauma. While there is extensive, even sensational reporting of violence within Indian families and against Indian wives in (predominantly Indian) tabloids, there is conversely less scholarly attention on this category of women and the dynamics and conflicts within Indian households. This piece focuses a narrow scrutiny on the Indian wife within abusive marriages. It looks at what is referred to as 'culturally systemic' violence and a certain commonality of marital discord and abuse experienced by Indian wives who live in extended families, and pays attention to the presence of the mother-in-law within the living arrangement.","creator":["Maheshvari Naidu"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41321403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bac4db3-6f4f-355d-b6e8-e6647506fcb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41321403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"1 (87)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Indian women in marriage: When the sacred marriage thread becomes a noose","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41321403","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the changing feminine subject of feminism by investigating women's sexual daydreams. Described by Rosi Braidotti following Luce Irigaray as the 'virtual feminine', and by Teresa de Lauretis as the 'space-off', the feminist subject is a mutating configuration embodying that which is not colonised from phallogocentric representations. Following Frigga Haug's work on daydreams, the paper is informed by a study that draws on responses from nineteen women in a university setting to an anonymous online survey that asked them to write a daydream about how they would like to express their sexualities in an ideal world. The data reveal that these women of the new millennium imagine spaces of gender\/sexual equity, characterised by a spirit of sexual adventure and ethical and emotionally intimate sex. I argue that these sexual imaginings are more progressive than earlier ones, filling in some of the details omitted from contemporary hegemonic representations of feminine sexuality. Arguably providing a snapshot of the feminist subject in its ongoing historical metamorphosis, the paper considers the meaning of these transformations.","creator":["Margaret R. Rowntree"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4c59305-a706-3c82-8010-e15ba79d0df5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"105","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"new millennium's feminine subject of feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571899","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8381,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[49155,49238]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Adopting Henri Lefebvre's spatial conceptual triad, this paper provides a critical investigation into the socio-spatial expression of homosexuality in Singapore. It explores how social space is not ontological, but constructed and reinforced as heterosexual. Specifically, an analysis is made of the roles of statistics, educational content and legal tools in fortifying heteronormativity. However, this paper contends that homosexuals in Singapore are not merely passive subjects entirely dominated by heterosexual norms\/regulations. They have demonstrated, through subtle strategies of overt expressions in public spaces, that they are conscious and creative agents who are able to contest the heteronormative milieu in which they live. This is exemplified by the successful organisation of the 'Nation' party by homosexuals in the past three years and the rise in artistic expressions of homosexual-related themes\/issues. Of course, the extent to which homosexuals are allowed to transgress heterosexual norms remains contingent on dominant (heterosexual) actors, and the paper critically interrogates why they have been allowed more space to do so in recent years.","creator":["Kean Fan Lim"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43201478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43201478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"1788","pageStart":"1759","pagination":"pp. 1759-1788","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Where Love Dares (Not) Speak Its Name: The Expression of Homosexuality in Singapore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43201478","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":18373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["April De Angelis"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41000797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be71f4c4-d006-36d3-b2cd-6aad7828f958"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41000797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Troubling Gender on Stage and with the Critics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41000797","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":1786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jill Dolan"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3209014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d63c5ad3-66cf-3d91-a075-f3f55d9cc96d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3209014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Geographies of Learning: Theatre Studies, Performance, and the \"Performative\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3209014","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":13316,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[61635,61716]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo \u00c9 poss\u00edvel notar que, ainda hoje, a computa\u00e7\u00e3o, por ser uma ci\u00eancia considerada exigente e de dif\u00edcil entendimento, \u00e9 majoritariamente dominada por homens. Isto \u00e9 reflexo da cultura que considera a mulher inapta para lidar com tarefas complexas. Al\u00e9m disso, \u00e9 poss\u00edvel observar que o ingresso de minorias sociais em cursos da \u00e1rea, como as mulheres, est\u00e1 em decl\u00ednio. Este artigo descreve uma pesquisa realizada para explorar quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero em um curso de gradua\u00e7\u00e3o na \u00e1rea de Computa\u00e7\u00e3o. A pesquisa mapeou o trajeto de alunas do curso para investigar suas motiva\u00e7\u00f5es, dificuldades, facilidades e expectativas quanto ao mesmo. Foram realizadas entrevistas e, posteriormente, uma an\u00e1lise qualitativa indicou a necessidade de a\u00e7\u00f5es que discutam as quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero e incentivem a participa\u00e7\u00e3o feminina na \u00e1rea de Computa\u00e7\u00e3o.","creator":["Mar\u00edlia Abrah\u00e3o Amaral","Maria Claudia Figueiredo Pereira Emer","Silvia Am\u00e9lia Bim","Mariangela Gomes Setti","Marcelo Mikosz Gon\u00e7alves"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de685603-50e4-32e0-a4d3-61ef1099f0aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"857","pagination":"pp. 857-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Investigando quest\u00f5es de g\u00eanero em um curso da \u00e1rea de Computa\u00e7\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007989","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Harriet Malinowitz"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f5593b2-53e6-3679-a0cc-854262a29ca5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Theory: Whose Theory?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346735","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7406,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554],[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[9174,40341],[45019,45119]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"AbstractIn this essay I use the case of Caster Semenya, a South African sprinter forced to undergo gender verification testing in 2008, as a point of entry for looking at the role that race and nation have historically played in the production and reproduction of the concept of intersex. I examine feminist scholars\u2019 previous work on Semenya in order to highlight how their inattention to issues of race and nation made them unable to see the ways in which intersex\u2014as a classificatory schema, an object of knowledge, and a technology of subject formation\u2014contains within it a racially exclusive impulse. The essay examines the production and reproduction of the idea of intersex in two locations\u2014the United States and South Africa\u2014during three different time periods in order to show how ideas about race were written into the subject from its earliest conception. A number of other scholars have argued that intersex has played a key role in the production of ontological gender. I take this work a step further by showing how the issues of race and nation have factored into both the historical production and reproduction of intersex and, through that, have come to exert a powerful but hidden effect on gender as an object of analysis and conceptual tool.","creator":["Zine Magubane"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/674301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80a4c720-7849-3e20-88a3-410fc9b71c39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/674301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"785","pageStart":"761","pagination":"pp. 761-785","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Spectacles and Scholarship: Caster Semenya, Intersex Studies, and the Problem of Race in Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/674301","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9022,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Organizational research on workplace sexuality generally focuses on sexual harassment or workplace romance to the exclusion of strategic forms of sexuality (i.e., the instrumental use of sexuality to influence others or gain desired ends). We consider men's and women's strategic sexual performances as a form of social influence and address the positive and negative consequences that may follow. This review highlights the occurrence and complexities of strategic sexual performances and discusses the important implications of sexual performances on managers, employees, and workplace policies.","creator":["MARLA BASKERVILLE WATKINS","ALEXIS NICOLE SMITH","KARL AQUINO"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43822020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15589080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05109d83-5c67-34fb-890d-643ba9ac74b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43822020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanapers"}],"isPartOf":"Academy of Management Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"THE USE AND CONSEQUENCES OF STRATEGIC SEXUAL PERFORMANCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43822020","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tania Modleski"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87070538-552e-36a1-9914-c0a584f16c5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Woman's Gotta Do ... What a Man's Gotta Do? Cross-Dressing in the Western","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175244","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Al Strangeways","Sylvia Plath"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c8de90-dd90-3552-ba2c-44965b89fda6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"370","pagination":"pp. 370-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Boot in the Face\": The Problem of the Holocaust in the Poetry of Sylvia Plath","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208714","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Yolanda Mart\u00ednez-San Miguel"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90620904-3750-3603-979a-aed43ada877e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4531028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"49","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Saberes americanos: Constitucion de una subjetividad intelectual femenina en la poesia lirica de Sor Juana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531028","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Freeman"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8ccf817-d0bf-358b-afc5-0e6b759057f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lessons from \"Object Lessons\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860714","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["EVE KOSOFSKY SEDGWICK"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f7de84f-53f1-30da-a974-b449d931bc76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: QUEERER THAN FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533147","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":1741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines two tendencies in lesbian ethics as differing visions of community, as well as contrasting views of the relationship between the erotic and the ethical. In addition to considering those authors who make explicit claims about lesbian ethics, this paper reflects on the works of some lesbians whose works are less frequently attended to in discussions about lesbian ethics, including lesbians writing from the perspectives of theology and of literature.","creator":["Kathleen Martindale","Martha Saunders"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e9a0a04-24a5-38f7-abec-8f1d1485f821"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Realizing Love and Justice: Lesbian Ethics in the Upper and Lower Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810083","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10896,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520838,520890]],"Locations in B":[[70126,70178]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard T. Ford"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c82b41ff-2f6f-3ef7-a518-6a1c35b8eb60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":88,"pageEnd":"930","pageStart":"843","pagination":"pp. 843-930","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law's Territory (A History of Jurisdiction)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290376","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":38627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a49f7a8e-61c8-3c83-abac-c07d895bcebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"508","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-508","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Alexander Smith and the Bisexual Poetics of \"A Life-Drama\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002748","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[204236,204651]],"Locations in B":[[78,493]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Goodrich"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Gynaetopia: Feminine Genealogies of Common Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410309","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":19232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on young peasant narratives, this article analyses the sexual division of labour in rural areas, focusing on tensions produced by generational differences. Data obtained from four stages of pedagogical workshops (2015-2016), using the life history methodology with 150 young people from two schools based in agrarian reform settlements in Paran\u00e1, show the impacts of gendered labour on the process of peasant youth socialization. The study provides evidence of generational conflicts in a shifting context, as well as the pedagogical and cultural impact stemming from access to systematic knowledge and debates on the theme, especially, the revision of prejudices and the shift of discourses, practices and attitudes towards gender equality, notably, through the agency of young peasant women. A partir de narrativas juvenis, neste artigo analisa-se a divis\u00e3o sexual do trabalho em \u00e1reas rurais, com foco nas tens\u00f5es produzidas pelas diferen\u00e7as geracionais. Os dados, obtidos a partir da metodologia da hist\u00f3ria de vida em quatro etapas de oficinas pedag\u00f3gicas (2015-2016) realizadas com 150 jovens de duas escolas de assentamentos de reforma agr\u00e1ria no Paran\u00e1, revelam os impactos do trabalho genderizado no processo de socializa\u00e7\u00e3o da juventude camponesa. O estudo evidencia conflitos geracionais num contexto em mudan\u00e7a, bem como o impacto pedag\u00f3gico e cultural advindo do acesso ao conhecimento sistem\u00e1tico e da problematiza\u00e7\u00e3o da tem\u00e1tica, sobretudo, a revis\u00e3o de preconceitos e a mudan\u00e7a de discursos, pr\u00e1ticas e atitudes em dire\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 promo\u00e7\u00e3o da igualdade de g\u00eanero, notadamente, a partir da ag\u00eancia das jovens do campo.","creator":["S\u00f4nia F\u00e1tima Schwendler"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"948c2ff0-18c7-30b1-b3b6-0dcef99b691e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sexual Division of Labour in the Countryside from a Young Peasant Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965059","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10257,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[57350,57456]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mar\u00eda Luisa Femen\u00edas"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afc42b47-e4c4-3ac3-b9a9-6626a4a06bb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"G\u00e9nero y feminismo en Am\u00e9rica Latina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625114","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Hekman"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec3e2494-42eb-3276-a837-e917386fcc2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810211","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":3384,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[20247,20309]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tragic Bitches: An Experiment in Queer Xicana & Xicano Performance Poetry, by Adelina Anthony, Dino Foxx and Lorenzo Herrera y Lozano, recovers a lost voice among current Chicano sociocultural trends, the Queer Xican@. This study analyzes the use of performance poetry as a tool for uncovering Queer Xicanidad. The trio establishes queer people of color via social demonstration, thus giving life through both live performance poetry and the written page. Brazen and unapologetic, Tragic Bitches serves as a social movement in and of itself in which the poets rescue Queer Xicanidad from oblivion. Its authors recognize and claim their collective tragedy while learning and healing from it.","creator":["Trevor Boffone"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe5a3aa1-1947-32ec-98db-f289803ccda2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24642021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tragic Bitches: Queer Xican@ Performance Acts against Oblivion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642021","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":6451,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64071,64450]],"Locations in B":[[17076,20999]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the core of Herbert Blau's theatre theory are meditations on appearance, repetition, bodily texts, temporality, history, and the illusory and elusive workings of power. Blau's decades of theorizing are refracted through his long experience as a theatremaker, including his production of \"Waiting for Godot\"-before an audience of San Quentin prisoners. In this essay, Diamond explores the affinities between Blau, the poststructuralists, and Beckett.","creator":["Elin Diamond"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fff22dbf-7b4f-3253-acd5-70bbd19eb950"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re: Blau, Butler, Beckett, and the Politics of Seeming","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146860","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[248191,248287]],"Locations in B":[[4758,4855]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through the analysis of three important texts\u2014Gerald of Wales's Topographia Hibernica, the poem known as both The Song of Dermot and the Earl and The Deeds of the Normans in Ireland, and the 1367 Statutes of Kilkenny\u2014this article seeks to demonstrate that characterizations of the Irish by the English during the first centuries of conquest and settlement established the Irish as differently gendered from the English. This is shown through the use of terms that define the Irish as sexually, socially, and culturally deviant, as unmanly and emasculated, and as legally and culturally inferior even to English women.","creator":["Linda E. Mitchell"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28d2c14d-e7e2-315e-bac8-b81cf5937451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41403717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender(ed) Identities? Anglo-Norman Settlement, Irish-ness, and The Statutes of Kilkenny of 1367","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403717","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8387,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475189,475274]],"Locations in B":[[40901,40987]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Juliet Yates"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653368","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"849496170"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014265026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd90730e-63cd-3ab4-8719-94aba78ff9bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26653368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pilgrimages"}],"isPartOf":"Pilgrimages: The Journal of Dorothy Richardson Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Dorothy Richardson Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FEMININE FLUIDITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653368","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"MIND VERSUS BODY IN PILGRIMAGE<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"\u042d\u0442\u0430 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u044f \u0434\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0437\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u044d\u043f\u043e\u0445\u0430 \u0411\u0440\u0435\u0436\u043d\u0435\u0432\u0430 \u0441 \u0435\u0435 \u043e\u0447\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0434\u044f\u043c\u0438, \u0444\u0438\u043b\u044c\u043c\u0430\u043c\u0438 \u0438 \u043b\u0438\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0443\u0440\u043e\u0439 \u043f\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0434\u0438\u043b\u0430 \u0442\u043e, \u0447\u0442\u043e \u0414\u0436. \u0425\u0430\u043b\u0431\u0435\u0440\u0441\u0442\u0430\u043c \u0438 \u0434\u0440\u0443\u0433\u0438\u0435 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\u043a\u043e\u043c\u043c\u0443\u043d\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e\u043c \u0431\u0443\u0434\u0443\u0449\u0435\u043c. \u0412 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0446\u0435 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0441\u043c\u0430\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0432\u0430\u044e\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0440\u0443\u0441\u0441\u043a\u043e-\u0430\u043c\u0435\u0440\u0438\u043a\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043a\u0438\u0435 \u0440\u043e\u043c\u0430\u043d\u044b \u00ab\u041e\u0447\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0434\u044c\u00bb \u041e\u043b\u044c\u0433\u0438 \u0413\u0440\u0443\u0448\u0438\u043d\u043e\u0439 (2010\u0433) \u0438 \u00ab\u0421\u0432\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0434\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u043c\u0438\u0440\u00bb \u0414\u044d\u0432\u0438\u0434\u0430 \u0411\u0435\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0437\u0433\u0438\u0441\u0430 (2011\u0433), \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u043f\u043e\u0434\u044b\u0442\u043e\u0436\u0438\u043b\u0438 \u043a\u0432\u0438\u0440-\u0432\u0440\u0435\u043c\u044f 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\u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u0443, \u043d\u043e \u0438 \u0432\u0440\u0435\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0438, \u0430 \u0442\u0430\u043a\u0436\u0435 \u0436\u0435\u043b\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438 \u043e\u043f\u044b\u0442\u0430, \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u0441\u0432\u044f\u0437\u0430\u043d\u044b \u0441 \u044d\u0442\u043e\u0439 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0446\u0435\u043f\u0446\u0438\u0435\u0439. \u042d\u0442\u0438 \u0430\u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440\u044b \u0432\u043e\u0441\u043a\u0440\u0435\u0448\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u0432 \u043f\u0430\u043c\u044f\u0442\u0438 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0438\u043e\u0434 \u0437\u0430\u0441\u0442\u043e\u044f \u0438 \u043e\u043f\u043b\u0430\u043a\u0438\u0432\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u0432\u043e\u043b\u0448\u0435\u0431\u043d\u043e\u0435, \u043f\u043e\u0442\u0435\u0440\u044f\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0435 \u0432\u0440\u0435\u043c\u044f.","creator":["Anna Fishzon"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26633790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f42dcdf-5149-34ab-b69f-3839c33c7f7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26633790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"566","pageStart":"542","pagination":"pp. 542-566","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"QUEUE TIME AS QUEER TIME: AN OCCASION FOR PLEASURE AND DESIRE IN THE BREZHNEV ERA AND TODAY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26633790","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna M. Zajicek","Chris Shields","Joe L. Wright"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ef7f134-b858-3ba0-8d75-54c490272c5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Bringing The Body Back In: The Social Construction of Embodied Sexual Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250080","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Traditional models of analysis of informed consent are often used to analyze ethical consent. However, these models ignore sociocultural factors that may affect the patients\u2019 willingness to consent. This paper uses the case of nondiagnostic tumor biopsies obtained for research to show how the culture surrounding a disease could influence the consent process. I examine how the mainstream breast cancer movement\u2019s rhetoric may affect breast cancer patients\u2019 willingness to engage in clinical research that does not provide a direct benefit. Ultimately, I argue that a sociological feminist consent approach should be used in evaluating informed consent.","creator":["Skye A. Miner"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5125508b-c3d1-3678-aa58-6736a29f5369"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90019561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Racing for Consent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019561","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8754,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[83662,83752]],"Locations in B":[[27778,27868]],"subTitle":"A Feminist Relational Analysis of Informed Consent for Nondiagnostic Breast Cancer Research Biopsies"} +{"abstract":"In this paper we use data from the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) to ascertain and analyze patterns of asexuality in the United States. We endeavor to extend the earlier work of Bogaert (2004) on this topic, which focused on patterns of asexuality in Great Britain. Using a social constructionist perspective to study asexuality, we conceptualize and measure the phenomenon in several ways, according to behavior, desire, and self-identification. We use the NSFG respondent sampling weights to produce several sets of unbiased estimates of the percentages of persons in the U.S. population, aged 15-44, who are asexual; each set is based on one or more of the various definitions of asexuality. Finally, we describe some of the characteristics of the asexual population using logistic regression.","creator":["Dudley L. Poston Jr.","Amanda K. Baumle"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14359871"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43714181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23584320-7ffe-3788-a99a-6807ef662286"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26349603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"demorese"}],"isPartOf":"Demographic Research","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Foerderung der Wissenschaften","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Patterns of asexuality in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349603","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper focuses on young people's construction of lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer (LGBQ) identities in contemporary Australia. Through the perspectives of young people, it seeks to position their understanding of LGBQ identities alongside current theoretical and empirical debates about the individual and social significance attached to these identity frames. In this qualitative study, 28 young people (aged 18 to 26 years) shared their stories of identifying as LGBQ through online, face-to-face or telephone interviews. The findings highlight how varying elements of LGBQ identities continue to have currency within this group and how young people adopt and refer to these terms interchangeably and in tandem. This is balanced alongside an awareness of both the limitations of lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer identity categories and of the homophobic discourses informing these subject positions. The paper concludes by arguing that health and social care professionals have a integral role to play in supporting LGBQ youth through a process of co-authorship \u2014 to work in partnership to construct more enabling self-stories that transcend restrictive identity frames. Cet article traite de la construction des identit\u00e9s lesbiennes, gays, bisexuelles et Queer (LGBQ) parmi les jeunes, dans l'Australie contemporaine. En prenant en compte les points de vue des jeunes, il cherche \u00e0 positionner leur compr\u00e9hension de ces identit\u00e9s parall\u00e8lement aux d\u00e9bats th\u00e9oriques et empiriques actuels sur les questions de l'individu et de la signification sociale associ\u00e9es au cadre de ces identit\u00e9s. Dans cette \u00e9tude qualitative, vingt-huit jeunes (18 \u00e0 26 ans) ont racont\u00e9 leurs processus d'identification en tant que personnes LGBQ au cours d'entretiens en ligne, en face \u00e0 face ou par t\u00e9l\u00e9phone. Les r\u00e9sultats soulignent que diff\u00e9rents \u00e9l\u00e9ments des identit\u00e9s LGBQ continuent de se r\u00e9pandre dans cette population et comment ces jeunes les adoptent et s'y r\u00e9f\u00e8rent de mani\u00e8re interchangeable et en tandem. Parall\u00e8lement, les participants ont exprim\u00e9 une prise de conscience \u00e0 la fois des limites des cat\u00e9gories associ\u00e9es aux identit\u00e9s LGBQ et des discours homophobes qui d\u00e9terminent ces positions de sujets. En conclusion, l'article affirme que les professionnels de sant\u00e9 et des soins ont un r\u00f4le essentiel de soutien \u00e0 assurer aupr\u00e8s jeunes LGBQ dans le cadre d'une collaboration avec eux, afin que se construisent d'autres histoires d'autonomisation pouvant transcender les cadres des identit\u00e9s restrictifs. Este ensayo se centra en la construcci\u00f3n de identidades l\u00e9sbicas, gais, bisexuales y \"queer\" (LGBQ) entre los j\u00f3venes de la Australia actual. Con base en las perspectivas de los j\u00f3venes, el ensayo busca posicionar c\u00f3mo ellos comprenden las identidades LGBQ a la luz de debates te\u00f3ricos y emp\u00edricos sobre el significado individual y social asociado a estos marcos de identidad. En este estudio cualitativo, veintiocho j\u00f3venes (de entre 18 y 26 a\u00f1os) compartieron sus historias sobre su identidad LGBQ por Internet, en conversaciones personales o por tel\u00e9fono. Las conclusiones demuestran c\u00f3mo los distintos elementos de las identidades LGBQ siguen vigentes para este grupo y c\u00f3mo los j\u00f3venes incorporan y utilizan estos t\u00e9rminos indistinta y simult\u00e1neamente. A la par, tienen presentes las limitaciones de las categor\u00edas de identidad LGBQ y de los discursos homof\u00f3bicos que orientan las actitudes de los individuos. El ensayo sostiene que los profesionales de la salud y de la atenci\u00f3n social tienen un papel importante que jugar en el apoyo a los j\u00f3venes LGBQ mediante un proceso de coautor\u00eda \u2014un trabajo conjunto para la construcci\u00f3n de biograf\u00edas que los apoye y que trascienda las construcciones de identidad restrictivas.","creator":["Paul Willis"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4697e572-6a52-359a-8712-82a7881f1981"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"1227","pageStart":"1213","pagination":"pp. 1213-1227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Constructions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer identities among young people in contemporary Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524958","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debby Thompson"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8790658f-e1b2-3122-85ae-f7f0711cfe86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Is Race a Trope?\": Anna Deavere Smith and the Question of Racial Performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512365","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7300,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[42533,42602]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este trabajo examina las desviaciones y derivaciones del realismo en El ni\u00f1o pez (2004) la primera novela de la escritora y cineasta argentina Luc\u00eda Puenzo. Con una fuerte apuesta narrativa basada en la incorporaci\u00f3n de la oralidad de las lenguas ind\u00edgenas y en los estereotipos popul\u00e4res tornados de los medios masivos, la novela propone una nueva subjetividad centrada en la recuperaci\u00f3n de la naturaleza animal como forma de vida que se resiste a los mecanismos de control y como exceso capaz de desafiar los limites territoriales, morales y gen\u00e9ricos de la vida pol\u00edtica. This article examines the deviations and derivations of a new type of realism in The Fish Child (2004), the first novel of Argentine writer and filmmaker Lucia Puenzo. Through an innovative narrative based on the incorporation of the oral components of indigenous languages and the popular stereotypes taken from mass-media, the novel proposes a new subjectivity focused on the recovery\/re-adoption of an animalistic nature as a way of life that resists domination and as a form of excess capable of transcending the limits of gender, morals and cultural territories marked by politics.","creator":["Carina Gonz\u00e1lez"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f420bdf-4829-3d5e-aea9-bc65237b5da5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"74","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Migraci\u00f3n y oralidad: la vida animal en la novela El ni\u00f1o pez de Luc\u00eda Puenzo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940844","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As Val Plumwood argues, the Christian otherworldly is ecologically problematic. In relation to time, space, being and agency, this article considers the tendency to dualism in Christian appeals to the otherworldly. In the context of Plumwood's critique of nature-skepticism, I ask whether we should also critique an otherworldly skepticism. I then set out five possibilities for understanding the Christian otherworldly in relation to nature and culture. I argue that the otherworldly can be understood not only as a problematic cultural notion that participates in the devaluation of nature, but as a way of understanding the otherness of nature, as having purposes and agencies beyond the cultural construction of earth as world. An understanding of nature as other-worldly presents challenges for both Christian theologies and environmental ethics.","creator":["Anne Elvey"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Culture? Nature\/Culture Dualism and the Christian Otherworldly","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339124","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8281,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476075,476141]],"Locations in B":[[49492,49559]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Objective: In this article, I want to promote theoretical awareness and commitment among qualitative researchers in general practice and suggest adequate and feasible theoretical approaches. Approach: I discuss different theoretical aspects of qualitative research and present the basic foundations of the interpretative paradigm. Associations between paradigms, philosophies, methodologies and methods are examined and different strategies for theoretical commitment presented. Finally, I discuss the impact of theory for interpretation and the development of general practice knowledge. Main points: A scientific theory is a consistent and soundly based set of assumptions about a specific aspect of the world, predicting or explaining a phenomenon. Qualitative research is situated in an interpretative paradigm where notions about particular human experiences in context are recognized from different subject positions. Basic theoretical features from the philosophy of science explain why and how this is different from positivism. Reflexivity, including theoretical awareness and consistency, demonstrates interpretative assumptions, accounting for situated knowledge. Different types of theoretical commitment in qualitative analysis are presented, emphasizing substantive theories to sharpen the interpretative focus. Such approaches are clearly within reach for a general practice researcher contributing to clinical practice by doing more than summarizing what the participants talked about, without trying to become a philosopher. Conclusions: Qualitative studies from general practice deserve stronger theoretical awareness and commitment than what is currently established. Persistent attention to and respect for the distinctive domain of knowledge and practice where the research deliveries are targeted is necessary to choose adequate theoretical endeavours.","creator":["KIRSTI MALTERUD"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48512632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14034948"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"915d9350-e68b-31cd-bf09-57d39f09fcd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48512632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanjpublheal"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Journal of Public Health","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory and interpretation in qualitative studies from general practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48512632","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Why and how?"} +{"abstract":"In 1994, with the upcoming first non-racial democratic elections in South Africa, riots broke out in numerous prisons throughout the country. Common-law prisoners, political inmates who had not yet been granted amnesty and offenders kept in psychiatric hospitals claimed their right to vote, challenging in the same process the boundaries of South African citizenship, which was being redefined at the time. This article focuses on Pollsmoor Prison and on the Maximum Security Ward of Valkenberg Mental Hospital, both located in the Western Cape. Punishment is defined as the expression of a distinct regime of powerknowledge disseminated by local authorities such as judges and psychiatrists. The aim is to explore the extent to which the implementation of the categories of insane, political and criminal prisoners during apartheid was based on the delimitation of deviancy as issued by diverse authorities of power. These discursive categories were performative, to the extent that they described, defined and created their object in the same movement. They also constituted the framework in which resistance and initiative could be formulated within a total institution. This article therefore analyses, from the end of the 1960s to the democratic transition in the 1990s, how the apartheid regime tried to govern by circumscribing the subjectivity of the non-white populations through the use of intricate dynamics of punishment.","creator":["Natacha Filippi"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41345717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9054d16d-39c0-3715-81e9-bc139ccb0607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41345717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"643","pageStart":"627","pagination":"pp. 627-643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Deviance, Punishment and Logics of Subjectification during Apartheid: Insane, Political and Common-law Prisoners in a South African Gaol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41345717","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In my previous article, Racial Capitalism, I examined the ways in which white individuals and predominantly white institutions derive value from nonwhite racial identity. This process of deriving value from identity results from intense social and legal preoccupation with diversity. And it results in the commodification of nonwhite racial identity, with negative implications for both individuals and society. This Article builds on Racial Capitalism in three ways. First, as a foundation, it expands the concept of racial capitalism to identity categories more generally, explaining that individual in-group members and predominantly in-group institutions\u2014usually individuals or institutions that are white, male, straight, wealthy, and so on\u2014can and do derive value from out-group identities. Second, the Article turns from the overarching system of identity capitalism to the myriad ways that individual out-group members actively participate in that system. In particular, I examine how out-group members leverage their out-group status to derive social and economic value for themselves. I call such out-group participants identity entrepreneurs. Identity entrepreneurs hip is neither inherently good nor inherently bad. Rather, it is a complicated phenomenon with both positive and negative consequences. Finally, the Article considers the appropriate response to identity entrepreneurs hip in a number of legal contexts. As a general rule, judges, legislators, and other regulators should design laws and policies to maximize both individual agency and access to information for out-group members. Such reforms would protect individual choice while making clear the consequences of identity entrepreneurs hip for both individual identity entrepreneurs and for the out-group as a whole. A range of legal doctrines interact with and influence identity entrepreneur ship, including employment discrimination under Title VII, rights of privacy and publicity, and copyright law. Modifying these doctrines to take account of identity entrepreneurs hip will promote progress toward an egalitarian society in which in-group and out-group identities are valued equally.","creator":["Nancy Leong"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24915729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d2b2e3a-0194-3867-9fd1-95d4ac4b8afb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24915729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67,"pageEnd":"1399","pageStart":"1333","pagination":"pp. 1333-1399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Entrepreneurs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24915729","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":31341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Women characters' position as involved spectators facilitates their use as readers and teachers in \"Morte Darthur\". Malory's use of these characters to model the act of reading reflects his own position as a redactor and involved, analytical reader of his sources.","creator":["ROBERTA DAVIDSON"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6523012a-48a1-3848-9544-05e75a7daf4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Like a Woman in Malory's \"Morte Darthur\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870730","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":5937,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[29495,29658]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3587ed0-14ff-3cd0-ae5b-74851acf7414"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779023","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":2683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lauren Rabinovitz"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cae7709-2066-3f0a-97b3-26565cbcfb5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315078","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3229,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485551]],"Locations in B":[[17857,17991]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen Zivi"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a3b2ba2-6b74-3e40-ab5e-c65f3460d962"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3235484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who or What Are We? The Identity Crisis in Feminist Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3235484","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mikel Imaz"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a15b6ea-0dbc-3ae0-b6b9-962727714b69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Analidad, Deseo Homoer\u00f3tico y (De)Construcci\u00f3n de la Masculinidad en \"Tadeys\" de Osvaldo Lamborghini","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741925","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445253,445410]],"Locations in B":[[18070,18227]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John McGowan"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23739488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THINKING ABOUT VIOLENCE: FEMINISM, CULTURAL POLITICS, AND NORMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739488","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10402,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[96838,97035],[359159,359323],[429520,430061],[436729,436962]],"Locations in B":[[7555,7754],[18534,18698],[58830,59378],[61583,61844]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cheerleading occupies a contested space in American culture and a key point of controversy is whether it ought to be considered a sport. Drawing on interviews with college cheerleaders on coed squads, as well as five years of fieldwork in various cheerleading sites, this paper examines the debate over cheerleading and sport in terms of its gender politics. The bid for sport status on the part of cheerleaders revolves around the desire for respect more than official recognition by athletic organizations; cheerleaders recognize the prestige associated with sport, a function of its historic association with hegemonic masculinity, and they claim that prestige for cheerleading by highlighting its recent transformation into a more athletic, competitive activity that is no longer \"just for girls.\" However, the support function of college cheerleading, combined with its \"feminine\" performance demands, make the bid for sport status controversial. Male cheerleaders in particular distance themselves from the feminine elements of cheerleading because they want to avoid being perceived as gay. The gender politics at work here illustrate both the elasticity of gender categories and the limits of that elasticity, as gendered boundaries are drawn and redrawn between what gets to count as sport and what does not, and as cheerleading simultaneously challenges and reinforces the notion of sport as a male preserve. Because masculinity and femininity are performed side-by-side in coed cheerleading, this research underscores the importance of relational analyses for examining and critiquing the construction of gender and sexuality. Keywords: gender, sport, performance, hegemonic masculinity, emphasized femininity.","creator":["Laura Grindstaff","Emily West"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7acad55-7f10-3574-b414-ca84321d69a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"500","pagination":"pp. 500-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cheerleading and the Gendered Politics of Sport","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2006.53.4.500","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":13211,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444766,444873]],"Locations in B":[[58897,58983]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The field of second language studies is using increasingly sophisticated methodological approaches to address a growing number of urgent, real-world problems. These methodological developments bring both new challenges and opportunities. This article briefly reviews recent ontological and methodological debates in the field, then builds on these insights to consider some of the current dilemmas faced by researchers of second language teaching and learning, including concerns regarding fragmentation, generalizability, and replication. Through a review of recent research, we argue that one means of addressing these ongoing questions is to continue to focus collectively and collaboratively on solving realworld problems of language learning, while also layering our perspectives. By layering, we mean considering the central philosophical challenges, often those that are basic values in our methodological approaches, such as objectivity and bias, from varied epistemological stances. We argue that recognizing these differences and using a layered approach will enhance and improve our attempts to address the pressing problems in our field.","creator":["KENDALL A. KING","ALISON MACKEY"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44135004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61ff055a-d49e-33d2-a842-cb8687f65a4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44135004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Research Methodology in Second Language Studies: Trends, Concerns, and New Directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44135004","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":14790,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Yukins"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4da4b7ec-34ed-3c23-b57e-fe86533febfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"779","pageStart":"746","pagination":"pp. 746-779","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE BUSINESS OF PATRIARCHY: BLACK PATERNITY AND ILLEGITIMATE ECONOMIES IN RICHARD WRIGHT'S \"THE LONG DREAM\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286795","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":15155,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[311674,311754]],"Locations in B":[[85198,85278]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frank Reza Links"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24778158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00358126"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559640205"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccd15ac0-b5d0-3d04-a684-a0c5ca925fc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24778158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romafors"}],"isPartOf":"Romanische Forschungen","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Vittorio Klostermann GmbH","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24778158","volumeNumber":"127","wordCount":2370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper focuses on the operation of heteronormativity in online and face-to-face dialogues about sexualities and schooling, and seeks to tease out the means through which this operation is enacted. The data arise from two linked research projects focusing on participants' perceptions and concerns about addressing issues related to sexual orientation in school contexts. Analysis of data from both sources showed that participants' narratives were embedded (often without the participants' recognition) in the heteronormative, through the inscription and reinscription of specific identity categories that fixed heterosexuality as the normative centre. Revisiting these data as a whole, we draw upon Youdell's notion of 'wounds and reinscrptions' and Bakhtin's notion of carnivalistic inversion to explore the virtual impossibility of imagining the homonormative. From this exercise we derive important lessons for ourselves as educators and researchers about how offering new imaginaries might enhance the possibilities for social justice and social change.","creator":["Elizabeth Atkinson","Ren\u00e9e DePalma"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8912b96d-081d-36eb-910b-9a5b8b6c8947"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Imagining the Homonormative: Performative Subversion in Education for Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036265","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LAURENT DUBREUIL","Ioana Vartolomei"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41416234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72b16da9-bfc3-3c83-bd58-c74e1f6b53c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41416234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-14, 16-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PREAMBLE TO APOLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41416234","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cindi SturtzSreetharan"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3ed4d70-c6c8-3bf5-aa51-15b2a5262b0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24615146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"\"Na(a)n ya nen\": Negotiating Language and Identity in the Kansai Region","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615146","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How do we understand human difference, and what should we do with it? These are central questions of social work knowledge, practice and pedagogy. In recent years, 'intersectionality' has emerged as a useful construct in theorising how difference operates in social hierarchies. Too often, however, 'intersectional' discussions have led to increasingly fine divisions that isolate individuals and reify categories of difference. This article argues that an active engagement with history can promote a more nuanced and helpful approach to intersectionality, as a greater understanding of the past shakes up static perceptions of identity categories. The legacy of eugenics visible in present-day notions of 'desirable reproduction' is explored using the example of 'queer parents of disabled children'. Two ways of looking at such a grouping illustrate different possible applications of intersectionality theory. A temporal, relational intersectionality is proposed\u2014one that can be both historically responsive and situated in everyday narratives. The article concludes by addressing the social work implications of a historically aware, relational approach to difference.","creator":["Margaret F. Gibson"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43687831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2bd8602-2870-32ee-a8b4-58e11f74a9e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43687831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersecting Deviance: Social Work, Difference and the Legacy of Eugenics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43687831","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8045,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[50523,50585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susie Jolly"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13552074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44523373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"238532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97b792cf-7c1b-3a19-a03d-2b9287c8c5fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4030310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genddeve"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"'Queering' Development: Exploring the Links between Same-Sex Sexualities, Gender, and Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4030310","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d4\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05de\u05d1\u05e2 \u05dc\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9, \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3, \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05e9 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05dc\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05d3\u05e1, \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05e6\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d3\u05d5\u05d5\u05e7\u05d0 \u05d1\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05e0\u05e2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u2014 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05e8\u05e0\u05d8. \u05d4\u05d6\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8\u05d8\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05de\u05e1\u05e4\u05e7\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05e8\u05ea\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e0\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1 \u05d3\u05e8\u05de\u05d8\u05d9, \u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05e7\u05e3 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05ea\u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9 \u05db\u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05e9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05e9\u05e8 \u05de\u05e9\u05d1\u05e9\u05ea \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d1\u05e0\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea. \u05d1\u05d0\u05de\u05e6\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05e0\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7 \u05e0\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9-\u05e4\u05e8\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05de\u05d7\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05d0\u05de\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd, \u05d5\u05e0\u05e9\u05d0\u05dc \u05db\u05d9\u05e6\u05d3 \u05d1\u05d4\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d4\u05ea\u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e4\u05d9\u05d6\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05d4\u05e0\u05e4\u05e9\u05d9\u05ea \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d5\u05e2\u05dd \u05d0\u05e8\u05d2\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4 \u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05de\u05ea \u05dc\u05de\u05d5\u05e9\u05d2 \"\u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd\" \u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05e8\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea, \u05d4\u05de\u05ea\u05d3\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e2\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d4\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd. The complex relationship of linguistic expression, body, identity and emotions assume a central role in shaping the illness narratives of Israeli and American gay men who are HIV+. The dramatic narratives constructed in the disembodied medium of the Internet portray AIDS as a transformative experience, demanding the problematization of the relationship between body, emotion and identity. This interpretive study examines 'inspiration stories' published on Israeli and American bulletin boards using narrative analysis. Comparison of the groups of narrators revealed two discernible models of gay masculinity. Yet, interestingly, both groups framed their physical and emotional coping with the disease in terms that resemble Agemban's (1998) notion of \"The life worth living\". The study sheds light on the mutual effect of nationalistic and gendered ethos on the performance of personal life practices.","creator":["\u05e9\u05d9\u05e8\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d1\u05e8-\u05dc\u05d1","\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05ea \u05d8\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05e0\u05d2\u05e8","Shirly Bar-Lev","Efrat Tillinger"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"871394614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de48a14e-2b33-3239-8d39-2a7a52a96f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"1","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Life Is Not What You Lived but How You Remember to Tell its Tale\": Gay Men Perform AIDS Stories Online \/ \"\u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05dd \u05dc\u05d0 \u05de\u05d4 \u05e9\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05dc\u05d0 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05e9\u05d0\u05ea\u05d4 \u05d6\u05d5\u05db\u05e8 \u05d0\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05db\u05d3\u05d9 \u05dc\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05dd\": \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05d3\u05e1 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d8\u05e8\u05e0\u05d8","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442694","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d0","wordCount":9914,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[56508,56582]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This text examines the construction of masculinity in three men's lifestyle magazines. Using semiotics and discourse analysis, the text focuses on the construction of various representations of masculinity. It argues that men's lifestyle magazines do not show only stereotyped representations of masculinity but are also a space where the meaning of masculinity is negotiated and where masculinity loses its stability and coherence. Using the open text concept, it aims to show how the construction of a text and textual strategies which draw our attention to the code in which the text has been written participate in subverting a stereotyped representation of masculinity. The author argues that the subversion of a stereotype and the destruction of the naturalness of masculinity through parody that we find in men's lifestyle magazines is productive because it leads to critical reflection on the historical and social nature of masculinity.","creator":["DANA \u0158EH\u00c1\u010cKOV\u00c1"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7caf539-ba49-3ebc-8af6-813f6e90aae3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41132294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Konstruov\u00e1n\u00ed maskulinity v \u010dasopisech \u017eivotn\u00edho stylu pro mu\u017ee \/ Construction of Masculinity in Men's Lifestyle Magazines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132294","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist scholars of public administration have critiqued the dominance of masculine imagery in public administration theory and practice. However, public service motivation is one area of public administration discourse that contains both feminine and masculine imagery. Focusing on Perry's multidimensional public service motivation scale, the authors borrow from a range of social science literatures to contend that compassion is a feminine dimension of public service motivation, whereas attraction to policy making and commitment to public service are masculine dimensions. Data from a survey of public managers in state health and human service agencies reveal that women score higher on Perry s compassion subscale but also on attraction to policy making. No statistically significant gender differences were found on commitment to public service.","creator":["Leisha DeHart-Davis","Justin Marlowe","Sanjay K. Pandey"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4096604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00333352"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46614557"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c025329f-6359-31ac-9be0-d049ddf15e99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4096604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publadmirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Public Administration Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"887","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-887","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Society for Public Administration","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender Dimensions of Public Service Motivation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4096604","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":11553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victoria Singh Gill"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f000fc1f-100d-3a33-b482-78cd86f874d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26610173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Carpe Librum: Seize the (YA) Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610173","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":1817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Intersectional Identities from the Margins"} +{"abstract":"Women's involvement in drug trafficking in recent years has expanded dramatically. Yet there are few studies of female drug smugglers, the causes of female involvement in smuggling, and the impact of smuggling on women's lives specifically. In this article, I provide in-depth ethnographic interviews and observations of a broad spectrum of female drug smugglers on the U.S. Mexico border. Moving beyond stereotypes, I examine how drug trafficking affects women's relationships with men and their position in society. Economic and cultural factors strongly shape women's involvement in drug smuggling and the effects of smuggling on their lives, but these factors and effects vary significantly, depending on women's social class position and place within drug organizations. High-level female drug smugglers may be attracted to the power and mystique of drug trafficking and may achieve a relative independence from male dominance. Middle-level women in smuggling organizations obtain less freedom vis-\u00e1-vis men but may manipulate gender stereotypes to their advantage in the smuggling world. Low-level mules also perform (or subvert) traditional gender roles as a smuggling strategy, but receive less economic benefit and less power, though in some cases some independence from male domestic control. A fourth category of women do not smuggle drugs but are negatively impacted by the male smugglers with whom they are associated. I argue that drug smuggling frequently leads to female victimization, especially at the lowest and middle levels of drug trafficking organizations. However, it is also, in the case of high-level and some low-level and middle-level smugglers, a vehicle for female empowerme","creator":["Howard Campbell"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30052745","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e474d686-ece9-3ac2-bd12-ec63159014a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30052745"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Female Drug Smugglers on the U-S.-Mexico Border: Gender, Crime, and Empowerment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30052745","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":14490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using ethnographic data from 10 months of observations in nine preschool classrooms, I examine gendered sexual socialization children receive from teachers' practices and reproduce through peer interactions. I find heteronormativity permeates preschool classrooms, where teachers construct (and occasionally disrupt) gendered sexuality in a number of different ways, and children reproduce (and sometimes resist) these identities and norms in their daily play. Teachers use what I call facilitative, restrictive, disruptive, and passive approaches to sexual socialization in preschool classrooms. Teachers' approaches to gendered sexual socialization varied across preschools observed and affected teachers' response to children's behaviors, such as heterosexual romantic play (kissing and relationships), bodily displays, and consent. Additionally, my data suggest young children are learning in preschool that boys have gendered power over girls' bodies. I find that before children have salient sexual identities of their own, children are beginning to make sense of heteronormativity and rules associated with sexuality through interactions with their teachers and peers in preschool.","creator":["Heidi M. Gansen"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777440"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23365"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be88649e-af02-39d4-bf3a-6bf208610c5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26382985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Reproducing (and Disrupting) Heteronormativity: Gendered Sexual Socialization in Preschool Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382985","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":11578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debbie Epstein"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddcde9ab-2a3d-3118-adb9-b9a9085ec237"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marked Men: Whiteness and Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066174","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay exemplifies a particular approach to the field of health tourism, whereby the anthropology of tourism and medical anthropology can be used in conjunction. The serious business of healing is not usually associated with the pleasures of relaxation; however, Czech spas have historically been sites of both healing and leisure for visitors. Building on the suggestion of Veijola and Jokinen (1994), the body of the tourist is made the centre of this study. The bodies of patient-tourists at Czech health spas undergo various healing regimens, and their bodies signify a negotiation of national and cultural identities. Just as Bunzl (2000) considers bodies as constituting European cultural landscapes, this essay considers the ways in which German patient bodies at Czech health spas constitute a changing national, political and cultural relationship at a 'border' of Europe.","creator":["AMY SPEIER"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43234475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17552923"},{"name":"oclc","value":"692999270"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66bc8788-7503-3020-8d41-210256c8cbc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43234475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthjeurocult"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Journal of European Cultures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","European Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Czech Balneotherapy: Border Medicine and Health Tourism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43234475","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DAN COLSON"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"371ccf7a-b04b-37f2-b212-9f8492fa4d3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287698","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":1257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the reading of leveled books and the assessment of students' reading levels in a public school classroom. The purpose of the research study was to examine how these processes of assessment, which often go unnoticed, shaped the ways reading and readers were defined. The research was located in a third grade, public school classroom in a large metropolitan city in the United States. Theoretically grounded in sociocultural perspectives on literacy and poststructural notions of power and positioning, the research methodology involved a series of nested case studies of the classroom as a whole and of one particular reader, whose performances allowed a more nuanced understanding of the dynamics of reading levels and reading leveled books in the particular classroom. Data analysis involved the thematic analysis of reading events with the purpose of identifying the materials, norms, and routines connected to reading leveled books. Attention was paid to processes of naming, to students' efforts to discipline selves and others, and to the meaning of reading as measurable that extended beyond the boundaries of the local classroom and into broader institutional contexts. This allowed tracing and interpreting the productive and regulatory power of leveling. The findings show that reading leveled books and assessing students' levels were integral parts of schooled literacy as performed in the particular classroom. The study offers grounded theoretical hypotheses about the intersection of reading instruction and assessment and calls readers to consider the complexities of reading and reading instruction in elementary classrooms.","creator":["Stavroula Kontovourki"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e60e547-2516-3571-bfd5-79c0e5e28ca0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43497135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Reading Leveled Books in Assessment-Saturated Classrooms: A Close Examination of Unmarked Processes of Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497135","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":16478,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[96853,96922]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For more than three years, Lebanon has been beset by a succession of political assassinations and disquieting public protests. Little is known about the views of the youth, roughly half the country's population, who have witnessed the enthusiasm and sense of national consciousness sparked by the Cedar Revolution of 2005. This article focuses on the narrative texts of returnee students at the American University of Beirut, exploring their hopes and disappointments. Such trenchant voices should be incorporated into the shaping of the public discourse and reconciliation currently underway.","creator":["Roseanne Saad Khalaf"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25482603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"oclc","value":"173688345"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-213739"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cd738a9-4886-3201-91fa-5959ff5d6c1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25482603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Youthful Voices in Post-War Lebanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25482603","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":9766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303759","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia Borossa"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44122459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f3e7e62-c5b3-3dad-9df6-c310f1232d70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44122459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Migration of Psychoanalysis and the Psychoanalyst as Migrant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44122459","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I analyze discursive practices that serve to reproduce models of femininity and that are adopted by lay women employed in central Church organizations, including in diocesan chanceries and ecclesiastical courts. The key discursive practice is dissociation, which excludes women from various institutional orders of the Roman Catholic Church in Poland, keeping them in their place in the hierarchy, and sanctioning non-normative gender models. Drawing on integration theories of gender and new institutionalism in sociology, I depart in this article from individualist and identity views of gender. I consider this category as a social institution, that is, as the social rules, both formal and informal, that restrict and liberate human action and are reproduced and transformed in social practices as a result of human agency. My article is based on 31 in-depth interviews which I conducted with lay women working in administrative and evangelizing organizations of the Church in Poland.","creator":["KATARZYNA LESZCZY\u0143SKA"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26383042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607447092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-234699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48d545c4-832b-3178-a75b-4c560e971948"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26383042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"196","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The (Self-) Exclusion of Women from the Roman Catholic Church in Poland: Discursive Practices as Mechanisms Reproducing Models of Femininity in Church Organizations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26383042","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I will explore how the self can be used to critically discuss concerns that are vital to anthropology. Through examples from my research, I plan to assert that inquiry into the ethnographic self can lead to knowledge of larger social and political meanings. I argue that analysing one's own culture can be as revealing to the native, participant researcher as studying the 'other'. Subsequently I will also focus on the assumptions of gender in my study of menstruation. My first academic discussion on menstruation was a Masters project where I engaged my own self as a case study to scrutinise various forms of treatments and therapies, both social and physical. Combined with ideas of cultural reflexivity, I plan to methodically utilise my own subjectivity to garner knowledge about my Self in the space that birthed my physical notions of identity.","creator":["Mitoo Das"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43899389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557553115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dc177cf-eeb7-3504-8771-3d9d71a81284"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43899389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indianth"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Anthropologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indian Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing the 'Other' in the 'Self': Reading Gender and Menstruation through Autoethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43899389","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[44710,44791]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper analyses two female sexual practices in Tete Province, Mozambique: (1) the practice of elongating the labia minora and (2) what is sometimes called 'dry sex' involving the insertion of natural and\/or synthetic products into the vagina or the ingestion of these products orally. These practices are fundamental to the construction of female identity, eroticism and the experience of pleasure. Notions such as 'closed\/open', 'dry\/damp', 'hot\/cold', 'heavy\/light', 'life\/death', 'wealth\/poverty' and 'sweet\/not sweet' are central to local understandings of sexual practices and reproduction. These notions may affect the women's sexual health because they influence preferences for sex without a condom. These practices may also be associated with the alteration of the vaginal flora and vaginal lesions that may make women more vulnerable to sexually transmitted infections. \/\/\/ Cet article est une analyse de deux pratiques sexuelles f\u00e9minines courantes dans la province de Tete au Mozambique: l'\u00e9longation des petites l\u00e8vres (labia minora), et la pratique parfois appel\u00e9e \"sexe sec\", obtenue gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 l'insertion de produits naturels et\/ou synth\u00e9tiques dans le vagin, ou l'ingestion de ces m\u00eames produits. Ces pratiques sont fondamentales pour la construction de l'identit\u00e9 f\u00e9minine, l'\u00e9rotisme et l'exp\u00e9rience du plaisir. \"Ferm\u00e9\/ouvert\", \"sec\/humide\", \"chaud\/froid\", \"lourd\/l\u00e9ger\", \"vie\/mort\", \"richesse\/pauvret\u00e9\" et \"doux\/non doux\" sont des notions centrales aux compr\u00e9hensions locales des pratiques sexuelles et reproductives. Ayant une influence sur les pr\u00e9f\u00e9rences pour les rapports sexuels sans pr\u00e9servatifs, ces notions peuvent affecter la sant\u00e9 sexuelle des femmes. Ces pratiques peuvent elles aussi \u00eatre associ\u00e9es aux alt\u00e9rations de la flore vaginale et aux l\u00e9sions vaginales qui peuvent accro\u00eetre la vuln\u00e9rabilit\u00e9 des femmes aux infections sexuellement transmises. \/\/\/ En este art\u00edculo analizamos dos pr\u00e1cticas sexuales femeninas comunes en la provincia de Tete, Mozambique: la pr\u00e1ctica de la elongaci\u00f3n del labio menor, y lo que a veces se denomina 'sexo seco' y que implica la inserci\u00f3n de productos naturales o sint\u00e9ticos en la vagina o la ingesti\u00f3n oral de estos productos. Estas pr\u00e1cticas son fundamentales para la construcci\u00f3n de la identidad femenina, el erotismo y la experiencia del placer. Para entender las pr\u00e1cticas sexuales y la reproducci\u00f3n es de vital importancia entender nociones tales como 'cerrado\/abierto', 'seco\/h\u00famedo', 'caliente\/fr\u00edo', 'pesado\/ligero', 'vida\/muerte', 'riqueza\/pobreza' y 'dulce\/no dulce'. Estas nociones pueden afectar a la salud sexual de las mujeres porque influyen a la hora de decidir si prefieren tener relaciones sexuales sin preservativo. Estas pr\u00e1cticas podr\u00edan estar vinculadas a la alteraci\u00f3n de la flora vaginal y lesiones vaginales que podr\u00edan hacer a las mujeres m\u00e1s vulnerables a infecciones de transmisi\u00f3n sexual.","creator":["Brigitte Bagnol","Esmeralda Mariano"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e608eb7-d032-3541-a4ed-083906e20f89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20461039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Vaginal Practices: Eroticism and Implications for Women's Health and Condom Use in Mozambique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20461039","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Critics who disliked Jane Campion's The Portrait of a Lady (1996) suggest she was wasting her talents on a high-budget adaptation in order to reach a mass audience. Yet Campion does not adapt Henry James's novel so much as interpret it. By boldly dramatizing the unconscious sexual desires that riddle James's melodramatic novel, Campion exposes the spaces where traditional gender ideology fails, loosening the gender codes upon which the pleasure of melodrama rests. The result is a feminist narrative that is attractive to the mainstream but also capable of leading the audience to consider social systems in place beyond the theater.","creator":["Rebecca M. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2002-12-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2002.56.2.14","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56500493-61e8-3f3a-a03b-845bea745447"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2002.56.2.14"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Portraits Perversely Framed: Jane Campion and Henry James","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2002.56.2.14","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":7693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Manuela Mour\u00e3o"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa0b5154-8e63-30db-a493-f11e67687200"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Representation of Female Desire in Early Modern Pornographic Texts, 1660-1745","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175319","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carrie Galloway Blackstock"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49e4c93d-4e60-3fec-bcb6-2d4d74f247d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Anne Bradstreet and Performativity: Self-Cultivation, Self-Deployment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057095","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":12680,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620],[460746,460925]],"Locations in B":[[1580,1655],[60904,61080]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper uses an intersectional analysis to look at contemporary forms of women's popular protest in the hopes of raising questions about the explicit use of the gendered body in struggles for women's emancipation. Specifically, it explores the protests of SlutWalk and FEMEN to suggest that such body protests exemplify a problematic interface between third-wave and postfeminism. This interface or junction is most noticeable and problematic in relation to uncontested auto-sexualisation or 'femmenism'. I argue that any subversive potential these recent mobilisations might offer is limited through their reproduction of patriarchal, hegemonic norms. This piece is theoretical in the main, though it does include some preliminary qualitative research by way of drawing on websites, news reports, Twitter feeds, Facebook pages, and other online content produced by or about SlutWalk and FEMEN. The hope is to raise questions about the value of this increasingly pervasive use of sexualised, gender protest for feminist organising, not merely as an academic exercise but for its utility in practice.","creator":["Theresa O'Keefe"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1e0ae66-23fd-3270-adbb-eb1f4354e54b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"107","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"my body is my manifesto! SlutWalk, FEMEN and femmenist protest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571886","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10242,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[437892,438215]],"Locations in B":[[12529,13849]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing on a series of pioneering radio ballads produced for the BBC between 1958 and 1961 by Ewan MacColl, Charles Parker, and Peggy Seeger, this article explores representations of industrial working-class culture in folksongs of the radical Left. Situating such work in relation to A. L. Lloyd, mass culture, the nascent New Left, gender, and the aesthetics of social realism (distinct from the project of Soviet socialist realism), I argue that early radio ballads were nostalgic panegyrics for the integrity of working-class identity in the face of unprecedented socioeconomic change. At the very moment when distinctively masculine working-class traditions seemed to be at risk of disappearing under the rising tide of affluence, Conservative Party rhetoric, female emancipation, and the emergence of a classless commodity utopia, these programs generated a portrait of an unwavering British subculture damaged and defined by capitalist exploitation yet resistant to the unwelcome advance of globalized modernity. Ultimately, such work revealed far more about MacColl\u2019s own political convictions than about the intricacies of workingclass life in Britain.","creator":["ROSS COLE"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5371064d-d2af-3155-b19d-e499aa3f9f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26414224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Industrial Balladry, Mass Culture, and the Politics of Realism in Cold War Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414224","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":16306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"How does the appearance of racial difference shape our view of citizenship and national identity? This Article seeks to address that question by examining two early twentieth-century cases involving the naturalization of Indian immigrants to the United States. In United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind (1923), the Supreme Court determined that \u201cHindus\u201d were not eligible for citizenship within the terms of the Naturalization Act because they were not \u201cwhite persons.\u201d The Court recognized that, although individual immigrants from India had proven themselves capable of cultural assimilation, as a group, they were disqualified because they would remain visually inassimilable. Through a close reading of the Court\u2019s analysis, this Article examines the ways in which law participates in the visual construction of both racial difference and national identity. Dinshah P. Ghadiali was one of several Indian immigrants whom the United States sought to denaturalize in the wake of Thind. Since the Supreme Court announced that visual assimilability was the relevant test for naturalization, in 1932, Ghadiali found himself in the peculiar position of having to defend his citizenship by demonstrating to a judge that he looked white. At his denaturalization trial, he submitted into evidence several photographs of himself, his children, and his properties, assuring the judge, \u201cYou will see my family became so American.\u201d Through these photographs, I explore the demands of visual conformity that the law imposes on racialized minorities. Finally, this Article seeks to introduce to comparative legal scholarship a method of engaging the reflections of minority subjects to challenge the authority of legal texts, a method of analysis I call \u201cminor comparativism.\u201d","creator":["SHERALLY MUNSHI"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26425432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52899623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ac53ed5-3b43-3232-8d32-b6ee2dc58f74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26425432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjcomplaw"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Comparative Law","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64,"pageEnd":"718","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-718","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"\u201cYou Will See My Family Became So American\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26425432","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":28324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Toward a Minor Comparativism"} +{"abstract":"The author investigates the notion of linguistic meaning in gender research. She approaches this basic problem by drawing upon two very different conceptions of language and meaning: (1) that of the logician Gottlob Frege and (2) that of the linguist Ferdinand de Saussure. Motivated by the controversial response the Anglo-American sex\/gender debate received within the German context, the author focuses on the connection between this epistemological controversy among feminists and two discursive traditions of linguistic meaning (analytic philosophy and poststructuralism), to show how philosophy of language can contribute to current feminist debates.","creator":["Eva Waniek","Erik M. Vogt"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a18ed4ac-372b-3874-a5a7-4fcf310e3cdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Meaning in Gender Theory: Clarifying a Basic Problem from a Linguistic-Philosophical Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811163","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SARA L. CRAWLEY"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a28ee25-bb27-3002-bba9-2eff9a3f880c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676791","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article discusses the place sexual diversity has within multicultural art education with a specific focus on the ways culture is discussed in multicultural arteducationdiscourses. Idraw on queer theory's contribution to issues of identity and subjectivity to address and rethink the concept of culture. I specifically analyze how the term \"culture\" operates in both mainstream and social reconstructive approaches in multicultural art and whether the term limits our understanding of the complex intersections of sexuality with race, ethnicity, gender, and social class.","creator":["Dipti Desai"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41bd51a-a507-37bd-8b9b-42ffb0b3ad35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1321057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Multicultural Art Education and the Heterosexual Imagination: A Question of Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1321057","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e6da20a-7d19-305c-8bf6-74a4eed2f2fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25474530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474530","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":1717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Racial capitalism \u2014 the process of deriving social and economic value from the racial identity of another person \u2014 is a longstanding, common, and deeply problematic practice. This Article is the first to identify racial capitalism as a systemic phenomenon and to undertake a close examination of its causes and consequences. The Article focuses on instances of racial capitalism in which white individuals and predominantly white institutions use nonwhite people to acquire social and economic value. Affirmative action doctrines and policies provide much of the impetus for this form of racial capitalism. These doctrines and policies have fueled an intense legal and social preoccupation with the notion of diversity, which encourages white individuals and predominantly white institutions to engage in racial capitalism by deriving value from nonwhite racial identity. Racial capitalism has serious negative consequences both for individuals and for society as a whole. The process of racial capitalism relies upon and reinforces commodification of racial identity, thereby degrading that identity by reducing it to another thing to be bought and sold. Commodification can also foster racial resentment by causing nonwhite people to feel used or exploited by white people. And the superficial process of assigning value to nonwhiteness within a system of racial capitalism displaces measures that would lead to meaningful social reform. In an ideal society, racial capitalism would not occur. Given the imperfections of our current society, however, this Article proposes a pragmatic approach to dismantling racial capitalism, one that recognizes that progress must occur incrementally. Such an approach would require a transition period of limited commodification during which we would discourage racial capitalism. Moreover, we would ensure that any transaction involving racial value is structured to discourage future racial capitalism. I briefly survey some of the various legal mechanisms that can be deployed to discourage racial capitalism through limited commodification. Ultimately, this approach will allow progress toward a society in which we successfully recognize and respect racial identity without engaging in racial capitalism.","creator":["Nancy Leong"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46968396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b434fc-c756-39b7-8fb8-97e75d74be14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23415098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76,"pageEnd":"2226","pageStart":"2151","pagination":"pp. 2151-2226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RACIAL CAPITALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415098","volumeNumber":"126","wordCount":36294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ashis Sengupta"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cbfac67-bfc0-3622-abe9-45cdf243e949"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MAHESH DATTANI AND THE INDIAN (HINDU) FAMILY EXPERIENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274325","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tara Star Johnson"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b2ee637-ae2d-3606-a6d3-449cfe20a6e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40173182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Specialized education","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"It's Pointless to Deny That That Dynamic Is There\": Sexual Tensions in Secondary Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40173182","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10866,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[89115,89458]],"Locations in B":[[1946,2287]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kita Hall"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43102461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdd759fc-7539-323d-b507-741cc3cd03fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43102461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43102461","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":1547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When seen through Bergson\u2019s philosophy, the cinematic machine at the heart of La invenci\u00f3n de Morel bolsters recent attempts to reconcile the disciplines of film studies and cultural geography. Bioy Casares\u2019s novel serves as a concrete, if fantastic, introduction to powerful methodological shifts that have brought film-space and cityspace together.","creator":["BENJAMIN FRASER"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5c6f3a1-5a6f-331d-8ab4-a4e030f90d1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90011650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reconciling Film Studies and Geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011650","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7627,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[518726,518779]],"Locations in B":[[40698,40751]],"subTitle":"Adolfo Bioy Casares\u2019s La invenci\u00f3n de Morel<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"\"Forgetting\" plays an important role in the lives of individuals and communities. Although a few Holocaust scholars have begun to take forgetting more seriously in relation to the task of remembering--in popular parlance as well as in academic discourse on the Holocaust--forgetting is usually perceived as a negative force. In the decades following 1945, the terms remembering and forgetting have often been used antithetically, with the communities of victims insisting on the duty to remember and a society of perpetrators desiring to forget. Thus, the discourse on Holocaust memory has become entrenched on this issue. This essay counters the swift rejection of forgetting and its labeling as a reprehensible act. It calls attention to two issues: first, it offers a critical argument for different forms of forgetting; second, it concludes with suggestions of how deliberate performative practices of forgetting might benefit communities affected by a genocidal past. Is it possible to conceive of forgetting not as the ugly twin of remembering but as its necessary companion?","creator":["Bj\u00f6rn Krondorfer"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40014887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfa6c3e1-9919-32c2-94b5-4cd0f7845da1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40014887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is Forgetting Reprehensible? Holocaust Remembrance and the Task of Oblivion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40014887","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Monique Deveaux"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2a50631-8b7c-3df5-a18f-fd461800da04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Empowerment: A Critical Reading of Foucault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178151","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11348,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[432777,433041],[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[40772,41035],[63378,63431]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Simona Bertacco"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.16.1.0009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae5aa94e-4858-3c3c-a543-244e8b966c83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.16.1.0009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"An Interview with Emily Apter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.16.1.0009","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Willett","Anthony Steinbock","Lauren Guilmette"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2af8eb73-a3e0-3623-aa47-5c7d868b0aa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0079","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":2392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lara Cox"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26418651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23fd3008-439f-3f44-bd6d-2d2c6e0942b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26418651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reaching for Archive Fever","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26418651","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"A Tall Tale about Queer \u2018Made in France\u2019"} +{"abstract":"Categorization based on sex is the most basic social divide. It is the organizational basis of most major institutions, including the division of labor in the home, the workforce, politics, and religion. Globally, women's gendered roles are regarded as subordinate to men's. The gender divide enforces women's roles in reproduction and support activities and limits their autonomy, it limits their participation in decision making and highly-rewarded roles, and it puts women at risk. Social, cultural, and psychological mechanisms support the process. Differentiation varies with the stability of groups and the success of social movements. Gender analyses tend to be ghettoized; so it is recommended that all sociologists consider gender issues in their studies to better understand the major institutions and social relationships in society.","creator":["Cynthia Fuchs Epstein"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fa2b661-028f-3b04-826a-abeac7fcd5d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Great Divides: The Cultural, Cognitive, and Social Bases of the Global Subordination of Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472445","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":16060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vladimir Strukov"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3220070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"445e81ce-d25e-3ad8-ba04-c52d159c090c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3220070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"438","pagination":"pp. 438-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Masiania, or Reimagining the Self in the Cyberspace of Rusnet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3220070","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PATRICK McGEE"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26634557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08993114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259372100"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30bf3c31-2603-3f0e-81fe-a19c76145dff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26634557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoyclitesupp"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Literary Supplement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Miami","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminist Text\/Feminist Countertext","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26634557","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":4407,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[310727,310937]],"Locations in B":[[4990,5201]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study documents the counterstories of four academically (and mathematically) successful African American male students. Using participative inquiry, the participants were asked to read, reflect on, and respond to historical and current research literature regarding the schooling experiences of African American students. Their responses were analyzed using a somewhat eclectic theoretical framework that included poststructural theory, critical race theory, and critical theory. Collectively, the participants' counterstories revealed that each had acquired a robust mathematics identity as a component of his overall efforts toward success. How the participants acquired such \"uncharacteristic\" mathematics identities was to be found in part in how they understood sociocultural discourses of U.S. society and how they negotiated the specific discourses that surround male African Americans. Present throughout the counterstories of each participant was a recognition of himself as a discursive formation who could negotiate sociocultural discourses as a means to subversively repeat his constituted \"raced\" self.","creator":["David W. Stinson"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08eb9a9b-862f-345f-bd22-df9ac28f6780"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27667160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereducresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"1010","pageStart":"975","pagination":"pp. 975-1010","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Negotiating Sociocultural Discourses: The Counter-Storytelling of Academically (And Mathematically) Successful African American Male Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667160","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":17266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that the inherent directedness of attention is a central and pervasive condition of politics across a wide range of social fields. The subfield of landscape geography serves as an occasion to illustrate what can be gained by attending to attention. The argument begins by reflexively placing the problematic of attention within a brief genealogy of constructions of modern perception. Within this frame, the article takes a closer look at the ambivalent and hesitant response to the problem of attention in phenomenology. This field is best positioned to give a foundational account of the political character of attention and to explain the sense in which its relevance transcends the era in which it was first clearly formulated. However, a strong upsurge of phenomenological interest in attention has only appeared in recent years. A review of this work, particularly in the writings of Bernhard Waidenfels, shows how attending to attention can deepen critical analyses of capitalism and spectacle offered by Benjamin, Debord, Ranci\u00e8re and Bellen The final section of the article illustrates key points by staging an imaginary trip through the corporate agricultural landscapes of California.","creator":["Matthew G. Hannah"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43299156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edd322fc-5cfc-3530-8415-ff7414245eb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43299156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"ATTENTION AND THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL POLITICS OF LANDSCAPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43299156","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":12397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Professor Williams argues that by understanding their history feminists can avoid repeating it. The key disagreement in the destructive sameness\/difference debate is not over whether women are the same or different from men, but over whether to empower women in their traditional caregiving role (the \"femme strategy\"), or to shift them into socially valued masculine gender performances such as melding personal identity with paid work and off-loading care work (the \"tomboy strategy\"). Professor Williams argues that, given the profound importance of care work to the identities of the 85% of women who become mothers, and the structural linkage of motherhood and economic inequality, we need to accept as a given that empowering women requires ending the economic marginalization of mothers. She proposes a \"listening tour,\" informed by an epistemology that respects all truths as partial, flawed, and situated--all forged in an arena of constraint. The law professor's role is not to pronounce the \"One True Way\" but to seek points of respectful coalition among people whose truths differ.","creator":["Joan Williams"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1609f00a-e83d-342b-945f-9fb49c752b07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"812","pagination":"pp. 812-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"It's Snowing down South\": How to Help Mothers and Avoid Recycling the Sameness\/Difference Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123761","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":11190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tuija Pulkkinen"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"788d1df6-7f54-3e00-a5b1-0eb333384881"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hannah Arendt and the Politics of Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645076","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Some feminists have criticized Judith Butler's theory of performativity for providing an insufficient account of agency. In this article I first defend her against such charges by appealing to two themes central to Hans-Georg Gadamer's hermeneutics. I compare her emphasis on the sociohistorical nature of agency with Gadamer's insistence on the historical nature of knowledge, and I examine the significance Butler assigns to repetition and note its affinities with Gadamer's conception of play. In the final part of the article I argue that in spite of providing an adequate account of agency, Butler's theory of performativity provides no way to allow us to evaluate performances. I show how Gadamer's account of festival, which builds on his concept of play, is useful in helping us make sense of how we might delineate true from false performances, and thus identities.","creator":["LAUREN SWAYNE BARTHOLD"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a21ea70-4491-3161-ae44-c34eb5ea1ae4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"823","pageStart":"808","pagination":"pp. 808-823","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"True Identities: From Performativity to Festival","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542104","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8372,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[136843,137259],[431491,431620],[443591,443757],[444961,445246]],"Locations in B":[[16052,16468],[18206,18335],[18424,18591],[23252,23538]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I investigate the relationship between space and gender in Angela Krau\u00df's Die \u00dcberfliegerin (1995, High-flying woman), one of the earliest and most unique explorations in fiction of East German identity after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Krau\u00df depicts the immediate post-Wall era as an exhilarating moment of rupture with the past, sending her protagonist to America and Russia to reevaluate her sense of self outside the spatial and historical parameters of her everyday life. I demonstrate how the narrator's negotiations with both space and gender are central to her search for a sense of self, paying special attention to her \u201cqueer encounter\u201d with two transvestites, which fundamentally changes her understanding of gender. Framing my reading of Die \u00dcberfliegerin with both spatial and queer theory, I show how the story addresses concerns about the fluidity of identity that proliferated in both literature and theory during the post-Wall era.","creator":["Necia Chronister"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fef89d1-4426-318b-a878-fbee07f0bcf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cI Am Dismantling Everything Down to the Very Skeleton\u201d: Rupture, Multiplicity, and the \u201cQueer Encounter\u201d in Angela Krau\u00df's Die \u00dcberfliegerin<\/em> (1995)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.28.2012.0042","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A tradition is a centuries-long conversation about the goods and concerns of the philosophical or religious systems in which these goods and concerns inhere. LGBTQ Jews are the latest newcomers to Judaism's conversation. Entering an established conversation places stressful demands upon incomers and veteran participants alike but enlarges and enriches the discourse. LGBTQ participants bring new topics and categories concerning gender that challenge participants of longer standing. Bringing to the existing categories and topics of the tradition experiences of which it was unaware implicitly requires that those topics be reexamined in the light of new data and situations. All this revitalizes the conversation.","creator":["Rachel Adler"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00143006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617852"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250522"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a07a9bc-d7f9-3a56-812f-cbc8c6f83cda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"europeanjudaism"}],"isPartOf":"European Judaism: A Journal for the New Europe","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"QUEER JEWS TALKING THEIR WAY IN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630865","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":3727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary C. Madden"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.1.170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"837f901c-d4a6-3d7b-8962-d165d807689d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.33.1.170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.1.170","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":1833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Penelope Pether"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2002.14.3.489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af15e936-ac98-3a9d-857c-96b6a0d82533"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2002.14.3.489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Measured Judgments: Histories, Pedagogies, and the Possibility of Equity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2002.14.3.489","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":21367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u00c9RIC F\u00c9REY"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":596,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVI e<\/sup> -XX e<\/sup> si\u00e8cles). Ann\u00e9e 2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014291","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":310290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sandra Bamford"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44abf0c0-e0a5-31f4-89a9-3d827ae2d058"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44368998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368998","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3923,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474939,475049]],"Locations in B":[[22922,23499]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabrielle Ivinson"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e81109d-be9f-3578-9753-ea84914320f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1501711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Feminist Scholarship in Education: The State of the Art?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501711","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Over the past four decades, two forms of lesbian community have come gradually into existence in Taiwan: the T-Po community which revolves around butch-femme distinctions, and the feminist lesbian community which advocates women's liberation through same-sex practises. This paper examines the ways in which each community has come into formation. It highlights how, via a process of 'domestic colonialism', the feminist lesbian community has appropriated many of the gender and sexual roles performed by the T-Po community so as to establish a global and progressive 'queer' identity. The paper end by exploring a number of issues that remain problematic in Taiwan's feminist lesbian discourse today. These include notions of social class and the relevance of concepts of globalization for an understanding of contemporary lesbian identities and practises. \/\/\/ Pendant ces quarante derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, deux communaut\u00e9s distinctes de lesbiennes ont progressivement vu le jour \u00e0 Ta\u00efwan: celle des T-Po qui se reconna\u00eet dans des crit\u00e8res de femmes tr\u00e8s masculines et celle des f\u00e9ministes qui pr\u00f4nent la lib\u00e9ration de la femme par des rapports sexuels entre femmes. Cet article examine les processus de construction de chacune de ces communaut\u00e9s. Il souligne la fa\u00e7on dont la communaut\u00e9 des lesbiennes f\u00e9ministes s'est appropri\u00e9e, par un processus de 'colonialisme domestique', bon nombre des r\u00f4les relatifs au genre et au sexe qui se jouent dans la communaut\u00e9 T-Po, afin d'\u00e9tablir une identit\u00e9 'queer' globale et progressiste. L'article s'ach\u00e8ve en explorant diff\u00e9rents sujets qui, \u00e0 Ta\u00efwan, restent probl\u00e9matiques dans le discours lesbien f\u00e9ministe d'aujourd'hui. Parmi eux, la notion de classe sociale et la pertinence des concepts de globalisation pour une compr\u00e9hension des identit\u00e9s et des pratiques lesbiennes contemporaines. \/\/\/ Durante los \u00faltimos cuarenta a\u00f1os, han surgido dos formas de comunidad lesbiana en Taiw\u00e1n: la comunidad T-Po, que se reconoce en los criterios de las mujeres muy masculinas y la comunidad de lesbianas feministas, que abogan por la liberaci\u00f3n de las mujeres a trav\u00e9s de las relaciones homosexuales. En este documento, se estudia de qu\u00e9 forma se ha creado cada comunidad y se pone de relieve c\u00f3mo la comunidad lesbiana feminista, mediante un proceso de 'colonialismo interno', se ha adue\u00f1ado de muchos de los sexuales roles de y g\u00e9nero de la comunidad T-Po, a fin de una identidad establecer global y progresiva homosexual. El documento termina explorando varios aspectos que hoy d\u00eda siguen siendo problem\u00e1ticos en la discurso lesbiano feminista en Taiw\u00e1n, incluyendo tambi\u00e9n lo que afecta a las nociones de clase social y la importancia de los conceptos de globalizaci\u00f3n para comprender las identidades y pr\u00e1cticas lesbianas contempor\u00e1neas.","creator":["Antonia Chao"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3986697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"067858d0-df61-3256-badf-8941e361ba5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3986697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Global Metaphors and Local Strategies in the Construction of Taiwan's Lesbian Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3986697","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leticia I. Romo"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53841d7d-06ef-381d-a10e-a10e9bbf56f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SEXUALIZING DICTATORSHIPS IN \"LA REIVINDICACION DEL CONDE DON JULIAN\" AND \"COLA DE LAGARTIJA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342249","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9374,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[120184,120390]],"Locations in B":[[43364,43580]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article deals with young urban Saudi women's transgressions of rules regulating dress and public conduct in Riyadh. Many researchers on Middle Eastern societies interpret as resistance the silent practices adopted by subalterns such as women or youth. The existence of such social groupings is scarcely questioned in these works, which focus mainly on the interpretation of practices as political or subversive. In this article, I emphasize the collective and public aspect of transgressions in order to show how transgressive acts participate in shaping collective identifications and in producing young urban Saudi women as a group. In the first section, I argue that transgressions have a public aspect that makes them transformative, as they are tacitly coordinated, reproduced among young women, and repeated every day. The second section states that the transgressions' impact does not imply that they should be interpreted as resistance. In fact, transgressive acts are embedded in shifting power relations in the context of reform. In the third section, I show how transgressions have long-term implications for shaping groupings, identifications, and exclusions. Some transgressive practices that involve specific consumerist selfpresentations have become norms among urban young women who conform to prevent rejection from the group. This study draws on ten months of ethnographic fieldwork in Riyadh between 2005 and 2009. I conducted interviews with young, urban Saudi women who studied or worked in Riyadh.","creator":["Am\u00e9lie Le Renard"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.9.3.108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8122ea3-a434-3f66-a168-5fc347696315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.9.3.108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Young Urban Saudi Women's Transgressions of Official Rules and the Production of a New Social Group","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.9.3.108","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timo Myllyntaus"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50725734-47da-349b-af66-b35209b87cb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23791373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Prologue: Constructing Technology for Everyday Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791373","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8754,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[53390,53461]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Manners"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40551995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"042860cd-68a1-3848-8def-1b4fb95db2ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40551995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Vagaries of Flight in H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Cixous's Le Troisi\u00e8me Corps","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40551995","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5826,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464624,464780]],"Locations in B":[[27244,27404]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Rom\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad808b1a-0991-34b9-91ed-bac35b9f19ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'It's My Party and I'll Die If I Want to!': Gay Men, AIDS, and the Circulation of Camp in U.S. Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208551","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11630,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[493864,494005],[495245,495299],[513340,513439]],"Locations in B":[[13167,13304],[13498,13552],[16848,16947]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article contributes to the existing critical theory and gender scholarship on private military security companies by examining how the gendered subjectivities of third-country nationals (TCNs) are constituted through the intersections of colonial histories and neoliberal economic practices. Focusing on Gurkha contractors, I ask how it is that both the remuneration and the working conditions of TCNs are inferior to those of their white Western peers within the industry. The article shows that Gurkhas\u2019 working conditions flow from their location on the periphery of global employment markets, a disadvantage that is further inflected by their status as racially underdeveloped subjects. Thus, their material and cultural status within the industry \u2013 regardless of the abilities of the individuals in question \u2013 is argued to be the outcome of tenacious colonial histories that continue to shape the labour-market opportunities of men from the global South within larger global security governance practices that increasingly feature outsourcing of military labour in operations.","creator":["Amanda Chisholm"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57bbf518-fc40-3869-896e-77ecfd6a8bd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26291746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marketing the Gurkha security package","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291746","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":14200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Colonial histories and neoliberal economies of private security"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Annette Burfoot"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd76898e-5fab-3ba3-8520-25d67c43fc83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Human Remains: Identity Politics in the Face of Biotechnology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354624","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9437,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[60132,60223]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c0 la fin du XIXe si\u00e8cle, l\u2019arm\u00e9e fran\u00e7aise se pr\u00e9sente comme la grande \u00e9cole cens\u00e9e transmettre aux conscrits les valeurs du \u00ab mod\u00e8le militaro-viril \u00bb. Mais les soldats ont-ils toujours retenu cette \u00ab le\u00e7on de virilit\u00e9 \u00bb ? Poser la question revient \u00e0 s\u2019interroger sur les r\u00e9ceptions diff\u00e9renci\u00e9es de ce mod\u00e8le en s\u2019inspirant de quelques principes m\u00e9thodologiques pos\u00e9s par les gender studies. Car avant d\u2019\u00eatre une repr\u00e9sentation valoris\u00e9e de masculinit\u00e9, le mod\u00e8le militaro-viril est une cat\u00e9gorie de genre dont l\u2019usage s\u2019inscrit dans un rapport de force, qu\u2019il s\u2019agisse de justifier l\u2019ob\u00e9issance militaire, la domination masculine, raciale ou sociale. Ce mod\u00e8le ne peut donc \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme une repr\u00e9sentation uniforme transmise \u00e0 l\u2019ensemble du contingent mais bien comme le produit toujours singulier d\u2019une relation de pouvoir visant \u00e0 naturaliser certains effets de domination et \u00e0 susciter un d\u00e9sir d\u2019identification. At the end of the nineteenth century, the French army saw itself as a national institution with the task of passing on to conscripts the values of the \u201cmilitaryvirility model\u201d. But did soldiers always retain this \u201clesson in virility\u201d? Asking the question means exploring the different ways in which this model might be received, drawing on some of the methodological principles raised by gender studies. Before being a heightened representation of masculinity, the militaryvirility model is a gender category reflecting a power relationship, whether it is concerned to justify military obedience or more generally masculine, racial or social domination. This model cannot therefore be considered as a blanket representation passed on to the whole population of servicemen, but rather as the always individual product of a power relationship aiming to make certain forms of domination seem natural, and to arouse a desire for identification.","creator":["Mathieu Marly","Helo\u00efse Finch-Boyer"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26934345","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a9e0d72-c996-35e7-b18c-192deff68e1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26934345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Does the army make the man? Reflections on the \u201cmilitary-virility model\u201d (France, late nineteenth century)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26934345","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Living rurally creates geographic and socio-economic challenges for women, which negatively affect their health and well-being. Gender ideologies, expectations and practices that assign domestic and familial unpaid care work as \"women's work\" serve also to disadvantage women. How these ideological and material forces together affect health are difficult to assess with a health determinants model. Drawing from relational theories of place and gender, articulated in geographic and feminist literature, we offer a nuanced relational framework that builds on insights of health determinants explanations but situates women as recipients and providers of care within a \"relations of care\" context. We discuss how this framework can contribute to a better understanding of rural women's health and well-being. We focus on the context of neo-liberalism and the subsequent restructuring of rural Canadian society but note how our framework is applicable to other high-income nations, such as Finland, Iceland and Norway. We argue that it is critical to consider how contemporary political and ideological changes interact with place and gender relations to affect conditions of dignity for women as recipients and providers of care in rural places. We conclude with suggestions for policy directions. La vie en milieu rural pr\u00e9sente des d\u00e9fis de nature g\u00e9ographique et socio\u00e9conomique pour les femmes, ce qui nuit \u00e0 leur sant\u00e9 et \u00e0 leur bien-\u00eatre. Les id\u00e9ologies, les attentes et les pratiques sexosp\u00e9cifiques, qui consid\u00e8rent la prestation b\u00e9n\u00e9vole de soins au sein du m\u00e9nage et en milieu familial comme un \u00ab travail f\u00e9minin \u00bb, d\u00e9favorisent \u00e9galement les femmes. Lorsqu'on utilise un mod\u00e8le ax\u00e9 sur les d\u00e9terminants de la sant\u00e9, il est difficile de savoir comment ces forces id\u00e9ologiques et mat\u00e9rielles se conjuguent pour nuire \u00e0 la sant\u00e9. \u00c0 partir des th\u00e9ories relationnelles du lieu et du sexe pr\u00e9sent\u00e9es dans la documentation g\u00e9ographique et f\u00e9ministe, nous proposons un cadre relationnel nuanc\u00e9 qui fait fond sur les explications des d\u00e9terminants de la sant\u00e9, mais situent les femmes en tant que b\u00e9n\u00e9ficiaires et dispensatrices de soins dans un contexte de \u00ab relation de soin \u00bb. Nous indiquons comment un tel cadre peut contribuer \u00e0 am\u00e9liorer les connaissances sur la sant\u00e9 et le bien\u00eatre des femmes en milieu rural. Nous nous attachons au contexte du n\u00e9olib\u00e9ralisme et de la restructuration subs\u00e9quente de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 rurale canadienne, mais notre cadre peut s'appliquer \u00e0 d'autres pays \u00e0 revenu \u00e9lev\u00e9 comme la Finlande, l'Islande et la Norv\u00e8ge. Selon nous, il est essentiel d'\u00e9tudier comment l'interaction entre les changements politiques et id\u00e9ologiques contemporains, le lieu et les relations entre les sexes influe sur les conditions essentielles \u00e0 la dignit\u00e9 des femmes en tant que b\u00e9n\u00e9ficiaires et dispensatrices de soins en milieu rural. Nous concluons en proposant des orientations strat\u00e9giques.","creator":["Holly Dolan","Deborah Thien"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41995017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084263"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a3c810c-a00f-3c63-82e3-41347dde26c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41995017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpublheal"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Public Health \/ Revue Canadienne de Sante'e Publique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"S42","pageStart":"S38","pagination":"pp. S38-S42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Canadian Public Health Association","sourceCategory":["Medicine and Allied Health","Public Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Relations of Care: A Framework for Placing Women and Health in Rural Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41995017","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":5417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The purpose of this article is twofold. First, it aims to confront Hegel's ideas on the interaction between universality, particularity and singularity with those of Butler and to show that Butler's universal is dynamic and infinitely selfrenewing.Second, it aims to engage with Butler's politics of translation and to demonstrate how a Levinasian perspective on Hegelian dialectics changes the functioning of the universal. In relation to this claim, the article will also demonstrate how the structural failure in translation and performativity allows for the constant circulation of the universal and, as a consequence, brings about social and political transformation.","creator":["Iwona Janicka"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a0f5b49-f885-3131-8e1c-2222e26e004a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hegel on a Carrousel: Universality and the Politics of Translation in the Work of Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151988","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6224,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[456129,456212]],"Locations in B":[[21772,21852]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the digital self-photographic play of contemporary diasporic Korean teen girls living in a Midwest campus town in the United States. Drawing on postcolonial notions of \"hybridity\", this article highlights the ways these girls engage in ambivalent photo practices of both identification and dis-identification with their seemingly \"authentic\" Koreanness, allowing them to reclaim their desire as a recognizable \"Other\" (Bhabha, 994). Their liminal tactics in their Stereotypie photo gesture offers the diasporic girls a way to plan their own articulations of (in)authenticity that challenge dominant notions of \"planned authenticity\" (Min-ha, 1989, p. 89) so embedded in conventional approaches to multiculturalism. Their playful use of self-photography plays a significant role in allowing them to unlock a liminal, reflexive space where they can demonstrate relational connections between and within their cultural\/social positions as global girls. This study concludes by offering art educators ways of thinking about pedagogical approaches to community-based art, informal learning, and public pedagogy\u2014particularly for diasporic, ethnic communities.","creator":["MICHELLE BAE-DIMITRIADIS"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45185096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a82091a-58cc-37ef-a179-bc0aea844b99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45185096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Performing \"Planned Authenticity\": Diasporic Korean Girls' Self-Photographic Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45185096","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":6987,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620]],"Locations in B":[[18735,18811]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay will explore the mirroring of erotic desire and violence that Dennis Cooper undertakes in his poetry anthology The Dream Police (Selected Poems 1969-1993). Drawing mainly on Jacques Lacan and Georges Bataille, it will be argued that sexual violence is the vehicle which Cooper uses to liberate eroticism from what in psychoanalysis is known as the Symbolic \u2014the order of the human mind ruled by sociocultural prescriptions. This liberation is productive of alternative knowledge about Cooperian subjects and their vicissitudes in desire, especially the poietic metaphorization of their sexual drives. On articulating this view, this piece of research departs from the critical line that conceives Cooper's violent ars erotica as either an elicitor of nihilism or the annihilation of otherness. Este trabajo tiene como objetivo explorar el espejeo entre violencia y deseo sexual con el que Dennis Cooper inviste su antolog\u00eda po\u00e9tica The Dream Police (Selected Poems 1969-1993). En torno a principios de Jacques Lacan y Georges Bataille, se argumentar\u00e1 que la violencia sexual es el veh\u00edculo que Cooper usa para liberar el erotismo de lo que en psicoan\u00e1lisis se conoce como lo Simb\u00f3lico \u2014el orden de la mente humana gobernado por las prescripciones socioculturales. Dichaliberaci\u00f3n produce operaciones de conocimiento alternativas sobre los sujetos cooperianos y sus vicisitudes en el deseo, especialmente la metaforizaci\u00f3n poietica de sus pulsiones sexuales. Al articular este punto de vista, este trabajo se desmarca de la l\u00ednea cr\u00edtica que ha considerado el violento ars erotica de Cooper como productor de nihilismo o la aniquilaci\u00f3n de la otredad.","creator":["Pedro Antonio F\u00e9rez Mora"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"174e2333-c6c0-3f7a-b191-340fa66e0b2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Violence, Death, Sex and Psychoanalysis in Dennis Cooper's \"The Dream Police\" \/ Violencia, muerte, sexo y psicoan\u00e1lisis en \"The Dream Police\", de Dennis Cooper","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486060","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers 'health' and issues of embodiment through the prism of Deleuze and Guattari's framework of theory. Deleuze and Guattari speak of an embodied subjectivity, a 'body-without-organs' (BwO), which is the outcome of a dynamic tension between culture and biology. This BwO \u2013 or 'body-self' \u2013 is a limit, the outcome of physical, psychological and social 'territorialization', but which may be 'deterritorialized' to open up new possibilities for embodied subjectivity. The question 'what can a body do?' is posed to address issues of health and illness. The physical, psychological, emotional and social relations of body-self together comprise the limit of a person's embodied subjectivity, and as such delimit its 'health'. 'Illness' is a further limiting of these relations, while health care may offer the potential to de-territorialize these relations, opening up new possibilities. This model suggests the importance of a collaborative approach to illness, health and health care.","creator":["Nick J. Fox"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d620e348-7142-3abe-9f9f-1515a41c00f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26646336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Refracting 'health': Deleuze, Guattari and body-self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646336","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RUSSELL SBRIGLIA"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26975029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c68b107-3945-35f3-87e1-0048b3bc3bbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26975029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enjoyment as an Ontological Factor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26975029","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Sex, Death Drive, and the Subject of<\/em> Jouissance in Hannah Webster Foster\u2019s<\/em> The Coquette"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["G. G. Weix"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5728\/indonesia.98.0141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00197289"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43942998"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236971"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b26b5f84-8661-3458-9fea-2c224684824c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5728\/indonesia.98.0141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indonesia"}],"isPartOf":"Indonesia","issueNumber":"98","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Southeast Asia Program Publications at Cornell University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interrupting the Gender Narrative: In\u2014between Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5728\/indonesia.98.0141","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I argue that the relationships among mental health, disorder, and distress are a key source of conflict in the sociology of mental health and that the features of the conflict have the potential to call into question much of the accumulated scientific knowledge on mental health. To address this issue, I attempt to empirically assess three competing frameworks regarding these relationships: (1) the \"modal perspective,\" (2) the \"Mirowsky and Ross perspective,\" and (3) the \"positive psychology perspective.\" Results, however, support a \"discontinuous perspective:\" no underlying continuum among any of the three concepts. These results suggest that researchers need to avoid the common practice of \"lumping together\" distress, disorder, and mental health and study each in their own right. Subsequent tests attempt to further specify the relationships among these concepts. Results indicate a strong positive directional association from distress to disorder, a strong negative directional association from distress to mental health, and no significant relationship between mental health and disorder. These results are used to generate a number of directions for future research.","creator":["Andrew R. Payton"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20617632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221465"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38543580"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"203a83b6-1c29-3a53-871d-4aaa6ef5b726"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20617632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhealsocibeha"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Health and Social Behavior","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Mental Health, Mental Illness, and Psychological Distress: Same Continuum or Distinct Phenomena?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20617632","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth C. Goldsmith"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/395603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/395603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/395603","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":549,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[386479,386572],[463168,463346]],"Locations in B":[[2310,2403],[2604,2801]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With the aim of contributing to a sociology of age, this essay develops a framework for understanding age as accomplished, i.e., as something that is both a process and the outcome of ongoing interactional work. The common expression \"act your age\" provides the useful metaphor of performance. We perform our own age constantly, but we also give meaning to other ages and to age more generally in our actions and interactions, our beliefs and words and feelings, our social policies. This essay offers two routes to the conclusion that age is accomplished. The first involves drawing parallels between the study of age and the study of gender. The second route uses existing scholarship, which recognizes that age is far more social than chronological. I draw on work in the social constructionist, symbolic interactionist, and life course traditions to develop the framework of age-as-accomplished and to show its potential to organize much of what we already have learned about age and aging.","creator":["Cheryl Laz"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/684926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/684926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Act Your Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/684926","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":12881,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[77871,77967]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tapa (or barkcloth), which is made from the outer bark of specific trees, is intimately interwoven with past and present socialities across Oceania. The cloths have been used to decorate, wrap, cover, protect, and carry the human body, as exchange valuables and commodities, in land claims, and as indexes and embodiments of ancestral power. This article explores the complexities of personhood in Oceania by focusing on the making and ceremonial use of tapa among the Maisin of Collingwood Bay, Papua New Guinea. It elucidates dynamics of the intimate correspondence between people and things, and, in particular, how people's gendered identities are mediated: that is shaped, reproduced, and contested through the cloth's specific materiality and design. Ultimately, it reveals the mutual growth of people and things and how they are part of each other's substance, thereby dissolving the subject-object dichotomy.","creator":["Anna-Karina Hermkens"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44161318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a593e30-9c5a-3082-a187-227cb5e92dc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44161318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Mediations of Cloth: Tapa and Personhood among the Maisin in PNG","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44161318","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":8644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy Morris"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c120475-b1f3-38f3-a27b-8302f72570a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"500","pagination":"pp. 500-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946301","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":1451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Clara Rom\u00e1n-Odio"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"722f9bcc-f499-3d0e-bb5d-2b5f9c4481bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Global-Local Parodies in Mar\u00eda Amparo Escand\u00f3n's \"Esperanza's Box of Saints\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021927","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7899,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[454442,454559],[455473,455708]],"Locations in B":[[14443,14560],[14792,15027]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chantal Mouffe","Hortensia Moreno"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a09e7a1-f008-3b4f-a525-f1bcf9540dcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Feminismo, ciudadan\u00eda y pol\u00edtica democr\u00e1tica radical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624105","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues for a practice of reflexive role ascription in International Relations (IR) to prevent actor normalization. Roles are useful and often applied in narratives to facilitate our understanding of particular actors or subject positions. Yet, recurrent and non-reflexive ascriptions give rise to normalization, shaping how actors become understood. Awareness of performativity, over-generalization, and over-determining roles would thus contribute to more nuanced understandings of actors and prevent limited yet insightful role ascriptions from becoming the norm. The article builds on two largely compatible turns in IR\u2014the reflexive and narrative turns\u2014with a view to enlarging the concept of role beyond the domain of interaction and drama. It thus reviews the manner in which roles have been conceptualized in IR and extends their definition. Then, by focusing on the notions of attribution, predication, and Judith Butler's performativity, the article propounds a two-level approach to reflexive role ascription-derived from Paul Ricoeur's hermeneutics\u2014that deters narratives and their roles from normalizing subject positions in IR.","creator":["Bernardo Teles Fazendeiro"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26407951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"538ba938-e467-3efd-bbda-89fcf9d8b3bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26407951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Roles: Reflexive Role Ascription and Performativity in International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26407951","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12942,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[68030,68134]],"Locations in B":[[43499,43606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In 2006 over three million experiments were performed on nonhuman animals. In making an argument against such experiments I contend that approval of nonhuman animal experimentation is rooted in acceptance of humans as having essential primacy over nonhuman animals and lies in the power relations associated with human primacy identity claims. To challenge essentialist notions of human identity and human primacy I utilize a performative conceptualization of identity. Discourses used by Pro-Test, a lobby group that promotes nonhuman animal experimentation, allows an exploration of justifications made for such experiments. In promoting these experiments Pro-Test is, I argue, engaging in a form of human primacy identity politics based in continued inequality and the sustained oppression of nonhuman animals. I conclude that discourses extolling scientific advancements for human benefits, made on the basis of experiments on nonhuman animals, reiterate an immoral human primacy identity that dissolutely exploits power relations to privilege the human.","creator":["Kay Peggs"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4359de65-2133-3b36-b0bb-2b75e1c9a119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Hostile World for Nonhuman Animais: Human Identification and the Oppression of Nonhuman Animals for Human Good","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857233","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8189,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17450,17580]],"Locations in B":[[11953,12083]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines how the discourse and imagery of West African female dance coalesced with notions of power, desire, disgust, and superiority in Western travel narratives from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. The authors of these publications wrote extensively of the cultures they encountered in West Africa, noting indigenous performances and customs-especially dance. Informed by their own cultural and social norms, these writers transformed African dance performances into pornographic scenes for consumption and sexual enticement for a mainly white male audience. African dance became evidence of the overt sexuality of blackness, helping create racial stereotypes of the black \"other,\" and provided validation for the sexual abuse of black women in the Atlantic slave system. There is an association between performance and blackness that influenced negative racial conceptions of blacks in the North American slavery system. Travel narratives presented the identity of black femininity as malleable and capable of being shaped according to the desired purpose of the gazer. This sociocultural construct reassured these travelers of their sexual power and at the same time denied any sexuality of women other than the white male desires. These women were thus depicted as sexual predators who lacked traditional feminine qualities, therefore placing them outside the traditional female sphere reserved for white womanhood. Using these travel narratives and tying together dance culture in both Europe and Africa, this article examines how the white male gaze sexualized African dance, contributed to the construction of race and gender, and affected the experiences of black women in the Atlantic world.","creator":["Katrina Dyonne Thompson"],"datePublished":"2012-10-05","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.6.2.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19352743"},{"name":"oclc","value":"277050143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008216364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e051eaa-30d2-3694-998e-e6c22c7875e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.6.2.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacwomegendfami"}],"isPartOf":"Black Women, Gender + Families","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Some were wild, some were soft, some were tame, and some were fiery\": Female Dancers, Male Explorers, and the Sexualization of Blackness, 1600-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.6.2.0001","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":11910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Comparing the treatment of gender identity and feminist politics in Virginia Woolf's Orlando and Sally Potter's film, this essay examines how differences between the two media enable Woolf to embrace a performative conception of gender that makes her treatment of feminist concerns more radical than Potter's.","creator":["SUSAN WATKINS"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cb0a629-1727-324f-b09d-df61a8eff642"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex Change and Media Change: From Woolf's to Potter's \"Orlando\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029810","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8230,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[49048,49628],[434702,435259],[461942,462141]],"Locations in B":[[7653,8233],[28246,28803],[45151,45350]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARJORIE RHINE"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebab3b26-5ccb-38d0-bc02-7bc178ff75a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"GLOSSING SCRIPTS AND SCRIPTING PLEASURE IN MISHIMA'S \"CONFESSIONS OF A MASK\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533329","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5956,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430935,431480]],"Locations in B":[[4318,4863]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JULIA EPSTEIN"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60e72243-decd-382c-944a-cab791094625"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AIDS, Stigma, and Narratives of Containment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304009","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":6506,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[419601,419865],[420018,420086]],"Locations in B":[[22442,22706],[27442,27510]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel Crawford"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e96f6e1-24f0-3bd7-bab8-cac0541c5cba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Troping the Subject: Behn, Smith, Hemans and the Poetics of the Bower","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601389","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":14295,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102168,102730]],"Locations in B":[[45194,45755]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Louise Fradenburg"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f16d70c2-bf73-39db-b8fe-568c260eb9ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"So That We May Speak of Them\": Enjoying the Middle Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057414","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["RICHARD E. FLATHMAN"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c53a370f-8dca-3784-89de-c9ed7b8b28ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40971052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"671","pagination":"pp. 671-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberalism: From Unicity to Plurality and on to Singularity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971052","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":5187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Sabor"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30054163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"578","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-578","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Sexual Liberation to Gender Trouble: Reading \"Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure\" from the 1960s to the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054163","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shannon Draucker"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48590879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19473370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"696452369"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011273660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2669900-b02d-32f5-984e-ea8153e98996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48590879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eudoweltrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Eudora Welty Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Georgia State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Alternative Corporealities in \u201cJune Recital\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48590879","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7244,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[42540,42615]],"subTitle":"Eudora Welty\u2019s Queering of Virgie Rainey and Miss Eckhart"} +{"abstract":"This article examines the contributions of psychoanalysis to international development, illustrating ways in which thinking and practice in this field are psychoanalytically structured. Drawing on the work of Lacan and \u017di\u017eek, the article will emphasise three key points: (1) psychoanalysis can help uncover the unconscious of development \u2013 its gaps, dislocations, blind spots \u2013 thereby elucidating the latter's contradictory and seemingly 'irrational' practices; (2) the important psychoanalytic notion of jouissance (enjoyment) can help explain why development discourse endures, that is, why it has such sustained appeal, and why we continue to invest in it despite its many problems; and (3) psychoanalysis can serve as an important tool for ideology critique, helping to expose the socioeconomic contradictions and antagonisms that development persistently disavows (eg inequality, domination, sweatshop labour). But while partial to Lacan and \u017di\u017eek, the article will also reflect on the limits of psychoanalysis \u2013 the extent to which it is gendered and, given its Western origins, universalisable.","creator":["Ilan Kapoor"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60244555-8d1a-35fb-a538-ba03a15d8ed1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24522167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"1143","pageStart":"1120","pagination":"pp. 1120-1143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Psychoanalysis and development: contributions, examples, limits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522167","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela Cooper"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c0fa232-0023-3fe3-abde-2415251e4493"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"IMPERIAL TOPOGRAPHIES: THE SPACES OF HISTORY IN \"WATERLAND\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285783","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza c\u00f3mo el suicidio frustrado de las protagonistas de \u00bfQu\u00e9 he hecho yo para merecer esto!! (Pedro Almod\u00f3var, 1984) y Costa Brava (Family Album) (Marta Balletb\u00f2-Coll, 1995) es esencial para entender el lugar de estas dos mujeres en relaci\u00f3n con los modelos de g\u00e9nero de la Espa\u00f1a de los 80 y 90. Arg\u00fcimos que el acto de suicidio es m\u00e1s que una elecci\u00f3n individual, puesto que surge de una serie de coyunturas sociol\u00f3gicas y de g\u00e9nero. A su vez, consideramos que el suicidio fallido puede ayudamos a entender c\u00f3mo se presenta la autor\u00eda y la reescritura del mito de Edipo en las dos pel\u00edculas. This article analyzes how the failed suicides of the female protagonists of the films \u00bfQu\u00e9 he hecho yo para merecer esto!! (Pedro Almodovar, 1984) and Costa Brava (Family Album) (1995) are key to understanding the position of these characters with regard to Spain's gender models during the 80s and 90s. We argue that suicide is more than an individual decision, because it arises from sociological factors and gender presumptions and expectations. In addition, we consider failed suicide as essential in understanding the question of authorship and the revision of the Oedipal myth in these two films.","creator":["CLAIRE RANSTROM","ANNA CASAS AGUILAR"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0658aff8-7db7-3929-b483-e3e08805db87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Feminine and Failed Suicides in Spanish Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987066","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8816,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442209,442369]],"Locations in B":[[24200,24362]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper documents the raced and gendered bodily dynamics that women of color (WOC) faculty report encountering with White students in the classroom: specifically, how WOC feel that White students misrecognize their bodies; how such bodily misrecognition affects faculty-student interactions; and how WOC negotiate these bodily assumptions within the academy.","creator":["Kristie A. Ford"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29789534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67f13f66-900a-3ae4-952b-e632cf7ef5be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29789534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhighereducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Higher Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"444","pagination":"pp. 444-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Race, Gender, and Bodily (Mis)Recognitions: Women of Color Faculty Experiences with White Students in the College Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29789534","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":14645,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443537]],"Locations in B":[[29486,29739]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eva Hohenberger"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43500303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03437736"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606455008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55059f16-22df-3c46-9363-a4babd68c9fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43500303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frauenfilm"}],"isPartOf":"Frauen und Film","issueNumber":"66","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Stroemfeld Verlag Buchversand GmbH","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Queering American Television: The L-Word, das Konvergenz-Fernsehen und (neo)liberale Nicht-Identit\u00e4t","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43500303","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, I investigate the ethical aspects of sex selection for \u201cfamily balancing.\u201d Advocates of the practice make two claims: first, that it is ethically permissible because it creates gender diversity and entails no harm from sexism; and, second, that it benefits families, as gender diversity offers richer experiences. I test these claims through an empirical study with Australian sex selectors. I argue that the claims are flawed because they are grounded in a narrow understanding of sexism that disregards gender essentialism. As family balancing is based on the selection of children to fit preconceived binary gender roles, it denies diversity and reinforces sexism.","creator":["Tereza Hendl"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9072459-de5b-32b2-bc7c-7d39c3ba0fb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90019559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Queering the Odds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90019559","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12608,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[73272,73379]],"subTitle":"The Case Against \u201cFamily Balancing\u201d"} +{"abstract":"Building off of the path-breaking works of Roy Bhaskar\u2014and in particular his philosophical position of critical realism\u2014this paper works toward a realignment of sociology with the life and ecological sciences. Sociology has been cautious of looking too far into the realm of the biophysical for causal potentials out of fear that such analyses might mark the beginning of a slippery slope toward biological reductionism. Yet, as this paper argues, such fears of reductionism are conceptually misguided. Critical realism argues that reality is stratified, rooted, and emergent. Consequently, to bracket social life from those levels \"beneath\" it\u2014or, in some cases, to write out nature entirely (e.g., discursive theory and \"strong\" social constructionism)\u2014is to approach the study of those phenomena with a degree of institutionalized blindness. Instead, this paper argues that sociology must open its doors to all causal potentials, regardless of where this search may lead.","creator":["Michael S. Carolan"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24707497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10744827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9f7370b-2520-3ab7-81f2-471c18b174b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24707497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humaecolrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Human Ecology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Society for Human Ecology","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Realism without Reductionism: Toward an Ecologically Embedded Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24707497","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":17405,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[82499,82580]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper's central argument is that a slow but profound process of change is occurring in Israeli society as the result of feminist endeavors. In the course of this process, diverse publics of women have begun to flourish. All of them are women with a strong political awareness, who work in various arenas to redefine gender, gender inequality, and intergender relationships. Additionally, those publics are challenging dominant political perceptions and proposing alternative ways of observing the social order; women are now involved in the broader social process within which a civil society in Israel is taking shape. Women's efforts are dispersed among different arenas in civil society, in organizations composed of women and men, but also in numerous organizations created by women for women. Women now constitute one of the pivotal forces in the burgeoning civil society. They play their part in extending the borders of politics, both in the way that the political world and its contents are defined, and in the alternative modes of organization suggested for achieving political change.","creator":["\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e8\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2","Hanna Herzog"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24151912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15650316"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24151912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"democult"}],"isPartOf":"Democratic Culture \/ \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d3\u05de\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":null,"language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Bar Ilan University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Between the Lawn and the Gravel Path - Women, Politics, and Civil Society \/ \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05db\u05d9\u05db\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d3\u05e9\u05d0 \u05d5\u05e9\u05d1\u05d9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d7\u05e6\u05e5 \u2014 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd, \u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d6\u05e8\u05d7\u05d9\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24151912","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pierre Bourdieu's writings provide us with a powerful vision of corporeal sociology (an approach towards human relationships and identities that has at its centre the socially shaped embodied subject), and an understanding of the body as a form of physical capital. Despite his protestations to the contrary, however, a reproductionist bias pervades Bourdieu's conception of social action, making it difficult for him to account theoretically for those individuals who deviate from the class trajectories 'assigned' them during their formative years. After exploring the idea of physical capital implicit within Bourdieu's work, this article places this conception of the body on a non-reproductionist footing by developing the pragmatist notion of situated action. This conception of action is then used to illustrate how the relationship between social field and physical capital can result in not only a continuation of habitual action (and an associated accumulation of particular quantities and qualities of physical capital), but in action informed by crisis and revelation (and associated transformations in the individual's relationship with physical capital) that can aid our understanding of the education of bodies.","creator":["Chris Shilling"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4128672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8a62167-8be6-3391-8dec-66796fa49021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4128672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Physical Capital and Situated Action: A New Direction for Corporeal Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4128672","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b09c6074-a32d-392b-b178-65e6fd4e519b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979537","volumeNumber":"226","wordCount":4735,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476075,476141]],"Locations in B":[[16085,16152]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract The article analyzes the political and theoretical potential of cinematographic language to express and rebuild the relationship between sexual and gender differences. As cultural products, the three films analyzed - A Casa Assassinada (1972), Sunday, bloody Sunday (1971) and Les Amities Particuli\u00e8res (1964) - allude to feminist issues of the time, as well as instigating a reading of gender beyond the narratives, by historicizing the visibility of the female body, heteronormativity, and the subversiveness of forbidden loves as represented through the films\u2019 structure. The text argues, from a queer perspective, that the aesthetic nature of twist cinema, within the limits of each style and period, was precisely the boldness to run risks in its visual grammar, not making political concessions in challenging the moral canons of current society.","creator":["Karla Adriana Martins Bessa"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48da0311-5583-38e3-b029-cc31e7061efe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90001013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cHow I became what I am\u201d:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001013","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"an aesthetics of twist cinema in films from the 1960s and 1970s"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2185898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318108"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39648313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2185898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Philosophical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2185898","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":4229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Flax"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd5efd6c-4c82-3775-b745-8e8b5b675fe4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20010986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Multiples: On the Contemporary Politics of Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010986","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This exploratory article is threefold in purpose. In the first instance, it seeks to re-assess the contributions of feminist thought to our understanding of democratic values in education. We draw extensively upon the insights of feminist political theorists to conduct this re-assessment and suggest some new directions for the study of \"Education Feminism\" (see Stone, 1994). The second aim is to identify and describe the key feminist debates which have emerged about the gendering of liberal democracy. We revisit major but contrasting traditions of thought-that of liberal feminism and feminist theorizing from maternal, socialist, and post-structural positions-to illustrate shifts in thinking about democracy and democratic education. Our goal in conducting this re-evaluation is to highlight the necessity of developing a more explicit and systematic consideration of the relationship between feminism and democratic education. Our third aim is to describe the key levels of political analysis that have been favored by feminists in their efforts to understand the relationship between gender politics and democratic education. We then go on to argue that feminists must revisit the social and political dimensions of their work in order to engage more critically with \"epistemic\" concerns as they emerge in relation to the study of gender and democratic schooling. This view may seem somewhat out of step with postmodern\/post-structural feminist theories that attempt to defend the illusory and performative nature of gender. It is our view, however, that feminists remain committed to the idea that \"democratic values\" must not only function to serve, but also represent, the political concerns of women \"as gendered persons\" from diverse contexts. This commitment implies that we view feminism as both a political representation of women's difference\/experience and as a necessary theoretical abstraction which has, at its core, an interest in struggling over the meaning and significance of feminist values in a democracy.","creator":["Madeleine Arnot","Jo-Anne Dillabough"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cda2b2af-0e80-3a94-a2af-d56280dd75e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3185890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Politics and Democratic Values in Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185890","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Immigrant adolescent male students and their identity negotiation remain under-examined in the field of language and literacy education research. This paper reports on a classroom discourse study examining the relationship between masculinity performances and language learning of one immigrant boy, Tiger, in one ESL classroom. Using discourse analysis of classroom interactions, field notes, and documents, I illustrate that Tiger stylized his L2 speech and appropriated the classroom language practice to perform a funny and \u201claddish\u201d masculinity. I theorize his L2 stylization as \u201cdoing funny,\u201d a discursive practice of performing a dominant form of masculinity to gain hegemonic power and an act of subverting the routinized and nonengaging language instruction for identity performance. His masculinity performances, deeply intertwined with the interactional process of teaching and learning of language, conflicted with the instructional goals set by the teacher, ultimately leading to him being identified as a \u201cproblem\u201d student. This study underscores the need for teachers to be cognizant of the complexity in multilingual young men\u2019s masculinity negotiation, to recognize the interdependence of identity performances and language learning, to disrupt boys\u2019 internalized notions of masculinity, and to decenter the power and control between the student, the teacher, and the school.","creator":["Kongji Qin"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48530054"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbba0e40-e3d1-3d17-9ece-fefe75cfb795"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26802706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\u201cDoing Funny\u201d and Performing Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802706","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12773,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[10875,11064]],"subTitle":"An Immigrant Adolescent Boy\u2019s Identity Negotiation and Language Learning in One US ESL Classroom"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irene Diamond","David Seidenberg"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Sensuous Minds and the Possibilities of a Jewish Ecofeminist Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338977","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":5563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this essay is to reclaim Kristeva's concept of the semiotic chora by reinscribing it as an intervention in the context of two important postmodern debates. The first debate relates to the philosophical problem of \"the beginning before the Beginning.\" The second concerns the necessity and possibility of mediation between incommensurable entities: the \"demonic\" and the social, desire and the Law, material production and representation. I contend: (1) that the introduction of the chora in RPL is part of Kristeva's effort to restore the legacy of a materialist economy of the beginning, as this is glimpsed in Plato's Timaeus from which Kristeva borrows her controversial term; and (2) that the chora constitutes an attempt on Kristeva's part to explore a third space of ambiguous relationality in the context of which our transcendence to the \"demonic\" lies less \"beyond us\" than \"in-between.\"","creator":["Maria Margaroni"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d485c58-6d71-33dd-9a4e-9ad894f01779"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"The Lost Foundation\": Kristeva's Semiotic Chora and Its Ambiguous Legacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810844","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10081,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494699]],"Locations in B":[[60190,60280]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I explore how masculinity and gender nonconformity are viewed by 37 migrant Puerto Rican gay men who had been raised in Puerto Rico and migrated Stateside as adults. Most of these migrant men note the importance of masculinity in their development and interactions with others, particularly other men. They resist identification of themselves as effeminate and distance themselves from locas (effeminate gay men). They associate locas with overt homosexuality, disrespect, and marginality. I argue that migrant Puerto Rican gay masculinities are maintained within the precept of hegemonic masculinity through various social mechanisms, including a gendered construction of male homosexuality; the connection of social and interpersonal respect with masculinity; the socially allowable and pervasive ridicule and punishment of male femininity; and marginalization based on multiple social statuses. Through these interconnected social mechanisms, heteronormative perspectives on gender, gender binaries, and power are incorporated into homonormative migrant Puerto Rican gay masculinities.","creator":["MARYSOL ASENCIO"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50377bda-9c50-3227-a79d-31f958956803"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23044152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"354","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"LOCAS,\" RESPECT, AND MASCULINITY: Gender Conformity in Migrant Puerto Rican Gay Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044152","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8272,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489252,489354]],"Locations in B":[[50999,51108]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cherie Meacham"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3842276a-e696-3b78-8510-232cb68aff84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43894926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"138","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CROSSING YET ANOTHER BORDER: THE CRITIQUE OF COMPULSORY HETEROSEXUALITY IN THE NOVELS OF JULIA \u00c1LVAREZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43894926","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8963,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[101215,101386],[102961,103158]],"Locations in B":[[2735,2905],[2934,3131]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"During the 19th and early 20th centuries, an era when immigrant groups were seen as divisible into races with distinct physical and mental traits, American Jews thought of themselves as a race. In the post-Holocaust era, however, racial language was eschewed, and American Jews instead adapted terms such as \"community\" and \"ethnicity.\" Our research on unsynagogued Jews and adult children of Jewish intermarriage, however, revealed that many contemporary Jews actually continue to employ an essentialist understanding of Jewishness that emphasizes the biological, genetic basis of their identities. Their reliance on ascribed characteristics as central to their identities in an era when the idea of a Jewish race has been debunked, and when most scholars eschew racial categorizations, is surprising and constitutes the analytic focus of this article.","creator":["Shelly Tenenbaum","Lynn Davidman"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40220032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4db07af2-f56b-3311-a02c-9960f085cc1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40220032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"It's in My Genes: Biological Discourse and Essentialist Views of Identity among Contemporary American Jews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40220032","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CLARE WHATLING"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Utopian conceptions: rethinking the straight mind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263517","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6671,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[371372,371647],[371673,372118],[372139,372358],[372364,372624],[408799,409193]],"Locations in B":[[18345,18618],[18639,19285],[19289,19521],[19559,19824],[24306,24701]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In part an examination of the speculative arena of genomics, particularly through the historical context of US nuclear detonations in the Pacific in the mid-twentieth century, this essay traces a rhetorical shift in scientific interest in \"mutation\" to \"regeneration.\" This shift: marks how the financialization of scientific research brokers a profitable conversion of the devastations of the atomic age to the promissory therapies of the Human Genome Project. Against this backcloth, I turn to Larissa Lai's speculative fiction Salt Fish Girl, which resurrects these specters of the Pacific to haunt the HGP's projections and tether transpacific futurity to an irradiated past.","creator":["AIMEE BAHNG"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2154e1c4-b3a6-3d2d-a326-48da65485402"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44162711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"683","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-683","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Specters of the Pacific: Salt Fish Drag and Atomic Hauntologies in the Era of Genetic Modification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162711","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Chris GoGwilt"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a5da3f6-f690-344b-870b-a13edeb1385d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Salom\u00e9, Woman and Modernity: Zigzag Paths through the Turn of the Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488447","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Collaborative learning has much to offer but not all learners participate fully and peer groups can be exclusive. The article examines how belonging or 'congruence' in learning groups is related to identities of gender, age, ethnicity and socio-economic status. A study of student experiences of collaborative learning on three different blended learning courses illustrated how learners negotiate identity congruence with peer groups to belong and engage. An analytical framework that distinguishes social, operational and knowledge-related identity congruence has emerged. Contrary to received wisdom, the social aspect appears least important for learner engagement while knowledge-related identity congruence is fundamental. Some of the consequences of identity incongruence, particularly concerning gender and maturity, are discussed and the article points towards the pedagogies which might enable identities of group members to shift so that collaborative learning can flourish.","creator":["Gwyneth Hughes"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c966e46f-a554-322e-8557-f2e9aafde4d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27823586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Identity and belonging in social learning groups: the importance of distinguishing social, operational and knowledge-related identity congruence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27823586","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers a nuanced analysis of identity reconstitution in transnational gay relations. Drawing from critical ethnography, the author focuses on Filipino gay-identified hosts, who remain invisible in global analyses of sexuality and tourism, as they create a gay space in Malate, an ex-sex and current tourist district in the city of Manila. Challenging the perception that gay identity is Western made, the author focuses on how gay host identity is constituted through hosts' travel\/mobility and in relation to urban place. She discusses place-making as a strategy that allows gay hosts to see their identities transformed in Malate despite their social exclusion in the process of urban gentrification.","creator":["Dana Collins"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"477ff04c-4d58-3d25-99c6-3c24e5910e74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity, Mobility, and Urban Place-Making: Exploring Gay Life in Manila","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044582","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This essay examines dominant notions of reproductive identity in feminist bioethics from a queer-crip perspective by considering the \u201creproductive situation\u201d in Germany of people who are classified as disabled and people who are classified as queer. I analyze the ways in which such people are excluded from the understandings of reproductive identity that figure prominently in German feminist bioethics, and argue that feminist bioethics in Germany, which has become a well-established part of important bioethical institutions, reflects many, if not most, of the neo-eugenic developments that characterize more recognizably mainstream bioethics. I also show that (German) feminist bioethics (like its more recognizably mainstream counterpart) constitutes the reproductive subject as nondisabled, intelligibly gendered, and heterosexual.","creator":["Ute Kalender"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/fab.2010.3.2.150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"952383c4-37cf-3cae-9e56-b4a61365bfab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/fab.2010.3.2.150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nothing beyond the able mother? A queer-crip perspective on notions of the reproductive subject in German feminist bioethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/fab.2010.3.2.150","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sheldon Brivic"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c96df963-a88c-3673-a178-fec3d96e6e39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25477894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Dissonance, Hysteria, and History in James Joyce's \"A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477894","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9271,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455973,456111]],"Locations in B":[[34304,34443]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Par une lecture approfondie du film exp\u00e9rimental Panic Bodies de Mike Hoolboom, cet article \u00e9tudie la repr\u00e9sentation cin\u00e9matographique de l'espace en tant que construction sociale. L'auteur s'oppose \u00e0 la th\u00e9orie culturelle canadienne qui suppose un lien d\u00e9terminant entre l'identit\u00e9 et l'\u00c9tat national. L'auteur utilise plut\u00f4t la th\u00e9orie de l'espace d'Henri Lefebvre pour d\u00e9montrer, d'une part, que les fronti\u00e8res d'un espace donn\u00e9 sont impos\u00e9es par la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 et peuvent donc \u00eatre contest\u00e9es et, d'autre part, que l'art permet de faire l'exp\u00e9rience d'un espace qui n'est pas prescrit par la raison d'\u00e9tat. La mise en espace de l'exp\u00e9rience cin\u00e9matographique s'\u00e9labore en relation dialectique avec le concept de l'image-temps qui selon Deleuze rompt la lin\u00e9arit\u00e9 et l'endiguement de la diff\u00e9rence.","creator":["DARRELL VARGA"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"802b10f3-4e81-3530-b3e2-17770622e737"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"PANIC BODIES\" AND THE PERFORMANCE OF SPACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408043","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8688,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[240807,241002]],"Locations in B":[[33121,33316]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert S. Hatten"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02718022"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24046497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inditheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Theory Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Department of Music Theory, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performance and Analysis\u2014Or Synthesis: Theorizing Gesture, Topics, and Tropes in Chopin's F-Minor Ballade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046497","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claire Detels"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Soft Boundaries and Relatedness: Paradigm for a Postmodern Feminist Musical Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303539","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8737,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477898]],"Locations in B":[[10515,10580]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a clinical category and a sociocultural phenomenon, autism occupies a prominent albeit ambiguous place in ongoing social science and humanities debates about empathy, intersubjectivity, intentionality, epistemological certainty, and moral agency. Autism is used as a counterexample to feeling empathy and understanding other people's beliefs and intentions. Alternatively, it is given as evidence of the limitless potential and neurodiversity of the human mind. This review examines the field of autism research relevant to anthropology of the senses. It considers the production of knowledge about autism as a clinically relevant category at the intersection of sense as culturally organized competence in meaning making and the senses as a culturally normative and institutionally ratified sensory and perceptual endowment. In such a distinction, both sense and the senses are paths toward and objects of the empirical understanding of autism.","creator":["Olga Solomon"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25735110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0c0f20b-722c-31e6-8510-4486ed355640"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25735110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Sense and the Senses: Anthropology and the Study of Autism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25735110","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From its inception, the archaeology of gender was entwined with feminism. Engagement has engendered reconstructions of complex, diverse peoples and practices that are more equitable, relevant, and sound. Yet, for many archaeologists, the connection with feminist perspectives has frayed in recent years. Their studies of gender articulate dated ideas about women and epistemological frames that highlight duality and universality. Examinations of labor divisions typify shortcomings. To advance gender's study and archaeology, practitioners need to consider several concerns about identity and difference emerging from thirdwave feminism. Gender is envisioned as intersection. Bioarchaeology, especially, will benefit from feminist approaches that reflect critically and regard gender in nonnormative and multiscalar terms. To this end, resistance to feminism must fade. Opposition stems from its imagined relationship with postmodernism, but conflation misconstrues feminism's sociopolitical commitment to emancipatory change. For their part, archaeologists can utilize feminist perspectives to diversify the field, explore difference, and tackle archaeological issues with sociopolitical resonance.","creator":["Pamela L. Geller"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60c43b85-48ad-3625-a451-ad055d16e152"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20622641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","History - Historical methodology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Identity and Difference: Complicating Gender in Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622641","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9625,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[59290,59352]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hundreds of thousands of Poles were forcibly transported to the interior of the USSR after the Red Army invaded eastern Poland in 1939. These individuals, male and female, ended up in Soviet prisons, labour camps or special deportation settlements. This article examines how women interpreted and coped with this traumatic experience of exile, arguing that this entailed the articulation of a traditional, homogenous identity for Polish females. One component of this self-definition was differentiation from 'others', isolated on the basis of nationality. On the whole, the exiled Polish women did not feel solidarity with women of other nationalities, regardless of the fact that they too were victims of the Stalinist regime. Polish women continually linked the configuration of gender roles which they regarded as proper, civilised and even natural, to their own national group. In this way, they affirmed that they did not belong in this new world and maintained a connection to home, to what they understood to be Polish, European and civilised. \/\/\/ Des centaines de milliers de polonais furent transf\u00e9r\u00e9s de force en URSS apr\u00e8s que l'Arm\u00e9e Rouge eut envahi la Pologne orientale en 1939. Hommes ou femmes, ils d\u00e9couvrirent les prisons sovi\u00e9tiques, les camps de travail ou les colonies de d\u00e9portation. Cet article cherche \u00e0 saisir la mani\u00e8re dont les polonaises ont 'fait' avec cet exp\u00e9rience de l'exil, en sugg\u00e9rant que cela a impliqu\u00e9 le d\u00e9ploiement d'une formule homog\u00e8ne et traditionnelle de la femme polonaise. Un des outils de cette auto d\u00e9finition fut la diff\u00e9rentiation par rapport aux 'autres', sur la base de la nationalit\u00e9. Dans l'ensemble, les femmes polonaises ne semblent pas avoir ressenti de solidarit\u00e9 pour les femmes d'autres origines, bien qu'elles aient \u00e9t\u00e9 elles aussi victimes du r\u00e9gime stalinien. Les polonaises ont constamment adopt\u00e9 des r\u00f4les sexu\u00e9s qu'elles consid\u00e9raient comme dignes, civilis\u00e9s et naturels \u00e0 leur propre groupe national. De cette mani\u00e8re, elles r\u00e9ussirent \u00e0 affirmer qu'elles n'appartenaient pas \u00e0 cette communaut\u00e9 de hasard et maintirent un lien avec leur patrie, avec ce qu'elles consid\u00e9raient comme polonais, europ\u00e9en et civilis\u00e9. \/\/\/ Hunderte und Tausende von Polen wurden unfreiwillig in das Innere der UdSSR transportiert, als die Rote Armee 1939 in das \u00f6stliche Polen eindrang. Diese Individuen, M\u00e4nner und Frauen, verschwanden in sowjetischen Gef\u00e4ngnissen, Arbeitslagern und speziellen Deportiertensiedlungen. Der Aufsatz untersucht, wie Frauen dieses traumatische Ereignis interpretierten und bew\u00e4ltigten. Als wesentlich erwies sich der Ausdruck einer traditionellen, homogenen Identit\u00e4t f\u00fcr polnische Frauen. Eine Komponente dieses Selbstbildes war die Unterscheidung von 'Anderen' auf der Basis von Nationalit\u00e4t. Insgesamt f\u00fchlten sich die Polinnen nicht solidarisch mit Frauen anderer Nationalit\u00e4t, obgleich sie auch Optfer des Stalinismus waren. Polnische Frauen verkn\u00fcpften immer wieder die Konfiguration von Geschlechterrollen, die sie als richtig, zivilisiert und sogar nat\u00fcrlich ansahen, mit ihrer eigenen nationalen Gruppe. Auf diese Weise best\u00e4rkten sie ihren Glauben, nicht zu der neuen Welt um sie herum zu geh\u00f6ren, und sie behielten so eine Verbindung mit ihrer Heimat, die sie als polnisch, europ\u00e4isch und zivilisiert auffassten.","creator":["Katherine R. Jolluck"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20081805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09607773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43383809"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b9a82b4-92b9-3f8f-ad3a-512be35991e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20081805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conteurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary European History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'You Can't Even Call Them Women': Poles and 'Others' in Soviet Exile during the Second World War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20081805","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara M. Cooper"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9105e09-a777-3d38-bca0-302920553afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"882","pageStart":"851","pagination":"pp. 851-882","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Politics of Difference and Women's Associations in Niger: Of \"Prostitutes,\" the Public, and Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174885","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":15000,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149651,150110]],"Locations in B":[[81841,82300]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the experiences of German Jewish men who defied their deportations and instead tried to subsist in the underground in Nazi Germany during the years of the Holocaust. The author takes a gendered perspective analyzing some of the gender-specific challenges that German Jewish men faced, as well as coping strategies these men developed to overcome them. This article argues that German Jewish men, like women, used distinctly gendered survival strategies. These included the disguising of their Jewish identities through the forging of military papers and adapting military-male behaviors; the masquerading of their physical male constitution qua assuming a female appearance; and the endorsing of their male status in the men-deprived social landscape of wartime Germany, using German women as protective shields.","creator":["Sebastian Huebel"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/shofar.36.3.0110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"728469282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60de111c-ed51-33bb-bbf0-b51db39e32f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5703\/shofar.36.3.0110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disguise and Defiance: German Jewish Men and Their Underground Experiences in Nazi Germany, 1941\u201345","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/shofar.36.3.0110","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cheri L. Larsen Hoeckley"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44314449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39e8d382-e6e5-304e-8536-84efc79af75e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44314449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"448","pagination":"pp. 448-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44314449","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Manuel Fern\u00e1ndez"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7b48184-a47b-3983-930a-b35aaf0e17f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Sex between Males in Mexico and Cuba: Behavioral, Philosophical, and Educational Approaches","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813484","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Butler"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b84a121-b1df-3cc0-ae92-60dcac2c8621"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Embracing AIDS: History, Identity, and Post-AIDS Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866614","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7713,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124687]],"Locations in B":[[24792,24897]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frank A. Dom\u00ednguez"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40997724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03610160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076136"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08740e02-eb98-3007-8e56-fb065fde0df7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40997724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sixtcentj"}],"isPartOf":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"1292","pageStart":"1290","pagination":"pp. 1290-1292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sixteenth Century Journal","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40997724","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In human geography, member checking is now routine practice for upholding rigour in qualitative studies, yet it can result in conflicting opinions regarding research interpretations. Here we reflect upon divergent outcomes from member checking research exploring the nature of student experiences in a specific space of a Canadian university law school. While member checking did not yield acceptance of the initial interpretations by all informants, we argue that rather than invalidating our findings, the very disagreement exposed through member checks added to our analyses in important ways. As such, results refuted by informants should not necessarily be discarded in human geography research.","creator":["Sarah Turner","Stephanie E. Coen"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40346113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Member Checking in Human Geography: Interpreting Divergent Understandings of Performativity in a Student Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40346113","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory Feldman"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d0371b4-be42-3b9a-955d-09e5e730c809"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development in Theory: Essential Crises: A Performative Approach to Migrants, Minorities, and the European Nation-State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150897","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":14496,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431545,431620]],"Locations in B":[[22021,22097]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicholas A. Wolters"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a40cd08-c9c8-3146-b83c-fdf47f9ce031"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"FASHIONING THE DEVIANT MALE BODY IN TOM\u00c1S DE IRIARTE'S \"EL SE\u00d1ORITO MIMADO O LA MALA EDUCACI\u00d3N\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803421","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":6282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Graciela Trajtenberg"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45042e3d-b31c-3381-b67b-d482da4f8d79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Elastic Femininity: How Female Israeli Artists Appropriate a Gender-Endangered Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0167","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Lilienfeld"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fea147c0-4601-3bd7-a7f5-e1e818ddddef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Pace University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction: Virginia Woolf and Literary History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906540","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c584dcc-49af-3b13-93b6-d933aee9b258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":194,"pageEnd":"1336","pageStart":"1145","pagination":"pp. 1145-1336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462299","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":63777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Seyla Benhabib"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a5e24c0-22c1-3cad-aac4-48b88376fd13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sexual Difference and Collective Identities: The New Global Constellation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175645","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":12365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Monica A. Longmore"],"datePublished":"2000-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a204669d-e8a3-36a9-8af7-90568c6db0ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Deconstructing Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813532","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":2950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40649545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1a7c3ef-64a1-3855-95d2-c5fda5b7601c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40649545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SFS Symposium: Sexuality in Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40649545","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article tracks the production and circulation of post-intersectional discourse in the neoliberal university. Focusing specifically on the ways in which a public flagship university from 2008 through 2013 produces anxious subjects (graduate students, untenured professors, adjunct faculty, and staff), the article argues that neoliberal logics and everyday speech acts within corporate universities temporalize, spatialize, contain, and ultimately seek to render intersectionality to a time and space of the \"post.\" It is within this neoliberal context ofprecarity that the article identifies and scrutinizes Jasbir Puar's critiques of intersectionality and postAntersectional discourse as \"anxious speech acts.\" Finally, the article proposes a new and less anxious reading practice inspired by Jennifer Nash's \"Black feminist love politics\" that rethinks intersectionality's rehtionship to the subject and the neoliberal ethos of disposability.","creator":["Tiffany Lethabo King"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b47a8dbc-2bdc-3464-8aee-32a6fd220183"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Indentitarian and Post-Intersectional Anxiety in the Neoliberal Corporate University","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860817","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11237,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[70505,70551]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Prompted by the prominence of incest themes in the U.S. literary canon, the author raises and explores the idea of a \"democratic theory of incest.\" To that end, the paper uncovers, tracks, and documents the interest in incest throughout the Western canon of political thought. It then presents and addresses a \"standoff\" in theoretical circles today: whereas many nonliberal political theorists have continued and developed the canonical interest in the politics of incest, contemporary liberals have largely dropped out of that extended discussion. By way of a re-reading of Freud's Totem and Taboo along with an analysis of John Sayles's 1996 film, Lone Star, the paper outlines a possible way out of a poststructuralist versus liberal theory impasse over incest, thus proposing movement in the direction of a democratic understanding of incest concerns.","creator":["John Seery"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d740ef26-52bc-3351-b9af-fc344be7d4f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23484404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Stumbling toward a Democratic Theory of Incest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484404","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935189","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1782,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496553]],"Locations in B":[[2429,2497]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reviews recent work applying a notion of \"performance\" in the study and representation of lives. It tries to clarify some of the issues involved \u2014 including the meaning of \"performance\" \u2014 and \"performative\" \u2014 the range of possible approaches (e.g., in addition to drama\u2014other arts) and the relationship between \"subjects\", \"researcher\" and \"audience\". An immediate concern is the nature of the researcher \u2014 as having the necessary skills and abilities or knowledge involved in \"performance\" (in researching, writing, recording and representing), as engaged (to some extent) in \"artistic\" endeavour, and moving between a number of \"roles\" and social relations in \"performing\" with\/to others (the \"researched\" group, audience and society). An important issue for social science in crossing or bridging the social science-arts, in taking up \"performative approaches\", is \"What remains distinctive about the social science if it becomes involved with performance approaches?\" As a source for comparison (and inspiration), some brief reference will be made to the work of Kandinsky \u2014 who moved across disciplinary boundaries and artistic practices \u2014 as ethnographer, painter, teacher, designer, theorist and poet. Finally, perhaps, there is a deeper \"turn\" indicated by the \"turn to performance\" in the study of lives, a more \"complete\" portrait of the individual as an active, communicative and sensual being.","creator":["Brian Roberts"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607367784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08361bf3-9038-32d7-b36e-e3d080dcf352"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20762346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"1 (127)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performative Social Science: A Consideration of Skills, Purpose and Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20762346","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":20528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Uma das condi\u00e7\u00f5es para que na sociedade sejam alicer\u00e7ados valores de g\u00e9nero mis\u00f3ginos consiste na exist\u00eancia de uma estrutura de produ\u00e7\u00e3o cultural heterossexual compulsiva, dominante e universalista que estabele\u00e7a princ\u00edpios de representa\u00e7\u00e3o dos sexos claramente diferenciados, que tendam a favorecer mais o homem em detrimento da mulher. Partimos de um princ\u00edpio de que a produ\u00e7\u00e3o da cultura origina processos de reprodu\u00e7\u00e3o, o que significa, em termos pr\u00e1ticos, que a representa\u00e7\u00e3o de signos, c\u00f3digos, valores e comportamentos associados aos sexos \u00e9 potencialmente materializada nas sociedades, por homens e por mulheres. Essa tem sido uma batalha levada a cabo por muitas mulheres a partir da segunda vaga do movimento feminista, nomeadamente pela ala mais radical, que tem procurado reivindicar novos paradigmas no que diz respeito \u00e0s conven\u00e7\u00f5es culturais de g\u00e9nero. O que propomos neste estudo \u00e9 analisar algumas das campanhas levadas a cabo por Nikki Craft, uma feminista radical norte-americana que viria a organizar e\/ou a protagonizar nos anos 1970 e 1980 v\u00e1rios protestos em espa\u00e7os p\u00fablicos de algumas cidades dos Estados Unidos. Neste estudo procuramos clarificar as motiva\u00e7\u00f5es e as estrat\u00e9gias levadas a cabo por essa feminista, cujos activismos incidiram contra algumas das estruturas culturais (campo da arte, institui\u00e7\u00f5es da beleza e ind\u00fastria pornogr\u00e1fica) legitimadoras de representa\u00e7\u00f5es desencadeadoras de preju\u00edzos para a mulher. One of the conditions for misogynic genders to be settled in society consists on the existence of a compulsive dominant and universal heterosexual cultural production, which establishes clearly differentiated representation principles of both sexes. These representation principles tend to favour more the man, disregarding the woman. We consider that culture production gives origin to reproduction processes, which means that, in practical terms, the representation of signs, codes, values, and behaviors associated to the sexes are potentially materialized in societies by both men and women. This has been one battle that several women have embraced after the second wave of the feminist movement, namely by the most radical wing. In this battle it tries to claim for new paradigms regarding gender cultural conventions. In this study we propose to analyze some of the campaigns developed by Nikki Craft, a radical North-American feminist who, in the 70s and 80s, would organize and\/or lead several protests in public spaces in some cities around the United States. This analysis intends to clarify the motivations and strategies taken by this feminist, whose activisms aimed at several cultural structures (the art world, beauty institutions, and the pornographic industry) that legitimate representations harmful to women.","creator":["Rui Pedro Fonseca"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e008e037-2407-3855-ba28-370e2eb591f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"O activismo est\u00e9tico feminista de Nikki Craft","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328220","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This review examines research on white racial and ethnic identity, paying special attention to developments in whiteness studies during the past decade. Although sociologists have long focused on white ethnic identity, considerations of white racial identity are more recent. White racial identity is commonly portrayed as a default racial category, an invisible yet privileged identity formed by centuries of oppression of nonwhite groups. Whiteness has become synonymous with privilege in much scholarly writing, although recent empirical work strives to consider white racial identity as a complex, situated identity rather than a monolithic one. The study of white racial identity can greatly benefit from moving away from simply naming whiteness as an overlooked, privileged identity and by paying closer attention to empirical studies of racial and ethnic identity by those studying social movements, ethnic identity, and social psychology.","creator":["Monica McDermott","Frank L. Samson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29737719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a42b380-564c-34a9-8dab-34e9ac053ce2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29737719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"White Racial and Ethnic Identity in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29737719","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tamar Tembeck"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606242963"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7600d31b-4a2f-3a68-8fd8-a2c0d90362e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Mona Hatoum's Corporeal Xenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876231","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is a critical examination of the Roman Catholic womenpriest movement in the United States. For the article, Moon conducted telephone interviews in 2006 with seven ordained womenpriests and two ordained womendeacons in order to engage in listening to these women share their spiritual journeys. She first describes the movement through the womenpriests' conversations and narratives. Then, she offers an analysis of the movement as well as an interpretation of the issues, and looks at whether the womenpriest movement can truly dismantle kyriarchy as it purports to do. Here, Moon provides a critical analysis of two key issues within the womenpriest movement that she has identified as problematic: (1) the issue of the tradition of apostolic succession, and (2) the issue of essentialism of women in the womenpriest movement. Finally, she puts forth proposals for future reflection and action in the way of queer theology.","creator":["Hellena Moon"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee4a89a4-22bd-34c9-8311-7a327aff4237"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Womenpriests: Radical Change or More of the Same?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487930","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O conto\/roteiro \"A bela adormecida (Roteiro de uma vida in\u00fatil)\" \u00e9 representativo de uma preocupa\u00e7\u00e3o central na obra de Edla Van Steen: o cinematogr\u00e1fico e a sua centralidade na forma\u00e7\u00e3o da identidade sexual\/de g\u00eanero. As t\u00e9cnicas, as imagens e as situa\u00e7\u00f5es cinematogr\u00e1ficas proporcionam-lhe uma nova linguagem criativa capaz de transformar a narrativa tradicional escrita. Van Steen cria uma est\u00e9tica feminista que tenta revelar os mecanismos sociais que servem para constituir a identidade de g\u00eanero por vias m\u00faltiplas. Ao ligar a forma liter\u00e1ria e a exist\u00eancia social, procura um texto que escapa aos mesmos mecanismos repressivos que simultaneamente tenta desnudar. O texto serve como proposta de poss\u00edveis vias para reconhecer e escapar aos modelos tradicionais patriarcais.","creator":["Andrew M. Gordus"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25654830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96ab761d-1d4f-3436-8282-516fddba034b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25654830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Feminist Vision in the Cinematic Writing of Edla Van Steen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25654830","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7510,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440138,440300]],"Locations in B":[[25507,25666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While Judith Butler's concept of the heterosexual matrix is dominant in gender and sexuality studies, it is a curiously aspatial and atemporal concept. This paper seeks to re-embed it within space and time by situating its emergence within colonial and imperial histories. Based on this discussion, it ends with three lessons for contemporary work on gender and sexuality and a broader theorization of sex-gender-sexuality regimes beyond the heterosexual matrix.","creator":["Vrushali Patil"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26427670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95681011-8914-32b1-ad1e-c0bdf5feb3bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26427670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Heterosexual Matrix as Imperial Effect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26427670","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":15404,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473846,473952]],"Locations in B":[[1110,1215]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nalini Persram"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3197081d-63be-3bb8-b0d4-78d284cfd50f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politicizing the F\u00e9minine, Globalizing the Feminist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644810","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16757,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478206]],"Locations in B":[[81806,81888]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Abby Zanger"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224044cb-d215-3e1a-93c7-4dbe526c4ea5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"86","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Making Sweat: Sex and the Gender of National Reproduction in the Marriage of Louis XIII","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930283","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The waves metaphor to delineate feminist activism in the United States is troublesome, to say the least. Despite its problems, the waves model has tremendous staying power when it comes to understanding, analyzing, writing about, and teaching the history of U. S. feminism. In this collection of essays, historians revisit this model, highlighting the efficacy of feminist waves as we know them, but also challenging this model for eliding the experiences of women of color, men, young people, and others whose activist work falls under a capacious definition of feminism.","creator":["Kathleen A. Laughlin","Julie Gallagher","Dorothy Sue Cobble","Eileen Boris","Premilla Nadasen","Stephanie Gilmore","Leandra Zarnow"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0a330f1-4f19-3946-b2a5-fd717c2b70d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40835345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is It Time to Jump Ship? Historians Rethink the Waves Metaphor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835345","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":27963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Robinson"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"736f62a9-9173-3589-b4d1-af7f22cb6688"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"736","pageStart":"715","pagination":"pp. 715-736","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"It Takes One to Know One: Passing and Communities of Common Interest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343856","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10301,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499374,499498]],"Locations in B":[[25695,25817]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HINA NAZAR"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb66fea5-44d4-3ebb-830b-57aee0652f66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Axiology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"JUDGING CLARISSA'S HEART","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337580","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":11802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524252]],"Locations in B":[[64214,64293]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is positioned inside the theistic tradition of Hinduism and approaches body in the form of the Earth body and Woman body as masculine constructions in the sense that control is exercised over both these \"bodies.\" The paper queries these religiously connoted constructions, within Hinduism, and argues that they panoptically essentialise and mark women as child-producing mothers, and are blind to the maternal objectification that strips other aspects of corporeality off the female body. Women are religiously \"disciplined\" into having to biologically and socially fulfil a religiously authorized maternal role. There is thus a religiously sanctioned performance of discursive \"othering\" or alterity that comes to be normatized. I argue that this conveniently confiscates much of the nurturing and mentoring responsibility away from the man, onto the woman, in the same way as deifying the earth appears to work to remove ecological responsibility from us, with the claim that the ritually pure Earth Mother cannot be defiled. The paper attempts a queering of Hinduism and women by applying the deconstructive lens of queer theory in challenging both the feministic and eco-feministic assertions in Hinduism, and the congealed normatives around women and earth. The paper maintains that these normatives come to be naturalized through tradition. The genealogy of tradition creates and normalizes the \"realities\" through textual history, which is in turn sustained by the genealogy of ritual praxis. The paper begins by pointing out that the claim of eco-feminism and environmental consciousness, within Hinduism, is routinely confused and conceptually entangled with the notion of bio-divinity. In the final analysis, the paper queries the possibility of transforming feminisms in the context of the Hindu religious tradition by queering and re-signifying both woman and earth.","creator":["Maheshvari Naidu"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2346ed8-a93f-3ee4-842a-59fc856a3468"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering Women and Hinduism: Disembedding the Maternal Script from Woman and Earth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764283","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the biography of Rao Gopal Singh (r. 1872\u20131939), \u1e6ch\u0101kur of Kharwa (now in the Indian state of Rajasthan), through the lens of songs men sing in his honor. The subject of women's songs honoring Rajput heroes martyred centuries ago is a concern of recent scholarship. However, in focusing solely on women's songs, scholars have elided the question of whether a complementary men's tradition exists and, if so, how their songs differ in thematic content, language, and performance from that of women. Also dissimilar to the narratives of Rajput heroes that scholars have so far examined, Rao Gopal Singh's story is rooted in the colonial era; he was a nationalist whose struggle to liberate India from the British inspired his involvement in violent acts of rebellion.","creator":["Melia Belli"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18826865"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298239510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-266704"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e5a274c-2af9-3d6a-a587-71afd6325f59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianeth"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Ethnology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Nanzan University","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Religion","Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Performing Paradigms of Modern Rajput Masculinities: Men's Songs to Rao Gopal Singh of Kharwa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821482","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11671,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443525]],"Locations in B":[[32726,32848]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shannon Winnubst"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fadd2235-c009-3e8a-a190-4446a7db0869"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811153","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":1688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the relationship between gift-giving and violence in texts about the Oedipus complex. It argues that in Henry James's novel What Maisie Knew and Wes Anderson's film Rushmore, a secondary repression is enabled by narrative techniques that mobilize a collective act of forgetting through the enjoyment of plot.","creator":["DEANNA K. KREISEL"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18fc3dbf-352b-3cc1-a619-2409c99c6811"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Maxie Knew: The Gift and Oedipus in \"What Maisie Knew\" and \"Rushmore\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029429","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8329,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[47768,47827]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hsiao-Hung Chang"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8b4c565-b477-3a42-a83a-ab64a253ebae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender Crossing in Maxine Hong Kingston's Tripmaster Monkey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468078","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hugh Gusterson"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a98d1918-934f-3893-82f8-1d5e33c494ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24510862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Militarism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510862","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CLAUDIA LIEBRAND"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23982057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Jakob von Guntens Maskeraden Spielkonfigurationen in Robert Walsers Tagebuchroman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982057","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Maslan"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be0c69e4-31b1-3da8-a280-16848005e418"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"GOTTA SERVE SOMEBODY\": SERVICE; AUTONOMY; SOCIETY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659700","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":13487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e8e021-a484-3fda-b59d-71760aab8135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Biological sciences - Biology","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975350","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5306,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524799,524882]],"Locations in B":[[11896,11979]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Liberal versions of sexuality, which mark South Africa's new democracy, have had a number of highly contradictory consequences for women and men, as old notions of masculinity and male privilege have been destabilized. The transition to democracy has precipitated a crisis of masculinity. Orthodox notions of masculinity are being challenged and new versions of masculinity are emerging in their place. Some men are seeking to be part of a new social order while others are defensively clinging to more familiar routines. Drawing on in-depth interviews with young African working class men, this paper explores new masculinities in contemporary South Africa. It examines how men negotiate their manhood in a period of social turbulence and transition. Masculinity, male sexuality, and the expectations which men have of themselves, each other and women are contested and in crisis. \/\/\/ Les versions lib\u00e9rales de la sexualit\u00e9 qui marquent la d\u00e9mocratie nouvellement install\u00e9e en Afrique du Sud, ont eu des cons\u00e9quences fortement contradictoires chez les femmes et chez les hommes, alors que les notions anciennes de virilit\u00e9 et de privil\u00e8ge masculin \u00e9taient bouscul\u00e9es. La transition vers la d\u00e9mocratie a pr\u00e9cipit\u00e9 une \" crise de virilit\u00e9 \". Les notions orthodoxes de virilit\u00e9 sont contest\u00e9es et remplac\u00e9es par de nouvelles. Certains hommes cherchent \u00e0 s'int\u00e9grer \u00e0 un nouvel ordre social, tandis que d'autres se cramponnent d\u00e9fensivement \u00e0 des routines plus famili\u00e8res. En exploitant des entretiens en profondeur men\u00e9s avec des jeunes africains issus de la classe ouvri\u00e8re, cet article explore les nouvelles versions de la virilit\u00e9 dans l'Afrique du Sud contemporaine. Il examine comment les hommes n\u00e9gocient leur masculinit\u00e9 dans une p\u00e9riode d'agitation et de transition sociales. La virilit\u00e9, la sexualit\u00e9 masculine, et les attentes qu'ont les hommes d'eux-m\u00eames, des autres hommes et des femmes, sont contest\u00e9es et en crise. \/\/\/ Las versiones liberales de la sexualidad, que marcan la nueva democracia de Sud\u00e1frica, presentan una serie de consecuencias muy contradictorias para mujeres y hombres debido a la desestabilizaci\u00f3n de las antiguas nociones de masculinidad y privilegios masculinos. La transici\u00f3n hacia la democracia a precipitado una 'crisis de masculinidad'. Las nociones ortodoxas de masculinidad se est\u00e1n poniendo a prueba y en su lugar est\u00e1n apareciendo nuevas versiones de masculinidad. Algunos hombres buscan formar parte de un nuevo orden social mientras que otros se aferran defensivamente a h\u00e1bitos m\u00e1s familiares. Bas\u00e1ndonos en entrevistas exhaustivas con hombres j\u00f3venes africanos de clase trabajadora, en este documento se analiza la masculinidad en la Sud\u00e1frica contempor\u00e1nea. Se examina c\u00f3mo los hombres negocian su virilidad en un periodo de transici\u00f3n y turbulencia social. Se est\u00e1n debatiendo la masculinidad, la sexualidad masculina y las expectativas que los hombres tienen de ellos mismos, entre ellos y de las mujeres en un periodo de crisis.","creator":["Liz Walker"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cc03b0b-1fe4-384d-9395-98645749af01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Men Behaving Differently: South African Men since 1994","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005493","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is an exploration of how a group of men in the United States create homosocial (as opposed to homosexual) desire through language. In a society in which dominant discourses of masculinity provide competing scripts of male solidarity and heterosexuality, the achievement of closeness among men is not straightforward but must be negotiated through \"indirect\" means. It is shown how men actively negotiate dominant cultural discourses in their everyday interactions. In addition, a broadened view of indirectness, based on social function as much as denotation, is argued for.","creator":["Scott Fabius Kiesling"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"418e0fff-8fb4-31e3-bbc0-73d7b7b364a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"726","pageStart":"695","pagination":"pp. 695-726","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Homosocial Desire in Men's Talk: Balancing and Re-Creating Cultural Discourses of Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169463","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":16750,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[101459,101513]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how women seek power through both resisting and accommodating mainstream norms for female hair and delineates the strengths and limitations of these strategies. The data help to illuminate the complex role the body plays in sustaining and challenging women's subordinate position, how accommodation and resistance lie buried in everyday activities, the limits of resistance based on the body, and why accommodation and resistance are best viewed as coexisting variables rather than as polar opposites. Finally, these data suggest the importance of defining resistance as actions that reject subordination by challenging the ideologies that support subordination.","creator":["Rose Weitz"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a942794-31f9-323e-8724-6eb1a0b46c77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3081969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"667","pagination":"pp. 667-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women and Their Hair: Seeking Power through Resistance and Accommodation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081969","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rayya S. El Zein"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56722533"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0af36a85-0f0b-39e7-8e83-931d0cf72247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43297434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297434","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":1205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. G. Zerilli"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcf31aff-029c-3e28-a47c-417a57cf6b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Turn to Affect and the Problem of Judgment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542761","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the figurative art of Late Bronze Age Knossos one recognizes a singular form to the human body which cuts across all other distinctions. Contrary to popular and academic interpretations, sexed differences are not marked in a clearly binary fashion. Drawing on this observation, the current paper analyses the relationship between two sets of figurines from the Bronze Age Palace site of Knossos: the faience figurines from the 'Temple Repositories' and the ivory bull-leaper figurines from the 'Domestic Quarter'. The interpretation of these figurines elucidates: a) how the appearance of sexual characteristics is context specific and not a general feature of the imagery; and b) the differing aesthetic responses motivated by and surrounding these two sets of artefacts and hence the social contexts in which representations of sexed differences were mobilized.","creator":["Benjamin Alberti"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535549"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a55f5193-e924-3841-b1a0-a7282e3fb0dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Faience Goddesses and Ivory Bull-Leapers: The Aesthetics of Sexual Difference at Late Bronze Age Knossos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827898","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"While Azuah's novel \"Sky-High Flames\" (2005) is firmly grounded in the Igbo sociological context, comprising ancestor worship, the cult of a female goddess, polygamy, and the levirate, the novel taps into the practice of \"female husbandry\" documented by cultural anthropologists (e.g., Sylvia Leith-Ross and Ifi Amadiume, whose theories I reassess), previous West African literary attempts at representing lesbian seduction, as well relational nexuses within the boarding school system. Nigerian feminisms, I argue, need to make room for the material factors of \"doing lesbian.\" While pointing to this debut novel's reluctance to allow same-sex desire to develop, I also comment on womanly relationality, such as Azuah's displaced (auto)biographical vestment in her aunt's story, as well as on moments of intimacy between women, which augur the new Nigerian novel's capacity to comment on the economy of pleasures and on the way of constituting oneself as the moral subject of one's sexual conduct.","creator":["Chantal Zabus"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of Female Husbands and Boarding School Girls: Gender Bending in Unoma Azuah's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109581","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["TERRY HELLER"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a72f8c0-2350-385b-8c72-2a5b09b3c65c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eunice and the Jade Gods: Jewett's Religious Rhetoric in A Country Doctor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679550","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11250,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[311674,311862]],"Locations in B":[[55936,56133]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In recent years, a growing group of scholars has begun to draw upon queer theory as they research aspects of LGBTQ folk performances and texts from around the globe. In the process, folklore scholars have become increasingly intrigued by bodies that appear to transgress dimorphism, and complicate binary oppositions like male\/female. Performances of gender identity and sexuality by hijras in South Asia have awakened audiences' imaginings since the Kama Sutra period (Gupta 2005:180). In folktale, dance, song, religious epic, and popular culture, the figure of the hijra often evokes a liminal play of \"otherness.\" Commonly known as the \"third gender\"--a conceptual space outside of typical Western constructs--hijra individuals engage with varied notions of transsexual, transgender, intersex, cross-dresser, eunuch, or sexual fluidity. This article focuses on a feminist appropriation of the hijra within Yoni Ki Baat, a South Asian American version of The Vagina Monologues. The authors explore how the figure of the hijra--drawn from South Asian folk narratives, religious discourse, and popular culture--might be used strategically by social activists in political performance narratives to (1) encourage a complicated sense of sexually ambiguous or queer practices and identities, and (2) acknowledge individuals facing social oppression due to their marginalized identities. As such, their approach conceptualizes performance as both a relational space and as a space in which to wonder about questions of relationality (Madison and Hamera 2006; Schechner 1990).","creator":["Ayeshah \u00c9mon","Christine Garlough"],"datePublished":"2015-10-23","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerfolk.128.510.0412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06a4d371-6d73-32ae-b2e5-0e16b4e47c25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jamerfolk.128.510.0412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"510","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"3437","pageStart":"412","pagination":"pp. 412-3437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Folklore","Anthropology","American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Refiguring the South Asian American Tradition Bearer: Performing the \"Third Gender\" in Yoni Ki Baat<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerfolk.128.510.0412","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":14175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["THOMAS JOHANSSON"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"748c2bb2-7e26-3168-bc8e-25df8605c5a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20850203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Kropp och kultur: En introduktion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850203","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Colin Counsell"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02642875"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606282"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44d72d66-b2c2-338c-9f38-4729c4709788"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancresejsocidan"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Kinesics of Infinity: Laban, Geometry and the Metaphysics of Dancing Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004107","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The inclusion of women in the U.S. military is generally understood as radically transforming traditional gender relations. Drawing from 38 interviews with women and men in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, I ask: how do women negotiate gender identities within the \"masculine\" military institution, and what types of transformations in their gender ideology and practices does this negotiation entail? I find that ROTC women's transformative agency is limited by the cultural imperative of performing gender. That is, because their very identities as women are called into question in the military sphere, ROTC women must privilege traditionally feminine aspects of themselves in order to maintain a coherent sense of self. Through this process, these women ultimately reproduce traditional femininity and male privilege.","creator":["Jennifer M. Silva"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20430897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0e395a2-6776-3506-8b4e-556ba7020b2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20430897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"960","pageStart":"937","pagination":"pp. 937-960","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"A New Generation of Women? How Female ROTC Cadets Negotiate the Tension between Masculine Military Culture and Traditional Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20430897","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":9979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441040,441148]],"Locations in B":[[12277,12385]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is primarily concerned with emphasizing the importance of gender in relation to understanding and responding to sexuality and sexual abuse\/exploitation issues within residential children's homes. Initially, past research and inquiry reports are analysed and evaluated, not only in relation to their overall conclusions and recommendations, but also with regard to their consideration, misrepresentation or omission of gender issues. A theoretical framework is then drawn up which takes into account historical debates and contestations around notions of gender. This illustrates how gender is frequently conflated or merged with understandings about sex and sexuality. This theoretical conceptualization is then extended to consider the effects of the social construction of childhood and childhood sexuality, and how sex, gender and sexuality may commonly be represented and understood within organizational, public-sphere contexts. Important findings from a recent in-depth qualitative research project focused on sexuality issues in children's homes are then presented thematically and through narrative excerpts. These findings are also located within and made comprehensible in relation to the theoretical framework previously constructed. The conclusion examines the implications of the findings presented and their theorization, and briefly evaluates the usefulness of recent policy initiatives intended to improve the care and development of 'looked after' children.","creator":["Lorraine Green"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45043548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23720658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theorizing Sexuality, Sexual Abuse and Residential Children's Homes: Adding Gender to the Equation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23720658","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13395,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74434,74557]],"Locations in B":[[27683,27806]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The concept of desecuritisation - the move of an issue out of the sphere of security - has been the subject of heated international political theory debate and adopted in case studies across a range of sectors and settings. What unites the political theory and the applied literature is a concern with the normative-political potential of desecuritisation. This article documents the political status and content of desecuritisation through four readings: one which shows how desecuritisation is a Derridarian supplement to the political concept of securitisation; one which traces the understanding of the public sphere's ability to rework the friend-enemy distinction; one which emphasises the role of choice, responsibility, and decisions; and one which uncovers the significance of the historical context of Cold War d\u00e9tente. The last part of the article provides a reading of the varied use of desecuritisation in applied analysis and shows how these can be seen as falling into four forms of desecuritisation. Each of the latter identifies a distinct ontological position as well as a set of more specific political and normative questions.","creator":["LENE HANSEN"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c57421c-031a-3232-a115-5d51edbd52dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41681477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconstructing desecuritisation: the normative-political in the Copenhagen School and directions for how to apply it","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681477","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article has a double purpose. On the one hand, it aims to show how congruities of musical style, repertoire and performance practice in different locales can help prove the existence of two little-known trade and diaspora routes: the one as travelled by Jewish-Babylonian or Baghdad-Jewish merchants, their relatives and employees throughout Asia between c. 1780 and c. 1950 and the second, a further movement from Asian to Western countries between 1950 and the present. Through analysis of seven versions of a song of praise melody sung along segments of both routes, it also explores the musical consequences within this \"fictive super-family\" of deeply held ideas of accommodation and change as determinants of musical-cultural identity.","creator":["Margaret Kartomi"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56722533"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"325c6b89-253c-3689-b950-2fae85bc4d29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20184467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tracing Jewish-Babylonian Trade Routes and Identity through Music, with Reference to Seven Versions of a Song of Praise Melody","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184467","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"As a figure of appropriation, recovery, and reinterpretation, Mary Magdalene illuminates the need to examine how rhetorical practices inscribe and misrepresent historical women in public memory. Analyzing sites of public memory, such as mass media, helps feminist scholars account for not only women who have been forgotten, but also for the ways that women have been misremembered. Using Dan Brown's The Da Vinci Code and Ron Howard's film adaptation of the novel as sites of public memory, the article demonstrates how historical women like Magdalene are constructed and sustained as \"facts\" that support ideological paradigms and subvert alternative interpretations, or what Michel Foucault describes as \"counter-memory.\" Despite Brown's intention to remember Magdalene in a new way, his contribution to public memory re-inscribes a gendered view that truncates her agency as a woman and leader in early Christianity.","creator":["Tammie M. Kennedy"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8de41357-9979-3d1d-9d53-0d9d9470245d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23275107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mary Magdalene and the Politics of Public Memory: Interrogating \"The Da Vinci Code\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23275107","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9581,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[59992,60148]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lorie Sauble\u2010Otto"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/500604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19dac626-6167-3bd3-8b9c-21fbee683aac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/500604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"1169","pageStart":"1168","pagination":"pp. 1168-1169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/500604","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margareta Lindholm"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20853633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2eecc6b6-62f9-3a77-a2ae-dfb035b45885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20853633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"4","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20853633","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":1310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The postings made to Internet forums by relatives and friends of people with breast and prostate cancer are described. Women post very frequently on the prostate cancer forum and assume a communication style that is similar to women elsewhere, prioritizing emotional forms of communication over the informational forms preferred by men and showing only mild signs of accommodation to a male style. Men on the breast cancer forum are in a minority and are often responding to the current or anticipated loss of a partner. Their communication behaviour is radically different from that required by dominant conceptions of masculinity. They prioritize emotional communication and the emotional welfare of family members. They experience this new form of communication as unsettling to their conceptions of traditional masculinity. Internet cancer support groups thus favour a form and content of communication generally associated with women's culture.","creator":["Clive Seale"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54487365-332d-3640-acdf-9e626d913d78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26649704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Gender accommodation in online cancer support groups","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26649704","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julie Bettie"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37d9b02b-2f29-3073-9a36-a26a6326ee0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Women without Class: Chicas, Cholas, Trash, and the Presence\/Absence of Class Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175379","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":15739,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[95678,95722]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["I. Bennett Capers"],"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1122847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c8f75a9-f80e-36ca-9a30-f2fc2a14bd67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1122847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"1187","pageStart":"1158","pagination":"pp. 1158-1187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Sex(ual Orientation) and Title VII","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1122847","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":15825,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[369123,369535]],"Locations in B":[[17952,18375]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rolland Murray"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a2b6efc-2c4a-3f9e-9284-9ecee42e1577"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Diaspora by Bus: Reginald McKnight, Postmodernism, and Transatlantic Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489106","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":11756,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524174,524284]],"Locations in B":[[70510,70624]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I begin by identifying characterizations of Muslim identities as antithetical to a wide range of western values, including democracy, secularization, gender equality and sexual diversity. I argue that issues of gender and sexuality represent a problematic around modernity and its values but one that is more complex than the putative clash of civilizations discourse. I suggest that gay Muslims represent an interactional location that productively illuminates this problematic, because their existence challenges the positioning of western and eastern cultures as mutually exclusive and oppositional. I then theorize this intersectionalrty using queer theory, arguing that there is an affinity between the queer emphasis on deferred ontology and intersectional emphasis on standpoint suggesting an understanding of intersectionalrty as productively queen and queer as necessarily intersectional. In conclusion I sketch out the implications of such theorizing for research on gay Muslim identities.","creator":["Momin Rahman"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a6ef4f8-fddb-38b7-837b-5cf3e703f3cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"961","pageStart":"944","pagination":"pp. 944-961","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer as Intersectionality: Theorizing Gay Muslim Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857483","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The discussion of women and the Holocaust is situated in the context of two early projects: an experimental course sponsored by San Francisco Hillel and Lehrhaus Judaica in 1984 and a dialogue on the topic initiated by feminist artist Judy Chicago in 1988. Two questions are examined: Who are the women in the Holocaust? and who are the researchers\/ scholars framing inquiry into the topic? My reading of these projects suggests that Holocaust scholars should pay careful attention to how we set the boundaries of inquiry by defining certain historical and cutural subjects as epicentral while regarding others as peripheral, and cautions against construing gender in universalizing and \"natural\" terms.","creator":["R. Ruth Linden"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23451100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23451100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contjewry"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Jewry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TROUBLING CATERGORIES I CAN'T THINK WITHOUT: REFLECTIONS ON WOMEN IN THE HOLOCAUST","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23451100","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Helliwell"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6843490-cf17-3725-a570-74b46dd08eee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"816","pageStart":"789","pagination":"pp. 789-816","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"It's Only a Penis\": Rape, Feminism, and Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175417","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13692,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102991,103167]],"Locations in B":[[21655,21832]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay presents an ethnographic perspective on the performance of cameramen in the soft-core reality video industry. Much like the self-narratives among television producers, soft-core videographers frame their actions through masculinist discourses, which are then destabilized through the production process and labor conditions in the television economy.","creator":["Vicki Mayer"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30137704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfe46f85-bee2-3d4f-bf14-51cabc6e527b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30137704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Guys Gone Wild\"? Soft-Core Video Professionalism and New Realities in Television Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30137704","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lourdes Estrada-L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44733730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db6ce692-5970-3358-883c-620aef76169e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44733730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Marginalizaci\u00f3n secundaria en \"Quiero vivir mi vida\" (1931) de Carmen de Burgos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44733730","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Iwona Janicka"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/contagion.22.1.0043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10757201"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63762999"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006213541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba41dbb5-a5a9-33bc-8586-7e8f687f1385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/contagion.22.1.0043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contagion"}],"isPartOf":"Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Queering Girard\u2014De-Freuding Butler: A Theoretical Encounter between Judith Butler\u2019s Gender Performativity and Ren\u00e9 Girard\u2019s Mimetic Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/contagion.22.1.0043","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8793,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[221961,222050],[231789,231992]],"Locations in B":[[12892,13082],[23663,23755],[27288,27487]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MALINI JOHAR SCHUELLER"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad7c640e-14ea-36bf-9247-d2f69468c4ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Whiteness, Performing Blackness: Dorr's Cultural Capital and the Critique of Slavery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124294","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CATH SHARROCK"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Hermaphroditism; or, 'the Erection of a New Doctrine': theories of female sexuality in eighteenth-century England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263420","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4215,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485515]],"Locations in B":[[23861,23955]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Freedom, conceived ontologically, is power's condition of possibility. Yet, considering that the subject's interests and identity are constantly shaped, one still has to explain how -- theoretically speaking -- individuals can resist control. This is precisely the issue I address in the following pages. Following a brief overview of Foucault's contribution to our understanding of power, I turn to discuss the role of visibility vis-\u00e0-vis control, and show how the development of disciplinary techniques reversed the visibility of power. While Foucault illustrates that during different historical periods, distinct modes of visibility are produced by power in order to control society, I argue that the very same power that produces visibility is concomitantly dependent upon it. In addition, I maintain that visibility is a necessary component of resistance. But Foucault -- perhaps due to his premature death -- never adequately explains how individuals can resist the mechanisms of control in a world in which power is ubiquitous. To help clarify this enigma, I turn to Hannah Arendt's insights into power, freedom, plurality, and natality. These concepts, I claim, can serve as a corrective to Foucault because they make room for resistance without assuming that humans can exit power's web.","creator":["Neve Gordon"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97bf66ae-5857-384a-a2ad-84c26cbe9916"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20010264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Visibility and Power: An Arendtian Corrective of Foucault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010264","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10497,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[306783,306861]],"Locations in B":[[13030,13108]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on and reexamining theories on gender and literacy, derived from research performed between 1974 and 2002, this qualitative study explored the gender assumptions and expectations of Language Arts teachers in a graduate level adolescent literature course at a university in the Midwestern United States. The theoretical framework was structured around a social constructionist lens, including reader response and gender theories. The methodology employed ethnographic methods, as well as critical discourse analysis. This study explored the ways participants identified with or resisted gender expectations in their book discussion groups. It looked at the kind of discourses that were maintained and disrupted in the groups and within their personal blogs and written responses. The participants showed diversity within gender, which calls into question the use of gender as a major consideration for making reader's advisory, collection development, programming, or pedagogical decisions. It indicates that preservice librarians should be offered a variety of opportunities to examine and redefine our current strategies for motivating readers and recommending library materials. As library educators it is essential that we offer librarians lenses beyond gender in which to view their clients.","creator":["Beth M. Brendler"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43686985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07485786"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617146"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e02c8e33-b018-3072-9906-b29fc79a77f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43686985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jedulibinfosci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Education for Library and Information Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Diversity in Literary Response: Revisiting Gender Expectations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43686985","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Constance Furey"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cdb7eef-631c-3b15-9093-9c2a1d1cd3f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Selfe Undone: Individualism and Relationality in John Donne and Aemilia Lanyer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125267","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":8533,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[38382,38436]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927160","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":1195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines pictures taken by the British photographer Roger Mayne of Southam Street, London, in the 1950s and 1960s. It explores these photographs as a way of thinking about the representation of urban, working-class life in Britain after the Second World War. The article uses this focused perspective as a line of sight on a broader landscape: the relationship among class, identity, and social change in the English city after the Second World War. Mayne's photographs of Southam Street afford an examination of the representation of economic and social change in the postwar city and, not least, the intersections among class, race, generation, and gender that reshaped that city.","creator":["Stephen Brooke"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24701871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23d0eb83-c927-3443-8227-5f18f829ceb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24701871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"496","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revisiting Southam Street: Class, Generation, Gender, and Race in the Photography of Roger Mayne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24701871","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":16469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["John O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"828dbd61-7c80-3cf2-aba8-321eb3a874b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Theater and Theatricality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467903","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":2093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"World-systems theory anchors creative ways to think about historical capitalism and processes of internationalization and provides a framework for interpreting nation-state formation and intrastate class and gender relations. Less attention, however, has been devoted by world-systems theorists to sustained engagements with contemporary theory and the advancements it promises for theory-building. To encourage this dialogue, I identify as well as deepen areas of engagement between world-systems analysts and those employing contemporary feminist and various post- theories. The primary question animating my discussion is: How do contributions from feminism, poststructuralism, and postcolonial theory offer a refinement of our understanding of contemporary global capitalism?","creator":["Shelley Feldman"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c857a225-9b32-37c9-95cf-424c794b7f32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersecting and Contesting Positions: Postcolonialism, Feminism, and World-Systems Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241521","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":11672,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500711,500774]],"Locations in B":[[71335,71398]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra Hawhee"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02773945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ecab0f-e52c-3b1e-97d6-927280701247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40232514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Society Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Rhetoric Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232514","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":1825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle Meagher"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.40.1.101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15fb713f-e48e-3849-a5dc-460b587e8514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.40.1.101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Against the Invisibility of Old Age: Cindy Sherman, Suzy Lake, and Martha Wilson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.40.1.101","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10848,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[498063,498168]],"Locations in B":[[33020,33126]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas Foster"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"944ff463-b530-3086-8a45-a5a66eef9c19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Rhetoric of Cyberspace: Ideology or Utopia?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208823","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nattie Golubov"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e960d01c-9931-3b96-86b8-b81401a29bd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La cr\u00edtica literaria feminista contempor\u00e1nea: entre el esencialismo y la diferencia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624217","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jes\u00fas P\u00e9rez-Magall\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12a4af95-192d-39b7-8f07-1661ede56c50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Leticia Valle o la indeterminaci\u00f3n gen\u00e9rica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742209","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7672,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73224,73346]],"Locations in B":[[14571,14693]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"En este art\u00edculo, se explora en las Sonatas de Valle-Incl\u00e1n el bricolage supuestamente ir\u00f3nico de textos decimon\u00f3nicos g\u00f3ticos, simbolistas, decadentes, noirs y rom\u00e1nticos como alegor\u00eda desconstructiva fracasada de la colonizaci\u00f3n europea de la cultura espa\u00f1ola ejemplificada en una \"espa\u00f1olidad\" feminizada y reificada. Este carnaval de transgresiones intertextuales pretende subvertir las ideolog\u00edas burguesas pol\u00edticas y sociales que afirman un \"yo\" civilizado, masculino y europeo frente a un \"otro\" sexual, \u00e9tnico y geogr\u00e1fico. Una Espa\u00f1a feminizada como Carmen ex\u00f3tica y salvaje por el viajero dandy franc\u00e9s y el gusto baudelaireano a la prostituta caribe\u00f1a son algunos de los fetiches supuestamente parodiados aqu\u00ed. Sin embargo, la parodia valleinclanesca termina por desconstruirse en lo que se refiere a los nexos formados entre la representaci\u00f3n del deseo transgresivo, el cuerpo femenino y el paisaje ex\u00f3tico\/extra\u00f1o. En vez de reconfigurar y desafiar radicalmente las oposiciones epistemol\u00f3gicas a trav\u00e9s de las cuales la figura donjuanesca, dandy sat\u00e1nico, realiza sus fetiches imperialistas, narcisistas y masculinistas, \u00e9stos quedan re-inscritos textualmente en las Sonatas. Esta desconstrucci\u00f3n ambivalente y fracasada refleja una ansiedad cultural que remite tanto al cuerpo nacional y social en crisis finisecular, como a la potencia del cuerpo sexual masculino.","creator":["LEORA LEV"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43b627f1-3b4b-3046-9eeb-099ea7b8f5e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Tis Pity She's a Corpse: Modernism, Remembering, and Dismemberment in Valle-Incl\u00e1n's Sonatas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763642","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7401,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[436624,436962]],"Locations in B":[[27808,28150]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven F. Kruger"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bb2a5f2-3bb9-36e9-b047-d215134950f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Medieval Christian (Dis)identifications: Muslims and Jews in Guibert of Nogent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057413","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper analyzes gendered social identity in Japan and the United States, countries with comparable postindustrial economic systems but distinct cultural traditions. Using national surveys (1995), we find gender differences in value orientations to be neither systematic nor consistent. They often disappeared after controlling for demographic and human-capital variables, though not so often for Japan. Other variables proved more important predictors of values than gender, although in different ways in Japan and the United States. We conclude by reassessing the use of the term gender in social research and the cultural meaning of gender relations by addressing the feminist concerns with issues of gender location.","creator":["Tania Levey","Catherine B. Silver"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4540968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4540968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"691","pageStart":"659","pagination":"pp. 659-691","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender and Value Orientations: What's the Difference!? The Case of Japan and the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4540968","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Mackinlay"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.23.2.0126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5714140f-60c5-39e5-b8d3-bf4ce1b23863"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.23.2.0126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\u201cWe\u2019re Not Afraid of the \u2018F Word\u201d: Storying Our Voices and Experiences of Women and Gender Studies in Australian Universities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.23.2.0126","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[44219,44300]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MATHAYO NDOMONDO"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00654019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"616280295"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f22acf7c-094a-30b7-8c3e-25087da96b28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24877252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrimusi"}],"isPartOf":"African Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"International Library of African Music","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A WOMAN CAN SING AND DANCE BUT CANNOT DANCE WITH HIGH LEAPS: MUSICAL PERFORMANCE OF THE HAYA OF BUKOBA, TANZANIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877252","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10888,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443403,443693]],"Locations in B":[[27710,28001]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article sets out to examine the policing of the so-called 'borders' of 'modernism' and 'post-modernism', arguing that such polarising metaphors are distinctions that cannot be made without self-contradictions that would make even a post-modernist blush. Instead, we must deconstruct the notion of boundary or border, drawing on Derridean formulations of difference in the fields of literature, feminism and post-coloniality: what new metaphors of difference are possible, and what do they imply for the 'essentialisms' of educational ideals, or for notions of sexual, ethnic, or cultural identity? The ambition of the article is to explore a way of deconstructing the unspeakable 'slash' between modernism\/post-modernism that can model how similar arguments may be deployed against a wide range of educational topics where questions of identity and difference are brought to the fore, such as equal opportunities, special needs, antiracism, as well as more mundane categories of pupil or teacher-or researcher-identity. It fails, of course, but perhaps interestingly enough to encourage further explorations in such directions.","creator":["Ian Stronach"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64609232-9623-3709-9dcb-e7a28c5be32f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1501426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fashioning Post-Modernism, Finishing Modernism: Tales from the Fitting Room","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501426","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9223,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[60853,60915]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JUDITH BAXTER"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe1affa2-8b74-3288-848a-b51a1433fa50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"859","pageStart":"853","pagination":"pp. 853-859","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Is PDA really an alternative? A reply to West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888542","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martha Minow"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81cc146e-d9f3-3e64-9dfe-ce8fe1401ec3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"1105","pageStart":"1096","pagination":"pp. 1096-1105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Incomplete Correspondence: An Unsent Letter to Mary Joe Frug","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341523","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":5222,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489460,489534]],"Locations in B":[[16951,17023]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sarah Cole"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism, Male Intimacy, and the Great War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031977","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":14313,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gerald Doherty"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"918e6331-3481-3007-b79d-efb3a4e8785e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44235627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Question of Gravity: The Erotics of Identification in \"Women in Love\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235627","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8808,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[156767,156967]],"Locations in B":[[47256,47490]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lisa Yaszek"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a52dee2-4708-3f25-a75d-8480f7684c5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Fossils and Androids: (Re)Producing Sexual Identity in \"Jurassic Park\" and \"Blade Runner\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315426","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4823,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[392141,392274]],"Locations in B":[[482,615]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Political theorists can at times forget that the origins of political theory lie in the struggles of concrete political life. This paper focuses on one arena of political contestation: the collision between dissenters and their communities' legal systems. It focuses on The Peoples Ancient and Just Liberties Asserted (1670), a purported transcript of the trial of William Penn and William Mead for disturbance of the peace. The trial plays an important role in the emergent principle of jury independence and a key role in Penn's career as a political actor during the 1670s, culminating in his American colonizing enterprise. After a few remarks about the trial itself, the paper proceeds in two parts, each emphasizing an aspect of the text's performative nature. First, akin to canonical works of the Anglo-American tradition, Peoples presents embedded principles: coherent and substantive visions of legitimate government, justified by reference to authoritative texts, arguments, and practices. But the defendants in Peoples also enact and embody political dissent in ways other than overt and explicit argumentation: Penn and Mead themselves appear as characters performing a politics of dissent. As a work of both political theory and political theater, Peoples offers insights into Deleuze's notion of \"dramatization,\" and can lead us to a broader appreciation of the many different genres that constitute political theory.","creator":["Andrew R. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"962f517a-bc68-3844-a0a1-017debb6bc8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"808","pageStart":"775","pagination":"pp. 775-808","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Trial Transcript as Political Theory: Principles and Performance in the Penn-Mead Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571372","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":14994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"With the advent of the 2nd wave of the women's movement, numerous voices within social work academia called for the inclusion of gendered content in the curriculum. The subsequent addition of content on women was a pivotal achievement for the social work profession. However, gender is an increasingly slippery concept. A current call for re-gendering the social work curriculum includes continued emphasis on the importance of the concept of gender while acknowledging that men have a gender, too. The call for a more comprehensive understanding of gender includes new conceptualizations of women; more complex understandings of feminism(s); content on men, masculinities, and transgender issues; and methods for teaching a critical gender consciousness. Specific class exercises and film recommendations are included.","creator":["Beverly A. McPhail"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10437797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41157004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10df0c77-d7df-3682-b90f-7b53a68802dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23044279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocworked"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social Work Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RE-GENDERING THE SOCIAL WORK CURRICULUM: NEW REALITIES AND COMPLEXITIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044279","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5274dba-adee-3b1e-a94b-ce2691ee572f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978317","volumeNumber":"220","wordCount":5195,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[488108,488180]],"Locations in B":[[11119,11191]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Issues of sexuality remain taboo in many African communities, with girlhood sexuality being a highly policed domain. This creates a lot of challenges for girls as they negotiate the spaces between being a girl-child and a sexual being. This paper explores the gendered politics of elongating the inner labia among Basotho girls and the socially constructed notions of proper girlhood. I draw from a study which explored the memories of adolescent sexual experiences of Basotho women teachers through focus group discussions. The findings present girls' stories of being sexual beings and trying to perform normalised girlhood, while at the same time performing alternate discourses of girlhood. They highlight the use of labial elongation for promoting male sexual pleasure at the expense of female pleasure. Based on the findings, I argue for non-conformity in relation to labial elongation to give girls a chance of shaping their sexual identities around pleasurable sexuality.","creator":["Mathabo Khau"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3ee48d5-0093-31a3-b769-3256f95e8d31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27868945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"79","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Exploring sexual customs: Girls and the politics of elongating the inner labia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868945","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Garber"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33bce7a0-a679-38bc-96b6-fd2ddeef33aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Where in the World Are the Lesbians?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704708","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charles Lemert"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf045dae-259d-322e-9cdd-442f243848c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Against Capital-S Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108610","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leslie Gourse"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4023440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"141c2624-4fdd-35c2-b42d-e4d59a0345e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4023440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rhythm and Blues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4023440","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, o autor pretende explorar desenvolvimentos do processo conhecido como reafricaniza\u00e7\u00e3o da cultura e da pol\u00edtica em Salvador corporificados na cristaliza\u00e7\u00e3o transit\u00f3ria de determinada figura social conhecida como o brau. Essa seria uma inflex\u00e3o de masculinidade informada pelas tens\u00f5es raciais e de g\u00e9nero em Salvador, assim como uma re-apropria\u00e7\u00e3o localizada de temas culturais da di\u00e0spora africana. Braus foram (s\u00e3o) jovens negros da periferia que re-inventam uma visualidade\/corporalidade negra a partir de releituras da 'cultura' soul norte-americana e ao mesmo tempo s\u00e3o estigmatizados pela classe m\u00e9dia como violentos, de \"mau-gosto\" e hiper-sexualizados, ou seja, excessivamente 'negros' e excessivamente 'masculinos', em uma hiperboliza\u00e7\u00e3o que em certo sentido contradiz com sua estigmatiza\u00e7\u00e3o. In this article the author seeks to explore some developments of the process known as the cultural and political reafricanization of Salvador, through the transitory crystalization of social figure called \"brau\". This would be an inflexion of masculinity informed by racial and gender tensions in Salvador, as well as a localized appropriation of cultural themes of the African Diaspora. \"Braus\" were (are) young blacks from poor neighborhoods who re-created a black look\/corporality from readings of North-American soul culture, while being stigmatized by the middle class as violents, ugly-looking and hyper-sexed, that is, excessively black and excessively male, a hyperbole which in a way contradicts this stigmatization.","creator":["OSMUNDO DE ARA\u00daJO PINHO"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f328046f-b663-37c7-94f4-46bc774d9f03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ETNOGRAFIAS DO BRAU: CORPO, MASCULINIDADE E RA\u00c7A NA REAFRICANIZA\u00c7\u00c3O EM SALVADOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596441","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J. Oloka-Onyango","Sylvia Tamale"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/762486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"731","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-731","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Personal Is Political,\" or Why Women's Rights Are Indeed Human Rights: An African Perspective on International Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762486","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":19701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In Jackie Kay's award-winning novel, \"Trumpet\" (1998), the main character Joss Moody, a celebrated jazz trumpet player, is discovered upon his death to be anatomically female. The essay traces both postmodern and humanist affirmations of constructions of self-hood. Situating Virginia Woolf's version of a metaphysical and escapist androgyny as one kind of aesthetic against the material politics of the transgendered subject, the essay argues that Kay's novel can be seen as part of a 20th century tradition of literature and film which satirizes, parodies and painfully exposes the discontinuities of dominant sex-gender systems. The essay ends by arguing that Kay also develops these systems by imbricating sex and gender within a series of dislocated familial, sexual and racial identities, beginning with the arrival of Joss's African father in Scotland at the beginning of the 20th century.","creator":["Tracy Hargreaves"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8841a3dc-bd5c-3a1b-b196-bac565ce7848"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"74","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Power of the Ordinary Subversive in Jackie Kay's \"Trumpet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395948","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8108,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[48399,48479]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David G. Riede","Donald E. Hall","Clinton Machann","Dorothy Mermin","Mary Ellis Gibson","Tim Armstrong","Jeffrey B. Loomis","Florence S. Boos","Margot K. Louis","Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1483bb43-e9ff-3c06-b98f-955bdd593601"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003058","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":34474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many contemporary choreographers use improvisation as a choreographic method. With cross-disciplinary historical antecedents, especially in post-World War II avant-garde art, improvisation remains a particularly relevant practice in today's cultural climate of political and economic uncertainty. This article describes an elastic dialogue of choreographic control in a rehearsal process that involves improvisation. A creative practice with such recurrent exchanges of control underscores a view that improvisation intimately affects choreographic choice, performance quality, and audience understanding.","creator":["ANNIE KLOPPENBERG"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31d1ae3f-04ce-351d-81c2-35eb2556bc84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"IMPROVISATION IN PROCESS: \"POST-CONTROL\" CHOREOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749326","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9284,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[515047,515125]],"Locations in B":[[17106,17184]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I construct a genealogy of the principle of distinction; the injunction to distinguish between combatants and civilians at all times during war. I outline the influence of a series of discourses--gender, innocence, and civilization--on these two categories. I focus on the emergence of the distinction in the seventeenth-century text \"On the Law of War and Peace\", authored by Hugo Grotius, and trace it through the twentieth-century treaties of the laws of war--the 1949 Geneva Protocols and the 1977 Protocols Additional. I draw out how the practices of and referents for our current wars partially descend from and are governed by the binary logics of Christianity, barbarism, innocence, guilt, and sex difference articulated in Grotius's text. These binaries are implicated in our contemporary distinction of \"combatant\" and \"civilian,\" troubling any facile notion of what \"humanitarian\" law is or what \"humanitarian\" law does, and posing distinct challenges to theorizations of the laws said to regulate war.","creator":["Helen M. Kinsella"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95d48422-fb60-388d-a18c-bf79cadc935d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20452445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendering Grotius: Sex and Sex Difference in the Laws of War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20452445","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":15230,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75071,75199]],"Locations in B":[[14893,15021]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Two recent productions of American dramas employed provocative strategies for enacting Jewish ethnicity: National Asian American Theatre Company's performance of Clifford Odets's Awake and Sing! with an all\u2013Asian American cast and New Yiddish Rep's staging of Toyt fun a seylsman, a Yiddish translation of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. Each production entails a different approach to performing Jewishness that exemplifies these companies' respective artistic agendas regarding the enactment of ethnicity, resulting in complex performances of masking and unmasking Jewishness. Moreover, their analysis illuminates how ethnicity is conceptualized and realized in the United States in the early decades of the twenty-first century. Yiddish appears strategically, if often obliquely, in the histories of composition, production, and reception for both dramas, emblematic of shifting notions of enacting ethnicity.","creator":["Jeffrey Shandler"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.23.2.01","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8d0fdf6-135c-3ef6-8e58-538ed404fe0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jewisocistud.23.2.01"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Enacting Ethnicity: Yiddishkeit Masked and Unmasked on the Contemporary American Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.23.2.01","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katja Antoine"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746585372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235500"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c736799-b228-3e9e-b7db-c0c8755837a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43823941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Pushing the Edge' of Race and Gender Hegemonies through Stand-up Comedy: Performing Slavery as Anti-racist Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823941","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10313,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey N. Peters"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcea5b90-7f57-3d35-91f6-872ed1986589"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boileau's Nerve, or the Poetics of Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288646","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I examine the role of talk in constructing speakers as heterosexual beings. Heterosexuality is a cultural construction relying on strictly enforced norms for its continuing dominance. Queer linguistics initially focused on the language of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) groups, but is now widening its focus to explore the discursive construction of heterosexuality, and to show that language does not just reflect the heteronormative order; it is also involved in reproducing that order. I shall explore how heterosexuality is 'done' in everyday talk, drawing on Cameron and Kulick's idea of 'the heteronormative hierarchy'. I shall also show how closely sexuality and gender are linked, and will argue that this closeness is essential to the maintenance of heteronormativity.","creator":["Jennifer Coates"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233713"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"377aac83-f102-3274-bc9c-fafc5e5852a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24441611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"552","pageStart":"536","pagination":"pp. 536-552","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The discursive production of everyday heterosexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24441611","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474800"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fbcb139-c237-3a37-9701-40afc24acd5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41705205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litterature"}],"isPartOf":"Litt\u00e9rature","issueNumber":"150","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-211, 213-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"[TABLES ET INDEX (1996-2008)]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705205","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":42946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"\u05de\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\" \u2014 \u05d1\u05e6\u05d3 \u05de\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05e1 \u05e6\u05dc\u05e2 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d3\u05dd \u2014 \u05de\u05e1\u05e4\u05e7 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d1\u05e1\u05d9\u05e1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d7\u05dc\u05d5\u05e7\u05d4 \u05dc\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5. \u05dc\u05e4\u05d9 \u05de\u05d9\u05ea\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d6\u05d4, \u05d4\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d5\u05e9\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d0\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e1, \u05e9\u05d4\u05ea\u05e4\u05e6\u05dc \u05dc\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d0\u05d5\u05d7\u05e8 \u05d9\u05d5\u05ea\u05e8. \u05de\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d8\u05d5\u05e2\u05df, \u05e9\u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1 \u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05d9\u05d1\u05ea \u05dc\u05d3\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05dc\u05db\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e8\u05d5\u05d7\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05e6\u05d3 \u05d4\u05de\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9, \u05d4\u05d2\u05e9\u05de\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d0\u05e8\u05db\u05d9. \u05de\u05e6\u05d1 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d7\u05dc\u05e7 \u05de\u05d7\u05d6\u05d5\u05df \u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d0\u05e0\u05d5\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea, \u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05ea \u05dc\u05e2\u05de\u05d9\u05dd, \u05dc\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc \u05d6\u05d4 \u05e2\u05d5\u05de\u05d3 \u05de\u05d0\u05d7\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05de\u05d3\u05e8\u05e9 \u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d1\u05e2\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05df \"\u05dc\u05d0 \u05d6\u05db\u05e8 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0 \u05e0\u05e7\u05d1\u05d4\". \u05e8\u05d0\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4 \u05db\u05d6\u05d5 \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8\u05ea \u05dc\u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d1 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05ea\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4-\u05db\u05d1\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05dc \u05d1\u05e9\u05d9\u05d7 \u05d4\u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea: \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05d7 \u05dc\u05d0 \u05d9\u05d9\u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05d5 \u05d6\u05db\u05e8 \u05d5\u05e0\u05e7\u05d1\u05d4, \u05d0\u05da \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d1\u05e9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05dd \u05d9\u05e9\u05e0\u05dd \u05d2\u05dd \u05d9\u05e9\u05e0\u05dd. \u05de\u05d7\u05d9\u05e7\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05d1\u05d3\u05dc \u05de\u05ea\u05d1\u05e6\u05e2\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e8\u05d5\u05d7, \u05d1\u05e8\u05d2\u05e2 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e7\u05e1\u05d8\u05d8\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d7\u05d6\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d0\u05dc \u05d9\u05e9\u05d5 \u2014 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9.","creator":["\u05d3\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc \u05d1\u05d5\u05d9\u05d0\u05e8\u05d9\u05df","\u05d0\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05d9\u05e8","Daniel Boyarin"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23436339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15655261"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc56bd71-06bf-3f37-82d4-c550b3661267"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23436339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zmanim"}],"isPartOf":"Zmanim: A Historical Quarterly \/ \u05d6\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd: \u05e8\u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d4","issueNumber":"46\/47","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Open University \/ \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e4\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7\u05d4","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Paul and the Genealogy of Gender \/ \u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d5\u05d4\u05d2\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d2'\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23436339","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Like other transvestite intrigues of the seventeenth century, Clitandre shares a concern with defining gendered subjects in relation to a powerful male figure. The cross-dressed heroine in Clitandre serves as a means through which the play defines relationships of authority between the king, on the one hand, and the prince, queen, state, and subjects, on the other. The ultimate recuperation of the heroine through marriage coincides with the notion of the king as arbiter and patriarch whose jurisdiction extends to marriage and sexuality, a conception voiced by theorists early in the century and later institutionalized in the marriage laws of the 1670s. The transvestite character suggests that in seventeenth-century France, one's masculinity or femininity-defined as a lesser or greater degree of power-is determined less by anatomy than by one's relationship to the king.","creator":["Adrienne E. Zuerner"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/398911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/398911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"774","pageStart":"757","pagination":"pp. 757-774","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Disguise and the Gendering of Royal Authority in Corneille's Clitandre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/398911","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":8365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Melissa Rigney"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfa5f6a0-ed60-3a9c-b71d-b88d751eedfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Brandon Goes to Hollywood: \"Boys Don't Cry\" and the Transgender Body in Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019160","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7721,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103187,103448]],"Locations in B":[[19192,19453]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article explores the imperatives of postfeminism, specifically the dual mandates of what Shelley Budgeon (2011) calls \"successful femininity\": self-invention and self-regulation. Using examples from contemporary American middlebrow fashion culture, it analyzes the way postfeminist ideology requires its subjects to fulfill these mandates by both following and breaking rules. Through this analysis, the article argues that a key feature of postfeminism is a detachment toward rules and those who follow them, which it traces to both an earlier feminist skepticism toward norms and a pronounced anxiety in middlebrow culture over femininity and individuality. It further argues that this detachment is an iteration of class privilege and is enacted through class violence, suggesting that postfeminism is above all a phenomenon of class as much as gender. Ultimately, the article argues that a postfeminist celebration of rule-breaking as a practice of successful femininity leads to inaccurate and dangerous notions of women's agency, vividly exemplified in the figure of Sarah Palin, whose rogue affect both claims and disavows feminism.","creator":["Marjorie Jolles"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c046611-937b-3171-b027-7de4a5757fb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Going Rogue: Postfeminism and the Privilege of Breaking Rules","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819650","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8700,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[53678,53730]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ludmilla Jordanova"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4027467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20dd6c29-ade2-3a31-9d9b-d189fa52b1ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4027467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and the Historiography of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4027467","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8803,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[474910,474998],[476056,476119]],"Locations in B":[[26616,26702],[30923,30986]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article se propose de r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir \u00e0 la mani\u00e8re d'\u00e9crire l'histoire contemporaine des sexualit\u00e9s, en se concentrant sur le XXe si\u00e8cle, et \u00e0 partir de quelques productions francophones ou anglophones significatives. Il ne s'agit pas d'un bilan historiographique exhaustif, mais de comparer les outils m\u00e9thodologiques et les probl\u00e9matiques d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s. L'articulation des questions de genre et de sexualit\u00e9 sera par exemple au coeur de ce parcours historiographique. Apr\u00e8s avoir point\u00e9 les principales diff\u00e9rences entre une historiographie anglo-am\u00e9ricaine tr\u00e8s riche, ax\u00e9e sur une v\u00e9ritable r\u00e9flexion \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique, et une historiographie fran\u00e7aise plus lacunaire et descriptive (en dehors de quelques domaines bien balis\u00e9s : la prostitution, la contraception et l'avortement, les violences sexuelles), on \u00e9valuera les conditions d'un possible rattrapage fran\u00e7ais. This article addresses the question as to how to write a modern history of sexualities, focusing on the 20th century and based on certain major French and English works. It does not set out to provide an exhaustive historiography, but to compare the methodological tools and problematics used. This historiographical journey concentrates on questions of gender and sexuality. After highlighting the main differences between a rich Anglo-American historiography centred on real epistemological reflection and a rather more deficient, descriptive French historiography (with the exception of the well beaten tracks of prostitution, contraception and abortion, sexual abuse), we examine how it might be possible for the French to make up for lost ground.","creator":["Anne-Claire REBREYEND"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44406207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8566660-d6f7-3394-b821-3973fb793795"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44406207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"22","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Comment \u00e9crire l'histoire des sexualit\u00e9s au XX e<\/sup> si\u00e8cle ? Bilan historiographique compar\u00e9 fran\u00e7ais\/anglo-am\u00e9ricain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44406207","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8574,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471827,471893]],"Locations in B":[[44392,44464]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DIETER INGENSCHAY"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b97e996-02d3-37d9-af65-cbf2b809a7ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23055735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"430","pagination":"pp. 430-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055735","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth Dutro"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20205065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340561"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618570"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007214265"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20205065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readingteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Reading Teacher","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"376","pagination":"pp. 376-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"But That's a Girls' Book!\" Exploring Gender Boundaries in Children's Reading Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20205065","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":6750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miranda J. Burgess"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7a925b2-b07e-3cb0-b442-8dfb8d288ea8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/438845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Bearing Witness: Law, Labor, and the Gender of Privacy in the 1720s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438845","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":13934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O objetivo do presente ensaio \u00e9 discutir como (se poss\u00edvel) dever\u00edamos traduzir a ideia de \u2018queer\u2019 (tal como no sintagma \u2018teoria queer\u2019), do ingl\u00eas para o portugu\u00eas. Nosso interesse n\u00e3o \u00e9 simplesmente o de traduzir o termo \u2018queer\u2019, mas sim discutir o que podemos ganhar e\/ou o que podemos perder no processo de tradu\u00e7\u00e3o e adapta\u00e7\u00e3o da teoria queer, deslocando-a de seu contexto angl\u00f3fono e realocando-a em um contexto lus\u00f3fono, em especial quando se leva em considera\u00e7\u00e3o a articula\u00e7\u00e3o da teoria na an\u00e1lise cultural e na cr\u00edtica liter\u00e1ria fora de contextos angl\u00f3fonos. Palavras-chave: Teoria queer; tradutologia; g\u00eanero; sexualidade. The aim of this essay is to discuss how (if possible) we should translate the idea of \u2018queer\u2019 (as in \u2018queer theory\u2019 from English to Portuguese. Our interest is not simply to translate the word \u2018queer\u2019, but to discuss what could be gained or loss in the process of translation and adaptation of queer theory from Anglophone to Lusophone contexts, in terms of the articulation of the theory in cultural analysis and literary criticism outside the Anglophone contexts.","creator":["Anselmo Peres Al\u00f3s"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ea527b9-9039-38bf-a984-c7174e4c9913"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Traduzir o queer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965104","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"uma op\u00e7\u00e3o vi\u00e1vel?"} +{"abstract":"En este art\u00edculo se analiza Utop\u00eda gay, de Jos\u00e9 Rafael Calva, como una novela en la que no solamente se intenta inaugurar la representaci\u00f3n literaria positiva de las relaciones homosexuales y se critican diferentes pr\u00e1cticas culturales e ideol\u00f3gicas del sistema capitalista occidental, sino tambi\u00e9n como un ejercicio de deconstrucci\u00f3n de las diferentes din\u00e1micas opresoras y excluyentes que parten de la hegemon\u00eda patriarcal en el contexto sociocultural y pol\u00edtico del M\u00e9xico contempor\u00e1neo. En Utop\u00eda gay se propone un modelo ut\u00f3pico que en su misma configuraci\u00f3n materializa muchas contradicciones, las cuales son el resultado de la absorci\u00f3n de premisas ideol\u00f3gicas que, si bien posibilitan un tipo de liberaci\u00f3n, tambi\u00e9n inauguran y perpet\u00faan otros sistemas de exclusi\u00f3n y discriminaci\u00f3n. La novela, quiz\u00e1s la primera en presentar positivamente una pareja homosexual, en su parodia de la relaci\u00f3n heterosexual cuestiona el car\u00e1cter de inevitabilidad y naturalidad de la heterosexualidad, cancelando as\u00ed su estatus normativo y, adem\u00e1s, propone una comunidad imaginada ut\u00f3pica (una nueva imagen de familia) en donde prevalece la solidaridad, la comunicaci\u00f3n y la aparente distribuci\u00f3n democr\u00e1tica de posiciones y valores.","creator":["BLADIMIR RUIZ"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0bbe66c-d1bd-3499-a488-efdcb68e7b07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Utop\u00eda gay, de Jos\u00e9 Rafael Calva, y las contradicciones dentro del discurso narrativo de la diferencia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764052","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8652,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[441193,441417],[489260,489409]],"Locations in B":[[16797,17018],[53674,53843]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This case study of the feminist drag troupe the Disposable Boy Toys (DBT) examines the relationship between drag and gender identity. Drawing on multiple methods, the author explores the range of gender identities that emerged through participation in DBT. Members saw DBT as the central catalyst for their own identity shifts. The author suggests that these identity transformations occurred through four collective mechanisms: imaginative possibility, information and resources, opportunities for enactment, and social support. The author finds that DBT served as an identity incubator in which participants were able and encouraged to interrogate, play with, and sometimes adopt new gender identities. The author concludes that context is critical in understanding the meaning and importance of drag. Performing gender in this politicized, feminist context shaped the gender identities of the troupe's members in fundamental and varied ways, suggesting that oppositional communities can be an important venue for identity work.","creator":["Eve Shapiro"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a65b686-ac77-3849-af73-7c372bf2fc18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27640961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Drag Kinging and the Transformation of Gender Identities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27640961","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8966,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124687]],"Locations in B":[[6958,7063]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen O'Gorman"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10730508"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a5dcee9-ed5c-31d7-ba97-ce4ec2739905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30224369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjclasstrad"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of the Classical Tradition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"591","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-591","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cracking the Code of Honor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224369","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Horacio Legr\u00e1s"],"datePublished":"2016-02-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.38.1.0003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5dceb5f-5f9d-37e9-a084-af5bcc612c91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.38.1.0003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Seeing Women Photographed in Revolutionary Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.38.1.0003","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What conception of causality is presupposed when the discursive constitution of identity is affirmed? Is the subject of late modernity \"Produced?\" \"Generated?\" \"Inscribed?\" \"Constructed?\" \"Defined?\" \"Formed?\" Indiscriminately employed in much recent feminist theory, these terms evoke quite different understandings of causal efficacy, and hence quite different accounts of how specifically gendered identities are fashioned. To indicate what is at stake here, I explore arguments advanced by Judith Butler in Gender Trouble and, more recently, in Bodies That Matter. In the former, Butler's unrecognized reliance on a mechanistic idiom of causality vitiates her genealogical critique of the humanist subject. In the latter, more elliptically than conclusively, Butler proposes a critical reappropriation of the Aristotelian idiom of form and matter. Building on this suggestion, I argue that an organic idiom of causality, although not without problems, is better equipped than is its Cartesian counterpart to make sense of the body's immanent implication in the processes by which it becomes a gendered subject. In closing, I ask about the implications of these two idioms of causality for our understanding of political agency.","creator":["Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/448921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"981b8c66-7479-35c7-ab80-4881f54e4d0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/448921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"674","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Pi Sigma Alpha Award: Fashionable Subjects: On Judith Butler and the Causal Idioms of Postmodern Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/448921","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12060,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[46022,46230],[297052,297207],[302596,302830],[454310,454559],[460727,460962]],"Locations in B":[[12263,12471],[14187,14341],[16666,16900],[19564,19813],[22622,22857]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The formation of social classes in Pacific Islands societies and in their diasporas continues to raise theoretical questions about the nature of social classes and their relationship to prior forms of social organization. In Tonga, middle classes both reproduce aspects of the older rank-based system with which they continue to coexist and innovate new forms of acting and being, many of which emerged with the diasporic explosion of the society. While \"middle-classness\" is fragile and shifting, it is constituted by four important characteristics: an intense awareness of the extralocal; a valorization of consumption; multiple modes of livelihood; and the commoditization of structures of reciprocity. These characteristics form a basis for comparison of Tongan middle classes with non\u2013middle classes locally and with middle classes in other societies of the Pacific and beyond.","creator":["Niko Besnier"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8b26448-062c-3972-b39c-d8ceceee7f4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Modernity, Cosmopolitanism, and the Emergence of Middle Classes in Tonga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724851","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":17767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steve Fuller"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2677971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Quo Vadis, Social Theory?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2677971","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dennis Carlson"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cca78ba-9f34-3b30-8517-cea4e6915082"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 1: Constructing the Adolescent Body: Cultural Studies and Sexuality Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981014","volumeNumber":"392","wordCount":11247,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147710]],"Locations in B":[[14677,14747]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620304","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tilo Renz"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23978069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4bb5f48-2657-3121-8451-0869a7844feb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23978069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","issueNumber":"1","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Br\u00fcnhilds Kraft. Zur Logik des einen Geschlechts im \u201eNibelungenlied\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23978069","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Art education throughout the 20th and into the 21st century has drawn on both psychology and psychoanalysis to support approaches to teaching and learning in the arts. This article examines the concept of \"psychologizing\" as it appears in the writing of psychologist\/philosopher John Dewey (1859-1952) and psychiatrist\/psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) to complicate our assumptions about what it means to learn in engagement with images and objects. Dewey's psychologizing has provided a way for teachers to help students gain access to new knowledge through experience and conscious reflection while Lacan viewed psychologizing as a fundamental misunderstanding of the human subject. Contemporary writings in art education are used to illustrate ways the two approaches have manifested in contemporary art education theory and practice.","creator":["BETH A. THOMAS"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8705b92c-3734-344b-8e9d-d27535f721d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24467921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"330","pagination":"pp. 330-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Psychologizing and the Anti-Psychologist: Dewey, Lacan, and Contemporary Art Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467921","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"El prop\u00f3sito central de este art\u00edculo es adelantar un proyecto pol\u00edtico y normativo para el establecimiento intemacional de los derechos sexuales como derechos humanos. Debido a la organizaci\u00f3n so\u00e1al del sexo y del g\u00e9nero en nuestras sociedades contempor\u00e1neas, consideramos que son urgentes las demandas por dise\u00f1ar y establecer normas para proteger la diferencia sexual y auspiciar la afrmaci\u00f3n de la diversidad sexual. Por un lado, identificamos la necesidad de establecer algunos derechos sexuales negativos capaces de proteger la integridad sexual de ciertos individuos que hist\u00f3ricamente han sido marginados y de algunos grupos que suelen ser bianco de la violencia heterosexista. Por el otro, consideramos necesario promover derechos sexuales positivos que afirmen la diversidad sexual y auspicien vidas sexuales llenas de placer. Sostenemos que para la justificaci\u00f3n y aceptaci\u00f3n de los derechos sexuales negativos solo se requiere una pol\u00edtica y una \u00e9tica de la tolerancia. En cambio los derechos sexuales positivos exigen la adopci\u00f3n de un paradigma pol\u00edtico y \u00e9tico diferente, basado en el reconocimiento. El proyecto pol\u00edtico de los derechos sexuales positivos busca, en \u00faltima instancia, destruir la hegemon\u00eda masculina sobre lapr\u00e1ctica y el discurso de la sexualidad, y pretende asimismo descentrar la heterosexualidad. Pese a los l\u00edmites de los movimientos sociales basados en la identidad sexual, su impacto social y cultural ha sido profundo. Por ello opinamos que los derechos sexuales negativos son hoy un proyecto m\u00e1s que factible. M\u00e1s a\u00fan, hemos desarrollado la idea de que la posibilidad de concretar el proyecto de los derechos sexuales positivos resulta de la combinaci\u00f3n creativa de dos fuerzas. Primero, los potenciales emancipatorios de los movimientos sociales basados en la identidad sexual que han permitido mantener un cuestionamiento constante de la actual organizaci\u00f3n social de la sexualidad. Segundo, las transformaciones profundas en teor\u00eda social y filosofia que nos lleva a pensar y experimentar la sexualidad (y sus identidades) de manera no esencialista, descentrada, relacional, interactiva y fluida. Finalmente, esto abre la posibilidad de desestabilizar los efectos que las relaciones de poder tienen sobre el sexo, la sexualidad y la identidad sexual. \/\/\/ The main aim of this article is to promote a political and normative project for the international establishment of sexual rights as human rights. Due to the social organization of sex and gender in contemporary societies, we believe that there is an urgent demand to design and establish norms to protect sexual difference and encourage the affirmation of sexual diversity. On the one hand, we identify the need for negative sexual rights capable of protecting the sexual integrity of historically marginalized individuals and groups that have become the target of heterosexist violence. On the other hand, we explain the need to promote positive sexual rights that affirm sexual diversity and encourage pleasurable sex lives. We hold that the justification and acceptance of negative sexual rights merely requires a politics and ethics of tolerance. Conversely, positive sexual rights demand a different political and ethical paradigm, based on recognition. The political project of positive sexual rights ultimately seeks to destroy male hegemony over the practice and discourse of sexuality and to remove heterosexuality from the center. Despite the limits of social movements based on sexual identity, we believe that they have had a profound social and cultural impact, which is why we argue that negative sexual rights are now an extremely feasible project. Moreover, we develop the idea that the possibility of undertaking a project of positive sexual rights is based on the creative combination of two forces. The first is the emancipatory forces of social movements based on sexual identity that have permitted the continuous questioning of the current social organization of sexuality. The second is the profound transformations of social theory and philosophy that enable us to conceive of and experience sexuality (and its identities) in a nonexistentialist, decentered, relational, interactive and fluid manner. In the end, we believe that this opens up the possibility of destabilizing the effects that power relations have on sex, sexuality and sexual identity.","creator":["Tracy Citeroni","Alejandro Cervantes-Carson"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40315411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01867210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89954afb-a656-3218-9465-a32a9ea38e87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40315411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estudemourba"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Demogr\u00e1ficos y Urbanos","issueNumber":"3 (57)","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"715","pageStart":"687","pagination":"pp. 687-715","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"El Colegio De Mexico","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Protecci\u00f3n, afirmaci\u00f3n y sexualidad sin poder: un proyecto pol\u00edtico y normativo para la construcci\u00f3n de los derechos sexuales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40315411","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5854ade-a1d6-3b88-8030-6d81e81f5009"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"88","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930109","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Poovey"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism and Postmodernism-Another View","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303532","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8337,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[101653,101745]],"Locations in B":[[35070,35163]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Communist ruling parties of East Central and Eastern Europe in the post-1956 era developed 'softer' methods of staying in power, both vis-a-vis the societies they ruled as well as within the Party itself, methods which proved more effective than 'purges' and 'party discipline'. This article investigates these methods, taking the East German 'Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands' (Socialist Unity Party of Germany) or SED as a case study and focusing on one specific control procedure in particular: the 'brigade deployments' of the Central Committee apparatus of the SED, that is 'on the job inspections' of subordinate party organs. A systematic analysis of Central Committee brigade deployments shows that, rather than serving to punish these organs, the inspections were primarily a means of consensus creation in which brigade members effectively used staged performances and a 'language of intimacy' to keep their comrades 'in line'. Though ultimately still a form of repression, this 'performative' style of party rule was much more subtle than the common conception of monolithic power machines would suggest.","creator":["R\u00fcdiger Bergien"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23488396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab68a321-dbff-3e8e-9dc4-7f7cf37dee78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23488396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"811","pageStart":"793","pagination":"pp. 793-811","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Activating the 'Apparatchik': Brigade Deployment in the SED Central Committee and Performative Communist Party Rule","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23488396","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study examines the lived experiences of a group of homeless women, with particular attention to their \"sexualization\" and how this frames their interpretations of and responses to their homelessness. A symbolic interactionist approach locates the social construction of femininity with its emphasis on sexualized embodiment within larger structural conditions of gender inequality. The impact of these structural conditions intersects with homelessness for the participants in this study. In-depth interviews at a homeless shelter reveal the early sexualization that degraded and violated the women, eroding their self-worth as young girls and, later, as adults. These circumstances shaped their gendered fears and vulnerabilities and influenced the context of their survival.","creator":["Jennifer K. Wesely"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2009.32.2.91","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a487bcfd-49c6-3249-b8df-46e01e0b66f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2009.32.2.91"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Mom said we had a money maker\": Sexualization and Survival Contexts among Homeless Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2009.32.2.91","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharalyn Orbaugh"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce74106-7ad4-3b9a-82f8-e51336573e7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Creativity and Constraint in Amateur \"Manga\" Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771905","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In \"The Female Man\" Russ contrasts our present-day heterosexual society with two revolutionary alternatives: a utopian world of women and a dystopian world of women warring with men. The novel functions as what Monique Witting calls a \"literary war machine\" because it tries \"to pulverize the old forms and formal conventions.\" Specifically, Russ critiques the \"straight mind\"-heterosexual institutions that regulate gender-by showing how two representatives from \"our world\" respond to those institutions. She also shows two alternative worlds that further undermine, but do not solve, the way heterosexual institutions regulate gender. In responding to the straight mind and to the consequences of being the female Other, one character from \"our world,\" Joanna, changes into a female man. Joanna becomes the female man by appropriating language and therefore \"resolv[ing] contrarieties, [by] unit[ing] them in her own person,\" and in this way she destroys gender as Witting describes by \"lay[ing] claim to universality.\" Russ contrasts Joanna's solution with the alternative worlds inhabited by Janet (on the all-women utopian Whileaway) and by the cyborg Jael (on the dystopian world of warring Manland and Womanland). Russ's literary war machine deploys various weapons against the Straight Mind. Of these, the most successful is language, which allows women to kill the myth of Woman and to abolish the class of women. In short, Russ demonstrates Judith Butler's suggestion that women can \"speak their way out of their gender.\"","creator":["Susan Ayres"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"223e54fd-e7f0-39e8-a3b3-ab06b4995862"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \"Straight Mind\" in Russ's \"The Female Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240395","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7044,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[100039,100252],[110032,110165],[133783,133964],[376132,376342],[377559,377644],[385816,385889],[435264,435631]],"Locations in B":[[4207,4420],[6011,6145],[6412,6594],[15029,15239],[15488,15575],[16249,16318],[33185,33521]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bernard Mees"],"datePublished":"2011-09-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jenglgermphil.110.4.0474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03636941"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-247631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"077e98bc-b06d-3a9d-8576-08a0762010aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jenglgermphil.110.4.0474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jenglgermphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of English and Germanic Philology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"474","pagination":"pp. 474-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Sociocultural Theory and the leub Inscriptions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jenglgermphil.110.4.0474","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":6887,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503309,503458]],"Locations in B":[[5555,5688]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article develops a critical analysis of gendered narratives of global finance. The post-subprime crisis equation of unfettered global finance with the excessive masculinity of individual bankers is read in line with a wider gender narrative. We discuss how hetero-normative relations between men and women underpin financial representations through three historical examples: war bond advertising, Hollywood films about bankers, and contemporary aesthetic representations of female politicians who advocate for austerity. A politics emerges whereby gender is used to encompass a\/the spectrum between embedded and disembedded finance, approximate to the divide between oikonomia and chrematistics. The apparently desirable 'marriage' between the state and finance that ensues carries several ambiguities \u2013 precisely along gender lines \u2013 that point to a pervasive limit: the myth of embedded liberalism in the imagination of global finance.","creator":["JAMES BRASSETT","LENA RETHEL"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24564338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba76b1d4-1488-3e83-82bc-21923d86826c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24564338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexy money: the hetero-normative politics of global finance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24564338","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"The body\" and \"embodiment\" are now firmly entrenched in the working vocabulary of the study of religion, yet there is little consensus on what such terms mean. This essay reviews the widely varying uses, focusing on main trajectories of the \"lived body\", the \"semiotic body\", and the \"productive and produced body\". Since \"the body\" must always be set in a particular narrative strategy in any given ethnography, complications arise when the various, sometimes contradictory, uses of \"the body\" are not kept distinct or are presumed to be one. This essay presents case studies on how varying uses are actually implemented in writing ethnography, and calls for a return to clear specification of how and why \"the body\" is invoked.","creator":["Paul Christopher Johnson"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a777926b-6161-3e7c-aff2-179bdcd3bc4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23549955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MODELS OF \"THE BODY\" IN THE ETHNOGRAPHIC FIELD: GAR\u00cdFUNA AND CANDOMBL\u00c9 CASE STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549955","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":10159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The distinction between heterosexuality and homosexuality does not allow for sufficient attention to be given to the question of non-normative heterosexualities. This paper develops a feminist critique of normative sexuality, focusing on alternative readings of sex and\/or gender offered by Beauvoir and Irigaray. Despite their differences, both accounts contribute significantly to dismantling the lure of normative sexuality in heterosexual relations-a dismantling necessary to the construction of a feminist social and political order.","creator":["Ofelia Schutte"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5530e963-8b99-393c-baf4-8ba04f07ebed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Critique of Normative Heterosexuality: Identity, Embodiment, and Sexual Difference in Beauvoir and Irigaray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810250","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10358,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083],[477848,477945],[495840,495899],[497314,497396]],"Locations in B":[[61811,61895],[63784,63880],[64044,64103],[65198,65285]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elfi Bettinger"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03034178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43028281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poetica"}],"isPartOf":"Poetica","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"597","pageStart":"592","pagination":"pp. 592-597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wilhelm Fink GmbH & Co. Verlags-KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028281","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen M. Bolen"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/530665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00934690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51213011"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7253311a-c8f9-33e5-b82c-b6a437025cfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/530665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfielarch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Field Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Maney Publishing","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/530665","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":1324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maud Lesn\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00324663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"313239f3-b9f5-3b11-9020-314ef287d289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23263198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popufrenedit"}],"isPartOf":"Population (French Edition)","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Institut National d'\u00c9tudes D\u00e9mographiques","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263198","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":1116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"By reading the analyses of mysticism found in Beauvoir and Irigaray with and against some medieval women's mystical texts, the paper articulates a possible space for the divine within feminist thought.","creator":["Amy M. Hollywood"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7896c9a6-8cd7-3e8a-8168-9cfb54703fbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beauvoir, Irigaray, and the Mystical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810427","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":13474,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794],[477848,477951],[495840,495899],[497010,497067]],"Locations in B":[[78638,78691],[81007,81110],[81270,81329],[82777,82834]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The fifth act of Garc\u00eda Lorca's \"El P\u00fablico\" deals with the protest provoked by the Stage Director's revolutionary version of \"Romeo and Juliet,\" when it is discovered that the actor's costumes are not concomitant to the sexual identity of their wearers. The revolution gives rise to a counter discourse that contains some of the most subtle, yet caustic, criticism Lorca expressed on society's view on homosexuality. An analysis of this act reveals that the play should be read not only as emblematic of the modernist literary discourse Lorca was developing so adeptly, but also as a self-dramatization of the author's impossibility to develop within a social system that made the homosexual subjectivity a bizarre mixture of pain, censure, invisibility, and frustration.","creator":["Carlos Jerez-Farr\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3735499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3735499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"743","pageStart":"728","pagination":"pp. 728-743","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Towards a Foucauldian Exegesis of Act v of Garc\u00eda Lorca's \"El p\u00fablico\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3735499","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":10012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[7612,7666]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nichole Marie Shippen"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75a01338-1982-3a24-bd94-639e26314c55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Precarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421138","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":1791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Interdependence to Solidarity"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Roberta C. Martin"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ba2b1f9-2d72-3979-9ba6-662b3bf35840"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/378879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Beauteous Wonder of a Different Kind\": Aphra Behn's Destabilization of Sexual Categories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378879","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":9538,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116367,116515]],"Locations in B":[[713,861]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tuli Chatterji"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235525"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e74c009-3e4e-3090-8759-c994a47a8bf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90021225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\u201cI Am Not What You Think\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021225","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Sexual Fetishism in Patricia Powell\u2019s The Pagoda<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Berni"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"774e3ce7-ae17-3b08-bb43-eb59f3597c54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3347224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Nose-Length into the Matter\": Sexology and Lesbian Desire in Djuna Barnes's \"Ladies Almanack\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347224","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11518,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[458670,458782],[495025,495125]],"Locations in B":[[23429,23621],[23760,23870],[67230,67336]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisabeth Hodges"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24245577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03610160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076136"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74319933-3813-3d89-b742-b9ed2f72b1ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24245577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sixtcentj"}],"isPartOf":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"803","pageStart":"802","pagination":"pp. 802-803","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sixteenth Century Journal","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24245577","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Patricia Vertinsky"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43610055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00941700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2127b07-7fb9-3167-a5ba-99f76926eec8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43610055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsporthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Sport History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Embodying Normalcy: Anthropometry and the Long Arm of William H. Sheldon's Somatotyping Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43610055","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":22660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Given the negative and limited representations of Muslims and Palestinians, and the central role that women play in this spectrum of dominant representations, this article takes interest in the possibilities of circulating dissent and alternative portrayals through digital media. Taking interest in the poetry of Palestinian-American poet Suheir Hammad, which vibrantly emerged in the digital public sphere in the immediate aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, this analysis focuses on Hammad's digital interventions to challenge Islamophobia and other forms of discursive and material domination. Based on a textual analysis of Hammad's poetry, this article is also informed by a semi-structured interview conducted with the artist, as well as other information available in the public domain. This analysis reveals that digital media play an important role in increasing Hammad's ability to circulate her art to a wider audience. Building bridges across multiple communities and positions of marginality transnationally, Hammad's work attempts to challenge dominant Islamophobic and gendered discourses about identity. However, similarly to other \u201cminority\u201d artists, \u201ctalking back\u201d (hooks 1989) to dominant discourses requires a performativity of identity, and is at the same time anchored to the motivation to unsettle essentialist understandings of identity. Through her writings and poetry performances archived online, Hammad highlights the complexity of identity and reveals both how racialization is socially constructed and the racial ambiguity of Islamophobia. While acknowledging the discursive formation of identity, Hammad's work also underscores the real, material consequences of discourses of fear and hate in order to regain some agency and symbolic power.","creator":["Kenza Oumlil"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/islastudj.6.1.0093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23258381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821214105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273840"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb02659a-1cef-3114-ad76-fe4e21510c17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/islastudj.6.1.0093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islastudj"}],"isPartOf":"Islamophobia Studies Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Poetry of Suheir Hammad: Transnational Interventions in the Age of Islamophobia and Digital Media","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/islastudj.6.1.0093","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9228,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[458651,458782]],"Locations in B":[[39659,39790]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cultural anthropology has privileged the concept of experience over that of performance, and as ethnographers, we have also privileged the ethnographic text and inscription over the act(s) of fieldwork or the \u201cperformances\u201d of ethnography. Although we have made some improvements toward a different kind of anthropology, one that is embodied, the investigations of the body and performance have ultimately remained on the margins of the discipline. Drawing from my ethnographic participant fieldwork with North Indian tabla players and the teaching of ethnomusicology labs at an American university, I argue for a turn to what Sarah Pink (2009) has called sensory ethnography. L\u2019anthropologie culturelle a longtemps privil\u00e9gi\u00e9 le concept \u00ab d\u2019exp\u00e9rience \u00bb par rapport \u00e0 celui de \u00ab performance \u00bb. Quant aux ethnographes, ils ont longtemps privil\u00e9gi\u00e9 le texte ethnographique et l\u2019inscription par rapport aux actions du travail de terrain et aux \u00ab performances \u00bb de l\u2019ethnographie. Bien que des progr\u00e8s aient \u00e9t\u00e9 r\u00e9alis\u00e9s vers un autre type d\u2019anthropologie, une anthropologie incarn\u00e9e, les recherches sur le corps et la performance sont rest\u00e9es cantonn\u00e9es aux marges de la discipline. Sur la base de mon travail de terrain ethnographique aupr\u00e8s de joueurs de tabla de l\u2019Inde du nord, ainsi que de mon exp\u00e9rience de professeure d\u2019ethnomusicologie au sein d\u2019une universit\u00e9 am\u00e9ricaine, je plaide pour un tournant vers ce que Sarah Pink (2009) nomme l\u2019ethnographie sensorielle.","creator":["Denise Nuttall"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccc36aff-b60c-37fc-b583-a1ba8b1932b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26794625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Learning to Embody the Radically Empirical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794625","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Performance, Ethnography, Sensorial Knowledge and the Art of Tabla Playing"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Block","Kathleen M. Brown"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e8ed7dd-50bb-3d05-8b12-d631cb7864aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3491493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Clio in Search of Eros: Redefining Sexualities in Early America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3491493","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":3506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Johanna X. K. Garvey"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f487963-1593-3898-b410-13d37e21c13f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"City Limits: Reading Gender and Urban Spaces in Ulysses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441717","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7041,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147117,147314],[503324,503402]],"Locations in B":[[3322,3520],[42155,42237]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Public toilets are a key part of the urban environment. This paper examines and evaluates the pervasive sex segregation, throughout North America, of public toilets. The issue is situated within a larger context\u2014the design and management of the urban environment; larger assumptions about sexuality, reproduction, and privacy that govern that environment; and continuing compulsory sex identification and segregation which still define key areas of \"public\" space. I examine seven groups of arguments in favor of sex segregation, arguing that all of them are inadequate. I then present reasons showing why ending the sex segregation of public toilets is justified.","creator":["Christine Overall"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Public Toilets: Sex Segregation Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339141","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Demoya R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20677923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"375710d2-f9d1-3af3-a908-d3fb63dc16b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20677923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"1762","pageStart":"1719","pagination":"pp. 1719-1762","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Transgender Legal Advocacy: What Do Feminist Legal Theories Have to Offer?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20677923","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":21404,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[74475,74701],[75117,75322],[441982,442243],[442254,442369]],"Locations in B":[[95943,96166],[96191,96396],[118817,119025],[119143,119258]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article uses a study of Toronto in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to upend assumptions about class, the urban environment, and the presentation of the naked body. Rather than attempting to drive bathers out of urban space, the city\u2019s middle class viewed the bathing boy through the lens of anti-modernism and turned them into pre-industrial folk figures. Puncturing the nostalgic gloss of the swimming hole allows us to see the city with new eyes. We can avoid declensionist narratives that imagined Toronto\u2019s Don River as too polluted or too industrial for recreational use. When we follow the bathers we find that the marginal, semi-industrialized river provided an ideal recreational space that cloaked and contained the undressed male body. This project relies on newspaper accounts of drownings and rescues, municipal records, regional histories, and visual culture to recreate the social environment of early twentieth-century bathing spaces. Cet article utilise une \u00e9tude de Toronto \u00e0 la fin du dixneuvi\u00e8me et au d\u00e9but du vingti\u00e8me si\u00e8cle pour mettre au d\u00e9fi certaines pr\u00e9somptions sur la classe, l\u2019environnement urbain et la pr\u00e9sentation du corps nu. Plut\u00f4t que d\u2019essayer de chasser les baigneurs de l\u2019espace urbain, la classe moyenne de la ville a vu le baigneur \u00e0 travers le prisme de l\u2019antimodernisme et en a fait un personnage pr\u00e9industriel. Regarder au-del\u00e0 de l\u2019appel nos\u00adtalgique du trou d\u2019eau nous permet de voir la ville avec de nou\u00adveaux yeux. Nous pouvons \u00e9viter les discours d\u00e9clensionnistes qui imaginaient la rivi\u00e8re Don, de Toronto, trop pollu\u00e9e ou trop industrielle pour un usage r\u00e9cr\u00e9atif. Lorsque nous suivons les baigneurs, nous d\u00e9couvrons que la rivi\u00e8re marginale, semi-industrialis\u00e9e, offrait un espace de loisirs id\u00e9al recouvrant et contenant le corps masculin non habill\u00e9. Ce projet s\u2019appuie sur des r\u00e9cits de journaux sur les noyades et les sauvetages, les archives municipales, les histoires r\u00e9gionales et la culture visuelle pour recr\u00e9er l\u2019environnement social des espaces de baignade du d\u00e9but du XXe si\u00e8cle.","creator":["Dale Barbour"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26841711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07030428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621567"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3f35177-30e9-3ba3-9442-6e2cd8abfddc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26841711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbahistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History Review \/ Revue d'histoire urbaine","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Romance of Boys Bathing in Toronto\u2019s Don River, 1890\u20131930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26841711","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gwen Bergner"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fbc16f6-8d9f-33a8-8692-48a1a7015cd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Myths of the Masculine Subject: The Oedipus Complex and Douglass's 1845 \"Narrative\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389444","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I explore local productions of desire in Namibia by focusing on the engagement of young, working-class lesbians with human rights ideologies of sexual freedom. I discuss how various techniques deployed by a sexual minority-rights NGO allow youth to amplify and legitimize their embodied sense of sexual\u2014gender difference. In my analysis of their self-mediated incitement, I regard desire as a moral practice; practices of self-determination and acts of resistance are generated and authenticated through repeated reflection on the internality of desire. My elaborations also emphasize class-related issues. I argue that struggles with class and gender inequality destabilize the very notion of \"sexual identity\" in ways that open up political and erotic possibilities between lesbians and other working-class women in Namibia, blurring the dividing lines of identity politics and of gender and class politics.","creator":["Robert Lorway"],"datePublished":"2008-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ce7ecb6-5269-374b-8459-f3fc0d3e6480"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27667471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Defiant Desire in Namibia: Female Sexual-Gender Transgression and the Making of Political Being","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667471","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing upon theories that reconceptualize toys and artifacts as identity texts, this study employs mediated discourse analysis to examine children's videotaped writing and play interactions with princess dolls and stories in one kindergarten classroom. The study reported here is part of a three-year ethnographic study of literacy play in U.S. early childhood classrooms. The specific focus here is on young girls who are avid Disney Princess fans and how they address the gendered identities and discourses attached to the popular films and franchised toys. The study employs an activity model design that incorporates ethnographic microanalysis of social practices in the classroom, design conventions in toys and drawings, negotiated meanings in play, and identities situated in discourses. The commercially given gendered princess identities of the dolls, consumer expectations about the dolls, the author identities in books and storyboards associated with the dolls, and expectations related to writing production influenced how the girls upheld, challenged, or transformed the meanings they negotiated for princess story lines and their gender expectations, which influenced who participated in play scenarios and who assumed leadership roles in peer and classroom cultures. When the girls played with Disney Princess dolls during writing workshop, they animated identities sedimented into toys and texts. Regular opportunities to play with toys during writing workshop allowed children to improvise and revise character actions, layering new story meanings and identities onto old. Dolls and storyboards facilitated chains of animating and authoring, linking meanings from one event to the next as they played, wrote, replayed, and rewrote. The notion of productive consumption explains how girls enthusiastically took up familiar media narratives, encountered social limitations in princess identities, improvised character actions, and revised story lines to produce counternarratives of their own.","creator":["Karen E. Wohlwend"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20304573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"206fdd02-553a-3d1e-8e27-bedea9a28d8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20304573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Damsels in Discourse: Girls Consuming and Producing Identity Texts through Disney Princess Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20304573","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":20988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Reading Thomas Mann's \"Der Tod in Venedig\" and Max Frisch's Homo faber as narratives of male aging and ageism, I show that the protagonists' \"midlife crises\" are crises in representation located at the intersection of the body and socially constructed male images. As the main characters struggle with their declining bodies and the loss of status associated with aging, the close interconnection of age and gender norms and their significance for male identity formation emerge. Anticipating current scholarship in aging studies, these works reveal the performative nature of age and gender, and explore the tensions that arise where subjective, physiological, and social age meet and interfere with gender performance. In my reading, I demonstrate that the subversive potential of Mann's and Frisch's narratives lies less in their renditions of sexual deviance (incest, homosexuality), and more in the way these authors illustrate the potentially destructive effects of normative concepts of age and masculinity while tracing paths to subvert these categories.","creator":["Esther K. Bauer"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6373f5b-31a7-36e9-9ac5-3245d3d10e9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24756590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masculinity in Crisis: Aging Men in Thomas Mann's \"Der Tod in Venedig\" and Max Frisch's \"Homo faber\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756590","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":10881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Using as a focus Judith Butler's statement that sex is \"performatively enacted signification,\" this review essay surveys four works that, taken as a whole, constitute a historical discussion of theater as a site for cross-dressing from the Renaissance to the present: Patrick Barbier's The World of the Castrati, Laura Levine's Men in Women's Clothing, Stephen Orgel's Impersonations, and Alan Sinfield's The Wilde Century. Butler's emphasis on the mimetic as transgressive of gender boundaries, while much more insightful than early feminist theory on androgyny, is found less than adequate as philosophical grounding for a full conceptualization of subjectivity.","creator":["BARBARA CHARLESWORTH GELPI"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75f095ab-e30d-37a9-8277-af6586f1cc64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex as Performance with All the World as Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029830","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4582,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149313,149446]],"Locations in B":[[4101,4234]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mat Fournier"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"oclc","value":"65211423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006212212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"befb9ead-704f-3204-8962-bada7e1f7fe7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cInsurrections en territoire sexuel\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378826","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":6150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Wendy Delorme\u2019s War Machines"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonia Kruks"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/508247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42799275"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23442"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d17c27bb-ef18-32a4-a737-cd80aa2626dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/508247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethics"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/508247","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":2206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This discussion contributes to the ongoing debates regarding the (re)sexualisation of female bodies in popular and visual culture. Visual texts display the upper middle-class white female as the carrier of mainstream neo-liberal values in Western societies, and the success of this approach is the twinning of the culture of individualism, self-interest and market values with feminist vocabularies; namely, choice, freedom and independence. Drawing on a broad feminist scholarship that includes discussions on the influence of the HBO series Sex and the City, semiotic analysis is combined with intersectionality to gain an understanding of how gender, class and sexuality shape and reinforce whiteness as entitled to luxury in an advertising campaign for Michael Kors luxury goods. Contemporary representations have expanded to include representations of affluent women who appear to have it all. These new post-feminist subjectivities promote an aesthetic of wealth, to display privileged whiteness, heterosexuality, normative Western beauty ideals and individualism. An intersectional approach reveals the apparent neutrality of neo-liberal values as being an expression of whiteness, specifically in representations of white women as economically independent neo-liberal subjects who display their status through the conspicuous consumption of luxury brands.","creator":["Karen Wilkes"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49b6fbbd-7d3a-30d2-bf4a-25cf233dc256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"110","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"colluding with neo-liberalism: post-feminist subjectivities, whiteness and expressions of entitlement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571995","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study explores gender, activity, and well-being among people with mental illness attending day centers in Sweden. Based on survey data of 215 attendees, this study applies the concepts of doing gender and regulatory regimes to analyze the relationship between being involved in gendered activities and well-being. The results show that while both male and female participants are involved in gender-neutral activities, men are less likely to engage in women-dominated (WD) activities while women are more prone to engage in men-dominated (MD) activities. Moreover, women involved in MD activities show a positive correlation with well-being, while the same does not hold for men engaging in WD activities. The study concludes that both women and men are \u201cundoing\u201d gender but that women also tend to \u201cre-do\u201d gender, suggesting that gendered regulatory regimes are more permissive to diversified feminist subjectivities than masculine subjectivities.","creator":["Lisa Eklund","Mona Eklund"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48684277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21568693"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bfa91dc-e2fd-3ce8-9fe3-7719390c8ac8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48684277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socimentheal"}],"isPartOf":"Society and Mental Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Doing or Undoing Gender? An Explorative Study of Gender, Activities, and Well-being among People with Mental Illness Attending Day Centers in Sweden","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48684277","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laura Garc\u00eda-Moreno"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2284f09-87ea-33f6-85c8-759471452b63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Limits of Performance: Art, Gender, and Power in Jos\u00e9 Donoso's \"El Lugar Sin L\u00edmites\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741351","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The biblical Book of Esther tells a story about Jewish survival in the land of Persia. Esther, a Jewess, sentenced to die by Persian law, nonetheless shapes conceptions of what it is to be Persian. She not only brings salvation to a people destined for annihilation, but also questions the rigid alignments of Persian identity with male power. Powerful individuals (Persian and male) prescribe cultural behaviors, including feasting and immersion in oils and spices, in order to regulate populations and keep individuals in a hierarchical order. Through the modes of corporeal prescription, bodies are made amenable to the prevailing exigencies of power. Those not included in the dominant discourse are placed in the roles of \u201cother\u201d (Jewish and female), to maintain the existing political power. Esther, the narrative's heroine, is a skilled \u201cother\u201d who effects a radical political subversion in which the oppressed essentially rewrite the laws of their oppressors.","creator":["Drora Oren"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2009.-.18.140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b29ca306-ebcd-301a-a3e7-d75e0b941aaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2009.-.18.140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"18","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Esther\u2014The Jewish Queen of Persia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2009.-.18.140","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In his Narrative (1845), Frederick Douglass constructs a self based on conversion rhetoric and binary logic. In the greatly expanded My Bondage and My Freedom (1855), he complicates this textual self by both imitating and criticizing tropes conventionally used in the slavery debate, such as metaphors related to animals. Christianity, and manhood. Emphasizing the constructed nature of mimesis and metaphor, Douglass demonstrates his ability to escape the bondage of reductionist language even as he claims the power associated with linguistic mastery. This revision of self emerges from his experience of northern racism, manifested in his limited role in William Lloyd Garrison's organization. Douglass's renunciation of Garrisonian dogma and his entry into political action-including his striking textual reinterpretation of the United States Constitution-coincide with the stylistically \"modernist\" self of the second autobiography.","creator":["Peter A. Dorsey"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cee70108-c4f2-3e5d-84e2-214e2d2ef991"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Becoming the Other: The Mimesis of Metaphor in Douglass's My Bondage and My Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463167","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":10283,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477848,477934]],"Locations in B":[[60516,60603]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"No presente artigo, objetivamos desvelar a l\u00f3gica das normas sociais de inteligibilidade e reconhecimento que permite a continuidade da viol\u00eancia de g\u00eanero contra mulheres visitantes em estabelecimentos prisionais no Brasil ao estipular quem conta como vida humana reconhec\u00edvel e viv\u00edvel. No aspecto jur\u00eddico, o discurso justificador da revista \u00edntima vexat\u00f3ria \u00e9 desconstru\u00eddo por meio da an\u00e1lise da penaliza\u00e7\u00e3o corporal dessas mulheres e da viola\u00e7\u00e3o do princ\u00edpio da pessoalidade da pena. Ap\u00f3s, o problema \u00e9 analisado a partir da aplica\u00e7\u00e3o das categorias te\u00f3ricas de performatividade, enquadramento e precariedade, desenvolvidas por Judith Butler. As an\u00e1lises permitem concluir que a viol\u00eancia institucionalizada a que s\u00e3o submetidas decorre do fato de a vida dessas mulheres n\u00e3o ser reconhecida como normativamente humana, diante do esvaziamento da pr\u00f3pria condi\u00e7\u00e3o de exist\u00eancia e luto. The present study intends to reveal the logic of social norms of intelligibility and recognition that allows gender violence against women visitors in prisons to continue in Brazil by stipulating who counts as recognizable and livable human life. In the legal aspect, the discourse that justifies the vexatious intimate body searches is deconstructed through the analysis of the corporal punishment of these women and the violation of the personal character of penalty. Then, the problem is analyzed from the application of theoretical categories of performativity, framing and precarity developed by Judith Butler. These analyzes confirms that the institutionalized violence to which these women are subjected results from the fact that their lives are not recognized as normatively human and livable, considering the complete emptying of the very condition of existence and regrettable life. El trabajo tiene como objetivo develar la l\u00f3gica de las normas sociales de inteligibilidad y reconocimiento que permiten la continuidad de la violencia de g\u00e9nero contra las mujeres visitantes en las prisiones de Brasil, al estipular qui\u00e9n cuenta como vida humana reconocible y viable. En el aspecto legal, el discurso justificativo de la b\u00fasqueda \u00edntima vejatoria se deconstruye a trav\u00e9s del an\u00e1lisis del castigo corporal de estas mujeres y la violaci\u00f3n del principio de la personalidad de la pena. Posteriormente se analiza el problema a partir de la aplicaci\u00f3n de categor\u00edas te\u00f3ricas de performatividad, encuadre y precariedad desarrolladas por Judith Butler. Los an\u00e1lisis permiten concluir que la violencia institucionalizada a la que son sometidas resulta del hecho de que la vida de estas mujeres no es reconocida como normativamente humana, dado el agotamiento de su propia condici\u00f3n de existencia y luto.","creator":["Samia Moda Cirino","Bruna Azevedo de Castro"],"datePublished":"2022-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48663155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebd9e897-6d22-37ed-974e-70974099411c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48663155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15, 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Revista \u00edntima de mulheres visitantes em pres\u00eddios - Intimate Body Searches of Women Visitors to Prisons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48663155","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":22053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"vidas normativamente n\u00e3o humanas"} +{"abstract":"In Mexico, the western state of Jalisco is popularly represented as the birthplace of mariachi. An excessively circulated national symbol, performances and performers of mariachi embody two important tenets of Mexican nationalism: machismo and mestizaje. In addition, Jalisco is also famous for its beautiful women, known for their light skin and piety. In this article I examine the increasing popular performance of women in all-female mariachis. Specifically, I am interested in how these mariacheras embody, mimic and contest their femininities in a highly gendered and racialized context in Jalisco. Au Mexique, la perception populaire situe dans l'\u00c9tat occidental du Jalisco l'origine du mariachi. Symbole national surexploit\u00e9, les repr\u00e9sentations et les performeurs de la tradition mariachi incarnent deux dimensions importantes du nationalisme mexicain : le machisme et le m\u00e9tissage (machismo et mestizaje). De plus, Jalisco est aussi r\u00e9put\u00e9e pour la beaut\u00e9 de ses femmes, reconnues pour la p\u00e2leur de leur peau et leur pi\u00e9t\u00e9. Dans cet article, je m'int\u00e9resse \u00e0 la popularit\u00e9 croissante des performances de groupes mariachi exclusivement compos\u00e9s de femmes. Je m'int\u00e9resse particuli\u00e8rement \u00e0 comment ces mariacheras incarnent, imitent, et contestent leurs f\u00e9minit\u00e9s dans le contexte hautement genr\u00e9 et racialis\u00e9 de Jalisco.","creator":["Mary-Lee Mulholland"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622890"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e448f21b-ecd0-3a5c-be10-4c3462df84ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24467342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Beautiful Thing: Mariachi and Femininity in Jalisco, Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24467342","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":11414,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Leo Koerner"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","issueNumber":"31","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166962","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2678,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503621,503676]],"Locations in B":[[8766,8825]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c9tay\u00e9 par des notes et des images prises in situ, le pr\u00e9sent article traite d\u2019un organisme, Inspirations Studio, qui vient en aide \u00e0 des femmes marginalis\u00e9es. Dans la foul\u00e9e, il analyse la gestion d\u2019un tel dossier dans une perspective politique. Entreprise sociale fond\u00e9e il y a quelques d\u00e9cennies, Inspirations Studio soutient ses membres dans l\u2019apprentissage de la confection de produits c\u00e9ramiques et l\u2019acquisition d\u2019un ensemble de comp\u00e9tences dans les sph\u00e8res de la cr\u00e9ation et des affaires. L\u2019organisme torontois apporte son appui \u00e0 des femmes qui ont v\u00e9cu la pauvret\u00e9, l\u2019itin\u00e9rance, la d\u00e9pendance, un traumatisme ou des probl\u00e8mes de sant\u00e9 mentale. Les participantes au programme d\u2019Inspirations Studio gagnent en confiance en soi, en dignit\u00e9 et en stabilit\u00e9, \u00e9tablissent des liens au sein de la communaut\u00e9, touchent un compl\u00e9ment de revenu et d\u00e9couvrent une nouvelle mani\u00e8re de contribuer \u00e0 la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 en qualit\u00e9 d\u2019artisanes. Dans cet article, nous voyons comment le travail cr\u00e9atif d\u2019un groupe d\u2019artisanes issues de la diversit\u00e9 s\u2019int\u00e8gre dans l\u2019industrie artisanale, souvent qualifi\u00e9e de sectaire tant par les chercheurs que par les intervenants sectoriels. Les membres du personnel, les b\u00e9n\u00e9voles et les porte-drapeaux d\u2019Inspirations Studio mettent tout en \u0153uvre pour fournir \u00e0 des cr\u00e9atrices marginalis\u00e9es une plateforme o\u00f9 elles peuvent, d\u2019une part, pr\u00e9senter leur production et, d\u2019autre part, toucher un revenu suppl\u00e9mentaire gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 la vente d\u2019articles. En offrant un d\u00e9bouch\u00e9 unique en son genre dans le march\u00e9 artisanal local, l\u2019organisme montre que l\u2019\u00e9conomie de l\u2019artisanat ind\u00e9pendant d\u2019aujourd\u2019hui n\u2019a pas \u00e0 \u00eatre l\u2019apanage de femmes blanches h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles appartenant \u00e0 la classe moyenne. La pluralit\u00e9 identitaire des artisanes et leur production mat\u00e9rielle ouvrent des perspectives int\u00e9ressantes et subversives dans l\u2019\u00e9conomie de l\u2019artisanat. Outre ces interventions bienvenues, nous soulignons les efforts d\u00e9licats qu\u2019exige l\u2019organisation des activit\u00e9s li\u00e9es \u00e0 la production, \u00e0 la commercialisation et au marketing des \u0153uvres r\u00e9alis\u00e9es par ces femmes. Les membres du personnel et les subventionnaires d\u2019Inspirations Studio ont \u00e0 l\u2019\u0153il non seulement l\u2019\u00e9conomie, mais \u00e9galement les tendances locales en mati\u00e8re de production artisanale. Soucieuses de soutenir les artisanes, ces personnes cherchent \u00e0 optimiser la vente des objets faits main. Par exemple, des efforts sont d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s \u00e0 petite \u00e9chelle afin de restreindre le nuancier qu\u2019utilisent les b\u00e9n\u00e9ficiaires de l\u2019organisme, et ce, notamment dans l\u2019objectif de limiter le volume d\u2019articles offerts simultan\u00e9ment et d\u2019adopter une pr\u00e9sentation graphique plus minimaliste aux fins du mat\u00e9riel promotionnel. Parall\u00e8lement \u00e0 cet exercice, nous menons une r\u00e9flexion sur notre pratique de recherche ethnographique, sa coop\u00e9ration au concept de pr\u00e9sentation des produits c\u00e9ramiques et les aspects \u00e9thiques de cette collaboration. Par ailleurs, nous \u00e9tablissons des parall\u00e8les entre ces trois \u00e9l\u00e9ments. Si la gestion de l\u2019esth\u00e9tique r\u00e9pond \u00e0 une politique, le choix d\u2019une esth\u00e9tique moderne dominante dans un effort visant \u00e0 soutenir des artisanes marginalis\u00e9es appara\u00eet alors quelque peu paradoxal. Le modernisme \u00e9tant souvent associ\u00e9 au code masculin, l\u2019adoption d\u2019une telle d\u00e9marche afin de temp\u00e9rer l\u2019exub\u00e9rance d\u2019\u0153uvres f\u00e9minines suscite certes la controverse. Toutefois, au fil de son int\u00e9gration dans l\u2019esth\u00e9tique contemporaine, le modernisme pourrait avoir transcend\u00e9 ses propres racines en mati\u00e8re d\u2019exclusivit\u00e9, de masculinit\u00e9, de blanchit\u00e9 et de rationalit\u00e9. D\u00e8s lors, le travail de ces tisanes marginalis\u00e9es remet en question non seulement le march\u00e9 artisanal traditionnel, mais aussi les conceptions usuelles du modernisme. Au-del\u00e0 des tentatives subtiles de gestion esth\u00e9tique, la mati\u00e8re dynamique des objets se manifeste indubitablement. De m\u00eame, la voix de la personnalit\u00e9 et du v\u00e9cu des artisanes s\u2019\u00e9l\u00e8ve malgr\u00e9 certaines tentatives pour y mettre une sourdine. Qu\u2019on se le dise : ces femmes ont des histoires \u00e0 raconter.","creator":["MIA HUNT"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26911885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03154297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94f918a8-5238-3166-87c8-5fe374fbdafe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26911885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcanaarthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Canadian Art History \/ Annales d'histoire de l'art Canadien","issueNumber":"2\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Journal of Canadian Art History","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Managing Marginalized Material in the Craft Marketplace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26911885","volumeNumber":"39\/40","wordCount":6697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Scott Spector"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78a07be3-2530-3866-8bc4-1359185c4bd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"75","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Edith Stein's Passing Gestures: Intimate Histories, Empathic Portraits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488577","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bronwyn Davies"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23164525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"431af6f5-28d8-3b1d-8e32-dfc8b0aa12bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23164525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE CONCEPT OF AGENCY: A Feminist Poststructuralist Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23164525","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Seeley"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/235169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2f5580f-d38d-3b3e-b011-4f700c291e17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/235169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"891","pageStart":"862","pagination":"pp. 862-891","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"O Sainte Mere: Liberalism and the Socialization of Catholic Men in Nineteenth\u2010Century France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/235169","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":14716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist political theory draws on particular spatial imaginations in elaborating a politics of transformation. This paper establishes this in relation to two familiar accounts of feminist transformation - those of Judith Butler and Luce Irigaray. Respectively I read their work as suggesting that transformation of gender relations takes the form of ubiquitous revolution, taking place everywhere, or a distant dream of an (im)possible future - elsewhere. The paper then turns to discuss the work of Julia Kristeva, often dismissed as not feminist and conservative. I read her work politically, within the frame of feminist theory. She offers a different, heterogeneous account of transformation, as both possible in the present and also limited by the existence and need for social and symbolic orders. In exploring the heterogeneous spatial imagination of her work, the paper suggests that the spatialities of abjection are diverse and productive. Abjection is not simply about devising territories and borders. Moreover, dominant spatialities cannot be described as simply masculine. Finally, drawing links with Lefebvre's account of representational spaces, I argue that Kristeva's work can be extended to inform our understanding of how spaces themselves can be transformed.","creator":["Jenny Robinson"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/623251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Feminism and the Spaces of Transformation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623251","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12631,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[139878,140252],[438602,438780],[439137,439245]],"Locations in B":[[6332,6706],[27409,27587],[27596,27704]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article contributes to the relatively under-researched field of Eastern European sf cinema of the communist period by looking at gender discourse in two films with post-apocalyptic settings: the Czech The End of August at the Hotel Ozone [Konec srpna v hotelu Oz\u00f3n, aka Late August at the Hotel Ozone] (1967), directed by Jan Schmidt, and the Polish Sex Mission [Seksmisja] (1984), directed by Juliusz Machulski. While made in somewhat different sociopolitical situations and featuring disparate modes of expression (art house versus popular comedy), both films stand out for representations of problematic gender relations and identities, which seem to question the heteropatriarchal norm. By linking gender discourse with colonial perspective, this study demonstrates that both films in fact use the unbalanced gender situations to denounce the communist colonial rule and to promote the close connection between heteropatriarchy and the nation state.","creator":["Ewa Mazierska","Eva N\u00e4ripea"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3fc6e74-14d4-3827-b57a-4dc6f546708b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Discourse in Eastern European SF Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0163","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489260,489354]],"Locations in B":[[54907,54998]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michelle S. Bae"],"datePublished":"2011-11-27","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.37.2.0028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08a67770-2009-32e5-8804-7266b3abbf70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/visuartsrese.37.2.0028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interrogating Girl Power: Girlhood, Popular Media, and Postfeminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.37.2.0028","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":5191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumos When carrying out political projects, the use of homosexual\/heterosexual or trans*\/cis distinctions as exclusive categories of analysis may limit our understanding of the complexity of belongings in which each subject is positioned. In many cases, including some queer approaches, this strategy provides for a simplification which attributes a radical or subversive nature to the first term of the pair and a normal or even repressive one to the second. The former case results in what is here called a \u201chomo-trans*-revolution series\u201d; the latter, in a \u201chetero-cisrepression series\u201d. In both instances, a passage from generalization to reduction to invisibilization obstructs any understanding either of the conservative positions existent in the realm of the homo\/ trans*, or of the subversive and radical ones in the sphere of the hetero\/cis. Exposing both of them will allow us to understand that a dissident, fertile collective political project cannot be based solely on sexuality or gender: it must build intersectional bridges based on political approaches and objectives, without falling into generalizations, and maintaining the flexibility we seek in queer approaches.","creator":["Moira P\u00e9rez"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"901fc749-9201-3bea-b336-885511519a0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201cThe Sex-Gender-Revolution Series\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007971","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hillary Clinton is arguably the most prominent woman in American politics today. Past research suggests female politicians conform to masculine communication styles in an attempt to evade the \"double bind.\" Clinton's long and varied career thus provides an important and useful case study for investigating how female politicians present themselves strategically. Drawing on research in political psychology, political communication, social psychology, and linguistics I examine whether Clinton talked \"like a man\" as she navigated a path toward political leadership by conducting a quantitative textual analysis of 567 interview transcripts and candidate debates between 1992\u20132013. Results on Clinton's linguistic style suggest her language grew increasingly masculine over time, as her involvement and power in politics expanded. I also consider Clinton's language in the context of her 2007\u20132008 presidential campaign. In 2007, Clinton's linguistic style was consistently masculine, supporting widespread accounts of Clinton's campaign strategy. Beginning in late 2007, however, Clinton's language became more feminine, reflecting a shift in the self-presentational strategies advised by her campaign staff. Throughout the 2008 campaign period, Clinton's language fluctuated dramatically from one interview to the next, reflecting a candidate\u2014and campaign\u2014in crisis. This study reveals hidden insight into the strategies Clinton used as she navigated through the labyrinth toward leadership. Changes in Clinton's linguistic style reflect the performance of gendered roles, expectations of political leaders, and the masculine norms of behavior that permeate political institutions.","creator":["Jennifer J. Jones"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26314834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26ab1cf7-f5e2-3247-a5d9-640719a65276"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26314834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Talk \"Like a Man\": The Linguistic Styles of Hillary Clinton, 1992\u20132013","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26314834","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bernice L. Hausman"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97f772a0-aeaf-3ca7-8efd-1a016afad2cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Transgender Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178770","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10564,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[475185,475265],[489242,489409]],"Locations in B":[[61402,61480],[66058,66248]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that language, interaction and culture cannot be reduced to literal performance \u2013 the 'there' in an interaction. Instead, language in interaction should also be understood in relation to what is barred from performance, what is not or cannot be performed \u2013 the not-there, or, rather, the unsaid traces, the absent presences, that structure the said and the done. If this is accepted, the question becomes: how can we engage with those processes, both theoretically and empirically? Drawing on work presented in the book Language and Sexuality (Cameron and Kulick, 2003), as well as research concerned with performativity, desire, and mimesis, this article presents a brief overview of the kinds of questions that appear when we turn our attention to what tends to get left out, both in specific linguistic interactions, and in our models of language.","creator":["DON KULICK"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f15d1e1a-2e80-3201-a31c-8b8f85475079"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The importance of what gets left out","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048526","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5194,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[453217,453320]],"Locations in B":[[10258,10361]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Mark"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a30c2990-557c-3ccd-b7e5-38735a7d2783"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"As They Lay Dying: or Why We Should Teach, Write, and Read Eudora Welty Instead of, Alongside of, Because of, as Often as William Faulkner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908209","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the extent to which the short story Shame, Salman Rushdie's reinterpretation of the Beauty-and-the-Beast fairytale motif, can be treated as a postmodern feminist subversion of the master narrative of Euro-American androcentric culture.","creator":["Justyna Deszcz"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30035141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0015587X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44708348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237170"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1b22be4-85ad-3414-bfe0-b39fe511a35b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30035141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"folklore"}],"isPartOf":"Folklore","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Folklore Enterprises, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Salman Rushdie's Attempt at a Feminist Fairytale Reconfiguration in Shame","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30035141","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":9399,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[363822,364080]],"Locations in B":[[45541,45799]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marilyn Lake"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27509053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00236942"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9bf6f7e-23d6-3009-879a-2af1c121f840"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27509053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Labour History","issueNumber":"60","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Socialism and Manhood: A Reply to Bruce Scates","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27509053","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article offers an investigation of the Women's National Basketball Association's marketing discourses and provides historical and contemporary contexts to illuminate the complex articulations of race and sexuality imagined via representations of the league and its players. Proposing to \"queer whiteness\" by deploying particular inflections of the word queer, this article makes visible the ways in which discourses related to heterosexuality and whiteness assist marketers in advertising the league as a \"mainstream\" and therefore salable event. Marketers thus participate in and advance a representational politics that elevates the importance of maternity and morality as emblematic of the WNBA's idealized image of the \"good girl,\" especially the \"good white girl.\" This constant emphasis on the players' moral attributes and family values helps to distance the league from projections of alleged deviance imagined to be embodied by \"fatal women\"\u2014that is, bodies marked as black and lesbian\u2014the alleged obverse of the \"good white girl.\"","creator":["Mary G. McDonald"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2002.45.4.379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b3020c3-802b-339b-86ad-ed0684dc859e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sop.2002.45.4.379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering Whiteness: The Particular Case of the Women's National Basketball Association","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2002.45.4.379","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amanda Anderson"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Prostitution's Artful Guise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465193","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12400,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[511312,511413]],"Locations in B":[[81186,81287]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Blackshaw Naberhaus"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54950243-10d5-30ac-94a3-fe1f46e51eb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"164","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"JOAQU\u00cdN PACHECO'S \"ALFREDO\" AND THE FATHER-SON CONFLICT IN SPANISH ROMANTIC DRAMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808649","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8943,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[214249,214454]],"Locations in B":[[20200,20406]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Os hinos nacionais, tais como as bandeiras, os bras\u00f5es, os selos e o dinheiro, s\u00e3o elementos simb\u00f3licos que fazem parte de um equipamento que acompanha as reivindica\u00e7\u00e3es de especificidade de cada na\u00e7\u00e3o. As letras dos hinos dos pa\u00edses p\u00f3s-coloniais podem ser vistos como documentos ilustrativos, j\u00e1 que reflectem as ideologias e preocupa\u00e7\u00e3es da era da indep\u00eandencia. Os temas mais comuns s\u00e3o apelos ao despertar da na\u00e7\u00e3o ou elogios \u00e0s maravilhas '\u00fanicas' do territ\u00f3rio nacional. No entanto, os hinos dos cinco pa\u00edses da \u00c1frica lus\u00f3fona e Timor-Leste diferem da maioria dos outros estados p\u00f3scoloniais na medida em que as elites pol\u00edticas recorreram a poetas e escritores conhecidos e proclamaram a revolu\u00e7\u00e3o socialista. Enquanto que na maioria dos outros pa\u00edses os hinos iniciais permanecem, no novo mundo lus\u00f3fono a transforma\u00e7\u00e3o pol\u00edtica do socialismo para o capitalismo foi acompanhada pela substitui\u00e7\u00e3o-ou planos de substitui\u00e7\u00e3o-dos hinos. Os discursos de identidade nacional que inicialmente celebravam os her\u00f3is de liberta\u00e7\u00e3o e preconizavam a constru\u00e7\u00e3o de umfuturo pr\u00f3speroforam substituidos por hinos que enfatizam a cultura e o encanto do pa\u00eds amado.","creator":["Igor Cusack"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30219083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1f1600f-756d-3557-8b99-2a1b54f3b39f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30219083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From Revolution to Reflection: The National Anthems of the New Lusophone Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30219083","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10434,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[8639,8784]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I develop a new conceptual framework, a new thinking technology, for understanding the bullying that takes place between children in schools. In addition, I propose a new definition of bullying. This new thinking technology reflects a shift in focus from individual characteristics to the social processes that may lead to bullying. The social approach theorises bullying as one of many reactions to particular kinds of social insecurity. The concepts I develop include the necessity of belonging, social exclusion anxiety and the production of contempt and dignity by both children and adults. I also draw on Judith Butler's concept of abjection. In the last part of the article, I employ Karen Barad's theory of agential realism, focusing specifically on her concept of intraacting enacting forces. The entry to the theoretical development is based on empirical data generated in Denmark during a comprehensive five-year study of bullying.","creator":["Dorte Marie S\u00f8ndergaard"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ed30b7-2d57-31ac-b718-a3429f7ec323"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41485442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bullying and social exclusion anxiety in schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41485442","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[422928,423172]],"Locations in B":[[40068,40313]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith C. Mueller"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imperfect Enjoyment at Market Hill: Impotence, Desire, and Reform in Swift's Poems to Lady Acheson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032061","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":7997,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62337,62497]],"Locations in B":[[49945,50105]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary-Kay Gamel"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1561696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227012"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1561696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjphil"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From Thesmophoriazousai to the Julie Thesmo Show: Adaptation, Performance, Reception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1561696","volumeNumber":"123","wordCount":13382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The struggle for wholeness\u2014the melding of all experience and knowledge of the world\u2014is central to the practice of machi, or Mapuche shamans, in southern Chile. I explore how the gender and generational aspects of Mapuche persons are extended to the socio-cosmological order, to Mapuche ritual practice, and to the creation of a holistic machi personhood. I outline the application of holistic personhood in Mapuche cosmology and then analyze its performance in three kinds of Mapuche rituals. First, in divination rituals, gender difference is enacted by machi and dungumachife (\"ritual interpreter for machi\"), and wholeness is expressed through their ritual partnership. I demonstrate that ecstatic and formal discourses are gendered independently of the sex of the actors. Second, in community-wide nguillatun rituals, difference is impersonated by diverse actors, and wholeness is enacted collectively to integrate the ritual community. I demonstrate that both sex-based and performative dimensions of gender and generation are crucial for collective renditions of wholeness. Third, in individual healing rituals, difference is subsumed by the machi, who enacts wholeness as Wellness, and the performative dimension of gender prevails over the notion of gender as linked to sex. Machi, both male and female, assume masculine, feminine, and co-gendered identities\u2014moving between masculine and feminine gender polarities or combining them\u2014for the purpose of healing. I conclude by analyzing the implications of ritual wholeness for theories of gender and embodiment and for Mapuche identity politics.","creator":["Ana Mariella Bacigalupo"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018593"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c64955f-da98-33cb-a4e5-d569a5cef1d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44368738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"GENDERED RITUALS FOR COSMIC ORDER: MAPUCHE SHAMANIC STRUGGLES FOR WHOLENESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368738","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many forms of sovereignty are still, albeit not exclusively, anchored in claims on territory and are asserted through the productive exercise of control over people, resources, and habitats located within the spaces of territory. In British Columbia, Canada, First Nations' assertions of sovereign control over their territories and resources are reconfiguring resource planning, development, and management, even as the provincial and federal governments seek to maintain their own control over the same territory. While the courts have been the primary avenue for protecting Aboriginal Title and rights, First Nations are also turning to the use of mass media and other public forums. This essay examines the assertions of sovereignty made by coastal First Nations through the venues of public forums.","creator":["Kathleen M. Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40086723-b7ee-3a77-8e59-a6fd9531a305"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"(Re)Landscaping Sovereignty in British Columbia, Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497542","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9346,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[57715,57784]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Donald E. Hall"],"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47e97680-b32f-3028-9659-6efadedeca02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction: Queer Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099622","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4171,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460867,460936]],"Locations in B":[[15896,15965]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CORALINE JORTAY","JENNIFER BOND","CHANG LIU"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26975293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20703449"},{"name":"oclc","value":"604718998"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d33a8922-05a7-3006-9570-810a6276ab95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26975293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaperspective"}],"isPartOf":"China Perspectives","issueNumber":"3 (122)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"French Centre for Research on Contemporary China","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26975293","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Legible and Thus Legitimate? Reading and Blurring Gender in China, Today and Yesterday"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven L. Winter"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf1dbcf6-b6de-3fcd-9c4d-712363c12ad9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1073711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":115,"pageEnd":"835","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-835","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Virginia Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Power\" Thing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073711","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":45818,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49048,49628]],"Locations in B":[[13841,14421]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jennifer Denbow"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.1.0107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"354f5f6f-b4a9-3930-88c1-a1c282b16af7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.1.0107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sterilization as Cyborg Performance: Reproductive Freedom and the Regulation of Sterilization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.35.1.0107","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11118,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103842,104115]],"Locations in B":[[28284,28557]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates the utility of Eckert & McConnell-Ginet's concept of \"community of practice\" for an analysis of the language used by women in a sexual assault tribunal. It is shown how the questions asked by two tribunal members (a male and a female faculty member), in a university sexual \"harassment\" tribunal, function to (re)frame and (re)construct the events in question as consensual sex. Although the female complainants (i.e. victims) in the tribunal characterize their experiences as sexual assault, two of the tribunal members -- one of whom is a female faculty member -- ask questions that presuppose the inadequacy and deficiency of the complainants' signals of resistance, suggesting that their so-called lack of resistance was tantamount to consent. Clearly, any homogeneous notion of \"woman's speech style\" or \"woman's point of view\" would fail to account for the differences between the discursive patterns of this woman tribunal member and the women complainants in this context. However, if (as argued by Eckert & McConnell-Ginet 1992a,b) our linguistic practices arise out of the kinds of community of practice with which we are involved, then an understanding of such local practices and activities should provide greater insight into the differential linguistic behavior of the women involved in this sexual \"harassment\" tribunal.","creator":["Susan Ehrlich"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4168927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Communities of Practice, Gender, and the Representation of Sexual Assault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168927","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sara Castro-Klar\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07340591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"911bfd33-5469-36f6-9e90-59690b697f16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dispositio"}],"isPartOf":"Dispositio","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WRITING SUBALTERITY: GUAMAN POMA AND GARCILASO, INCA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491515","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores how national identities are constructed through language by examining the accent negotiations of a group of white English immigrants to the U.S. Pointing to the anxiety that any Americanization of their accents engendered, I show how individuals cope with claiming an identity that seems to be undermined by their speech style. They negotiated this contradiction in two ways: first, they feared that an invisible audience of English people would unmask them as not properly English; and second, they used distancing mechanisms-namely, sarcasm, disgust, anxiety about disloyalty, and a recourse to physicality-to distance themselves from the Americanisms that crept into their linguistic habitus. These mechanisms allowed the immigrants to maintain their sense of Englishness even when they did not sound English.","creator":["Katharine W. Jones"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2675618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47186132-3d2b-3c01-8cc3-7e6a06ee79ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2675618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"1094","pageStart":"1061","pagination":"pp. 1061-1094","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"I've Called 'em Tom-ah-toes All My Life and I'm Not Going to Change!\": Maintaining Linguistic Control over English Identity in the U.S.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2675618","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":16002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ROBIN OSBORNE"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44712054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00686735"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"638a87db-1dbb-3779-85e9-3b572ea2b876"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44712054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"proccambphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE USE OF ABUSE: SEMONIDES 7","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44712054","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay treats Ingeborg Bachmann's dystopian text, \"A Place for Coincidences\" (1964). Bachmann here represents the Berlin of the Economic Miracle through reference to the satirical tradition and its relationship to utopian thinking. The narrative draws upon an intertextual network, including Voltaire's \"Candide\", B\u00fcchner's \"Lenz\" and \"Leonce and Lena\", and Kafka's 'A Country Doctor'. The sick-to-death narrator describes the pathography of the city, exposing the symptomatic layers of a traumatic and repressed history. Berlin functions here as counter-location to Vienna, both cities in need of betterment but probably not to be made better in a world far from the best possible. Dieser Aufsatz behandelt den dystopischen Text von Ingeborg Bachmann, \"Ein Ort f\u00fcr Zuf\u00e4lle\" (1964). Bachmann stellt hier das Berlin des Wirtschaftswunders unter Heranziehung der satirischen Tradition und ihrer Beziehung zum utopischen Denken dar. Die Erz\u00e4hlung basiert auf einem intertextuellen Netzwerk, das Voltaires \"Candide\", B\u00fcchners \"Lenz\" und \"Leonce und Lena\", und Kafkas 'Ein Landarzt' einschlie\u00dft. Die kranke bzw. krankhafte Erz\u00e4hlerfigur beschreibt auch die Pathographie der Stadt, legt die symptomatischen Schichten einer traumatischen und verdr\u00e4ngten Geschichte blo\u00df. Berlin funktioniert hier auch als Gegenort zu Wien, zu verbessernde aber wahrscheinlich unverbesserliche St\u00e4dte in einer Welt, die lange nicht die bestm\u00f6gliche ist.","creator":["ANDREW J. WEBBER"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13507532"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55135080"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27944846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Austrian Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Worst of all Possible Worlds? Ingeborg Bachmann's \"Ein Ort f\u00fcr Zuf\u00e4lle\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944846","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kiera Galway"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff893156-fe58-3733-b756-7e7ad6a1073a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Music Library Association","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669854","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":1276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines narrative methodologies as one approach to exploring issues of gender, education and social justice and, particularly, insights into \"undoing gender\". It furthermore examines the possibilities of exploring gender and its multiple intersections in a range of global and policy contexts through the use of personal experience approaches. The \"storying\" of lived experience is examined as a means of challenging dominant discourses which can construct and other individuals and groups in relation to many aspects of gender and education. Drawing on intersectionality, as a complex and developing feminist theory, the paper considers ways in which narrative can illuminate often hidden complexities while seeking to avoid generalisations and essentialisms. The difficulties of using narrative in relation to these aims are explored in the light of the warnings of feminist writers such as Michele Fine and bell hooks. The paper briefly considers narrative as both methodology and phenomenon, and finally, drawing on critical discourse analysis, discusses the potential of intersectionality and narrative in relation to undoing gender. Cet article examine les m\u00e9thodologies narratives en tant qu'approche pour explorer les questions de genre, d'\u00e9ducation et de justice sociale, et en particulier pour aborder la question de \u00abd\u00e9faire le genre\u00bb. L'auteure analyse en outre les possibilit\u00e9s d'\u00e9tudier la question du genre et ses nombreuses intersections avec plusieurs contextes mondiaux et strat\u00e9giques \u00e0 travers les approches de l'exp\u00e9rience personnelle. La narration de l'exp\u00e9rience v\u00e9cue est examin\u00e9e comme moyen de contester les discours dominants, qui peuvent construire et rendre autres les individus et les groupes par rapport \u00e0 de nombreux aspects du genre et de l'\u00e9ducation. \u00c0 partir de l'intersectionnalit\u00e9, th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe \u00e9mergente et complexe, l'auteure \u00e9tudie comment le r\u00e9cit peut \u00e9clairer des complexit\u00e9s souvent masqu\u00e9es tout en s'effor\u00e7ant d'\u00e9viter les g\u00e9n\u00e9ralisations et essentialismes. Les difficult\u00e9s d'utiliser le r\u00e9cit par rapport \u00e0 ces objectifs sont analys\u00e9es \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re des mises en garde d'ecrivaines f\u00e9ministes telles que Michele Fine et bell hooks. L'auteure aborde bri\u00e8vement le r\u00e9cit en tant que m\u00e9thodologie et ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne et examine finalement, \u00e0 partir d'une analyse critique du discours, le potentiel de l'intersectionnalit\u00e9 et du r\u00e9cit en vue de d\u00e9construire les in\u00e9galit\u00e9s sexuelles. Dies ist eine Untersuchung narrativer Methodik als Ansatz zur Erforschung von Geschlechtsrollen (Gender), Bildung und sozialer Gerechtigkeit und insbesondere zur Gewinnung von Einsichten, wie geschlechtsspezifische Benachteiligungen beseitigt werden k\u00f6nnen. Dar\u00fcber hinaus wird eruiert, wie unter Einsatz erfahrungsbezogener Forschungsans\u00e4tze Geschlechtsrollen und deren vielf\u00e4ltige \u00dcberschneidungen in diversen globalen und politischen Kontexten untersucht werden k\u00f6nnen. Es wird untersucht, inwieweit die Fiktionalisierung gelebter Erfahrung in Geschichten ein Mittel sein kann, um vorherrschende Diskurse, durch die viele Aspekte von Gender und Bildung unter Umst\u00e4nden erst geschaffen werden, und in Bezug darauf andere Personen und Gruppen kritisch zu hinterfragen. Im R\u00fcckgriff auf Intersektionalit\u00e4t als komplexer und sich entwickelnder feministischer Theorie werden in dieser Arbeit Mittel und Wege er\u00f6rtert, wie die Erz\u00e4hlung Vielschichtigkeiten ans Licht bringen kann, die sonst oft im Dunkel liegen, wobei versucht wird, Verallgemeinerungen und essenzialistische Erkl\u00e4rungen zu vermeiden. Im Licht der Warnungen feministischer Autorinnen wie Michele Fine und bell hooks wird die Problematik narrativer Ans\u00e4tze hinsichtlich dieser Ziele ausgelotet. Erz\u00e4hlen wird sowohl als Methodik als auch als Ph\u00e4nomen in knapper Form dargestellt. Unter R\u00fcckgriff auf die kritische Diskursanalyse wird am Schluss das Potenzial von Intersektionalit\u00e4t und Erz\u00e4hlung im Hinblick auf die Beseitigung geschlechtsspezifischer Benachteiligung diskutiert. En este trabajo, la autora examina metodolog\u00edas narrativas como modo de explorar problemas de g\u00e9nero, educaci\u00f3n y justicia social y, en particular, insights de lo que llamamos \"deshacer el g\u00e9nero\". Adem\u00e1s, examina las posibilidades de explorar el g\u00e9nero y sus m\u00faltiples intersecciones en una serie de contextos globales y de pol\u00edticas basando sus enfoques en la experiencia personal. Examina esta \"narraci\u00f3n\" de experiencia vivida como desaf\u00edo de los discursos dominantes, capaces de construir otros individuos y grupos en funci\u00f3n de muchos aspectos de g\u00e9nero y educaci\u00f3n. Inspirada en la interseccionalidad como teor\u00eda feminista compleja y en desarrollo, la autora estudia caminos donde la narrativa puede aclarar complejidades frecuentemente ocultas, a la vez que trata de evitar generalizaciones y esencialismos. Las dificultades de usar la narrativa en relaci\u00f3n con estos objetivos se han explorado a la luz de las advertencias de escritoras feministas como Michele Fine y bell hooks. En resumen, en este trabajo la autora considera la narrativa como metodolog\u00eda y tambi\u00e9n como fen\u00f3meno, y bas\u00e1ndose en un an\u00e1lisis de discurso cr\u00edtico, finalmente trata el potencial de la interseccionalidad y la narrativa en relaci\u00f3n con \"deshacer el g\u00e9nero\". \u0412 \u0434\u0430\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0435 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0441\u043c\u0430\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u043d\u0430\u0440\u0440\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u0430\u044f \u043c\u0435\u0442\u043e\u0434\u0438\u043a\u0430 \u0432 \u043a\u0430\u0447\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435 \u043e\u0434\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0438\u0437 \u043c\u0435\u0442\u043e\u0434\u043e\u0432 \u0438\u0437\u0443\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0432\u043e\u043f\u0440\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432 \u0433\u0435\u043d\u0434\u0435\u0440\u0430, \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438 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\u043a\u0430\u0447\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u0442\u043e\u0434\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u0438 \u0444\u0435\u043d\u043e\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0430, \u0438 \u0432 \u0437\u0430\u043a\u043b\u044e\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435, \u0430\u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440, \u043e\u043f\u0438\u0440\u0430\u044f\u0441\u044c \u043d\u0430 \u0430\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437 \u043a\u0440\u0438\u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0434\u0438\u0441\u043a\u0443\u0440\u0441\u0430, \u043e\u0431\u0441\u0443\u0436\u0434\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u043f\u043e\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b \u0432\u043e\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0435\u0439 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0441\u0435\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438 \u043f\u043e\u0432\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0432 \u043e\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0448\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u0443\u043f\u0440\u0430\u0437\u0434\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0433\u0435\u043d\u0434\u0435\u0440\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0432\u043e\u043f\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0430.","creator":["BARBARA ANN COLE"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208566"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41569093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233329"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ca85895-e8a0-3a06-8039-07178fac667e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevieducinte"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Education \/ Internationale Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Erziehungswissenschaft \/ Revue Internationale de l'Education","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"578","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-578","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"GENDER, NARRATIVES AND INTERSECTIONALITY: CAN PERSONAL EXPERIENCE APPROACHES TO RESEARCH CONTRIBUTE TO \"UNDOING GENDER\"?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608078","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":8181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANITA PACHECO"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43447772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50030946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43447772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englliterena"}],"isPartOf":"English Literary Renaissance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"A mere cupboard of glasses\": Female Sexuality and Male Honor in \"A Fair Quarrel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43447772","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10259,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[258830,258997]],"Locations in B":[[4937,5104]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a content analysis of 1094 advertisements, the article extends the author's previous research on dating by examining how age and gender intersect to influence the age at which people advertise, their choice of partner and how they manage aspects of their age identity. Locating analyses in the context of a postmodern, consumer culture, it shows that young men and older women are most likely to advertise. It reveals that the maintenance of traditional age differentials varies according to age group. It argues that intimations of a reversal in tradition are discernible in that some older women now seek younger men. It concludes that in a culture that gives primacy to youth, assembling an age identity is problematic, not only for women but also for the chronologically young.","creator":["Elizabeth Jagger"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff9495f-d537-3056-9a17-972d2cf63a0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Is Thirty the New Sixty? Dating, Age and Gender in a Postmodern, Consumer Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856714","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.22.3.10","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3c4ad43-8798-34a5-a269-8fc2f2d5148e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jewisocistud.22.3.10"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Is Bannon's Antisemitism Considered Alright?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.22.3.10","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article contributes towards ongoing debates on gender, security and post-conflict studies. Its focus is on the activities of male peacekeepers and their gendered relations with women and girls. Against the backdrop of the peacekeeping economies in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sierra Leone, we focus on the consequences of male peacekeepers' construction and enactment of masculinity (and masculinities) on the security of local women. We conclude by suggesting that a deeper understanding of gender relations and security in peacekeeping contexts is necessary for any policy intervention in post-conflict settings.","creator":["PAUL HIGATE","MARSHA HENRY"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26298585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cacdeb7-460c-39c6-bc98-6eb11341c0f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26298585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engendering (In)security in Peace Support Operations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26298585","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Karen S\u00e1nchez-Eppler"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"354","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"American Houses: Constructions of History and Domesticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489994","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3937,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49508,49628]],"Locations in B":[[22151,22271]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article brings together two case studies that examine how nontransgender people, \"gender normals,\" interact with transgender people to highlight the connections between doing gender and heteronormativity. By contrasting public and private interactions that range from nonsexual to sexualized to sexual, the authors show how gender and sexuality are inextricably tied together. The authors demonstrate that the criteria for membership in a gender category are significantly different in social versus (hetero)sexual circumstances. While gender is presumed to reflect biological sex in all social interactions, the importance of doing gender in a way that represents the shape of one's genitals is heightened in sexual and sexualized situations. Responses to perceived failures to fulfill gender criteria in sexual and sexualized relationships are themselves gendered; men and women select different targets for and utilize gendered tactics to accomplish the policing of supposedly natural gender boundaries and to repair breaches to heteronormativity.","creator":["KRISTEN SCHILT","LAUREL WESTBROOK"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3115201c-7e4f-35a2-bab7-238de58c3911"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20676798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"440","pagination":"pp. 440-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"DOING GENDER, DOING HETERONORMATIVITY: \"Gender Normals,\" Transgender People, and the Social Maintenance of Heterosexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20676798","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9981,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[475212,475303]],"Locations in B":[[62958,63056]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article investigates discursive practices and their relations to gender, facework and workplace in two all-female institutions that address violence against women in Brazil. By investigating 26 audio-taped interactions with victims of domestic violence at an all-female police station and a feminist activist crisis intervention center, this study contributes to the understanding of intragender differences. The findings suggest that gender does not predict interactional patterns; instead these interactional patterns are best understood as reflecting the gendered communities of practice from which the professionals are drawn. Police officers attend less to the victims' needs by providing minimal feedback when the victims report their problems. They are four times more likely than feminists to provide non-responses to the victims' turns, as well as four times more likely to change topics in their responses to the victims' turns. The linguistic and ethnographic findings suggest that the more cooperative strategies used by the feminists are not as 'Valuable' for police officers in the symbolic market of their habitus. In the police system, a more affiliative way of relating to the female clientele seems to work against the female police officers and their aims, by reifying the essentialist ideology that affiliative interactions are 'natural' to women, or that is all females can offer in the police system.","creator":["ANA CRISTINA OSTERMANN"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10d665c3-9343-39e6-997b-74efbeae3749"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"505","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-505","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Communities of practice at work: gender, facework and the power of habitus at an all-female police station and a feminist crisis intervention center in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888584","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":15445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reexamines the evidence for the relationships between the Vestal virgins and their natal kin from the second century BC to the third century ad. It suggests that the bond between these priestesses and their families remained strong throughout this period and that, as a consequence, interpretations of the Vestals' position within Roman society that emphasize the severing of agnatic ties through their removal from patria potestas may be misguided. When placed in the broader social and legal context, the ritual \u201ccapture\u201d of these priestesses is shown to be a necessary feature of their priestly identity, which only marked the Vestals as extraordinary because of the unique intersection of religious and gender categories that characterized their office. Finally, the implications of these findings for the interpretation of Vestal virginity are discussed.","creator":["Andrew B. Gallia"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2015.34.1.74","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df6f4760-aaf1-3b3a-a423-33b8e9553cb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ca.2015.34.1.74"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Vestal Virgins and Their Families","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2015.34.1.74","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":23061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mariko Hori Tanaka"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09273131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51392071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234422"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"208e436b-5e91-3c20-a61f-43b8b56d03da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25781208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"samubecktoda"}],"isPartOf":"Samuel Beckett Today \/ Aujourd'hui","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"POSTMODERN STAGINGS OF \"WAITING FOR GODOT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781208","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":3216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sally O'Driscoll"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e72cd79-b244-39b9-bc98-036674866f0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20059132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lesbian Criticism and Feminist Criticism: Readings of \"Millenium Hall\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059132","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10964,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[57329,57382]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24778487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ef56d0a-6016-32a8-a46e-068f3d620416"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24778487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24778487","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":2345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este estudo prop\u00f5e analisar a falta de desenvolvimento dum c\u00e2none de literatura portuguesa homossexual, apesar do crescente aparecimento de obras escritas por autores homossexuais que tratam abertamente a tem\u00e1tica 'queer.' Aqui a proposta \u00e9 que a homofobia, neste contexto, permeia tanto a produ\u00e7\u00e3o destes autores como as opini\u00f5es publicadas dos mesmos sobre a sua obra e a literatura 'queer' portuguesa em geral. A hip\u00f3tese de que a homofobia \u00e9 o elemento que inspira, e que \u00e9 ao mesmo tempo o maior obst\u00e1culo \u00e0 dissemina\u00e7\u00e3o da literatura 'queer,' \u00e9 explorada com o exemplo do autor portugu\u00eas mais prol\u00edfico de romances de tem\u00e1tica homossexual, Guilherme de Melo.","creator":["Timothy McGovern"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"634074cb-0ec6-3be6-9b41-1328068c1ba6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4490645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Narrating Homophobia and the Closet in Portugal: Guilherme de Melo and the Emergence of Queer Canons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490645","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102757,103458]],"Locations in B":[[41858,42589]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The performance of Kriolu rap in Lisbon, Portugal has emerged at a time when Western European countries are reassessing the relationship between national territory and identity. Attractive to some and disturbing to others are the attitude and flair of Kriolu rappers. A group of mostly young men of Cape Verdean descent, these rappers insist on speaking and singing in Kriolu, a creole language that lacks official-language status in both Portugal and Cape Verde. In this article, based on analyses of rap lyrics, excerpts from my fieldwork conversations with rappers, and structural features of the Kriolu language itself, I propose that Kriolu rap is a renewed interrogation of diaspora and of place-based identity. More generally, I propose that, when contextualized in terms of cultural history and (post) colonial politics, Kriolu rap offers insight into the relationship between words and music as part of a process of combining aesthetics with social claims.","creator":["Derek Pardue"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48576387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53993709"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004213823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8014fd8-04d7-3195-9be1-dd6c5017bd69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48576387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"E60","pageStart":"E42","pagination":"pp. E42-E60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cape Verdean Creole and the Politics of Scene-Making in Lisbon, Portugal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48576387","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["SUZANNE JUHASZ"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f6e5003-bc6b-32b3-bc9d-308f16aad89a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Prince Is Wearing a Tutu: Queer Identity and Identificatory Reading in Jane Hamilton's \"The Short History of a Prince\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304824","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Le r\u00f4le conc\u00e9d\u00e9 \u00e0 Robert de Montesquiou dans la formation de Marcel Proust est celui d\u2019un mentor mondain et d\u2019un mod\u00e8le romanesque aux allures de repoussoir. Ce \u00ab professeur de beaut\u00e9 \u00bb a pourtant eu une influence d\u00e9cisive dans l\u2019\u00e9laboration de la Recherche. Enlaidi et travesti, le po\u00e8te y incarne le type de l\u2019amateur st\u00e9rile et de l\u2019aristocrate dilettante. La vocation du narrateur pourrait \u00eatre cependant le fruit de la m\u00e9salliance f\u00e9conde qui fonde la modernit\u00e9, celle du po\u00e8te et du romancier. Robert de Montesquiou\u2019s role in Marcel Proust\u2019s training was that of a social mentor and a romanesque role model, who was also a negative example. This \u201cprofessor of beauty\u201d nevertheless exerted a decisive influence on the development of the Recherche. In an uglier and disguised form, the poet embodies the figure of the sterile amateur and the dilettante aristocrat. The vocation of the narrator could, however, be the product of the fruitful misalliance that is the foundation of modernity, that of the poet and the novelist.","creator":["Mathilde Bertrand"],"datePublished":"2020-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26927845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70b17973-54e7-3346-939a-8ef7f5bb0387"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26927845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"612","pageStart":"599","pagination":"pp. 599-612","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00ab PROFESSEUR DE BEAUT\u00c9 \u00bb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26927845","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":6483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"ROBERT DE MONTESQUIOU DANS LA FORMATION DE MARCEL PROUST"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helen Solterer"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"970e9f4c-7643-399c-aa12-4a9ab2e017c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"549","pageStart":"522","pagination":"pp. 522-549","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Figures of Female Militancy in Medieval France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174588","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11637,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[56602,56673]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT In Cuentos de vacaciones (1905), the collection of short fictions by Spanish histologist and Nobel Prize winner Santiago Ram\u00f3n y Cajal, scientific and aesthetic discourses merge to interrogate the increasing complexity of life under modernity. This article examines how science and technologies of representation and display (dissection, \u201cthe theater of proof,\u201d microscopy) intersect with modern spaces of visuality (theaters, museums, laboratories) in order to construct an epistemology of the human body and its legibility at individual and collective levels of existence. In my reading of \u201cEl pesimista corregido,\u201d I argue that the story can be interpreted as a pseudoscientific experiment taking the form of a mise en sc\u00e8ne which, as it exposes the constructed nature of human physiology, also foregrounds the centrality of theater and illusion as mechanisms and channels for subjectivization as well as for the production of aesthetic, cultural, and political consensus.","creator":["Loredana Comparone"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a201ba98-8749-3de5-ae09-7e5fb986409d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90000309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Microscopy, Theatricality, and the Making of Cultural Consensus in the Short Fiction of Santiago Ram\u00f3n y Cajal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000309","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":10031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rolando B. Tolentino"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e32da1b-d233-354b-b830-2b46a574c19e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42634353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"National Bodies and Sexualities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634353","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JAY WATSON"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2eaa540-e099-3674-ab94-b8be1ca1090e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"856","pageStart":"853","pagination":"pp. 853-856","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287389","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kwangsoon Kim"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c914218c-e536-3e98-9d2d-3e16c995e3e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"Becoming\" William Harris: Deterritorialization of Black Identity in Charles Johnson's Oxherding Tale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325901","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":6427,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478800,478839]],"Locations in B":[[38445,38485]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Teresa L\u00f3pez Pardina"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/pasajes.37.101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15752259"},{"name":"oclc","value":"818673107"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79a1b821-c24d-39d2-8fa6-d20d7efb5672"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/pasajes.37.101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pasajes"}],"isPartOf":"Pasajes","issueNumber":"37","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Publicacions Universitat de Valencia","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"De Simone de Beauvoir a Judith Butler:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/pasajes.37.101","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"el g\u00e9nero y el sujeto"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy C. Cornwell"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40545815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82f81eca-cf41-33bc-846f-947cb43f9f69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40545815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Free Expression in the Feminist Classroom: The Problem of Hate Speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40545815","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":5661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Brenda R. Silver"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ced4b7d-aee9-3421-9746-b227c399c923"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mis-fits: The Monstrous Union of Virginia Woolf and Marilyn Monroe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389302","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on forty-eight interviews with individuals who participated on the academic job market in rhetoric and composition between 2010 and 2015, this essay shows how conceptualizing the academic job search as an intimate endeavor can offer insights for understanding the rhetorical production of affective binds within institutional contexts.","creator":["Jennifer Sano-Franchini"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44783529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709729"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5de265b2-43b3-3415-9e1b-050778e150e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44783529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law"],"title":"\"It's Like Writing Yourself into a Codependent Relationship with Someone Who Doesn't Even Want You!\" Emotional Labor, Intimacy, and the Academic Job Market in Rhetoric and Composition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44783529","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":10533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article souligne l\u2019int\u00e9r\u00eat du genre et de sa mesure pour \u00e9clairer les probl\u00e9matiques marketing. Les auteurs montrent que la mesure du genre a \u00e9volu\u00e9 vers une approche multifactorielle comprenant trois facteurs principaux : cognitif (dont l\u2019identit\u00e9 de genre), affectif et comportemental. Le genre apporte une valeur explicative compl\u00e9mentaire au sexe, de pr\u00e9f\u00e9rence quand la mesure est multifactorielle. Les auteurs explicitent \u00e9galement quand et comment utiliser le genre et sa mesure, identifiant les situations dans lesquelles il est pertinent d\u2019employer ce concept, en distinguant contextes biologiques, sociaux, culturels et situationnels.","creator":["Isabelle Ulrich","Elisabeth Tissier-Desbordes"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26897008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07673701"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321313500"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235766"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc583a1d-3865-36f6-a988-878f98e3bc1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26897008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rechapplmark"}],"isPartOf":"Recherche et Applications en Marketing","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"De l\u2019int\u00e9r\u00eat de mobiliser en marketing le genre multifactoriel et sa mesure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26897008","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":19357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Casey Charles"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be5e6869-6893-324d-8016-80157c4f5033"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Was Shakespeare Gay? Sonnet 20 and the Politics of Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112402","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8600,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471785]],"Locations in B":[[51145,51221]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Scott Banville"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20084241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Ally Sloper's Half-Holiday\": The Geography of Class in Late-Victorian Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084241","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ce texte analyse la mani\u00e8re dont le film Batman Returns dy r\u00e9alisateur am\u00e9rican Tim Burton fait usage des pr\u00e9occupations majeures de la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe des dix derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es. A travers la repr\u00e9sentation de \u00abCatwoman\u00bb, le film, un pastiche postmoderne de subjectivit\u00e9s sutur\u00e9es et de masquerades performatives, permet d'examiner les probl\u00e9matiques essentialiste et anti-essentialiste de la th\u00e9orie f\u00e9ministe, et souligne les risques de chaque prise de position quand l'une ignore les pr\u00e9occupations de l'autre. En examinant la reconstruction du personnage de \u00abCatwoman\u00bb, le texte permet de mieux saisir le film luim\u00eame en tant que champ de negotiation contradictoire.","creator":["Priscilla L. Walton","Michael Dorland"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b031dc8-86ae-3e86-8df3-768cc2e221e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24402480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A SLIPPAGE OF MASKS: DIS-GUISING CATWOMAN IN \"BATMAN RETURNS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402480","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7709,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49048,49628]],"Locations in B":[[30512,31092]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Artist Andrea Desz\u0151's embroideries, inspired by the Romanian traditional sampler, belong to the material turn in cultural and feminist studies. Based on a comparison with first-wave feminist ideas in Charlotte Perkins Gillman's Women and Economics, this analysis interrogates what embroidery\u2014as a form of discourse\u2014tells about the little-known Eastern-European woman's condition. In the region significantly different from Western Europe in both postcolonialist and post-Marxist analyses, these artifacts reveal the ambivalent condition of women situated at the intersection of tradition, feminist thought, and Marxist practice, after Marxist-led governments had provided women with a workplace and equality, at least in theory.","creator":["Adriana Cordali Gradea"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ae3f33b-748b-3504-a0c7-fdb6f263d870"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43940421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Embroidered Feminist Rhetoric in Andrea Dezs\u0151's \"Lessons from My Mother\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43940421","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[94256,94329]],"Locations in B":[[3368,3441]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marianne H. Marchand"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"518d1f09-1ad7-3d45-bd87-7d7e62763d24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Challenging Globalisation: Toward a Feminist Understanding of Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097889","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines accounts of cross-sex reincarnation among the Dene Tha of Northern Alberta, Canada, and shows how the Dene Tha constitute dual gender identities through processes of dream interpretation and socialization. In doing so, the article challenges recent claims that the status of 'berdache' exists among Northern Athapaskans, and illustrates the danger of applying anthropological concepts to Northern Athapaskan social practices without adequate consideration of indigenous ideas and social contexts.","creator":["Jean-Guy A. Goulet"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3034303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3034303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"683","pagination":"pp. 683-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The `Berdache'\/`Two-Spirit': A Comparison of Anthropological and Native Constructions of Gendered Identities Among the Northern Athapaskans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3034303","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":11293,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75156,75317]],"Locations in B":[[9031,9190]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Colleen Glenney Boggs"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"129ece8c-1ae1-3043-b305-e3a37de991bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40925347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"76","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"AMERICAN BESTIALITY: SEX, ANIMALS, AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF SUBJECTIVITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40925347","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11078,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443113,443179]],"Locations in B":[[15833,15907]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2654cc38-ffa4-37ba-ba4a-c57e89f5c28a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810010","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Baukje Prins","Irene Costera Meijer","Susana Born\u00e9o Funck"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3326a6a-d5ab-3b53-bcf8-663c2049ee84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Como os corpos se tornam mat\u00e9ria: entrevista com Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596098","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that Protestant modernist discourse framed U.S. foreign relations during the 1930s. The good neighbor policy emerged as part o f a rhetorically constructed national identity narrative that reinvigorated Americans' sense of manifest destiny in the face of Great Depression anxiety. U.S. policies ostensibly advocating nonintervention, disarmament, and international cooperation inscribed a religiously oriented national mission centered on international beneficence. These discursive frames altered the form rather than the substance of U.S. hegemony in the Western Hemisphere while rendering the United States militarily inert amid rising tensions in Asia and Europe.","creator":["David Zietsma"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Building the Kingdom of God: Religious Discourse, National Identity, and the Good Neighbor Policy, 1930-1938","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940356","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":16974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The late twentieth century saw an intense expansion of the prison system in the United States during the same period in which Foucault's Discipline and Punish influenced academic approaches to power and subjection. This article reviews the history, sociology, and anthropology of the prison, as well as some recent popular critiques of the current situation. It highlights critical perspectives on modern forms of punishment and reform and suggests areas in which an anthropology of prisons might take up questions of modernity, subjection, classification, social suffering, and ethnographic possibility in the context of an increasingly politicized and racialized system of incarceration.","creator":["Lorna A. Rhodes"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3069209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc99d794-557f-3b00-ab96-328900edafda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3069209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward an Anthropology of Prisons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3069209","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores bisexual identity as an ambiguous social category within the dominant dualistic sex\/gender structure. The article documents the stigmatization of the bisexual category in the discourse of both the Religious Right and lesbian feminist communities, then examines the impact of dual stigmatization on bisexual women, who often see bi identity as disrupting the dominant sexual binary. Drawing from interviews with bisexual women, the article argues that bisexual women's discourse on sexual subjectivity does not escape the influence of binary structures, although it does at times reconfigure the binary along the queer\/nonqueer and bisexual\/monosexual axes. While the bisexual identity category may work as a discursive stabilizing device during the sex\/gender crisis provoked by the AIDS epidemic, its politicization by bi feminists also allows the category to be strategically deployed for feminist and queer political projects.","creator":["Amber Ault"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4ac6085-077d-368e-9dae-cf80058818ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ambiguous Identity in an Unambiguous Sex\/Gender Structure: The Case of Bisexual Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121293","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8278,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493964,494011]],"Locations in B":[[53307,53354]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn Stephen"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d971b80c-bec0-3330-80ca-49a14b90084f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3185106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Gender, Citizenship, and the Politics of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185106","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Unlike her successful Life in Mexico (1843), which enjoyed the patronage of the American historian William Hickling Prescott, Frances Calder\u00f3n de la Barca's The Attach\u00e9 in Madrid (1856) has received little critical attention. Published anonymously in New York as the work of a young German diplomat, Calder\u00f3n's travel book on Spain sheds new light on her transatlantic writing career. This study examines the dynamics of self-revelation and containment in The Attach\u00e9, foregrounding Calder\u00f3n's imbrication in the politics of empire and her experimentation with literary gender crossing. In The Attach\u00e9, Calder\u00f3n deploys maleness not only as a cover, but also to contest nineteenth-century US discourse on Spanish decadence and to counter rhetorical strategies of domination common to male-authored accounts of Spain.","creator":["Beth Bauer"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"974390b9-e99d-300c-b3fc-507b7c985805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25790617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Crossing Over: Gender and Empire in Fanny Calder\u00f3n de la Barca's \"The Attach\u00e9 in Madrid\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25790617","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":9202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A long tradition of scholarship has focused attention on imports and exotic objects coming from the eastern regions of the Mediterranean (so-called exotica) and found in central Italy already during the late Early Iron Age and more commonly during the Orientalizing period. Most of these studies investigated the significance and value of these objects as indicators of far-reaching trade and connections between the eastern and western regions of the Mediterranean. In addition, these studies have considered their role as agents of social interaction and therefore as catalysts for social differentiation and stratification in the western regions, which are generally considered to be less advanced than the eastern ones. This paper takes a long-term perspective by analyzing imports from burial contexts in Latium vetus from the end of the Final Bronze Age to the end of the Orientalizing period. By studying circulation patterns both in terms of gender and age dimensions (in combination with spatial analysis), this study argues that it is possible to detect new, female-specific networks and spheres of interaction between local peoples and external agents. These patterns were previously unnoticed or underestimated in scholarship due to gender biases and preconceptions.","creator":["Francesca Fulminante"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26989841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00656801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"263448427"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234551"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"468e5e13-74d2-3d1c-8633-d0b0047bfb04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26989841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"memoameracadrome"}],"isPartOf":"Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Academy in Rome","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"EARLY IRON AGE AND ORIENTALIZING MEDITERRANEAN NETWORKS FROM FUNERARY CONTEXTS IN LATIUM VETUS<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26989841","volumeNumber":"63\/64","wordCount":21390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"IDENTIFYING GENDER AND SPATIAL PATTERNS OF INTERACTION"} +{"abstract":"Drawing on feminist research methodologies and theory, this article recentres critical security studies to focus on a migrant seeking an alternative form of security after his application for asylum was denied by the state. The two main objectives of this article are; first, to resituate a failed asylum seeker, Qasim, as an agent of international security as understood through his practice of seeking and obtaining security; and, second, to demonstrate a revised performative conceptualization of security through understanding the failed asylum seeker as practicing an embodied theorization of security. The encounter with Qasim shows alternative means of seeking security, which illustrates agency on the part of the migrant that exists actively outside of the state. This contests the positioning of migrants as passive victims and recognizes a way of being in the world that by necessity cannot rely on a state-based identity. Ethnographic methods, including participant observation and a narrative interview with Qasim, elucidate his practice of security and allow for the development of a theoretical conceptualization of security that remains true to a failed asylum seeker\u2019s practice in the UK.","creator":["Alexandria J Innes"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b312f45c-e850-3836-a1cb-38d8ce9bfc28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"565","pagination":"pp. 565-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing security absent the state","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292932","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Encounters with a failed asylum seeker in the UK"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CANDACE COLLINS"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10632042"},{"name":"oclc","value":"891456947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1934899-3fd0-3db7-89e3-54508ba776ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45170499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"simobeaustud"}],"isPartOf":"Simone de Beauvoir Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR'S GENDER OF AMBIGUITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170499","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tacey A. Rosolowski"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc1f6c18-bb90-3064-89ba-4edb0cb08f0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Specular Reciprocity and the Construction of the Feminine in Friedrich H\u00f6lderlin's \"Hyperion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195371","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12295,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[89725,89859],[155965,156058],[156173,156346],[484480,484561]],"Locations in B":[[43540,43674],[66046,66139],[66146,66319],[73561,73645]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper aims to investigate whether and in what respects the conceptions of the body and of agency that Judith Butler develops in Bodies That Matter are useful contributions to feminist theory. The discussion focuses on the clarification and critical assessment of the arguments Butler presents to refute the charges of linguistic monism and determinism.","creator":["Veronica Vasterling"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7fd1229-436f-3c58-b1e0-212983e3ea82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Butler's Sophisticated Constructivism: A Critical Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810484","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":10715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Hollie Markland Harder"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23510993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8415c232-10ca-3f5f-b62b-248cb4698dfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23510993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23510993","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Background: Young people in South Africa are susceptible to HIV infection. They are vulnerable to peer pressure to have sex, but little is known about how peer pressure operates. Aim: The aim of the study was to understand how negative peer pressure increases high risk sexual behaviour among young adolescents in Cape Town, South Africa. Methods: Qualitative research methods were used. Eight focus groups were conducted with young people between the ages of 13 and 14 years. Results: Peer pressure among both boys and girls undermines healthy social norms and HIV prevention messages to abstain, be faithful, use a condom and delay sexual debut. Conclusions: HIV prevention projects need to engage with peer pressure with the aim of changing harmful social norms into healthy norms. Increased communication with adults about sex is one way to decrease the impact of negative peer pressure. Peer education is a further mechanism by which trained peers can role model healthy social norms and challenge a peer culture that promotes high risk sexual behaviour. Successful HIV prevention interventions need to engage with the disconnect between educational messages and social messages and to exploit the gaps between awareness, decision making, norms, intentions and actions as spaces for positive interventions.","creator":["TERRY-ANN SELIKOW","NAZEEMA AHMED","ALAN J FLISHER","CATHERINE MATHEWS","WANJIRU MUKOMA"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45205839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14034956"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"470f6cd7-c374-3241-92d2-b19495ee7f5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45205839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanjpublsupp"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. Supplement","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"I am not \"umqwayito\": A qualitative study of peer pressure and sexual risk behaviour among young adolescents in Cape Town, South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45205839","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laurentino V\u00e9lez-Pelligrini"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02108259"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30a36214-88ad-3d94-a592-233d2b59451f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mientrastanto"}],"isPartOf":"Mientras Tanto","issueNumber":"107","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Icaria Editorial","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00bfDe la desconstrucci\u00f3n a la (re)esencializaci\u00f3n? G\u00e9nero, heterosexualidad obligatoria y minor\u00edas sexuales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821294","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":23493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MICHAEL WILLIAMS"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45237195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89360668-cf2c-3ea6-af2a-c8a47e5c6d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45237195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cross-Dressing in Yoknapatawpha County","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45237195","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9203,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[199893,200133]],"Locations in B":[[19363,19603]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cary Levine"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75b9fa97-7801-34fe-96b1-3243d8215c36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25676524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Manly Crafts: Mike Kelley's (Oxy)Moronic Gender Bending","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676524","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":6104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on archival research, ethnographic fieldwork in Syria in the 2000s, and texts published in print and on the Internet, this article investigates how social and collective identities in Syria's tribal milieu have been negotiated through interactions between different social actors during the period of the French Mandate (1920-46) and the decade 2001-11. By scrutinizing administrative distinctions between \"nomadic\" and \"semi-sedentary tribes\", or \"Bedouin\" and \"Shawaya\" adopted during the Mandate, the article explores how notions of social order, which were partly informed by stereotypical imaginations of the Bedouin, have shaped local politics and influenced social dynamics in northern Syria. The article also traces how the experiences of the Mandate years resonate in articulations of social and political identity in Syria around the beginning of the twenty-first century. Taking inspiration from Judith Butler's exposition of the performative constitution of gender identities, it is suggested that the constitution of tribal identities in Syria, too, can productively be regarded as a performative process.","creator":["Katharina Lange"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849781"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5d38d33-d6b1-3df3-841b-8475d5b02d3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43919241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconsocihistori"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Business","History","Economics","History","Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"\"Bedouin\" and \"Shawaya\": The Performative Constitution of Tribal Identities in Syria during the French Mandate and Today","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919241","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":15129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matthew Hale","Richard Hawkins","Michael Partridge"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3091963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d1e15d1-88a6-3d20-befa-e3d428cb031f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3091963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39,"pageEnd":"759","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-759","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Economic History Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"List of Publications on the Economic and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland Published in 2001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3091963","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":27217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ill-being arises from the multiple interactions involved in a specific tension, that between an individual with social characteristics and the values and norms promoted by the society that individual lives in. The way a person expresses ill-being tends to vary by gender: depression and suicidal behavior are more common among women, whereas suicide and alcohol dependence are more common among men. Focusing on a single way of expressing ill-being could therefore lead to misinterpretation of results. While divergences among ways of expressing ill-being expose the specificities of those ways and their differentiated effects for particular groups, convergences make it possible to arrive at conclusions that can be generalized to all individuals. Gender-specific indicators have been developed on the basis of recent data that capture major changes in the form of the couple and household types. These indicators can be used to examine whether and to what degree women are \"protected\" against ill-being by having an intimate partner and children. These elements are usually determined on the basis of suicide studies alone.","creator":["Anne-Sophie COUSTEAUX","Jean-Louis PAN K\u00c9 SHON","Amy Jacobs"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40731127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52792858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236953"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9960b9d3-9106-3249-8ac2-c5f7c49c8c36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40731127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufransoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de sociologie","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Is Ill-Being Gendered? Suicide, Risk for Suicide, Depression and Alcohol Dependence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40731127","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":17678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DUSTIN FRIEDMAN"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27867282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50573849"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"599c8f5c-7856-343c-8934-36aa2117dcdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27867282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Boston University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Parents of the mind\": Mary Wollstonecraft and the Aesthetics of Productive Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27867282","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":11148,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[48731,48784]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The question how to situate Dea Loher's drama Manhattan Medea in the Medea reception serves as a point of departure for a discussion of imitation, originality, and the act of copying. In their dialogues, the characters Medea, as in Euripides' tragedy a refugee, and Velazquez, a security guard, reflect on originality and imitation. The article explores the theoretical and self-referential aspects evoked by these discussions and links them with a more general inquiry into the dimensions of interpretation in the arts. The question of originality and appropriation is expanded and problematized through focusing on radical social criticism voiced among others by the drag queen Deaf Daisy. In this context the article also examines the potential of performative signification encountered in Medea's deadly bridal gift, especially in light of Marjorie Garber's remark that \"[w]hat gets married is a dress.\" Transgressive in its form too, Manhattan Medea combines tragic elements and those characteristic of comedy.","creator":["Sebastian Wogenstein"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30154377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eccf0e46-ffa2-322f-91bd-7aa8ec5ccae8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30154377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"3","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Meine Nachahmung eine Neuerschaffung\": Aneignung und Ent-Stellung in Dea Lohers \"Manhattan Medea\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30154377","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":7727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract It is common for female-identified individuals to perform feminine acts\u2014what I term \u201cfemale-femmeing\u201d\u2014at contemporary drag king and queer drag shows. Although some scholarship has acknowledged the presence of these acts, a woman\u2019s onstage (and offstage) femininity is frequently considered nontransgressive, nonqueer, and not gender-bending. This article first interrogates why femininity is often presumed to mean social alignment, and then demonstrates how some femininities actively contest this. Pairing Mu\u00f1oz\u2019s characterization of disidentification with ethnography from drag shows in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Oakland (2008\u20132012), I illustrate several ways female-femmeing bends or expands hegemonic femininity. These acts not only add complexity to a queer counterpublic drag space, but also, I suggest, encourage the consideration of all identities, including femininity, as potentially queer. The acceptance of female-femmeing as queer, and the expansion of drag narratives to meet these practices, is an important step toward a queer world ideology.","creator":["Meredith Heller"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.2.3.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3111207-82a1-3e78-b7c6-bf46120771af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.2.3.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Female-Femmeing: A Gender-Bent<\/em> Performance Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.2.3.0001","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9526,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524331,524428]],"Locations in B":[[54001,54098]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ASHER WALDEN"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20708977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19307365"},{"name":"oclc","value":"277052422"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-216366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21c179a3-7820-34db-abaa-82f55e94405b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20708977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pluralist"}],"isPartOf":"The Pluralist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Butler on Subjectivity and Authorship: Reflections on Doing Philosophy in the First Person","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20708977","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3313,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The medieval Welsh prose version of the story of Gereint (Erec) and Enid differs from its cognates in French and German by attributing the motive of jealousy to Gereint as the reason why he decides to test his wife's devotion. This theme of jealousy draws attention to an uneasiness in the text about Enid's noble status and the concept of gender. The story of Gereint and Enid, in common with the French Roman de Silence, finds itself demonstrating that both gender and class are constructed through a social performance that must be continually enacted.","creator":["HELEN FULTON"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44697423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57bce9f0-a0c2-31c0-9963-bf4d8b5888da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44697423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and Jealousy in \"Gereint uab Erbin\" and \"Le Roman de Silence\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44697423","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13436,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[429953,430061],[442609,442808],[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[16300,16402],[16629,16828],[16833,17068]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The effects of software (code) on the spatial formation of everyday life are best understood through a theoretical framework that utilizes the concepts of technicity (the productive power of technology to make things happen) and transduction (the constant making anew of a domain in reiterative and transformative practices). Examples from the lives of three Londoners illustrate that code makes a difference to everyday life because its technicity alternatively modulates space through processes of transduction. Space needs to be theorized as ontogenetic, that is, understood as continually being brought into existence through transductive practices (practices that change the conditions under which space is (re)made). The nature of space transduced by code is detailed and illustrated with respect to domestic living, work, communication, transport, and consumption.","creator":["Martin Dodge","Rob Kitchin"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fdc0f87-2ef6-3cfb-b8c1-36e6048cb558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3694036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Code and the Transduction of Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694036","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":15546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Ces derni\u00e9res ann\u00e9es ont vu resurgir, chez les f\u00e9ministes britanniques, un d\u00e9batportant sur l' h\u00e9terosexualit\u00e9 et posant une nouvelle fois la question suivante: comment les f\u00e9ministes h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles parviennentelles \u00e1 concilier leurs prises de position politiques avec leurs pratiques sexuelles? Cet article constitue une r\u00e9action \u00e1 ces d\u00e9bats; il tente de d\u00e9velopper une perspective f\u00e9ministe mat\u00e9rialiste critique sur l'h\u00e9terosexualite, evitant d'appr\u00e9hender les f\u00e9ministes h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles soit comme victimes soit comme complices. Il prend pour point de d\u00e9part la perspective feministe mat\u00e9rialiste sur la question du genre d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e par des theoriciennes francaises telles que Christine Delphy. On considere en ef fet que ce point de vue fournit une base solide permettant l' analyse de l' institution mais aussi de l'identite, de l'experience, et de la pratique h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelles. Dans cette perspective, le genre et les categories sexuelles sontper \u00a3 us comme des constructions sociales, produites par des rapports de force hi\u00e9rarchis\u00e9s. L'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualite doit certes \u00e9tre analys\u00e9e comme une institution patriarcale mais il faut \u00e9viter d'associer l' institution avec la pratique et I' exp\u00e9rience de rh\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9, et de consid\u00e9rer l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9 comme le lieu unique de la subordination des femmes. In the past few years there has been a resurgence of the debate on heterosexualiy among British feminists, raising once more the question of how heterosexual feminists reconcile their feminist politics with their sexual practive. This article was written in response to these debates, as an attempt to develop a critical perspective on heterosexuality which avoids casting heterosexual feminists as either victims or collaborators. It takes as its starting point the materialist feminist perspective on gender developed by French theorists such as Christine Delphy, arguing that this standpoint provides a strong foundation for analysing the institution, identity, experience and practice of heterosexuality. From this perspective gender and sexual categories as social constructs are products of material, hierarchical social relations. Heterosexuality should be analysed as a patriarchal institution, but we should avoid conflating the institution with practice and experience of heterosexuality and should not view sexuality as the sole site of women's subordination.","creator":["Stevi Jackson"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40619637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"R\u00e9cents d\u00e9bats sur l'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexualit\u00e9: une approche f\u00e9ministe mat\u00e9rialiste","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40619637","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Using Constantin Stanislavki's vocabulary for actor training, I offer an autoethnographic essay that explores my performances as a man, a man who does and does not measure up to the cultural ideal. I juxtapose cultural scripts against personal experience in order to demonstrate the tensions that emerge as I try to negotiate the masculine roles I have been asked to play.","creator":["Ronald J. Pelias"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.1.65","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04eb1ea3-595f-397a-a874-fca8add3bda2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.1.65"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Making My Masculine Body Behave","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2008.1.1.65","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6b2f42d-db98-3d81-a3ed-a5113e205b08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3809868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3809868","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay explores the criteria for lesbian identity attribution through the case study of \"male lesbians\": biological males who claim to be lesbians. I analyze such sex\/gender identity attribution through the lens of postmodernism, which provides a workable theoretical framework for \"male lesbian\" identities. My conclusions explore the historicity and cultural constructedness of the body's sex\/gender identities, revealing the limitations of both \"the postmodernized body\" and \"the essentialized modernist body.\"","creator":["Jacquelyn N. Zita"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02455a5c-75fc-33a7-ba36-022035620ee2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Male Lesbians and the Postmodernist Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810081","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the early twentieth century, female impersonators in Japan's first Western-style theatre, shinpa (new school drama), employed gender performance conventions based on kabuki onnagata and European melodramatic techniques. Shinpa performers influenced the performance of gender in early Chinese spoken drama. Chinese student actors emulated shinpa conventions in Tokyo and popularized them in Shanghai in the 1910s, where they were accepted as being accurate enactments of modern women.","creator":["Siyuan Liu"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e10ce7e4-0aef-3271-aa9e-cceffb321ffb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25599473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Gender at the Beginning of Modern Chinese Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599473","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[444434,444690]],"Locations in B":[[36137,36393]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzette A. Spencer"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87490b12-0e67-371b-b327-7eb291b2e194"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44323192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"SWERVING AT A DIFFERENT ANGLE AND FLYING IN THE FACE OF TRADITION: EXCAVATING THE HOMOEROTIC SUBTEXT IN \"HOME TO HARLEM\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323192","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10060,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[5540,5585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Has the debate about women's roles in U.S. society allowed first ladies greater latitude in choosing the role(s) they will perform? To answer this question, two points on the spectrum of possible first lady roles-\"first political wife\" and \"wife\"-were identified. Public correspondence responding to Betty Ford's 60 Minutes interview was then studied. Ford's critics and supporters each articulated coherent ideologies of gender and presidential power, which were congruent with the theoretical constructs of first political wife and wife. In this instance, the role of first political wife mobilized more critics than supporters and influenced campaign strategies throughout the second half of the Ford administration.","creator":["Maryanne Borrelli"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27552320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03604918"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45848856"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27552320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presstudq"}],"isPartOf":"Presidential Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Competing Conceptions of the First Ladyship: Public Responses to Betty Ford's \"60 Minutes\" Interview","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27552320","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Deschamps"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00324663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dea54994-3dd3-3544-8965-ab3f1a62887a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popufrenedit"}],"isPartOf":"Population (French Edition)","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Institut National d'\u00c9tudes D\u00e9mographiques","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044996","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":1615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thomas K\u00fchne"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00089389"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47795498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227108"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21c1c672-8435-357b-9d99-a594616ef497"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26567844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centeurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Central European History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26567844","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":7790,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[11376,11440]],"subTitle":"Masculinity and the Third Reich"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon E. Preves"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69c4485a-cbc6-314b-94b1-2347e536928c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3813185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Centering the Margin: Research by, for, and with People Who Are Transsexual and Transgender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3813185","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":2845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Bergeron"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"191ec5e8-6e73-316a-887f-5b19988dd806"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40388707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"An Interpretive Analytics to Move Caring Labor off the Straight Path","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388707","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory F. DeNordo","Allen R. Legutki","Joseph Abramo","John Cavicchia","Ed Duling","Kate R. Fitzpatrick","Erin Hansen","Lisa J. Furman","Matthew L. Garrett","Jennifer Haywood","Melissa Natale-Abramo","Jeananne Nichols","Jerry Pergolesi","Fred P. Spano","Bridget Sweet","Stephen A. Paparo","Brent C. Talbot","Margaux B. Millman","Donald M. Taylor","Betty Anne Younker"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41162329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00109894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"436923044"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41162329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulcouresmusedu"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education","issueNumber":"188","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Education","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Establishing Identity: LGBT Studies & Music Education \u2013 Select Conference Proceedings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41162329","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":24146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the ways two young women, living in Australia, make sense of themselves, their activities, and futures. The two young women come from two different schooling contexts-a prestigious private school and a government school. We analyse their self-narratives in relation to neoliberal discourse, and consider how, and with what effects, their school contexts privilege and make available neoliberal discourses, and work to produce different subjectivities and notions of 'worthwhile' or 'good' lives. Conceptualising schools as sites of subjection, we analyse the discourses that their respective schools make available to the young women, and how they have appropriated them. We suggest that the different exposure and access to neoliberal discourses position the women very differently in terms of future possibilities and work-life scenarios in the neoliberal economy. In that way, the article seeks to make a contribution towards understanding schools as implicated in social (re)production and in the (re)production of classed subjectivities.","creator":["Gabrielle O'Flynn","Eva Bendix Petersen"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"542c93b2-cc0f-3ddb-b819-04665fb70ef9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The 'Good Life' and the 'Rich Portfolio': Young Women, Schooling and Neoliberal Subjectification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036223","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawing on debates in lesbian and gay periodicals and writings from and about post-structuralist \"queer theory\" and politics, this paper clarifies the meanings and distinctive politics of \"queerness,\" in order to trace its implications for social movement theory and research. The challenge of queer theory and politics, I argue, is primarily in its disruption of sex and gender identity boundaries and deconstruction of identity categories. The debates (over the use of the term \"queer\" and over bisexual and transgender inclusion) raise questions not only about the content of sexuality-based political identities, but over their viability and usefulness. This in turn challenges social movement theory to further articulate dynamics of collective identity formation and deployment. While recent social movement theory has paid attention to the creation and negotiation of collective identity, it has not paid sufficient attention to the simultaneous impulse to destabilize identities from within. That tendency, while especially visible in lesbian and gay movements, is also visible in other social movements. It calls attention to a general dilemma of identity politics: Fixed identity categories are both the basis for oppression and the basis for political power. The insights of both sides of the dilemma highlighted here raise important new questions for social movement theory and research.","creator":["Joshua Gamson"],"datePublished":"1995-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3096854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Must Identity Movements Self-Destruct? A Queer Dilemma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096854","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10863,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[63063,63207]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The concept of the carnivalesque is redefined in Carol Shield's recent short story collection, though its traditional promises of celebration, disruption, and excess are nevertheless obliquely fulfilled. Focusing on the title story and 'Dressing Down', this essay argues that Shields's postmodern versions of carnivalesque are written not in the indicative but in the subjunctive mood, signalling openness and unrealized possibilities. Her stories trace subjective patterns of fantasy and desire, and social collectivity is reconstructed through narrative frameworks.","creator":["Coral Ann Howells"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34ad2c47-278d-3c4b-b0c4-884f92c8ee6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In the Subjunctive Mood: Carol Shields's 'Dressing up for the Carnival'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509381","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5515,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[25283,25469]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan David Bernstein"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70e9e93d-be8c-3639-8752-f67322663832"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Transparent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649801","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Camille Robcis"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ce9bab9-edc5-33be-b4bc-a312ee32b549"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378253","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2030,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[518,587]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joline Blais"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f496cff-6124-3797-983f-ed070fe904b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Qui est L\u00e0?\": Displaced Subjects in \"Wide Sargasso Sea\" and \"Le Ravissement de Lol V. Stein\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112033","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10502,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497314,497396]],"Locations in B":[[61983,62064]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Thomas"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"043bc250-a92a-3db3-81d5-9bfca23d9e17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27866463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866463","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":5577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Eli Adams"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f487b7b-e934-3f9f-9499-a71d1f864d72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1556209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53,"pageEnd":"879","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-879","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556209","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":22085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Rottenberg"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c12bb73-0271-34e9-91df-f82b34921c2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race and Ethnicity in \"The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man\" and \"The Rise of David Levinsky\": The Performative Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141857","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5537,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471794]],"Locations in B":[[33386,33480]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The identification of intra-national armed conflict as a leading problem for the international community in the 1990s produced a wave of novel research into civil wars. Though these new civil war studies soon began to claim a degree of consensus on several key questions, the very concept and ontology of civil war has been implicitly and explicitly contested. An examination of the politics of naming civil wars likewise reveals the extent to which varying and sometimes conflicting definitions of civil war are still in circulation among various observer types. Instead of adjudicating these disputed definitions of civil war, this article details the way in which particular conceptions of civil war produce their object of analysis. The recent Algerian conflict stands as an excellent case study in the politics of naming civil wars and the ways in which the conceptual frameworks of the new civil war studies make Algeria into a civil war. To go beyond the contested definition of civil war, the new civil war studies should not judge the viability of concepts of mass armed violence \u2013 whether civil war or so-called new wars \u2013 on their alleged coherence with particular representations of history. Concepts of mass violence should instead be judged in relation to the political goals from which they obtain their warrant in the first place.","creator":["Jacob Mundy"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a21b62cf-4cbd-3d2f-83d2-e1a2049cd2cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26301617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Deconstructing civil wars: Beyond the new wars debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301617","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DANIELA GAROFALO"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a64c60cd-ba7a-36d0-b432-9b26ff4ec7d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23126352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Political Seductions: The Show of War in Byron's \"Sardanapalus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126352","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robin Truth Goodman"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"594fa43b-db0b-3b28-aec0-1f303ac10f25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mario Vargas Llosa and the Rape of Sebastiana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119801","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is not just women's bodies which can pose risks to the foetus but also those of men, with the quality of sperm playing an important role in foetal health. This article assesses why male antenatal behaviour has received such scant attention. It focuses on the regulation of liability for congenital disability and foetal protection legislation and policies, in order to uncover the received understandings of male and female reproductivity which have informed the law in this area. It argues that these understandings are predicated upon a particular vision of men's and women's bodies and of a gendered division of labour following the birth of a child.","creator":["Sally Sheldon"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"ReConceiving Masculinity: Imagining Men's Reproductive Bodies in Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410493","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11095,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[420018,420086]],"Locations in B":[[37128,37196]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard C. Cante"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e5e4ff-e196-38eb-ac80-88e472e9e43a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"HIV, Multiculturalism, and Popular Narrativity in the United States: Afterthoughts on \"Philadelphia\" (And Beyond)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107187","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of the present study was to develop and validate a short form of the Genderism and Transphobia Scale and assess adolescents' attitudes toward transpeople. A total of 800 Spanish adolescents aged between 14 and 18 years (50.70% girls, 49.3% boys) completed the Spanish version of the scale and other related questionnaires. The short form of the scale is composed of 12 items clustered into two factors (Transphobia\/Genderism and Gender Bashing) that explain 54.22% of the variance. All the items showed good discriminating power, and the present scale demonstrated adequate reliability and validity. In the study, boys exhibited significantly more negative attitudes toward transpeople than girls did, both in the affective \/cognitive dimension (Transphobia\/Genderism) and in the behavioral dimension (Gender Bashing). Moreover, adolescents showed significantly more negative attitudes toward gender-nonconforming men than toward gender-nonconforming women. These results are discussed in terms of their relevance to the maintenance of discriminatory attitudes toward sexual diversity.","creator":["Maria Victoria Carrera-Fern\u00e1ndez","Mar\u00eda Lameiras-Fern\u00e1ndez","Yolanda Rodr\u00edguez-Castro","Pablo Vallejo-Medina"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43701762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60e9b0ef-99f4-3153-9e58-ed32975fba9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43701762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"666","pageStart":"654","pagination":"pp. 654-666","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Spanish Adolescents' Attitudes toward Transpeople: Proposal and Validation of a Short Form of the Genderism and Transphobia Scale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43701762","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":11132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Most theatre scholars look at translation as an activity involved in moving from page to stage or from one language to another. This article analyzes the use of translation as a metaphor for approaching other cultures in plays that address primarily English-speaking audiences. Building upon contemporary translation theories, as well as Judith Butler's concept of cultural translation, the article compares the different translation strategies found in plays written in three different decades: Brian Friel's Translations (1980), David Edgar's Pentecost (1994), and Tony Kushner's Homebody\/Kabul (2001). The author argues that the plays' political significance should be measured against the playwrights' approach to translation itself. Thus Friel's play seems the most conservative and Edgar's the most in tune with the liberal European politics of the time. Kushner's play, however, demonstrates a different understanding of the risks, limits, and possibilities of a postmodern translation practice, one that would substitute uncertainty for mastery in its approach to the Other.","creator":["Jenny Spencer"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5f9d5b7-bd27-334d-8b62-4a602ee92264"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Translation in Contemporary Anglo-American Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070064","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":12850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The Western understanding of meaning as primarily representational, and therefore translatable, is a relatively recent development in the history of human societies. According to phenomenologists of religion (e.g. Eliade), archaic ontology tended instead to be performative, in the sense that reality (that which had sacred potency) was literally summoned into existence by the ritualistic repetition of archetypes. This article argues that the shift from a performative to a representational understanding of meaning in Western culture, which had implications for all aspects of society, was intimately bound up with translation mechanisms. \u064a\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0647\u0645\u064d \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0644\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0646\u0649 \u0628\u0648\u0635\u0641\u0647 \u062a\u0645\u062b\u064a\u0644\u064a\u0627\u064b \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0623\u0633\u0627\u0633 - \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062b\u0645 \u0642\u0627\u0628\u0644 \u0644\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 - \u0641\u0647\u0645\u0627\u064b \u062d\u062f\u064a\u062b \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0647\u062f \u0646\u0633\u0628\u064a\u0627\u064b \u0641\u064a \u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629 . \u0623\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0646\u0637\u0648\u0644\u0648\u062c\u064a\u0627 \u060c \u0641\u0642\u062f \u0627\u062a\u0633\u0645\u062a \u0642\u062f\u064a\u0645\u0627\u064b - \u062a\u0628\u0639\u0627\u064b \u0644\u0645\u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a \u0645\u0628\u062f\u0623 \u0627\u0644\u0638\u0627\u0647\u0631\u0627\u062a\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u064a\u0627\u0646 (\u0645\u062b\u0644 \u0645\u064a\u0631\u0633\u064a\u0627 \u0625\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062f) - \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u060c \u0628\u0645\u0639\u0646\u0649 \u0623\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0627\u0642\u0639 (\u0648\u062e\u0627\u0635\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u062a\u0628\u0637 \ufee3\ufee8\ufeea \ufe91\ufe8e\u0644\u0645\u0642\u062f\u0633) \u0643\u0627\u0646 \u064a\u062a\u0645 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062d\u0636\u0627\u0631\u0647 \u062d\u0631\u0641\u064a\u0627\u064b \u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0643\u0631\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0642\u0633\u064a \u0644\u0646\u0645\u0648\u0630\u062c \u0645\u062b\u0627\u0644\u064a . \u062a\u0631\u0643\u0651\u0632 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0631\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0637 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0645\u062b\u064a\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0641\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0646\u0649 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0628\u064a\u0629 - \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0643\u0627\u0646 \u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0623\u062b\u0631 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062c\u0645\u064a\u062d \u0645\u0646\u0627\u062d\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0639 - \u0627\u0631\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0637\u0627\u064b \u0648\u062b\u064a\u0642\u0627\u064b \ufe91\ufe82\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 .","creator":["Karen Bennett","\u0643\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0628\u064a\u0646\u064a\u062a"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26496371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67dadca2-1bc1-31dd-a1e4-e2728c7eafa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26496371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Translation and the Desacralization of the Western World: From Performativity to Representation \/ \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0648\u0646\u0632\u0639 \u0642\u062f\u0627\u0633\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0628\u064a : \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0645\u062b\u064a\u0644","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26496371","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10241,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nan Enstad"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30042167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c246a2c-9d77-3c06-bf4d-1c17cfbe1387"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30042167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"782","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-782","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fashioning Political Identities: Cultural Studies and the Historical Contruction of Political Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30042167","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":16551,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911]],"Locations in B":[[84075,84155]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["M. M. Adjarian"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"388b3f6f-096f-3d68-ab56-5d1c0cbd6e49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Monique Wittig and the Allegory of the Possible in Across the Acheron<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0096","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9873,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520403,520542]],"Locations in B":[[26559,26698]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"From the mid-1980s the influence of identity politics and poststructural ism has sought to replace the idea of a 'unified' identity with the concept of dynamic, multiple and fractured identities. However, it has been suggested that there is an ontological problem with researching dynamic conceptions of identity and that all too often people treat forming and formative processes (such as the makings and doings of identity) as fixed and formed wholes. This article attempts to address this concern through an exploration of the 'doings' of Scottish national identities. Drawing on a non representational inspired study of ('Scottish') musical performances the project presented in this article seeks to explore how a study of the ephemeral, emotionally charged moments of ('Scottish') musical performance might shed new light on the nature and (re) production of Scottish national identities in the making or the doing. This article therefore makes a contribution to understandings of 'Scottishness' (as lived experiences), but, it also makes a contribution to the geographies of music literature by highlighting the need to further explore the practical and performative dimensions of 'musicking'.","creator":["Nichola Wood"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"355fd188-02e0-3f81-89a7-897861d617b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Playing with 'Scottishness': musical performance, non-representational thinking and the 'doings' of national identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251469","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The goal of the present study was to investigate how empathy and gender-empathic constructions affect the levels of support for political compromise in an intractable conflict. Gender-empathic constructions relate to perceptions that individuals hold about self or others as having feminine-empathic gender traits. We hypothesized that empathy will be positively associated with support for compromise, but that perceiving one\u2019s own group as feminine empathic will be negatively associated with such attitudes, with empathy being a significant mediator. Data were collected through a public opinion survey conducted with a representative sample of Israeli-Jewish adults (N = 511). The findings supported our hypotheses, thus indicating that perceiving one\u2019s own group as having feminine-empathic traits and empathy toward opponents made significant contributions to explaining Jewish-Israeli willingness to compromise with Palestinians. The implications of our findings for understanding the role of gender-empathic constructions and of empathy in conflict resolution are discussed.","creator":["Yossi David","Nimrod Rosler","Ifat Maoz"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48596844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d676de4a-9b31-32a9-af84-bfe7218151cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48596844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"1752","pageStart":"1727","pagination":"pp. 1727-1752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender-empathic Constructions, Empathy, and Support for Compromise in Intractable Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48596844","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":11155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Matti Bunzl"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3318051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aa1c9cf-876c-362a-ac02-ee94741c0804"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3318051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between Oppression and Affirmation: Historical Ethnography of Lesbian and Gay Pasts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3318051","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":5837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heather Findlay"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queerying the English Renaissance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465174","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6309,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[39569,39622]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Debra A. Moddelmog"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4304b8d4-65b9-3c5e-a303-a6f0b209891d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reconstructing Hemingway's Identity: Sexual Politics, the Author, and the Multicultural Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107011","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474128,474461]],"Locations in B":[[54859,55191]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda M. Shires"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6470a10-c09f-35f0-87dd-ea717de9944e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Patriarchy, Dead Men, and Tennyson's \"Idylls of the King\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002475","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victor J. Vitanza"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47fc44a1-0483-3d4e-bc68-10ad2d49fad4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Feminist Sophistic?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866029","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":15191,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[86205,86337]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Nigeria has high levels of alcohol consumption, and little or no regulation of the alcohol industry. There is a dearth of studies exploring young adults\u2019drinking in a Nigerian context with only a few predominantly quantitative surveys. These do not explore the social meanings attached to drinking practices nor do they shed light on potential gender differences and how these are mediated by popular media. This qualitative study addresses this gap with semi-structured interviews involving 31 undergraduate students. It identifies that media consumption shapes drinking behaviour in ways which are highly patterned and gendered. Participants with high consumption of both Hollywood films and popular American reality television series associate heavy alcohol consumption with high social status, economic independence and gender equality. By contrast, Nollywood (local) films which are intended to act as moral tales and warn of the dangers of drinking appear paradoxically to support participants\u2019 views of alcohol as positive (alleviating anxiety, depression and menstrual discomfort). Nigeria currently has no serious regulation of alcohol on television which is embedded in everyday life. Attempts to develop wider public health campaigns and policies should take this saturated media landscape into account to develop harm reduction strategies which are linked directly to media literacy programmes.","creator":["Emeka W. Dumbili","Lesley Henderson"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48509986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02681153"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39189000"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238304"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8764ee7e-84f1-3aee-bbe4-f1a2981b20ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48509986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healeducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Health Education Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mediating alcohol use in Eastern Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48509986","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"a qualitative study exploring the role of popular media in young people\u2019s recreational drinking"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Harvey","Pascal Le Brun-Cordier"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11440821"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3efb7c7d-b55f-3898-80f6-4e5376f98f3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40978733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ruedescartes"}],"isPartOf":"Rue Descartes","issueNumber":"40","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"[HORIZONS]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40978733","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Chance"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25e0a649-8ed6-3187-a326-1ea03a819ee9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The F-Word as \"Fashion\": Gendering the Sophomore Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112583","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6305,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper studies gender differences in activity patterns and activity spaces (in terms of trip frequencies and travel distances to various activities) over the period 1976 to 2008. The results show gender convergence both in trip frequencies and travel distances. The growth of activity spaces is less pronounced in large cities than in small towns and municipalities, supporting the hypotheses of sustainability in transport development in the cities and of diverging patterns in travel trends between cities and the countryside. A cohort analysis of commute and shopping trip distances shows cohort effects as well as changes over the life-course. Again, the results reflect increasingly egalitarian gender roles. Der Beitrag untersucht Geschlechterunterschiede in Aktivit\u00e4tsmustern und Aktionsr\u00e4umen (im Sinne von Wegeh\u00e4ufigkeiten und zur\u00fcckgelegten Distanzen f\u00fcr verschiedene Wegezwecke) im Zeitraum 1976 bis 2008. Die Ergebnisse zeigen die Konvergenz der Aktivit\u00e4tsmuster und der zur\u00fcckgelegten Wegel\u00e4ngen zwischen den Geschlechtern. Das Wachstum der Aktionsr\u00e4ume ist in den Gro\u00dfst\u00e4dten deutlich geringer als in Mittelst\u00e4dten und kleinen Gemeinden. Dies st\u00fctzt die These der Nachhaltigkeit der Verkehrsentwicklung in den St\u00e4dten sowie der 'Schere' der Verkehrsentwicklung zwischen Stadt und Land. Eine Kohortenanalyse f\u00fcr Berufs-und Einkaufswegel\u00e4ngen zeigt Kohorteneffekte sowie biografische Ver\u00e4nderungen im Lebenslauf. Auch darin spiegelt sich ein zunehmend egalit\u00e4res Geschlechterverh\u00e4ltnis.","creator":["Joachim Scheiner","Kathrin Sicks","Christian Holz-Rau"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41331383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140015"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59586ab7-3a7b-364c-ab40-e20a5996b882"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41331383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"erdkunde"}],"isPartOf":"Erdkunde","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Erdkunde","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"GENDERED ACTIVITY SPACES: TRENDS OVER THREE DECADES IN GERMANY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41331383","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":11985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara A. Holdrege"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10224556"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41438060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-047752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7ba0d78-a3fc-3c61-9adb-660c691351bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20106613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhindstud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Hindu Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Body Connections: Hindu Discourses of the Body and the Study of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106613","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":19074,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[476786,476900],[477848,477951],[503324,503458],[503627,503693]],"Locations in B":[[107667,107792],[109097,109202],[111469,111586],[111592,111655]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Risk reasoning has become the common-sense mode of knowledge production in the health sciences. Risk assessment techniques of modern epidemiology also co-shape the ways genomic data are translated into population health. Risk computations (e.g., in preventive medicine, clinical decision-support software, or web-based self-tests), loop results from epidemiological studies back into everyday life. Drawing from observations at various European research sites, I analyze how epidemiological techniques mediate and enact the linkages between genomics and public health. This article examines the epidemiological apparatus as a generative machine that is socially performative. The study design and its reshuffling of data and categories in risk modeling recombine old and new categories from census to genomics and realign genes\/environment and nature\/culture in novel and hybrid ways. In the Euro-American assemblage of risk reasoning and related profiling techniques, the individual and the population are no longer separate but intimately entangled.","creator":["Susanne Bauer"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07455194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14f94e92-2e1d-3ef2-851c-92838600f4f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24029202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medianthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Medical Anthropology Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Modeling Population Health: Reflections on the Performativity of Epidemiological Techniques in the Age of Genomics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24029202","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, the woman-in-conflict has emerged as a central figure in the discourse of the UNSC Women, Peace and Security policy community. She is an ever-present referent in discussions, the person in whose name critique is launched or action demanded. This figure is a representation of the needs and interests of the uncountable, faceless and nameless women affected by and living through war; a representation that takes place through imbuing her with particular meaning or characteristics. These meanings shape how the figure is understood in Women, Peace and Security discourse, which, in turn, constructs the horizons of possibility for both current and future policy and its implementation. This article explores how this figure is produced as a subject through layers of representation and is deeply embedded in the practices and relationships of power in the policy community. It suggests that accounting for these will offer an opportunity for feminist advocates to engage in this institutional space in more considered and effective ways.","creator":["SAM COOK"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3054f0a-2318-3955-8d57-7a581158f7dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The 'woman-in-conflict' at the UN Security Council: a subject of practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757889","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":11636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The history of what we now call \"academic feminism\" did not take place exclusively in colleges and universities. Rather, a range of infrastructure facilitated the production and dissemination of feminist knowledge in the decades following the institutionalization of the first women's studies programs in the United States. This article looks specifically at the infamous 1982 Barnard Conference on Sexuality to trace the multiple trajectories through which feminism was gradually academicized and institutionalized in the university. This conference is a particularly instructive case study because it already exists as a locus of anxiety in which histories of grassroots activism, feminist thought, and proto-queer theory collide. The article, then, provides an archivally driven account of the conference, from its planning stages through its political fallout, with an eye toward the infrastructural and personal networks that weave inside and outside of the academy. Because knowledge production is a collaborative process, the article argues that we end up with oddly skewed accounts of feminist field formation when inclusion is dependent on proximity to recognizable forms of feminism in the university.","creator":["Rachel Corbman"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34d17339-056c-32eb-84b8-6716c28f8485"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Scholars and the Feminists: The Barnard Sex Conference and the History of the Institutionalization of Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860815","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":14855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[91852,91914]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u2018My art\u2019, said filmmaker Miranda July, \u2018is like my car, the way I get to the next place\u2019. What if cultural critics adopted a similar disposition, using cultural forms to get to the next place? In this article I approach queer culture with July\u2019s sense of need and discovery, to explore criticism and theorisation as constructive and reparative gestures. The topic of my analysis is the relationship between queerness and class, and the endpoint is a proposal for a cultural politics of friendship. To get there, I articulate queerness and class in a variety of ways, asking how queerness, in the US especially (but not only), came to be seen as antagonistic to class struggle despite a shared intellectual and political agenda at an earlier time. I go on to consider key cultural moments in the class project of contemporary queerness, then close with the tactic of \u2018reading for friendship\u2019, considering queer friendships at the root of published biography and documentary and fiction film. How might the historical practice of queer friendship anchor a renewed cultural politics? The point is not to dematerialise class and other social differences, but to recognise the materiality of culture and affect in political development, a project that Raymond Williams, among others, made with grace and force. Like Miranda July\u2019s art, Williams\u2019s theorising is our car, how we get to the next place.","creator":["Lisa Henderson"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13699725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c753950c-efb0-3265-b0a8-d0fcd575e623"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26920382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keywords"}],"isPartOf":"Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Raymond Williams Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queers and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920382","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Toward a Cultural Politics of Friendship"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Halvor Moxnes"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"JESUS IN GENDER TROUBLE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460588","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":6977,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[36504,36609],[36702,36874]],"Locations in B":[[12714,12819],[12824,12996]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregory Castle"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adf9d5e7-300e-362d-a54c-00e9ee6e022e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25474133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474133","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":2836,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497254,497361]],"Locations in B":[[17018,17124]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Until 1996, poor single mothers in the United States could claim welfare benefits for themselves and their children under the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program if they had no other source of income. With the 1996 passage of the Personal Responsibility Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), paid work and work-related activities became a mandatory condition for receiving aid. At the same time, the law promotes marriage as a route out of poverty. Using a feminist reinterpretation of Althusser's concept of interpellation, I turn to Job Clubs, mandatory week-long workshops that teach job search skills, to analyze the citizen-subject generated by front-line representatives of the state in the context of this new legislation. Based on participant-observation, I conclude that while PRWORA ostensibly promotes both marriage and paid employment, Job Club trainers enforced a masculine worker-citizen subject through the deployment of three discursive strategies. These discursive strategies 1) promoted paid work over welfare-receipt as both a pragmatic and moral choice, 2) posited an individual-psychological account of women's welfare receipt, and 3) portrayed parenting skills as marketable skills. In the conclusion, I speculate that current welfare reform efforts require the generation of a self-reproducing worker-citizen and that workshops like Job Club become a site in which the existence of this autonomous citizen is affirmed.","creator":["Anna C. Korteweg"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3649643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cda1b371-1a34-3452-88f2-78900763b1e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3649643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Welfare Reform and the Subject of the Working Mother: \"Get a Job, a Better Job, Then a Career\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3649643","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":15206,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478060,478195]],"Locations in B":[[82562,82692]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the contested terrain of law, literature and social change as it relates to exclusionary practices by turning to the work of Jacques Derrida and Pierre Bourdieu. It argues that their attention to the categories and institutions of law and literature, and to the performative structures and power relations through which these categories and institutions logically cohere, extends the possibility of critiques of ideology.","creator":["BARBARA LECKIE"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3460349-818d-3270-9493-227e5466b207"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24775791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Force of Law and Literature: Critiques of Ideology in Jacques Derrida and Pierre Bourdieu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775791","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10507,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[61257,61498],[62220,62497]],"Locations in B":[[28510,28751],[29287,29565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert Bray","Annette Saddik","David Savran","Michael Paller","Dirk Gindt"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45344092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10976035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7457f6c6-6ec9-38bc-b4c0-c3613dad305d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45344092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tennwillannurevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Tennessee Williams Annual Review","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Historic New Orleans Collection","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Out of the Closet, Onto the Page: A Discussion of Williams's Public Coming Out on \"The David Frost Show\" in 1970 and His Confessional Writing of the '70s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45344092","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article considers the experiences of 12 U.S. Army women combat veterans. These women served in historically significant roles as some of the first women to officially serve in combat in the U.S. military. This article focuses on the role of gender in these women\u2019s experiences in the context of the masculine culture of the military. We explore how they used performance of masculinity and metaphors of family to fit into their combat units. We also deliberate on how sexual harassment was used against these women in ways that communicated that they were not fully accepted. Finally, we consider the tension between empowerment and disempowerment in these women\u2019s narratives of their military service.","creator":["Kacy Crowley","Michelle Sandhoff"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48609166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095327X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ce6782-9489-3faf-967f-1190ea7c7110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48609166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"armedforcessoc"}],"isPartOf":"Armed Forces & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Just a Girl in the Army","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48609166","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"U.S. Iraq War Veterans Negotiating Femininity in a Culture of Masculinity"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maja Horn"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2f53db8-579a-3207-8ac5-8e6bbfb4b367"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"67","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bolero Bad Boys: Luis Rafael S\u00e1nchez's \"La importancia de llamarse Daniel Santos\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119968","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5230,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445515,445588]],"Locations in B":[[4844,4917]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Previous studies have shown that female offenders frequently receive more lenient judgments than equivalent males. Chivalry theories argue that such leniency is the result of paternalistic, benevolent attitudes toward women, in particular toward those who fulfill stereotypical female roles. Yet to date, studies have not examined whether such leniency is indeed associated with paternalistic societal attitudes toward women. The present study goes beyond the investigation of demographics and employs Glick and Fiske's (1996) concepts of hostile and benevolent sexism. We use these concepts to highlight the role of individual differences in attitudes toward women as a key to our understanding of lenient attitudes toward female offenders. Eight hundred forty respondents from a national sample of Israeli residents evaluated the seriousness of hypothetical crime scenarios with (traditional and nontraditional) female and male offenders. As hypothesized, hostile and benevolent sexism moderate the effect of women's \"traditionality\" on respondents' crime seriousness judgments and on the severity of sentences assigned.","creator":["Sergio Herzog","Shaul Oreg"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f190bbf1-4755-3854-8dff-eae770c33ae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29734104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Chivalry and the Moderating Effect of Ambivalent Sexism: Individual Differences in Crime Seriousness Judgments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734104","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11809,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Engendered and feminist archaeologies in historical archaeology have developed in complementary ways to those in nonhistorical archaeologies but with distinct methodological issues and sources of data. This article discusses the development of engendered and feminist archaeologies that use textual sources, the continuing themes that characterize this body of work, and the state of the field today. The article concludes with a discussion of future directions for practitioners to pursue.","creator":["Laurie A. Wilkie","Katherine Howlett Hayes"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10590161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2988fc8-96b1-3203-9b6d-59cdd6a1ffde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41053229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Engendered and Feminist Archaeologies of the Recent and Documented Pasts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053229","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["EDWARD STEIN"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24438906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24438906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"AN INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24438906","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite significant theoretical advances, there is still no universally accepted paradigm for the investigation of sex and gender and little critical research on the subject in South Asian archaeology. Without deciphered texts, artifacts such as figurines that provide body imagery are invaluable in understanding these conceptions in ancient societies. This paper is a critical examination of representations of the body in the Indus civilization, focusing on the anthropomorphic terracotta figurines from Harappa and using more flexible notions of sex, gender, and sexuality to explore Indus conceptions of sexual difference as it relates to other aspects of social difference and identity. The meaningful combinations of the attributes of the represented Indus body may reflect complex and fluid concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality in Indus society that differed from later traditions and varied beneath the cultural veneer of the Indus Civilization with its unique ideology.","creator":["SHARRI R. CLARK"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42928582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00668435"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c340b838-74c1-3731-a6c2-dbd89415d445"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42928582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianperspect"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Perspectives","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"304","pagination":"pp. 304-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Representing the Indus Body: Sex, Gender, Sexuality, and the Anthropomorphic Terracotta Figurines from Harappa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42928582","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"For many, \"Gender Studies\" has become a label for a huge field, comprising women's studies, men's studies and all investigations into their differences and relations. Understood in that way 'gender studies' would be the name of any science that regards human beings under the aspect of their sex. The article pleads for a more specific notion of gender studies as an enter prise investigating the distinction between the sexes instead of using the distinction for research (like women's and men's studies do). Gender studies in this sense get its contour through dealing with three 'margins' of gender: 1. those gender trouble makers which gave rise to the category of 'gender' in clinical research in the 60s, and who are still vital resources for theoretical innovation in the humanities; 2. the phenomenon of gender indifference which has to be taken seriously both as feature of modern societies and as a clue to understanding sexual discrimination as an unexpected re-enactment of gender; 3. the contributions of 'sex studies' in the life-sciences which have to be observed by gender studies in a science studies manner, and which have to be taken seriously as intellectual competitors, not opponents. In sum, gender studies should be regarded as 'social studies of sexual difference' aiming at a culturalist decomposition of the reifications 'man' and 'woman'.","creator":["Stefan Hirschauer"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00386073"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564429926"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235839"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40878437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sozialewelt"}],"isPartOf":"Soziale Welt","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Wozu \u201aGender Studies\u2019? Geschlechtsdifferenzierungsforschung zwischen politischem Populismus und naturwissenschaftlicher Konkurrenz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40878437","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":10981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Las comunidades imaginarias inscriben el cuerpo en determinadas posibilidades semi\u00f3ticas y sem\u00e1nticas, en el seno de relaciones de poder que se expresan material y simb\u00f3licamente. Desplegar literariamente el cuerpo fragmentado de lo existente implica simbolizar una subjetividad encarnada en el propio proceso de creaci\u00f3n verbal. En este art\u00edculo, estudiamos el registro imaginario y la simb\u00f3lica del cuerpo en Vaca Sagrada, novela de Diamela Eltit (1991, 132). Nuestra lectura explora la subjetividad encarnada en el cuerpo, no solo como problema literario de esta novela en particular, sino como escritura del cuerpo en situaci\u00f3n de biopoder, al convertirse la propia vida material en objeto de sometimiento, particularmente desde la dictadura. Habitar cuerpo a cuerpo la ciudad letrada sin renunciar al potencial transformador de la letra encarnada, abarca aqu\u00ed un aspecto central de la propuesta est\u00e9tica post dictatorial (Violi 1991) de Diamela Eltit. Imaginary communities inscribe the body in concrete semiotic and semantic possibilities, within a system of engendered power relations. In this article, we study the imaginary and symbolic bodily constructions in Vaca Sagrada, novel by Diamela Eltit. Our reading explores embodied subjectivity not only as a literary problem in the novel, but as biopower, a political situation whereby material life itself becomes a specific object of power since Chile\u00b4s dictatorship in the 70\u00b4s. The old, enlightened \u201clettered city\u201d is subjected to the transformative potential of the \u201cembodied letter\u201d, revealing a central aspect of Eltit\u00b4s aesthetic post dictatorial vision.","creator":["Kemy Oyarz\u00fan"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90020780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4f5cc88-bd38-3f8c-acd0-562a6ff0f699"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90020780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","issueNumber":"97","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Universidad de Chile","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"CUERPO, ESCRITURA Y BIOPODER EN VACA SAGRADA<\/em>, DE DIAMELA ELTIT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90020780","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan L. Brown"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec3cf532-6c0d-37ca-9742-70295e725e43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"183","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"NUBOSIDAD VARIABLE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617304","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"POSTMODERN FEMINISM IN POST-TRANSITION SPAIN"} +{"abstract":"This article discusses issues of beauty in relation to gendered ideas about aging in Smith's novel On Beauty (2005). It suggests that Smith's novel advances an understanding of aging by revealing how youthful beauty ideah may become integral\u2014and damaging\u2014to identity, regardless of age, gender, ethnicity, or race. It considers how the novel emphasizes the pervasiveness of these cultural ideals in its multiple viewpoints and ultimately focuses on the novels representation of its fifty-something protagonist, Kiki. The article argues that Kiki s perspective asks readers to engage with a concept of aging and identity that shares simiforities with the novel's narrative structure, that is, fragmented and self-aware but also searching for coherence. Kiki's perspective reveah how the complicated process of aging may grant an individual the ability to reject cultural ideals that link age and gender in order to identify and integrate one's subjectivity beyond the limits of others' expectations.","creator":["Colleen Fenno"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"002d988a-7b36-32d5-a75f-b5175bf44685"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Zadie Smith \"On Beauty\", Youth, and Aging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653330","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent contributions within international relations place embodiment, experience and emotion at the centre of their analysis of war. Recognizing that war should be \u2018studied up from people and not down from places that sweep blood, tears and laughter away\u2019 (Sylvester, 2012: 484), I extend this aim to analyse embodiment and experience through Norwegian military memoirs from Afghanistan. These are relevant empirically not necessarily because they contest political aims or offer policy recommendations, but because of how these embodied narratives, influenced by particular gendered conceptions of \u2018warrior masculinity\u2019 and Viking mythology, can trouble Norwegian public narratives. Through focusing on how memoirs construct the sensory experience of combat, I argue that these enable us to push conceptual understandings of embodiment and experience. Memoirs show how war is experienced as an assemblage of pleasure and pain, and how this is caught up in complex blurrings of individual and collective militarized bodies. Analysing how the pain and pleasure of war is made sense of through and between bodies allows us to advance the usage of embodiment as a concept in international relations, in turn leaving the discipline better equipped to understand war\u2019s complex embodied assemblages.","creator":["Synne L Dyvik"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9cf6d26-e092-386a-a284-b032f8a4eba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26294215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"\u2018Valhalla rising\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294215","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Gender, embodiment and experience in military memoirs"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Donawerth"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24350983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","issueNumber":"2 (70)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing the Technologies of Gender: Representations of Television in Science Fiction by Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350983","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Becker-Cantarino"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20468200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8eb41d8-f2ef-392b-a83a-31e83ea20fbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20468200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20468200","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Miers"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1091","pageStart":"1078","pagination":"pp. 1078-1091","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Language and the Structure of Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251043","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":4987,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[496482,496573]],"Locations in B":[[29049,29137]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This ethnographic study of a high school gay\u2014straight alliance club examines unintended consequences of silence during the Day of Silence, a day of action aimed at addressing anti-LGBTQ bias in schools. While this strategy calls for students to engage in intentional silences to raise awareness of anti-LGBTQ bias, it does not necessarily lead others to address harassment or silences around gender and sexuality. Rather, silence makes students more defenseless in the face of verbal harassment.","creator":["Susan W. Woolley"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9747491-a476-37e7-bd6e-306ac6bb0024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23249760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"\"The Silence Itself Is Enough of a Statement\": The Day of Silence and LGBTQ Awareness Raising","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249760","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10930,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[67486,67548]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We propose an externalist understanding of sex that builds upon extended and distributed approaches to cognition, and contributes to building a more just, diversity-sensitive society. Current sex categorization practices according to the female\/male dichotomy are not only inaccurate and incoherent (attributing nonreproductive properties to differences in vaguely defined reproductive roles), but they also ground moral and political pressures that harm and oppress people. We argue that a new understanding of sex is due, an understanding that would acknowledge the variability and, most important, the flexibility of sex properties, as well as the moral and political meaning of sex categorization We propose an externalist account of sex, elaborating on extended and distributed approaches to cognition that capitalize on the natural capacity of organisms to couple with environmental resources. We introduce the notion of extended sex, and argue that properties relevant for sex categorization are neither exclusively internal to the individual skin, nor fixed. Finally, we spell out the potential of extended sex to support an active defense of diversity and an intervention against sex-based discrimination.","creator":["SARAY AYALA","NADYA VASILYEVA"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04f33db7-2a84-3e1b-97ac-e23c6e0db5e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24541978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"742","pageStart":"725","pagination":"pp. 725-742","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Extended Sex: An Account of Sex for a More Just Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541978","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In China, reluctance to discuss sex continues to be widely observed despite the sexual revolution there. That silence generates questions about health risks in the contexts of HIV\/AIDS and international migration. Based on a qualitative study of mainland Chinese immigrants in Canada, this paper explores the impacts of immigration processes on sex and sexuality. The findings reveal a gap between these individuals' changing sexual behaviours and the continuing silence on sex. Although Canada has exposed them to a new living environment that has shaped the dynamics and patterns of their sexual practices, their incomplete integration into the host society and their close connections with China as the home country mean that traditional Chinese norms continue to influence their understanding of these changes. With the increasing openness of these immigrants' sexual relationships, the obsolescence of their consciousness and knowledge of sexuality should be addressed in order to reduce their vulnerability to sexual inequalities and consequent health risks. Malgr\u00e9 la r\u00e9volution sexuelle en Chine, on observe toujours une r\u00e9ticence g\u00e9n\u00e9rale \u00e0 parler de rapports sexuels. Ce silence g\u00e9n\u00e8re des questions sur les risques pour la sant\u00e9 dans les contextes du VIH\/sida et de la migration internationale. S'appuyant sur une \u00e9tude qualitative sur les immigr\u00e9s originaires de la Chine continentale au Canada, cet article explore les diff\u00e9rents impacts des processus d'immigration sur les rapports sexuels et sur la sexualit\u00e9. Les r\u00e9sultats de cette analyse mettent en lumi\u00e8re un \u00e9cart entre les comportements sexuels changeants dans cette population et le silence persistant en ce qui concerne les rapports sexuels. Bien que le Canada ait offert \u00e0 ces personnes un nouvel environnement de vie qui a d\u00e9termin\u00e9 les dynamiques et les mod\u00e8les de leurs pratiques sexuelles, leur int\u00e9gration incompl\u00e8te dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 qui les accueille et leurs connexions \u00e9troites avec la Chine, en tant que patrie, ont pour signification une influence persistante des normes traditionnelles chinoises sur leur compr\u00e9hension de ces changements. Face \u00e0 la mani\u00e8re de plus en plus ouverte avec laquelle ces immigr\u00e9s vivent leurs relations sexuelles, il est important de traiter la question de l'obsolescence de leur conscience et de leurs connaissances sur la sexualit\u00e9 afin de r\u00e9duire leur vuln\u00e9rabilit\u00e9 aux in\u00e9galit\u00e9s sexuelles et aux risques qui en r\u00e9sultent. En China la renuencia a hablar de sexo sigue siendo un hecho probado a pesar de su revoluci\u00f3n sexual. Este silencio plantea cuestiones sobre los riesgos para la salud en los contextos del VIH y el sida, as\u00ed como con respecto a la migraci\u00f3n internacional. Bas\u00e1ndonos en un estudio cualitativo sobre los inmigrantes de China continental en Canad\u00e1, en este art\u00edculo analizamos las repercusiones de los procesos de inmigraci\u00f3n sobre el sexo y la sexualidad. Los resultados indican que existe una discrepancia entre los cambios en los patrones de comportamiento sexual de este grupo de personas y el continuo silencio sobre el tema sexual. Aunque Canad\u00e1 los ha expuesto a un nuevo entorno que ha influido en las din\u00e1micas y patrones de sus pr\u00e1cticas sexuales, su incompleta integraci\u00f3n en la sociedad de acogida y sus estrechas relaciones con China como pa\u00eds de origen significa que las normas tradicionales chinas siguen teniendo influencia en su modo de entender estos cambios. Con la creciente apertura de las relaciones sexuales de estos inmigrantes, deber\u00eda abordarse la obsolescencia de su conciencia y conocimiento de la sexualidad a fin de reducir su vulnerabilidad a las desigualdades sexuales y los riesgos para la salud que conllevan.","creator":["Yanqiu Rachel Zhou"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41426446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b01f18d0-57fe-3df9-ad5a-000a542e544e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41426446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing behaviours and continuing silence: sex in the post-immigration lives of mainland Chinese immigrants in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41426446","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite the disappearance of the historical avantgarde before WWII, both scholars and the popular press are reluctant to relinquish the belief in a radical, American, theatrical avantgarde. No other artists eepitomize this avantgarde more than the Woister Group, which, in its 30 years of work, has gradually become recognized as the emblematic avantgarde company. But was the avantgarde that developed in the 1970 ever really an avantgarde at all?","creator":["David Savran"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4488655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb4b31a0-b3d5-3006-a5cd-fe3d8bafb345"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4488655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Death of the Avantgarde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4488655","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":17975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8cb0678-f14a-3a68-bcb2-1006e92baf42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3130456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":87,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130456","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":22660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper looks at the influential part played by the game of football in the social construction of hegemonic masculine practices among a group of Year 6 boys in an English junior school, which is an area that remains under-researched. Football forms a large part of school life for many children (the majority of whom are boys) and is sated with masculinising associations: this paper argues that football acts as a model for the boys, and they use the game as a way of constructing, negotiating, and performing their masculinity. Football is seen as a key signifier of successful masculinity, and its practices are a major influence on hegemonic masculinities, which are performed and defended in relation to other masculinities and femininities that become subordinated and marginalised. Girls are excluded from the games, along with some of the boys in the subordinated group who become feminised by their lack of skill and competence, and are subjected to homophobic abuse, as the hegemonic group acts within the 'cultural imperative' of heterosexuality. The games of playground football are viewed as a series of ritualised and fantasised performances, and this paper proposes that the body plays an essential role in the formation of masculine identities, with competitive displays of skill and strength. The school policies and organisation of football are also considered, and the power struggles and tensions this causes, not only between pupils, but also between teachers and pupils, and between and teacher.","creator":["Jon Swain"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b86959f7-31b9-30e6-ab43-b312e649ad6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1393361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'The Money's Good, the Fame's Good, the Girls Are Good': The Role of Playground Football in the Construction of Young Boys' Masculinity in a Junior School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1393361","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524164,524242]],"Locations in B":[[44797,44886]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I examine the meaning of natural bodies and natural births in contemporary midwifery in Canada and explore the impact of these central concepts on the embodied experiences of pregnant and birthing women. The ideal of a natural birth has been used as a successful rhetorical strategy in scholarly and popular feminist works on childbirth to counter and critique the predominant biomedical or \"technocratic\" model of the pregnant and birthing body as inherently problematic and potentially dangerous to the fetus. Contemporary Canadian midwifery-which only as recently as 1994 made a historic transition from a grassroots social movement to a full profession within the public health care system-continues to work discursively through the idiom of nature to affect women's knowledge and experience of their bodies and selves in pregnancy and birth. However, my key finding in this ethnographic study, which focused primarily on midwifery in the province of Ontario in the years following professionalization, is that natural birth is being redefined by the personal, political, and pragmatic choices of midwives and their clients. I argue that the construction, negotiation, and experience of natural birth in contemporary midwifery both reflects and promotes a fundamental shift away from essentialized understandings as it makes room for biomedical technology and hospital spaces, underpinned by the midwifery logics of caring and choice. Natural birth in this context also carries important cultural messages-gender expectations-that posit women as persons and bodies as naturally competent and knowing.","creator":["Margaret Macdonald"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07455194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205070"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efe241aa-d26e-35c3-bdfe-2af875e24057"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3655414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medianthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Medical Anthropology Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Expectations: Natural Bodies and Natural Births in the New Midwifery in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655414","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11428,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147654,147832]],"Locations in B":[[18019,18196]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Relatively little research has aimed to understand autism from an emic perspective. The majority of studies examining the organization of the talk of individuals with autism presume that autism organizes discourse rather than examine ways in which talk itself constructs the notion of autism. This study explored the meanings of autism performed in and through the talk of the parents of children with autism and their therapists. Drawing from a larger ethnographic study, we report on findings generated from interview data with parents and therapists. Situating this study within a discursive psychology framework, we attend to the ways in which 'normality' and 'abnormality' are performed, drawing upon critical notions of disability, poststructural understandings of discourse, and conversation analysis. We point to the importance of situating the construction of an 'ordered' or 'disordered' body in relationship to the exclusionary practices and policies that individuals with autism and those close to them experience daily.","creator":["Jessica N. Lester","Trena M. Paulus"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e445aa5b-d4d9-3b7f-a5aa-85874a1b357c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performative acts of autism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496373","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jay Watson"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f106b0b-164c-38a1-b353-29283eea4678"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Overdoing Masculinity in \"Light in August\"; or, Joe Christmas and the Gender Guard","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907661","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":13483,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[73438,73644],[256220,256330],[256721,257008],[430988,431979],[439121,439245],[456258,456411],[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[8960,9166],[37655,37765],[39622,39909],[55486,56476],[59612,59736],[70613,70762],[80583,80657]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martine Van Woerkens"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40379528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04394216"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8546c5f4-e9ba-3015-b8f2-502d3527508c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40379528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"homme"}],"isPartOf":"L'Homme","issueNumber":"187\/188","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"476","pagination":"pp. 476-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40379528","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1614,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481554]],"Locations in B":[[3600,3708]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines how significant musical moments, occurring within singular contexts, may be performative to the development of community. While community is often viewed within music education as an unequivocal good, I argue that this result may not always be beneficent In this paper, I look at one unique performative moment through the lens of anti-racism education as the potential for community conceived as multicultural human subjectivity. Drawing upon the arguments of Theodore Adomo, Paul Gilroy, and others, I then examine this same moment as one in which the seeds offascistic community may also be sewn. From this background, I examine the ongoing project of the National Association for Music Education (MENC) known as the National Anthem Project (NAP) as an identity building project, questioning where the lines blur between solidarity, nationalism, and fascistic forms of community within the potentially significant musical moments that NAP may also foster.","creator":["Deborah Bradley"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c766162c-4518-32da-b312-c1ad73d2c677"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40327310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Oh, That Magic Feeling! Multicultural Human Subjectivity, Community, and Fascism's Footprints","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327310","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7689,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[95655,95799]],"Locations in B":[[23780,23924]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Hitchcock"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a78b369-a185-344f-9037-9923b51b07cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PASSING: HENRY GREEN AND WORKING-CLASS IDENTITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284267","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy J. Deines"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"One 2 Many Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949364","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7267,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[43980,44033]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ecd80a0-6315-3394-8d2e-a1745ae262d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/529963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"1274","pageStart":"1264","pagination":"pp. 1264-1274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Collected Essays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529963","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":9654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explains the connection between the forms of historical records and the representation of the two genders in early China. It is focused on Sima Qian's adaptation of stories concerning women from Zuozhuan, a chronicle full of discrete narrative episodes, into the linearly connected history narratives of Shiji. I argue that, by building the linear unity of his narrative around the ruling patriline, Sima Qian either removes elements representing women and their agency to leave space for male characters or transposes these elements onto them. Sima Qian thereby fits the representation of the characters in Shiji to the distinct gender roles articulated in Han Confucian ritual texts.","creator":["Xiucai ZHENG"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01619705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b40ca45e-3cc6-340d-91f0-5a393d904f07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinliteessaarti"}],"isPartOf":"Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews (CLEAR)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Chinese Literature: essays, articles, reviews (CLEAR)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Theology","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"From \"Zuozhuan to Shiji\": Changes in Gender Representation in Sima Qian's Rewriting of Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490203","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the problems and dilemmas of creating and crossing identity borders and boundaries. The identities discussed are those of gender and sexuality, race and ethnicity. When these identities fragment or cross-cut each other, a unified politics becomes problematic. If stigmatized identities remain primarily personal, identity-based groups provide support and resources, but do not affect systemic injustices or status inequalities. The paper ends with a proposal for a politics of transformation and a description of some current programs that offer possibilities for structural change. Some of these programs are identity-based and maintain conventional categories; others deliberately integrate categories.","creator":["JUDITH LORBER"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380237"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617066"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200248"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e34cdbfe-1f6f-36dc-9c43-f4b0aec2800a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20832051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociofocus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Focus","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"CROSSING BORDERS AND ERASING BOUNDARIES: PARADOXES OF IDENTITY POLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832051","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Hekman"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88929eec-ec58-3828-bfef-66f0b167f123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Backgrounds and Riverbeds: Feminist Reflections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178689","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8867,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[512556,512647]],"Locations in B":[[55254,55353]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, Professor Kenji Yoshino seeks to explain why the category of bisexuality has been erased in contemporary American political and legal discourse. He first argues that the invisibility of bisexuality relative to homosexuality does not reflect the incidences of those orientations in the population. Defining bisexuality as the possession of more than incidental desire for both sexes, Yoshino shows that the major sexuality studies demonstrate that the incidence of bisexuality is in fact greater than or comparable to the incidence of homosexuality. Yoshino explains the erasure of bisexuality by positing that both self-identified heterosexuals and self-identified homosexuals have overlapping interests in the erasure of bisexuality that lead them into an \"epistemic contract\" of bisexual erasure. These interests include: (1) the stabilization of exclusive sexual orientation categories; (2) the retention of sex as an important diacritical axis; and (3) the protection of norms of monogamy. Noting that such contracts tend to become visible only when they are challenged, Yoshino describes how bisexuals have increasingly contested their own erasure. Finally, Yoshino examines the effects of bisexual invisibility and visibility in the legal realm, focusing on the sexual harassment jurisprudence of recent decades.","creator":["Kenji Yoshino"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb13b73-9422-3480-9cc4-6417a94c1d09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":109,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Epistemic Contract of Bisexual Erasure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229482","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":55920,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[74483,74701],[361249,361539]],"Locations in B":[[27751,27967],[193099,193402]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Steege","Andrew\u00a0Stuart Bergerson","Maureen Healy","Pamela\u00a0E. Swett"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"review-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/588855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e28984c-c50b-3ce0-b6bf-62d1e0d31d54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/588855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The History of Everyday Life: A Second Chapter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/588855","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":10876,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524252]],"Locations in B":[[53390,53485]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article aims to analyze the discourse of cursing and gender performance in Shakespeare's Richard III (1592) through Judith Butler's theory of gender as a performative act in conjunction with J. L. Austin's concept of performative utterances, in order to further a cultural understanding of the beliefs surrounding curses in early modern England. I deploy Richard III as a case study to demonstrate that speech-act theory is applicable in a dramatic text, a context that Austin failed to consider when he theorized illocutionary acts. Since the construction of feminine identities in Richard III is based on performance\u2013in early modern England boy actors impersonated female figures vocally and physically, I argue that curses are gendered feminine despite the fact that cursing women transgress the conventional feminine virtue of silence and despite the cultural belief that curses produce agency of which women are conventionally deprived. As such, the discourse of female cursing can be read as a case of minor literature, a mode of enunciation that challenges and eclipses Richard's discourse, and which emanates from the conventional view that the female curse is a performative speech act that is divinely endorsed. It is an effective means of retaliation, leading to the destruction of villainous figures.","creator":["Bilal Hamamra"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/bethunivj.36.2019.0115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25213695"},{"name":"oclc","value":"682395017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35a614aa-79cb-333b-b880-a5d304d89b4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/bethunivj.36.2019.0115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bethunivj"}],"isPartOf":"Bethlehem University Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Performative Utterances and Gender Performance in Shakespeare's Richard III<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/bethunivj.36.2019.0115","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6748,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[123890,124038]],"Locations in B":[[10484,10631]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James C. Bulman"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0f0eba6-6214-3bab-a1b0-afb7692b67d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26349130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bringing Cheek By Jowl's \"As You Like It\" out of the Closet: The Politics of Gay Theater","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26349130","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bethany Hicok","Elizabeth Bishop"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"060c7673-464b-3f5e-a514-1ac7df71e0f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Elizabeth Bishop's \"Queer Birds\": Vassar, \"Con Spirito,\" and the Romance of Female Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208914","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9711,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149720,149822]],"Locations in B":[[10503,10605]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Natalie Stoljar"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Essence, Identity, and the Concept of Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154214","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":16510,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471]],"Locations in B":[[85313,85379]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper discusses \"normalization \" as a problem for the liberal order through a detailed examination of the liberal political theory of Michael Oakeshott. Oakeshott links the poststructuralist normalizing problematic with the \"existential\" dilemma of human finitude. In liberalism, he argues, selves become disciplined and normalized when they respond to finitude with an overemphasis on instrumentality. They understand freedom as an instrumental good, a means to external ends. Oakeshott reformulates liberalism based on another response when selves appreciate experience as a self-sufficient or intrinsic good. They understand freedom as a first-order good valuable for itself and this lessens the normalizing pressure. I argue that F. A. Hayek's theory of liberalism confirms Oakeshott's warning about an overemphasis on instrumentality. I show the importance of Oakeshott's work in that he restates the distinction between the public and the private and demonstrates the limits of contemporary liberal theories insofar as they neglect the problem of normalization.","creator":["Jacob Segal"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f0446fb-895e-37cb-80f5-e38291d52dc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3117619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Freedom and Normalization: Poststructuralism and the Liberalism of Michael Oakeshott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117619","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":11567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In the postmodern condition, individuals are flooded with images, symbols, and content from various traditions and cultural contexts. How does tradition change in its postmodern uses? How does folklore fill the contemporary need for \u201cauthenticity\u201d? This article presents three models of adapting folkloric materials, reflecting different ways of coping with issues such as identity, community, tradition, multiculturalism, and the desire to fill some of the emptiness experienced by individuals in the complex cultural context of the postmodern condition characterizing contemporary Western culture. The liturgical poem \u201cIm Nin'alu\u201d\u2014referenced and shaped differently by Ofra Haza, Madonna, and Offer Nissim\u2014constitutes a test case for examining a variety of models for adapting traditional material, with varying degrees of postmodernity. The first model seeks to experience authenticity through a restoration of, or return to, \u201ctradition.\u201d The second one, shaped in the context of World Music, springs from a spirituality that yearns for an \u201cauthentic\u201d experience as manifested through a tradition that belongs to the culture of the Other. The third model, which we term \u201cremix spirituality,\u201d seeks to generate an ecstatic experience in an ultra-postmodern manner.","creator":["Marianna Ruah-Midbar Shapiro","Omri Ruah Midbar"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd8a7f51-821e-38bf-be4e-81fe53912db9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Outdoing Authenticity: Three Postmodern Models of Adapting Folkloric Materials in Current Spiritual Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.03","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christian A. Gregory"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bebedf05-d0b9-3850-a684-14a7f207d233"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performative Transformation of the Public Queer in \"Paris is Burning\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018928","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7494,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431245,431480]],"Locations in B":[[18505,18740]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meredith Cherland"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21ea1008-f2d8-3f5d-953b-263bfb303ad4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"CHAPTER SIX: Reading Elisabeth's Girlhood: History and Popular Culture at Work in the Subjectivity of a Tween","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978694","volumeNumber":"245","wordCount":9283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARJEAN D. PURINTON"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4797e6bc-8605-3098-bf7c-f0383afd56fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24634926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Texas Tech University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Laugh of the Medusa\" and \"Laughing Anne\": A Feminist Reading of Joseph Conrad's Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634926","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8219,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[145867,146075],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[41767,41975],[47445,47514]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sabine Nessel"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03437736"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606455008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c4f2177-33e4-3ace-a1eb-77ff57561506"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24058622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frauenfilm"}],"isPartOf":"Frauen und Film","issueNumber":"62","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Stroemfeld Verlag Buchversand GmbH","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Attacke statt Erotik: Anmerkungen zur Geschlechterdifferenz im Kino der Visual Effects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24058622","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Fraser","Linda Gordon"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcaa774d-e2ac-3798-92f3-d7fe0456513a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Genealogy of Dependency: Tracing a Keyword of the U.S. Welfare State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174801","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12287,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477001,477125]],"Locations in B":[[73463,73589]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02d028f6-de26-3101-9198-15812bfbf515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"904","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-904","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175411","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Clark"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c55ab64-0bd7-3e24-be62-587dff36d0c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Fight Club\": Historicizing the Rhetoric of Masculinity, Violence, and Sentimentality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866410","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3868,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522812,522892]],"Locations in B":[[23112,23195]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The objective of emancipatory security theory is to examine the insecurities of individuals and social groups that stem from oppressive power processes, relations, and structures. However, the image of power in emancipatory security studies does not correspond to such a normative and analytical motivation. This renders the theory susceptible to substantial criticism on the grounds of inadequate analysis of resisting individuals as agents of security in their own localities. To address this issue, the present article conceptualizes \u2018emancipatory power\u2019. In this exercise, Hannah Arendt\u2019s understanding of power, enriched by Judith Butler\u2019s concept of performativity and feminist insights, will be used as the theoretical foundation to tailor collective power based on trust in a \u2018moment\u2019 of emancipation. Collective power will be illustrated by references to the protests in Cairo\u2019s Tahrir Square in 2011.","creator":["Ali Bilgic"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40b5a52b-2a89-3f29-a35a-abd117b6e700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"272","pagination":"pp. 272-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Real people in real places\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292352","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Conceptualizing power for emancipatory security through Tahrir"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Annelise Heinz"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.1.0032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef666f18-2326-3ef7-ad86-99ef88a649dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.1.0032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Mahjong in the 1920s: White Women, Chinese Americans, and the Fear of Cultural Seduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.1.0032","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15003,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[67420,67501]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines The Hayloft Project's theatre production Thyestes, first performed at the Malthouse Theatre in Melbourne in 2010. It takes as its starting point public criticism of the practice of adaptation as a derivative form. Contrary to this position, the essay applies recent theorizations of theatre as a hypermedium in order to argue that adaptation is an integral, structural component of theatre rather than simply an intertextual, representational strategy. In doing so, it positions Brechtian approaches to the medium as a historical precedent through which to consider the dramaturgical strategies at work in the production, and it extrapolates on Walter Benjamin's idea of citation as a formative interruption to critique scholarly conceptions of the practice as a \"second,\" palimpsestic form. The essay thus extends the discussion of adaptation beyond the language of alteration and re-creation. Finally, it explores the misapprehensions that result from reading adaptation purely in representational terms in its discussion of adaptation in an Australian context.","creator":["Margaret Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8647b873-4145-361d-b484-3c23af74ea2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hayloft's \"Thyestes\": Adapting Seneca for the Australian Stage and Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580461","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":10930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"L'article s'int\u00e9resse \u00e0 la mani\u00e8re dont l'espace litt\u00e9raire \"postcolonial\" prend acte des lectures \u00e9cocritiques, \u00e0 partir de l'exemple indiaoc\u00e9anique et de la r\u00e9sonance particuli\u00e8re que celles-ci y entretiennent avec l'exotisme et les discours de la modernit\u00e9. Fiction d'auteur, rejoignant le main stream de la litt\u00e9rature-monde, et fiction \u00e8zocritique, empruntant \u00e0 la biopolitique, \u00e0 la pens\u00e9e \u00e9cologique et \u00e0 la g\u00e9opo\u00e9tique, G\u00e9otropiques de Johary Ravaloson propose un au-del\u00e0 du paradigme historique et des sc\u00e9nographies contraignantes, o\u00f9 la fiction habite les fronti\u00e8res de la litt\u00e9rature et de son dehors.","creator":["Yolaine Parisot"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44685432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15523152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"656426483"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200860"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39ac31d6-7420-34f7-9208-2ba92606ae86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44685432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvetudfran"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles \u00c9tudes Francophones","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"G\u00e9otropiques\" ou la pens\u00e9e \u00e9cologique insulaire \u00e0 l'\u00e9preuve de l'espace litt\u00e9raire \"postcolonial\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44685432","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Trask"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6db2276-234b-37ac-80ed-1e44565fa1ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23358475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What School Culture Teaches Us about Queer Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358475","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn Ross-Bryant"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dbc759f-07d8-3648-ba1a-1273301f58e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41178763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE SELF IN NATURE: Four American Autobiographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178763","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9242,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,524001]],"Locations in B":[[50563,50694]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helene Meyers"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe43c212-719c-3f5b-bd13-6bd632ddc8ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Jewish Gender Trouble: Women Writing Men of Valor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455285","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This address discusses both the organization of SPEP (the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy) and SPEP as an organization. I take up these issues by describing the foundation of SPEP in terms of a positive insight into a distinctive style of doing philosophy and a subsequent experience of being other. I then suggest that there is an initial and fundamental phase of openness characteristic of SPEP as \u201ceyes wide open\u201d and another narrowing moment of SPEP that runs counter to this as \u201ceyes wide shut.\u201d In a fourth section, I depict a difficulty in which SPEP finds itself today: a \u201ccontinental drift,\u201d when SPEP becomes identified with continental philosophy. Whereas continental philosophy might find itself in antagonist relations to, for example, \u201canalytic philosophy,\u201d SPEP does not necessarily find itself in this way. It is therefore necessary to understand continental philosophy as a participant in and from SPEP, not SPEP as an allegiance to a discipline or as an organ of continental philosophy. SPEP is an organization that edges beyond itself and, according to its distinctive style, is characterized by openness to the things themselves and their structures in terms of an orientation to problems, experience, context, and critique.","creator":["Anthony J. Steinbock"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.28.3.0256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fc8827c-60c8-3d5d-aa35-eb6ee60b498e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jspecphil.28.3.0256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SPEP Co-director's Address:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.28.3.0256","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"SPEP and the Continental Divide"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Audrey Thompson"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"When Manipulation Is Indispensable to Education: The Moral Work of Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589501","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11816,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[57462,57516]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents ethnographic data showing how recruitment consultants negotiate managerial attempts to control workforce culture. I suggest the values which senior managers encourage consultants to embody prioritize so-called 'masculine' attributes over 'feminine' ones. I attempt to demonstrate the limits of cultural control by outlining three ways in which the consultants engage with this imposed culture: defiance, parody and ritual. These activities contain gendered assumptions similar to those embedded in corporate culture. I discuss the potential such practices have for resisting corporate culture and the gender within it, suggesting that one source of ambiguity within workplace 'control' and 'resistance' practices is that they employ overlapping cultural resources and assumptions.","creator":["Beverley Hawkins"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cb1f5ab-1255-3ced-b3bf-fc0e5c3a1860"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Double Agents: Gendered Organizational Culture, Control and Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857142","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article traces the meaning of same-sex sexuality in Vietnamese-language popular sources from the Renovation period to the early years of the millennium to argue that one dominant meaning prevailed: the idea that homosexual identity is synonymous with gender-crossing. Historical studies have shown that in certain times and places, same-sex sexuality was predicated on other variables, such as status and power, not gender. Yet, the Vietnamese sources insist on the centrality of gender in homosexual definition. This article discusses two historical discourses, one medical and the other state-sponsored, that contributed to the shaping of this definition.","creator":["Richard Quang-Anh Tran"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/vs.2014.9.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1559372X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62763830"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-228027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d212370f-47c3-39b3-b250-acca4e558373"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/vs.2014.9.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvietstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vietnamese Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"An Epistemology of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/vs.2014.9.2.1","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":18611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Historical Notes on the Homosexual Body in Contemporary Vietnam, 1986\u20132005"} +{"abstract":"Dispelling historical narratives in composition and rhetoric that largely depict nineteenth-century student compositions as \"vacuous\" themes, this archival study examines women's compositions at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary as complex generic hybrids, in which the composition is fused with common social and dialogic forms. By focusing particularly on two related hybrid forms--the letter composition and the sermon composition--this article demonstrates the discursive nature of women's intellectual work as it circulated within and beyond seminary walls, in both written and oral forms, serving as localized evidence of a gendered antebellum epistolary culture.","creator":["Suzanne B. Spring"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20457029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0455800-041c-338e-9285-fb475197ee24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20457029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"633","pagination":"pp. 633-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Seemingly Uncouth Forms\": Letters at Mount Holyoke Female Seminary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20457029","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":19405,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[32986,33199]],"Locations in B":[[9634,9847]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jenny Bj\u00f6rklund"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3c6110c-19b3-3bc8-9bce-9771a473739d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/scanstud.88.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Playing with Pistols: Female Masculinity in Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.1.1","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":6950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The article looks at the concepts of 'individuality', 'mask', 'self, and 'voice' in recent British women's poetry (Patricia Beer, Lavinia Greenlaw, Kathleen Jamie Judith Kazantzis). Starting from a modified version of Speech Act Theory, the poems are read along the lines of Butler's (1990, 1993, 1997) theory of the performative character of (female) identity. Through Felman's (1983) deconstruction-oriented hypothesis of resistant (female) reading(s), and other issues such as femininevs. feminist writing, feminist awakening vs. feminist confession, the poems are highlighted as multi-faceted expressions of their authors'\/speakers' concern with the dynamics of the psychic realm of experience. The analysis concentrates on the use of first-person pronouns, me\/you oppositions, metaphoricity, subjectivity, types of knowledge, and related notions. It is shown that the 'l' in women's poetry needs to be constructed, performed, and, where necessary, contested.","creator":["G\u00f6ran Nieragden"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43025674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Half the heart knows itself\": The Performance Character of Identity in Contemporary British Women's Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025674","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9956,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[59311,59378],[73363,73654],[243898,244010]],"Locations in B":[[17909,17976],[18262,18566],[44766,44878]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este artigo resulta de um exerc\u00edcio de revis\u00e3o de literatura feito no \u00e2mbito de uma pesquisa de doutoramento em Sociologia, cujo objetivo central consistiu na identifica\u00e7\u00e3o de mudan\u00e7as e continuidades nas formas de viver e representar a sexualidade, nas \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas, em Portugal. Em concreto, procur\u00e1mos com este artigo explorar duas vias fundamentais de conceptualiza\u00e7\u00e3o da sexualidade: primeiro, a sexualidade enquanto campo leg\u00edtimo do saber cient\u00edfico e, depois, a sexualidade enquanto objeto da Sociologia em particular. Deste exerc\u00edcio resulta a ideia de que, enquanto dimens\u00e3o da vida social, a sexualidade \u00e9 um reflexo de mudan\u00e7as sociais mais abrangentes, sendo, nas sociedades contempor\u00e2neas, palco de importantes conquistas identit\u00e1rias e lugar de excel\u00eancia para uma nova ordem de individualiza\u00e7\u00e3o e prazer. This article results from a literature review carried out in the context of a doctoral research in sociology, whose aim was to identify changes and continuities in the ways of living and representing sexuality, in the last decades, in Portugal. In particular, we have sought to explore two fundamental ways of conceptualizing sexuality: first, sexuality as a legitimate field of research, and then, sexuality a sociological object, in particular. This exercise results in the idea that, as a dimension of social life, sexuality reflects wider social changes, being, in contemporary societies, a stage of important identity achievements and a place, par excellence, of a new order of individualization and pleasure.","creator":["Dulce Morgado Neves"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6896b4a2-ef27-3a43-ac1e-3cc589240b6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26748013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Sexualidade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748013","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Saber e Individualidade"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nikol G. Alexander-Floyd","Evelyn M. Simien"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revisiting \"What's in a Name?\": Exploring the Contours of Africana Womanist Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137413","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9483,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[57144,57219]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Katherine Ince"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3700500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3700500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is Sex Comedy or Tragedy? Directing Desire and Female Auteurship in the Cinema of Catherine Breillat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3700500","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":5660,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[209186,210093],[210098,210348],[210786,210892]],"Locations in B":[[2217,3123],[3203,3510],[3680,3788]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I attempt to do an ethnography of the state by examining the discourses of corruption in contemporary India. I focus on the practices of lower levels of the bureaucracy in a small north Indian town as well as on representations of the state in the mass media. Research on translocal institutions such as \"the state\" enables us to reflect on the limitations of participant-observation as a technique of fieldwork. The analysis leads me to question Eurocentric distinctions between state and civil society and offers a critique of the conceptualization of \"the state\" as a monolithic and unitary entity. [the state, public culture, fieldwork, discourse, corruption, India]","creator":["Akhil Gupta"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66a0d69c-306d-3562-bc75-d473bfccca1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Blurred Boundaries: The Discourse of Corruption, the Culture of Politics, and the Imagined State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646708","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":19828,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523956]],"Locations in B":[[114517,114605]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Jelinek's 1975 novel \"Die Liebhaberinnen\" may be read as a classic Marxist-feminist text demonstrating in a Brechtian way the partnership of capital and patriarchy. It also, however, illustrates that patriarchy functions as a hom(m)o-sexual economy based on the symbolic exchange of women (Luce Irigaray). Though its aesthetic is overwhelmingly negative, its use of strategic mimicry (Irigaray) suggests that the symbolic can and must be challenged from within.","creator":["Brigid Haines"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3733391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"655","pageStart":"643","pagination":"pp. 643-655","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Patriarchy: Marxism, Feminism, and Elfriede Jelinek's \"Die Liebhaberinnen\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733391","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":7730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Bosworth"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"064b0bd2-c42a-3961-99fc-113ead48e33b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675329","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":2549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MERETE HELLUM"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e91b214-9b8d-3197-b876-9d40668d9e01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20850225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"4","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20850225","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane Gray"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/205359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221953"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9df42b5-b14a-32e8-b4a0-9530da71cfc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/205359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintehist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Interdisciplinary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and Plebian Culture in Ulster","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/205359","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sheng Kuan Chung"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27696214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043125"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839029"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236603"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ded1d3ce-8e3c-3489-9446-3a8e7516a14b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27696214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arteducation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Media\/Visual Literacy Art Education: Sexism in Hip-Hop Music Videos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27696214","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":4376,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73363,73644]],"Locations in B":[[14980,15261]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article asks what a sustained ethnographic approach to media reception can teach us about the processes of identification and disavowal that take place when audiences consume media that for them is both fictional and realistic. Focusing on Chinese viewers' responses to the film Shuang zhuo (Twin Bracelets), I examine the commentaries generated in the context of film viewing and show how they enabled viewers to redefine representational genres and potentially reclaim personal and community histories. At the same time, I also elucidate common themes that appear in the viewers' own stories and in the genre they sought to contest. These commonalities grant viewers a form of authorial agency while simultaneously reinforcing existing modes of representing their lives. The article integrates approaches from linguistic and sociocultural anthropology with film theory to consider how spectators both engage with media texts and mediate the relationship between their present and past lives through different representational forms.","creator":["Sara L. Friedman"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4121bf3-952a-3b14-9c93-76b624589b50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4124724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"632","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-632","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Watching \"Twin Bracelets\" in China: The Role of Spectatorship and Identification in an Ethnographic Analysis of Film Reception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124724","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":14398,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[87234,87288]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this essay, I argue that Clemente Pereda's works of art (including his protest fast from 1934) are examples of a necessary process both at the level of the individual and at the level of the community that sublimates what Julia Kristeva calls abjection: an idealization of the link between self and other that is constituted of both symbolic and physical material. I emphasize the need for the social sphere to continue to generate the conditions of possibility for this necessary process, to support works of art like Clemente Pereda's fast, which worked as an antidote to the anorectic and suicidal effects of colonialism.","creator":["Benigno Trigo"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43279337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff478849-2116-375a-9ee3-88b3fb46e97a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43279337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anorexia as Idealization: Clemente Pereda's Protest Fast (Puerto Rico, 1934)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43279337","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":12396,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[151543,151618]],"Locations in B":[[4980,5053]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["\u05d2\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05e2\u05e4\u05e8","Gila Ofer"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23490712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23102063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa1a9c1b-52bc-3822-82eb-4902ba17614e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23490712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mikbatz"}],"isPartOf":"Mikbatz: The Israel Journal of Group Psychotherapy \/ \u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05e5: \u05db\u05ea\u05d1 \u05d4\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d7\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d8\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05d9","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Israeli Association of Group Psychotherapy \/ \u05e2\u05de\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d7\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d8\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc \u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05ea\u05d9 (\u05e2\"\u05e8)","sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introduction to Special Issue \/ \u05d1\u05e4\u05ea\u05d7 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05df: \u05d3\u05d1\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05e8\u05db\u05ea-\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d7\u05ea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23490712","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":1689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Action is a highly theorised aspect of social life. Nonetheless, it remains a relatively neglected source of data within educational research. This article attempts to highlight the significance of the analysis of organised action within educational research. It describes and demonstrates an analytical approach to action applicable to the classroom developed from approaches to the analysis of bodily communication and action in drama education and from new approaches to rhetoric. These approaches draw on social semiotic theories of making meaning in order to describe the complex relationship between the semiotics of social action and the situated experience of learning in the classroom. This article describes how action realises meanings and shapes classroom interaction through the application of the schema to video data from a science lesson on energy with Year 9 pupils (14 years old). Finally, it draws attention to the research and pedagogical implications of a focus on action in the science classroom and in education more generally.","creator":["Anton Franks","Carey Jewitt"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01411926"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43770204"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b724410-fd3b-3c22-ac78-fc709bf4f81f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1501710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"briteducresej"}],"isPartOf":"British Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"The Meaning of Action in Learning and Teaching","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1501710","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article examine deux films r\u00e9alis\u00e9s par le cin\u00e9aste ind\u00e9pendant Vincent Gallo \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de la th\u00e9orie queer et de l'analyse des r\u00f4les sexuels. La fonction du masochisme masculin chez Gallo s'articule selon un version h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelle du queer, ce qui permet de rajeunir le cool contre-culturel et de distinguer l\u0153uvre de Gallo de celles des r\u00e9alisateurs lib\u00e9raux grand public. Nous utilisons le model sociologique de production culturelle de Pierre Bourdieu pour d\u00e9velopper l'id\u00e9e du cin\u00e9ma \u00ab branch\u00e9 \u00bb et expliquer la d\u00e9centralisation subjective, la thanatophilie et la traumatophilie contemporaines. La psychanalyse et la th\u00e9orie queer s'amalgament \u00e0 cette lecture sociologique pour explorer les politiques culturelles de Buffalo 66 et The Brown Bunny de Gallo.","creator":["MARC JAMES L\u00c9GER"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f97d0e5-6f8e-3a9c-b04c-edc5a3abf39f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SAD BUNNY: Vincent Gallo and The Melancholia of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408472","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article takes up three overlapping sets of issues. The first set brings into sharper relief current debates about work\u2013family balance and persistent gender inequality. The second set traces the emergence of women\u2019s studies as a scholarly discipline, examines a shift from women\u2019s studies to gender studies, and considers the reception of Western feminist discourse in Poland. The final set builds on the first two by addressing assumptions about the history of Polish women and their supposedly benighted sisters in the West, by questioning the presupposition that archives are passive depositories, and by exploring prospects for future work.","creator":["Halina Filipowicz"],"datePublished":"2014-05-30","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/polishreview.59.1.0003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00322970"},{"name":"oclc","value":"229135934"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236863"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20087899-3bfe-3895-b679-7707e17ea1bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/polishreview.59.1.0003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polishreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Polish Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cAm I That Name?\u201d Feminism, Feminist Criticism, and Gender Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/polishreview.59.1.0003","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":6120,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[447625,447753]],"Locations in B":[[15683,15812]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Miranda Joseph"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"54","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Performance of Production and Consumption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466749","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15996,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[81908,82014]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The extant literature about migrant worker hostel violence in South Africa in the early 1990s is critiqued in this article from a gendered perspective. Based on that critique, a feminist geographical framework is developed to examine hostel violence during South Africa's transition. By locating hostels and their residents within this geographical framework, referred to as the procreational geography of apartheid, it is argued that hostel violence evinces male hostel-dwellers' resistance to a perceived erosion of heteropatriarchal family power structures inside hostels and in far-flung rural homes. From this perspective, the post-1994-election hostels' internal political geographies are shown to reinscribe many of the heteropatriarchal claims to power negotiated under the conditions of apartheid.","creator":["Glen S. Elder"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02ca43b9-a1fb-3557-8567-0c04c1a92b3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"935","pageStart":"921","pagination":"pp. 921-935","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Malevolent Traditions: Hostel Violence and the Procreational Geography of Apartheid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557394","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9308,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473861,473952]],"Locations in B":[[14592,14683]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sharon Marcus"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/432743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ae5844-d7cc-3d96-9105-03af3cbba864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/432743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Queer Theory for Everyone: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/432743","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"If academic feminism suffers from an institutionalized overfamiliarity, it is also the case that its language of gender has never ceased to shift, bifurcate, and enfold other discourses. In its attention to its own aporias, feminism at points resembles a mysticism of \"knowing ignorance.\" This paper effects an improbable resonance between a particular tradition of apophatic cosmology and a feminist theology that resists at once its own idolatry and its own silence. Negative theology becomes positively embodied. The device of a feminist fourfold allows for the exploration of the potentiality of gender, race, and queerness for an amorous and prolific manifold.","creator":["Catherine Keller"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4920faa-ce87-3bd9-8906-ae7b18e73f0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"933","pageStart":"905","pagination":"pp. 905-933","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Apophasis of Gender: A Fourfold Unsaying of Feminist Theology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484070","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":12358,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481815]],"Locations in B":[[74906,74965]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Approaches to business ethics can be roughly divided into two streams: 'codes of behavior' and 'forms of subjectification', with code-oriented approaches clearly dominating the field. Through an elaboration of poststructuralist approaches to moral philosophy, this paper questions the emphasis on codes of behaviour and, thus, the conceptions of the moral and responsible subject that are inherent in rule-based approaches. As a consequence of this critique, the concept of a practice-based 'ethics of responsiveness' in which ethics is never final but rather always 'to come', is investigated. In such an approach the ethical self is understood as being continuously constituted within power\/knowledge relations. Following this line, we ask how one can become a responsible subject while also acknowledging certain limits of full responsibility. We thereby explore responsibility as a considered but unconditional openness in response to the other.","creator":["Bernadette Loacker","Sara Louise Muhr"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01674544"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38095061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29cef4ef-0b81-32dd-b5c8-250bad1584d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27735241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbusiethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Business Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"How Can I Become a Responsible Subject? Towards a Practice-Based Ethics of Responsiveness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735241","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":9042,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[60824,60941]],"Locations in B":[[23716,23833]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A partir de narrativas juvenis, neste artigo analisa-se a divis\u00e3o sexual do trabalho em \u00e1reas rurais, com foco nas tens\u00f5es produzidas pelas diferen\u00e7as geracionais. Os dados, obtidos a partir da metodologia da hist\u00f3ria de vida em quatro etapas de oficinas pedag\u00f3gicas (2015-2016) realizadas com 150 jovens de duas escolas de assentamentos de reforma agr\u00e1ria no Paran\u00e1, revelam os impactos do trabalho genderizado no processo de socializa\u00e7\u00e3o da juventude camponesa. O estudo evidencia conflitos geracionais num contexto em mudan\u00e7a, bem como o impacto pedag\u00f3gico e cultural advindo do acesso ao conhecimento sistem\u00e1tico e da problematiza\u00e7\u00e3o da tem\u00e1tica, sobretudo, a revis\u00e3o de preconceitos e a mudan\u00e7a de discursos, pr\u00e1ticas e atitudes em dire\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 promo\u00e7\u00e3o da igualdade de g\u00eanero, notadamente, a partir da ag\u00eancia das jovens do campo. Based on young peasant narratives, this article analyses the sexual division of labour in rural areas, focusing on tensions produced by generational differences. Data obtained from four stages of pedagogical workshops (2015-2016), using the life history methodology with 150 young people from two schools based in agrarian reform settlements in Paran\u00e1, show the impacts of gendered labour on the process of peasant youth socialization. The study provides evidence of generational conflicts in a shifting context, as well as the pedagogical and cultural impact stemming from access to systematic knowledge and debates on the theme, especially, the revision of prejudices and the shift of discourses, practices and attitudes towards gender equality, notably, through the agency of young peasant women.","creator":["S\u00f4nia F\u00e1tima Schwendler"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d474d88-7161-353c-a121-9b7740f04ae2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A divis\u00e3o sexual do trabalho no campo sob a perspectiva da juventude camponesa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965058","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10420,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[60206,60312]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy M. Arenberg"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f63d0d42-389b-394c-93e0-2b27b72e6f59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26380123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Appropriating the Masculine in Nina Bouraoui's \"Gar\u00e7on Manqu\u00e9\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380123","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":6695,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[73438,73610]],"Locations in B":[[5964,6136]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recently, Judith Butler refused to accept an award for civil courage at the Berlin Christopher Street Day, because she felt the event had become too commercial, and the event's organization had failed to distance itself from certain discriminatory statements. This, as well as many of her works, suggests that more than any other contemporary feminist author, Butler is aware of the risk of implication in exclusionary politics; a risk she might therefore successfully avoid. However, in this essay I argue that to the extent her theory of performativity has become a hegemonic framework within the field of gender studies, it leads to the foreclosure of certain possible gendered identities. Using Nancy's notion of finite thinking, I argue that a different approach to universality may lead to a less exclusionary way of conceptualizing gender.","creator":["DENNIS SCHEP"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c15148c-ac1e-33a7-81d5-389b1efb89fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23352299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"880","pageStart":"864","pagination":"pp. 864-880","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Limits of Performativity: A Critique of Hegemony in Gender Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352299","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7972,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430994,431620]],"Locations in B":[[3498,4125]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Filippone"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5251f4e-e0a8-3794-bd6d-827265b9842d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24395330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ecological Systems Thinking in the Work of Linda Stein","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395330","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tina Takemoto"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3558492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37901d94-0f73-35ca-b8bd-5997a2f4be49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3558492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Melancholia of AIDS: Interview with Douglas Crimp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3558492","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":6516,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[11360,11414]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the role of the market report as a performative technology that does not merely reflect the emerging world of financial capitalism in late nineteenth-century America but actively shapes it. It takes as its case study the financial pages of Town Topics, the preeminent society gossip magazine in the 1880s and 1890s. Although at first sight the financial section seems far removed from the salacious gossip that the main section of the magazine traded in, there are close connections between the two. An analysis of the rhetoric of the financial pages of Town Topics uncovers a mixture of abstraction and personification in their depictions of market activity. In the same way that the society gossip column in effect created the very possibility of \"society\" as both exclusive and public property, the genre of the financial page helped create the idea of \"the market\" as both a human-scale drama and an abstraction that was beyond the control of any individual, or even government.","creator":["PETER KNIGHT"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f62ca67f-b6f3-3651-b760-6f4aeafd4c84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23352478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"1075","pageStart":"1055","pagination":"pp. 1055-1075","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Reading the Market: Abstraction, Personification and the Financial Column of \"Town Topics\" Magazine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352478","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["LISA JEAN MOORE"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0199c034-7958-3f9f-9033-d8218c3e9bd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40546013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Incongruent Bodies: Teaching While Leaking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546013","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Four teachers share their lessons for drawing students into a critical examination of race, class, gender, and sexual identity. They strive to heighten students' awareness of ways literature \"and gendered patterns in the world foreground or silence groups of people or issues,\" and they offer students and teachers tools for change.","creator":["Heather E. Bruce","Shirley Brown","Nancy Mellin McCracken","Mary Bell-Nolan"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30046837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"282013d8-507e-381d-b77b-65de8a7c847e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30046837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminist Pedagogy Is for Everybody: Troubling Gender in Reading and Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30046837","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":5397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pilar Mir\u00f3's positions in the public sector and the film industry are an indication of the rapidly evolving roles of women in Spain during the mid-1970s through the 1980s. Most significant, and the focus of this study, is how Mir\u00f3 as director of El p\u00e1jaro de la felicidad reflects the transformation of gender constructs during that period. Mir\u00f3's artistry succeeds in expressing the protagonist's inner turmoil as she counters normative gender behavior. An intricate design of chiaroscuro, symbolism, the presence of the camera, intertextuality, and the foregrounding of art as process makes palpable the protagonist's emotional state of disempowerment and her resolve to find an elsewhere where viable positions of subjectivity are possible.","creator":["Sharon Keefe Ugalde"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"543df79f-9ebc-385f-8aa1-e01c68e7971f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Gender in Life and Art: Pilar Mir\u00f3 and \"El p\u00e1jaro de la felicidad\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572749","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":7646,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charles G. Conway"],"datePublished":"2012-01-13","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerjtheophil.33.1.0074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01943448"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200795"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9de976ee-e1e9-35d9-a5f6-27405015176a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/amerjtheophil.33.1.0074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjtheophil"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Theology & Philosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Toward a Peircean Response to MacKinnon's Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerjtheophil.33.1.0074","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6128,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[503309,503495]],"Locations in B":[[13835,13967]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Early gender archaeology formulated two statements: men are visible, women are invisible, and men work in hard materials, women work in soft materials.We discuss these dichotomies in connection with nineteenth-century folklore and an excavated eighteenth-century cottage at a summer-farm. We conclude that much of the gendered order-of-work tasks broke down in pragmatic day-to-day life, especially by women crossing the gender border. However, social chaos was held at bay by ritual acts and magic objects.","creator":["Josefina Andersson","Magnus Elfwendahl","Gunvor Gustafson","Britt-Marie H\u00e4german","Rolf Lundqvist","Ulrika Stenb\u00e4ck L\u00f6nnquist","Johanna Ulfsdotter","Stig Welinder"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41306870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea782a0a-a90c-3b8d-958a-236c0f746efd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41306870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Visible Men and Elusive Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41306870","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I analyze Jorge's case as paradigmatic of Mapuche sorcery in Chile because he epitomizes many of the contradictory ways in which Mapuche perceive and categorize people they believe embody evil and threaten sociality. Capitalist consumption and individual success are both desired by Mapuche and criticized as antithetical to spirituality, morality, and community values. Mapuche see sorcerers as people who (a) draw on older Mapuche notions of ambivalent shamanic powers rather than on Catholic moralities; (b) challenge local sociopolitical hierarchies and communal egalitarian ideals; (c) accumulate wealth and prestige through engagement with modern beliefs and practices, self-proclaimed political and religious roles, capitalism, and foreign influences; (d) are excessively poor or wealthy; (e) challenge dominant Chilean gender norms and are suspected of being sexually \"deviant\"; (f) challenge Mapuche norms of sociality through aggression, individualism, and amorality; and (g) commodify indigenous knowledge for their own benefit rather than that of the community. I show that sorcery engenders change because it is linked to fractures that develop within the community when people take different positions in relation to modernization, capitalism, and foreign influence. I show how the \"traditionalizing\" of Mapuche sorcery operates simultaneously with its modernization and how both were played out in Machi Jorge's life and practice.","creator":["Ana Mariella Bacigalupo"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3631322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87b98fe5-feb3-3fab-b672-e1149bb29ba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3631322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"janthrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Anthropological Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of New Mexico","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Creation of a Mapuche Sorcerer: Sexual Ambivalence, the Commodification of Knowledge, and the Coveting of Wealth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3631322","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":10407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores the relationship between language and cultural identity as manifested in the language socialization practices of four Mexican-descent families: two in northern California and two in south Texas. The analysis considers both the patterns of meaning suggested by the use of Spanish and English in the speech and literacy performances of four focal children as well as family and dominant societal ideologies concerning the symbolic importance of the two languages, the way language learning occurs, and the role of schooling-all frameworks in which the children's linguistic behaviors were embedded. All four focal children defined themselves in terms of allegiance to their Mexican or Mexican American cultural heritage. However, the families were oriented differently to the Spanish language as a vehicle for affirmation of this commonly articulated group identity. The differences are emblematic of stances taken in a larger cultural and political debate over the terms of Latino participation in U.S. society. Parents in all of the families endorsed Spanish maintenance and spoke of the language as an important aspect of their sense of cultural identity. Only two of the families, however, pursued aggressive home maintenance strategies. Of the other two families, one used a protocol combining some Spanish use in the home with instruction from Spanish-speaking relatives, whereas the family that had moved most fully into the middle class was the least successful in the intergenerational transmission of Spanish, despite a commitment to cultural maintenance.","creator":["Sandra R. Schecter","Robert Bayley"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00398322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44394888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3587836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tesolquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"TESOL Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"541","pageStart":"513","pagination":"pp. 513-541","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Language Socialization Practices and Cultural Identity: Case Studies of Mexican-Descent Families in California and Texas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3587836","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Resumo Neste artigo procuro confrontar o que percepciono enquanto certos enquadramentos positivistas naturalizados na teoria queer contempor\u00e2nea, em que se reproduzem disposi\u00e7\u00f5es cl\u00e1ssicas da rela\u00e7\u00e3o formal, afectiva e metodol\u00f3gica sujeito\/objecto, desejando, no processo, problematizar o que podemos descrever como os mecanismos de objectifica\u00e7\u00e3o epist\u00e9mica e pol\u00edtica patente em alguma teoria queer recente. Em contraste, e por via da leitura de contribui\u00e7\u00f5es te\u00f3ricas feministas (especialmente das \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas do s\u00e9culo XX), procuro tra\u00e7ar uma contra-narrativa te\u00f3rica, uma outra traject\u00f3ria epist\u00e9mica, que valorize precisamente a m\u00fatua implica\u00e7\u00e3o entre subjetividade e objetividade, potencializando outra conceitualiza\u00e7\u00e3o de poss\u00edveis pr\u00e1ticas cr\u00edticas queer, encarnadas e operacionalizadas por via do corpo sujetivo significante.","creator":["Daniel Louren\u00e7o"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"798ed2f1-2296-3874-ba59-284cc0561152"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"887","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-887","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Queer na primeira pessoa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007991","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"notas para uma enuncia\u00e7\u00e3o localizada"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ronalda Murphy"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"1105","pageStart":"1079","pagination":"pp. 1079-1105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodern Pride: Mary Joe Frug's Manifesto","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828892","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":14431,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[48443,48614],[71330,71464],[123764,124157],[124582,124745],[421463,421825],[422173,422458],[432593,432762]],"Locations in B":[[56003,56174],[58742,58880],[59455,59847],[59852,60015],[61109,61471],[61476,61761],[66785,66947]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JANET M. JESMOK"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dda9b01-3c58-36b8-bc6f-ead6f53cb322"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27870659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27870659","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Richards"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d15d3db-9bd4-3b41-97c2-59734d7259b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE PLEASURES OF COMPLICITY\": SYMPATHETIC IDENTIFICATION AND THE FEMALE READER IN EARLY EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY WOMEN'S AMATORYFICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467791","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6046,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[151455,151618]],"Locations in B":[[33343,33503]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Julia V. Emberley"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adc047d7-f703-3dd8-bcb8-9de7e394569a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Bourgeois Family, Aboriginal Women, and Colonial Governance in Canada: A Study in Feminist Historical and Cultural Materialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175866","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Despite feminist critiques, evolutionary psychology (EP) has continued to grow and garner mainstream legitimacy. Adding to its advancement are those evolutionary psychologists (EPs) who push to disrupt such critiques by attempting to join EP to the work of feminism (Buss, Fisher, Fehr, Geher, Vandermassen). Supple and dynamic, feminism has a demonstrated history of integrating outlying theories and approaches, and expanding and remapping its margins through fierce and lively debate. But feminism is not theoretical tofu\u2014there are limits to what it can absorb. This article will make the case for those limits by arguing against the compatibility of mainstream (or narrow) EP approaches with the goals of feminism, while also calling for a renewed feminist criticism of EP.","creator":["Suzanne Kelly"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559225"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d17a494-b533-349e-83d2-3ad0bb2929f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43895105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tofu feminism: can feminist theory absorb evolutionary psychology?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895105","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9104,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476555]],"Locations in B":[[51613,51708]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The shamanistic interpretation of southern African rock art has had a significant impact on the study of rock art world-wide, as well as the archaeology of southern Africa. Despite considerable theoretical and methodological developments over nearly three decades the approach has retained its basis in Cartesian thinking and overstated the role of the shaman in the control of supernatural forces. By eschewing Cartesian principles and resituating the shaman in an animic hunter-gatherer ontology, I propose a new direction for southern African hunter-gatherer rock art studies. I initiate this new approach here by drawing on a specific set of themes in rock art -- those that still greatly influence the wider reception of hunter-gatherer arts, so-called images of daily life. The interaction of non-human animals and rock surfaces, rocks that have been rubbed smooth by rhinoceroses, is also considered. I argue that the control of supernatural potency was not the exclusive preserve of shamans, but that all human and non-human animals were involved in maintaining the continued circulation of these vital life forces through the various activities that constituted human and non-human beings' identities. The painting and engraving of these activities revealed a deeper understanding of the world to ensure its continued existence.","creator":["Thomas A. Dowson"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20474946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f93d703-68c3-3623-9c27-52e93566debc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20474946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutafriarchbull"}],"isPartOf":"The South African Archaeological Bulletin","issueNumber":"185","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"South African Archaeological Society","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Debating Shamanism in Southern African Rock Art: Time to Move on...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20474946","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":12158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The field of language and sexuality has gained importance within socio-culturally oriented linguistic scholarship. Much current work in this area emphasizes identity as one key aspect of sexuality. However, recent critiques of identity-based research advocate instead a desire-centered view of sexuality. Such an approach artificially restricts the scope of the field by overlooking the close relationship between identity and desire. This connection emerges clearly in queer linguistics, an approach to language and sexuality that incorporates insights from feminist, queer, and sociolinguistic theories to analyze sexuality as a broad sociocultural phenomenon. These intellectual approaches have shown that research on identity, sexual or otherwise, is most productive when the concept is understood as the outcome of intersubjectively negotiated practices and ideologies. To this end, an analytic framework for the semiotic study of social intersubjectivity is presented.","creator":["Mary Bucholtz","Kira Hall"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e1ddbf7-1d6f-3dfc-a27d-20f66acc022b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"515","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-515","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theorizing Identity in Language and Sexuality Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169370","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":24385,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718],[477848,477951]],"Locations in B":[[140365,140434],[146728,146831]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bruce Dean Willis"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68863b3a-65ec-36ae-8a5a-d0c8c4eb1276"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"La espada encendida\": The Questioning Woman in Neruda's Questionable Paradise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201721","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":6312,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445157,445246]],"Locations in B":[[30464,30553]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joanne Conaghan"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1097393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44543741"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1097393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Tort Litigation in the Context of Intra-Familial Abuse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1097393","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":20234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Moore Howard"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95d0e39f-b1c6-318b-8cce-b1367d9be59b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/378866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Sexuality, Textuality: The Cultural Work of Plagiarism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/378866","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":9478,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[69052,69150],[70529,70766]],"Locations in B":[[39233,39331],[39725,39962]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARC STEIN"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerethnhist.29.4.0045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02785927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49605417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9b0529c-e190-33d6-8c25-eaa5dcb07f17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jamerethnhist.29.4.0045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerethnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Ethnic History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"All the Immigrants Are Straight, All the Homosexuals Are Citizens, But Some of Us Are Queer Aliens: Genealogies of Legal Strategy in Boutilier v. INS<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerethnhist.29.4.0045","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores the connections between ethnicity and sexuality. Racial, ethnic, and national boundaries are also sexual boundaries. The borderlands dividing racial, ethnic, and national identities and communities constitute ethnosexual frontiers, erotic intersections that are heavily patrolled, policed, and protected, yet regularly are penetrated by individuals forging sexual links with ethnic \"others.\" Normative heterosexuality is a central component of racial, ethnic, and nationalist ideologies; both adherence to and deviation from approved sexual identities and behaviors define and reinforce racial, ethnic, and nationalist regimes. To illustrate the ethnicity\/sexuality nexus and to show the utility of revealing this intimate bond for understanding ethnic relations, I review constructionist models of ethnicity and sexuality in the social sciences and humanities, and I discuss ethnosexual boundary processes in several historical and contemporary settings: the sexual policing of nationalism, sexual aspects of US-American Indian relations, and the sexualization of the black-white color line.","creator":["Joane Nagel"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6edaa4fc-8326-376a-86d4-19e0f55b4a2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnicity and Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223439","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12807,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[58180,58436],[141924,141990],[142635,142785],[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[24430,24686],[30512,30592],[30741,30892],[74416,74478]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Drawn from a year-long study in a combined first- and second-grade classroom, this article presents an interpretive portrait of two young students engaged in spontaneous talk while writing. We analyze their conversations to explore the subject positions these student writers assumed, those they assigned each other, and the related functions they assigned the texts they composed. Through our close reading of their conversations, we develop an analytic protocol for positional microanalysis of everyday conversations that honors the intertwined social and emotional dimensions of peer interactions. Countering those who would cast literacy development as the sequential attainment of discrete cognitive skills, we consider the ways that these social and emotional dimensions may interlace with intellectual growth as young children struggle to become students, writers, and people.","creator":["Randy Bomer","Tasha Laman"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ba5935b-9274-384c-b3c0-dffaa578ecf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40171690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47,"pageEnd":"466","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Positioning in a Primary Writing Workshop: Joint Action in the Discursive Production of Writing Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40171690","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":22295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper is concerned with extending existing understandings about the role of schools as sexualising agencies. It seeks to uncover previously undisturbed spatial and material dimensions of schooling with regards to sexualities and their implication for how young people learn about sexualities at school. In this regard, the paper asks: how do apparently mundane spatial and material schooling arrangements constitute particular sexual meanings and identities for students? A visual methodology is employed to capture schooling places that students identify as constitutive of sexual meanings and identities. How students' embodied sexual practices negotiate and contest these spatial\/material configurations is also investigated. Through this analysis, the paper makes a theoretical contribution to an understanding of space as an in process materiality. It is concluded that the spatial and material arrangements of schooling contribute to a larger schooling project concerned with muting and regulating young people's sexual subjectivities.","creator":["Louisa Allen"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87f40550-3363-312e-9a00-08273887aeb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23357008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Behind the bike sheds: sexual geographies of schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357008","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8556,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495840,495899]],"Locations in B":[[52822,52881]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper argues that the critique offered by African hermeneutics of what they perceive to be Western hermeneutics, can be interpreted as an interpellation of whiteness. The paper endeavours to explore aspects of this interpellation. Based on President Thabo Mbeki's letter on the eve of Human Rights Day, it proceeds by illuminating several other interpellations, starting with Butler's gender interpellation in order to provide some structural resonance between gender performativity and racial performativity. It then looks at two racial performativities, namely the videotape of the Rodney King beating and Fanon's vignette 'Look, a Negro!' in terms of an assertion of blackness as the very antithesis of the social order. Two reactions to blackness as antithesis of the social order are then looked at, namely the 50 year old Des pr\u00eatres noirs s'interrogent and K\u00e4 Mana's view on the myth of the West. The paper offers Perkinson's White theology as a possible, yet problematic, answer to the interpellation of African Hermeneutics found in these two reactions. The paper is concluded with a few observations about whiteness.","creator":["Gerrie Snyman"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"AFRICAN HERMENEUTICS' 'OUTING' OF WHITENESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049257","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11375,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[431491,431620]],"Locations in B":[[19962,20152],[21119,21249]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Laurie Langbauer"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Studies and the Politics of the Everyday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465237","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"An underlying premise of a 'democracy' is that a sense of well-being exists for the individuals who make up that democracy. In South Africa the more popular meaning of a developing democracy is a Constitution that protects people from discrimination on the basis of, among other factors, race, gender, sexual orientation, disability, class and religion. Despite this progressive Constitution, the torture, rape and murder of black lesbians who live in South Africa's townships suggests that there is a lack of tolerance for persons who do not conform to particular and limiting ideas about gender and sexuality; ideas that are rooted in binaries of what constitutes acceptable femininities and masculinities. The intention in this Focus is to reflect how this specific form of heterosexist violence is not isolated to 'black township men inflicting violence on black lesbian township women'. Rather, this violence should be understood as centrally located within heteronormative1 values, reinforced and reconstructed through a variety of state and media discourses that dominate the public sphere in South Africa. Unlike advocates of the State and mainstream media, feminist voices on the subject are predominantly situated outside of the public consciousness. Through a feminist engagement with some of these discourses I wish to motivate how heterosexist violence against gender non-conforming women in black townships becomes acceptable.","creator":["Nadia Sanger"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a38170d8-22a9-3bba-bc61-d00a3e42569a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"'The real problems need to be fixed first': Public discourses on sexuality and gender in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917341","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the challenge of the culture turn for the sociology of religion from several points of view. Looking at the congruence between certain feminist theories and the cultural turn, it begins by problematizing the Enlightenment idea of the autonomous individual seen in rebellion against an oppressive society. The article suggests congruence between the cultural turn and certain feminist theories in that they both posit the idea of the self as relational. A second point of congruence between the cultural turn and feminist theory is a new understanding of how selves are constituted through narrative. One implication of this for sociologists of religion is that we should pay greater attention to practices. This, in turn, leads to a reformulation of the relation between structure and culture. It also opens the door to seeing how practices are embodied and gendered, and at the core of religious identification.","creator":["Mary Jo Neitz"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3712321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Culture: Challenges to the Sociology of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712321","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":5562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract While increased visibility of gay, lesbian, transgendered, and queer people in public settings, including schools, is certainly freeing for many students, critical questions concerning whether popular media depictions of LGBTQ identities serve to liberate students, or instead facilitate subtle strategies of containment and ghettoizing, are being raised. The present article argues that as a sex education strategy, the essentializing of sexual identity within sex education should be supplanted by more constructivist approaches; ones that allow for maximum individuation and self-expression. Rather than embracing particular labels and the commodification that sometimes flows from them in the popular media landscape, queer-positive sex educators might consider adopting some methods associated with spiritual pedagogy to assist students in rethinking questions of sexuality and creating new possibilities for identities and creative self-expression.","creator":["George Drazenovich"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajeducrevucan.38.2.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31387f73-6b37-32db-bdba-82438dcae9b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajeducrevucan.38.2.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Pedagogy in Sex Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajeducrevucan.38.2.07","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study addresses the problem of sexuality and ideology in relation to (pan)-Africanist doctrines that have been instrumental in the effort of post-colonial African elites to constitute an exclusive African sexual selfhood. The focus is on their efforts to 'Africanize' the sexuality of the masses in a global context that dramatizes the uncontrolled flow of sexual desires, and favours the emergence of new forms of sexual expressions and practices that destabilize the post-colonial sexual order. The leading question informing this study is how a hegemonic heterosexual identity has come to be internalized in post-colonial Africa, and how both men and women have come to believe that to be 'good' citizens or 'real' Africans they have to become repressed subjects who not only limit their sexuality solely to heterosexual desires, but also have a natural aversion to other forms of sexuality such as same-sex relations. My main argument is that in most African countries, and specifically in Cameroon, both the edification of a phallocratico-patriarchal society and the political invention of the sublimated Muntu, the so-called libidinal African straight, went along with the suppression, annihilation or negation of gays and lesbians, generally misrepresented as deracinated Africans and dangerous 'witch-others'. Cette \u00e9tude traite du probl\u00e8me de la sexualit\u00e9 et de l'id\u00e9ologie dans le contexte des doctrines pan-africanistes dont le r\u00f4le a \u00e9t\u00e9 instrumental dans les efforts d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s par les \u00e9lites africaines postcoloniales pour constituer une individualit\u00e9 sexuelle africaine exclusive. Elle met l'accent sur les efforts d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s pour \u00ab africaniser \u00bb la sexualit\u00e9 des masses dans un contexte mondial qui semble dramatiser le flux incontr\u00f4l\u00e9 de d\u00e9sirs sexuels, et de favoriser l'\u00e9mergence de nouvelles formes d'expression et de pratiques sexuelles qui d\u00e9stabilisent l'ordre sexuel postcolonial. La question centrale qui informe cette \u00e9tude est celle de comprendre comment une identit\u00e9 h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelle h\u00e9g\u00e9monique est arriv\u00e9e \u00e0 \u00eatre internalis\u00e9e en Afrique postcoloniale, et comment les hommes comme les femmes en sont arriv\u00e9s \u00e0 croire que pour devenir de \u00ab bons \u00bb citoyens ou de \u00ab vrais \u00bb Africains, ils doivent devenir des sujets r\u00e9prim\u00e9s qui non seulement limitent leur sexualit\u00e9 aux seuls d\u00e9sirs h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuels, mais aussi ont une aversion naturelle pour d'autres formes de sexualit\u00e9 comme les relations homosexuelles. Le principal argument de cet article est que dans la plupart des pays africains, et notamment au Cameroun, l'\u00e9dification d'une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 phallocratico-patriarcale et l'invention politique du Muntu sublim\u00e9, le soi-disant h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel libidinal africain, s'est accompagn\u00e9e d'une suppression, annihilation ou n\u00e9gation des gays et des lesbiennes, g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement faussement repr\u00e9sent\u00e9s comme des africains d\u00e9racin\u00e9s et de dangereux \u00ab sorciers \u00e9trangers \u00bb.","creator":["Basile Ndjio"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce6c9b6f-9d61-3eb1-bf2f-f538434cbaa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23356107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"631","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-631","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"POST-COLONIAL HISTORIES OF SEXUALITY: THE POLITICAL INVENTION OF A LIBIDINAL AFRICAN STRAIGHT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356107","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":12077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3131082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0edd9fe0-c286-38f0-87d1-6cec21d82373"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3131082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3131082","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":21243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article a pour objet d'\u00e9tude la corr\u00e9lation entre les formes d'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie culturelle, les types de masculinit\u00e9s et les d\u00e9finitions de la nation qui peuvent en d\u00e9couler dans Le Dernier Combat du Captain Ni'mat, roman posthume de l'\u00e9crivain marocain Mohamed Leftah. Dans un premier temps, notre \u00e9tude cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9montrer les convergences de la qu\u00eate du personnage principal et de l'engagement de l'\u00e9crivain en faveur d'une reconnaissance de la libert\u00e9 sexuelle des individus, consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme une revendication d\u00e9viante et d\u00e9fiante dans une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 patriarcale traumatis\u00e9e par plusieurs d\u00e9faites militaires. Dans un second temps, cette analyse rappelle les risques plus subtils d'une r\u00e9cup\u00e9ration id\u00e9ologique et homonationaliste du discours litt\u00e9raire, dans un certain imaginaire de la mondialisation o\u00f9 la d\u00e9finition occidentale et fortement universalis\u00e9e de l'homosexualit\u00e9 et des droits humains tend \u00e0 soutenir des repr\u00e9sentations biais\u00e9es et orientalistes des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s arabes comme incompatibles avec la modernit\u00e9, la souverainet\u00e9 nationale et la citoyennet\u00e9 mondiale.","creator":["Carla Calarg\u00e9","Emmanuel Bruno Jean-Fran\u00e7ois"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24773083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15523152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"656426483"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200860"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16c99c55-68a1-38cb-a673-f12dde5f3ad6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24773083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvetudfran"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles \u00c9tudes Francophones","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Masculinit\u00e9s, homosexualit\u00e9 et homonationalisme dans \"Le Dernier Combat du Captain Ni'mat\" de Mohamed Leftah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24773083","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e6\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05e9\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d7\u05dc \u05e4\u05d9\u05d7\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e7\u05d3\u05de\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d7\u05d5\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05de\u05d9 \u05d9\u05d3\u05e2 \u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d7\u05dc\u05d5 \u05dc\u05d4\u05e9\u05de\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d1\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc \u05e8\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc \u05de\u05d5\u05e9\u05d2 \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05e2\u05dc \u05e9\u05d5\u05d5\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e8\u05da \u05d4\u05d0\u05de\u05e4\u05d9\u05e8\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc\u05d5. \u05d4\u05d8\u05e2\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d9\u05d7 \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05e6\u05d1 \u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05d1 \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05da \u05d6\u05de\u05df, \u05d5\u05db\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d4\u05dc\u05db\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05e2\u05e9\u05d4 \u05d0\u05d9\u05df \u05e2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05de\u05e6\u05d1 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d0\u05d7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d0\u05dc\u05d0 \u05db\u05d3\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2 \u05d6\u05d9\u05d2\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d3 \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05de\u05df, \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05db\u05d9\u05d5\u05dd \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05d1\u05de\u05e6\u05d1 \u05e0\u05d6\u05d9\u05dc. \u05d0\u05dd \u05db\u05da \u05d9\u05e9 \u05dc\u05d4\u05e0\u05d9\u05d7 \u05db\u05d9 \u05d1\u05de\u05e9\u05da \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05d5 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d0\u05d3\u05dd \u05d9\u05d5\u05d7\u05dc\u05e4\u05d5 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\u05d4\u05de\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd. \u05dc\u05de\u05de\u05d3 \u05d4\u05d4\u05db\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9 \u05d5\u05dc\u05de\u05de\u05d3 \u05d4\u05e1\u05d9\u05de\u05d1\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d7\u05e9\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05e8\u05d1\u05d4 \u05d1\u05e7\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05d0\u05d4\u05d3\u05d4\/\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3 \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9. \u05d1\u05e9\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05ea\u05d7\u05ea\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d0\u05db\u05df \u05d0\u05d4\u05d3\u05ea \u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d1 \u05de\u05d5\u05e6\u05e7 \u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5 \u05de\u05ea\u05db\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d0\u05e6\u05dc \u05d0\u05d5\u05d4\u05d3 \u05d4\u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc \u05d5\u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05de\u05e9\u05e4\u05d9\u05e2\u05d4 \u05e2\u05dc \u05e1\u05d9\u05e0\u05d3\u05e8\u05d5\u05dd \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05db\u05dc\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc\u05d5. It appears that the academic position of identity is devaluating. Researchers of various disciplines criticize the concept of identity and its empirical equivalence. The common contention is that there is no more ground to presume a stable, ongoing identity. It appears that in theory and in practice one cannot point to a unified tight identity, but as argued by Bauman, identity is liquid. It is therefore assumed that the individual will change components of his\/her identity and will also complete identities. The major reason for this is the present \"post-modern\" environment, by which every thing endlessly dissolves and rejoins. Furthermore, the loss of identity influences the life and behavior of individuals. This study refers to fandom of football clubs as a component of identity that maintains its stability and continuation almost without exception. Studies of football fans point out that football fandom \u2014 identification with a certain club \u2014 begins in the cradle and ends in the grave, and this is not a clich\u00e9. Identity with a football club is a dominant component in the fan's identity syndrome. This component is non-perishable. This paper deals with veteran Israeli football fans. Their identification with the club is analyzed by three levels of fandom: the emotional, the cognitive, and the symbolic. All levels in this study seem to be equally effective in formulating the fan's relations with his\/her club. Its conclusion is that indeed, identity with the football club is stable and inflicts on the fan's identity syndrome.","creator":["\u05d0\u05de\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d1\u05df \u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea","A. Ben Porat"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23635788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07926391"},{"name":"oclc","value":"887773067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44b9fe08-b978-3fbe-bf6f-8698d782b599"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23635788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movement"}],"isPartOf":"Movement: Journal of Physical Education & Sport Sciences \/ \u05d1\u05ea\u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d4: \u05db\u05ea\u05d1-\u05e2\u05ea \u05dc\u05de\u05d3\u05e2\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da \u05d4\u05d2\u05d5\u05e4\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05e1\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Zinman College of Physical Education and Sport Sciences","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Football fandom: Non-perishable material \/ \u05d0\u05d4\u05d3\u05ea \u05db\u05d3\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05dc: \u05d7\u05d5\u05de\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5 \u05de\u05ea\u05db\u05dc\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23635788","volumeNumber":"\u05d9","wordCount":7848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eva Kocher"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24240451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00234834"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da30eae4-c6f1-3394-b893-fc7fcca349f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24240451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kritischejustiz"}],"isPartOf":"Kritische Justiz","issueNumber":"4","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"386","pagination":"pp. 386-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201eGeschlecht\u201c im Anti-Diskriminierungsrecht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24240451","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Four hundred ninety-three recently published monographs treat critical theory: specifically semiotics, narratology, rhetoric, and language systems; postmodernist criticism and deconstruction; reader-response and phenomenological criticism; feminist and gender studies; psychoanalytic criticism; and cultural and historical criticism.","creator":["William Baker","Kenneth Womack"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59992240-9e67-32a2-8272-a67484d85a87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":145,"pageEnd":"679","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-679","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Work in Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946457","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":55865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elena Lahr-Vivaz"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fbc4696-bf7b-3544-aca3-a983bb9faa87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing the Nation: Adaptations of Mexico and Madre Patria in La mala educaci\u00f3n<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.161","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":6599,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[435522,435631]],"Locations in B":[[15562,15671]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Barbara Biesecker"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40237715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77f2a861-b445-33d0-afd3-3b2a224a2494"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40237715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrhet"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Rhetoric","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Coming to Terms with Recent Attempts to Write Women into the History of Rhetoric","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40237715","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9451,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[494609,494772]],"Locations in B":[[57765,57945]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Lind"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3184971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"389a1f3f-8659-3296-acf1-03acb725a355"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3184971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Neoliberal States: Feminists Remake the Nation in Ecuador","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3184971","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c9042fb-d944-373f-b017-4981fc43b4d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71,"pageEnd":"1347","pageStart":"962","pagination":"pp. 962-1347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463263","volumeNumber":"115","wordCount":26201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The authors describe broad patterns and key developments in gender and education scholarship to provide an overview of the state of the field. They incorporate historical developments shaping research patterns, broad tensions and shifts, and emerging trajectories in inquiry. Cognizant that reviews are inherently political endeavors in both reflecting\u2014and creating\u2014\"the field,\" the authors suggest that reviews such as this one are inevitably partial and political, even as they provide useful insights into scholarly trends. The dynamic body of work that constitutes what the authors refer to as \"gender and education'' scholarship (writ large) encompasses diverse inquiries, theoretical investments, sites of analysis, and conceptions of gender that go beyond a straightforward reporting of women's and girls' gradual progress over time in accessing education. The authors argue that gender remains a central force in organizing social relations and educational processes with an array of implications for lived experience that merit sustained scrutiny.","creator":["Lucy E. Bailey","Karen Graves"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44668634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0091732X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236895"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"580ed814-94c2-3d33-9c74-fe404b1a8283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44668634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revireseeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Research in Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"722","pageStart":"682","pagination":"pp. 682-722","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44668634","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":21139,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500768]],"Locations in B":[[117527,117606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Situating Assia Djebar's novel Fantasia: An Algerian Calvacade within recent critical debates in postcolonial and feminist theory, this essay argues that the negotiation of a female postcolonial identity is intertwined not only with the politics of language but also with the need to transcend the trauma of the past.","creator":["NANCY VON ROSK"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c33156c8-8124-322f-bfe7-fc5ba9bc934c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Exhuming Buried Cries\" in Assia Djebar's \"Fantasia\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029923","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8908,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[52877,52939]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gabriele vom Bruck"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20344fbe-1765-33e3-9976-a2822df8e6f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Elusive Bodies: The Politics of Aesthetics among Yemeni Elite Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175156","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":18324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["J.E. Elliott"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Paradigms Retained: Cultural Theory, Critical Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771219","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":15971,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[96651,96939],[99265,99660]],"Locations in B":[[26704,26983],[26977,27372]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay proposes that current feminist theory shows a renewed interest in materiality, economics, and work.1 It refers to scholarly arguments that criticize second-wave feminism for preparing the ground for neoliberalism and contrasts those claims with Helke Sander's Die Allseitig-reduzierte Pers\u00f6nlichkeit\u2014Redupers (1978, The all-around reduced personality\u2014Redupers). A reading of a more recent film, Tatjana Turanskyj's Eine flexible Frau (2010, The drifters), illustrates the continuities and discontinuities from the earlier to the later feminist film in their discussions of women and work. The essay then turns to new materialisms to probe their productivity for an analysis of filmic representation of economy and materiality. Arguing for the continued importance of the study of texts for our concern with economy and labor, the essay concludes with an analysis of Martina Priessner's independent documentary Wir sitzen im S\u00fcden (2010, We are based down south).","creator":["Barbara Mennel"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3fbda2b-c518-38a9-a958-0946cc0b9769"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Utopian Collectivity to Solitary Precarity: Thirty Years of Feminist Theory and the Cinema of Women's Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.30.2014.0125","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":5254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines the representation of sexuality and identity in the fictions of American novelist Edmund White. Gay sexuality and identity politics are discussed in relation to \"coming out,\" the discourse of American identity, and whiteness. White's output is shaped and informed by the cultural, historical and political circumstances which have conditioned how gay male sexuality has been discursively shaped over the last forty years. Yet his work has been inflected by theorizations of sexuality which have called into question the very specificity of a homosexual and\/or gay identity. Who is White's audience today, and who wants to read a \"white\" boy's story anyway?","creator":["Tony Purvis"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40464271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62440709-51ff-3d66-a08a-518661fec807"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40464271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"America's \"White\" Cultural and Sexual Dissensus: The Fictions of Edmund White","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40464271","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48423,48614]],"Locations in B":[[44060,44255]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela Robertson"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6bd6fb2-7c63-3157-9750-45ccc336c971"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Kinda Comedy That Imitates Me\": Mae West's Identification with the Feminist Camp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225605","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7925,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499374,499610]],"Locations in B":[[43715,43944]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Working with the representation of inter-gender relations in the literature produced by women, Susana Funck analyzes English-language feminist fiction works, including those by Ursula LeGuin, Dorothy Bryant, Joanna Russ, Marge Piercy, and Sally Miller Gearhart. Motherhood, marriage, sexuality, and child care are some of the themes present in the constituent utopias of these narratives, allowing one to foresee a truly new future world for men and women, free from the dictates of patriarchy. En se servant des repr\u00e9sentations sur les rapports de sexes pr\u00e9sents dans la litt\u00e9rature produite par les femmes, Susana Funck analyse des ouvrages de fiction f\u00e9ministe en langue anglaise, dont ceux de Ursula LeGuin, Dorothy Bryant, Joanna Russ, Marge Piercy et Sally Miller Gearhart. La maternit\u00e9, le mariage, la sexualit\u00e9, l'\u00e9ducation des enfants sont quelques aspects trait\u00e9s par les utopies constitutives de ces r\u00e9cits, pierre de touche d'un monde futur v\u00e9ritablement nouveau pour les hommes et pour les femmes, monde \u00e9tranger aux r\u00e8gles du patriarcat.","creator":["SUSANA BORN\u00c9O FUNCK"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c8c2809-4a09-3f1f-8df8-7fb20ff69835"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"feminismo e utopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904446","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Vision plays a privileged role in social interaction and the construction of intersubjective reality. Given that one of sociology's tasks is to problematize the taken for granted, research that examines rarely foregrounded non-visual modes of sensory perception is a powerful resource. This article draws on twenty-seven interviews that explore blind people's perceptions of male and female bodies. I highlight several distinctive features of non-visual sex attribution (salience, speed, and diachronicity), and argue that conceptions of sex as \u201cself-evident\u201d primarily reflect visual perception. These findings suggest the need to explore the sociology of perception as a new approach to the sociology of the body, and more broadly highlight the role of sensory perception in the social construction of reality.","creator":["Asia M. Friedman"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.3.284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e78b5ac2-019e-322c-9754-ec99fbf0d9ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/symbinte.35.3.284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Believing Not Seeing: A Blind Phenomenology of Sexed Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/symbinte.35.3.284","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\"Imitation\" in contemporary anthropology comprises numerous topics whose relations have seldom been explored. In surveying mimetic phenomena that range from television parodies to postural mirroring, I offer reflections designed to stimulate exploration of \"mimetic practice.\" The review encourages work at the nexus of sociocultural and linguistic anthropology, for without appreciating the communicative specificities of mimetic practice, one can neither narrate nor theorize adequately what mimesis does, and thus is. I chart directions in research by drawing out underappreciated findings from the ethnographic record, such as those that show that mimesis is not a matter of two-ness, as the original-copy binary suggests; that communicative dissonance often helps actors recognize when mimesis is in play and what action(s) it involves; that mimetic practice suffers (and sometimes benefits) from various instabilities (e.g., what is imitated, who imitates whom); and that reflexivity helps create, stabilize, and alter mimetic practices and projects.","creator":["Michael Lempert"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce76d322-b513-3a39-b446-2c6e815dcd3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Imitation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049581","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9884,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[478793,478839],[491724,491829]],"Locations in B":[[52896,52952],[56736,56845]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alison Conway"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af420b20-113c-350a-8974-e1f4193a2d7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41468053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Future Conditional: Feminist Theory, New Historicism, and Eighteenth-Century Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468053","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":3280,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eileen Boris"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ba6d6f9-62a8-303c-9bcd-5fb8838f70cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27556906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Arm and Arm\": Racialized Bodies and Colored Lines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556906","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Drawing from qualitative data in a Southern African context, this article explores meanings assigned to names for female genitalia to establish whether males and females assign the same meanings to the same vocabulary used in naming or whether they associate the same vocabulary with different meanings. The study illustrates that while males associate the meanings of terms for female genitalia with well-established, stigmatized views of women, female informants associate the same terms with different meanings that provide alternative views about women and, at the same time, appear to be a form of reclamation of Southern African women\u2019s personhood, identity, and agency. Although males, through these vocabulary items, metaphorically associate female genitalia with possession, which discursively constructs women as powerless objects that can be owned and commoditized, females draw from the philosophy of Africana womanism, indicating that even in asymmetrically structured societies, some women subjectively and purposefully construct their own identities as strong, smart, socially conscious, and independent.","creator":["Busi Makoni"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.41.1.42","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d4a4efa-1a8e-31f2-b587-cb08ae55b125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.41.1.42"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Labeling Female Genitalia in a Southern African Context: Linguistic Gendering of Embodiment, Africana Womanism, and the Politics of Reclamation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.41.1.42","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I explore how Indonesians come to see themselves as lesbi or gay through fragmentary encounters with mainstream mass media (rather than lesbian and gay Westerners or Western lesbian and gay media). By placing this ethnographic material alongside a recent debate on the dubbing of foreign television programs into the Indonesian language, I develop a theoretical framework of \"dubbing culture\" to critically analyze globalizing processes.","creator":["Tom Boellstorff"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f81a2d-59b8-3c53-ae1d-f4af0cec37ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Dubbing Culture: Indonesian \"Gay\" and \"Lesbi\" Subjectivities and Ethnography in an Already Globalized World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805374","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":16229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article pr\u00e9sente une fa\u00e7on sp\u00e9cifique d'appr\u00e9hender la question de l'habiter du point de vue d'une th\u00e9orie de la pratique. Plus pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment, quelques \u00e9l\u00e9ments acquis de diff\u00e9rentes approches th\u00e9oriques mettant au centre le concept de pratiques sont explicit\u00e9s et interrog\u00e9s quant \u00e0 leur capacit\u00e9 heuristique pour appr\u00e9hender l'habiter. Pour ce faire, on part d'une photographie qui pr\u00e9sente la situation touristique. Dans un deuxi\u00e8me temps, cette situation touristique est utilis\u00e9e pour mener une interrogation sur la probl\u00e9matique contemporaine de l'habiter qui est inform\u00e9e par la mobilit\u00e9 spatiale. Dans un troisi\u00e8me temps, des \u00e9l\u00e9ments de th\u00e9ories de la pratique sont pr\u00e9sent\u00e9s qui font sens pour une analyse de l'habiter. L'enjeu r\u00e9side notamment dans la conceptualisation coh\u00e9rente des dimensions spatiales pour des th\u00e9ories de la pratique con\u00e7ues a priori sans r\u00e9f\u00e9rences aux enjeux spatiaux. This article presents a specific approach to the question of dwelling from the point of view of practice theories. Dwelling is defined as \"coping with space\", as opposed to approaches where the occupation of dwellings and\/or immobility of individuals are prominent. Selected elements of different theoretical approaches that focus on the concept of practice are made explicit and critically analysed regarding their heuristic capacity to approach dwelling. A photograph representing people doing something in a touristic situation serves as starting point. In a second step, this touristic situation is utilised to think about one of the contemporary characteristics of dwelling, which is the pervasive nature of spatial mobility. Finally, selected elements of theories of practice that can be mobilized for analyses of contemporary dwelling. One of the issues is the coherent conceptualisation of the spatial dimensions of practice conceived a priori without references to spatial issues.","creator":["Mathis Stock"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00034010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564446585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8fe3a11-6bd4-3cda-84e1-3f3e5329f823"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annageog"}],"isPartOf":"Annales de G\u00e9ographie","issueNumber":"704","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"424","pagination":"pp. 424-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Habiter comme \u00ab faire avec l'espace \u00bb. R\u00e9flexions \u00e0 partir des th\u00e9ories de la pratique \/ Dwelling as \"coping with space\". Reflections from practice theories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569800","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":8584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Jo Neitz"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3712521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Queering the Dragonfest: Changing Sexualities in a Post-Patriarchal Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712521","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11690,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481290]],"Locations in B":[[70513,70564]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mich\u00e8le A. Schaal"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad0f6b0a-f19c-33ec-bfd2-17db8ead9982"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43487350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Un conte de f\u00e9es punk-rock f\u00e9ministe : \"Bye Bye Blondie\" de Virginie Despentes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487350","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":7910,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[100125,100252]],"Locations in B":[[31452,31584]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carmen S\u00edlvia Moraes Rial","Miriam Pillar Grossi","Mar\u00eda Luisa Femen\u00edas"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d585f8b4-ffa1-3fe4-b43b-9dbbb54a5ab2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24327890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"738","pageStart":"717","pagination":"pp. 717-738","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Nem Deus, nem amo, nem marido: uma trajet\u00f3ria do feminismo na Argentina \u2013entrevista com Mar\u00eda Luisa Femen\u00edas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327890","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":10408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Research that has explored young people's (hetero)sexual behaviour has often assumed that the idea of 'relationships' is transparent. Subsequently, the diversity which exists within this concept has been neglected. This paper endeavours to unpack the concept of 'relationships' with reference to young people's own understandings and meanings of the term. Drawing on findings from focus group research with 17-19 year-olds in New Zealand, it analyses how relationships are constituted and differentiated. Some of the determining characteristics are: the time partners spend together, a sense of exclusivity and intimacy, emotional attachment and the kinds and frequency of sexual activity engaged in. On the basis of various configurations of these elements, young people's relationships can be loosely categorized as 'one-night stands', 'short-term relationships', 'casual dating' and 'going out'. The diversity, complexity and fluidity in these conceptualizations present a challenge to traditional understandings of these relationships, and have implications for how sexual health promotion might be carried out. \/\/\/ Les recherches qui ont explor\u00e9 les comportements (h\u00e9t\u00e9ro)sexuels des jeunes ont souvent fait l'hypoth\u00e8se que le concept de \"relations\" est transparent, et par la suite, la diversit\u00e9 de ce concept a \u00e9t\u00e9 n\u00e9glig\u00e9e. Cet article tente de d\u00e9velopper le concept de \"relations\" en r\u00e9f\u00e9rence avec la compr\u00e9hension et la signification que les jeunes attribuent \u00e0 ce terme. En s'inspirant des r\u00e9sultats d'une recherche men\u00e9e parmi des jeunes de 17 \u00e0 19 ans, r\u00e9unis en groupes focus, il analyse la mani\u00e8re avec laquelle les relations sont constitu\u00e9es et diff\u00e9renci\u00e9es. Certaines des caract\u00e9ristiques d\u00e9terminantes sont: le temps que les partenaires passent ensemble, le sentiment d'exclusivit\u00e9 et d'intimit\u00e9, l'attachement \u00e9motionnel, les types de rapports sexuels et leur fr\u00e9quence. A partir de diff\u00e9rentes configurations de ces \u00e9l\u00e9ments, les relations chez les jeunes peuvent \u00eatre approximativement cat\u00e9goris\u00e9es en relations \"d'une nuit\", \"\u00e0 court terme\", \"occasionnelles\" et \"sortir avec\". La diversit\u00e9, la complexit\u00e9 et la fluidit\u00e9 de ces conceptualisations pr\u00e9sentent un d\u00e9fi aux compr\u00e9hensions traditionnelles de ces relations et ont des implications sur la mani\u00e8re dont la promotion de la sant\u00e9 sexuelle pourrait \u00eatre men\u00e9e. \/\/\/ En los estudios en los que se ha analizado el comportamiento (hetero)sexual de los j\u00f3venes, se supone generalmente que la idea de 'relaciones' es transparente y, en consecuencia, se ha ignorado la diversidad que existe dentro de este concepto. En este documento, se procura analizar el concepto de 'relaciones' con referencia a c\u00f3mo entienden los j\u00f3venes este t\u00e9rmino y qu\u00e9 significado tiene para ellos. Bas\u00e1ndose en los resultados de un estudio de grupos de discusi\u00f3n con j\u00f3venes de 17 a 19 a\u00f1os, se analiza el modo en que se forman y diferencian las relaciones. Algunas de las caracter\u00edsticas determinantes son: el tiempo que las parejas pasan juntas, un sentido de exclusividad e intimidad, el v\u00ednculo emocional y los tipos y la frecuencia de la actividad sexual en la que participan. Seg\u00fan varias configuraciones de estos elementos, las relaciones de los j\u00f3venes pueden clasificarse a grandes rasgos en relaciones de una noche, a corto plazo, con citas casuales y relaciones m\u00e1s estables. La diversidad, complejidad y fluidez de estas conceptualizaciones presentan un reto para entender estas relaciones desde un punto de vista tradicional y tienen implicaciones en cuanto a c\u00f3mo fomentar la salud sexual.","creator":["Louisa Allen"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"829d7d3d-4388-3727-bbfe-99ecb0e911da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"'Getting off' and 'Going out': Young People's Conceptions of (Hetero)Sexual Relationships","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005389","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9455,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513347,513429]],"Locations in B":[[54370,54462]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Timothy Lyle"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41243201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98316b58-e4ea-36b0-a190-37998915afac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41243201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"958","pageStart":"943","pagination":"pp. 943-958","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"CHECK WITH YO' MAN FIRST; CHECK WITH YO' MAN\": Tyler Perry Appropriates Drag as a Tool to Re-Circulate Patriarchal Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41243201","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[434044,434205],[435522,435597],[436118,436245]],"Locations in B":[[9204,9366],[9494,9569],[10097,10226]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy Hollywood"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3176407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42815961"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c4790e8-0b01-381b-9adf-92ecbc8a1800"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3176407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyreligions"}],"isPartOf":"History of Religions","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performativity, Citationality, Ritualization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3176407","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11485,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832],[442609,442697]],"Locations in B":[[9052,9250],[16245,16333]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT In this essay, I argue that during the post-September 11th \u201cwar on terror,\u201d the Iranian homosexual became transferred from the position of the abject to the representable subject in transnational political realms. This shift involves Iranian opposition groups, transnational media, the \u201cgay international\u201d (in the words of Joseph A. Massad), and some Iranian diasporic queers who willingly insert themselves into national imaginations of the opposition in diasporic reterritorializations. This hypervisibility is enabled by massive mobilizations of universalized sexual identities on the Internet, discourses of protectorship, valorizations of mobility in cyberspace and diasporic imaginations, and the political and economic opportunities for neoliberal entrepreneurship and expertise during the war on terror. In this process, the normative Iranian homosexual is produced as a victim of backward homophobic Iranian-ness, awaiting representation and liberation by new media technologies, while the Iranian citizen is disciplined through cybergovernmentality as a heterosexual subject who is expected to reject tradition, tolerate or defend homosexuals, and avoid perversion.","creator":["Sima Shakhsari"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.14","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2f76264-8330-3085-92c6-9c9591838d35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.14"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"From Homoerotics of Exile to Homopolitics of Diaspora: Cyberspace, the War on Terror, and the Hypervisible Iranian Queer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.8.3.14","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracy McCabe"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc8c8694-785a-318b-8bc1-4bc0b76d3bc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41178831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE MULTIFACETED POLITICS OF PRIMITIVISM IN HARLEM RENAISSANCE WRITING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178831","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":9297,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471741,471794]],"Locations in B":[[53526,53585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth A. Clark"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3170769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d867689f-0cff-3eb7-8dfb-3d1fada9cda1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3170769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Society of Church History","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lady Vanishes: Dilemmas of a Feminist Historian after the \"Linguistic Turn\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3170769","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":14442,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[472833,472911],[478055,478195]],"Locations in B":[[18014,18093],[21302,32979]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Davide Daolmi","Emanuele Senici"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11238615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ffcbaeb-5aca-3c87-99d9-df3c0dca9c52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43029593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saggmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Il Saggiatore musicale","issueNumber":"1","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki s.r.l.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u00abL'OMOSESSUALIT\u00c0 \u00c8 UN MODO DI CANTARE\u00bb: Il contributo queer all'indagine sull'opera in musica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029593","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":22778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicholas Radel"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07313403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24322615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medirenadramengl"}],"isPartOf":"Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rosemont Publishing & Printing Corp DBA Associated University Presses","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322615","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":2648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert W. Connell"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9b511dd-b533-3ca3-a6d1-a9974971928b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding Men: Gender Sociology and the New International Research on Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250072","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca Rossen"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23069906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6de1de89-9b78-3d8e-ab35-5461c0c4011a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23069906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Hasidic Drag: Jewishness and Transvestism in the Modern Dances of Pauline Koner and Hadassah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23069906","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Vernon Rosario II"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44444581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d6f731c-f6ce-392c-8e85-9a31bef6718a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44444581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44444581","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":1654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo a autora anallsa a invislbllidade da ra\u00e7a e da experi\u00eancia das mulheres negras no dos estudos da mulher brasllelros. A partir de um olhar comparativo sobre estudos da mulher na Inglaterra, Estados Unidos e no Canad\u00e1, a autora explora como quest\u00f3es sobre diferen\u00e7a racial entre as mulheres n\u0101o foram tratadas nos diferentes contextos naclonals. A an\u00e1llse enfatiza a aus\u00eancia da ra\u00e7a na malor parte dos estudos mulher no Brasil e sugere que, para um melhor entendlmento da diversidade das experi\u00eancias das brasllelras, \u00e9 preciso dar um malor enfoque para \"diferen\u00e7a\" racial e para a rela\u00e7\u0101o entre roca e g\u00eanero. This paper examines the invisibility of race and black women's experiences in Brazilian Women's Studies scholarship. Through a comparative analysis of Women's Studies scholarship in England, the United States, Canada and Brazil, the author explores how the question of racial differences among women has been treated in different national contexts. The analysis underscores the absence of race in most Brazilian Women's Studies scholarship and suggests the need to focus on racial \"difference\" and the relationship between race and gender in order to better understand the diverse experiences of Brazilian women.","creator":["KIA LILLY CALDWELL"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b0000f1-11db-3a67-bf14-0d81e02ba462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Fronteiras da diferen\u00e7a: ra\u00e7a e mulher no Brasil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596552","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":7360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54e62f0a-ce6b-3303-802a-a0220484fb88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975271","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lucy Brisley"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.76.2014.0099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43395a11-8d1c-349e-8fb1-caf2a258308a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.76.2014.0099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"French Studies: African and Maghreb Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.76.2014.0099","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":4850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jodi Eichler-Levine","Rosemary R. Hicks"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74c745e0-6d6b-3730-a5e6-d051dc7269ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"735","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-735","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"As Americans against Genocide\": The Crisis in Darfur and Interreligious Political Activism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068447","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":11314,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[58566,58635]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41290296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7de59cfd-5810-3d41-9396-eeb8b6ccc946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41290296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Axiology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Response: Performative Reflections on Love and Commitment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41290296","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":1518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anny Brooksbank Jones"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de2e99b8-6f84-340e-a7f2-95dfc00bb4bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ana Maria Moix and the Sacrifice of Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021454","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This purpose of this paper is to provide a theoretical foundation for inclusion in Canadian schools for this Special Issue on Inclusive Education. In response to the need for an interdisciplinary framework, this paper uses an interpretive literature review methodology to construct a framework for educational inclusivity based on four disciplinary perspectives: (a) special education and disability studies, (b) multiculturalism and anti-racist education, (c) gender and women's education, and (d) queer studies. The constructed framework elucidates four conceptions of inclusivity\u2013\u2013normative, integrative, dialogical, and transgressive\u2013\u2013positioned on a continuum with each conception representing a different approach to inclusion. Unlike previous models, this framework is not anchored to any one marginalized group; rather, it is intended to represent multiple forms of inclusivity to edify historical, existing, and idealistic educational practices and structures for all forms of difference.","creator":["Christopher DeLuca"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajeducrevucan.36.1.305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18fd9287-e78a-3031-aa2f-b83740ac388a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajeducrevucan.36.1.305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Toward an Interdisciplinary Framework for Educational Inclusivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajeducrevucan.36.1.305","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay examines style as a vehicle for performance: Patterns of language are rituals of language that participate in broader social rituals and behaviors. It then turns to recent debates over academic prose, focusing on Judith Butler who claims that radical thought demands radical forms of expression. In the case of her own writing, however, her style isn't radical. Instead, it's conservative in form, a souped-up version of technobureaucratic writing. The essay ends with an analysis of Butler's \"Burning Acts, Injurious Speech\" and argues that while it does fulfill one of the aesthetic goals Butler has outlined elsewhere, the stylistic performance it delivers is like that of a shaman, hovering ambiguously between mysticism and trickery.","creator":["Chris Holcomb"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20176649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7035fb3b-d0d0-3397-a4bb-105d8cff7031"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20176649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Performative Stylistics and the Question of Academic Prose","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20176649","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8771,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[25825,25946],[26097,26168],[26241,26434],[26623,26767],[62499,63329]],"Locations in B":[[19426,19548],[19727,19795],[19872,20065],[20141,20285],[25932,26762]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ben Sifuentes J\u00e1uregui"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc2121fc-f958-306a-82fd-1d87b563be83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25485831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"66","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cuerpos, intelectuales y homosocialidad en \"Los de abajo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485831","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["OWEN HEATHCOTE"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masochism, sadism and homotextuality: the examples of Yukio Mishima and Eric Jourdan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263432","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aya Kitamura"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ba8328a-edd0-3743-b481-2ea435be7b53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subverting from Within: Images and Identities of Japanese Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771934","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9279,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[145680,146075]],"Locations in B":[[11804,12199]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Carr"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3268485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fdfae2d-22be-3101-953f-bbfaddd96f78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3268485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender and the Shaping of Desire in the Song of Songs and Its Interpretation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3268485","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":8171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joan C. Williams"],"datePublished":"1990-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"785033e9-e3b3-37fa-b0f4-05eb681ccbcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1073210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"746","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-746","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Virginia Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Certainty: Legal History and the Reconstructive Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073210","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":14470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523867,523956]],"Locations in B":[[69225,69312]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on a content analysis of a hundred heterosexual dating advertisements, the paper, in part, seeks to build upon the findings of previous research emerging mainly from the disciplines of sociobiology and psychology, which shows that when selling the self, men market their financial and occupational resources, whereas women offer physical attractiveness and appealing body shape, consistent with traditional 'sex-role' stereotypes and mating selection strategies. The main focus of this paper, however, is on the repetitive and changing meanings of masculinity and femininity. Locating analyses in the context of a postmodern, consumer society, it shows that whilst consumer culture appears to provide men with a wide range of resources for the creation of identities, reflexive self-fashioning is more problematic for women. It argues that although what constitutes a 'feminine' identity has now diversified as men and women deal with a novel set of social conditions, women's subjectivities remain more fixed and stable than those of men. It concludes, therefore, that access to cultural resources for identity construction are not equally available to men and women.","creator":["Elizabeth Jagger"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c1a9999-4d8b-3904-bc12-cd4ae87bd06a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marketing Molly and Melville: Dating in a Postmodern, Consumer Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856248","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"When trying to empathize with suffering textual characters, the reader should not only be conscious of his or her relationship to the sufferer, but also of his or her relationship to the text that tells the sufferer's story. In evaluating the latter relationship, I look to the short story genre to show how when one breaks down assumptions about form a greater reflective space, fewer representational characters, and a resistance to textual \"mastery\" can develop. I locate my exploration in an early twentieth\u2014century work by Mexican-American writer, Maria Cristina Mena, entitled \"The Gold Vanity Set.\" I explore the various ways that one might achieve a more ethical relationship to the text through the deconstruction of literary assumptions that can impede the realization of human rights and social justice for subaltern groups.","creator":["Erin Houlihan"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2660b80-6f27-321b-b573-015fd5598770"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ethics of Reading the Short Story: Literary Humanitarianism in \"The Gold Vanity Set\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749603","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Annick T.R. Wibben"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24590524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800786"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9117a9ab-248b-3224-a1b9-eb56720153ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24590524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"browjworlaffa"}],"isPartOf":"The Brown Journal of World Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brown Journal of World Affairs","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist International Relations: Old Debates and New Directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24590524","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9048,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[97213,97370]],"Locations in B":[[55230,55383]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the process of body recovery that took place after the sinking of the Titanic in 1912. Focusing on how identification was intertwined with valuation, I show how notions of economic class informed decisions about which human bodies were fit for preservation as human bodies. The RMS Titanic steamship was a microcosm of social circulation in the early 20th-century Atlantic, and life on board was systematically stratified according to economic class. During the recovery that following the sinking, 114 bodies, or one-third of the total recovered, were buried at sea, most of them crewmembers or immigrant passengers who had held third-class tickets. Sea burial exposed the bodies to rapid and inaccessible decomposition, thereby selectively excluding those bodies from the archival and forensic record even as those victims\u2019 names and personal artefacts were recorded for posterity. The recovery process thus demonstrates that the material existence of those passengers\u2019 remains was not a given, but instead emerged in varied ways through identification and recovery practices. Such practices drew on notions of economic value and identifiability to shape bodily materials, which were selectively preserved, transformed, and\/or put out of reach. As such, I argue that identification and valuation are thoroughly enmeshed with what I call instantiation, or determinations of how and whether something exists.","creator":["Jess Bier"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48568910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beba7aae-2389-325f-8bca-8541d41bea54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48568910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"635","pagination":"pp. 635-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Bodily circulation and the measure of a life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48568910","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":15545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Forensic identification and valuation after the Titanic<\/em> disaster"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mustafa Emirbayer","Mimi Sheller"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3feee47-b304-33da-9d41-a2af9ce582d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/658030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53,"pageEnd":"779","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-779","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Publics in History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658030","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":22541,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[109754,109825]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The format and content of LGBTQ graphic novels make them effective pedagogical tools for engaging students in critical discussions about gender and sexuality. By using two exemplar texts, the authors offer teachers a vocabulary and method for engaging in these conversations.","creator":["Kate E. Kedley","Jenna Spiering"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d9e5ce6-e388-31c3-af4e-e2f9c1979ccc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Using LGBTQ Graphic Novels to Dispel Myths about Gender and Sexuality in ELA Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359518","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":5002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper I report on an investigation of discoursal asymmetry in parentcraft texts, in terms of the ways in which the father is represented and backgrounded. In particular, I suggest that it is possible to see one dominant, overarching discourse: 'Part-time father\/mother as main parent'. This dominant discourse can be seen as being 'shored up' (as well as, to an extent, challenged) by other, usually complementary, discourses: 'father as baby entertainer', 'father as mother's bumbling assistant', 'father as line manager', 'mother as manager of the father's role in childcare', and 'mother as wife\/partner'. These discourses are characterized by recurring and nonrecurring linguistic presences \u2013 and, importantly, absences (Van Leeuwen, 1995, 1996). Looking in particular at the following linguistic items from three different semantic fields \u2013 mother\/father\/wife\/husband\/partner; play\/fun\/help; and share \u2013 I illustrate how different discourses, with their salient linguistic presences and absences, can organize a text in supporting and potentially destabilizing ways.","creator":["JANE SUNDERLAND"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98218410-78b2-372c-b968-d62bfbebe8a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Baby entertainer, bumbling assistant and line manager: discourses of fatherhood in parentcraft texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888310","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":14064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Sociological studies of women's experiences with conservative religions are typically framed by a paradox that ponders women's complicity. The prevailing view associates agency with strategic subjects who use religion to further extra-religious ends and pays little attention to the cultural and institutional contexts that shape \"compliance.\" This paper suggests an alternative framing. Rather than asking why women comply, I examine agency as religious conduct and religiosity as a constructed status. Drawing on a study that examined how orthodox Jewish Israeli women observe, negotiate, and make sense of regulations of martial sexuality, this paper explains religious women's agency as religious conduct, or the \"doing\" of religion. I demonstrate that doing religion is associated with a search for authentic religious subjecthood and that religiosity is shaped in accordance with the logics of one's religion, and in the context of controlling messages about threatened symbolic boundaries and cultural Others.","creator":["ORIT AVISHAI"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fcb9fb5-bc99-3a3c-8d85-e3a771439645"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"DOING RELIGION\" IN A SECULAR WORLD: Women in Conservative Religions and the Question of Agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821661","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay brings to bear insights from continental philosophers Michel Foucault and Judith Butler on the science of (homo) sexuality and, more importantly, the desire to use such science to resolve contemporary conflicts over homosexuality's acceptability. So-called \"queer science\" remains deeply beholden to modern notions of sex, gender, and sexuality, the author argues, a schematic that its premodern (Christian) roots further denaturalize. The philosophical insights drawn from this analysis are then applied to the controversy over homosexuality within global Christianity that often pits the \"backward\" former colonies against the \"modern\" west.","creator":["Ellen T. Armour"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0ae732a-8f36-394a-92c2-cb788d7e96ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40981212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejphilreli"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal for Philosophy of Religion","issueNumber":"1\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Blinding me with (queer) science: religion, sexuality, and (post?) modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981212","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":7326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In January 2002, images of the detention of prisoners held at US Naval Station Guantanamo Bay as part of the Global War on Terrorism were released by the US Department of Defense, a public relations move that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld later referred to as 'probably unfortunate'. These images, widely reproduced in the media, quickly came to symbolise the facility and the practices at work there. Nine years on, the images of orange-clad 'detainees' \u2014 the 'orange series' \u2014 remain a powerful symbol of US military practices and play a significant role in the resistance to the site. However, as the site has evolved, so too has its visual representation. Official images of these new facilities not only document this evolution but work to constitute, through a careful (re)framing (literal and figurative), a new (re)presentation of the site, and therefore the identities of those involved. The new series of images not only (re)inscribes the identities of detainees as dangerous but, more importantly, work to constitute the US State as humane and modern. These images are part of a broader effort by the US administration to resituate its image, and remind us, as IR scholars, to look at the diverse set of practices (beyond simply spoken language) to understand the complexity of international politics.","creator":["ELSPETH VAN VEEREN"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7ec9b0d-81e3-3634-bc82-1d810b0af3af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23025573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"1749","pageStart":"1721","pagination":"pp. 1721-1749","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Captured by the camera's eye: Guant\u00e1namo and the shifting frame of the Global War on Terror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025573","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on the experiences of becoming and being mothers for lesbian co-parents who have children via donor insemination. Rather than the presence of children incorporating lesbians into the mainstream as \"honorary heterosexuals,\" the author argues that lesbian parenting represents a radical and radicalizing challenge to heterosexual norms that govern parenting roles and identities. It undermines traditional notions of the family and the heterosexual monopoly of reproduction. The same-sex context together with successful collaboration with donors supports the refashioning of kinship relationships. An attentiveness to the gender dynamics of sexuality illuminates further contestations. The author argues that their structural similarities as women place them in contradiction with dominant gender practices enacted in heterosexual relationships. This facilitates the evaluation and negotiation of more egalitarian approaches to work and parenting, and through their operationalization, much of the logic supporting conventional divisions of labor is undermined.","creator":["Gillian A. Dunne"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"307e2562-a295-3a42-9582-b18f49fb1cf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Opting into Motherhood: Lesbians Blurring the Boundaries and Transforming the Meaning of Parenthood and Kinship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190420","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12993,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434118,434205]],"Locations in B":[[71192,71285]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Current paradigms of identity, especially those found in Whiteness Studies, do not sufficiently explain the complex interaction and intersection of race, culture, and identity. Drawing on two years of extended fieldwork in the Steppin' dance scene in Chicago, I extend Bourdieu's theory of practice, particularly the role of the body in culture, to the study of race and identity. This article presents an alternative model for explaining racial identity, grounded in the competencies and embodied knowledges that one enacts in practice. This novel approach opens up new anti-essentialist possibilities for theorizing race and an anti-racist politics based in cultural labor.","creator":["Black Hawk Hancock"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cec68c2-b97a-3dc9-8654-a8c8950c6d0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Steppin' out of Whiteness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047867","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":15536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Michael Saward"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b953126-e9c8-3698-b041-62e58f061228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44482964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconstructing Democracy: Current Thinking and New Directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482964","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Partly due to the transdisciplinary agenda of the field, the development of American Studies has been accompanied by intensive debates about methods and theories. This essay relates a\u2014necessarily reductive\u2014narrative about how, throughout its history, German American Studies has intervened into and contributed to these debates; and how, with the emergence of parameters and politics of difference, on the one hand, and poststructuralist thought and notions of diff\u00e9rance, on the other, the early debate on methods of American Studies transformed into discussions of theories of American literature, culture, history etc. In the light of what I perceive as the current division within German American Studies\u2014a division between work that refocuses the theoretical discussion on literary studies and questions of aesthetics and analyses that engage other cultural practices and media by way of explicit theoretical perspectives, yet not necessarily in the frame of an American Studies agenda\u2014my argument suggests that we take a more dialectical approach to the plurality of theories American Studies engages. While such an approach can no longer aim at syntheses and needs to allow for incoherencies and contradictions, it seems indispensable if we aim at futures for American Studies","creator":["Sabine Sielke"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38a0d82c-409e-34f7-b5fd-61f108be3bdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theorizing American Studies: German Interventions into an Ongoing Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158115","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":22622,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[128895,128976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jay Dolmage"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b98995f0-fde5-3d3d-9f01-f75ee9bfbd4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"850","pageStart":"844","pagination":"pp. 844-850","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866817","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan Talburt"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf2c5d9c-7c2f-3b0e-9e6c-0a5d4f5818ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Chapter 4: Identity Politics, Institutional Response, and Cultural Negotiation: Meanings of a Gay and Lesbian Office on Campus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136097","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":9383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine S. Cox"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"883776e1-e580-381b-a192-af5bf36a0e2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"\"Il Giudeo di voi\": Contiguity and Conflict in Dantes \"Paradiso\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201584","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":8469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[41459,41604]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Douglas Steward"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40867dc0-483d-358f-a2f2-8e5a204c0665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2901218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Saint's Progeny: Assotto Saint, Gay Black Poets, and Poetic Agency in the Field of the Queer Symbolic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2901218","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7293,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[209906,210071]],"Locations in B":[[38709,38874]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this book note, Naomi Mezey explores both the content and the context of \"Sexy Dressing Etc.: Essays on the Power and Politics of Cultural Identity,\" by Duncan Kennedy, a leading figure in the critical legal studies (CLS) movement. Ms. Mezey sees Kennedy as engaged in two related projects: first, responding to criticisms of CLS by feminist and critical race theorists, and second, revitalizing radical left thought for a new generation of culture-conscious scholars. Ms. Mezey focuses on Kennedy's analysis of the popular performer Madonna in order to discuss how popular culture can be a site for strategic reinterpretation of traditional narratives about race and gender that in turn influence the law and legal theory. Ms. Mezey suggets that grappling with pop culture not only offers clues about how communities define themselves, but can also add vital force and attractiveness to radical legal theory.","creator":["Naomi Mezey"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87f69363-8d58-3cf4-b64b-1f3939e8b2a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"1861","pageStart":"1835","pagination":"pp. 1835-1861","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Legal Radicals in Madonna's Closet: The Influence of Identity Politics, Popular Culture, and a New Generation on Critical Legal Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229172","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":14658,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513422]],"Locations in B":[[15265,15345]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article provides an introduction to the Australian-German research project Antipodean Visions of Transcultural Societies,which is investigating the filmic representation of transcultural social conditions in Germany and Australia. The dual focus is on contemporary Turkish-German films, and on films either directed by indigenous people of Australia, or else treating indigenous issues. The analytical potential of the project is demonstrated by a comparative analysis of Rachel Perkins' film Radiance (Australia 1997) and Kutlug Ataman's Lola and Billy the Kid (Germany 1998).","creator":["Hendrik Blumentrath","Julia Bodenburg","Roger Hillman","Martina Wagner-Egelhaaf"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2de6940-3ec9-32e5-9f74-a0aeb1de083f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40621739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Antipodean Visions of Transcultural Societies. Ein australisch-deutsches Forschungsprojekt zu Filmen der Gegenwart","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621739","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie Lourties"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d67cc701-a336-3863-8a5b-b625b95aa96c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42625380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Teatro e identidad (A guisa de pr\u00f3logo a esta traducci\u00f3n)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42625380","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4261,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[1998,2079]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reports on ethnographic research into the practical and ethical consequences of the implementation and use of telecare devices for older people living at home in Spain and the United Kingdom. Telecare services are said to allow the maintenance of their users' autonomy through connectedness, relieving the isolation from which many older people suffer amid rising demands for care. However, engaging with Science and Technology Studies (STS) literature on \"user configuration\" and implementation processes, we argue here that neither services nor users preexist the installation of the service: they are better described as produced along with it. Moving beyond design and appropriation practices, our contribution stresses the importance of installations as specific moments where such emplacements take place. Using Etienne Souriau's concept of instauration, we describe the ways in which, through installation work, telecare services \"bring into existence\" their very infrastructure of usership. Hence, both services and telecare users are effects of fulfilling the \"felicity conditions\" (technical, relational, and contractual) of an achieved installation.","creator":["Tom\u00e1s S\u00e1nchez-Criado","Daniel L\u00f3pez","Celia Roberts","Miquel Dom\u00e8nech"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43671195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3204843a-1e83-3c98-a1cf-517f41e0f90c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43671195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"719","pageStart":"694","pagination":"pp. 694-719","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Installing Telecare, Installing Users: Felicity Conditions for the Instauration of \"Usership\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43671195","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Soheila Ghaussy"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40150357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Stepmother Tongue: \"Feminine Writing\" in Assia Djebar's Fantasia: An Algerian Cavalcade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150357","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":5360,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481239,481301]],"Locations in B":[[32595,32657]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kristin Handler"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"896cf0e6-37d8-3d36-a2b6-29692529d9ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1212957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexing \"The Crying Game\": Difference, Identity, Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212957","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8654,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727],[142887,142985]],"Locations in B":[[48174,48319],[48453,48547]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Studies on the identity formation of urban centres and the use of aesthetic markers within that regeneration process largely fall into two camps that reflect their respective academic provenance. On the one hand, this effect is assessed by reference to urban planning and architectural processes. Here, the interest is firmly in the design hardware of buildings, streets and public spaces and how they are used to differentiate and communicate. On the other, this is reviewed by reference to the marketing strategies of place branding. Here the emotional software of brand identity programmes, as carried through literature, websites, the copywriting of slogans and other largely two-dimensional platforms comes into view. Within the remit of 'culture-led regeneration', the article considers a more extended version of the role of design in this process. Designers are implicated among networks of urban \u00e9lites that decide strategies. But their involvement takes the process of design-led regeneration beyond buildings or leaflets to a loosely coherent, hegemonic network of signifiers to produce what I call 'designscapes'. The article takes a critical approach to three designscapes: Barcelona, Manchester and Hull. In doing so, it evaluates contrasting approaches while keeping in view the interactions of design \u00e9lites and their public, the flows between individual and collective consumption and their roles in forming an urban habitus.","creator":["Guy Julier"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43197302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915650"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233805"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d0bb47d-a2cb-3adc-927f-477bad9c1fdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43197302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"887","pageStart":"869","pagination":"pp. 869-887","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Urban Designscapes and the Production of Aesthetic Consent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43197302","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Aviva Briefel"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e24b9b5d-1cd6-30db-a098-dc06945108c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Cosmetic Tragedies: Failed Masquerade in Wilkie Collins's \"The Law and the Lady\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347241","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11139,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[177693,177768],[177930,178084],[179874,180030],[497254,497396]],"Locations in B":[[34180,34255],[34265,34419],[44925,45081],[66146,66246]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3ab6ad8-5e9e-3d32-8fb5-fa0303a560a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Deviant Dervishes: Space, Gender, and the Construction of Antinomian Piety in Ottoman Aleppo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879644","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ryan Netzley"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fda334e3-d7d8-3e9a-9c0a-1e57f308ccc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Oral Devotion: Eucharistic Theology and Richard Crashaw's Religious Lyrics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755364","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean E. Kennard"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71da5bae-bcbe-3822-9788-9636a327b115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lesbianism and the Censoring of \"Wuthering Heights\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316438","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9142,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[398076,398195]],"Locations in B":[[24338,24457]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Set against a backdrop of the chaotic, crumbling Cuban capital and the multiple crises of the Special Period, Ena Luc\u00eda Portela's 2002 novel Cien botellas en una pared portrays both consequences of economic collapse and the breakdown of traditional paradigms of gender and sexuality. In the text, the connection between biological sex and gender performance appears to be arbitrary; virtually all of the female characters are lesbians, while the male characters are either gay or emasculated heterosexuals. This essay argues that Portela's novel problematises the (hetero)sexist norms that have persisted in Cuban society, dismantling patriarchy in favour of a fluid, amorphous social structure in which power itself becomes ephemeral. While the image of La Habana presented in Cien botellas en una pared is far from utopian, the text nonetheless questions rigid hierarchies of gender and sexuality to a degree that is trailblazing in Cuban fiction of the Per\u00edodo especial.","creator":["Karen S. Christian"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intejcubastud.5.2.0184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17563461"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232979331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252038"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d0866ff-4f80-317a-929f-0812562b21b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intejcubastud.5.2.0184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcubastud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Beyond Essence: Performing Gender and Sexuality in Ena Luc\u00eda Portela's Cien botellas en una pared<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intejcubastud.5.2.0184","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alfons Gregori i Gomis"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23790673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8549cd78-5c43-37cd-b4e9-eaad981fbb04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23790673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TECHNOLOGY AND GENDER IN SPANISH POPULAR MUSIC: CREATION AND REPRESENTATION BY THE BAND MECANO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23790673","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7900,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[29401,29591]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Breger"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bb0ef1b-8fc3-386c-8387-856bddd73344"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Feminine Masculinities: Scientific and Literary Representations of \"Female Inversion\" at the Turn of the Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704710","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[102206,102313]],"Locations in B":[[14173,14280]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this article is to analyse some of the representations of intersectional gender that materialise in activism against genetically modified organisms (GMOs). It uses the case of Hawai'i as a key node in global transgenic seed production and hotspot for food, land and farming controversies. Based on ethnographic work conducted since 2012, the article suggests some of the ways that gender is represented within movements against GMOs by analysing activist media representations. The article shows how gender, understood intersectionally, informs possibilities for movement-identification, exploring how themes of motherhood, warrior masculinities and sexualised femininities are represented within these movements. The article suggests that some activist representations of gender invoke what could be considered as normative framings of gender similar to those seen in other environmental, food and anti-GMO movements. It is suggested that these gendered representations may influence and limit how different subjects engage with Hawai'i anti-GMO movements. At the same time, contextual, intersectional readings demonstrate the complex histories behind what appear to be gender normative activist representations. Taken together, this emphasis on relative norms of femininities and masculinities may provide anti-GMO organising with familiar social frames that counterbalance otherwise threatening campaigns against (agri)business in the settler state. Understood within these histories, the work that gender does within anti-GMO organising may offer generative examples for thinking through the relationships between gendered representations and situated, indigenous-centred, food and land-based resistances.","creator":["Amanda Shaw"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"154a040e-a4d9-39e4-b9d4-c305ad3a2125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"114","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"gendered representations in Hawai'i's anti-GMO activism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987282","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Covering one hundred years, this paper recounts the life stories of three generations of middle-class women of the New Delhi-based Kapoor family. By taking the methodological view that individuals born approximately at the same time, within the same class segment, and at the same cultural place will be shaped by the same historical structures so that their lives to some extent are synchronized into a gendered, generational experience, these three life stories are viewed as voices that reflect their respective generational class segments. In view of this, the paper uses the three life stories to discuss changes in women's agency within the urban, educated, upper middle-class. Agency is here understood as control over resources, and it is argued that in order to understand changes in women's agency, one should take into account the impact of both social, economic structures and cultural ideologies. When analysing the three life stories, the overall finding is that the granddaughter has had more control over her own life than her mother and grandmother. However, by acknowledging that cultural ideologies and social economic structures are not always synchronized, a nuanced and many-dimensional picture of twists and turns in these middle-class women's degree and type of agency over time emerges.","creator":["ANNE WALDROP"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19ff0b56-29c4-318e-bbca-ba7d4cdc0299"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41478325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"638","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-638","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Grandmother, Mother and Daughter: Changing agency of Indian, middle-class women, 1908-2008","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478325","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":17504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Historians, sociologists, and contemporary critics have used the trope of the \u201cfeminization of the synagogue\u201d to describe and critique gendered changes in American Judaism. Yet, given its many usages, the concept has proven too ambiguous and wide-ranging to function as a useful analytical description. This article begins by parsing the multiple uses of the term feminization: Who uses it, and what might they mean? Equipped with this map of the many meanings of the concept, the article then takes the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as a case study. In this period, there is little historical evidence to support the idea that a single, identifiable phenomenon we should call feminization of the synagogue occurred. The persistence of the scholarly trope of feminization of the synagogue, despite the uneven evidence and slipperiness of the term, suggests the need for greater specificity and clarity in scholarly use.","creator":["Sarah Imhoff"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.3.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42024ac5-45e5-3acb-aac9-7c162656d37a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.3.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Myth of American Jewish Feminization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.3.05","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11351,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[61808,61869]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracy Morison"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a2be265-4c03-3d4d-ab9c-578be104be2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"S113","pageStart":"S111","pagination":"pp. S111-S113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524935","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deanna Hutson Mihaly"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02774356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608377942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f53c37a-1afd-39e2-a745-63cbf850252f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23021423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"letrfeme"}],"isPartOf":"Letras Femeninas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Asociaci\u00f3n de Estudios de G\u00e9nero y Sexualidades","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Re-Scripting the Resistive Body in \"Nunca estuve sola\", the Prison Memoir of Nidia D\u00edaz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23021423","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Zerilli"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b15a007-bc5f-3ed6-8d3f-bb0da5ca5c7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40376114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Feminism and the Abyss of Freedom: Rejoinder to Ferree, Glaeser, and Steinmetz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40376114","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nina Cornyetz"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10599770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646832089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015201732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77d0eb7a-1e23-3c1d-9208-f94ece1481cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomjengsup"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal. English Supplement","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bound by Blood: Female Pollution, Divinity, and Community in Enchi Fumiko's \"Masks\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772084","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13221,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[440138,440300]],"Locations in B":[[1637,1800]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ariela J. Gross"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9f50b86-f585-3a1f-9072-579887acd657"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Litigating Whiteness: Trials of Racial Determination in the Nineteenth-Century South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797472","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":42346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Joseph Valente"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba9f2e25-39c6-3db2-83c5-b1f0f55f8eab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Quhare Soort of a Mahan\": Joyce's Same-Sexed Other-Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473561","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":2292,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477833,477945]],"Locations in B":[[13388,13494]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lynn M. Voskuil"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b110922-6095-3de0-97e8-3ee1fb030b7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"639","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-639","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Acts of Madness: Lady Audley and the Meanings of Victorian Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178808","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11800,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47090,47260]],"Locations in B":[[12362,12533]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper aims to further discussion on the underexplored relationship between public administration and public protest, and how public administration can further the aims of public protest movements or actively work to thwart them. I suggest that the Occupy movement, particularly in Oakland, CA, serves as an example where public administration thwarted a movement for social and economic justice. Looking at the Occupy movement through the lens of Foucault's later work, I propose that the Occupy movement can be framed as an instance of Cynical parrhesia, or frank speech, in which the safety of the speakers is at stake. This examination exposes the nature of public protest as bodily and risky, the potential for such movements to further social change, and the potential for public administrators to take up this speech aimed at those in power or to help in silencing its message through security regimes and even violence.","creator":["Jennifer L. Eagan"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec096d7b-ea93-377d-bf08-3dc2bf24b551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43859493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Withholding the Red Ink: Occupy, Foucault, and the Administration of Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43859493","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Daniel M. Scott III"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"543963c3-e08b-3add-831f-6ba6ea2e652c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Harlem Shadows: Re-Evaluating Wallace Thurman's \"The Blacker the Berry\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141858","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5959,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443762]],"Locations in B":[[15996,16468]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Annette Trefzer"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19473370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba49c9d7-7ccb-3af9-afe1-f7a67da01cce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eudoweltrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Eudora Welty Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Georgia State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Something Inarticulate\": Sexual Desire in the Fiction of Eudora Welty and Hubert Creekmore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630849","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Natania Meeker"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e9af215-c697-3bef-a919-a7f9b8a68d66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27793768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"All times are present to her\": Femininity, Temporality, and Libertinage in Diderot's \"Sur les femmes\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27793768","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":12460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Tomando como corpus de an\u00e1lise a revista sadomasoquista e fetichista norte-americana Bizarre, editada entre 1946 e 1959 por John Willie, o presente artigo Pusca refletir sobre a rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre o conte\u00fado da puPlica\u00e7\u00e3o e seus leitores, evidenciada soPretudo nas p\u00e1ginas de suas se\u00e7\u00f5es de correspond\u00eancia. Ap\u00f3s uma Preve apresenta\u00e7\u00e3o das pr\u00e1ticas e da rede agrupada sop a sigla BDSM, Puscaremos, nas p\u00e1ginas de Bizarre, diferentes modula\u00e7\u00f5es de ag\u00eancia de imagens, oPjetos e textos e seus efeitos soPre pr\u00e1ticas, corpos e desejos sexuais tidos como \u2018desviantes'. Tais modula\u00e7\u00f5es ser\u00e3o divididas a partir das ideias de excita\u00e7\u00e3o, imagina\u00e7\u00e3o, identifica\u00e7\u00e3o e multiplica\u00e7\u00e3o, a partir das quais, ser\u00e3o esbo\u00e7ados dePates com teorias sobre o fetichismo, a ag\u00eancia das imagens e a forma\u00e7\u00e3o identit\u00e1ria. This article analyzes the North-American sadomasochist and fetishist magazine Bizarre, edited from 1946 to 1959 by John Willie. We propose a reflection about the interaction between the content of the magazine and its readers, as observed primarily in the the correspondence sections. After a brief introduction about the practices and the network grouped under the acronym BDSM, we will search the pages of Bizarre for different modes of agency of images, object and texts, and their effect on bodies, actions and sexual desires usually regarded as \u2018deviant'. These modes of agency will be divided into excitation, imagination, identification and multiplication, allowing for a discussion with theories about fetishism, the agency of images, and the shaping of sexualized identities.","creator":["Rog\u00e9rio Brittes W. Pires"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64da3606-8570-3199-96c7-c751527fea38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26538444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Da excita\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0 multiplica\u00e7\u00e3o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26538444","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"imagens sadomasoquistas e fetichistas de Bizarre"} +{"abstract":"Abstract This paper investigates the mediating role that technologies of classification and identification have on individual performances and subsequent identity construction. During WWII in Canada, ID surveillance technologies were developed to govern the behaviours of individuals conscripted into the Armed Forces. Legislation, however, limited how these conscripted soldiers could be deployed. Due to a cultural perception of a lack of patriotism associated with these conscript \u201cZombies,\u201d the Army consciously developed policy to have conscripts adopt additional performances to identify them as Zombies in order to shame them into \u201cvolunteering\u201d for General Service. This paper argues that as a result of implemented governing technologies, conscripted individuals took up new and undesired performances as Zombie soldiers, and furthermore, that these performances impacted how they were perceived culturally and worked to mediate their constructed sense of identity.","creator":["Scott Thompson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.41.4.465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49846124"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236970"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ea2861c-03d2-359b-af13-fd9d33c5d0ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajsocicahican.41.4.465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"I am Zombie:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.41.4.465","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Mobilization in WWII Canada and Forced \u201cZombie\u201d Performances 1939-1947"} +{"abstract":"This essay argues that the material conditions of capitalist patriarchal societies are more integrally linked to institutionalized heterosexuality than they are to gender. Building on the critical strategies of early feminist sociology through the articulation of a materialist feminist theoretical framework, the author provides a critique of contemporary sex-gender theory. She argues that the heterosexual imaginary in feminist sociological theories of gender conceals the operation of heterosexuality in structuring gender and closes off any critical analysis of heterosexuality as an organizing institution.... every sociological concept and thesis, as well as the overall patterning of these concepts and theses, is potentially open for reconsideration... With the emergence of feminist sociological theory, the critical emphases in sociology are strengthened by an insistence that sociological work be critical and change-oriented... in an intensely reflexive way towards sociology itself (Lengermann and Niebrugge-Brantley 1990:318). We must produce a political transformation of the key concepts, that is of the concepts which are strategic for us (Wittig 1992:30).","creator":["Chrys Ingraham"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5da4c1b9-bb21-377f-9e7b-84a5c3f8a409"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Heterosexual Imaginary: Feminist Sociology and Theories of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201865","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10117,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481526]],"Locations in B":[[60161,60288]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I explore both the diversity and commonality of human labor organization in response to sex difference through an ethnographic study of the sex\/gender allocation of labor among the Qhawqhat Lahu of Lancang, China. I argue that the principle of \"unity,\" rather than the more commonly discussed \"division,\" predominantly governs the gendered allocation of labor in Qhawqhat. I demonstrate that the Lahu ideal of gender unity, combined with their practical pursuit of optimal use of household laborers, foster an extraordinarily high degree of joint gender roles in child rearing, as well as in reproductive and productive activities in general. I also show that such an extreme sociocultural system minimizes (although it does not entirely negate) the impact of sex differences. This study may shed some light on the diversity and commonality of human labor organization in response to sex difference by bringing into dialogue more recent approaches to the issue and earlier studies of the \"sexual division of labor.\"","creator":["Shanshan Du"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a9ea511-c3e7-3f95-ad24-e89ead9d5d4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/683408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"520","pagination":"pp. 520-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"\"Husband and Wife Do It Together\": Sex\/Gender Allocation of Labor among the Qhawqhat Lahu of Lancang, Southwest China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683408","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":16547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493958]],"Locations in B":[[98029,98122]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Djuna Barnes's experimental text Nightwood offers a difficult narrative shaped around a sense of loss. Barnes outlines a loss of access to history, to language, and to representation in general for those consigned to the margins of culture. By using a torrential and Byzantine language-a language of indirection-Barnes creates a lexicon of loss that acts as a strategy for recuperating what has been unspeakable, particularly the culturally disempowered: in this text, Jews, women, and homosexuals. Her psychic and textual strategies work through analogy to recover unrecorded history and to show the unrepresented. Barnes reconfigures the culturally privileged discourse of melancholia and in doing so articulates a structure of loss for those whose histories have been effaced.","creator":["Victoria L. Smith"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90d039e3-f225-3168-8694-2cb85cd52aa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Story beside(s) Itself: The Language of Loss in Djuna Barnes's Nightwood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463391","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":9828,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[214742,214996],[215079,215245],[498926,499087],[504982,505037]],"Locations in B":[[7857,8111],[8130,8296],[47156,47317],[55365,55420]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this project, I illustrate how eight premises of sexuality, gay identity, and the closet contribute to the existence of paradox, an interactional situation constituted by contradiction. I first outline the following premises: gay identity is (1) inextricably tied to the metaphor of the closet; coming out is necessary when gay identity (2) is invisible; the closet draws meaning (3) only in relation to heteronormative contexts; gay identity, as a (4) stigmatized identity, makes coming out a (5) potentially dangerous act; coming out is conceived of as a (6) necessary and important, (7) discrete and linear, (8) inescapable and ever-present process. I then use autoethnography to describe and analyze the lived experience of paradox in terms of these premises. I conclude by formulating ways a gay person can negotiate paradox in, and by way of, interaction.","creator":["Tony E. Adams"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f274c5f1-8f8a-32ac-9aa9-0199cfea7076"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Paradoxes of Sexuality, Gay Identity, and the Closet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2010.33.2.234","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":12226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[60590,60659]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["BETH PALMER"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27760217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39e082ae-8f94-381f-928c-b3bdd75b0da9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27760217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Chieftaness,\" \"Great Duchess,\" \"Editress! Mysterious Being!\": Performing Editorial Identities in Florence Marryat's London Society Magazine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27760217","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7272,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[37900,37981]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jessi Knippel"],"datePublished":"2019-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26851800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98048229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29b105b3-8384-3a4b-8e39-72698f13bc25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26851800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"QUEER NUNS AND GENDERBENDING SAINTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26851800","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":5280,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[459844,460251]],"Locations in B":[[24834,25240]],"subTitle":"Genderf*cking Notions of Normativity"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marta Lamas"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bcab85c-07b7-32e5-ae3e-927b8ccfdc6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cuerpo: diferencia sexual y g\u00e9nero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624175","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11391,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[66720,66804]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Geoffrey Kantaris"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11372354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2477b104-037d-329a-9bc6-46456430ae78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25596388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"guaraguao"}],"isPartOf":"Guaraguao","issueNumber":"18","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Asociacion Centro de Estudios y Cooperacion Para America Latina","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Lola\/Lolo: g\u00e9nero y violencia en pel\u00edculas de la Ciudad de M\u00e9xico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596388","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":7792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, we present an aspect of our ethnographic investigation with HIV-positive Latin Americans living in Japan. In order to investigate the relationship between HIV\/AIDS and community support among HIV carriers, we interviewed 20 male HIV-positive Latin Americans living in Japan. From April to September 2002 and in August 2003 and 2004, we conducted a set of six 60-minute interviews with 20, 28\u201437-year-old HIV-positive males. Three of them were illegal aliens and seven of them claimed to be homosexual. Participants were contacted through a hospital, a non-government organization (NGO), and by snowball sampling. The analysis of the interviews indicates that informants did not find any community support. Informants were fully aware that the psychological pressure from the community affected negatively their CD4-count and viral load. Our analysis suggests three main issues concerning the ways our informants relate to their community: non-attachment, invisibility and under-representation. Serostatus, social class, sexual preference, ethnicity and legal status were referred to as barriers to freely associating within the community.","creator":["GENARO CASTRO-VAZQUEZ","MASAYOSHI TARUI"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a707471e-4201-35c2-8309-515a95a2bb55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23889336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Pueblo chico, infierno grande': Community support and HIV\/AIDS among HIV-positive Latin Americans in Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889336","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Butler"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7b9df9f-e57e-3645-a571-6fc3c97de5bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"350","pagination":"pp. 350-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sovereign Performatives in the Contemporary Scene of Utterance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343987","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Performance theory after Antonin Artaud and Judith Butler: dissociative identity disorder, Karen Finley, and charismatic religion.","creator":["Anthony Kubiak"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd6dae9b-f8eb-3262-98f6-3b77dadd6cc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Splitting the Difference: Performance and Its Double in American Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146720","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13382,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524098]],"Locations in B":[[80525,80606]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Viviana Comensoli"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2d4e99a-dd28-3f8d-9903-b802e15461c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Homophobia and the Regulation of Desire: A Psychoanalytic Reading of Marlowe's \"Edward II\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704287","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11200,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[218116,218218],[218434,218522],[219396,219761]],"Locations in B":[[58127,58229],[58516,58604],[59458,62160]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Georges Van Den Abbeele"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40536936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db3eb632-97e7-32de-92cb-82a5ae87fc83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40536936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Theory and the \"Chunnel\": Cultural Studies and the Retreat of Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40536936","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Many challenges currently face art educators who aim to address aspects of popular visual culture in the art classroom. This article analyzes the relationship between performance art and the MTV program \"Jackass,\" one example of problematic popular visual culture. Issues of gender representation and violence within the context of Reality TV and 'extreme' sports will be analyzed, with the intent of questioning the pedagogical limitations and possibilities of such topics within the field of art education, in order to provide art educators with related critical pedagogical strategies.","creator":["Robert W. Sweeny"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7814edfd-d468-343d-82d4-184a96b6065e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"This Performance Art Is for the Birds:\" \"Jackass,\" 'Extreme' Sports, and the De(con)struction of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475864","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elisa Glick"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0aaa0474-e629-3bb8-9f5b-3dbe235a142c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"48","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Dialectics of Dandyism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354399","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The paper examines the religious meanings of journeys made to sites associated with ancient Goddess worship by women who belong to the Goddess movement. While 'Goddess pilgrims' have characteristics in common with other religious pilgrims and with other middle-class tourists, especially those inclined towards ethnic tourism, environmental tourism and historical tourism, they also possess some crucial, distinctive characteristics. Through travelling to sacred sites for explicitly stated spiritual purposes, these women express both their religious identity and their political consciousness. Self-transformation is seen by them as a fundamental component of societal transformation. The paper argues that such journeys contribute to a radical re-inscription of the female body by exposing women to alternative representations of the feminine and by providing contexts in which the feminine can be re-imagined and re-experienced through symbolic activity and ritual. Through the rituals they perform at sites, Goddess pilgrims experience their female bodies as sacred, themselves as divine.","creator":["Kathryn Rountree"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3712303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"496","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Goddess Pilgrims as Tourists: Inscribing the Body through Sacred Travel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3712303","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":10874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Seeing the sea as a feminine force and flux has a long history in the crosscurrents of Judeo-Christian thought, Enlightenment philosophy, and natural scientific epistemology. This essay examines how ocean waves have been similarly gendered female, and also flips that inquiry, asking how women's collective agency has been figured through wave metaphors, notably in discussions of U.S. feminism. I examine how such depictions of waves have called upon and naturalized a gendered symbolism but may these days\u2014particularly in the age of attention to the \"nonhuman\"\u2014be coming undone, rendering gender newly \"at sea.\"","creator":["Stefan Helmreich"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bca1aee-5fc4-37c9-8df2-883bd52b3ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Genders of Waves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474101","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":7291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[39789,39872]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PETER C.L. NOHRNBERG"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f000f23-1fa3-3ab8-ba4e-38524c689fb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Building Up a Nation Once Again\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288756","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":24097,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441603,441708]],"Locations in B":[[3945,4049]],"subTitle":"Irish Masculinity, Violence, and the Cultural Politics of Sports in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man<\/em> and Ulysses<\/em>"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bego\u00f1a Souviron L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43112476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09458301"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d7947e3-c2e0-31aa-802f-6ab4253b005d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43112476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noreiblisohi"}],"isPartOf":"Notas: Rese\u00f1as iberoamericanas. Literatura, sociedad, historia","issueNumber":"1 (10)","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43112476","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":1205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Thamora Fishel"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41298997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c3454fa-0bea-3033-954c-6d28f3fb333e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41298997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Extending the Limits of Social Construction: Female Homosexuality in Taiwan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41298997","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Holly Furneaux, \u201cCharles Dickens's Families of Choice: Elective Affinities, Sibling Substitution, and Homoerotic Desire\u201d (pp. 153\u2013192) This essay focuses upon one particularly rich strategy through which Charles Dickens and his contemporaries articulated the queer possibilities inherent within the putatively heterosexual family: in-lawing, in which prohibited desire for a member of the same-sex is quite transparently redirected or extended to an opposite-sex sibling. Such plots, which expose both female and male homoerotic motivations for courtship narratives, proliferate throughout Dickens's work. Focusing on Dickens's early career (The Pickwick Papers, Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit), the essay suggests that explorations of in-lawing reflect and contribute to wider contemporary literary and biographical discourses about how Victorian families could accommodate same-sex desire. Dickens leans on\u2014and then proceeds to expose the homoerotic possibilities within\u2014two central Victorian beliefs about siblinghood: the expectation that sisters will imitate and fulfill their brother's desires, even and especially in the selection of a husband; and the perception of sibling parity or interchangeability, which was strikingly demonstrated in the Deceased Wife's Sister controversy. Recognizing the pervasiveness of homoerotic in-lawing in nineteenth-century works and lives, this essay builds upon recent developments in queer theory and histories of sexuality to propose that heterosexual bonds were not the only, or indeed the primary, erotic determinant of family formation in this period.","creator":["Holly Furneaux"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2007.62.2.153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de374685-8e8c-3791-9ef5-84a5334f372d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncl.2007.62.2.153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Charles Dickens's Families of Choice: Elective Affinities, Sibling Substitution, and Homoerotic Desire<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2007.62.2.153","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":15075,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011]],"Locations in B":[[50115,50262]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Clemente Carre\u00f1o Medina"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fc54d9d-785d-31e1-ae2f-cc36c00e3a36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26795297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LA DESCOLONIZACI\u00d3N EPIST\u00c9MICA DEL OTRO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795297","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"CUATRO VI\u00d1ETAS NEGRAS EN TRES LINDAS CUBANAS<\/em> DE GONZALO CELORIO"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Halberstam"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb29ad88-f59a-310c-bddd-8b765220a36b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175404","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":2248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Vicars"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a805dd8b-24eb-3e66-bf62-8bdb0a44205d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Chapter 9: Queerer Than Queer!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981976","volumeNumber":"440","wordCount":9073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What did it mean for an Elizabethan actor to perform black magic on the early modern stage? What characterized the extraordinary \"symbolic utterances\" that constituted black magic, at least in the Elizabethan popular imagination? Viewing Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus through J. L. Austin's theories of performative speech, this essay investigates the fascination conjuring held for Elizabethan audiences, tracing its unnerving performative potential. In Doctor Faustus, conjuring models a performative speech act that threatens to blur the distinction between theatre and magic. The play's power in performance relied on keeping the ontological stakes of black magic deliberately uncertain. Far from dismissing black magic as mere charlatanism, Doctor Faustus equated conjuring with the dangerous verbal magic of performativity itself. It was precisely the potential for inadvertent magic on the part of the players that thrilled and alarmed Elizabethan audiences, causing them to see devils that were not literally there. Doctor Faustus at once enacts and critiques performative speech, challenging Austin's distinction between \"efficacious\" (successful) performatives and \"hollow\" (unsuccessful) theatrical quotations of them.","creator":["Andrew Sofer"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40211155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12ad1235-8a28-349f-a6ed-32dde9edd30b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40211155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"How to Do Things with Demons: Conjuring Performatives in \"Doctor Faustus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40211155","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":12838,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[20449,20555]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper considers the application of Foucauldian perspectives within sociology. While Foucault's epistemology has generated novel historical and philosophical interpretations, when transposed to sociology, problems arise. The first of these concerns the association of knowledge and power, and the concept of 'discourse'. Foucault suggested that there are 'rules' of discursive formation which are extraneous to the 'non-discursive' realm of 'reality'. This formulation is consequently both deterministic and incapable of supplying explanations of why some practices become discursive which others do not. This determinism is reflected in some sociological analyses of embodiment, offering a model of the 'body' which is passive, and incapable of resisting power\/knowledge. Secondly, Foucault's notion of the 'self' moves to the other extreme, inadequately addressing the constraints which affect the fabrication of subjectivity. Sociological accounts do not always recognize the ambiguities which consequently result from efforts to use Foucauldian positions. It is argued that post-structuralists other than Foucault may offer more to sociology.","creator":["Nick J. Fox"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/591391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Foucault, Foucauldians and Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591391","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Deborah Cameron"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13699725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26d58b92-5d02-39c7-a7ea-985515a1a154"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26920222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keywords"}],"isPartOf":"Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Raymond Williams Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Keywords","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920222","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"'Gender'"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ERIN C. TARVER"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25670671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25670671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Particulars, Practices, and Pragmatic Feminism: Breaking Rules and Rulings with William James","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25670671","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u2018Archives in drag: Performing nachaniya towards a queer theory of indenture\u2019 takes as its object the figure of the Indo-Jamaican nachaniya dancer as a paradigm for re-thinking queer theories of indenture. Nachaniya is a highly stylized Indo-Jamaican folk dance featuring a heterosexual male dancing in drag. The performance, which can be traced to the nineteenth century, is still common within present-day Indo-Jamaican communities and the diaspora. Nachaniya therefore presents both parts of a queer historical and living archive. By using an archival photograph from the 1960s of a nachaniya dancer as a point of entry, I consider the ways in which this genre of Indo-Jamaican folk performance demonstrates gender non-normativity as deeply embedded within the indentured archive. Since nachaniya is also read as not necessarily queer but \u2018cultural\u2019, I am interested in the tensions between a refusal to categorize the performance as a kind of drag while simultaneously elevating its \u2018cultural\u2019 status and the slippage between \u2018queer\u2019 and \u2018culture\u2019. I consider the figure of the nachaniya dancer as what Anjali Arondekar has termed a site of \u2018ordinary surplus\u2019 rather than a site of queer exception. Through a reading of this queer archival photograph, I consider destabilizing narratives of loss or absence that saturate approaches to the queer archive of indenture to suggest that nachaniya is a useful paradigm for theorizing the nexus at which Indo-Jamaican archives and queers of indenture have been theorized as \u2018nothing to see\u2019.","creator":["Suzanne C. Persard"],"datePublished":"2022-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48676207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26341999"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4d9e232-ef69-306d-b875-e2d9ec87f383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48676207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jofstudindentleg"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Indentureship and Its Legacies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Archives in drag","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48676207","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":6894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Performing nachaniya<\/em> towards a queer theory of indenture"} +{"abstract":"ABSTRACT. 2014 marked the centenary of the publication of M\u00e1rio de S\u00e1-Carneiro's novel A Confiss\u00e3o de L\u00facio, a text defined by its complex articulations of sexuality, jealousy and madness. While traditional analyses of the text underplayed the importance of sexuality and eroticism to the plot, more recent readings have revisited the novel to engage with the latent sexual tension between the novel's male protagonists. S\u00e1-Carneiro's use of sexuality and gender as articulated through his two female characters, however, remains overlooked. This study explores the radical possibilities of these intriguing characters, using Judith Butler's poststructuralist theorization of gender and sexual categories to provide a starting point for the development of new perspectives on S\u00e1-Carneiro's classic text. KEYWORDS. Portugal, S\u00e1-Carneiro, modernism, gender, sexuality, post structuralism","creator":["Eleanor K. Jones"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/portstudies.32.1.0062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02675315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608650135"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235051"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef74b9dc-5433-350a-8465-226cc660c952"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/portstudies.32.1.0062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"portstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Portuguese Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Undone Anatomies: Femininity, Performativity and Parody in M\u00e1rio de S\u00e1-Carneiro's A Confiss\u00e3o de L\u00facio<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/portstudies.32.1.0062","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":4458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99277,99380]],"Locations in B":[[12427,12530]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Neste artigo, analisamos o movimento #elen\u00e3o e suas reverbera\u00e7\u00f5es em contexto franc\u00eas. Num movimento que ganhou repercuss\u00e3o transnacional, mulheres brasileiras organizadas por diferentes l\u00f3gicas de opress\u00e3o mostram ag\u00eancia pol\u00edtica pelo uso das redes sociais digitais e, especificamente, de hashtags. De inspira\u00e7\u00e3o etnogr\u00e1fica, partiu-se de observa\u00e7\u00f5es participantes da autora e autor nas manifesta\u00e7\u00f5es que aconteceram na cidade de Paris, na Fran\u00e7a, no per\u00edodo das elei\u00e7\u00f5es de 2018, no Brasil, mas tamb\u00e9m de entrevistas com as organizadoras locais dos eventos. Mobilizando como operador anal\u00edtico o conceito de political agency, ou capacidade de agir politicamente, segundo Judith Butler, argumentamos que este movimento, iniciado pelas mulheres, foi um elemento unificador de outras minorias pol\u00edticas, como negros e LGBT+, contra o avan\u00e7o do \u201cneofascismo\u201d e retrocessos no campo dos direitos humanos. In this article, we analyze the movement #NotHim and its repercussions in the French context. In a movement of transnational repercussion, brazilian women organized by different logics of oppression show political agency through the use of digital social networks and, specifically, hashtags. Inspired by ethnography, we started with participant observations by the author and author in the demonstrations that took place in the city of Paris, France, during the 2018 election period in Brazil, but also of interviews with local event organizers. Mobilizing as an analytical operator the concept of political agency, according to Judith Butler, we argue that this movement, initiated by women, was a unifying element of other political minorities, such as blacks and LGBT +, against the advance of the \u201cneo-fascism\u201d and setbacks in the field of human rights.","creator":["Larissa Pel\u00facio","Diego Paz"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0d7361a-9816-36c7-b0c3-de2ef131c2c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26965156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"3","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"#paslui","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26965156","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"feminismos brasileiros no hex\u00e1gono europeu"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carmem Silvia da Fonseca Kummer Liblik"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.2.653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b38450d-93a5-3383-afe4-0a686c9ab832"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/estufemi.24.2.653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"656","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A contrassexualidade como supera\u00e7\u00e3o das dicotomias de g\u00eanero e sexo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/estufemi.24.2.653","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":2322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Helga Kotthoff"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14614456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41383954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7782339c-2068-3284-97d0-f131a78b3039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24048410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discoursestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24048410","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":1139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul G. Woodford"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17193a44-592f-39da-9075-c3d66045daa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Music, Reason, Democracy, and the Construction of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333611","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"We argue for the importance of adequately distinguishing between the concepts of sex, gender, and sexual orientation. We review the literature across disciplines to suggest ways that political scientists might benefit by taking into account important biological distinctions in addition to cultural factors regarding sex, gender, and sexuality in their research. We clarify the distinction between these concepts in an effort to help reduce discrimination and defuse misconceptions, stereotypes, and imposed social roles. We believe that it would be fruitful for us as a discipline to better communicate this research to the wider public in the hope that public opinion and elite discourse will shift in a more tolerant and positive direction as a result.","creator":["Rose McDermott","Peter K. Hatemi"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72fb5888-70fa-3ea8-a461-7ca4f6c1e218"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Distinguishing Sex and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984490","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christopher Schmidt"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5f8b6e6-62f6-3c09-b6e3-a2bfd20aabd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25195169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Waste-Management Poetics of Kenneth Goldsmith","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195169","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["George Mariscal"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01cc3e07-cc04-3d44-a72d-2bc765b3d470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In the Wake of the Gulf War: Untying the Yellow Ribbon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354309","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender has become a major conceptual tool for understanding the evolving HIV pandemic globally. As such, it has provided a powerful way to see the structure of relations between men and women as central to various epidemics, and added weight to our understanding of HIV infection as not simply an individual experience of disease. Yet, as a concept, gender has its blind spots. This paper argues that there are four issues central to our understanding of how the HIV pandemic moves and develops that are not necessarily best understood through an analysis that uses gender alone, namely: women's vulnerability, men's culpability, young people's sexual interests and marginalised sexual cultures. The paper proposes using sexuality as a framework for analysing these issues and seeks to utilise developments in critical sexuality research to add to gender as a way to increase the capacity to respond to the HIV\/AIDS crisis. \/\/\/ La sexo-sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 est devenue un outil conceptuel majeur pour saisir l'\u00e9volution de la pand\u00e9mie de SIDA. Elle a permis de comprendre que la structure des relations hommes-femmes est centrale dans les diff\u00e9rentes \u00e9pid\u00e9mies et a \u00e9tay\u00e9 notre compr\u00e9hension de l'infection \u00e0 VIH comme une exp\u00e9rience de la maladie qui n'est pas simplement individuelle. La sexo-sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 comme concept a pourtant ses lacunes. D'apr\u00e8s cet article, quatre questions sont centrales pour savoir comment la pand\u00e9mie de SIDA se d\u00e9veloppe, mais ne sont pas n\u00e9cessairement mieux comprises avec une analyse utilisant seulement la sexo-sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9. Ces questions sont: la vuln\u00e9rabilit\u00e9 des femmes, la culpabilit\u00e9 des hommes, les int\u00e9r\u00eats sexuels des jeunes et les cultures sexuelles marginalis\u00e9es. L'article propose d'utiliser la sexualit\u00e9 comme cadre pour les analyser et souhaite compl\u00e9ter la sexo-sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 par les conclusions des recherches sur la sexualit\u00e9 en vue d'augmenter la capacit\u00e9 de r\u00e9ponse \u00e0 la crise du VHI\/SIDA. \/\/\/ El g\u00e9nero se ha convertido en una de las principales herramientas conceptuales para comprender la pandemia del VIH a nivel global. Como tal, ofrece una manera poderosa de ver la estructura de las relaciones entre hombres y mujeres como un factor central en varias epidemias y refuerza nuestra comprensi\u00f3n de la infecci\u00f3n de VIH como algo m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la experiencia individual de la enfermedad. Sin embargo, como concepto, el g\u00e9nero tiene su lado ciego. En este art\u00edculo se plantea que hay cuatro temas que son centrales a nuestra comprensi\u00f3n del movimiento y el desarrollo de la pandemia de VIH, los cuales no necesariamente se entienden mejor mediante un an\u00e1lisis que usa solamente el g\u00e9nero. Ellos son: la vulnerabilidad de las mujeres, la culpabilidad de los hombres, los intereses sexuales de los j\u00f3venes y las culturas sexuales marginadas. Se plantea usar la sexualidad como marco conceptual para analizar estos temas y pretende aumentar la capacidad de responder a la crisis del VIH\/SIDA agregando al g\u00e9nero las novedades en la investigaci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica sobre la sexualidad.","creator":["Gary W. Dowsett"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3776042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09688080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51091171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233050"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61ac5f3c-1541-3c77-96f3-0a1b6538e49b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3776042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reprhealmatt"}],"isPartOf":"Reproductive Health Matters","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Population Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some Considerations on Sexuality and Gender in the Context of AIDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3776042","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Maxine L. Montgomery"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce4a13d6-b5db-3819-abfa-69dd67b43981"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"DON'T LOOK B(L)ACK: SPECTATORSHIP AND TONI MORRISON'S \"TAR BABY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325665","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":5694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo examina la construcci\u00f3n diaria de una identidad queer por un joven madrile\u00f1o del siglo de las luces, Sebasti\u00e1n Leirado, en el contexto de enfermedad ven\u00e9rea y c\u00f3digos sexuales. Due\u00f1o de una taberna de d\u00eda, Sebasti\u00e1n se convert\u00eda cada noche en una dama del teatro, representando roles femeninos protag\u00f3nicos en escenificaciones dram\u00e1ticas populares y pase\u00e1ndose por las calles urbanas en garbo femenino. En efecto, Sebasti\u00e1n tan exitosamente representaba varios roles de g\u00e9nero en su vida diaria que testigos en el caso de sodom\u00eda tratado contra \u00e9l en 1769 interpretaban su g\u00e9nero en maneras totalmente confusas. Algunos cre\u00edan que era un hombre que se pasaba por mujer, otros argumentaban que era una mujer pretendiendo ser hombre, finalmente otros m\u00e1s dec\u00edan que era hermafrodita. En su ofuscaci\u00f3n sexual, Sebasti\u00e1n demostraba una individualidad queer ambivalente que retaba los c\u00f3digos de g\u00e9nero inflexibles que predominaban durante la ilustraci\u00f3n. La producci\u00f3n diaria de esta individualidad queer, sin embargo, estaba basada en una ingeniosa reinterpretaci\u00f3n de las expectativas de g\u00e9nero que informaban la enfermedad sifil\u00edtica que lo atosigaba. As\u00ed, Sebasti\u00e1n lograba trasformar una enfermedad normalmente problem\u00e1tica en una herramienta de resistencia pronta a construir una identidad ambivalente que lo ayudar\u00eda a realizar sus objetivos personales.","creator":["CRISTIAN BERCO","STEPHANIE FINK DEBACKER"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0412bfb-0fbc-3937-b3f1-0bcbb299060e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23055666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queerness, Syphilis, and Enlightenment in Eighteenth Century Madrid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055666","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explicates Foucault's conception of experience and defends it as an important theoretical resource for feminist theory. It analyzes Linda Alcoff's devastating critique of Foucault's account of sexuality and her reasons for advocating phenomenology as a more viable alternative. I agree with her that a philosophically sophisticated understanding of experience must remain central for feminist theory, but I demonstrate that her critique of Foucault is based on a mistaken view of his philosophical position as well as on a problematic understanding of phenomenology.","creator":["JOHANNA OKSALA"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40a45da2-ef7a-31a8-8a62-293b71245e7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23016689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sexual Experience: Foucault, Phenomenology, and Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23016689","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7385,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485422,485501]],"Locations in B":[[30018,30097]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines intersectionl praxis via a focus on what constitutes relevant axes of difference. The author argues that a discussion of relevance should focus on two important issues: (1) which categories are of analytic importance and (2) those categories that activists consider relevant. This approach allows for activist debates over the most important social divisions in society while establishing some minimal number of axes that must be included to qualify activism as intersectional. In the Uruguayan case, gender and class constitute minimally important axes of difference; however, race and, less centrally, sexuality and ability constitute central points of debate.","creator":["Erica Townsend-Bell"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41058333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bf0d279-4b36-3583-897b-ed83c1a0074d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41058333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What is Relevance? Defining Intersectional Praxis in Uruguay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41058333","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":10690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andy Crockett"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07350198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"449be3ce-5319-355f-a891-88c5369cb17b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetoricreview"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gorgias's Encomium of Helen: Violent Rhetoric or Radical Feminism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465780","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9207,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122097,122714]],"Locations in B":[[24308,24925]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pete Sigal"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eebbb0e3-d1e3-3d35-9d6f-d2dc525c0e10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The Politicization of Pederasty among the Colonial Yucatecan Maya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704486","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11532,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[497254,497354]],"Locations in B":[[56550,56651]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este estudio intenta esquematizar las varias manifestaciones del deseo, pr\u00e1ctica e identidad homosexual dentro de la sociedad mexicana y las varias influencias que las moldean en las obras po\u00e9ticas Poes\u00eda teatro (1960) y Digo lo que amo (1976) del escritor sonorense Abigael Boh\u00f3rquez. Se estudian, espec\u00edficamente, las representaciones de tales conceptos o im\u00e1genes como el amor, el eroticismo, y la identidad personal dentro de un contexto \"queer\" y esa posici\u00f3n en t\u00e9rminos sociales e hist\u00f3ricos. \/ This article attempts to outline the different manifestations of homosexual desire, practice, and identity within Mexican society and the different aspects under which these take form in the poetic works Poes\u00eda y teatro (1960) and Digo lo que amo (1976) by the Sonoran writer Abigael Boh\u00f3rquez. It analyzes, specifically, the representations of concepts or images such as love, eroticism, and personal identity within a \"queer\" context and its position in social and historical terms.","creator":["Abigael Boh\u00f3rquez","Andrew M. Gordus"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1051945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07429797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45913592"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12630145-ac22-381f-b1d2-016a44f271ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1051945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mexistudestumexi"}],"isPartOf":"Mexican Studies\/Estudios Mexicanos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Silence and Celebration: Queer Markings in the Poetry of Abigael Boh\u00f3rquez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1051945","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7753,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[307212,307267],[401728,402008]],"Locations in B":[[22873,22937],[34782,35062]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mary Jane Treacy"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acb72599-9e72-35d9-8e7f-eb13cbfddf30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cherchez les Femmes: Looking for Lesbians in Spanish Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195474","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2115,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"At the turn of the twentieth century, biologists such as Oscar Riddle, Thomas Hunt Morgan, Frank Lillie, and Richard Goldschmidt all puzzled over the question of sexual difference, the distinction between male and female. They all offered competing explanations for the biological cause of this difference, and engaged in a fierce debate over the primacy of their respective theories. Riddle propounded a metabolic theory of sex dating from the late-nineteenth century suggesting that metabolism lay at the heart of sexual difference. Thomas Hunt Morgan insisted on the priority of chromosomes, Frank Lillie emphasized the importance of hormones, while Richard Goldschmidt supported a mixed model involving both chromosomes and hormones. In this paper, I will illustrate how the older metabolic theory of sex was displaced when those who argued for the relatively newer theories of chromosomes and hormones gradually formed an alliance that accommodated each other and excluded the metabolic theory of sex. By doing so, proponents of chromosomes and hormones established their authority over the question of sexual difference as they laid the foundations for the new disciplines of genetics and endocrinology. Their debate raised urgent questions about what constituted sexual difference, and how scientists envisioned the plasticity and controllability of this difference. These theories also had immediate political and cultural consequences at the turn of the twentieth century, especially for the eugenic and feminist movements, both of which were heavily invested in knowledge of sex and its determination, ascertainment, and command.","creator":["NATHAN Q. HA"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41488415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f129fab9-2789-336b-99c7-fa021f358614"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41488415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Riddle of Sex: Biological Theories of Sexual Difference in the Early Twentieth-Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41488415","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":17237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Arthur"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87b12bf9-b7a1-3373-a3a5-9c68f8fe6fb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"534","pageStart":"532","pagination":"pp. 532-534","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647212","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within recent feminist philosophy, controversy has developed over the desirability, and indeed, the possibility of defining the central terms of its analysis-\"woman,\" \"femininity,\" etc. The controversy results largely from the undertheorization of the notion of definition; feminists have uncritically adopted an Aristotelian treatment of definition as entailing metaphysical, rather than merely linguistic, commitments. A \"discursive\" approach to definition, by contrast, allows us to define our terms, while avoiding the dangers of essentialism and universalism.","creator":["Victoria Barker"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"489b0df8-f90b-3538-9448-73798fee5d52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Definition and the Question of \"Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810477","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14833,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[94432,94562],[477001,477083]],"Locations in B":[[87337,87462],[90408,90492]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Donald S. Moore"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f68a4fd-2b46-3b03-9116-b6b88a32545f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subaltern Struggles and the Politics of Place: Remapping Resistance in Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656594","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":17430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[511000,511095]],"Locations in B":[[112589,112684]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article critically juxtaposes Donna Haraway's concept of the feminist cyborg with the remote controlled female cyborg figure in the 1984 German science fiction short story \"Biocon\" by Reinmar Cunis. It shows how both authors investigate their current societies' adaptation of the cyborg as a figure through which female sexuality and the disavowed fears and desires around self-engendering technology can be \"both exorcized and reaffirmed\" (Huyssen 81). In their writings, Cunis and Haraway demonstrate the continued sway that this structural paradox holds. Both are deeply committed to analyzing and representing the inequalities, anxieties, contradictions and potential of mass culture in the 1980s. Rereading Haraway's influential \"Manifesto for Cyborgs\" through Cunis's German SF-scenario helps to highlight the different role recent national history plays in both cyborg manifestations. It shows how, all attempts to the contrary, postwar German society employs the production of hybrids and the conceptualization of hybridity as a means to purification.","creator":["Sunka Simon"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Woman as Biocontrol: Rereading Donna Haraway through German Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688296","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9236,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523934,524001]],"Locations in B":[[58938,59005]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"One of the initiatives used by the Singapore government to fortify its own position has been to promote Malay culture. This has been done by strengthening the Malays' attachment to their indigenous culture and also by introducing the customs and practices of the racial minority to non-Malays. This article traces the genealogy of cultural engineering by the state from the 1960s to the present, and argues that the persistence of late capitalism has retained the material dialectic between the political and the popular. Focusing on the local practices of the gamelan and angklung-kulintang, the article explores paradoxes in the way these musical genres are being promoted today by a new generation of non-Malay descendants, who have also become the cultural sculptors of Malay identity for international spectacles.","creator":["Jun Zubillaga-Pow"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44f130cc-ca25-3fbe-97c2-f038031b3371"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23752504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The dialectics of capitalist reclamation, or traditional Malay music in fin de si\u00e8cle Singapore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752504","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pharmaceutical sex hormones are hybrid, complex objects, which cut across political and sexual economies and are located at the boundary between sex and gender. In pharmaceutical form, they confer sexual characteristics on the body, in part exogenously. It follows that their clinical use is socially regulated according to the dominant norms of gender. Through an ethnographic analysis of the various contexts of hormone use observed in Bahia, Brazil, this article shows that sexual dualism is the product of biomedical practices which regulate the circulation of hormones. The meaning of the locally adopted term \u201chorm\u00f4nio\u201d is not fully captured by that of \u201chormones\u201d. The use made in Brazil of the singular term \u201chorm\u00f4nio\u201d confers upon it a fluid and homogenous quality. In the Brazilian context, hormones are understood as a kind of substance that can circulate between bodies. This conceptualisation of hormones as a substance has implications for the ontological status of the body and reveals the relative plasticity of the sex\/gender relation.","creator":["Emilia Sanabria","Regan Kramer"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238682","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1020173364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7b35457-de39-3978-b6f0-c224a674a126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26238682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clioeng"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Women, Gender, History","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sexing hormones and materializing gender in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26238682","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Memories of violence for \u201cstreet girls\u201d (referred to as VMC girls in this article) are stored in multiple places across geographic scales. From particular private places to blood-stained street corners, VMC girls' movements throughout the city are haunted by place-memories of violence. Based on findings from youth-driven participatory action research (YPAR) with VMC girls in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia, this article re-presents violence through their eyes by drawing from participatory writing workshops, place-perception interviews, street-corner cartography, and textual reflections in fieldnotes on violence in the socio-spatial context of VMC girls. The inclusion of VMC girls' voices through qualitative data excerpts takes the reader on a journey through these young people's minds, voices and visions of Bogot\u00e1. Through a description of how VMC girls exercised their \u201cright to the city\u201d during the project, the article discusses strategies adapted by the YPAR team to overcome experiences of violence and to re-envision the urban spaces in which violence occurred. These strategies include artistic expression and different acts of \u201cspeaking out\u201d in which VMC girls alter spaces in order to erase painful place-memories of violence and construct an alternative geo-narrative of the city.","creator":["Amy E. Ritterbusch"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.23.1.0064","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"52938983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215589"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6657c53-b2ae-3310-a5ab-81da32137265"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.23.1.0064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chilyoutenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Children, Youth and Environments","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Cincinnati","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Street Girls to \u201cVMC\u201d Girls: Empowering Strategies for Representing and Overcoming Place-Memories of Violence in Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7721\/chilyoutenvi.23.1.0064","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13754,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464458,464780]],"Locations in B":[[13430,14326]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bette London"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guerrilla in Petticoats or Sans-Culotte? Virginia Woolf and the Future of Feminist Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465188","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11439,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[153557,153688],[237782,237896]],"Locations in B":[[26624,26755],[27663,27777]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on bodily writing as a performance of virtue in premodern China. Bodily writing includes inscribing text on the body (tattooing), mutilation, and blood-letter-writing. These \"bloody\" acts were originally associated with the lowly or marginalized class but coopted by the mainstream society as a means of performing virtue. Virtuous bodily writing is gender-specific, especially as displayed on stage: while male writing surpasses the body, a split has to be inserted between the female body and text to ensure pleasure. The article further addresses the issue of cultural translation in the transnational context, with an analysis of the controversial tattooing scene in Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior.","creator":["Daphne P. Lei"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25488259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2fb274e-981e-32aa-b288-d024ed9fdae9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25488259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Blood-Stained Text in Translation: Tattooing, Bodily Writing, and Performance of Chinese Virtue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25488259","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":12617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Against a backdrop of increasingly vocal assertions that Germany's growing Muslim immigrant population is resisting integration through the development of a \"parallel society\" this article demonstrates how German social policy literature, the news media, and cinema converge to naturalize assumptions of cultural difference through a mythological process that generates polarized stereotypes of the cultural practices of Turks in Germany. This discourse freezes the Muslim woman as an oppressed other to the liberated Western woman and generates scripts for the liberation of Turkish women that limit their options by posing multiculturalism, hybridity, or humanistic individualism as the only models for integration. This discourse reinforces the misrecognition of practicing Muslims who are involved in Islamic groups or wear headscarves. I propose an alternative approach that focuses on the practical effects of competing discourses by tracing out ethnographically the micropolitics of everyday life to foreground the multiple positionings and identities that immigrants and their families occupy and to identify how they negotiate the contradictions and inconsistencies they experience.","creator":["Katherine Pratt Ewing"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2f2f9e3-b9fc-3bf1-93c2-dd3a72a4b3ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Cinema and Social Work: Diasporic Turkish Women and the (Dis)Pleasures of Hybridity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651605","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":14742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dina Stein"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25470235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216682"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56634092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213347"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f390a3cd-cd73-3ecb-8747-2d9740e70138"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25470235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewiquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Jewish Quarterly Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Collapsing Structures: Discourse and the Destruction of the Temple in the Babylonian Talmud","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25470235","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":13165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stanley Aronowitz"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward Radicalism: The Death and Rebirth of the American Left","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466908","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ace3180-beab-3c1d-a9a9-6cb4a1189b9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45177701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177701","volumeNumber":"505","wordCount":1753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Peut-on continuer \u00e0 parler de \u00ab femmes travesties \u00bb sans questionner la construction \u00e0 la fois h\u00e9t\u00e9rocentr\u00e9e et masculine du travestisme, \u00ab perversion-inversion \u00bb essentiellement vestimentaire et qui n'a de sens que dans un r\u00e9gime h\u00e9t\u00e9ro-sexuel binaire \u00e9tablissant une continuit\u00e9 r\u00e9gl\u00e9e entre sexe et genre, entre le sexe biologique, le masculin et le f\u00e9minin? En proposant un aper\u00e7u des diff\u00e9rents mod\u00e8les interpr\u00e9tatifs du travestisme: le mod\u00e8le m\u00e9dical (les sexologues de la fin du XIXe et du XXe), le mod\u00e8le f\u00e9ministe \u00e9mancipationniste (Beauvoir), le mod\u00e8le queer de la performativit\u00e9 (Butler), l'article retrace la g\u00e9n\u00e9alogie des exclusions, des fronti\u00e8res et des d\u00e9limitations oublieuses qu'entra\u00eene une fid\u00e9lit\u00e9 aux d\u00e9finitions disciplinaires ou id\u00e9ologiques du \u00ab travestisme \u00bb des femmes. Parler de \u00ab pratiques transgenres \u00bb permettrait d'embrasser un plus grand nombre d'expressions de genres et de r\u00e9\u00e9valuer la pseudo exceptionnalit\u00e9 du \u00ab travestisme \u00bb. Can we still use the category of \u00ab female travestite \u00bb, without questioning the heterocentric and androcentric frameworks within which this category has been constructed? This paper questions this contradictory model of the \u00ab female travestite \u00bb and the ways in which (being a short of \u00ab perversion-inversion \u00bb which is primarily considered as a matter of clothing) it comes to fulfill the normative continuity between sex and gender, and to re-establish the sexual biological binarism of femininity and masculinity within the social and political spheres. A brief account of the different interpretative models on transvestism: the medical model (end of XIXth and begining of XXth century sexology), the feminist emancipatory model (Beauvoir) and the queer performative model (Butler), this paper traces the genealogy of exclusions, frontiers constructed by a certain disciplinary account of sexual and gender practices. Using a concept such as \u00ab transgender practices \u00bb would help to embrace a great number of gender expressions and could help to reevaluate historical cases of travestism.","creator":["Marie-H\u00e9l\u00e8ne BOURCIER"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e895210-368c-3362-9d92-d9f05c52dd31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"10","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Des \u00ab femmes travesties \u00bb aux pratiques transgenres: repenser et queeriser le travestissement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405322","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6693,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[39588,39660]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Early Christians largely understood their differences in terms of factionalism, articulated in terms of discourses of orthodoxy and heresy. Contemporary historiography has troubled those discourses with talk of the \"diversity\" or \"variety\" of early Christianities, but without entirely displacing either the logic or the functions of the orthodoxy-heresy bifurcation. This essay examines the limits of current historiographical modes of treating early Christian diversity, and suggests an understanding of religion and methods of analysis usable for a history of difference beyond orthodoxy and heresy.","creator":["Karen L. King"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23555780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2bee1d7-3399-39f6-b701-b812704e8e92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23555780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"BRILL","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Factions, Variety, Diversity, Multiplicity: Representing Early Christian Differences for the 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23555780","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Immigration, international conflicts, and world debt have contributed to rising unease over the power relations created by burgeoning globalization. Absent from much of the political rhetoric surrounding global issues is a role for the social value of hospitality. Political theorists and philosophers such as the late Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas have reinvigarated interest in hospitality. This article suggests that the work of feminist theorists such as Seyla Benhabib, Margaret Urban Walker, and Iris Marion Young on issues of identity, inclusiveness, reciprocity, forgiveness, and embodiment can contribute to an alternative theory of hospitality. Consistent with feminist care ethics, the theory of feminist hospitality proposed here integrates a moral disposition toward the Other with an open epistemological stance, funded by a metaphysical conceptualization of connected identity. Granting the historical gender division of labor associated with hospitality work, the hospitality offered integrates a healthy notion of self-care and is critical of oppressive power dynamics. Ultimately, this article proposes a feminist hospitality that reflects a performative extension of care ethics by pursuing stronger social bonds, as well as fostering inclusive and nonhierarchical host\/guest relations.","creator":["Maurice Hamington"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e852a2c0-a870-3594-afbd-48bc80e0bb4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40835342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Theory of Feminist Hospitality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835342","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7854,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[523982,524123]],"Locations in B":[[47710,47846]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alice Domurat Dreger"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Doubtful Sex: The Fate of the Hermaphrodite in Victorian Medicine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828713","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":13523,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[357668,358040]],"Locations in B":[[7520,7892]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through a close reading of Judith Butler's 1989 essay on Merleau-Ponty's \"theory\" of sexuality as well as the texts her argument hinges on, this paper addresses the debate about the relation between language and the living, gendered body as it is understood by defenders of poststructural theory on the one hand, and different interpretations of Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology on the other. I claim that Butler, in her criticism of the French philosopher's analysis of the famous \"Schneider case,\" does not take its wider context into account: either the case study that Merleau-Ponty's discussion is based upon, or its role in his phenomenology of perception. Yet, although Butler does point out certain blind spots in his descriptions regarding the gendered body, it is in the light of her questioning that the true radicality of Merleau-Ponty's ideas can be revealed. A further task for feminist phenomenology should be a thorough assessment of his philosophy from this angle, once the most obvious misunderstandings have been put to the side.","creator":["ANNA PETRONELLA FOULTIER"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c60516a0-fd61-32ba-b086-bdd2461b2587"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"783","pageStart":"767","pagination":"pp. 767-783","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Language and the Gendered Body: Butler's Early Reading of Merleau-Ponty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542085","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8407,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524123]],"Locations in B":[[47650,47755]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay deals with a few of the different configurations of Spanish feminist discourse represented in the theoretical and activist practices of transfeminism, which is in turn revealed to be in constant dialogue with and opposition to feminism of an institutional bent. The essay also seeks to understand how transfeminism is integrated into public space, not without opposition within the movement itself, through the appropriation and conquering of the symbolic production generated by technologies of institutional power. To this end, the article takes as its central case the debate series La internacional cuir, held in 2011 at Madrid's Reina Sof\u00eda Museum, and analyzes the discursive responses from different spaces of a new online feminist praxis that conceptualizes itself as transfeminist.","creator":["Sonia N\u00fa\u00f1ez Puente"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3ad66a1-480a-3f66-83c0-0b03c44d2700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44508126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Activism Trouble: Transfeminism and Institutional Feminism in Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44508126","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lara Cox"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.74.2012.0152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0eed0afd-e8d2-33b9-9f0a-81c62c4cf0f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.74.2012.0152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"French Studies: Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.74.2012.0152","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":5472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"O objetivo deste texto \u00e9 analisar como as representa\u00e7\u00f5es e as autorrepresenta\u00e7\u00f5es da cultura \u00e1rabe se projetam em eventos performativos particulares como s\u00e3o as recria\u00e7\u00f5es hist\u00f3ricas de cariz crist\u00e3o no mundo ocidental, nomeadamente em Portugal e Espanha. Estas imagens ser\u00e3o tamb\u00e9m observadas na cria\u00e7\u00e3o de espa\u00e7os e de projetos performativos dedicados sobretudo \u00e0 dan\u00e7a e \u00e0 m\u00fasica de tra\u00e7os \u00e1rabes ou orientais. Procura-se explicitar modos de configura\u00e7\u00e3o deste outro mundo que s\u00e3o constru\u00eddos por meio de formas de express\u00e3o performativa emergentes na atualidade europeia como exerc\u00edcios nost\u00e1lgicos de objetifica\u00e7\u00e3o do passado da Velha Europa crist\u00e3. Estas podem ser melhor entendidas como reperformances. O texto suporta-se na pesquisa etnogr\u00e1fica em diversos eventos de recria\u00e7\u00e3o hist\u00f3rica, nas interlocu\u00e7\u00f5es com performers e na etnografia destes espa\u00e7os e projetos dedicados a estilos performativos \u00e1rabes, supostamente tradicionais. The aim of this text is to analyze how the narrative self-portraits and representations of Arab culture protrude in certain performative events: historical re-enactment Christian oriented in the Western world, in particular in Portugal and Spain. These images will be observed also in the creation of spaces and projects dedicated mainly to performances, dance and music with Arab or Oriental focus. We seek to clarify how configuration modes of this Other world are made through performative forms of expression that emerge as nostalgic exercises or objectifications of the past of the old Christian Europe. They might be better understood as reperformances. The text is supported in ethnographic research with several performers, in various events of historical re-creation, and in spaces and projects dedicated to arab supposedly traditional performative styles.","creator":["Paulo Raposo"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43854896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00347701"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54031079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f88c811-ba49-3b1c-a829-2841628a31f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43854896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviantr"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Antropologia","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Revista de Antropologia","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Performando Orientalismos: do Har\u00e9m \u00e0 Primavera \u00c1rabe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43854896","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":14133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article makes a series of interlocking arguments regarding the way in which gender and dress contributed to the meaning of the terrorist act in revolutionary Russia. It argues that because \"populist political terrorism\" entailed political assassination targeting specific individuals, the individual attributes of both terrorist and victim acquired symbolic significance. The terrorist act was troped as a duel that staged a contest of superior and legitimate violence \u2013 and thus of sovereignty \u2013 between the regime and its opponents (representing \"the will of the people\"). Women were prominent participants in terrorist acts throughout the revolutionary period, and the relative novelty of female political violence enhanced the spectacularity of that violence. Female terrorists, however, opted for an anti-spectacular spectacularity, or renunciatory display, that was rendered by a means available to all women: through their dress. While period memoirs and literature, as well as the historiography, are equally enthralled by the self-renunciation of revolutionary women and characterize it as a moral\/ideological stance, the female terrorists' \"great renunciation\" in fact became the dominant trope in the (self) representation of the female Russian revolutionary terrorist. Textual reencodings of the relationship between dress and female gender in discourses of different orders, including the self-writing of female terrorists, find in \"the great renunciation\" the womens' right to act politically \u2013 \"to kill and die\" in public \u2013 as well as the moral legitimacy of their act.","creator":["Lynn Patyk"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41052427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"562432341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235844"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1452ccd-d40b-3846-b8e8-24a69d52c370"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41052427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jahrgescoste"}],"isPartOf":"Jahrb\u00fccher f\u00fcr Geschichte Osteuropas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dressed to Kill and Die: Russian Revolutionary Terrorism, Gender, and Dress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41052427","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":9643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tracy Fessenden"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25154963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358318"},{"name":"oclc","value":"318540786"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-202593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82b8a803-2989-36c1-9593-9015deec9664"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25154963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"uscathhist"}],"isPartOf":"U.S. Catholic Historian","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Catholic University of America Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"F. Scott Fitzgerald's Catholic Closet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25154963","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11424,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[59147,59211]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article takes issue vigorously with what it argues are the disempowering effects of Judith Butler's more recent work, for transgendered people in particular and accordingly for the queer movement in general. In so doing it contests the way in which the reception of Butler's work in France has been mediated by a transphobic psychoanalytic establishment and attacks Butler for playing along with their self-interested political agenda by retelling, in Paris, for their ears, an anecdote of a savoury encounter with a transgendered interlocutor in a subcultural queer space in San Francisco.","creator":["Marie-H\u00e9l\u00e8ne Bourcier","Oliver Davis"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da57e0a3-9efc-3581-8399-77edf108dbbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"'F***' the Politics of Disempowerment in the Second Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263836","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Richard Collier"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1410693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1410693","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyses two cases brought by aboriginal Australians against the Australian government acquisition of long leases of their land under the Northern Territory National Emergency Response Act 2007. These leases are conspicuous, particularly in that the government always made it clear that it would not take up its right to exclusive possession of the leased land, and has not done so. The leases have not been used to evict residents, as some feared; nor to pursue mining or agricultural activity. Socio-legal theories centered on the right to exclusive possession cannot account for these leases. The article explores the use of property under the 2007 Act, the legal geographies of the areas subject to the leases and the political potency of property beyond exclusive possession, and suggests an understanding of property as a spatially contingent relation of belonging. Specifically, the article argues that property is productive of temporal and spatial order and so can function as a tool of governance.","creator":["Sarah Keenan"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a569849e-db1c-3b43-825c-98a200fb04f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41857483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"493","pageStart":"464","pagination":"pp. 464-493","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Property as Governance: Time, Space and Belonging in Australia's Northern Territory Intervention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857483","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":15565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper responds to the sense of \"crisis\" or \"trouble\" that dominates contemporary feminist debate about the categories of sex and gender. It argues that this perception of crisis has emerged from a fundamental confusion of theoretical and political issues concerning the implications of the sex\/gender debate for political representation and agency. It explores the sense in which this confusion is manifest in a debate between Seyla Benhabib and Judith Butler.","creator":["Fiona Webster"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"262ce030-151a-3c4a-a846-053b790844be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Politics of Sex and Gender: Benhabib and Butler Debate Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810509","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11101,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43764,43877]],"Locations in B":[[821,934]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jane O'Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41957384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41957384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Geologist or Geisha? Disorienting Body and Landscape in \"Japanese Story\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41957384","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6625,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[432966,433041],[435540,435893]],"Locations in B":[[11755,11830],[20388,20744]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nicholas L. Clarkson"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.27.2-3.0233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a6951ef-89cc-3282-89fa-098f7c5f9c51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.27.2-3.0233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Teaching Trans Students, Teaching Trans Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.27.2-3.0233","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robin May Schott"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6aa20c15-5adc-354c-ae14-335d0b1dfdd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810490","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":2632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Donna LeCourt"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2be964d-a119-334b-8136-58ea36de18c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performing Working-Class Identity in Composition: Toward a Pedagogy of Textual Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472187","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":11225,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124657]],"Locations in B":[[28100,28178]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mariselle Mel\u00e9ndez"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88943988-80eb-3bee-a8e6-6dc05169bb36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"46","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El perfil economico de la identidad racial en los \"Apuntes\" de las indias caciques del convento de Corpus Christi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530930","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay presents an argument for reading Paul Taylor's Big Bertha (in both its 1971 and 2005 castings) as a dramatization of Julia Kristeva's concepts of the semiotic and symbolic dispositions of language. What function does the figure of Bertha play in the dance? How can critics and audience members grapple with her multiple interpretive possibilities to reach a fuller understanding of Taylor's short, dark American fable? By detailing the relationship of modern dance to poetic language, the author illustrates how the use of certain literary critical and gender studies theories can contribute to a more nuanced understanding of social codes as they are both established and subverted in the same work of an\u2014especially when that art is manifested through the movement of actual human bodies.","creator":["KIRSTEN KASCHOCK"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41723090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd0b591e-e782-327f-ab62-beba99870811"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41723090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Big Bertha: Monster, Mirror, Machine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41723090","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11217,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[273974,274084],[275639,275794],[296984,297207],[311674,311862],[503324,503429]],"Locations in B":[[27951,28061],[30324,30479],[36856,37075],[61267,61455],[64039,64149]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df668ffc-bd7f-34d4-ab71-9cd7c7c4fb52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157327","volumeNumber":"498","wordCount":15504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlie Yi Zhang"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76c557f6-4deb-3b90-a4b2-69046372ec24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering the National Body of Contemporary China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.37.2.0001","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u00c0 travers l'ethnographie des concours de beaut\u00e9 organis\u00e9s dans une communaut\u00e9 native kakataibo (Amazonie p\u00e9ruvienne), cet article interroge d'un c\u00f4t\u00e9 l'exp\u00e9rience du f\u00e9minin que font aujourd'hui les jeunes filles kakataibo et de l'autre les rapports que le groupe entretient avec la population non-indig\u00e8ne de la r\u00e9gion. Par contraste avec les concours de beaut\u00e9 organis\u00e9s dans d'autres contextes autochtones, l'objectif du concours kakataibo n'est pas tant d'exposer et d'affirmer la diff\u00e9rence culturelle ou ethnique que de mettre en sc\u00e8ne la figure de la femme blanche transform\u00e9e en objet de d\u00e9sir. Cette performance peut \u00eatre analys\u00e9e \u00e0 partir de certaines transformations \u00e9troitement li\u00e9es \u00e0 la scolarisation, \u00e0 la construction du genre et, plus g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement, aux nouvelles politiques du corps, qui se sont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9es dans les villages am\u00e9rindiens au cours des derni\u00e8res d\u00e9cennies. En privil\u00e9giant une approche pragmatique et interactionniste, nous nous int\u00e9ressons dans un premier temps aux aspects spectaculaires et mim\u00e9tiques de l'\u00e9v\u00e9nement (r\u00e9p\u00e9titions, costumes, chor\u00e9graphie) pour passer ensuite \u00e0 l'analyse de la dimension performative de ce jeu singulier consistant \u00e0 \u00ab \u00eatre un autre \u00bb. Through an ethnography of beauty contests organized in a Kakataibo Native Community (Peruvian Amazon), this article examines on the one hand the young Kakataibo women's experience of femininity, and on the other hand, the relations of Kakataibo with the non-indigenous population of the region. In contrast to the beauty contests organized in other indigenous contexts which expose and affirm cultural difference or ethnicity, the Kakataibo version aims to stage the figure of the white woman transformed into an object of desire. This performance can be understood through the transformations that are taking place in Amerindian villages, and related closely to education, modes of gender construction and more generally to the new politics of the body. Privileging a pragmatic and interactionist approach, we initially focus on the spectacular and mimetic aspects of the event (training, costumes, choreography), and then proceed to examine the performative dimension of this specific play of being the Other. A trav\u00e9s de la etnograf\u00eda del concurso de belleza organizado en una comunidad nativa kakataibo (Amazonia Peruana), este art\u00edculo cuestiona por un lado la experiencia de lo femenino que tienen hoy en d\u00eda las j\u00f3venes kakataibos, y por otro las relaciones que el grupo mantiene con la poblaci\u00f3n no ind\u00edgena de la regi\u00f3n. A diferencia de los concursos de belleza organizados en otros contextos aut\u00f3ctonos, el objetivo del concurso kakataibo no es tanto de exponer y afirmar la diferencia cultural o \u00e9tnica, sino m\u00e1s bien de poner en escena la figura de la mujer blanca transformada en objeto de deseo. Esta performance puede ser interpretada a partir de ciertas transformaciones estrechamente ligadas con la escolarizaci\u00f3n, la construcci\u00f3n del g\u00e9nero y, m\u00e1s generalmente, con las nuevas pol\u00edticas del cuerpo que han tenido lugar en las \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas. Privilegiando un enfoque pragm\u00e1tico e interaccionista, se tratar\u00e1 en primer lugar de los aspectos espectacular y mim\u00e9tico del evento (ensayos, trajes, coreograf\u00eda), para pasar luego al an\u00e1lisis de la dimensi\u00f3n performativa de este singular juego a ser otro.","creator":["Magda Helena Dziubinska"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44387103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379174"},{"name":"oclc","value":"105851932, 85447168"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e23a145-f38a-3e1e-ac02-893a55b83afb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44387103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Journal de la Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des am\u00e9ricanistes","issueNumber":"1","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des Am\u00e9ricanistes","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Devenir reine kakataibo. Performance, s\u00e9duction et genre en Amazonie p\u00e9ruvienne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44387103","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":14062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Dennis J. Sumara","Brent Davis"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73b71495-bd6c-3c2d-b531-2b3e69d74519"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Enlarging the Space of the Possible: Complexity, Complicity, and Action-Research Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975255","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":6428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article both elaborates on and empirically supports Norman Denzin's thesis on the political aesthetics of interpretation. Through a reading of consumer reviews, I discuss both the image and the music of the contemporary pop star Avril Lavigne by combining analytic tools derived from dramaturgy and social semiotics. Specifically, I present consumer reviews of Avril Lavigne's public persona as interpretive acts that decode the practices of production, distribution, and consumption of her alleged subcultural authenticity. I discuss the importance of understanding interpretation as a practice of cultural resistance against the pervasive force of consumerist ideologies and hegemonic mass media discourses. In addition, I reflect on the usefulness of a symbolic interactionist approach to a cultural studies based on Peircean semiotics and Goffmanian dramaturgy.","creator":["Phillip Vannini"],"datePublished":"2004-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2004.27.1.47","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"078073f0-7ed6-3ca5-ae2a-d585c28f0c2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2004.27.1.47"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Meanings of a Star: Interpreting Music Fans' Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2004.27.1.47","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peggy Thompson"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43293971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Tennessee","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"I hope, you wou'd not offer violence to me\": The Trope of Insincere Resistance in Dryden's \"The Kind Keeper\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293971","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9443,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[144406,144496]],"Locations in B":[[1564,1660]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Amy L. Brandzel"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44475170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3506191d-7871-3b3a-b000-c6b3c462927d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44475170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Subjects of Survival: The Anti-Intersectional Routes of Breast Cancer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44475170","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The sparse scholarship on Jos\u00e9 Manuel Poveda's feminine heteronym, Alma Rubens, has emphasized the innovative style and racy content of his\/her twenty-four prose poems or poemetos. But the heteronymic process as it is revealed in Rubens's debut poem, \"Agua profunda y escondida\" and the three chronicles in which Poveda introduces and describes Rubens have not been closely analyzed. Because Rubens is imagined as a woman, as sexually androgynous, as object of Poveda's desire, and as the creator of a new poetry, heteronymic embodiment here affords an opportunity for creative expansion and it issues a challenge to stable notions of gender identity and artistic subjectivity.","creator":["Kathrin Theumer"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23609963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"babf1c42-1713-313c-9e30-3af76cfd94bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23609963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Case of Alma Rubens or the Trans-gendered Imagination in Jos\u00e9 Manuel Poveda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23609963","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":6166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jutta Eming"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87748bb8-d2c6-3f6a-978d-c31c0d7f003e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29734527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"555","pagination":"pp. 555-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"On Stage. Ritualized Emotions and Theatricality in Isolde's Trial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29734527","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":7009,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[15381,15450]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Robert F. Darcy"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c69ece0-fb89-31b0-addf-f232718b57c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Under My Hands . . . A Double Duty\": Printing and Pressing Marlowe's Hero and Leander","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339520","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":13634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines how the era between the world wars also produced conditions for a traumatization of gender. Judith Butler's concept of performative gender and Cathy Caruth's work on trauma provide the concepts needed to interrogate the psychological connections between gender and trauma. This connection also manifests itself physically, written on the body itself through illness or decline; the psychological becomes physical, negating any notion of a mind-body split. These relationships between gender and trauma, trauma and performative gender, and trauma and the body, are teased out through an examination of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1934 novel, \"Tender Is the Night\", Fitzgerald's most conspicuously modernist work. Frequently read as a parable of moral decline, \"Tender Is the Night\" shows how trauma disrupts gender performance and arises from it, exposing the artifice of gender in the postwar world.","creator":["Tiffany Joseph"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be028d78-8499-3ae4-91bb-60ad2a68e0dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4317010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Non-Combatant's Shell-Shock\": Trauma and Gender in F. Scott Fitzgerald's \"Tender Is the Night\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4317010","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article puts forward a queer interpretation of PBS\u2019s The Yellow Wallpaper (1989), adapted from Charlotte Perkins Gilman\u2019s canonical story. It is structured in three parts: an approach to the term queer, a reading of the queerness (and feminism) of Gilman\u2019s text and an analysis of the queer (and feminist) aspects of the film. The third part also responds to the only academic essay about PBS\u2019s production, by Janet Beer, which ignores the movie\u2019s queer character. This section discusses the queer treatment of topics\u2014the instability of identity, autoeroticism, lesbian tendencies, mental illness, women\u2019s solidarity, and gender and class inequalities\u2014while dialoguing with film critics such as Linda Hutcheon and Laura Mulvey. The queer use of formal resources\u2014light, shots, sound, music, symbolism and scene-motifs\u2014is also highlighted. My ultimate aim is to demonstrate that The Yellow Wallpaper is an innovative queer adaptation of Gilman\u2019s piece for a modern audience. Este art\u00edculo propone una interpretaci\u00f3n queer de The Yellow Wallpaper (1989), una adaptaci\u00f3n de PBS del relato can\u00f3nico de Gilman. Consta de tres partes: una aproximaci\u00f3n al t\u00e9rmino queer, una lectura queer (y feminista) del texto de Gilman y un an\u00e1lisis de los aspectos queer (y feministas) del film. La tercera parte tambi\u00e9n responde al \u00fanico ensayo acad\u00e9mico sobre dicha producci\u00f3n, escrito por Janet Beer, el cual omite el car\u00e1cter queer de la misma. Esta secci\u00f3n explora el tratamiento queer de los temas\u2014identidad inestable, autoerotismo, tendencias l\u00e9sbicas, enfermedades mentales, solidaridad entre mujeres y desigualdades de g\u00e9nero y clase\u2014a la vez que dialoga con cr\u00edticas de cine como Linda Hutcheon y Laura Mulvey. Se se\u00f1ala adem\u00e1s el uso queer de los recursos formales\u2014luz, planos, sonido, m\u00fasica, simbolismo y motivos esc\u00e9nicos. Mi objetivo principal es demostrar que The Yellow Wallpaper es una innovadora adaptaci\u00f3n queer de la obra de Gilman para un p\u00fablico moderno.","creator":["Carolina N\u00fa\u00f1ez-Puente"],"datePublished":"2019-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26732506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2db4a722-a71c-39a8-83f3-cf0d44b0833b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26732506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Queer Eye for Gilman\u2019s Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26732506","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8895,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124745]],"Locations in B":[[5568,5739]],"subTitle":"The Yellow Wallpaper<\/em>, a Film by PBS"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Erika T. Lin"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3595282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"833fba07-9aa6-38af-b4ff-aa0d5d99a216"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3595282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mona on the Phone: The Performative Body and Racial Identity in \"Mona in the Promised Land\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3595282","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study examines how colonial migrants appropriated the performative identity strategies of passing and mimicry to gain inclusion into the diverse imperial and national spaces of Britain, Europe and the dominions. Mimicry and passing were both creative liberational migrant strategies as well as responses to powerful constraints operating against colonial newcomers in the West. The first section investigates the methodology and manifestations of race passing and the metropolitan environment that fostered it. The second section explores how and why class mimicry was deployed by colonial and non-colonial racial migrants and the balance of epistemological distance and proximity necessary for its operation. The last section focuses on spatialized colonial mimicry of imperial masculinity, citizenship, travel cultures and geographies of belonging.","creator":["Shompa Lahiri"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99a84533-e26c-3ba0-9367-18e3114a997c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44250941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"408","pagination":"pp. 408-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Performing identity: colonial migrants, passing and mimicry between the wars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44250941","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne Fleche"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcbfffd8-82e5-3114-bbfb-cc9f9999c0fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"When a Door Is a Jar, or out in the Theatre: Tennessee Williams and Queer Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208486","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8735,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524014,524260]],"Locations in B":[[10236,14468]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Carol Siegel"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99119e31-d431-32c2-9fde-cf6f8115a8c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44235551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"1\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"St. Mawr\": Lawrence's Journey Toward Cultural Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235551","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[74475,74701]],"Locations in B":[[22642,22866]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Based on ethnographic research in Tonga in 2008 and 2009, this essay examines how gender relations and categories are defined during tourist performances. This definition is anchored within and constrained by social inequalities, which are in turn negotiated through constructing gender distinctions. Body practices, as much as discourses, are involved in this negotiation. The results yield new insights into the power relationships generally at stake in tourism and help lead to understanding how the transformation of gender norms is linked to body practices. (Tonga, tourism, gender, body, performance)","creator":["Aur\u00e9lie Condevaux"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23643460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141828"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5d9ec2e-1430-306d-8fa1-4f556140ef5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23643460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh- Of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"GENDER AND POWER IN TONGAN TOURIST PERFORMANCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23643460","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Much has been written about the history of the work of men and women in the premodern past. It is now generally acknowledged that early modern ideological assumptions about a strict division of work and space between men and productive work outside the house on the one hand, and women and reproduction and consumption inside the house, on the other, bore little relation to reality. Household work strategies, out of necessity, were diverse. Yet what this spatial complexity meant in particular households on a day-to-day basis and its consequences for gender relationships is less clear and has received relatively little historical attention. The aim of this paper is to add to our knowledge through a case study of the way that men and women used and organized space for work in the county of Essex during the \"long seventeenth century.\" Drawing on critiques of the concept of \"separate spheres\" and the models of economic change to which it relates, together with local\/micro historical methods, it places evidence within an appropriate regional context to argue that spatial patterns were enormously varied in early modern England and a number of factors\u2014time, place, occupation, and status, as well as gender\u2014determined them. Understanding of the dynamic, complex, uneven purchase of patriarchy upon the organization, imagination, and experience of space has important implications for approaches to gender relations in early modern England. It raises additional doubts about the utility of the separate spheres analogy, and particularly the use of binary oppositions of male\/female and public\/private, to describe gender relations and their changes in this period and shows that a deeper understanding demands more research into the local contexts in which the gendered division and meaning of work was negotiated.","creator":["AMANDA J. FLATHER"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b13c2f4-5381-3072-a315-e1d0f3574f4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Human geography"],"title":"SPACE, PLACE, AND GENDER: THE SEXUAL AND SPATIAL DIVISION OF LABOR IN THE EARLY MODERN HOUSEHOLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542990","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":9624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Exploring aspects of the Modernist and Postmodernist attempts at the imaginative reclamation of the body, this essay discusses the insistence on the body in the strategies of representation in the \"Penelope\" episode, offering an analysis of its so-called \"cardinal\" or \"wobbling\" points (the words \"because\", \"bottom\", \"woman\" and \"yes\"), arguing that these may be understood as central to either or both of these Modernist and Postmodernist projects by virtue of their providing a tangential form of structure and reference that attempts to redress the constraints on the libidinal that may be characteristic of conventional representations, working to make \"sense\" in partial resistance to the instrumental, pathologizing or criminalizing tendencies of the \"sentence\".","creator":["RICHARD BROWN"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2251c8f4-bd7d-379d-841b-163a0028cc4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"BODY WORDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871276","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article draws on feminism and post-structuralism to theorize a narrative framework for developing and critiquing therapeutic practices with women who have experienced child sexual abuse. I argue that both objectivism and relativism provide poor guides for conducting therapy and that it is only through situating our knowledges precisely that more liberatory therapy practices may be developed. This approach, termed 'visible therapy', is used to directly and explicitly challenge normative constructions of women, child sexual abuse and therapy. I argue that it is necessary to explicate the embedded assumptions produced through practices of abuse, and which serve to construct children's experiences of that abuse, in order to ward against their reproduction within therapy relationships. I demonstrate that it is through situating and explicating the operations of power that the authenticity of experience and identity may be questioned and women's ongoing positioning as guilty victims may be challenged. Thus, I am concerned not with who women 'really are' but with how they come to know and be known through practices of both abuse and therapy. This, then, is about making the tactics of abuse and therapy visible. Problems are not located within individuals, but rather within the narratives which situate both past and current relationships but which, through reiteration, obscure their own social production. I conclude that it is only when categorical identity is no longer assumed that progressive therapy practices with women who have been sexually abused can be developed and maintained.","creator":["Sam Warner"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50d4a069-96ac-32ad-b42c-b999e149031b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disrupting Identity Through Visible Therapy: A Feminist Post-Structuralist Approach to Working with Women Who Have Experienced Child Sexual Abuse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395748","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10502,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[63363,63438]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A teoria queer \u00e9 apresentada neste artigo como um conjunto de encontros entre pensamentos em constante reinven\u00e7\u00e3o. Derivam desses di\u00e1logos tessituras de conceitos e opera\u00e7\u00f5es anal\u00edticas com disposi\u00e7\u00e3o pol\u00edtica, cujas for\u00e7as residem em suas habilidades de afrouxar ou at\u00e9 mesmo desatar os n\u00f3s de verdades cis-heterocentradas, especialmente, no que diz respeito a corpos, g\u00eaneros e sexualidades. Nesse sentido, realizo uma revis\u00e3o das ideias principais em tr\u00eas obras consideradas centrais \u00e0 epistemologia queer: Hist\u00f3ria da sexualidade 1: a vontade de saber, de Michel Foucault; Problemas de g\u00eanero: feminismo e subvers\u00e3o da identidade, de Judith Butler; e Testo yonqui, de Paul B. Preciado. No tocar dessas movimenta\u00e7\u00f5es, menciono as aproxima\u00e7\u00f5es e os distanciamentos entre as propostas, bem como os seus efeitos em leituras brasileiras. This article presents the Queer Theory as encounters between thoughts in constant reinvention. Germinate of these dialogues weavings of concepts and analytical operations with political disposition, whose forces resides in their abilities to loosen or even untie the nodes of cis-heterocentered truths, especially, with regard to bodies, genders and sexualities. In this sense, I review three works considered central to queer epistemology: The history of sexuality 1: the will to knowledge, by Michel Foucault; Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity, by Judith Butler; and Testo junkie: sex, drugs, and biopolitics in the pharmacopornographic era, by Paul B. Preciado. In these movements, I mention the approaches and distances between the proposals, as well as mentioning their effects in Brazilian readings.","creator":["Kris Herik de Oliveira"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8a521e0-6c31-372f-94d1-3dd5e7f1e17e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48618877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Intensos encontros","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618877","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":11568,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[522026,522097]],"Locations in B":[[75911,75976]],"subTitle":"Michel Foucault, Judith Butler, Paul B. Preciado e a teoria queer<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"This essay adapts Judith Butler's theories on the performance of gender to investigate the performative nature of marriage in Thomas Dekker's city comedy, The Shoemaker's Holiday. The cross-class clandestine wedding of the main plot allows Rose to work against her father's demands, against class endogamy, and toward a choice that provides her with economic and emotional benefits. This wedding, read in the context of the play's multiple weddings and remarriages, suggests a critique of the class, paternal, and gender hierarchies such ceremonies are often assumed to support.","creator":["Amy L. Smith"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844548","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fadb4b33-4d01-38e7-a733-7963b6ec1694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844548"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Performing Cross-Class Clandestine Marriage in \"The Shoemaker's Holiday\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844548","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9662,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442641,442796]],"Locations in B":[[2274,2430]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo explora algunos aspectos de la obra de Foucault que han Incidido en la teor\u00eda y la pol\u00edtica feminista. Luego de una breve revisi\u00f3n sobre las contribuciones del pensamiento foucaultiano al an\u00e1lisis de la subordinaci\u00f3n de g\u00e9nero, el ensayo identifica un espacio de encuentro entre el pensador franc\u00e9s y la teor\u00eda feminista: la deconstrucci\u00f3n de la subjetividad y la cr\u00edtica a las formas hist\u00f3ricas de constituci\u00f3n de las identidades. Identificado este espacio, el art\u00edculo muestra que la Importancia del pensamiento foucaultiano - y de sus seguidoras feministas - reside su poder para mostrar las tendencias de dominaci\u00f3n que pueden encerrar las pr\u00e1cticas liberadoras, las feministas entre ellas. Sin embargo, a pesar de que rechaza todo pensamiento fundaclonalista, Foucault no deja por ello de articular propuestas normativas orientadas a la b\u00fasqueda de formas de vida emancipadas. El problema al que se enfrenta su obra es que los supuestos normativos que utiliza permanecen fuera de los l\u00edmites de su trabajo. El resultado de esto es la Invisibilidad que presentan los propios riesgos de dominaci\u00f3n que aparecen en la propia obra de Foucault. This paper explores some aspects of Foucault's work that have been influential for feminist theory and politics. After a brief review of some of Foucaulfs contributions to the analysis of gender subordination, it identifies an area of convergence between the French thinker and his fellow feminist theorists: the deconstruction of subjectivity and the critique of the historical forms of identify construction. The author argues that the relevance of Foucaulfs - and his followers' - thought lies in that it shows how domination also pervades liberation movements such as the feminist movement. Nevertheless, Foucaulfs work does not stay there. While denouncing domination, he makes normative claims aimed at the exploration of emancipated ways of life. The problem, the author argues, is that the normative assumptions he employs to unmask power and to reflect on new possible life forms are kept out of the limits of his own work. The result Is that the (invisible) risks of domination remain hidden in Foucault's own work.","creator":["Josefina Fern\u00e1ndez"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eac1e105-d0c3-3d6b-8a5a-d63d66436179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43596555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Foucault: \u00bfMarido o Amante? Algunas tensiones entre Foucault y el feminismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43596555","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Theresa L. Geller"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6141e696-4515-39f2-8d37-718b61badfc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3347316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering Hollywood's Tough Chick: The Subversions of Sex, Race, and Nation in \"The Long Kiss Goodnight\" and \"The Matrix\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347316","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A transformation of the feminist landscape is underway, although it is as yet only tentatively defined. The authors examine the state of feminisms today while seeking likely heirs to our sisters' earlier crusade to carry on the work that second wave feminists see as incomplete. Future feminisms and their culture-altering effects on public administration are discussed as the authors seek to discover the forms that feminisms' heirs might take, with particular attention to gender anarchy, and its likely imposition on PA.","creator":["Janet R. Hutchinson","Hollie S. Mann"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"222397c3-fadc-3a77-8ccd-4c04f85b8f42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender Anarchy and the Future of Feminisms in Public Administration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610807","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7574,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481466]],"Locations in B":[[22041,22103]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Leslie Salzinger","Cecilia Olivares"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ced1c408-095a-343b-8ecc-ecd37826e7a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"De los tacones altos a los cuerpos cubiertos: significados generizados en (la) producci\u00f3n de la industria maquiladora para la exportaci\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624971","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"It is notable how little gender archaeology has been written for the European Neolithic, in contrast to the following Bronze Age. We cannot blame this absence on a lack of empirical data or on archaeologists\u2019 theoretical na\u00efvet\u00e9. Instead, we argue that this absence reflects the fact that gender in this period was qualitatively different in form from the types of gender that emerged in Europe from about 3000 cal BC onwards; the latter still form the norm in European and American contexts today, and our standard theories and methodologies are designed to uncover this specific form of gender. In Bronze Age gender systems, gender was mostly binary, associated with stable, lifelong identities expressed in recurrent complexes of gendered symbolism. In contrast, Neolithic gender appears to have been less firmly associated with personal identity and more contextually relevant; it slips easily through our methodological nets. In proposing this \u201ccontextual gender\u201d model for Neolithic gender, we both open up new understandings of gender in the past and present and pose significant questions for our models of gender more widely. Es llamativo lo poco que se ha escrito sobre arqueolog\u00eda de g\u00e9nero en el Neol\u00edtico europeo en comparaci\u00f3n con el per\u00edodo posterior, la Edad del Bronce. Esta escasez no puede atribuirse a la falta de datos emp\u00edricos o a la ingenuidad de los arque\u00f3logos. M\u00e1s bien, como proponemos aqu\u00ed, esta ausencia refleja el hecho de que hay una diferencia cualitativa entre las manifestaciones de g\u00e9nero en este per\u00edodo y los tipos de g\u00e9nero que emergieron en Europa a partir de 3000 aC. Estos \u00faltimos siguen constituyendo la norma en contextos europeos y americanos actuales, y nuestras teor\u00edas y m\u00e9todos est\u00e1n dise\u00f1ados para analizar estas formas espec\u00edficas de g\u00e9nero. En los sistemas de g\u00e9nero de la Edad del Bronce, el g\u00e9nero consisti\u00f3 mayoritariamente en una identidad binaria asociada a identidades estables que persist\u00edan durante toda una vida y que fueron expresadas en complejos recurrentes de s\u00edmbolos de g\u00e9nero. En contraste, el g\u00e9nero en el Neol\u00edtico parece haber tenido una asociaci\u00f3nm\u00e1s tenue con la identidad personal; en cambio, parece haber sidom\u00e1s relevante a nivel contextual. Por lo tanto, las manifestaciones de g\u00e9nero del Neol\u00edtico se nos escapan a trav\u00e9s de nuestras redes metodol\u00f3gicas. Al proponer un modelo de \u2018g\u00e9nero contextual\u2019 para el Neol\u00edtico mediante la identificaci\u00f3n del c\u00f3mo y del porqu\u00e9 de esta diferencia, ofrecemos nuevas formas de comprender el g\u00e9nero en el pasado y presente del Neol\u00edtico, planteando al mismo tiempo cuestiones de relevancia m\u00e1s general para nuestros modelos de g\u00e9nero.","creator":["John Robb","Oliver J. T. Harris"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027316"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227011"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fdcc64f-eca0-37ee-ac1c-ea4a7c44ccd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26585497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranti"}],"isPartOf":"American Antiquity","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"BECOMING GENDERED IN EUROPEAN PREHISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585497","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":11570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"WAS NEOLITHIC GENDER FUNDAMENTALLY DIFFERENT?"} +{"abstract":"During the 20th century, wars were fought primarily in the name of protecting the homeland. Making the \u2018ultimate sacrifice\u2019was a national masculine duty and a key feature of military heroism. Today, human rights and international values justify war-making and legitimise military action. In one of these post-national wars, the International Security Assistance Force operation in Afghanistan, more than 700 European soldiers have lost their lives. How have these deaths been legitimised, and how has the new security discourse affected notions of masculinised heroism and sacrifice? This article investigates how the dimensions of national\/international and masculinity\/femininity are negotiated in media narratives of heroism and sacrifice in Denmark and Sweden. Regarding scholarly discussions on the professionalisation, individualisation and domestication of military heroism, the empirical analysis demonstrates that the Danish\/Swedish nation remains posited as the core context for military heroism and sacrifice. In the media narratives, professionalism is represented as an expression of specific national qualities. The media narratives conflate nation and family and represent military heroes as distinctively masculine and national figures. It is argued that a family trope has become vital in present-day hero narratives. This trope is disposed towards collective emotions, national loyalty and conservative gender ideals.","creator":["Cecilia \u00c5se","Maria Wendt"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48512961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"087a380c-38de-3d14-8f01-ec415c5cf3fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48512961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendering the new hero narratives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48512961","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Military death in Denmark and Sweden"} +{"abstract":"This article argues for a renewed interest in forgotten modernist lesbian author Gale Wilhelm through an examination of her 1935 novel We Too Are Drifting. Aimed at a wide readership, Wilhelm's novel differs from the work of high-modernist lesbians like Gertrude Stein and Djuna Barnes with its middlebrow sensibilities. Furthermore, it presents the hermaphrodite as a new metaphor for conceptualizing lesbian identity in contrast to the dominant model of the invert espoused by Radclyffe Hall's famous The Well of Loneliness. Without engaging in explicit politics, entering into clinical considerations of sexual psychology, or including gratuitously titillating scenes that the public had come to expect with the subject of lesbianism, Wilhelm's revolutionary gesture needs to be gauged differently: it assumes the lesbian's right to define her own existence as the a priori condition for writing about lesbian love by focusing on how lesbian artists use visual media to express their identities and desires.","creator":["CHASE DIMOCK"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f672b474-92bb-3da8-94ce-c63564b0aef6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CRAFTING HERMAPHRODITISM: GALE WILHELM'S LESBIAN MODERNISM IN \"WE TOO ARE DRIFTING\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544600","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11911,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124061,124157]],"Locations in B":[[14837,14933]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Colby Dickinson"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24016421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Biopolitics and the Theological Body: On the Apparent Absence of Gender in the Work of Giorgio Agamben","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016421","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Through educational campaigns and partnerships with the international community, the Jordanian government has indicated a desire to create a more loyal, democratic, and self-enterprising citizenry. While the participation of girls in public life is encouraged by the Jordanian regime and valorised by the international community, little effort is made to ensure and understand the participation of boys in such spaces, and what this participation produces. By highlighting the experiences and narratives of boys, including those of Palestinian origin, in two government secondary schools in Amman, this article examines how top-down efforts to produce a particular national identity have engendered a performative kind of citizenship in schools, in which students interrogate official accounts of Jordanian-ness through various practices of signification. This use of performativity, adapted from Judith Butler's work on gender, raises two important points: first, the learning of citizenship and national identity is a contingent and self-reflexive process; second, practices of citizenship cannot be understood outside the sociopolitical norms that regulate them.","creator":["Roozbeh Shirazi"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed119c8d-da07-3647-959d-668f43b8a4fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing the 'Knights of Change': male youth narratives and practices of citizenship in Jordanian schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267829","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8500,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17099,17268]],"Locations in B":[[10144,10311]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Writers for both academic and popular audiences often use the term gender when considering differences between the educational experiences of male and female students, and the distinction often appears to be based on a traditional understanding of the term sex. The authors of this article argue that gender and sex should be distinguished more clearly in education research and that the pattern of unclear, conflated, and even synonymous use of the terms has slowed progress in understanding how gender influences students' educational experiences. The authors present evidence of conflated use, review the wide diversity in orienting perspectives and definitions of gender, show how current American Psychological Association publication guidelines fail to provide clear guidance on the use of the terms, and make recommendations for improving research practice.","creator":["Howard M. Glasser","John P. Smith, III"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25209010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013189X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"048dbf96-8f77-35b0-acb5-160068868ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25209010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educrese"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Researcher","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"On the Vague Meaning of \"Gender\" in Education Research: The Problem, Its Sources, and Recommendations for Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25209010","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8297,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[25780,26015]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Catherine Dousteyssier-Khoze"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42796824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d85f74c-93f7-3852-971b-0fc5b9737523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42796824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2,"pageEnd":"978","pageStart":"977","pagination":"pp. 977-978","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42796824","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract Planning has been ineffective at addressing women's fear of violence and violence against women in part because of the false public\/private divide. This divide is parallel and mutually supported by parochial and conservative understandings of male and female gender constructions and norms in spaces and social structural systems. We propose exploring the actual spaces of bodies and planning at the scale of bodies since bodies are at the nexus of public\u2013private spaces, gender identities and gender violence. Using bodies as geographical spaces to understand and analyse visceral experiences and fear of violence may help diminish the dominance of the public\u2013private divide and challenge the unequal rights women have to use space. Based on exploratory workshops in New York City, Mexico City and Barcelona as well as research events in Medellin, we share our experiences using visceral methods including body-map storytelling and shared sensory spatial experiences, also evaluating their usefulness. We examine the ethics of visceral methods, ways to analyse body-mapped data and the use of planners' bodies as tools in research and practice. We conclude that bodies have the potential to become a source of dynamic and reflective information that might be effectively used by planners and communities to make places better and safer.","creator":["Elizabeth L Sweet","Sara Ortiz Escalante"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26146098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915650"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233805"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"088e5fe1-8398-3584-9697-007e630e0c1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26146098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"1845","pageStart":"1826","pagination":"pp. 1826-1845","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Bringing bodies into planning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26146098","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Visceral methods, fear and gender violence"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Einat Avrahami"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06835629-a375-3336-9d9f-ea0190b0a994"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Keep Your Mind in Hell and Despair Not\": Illness as Life Affair in Gillian Rose's \"Love's Work\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107260","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"What happens when a qualitative\/theoretical scholar ofgender\/sexuality and cultural studies and a quantitative behavioral scientist step outside the boundaries of our respective disciplines, risking disruptions to our normal procedures and cherished political and theoretical commitments? Our unlikely collaboration allowed each of us to explore and challenge the possibilities, limitations, and consequences of our approaches to the study of gender and finance and, ultimately, to make new knowledge. The occasion for this collaboration is the Arizona Pathways to Life Success (APLUS) study, a longitudinal study of a group of young adults to understand how financial practices develop and the factors that shape those practices. We begin by presenting our respective research agendas and our concerns about \"engaging the opposition.\" We then narrate the sequence of our efforts: to talk and think together, generate analyses and interpretations, and then interrupt ourselves \u2014 only to begin again. Ultimately, despite (or perhaps because of) our divergent backgrounds, our final set of findings, which reveals the changeability of participation in gendered constellations of financial attitudes and behaviors over time, challenges dominant scientific and popular understandings of the rehtion of gender to financial behavior and attitudes, with implications across many domains of research, policy, and educational practice.","creator":["Joyce Serido","Miranda Joseph"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6945196a-328c-3b50-bdf3-02754d09f49a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Challenging Assumptions: Crossing Disciplinary Divides to Make Knowledge about Gender and Finance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860742","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Martha McCaughey"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2af8b2a-784d-368d-af9e-5b369778525f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690177","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":1434,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[355986,356424]],"Locations in B":[[7572,8011]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kevin Latham"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d8a0bee-39be-3cdd-91f0-2a637e3f8a3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"628","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-628","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704172","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":1069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[149921,150110]],"Locations in B":[[6493,6682]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article seeks to explicate the racial politics of knowledge production in Brazil. The analysis compares trends in women's studies scholarship in the United States, England, Canada, and Brazil by focusing on the significance accorded to the intersection of race and gender by women's studies scholars in each region. It addresses four key questions: How has feminist scholarship by women of color from these other countries traveled to Brazil? How has work by Afro-Brazilian women contributed to Brazilian conceptualizations of race and gender? What impact has scholarship on race and gender had on research and theory produced about Brazilian women? What are the persistent challenges to making race and the experiences of Afro-Brazilian women visible in Brazilian women's studies scholarship?","creator":["Kia Lilly Caldwell"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3211212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racialized Boundaries: Women's Studies and the Question of \"Difference\" in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211212","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":7001,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[500702,500774]],"Locations in B":[[43382,43466]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mona Narain"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25674377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839053"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbe5d44b-fb0e-3cfa-8961-7b76435b6e58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25674377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notorious Celebrity: Margaret Cavendish and the Spectacle of Fame","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25674377","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9892,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"After more than two decades of challenging mainstream sociology, feminist sociology has come of age. Recognizing that the strength of feminist sociology in the early 1990s is the product of considerable struggle and is an achievement to be celebrated, this paper explores the implications of the maturation of the feminist project within sociology. It examines issues concerning the practice of feminist sociology and addresses its current and future theoretical orientations. The relationship of feminist sociology to both the discipline as a whole and to the interdisciplinary area of women's studies is discussed, and the merits of the 'integrationist' versus the 'multiculturalist' strategies are evaluated. The paper then discusses recent concern about 'political correctness' as a form of backlash against the success of feminist work in the academy. The theoretical concerns of the paper focus on the implications of the poststructuralist turn in feminist sociology, and on the turn towards agency which, it is argued, is just beginning. It is concluded that the issues addressed in the paper are some of those which will concern the emerging generation of feminist sociologists.","creator":["Sasha Roseneil"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/591785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Coming of Age of Feminist Sociology: Some Issues of Practice and Theory for the Next Twenty Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591785","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rachel\u00a0Sophia Baard"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/516741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc0c3a59-b89b-35f8-bceb-3c713c61dff2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/516741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Original Grace, Not Destructive Grace: A Feminist Appropriation of Paul Tillich\u2019s Notion of Acceptance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/516741","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":11372,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455440,455598]],"Locations in B":[[32128,32283]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article deals with the formation of Taiwan's homosexual cultural politics in the 1990s, the impact and implications of which are yet to be examined within the larger context of Taiwan's cultural and political development and ethnic relationships. It is argued that the rise of this cultural politics is both a reflection and a source of a growing sense of identity crisis on the island. By examining the configurations of \"queer\" in various discursive domains, this interdisciplinary study seeks to delineate the cross-referencing ideological network of this cultural movement and its entanglement with the complexity of Taiwan's nationalism. At the same time, to the extent that this movement tends to present itself as a radical politics from a privileged epistemological and cultural standpoint, this claimed radicalism is also scrutinized for its problematics and ironies.","creator":["Li-fen Chen"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00977004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48533388"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b34474f5-6b99-3061-9af9-a38915ebfe51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23053329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernchina"}],"isPartOf":"Modern China","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"384","pagination":"pp. 384-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queering Taiwan: In Search of Nationalism's Other","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053329","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the everyday practice of gendered public space through an analysis of three \"mapping\" studies conducted in Mumbai. The first study attempted to document and represent public spaces onto drawings through observation. The second study was based on a participatory research methodology and came about through two simple exercises developed for pedagogic activities. These studies, conducted under the Gender and Space project at Pukar, focused on how male and female bodies locate themselves in and move through public space in their everyday negotiation of space, in the process participating in the production and reproduction of a hegemonic gender-space.","creator":["Shilpa Ranade"],"datePublished":"2007-04-28","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bea3e1ea-f8ce-3ddf-be53-d1974f7ff6c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4419518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"17","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"1526","pageStart":"1519","pagination":"pp. 1519-1526","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Way She Moves: Mapping the Everyday Production of Gender-Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419518","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Mark Albert Johnston"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing with the Beard: Courtly and Commercial Economies in Richard Edwards's \"Damon and Pithias\" and John Lyly's Midas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029963","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":11501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CATH SHARROCK"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263416","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Charlotte Witt"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Anti-Essentialism in Feminist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154216","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11427,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[70771,70949],[116866,117193]],"Locations in B":[[38486,38664],[43396,43724]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"To travel undetected by state authorities and criminal predators, Central Americans pass as Mexican during their journey to the United States. This 'passing' underscores the ambiguities of social roles, such as nationality. Over time, these performances partially reconstruct imagined communities, blurring the boundaries between foreigners and citizens. However, international-relations scholarship tends to overlook how uncoordinated everyday practice complicates borders in a globalized world. By tracing the co-constitutive relationship between migration policing, national performances, and transnational routes, this article reveals the makeshift nature of the identities that underscore distinctions between citizens and foreigners. I argue for the continued inclusion of ethnography as a method for exploring the dynamic relationship between territory, state, and nation. Migrants complicate borders, but also suffer the very real, material consequences of both state and nonstate violence. My analysis of clandestine transnationalism therefore chronicles challenges to, and reconfigurations of, sovereignty.","creator":["Noelle K. Brigden"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43869077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"768a920e-0113-301b-abf1-65a56d67a257"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43869077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"354","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Improvised Transnationalism: Clandestine Migration at the Border of Anthropology and International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43869077","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":12390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is concerned with the role of formal education in the upward social mobility of women in the Sirwa, a marginal Berber region of southern Morocco where carpets are produced by women, and marketed by men. To explore why girls' education in weaving takes precedence over formal education, the article considers the place of women's education in the livelihood strategies of the household and the significance of marriage in women's social mobility.","creator":["Myriem Naji"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fae9d93-21b3-359e-87a1-c4a50717df94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23359075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"372","pagination":"pp. 372-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Learning to Weave the Threads of Honor: Understanding the Value of Female Schooling in Southern Morocco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359075","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Linda Dusman"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5584a1d9-5267-342c-adee-1ac68e833ac1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unheard-of: Music as Performance and the Reception of the New","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833601","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6673,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[446788,447072],[455517,455598]],"Locations in B":[[16573,16857],[20382,20463]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Three recent scientific reports that purport to show a biological basis for homosexuality have changed the face of pro-gay equal protection litigation by making the argument from immutability more attractive. Professor Janet E. Halley critiques these studies and their reception in legal culture. Because immutability is not a requirement for successful pro-gay litigation, moreover, Professor Halley contends that pro-gay litigators who invoke the argument from immutability do so not only at their option, but at the risk of misrepresenting and dividing the community they hope to represent. She argues that progay legal argument should focus instead on common ground that adequately represents the self-conceptions of both pro-gay essentialists and pro-gay constructivists. And she suggests just such a common ground for more effectively articulating pro-gay equal protection arguments.","creator":["Janet E. Halley"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7ddb4fb-dfbe-3990-a377-6b23ee727be0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexual Orientation and the Politics of Biology: A Critique of the Argument from Immutability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229101","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":38255,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489242,489354]],"Locations in B":[[100770,100880]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Eamonn Jordan"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b2f7f72-be21-31bd-b09d-40bfad38310b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29736325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Project Mayhem: Mark O'Rowe's \"Howie the Rookie\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736325","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6816,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[83600,83734]],"Locations in B":[[38598,38732]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay questions the relation between national affiliation and other elements of identity, such as race, gender, and sexuality. Citing British newspaper stories and editorials of the 1920s that sexualized and pathologized the black man, I connect the fear these articles reflect to the fear of the white flapper. Joan Riviere's 1929 psychoanalytic study of femininity and masquerade, which explores the psychic parameters of gendered national belonging, frames my reading of Woolf's use of racial tropes in Orlando (1928), where they function within strategies for granting national belonging to the queerly gendered white Englishwoman. These strategies, which are part of the masquerade, include the narrator's satiric stance and the deployment of secret codes. Despite the text's ambivalences and ambiguities, Orlando's sexuality is finally domesticated by the racial and sexual terms of national belonging.","creator":["Jaime Hovey"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab4444bd-6f1e-3deb-b009-e0176ad4fb53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Kissing a Negress in the Dark\": Englishness as a Masquerade in Woolf's Orlando","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462948","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":8219,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[195984,196127]],"Locations in B":[[16431,16592]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Counterterrorism officials increasingly seek to scrutinize conduct and behavior that they believe, however uncertainly, to be probative of terrorist activity. When such conduct-based profiling specifically targets activity that is also expressive of Muslim identity, it may inflict pervasive dignitary and stigmatic harms upon the American Muslim community. Those seeking redress from such policies through litigation would find that existing constitutional doctrine does not readily let judges account for group harms when balancing the interests at stake. This Note, however, argues that Muslim plaintiffs can use the Free Exercise Clause doctrine of \"hybrid situations,\" announced in Employment Division v. Smith, to plead that certain profiles' burdens upon their religiously motivated exercise of secular constitutional rights threaten to subordinate their religious community as a whole.","creator":["Murad Hussain"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2f69c67-68dc-3948-8caf-a63d43fec70e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50,"pageEnd":"969","pageStart":"920","pagination":"pp. 920-969","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Defending the Faithful: Speaking the Language of Group Harm in Free Exercise Challenges to Counterterrorism Profiling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455814","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":21684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Hip-hop has become relevant to the field of education because of its implications for understanding language, learning, identity, curriculum, and other areas. This integrative review provides historical context and cohesion for the burgeoning and discursive body of hip-hop scholarship by framing it according to three heuristic categories and briefly discussing the strengths and weaknesses for the field of education. The article then critically reviews three major strands of selected literature across these categories that are relevant to educational research. Finally, the article outlines new directions for future research and corresponding theoretical perspectives and strategic methods. With these purposes, this review is intended to inform both researchers unfamiliar with hip-hop and scholars who have centered hip-hop in their research agendas.","creator":["Emery Petchauer"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40469060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"288d8836-fd7f-3d7d-9781-10d09bd4046c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40469060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33,"pageEnd":"978","pageStart":"946","pagination":"pp. 946-978","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Framing and Reviewing Hip-Hop Educational Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40469060","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":15509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"801e443a-ff2e-3d41-b44e-b857169c12ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"941","pageStart":"933","pagination":"pp. 933-941","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175554","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article represents both a continuance and a reformulation of an ongoing project: a call to sociology proper to \"bring nature back in.\" Moving beyond such earlier heuristics as Demeritt's \"conjoined materiality,\" Freudenburg and colleagues' \"conjoint constitution,\" Norgaard's \"coevolution,\" and Bell's \"ecological dialogue,\" this article uses Bhaskar's work and his writings on critical realism to develop a conceptual framework through which to view nature-society relations. Following a brief overview of Bhaskarian critical realism, a conceptual typology is forwarded whereby reality is collapsed into three fluid categories referred to as (in descending order of ontological depth) \"nature,\" nature, and Nature. Through this, a sketch of reality is presented that allows for critical discussion and analysis concerning the growing interrelationship between the social and the natural realms, while opening the door for debate as to what this dynamic means for sociology's long-term viability.","creator":["MICHAEL S. CAROLAN"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26161917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10860266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef3c8871-5e34-37b8-b670-2fb667d67b06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26161917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"orgaenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Organization & Environment","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SOCIETY, BIOLOGY, AND ECOLOGY: Bringing Nature Back Into Sociology's Disciplinary Narrative Through Critical Realism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26161917","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":15941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since the arrival in Tanzania of American hip hop recordings in the 1980s, a varied, local, rapped music scene has developed. Due to high import duties, hip hop recordings were available only to wealthier Tanzanians, who consequently formed many of the early rap groups. Following liberalization of the media, however, local music incorporating rapping has become widely popular and the practice of rapping more widespread. Tanzanian rapped music has moved from a largely elite pastime to a ubiquitous form of Swahili language popular culture; from the margins to the mainstream. As rapped music has become increasingly popular it has engendered both local musical stars and maandagraundi or \u2018underground\u2019 rappers. Underground rappers define themselves through their marginalization and exclusion from the circuits of commercial musical production, distribution and dissemination in Dar es Salaam. Unplanned settlements, commonly referred to by the term uswahilini, are fundamental to the practice of underground rapping, providing spaces for underground rapping practice and performance. This article will explore the ways in which underground rappers use the marginal and liminal space of uswahilini to engage in productive, creative practices, arguing that rapping acts as a means through which young men contest their marginality and assert their personhood. Rapping is a space in which young men contest not only their marginality but that of uswahilini \u2013 sonically asserting their presence in the city.","creator":["David Kerr"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc830494-9e06-3a61-b573-e0af89527b4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26739726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From the margins to the mainstream","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739726","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"making and remaking an alternative music economy in Dar es Salaam"} +{"abstract":"I argue that Irigaray's recent work develops a theoretically cogent and politically radical form of realist essentialism. I suggest that she identifies sexual difference with a fundamental difference between the rhythms of percipient fluids constituting women's and men's bodies, supporting this with a philosophy of nature that she justifies phenomenologically and ethically. I explore the politics Irigaray derives from this philosophy, which affirms the sexes' rights to realize the possibilities of their rhythmically diverse bodies.","creator":["Alison Stone"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0cee67d-4757-3e4e-891a-ef18de15178c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sex of Nature: A Reinterpretation of Irigaray's Metaphysics and Political Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810864","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11590,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481841]],"Locations in B":[[73671,73756]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Commentators in the popular media of Weimar Germany paid great attention to questions of women's sport, athleticism, and physicality. Their concerns were not restricted to women's reproductive capacities\u2014rather, women's physical emancipation was increasingly interpreted within the framework of larger cultural discourses surrounding the \"masculinization\" and political emancipation of the modern woman. This article examines such representations of the \"masculinized\" female athlete, arguing that female athleticism provided an important focus for broader concerns about changing gender relations, female sexuality, and acceptable female life trajectories at this period. Although the perceived threat to traditional male dominance symbolized by the female athlete prompted some commentators to denounce women's physical activity and emphasize traditional gender roles, the article also examines less conventional contemporary responses to women's athleticism, in particular, how a female body \"steeled by sport\" was reclaimed as an aesthetic ideal within the female homosexual subculture of interwar Berlin.","creator":["Katie Sutton"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23744618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10450300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49847086"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93088812-95b4-3c78-af4d-0e18c3289cc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23744618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germpolisoci"}],"isPartOf":"German Politics & Society","issueNumber":"3 (92)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Masculinized Female Athlete in Weimar Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23744618","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[489892,489992]],"Locations in B":[[43321,43423]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Suzanne Ferriss","Kathleen Waites"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43798722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc5d94a7-ee8c-3685-82fc-598970fa06dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43798722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Salisbury University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Unclothing Gender: The Postmodern Sensibility in Sally Potter's \"Orlando\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43798722","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3750,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64071,64163]],"Locations in B":[[14802,14894]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anna McMullan"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"986c24e9-5e9d-3e8a-a6e3-ee743103def2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25517191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masculinity and Masquerade in Thomas Kilroy's \"Double Cross\" and \"The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517191","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":4537,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431491,431608]],"Locations in B":[[2859,2976]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Symbolic interactionists have widely established the tenet that the self is formed in interaction with others. Despite this great contribution, this perspective has tended to sidestep discussions of the relationship between the body and the self and to overlook systems of power and the ways in which they impact upon the self and the body. The more recent contributions of postmodernists and critical theorists have focused on knowledge as a system of power. An examination of a sample of transgendered persons, individuals who endeavor to present alternatively gendered selves within a social system that proclaims males to be men and females to be women, provides a unique opportunity to analyze the ways in which knowledge systems affect gender identity and the embodied self. While individuals are not able to fully escape the dictates of the binary system of knowledge about sex and gender, they are capable of devising alternative ways of \"doing\" gender that more closely adhere to an internalized sense of self. In the end, individuals neither passively enact nor completely escape the dictates of the binary system of gender knowledge.","creator":["Patricia Gagn\u00e9","Richard Tewksbury"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6fd34fa-799a-3115-b054-64cacb15bcd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4120891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Knowledge and Power, Body and Self: An Analysis of Knowledge Systems and the Transgendered Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120891","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ira Elliott"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performance Art: Jake Barnes and \"Masculine\" Signification in The Sun Also Rises","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928031","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":7835,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[102961,103147],[116996,117179]],"Locations in B":[[3864,4050],[21758,21941]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeffrey Weeks"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e62c7c23-0355-3273-bad5-90e54002fc76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40981156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"70","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making the Human Gesture: History, Sexuality and Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981156","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A postcolonial perspective in the history of economic thought reveals the ways in which racial theory was built into the foundations of neoclassical economics. Neoclassical economics emerged within the context of nineteenth-century European colonisation and this paper connects the material practices of colonisation in Australia to this emerging body of theory. In particular, the paper focuses on the Western breadwinner\/dependent family ideal that was deeply embedded within economic visions of development, prosperity and progress. I argue that neoclassical economics naturalised and justified colonial practices that sought to impose the homogeneity of culture, desires and needs used to justify the displacement and subordination of the colonised Aborigines.","creator":["Gillian Hewitson"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23601925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0309166X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd4b6fa7-bc0a-391a-99a6-5418e46c2038"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23601925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambjecon"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Journal of Economics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Economics and the family: a postcolonial perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23601925","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Elizabeth R. Cole","Zakiya T. Luna"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"486706fc-c74d-3dfe-9d89-88d394d86f11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Coalitions Work: Solidarity across Difference within US Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608000","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10197,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[97766,98113]],"Locations in B":[[12219,12565]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Caciola"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cfb9e28-e719-38d2-ba07-7f56105b0a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Through a Glass, Darkly: Recent Work on Sanctity and Society. A Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179130","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":4457,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147184,147314]],"Locations in B":[[6471,6602]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Marie-Claire Barnet"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e78bbc47-b1cd-31a9-a2f1-54ded4f12b03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Undutiful Daughter On Fire: R\u00e9gine Detambel's \"La Verri\u00e8re\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288954","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":5835,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[477984,478018]],"Locations in B":[[33072,33106]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan A. Glenn"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd4437ee-240c-3225-aaab-d5f58606b664"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Give an Imitation of Me\": Vaudeville Mimics and the Play of the Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041599","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493788]],"Locations in B":[[77165,77229]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Christine Ross"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"026902ea-4f76-3d03-b430-5e384a5c0e1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 86-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Vision and Insufficiency at the Turn of the Millennium: Rosemarie Trockel's Distracted Eye","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779119","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":9398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Musical performances on the bass guitar, able to be felt bodily beyond the ear, connect into the many layers of affect that music excites; but they are particularly potent as a means of communicating embodied masculinity for one young man with a hearing disability. Masculinity as a social code enacted within practices of the everyday involves both the affect and the effect of difference. The bass guitar, the instrument which drives a band's sound and rhythm, is part of the performativity of masculinity within popular music - visually, and at the level of sound, as auricular materiality - an embodied sensation where the ' feel' of sound through the body constitutes a language in which 'desirable' and 'undesirable' modes of masculinity become appropriated and defined. Displays of musical prowess on the bass guitar open a space for becoming 'unfixed' from the identity and abject status of the hearing-disabled Other. This 'Othering' occurs primarily in everyday spoken encounters where difficulties with hearing and speech limit opportunities for occupying a viable masculine positioning. By contrast, the capacity to ' fit' the sensory and sensual prompts that trigger recognition of masculinity within popular music enables the re-assembling of an embodied masculine identity for a hearing-disabled young man. Masculinity and disability are rendered reversible and exchangeable -performative productions that are excessive and transgressive, contingent on the sensory perceptions of self and others. This emphasis on embodied communicative practice through the play of bass guitar provides an important counterweight to representational forms of embodied gendered subjectivity that continue to predominate in some modes of disability and gender theorising. It constitutes a forceful assertion of how everyday embodied interactions are irrevocably coupled with mobile and transient masculine and disabled aesthetic identifications.","creator":["Cassandra Loesert","Vicki Crowley"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40541515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17e7bbd9-08a9-31cc-87b3-41bfb57c2bda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40541515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A Natural Ear for Music? Hearing (Dis)abled Masculinities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40541515","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephanie Lynn Daza"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980396","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55ff9090-3ddc-3791-aa93-1fcc6af8f0f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980396"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"CHAPTER 19: The Noninnocence of Recognition: Subjects and Agency in Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980396","volumeNumber":"369","wordCount":7710,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460867,461074]],"Locations in B":[[10788,10995]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The 2005 Student Essay Contest winner weaves together the narratives of members of Viji Prakash's Shakti bharatanatyam school community, dancing in and out of positions of marginality to unravel the notion of group identity as cohesive, homogenous, and pure as she confronts her own performance and corporealization of South Asian amrican identity.","creator":["Anita Kumar"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cab49945-edde-3ab9-bd95-eafab1dbab54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4492715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shakti's (Re) Collection of Race, Nationhood, and Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492715","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":13963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article presents an analysis of the politics of gender representation on Instagram. It adopts a broad understanding of the political in terms of \u201ceveryday politics\u201d and \u201ceveryday activism\u201d. This allows for exploring the political potential of self-representation on Instagram and Instagram's ability to enable more diverse forms of gender representation. It starts from the assumption that Instagram can play a role in reproducing and reinforcing traditional gender norms, and then explores the technological affordances and limitations that shape representations, such as Instagram's Terms of Use and the diffuse power exerted by Instagram users' feedback. These theoretical arguments are illustrated by discussing the recent ban of Marisa Papen, a popular Instagram model.","creator":["Sofia P. Caldeira","Sander De Ridder","Sofie Van Bauwel"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.5.1.2","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80cc43cf-f082-386b-8699-0a0e05436366"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.5.1.2"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Exploring the Politics of Gender Representation on Instagram: Self-representations of Femininity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.5.1.2","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article explores issues of the racial identities of young male supporters of the political far right in the North of England. Sociological identity theories are utilised in combination with ethnographic and retrospective interview data to inform the failures of anti-racist education programmes. These failures include a naive assumption that knowledge of and contact between racial groups will automatically reduce racism. They have also failed because of the ostracism of those very individuals the programmes are designed to engage with. The article argues that programmes must take as their starting point an acceptance of the fluid nature of racism and the necessity to maintain dialogue in a respectful manner with all concerned, even with those who espouse racist views. It is necessary for educators to offer trust and empathy to all young people before mutual recognition and understanding of all racial identities can be achieved.","creator":["Tom Cockburn"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"261a0c40-7312-340a-968a-9b724719f4c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Performing' Racism: Engaging Young Supporters of the Far Right in England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036234","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7279,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443313,443525]],"Locations in B":[[10479,10692]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing on Timothy Findley's Not Wanted on the Voyage and Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water, this essay redefines \"androgyny\" to designate figures that resist conventional gender categories. These contemporary Canadian novels are read as counter-narratives which deploy androgynous figures to parody traditional texts, thus challenging their underlying authoritarian ideologies.","creator":["LINDA LAMONT-STEWART"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ad2e5d2-4860-3aff-bb4d-29b0530a8c13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Androgyny as Resistance to Authoritarianism in Two Postmodern Canadian Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029826","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6992,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46307,46409]],"Locations in B":[[910,1012]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rhonda Y. Williams"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3675711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940798"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954894"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214643"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3675711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oralhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Oral History Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I'm a Keeper of Information\": History-Telling and Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3675711","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9958,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[7176,7244]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["PETE SIGAL"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23303430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd0cd045-b18d-3558-b31e-02ca1f41f7f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23303430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1353","pageStart":"1340","pagination":"pp. 1340-1353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Latin America and the Challenge of Globalizing the History of Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23303430","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":8935,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478055,478118]],"Locations in B":[[56610,56674]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article, I want to suggest the usefulness of gender as an analytical category to understand how ideas of cooperation are practically articulated, and by implication how community is constructed via the interplay between ideologies and ritual. These ideas are brought together by a conflation of theories about gender, performance, and the in\/dividual (see for example Busby 1997, Butler 1990, Porter Poole 1996), with Victor Turner's contribution to ritual studies in the notions of liminality and community. Within the theoretical framework defined by these concepts, this article will look at Native North American Plains tribes' historical scalp dances.","creator":["Massimiliano Carocci"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85845121-28b8-326e-9300-1e2cfe6a1ddb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44368559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"WOMEN, TEMPORARY LIMINALITY AND TWO-SPIRITS: THE STAGING OF COMMUNITY IN THE PLAINS INDIANS SCALP DANCE'S MASQUERADE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44368559","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Greater diversity in the health care workforce is frequently proposed as a means of addressing health disparities between minority and majority populations in the USA by improving health care access and quality for minority groups. 'Culturally appropriate' health care programs that include ethnic resemblance between physician and patient are emerging as new technologies of knowledge and power in a wide range of health care settings. Based on participant-observation research and interviews with patients and health care providers at a federally funded New England clinic, this article uses theories of cultural identity supported by ethnographic examples to examine arguments in favor of patient-provider resemblance. While ethnic identity is often assumed to incorporate cultural expertise or competence, in practice, developing and maintaining such expertise is the result of repeated performances developed in part through didactic trainings described herein. Claims for the efficacy of patient-provider resemblance in addressing disparities in quality of care mobilize notions of specificity, difference and recognition that both depend on and construct racialized ethnic identities. Proposed as a means to expand access to health care, resemblance programs nonetheless perpetuate segregation in health care by relying on minority health care providers to care for the minority poor. Both patients and health care providers I interviewed perceived benefits associated with ethnic resemblance, yet also articulated critiques of the essentialized notions of identity that render ethnicity automatically efficacious. Following Laclau, I argue that an exclusive focus on physician\u2013patient resemblance constructs ethnicity as 'mere particularity' and in so doing helps to obscure the relations of power and inequality that produce the very health disparities that resemblance is meant to solve.","creator":["Susan J. Shaw"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13634593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88e6172a-6c02-36c9-9f9b-fccc66ea1340"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26650184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"health"}],"isPartOf":"Health","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The logic of identity and resemblance in culturally appropriate health care","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26650184","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":10946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Background: Healthcare has traditionally been dominated by norms making the sexual orientation of clients invisible. Aim: To explore processes counteracting or promoting invisibility. Method: A single case study based on notes from psychotherapy and a research interview. Results: The client's story can be understood in terms of pathology but also in terms of finding her lesbian lifestyle. A special focus is required for transcending heterosexuality and for realizing the meaning of being a lesbian in everyday life. Conclusion: In conducting inquiries, practitioners need to be aware of how their own norms take heteronormativity for granted. This aids recognition of the important need for gay and lesbian clients to tell their personal stories.","creator":["ANBJ\u00d8RG OHNSTAD"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45205761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14034956"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e1360ec-6be9-332a-b403-30e73d513b7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45205761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanjpublsupp"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. Supplement","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Speaking vulnerable issues into existence: Their consequences for psychotherapy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45205761","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":3610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I critique anthropological uses of the construct of \"ritualized homosexuality\" in Melanesia and examine related theoretical problems in the cross-cultural study of sexualities, homosexualities, and erotics. I argue that identifying as \"ritualized homosexuality\" the semen practices through which boys are made into men in some Melanesian societies engages and relies on Western ideas about sexuality that obscure the indigenous meanings of these practices. By comparing three Melanesian societies, I argue that age and gender hierarchies and a substance-based model for the constitution of social identities together comprise a more useful and accurate framework for understanding boys' initiatory practices in Melanesia. Exploring emerging frameworks for understanding erotics cross-culturally, I seek to demonstrate the need for a more self-critical and self-aware stance as well as a more refined theoretical apparatus for the larger project of theorizing sexualities cross-culturally. [erotics, gender, hierarchy, homosexuality, sexuality, Melanesia]","creator":["Deborah A. Elliston"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43fac48e-f52d-3116-a373-1d40c21987a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"867","pageStart":"848","pagination":"pp. 848-867","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Erotic Anthropology: \"Ritualized Homosexuality\" in Melanesia and beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646389","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12591,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[485417,485515]],"Locations in B":[[77864,77966]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this paper, we analyze the processes whereby participants construct their identity of homo parents. The data are focus group meetings in which participants share and discuss their experience. The discussion often focuses on the problems children will have to face in their relationship with parents and with other children living in a more traditional family. Two processes of constructing homoparental categories have attracted our attention. In the first, identity categories of gay and lesbian parents are the topic of the conversations, and the choice of kinship terms with the semantic traits they bring is constantly negotiated and reformulated in the interaction. In the second, the focus-group collective identity emerges in humourous episodes in which participants propose paradoxical made-up scenes that evidently oversimplify the parental experience they are discussing about. Dans cet article, nous analysons les proc\u00e9d\u00e9s mobilis\u00e9s par les membres du groupe pour construire leur identit\u00e9 d'homoparents. Les donn\u00e9es sont des r\u00e9unions de groupes de parole d\u00e9di\u00e9es \u00e0 la discussion des probl\u00e8mes que les parents et futur parents gay et lesbiens rencontrent dans leur parcours parental, et ceux que les (futurs) enfants devront eux-m\u00eames affronter. Deux proc\u00e9d\u00e9s de construction cat\u00e9gorielle sont \u00e9tudi\u00e9s. Dans le premier, les cat\u00e9gories d'identit\u00e9 homoparentale constituent l'objet de la conversation et le choix des formes de d\u00e9nomination des deux parents font l'objet de reformulations et de n\u00e9gociations incessantes. Dans le second cas, l'identit\u00e9 de groupe \u00e9merge de fa\u00e7on indirecte au cours d'\u00e9pisodes humoristiques dans lesquels les participants \u00e9voquent des sc\u00e9narii de vie de famille et se moquent de ceux qui normalisent et simplifient trop l'exp\u00e9rience dont ils sont en train de discuter.","creator":["Renata Galatolo","Luca Greco"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41710296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238368"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557655165"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5da451d-46fe-3b3e-b500-e88f1c6c4086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41710296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langfranc"}],"isPartOf":"Langue Fran\u00e7aise","issueNumber":"175","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'identit\u00e9 dans l'interaction : pratiques de cat\u00e9gorisation et \"accountability\" en milieu homoparental","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41710296","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article applies a gender perspective to the history of Norwegian folk music. The aim in this regard is to explore why and how the expressive coding of the musical language is profoundly gendered. It is shown that performance norms and aesthetics are related to stylistic constructions of maleness and femaleness that are overlapping and contradictory. It is also discussed how these constructions are consistent with the gender historiography of the genre, including the mythologization of (male) musical subjects around which artists and audiences organize and articulate their roles and self-perceptions. The article ultimately argues for further scholarly attention to the way gender codes embedded in stylistic practices inform and constrain freedom of expression. Ovaj \u010dlanak primjenjuje rodnu perspektivu na povijest norve\u0161ke folklorne glazbe, usmjeravaju\u0107i se na: 1) uloge dodijeljene mu\u0161karcima i \u017eenama u razli\u010dito postavljenim izvedbama; 2) izra\u017eajno kodiranje glazbenog jezika i njegove rodne konotacije; 3) historiografiju rodnih glazbenih subjekata te njezin utjecaj na koncepcije glazbenog autoriteta; 4) politiku terminologije: imenuju\u0107i konvencije te njihove konstitutivne odnose prema (rodnim) normama izvo\u0111enja. Ove me\u0111usobno povezane razine normi i kodova tako\u0111er tvore polazi\u0161nu to\u010dku za detaljnije istra\u017eivanje estetike izvo\u0111enja iz rodne perspektive. U tom je smislu osnovni problem otkriti kako se to\u010dno pojedini na\u010dini izvo\u0111enja glazbe (npr. odre\u0111eno tretiranje trajanja i visine tona) prenose u prikaze osje\u0107aja, ranjivosti i du\u0161evnosti, svode\u0107i krajnji izazov izvedbe na sposobnost osloba\u0111anja osje\u0107aja i emotivno nabijenih zna\u010denja pomo\u0107u odre\u0111enih stilskih sredstava. U ovom je kontekstu osnovni problem bio prikazati prirodu tog semioti\u010dkog prostora te na\u010dine po kojima se rodno razlikuje. Za\u0161to se danas toliko \u017eenskih izvo\u0111a\u010da folklorne glazbe priklju\u010duje jednoj vrsti stilske konstrukcije stereotipne mu\u0161kosti, dok mu\u0161ki izvo\u0111a\u010di \u010dini se da monopoliziraju razinu glazbeni\u0161tva na kojoj se zbiva najdublji esteti\u010dki dijalog? Za\u0161to je samo mu\u0161karcima dopu\u0161teno \u00bbzakriviti kolosijek\u00ab, \u0161to to zna\u010di u glazbenim okvirima, i za\u0161to se to \u00bbobuzdavanje bez kr\u0161enja pravila\u00ab u \u017eanru metonimijski povezuje sa \u00bb\u017eenskim\u00ab kvalitetama? Da bi odgovorio na ova pitanja, \u010dlanak istra\u017euje na\u010din na koji su odre\u0111eni standardi izvrsnosti kultivirani na u\u0161trb drugih te kako su takvi standardi ili ideali konceptualizirani s gledi\u0161ta nadmo\u0107i mu\u0161kog subjekta i njegovih kontradiktornih kulturnih predstavljanja.","creator":["Mats Johansson"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23594804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fa42990-91eb-3f15-99b8-5126853983eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23594804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Gendered Fiddle: On the Relationship between Expressive Coding and Artistic Identity in Norwegian Folk Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23594804","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Theorists of widely different persuasions are making serious efforts to understand difference and to bring the concerns and ideals of others within the reach of intellectual and political visions. Yet this attention to difference continues to be examined almost entirely through precise, rigorous, and sophisticated theoretical language. This is only appropriate if we presume that this language, the language-of-theory, is able to represent--and serve as the master interpreter of--all ideas and ideals, all senses of self and politics. I believe that this presumption is deeply flawed. Theoretical language passes over and distorts the differences it would understand. Theory more attentive to difference needs to gain access to the meanings that circulate within different lives, especially as reflected in literary writing of those who, themselves, speak and write from sites of difference.","creator":["Larry M. Preston"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2082519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9a73d84-b1dc-32eb-96a5-376c206f8747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2082519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"953","pageStart":"941","pagination":"pp. 941-953","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theorizing Difference: Voices from the Margins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2082519","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":12595,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481858]],"Locations in B":[[73964,74059]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne C. Dailey"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f76b62e-0ad9-35f4-b9a0-60014062c794"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":102,"pageEnd":"1888","pageStart":"1787","pagination":"pp. 1787-1888","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Federalism and Families","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312587","volumeNumber":"143","wordCount":49539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jeanine S. Alesch"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00358126"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559640205"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234885"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cd3e9e4-493e-35d3-87ff-2a7a7361ce61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26420472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romafors"}],"isPartOf":"Romanische Forschungen","issueNumber":"4","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"591","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-591","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Vittorio Klostermann GmbH","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420472","volumeNumber":"125","wordCount":1929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Borb\u00e1la Farag\u00f3"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d423ad2-6ee0-3737-a8f3-4228df9c6ce1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"THE MEETING OF TWO TIDAL ROADS\": TRADITION AND IDENTITY IN MEDBH MCGUCKIAN'S \"THE, FACE, OF THE EARTH\" AND EIL\u00c9AN N\u00cd CHUILLEAN\u00c1IN'S \"THE GIRL WHO MARRIED THE REINDEER\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274285","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":4124,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[460286,460562]],"Locations in B":[[15821,16097]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay questions assumptions about agency expressed in prevailing concepts of freedom understood as autonomy. It also turns to contexts of bondedness, where one endures and negotiates one's embeddedness in relations of power and thick webs of sociality, to explore alternative modes of agency, of response-ability. The theoretical analysis engages two sites of communal agency, particularly women's: first, I draw from Saba Mahmood's study of the women's mosque movement in contemporary Egypt; and second, I look closely at H\u1ed3 Xu\u00e2n Hu'o'ng folk poetry in eighteenth-century Confucian-dominated Vi\u1ec7t Nam. One can be conceived as a politics of piety, whereas the other can be aptly called a politics of impiety. Both offer glimpses into alternative ways of being and acting in the world. Together they challenge the prevalence of a freedom-centered approach in international relations and political theory.","creator":["Qu\u1ef3nh N. Ph\u1ea1m"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbb4a54a-d1ae-3c58-8829-45da95394fb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23412518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enduring Bonds: Politics and Life Outside Freedom as Autonomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412518","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12508,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[445095,445164],[461319,461476]],"Locations in B":[[20404,20474],[67372,67529]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The absence of women from Lipsius's highly influential De Constantia points to a deep mistrust of the feminine and the family in neo-Stoic philosophy that contrasts sharply with the high valuation of marital love and family ties in Johannes von Tepl's Der Ackermann und der Tod. Lipsius's devaluation of the feminine entails a disturbing sterility as well as a certain irony. While seeking to instill virile attributes in his male audience to protect them from vicissitude, Lipsius is simultaneously addressing and helping form the male citizens of the early absolutist state whose position as subjects is gendered as feminine.","creator":["M. R. Sperberg-McQueen"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40cc211e-23fa-3f94-8674-07ae4fdd5c28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/407797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gardening without Eve: The Role of the Feminine in Justus Lipsius's De Constantia and in Neo-Stoic Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407797","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":12847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This research provides the first look into the experiences of openly gay male team sport athletes on ostensibly all-heterosexual teams. Although openly gay athletes were free from physical harassment, in the absence of a formal ban against gay athletes, sport resisted their acceptance and attempted to remain a site of orthodox masculine production by creating a culture of silence surrounding gay athleticism, by segmenting gay men's identities, and by persistently using homophobic discourse to discredit homosexuality in general. Sports attempt to tolerate gay male athletes when they contribute to the overarching ethos of sport-winning-but try to taint the creation of a gay identity within sport that would see homosexuality and athleticism as compatible. Still, by proving themselves successful in sport, and meeting most other mandates of hegemonic masculinity except for their sexual identity, gay male athletes show that hegemony is not seamless and that there is a possibility of softening hegemonic masculinity in the sporting realm.","creator":["Eric Anderson"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54be8193-5864-3ea7-a492-329ac639bd44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3081938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"877","pageStart":"860","pagination":"pp. 860-877","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Openly Gay Athletes: Contesting Hegemonic Masculinity in a Homophobic Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3081938","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article shows how emcees create local meanings of race and ethnicity in freestyle rap battles. We demonstrate how performers attach new social meanings to race and ethnicity in verbal duels, even as they also reproduce normative meanings around gender and sexuality. Further, we suggest that the construction of local, alternative meanings around race and ethnicity might actually help support dominant racial hierarchies by relegating \"blackness\" suitable for only a limited set of domains. Despite the enduring nature of these broader racial hierarchies, we conclude that performances are activities in which individuals contest and negotiate the social meanings of identities.","creator":["H. Samy Alim","Jooyoung Lee","Lauren Mason Carris"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58ca20b5-e3bb-3899-b686-41b475f990e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"Short Fried-Rice-Eating Chinese MCs\" and \"Good-Hair-Havin Uncle Tom Niggas\": Performing Race and Ethnicity in Freestyle Rap Battles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104245","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Frederick L. Greene"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40172908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3558900-6c9c-39b3-b9e8-7f89336eba20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40172908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishedu"}],"isPartOf":"English Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introducing Queer Theory into the Undergraduate Classroom: Abstractions and Practical Applications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40172908","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CATHERINE DRISCOLL"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38bcbbdf-c273-3e51-81bc-305710e93001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"FEMINIST AUDIENCES FOR JOYCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871165","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7846,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[491716,491841],[499374,499518]],"Locations in B":[[20063,20184],[24374,24517]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELISABETH YOUNG-BRUEHL","LAURA WEXLER"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69fab0dc-85de-3c25-af39-e392ea247744"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On \"Psychoanalysis and Feminism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970700","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":10247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the issue of the genderedness of the philosophical canon. In the theoretical part of the article the author gives evidence of the constructed nature of the philosophical canon, which in the Euro-American space is clearly androcentric. She summarises criticism to date of the philosophical canon by feminist historians of philosophy and describes the results of their research, which is directed at several areas: uncovering forgotten women philosophers of the past; analysing philosophers' views on gender; identifying the genderedness of basic philosophical categories; criticising the dualism that characterises modern philosophical discourse; and finally, making various reinterpretations of the concepts of past philosophers. Each of these approaches has particular potential and limitations, which the author seeks to identify. In the second part of the article the author presents the results of her analysis of philosophy textbooks and books on the history of philosophy published in the Czech Republic after 1990. She conducted her analysis by comparing information on women philosophers contained in the texts of the selected books with the information available in other literature (mainly English). She also employed the typological method, and she identified five \u2019strategies\u2018 of marginalisation of women philosophers, whereby textbooks used at Czech universities contribute to maintaining the existing philosophical canon.","creator":["ZDE\u0147KA KALNICK\u00c1"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560909399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea4aa14d-2c46-36fa-8510-e97f1f808673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41132765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"809","pagination":"pp. 809-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Genderovanost filozofick\u00e9ho k\u00e1nonu a textov\u00e9 \u201estrategie\u201d marginalizace filozofek \/ The Genderedness of the Philosophical Canon and the Textual 'Strategies' of Marginalisation of Women Philosophers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41132765","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":11881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Wentworth, a predominantly 'Coloured' working class community in the south Durban basin of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, is characterised by a high prevalence of HIV and AIDS, poverty and unemployment - the socio-economic context from which participants in this study emerge. This article draws from a completed doctoral study drawing from ethnographic methods and included semi-structured, open-ended interviews and participant observation of 13 'Coloured' high-school boy (Anderson, 2010). The findings suggest that despite a misogynistic and violent culture in this community, some boys resist and abhor sexual and physically violent practices that serve to dominate and subjugate girls. This article captures the conflicting constructions and manifestations of masculinity which demonstrate the ambivalences and confusions that permeate the everyday experiences and performances of these boys. Demonstration of alternate, non-violent and non-sexist masculinities among this group can be interpreted in ways that suggest pro-feminist dispositions, and can provide opportunities for working with these boys to create awareness in schools as catalysts for change in such gender relations. This paper focuses largely on the more exemplary, alternate and non-violent masculine articulations, destabilising the negative perception of all 'Coloured' males as essentially violent. Evidence points to the existence of caring maternal and familial relationships that translate into the boys' desire for respectful and peaceful relationships with girls. However, the lack of alternatives to the existing violent expressions of masculinities is real and it is therefore crucial to provide boys with other, more exemplary versions of masculine behaviour.","creator":["Bronwynne Anderson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9c251c1-fda0-3386-b589-a5ca3a44422f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"You're not a man if you hit a girl\": Coloured high-school boys articulating more peaceable expressions of heterosexual masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917336","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Meenakshi Thapan"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e73c87c0-10a5-3673-86af-09fe0465736a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3517859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"7\/9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Body and Everyday Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517859","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12951,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[79201,79329],[147205,147294],[153797,154118],[461319,461463]],"Locations in B":[[16239,16367],[16637,16727],[52380,52701],[58391,58535]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Victoria Foote"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45412350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02295113"},{"name":"oclc","value":"816979121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2021240762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31821fe1-cace-3e1a-9760-7e735427a8c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45412350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refucandjrefu"}],"isPartOf":"Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees \/ Refuge: Revue canadienne sur les r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Centre for Refugee Studies, York University","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Refugee Women as a Particular Social Group: A Reconsideration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45412350","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4713,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[65718,65812],[68689,68777],[69036,69150],[70096,70228]],"Locations in B":[[21219,21313],[21750,21838],[21898,22013],[25270,25400]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Samantha Arnold"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3699681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15219488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3475a2da-3ccd-3d79-bdb8-4f2da96a3a87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3699681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"638","pageStart":"636","pagination":"pp. 636-638","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Politics Disguised; Disguising Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3699681","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":1544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes proverbs used by Kasena women from northern Ghana in their effort to critique gendered perceptions of justice in their society. This critique takes place within the socially approved medium of the joking relationship that pertains between a Kasena woman and her husband's kin. The joking relationship permits joking partners to give their views free reign and therefore provides a safe avenue for women to express their own attitudes and values pertaining to justice. They subvert and contradict Kasem proverbs in order to protest the use of gender as a basis for defining women's roles and rights in the home and in marriage. However, gender justice, as it can be gleaned from the proverbs the women deploy, is not limited to demanding freedom from traditional dependencies and addressing gender inequities. It is broadened to include calls for the recognition of women's self worth and of their contribution to culture \u2013 a conception of justice that has been the subject of recent debates on the definition of justice which have moved the focus from issues of distribution to questions of recognition. Tono konto ni Kasena kaana memanga mo, Ghana banga tiina kateri dem wone. Kaana bam mange memanga yam se ba bere ba sam tiina na bonge te baara de kaana seeni to mo. Ba mae Kasena kaane de o banna kweera sena mo ba jange de memanga ba di bonga. Bonga dim na ye te to, ko pae se balo na kweere daane to wae ba ngoona ba bobonga taam, delo ba yaa na baa wane bat a to. Konto nwaane me pea se kaana bam wae ba tea baara yaa na gyege se ba taa ke kaana lamyirane te to. Kaana bam leri memanga yam mo, ba gya ya ba tulimi, se ba bere we noono na ye kaane, ko wo mange se ba taa ke o ne baaro gare o to, songo de baro-zure wone. Kaana de baara sena yam ban a bere ba memanga yam ne to, dae yalo na tea yizura sena yirane, ko foge ko dae fanga kikea seeni to. Memanga yam yadonna bere ko na mange se noona taa nige kaana tei ye ba bonga ba sige kaana na ke kolo ba wole logo kom to mo \u2013 yanto bobonga yam mo noona badonna de gyege ba lara, ye ba bere we kem manga doe ka ke komara komara; be ngwaane, se n'nii n'dong n'nige, de ye kem manga mo.","creator":["Helen Yitah"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42005269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9022eba-1fba-3aee-85bb-31b4c2c04ca8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42005269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kasena women's critique of gender roles and gender justice through proverbial jesting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42005269","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Following the corporeal turn in social theory, this paper explores how the body is implicated in pedagogic practice and leaning. Focusing on the body has usually been recognised as part of the regulative rather than instructional discourse in schools. Work has begun to redress the mind\u2014body imbalance through the 'corporeal device' developed from Bernstein's 'pedagogic device', the fundamental relay through which social inequalities are reproduced in schools. To properly recognise the way bodies act as pedagogic relays requires a robust understanding of persons as multi-sensorial acting beings. Examples for choreographic pedagogy are used to illuminate the complex and multimodal features of instructional discourse and to suggest how the moving body could be enlisted to enhance students' access to formal academic discourses and better understand why some young people fail to achieve in schools.","creator":["Gabrielle Ivinson"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e633edc-ce75-3f3e-93fa-e4ee120af3b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23256164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The body and pedagogy: beyond absent, moving bodies in pedagogic practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256164","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8076,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524164,524260]],"Locations in B":[[47846,47957]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Najarian"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"629c12e4-25ae-3ae2-ab4e-280eb04e0b06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"West Virginia University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Curled Minion, Mancer, Coiner of Sweet Words\": Keats, Dandyism, and Sexual Indeterminacy in \"Sohrab and Rustum\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003661","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Cynthia Barounis"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26878267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"427418196"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2019200491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67be2be3-ad8b-3186-b63b-8e30f25f3d88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26671116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"flanneryoconnor"}],"isPartOf":"Flannery O'Connor Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System by and on behalf of Georgia College and State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Through Spectacle(s)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671116","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Flannery O\u2019Connor and the Politics of Drag"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jean Franco","Claudia Montillo V."],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01889478"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607198925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e677003-b59a-301b-bdfb-b0c95c076f6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42624740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"debatefeminista"}],"isPartOf":"Debate Feminista","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Metis Productos Culturales S.A. de C.V.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Deponer a El Vaticano: el proyecto secular del feminismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42624740","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Diane Lamoureux"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30f7a5b7-bf1c-3d1f-bcc8-4b578581aa79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"21\/22","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"De la trag\u00e9die \u00e0 la r\u00e9bellion : le lesbianisme \u00e0 travers l'exp\u00e9rience du f\u00e9minisme radical","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598408","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4430,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/394634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/394634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"1099","pageStart":"1086","pagination":"pp. 1086-1099","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/394634","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":6252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gregg Bordowitz"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/668919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b24dc4c-2040-3a53-a153-502a43b3b79f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/668919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","issueNumber":"31","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Repetition and Change: The Film Installations of Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/668919","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["JULIANA MART\u00cdNEZ"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fa26dc1-9190-3bd6-87b5-210a03e80559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Dressed Like a Man? Of Language, Bodies, and Monsters in the Trial of Enrique\/Enriqueta Favez and Its Contemporary Accounts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862381","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The aim of this article is to explore the development of theories on transsexualism with a view to advancing a typology of theories of transsexualism. This typology exposes a general shift from concerns with 'authenticity' (the transsexual as a 'real' woman or man) to issues of 'performativity' (the transsexual as hyperbolic enactment of gender). I will argue it is through a displacement of psychology with sociology as the major lens through which transsexualism is theorized that such a shift from authenticity to performativity is effected. The final typology considers the notion of transgression (rendering the modem two-gender system obsolete). The article argues that whilst transgression may be possible, it is not guaranteed by all forms of tramsexualism.","creator":["Myra J. Hird"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c485e961-bbe4-3095-a804-71fa0d518cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"For a Sociology of Transsexualism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856430","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8181,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[430988,431620]],"Locations in B":[[23594,24228]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper explores ambiguities of political resistance and anti-war protest in Madonna's music video, 'American Life'. We begin by tracing the history of the making, promotion and eventual withdrawal of the video in the context of the military build-up and media campaign that preceded the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. In these opening sections, we focus in particular on the (perhaps deliberately generated) controversy surrounding the work, and its problematic relationship with contemporary corporate mass media. We then proceed to describe the visual contents of the video, and present three distinct readings of it: first, as a gesture of overt protest against the war; second, as a work that is unaware of the manner in which its signifying textures unwittingly and covertly celebrate the culture it would critique, thus nullifying its overt subversive gesture; and third, as a work that is in fact far more politically resistant than it knows, through an uncanny form of protest that is dependent upon this very complicity.","creator":["Martin Scherzinger","Stephen Smith"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Blatant to Latent Protest (And Back Again): On the Politics of Theatrical Spectacle in Madonna's 'American Life'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500314","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Gillian Harkins"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20077893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384291"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456782"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212093"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e92a9368-e525-346d-b2bd-89c8fd6051e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20077893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southlitj"}],"isPartOf":"The Southern Literary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Surviving the Family Romance? Southern Realism and the Labor of Incest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20077893","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e46a7da9-47fc-342b-8870-f61616e89126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":192,"pageEnd":"1600","pageStart":"1411","pagination":"pp. 1411-1600","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463048","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":63552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Efforts to promote gender equality often encourage changes to interpersonal interactions as a way of undermining gender hierarchy. Such programs are premised on the idea that the gender system can be \u201cundone\u201d when individuals behave in ways that challenge prevailing gender norms. However, scholars know little about whether and under what conditions real changes to the gender system can result from changed behaviors. We use the context of a gender sensitization program in the Democratic Republic of Congo to examine prospects for transformative change at the interactional level of the gender system. Over nine months, we observed significant changes in men\u2019s quotidian practices. Further, we identified a new commitment among many men to a more equal division of household labor. However, participants consistently undermined the transformative potential of these behavioral changes through their dedication to maintaining control over the objective, process, and meaning of change, resisting conceptions of equality that challenged the gender system. Because quotidian changes left gender hierarchy intact, they appear unlikely to destabilize the logics that legitimate women\u2019s subordination.","creator":["RACHAEL S. PIEROTTI","MILLI LAKE","CHLO\u00c9 LEWIS"],"datePublished":"2018-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26597097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0f1dbad-20ba-30bf-b2a6-c36cf60840e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26597097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"540","pagination":"pp. 540-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"EQUALITY ON HIS TERMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26597097","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Doing and Undoing Gender through Men\u2019s Discussion Groups"} +{"abstract":"The Liquid Metal Man of \"Terminator 2\" exposes ambiguities in the figure of the American body politic that have existed for over three hundred years; in contrast, the reprogrammed T101 suggests a body politic as cyborg and offers false assurances of popular control over mass democracy under late capitalism.","creator":["Doran Larson"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7217adea-7534-3c9f-9120-d735a683cb31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Machine as Messiah: Cyborgs, Morphs, and the American Body Politic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225613","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Beginning with an understanding of visual culture as a postmodern discourse, this article argues for more focused attention to how visual culture presents a critical rethinking of subjectivity within art education. Through an analysis of a language of bombardment, a discourse that positions the subject as bombarded by media messages, this article examines how differences between humanist constructions of the self and postmodern theories of the subject impact understandings of viewer\/viewed, student\/teacher and active\/passive relationships. The performative photographs of Cindy Sherman are presented as a critical rethinking of conduit metaphors of communication and liberal humanist constructions of the self. In its conclusions, this article suggests that visual culture marks not only a rethinking of the subject's relationship to the visual, but also a significant shift in understandings of subjectivity itself.","creator":["Jennifer F. Eisenhauer"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3497106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a12f30f-84c4-3cee-b0da-d8511c3e1eff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3497106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond Bombardment: Subjectivity, Visual Culture, and Art Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3497106","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":6244,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[96415,96585]],"Locations in B":[[28381,28552]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MARIE E. GASPER-HULVAT"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25769978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","issueNumber":"57\/58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The icon as performer and as performative utterance: The sixteenth-century Vladimir Mother of God in the Moscow Dormition Cathedral","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769978","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Within political theory there has been a recent surge of interest in the themes of loss, grief, and mourning. In this paper i address questions about the politics of mourning through a critical engagement of the work of Judith Butler. I argue that Butler's work remains tethered to an account of melancholic subjectivity derived from her early reading of Freud. These investments in melancholia compromise Butler's recent ethico-political interventions by obscuring the ambivalence of political engagements and the possibilities of achieving and sustaining non-dogmatic identities. To overcome this impasse I argue for an alternative framing of mourning by turning to the psychoanalytic theory of Melanie Klein. An account of mourning that leans upon Klein's work cashes in on the ethical and political promises that are immanent yet unrealized in Butler's recent work while providing a new orientation for mourning in, and for, democratic politics.","creator":["David W. McIvor"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41703076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ab125b3-beb8-3fc4-96fd-90eadbac53bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41703076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Bringing Ourselves to Grief: Judith Butler and the Politics of Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41703076","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11890,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286911,287021]],"Locations in B":[[10655,10761]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the precepts of natural law feminism, and in exploring the writings of two Canadian feminists, Maureen McTeer and Louise Vandelac, examines how natural law feminism is deployed in debates about how to theorize reproduction. I contend that the natural law perspective obscures many issues worthy of feminist inquiry, and, perhaps more critically, eschews a discourse that emphasizes reproductive freedom in favour of one which has at its centre a largely unproblematized view of reproduction that follows a biologically driven script of conception, gestation, childbirth and mothering as inherently and necessarily connected. I argue that this stance is particularly evident in natural law feminist analyses of ecology and the regulation of new reproductive and genetic technologies. In both these areas, natural law feminism poses the central problem as one in which feminists must zealously protect the natural association between women and reproduction; in so doing, natural law feminists gloss over the nature of this association. I suggest a reframing of the focus of debates on reproduction from what is natural and what is socially constructed to how we demarcate the two.","creator":["Lealle Ruhl"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4474cd86-2a0e-310c-a884-ab43cdc34484"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"66","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Natural Governance and the Governance of Nature: The Hazards of Natural Law Feminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395830","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Emily R. Neill","Marla Brettschneider","Regula Gr\u00fcnenfelder","Grace Ji-Sun Kim","Patricia A. Martinez","Kirsten Witte","Jane Naomi Iwamura","Debra Washington"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe37877a-0e34-3ef0-86df-b4ec7152bba2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Roundtable Discussion: From Generation to Generation: Horizons in Feminist Theology or Reinventing the Wheel?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002358","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":17538,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[67972,68139],[500697,500774]],"Locations in B":[[67762,67934],[71339,71414]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay is devoted to the seventeenth-century Italian actress Caterina Biancolelli, who lived and acted in France during the reign of Louis XIV, and, in particular, to her creation of the famous comedic role of Colombina. It explores how Caterina's character acts as a superb illustration of transgressive humor, subversive performance, and improvisational comedy by drawing from the rich oral tradition of the female performers in the commedia dell'arte tradition as well as from her own comedic genius.","creator":["Domnica Radulescu"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f977003-2731-3b8b-ba94-193537374246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Caterina's Colombina: The Birth of a Female Trickster in Seventeenth-Century France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070159","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":15509,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17399,17592]],"Locations in B":[[59604,59804]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29733991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b7a53d0-1e30-3623-9779-3c9b4bd1de04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29733991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29733991","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is concerned with Jeanette Winterson's use and reworking of postmodern concepts of the body in her novel Written on the Body. Feminist appropriations of those concepts can be problematic: they tend to focus on the way in which a coherent body image is constructed and then imposed on the body parts, whereas many feminist theorists continue to emphasize the wholeness and integrity of the female body. Written on the Body offers constructive ways of theorizing the female body within a postmodern framework, because it is shaped by concepts of wholeness and fragmentation at the same time. Winterson develops a critique of androcentric science and medicine that strives to know the female body by dissecting it, analogous to the way modern society compartmentalizes human lives into neat manageable units. Against this, a concept of wholeness is strategically employed. Likewise, Winterson criticizes the equation of the female body with a penetrable surface. The androcentric concept of sexuality that associates penetration with the exploration of hidden depths and the achievement of power and knowledge is unmasked as necrophiliac. However, by constructing a lover\/narrator whose gender remains undeclared, Winterson manages to unsettle perceptions of gendered difference. The text produces different meanings depending on whether the narrator is read as a man or a woman, and sexuality requires a basic human sameness from which a host of differences emerge that may or may not be gendered. In Written on the Body, Winterson disturbs fixed boundaries and rigidly gendered identities that objectify the body in order to build up a concept of the body that is fluid and leaves room for changes and mergings with other bodies, where bodies are held together not by a stable body image and a gendered identity, but by forces of connection and interaction between parts of the body.","creator":["Antje Lindenmeyer"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d25bcc9-33c8-312e-912e-8ac625050731"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Postmodern Concepts of the Body in Jeanette Winterson's \"Written on the Body\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395587","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6887,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[421463,421551]],"Locations in B":[[3979,4067]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay begins with Schiller's intriguing assertion of Anmut as a detachable, movable quality in \"\u00dcber Anmut und W\u00fcrde\" and applies it to a discussion of gender attributes and gender attributions in Die Jungfrau von Orleans. Schiller's awareness of the contingency and transportability of the attributes that signal gender generates a counter-model to the medieval \"sex-gender\" assumptions that triggered the execution of the historical Joan of Arc, but this is at best a vexed and inconclusive \"countering.\"","creator":["Gail K. Hart"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"227281ce-5530-315b-b21f-99f33be1e084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-dressing History: Mother Nature, Mother Isabeau, the Virgin Mary, and Schiller's Jungfrau","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688873","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Donna M. Lanclos"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23166787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1923d472-aab5-310e-8575-7fa5a122ced0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23166787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"PIGS AND COWS IN NORTHERN IRELAND: Anthropology, Folklore and Contributing to Child-Centered Studies of Culture and Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23166787","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":19039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susanne Schr\u00f6ter"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1c867b6-90fc-31c7-81d4-281b971fcddf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40341808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Travestie und Transsexualit\u00e4t. Der ethnologische Beitrag zu einer interdisziplin\u00e4ren Debatte","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40341808","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[474804,474877]],"Locations in B":[[55119,55192]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Rebecca F. Stern"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Moving Parts and Speaking Parts: Situating Victorian Antitheatricality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030186","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":12021,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443416,443525]],"Locations in B":[[4800,4909]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Ellen McBreen"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6896e74-550b-38b4-84c5-5c2677ed748d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Biblical Gender Bending in Harlem: The Queer Performance of Nugent's Salome","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777966","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":4416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article focuses on blind women\u2019s negotiation of their hypervisibility and invisibility and on their encounters with the gaze as blind and as women. Based on interviews with blind women in Israel, the essay employs the anthropological methodology of life history or life story narrative, focusing on three women\u2019s narratives and providing a close reading of blind women\u2019s experience of the visual. Addressing the ways blind women verbalize their seemingly panoptic condition of living in a state of permanent, heightened visibility absent the ability to return the gaze, I argue for blind women\u2019s awareness of and active responses to the gaze, analyzing the ways they do not simply serve as passive spectacles but rather talk (or stare) back at the gaze they encounter, manipulating what Rosemarie Garland-Thomson terms \u201cstaring relations.\u201d Presenting the complexities inherent in the intersections of gender, disability, and the visual field, the essay integrates the scholarships of feminist disability studies and feminist analysis of the gaze, offering an opportunity to examine the similarities and differences between the terms \u201cgaze\u201d and \u201cstaring,\u201d contemplating visuality as a human condition, and enriching what Lois McNay calls the \u201ctheory of agency.\u201d","creator":["Gili Hammer"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83157782-e849-3b55-940e-a7b72d9b0614"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26552820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cIf They\u2019re Going to Stare, at Least I\u2019ll Give Them a Good Reason To\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552820","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Blind Women\u2019s Visibility, Invisibility, and Encounters with the Gaze"} +{"abstract":"In recent years numerous reports of prisoner abuse and other militarised violences by British troops stationed in Iraq and Afghanistan have emerged. Drawing on two such incidents \u2013 the abuse of detainees at Camp Breadbasket and the murder of Baha Mousa \u2013 this article seeks to locate such violences on a continuum that can be traced back to the ways in which British soldiers are trained. Following on from a burgeoning feminist literature on militarised masculinities, and using Avery Gordon's epistemology of ghosts and hauntings, I suggest a conceptual and methodological intervention into the subject that resists generalised stories and the mapping of 'hard' borders. Focusing on the myths of asexuality and discipline that emerge from, and reinforce, the gendered discourses of basic training, I conduct a 'ghost hunt' of the haunting spectres that have attempted to be exorcised from these myths. Making visible these ghost(s) and tracing their (violent) materialisations through multiple sites and across a continuum, militarised violences \u2013 in all their ranges \u2013 begin to be made explicable.","creator":["JULIA WELLAND"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24564437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66282cdc-d842-358a-a1d1-363a95f340ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24564437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"902","pageStart":"881","pagination":"pp. 881-902","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Militarised violences, basic training, and the myths of asexuality and discipline","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24564437","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":13432,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[524157,524260]],"Locations in B":[[31953,32055]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The spread of the term \"decolonization\" in Bolivian political discourse since the coming to power of Evo Morales is an example of the ways in which shifts in the use of language may constitute the processes of change of which they are part. Opposing ideologies are being expressed through various channels (language, dress, symbolism, and ritual) in the struggle for dominance in the public sphere. The mass media play a dual role, both providing illustrations of the discursive processes at work and discursively countering decolonization. Despite media opposition, Morales and the Movimiento al Socialismo are developing the structural conditions necessary for previously marginalized voices to be heard.","creator":["Rosaleen Howard"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25700523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7be6ba87-4812-3c91-a074-809d9e511a06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25700523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language, Signs, and the Performance of Power: The Discursive Struggle over Decolonization in the Bolivia of Evo Morales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25700523","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent geography literature has understood 'the body' mainly as representation. This paper argues for an increased recognition of the body as a material entity. Disability is used to illustrate the importance of reinterpreting the biology of the body and mind. This reinterpretation of the body will, the paper concludes, strengthen research into the geography of health and impairment.","creator":["Edward Hall"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Blood, Brain and Bones': Taking the Body Seriously in the Geography of Health and Impairment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004033","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sophie Mayer"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e519faec-42dd-365c-8d69-42fc3394d713"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GIRL POWER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413786","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":6719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"BACK TO THE FUTURE OF FEMINIST SCIENCE FICTION WITH INTO THE FOREST<\/em> AND ARRIVAL<\/em>"} +{"abstract":"This article examines how the term \"The Practitioner\" organizes knowledge and power in public administration, and how it constrains thought about the field's possibilities. The Practitioner has neither the specific qualities it posits as a representative of executive authority, nor the generic, universal quality as a neutral figure of science, stripped of all particular characteristics. The Practitioner is shown to reinforce a preoccupation with a narrow range of social concerns and questions and, ultimately, determines what constitutes legitimate public administration speech and inquiry and who may speak on behalf of administrative realities. On a more fundamental level, however, The Practitioner names a specific kind of formal relationship in which the actual content of the term is less critical than the basic relationship it establishes and seeks to reproduce. Through its pedagogy, public administration fabricates heterogeneous practitioners into The Practitioner. The possibilities for a different kind of relationship are explored via the injunction of David Farmer to embrace the \"death of The Practitioner.\" The article concludes that, in order to move beyond The Practitioner, public administration must consider the significance of its \"passionate attachments\" to this figure. To this end, an \"erotics of public administration\" is outlined.","creator":["Thomas J. Catlaw"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df7b4708-4bd1-3638-99da-f279ba12ff63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25610791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Death of the Practitioner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25610791","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7305,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Claudia Rattazzi Papka"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24006568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24006568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Written Woman Writes: Caterina da Siena Between History and Hagiography, Body and Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24006568","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9070,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727],[477219,477271]],"Locations in B":[[3424,3569],[52011,52063]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article reassesses the shift from lesbian-feminism to queer in light of the expressivist turn in feminist thought. The article follows Charles Taylor's theory of expressivism as a modernist, Romantic paradigm of identity and practice. Expressivism defines the self and freedom as a process of self-creation, apoeisis. An expressivist paradigm underlies aspects of contemporary feminist praxis, redefining politics as practices of transforming the subject, self, and\/or language. I argue that this paradigm of praxis ultimately works to depoliticize feminism. I criticize two forms of expressivism, namely, lesbian-feminist normative expressivism (based on ethical ideals of liberation) and queer performative expressivism (based on aesthetic ideals of subversion, i.e., \"arts of the self\"). I argue that feminism needs to break out of the expressivist paradigm and to reconceptualize a praxis that interrelates practices of self-transformation with concrete, political practices aimed at transforming the social order.","creator":["Kathy Miriam"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79dc75f4-3a2c-39b4-86a8-6dd296f63c94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberating Practice: A Critique of the Expressivist Turn in Lesbian-Feminist and Queer Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071204","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10066,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[142447,142540],[468649,468718]],"Locations in B":[[36302,36395],[60365,60434]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathleen Biddick"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2864558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00387134"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a543c2b4-4d89-3155-9579-06c7ec3a5b13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2864558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"speculum"}],"isPartOf":"Speculum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Medieval Academy of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Genders, Bodies, Borders: Technologies of the Visible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2864558","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":16848,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[42187,42332]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza c\u00f3mo Indocumentados...el otro merengue, obra teatral de Jos\u00e9 Luis Ramos Escobar, capta las tensiones que caracterizan a los actos migratorios caribe\u00f1os y las consiguientes articulaciones identitarias. Ambientada en Nueva York, la obra explora los sentimientos de (no) pertenencia y las diferencias socio-culturales entre puertorrique\u00f1os y dominicanos expresados mediante el lenguaje, el racismo y los gustos musicales. El protagonista capta esta complejidad cuando compra los documentos de un puertorrique\u00f1o fallecido y deja de ser un dominicano indocumentado, Para examinar estas transformaciones, se utilizar\u00e1n conceptos te\u00f3ricos provenientes de los estudios performativos, queer y musicales. This article analyzes how, Indocumentados...el otro merengue, by Jos\u00e9 Luis Ramos Escobar, captures the tensions that undergird Caribbean migratory flows alongside articulations of being. Taking place in New York, the theatre piece explores feelings of (not) belonging and socio-cultural divisions between Puerto Ricans and Dominicans via linguistic markers, racism and musical preferences. The protagonist best captures this complex situation when he buys the documents of a deceased Puerto Rican man, leaving his identity as an undocumented Dominican behind in favor of this new self. In order to analyze this transformation, I apply theoretical concepts from Performance Studies, Queer Studies and Musicology.","creator":["CHRISTINA BAKER"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26393650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25ecafde-cff8-3d42-9876-8369ec0f0756"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26393650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Migrating \"Bandas\/Banderas Sonoras\": Musical Affiliation and Performances of Passing in \"Indocumentados...el otro merengue\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26393650","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Tim Stuettgen"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e78f4680-e575-3c02-bd5a-b0adb1ecba48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27649664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Disidentification in the Center of Power: The Porn Performer and Director Belladonna as a Contrasexual Culture Producer (A Letter to Beatriz Preciado)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27649664","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Theda Wrede"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24372860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d38fbdb-1eb1-3e10-bfb5-7e92f8180d69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24372860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction to Special Issue \"Theorizing Space and Gender in the 21st Century\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24372860","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":3099,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443290,443525]],"Locations in B":[[115,349]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In this article I examine the feminist implications of an excerpt from BT Me\u2018ilah 15b\u201316a. The sugya concerns categories of neveilah (flesh from the carcass of an animal that was not properly slaughtered), which may not be eaten and also transmits impurity to those who touch it. Small amounts, encountered separately, would be considered negligible from a halakhic point of view. If encountered together, do they combine to constitute a minimum halakhic measurement from the point of view either of consumption or of transmitting impurity? Whereas the mishnah considers all manner of neveilah combinable for both those purposes, three amoraic responses to the mishnah each take a different stance on the issue. My paper analyzes the ways in which the binary categories that are set up and then broken down further might inform our understanding of the role of hierarchical binaries that govern sex and gender and define men as center and women as \u201cother.\u201d","creator":["Sarra Lev"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.28.106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66e1c2b9-080b-3e8e-a923-290a8bf6bdd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nashim.28.106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","issueNumber":"28","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Inside\/Outside: The Rabbinic Negotiation of Binaries \u00b7 BT Me\u2018ilah<\/em> 15b\u201316a","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nashim.28.106","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6225,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[80006,80349],[417447,417655]],"Locations in B":[[4959,5319],[28840,29048]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad3ba156-8155-33c5-b549-35c80461dd0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328186","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":2439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article argues that residents of late eighteenth-century North America had access to a wide vocabulary for describing and experiencing variation in sexual behavior and self-presentation. Building on work in eighteenth-century science studies, this article reminds us that gender, a term that was used during the eighteenth century to describe groups of either sex, was increasingly understood as a way of characterizing men and women along specific behavioral or taxonomic lines. The article makes three claims: first, that the enormous body of scholarship on the relationality and contingency of eighteenth-century gender has not yet coalesced into an overarching narrative within eighteenth-century studies that reflects this understanding of the instability of gender during this period; second, that to center a historical narrative of the instability of eighteenth-century gender in our scholarship and teaching, we must center studies of gender that are theorized intersectionally (the history of gender in Caribbean colonies, rather than metropolitan spaces; the history of gender in working-class communities, rather than ruling-class communities; and so on) because this scholarship takes the relationality of gender as fundamental; and finally, that theorizing transhistorical \"similarity\" (as distinct from continuity) bears important potential as a framework for imagining a historically rigorous relationship between the politics of gender in the eighteenth century and the politics of gender today.","creator":["GRETA LAFLEUR"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ad96b25-f8ba-3a43-868d-9daca7be7518"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24474867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex and \"Unsex\": Histories of Gender Trouble in Eighteenth-Century North America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24474867","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":13626,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[63333,63541],[64063,64435]],"Locations in B":[[65395,67810],[67855,68228]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rationalist theories and practices of justice are inadequate. They fail to encourage or to account or provide space for the wide range of qualities necessary for justice. Feminist theories, object relations psychoanalysis and postmodernist philosophies provide insights into the necessary failures of rationalist concepts of justice. I utilize these theories, especially Winnicott's notion of transitional space and a feminist sensitivity to gender, to outline a different approach to justice.","creator":["Jane Flax"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3791414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Play of Justice: Justice as a Transitional Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791414","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[478124,478195]],"Locations in B":[[49396,49467]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Rosen-Berry"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41443978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00143006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617852"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250522"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41443978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"europeanjudaism"}],"isPartOf":"European Judaism: A Journal for the New Europe","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"REVEALING HIDDEN ASPECTS OF DIVINITY IN THE 'QUEER' FACE: TOWARDS A JEWISH 'QUEER' (LIBERATION) THEOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41443978","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8333,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481404,481471]],"Locations in B":[[36193,36260]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ANTONY ROWLAND"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77e5a3fb-bc3c-39ec-b811-6d8459b2a4b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41556757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'All Is Not Dead': Philip Larkin, Humanism and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556757","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Recent controversies over identity claims have prompted questions about who should qualify for affirmative action, who counts as family, who is a man or a woman, and who is entitled to the benefits of U.S. citizenship. Commentators across the political spectrum have made calls to settle these debates with evidence of official designations on birth certificates, application forms, or other records. This move toward formalities seeks to transcend the usual divide between those who believe identities should be determined based on objective biological or social standards, and those who believe identities are a matter of individual choice. Yet legal scholars have often overlooked the role of formalities in identity determination doctrines. This Article identifies and describes the phenomenon of \"formal identity,\" in which the law recognizes those identities individuals claim for themselves by executing formalities. Drawing on Lon Fuller's classic work on the benefits of formality in commercial law contexts, it offers a theory explaining the appeal of formal identity. But it concludes that reformers should be skeptical of the concept. Formal identity may set traps for the unwary, eliminate space for subversive or marginal identities, and legitimize identity-based systems of inequality. Ultimately, this Article urges critical examination not merely of formal identity, but of the functions identity categories serve in the law.","creator":["Jessica A. Clarke"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bc4f1d0-63c0-3848-9dcf-1033863ab3ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":93,"pageEnd":"839","pageStart":"747","pagination":"pp. 747-839","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Identity and Form","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758490","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":49012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46946,47068]],"Locations in B":[[236374,236497]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Walter Metz"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ecd161d-9964-3536-a1b9-e91e1a8347c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Women, Film, and Feminism: A Course Syllabus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004655","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":1871,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481756,481824]],"Locations in B":[[3432,3500]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper analyses data from a recent study of ex-prisoners and prisoners in Gauteng Province, South Africa, to consider the moral economy established by hegemonic inmate culture in which sexual interactions are negotiated. It argues that while this system is based on outside norms of heterosexism, ruptures with these norms occur. Male prison populations are rearranged into gendered categories through intricate inmate rituals, causing dramatic breaks in the ways that some prisoners are understood by others and themselves. The rituals and rules involved in the constructions appear to be unfamiliar from an 'outside' perspective, but have roots beyond prison walls. Similarly, the gendered positions generated are distinct from those they imitate, but also emerge in relation to them, beyond mere imitation. Even as new structures of identity emerge then, breaks with the outside are never total. Neither is the hold of the moral economy that immate culture works so hard to create. Another order of rupture happens when prisoners transgress the rules of this economy, and subvert the meanings on which both the oppressive gender-sex status quo of the inside and that of the outside, rely. \/\/\/ Cet article analyse les donn\u00e9es d'une \u00e9tude r\u00e9cente sur des ex-prisonniers et des prisonniers dans la province de Gauteng, en Afrique du Sud, afin d'examiner l'\u00e9conomie morale \u00e9tablie par la culture h\u00e9g\u00e9monique des d\u00e9tenus, au sein de laquelle des interactions sexuelles sont n\u00e9goci\u00e9es. Il avance l'hypoth\u00e8se que si ce syst\u00e8me est bas\u00e9 sur des normes ext\u00e9rieures d'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexisme, des ruptures avec ces normes se produisent. Les populations masculines des prisons sont reclass\u00e9es en cat\u00e9gories \" de genre \" \u00e0 travers des rituels carc\u00e9raux complexes, ce qui provoque parfois des ruptures dramatiques dans la fa\u00e7on dont les prisonniers sont compris par les autres et par eux-m\u00eames. Vus \" de l'ext\u00e9rieur \", les rituels et les r\u00e8gles qui jouent un r\u00f4le dans ces constructions semblent inhabituels. Pourtant ils ont des racines au-del\u00e0 des murs des prisons. De m\u00eame, les attitudes sexu\u00e9es produites sontelles distinctes de celles qu'elles imitent, tout en \u00e9manant d'elles de mani\u00e8re plus affirm\u00e9e que dans une simple imitation. M\u00eame lorsque ce ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne entra\u00eene l'apparition de nouvelles structures d'identit\u00e9, les ruptures avec l'ext\u00e9rieur ne sont jamais totales, ni d'ailleurs le contr\u00f4le de l'\u00e9conomie morale que la culture carc\u00e9rale s'acharne \u00e0 cr\u00e9er. Un autre ordre de rupture se produit quand les prisonniers transgressent les r\u00e8gles de cette \u00e9conomie et \u00e9branlent les significations sur lesquelles aussi bien le statu quo sexu\u00e9 et oppressif de l'int\u00e9rieur que celui de l'ext\u00e9rieur s'appuient. \/\/\/ En este documento se analizan datos a partir de un estudio reciente de exconvictos y prisioneros en la provincia de Gauteng, Sud\u00e1frica, con el objetivo de examinar la econom\u00eda moral establecida por la cultura hegem\u00f3nica de los presos con respecto a c\u00f3mo se negocian sus interacciones sexuales. Se arguye que si bien este sistema est\u00e1 basado en las reglas externas de car\u00e1cter heterosexual, estas normas se acaban transgrediendo. Las poblaciones de presos de sexo masculino se reorganizan en categor\u00edas por sexos a trav\u00e9s de complejos rituales entre los presos, causando cambios dr\u00e1sticos en la manera en la que los presos son entendidos entre ellos y por los dem\u00e1s. Los rituales y las normas que participan en las interpretaciones no parecen ser muy conocidas desde una perspectiva 'exterior', pero sus ra\u00edces traspasan las paredes de la c\u00e1rcel. Al mismo tiempo, las posiciones por sexos que se generan est\u00e1n claramente definidas de aquellas a las que imitan, aunque tambi\u00e9n surgen con relaci\u00f3n a \u00e9stas, m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la mera imitaci\u00f3n. Aun cuando se originan nuevas estructuras de identidad, la ruptura con el exterior no siempre es total. Ni tampoco es la influencia de la econom\u00eda moral que la cultura de convicto se esfuerza tanto en crear. Otro orden de ruptura ocurre cuando los prisioneros transgreden las normas de esta econom\u00eda y trastocan los significados de los que depende el status quo del sexo opresivo tanto en el interior como en el exterior.","creator":["Sasha Gear"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"297b4915-e9bb-3a09-8a51-33311cc9baa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rules of Engagement: Structuring Sex and Damage in Men's Prisons and Beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005491","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELISABETH B. THOMPSON-HARDY"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a53dfba8-7507-3981-b090-1cd2ec416d75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter One: Rural Beauty Pageant Culture, Girlhood, and Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136441","volumeNumber":"522","wordCount":8324,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441193,441425]],"Locations in B":[[21246,21487]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Shirley R. Steinberg"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0d49c9e-831e-3c11-ad8e-57363c0d0759"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Critical Pedagogy and Cultural Studies Research: Bricolage in Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981761","volumeNumber":"422","wordCount":11130,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Students enter schools today amid difficult, rapid social change, their sexuality and gender partly formed by family, peers, and the media. We are only beginning to understand the complex articulation between schooling, wider learning networks, and sexual\/gender subjectivities. Current empirical and theoretical work in masculinity, sexuality, and education in England enables us to go beyond critiques of the New Right and re-engage critically with emerging social democratic models of education and to reconnect education with wider theoretical debates in the social sciences and political movements in civil society. \/\/\/ Aujourd'hui, les jeunes entrent \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole dans une p\u00e9riode difficile, marqu\u00e9e par des changements sociaux rapides; leur perception de la sexualit\u00e9 et du sexe est d\u00e9j\u00e0 partiellement form\u00e9e par leur famille, leurs pairs et les m\u00e9dias. Nous ne faisons que commencer \u00e0 comprendre la jonction complexe entre l'\u00e9cole, les r\u00e9seaux plus vastes d'apprentissage et les subjectivit\u00e9s ayant trait \u00e0 la sexualit\u00e9 et au sexe. Les travaux th\u00e9oriques et empiriques actuels sur la masculinit\u00e9, la sexualit\u00e9 et l'\u00e9ducation en Angleterre nous permettent de d\u00e9passer les critiques de la nouvelle droite, de r\u00e9analyser de fa\u00e7on \u00e9clair\u00e9e les nouveaux mod\u00e8les d'\u00e9ducation de la d\u00e9mocratie sociale et de relier l'\u00e9ducation aux d\u00e9bats th\u00e9oriques plus vastes suscit\u00e9s par les sciences sociales et les mouvements politiques dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile.","creator":["M\u00e1irt\u00edn Mac an Ghaill"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1585743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"967016af-d31f-33a9-805c-1a96be241bab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1585743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Cultural Production of English Masculinities in Late Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1585743","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay consists of fragments, questions, and reflections which introduce this collection of essays on feminism and postmodernism in anthropology and which explore the problematic conjunctions and disjunctions of these \"isms\" in the academy in general.","creator":["Barbara A. Babcock"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3317104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"108ca26d-62ca-3218-b0e6-2829411fbefb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3317104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Feminisms\/Pretexts: Fragments, Questions, and Reflections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3317104","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":6188,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[70519,70766],[491781,491856]],"Locations in B":[[19208,19455],[39385,39460]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines Ecuadorian students' attempts to contest immigrant stereotypes and redefine their social identities in Madrid, Spain. I argue that academic tracking plays a pivotal role in the trajectory of students' emergent ethnic identity. To illustrate this process, I focus on students who abandon their academic and professional ambitions as they are tracked into low-achieving classrooms, and in the process participate in social and cultural practices that reify dominant stereotypes of Latino immigrants.","creator":["Jennifer Lucko"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d75e2cd4-635d-3020-b9cb-4ac3ff249c51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Tracking Identity: Academic Performance and Ethnic Identity among Ecuadorian Immigrant Teenagers in Madrid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237256","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sherril Dodds"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c338c467-a3cc-389c-9521-d99a534a333b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Choreographic Interface: Dancing Facial Expression in Hip-Hop and Neo-Burlesque Striptease","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966701","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Lila Abu-Lughod"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"917b6ad5-f604-3bfb-ba18-3a15e8b48dd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"1630","pageStart":"1621","pagination":"pp. 1621-1630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Debate about Gender, Religion, and Rights: Thoughts of a Middle East Anthropologist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501635","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":6745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Amid the standard cast of knights and ladies at King Arthur's court, the devil in the \"Queste del Saint Graal\" disrupts rigid social and linguistic categories of maculinity and feminity, subverting the regulatory, heterosexual norms that typically govern both ecclesiastical and courtly cultures in thirteenth-century France.","creator":["E. JANE BURNS"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbf39bad-6d16-37e0-84b0-6a6d1ff526fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27869337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Scriptorium Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Devilish Ways: Sexing the Subject in the \"Queste del Saint Graal\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27869337","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10059,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[141105,141398]],"Locations in B":[[2356,2648]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"I challenge the age-old binary opposition between human and animal, not as philosophers sometimes do by claiming that humans are also animals, or that animals are capable of suffering or intelligence, but rather by questioning the very category of \"the animal\" itself. This category groups a nearly infinite variety of living beings into one concept measured in terms of humans\u2014animals are those creatures that are not human. In addition, I argue that the binary opposition between human and animal is intimately linked to the binary opposition between man and woman. Furthermore, I suggest that thinking through animal differences or differences among various living creatures opens up the possibility of thinking beyond the dualist notion of sexual difference and enables thinking toward a multiplicity of sexual differences.","creator":["Kelly Oliver"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3d1953d-e205-3fb7-8764-f052d5f5e77c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sexual Difference, Animal Difference: Derrida and Difference \"Worthy of Its Name\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618147","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10958,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476472,476563]],"Locations in B":[[66380,66483]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Peter Williams"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dec753ef-0bcf-37d1-b40e-f2880dc5bc8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Between Wilderness and Civilization: Bodies, Gesture, and the Aesthetics of Representational Subtraction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550402","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Stephen Brooke"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2651613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f595a571-29a6-3705-a2fd-b6f4213d266e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2651613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A New World for Women\"? Abortion Law Reform in Britain during the 1930s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2651613","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":16609,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[472829,472911]],"Locations in B":[[57675,57758]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is about football, played by men from Panapompom in Papua New Guinea's Milne Bay province. Football is problematic not because it is culturally appropriated or modified, but rather because Panapompom desired accurately to reproduce the appearance of the international game. As such it questions conventional frames of reference. An interpretation in terms of culture obscures Panapompom interests in football: its globally recognizable character. It mattered profoundly that Panapompom people played football. Yet framing football as a universal sporting institution is equally inadequate, erasing the specific political project that was embedded in the game. Displacing the interpretative framings, I argue that football itself provides a context in which Panapompom people can judge themselves in relation to others, who are defined in terms of colonial and postcolonial discourses on `development'. Taking football as a contextualizing image, Panapompom people appear in distinctive ways in the field of relationships that it defines. Le pr\u00e9sent article est consacr\u00e9 au football tel qu'y jouent les hommes de Panapompom, dans la province de Milne Bay en Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guin\u00e9e. Si le football pose question, ce n'est pas parce qu'il est annex\u00e9 ou modifi\u00e9 culturellement mais parce que les habitants de Panapompom ont voulu reproduire exactement l'apparence des matches internationaux. En cela, il d\u00e9fie les cadres de r\u00e9f\u00e9rence conventionnels. Une interpr\u00e9tation en termes culturels m\u00e9conna\u00eetrait ce qui int\u00e9resse les habitants de Panapompom dans le football: son caract\u00e8re mondialement reconnaissable. \u00c0 Panapompom, on tient beaucoup \u00e0 jouer exactement au football. Cependant, il ne conviendrait pas non plus de d\u00e9finir le football comme une institution sportive universelle, en gommant le projet politique sp\u00e9cifique inh\u00e9rent au jeu. Pour d\u00e9placer le cadre d'interpr\u00e9tation, l'auteur avance que le football fournit en lui-m\u00eame un contexte dans lequel les habitants de Panapompom peuvent s'\u00e9valuer par rapport aux autres, ceux qui sont d\u00e9finis selon les termes du discours colonial et postcolonial sur le \u00ab d\u00e9veloppement \u00bb. En prenant le football comme image contextualisante, les habitants de Panapompom se pr\u00e9sentent sous un jour qui leur est propre dans le champ de relations ainsi d\u00e9finies.","creator":["Will Rollason"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23011310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ba770ce-70da-315a-afbb-a85ffd119ab3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23011310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"We are playing football: seeing the game on Panapompom, PNG","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23011310","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article analyzes the structure of the \"we relation\" drawing on Alfred Sch\u00fctz's theoretical framework. It argues for a flexibilization of the initial framework in order to capture not only the tension, but also the variations in the relation between the lived experience of the other in lived duration and the reflection upon the other, through which meaning is constructed. In order to do so, it revisits Sch\u00fctz's claims about immersion into togetherness as part of the experience of copresence and it bridges them with the apparently opposite Sartrian view of the other as either objectifying or being objectified. This leads to certain shifts in the distinction between consociates and contemporaries and sheds light upon the ways in which the process of constructing the other as meaningful is not an added layer, but a co-constitutive element in the vivid experience of copresence and of absence.","creator":["Greti-Iulia Ivana"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8c234be-e8fe-301c-bd1c-803f78fd7a2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44979832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"513","pagination":"pp. 513-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Present Contemporaries and Absent Consociates: Rethinking Sch\u00fctz's \"We Relation\" Beyond Copresence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979832","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Pris dans leur ensemble, les cultes (afro-) cubains apparaissent plus ou moins masculinis\u00e9s ou f\u00e9minis\u00e9s selon qu\u2019ils sont accessibles aux femmes et\/ou aux hommes (h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuels et\/ou homosexuels). En interne, chacun d\u2019eux n\u2019en contribue pas moins \u00e0 produire des exp\u00e9riences du genre qui ne recoupent que partiellement cette distribution. Dans certains cas, leurs initiations s\u2019av\u00e8rent instaurer une binarit\u00e9 rigide tandis que, dans d\u2019autres, elles ouvrent sur une pluralit\u00e9 et une instabilit\u00e9 qui confinent \u00e0 l\u2019indiscrimination, voire \u00e0 l\u2019indiff\u00e9renciation. Par une \u00e9tude du complexe d\u2019ocha-If\u00e1 (parfois connu sous le nom de santer\u00eda), il s\u2019agit d\u2019interroger ces constructions du genre au prisme de leur production rituelle dans deux initiations, la premi\u00e8re centr\u00e9e sur la fabrication de \u00ab poss\u00e9d\u00e9. e.s \u00bb de tous sexes et genres, la seconde sur celle de devins constituant un corps sacerdotal d\u00e9fini par sa masculinit\u00e9 h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexu\u00e9e. Par la mise en regard syst\u00e9matique de leurs proc\u00e9dures rituelles, l\u2019article r\u00e9v\u00e8le comment ces rites mettent en acte non seulement des exp\u00e9riences de soi, mais aussi des hi\u00e9rarchies et des conceptions du genre formellement divergentes, pour partie antith\u00e9tiques. Il montre in fine combien leur articulation participe de rivalit\u00e9s et de tensions structurelles, lesquelles mobilisent des registres d\u2019opposition distincts au sein desquels secret, rapport aux entit\u00e9s, travail sur le corps et les \u00e9motions, voire parent\u00e9, s\u2019entrem\u00ealent de fa\u00e7on diff\u00e9renci\u00e9e. Taken as a whole, (Afro-)Cuban religions appear masculinized or feminized to varying degrees, depending on whether they are open to women and\/or to men (heterosexual and\/or homosexual). Internally, however, each of them contributes to the production of gender experiences that only partially overlap with this distribution. In some cases, their initiations establish a rigid binarity, while in others they open up a plurality and instability that borders on indiscrimination and even non-differentiation. Based on the study of the ocha-If\u00e1 complex (sometimes known as santer\u00eda), this article examines these constructions of gender through the prism of their ritual production in two initiations, the first focused on the production of \u00ab possessed \u00bb people of all sexes and genders, and the second on that of diviners constituting a priestly body defined by its heterosexual masculinity. By systematically comparing their ritual procedures, the article reveals how these rites shape not only experiences of the self, but also hierarchies and conceptions of gender that are formally divergent and partly antithetical. Ultimately, it shows how much their articulation participates in rivalries and structural tensions that mobilize distinct registers of opposition within which secrecy, relationship to entities, work on the body and emotions, and even kinship, are intertwined in various ways.","creator":["Emma Gobin"],"datePublished":"2021-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27123106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04394216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c8b3f4e-bfd0-3850-9eaf-fd0ef7dd4920"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27123106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"homme"}],"isPartOf":"L'Homme","issueNumber":"239\/240","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u201cFil.le.s de saint\u201d versus<\/em> \u201cp\u00e8res du secret\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27123106","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Possession, divination et construction initiatique des genres \u00e0 Cuba"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Jacquelyn Zita"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98c3c126-6c3a-3d1c-817d-c4fd4faa2828"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"795","pageStart":"786","pagination":"pp. 786-795","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175191","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The second half of the 1890s was marked by a heated, trans-national debate on women and cycling. By drawing on source material from Germany and the Netherlands, this article seeks to re-assess the alleged role the bicycle played in women's emancipation. Limited statistics are available on the number of women cycling, and the little information that can be found suggests that women's cycling was still a rather minor phenomenon. Qualitative changes rather than quantitative changes were at stake. By analysing the functioning of various bicycle models of the 1880s and 1890s and their particular 'script', by investigating the ways in which men and women cycled and the ways in which discourses on cycling were shaped, the article examines the intersections between objects and actors, practices and discourses from which various meanings of female cycling emerged. Cycling was a popular leisure of the urban middle-class, and women could practise cycling within that context without any aspirations to female emancipation. But in combination with new bicycle dresses and cycling practices, the particular 'script' of the safety bicycle induced women to experience themselves as strong, independent individuals in their own right. Various voices of the German and Dutch women's movements considered the bicycle an ally of their activities. But the relationship between bicycle use and emancipation remained extremely ambivalent: cycling enabled women to experience their own individuality and independence, their strength and body control, but it simultaneously presupposed dependence on consumer goods and on the act of consuming.","creator":["Anne-Katrin Ebert"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60b1f5a5-aa08-3855-ba4d-464311435157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23791374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Liberating Technologies? Of Bicycles, Balance and the 'New Woman' in the 1890s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23791374","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":13013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Although the 'liberatory' approach to new communications technologies has been, for the most part, called into question by researchers in the humanities and social sciences, who now adopt a more critical relationship with technology, it continues to enjoy explanatory power in the popular press and in software design practices and cultures. According to the liberatory approach, freedom from sexism and other forms of oppression is brought about by something as simple and profound as a change in online handle -a practice known as 'gender swapping' (Bruckman, 1993). Yet, as some language theorists have shown (e.g. Herring, 1996), communication in cyberspace also reinforces existing social hierarchies, including gender differences found in face-to-face contexts. Unlike traditional, human-centered studies of computermediated communication and gender, this article treats a series of talking software programs as important objects for studying how software design is also implicated in the construction of gender differences. In addition to the programs' databases of gendered utterances and internal models of communicative interaction, these differences are also reinforced and negotiated en route, in the ongoing process of talking about why and how a software program is gendered.","creator":["SEAN ZDENEK"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de311d3a-2a42-35fc-9479-3a5dbd55e608"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42888264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Rising up from the MUD: inscribing gender in software design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42888264","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":15129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Paul Johnson"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2de10ed4-7ada-3be3-9ae9-63ceb263a753"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5,"pageEnd":"759","pageStart":"755","pagination":"pp. 755-759","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Improvisation and Constraint: New Works by Judith Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856786","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":2556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"A quarter century ago, Margaret Jane Radin interrupted the hegemonic law and economics discourse on property with a theory of personhood. And the New Jersey Supreme Court declared in the historic case of State v. Shack that \"property rights serve human values.\" From these our modern \"social relations\" theory of property was born. Now, the pundits declare that \"intellectual property has come of age.\" But is intellectual property philosophically and theoretically mature enough to face the world? Unlike its cousins property law and the First Amendment, which bear the weight of values such as autonomy, culture, equality, and democracy, in the United States intellectual property is understood almost exclusively as being about incentives. To put it bluntly, there are no \"giant-sized\" intellectual property values. But there should be. Intellectual property has grown, perhaps exponentially, but its march into all corners of our lives and to the most destitute corners of the world has paradoxically exposed the fragility of its economic foundations while amplifying its social and cultural effects. Indeed, with full compliance to the TRIPS Agreement now required in all but the world's very least developed countries, bringing with it patents in everything from seeds to drugs, intellectual property law becomes literally an issue of life or death. Despite these real-world changes, intellectual property scholars increasingly explain their field through the lens of economics alone, evidence of Amartya Sen's observation that \"[t]heories have lives of their own, quite defiantly of the phenomenal world that can be actually observed.\" The theory is behind the practice. On the ground, underground, and in the ether, intellectual property is spurring what the New York Times says \"could be the first new social movement of the century.\" I show that in case after case, from MGM v. Grokster, to new licenses from the Creative Commons for developing nations, to the rise of Internet auteurs of fan fiction, mash-ups, and machinima, to efforts to deliver medicines to the world's poor, to demands for \"Geographical Indications\" for sarees and other crafts of the developing world, and to the nascent global movement for \"Access to Knowledge,\" traditional economic analysis fails to capture fully the struggles at the heart of local and global intellectual property law conflicts. This Article builds from these examples to lay a foundation for a cultural analysis of intellectual property. I offer \"IP\u00b3\" as a metonym. The twentieth century closed with the rise of identity politics, the Internet Protocol, and intellectual property rights. I suggest that the convergence of these \"IPs\" begins to explain the growth of intellectual property rights where traditional justifications for intellectual property do not. IP\u00b3 reveals intellectual property's social effects and this law as a tool for crafting cultural relations. Call it the ripping, mixing, and burning of law.","creator":["Madhavi Sunder"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86bbeed6-b240-3a63-a9d1-e8a1f1e30d20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40040300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IP\u00b3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":38281,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[464317,464718]],"Locations in B":[[165896,166345]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the construction of a homoerotic social scene among Mexican migrants in California. It analyses the discourses of migrant men in the cities of San Diego and Fresno who identify themselves as heterosexual and have not had sexual experiences with men and those of members of civil society organisations doing HIV prevention work with migrant men, to show how an identity-based model of sexuality used by the HIV prevention organisations is counter to the strategic, non-identity-based model constructed by migrant men. With this incongruence as its starting point, the paper offers a critique both of the epistemological factors underlying the category of 'men who have sex with men' and the logic running through HIV prevention discourses that adhere to the Foucauldian notion of the deployment of sexuality, which demands both truth and coherence in subjects' sexuality. Cet article examine la construction d'un monde social homo-\u00e9rotique parmi des migrants mexicains en Californie. Il analyse les discours de migrants de sexe masculin vivant \u00e0 San Diego et \u00e0 Fresno qui s'identifient en tant qu'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuels et n'ont pas eu d'exp\u00e9riences sexuelles avec d'autres hommes. Il analyse aussi les discours des organisations issues de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile qui font un travail de pr\u00e9vention du VIH dans cette population, pour montrer combien le mod\u00e8le identitaire de sexualit\u00e9, sur lequel elles basent leurs actions, est en contradiction avec le mod\u00e8le strat\u00e9gique non identitaire construit par ces hommes. Avec cette contradiction pour point de d\u00e9part, l'article propose une critique \u00e0 la fois des facteurs \u00e9pist\u00e9miologiques sous-jacents \u00e0 la cat\u00e9gorie des 'hommes qui ont des rapports avec des hommes' et de la logique sur laquelle s'appuient les discours inspir\u00e9s de la notion foucaldienne du d\u00e9ploiement de la sexualit\u00e9, qui exige aussi bien une v\u00e9rit\u00e9 qu'une coh\u00e9rence dans la sexualit\u00e9 des individus. En este art\u00edculo examinamos la construcci\u00f3n de un contexto social homoer\u00f3tico entre emigrantes mexicanos de California. Analizamos por una parte los discursos de hombres emigrantes a las ciudades de San Diego y Fresno que se identifican como heterosexuales y no han tenido ninguna experiencia sexual con hombres, y por otra los discursos de miembros de organizaciones de la sociedad civil que se ocupan de intentar prevenir el HIV entre los emigrantes. Con este an\u00e1lisis queremos demostrar c\u00f3mo un modelo de la sexualidad basado en la identidad utilizado por organizaciones para la prevenci\u00f3n del virus del sida va en contra del modelo estrat\u00e9gico y no basado en la identidad construido por hombres emigrantes. Con esta incongruencia como punto de partida, en este art\u00edculo cuestionamos los factores epistemol\u00f3gicos detr\u00e1s de la categor\u00eda de 'hombres que tienen relaciones sexuales con hombres' y la l\u00f3gica que se utiliza en los discursos para la prevenci\u00f3n del VIH que cumplen con la noci\u00f3n foucauldiana de la construcci\u00f3n de la sexualidad, que exige verdad y coherencia en la sexualidad de las personas.","creator":["Rodrigo Parrini","X\u00f3chitl Casta\u00f1eda","Carlos Magis-Rodr\u00edguez","Juan Ruiz","George Lemp"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29713f12-016b-36f0-b014-0e4ccd7c6d6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41148808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity, desire and truth: homosociality and homoeroticism in Mexican migrant communities in the USA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148808","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper examines the temporality of agency in Judith Butler's and Saba Mahmood's writing. I argue that Mahmood moves away from a performative understanding of agency, which focuses on relations of signification, to a corporeal understanding, which focuses on desire and sensation. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze's reading of Henri Bergson, I show how this move involves a changed model of becoming: whereas Butler imagines movement as a series of discontinuous beings, in Mahmood's case, we get an understanding of becoming.","creator":["Stephanie Clare"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14383ee1-a276-3787-9b96-0f4b2c4c59ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Agency, Signification, and Temporality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618180","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6059,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443961,444076]],"Locations in B":[[25486,25601]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Alan Coddington critiques post-Keynesians for their use of fundamental uncertainty. He argues that fundamental uncertainty should also affect the consumption function, undermining the case for Keynesian macroeconomic policies. This paper shows how contemporary feminist theory provides post-Keynesians with a compelling response to Coddington. It uses the concept of gender as an effect of heteronormativity to integrate 'the household', the institution that undertakes consumption spending, into post-Keynesian economics. This gives us a more robust analysis of the sources of consumption stability in a world marked by the fundamental unknowability of the future.","creator":["S. Charusheela"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24232060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0309166X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41964126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ffc7e29-82e9-3f94-a66e-e72a08bb5b13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24232060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambjecon"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Journal of Economics","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"1156","pageStart":"1145","pagination":"pp. 1145-1156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and the stability of consumption: a feminist contribution to post-Keynesian economics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24232060","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6727,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[44871,44946]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Abstract This article discusses the moment in which normative ideas about aging and reproductive embodiment became conceptually linked in the mid-nineteenthcentury medicalization of menopause. The reading centers on the first English book-length publication on menopause, written by E. J. Tilt in 1857, and Foucault's concept of the medical gaze. I analyze mechanisms of observing, conceptualizing, and treating the body in relation to time and discuss their function in affirming and reworking social norms of age and gender. In doing so, I highlight the political work implicit in contesting conceptualizations of female reproductive bodies, their age-specific pathologies, and directives of (self-)surveillance employed in discourses surrounding women's reproductive health.","creator":["Lucy van de Wiel"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/intjfemappbio.7.1.74","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19374585"},{"name":"oclc","value":"143188415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-212559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"417497da-381c-32df-bb15-06c006069c1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/intjfemappbio.7.1.74"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjfemappbio"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Toronto Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"The time of the change: Menopause's medicalization and the gender politics of aging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/intjfemappbio.7.1.74","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This Essay surveys the new field of cultural-legal history, highlighting its promise and pitfalls for the study of race and slavery. It discusses several aspects of the new cultural approaches: the view of trials as narratives or performances; the emphasis on the agency of outsiders to the law, including people of color and white women; and a household approach to slavery and other \"domestic relations.\" The Essay argues that these studies have begun to transform historians' understandings of old debates regarding the origins and nature of American slavery, the beginnings of Jim Crow, and the possibilities of resistance against white cultural hegemony. While there are dangers to the new cultural approaches, in particular the loss of an all-encompassing framework to understand law, race and slavery, and the limitations of a black-white model, cultural-legal history also holds great promise for rethinking the role of law in racial formation, the nature of legal change, and the relationship between law and extralegal norms.","creator":["Ariela Gross"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"390c89e2-197e-3a4b-9255-0c7afe4d1e81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"640","pagination":"pp. 640-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Black and White: Cultural Approaches to Race and Slavery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123740","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":26356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The need to revise scholars' approach to the measurement of gender attitudes\u2014long dominated by the separate-spheres paradigm\u2014is growing increasingly timely as women's share of the labor force approaches parity with men's. Recent years have seen revived interest in marital name change as a gendered practice with the potential to aid in this task; however, scholars have yet to test its effectiveness as one possible indicator of gender attitudes. In this article we present views toward marital name change as a potential window into contemporary gender attitudes and most centrally as an illustration of the types of measures that hold great potential for attitudinal research. Using quantitative analyses from a national survey, we show that views on name change reflect expected sociodemographic cleavages and are more strongly linked to a wide array of other gender-related attitudes than are views regarding gendered separate spheres\u2014even net of sociodemographic factors. We then turn to interlinked qualitative data to illustrate three reasons why name-change measures so effectively capture broader beliefs about gender. We conclude by looking at what attitudes about name change can tell us about future directions for the conceptualization and measurement of gender attitudes.","creator":["LAURA HAMILTON","CLAUDIA GEIST","BRIAN POWELL"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bfcadae-24ad-37ad-a47d-46ef05c925f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23044134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"MARITAL NAME CHANGE AS A WINDOW INTO GENDER ATTITUDES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23044134","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Since its inception in the early 1980s, \"postfeminism\" has become a common appellationfor the attitudes and behaviors of young women in the contemporary United States. The article assesses how postfeminism is connected to the discursive deployment of sexuality in the late modern era by examining the socio-historical context out of which postfeminism emerges, reviewing various definitions of postfeminism, and offering a conceptualization of postfeminism as a neoliberal discursive formation. After briefly analyzing the existing scholarship on postfeminism, particularly the ways in which this body of literature privileges a white middle-class, heterosexual subject, the article proposes an intersectional approach to postfeminism in order to more fully understand how postfeminist discourses reproduce inequalities of race, gender, and sexuality, and offers some preliminary thoughts about pop star Nicki Minaj's potential to symbolically rupture postfeminism's discursive boundaries.","creator":["Jess Butler"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63867b96-0330-3624-a3a8-6362896f056a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"For White Girls Only? Postfeminism and the Politics of Inclusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860666","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10906,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[317080,317305],[467316,467400]],"Locations in B":[[6834,7064],[68971,69060]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Steven C. Dubin"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43306255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5539ab2d-983e-3d85-93a3-33f1a8f54205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43306255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Impersonations and Revelations: Mysteries of a South African Photography Studio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43306255","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Will Rollason"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"441f7fd8-045c-3049-8b88-a1e11eee3b1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"My Boss: Insincerity, Capitalism and Development in PNG","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758176","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Caroline Miles"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15c5776c-ab62-337a-be57-ee077af5322a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Faulkner Journal","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Little Men in Faulkner's \"Barn Burning\" and \"The Reivers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907819","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Samantha Frost"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"750b3471-bb94-3814-bd25-e0920059ccb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Faking It: Hobbes's Thinking-Bodies and the Ethics of Dissimulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072542","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"In today's classroom and larger cultural climate, overtly politicized \"critical\" composition pedagogies may only exacerbate student resistance to issues and identities of difference, especially if the teacher is marked or read as different her\/himself. I therefore suggest that the marginalized teacher-subject look to contemporary theoretical notions of the \"radical resignification\" of power as well as to the neglected rhetorical concept of m\u00eatis, or \"cunning,\" to engage difference more efficaciously, if more sneakily. Specifically, I argue that one possible praxis for better negotiating student resistance is the performance of the very neutrality that students expect of teachers.","creator":["Karen Kopelson"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0010096X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5cbfa39-0620-3a3d-9fa2-ad2f8228211c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3594203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"College Composition and Communication","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rhetoric on the Edge of Cunning; Or, the Performance of Neutrality (Re)Considered as a Composition Pedagogy for Student Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3594203","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":13424,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471706,471775]],"Locations in B":[[84562,84631]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article is a descriptive narrative of the U.S. military's \"cultural awareness\" training for counterinsurgency doctrine at the Muscatatuck Urban Training Center (MUTC) in Indiana. Within the narrative, I show how the \"Arab,\" \"Afghan,\" and \"culturally sensitive soldier\" are constituted within the U.S. military imagination through the practices and spaces of MUTC. Drawing on recent work in \"new materialism\" and the material geographies of late-modern war, the article argues that the circulation of \"culture\" within the U.S. military is not an indifferent exercise in familiarity with an occupied population, nor a mere knowledge production. Rather, cultural awareness must be understood as an instrumental activity through which identities are positioned and habitually put to use, like tools, to orient strategic and tactical operations in counterinsurgency contexts. Counterinsurgency training sites such as MUTC are ideal for interrogating how cultural identities acquire a status of serviceability akin to what Heidegger (1962) once called \"equipment\" or \"paraphernalia\" that inform the practices of everyday military occupation in Afghanistan and Iraq. In my thick description of the MUTC, I examine the function and silences of the site of the U.S. military's imagination, which I deliberately leave vague here but whose orders, phantoms, and figures I elaborate fully in the narrative. \u672c\u6587\u662f\u5bf9\u4e8e\u4f4d\u5728\u5370\u7b2c\u5b89\u7eb3\u9a6c\u65af\u5361\u5854\u5854\u514b\u57ce\u5e02\u57f9\u8bad\u4e2d\u5fc3 (MUTC) \u7684\u7f8e\u56fd\u519b\u961f\u4e3a\u4e86\u53cd\u53db\u4e71\u653f\u7b56\u6240\u8fdb\u884c\u7684 \u201c\u6587\u5316\u610f\u8bc6\u201d \u8bad\u7ec3\u4e4b\u63cf\u8ff0\u6027\u53d9\u4e8b\u3002\u5728\u6b64\u53d9\u4e8b\u4e2d, \u6211\u5c06\u5448\u73b0 \u201c\u963f\u62c9\u4f2f\u201d, \u201c\u963f\u5bcc\u6c57\u201d \u4ee5\u53ca \u201c\u5177\u6587\u5316\u654f\u611f\u6027\u7684\u519b\u4eba,\u201d \u5982\u4f55\u900f\u8fc7 MUTC \u7684\u64cd\u4f5c\u4e0e\u7a7a\u95f4, \u5728\u7f8e\u519b\u7684\u60f3\u50cf\u4e2d\u5efa\u6784\u4e4b\u3002\u672c\u6587\u8fd0\u7528 \u201c\u65b0\u7269\u8d28\u4e3b\u4e49\u201d \u7684\u665a\u8fd1\u7814\u7a76, \u4ee5\u53ca\u665a\u73b0\u4ee3\u6218\u4e89\u7684\u7269\u8d28\u5730\u7406, \u4e3b\u5f20\u5728\u7f8e\u56fd\u519b\u961f\u4e2d\u6d41\u4f20\u7684 \u201c\u6587\u5316\u201d, \u5e76\u4e0d\u662f\u719f\u6089\u4f54\u9886\u4eba\u53e3\u7684\u4e2d\u7acb\u5b9e\u4f5c, \u4ea6\u975e\u4ec5\u53ea\u662f\u77e5\u8bc6\u751f\u4ea7\u3002\u53cd\u4e4b, \u6587\u5316\u610f\u8bc6\u5fc5\u987b\u88ab\u7406\u89e3\u4e3a\u4e00\u4e2a\u5de5\u5177\u5f0f\u7684\u884c\u52a8, \u8ba4\u540c\u85c9\u6b64\u88ab\u5b89\u7f6e, \u5e76\u60ef\u6027\u5730\u5982\u540c\u5de5\u5177\u822c\u88ab\u4f7f\u7528, \u4ee5\u5728\u53cd\u53db\u4e71\u7684\u8109\u7edc\u4e2d, \u6307\u5bfc\u7b56\u7565\u6027\u548c\u6218\u672f\u6027\u7684\u64cd\u4f5c\u3002\u8bf8\u5982 MUTC \u7684\u53cd\u53db\u4e71\u8bad\u7ec3\u57fa\u5730, \u5bf9\u4e8e\u63a2\u95ee\u6587\u5316\u8ba4\u540c\u5982\u4f55\u53d6\u5f97\u7c7b\u4f3c\u6d77\u5fb7\u683c (1962) \u66fe\u79f0\u4e4b\u4e3a \u201c\u88c5\u5907\u201d \u6216 \u201c\u7528\u5177\u201d, \u5e76\u8d2f\u7a7f\u963f\u5bcc\u6c57\u4e0e\u4f0a\u62c9\u514b\u6bcf\u65e5\u519b\u4e8b\u4f54\u9886\u5b9e\u4f5c\u7684\u6709\u7528\u72b6\u6001\u800c\u8a00, \u662f\u4e3a\u7406\u60f3\u4e4b\u5730\u3002\u5728\u6211\u5bf9 MUTC \u7684\u6df1\u63cf\u4e2d, \u6211\u5c06\u68c0\u89c6\u7f8e\u519b\u60f3\u50cf\u573a\u57df\u7684\u529f\u80fd\u548c\u6c89\u9ed8, \u800c\u6211\u5bf9\u6b64\u614e\u91cd\u5730\u7559\u4e0b\u6a21\u7173\u4e4b\u5904, \u4f46\u5374\u5c06\u5728\u53d9\u4e8b\u4e2d\u5145\u5206\u9610\u8ff0\u5176\u89c4\u5f8b, \u5e7b\u8c61\u4ee5\u53ca\u5f62\u6001\u3002 Este art\u00edculo es una narrativa descriptiva del entrenamiento en \"conciencia cultural\" de los militares de EE.UU., dentro de la doctrina de contrainsurgencia del Centro de Entrenamiento Urbano Muscatatuck (MUTC), en Indiana. En la narrativa, indico c\u00f3mo se construyen en EE.UU. en la imaginaci\u00f3n militar expresiones como \"\u00e1rabe\", \"afgano\" y \"soldado culturalmente sensible\", por medio de pr\u00e1cticas y espacios del MUTC. Con base en trabajos recientes sobre \"nuevo materialismo\" y las \u00faltimas geograf\u00edas materiales de la guerra moderna, el art\u00edculo sostiene que la circulaci\u00f3n de \"cultura\" dentro de lo militar en los EE.UU. no es un ejercicio indiferente en familiaridad sobre una poblaci\u00f3n ocupada, ni una producci\u00f3n de mero conocimiento. Por el contrario, la concientizaci\u00f3n cultural debe entenderse como una actividad instrumental a trav\u00e9s de la cual las identidades son posicionadas y habitualmente puestas en uso, como herramientas, para orientar operaciones estrat\u00e9gicas y t\u00e1cticas en contextos de contrainsurgencia. Los lugares en donde se imparte entrenamiento contrainsurgente, tales como el MUTC, son ideales para averiguar c\u00f3mo las identidades culturales adquieren estatus de elemento servible, parecido a lo que alguna vez Heidegger (1962) llam\u00f3 \"equipo\" o \"parafernalia\", subrayando las pr\u00e1cticas cotidianas de la ocupaci\u00f3n militar en Afganist\u00e1n e Irak. En mi abultada descripci\u00f3n del MUTC, examino la funci\u00f3n y los silencios del lugar en la imaginaci\u00f3n militar de los EE.UU., la cual dejo aqu\u00ed deliberadamente vaga, pero cuyas \u00f3rdenes, fantasmas y figuras elaboro in extenso en la narrativa.","creator":["Oliver Belcher"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a560cd81-58fd-3f28-b673-32d4723db836"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"1029","pageStart":"1012","pagination":"pp. 1012-1029","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Staging the Orient: Counterinsurgency Training Sites and the U.S. Military Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537581","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11493,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[174962,175094]],"Locations in B":[[63662,63794]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Susan McClary"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4023206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60285fde-e7c5-3b26-8578-1e69c73cb1b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4023206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1+3-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Breaking All the Rules","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4023206","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":2793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judith Chuan Xu"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87554178"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56018756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004221981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89785b05-75d3-3564-8a64-4bb44b4be1bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25002458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfemistudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poststructuralist Feminism and the Problem of Femininity in the \"Daodejing\" [Unrepresentable Symbol]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25002458","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8382,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[493864,494011],[503309,503495],[513845,514063]],"Locations in B":[[8284,8431],[31601,31792],[32823,33046]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Existing (binary) understandings of gender affirm some types of gendered accounts as \u201cauthentic,\u201d while others are discredited or obscured. As a consequence, many transgender people express anxiety about whether their experience of gender can be distilled into a narrative that is intelligible to others and appears consistent over time. In this article, I assess the identity narratives produced by two cohorts of trans respondents\u2014binaryidentified respondents, and non-binary respondents\u2014as a means of understanding the narrative strategies that respondents employ to establish themselves as \u201cauthentically\u201d trans. To affirm themselves as trans, I find that non-binary participants tended to elide or to minimize potential inconsistencies in their stories, producing narratives that reflect dominant cultural accounts of trans experience\u2014accounts that center an early-childhood affiliation with the \u201copposite\u201d sex, endorsing and affirming binary gender distinctions. In turn, binary-identified participants often produced accounts that complicated or questioned these tropes. While non-binary individuals have been hailed as the primary arbiters of gender\u2019s undoing, the social and institutional constraints that inform how we account for gender\u2014which shape both our production of those accounts and others\u2019 interpretations of them\u2014suggest that binary-identified respondents may be better positioned to work towards this \u201cundoing\u201d than their non-binary counterparts.","creator":["SPENCER GARRISON"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26967020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e66f2d8-6d2a-3eaa-82fd-a77bfac4bd2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26967020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"613","pagination":"pp. 613-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"ON THE LIMITS OF \u201cTRANS ENOUGH\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26967020","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":"Authenticating Trans Identity Narratives"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nada Elia"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12324a76-1944-36bf-871a-e3156f0528ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"A Man Who Wants to Be a Woman\": Queerness as\/and Healing Practices in Michelle Cliff's \"No Telephone to Heaven\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299566","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495245,495299]],"Locations in B":[[41075,41135]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["L\u00cdDIA PUIGVERT"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9f8397b-9bab-3606-a03b-32b5537902f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 5: Equality of Differences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976716","volumeNumber":"242","wordCount":6597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The 1990s were hard on our traditional theories of International Relations and International Political Economy, and the Millennium has brought the End of Meta-Narrative as We Know It. In this article, I discuss and dissect three of the past decade's meta-narratives, and show how they were no more than failed efforts to shore up the decomposing corpus of mainstream theories. In their stead, I offer a preliminary description of a contextual and contingent approach to thinking about and analyzing global political economy. I place people at the center of my framework, and use the tools of historical materialism, feminist theory, and agency-structure analysis to generate an understanding of the relationship between what I call the \"social individual\" and global politics and political economy.","creator":["Ronnie D. Lipschutz"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15283577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"406b8527-1194-33dc-a164-e2245291c92d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44218179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudpers"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Because People Matter: Studying Global Political Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218179","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":12050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61257,61961]],"Locations in B":[[50562,51266]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Noah Salomon"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/652131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50df6625-3c70-3ecc-bc2e-0a2a71a940e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/652131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"272","pagination":"pp. 272-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/652131","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1619,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[151471,151618]],"Locations in B":[[4663,4810]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Margaret Homans"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e57ba6ea-d86d-3850-8eb4-e6a5378d2764"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Adoption and Essentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149233","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8343,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17389,17592]],"Locations in B":[[36889,37100]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94d864b2-a389-3801-b1b7-94b4c00a61f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810148","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Decisions about infant feeding are commonly viewed as an issue of personal choice made in the light of information about the benefits of breastfeeding. A pilot study of first-time parents' decisions and experiences in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, suggests that local cultural contexts, in particular how men and women are seen to be parenting in different spaces, have a profound influence on infant feeding.","creator":["Rachel Pain","Cathy Bailey","Graham Mowl"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Infant Feeding in North East England: Contested Spaces of Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004164","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Though most of Foucault's interpreters have had little to say about his relation to Freud, Foucault was engaged throughout his career in an implicit dialogue with the founder of psychoanalysis over the sense and importance of sado-masochism. In his work prior to The History of Sexuality, Foucault argued that all repression is in part \"productive\" in libidinal terms and therefore all relations between subjects are to some extent governed by the logic of sado-masochism. Foucault's sado-masochist paradigm undercuts Freud's patrocentrism and, more broadly, his view of the nature of authority. Moreover, in The History of Sexuality Foucault carries his argument much further by defending a model of repression that is purely productive and aesthetic. Based on the questions raised by this last work, an alternative model of repression would incorporate the positive dimensions Foucault defends without aestheticizing repression and ignoring its negative dimensions.","creator":["Suzanne Gearhart"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87faa937-9178-31e4-a897-9853bf884f5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Foucault's Response to Freud: Sado-Masochism and the Aestheticization of Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946294","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Terrell Carver"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e0cd499-fcad-3204-9908-9a01104f77c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44483162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"450","pagination":"pp. 450-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POLITICS OF IDENTITY \u2013 X: Being a Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483162","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Camille Robcis"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/683599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfddf997-9307-3386-8598-ae5749003153"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/683599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32,"pageEnd":"923","pageStart":"892","pagination":"pp. 892-923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Catholics, the \u201cTheory of Gender,\u201d and the Turn to the Human in France: A New Dreyfus Affair?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/683599","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":9974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["HEATHER HIRSCHFELD"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc6e1d9e-9d03-3f09-8c61-47227a962ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Do Women Know?: \"The Roaring Girl\" and the Wisdom of Tiresias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917378","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10359,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[467514,467598]],"Locations in B":[[51880,51964]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This essay challenges the generally accepted interpretation of Greuze's Young Girl Weeping over Her Dead Bird (1765) as an allegory of lost virginity by considering the painting in relation to eighteenth-century representations of the young girl in a range of discourses. The central contention is that the implied spectator to whom the picture is addressed is a quasi-paternal figure who disavows his own desire for the girl whilst nevertheless enjoying an eroticized intimacy with her. In thereby raising the specter of incest even as it represses it, the painting exemplifies deep-seated tensions within later eighteenth-century French culture.","creator":["Emma Barker"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.86","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54b9b595-f6c1-38c3-94e4-dc610fc8d09b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.86"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading the Greuze Girl: The Daughter's Seduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.86","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":14666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493864,493989]],"Locations in B":[[71792,71915]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This paper traces the discursive constructions through which refugees were produced as particular kinds of subjects in US social work discourse in the first half of the twentieth century. Prior to the onset of the Second World War, the refugee ideal was valorized in social work discourse to both exhort and contest immigration restrictions. In the war years, actual refugees became framed, instead, as the most troublesome immigrants. The many anti-restrictionists among social work's leaders persistently and prolifically opposed problematized constructions of refugees. But through its uncritical uses of the same unstable measures of fitness through which the problematized identities were constructed, the liberal, anti-restrictionist discourse of social work re-inscribed the discourses it sought to counter. As a study of the disciplinary construction of a particularly vulnerable identity, and a methodological exemplar for examining key constructs, this analysis has broad implication for study of the many categories of identity (e.g. child, client, etc.) upon which social work builds its practice models and explanatory theories.","creator":["Yoosun Park"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00453102"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f740f61-8596-3b95-95b0-e24550d76f51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsociwork"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Social Work","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Refugees: A Historical Discourse Analysis of the Construction of the 'Refugee' in US Social Work, 1900\u20131957","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724080","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7816,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25825,25996]],"Locations in B":[[41601,41770]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Heterosexism exists throughout Canadian society, but to what degree is it present in classrooms? In this article, I explore this question through content analysis of twenty francophone Qu\u00e9bec secondary-school textbooks, examining how sexuality and relationships are discussed in five different subjects. These texts are persistently and overwhelmingly heterosexist: 95 per cent of pages discussing sexuality or relationships make no reference to same-sex sexuality or same-sex relationships, and 80 per cent of references that do occur appear in a negative context. Heterosexism in textbooks is not an isolated phenomenon, however, but part of a larger process of institutionalised heterosexism and homophobia. \/\/\/ L'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexisme est une donn\u00e9e omnipr\u00e9sente dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 canadienne, mais qu'en est-il dans les \u00e9coles ? Dans cet article, l'auteure aborde cette question en analysant le contenu des manuels scolaires utilis\u00e9s pour cinq mati\u00e8res distinctes dans vingt \u00e9coles secondaires francophones du Qu\u00e9bec, notamment en ce qui concerne la sexualit\u00e9 et les relations humaines. Ces textes sont tr\u00e8s largement h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexistes : dans 95 % des pages traitant de sexualit\u00e9 ou de relations, il n'y a aucune r\u00e9f\u00e9rence \u00e0 la sexualit\u00e9 entre des personnes de m\u00eame sexe ou \u00e0 des relations entre des personnes de m\u00eame sexe et 80 % des mentions qui y font r\u00e9f\u00e9rence sont n\u00e9gatives. L'h\u00e9r\u00e9rosexisme dans les manuels scolaires n'est pas un ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne isol\u00e9 et s'inscrit dans un vaste processus d'h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexisme et d'homophobie institutionnalis\u00e9.","creator":["Julia R. Temple"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8de69a65-a9b3-3f70-b634-6bcd931ac62e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4126471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"People Who Are Different from You\": Heterosexism in Quebec High School Textbooks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126471","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[118066,118330]],"Locations in B":[[7935,8199]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["G. W. Dowsett"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20405921-e052-38ba-b0d6-ec6f9e9d281d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"709","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-709","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"I'll Show You Mine, if You'll Show Me Yours: Gay Men, Masculinity Research, Men's Studies, and Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657991","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5116,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513429]],"Locations in B":[[27784,27875]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Kathy Rudy"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6708901d-2045-3f92-ad5b-525151010c96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethics, Reproduction, Utopia: Gender and Childbearing in \"Woman on the Edge of Time\" and \"The Left Hand of Darkness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316482","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8133,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124582,124727]],"Locations in B":[[34350,34495]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Even though the normativrty of heterosexuality has come into question in recent years, heterosexual norms continue to figure as a structuring principle in contemporary social life. Drawing on 40 qualitative interviews with a diverse group of young German and British women, this article analyses empirical research on feminist disidentification to show that heteronormativity plays a central role in young women's negotiations of feminism. Numerous respondents established a link between feminism, unfemininity, man-hatred and lesbianism. By exploring constructions of 'the feminist', and by reconceptualizing the figure of 'the feminist' as a constitutive outside of heterosexual norms that haunts the interviews, this article foregrounds the importance of examining the dimension of sexuality in analyses of contemporary social phenomena.","creator":["Christina Scharff"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f7b126c-8730-30e7-ba48-468a3d7ba5f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16,"pageEnd":"842","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-842","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Young Women's Negotiations of Heterosexual Conventions: Theorizing Sexuality in Constructions of 'the Feminist'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857476","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7530,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116517,116860]],"Locations in B":[[20981,21330]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["ELIZABETH F. EMENS"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24220196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00780979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9618d5a-ed7c-349e-878d-ce26983e1fa3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24220196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nomos"}],"isPartOf":"Nomos","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Law","Law","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AGAINST NATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24220196","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":21381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CORDULA POLITIS"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"422695375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"35018315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41c585de-ba83-38a2-9510-d9dcb72f0b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43630596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mediumaevum"}],"isPartOf":"Medium \u00c6vum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE TAMING OF THE AMAZON: PENTESILIE IN ULRICH VON T\u00dcRHEIM'S \"RENNEWART\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630596","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":10118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Pamela L. Moore"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8681fac-bf5e-37ea-8454-2f254447bb44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44366869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TESTING THE TERMS: \"WOMAN\" IN \"THE HOUSE OF SPIRITS\" AND \"ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF SOLITUDE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366869","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[473861,473952]],"Locations in B":[[31296,31387]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gay bathhouses operate in clandestine ways. They are often depicted as safe spaces for sexual expressions free from dangers caused by exposure to heteronormative judgments. This paper interrogates this view by examining the discursive constructions of identities, desires, and bodies in gay bathhouses. I argue that these spaces, while operating covertly, reinforce rather than immediately challenge standards of hegemonic heteronormativity. My findings are based on my ethnographic work in two bathhouses in the Philippines. This involves participant observation and interviews with ten self-identified gay patrons.","creator":["JOHN ANDREW G. EVANGELISTA"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9272e647-f20f-3707-9b1f-642a4aab949d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Sociological Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Philippine Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gaze in the Dark: Sexual Discourses and Practices in Gay Bathhouses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486387","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":8309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article evaluates critically the meta-narrative that capitalism is becoming totalizing and hegemonic. Recently, an emerging corpus of postdevelopment thought has begun to deconstruct this discourse, but only in relation to Western economies and the majority (third) world. To further contribute to this emerging critique, the aim is to analyze the degree to which capitalist economic practices have permeated postsocialist societies through a case study of Moscow. Based on face-to-face interviews with 313 households during 2005\/06 concerning their work practices, a relatively shallow penetration of capitalism in this city is identified, with only a minority of households relying on the capitalist economy in particular, and the formal economy more generally, to secure their livelihood. The vast majority of the population is found to depend heavily on an array of noncapitalist economic practices; and capitalist and noncapitalist practices are identified as operating in tandem with, rather than in opposition to, each other. The outcome is a call to refute the universality of capitalist hegemony and to rethink the nature of economic development from a perspective that recognizes the persistence of economic pluralism.","creator":["Colin C. Williams","John Round"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44545933"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233991"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27739708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjeconsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Economics and Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Evaluating the Penetration of Capitalism in Postsocialist Moscow","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739708","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":5895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Gender relations in island Southeast Asia are largely based on studies of Bali, Java and the eastern Indonesian islands and are often characterised in terms of binary opposites or complementarities. However, the issue of gender is multifaceted and goes beyond a two column representation of gender, one defined by and limited to biological divisions. Among the T'boli of the southern Philippines, complex dynamics interpenetrate masculine and feminine principles across almost all areas of cognitive, social, cultural and aesthetic domains, including music. However, gender complementarity and difference between women and men carry a degree of ambiguity and mutual inclusiveness as illustrated in the constitution and performance of the two genres associated with courting and marriage, the seguyun and the sebelang.","creator":["Manolete Mora"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56722533"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41f8797-3179-3dd4-94d9-86eca6e1a86c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20184620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Lutes, Gongs, Women and Men: (En)gendering Instrumental Music in the Philippines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184620","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17450,17741]],"Locations in B":[[53888,54182]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["CHRISTOPHER J. VOPARIL","JOHN GIORDANO"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26602293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49883085"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238567"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c854359-d42b-386f-8850-be73b302a91a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26602293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"PRAGMATISM AND THE SOMATIC TURN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26602293","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9306,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[480223,480287]],"Locations in B":[[62223,62287]],"subTitle":"SHUSTERMAN'S SOMAESTHETICS AND BEYOND"} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Olivia Banner"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23346016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23346016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Postracial Imagination: Gattaca's Imperfect Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23346016","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The HIV\/AIDS epidemic, exacerbated by global processes, has affected most aspects of life in Zambia. The country's demographic profile has changed, with significant losses among those of reproductive age, and a huge increase in the number of orphans has placed additional burdens on families and on the delivery of health and education services. HIV\/AIDS has engendered profound changes in personal and national identity. Shifts in Zambian narratives of nationhood emerge from this overview of the history of HIV made through the lens of research over a stretch of 30 years. One key narrative change concerns ideas of integrity and respect. Discussion of, and instruction in, sexual matters has become a topic of public debate about right conduct at all levels in society, thus reframing ideas of respect towards those in authority who have addressed this crisis. Another key narrative involves changes in the locus of responsibility and rights. The HIV response has both contested and pushed the reach of the state further into health and well-being, alongside an unprecedented involvement of local and international non-governmental agencies and church organisations. Thus HIV has both changed Zambia as a nation and changed what it means to be Zambian. Within opportunities created by HIV for academic research, focus has swung between the social and the bio-technological. This pendulum of research has gradually allowed Zambian agency in research to become more assertive, culminating in a National Health Research Bill in 2013. Free access to antiretroviral therapy (ART), which has in many ways transformed the landscape of HIV\/AIDS from one of fear and despair to one of hope, is not without its own uncertainties and challenges at the personal, community and national levels. In the face of bio-technological solutions, there remains a need to draw on the social \u2013 the responsibility of the state and changed ideas of respect, sex and health.","creator":["Anthony Simpson","Virginia Bond"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15d493da-fae8-3e77-8018-fe8446b96d46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25,"pageEnd":"1089","pageStart":"1065","pagination":"pp. 1065-1089","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Narratives of Nationhood and HIV\/AIDS: Reflections on Multidisciplinary Research on the HIV\/AIDS Epidemic in Zambia over the Last 30 Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566714","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":15985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article examines the representation of intersexuality in Jeffrey Eugenides's Pulitzer Prizewinning 2002 novel Middlesex. It situates the depiction of intersexuality within the context of current scholarship on sexed identity within the field of gender and sexuality studies. It argues that while a fictional focus on ambiguously sexed identity might appear to be aligned with queer critiques of fixed categories of \"sex,\" Eugenides's narrative remains implicated in heteronormative assumptions. More specifically, it will explore the narrative strategies which frame Calliope Stephanides's intersexed body, focussing on the relationship between the male-identified adult Cal, \"author\" of this fictional autobiography, and his remembered teenage girl self. It will suggest that the retrospective logic at work in this narrative is complicit in a heteronormative temporality which reinforces the causal relationship between sex, gender and sexuality which queer theorists have sought to interrogate.","creator":["RACHEL CARROLL"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"037a9ce9-fd51-32dc-be8a-902906862b72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40648696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Retrospective Sex: Rewriting Intersexuality in Jeffrey Eugenides's Middlesex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648696","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["James Vernon"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1788d77-e190-3f5b-819c-098f5d844d0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"For Some Queer Reason\": The Trials and Tribulations of Colonel Barker's Masquerade in Interwar Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175380","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11741,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[499389,499507]],"Locations in B":[[69091,69217]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Nancy Ehrenreich"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfb37cb8-aec9-3198-867a-b642efc108d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1372827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":96,"pageEnd":"587","pageStart":"492","pagination":"pp. 492-587","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Colonization of the Womb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372827","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":43114,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[467295,467363],[476150,476236]],"Locations in B":[[23965,24036],[163669,163759]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["L. H. Stallings"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15421619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d4fd73e-fe3c-3870-a13b-c96273c5c3d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44511876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidianiii"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian III","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-reading Ann Allen Shockley through Queer Queen B Eyes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511876","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11939,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[481509,481554]],"Locations in B":[[72540,72585]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andrea Bobotis"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"161ab7cf-b9ad-35e8-bf30-6468bc9411aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25504907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queering Knowledge in Flann O'Brien's \"The Third Policeman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504907","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8057,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[455499,455887]],"Locations in B":[[40404,40793]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Feminist critiques of menopause have been beneficial in opening up important public health debates around menopause. One of the most contentious public health issues concerns the use of Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) for the prevention of osteoporosis, heart disease and, more recently, Alzheimer's disease, in postmenopausal women. For preventive purposes, it is recommended that women should take HRT for 10-15 years and preferably remain on the therapy for the remainder of their lives. This is despite reported increased cancer risks associated with HRT, side effects and considerable cost of the therapy. Various studies have shown that up to 50% of women stop taking HRT after 9-12 months. These figures are used in the medical literature as an indication of women's non-compliance. Extending earlier feminist critiques around menopause and HRT, this paper discusses a critical feminist engagement around issues of women's perceived noncompliance with HRT.","creator":["Marilys N. Guillemin"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45142779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14034948"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e344e22-3431-378b-af57-045235b7f175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45142779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanjpublheal"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Journal of Public Health","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Managing menopause: a critical feminist engagement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45142779","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Adriaan S. van Klinken"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24461904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98048229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09b97635-05f7-3ee4-970f-bf2721db764c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24461904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ST. JOACHIM AS A MODEL OF CATHOLIC MANHOOD IN TIMES OF AIDS: A Case Study on Masculinity in an African Christian Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24461904","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":4976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Henning Bech"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4200956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db8a25e3-b117-327b-abaa-61f4f199869e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4200956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexuality, Gender and Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4200956","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":4006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"\u05db\u05e9\u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d7\u05e6\u05d9 \u05de\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05e0\u05e4\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e9\u05d1\u05d9 \u05d1\u05de\u05dc\u05d7\u05de\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05dd \u05d4\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d5\u05d9\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5 \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05ea\u05e7\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05d0\u05e8\u05d5\u05db\u05d5\u05ea. \u05d0\u05dc\u05d5\u05df \u05e8\u05d7\u05de\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d1\u05d5\u05d7\u05df \u05db\u05d0\u05df \u05ea\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d4 \u05de\u05e2\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05ea \u05d0\u05d7\u05ea \u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9\u05d4: \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d2\u05d9\u05dc\u05de\u05d5 \u05ea\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05d6\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d4\u05d5\u05e2\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05d1\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05ea\u05d0\u05d8\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d1\u05de\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5 \u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d4\u05ea\u05e0\u05d4\u05d2 \u05db\u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05dc\u05d6\u05db\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1 \u05d4\u05e9\u05de\u05d5\u05e8 \u05dc\u05db\u05d5\u05db\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d2\u05dd \u05de\u05d7\u05d5\u05e5 \u05dc\u05d1\u05de\u05d4. \u05d4\u05d0\u05dd \u05d4\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05dc\u05d4, \u05e9\u05e0\u05e7\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05e2\u05d2\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d9\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \"\u05d3\u05e8\u05d0\u05d2\", \u05e0\u05d5\u05e2\u05d3\u05d5 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d9\u05d9\u05e2 \u05dc\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05d4\u05ea\u05d2\u05d1\u05e8 \u05e2\u05dc \u05ea\u05d7\u05d5\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d7\u05d5\u05e1\u05e8-\u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05e4\u05d2\u05d9\u05e2\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05e4\u05e7\u05d3\u05d5 \u05d0\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05e2\u05dd \u05d4\u05e0\u05e4\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05d9\u05d1? \u05d4\u05d0\u05dd \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d6\u05e7 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e9\u05e9 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d5\u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05d1\u05d7\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05e7\u05e9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd? \u05d0\u05d5 \u05e9\u05de\u05d0 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d5 \u05d1\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d7\u05ea\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05ea\u05d7\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d4\u05d5\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d1\u05d5\u05e8\u05d2\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05e2\u05d9\u05d3\u05d5\u05d3 \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05e8\u05d5\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d5\u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05e1\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea?","creator":["\u05d0\u05dc\u05d5\u05df \u05e8\u05d7\u05de\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05d1","Alon Rachamimov"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23443961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15655261"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eec491fd-7b0b-34f1-8c2a-8f738badf9ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23443961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zmanim"}],"isPartOf":"Zmanim: A Historical Quarterly \/ \u05d6\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd: \u05e8\u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05df \u05dc\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d4","issueNumber":"98","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Open University \/ \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e4\u05ea\u05d5\u05d7\u05d4","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Disruptive Comforts of Drag: (Trans)Gender Performances among Prisoners of War in Russia, 1914-1920 \/ \u05e7\u05e1\u05de\u05d5 \u05d4\u05de\u05e2\u05e8\u05e2\u05e8 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\"\u05d3\u05e8\u05d0\u05d2\": \u05ea\u05d0\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05d7\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4-\u05de\u05d2\u05d3\u05e8 \u05d1\u05de\u05d7\u05e0\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d1\u05de\u05dc\u05d7\u05de\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05dc\u05dd \u05d4\u05e8\u05d0\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23443961","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b2b6738-5234-3257-a6a0-e19ff4718e9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1262579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262579","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"The \"Puerto Rican wannabe \" is one contemporary, local expression of contested racial identities-identities that are also inflected with class and gender meanings. This study uses interviews with local youth and young adults to explore their use of the caricature of the wannabe to create and contest race, class, and gender boundaries. The wannabe's challenge to racially designated categories provides a symbol onto which nonwannabe kids project their own stereotypes, anxieties, and desires. The stories told about the wannabe in this study reveal both the persistence and the fragility of race, class, and gender identities and underline the centrality of sexuality in bolstering and undermining them. Boundary negotiations in one category rely on and affect other categories: In this study, the contestation of racial boundaries reestablishes heteronormative and hierarchical gender relations.","creator":["Amy C. Wilkins"],"datePublished":"2004-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71b95216-e792-35e9-acf0-16699c260783"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Puerto Rican Wannabes: Sexual Spectacle and the Marking of Race, Class, and Gender Boundaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149376","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This study argues that the contemporary mass media presents conflicting and contradictory messages about women and the roles they should fulfill By systematically analyzing the conflicting images of women in music videos, a greater understanding as to how the dominant youth culture constructs, deconstructs, and reconstructs young women's self-identity emerges. The study is based upon a qualitative analysis of 123 music videos which appeared on MTV and BET during the summer of 1995. Although 55 (44.7percent) of the 123 videos included in this sample contained no women or placed women only in background shots, the focus here is on the 68 music videos that feature women as a principal character in the action. The findings indicate that the portrayal of women in videos can be identified according to three categories: conventional women, self-reliant women, and the internal paradox. The \"conventional women\" category includes videos in which women are passive, and dependent on a male's attention, and in which the emphasis is on physical appearance. Videos in the \"independent women\" category include videos that depict women as strong, self-reliant, and dominant in sexual relationships. The third category, \"the internal paradox,\" includes videos in which a female or male character is shown in conflicting gender roles within a single video. These three categories are juxtaposed during the programming of music videos, thus leaving the female viewer to construct the particular gender identity she finds most satisfactory from the paradoxical images presented.","creator":["Susan Alexander"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40969035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19347111"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03c90277-a210-362a-8111-d98fcf2cbf19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40969035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michsocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Sociological Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Michigan Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE GENDER ROLE PARADOX IN YOUTH CULTURE: AN ANALYSIS OF WOMEN IN MUSIC VIDEOS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40969035","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7395,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[448298,448469]],"Locations in B":[[3938,4109]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["DUSTIN FRIEDMAN"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e1a3f3b-0767-3df1-b8f3-242333f940f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NEGATIVE EROTICISM: LYRIC PERFORMATIVITY AND THE SEXUAL SUBJECT IN OSCAR WILDE'S \"THE PORTRAIT OF MR. W. H.\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475519","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":13247,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[513340,513439]],"Locations in B":[[77571,77669]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Bladimir Ruiz"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f541f12b-3501-305d-8267-62d4e1509d3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"152","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DE SE\u00d1ORAS Y PUTAS: LAS MUJERES MALAS EN LA NARRATIVA DE LUC\u00cdA GUERRA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808514","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8817,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[321345,321404]],"Locations in B":[[492,554]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Rendant compte des travaux r\u00e9cents dans le champ de l\u2019\u00e9tude sociales des sciences (Social Studies of Knowledge), de la critique f\u00e9ministe des sciences et des cultural studies, cet article revient sur leurs apports et sur la fa\u00e7on dont ils lisent l\u2019histoire des transformations biom\u00e9dicales (tr\u00e8s) contemporaines, notamment dans les domaines de la reproduction et de la sexualit\u00e9. Les SSK, en particulier, proposent une lecture complexe et riche des relations humains\/techniques et de la fa\u00e7on dont les relations sociales et de genre s\u2019y trouvent engag\u00e9es. S\u2019interrogeant sur la co\u00efncidence de certaines de ces approches (participant du \u00ab tournant descriptif \u00bb dans les sciences sociales) avec des transformations \u00e9conomiques et sociales plus vastes (la reconfiguration de soi via les biotechnologies comme promesse individuelle en contexte n\u00e9olib\u00e9ral), l\u2019article propose de mettre en \u00e9vidence ce qu\u2019un renouveau de l\u2019approche historienne pourrait apporter en propre : redonner \u00e0 voir l\u2019\u00e9paisseur des contextes scientifiques et sociaux de production de certaines technologies, dire l\u2019historicit\u00e9 des enjeux sociaux et de genre, produire de nouveaux r\u00e9cits attentifs aux enjeux normatifs, politiques et \u00e9conomiques.","creator":["Delphine Gardey"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12527017"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04d1084e-0662-3002-9677-3237f5e9aa8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26264808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clio"}],"isPartOf":"Clio. Femmes, Genre, Histoire","issueNumber":"37","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Feminist & Women's Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Comment \u00e9crire l\u2019histoire des relations corps, genre, m\u00e9decine au XXe<\/sup> si\u00e8cle ?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26264808","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[476075,476141]],"Locations in B":[[40967,41034]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Judy Tobler"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45aed710-9f82-3c07-b8e3-9cefe5f20b0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred Space in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764042","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":13997,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[446805,446947],[481756,481815],[495817,495872],[497254,497396]],"Locations in B":[[41303,41445],[84793,84852],[85260,85315],[85908,86018]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Andreas Spiegl","Fiona Elliot"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b770d20f-1133-3b18-ab5c-58e3f50130b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711420","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5552,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[432496,432753],[439768,439971]],"Locations in B":[[27504,27761],[27972,28178]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"This article discusses the development of feminist theories concerning the separation of public and private spheres. It reconstructs the critique of a dichotomization of both concepts and applies newer problematizations, for example the concept of experience, to the earlier dictum of the women's movement that the private\/personal is political. This analysis of discourses concerning private life and the public sphere is devoted not only to a historical reconstruction but it also casts a glance into the future, into a transformed cultural and media landscape, and poses questions as to the role of the private in the public sphere and beyond, as to whether the public sphere would have to protect privacy.","creator":["Ulla Wischermann","Ilze Klavina Mueller"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06256d97-5456-38b8-a6fa-f5bc28d6b7f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminist Theories on the Separation of the Private and the Public: Looking Back, Looking Forward","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688978","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Casey Hayman"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2d191f7-cc66-3606-b339-98a7b1402780"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hypervisible Man: Techno-Performativity and Televisual Blackness in Percival Everett's \"I Am Not Sidney Poitier\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569864","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Cet article examine la mani\u00e8re dont la Convention de 1951 des Nations Unies relative au statut des r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s s'applique aux demandes d'asile introduites par des requ\u00e9rantes d'asile lesbiennes. Il pr\u00e9sente une analyse de quelques-uns des obstacles rencontr\u00e9s par ces requ\u00e9rantes au niveau de l'application de la proc\u00e9dure de d\u00e9termination du statut de r\u00e9fugi\u00e9. Je sugg\u00e8re qu'il s'agit de s'interroger sur la pertinence de la notion de genre utilis\u00e9e en droit international des r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s et en particulier par les institutions et les d\u00e9cisionnaires en mati\u00e8re d'asile. Je tente de d\u00e9montrer que la restriction de l'analyse des demandes d'asile introduites par des lesbiennes au cadre du motif de l'appartenance \u00e0 un certain groupe social peut non seulement constituer un obstacle \u00e0 la reconnaissance du statut de r\u00e9fugi\u00e9 de demandeuses d'asile lesbiennes mais \u00e9galement renforcer le syst\u00e8me de genre. This article examines how the 1951 UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees applies to claims made by lesbian asylum seekers. It presents an analysis of some of the obstacles faced by these claimants in relation to the procedures that determine refugee status. I argue that it is necessary to question the definition of gender used in international refugee law, particularly by asylum institutions and decision-makers. I try to demonstrate that limiting the analysis of claims made by lesbian asylum seekers to the framework of a particular social group, as specified in the Convention's definition, may not only be an obstacle to recognizing these lesbian claimants as refugees but may also reinforce the gender system.","creator":["Fran\u00e7oise Stichelbaut"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02484951"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680466372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18ee2a42-ab3a-3cff-95a0-dbc30761257a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40620526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nouvquesfemi"}],"isPartOf":"Nouvelles Questions F\u00e9ministes","issueNumber":"2","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"\u00c9ditions Antipodes","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'application de la Convention sur les r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s aux demandeuses d'asile lesbiennes: de quel genre parlons-nous ?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40620526","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Sonia N\u00fa\u00f1ez Puente"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"097f9b12-e5ba-3de6-8238-8aa611384567"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22,"pageEnd":"526","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-526","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Corporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero, mu\u00f1eca\", de Ernesto Caballero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742611","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7684,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[493724,493799]],"Locations in B":[[45214,45288]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"Focusing primarily upon Poppea's transgressive rhetoric, which manoeuvres both inside and outside ideologies of the feminine in Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Poppea, this article has two main objectives: first, to situate the gender confusion at the heart of the Poppea-Nerone relationship within the context of the sexually double nature of Renaissance rhetoric and, secondly, to locate these findings within the much broader issue of 'Who wrote the music to L'incoronazione di Poppea?' Arguing for an alternative composer or composers for the Finale, I suggest that the patriarchal retribution witnessed here in the form of Nerone's musical empowerment, when coupled with the affective nature of the final love duet, 'Pur ti miro', postulates a rhetorical outlook significantly at odds with the opera as a whole.","creator":["Rachel A. Lewis"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3526030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Love as Persuasion in Monteverdi's 'L'incoronazione di Poppea': New Thoughts on the Authorship Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526030","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":11796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["MELANIE L. BUFFINGTON","AMY E. WILLIAMS","ERIKA OGIER","LAUREN ROUATT"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45381442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ac3366c-e970-36cd-80b0-ac3b78ab44e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45381442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Telling Our Tales: Becoming Art Educators","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45381442","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":6282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["David Chioni Moore"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3630558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c429919-8c4a-335b-9234-6759e1a4cdd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3630558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"janthrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Anthropological Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of New Mexico","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)pology: Poststructuralism, Literary Studies, and Anthropology's \"Nervous Present\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3630558","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[147640,147832]],"Locations in B":[[16061,16251]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Alberta Gallus"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40540430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b122d0a-01e4-33e7-a538-99e37cd9c38b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40540430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Body into Words: Violette Leduc's La Folie en t\u00eate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40540430","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":5509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90802802-6e92-3bea-8c1a-a3f02113d5ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19,"pageEnd":"882","pageStart":"864","pagination":"pp. 864-882","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174529","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Irene Gedalof"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83db0e26-f4b4-3833-9a98-5ce7c8e6f6d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1395701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"64","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comments on Elisa Glick's 'Sex Positive'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1395701","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1789,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[443416,443517]],"Locations in B":[[2982,3089]],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":["Anne E. McCall"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3279977c-5cdd-3e14-89a5-2a230860d8af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"George Sand and the Genealogy of Terror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287480","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":"George Whitefield's ability to enthrall audiences through a potent combination of drama, religious rhetoric, and imperial pride is well documented, as is the Hallam Theater Company's successful mid-eighteenth century tour of North America. Yet, as historian Odai Johnson recendy asserted, scholars have almost always placed the two performers (and the larger movements they represented) in opposition. This article demonstrates that George Whitefield and Lewis Hallam Sr.\u2014lead purveyors of the pulpit and the stage in mid-eighteenth century colonial America\u2014should be understood as mutual contributors to the development of early American performance and, ultimately, professional theater. Both rose to prominence dwing a specific period (the mid-eighteenth century) in a specific place (the British American colonies) for a shared reason: to use professional performance to entrance the most colonists as possible. Ultimately, Whitefield and HaUam were quite different men who, through common pursuit of fame in North America, demonstrated just how much theatricality and religion\u2014despite imagining themselves as oppositional forces\u2014became entangled by the mid-eighteenth century.","creator":["Vaughn Scribner"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a56ca12-5cef-3723-8e48-a1418c953375"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43919914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Transatlantic Actors: The Intertwining Stages of George Whitefield and Lewis Hallam, Sr., 1739-1756","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919914","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":16025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} +{"abstract":null,"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ff741fe-62c5-3b78-8908-03cd90f4eabf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23481072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23481072","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"subTitle":null} diff --git a/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb b/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb deleted file mode 100644 index 908d20f..0000000 --- a/text_matcher/jstor-match.ipynb +++ /dev/null @@ -1,105 +0,0 @@ -{ - "cells": [ - { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Experiment 2A\n", - "\n", - "Using the rewritten text matcher. " - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 1, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", - "import json\n", - "import pandas as pd\n", - "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", - "%matplotlib inline\n", - "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", - "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Load the data. \n", - "with open('part-1.jsonl') as f: \n", - " rawCriticism = f.readlines()\n", - "\n", - "# Parse the data. \n", - "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawCriticism]\n", - "\n", - "# Load Middlemarch\n", - "with open('nocite_pages.txt') as f: \n", - " rawMM = f.read()\n", - "\n", - "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Gender Trouble')" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 3, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - " Matching article 5184 of 5185" - ] - } - ], - "source": [ - "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", - " clear_output()\n", - " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", - " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", - " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", - " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", - " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": true - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Write output somewhere. \n", - "with open('nocite.json', 'w') as outfile: \n", - " json.dump(data, outfile)" - ] - } - ], - "metadata": { - "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3", - "language": "python", - "name": "python3" - }, - "language_info": { - "codemirror_mode": { - "name": "ipython", - "version": 3 - }, - "file_extension": ".py", - "mimetype": "text/x-python", - "name": "python", - "nbconvert_exporter": "python", - "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.10.2" - } - }, - "nbformat": 4, - "nbformat_minor": 1 -} diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a34560f --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,134 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Run Text_Matcher Algorithm" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 7, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 8, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", + "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", + "\n", + "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/part-1.jsonl'\n", + "with open(articles) as f: \n", + " rawArticles = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "# Parse the data. \n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawArticles]\n", + "\n", + "# Load the text you want to find quotations from. Replace text with the text file you want to use.\n", + "\n", + "text = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "with open(text) as f: \n", + " rawText = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble') # Replace with the name of the article" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Let's match the articles!" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 9, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + " Matching article 5184 of 5185" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", + " clear_output()\n", + " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", + " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", + " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", + " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", + " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()\n", + " article['fullText'] = '' #drop the fulltext asap" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Turn the data into a pandas dataframe, drop the full text, and turn it back into a jsonl file for future analysis" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 10, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", + "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", + "\n", + "#Replace 'finaldata.jsonl' with whatever name you want to give this file.\n", + "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} diff --git a/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb b/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b0eed5e --- /dev/null +++ b/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,12219 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Analysis of Text Matching Data Generated from JSTOR Dataset " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "#import spacy\n", + "import re\n", + "import json\n", + "#import altair as alt\n", + "#new viz library for single-column heatmap\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "import seaborn as sns\n", + "sns.set()\n", + "#from nltk.corpus import names\n", + "from collections import Counter\n", + "from matplotlib import pyplot as plt\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "plt.style.use('ggplot')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "docName = '../gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "with open(docName) as f: \n", + " txt = f.read()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 5, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "textALength = len(txt) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 11, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "250" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 11, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get page locations\n", + "pageMatches = txt.split('~')\n", + "pageMatches = [match.strip() for match in pageMatches]\n", + "len(pageMatches)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 19, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Text AText BThresholdCutoffN-GramsNum MatchesText A LengthText B LengthLocations in ALocations in B
0gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE353153351745970[(435522, 435631)][(34199, 34308)]
1gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH353153351758719[(118066, 118330)][(4653, 4920)]
2gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Inclusion and t353153351735376[(477833, 477898)][(33058, 33123)]
3gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/An Exploration353153351745966[(443971, 444257)][(6388, 6643)]
4gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/The Sentimental353153351759900[(478055, 478118)][(2578, 2642)]
.................................
2432gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Reading Zinaida353153351742485[(485422, 485515)][(39796, 39890)]
2433gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Dissenting in a353453351754105[(99981, 100198), (103187, 103458), (103619, 1...[(13420, 13637), (13837, 14106), (14114, 14301...
2434gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/A Poetics of Di353153351749182[(455517, 455887)][(5066, 5463)]
2435gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Madame Bovary c353353351788029[(433526, 433592), (435522, 435631), (471706, ...[(58480, 58545), (60107, 60216), (84693, 84786)]
2436gender_trouble_pages.txtgender_texts/Consumption and3531533517102624[(474910, 474998)][(99362, 99449)]
\n", + "

2437 rows × 10 columns

\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Text A Text B Threshold \\\n", + "0 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/THE EMPERORS NE 3 \n", + "1 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/QUEERNESS AT SH 3 \n", + "2 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Inclusion and t 3 \n", + "3 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/An Exploration 3 \n", + "4 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/The Sentimental 3 \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "2432 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Reading Zinaida 3 \n", + "2433 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Dissenting in a 3 \n", + "2434 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/A Poetics of Di 3 \n", + "2435 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Madame Bovary c 3 \n", + "2436 gender_trouble_pages.txt gender_texts/Consumption and 3 \n", + "\n", + " Cutoff N-Grams Num Matches Text A Length Text B Length \\\n", + "0 5 3 1 533517 45970 \n", + "1 5 3 1 533517 58719 \n", + "2 5 3 1 533517 35376 \n", + "3 5 3 1 533517 45966 \n", + "4 5 3 1 533517 59900 \n", + "... ... ... ... ... ... \n", + "2432 5 3 1 533517 42485 \n", + "2433 5 3 4 533517 54105 \n", + "2434 5 3 1 533517 49182 \n", + "2435 5 3 3 533517 88029 \n", + "2436 5 3 1 533517 102624 \n", + "\n", + " Locations in A \\\n", + "0 [(435522, 435631)] \n", + "1 [(118066, 118330)] \n", + "2 [(477833, 477898)] \n", + "3 [(443971, 444257)] \n", + "4 [(478055, 478118)] \n", + "... ... \n", + "2432 [(485422, 485515)] \n", + "2433 [(99981, 100198), (103187, 103458), (103619, 1... \n", + "2434 [(455517, 455887)] \n", + "2435 [(433526, 433592), (435522, 435631), (471706, ... \n", + "2436 [(474910, 474998)] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \n", + "0 [(34199, 34308)] \n", + "1 [(4653, 4920)] \n", + "2 [(33058, 33123)] \n", + "3 [(6388, 6643)] \n", + "4 [(2578, 2642)] \n", + "... ... \n", + "2432 [(39796, 39890)] \n", + "2433 [(13420, 13637), (13837, 14106), (14114, 14301... \n", + "2434 [(5066, 5463)] \n", + "2435 [(58480, 58545), (60107, 60216), (84693, 84786)] \n", + "2436 [(99362, 99449)] \n", + "\n", + "[2437 rows x 10 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 19, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "dat = '../gender-trouble/log_pages.csv'\n", + "df = pd.read_csv(dat)\n", + "df" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Need to find the decades each article was written in\n", + "\n", + "# df['Decade'] = df['year']//10\n", + "# df['Locations in A'] = df['matches'].apply(lambda x: x[1])\n", + "# df['NumMatches'] = df['matches'].apply(lambda x: x[0])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 20, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "58768" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 20, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "sum([len(item) for item in df['Locations in A'].values])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# How many articles do we have? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 21, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "2437" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 21, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(df) # Total articles with the article in question mentioned somewhere" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Find only those with non-trivial quotations: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "count 489.000000\n", + "mean 1991.871166\n", + "std 18.477106\n", + "min 1873.000000\n", + "25% 1980.000000\n", + "50% 1995.000000\n", + "75% 2007.000000\n", + "max 2016.000000\n", + "Name: year, dtype: float64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 12, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches = df[df['Locations in A'].apply(lambda x: len(x) > 0)]\n", + "articlesWithMatches.year.describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "0 17\n", + "3 3\n", + "4 3\n", + "8 3\n", + "9 12\n", + "Name: Wordcounts, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 13, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches.Wordcounts.apply(len).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# articlesWithMatches.to_json('../data/cleaned-matches.json')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## How many articles do we have published in each year? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 15, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(articlesWithMatches).mark_bar().encode(x='year:O', y='count()').properties(width=1000)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Index(['Locations in A', 'Locations in B', 'author', 'coverdate', 'disc_name',\n", + " 'doi', 'id', 'jcode', 'journal', 'la', 'no', 'numMatches', 'pages',\n", + " 'publisher_name', 'sp', 'srcHtml', 'title', 'topics', 'ty', 'vo',\n", + " 'year', 'Decade', 'Quoted Words', 'Locations in A with Wordcounts',\n", + " 'Wordcounts'],\n", + " dtype='object')" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 16, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df.columns" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[Language & Literature, Humanities] 201\n", + "[Language & Literature] 72\n", + "[Humanities, Language & Literature] 59\n", + "[Language & Literature, History, British Studies, History, Area Studies, Humanities] 15\n", + "[Area Studies, British Studies, Humanities, Language & Literature] 9\n", + "Name: disc_name, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 17, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df[df['Quoted Words'] > 0]['disc_name'].value_counts().head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Find Number of Garbage Articles\n", + "I.e., articles that just contain front matter, contents, etc. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def isGarbage(itemTitle): \n", + " badTitles = ['front matter', 'back matter', 'table of contents', 'cover']\n", + " if itemTitle == None: \n", + " return False\n", + " for title in itemTitle: \n", + " for badTitle in badTitles: \n", + " if badTitle in title.lower(): \n", + " return True\n", + " return False" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "457" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 28, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(df[df.title.apply(isGarbage)]) # How many garbage items? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Average Numbers of Quoted Words Per Item" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "count 6069.000000\n", + "mean 19.240896\n", + "std 105.153455\n", + "min 0.000000\n", + "25% 0.000000\n", + "50% 0.000000\n", + "75% 0.000000\n", + "max 2498.000000\n", + "Name: Quoted Words, dtype: float64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 29, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df['Quoted Words'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "count 489.000000\n", + "mean 238.799591\n", + "std 291.466263\n", + "min 13.000000\n", + "25% 68.000000\n", + "50% 141.000000\n", + "75% 281.000000\n", + "max 2498.000000\n", + "Name: Quoted Words, dtype: float64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 30, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Quoted Words'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "489" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 31, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(df[df['Quoted Words'] > 0])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 32, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Quoted Words'].hist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Stats about Wordcounts\n", + "\n", + "Average number of words per match, per item: " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "0 67.235294\n", + "3 23.666667\n", + "4 167.000000\n", + "8 47.333333\n", + "9 62.416667\n", + "Name: Wordcounts, dtype: float64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 33, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Wordcounts'].apply(np.mean).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "count 489.000000\n", + "mean 69.712270\n", + "std 50.153803\n", + "min 13.000000\n", + "25% 37.000000\n", + "50% 58.500000\n", + "75% 86.000000\n", + "max 435.333333\n", + "Name: Wordcounts, dtype: float64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 34, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Wordcounts'].apply(np.mean).describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "#### Functions for extracting wordcounts, numbers of quotations for diachronic and synchronic analysis" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=True, normalize=True):\n", + " \"\"\" Turning on useWordcounts makes it so that it's weighted by wordcount. \n", + " Turning it off uses raw numbers of quotations. \"\"\"\n", + " decades = np.arange(decades[0], decades[1], 10)\n", + " # Make a dictionary of decades. \n", + " # Values are a list of locations. \n", + " decadeDict = {}\n", + " for i, row in df.iterrows():\n", + " decade = row['Decade']\n", + " locationsAndWordcounts = row['Locations in A with Wordcounts']\n", + " if decade not in decadeDict: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] = locationsAndWordcounts.copy()\n", + " else: \n", + " decadeDict[decade] += locationsAndWordcounts.copy()\n", + " # Grab the beginnings of quotes. \n", + " decadeStartsWeights = {decade: [(item[0][0], item[1]) \n", + " for item in loc] \n", + " for decade, loc in decadeDict.items()}\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " decadesBinned = {decade: \n", + " np.histogram([loc[0] for loc in locations], \n", + " bins=bins,\n", + " weights=[loc[1] for loc in locations],\n", + " range=(0, textALength))[0]\n", + " for decade, locations in decadeStartsWeights.items() \n", + " if decade in decades}\n", + " else: \n", + " decadesBinned = {decade: \n", + " np.histogram([loc[0] for loc in locations], \n", + " bins=bins,\n", + " range=(0, textALength))[0]\n", + " for decade, locations in decadeStartsWeights.items() \n", + " if decade in decades}\n", + " decadesDF = pd.DataFrame(decadesBinned).T\n", + " #Normalize\n", + " if normalize: \n", + " decadesDF = decadesDF.div(decadesDF.max(axis=1), axis=0)\n", + " return decadesDF\n", + "\n", + "def countWords(locRange): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts words in middlemarch, given character ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " chunk = mm[locRange[0]:locRange[1]]\n", + " return len(chunk.split())\n", + "\n", + "def totalWords(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts total words in a list of location ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " return sum([countWords(locRange) for locRange in locRangeSet]) \n", + " \n", + "def countsPerSet(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Returns an augmented location range set that includes word counts. \"\"\"\n", + " return [(locRange, countWords(locRange))\n", + " for locRange in locRangeSet]\n", + " \n", + "def extractWordcounts(locsAndWordcounts): \n", + " \"\"\" \n", + " Takes pairs of location ranges and wordcounts, \n", + " and returns just the wordcounts. \n", + " \"\"\"\n", + " return [item[1] for item in locsAndWordcounts \n", + " if len(locsAndWordcounts) > 0]\n", + "\n", + "def synchronicAnalysis(df, bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " locs = df['Locations in A'].values\n", + " locCounts = [(loc, countWords(loc)) for locSet in locs\n", + " for loc in locSet]\n", + " starts = [loc[0][0] for loc in locCounts]\n", + " counts = [loc[1] for loc in locCounts]\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " binned = np.histogram(starts, bins=bins, \n", + " weights=counts, range=(0, textALength))\n", + " else: \n", + " binned = np.histogram(starts, bins=bins, \n", + " range=(0, textALength))\n", + " binnedDF = pd.Series(binned[0])\n", + " return binnedDF\n", + "\n", + "def plotDiachronicAnalysis(df, save=False, reverse=False): \n", + " ylabels = [str(int(decade)) for decade in df.index] + ['2020']\n", + " plt.pcolor(df, cmap='gnuplot')\n", + " plt.yticks(np.arange(len(df.index)+1), ylabels)\n", + " plt.gca().invert_yaxis()\n", + " plt.ylabel('Decade')\n", + " plt.xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " plt.gca().set_xlim((0, len(df.T)))\n", + " plt.colorbar(ticks=[])\n", + " if save: \n", + " plt.savefig('diachronic.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300, transparent=True)\n", + " plt.show()\n", + " \n", + "def plotSynchronicAnalysis(s, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " ax = s.plot(kind='bar')\n", + " ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " if useWordcounts: \n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Words Quoted')\n", + " else: \n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')\n", + " \n", + "def plotSynchronicAnalysisHeatmap(s, useWordcounts=True): \n", + " vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + " fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + " sns.color_palette(\"magma\")\n", + " sns.heatmap([vec1])\n", + " ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + " ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')\n", + " \n", + "def plotDiachronicAnalysisBubble(df, save=False, reverse=False):\n", + " ylabels = [str(int(decade)) for decade in df.index] + ['2020'] \n", + " alt.Chart(df).mark_circle().encode(\n", + " x='Chapter',\n", + " y='Decade',\n", + " size='sum(count):Q'\n", + ")" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Quoted Words'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(totalWords)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(countsPerSet)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "94671.0" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 54, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Verify that the diachronic wordcounts are the same as the synchronic wordcounts\n", + "decadeSums = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1700, 2020), useWordcounts=True, normalize=False).sum(axis=1)\n", + "decadeSums.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "94671" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 55, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "chapterSums = synchronicAnalysis(df)\n", + "chapterSums.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Quotation Length Statistics" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'].apply(extractWordcounts)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "wordcounts = []\n", + "for countSet in df['Wordcounts'].values: \n", + " for count in countSet: \n", + " wordcounts.append(count)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 58, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", 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" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "pd.Series(wordcounts).hist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Number of Quotes (and words Quoted) by Chapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(synchronicAnalysis(df))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=True).to_csv('../papers/spring2017-middlemarch-paper/data/num-words-quoted-per-chapter.csv')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Total number of matches" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "allMatches = []\n", + "for group in df['Locations in A'].values: \n", + " for pair in group: \n", + " allMatches.append(pair)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "1794" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 50, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(allMatches)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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ZIcea9Lrx1Lrwurn8ODPkyLbxvTgz5Mi28b04M+TItvG9ODPkyLapuriq6jsiIqLMeJeuqR08eLA+/vhj7d+/XwUFBerevbtuvfVW+fv7u/LnDg4cOKDIyEjVr19fkhQbG6t169bJz++3GzHn5OQoJCSkwm0DAAAAAGoWlx7p849//ENff/21hgwZoqFDh+rbb7/VO++8U6kOW7ZsqYMHDyovL0+GYWjPnj1q27atUlNTlZ6eLpvNpu3bt3M9LQAAAACgXC6dqd2/f7/mzZungICL4T169NDkyZMr1WH37t313Xffadq0afL391fbtm11++23q1u3blqyZImsVquioqIUExNTqfYBAAAAADWHS0WtzWazF7SSVKtWrUpNPS4yfPhwDR8+3GFZ165dtWjRokq3CQAAAACoeVyaftyqVSu99dZbSk9P148//qi3335bLVu29HRuAAAAAAA45dKZ2nHjxumNN97QjBkzZLPZ1L17d40dO9bTuQEAAAAA4JRLRW3t2rX15z//2dO5AAAAAABQIS4VtfPnzy/1ubFTp051e0IAAAAAALjKpaK2+J2ICwoKtHPnTrVp08ZjSQEAAAAA4AqXitrY2NgSP8+ePdsT+QAAAAAA4DKX7n5cmqysLHfmAQAAAABAhVX4mlrDMHT69Gl17tzZo4kBAAAAAFCeCl9Ta7FYdOONN6p79+4eSwoAAAAAAFe4VNT27dtX33//vQzDUPPmzRUQEKCffvpJAQEBql+/vqdzBAAAAACgVOUWtZ9//rnee+89+fn5yTAMFRYWavTo0Tp69KhuuukmiloAAAAAgNc4LWp3796tjRs3aubMmWrVqpUk6eTJk3rxxRcVGhqq9u3bV0WOAAAAAACUymlRu379ej3++OOKiIiwL2vZsqX8/Px07tw5jycHAAAAAIAzTh/pk5eX51DQSlJOTo66du2q3NxcjyYGAAAAAEB5nBa1Vqu1xLIGDRpozJgxKiws9FhSAAAAAAC4wmlRGxERof3795dYvn//fjVt2tRjSQEAAAAA4Aqn19Tefvvtmjt3rm699VZ16tRJknTo0CGtW7dOTz31VJUkCAAAAABAWZwWta1atdKTTz6p999/X6tXr5YkdezYUdOnT1eLFi2qJEEAAAAAAMpS7nNqW7durWnTplVFLgAAAAAAVIjTa2oBAAAAAPBlFLUAAAAAANNyWtTu2rVLknThwoUqSQYAAAAAgIpwWtS+//77kqS//OUvVZIMAAAAAAAV4fRGUbVr19ajjz6qrKwsPfHEEyV+v3jxYo8lBgAAAABAeZwWtU8++aS+++47rVixQmPHjq2qnAAAAAAAcInTovaKK65Q586dNW3aNIWGhur48eMqKChQu3btdMUVV1RVjgAAAAAAlKrc59RK0vnz5zV79mzVr19fNptNP/30k6ZNm6YOHTp4Oj8AAAAAAMrkUlH7zjvv6JFHHlFkZKQk6euvv1ZcXJzmzp3r0eQAAAAAAHDGpefU5ubm2gtaSYqMjFR+fr7HkgIAAAAAwBUuFbUWi0UZGRn2n8+cOSM/P5f+FAAAAAAAj3Fp+vFtt92mp556Sl27dpXFYtGBAwc0btw4T+cGAAAAAIBTLhW10dHRatasmb7++mvZbDYNHz5czZo183RuAAAAAAA45VJRK0kRERGKiIjwZC4AAAAAAFQIF8YCAAAAAEyLohYAAAAAYFouFbUvvviip/MAAAAAAKDCXCpqT5w4IcMwPJ0LAAAAAAAV4tKNokJCQjRp0iS1a9dOwcHB9uVjx46tVKd79uzRBx98oPz8fHXr1k333XefkpKSFBcXJ6vVqj59+mj06NGVahsAAAAAUHO4VNS2b99e7du3d0uHP/74o1577TX99a9/Vf369fXMM88oMTFRr776qmbPnq2GDRtq/vz5SkxMVFRUlFv6BAAAAABUTy4VtbfffrusVqvS09PVrFkzXbhwQUFBQZXqcNeuXerTp48aNmwoSXrssceUnp6u8PBwhYWFSZL69eunhISEShW1/tmZUlaGsr8/Lv/8/IsLQxurMKRRpfIFAAAAAPgul4ra5ORkLV68WH5+fpozZ44mT56sqVOnqkOHDhXuMD09XQEBAVqwYIEyMzPVs2dPNWvWTA0aNLDHNGjQQFlZWRVuW5KUlSHr/KmyFlsUOG2BRFELAAAAANWOxXDhDlAzZ87Ugw8+qOeff14LFy7Uvn37tGbNGs2bN6/CHa5YsUJHjx7V008/reDgYC1YsEBdunTRDz/8oEceeUSSlJSUpHXr1umpp56qcPvZu7br3OzHHJZdOes5hUT3rVQcUFx1et1Up3UBAABAzeXSmdr8/Hw1a9bM/nOPHj303nvvVarDBg0aqGvXrqpXr54kKTo6Wjt27JCf3283Ys7JyVFISEiF2k1NTZWk36YcF2PNz7f/voircUUiIiLK/F1lY2tanBlyLC+uOr1uPLUuvG4uP84MObJtfC/ODDmybXwvzgw5sm18L84MObJtqi6uqvqOiIgoM96lR/oEBATo3LlzslgskuTyypWmZ8+eOnDggH799VfZbDYlJiaqd+/eSk1NVXp6umw2m7Zv385NogAAAAAA5XLpTO2IESP09NNPKzs7W88995ySkpL04IMPVqrDdu3a6Q9/+INmzpypgoICdevWTb///e/VtGlTLVmyRFarVVFRUYqJialU+wAAAACAmsOlorZnz55q2rSpkpKSZLPZNHLkSIfpyBU1cOBADRw40GFZ165dtWjRokq3CQAAAACoeVwqaiWpoKBANptN/v7+Cghw+c8AVKGiR1pJ+u2xVjzSCgAAANWYS9Xp5s2btWrVKnXv3l02m01r1qzR2LFjmSIM+Jr/PtJKkv2xVjzSCgAAANWZS0Xt+vXrtXDhQvsdiTMzMzV//nyK2mI4QwYAAAAAVc+lojYgIMDhETuNGjWSv7+/x5IyJc6QAQAAAECVc1rUHj9+XJLUsmVLvf766xo8eLD8/Py0ZcsWdejQoUoSBAAAAACgLE6L2iVLljj8vG/fPvv/LRaLxo4d65msAAAAAABwgdOidvny5VWVBwAAAAAAFebSNbU5OTnasmWLzp0757B8zJgxHkkKAAAAAABX+LkStGDBAqWkpMgwDId/AAAAAAB4k0tnagsKCvTEE094OhcAAAAAQA10OY9Idamovfrqq3Xq1Cm1aNHi8jIFAAAAAOBSl/GIVJeK2g4dOmjKlCkKCQlxeD7tiy++WPFkAQAAAKAGupyzkSibS0XtunXrNGHCBDVp0sTT+QAAAABA9XQZZyNRNpeK2tq1a6tPnz6ezgUAAAAAgApxqaiNjIxUXFycYmJiFBDw259cffXVHksMAAAAAIDyuFTUbt++XZK0c+dO+zKLxcI1tQAAAAAAr3KpqF2+fLmn8wAAAAAAoMJcKmrXr19f6vKhQ4e6NRkAAAAAACrCpaL21KlT9v8XFBTo8OHDioyM9FhSAAAAAAC4wqWidvz48Q4/Z2VlacWKFR5JCAAAAAAAV/lV5o9CQ0OVkZHh7lwAAAAAAKiQCl9TaxiGjh07pnr16nksKQC+wz87U8rKUPb3x+Wfn39xYWhjFfKQcAAAAPiACl9TK0mNGjXS3Xff7ZGEAPiYrAxZ50+VtdiiwGkLJIpaAAAA+IBKXVMLAAAAAIAvcFrUvvTSS2X+zmKx6KGHHnJ7QgAAAAAAuMppUdu8efMSy3755Rd9+umnCgsL81hSAAAAAAC4wmlRO2zYMIefk5KStHz5cvXr10/33XefRxMDAAAAAKA8Ll1TW1hYqFWrVmnLli164IEHFBMT4+m8AAAAAAAoV7lFbVpampYtW6bg4GAtXLhQDRs2rIq8AFPjMTgAAABA1XBa1G7evFlxcXEaNmyYRowYUVU5AebHY3AAAACAKuG0qF2xYoUsFovWrl2rjz/+2L7cMAxZLBa9/fbbHk8Q5ld01lLSb2cuOWsJAAAAwA2cFrUvvvhiVeWB6uy/Zy0l2c9cctYSAAAAgDs4LWobN25cVXkAAFAjcM09AADu5dLdjwEAgJtwzT0AAG7l5+0EAAAAAACoLM7UAgAAAIAP4UarFUNRCwAAAAC+hButVgjTjwEAAAAApuXVM7VxcXH65Zdf9PDDDyspKUlxcXGyWq3q06ePRo8e7c3UAAAAAAAm4LUztQcPHtTWrVslSVarVS+//LKmTJmipUuX6tixY0pMTPRWagAAAAAAk/BKUXvu3Dm99957uvXWWyVJKSkpCg8PV1hYmPz9/dWvXz8lJCR4IzUAAAAAgIl4pah99dVXNXr0aF155ZWSpKysLDVo0MD++wYNGigrK8sbqQEAAAAATKTKr6mNj49Xw4YN1bVrV23ZskWSZBiGLBaLQ9ylP5cnIiJC0sVbXlsv+V1gUJBC/vv7Iq7GldZHaSrTXnltVpe46rRtPPn6ckeOFenXW/tKZeI80aavx3mzb1+P82bf3jom1pRt48k4b/bt63He7NvX47zZt6/HebNvX49zFuvrnyUrG+eONiu7zpIXitqvvvpKOTk5mjx5ss6dO6e8vDxlZmbKz++3k8Y5OTkKCQmpULupqamSdPEZTpew5ufbf1/E1bgiERERZf6uMu250mZ1iatO28ZTry935ViRfr21r1Q0zhNt+nqcGXJk21Q+zlP7lDtzrG5xZsiRbeN7cWbIkW3je3Hlxfr6Z8nKxLmrzfLW2VnRXOVF7YwZM+z/37Jliw4dOqQHHnhAjz76qNLT0xUWFqbt27drwIABVZ0aAMBH8RB6AABQFq8+0qdIYGCgxo8fryVLlshqtSoqKkoxMTHeTgsA4Ct4CD0AACiDV4va2NhYxcbGSpK6du2qRYsWeTMdAAAAAIDJeO05tQAAAAAAXC6KWgAAAACAafnENbUAzK/oRj72m/hI3MgHAAAAHkdRC8A9/nsjn+LPF+NGPgAAAPA0ph8DAAAAAEyLohYAAAAAYFoUtQAAAAAA06KoBQAAAACYFkUtAAAAAMC0KGoBAAAAAKZFUQsAAAAAMC2KWgAAAACAaVHUAgAAAABMK8DbCfg6/+xMKStD2d8fl39+/sWFoY1VGNLIu4kBAAAAAChqy5WVIev8qbIWWxQ4bYFEUQsAAAAAXsf0YwAAAACAaXGmFj6jaKq3pN+mezPVGwAAAIATFLXwHf+d6i3JPt2bqd4AAAAAnKGoBQAP44ZzAAAAnkNRCwCexg3nAAAAPIaiFgAuwZlVAAAA86CoBYBLcWYVAADANHikDwAAAADAtChqAQAAAACmRVELAAAAADAtiloAAAAAgGlR1AIAAAAATIu7H/uookeKSPrtsSI8UgTwKTz6B/AO9j0AZeH4UDNR1Pqq/z5SRJL9sSI8UgTwMTz6B/AO9j0AZeH4UCMx/RgAAAAAYFqcqQUAAKhhuMwJQHVCUQsAAFDTcJkTgGqE6ccAAAAAANOiqAUAAAAAmBbTj2sQbnEOM+F6LwAAALiCorYm4RbnMBOu9wIAAIALmH4MAAAAADAtztQCAACgSpR6aYnE5SUALotXito1a9YoISFBktSjRw+NGTNGSUlJiouLk9VqVZ8+fTR69GhvpAYAAABPKeXSEonLSwBcniqffpyUlKSkpCQtXLhQCxcu1PHjx7V9+3a9/PLLmjJlipYuXapjx44pMTGxqlMDAAAAAJhMlRe1ISEhuvvuuxUQEKCAgAA1bdpUaWlpCg8PV1hYmPz9/dWvXz/7mVwAAAAAAMpS5dOPmzdvbv9/WlqaEhISdNNNN6lBgwb25Q0aNFBWVlaF2o2IiJB08foM6yW/CwwKUsh/f1/EW3Fl5X0pd7dX2TadtffLdykqyEhX9vfHdcV/lwU0bqK6rdtWql9PrLO743x9XSrSry/sA+5+vZbXprv79vXXQ3WKM8M2dPcxsTL5VSTWzHFmeD34epwvvU+50re3tqE3+/b1OG/2XZWfdysT5yy2un52cEeblV1nyYs3ijp9+rTmz5+vMWPGyN/fX2lpaQ6/t1gsFWovNTVVkn674UAx1vx8+++LeCuuuIiIiDJ/7+72KtNmue19f9J+XUyRwGkL9EtQ7Ur164l1dnecr69LRfr19j7g7terK226u29ffz1Up8TfjocAACAASURBVDgzbEN3HxMrml9FYs0eZ4bXg6/H+dL7VHl9e2sberNvX4/z5Rw9dYx117apjp8d3NVmeevsrGj2yiN9jhw5omeeeUZ33XWXYmNj1bBhQ+Xk5Nh/n5OTo5CQEG+kBgAAAAAwkSo/U5uZmalFixZp4sSJioyMlCS1bdtWqampSk9PV1hYmLZv364BAwZUdWqmVBNvjV/qOlfj9QXgfhxHAACoPqq8qF23bp0uXLigt99+275s8ODBGj9+vJYsWSKr1aqoqCjFxMRUdWrmVBNvjV/KOlfr9QXgfhxHAACoNqq8qL3vvvt03333lfq7RYsWVXE2AADA04rOjNeUGUUA4Iuq87HYazeKAgAANcR/z4zXmBlFAOCLqvGx2Cs3igIAAAAAwB0oagEAAAAApkVRCwAAAAAwLa6pBQB4TXW+aQUAAKgaFLUAAO+pxjetAAAAVYOiFgAAwI2KZiBIKncWArMV4At4HZaNbWMOFLUAAADu9N8ZCJLKn4XAbAX4Al6HZWPbmAJFLYAqxTeeNQPjfPnYhr6n1DOwjAkAeB1FLYCqxTeeNQPjfPnYhr6nlDOwjAkAeB+P9AEAAAAAmBZFLQAAAADAtChqAQAAAACmxTW1AGAy7r5ZTUXa4+ZF5uXqOHMzJACA2VDUAoDZuPtmNRVpj5sXmZer48zNkAAAJkNRC5gAZ04AAEBF+frsGj7fwF0oagEz4MwJAACoKF+fXcPnG7gJN4oCAAAAAJgWZ2oBAAB8nK9PI0XNwHRh+CqKWgAAAF/n69NIUTMwXRg+iqK2ivENV9Xim20AAACgeqOorWp8w1W1+GYbAAAAqNYoagGYGrMfAKB6YrYVAFdR1AIwN2Y/AED1xGwrAC7ikT4AAAAAANPiTC3gRUydBQAAqHpMb69eKGoBb2LqLAAAQNVjenu1QlELAD6CM/cAUHGccfM9nng/Y5zhDEUtAPgKztwDQMVxxs33eOL9jHGGExS1KKEmfhNWE9cZQPlKPdsgcXwQ2waOzDDThPd6oPqiqEVJNfGbsJq4zgDKV8rZBonjgyS2DRyZYaYJ7/VAtcUjfQAAAAAApsWZWgAAUC2ZYUosUBlMpYYv8KVjLEUtAAConswwJRaoDKZSwxf40DGWohYAqilf+gYVcIW3zj5Vp32FM3hVpzq9bnD5eD14F0UtAFRXPvQNKuASb519qk77Cmfwqk51et3g8vF68CqKWgBAtcE35QAulzePI5xpR2XwuvGxonb79u368MMPVVhYqP/5n//RTTfd5O2UAABmwjflAC6XN48jnGlHZfC68Z2iNisrS//4xz+0YMECBQQEaMaMGYqMjFSzZs28nRoAAAAAwEf5TFGblJSkyMhIXXnllZKk3r17a8eOHRo5cqSXMwNQHTAtFQAqjmPn5WMbwmzcPZ25KvYBnylqs7OzFRISYv85JCREKSkpXswIQLXCtFQAqDiOnZePbQizcfd05irYByyGYRhua+0yfPTRR7JarRo9erQkadOmTTp+/LgefPBBL2cGAAAAAPBVft5OoEhoaKhycnLsP+fk5Cg0NNSLGQEAAAAAfJ3PFLXdunXTwYMH9fPPPys/P187d+7UNddc4+20AAAAAAA+zGemH0sXH+nzz3/+UwUFBRo4cKBuueUWb6cEAAAAAPBhPlXUAgAAAABQET4z/RgAAAAAgIqiqAUAAAAAmBZFLQAAAADAtChqAQAAAACmRVELAAAAADAtiloAAAAAgGkFeDsBd/nhhx+0Y8cO/fTTT/Lz81NISIiuueYatWnTplLt7d69W5mZmYqKilKTJk3syzdt2qTf/e539p/T0tIUFBSk0NBQxcfH6+TJk+rYsaP69OnjtP24uDjdc889DstSUlLUtm1bSdLBgweVmJgof39/RUdHq127dg6x+/fvV7t27VSnTh1t3bpVKSkpuvrqqzVgwACHuDfeeEOjRo3SlVdeWe46f/311woMDFT79u21bt06HTp0SG3bttXw4cMVEPDbS2XXrl3avXu3cnJyFBAQoKuuukp9+vRR+/bty+0DAAAAANzJ/+mnn37a20lcro0bN2rVqlVq1qyZmjZtqgYNGigvL08ff/yx8vLy1KFDhwq19+6772r37t2yWCyKi4tTgwYN1LJlS0nSK6+8osGDB0uS1q9frzfffNNezB49elSdOnXSV199pTNnzqhz586SpJdeekm7d+92+JeQkKAffvhBu3fvVq9evSRJCxYs0ODBg7VhwwZ99NFH6tKli4KCgvTRRx/JZrPZC9633npLCQkJio6O1tq1a7V//3517txZe/fuVXJysqKiouzrsmzZMn355ZcKDQ1Vs2bNylznlStXavPmzdq7d6+SkpKUlZWlQYMG6fjx49q7d6+uvfZaSdI///lP7du3T126dFFaWpo6dOigOnXqaM2aNQoICNDVV19doW2NqrV//36tXbtWGzdu1JdffqlDhw6poKDA6WvDmcLCQm3YsEEJCQkKDAxU48aN7b9bvXq1unTpYv85KSlJ586dU/369bV69Wp9+umn+umnn9S+fXtZLJYy+3juuecUExPjsGz37t1q2rSpJOmLL77Qhx9+qF27dslms6l58+YO+cXHx6tRo0YKCAjQRx99pE8++USpqalq166d/P39JV3c99q1a+fSlz+FhYXasmWLfvjhB0VEROjNN9/Uu+++q2PHjqlTp04KDAyUJNlsNv3rX//SqlWrtHbtWm3atEkHDhyQJLVo0cKhTXeOS1WMieRb41KdxkSqHvuKJ8ZEMt++UtqYSNVrXHhfqZoxkcxxDGNfYV8pnp+7P4M5YzEMw7isFnzAo48+qoULFyooKMhheX5+vqZOnarnnntOkpSZmem0nUaNGkmSHn/8cS1cuFD+/v5KS0vTnDlzNGbMGF133XWaMmWKFi5caI+bN2+ezp49q0mTJun1119XYGCgCgoKNH36dC1atEjSxbOy27Zt04gRI1S7dm1JF19so0aNkiTFxsZKkqZOnaoFCxZo8uTJmjlzpurWrStJys3N1fTp0+3rMWnSJC1evFh+fn6aOnWq5syZo1q1aslms+nxxx/X0qVL7es0ZcoUTZgwQa+99pouXLigoUOH6tprr3U4SBaty6JFi1RQUKCHHnpIr7zyigICAmQYhqZMmWJfl8mTJ2vhwoWyWCyyWq2aN2+eZs2apfPnz+upp55y6Fu6uAOXdga9tANXeQoLC7Vx40ZlZmaqV69e6tSpk/13xbendHHnrVOnjlq1aqU1a9bYz6APGzZMfn5lz7p/7rnn9Nhjj5VYXvzLhy+++EL79u1TQECAoqOjHc7KFxYW6osvvlB0dLTq1KmjtWvX2s+iDx8+3L7dFyxYoHvvvVdXXXVVueu8detWBQYGKiYmRm+//bYOHz6sNm3a6J577rEfAGw2mz777LNSz6Bff/31kqT3339fKSkp6tevn0JCQmQYhnJycvTll1+qadOmDjMHDh8+7DSvoi9sXn75ZdlsNrVo0UIbNmzQoEGDNGLECEm/vZ6li1+afPvttzp//rxCQ0NVv3599enTRzt27FBwcLDGjh0rSZo9e3aJvo4fP27/smTWrFkOba9evVpHjhzRTTfdJOniTIrWrVvrzjvvlCQ9//zzkqT77rtPa9asUV5enq677jrt3btXv/76qx599FFJ0v3336/atWtr8ODBGjJkiMPMhEstX75c+fn5slqtOnfunNq2bavf/e532r17t44fP67HH39c0sUvnwoKCtSzZ0/t2LFDLVu2VGhoqD777DN17dpVI0eOrNC4eGtMzDAu1WVMKjIuNW1MvDku7h6T6jQu7h4Tb46Lr4+JN8eFfYV9pfi4ePMzmDPVYvqxv7+/CgsLSyy3Wq32bwEkad68eUpPT7e/mIqzWCx68cUXHX6WpPDwcE2bNk1z5sxRvXr1HL7NMAxDtWrVUuPGjTVs2DCHQrF4Pvfcc4+ioqL03nvv6a677lKXLl30r3/9y17MFikoKJDNZlPdunVVq1Yt+/KAgACHfoOCgnT27FmFhISoYcOGys/PV61atZSXl1eiYLNYLGrWrJlmz56tpKQkbdq0SW+++aYiIiIUGhpqf0FJ0vnz55WXl6f8/Hzl5uaqbt26slqtKigosMdcuHBB+fn5Cg4Otu/okhQcHFzim56yduDNmzfr6NGj9h1469atcqZ///6SpFdffdW+87744osOO+/evXvtRW1pO+/gwYO1Y8cOvfXWW+XuvEXLix9UP/jgA/Xq1avUHfjkyZP2HXj58uWSpJiYGMXFxSkvL0833nij9u7dq5dfftm+vZOTkzV37txyd+AVK1bYD6obNmxQ27ZtNXHiRO3evVuvvPKK/aAaFxengoIC3XLLLSUOqmlpaRo5cqS++uorLV26tMRrpG/fvnr88ccditoPP/xQR48etc8OuFTRtjl+/Lj9C4/+/fvr2WefVVBQkG6++WaHfSwxMVGLFy/WuXPn9Mgjj+iNN96Qn5+foqKiNGXKFHtc79699fHHH+uOO+5QWFiYDMPQK6+8ottvv73UPHbv3q25c+fa970ePXro8ccft4/HyZMntWTJEknSkSNHtGDBAlksFkVFRWnixIn2dkJDQ/Xkk09q5cqVmjBhgn7/+9/r+uuvd/jWs8h3332nxYsXy2az6U9/+pPmzJkjSWrWrJkmT55sjzt06JB923Tv3l2zZs3Ss88+q2uvvVZPPPGE/Y3O1XHx1piYYVyqy5hUZFxq2ph4c1w8NSbVYVzcPSa+MC6+OibeHBdvj4kvjwv7StV+BnOmWhS1I0aM0JQpUxQZGamQkBBZLBZlZWXp0KFDGj16tD3u2Wef1axZszRu3Dh17NixzPZiYmL09NNP65577lHbtm3VvHlzTZw4UYsXL9aFCxfscb1799bTTz+tWbNm2QuqEydO6JVXXilxTW3Xrl3VunVrvfrqq9q7d69sNluJfuvVq6fx48dLkl5//XU9/PDD+vrrr7Vy5Updd9119rjbbrtN06dPV58+fRQWFqZZs2apa9euOnDggG655RaHNou/qLt166Zu3bqpoKBAp06d0o8//mj/3S233KIJEybIMAyNGTNGc+bMUdeuXXXw4EGH63RjY2M1Y8YMde/eXQcOHFBsbKwyMzO1cOFC9e3b16FvV3fggwcPaufOnQ7rWFxRUevtnVcy90E1MDBQWVlZ9hkJRTIyMkoU1dOnT9fs2bN1880326eel8ZmsykvL0/BwcGqV6+epk+frhkzZpT4Aki6+IVI3bp1dffdd9tfE7m5uQ5fAN10002KjIzUa6+9poEDB6p///664oorHL6ZlKS8vDzl5OQoNDRUubm59vG49Ius4OBgnT59Ws2bN1dERIR++uknNWrUSFlZWQ5fHFksFjVo0EB//vOflZaWpvj4eM2ZM0dWq1UNGza0b/ei2NTUVJ0/f17nz5/XmTNnFBYWpp9//tlhXQoLC3X27FnVr19fOTk5slqtki5+eVU8R1fHxVtjYoZxKWtMzp49a7oxcXVczDomld1PvD0u7hyT6jQu7h4Tb46Lr43Jpccvb44L+wr7ii+MSXmqxTW1LVq0UExMjGw2my5cuCCLxaIWLVrojjvucLietlatWrr66qu1efNmpy+ULl26qFGjRqpbt67q1asn6eLU5D59+ujChQu65pprJEmRkZG66qqrFBYWZv/b8+fPq1WrVho0aFCJdgMDA3XdddcpMzNTmZmZuuGGGxx+Hxsbq6FDh6pHjx5q3ry5GjZsqKysLLVv397h5lQRERGKjo5WVlaWfv75Z4WGhqpu3bq65ZZb1KNHD4c2/f391bp1a4dlRdOAi897b9mypYYMGaKbb75ZHTt2VIcOHZSdna0bbrjBIc+OHTsqPDxcubm5GjBggPr27Ss/Pz916dKlxJTiL774Qj179rRPuS5y5swZ7dixQ7///e8lSdHR0UpOTlb37t01atQo9erVy+FfkY0bN6p///4KCAhQUFCQrr32Wr366quqV6+ekpOT7dc6f/755xowYIBq166tunXr2m8Wlpubq/j4eN14442SpLZt2+qaa67Rhx9+qKuuukq9evXSli1bdNddd5UoLtevX6/rrrtOhw4dUlRUlIKDgyVd3LG3bNlib3Pbtm1q37696tevr0OHDqldu3aqXbu2srKylJCQYM9x06ZNGjZsmKKjo9WjRw99++23eu+99/TJJ59ox44dGjhwoCTp3//+tyIjI3XmzBn9+9//Vt++fVWnTh39/PPP2rx5s73fDRs2KCYmRsHBwcrOzta2bds0ePBgWa1We1yTJk20aNEi7du3TwcPHtSuXbu0ceNGrV+/Xg888IDD69jPz08dO3bUnj171K1bN5XF399fy5cvV7NmzXTVVVfpiiuu0DXXXKOXXnpJGRkZuu222yRdPGAtX75cN954o308vv32W82ZM0d/+MMfHK7Frlevnvr166ft27crPj5eOTk59vUs8t133+njjz/W6dOn9f3336tPnz7auXOnFi1apKFDh9r7aN68uRYsWKCjR48qMDBQq1at0pEjR/Thhx/q3nvvVXh4uH07F41N3bp11a1bNw0ZMkT9+/dXu3btFBoaau/7qquu0t/+9jd99dVXeuihh/Tyyy/r8OHDWrNmjUaOHGm//j4oKEjLli1TcnKyPvjgA/sXC08++aRuvfVW+35Z2rh8/vnnJcblcsYkKirK5TGZO3euhg0bVuL6eF8el7LG5IMPPtBtt92mVq1aeXRMdu/e7ZYxcTYu7t5XFi5cqGHDhrk0Jv/3f//ntjFZs2ZNpcbEm+Pi7jFx17hUZl9p0qSJlixZ4rZxcffxyx3jUtoxrDocvyoyLuHh4S6931/OvlIV7/WeGJdNmzZd9r7iC+/1ZY1Ldd5XylMtrqmFb0pKStKKFSsUHh6ukJAQSVJ2drbS0tI0fvx4RUZG2mOzs7P1n//8R3/4wx/KbG/Tpk1at26d7r//fnXt2lXSxbtez507V2fPntW7774r6WJR++mnnzqcJf7222/1/PPP69Zbb3X4gkC6+G3aqlWrlJmZqe+//15/+9vfSvT90ksv6fjx48rMzFRkZKSeeOIJ7dy5U2+//baGDx9uL9CPHj2qJUuWqH379goKClJSUpLatWun48eP68EHH7TfxKv4tdnF/fLLL/rxxx/t004OHDigFStWyDAMjRs3TqtWrVLz5s117Ngx3XHHHfYvHLZs2aL3339f7du3V3Jysu666y61bdtWzzzzjG6//Xb72fYvv/xSaWlp8vPzU1hYmEJDQ9WuXTtt3bq1xHZx9Q7gH3/8sS5cuKC+ffva43Jzc7Vx40YNHz7cHvfpp5/az5g3adJEP/30k86fP69vv/3Wob3i/Z45c0ZffvmlHnrooRL97tq1yx4XHh6uU6dO2cegeNzWrVuVkZFhv969QYMG6t69uxITE+1xiYmJKigocGl9i/fdo0cPBQcH68iRI2revLm++eabUrfN9ddfr/DwcF24cEF5eXnauXOnQ9zJkyf166+/2vePQ4cOafDgwSVmfLh6t/XU1FQFBgaqUaNG9ri2bdvql19+0c033+wQFxwcbG8vOTlZYWFh9mn9ZfW9adMm+xdRpfUdFBSkgoICff311/rqq6/UuXNnh8KtaJ1PnDihnJwcXbhwQWvXrtUf//hH9evXzx6TmJioJk2alFjnTp06lZjZUXxdPvjgAyUkJKhfv34Or8GiuGPHjqlNmzb65ptvlJKSoi5dupSYaWK1WpWSkqLs7GwZhqEvvvhCTz75ZLnX+pR2Z/ui7VerVi37t/RxcXEaNWqU4uPjHcZEkv2MQJGXX35Zw4YNc3ozkaSkJPu+Uhqr1aqcnByFhYVp8eLFGjVqVImbmOTm5iopKUk//vijCgoKtH79ei1evNjhA0ViYqLDzQidrXNxOTk5mjFjhqZPn66IiAiH36WmpurUqVNq1aqVmjRpori4OI0YMaLETUNSUlLUokULpaSkKDMzU6tXr1ZYWJjuvPNOhycEuPokgZSUFNWpU0e1atVSWlqaPa5nz546duyYfVxSUlJUr149hYWF2dv79ddfNWDAAIdZX8X7TUpK0rvvvqvWrVtr0KBBJZ5gUBRrtVq1bds2paam6syZM7r55psd7heRkpKipk2bKikpSenp6Vq1apXq1aunxx9/3KHvog/Tl65z7969HaYxXrpt/vOf/+ibb77RhAkTSmyb2rVr69SpUzp37pxSU1Pl7++vXr16lXjSwf79+xUYGKjs7Gz9+OOPOnjwoK677jr7+2LxuLZt2+rKK690+tQGSfrXv/6l6OhoNWrUyB4bHh4um82moUOH2uM+//xzXX/99fYnQRw+fFitWrXSkCFDSvRd9MSI+Ph4HT16VB07dizR9/79+9WyZUtZrVYdOXJEW7ZsUXR0dIn29uzZo8LCQqWnp6uwsFAfffSRhg8f7jBdPjExURaLpcSTKtq0aVPi8rPi22bt2rXaunWrhgwZUmIbFm2bBg0aqFWrVkpOTtY333yjZs2aOWyXN954Q8OHD1d6err9GFb0fl/8DJmrT8h444031L9/f9WvX9/hTGNeXp7DMeyNN95QbGysQ5FU9F5f/ETKpf06O34VxQYGBtqPYUXv98WPYW+88YZuueUWpaSk2Mel6P2+YcOG9rhHHnlE8+bNc2mdi+eYk5Njf68vuklSUdwNN9ygzMxMtWzZ0v5en5+fX6KPvXv32k90FL3Xt2vXTqNGjXJ4byn+NJJPPvlEhw8fLvVpJNLFzyhNmzZVp06d7E8uiYiIUL169Rze/+Lj49W8eXP7E07279+vOnXqaMKECU77TkxMVJcuXUr0ffDgQQUFBal+/fratWuX9u/fr9q1a+vRRx91iNuzZ49OnTqlgIAAWa1WrV27Vn379tX9999vj0tMTFStWrVcegKLMxS18KhLPxiWdlB19QZeUskPhtLFD2JffPGFwwfDSz8UlnZQvVR5HwqL1sfZQbUon6IPIGUdVEv7YOiKsg6q0m8fDMs6qL777rs6fvy4mjZtqoSEBN199932ovjSm9W4Gltd4lauXKnvvvvOK9vm008/1WeffSabzabIyEj99NNPio6O1p49e9ShQwf7h6T169drw4YN5ca52p6rcd7s21v9vvTSS7rU3r171bNnT0myXybi7jhv9l1a3J49e+yzmqqy37K2TdF+s2HDBv373//WwIEDZRiGtm7dqkGDBtnvdeCOuIEDB9oLGXf3W9XrUlrcxo0b9fnnn2vQoEGy2WyVbu+tt97Sd999p4kTJ2rDhg1KSUlRdHS0EhMTFRYWpvvuu69CceXFNm7c2H5fjMr0vXHjRqWkpKhXr17lxiUnJ7u0LseOHSu3PXfkV5Ec7733XtWvX1933XWXevfuXWIfK+LrcZVp884773R6M1JPrUt5/a5cuVLffPONCgsL1bhxY/n5+al///7au3evCgsL9ac//anUOIvFotjY2BJxxWMLCgoUFhZWZmxl4y43R1fbe+edd3TkyJFy8yuXAXhIRkaG039FJk2aZNx1113Gww8/bIwfP97h38MPP1zh9twd582+3Rk3adIko6CgwDAMw0hNTTXGjx9vfPXVV4ZhGMbkyZMd1tfV2EmTJhmFhYUuxbnani/HeWrb5OfnG2fOnDHuvvtuIz8/3zAMw7hw4YLxxBNPlBo3ZsyYKovzdN++uM5vv/22MW7cOOPTTz81Nm/ebGzevNl46KGH7P/3VJw3+/b1OMMwjClTphiGcXH/+fnnn+3Lz58/bzz66KMl4p544gmfjKtMm95a5/L6nThxov04N2XKFMNqtRqGYRiFhYXGY489VuE4T7R5aVzRfu+u9qoqriKxkydPNk6fPm3MnDnTmD59uvHll1/a17s4X48zQ46uxhV9JsjPzzfGjh1rXLhwwTAMw7DZbCXep1yJ80Sbvh5Xnmpxoyj4JlfvNu3qDbxcbe9y4iwWiwzDKHE3bHe3WRXrUlqcK3f1Lv53rsa6Eudqe74e5+5tYxS7i/rQoUPLvIt68Thnd1t3d5yn+/bFdXb1jvXujvNm374eJ/32hIArr7zS6RMCXH2SgLfiKtOmt9a5vH5dfRpDRZ7a4O42L42zWq0KDAx0W3tVFVeRWFeffOHrcWbI0d1PGalInCfa9PU4Z5h+DI85f/68S8WqdPH6nfj4eP3xj3+87PbcHefNvt0Zt2bNGh08eNB+V2/p4h2ai+7q/fbbb1c4tqbFeaLN999/X4cPH9asWbPsH0qK7qLes2dPh2fceSPODDl6Yp0l6dy5c3r11VfVqFEjJSUlafHixSqNu+O82bcvx82ePVtpaWmSLj5RoPgTAnr06GF/CoGvx5khR1fj9uzZo7///e/q06ePbDabDh486PA0hqIvJ1yN80Sb1SWuIrGl3bej+JMviu5J4OtxZsjR1bht27bprbfekmEYuuOOO7R582b7U0auv/56+z1lXI3zRJu+Hlcul8/pApWQnJxsrFixosrbc3ecN/t2Z1xSUpJx+vRph2UZGRnGm2++WenYmhbniTYPHTrk8PMPP/xg7Nu3r0S/3oozQ46eWOcimzZtMp599lmnMZ6I82bfvhz3ww8/GN9++61hGIbxzTffGHv37jVlnBlydCXuxx9/NNatW2e89tprxooVK4z33nvPSE5OrnScJ9qsLnGuxsbHx5f6t5fy9Thv9u2JdcnPzzdyc3MNwzCMkydPGh9//LFx4MCBSsd5ok1fj3OGM7UAAAAAANPyKz8EAPD/7d1PSJRbHIfxZ5RyNEZCd9rsAiOCgcRwoSvLrUGgCK0kaBFEoISCFYibQgwUsanIlUu3gmRmUCSBA0FI9EfcSFY4jjSpxPjOXVwY7iWhy80ZG3g+y8M5h/ec3ZffOeeVJEnSn8lQK0mSx0Le7wAAA3pJREFUJEkqWr5+LElSAQRBwPT0NM+fP2d3d5dMJkN9fT0dHR3cv3+faDT63x/E+IVEIsH79+/p6OjYl/kkSfqTGWolSSqABw8e8P37d27evElFRQU7OzuMjIxw7969n37d8bs+fPhAOp3e1zklSfpT+VCUJEl59uXLF7q7u4nH41RUVOTaU6kUb9++ZXFxke3tbVKpFJubm0SjUa5evUo4HGZubo7Z2VkymQzpdJrz58/T2trK/Pw8L1++JJvN8vXrV6qqqrhy5Qrr6+vcuXOHIAg4e/YsnZ2dzM3NMTMzQzabJRKJ0NXVRW1tLWNjY6TTaT5//szp06e5ePHiAe6SJEn/j5VaSZLybHl5mWPHjv0r0AIcPXqUxsZGFhcXSSaT3Lp1i0OHDtHX18erV684c+YMT548oa+vj0gkwrt37xgcHKS1tRWApaUlbt++TU1NDZOTk0xMTNDd3c25c+f49u0bnZ2dLC0t8ezZMwYGBigrK+P169cMDQ1x9+5dAH78+MHw8HDB90SSpP1iqJUkKc9KSkr41cGohoYGysrKAIhGo2xubhIOh+nt7SWRSPDp0ydWVlbY2dnJjYnFYtTU1ADQ0tLC9evXf5o3kUiwtrZGf39/ri2dTueOJ9fV1f32+iRJOkiGWkmS8uz48eOsrq6yvb1NeXl5rj2ZTBKPxwmHw5SWlubaQ6EQ2WyW9fV1+vv7aWlp4cSJEzQ2NpJIJHL9/nkXN5vN7nk3NwgCmpubc0eLgyBgY2ODI0eOABAOh/d9vZIkFZK/9JEkKc+qqqpoampifHycra0tALa2tnj48CGRSITDhw/vOe7jx49UVlZy4cIFYrFYLtAGQQDAmzdvSCaTADx+/Jj6+noASktL2d3dBf6u5r548YKNjY1cv4GBgfwtVpKkArNSK0lSAVy6dImpqSlu3LhBSUkJmUyGhoYG2tvbicfje46JxWI8ffqUa9euEQqFOHnyJJWVlaytrQFQXV3N6OgoqVSK2tpaLl++DMCpU6cYGRnh0aNHdHV10dbWxuDgIKFQiPLycnp6egiFQgVbuyRJ+eTrx5IkFaH5+XkWFhbo7e096E+RJOlAefxYkiRJklS0rNRKkiRJkoqWlVpJkiRJUtEy1EqSJEmSipahVpIkSZJUtAy1kiRJkqSiZaiVJEmSJBUtQ60kSZIkqWj9BT2yVo8KALVKAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC", 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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Number of Quotations Chapter\n", + "0 61 0\n", + "1 119 1\n", + "2 32 2\n", + "3 57 3\n", + "4 9 4\n", + ".. ... ...\n", + "83 18 83\n", + "84 1 84\n", + "85 4 85\n", + "86 1 86\n", + "87 54 87\n", + "\n", + "[88 rows x 2 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 40, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "quotationsPerChapter = pd.DataFrame(quotationsPerChapter, index=range(0,88), columns=['Number of Quotations'])\n", + "quotationsPerChapter['Chapter'] = range(0, 88)\n", + "quotationsPerChapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 41, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x='Chapter:O', size='Number of Quotations:Q').properties(width=1000, height=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 42, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x='Chapter:O', size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=1000, height=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 43, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Redo chart with horizontal labels\n", + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(x=alt.X('Chapter:Q', axis=alt.Axis(title=\"Chapter\", tickMinStep=5,\n", + " labelOverlap=False,labelAngle=0)), \n", + "size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=1000,height=150).configure_legend(\n", + " titleFontSize=9,\n", + " labelFontSize=10\n", + ")" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 44, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerChapter).mark_circle().encode(y='Chapter:O', size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q', scale=alt.Scale(range=[1, 1000]))).properties(width=150)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Quotations Per Book" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "0 0\n", + "1 475\n", + "2 460\n", + "3 164\n", + "4 171\n", + "5 111\n", + "6 104\n", + "7 49\n", + "8 260\n", + "dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 45, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "quotationsPerBook = synchronicAnalysis(df, bins=bookLocations, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "quotationsPerBook" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Number of Quotations Book\n", + "1 475 1\n", + "2 460 2\n", + "3 164 3\n", + "4 171 4\n", + "5 111 5\n", + "6 104 6\n", + "7 49 7\n", + "8 260 8" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 46, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "quotationsPerBook = pd.DataFrame(quotationsPerBook, index=range(1,9), columns=['Number of Quotations'])\n", + "quotationsPerBook['Book'] = range(1, 9)\n", + "quotationsPerBook" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 47, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerBook).mark_bar().encode(x='Book:O', y='Number of Quotations:Q').properties(width=500)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 48, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerBook).mark_circle().encode(x='Book:O', size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q')).properties(height=150).configure_legend(\n", + "titleFontSize=9,\n", + "labelFontSize=10\n", + ") " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 49, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Redo chart with horizontal labels\n", + "alt.Chart(quotationsPerBook).mark_circle().encode(x=alt.X('Book:O', axis=alt.Axis(title=\"Book\", labelAngle=0,)), \n", + "size=alt.Size('Number of Quotations:Q')).properties(height=150).configure_legend(\n", + " titleFontSize=9,\n", + " labelFontSize=10\n", + ")" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Raw Number of Quotations Per Chapter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Get the raw number of quotations per chapter\n", + "# synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False).to_csv('../papers/spring2017-middlemarch-paper/data/num-quotations-per-chapter.csv')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Text(0, 0.5, 'Words Quoted, Normalized')" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 51, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Adjusted for the number of words in each chapter\n", + "ax = (synchronicAnalysis(df) / chapterLengthsSeries).plot(kind='bar')\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Words Quoted, Normalized')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", 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" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysis(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysis(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Text(120.5, 0.5, 'Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 54, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Create a one-dimensional heatmap of the synchonic raw number of quotations per chapter, as heatmap\n", + "vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + "sns.color_palette(\"magma\")\n", + "sns.heatmap([vec1])\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Text(120.5, 0.5, 'Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 55, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Create a one-dimensional heatmap of the synchonic raw number of quotations per chapter, as heatmap\n", + "# INVERTED COLOR SCHEMA\n", + "vec1=synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)\n", + "fig, ax = plt.subplots()\n", + "sns.heatmap([vec1], cmap = 'magma_r')\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Number of Quotations')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDFquoteOnly = diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations, useWordcounts=False, normalize=False).sort_index()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "plotDiachronicAnalysisBubble(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1960, 2020), bins=chapterLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synDF = synchronicAnalysis(df, useWordcounts=False)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "synDF.index.name = 'chapter'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "chapter\n", + "0 61\n", + "1 119\n", + "2 32\n", + "3 57\n", + "4 9\n", + " ... \n", + "83 18\n", + "84 1\n", + "85 4\n", + "86 1\n", + "87 54\n", + "Length: 88, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 61, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "synDF" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Redo chart in Altair" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "diaDF.columns.name = 'chapter'\n", + "diaDF.index.name = 'decade'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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decade
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decade
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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " decade book value\n", + "6 1960 1 0.484480\n", + "7 1970 1 1.000000\n", + "8 1980 1 0.861341\n", + "9 1990 1 0.787806\n", + "10 2000 1 1.000000\n", + "11 2010 1 1.000000\n", + "12 1960 2 1.000000\n", + "13 1970 2 0.881306\n", + "14 1980 2 1.000000\n", + "15 1990 2 1.000000\n", + "16 2000 2 0.976565\n", + "17 2010 2 0.813368\n", + "18 1960 3 0.184983\n", + "19 1970 3 0.383119\n", + "20 1980 3 0.257013\n", + "21 1990 3 0.220851\n", + "22 2000 3 0.672464\n", + "23 2010 3 0.564133\n", + "24 1960 4 0.309983\n", + "25 1970 4 0.334652\n", + "26 1980 4 0.284798\n", + "27 1990 4 0.530300\n", + "28 2000 4 0.340168\n", + "29 2010 4 0.303601\n", + "30 1960 5 0.526007\n", + "31 1970 5 0.156940\n", + "32 1980 5 0.085760\n", + "33 1990 5 0.117517\n", + "34 2000 5 0.391798\n", + "35 2010 5 0.224523\n", + "36 1960 6 0.044463\n", + "37 1970 6 0.195516\n", + "38 1980 6 0.308576\n", + "39 1990 6 0.082151\n", + "40 2000 6 0.375320\n", + "41 2010 6 0.149682\n", + "42 1960 7 0.122903\n", + "43 1970 7 0.013848\n", + "44 1980 7 0.092439\n", + "45 1990 7 0.069442\n", + "46 2000 7 0.057305\n", + "47 2010 7 0.112497\n", + "48 1960 8 0.524329\n", + "49 1970 8 0.475107\n", + "50 1980 8 0.867219\n", + "51 1990 8 0.538405\n", + "52 2000 8 0.452398\n", + "53 2010 8 0.675688" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 80, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "booksMelted = booksMelted[booksMelted.book != 0]\n", + "booksMelted" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 81, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(booksMelted).mark_rect().encode(x='book:O', y='decade:O', color=alt.Color('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"# of Quotations (normalized)\"))).properties(width=500, height=300).configure(background='#eeeeeeff')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 82, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(booksMelted).mark_circle().encode(x='book:O', y='decade:O', size='value').properties(width=500, height=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 83, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "alt.Chart(booksMelted).mark_circle().encode(x='book:O', y='decade:O', size=alt.Size('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"Number of Quotations (normalized)\"), scale=alt.Scale(type = 'threshold', domain = [0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1], range =[0, 20, 60, 100, 150, 250, 350, 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000,]))).properties(width=500, height=300).configure_legend(\n", + "titleFontSize=9,\n", + "labelFontSize=10\n", + ") " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "\n", + "
\n", + "" + ], + "text/plain": [ + "alt.Chart(...)" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 84, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "#Redo Chart to rotate tick marks\n", + "alt.Chart(booksMelted).mark_circle().encode(\n", + " x=alt.X('book:O', axis=alt.Axis(labelOverlap=True,\n", + " labelAngle=0)), \n", + " y=alt.Y('decade:O'), \n", + " size=alt.Size('value', legend=alt.Legend(title=\"Number of Quotations (normalized)\"), \n", + " scale=alt.Scale(type = 'threshold', domain = [0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1], range =[0, 20, 60, 100, 150, 250, 350, 500, 750, 1000, 1500, 2000,]))).properties(width=500, height=300).configure_legend(\n", + "titleFontSize=9,\n", + "labelFontSize=10\n", + ") " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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+ "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "def plotDiachronicAnalysisBooks(df, save=False, reverse=False): \n", + " ylabels = [str(int(decade)) for decade in df.index] + ['2020']\n", + " plt.pcolor(df, cmap='gnuplot')\n", + " plt.yticks(np.arange(len(df.index)+1), ylabels)\n", + " plt.gca().invert_yaxis()\n", + " plt.ylabel('Decade')\n", + " plt.xlabel('Book')\n", + " plt.gca().set_xlim((1, len(df.T)))\n", + " plt.colorbar(ticks=[])\n", + " if save: \n", + " plt.savefig('diachronic.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300, transparent=True)\n", + " plt.show()\n", + "\n", + "plotDiachronicAnalysisBooks(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=bookLocations).sort_index())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Export image for publication\n", + "# plotDiachronicAnalysis(diachronicAnalysis(df, decades=(1950, 2020), bins=chapterLocations), save=True)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "0.736392742796158" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 87, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the normalized proportion of, say, Chapter 20 in 1950: \n", + "diachronicAnalysis(df)[20][1950]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Gender of Author" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "maleNames, femaleNames = names.words('male.txt'), names.words('female.txt')\n", + "maleNames = [name.lower() for name in maleNames]\n", + "femaleNames = [name.lower() for name in femaleNames]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def guessGender(name): \n", + " name = name.split()[0].lower() # Grab the first name. \n", + " if name in maleNames and name in femaleNames: \n", + " return 'A' #Ambiguous\n", + " elif name in maleNames: \n", + " return 'M'\n", + " elif name in femaleNames: \n", + " return 'F'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'U'\n", + "\n", + "def averageGender(names): \n", + " if type(names) != list: \n", + " return 'U'\n", + " genderGuesses = [guessGender(name) for name in names]\n", + " stats = Counter(genderGuesses).most_common()\n", + " if len(stats) == 1: \n", + " # Only one author. We can just use that's author's gender guess. \n", + " return stats[0][0]\n", + " elif stats[0][1] == stats[1][1]: # There's a tie. \n", + " return 'A' # Ambiguous. \n", + " else: \n", + " return stats[0][0] # Return the most common gender. \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['gender'] = df['author'].apply(averageGender)\n", + "dfF = df.loc[df['gender'] == 'F']\n", + "dfM = df.loc[df['gender'] == 'M']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Differences in citations between genders. \n", + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(synchronicAnalysis(dfM) - synchronicAnalysis(dfF))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getFirst(row): \n", + " if type(row) == list: \n", + " return row[0]\n", + " else: \n", + " return row\n", + "\n", + "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = publishers.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getCountry(publisher): \n", + " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", + " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", + " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", + " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", + " if type(publisher) != list: \n", + " return 'Unknown'\n", + " publisher = publisher[0]\n", + " if publisher in brits: \n", + " return 'Britain' \n", + " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Canada' \n", + " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Germany'\n", + " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Spain'\n", + " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", + " return 'France' \n", + " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Ireland'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'US'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "US 3901\n", + "Unknown 1247\n", + "Britain 825\n", + "Canada 59\n", + "Germany 15\n", + "Ireland 8\n", + "Spain 8\n", + "France 6\n", + "Name: country, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 94, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df['country'].value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", + "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", + "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", + "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", + "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", + "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", + "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By Journal" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Victorian Studies 424\n", + "George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies 206\n", + "Nineteenth-Century Fiction 192\n", + "The Modern Language Review 188\n", + "The Review of English Studies 185\n", + "Nineteenth-Century Literature 126\n", + "NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction 126\n", + "Studies in the Novel 120\n", + "Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 85\n", + "ELH 77\n", + "Name: journal, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 98, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Look at the top journals. \n", + "journalStats = df['journal'].value_counts()\n", + "journalStats[:10]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "journalList = journalStats.index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Compare the specialist journal, \"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies,\" with all other journals. " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "geJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']\n", + "otherJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] != 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Normalize\n", + "geDF = synchronicAnalysis(geJournals)\n", + "otherDF = synchronicAnalysis(otherJournals)\n", + "normGE = geDF.div(geDF.max())\n", + "normOther = otherDF.div(otherDF.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", 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" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "fig = plt.figure()\n", + "ax = (normGE - normOther).plot(kind='bar')\n", + "fig.add_subplot(ax)\n", + "ax.set_xlabel('Chapter')\n", + "ax.set_ylabel('Specialization Index')\n", + "# Save a big version for publication. \n", + "fig.savefig('specialization.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "journals = pd.DataFrame({title: synchronicAnalysis(df.loc[df['journal'] == title]) for title in journalList }).T" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "/Users/sceckert/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/pandas/core/indexing.py:671: SettingWithCopyWarning: \n", + "A value is trying to be set on a copy of a slice from a DataFrame\n", + "\n", + "See the caveats in the documentation: https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/user_guide/indexing.html#returning-a-view-versus-a-copy\n", + " self._setitem_with_indexer(indexer, value)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "cutoff = 1500\n", + "topJournals = journals.loc[journals.sum(axis=1) > cutoff]\n", + "otherJournals = journals.loc[journals.sum(axis=1) < cutoff]\n", + "topJournals.loc['Other'] = otherJournals.sum()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 105, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "ax = topJournals.T.plot(kind='bar', stacked=True, colormap='nipy_spectral')\n", + "fig = ax.get_figure()\n", + "fig.savefig('synchronic-journals.png', bboxinches='tight', dpi=300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "365" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 107, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Print the total number of journals\n", + "len(journalStats)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Detour: Ch. 15" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out why Ch. 15 was so big in the 80s and 90s. \n", + "chap15s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 322052: # Does it cite Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Illuminating the Vision of Ordinary Life: A Tribute to \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['\"Middlemarch\" and George Eliot\\'s Female (Re) Vision of Shakespeare'],\n", + " ['Heroism and Organicism in the Case of Lydgate'],\n", + " ['THE DIALOGIC UNIVERSE OF \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Clinic'],\n", + " ['Microscopy and Semiotic in Middlemarch'],\n", + " [\"George Eliot's Reflexive Text: Three Tonalities in the Narrative Voice of Middlemarch\"],\n", + " [\"The Victorian Discourse of Gambling: Speculations on Middlemarch and the Duke's Children\"],\n", + " ['George Eliot\\'s Scrupulous Research: The Facts behind Eliot\\'s Use of the \"Keepsake in Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['The Union of \"Miss Brooke\" and \"Middlemarch\": A Study of the Manuscript'],\n", + " [\"The Turn of George Eliot's Realism\"],\n", + " ['Transformation of Rage',\n", + " \"Mourning and Creativity in George Eliot's Fiction\",\n", + " 'The Vast Wreck of Ambitious Ideals in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['SILENCE, GESTURE, AND MEANING IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Heroic Commitment in Richardson, Eliot, and James',\n", + " 'POWER AS PARTIALITY IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['AN END TO CONVERTING PATIENTS\\' STOMACHS INTO DRUG-SHOPS: LYDGATE\\'S NEW METHOD OF CHARGING HIS PATIENTS IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Dangerous Crossings: Dickens, Digression, and Montage'],\n", + " ['Vital Signs',\n", + " 'Medical Realism in Nineteenth-Century Fiction',\n", + " '“A NEW ORGAN OF KNOWLEDGE”:',\n", + " 'MEDICAL ORGANICISM AND THE LIMITS OF REALISM IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['The Language of Discovery: William Whewell and George Eliot'],\n", + " ['Lamarque and Olsen on Literature and Truth'],\n", + " ['The Strange Case of Monomania: Patriarchy in Literature, Murder in Middlemarch, Drowning in Daniel Deronda'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and the Eighteenth-Century Novel'],\n", + " ['Metaphors of Mind in Fiction and Psychology',\n", + " 'TOWARD THE LIFE OF THE MIND:',\n", + " 'JAMES AND ELIOT DISCOVER SENTIENCE'],\n", + " ['\"Wrinkled Deep in Time\": The Alexandria Quartet as Many-Layered Palimpsest'],\n", + " ['ERZÄHLERISCHE OBJEKTIVITÄT, ,AUTHORIAL INTRUSIONS‘ UND ENGLISCHER REALISMUS'],\n", + " ['Steamboat Surfacing: Scott and the English Novelists'],\n", + " ['Professional Judgment and the Rationing of Medical Care'],\n", + " ['NARRATIVE VOICE AND THE \"FEMININE\" NOVELIST: DINAH MULOCK AND GEORGE ELIOT'],\n", + " ['Versions of Narrative: Overt and Covert Narrators in Nineteenth Century Historiography']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 109, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": false + }, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[('Vocation', 8),\n", + " ('Love', 8),\n", + " ('Pity', 8),\n", + " ('Novelists', 8),\n", + " ('Gossip', 6),\n", + " ('Sympathy', 6),\n", + " ('Irony', 6),\n", + " ('Narratology', 5),\n", + " ('Novels', 5),\n", + " ('Humor', 4),\n", + " ('Heroism', 4),\n", + " ('Vanity', 4),\n", + " ('Marriage ceremonies', 4),\n", + " ('Melodrama', 4),\n", + " ('Gambling', 4),\n", + " ('Antitheses', 4),\n", + " ('Pathos', 4),\n", + " ('Objectivity', 3),\n", + " ('Compassion', 3),\n", + " ('Armchairs', 3)]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 110, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "ch15Topics = [item.topics for item in chap15s]\n", + "chap15TopicsFlat = [item for sublist in ch15Topics for item in sublist]\n", + "Counter(chap15TopicsFlat).most_common(20)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xvStart, xvEnd = chapterLocations[15:17]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "CHAPTER XV.\n", + "\n", + " \"Black eyes you have left, you say,\n", + " Blue eyes fail to draw you;\n", + " Yet you seem more rapt to-day,\n", + " Than of old we saw you.\n", + "\n", + " \"Oh, I track the fairest fair\n", + " Through new haunts of pleasure;\n", + " Footprints here and echoes there\n", + " Guide me to my treasure:\n", + "\n", + " \"Lo! she turns--immortal youth\n", + " Wrought to mortal stature,\n", + " Fresh as starlight's aged truth--\n", + " Many-named Nature!\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "A great historian, as he insisted on calling himself, who had the\n", + "happiness to be dead a hundred and twenty years ago, and so to take his\n", + "place among the colossi whose huge legs our living pettiness is\n", + "observed to walk under, glories in his copious remarks and digressions\n", + "as the least imitable part of his work, and especially in those initial\n", + "chapters to the successive books of his history, where he seems to\n", + "bring his armchair to the proscenium and chat with us in all the lusty\n", + "ease of his fine English. But Fielding lived when the days were longer\n", + "(for time, like mone\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xvStart:xvStart+1000]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out which articles cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV (with Lydgate's scientific research) \n", + "# vs the last 1/3 on the story of Laure\n", + "chap15p1s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 313892: # Does it cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15p1s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n", + "chap15p2s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 313892 and start < 322052: # Does it cite the last 1/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15p2s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id) \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Illuminating the Vision of Ordinary Life: A Tribute to \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['Heroism and Organicism in the Case of Lydgate'],\n", + " ['THE DIALOGIC UNIVERSE OF \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Clinic'],\n", + " ['Microscopy and Semiotic in Middlemarch'],\n", + " [\"George Eliot's Reflexive Text: Three Tonalities in the Narrative Voice of Middlemarch\"],\n", + " [\"The Victorian Discourse of Gambling: Speculations on Middlemarch and the Duke's Children\"],\n", + " ['George Eliot\\'s Scrupulous Research: The Facts behind Eliot\\'s Use of the \"Keepsake in Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['The Union of \"Miss Brooke\" and \"Middlemarch\": A Study of the Manuscript'],\n", + " [\"The Turn of George Eliot's Realism\"],\n", + " ['Transformation of Rage',\n", + " \"Mourning and Creativity in George Eliot's Fiction\",\n", + " 'The Vast Wreck of Ambitious Ideals in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['SILENCE, GESTURE, AND MEANING IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Heroic Commitment in Richardson, Eliot, and James',\n", + " 'POWER AS PARTIALITY IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['AN END TO CONVERTING PATIENTS\\' STOMACHS INTO DRUG-SHOPS: LYDGATE\\'S NEW METHOD OF CHARGING HIS PATIENTS IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Dangerous Crossings: Dickens, Digression, and Montage'],\n", + " ['Vital Signs',\n", + " 'Medical Realism in Nineteenth-Century Fiction',\n", + " '“A NEW ORGAN OF KNOWLEDGE”:',\n", + " 'MEDICAL ORGANICISM AND THE LIMITS OF REALISM IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['The Language of Discovery: William Whewell and George Eliot'],\n", + " ['Lamarque and Olsen on Literature and Truth'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and the Eighteenth-Century Novel'],\n", + " ['Metaphors of Mind in Fiction and Psychology',\n", + " 'TOWARD THE LIFE OF THE MIND:',\n", + " 'JAMES AND ELIOT DISCOVER SENTIENCE'],\n", + " ['\"Wrinkled Deep in Time\": The Alexandria Quartet as Many-Layered Palimpsest'],\n", + " ['ERZÄHLERISCHE OBJEKTIVITÄT, ,AUTHORIAL INTRUSIONS‘ UND ENGLISCHER REALISMUS'],\n", + " ['Steamboat Surfacing: Scott and the English Novelists'],\n", + " ['Professional Judgment and the Rationing of Medical Care'],\n", + " ['NARRATIVE VOICE AND THE \"FEMININE\" NOVELIST: DINAH MULOCK AND GEORGE ELIOT'],\n", + " ['Versions of Narrative: Overt and Covert Narrators in Nineteenth Century Historiography']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 114, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of articles citing the first 2/3 \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15p1s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['\"Middlemarch\" and George Eliot\\'s Female (Re) Vision of Shakespeare'],\n", + " ['Microscopy and Semiotic in Middlemarch'],\n", + " [\"George Eliot's Reflexive Text: Three Tonalities in the Narrative Voice of Middlemarch\"],\n", + " ['The Union of \"Miss Brooke\" and \"Middlemarch\": A Study of the Manuscript'],\n", + " ['The Strange Case of Monomania: Patriarchy in Literature, Murder in Middlemarch, Drowning in Daniel Deronda']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 115, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap15p2s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "\n", + "As to women, he had once already been drawn headlong by impetuous\n", + "folly, which he meant to be final, since marriage at some distant\n", + "period would of course not be impetuous. For those who want to be\n", + "acquainted with Lydgate it will be good to know what was that case of\n", + "impetuous folly, for it may stand as an example of the fitful swerving\n", + "of passion to which he was prone, together with the chivalrous kindness\n", + "which helped to make him morally lovable. The story can be told\n", + "without many words. It happened when he was studying in Paris, and\n", + "just at the time when, over and above his other work, he was occupied\n", + "with some galvanic experiments. One evening, tired with his\n", + "experimenting, and not being able to elicit the facts he needed, he\n", + "left his frogs and rabbits to some repose under their trying and\n", + "mysterious dispensation of unexplained shocks, and went to finish his\n", + "evening at the theatre of the Porte Saint Martin, where there was a\n", + "melodrama which he had already seen several times; attracted, not by\n", + "the ingenious work of the collaborating authors, but by an actress\n", + "whose part it was to stab her lover, mistaking him for the\n", + "evil-designing duke of the piece. Lydgate was in love with this\n", + "actress, as a man is in love with a woman whom he never expects to\n", + "speak to. She was a Provencale, with dark eyes, a Greek profile, and\n", + "rounded majestic form, having that sort of beauty which carries a sweet\n", + "matronliness even in youth, and her voice was a soft cooing. She had\n", + "but lately c\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Verify that we have the right location for the start of Laure's story in the last 1/3 of Chapter XV\n", + "print(mm[313892:313892+1500]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "CHAPTER XV.\n", + "\n", + " \"Black eyes you have left, you say,\n", + " Blue eyes fail to draw you;\n", + " Yet you seem more rapt to-day,\n", + " Than of old we saw you.\n", + "\n", + " \"Oh, I track the fairest fair\n", + " Through new haunts of pleasure;\n", + " Footprints here and echoes there\n", + " Guide me to my treasure:\n", + "\n", + " \"Lo! she turns--immortal youth\n", + " Wrought to mortal stature,\n", + " Fresh as starlight's aged truth--\n", + " Many-named Nature!\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "A great historian, as he insisted on calling himself, who had the\n", + "happiness to be dead a hundred and twenty years ago, and so to take his\n", + "place among the colossi whose huge legs our living pettiness is\n", + "observed to walk under, glories in his copious remarks and digressions\n", + "as the least imitable part of his work, and especially in those initial\n", + "chapters to the successive books of his history, where he seems to\n", + "bring his armchair to the proscenium and chat with us in all the lusty\n", + "ease of his fine English. But Fielding lived when the days were longer\n", + "(for time, like money, is measured by our needs), when summer\n", + "afternoons were spacious, and the clock ticked slowly in the winter\n", + "evenings. We belated historians must not linger after his example; and\n", + "if we did so, it is probable that our chat would be thin and eager, as\n", + "if delivered from a campstool in a parrot-house. I at least have so\n", + "much to do in unraveling certain human lots, and seeing how they were\n", + "woven and interwoven, that all the light I can command must be\n", + "concentrated on this particular web, and not dispersed over that\n", + "tempting range of relevancies called the universe.\n", + "\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Verify the location of the eipgraph and first paragraph\n", + "print(mm[290371:290371+1571]) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "chap15para1s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 290371 and start < 291943: # Does it cite the last 1/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15para1s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id) " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Illuminating the Vision of Ordinary Life: A Tribute to \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Clinic'],\n", + " ['Microscopy and Semiotic in Middlemarch'],\n", + " [\"George Eliot's Reflexive Text: Three Tonalities in the Narrative Voice of Middlemarch\"],\n", + " ['George Eliot\\'s Scrupulous Research: The Facts behind Eliot\\'s Use of the \"Keepsake in Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['The Union of \"Miss Brooke\" and \"Middlemarch\": A Study of the Manuscript'],\n", + " ['Dangerous Crossings: Dickens, Digression, and Montage'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and the Eighteenth-Century Novel'],\n", + " ['Steamboat Surfacing: Scott and the English Novelists'],\n", + " ['NARRATIVE VOICE AND THE \"FEMININE\" NOVELIST: DINAH MULOCK AND GEORGE ELIOT'],\n", + " ['Versions of Narrative: Overt and Covert Narrators in Nineteenth Century Historiography']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 119, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of articles that cite paragraph 1 of Chapter 15\n", + "[item.title for item in chap15para1s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Heroism and Organicism in the Case of Lydgate'],\n", + " ['THE DIALOGIC UNIVERSE OF \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Clinic'],\n", + " [\"The Victorian Discourse of Gambling: Speculations on Middlemarch and the Duke's Children\"],\n", + " ['The Union of \"Miss Brooke\" and \"Middlemarch\": A Study of the Manuscript'],\n", + " [\"The Turn of George Eliot's Realism\"],\n", + " ['Transformation of Rage',\n", + " \"Mourning and Creativity in George Eliot's Fiction\",\n", + " 'The Vast Wreck of Ambitious Ideals in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['SILENCE, GESTURE, AND MEANING IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Heroic Commitment in Richardson, Eliot, and James',\n", + " 'POWER AS PARTIALITY IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['AN END TO CONVERTING PATIENTS\\' STOMACHS INTO DRUG-SHOPS: LYDGATE\\'S NEW METHOD OF CHARGING HIS PATIENTS IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Vital Signs',\n", + " 'Medical Realism in Nineteenth-Century Fiction',\n", + " '“A NEW ORGAN OF KNOWLEDGE”:',\n", + " 'MEDICAL ORGANICISM AND THE LIMITS OF REALISM IN MIDDLEMARCH'],\n", + " ['The Language of Discovery: William Whewell and George Eliot'],\n", + " ['Lamarque and Olsen on Literature and Truth'],\n", + " ['Metaphors of Mind in Fiction and Psychology',\n", + " 'TOWARD THE LIFE OF THE MIND:',\n", + " 'JAMES AND ELIOT DISCOVER SENTIENCE'],\n", + " ['\"Wrinkled Deep in Time\": The Alexandria Quartet as Many-Layered Palimpsest'],\n", + " ['ERZÄHLERISCHE OBJEKTIVITÄT, ,AUTHORIAL INTRUSIONS‘ UND ENGLISCHER REALISMUS'],\n", + " ['Professional Judgment and the Rationing of Medical Care']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 120, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "chap15Lydgates = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1980, 1990]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 291942 and start < 313892: # Does it cite the first 2/3 of Chapter XV? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap15Lydgates.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n", + " \n", + "# Get the titles of articles that cite Lydgate section\n", + "[item.title for item in chap15Lydgates]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Chapter 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Chapter 20 Detour\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles cited chapter 20 \n", + "chap20s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1870, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 406324 and start < 432778: # Does it cite Chapter XX? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap20s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Dorothea and \"Miss Brooke\" in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['The Metaphorical Imagination of George Eliot'],\n", + " ['The Germ and the Picture in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['\"Middlemarch,\" Obligation, and Dorothea\\'s Duplicity'],\n", + " ['Torpedoes, tapirs and tortoises: scientific discourse in \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['“The Continuity of Married Companionship”'],\n", + " ['Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: George Eliot, Walter Pater and Samuel Butler',\n", + " 'Middlemarch:',\n", + " 'The Balance of Progress'],\n", + " [\"ELIOT'S SPANISH CONNECTION: CASAUBON, THE AVATAR OF QUIXOTE\"],\n", + " ['\"MIDDLEMARCH\": ELIOT\\'S TENDER SUBVERSION'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Clinic'],\n", + " ['ROME IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\": A NEED FOR FOREIGNNESS'],\n", + " ['\"Myriad-Headed, Myriad-Handed\": Labor in \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['DOROTHEA BROOKE UND EROTISCHE KUNST IN GEORGE ELIOTS \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Little Dorrit and Dorothea Brooke: Interpreting the Heroines of History'],\n", + " ['Women, Energy, and \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['Inherited Emotions: George Eliot and the Politics of Heirlooms'],\n", + " ['Transformation of Rage',\n", + " \"Mourning and Creativity in George Eliot's Fiction\",\n", + " 'The Vast Wreck of Ambitious Ideals in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['Error and the Academic Self',\n", + " 'The Scholarly Imagination, Medieval to Modern',\n", + " 'MY CASAUBON:',\n", + " 'THE NOVEL OF SCHOLARSHIP AND VICTORIAN PHILOLOGY'],\n", + " [\"Dorothea's 'Resartus' and the Palingenetic Impulse of Middlemarch\"],\n", + " ['THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM OF SYMPATHY: PARABASIS, INTEREST, AND REALIST FORM IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Isabel, Gwendolen, and Dorothea'],\n", + " ['Beside the Reclining Statue: Ekphrasis, Narrative, and Desire in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and Herbert Spencer',\n", + " 'Feminism, Evolutionism, and the Reconstruction of Gender',\n", + " 'Theories of Origin and Knowledge:',\n", + " 'Middlemarch and The Study of Sociology'],\n", + " ['Why Read George Eliot? Her novels are just modern enough—and just old-fashioned enough, too'],\n", + " ['The Greeks, the Germans, and George Eliot'],\n", + " [\"MARY SOMERVILLE'S INFLUENCE ON GEORGE ELIOT\"],\n", + " ['Narrative and History'],\n", + " ['The Licensed Trespasser: The Omniscient Narrator in \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " [\"Tolstoj's Reading of George Eliot: Visions and Revisions\"],\n", + " ['An Erotics of Detachment: \"Middlemarch\" and Novel-Reading as Critical Practice'],\n", + " ['Night Passages', 'Philosophy, Literature, and Film', 'GEORGE ELIOT’S DAWN'],\n", + " ['Middlemarch: Narrative Unity in the Story of Dorothea Brooke'],\n", + " [\"Imagery in George Eliot's Last Novels\"],\n", + " ['A History of the Lights and Shadows: The Secret Motion of \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['The Novel as Ethical Paradigm?'],\n", + " [\"Under Conrad's Eyes\",\n", + " 'The Novel as Criticism',\n", + " 'The Trouble with Sympathy in Middlemarch and Nostromo'],\n", + " ['Narrative in the Moral Theology of Tom Shaffer'],\n", + " [\"George Eliot's Vagueness\"],\n", + " ['THE REDEMPTIVE PAST IN THE NEO-VICTORIAN NOVEL'],\n", + " ['Views from above and below: George Eliot and Fakir Mohan Senapati'],\n", + " ['Sounds of Modern History',\n", + " 'Auditory Cultures in 19th- and 20th-Century Europe',\n", + " 'English Beat:',\n", + " 'The Stethoscopic Era’s Sonic Traces'],\n", + " [\"LE IMMAGINI DELL'ACQUA NEL LINGUAGGIO DI GEORGE ELIOT\"],\n", + " ['George Eliot and the Eighteenth-Century Novel'],\n", + " ['\"Be Ye Lukewarm!\": The Nineteenth-Century Novel and Social Action'],\n", + " ['A Note on Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['The Prison of Womanhood'],\n", + " ['Victorian Honeymoons: Sexual Reorientations and the \"Sights\" of Europe'],\n", + " ['When Narrative Fails'],\n", + " ['Victorian Interpretation', 'George Eliot’s Hermeneutics of Sympathy'],\n", + " [\"The Squirrel's Heartbeat: Some Thoughts on the Later Style of Henry James\"],\n", + " ['This Side of Silence',\n", + " 'Human Rights, Torture, and the Recognition of Cruelty',\n", + " 'Front Matter'],\n", + " ['Social Figures',\n", + " 'George Eliot, Social History, and Literary Representation',\n", + " 'Imperfection and Compensation'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and Greek Tragedy'],\n", + " ['Marriage in Literature'],\n", + " ['Women and the Art of Fiction'],\n", + " [\"'The Sensitive Author': George Eliot\"],\n", + " ['Reading Style',\n", + " 'A Life in Sentences',\n", + " 'Lord Leighton, Liberace and the Advantages of Bad Writing:',\n", + " 'Helen DeWitt, Harry Stephen Keeler, Lionel Shriver, George Eliot'],\n", + " ['Violette Nozière', 'A Story of Murder in 1930s Paris', 'Introduction'],\n", + " ['Why Ekphrasis?'],\n", + " [\"Isabel Archer's disease, and Henry James's\"],\n", + " ['Women, Love, and Power',\n", + " 'Literary and Psychoanalytic Perspectives',\n", + " 'The Feminine Bildungsroman:',\n", + " 'Education through Marriage'],\n", + " ['An Image of Disenchantment in the Novels of George Eliot'],\n", + " ['Stupendous, Miserable City', 'Pasolini’s Rome', 'Notes'],\n", + " ['Protocols of Reading', 'Criticism:', 'Rhetoric and Ethics'],\n", + " ['A Note on Literary Indebtedness: Dickens, George Eliot, Henry James'],\n", + " ['The Language of Silence: A Citation'],\n", + " ['Development and the Learning Organisation: An Introduction'],\n", + " [\"Eco's Echoes: Ironizing the (Post) Modern\"],\n", + " ['On Eloquence', 'Like Something Almost Being Said'],\n", + " ['Moving Images',\n", + " 'Nineteenth-Century Reading and Screen Practices',\n", + " 'Introduction:',\n", + " 'Moving Images: Nineteenth-Century Reading and Screen Practices'],\n", + " ['Acting in the Night',\n", + " 'Macbeth and the Places of the Civil War',\n", + " 'Sound and Fury:',\n", + " 'Nature in Virginia'],\n", + " ['Metaphor', 'Not Quite against Metaphor'],\n", + " ['Adventures among Ants',\n", + " 'A Global Safari with a Cast of Trillions',\n", + " 'conclusion:',\n", + " 'four ways of looking at an ant'],\n", + " ['Victorianized Romans: Images of Rome in Victorian Painting'],\n", + " ['The Not-Quite Said'],\n", + " ['Cutting and the Pedagogy of SelfDisclosure',\n", + " 'EPILOGUE',\n", + " '“I Was Committing a Crime against My Body, against Women”'],\n", + " ['Literature as Conduct: Speech Acts in Henry James',\n", + " 'The Story of a Kiss:',\n", + " 'Isabel’s Decisions in The Portrait of a Lady'],\n", + " ['Economic Woman',\n", + " 'Demand, Gender, and Narrative Closure in Eliot and Hardy',\n", + " 'Notes'],\n", + " ['Dying in Character',\n", + " 'Memoirs on the End of Life',\n", + " '“I Never Saw or Heard the Car Coming”',\n", + " 'My Close Call with Death'],\n", + " ['Deep History',\n", + " 'The Architecture of Past and Present',\n", + " 'Energy and Ecosystems'],\n", + " ['Samuel Johnson and the Tragic Sense', 'Johnson’s Tragic Sense of Life'],\n", + " ['Love, Amy',\n", + " 'The Selected Letters of Amy Clampitt',\n", + " 'The Letters of Amy Clampitt']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 122, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles. \n", + "[item.title for item in chap20s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# articlesWithoutMatches.title #Print the titles of articles without matches\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "82" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 124, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(chap20s)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles cite paragraph 6 in Chapter 20\n", + "chap20par6s = []\n", + "ids = []\n", + "for i, row in df.iterrows(): \n", + " locations = row['Locations in A']\n", + " starts = [item[0] for item in locations]\n", + " if row['Decade'] in [1870, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1940, 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000, 2010]: \n", + " for start in starts: \n", + " if start > 411152 and start < 412177: # Does it cite Chapter XX? \n", + " if row.id not in ids: \n", + " chap20par6s.append(row)\n", + " ids.append(row.id)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Dorothea and \"Miss Brooke\" in Middlemarch'],\n", + " ['Torpedoes, tapirs and tortoises: scientific discourse in \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['“The Continuity of Married Companionship”'],\n", + " ['\"Myriad-Headed, Myriad-Handed\": Labor in \"Middlemarch\"'],\n", + " ['THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM OF SYMPATHY: PARABASIS, INTEREST, AND REALIST FORM IN \"MIDDLEMARCH\"'],\n", + " ['Why Read George Eliot? Her novels are just modern enough—and just old-fashioned enough, too'],\n", + " [\"Tolstoj's Reading of George Eliot: Visions and Revisions\"],\n", + " [\"Under Conrad's Eyes\",\n", + " 'The Novel as Criticism',\n", + " 'The Trouble with Sympathy in Middlemarch and Nostromo'],\n", + " ['Views from above and below: George Eliot and Fakir Mohan Senapati'],\n", + " ['Sounds of Modern History',\n", + " 'Auditory Cultures in 19th- and 20th-Century Europe',\n", + " 'English Beat:',\n", + " 'The Stethoscopic Era’s Sonic Traces'],\n", + " ['\"Be Ye Lukewarm!\": The Nineteenth-Century Novel and Social Action'],\n", + " ['A Note on Middlemarch'],\n", + " [\"The Squirrel's Heartbeat: Some Thoughts on the Later Style of Henry James\"],\n", + " ['This Side of Silence',\n", + " 'Human Rights, Torture, and the Recognition of Cruelty',\n", + " 'Front Matter'],\n", + " ['Social Figures',\n", + " 'George Eliot, Social History, and Literary Representation',\n", + " 'Imperfection and Compensation'],\n", + " ['George Eliot and Greek Tragedy'],\n", + " ['Violette Nozière', 'A Story of Murder in 1930s Paris', 'Introduction'],\n", + " ['The Language of Silence: A Citation'],\n", + " ['Development and the Learning Organisation: An Introduction'],\n", + " ['On Eloquence', 'Like Something Almost Being Said'],\n", + " ['Acting in the Night',\n", + " 'Macbeth and the Places of the Civil War',\n", + " 'Sound and Fury:',\n", + " 'Nature in Virginia'],\n", + " ['Metaphor', 'Not Quite against Metaphor'],\n", + " ['Adventures among Ants',\n", + " 'A Global Safari with a Cast of Trillions',\n", + " 'conclusion:',\n", + " 'four ways of looking at an ant'],\n", + " ['The Not-Quite Said'],\n", + " ['Cutting and the Pedagogy of SelfDisclosure',\n", + " 'EPILOGUE',\n", + " '“I Was Committing a Crime against My Body, against Women”'],\n", + " ['Economic Woman',\n", + " 'Demand, Gender, and Narrative Closure in Eliot and Hardy',\n", + " 'Notes'],\n", + " ['Dying in Character',\n", + " 'Memoirs on the End of Life',\n", + " '“I Never Saw or Heard the Car Coming”',\n", + " 'My Close Call with Death'],\n", + " ['Deep History',\n", + " 'The Architecture of Past and Present',\n", + " 'Energy and Ecosystems'],\n", + " ['Samuel Johnson and the Tragic Sense', 'Johnson’s Tragic Sense of Life'],\n", + " ['Love, Amy',\n", + " 'The Selected Letters of Amy Clampitt',\n", + " 'The Letters of Amy Clampitt']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 126, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the titles of those articles.\n", + "[item.title for item in chap20par6s]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "30" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 127, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(chap20par6s) # The number of items citing paragraph 6 in chapter 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xxStart, xxEnd = chapterLocations[20:22] # Chapter 20 Boundaries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "CHAPTER XX.\n", + "\n", + " \"A child forsaken, waking suddenly,\n", + " Whose gaze afeard on all things round doth rove,\n", + " And seeth only that it cannot see\n", + " The meeting eyes of love.\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "Two hours later, Dorothea was seated in an inner room or boudoir of a\n", + "handsome apartment in the Via Sistina.\n", + "\n", + "I am sorry to add that she was sobbing bitterly, with such abandonment\n", + "to this relief of an oppressed heart as a woman habitually controlled\n", + "by pride on her own account and thoughtfulness for others will\n", + "sometimes allow herself when she feels securely alone. And Mr.\n", + "Casaubon was certain to remain away for some time at the Vatican.\n", + "\n", + "Yet Dorothea had no distinctly shapen grievance that she could state\n", + "even to herself; and in the midst of her confused thought and passion,\n", + "the mental act that was struggling forth into clearness was a\n", + "self-accusing cry that her feeling of desolation was the fault of her\n", + "own spiritual poverty. She had married the man of her choice, and with\n", + "the advantage over most girls t\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xxStart:xxStart+1000]) # Verify we have Ch. 20" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xx = mm[xxStart:xxEnd]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "xxParaLocations = [match.start() for match in re.finditer('\\n\\n+', mm)]\n", + "xxParaLocations = [x for x in xxParaLocations if (x > xxStart) and (x < xxEnd)] " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "'\\n\\nBut this stupendous fragmentariness heightened the dreamlike\\nstrangeness of her bridal life. Dorothea had now been five weeks in\\nRome, and in the kindly mornings when autumn and winter seemed to go\\nhand in hand like a happy aged couple one of whom would presently\\nsurvive in chiller loneliness, she had driven about at first with Mr.\\nCasaubon, but of late chiefly with Tantripp and their experienced\\ncourier. She had been led through the best galleries, had been taken\\nto the chief points of view, had been shown the grandest ruins and the\\nmost glorious churches, and she had ended by oftenest choosing to drive\\nout to the Campagna where she could feel alone with the earth and sky,\\naway-from the oppressive masquerade of ages, in which her own life too\\nseemed to become a masque with enigmatical costumes.'" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 132, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "mm[xxParaLocations[4]:xxParaLocations[5]]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[[5809, 6218],\n", + " [8751, 9046],\n", + " [57013, 57100],\n", + " [83868, 83999],\n", + " [116900, 117594],\n", + " [192301, 192441],\n", + " [195148, 195661],\n", + " [402604, 402726],\n", + " [411725, 412177],\n", + " [449403, 450049],\n", + " [450145, 450244],\n", + " [1575265, 1575374],\n", + " [1576340, 1576437],\n", + " [1648982, 1649704],\n", + " [1688955, 1689089],\n", + " [1689907, 1690307],\n", + " [1708999, 1709342]]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 133, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].loc[0]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def inXX(matches): \n", + " \"\"\" Determine if the article has a match in Ch. 20\"\"\"\n", + " for match in matches: \n", + " if match[0] > xxStart and match[0] < xxEnd:\n", + " return True\n", + " return False" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "0 True\n", + "3 False\n", + "4 False\n", + "8 False\n", + "9 False\n", + "Name: Locations in A, dtype: bool" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 135, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].apply(inXX).head()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def paraIndicesIn20(matches, paraLocations=xxParaLocations): \n", + " \"\"\" Determine paragraph number (index) for match in Ch. 20. \"\"\"\n", + " paraIndices = []\n", + " if inXX(matches): \n", + " paraBoundaries = list(zip(paraLocations, paraLocations[1:]))\n", + " for match in matches: \n", + " for i, paraBoundary in enumerate(paraBoundaries): \n", + " if set(range(match[0], match[1])) & set(range(paraBoundary[0], paraBoundary[1])): # find the set intersection of the ranges of pairs\n", + " paraIndices.append(i)\n", + " else: \n", + " paraIndices.append(None)\n", + " return paraIndices\n", + " \n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "1" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 137, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(set(range(8, 10)) & set(range(1, 9)))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + ":1: SettingWithCopyWarning: \n", + "A value is trying to be set on a copy of a slice from a DataFrame.\n", + "Try using .loc[row_indexer,col_indexer] = value instead\n", + "\n", + "See the caveats in the documentation: https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/user_guide/indexing.html#returning-a-view-versus-a-copy\n", + " articlesWithMatches['paraIndicesIn20'] = articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].apply(paraIndicesIn20)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches['paraIndicesIn20'] = articlesWithMatches['Locations in A'].apply(paraIndicesIn20)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "counters = list(articlesWithMatches['paraIndicesIn20'].apply(Counter))" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "grandTally = Counter()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "for counter in counters: \n", + " grandTally += counter" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "del grandTally[None]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "{6: 32,\n", + " 10: 17,\n", + " 12: 1,\n", + " 15: 1,\n", + " 9: 1,\n", + " 11: 6,\n", + " 33: 5,\n", + " 5: 34,\n", + " 4: 4,\n", + " 25: 1,\n", + " 7: 6,\n", + " 17: 4,\n", + " 16: 9,\n", + " 14: 1,\n", + " 18: 3,\n", + " 26: 5,\n", + " 3: 3,\n", + " 29: 2,\n", + " 2: 1}" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 143, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "dict(grandTally)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 144, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "pd.Series(dict(grandTally)).sort_index().plot(kind='bar')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "\n", + "To those who have looked at Rome with the quickening power of a\n", + "knowledge which breathes a growing soul into all historic shapes, and\n", + "traces out the suppressed transitions which unite all contrasts, Rome\n", + "may still be the spiritual centre and interpreter of the world. But\n", + "let them conceive one more historical contrast: the gigantic broken\n", + "revelations of that Imperial and Papal city thrust abruptly on the\n", + "notions of a girl who had been brought up in English and Swiss\n", + "Puritanism, fed on meagre Protestant histories and on art chiefly of\n", + "the hand-screen sort; a girl whose ardent nature turned all her small\n", + "allowance of knowledge into principles, fusing her actions into their\n", + "mould, and whose quick emotions gave the most abstract things the\n", + "quality of a pleasure or a pain; a girl who had lately become a wife,\n", + "and from the enthusiastic acceptance of untried duty found herself\n", + "plunged in tumultuous preoccupation with her personal lot. The weight\n", + "of unintelligible Rome might lie easily on bright nymphs to whom it\n", + "formed a background for the brilliant picnic of Anglo-foreign society;\n", + "but Dorothea had no such defence against deep impressions. Ruins and\n", + "basilicas, palaces and colossi, set in the midst of a sordid present,\n", + "where all that was living and warm-blooded seemed sunk in the deep\n", + "degeneracy of a superstition divorced from reverence; the dimmer but\n", + "yet eager Titanic life gazing and struggling on walls and ceilings; the\n", + "long vistas of white forms whose marble eyes seemed to hold the\n", + "monotonous light of an alien world: all this vast wreck of ambitious\n", + "ideals, sensuous and spiritual, mixed confusedly with the signs of\n", + "breathing forgetfulness and degradation, at first jarred her as with an\n", + "electric shock, and then urged themselves on her with that ache\n", + "belonging to a glut of confused ideas which check the flow of emotion.\n", + "Forms both pale and glowing took possession of her young sense, and\n", + "fixed themselves in her memory even when she was not thinking of them,\n", + "preparing strange associations which remained through her after-years.\n", + "Our moods are apt to bring with them images which succeed each other\n", + "like the magic-lantern pictures of a doze; and in certain states of\n", + "dull forlornness Dorothea all her life continued to see the vastness of\n", + "St. Peter's, the huge bronze canopy, the excited intention in the\n", + "attitudes and garments of the prophets and evangelists in the mosaics\n", + "above, and the red drapery which was being hung for Christmas spreading\n", + "itself everywhere like a disease of the retina.\n", + "\n", + "Not that this inward amazement of Dorothea's was anything very\n", + "exceptional: many souls in their young nudity are tumbled out among\n", + "incongruities and left to \"find their feet\" among them, while their\n", + "elders go about their business. Nor can I suppose that when Mrs.\n", + "Casaubon is discovered in a fit of weeping six weeks after her wedding,\n", + "the situation will be regarded as tragic. Some discouragement, some\n", + "faintness of heart at the new real future which replaces the imaginary,\n", + "is not unusual, and we do not expect people to be deeply moved by what\n", + "is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of\n", + "frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotion of\n", + "mankind; and perhaps our frames could hardly bear much of it. If we\n", + "had a keen vision and feeling of all ordinary human life, it would be\n", + "like hearing the grass grow and the squirrel's heart beat, and we\n", + "should die of that roar which lies on the other side of silence. As it\n", + "is, the quickest of us walk about well wadded with stupidity.\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(mm[xxParaLocations[5]:xxParaLocations[7]]) # What are paragraphs #5 and #6? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# NLH, ELH and GE-GHL" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal title is \"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "geJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.set_option('display.max_columns', 207)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Locations in ALocations in Bauthorcoverdatedisc_namedoiidjcodejournallanonumMatchespagespublisher_namespsrcHtmltitletopicstyvoyearDecadeQuoted WordsLocations in A with WordcountsWordcountscountry
7[][][K. K. Collins][20151101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.5325/georelioghlstud.67.2.02346a9b9119-bfa6-3a6e-82cf-1dccbaefe55b[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][2]1234-242[Penn State University Press]234<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[Review][Biography, Masculinity, Pastiche, Textbook re...brv[67]201520100[][]US
14[[195357, 195597]][[27642, 27885]][ROSEMARY BRENNAN DAY, GRAHAM HANDLEY, DONALD ...[19940901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4287084072ab47e3-5bd7-3c8c-a03e-ee9281130e2d[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][26/27]236-81[Penn State University Press]36<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[MIDDLEMARCH ON TV--A SYMPOSIUM][Villains, Humor, Screenwriting, Pity, Soap op...flaNone1994199040[([195357, 195597], 40)][40]US
34[[512101, 512375]][[9829, 10102]][LESLEY GORDON][19950901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/43595510c7b950b2-0669-3b7e-b270-1f5935d046d2[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][28/29]230-41[Penn State University Press]30<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[GEORGE ELIOT AND PLUTARCH][Nightingales, Tyranny, Theater criticism, Nov...flaNone1995199049[([512101, 512375], 49)][49]US
40[][][JOHN R. PFEIFFER][20070901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/428278414107827d-116a-3e2e-a579-4d68d6549df3[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][52/53]0144-147[Penn State University Press]144<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...None[Novels, Literary characters, Essayists, Wheel...brvNone200720000[][]US
46[[79888, 79968], [137185, 137297], [415296, 41...[[2131, 2207], [3016, 3127], [7459, 7622], [77...[CHESTER ST. H. MILLS][19940901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/42870836bc692f3b-e2eb-3f26-9285-9203f5d6de48[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][26/27]91-6[Penn State University Press]1<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[ELIOT'S SPANISH CONNECTION: CASAUBON, THE AVA...[Chivalry, Somatosensory perception, Endangere...flaNone19941990225[([79888, 79968], 14), ([137185, 137297], 24),...[14, 24, 28, 77, 82]US
.................................................................................
4436[][][DEBORAH GUTH][19980901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4282767227c44fbe-779e-3200-971e-2de9260955b2[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][34/35]013-27[Penn State University Press]13<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[GEORGE ELIOT AND SCHILLER: THE CASE OF \"THE M...[Idealism, Pity, Heroism, Selfhood, Love, Nost...flaNone199819900[][]US
4633[[404881, 405333], [441601, 441720]][[57303, 57753], [89214, 89333]][DAVID A REIBEL][20131001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/42827919038e64cb-cfc8-3566-8868-4ac1e6d5464d[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][64/65]416-52[Penn State University Press]16<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[HIDDEN PARALLELS IN GEORGE ELIOT'S DANIEL DER...[Pity, Artistic talent, Orchestras, Cartoons, ...flaNone2013201098[([404881, 405333], 77), ([441601, 441720], 21)][77, 21]US
4997[][][A. G. VAN DEN BROEK][19930901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4282762536986a59-df40-3cc0-85ca-7d835a60941e[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][24/25]036-64[Penn State University Press]36<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[SHAKESPEARE AT THE HEART OF GEORGE ELIOT'S EN...[Pity, Rebellion, Mottos, Literary epigraphs, ...flaNone199319900[][]US
4998[][][JENNIFER M. STOLPA][20020901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/42827747813212aa-0b4e-30f5-8f52-26d2235ed0ce[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][42/43]030-49[Penn State University Press]30<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[DINAH AND THE DEBATE OVER VOCATION IN \"ADAM B...[Preachers, Clergy, Feminism, Vocation, Pastor...flaNone200220000[][]US
5001[][][KATHRYN HUGHES][20100901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/42827873b8d5b2f7-d444-3dba-b5a5-829087bcc59a[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][58/59]043-60[Penn State University Press]43<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...['BUT WHY ALWAYS DOROTHEA?' MARIAN EVANS' SIST...[Nieces, Gossip, Pity, Cousins, Clergy, Preach...flaNone201020100[][]US
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206 rows × 26 columns

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MARIAN EVANS' SIST... \n", + "\n", + " topics ty vo year \\\n", + "7 [Biography, Masculinity, Pastiche, Textbook re... brv [67] 2015 \n", + "14 [Villains, Humor, Screenwriting, Pity, Soap op... fla None 1994 \n", + "34 [Nightingales, Tyranny, Theater criticism, Nov... fla None 1995 \n", + "40 [Novels, Literary characters, Essayists, Wheel... brv None 2007 \n", + "46 [Chivalry, Somatosensory perception, Endangere... fla None 1994 \n", + "... ... ... ... ... \n", + "4436 [Idealism, Pity, Heroism, Selfhood, Love, Nost... fla None 1998 \n", + "4633 [Pity, Artistic talent, Orchestras, Cartoons, ... fla None 2013 \n", + "4997 [Pity, Rebellion, Mottos, Literary epigraphs, ... fla None 1993 \n", + "4998 [Preachers, Clergy, Feminism, Vocation, Pastor... fla None 2002 \n", + "5001 [Nieces, Gossip, Pity, Cousins, Clergy, Preach... fla None 2010 \n", + "\n", + " Decade Quoted Words Locations in A with Wordcounts \\\n", + "7 2010 0 [] \n", + "14 1990 40 [([195357, 195597], 40)] \n", + "34 1990 49 [([512101, 512375], 49)] \n", + "40 2000 0 [] \n", + "46 1990 225 [([79888, 79968], 14), ([137185, 137297], 24),... \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "4436 1990 0 [] \n", + "4633 2010 98 [([404881, 405333], 77), ([441601, 441720], 21)] \n", + "4997 1990 0 [] \n", + "4998 2000 0 [] \n", + "5001 2010 0 [] \n", + "\n", + " Wordcounts country \n", + "7 [] US \n", + "14 [40] US \n", + "34 [49] US \n", + "40 [] US \n", + "46 [14, 24, 28, 77, 82] US \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "4436 [] US \n", + "4633 [77, 21] US \n", + "4997 [] US \n", + "4998 [] US \n", + "5001 [] US \n", + "\n", + "[206 rows x 26 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 148, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "geJournals " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "7 [Review]\n", + "14 [MIDDLEMARCH ON TV--A SYMPOSIUM]\n", + "34 [GEORGE ELIOT AND PLUTARCH]\n", + "40 None\n", + "46 [ELIOT'S SPANISH CONNECTION: CASAUBON, THE AVA...\n", + " ... \n", + "4436 [GEORGE ELIOT AND SCHILLER: THE CASE OF \"THE M...\n", + "4633 [HIDDEN PARALLELS IN GEORGE ELIOT'S DANIEL DER...\n", + "4997 [SHAKESPEARE AT THE HEART OF GEORGE ELIOT'S EN...\n", + "4998 [DINAH AND THE DEBATE OVER VOCATION IN \"ADAM B...\n", + "5001 ['BUT WHY ALWAYS DOROTHEA?' MARIAN EVANS' SIST...\n", + "Name: title, Length: 206, dtype: object\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(geJournals.title)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Number of George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal title is 'George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies':\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "206" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 150, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal title is 'George ELiot - George Henry Lewes Studies':\")\n", + "len(geJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal code is \"georelioghlstud\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Number of George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal code is 'georelioghlstud':\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "206" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 151, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies articles where journal code is 'georelioghlstud':\")\n", + "geJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'georelioghlstud']\n", + "len(geJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## NLH" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### NLH articles where journal title is \"New Literary History\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "nlhJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'New Literary History']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "pd.set_option('display.max_rows', 300)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Locations in ALocations in Bauthorcoverdatedisc_namedoiidjcodejournallanonumMatchespagespublisher_namespsrcHtmltitletopicstyvoyearDecadeQuoted WordsLocations in A with WordcountsWordcountscountry
842[][][Murray Baumgarten][19750101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4684283bc4df0f-42c8-3779-a157-7dff29faa018[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0415-427[Johns Hopkins University Press]415<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 6, No....[From Realism to Expressionism: Toward a Histo...[Narratology, Expressionism, Impressionism, In...fla[6]197519700[][]US
2581[[3247, 3495], [13519, 14153]][[20342, 20589], [25696, 26322]][Ellen Schauber, Ellen Spolsky][19810401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/46902186c18de4-606e-3c63-9e35-9cbb3151599c[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]3397-413[Johns Hopkins University Press]397<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 12, No...[Stalking a Generative Poetics][Sentences, Pragmatics, Poetics, Fables, Inten...fla[12]19811980157[([3247, 3495], 46), ([13519, 14153], 111)][46, 111]US
2707[[1689341, 1689496]][[16871, 17026]][Eugene Goodheart][19940401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4694566dd22696-d077-3e1b-bbbf-c428897d443a[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]2415-428[Johns Hopkins University Press]415<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 25, No...[Arnold, Critic of Ideology][Objectivity, Idealism, Resentment, Conservati...fla[25]1994199026[([1689341, 1689496], 26)][26]US
3004[][]None[19700101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/46863730265440-1009-3bf3-aeb5-df39805ece6f[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 1, No....[Back Matter][Literary criticism, Music criticism, Text edi...mis[1]197019700[][]US
3015[][][Robert Coles][19801001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/468816b320dfee-2e66-3b3c-a4a7-0c359597c5c0[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][1]0207-211[Johns Hopkins University Press]207<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 12, No...[Commentary on \"Psychology and Literature\"][Poetry, Psychoanalysts, Fantasy fiction, Nove...fla[12]198019800[][]US
3089[][][John M. Picker][20060401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/20057949a81f9b21-332d-3e91-911e-a3d070986b3f[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0361-388[Johns Hopkins University Press]361<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 37, No...[George Eliot and the Sequel Question][Parody, Melodrama, Illustration, Pseudonyms, ...fla[37]200620000[][]US
3444[][][E. D. Hirsch, <suffix>Jr.</suffix>][19830101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4686929063bc54-0080-3efa-b4c8-b5b1f038541b[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0389-397[Johns Hopkins University Press]389<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 14, No...[Beyond Convention?][Conventionalism, Philosophical realism, Veris...fla[14]198319800[][]US
3460[][][Martin Price][19730101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/468483680c7846-2940-3d8c-9c2e-7c1c519b8e78[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0381-387[Johns Hopkins University Press]381<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 4, No....[Form and Discontent][Poetics, Allegory, Actuality, Functionalism, ...fla[4]197319700[][]US
3461[][][Hilary Putnam][19831001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/46900238a87c02-9add-37e8-836d-e763f9909bf8[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][1]1193-200[Johns Hopkins University Press]193<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 15, No...[Taking Rules Seriously: A Response to Martha ...[Morality, Happiness, Oppression, Maxims, Laws...fla[15]198319800[][]US
3676[][][Elaine Freedgood][20100401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/40983828160fc128-4bf1-3c44-bc03-efb16a3933b0[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0393-411[The Johns Hopkins University Press]393<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 41, No...[Fictional Settlements: Footnotes, Metalepsis,...[Narratology, Fantasy fiction, Estrangement, E...fla[41]201020100[][]US
4454[][][Joan E. Hartman][19871001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4693030fc9be51-a0bd-34e3-9bb8-83eed0a2b6c2[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][1]1105-116[Johns Hopkins University Press]105<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 19, No...[Reflections on \"The Philosophical Bases of Fe...[Objectivity, Pedagogy, Feminist standpoint th...fla[19]198719800[][]US
4469[][][Harold Fisch][19900401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/469129b47c0ab8-01e2-3e73-b720-4e026c76ebe7[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0593-606[Johns Hopkins University Press]593<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 21, No...[Character as Linguistic Sign][Hobby horses, Structural linguistics, Nothing...fla[21]199019900[][]US
4472[][][Susan Rubin Suleiman][19810401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4690325882a448-921d-3491-88d1-0d8b5d708369[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0571-583[Johns Hopkins University Press]571<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 12, No...[The Place of Linguistics in Contemporary Lite...[Structural linguistics, Poetic meter, Narrato...fla[12]198119800[][]US
4697[][][Gary Saul Morson][20030701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/20057791209461cf-9d6b-36a1-b8c3-79074f8889cb[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0409-429[Johns Hopkins University Press]409<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 34, No...[The Aphorism: Fragments from the Breakdown of...[Irony, Aphorisms, Prophecy, Subjection, Nonse...fla[34]200320000[][]US
4704[][][Thomas Pavel][19981001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2005750178861e15-64b9-3ad6-8f01-cbd6ca2c604c[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][4]0579-598[Johns Hopkins University Press]579<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 29, No...[Freedom, from Romance to the Novel: Three Ant...Nonefla[29]199819900[][]US
4707[][][Günter Leypoldt][20080101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/20058058f0247a32-22a2-3291-8f6c-10dbed8359c1[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][1]0145-163[Johns Hopkins University Press]145<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 39, No...[Uses of Metaphor: Richard Rorty's Literary Cr...[Pragmatism, Cruelty, Formalist art, Aesthetic...fla[39]200820000[][]US
4948[][][Gary Saul Morson][20091001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/40666450ad5baee6-5e2e-3451-b401-f586e7d2b29c[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][4]0843-865[Johns Hopkins University Press]843<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 40, No...[Return to Process: The Unfolding of\\n ...Nonefla[40]200920000[][]US
5064[][][Philip J. M. Sturgess][19890401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4693667f31728c-42c9-3fb8-ad50-f32db03cbc23[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0763-783[Johns Hopkins University Press]763<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 20, No...[A Logic of Narrativity][Narratology, Dialogism, Verisimilitude, Contr...fla[20]198919800[][]US
5287[][][Robert Phiddian][19971001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/200574499d4e1dce-49ea-389c-8a34-df1ebfa3dbe0[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][4]0673-696[Johns Hopkins University Press]673<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 28, No...[Are Parody and Deconstruction Secretly the Sa...[Deconstruction, Parody, Pastiche, Originality...fla[28]199719900[][]US
5295[][][Sara Danius][20081001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2053312641c27600-af33-35b5-b18d-fe6af17e685f[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][4]0989-1016[Johns Hopkins University Press]989<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 39, No...[Joyce's Scissors: Modernism and the Dissoluti...[Newspapers, Animal loins, Cetology, Fortune, ...fla[39]200820000[][]US
5516[][][Ann Banfield][19780401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/46844939fb98a7-c430-3a58-8a85-b5e54fede05f[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0415-454[Johns Hopkins University Press]415<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 9, No....[Where Epistemology, Style, and Grammar Meet L...[Bar stock, Present tense, Stylistics, Phonolo...fla[9]197819700[][]US
5521[][][Peter Hughes][19770101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/46852169cdde3c-6452-3dc2-b92b-d9cc600f1b2a[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][2]0257-277[Johns Hopkins University Press]257<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 8, No....[Restructuring Literary History: Implications ...[Poetics, Satire, Nominalism, Historicism, For...fla[8]197719700[][]US
5527[][][Nathan A. Scott, <suffix>Jr.</suffix>][19831001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/468995c009116a-71a3-337c-8273-e4733a2ca22e[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][1]093-118[Johns Hopkins University Press]93<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 15, No...[Pater's Imperative, to Dwell Poetically][Meditation, Religious transcendence, Essayist...fla[15]198319800[][]US
5835[][][Winfried Fluck][19960701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/20057364b89d1ab9-db5e-3c52-ae52-528c40a32c23[newlitehist]New Literary History[eng][3]0415-457[Johns Hopkins University Press]415<cite>New Literary History</cite>, Vol. 27, No...[\"The American Romance\" and the Changing Funct...[Novels, Melodrama, Paranoid disorders, Othern...fla[27]199619900[][]US
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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Locations in A Locations in B \\\n", + "842 [] [] \n", + "2581 [[3247, 3495], [13519, 14153]] [[20342, 20589], [25696, 26322]] \n", + "2707 [[1689341, 1689496]] [[16871, 17026]] \n", + "3004 [] [] \n", + "3015 [] [] \n", + "3089 [] [] \n", + "3444 [] [] \n", + "3460 [] [] \n", + "3461 [] [] \n", + "3676 [] [] \n", + "4454 [] [] \n", + "4469 [] [] \n", + "4472 [] [] \n", + "4697 [] [] \n", + "4704 [] [] \n", + "4707 [] [] \n", + "4948 [] [] \n", + "5064 [] [] \n", + "5287 [] [] \n", + "5295 [] [] \n", + "5516 [] [] \n", + "5521 [] [] \n", + "5527 [] [] \n", + "5835 [] [] \n", + "\n", + " author coverdate \\\n", + "842 [Murray Baumgarten] [19750101] \n", + "2581 [Ellen Schauber, Ellen Spolsky] [19810401] \n", + "2707 [Eugene Goodheart] [19940401] \n", + "3004 None [19700101] \n", + "3015 [Robert Coles] [19801001] \n", + "3089 [John M. Picker] [20060401] \n", + "3444 [E. D. Hirsch, Jr.] [19830101] \n", + "3460 [Martin Price] [19730101] \n", + "3461 [Hilary Putnam] [19831001] \n", + "3676 [Elaine Freedgood] [20100401] \n", + "4454 [Joan E. Hartman] [19871001] \n", + "4469 [Harold Fisch] [19900401] \n", + "4472 [Susan Rubin Suleiman] [19810401] \n", + "4697 [Gary Saul Morson] [20030701] \n", + "4704 [Thomas Pavel] [19981001] \n", + "4707 [Günter Leypoldt] [20080101] \n", + "4948 [Gary Saul Morson] [20091001] \n", + "5064 [Philip J. M. Sturgess] [19890401] \n", + "5287 [Robert Phiddian] [19971001] \n", + "5295 [Sara Danius] [20081001] \n", + "5516 [Ann Banfield] [19780401] \n", + "5521 [Peter Hughes] [19770101] \n", + "5527 [Nathan A. Scott, Jr.] [19831001] \n", + "5835 [Winfried Fluck] [19960701] \n", + "\n", + " disc_name doi \\\n", + "842 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468428 \n", + "2581 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469021 \n", + "2707 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469456 \n", + "3004 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468637 \n", + "3015 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468816 \n", + "3089 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20057949 \n", + "3444 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468692 \n", + "3460 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468483 \n", + "3461 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469002 \n", + "3676 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40983828 \n", + "4454 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469303 \n", + "4469 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469129 \n", + "4472 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469032 \n", + "4697 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20057791 \n", + "4704 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20057501 \n", + "4707 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20058058 \n", + "4948 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40666450 \n", + "5064 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/469366 \n", + "5287 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20057449 \n", + "5295 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20533126 \n", + "5516 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468449 \n", + "5521 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468521 \n", + "5527 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/468995 \n", + "5835 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/20057364 \n", + "\n", + " id jcode \\\n", + "842 3bc4df0f-42c8-3779-a157-7dff29faa018 [newlitehist] \n", + "2581 86c18de4-606e-3c63-9e35-9cbb3151599c [newlitehist] \n", + "2707 6dd22696-d077-3e1b-bbbf-c428897d443a [newlitehist] \n", + "3004 30265440-1009-3bf3-aeb5-df39805ece6f [newlitehist] \n", + "3015 b320dfee-2e66-3b3c-a4a7-0c359597c5c0 [newlitehist] \n", + "3089 a81f9b21-332d-3e91-911e-a3d070986b3f [newlitehist] \n", + "3444 9063bc54-0080-3efa-b4c8-b5b1f038541b [newlitehist] \n", + "3460 680c7846-2940-3d8c-9c2e-7c1c519b8e78 [newlitehist] \n", + "3461 38a87c02-9add-37e8-836d-e763f9909bf8 [newlitehist] \n", + "3676 160fc128-4bf1-3c44-bc03-efb16a3933b0 [newlitehist] \n", + "4454 0fc9be51-a0bd-34e3-9bb8-83eed0a2b6c2 [newlitehist] \n", + "4469 b47c0ab8-01e2-3e73-b720-4e026c76ebe7 [newlitehist] \n", + "4472 5882a448-921d-3491-88d1-0d8b5d708369 [newlitehist] \n", + "4697 209461cf-9d6b-36a1-b8c3-79074f8889cb [newlitehist] \n", + "4704 78861e15-64b9-3ad6-8f01-cbd6ca2c604c [newlitehist] \n", + "4707 f0247a32-22a2-3291-8f6c-10dbed8359c1 [newlitehist] \n", + "4948 ad5baee6-5e2e-3451-b401-f586e7d2b29c [newlitehist] \n", + "5064 7f31728c-42c9-3fb8-ad50-f32db03cbc23 [newlitehist] \n", + "5287 9d4e1dce-49ea-389c-8a34-df1ebfa3dbe0 [newlitehist] \n", + "5295 41c27600-af33-35b5-b18d-fe6af17e685f [newlitehist] \n", + "5516 39fb98a7-c430-3a58-8a85-b5e54fede05f [newlitehist] \n", + "5521 69cdde3c-6452-3dc2-b92b-d9cc600f1b2a [newlitehist] \n", + "5527 c009116a-71a3-337c-8273-e4733a2ca22e [newlitehist] \n", + "5835 b89d1ab9-db5e-3c52-ae52-528c40a32c23 [newlitehist] \n", + "\n", + " journal la no numMatches pages \\\n", + "842 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 415-427 \n", + "2581 New Literary History [eng] [3] 3 397-413 \n", + "2707 New Literary History [eng] [2] 2 415-428 \n", + "3004 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 None \n", + "3015 New Literary History [eng] [1] 0 207-211 \n", + "3089 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 361-388 \n", + "3444 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 389-397 \n", + "3460 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 381-387 \n", + "3461 New Literary History [eng] [1] 1 193-200 \n", + "3676 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 393-411 \n", + "4454 New Literary History [eng] [1] 1 105-116 \n", + "4469 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 593-606 \n", + "4472 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 571-583 \n", + "4697 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 409-429 \n", + "4704 New Literary History [eng] [4] 0 579-598 \n", + "4707 New Literary History [eng] [1] 0 145-163 \n", + "4948 New Literary History [eng] [4] 0 843-865 \n", + "5064 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 763-783 \n", + "5287 New Literary History [eng] [4] 0 673-696 \n", + "5295 New Literary History [eng] [4] 0 989-1016 \n", + "5516 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 415-454 \n", + "5521 New Literary History [eng] [2] 0 257-277 \n", + "5527 New Literary History [eng] [1] 0 93-118 \n", + "5835 New Literary History [eng] [3] 0 415-457 \n", + "\n", + " publisher_name sp \\\n", + "842 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 415 \n", + "2581 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 397 \n", + "2707 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 415 \n", + "3004 [Johns Hopkins University Press] None \n", + "3015 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 207 \n", + "3089 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 361 \n", + "3444 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 389 \n", + "3460 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 381 \n", + "3461 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 193 \n", + "3676 [The Johns Hopkins University Press] 393 \n", + "4454 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 105 \n", + "4469 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 593 \n", + "4472 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 571 \n", + "4697 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 409 \n", + "4704 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 579 \n", + "4707 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 145 \n", + "4948 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 843 \n", + "5064 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 763 \n", + "5287 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 673 \n", + "5295 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 989 \n", + "5516 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 415 \n", + "5521 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 257 \n", + "5527 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 93 \n", + "5835 [Johns Hopkins University Press] 415 \n", + "\n", + " srcHtml \\\n", + "842 New Literary History, Vol. 6, No.... \n", + "2581 New Literary History, Vol. 12, No... \n", + "2707 New Literary History, Vol. 25, No... \n", + "3004 New Literary History, Vol. 1, No.... \n", + "3015 New Literary History, Vol. 12, No... \n", + "3089 New Literary History, Vol. 37, No... \n", + "3444 New Literary History, Vol. 14, No... \n", + "3460 New Literary History, Vol. 4, No.... \n", + "3461 New Literary History, Vol. 15, No... \n", + "3676 New Literary History, Vol. 41, No... \n", + "4454 New Literary History, Vol. 19, No... \n", + "4469 New Literary History, Vol. 21, No... \n", + "4472 New Literary History, Vol. 12, No... \n", + "4697 New Literary History, Vol. 34, No... \n", + "4704 New Literary History, Vol. 29, No... \n", + "4707 New Literary History, Vol. 39, No... \n", + "4948 New Literary History, Vol. 40, No... \n", + "5064 New Literary History, Vol. 20, No... \n", + "5287 New Literary History, Vol. 28, No... \n", + "5295 New Literary History, Vol. 39, No... \n", + "5516 New Literary History, Vol. 9, No.... \n", + "5521 New Literary History, Vol. 8, No.... \n", + "5527 New Literary History, Vol. 15, No... \n", + "5835 New Literary History, Vol. 27, No... \n", + "\n", + " title \\\n", + "842 [From Realism to Expressionism: Toward a Histo... \n", + "2581 [Stalking a Generative Poetics] \n", + "2707 [Arnold, Critic of Ideology] \n", + "3004 [Back Matter] \n", + "3015 [Commentary on \"Psychology and Literature\"] \n", + "3089 [George Eliot and the Sequel Question] \n", + "3444 [Beyond Convention?] \n", + "3460 [Form and Discontent] \n", + "3461 [Taking Rules Seriously: A Response to Martha ... \n", + "3676 [Fictional Settlements: Footnotes, Metalepsis,... \n", + "4454 [Reflections on \"The Philosophical Bases of Fe... \n", + "4469 [Character as Linguistic Sign] \n", + "4472 [The Place of Linguistics in Contemporary Lite... \n", + "4697 [The Aphorism: Fragments from the Breakdown of... \n", + "4704 [Freedom, from Romance to the Novel: Three Ant... \n", + "4707 [Uses of Metaphor: Richard Rorty's Literary Cr... \n", + "4948 [Return to Process: The Unfolding of\\n ... \n", + "5064 [A Logic of Narrativity] \n", + "5287 [Are Parody and Deconstruction Secretly the Sa... \n", + "5295 [Joyce's Scissors: Modernism and the Dissoluti... \n", + "5516 [Where Epistemology, Style, and Grammar Meet L... \n", + "5521 [Restructuring Literary History: Implications ... \n", + "5527 [Pater's Imperative, to Dwell Poetically] \n", + "5835 [\"The American Romance\" and the Changing Funct... \n", + "\n", + " topics ty vo year \\\n", + "842 [Narratology, Expressionism, Impressionism, In... fla [6] 1975 \n", + "2581 [Sentences, Pragmatics, Poetics, Fables, Inten... fla [12] 1981 \n", + "2707 [Objectivity, Idealism, Resentment, Conservati... fla [25] 1994 \n", + "3004 [Literary criticism, Music criticism, Text edi... mis [1] 1970 \n", + "3015 [Poetry, Psychoanalysts, Fantasy fiction, Nove... fla [12] 1980 \n", + "3089 [Parody, Melodrama, Illustration, Pseudonyms, ... fla [37] 2006 \n", + "3444 [Conventionalism, Philosophical realism, Veris... fla [14] 1983 \n", + "3460 [Poetics, Allegory, Actuality, Functionalism, ... fla [4] 1973 \n", + "3461 [Morality, Happiness, Oppression, Maxims, Laws... fla [15] 1983 \n", + "3676 [Narratology, Fantasy fiction, Estrangement, E... fla [41] 2010 \n", + "4454 [Objectivity, Pedagogy, Feminist standpoint th... fla [19] 1987 \n", + "4469 [Hobby horses, Structural linguistics, Nothing... fla [21] 1990 \n", + "4472 [Structural linguistics, Poetic meter, Narrato... fla [12] 1981 \n", + "4697 [Irony, Aphorisms, Prophecy, Subjection, Nonse... fla [34] 2003 \n", + "4704 None fla [29] 1998 \n", + "4707 [Pragmatism, Cruelty, Formalist art, Aesthetic... fla [39] 2008 \n", + "4948 None fla [40] 2009 \n", + "5064 [Narratology, Dialogism, Verisimilitude, Contr... fla [20] 1989 \n", + "5287 [Deconstruction, Parody, Pastiche, Originality... fla [28] 1997 \n", + "5295 [Newspapers, Animal loins, Cetology, Fortune, ... fla [39] 2008 \n", + "5516 [Bar stock, Present tense, Stylistics, Phonolo... fla [9] 1978 \n", + "5521 [Poetics, Satire, Nominalism, Historicism, For... fla [8] 1977 \n", + "5527 [Meditation, Religious transcendence, Essayist... fla [15] 1983 \n", + "5835 [Novels, Melodrama, Paranoid disorders, Othern... fla [27] 1996 \n", + "\n", + " Decade Quoted Words Locations in A with Wordcounts \\\n", + "842 1970 0 [] \n", + "2581 1980 157 [([3247, 3495], 46), ([13519, 14153], 111)] \n", + "2707 1990 26 [([1689341, 1689496], 26)] \n", + "3004 1970 0 [] \n", + "3015 1980 0 [] \n", + "3089 2000 0 [] \n", + "3444 1980 0 [] \n", + "3460 1970 0 [] \n", + "3461 1980 0 [] \n", + "3676 2010 0 [] \n", + "4454 1980 0 [] \n", + "4469 1990 0 [] \n", + "4472 1980 0 [] \n", + "4697 2000 0 [] \n", + "4704 1990 0 [] \n", + "4707 2000 0 [] \n", + "4948 2000 0 [] \n", + "5064 1980 0 [] \n", + "5287 1990 0 [] \n", + "5295 2000 0 [] \n", + "5516 1970 0 [] \n", + "5521 1970 0 [] \n", + "5527 1980 0 [] \n", + "5835 1990 0 [] \n", + "\n", + " Wordcounts country \n", + "842 [] US \n", + "2581 [46, 111] US \n", + "2707 [26] US \n", + "3004 [] US \n", + "3015 [] US \n", + "3089 [] US \n", + "3444 [] US \n", + "3460 [] US \n", + "3461 [] US \n", + "3676 [] US \n", + "4454 [] US \n", + "4469 [] US \n", + "4472 [] US \n", + "4697 [] US \n", + "4704 [] US \n", + "4707 [] US \n", + "4948 [] US \n", + "5064 [] US \n", + "5287 [] US \n", + "5295 [] US \n", + "5516 [] US \n", + "5521 [] US \n", + "5527 [] US \n", + "5835 [] US " + ] + }, + "execution_count": 154, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "nlhJournals " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "Number of NLH articles where journal title is 'New Literary History':\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "24" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 155, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "print(\"Number of NLH articles where journal title is 'New Literary History':\")\n", + "len(nlhJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### NLH articles where journal code is \"newlitehist\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "NLH articles where journal code is \"newlitehist\":\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "25" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 156, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "print('NLH articles where journal code is \"newlitehist\":')\n", + "nlhJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'newlitehist']\n", + "len(nlhJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## ELH" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### ELH articles where journal title is \"ELH\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Locations in ALocations in Bauthorcoverdatedisc_namedoiidjcodejournallanonumMatchespagespublisher_namespsrcHtmltitletopicstyvoyearDecadeQuoted WordsLocations in A with WordcountsWordcountscountry
19[[415187, 415972], [1691326, 1691647]][[8469, 9251], [18464, 18785]][Janet K. Gezari][19780401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872453bdec7777-4547-380f-8567-cb4dbcaa9388[elh]ELH[eng][1]493-106[Johns Hopkins University Press]93<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Spring, 1978...[The Metaphorical Imagination of George Eliot][Novels, Sympathy, Travel, Dialectic, Allegory...fla[45]19781970188[([415187, 415972], 129), ([1691326, 1691647],...[129, 59]US
26[[698796, 699017], [1368267, 1368353], [169094...[[15380, 15597], [29093, 29180], [40262, 40962]][Brian Swann][19720601][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872247af76839c-e17f-336c-a45b-7e2a150cf963[elh]ELH[eng][2]4279-308[Johns Hopkins University Press]279<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Jun., 1972),...[Middlemarch: Realism and Symbolic Form][Synecdoche, Irony, Pity, Symbolism, Chivalry,...fla[39]19721970181[([698796, 699017], 38), ([1368267, 1368353], ...[38, 13, 130]US
28[[18311, 18654], [36712, 36879], [39525, 39677...[[9299, 9639], [13482, 13644], [22259, 22414],...[Sophia Andres][19881201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873139682a0b66-d9b2-305c-99dd-22cd29b16067[elh]ELH[eng][4]16853-868[Johns Hopkins University Press]853<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Winter, 1988...[The Germ and the Picture in Middlemarch][Labyrinths, Preludes, Diastole, Harps, Curtai...fla[55]19881980422[([18311, 18654], 61), ([36712, 36879], 31), (...[61, 31, 22, 37, 18, 11, 16, 22, 28, 13, 57, 1...US
72[[291679, 291940], [297602, 297690], [307281, ...[[1777, 2037], [4485, 4590], [5770, 5987], [61...[Jeremy Tambling][19901201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28730914754a86e-dbdb-3cf2-aa1a-0179494fcc8c[elh]ELH[eng][4]12939-960[Johns Hopkins University Press]939<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 57, No. 4 (Winter, 1990...[Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Cli...[Metonymy, Constructive empiricism, Positivism...fla[57]19901990388[([291679, 291940], 45), ([297602, 297690], 14...[45, 14, 38, 17, 46, 39, 62, 69, 33, 25]US
105[[6270, 6426], [297998, 298358], [828586, 8289...[[21578, 21733], [29548, 29905], [43000, 43317...[J. Jeffrey Franklin][19941201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28733631bc977c7-5773-3298-affd-38bc079ca44b[elh]ELH[eng][4]5899-921[Johns Hopkins University Press]899<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 61, No. 4 (Winter, 1994...[The Victorian Discourse of Gambling: Speculat...[Gambling, Betting, Vicars, Scapegoats, Stockb...fla[61]19941990182[([6270, 6426], 25), ([297998, 298358], 65), (...[25, 65, 59, 33]US
131[[888787, 888912], [1175936, 1176366], [120672...[[1790, 1915], [15106, 15538], [27756, 28265],...[Jessie Givner][20020401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30032017f3c82cfe-9c11-397a-88db-e0ca9e940bbb[elh]ELH[eng][1]5223-243[Johns Hopkins University Press]223<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2002...[Industrial History, Preindustrial Literature:...[Personification, Fetishism, Artistic realism,...fla[69]20022000216[([888787, 888912], 19), ([1175936, 1176366], ...[19, 74, 93, 30]US
156[[11700, 11779], [40138, 40450], [48998, 49711...[[5441, 5520], [6026, 6337], [20063, 20772], [...[Michael Peled Ginsburg][19801001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28727957374e142-9fdd-3f05-b302-fd879956047b[elh]ELH[eng][3]11542-558[Johns Hopkins University Press]542<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 47, No. 3 (Autumn, 1980...[Pseudonym, Epigraphs, and Narrative Voice: Mi...[Literary epigraphs, Narratology, Narrators, P...fla[47]19801980525[([11700, 11779], 14), ([40138, 40450], 46), (...[14, 46, 130, 21, 14, 25, 28, 112, 42, 93]US
176[[169830, 169925], [171205, 171814], [411396, ...[[24637, 24732], [25621, 26230], [30394, 31563...[ANNA KORNBLUH][20101201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/409631156f8cb5f6-b189-3a6a-9e45-916007036013[elh]ELH[eng][4]12941-967[Johns Hopkins University Press]941<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 77, No. 4 (WINTER 2010)...[THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM OF SYMPATHY: PARABASIS, ...[Metonymy, Aestheticism, Sentimentality, Artis...fla[77]20102010539[([169830, 169925], 16), ([171205, 171814], 11...[16, 111, 129, 73, 87, 29, 31, 25, 38]US
180[[127877, 127994], [419624, 420202]][[16587, 16704], [17651, 18231]][George Levine][19630901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872038c98fdee0-fbcd-3f85-a8e5-79e409dc1d91[elh]ELH[eng][3]3244-257[Johns Hopkins University Press]244<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 30, No. 3 (Sep., 1963),...[Isabel, Gwendolen, and Dorothea][Novels, Pity, Irony, Ghost stories, Egotism, ...fla[30]19631960114[([127877, 127994], 20), ([419624, 420202], 94)][20, 94]US
262[[56, 234], [196063, 196541], [408633, 409407]...[[22354, 22532], [23981, 24459], [24501, 25274...[J. Hillis Miller][19741001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28725960122a255-44bb-3ac8-8ce9-d2a00136081c[elh]ELH[eng][3]7455-473[Johns Hopkins University Press]455<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 41, No. 3 (Autumn, 1974...[Narrative and History][Krises, Aphorisms, Primary qualities, Monads,...fla[41]19741970310[([56, 234], 31), ([196063, 196541], 71), ([40...[31, 71, 130, 28, 22, 28]US
270[[560018, 560102], [560366, 560784], [637966, ...[[7011, 7091], [8710, 9128], [21733, 21860], [...[Diana Postlethwaite][19900401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287325105ac14e8-7abc-30d0-83be-61afec8f6965[elh]ELH[eng][1]19197-221[Johns Hopkins University Press]197<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 57, No. 1 (Spring, 1990...[When George Eliot Reads Milton: The Muse in a...[Paradise, Pity, Asceticism, Immortality, Estr...fla[57]19901990560[([560018, 560102], 16), ([560366, 560784], 67...[16, 67, 24, 21, 25, 68, 37, 50, 25, 16, 19, 1...US
321[[755, 866], [1974, 2134], [2515, 2650], [4076...[[16490, 16601], [17466, 17627], [19196, 19332...[David Kurnick][20071001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300295734cfc267d-99f6-3f8c-ba40-6c3da518af1e[elh]ELH[eng][3]8583-608[Johns Hopkins University Press]583<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 74, No. 3 (Fall, 2007),...[An Erotics of Detachment: \"Middlemarch\" and N...[Seduction, Love, Personalism, Punctuation, Wh...fla[74]20072000355[([755, 866], 17), ([1974, 2134], 26), ([2515,...[17, 26, 24, 25, 135, 61, 67]US
322[][][Claude T. Bissell][19510901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287181099da1747-a84f-33e8-a9ce-65634f009ad4[elh]ELH[eng][3]1221-239[Johns Hopkins University Press]221<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 18, No. 3 (Sep., 1951),...[Social Analysis in the Novels of George Eliot][Aristocracy, Idealism, Snobbery, Vanity, Actu...fla[18]195119500[][]US
417[[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]][[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]][Thomas Albrecht][20060701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300300195f97e839-43b0-3d35-8fd6-31da94f56373[elh]ELH[eng][2]3437-463[Johns Hopkins University Press]437<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 73, No. 2 (Summer, 2006...[Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics...[Sympathy, Misanthropy, Egotism, Paranormal ex...fla[73]2006200065[([173657, 173756], 18), ([292143, 292406], 47)][18, 47]US
434[[68597, 68675], [1787728, 1787883]][[9115, 9193], [10928, 11083]][JESSE ROSENTHAL][20101001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/40963186e43f6636-8ee9-3baa-942f-501c4388023e[elh]ELH[eng][3]3777-811[Johns Hopkins University Press]777<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 77, No. 3 (FALL 2010), ...[THE LARGE NOVEL AND THE LAW OF LARGE NUMBERS;...[Gambling, Novels, Determinism, Interjections,...fla[77]2010201042[([68597, 68675], 12), ([1787728, 1787883], 30)][12, 30]US
459[[307101, 307178], [314546, 314901], [315071, ...[[39596, 39673], [42100, 42455], [42517, 42619...[Richard Menke][20000701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30031927c37b136c-63e8-376d-977d-7151c0680d8f[elh]ELH[eng][2]13617-653[Johns Hopkins University Press]617<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 67, No. 2 (Summer, 2000...[Fiction as Vivisection: G. H. Lewes and Georg...[Vivisection, Melodrama, Chariots, Microscopes...fla[67]20002000317[([307101, 307178], 13), ([314546, 314901], 60...[13, 60, 22, 14, 41, 30, 15, 18, 86, 18]US
582[[1019006, 1019209], [1019478, 1019692], [1019...[[37699, 37918], [37994, 38205], [38488, 38663...[Melissa J. Ganz][20081001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/276546265db14adf-7486-30c9-9a4a-451475f11144[elh]ELH[eng][3]9565-602[Johns Hopkins University Press]565<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 75, No. 3 (Fall, 2008),...[Binding the Will: George Eliot and the Practi...[Love, Promises, Loyalty, Fear, Resentment, Eg...fla[75]20082000324[([1019006, 1019209], 36), ([1019478, 1019692]...[36, 40, 30, 34, 25, 119, 40]US
588[][][Sarah Gates][20011001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300319895034d5c2-3ca3-306e-bb7f-64b13122aba7[elh]ELH[eng][3]0699-724[Johns Hopkins University Press]699<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 68, No. 3 (Fall, 2001),...[\"A Difference of Native Language\": Gender, Ge...[Visual fixation, Women, Fear, Marriage ceremo...fla[68]200120000[][]US
929[][][Karen B. Mann][19810401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28730177e027a0e-ab52-366b-ba2d-89b6f05b2f94[elh]ELH[eng][1]1190-216[Johns Hopkins University Press]190<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 48, No. 1 (Spring, 1981...[George Eliot's Language of Nature: Production...[Humor, Fables, Confectionery, Parsonages, Hum...fla[48]198119800[][]US
1008[[8450, 8912], [8932, 9540]][[17523, 17992], [18036, 18653]][Wendell V. Harris][19900701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873079260e180d-e932-3291-b7f0-ca9ba8a26bf6[elh]ELH[eng][2]3445-458[Johns Hopkins University Press]445<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 57, No. 2 (Summer, 1990...[Bakhtinian Double Voicing in Dickens and Eliot][Dialogism, Narratology, Irony, Polyphony, Inq...fla[57]19901990190[([8450, 8912], 85), ([8932, 9540], 105)][85, 105]US
1191[][]None[19720601][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287224061510d4f-522a-3f9c-9545-c8460a5f8b08[elh]ELH[eng][2]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Jun., 1972)[Front Matter]Nonemis[39]197219700[][]US
1224[][]None[19801001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287278834b09b13-cade-33ae-8ada-4ad503a8a195[elh]ELH[eng][3]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 47, No. 3 (Autumn, 1980)[Front Matter]Nonemis[47]198019800[][]US
1227[][]None[19721201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287269571a1ee0b-605d-303c-918f-8ece286a0c77[elh]ELH[eng][4]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 39, No. 4 (Dec., 1972)[Volume Information]Nonemis[39]197219700[][]US
1280[][]None[19941201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28733541b409d3e-f89c-335e-a053-509bde01a755[elh]ELH[eng][4]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 61, No. 4 (Winter, 1994)[Volume Information]Nonemis[61]199419900[][]US
1281[][]None[20020401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30032007bd0dacfe-a1d7-3c60-9bed-c7a0c77077b1[elh]ELH[eng][1]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2002)[Volume Information]Nonemis[69]200220000[][]US
1288[][]None[19881201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873132e092a987-2b8c-30fc-bb5f-6f94c496cb19[elh]ELH[eng][4]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Winter, 1988)[Volume Information]Nonemis[55]198819800[][]US
1289[][]None[19901201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873082ccccdfdb-9642-3b19-b208-6cf432ad52d2[elh]ELH[eng][4]0999-1003[Johns Hopkins University Press]999<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 57, No. 4 (Winter, 1990...[Volume Information]Nonemis[57]199019900[][]US
1291[][]None[19801201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287284997f23d0f-f93f-3c42-a33f-3ec157b56be2[elh]ELH[eng][4]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 47, No. 4 (Winter, 1980)[Volume Information]Nonemis[47]198019800[][]US
1295[][]None[20070101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30029595da26e7b9-f31a-33af-a777-433c1930660a[elh]ELH[eng][4]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 74, No. 4 (Winter, 2007)[Volume Information]Nonemis[74]200720000[][]US
1504[][][William J. Overton][19780701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287251741ce7ec8-d692-3fbe-8b1a-6c2c23544c3b[elh]ELH[eng][2]0285-302[Johns Hopkins University Press]285<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 45, No. 2 (Summer, 1978...[Self and Society in Trollope][Egoism, Nieces, Idealism, Scapegoats, Complac...fla[45]197819700[][]US
1631[][]None[19921001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873451d538fc0f-5bf4-3ac0-81e3-cd9068c31783[elh]ELH[eng][3]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 59, No. 3 (Autumn, 1992)[Back Matter][Bibliographies, Textbook research, Periodical...mis[59]199219900[][]US
1633[][]None[19860701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873265326e7c5f-2cd8-3107-b3e2-e79eec5dd6a9[elh]ELH[eng][2]0-[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 53, No. 2 (Summer, 1986)[Back Matter][Language translation, Novels, Publishing indu...mis[53]198619800[][]US
1665[][]None[20071001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300295693451f682-7949-3023-b949-b4d98cdeaeba[elh]ELH[eng][3]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 74, No. 3 (Fall, 2007)[Front Matter][Mailings, Comparative literature, Secondary p...mis[74]200720000[][]US
1712[][]None[20101201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/40963121d49c6bce-db04-3eab-ac39-3ef28dd4df3b[elh]ELH[eng][4]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 77, No. 4 (WINTER 2010)[Back Matter][Mailings, Filing systems, Pubs, Wire cloth, L...mis[77]201020100[][]US
1716[][]None[20101201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/4096311010bf0f9a-cb86-3074-be29-a07803563920[elh]ELH[eng][4]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 77, No. 4 (WINTER 2010)[Front Matter][Student research papers, Postcolonialism, Lib...mis[77]201020100[][]US
2285[][]None[19881201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873133aeabf1ca-3b73-3a91-abf8-a057b5a2e7ba[elh]ELH[eng][4]0754-916[Johns Hopkins University Press]754<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Winter, 1988...[Front Matter][Mailings, Academic journals, Electronic journ...mis[55]198819800[][]US
2298[][]None[19901201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287308353be073b-1890-33dc-8988-66e8a6100cf0[elh]ELH[eng][4]0834-938[Johns Hopkins University Press]834<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 57, No. 4 (Winter, 1990...[Front Matter][Mailings, Dance schools, Fees, Subscriptions,...mis[57]199019900[][]US
2315[][]None[20020401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300320084d0e29dd-1168-3bd0-8d27-b912a6a3796b[elh]ELH[eng][1]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2002)[Front Matter][Poetry, Publishing industry, Annotated biblio...mis[69]200220000[][]US
2318[][]None[19960401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/3003028139ca7510-6bb5-35f1-9b61-ebfb915b2ef9[elh]ELH[eng][1]0None[Johns Hopkins University Press]None<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 63, No. 1 (Spring, 1996)[Back Matter][Cultural studies, Literary theory, Credit car...mis[63]199619900[][]US
2666[][][John M. Picker][19981001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30030197fa0327c6-4ee5-327b-b152-a4ccfc93c910[elh]ELH[eng][3]0637-652[Johns Hopkins University Press]637<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 65, No. 3 (Fall, 1998),...[Disturbing Surfaces: Representations of the F...[Comic theater, Physiognomy, Humor, Voyeurism,...fla[65]199819900[][]US
2669[][][Jesse M. Molesworth][20070701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30029566c4535e3f-7f29-3f80-9b18-08e8db72c1aa[elh]ELH[eng][2]0493-508[Johns Hopkins University Press]493<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 74, No. 2 (Summer, 2007...[\"A Dreadful Course of Calamities\": Roxana's E...[Written narratives, Fortune, Paranoid disorde...fla[74]200720000[][]US
2841[][]None[19941201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873355c2af9252-48fd-32f9-8b01-611e0c9086f7[elh]ELH[eng][4]0782-922[Johns Hopkins University Press]782<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 61, No. 4 (Winter, 1994...[Front Matter][Mailings, Publishing industry, Electronic jou...mis[61]199419900[][]US
3103[][][Deanna K. Kreisel][20030701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/3002988707df26d4-77a8-3b16-984f-b1db37396baa[elh]ELH[eng][2]0541-574[Johns Hopkins University Press]541<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 70, No. 2 (Summer, 2003...[Incognito, Intervention, and Dismemberment in...[Fear, Midwives, Pity, Androgyny, Seduction, M...fla[70]200320000[][]US
3105[][][Lauren M. E. Goodlad][20000401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300319090a16ae51-4d0d-36ce-9164-d9af4a2a1e6e[elh]ELH[eng][1]0143-178[Johns Hopkins University Press]143<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 67, No. 1 (Spring, 2000...[\"A Middle Class Cut into Two\": Historiography...[Masculinity, Aristocracy, Polemics, Professio...fla[67]200020000[][]US
3109[][][Hilda Hollis][20010401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300319625b59e419-6588-3d0c-8200-ffd65dc2020e[elh]ELH[eng][1]0155-177[Johns Hopkins University Press]155<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 68, No. 1 (Spring, 2001...[Felix Holt: Independent Spokesman or Eliot's ...[Dialogism, Aristocracy, Radicalism, Satire, W...fla[68]200120000[][]US
3266[][][John S. Diekhoff][19360901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2871573680d847a-924e-30b2-aad0-8c1064ac577f[elh]ELH[eng][3]0221-227[Johns Hopkins University Press]221<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 3, No. 3 (Sep., 1936), ...[The Happy Ending of Adam Bede][Sin, Forgiveness, Spiritual love, Preachers, ...fla[3]193619300[][]US
3626[][][Walter L. Reed][19710901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872227daba3bde-7a7b-3888-8094-19e352960a2c[elh]ELH[eng][3]0411-431[Johns Hopkins University Press]411<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 38, No. 3 (Sep., 1971),...[The Pattern of Conversion in Sartor Resartus][Irony, Clothing, Metaphors, Dialectic, Ideali...fla[38]197119700[][]US
3628[][][Bonnie Zimmerman][19791001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872689dd8a8edf-4b7b-36a3-b940-3594c4694c78[elh]ELH[eng][3]0432-451[Johns Hopkins University Press]432<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 46, No. 3 (Autumn, 1979...[Felix Holt and the True Power of Womanhood][Womens suffrage movements, Pity, Embroidery, ...fla[46]197919700[][]US
3637[][][Tim Dolin][19950401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300302664dfcda19-d340-39ac-9131-67e90ba9d425[elh]ELH[eng][1]0197-215[Johns Hopkins University Press]197<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 62, No. 1 (Spring, 1995...[Fictional Territory and a Woman's Place: Regi...[Parochialism, Colonialism, Apologetics, Riots...fla[62]199519900[][]US
4081[][][Anna Neill][20081201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2765464372a8ef9c-1d2f-3bd9-861b-8e54a074df9b[elh]ELH[eng][4]0939-962[Johns Hopkins University Press]939<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 75, No. 4 (Winter, 2008...[The Primitive Mind of \"Silas Marner\"][Imagination, Fear, Animal magnetism, Religiou...fla[75]200820000[][]US
4084[][][J. Jeffrey Franklin][20050101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/3002999635f32783-026e-3f51-ad06-79ea481998ca[elh]ELH[eng][4]0941-974[Johns Hopkins University Press]941<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 72, No. 4 (Winter, 2005...[The Life of the Buddha in Victorian England][Divinity, Righteousness, Asceticism, Beatitud...fla[72]200520000[][]US
4085[][][Robert E. Lougy][20020701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300320285b5f592f-405d-3afb-98b3-447b7336645b[elh]ELH[eng][2]1473-500[Johns Hopkins University Press]473<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 2 (Summer, 2002...[Filth, Liminality, and Abjection in Charles D...[Olfactory perception, Castration, Horror fict...fla[69]200220000[][]US
4087[][][Rosemary Clark-Beattie][19861201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28731760c79744d-c3f7-31e7-9017-34463cbec95b[elh]ELH[eng][4]0821-847[Johns Hopkins University Press]821<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Winter, 1986...[Fables of Rebellion: Anti-Catholicism and the...[Penance, Fear, Convents, Visual fixation, Hyp...fla[53]198619800[][]US
4288[][][John H. Hagan, <suffix>Jr.</suffix>][19540301][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2871933d0370b66-0bca-3da0-a8df-e66b5be86f68[elh]ELH[eng][1]054-66[Johns Hopkins University Press]54<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 21, No. 1 (Mar., 1954),...[Structural Patterns in Dickens's Great Expect...[Deceit, Pathos, Parody, Crime reporting, Ambi...fla[21]195419500[][]US
4292[[256, 776], [1187, 1613], [2834, 3048]][[28098, 28615], [28694, 29119], [29133, 29346]][Walter E. Houghton][19460301][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287150019f4d0f6-a13f-38ce-9182-44d4c605539d[elh]ELH[eng][1]464-78[Johns Hopkins University Press]64<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Mar., 1946),...[The Meaning of Keats's Eve of St. Mark][Poetry, Martyrdom, Ballads, Facsimiles, Cathe...fla[13]19461940189[([256, 776], 85), ([1187, 1613], 70), ([2834,...[85, 70, 34]US
4308[][][Sarah Gilead][19860401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28731534ca76195-e29e-3325-a952-4445f7755176[elh]ELH[eng][1]0183-197[Johns Hopkins University Press]183<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 53, No. 1 (Spring, 1986...[Liminality, Anti-Liminality, and the Victoria...[Scapegoats, Transgression, Hypocrisy, Martyrd...fla[53]198619800[][]US
4309[][][J. M. Rignall][19841001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872938378b8a70-dccb-33b2-9fa7-cdc32b13b514[elh]ELH[eng][3]0575-587[Johns Hopkins University Press]575<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 51, No. 3 (Autumn, 1984...[Dickens and the Catastrophic Continuum of His...[Determinism, Pathos, Fear, Despair, Narrators...fla[51]198419800[][]US
4821[][][Dorothy M. Mermin][19760401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872464356b03bb-8d78-34c1-949e-5f13daf95339[elh]ELH[eng][1]0100-119[Johns Hopkins University Press]100<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 43, No. 1 (Spring, 1976...[Poetry as Fiction: Meredith's Modern Love][Irony, Love relationships, Christmas carols, ...fla[43]197619700[][]US
4822[][][Dennis Taylor][19750701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/287262860859903-c2d6-371a-8271-466b4e7ec8e3[elh]ELH[eng][2]0258-275[Johns Hopkins University Press]258<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 42, No. 2 (Summer, 1975...[The Patterns in Hardy's Poetry]Nonefla[42]197519700[][]US
4830[][][Ernest Tuveson][19660601][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872392a796844d-b2ca-38a5-8001-7ecb26ad60a4[elh]ELH[eng][2]0247-270[Johns Hopkins University Press]247<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 33, No. 2 (Jun., 1966),...[The Creed of the Confidence-Man][Sin, Piety, Evangelists, Quack doctors, Masqu...fla[33]196619600[][]US
4832[][][Joseph M. Duffy, <suffix>Jr.</suffix>][19680901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28722849d32245c-f02b-39fd-9ff5-feaf4bec87eb[elh]ELH[eng][3]0403-421[Johns Hopkins University Press]403<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 35, No. 3 (Sep., 1968),...[Another Version of Pastoral: Oliver Twist][Sadness, Pity, Workhouses, Heaven, Funerals, ...fla[35]196819600[][]US
4835[][][U. C. Knoepflmacher][19671201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872183a1fa53a7-3bb9-3871-b7d6-ae5e387a4b11[elh]ELH[eng][4]0518-540[Johns Hopkins University Press]518<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 34, No. 4 (Dec., 1967),...[The Post-Romantic Imagination: Adam Bede, Wor...[Pity, Sadness, Preachers, Sin, Paradise, Lite...fla[34]196719600[][]US
4837[][][Peter Allen][19880701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28732143c2d888e-52f7-3b93-b171-097e504331ef[elh]ELH[eng][2]0487-503[Johns Hopkins University Press]487<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 55, No. 2 (Summer, 1988...[Sir Edmund Gosse and his Modern Readers: The ...[Autobiographies, Aesthetic taste, Aestheticis...fla[55]198819800[][]US
4844[][][Jonathan Arac][19791201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872484f14fd252-e23d-31d9-9ebf-ad7766b3b18b[elh]ELH[eng][4]0673-692[Johns Hopkins University Press]673<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 46, No. 4 (Winter, 1979...[Rhetoric and Realism in Nineteenth-Century Fi...[Novels, Hyperbole, Contiguity, Laughter, Conf...fla[46]197919700[][]US
4853[][][Robert Preyer][19650301][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28723723bed1084-9486-3526-aacd-a109c2ef0208[elh]ELH[eng][1]062-84[Johns Hopkins University Press]62<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Mar., 1965),...[Two Styles in the Verse of Robert Browning][Poetic meter, Rhyme, Musical dissonance, Ship...fla[32]196519600[][]US
4854[][][Helena Michie][19890701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873065c48810db-e358-3155-abac-79672f8c6ba8[elh]ELH[eng][2]0401-421[Johns Hopkins University Press]401<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 56, No. 2 (Summer, 1989...[\"There is no Friend Like a Sister\": Sisterhoo...[Goblins, Melodrama, Female sexuality, Male ga...fla[56]198919800[][]US
5353[][][Nina Auerbach][19751001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28727114da87a3e-9e89-3955-923a-ec6b1aa1dbc5[elh]ELH[eng][3]0395-419[Johns Hopkins University Press]395<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 42, No. 3 (Autumn, 1975...[Incarnations of the Orphan][Divine grace, Fear, Labyrinths, Tears, Seduct...fla[42]197519700[][]US
5354[][][Bernard J. Paris][19621201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2871945ded54009-3301-3a28-8c15-0b7fff400bdf[elh]ELH[eng][4]1418-443[Johns Hopkins University Press]418<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 29, No. 4 (Dec., 1962),...[George Eliot's Religion of Humanity][Rational egoism, Sympathy, Pantheism, Divinit...fla[29]196219600[][]US
5358[][][Christopher Lane][20020401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30032016b1827c60-b5cb-3851-96f8-015c35020047[elh]ELH[eng][1]0199-222[Johns Hopkins University Press]199<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2002...[Charlotte Brontë on the Pleasure of Hating][Sympathy, Love, Revenge, Misanthropy, Communi...fla[69]200220000[][]US
5359[[56, 1057], [1080, 1179], [2834, 3025], [1793...[[14538, 15534], [15556, 15658], [17234, 17426...[Jeff Nunokawa][20021201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30032047d5a5f737-938b-360b-9507-00e660a64a61[elh]ELH[eng][4]6835-860[Johns Hopkins University Press]835<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 69, No. 4 (Winter, 2002...[Eros and Isolation: The Antisocial George Eliot][Solitude, Fear, Princesses, Egotism, Melodram...fla[69]20022000239[([56, 1057], 164), ([1080, 1179], 17), ([2834...[164, 17, 30, 28]US
5360[][][Elizabeth Duquette][20051001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30030070da821ade-c8b2-3f51-9ce3-23afe7b4c6cf[elh]ELH[eng][3]1717-745[Johns Hopkins University Press]717<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 72, No. 3 (Fall, 2005),...[\"A New Claim for the Family Renown\": Alice Ja...[Picturesque beauty, Pity, Sentimentalism, Sub...fla[72]200520000[][]US
5363[][][Peter J. Manning][19850401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2872827b96530b9-7d73-3ede-9bd2-2d32d5c83211[elh]ELH[eng][1]033-58[Johns Hopkins University Press]33<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 52, No. 1 (Spring, 1985...[Wordsworth at St. Bees: Scandals, Sisterhoods...[Priests, Nuns, Liturgy, Benevolence, Methodis...fla[52]198519800[][]US
5365[][][Jay Clayton][19791201][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/28724835f88b06d-9dda-3140-853a-6da11fb6b667[elh]ELH[eng][4]0645-672[Johns Hopkins University Press]645<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 46, No. 4 (Winter, 1979...[Visionary Power and Narrative Form: Wordswort...[Sadness, Preachers, Ghost stories, Sublimatio...fla[46]197919700[][]US
5372[][][John P. Farrell][19890401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/2873128b12be317-31aa-3111-a0ff-27e54d33a1f0[elh]ELH[eng][1]0173-208[Johns Hopkins University Press]173<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 56, No. 1 (Spring, 1989...[Reading the Text of Community in Wuthering He...[Dialogism, Narratology, Storytelling, Hierogl...fla[56]198919800[][]US
5373[][][Amit Yahav-Brown][20060101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/30030039f8de8475-4690-3c3b-ad44-679c28d88ea2[elh]ELH[eng][4]0805-830[Johns Hopkins University Press]805<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 73, No. 4 (Winter, 2006...[Reasonableness and Domestic Fiction][Reason, Pluralist school, Letter writing, Par...fla[73]200620000[][]US
5376[][][William Deresiewicz][19970701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300301464321709c-1c11-337b-a7d1-7d45878a15c0[elh]ELH[eng][2]0503-535[Johns Hopkins University Press]503<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 64, No. 2 (Summer, 1997...[Community and Cognition in \"Pride and Prejudi...[Irony, Humor, Intimacy, Gossip, Flattery, Com...fla[64]199719900[][]US
5383[][][Rebecca F. Stern][19980701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/300301860f0a5ad2-54e6-3dc7-8bd7-b8a2c89edbef[elh]ELH[eng][2]0423-449[Johns Hopkins University Press]423<cite>ELH</cite>, Vol. 65, No. 2 (Summer, 1998...[Moving Parts and Speaking Parts: Situating Vi...[Spectacle, Silent partners, Dresses, Vocation...fla[65]199819900[][]US
\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Locations in A \\\n", + "19 [[415187, 415972], [1691326, 1691647]] \n", + "26 [[698796, 699017], [1368267, 1368353], [169094... \n", + "28 [[18311, 18654], [36712, 36879], [39525, 39677... \n", + "72 [[291679, 291940], [297602, 297690], [307281, ... \n", + "105 [[6270, 6426], [297998, 298358], [828586, 8289... \n", + "131 [[888787, 888912], [1175936, 1176366], [120672... \n", + "156 [[11700, 11779], [40138, 40450], [48998, 49711... \n", + "176 [[169830, 169925], [171205, 171814], [411396, ... \n", + "180 [[127877, 127994], [419624, 420202]] \n", + "262 [[56, 234], [196063, 196541], [408633, 409407]... \n", + "270 [[560018, 560102], [560366, 560784], [637966, ... \n", + "321 [[755, 866], [1974, 2134], [2515, 2650], [4076... \n", + "322 [] \n", + "417 [[173657, 173756], [292143, 292406]] \n", + "434 [[68597, 68675], [1787728, 1787883]] \n", + "459 [[307101, 307178], [314546, 314901], [315071, ... \n", + "582 [[1019006, 1019209], [1019478, 1019692], [1019... \n", + "588 [] \n", + "929 [] \n", + "1008 [[8450, 8912], [8932, 9540]] \n", + "1191 [] \n", + "1224 [] \n", + "1227 [] \n", + "1280 [] \n", + "1281 [] \n", + "1288 [] \n", + "1289 [] \n", + "1291 [] \n", + "1295 [] \n", + "1504 [] \n", + "1631 [] \n", + "1633 [] \n", + "1665 [] \n", + "1712 [] \n", + "1716 [] \n", + "2285 [] \n", + "2298 [] \n", + "2315 [] \n", + "2318 [] \n", + "2666 [] \n", + "2669 [] \n", + "2841 [] \n", + "3103 [] \n", + "3105 [] \n", + "3109 [] \n", + "3266 [] \n", + "3626 [] \n", + "3628 [] \n", + "3637 [] \n", + "4081 [] \n", + "4084 [] \n", + "4085 [] \n", + "4087 [] \n", + "4288 [] \n", + "4292 [[256, 776], [1187, 1613], [2834, 3048]] \n", + "4308 [] \n", + "4309 [] \n", + "4821 [] \n", + "4822 [] \n", + "4830 [] \n", + "4832 [] \n", + "4835 [] \n", + "4837 [] \n", + "4844 [] \n", + "4853 [] \n", + "4854 [] \n", + "5353 [] \n", + "5354 [] \n", + "5358 [] \n", + "5359 [[56, 1057], [1080, 1179], [2834, 3025], [1793... \n", + "5360 [] \n", + "5363 [] \n", + "5365 [] \n", + "5372 [] \n", + "5373 [] \n", + "5376 [] \n", + "5383 [] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \\\n", + "19 [[8469, 9251], [18464, 18785]] \n", + "26 [[15380, 15597], [29093, 29180], [40262, 40962]] \n", + "28 [[9299, 9639], [13482, 13644], [22259, 22414],... \n", + "72 [[1777, 2037], [4485, 4590], [5770, 5987], [61... \n", + "105 [[21578, 21733], [29548, 29905], [43000, 43317... \n", + "131 [[1790, 1915], [15106, 15538], [27756, 28265],... \n", + "156 [[5441, 5520], [6026, 6337], [20063, 20772], [... \n", + "176 [[24637, 24732], [25621, 26230], [30394, 31563... \n", + "180 [[16587, 16704], [17651, 18231]] \n", + "262 [[22354, 22532], [23981, 24459], [24501, 25274... \n", + "270 [[7011, 7091], [8710, 9128], [21733, 21860], [... \n", + "321 [[16490, 16601], [17466, 17627], [19196, 19332... \n", + "322 [] \n", + "417 [[14718, 14816], [64553, 64816]] \n", + "434 [[9115, 9193], [10928, 11083]] \n", + "459 [[39596, 39673], [42100, 42455], [42517, 42619... \n", + "582 [[37699, 37918], [37994, 38205], [38488, 38663... \n", + "588 [] \n", + "929 [] \n", + "1008 [[17523, 17992], [18036, 18653]] \n", + "1191 [] \n", + "1224 [] \n", + "1227 [] \n", + "1280 [] \n", + "1281 [] \n", + "1288 [] \n", + "1289 [] \n", + "1291 [] \n", + "1295 [] \n", + "1504 [] \n", + "1631 [] \n", + "1633 [] \n", + "1665 [] \n", + "1712 [] \n", + "1716 [] \n", + "2285 [] \n", + "2298 [] \n", + "2315 [] \n", + "2318 [] \n", + "2666 [] \n", + "2669 [] \n", + "2841 [] \n", + "3103 [] \n", + "3105 [] \n", + "3109 [] \n", + "3266 [] \n", + "3626 [] \n", + "3628 [] \n", + "3637 [] \n", + "4081 [] \n", + "4084 [] \n", + "4085 [] \n", + "4087 [] \n", + "4288 [] \n", + "4292 [[28098, 28615], [28694, 29119], [29133, 29346]] \n", + "4308 [] \n", + "4309 [] \n", + "4821 [] \n", + "4822 [] \n", + "4830 [] \n", + "4832 [] \n", + "4835 [] \n", + "4837 [] \n", + "4844 [] \n", + "4853 [] \n", + "4854 [] \n", + "5353 [] \n", + "5354 [] \n", + "5358 [] \n", + "5359 [[14538, 15534], [15556, 15658], [17234, 17426... \n", + "5360 [] \n", + "5363 [] \n", + "5365 [] \n", + "5372 [] \n", + "5373 [] \n", + "5376 [] \n", + "5383 [] \n", + "\n", + " author coverdate \\\n", + "19 [Janet K. Gezari] [19780401] \n", + "26 [Brian Swann] [19720601] \n", + "28 [Sophia Andres] [19881201] \n", + "72 [Jeremy Tambling] [19901201] \n", + "105 [J. Jeffrey Franklin] [19941201] \n", + "131 [Jessie Givner] [20020401] \n", + "156 [Michael Peled Ginsburg] [19801001] \n", + "176 [ANNA KORNBLUH] [20101201] \n", + "180 [George Levine] [19630901] \n", + "262 [J. Hillis Miller] [19741001] \n", + "270 [Diana Postlethwaite] [19900401] \n", + "321 [David Kurnick] [20071001] \n", + "322 [Claude T. Bissell] [19510901] \n", + "417 [Thomas Albrecht] [20060701] \n", + "434 [JESSE ROSENTHAL] [20101001] \n", + "459 [Richard Menke] [20000701] \n", + "582 [Melissa J. Ganz] [20081001] \n", + "588 [Sarah Gates] [20011001] \n", + "929 [Karen B. Mann] [19810401] \n", + "1008 [Wendell V. Harris] [19900701] \n", + "1191 None [19720601] \n", + "1224 None [19801001] \n", + "1227 None [19721201] \n", + "1280 None [19941201] \n", + "1281 None [20020401] \n", + "1288 None [19881201] \n", + "1289 None [19901201] \n", + "1291 None [19801201] \n", + "1295 None [20070101] \n", + "1504 [William J. Overton] [19780701] \n", + "1631 None [19921001] \n", + "1633 None [19860701] \n", + "1665 None [20071001] \n", + "1712 None [20101201] \n", + "1716 None [20101201] \n", + "2285 None [19881201] \n", + "2298 None [19901201] \n", + "2315 None [20020401] \n", + "2318 None [19960401] \n", + "2666 [John M. Picker] [19981001] \n", + "2669 [Jesse M. Molesworth] [20070701] \n", + "2841 None [19941201] \n", + "3103 [Deanna K. Kreisel] [20030701] \n", + "3105 [Lauren M. E. Goodlad] [20000401] \n", + "3109 [Hilda Hollis] [20010401] \n", + "3266 [John S. Diekhoff] [19360901] \n", + "3626 [Walter L. Reed] [19710901] \n", + "3628 [Bonnie Zimmerman] [19791001] \n", + "3637 [Tim Dolin] [19950401] \n", + "4081 [Anna Neill] [20081201] \n", + "4084 [J. Jeffrey Franklin] [20050101] \n", + "4085 [Robert E. Lougy] [20020701] \n", + "4087 [Rosemary Clark-Beattie] [19861201] \n", + "4288 [John H. Hagan, Jr.] [19540301] \n", + "4292 [Walter E. Houghton] [19460301] \n", + "4308 [Sarah Gilead] [19860401] \n", + "4309 [J. M. Rignall] [19841001] \n", + "4821 [Dorothy M. Mermin] [19760401] \n", + "4822 [Dennis Taylor] [19750701] \n", + "4830 [Ernest Tuveson] [19660601] \n", + "4832 [Joseph M. Duffy, Jr.] [19680901] \n", + "4835 [U. C. Knoepflmacher] [19671201] \n", + "4837 [Peter Allen] [19880701] \n", + "4844 [Jonathan Arac] [19791201] \n", + "4853 [Robert Preyer] [19650301] \n", + "4854 [Helena Michie] [19890701] \n", + "5353 [Nina Auerbach] [19751001] \n", + "5354 [Bernard J. Paris] [19621201] \n", + "5358 [Christopher Lane] [20020401] \n", + "5359 [Jeff Nunokawa] [20021201] \n", + "5360 [Elizabeth Duquette] [20051001] \n", + "5363 [Peter J. Manning] [19850401] \n", + "5365 [Jay Clayton] [19791201] \n", + "5372 [John P. Farrell] [19890401] \n", + "5373 [Amit Yahav-Brown] [20060101] \n", + "5376 [William Deresiewicz] [19970701] \n", + "5383 [Rebecca F. Stern] [19980701] \n", + "\n", + " disc_name doi \\\n", + "19 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872453 \n", + "26 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872247 \n", + "28 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873139 \n", + "72 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873091 \n", + "105 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873363 \n", + "131 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032017 \n", + "156 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872795 \n", + "176 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40963115 \n", + "180 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872038 \n", + "262 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872596 \n", + "270 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873251 \n", + "321 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029573 \n", + "322 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2871810 \n", + "417 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030019 \n", + "434 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40963186 \n", + "459 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30031927 \n", + "582 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/27654626 \n", + "588 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30031989 \n", + "929 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873017 \n", + "1008 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873079 \n", + "1191 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872240 \n", + "1224 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872788 \n", + "1227 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872695 \n", + "1280 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873354 \n", + "1281 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032007 \n", + "1288 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873132 \n", + "1289 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873082 \n", + "1291 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872849 \n", + "1295 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029595 \n", + "1504 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872517 \n", + "1631 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873451 \n", + "1633 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873265 \n", + "1665 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029569 \n", + "1712 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40963121 \n", + "1716 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/40963110 \n", + "2285 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873133 \n", + "2298 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873083 \n", + "2315 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032008 \n", + "2318 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030281 \n", + "2666 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030197 \n", + "2669 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029566 \n", + "2841 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873355 \n", + "3103 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029887 \n", + "3105 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30031909 \n", + "3109 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30031962 \n", + "3266 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2871573 \n", + "3626 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872227 \n", + "3628 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872689 \n", + "3637 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030266 \n", + "4081 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/27654643 \n", + "4084 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30029996 \n", + "4085 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032028 \n", + "4087 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873176 \n", + "4288 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2871933 \n", + "4292 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2871500 \n", + "4308 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873153 \n", + "4309 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872938 \n", + "4821 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872464 \n", + "4822 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872628 \n", + "4830 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872392 \n", + "4832 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872284 \n", + "4835 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872183 \n", + "4837 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873214 \n", + "4844 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872484 \n", + "4853 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872372 \n", + "4854 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873065 \n", + "5353 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872711 \n", + "5354 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2871945 \n", + "5358 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032016 \n", + "5359 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30032047 \n", + "5360 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030070 \n", + "5363 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872827 \n", + "5365 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2872483 \n", + "5372 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/2873128 \n", + "5373 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030039 \n", + "5376 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030146 \n", + "5383 [Language & Literature, Humanities] 10.2307/30030186 \n", + "\n", + " id jcode journal la no \\\n", + "19 bdec7777-4547-380f-8567-cb4dbcaa9388 [elh] ELH [eng] [1] \n", + "26 af76839c-e17f-336c-a45b-7e2a150cf963 [elh] ELH [eng] [2] \n", + "28 682a0b66-d9b2-305c-99dd-22cd29b16067 [elh] ELH [eng] [4] \n", + "72 4754a86e-dbdb-3cf2-aa1a-0179494fcc8c [elh] ELH [eng] [4] \n", + "105 1bc977c7-5773-3298-affd-38bc079ca44b [elh] ELH [eng] [4] \n", + "131 f3c82cfe-9c11-397a-88db-e0ca9e940bbb [elh] ELH [eng] [1] \n", + "156 7374e142-9fdd-3f05-b302-fd879956047b [elh] ELH [eng] [3] \n", + "176 6f8cb5f6-b189-3a6a-9e45-916007036013 [elh] ELH [eng] [4] \n", + "180 c98fdee0-fbcd-3f85-a8e5-79e409dc1d91 [elh] ELH [eng] [3] \n", + "262 0122a255-44bb-3ac8-8ce9-d2a00136081c [elh] ELH [eng] [3] \n", + "270 05ac14e8-7abc-30d0-83be-61afec8f6965 [elh] ELH [eng] [1] \n", + "321 4cfc267d-99f6-3f8c-ba40-6c3da518af1e [elh] ELH [eng] [3] \n", + "322 99da1747-a84f-33e8-a9ce-65634f009ad4 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"19 [The Metaphorical Imagination of George Eliot] \n", + "26 [Middlemarch: Realism and Symbolic Form] \n", + "28 [The Germ and the Picture in Middlemarch] \n", + "72 [Middlemarch, Realism and the Birth of the Cli... \n", + "105 [The Victorian Discourse of Gambling: Speculat... \n", + "131 [Industrial History, Preindustrial Literature:... \n", + "156 [Pseudonym, Epigraphs, and Narrative Voice: Mi... \n", + "176 [THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM OF SYMPATHY: PARABASIS, ... \n", + "180 [Isabel, Gwendolen, and Dorothea] \n", + "262 [Narrative and History] \n", + "270 [When George Eliot Reads Milton: The Muse in a... \n", + "321 [An Erotics of Detachment: \"Middlemarch\" and N... \n", + "322 [Social Analysis in the Novels of George Eliot] \n", + "417 [Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics... \n", + "434 [THE LARGE NOVEL AND THE LAW OF LARGE NUMBERS;... \n", + "459 [Fiction as Vivisection: G. H. Lewes and Georg... \n", + "582 [Binding the Will: George Eliot and the Practi... \n", + "588 [\"A Difference of Native Language\": Gender, Ge... \n", + "929 [George Eliot's Language of Nature: Production... \n", + "1008 [Bakhtinian Double Voicing in Dickens and Eliot] \n", + "1191 [Front Matter] \n", + "1224 [Front Matter] \n", + "1227 [Volume Information] \n", + "1280 [Volume Information] \n", + "1281 [Volume Information] \n", + "1288 [Volume Information] \n", + "1289 [Volume Information] \n", + "1291 [Volume Information] \n", + "1295 [Volume Information] \n", + "1504 [Self and Society in Trollope] \n", + "1631 [Back Matter] \n", + "1633 [Back Matter] \n", + "1665 [Front Matter] \n", + "1712 [Back Matter] \n", + "1716 [Front Matter] \n", + "2285 [Front Matter] \n", + "2298 [Front Matter] \n", + "2315 [Front Matter] \n", + "2318 [Back Matter] \n", + "2666 [Disturbing Surfaces: Representations of the F... \n", + "2669 [\"A Dreadful Course of Calamities\": Roxana's E... \n", + "2841 [Front Matter] \n", + "3103 [Incognito, Intervention, and Dismemberment in... \n", + "3105 [\"A Middle Class Cut into Two\": Historiography... \n", + "3109 [Felix Holt: Independent Spokesman or Eliot's ... \n", + "3266 [The Happy Ending of Adam Bede] \n", + "3626 [The Pattern of Conversion in Sartor Resartus] \n", + "3628 [Felix Holt and the True Power of Womanhood] \n", + "3637 [Fictional Territory and a Woman's Place: Regi... \n", + "4081 [The Primitive Mind of \"Silas Marner\"] \n", + "4084 [The Life of the Buddha in Victorian England] \n", + "4085 [Filth, Liminality, and Abjection in Charles D... \n", + "4087 [Fables of Rebellion: Anti-Catholicism and the... \n", + "4288 [Structural Patterns in Dickens's Great Expect... \n", + "4292 [The Meaning of Keats's Eve of St. Mark] \n", + "4308 [Liminality, Anti-Liminality, and the Victoria... \n", + "4309 [Dickens and the Catastrophic Continuum of His... \n", + "4821 [Poetry as Fiction: Meredith's Modern Love] \n", + "4822 [The Patterns in Hardy's Poetry] \n", + "4830 [The Creed of the Confidence-Man] \n", + "4832 [Another Version of Pastoral: Oliver Twist] \n", + "4835 [The Post-Romantic Imagination: Adam Bede, Wor... \n", + "4837 [Sir Edmund Gosse and his Modern Readers: The ... \n", + "4844 [Rhetoric and Realism in Nineteenth-Century Fi... \n", + "4853 [Two Styles in the Verse of Robert Browning] \n", + "4854 [\"There is no Friend Like a Sister\": Sisterhoo... \n", + "5353 [Incarnations of the Orphan] \n", + "5354 [George Eliot's Religion of Humanity] \n", + "5358 [Charlotte Brontë on the Pleasure of Hating] \n", + "5359 [Eros and Isolation: The Antisocial George Eliot] \n", + "5360 [\"A New Claim for the Family Renown\": Alice Ja... \n", + "5363 [Wordsworth at St. Bees: Scandals, Sisterhoods... \n", + "5365 [Visionary Power and Narrative Form: Wordswort... \n", + "5372 [Reading the Text of Community in Wuthering He... \n", + "5373 [Reasonableness and Domestic Fiction] \n", + "5376 [Community and Cognition in \"Pride and Prejudi... \n", + "5383 [Moving Parts and Speaking Parts: Situating Vi... \n", + "\n", + " topics ty vo year \\\n", + "19 [Novels, Sympathy, Travel, Dialectic, Allegory... fla [45] 1978 \n", + "26 [Synecdoche, Irony, Pity, Symbolism, Chivalry,... fla [39] 1972 \n", + "28 [Labyrinths, Preludes, Diastole, Harps, Curtai... fla [55] 1988 \n", + "72 [Metonymy, Constructive empiricism, Positivism... fla [57] 1990 \n", + "105 [Gambling, Betting, Vicars, Scapegoats, Stockb... fla [61] 1994 \n", + "131 [Personification, Fetishism, Artistic realism,... fla [69] 2002 \n", + "156 [Literary epigraphs, Narratology, Narrators, P... fla [47] 1980 \n", + "176 [Metonymy, Aestheticism, Sentimentality, Artis... fla [77] 2010 \n", + "180 [Novels, Pity, Irony, Ghost stories, Egotism, ... fla [30] 1963 \n", + "262 [Krises, Aphorisms, Primary qualities, Monads,... fla [41] 1974 \n", + "270 [Paradise, Pity, Asceticism, Immortality, Estr... fla [57] 1990 \n", + "321 [Seduction, Love, Personalism, Punctuation, Wh... fla [74] 2007 \n", + "322 [Aristocracy, Idealism, Snobbery, Vanity, Actu... fla [18] 1951 \n", + "417 [Sympathy, Misanthropy, Egotism, Paranormal ex... fla [73] 2006 \n", + "434 [Gambling, Novels, Determinism, Interjections,... fla [77] 2010 \n", + "459 [Vivisection, Melodrama, Chariots, Microscopes... fla [67] 2000 \n", + "582 [Love, Promises, Loyalty, Fear, Resentment, Eg... fla [75] 2008 \n", + "588 [Visual fixation, Women, Fear, Marriage ceremo... fla [68] 2001 \n", + "929 [Humor, Fables, Confectionery, Parsonages, Hum... fla [48] 1981 \n", + "1008 [Dialogism, Narratology, Irony, Polyphony, Inq... fla [57] 1990 \n", + "1191 None mis [39] 1972 \n", + "1224 None mis [47] 1980 \n", + "1227 None mis [39] 1972 \n", + "1280 None mis [61] 1994 \n", + "1281 None mis [69] 2002 \n", + "1288 None mis [55] 1988 \n", + "1289 None mis [57] 1990 \n", + "1291 None mis [47] 1980 \n", + "1295 None mis [74] 2007 \n", + "1504 [Egoism, Nieces, Idealism, Scapegoats, Complac... fla [45] 1978 \n", + "1631 [Bibliographies, Textbook research, Periodical... mis [59] 1992 \n", + "1633 [Language translation, Novels, Publishing indu... mis [53] 1986 \n", + "1665 [Mailings, Comparative literature, Secondary p... mis [74] 2007 \n", + "1712 [Mailings, Filing systems, Pubs, Wire cloth, L... mis [77] 2010 \n", + "1716 [Student research papers, Postcolonialism, Lib... mis [77] 2010 \n", + "2285 [Mailings, Academic journals, Electronic journ... mis [55] 1988 \n", + "2298 [Mailings, Dance schools, Fees, Subscriptions,... mis [57] 1990 \n", + "2315 [Poetry, Publishing industry, Annotated biblio... mis [69] 2002 \n", + "2318 [Cultural studies, Literary theory, Credit car... mis [63] 1996 \n", + "2666 [Comic theater, Physiognomy, Humor, Voyeurism,... fla [65] 1998 \n", + "2669 [Written narratives, Fortune, Paranoid disorde... fla [74] 2007 \n", + "2841 [Mailings, Publishing industry, Electronic jou... mis [61] 1994 \n", + "3103 [Fear, Midwives, Pity, Androgyny, Seduction, M... fla [70] 2003 \n", + "3105 [Masculinity, Aristocracy, Polemics, Professio... fla [67] 2000 \n", + "3109 [Dialogism, Aristocracy, Radicalism, Satire, W... fla [68] 2001 \n", + "3266 [Sin, Forgiveness, Spiritual love, Preachers, ... fla [3] 1936 \n", + "3626 [Irony, Clothing, Metaphors, Dialectic, Ideali... fla [38] 1971 \n", + "3628 [Womens suffrage movements, Pity, Embroidery, ... fla [46] 1979 \n", + "3637 [Parochialism, Colonialism, Apologetics, Riots... fla [62] 1995 \n", + "4081 [Imagination, Fear, Animal magnetism, Religiou... fla [75] 2008 \n", + "4084 [Divinity, Righteousness, Asceticism, Beatitud... fla [72] 2005 \n", + "4085 [Olfactory perception, Castration, Horror fict... fla [69] 2002 \n", + "4087 [Penance, Fear, Convents, Visual fixation, Hyp... fla [53] 1986 \n", + "4288 [Deceit, Pathos, Parody, Crime reporting, Ambi... fla [21] 1954 \n", + "4292 [Poetry, Martyrdom, Ballads, Facsimiles, Cathe... fla [13] 1946 \n", + "4308 [Scapegoats, Transgression, Hypocrisy, Martyrd... fla [53] 1986 \n", + "4309 [Determinism, Pathos, Fear, Despair, Narrators... fla [51] 1984 \n", + "4821 [Irony, Love relationships, Christmas carols, ... fla [43] 1976 \n", + "4822 None fla [42] 1975 \n", + "4830 [Sin, Piety, Evangelists, Quack doctors, Masqu... fla [33] 1966 \n", + "4832 [Sadness, Pity, Workhouses, Heaven, Funerals, ... fla [35] 1968 \n", + "4835 [Pity, Sadness, Preachers, Sin, Paradise, Lite... fla [34] 1967 \n", + "4837 [Autobiographies, Aesthetic taste, Aestheticis... fla [55] 1988 \n", + "4844 [Novels, Hyperbole, Contiguity, Laughter, Conf... fla [46] 1979 \n", + "4853 [Poetic meter, Rhyme, Musical dissonance, Ship... fla [32] 1965 \n", + "4854 [Goblins, Melodrama, Female sexuality, Male ga... fla [56] 1989 \n", + "5353 [Divine grace, Fear, Labyrinths, Tears, Seduct... fla [42] 1975 \n", + "5354 [Rational egoism, Sympathy, Pantheism, Divinit... fla [29] 1962 \n", + "5358 [Sympathy, Love, Revenge, Misanthropy, Communi... fla [69] 2002 \n", + "5359 [Solitude, Fear, Princesses, Egotism, Melodram... fla [69] 2002 \n", + "5360 [Picturesque beauty, Pity, Sentimentalism, Sub... fla [72] 2005 \n", + "5363 [Priests, Nuns, Liturgy, Benevolence, Methodis... fla [52] 1985 \n", + "5365 [Sadness, Preachers, Ghost stories, Sublimatio... fla [46] 1979 \n", + "5372 [Dialogism, Narratology, Storytelling, Hierogl... fla [56] 1989 \n", + "5373 [Reason, Pluralist school, Letter writing, Par... fla [73] 2006 \n", + "5376 [Irony, Humor, Intimacy, Gossip, Flattery, Com... fla [64] 1997 \n", + "5383 [Spectacle, Silent partners, Dresses, Vocation... fla [65] 1998 \n", + "\n", + " Decade Quoted Words Locations in A with Wordcounts \\\n", + "19 1970 188 [([415187, 415972], 129), ([1691326, 1691647],... \n", + "26 1970 181 [([698796, 699017], 38), ([1368267, 1368353], ... \n", + "28 1980 422 [([18311, 18654], 61), ([36712, 36879], 31), (... \n", + "72 1990 388 [([291679, 291940], 45), ([297602, 297690], 14... \n", + "105 1990 182 [([6270, 6426], 25), ([297998, 298358], 65), (... \n", + "131 2000 216 [([888787, 888912], 19), ([1175936, 1176366], ... \n", + "156 1980 525 [([11700, 11779], 14), ([40138, 40450], 46), (... \n", + "176 2010 539 [([169830, 169925], 16), ([171205, 171814], 11... \n", + "180 1960 114 [([127877, 127994], 20), ([419624, 420202], 94)] \n", + "262 1970 310 [([56, 234], 31), ([196063, 196541], 71), ([40... \n", + "270 1990 560 [([560018, 560102], 16), ([560366, 560784], 67... \n", + "321 2000 355 [([755, 866], 17), ([1974, 2134], 26), ([2515,... \n", + "322 1950 0 [] \n", + "417 2000 65 [([173657, 173756], 18), ([292143, 292406], 47)] \n", + "434 2010 42 [([68597, 68675], 12), ([1787728, 1787883], 30)] \n", + "459 2000 317 [([307101, 307178], 13), ([314546, 314901], 60... \n", + "582 2000 324 [([1019006, 1019209], 36), ([1019478, 1019692]... \n", + "588 2000 0 [] \n", + "929 1980 0 [] \n", + "1008 1990 190 [([8450, 8912], 85), ([8932, 9540], 105)] \n", + "1191 1970 0 [] \n", + "1224 1980 0 [] \n", + "1227 1970 0 [] \n", + "1280 1990 0 [] \n", + "1281 2000 0 [] \n", + "1288 1980 0 [] \n", + "1289 1990 0 [] \n", + "1291 1980 0 [] \n", + "1295 2000 0 [] \n", + "1504 1970 0 [] \n", + "1631 1990 0 [] \n", + "1633 1980 0 [] \n", + "1665 2000 0 [] \n", + "1712 2010 0 [] \n", + "1716 2010 0 [] \n", + "2285 1980 0 [] \n", + "2298 1990 0 [] \n", + "2315 2000 0 [] \n", + "2318 1990 0 [] \n", + "2666 1990 0 [] \n", + "2669 2000 0 [] \n", + "2841 1990 0 [] \n", + "3103 2000 0 [] \n", + "3105 2000 0 [] \n", + "3109 2000 0 [] \n", + "3266 1930 0 [] \n", + "3626 1970 0 [] \n", + "3628 1970 0 [] \n", + "3637 1990 0 [] \n", + "4081 2000 0 [] \n", + "4084 2000 0 [] \n", + "4085 2000 0 [] \n", + "4087 1980 0 [] \n", + "4288 1950 0 [] \n", + "4292 1940 189 [([256, 776], 85), ([1187, 1613], 70), ([2834,... \n", + "4308 1980 0 [] \n", + "4309 1980 0 [] \n", + "4821 1970 0 [] \n", + "4822 1970 0 [] \n", + "4830 1960 0 [] \n", + "4832 1960 0 [] \n", + "4835 1960 0 [] \n", + "4837 1980 0 [] \n", + "4844 1970 0 [] \n", + "4853 1960 0 [] \n", + "4854 1980 0 [] \n", + "5353 1970 0 [] \n", + "5354 1960 0 [] \n", + "5358 2000 0 [] \n", + "5359 2000 239 [([56, 1057], 164), ([1080, 1179], 17), ([2834... \n", + "5360 2000 0 [] \n", + "5363 1980 0 [] \n", + "5365 1970 0 [] \n", + "5372 1980 0 [] \n", + "5373 2000 0 [] \n", + "5376 1990 0 [] \n", + "5383 1990 0 [] \n", + "\n", + " Wordcounts country \n", + "19 [129, 59] US \n", + "26 [38, 13, 130] US \n", + "28 [61, 31, 22, 37, 18, 11, 16, 22, 28, 13, 57, 1... US \n", + "72 [45, 14, 38, 17, 46, 39, 62, 69, 33, 25] US \n", + "105 [25, 65, 59, 33] US \n", + "131 [19, 74, 93, 30] US \n", + "156 [14, 46, 130, 21, 14, 25, 28, 112, 42, 93] US \n", + "176 [16, 111, 129, 73, 87, 29, 31, 25, 38] US \n", + "180 [20, 94] US \n", + "262 [31, 71, 130, 28, 22, 28] US \n", + "270 [16, 67, 24, 21, 25, 68, 37, 50, 25, 16, 19, 1... US \n", + "321 [17, 26, 24, 25, 135, 61, 67] US \n", + "322 [] US \n", + "417 [18, 47] US \n", + "434 [12, 30] US \n", + "459 [13, 60, 22, 14, 41, 30, 15, 18, 86, 18] US \n", + "582 [36, 40, 30, 34, 25, 119, 40] US \n", + "588 [] US \n", + "929 [] US \n", + "1008 [85, 105] US \n", + "1191 [] US \n", + "1224 [] US \n", + "1227 [] US \n", + "1280 [] US \n", + "1281 [] US \n", + "1288 [] US \n", + "1289 [] US \n", + "1291 [] US \n", + "1295 [] US \n", + "1504 [] US \n", + "1631 [] US \n", + "1633 [] US \n", + "1665 [] US \n", + "1712 [] US \n", + "1716 [] US \n", + "2285 [] US \n", + "2298 [] US \n", + "2315 [] US \n", + "2318 [] US \n", + "2666 [] US \n", + "2669 [] US \n", + "2841 [] US \n", + "3103 [] US \n", + "3105 [] US \n", + "3109 [] US \n", + "3266 [] US \n", + "3626 [] US \n", + "3628 [] US \n", + "3637 [] US \n", + "4081 [] US \n", + "4084 [] US \n", + "4085 [] US \n", + "4087 [] US \n", + "4288 [] US \n", + "4292 [85, 70, 34] US \n", + "4308 [] US \n", + "4309 [] US \n", + "4821 [] US \n", + "4822 [] US \n", + "4830 [] US \n", + "4832 [] US \n", + "4835 [] US \n", + "4837 [] US \n", + "4844 [] US \n", + "4853 [] US \n", + "4854 [] US \n", + "5353 [] US \n", + "5354 [] US \n", + "5358 [] US \n", + "5359 [164, 17, 30, 28] US \n", + "5360 [] US \n", + "5363 [] US \n", + "5365 [] US \n", + "5372 [] US \n", + "5373 [] US \n", + "5376 [] US \n", + "5383 [] US " + ] + }, + "execution_count": 157, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "elhJournals = df.loc[df['journal'] == 'ELH']\n", + "elhJournals" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "77" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 158, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(elhJournals)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### ELH articles where journal code is \"elh\"" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "85" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 159, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "elhJournalCodes = df.loc[df['jcode'].str[0] == 'elh']\n", + "len(elhJournalCodes)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Nonmatches" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Locations in ALocations in Bauthorcoverdatedisc_namedoiidjcodejournallanonumMatchespagespublisher_namespsrcHtmltitletopicstyvoyearDecadeQuoted WordsLocations in A with WordcountsWordcountscountry
0[[5809, 6218], [8751, 9046], [57013, 57100], [...[[10456, 10865], [10994, 11737], [12404, 12491...[Harriet Farwell Adams][19840601][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/3044822c6e6ce20-79c4-3c59-af91-b06c3208b37b[ninecentfict]Nineteenth-Century Fiction[eng][1]2069-90[University of California Press]69<cite>Nineteenth-Century Fiction</cite>, Vol. ...[Dorothea and \"Miss Brooke\" in Middlemarch][Sentiment, Fear, Martyrdom, Envy, Vocation, G...fla[39]19841980964[([5809, 6218], 71), ([8751, 9046], 56), ([570...[71, 56, 17, 26, 115, 24, 86, 15, 86, 123, 16,...US
1[][][HUGH WITEMEYER][19910901][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/434707980d7eb58a-e4c1-326b-a195-012da1a4eb11[georelioghlnews]The George Eliot, George Henry Lewes Newsletter[eng][18/19]073-78[Penn State University Press]73<cite>The George Eliot, George Henry Lewes New...None[Lecture methods, Feminism, Pedagogy, Novelist...brvNone199119900[][]US
2[][][Alison Cree, Louis J. Guillette, <suffix>Jr.<...[19950601][Biological Sciences, Science and Mathematics,...10.2307/1564553f7384b7a-36be-3f0f-ac0b-b66455da0d36[jherpetology]None[eng][2]0163-173[Society for the Study of Amphibians and Repti...163<cite>Journal of Herpetology</cite>, Vol. 29, ...[Biennial Reproduction with a Fourteen-Month P...[Animal vivipary, Parturition, Fat body, Skink...fla[29]199519900[][]US
3[[1814, 1922], [1638943, 1639037], [1649154, 1...[[23226, 23334], [25173, 25266], [27097, 27225]][Calvin Bedient][19690401][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/3849222ba20b1ad-b273-3608-bc9b-17b13f6d4e68[hudsonreview]The Hudson Review[eng][1]470-84[Hudson Review, Inc]70<cite>The Hudson Review</cite>, Vol. 22, No. 1...[Middlemarch: Touching Down][Immortality, Asceticism, Sentimentality, Mete...fla[22]1969196062[([1814, 1922], 17), ([1638943, 1639037], 19),...[17, 19, 26]US
4[[397716, 398312], [1588815, 1589729], [158881...[[20493, 21084], [22491, 23406], [22491, 23416]][Jane S. Smith][19770701][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/40754482ef12c01b-c42d-39b8-84dd-d00e6538143c[texastudlitelang]Texas Studies in Literature and Language[eng][2]5188-203[University of Texas Press]188<cite>Texas Studies in Literature and Language...[The Reader as Part of the Fiction: Middlemarch][Novels, Flattery, Humor, Vanity, Meditation, ...fla[19]19771970413[([397716, 398312], 102), ([1588815, 1589729],...[102, 155, 156]US
.................................................................................
6064[][][Paul A. Brown][19570401][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/26991522fa32cdd-0abb-37f8-ab1f-714e67c65582[pmla]None[eng][2]0133-402[Modern Language Association]133<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 72, No. 2 (Apr., 1957)...[1956 Annual Bibliography][Music criticism, Eurythmy, Annotated bibliogr...mis[72]195719500[][]US
6065[][][Paul A. Brown][19600501][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/2699365c8f2a2ba-bf55-30e9-a744-bf9af751d955[pmla]None[eng][2]0135-422[Modern Language Association]135<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 75, No. 2 (May, 1960),...[1959 Annual Bibliography][Onomastics, Music criticism, Periodicals, Ana...mis[75]196019600[][]US
6066[][][Paul A. Brown][19590501][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/269922614b84b3e-49ed-3348-bf73-feb00bc75221[pmla]None[eng][2]067-336[Modern Language Association]67<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 74, No. 2 (May, 1959),...[1958 Annual Bibliography][Music criticism, Bibliographies, Onomastics, ...mis[74]195919500[][]US
6067[][]None[20120101, 20120101][Language & Literature]10.3138/9781442662087.62416af8e-ce14-3993-ab70-42aa0b839b19NoneNone[eng]None0NoneNoneNoneNone[Index to the Collected Works of Northrop Frye...[Myths, Satire, Catharsis, Mimesis, Masques, P...mis[30]201220100[][]Unknown
6068[][]None[19840901][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/46205425804775-9427-339d-be01-4ab206334007[pmla]None[eng][4]0540-789[Modern Language Association]540<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 99, No. 4, Directory (...[Front Matter][Executive committees, Mailings, Literary crit...mis[99]198419800[][]US
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6069 rows × 26 columns

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US \n", + "1 [] US \n", + "2 [] US \n", + "3 [17, 19, 26] US \n", + "4 [102, 155, 156] US \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "6064 [] US \n", + "6065 [] US \n", + "6066 [] US \n", + "6067 [] Unknown \n", + "6068 [] US \n", + "\n", + "[6069 rows x 26 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 160, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df # Print the dataframe" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Locations in ALocations in Bauthorcoverdatedisc_namedoiidjcodejournallanonumMatchespagespublisher_namespsrcHtmltitletopicstyvoyearDecadeQuoted WordsLocations in A with WordcountsWordcountscountry
278[[1777736, 1778104]][[60663, 61483]][Vybarr Cregan-Reid][20130101, 20130101][Language & Literature]10.2307/j.ctt18mbdzh.9a4c64755-4651-3feb-8aaf-a6565b6735b9NoneNone[eng]None3NoneNoneNoneNone[Discovering Gilgamesh, Geology, narrative and...[Narrative plot, Love, Fear, Melodrama, Metony...misNone2013201066[([1777736, 1778104], 66)][66]Unknown
317[][][U. C. Knoepflmacher][19650101, 19650101][Language & Literature]10.2307/j.ctt13x1970.32991fd16-509a-33a2-b768-31e269079eefNoneNone[eng]None0NoneNoneNoneNone[Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: G...NonemisNone196519600[][]Unknown
350[][]None[20151101][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.5325/georelioghlstud.67.2.fmc0759c3c-1dff-3982-ae78-6e440184eaab[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][2]0i-ii[Penn State University Press]i<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[Front Matter][Newsletters, Fair use, Advertising media, Pee...mis[67]201520100[][]US
375[][]None[20150501][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.5325/georelioghlstud.67.1.fm61013785-2b6f-3124-9529-8cdc0985f016[georelioghlstud]George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies[eng][1]0i-iv[Penn State University Press]i<cite>George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie...[Front Matter][Newsletters, Fair use, Advertising media, Pub...mis[67]201520100[][]US
435[][]None[19681001][Language & Literature, Humanities]10.2307/1344791efc9cd8e-b2b0-3eb4-8f63-f2aadbb4bcfa[noveforufict]NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction[eng][1]01-4[Duke University Press]1<cite>NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction</cite>, Vol. 2...[Front Matter][Book publishing, Literary criticism, Written ...mis[2]196819600[][]US
.................................................................................
6025[][]None[20081101][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/2550199350052947-c9db-3814-a86f-4eb9cb956f1b[pmla]None[eng][6]0None[Modern Language Association]None<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 123, No. 6, Program (N...[Back Matter][Assegais, Anthologies, Consumer advertising, ...mis[123]200820000[][]US
6026[][]None[19871101][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/4623987a18e426-8595-3ed8-8d3e-350417c6c73b[pmla]None[eng][6]01087-1288[Modern Language Association]1087<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 102, No. 6, Program (N...[Back Matter][Anthologies, Music criticism, Local area netw...mis[102]198719800[][]US
6032[][]None[19911101][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/462749ad4f1349-385e-3db9-bcfd-93260c166050[pmla]None[eng][6]01408-1608[Modern Language Association]1408<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 106, No. 6, Program (N...[Back Matter][Anthologies, Feminism, International standard...mis[106]199119900[][]US
6033[][]None[19901101][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/4626324caaa434-e52b-35ce-827b-e754ea1467e3[pmla]None[eng][6]01346-1568[Modern Language Association]1346<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 105, No. 6, Program (N...[Back Matter][Academic conferences, Book reviews, Facsimile...mis[105]199019900[][]US
6068[][]None[19840901][Humanities, Language & Literature]10.2307/46205425804775-9427-339d-be01-4ab206334007[pmla]None[eng][4]0540-789[Modern Language Association]540<cite>PMLA</cite>, Vol. 99, No. 4, Directory (...[Front Matter][Executive committees, Mailings, Literary crit...mis[99]198419800[][]US
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457 rows × 26 columns

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" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " Locations in A Locations in B author \\\n", + "278 [[1777736, 1778104]] [[60663, 61483]] [Vybarr Cregan-Reid] \n", + "317 [] [] [U. C. Knoepflmacher] \n", + "350 [] [] None \n", + "375 [] [] None \n", + "435 [] [] None \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "6025 [] [] None \n", + "6026 [] [] None \n", + "6032 [] [] None \n", + "6033 [] [] None \n", + "6068 [] [] None \n", + "\n", + " coverdate disc_name \\\n", + "278 [20130101, 20130101] [Language & Literature] \n", + "317 [19650101, 19650101] [Language & Literature] \n", + "350 [20151101] [Language & Literature, Humanities] \n", + "375 [20150501] [Language & Literature, Humanities] \n", + "435 [19681001] [Language & Literature, Humanities] \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "6025 [20081101] [Humanities, Language & Literature] \n", + "6026 [19871101] [Humanities, Language & Literature] \n", + "6032 [19911101] [Humanities, Language & Literature] \n", + "6033 [19901101] [Humanities, Language & Literature] \n", + "6068 [19840901] [Humanities, Language & Literature] \n", + "\n", + " doi id \\\n", + "278 10.2307/j.ctt18mbdzh.9 a4c64755-4651-3feb-8aaf-a6565b6735b9 \n", + "317 10.2307/j.ctt13x1970.3 2991fd16-509a-33a2-b768-31e269079eef \n", + "350 10.5325/georelioghlstud.67.2.fm c0759c3c-1dff-3982-ae78-6e440184eaab \n", + "375 10.5325/georelioghlstud.67.1.fm 61013785-2b6f-3124-9529-8cdc0985f016 \n", + "435 10.2307/1344791 efc9cd8e-b2b0-3eb4-8f63-f2aadbb4bcfa \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "6025 10.2307/25501993 50052947-c9db-3814-a86f-4eb9cb956f1b \n", + "6026 10.2307/462398 7a18e426-8595-3ed8-8d3e-350417c6c73b \n", + "6032 10.2307/462749 ad4f1349-385e-3db9-bcfd-93260c166050 \n", + "6033 10.2307/462632 4caaa434-e52b-35ce-827b-e754ea1467e3 \n", + "6068 10.2307/462054 25804775-9427-339d-be01-4ab206334007 \n", + "\n", + " jcode journal la \\\n", + "278 None None [eng] \n", + "317 None None [eng] \n", + "350 [georelioghlstud] George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies [eng] \n", + "375 [georelioghlstud] George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies [eng] \n", + "435 [noveforufict] NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction [eng] \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "6025 [pmla] None [eng] \n", + "6026 [pmla] None [eng] \n", + "6032 [pmla] None [eng] \n", + "6033 [pmla] None [eng] \n", + "6068 [pmla] None [eng] \n", + "\n", + " no numMatches pages publisher_name sp \\\n", + "278 None 3 None None None \n", + "317 None 0 None None None \n", + "350 [2] 0 i-ii [Penn State University Press] i \n", + "375 [1] 0 i-iv [Penn State University Press] i \n", + "435 [1] 0 1-4 [Duke University Press] 1 \n", + "... ... ... ... ... ... \n", + "6025 [6] 0 None [Modern Language Association] None \n", + "6026 [6] 0 1087-1288 [Modern Language Association] 1087 \n", + "6032 [6] 0 1408-1608 [Modern Language Association] 1408 \n", + "6033 [6] 0 1346-1568 [Modern Language Association] 1346 \n", + "6068 [4] 0 540-789 [Modern Language Association] 540 \n", + "\n", + " srcHtml \\\n", + "278 None \n", + "317 None \n", + "350 George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie... \n", + "375 George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studie... \n", + "435 NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction, Vol. 2... \n", + "... ... \n", + "6025 PMLA, Vol. 123, No. 6, Program (N... \n", + "6026 PMLA, Vol. 102, No. 6, Program (N... \n", + "6032 PMLA, Vol. 106, No. 6, Program (N... \n", + "6033 PMLA, Vol. 105, No. 6, Program (N... \n", + "6068 PMLA, Vol. 99, No. 4, Directory (... \n", + "\n", + " title \\\n", + "278 [Discovering Gilgamesh, Geology, narrative and... \n", + "317 [Religious Humanism and the Victorian Novel: G... \n", + "350 [Front Matter] \n", + "375 [Front Matter] \n", + "435 [Front Matter] \n", + "... ... \n", + "6025 [Back Matter] \n", + "6026 [Back Matter] \n", + "6032 [Back Matter] \n", + "6033 [Back Matter] \n", + "6068 [Front Matter] \n", + "\n", + " topics ty vo year \\\n", + "278 [Narrative plot, Love, Fear, Melodrama, Metony... mis None 2013 \n", + "317 None mis None 1965 \n", + "350 [Newsletters, Fair use, Advertising media, Pee... mis [67] 2015 \n", + "375 [Newsletters, Fair use, Advertising media, Pub... mis [67] 2015 \n", + "435 [Book publishing, Literary criticism, Written ... mis [2] 1968 \n", + "... ... ... ... ... \n", + "6025 [Assegais, Anthologies, Consumer advertising, ... mis [123] 2008 \n", + "6026 [Anthologies, Music criticism, Local area netw... mis [102] 1987 \n", + "6032 [Anthologies, Feminism, International standard... mis [106] 1991 \n", + "6033 [Academic conferences, Book reviews, Facsimile... mis [105] 1990 \n", + "6068 [Executive committees, Mailings, Literary crit... mis [99] 1984 \n", + "\n", + " Decade Quoted Words Locations in A with Wordcounts Wordcounts country \n", + "278 2010 66 [([1777736, 1778104], 66)] [66] Unknown \n", + "317 1960 0 [] [] Unknown \n", + "350 2010 0 [] [] US \n", + "375 2010 0 [] [] US \n", + "435 1960 0 [] [] US \n", + "... ... ... ... ... ... \n", + "6025 2000 0 [] [] US \n", + "6026 1980 0 [] [] US \n", + "6032 1990 0 [] [] US \n", + "6033 1990 0 [] [] US \n", + "6068 1980 0 [] [] US \n", + "\n", + "[457 rows x 26 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 161, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df[df.title.apply(isGarbage)] # How many garbage items? " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Try to find out what articles contain no Middlemarch citations\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches = df[df['Locations in A'].apply(lambda x: len(x) == 0)]\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "[['Back Matter'],\n", + " ['Front Matter'],\n", + " ['Volume Information'],\n", + " ['Summary of Periodical Literature'],\n", + " ['Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century'],\n", + " ['Books Received'],\n", + " ['List of Publications Received'],\n", + " ['Recent Books'],\n", + " ['Abstracts'],\n", + " ['Review']]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 163, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "n = 10\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches['title'].value_counts()[:n].index.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "count 4427\n", + "unique 3645\n", + "top [Back Matter]\n", + "freq 208\n", + "Name: title, dtype: object" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 164, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "# What is the most frequent name of articles with no citations?\n", + "articlesWithoutMatches['title'].describe()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Generating samples of dataset for evaluating the precision and recall of text matcher\n", + "First, we're going to generate a smaller sample dataset, which we'll then perform bootstrapping on.\n", + "\n", + "First, let's stratify our dataset by year, and then take a random sample in that year." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "464" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 180, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articlesWithMatches1960_2015 = articlesWithMatches[articlesWithMatches['Decade'] >= 1960]\n", + "len(articlesWithMatches1960_2015)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "56" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 181, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "len(articlesWithMatches1960_2015['year'].value_counts())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Generate random sample" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "Representations 1\n", + "Victorian Studies 3\n", + "The British Journal of Sociology 1\n", + "Nineteenth-Century Fiction 8\n", + "George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies 4\n", + "Modern Philology 2\n", + "Biography 1\n", + "Texas Studies in Literature and Language 1\n", + "Victorian Literature and Culture 1\n", + "Studies in the Novel 1\n", + "The Cambridge Quarterly 1\n", + "NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction 1\n", + "The Yearbook of English Studies 1\n", + "Poetica 1\n", + "ELH 4\n", + "Nineteenth-Century Literature 2\n", + "Feminist Studies 1\n", + "Name: journal, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 192, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "sampleData = articlesWithMatches1960_2015.sample(n=56, random_state=56)\n", + "sampleData['journal'].value_counts(sort=False)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "sampleData.to_csv('../data/sample_dataset.csv', encoding='utf-8')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Function to loop over each row, extracting locations in A and metadata, then output that to a new text file\n", + "def extractSampleDataMatches(sampleData):\n", + " for i, row in sampleData.iterrows():\n", + " title = row['title']\n", + " year = row['year']\n", + " # Print a break between each article\n", + " with open('../data/sample-data-matches.txt', \"a\") as f:\n", + " print(\"---------------------------------------\\n\", file=f)\n", + " print(title, file=f)\n", + " print(year, file=f)\n", + " # For each pair of locations in the \"Locations in A\" column, iterate over, printing the location indexes\n", + " # Followed by the\n", + " for pair in row['Locations in A']:\n", + " print(f\"Location in A: {pair}\", file=f)\n", + " print(mm[pair[0]:pair[1]]+\"\\n\", file=f)\n", + " \n", + "extractSampleDataMatches(sampleData)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "### Evaluation metrics\n", + "\n", + "Terminology\n", + "TP (True Positives):\n", + "TN (True Negatives): \n", + "FP (False Posiives): \n", + "FN (False Negatives): \n", + "\n", + "**Classification accuracy:** percentage of correctly identified quotes and non-quotes, or overall, how often is the matcher correct? classification_accuracy = (TP + TN) / float(TP + TN + FP + FN)))\n", + "\n", + " **Recall (or \"sensitivity\")**: When the actual match is correc, how often is the prediction correct? recall = TP / float(FN + TP)\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "**Precision:** When a match is detected, how often is that match correct? precision = TP / float(TP + FP)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3.8.8 ('base')", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "40d3a090f54c6569ab1632332b64b2c03c39dcf918b08424e98f38b5ae0af88f" + } + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 4a4a4c424ab659462802039f5c3f951220711e8c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2023 16:11:07 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 27/63] fixed merge problems --- text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb | 278 +++++++++++----------------- 1 file changed, 108 insertions(+), 170 deletions(-) diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb index 1e04c56..b021fd0 100644 --- a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb +++ b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb @@ -1,174 +1,112 @@ { - "cells": [ - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "Run Text_Matcher Algorithm" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, -======= - "execution_count": 2, ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "from matcher import Text, Matcher\n", - "import json\n", - "import pandas as pd\n", - "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", - "%matplotlib inline\n", - "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", - "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "execution_count": 8, -======= - "execution_count": 3, ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", - "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "\n", - "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/part-1.jsonl'\n", -======= - "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/testing.jsonl'\n", ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "with open(articles) as f: \n", - " rawArticles = f.readlines()\n", - "\n", - "# Parse the data. \n", - "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawArticles]\n", - "\n", - "# Load the text you want to find quotations from. Replace text with the text file you want to use.\n", - "\n", - "text = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", - "with open(text) as f: \n", - " rawText = f.read()\n", - "\n", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble') # Replace with the name of the article" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "Let's match the articles!" -======= - "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "execution_count": 9, -======= - "execution_count": 4, ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ -<<<<<<< HEAD - " Matching article 5184 of 5185" -======= - " Matching article 22 of 231 total matches found.\n", - "\n", - "\n", - "match 1:\n", - "\u001b[32mGender Trouble\u001b[0m: (50788, 50940) desire? Are these terms discrete \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the Heterosexual\n", - "\u001b[32mhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/23345044\u001b[0m: (21407, 21558) Gender Trouble, Judith Butler asks \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Butler, xxxii). Admittedly, application of the American feminist's\n" ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - ] - } + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Run Text_Matcher Algorithm" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 3, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", + "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", + "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/testing.jsonl'\n", + "with open(articles) as f: \n", + " rawArticles = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "# Parse the data. \n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawArticles]\n", + "\n", + "# Load the text you want to find quotations from. Replace text with the text file you want to use.\n", + "\n", + "text = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "with open(text) as f: \n", + " rawText = f.read()\n", + "\n", + "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 4, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + " Matching article 22 of 231 total matches found.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "match 1:\n", + "\u001b[32mGender Trouble\u001b[0m: (50788, 50940) desire? Are these terms discrete \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the Heterosexual\n", + "\u001b[32mhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/23345044\u001b[0m: (21407, 21558) Gender Trouble, Judith Butler asks \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Butler, xxxii). Admittedly, application of the American feminist's\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", + " clear_output()\n", + " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", + " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", + " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", + " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", + " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 13, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", + "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", + "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" + ] + } ], - "source": [ - "for i, article in enumerate(data): \n", - " clear_output()\n", - " print('\\r', 'Matching article %s of %s' % (i, len(data)), end='')\n", - " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", - " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", - " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", -<<<<<<< HEAD - " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()\n", - " article['fullText'] = '' #drop the fulltext asap" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "Turn the data into a pandas dataframe, drop the full text, and turn it back into a jsonl file for future analysis" -======= - " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "execution_count": 10, -======= - "execution_count": 13, ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", - "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", -<<<<<<< HEAD - "\n", - "#Replace 'finaldata.jsonl' with whatever name you want to give this file.\n", -======= ->>>>>>> 4b822f34e7cc17fa235e6069c0c12451b154eefe - "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" - ] - } - ], - "metadata": { - "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3", - "language": "python", - "name": "python3" - }, - "language_info": { - "codemirror_mode": { - "name": "ipython", - "version": 3 + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 }, - "file_extension": ".py", - "mimetype": "text/x-python", - "name": "python", - "nbconvert_exporter": "python", - "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.8.8" - }, - "orig_nbformat": 4 - }, - "nbformat": 4, - "nbformat_minor": 2 + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 } From cdaa97a50a7b8b4f9fc58990975edf3773b4e65c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2023 16:37:47 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 28/63] spell check for all articles spell check now runs on all articles --- .gitignore | 1 + preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 288 ++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 2 files changed, 256 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 7ed0c55..f520a3b 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -2,3 +2,4 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json +algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 0db288a..af2ed02 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -10,13 +10,14 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, + "execution_count": 82, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", "import json\n", "import pandas as pd\n", + "import random\n", "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", "%matplotlib inline\n", "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", @@ -29,25 +30,20 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "# Load in our Data Files" + "# Load in our Data Files\n", + "\n", + "🛑 Input a link to the json file of articles to run the spell-check on\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 83, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ - "# Load Middlemarch .txt file \n", - "# (Note: must have 'middlemarch.txt' in this directory)\n", - "with open('../algorithm-testing/middlemarch.txt') as f: \n", - " rawMM = f.read()\n", - "\n", - "mm = Text(rawMM, 'Middlemarch')\n", - "\n", "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", - "df = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json')" + "articles = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)" ] }, { @@ -57,58 +53,284 @@ "source": [ "# Importing the spell-check package\n", "\n", - "## Input an article_id to run the spell-check on\n", - "\n", "Languages tested:\n", "* English - ‘en’\n", "* Spanish - ‘es’\n", "* French - ‘fr’\n", - "* German - ‘de’" + "* German - ‘de’\n", + "\n", + "Make sure to run `pip install pyspellchecker` in terminal before running the cell below\n", + "\n", + "Recommended upper bound of anomaly beyond 75% percentile based on normal distribution:\n", + "\n", + " mean = 0.12764241550612537\n", + " n = 30\n", + " std = 0.02330421008\n", + " [25 percentile, 75 percentile]: [0.1119237258,0.1433611052]\n", + "\n", + " Reccomended bound: 85.66\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 21, + "execution_count": 162, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "Percent incorrect: 0.16329941860465116\n" + "{}\n" ] } ], "source": [ "from spellchecker import SpellChecker\n", "\n", - "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the correct article id 🛑 ‼️\n", - "article_id = 'http://www.jstor.org/stable/439034' # CHANGE THIS to article id\n", + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the desired accuracy bound 🛑 ‼️\n", + "bound = 85.66\n", + "\n", + "#initialize dictionary pairing readability scores and article id's\n", + "articles_read_scores = {}\n", + "\n", + "#print(len(articles.index))\n", + "\n", + "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", + "for index in range(0,1):\n", + " article_index = index\n", + "\n", + " # defining variables\n", + " article_id = articles['id'].loc[article_index] \n", + " article_text = articles['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + " article_title = articles['title'].loc[article_index]\n", "\n", - "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", + " # Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + " cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", "\n", - "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", + " word_list = cleaned_article_text.getTokens()\n", + " \n", + " #word_list = ((\" \").join(cleaned_article_text)).split(\" \")\n", "\n", - "# Use article_id to get the index of the article in our DataFrame\n", - "article_index = df[df['id'] == article_id].index[0]\n", - "article_text = df['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", - "article_title = df['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + " #word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(1)))\n", "\n", - "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", - "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + " #word_list = word_list[:int(len(word_list)*6/10)]\n", "\n", - "word_list = ((\" \").join(article_text)).split(\" \")\n", + " # finding the document language\n", + " languages = ['en','fr','es','de']\n", + " abbrev_word_list = word_list[:50]\n", + " incorrect = []\n", + " for lg in languages:\n", + " spell = SpellChecker(language = lg)\n", + " misspelled = spell.unknown(abbrev_word_list)\n", + " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", + " lang = languages[incorrect.index(min(incorrect))]\n", "\n", - "# find those words that may be misspelled\n", - "incorrect = []\n", - "for lang in ['en','fr','es','de']:\n", + " # find those words that may be misspelled\n", " spell = SpellChecker(language = lang)\n", " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", "\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(min(incorrect))/len(word_list)\n", + " #output the readability score\n", + " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", "\n", - "print(\"Percent incorrect:\", incorrect_percentage)\n" + " if (1 - incorrect_percentage) < float(bound)/100:\n", + " articles_read_scores[article_id] = [article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage]\n", + "\n", + "print(articles_read_scores)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 27, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
-to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have
-as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one
-of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded
-my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an
-embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even
-as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in
-the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it
-belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
-and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
-undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the
-former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the
-case of Gender Trouble.
-In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual
-assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views
-that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and
-restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity
-and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory
-~
-that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
-practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often
-with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to
-seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and
-exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or
-derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for
-readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field
-of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities
-ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in
-the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal,
-and illegitimate is likely to pose that question.
-Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual
-and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and
-all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought
-to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions
-about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the
-face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of
-gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must
-be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded
-from any effort to think gender?
-Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was
-called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists.
-Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of
-sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be
-~
-one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
-on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If
-in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof
-from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the
-case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point
-was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those
-theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the
-critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed
-strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive
-can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism
-is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years,
-however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and
-sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism
-of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the
-domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether
-my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty
-Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but
-perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between
-the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim
-that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural
-studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory
-(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural
-studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the
-point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural
-appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure,
-where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is
-not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where
-cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and
-its promise of success, uncertain.
-~
-Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
-American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate
-theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although
-the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it
-will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of
-the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein,
-various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva,
-Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in
-France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a
-French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct
-from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist
-inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has
-threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few
-French publishers who have considered it.1
-Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It
-emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates
-on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and
-feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality,
-and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique
-Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and
-lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the
-1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism,
-Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the
-two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what
-is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con-
-
-~
-summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in
-a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call
-into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do
-certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is
-a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through
-normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to
-queer contexts?
-The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender
-emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and
-sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender.
-Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent
-that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and
-to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s
-sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of
-“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror
-and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one
-sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a
-certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and
-language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various
-new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism
-and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme
-identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who
-become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”?
-What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must
-be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness”
-that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some
-lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status
-
-~
-as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years,
-offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not
-anticipate.2
-But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought
-to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual
-practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of
-normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
-of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
-of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there
-are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes:
-Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of
-gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of
-sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization
-of inequality between men and women.3
-
-In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is
-not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender,
-but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is
-what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may
-be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said.
-Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for
-the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy
-serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are
-gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony?
-Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative
-use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming
-the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender,
-MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for
-thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender
-~
-discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
-discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment
-may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there
-are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is
-important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated
-against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in
-accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment
-of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity.
-Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender
-means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with
-some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that
-men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be
-straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a
-critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her
-womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination
-becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender
-should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter
-accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that
-the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but
-seeks to oppose it.
-I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn
-an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal
-or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one
-~
-perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
-normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to
-be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is
-meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension
-of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are
-clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede,
-however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered
-ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at
-all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or
-deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for
-instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably
-mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing.
-Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying
-and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender
-Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only
-because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have
-changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but
-because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of
-gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.”
-There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law,
-attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which
-that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its
-object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that
-might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very
-phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which
-~
-the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
-outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization
-in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained
-temporal duration.8
-Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and
-one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender
-is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal
-essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed
-that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we
-anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an
-hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble
-clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into
-the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and
-several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to
-come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic
-break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I
-would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of
-a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical
-mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted.
-Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do
-become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through
-that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche
-performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration.
-Although this text does not answer the question of whether the
-materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of
-much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the
-~
-reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
-can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several
-scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made
-explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple
-analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not
-whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but
-what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race.
-Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,”
-whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that
-no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
-always work as background for one another, and they often find their
-most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
-of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once,
-and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive
-category of analysis.12
-Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and
-debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a
-full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions
-of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was
-produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social
-movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a
-lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in
-which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book.
-Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a
-person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw
-many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of
-some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural
-edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the
-midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom,
-and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a
-part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension.
-At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living
-~
-a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
-book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth
-Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life.
-That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
-solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
-problem that this someone is given in language).
-It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the
-text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same
-time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its
-reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated
-with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
-to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and
-the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
-were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the
-relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist
-jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of
-Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug.
-In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in
-Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I
-tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and
-exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important
-strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I
-worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human
-Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual
-minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to
-understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out
-the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet
-~
-met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
-defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More
-recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory
-and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book
-that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of
-hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be
-published by Verso in 2000).
-Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in
-relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that
-seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on
-questions of sexuality, gender, and culture.
-Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to
-the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to
-some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular”
-according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps
-attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the
-complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of
-calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for
-grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive.
-I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend.
-Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly,
-one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are
-not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style
-are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible
-speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of
-not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell,
-in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about
-common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar
-is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints
-~
-that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
-But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly
-irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and
-sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who
-are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does
-their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual
-life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of
-linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical
-norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at
-the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part,
-through contesting the grammar in which gender is given.
-The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon
-looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing
-perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the
-sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who
-devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve?
-What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency”
-keep obscure?
-I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender
-norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body,
-deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the
-Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their
-sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the
-age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and
-homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation
-but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on
-a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this
-violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at
-the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be
-~
-a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
-agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the
-violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
-text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the
-pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality
-that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The
-writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to
-play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real”
-politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are
-always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible,
-and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be
-like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended
-kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate
-the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14
-Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the
-realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose
-are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to
-judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings
-in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to
-describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender
-ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also
-pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete
-consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender
-Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender
-is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It
-is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the
-~
-same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
-world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of
-a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be
-good.”
-Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide
-between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their
-judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and
-then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on
-the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what
-makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility,
-whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which
-expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying
-persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way.
-The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a
-question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a
-fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what
-is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense
-prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation.
-I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes
-the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such
-judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be
-made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves
-posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always
-run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition
-and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity
-culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name
-the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what
-is at stake in using the term at all?
-~
-What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
-questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
-how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In
-other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit
-the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the
-means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are
-the means by which we transform it?
-The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of
-subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is
-rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or
-a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those
-perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced
-through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory
-appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take
-the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood,
-and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this
-perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of
-the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or
-we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or
-how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it
-is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly
-erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality,
-then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy
-from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be
-preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may
-not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees?
-The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail,
-
-~
-when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely
-the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered
-is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories
-itself constitutes the experience of the body in question.
-When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is
-also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from
-the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand
-that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized
-knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call
-it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in
-itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real.
-And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices
-that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and
-reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented
-and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be
-made differently and, indeed, less violently.
-The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a
-true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling
-of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized
-knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism,
-heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and
-improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten
-by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish
-what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be
-considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which
-bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this
-legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is
-
-~
-not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter
-the violence performed by gender norms.
-In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the
-condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain
-performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal
-dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in
-response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications.
-Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and
-I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and
-revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and
-expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the
-volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political
-(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions
-(Routledge, 1995).
-I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I”
-to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I”
-that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the
-availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that
-structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes
-this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it.
-What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar
-that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that
-establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely
-~
-to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
-trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without
-which no “I” can appear.
-This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from
-a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of
-the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the
-publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory
-of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the
-ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in
-The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency.
-Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or
-that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read
-directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined
-over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have
-come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and
-that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In
-Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied
-relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider
-that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences.
-Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor
-to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous.
-This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the
-insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of
-both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.
-~
-If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
-include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal
-gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I
-would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular,
-how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized
-forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual
-minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will
-refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a
-coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and
-its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power,
-and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to
-refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining
-recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within
-reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider
-it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the
-purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of
-identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no
-reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position
-purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as
-the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those
-who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold
-that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life
-of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
-try to live, on the sexual margins.15
-Judith Butler
-Berkeley, California
-June, 1999
-~
-
-Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
-and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps
-trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was,
-within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should
-never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion
-and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of
-power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in
-trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble
-is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it.
-As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I
-noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the
-terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and
-unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I
-read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject
-of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the
-unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the
-glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the
-~
-masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
-the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my
-attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than
-an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion
-between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate
-in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I
-asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the
-Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those
-terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the
-subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic
-regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology?
-But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into
-question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support
-gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of
-“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female
-indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is,
-the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories
-is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to
-require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of
-the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that
-gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
-Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
-natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
-which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through
-which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted
-~
-through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
-body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize
-“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative
-construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be
-shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original,
-and the inevitable?
-To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as
-effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical
-inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual
-identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
-discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this
-inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions:
-phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality.
-Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion,
-its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both
-terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this
-inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests.
-Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle
-the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of
-politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the
-consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
-new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no
-longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what
-extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
-for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself?
-* * *
-~
-This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
-gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1,
-“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as
-the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory
-heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of
-power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of
-sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the
-feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the
-female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how
-do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where
-are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce
-the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of
-power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of
-continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
-these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
-into question their alleged relations?
-Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
-Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism
-that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities
-within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within
-some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of
-cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued
-through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan
-Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is
-subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The
-History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown
-both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual
-~
-economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
-complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual
-codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about
-the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies?
-The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical
-consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva
-in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged
-to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of
-Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an
-insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and
-fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions,
-Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas
-and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body,
-sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification
-and proliferation beyond the binary frame.
-It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within
-its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of
-the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a
-childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact.
-Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which
-gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is
-~
-clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
-various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled
-to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the
-predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
-author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other
-discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical
-boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
-participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from
-other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an
-interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist
-the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique.
-The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of
-Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship
-for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for
-Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and
-provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The
-George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported
-my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has
-been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this
-manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The
-“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under
-Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by
-virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective
-thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna
-Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll
-Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender,
-Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985
-and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to
-~
-imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
-critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work
-from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities
-Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the
-University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School
-of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and
-her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial
-and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues
-who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar,
-Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice
-Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone,
-Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work
-in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project
-and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance.
-As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination,
-keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work.
-
-~
-
-~
-GENDER TROUBL
-~
-
-~
-1
-
-Subjects of
-Sex/Gender/Desire
-One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one.
-—Simone de Beauvoir
-Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist.
-—Julia Kristeva
-Woman does not have a sex.
-—Luce Irigaray
-The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex.
-—Michel Foucault
-The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual.
-—Monique Wittig
-
-i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism
-For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some
-existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not
-only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
-representation serves as the operative term within a political process
-that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political
-subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function
-of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is
-~
-assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
-the development of a language that fully or adequately represents
-women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of
-women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all.
-Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist
-discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable
-or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after
-all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of
-women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out
-in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed,
-with the result that representation is extended only to what can be
-acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being
-a subject must first be met before representation can be extended.
-Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
-appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is,
-through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the
-contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them,
-formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements
-of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
-of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
-representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
-facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
-system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential
-~
-axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
-masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
-emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
-The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
-politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
-through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the
-juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the
-political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating
-and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively
-concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical
-structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces”
-what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned
-with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In
-effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject
-before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s
-own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women
-might become more fully represented in language and politics.
-Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
-“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
-very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
-Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
-the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the
-law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
-well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law
-as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing
-assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law
-might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature
-hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a
-presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and,
-thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.
-~
-Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
-the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism
-encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common
-identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
-whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural,
-has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As
-Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by
-the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a
-woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
-because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of
-its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
-consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
-separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in
-which it is invariably produced and maintained.
-The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for
-feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist
-cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
-women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
-a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its
-failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts
-have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the
-start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its
-efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support
-highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
-construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western
-barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for
-patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own
-~
-claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
-categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to
-produce women’s common subjugated experience.
-Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
-kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
-difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is
-there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
-there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
-integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified
-against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
-formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
-both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its
-difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of
-“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
-exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but
-in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully
-decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from
-the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of
-identity a misnomer.4
-My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the
-subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the
-representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature
-insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the
-category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory
-consequences of that construction, even when the construction has
-been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation
-within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from
-“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary
-~
-limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
-representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the
-constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem
-is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for
-merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
-exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion
-itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By
-conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism
-articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross
-misrepresentation.
-Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
-constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position
-outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating
-practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present,
-as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted
-frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize.
-Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics,
-a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a
-feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the
-ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order
-to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on
-other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical
-critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having
-to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested
-by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably
-excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in
-a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals
-to extend its claims to “representation”?5
-Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of
-~
-the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
-regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of
-the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves
-to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
-of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of
-gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
-identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a
-political goal.
-To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what
-qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a
-feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort
-to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic
-invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend
-representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion
-of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of
-the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics?
-The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of
-feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a
-field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation.
-Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense
-for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed.
-ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire
-Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject
-by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex
-and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability
-sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is
-~
-neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
-of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction
-that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7
-If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
-then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
-to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
-Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
-that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of
-males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even
-if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
-and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to
-assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of
-a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise
-restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as
-radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily
-signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male
-body as easily as a female one.
-This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set
-of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without
-first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what
-means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific
-discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex
-have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is
-there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy
-that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are
-the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests?
-If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
-called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it
-~
-was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
-between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11
-It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural
-interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
-not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a
-pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the
-very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
-also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
-a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of
-“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it
-is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for
-sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be
-understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to
-encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production?
-iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of
-Contemporary Debate
-Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential
-attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What
-gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
-is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness
-imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of
-agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
-laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What
-~
-sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
-gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law.
-When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
-terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In
-such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
-On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
-that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For
-Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
-agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and
-could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable
-and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear
-that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion
-to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.”
-There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who
-becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as
-she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
-been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
-a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
-shown to have been gender all along.14
-The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to
-founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will
-and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that
-some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits
-the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a
-passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the
-instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will
-~
-ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
-as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the
-mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does
-the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do
-we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument
-awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15
-Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse
-which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to
-safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender”
-or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose
-and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered
-possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the
-limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always
-set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on
-binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality.
-Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender.
-Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
-of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
-gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
-differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
-only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not
-an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that
-only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the
-masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of
-~
-their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
-In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray
-argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within
-the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.”
-Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language,
-women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity.
-Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex
-constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense,
-women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to
-Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray
-argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a
-closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing
-goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir,
-women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of
-signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the
-Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity
-of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as
-inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the
-metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject.
-What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform
-thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist
-conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is
-the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist
-feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person
-who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,”
-called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral
-deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,
-~
-der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
-gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable
-contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what
-the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the
-constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and
-contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being,
-but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically
-specific sets of relations.
-Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point
-of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an
-abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This
-absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s)
-that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray,
-the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female
-sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither
-“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the
-Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for
-Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir
-would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms
-of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even
-in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one.
-The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in
-a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men
-could not settle the question of women because they would then be
-acting as both judge and party to the case.18
-The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;
-~
-each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
-meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of
-socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of
-gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above.
-The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume
-that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which,
-on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned
-within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility
-of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements
-about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be
-argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is,
-indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and
-man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of
-identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry.
-For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms
-of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to
-immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for
-the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and,
-hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her
-position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
-is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as
-female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
-to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom.
-Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of
-~
-negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
-The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will
-later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both
-the existential subject and its Other.
-Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation
-and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting
-essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is
-clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts
-to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/
-body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The
-preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the
-very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes,
-Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political
-and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates
-the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
-and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
-mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender
-hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized.
-The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from
-“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very
-mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of
-gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body
-is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body,
-in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a
-~
-masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
-off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian
-terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading,
-Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not
-the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and
-en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting
-linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place.
-iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond
-Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by
-which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed
-reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that
-the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist
-critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical
-structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that
-traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
-difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological
-imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of
-cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism?
-The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
-global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a
-repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23
-Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to
-~
-the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
-singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
-strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms.
-That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike
-suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the
-varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly
-insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related,
-distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed,
-the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of
-dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual
-difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot
-be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism
-or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one
-tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service
-of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain.
-The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the
-question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or
-shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture
-feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who
-claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and
-is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege
-intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of
-the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of
-~
-cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
-of “women” are constructed.
-Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics
-which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be.
-They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously
-positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework
-of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not
-to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging
-and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in
-advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates
-coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert
-herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for
-coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee
-unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not
-the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and,
-most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition.
-The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes
-that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action.
-But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on
-unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and
-take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what
-dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of
-democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific
-and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a
-conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power
-relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be
-interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a
-liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions
-of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to
-~
-gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
-complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that
-category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve
-as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force.
-Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature
-insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged
-fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the
-“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired.
-Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of
-identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt
-the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish
-precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted
-at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context
-of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of
-identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions
-must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
-permanently moot.
-This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes
-neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a
-coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because
-the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
-definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity
-concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist
-tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity
-concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities
-or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or
-~
-subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
-depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain
-political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to
-accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous
-self that offers its complexity at once.
-Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
-never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition,
-then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without
-obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure.
-v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance
-What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the
-same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do
-these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would
-be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed
-prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological
-discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the
-person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the
-various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility
-and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the
-person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally
-related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that
-literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the
-focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
-what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts
-~
-almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
-person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through
-time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of
-gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To
-what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive
-feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
-other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
-logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
-assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
-the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
-emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
-who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered
-norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
-“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
-maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
-sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
-norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines
-of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders,
-and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual
-desire through sexual practice.
-The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that
-generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender
-norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the
-production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between
-“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive
-attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which
-gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of
-~
-“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
-from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation
-of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate
-the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain
-kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural
-intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical
-impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and
-regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up
-within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder.
-Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems
-crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of
-what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist
-between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect
-of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
-relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
-a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in
-which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression?
-Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the
-identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine,
-that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and
-those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category
-of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the
-category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,
-~
-onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
-with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of
-heterosexual hegemony.
-The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on
-how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive
-capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a
-“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western
-culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation
-and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off.
-Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple
-negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a
-monologic elaboration of the masculine.
-Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex
-appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically
-speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a
-performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact
-that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray,
-grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely
-because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation
-between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the
-substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well
-as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary
-that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive
-multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an
-~
-artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
-sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies.
-For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive
-aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she
-claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In
-other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender,
-and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian”
-emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary
-restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no
-metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination,
-appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
-the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands
-first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept
-I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an
-inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27
-The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
-is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized
-features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and
-autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the
-destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an
-attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche,
-come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In
-other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but
-the feminine:
-
-~
-Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between
-the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there
-are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine”
-not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the
-general.28
-
-Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can
-assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that
-destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal
-point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality
-through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the
-normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of
-substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not
-only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and
-materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a
-radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction
-between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of
-the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not
-only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to
-that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production
-and naturalization of the category of sex itself.
-The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with
-Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a
-number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain
-illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that
-the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior
-ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues
-Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity,
-order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do
-
-~
-they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes,
-this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the
-psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical
-thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the
-metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the
-psychological person as a substantive thing:
-The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as
-well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic.
-All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person)
-derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes
-back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense
-but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the
-structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty
-that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that
-come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to
-be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual,
-are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances
-fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31
-
-Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons
-cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She
-provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French.
-According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies”
-them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary
-gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of
-nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender”
-(1984), she writes:
-The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its
-meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as
-
-~
-far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and
-French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give
-way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a
-division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals
-with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to
-belong primarily to philosophy.32
-
-For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to
-“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe
-they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without
-saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in
-nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on
-gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of
-“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to
-“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that
-metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and
-“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under
-that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender
-and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various
-expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual
-desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex”
-whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional
-internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I
-feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant.
-Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy
-(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also
-fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like
-a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the
-~
-defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
-This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender.
-Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of
-gender within that binary pair.
-Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and
-desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate
-gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the
-self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it
-desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or
-woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the
-univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of
-gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system.
-This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation
-among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects
-or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The
-metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and
-expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that
-is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic
-paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and
-desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self
-is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and
-desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is
-presupposed, reified, and rationalized.
-This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding
-the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
-regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
-differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a
-~
-consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
-gender, and desire.
-The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories
-of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within
-the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality
-and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the
-Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35
-Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization
-of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific
-mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary
-categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus
-of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience,
-behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this
-ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of
-sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any
-discursive account of sexuality.
-Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite,
-Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
-a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the
-sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the
-true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
-she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
-govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
-terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault,
-Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the
-~
-disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
-her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her
-anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality)
-implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the
-identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the
-cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as
-qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere.
-As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered
-experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and
-hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes,
-essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine,
-Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the
-postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and
-hierarchy, a regulatory fiction.
-If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and
-to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that
-man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine
-attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the
-gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman”
-as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion
-of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the
-compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences,
-then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman
-as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that
-fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility.
-The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the
-psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines
-~
-of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
-conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant
-adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they
-are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of
-gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if
-these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently
-created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the
-ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous.
-In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
-practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse
-of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative—
-that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense,
-gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
-said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
-relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there
-is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a
-fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application
-that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we
-might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
-expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
-the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
-vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of
-Displacement
-A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is
-argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a
-~
-transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
-appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other
-hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical
-locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that
-there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the
-performative construction of gender within the material practices of
-culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would
-confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual
-space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the
-Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes:
-A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the
-cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the
-oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
-Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
-an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging
-to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct
-perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40
-
-Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual
-desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could
-liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41
-Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an
-institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
-view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would
-understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
-economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating
-~
-mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
-of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig,
-language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its
-structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of
-another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping
-the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose
-the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse
-that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like
-Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine
-and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on
-Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig
-asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43
-Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate
-and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language
-to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically
-transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and,
-hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The
-linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to
-restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual
-desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as
-well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the
-category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig
-appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call
-for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the
-construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures
-outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine
-form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be
-~
-understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
-the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more
-diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification
-invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital
-norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to
-deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely
-those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and
-effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of
-development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual
-matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what
-extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of
-normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model
-of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what
-extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What
-possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself?
-Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
-unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks
-to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the
-marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she
-both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of
-the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands
-that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
-regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of
-heterosexist oppression in Wittig.
-In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud,
-sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of
-~
-struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
-mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the
-Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create
-sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions
-of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars
-the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation
-between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly,
-the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father
-requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the
-rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that
-reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48
-The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in
-opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical
-reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an
-expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable
-absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of
-that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and
-Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of
-sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the
-dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual
-identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous
-ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the
-French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking
-replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect
-the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed
-sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very
-~
-impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
-feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence
-through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only
-that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs
-identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as
-a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the
-ground for the insurrections against him).
-The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there
-is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the
-mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality.
-Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is
-understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is
-no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set
-of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of
-the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of
-substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her
-existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person,
-to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the
-paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is
-perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52
-But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal
-trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a
-law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its
-authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that
-sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation
-of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the
-law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before”
-of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted
-modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative
-~
-framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
-inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed
-to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not
-have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or
-“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the
-juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently
-generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that
-emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication
-or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy
-of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and
-inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely
-exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the
-boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible.
-The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of
-significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom
-have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of
-Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual
-constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in
-which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even
-within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The
-same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality.
-Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from
-a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific
-feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that
-biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here
-through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether
-it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization
-of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize
-~
-that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
-off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
-is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed
-within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine
-pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If
-so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction?
-The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice
-has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the
-terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in
-terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence
-of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a
-masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed
-project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if
-a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of
-the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed
-within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative
-sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural
-impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones
-the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This
-critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of
-power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its
-consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified”
-sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
-of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in
-terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
-“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.
-~
-If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
-its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to
-acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there
-forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of
-“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
-intelligibility that govern gendered life?
-Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the
-simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of
-specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch”
-and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
-as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And
-neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of
-heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight
-may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization
-of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in
-non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed
-status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not
-as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of
-this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the
-idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs
-circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do
-gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation
-exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through
-~
-hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
-constructs by which they are mobilized?
-Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and
-among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive
-and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural
-configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention,
-exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the
-“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The
-force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their
-convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized
-ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as
-if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the
-cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges:
-What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself?
-If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that
-escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively
-produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what
-constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender?
-Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears
-to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not
-always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that
-~
-infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
-complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to
-hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of
-these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of
-sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning,
-then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility
-of a disruption of their univocal posturing.
-Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional
-philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being
-a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology.
-The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object
-of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of
-its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those
-terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the
-“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender
-ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of
-the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate
-and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization.
-If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born,
-but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in
-process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to
-originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the
-most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious
-practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for
-Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a
-telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
-is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
-highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the
-~
-appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
-of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
-appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for
-those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that
-police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that
-create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a
-part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on
-the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that
-have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that
-have constituted its contingent ontologies.
-The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of
-sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes
-outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those
-regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the
-binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as
-regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power
-regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter
-considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting
-signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically
-signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of
-dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively
-enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its
-naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues,
-then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support
-masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble,
-not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the
-mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
-constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing
-as the foundational illusions of identity.
-~
-2
-
-Prohibition, Psychoanalysis,
-and the Production
-of the Heterosexual Matrix
-The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality
-represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight
-mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality.
-—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind”
-
-On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin,
-a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an
-imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the
-history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether
-prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or
-matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a
-beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind
-these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a
-reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon.
-Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended
-to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme
-has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some
-feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs
-within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
-to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct
-~
-articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
-feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against
-racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important
-to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy
-as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration
-from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary
-past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic
-reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
-The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost
-always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
-the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and
-necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a
-state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the
-law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that,
-by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past,
-makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability.
-Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a
-utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that
-promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
-new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the
-terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present
-state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law,
-then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory
-fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or
-antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory
-becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic
-~
-gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
-ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome.
-Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those
-feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge
-various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or
-key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories
-which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women.
-As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the
-contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of
-oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however,
-whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals.
-Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist
-theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently
-transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or
-“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect
-that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is
-before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins
-to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship.
-This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized
-foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of
-~
-domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
-culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which
-culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it
-into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the
-model of domination.
-Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have
-argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
-female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured
-as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
-with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered
-to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an
-opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
-and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that
-construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the
-discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing
-framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of
-“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are
-the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they
-serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very
-designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to
-be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3
-The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be
-rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to
-think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining.
-Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be
-~
-no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
-serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical
-assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism
-whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only
-the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status,
-but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.
-How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
-Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful
-to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery
-of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal
-of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
-theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism,
-and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status—
-is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it
-inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To
-what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place?
-i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange
-Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in
-accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure
-of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship.
-According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange
-that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women,
-given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes
-“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only
-~
-serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
-words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men;
-she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being
-the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific
-kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion
-of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As
-wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of
-men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the
-patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they
-bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a
-relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a
-common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity.
-The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure
-human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that
-he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete
-cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical
-structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can
-be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work
-(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the
-questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this
-universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic
-describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human
-character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”
-~
-to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
-women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of
-positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative
-logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems
-always require the construction of socially impossible identities to
-occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
-marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a
-major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions
-whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss.
-The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested
-within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship
-of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation
-within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms
-presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is
-presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning.
-This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
-totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness
-within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and
-with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss
-refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of
-binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As
-a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the
-operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement.
-For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established
-through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where
-the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established
-between men and the women who effect the differentiation between
-~
-men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
-moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a
-Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But
-what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first
-in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating
-mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit,
-male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As
-Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on
-an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal
-clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls
-“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a
-relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men,
-but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9
-In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest
-taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds:
-Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply
-that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of
-exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the
-means of binding men together.
-
-The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss
-understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and
-unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays
-on the Theory of Sexuality).
-~
-The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
-the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men
-and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women.
-Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought
-must have required that women, like words, should be things that were
-exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from
-the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective
-position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an
-inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in
-which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby
-becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on
-what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work,
-Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of
-reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity
-between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the
-unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality.
-If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and
-can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain
-either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual
-difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose
-that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does
-“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it
-produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law
-itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive?
-The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship
-that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the
-~
-incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
-anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges
-that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds,
-he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a
-pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of
-the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the
-mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance
-undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying
-a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an
-ancient and lasting dream.”11
-In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious
-incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its
-power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it
-evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at
-all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides
-insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of
-incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with
-assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in
-no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest
-that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are
-generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That
-incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not
-also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms
-become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their
-prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous
-practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription?
-For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest
-between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated
-as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality
-constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,
-~
-and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
-naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency
-are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere
-assumed within this founding structuralist frame.
-The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of
-culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic
-structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the
-incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of
-kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take
-place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity
-apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the
-Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile
-entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression
-that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly
-barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery
-of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the
-subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural
-production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language
-inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of
-its referential gestures.
-ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade
-To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to
-confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western
-metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question
-~
-“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
-and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the
-paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the
-characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
-gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is
-itself pre-ontological.
-There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being,
-without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing
-signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition
-of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus
-denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other
-words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
-that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but
-the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
-means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
-to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
-to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
-dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
-lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests
-that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the
-masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
-and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
-This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance
-or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the
-mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of
-men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The
-interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of
-~
-failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
-own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in
-a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the
-terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the
-inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction
-and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real.
-If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of
-signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense
-to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly
-crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame
-that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the
-structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this
-scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in
-terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression,
-one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but
-whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions
-that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
-subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding
-signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the
-(now repressed) maternal body.
-The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
-thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
-to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual
-possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
-everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy.
-This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women
-reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes
-essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the
-basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it
-~
-serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
-the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced
-maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be
-precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also
-and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to
-repression and individuation.
-Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain
-the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding
-postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would
-break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position.
-In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent
-masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the
-sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in
-their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being”
-the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to
-reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that
-“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify
-the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The
-division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is
-established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic
-dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both
-masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging
-to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by
-either position.
-To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its
-object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and
-promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of
-exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the
-mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the
-emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is
-necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully
-reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of
-~
-women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
-the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be
-nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity
-of the Phallus.
-On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to
-“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and
-can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having”
-and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic
-failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these
-repeated impossibilities.
-But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that
-embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done
-through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the
-feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the
-Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”:
-Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a
-having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the
-contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject
-in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be
-signified.16
-
-In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to
-refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well
-as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the
-position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows
-from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the
-‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said
-not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on
-the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems
-that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is
-~
-characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
-unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of
-behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84).
-Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it
-suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the
-ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would
-appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of
-being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to
-the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that
-there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the
-masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable
-of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and
-displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy.
-At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the
-ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade
-may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other
-hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented
-by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s
-desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would
-engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery
-distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the
-“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by
-Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in
-order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained
-suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18
-~
-Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
-as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time.
-Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan
-Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
-interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated
-and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some
-way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual
-possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of
-a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests,
-transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
-to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the
-masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position?
-Lacan continues the quotation cited above:
-Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the
-phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman
-will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes
-through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be
-desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in
-the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love.
-Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84)
-
-If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic
-Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might
-so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential
-~
-part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
-part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that
-must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the
-unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that
-attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is
-this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the
-core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must
-be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore,
-is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order
-to be that lack that confirms?
-Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of
-the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of
-love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the
-object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of
-love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals
-suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals
-are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure
-of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in
-effect, twice lost.
-Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from
-a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love”
-(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently
-elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone
-who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding
-disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment
-recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade.
-One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to
-a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the
-expense of desire.
-Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with
-~
-the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
-the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if
-female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear,
-and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that
-female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as
-observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it
-the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what
-clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment”
-and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear
-to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can
-understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is
-presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as
-the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account
-not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and
-whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the
-essential character of the women who effectively refuse him?
-In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to
-make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to
-understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way
-to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in
-the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well.
-The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this
-loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which
-is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through
-the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then
-wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is
-~
-the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
-refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the
-refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed,
-becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is
-never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal
-boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the
-process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy.
-Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms
-of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at
-first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the
-comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of
-Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into
-heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the
-“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual
-and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of
-Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s
-facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane
-perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate
-types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with
-who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display
-strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the
-classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of
-attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to
-display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation
-among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that
-unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity
-between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an
-instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex.
-And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies
-through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning
-~
-of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
-would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a
-woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the
-acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual
-or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in
-order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes:
-Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their
-heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall
-attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a
-mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared
-from men. (35)
-
-It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the
-homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under
-notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much
-different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt
-differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic
-“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to
-the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained
-from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the
-supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes
-count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus,
-the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire.
-Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be
-interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order
-to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured
-through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some
-consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over
-~
-the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
-father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user
-of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating
-desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of
-woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language.
-Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual
-man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between
-male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman
-who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of
-taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on
-by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from
-others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes
-on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from
-the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
-is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that
-allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly,
-because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that
-the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words,
-the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both
-desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and
-Riviere apparently do.
-But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the
-analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification,
-but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s
-typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a
-“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women
-who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of
-their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in
-other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is
-~
-here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
-sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it
-would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female
-homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to
-read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious
-typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage.
-One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade
-wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men
-and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely
-because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she
-fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to
-deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women
-sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual
-exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or,
-at least, that has none that she will name.
-Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is
-masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from
-the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she
-suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”:
-The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw
-the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My
-suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether
-radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38)
-
-This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and
-the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the
-~
-Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
-such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the
-denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24
-Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine
-identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female
-object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may
-reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the
-hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd
-form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the
-melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic
-inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality.
-One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is,
-of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture,
-her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself
-both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine
-identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that
-she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids
-herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that
-accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26
-Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a
-discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s
-analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because
-that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her
-as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her
-castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest
-over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and
-~
-essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
-her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might
-usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and
-what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the
-position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s
-aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably,
-reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the
-authority of the speaking subject?
-We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes.
-The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in
-the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in
-the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute
-their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still
-not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some
-psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the
-exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a
-bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is
-assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that
-identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is,
-through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the
-binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality
-that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality
-shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it
-purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through
-which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality”
-that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a
-~
-later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
-practices of normative heterosexuality.
-Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary
-or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and
-that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on
-the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is
-always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which
-the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will
-necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental
-divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression,
-is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a
-prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose
-writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the
-law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of
-Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality,
-and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the
-artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as
-the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well.
-Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely
-because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the
-accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the
-~
-drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
-And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules
-that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is
-clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined
-epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual
-ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the
-“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of
-sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result.
-The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an
-impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
-restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality
-and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In
-marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the
-Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for
-Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and
-paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could
-not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through
-the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position
-of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge
-within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical
-past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that
-does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary
-speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality.
-The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an
-account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that
-~
-proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
-of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The
-injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic
-always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
-consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas
-of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
-be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
-humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
-that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls
-the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
-those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward.
-That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the
-demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct
-from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that
-eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic
-as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity.
-This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively
-undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative
-imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure
-of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old
-Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the
-comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the
-permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this
-comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it
-claims to be unable to overcome.
-Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”
-~
-How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
-of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power)
-that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the
-paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which
-the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological
-impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that
-points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is
-symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative
-powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility.
-What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the
-trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and
-self-subjection?
-iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender
-Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir:
-Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the
-melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of
-gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of
-melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only
-alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id
-(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient
-structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the
-1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing
-another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said
-to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on
-attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of
-imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome
-through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other
-~
-within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
-love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply
-momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in
-effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent
-relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the
-other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic
-identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic
-cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved
-person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud
-makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is
-crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.”
-In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization
-described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks:
-we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by
-supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost
-has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis
-has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did
-not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know
-how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to
-understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18)
-
-As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds,
-however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the
-acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that
-this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up
-its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in
-~
-tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
-those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves
-becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the
-incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for
-the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited
-heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other
-objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual
-union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself
-with him” (21).
-In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object
-cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of
-a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud
-does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the
-process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a
-bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does.
-The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and
-Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to
-seduce the mother.
-Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why
-the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude
-toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be
-that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be
-attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
-above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23,
-n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly,
-Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the
-~
-two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
-result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the
-heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated,
-but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally
-sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather
-than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation
-of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
-the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently,
-the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis.
-Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother
-(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire
-who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding
-moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the
-mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through
-identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in
-which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there
-are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic
-landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and
-disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object
-choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and
-sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place.
-For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result
-either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is
-~
-found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
-which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of
-masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud
-avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22).
-What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in
-consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each
-of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to
-keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects
-or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what
-traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a
-“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object
-choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the
-father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin,
-despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual
-matrix for desire?
-The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine
-and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect,
-never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither
-is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl
-may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an
-object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity
-and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,
-~
-within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
-and only opposites attract.
-But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such
-dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity
-acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional,
-then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities
-are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional
-sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can
-we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and,
-secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the
-self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications.
-In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical
-attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a
-lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though
-the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is
-“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an
-interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and
-Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice
-or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that
-the internalized object now berates the ego:
-If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the
-melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often
-the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself,
-but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else,
-some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . .
-the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have
-been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169)
-
-The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization
-becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only
-
-~
-because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the
-object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled.
-In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of
-libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that
-cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that
-the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole
-condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other
-words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia
-becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud
-remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego
-assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon
-the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the
-object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation.
-What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and
-its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a
-moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are
-reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external
-mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably
-heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego
-changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits
-its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego
-by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to
-turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities
-of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36
-The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali-
-
-~
-zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is
-a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the
-successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity:
-The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest
-object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted
-by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also
-comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your
-father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his
-prerogative.” (24)
-
-The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and
-taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity
-through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The
-internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love,
-but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The
-prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed,
-repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an
-interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution
-to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification
-and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire.
-As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications
-substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence
-of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
-of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of
-heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects
-gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to
-that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies
-~
-with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
-and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent
-to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
-and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
-object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
-more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so
-that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an
-original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved.
-But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
-implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and
-masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of
-that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed
-object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the
-construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily
-to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of
-identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the
-consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the
-body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition
-moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation,
-whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of
-“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of
-affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of
-the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by
-the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal.
-In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means:
-separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal
-situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set
-of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which
-“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and
-energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not
-~
-explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
-homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo
-against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions”
-by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and
-young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that
-Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are
-effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete
-gender identity and heterosexuality.
-Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process
-whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is
-untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of
-dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure
-which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are
-trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the
-name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes
-the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the
-law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears
-disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly
-“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic
-kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of
-the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the
-law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical
-continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as
-its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations.
-What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and
-~
-to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
-of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis
-for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms,
-but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault,
-subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and
-inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault
-argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed
-is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own
-self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a
-discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in
-that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to
-maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in
-question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law
-constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and
-invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in
-effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.”
-The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a
-repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in
-the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally
-homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the
-prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives
-which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence
-into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field
-deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence
-that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements.
-Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts
-not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,
-~
-most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
-from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the
-unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate.
-iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits
-of Identification
-The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id
-offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed,
-of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity
-and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts
-those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting
-and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of
-any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having”
-or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of
-the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of
-any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the
-self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know
-the source and object of its desire.
-For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question
-of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and
-its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and
-clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within
-the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce
-precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders
-into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of
-the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay
-~
-and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
-maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the
-semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in
-the following chapter.
-What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the
-consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The
-recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it
-seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal
-determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair.
-Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is
-impervious to historical variability and possibility.
-As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity
-in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although
-the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the
-law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less
-deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to
-acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in
-which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to
-culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
-origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the
-repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational
-moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even
-though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law,
-is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself.
-The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from
-psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances
-~
-within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
-feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the
-possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible
-to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine
-and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
-that “the” law may not even be singular.
-The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to
-be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to
-be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space
-as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In
-agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a
-process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined,
-and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such
-spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are
-“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated
-space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as
-its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as
-an incorporated space.
-Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that
-serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but
-acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs
-more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended
-grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some
-way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty
-mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The
-successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved
-through the formation of words which both signify and displace that
-object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially
-metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass
-~
-poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
-melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it
-maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself.
-As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the
-Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the
-possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is
-necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of
-desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal
-body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out
-of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy—
-results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the
-maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term,
-and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of
-the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds.
-When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it
-makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that
-identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above,
-gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that
-encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living
-versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation
-literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the
-body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal
-truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in
-given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating
-melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable
-object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with
-the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the
-compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law.
-The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against
-~
-homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
-which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In
-the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which
-heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained
-through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object,
-argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object
-requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is
-not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at
-all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely
-safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial.
-Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the
-denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of
-repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it
-is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a
-‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a
-psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible
-desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be
-felt or known.
-Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the
-developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly
-pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of
-that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims.
-Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim
-together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated
-through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure
-which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal
-space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia
-operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love
-~
-der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
-the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment
-of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment
-and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief.
-Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable
-may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure
-of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is
-neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the
-heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is
-in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In
-other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires.
-But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this
-incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an
-enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own
-interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation
-is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its
-melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.”
-What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming
-naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and
-parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in
-the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such
-descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed
-~
-or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
-body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in
-some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life.
-Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which
-serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place
-within the matrix of gender norms.42
-Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual
-pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly,
-pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of
-parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the
-transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body
-not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy
-of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself.
-Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an
-altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
-might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary
-condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on
-which it works.
-Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to
-the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and
-the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized
-heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes
-and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality.
-The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is
-parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause
-~
-acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
-reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex”
-designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
-desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that
-transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the
-body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and
-desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or
-encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible
-anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized
-sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable
-homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he
-never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the
-empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not
-only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the
-very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The
-love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an
-impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has
-that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual
-desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign
-must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in
-favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality.
-v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power
-Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has
-guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual
-matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the
-juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates
-the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to
-the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the
-Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the
-~
-primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
-proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be
-reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several
-cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would
-a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique
-mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most
-influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle
-Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article,
-Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article
-might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame.
-Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the
-prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on
-sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and
-reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and
-Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros.
-Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general
-“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion
-and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the
-human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation,
-however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and
-consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own
-genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions,
-but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary”
-dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we
-~
-conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
-the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its
-desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted.
-Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes:
-the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon
-the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides
-the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173)
-
-Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the
-particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved,
-exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union
-between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo
-against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes:
-the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a
-taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed
-toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in
-both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180)
-
-Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations.
-In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females
-into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural
-institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of
-women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws
-which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,
-~
-the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
-against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains
-that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a
-gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189).
-The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a
-primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of
-an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual
-possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the
-Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo,
-that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law
-produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
-the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the
-creation of that law.
-Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and
-gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a
-“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed
-subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires
-a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is
-in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And
-yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking,
-is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a
-belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by
-the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language,
-then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before”
-will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does
-the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally
-(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the
-
-~
-“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes
-an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence.
-Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a
-primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and
-presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of
-femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for
-both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the
-traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality
-and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the
-compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
-and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204).
-Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
-that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities
-to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
-of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of
-gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in
-what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing
-but unclarified implications of her analysis.
-Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently
-sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed
-have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual
-form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear;
-in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi-
-
-~
-Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads
-her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory
-heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of
-bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin
-has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
-which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law.
-If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of
-knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal
-sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the
-structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what
-relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of
-gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order
-to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive?
-Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of
-Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and
-that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire
-it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be
-its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the
-very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and
-necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its
-repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures;
-desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture
-whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power.
-The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit
-incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities
-through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to
-guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are
-anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over
-~
-what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
-meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to
-claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant
-framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim
-the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it
-exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form.
-My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the
-incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the
-generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its
-juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety
-of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in
-advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we
-extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that
-the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized
-in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might
-be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as
-well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an
-“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a
-production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition.
-If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a
-wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire
-both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame
-law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive
-from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo.
-Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire
-and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that
-the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire
-~
-in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
-is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly
-stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed
-parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification.
-But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of
-the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced
-and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the
-incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and
-if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced
-in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to
-remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis,
-bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon
-their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive
-possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and
-homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes
-the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of
-bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48
-The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves
-as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of
-that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete
-cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What
-remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing
-cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of
-intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized,
-not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini-
-
-~
-mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to
-gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully
-within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory
-which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive
-subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the
-very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I
-will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never
-be translated into other cultural practices.
-In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed
-to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the
-terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire
-and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of
-the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This
-full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the
-irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that
-that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution
-of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal
-libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can
-only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this
-case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always
-speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes
-the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond”
-is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the
-Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of
-
-~
-what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is
-“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the
-start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the
-account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the
-split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence
-at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy,
-revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a
-perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin
-in the name of subversion inevitably belated.
-
-~
-3
-
-Subversive Bodily Acts
-i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva
-Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears
-to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a
-specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
-principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful
-language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of
-primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child
-on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who
-emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early
-dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language
-is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by
-suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body)
-and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place.
-Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural
-meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the
-maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language
-occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
-Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion
-within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original
-~
-libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
-within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to
-disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law.
-Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to
-displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts
-to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes
-that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it
-assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those
-terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony?
-The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several
-steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of
-effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to
-accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple
-drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but
-which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest
-in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal
-economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem
-emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion
-cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained
-presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of
-cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension
-of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of
-language which never can be consistently maintained.
-~
-In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
-ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and
-what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva
-describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior
-to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a
-paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural
-reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively
-reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction
-and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity
-is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a
-given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and
-primary cause.
-Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear
-that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as
-anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony
-of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political
-strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of
-drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of
-the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it
-seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never
-become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I
-will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective
-strategy of subversion.
-Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number
-of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their
-emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements
-of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that
-the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the
-~
-semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
-which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech.
-As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for
-a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the
-plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she
-maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of
-primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms
-of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple
-sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of
-the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the
-requirements of univocal designation.
-In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic
-function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives
-in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that
-in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic]
-place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of
-univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated
-or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against
-the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their
-repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives
-manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity,
-these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work,
-she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to
-the modality [of] primary process.”3
-In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva
-ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic
-terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic
-obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only
-~
-those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
-dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other
-words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather
-than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that
-jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that
-desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal
-body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the
-“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse
-prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike
-effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the
-mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as
-the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as
-distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But
-this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it
-thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself
-in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5
-The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the
-Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to
-vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words
-to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two
-modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood
-as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the
-semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition,
-mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely
-signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests
-upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it
-becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and
-univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of
-~
-the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
-univocal signification. Kristeva writes:
-In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for
-example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints
-(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic
-elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
-
-For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests
-a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body:
-Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the
-contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language
-(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the
-cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7
-
-Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly
-appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject,
-where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the
-Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against
-the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of
-maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally
-signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
-would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of
-incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding
-law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from
-~
-within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
-libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state
-of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the
-ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the
-heterogeneity of drives.
-In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that,
-because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete
-identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a
-woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal
-signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language
-is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and,
-hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow
-that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the
-structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the
-founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire
-can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements
-that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the
-act of giving birth:
-By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she
-becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her
-instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently,
-more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9
-
-According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully
-reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because
-the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated
-off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from
-~
-the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
-never fully completed.
-As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to
-grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense,
-refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body
-is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a
-kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack.
-The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female
-“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female
-homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture:
-The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete
-absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm,
-sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a
-screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10
-
-For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides
-childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic.
-For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an
-unmediated way. And yet why is this the case?
-Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the
-Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the
-Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those
-which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task,
-then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to
-~
-tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
-as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the
-site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in
-culturally communicable form:
-The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by
-virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also
-attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of
-split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of
-the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth
-consists.11
-
-Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged
-practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic
-of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the
-autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The
-heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of
-displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law
-by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself.
-Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented
-in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the
-Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is
-impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of
-the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law
-challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva
-does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the
-prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the
-~
-subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
-version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s
-concealed foundation.
-This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law
-produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one
-hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible
-practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva
-does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from
-her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva
-poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always
-on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the
-incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and,
-because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality.
-For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual
-desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this
-drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of
-maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or
-through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity
-of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially
-sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual
-desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences
-for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of
-the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire
-would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to
-Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality
-and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked.
-How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience
-~
-as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
-identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism
-constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis?
-By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing
-lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs
-lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal
-and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law
-positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege.
-The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is
-precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a
-site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience
-is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a
-fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
-In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva
-appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression
-necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior
-to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain
-lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation
-itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her
-restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear
-encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a
-developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to
-culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”?
-Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience
-~
-from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
-its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
-not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural
-subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it
-appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to
-return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that
-escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed,
-beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law,
-temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they
-initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of
-culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion
-as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility.
-Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her
-postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of
-epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these
-drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives
-us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this
-answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend
-upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot,
-then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives
-through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed
-for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that
-which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives
-prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to
-attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation
-into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot
-reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other
-~
-words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
-effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with
-their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations
-are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves.
-This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider,
-for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse
-is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we
-have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order
-to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts
-are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover
-that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and
-are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception
-of maternal instincts:
-Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species
-that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of
-markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the
-life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic,
-unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the
-whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled
-drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13
-
-Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which,
-it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy,
-in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in
-avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these
-~
-various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
-moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents
-any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts
-with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the
-Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle
-of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly,
-that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends
-operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the
-way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her
-description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the
-very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has
-become a univocal signifier.
-Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to
-their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions
-about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive
-and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the
-hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed
-ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with
-the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity
-of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other
-cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which
-operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva
-believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would
-~
-ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
-to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed
-concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear
-and univocal.
-Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire,
-part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes
-an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity
-and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the
-semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of
-univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the
-principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations.
-Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having
-an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the
-way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it
-is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required
-and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the
-consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed,
-rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction
-of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand
-the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on
-women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of
-Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the
-desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and
-produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14
-What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal
-teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture?
-To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction
-between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of
-the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary
-~
-signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
-itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider
-the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her
-argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary
-processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing
-framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and
-for what purposes?
-By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which
-affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
-result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally
-constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship
-which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of
-desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders
-that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality.
-Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology
-of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this
-sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure
-generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that
-activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and
-poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
-uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of
-humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does
-the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
-female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very
-~
-order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
-In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality,
-he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . .
-[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex
-facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to
-cause the structure and meaning of desire:
-the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
-unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious
-unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus
-able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16
-
-For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to
-its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning
-within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an
-historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and
-affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce
-“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises
-the power relations responsible for its genesis.
-Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of
-the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a
-maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the
-structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive
-production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by
-which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the
-maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of
-all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,
-~
-rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
-female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self
-and the law of its desire.
-If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically
-specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality,
-itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the
-trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no
-longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon
-the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This
-very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends
-and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women.
-Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood
-are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the
-institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures
-of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and
-requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its
-reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural
-necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated
-maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law
-itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability.
-Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in
-which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural
-drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct
-produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do
-these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest,
-however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated
-upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider
-~
-whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
-which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of
-the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the
-object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may
-be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself.
-As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the
-mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and
-makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body
-that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be
-yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating
-in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order
-to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the
-oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and
-subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body
-beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from
-within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when
-the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of
-itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither
-to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future
-of cultural possibilities.
-ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics
-of Sexual Discontinuity
-Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those
-Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms
-of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a
-disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of
-theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we
-consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes
-the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that
-his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that
-~
-proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
-his own critical apparatus.
-Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality,
-Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of
-“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to
-doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to
-“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published
-in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided.
-A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also
-included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation
-of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is
-necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the
-critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s
-reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of
-Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that
-sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete
-relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
-“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual
-difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine
-against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text.
-In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that
-the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the
-other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within
-~
-discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
-reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18
-In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and
-causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as
-an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and
-continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes
-“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and
-power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
-power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment
-of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as
-repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted
-energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this
-juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only
-works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in
-this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations
-and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
-falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be
-recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power
-must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power
-which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity.
-the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it
-possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to
-sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
-
-~
-relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible
-urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154)
-
-Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they
-subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of
-power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to
-emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and,
-thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of
-departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into
-how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within
-discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model
-of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in
-his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some
-sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault
-remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal
-subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled
-than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to
-be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs
-those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex,
-gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and
-any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically
-extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/
-knowledge regime.
-In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin,
-Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of
-sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy
-dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and
-~
-physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
-within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides,
-according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a
-world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii).
-Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation
-imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of
-Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of
-emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the
-release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from
-the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or
-Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture.
-The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine
-Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History
-of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures
-of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition
-of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants
-to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to
-be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any
-specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a
-trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault
-officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we
-must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues
-that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is
-~
-always produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
-both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality
-before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory
-sexual politics.
-The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read
-Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the
-constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for
-sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust
-victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the
-time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the
-other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety
-and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although
-Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals,
-the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s
-own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what
-is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where
-one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably
-female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation
-that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents.
-Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a
-state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er
-suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward
-men, but finally toward the world as such.
-Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at
-school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate
-attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt
-and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes
-h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that
-effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and
-~
-effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
-obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of
-men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the
-journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide.
-One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a
-man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of
-the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed,
-Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely
-that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of
-univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of
-the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the
-pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law
-they are said to defy.
-The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian
-play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the
-alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we
-have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the
-productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative
-strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the
-specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context
-of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference
-reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical
-reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of
-Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of
-Herculine’s sexual world.
-Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality
-between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of
-female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine
-~
-we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
-French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within
-an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions
-produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and
-Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner
-of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about
-ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously,
-the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
-sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality
-and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself.
-The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young
-girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological
-doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If
-Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or
-chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently
-generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires,
-the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body,
-and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both
-causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity?
-Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle
-to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender
-which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself
-presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender
-confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
-and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er
-~
-anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
-and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a
-sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse
-on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of
-happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide.
-If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of
-confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as
-the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters”
-and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made
-possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her
-sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of
-women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once
-“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment,
-structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy
-limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly
-retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of
-female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather
-than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy
-the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for
-Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault
-wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject.
-But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he
-wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in
-homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to
-the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following
-description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once
-~
-invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
-pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes
-astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another”
-(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to
-accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions
-the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the
-eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces
-these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even
-within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er
-difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference
-is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire.
-S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she
-is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he
-contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it.
-The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the
-denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no
-longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex.
-Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but
-confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing
-the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to
-which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover,
-Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which
-challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic
-exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence
-and redistribution.
-But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level
-of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex”
-and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of
-~
-sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
-sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost
-Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a
-natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as
-“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough
-medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the
-heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very
-medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But
-what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve?
-If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as
-precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that
-he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the
-effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear
-whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something
-else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces
-sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be
-described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place
-of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether
-this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In
-other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality
-and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly
-didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity
-or parallel between his life and hers?
-~
-On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
-understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some
-sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks
-that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten
-to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that
-do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community
-of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable.
-“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel
-points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the
-textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the
-adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and
-Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it
-is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps
-Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in
-the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,”
-might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not
-in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such,
-especially as it applies to the categories of sex.
-Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are
-in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic
-distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of
-h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after
-some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of
-appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when
-she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!”
-(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in
-order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on
-homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there
-is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly
-among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female
-homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different
-~
-bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
-do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed
-“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This
-explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
-les choses):
-This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter
-that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my
-thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes
-with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing
-things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with
-collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20
-
-The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and
-particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre
-Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for
-Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of
-kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s
-now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference,
-designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s
-dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics,
-but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh
-of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface
-constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
-Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23
-In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa,
-Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to
-freeze” (105) those who encounter it.
-But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and
-Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which
-~
-consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
-as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable—
-that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one.
-But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive
-identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to
-the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it
-is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed,
-perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify
-for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification.
-But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems
-to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a
-laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he
-loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine,
-then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two
-positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it
-either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the
-jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of
-punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was
-not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he
-articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a
-devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then
-finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself
-from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation,
-s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully
-directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those
-who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love.
-At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence
-~
-paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
-incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into
-h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was
-abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he
-tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for
-abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures,
-deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence
-s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a
-sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother”
-(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through
-the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears
-as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal
-caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it
-were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which
-scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between
-being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object
-of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic
-structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy
-involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination
-is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the
-mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be
-constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive
-narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and
-neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of
-enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is
-better for all women than any “man” (107).
-S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early
-“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at
-the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early
-~
-refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
-phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very
-father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the
-tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my
-feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the
-anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier
-enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and
-whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs
-h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet
-underground!” (69).
-Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place
-Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not
-“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier,
-h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production,
-construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of
-the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and
-the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law,
-one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic
-and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are
-subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by
-death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its
-condition and its aim.
-After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid
-than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person”
-who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the
-~
-other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
-h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects
-h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law
-precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law
-naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other
-words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of
-“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical
-naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized
-instrument and sign.
-Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical
-law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside”
-within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of
-fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected,
-have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis.
-Concluding Unscientific Postscript
-Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the
-quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that
-become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although
-Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of
-Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his
-philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for
-~
-ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
-Foucaultian critique.
-One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
-to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With
-the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene,
-which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was
-discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or
-testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No.
-51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon
-which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions
-regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked.
-According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the
-Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA
-were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had
-XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and
-some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis
-they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but
-we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations.
-Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be
-some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of
-DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its
-usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
-expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA
-sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why
-it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact,
-still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y
-chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had
-somehow been misplaced.
-~
-Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
-with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their
-research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has
-chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female
-and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal
-criteria could provide.
-Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that
-haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA
-sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of
-females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that
-perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its
-absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males
-and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains
-hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his
-coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals
-from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous
-in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her
-article, “Life in the XY Corral”:
-the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm
-production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e.,
-precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and
-low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males
-because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . .
-Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal,
-[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328)
-
-Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not
-add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated
-by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as
-well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are
-~
-XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
-and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided
-by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were
-sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the
-experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary
-at all.
-But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which
-that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice
-that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher
-and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that
-ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of
-the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence
-of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an
-object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active
-and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions
-about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew
-and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes
-Eicher and Washburn:
-Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y
-chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the
-induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant)
-event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive
-(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as
-much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the
-induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any
-cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written
-about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the
-undifferentiated gonad. (325)
-
-In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under
-~
-tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
-argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research
-orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated
-cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and
-well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that
-would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning
-and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during
-differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic
-interactions alter during differentation” (323–24).
-The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general
-trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from
-the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the
-descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the
-description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at
-hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that
-femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence
-of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would
-invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is
-not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself
-frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of
-those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior
-to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more
-complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates
-in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation
-in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.
-~
-Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
-when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is
-male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex?
-One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be
-resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary
-framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek
-recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the
-claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three
-Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange,
-that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world
-of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself
-constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies,
-about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to
-inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the
-categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within
-the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent,
-that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as
-one that might well be constructed differently.
-Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that
-Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in
-the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is
-interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those
-anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment.
-One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses
-that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external
-genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of
-reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the
-~
-male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
-to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather
-than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
-Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male
-body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s
-inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with
-the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work
-together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting,
-then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the
-last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority
-over the discourse of reproduction.
-This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance,
-according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates
-through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view,
-to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female”
-exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from
-a radical critique.
-iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and
-Fictive Sex
-Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body.
-—Monique Wittig
-
-Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a
-woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical,
-for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along?
-And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human
-who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that
-this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
-one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender
-~
-construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
-a gendered subject?
-Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the
-question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who
-do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute
-the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the
-human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in
-advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human
-who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural
-afterthought?
-Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of
-women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are
-taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with
-a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was
-willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that
-being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is
-an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed;
-sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause
-gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex;
-indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and
-whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the
-variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities
-of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body.
-Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones
-that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are
-radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to
-become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret
-male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction
-~
-ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
-the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way
-restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never
-be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of
-some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively,
-then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond
-the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new
-vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the
-binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But
-how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the
-fate of an impossible and vain utopian project?
-“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in
-an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what
-sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig
-offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from
-her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is
-a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to
-divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a
-division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig,
-there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is
-itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not
-natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is
-the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only
-exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A
-~
-lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
-terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains,
-transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is
-neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is
-beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding
-presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might
-say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not
-born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if
-one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man.
-Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a
-category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable
-political categories of description.
-Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the
-political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This
-relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary
-in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one
-sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is
-always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this
-system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig,
-then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male
-sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex,
-trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because
-“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no
-sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into
-sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues
-that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become
-ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex
-is necessarily feminine.
-Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in
-~
-the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
-system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it.
-As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire
-discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans
-and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her
-theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that
-regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender.
-Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions
-forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a
-“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience,
-Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a
-datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no
-longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a
-violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is
-“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused,
-but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that
-her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge:
-Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical
-features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a
-physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic
-construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social
-system), through the network of relationships in which they are
-perceived.27
-
-“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side
-of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that
-these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the
-~
-reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
-gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within
-the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on
-an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a
-language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
-Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body?
-An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
-forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous
-body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
-Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a
-“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction
-of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the
-“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the
-body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination
-those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate
-what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her
-theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the
-body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination.
-Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
-locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of
-reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted
-ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
-be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
-that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly
-refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying
-structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation
-~
-of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
-contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
-that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and
-deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
-The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
-authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex
-and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
-Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
-reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively
-considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
-domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that
-both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/
-perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual
-difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies
-and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of
-nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28
-“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category
-of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon
-the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the
-“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences,
-“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because
-they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the
-speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of
-that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s
-own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:
-~
-“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
-gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To
-speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech;
-hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction,
-the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language
-that asserts it.
-The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous.
-Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical
-and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and
-interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and
-theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds,
-even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms
-of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather,
-one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had
-to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the
-cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression.
-Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity
-of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33
-Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through
-locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and,
-ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that
-identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male
-and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no
-sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of
-men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists:
-“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The
-universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated
-by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act,
-perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the
-level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34
-~
-Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
-the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an
-absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,”
-which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women”
-altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman,
-the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the
-invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject
-could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking
-presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig
-describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the
-power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I”
-assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to
-speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and
-power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the
-feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36
-Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology
-of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off
-the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial
-or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a
-full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The
-social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior
-ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion
-~
-of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
-hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal
-mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she
-writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal
-to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access,
-however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity
-of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she
-argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being
-is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes
-not only the totality of language, but the unity of being.
-If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within
-the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence,
-Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a
-Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on
-an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and
-invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction
-gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social
-relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion
-of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its
-universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the
-straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she
-not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the
-totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts.
-Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of
-ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the
-universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection.
-Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary
-unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs
-through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.
-~
-Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
-about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a
-tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity.
-Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration,
-suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and
-proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an
-absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is
-one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for
-being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.”
-In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of
-the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In
-that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two
-sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are
-individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically
-entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds
-to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any
-general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular
-property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization.
-The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work
-in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
-Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating
-social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are
-measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept
-and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a
-material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these
-“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be
-judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.
-~
-Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
-that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered,
-however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the
-universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is
-quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,”
-even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for
-women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized
-through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the
-speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view.
-The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his
-or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The
-literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the
-hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular
-in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms.
-To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy
-the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of
-a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise
-unified ontology.
-Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between
-abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as
-Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so
-she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of
-language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . .
-words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise
-made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that
-within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with
-the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les
-Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,
-~
-indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
-universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize
-the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48
-In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that
-only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively
-lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish
-the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can
-wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic
-and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals,
-but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position
-of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a
-set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject
-becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective
-that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the
-world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory
-heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the
-latter’s epistemic hegemony.
-In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion
-of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality
-with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It
-can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it
-can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to
-speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point
-of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that
-speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an
-ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and
-concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,
-~
-the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
-in her theoretical essays all along.51
-Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot
-be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes:
-I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which
-cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole
-life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we
-are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52
-
-As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within
-Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to
-falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the
-radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime.
-But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of
-heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as
-a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist
-power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution.
-Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely
-problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice
-and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically
-“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by
-numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay
-culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as
-they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to
-~
-ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
-heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not
-follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further,
-Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the
-kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind.
-My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig
-between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that
-there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian
-sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse
-centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality;
-heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
-informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
-describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
-impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic
-elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of
-the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not
-always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and
-the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with
-these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory
-law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into
-heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a
-constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective.
-Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate
-with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position
-is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
-for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
-Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
-contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the
-~
-normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
-lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged
-in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that
-proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls,
-even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and
-destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood
-as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the
-oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other
-hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical
-meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing
-sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation,
-the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs
-a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply
-possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation
-between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
-the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense
-is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an
-assumption surely suspect.
-Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that
-appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back
-into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she
-likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and
-resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a
-culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that
-constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly,
-there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine
-~
-identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
-interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
-prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite
-direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case,
-the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the
-“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
-Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire
-admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the
-sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can
-shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay
-claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief,
-depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch
-and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual
-exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as
-internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may
-recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same
-time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that
-question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source
-of their erotic significance.
-Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme
-identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a
-natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist
-among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in
-Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the
-various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate
-descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is
-established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of
-~
-bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
-that they themselves invested in the category.
-For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual
-contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of
-choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood
-to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said
-to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining
-and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be
-neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my
-view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on
-the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the
-impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence.
-Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale
-refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very
-terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are
-coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed
-than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless
-pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off.
-The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and
-lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and
-lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or
-reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and
-denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual
-constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of
-power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of
-parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its
-claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond
-sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a
-problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works
-~
-appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
-which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body
-and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political
-transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms
-and to deprive them of their legitimating functions.
-Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific
-meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome
-the split between materiality and representation that characterizes
-“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas
-to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base,
-strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she
-understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the
-male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality
-are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to
-support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense,
-Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and
-to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality.
-Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a
-medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained
-for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible
-materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures
-and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the
-naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her
-aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to
-offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring
-~
-bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
-form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are
-always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For
-Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably
-constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct
-and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex.
-If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the
-binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive
-enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In
-The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its
-partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of
-attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the
-same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig
-clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a
-“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks
-those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the
-task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
-but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories.
-The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the
-violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for
-this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not
-to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and
-binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now
-represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that
-consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive
-redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to
-~
-belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
-assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,”
-but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this
-literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical
-use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings
-that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the
-tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple
-internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence
-against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
-out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem
-inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution,
-and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness.
-Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution
-of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is
-always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged
-among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs
-that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities.
-But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can
-this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of
-this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a
-way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well
-a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different
-centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency
-comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and
-~
-recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
-become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes.
-This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third
-gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal
-subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to
-the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction,
-its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories
-of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of
-the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole
-new languages of description.
-In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but,
-rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman,
-one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of
-women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism.
-This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But
-even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to
-decide the question of sexual “identity”?
-If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a
-self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming
-an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian
-no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts
-that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a
-“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a
-contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,”
-but also of “lesbian”?
-~
-Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
-homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a
-homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that
-construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of
-view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted
-through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that
-do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
-identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were
-not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed,
-required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it
-seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
-Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality
-deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result,
-that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in
-its oppressive forms.
-The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity
-themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to
-render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic.
-iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions
-“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that
-heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . .
-How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation,
-whether the sex underneath is true or not.”
-—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted
-in Esther Newton, Mother Camp
-
-Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have
-constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist
-~
-theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
-epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is
-shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express
-the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political
-shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political
-elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that
-identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site
-of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female
-body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
-gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body”
-itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that
-body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex?
-The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to
-presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
-of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive
-medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of
-suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse.
-There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which,
-prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century,
-understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or,
-more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception,
-sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine.
-There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where
-“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that
-can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in
-Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification,
-and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To
-what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology
-~
-adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
-as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent
-do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit
-hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the
-taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations
-are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance?
-Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the
-body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy?
-Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body
-is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body
-is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is
-“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
-understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction
-of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities
-are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through
-the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering
-destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of
-values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the
-speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through
-the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama”
-of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus
-vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault,
-“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture.
-Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his
-body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or
-for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the
-constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the
-body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,
-~
-requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
-writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and
-self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for
-Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an
-inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank
-page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
-must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated
-domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the
-body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in
-order for “culture” to emerge.
-By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault
-appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because
-this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he
-defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical
-investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break
-through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of
-cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of
-precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a
-genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a
-subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of
-the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of
-the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility.
-Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours
-of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish
-specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the
-boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing
-certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes
-of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:
-~
-ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
-between within and without, above and below, male and female, with
-and against, that a semblance of order is created.55
-
-Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction
-between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural
-means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a
-region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably
-binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot
-point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame.
-Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for
-understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
-maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that
-what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but
-that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become,
-within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist
-appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the
-body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she
-maintains, there are
-pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and
-which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or
-joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where
-the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined.
-A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed
-some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which
-should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger
-for someone.56
-
-~
-In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his
-Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness
-figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and
-homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a
-continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of
-the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted
-through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist
-graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable
-bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks
-that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its
-boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to
-read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59
-Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
-margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous.
-If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which
-open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and
-oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
-site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural
-presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless
-of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief
-the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside”
-the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy
-and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always
-conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural.
-
-~
-The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites
-of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices
-in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and
-orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex
-among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body
-in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution
-which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social)
-intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a
-consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its
-stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various
-bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered
-exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such
-exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine
-what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the
-regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed
-constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that
-might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61
-Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror
-begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject
-through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been
-expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered
-“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is
-effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the
-“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which
-are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes:
-nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the
-mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign
-of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I”
-expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in
-
-~
-their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the
-same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63
-
-The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation
-of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As
-Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism,
-homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that
-founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along
-sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of
-Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
-through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
-the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary
-tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
-those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes
-outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by
-which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In
-effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and
-outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body
-would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its
-surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but
-this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears.
-Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions
-of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make
-sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by
-cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation
-~
-tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
-subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos,
-then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of
-gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not
-how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a
-process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed.
-Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse
-and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive
-binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
-is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility
-of its hidden depth?
-From Interiority to Gender Performatives
-In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
-to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner”
-truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the
-doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his
-history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as
-Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in
-On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of
-prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a
-repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the
-prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is
-not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that
-bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body;
-there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of
-their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is
-at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external
-to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:
-~
-It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
-effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power
-that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66
-
-The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode
-of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The
-effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification
-of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the
-body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That
-lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In
-this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic
-space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually
-renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest,
-but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67
-The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface
-politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the
-disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of
-presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the
-gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying
-absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body
-politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We
-have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against
-homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of
-an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of
-the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the
-~
-der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
-and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
-significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive
-model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed
-as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe.
-According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired,
-wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the
-effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of
-the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but
-never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts,
-gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
-that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
-fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
-other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
-constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated
-as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of
-a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control
-that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity”
-of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core,
-an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation
-of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
-the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary
-~
-practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
-origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
-analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its
-fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its
-true identity.
-If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a
-fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems
-that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the
-truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother
-Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton
-suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender
-takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
-both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
-identity. Newton writes:
-At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
-‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is
-masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
-“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my
-essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69
-
-Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth
-and falsity.
-The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
-parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to
-~
-sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
-the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more
-complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a
-clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
-plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
-the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
-of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
-sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
-performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and
-both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the
-performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
-drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose),
-it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
-which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
-heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
-pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
-natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence,
-we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which
-avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their
-fabricated unity.
-The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
-there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the
-parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
-notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
-the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that
-double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
-which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be
-~
-more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
-effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification
-and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender
-identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
-styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
-original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
-original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender
-identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
-received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer
-laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
-a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
-construction.
-According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer
-Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
-Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
-wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
-practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the
-satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that
-there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it
-humor.70
-
-The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion
-for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
-be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
-In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.
-~
-stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
-and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
-actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive
-confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the
-inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of
-the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance
-will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that
-destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire.
-If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
-permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
-what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre
-would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest
-that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all
-never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a
-corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent
-construction of meaning.
-Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is
-an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to
-materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and
-to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal
-project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating
-force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of
-~
-duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
-Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a
-performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are
-part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture;
-indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right.
-Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender
-is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and
-without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a
-construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective
-agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders
-as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
-and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
-construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
-historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
-nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
-Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the
-peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which,
-in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes
-existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted,
-and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their
-originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible
-“cause” to be an “effect”?
-In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This
-repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of
-meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies
-that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered
-~
-tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
-inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic
-aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot
-be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found
-and consolidate the subject.
-Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of
-agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
-tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
-stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the
-stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane
-way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds
-constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation
-moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model
-of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
-social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
-which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
-precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
-which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
-come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
-norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to
-embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of
-acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized
-configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts
-that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity,
-but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and
-contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender
-transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
-between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
-or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
-identity as a politically tenuous construction.
-~
-If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
-then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to
-express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
-which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
-attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or
-distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity
-would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created
-through sustained social performances means that the very notions of
-an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also
-constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative
-character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender
-configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination
-and compulsory heterosexuality.
-Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
-incredible.
-
-~
-From Parody to Politics
-I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
-do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether
-it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in
-order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we”
-is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the
-term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of
-the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous
-or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or,
-at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
-theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and
-bodies, but of politics itself.
-The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume
-that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
-elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument
-is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is
-variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an
-existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
-its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in
-and through the other that has interested me here.
-~
-The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
-stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the
-subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
-usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains
-intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject.
-This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared
-necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that
-culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes
-(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive
-“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and
-(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse,
-where determination forecloses the possibility of agency.
-Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted
-environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally
-enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for
-example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender,
-but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point
-of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never
-fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness
-of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural
-predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates
-of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close
-with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is
-instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of
-exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It
-is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to
-~
-posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
-itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
-If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity
-is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates
-within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is
-not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are
-provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the
-legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices
-that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I
-pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The
-Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by
-Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses
-presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its
-world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as
-an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here
-belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very
-problematic of identity that it seeks to solve.
-What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an
-epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and
-how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What
-kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the
-invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled
-out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely
-documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object
-dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and
-distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a
-strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once
-~
-that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
-the knowability and recoverability of that Other.
-As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move
-within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in
-and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a
-necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary
-itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity
-to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification
-permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one
-possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of
-agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert
-piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many
-inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this
-appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks
-to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to
-qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent
-and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally
-intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a
-practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that
-inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic
-life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs
-by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves
-in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting
-unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific
-modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.
-~
-logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
-identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,”
-rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy
-and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed,
-when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the
-subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined
-by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a
-founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals
-itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the
-orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing
-signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative
-domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that
-contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within
-the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity
-becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated.
-Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through
-discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable
-object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees
-in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a
-transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who
-maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural
-field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the
-very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there.
-What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the
-~
-genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
-itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself
-here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests
-the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
-that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the
-real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which
-gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
-written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s
-“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the
-accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry
-within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between
-instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition
-are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to
-approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the
-rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits
-itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition
-that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so
-these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized
-performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself.
-Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the
-very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a
-failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a
-politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion
-of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And
-yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
-argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable.
-Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic
-practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them-
-
-~
-selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the
-effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive
-identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The
-parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender
-identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a
-subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it
-were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those
-hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration,
-reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status.
-I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed
-to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in
-order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously
-work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities
-that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative
-political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically,
-the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
-generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
-fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally
-determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status
-of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests
-the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction
-remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and
-determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and
-becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to
-establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit
-is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its
-own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a
-position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism
-
-~
-ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local
-possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those
-practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present
-the immanent possibility of contesting them.
-This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the
-very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the
-political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative
-cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in
-their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics?
-This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of
-sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of
-the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification,
-a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the
-inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as
-binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as
-enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as
-an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of
-“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual
-construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the
-mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are
-also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction
-and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of
-sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that
-presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and
-globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention.
-
-~
-If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these
-“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not
-only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that
-enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a
-feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might
-enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to
-repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
-There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political
-contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on
-sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a
-foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by
-installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground.
-The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which
-identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the
-foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has
-been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it
-presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every
-new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that
-already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as
-culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer
-fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer
-understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that
-belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
-
-~
-would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations
-of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that
-establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of
-sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local
-strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such?
-
-~
-
-Preface (1999)
-1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation
-of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the
-arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
-ratification of same-sex partnerships.
-2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
-Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and
-Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998.
-3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
-(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
-4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky
-Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los
-Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my
-arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of
-gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book.
-5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point.
-6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/
-Wellek/index.html.
-7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek,
-Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy
-Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
-
-~
-Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity.
-8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the
-notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only
-came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to
-account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
-Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997).
-9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the
-earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the
-melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of
-the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss
-that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or
-disavow the loss it has just articulated.
-10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and
-interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to
-contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real:
-Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences,
-Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126.
-11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose
-work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
-“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the
-postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the
-appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that
-emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the
-same time under conditions of domination.
-12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has
-been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject.
-I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions
-of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to
-Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at
-Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection.
-
-~
-13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most
-prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech.
-14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America
-(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
-other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
-gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at
-http://www.isna.org.
-15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances
-Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell,
-Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William
-Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava,
-Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for
-their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface
-was written.
-1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire
-1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History
-of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York:
-Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté
-de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses
-the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the
-productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not
-identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of
-productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of
-Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault,
-Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of
-sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under
-criticism in the final chapter.
-2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka
-and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan
-Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987).
-3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in
-History (New York: Macmillan, 1988).
-
-~
-4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of
-Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and
-Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp.
-283–302.
-5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The
-Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987).
-She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement
-sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that
-movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether
-uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the
-repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities
-that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the
-very instability that the foundationalist move creates.
-6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
-grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
-are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
-“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/
-epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to
-cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a
-stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female)
-that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory
-practice of heterosexuality.
-7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see
-chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.”
-8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements
-in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the
-Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press,
-1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
-Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge
-University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis
-of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies,
-see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological
-Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978).
-
-~
-9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of
-biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific
-basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender,
-vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on
-feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2,
-No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The
-Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique
-for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra
-Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University
-Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New
-Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
-was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in
-Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions
-(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex
-and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne
-Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men
-(New York: Norton, 1979).
-10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history
-of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed
-consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The
-Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century
-(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as
-an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986.
-11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in
-Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil
-Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987).
-12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York:
-Vintage, 1973), p. 301.
-13. Ibid., p. 38.
-14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies,
-Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986.
-15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s,
-Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn
-as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a
-
-~
-mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic
-relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the
-body itself.
-16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
-Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977).
-17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
-Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press,
-1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5,
-1986.
-18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi.
-19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.”
-20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz
-Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization
-through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of
-doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz
-Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323,
-originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil,
-1952]).
-21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and
-the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
-the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit.
-Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is
-clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of
-that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and
-Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be
-the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion
-for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first
-this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that
-
-~
-remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the
-ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed
-and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
-over feminine.
-22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary
-Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982.
-23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
-explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
-“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates
-politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of
-that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions
-. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the
-possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
-and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New
-York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113).
-24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La
-Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
-eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
-Women of Color Press, 1982).
-25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has
-Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
-Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
-Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10).
-26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2,
-Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20,
-see chapter 3, n. 49.
-27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two
-of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of
-
-~
-cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the
-terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual
-difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the
-Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so
-wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as
-a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and
-Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed
-for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that
-preexist and structure subject-formation itself.
-28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist
-Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other
-Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49.
-29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least
-to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
-Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
-30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
-Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original
-editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social
-function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to
-the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave
-ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality.
-31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche:
-Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta,
-1977), pp. 17–18.
-32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall
-1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25.
-
-~
-33. Ibid., p. 3.
-34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that
-“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other
-words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without
-“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that
-“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s
-Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall,
-Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed.
-(New York: Routledge, 1996).
-35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
-of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New
-York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
-Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French
-version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English
-translation.
-36. See chapter 2, section ii.
-37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x.
-38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press,
-1985), pp. 11–14.
-39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann
-(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45.
-40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion
-of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups
-to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977.
-The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex.
-41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
-Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
-(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114.
-42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration
-or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of
-structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender-
-
-~
-neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
-1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language.
-43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63.
-44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
-Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30.
-45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon,
-1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
-1973).
-46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase.
-47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the
-genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See,
-for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline
-of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton,
-1979).
-48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in
-various parts of chapter 2 of this text.
-49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987).
-50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The
-Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982).
-51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender
-(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is
-that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed
-roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90).
-52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the
-Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The
-“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the
-understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche.
-Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the
-law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the
-other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of
-the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a
-fictive and repressive notion.
-
-~
-53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
-Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston:
-Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and
-Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of
-Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual
-Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the
-Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber
-Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed
-with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann
-Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
-1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to
-Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and
-Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,”
-Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N.
-Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and
-Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71.
-54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure
-of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness
-through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See
-Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and
-Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of
-that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar
-College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that
-she did not.
-55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J.
-Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989).
-56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it
-is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of
-gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic
-ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson,
-
-~
-“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
-Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983).
-2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
-Heterosexual Matrix
-1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s
-“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
-provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and
-masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its
-attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as
-a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map
-that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time.
-Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language
-and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be
-fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the
-reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to
-an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of
-Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer
-exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic
-authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in
-Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana
-University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of
-this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the
-law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of
-that law through recourse to a time before the law.
-2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
-Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
-3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
-Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
-Routledge, 1990).
-4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women:
-Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of
-Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
-Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the
-
-~
-notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how
-women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the
-social bond between men.
-5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary
-Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496.
-6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist
-Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns
-Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of
-Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
-Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
-trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
-7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange—
-and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a
-social value. It provides the means of binding men together.”
-8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca:
-Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103.
-9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men:
-English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University
-Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of
-reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering
-attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and
-an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects
-of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object
-of discourse.
-10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
-as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1993).
-11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
-12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
-13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated
-jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother.
-14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master
-and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire:
-
-~
-Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999).
-15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment
-from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father
-onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
-mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
-Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
-femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980).
-16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques
-Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose,
-trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter,
-page references to this work will appear in the text.
-17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977),
-p. 131.
-18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here
-is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic
-of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is
-whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as
-genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which
-femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a
-fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann
-Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington:
-Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the
-Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982,
-pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17,
-Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and
-the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark
-Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary
-Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper,
-Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985).
-19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of
-Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the
-
-~
-consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which
-founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of
-disavowed losses.
-20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the
-text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order.
-21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
-Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986),
-pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of
-Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will
-appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows,
-“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.”
-22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther
-Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More
-Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance
-(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how
-radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of
-gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the
-presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find
-their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are
-themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a
-counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms.
-23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by
-bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
-Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
-Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and
-are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal.
-24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61.
-25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic
-
-~
-establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification,
-with the analysand that she describes in the article.
-26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85.
-27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
-Rose, p. 44.
-28. Ibid., p. 55.
-29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
-understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See
-his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de
-Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me.
-30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans.
-Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is
-created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery
-of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible
-through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the
-thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s
-Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most
-clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction
-between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in
-Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms,
-the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power,
-but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
-subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
-I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81)
-and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined
-status of the juridical law.
-31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73.
-32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art,
-ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S.
-Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir:
-Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun:
-Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter
-text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the
-
-~
-matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked
-with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of
-primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to
-the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to
-commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas
-the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the
-suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly
-and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern
-effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the
-psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood
-According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body
-Politics of Julia Kristeva.”
-33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id,
-trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia
-and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion
-of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul
-Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and
-Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip
-Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text.
-34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s
-“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic
-Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim
-(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195.
-35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of
-mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below.
-36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between
-the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does
-not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine
-Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
-the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New
-
-~
-York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
-engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan.
-37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81.
-38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale
-University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York:
-International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of
-the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press,
-1968).
-39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie,
-introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in
-L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and
-the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by
-Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of
-this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and
-Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in
-Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New
-York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the
-same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s
-Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer
-(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics
-of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp.
-3–18.
-40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68.
-41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes
-of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes.
-This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward
-by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a
-fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5).
-42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian
-Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the
-heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu-
-
-~
-ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that
-body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals
-the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and
-the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout
-the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on
-these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is
-understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and
-anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity
-into question.
-43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed
-by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego
-is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests
-that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development.
-Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface
-entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in
-Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins
-(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative
-account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the
-implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A
-Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale
-University Press, 1989).
-44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in
-the text.
-45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
-Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de
-Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality.
-46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View
-(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest.
-47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of
-Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980.
-
-~
-48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James
-Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7.
-49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought
-and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable
-narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which
-transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic
-order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting
-or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
-3. Subversive Bodily Acts
-1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol.
-3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118.
-2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984),
-p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris:
-Editions du Seuil, 1974).
-3. Ibid., p. 25.
-4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p.
-135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from
-two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and
-Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil,
-1969).
-5. Ibid., p. 135.
-6. Ibid., p. 134.
-7. Ibid., p. 136.
-8. Ibid.
-9. Ibid., p. 239.
-10. Ibid., pp. 239–240.
-11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen,
-“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia
-Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English,
-1985.
-12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239.
-
-~
-13. Ibid., p. 239.
-14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of
-Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4.
-15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he
-writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations
-are understood as sublimated reproductive desire.
-16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans.
-Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154.
-17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
-of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New
-York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
-Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text.
-18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
-unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
-pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a
-causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See
-chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted.
-19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James
-O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982–
-Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy,
-Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman
-(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291.
-20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences
-(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv.
-21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My
-Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank
-Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . .
-(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973).
-22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism
-without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago:
-University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la
-différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967).
-23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms.
-24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s
-
-~
-Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on
-Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V.
-Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her
-article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda
-Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,”
-Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360.
-25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being
-almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It
-is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender
-to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No.
-2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89.
-See chapter 3, n. 4).
-26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might
-account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category
-violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies
-effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing
-the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to
-writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action,
-we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the
-category of sex in action.
-27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2,
-Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20.,
-see chapter 3, n. 49.
-28. Ibid., p. 17.
-29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
-30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
-Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp.
-21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49.
-31. Ibid., p. 107.
-32. Ibid., p. 106.
-33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
-
-~
-34. Ibid., p. 5.
-35. Ibid., p. 6.
-36. Ibid.
-37. Ibid.
-38. Ibid.
-39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
-Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
-(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical
-difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language
-that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and
-Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of
-linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s
-critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains
-closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the
-semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both
-Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces
-and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze
-argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is
-deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet,
-Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York:
-Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89.
-40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this
-insight.
-41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also
-in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49.
-42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3,
-No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67.
-See chapter 3, n. 49.
-43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.”
-44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French
-New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
-1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter
-3, n. 49.
-45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48.
-
-~
-46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a
-“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee”
-the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the
-second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social
-capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues,
-individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that
-precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay
-with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any
-reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely
-woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their
-organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139).
-47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon,
-1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du
-Minuit, 1969).
-48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9.
-49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in
-1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press,
-1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic
-contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although
-she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general
-will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see
-Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in
-Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and
-Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp.
-259–279.
-50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.”
-51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.”
-52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41.
-53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.”
-54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans.
-Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
-
-~
-Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to
-this essay.
-55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley:
-Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4.
-56. Ibid., p. 113.
-57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988).
-58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115.
-59. Ibid., p. 121.
-60. Ibid., p. 140.
-61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory,
-Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion
-of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in
-honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical
-“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
-62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
-Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur
-(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her
-own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality,
-that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then
-becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals
-and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65).
-63. Ibid., p. 3.
-64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious
-Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of
-Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern
-University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery
-and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990),
-pp. 201–214.
-65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic
-Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
-Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
-
-~
-Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20,
-No. 3,Winter 1988.
-66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
-Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
-67. Ibid., p. 30.
-68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female
-Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
-69. Ibid., p. 103.
-70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,
-WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114.
-71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University
-Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The
-Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive
-Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983).
-
-~
-
-abject, the, 169–70
-Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87
-AIDS, 168–69
-Am I That Name? (Riley), 6
-Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari),
-151
-Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43
-Barnes, Djuna, 152
-Bataille, Georges, 131
-“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60,
-149–51
-berdache, 194n. 8
-binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63
-biology, cellular, 135–41
-bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84,
-98–100, 173
-bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43
-body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as
-boundary, variable, 44, 170–71,
-177; construction of, 12–13, 17,
-161, 168–69; inscription on,
-163–67, 171–73; maternal,
-101–19; permeability of, 168;
-“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70
-Borges, Jorge, 131
-
-butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58
-chromosomes, 135–41
-Civilization and Its Discontents
-(Freud), 92
-Cixous, Hélène, 131
-corporeal styles, 178–80
-Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5
-de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18,
-35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177
-de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49
-Deleuze and Guattari, 151
-Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150,
-193n. 2, 201–2n. 1
-de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51
-Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21
-Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5
-Dews, Peter, 209n. 49
-différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150
-Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171
-dispositions, sexual, 77–84
-Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169,
-214–15n. 62
-drag, 174–80
-écriture feminine, 19
-
-~
-Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77,
-79–82, 84
-ego-ideal, the, 79–81
-Eicher, Eva, 138–41
-Elementary Structures of Kinship, The
-(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55
-empty space, 86
-Engels, Friedrich, 47
-epistemology and identity, 183–84
-Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92
-Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41
-fêlure, 71, 100
-feminism: debates within, 18–22;
-foundationalist frame of,
-189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46;
-and politics, 181–90; and sexual
-difference, 35–44; women as
-“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
-Ferenczi, Sandor, 66
-Foucault, Michel: on category of
-sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18,
-123–35; on genealogy, 165–66;
-on homosexuality, 83, 130–31;
-on inscription, 171–73; on
-repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97
-Franklin, Aretha, 29–30,
-198–99n. 34
-Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84,
-203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36
-Gallop, Jane, 37
-Garbo, Greta, 163
-Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50
-gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77;
-as incredible, 180; in language,
-28–30; overthrow of, 95–96,
-151–54; as performative,
-163–90; as regulatory, 23–33,
-
-42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33,
-47–48, 141–65
-genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188
-genetics, sex and, 135–41
-Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53,
-160–61
-Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40
-Haar, Michel, 27–28
-Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25
-Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183,
-196–97n. 21, 203n. 14
-Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently
-Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault),
-31–32, 120, 123–35
-heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26,
-30–31, 34–35, 147–50
-heterosexual matrix, 42–43,
-45–100
-History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1
-(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117,
-120–24, 135–36
-homosexuality: Foucault on, 83,
-130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan
-on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14;
-and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere
-on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84,
-87–88, 168–70;Wittig on,
-24–33
-hooks, bell, 205n. 23
-Husserl, Edmund, 17
-identification in gender, 40–41,
-80–91, 207n. 38
-identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of,
-181–90
-imitation, 41, 174–76
-impersonation, 174–80
-
-~
-incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84,
-87–88, 110, 204n. 19
-“incorporation” of identity, 86–91,
-171–74
-internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38
-“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166,
-186, 201–2n. 1
-Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27,
-34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54
-Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56
-“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade”
-(Heath), 67–68
-Jones, Ernest, 64
-jouissance, 55, 71
-Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2,
-201–2n. 1
-Kant, Immanuel, 71
-kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16
-Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32
-Kristeva, Julia: on the abject,
-169–70; on Lacan, 101–2,
-104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14;
-and the maternal body, 101–19;
-on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32;
-as orientalist, 114; on repression,
-104–5, 115–17; on the
-Symbolic, 102, 104–10
-Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2,
-104–5; and lesbian sexuality,
-62–64; and the Law, 55, 59,
-70–72; and masquerade, 60–73;
-on the Phallus, 56–60; on
-sexual difference, 36–39; on
-the Symbolic, 57, 70–73,
-101–2, 104
-language: and culture, 55; gender in,
-28–30; poetic, 101–12; and
-
-identity, 182–86; and power,
-33–44
-law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2,
-118–19, 200n. 52
-Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72
-Leibniz, Gottfried, 51
-Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36,
-153, 159–60, 169
-lesbianism: and the body, 35–36,
-159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64;
-and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of
-women, 26–27, 162–63
-Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93
-“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41
-literalization, 87–91
-Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50
-Locke, John, 158
-MacCormack, Carol, 48
-Marcuse, Herbert, 92
-“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig),
-28–29
-Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183
-masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18
-melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19,
-206–7n. 32
-Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in
-America (Newton), 163, 174
-“Motherhood According to Bellini”
-(Kristeva), 71
-mourning, 73–84, 107–9
-“Mourning and Melancholia”
-(Freud), 73–74, 78–79
-Newton, Esther, 163, 174,
-205n. 22
-
-~
-Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73,
-166, 171, 206n. 30
-Oedipal complex, the, 75–84,
-91–100
-“One Is Not Born a Woman”
-(Wittig), 143–44
-On the Genealogy of Morals
-(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171,
-206n. 30
-“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig),
-159, 214n. 49
-Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131
-Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11
-Page, David, 136–41
-Panizza, Oscar, 120
-“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151
-parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90
-pastiche, 176, 186–87
-patriarchy, 45–46
-performativity, 171–90
-person, unversal conception of,
-14–15
-phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52
-Phallus, the, 55–73
-Plato, 17, 92, 116
-Pleasure and Danger (Vance),
-200–201n. 53, 205n. 22
-pleasures, proliferation of,
-35–36
-Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and
-the Media (Watney), 168
-politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9,
-181–90; of identity, 181–87
-“Postmodernism and Consumer
-Society” (Jameson), 176
-power: and category of sex, 25,
-155–58; and language, 33–44;
-
-prohibition as, 91–100; and
-volition, 158
-Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70
-Proust, Marcel, 152
-psychoanalytic accounts of sexual
-difference, 33–39, 44–100
-Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67,
-169
-redeployment of categories, 163–90
-repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87
-representation, problems of, 3–9
-repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17
-Revolution in Poetic Language
-(Kristeva), 104
-Riley, Denise, 6
-Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25
-Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70,
-156n. 51, 205–6n. 29
-Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4,
-209n. 45
-Same/Other binary, 131–33
-Sarraute, Natalie, 152
-Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164,
-196–97n. 21
-Schafer, Roy, 86
-Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18,
-35, 141, 143
-Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9
-semiotic, the, 101–19
-sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,”
-35–36, 141–63; and genetics,
-135–41; vs. gender, 9–11,
-23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and
-identity, 23–33; as project,
-177–78
-“Sex-Determining Region of the
-Human Y Chromosome Encodes
-a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41
-
-~
-Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53
-sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96,
-120–24, 155–58
-signifying economy, masculinist,
-18–19
-“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30
-Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie
-(Kristeva), 73
-space, internal, 86–91, 170–71
-Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty,
-197n. 23, 204n. 18
-Stoller, Robert, 32
-“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45,
-159
-Strathern, Marilyn, 48
-structuralism, 49–55
-subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48,
-149–54, 169–70, 181–90
-substance, metaphysics of, 25–28,
-34, 37
-Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73,
-102, 104–10
-Symposium (Plato), 116
-Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
-(Freud), 36, 52, 140
-Torok, Maria, 86–87
-Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54
-“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political
-Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin),
-92–96
-transsexuality, 90
-
-Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50
-Tyler, Parker, 163
-“unity,” 20–22
-“universality,” 15–16
-Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault),
-135–36
-Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53,
-205n. 22
-Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22
-Washburn, Linda L., 138–41
-Watney, Simon, 168
-Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir,
-143–44; and category of sex,
-24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59;
-and heterosexual contract,
-34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and
-Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141,
-147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as
-materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159
-“Womanliness as a Masquerade”
-(Riviere), 61–73
-women: as “being” the Phallus,
-55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9,
-19–22, 162–64; as object of
-exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of
-feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
-Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131
-Young, Iris Marion, 
- \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html b/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html deleted file mode 100644 index 13202e5..0000000 --- a/gender-trouble/annotated-pages.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,7141 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - -
Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it
-to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have
-as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one
-of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded
-my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an
-embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even
-as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in
-the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it
-belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism
-and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to
-undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the
-former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the
-case of Gender Trouble.
-In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual
-assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views
-that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and
-restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity
-and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory
-~
-that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own
-practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often
-with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to
-seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and
-exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or
-derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for
-readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field
-of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities
-ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in
-the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal,
-and illegitimate is likely to pose that question.
-Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual
-and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and
-all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought
-to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions
-about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the
-face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of
-gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must
-be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded
-from any effort to think gender?
-Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was
-called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists.
-Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of
-sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be
-~
-one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear
-on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If
-in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof
-from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the
-case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point
-was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those
-theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the
-critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed
-strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive
-can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism
-is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years,
-however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and
-sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism
-of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the
-domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether
-my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty
-Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but
-perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between
-the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim
-that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural
-studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory
-(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural
-studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the
-point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural
-appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure,
-where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is
-not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where
-cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and
-its promise of success, uncertain.
-~
-Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious
-American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate
-theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although
-the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it
-will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of
-the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein,
-various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva,
-Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in
-France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a
-French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct
-from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist
-inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has
-threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few
-French publishers who have considered it.1
-Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It
-emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates
-on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and
-feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality,
-and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique
-Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and
-lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the
-1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism,
-Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the
-two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what
-is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con-
-
-~
-summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in
-a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call
-into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do
-certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is
-a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through
-normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to
-queer contexts?
-The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender
-emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and
-sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender.
-Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent
-that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and
-to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s
-sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of
-“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror
-and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one
-sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a
-certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and
-language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various
-new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism
-and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme
-identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who
-become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”?
-What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must
-be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness”
-that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some
-lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status
-
-~
-as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years,
-offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not
-anticipate.2
-But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought
-to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual
-practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of
-normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way
-of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation
-of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there
-are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes:
-Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of
-gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of
-sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization
-of inequality between men and women.3
-
-In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is
-not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender,
-but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is
-what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may
-be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said.
-Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for
-the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy
-serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are
-gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony?
-Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative
-use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming
-the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender,
-MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for
-thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender
-~
-discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all
-discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment
-may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there
-are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is
-important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated
-against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in
-accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment
-of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity.
-Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender
-means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with
-some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that
-men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be
-straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a
-critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her
-womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination
-becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender
-should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter
-accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that
-the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but
-seeks to oppose it.
-I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn
-an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal
-or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one
-~
-perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual
-normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to
-be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is
-meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension
-of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are
-clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede,
-however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered
-ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at
-all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or
-deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for
-instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably
-mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing.
-Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying
-and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender
-Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only
-because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have
-changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but
-because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of
-gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.”
-There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law,
-attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which
-that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its
-object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that
-might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very
-phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which
-~
-the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as
-outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization
-in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained
-temporal duration.8
-Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and
-one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender
-is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal
-essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed
-that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we
-anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an
-hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble
-clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into
-the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and
-several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to
-come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic
-break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I
-would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of
-a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical
-mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted.
-Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do
-become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through
-that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche
-performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration.
-Although this text does not answer the question of whether the
-materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of
-much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the
-~
-reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity
-can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several
-scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made
-explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple
-analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not
-whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but
-what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race.
-Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,”
-whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that
-no single account of construction will do, and that these categories
-always work as background for one another, and they often find their
-most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization
-of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once,
-and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive
-category of analysis.12
-Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and
-debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a
-full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions
-of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was
-produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social
-movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a
-lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in
-which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book.
-Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a
-person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw
-many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of
-some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural
-edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the
-midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom,
-and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a
-part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension.
-At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living
-~
-a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic
-book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth
-Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life.
-That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of
-solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the
-problem that this someone is given in language).
-It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the
-text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same
-time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its
-reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated
-with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped
-to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and
-the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender
-were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the
-relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist
-jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of
-Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug.
-In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in
-Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I
-tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and
-exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important
-strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I
-worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human
-Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual
-minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to
-understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out
-the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet
-~
-met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is
-defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More
-recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory
-and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book
-that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of
-hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be
-published by Verso in 2000).
-Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in
-relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that
-seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on
-questions of sexuality, gender, and culture.
-Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to
-the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to
-some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular”
-according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps
-attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the
-complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of
-calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for
-grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive.
-I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend.
-Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly,
-one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are
-not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style
-are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible
-speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of
-not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell,
-in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about
-common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar
-is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints
-~
-that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself.
-But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly
-irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and
-sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who
-are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does
-their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual
-life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of
-linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical
-norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at
-the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part,
-through contesting the grammar in which gender is given.
-The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon
-looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing
-perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the
-sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who
-devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve?
-What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency”
-keep obscure?
-I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender
-norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body,
-deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the
-Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their
-sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the
-age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and
-homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation
-but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on
-a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this
-violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at
-the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be
-~
-a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human
-agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the
-violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this
-text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the
-pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality
-that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The
-writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to
-play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real”
-politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are
-always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible,
-and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be
-like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended
-kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate
-the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14
-Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the
-realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose
-are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to
-judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings
-in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to
-describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender
-ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also
-pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete
-consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender
-Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender
-is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It
-is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the
-~
-same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered
-world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of
-a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be
-good.”
-Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide
-between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their
-judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and
-then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on
-the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what
-makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility,
-whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which
-expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying
-persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way.
-The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a
-question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a
-fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what
-is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense
-prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation.
-I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes
-the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such
-judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be
-made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves
-posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always
-run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition
-and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity
-culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name
-the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what
-is at stake in using the term at all?
-~
-What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of
-questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and
-how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In
-other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit
-the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the
-means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are
-the means by which we transform it?
-The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of
-subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is
-rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or
-a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those
-perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced
-through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory
-appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take
-the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood,
-and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this
-perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of
-the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or
-we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or
-how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it
-is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly
-erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality,
-then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy
-from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be
-preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may
-not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees?
-The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail,
-
-~
-when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely
-the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered
-is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories
-itself constitutes the experience of the body in question.
-When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is
-also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from
-the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand
-that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized
-knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call
-it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in
-itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real.
-And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices
-that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and
-reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented
-and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be
-made differently and, indeed, less violently.
-The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a
-true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling
-of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized
-knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism,
-heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and
-improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten
-by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish
-what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be
-considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which
-bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this
-legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is
-
-~
-not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter
-the violence performed by gender norms.
-In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the
-condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain
-performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal
-dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in
-response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications.
-Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and
-I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and
-revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and
-expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the
-volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political
-(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions
-(Routledge, 1995).
-I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I”
-to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I”
-that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the
-availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that
-structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes
-this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it.
-What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar
-that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that
-establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely
-~
-to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not
-trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without
-which no “I” can appear.
-This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from
-a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of
-the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the
-publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory
-of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the
-ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in
-The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency.
-Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or
-that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read
-directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined
-over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have
-come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and
-that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In
-Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied
-relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider
-that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences.
-Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor
-to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous.
-This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the
-insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of
-both bodily seduction and the threat of injury.
-~
-If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would
-include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal
-gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I
-would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular,
-how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized
-forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual
-minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will
-refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a
-coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and
-its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power,
-and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to
-refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining
-recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within
-reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider
-it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the
-purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of
-identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no
-reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position
-purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as
-the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those
-who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold
-that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life
-of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or
-try to live, on the sexual margins.15
-Judith Butler
-Berkeley, California
-June, 1999
-~
-
-Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time
-and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps
-trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was,
-within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should
-never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion
-and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of
-power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in
-trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble
-is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it.
-As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I
-noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the
-terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and
-unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I
-read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject
-of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the
-unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the
-glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the
-~
-masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on
-the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my
-attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than
-an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion
-between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate
-in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I
-asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the
-Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those
-terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the
-subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic
-regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology?
-But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into
-question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support
-gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of
-“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female
-indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is,
-the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories
-is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to
-require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of
-the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that
-gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real.
-Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the
-natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through
-which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through
-which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted
-~
-through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the
-body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize
-“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative
-construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be
-shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original,
-and the inevitable?
-To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as
-effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical
-inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual
-identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices,
-discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this
-inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions:
-phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality.
-Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion,
-its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both
-terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this
-inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests.
-Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle
-the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of
-politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the
-consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What
-new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no
-longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what
-extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation
-for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself?
-* * *
-~
-This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of
-gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1,
-“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as
-the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory
-heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of
-power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of
-sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the
-feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the
-female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how
-do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where
-are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce
-the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of
-power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of
-continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are
-these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call
-into question their alleged relations?
-Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
-Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism
-that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities
-within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within
-some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of
-cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued
-through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan
-Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is
-subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The
-History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown
-both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual
-~
-economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual
-complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual
-codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about
-the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies?
-The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical
-consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva
-in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged
-to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of
-Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an
-insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and
-fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions,
-Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas
-and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body,
-sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification
-and proliferation beyond the binary frame.
-It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within
-its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of
-the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a
-childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact.
-Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which
-gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is
-~
-clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the
-various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled
-to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the
-predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this
-author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other
-discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical
-boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to
-participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from
-other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an
-interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist
-the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique.
-The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of
-Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship
-for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for
-Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and
-provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The
-George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported
-my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has
-been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this
-manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The
-“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under
-Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by
-virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective
-thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna
-Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll
-Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender,
-Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985
-and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to
-~
-imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of
-critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work
-from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities
-Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the
-University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School
-of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and
-her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial
-and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues
-who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar,
-Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice
-Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone,
-Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work
-in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project
-and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance.
-As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination,
-keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work.
-
-~
-
-~
-GENDER TROUBL
-~
-
-~
-1
-
-Subjects of
-Sex/Gender/Desire
-One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one.
-—Simone de Beauvoir
-Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist.
-—Julia Kristeva
-Woman does not have a sex.
-—Luce Irigaray
-The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex.
-—Michel Foucault
-The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual.
-—Monique Wittig
-
-i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism
-For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some
-existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not
-only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand,
-representation serves as the operative term within a political process
-that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political
-subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function
-of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is
-~
-assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory,
-the development of a language that fully or adequately represents
-women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of
-women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all.
-Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist
-discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable
-or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after
-all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of
-women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out
-in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed,
-with the result that representation is extended only to what can be
-acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being
-a subject must first be met before representation can be extended.
-Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power
-appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is,
-through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the
-contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them,
-formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements
-of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation
-of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of
-representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to
-facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that
-system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential
-~
-axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be
-masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the
-emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating.
-The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist
-politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced
-through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the
-juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the
-political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating
-and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively
-concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical
-structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces”
-what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned
-with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In
-effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject
-before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s
-own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women
-might become more fully represented in language and politics.
-Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of
-“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the
-very structures of power through which emancipation is sought.
-Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises
-the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the
-law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as
-well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law
-as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing
-assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law
-might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature
-hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a
-presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and,
-thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract.
-~
-Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of
-the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism
-encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common
-identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those
-whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural,
-has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As
-Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by
-the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a
-woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not
-because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of
-its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or
-consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to
-separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in
-which it is invariably produced and maintained.
-The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for
-feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist
-cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of
-women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of
-a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its
-failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts
-have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the
-start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its
-efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support
-highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to
-construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western
-barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for
-patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own
-~
-claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a
-categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to
-produce women’s common subjugated experience.
-Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the
-kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more
-difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is
-there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is
-there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and
-integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified
-against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural
-formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is
-both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its
-difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of
-“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the
-exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but
-in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully
-decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from
-the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of
-identity a misnomer.4
-My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the
-subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the
-representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature
-insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the
-category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory
-consequences of that construction, even when the construction has
-been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation
-within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from
-“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary
-~
-limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider
-representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the
-constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem
-is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for
-merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that
-exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion
-itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By
-conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism
-articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross
-misrepresentation.
-Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics
-constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position
-outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating
-practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present,
-as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted
-frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize.
-Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics,
-a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a
-feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the
-ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order
-to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on
-other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical
-critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having
-to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested
-by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably
-excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in
-a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals
-to extend its claims to “representation”?5
-Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of
-~
-the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting
-regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of
-the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves
-to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort
-of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of
-gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of
-identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a
-political goal.
-To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what
-qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a
-feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort
-to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic
-invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend
-representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion
-of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of
-the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics?
-The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of
-feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a
-field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation.
-Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense
-for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed.
-ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire
-Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject
-by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex
-and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability
-sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is
-~
-neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity
-of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction
-that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7
-If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes,
-then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken
-to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders.
-Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow
-that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of
-males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even
-if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology
-and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to
-assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of
-a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise
-restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as
-radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily
-signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male
-body as easily as a female one.
-This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set
-of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without
-first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what
-means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific
-discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex
-have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is
-there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy
-that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are
-the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests?
-If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct
-called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it
-~
-was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction
-between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11
-It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural
-interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought
-not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a
-pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the
-very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is
-also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture,
-a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of
-“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it
-is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for
-sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be
-understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to
-encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production?
-iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of
-Contemporary Debate
-Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential
-attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What
-gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what
-is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness
-imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of
-agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain
-laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What
-~
-sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that
-gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law.
-When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in
-terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In
-such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny.
-On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex
-that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For
-Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an
-agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and
-could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable
-and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear
-that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion
-to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.”
-There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who
-becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as
-she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already
-been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as
-a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be
-shown to have been gender all along.14
-The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to
-founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will
-and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that
-some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits
-the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a
-passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the
-instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will
-~
-ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction,
-as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the
-mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does
-the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do
-we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument
-awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15
-Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse
-which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to
-safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender”
-or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose
-and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered
-possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the
-limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always
-set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on
-binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality.
-Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender.
-Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension”
-of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases,
-gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually
-differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists
-only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not
-an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that
-only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the
-masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of
-~
-their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood.
-In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray
-argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within
-the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.”
-Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language,
-women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity.
-Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex
-constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense,
-women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to
-Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray
-argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a
-closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing
-goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir,
-women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of
-signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the
-Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity
-of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as
-inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the
-metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject.
-What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform
-thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist
-conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is
-the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist
-feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person
-who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,”
-called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral
-deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person,
-~
-der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand
-gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable
-contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what
-the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the
-constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and
-contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being,
-but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically
-specific sets of relations.
-Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point
-of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an
-abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This
-absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s)
-that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray,
-the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female
-sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither
-“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the
-Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for
-Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir
-would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms
-of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even
-in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one.
-The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in
-a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men
-could not settle the question of women because they would then be
-acting as both judge and party to the case.18
-The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete;
-~
-each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and
-meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of
-socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of
-gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above.
-The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume
-that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which,
-on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned
-within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility
-of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements
-about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be
-argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is,
-indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and
-man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of
-identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry.
-For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms
-of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to
-immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for
-the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and,
-hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her
-position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject
-is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as
-female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted
-to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom.
-Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of
-~
-negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality?
-The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will
-later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both
-the existential subject and its Other.
-Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation
-and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting
-essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is
-clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts
-to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/
-body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The
-preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the
-very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes,
-Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political
-and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates
-the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity
-and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the
-mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender
-hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized.
-The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from
-“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very
-mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of
-gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body
-is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body,
-in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a
-~
-masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked
-off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian
-terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading,
-Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not
-the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and
-en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting
-linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place.
-iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond
-Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by
-which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed
-reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that
-the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist
-critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical
-structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that
-traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual
-difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological
-imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of
-cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism?
-The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a
-global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a
-repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23
-Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to
-~
-the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as
-singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the
-strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms.
-That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike
-suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the
-varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly
-insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related,
-distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed,
-the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of
-dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual
-difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot
-be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism
-or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one
-tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service
-of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain.
-The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the
-question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or
-shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture
-feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who
-claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and
-is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege
-intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of
-the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of
-~
-cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array
-of “women” are constructed.
-Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics
-which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be.
-They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously
-positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework
-of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not
-to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging
-and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in
-advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates
-coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert
-herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for
-coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee
-unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not
-the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and,
-most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition.
-The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes
-that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action.
-But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on
-unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and
-take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what
-dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of
-democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific
-and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a
-conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power
-relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be
-interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a
-liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions
-of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to
-~
-gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become
-complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that
-category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve
-as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force.
-Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature
-insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged
-fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the
-“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired.
-Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of
-identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt
-the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish
-precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted
-at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context
-of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of
-identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions
-must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is
-permanently moot.
-This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes
-neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a
-coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because
-the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a
-definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity
-concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist
-tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity
-concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities
-or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or
-~
-subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve
-depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain
-political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to
-accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous
-self that offers its complexity at once.
-Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred,
-never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition,
-then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without
-obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure.
-v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance
-What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the
-same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do
-these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would
-be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed
-prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological
-discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the
-person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the
-various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility
-and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the
-person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally
-related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that
-literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the
-focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of
-what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts
-~
-almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the
-person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through
-time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of
-gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To
-what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive
-feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In
-other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not
-logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is
-assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality,
-the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural
-emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings
-who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered
-norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined.
-“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and
-maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender,
-sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing
-norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines
-of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders,
-and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual
-desire through sexual practice.
-The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that
-generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender
-norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the
-production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between
-“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive
-attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which
-gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of
-~
-“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow”
-from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation
-of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate
-the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain
-kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural
-intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical
-impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and
-regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up
-within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder.
-Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems
-crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of
-what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist
-between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect
-of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a
-relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of
-a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in
-which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression?
-Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the
-identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine,
-that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and
-those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category
-of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the
-category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality,
-~
-onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically,
-with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of
-heterosexual hegemony.
-The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on
-how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive
-capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a
-“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western
-culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation
-and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off.
-Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple
-negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a
-monologic elaboration of the masculine.
-Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex
-appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically
-speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a
-performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact
-that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray,
-grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely
-because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation
-between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the
-substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well
-as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary
-that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive
-multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an
-~
-artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of
-sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies.
-For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive
-aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she
-claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In
-other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender,
-and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian”
-emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary
-restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no
-metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination,
-appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under
-the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands
-first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept
-I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an
-inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27
-The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig,
-is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized
-features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and
-autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the
-destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an
-attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche,
-come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In
-other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but
-the feminine:
-
-~
-Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between
-the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there
-are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine”
-not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the
-general.28
-
-Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can
-assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that
-destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal
-point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality
-through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the
-normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of
-substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not
-only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and
-materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a
-radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction
-between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of
-the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not
-only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to
-that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production
-and naturalization of the category of sex itself.
-The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with
-Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a
-number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain
-illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that
-the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior
-ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues
-Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity,
-order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do
-
-~
-they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes,
-this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the
-psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical
-thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the
-metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the
-psychological person as a substantive thing:
-The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as
-well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic.
-All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person)
-derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes
-back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense
-but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the
-structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty
-that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that
-come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to
-be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual,
-are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances
-fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31
-
-Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons
-cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She
-provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French.
-According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies”
-them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary
-gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of
-nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender”
-(1984), she writes:
-The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its
-meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as
-
-~
-far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and
-French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give
-way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a
-division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals
-with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to
-belong primarily to philosophy.32
-
-For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to
-“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe
-they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without
-saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in
-nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on
-gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of
-“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to
-“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that
-metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and
-“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under
-that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender
-and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various
-expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual
-desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex”
-whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional
-internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I
-feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant.
-Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy
-(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also
-fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like
-a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the
-~
-defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34
-This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender.
-Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of
-gender within that binary pair.
-Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and
-desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate
-gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the
-self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it
-desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or
-woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the
-univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of
-gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system.
-This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation
-among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects
-or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The
-metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and
-expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that
-is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic
-paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and
-desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self
-is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and
-desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is
-presupposed, reified, and rationalized.
-This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding
-the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and
-regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is
-differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a
-~
-consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex,
-gender, and desire.
-The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories
-of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within
-the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality
-and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the
-Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35
-Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization
-of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific
-mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary
-categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus
-of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience,
-behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this
-ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of
-sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any
-discursive account of sexuality.
-Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite,
-Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of
-a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the
-sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the
-true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because
-she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that
-govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the
-terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault,
-Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the
-~
-disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in
-her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her
-anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality)
-implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the
-identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the
-cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as
-qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere.
-As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered
-experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and
-hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes,
-essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine,
-Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the
-postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and
-hierarchy, a regulatory fiction.
-If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and
-to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that
-man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine
-attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the
-gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman”
-as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion
-of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the
-compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences,
-then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman
-as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that
-fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility.
-The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the
-psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines
-~
-of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is
-conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant
-adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they
-are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of
-gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if
-these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently
-created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the
-ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous.
-In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory
-practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse
-of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative—
-that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense,
-gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be
-said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the
-relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there
-is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a
-fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application
-that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we
-might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the
-expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by
-the very “expressions” that are said to be its results.
-vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of
-Displacement
-A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is
-argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a
-~
-transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig
-appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other
-hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical
-locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that
-there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the
-performative construction of gender within the material practices of
-culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would
-confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual
-space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the
-Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes:
-A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the
-cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the
-oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women.
-Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as
-an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging
-to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct
-perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40
-
-Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual
-desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could
-liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41
-Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an
-institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her
-view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would
-understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying
-economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating
-~
-mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field
-of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig,
-language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its
-structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of
-another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping
-the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose
-the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse
-that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like
-Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine
-and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on
-Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig
-asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43
-Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate
-and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language
-to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically
-transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and,
-hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The
-linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to
-restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual
-desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as
-well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the
-category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig
-appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call
-for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the
-construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures
-outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine
-form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be
-~
-understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on
-the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more
-diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification
-invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital
-norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to
-deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely
-those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and
-effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of
-development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual
-matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what
-extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of
-normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model
-of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what
-extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What
-possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself?
-Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the
-unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks
-to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the
-marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she
-both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of
-the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands
-that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a
-regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of
-heterosexist oppression in Wittig.
-In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud,
-sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of
-~
-struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a
-mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the
-Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create
-sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions
-of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars
-the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation
-between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly,
-the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father
-requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the
-rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that
-reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48
-The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in
-opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical
-reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an
-expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable
-absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of
-that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and
-Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of
-sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the
-dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual
-identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous
-ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the
-French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking
-replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect
-the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed
-sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very
-~
-impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the
-feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence
-through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only
-that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs
-identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as
-a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the
-ground for the insurrections against him).
-The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there
-is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the
-mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality.
-Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is
-understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is
-no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set
-of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of
-the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of
-substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her
-existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person,
-to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the
-paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is
-perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52
-But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal
-trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a
-law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its
-authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that
-sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation
-of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the
-law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before”
-of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted
-modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative
-~
-framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and
-inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed
-to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not
-have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or
-“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the
-juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently
-generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that
-emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication
-or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy
-of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and
-inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely
-exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the
-boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible.
-The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of
-significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom
-have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of
-Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual
-constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in
-which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even
-within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The
-same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality.
-Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from
-a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific
-feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that
-biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here
-through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether
-it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization
-of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize
-~
-that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written
-off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality
-is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed
-within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine
-pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If
-so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction?
-The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice
-has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the
-terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in
-terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence
-of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a
-masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed
-project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if
-a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of
-the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed
-within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative
-sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural
-impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones
-the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This
-critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of
-power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its
-consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified”
-sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning
-of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in
-terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of
-“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable.
-~
-If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays
-its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to
-acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there
-forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of
-“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural
-intelligibility that govern gendered life?
-Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the
-simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of
-specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch”
-and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained
-as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And
-neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of
-heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight
-may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization
-of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in
-non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed
-status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not
-as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of
-this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the
-idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs
-circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do
-gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation
-exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through
-~
-hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very
-constructs by which they are mobilized?
-Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and
-among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive
-and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural
-configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention,
-exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the
-“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The
-force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their
-convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized
-ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as
-if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the
-cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges:
-What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself?
-If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that
-escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively
-produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what
-constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender?
-Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears
-to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not
-always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that
-~
-infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very
-complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to
-hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of
-these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of
-sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning,
-then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility
-of a disruption of their univocal posturing.
-Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional
-philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being
-a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology.
-The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object
-of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of
-its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those
-terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the
-“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender
-ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of
-the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate
-and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization.
-If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born,
-but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in
-process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to
-originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the
-most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious
-practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for
-Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a
-telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender
-is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a
-highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the
-~
-appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy
-of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive
-appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for
-those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that
-police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that
-create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a
-part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on
-the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that
-have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that
-have constituted its contingent ontologies.
-The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of
-sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes
-outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those
-regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the
-binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as
-regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power
-regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter
-considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting
-signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically
-signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of
-dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively
-enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its
-naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues,
-then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support
-masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble,
-not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the
-mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those
-constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing
-as the foundational illusions of identity.
-~
-2
-
-Prohibition, Psychoanalysis,
-and the Production
-of the Heterosexual Matrix
-The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality
-represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight
-mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality.
-—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind”
-
-On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin,
-a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an
-imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the
-history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether
-prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or
-matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a
-beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind
-these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a
-reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon.
-Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended
-to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme
-has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some
-feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs
-within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened
-to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct
-~
-articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As
-feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against
-racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important
-to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy
-as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration
-from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary
-past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic
-reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power.
-The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost
-always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of
-the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and
-necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a
-state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the
-law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that,
-by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past,
-makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability.
-Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a
-utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that
-promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a
-new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the
-terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present
-state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law,
-then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory
-fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or
-antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory
-becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic
-~
-gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This
-ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome.
-Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those
-feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge
-various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or
-key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories
-which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women.
-As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the
-contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of
-oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however,
-whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals.
-Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist
-theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently
-transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or
-“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect
-that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is
-before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins
-to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship.
-This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized
-foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of
-~
-domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between
-culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which
-culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it
-into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the
-model of domination.
-Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have
-argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as
-female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured
-as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated
-with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered
-to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an
-opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality
-and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that
-construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the
-discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing
-framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of
-“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are
-the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they
-serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very
-designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to
-be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3
-The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be
-rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to
-think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining.
-Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be
-~
-no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might
-serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical
-assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism
-whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only
-the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status,
-but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms.
-How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology?
-Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful
-to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery
-of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal
-of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist
-theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism,
-and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status—
-is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it
-inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To
-what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place?
-i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange
-Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in
-accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure
-of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship.
-According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange
-that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women,
-given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes
-“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only
-~
-serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other
-words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men;
-she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being
-the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific
-kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion
-of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As
-wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of
-men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the
-patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they
-bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a
-relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a
-common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity.
-The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure
-human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that
-he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete
-cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical
-structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can
-be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work
-(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the
-questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this
-universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic
-describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human
-character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity”
-~
-to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to
-women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of
-positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative
-logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems
-always require the construction of socially impossible identities to
-occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s
-marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a
-major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions
-whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss.
-The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested
-within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship
-of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation
-within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms
-presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is
-presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning.
-This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic
-totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness
-within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and
-with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss
-refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of
-binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As
-a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the
-operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement.
-For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established
-through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where
-the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established
-between men and the women who effect the differentiation between
-~
-men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating
-moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a
-Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But
-what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first
-in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating
-mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit,
-male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As
-Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on
-an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal
-clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls
-“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a
-relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men,
-but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9
-In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest
-taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds:
-Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply
-that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of
-exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the
-means of binding men together.
-
-The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss
-understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and
-unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays
-on the Theory of Sexuality).
-~
-The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is
-the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men
-and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women.
-Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought
-must have required that women, like words, should be things that were
-exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from
-the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective
-position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an
-inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in
-which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby
-becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on
-what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work,
-Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of
-reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity
-between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the
-unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality.
-If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and
-can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain
-either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual
-difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose
-that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does
-“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it
-produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law
-itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive?
-The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship
-that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the
-~
-incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist
-anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges
-that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds,
-he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a
-pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of
-the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the
-mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance
-undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying
-a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an
-ancient and lasting dream.”11
-In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious
-incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its
-power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it
-evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at
-all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides
-insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of
-incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with
-assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in
-no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest
-that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are
-generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That
-incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not
-also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms
-become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their
-prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous
-practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription?
-For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest
-between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated
-as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality
-constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire,
-~
-and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The
-naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency
-are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere
-assumed within this founding structuralist frame.
-The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of
-culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic
-structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the
-incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of
-kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take
-place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity
-apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the
-Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile
-entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression
-that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly
-barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery
-of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the
-subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural
-production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language
-inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of
-its referential gestures.
-ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade
-To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to
-confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western
-metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question
-~
-“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted
-and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the
-paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the
-characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological
-gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is
-itself pre-ontological.
-There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being,
-without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing
-signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition
-of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus
-denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other
-words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other
-that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but
-the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus
-means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power,
-to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and
-to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the
-dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that
-lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests
-that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the
-masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm
-and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13
-This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance
-or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the
-mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of
-men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The
-interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of
-~
-failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his
-own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in
-a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the
-terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the
-inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction
-and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real.
-If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of
-signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense
-to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly
-crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame
-that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the
-structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this
-scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in
-terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression,
-one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but
-whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions
-that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the
-subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding
-signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the
-(now repressed) maternal body.
-The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and
-thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts
-to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual
-possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and
-everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy.
-This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women
-reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes
-essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the
-basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it
-~
-serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by
-the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced
-maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be
-precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also
-and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to
-repression and individuation.
-Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain
-the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding
-postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would
-break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position.
-In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent
-masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the
-sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in
-their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being”
-the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to
-reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that
-“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify
-the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The
-division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is
-established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic
-dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both
-masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging
-to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by
-either position.
-To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its
-object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and
-promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of
-exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the
-mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the
-emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is
-necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully
-reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of
-~
-women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to
-the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be
-nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity
-of the Phallus.
-On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to
-“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and
-can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having”
-and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic
-failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these
-repeated impossibilities.
-But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that
-embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done
-through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the
-feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the
-Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”:
-Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a
-having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the
-contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject
-in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be
-signified.16
-
-In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to
-refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well
-as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the
-position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows
-from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the
-‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said
-not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on
-the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems
-that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is
-~
-characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some
-unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of
-behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84).
-Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it
-suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the
-ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would
-appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of
-being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to
-the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that
-there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the
-masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable
-of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and
-displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy.
-At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the
-ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade
-may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other
-hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented
-by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s
-desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would
-engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery
-distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the
-“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by
-Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in
-order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained
-suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18
-~
-Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive
-as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time.
-Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan
-Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their
-interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated
-and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some
-way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual
-possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of
-a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests,
-transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity
-to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the
-masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position?
-Lacan continues the quotation cited above:
-Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the
-phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman
-will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes
-through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be
-desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in
-the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love.
-Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84)
-
-If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic
-Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might
-so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential
-~
-part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed
-part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that
-must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the
-unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that
-attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is
-this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the
-core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must
-be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore,
-is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order
-to be that lack that confirms?
-Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of
-the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of
-love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the
-object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of
-love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals
-suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals
-are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure
-of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in
-effect, twice lost.
-Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from
-a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love”
-(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently
-elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone
-who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding
-disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment
-recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade.
-One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to
-a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the
-expense of desire.
-Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with
-~
-the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate
-the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if
-female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear,
-and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that
-female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as
-observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it
-the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what
-clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment”
-and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear
-to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can
-understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is
-presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as
-the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account
-not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and
-whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the
-essential character of the women who effectively refuse him?
-In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to
-make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to
-understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way
-to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in
-the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well.
-The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this
-loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which
-is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through
-the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then
-wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is
-~
-the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been
-refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the
-refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed,
-becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is
-never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal
-boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the
-process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy.
-Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms
-of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at
-first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the
-comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of
-Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into
-heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the
-“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual
-and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of
-Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s
-facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane
-perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate
-types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with
-who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display
-strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the
-classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of
-attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to
-display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation
-among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that
-unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity
-between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an
-instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex.
-And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies
-through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning
-~
-of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that
-would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a
-woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the
-acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual
-or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in
-order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes:
-Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their
-heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall
-attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a
-mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared
-from men. (35)
-
-It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the
-homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under
-notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much
-different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt
-differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic
-“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to
-the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained
-from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the
-supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes
-count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus,
-the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire.
-Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be
-interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order
-to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured
-through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some
-consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over
-~
-the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the
-father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user
-of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating
-desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of
-woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language.
-Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual
-man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between
-male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman
-who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of
-taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on
-by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from
-others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes
-on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from
-the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man
-is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that
-allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly,
-because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that
-the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words,
-the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both
-desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and
-Riviere apparently do.
-But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the
-analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification,
-but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s
-typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a
-“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women
-who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of
-their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in
-other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is
-~
-here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses
-sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it
-would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female
-homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to
-read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious
-typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage.
-One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade
-wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men
-and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely
-because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she
-fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to
-deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women
-sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual
-exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or,
-at least, that has none that she will name.
-Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is
-masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from
-the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she
-suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”:
-The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw
-the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My
-suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether
-radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38)
-
-This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and
-the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the
-~
-Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is
-such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the
-denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24
-Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine
-identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female
-object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may
-reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the
-hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd
-form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the
-melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic
-inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality.
-One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is,
-of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture,
-her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself
-both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine
-identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that
-she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids
-herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that
-accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26
-Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a
-discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s
-analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because
-that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her
-as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her
-castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest
-over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and
-~
-essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for
-her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might
-usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and
-what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the
-position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s
-aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably,
-reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the
-authority of the speaking subject?
-We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes.
-The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in
-the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in
-the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute
-their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still
-not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some
-psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the
-exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a
-bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is
-assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that
-identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is,
-through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the
-binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality
-that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality
-shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it
-purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through
-which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality”
-that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a
-~
-later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary
-practices of normative heterosexuality.
-Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary
-or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and
-that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on
-the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is
-always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which
-the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will
-necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental
-divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression,
-is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a
-prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose
-writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the
-law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of
-Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality,
-and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the
-artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as
-the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well.
-Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely
-because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the
-accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the
-~
-drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29
-And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules
-that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is
-clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined
-epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual
-ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the
-“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of
-sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result.
-The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an
-impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary
-restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality
-and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In
-marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the
-Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for
-Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and
-paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could
-not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through
-the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position
-of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge
-within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical
-past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that
-does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary
-speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality.
-The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an
-account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that
-~
-proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility
-of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The
-injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic
-always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively
-consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas
-of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to
-be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,”
-humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative
-that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls
-the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and
-those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward.
-That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the
-demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct
-from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that
-eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic
-as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity.
-This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively
-undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative
-imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure
-of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old
-Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the
-comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the
-permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this
-comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it
-claims to be unable to overcome.
-Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.”
-~
-How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation
-of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power)
-that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the
-paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which
-the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological
-impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that
-points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is
-symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative
-powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility.
-What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the
-trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and
-self-subjection?
-iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender
-Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir:
-Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the
-melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of
-gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of
-melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only
-alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id
-(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient
-structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the
-1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing
-another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said
-to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on
-attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of
-imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome
-through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other
-~
-within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego,
-love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply
-momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in
-effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent
-relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the
-other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic
-identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic
-cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved
-person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud
-makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is
-crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.”
-In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization
-described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks:
-we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by
-supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost
-has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis
-has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did
-not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know
-how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to
-understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18)
-
-As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds,
-however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the
-acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that
-this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up
-its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in
-~
-tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of
-those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves
-becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the
-incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for
-the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited
-heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other
-objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual
-union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself
-with him” (21).
-In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object
-cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of
-a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud
-does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the
-process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a
-bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does.
-The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and
-Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to
-seduce the mother.
-Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why
-the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude
-toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be
-that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be
-attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented
-above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23,
-n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly,
-Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the
-~
-two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the
-result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the
-heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated,
-but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally
-sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather
-than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation
-of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of
-the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently,
-the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis.
-Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother
-(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire
-who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding
-moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the
-mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through
-identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in
-which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there
-are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic
-landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and
-disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object
-choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and
-sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place.
-For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result
-either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is
-~
-found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides
-which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of
-masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud
-avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22).
-What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in
-consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each
-of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to
-keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects
-or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what
-traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a
-“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object
-choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the
-father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin,
-despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual
-matrix for desire?
-The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine
-and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect,
-never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither
-is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl
-may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an
-object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity
-and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence,
-~
-within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality,
-and only opposites attract.
-But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such
-dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity
-acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional,
-then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities
-are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional
-sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can
-we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and,
-secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the
-self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications.
-In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical
-attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a
-lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though
-the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is
-“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an
-interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and
-Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice
-or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that
-the internalized object now berates the ego:
-If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the
-melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often
-the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself,
-but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else,
-some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . .
-the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have
-been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169)
-
-The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization
-becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only
-
-~
-because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the
-object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled.
-In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of
-libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that
-cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that
-the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole
-condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other
-words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia
-becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud
-remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego
-assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon
-the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the
-object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation.
-What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and
-its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a
-moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are
-reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external
-mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably
-heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego
-changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits
-its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego
-by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to
-turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities
-of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36
-The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali-
-
-~
-zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is
-a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the
-successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity:
-The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest
-object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted
-by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also
-comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your
-father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his
-prerogative.” (24)
-
-The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and
-taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity
-through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The
-internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love,
-but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The
-prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed,
-repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an
-interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution
-to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification
-and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire.
-As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications
-substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence
-of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex
-of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of
-heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects
-gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to
-that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies
-~
-with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim
-and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent
-to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations,
-and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved
-object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and
-more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so
-that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an
-original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved.
-But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful
-implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and
-masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of
-that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed
-object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the
-construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily
-to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of
-identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the
-consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the
-body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition
-moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation,
-whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of
-“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of
-affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of
-the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by
-the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal.
-In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means:
-separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal
-situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set
-of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which
-“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and
-energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not
-~
-explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against
-homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo
-against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions”
-by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and
-young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that
-Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are
-effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete
-gender identity and heterosexuality.
-Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process
-whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is
-untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of
-dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure
-which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are
-trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the
-name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes
-the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the
-law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears
-disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly
-“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic
-kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of
-the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the
-law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical
-continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as
-its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations.
-What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and
-~
-to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume
-of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis
-for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms,
-but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault,
-subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and
-inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault
-argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed
-is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own
-self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a
-discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in
-that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to
-maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in
-question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law
-constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and
-invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in
-effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.”
-The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a
-repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in
-the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally
-homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the
-prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives
-which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence
-into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field
-deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence
-that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements.
-Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts
-not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and,
-~
-most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable
-from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the
-unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate.
-iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits
-of Identification
-The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id
-offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed,
-of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity
-and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts
-those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting
-and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of
-any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having”
-or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of
-the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of
-any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the
-self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know
-the source and object of its desire.
-For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question
-of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and
-its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and
-clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within
-the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce
-precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders
-into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of
-the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay
-~
-and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that
-maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the
-semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in
-the following chapter.
-What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the
-consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The
-recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it
-seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal
-determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair.
-Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is
-impervious to historical variability and possibility.
-As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity
-in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although
-the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the
-law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less
-deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to
-acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in
-which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to
-culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our
-origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the
-repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational
-moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even
-though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law,
-is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself.
-The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from
-psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances
-~
-within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and
-feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the
-possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible
-to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine
-and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and
-that “the” law may not even be singular.
-The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to
-be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to
-be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space
-as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In
-agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a
-process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined,
-and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such
-spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are
-“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated
-space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as
-its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as
-an incorporated space.
-Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that
-serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but
-acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs
-more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended
-grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some
-way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty
-mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The
-successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved
-through the formation of words which both signify and displace that
-object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially
-metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass
-~
-poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes
-melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it
-maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself.
-As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the
-Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the
-possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is
-necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of
-desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal
-body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out
-of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy—
-results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the
-maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term,
-and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of
-the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds.
-When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it
-makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that
-identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above,
-gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that
-encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living
-versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation
-literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the
-body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal
-truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in
-given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating
-melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable
-object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with
-the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the
-compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law.
-The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against
-~
-homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through
-which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In
-the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which
-heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained
-through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object,
-argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object
-requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is
-not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at
-all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely
-safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial.
-Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the
-denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of
-repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it
-is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a
-‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a
-psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible
-desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be
-felt or known.
-Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the
-developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly
-pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of
-that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims.
-Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim
-together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated
-through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure
-which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal
-space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia
-operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love
-~
-der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains
-the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment
-of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment
-and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief.
-Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable
-may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure
-of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is
-neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the
-heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is
-in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In
-other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires.
-But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this
-incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an
-enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own
-interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation
-is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its
-melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.”
-What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming
-naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and
-parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in
-the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such
-descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed
-~
-or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the
-body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in
-some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life.
-Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which
-serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place
-within the matrix of gender norms.42
-Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual
-pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly,
-pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of
-parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the
-transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body
-not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy
-of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself.
-Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an
-altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary,
-might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary
-condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on
-which it works.
-Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to
-the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and
-the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized
-heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes
-and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality.
-The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is
-parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause
-~
-acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality
-reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex”
-designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural
-desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that
-transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the
-body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and
-desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or
-encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible
-anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized
-sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable
-homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he
-never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the
-empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not
-only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the
-very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The
-love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an
-impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has
-that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual
-desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign
-must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in
-favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality.
-v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power
-Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has
-guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual
-matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the
-juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates
-the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to
-the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the
-Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the
-~
-primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that
-proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be
-reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several
-cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would
-a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique
-mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most
-influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle
-Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article,
-Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article
-might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame.
-Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the
-prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on
-sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and
-reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and
-Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros.
-Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general
-“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion
-and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the
-human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation,
-however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and
-consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own
-genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions,
-but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary”
-dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we
-~
-conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then
-the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its
-desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted.
-Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes:
-the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon
-the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides
-the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173)
-
-Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the
-particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved,
-exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union
-between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo
-against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes:
-the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a
-taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed
-toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in
-both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180)
-
-Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations.
-In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females
-into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural
-institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of
-women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws
-which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence,
-~
-the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo
-against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains
-that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a
-gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189).
-The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a
-primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of
-an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual
-possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the
-Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo,
-that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law
-produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than
-the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the
-creation of that law.
-Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and
-gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a
-“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed
-subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires
-a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is
-in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And
-yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking,
-is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a
-belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by
-the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language,
-then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before”
-will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does
-the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally
-(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the
-
-~
-“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes
-an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence.
-Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a
-primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and
-presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of
-femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for
-both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the
-traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality
-and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the
-compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior
-and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204).
-Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as
-that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities
-to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character
-of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of
-gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in
-what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing
-but unclarified implications of her analysis.
-Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently
-sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed
-have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual
-form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear;
-in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi-
-
-~
-Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads
-her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory
-heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of
-bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin
-has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law
-which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law.
-If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of
-knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal
-sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the
-structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what
-relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of
-gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order
-to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive?
-Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of
-Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and
-that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire
-it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be
-its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the
-very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and
-necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its
-repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures;
-desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture
-whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power.
-The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit
-incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities
-through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to
-guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are
-anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over
-~
-what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the
-meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to
-claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant
-framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim
-the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it
-exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form.
-My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the
-incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the
-generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its
-juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety
-of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in
-advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we
-extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that
-the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized
-in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might
-be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as
-well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an
-“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a
-production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition.
-If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a
-wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire
-both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame
-law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive
-from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo.
-Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire
-and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that
-the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire
-~
-in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex
-is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly
-stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed
-parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification.
-But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of
-the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced
-and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the
-incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and
-if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced
-in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to
-remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis,
-bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon
-their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive
-possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and
-homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes
-the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of
-bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48
-The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves
-as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of
-that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete
-cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What
-remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing
-cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of
-intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized,
-not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini-
-
-~
-mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to
-gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully
-within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory
-which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive
-subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the
-very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I
-will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never
-be translated into other cultural practices.
-In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed
-to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the
-terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire
-and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of
-the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This
-full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the
-irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that
-that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution
-of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal
-libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can
-only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this
-case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always
-speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes
-the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond”
-is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the
-Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of
-
-~
-what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is
-“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the
-start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the
-account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the
-split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence
-at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy,
-revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a
-perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin
-in the name of subversion inevitably belated.
-
-~
-3
-
-Subversive Bodily Acts
-i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva
-Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears
-to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a
-specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing
-principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful
-language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of
-primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child
-on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who
-emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early
-dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language
-is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by
-suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body)
-and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place.
-Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural
-meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the
-maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language
-occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes
-Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion
-within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original
-~
-libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely,
-within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to
-disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law.
-Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to
-displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts
-to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes
-that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it
-assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those
-terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony?
-The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several
-steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of
-effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to
-accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple
-drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but
-which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest
-in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal
-economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem
-emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion
-cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained
-presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of
-cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension
-of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of
-language which never can be consistently maintained.
-~
-In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to
-ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and
-what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva
-describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior
-to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a
-paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural
-reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively
-reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction
-and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity
-is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a
-given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and
-primary cause.
-Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear
-that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as
-anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony
-of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political
-strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of
-drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of
-the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it
-seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never
-become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I
-will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective
-strategy of subversion.
-Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number
-of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their
-emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements
-of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that
-the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the
-~
-semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic,
-which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech.
-As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for
-a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the
-plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she
-maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of
-primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms
-of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple
-sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of
-the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the
-requirements of univocal designation.
-In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic
-function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives
-in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that
-in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic]
-place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of
-univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated
-or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against
-the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their
-repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives
-manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity,
-these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work,
-she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to
-the modality [of] primary process.”3
-In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva
-ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic
-terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic
-obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only
-~
-those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the
-dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other
-words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather
-than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that
-jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that
-desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal
-body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the
-“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse
-prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike
-effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the
-mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as
-the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as
-distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But
-this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it
-thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself
-in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5
-The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the
-Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to
-vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words
-to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two
-modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood
-as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the
-semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition,
-mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely
-signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests
-upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it
-becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and
-univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of
-~
-the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and
-univocal signification. Kristeva writes:
-In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for
-example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints
-(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic
-elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6
-
-For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests
-a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body:
-Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the
-contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language
-(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the
-cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7
-
-Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly
-appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject,
-where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the
-Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against
-the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of
-maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally
-signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language
-would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of
-incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding
-law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from
-~
-within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of
-libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state
-of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the
-ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the
-heterogeneity of drives.
-In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that,
-because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete
-identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a
-woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal
-signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language
-is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and,
-hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow
-that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the
-structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the
-founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire
-can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements
-that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the
-act of giving birth:
-By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she
-becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her
-instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently,
-more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9
-
-According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully
-reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because
-the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated
-off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from
-~
-the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is
-never fully completed.
-As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to
-grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense,
-refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body
-is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a
-kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack.
-The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female
-“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female
-homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture:
-The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete
-absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm,
-sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a
-screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10
-
-For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides
-childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic.
-For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an
-unmediated way. And yet why is this the case?
-Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the
-Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the
-Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those
-which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task,
-then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to
-~
-tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just
-as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the
-site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in
-culturally communicable form:
-The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by
-virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also
-attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of
-split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of
-the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth
-consists.11
-
-Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged
-practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic
-of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the
-autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The
-heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of
-displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law
-by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself.
-Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented
-in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the
-Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is
-impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of
-the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law
-challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva
-does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the
-prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the
-~
-subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another
-version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s
-concealed foundation.
-This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law
-produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one
-hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible
-practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva
-does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from
-her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva
-poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always
-on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the
-incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and,
-because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality.
-For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual
-desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this
-drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of
-maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or
-through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity
-of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially
-sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual
-desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences
-for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of
-the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire
-would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to
-Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality
-and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked.
-How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience
-~
-as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she
-identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism
-constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis?
-By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing
-lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs
-lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal
-and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law
-positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege.
-The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is
-precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a
-site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience
-is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a
-fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself.
-In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva
-appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression
-necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior
-to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain
-lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation
-itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her
-restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear
-encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a
-developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to
-culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”?
-Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience
-~
-from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge
-its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law
-not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural
-subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it
-appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to
-return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that
-escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed,
-beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law,
-temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they
-initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of
-culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion
-as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility.
-Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her
-postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of
-epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these
-drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives
-us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this
-answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend
-upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot,
-then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives
-through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed
-for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that
-which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives
-prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to
-attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation
-into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot
-reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other
-~
-words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their
-effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with
-their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations
-are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves.
-This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider,
-for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse
-is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we
-have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order
-to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts
-are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover
-that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and
-are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception
-of maternal instincts:
-Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species
-that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of
-markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the
-life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic,
-unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the
-whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled
-drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13
-
-Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which,
-it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy,
-in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in
-avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these
-~
-various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural
-moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents
-any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts
-with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the
-Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle
-of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly,
-that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends
-operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the
-way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her
-description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the
-very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has
-become a univocal signifier.
-Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to
-their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions
-about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive
-and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the
-hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed
-ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with
-the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity
-of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other
-cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which
-operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva
-believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would
-~
-ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return
-to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed
-concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear
-and univocal.
-Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire,
-part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes
-an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity
-and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the
-semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of
-univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the
-principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations.
-Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having
-an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the
-way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it
-is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required
-and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the
-consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed,
-rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction
-of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand
-the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on
-women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of
-Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the
-desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and
-produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14
-What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal
-teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture?
-To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction
-between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of
-the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary
-~
-signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification
-itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider
-the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her
-argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary
-processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing
-framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and
-for what purposes?
-By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which
-affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the
-result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally
-constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship
-which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of
-desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders
-that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality.
-Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology
-of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this
-sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure
-generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that
-activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and
-poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an
-uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of
-humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does
-the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary
-female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very
-~
-order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse?
-In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality,
-he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . .
-[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex
-facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to
-cause the structure and meaning of desire:
-the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
-unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious
-unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus
-able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16
-
-For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to
-its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning
-within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an
-historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and
-affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce
-“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises
-the power relations responsible for its genesis.
-Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of
-the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a
-maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the
-structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive
-production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by
-which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the
-maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of
-all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood,
-~
-rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the
-female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self
-and the law of its desire.
-If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically
-specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality,
-itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the
-trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no
-longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon
-the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This
-very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends
-and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women.
-Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood
-are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the
-institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures
-of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and
-requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its
-reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural
-necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated
-maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law
-itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability.
-Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in
-which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural
-drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct
-produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do
-these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest,
-however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated
-upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider
-~
-whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by
-which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of
-the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the
-object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may
-be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself.
-As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the
-mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and
-makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body
-that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be
-yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating
-in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order
-to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the
-oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and
-subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body
-beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from
-within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when
-the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of
-itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither
-to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future
-of cultural possibilities.
-ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics
-of Sexual Discontinuity
-Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those
-Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms
-of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a
-disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of
-theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we
-consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes
-the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that
-his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that
-~
-proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of
-his own critical apparatus.
-Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality,
-Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of
-“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to
-doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to
-“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published
-in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided.
-A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also
-included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation
-of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is
-necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the
-critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s
-reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of
-Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that
-sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete
-relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the
-“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual
-difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine
-against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text.
-In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that
-the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the
-other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within
-~
-discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally
-reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18
-In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and
-causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as
-an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and
-continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes
-“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and
-power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which
-power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment
-of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as
-repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted
-energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this
-juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only
-works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in
-this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations
-and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and
-falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be
-recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power
-must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power
-which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity.
-the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it
-possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to
-sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive
-
-~
-relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible
-urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154)
-
-Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they
-subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of
-power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to
-emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and,
-thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of
-departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into
-how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within
-discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model
-of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in
-his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some
-sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault
-remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal
-subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled
-than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to
-be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs
-those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex,
-gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and
-any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically
-extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/
-knowledge regime.
-In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin,
-Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of
-sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy
-dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and
-~
-physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes
-within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides,
-according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a
-world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii).
-Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation
-imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of
-Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of
-emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the
-release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from
-the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or
-Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture.
-The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine
-Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History
-of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures
-of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition
-of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants
-to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to
-be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any
-specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a
-trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault
-officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we
-must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues
-that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is
-~
-always produced or constructed within specific historical practices,
-both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality
-before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory
-sexual politics.
-The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read
-Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the
-constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for
-sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust
-victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the
-time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the
-other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety
-and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although
-Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals,
-the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s
-own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what
-is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where
-one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably
-female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation
-that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents.
-Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a
-state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er
-suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward
-men, but finally toward the world as such.
-Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at
-school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate
-attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt
-and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes
-h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that
-effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and
-~
-effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally
-obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of
-men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the
-journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide.
-One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a
-man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of
-the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed,
-Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely
-that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of
-univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of
-the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the
-pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law
-they are said to defy.
-The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian
-play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the
-alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we
-have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the
-productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative
-strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the
-specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context
-of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference
-reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical
-reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of
-Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of
-Herculine’s sexual world.
-Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality
-between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of
-female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine
-~
-we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as
-French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within
-an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions
-produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and
-Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner
-of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about
-ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously,
-the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous
-sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality
-and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself.
-The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young
-girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological
-doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If
-Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or
-chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently
-generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires,
-the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body,
-and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both
-causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity?
-Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle
-to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender
-which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself
-presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender
-confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result
-and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er
-~
-anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs
-and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a
-sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse
-on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of
-happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide.
-If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of
-confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as
-the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters”
-and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made
-possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her
-sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of
-women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once
-“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment,
-structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy
-limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly
-retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of
-female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather
-than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy
-the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for
-Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault
-wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject.
-But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he
-wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in
-homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to
-the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following
-description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once
-~
-invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender
-pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes
-astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another”
-(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to
-accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions
-the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the
-eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces
-these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even
-within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er
-difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference
-is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire.
-S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she
-is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he
-contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it.
-The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the
-denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no
-longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex.
-Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but
-confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing
-the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to
-which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover,
-Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which
-challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic
-exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence
-and redistribution.
-But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level
-of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex”
-and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of
-~
-sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of
-sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost
-Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a
-natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as
-“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough
-medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the
-heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very
-medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But
-what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve?
-If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as
-precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that
-he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the
-effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear
-whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something
-else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces
-sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be
-described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place
-of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether
-this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In
-other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality
-and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly
-didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity
-or parallel between his life and hers?
-~
-On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch
-understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some
-sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks
-that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten
-to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that
-do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community
-of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable.
-“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel
-points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the
-textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the
-adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and
-Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it
-is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps
-Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in
-the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,”
-might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not
-in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such,
-especially as it applies to the categories of sex.
-Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are
-in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic
-distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of
-h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after
-some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of
-appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when
-she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!”
-(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in
-order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on
-homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there
-is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly
-among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female
-homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different
-~
-bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally
-do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed
-“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This
-explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et
-les choses):
-This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter
-that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my
-thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes
-with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing
-things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with
-collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20
-
-The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and
-particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre
-Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for
-Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of
-kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s
-now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference,
-designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s
-dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics,
-but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh
-of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface
-constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of
-Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23
-In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa,
-Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to
-freeze” (105) those who encounter it.
-But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and
-Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which
-~
-consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked
-as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable—
-that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one.
-But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive
-identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to
-the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it
-is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed,
-perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify
-for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification.
-But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems
-to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a
-laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he
-loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine,
-then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two
-positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it
-either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the
-jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of
-punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was
-not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he
-articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a
-devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then
-finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself
-from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation,
-s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully
-directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those
-who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love.
-At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence
-~
-paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic
-incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into
-h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was
-abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he
-tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for
-abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures,
-deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence
-s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a
-sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother”
-(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through
-the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears
-as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal
-caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it
-were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which
-scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between
-being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object
-of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic
-structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy
-involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination
-is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the
-mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be
-constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive
-narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and
-neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of
-enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is
-better for all women than any “man” (107).
-S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early
-“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at
-the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early
-~
-refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the
-phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very
-father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the
-tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my
-feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the
-anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier
-enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and
-whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs
-h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet
-underground!” (69).
-Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place
-Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not
-“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier,
-h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production,
-construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of
-the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and
-the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law,
-one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic
-and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are
-subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by
-death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its
-condition and its aim.
-After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid
-than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person”
-who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the
-~
-other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns
-h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects
-h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law
-precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law
-naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other
-words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of
-“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical
-naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized
-instrument and sign.
-Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical
-law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside”
-within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of
-fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected,
-have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis.
-Concluding Unscientific Postscript
-Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the
-quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that
-become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although
-Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of
-Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his
-philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for
-~
-ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a
-Foucaultian critique.
-One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim
-to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With
-the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene,
-which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was
-discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or
-testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No.
-51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon
-which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions
-regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked.
-According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the
-Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA
-were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had
-XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and
-some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis
-they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but
-we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations.
-Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be
-some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of
-DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its
-usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not
-expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA
-sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why
-it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact,
-still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y
-chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had
-somehow been misplaced.
-~
-Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up
-with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their
-research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has
-chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female
-and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal
-criteria could provide.
-Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that
-haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA
-sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of
-females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that
-perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its
-absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males
-and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains
-hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his
-coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals
-from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous
-in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her
-article, “Life in the XY Corral”:
-the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm
-production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e.,
-precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and
-low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males
-because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . .
-Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal,
-[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328)
-
-Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not
-add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated
-by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as
-well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are
-~
-XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male
-and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided
-by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were
-sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the
-experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary
-at all.
-But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which
-that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice
-that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher
-and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that
-ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of
-the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence
-of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an
-object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active
-and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions
-about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew
-and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes
-Eicher and Washburn:
-Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y
-chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the
-induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant)
-event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive
-(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as
-much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the
-induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any
-cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written
-about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the
-undifferentiated gonad. (325)
-
-In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under
-~
-tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have
-argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research
-orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated
-cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and
-well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that
-would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning
-and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during
-differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic
-interactions alter during differentation” (323–24).
-The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general
-trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from
-the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the
-descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the
-description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at
-hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that
-femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence
-of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would
-invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is
-not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself
-frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of
-those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior
-to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more
-complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates
-in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation
-in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe.
-~
-Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer
-when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is
-male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex?
-One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be
-resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary
-framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek
-recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the
-claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three
-Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange,
-that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world
-of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself
-constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies,
-about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to
-inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the
-categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within
-the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent,
-that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as
-one that might well be constructed differently.
-Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that
-Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in
-the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is
-interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those
-anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment.
-One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses
-that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external
-genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of
-reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the
-~
-male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire
-to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather
-than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other.
-Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male
-body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s
-inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with
-the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work
-together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting,
-then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the
-last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority
-over the discourse of reproduction.
-This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance,
-according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates
-through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view,
-to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female”
-exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from
-a radical critique.
-iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and
-Fictive Sex
-Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body.
-—Monique Wittig
-
-Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a
-woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical,
-for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along?
-And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human
-who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that
-this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does
-one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender
-~
-construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into
-a gendered subject?
-Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the
-question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who
-do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute
-the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the
-human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in
-advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human
-who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural
-afterthought?
-Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of
-women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are
-taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with
-a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was
-willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that
-being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is
-an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed;
-sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause
-gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex;
-indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and
-whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the
-variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities
-of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body.
-Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones
-that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are
-radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to
-become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret
-male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction
-~
-ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to
-the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way
-restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never
-be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of
-some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively,
-then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond
-the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new
-vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the
-binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But
-how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the
-fate of an impossible and vain utopian project?
-“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in
-an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what
-sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig
-offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from
-her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is
-a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to
-divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a
-division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig,
-there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is
-itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not
-natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is
-the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only
-exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A
-~
-lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in
-terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains,
-transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is
-neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is
-beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding
-presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might
-say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not
-born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if
-one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man.
-Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a
-category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable
-political categories of description.
-Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the
-political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This
-relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary
-in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one
-sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is
-always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this
-system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig,
-then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male
-sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex,
-trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because
-“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no
-sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into
-sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues
-that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become
-ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex
-is necessarily feminine.
-Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in
-~
-the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the
-system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it.
-As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire
-discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans
-and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her
-theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that
-regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender.
-Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions
-forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a
-“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience,
-Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a
-datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no
-longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a
-violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is
-“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused,
-but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that
-her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge:
-Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical
-features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a
-physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic
-construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social
-system), through the network of relationships in which they are
-perceived.27
-
-“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side
-of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that
-these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the
-~
-reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features
-gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within
-the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on
-an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a
-language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived.
-Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body?
-An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so
-forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous
-body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole.
-Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a
-“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction
-of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the
-“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the
-body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination
-those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate
-what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her
-theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the
-body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination.
-Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the
-locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of
-reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted
-ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to
-be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology
-that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly
-refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying
-structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation
-~
-of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically
-contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory
-that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and
-deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons.
-The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the
-authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex
-and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin.
-Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce
-reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively
-considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of
-domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that
-both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/
-perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual
-difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies
-and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of
-nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28
-“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category
-of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon
-the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the
-“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences,
-“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because
-they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the
-speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of
-that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s
-own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat:
-~
-“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and
-gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To
-speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech;
-hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction,
-the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language
-that asserts it.
-The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous.
-Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical
-and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and
-interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and
-theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds,
-even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms
-of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather,
-one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had
-to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the
-cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression.
-Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity
-of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33
-Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through
-locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and,
-ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that
-identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male
-and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no
-sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of
-men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists:
-“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The
-universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated
-by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act,
-perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the
-level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34
-~
-Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of
-the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an
-absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,”
-which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women”
-altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman,
-the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the
-invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject
-could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking
-presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig
-describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the
-power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I”
-assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to
-speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and
-power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the
-feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36
-Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology
-of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off
-the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial
-or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a
-full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The
-social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior
-ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion
-~
-of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and,
-hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal
-mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she
-writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal
-to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access,
-however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity
-of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she
-argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being
-is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes
-not only the totality of language, but the unity of being.
-If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within
-the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence,
-Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a
-Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on
-an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and
-invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction
-gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social
-relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion
-of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its
-universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the
-straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she
-not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the
-totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts.
-Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of
-ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the
-universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection.
-Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary
-unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs
-through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality.
-~
-Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth
-about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a
-tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity.
-Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration,
-suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and
-proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an
-absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is
-one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for
-being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.”
-In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of
-the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In
-that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two
-sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are
-individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically
-entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds
-to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any
-general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular
-property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization.
-The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work
-in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status.
-Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating
-social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are
-measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept
-and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a
-material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these
-“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be
-judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude.
-~
-Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena
-that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered,
-however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the
-universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is
-quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,”
-even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for
-women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized
-through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the
-speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view.
-The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his
-or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The
-literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the
-hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular
-in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms.
-To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy
-the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of
-a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise
-unified ontology.
-Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between
-abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as
-Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so
-she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of
-language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . .
-words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise
-made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that
-within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with
-the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les
-Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions,
-~
-indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the
-universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize
-the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48
-In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that
-only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively
-lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish
-the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can
-wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic
-and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals,
-but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position
-of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a
-set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject
-becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective
-that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the
-world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory
-heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the
-latter’s epistemic hegemony.
-In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion
-of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality
-with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It
-can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it
-can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to
-speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point
-of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that
-speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an
-ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and
-concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract,
-~
-the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present
-in her theoretical essays all along.51
-Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot
-be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes:
-I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which
-cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole
-life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we
-are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52
-
-As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within
-Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to
-falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the
-radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime.
-But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of
-heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as
-a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist
-power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution.
-Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely
-problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice
-and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically
-“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by
-numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay
-culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as
-they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to
-~
-ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if
-heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not
-follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further,
-Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the
-kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind.
-My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig
-between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that
-there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian
-sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse
-centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality;
-heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that
-informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig
-describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an
-impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic
-elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of
-the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not
-always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and
-the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with
-these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory
-law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into
-heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a
-constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective.
-Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate
-with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position
-is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies
-for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct.
-Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively
-contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the
-~
-normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be
-lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged
-in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that
-proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls,
-even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and
-destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood
-as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the
-oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other
-hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical
-meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing
-sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation,
-the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs
-a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply
-possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation
-between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize
-the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense
-is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an
-assumption surely suspect.
-Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that
-appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back
-into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she
-likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and
-resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a
-culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that
-constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly,
-there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine
-~
-identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic
-interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well
-prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite
-direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case,
-the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the
-“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other.
-Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire
-admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the
-sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can
-shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay
-claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief,
-depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch
-and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual
-exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as
-internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may
-recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same
-time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that
-question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source
-of their erotic significance.
-Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme
-identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a
-natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist
-among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in
-Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the
-various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate
-descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is
-established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of
-~
-bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality
-that they themselves invested in the category.
-For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual
-contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of
-choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood
-to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said
-to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining
-and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be
-neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my
-view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on
-the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the
-impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence.
-Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale
-refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very
-terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are
-coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed
-than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless
-pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off.
-The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and
-lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and
-lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or
-reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and
-denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual
-constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of
-power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of
-parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its
-claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond
-sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a
-problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works
-~
-appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for
-which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body
-and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political
-transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms
-and to deprive them of their legitimating functions.
-Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific
-meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome
-the split between materiality and representation that characterizes
-“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas
-to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base,
-strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she
-understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the
-male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality
-are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to
-support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense,
-Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and
-to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality.
-Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a
-medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained
-for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible
-materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures
-and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the
-naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her
-aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to
-offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring
-~
-bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and
-form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are
-always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For
-Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably
-constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct
-and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex.
-If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the
-binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive
-enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In
-The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its
-partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of
-attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the
-same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig
-clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a
-“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks
-those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the
-task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine,
-but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories.
-The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the
-violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for
-this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not
-to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and
-binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now
-represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that
-consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive
-redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to
-~
-belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has
-assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,”
-but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this
-literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical
-use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings
-that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the
-tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple
-internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence
-against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct
-out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem
-inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution,
-and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness.
-Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution
-of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is
-always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged
-among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs
-that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities.
-But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can
-this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of
-this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a
-way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well
-a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different
-centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency
-comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and
-~
-recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to
-become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes.
-This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third
-gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal
-subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to
-the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction,
-its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories
-of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of
-the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole
-new languages of description.
-In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but,
-rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman,
-one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of
-women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism.
-This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But
-even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to
-decide the question of sexual “identity”?
-If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a
-self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming
-an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian
-no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts
-that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a
-“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a
-contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,”
-but also of “lesbian”?
-~
-Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the
-homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a
-homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that
-construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of
-view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted
-through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that
-do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian
-identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were
-not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed,
-required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it
-seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality.
-Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality
-deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result,
-that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in
-its oppressive forms.
-The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity
-themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to
-render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic.
-iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions
-“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that
-heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . .
-How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation,
-whether the sex underneath is true or not.”
-—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted
-in Esther Newton, Mother Camp
-
-Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have
-constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist
-~
-theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of
-epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is
-shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express
-the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political
-shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political
-elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that
-identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site
-of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female
-body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which
-gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body”
-itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that
-body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex?
-The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to
-presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition
-of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive
-medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of
-suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse.
-There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which,
-prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century,
-understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or,
-more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception,
-sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine.
-There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where
-“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that
-can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in
-Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification,
-and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To
-what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology
-~
-adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed
-as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent
-do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit
-hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the
-taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations
-are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance?
-Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the
-body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy?
-Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body
-is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body
-is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is
-“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly
-understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction
-of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities
-are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through
-the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering
-destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of
-values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the
-speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through
-the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama”
-of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus
-vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault,
-“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture.
-Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his
-body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or
-for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the
-constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the
-body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification,
-~
-requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it
-writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and
-self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for
-Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an
-inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank
-page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium
-must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated
-domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the
-body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in
-order for “culture” to emerge.
-By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault
-appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because
-this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he
-defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical
-investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break
-through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of
-cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of
-precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a
-genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a
-subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of
-the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of
-the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility.
-Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours
-of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish
-specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the
-boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing
-certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes
-of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies:
-~
-ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference
-between within and without, above and below, male and female, with
-and against, that a semblance of order is created.55
-
-Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction
-between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural
-means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a
-region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably
-binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot
-point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame.
-Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for
-understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and
-maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that
-what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but
-that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become,
-within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist
-appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the
-body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she
-maintains, there are
-pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and
-which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or
-joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where
-the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined.
-A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed
-some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which
-should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger
-for someone.56
-
-~
-In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his
-Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness
-figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and
-homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a
-continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of
-the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted
-through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist
-graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable
-bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks
-that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its
-boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to
-read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59
-Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their
-margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous.
-If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which
-open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and
-oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a
-site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural
-presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless
-of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief
-the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside”
-the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy
-and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always
-conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural.
-
-~
-The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites
-of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices
-in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and
-orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex
-among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body
-in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution
-which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social)
-intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a
-consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its
-stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various
-bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered
-exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such
-exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine
-what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the
-regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed
-constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that
-might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61
-Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror
-begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject
-through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been
-expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered
-“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is
-effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the
-“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which
-are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes:
-nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the
-mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign
-of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I”
-expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in
-
-~
-their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the
-same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63
-
-The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation
-of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As
-Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism,
-homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that
-founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along
-sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of
-Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others
-through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division
-the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary
-tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by
-those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes
-outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by
-which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In
-effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and
-outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body
-would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its
-surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but
-this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears.
-Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions
-of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make
-sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by
-cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation
-~
-tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that
-subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos,
-then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of
-gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not
-how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a
-process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed.
-Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse
-and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive
-binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body
-is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility
-of its hidden depth?
-From Interiority to Gender Performatives
-In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected
-to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner”
-truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the
-doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his
-history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as
-Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in
-On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of
-prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a
-repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the
-prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is
-not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that
-bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body;
-there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of
-their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is
-at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external
-to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes:
-~
-It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological
-effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power
-that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66
-
-The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode
-of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The
-effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification
-of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the
-body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That
-lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In
-this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic
-space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually
-renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest,
-but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67
-The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface
-politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the
-disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of
-presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the
-gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying
-absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body
-politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We
-have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against
-homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of
-an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of
-the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the
-~
-der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual,
-and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of
-significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive
-model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed
-as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe.
-According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired,
-wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the
-effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of
-the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but
-never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts,
-gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense
-that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are
-fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and
-other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which
-constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated
-as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of
-a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control
-that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity”
-of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core,
-an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation
-of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within
-the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary
-~
-practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive
-origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an
-analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its
-fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its
-true identity.
-If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a
-fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems
-that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the
-truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother
-Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton
-suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender
-takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks
-both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender
-identity. Newton writes:
-At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my
-‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is
-masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion;
-“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my
-essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69
-
-Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth
-and falsity.
-The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such
-parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to
-~
-sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But
-the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more
-complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a
-clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag
-plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and
-the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence
-of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical
-sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the
-performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and
-both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the
-performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as
-drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose),
-it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience
-which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of
-heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the
-pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be
-natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence,
-we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which
-avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their
-fabricated unity.
-The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that
-there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the
-parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic
-notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy,
-the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that
-double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after
-which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be
-~
-more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its
-effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification
-and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender
-identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic
-styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the
-original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an
-original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender
-identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of
-received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer
-laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of
-a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that
-construction.
-According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer
-Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody:
-Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the
-wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral
-practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the
-satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that
-there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it
-humor.70
-
-The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion
-for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to
-be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody.
-In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived.
-~
-stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated
-and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of
-actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive
-confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the
-inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of
-the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance
-will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that
-destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire.
-If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose
-permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then
-what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre
-would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest
-that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all
-never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a
-corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent
-construction of meaning.
-Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is
-an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to
-materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and
-to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal
-project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating
-force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of
-~
-duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs.
-Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a
-performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are
-part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture;
-indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right.
-Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender
-is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and
-without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a
-construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective
-agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders
-as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions—
-and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the
-construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The
-historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are
-nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress.
-Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the
-peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which,
-in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes
-existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted,
-and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their
-originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible
-“cause” to be an “effect”?
-In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This
-repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of
-meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies
-that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered
-~
-tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not
-inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic
-aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot
-be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found
-and consolidate the subject.
-Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of
-agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity
-tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a
-stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the
-stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane
-way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds
-constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation
-moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model
-of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted
-social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts
-which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is
-precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment
-which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves,
-come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a
-norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to
-embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of
-acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized
-configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts
-that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity,
-but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and
-contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender
-transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation
-between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity,
-or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding
-identity as a politically tenuous construction.
-~
-If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative,
-then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to
-express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in
-which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or
-attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or
-distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity
-would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created
-through sustained social performances means that the very notions of
-an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also
-constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative
-character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender
-configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination
-and compulsory heterosexuality.
-Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically
-incredible.
-
-~
-From Parody to Politics
-I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could
-do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether
-it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in
-order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we”
-is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the
-term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of
-the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous
-or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or,
-at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political
-theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and
-bodies, but of politics itself.
-The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume
-that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be
-elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument
-is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is
-variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an
-existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and
-its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in
-and through the other that has interested me here.
-~
-The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some
-stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the
-subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency,
-usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains
-intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject.
-This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared
-necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that
-culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes
-(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive
-“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and
-(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse,
-where determination forecloses the possibility of agency.
-Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted
-environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally
-enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for
-example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender,
-but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point
-of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never
-fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness
-of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural
-predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates
-of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close
-with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is
-instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of
-exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It
-is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to
-~
-posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers
-itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing.
-If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity
-is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates
-within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is
-not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are
-provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the
-legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices
-that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I
-pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The
-Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by
-Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses
-presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its
-world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as
-an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here
-belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very
-problematic of identity that it seeks to solve.
-What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an
-epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and
-how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What
-kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the
-invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled
-out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely
-documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object
-dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and
-distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a
-strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once
-~
-that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about
-the knowability and recoverability of that Other.
-As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move
-within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in
-and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a
-necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary
-itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity
-to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification
-permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one
-possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of
-agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert
-piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many
-inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this
-appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks
-to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to
-qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent
-and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally
-intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a
-practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that
-inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic
-life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs
-by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves
-in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting
-unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific
-modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered.
-~
-logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible
-identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,”
-rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy
-and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed,
-when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the
-subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined
-by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a
-founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals
-itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the
-orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing
-signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative
-domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that
-contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within
-the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity
-becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated.
-Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through
-discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable
-object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees
-in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a
-transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who
-maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural
-field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the
-very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there.
-What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the
-~
-genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar
-itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself
-here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests
-the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted)
-that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the
-real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which
-gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not
-written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s
-“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the
-accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry
-within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between
-instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition
-are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to
-approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the
-rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits
-itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition
-that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so
-these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized
-performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself.
-Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the
-very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a
-failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a
-politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion
-of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And
-yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would
-argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable.
-Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic
-practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them-
-
-~
-selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the
-effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive
-identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The
-parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender
-identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a
-subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it
-were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those
-hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration,
-reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status.
-I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed
-to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in
-order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously
-work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities
-that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative
-political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically,
-the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or
-generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and
-fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally
-determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status
-of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests
-the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction
-remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and
-determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and
-becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to
-establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit
-is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its
-own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a
-position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism
-
-~
-ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local
-possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those
-practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present
-the immanent possibility of contesting them.
-This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the
-very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the
-political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative
-cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in
-their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics?
-This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of
-sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of
-the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification,
-a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the
-inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as
-binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as
-enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as
-an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of
-“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual
-construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the
-mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are
-also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction
-and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of
-sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that
-presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and
-globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention.
-
-~
-If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these
-“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not
-only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that
-enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a
-feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might
-enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to
-repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself.
-There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political
-contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on
-sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a
-foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by
-installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground.
-The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which
-identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the
-foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has
-been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it
-presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every
-new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that
-already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as
-culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer
-fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer
-understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that
-belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics
-
-~
-would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations
-of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that
-establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of
-sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local
-strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such?
-
-~
-
-Preface (1999)
-1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation
-of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the
-arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal
-ratification of same-sex partnerships.
-2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme:
-Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and
-Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998.
-3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
-(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7.
-4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky
-Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los
-Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my
-arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of
-gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book.
-5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point.
-6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/
-Wellek/index.html.
-7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek,
-Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy
-Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser,
-
-~
-Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity.
-8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the
-notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only
-came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to
-account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A
-Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997).
-9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the
-earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the
-melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of
-the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss
-that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or
-disavow the loss it has just articulated.
-10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and
-interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to
-contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real:
-Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences,
-Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126.
-11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose
-work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s
-“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the
-postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the
-appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that
-emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the
-same time under conditions of domination.
-12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has
-been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject.
-I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions
-of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to
-Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at
-Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection.
-
-~
-13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most
-prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech.
-14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America
-(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any
-other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent
-gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at
-http://www.isna.org.
-15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances
-Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell,
-Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William
-Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava,
-Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for
-their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface
-was written.
-1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire
-1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History
-of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York:
-Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté
-de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses
-the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the
-productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not
-identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of
-productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of
-Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault,
-Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of
-sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under
-criticism in the final chapter.
-2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka
-and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan
-Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987).
-3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in
-History (New York: Macmillan, 1988).
-
-~
-4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of
-Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and
-Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp.
-283–302.
-5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The
-Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987).
-She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement
-sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that
-movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether
-uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the
-repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities
-that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the
-very instability that the foundationalist move creates.
-6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that
-grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires
-are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of
-“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/
-epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to
-cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a
-stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female)
-that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory
-practice of heterosexuality.
-7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see
-chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.”
-8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements
-in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the
-Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press,
-1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual
-Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge
-University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis
-of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies,
-see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological
-Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978).
-
-~
-9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of
-biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific
-basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender,
-vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on
-feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2,
-No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The
-Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique
-for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra
-Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University
-Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New
-Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning
-was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in
-Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions
-(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex
-and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne
-Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men
-(New York: Norton, 1979).
-10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history
-of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed
-consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The
-Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century
-(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as
-an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986.
-11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in
-Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil
-Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987).
-12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York:
-Vintage, 1973), p. 301.
-13. Ibid., p. 38.
-14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies,
-Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986.
-15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s,
-Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn
-as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a
-
-~
-mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic
-relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the
-body itself.
-16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with
-Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977).
-17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in
-Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press,
-1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5,
-1986.
-18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi.
-19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.”
-20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz
-Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization
-through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of
-doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz
-Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323,
-originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil,
-1952]).
-21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and
-the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at
-the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit.
-Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is
-clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of
-that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and
-Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be
-the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion
-for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first
-this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that
-
-~
-remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the
-ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed
-and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine
-over feminine.
-22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary
-Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982.
-23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary
-explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the
-“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates
-politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of
-that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions
-. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the
-possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation
-and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New
-York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113).
-24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La
-Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color,
-eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table,
-Women of Color Press, 1982).
-25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has
-Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other
-Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
-Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10).
-26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2,
-Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20,
-see chapter 3, n. 49.
-27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two
-of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of
-
-~
-cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the
-terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual
-difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the
-Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so
-wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as
-a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and
-Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed
-for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that
-preexist and structure subject-formation itself.
-28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist
-Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other
-Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49.
-29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least
-to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist
-Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41).
-30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist
-Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original
-editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social
-function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to
-the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave
-ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality.
-31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche:
-Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta,
-1977), pp. 17–18.
-32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall
-1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25.
-
-~
-33. Ibid., p. 3.
-34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that
-“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other
-words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without
-“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that
-“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s
-Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall,
-Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed.
-(New York: Routledge, 1996).
-35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
-of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New
-York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
-Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French
-version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English
-translation.
-36. See chapter 2, section ii.
-37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x.
-38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press,
-1985), pp. 11–14.
-39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann
-(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45.
-40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion
-of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups
-to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977.
-The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex.
-41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
-Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
-(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114.
-42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration
-or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of
-structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender-
-
-~
-neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
-1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language.
-43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63.
-44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
-Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30.
-45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon,
-1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit,
-1973).
-46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase.
-47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the
-genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See,
-for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline
-of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton,
-1979).
-48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in
-various parts of chapter 2 of this text.
-49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987).
-50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The
-Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982).
-51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender
-(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is
-that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed
-roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90).
-52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the
-Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The
-“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the
-understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche.
-Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the
-law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the
-other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of
-the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a
-fictive and repressive notion.
-
-~
-53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
-Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston:
-Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and
-Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of
-Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual
-Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the
-Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber
-Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed
-with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann
-Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago,
-1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to
-Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and
-Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,”
-Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N.
-Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and
-Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71.
-54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure
-of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness
-through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See
-Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and
-Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of
-that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar
-College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that
-she did not.
-55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J.
-Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989).
-56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it
-is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of
-gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic
-ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson,
-
-~
-“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
-Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983).
-2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the
-Heterosexual Matrix
-1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s
-“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that
-provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and
-masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its
-attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as
-a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map
-that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time.
-Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language
-and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be
-fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the
-reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to
-an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of
-Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer
-exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic
-authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in
-Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana
-University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of
-this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the
-law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of
-that law through recourse to a time before the law.
-2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and
-Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980).
-3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in
-Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York:
-Routledge, 1990).
-4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women:
-Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of
-Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975).
-Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the
-
-~
-notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how
-women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the
-social bond between men.
-5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary
-Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496.
-6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist
-Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns
-Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of
-Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns
-Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy,
-trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982).
-7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange—
-and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a
-social value. It provides the means of binding men together.”
-8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca:
-Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103.
-9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men:
-English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University
-Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of
-reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering
-attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and
-an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects
-of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object
-of discourse.
-10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated
-as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1993).
-11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive.
-12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491.
-13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated
-jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother.
-14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master
-and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire:
-
-~
-Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999).
-15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment
-from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father
-onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost
-mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman:
-Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la
-femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980).
-16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques
-Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose,
-trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter,
-page references to this work will appear in the text.
-17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977),
-p. 131.
-18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here
-is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic
-of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is
-whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as
-genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which
-femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a
-fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann
-Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington:
-Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the
-Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982,
-pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17,
-Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and
-the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark
-Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary
-Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper,
-Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985).
-19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of
-Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the
-
-~
-consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which
-founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of
-disavowed losses.
-20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the
-text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order.
-21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds.
-Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986),
-pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of
-Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will
-appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows,
-“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.”
-22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther
-Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More
-Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance
-(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how
-radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of
-gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the
-presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find
-their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are
-themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a
-counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms.
-23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by
-bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End
-Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire.
-Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and
-are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal.
-24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61.
-25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic
-
-~
-establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification,
-with the analysand that she describes in the article.
-26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85.
-27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and
-Rose, p. 44.
-28. Ibid., p. 55.
-29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to
-understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See
-his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de
-Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me.
-30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans.
-Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is
-created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery
-of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible
-through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the
-thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s
-Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most
-clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction
-between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in
-Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms,
-the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power,
-but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and
-subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume
-I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81)
-and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined
-status of the juridical law.
-31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73.
-32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art,
-ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S.
-Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir:
-Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun:
-Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter
-text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the
-
-~
-matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked
-with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of
-primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to
-the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to
-commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas
-the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the
-suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly
-and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern
-effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the
-psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood
-According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body
-Politics of Julia Kristeva.”
-33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id,
-trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia
-and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion
-of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul
-Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and
-Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip
-Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text.
-34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s
-“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic
-Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim
-(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195.
-35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of
-mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below.
-36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between
-the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does
-not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine
-Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of
-the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New
-
-~
-York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text
-engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan.
-37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81.
-38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale
-University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York:
-International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of
-the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press,
-1968).
-39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie,
-introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in
-L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and
-the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by
-Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of
-this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and
-Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in
-Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New
-York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the
-same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s
-Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer
-(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics
-of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp.
-3–18.
-40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68.
-41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes
-of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes.
-This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward
-by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a
-fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5).
-42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian
-Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the
-heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu-
-
-~
-ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that
-body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals
-the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and
-the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout
-the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on
-these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is
-understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and
-anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity
-into question.
-43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed
-by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego
-is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests
-that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development.
-Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface
-entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in
-Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins
-(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative
-account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the
-implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A
-Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale
-University Press, 1989).
-44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in
-the text.
-45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the
-Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de
-Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality.
-46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View
-(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest.
-47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of
-Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980.
-
-~
-48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James
-Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7.
-49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought
-and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable
-narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which
-transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic
-order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting
-or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105).
-3. Subversive Bodily Acts
-1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol.
-3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118.
-2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984),
-p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris:
-Editions du Seuil, 1974).
-3. Ibid., p. 25.
-4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p.
-135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from
-two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and
-Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil,
-1969).
-5. Ibid., p. 135.
-6. Ibid., p. 134.
-7. Ibid., p. 136.
-8. Ibid.
-9. Ibid., p. 239.
-10. Ibid., pp. 239–240.
-11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen,
-“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia
-Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English,
-1985.
-12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239.
-
-~
-13. Ibid., p. 239.
-14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of
-Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4.
-15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he
-writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations
-are understood as sublimated reproductive desire.
-16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans.
-Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154.
-17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs
-of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New
-York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite
-Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text.
-18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial
-unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations,
-pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a
-causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See
-chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted.
-19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James
-O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982–
-Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy,
-Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman
-(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291.
-20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences
-(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv.
-21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My
-Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank
-Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . .
-(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973).
-22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism
-without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago:
-University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la
-différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967).
-23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms.
-24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s
-
-~
-Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on
-Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V.
-Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her
-article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda
-Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,”
-Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360.
-25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being
-almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It
-is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender
-to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No.
-2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89.
-See chapter 3, n. 4).
-26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might
-account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category
-violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies
-effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing
-the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to
-writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action,
-we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the
-category of sex in action.
-27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2,
-Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20.,
-see chapter 3, n. 49.
-28. Ibid., p. 17.
-29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
-30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1,
-Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp.
-21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49.
-31. Ibid., p. 107.
-32. Ibid., p. 106.
-33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4.
-
-~
-34. Ibid., p. 5.
-35. Ibid., p. 6.
-36. Ibid.
-37. Ibid.
-38. Ibid.
-39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature:
-Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian
-(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical
-difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language
-that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and
-Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of
-linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s
-critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains
-closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the
-semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both
-Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces
-and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze
-argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is
-deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet,
-Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York:
-Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89.
-40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this
-insight.
-41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also
-in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49.
-42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3,
-No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67.
-See chapter 3, n. 49.
-43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.”
-44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French
-New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
-1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter
-3, n. 49.
-45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48.
-
-~
-46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a
-“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee”
-the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the
-second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social
-capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues,
-individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that
-precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay
-with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any
-reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely
-woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their
-organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139).
-47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon,
-1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du
-Minuit, 1969).
-48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9.
-49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in
-1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press,
-1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic
-contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although
-she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general
-will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see
-Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in
-Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and
-Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp.
-259–279.
-50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.”
-51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.”
-52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41.
-53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.”
-54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans.
-Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca:
-
-~
-Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to
-this essay.
-55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley:
-Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4.
-56. Ibid., p. 113.
-57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988).
-58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115.
-59. Ibid., p. 121.
-60. Ibid., p. 140.
-61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory,
-Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion
-of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in
-honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical
-“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48.
-62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of
-Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia
-University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur
-(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her
-own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality,
-that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then
-becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals
-and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65).
-63. Ibid., p. 3.
-64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious
-Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of
-Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern
-University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery
-and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990),
-pp. 201–214.
-65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic
-Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York:
-Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An
-
-~
-Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20,
-No. 3,Winter 1988.
-66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan
-Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29.
-67. Ibid., p. 30.
-68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female
-Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972).
-69. Ibid., p. 103.
-70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,
-WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114.
-71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University
-Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The
-Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive
-Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983).
-
-~
-
-abject, the, 169–70
-Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87
-AIDS, 168–69
-Am I That Name? (Riley), 6
-Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari),
-151
-Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43
-Barnes, Djuna, 152
-Bataille, Georges, 131
-“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60,
-149–51
-berdache, 194n. 8
-binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63
-biology, cellular, 135–41
-bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84,
-98–100, 173
-bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43
-body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as
-boundary, variable, 44, 170–71,
-177; construction of, 12–13, 17,
-161, 168–69; inscription on,
-163–67, 171–73; maternal,
-101–19; permeability of, 168;
-“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70
-Borges, Jorge, 131
-
-butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58
-chromosomes, 135–41
-Civilization and Its Discontents
-(Freud), 92
-Cixous, Hélène, 131
-corporeal styles, 178–80
-Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5
-de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18,
-35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177
-de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49
-Deleuze and Guattari, 151
-Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150,
-193n. 2, 201–2n. 1
-de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51
-Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21
-Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5
-Dews, Peter, 209n. 49
-différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150
-Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171
-dispositions, sexual, 77–84
-Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169,
-214–15n. 62
-drag, 174–80
-écriture feminine, 19
-
-~
-Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77,
-79–82, 84
-ego-ideal, the, 79–81
-Eicher, Eva, 138–41
-Elementary Structures of Kinship, The
-(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55
-empty space, 86
-Engels, Friedrich, 47
-epistemology and identity, 183–84
-Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92
-Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41
-fêlure, 71, 100
-feminism: debates within, 18–22;
-foundationalist frame of,
-189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46;
-and politics, 181–90; and sexual
-difference, 35–44; women as
-“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
-Ferenczi, Sandor, 66
-Foucault, Michel: on category of
-sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18,
-123–35; on genealogy, 165–66;
-on homosexuality, 83, 130–31;
-on inscription, 171–73; on
-repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97
-Franklin, Aretha, 29–30,
-198–99n. 34
-Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84,
-203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36
-Gallop, Jane, 37
-Garbo, Greta, 163
-Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50
-gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77;
-as incredible, 180; in language,
-28–30; overthrow of, 95–96,
-151–54; as performative,
-163–90; as regulatory, 23–33,
-
-42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33,
-47–48, 141–65
-genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188
-genetics, sex and, 135–41
-Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53,
-160–61
-Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40
-Haar, Michel, 27–28
-Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25
-Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183,
-196–97n. 21, 203n. 14
-Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently
-Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault),
-31–32, 120, 123–35
-heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26,
-30–31, 34–35, 147–50
-heterosexual matrix, 42–43,
-45–100
-History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1
-(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117,
-120–24, 135–36
-homosexuality: Foucault on, 83,
-130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan
-on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14;
-and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere
-on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84,
-87–88, 168–70;Wittig on,
-24–33
-hooks, bell, 205n. 23
-Husserl, Edmund, 17
-identification in gender, 40–41,
-80–91, 207n. 38
-identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of,
-181–90
-imitation, 41, 174–76
-impersonation, 174–80
-
-~
-incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84,
-87–88, 110, 204n. 19
-“incorporation” of identity, 86–91,
-171–74
-internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38
-“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166,
-186, 201–2n. 1
-Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27,
-34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54
-Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56
-“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade”
-(Heath), 67–68
-Jones, Ernest, 64
-jouissance, 55, 71
-Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2,
-201–2n. 1
-Kant, Immanuel, 71
-kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16
-Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32
-Kristeva, Julia: on the abject,
-169–70; on Lacan, 101–2,
-104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14;
-and the maternal body, 101–19;
-on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32;
-as orientalist, 114; on repression,
-104–5, 115–17; on the
-Symbolic, 102, 104–10
-Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2,
-104–5; and lesbian sexuality,
-62–64; and the Law, 55, 59,
-70–72; and masquerade, 60–73;
-on the Phallus, 56–60; on
-sexual difference, 36–39; on
-the Symbolic, 57, 70–73,
-101–2, 104
-language: and culture, 55; gender in,
-28–30; poetic, 101–12; and
-
-identity, 182–86; and power,
-33–44
-law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2,
-118–19, 200n. 52
-Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72
-Leibniz, Gottfried, 51
-Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36,
-153, 159–60, 169
-lesbianism: and the body, 35–36,
-159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64;
-and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of
-women, 26–27, 162–63
-Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93
-“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41
-literalization, 87–91
-Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50
-Locke, John, 158
-MacCormack, Carol, 48
-Marcuse, Herbert, 92
-“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig),
-28–29
-Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183
-masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18
-melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19,
-206–7n. 32
-Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in
-America (Newton), 163, 174
-“Motherhood According to Bellini”
-(Kristeva), 71
-mourning, 73–84, 107–9
-“Mourning and Melancholia”
-(Freud), 73–74, 78–79
-Newton, Esther, 163, 174,
-205n. 22
-
-~
-Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73,
-166, 171, 206n. 30
-Oedipal complex, the, 75–84,
-91–100
-“One Is Not Born a Woman”
-(Wittig), 143–44
-On the Genealogy of Morals
-(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171,
-206n. 30
-“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig),
-159, 214n. 49
-Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131
-Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11
-Page, David, 136–41
-Panizza, Oscar, 120
-“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151
-parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90
-pastiche, 176, 186–87
-patriarchy, 45–46
-performativity, 171–90
-person, unversal conception of,
-14–15
-phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52
-Phallus, the, 55–73
-Plato, 17, 92, 116
-Pleasure and Danger (Vance),
-200–201n. 53, 205n. 22
-pleasures, proliferation of,
-35–36
-Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and
-the Media (Watney), 168
-politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9,
-181–90; of identity, 181–87
-“Postmodernism and Consumer
-Society” (Jameson), 176
-power: and category of sex, 25,
-155–58; and language, 33–44;
-
-prohibition as, 91–100; and
-volition, 158
-Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70
-Proust, Marcel, 152
-psychoanalytic accounts of sexual
-difference, 33–39, 44–100
-Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67,
-169
-redeployment of categories, 163–90
-repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87
-representation, problems of, 3–9
-repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17
-Revolution in Poetic Language
-(Kristeva), 104
-Riley, Denise, 6
-Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25
-Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70,
-156n. 51, 205–6n. 29
-Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4,
-209n. 45
-Same/Other binary, 131–33
-Sarraute, Natalie, 152
-Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164,
-196–97n. 21
-Schafer, Roy, 86
-Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18,
-35, 141, 143
-Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9
-semiotic, the, 101–19
-sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,”
-35–36, 141–63; and genetics,
-135–41; vs. gender, 9–11,
-23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and
-identity, 23–33; as project,
-177–78
-“Sex-Determining Region of the
-Human Y Chromosome Encodes
-a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41
-
-~
-Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53
-sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96,
-120–24, 155–58
-signifying economy, masculinist,
-18–19
-“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30
-Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie
-(Kristeva), 73
-space, internal, 86–91, 170–71
-Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty,
-197n. 23, 204n. 18
-Stoller, Robert, 32
-“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45,
-159
-Strathern, Marilyn, 48
-structuralism, 49–55
-subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48,
-149–54, 169–70, 181–90
-substance, metaphysics of, 25–28,
-34, 37
-Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73,
-102, 104–10
-Symposium (Plato), 116
-Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
-(Freud), 36, 52, 140
-Torok, Maria, 86–87
-Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54
-“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political
-Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin),
-92–96
-transsexuality, 90
-
-Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50
-Tyler, Parker, 163
-“unity,” 20–22
-“universality,” 15–16
-Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault),
-135–36
-Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53,
-205n. 22
-Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22
-Washburn, Linda L., 138–41
-Watney, Simon, 168
-Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir,
-143–44; and category of sex,
-24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59;
-and heterosexual contract,
-34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and
-Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141,
-147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as
-materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159
-“Womanliness as a Masquerade”
-(Riviere), 61–73
-women: as “being” the Phallus,
-55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9,
-19–22, 162–64; as object of
-exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of
-feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90
-Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131
-Young, Iris Marion, 
diff --git a/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt b/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 92e5c9a..0000000 --- a/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6969 +0,0 @@ -Ten years ago I completed the manuscript of Gender Trouble and sent it -to Routledge for publication. I did not know that the text would have -as wide an audience as it has had, nor did I know that it would constitute a provocative “intervention” in feminist theory or be cited as one -of the founding texts of queer theory.The life of the text has exceeded -my intentions, and that is surely in part the result of the changing context of its reception. As I wrote it, I understood myself to be in an -embattled and oppositional relation to certain forms of feminism, even -as I understood the text to be part of feminism itself. I was writing in -the tradition of immanent critique that seeks to provoke critical examination of the basic vocabulary of the movement of thought to which it -belongs. There was and remains warrant for such a mode of criticism -and to distinguish between self-criticism that promises a more democratic and inclusive life for the movement and criticism that seeks to -undermine it altogether. Of course, it is always possible to misread the -former as the latter, but I would hope that that will not be done in the -case of Gender Trouble. -In 1989 I was most concerned to criticize a pervasive heterosexual -assumption in feminist literary theory. I sought to counter those views -that made presumptions about the limits and propriety of gender and -restricted the meaning of gender to received notions of masculinity -and femininity. It was and remains my view that any feminist theory -~ -that restricts the meaning of gender in the presuppositions of its own -practice sets up exclusionary gender norms within feminism, often -with homophobic consequences. It seemed to me, and continues to -seem, that feminism ought to be careful not to idealize certain expressions of gender that, in turn, produce new forms of hierarchy and -exclusion. In particular, I opposed those regimes of truth that stipulated that certain kinds of gendered expressions were found to be false or -derivative, and others, true and original. The point was not to prescribe a new gendered way of life that might then serve as a model for -readers of the text. Rather, the aim of the text was to open up the field -of possibility for gender without dictating which kinds of possibilities -ought to be realized. One might wonder what use “opening up possibilities” finally is, but no one who has understood what it is to live in -the social world as what is “impossible,” illegible, unrealizable, unreal, -and illegitimate is likely to pose that question. -Gender Trouble sought to uncover the ways in which the very thinking of what is possible in gendered life is foreclosed by certain habitual -and violent presumptions. The text also sought to undermine any and -all efforts to wield a discourse of truth to delegitimate minority gendered and sexual practices. This doesn’t mean that all minority practices are to be condoned or celebrated, but it does mean that we ought -to be able to think them before we come to any kinds of conclusions -about them.What worried me most were the ways that the panic in the -face of such practices rendered them unthinkable. Is the breakdown of -gender binaries, for instance, so monstrous, so frightening, that it must -be held to be definitionally impossible and heuristically precluded -from any effort to think gender? -Some of these kinds of presumptions were found in what was -called “French Feminism” at the time, and they enjoyed great popularity among literary scholars and some social theorists. -Even as I opposed what I took to be the heterosexism at the core of -sexual difference fundamentalism, I also drew from French poststructuralism to make my points. My work in Gender Trouble turned out to be -~ -one of cultural translation. Poststructuralist theory was brought to bear -on U.S. theories of gender and the political predicaments of feminism. If -in some of its guises, poststructuralism appears as a formalism, aloof -from questions of social context and political aim, that has not been the -case with its more recent American appropriations. Indeed, my point -was not to “apply” poststructuralism to feminism, but to subject those -theories to a specifically feminist reformulation.Whereas some defenders of poststructuralist formalism express dismay at the avowedly “thematic” orientation it receives in works such as Gender Trouble, the -critiques of poststructuralism within the cultural Left have expressed -strong skepticism toward the claim that anything politically progressive -can come of its premises. In both accounts, however, poststructuralism -is considered something unified, pure, and monolithic. In recent years, -however, that theory, or set of theories, has migrated into gender and -sexuality studies, postcolonial and race studies. It has lost the formalism -of its earlier instance and acquired a new and transplanted life in the -domain of cultural theory. There are continuing debates about whether -my own work or the work of Homi K. Bhabha, Gayatri Chakravorty -Spivak, or Slavoj Žižek belongs to cultural studies or critical theory, but -perhaps such questions simply show that the strong distinction between -the two enterprises has broken down.There will be theorists who claim -that all of the above belong to cultural studies, and there will be cultural -studies practitioners who define themselves against all manner of theory -(although not, significantly, Stuart Hall, one of the founders of cultural -studies in Britain). But both sides of the debate sometimes miss the -point that the face of theory has changed precisely through its cultural -appropriations. There is a new venue for theory, necessarily impure, -where it emerges in and as the very event of cultural translation.This is -not the displacement of theory by historicism, nor a simple historicization of theory that exposes the contingent limits of its more generalizable claims. It is, rather, the emergence of theory at the site where -cultural horizons meet, where the demand for translation is acute and -its promise of success, uncertain. -~ -Gender Trouble is rooted in “French Theory,” which is itself a curious -American construction. Only in the United States are so many disparate -theories joined together as if they formed some kind of unity. Although -the book has been translated into several languages and has had an especially strong impact on discussions of gender and politics in Germany, it -will emerge in France, if it finally does, much later than in other countries. I mention this to underscore that the apparent Francocentrism of -the text is at a significant distance from France and from the life of theory in France. Gender Trouble tends to read together, in a syncretic vein, -various French intellectuals (Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Lacan, Kristeva, -Wittig) who had few alliances with one another and whose readers in -France rarely, if ever, read one another. Indeed, the intellectual promiscuity of the text marks it precisely as American and makes it foreign to a -French context. So does its emphasis on the Anglo-American sociological and anthropological tradition of “gender” studies, which is distinct -from the discourse of “sexual difference” derived from structuralist -inquiry. If the text runs the risk of Eurocentrism in the U.S., it has -threatened an “Americanization” of theory in France for those few -French publishers who have considered it.1 -Of course, “French Theory” is not the only language of this text. It -emerges from a long engagement with feminist theory, with the debates -on the socially constructed character of gender, with psychoanalysis and -feminism, with Gayle Rubin’s extraordinary work on gender, sexuality, -and kinship, Esther Newton’s groundbreaking work on drag, Monique -Wittig’s brilliant theoretical and fictional writings, and with gay and -lesbian perspectives in the humanities. Whereas many feminists in the -1980s assumed that lesbianism meets feminism in lesbian-feminism, -Gender Trouble sought to refuse the notion that lesbian practice instantiates feminist theory, and set up a more troubled relation between the -two terms. Lesbianism in this text does not represent a return to what -is most important about being a woman; it does not consecrate femininity or signal a gynocentric world. Lesbianism is not the erotic con- - -~ -summation of a set of political beliefs (sexuality and belief are related in -a much more complex fashion, and very often at odds with one another). Instead, the text asks, how do non-normative sexual practices call -into question the stability of gender as a category of analysis? How do -certain sexual practices compel the question: what is a woman, what is -a man? If gender is no longer to be understood as consolidated through -normative sexuality, then is there a crisis of gender that is specific to -queer contexts? -The idea that sexual practice has the power to destabilize gender -emerged from my reading of Gayle Rubin’s “The Traffic in Women” and -sought to establish that normative sexuality fortifies normative gender. -Briefly, one is a woman, according to this framework, to the extent -that one functions as one within the dominant heterosexual frame and -to call the frame into question is perhaps to lose something of one’s -sense of place in gender. I take it that this is the first formulation of -“gender trouble” in this text. I sought to understand some of the terror -and anxiety that some people suffer in “becoming gay,” the fear of losing one’s place in gender or of not knowing who one will be if one -sleeps with someone of the ostensibly “same” gender.This constitutes a -certain crisis in ontology experienced at the level of both sexuality and -language. This issue has become more acute as we consider various -new forms of gendering that have emerged in light of transgenderism -and transsexuality, lesbian and gay parenting, new butch and femme -identities. When and why, for instance, do some butch lesbians who -become parents become “dads” and others become “moms”? -What about the notion, suggested by Kate Bornstein, that a transsexual cannot be described by the noun of “woman” or “man,” but must -be approached through active verbs that attest to the constant transformation which “is” the new identity or, indeed, the “in-betweenness” -that puts the being of gendered identity into question? Although some -lesbians argue that butches have nothing to do with “being a man,” others insist that their butchness is or was only a route to a desired status - -~ -as a man. These paradoxes have surely proliferated in recent years, -offering evidence of a kind of gender trouble that the text itself did not -anticipate.2 -But what is the link between gender and sexuality that I sought -to underscore? Certainly, I do not mean to claim that forms of sexual -practice produce certain genders, but only that under conditions of -normative heterosexuality, policing gender is sometimes used as a way -of securing heterosexuality. Catharine MacKinnon offers a formulation -of this problem that resonates with my own at the same time that there -are, I believe, crucial and important differences between us. She writes: -Stopped as an attribute of a person, sex inequality takes the form of -gender; moving as a relation between people, it takes the form of -sexuality. Gender emerges as the congealed form of the sexualization -of inequality between men and women.3 - -In this view, sexual hierarchy produces and consolidates gender. It is -not heterosexual normativity that produces and consolidates gender, -but the gender hierarchy that is said to underwrite heterosexual relations. If gender hierarchy produces and consolidates gender, and if gender hierarchy presupposes an operative notion of gender, then gender is -what causes gender, and the formulation culminates in tautology. It may -be that MacKinnon wants merely to outline the self-reproducing mechanism of gender hierarchy, but this is not what she has said. -Is “gender hierarchy” sufficient to explain the conditions for -the production of gender? To what extent does gender hierarchy -serve a more or less compulsory heterosexuality, and how often are -gender norms policed precisely in the service of shoring up heterosexual hegemony? -Katherine Franke, a contemporary legal theorist, makes innovative -use of both feminist and queer perspectives to note that by assuming -the primacy of gender hierarchy to the production of gender, -MacKinnon also accepts a presumptively heterosexual model for -thinking about sexuality. Franke offers an alternative model of gender -~ -discrimination to MacKinnon’s, effectively arguing that sexual harassment is the paradigmatic allegory for the production of gender. Not all -discrimination can be understood as harassment.The act of harassment -may be one in which a person is “made” into a certain gender. But there -are others ways of enforcing gender as well. Thus, for Franke, it is -important to make a provisional distinction between gender and sexual discrimination. Gay people, for instance, may be discriminated -against in positions of employment because they fail to “appear” in -accordance with accepted gendered norms. And the sexual harassment -of gay people may well take place not in the service of shoring up gender hierarchy, but in promoting gender normativity. -Whereas MacKinnon offers a powerful critique of sexual harassment, she institutes a regulation of another kind: to have a gender -means to have entered already into a heterosexual relationship of subordination. At an analytic level, she makes an equation that resonates with -some dominant forms of homophobic argument. One such view prescribes and condones the sexual ordering of gender, maintaining that -men who are men will be straight, women who are women will be -straight.There is another set of views, Franke’s included, which offers a -critique precisely of this form of gender regulation.There is thus a difference between sexist and feminist views on the relation between gender and sexuality: the sexist claims that a woman only exhibits her -womanness in the act of heterosexual coitus in which her subordination -becomes her pleasure (an essence emanates and is confirmed in the sexualized subordination of women); a feminist view argues that gender -should be overthrown, eliminated, or rendered fatally ambiguous precisely because it is always a sign of subordination for women.The latter -accepts the power of the former’s orthodox description, accepts that -the former’s description already operates as powerful ideology, but -seeks to oppose it. -I belabor this point because some queer theorists have drawn -an analytic distinction between gender and sexuality, refusing a causal -or structural link between them. This makes good sense from one -~ -perspective: if what is meant by this distinction is that heterosexual -normativity ought not to order gender, and that such ordering ought to -be opposed, I am firmly in favor of this view.4 If, however, what is -meant by this is that (descriptively speaking), there is no sexual regulation of gender, then I think an important, but not exclusive, dimension -of how homophobia works is going unrecognized by those who are -clearly most eager to combat it. It is important for me to concede, -however, that the performance of gender subversion can indicate nothing about sexuality or sexual practice. Gender can be rendered -ambiguous without disturbing or reorienting normative sexuality at -all. Sometimes gender ambiguity can operate precisely to contain or -deflect non-normative sexual practice and thereby work to keep normative sexuality intact.5 Thus, no correlation can be drawn, for -instance, between drag or transgender and sexual practice, and the distribution of hetero-, bi-, and homo-inclinations cannot be predictably -mapped onto the travels of gender bending or changing. -Much of my work in recent years has been devoted to clarifying -and revising the theory of performativity that is outlined in Gender -Trouble.6 It is difficult to say precisely what performativity is not only -because my own views on what “performativity” might mean have -changed over time, most often in response to excellent criticisms,7 but -because so many others have taken it up and given it their own formulations. I originally took my clue on how to read the performativity of -gender from Jacques Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s “Before the Law.” -There the one who waits for the law, sits before the door of the law, -attributes a certain force to the law for which one waits.The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which -that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its -object. I wondered whether we do not labor under a similar expectation concerning gender, that it operates as an interior essence that -might be disclosed, an expectation that ends up producing the very -phenomenon that it anticipates. In the first instance, then, the performativity of gender revolves around this metalepsis, the way in which -~ -the anticipation of a gendered essence produces that which it posits as -outside itself. Secondly, performativity is not a singular act, but a repetition and a ritual, which achieves its effects through its naturalization -in the context of a body, understood, in part, as a culturally sustained -temporal duration.8 -Several important questions have been posed to this doctrine, and -one seems especially noteworthy to mention here.The view that gender -is performative sought to show that what we take to be an internal -essence of gender is manufactured through a sustained set of acts, posited through the gendered stylization of the body. In this way, it showed -that what we take to be an “internal” feature of ourselves is one that we -anticipate and produce through certain bodily acts, at an extreme, an -hallucinatory effect of naturalized gestures. Does this mean that everything that is understood as “internal” about the psyche is therefore evacuated, and that internality is a false metaphor? Although Gender Trouble -clearly drew upon the metaphor of an internal psyche in its early discussion of gender melancholy, that emphasis was not brought forward into -the thinking of performativity itself.9 Both The Psychic Life of Power and -several of my recent articles on psychoanalytic topics have sought to -come to terms with this problem, what many have seen as a problematic -break between the early and later chapters of this book. Although I -would deny that all of the internal world of the psyche is but an effect of -a stylized set of acts, I continue to think that it is a significant theoretical -mistake to take the “internality” of the psychic world for granted. -Certain features of the world, including people we know and lose, do -become “internal” features of the self, but they are transformed through -that interiorization, and that inner world, as the Kleinians call it, is constituted precisely as a consequence of the interiorizations that a psyche -performs. This suggests that there may well be a psychic theory of performativity at work that calls for greater exploration. -Although this text does not answer the question of whether the -materiality of the body is fully constructed, that has been the focus of -much of my subsequent work, which I hope will prove clarifying for the -~ -reader.10 The question of whether or not the theory of performativity -can be transposed onto matters of race has been explored by several -scholars.11 I would note here not only that racial presumptions invariably underwrite the discourse on gender in ways that need to be made -explicit, but that race and gender ought not to be treated as simple -analogies. I would therefore suggest that the question to ask is not -whether the theory of performativity is transposable onto race, but -what happens to the theory when it tries to come to grips with race. -Many of these debates have centered on the status of “construction,” -whether race is constructed in the same way as gender. My view is that -no single account of construction will do, and that these categories -always work as background for one another, and they often find their -most powerful articulation through one another.Thus, the sexualization -of racial gender norms calls to be read through multiple lenses at once, -and the analysis surely illuminates the limits of gender as an exclusive -category of analysis.12 -Although I’ve enumerated some of the academic traditions and -debates that have animated this book, it is not my purpose to offer a -full apologia in these brief pages.There is one aspect of the conditions -of its production that is not always understood about the text: it was -produced not merely from the academy, but from convergent social -movements of which I have been a part, and within the context of a -lesbian and gay community on the east coast of the United States in -which I lived for fourteen years prior to the writing of this book. -Despite the dislocation of the subject that the text performs, there is a -person here: I went to many meetings, bars, and marches and saw -many kinds of genders, understood myself to be at the crossroads of -some of them, and encountered sexuality at several of its cultural -edges. I knew many people who were trying to find their way in the -midst of a significant movement for sexual recognition and freedom, -and felt the exhilaration and frustration that goes along with being a -part of that movement both in its hopefulness and internal dissension. -At the same time that I was ensconced in the academy, I was also living -~ -a life outside those walls, and though Gender Trouble is an academic -book, it began, for me, with a crossing-over, sitting on Rehoboth -Beach, wondering whether I could link the different sides of my life. -That I can write in an autobiographical mode does not, I think, relocate this subject that I am, but perhaps it gives the reader a sense of -solace that there is someone here (I will suspend for the moment the -problem that this someone is given in language). -It has been one of the most gratifying experiences for me that the -text continues to move outside the academy to this day. At the same -time that the book was taken up by Queer Nation, and some of its -reflections on the theatricality of queer self-presentation resonated -with the tactics of Act Up, it was among the materials that also helped -to prompt members of the American Psychoanalytic Association and -the American Psychological Association to reassess some of their current doxa on homosexuality. The questions of performative gender -were appropriated in different ways in the visual arts, at Whitney exhibitions, and at the Otis School for the Arts in Los Angeles, among others. Some of its formulations on the subject of “women” and the -relation between sexuality and gender also made its way into feminist -jurisprudence and antidiscrimination legal scholarship in the work of -Vicki Schultz, Katherine Franke, and Mary Jo Frug. -In turn, I have been compelled to revise some of my positions in -Gender Trouble by virtue of my own political engagements. In the book, I -tend to conceive of the claim of “universality” in exclusive negative and -exclusionary terms. However, I came to see the term has important -strategic use precisely as a non-substantial and open-ended category as I -worked with an extraordinary group of activists first as a board member and then as board chair of the International Gay and Lesbian Human -Rights Commission (1994–7), an organization that represents sexual -minorities on a broad range of human rights issues. There I came to -understand how the assertion of universality can be proleptic and performative, conjuring a reality that does not yet exist, and holding out -the possibility for a convergence of cultural horizons that have not yet -~ -met. Thus, I arrived at a second view of universality in which it is -defined as a future-oriented labor of cultural translation.13 More -recently, I have been compelled to relate my work to political theory -and, once again, to the concept of universality in a co-authored book -that I am writing with Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek on the theory of -hegemony and its implications for a theoretically activist Left (to be -published by Verso in 2000). -Another practical dimension of my thinking has taken place in -relationship to psychoanalysis as both a scholarly and clinical enterprise. I am currently working with a group of progressive psychoanalytic therapists on a new journal, Studies in Gender and Sexuality, that -seeks to bring clinical and scholarly work into productive dialogue on -questions of sexuality, gender, and culture. -Both critics and friends of Gender Trouble have drawn attention to -the difficulty of its style. It is no doubt strange, and maddening to -some, to find a book that is not easily consumed to be “popular” -according to academic standards. The surprise over this is perhaps -attributable to the way we underestimate the reading public, its capacity and desire for reading complicated and challenging texts, when the -complication is not gratuitous, when the challenge is in the service of -calling taken-for-granted truths into question, when the taken for -grantedness of those truths is, indeed, oppressive. -I think that style is a complicated terrain, and not one that we unilaterally choose or control with the purposes we consciously intend. -Fredric Jameson made this clear in his early book on Sartre. Certainly, -one can practice styles, but the styles that become available to you are -not entirely a matter of choice. Moreover, neither grammar nor style -are politically neutral. Learning the rules that govern intelligible -speech is an inculcation into normalized language, where the price of -not conforming is the loss of intelligibility itself. As Drucilla Cornell, -in the tradition of Adorno, reminds me: there is nothing radical about -common sense. It would be a mistake to think that received grammar -is the best vehicle for expressing radical views, given the constraints -~ -that grammar imposes upon thought, indeed, upon the thinkable itself. -But formulations that twist grammar or that implicitly call into question the subject-verb requirements of propositional sense are clearly -irritating for some. They produce more work for their readers, and -sometimes their readers are offended by such demands. Are those who -are offended making a legitimate request for “plain speaking” or does -their complaint emerge from a consumer expectation of intellectual -life? Is there, perhaps, a value to be derived from such experiences of -linguistic difficulty? If gender itself is naturalized through grammatical -norms, as Monique Wittig has argued, then the alteration of gender at -the most fundamental epistemic level will be conducted, in part, -through contesting the grammar in which gender is given. -The demand for lucidity forgets the ruses that motor the ostensibly “clear” view. Avital Ronell recalls the moment in which Nixon -looked into the eyes of the nation and said, “let me make one thing -perfectly clear” and then proceeded to lie. What travels under the -sign of “clarity,” and what would be the price of failing to deploy a certain critical suspicion when the arrival of lucidity is announced? Who -devises the protocols of “clarity” and whose interests do they serve? -What is foreclosed by the insistence on parochial standards of transparency as requisite for all communication? What does “transparency” -keep obscure? -I grew up understanding something of the violence of gender -norms: an uncle incarcerated for his anatomically anomalous body, -deprived of family and friends, living out his days in an “institute” in the -Kansas prairies; gay cousins forced to leave their homes because of their -sexuality, real and imagined; my own tempestuous coming out at the -age of 16; and a subsequent adult landscape of lost jobs, lovers, and -homes. All of this subjected me to strong and scarring condemnation -but, luckily, did not prevent me from pursuing pleasure and insisting on -a legitimating recognition for my sexual life. It was difficult to bring this -violence into view precisely because gender was so taken for granted at -the same time that it was violently policed. It was assumed either to be -~ -a natural manifestation of sex or a cultural constant that no human -agency could hope to revise. I also came to understand something of the -violence of the foreclosed life, the one that does not get named as “living,” the one whose incarceration implies a suspension of life, or a sustained death sentence.The dogged effort to “denaturalize” gender in this -text emerges, I think, from a strong desire both to counter the normative violence implied by ideal morphologies of sex and to uproot the -pervasive assumptions about natural or presumptive heterosexuality -that are informed by ordinary and academic discourses on sexuality.The -writing of this denaturalization was not done simply out of a desire to -play with language or prescribe theatrical antics in the place of “real” -politics, as some critics have conjectured (as if theatre and politics are -always distinct). It was done from a desire to live, to make life possible, -and to rethink the possible as such. What would the world have to be -like for my uncle to live in the company of family, friends, or extended -kinship of some other kind? How must we rethink the ideal morphological constraints upon the human such that those who fail to approximate -the norm are not condemned to a death within life?14 -Some readers have asked whether Gender Trouble seeks to expand the -realm of gender possibilities for a reason. They ask, for what purpose -are such new configurations of gender devised, and how ought we to -judge among them? The question often involves a prior premise, namely, that the text does not address the normative or prescriptive dimension of feminist thought. “Normative” clearly has at least two meanings -in this critical encounter, since the word is one I use often, mainly to -describe the mundane violence performed by certain kinds of gender -ideals. I usually use “normative” in a way that is synonymous with “pertaining to the norms that govern gender.” But the term “normative” also -pertains to ethical justification, how it is established, and what concrete -consequences proceed therefrom. One critical question posed of Gender -Trouble has been: how do we proceed to make judgments on how gender -is to be lived on the basis of the theoretical descriptions offered here? It -is not possible to oppose the “normative” forms of gender without at the -~ -same time subscribing to a certain normative view of how the gendered -world ought to be. I want to suggest, however, that the positive normative vision of this text, such as it is, does not and cannot take the form of -a prescription: “subvert gender in the way that I say, and life will be -good.” -Those who make such prescriptions or who are willing to decide -between subversive and unsubversive expressions of gender, base their -judgments on a description. Gender appears in this or that form, and -then a normative judgment is made about those appearances and on -the basis of what appears. But what conditions the domain of appearance for gender itself? We may be tempted to make the following distinction: a descriptive account of gender includes considerations of what -makes gender intelligible, an inquiry into its conditions of possibility, -whereas a normative account seeks to answer the question of which -expressions of gender are acceptable, and which are not, supplying -persuasive reasons to distinguish between such expressions in this way. -The question, however, of what qualifies as “gender” is itself already a -question that attests to a pervasively normative operation of power, a -fugitive operation of “what will be the case” under the rubric of “what -is the case.” Thus, the very description of the field of gender is no sense -prior to, or separable from, the question of its normative operation. -I am not interested in delivering judgments on what distinguishes -the subversive from the unsubversive. Not only do I believe that such -judgments cannot be made out of context, but that they cannot be -made in ways that endure through time (“contexts” are themselves -posited unities that undergo temporal change and expose their essential disunity). Just as metaphors lose their metaphoricity as they congeal through time into concepts, so subversive performances always -run the risk of becoming deadening cliches through their repetition -and, most importantly, through their repetition within commodity -culture where “subversion” carries market value. The effort to name -the criterion for subversiveness will always fail, and ought to. So what -is at stake in using the term at all? -~ -What continues to concern me most is the following kinds of -questions: what will and will not constitute an intelligible life, and -how do presumptions about normative gender and sexuality determine in advance what will qualify as the “human” and the “livable”? In -other words, how do normative gender presumptions work to delimit -the very field of description that we have for the human? What is the -means by which we come to see this delimiting power, and what are -the means by which we transform it? -The discussion of drag that Gender Trouble offers to explain the constructed and performative dimension of gender is not precisely an example of subversion. It would be a mistake to take it as the paradigm of -subversive action or, indeed, as a model for political agency.The point is -rather different. If one thinks that one sees a man dressed as a woman or -a woman dressed as a man, then one takes the first term of each of those -perceptions as the “reality” of gender: the gender that is introduced -through the simile lacks “reality,” and is taken to constitute an illusory -appearance. In such perceptions in which an ostensible reality is coupled with an unreality, we think we know what the reality is, and take -the secondary appearance of gender to be mere artifice, play, falsehood, -and illusion. But what is the sense of “gender reality” that founds this -perception in this way? Perhaps we think we know what the anatomy of -the person is (sometimes we do not, and we certainly have not appreciated the variation that exists at the level of anatomical description). Or -we derive that knowledge from the clothes that the person wears, or -how the clothes are worn.This is naturalized knowledge, even though it -is based on a series of cultural inferences, some of which are highly -erroneous. Indeed, if we shift the example from drag to transsexuality, -then it is no longer possible to derive a judgment about stable anatomy -from the clothes that cover and articulate the body. That body may be -preoperative, transitional, or postoperative; even “seeing” the body may -not answer the question: for what are the categories through which one sees? -The moment in which one’s staid and usual cultural perceptions fail, - -~ -when one cannot with surety read the body that one sees, is precisely -the moment when one is no longer sure whether the body encountered -is that of a man or a woman. The vacillation between the categories -itself constitutes the experience of the body in question. -When such categories come into question, the reality of gender is -also put into crisis: it becomes unclear how to distinguish the real from -the unreal. And this is the occasion in which we come to understand -that what we take to be “real,” what we invoke as the naturalized -knowledge of gender is, in fact, a changeable and revisable reality. Call -it subversive or call it something else. Although this insight does not in -itself constitute a political revolution, no political revolution is possible without a radical shift in one’s notion of the possible and the real. -And sometimes this shift comes as a result of certain kinds of practices -that precede their explicit theorization, and which prompt a rethinking of our basic categories: what is gender, how is it produced and -reproduced, what are its possibilities? At this point, the sedimented -and reified field of gender “reality” is understood as one that might be -made differently and, indeed, less violently. -The point of this text is not to celebrate drag as the expression of a -true and model gender (even as it is important to resist the belittling -of drag that sometimes takes place), but to show that the naturalized -knowledge of gender operates as a preemptive and violent circumscription of reality.To the extent the gender norms (ideal dimorphism, -heterosexual complementarity of bodies, ideals and rule of proper and -improper masculinity and femininity, many of which are underwritten -by racial codes of purity and taboos against miscegenation) establish -what will and will not be intelligibly human, what will and will not be -considered to be “real,” they establish the ontological field in which -bodies may be given legitimate expression. If there is a positive normative task in Gender Trouble, it is to insist upon the extension of this -legitimacy to bodies that have been regarded as false, unreal, and unintelligible. Drag is an example that is meant to establish that “reality” is - -~ -not as fixed as we generally assume it to be.The purpose of the example is to expose the tenuousness of gender “reality” in order to counter -the violence performed by gender norms. -In this text as elsewhere I have tried to understand what political agency might be, given that it cannot be isolated from the dynamics of power from which it is wrought.The iterability of performativity is a theory of agency, one that cannot disavow power as the -condition of its own possibility. This text does not sufficiently explain -performativity in terms of its social, psychic, corporeal, and temporal -dimensions. In some ways, the continuing work of that clarification, in -response to numerous excellent criticisms, guides most of my subsequent publications. -Other concerns have emerged over this text in the last decade, and -I have sought to answer them through various publications. On the status of the materiality of the body, I have offered a reconsideration and -revision of my views in Bodies that Matter. On the question of the necessity of the category of “women” for feminist analysis, I have revised and -expanded my views in “Contingent Foundations” to be found in the -volume I coedited with Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political -(Routledge, 1993) and in the collectively authored Feminist Contentions -(Routledge, 1995). -I do not believe that poststructuralism entails the death of autobiographical writing, but it does draw attention to the difficulty of the “I” -to express itself through the language that is available to it. For this “I” -that you read is in part a consequence of the grammar that governs the -availability of persons in language. I am not outside the language that -structures me, but neither am I determined by the language that makes -this “I” possible. This is the bind of self-expression, as I understand it. -What it means is that you never receive me apart from the grammar -that establishes my availability to you. If I treat that grammar as pellucid, then I fail to call attention precisely to that sphere of language that -establishes and disestablishes intelligibility, and that would be precisely -~ -to thwart my own project as I have described it to you here. I am not -trying to be difficult, but only to draw attention to a difficulty without -which no “I” can appear. -This difficulty takes on a specific dimension when approached from -a psychoanalytic perspective. In my efforts to understand the opacity of -the “I” in language, I have turned increasingly to psychoanalysis since the -publication of Gender Trouble. The usual effort to polarize the theory -of the psyche from the theory of power seems to me to be counterproductive, for part of what is so oppressive about social forms of gender is the psychic difficulties they produce. I sought to consider the -ways in which Foucault and psychoanalysis might be thought together in -The Psychic Life of Power (Stanford, 1997). I have also made use of psychoanalysis to curb the occasional voluntarism of my view of performativity without thereby undermining a more general theory of agency. -Gender Trouble sometimes reads as if gender is simply a self-invention or -that the psychic meaning of a gendered presentation might be read -directly off its surface. Both of those postulates have had to be refined -over time. Moreover, my theory sometimes waffles between understanding performativity as linguistic and casting it as theatrical. I have -come to think that the two are invariably related, chiasmically so, and -that a reconsideration of the speech act as an instance of power invariably draws attention to both its theatrical and linguistic dimensions. In -Excitable Speech, I sought to show that the speech act is at once performed (and thus theatrical, presented to an audience, subject to interpretation), and linguistic, inducing a set of effects through its implied -relation to linguistic conventions. If one wonders how a linguistic theory of the speech act relates to bodily gestures, one need only consider -that speech itself is a bodily act with specific linguistic consequences. -Thus speech belongs exclusively neither to corporeal presentation nor -to language, and its status as word and deed is necessarily ambiguous. -This ambiguity has consequences for the practice of coming out, for the -insurrectionary power of the speech act, for language as a condition of -both bodily seduction and the threat of injury. -~ -If I were to rewrite this book under present circumstances, I would -include a discussion of transgender and intersexuality, the way that ideal -gender dimorphism works in both sorts of discourses, the different relations to surgical intervention that these related concerns sustain. I -would also include a discussion on racialized sexuality and, in particular, -how taboos against miscegenation (and the romanticization of crossracial sexual exchange) are essential to the naturalized and denaturalized -forms that gender takes. I continue to hope for a coalition of sexual -minorities that will transcend the simple categories of identity, that will -refuse the erasure of bisexuality, that will counter and dissipate the violence imposed by restrictive bodily norms. I would hope that such a -coalition would be based on the irreducible complexity of sexuality and -its implication in various dynamics of discursive and institutional power, -and that no one will be too quick to reduce power to hierarchy and to -refuse its productive political dimensions. Even as I think that gaining -recognition for one’s status as a sexual minority is a difficult task within -reigning discourses of law, politics, and language, I continue to consider -it a necessity for survival.The mobilization of identity categories for the -purposes of politicization always remain threatened by the prospect of -identity becoming an instrument of the power one opposes. That is no -reason not to use, and be used, by identity.There is no political position -purified of power, and perhaps that impurity is what produces agency as -the potential interruption and reversal of regulatory regimes. Those -who are deemed “unreal” nevertheless lay hold of the real, a laying hold -that happens in concert, and a vital instability is produced by that performative surprise.This book is written then as part of the cultural life -of a collective struggle that has had, and will continue to have, some success in increasing the possibilities for a livable life for those who live, or -try to live, on the sexual margins.15 -Judith Butler -Berkeley, California -June, 1999 -~ - -Contemporary feminist debates over the meanings of gender lead time -and again to a certain sense of trouble, as if the indeterminacy of gender might eventually culminate in the failure of feminism. Perhaps -trouble need not carry such a negative valence. To make trouble was, -within the reigning discourse of my childhood, something one should -never do precisely because that would get one in trouble.The rebellion -and its reprimand seemed to be caught up in the same terms, a phenomenon that gave rise to my first critical insight into the subtle ruse of -power: the prevailing law threatened one with trouble, even put one in -trouble, all to keep one out of trouble. Hence, I concluded that trouble -is inevitable and the task, how best to make it, what best way to be in it. -As time went by, further ambiguities arrived on the critical scene. I -noted that trouble sometimes euphemized some fundamentally mysterious problem usually related to the alleged mystery of all things feminine. I read Beauvoir who explained that to be a woman within the -terms of a masculinist culture is to be a source of mystery and -unknowability for men, and this seemed confirmed somehow when I -read Sartre for whom all desire, problematically presumed as heterosexual and masculine, was defined as trouble. For that masculine subject -of desire, trouble became a scandal with the sudden intrusion, the -unanticipated agency, of a female “object” who inexplicably returns the -glance, reverses the gaze, and contests the place and authority of the -~ -masculine position.The radical dependency of the masculine subject on -the female “Other” suddenly exposes his autonomy as illusory.That particular dialectical reversal of power, however, couldn’t quite hold my -attention—although others surely did. Power seemed to be more than -an exchange between subjects or a relation of constant inversion -between and subject and an Other; indeed, power appeared to operate -in the production of that very binary frame for thinking about gender. I -asked, what configuration of power constructs the subject and the -Other, that binary relation between “men” and “women,” and the internal stability of those terms? What restriction is here at work? Are those -terms untroubling only to the extent that they conform to a heterosexual matrix for conceptualizing gender and desire? What happens to the -subject and to the stability of gender categories when the epistemic -regime of presumptive heterosexuality is unmasked as that which produces and reifies these ostensible categories of ontology? -But how can an epistemic/ontological regime be brought into -question? What best way to trouble the gender categories that support -gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality? Consider the fate of -“female trouble,” that historical configuration of a nameless female -indisposition, which thinly veiled the notion that being female is a natural indisposition. Serious as the medicalization of women’s bodies is, -the term is also laughable, and laughter in the face of serious categories -is indispensable for feminism.Without a doubt, feminism continues to -require its own forms of serious play. Female Trouble is also the title of -the John Waters film that features Divine, the hero/heroine of Hairspray as well, whose impersonation of women implicitly suggests that -gender is a kind of persistent impersonation that passes as the real. -Her/his performance destabilizes the very distinctions between the -natural and the artificial, depth and surface, inner and outer through -which discourse about genders almost always operates. Is drag the imitation of gender, or does it dramatize the signifying gestures through -which gender itself is established? Does being female constitute a “natural fact” or a cultural performance, or is “naturalness” constituted -~ -through discursively constrained performative acts that produce the -body through and within the categories of sex? Divine notwithstanding, gender practices within gay and lesbian cultures often thematize -“the natural” in parodic contexts that bring into relief the performative -construction of an original and true sex.What other foundational categories of identity—the binary of sex, gender, and the body—can be -shown as productions that create the effect of the natural, the original, -and the inevitable? -To expose the foundational categories of sex, gender, and desire as -effects of a specific formation of power requires a form of critical -inquiry that Foucault, reformulating Nietzsche, designates as “genealogy.” A genealogical critique refuses to search for the origins of gender, the inner truth of female desire, a genuine or authentic sexual -identity that repression has kept from view; rather, genealogy investigates the political stakes in designating as an origin and cause those identity categories that are in fact the effects of institutions, practices, -discourses with multiple and diffuse points of origin. The task of this -inquiry is to center on—and decenter—such defining institutions: -phallogocentrism and compulsory heterosexuality. -Precisely because “female” no longer appears to be a stable notion, -its meaning is as troubled and unfixed as “woman,” and because both -terms gain their troubled significations only as relational terms, this -inquiry takes as its focus gender and the relational analysis it suggests. -Further, it is no longer clear that feminist theory ought to try to settle -the questions of primary identity in order to get on with the task of -politics. Instead, we ought to ask, what political possibilities are the -consequence of a radical critique of the categories of identity. What -new shape of politics emerges when identity as a common ground no -longer constrains the discourse on feminist politics? And to what -extent does the effort to locate a common identity as the foundation -for a feminist politics preclude a radical inquiry into the political construction and regulation of identity itself? -* * * -~ -This text is divided into three chapters that effect a critical genealogy of -gender categories in very different discursive domains. Chapter 1, -“Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire,” reconsiders the status of “women” as -the subject of feminism and the sex/gender distinction. Compulsory -heterosexuality and phallogocentrism are understood as regimes of -power/discourse with often divergent ways of answering central question of gender discourse: how does language construct the categories of -sex? Does “the feminine” resist representation within language? Is language understood as phallogocentric (Luce Irigaray’s question)? Is “the -feminine” the only sex represented within a language that conflates the -female and the sexual (Monique Wittig’s contention)? Where and how -do compulsory heterosexuality and phallogocentrism converge? Where -are the points of breakage between? How does language itself produce -the fiction construction of “sex” that supports these various regimes of -power? Within a language of presumptive heterosexuality, what sorts of -continuities are assumed to exist among sex, gender, and desire? Are -these terms discrete? What kinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call -into question their alleged relations? -Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the -Heterosexual Matrix,” offers a selective reading of structuralism, psychoanalytic and feminist accounts of the incest taboo as the mechanism -that tries to enforce discrete and internally coherent gender identities -within a heterosexual frame. The question of homosexuality is, within -some psychoanalytic discourse, invariably associated with forms of -cultural unintelligibility and, in the case of lesbianism, with the desexualization of the female body. On the other hand, the uses of psychoanalytic theory for an account of complex gender “identities” is pursued -through an analysis of identity, identification, and masquerade in Joan -Riviere and other psychoanalytic literature. Once the incest taboo is -subjected to Foucault’s critique of the repressive hypothesis in The -History of Sexuality, that prohibitive or juridical structure is shown -both to instate compulsory heterosexuality within a masculinist sexual -~ -economy and to enable a critical challenge to that economy. Is psychoanalysis an antifoundationalist inquiry that affirms the kind of sexual -complexity that effectively deregulates rigid and hierarchical sexual -codes, or does it maintain an unacknowledged set of assumptions about -the foundations of identity that work in favor of those very hierarchies? -The last chapter, “Subversive Bodily Acts,” begins with a critical -consideration of the construction of the maternal body in Julia Kristeva -in order to show the implicit norms that govern the cultural intelligibility of sex and sexuality in her work.Although Foucault is engaged -to provide a critique of Kristeva, a close examination of some of -Foucault’s own work reveals a problematic indifference to sexual difference. His critique of the category of sex, however, provides an -insight into the regulatory practices of some contemporary medical fictions designed to designate univocal sex. Monique Wittig’s theory and -fiction propose a “disintegration” of culturally constituted bodies, suggesting that morphology itself is a consequence of a hegemonic conceptual scheme. The final section of this chapter, “Bodily Inscriptions, -Performative Subversions,” considers the boundary and surface of bodies as politically constructed, drawing on the work of Mary Douglas -and Julia Kristeva.As a strategy to denaturalize and resignify bodily categories, I describe and propose a set of parodic practices based in a performative theory of gender acts that disrupt the categories of the body, -sex, gender, and sexuality and occasion their subversive resignification -and proliferation beyond the binary frame. -It seems that every text has more sources than it can reconstruct within -its own terms. These are sources that define and inform the very language of the text in ways that would require a thorough unraveling of -the text itself to be understood, and of course there would be no guarantee that that unraveling would ever stop. Although I have offered a -childhood story to begin this preface, it is a fable irreducible to fact. -Indeed, the purpose here more generally is to trace the way in which -gender fables establish and circulate the misnomer of natural facts. It is -~ -clearly impossible to recover the origins of these essays, to locate the -various moments that have enabled this text. The texts are assembled -to facilitate a political convergence of feminism, gay and lesbian perspectives on gender, and poststructuralist theory. Philosophy is the -predominant disciplinary mechanism that currently mobilizes this -author-subject, although it rarely if ever appears separated from other -discourses. This inquiry seeks to affirm those positions on the critical -boundaries of disciplinary life. The point is not to stay marginal, but to -participate in whatever network or marginal zones is spawned from -other disciplinary centers and that, together, constitute a multiple displacement of those authorities. The complexity of gender requires an -interdisciplinary and postdisciplinary set of discourses in order to resist -the domestication of gender studies or women studies within the academy and to radicalize the notion of feminist critique. -The writing of this text was made possible by a number of institutional and individual forms of support. The American Council of -Learned Societies provided a Recent Recipient of the Ph.D. Fellowship -for the fall of 1987, and the School of Social Science at the Institute for -Advanced Study in Princeton provided fellowship, housing, and -provocative argumentation during the 1987–1988 academic year. The -George Washington University Faculty Research Grant also supported -my research during the summers of 1987 and 1988. Joan W. Scott has -been an invaluable and incisive critic throughout various stages of this -manuscript. Her commitment to a critical rethinking of the presuppositional terms of feminist politics has challenged and inspired me. The -“Gender Seminar” assembled at the Institute for Advanced Study under -Joan Scott’s direction helped me to clarify and elaborate my views by -virtue of the significant and provocative divisions in our collective -thinking. Hence, I thank Lila Abu-Lughod, Yasmine Ergas, Donna -Haraway, Evelyn Fox Keller, Dorinne Kondo, Rayna Rapp, Carroll -Smith-Rosenberg, Louise Tilly. My students in the seminar “Gender, -Identity, and Desire,” offered at Wesleyan University and at Yale in 1985 -and 1986, respectively, were indispensable for their willingness to -~ -imagine alternatively gendered worlds. I also appreciate the variety of -critical responses that I received on presentations of parts of this work -from the Princeton Women’s Studies Colloquium, the Humanities -Center at Johns Hopkins University, the University of Notre Dame, the -University of Kansas, Amherst College, and the Yale University School -of Medicine. My acknowledgment also goes to Linda Singer, whose persistent radicalism has been invaluable, Sandra Bartky for her work and -her timely words of encouragement, Linda Nicholson for her editorial -and critical advice, and Linda Anderson for her acute political intuitions. I also thank the following individuals, friends, and colleagues -who shaped and supported my thinking: Eloise Moore Aggar, Inés Azar, -Peter Caws, Nancy F. Cott, Kathy Natanson, Lois Natanson, Maurice -Natanson, Stacy Pies, Josh Shapiro, Margaret Soltan, Robert V. Stone, -Richard Vann, and Eszti Votaw. I thank Sandra Schmidt for her fine work -in helping to prepare this manuscript, and Meg Gilbert for her assistance. I also thank Maureen MacGrogan for encouraging this project -and others with her humor, patience, and fine editorial guidance. -As before, I thank Wendy Owen for her relentless imagination, -keen criticism, and for the provocation of her work. - -~ - -~ -GENDER TROUBL -~ - -~ -1 - -Subjects of -Sex/Gender/Desire -One is not born a woman, but rather becomes one. -—Simone de Beauvoir -Strictly speaking,“women” cannot be said to exist. -—Julia Kristeva -Woman does not have a sex. -—Luce Irigaray -The deployment of sexuality ... established this notion of sex. -—Michel Foucault -The category of sex is the political category that founds society as heterosexual. -—Monique Wittig - -i. “Women” as the Subject of Feminism -For the most part, feminist theory has assumed that there is some -existing identity, understood through the category of women, who not -only initiates feminist interests and goals within discourse, but constitutes the subject for whom political representation is pursued. But politics and representation are controversial terms. On the one hand, -representation serves as the operative term within a political process -that seeks to extend visibility and legitimacy to women as political -subjects; on the other hand, representation is the normative function -of a language which is said either to reveal or to distort what is -~ -assumed to be true about the category of women. For feminist theory, -the development of a language that fully or adequately represents -women has seemed necessary to foster the political visibility of -women. This has seemed obviously important considering the pervasive cultural condition in which women’s lives were either misrepresented or not represented at all. -Recently, this prevailing conception of the relation between feminist theory and politics has come under challenge from within feminist -discourse.The very subject of women is no longer understood in stable -or abiding terms. There is a great deal of material that not only questions the viability of “the subject” as the ultimate candidate for representation or, indeed, liberation, but there is very little agreement after -all on what it is that constitutes, or ought to constitute, the category of -women.The domains of political and linguistic “representation” set out -in advance the criterion by which subjects themselves are formed, -with the result that representation is extended only to what can be -acknowledged as a subject. In other words, the qualifications for being -a subject must first be met before representation can be extended. -Foucault points out that juridical systems of power produce the subjects they subsequently come to represent.1 Juridical notions of power -appear to regulate political life in purely negative terms—that is, -through the limitation, prohibition, regulation, control, and even “protection” of individuals related to that political structure through the -contingent and retractable operation of choice. But the subjects regulated by such structures are, by virtue of being subjected to them, -formed, defined, and reproduced in accordance with the requirements -of those structures. If this analysis is right, then the juridical formation -of language and politics that represents women as “the subject” of feminism is itself a discursive formation and effect of a given version of -representational politics. And the feminist subject turns out to be discursively constituted by the very political system that is supposed to -facilitate its emancipation. This becomes politically problematic if that -system can be shown to produce gendered subjects along a differential -~ -axis of domination or to produce subjects who are presumed to be -masculine. In such cases, an uncritical appeal to such a system for the -emancipation of “women” will be clearly self-defeating. -The question of “the subject” is crucial for politics, and for feminist -politics in particular, because juridical subjects are invariably produced -through certain exclusionary practices that do not “show” once the -juridical structure of politics has been established. In other words, the -political construction of the subject proceeds with certain legitimating -and exclusionary aims, and these political operations are effectively -concealed and naturalized by a political analysis that takes juridical -structures as their foundation. Juridical power inevitably “produces” -what it claims merely to represent; hence, politics must be concerned -with this dual function of power: the juridical and the productive. In -effect, the law produces and then conceals the notion of “a subject -before the law”2 in order to invoke that discursive formation as a naturalized foundational premise that subsequently legitimates that law’s -own regulatory hegemony. It is not enough to inquire into how women -might become more fully represented in language and politics. -Feminist critique ought also to understand how the category of -“women,” the subject of feminism, is produced and restrained by the -very structures of power through which emancipation is sought. -Indeed, the question of women as the subject of feminism raises -the possibility that there may not be a subject who stands “before” the -law, awaiting representation in or by the law. Perhaps the subject, as -well as the invocation of a temporal “before,” is constituted by the law -as the fictive foundation of its own claim to legitimacy. The prevailing -assumption of the ontological integrity of the subject before the law -might be understood as the contemporary trace of the state of nature -hypothesis, that foundationalist fable constitutive of the juridical structures of classical liberalism. The performative invocation of a nonhistorical “before” becomes the foundational premise that guarantees a -presocial ontology of persons who freely consent to be governed and, -thereby, constitute the legitimacy of the social contract. -~ -Apart from the foundationalist fictions that support the notion of -the subject, however, there is the political problem that feminism -encounters in the assumption that the term women denotes a common -identity. Rather than a stable signifier that commands the assent of those -whom it purports to describe and represent, women, even in the plural, -has become a troublesome term, a site of contest, a cause for anxiety.As -Denise Riley’s title suggests, Am I That Name? is a question produced by -the very possibility of the name’s multiple significations.3 If one “is” a -woman, that is surely not all one is; the term fails to be exhaustive, not -because a pregendered “person” transcends the specific paraphernalia of -its gender, but because gender is not always constituted coherently or -consistently in different historical contexts, and because gender intersects with racial, class, ethnic, sexual, and regional modalities of discursively constituted identities. As a result, it becomes impossible to -separate out “gender” from the political and cultural intersections in -which it is invariably produced and maintained. -The political assumption that there must be a universal basis for -feminism, one which must be found in an identity assumed to exist -cross-culturally, often accompanies the notion that the oppression of -women has some singular form discernible in the universal or hegemonic structure of patriarchy or masculine domination. The notion of -a universal patriarchy has been widely criticized in recent years for its -failure to account for the workings of gender oppression in the concrete cultural contexts in which it exists.Where those various contexts -have been consulted within such theories, it has been to find “examples” or “illustrations” of a universal principle that is assumed from the -start.That form of feminist theorizing has come under criticism for its -efforts to colonize and appropriate non-Western cultures to support -highly Western notions of oppression, but because they tend as well to -construct a “Third World” or even an “Orient” in which gender oppression is subtly explained as symptomatic of an essential, non-Western -barbarism. The urgency of feminism to establish a universal status for -patriarchy in order to strengthen the appearance of feminism’s own -~ -claims to be representative has occasionally motivated the shortcut to a -categorial or fictive universality of the structure of domination, held to -produce women’s common subjugated experience. -Although the claim of universal patriarchy no longer enjoys the -kind of credibility it once did, the notion of a generally shared conception of “women,” the corollary to that framework, has been much more -difficult to displace. Certainly, there have been plenty of debates: Is -there some commonality among “women” that preexists their oppression, or do “women” have a bond by virtue of their oppression alone? Is -there a specificity to women’s cultures that is independent of their subordination by hegemonic, masculinist cultures? Are the specificity and -integrity of women’s cultural or linguistic practices always specified -against and, hence, within the terms of some more dominant cultural -formation? If there is a region of the “specifically feminine,” one that is -both differentiated from the masculine as such and recognizable in its -difference by an unmarked and, hence, presumed universality of -“women”? The masculine/feminine binary constitutes not only the -exclusive framework in which that specificity can be recognized, but -in every other way the “specificity” of the feminine is once again fully -decontextualized and separated off analytically and politically from -the constitution of class, race, ethnicity, and other axes of power relations that both constitute “identity” and make the singular notion of -identity a misnomer.4 -My suggestion is that the presumed universality and unity of the -subject of feminism is effectively undermined by the constraints of the -representational discourse in which it functions. Indeed, the premature -insistence on a stable subject of feminism, understood as a seamless category of women, inevitably generates multiple refusals to accept the -category.These domains of exclusion reveal the coercive and regulatory -consequences of that construction, even when the construction has -been elaborated for emancipatory purposes. Indeed, the fragmentation -within feminism and the paradoxical opposition to feminism from -“women” whom feminism claims to represent suggest the necessary -~ -limits of identity politics. The suggestion that feminism can seek wider -representation for a subject that it itself constructs has the ironic consequence that feminist goals risk failure by refusing to take account of the -constitutive powers of their own representational claims.This problem -is not ameliorated through an appeal to the category of women for -merely “strategic” purposes, for strategies always have meanings that -exceed the purposes for which they are intended. In this case, exclusion -itself might qualify as such an unintended yet consequential meaning. By -conforming to a requirement of representational politics that feminism -articulate a stable subject, feminism thus opens itself to charges of gross -misrepresentation. -Obviously, the political task is not to refuse representational politics—as if we could. The juridical structures of language and politics -constitute the contemporary field of power; hence, there is no position -outside this field, but only a critical genealogy of its own legitimating -practices.As such, the critical point of departure is the historical present, -as Marx put it. And the task is to formulate within this constituted -frame a critique of the categories of identity that contemporary juridical structures engender, naturalize, and immobilize. -Perhaps there is an opportunity at this juncture of cultural politics, -a period that some would call “postfeminist,” to reflect from within a -feminist perspective on the injunction to construct a subject of feminism. Within feminist political practice, a radical rethinking of the -ontological constructions of identity appears to be necessary in order -to formulate a representational politics that might revive feminism on -other grounds. On the other hand, it may be time to entertain a radical -critique that seeks to free feminist theory from the necessity of having -to construct a single or abiding ground which is invariably contested -by those identity positions or anti-identity positions that it invariably -excludes. Do the exclusionary practices that ground feminist theory in -a notion of “women” as subject paradoxically undercut feminist goals -to extend its claims to “representation”?5 -Perhaps the problem is even more serious. Is the construction of -~ -the category of women as a coherent and stable subject an unwitting -regulation and reification of gender relations? And is not such a reification precisely contrary to feminist aims? To what extent does the category of women achieve stability and coherence only in the context of -the heterosexual matrix?6 If a stable notion of gender no longer proves -to be the foundational premise of feminist politics, perhaps a new sort -of feminist politics is now desirable to contest the very reifications of -gender and identity, one that will take the variable construction of -identity as both a methodological and normative prerequisite, if not a -political goal. -To trace the political operations that produce and conceal what -qualifies as the juridical subject of feminism is precisely the task of a -feminist genealogy of the category of women. In the course of this effort -to question “women” as the subject of feminism, the unproblematic -invocation of that category may prove to preclude the possibility of feminism as a representational politics. What sense does it make to extend -representation to subjects who are constructed through the exclusion -of those who fail to conform to unspoken normative requirements of -the subject? What relations of domination and exclusion are inadvertently sustained when representation becomes the sole focus of politics? -The identity of the feminist subject ought not to be the foundation of -feminist politics, if the formation of the subject takes place within a -field of power regularly buried through the assertion of that foundation. -Perhaps, paradoxically, “representation” will be shown to make sense -for feminism only when the subject of “women” is nowhere presumed. -ii. The Compulsory Order of Sex/Gender/Desire -Although the unproblematic unity of “women” is often invoked to construct a solidarity of identity, a split is introduced in the feminist subject -by the distinction between sex and gender. Originally intended to dispute the biology-is-destiny formulation, the distinction between sex -and gender serves the argument that whatever biological intractability -sex appears to have, gender is culturally constructed: hence, gender is -~ -neither the causal result of sex nor as seemingly fixed as sex.The unity -of the subject is thus already potentially contested by the distinction -that permits of gender as a multiple interpretation of sex. 7 -If gender is the cultural meanings that the sexed body assumes, -then a gender cannot be said to follow from a sex in any one way.Taken -to its logical limit, the sex/gender distinction suggests a radical discontinuity between sexed bodies and culturally constructed genders. -Assuming for the moment the stability of binary sex, it does not follow -that the construction of “men” will accrue exclusively to the bodies of -males or that “women” will interpret only female bodies. Further, even -if the sexes appear to be unproblematically binary in their morphology -and constitution (which will become a question), there is no reason to -assume that genders ought also to remain as two.8 The presumption of -a binary gender system implicitly retains the belief in a mimetic relation of gender to sex whereby gender mirrors sex or is otherwise -restricted by it. When the constructed status of gender is theorized as -radically independent of sex, gender itself becomes a free-floating artifice, with the consequence that man and masculine might just as easily -signify a female body as a male one, and woman and feminine a male -body as easily as a female one. -This radical splitting of the gendered subject poses yet another set -of problems. Can we refer to a “given” sex or a “given” gender without -first inquiring into how sex and/or gender is given, through what -means? And what is “sex” anyway? Is it natural, anatomical, chromosomal, or hormonal, and how is a feminist critic to assess the scientific -discourses which purport to establish such “facts” for us?9 Does sex -have a history?10 Does each sex have a different history, or histories? Is -there a history of how the duality of sex was established, a genealogy -that might expose the binary options as a variable construction? Are -the ostensibly natural facts of sex discursively produced by various scientific discourses in the service of other political and social interests? -If the immutable character of sex is contested, perhaps this construct -called “sex” is as culturally constructed as gender; indeed, perhaps it -~ -was always already gender, with the consequence that the distinction -between sex and gender turns out to be no distinction at all.11 -It would make no sense, then, to define gender as the cultural -interpretation of sex, if sex itself is a gendered category. Gender ought -not to be conceived merely as the cultural inscription of meaning on a -pregiven sex (a juridical conception); gender must also designate the -very apparatus of production whereby the sexes themselves are established. As a result, gender is not to culture as sex is to nature; gender is -also the discursive/cultural means by which “sexed nature” or “a natural sex” is produced and established as “prediscursive,” prior to culture, -a politically neutral surface on which culture acts. This construction of -“sex” as the radically unconstructed will concern us again in the discussion of Lévi-Strauss and structuralism in chapter 2. At this juncture it -is already clear that one way the internal stability and binary frame for -sex is effectively secured is by casting the duality of sex in a prediscursive domain. This production of sex as the prediscursive ought to be -understood as the effect of the apparatus of cultural construction designated by gender. How, then, does gender need to be reformulated to -encompass the power relations that produce the effect of a prediscursive sex and so conceal that very operation of discursive production? -iii. Gender: The Circular Ruins of -Contemporary Debate -Is there “a” gender which persons are said to have, or is it an essential -attribute that a person is said to be, as implied in the question “What -gender are you?” When feminist theorists claim that gender is the cultural interpretation of sex or that gender is culturally constructed, what -is the manner or mechanism of this construction? If gender is constructed, could it be constructed differently, or does its constructedness -imply some form of social determinism, foreclosing the possibility of -agency and transformation? Does “construction” suggest that certain -laws generate gender differences along universal axes of sexual difference? How and where does the construction of gender take place? What -~ -sense can we make of a construction that cannot assume a human constructor prior to that construction? On some accounts, the notion that -gender is constructed suggests a certain determinism of gender meanings inscribed on anatomically differentiated bodies, where those bodies are understood as passive recipients of an inexorable cultural law. -When the relevant “culture” that “constructs” gender is understood in -terms of such a law or set of laws, then it seems that gender is as determined and fixed as it was under the biology-is-destiny formulation. In -such a case, not biology, but culture, becomes destiny. -On the other hand, Simone de Beauvoir suggests in The Second Sex -that “one is not born a woman, but, rather, becomes one.”12 For -Beauvoir, gender is “constructed,” but implied in her formulation is an -agent, a cogito, who somehow takes on or appropriates that gender and -could, in principle, take on some other gender. Is gender as variable -and volitional as Beauvoir’s account seems to suggest? Can “construction” in such a case be reduced to a form of choice? Beauvoir is clear -that one “becomes” a woman, but always under a cultural compulsion -to become one. And clearly, the compulsion does not come from “sex.” -There is nothing in her account that guarantees that the “one” who -becomes a woman is necessarily female. If “the body is a situation,”13 as -she claims, there is no recourse to a body that has not always already -been interpreted by cultural meanings; hence, sex could not qualify as -a prediscursive anatomical facticity. Indeed, sex, by definition, will be -shown to have been gender all along.14 -The controversy over the meaning of construction appears to -founder on the conventional philosophical polarity between free will -and determinism. As a consequence, one might reasonably suspect that -some common linguistic restriction on thought both forms and limits -the terms of the debate. Within those terms, “the body” appears as a -passive medium on which cultural meanings are inscribed or as the -instrument through which an appropriative and interpretive will -~ -ings are only externally related. But “the body” is itself a construction, -as are the myriad “bodies” that constitute the domain of gendered subjects. Bodies cannot be said to have a signifiable existence prior to the -mark of their gender; the question then emerges:To what extent does -the body come into being in and through the mark(s) of gender? How do -we reconceive the body no longer as a passive medium or instrument -awaiting the enlivening capacity of a distinctly immaterial will?15 -Whether gender or sex is fixed or free is a function of a discourse -which, it will be suggested, seeks to set certain limits to analysis or to -safeguard certain tenets of humanism as presuppositional to any analysis of gender. The locus of intractability, whether in “sex” or “gender” -or in the very meaning of “construction,” provides a clue to what cultural possibilities can and cannot become mobilized through any further analysis.The limits of the discursive analysis of gender presuppose -and preempt the possibilities of imaginable and realizable gender configurations within culture. This is not to say that any and all gendered -possibilities are open, but that the boundaries of analysis suggest the -limits of a discursively conditioned experience.These limits are always -set within the terms of a hegemonic cultural discourse predicated on -binary structures that appear as the language of universal rationality. -Constraint is thus built into what that language constitutes as the imaginable domain of gender. -Although social scientists refer to gender as a “factor” or a “dimension” -of an analysis, it is also applied to embodied persons as “a mark” of biological, linguistic, and/or cultural difference. In these latter cases, -gender can be understood as a signification that an (already) sexually -differentiated body assumes, but even then that signification exists -only in relation to another, opposing signification. Some feminist theorists claim that gender is “a relation,” indeed, a set of relations, and not -an individual attribute. Others, following Beauvoir, would argue that -only the feminine gender is marked, that the universal person and the -masculine gender are conflated, thereby defining women in terms of -~ -their sex and extolling men as the bearers of a body-transcendent universal personhood. -In a move that complicates the discussion further, Luce Irigaray -argues that women constitute a paradox, if not a contradiction, within -the discourse of identity itself.Women are the “sex” which is not “one.” -Within a language pervasively masculinist, a phallogocentric language, -women constitute the unrepresentable. In other words, women represent the sex that cannot be thought, a linguistic absence and opacity. -Within a language that rests on univocal signification, the female sex -constitutes the unconstrainable and undesignatable. In this sense, -women are the sex which is not “one,” but multiple.16 In opposition to -Beauvoir, for whom women are designated as the Other, Irigaray -argues that both the subject and the Other are masculine mainstays of a -closed phallogocentric signifying economy that achieves its totalizing -goal through the exclusion of the feminine altogether. For Beauvoir, -women are the negative of men, the lack against which masculine identity differentiates itself; for Irigaray, that particular dialectic constitutes a system that excludes an entirely different economy of -signification. Women are not only represented falsely within the -Sartrian frame of signifying-subject and signified-Other, but the falsity -of the signification points out the entire structure of representation as -inadequate. The sex which is not one, then, provides a point of departure for a criticism of hegemonic Western representation and of the -metaphysics of substance that structures the very notion of the subject. -What is the metaphysics of substance, and how does it inform -thinking about the categories of sex? In the first instance, humanist -conceptions of the subject tend to assume a substantive person who is -the bearer of various essential and nonessential attributes. A humanist -feminist position might understand gender as an attribute of a person -who is characterized essentially as a pregendered substance or “core,” -called the person, denoting a universal capacity for reason, moral -deliberation, or language. The universal conception of the person, -~ -der by those historical and anthropological positions that understand -gender as a relation among socially constituted subjects in specifiable -contexts.This relational or contextual point of view suggests that what -the person “is,” and, indeed, what gender “is,” is always relative to the -constructed relations in which it is determined.17 As a shifting and -contextual phenomenon, gender does not denote a substantive being, -but a relative point of convergence among culturally and historically -specific sets of relations. -Irigaray would maintain, however, that the feminine “sex” is a point -of linguistic absence, the impossibility of a grammatically denoted substance, and, hence, the point of view that exposes that substance as an -abiding and foundational illusion of a masculinist discourse. This -absence is not marked as such within the masculine signifying economy—a contention that reverses Beauvoir’s argument (and Wittig’s) -that the female sex is marked, while the male sex is not. For Irigaray, -the female sex is not a “lack” or an “Other” that immanently and negatively defines the subject in its masculinity. On the contrary, the female -sex eludes the very requirements of representation, for she is neither -“Other” nor the “lack,” those categories remaining relative to the -Sartrian subject, immanent to that phallogocentric scheme. Hence, for -Irigaray, the feminine could never be the mark of a subject, as Beauvoir -would suggest. Further, the feminine could not be theorized in terms -of a determinate relation between the masculine and the feminine within any given discourse, for discourse is not a relevant notion here. Even -in their variety, discourses constitute so many modalities of phallogocentric language.The female sex is thus also the subject that is not one. -The relation between masculine and feminine cannot be represented in -a signifying economy in which the masculine constitutes the closed circle of signifier and signified. Paradoxically enough, Beauvoir prefigured this impossibility in The Second Sex when she argued that men -could not settle the question of women because they would then be -acting as both judge and party to the case.18 -The distinctions among the above positions are far from discrete; -~ -each of them can be understood to problematize the locality and -meaning of both the “subject” and “gender” within the context of -socially instituted gender asymmetry. The interpretive possibilities of -gender are in no sense exhausted by the alternatives suggested above. -The problematic circularity of a feminist inquiry into gender is underscored by the presence of positions which, on the one hand, presume -that gender is a secondary characteristic of persons and those which, -on the other hand, argue that the very notion of the person, positioned -within language as a “subject,” is a masculinist construction and prerogative which effectively excludes the structural and semantic possibility -of a feminine gender. The consequence of such sharp disagreements -about the meaning of gender (indeed, whether gender is the term to be -argued about at all, or whether the discursive construction of sex is, -indeed, more fundamental, or perhaps women or woman and/or men and -man) establishes the need for a radical rethinking of the categories of -identity within the context of relations of radical gender asymmetry. -For Beauvoir, the “subject” within the existential analytic of misogyny is always already masculine, conflated with the universal, differentiating itself from a feminine “Other” outside the universalizing norms -of personhood, hopelessly “particular,” embodied, condemned to -immanence. Although Beauvoir is often understood to be calling for -the right of women, in effect, to become existential subjects and, -hence, for inclusion within the terms of an abstract universality, her -position also implies a fundamental critique of the very disembodiment of the abstract masculine epistemological subject.19 That subject -is abstract to the extent that it disavows its socially marked embodiment and, further, projects that disavowed and disparaged embodiment on to the feminine sphere, effectively renaming the body as -female.This association of the body with the female works along magical relations of reciprocity whereby the female sex becomes restricted -to its body, and the male body, fully disavowed, becomes, paradoxically, the incorporeal instrument of an ostensibly radical freedom. -Beauvoir’s analysis implicitly poses the question: Through what act of -~ -negation and disavowal does the masculine pose as a disembodied universality and the feminine get constructed as a disavowed corporeality? -The dialectic of master-slave, here fully reformulated within the nonreciprocal terms of gender asymmetry, prefigures what Irigaray will -later describe as the masculine signifying economy that includes both -the existential subject and its Other. -Beauvoir proposes that the female body ought to be the situation -and instrumentality of women’s freedom, not a defining and limiting -essence.20 The theory of embodiment informing Beauvoir’s analysis is -clearly limited by the uncritical reproduction of the Cartesian distinction between freedom and the body. Despite my own previous efforts -to argue the contrary, it appears that Beauvoir maintains the mind/ -body dualism, even as she proposes a synthesis of those terms.21 The -preservation of that very distinction can be read as symptomatic of the -very phallogocentrism that Beauvoir underestimates. In the philosophical tradition that begins with Plato and continues through Descartes, -Husserl, and Sartre, the ontological distinction between soul (consciousness, mind) and body invariably supports relations of political -and psychic subordination and hierarchy.The mind not only subjugates -the body, but occasionally entertains the fantasy of fleeing its embodiment altogether. The cultural associations of mind with masculinity -and body with femininity are well documented within the field of philosophy and feminism.22 As a result, any uncritical reproduction of the -mind/body distinction ought to be rethought for the implicit gender -hierarchy that the distinction has conventionally produced, maintained, and rationalized. -The discursive construction of “the body” and its separation from -“freedom” in Beauvoir fails to mark along the axis of gender the very -mind-body distinction that is supposed to illuminate the persistence of -gender asymmetry. Officially, Beauvoir contends that the female body -is marked within masculinist discourse, whereby the masculine body, -in its conflation with the universal, remains unmarked. Irigaray clearly suggests that both marker and marked are maintained within a -~ -masculinist mode of signification in which the female body is “marked -off,” as it were, from the domain of the signifiable. In post-Hegelian -terms, she is “cancelled,” but not preserved. On Irigaray’s reading, -Beauvoir’s claim that woman “is sex” is reversed to mean that she is not -the sex she is designated to be, but, rather, the masculine sex encore (and -en corps) parading in the mode of otherness. For Irigaray, that phallogocentric mode of signifying the female sex perpetually reproduces phantasms of its own self-amplifying desire. Instead of a self-limiting -linguistic gesture that grants alterity or difference to women, phallogocentrism offers a name to eclipse the feminine and take its place. -iv. Theorizing the Binary, the Unitary, and Beyond -Beauvoir and Irigaray clearly differ over the fundamental structures by -which gender asymmetry is reproduced; Beauvoir turns to the failed -reciprocity of an asymmetrical dialectic, while Irigaray suggests that -the dialectic itself is the monologic elaboration of a masculinist signifying economy. Although Irigaray clearly broadens the scope of feminist -critique by exposing the epistemological, ontological, and logical -structures of a masculinist signifying economy, the power of her analysis is undercut precisely by its globalizing reach. Is it possible to identify a monolithic as well as a monologic masculinist economy that -traverses the array of cultural and historical contexts in which sexual -difference takes place? Is the failure to acknowledge the specific cultural operations of gender oppression itself a kind of epistemological -imperialism, one which is not ameliorated by the simple elaboration of -cultural differences as “examples” of the selfsame phallogocentrism? -The effort to include “Other” cultures as variegated amplifications of a -global phallogocentrism constitutes an appropriative act that risks a -repetition of the self-aggrandizing gesture of phallogocentrism, colonizing under the sign of the same those differences that might otherwise call that totalizing concept into question.23 -Feminist critique ought to explore the totalizing claims of a masculinist signifying economy, but also remain self-critical with respect to -~ -the totalizing gestures of feminism. The effort to identify the enemy as -singular in form is a reverse-discourse that uncritically mimics the -strategy of the oppressor instead of offering a different set of terms. -That the tactic can operate in feminist and antifeminist contexts alike -suggests that the colonizing gesture is not primarily or irreducibly masculinist. It can operate to effect other relations of racial, class, and heterosexist subordination, to name but a few. And clearly, listing the -varieties of oppression, as I began to do, assumes their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe their convergences within the social field. A vertical model is similarly -insufficient; oppressions cannot be summarily ranked, causally related, -distributed among planes of “originality” and “derivativeness.”24 Indeed, -the field of power structured in part by the imperializing gesture of -dialectical appropriation exceeds and encompasses the axis of sexual -difference, offering a mapping of intersecting differentials which cannot -be summarily hierarchized either within the terms of phallogocentrism -or any other candidate for the position of “primary condition of oppression.” Rather than an exclusive tactic of masculinist signifying economies, dialectical appropriation and suppression of the Other is one -tactic among many, deployed centrally but not exclusively in the service -of expanding and rationalizing the masculinist domain. -The contemporary feminist debates over essentialism raise the -question of the universality of female identity and masculinist oppression in other ways. Universalistic claims are based on a common or -shared epistemological standpoint, understood as the articulated consciousness or shared structures of oppression or in the ostensibly transcultural structures of femininity, maternity, sexuality, and/or écriture -feminine. The opening discussion in this chapter argued that this globalizing gesture has spawned a number of criticisms from women who -claim that the category of “women” is normative and exclusionary and -is invoked with the unmarked dimensions of class and racial privilege -intact. In other words, the insistence upon the coherence and unity of -the category of women has effectively refused the multiplicity of -~ -cultural, social, and political intersections in which the concrete array -of “women” are constructed. -Some efforts have been made to formulate coalitional politics -which do not assume in advance what the content of “women” will be. -They propose instead a set of dialogic encounters by which variously -positioned women articulate separate identities within the framework -of an emergent coalition. Clearly, the value of coalitional politics is not -to be underestimated, but the very form of coalition, of an emerging -and unpredictable assemblage of positions, cannot be figured in -advance. Despite the clearly democratizing impulse that motivates -coalition building, the coalitional theorist can inadvertently reinsert -herself as sovereign of the process by trying to assert an ideal form for -coalitional structures in advance, one that will effectively guarantee -unity as the outcome. Related efforts to determine what is and is not -the true shape of a dialogue, what constitutes a subject-position, and, -most importantly, when “unity” has been reached, can impede the selfshaping and self-limiting dynamics of coalition. -The insistence in advance on coalitional “unity” as a goal assumes -that solidarity, whatever its price, is a prerequisite for political action. -But what sort of politics demands that kind of advance purchase on -unity? Perhaps a coalition needs to acknowledge its contradictions and -take action with those contradictions intact. Perhaps also part of what -dialogic understanding entails is the acceptance of divergence, breakage, splinter, and fragmentation as part of the often tortuous process of -democratization. The very notion of “dialogue” is culturally specific -and historically bound, and while one speaker may feel secure that a -conversation is happening, another may be sure it is not. The power -relations that condition and limit dialogic possibilities need first to be -interrogated. Otherwise, the model of dialogue risks relapsing into a -liberal model that assumes that speaking agents occupy equal positions -of power and speak with the same presuppositions about what constitutes “agreement” and “unity” and, indeed, that those are the goals to -~ -gory of “women” that simply needs to be filled in with various components of race, class, age, ethnicity, and sexuality in order to become -complete. The assumption of its essential incompleteness permits that -category to serve as a permanently available site of contested meanings.The definitional incompleteness of the category might then serve -as a normative ideal relieved of coercive force. -Is “unity” necessary for effective political action? Is the premature -insistence on the goal of unity precisely the cause of an ever more bitter fragmentation among the ranks? Certain forms of acknowledged -fragmentation might facilitate coalitional action precisely because the -“unity” of the category of women is neither presupposed nor desired. -Does “unity” set up an exclusionary norm of solidarity at the level of -identity that rules out the possibility of a set of actions which disrupt -the very borders of identity concepts, or which seek to accomplish -precisely that disruption as an explicit political aim? Without the presupposition or goal of “unity,” which is, in either case, always instituted -at a conceptual level, provisional unities might emerge in the context -of concrete actions that have purposes other than the articulation of -identity. Without the compulsory expectation that feminist actions -must be instituted from some stable, unified, and agreed-upon identity, those actions might well get a quicker start and seem more congenial to a number of “women” for whom the meaning of the category is -permanently moot. -This antifoundationalist approach to coalitional politics assumes -neither that “identity” is a premise nor that the shape or meaning of a -coalitional assemblage can be known prior to its achievement. Because -the articulation of an identity within available cultural terms instates a -definition that forecloses in advance the emergence of new identity -concepts in and through politically engaged actions, the foundationalist -tactic cannot take the transformation or expansion of existing identity -concepts as a normative goal. Moreover, when agreed-upon identities -or agreed-upon dialogic structures, through which already established identities are communicated, no longer constitute the theme or -~ -subject of politics, then identities can come into being and dissolve -depending on the concrete practices that constitute them. Certain -political practices institute identities on a contingent basis in order to -accomplish whatever aims are in view. Coalitional politics requires neither an expanded category of “women” nor an internally multiplicitous -self that offers its complexity at once. -Gender is a complexity whose totality is permanently deferred, -never fully what it is at any given juncture in time. An open coalition, -then, will affirm identities that are alternately instituted and relinquished according to the purposes at hand; it will be an open assemblage that permits of multiple convergences and divergences without -obedience to a normative telos of definitional closure. -v. Identity, Sex, and the Metaphysics of Substance -What can be meant by “identity,” then, and what grounds the presumption that identities are self-identical, persisting through time as the -same, unified and internally coherent? More importantly, how do -these assumptions inform the discourses on “gender identity”? It would -be wrong to think that the discussion of “identity” ought to proceed -prior to a discussion of gender identity for the simple reason that “persons” only become intelligible through becoming gendered in conformity with recognizable standards of gender intelligibility. Sociological -discussions have conventionally sought to understand the notion of the -person in terms of an agency that claims ontological priority to the -various roles and functions through which it assumes social visibility -and meaning. Within philosophical discourse itself, the notion of “the -person” has received analytic elaboration on the assumption that whatever social context the person is “in” remains somehow externally -related to the definitional structure of personhood, be that consciousness, the capacity for language, or moral deliberation. Although that -literature is not examined here, one premise of such inquiries is the -focus of critical exploration and inversion. Whereas the question of -what constitutes “personal identity” within philosophical accounts -~ -almost always centers on the question of what internal feature of the -person establishes the continuity or self-identity of the person through -time, the question here will be:To what extent do regulatory practices of -gender formation and division constitute identity, the internal coherence of the subject, indeed, the self-identical status of the person? To -what extent is “identity” a normative ideal rather than a descriptive -feature of experience? And how do the regulatory practices that govern gender also govern culturally intelligible notions of identity? In -other words, the “coherence” and “continuity” of “the person” are not -logical or analytic features of personhood, but, rather, socially instituted and maintained norms of intelligibility. Inasmuch as “identity” is -assured through the stabilizing concepts of sex, gender, and sexuality, -the very notion of “the person” is called into question by the cultural -emergence of those “incoherent” or “discontinuous” gendered beings -who appear to be persons but who fail to conform to the gendered -norms of cultural intelligibility by which persons are defined. -“Intelligible” genders are those which in some sense institute and -maintain relations of coherence and continuity among sex, gender, -sexual practice, and desire. In other words, the spectres of discontinuity and incoherence, themselves thinkable only in relation to existing -norms of continuity and coherence, are constantly prohibited and produced by the very laws that seek to establish causal or expressive lines -of connection among biological sex, culturally constituted genders, -and the “expression” or “effect” of both in the manifestation of sexual -desire through sexual practice. -The notion that there might be a “truth” of sex, as Foucault ironically terms it, is produced precisely through the regulatory practices that -generate coherent identities through the matrix of coherent gender -norms. The heterosexualization of desire requires and institutes the -production of discrete and asymmetrical oppositions between -“feminine” and “masculine,” where these are understood as expressive -attributes of “male” and “female.” The cultural matrix through which -gender identity has become intelligible requires that certain kinds of -~ -“identities” cannot “exist”—that is, those in which gender does not follow from sex and those in which the practices of desire do not “follow” -from either sex or gender. “Follow” in this context is a political relation -of entailment instituted by the cultural laws that establish and regulate -the shape and meaning of sexuality. Indeed, precisely because certain -kinds of “gender identities” fail to conform to those norms of cultural -intelligibility, they appear only as developmental failures or logical -impossibilities from within that domain.Their persistence and proliferation, however, provide critical opportunities to expose the limits and -regulatory aims of that domain of intelligibility and, hence, to open up -within the very terms of that matrix of intelligibility rival and subversive matrices of gender disorder. -Before such disordering practices are considered, however, it seems -crucial to understand the “matrix of intelligibility.” Is it singular? Of -what is it composed? What is the peculiar alliance presumed to exist -between a system of compulsory heterosexuality and the discursive categories that establish the identity concepts of sex? If “identity” is an effect -of discursive practices, to what extent is gender identity, construed as a -relationship among sex, gender, sexual practice, and desire, the effect of -a regulatory practice that can be identified as compulsory heterosexuality? Would that explanation return us to yet another totalizing frame in -which compulsory heterosexuality merely takes the place of phallogocentrism as the monolithic cause of gender oppression? -Within the spectrum of French feminist and poststructuralist theory, very different regimes of power are understood to produce the -identity concepts of sex. Consider the divergence between those positions, such as Irigaray’s, that claim there is only one sex, the masculine, -that elaborates itself in and through the production of the “Other,” and -those positions, Foucault’s, for instance, that assume that the category -of sex, whether masculine or feminine, is a production of a diffuse regulatory economy of sexuality. Consider also Wittig’s argument that the -category of sex is, under the conditions of compulsory heterosexuality, -~ -onymous with the “universal”).Wittig concurs, however paradoxically, -with Foucault in claiming that the category of sex would itself disappear and, indeed, dissipate through the disruption and displacement of -heterosexual hegemony. -The various explanatory models offered here suggest the very different ways in which the category of sex is understood depending on -how the field of power is articulated. Is it possible to maintain the complexity of these fields of power and think through their productive -capacities together? On the one hand, Irigaray’s theory of sexual difference suggests that women can never be understood on the model of a -“subject” within the conventional representational systems of Western -culture precisely because they constitute the fetish of representation -and, hence, the unrepresentable as such.Women can never “be,” according to this ontology of substances, precisely because they are the relation of difference, the excluded, by which that domain marks itself off. -Women are also a “difference” that cannot be understood as the simple -negation or “Other” of the always-already-masculine subject. As discussed earlier, they are neither the subject nor its Other, but a difference from the economy of binary opposition, itself a ruse for a -monologic elaboration of the masculine. -Central to each of these views, however, is the notion that sex -appears within hegemonic language as a substance, as, metaphysically -speaking, a self-identical being. This appearance is achieved through a -performative twist of language and/or discourse that conceals the fact -that “being” a sex or a gender is fundamentally impossible. For Irigaray, -grammar can never be a true index of gender relations precisely -because it supports the substantial model of gender as a binary relation -between two positive and representable terms.25 In Irigaray’s view, the -substantive grammar of gender, which assumes men and women as well -as their attributes of masculine and feminine, is an example of a binary -that effectively masks the univocal and hegemonic discourse of the masculine, phallogocentrism, silencing the feminine as a site of subversive -multiplicity. For Foucault, the substantive grammar of sex imposes an -~ -artificial binary relation between the sexes, as well as an artificial internal coherence within each term of that binary.The binary regulation of -sexuality suppresses the subversive multiplicity of a sexuality that disrupts heterosexual, reproductive, and medicojuridical hegemonies. -For Wittig, the binary restriction on sex serves the reproductive -aims of a system of compulsory heterosexuality; occasionally, she -claims that the overthrow of compulsory heterosexuality will inaugurate a true humanism of “the person” freed from the shackles of sex. In -other contexts, she suggests that the profusion and diffusion of a nonphallocentric erotic economy will dispel the illusions of sex, gender, -and identity. At yet other textual moments it seems that “the lesbian” -emerges as a third gender that promises to transcend the binary -restriction on sex imposed by the system of compulsory heterosexuality. In her defense of the “cognitive subject,”Wittig appears to have no -metaphysical quarrel with hegemonic modes of signification or representation; indeed, the subject, with its attribute of self-determination, -appears to be the rehabilitation of the agent of existential choice under -the name of the lesbian: “the advent of individual subjects demands -first destroying the categories of sex . . . the lesbian is the only concept -I know of which is beyond the categories of sex.”26 She does not criticize “the subject” as invariably masculine according to the rules of an -inevitably patriarchal Symbolic, but proposes in its place the equivalent of a lesbian subject as language-user.27 -The identification of women with “sex,” for Beauvoir as for Wittig, -is a conflation of the category of women with the ostensibly sexualized -features of their bodies and, hence, a refusal to grant freedom and -autonomy to women as it is purportedly enjoyed by men. Thus, the -destruction of the category of sex would be the destruction of an -attribute, sex, that has, through a misogynist gesture of synecdoche, -come to take the place of the person, the self-determining cogito. In -other words, only men are “persons,” and there is no gender but -the feminine: - -~ -Gender is the linguistic index of the political opposition between -the sexes. Gender is used here in the singular because indeed there -are not two genders.There is only one: the feminine, the “masculine” -not being a gender. For the masculine is not the masculine, but the -general.28 - -Hence,Wittig calls for the destruction of “sex” so that women can -assume the status of a universal subject. On the way toward that -destruction, “women” must assume both a particular and a universal -point of view.29 As a subject who can realize concrete universality -through freedom, Wittig’s lesbian confirms rather than contests the -normative promise of humanist ideals premised on the metaphysics of -substance. In this respect, Wittig is distinguished from Irigaray, not -only in terms of the now familiar oppositions between essentialism and -materialism,30 but in terms of the adherence to a metaphysics of substance that confirms the normative model of humanism as the framework for feminism. Where it seems that Wittig has subscribed to a -radical project of lesbian emancipation and enforced a distinction -between “lesbian” and “woman,” she does this through the defense of -the pregendered “person,” characterized as freedom. This move not -only confirms the presocial status of human freedom, but subscribes to -that metaphysics of substance that is responsible for the production -and naturalization of the category of sex itself. -The metaphysics of substance is a phrase that is associated with -Nietzsche within the contemporary criticism of philosophical discourse. In a commentary on Nietzsche, Michel Haar argues that a -number of philosophical ontologies have been trapped within certain -illusions of “Being” and “Substance” that are fostered by the belief that -the grammatical formulation of subject and predicate reflects the prior -ontological reality of substance and attribute.These constructs, argues -Haar, constitute the artificial philosophical means by which simplicity, -order, and identity are effectively instituted. In no sense, however, do - -~ -they reveal or represent some true order of things. For our purposes, -this Nietzschean criticism becomes instructive when it is applied to the -psychological categories that govern much popular and theoretical -thinking about gender identity. According to Haar, the critique of the -metaphysics of substance implies a critique of the very notion of the -psychological person as a substantive thing: -The destruction of logic by means of its genealogy brings with it as -well the ruin of the psychological categories founded upon this logic. -All psychological categories (the ego, the individual, the person) -derive from the illusion of substantial identity. But this illusion goes -back basically to a superstition that deceives not only common sense -but also philosophers—namely, the belief in language and, more precisely, in the truth of grammatical categories. It was grammar (the -structure of subject and predicate) that inspired Descartes’ certainty -that “I” is the subject of “think,” whereas it is rather the thoughts that -come to “me”: at bottom, faith in grammar simply conveys the will to -be the “cause” of one’s thoughts.The subject, the self, the individual, -are just so many false concepts, since they transform into substances -fictitious unities having at the start only a linguistic reality.31 - -Wittig provides an alternative critique by showing that persons -cannot be signified within language without the mark of gender. She -provides a political analysis of the grammar of gender in French. -According to Wittig, gender not only designates persons, “qualifies” -them, as it were, but constitutes a conceptual episteme by which binary -gender is universalized. Although French gives gender to all sorts of -nouns other than persons, Wittig argues that her analysis has consequences for English as well. At the outset of “The Mark of Gender” -(1984), she writes: -The mark of gender, according to grammarians, concerns substantives. They talk about it in terms of function. If they question its -meaning, they may joke about it, calling gender a “fictive sex.” . . . as - -~ -far as the categories of the person are concerned, both [English and -French] are bearers of gender to the same extent. Both indeed give -way to a primitive ontological concept that enforces in language a -division of beings into sexes. . . . As an ontological concept that deals -with the nature of Being, along with a whole nebula of other primitive concepts belonging to the same line of thought, gender seems to -belong primarily to philosophy.32 - -For gender to “belong to philosophy” is, for Wittig, to belong to -“that body of self-evident concepts without which philosophers believe -they cannot develop a line of reasoning and which for them go without -saying, for they exist prior to any thought, any social order, in -nature.”33 Wittig’s view is corroborated by that popular discourse on -gender identity that uncritically employs the inflectional attribution of -“being” to genders and to “sexualities.” The unproblematic claim to -“be” a woman and “be” heterosexual would be symptomatic of that -metaphysics of gender substances. In the case of both “men” and -“women,” this claim tends to subordinate the notion of gender under -that of identity and to lead to the conclusion that a person is a gender -and is one in virtue of his or her sex, psychic sense of self, and various -expressions of that psychic self, the most salient being that of sexual -desire. In such a prefeminist context, gender, naively (rather than critically) confused with sex, serves as a unifying principle of the embodied self and maintains that unity over and against an “opposite sex” -whose structure is presumed to maintain a parallel but oppositional -internal coherence among sex, gender, and desire. The articulation “I -feel like a woman” by a female or “I feel like a man” by a male presupposes that in neither case is the claim meaninglessly redundant. -Although it might appear unproblematic to be a given anatomy -(although we shall later consider the way in which that project is also -fraught with difficulty), the experience of a gendered psychic disposition or cultural identity is considered an achievement.Thus, “I feel like -a woman” is true to the extent that Aretha Franklin’s invocation of the -~ -defining Other is assumed: “You make me feel like a natural woman.”34 -This achievement requires a differentiation from the opposite gender. -Hence, one is one’s gender to the extent that one is not the other gender, a formulation that presupposes and enforces the restriction of -gender within that binary pair. -Gender can denote a unity of experience, of sex, gender, and -desire, only when sex can be understood in some sense to necessitate -gender—where gender is a psychic and/or cultural designation of the -self—and desire—where desire is heterosexual and therefore differentiates itself through an oppositional relation to that other gender it -desires. The internal coherence or unity of either gender, man or -woman, thereby requires both a stable and oppositional heterosexuality. That institutional heterosexuality both requires and produces the -univocity of each of the gendered terms that constitute the limit of -gendered possibilities within an oppositional, binary gender system. -This conception of gender presupposes not only a causal relation -among sex, gender, and desire, but suggests as well that desire reflects -or expresses gender and that gender reflects or expresses desire. The -metaphysical unity of the three is assumed to be truly known and -expressed in a differentiating desire for an oppositional gender—that -is, in a form of oppositional heterosexuality. Whether as a naturalistic -paradigm which establishes a causal continuity among sex, gender, and -desire, or as an authentic-expressive paradigm in which some true self -is said to be revealed simultaneously or successively in sex, gender, and -desire, here “the old dream of symmetry,” as Irigaray has called it, is -presupposed, reified, and rationalized. -This rough sketch of gender gives us a clue to understanding -the political reasons for the substantializing view of gender. The institution of a compulsory and naturalized heterosexuality requires and -regulates gender as a binary relation in which the masculine term is -differentiated from a feminine term, and this differentiation is accomplished through the practices of heterosexual desire. The act of differentiating the two oppositional moments of the binary results in a -~ -consolidation of each term, the respective internal coherence of sex, -gender, and desire. -The strategic displacement of that binary relation and the metaphysics of substance on which it relies presuppose that the categories -of female and male, woman and man, are similarly produced within -the binary frame. Foucault implicitly subscribes to such an explanation. In the closing chapter of the first volume of The History of Sexuality -and in his brief but significant introduction to Herculine Barbin, Being the -Recently Discovered Journals of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite,35 -Foucault suggests that the category of sex, prior to any categorization -of sexual difference, is itself constructed through a historically specific -mode of sexuality. The tactical production of the discrete and binary -categorization of sex conceals the strategic aims of that very apparatus -of production by postulating “sex” as “a cause” of sexual experience, -behavior, and desire. Foucault’s genealogical inquiry exposes this -ostensible “cause” as “an effect,” the production of a given regime of -sexuality that seeks to regulate sexual experience by instating the discrete categories of sex as foundational and causal functions within any -discursive account of sexuality. -Foucault’s introduction to the journals of the hermaphrodite, -Herculine Barbin, suggests that the genealogical critique of these reified categories of sex is the inadvertent consequence of sexual practices that cannot be accounted for within the medicolegal discourse of -a naturalized heterosexuality. Herculine is not an “identity,” but the -sexual impossibility of an identity. Although male and female anatomical elements are jointly distributed in and on this body, that is not the -true source of scandal.The linguistic conventions that produce intelligible gendered selves find their limit in Herculine precisely because -she/he occasions a convergence and disorganization of the rules that -govern sex/gender/desire. Herculine deploys and redistributes the -terms of a binary system, but that very redistribution disrupts and proliferates those terms outside the binary itself. According to Foucault, -Herculine is not categorizable within the gender binary as it stands; the -~ -disconcerting convergence of heterosexuality and homosexuality in -her/his person are only occasioned, but never caused, by his/her -anatomical discontinuity. Foucault’s appropriation of Herculine is suspect,36 but his analysis implies the interesting belief that sexual heterogeneity (paradoxically foreclosed by a naturalized “hetero”-sexuality) -implies a critique of the metaphysics of substance as it informs the -identitarian categories of sex. Foucault imagines Herculine’s experience as “a world of pleasures in which grins hang about without the -cat.”37 Smiles, happinesses, pleasures, and desires are figured here as -qualities without an abiding substance to which they are said to adhere. -As free-floating attributes, they suggest the possibility of a gendered -experience that cannot be grasped through the substantializing and -hierarchizing grammar of nouns (res extensa) and adjectives (attributes, -essential and accidental). Through his cursory reading of Herculine, -Foucault proposes an ontology of accidental attributes that exposes the -postulation of identity as a culturally restricted principle of order and -hierarchy, a regulatory fiction. -If it is possible to speak of a “man” with a masculine attribute and -to understand that attribute as a happy but accidental feature of that -man, then it is also possible to speak of a “man” with a feminine -attribute, whatever that is, but still to maintain the integrity of the -gender. But once we dispense with the priority of “man” and “woman” -as abiding substances, then it is no longer possible to subordinate dissonant gendered features as so many secondary and accidental characteristics of a gender ontology that is fundamentally intact. If the notion -of an abiding substance is a fictive construction produced through the -compulsory ordering of attributes into coherent gender sequences, -then it seems that gender as substance, the viability of man and woman -as nouns, is called into question by the dissonant play of attributes that -fail to conform to sequential or causal models of intelligibility. -The appearance of an abiding substance or gendered self, what the -psychiatrist Robert Stoller refers to as a “gender core,”38 is thus produced by the regulation of attributes along culturally established lines -~ -of coherence. As a result, the exposure of this fictive production is -conditioned by the deregulated play of attributes that resist assimilation into the ready made framework of primary nouns and subordinate adjectives. It is of course always possible to argue that dissonant -adjectives work retroactively to redefine the substantive identities they -are said to modify and, hence, to expand the substantive categories of -gender to include possibilities that they previously excluded. But if -these substances are nothing other than the coherences contingently -created through the regulation of attributes, it would seem that the -ontology of substances itself is not only an artificial effect, but essentially superfluous. -In this sense, gender is not a noun, but neither is it a set of freefloating attributes, for we have seen that the substantive effect of gender is performatively produced and compelled by the regulatory -practices of gender coherence. Hence, within the inherited discourse -of the metaphysics of substance, gender proves to be performative— -that is, constituting the identity it is purported to be. In this sense, -gender is always a doing, though not a doing by a subject who might be -said to preexist the deed. The challenge for rethinking gender categories outside of the metaphysics of substance will have to consider the -relevance of Nietzsche’s claim in On the Genealogy of Morals that “there -is no ‘being’ behind doing, effecting, becoming; ‘the doer’ is merely a -fiction added to the deed—the deed is everything.”39 In an application -that Nietzsche himself would not have anticipated or condoned, we -might state as a corollary: There is no gender identity behind the -expressions of gender; that identity is performatively constituted by -the very “expressions” that are said to be its results. -vi. Language, Power, and the Strategies of -Displacement -A great deal of feminist theory and literature has nevertheless assumed that there is a “doer” behind the deed. Without an agent, it is -argued, there can be no agency and hence no potential to initiate a -~ -transformation of relations of domination within society.Wittig’s radical feminist theory occupies an ambiguous position within the continuum of theories on the question of the subject. On the one hand,Wittig -appears to dispute the metaphysics of substance, but on the other -hand, she retains the human subject, the individual, as the metaphysical -locus of agency. While Wittig’s humanism clearly presupposes that -there is a doer behind the deed, her theory nevertheless delineates the -performative construction of gender within the material practices of -culture, disputing the temporality of those explanations that would -confuse “cause” with “result.” In a phrase that suggests the intertextual -space that links Wittig with Foucault (and reveals the traces of the -Marxist notion of reification in both of their theories), she writes: -A materialist feminist approach shows that what we take for the -cause or origin of oppression is in fact only the mark imposed by the -oppressor; the “myth of woman,” plus its material effects and manifestations in the appropriated consciousness and bodies of women. -Thus, this mark does not preexist oppression . . . sex is taken as -an “immediate given,” a “sensible given,” “physical features,” belonging -to a natural order. But what we believe to be a physical and direct -perception is only a sophisticated and mythic construction, an “imaginary formation.”40 - -Because this production of “nature” operates in accord with the dictates of compulsory heterosexuality, the emergence of homosexual -desire, in her view, transcends the categories of sex: “If desire could -liberate itself, it would have nothing to do with the preliminary marking by sexes.”41 -Wittig refers to “sex” as a mark that is somehow applied by an -institutionalized heterosexuality, a mark that can be erased or obfuscated through practices that effectively contest that institution. Her -view, of course, differs radically from Irigaray’s. The latter would -understand the “mark” of gender to be part of the hegemonic signifying -economy of the masculine that operates through the self-elaborating -~ -mechanisms of specularization that have virtually determined the field -of ontology within the Western philosophical tradition. For Wittig, -language is an instrument or tool that is in no way misogynist in its -structures, but only in its applications.42 For Irigaray, the possibility of -another language or signifying economy is the only chance at escaping -the “mark” of gender which, for the feminine, is nothing but the phallogocentric erasure of the female sex.Whereas Irigaray seeks to expose -the ostensible “binary” relation between the sexes as a masculinist ruse -that excludes the feminine altogether,Wittig argues that positions like -Irigaray’s reconsolidate the binary between masculine and feminine -and recirculate a mythic notion of the feminine. Clearly drawing on -Beauvoir’s critique of the myth of the feminine in The Second Sex,Wittig -asserts, “there is no ‘feminine writing.’”43 -Wittig is clearly attuned to the power of language to subordinate -and exclude women. As a “materialist,” however, she considers language -to be “another order of materiality,”44 an institution that can be radically -transformed. Language ranks among the concrete and contingent practices and institutions maintained by the choices of individuals and, -hence, weakened by the collective actions of choosing individuals. The -linguistic fiction of “sex,” she argues, is a category produced and circulated by the system of compulsory heterosexuality in an effort to -restrict the production of identities along the axis of heterosexual -desire. In some of her work, both male and female homosexuality, as -well as other positions independent of the heterosexual contract, provide the occasion either for the overthrow or the proliferation of the -category of sex. In The Lesbian Body and elsewhere, however, Wittig -appears to take issue with genitally organized sexuality per se and to call -for an alternative economy of pleasures which would both contest the -construction of female subjectivity marked by women’s supposedly distinctive reproductive function.45 Here the proliferation of pleasures -outside the reproductive economy suggests both a specifically feminine -form of erotic diffusion, understood as a counterstrategy to the reproductive construction of genitality. In a sense, The Lesbian Body can be -~ -understood, for Wittig, as an “inverted” reading of Freud’s Three Essays on -the Theory of Sexuality, in which he argues for the developmental superiority of genital sexuality over and against the less restricted and more -diffuse infantile sexuality. Only the “invert,” the medical classification -invoked by Freud for “the homosexual,” fails to “achieve” the genital -norm. In waging a political critique against genitality,Wittig appears to -deploy “inversion” as a critical reading practice, valorising precisely -those features of an undeveloped sexuality designated by Freud and -effectively inaugurating a “post-genital politics.”46 Indeed, the notion of -development can be read only as normalization within the heterosexual -matrix. And yet, is this the only reading of Freud possible? And to what -extent is Wittig’s practice of “inversion” committed to the very model of -normalization that she seeks to dismantle? In other words, if the model -of a more diffuse and antigenital sexuality serves as the singular, oppositional alternative to the hegemonic structure of sexuality, to what -extent is that binary relation fated to reproduce itself endlessly? What -possibility exists for the disruption of the oppositional binary itself? -Wittig’s oppositional relationship to psychoanalysis produces the -unexpected consequence that her theory presumes precisely that psychoanalytic theory of development, now fully “inverted,” that she seeks -to overcome. Polymorphous perversity, assumed to exist prior to the -marking by sex, is valorised as the telos of human sexuality.47 One possible feminist psychoanalytic response to Wittig might argue that she -both undertheorizes and underestimates the meaning and function of -the language in which “the mark of gender” occurs. She understands -that marking practice as contingent, radically variable, and even dispensable. The status of a primary prohibition in Lacanian theory operates more forcefully and less contingently than the notion of a -regulatory practice in Foucault or a materialist account of a system of -heterosexist oppression in Wittig. -In Lacan, as in Irigaray’s post-Lacanian reformulation of Freud, -sexual difference is not a simple binary that retains the metaphysics of -~ -struction produced by the law that prohibits incest and forces an infinite displacement of a heterosexualizing desire.The feminine is never a -mark of the subject; the feminine could not be an “attribute” of a gender. Rather, the feminine is the signification of lack, signified by the -Symbolic, a set of differentiating linguistic rules that effectively create -sexual difference.The masculine linguistic position undergoes individuation and heterosexualization required by the founding prohibitions -of the Symbolic law, the law of the Father. The incest taboo that bars -the son from the mother and thereby instates the kinship relation -between them is a law enacted “in the name of the Father.” Similarly, -the law that refuses the girl’s desire for both her mother and father -requires that she take up the emblem of maternity and perpetuate the -rules of kinship. Both masculine and feminine positions are thus instituted through prohibitive laws that produce culturally intelligible genders, but only through the production of an unconscious sexuality that -reemerges in the domain of the imaginary.48 -The feminist appropriation of sexual difference, whether written in -opposition to the phallogocentrism of Lacan (Irigaray) or as a critical -reelaboration of Lacan, attempts to theorize the feminine, not as an -expression of the metaphysics of substance, but as the unrepresentable -absence effected by (masculine) denial that grounds the signifying economy through exclusion.The feminine as the repudiated/excluded within that system constitutes the possibility of a critique and disruption of -that hegemonic conceptual scheme.The works of Jacqueline Rose49 and -Jane Gallop50 underscore in different ways the constructed status of -sexual difference, the inherent instability of that construction, and the -dual consequentiality of a prohibition that at once institutes a sexual -identity and provides for the exposure of that construction’s tenuous -ground. Although Wittig and other materialist feminists within the -French context would argue that sexual difference is an unthinking -replication of a reified set of sexed polarities, these criticisms neglect -the critical dimension of the unconscious which, as a site of repressed -sexuality, reemerges within the discourse of the subject as the very -~ -impossibility of its coherence. As Rose points out very clearly, the construction of a coherent sexual identity along the disjunctive axis of the -feminine/masculine is bound to fail;51 the disruptions of this coherence -through the inadvertent reemergence of the repressed reveal not only -that “identity” is constructed, but that the prohibition that constructs -identity is inefficacious (the paternal law ought to be understood not as -a deterministic divine will, but as a perpetual bumbler, preparing the -ground for the insurrections against him). -The differences between the materialist and Lacanian (and postLacanian) positions emerge in a normative quarrel over whether there -is a retrievable sexuality either “before” or “outside” the law in the -mode of the unconscious or “after” the law as a postgenital sexuality. -Paradoxically, the normative trope of polymorphous perversity is -understood to characterize both views of alternative sexuality.There is -no agreement, however, on the manner of delimiting that “law” or set -of “laws.” The psychoanalytic critique succeeds in giving an account of -the construction of “the subject”—and perhaps also the illusion of -substance—within the matrix of normative gender relations. In her -existential-materialist mode,Wittig presumes the subject, the person, -to have a presocial and pregendered integrity. On the other hand, “the -paternal Law” in Lacan, as well as the monologic mastery of phallogocentrism in Irigaray, bear the mark of a monotheistic singularity that is -perhaps less unitary and culturally universal than the guiding structuralist assumptions of the account presume.52 -But the quarrel seems also to turn on the articulation of a temporal -trope of a subversive sexuality that flourishes prior to the imposition of a -law, after its overthrow, or during its reign as a constant challenge to its -authority. Here it seems wise to reinvoke Foucault who, in claiming that -sexuality and power are coextensive, implicitly refutes the postulation -of a subversive or emancipatory sexuality which could be free of the -law.We can press the argument further by pointing out that “the before” -of the law and “the after” are discursively and performatively instituted -modes of temporality that are invoked within the terms of a normative -~ -framework which asserts that subversion, destabilization, or displacement requires a sexuality that somehow escapes the hegemonic prohibitions on sex. For Foucault, those prohibitions are invariably and -inadvertently productive in the sense that “the subject” who is supposed -to be founded and produced in and through those prohibitions does not -have access to a sexuality that is in some sense “outside,” “before,” or -“after” power itself. Power, rather than the law, encompasses both the -juridical (prohibitive and regulatory) and the productive (inadvertently -generative) functions of differential relations. Hence, the sexuality that -emerges within the matrix of power relations is not a simple replication -or copy of the law itself, a uniform repetition of a masculinist economy -of identity. The productions swerve from their original purposes and -inadvertently mobilize possibilities of “subjects” that do not merely -exceed the bounds of cultural intelligibility, but effectively expand the -boundaries of what is, in fact, culturally intelligible. -The feminist norm of a postgenital sexuality became the object of -significant criticism from feminist theorists of sexuality, some of whom -have sought a specifically feminist and/or lesbian appropriation of -Foucault. This utopian notion of a sexuality freed from heterosexual -constructs, a sexuality beyond “sex,” failed to acknowledge the ways in -which power relations continue to construct sexuality for women even -within the terms of a “liberated” heterosexuality or lesbianism.53 The -same criticism is waged against the notion of a specifically feminine sexual pleasure that is radically differentiated from phallic sexuality. -Irigaray’s occasional efforts to derive a specific feminine sexuality from -a specific female anatomy have been the focus of anti-essentialist arguments for some time.54 The return to biology as the ground of a specific -feminine sexuality or meaning seems to defeat the feminist premise that -biology is not destiny. But whether feminine sexuality is articulated here -through a discourse of biology for purely strategic reasons,55 or whether -it is, in fact, a feminist return to biological essentialism, the characterization of female sexuality as radically distinct from a phallic organization -of sexuality remains problematic. Women who fail either to recognize -~ -that sexuality as their own or understand their sexuality as partially constructed within the terms of the phallic economy are potentially written -off within the terms of that theory as “male-identified” or “unenlightened.” Indeed, it is often unclear within Irigaray’s text whether sexuality -is culturally constructed, or whether it is only culturally constructed -within the terms of the phallus. In other words, is specifically feminine -pleasure “outside” of culture as its prehistory or as its utopian future? If -so, of what use is such a notion for negotiating the contemporary struggles of sexuality within the terms of its construction? -The pro-sexuality movement within feminist theory and practice -has effectively argued that sexuality is always constructed within the -terms of discourse and power, where power is partially understood in -terms of heterosexual and phallic cultural conventions.The emergence -of a sexuality constructed (not determined) in these terms within lesbian, bisexual, and heterosexual contexts is, therefore, not a sign of a -masculine identification in some reductive sense. It is not the failed -project of criticizing phallogocentrism or heterosexual hegemony, as if -a political critique could effectively undo the cultural construction of -the feminist critic’s sexuality. If sexuality is culturally constructed -within existing power relations, then the postulation of a normative -sexuality that is “before,” “outside,” or “beyond” power is a cultural -impossibility and a politically impracticable dream, one that postpones -the concrete and contemporary task of rethinking subversive possibilities for sexuality and identity within the terms of power itself. This -critical task presumes, of course, that to operate within the matrix of -power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination. It offers the possibility of a repetition of the law which is not its -consolidation, but its displacement. In the place of a “male-identified” -sexuality in which “male” serves as the cause and irreducible meaning -of that sexuality, we might develop a notion of sexuality constructed in -terms of phallic relations of power that replay and redistribute the possibilities of that phallicism precisely through the subversive operation of -“identifications” that are, within the power field of sexuality, inevitable. -~ -If “identifications,” following Jacqueline Rose, can be exposed as phantasmatic, then it must be possible to enact an identification that displays -its phantasmatic structure. If there is no radical repudiation of a culturally constructed sexuality, what is left is the question of how to -acknowledge and “do” the construction one is invariably in. Are there -forms of repetition that do not constitute a simple imitation, reproduction, and, hence, consolidation of the law (the anachronistic notion of -“male identification” that ought to be discarded from a feminist vocabulary)? What possibilities of gender configurations exist among the various emergent and occasionally convergent matrices of cultural -intelligibility that govern gendered life? -Within the terms of feminist sexual theory, it is clear that the presence of power dynamics within sexuality is in no sense the same as the -simple consolidation or augmentation of a heterosexist or phallogocentric power regime. The “presence” of so-called heterosexual conventions within homosexual contexts as well as the proliferation of -specifically gay discourses of sexual difference, as in the case of “butch” -and “femme” as historical identities of sexual style, cannot be explained -as chimerical representations of originally heterosexual identities. And -neither can they be understood as the pernicious insistence of heterosexist constructs within gay sexuality and identity. The repetition of -heterosexual constructs within sexual cultures both gay and straight -may well be the inevitable site of the denaturalization and mobilization -of gender categories. The replication of heterosexual constructs in -non-heterosexual frames brings into relief the utterly constructed -status of the so-called heterosexual original.Thus, gay is to straight not -as copy is to original, but, rather, as copy is to copy.The parodic repetition of “the original,” discussed in the final sections of chapter 3 of -this text, reveals the original to be nothing other than a parody of the -idea of the natural and the original.56 Even if heterosexist constructs -circulate as the available sites of power/discourse from which to do -gender at all, the question remains: What possibilities of recirculation -exist? Which possibilities of doing gender repeat and displace through -~ -hyperbole, dissonance, internal confusion, and proliferation the very -constructs by which they are mobilized? -Consider not only that the ambiguities and incoherences within and -among heterosexual, homosexual, and bisexual practices are suppressed and redescribed within the reified framework of the disjunctive -and asymmetrical binary of masculine/feminine, but that these cultural -configurations of gender confusion operate as sites for intervention, -exposure, and displacement of these reifications. In other words, the -“unity” of gender is the effect of a regulatory practice that seeks to render gender identity uniform through a compulsory heterosexuality.The -force of this practice is, through an exclusionary apparatus of production, to restrict the relative meanings of “heterosexuality,” “homosexuality,” and “bisexuality” as well as the subversive sites of their -convergence and resignification. That the power regimes of heterosexism and phallogocentrism seek to augment themselves through a constant repetition of their logic, their metaphysic, and their naturalized -ontologies does not imply that repetition itself ought to be stopped—as -if it could be. If repetition is bound to persist as the mechanism of the -cultural reproduction of identities, then the crucial question emerges: -What kind of subversive repetition might call into question the regulatory practice of identity itself? -If there is no recourse to a “person,” a “sex,” or a “sexuality” that -escapes the matrix of power and discursive relations that effectively -produce and regulate the intelligibility of those concepts for us, what -constitutes the possibility of effective inversion, subversion, or displacement within the terms of a constructed identity? What possibilities exist by virtue of the constructed character of sex and gender? -Whereas Foucault is ambiguous about the precise character of the “regulatory practices” that produce the category of sex, and Wittig appears -to invest the full responsibility of the construction to sexual reproduction and its instrument, compulsory heterosexuality, yet other discourses converge to produce this categorial fiction for reasons not -always clear or consistent with one another. The power relations that -~ -infuse the biological sciences are not easily reduced, and the medicolegal alliance emerging in nineteenth-century Europe has spawned categorial fictions that could not be anticipated in advance. The very -complexity of the discursive map that constructs gender appears to -hold out the promise of an inadvertent and generative convergence of -these discursive and regulatory structures. If the regulatory fictions of -sex and gender are themselves multiply contested sites of meaning, -then the very multiplicity of their construction holds out the possibility -of a disruption of their univocal posturing. -Clearly this project does not propose to lay out within traditional -philosophical terms an ontology of gender whereby the meaning of being -a woman or a man is elucidated within the terms of phenomenology. -The presumption here is that the “being” of gender is an effect, an object -of a genealogical investigation that maps out the political parameters of -its construction in the mode of ontology. To claim that gender is constructed is not to assert its illusoriness or artificiality, where those -terms are understood to reside within a binary that counterposes the -“real” and the “authentic” as oppositional. As a genealogy of gender -ontology, this inquiry seeks to understand the discursive production of -the plausibility of that binary relation and to suggest that certain cultural configurations of gender take the place of “the real” and consolidate -and augment their hegemony through that felicitous self-naturalization. -If there is something right in Beauvoir’s claim that one is not born, -but rather becomes a woman, it follows that woman itself is a term in -process, a becoming, a constructing that cannot rightfully be said to -originate or to end.As an ongoing discursive practice, it is open to intervention and resignification. Even when gender seems to congeal into the -most reified forms, the “congealing” is itself an insistent and insidious -practice, sustained and regulated by various social means. It is, for -Beauvoir, never possible finally to become a woman, as if there were a -telos that governs the process of acculturation and construction. Gender -is the repeated stylization of the body, a set of repeated acts within a -highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the -~ -appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being. A political genealogy -of gender ontologies, if it is successful, will deconstruct the substantive -appearance of gender into its constitutive acts and locate and account for -those acts within the compulsory frames set by the various forces that -police the social appearance of gender.To expose the contingent acts that -create the appearance of a naturalistic necessity, a move which has been a -part of cultural critique at least since Marx, is a task that now takes on -the added burden of showing how the very notion of the subject, intelligible only through its appearance as gendered, admits of possibilities that -have been forcibly foreclosed by the various reifications of gender that -have constituted its contingent ontologies. -The following chapter investigates some aspects of the psychoanalytic structuralist account of sexual difference and the construction of -sexuality with respect to its power to contest the regulatory regimes -outlined here as well as its role in uncritically reproducing those -regimes.The univocity of sex, the internal coherence of gender, and the -binary framework for both sex and gender are considered throughout as -regulatory fictions that consolidate and naturalize the convergent power -regimes of masculine and heterosexist oppression. The final chapter -considers the very notion of “the body,” not as a ready surface awaiting -signification, but as a set of boundaries, individual and social, politically -signified and maintained. No longer believable as an interior “truth” of -dispositions and identity, sex will be shown to be a performatively -enacted signification (and hence not “to be”), one that, released from its -naturalized interiority and surface, can occasion the parodic proliferation and subversive play of gendered meanings. This text continues, -then, as an effort to think through the possibility of subverting and displacing those naturalized and reified notions of gender that support -masculine hegemony and heterosexist power, to make gender trouble, -not through the strategies that figure a utopian beyond, but through the -mobilization, subversive confusion, and proliferation of precisely those -constitutive categories that seek to keep gender in its place by posturing -as the foundational illusions of identity. -~ -2 - -Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, -and the Production -of the Heterosexual Matrix -The straight mind continues to affirm that incest, and not homosexuality -represents its major interdiction.Thus, when thought by the straight -mind, homosexuality is nothing but heterosexuality. -—Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind” - -On occasion feminist theory has been drawn to the thought of an origin, -a time before what some would call “patriarchy” that would provide an -imaginary perspective from which to establish the contingency of the -history of women’s oppression. Debates have emerged over whether -prepatriarchal cultures have existed, whether they were matriarchal or -matrilineal in structure, whether patriarchy could be shown to have a -beginning and, hence, be subject to an end. The critical impetus behind -these kinds of inquiry sought understandably to show that the antifeminist argument in favor of the inevitability of patriarchy constituted a -reification and naturalization of a historical and contingent phenomenon. -Although the turn to a prepatriarchal state of culture was intended -to expose the self-reification of patriarchy, that prepatriarchal scheme -has proven to be a different sort of reification. More recently, some -feminists have offered a reflexive critique of some reified constructs -within feminism itself. The very notion of “patriarchy” has threatened -to become a universalizing concept that overrides or reduces distinct -~ -articulations of gender asymmetry in different cultural contexts. As -feminism has sought to become integrally related to struggles against -racial and colonialist oppression, it has become increasingly important -to resist the colonizing epistemological strategy that would subordinate different configurations of domination under the rubric of a transcultural notion of patriarchy.The articulation of the law of patriarchy -as a repressive and regulatory structure also requires reconsideration -from this critical perspective. The feminist recourse to an imaginary -past needs to be cautious not to promote a politically problematic -reification of women’s experience in the course of debunking the selfreifying claims of masculinist power. -The self-justification of a repressive or subordinating law almost -always grounds itself in a story about what it was like before the advent of -the law, and how it came about that the law emerged in its present and -necessary form.1 The fabrication of those origins tends to describe a -state of affairs before the law that follows a necessary and unilinear narrative that culminates in, and thereby justifies, the constitution of the -law.The story of origins is thus a strategic tactic within a narrative that, -by telling a single, authoritative account about an irrecoverable past, -makes the constitution of the law appear as a historical inevitability. -Some feminists have found in the prejuridical past traces of a -utopian future, a potential resource for subversion or insurrection that -promises to lead to the destruction of the law and the instatement of a -new order. But if the imaginary “before” is inevitably figured within the -terms of a prehistorical narrative that serves to legitimate the present -state of the law or, alternatively, the imaginary future beyond the law, -then this “before” is always already imbued with the self-justificatory -fabrications of present and future interests, whether feminist or -antifeminist. The postulation of the “before” within feminist theory -becomes politically problematic when it constrains the future to materialize an idealized notion of the past or when it supports, even inadvertently, the reification of a precultural sphere of the authentic -~ -gic and parochial ideal that refuses the contemporary demand to formulate an account of gender as a complex cultural construction. This -ideal tends not only to serve culturally conservative aims, but to constitute an exclusionary practice within feminism, precipitating precisely the kind of fragmentation that the ideal purports to overcome. -Throughout the speculation of Engels, socialist feminism, those -feminist positions rooted in structuralist anthropology, there emerge -various efforts to locate moments or structures within history or culture that establish gender hierarchy.The isolation of such structures or -key periods is pursued in order to repudiate those reactionary theories -which would naturalize or universalize the subordination of women. -As significant efforts to provide a critical displacement of the universalizing gestures of oppression, these theories constitute part of the -contemporary theoretical field in which a further contestation of -oppression is taking place.The question needs to be pursued, however, -whether these powerful critiques of gender hierarchy make use of presuppositional fictions that entail problematic normative ideals. -Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist anthropology, including the problematic nature/culture distinction, has been appropriated by some feminist -theorists to support and elucidate the sex/gender distinction: the position that there is a natural or biological female who is subsequently -transformed into a socially subordinate “woman,” with the consequence that “sex” is to nature or “the raw” as gender is to culture or -“the cooked.” If Lévi-Strauss’s framework were true, it would be possible to trace the transformation of sex into gender by locating that stable mechanism of cultures, the exchange rules of kinship, which effect -that transformation in fairly regular ways. Within such a view, “sex” is -before the law in the sense that it is culturally and political undetermined, providing the “raw material” of culture, as it were, that begins -to signify only through and after its subjection to the rules of kinship. -This very concept of sex-as-matter, sex-as-instrument-of-culturalsignification, however, is a discursive formation that acts as a naturalized -foundation for the nature/culture distinction and the strategies of -~ -domination that that distinction supports. The binary relation between -culture and nature promotes a relationship of hierarchy in which -culture freely “imposes” meaning on nature, and, hence, renders it -into an “Other” to be appropriated to its own limitless uses, safeguarding the ideality of the signifier and the structure of signification on the -model of domination. -Anthropologists Marilyn Strathern and Carol MacCormack have -argued that nature/culture discourse regularly figures nature as -female, in need of subordination by a culture that is invariably figured -as male, active, and abstract.2 As in the existential dialectic of misogyny, this is yet another instance in which reason and mind are associated -with masculinity and agency, while the body and nature are considered -to be the mute facticity of the feminine, awaiting signification from an -opposing masculine subject. As in that misogynist dialectic, materiality -and meaning are mutually exclusive terms. The sexual politics that -construct and maintain this distinction are effectively concealed by the -discursive production of a nature and, indeed, a natural sex that postures as the unquestioned foundation of culture. Critics of structuralism such as Clifford Geertz have argued that its universalizing -framework discounts the multiplicity of cultural configurations of -“nature.” The analysis that assumes nature to be singular and prediscursive cannot ask, what qualifies as “nature” within a given cultural context, and for what purposes? Is the dualism necessary at all? How are -the sex/gender and nature/culture dualisms constructed and naturalized in and through one another? What gender hierarchies do they -serve, and what relations of subordination do they reify? If the very -designation of sex is political, then “sex,” that designation supposed to -be most in the raw, proves to be always already “cooked,” and the central distinctions of structuralist anthropology appear to collapse.3 -The effort to locate a sexed nature before the law seems to be -rooted understandably in the more fundamental project to be able to -think that the patriarchal law is not universally true and all-determining. -Indeed, if constructed gender is all there is, then there appears to be -~ -no “outside,” no epistemic anchor in a precultural “before” that might -serve as an alternative epistemic point of departure for a critical -assessment of existing gender relations. Locating the mechanism -whereby sex is transformed into gender is meant to establish not only -the constructedness of gender, its unnatural and nonnecessary status, -but the cultural universality of oppression in nonbiologistic terms. -How is this mechanism formulated? Can it be found or merely imagined? Is the designation of its ostensible universality any less of a reification than the position that grounds universal oppression in biology? -Only when the mechanism of gender construction implies the contingency of that construction does “constructedness” per se prove useful -to the political project to enlarge the scope of possible gender configurations. If, however, it is a life of the body beyond the law or a recovery -of the body before the law which then emerges as the normative goal -of feminist theory, such a norm effectively takes the focus of feminist -theory away from the concrete terms of contemporary cultural struggle. Indeed, the following sections on psychoanalysis, structuralism, -and the status and power of their gender-instituting prohibitions centers precisely on this notion of the law:What is its ontological status— -is it juridical, oppressive, and reductive in its workings, or does it -inadvertently create the possibility of its own cultural displacement? To -what extent does the articulation of a body prior to articulation performatively contradict itself and spawn alternatives in its place? -i. Structuralism’s Critical Exchange -Structuralist discourse tends to refer to the Law in the singular, in -accord with Lévi-Strauss’s contention that there is a universal structure -of regulating exchange that characterizes all systems of kinship. -According to The Elementary Structures of Kinship, the object of exchange -that both consolidates and differentiates kinship relations is women, -given as gifts from one patrilineal clan to another through the institution of marriage.4 The bride, the gift, the object of exchange constitutes -“a sign and a value” that opens a channel of exchange that not only -~ -serves the functional purpose of facilitating trade but performs the symbolic or ritualistic purpose of consolidating the internal bonds, the collective identity, of each clan differentiated through the act.5 In other -words, the bride functions as a relational term between groups of men; -she does not have an identity, and neither does she exchange one identity for another. She reflects masculine identity precisely through being -the site of its absence. Clan members, invariably male, invoke the prerogative of identity through marriage, a repeated act of symbolic differentiation. Exogamy distinguishes and binds patronymically specific -kinds of men. Patrilineality is secured through the ritualistic expulsion -of women and, reciprocally, the ritualistic importation of women. As -wives, women not only secure the reproduction of the name (the functional purpose), but effect a symbolic intercourse between clans of -men. As the site of a patronymic exchange, women are and are not the -patronymic sign, excluded from the signifier, the very patronym they -bear. The woman in marriage qualifies not as an identity, but only as a -relational term that both distinguishes and binds the various clans to a -common but internally differentiated patrilineal identity. -The structural systematicity of Lévi-Strauss’s explanation of kinship relations appeals to a universal logic that appears to structure -human relations. Although Lévi-Strauss reports in Tristes tropiques that -he left philosophy because anthropology provided a more concrete -cultural texture to the analysis of human life, he nevertheless assimilates that cultural texture to a totalizing logical structure that effectively returns his analyses to the decontextualized philosophical -structures he purported to leave. Although a number of questions can -be raised about the presumptions of universality in Lévi-Strauss’s work -(as they are in anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s Local Knowledge), the -questions here concern the place of identitarian assumptions in this -universal logic and the relationship of that identitarian logic to the subordinate status of women within the cultural reality that this logic -describes. If the symbolic nature of exchange is its universally human -character as well, and if that universal structure distributes “identity” -~ -to male persons and a subordinate and relational “negation” or “lack” to -women, then this logic might well be contested by a position or set of -positions excluded from its very terms. What might an alternative -logic of kinship be like? To what extent do identitarian logical systems -always require the construction of socially impossible identities to -occupy an unnamed, excluded, but presuppositional relation subsequently concealed by the logic itself? Here the impetus for Irigaray’s -marking off of the phallogocentric economy becomes clear, as does a -major poststructuralist impulse within feminism that questions -whether an effective critique of phallogocentrism requires a displacement of the Symbolic as defined by Lévi-Strauss. -The totality and closure of language is both presumed and contested -within structuralism. Although Saussure understands the relationship -of signifier and signified to be arbitrary, he places this arbitrary relation -within a necessarily complete linguistic system. All linguistic terms -presuppose a linguistic totality of structures, the entirety of which is -presupposed and implicitly recalled for any one term to bear meaning. -This quasi-Leibnizian view, in which language figures as a systematic -totality, effectively suppresses the moment of difference between signifier and signified, relating and unifying that moment of arbitrariness -within a totalizing field. The poststructuralist break with Saussure and -with the identitarian structures of exchange found in Lévi-Strauss -refutes the claims of totality and universality and the presumption of -binary structural oppositions that implicitly operate to quell the insistent ambiguity and openness of linguistic and cultural signification.6 As -a result, the discrepancy between signifier and signified becomes the -operative and limitless différance of language, rendering all referentiality into a potentially limitless displacement. -For Lévi-Strauss, the masculine cultural identity is established -through an overt act of differentiation between patrilineal clans, where -the “difference” in this relation is Hegelian—that is, one which simultaneously distinguishes and binds. But the “difference” established -between men and the women who effect the differentiation between -~ -men eludes the dialectic altogether. In other words, the differentiating -moment of social exchange appears to be a social bond between men, a -Hegelian unity between masculine terms that are simultaneously specified and individualized.7 On an abstract level, this is an identityin-difference, since both clans retain a similar identity: male, patriarchal, and patrilineal. Bearing different names, they particularize themselves within this all-encompassing masculine cultural identity. But -what relation instates women as the object of exchange, clothed first -in one patronym and then another? What kind of differentiating -mechanism distributes gender functions in this way? What kind of differentiating différance is presupposed and excluded by the explicit, -male-mediating negation of Lévi-Strauss’s Hegelian economy? As -Irigaray argues, this phallogocentric economy depends essentially on -an economy of différance that is never manifest, but always both presupposed and disavowed. In effect, the relations among patrilineal -clans are based in homosocial desire (what Irigaray punningly calls -“hommo-sexuality”),8 a repressed and, hence, disparaged sexuality, a -relationship between men which is, finally, about the bonds of men, -but which takes place through the heterosexual exchange and distribution of women.9 -In a passage that reveals the homoerotic unconscious of the phallogocentric economy, Lévi-Strauss offers the link between the incest -taboo and the consolidation of homoerotic bonds: -Exchange—and consequently the rule of exogamy—is not simply -that of goods exchanged. Exchange—and consequently the rule of -exogamy that expresses it—has in itself a social value. It provides the -means of binding men together. - -The taboo generates exogamic heterosexuality which Lévi-Strauss -understands as the artificial accomplishment of a nonincestuous heterosexuality extracted through prohibition from a more natural and -unconstrained sexuality (an assumption shared by Freud in Three Essays -on the Theory of Sexuality). -~ -The relation of reciprocity established between men, however, is -the condition of a relation of radical nonreciprocity between men -and women and a relation, as it were, of nonrelation between women. -Lévi-Strauss’s notorious claim that “the emergence of symbolic thought -must have required that women, like words, should be things that were -exchanged,” suggests a necessity that Lévi-Strauss himself induces from -the presumed universal structures of culture from the retrospective -position of a transparent observer. But the “must have” appears as an -inference only to function as a performative; since the moment in -which the symbolic emerged could not be one that Lévi-Strauss witnessed, he conjectures a necessary history: The report thereby -becomes an injunction. His analysis prompted Irigaray to reflect on -what would happen if “the goods got together” and revealed the unanticipated agency of an alternative sexual economy. Her recent work, -Sexes et parentés,10 offers a critical exegesis of how this construction of -reciprocal exchange between men presupposes a nonreciprocity -between the sexes inarticulable within that economy, as well as the -unnameability of the female, the feminine, and lesbian sexuality. -If there is a sexual domain that is excluded from the Symbolic and -can potentially expose the Symbolic as hegemonic rather than totalizing in its reach, it must then be possible to locate this excluded domain -either within or outside that economy and to strategize its intervention in terms of that placement. The following rereading of the structuralist law and the narrative that accounts for the production of sexual -difference within its terms centers on the presumed fixity and universality of that law and, through a genealogical critique, seeks to expose -that law’s powers of inadvertent and self-defeating generativity. Does -“the Law” produce these positions unilaterally or invariably? Can it -produce configurations of sexuality that effectively contest the law -itself, or are those contests inevitably phantasmatic? Can the generativity of that law be specified as variable or even subversive? -The law forbidding incest is the locus of this economy of kinship -that forbids endogamy. Lévi-Strauss maintains that the centrality of the -~ -incest taboo establishes the significant nexus between structuralist -anthropology and psychoanalysis. Although Lévi-Strauss acknowledges -that Freud’s Totem and Taboo has been discredited on empirical grounds, -he considers that repudiating gesture as paradoxical evidence in support of Freud’s thesis. Incest, for Lévi-Strauss, is not a social fact, but a -pervasive cultural fantasy. Presuming the heterosexual masculinity of -the subject of desire, Lévi-Strauss maintains that “the desire for the -mother or the sister, the murder of the father and the sons’ repentance -undoubtedly do not correspond to any fact or group of facts occupying -a given place in history. But perhaps they symbolically express an -ancient and lasting dream.”11 -In an effort to affirm the psychoanalytic insight into unconscious -incestuous fantasy, Lévi-Strauss refers to the “magic of this dream, its -power to mould men’s thoughts unbeknown to them . . . the acts it -evokes have never been committed, because culture opposes them at -all times and all places.”12 This rather astonishing statement provides -insight not only into Lévi-Strauss’s apparent powers of denial (acts of -incest “have never been committed” !), but the central difficulty with -assuming the efficacy of that prohibition.That the prohibition exists in -no way suggests that it works. Rather, its existence appears to suggest -that desires, actions, indeed, pervasive social practices of incest are -generated precisely in virtue of the eroticization of that taboo. That -incestuous desires are phantasmatic in no way implies that they are not -also “social facts.” The question is, rather, how do such phantasms -become generated and, indeed, instituted as a consequence of their -prohibition? Further, how does the social conviction, here symptomatically articulated through Lévi-Strauss, that the prohibition is efficacious disavow and, hence, clear a social space in which incestuous -practices are free to reproduce themselves without proscription? -For Lévi-Strauss, the taboo against the act of heterosexual incest -between son and mother as well as that incestuous fantasy are instated -as universal truths of culture. How is incestuous heterosexuality -constituted as the ostensibly natural and pre-artificial matrix for desire, -~ -and how is desire established as a heterosexual male prerogative? The -naturalization of both heterosexuality and masculine sexual agency -are discursive constructions nowhere accounted for but everywhere -assumed within this founding structuralist frame. -The Lacanian appropriation of Lévi-Strauss focuses on the prohibition against incest and the rule of exogamy in the reproduction of -culture, where culture is understood primarily as a set of linguistic -structures and significations. For Lacan, the Law which forbids the -incestuous union between boy and mother initiates the structures of -kinship, a series of highly regulated libidinal displacements that take -place through language. Although the structures of language, collectively understood as the Symbolic, maintain an ontological integrity -apart from the various speaking agents through whom they work, the -Law reasserts and individuates itself within the terms of every infantile -entrance into culture. Speech emerges only upon the condition of dissatisfaction, where dissatisfaction is instituted through incestuous prohibition; the original jouissance is lost through the primary repression -that founds the subject. In its place emerges the sign which is similarly -barred from the signifier and which seeks in what it signifies a recovery -of that irrecoverable pleasure. Founded through that prohibition, the -subject speaks only to displace desire onto the metonymic substitutions for that irretrievable pleasure. Language is the residue and alternative accomplishment of dissatisfied desire, the variegated cultural -production of a sublimation that never really satisfies. That language -inevitably fails to signify is the necessary consequence of the prohibition which grounds the possibility of language and marks the vanity of -its referential gestures. -ii. Lacan, Riviere, and the Strategies of Masquerade -To ask after the “being” of gender and/or sex in Lacanian terms is to -confound the very purpose of Lacan’s theory of language. Lacan disputes the primacy given to ontology within the terms of Western -metaphysics and insists upon the subordination of the question -~ -“What is/has being?” to the prior question “How is ‘being’ instituted -and allocated through the signifying practices of the paternal economy?” The ontological specification of being, negation, and their relations is understood to be determined by a language structured by the -paternal law and its mechanisms of differentiation. A thing takes on the -characterization of “being” and becomes mobilized by that ontological -gesture only within a structure of signification that, as the Symbolic, is -itself pre-ontological. -There is no inquiry, then, into ontology per se, no access to being, -without a prior inquiry into the “being” of the Phallus, the authorizing -signification of the Law that takes sexual difference as a presupposition -of its own intelligibility. “Being” the Phallus and “having” the Phallus -denote divergent sexual positions, or nonpositions (impossible positions, really), within language. To “be” the Phallus is to be the “signifier” of the desire of the Other and to appear as this signifier. In other -words, it is to be the object, the Other of a (heterosexualized) masculine desire, but also to represent or reflect that desire.This is an Other -that constitutes, not the limit of masculinity in a feminine alterity, but -the site of a masculine self-elaboration. For women to “be” the Phallus -means, then, to reflect the power of the Phallus, to signify that power, -to “embody” the Phallus, to supply the site to which it penetrates, and -to signify the Phallus through “being” its Other, its absence, its lack, the -dialectical confirmation of its identity. By claiming that the Other that -lacks the Phallus is the one who is the Phallus, Lacan clearly suggests -that power is wielded by this feminine position of not-having, that the -masculine subject who “has” the Phallus requires this Other to confirm -and, hence, be the Phallus in its “extended” sense.13 -This ontological characterization presupposes that the appearance -or effect of being is always produced through the structures of signification. The Symbolic order creates cultural intelligibility through the -mutually exclusive positions of “having” the Phallus (the position of -men) and “being” the Phallus (the paradoxical position of women).The -interdependency of these positions recalls the Hegelian structure of -~ -failed reciprocity between master and slave, in particular, the unexpected dependency of the master on the slave in order to establish his -own identity through reflection.14 Lacan casts that drama, however, in -a phantasmatic domain. Every effort to establish identity within the -terms of this binary disjunction of “being” and “having” returns to the -inevitable “lack” and “loss” that ground their phantasmatic construction -and mark the incommensurability of the Symbolic and the real. -If the Symbolic is understood as a culturally universal structure of -signification that is nowhere fully instantiated in the real, it makes sense -to ask:What or who is it that signifies what or whom in this ostensibly -crosscultural affair? This question, however, is posed within a frame -that presupposes a subject as signifier and an object as signified, the traditional epistemological dichotomy within philosophy prior to the -structuralist displacement of the subject. Lacan calls into question this -scheme of signification. He poses the relation between the sexes in -terms that reveal the speaking “I” as a masculinized effect of repression, -one which postures as an autonomous and self-grounding subject, but -whose very coherence is called into question by the sexual positions -that it excludes in the process of identity formation. For Lacan, the -subject comes into being—that is, begins to posture as a self-grounding -signifier within language—only on the condition of a primary repression of the pre-individuated incestuous pleasures associated with the -(now repressed) maternal body. -The masculine subject only appears to originate meanings and -thereby to signify. His seemingly self-grounded autonomy attempts -to conceal the repression which is both its ground and the perpetual -possibility of its own ungrounding. But that process of meaningconstitution requires that women reflect that masculine power and -everywhere reassure that power of the reality of its illusory autonomy. -This task is confounded, to say the least, when the demand that women -reflect the autonomous power of masculine subject/signifier becomes -essential to the construction of that autonomy and, thus, becomes the -basis of a radical dependency that effectively undercuts the function it -~ -serves. But further, this dependency, although denied, is also pursued by -the masculine subject, for the woman as reassuring sign is the displaced -maternal body, the vain but persistent promise of the recovery of preindividuated jouissance. The conflict of masculinity appears, then, to be -precisely the demand for a full recognition of autonomy that will also -and nevertheless promise a return to those full pleasures prior to -repression and individuation. -Women are said to “be” the Phallus in the sense that they maintain -the power to reflect or represent the “reality” of the self-grounding -postures of the masculine subject, a power which, if withdrawn, would -break up the foundational illusions of the masculine subject position. -In order to “be” the Phallus, the reflector and guarantor of an apparent -masculine subject position, women must become, must “be” (in the -sense of “posture as if they were”) precisely what men are not and, in -their very lack, establish the essential function of men. Hence, “being” -the Phallus is always a “being for” a masculine subject who seeks to -reconfirm and augment his identity through the recognition of that -“being for.” In a strong sense, Lacan disputes the notion that men signify -the meaning of women or that women signify the meaning of men. The -division and exchange between this “being” and “having” the Phallus is -established by the Symbolic, the paternal law. Part of the comedic -dimension of this failed model of reciprocity, of course, is that both -masculine and feminine positions are signified, the signifier belonging -to the Symbolic that can never be assumed in more than token form by -either position. -To be the Phallus is to be signified by the paternal law, to be both its -object and its instrument and, in structuralist terms, the “sign” and -promise of its power. Hence, as the constituted or signified object of -exchange through which the paternal law extends its power and the -mode in which it appears, women are said to be the Phallus, that is, the -emblem of its continuing circulation. But this “being” the Phallus is -necessarily dissatisfying to the extent that women can never fully -reflect that law; some feminists argue that it requires a renunciation of -~ -women’s own desire (a double renunciation, in fact, corresponding to -the “double wave” of repression that Freud claimed founds femininity),15 which is the expropriation of that desire as the desire to be -nothing other than a reflection, a guarantor of the pervasive necessity -of the Phallus. -On the other hand, men are said to “have” the Phallus, yet never to -“be” it, in the sense that the penis is not equivalent to that Law and -can never fully symbolize that Law. Hence, there is a necessary or presuppositional impossibility to any effort to occupy the position of “having” the Phallus, with the consequence that both positions of “having” -and “being” are, in Lacan’s terms, finally to be understood as comedic -failures that are nevertheless compelled to articulate and enact these -repeated impossibilities. -But how does a woman “appear” to be the Phallus, the lack that -embodies and affirms the Phallus? According to Lacan, this is done -through masquerade, the effect of a melancholy that is essential to the -feminine position as such. In his early essay, “The Meaning of the -Phallus,” he writes of “the relations between the sexes”: -Let us say that these relations will revolve around a being and a -having which, because they refer to a signifier, the phallus, have the -contradictory effect of on the one hand lending reality to the subject -in that signifier, and on the other making unreal the relations to be -signified.16 - -In the lines that directly follow this sentence, Lacan appears to -refer to the appearance of the “reality” of the masculine subject as well -as to the “unreality” of heterosexuality. He also appears to refer to the -position of women (my interruption is within brackets): “This follows -from the intervention of an ‘appearing’ which gets substituted for the -‘having’ [a substitution is required, no doubt, because women are said -not “to have”] so as to protect it on one side and to mask its lack on -the other.” Although there is no grammatical gender here, it seems -that Lacan is describing the position of women for whom “lack” is -~ -characteristic and, hence, in need of masking and who are in some -unspecified sense in need of protection. Lacan then states that this situation produces “the effect that the ideal or typical manifestations of -behaviour in both sexes, up to and including the act of sexual copulation, are entirely propelled into comedy” (84). -Lacan continues this exposition of heterosexual comedy by explaining that this “appearing as being” the Phallus that women are compelled to do is inevitably masquerade. The term is significant because it -suggests contradictory meanings: On the one hand, if the “being,” the -ontological specification of the Phallus, is masquerade, then it would -appear to reduce all being to a form of appearing, the appearance of -being, with the consequence that all gender ontology is reducible to -the play of appearances. On the other hand, masquerade suggests that -there is a “being” or ontological specification of femininity prior to the -masquerade, a feminine desire or demand that is masked and capable -of disclosure, that, indeed, might promise an eventual disruption and -displacement of the phallogocentric signifying economy. -At least two very different tasks can be discerned from the -ambiguous structure of Lacan’s analysis. On the one hand, masquerade -may be understood as the performative production of a sexual ontology, an appearing that makes itself convincing as a “being”; on the other -hand, masquerade can be read as a denial of a feminine desire that presupposes some prior ontological femininity regularly unrepresented -by the phallic economy. Irigaray remarks in such a vein that “the masquerade . . . is what women do . . . in order to participate in man’s -desire, but at the cost of giving up their own.”17 The former task would -engage a critical reflection on gender ontology as parodic (de)construction and, perhaps, pursue the mobile possibilities of the slippery -distinction between “appearing” and “being,” a radicalization of the -“comedic” dimension of sexual ontology only partially pursued by -Lacan. The latter would initiate feminist strategies of unmasking in -order to recover or release whatever feminine desire has remained -suppressed within the terms of the phallic economy.18 -~ -Perhaps these alternative directions are not as mutually exclusive -as they appear, since appearances become more suspect all the time. -Reflections on the meaning of masquerade in Lacan as well as in Joan -Riviere’s “Womanliness as a Masquerade” have differed greatly in their -interpretations of what precisely is masked by masquerade. Is masquerade the consequence of a feminine desire that must be negated -and, thus, made into a lack that, nevertheless, must appear in some -way? Is masquerade the consequence of a denial of this lack for the purpose of appearing to be the Phallus? Does masquerade construct femininity as the reflection of the Phallus in order to disguise bisexual -possibilities that otherwise might disrupt the seamless construction of -a heterosexualized femininity? Does masquerade, as Riviere suggests, -transform aggression and the fear of reprisal into seduction and flirtation? Does it serve primarily to conceal or repress a pregiven femininity, a feminine desire which would establish an insubordinate alterity -to the masculine subject and expose the necessary failure of masculinity? Or is masquerade the means by which femininity itself is first established, the exclusionary practice of identity formation in which the -masculine is effectively excluded and instated as outside the boundaries of a feminine gendered position? -Lacan continues the quotation cited above: -Paradoxical as this formulation might seem, it is in order to be the -phallus, that is, the signifier of the desire of the Other, that the woman -will reject an essential part of her femininity, notably all its attributes -through masquerade. It is for what she is not that she expects to be -desired as well as loved. But she finds the signifier of her own desire in -the body of the one to whom she addresses her demand for love. -Certainly we should not forget that the organ invested with this signifying function takes on the value of a fetish. (84) - -If this unnamed “organ,” presumably the penis (treated like the Hebraic -Yahweh, never to be spoken), is a fetish, why should it be that we might -so easily forget it, as Lacan himself assumes? And what is the “essential -~ -part of her femininity” that must be rejected? Is it the, again, unnamed -part which, once rejected, appears as a lack? Or is it the lack itself that -must be rejected, so that she might appear as the Phallus itself? Is the -unnameability of this “essential part” the same unnameability that -attends the male “organ” that we are always in danger of forgetting? Is -this precisely that forgetfulness that constitutes the repression at the -core of feminine masquerade? Is it a presumed masculinity that must -be forfeited in order to appear as the lack that confirms and, therefore, -is the Phallus, or is it a phallic possibility, that must be negated in order -to be that lack that confirms? -Lacan clarifies his own position as he remarks that “the function of -the mask . . . dominates the identifications through which refusals of -love are resolved” (85). In other words, the mask is part of the incorporative strategy of melancholy, the taking on of attributes of the -object/Other that is lost, where loss is the consequence of a refusal of -love.19 That the mask “dominates” as well as “resolves” these refusals -suggests that appropriation is the strategy through which those refusals -are themselves refused, a double negation that redoubles the structure -of identity through the melancholic absorption of the one who is, in -effect, twice lost. -Significantly, Lacan locates the discussion of the mask in conjunction with an account of female homosexuality. He claims that “the orientation of feminine homosexuality, as observation shows, follows from -a disappointment which reenforces the side of the demand for love” -(85). Who is observing and what is being observed are conveniently -elided here, but Lacan takes his commentary to be obvious to anyone -who cares to look.What one sees through “observation” is the founding -disappointment of the female homosexual, where this disappointment -recalls the refusals that are dominated/resolved through masquerade. -One also “observes” somehow that the female homosexual is subject to -a strengthened idealization, a demand for love that is pursued at the -expense of desire. -Lacan continues this paragraph on “feminine homosexuality” with -~ -the statement partially quoted above: “These remarks should be qualified by going back to the function of the mask [which is] to dominate -the identifications through which refusals of love are resolved,” and if -female homosexuality is understood as a consequence of a disappointment “as observation shows,” then this disappointment must appear, -and appear clearly, in order to be observed. If Lacan presumes that -female homosexuality issues from a disappointed heterosexuality, as -observation is said to show, could it not be equally clear to the observer that heterosexuality issues from a disappointed homosexuality? Is it -the mask of the female homosexual that is “observed,” and if so, what -clearly readable expression gives evidence of that “disappointment” -and that “orientation” as well as the displacement of desire by the (idealized) demand for love? Lacan is perhaps suggesting that what is clear -to observation is the desexualized status of the lesbian, the incorporation of a refusal that appears as the absence of desire.20 But we can -understand this conclusion to be the necessary result of a heterosexualized and masculine observational point of view that takes lesbian sexuality to be a refusal of sexuality per se only because sexuality is -presumed to be heterosexual, and the observer, here constructed as -the heterosexual male, is clearly being refused. Indeed, is this account -not the consequence of a refusal that disappoints the observer, and -whose disappointment, disavowed and projected, is made into the -essential character of the women who effectively refuse him? -In a characteristic gliding over pronomial locations, Lacan fails to -make clear who refuses whom. As readers, we are meant, however, to -understand that this free-floating “refusal” is linked in a significant way -to the mask. If every refusal is, finally, a loyalty to some other bond in -the present or the past, refusal is simultaneously preservation as well. -The mask thus conceals this loss, but preserves (and negates) this -loss through its concealment. The mask has a double function which -is the double function of melancholy. The mask is taken on through -the process of incorporation which is a way of inscribing and then -wearing a melancholic identification in and on the body; in effect, it is -~ -the signification of the body in the mold of the Other who has been -refused. Dominated through appropriation, every refusal fails, and the -refuser becomes part of the very identity of the refused, indeed, -becomes the psychic refuse of the refused. The loss of the object is -never absolute because it is redistributed within a psychic/corporeal -boundary that expands to incorporate that loss. This locates the -process of gender incorporation within the wider orbit of melancholy. -Published in 1929, Joan Riviere’s essay, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,”21 introduces the notion of femininity as masquerade in terms -of a theory of aggression and conflict resolution.This theory appears at -first to be far afield from Lacan’s analysis of masquerade in terms of the -comedy of sexual positions. She begins with a respectful review of -Ernest Jones’s typology of the development of female sexuality into -heterosexual and homosexual forms. She focuses, however, on the -“intermediate types” that blur the boundaries between the heterosexual -and the homosexual and, implicitly, contest the descriptive capacity of -Jones’s classificatory system. In a remark that resonates with Lacan’s -facile reference to “observation,” Riviere seeks recourse to mundane -perception or experience to validate her focus on these “intermediate -types”: “In daily life types of men and women are constantly met with -who, while mainly heterosexual in their development, plainly display -strong features of the other sex” (35). What is here most plain is the -classifications that condition and structure the perception of this mix of -attributes. Clearly, Riviere begins with set notions about what it is to -display characteristics of one’s sex, and how it is that those plain characteristics are understood to express or reflect an ostensible sexual orientation.22 This perception or observation not only assumes a correlation -among characteristics, desires, and “orientations,”23 but creates that -unity through the perceptual act itself. Riviere’s postulated unity -between gender attributes and a naturalized “orientation” appears as an -instance of what Wittig refers to as the “imaginary formation” of sex. -And yet, Riviere calls into question these naturalized typologies -through an appeal to a psychoanalytic account that locates the meaning -~ -of mixed gender attributes in the “interplay of conflicts” (35). Significantly, she contrasts this kind of psychoanalytic theory with one that -would reduce the presence of ostensibly “masculine” attributes in a -woman to a “radical or fundamental tendency.” In other words, the -acquisition of such attributes and the accomplishment of a heterosexual -or homosexual orientation are produced through the resolution of conflicts that have as their aim the suppression of anxiety. Citing Ferenczi in -order to establish an analogy with her own account, Riviere writes: -Ferenczi pointed out . . . that homosexual men exaggerate their -heterosexuality as a ‘defence’ against their homosexuality. I shall -attempt to show that women who wish for masculinity may put on a -mask of womanliness to avert anxiety and the retribution feared -from men. (35) - -It is unclear what is the “exaggerated” form of heterosexuality the -homosexual man is alleged to display, but the phenomenon under -notice here might simply be that gay men simply may not look much -different from their heterosexual counterparts. This lack of an overt -differentiating style or appearance may be diagnosed as a symptomatic -“defense” only because the gay man in question does not conform to -the idea of the homosexual that the analyst has drawn and sustained -from cultural stereotypes. A Lacanian analysis might argue that the -supposed “exaggeration” in the homosexual man of whatever attributes -count as apparent heterosexuality is the attempt to “have” the Phallus, -the subject position that entails an active and heterosexualized desire. -Similarly, the “mask” of the “women who wish for masculinity” can be -interpreted as an effort to renounce the “having” of the Phallus in order -to avert retribution by those from whom it must have been procured -through castration. Riviere explains the fear of retribution as the consequence of a woman’s fantasy to take the place of men, more precisely, of the father. In the case that she herself examines, which some -consider to be autobiographical, the rivalry with the father is not over -~ -the desire of the mother, as one might expect, but over the place of the -father in public discourse as speaker, lecturer, writer—that is, as a user -of signs rather than a sign-object, an item of exchange. This castrating -desire might be understood as the desire to relinquish the status of -woman-as-sign in order to appear as a subject within language. -Indeed, the analogy that Riviere draws between the homosexual -man and the masked woman is not, in her view, an analogy between -male and female homosexuality. Femininity is taken on by a woman -who “wishes for masculinity,” but fears the retributive consequences of -taking on the public appearance of masculinity. Masculinity is taken on -by the male homosexual who, presumably, seeks to hide—not from -others, but from himself—an ostensible femininity. The woman takes -on a masquerade knowingly in order to conceal her masculinity from -the masculine audience she wants to castrate. But the homosexual man -is said to exaggerate his “heterosexuality” (meaning a masculinity that -allows him to pass as heterosexual?) as a “defense,” unknowingly, -because he cannot acknowledge his own homosexuality (or is it that -the analyst would not acknowledge it, if it were his?). In other words, -the homosexual man takes unconscious retribution on himself, both -desiring and fearing the consequences of castration. The male homosexual does not “know” his homosexuality, although Ferenczi and -Riviere apparently do. -But does Riviere know the homosexuality of the woman in masquerade that she describes? When it comes to the counterpart of the -analogy that she herself sets up, the woman who “wishes for masculinity” is homosexual only in terms of sustaining a masculine identification, -but not in terms of a sexual orientation or desire. Invoking Jones’s -typology once again, as if it were a phallic shield, she formulates a -“defense” that designates as asexual a class of female homosexuals understood as the masquerading type: “his first group of homosexual women -who, while taking no interest in other women, wish for ‘recognition’ of -their masculinity from men and claim to be the equals of men, or in -other words, to be men themselves” (37). As in Lacan, the lesbian is -~ -here signified as an asexual position, as indeed, a position that refuses -sexuality. For the earlier analogy with Ferenzci to become complete, it -would seem that this description enacts the “defense” against female -homosexuality as sexuality that is nevertheless understood as the reflexive structure of the “homosexual man.” And yet, there is no clear way to -read this description of a female homosexuality that is not about a sexual desire for women. Riviere would have us believe that this curious -typological anomaly cannot be reduced to a repressed female homosexuality or heterosexuality.What is hidden is not sexuality, but rage. -One possible interpretation is that the woman in masquerade -wishes for masculinity in order to engage in public discourse with men -and as a man as part of a male homoerotic exchange. And precisely -because that male homoerotic exchange would signify castration, she -fears the same retribution that motivates the “defenses” of the homosexual man. Indeed, perhaps femininity as masquerade is meant to -deflect from male homosexuality—that being the erotic presupposition of hegemonic discourse, the “hommo-sexuality” that Irigaray suggests. In any case, Riviere would have us consider that such women -sustain masculine identifications not to occupy a position in a sexual -exchange, but, rather, to pursue a rivalry that has no sexual object or, -at least, that has none that she will name. -Riviere’s text offers a way to reconsider the question: What is -masked by masquerade? In a key passage that marks a departure from -the restricted analysis demarcated by Jones’s classificatory system, she -suggests that “masquerade” is more than the characteristic of an “intermediate type,” that it is central to all “womanliness”: -The reader may now ask how I define womanliness or where I draw -the line between genuine womanliness and the ‘masquerade’. My -suggestion is not, however, that there is any such difference; whether -radical or superficial, they are the same thing. (38) - -This refusal to postulate a femininity that is prior to mimicry and -the mask is taken up by Stephen Heath in “Joan Riviere and the -~ -Masquerade” as evidence for the notion that “authentic womanliness is -such a mimicry, is the masquerade.” Relying on the postulated characterization of libido as masculine, Heath concludes that femininity is the -denial of that libido, the “dissimulation of a fundamental masculinity.”24 -Femininity becomes a mask that dominates/resolves a masculine -identification, for a masculine identification would, within the presumed heterosexual matrix of desire, produce a desire for a female -object, the Phallus; hence, the donning of femininity as mask may -reveal a refusal of a female homosexuality and, at the same time, the -hyperbolic incorporation of that female Other who is refused—an odd -form of preserving and protecting that love within the circle of the -melancholic and negative narcissism that results from the psychic -inculcation of compulsory heterosexuality. -One might read Riviere as fearful of her own phallicism25—that is, -of the phallic identity she risks exposing in the course of her lecture, -her writing, indeed, the writing of this phallicism that the essay itself -both conceals and enacts. It may, however, be less her own masculine -identity than the masculine heterosexual desire that is its signature that -she seeks both to deny and enact by becoming the object she forbids -herself to love. This is the predicament produced by a matrix that -accounts for all desire for women by subjects of whatever sex or gender as originating in a masculine, heterosexual position. The libidoas-masculine is the source from which all possible sexuality is presumed to come.26 -Here the typology of gender and sexuality needs to give way to a -discursive account of the cultural production of gender. If Riviere’s -analysand is a homosexual without homosexuality, that may be because -that option is already refused her; the cultural existence of this prohibition is there in the lecture space, determining and differentiating her -as speaker and her mainly male audience. Although she fears that her -castrating wish might be understood, she denies that there is a contest -over a common object of desire without which the masculine identification that she does acknowledge would lack its confirmation and -~ -essential sign. Indeed, her account presupposes the primacy of aggression over sexuality, the desire to castrate and take the place of the masculine subject, a desire avowedly rooted in a rivalry, but one which, for -her, exhausts itself in the act of displacement. But the question might -usefully be asked: What sexual fantasy does this aggression serve, and -what sexuality does it authorize? Although the right to occupy the -position of a language user is the ostensible purpose of the analysand’s -aggression, we can ask whether there is not a repudiation of the feminine that prepares this position within speech and which, invariably, -reemerges as the Phallic-Other that will phantasmatically confirm the -authority of the speaking subject? -We might then rethink the very notions of masculinity and femininity constructed here as rooted in unresolved homosexual cathexes. -The melancholy refusal/domination of homosexuality culminates in -the incorporation of the same-sexed object of desire and reemerges in -the construction of discrete sexual “natures” that require and institute -their opposites through exclusion. To presume the primacy of bisexuality or the primary characterization of the libido as masculine is still -not to account for the construction of these various “primacies.” Some -psychoanalytic accounts would argue that femininity is based in the -exclusion of the masculine, where the masculine is one “part” of a -bisexual psychic composition. The coexistence of the binary is -assumed, and then repression and exclusion intercede to craft discretely gendered “identities” out of this binary, with the result that -identity is always already inherent in a bisexual disposition that is, -through repression, severed into its component parts. In a sense, the -binary restriction on culture postures as the precultural bisexuality -that sunders into heterosexual familiarity through its advent into “culture.” From the start, however, the binary restriction on sexuality -shows clearly that culture in no way postdates the bisexuality that it -purports to repress: It constitutes the matrix of intelligibility through -which primary bisexuality itself becomes thinkable. The “bisexuality” -that is posited as a psychic foundation and is said to be repressed at a -~ -later date is a discursive production that claims to be prior to all discourse, effected through the compulsory and generative exclusionary -practices of normative heterosexuality. -Lacanian discourse centers on the notion of “a divide,” a primary -or fundamental split that renders the subject internally divided and -that establishes the duality of the sexes. But why this exclusive focus on -the fall into twoness? Within Lacanian terms, it appears that division is -always the effect of the law, and not a preexisting condition on which -the law acts. Jacqueline Rose writes that “for both sexes, sexuality will -necessarily touch on the duplicity which undermines its fundamental -divide,”27 suggesting that sexual division, effected through repression, -is invariably undermined by the very ruse of identity. But is it not a -prediscursive doubleness that comes to undermine the univocal posturing of each position within the field of sexual difference? Rose -writes compellingly that “for Lacan, as we have seen, there is no prediscursive reality (‘How return, other than by means of a special discourse, to a prediscursive reality?’, SXX, p. 33), no place prior to the -law which is available and can be retrieved.” As an indirect critique of -Irigaray’s efforts to mark a place for feminine writing outside the phallic economy, Rose then adds, “And there is no feminine outside language.”28 If prohibition creates the “fundamental divide” of sexuality, -and if this “divide” is shown to be duplicitous precisely because of the -artificiality of its division, then there must be a division that resists division, a psychic doubleness or inherent bisexuality that comes to undermine every effort of severing. To consider this psychic doubleness as -the effect of the Law is Lacan’s stated purpose, but the point of resistance within his theory as well. -Rose is no doubt right to claim that every identification, precisely -because it has a phantasm as its ideal, is bound to fail.Any psychoanalytic theory that prescribes a developmental process that presupposes the -accomplishment of a given father-son or mother-daughter identification mistakenly conflates the Symbolic with the real and misses the critical point of incommensurability that exposes “identification” and the -~ -drama of “being” and “having” the Phallus as invariably phantasmatic.29 -And yet, what determines the domain of the phantasmatic, the rules -that regulate the incommensurability of the Symbolic with the real? It is -clearly not enough to claim that this drama holds for Western, late capitalist household dwellers and that perhaps in some yet to be defined -epoch some other Symbolic regime will govern the language of sexual -ontology. By instituting the Symbolic as invariably phantasmatic, the -“invariably” wanders into an “inevitably,” generating a description of -sexuality in terms that promote cultural stasis as its result. -The rendition of Lacan that understands the prediscursive as an -impossibility promises a critique that conceptualizes the Law as prohibitive and generative at once.That the language of physiology or disposition does not appear here is welcome news, but binary -restrictions nevertheless still operate to frame and formulate sexuality -and delimit in advance the forms of its resistance to the “real.” In -marking off the very domain of what is subject to repression, exclusion operates prior to repression—that is, in the delimitation of the -Law and its objects of subordination. Although one can argue that for -Lacan repression creates the repressed through the prohibitive and -paternal law, that argument does not account for the pervasive nostalgia for the lost fullness of jouissance in his work. Indeed, the loss could -not be understood as loss unless the very irrecoverability of that pleasure did not designate a past that is barred from the present through -the prohibitive law. That we cannot know that past from the position -of the founded subject is not to say that that past does not reemerge -within that subject’s speech as fêlure, discontinuity, metonymic slippage. As the truer noumenal reality existed for Kant, the prejuridical -past of jouissance is unknowable from within spoken language; that -does not mean, however, that this past has no reality.The very inaccessibility of the past, indicated by metonymic slippage in contemporary -speech, confirms that original fullness as the ultimate reality. -The further question emerges:What plausibility can be given to an -account of the Symbolic that requires a conformity to the Law that -~ -proves impossible to perform and that makes no room for the flexibility -of the Law itself, its cultural reformulation in more plastic forms? The -injunction to become sexed in the ways prescribed by the Symbolic -always leads to failure and, in some cases, to the exposure of the phantasmatic nature of sexual identity itself.The Symbolic’s claim to be cultural intelligibility in its present and hegemonic form effectively -consolidates the power of those phantasms as well as the various dramas -of identificatory failures. The alternative is not to suggest that identification should become a viable accomplishment. But there does seem to -be a romanticization or, indeed, a religious idealization of “failure,” -humility and limitation before the Law, which makes the Lacanian narrative ideologically suspect.The dialectic between a juridical imperative -that cannot be fulfilled and an inevitable failure “before the law” recalls -the tortured relationship between the God of the Old Testament and -those humiliated servants who offer their obedience without reward. -That sexuality now embodies this religious impulse in the form of the -demand for love (considered to be an “absolute” demand) that is distinct -from both need and desire (a kind of ecstatic transcendence that -eclipses sexuality altogether) lends further credibility to the Symbolic -as that which operates for human subjects as the inaccessible but alldetermining deity. -This structure of religious tragedy in Lacanian theory effectively -undermines any strategy of cultural politics to configure an alternative -imaginary for the play of desires. If the Symbolic guarantees the failure -of the tasks it commands, perhaps its purposes, like those of the Old -Testament God, are altogether unteleological—not the accomplishment of some goal, but obedience and suffering to enforce the “subject’s” sense of limitation “before the law.” There is, of course, the -comic side to this drama that is revealed through the disclosure of the -permanent impossibility of the realization of identity. But even this -comedy is the inverse expression of an enslavement to the God that it -claims to be unable to overcome. -Lacanian theory must be understood as a kind of “slave morality.” -~ -How would Lacanian theory be reformulated after the appropriation -of Nietzsche’s insight in On the Genealogy of Morals that God, the inaccessible Symbolic, is rendered inaccessible by a power (the will-to-power) -that regularly institutes its own powerlessness?30 This figuration of the -paternal law as the inevitable and unknowable authority before which -the sexed subject is bound to fail must be read for the theological -impulse that motivates it as well as for the critique of theology that -points beyond it.The construction of the law that guarantees failure is -symptomatic of a slave morality that disavows the very generative -powers it uses to construct the “Law” as a permanent impossibility. -What is the power that creates this fiction that reflects inevitable subjection? What are the cultural stakes in keeping power within that selfnegating circle, and how might that power be reclaimed from the -trappings of a prohibitive law that is that power in its dissimulation and -self-subjection? -iii. Freud and the Melancholia of Gender -Although Irigaray maintains that the structure of femininity and melancholy “cross-check”31 and Kristeva identifies motherhood with melancholy in “Motherhood According to Bellini” as well as Soleil noir: -Dépression et mélancolie,32 there has been little effort to understand the -melancholic denial/preservation of homosexuality in the production of -gender within the heterosexual frame. Freud isolates the mechanism of -melancholia as essential to “ego formation” and “character,” but only -alludes to the centrality of melancholia to gender. In The Ego and the Id -(1923), he elaborates on the structure of mourning as the incipient -structure of ego formation, a thesis whose traces can be found in the -1917 essay “Mourning and Melancholia.”33 In the experience of losing -another human being whom one has loved, Freud argues, the ego is said -to incorporate that other into the very structure of the ego, taking on -attributes of the other and “sustaining” the other through magical acts of -imitation.The loss of the other whom one desires and loves is overcome -through a specific act of identification that seeks to harbor that other -~ -within the very structure of the self: “So by taking flight into the ego, -love escapes annihilation” (178). This identification is not simply -momentary or occasional, but becomes a new structure of identity; in -effect, the other becomes part of the ego through the permanent internalization of the other’s attributes.34 In cases in which an ambivalent -relationship is severed through loss, that ambivalence becomes internalized as a self-critical or self-debasing disposition in which the role of the -other is now occupied and directed by the ego itself: “The narcissistic -identification with the object then becomes a substitute for the erotic -cathexis, the result of which is that in spite of the conflict with the loved -person the love-relation need not be given up” (170). Later, Freud -makes clear that the process of internalizing and sustaining lost loves is -crucial to the formation of the ego and its “object-choice.” -In The Ego and the Id, Freud refers to this process of internalization -described in “Mourning and Melancholia” and remarks: -we succeeded in explaining the painful disorder of melancholia by -supposing that [in those suffering from it] an object which was lost -has been set up again inside the ego—that is, that an object-cathexis -has been replaced by an identification. At that time, however, we did -not appreciate the full significance of this process and did not know -how common and how typical it is. Since then we have come to -understand that this kind of substitution has a great share in determining the form taken by the ego and that it makes an essential contribution towards building up what is called its “character.” (18) - -As this chapter on “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal)” proceeds, -however, it is not merely “character” that is being described, but the -acquisition of gender identity as well. In claiming that “it may be that -this identification is the sole condition under which the id can give up -its objects,” Freud suggests that the internalizing strategy of melancholia does not oppose the work of mourning, but may be the only way in -~ -tate of abandoned object-cathexes and that it contains the history of -those object-choices” (19). This process of internalizing lost loves -becomes pertinent to gender formation when we realize that the -incest taboo, among other functions, initiates a loss of a love-object for -the ego and that this ego recuperates from this loss through the internalization of the tabooed object of desire. In the case of a prohibited -heterosexual union, it is the object which is denied, but not the modality of desire, so that the desire is deflected from that object onto other -objects of the opposite sex. But in the case of a prohibited homosexual -union, it is clear that both the desire and the object require renunciation and so become subject to the internalizing strategies of melancholia. Hence, “the young boy deals with his father by identifying himself -with him” (21). -In the first formation of the boy-father identification, Freud speculates that the identification takes place without the prior object -cathexis (21), meaning that the identification is not the consequence of -a love lost or prohibited of the son for the father. Later, however, Freud -does postulate primary bisexuality as a complicating factor in the -process of character and gender formation. With the postulation of a -bisexual set of libidinal dispositions, there is no reason to deny an original sexual love of the son for the father, and yet Freud implicitly does. -The boy does, however, sustain a primary cathexis for the mother, and -Freud remarks that bisexuality there makes itself known in the masculine and feminine behavior with which the boy-child attempts to -seduce the mother. -Although Freud introduces the Oedipal complex to explain why -the boy must repudiate the mother and adopt an ambivalent attitude -toward the father, he remarks shortly afterward that, “It may even be -that the ambivalence displayed in the relations to the parents should be -attributed entirely to bisexuality and that it is not, as I have represented -above, developed out of identification in consequence of rivalry” (23, -n.1). But what would condition the ambivalence in such a case? Clearly, -Freud means to suggest that the boy must choose not only between the -~ -two object choices, but the two sexual dispositions, masculine and feminine.That the boy usually chooses the heterosexual would, then, be the -result, not of the fear of castration by the father, but of the fear of castration—that is, the fear of “feminization” associated within heterosexual cultures with male homosexuality. In effect, it is not primarily the -heterosexual lust for the mother that must be punished and sublimated, -but the homosexual cathexis that must be subordinated to a culturally -sanctioned heterosexuality. Indeed, if it is primary bisexuality rather -than the Oedipal drama of rivalry which produces the boy’s repudiation -of femininity and his ambivalence toward his father, then the primacy of -the maternal cathexis becomes increasingly suspect and, consequently, -the primary heterosexuality of the boy’s object cathexis. -Regardless of the reason for the boy’s repudiation of the mother -(do we construe the punishing father as a rival or as an object of desire -who forbids himself as such?), the repudiation becomes the founding -moment of what Freud calls gender “consolidation.” Forfeiting the -mother as object of desire, the boy either internalizes the loss through -identification with her, or displaces his heterosexual attachment, in -which case he fortifies his attachment to his father and thereby “consolidates” his masculinity. As the metaphor of consolidation suggests, there -are clearly bits and pieces of masculinity to be found within the psychic -landscape, dispositions, sexual trends, and aims, but they are diffuse and -disorganized, unbounded by the exclusivity of a heterosexual object -choice. Indeed, if the boy renounces both aim and object and, therefore, heterosexual cathexis altogether, he internalizes the mother and -sets up a feminine superego which dissolves and disorganizes masculinity, consolidating feminine libidinal dispositions in its place. -For the young girl as well, the Oedipal complex can be either “positive” (same-sex identification) or “negative” (opposite-sex identification); the loss of the father initiated by the incest taboo may result -either in an identification with the object lost (a consolidation of masculinity) or a deflection of the aim from the object, in which case heterosexuality triumphs over homosexuality, and a substitute object is -~ -found.At the close of his brief paragraph on the negative Oedipal complex in the young girl, Freud remarks that the factor that decides -which identification is accomplished is the strength or weakness of -masculinity and femininity in her disposition. Significantly, Freud -avows his confusion about what precisely a masculine or feminine disposition is when he interrupts his statement midway with the hyphenated doubt: “—whatever that may consist in—” (22). -What are these primary dispositions on which Freud himself apparently founders? Are these attributes of an unconscious libidinal organization, and how precisely do the various identifications set up in -consequence of the Oedipal conflict work to reinforce or dissolve each -of these dispositions? What aspect of “femininity” do we call dispositional, and which is the consequence of identification? Indeed, what is to -keep us from understanding the “dispositions” of bisexuality as the effects -or productions of a series of internalizations? Moreover, how do we identify a “feminine” or a “masculine” disposition at the outset? By what -traces is it known, and to what extent do we assume a “feminine” or a -“masculine” disposition as the precondition of a heterosexual object -choice? In other words, to what extent do we read the desire for the -father as evidence of a feminine disposition only because we begin, -despite the postulation of primary bisexuality, with a heterosexual -matrix for desire? -The conceptualization of bisexuality in terms of dispositions, feminine -and masculine, which have heterosexual aims as their intentional correlates, suggests that for Freud bisexuality is the coincidence of two heterosexual desires within a single psyche. The masculine disposition is, in effect, -never oriented toward the father as an object of sexual love, and neither -is the feminine disposition oriented toward the mother (the young girl -may be so oriented, but this is before she has renounced that “masculine” side of her dispositional nature). In repudiating the mother as an -object of sexual love, the girl of necessity repudiates her masculinity -and, paradoxically, “fixes” her femininity as a consequence. Hence, -~ -within Freud’s thesis of primary bisexuality, there is no homosexuality, -and only opposites attract. -But what is the proof Freud gives us for the existence of such -dispositions? If there is no way to distinguish between the femininity -acquired through internalizations and that which is strictly dispositional, -then what is to preclude the conclusion that all gender-specific affinities -are the consequence of internalizations? On what basis are dispositional -sexualities and identities ascribed to individuals, and what meaning can -we give to “femininity” and “masculinity” at the outset? Taking the problematic of internalization as a point of departure, let us consider the status of internalized identifications in the formation of gender and, -secondarily, the relation between an internalized gender affinity and the -self-punishing melancholia of internalized identifications. -In “Mourning and Melancholia,” Freud interprets the self-critical -attitudes of the melancholic to be the result of the internalization of a -lost object of love. Precisely because that object is lost, even though -the relationship remains ambivalent and unresolved, the object is -“brought inside” the ego where the quarrel magically resumes as an -interior dialogue between two parts of the psyche. In “Mourning and -Melancholia,” the lost object is set up within the ego as a critical voice -or agency, and the anger originally felt for the object is reversed so that -the internalized object now berates the ego: -If one listens patiently to the many and various self-accusations of the -melancholic, one cannot in the end avoid the impression that often -the most violent of them are hardly applicable to the patient himself, -but that with insignificant modifications they do fit someone else, -some person whom the patient loves, has loved or ought to love. . . . -the self-reproaches are reproaches against a loved object which have -been shifted onto the patient’s own ego. (169) - -The melancholic refuses the loss of the object, and internalization -becomes a strategy of magically resuscitating the lost object, not only - -~ -because the loss is painful, but because the ambivalence felt toward the -object requires that the object be retained until differences are settled. -In this early essay, Freud understands grief to be the withdrawal of -libidinal cathexis from the object and the successful transferral of that -cathexis onto a fresh object. In The Ego and the Id, however, Freud revises this distinction between mourning and melancholia and suggests that -the identification process associated with melancholia may be “the sole -condition under which the id can give up its objects” (19). In other -words, the identification with lost loves characteristic of melancholia -becomes the precondition for the work of mourning.The two processes, originally conceived as oppositional, are now understood as integrally related aspects of the grieving process.35 In his later view, Freud -remarks that the internalization of loss is compensatory: “When the ego -assumes the features of the object, it is forcing itself, so to speak, upon -the id’s loss by saying: ‘Look, you can love me too—I am so like the -object’ ”(20). Strictly speaking, the giving up of the object is not a negation of the cathexis, but its internalization and, hence, preservation. -What precisely is the topology of the psyche in which the ego and -its lost loves reside in perpetual habitation? Clearly, Freud conceptualizes the ego in the perpetual company of the ego ideal which acts as a -moral agency of various kinds. The internalized losses of the ego are -reestablished as part of this agency of moral scrutiny, the internalization of anger and blame originally felt for the object in its external -mode. In the act of internalization, that anger and blame, inevitably -heightened by the loss itself, are turned inward and sustained; the ego -changes place with the internalized object, thereby investing this internalized externality with moral agency and power.Thus, the ego forfeits -its anger and efficacy to the ego ideal which turns against the very ego -by which it is sustained; in other words, the ego constructs a way to -turn against itself. Indeed, Freud warns of the hypermoral possibilities -of this ego ideal, which, taken to its extreme, can motivate suicide.36 -The construction of the interior ego ideal involves the internali- - -~ -zation of gender identities as well. Freud remarks that the ego ideal is -a solution to the Oedipal complex and is thus instrumental in the -successful consolidation of masculinity and femininity: -The super-ego is, however, not simply a residue of the earliest -object-choices of the id: it also represents an energetic reaction-formation against these choices. Its relation to the ego is not exhausted -by the precept: “You ought to be like this (like your father.)” It also -comprises the prohibition: “You may not be like this (like your -father)—that is, you may not do all that he does; some things are his -prerogative.” (24) - -The ego ideal thus serves as an interior agency of sanction and -taboo which, according to Freud, works to consolidate gender identity -through the appropriate rechanneling and sublimation of desire. The -internalization of the parent as object of love suffers a necessary inversion of meaning.The parent is not only prohibited as an object of love, -but is internalized as a prohibiting or withholding object of love. The -prohibitive function of the ego ideal thus works to inhibit or, indeed, -repress the expression of desire for that parent, but also founds an -interior “space” in which that love can be preserved. Because the solution -to the Oedipal dilemma can be either “positive” or “negative,” the prohibition of the opposite-sexed parent can either lead to an identification with the sex of the parent lost or a refusal of that identification -and, consequently, a deflection of heterosexual desire. -As a set of sanctions and taboos, the ego ideal regulates and determines masculine and feminine identification. Because identifications -substitute for object relations, and identifications are the consequence -of loss, gender identification is a kind of melancholia in which the sex -of the prohibited object is internalized as a prohibition. This prohibition sanctions and regulates discrete gendered identity and the law of -heterosexual desire. The resolution of the Oedipal complex affects -gender identification through not only the incest taboo, but, prior to -that, the taboo against homosexuality. The result is that one identifies -~ -with the same-sexed object of love, thereby internalizing both the aim -and object of the homosexual cathexis. The identifications consequent -to melancholia are modes of preserving unresolved object relations, -and in the case of same-sexed gender identification, the unresolved -object relations are invariably homosexual. Indeed, the stricter and -more stable the gender affinity, the less resolved the original loss, so -that rigid gender boundaries inevitably work to conceal the loss of an -original love that, unacknowledged, fails to be resolved. -But clearly not all gender identification is based on the successful -implementation of the taboo against homosexuality. If feminine and -masculine dispositions are the result of the effective internalization of -that taboo, and if the melancholic answer to the loss of the same-sexed -object is to incorporate and, indeed, to become that object through the -construction of the ego ideal, then gender identity appears primarily -to be the internalization of a prohibition that proves to be formative of -identity. Further, this identity is constructed and maintained by the -consistent application of this taboo, not only in the stylization of the -body in compliance with discrete categories of sex, but in the production and “disposition” of sexual desire. The language of disposition -moves from a verb formation (to be disposed) into a noun formation, -whereupon it becomes congealed (to have dispositions); the language of -“dispositions” thus arrives as a false foundationalism, the results of -affectivity being formed or “fixed” through the effects of the prohibition. As a consequence, dispositions are not the primary sexual facts of -the psyche, but produced effects of a law imposed by culture and by -the complicitous and transvaluating acts of the ego ideal. -In melancholia, the loved object is lost through a variety of means: -separation, death, or the breaking of an emotional tie. In the Oedipal -situation, however, the loss is dictated by a prohibition attended by a set -of punishments. The melancholia of gender identification which -“answers” the Oedipal dilemma must be understood, then, as the internalization of an interior moral directive which gains its structure and -energy from an externally enforced taboo. Although Freud does not -~ -explicitly argue in its favor, it would appear that the taboo against -homosexuality must precede the heterosexual incest taboo; the taboo -against homosexuality in effect creates the heterosexual “dispositions” -by which the Oedipal conflict becomes possible. The young boy and -young girl who enter into the Oedipal drama with incestuous heterosexual aims have already been subjected to prohibitions which “dispose” them in distinct sexual directions. Hence, the dispositions that -Freud assumes to be primary or constitutive facts of sexual life are -effects of a law which, internalized, produces and regulates discrete -gender identity and heterosexuality. -Far from foundational, these dispositions are the result of a process -whose aim is to disguise its own genealogy. In other words, “dispositions” are traces of a history of enforced sexual prohibitions which is -untold and which the prohibitions seek to render untellable. The narrative account of gender acquisition that begins with the postulation of -dispositions effectively forecloses the narrative point of departure -which would expose the narrative as a self-amplifying tactic of the prohibition itself. In the psychoanalytic narrative, the dispositions are -trained, fixed, and consolidated by a prohibition which later and in the -name of culture arrives to quell the disturbance created by an unrestrained homosexual cathexis.Told from the point of view which takes -the prohibitive law to be the founding moment of the narrative, the -law both produces sexuality in the form of “dispositions” and appears -disingenuously at a later point in time to transform these ostensibly -“natural” dispositions into culturally acceptable structures of exogamic -kinship. In order to conceal the genealogy of the law as productive of -the very phenomenon it later claims only to channel or repress, the -law performs a third function: Instating itself as the principle of logical -continuity in a narrative of causal relations which takes psychic facts as -its point of departure, this configuration of the law forecloses the possibility of a more radical genealogy into the cultural origins of sexuality and power relations. -What precisely does it mean to reverse Freud’s causal narrative and -~ -to think of primary dispositions as effects of the law? In the first volume -of The History of Sexuality, Foucault criticizes the repressive hypothesis -for the presumption of an original desire (not “desire” in Lacan’s terms, -but jouissance) that maintains ontological integrity and temporal priority with respect to the repressive law.37 This law, according to Foucault, -subsequently silences or transmutes that desire into a secondary and -inevitably dissatisfying form or expression (displacement). Foucault -argues that the desire which is conceived as both original and repressed -is the effect of the subjugating law itself. In consequence, the law produces the conceit of the repressed desire in order to rationalize its own -self-amplifying strategies, and, rather than exercise a repressive function, the juridical law, here as elsewhere, ought to be reconceived as a -discursive practice which is productive or generative—discursive in -that it produces the linguistic fiction of repressed desire in order to -maintain its own position as a teleological instrument. The desire in -question takes on the meaning of “repressed” to the extent that the law -constitutes its contextualizing frame; indeed, the law identifies and -invigorates “repressed desire” as such, circulates the term, and, in -effect, carves out the discursive space for the self-conscious and linguistically elaborated experience called “repressed desire.” -The taboo against incest and, implicitly, against homosexuality is a -repressive injunction which presumes an original desire localized in -the notion of “dispositions,” which suffers a repression of an originally -homosexual libidinal directionality and produces the displaced phenomenon of heterosexual desire.The structure of this particular metanarrative of infantile development figures sexual dispositions as the -prediscursive, temporally primary, and ontologically discrete drives -which have a purpose and, hence, a meaning prior to their emergence -into language and culture. The very entry into the cultural field -deflects that desire from its original meaning, with the consequence -that desire within culture is, of necessity, a series of displacements. -Thus, the repressive law effectively produces heterosexuality, and acts -not merely as a negative or exclusionary code, but as a sanction and, -~ -most pertinently, as a law of discourse, distinguishing the speakable -from the unspeakable (delimiting and constructing the domain of the -unspeakable), the legitimate from the illegitimate. -iv. Gender Complexity and the Limits -of Identification -The foregoing analyses of Lacan, Riviere, and Freud’s The Ego and the Id -offer competing versions of how gender identifications work—indeed, -of whether they can be said to “work” at all. Can gender complexity -and dissonance be accounted for by the multiplication and convergence of a variety of culturally dissonant identifications? Or is all identification constructed through the exclusion of a sexuality that puts -those identifications into question? In the first instance, multiple identifications can constitute a nonhierarchical configuration of shifting -and overlapping identifications that call into question the primacy of -any univocal gender attribution. In the Lacanian framework, identification is understood to be fixed within the binary disjunction of “having” -or “being” the Phallus, with the consequence that the excluded term of -the binary continually haunts and disrupts the coherent posturing of -any one. The excluded term is an excluded sexuality that contests the -self-grounding pretensions of the subject as well as its claims to know -the source and object of its desire. -For the most part, feminist critics concerned with the psychoanalytic problematic of identification have often focused on the question -of a maternal identification and sought to elaborate a feminist epistemological position from that maternal identification and/or a maternal discourse evolved from the point of view of that identification and -its difficulties. Although much of that work is extremely significant and -clearly influential, it has come to occupy a hegemonic position within -the emerging canon of feminist theory. Further, it tends to reinforce -precisely the binary, heterosexist framework that carves up genders -into masculine and feminine and forecloses an adequate description of -the kinds of subversive and parodic convergences that characterize gay -~ -and lesbian cultures. As a very partial effort to come to terms with that -maternalist discourse, however, Julia Kristeva’s description of the -semiotic as a maternal subversion of the Symbolic will be examined in -the following chapter. -What critical strategies and sources of subversion appear as the -consequence of the psychoanalytic accounts considered so far? The -recourse to the unconscious as a source of subversion makes sense, it -seems, only if the paternal law is understood as a rigid and universal -determinism which makes of “identity” a fixed and phantasmatic affair. -Even if we accept the phantasmatic content of identity, there is no reason to assume that the law which fixes the terms of that fantasy is -impervious to historical variability and possibility. -As opposed to the founding Law of the Symbolic that fixes identity -in advance, we might reconsider the history of constitutive identifications without the presupposition of a fixed and founding Law. Although -the “universality” of the paternal law may be contested within anthropological circles, it seems important to consider that the meaning that the -law sustains in any given historical context is less univocal and less -deterministically efficacious than the Lacanian account appears to -acknowledge. It should be possible to offer a schematic of the ways in -which a constellation of identifications conforms or fails to conform to -culturally imposed standards of gender integrity.The constitutive identifications of an autobiographical narrative are always partially fabricated in the telling. Lacan claims that we can never tell the story of our -origins, precisely because language bars the speaking subject from the -repressed libidinal origins of its speech; however, the foundational -moment in which the paternal law institutes the subject seems to function as a metahistory which we not only can but ought to tell, even -though the founding moments of the subject, the institution of the law, -is as equally prior to the speaking subject as the unconscious itself. -The alternative perspective on identification that emerges from -psychoanalytic theory suggests that multiple and coexisting identifications produce conflicts, convergences, and innovative dissonances -~ -within gender configurations which contest the fixity of masculine and -feminine placements with respect to the paternal law. In effect, the -possibility of multiple identifications (which are not finally reducible -to primary or founding identifications that are fixed within masculine -and feminine positions) suggests that the Law is not deterministic and -that “the” law may not even be singular. -The debate over the meaning or subversive possibilities of identifications so far has left unclear exactly where those identifications are to -be found.The interior psychic space in which identifications are said to -be preserved makes sense only if we can understand that interior space -as a phantasized locale that serves yet another psychic function. In -agreement with Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok it seems, psychoanalyst Roy Schafer argues that “incorporation” is a fantasy and not a -process; the interior space into which an object is taken is imagined, -and imagined within a language that can conjure and reify such -spaces.38 If the identifications sustained through melancholy are -“incorporated,” then the question remains: Where is this incorporated -space? If it is not literally within the body, perhaps it is on the body as -its surface signification such that the body must itself be understood as -an incorporated space. -Abraham and Torok have argued that introjection is a process that -serves the work of mourning (where the object is not only lost, but -acknowledged as lost).39 Incorporation, on the other hand, belongs -more properly to melancholy, the state of disavowed or suspended -grief in which the object is magically sustained “in the body” in some -way. Abraham and Torok suggest that introjection of the loss characteristic of mourning establishes an empty space, literalized by the empty -mouth which becomes the condition of speech and signification. The -successful displacement of the libido from the lost object is achieved -through the formation of words which both signify and displace that -object; this displacement from the original object is an essentially -metaphorical activity in which words “figure” the absence and surpass -~ -poration, which denotes a magical resolution of loss, characterizes -melancholy.Whereas introjection founds the possibility of metaphorical signification, incorporation is antimetaphorical precisely because it -maintains the loss as radically unnameable; in other words, incorporation is not only a failure to name or avow the loss, but erodes the conditions of metaphorical signification itself. -As in the Lacanian perspective, for Abraham and Torok the repudiation of the maternal body is the condition of signification within the -Symbolic. They argue further that this primary repression founds the -possibility of individuation and of significant speech, where speech is -necessarily metaphorical, in the sense that the referent, the object of -desire, is a perpetual displacement. In effect, the loss of the maternal -body as an object of love is understood to establish the empty space out -of which words originate. But the refusal of this loss—melancholy— -results in the failure to displace into words; indeed, the place of the -maternal body is established in the body, “encrypted,” to use their term, -and given permanent residence there as a dead and deadening part of -the body or one inhabited or possessed by phantasms of various kinds. -When we consider gender identity as a melancholic structure, it -makes sense to choose “incorporation” as the manner by which that -identification is accomplished. Indeed, according to the scheme above, -gender identity would be established through a refusal of loss that -encrypts itself in the body and that determines, in effect, the living -versus the dead body. As an antimetaphorical activity, incorporation -literalizes the loss on or in the body and so appears as the facticity of the -body, the means by which the body comes to bear “sex” as its literal -truth. The localization and/or prohibition of pleasures and desires in -given “erotogenic” zones is precisely the kind of gender-differentiating -melancholy that suffuses the body’s surface.The loss of the pleasurable -object is resolved through the incorporation of that very pleasure with -the result that pleasure is both determined and prohibited through the -compulsory effects of the gender-differentiating law. -The incest taboo is, of course, more inclusive than the taboo against -~ -homosexuality, but in the case of the heterosexual incest taboo through -which heterosexual identity is established, the loss is borne as grief. In -the case of the prohibition against homosexual incest through which -heterosexual identity is established, however, the loss is sustained -through a melancholic structure. The loss of the heterosexual object, -argues Freud, results in the displacement of that object, but not the heterosexual aim; on the other hand, the loss of the homosexual object -requires the loss of the aim and the object. In other words, the object is -not only lost, but the desire fully denied, such that “I never lost that person and I never loved that person, indeed never felt that kind of love at -all.” The melancholic preservation of that love is all the more securely -safeguarded through the totalizing trajectory of the denial. -Irigaray’s argument that in Freud’s work the structures of melancholy and of developed femininity are very similar refers to the -denial of both object and aim that constitutes the “double wave” of -repression characteristic of a fully developed femininity. For Irigaray, it -is the recognition of castration that initiates the young girl into “a -‘loss’ that radically escapes any representation.”40 Melancholia is thus a -psychoanalytic norm for women, one that rests upon her ostensible -desire to have the penis, a desire which, conveniently, can no longer be -felt or known. -Irigaray’s reading, full of mocking citations, is right to debunk the -developmental claims regarding sexuality and femininity that clearly -pervade Freud’s text. As she also shows, there are possible readings of -that theory that exceed, invert, and displace Freud’s stated aims. -Consider that the refusal of the homosexual cathexis, desire and aim -together, a refusal both compelled by social taboo and appropriated -through developmental stages, results in a melancholic structure -which effectively encloses that aim and object within the corporeal -space or “crypt” established through an abiding denial. If the heterosexual denial of homosexuality results in melancholia and if melancholia -operates through incorporation, then the disavowed homosexual love -~ -der identity. In other words, disavowed male homosexuality culminates in a heightened or consolidated masculinity, one which maintains -the feminine as the unthinkable and unnameable.The acknowledgment -of heterosexual desire, however, leads to a displacement from an original to a secondary object, precisely the kind of libidinal detachment -and reattachment that Freud affirms as the character of normal grief. -Clearly, a homosexual for whom heterosexual desire is unthinkable -may well maintain that heterosexuality through a melancholic structure -of incorporation, an identification and embodiment of the love that is -neither acknowledged nor grieved. But here it becomes clear that the -heterosexual refusal to acknowledge the primary homosexual attachment is culturally enforced by a prohibition on homosexuality which is -in no way paralleled in the case of the melancholic homosexual. In -other words, heterosexual melancholy is culturally instituted and maintained as the price of stable gender identities related through oppositional desires. -But what language of surface and depth adequately expresses this -incorporating effect of melancholy? A preliminary answer to this question is possible within the psychoanalytic discourse, but a fuller understanding will lead in the last chapter to a consideration of gender as an -enactment that performatively constitutes the appearance of its own -interior fixity. At this point, however, the contention that incorporation -is a fantasy suggests that the incorporation of an identification is a fantasy of literalization or a literalizing fantasy.41 Precisely by virtue of its -melancholic structure, this literalization of the body conceals its genealogy and offers itself under the category of “natural fact.” -What does it mean to sustain a literalizing fantasy? If gender differentiation follows upon the incest taboo and the prior taboo on homosexuality, then “becoming” a gender is a laborious process of becoming -naturalized, which requires a differentiation of bodily pleasures and -parts on the basis of gendered meanings. Pleasures are said to reside in -the penis, the vagina, and the breasts or to emanate from them, but such -descriptions correspond to a body which has already been constructed -~ -or naturalized as gender-specific. In other words, some parts of the -body become conceivable foci of pleasure precisely because they correspond to a normative ideal of a gender-specific body. Pleasures are in -some sense determined by the melancholic structure of gender whereby some organs are deadened to pleasure, and others brought to life. -Which pleasures shall live and which shall die is often a matter of which -serve the legitimating practices of identity formation that take place -within the matrix of gender norms.42 -Transsexuals often claim a radical discontinuity between sexual -pleasures and bodily parts.Very often what is wanted in terms of pleasure requires an imaginary participation in body parts, either appendages or orifices, that one might not actually possess, or, similarly, -pleasure may require imagining an exaggerated or diminished set of -parts.The imaginary status of desire, of course, is not restricted to the -transsexual identity; the phantasmatic nature of desire reveals the body -not as its ground or cause, but as its occasion and its object. The strategy -of desire is in part the transfiguration of the desiring body itself. -Indeed, in order to desire at all it may be necessary to believe in an -altered bodily ego43 which, within the gendered rules of the imaginary, -might fit the requirements of a body capable of desire. This imaginary -condition of desire always exceeds the physical body through or on -which it works. -Always already a cultural sign, the body sets limits to the imaginary meanings that it occasions, but is never free of an imaginary construction. The fantasized body can never be understood in relation to -the body as real; it can only be understood in relation to another culturally instituted fantasy, one which claims the place of the “literal” and -the “real.” The limits to the “real” are produced within the naturalized -heterosexualization of bodies in which physical facts serve as causes -and desires reflect the inexorable effects of that physicality. -The conflation of desire with the real—that is, the belief that it is -parts of the body, the “literal” penis, the “literal” vagina, which cause -~ -acteristic of the syndrome of melancholic heterosexuality. The disavowed homosexuality at the base of melancholic heterosexuality -reemerges as the self-evident anatomical facticity of sex, where “sex” -designates the blurred unity of anatomy, “natural identity,” and “natural -desire.” The loss is denied and incorporated, and the genealogy of that -transmutation fully forgotten and repressed. The sexed surface of the -body thus emerges as the necessary sign of a natural(ized) identity and -desire. The loss of homosexuality is refused and the love sustained or -encrypted in the parts of the body itself, literalized in the ostensible -anatomical facticity of sex. Here we see the general strategy of literalization as a form of forgetfulness, which, in the case of a literalized -sexual anatomy, “forgets” the imaginary and, with it, an imaginable -homosexuality. In the case of the melancholic heterosexual male, he -never loved another man, he is a man, and he can seek recourse to the -empirical facts that will prove it. But the literalization of anatomy not -only proves nothing, but is a literalizing restriction of pleasure in the -very organ that is championed as the sign of masculine identity. The -love for the father is stored in the penis, safeguarded through an -impervious denial, and the desire which now centers on that penis has -that continual denial as its structure and its task. Indeed, the womanas-object must be the sign that he not only never felt homosexual -desire, but never felt the grief over its loss. Indeed, the woman-as-sign -must effectively displace and conceal that preheterosexual history in -favor of one that consecrates a seamless heterosexuality. -v. Reformulating Prohibition as Power -Although Foucault’s genealogical critique of foundationalism has -guided this reading of Lévi-Strauss, Freud, and the heterosexual -matrix, an even more precise understanding is needed of how the -juridical law of psychoanalysis, repression, produces and proliferates -the genders it seeks to control. Feminist theorists have been drawn to -the psychoanalytic account of sexual difference in part because the -Oedipal and pre-Oedipal dynamics appear to offer a way to trace the -~ -primary construction of gender. Can the prohibition against incest that -proscribes and sanctions hierarchial and binary gendered positions be -reconceived as a productive power that inadvertently generates several -cultural configurations of gender? Is the incest taboo subject to the critique of the repressive hypothesis that Foucault provides? What would -a feminist deployment of that critique look like? Would such a critique -mobilize the project to confound the binary restrictions on sex/gender imposed by the heterosexual matrix? Clearly, one of the most -influential feminist readings of Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, and Freud is Gayle -Rubin’s “The Traffic of Women: The ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” published in 1975.44 Although Foucault does not appear in that article, -Rubin effectively sets the stage for a Foucaultian critique.That she herself later appropriates Foucault for her own work in radical sexual theory45 retrospectively raises the question of how that influential article -might be rewritten within a Foucaultian frame. -Foucault’s analysis of the culturally productive possibilities of the -prohibitive law clearly takes its bearing within the existing theory on -sublimation articulated by Freud in Civilization and its Discontents and -reinterpreted by Marcuse in Eros and Civilization. Both Freud and -Marcuse identify the productive effects of sublimation, arguing that cultural artifacts and institutions are the effects of sublimated Eros. -Although Freud saw the sublimation of sexuality as producing a general -“discontent,” Marcuse subordinates Eros to Logos in Platonic fashion -and saw in the act of sublimation the most satisfying expression of the -human spirit. In a radical departure from these theories of sublimation, -however, Foucault argues on behalf of a productive law without the postulation of an original desire; the operation of this law is justified and -consolidated through the construction of a narrative account of its own -genealogy which effectively masks its own immersion in power relations. The incest taboo, then, would repress no primary dispositions, -but effectively create the distinction between “primary” and “secondary” -dispositions to describe and reproduce the distinction between a legitimate heterosexuality and an illegitimate homosexuality. Indeed, if we -~ -conceive of the incest taboo as primarily productive in its effects, then -the prohibition that founds the “subject” and survives as the law of its -desire becomes the means by which identity, particularly gender identity, is constituted. -Underscoring the incest taboo as both a prohibition and a sanction, Rubin writes: -the incest taboo imposes the social aim of exogamy and alliance upon -the biological events of sex and procreation.The incest taboo divides -the universe of sexual choice into categories of permitted and prohibited sexual partners. (173) - -Because all cultures seek to reproduce themselves, and because the -particular social identity of the kinship group must be preserved, -exogamy is instituted and, as its presupposition, so is exogamic heterosexuality. Hence, the incest taboo not only forbids sexual union -between members of the same kinship line, but involves a taboo -against homosexuality as well. Rubin writes: -the incest taboo presupposes a prior, less articulate taboo on homosexuality. A prohibition against some heterosexual unions assumes a -taboo against nonheterosexual unions. Gender is not only an identification with one sex; it also entails that sexual desire be directed -toward the other sex. The sexual division of labor is implicated in -both aspects of gender—male and female it creates them, and it creates them heterosexual. (180) - -Rubin understands psychoanalysis, especially in its Lacanian incarnation, to complement Lévi-Strauss’s description of kinship relations. -In particular, she understands that the “sex/gender system,” the regulated cultural mechanism of transforming biological males and females -into discrete and hierarchized genders, is at once mandated by cultural -institutions (the family, the residual forms of “the exchange of -women,” obligatory heterosexuality) and inculcated through the laws -which structure and propel individual psychic development. Hence, -~ -the Oedipal complex instantiates and executes the cultural taboo -against incest and results in discrete gender identification and a corollary heterosexual disposition. In this essay, Rubin further maintains -that before the transformation of a biological male or female into a -gendered man or woman, “each child contains all of the sexual possibilities available to human expression” (189). -The effort to locate and describe a sexuality “before the law” as a -primary bisexuality or as an ideal and unconstrained polymorphousness implies that the law is antecedent to sexuality. As a restriction of -an originary fullness, the law prohibits some set of prepunitive sexual -possibilities and the sanctioning of others. But if we apply the -Foucaultian critique of the repressive hypothesis to the incest taboo, -that paradigmatic law of repression, then it would appear that the law -produces both sanctioned heterosexuality and transgressive homosexuality. Both are indeed effects, temporally and ontologically later than -the law itself, and the illusion of a sexuality before the law is itself the -creation of that law. -Rubin’s essay remains committed to a distinction between sex and -gender which assumes the discrete and prior ontological reality of a -“sex” which is done over in the name of the law, that is, transformed -subsequently into “gender.”This narrative of gender acquisition requires -a certain temporal ordering of events which assumes that the narrator is -in some position to “know” both what is before and after the law. And -yet the narration takes place within a language which, strictly speaking, -is after the law, the consequence of the law, and so proceeds from a -belated and retrospective point of view. If this language is structured by -the law, and the law is exemplified, indeed, enacted in the language, -then the description, the narration, not only cannot know what is outside itself—that is, prior to the law—but its description of that “before” -will always be in the service of the “after.” In other words, not only does -the narration claim access to a “before” from which it is definitionally -(by virtue of its linguisticality) precluded, but the description of the - -~ -“before” takes place within the terms of the “after” and, hence, becomes -an attenuation of the law itself into the site of its absence. -Although Rubin claims that the unlimited universe of sexual possibilities exists for the pre-Oedipal child, she does not subscribe to a -primary bisexuality. Indeed, bisexuality is the consequence of childrearing practices in which parents of both sexes are present and -presently occupied with child care and in which the repudiation of -femininity no longer serves as a precondition of gender identity for -both men and women (199).When Rubin calls for a “revolution in kinship,” she envisions the eradication of the exchange of women, the -traces of which are evident not only in the contemporary institutionalization of heterosexuality, but in the residual psychic norms (the institutionalization of the psyche) which sanction and construct sexuality -and gender identity in heterosexual terms. With the loosening of the -compulsory character of heterosexuality and the simultaneous emergence of bisexual and homosexual cultural possibilities for behavior -and identity, Rubin envisions the overthrow of gender itself (204). -Inasmuch as gender is the cultural transformation of a biological polysexuality into a culturally mandated heterosexuality and inasmuch as -that heterosexuality deploys discrete and hierarchized gender identities -to accomplish its aim, then the breakdown of the compulsory character -of heterosexuality would imply, for Rubin, the corollary breakdown of -gender itself. Whether or not gender can be fully eradicated and in -what sense its “breakdown” is culturally imaginable remain intriguing -but unclarified implications of her analysis. -Rubin’s argument rests on the possibility that the law can be effectively overthrown and that the cultural interpretation of differently -sexed bodies can proceed, ideally, without reference to gender disparity. That systems of compulsory heterosexuality may alter, and indeed -have changed, and that the exchange of women, in whatever residual -form, need not always determine heterosexual exchange, seems clear; -in this sense, Rubin recognizes the misogynist implications of Lévi- - -~ -Strauss’s notoriously nondiachronic structuralism. But what leads -her to the conclusion that gender is merely a function of compulsory -heterosexuality and that without that compulsory status, the field of -bodies would no longer be marked in gendered terms? Clearly, Rubin -has already envisioned an alternative sexual world, one which is attributed to a utopian stage in infantile development, a “before” the law -which promises to reemerge “after” the demise or dispersal of that law. -If we accept the Foucaultian and Derridean criticisms of the viability of -knowing or referring to such a “before,” how would we revise this narrative of gender acquisition? If we reject the postulation of an ideal -sexuality prior to the incest taboo, and if we also refuse to accept the -structuralist premise of the cultural permanence of that taboo, what -relation between sexuality and the law remains for the description of -gender? Do we need recourse to a happier state before the law in order -to maintain that contemporary gender relations and the punitive production of gender identities are oppressive? -Foucault’s critique of the repressive-hypothesis in The History of -Sexuality,Volume I argues that (a) the structuralist “law” might be understood as one formation of power, a specific historical configuration and -that (b) the law might be understood to produce or generate the desire -it is said to repress.The object of repression is not the desire it takes to be -its ostensible object, but the multiple configurations of power itself, the -very plurality of which would displace the seeming universality and -necessity of the juridical or repressive law. In other words, desire and its -repression are an occasion for the consolidation of juridical structures; -desire is manufactured and forbidden as a ritual symbolic gesture -whereby the juridical model exercises and consolidates its own power. -The incest taboo is the juridical law that is said both to prohibit -incestuous desires and to construct certain gendered subjectivities -through the mechanism of compulsory identification. But what is to -guarantee the universality or necessity of this law? Clearly, there are -anthropological debates that seek to affirm and to dispute the universality of the incest taboo,46 and there is a second-order dispute over -~ -what, if anything, the claim to universality might imply about the -meaning of social processes.47 To claim that a law is universal is not to -claim that it operates in the same way crossculturally or that it determines social life in some unilateral way. Indeed, the attribution of universality to a law may simply imply that it operates as a dominant -framework within which social relations take place. Indeed, to claim -the universal presence of a law in social life is in no way to claim that it -exists in every aspect of the social form under consideration; minimally, it means that it exists and operates somewhere in every social form. -My task here is not to show that there are cultures in which the -incest taboo as such does not operate, but rather to underscore the -generativity of that taboo, where it does operate, and not merely its -juridical status. In other words, not only does the taboo forbid and dictate sexuality in certain forms, but it inadvertently produces a variety -of substitute desires and identities that are in no sense constrained in -advance, except insofar as they are “substitutes” in some sense. If we -extend the Foucaultian critique to the incest taboo, then it seems that -the taboo and the original desire for mother/father can be historicized -in ways that resist the formulaic universality of Lacan.The taboo might -be understood to create and sustain the desire for the mother/father as -well as the compulsory displacement of that desire. The notion of an -“original” sexuality forever repressed and forbidden thus becomes a -production of the law which subsequently functions as its prohibition. -If the mother is the original desire, and that may well be true for a -wide range of late-capitalist household dwellers, then that is a desire -both produced and prohibited within the terms of that cultural context. In other words, the law which prohibits that union is the selfsame -law that invites it, and it is no longer possible to isolate the repressive -from the productive function of the juridical incest taboo. -Clearly, psychoanalytic theory has always recognized the productive function of the incest taboo; it is what creates heterosexual desire -and discrete gender identity. Psychoanalysis has also been clear that -the incest taboo does not always operate to produce gender and desire -~ -in the ways intended. The example of the negative Oedipal complex -is but one occasion in which the prohibition against incest is clearly -stronger with respect to the opposite-sexed parent than the same-sexed -parent, and the parent prohibited becomes the figure of identification. -But how would this example be redescribed within the conception of -the incest taboo as both juridical and generative? The desire for the parent who, tabooed, becomes the figure of identification is both produced -and denied by the same mechanism of power. But for what end? If the -incest taboo regulates the production of discrete gender identities, and -if that production requires the prohibition and sanction of heterosexuality, then homosexuality emerges as a desire which must be produced -in order to remain repressed. In other words, for heterosexuality to -remain intact as a distinct social form, it requires an intelligible conception of homosexuality and also requires the prohibition of that conception in rendering it culturally unintelligible. Within psychoanalysis, -bisexuality and homosexuality are taken to be primary libidinal dispositions, and heterosexuality is the laborious construction based upon -their gradual repression.While this doctrine seems to have a subversive -possibility to it, the discursive construction of both bisexuality and -homosexuality within the psychoanalytic literature effectively refutes -the claim to its precultural status. The discussion of the language of -bisexual dispositions above is a case in point.48 -The bisexuality that is said to be “outside” the Symbolic and that serves -as the locus of subversion is, in fact, a construction within the terms of -that constitutive discourse, the construction of an “outside” that is nevertheless fully “inside,” not a possibility beyond culture, but a concrete -cultural possibility that is refused and redescribed as impossible.What -remains “unthinkable” and “unsayable” within the terms of an existing -cultural form is not necessarily what is excluded from the matrix of -intelligibility within that form; on the contrary, it is the marginalized, -not the excluded, the cultural possibility that calls for dread or, mini- - -~ -mally, the loss of sanctions. Not to have social recognition as an effective heterosexual is to lose one possible social identity and perhaps to -gain one that is radically less sanctioned.The “unthinkable” is thus fully -within culture, but fully excluded from dominant culture. The theory -which presumes bisexuality or homosexuality as the “before” to culture and then locates that “priority” as the source of a prediscursive -subversion, effectively forbids from within the terms of the culture the -very subversion that it ambivalently defends and defends against. As I -will argue in the case of Kristeva, subversion thus becomes a futile gesture, entertained only in a derealized aesthetic mode which can never -be translated into other cultural practices. -In the case of the incest taboo, Lacan argues that desire (as opposed -to need) is instituted through that law. “Intelligible” existence within the -terms of the Symbolic requires both the institutionalization of desire -and its dissatisfaction, the necessary consequence of the repression of -the original pleasure and need associated with the maternal body. This -full pleasure that haunts desire as that which it can never attain is the -irrecoverable memory of pleasure before the law. Lacan is clear that -that pleasure before the law is only fantasized, that it recurs in the infinite phantasms of desire. But in what sense is the phantasm, itself forbidden from the literal recovery of an original pleasure, the constitution -of a fantasy of “originality” that may or may not correspond to a literal -libidinal state? Indeed, to what extent is such a question decidable within the terms of Lacanian theory? A displacement or substitution can -only be understood as such in relation to an original, one which in this -case can never be recovered or known.This speculative origin is always -speculated about from a retrospective position, from which it assumes -the character of an ideal.The sanctification of this pleasurable “beyond” -is instituted through the invocation of a Symbolic order that is essentially unchangeable.49 Indeed, one needs to read the drama of the -Symbolic, of desire, of the institution of sexual difference as a selfsupporting signifying economy that wields power in the marking off of - -~ -what can and cannot be thought within the terms of cultural intelligibility. Mobilizing the distinction between what is “before” and what is -“during” culture is one way to foreclose cultural possibilities from the -start. The “order of appearances,” the founding temporality of the -account, as much as it contests narrative coherence by introducing the -split into the subject and the fêlure into desire, reinstitutes a coherence -at the level of temporal exposition. As a result, this narrative strategy, -revolving upon the distinction between an irrecoverable origin and a -perpetually displaced present, makes all effort at recovering that origin -in the name of subversion inevitably belated. - -~ -3 - -Subversive Bodily Acts -i. The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva -Kristeva’s theory of the semiotic dimension of language at first appears -to engage Lacanian premises only to expose their limits and to offer a -specifically feminine locus of subversion of the paternal law within language.1 According to Lacan, the paternal law structures all linguistic signification, termed “the Symbolic,” and so becomes a universal organizing -principle of culture itself. This law creates the possibility of meaningful -language and, hence, meaningful experience, through the repression of -primary libidinal drives, including the radical dependency of the child -on the maternal body. Hence, the Symbolic becomes possible by repudiating the primary relationship to the maternal body. The “subject” who -emerges as a consequence of this repression becomes a bearer or proponent of this repressive law.The libidinal chaos characteristic of that early -dependency is now fully constrained by a unitary agent whose language -is structured by that law.This language, in turn, structures the world by -suppressing multiple meanings (which always recall the libidinal multiplicity which characterized the primary relation to the maternal body) -and instating univocal and discrete meanings in their place. -Kristeva challenges the Lacanian narrative which assumes cultural -meaning requires the repression of that primary relationship to the -maternal body. She argues that the “semiotic” is a dimension of language -occasioned by that primary maternal body, which not only refutes -Lacan’s primary premise, but serves as a perpetual source of subversion -within the Symbolic. For Kristeva, the semiotic expresses that original -~ -libidinal multiplicity within the very terms of culture, more precisely, -within poetic language in which multiple meanings and semantic nonclosure prevail. In effect, poetic language is the recovery of the maternal body within the terms of language, one that has the potential to -disrupt, subvert, and displace the paternal law. -Despite her critique of Lacan, however, Kristeva’s strategy of subversion proves doubtful. Her theory appears to depend upon the stability and reproduction of precisely the paternal law that she seeks to -displace. Although she effectively exposes the limits of Lacan’s efforts -to universalize the paternal law in language, she nevertheless concedes -that the semiotic is invariably subordinate to the Symbolic, that it -assumes its specificity within the terms of a hierarchy immune to challenge. If the semiotic promotes the possibility of the subversion, displacement, or disruption of the paternal law, what meanings can those -terms have if the Symbolic always reasserts its hegemony? -The criticism of Kristeva which follows takes issue with several -steps in Kristeva’s argument in favor of the semiotic as a source of -effective subversion. First, it is unclear whether the primary relationship to the maternal body which both Kristeva and Lacan appear to -accept is a viable construct and whether it is even a knowable experience according to either of their linguistic theories. The multiple -drives that characterize the semiotic constitute a prediscursive libidinal economy which occasionally makes itself known in language, but -which maintains an ontological status prior to language itself. Manifest -in language, in poetic language in particular, this prediscursive libidinal -economy becomes a locus of cultural subversion. A second problem -emerges when Kristeva argues that this libidinal source of subversion -cannot be maintained within the terms of culture, that its sustained -presence within culture leads to psychosis and to the breakdown of -cultural life itself. Kristeva thus alternately posits and denies the semiotic as an emancipatory ideal.Though she tells us that it is a dimension -of language regularly repressed, she also concedes that it is a kind of -language which never can be consistently maintained. -~ -In order to assess her seemingly self-defeating theory, we need to -ask how this libidinal multiplicity becomes manifest in language, and -what conditions its temporary lifespan there? Moreover, Kristeva -describes the maternal body as bearing a set of meanings that are prior -to culture itself. She thereby safeguards the notion of culture as a -paternal structure and delimits maternity as an essentially precultural -reality. Her naturalistic descriptions of the maternal body effectively -reify motherhood and preclude an analysis of its cultural construction -and variability. In asking whether a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity -is possible, we will also consider whether what Kristeva claims to discover in the prediscursive maternal body is itself a production of a -given historical discourse, an effect of culture rather than its secret and -primary cause. -Even if we accept Kristeva’s theory of primary drives, it is unclear -that the subversive effects of such drives can serve, via the semiotic, as -anything more than a temporary and futile disruption of the hegemony -of the paternal law. I will try to show how the failure of her political -strategy follows in part from her largely uncritical appropriation of -drive theory. Moreover, upon careful scrutiny of her descriptions of -the semiotic function within language, it appears that Kristeva reinstates the paternal law at the level of the semiotic itself. In the end, it -seems that Kristeva offers us a strategy of subversion that can never -become a sustained political practice. In the final part of this section, I -will suggest a way to reconceptualize the relation between drives, language, and patriarchal prerogative which might serve a more effective -strategy of subversion. -Kristeva’s description of the semiotic proceeds through a number -of problematic steps. She assumes that drives have aims prior to their -emergence into language, that language invariably represses or sublimates these drives, and that such drives are manifest only in those linguistic expressions which disobey, as it were, the univocal requirements -of signification within the Symbolic domain. She claims further that -the emergence of multiplicitous drives into language is evident in the -~ -semiotic, that domain of linguistic meaning distinct from the Symbolic, -which is the maternal body manifest in poetic speech. -As early as Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), Kristeva argues for -a necessary causal relation between the heterogeneity of drives and the -plurivocal possibilities of poetic language. Differing from Lacan, she -maintains that poetic language is not predicated upon a repression of -primary drives. On the contrary, poetic language, she claims, is the linguistic occasion on which drives break apart the usual, univocal terms -of language and reveal an irrepressible heterogeneity of multiple -sounds and meanings. Kristeva thereby contests Lacan’s equation of -the Symbolic with all linguistic meaning by asserting that poetic language has its own modality of meaning which does not conform to the -requirements of univocal designation. -In this same work, she subscribes to a notion of free or uncathected energy which makes itself known in language through the poetic -function. She claims, for instance, that “in the intermingling of drives -in language . . . we shall see the economy of poetic language” and that -in this economy, “the unitary subject can no longer find his [sic] -place.”2 This poetic function is a rejective or divisive linguistic function which tends to fracture and multiply meanings; it enacts the heterogeneity of drives through the proliferation and destruction of -univocal signification. Hence, the urge toward a highly differentiated -or plurivocal set of meanings appears as the revenge of drives against -the rule of the Symbolic, which, in turn, is predicated upon their -repression. Kristeva defines the semiotic as the multiplicity of drives -manifest in language. With their insistent energy and heterogeneity, -these drives disrupt the signifying function. Thus, in this early work, -she defines the semiotic as “the signifying function . . . connected to -the modality [of] primary process.”3 -In the essays that comprise Desire in Language (1977), Kristeva -ground her definition of the semiotic more fully in psychoanalytic -terms.The primary drives that the Symbolic represses and the semiotic -obliquely indicates are now understood as maternal drives, not only -~ -those drives belonging to the mother, but those which characterize the -dependency of the infant’s body (of either sex) on the mother. In other -words, “the maternal body” designates a relation of continuity rather -than a discrete subject or object of desire; indeed, it designates that -jouissance which precedes desire and the subject/object dichotomy that -desire presupposes. While the Symbolic is predicated upon the rejection of the mother, the semiotic, through rhythm, assonance, intonations, sound play, and repetition, re-presents or recovers the maternal -body in poetic speech. Even the “first echolalias of infants” and the -“glossalalias in psychotic discourse” are manifestations of the continuity of the mother-infant relation, a heterogeneous field of impulse -prior to the separation/individuation of infant and mother, alike -effected by the imposition of the incest taboo.4 The separation of the -mother and infant effected by the taboo is expressed linguistically as -the severing of sound from sense. In Kristeva’s words, “a phoneme, as -distinctive element of meaning, belongs to language as Symbolic. But -this same phoneme is involved in rhythmic, intonational repetitions; it -thereby tends toward autonomy from meaning so as to maintain itself -in a semiotic disposition near the instinctual drive’s body.”5 -The semiotic is described by Kristeva as destroying or eroding the -Symbolic; it is said to be “before” meaning, as when a child begins to -vocalize, or “after” meaning, as when a psychotic no longer uses words -to signify. If the Symbolic and the semiotic are understood as two -modalities of language, and if the semiotic is understood to be generally repressed by the Symbolic, then language for Kristeva is understood -as a system in which the Symbolic remains hegemonic except when the -semiotic disrupts its signifying process through elision, repetition, -mere sound, and the multiplication of meaning through indefinitely -signifying images and metaphors. In its Symbolic mode, language rests -upon a severance of the relation of maternal dependency, whereby it -becomes abstract (abstracted from the materiality of language) and -univocal; this is most apparent in quantitative or purely formal reasoning. In its semiotic mode, language is engaged in a poetic recovery of -~ -the maternal body, that diffuse materiality that resists all discrete and -univocal signification. Kristeva writes: -In any poetic language, not only do the rhythmic constraints, for -example, go so far as to violate certain grammatical rules of a national language . . . but in recent texts, these semiotic constraints -(rhythm, vocalic timbres in Symbolist work, but also graphic disposition on the page) are accompanied by nonrecoverable syntactic -elisions; it is impossible to reconstitute the particular elided syntactic category (object or verb), which makes the meaning of the utterance decidable.6 - -For Kristeva, this undecidability is precisely the instinctual moment in language, its disruptive function. Poetic language thus suggests -a dissolution of the coherent, signifying subject into the primary continuity which is the maternal body: -Language as Symbolic function constitutes itself at the cost of repressing instinctual drive and continuous relation to the mother. On the -contrary, the unsettled and questionable subject of poetic language -(from whom the word is never uniquely sign) maintains itself at the -cost of reactivating this repressed, instinctual, maternal element.7 - -Kristeva’s references to the “subject” of poetic language are not wholly -appropriate, for poetic language erodes and destroys the subject, -where the subject is understood as a speaking being participating in the -Symbolic. Following Lacan, she maintains that the prohibition against -the incestuous union with the mother is the founding law of the subject, a foundation which severs or breaks the continuous relation of -maternal dependency. In creating the subject, the prohibitive law creates the domain of the Symbolic or language as a system of univocally -signifying signs. Hence, Kristeva concludes that “poetic language -would be for its questionable subject-in-process the equivalent of -incest.”8 The breaking of Symbolic language against its own founding -law or, equivalently, the emergence of rupture into language from -~ -within its own interior instinctuality, is not merely the outburst of -libidinal heterogeneity into language; it also signifies the somatic state -of dependency on the maternal body prior to the individuation of the -ego. Poetic language thus always indicates a return to the maternal terrain, where the maternal signifies both libidinal dependency and the -heterogeneity of drives. -In “Motherhood According to Bellini,” Kristeva suggests that, -because the maternal body signifies the loss of coherent and discrete -identity, poetic language verges on psychosis. And in the case of a -woman’s semiotic expressions in language, the return to the maternal -signifies a prediscursive homosexuality that Kristeva also clearly associates with psychosis. Although Kristeva concedes that poetic language -is sustained culturally through its participation in the Symbolic and, -hence, in the norms of linguistic communicability, she fails to allow -that homosexuality is capable of the same nonpsychotic social expression.The key to Kristeva’s view of the psychotic nature of homosexuality is to be understood, I would suggest, in her acceptance of the -structuralist assumption that heterosexuality is coextensive with the -founding of the Symbolic. Hence, the cathexis of homosexual desire -can be achieved, according to Kristeva, only through displacements -that are sanctioned within the Symbolic, such as poetic language or the -act of giving birth: -By giving birth, the women enters into contact with her mother; she -becomes, she is her own mother; they are the same continuity differentiating itself. She thus actualizes the homosexual facet of motherhood, through which a woman is simultaneously closer to her -instinctual memory, more open to her psychosis, and consequently, -more negatory of the social, symbolic bond.9 - -According to Kristeva, the act of giving birth does not successfully -reestablish that continuous relation prior to individuation because -the infant invariably suffers the prohibition on incest and is separated -off as a discrete identity. In the case of the mother’s separation from -~ -the girl-child, the result is melancholy for both, for the separation is -never fully completed. -As opposed to grief or mourning, in which separation is recognized and the libido attached to the original object is successfully displaced onto a new substitute object, melancholy designates a failure to -grieve in which the loss is simply internalized and, in that sense, -refused. Instead of a negative attachment to the body, the maternal body -is internalized as a negation, so that the girl’s identity becomes itself a -kind of loss, a characteristic privation or lack. -The alleged psychosis of homosexuality, then, consists in its thorough break with the paternal law and with the grounding of the female -“ego,” tenuous though it may be, in the melancholic response to separation from the maternal body. Hence, according to Kristeva, female -homosexuality is the emergence of psychosis into culture: -The homosexual-maternal facet is a whirl of words, a complete -absence of meaning and seeing; it is feeling, displacement, rhythm, -sound, flashes, and fantasied clinging to the maternal body as a -screen against the plunge . . . for woman, a paradise lost but seemingly close at hand.10 - -For women, however, this homosexuality is manifest in poetic language which becomes, in fact, the only form of the semiotic, besides -childbirth, which can be sustained within the terms of the Symbolic. -For Kristeva, then, overt homosexuality cannot be a culturally sustainable activity, for it would constitute a breaking of the incest taboo in an -unmediated way. And yet why is this the case? -Kristeva accepts the assumption that culture is equivalent to the -Symbolic, that the Symbolic is fully subsumed under the “Law of the -Father,” and that the only modes of nonpsychotic activity are those -which participate in the Symbolic to some extent. Her strategic task, -then, is neither to replace the Symbolic with the semiotic nor to -~ -tion of the borders which divide the Symbolic from the semiotic. Just -as birth is understood to be a cathexis of instinctual drives for the purposes of a social teleology, so poetic production is conceived as the -site in which the split between instinct and representation exists in -culturally communicable form: -The speaker reaches this limit, this requisite of sociality, only by -virtue of a particular, discursive practice called “art.” A woman also -attains it (and in our society, especially) through the strange form of -split symbolization (threshold of language and instinctual drive, of -the “symbolic” and the “semiotic”) of which the act of giving birth -consists.11 - -Hence, for Kristeva, poetry and maternity represent privileged -practices within paternally sanctioned culture which permit a nonpsychotic experience of that heterogeneity and dependency characteristic -of the maternal terrain.These acts of poesis reveal an instinctual heterogeneity that subsequently exposes the repressed ground of the Symbolic, challenges the mastery of the univocal signifier, and diffuses the -autonomy of the subject who postures as their necessary ground. The -heterogeneity of drives operates culturally as a subversive strategy of -displacement, one which dislodges the hegemony of the paternal law -by releasing the repressed multiplicity interior to language itself. -Precisely because that instinctual heterogeneity must be re-presented -in and through the paternal law, it cannot defy the incest taboo altogether, but must remain within the most fragile regions of the -Symbolic. Obedient, then, to syntactical requirements, the poeticmaternal practices of displacing the paternal law always remain tenuously tethered to that law. Hence, a full-scale refusal of the Symbolic is -impossible, and a discourse of “emancipation,” for Kristeva, is out of -the question. At best, tactical subversions and displacements of the law -challenge its self-grounding presumption. But, once again, Kristeva -does not seriously challenge the structuralist assumption that the -prohibitive paternal law is foundational to culture itself. Hence, the -~ -subversion of paternally sanctioned culture can not come from another -version of culture, but only from within the repressed interior of culture itself, from the heterogeneity of drives that constitutes culture’s -concealed foundation. -This relation between heterogeneous drives and the paternal law -produces an exceedingly problematic view of psychosis. On the one -hand, it designates female homosexuality as a culturally unintelligible -practice, inherently psychotic: on the other hand, it mandates maternity as a compulsory defense against libidinal chaos. Although Kristeva -does not make either claim explicitly, both implications follow from -her views on the law, language, and drives. Consider that for Kristeva -poetic language breaks the incest taboo and, as such, verges always -on psychosis. As a return to the maternal body and a concomitant deindividuation of the ego, poetic language becomes especially threatening when uttered by women. The poetic then contests not only the -incest taboo, but the taboo against homosexuality as well. Poetic language is thus, for women, both displaced maternal dependency and, -because that dependency is libidinal, displaced homosexuality. -For Kristeva, the unmediated cathexis of female homosexual -desire leads unequivocally to psychosis. Hence, one can satisfy this -drive only through a series of displacements: the incorporation of -maternal identity—that is, by becoming a mother oneself—or -through poetic language which manifests obliquely the heterogeneity -of drives characteristic of maternal dependency. As the only socially -sanctioned and, hence, nonpsychotic displacements for homosexual -desire, both maternity and poetry constitute melancholic experiences -for women appropriately acculturated into heterosexuality. The heterosexual poet-mother suffers interminably from the displacement of -the homosexual cathexis. And yet, the consummation of this desire -would lead to the psychotic unraveling of identity, according to -Kristeva—the presumption being that, for women, heterosexuality -and coherent selfhood are indissolubly linked. -How are we to understand this constitution of lesbian experience -~ -as the site of an irretrievable self-loss? Kristeva clearly takes heterosexuality to be prerequisite to kinship and to culture. Consequently, she -identifies lesbian experience as the psychotic alternative to the acceptance of paternally sanctioned laws. And yet why is lesbianism constituted as psychosis? From what cultural perspective is lesbianism -constructed as a site of fusion, self-loss, and psychosis? -By projecting the lesbian as “Other” to culture, and characterizing -lesbian speech as the psychotic “whirl-of-words,” Kristeva constructs -lesbian sexuality as intrinsically unintelligible. This tactical dismissal -and reduction of lesbian experience performed in the name of the law -positions Kristeva within the orbit of paternal-heterosexual privilege. -The paternal law which protects her from this radical incoherence is -precisely the mechanism that produces the construct of lesbianism as a -site of irrationality. Significantly, this description of lesbian experience -is effected from the outside and tells us more about the fantasies that a -fearful heterosexual culture produces to defend against its own homosexual possibilities than about lesbian experience itself. -In claiming that lesbianism designates a loss of self, Kristeva -appears to be delivering a psychoanalytic truth about the repression -necessary for individuation. The fear of such a “regression” to homosexuality is, then, a fear of losing cultural sanction and privilege altogether. Although Kristeva claims that this loss designates a place prior -to culture, there is no reason not to understand it as a new or unacknowledged cultural form. In other words, Kristeva prefers to explain -lesbian experience as a regressive libidinal state prior to acculturation -itself, rather than to take up the challenge that lesbianism offers to her -restricted view of paternally sanctioned cultural laws. Is the fear -encoded in the construction of the lesbian as psychotic the result of a -developmentally necessitated repression, or is it, rather, the fear of losing cultural legitimacy and, hence, being cast, not outside or prior to -culture, but outside cultural legitimacy, still within culture, but culturally “out-lawed”? -Kristeva describes both the maternal body and lesbian experience -~ -from a position of sanctioned heterosexuality that fails to acknowledge -its own fear of losing that sanction. Her reification of the paternal law -not only repudiates female homosexuality, but denies the varied meanings and possibilities of motherhood as a cultural practice. But cultural -subversion is not really Kristeva’s concern, for subversion, when it -appears, emerges from beneath the surface of culture only inevitably to -return there. Although the semiotic is a possibility of language that -escapes the paternal law, it remains inevitably within or, indeed, -beneath the territory of that law. Hence, poetic language and the pleasures of maternity constitute local displacements of the paternal law, -temporary subversions which finally submit to that against which they -initially rebel. By relegating the source of subversion to a site outside of -culture itself, Kristeva appears to foreclose the possibility of subversion -as an effective or realizable cultural practice. Pleasure beyond the paternal law can be imagined only together with its inevitable impossibility. -Kristeva’s theory of thwarted subversion is premised on her problematic view of the relation among drives, language, and the law. Her -postulation of a subversive multiplicity of drives raises a number of -epistemological and political questions. In the first place, if these -drives are manifest only in language or cultural forms already determined as Symbolic, then how is it that we can verify their preSymbolic ontological status? Kristeva argues that poetic language gives -us access to these drives in their fundamental multiplicity, but this -answer is not fully satisfactory. Since poetic language is said to depend -upon the prior existence of these multiplicitous drives, we cannot, -then, in circular fashion, justify the postulated existence of these drives -through recourse to poetic language. If drives must first be repressed -for language to exist, and if we can attribute meaning only to that -which is representable in language, then to attribute meaning to drives -prior to their emergence into language is impossible. Similarly, to -attribute a causality to drives which facilitates their transformation -into language and by which language itself is to be explained cannot -reasonably be done within the confines of language itself. In other -~ -words, we know these drives as “causes” only in and through their -effects, and, as such, we have no reason for not identifying drives with -their effects. It follows that either (a) drives and their representations -are coextensive or (b) representations preexist the drives themselves. -This last alterative is, I would argue, an important one to consider, -for how do we know that the instinctual object of Kristeva’s discourse -is not a construction of the discourse itself? And what grounds do we -have for positing this object, this multiplicitous field, as prior to signification? If poetic language must participate in the Symbolic in order -to be culturally communicable, and if Kristeva’s own theoretical texts -are emblematic of the Symbolic, then where are we to find a convincing “outside” to this domain? Her postulation of a prediscursive corporeal multiplicity becomes all the more problematic when we discover -that maternal drives are considered part of a “biological destiny” and -are themselves manifestations of “a non-symbolic, nonpaternal causality.” 12 This pre-Symbolic, nonpaternal causality is, for Kristeva, a semiotic, maternal causality, or, more specifically, a teleological conception -of maternal instincts: -Material compulsion, spasm of a memory belonging to the species -that either binds together or splits apart to perpetuate itself, series of -markers with no other significance than the eternal return of the -life-death biological cycle. How can we verbalize this prelinguistic, -unrepresentable memory? Heraclitus’ flux, Epicurus’ atoms, the -whirling dust of cabalic, Arab and Indian mystics, and the stippled -drawings of psychedelics—all seem better metaphors than the theory of Being, the logos, and its laws.13 - -Here, the repressed maternal body is not only the locus of multiple drives, but the bearer of a biological teleology as well, one which, -it seems, makes itself evident in the early stages of Western philosophy, -in non-Western religious beliefs and practices, in aesthetic representations produced by psychotic or near-psychotic states, and even in -avant-garde artistic practices. But why are we to assume that these -~ -various cultural expressions manifest the selfsame principle of maternal heterogeneity? Kristeva simply subordinates each of these cultural -moments to the same principle. Consequently, the semiotic represents -any cultural effort to displace the logos (which, curiously, she contrasts -with Heraclitus’ flux), where the logos represents the univocal signifier, the law of identity. Her opposition between the semiotic and the -Symbolic reduces here to a metaphysical quarrel between the principle -of multiplicity that escapes the charge of non-contradiction and a principle of identity based on the suppression of that multiplicity. Oddly, -that very principle of multiplicity that Kristeva everywhere defends -operates in much the same manner as a principle of identity. Note the -way in which all manner of things “primitive” and “Oriental” are summarily subordinated to the principle of the maternal body. Surely, her -description warrants not only the charge of Orientalism, but raises the -very significant question of whether, ironically, multiplicity has -become a univocal signifier. -Her ascription of a teleological aim to maternal drives prior to -their constitution in language or culture raises a number of questions -about Kristeva’s political program. Although she clearly sees subversive -and disruptive potential in those semiotic expressions that challenge the -hegemony of the paternal law, it is less clear in what precisely this subversion consists. If the law is understood to rest on a constructed -ground, beneath which lurks the repressed maternal terrain, what concrete cultural options emerge within the terms of culture as a consequence of this revelation? Ostensibly, the multiplicity associated with -the maternal libidinal economy has the force to disperse the univocity -of the paternal signifier and seemingly to create the possibility of other -cultural expressions no longer tightly constrained by the law of noncontradiction. But is this disruptive activity the opening of a field of significations, or is it the manifestation of a biological archaism which -operates according to a natural and “prepaternal” causality? If Kristeva -believed the former were the case (and she does not), then she would -~ -ating field of cultural possibilities. But instead, she prescribes a return -to a principle of maternal heterogeneity which proves to be a closed -concept, indeed, a heterogeneity confined by a teleology both unilinear -and univocal. -Kristeva understands the desire to give birth as a species-desire, -part of a collective and archaic female libidinal drive that constitutes -an ever-recurring metaphysical reality. Here Kristeva reifies maternity -and then promotes this reification as the disruptive potential of the -semiotic. As a result, the paternal law, understood as the ground of -univocal signification, is displaced by an equally univocal signifier, the -principle of the maternal body which remains self-identical in its teleology regardless of its “multiplicitous” manifestations. -Insofar as Kristeva conceptualizes this maternal instinct as having -an ontological status prior to the paternal law, she fails to consider the -way in which that very law might well be the cause of the very desire it -is said to repress. Rather than the manifestation of a prepaternal causality, these desires might attest to maternity as a social practice required -and recapitulated by the exigencies of kinship. Kristeva accepts LéviStrauss’s analysis of the exchange of women as prerequisite for the -consolidation of kinship bonds. She understands this exchange, however, as the cultural moment in which the maternal body is repressed, -rather than as a mechanism for the compulsory cultural construction -of the female body as a maternal body. Indeed, we might understand -the exchange of women as imposing a compulsory obligation on -women’s bodies to reproduce. According to Gayle Rubin’s reading of -Lévi-Strauss, kinship effects a “sculpting of . . . sexuality” such that the -desire to give birth is the result of social practices which require and -produce such desires in order to effect their reproductive ends.14 -What grounds, then, does Kristeva have for imputing a maternal -teleology to the female body prior to its emergence into culture? -To pose the question in this way is already to question the distinction -between the Symbolic and the semiotic on which her conception of -the maternal body is premised. The maternal body in its originary -~ -signification is considered by Kristeva to be prior to signification -itself; hence, it becomes impossible within her framework to consider -the maternal itself as a signification, open to cultural variability. Her -argument makes clear that maternal drives constitute those primary -processes that language invariably represses or sublimates. But perhaps her argument could be recast within an even more encompassing -framework: What cultural configuration of language, indeed, of discourse, generates the trope of a pre-discursive libidinal multiplicity, and -for what purposes? -By restricting the paternal law to a prohibitive or repressive function, Kristeva fails to understand the paternal mechanisms by which -affectivity itself is generated. The law that is said to repress the semiotic may well be the governing principle of the semiotic itself, with the -result that what passes as “maternal instinct” may well be a culturally -constructed desire which is interpreted through a naturalistic vocabulary. And if that desire is constructed according to a law of kinship -which requires the heterosexual production and reproduction of -desire, then the vocabulary of naturalistic affect effectively renders -that “paternal law” invisible.What for Kristeva is a pre-paternal causality would then appear as a paternal causality under the guise of a natural or distinctively maternal causality. -Significantly, the figuration of the maternal body and the teleology -of its instincts as a self-identical and insistent metaphysical principle—an archaism of a collective, sex-specific biological constitution—bases itself on a univocal conception of the female sex. And this -sex, conceived as both origin and causality, poses as a principle of pure -generativity. Indeed, for Kristeva, it is equated with poesis itself, that -activity of making upheld in Plato’s Symposium as an act of birth and -poetic conception at once.15 But is female generativity truly an -uncaused cause, and does it begin the narrative that takes all of -humanity under the force of the incest taboo and into language? Does -the pre-paternal causality whereof Kristeva speaks signify a primary -female economy of pleasure and meaning? Can we reverse the very -~ -order of this causality and understand this semiotic economy as a production of a prior discourse? -In the final chapter of Foucault’s first volume of The History of Sexuality, -he cautions against using the category of sex as a “fictitious unity . . . -[and] causal principle” and argues that the fictitious category of sex -facilitates a reversal of causal relations such that “sex” is understood to -cause the structure and meaning of desire: -the notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial -unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, and pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious -unity as a causal principle, an omnipresent meaning: sex was thus -able to function as a unique signifier and as a universal signified.16 - -For Foucault, the body is not “sexed” in any significant sense prior to -its determination within a discourse through which it becomes invested with an “idea” of natural or essential sex. The body gains meaning -within discourse only in the context of power relations. Sexuality is an -historically specific organization of power, discourse, bodies, and -affectivity. As such, sexuality is understood by Foucault to produce -“sex” as an artificial concept which effectively extends and disguises -the power relations responsible for its genesis. -Foucault’s framework suggests a way to solve some of the epistemological and political difficulties that follow from Kristeva’s view of -the female body.We can understand Kristeva’s assertion of a “prepaternal causality” as fundamentally inverted. Whereas Kristeva posits a -maternal body prior to discourse that exerts its own causal force in the -structure of drives, Foucault would doubtless argue that the discursive -production of the maternal body as prediscursive is a tactic in the selfamplification and concealment of those specific power relations by -which the trope of the maternal body is produced. In these terms, the -maternal body would no longer be understood as the hidden ground of -all signification, the tacit cause of all culture. It would be understood, -~ -rather, as an effect or consequence of a system of sexuality in which the -female body is required to assume maternity as the essence of its self -and the law of its desire. -If we accept Foucault’s framework, we are compelled to redescribe the maternal libidinal economy as a product of an historically -specific organization of sexuality. Moreover, the discourse of sexuality, -itself suffused by power relations, becomes the true ground of the -trope of the prediscursive maternal body. Kristeva’s formulation suffers a thoroughgoing reversal: The Symbolic and the semiotic are no -longer interpreted as those dimensions of language which follow upon -the repression or manifestation of the maternal libidinal economy.This -very economy is understood instead as a reification that both extends -and conceals the institution of motherhood as compulsory for women. -Indeed, when the desires that maintain the institution of motherhood -are transvaluated as pre-paternal and pre-cultural drives, then the -institution gains a permanent legitimation in the invariant structures -of the female body. Indeed, the clearly paternal law that sanctions and -requires the female body to be characterized primarily in terms of its -reproductive function is inscribed on that body as the law of its natural -necessity. Kristeva, safeguarding that law of a biologically necessitated -maternity as a subversive operation that pre-exists the paternal law -itself, aids in the systematic production of its invisibility and, consequently, the illusion of its inevitability. -Because Kristeva restricts herself to an exclusively prohibitive conception of the paternal law, she is unable to account for the ways in -which the paternal law generates certain desires in the form of natural -drives. The female body that she seeks to express is itself a construct -produced by the very law it is supposed to undermine. In no way do -these criticisms of Kristeva’s conception of the paternal law necessarily invalidate her general position that culture or the Symbolic is predicated upon a repudiation of women’s bodies. I want to suggest, -however, that any theory that asserts that signification is predicated -upon the denial or repression of a female principle ought to consider -~ -whether that femaleness is really external to the cultural norms by -which it is repressed. In other words, on my reading, the repression of -the feminine does not require that the agency of repression and the -object of repression be ontologically distinct. Indeed, repression may -be understood to produce the object that it comes to deny. That production may well be an elaboration of the agency of repression itself. -As Foucault makes clear, the culturally contradictory enterprise of the -mechanism of repression is prohibitive and generative at once and -makes the problematic of “liberation” especially acute.The female body -that is freed from the shackles of the paternal law may well prove to be -yet another incarnation of that law, posing as subversive but operating -in the service of that law’s self-amplification and proliferation. In order -to avoid the emancipation of the oppressor in the name of the -oppressed, it is necessary to take into account the full complexity and -subtlety of the law and to cure ourselves of the illusion of a true body -beyond the law. If subversion is possible, it will be a subversion from -within the terms of the law, through the possibilities that emerge when -the law turns against itself and spawns unexpected permutations of -itself. The culturally constructed body will then be liberated, neither -to its “natural” past, nor to its original pleasures, but to an open future -of cultural possibilities. -ii. Foucault, Herculine, and the Politics -of Sexual Discontinuity -Foucault’s genealogical critique has provided a way to criticize those -Lacanian and neo-Lacanian theories that cast culturally marginal forms -of sexuality as culturally unintelligible. Writing within the terms of a -disillusionment with the notion of a liberatory Eros, Foucault understands sexuality as saturated with power and offers a critical view of -theories that lay claim to a sexuality before or after the law. When we -consider, however, those textual occasions on which Foucault criticizes -the categories of sex and the power regime of sexuality, it is clear that -his own theory maintains an unacknowledged emancipatory ideal that -~ -proves increasingly difficult to maintain, even within the strictures of -his own critical apparatus. -Foucault’s theory of sexuality offered in The History of Sexuality, -Volume I is in some ways contradicted by his short but significant introduction to the journals he published of Herculine Barbin, a nineteenthcentury French hermaphrodite. Herculine was assigned the sex of -“female” at birth. In h/er early twenties, after a series of confessions to -doctors and priests, s/he was legally compelled to change h/er sex to -“male.” The journals that Foucault claims to have found are published -in this collection, along with the medical and legal documents that discuss the basis on which the designation of h/er “true” sex was decided. -A satiric short story by the German writer, Oscar Panizza, is also -included. Foucault supplies an introduction to the English translation -of the text in which he questions whether the notion of a true sex is -necessary. At first, this question appears to be continuous with the -critical genealogy of the category of “sex” he offers toward the conclusion of the first volume of The History of Sexuality.17 However, the journals and their introduction offer an occasion to consider Foucault’s -reading of Herculine against his theory of sexuality in The History of -Sexuality,Volume I. Although he argues in The History of Sexuality that -sexuality is coextensive with power, he fails to recognize the concrete -relations of power that both construct and condemn Herculine’s sexuality. Indeed, he appears to romanticize h/er world of pleasures as the -“happy limbo of a non-identity” (xiii), a world that exceeds the categories of sex and of identity.The reemergence of a discourse on sexual -difference and the categories of sex within Herculine’s own autobiographical writings will lead to an alternative reading of Herculine -against Foucault’s romanticized appropriation and refusal of her text. -In the first volume of The History of Sexuality, Foucault argues that -the univocal construct of “sex” (one is one’s sex and, therefore, not the -other) is (a) produced in the service of the social regulation and control of sexuality and (b) conceals and artificially unifies a variety of disparate and unrelated sexual functions and then (c) postures within -~ -discourse as a cause, an interior essence which both produces and renders intelligible all manner of sensation, pleasure, and desire as sexspecific. In other words, bodily pleasures are not merely causally -reducible to this ostensibly sex-specific essence, but they become readily interpretable as manifestations or signs of this “sex.”18 -In opposition to this false construction of “sex” as both univocal and -causal, Foucault engages a reverse-discourse which treats “sex” as -an effect rather than an origin. In the place of “sex” as the original and -continuous cause and signification of bodily pleasures, he proposes -“sexuality” as an open and complex historical system of discourse and -power that produces the misnomer of “sex” as part of a strategy to conceal and, hence, to perpetuate power-relations. One way in which -power is both perpetuated and concealed is through the establishment -of an external or arbitrary relation between power, conceived as -repression or domination, and sex, conceived as a brave but thwarted -energy waiting for release or authentic self-expression.The use of this -juridical model presumes that the relation between power and sexuality is not only ontologically distinct, but that power always and only -works to subdue or liberate a sex which is fundamentally intact, selfsufficient, and other than power itself. When “sex” is essentialized in -this way, it becomes ontologically immunized from power relations -and from its own historicity. As a result, the analysis of sexuality is collapsed into the analysis of “sex,” and any inquiry into the historical production of the category of “sex” itself is precluded by this inverted and -falsifying causality. According to Foucault, “sex” must not only be -recontextualized within the terms of sexuality, but juridical power -must be reconceived as a construction produced by a generative power -which, in turn, conceals the mechanism of its own productivity. -the notion of sex brought about a fundamental reversal; it made it -possible to invert the representation of the relationships of power to -sexuality, causing the latter to appear, not in its essential and positive - -~ -relation to power, but as being rooted in a specific and irreducible -urgency which power tries as best it can to dominate. (154) - -Foucault explicitly takes a stand against emancipatory or liberationist models of sexuality in The History of Sexuality because they -subscribe to a juridical model that does not acknowledge the historical production of “sex” as a category, that is, as a mystifying “effect” of -power relations. His ostensible problem with feminism seems also to -emerge here: Where feminist analysis takes the category of sex and, -thus, according to him, the binary restriction on gender, as its point of -departure, Foucault understands his own project to be an inquiry into -how the category of “sex” and sexual difference are constructed within -discourse as necessary features of bodily identity. The juridical model -of law which structures the feminist emancipatory model presumes, in -his view, that the subject of emancipation, “the sexed body” in some -sense, is not itself in need of a critical deconstruction. As Foucault -remarks about some humanist efforts at prison reform, the criminal -subject who gets emancipated may be even more deeply shackled -than the humanist originally thought. To be sexed, for Foucault, is to -be subjected to a set of social regulations, to have the law that directs -those regulations reside both as the formative principle of one’s sex, -gender, pleasures, and desires and as the hermeneutic principle of selfinterpretation. The category of sex is thus inevitably regulative, and -any analysis which makes that category presuppositional uncritically -extends and further legitimates that regulative strategy as a power/ -knowledge regime. -In editing and publishing the journals of Herculine Barbin, -Foucault is clearly trying to show how an hermaphroditic or intersexed body implicitly exposes and refutes the regulative strategies of -sexual categorization. Because he thinks that “sex” unifies bodily functions and meanings that have no necessary relationship with one another, he predicts that the disappearance of “sex” results in a happy -dispersal of these various functions, meanings, organs, somatic and -~ -physiological processes as well as in the proliferation of pleasures outside of the framework of intelligibility enforced by univocal sexes -within a binary relation.The sexual world in which Herculine resides, -according to Foucault, is one in which bodily pleasures do not immediately signify “sex” as their primary cause and ultimate meaning; it is a -world, he claims, in which “grins hung about without the cat” (xiii). -Indeed, these are pleasures that clearly transcend the regulation -imposed upon them, and here we see Foucault’s sentimental indulgence in the very emancipatory discourse his analysis in The History of -Sexuality was meant to displace. According to this Foucaultian model of -emancipatory sexual politics, the overthrow of “sex” results in the -release of a primary sexual multiplicity, a notion not so far afield from -the psychoanalytic postulation of primary polymorphousness or -Marcuse’s notion of an original and creative bisexual Eros subsequently repressed by an instrumentalist culture. -The significant difference between Foucault’s position in the first volume of The History of Sexuality and in his introduction to Herculine -Barbin is already to be found as an unresolved tension within the History -of Sexuality itself (he refers there to “bucolic” and “innocent” pleasures -of intergenerational sexual exchange that exist prior to the imposition -of various regulative strategies [31]). On the one hand, Foucault wants -to argue that there is no “sex” in itself which is not produced by complex interactions of discourse and power, and yet there does seem to -be a “multiplicity of pleasures” in itself which is not the effect of any -specific discourse/power exchange. In other words, Foucault invokes a -trope of prediscursive libidinal multiplicity that effectively presupposes a sexuality “before the law,” indeed, a sexuality waiting for emancipation from the shackles of “sex.” On the other hand, Foucault -officially insists that sexuality and power are coextensive and that we -must not think that by saying yes to sex we say no to power. In his antijuridical and anti-emancipatory mode, the “official” Foucault argues -that sexuality is always situated within matrices of power, that it is -~ -always produced or constructed within specific historical practices, -both discursive and institutional, and that recourse to a sexuality -before the law is an illusory and complicitous conceit of emancipatory -sexual politics. -The journals of Herculine provide the opportunity to read -Foucault against himself, or, perhaps more appropriately, to expose the -constitutive contradiction of this kind of anti-emancipatory call for -sexual freedom. Herculine, called Alexina throughout the text, narrates a story about h/er tragic plight as one who lives a life of unjust -victimization, deceit, longing, and inevitable dissatisfaction. From the -time s/he was a young girl, s/he reports, s/he was different from the -other girls. This difference is a cause for alternating states of anxiety -and self-importance through the story, but it is there as tacit knowledge before the law becomes an explicit actor in the story. Although -Herculine does not report directly on h/er anatomy in the journals, -the medical reports that Foucault publishes along with Herculine’s -own text suggest that Herculine might reasonably be said to have what -is described as either a small penis or an enlarged clitoris, that where -one might expect to find a vagina one finds a “cul-de-sac,” as the doctors put it, and, further, that she doesn’t appear to have identifiably -female breasts. There seems also to be some capacity for ejaculation -that is not fully accounted for within the medical documents. -Herculine never refers to anatomy as such, but relates h/er predicament in terms of a natural mistake, a metaphysical homelessness, a -state of insatiable desire, and a radical solitariness that, before h/er -suicide, is transformed into a full-blown rage, first directed toward -men, but finally toward the world as such. -Herculine relates in elliptical terms h/er relations with the girls at -school, the “mothers” at the convent, and finally h/er most passionate -attachment with Sara who becomes h/er lover. Plagued first with guilt -and then with some unspecified genital ailment, Herculine exposes -h/er secret to a doctor and then a priest, a set of confessional acts that -effectively force h/er separation from Sara. Authorities confer and -~ -effect h/er legal transformation into a man whereupon s/he is legally -obligated to dress in men’s clothing and to exercise the various rights of -men in society. Written in a sentimental and melodramatic tone, the -journals report a sense of perpetual crisis that culminates in suicide. -One could argue that prior to the legal transformation of Alexina into a -man, s/he was free to enjoy those pleasures that are effectively free of -the juridical and regulatory pressures of the category of “sex.” Indeed, -Foucault appears to think that the journals provide insight into precisely -that unregulated field of pleasures prior to the imposition of the law of -univocal sex. His reading, however, constitutes a radical misreading of -the way in which those pleasures are always already embedded in the -pervasive but inarticulate law and, indeed, generated by the very law -they are said to defy. -The temptation to romanticize Herculine’s sexuality as the utopian -play of pleasures prior to the imposition and restrictions of “sex” surely ought to be refused. It still remains possible, however, to ask the -alternative Foucaultian question: What social practices and conventions produce sexuality in this form? In pursuing the question, we -have, I think, the opportunity to understand something about (a) the -productive capacity of power—that is, the way in which regulative -strategies produce the subjects they come to subjugate; and (b) the -specific mechanism by which power produces sexuality in the context -of this autobiographical narrative. The question of sexual difference -reemerges in a new light when we dispense with the metaphysical -reification of multiplicitous sexuality and inquire in the case of -Herculine into the concrete narrative structures and political and cultural conventions that produce and regulate the tender kisses, the diffuse pleasures, and the thwarted and transgressive thrills of -Herculine’s sexual world. -Among the various matrices of power that produce sexuality -between Herculine and h/er partners are, clearly, the conventions of -female homosexuality both encouraged and condemned by the convent and its supporting religious ideology. One thing about Herculine -~ -we know is that s/he reads, and reads a good deal, that h/er nineteenthcentury French education involved schooling in the classics as well as -French Romanticism, and that h/er own narrative takes place within -an established set of literary conventions. Indeed, these conventions -produce and interpret for us this sexuality that both Foucault and -Herculine take to be outside of all convention. Romantic and sentimental narratives of impossible loves seem also to produce all manner -of desire and suffering in this text, and so do Christian legends about -ill-fated saints, Greek myths about suicidal androgynes, and, obviously, -the Christ figure itself. Whether “before” the law as a multiplicitous -sexuality or “outside” the law as an unnatural transgression, those positionings are invariably “inside” a discourse which produces sexuality -and then conceals that production through a configuring of a courageous and rebellious sexuality “outside” of the text itself. -The effort to explain Herculine’s sexual relations with young -girls through recourse to the masculine component of h/er biological -doubleness is, of course, the constant temptation of the text. If -Herculine desires a girl, then perhaps there is evidence in hormonal or -chromosomal structures or in the anatomical presence of the imperforate penis to suggest a more discrete, masculine sex that subsequently -generates heterosexual capacity and desire.The pleasures, the desires, -the acts—do they not in some sense emanate from the biological body, -and is there not some way of understanding that emanation as both -causally necessitated by that body and expressive of its sex-specificity? -Perhaps because Herculine’s body is hermaphroditic, the struggle -to separate conceptually the description of h/er primary sexual characteristics from h/er gender identity (h/er sense of h/er own gender -which, by the way, is ever-shifting and far from clear) and the directionality and objects of h/er desire is especially difficult. S/he herself -presumes at various points that h/er body is the cause of h/er gender -confusion and h/er transgressive pleasures, as if they were both result -and manifestation of an essence which somehow falls outside the natural/metaphysical order of things. But rather than understand h/er -~ -anomalous body as the cause of h/er desire, h/er trouble, h/er affairs -and confession, we might read this body, here fully textualized, as a -sign of an irresolvable ambivalence produced by the juridical discourse -on univocal sex. In the place of univocity, we fail to discover multiplicity, as Foucault would have us do; instead, we confront a fatal ambivalence, produced by the prohibitive law, which for all its effects of -happy dispersal nevertheless culminates in Herculine’s suicide. -If one follows Herculine’s narrative self-exposition, itself a kind of -confessional production of the self, it seems that h/er sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, that h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, construed in part as -the institutional injunction to pursue the love of the various “sisters” -and “mothers” of the extended convent family and the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. Foucault inadvertently suggests that Herculine’s “happy limbo of a non-identity” was made -possible by an historically specific formation of sexuality, namely, “her -sequestered existence among the almost exclusive company of -women.” This “strange happiness,” as he describes it, was at once -“obligatory and forbidden” within the confines of convent conventions. His clear suggestion here is that this homosexual environment, -structured as it is by an eroticized taboo, was one in which this “happy -limbo of a non-identity” is subtly promoted. Foucault then swiftly -retracts the suggestion of Herculine as participating in a practice of -female homosexual conventions, insisting that “non-identity” rather -than a variety of female identities is at play. For Herculine to occupy -the discursive position of “the female homosexual” would be for -Foucault to engage the category of sex—precisely what Foucault -wants Herculine’s narrative to persuade us to reject. -But perhaps Foucault does want to have it both ways; indeed, he -wants implicitly to suggest that nonidentity is what is produced in -homosexual contexts—namely, that homosexuality is instrumental to -the overthrow of the category of sex. Note in Foucault’s following -description of Herculine’s pleasures how the category of sex is at once -~ -invoked and refused: The school and the convent “foster the tender -pleasures that sexual nonidentity discovers and provokes when it goes -astray in the midst of all those bodies that are similar to one another” -(xiv). Here Foucault assumes that the likenesses of these bodies condition the happy limbo of their nonidentity, a difficult formulation to -accept both logically and historically, but also as an adequate description of Herculine. Is it the awareness of their likeness that conditions -the sexual play of the young women in the convent, or is it, rather, the -eroticized presence of the law forbidding homosexuality that produces -these transgressive pleasures in the compulsory mode of a confessional? Herculine maintains h/er own discourse of sexual difference even -within this ostensibly homosexual context: s/he notes and enjoys h/er -difference from the young women s/he desires, and yet this difference -is not a simple reproduction of the heterosexual matrix for desire. -S/he knows that her position in that exchange is transgressive, that she -is a “usurper” of a masculine prerogative, as s/he puts it, and that s/he -contests that privilege even as s/he replicates it. -The language of usurpation suggests a participation in the very categories from which s/he feels inevitably distanced, suggesting also the -denaturalized and fluid possibilities of such categories once they are no -longer linked causally or expressively to the presumed fixity of sex. -Herculine’s anatomy does not fall outside the categories of sex, but -confuses and redistributes the constitutive elements of those categories; indeed, the free play of attributes has the effect of exposing -the illusory character of sex as an abiding substantive substrate to -which these various attributes are presumed to adhere. Moreover, -Herculine’s sexuality constitutes a set of gender transgressions which -challenge the very distinction between heterosexual and lesbian erotic -exchange, underscoring the points of their ambiguous convergence -and redistribution. -But it seems we are compelled to ask, is there not, even at the level -of a discursively constituted sexual ambiguity, some questions of “sex” -and, indeed, of its relation to “power” that set limits on the free play of -~ -sexual categories? In other words, how free is that play, whether conceived as a prediscursive libidinal multiplicity or as a discursively constituted multiplicity? Foucault’s original objection to the category of -sex is that it imposes the artifice of unity and univocity on a set of ontologically disparate sexual functions and elements. In an almost -Rousseauian move, Foucault constructs the binary of an artificial cultural law that reduces and distorts what we might well understand as a -natural heterogeneity. Herculine h/erself refers to h/er sexuality as -“this incessant struggle of nature against reason” (103).A cursory examination of these disparate “elements,” however, suggests their thorough -medicalization as “functions,” “sensations,” even “drives.” Hence, the -heterogeneity to which Foucault appeals is itself constituted by the very -medical discourse that he positions as the repressive juridical law. But -what is this heterogeneity that Foucault seems to prize, and what purpose does it serve? -If Foucault contends that sexual nonidentity is promoted in homosexual contexts, he would seem to identify heterosexual contexts as -precisely those in which identity is constituted. We know already that -he understands the category of sex and of identity generally to be the -effect and instrument of a regulatory sexual regime, but it is less clear -whether that regulation is reproductive or heterosexual, or something -else. Does that regulation of sexuality produce male and female identities within a symmetrical binary relation? If homosexuality produces -sexual nonidentity, then homosexuality itself no longer relies on identities being like one another; indeed, homosexuality could no longer be -described as such. But if homosexuality is meant to designate the place -of an unnameable libidinal heterogeneity, perhaps we can ask whether -this is, instead, a love that either cannot or dare not speak its name? In -other words, Foucault, who gave only one interview on homosexuality -and has always resisted the confessional moment in his own work, nevertheless presents Herculine’s confession to us in an unabashedly -didactic mode. Is this a displaced confession that presumes a continuity -or parallel between his life and hers? -~ -On the cover of the French edition, he remarks that Plutarch -understood illustrious persons to constitute parallel lives which in some -sense travel infinite lines that eventually meet in eternity. He remarks -that there are some lives that veer off the track of infinity and threaten -to disappear into an obscurity that can never be recovered—lives that -do not follow the “straight” path, as it were, into an eternal community -of greatness, but deviate and threaten to become fully irrecoverable. -“That would be the inverse of Plutarch,” he writes, “lives at parallel -points that nothing can bring back together” (my translation). Here the -textual reference is most clearly to the separation of Herculine, the -adopted male name (though with a curiously feminine ending), and -Alexina, the name that designated Herculine in the female mode. But it -is also a reference to Herculine and Sara, h/er lover, who are quite literally separated and whose paths quite obviously diverge. But perhaps -Herculine is in some sense also parallel to Foucault, parallel precisely in -the sense in which divergent lifelines, which are in no sense “straight,” -might well be. Indeed, perhaps Herculine and Foucault are parallel, not -in any literal sense, but in their very contestation of the literal as such, -especially as it applies to the categories of sex. -Foucault’s suggestion in the preface that there are bodies which are -in some sense “similar” to each other disregards the hermaphroditic -distinctness of Herculine’s body, as well as h/er own presentation of -h/erself as very much unlike the women s/he desires. Indeed, after -some manner of sexual exchange, Herculine engages the language of -appropriation and triumph, avowing Sara as her eternal property when -she remarks, “From that moment on, Sara belonged to me . . . !!!” -(51). So why would Foucault resist the very text that he wants to use in -order to make such a claim? In the one interview Foucault gave on -homosexuality, James O’Higgins, the interviewer, remarks that “there -is a growing tendency in American intellectual circles, particularly -among radical feminists, to distinguish between male and female -homosexuality,” a position, he argues, that claims that very different -~ -bians tend to prefer monogamy and the like while gay men generally -do not. Foucault responds by laughing, suggested by the bracketed -“[Laughs],” and he says, “All I can do is explode with laughter.”19 This -explosive laughter, we may remember, also followed Foucault’s reading of Borges, reported in the preface to The Order of Things (Les mots et -les choses): -This book first arose out of a passage in Borges, out of the laughter -that shattered, as I read the passage, all the familiar landmarks of my -thought . . . breaking up all the ordered surfaces and all the planes -with which we are accustomed to tame the wild profusion of existing -things, and continuing long afterwards to disturb and threaten with -collapse our age-old distinction between the Same and the Other.20 - -The passage is, of course, from the Chinese encyclopedia which confounds the Aristotelian distinction between universal categories and -particular instances. But there is also the “shattering laughter” of Pierre -Rivière whose murderous destruction of his family, or, perhaps, for -Foucault, of the family, seems quite literally to negate the categories of -kinship and, by extension, of sex.21 And there is, of course, Bataille’s -now famous laughter which, Derrida tells us in Writing and Difference, -designates that excess that escapes the conceptual mastery of Hegel’s -dialectic.22 Foucault, then, seems to laugh precisely because the question instates the very binary that he seeks to displace, that dreary binary of Same and Other that has plagued not only the legacy of dialectics, -but the dialectic of sex as well. But then there is, of course, the laugh -of Medusa, which, Hélène Cixous tells us, shatters the placid surface -constituted by the petrifying gaze and which exposes the dialectic of -Same and Other as taking place through the axis of sexual difference.23 -In a gesture that resonates self-consciously with the tale of Medusa, -Herculine h/erself writes of “the cold fixity of my gaze [that] seems to -freeze” (105) those who encounter it. -But it is, of course, Irigaray who exposes this dialectic of Same and -Other as a false binary, the illusion of a symmetrical difference which -~ -consolidates the metaphysical economy of phallogocentrism, the economy of the same. In her view, the Other as well as the Same are marked -as masculine; the Other is but the negative elaboration of the masculine subject with the result that the female sex is unrepresentable— -that is, it is the sex which, within this signifying economy, is not one. -But it is not one also in the sense that it eludes the univocal signification characteristic of the Symbolic, and because it is not a substantive -identity, but always and only an undetermined relation of difference to -the economy which renders it absent. It is not “one” in the sense that it -is multiple and diffuse in its pleasures and its signifying mode. Indeed, -perhaps Herculine’s apparently multiplicitous pleasures would qualify -for the mark of the feminine in its polyvalence and in its refusal to submit to the reductive efforts of univocal signification. -But let us not forget Herculine’s relation to the laugh which seems -to appear twice, first in the fear of being laughed at (23) and later as a -laugh of scorn that s/he directs against the doctor, for whom s/he -loses respect after he fails to tell the appropriate authorities of the natural irregularity that has been revealed to him (71). For Herculine, -then, laughter appears to designate either humiliation or scorn, two -positions unambiguously related to a damning law, subjected to it -either as its instrument or object. Herculine does not fall outside the -jurisdiction of that law; even h/er exile is understood on the model of -punishment. On the very first page, s/he reports that h/er “place was -not marked out [pas marquée] in this world that shunned me.” And s/he -articulates the early sense of abjection that is later enacted first as a -devoted daughter or lover to be likened to a “dog” or a “slave” and then -finally in a full and fatal form as s/he is expelled and expels h/erself -from the domain of all human beings. From this presuicidal isolation, -s/he claims to soar above both sexes, but h/er anger is most fully -directed against men, whose “title” s/he sought to usurp in h/er intimacy with Sara and whom s/he now indicts without restraint as those -who somehow forbid h/er the possibility of love. -At the beginning of the narrative, s/he offers two one-sentence -~ -paragraphs “parallel” to one another which suggest a melancholic -incorporation of the lost father, a postponement of the anger of abandonment through the structural instatement of that negativity into -h/er identity and desire. Before s/he tells us that s/he h/erself was -abandoned by h/er mother quickly and without advance notice, s/he -tells us that for reasons unstated s/he spent a few years in a house for -abandoned and orphaned children. S/he refers to the “poor creatures, -deprived from their cradle of a mother’s love.” In the next sentence -s/he refers to this institution as a “refuge [asile] of suffering and affliction,” and in the following sentence refers to h/er father “whom a -sudden death tore away . . . from the tender affection of my mother” -(4). Although h/er own abandonment is twice deflected here through -the pity for others who are suddenly rendered motherless, s/he establishes an identification through that deflection, one that later reappears -as the joint plight of father and daughter cut off from the maternal -caress. The deflections of desire are semantically compounded, as it -were, as Herculine proceeds to fall in love with “mother” after “mother” and then falls in love with various mothers’ “daughters,” which -scandalizes all manner of mother. Indeed, s/he vacillates between -being the object of everyone’s adoration and excitement and an object -of scorn and abandonment, the split consequence of a melancholic -structure left to feed on itself without intervention. If melancholy -involves self-recrimination, as Freud argues, and if that recrimination -is a kind of negative narcissism (attending to the self, even if only in the -mode of berating that self), then Herculine can be understood to be -constantly falling into the opposition between negative and positive -narcissism, at once avowing h/erself as the most abandoned and -neglected creature on earth but also as the one who casts a spell of -enchantment on everyone who comes near h/er, indeed, one who is -better for all women than any “man” (107). -S/he refers to the hospital for orphaned children as that early -“refuge of suffering,” an abode that s/he figuratively reencounters at -the close of the narrative as the “refuge of the tomb.” Just as that early -~ -refuge provides a magical communion and identification with the -phantom father, so the tomb of death is already occupied by the very -father whom s/he hopes death will let h/er meet: “The sight of the -tomb reconciles me to life,” she writes. “It makes me feel an indefinable tenderness for the one whose bones are lying there beneath my -feet [là à mes pieds]” (109). But this love, formulated as a kind of solidarity against the abandoning mother, is itself in no way purified of the -anger of abandonment: The father “beneath [h/er] feet” is earlier -enlarged to become the totality of men over whom s/he soars, and -whom s/he claims to dominate (107), and toward whom s/he directs -h/er laugh of disdain. Earlier s/he remarks about the doctor who discovered h/er anomalous condition, “I wished he were a hundred feet -underground!” (69). -Herculine’s ambivalence here implies the limits of Foucault’s theory of the “happy limbo of a non-identity.” Almost prefiguring the place -Herculine will assume for Foucault, s/he wonders whether s/he is not -“the plaything of an impossible dream” (79). Herculine’s sexual disposition is one of ambivalence from the outset, and, as argued earlier, -h/er sexuality recapitulates the ambivalent structure of its production, -construed in part as the institutional injunction to pursue the love of -the various “sisters” and “mothers” of the extended convent family and -the absolute prohibition against carrying that love too far. H/er sexuality is not outside the law, but is the ambivalent production of the law, -one in which the very notion of prohibition spans the psychoanalytic -and institutional terrains. H/er confessions, as well as h/er desires, are -subjection and defiance at once. In other words, the love prohibited by -death or abandonment, or both, is a love that takes prohibition to be its -condition and its aim. -After submitting to the law, Herculine becomes a juridically sanctioned subject as a “man,” and yet the gender category proves less fluid -than h/er own references to Ovid’s Metamorphoses suggest. H/er heteroglossic discourse challenges the viability of the notion of a “person” -who might be said to preexist gender or exchange one gender for the -~ -other. If s/he is not actively condemned by others, s/he condemns -h/erself (even calls h/erself a “judge” [106]), revealing that the juridical law in effect is much greater than the empirical law that effects -h/er gender conversion. Indeed, Herculine can never embody that law -precisely because s/he cannot provide the occasion by which that law -naturalizes itself in the symbolic structures of anatomy. In other -words, the law is not simply a cultural imposition on an otherwise natural heterogeneity; the law requires conformity to its own notion of -“nature” and gains its legitimacy through the binary and asymmetrical -naturalization of bodies in which the Phallus, though clearly not identical with the penis, nevertheless deploys the penis as its naturalized -instrument and sign. -Herculine’s pleasures and desires are in no way the bucolic innocence that thrives and proliferates prior to the imposition of a juridical -law. Neither does s/he fully fall outside the signifying economy of masculinity. S/he is “outside” the law, but the law maintains this “outside” -within itself. In effect, s/he embodies the law, not as an entitled subject, but as an enacted testimony to the law’s uncanny capacity to produce only those rebellions that it can guarantee will—out of -fidelity—defeat themselves and those subjects who, utterly subjected, -have no choice but to reiterate the law of their genesis. -Concluding Unscientific Postscript -Within The History of Sexuality,Volume I, Foucault appears to locate the -quest for identity within the context of juridical forms of power that -become fully articulate with the advent of the sexual sciences, including psychoanalysis, toward the end of the nineteenth century. Although -Foucault revised his historiography of sex at the outset of The Use of -Pleasure (L’Usage des plaisirs) and sought to discover the repressive/generative rules of subject-formation in early Greek and Roman texts, his -philosophical project to expose the regulatory production of identityeffects remained constant. A contemporary example of this quest for -~ -ple that inadvertently confirms the continuing applicability of a -Foucaultian critique. -One place to interrogate the univocity of sex is the recent controversy over the master gene that researchers at MIT in late 1987 claim -to have discovered as the secret and certain determinant of sex. With -the use of highly sophisticated technological means, the master gene, -which constitutes a specific DNA sequence on the Y chromosome, was -discovered by Dr. David Page and his colleagues and named “TDF” or -testis-determining factor. In the publication of his findings in Cell (No. -51), Dr. Page claimed to have discovered “the binary switch upon -which hinges all sexually dimorphic characteristics.”24 Let us then consider the claims of this discovery and see why the unsettling questions -regarding the decidability of sex continue to be asked. -According to Page’s article, “The Sex-Determining Region of the -Human Y Chromosome Encodes a Finger Protein,” samples of DNA -were taken from a highly unusual group of people, some of whom had -XX chromosomes, but had been medically designated as males, and -some of whom had XY chromosomal constitution, but had been medically designated as female. He does not tell us exactly on what basis -they had been designated contrary to the chromosomal findings, but -we are left to presume that obvious primary and secondary characteristics suggested that those were, indeed, the appropriate designations. -Page and his coworkers made the following hypothesis:There must be -some stretch of DNA, which cannot be seen under the usual microscopic conditions, that determines the male sex, and this stretch of -DNA must have been moved somehow from the Y chromosome, its -usual location, to some other chromosome, where one would not -expect to find it. Only if we could presume (a) this undetectable DNA -sequence and (b) prove its translocatability, could we understand why -it is that an XX male had no detectable Y chromosome, but was, in fact, -still male. Similarly, we could explain the curious presence of the Y -chromosome on females precisely because that stretch of DNA had -somehow been misplaced. -~ -Although the pool that Page and his researchers used to come up -with this finding was limited, the speculation on which they base their -research, in part, is that a good ten percent of the population has -chromosomal variations that do not fit neatly into the XX-female -and XY-male set of categories. Hence, the discovery of the “mastergene” is considered to be a more certain basis for understanding sexdetermination and, hence, sex-difference, than previous chromosomal -criteria could provide. -Unfortunately for Page, there was one persistent problem that -haunted the claims made on behalf of the discovery of the DNA -sequence. Exactly the same stretch of DNA said to determine maleness was, in fact, found to be present on the X chromosomes of -females. Page first responded to this curious discovery by claiming that -perhaps it was not the presence of the gene sequence in males versus its -absence in females that was determining, but that it was active in males -and passive in females (Aristotle lives!). But this suggestion remains -hypothetical and, according to Anne Fausto-Sterling, Page and his -coworkers failed to mention in that Cell article that the individuals -from whom the gene samples were taken were far from unambiguous -in their anatomical and reproductive constitutions. I quote from her -article, “Life in the XY Corral”: -the four XX males whom they studied were all sterile (no sperm -production), had small testes which totally lacked germ cells, i.e., -precursor cells for sperms. They also had high hormone levels and -low testosterone levels. Presumably they were classified as males -because of their external genitalia and the presence of testes. . . . -Similarly . . . both of the XY females’ external genitalia were normal, -[but] their ovaries lacked germ cells. (328) - -Clearly these are cases in which the component parts of sex do not -add up to the recognizable coherence or unity that is usually designated -by the category of sex. This incoherence troubles Page’s argument as -well, for it is unclear why we should agree at the outset that these are -~ -XX-males and XY-females, when it is precisely the designation of male -and female that is under question and that is implicitly already decided -by the recourse to external genitalia. Indeed, if external genitalia were -sufficient as a criterion by which to determine or assign sex, then the -experimental research into the master gene would hardly be necessary -at all. -But consider a different kind of problem with the way in which -that particular hypothesis is formulated, tested, and validated. Notice -that Page and his coworkers conflate sex-determination with maledetermination, and with testis-determination. Geneticists Eva Eicher -and Linda L. Washburn in the Annual Review of Genetics suggest that -ovary-determination is never considered in the literature on sexdetermination and that femaleness is always conceptualized in terms of -the absence of the male-determining factor or of the passive presence -of that factor. As absent or passive, it is definitionally disqualified as an -object of study. Eicher and Washburn suggest, however, that it is active -and that a cultural prejudice, indeed, a set of gendered assumptions -about sex, and about what might make such an inquiry valuable, skew -and limit the research into sex-determination. Fausto-Sterling quotes -Eicher and Washburn: -Some investigators have overemphasized the hypothesis that the Y -chromosome is involved in testis-determination by presenting the -induction of testicular tissue as an active, (gene-directed, dominant) -event while presenting the induction of ovarian tissue as a passive -(automatic) event. Certainly, the induction of ovarian tissue is as -much an active, genetically directed developmental process as the -induction of testicular tissue, or for that matter, the induction of any -cellular differentiation process. Almost nothing has been written -about genes involved in the induction of ovarian tissue from the -undifferentiated gonad. (325) - -In related fashion, the entire field of embryology has come under -~ -tiation. Feminist critics of the field of molecular cell biology have -argued against its nucleocentric assumptions. As opposed to a research -orientation that seeks to establish the nucleus of a fully differentiated -cell as the master or director of the development of a complete and -well-formed new organism, a research program is suggested that -would reconceive the nucleus as something which gains its meaning -and control only within its cellular context. According to FaustoSterling, “the question to ask is not how a cell nucleus changes during -differentiation, but, rather, how the dynamic nuclear-cytoplasmic -interactions alter during differentation” (323–24). -The structure of Page’s inquiry fits squarely within the general -trends of molecular cell biology.The framework suggests a refusal from -the outset to consider that these individuals implicitly challenge the -descriptive force of the available categories of sex; the question he pursues is that of how the “binary switch” gets started, not whether the -description of bodies in terms of binary sex is adequate to the task at -hand. Moreover, the concentration on the “master gene” suggests that -femaleness ought to be understood as the presence or absence -of maleness or, at best, the presence of a passivity that, in men, would -invariably be active. This claim is, of course, made within the research context in which active ovarian contributions to sex differentiation have never been strongly considered. The conclusion here is -not that valid and demonstrable claims cannot be made about sexdetermination, but rather that cultural assumptions regarding the relative status of men and women and the binary relation of gender itself -frame and focus the research into sex-determination.The task of distinguishing sex from gender becomes all the more difficult once we understand that gendered meanings frame the hypothesis and the reasoning of -those biomedical inquiries that seek to establish “sex” for us as it is prior -to the cultural meanings that it acquires. Indeed, the task is even more -complicated when we realize that the language of biology participates -in other kinds of languages and reproduces that cultural sedimentation -in the objects it purports to discover and neutrally describe. -~ -Is it not a purely cultural convention to which Page and others refer -when they decide that an anatomically ambiguous XX individual is -male, a convention that takes genitalia to be the definitive “sign” of sex? -One might argue that the discontinuities in these instances cannot be -resolved through recourse to a single determinant and that sex, as a category that comprises a variety of elements, functions, and chromosomal and hormonal dimensions, no longer operates within the binary -framework that we take for granted. The point here is not to seek -recourse to the exceptions, the bizarre, in order merely to relativize the -claims made in behalf of normal sexual life. As Freud suggests in Three -Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, however, it is the exception, the strange, -that gives us the clue to how the mundane and taken-for-granted world -of sexual meanings is constituted. Only from a self-consciously denaturalized position can we see how the appearance of naturalness is itself -constituted. The presuppositions that we make about sexed bodies, -about them being one or the other, about the meanings that are said to -inhere in them or to follow from being sexed in such a way are suddenly and significantly upset by those examples that fail to comply with the -categories that naturalize and stabilize that field of bodies for us within -the terms of cultural conventions. Hence, the strange, the incoherent, -that which falls “outside,” gives us a way of understanding the taken-forgranted world of sexual categorization as a constructed one, indeed, as -one that might well be constructed differently. -Although we may not immediately agree with the analysis that -Foucault supplies—namely, that the category of sex is constructed in -the service of a system of regulatory and reproductive sexuality—it is -interesting to note that Page designates the external genitalia, those -anatomical parts essential to the symbolization of reproductive sexuality, as the unambiguous and a priori determinants of sex assignment. -One might well argue that Page’s inquiry is beset by two discourses -that, in this instance, conflict: the cultural discourse that takes external -genitalia to be the sure signs of sex, and does that in the service of -reproductive interests, and the discourse that seeks to establish the -~ -male principle as active and monocausal, if not autogenetic.The desire -to determine sex once and for all, and to determine it as one sex rather -than the other, thus seems to issue from the social organization of sexual reproduction through the construction of the clear and unequivocal identities and positions of sexed bodies with respect to each other. -Because within the framework of reproductive sexuality the male -body is usually figured as the active agent, the problem with Page’s -inquiry is, in a sense, to reconcile the discourse of reproduction with -the discourse of masculine activity, two discourses that usually work -together culturally, but in this instance have come apart. Interesting, -then, is Page’s willingness to settle on the active DNA sequence as the -last word, in effect giving the principle of masculine activity priority -over the discourse of reproduction. -This priority, however, would constitute only an appearance, -according to the theory of Monique Wittig. The category of sex belongs to a system of compulsory heterosexuality that clearly operates -through a system of compulsory sexual reproduction. In Wittig’s view, -to which we now turn, “masculine” and “feminine,” “male” and “female” -exist only within the heterosexual matrix; indeed, they are the naturalized terms that keep that matrix concealed and, hence, protected from -a radical critique. -iii. Monique Wittig: Bodily Disintegration and -Fictive Sex -Language casts sheaves of reality upon the social body. -—Monique Wittig - -Simone de Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex that “one is not born a -woman, but rather becomes one.” The phrase is odd, even nonsensical, -for how can one become a woman if one wasn’t a woman all along? -And who is this “one” who does the becoming? Is there some human -who becomes its gender at some point in time? Is it fair to assume that -this human was not its gender before it became its gender? How does -one “become” a gender? What is the moment or mechanism of gender -~ -construction? And, perhaps most pertinently, when does this mechanism arrive on the cultural scene to transform the human subject into -a gendered subject? -Are there ever humans who are not, as it were, always already gendered? The mark of gender appears to “qualify” bodies as human bodies; the moment in which an infant becomes humanized is when the -question, “is it a boy or girl?” is answered. Those bodily figures who -do not fit into either gender fall outside the human, indeed, constitute -the domain of the dehumanized and the abject against which the -human itself is constituted. If gender is always there, delimiting in -advance what qualifies as the human, how can we speak of a human -who becomes its gender, as if gender were a postscript or a cultural -afterthought? -Beauvoir, of course, meant merely to suggest that the category of -women is a variable cultural accomplishment, a set of meanings that are -taken on or taken up within a cultural field, and that no one is born with -a gender—gender is always acquired. On the other hand, Beauvoir was -willing to affirm that one is born with a sex, as a sex, sexed, and that -being sexed and being human are coextensive and simultaneous; sex is -an analytic attribute of the human; there is no human who is not sexed; -sex qualifies the human as a necessary attribute. But sex does not cause -gender, and gender cannot be understood to reflect or express sex; -indeed, for Beauvoir, sex is immutably factic, but gender acquired, and -whereas sex cannot be changed—or so she thought—gender is the -variable cultural construction of sex, the myriad and open possibilities -of cultural meaning occasioned by a sexed body. -Beauvoir’s theory implied seemingly radical consequences, ones -that she herself did not entertain. For instance, if sex and gender are -radically distinct, then it does not follow that to be a given sex is to -become a given gender; in other words, “woman” need not be the cultural construction of the female body, and “man” need not interpret -male bodies. This radical formulation of the sex/gender distinction -~ -ent genders, and further, that gender itself need not be restricted to -the usual two. If sex does not limit gender, then perhaps there are genders, ways of culturally interpreting the sexed body, that are in no way -restricted by the apparent duality of sex. Consider the further consequence that if gender is something that one becomes—but can never -be—then gender is itself a kind of becoming or activity, and that gender ought not to be conceived as a noun or a substantial thing or a static cultural marker, but rather as an incessant and repeated action of -some sort. If gender is not tied to sex, either causally or expressively, -then gender is a kind of action that can potentially proliferate beyond -the binary limits imposed by the apparent binary of sex. Indeed, gender would be a kind of cultural/corporeal action that requires a new -vocabulary that institutes and proliferates present participles of various kinds, resignifiable and expansive categories that resist both the -binary and substantializing grammatical restrictions on gender. But -how would such a project become culturally conceivable and avoid the -fate of an impossible and vain utopian project? -“One is not born a woman.” Monique Wittig echoed that phrase in -an article by the same name, published in Feminist Issues (1:1). But what -sort of echo and re-presentation of Beauvoir does Monique Wittig -offer? Two of her claims both recall Beauvoir and set Wittig apart from -her: one, that the category of sex is neither invariant nor natural, but is -a specifically political use of the category of nature that serves the purposes of reproductive sexuality. In other words, there is no reason to -divide up human bodies into male and female sexes except that such a -division suits the economic needs of heterosexuality and lends a naturalistic gloss to the institution of heterosexuality. Hence, for Wittig, -there is no distinction between sex and gender; the category of “sex” is -itself a gendered category, fully politically invested, naturalized but not -natural.The second rather counter-intuitive claim that Wittig makes is -the following: a lesbian is not a woman. A woman, she argues, only -exists as a term that stabilizes and consolidates a binary and oppositional relation to a man; that relation, she argues, is heterosexuality. A -~ -lesbian, she claims, in refusing heterosexuality is no longer defined in -terms of that oppositional relation. Indeed, a lesbian, she maintains, -transcends the binary opposition between woman and man; a lesbian is -neither a woman nor a man. But further, a lesbian has no sex; she is -beyond the categories of sex.Through the lesbian refusal of those categories, the lesbian exposes (pronouns are a problem here) the contingent cultural constitution of those categories and the tacit yet abiding -presumption of the heterosexual matrix. Hence, for Wittig, we might -say, one is not born a woman, one becomes one; but further, one is not -born female, one becomes female; but even more radically, one can, if -one chooses, become neither female nor male, woman nor man. -Indeed, the lesbian appears to be a third gender or, as I shall show, a -category that radically problematizes both sex and gender as stable -political categories of description. -Wittig argues that the linguistic discrimination of “sex” secures the -political and cultural operation of compulsory heterosexuality. This -relation of heterosexuality, she argues, is neither reciprocal nor binary -in the usual sense; “sex” is always already female, and there is only one -sex, the feminine. To be male is not to be “sexed”; to be “sexed” is -always a way of becoming particular and relative, and males within this -system participate in the form of the universal person. For Wittig, -then, the “female sex” does not imply some other sex, as in a “male -sex”; the “female sex” implies only itself, enmeshed, as it were, in sex, -trapped in what Beauvoir called the circle of immanence. Because -“sex” is a political and cultural interpretation of the body, there is no -sex/gender distinction along conventional lines; gender is built into -sex, and sex proves to have been gender from the start. Wittig argues -that within this set of compulsory social relations, women become -ontologically suffused with sex; they are their sex, and, conversely, sex -is necessarily feminine. -Wittig understands “sex” to be discursively produced and circulated by a system of significations oppressive to women, gays, and lesbians. She refuses to take part in this signifying system or to believe in -~ -the viability of taking up a reformist or subversive position within the -system; to invoke a part of it is to invoke and confirm the entirety of it. -As a result, the political task she formulates is to overthrow the entire -discourse on sex, indeed, to overthrow the very grammar that institutes “gender”—or “fictive sex”—as an essential attribute of humans -and objects alike (especially pronounced in French).25 Through her -theory and fiction she calls for a radical reorganization of the description of bodies and sexualities without recourse to sex and, consequently, without recourse to the pronomial differentiations that -regulate and distribute rights of speech within the matrix of gender. -Wittig understands discursive categories like “sex” as abstractions -forcibly imposed upon the social field, ones that produce a secondorder or reified “reality.” Although it appears that individuals have a -“direct perception” of sex, taken as an objective datum of experience, -Wittig argues that such an object has been violently shaped into such a -datum and that the history and mechanism of that violent shaping no -longer appears with that object.26 Hence, “sex” is the reality-effect of a -violent process that is concealed by that very effect. All that appears is -“sex,” and so “sex” is perceived to be the totality of what is, uncaused, -but only because the cause is nowhere to be seen. Wittig realizes that -her position is counterintuitive, but the political cultivation of intuition is precisely what she wants to elucidate, expose, and challenge: -Sex is taken as an “immediate given,” “a sensible given,” “physical -features,” belonging to a natural order. But what we believe to be a -physical and direct perception is only a sophisticated and mythic -construction, an “imaginary formation,” which reinterprets physical features (in themselves as neutral as others but marked by a social -system), through the network of relationships in which they are -perceived.27 - -“Physical features” appear to be in some sense there on the far side -of language, unmarked by a social system. It is unclear, however, that -these features could be named in a way that would not reproduce the -~ -reductive operation of the categories of sex. These numerous features -gain social meaning and unification through their articulation within -the category of sex. In other words, “sex” imposes an artificial unity on -an otherwise discontinuous set of attributes. As both discursive and perceptual, “sex” denotes an historically contingent epistemic regime, a -language that forms perception by forcibly shaping the interrelationships through which physical bodies are perceived. -Is there a “physical” body prior to the perceptually perceived body? -An impossible question to decide. Not only is the gathering of attributes under the category of sex suspect, but so is the very discrimination of the “features” themselves. That penis, vagina, breasts, and so -forth, are named sexual parts is both a restriction of the erogenous -body to those parts and a fragmentation of the body as a whole. -Indeed, the “unity” imposed upon the body by the category of sex is a -“disunity,” a fragmentation and compartmentalization, and a reduction -of erotogeneity. No wonder, then, that Wittig textually enacts the -“overthrow” of the category of sex through a destruction and fragmentation of the sexed body in The Lesbian Body. As “sex” fragments the -body, so the lesbian overthrow of “sex” targets as models of domination -those sexually differentiated norms of bodily integrity that dictate -what “unifies” and renders coherent the body as a sexed body. In her -theory and fiction, Wittig shows that the “integrity” and “unity” of the -body, often thought to be positive ideals, serve the purposes of fragmentation, restriction, and domination. -Language gains the power to create “the socially real” through the -locutionary acts of speaking subjects. There appear to be two levels of -reality, two orders of ontology, in Wittig’s theory. Socially constituted -ontology emerges from a more fundamental ontology that appears to -be pre-social and pre-discursive.Whereas “sex” belongs to a discursively constituted reality (second-order), there is a pre-social ontology -that accounts for the constitution of the discursive itself. She clearly -refuses the structuralist assumption of a set of universal signifying -structures prior to the speaking subject that orchestrate the formation -~ -of that subject and his or her speech. In her view, there are historically -contingent structures characterized as heterosexual and compulsory -that distribute the rights of full and authoritative speech to males and -deny them to females. But this socially constituted asymmetry disguises and violates a pre-social ontology of unified and equal persons. -The task for women,Wittig argues, is to assume the position of the -authoritative, speaking subject—which is in some sense their ontologically grounded “right”—and to overthrow both the category of sex -and the system of compulsory heterosexuality that is its origin. -Language, for Wittig, is a set of acts, repeated over time, that produce -reality-effects that are eventually misperceived as “facts.” Collectively -considered, the repeated practice of naming sexual difference has created this appearance of natural division.The “naming” of sex is an act of -domination and compulsion, an institutionalized performative that -both creates and legislates social reality by requiring the discursive/ -perceptual construction of bodies in accord with principles of sexual -difference. Hence, Wittig concludes, “we are compelled in our bodies -and our minds to correspond, feature by feature, with the idea of -nature that has been established for us . . .‘men’ and ‘women’ are political categories, and not natural facts.”28 -“Sex,” the category, compels “sex,” the social configuration of bodies, through what Wittig calls a coerced contract. Hence, the category -of “sex” is a name that enslaves. Language “casts sheaves of reality upon -the social body,” but these sheaves are not easily discarded. She continues: “stamping it and violently shaping it.”29 Wittig argues that the -“straight mind,” evident in the discourses of the human sciences, -“oppress all of us, lesbians, women, and homosexual men” because -they “take for granted that what founds society, any society, is heterosexuality.”30 Discourse becomes oppressive when it requires that the -speaking subject, in order to speak, participate in the very terms of -that oppression—that is, take for granted the speaking subject’s -own impossibility or unintelligibility. This presumptive heterosexuality, she argues, functions within discourse to communicate a threat: -~ -“‘you-will-be-straight-or-you-will-not-be.’”31 Women, lesbians, and -gay men, she argues, cannot assume the position of the speaking subject within the linguistic system of compulsory heterosexuality. To -speak within the system is to be deprived of the possibility of speech; -hence, to speak at all in that context is a performative contradiction, -the linguistic assertion of a self that cannot “be” within the language -that asserts it. -The power Wittig accords to this “system” of language is enormous. -Concepts, categories, and abstractions, she argues, can effect a physical -and material violence against the bodies they claim to organize and -interpret: “There is nothing abstract about the power that sciences and -theories have to act materially and actually upon our bodies and minds, -even if the discourse that produces it is abstract. It is one of the forms -of domination, its very expression, as Marx said. I would say, rather, -one of its exercises. All of the oppressed know this power and have had -to deal with it.”32 The power of language to work on bodies is both the -cause of sexual oppression and the way beyond that oppression. -Language works neither magically nor inexorably: “there is a plasticity -of the real to language: language has a plastic action upon the real.”33 -Language assumes and alters its power to act upon the real through -locutionary acts, which, repeated, become entrenched practices and, -ultimately, institutions. The asymmetrical structure of language that -identifies the subject who speaks for and as the universal with the male -and identifies the female speaker as “particular” and “interested” is in no -sense intrinsic to particular languages or to language itself.These asymmetrical positions cannot be understood to follow from the “nature” of -men or women, for, as Beauvoir established, no such “nature” exists: -“One must understand that men are not born with a faculty for the universal and that women are not reduced at birth to the particular. The -universal has been, and is continually, at every moment, appropriated -by men. It does not happen, it must be done. It is an act, a criminal act, -perpetrated by one class against another. It is an act carried out at the -level of concepts, philosophy, politics.”34 -~ -Although Irigaray argues that “the subject is always already masculine,” Wittig disputes the notion that “the subject” is exclusively masculine territory.The very plasticity of language, for her, resists the fixing of -the subject position as masculine. Indeed, the presumption of an -absolute speaking subject is, for Wittig, the political goal for “women,” -which, if achieved, will effectively dissolve the category of “women” -altogether. A woman cannot use the first person “I” because as a woman, -the speaker is “particular” (relative, interested, perspectival), and the -invocation of the “I” presumes the capacity to speak for and as the universal human: “a relative subject is inconceivable, a relative subject -could not speak at all.”35 Relying on the assumption that all speaking -presupposes and implicitly invokes the entirety of language, Wittig -describes the speaking subject as one who, in the act of saying “I,” “reappropriates language as a whole, proceeding from oneself alone, with the -power to use all language.” This absolute grounding of the speaking “I” -assumes god-like dimensions within Wittig’s discussion.This privilege to -speak “I” establishes a sovereign self, a center of absolute plenitude and -power; speaking establishes “the supreme act of subjectivity.”This coming into subjectivity is the effective overthrow of sex and, hence, the -feminine: “no woman can say I without being for herself a total subject—that is, ungendered, universal, whole.”36 -Wittig continues with a startling speculation on the nature of language and “being” that situates her own political project within the traditional discourse of ontotheology. In her view, the primary ontology -of language gives every person the same opportunity to establish subjectivity. The practical task that women face in trying to establish subjectivity through speech depends on their collective ability to cast off -the reifications of sex imposed on them which deform them as partial -or relative beings. Since this discarding follows upon the exercise of a -full invocation of “I,” women speak their way out of their gender. The -social reifications of sex can be understood to mask or distort a prior -ontological reality, that reality being the equal opportunity of all persons, prior to the marking by sex, to exercise language in the assertion -~ -of subjectivity. In speaking, the “I” assumes the totality of language and, -hence, speaks potentially from all positions—that is, in a universal -mode. “Gender . . . works upon this ontological fact to annul it,” she -writes, assuming the primary principle of equal access to the universal -to qualify as that “ontological fact.”37 This principle of equal access, -however, is itself grounded in an ontological presumption of the unity -of speaking beings in a Being that is prior to sexed being. Gender, she -argues, “tries to accomplish the division of Being,” but “Being as being -is not divided.”38 Here the coherent assertion of the “I” presupposes -not only the totality of language, but the unity of being. -If nowhere else quite so plainly, Wittig places herself here within -the traditional discourse of the philosophical pursuit of presence, -Being, radical and uninterrupted plenitude. In distinction from a -Derridean position that would understand all signification to rely on -an operational différance, Wittig argues that speaking requires and -invokes a seamless identity of all things. This foundationalist fiction -gives her a point of departure by which to criticize existing social institutions.The critical question remains, however, what contingent social -relations does that presumption of being, authority, and universal subjecthood serve? Why value the usurpation of that authoritarian notion -of the subject? Why not pursue the decentering of the subject and its -universalizing epistemic strategies? Although Wittig criticizes “the -straight mind” for universalizing its point of view, it appears that she -not only universalizes “the” straight mind, but fails to consider the -totalitarian consequences of such a theory of sovereign speech acts. -Politically, the division of being—a violence against the field of -ontological plenitude, in her view—into the distinction between the -universal and the particular conditions a relation of subjection. -Domination must be understood as the denial of a prior and primary -unity of all persons in a prelinguistic being. Domination occurs -through a language which, in its plastic social action, creates a secondorder, artificial ontology, an illusion of difference, disparity, and, consequently, hierarchy that becomes social reality. -~ -Paradoxically, Wittig nowhere entertains an Aristophanic myth -about the original unity of genders, for gender is a divisive principle, a -tool of subjection, one that resists the very notion of unity. -Significantly, her novels follow a narrative strategy of disintegration, -suggesting that the binary formulation of sex needs to fragment and -proliferate to the point where the binary itself is revealed as contingent. The free play of attributes or “physical features” is never an -absolute destruction, for the ontological field distorted by gender is -one of continuous plenitude. Wittig criticizes “the straight mind” for -being unable to liberate itself from the thought of “difference.” In temporary alliance with Deleuze and Guattarri, Wittig opposes psychoanalysis as a science predicated on an economy of “lack” and “negation.” -In “Paradigm,” an early essay, Wittig considers that the overthrow of -the system of binary sex might initiate a cultural field of many sexes. In -that essay she refers to Anti-Oedipus: “For us there are, not one or two -sexes, but many (cf. Guattarri/Deleuze), as many sexes as there are -individuals.”39 The limitless proliferation of sexes, however, logically -entails the negation of sex as such. If the number of sexes corresponds -to the number of existing individuals, sex would no longer have any -general application as a term: one’s sex would be a radically singular -property and would no longer be able to operate as a useful or descriptive generalization. -The metaphors of destruction, overthrow, and violence that work -in Wittig’s theory and fiction have a difficult ontological status. -Although linguistic categories shape reality in a “violent” way, creating -social fictions in the name of the real, there appears to be a truer reality, an ontological field of unity against which these social fictions are -measured.Wittig refuses the distinction between an “abstract” concept -and a “material” reality, arguing that concepts are formed and circulated within the materiality of language and that that language works in a -material way to construct the social world.40 On the other hand, these -“constructions” are understood as distortions and reifications to be -judged against a prior ontological field of radical unity and plenitude. -~ -Constructs are thus “real” to the extent that they are fictive phenomena -that gain power within discourse.These constructs are disempowered, -however, through locutionary acts that implicitly seek recourse to the -universality of language and the unity of Being.Wittig argues that “it is -quite possible for a work of literature to operate as a war machine,” -even “a perfect war machine.”41 The main strategy of this war is for -women, lesbians, and gay men—all of whom have been particularized -through an identification with “sex”—to preempt the position of the -speaking subject and its invocation of the universal point of view. -The question of how a particular and relative subject can speak his -or her way out of the category of sex directs Wittig’s various considerations of Djuna Barnes,42 Marcel Proust,43 and Natalie Sarraute.44 The -literary text as war machine is, in each instance, directed against the -hierarchical division of gender, the splitting of universal and particular -in the name of a recovery of a prior and essential unity of those terms. -To universalize the point of view of women is simultaneously to destroy -the category of women and to establish the possibility of a new humanism. Destruction is thus always restoration—that is, the destruction of -a set of categories that introduce artificial divisions into an otherwise -unified ontology. -Literary works, however, maintain a privileged access to this primary field of ontological abundance.The split between form and content corresponds to the artificial philosophical distinction between -abstract, universal thought and concrete, material reality. Just as -Wittig invokes Bakhtin to establish concepts as material realities, so -she invokes literary language more generally to reestablish the unity of -language as indissoluble form and content: “through literature . . . -words come back to us whole again”45; “language exists as a paradise -made of visible, audible, palpable, palatable words.”46 Above all, literary works offer Wittig the occasion to experiment with pronouns that -within systems of compulsory meaning conflate the masculine with -the universal and invariably particularize the feminine. In Les -Guérillères,47 she seeks to eliminate any he-they (il-ils) conjunctions, -~ -indeed, any “he” (il ), and to offer elles as standing for the general, the -universal. “The goal of this approach,” she writes, “is not to feminize -the world but to make the categories of sex obsolete in language.”48 -In a self-consciously defiant imperialist strategy, Wittig argues that -only by taking up the universal and absolute point of view, effectively -lesbianizing the entire world, can the compulsory order of heterosexuality be destroyed. The j/e of The Lesbian Body is supposed to establish -the lesbian, not as a split subject, but as the sovereign subject who can -wage war linguistically against a “world” that has constituted a semantic -and syntactic assault against the lesbian. Her point is not to call attention to the presence of rights of “women” or “lesbians” as individuals, -but to counter the globalizing heterosexist episteme by a reverse discourse of equal reach and power.The point is not to assume the position -of the speaking subject in order to be a recognized individual within a -set of reciprocal linguistic relations; rather, the speaking subject -becomes more than the individual, becomes an absolute perspective -that imposes its categories on the entire linguistic field, known as “the -world.” Only a war strategy that rivals the proportions of compulsory -heterosexuality,Wittig argues, will operate effectively to challenge the -latter’s epistemic hegemony. -In its ideal sense, speaking is, for Wittig, a potent act, an assertion -of sovereignty that simultaneously implies a relationship of equality -with other speaking subjects.49 This ideal or primary “contract” of language operates at an implicit level. Language has a dual possibility: It -can be used to assert a true and inclusive universality of persons, or it -can institute a hierarchy in which only some persons are eligible to -speak and others, by virtue of their exclusion from the universal point -of view, cannot “speak” without simultaneously deauthorizing that -speech. Prior to this asymmetrical relation to speech, however, is an -ideal social contract, one in which every first-person speech act presupposes and affirms an absolute reciprocity among speaking subjects—Wittig’s version of the ideal speech situation. Distorting and -concealing that ideal reciprocity, however, is the heterosexual contract, -~ -the focus of Wittig’s most recent theoretical work,50 although present -in her theoretical essays all along.51 -Unspoken but always operative, the heterosexual contract cannot -be reduced to any of its empirical appearances.Wittig writes: -I confront a nonexistent object, a fetish, an ideological form which -cannot be grasped in reality, except through its effects, whose existence lies in the mind of people, but in a way that affects their whole -life, the way they act, the way they move, the way they think. So we -are dealing with an object both imaginary and real.52 - -As in Lacan, the idealization of heterosexuality appears even within -Wittig’s own formulation to exercise a control over the bodies of practicing heterosexuals that is finally impossible, indeed, that is bound to -falter on its own impossibility. Wittig appears to believe that only the -radical departure from heterosexual contexts—namely becoming lesbian or gay—can bring about the downfall of this heterosexual regime. -But this political consequence follows only if one understands all “participation” in heterosexuality to be a repetition and consolidation of -heterosexual oppression.The possibilities of resignifying heterosexuality itself are refused precisely because heterosexuality is understood as -a total system that requires a thoroughgoing displacement. The political options that follow from such a totalizing view of heterosexist -power are (a) radical conformity or (b) radical revolution. -Assuming the systemic integrity of heterosexuality is extremely -problematic both for Wittig’s understanding of heterosexual practice -and for her conception of homosexuality and lesbianism. As radically -“outside” the heterosexual matrix, homosexuality is conceived as radically unconditioned by heterosexual norms.This purification of homosexuality, a kind of lesbian modernism, is currently contested by -numerous lesbian and gay discourses that understand lesbian and gay -culture as embedded in the larger structures of heterosexuality even as -they are positioned in subversive or resignificatory relationships to -~ -ity, it seems, of a volitional or optional heterosexuality; yet, even if -heterosexuality is presented as obligatory or presumptive, it does not -follow that all heterosexual acts are radically determined. Further, -Wittig’s radical disjunction between straight and gay replicates the -kind of disjunctive binarism that she herself characterizes as the divisive philosophical gesture of the straight mind. -My own conviction is that the radical disjunction posited by Wittig -between heterosexuality and homosexuality is simply not true, that -there are structures of psychic homosexuality within heterosexual relations, and structures of psychic heterosexuality within gay and lesbian -sexuality and relationships. Further, there are other power/discourse -centers that construct and structure both gay and straight sexuality; -heterosexuality is not the only compulsory display of power that -informs sexuality. The ideal of a coherent heterosexuality that Wittig -describes as the norm and standard of the heterosexual contract is an -impossible ideal, a “fetish,” as she herself points out. A psychoanalytic -elaboration might contend that this impossibility is exposed in virtue of -the complexity and resistance of an unconscious sexuality that is not -always already heterosexual. In this sense, heterosexuality offers normative sexual positions that are intrinsically impossible to embody, and -the persistent failure to identify fully and without incoherence with -these positions reveals heterosexuality itself not only as a compulsory -law, but as an inevitable comedy. Indeed, I would offer this insight into -heterosexuality as both a compulsory system and an intrinsic comedy, a -constant parody of itself, as an alternative gay/lesbian perspective. -Clearly, the norm of compulsory heterosexuality does operate -with the force and violence that Wittig describes, but my own position -is that this is not the only way that it operates. For Wittig, the strategies -for political resistance to normative heterosexuality are fairly direct. -Only the array of embodied persons who are not engaged in a heterosexual relationship within the confines of the family which takes reproduction to be the end or telos of sexuality are, in effect, actively -contesting the categories of sex or, at least, not in compliance with the -~ -normative presuppositions and purposes of that set of categories.To be -lesbian or gay is, for Wittig, no longer to know one’s sex, to be engaged -in a confusion and proliferation of categories that make sex an impossible category of identity. As emancipatory as this sounds, Wittig’s proposal overrides those discourses within gay and lesbian culture that -proliferate specifically gay sexual identities by appropriating and redeploying the categories of sex. The terms queens, butches, femmes, girls, -even the parodic reappropriation of dyke, queer, and fag redeploy and -destabilize the categories of sex and the originally derogatory categories for homosexual identity. All of these terms might be understood -as symptomatic of “the straight mind,” modes of identifying with the -oppressor’s version of the identity of the oppressed. On the other -hand, lesbian has surely been partially reclaimed from it historical -meanings, and parodic categories serve the purposes of denaturalizing -sex itself. When the neighborhood gay restaurant closes for vacation, -the owners put out a sign, explaining that “she’s overworked and needs -a rest.” This very gay appropriation of the feminine works to multiply -possible sites of application of the term, to reveal the arbitrary relation -between the signifier and the signified, and to destabilize and mobilize -the sign. Is this a colonizing “appropriation” of the feminine? My sense -is no.That accusation assumes that the feminine belongs to women, an -assumption surely suspect. -Within lesbian contexts, the “identification” with masculinity that -appears as butch identity is not a simple assimilation of lesbianism back -into the terms of heterosexuality. As one lesbian femme explained, she -likes her boys to be girls, meaning that “being a girl” contextualizes and -resignifies “masculinity” in a butch identity. As a result, that masculinity, if that it can be called, is always brought into relief against a -culturally intelligible “female body.” It is precisely this dissonant juxtaposition and the sexual tension that its transgression generates that -constitute the object of desire. In other words, the object [and clearly, -there is not just one] of lesbian-femme desire is neither some decontextualized female body nor a discrete yet superimposed masculine -~ -identity, but the destabilization of both terms as they come into erotic -interplay. Similarly, some heterosexual or bisexual women may well -prefer that the relation of “figure” to “ground” work in the opposite -direction—that is, they may prefer that their girls be boys. In that case, -the perception of “feminine” identity would be juxtaposed on the -“male body” as ground, but both terms would, through the juxtaposition, lose their internal stability and distinctness from each other. -Clearly, this way of thinking about gendered exchanges of desire -admits of much greater complexity, for the play of masculine and feminine, as well as the inversion of ground to figure can constitute a highly complex and structured production of desire. Significantly, both the -sexed body as “ground” and the butch or femme identity as “figure” can -shift, invert, and create erotic havoc of various sorts. Neither can lay -claim to “the real,” although either can qualify as an object of belief, -depending on the dynamic of the sexual exchange.The idea that butch -and femme are in some sense “replicas” or “copies” of heterosexual -exchange underestimates the erotic significance of these identities as -internally dissonant and complex in their resignification of the hegemonic categories by which they are enabled. Lesbian femmes may -recall the heterosexual scene, as it were, but also displace it at the same -time. In both butch and femme identities, the very notion of an original or natural identity is put into question; indeed, it is precisely that -question as it is embodied in these identities that becomes one source -of their erotic significance. -Although Wittig does not discuss the meaning of butch/femme -identities, her notion of fictive sex suggests a similar dissimulation of a -natural or original notion of gendered coherence assumed to exist -among sexed bodies, gender identities, and sexualities. Implicit in -Wittig’s description of sex as a fictive category is the notion that the -various components of “sex” may well disaggregate. In such a breakdown of bodily coherence, the category of sex could no longer operate -descriptively in any given cultural domain. If the category of “sex” is -established through repeated acts, then conversely, the social action of -~ -bodies within the cultural field can withdraw the very power of reality -that they themselves invested in the category. -For power to be withdrawn, power itself would have to be understood as the retractable operation of volition; indeed, the heterosexual -contract would be understood to be sustained through a series of -choices, just as the social contract in Locke or Rousseau is understood -to presuppose the rational choice or deliberate will of those it is said -to govern. If power is not reduced to volition, however, and the classical liberal and existential model of freedom is refused, then powerrelations can be understood, as I think they ought to be, as constraining -and constituting the very possibilities of volition. Hence, power can be -neither withdrawn nor refused, but only redeployed. Indeed, in my -view, the normative focus for gay and lesbian practice ought to be on -the subversive and parodic redeployment of power rather than on the -impossible fantasy of its full-scale transcendence. -Whereas Wittig clearly envisions lesbianism to be a full-scale -refusal of heterosexuality, I would argue that even that refusal constitutes an engagement and, ultimately, a radical dependence on the very -terms that lesbianism purports to transcend. If sexuality and power are -coextensive, and if lesbian sexuality is no more and no less constructed -than other modes of sexuality, then there is no promise of limitless -pleasure after the shackles of the category of sex have been thrown off. -The structuring presence of heterosexual constructs within gay and -lesbian sexuality does not mean that those constructs determine gay and -lesbian sexuality nor that gay and lesbian sexuality are derivable or -reducible to those constructs. Indeed, consider the disempowering and -denaturalizing effects of a specifically gay deployment of heterosexual -constructs. The presence of these norms not only constitute a site of -power that cannot be refused, but they can and do become the site of -parodic contest and display that robs compulsory heterosexuality of its -claims to naturalness and originality.Wittig calls for a position beyond -sex that returns her theory to a problematic humanism based in a -problematic metaphysics of presence. And yet, her literary works -~ -appear to enact a different kind of political strategy than the one for -which she explicitly calls in her theoretical essays. In The Lesbian Body -and in Les Guérillères, the narrative strategy through which political -transformation is articulated makes use of redeployment and transvaluation time and again both to make use of originally oppressive terms -and to deprive them of their legitimating functions. -Although Wittig herself is a “materialist,” the term has a specific -meaning within her theoretical framework. She wants to overcome -the split between materiality and representation that characterizes -“straight” thinking. Materialism implies neither a reduction of ideas -to matter nor the view of theory as a reflection of its economic base, -strictly conceived.Wittig’s materialism takes social institutions and practices, in particular, the institution of heterosexuality, as the basis of critical analysis. In “The Straight Mind” and “On the Social Contract,”53 she -understands the institution of heterosexuality as the founding basis of the -male-dominated social orders. “Nature” and the domain of materiality -are ideas, ideological constructs, produced by these social institutions to -support the political interests of the heterosexual contract. In this sense, -Wittig is a classic idealist for whom nature is understood as a mental representation.A language of compulsory meanings produces this representation of nature to further the political strategy of sexual domination and -to rationalize the institution of compulsory heterosexuality. -Unlike Beauvoir,Wittig sees nature not as a resistant materiality, a -medium, surface, or an object; it is an “idea” generated and sustained -for the purposes of social control. The very elasticity of the ostensible -materiality of the body is shown in The Lesbian Body as language figures -and refigures the parts of the body into radically new social configurations of form (and antiform). Like those mundane and scientific languages that circulate the idea of “nature” and so produce the -naturalized conception of discretely sexed bodies, Wittig’s own language enacts an alternative disfiguring and refiguring of bodies. Her -aim is to expose the idea of a natural body as a construction and to -offer a deconstructive/reconstructive set of strategies for configuring -~ -bodies to contest the power of heterosexuality. The very shape and -form of bodies, their unifying principle, their composite parts, are -always figured by a language imbued with political interests. For -Wittig, the political challenge is to seize language as the means of representation and production, to treat it as an instrument that invariably -constructs the field of bodies and that ought to be used to deconstruct -and reconstruct bodies outside the oppressive categories of sex. -If the multiplication of gender possibilities expose and disrupt the -binary reifications of gender, what is the nature of such a subversive -enactment? How can such an enactment constitute a subversion? In -The Lesbian Body, the act of love-making literally tears the bodies of its -partners apart. As lesbian sexuality, this set of acts outside of the reproductive matrix produces the body itself as an incoherent center of -attributes, gestures, and desires. And in Wittig’s Les Guérillères, the -same kind of disintegrating effect, even violence, emerges in the struggle between the “women” and their oppressors. In that context,Wittig -clearly distances herself from those who would defend the notion of a -“specifically feminine” pleasure, writing, or identity; she all but mocks -those who would hold up the “circle” as their emblem. For Wittig, the -task is not to prefer the feminine side of the binary to the masculine, -but to displace the binary as such through a specifically lesbian disintegration of its constitutive categories. -The disintegration appears literal in the fictional text, as does the -violent struggle in Les Guérillères. Wittig’s texts have been criticized for -this use of violence and force—notions that on the surface seem antithetical to feminist aims. But note that Wittig’s narrative strategy is not -to identify the feminine through a strategy of differentiation or exclusion from the masculine. Such a strategy consolidates hierarchy and -binarisms through a transvaluation of values by which women now -represent the domain of positive value. In contrast to a strategy that -consolidates women’s identity through an exclusionary process of differentiation, Wittig offers a strategy of reappropriation and subversive -redeployment of precisely those “values” that originally appeared to -~ -belong to the masculine domain. One might well object that Wittig has -assimilated masculine values or, indeed, that she is “male-identified,” -but the very notion of “identification” reemerges in the context of this -literary production as immeasurably more complex than the uncritical -use of that term suggests. The violence and struggle in her text is, significantly, recontextualized, no longer sustaining the same meanings -that it has in oppressive contexts. It is neither a simple “turning of the -tables” in which women now wage violence against men, nor a simple -internalization of masculine norms such that women now wage violence -against themselves.The violence of the text has the identity and coherence of the category of sex as its target, a lifeless construct, a construct -out to deaden the body. Because that category is the naturalized construct that makes the institution of normative heterosexuality seem -inevitable, Wittig’s textual violence is enacted against that institution, -and not primarily for its heterosexuality, but for its compulsoriness. -Note as well that the category of sex and the naturalized institution -of heterosexuality are constructs, socially instituted and socially regulated fantasies or “fetishes,” not natural categories, but political ones (categories that prove that recourse to the “natural” in such contexts is -always political). Hence, the body which is torn apart, the wars waged -among women, are textual violences, the deconstruction of constructs -that are always already a kind of violence against the body’s possibilities. -But here we might ask:What is left when the body rendered coherent through the category of sex is disaggregated, rendered chaotic? Can -this body be re-membered, be put back together again? Are there possibilities of agency that do not require the coherent reassembling of -this construct? Wittig’s text not only deconstructs sex and offers a -way to disintegrate the false unity designated by sex, but enacts as well -a kind of diffuse corporeal agency generated from a number of different -centers of power. Indeed, the source of personal and political agency -comes not from within the individual, but in and through the complex cultural exchanges among bodies in which identity itself is evershifting, indeed, where identity itself is constructed, disintegrated, and -~ -recirculated only within the context of a dynamic field of cultural relations. To be a woman is, then, for Wittig as well as for Beauvoir, to -become a woman, but because this process is in no sense fixed, it is possible to become a being whom neither man nor woman truly describes. -This is not the figure of the androgyne nor some hypothetical “third -gender,” nor is it a transcendence of the binary. Instead, it is an internal -subversion in which the binary is both presupposed and proliferated to -the point where it no longer makes sense.The force of Wittig’s fiction, -its linguistic challenge, is to offer an experience beyond the categories -of identity, an erotic struggle to create new categories from the ruins of -the old, new ways of being a body within the cultural field, and whole -new languages of description. -In response to Beauvoir’s notion “one is not born a woman, but, -rather, becomes one,”Wittig claims that instead of becoming a woman, -one (anyone?) can become a lesbian. By refusing the category of -women, Wittig’s lesbian-feminism appears to cut off any kind of solidarity with heterosexual women and implicitly to assume that lesbianism is the logically or politically necessary consequence of feminism. -This kind of separatist prescriptivism is surely no longer viable. But -even if it were politically desirable, what criteria would be used to -decide the question of sexual “identity”? -If to become a lesbian is an act, a leave-taking of heterosexuality, a -self-naming that contests the compulsory meanings of heterosexuality’s women and men, what is to keep the name of lesbian from becoming -an equally compulsory category? What qualifies as a lesbian? Does anyone know? If a lesbian refutes the radical disjunction between heterosexual and homosexual economies that Wittig promotes, is that lesbian -no longer a lesbian? And if it is an “act” that founds the identity as a performative accomplishment of sexuality, are there certain kinds of acts -that qualify over others as foundational? Can one do the act with a -“straight mind”? Can one understand lesbian sexuality not only as a -contestation of the category of “sex,” of “women,” of “natural bodies,” -but also of “lesbian”? -~ -Interestingly,Wittig suggests a necessary relationship between the -homosexual point of view and that of figurative language, as if to be a -homosexual is to contest the compulsory syntax and semantics that -construct “the real.” Excluded from the real, the homosexual point of -view, if there is one, might well understand the real as constituted -through a set of exclusions, margins that do not appear, absences that -do not figure. What a tragic mistake, then, to construct a gay/lesbian -identity through the same exclusionary means, as if the excluded were -not, precisely through its exclusion, always presupposed and, indeed, -required for the construction of that identity. Such an exclusion, paradoxically, institutes precisely the relation of radical dependency it -seeks to overcome: Lesbianism would then require heterosexuality. -Lesbianism that defines itself in radical exclusion from heterosexuality -deprives itself of the capacity to resignify the very heterosexual constructs by which it is partially and inevitably constituted. As a result, -that lesbian strategy would consolidate compulsory heterosexuality in -its oppressive forms. -The more insidious and effective strategy it seems is a thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment of the categories of identity -themselves, not merely to contest “sex,” but to articulate the convergence of multiple sexual discourses at the site of “identity” in order to -render that category, in whatever form, permanently problematic. -iv. Bodily Inscriptions, Performative Subversions -“Garbo ‘got in drag’ whenever she took some heavy glamour part, whenever she melted in or out of a man’s arms, whenever she simply let that -heavenly-flexed neck . . . bear the weight of her thrown-back head. . . . -How resplendent seems the art of acting! It is all impersonation, -whether the sex underneath is true or not.” -—Parker Tyler, “The Garbo Image” quoted -in Esther Newton, Mother Camp - -Categories of true sex, discrete gender, and specific sexuality have -constituted the stable point of reference for a great deal of feminist -~ -theory and politics. These constructs of identity serve as the points of -epistemic departure from which theory emerges and politics itself is -shaped. In the case of feminism, politics is ostensibly shaped to express -the interests, the perspectives, of “women.” But is there a political -shape to “women,” as it were, that precedes and prefigures the political -elaboration of their interests and epistemic point of view? How is that -identity shaped, and is it a political shaping that takes the very morphology and boundary of the sexed body as the ground, surface, or site -of cultural inscription? What circumscribes that site as “the female -body” ? Is “the body” or “the sexed body” the firm foundation on which -gender and systems of compulsory sexuality operate? Or is “the body” -itself shaped by political forces with strategic interests in keeping that -body bounded and constituted by the markers of sex? -The sex/gender distinction and the category of sex itself appear to -presuppose a generalization of “the body” that preexists the acquisition -of its sexed significance. This “body” often appears to be a passive -medium that is signified by an inscription from a cultural source figured as “external” to that body. Any theory of the culturally constructed body, however, ought to question “the body” as a construct of -suspect generality when it is figured as passive and prior to discourse. -There are Christian and Cartesian precedents to such views which, -prior to the emergence of vitalistic biologies in the nineteenth century, -understand “the body” as so much inert matter, signifying nothing or, -more specifically, signifying a profane void, the fallen state: deception, -sin, the premonitional metaphorics of hell and the eternal feminine. -There are many occasions in both Sartre’s and Beauvoir’s work where -“the body” is figured as a mute facticity, anticipating some meaning that -can be attributed only by a transcendent consciousness, understood in -Cartesian terms as radically immaterial. But what establishes this dualism for us? What separates off “the body” as indifferent to signification, -and signification itself as the act of a radically disembodied consciousness or, rather, the act that radically disembodies that consciousness? To -what extent is that Cartesian dualism presupposed in phenomenology -~ -adapted to the structuralist frame in which mind/body is redescribed -as culture/nature? With respect to gender discourse, to what extent -do these problematic dualisms still operate within the very descriptions that are supposed to lead us out of that binarism and its implicit -hierarchy? How are the contours of the body clearly marked as the -taken-for-granted ground or surface upon which gender significations -are inscribed, a mere facticity devoid of value, prior to significance? -Wittig suggests that a culturally specific epistemic a priori establishes the naturalness of “sex.” But by what enigmatic means has “the -body” been accepted as a prima facie given that admits of no genealogy? -Even within Foucault’s essay on the very theme of genealogy, the body -is figured as a surface and the scene of a cultural inscription: “the body -is the inscribed surface of events.”54 The task of genealogy, he claims, is -“to expose a body totally imprinted by history.” His sentence continues, however, by referring to the goal of “history”—here clearly -understood on the model of Freud’s “civilization”—as the “destruction -of the body” (148). Forces and impulses with multiple directionalities -are precisely that which history both destroys and preserves through -the Entstehung (historical event) of inscription. As “a volume in perpetual disintegration” (148), the body is always under siege, suffering -destruction by the very terms of history. And history is the creation of -values and meanings by a signifying practice that requires the subjection of the body.This corporeal destruction is necessary to produce the -speaking subject and its significations.This is a body, described through -the language of surface and force, weakened through a “single drama” -of domination, inscription, and creation (150). This is not the modus -vivendi of one kind of history rather than another, but is, for Foucault, -“history” (148) in its essential and repressive gesture. -Although Foucault writes, “Nothing in man [sic]—not even his -body—is sufficiently stable to serve as the basis for self-recognition or -for understanding other men [sic]” (153), he nevertheless points to the -constancy of cultural inscription as a “single drama” that acts on the -body. If the creation of values, that historical mode of signification, -~ -requires the destruction of the body, much as the instrument of torture in Kafka’s “In the Penal Colony” destroys the body on which it -writes, then there must be a body prior to that inscription, stable and -self-identical, subject to that sacrificial destruction. In a sense, for -Foucault, as for Nietzsche, cultural values emerge as the result of an -inscription on the body, understood as a medium, indeed, a blank -page; in order for this inscription to signify, however, that medium -must itself be destroyed—that is, fully transvaluated into a sublimated -domain of values.Within the metaphorics of this notion of cultural values is the figure of history as a relentless writing instrument, and the -body as the medium which must be destroyed and transfigured in -order for “culture” to emerge. -By maintaining a body prior to its cultural inscription, Foucault -appears to assume a materiality prior to signification and form. Because -this distinction operates as essential to the task of genealogy as he -defines it, the distinction itself is precluded as an object of genealogical -investigation. Occasionally in his analysis of Herculine, Foucault subscribes to a prediscursive multiplicity of bodily forces that break -through the surface of the body to disrupt the regulating practices of -cultural coherence imposed upon that body by a power regime, understood as a vicissitude of “history.” If the presumption of some kind of -precategorial source of disruption is refused, is it still possible to give a -genealogical account of the demarcation of the body as such as a signifying practice? This demarcation is not initiated by a reified history or by a -subject. This marking is the result of a diffuse and active structuring of -the social field. This signifying practice effects a social space for and of -the body within certain regulatory grids of intelligibility. -Mary Douglas’s Purity and Danger suggests that the very contours -of “the body” are established through markings that seek to establish -specific codes of cultural coherence. Any discourse that establishes the -boundaries of the body serves the purpose of instating and naturalizing -certain taboos regarding the appropriate limits, postures, and modes -of exchange that define what it is that constitutes bodies: -~ -ideas about separating, purifying, demarcating and punishing transgressions have as their main function to impose system on an inherently untidy experience. It is only by exaggerating the difference -between within and without, above and below, male and female, with -and against, that a semblance of order is created.55 - -Although Douglas clearly subscribes to a structuralist distinction -between an inherently unruly nature and an order imposed by cultural -means, the “untidiness” to which she refers can be redescribed as a -region of cultural unruliness and disorder. Assuming the inevitably -binary structure of the nature/culture distinction, Douglas cannot -point toward an alternative configuration of culture in which such distinctions become malleable or proliferate beyond the binary frame. -Her analysis, however, provides a possible point of departure for -understanding the relationship by which social taboos institute and -maintain the boundaries of the body as such. Her analysis suggests that -what constitutes the limit of the body is never merely material, but -that the surface, the skin, is systemically signified by taboos and anticipated transgressions; indeed, the boundaries of the body become, -within her analysis, the limits of the social per se. A poststructuralist -appropriation of her view might well understand the boundaries of the -body as the limits of the socially hegemonic. In a variety of cultures, she -maintains, there are -pollution powers which inhere in the structure of ideas itself and -which punish a symbolic breaking of that which should be joined or -joining of that which should be separate. It follows from this that pollution is a type of danger which is not likely to occur except where -the lines of structure, cosmic or social, are clearly defined. -A polluting person is always in the wrong. He [sic] has developed -some wrong condition or simply crossed over some line which -should not have been crossed and this displacement unleashes danger -for someone.56 - -~ -In a sense, Simon Watney has identified the contemporary construction of “the polluting person” as the person with AIDS in his -Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media.57 Not only is the illness -figured as the “gay disease,” but throughout the media’s hysterical and -homophobic response to the illness there is a tactical construction of a -continuity between the polluted status of the homosexual by virtue of -the boundary-trespass that is homosexuality and the disease as a specific modality of homosexual pollution. That the disease is transmitted -through the exchange of bodily fluids suggests within the sensationalist -graphics of homophobic signifying systems the dangers that permeable -bodily boundaries present to the social order as such. Douglas remarks -that “the body is a model that can stand for any bounded system. Its -boundaries can represent any boundaries which are threatened or precarious.”58 And she asks a question which one might have expected to -read in Foucault: “Why should bodily margins be thought to be specifically invested with power and danger?”59 -Douglas suggests that all social systems are vulnerable at their -margins, and that all margins are accordingly considered dangerous. -If the body is synecdochal for the social system per se or a site in which -open systems converge, then any kind of unregulated permeability constitutes a site of pollution and endangerment. Since anal and -oral sex among men clearly establishes certain kinds of bodily permeabilities unsanctioned by the hegemonic order, male homosexuality would, within such a hegemonic point of view, constitute a -site of danger and pollution, prior to and regardless of the cultural -presence of AIDS. Similarly, the “polluted” status of lesbians, regardless -of their low-risk status with respect to AIDS, brings into relief -the dangers of their bodily exchanges. Significantly, being “outside” -the hegemonic order does not signify being “in” a state of filthy -and untidy nature. Paradoxically, homosexuality is almost always -conceived within the homophobic signifying economy as both uncivilized and unnatural. - -~ -The construction of stable bodily contours relies upon fixed sites -of corporeal permeability and impermeability. Those sexual practices -in both homosexual and heterosexual contexts that open surfaces and -orifices to erotic signification or close down others effectively reinscribe the boundaries of the body along new cultural lines. Anal sex -among men is an example, as is the radical re-membering of the body -in Wittig’s The Lesbian Body. Douglas alludes to “a kind of sex pollution -which expresses a desire to keep the body (physical and social) -intact,”60 suggesting that the naturalized notion of “the” body is itself a -consequence of taboos that render that body discrete by virtue of its -stable boundaries. Further, the rites of passage that govern various -bodily orifices presuppose a heterosexual construction of gendered -exchange, positions, and erotic possibilities. The deregulation of such -exchanges accordingly disrupts the very boundaries that determine -what it is to be a body at all. Indeed, the critical inquiry that traces the -regulatory practices within which bodily contours are constructed -constitutes precisely the genealogy of “the body” in its discreteness that -might further radicalize Foucault’s theory.61 -Significantly, Kristeva’s discussion of abjection in Powers of Horror -begins to suggest the uses of this structuralist notion of a boundaryconstituting taboo for the purposes of constructing a discrete subject -through exclusion.62 The “abject” designates that which has been -expelled from the body, discharged as excrement, literally rendered -“Other.”This appears as an expulsion of alien elements, but the alien is -effectively established through this expulsion. The construction of the -“not-me” as the abject establishes the boundaries of the body which -are also the first contours of the subject. Kristeva writes: -nausea makes me balk at that milk cream, separates me from the -mother and father who proffer it. “I” want none of that element, sign -of their desire; “I” do not want to listen, “I” do not assimilate it, “I” -expel it. But since the food is not an “other” for “me,” who am only in - -~ -their desire, I expel myself, I spit myself out, I abject myself within the -same motion through which “I” claim to establish myself.63 - -The boundary of the body as well as the distinction between internal and external is established through the ejection and transvaluation -of something originally part of identity into a defiling otherness. As -Iris Young has suggested in her use of Kristeva to understand sexism, -homophobia, and racism, the repudiation of bodies for their sex, sexuality, and/or color is an “expulsion” followed by a “repulsion” that -founds and consolidates culturally hegemonic identities along -sex/race/sexuality axes of differentiation.64 Young’s appropriation of -Kristeva shows how the operation of repulsion can consolidate “identities” founded on the instituting of the “Other” or a set of Others -through exclusion and domination. What constitutes through division -the “inner” and “outer” worlds of the subject is a border and boundary -tenuously maintained for the purposes of social regulation and control. The boundary between the inner and outer is confounded by -those excremental passages in which the inner effectively becomes -outer, and this excreting function becomes, as it were, the model by -which other forms of identity-differentiation are accomplished. In -effect, this is the mode by which Others become shit. For inner and -outer worlds to remain utterly distinct, the entire surface of the body -would have to achieve an impossible impermeability.This sealing of its -surfaces would constitute the seamless boundary of the subject; but -this enclosure would invariably be exploded by precisely that excremental filth that it fears. -Regardless of the compelling metaphors of the spatial distinctions -of inner and outer, they remain linguistic terms that facilitate and articulate a set of fantasies, feared and desired. “Inner” and “outer” make -sense only with reference to a mediating boundary that strives for stability. And this stability, this coherence, is determined in large part by -cultural orders that sanction the subject and compel its differentiation -~ -tion that stabilizes and consolidates the coherent subject. When that -subject is challenged, the meaning and necessity of the terms are subject to displacement. If the “inner world” no longer designates a topos, -then the internal fixity of the self and, indeed, the internal locale of -gender identity, become similarly suspect. The critical question is not -how did that identity become internalized? as if internalization were a -process or a mechanism that might be descriptively reconstructed. -Rather, the question is: From what strategic position in public discourse -and for what reasons has the trope of interiority and the disjunctive -binary of inner/outer taken hold? In what language is “inner space” figured? What kind of figuration is it, and through what figure of the body -is it signified? How does a body figure on its surface the very invisibility -of its hidden depth? -From Interiority to Gender Performatives -In Discipline and Punish Foucault challenges the language of internalization as it operates in the service of the disciplinary regime of the subjection and subjectivation of criminals.65 Although Foucault objected -to what he understood to be the psychoanalytic belief in the “inner” -truth of sex in The History of Sexuality, he turns to a criticism of the -doctrine of internalization for separate purposes in the context of his -history of criminology. In a sense, Discipline and Punish can be read as -Foucault’s effort to rewrite Nietzsche’s doctrine of internalization in -On the Genealogy of Morals on the model of inscription. In the context of -prisoners, Foucault writes, the strategy has been not to enforce a -repression of their desires, but to compel their bodies to signify the -prohibitive law as their very essence, style, and necessity. That law is -not literally internalized, but incorporated, with the consequence that -bodies are produced which signify that law on and through the body; -there the law is manifest as the essence of their selves, the meaning of -their soul, their conscience, the law of their desire. In effect, the law is -at once fully manifest and fully latent, for it never appears as external -to the bodies it subjects and subjectivates. Foucault writes: -~ -It would be wrong to say that the soul is an illusion, or an ideological -effect. On the contrary, it exists, it has a reality, it is produced permanently around, on, within, the body by the functioning of a power -that is exercised on those that are punished. (my emphasis)66 - -The figure of the interior soul understood as “within” the body is signified through its inscription on the body, even though its primary mode -of signification is through its very absence, its potent invisibility. The -effect of a structuring inner space is produced through the signification -of a body as a vital and sacred enclosure.The soul is precisely what the -body lacks; hence, the body presents itself as a signifying lack. That -lack which is the body signifies the soul as that which cannot show. In -this sense, then, the soul is a surface signification that contests and displaces the inner/outer distinction itself, a figure of interior psychic -space inscribed on the body as a social signification that perpetually -renounces itself as such. In Foucault’s terms, the soul is not imprisoned by or within the body, as some Christian imagery would suggest, -but “the soul is the prison of the body.”67 -The redescription of intrapsychic processes in terms of the surface -politics of the body implies a corollary redescription of gender as the -disciplinary production of the figures of fantasy through the play of -presence and absence on the body’s surface, the construction of the -gendered body through a series of exclusions and denials, signifying -absences. But what determines the manifest and latent text of the body -politic? What is the prohibitive law that generates the corporeal stylization of gender, the fantasied and fantastic figuration of the body? We -have already considered the incest taboo and the prior taboo against -homosexuality as the generative moments of gender identity, the prohibitions that produce identity along the culturally intelligible grids of -an idealized and compulsory heterosexuality.That disciplinary production of gender effects a false stabilization of gender in the interests of -the heterosexual construction and regulation of sexuality within the -~ -der discontinuities that run rampant within heterosexual, bisexual, -and gay and lesbian contexts in which gender does not necessarily follow from sex, and desire, or sexuality generally, does not seem to follow from gender—indeed, where none of these dimensions of -significant corporeality express or reflect one another.When the disorganization and disaggregation of the field of bodies disrupt the regulatory fiction of heterosexual coherence, it seems that the expressive -model loses its descriptive force.That regulatory ideal is then exposed -as a norm and a fiction that disguises itself as a developmental law regulating the sexual field that it purports to describe. -According to the understanding of identification as an enacted fantasy or incorporation, however, it is clear that coherence is desired, -wished for, idealized, and that this idealization is an effect of a corporeal signification. In other words, acts, gestures, and desire produce the -effect of an internal core or substance, but produce this on the surface of -the body, through the play of signifying absences that suggest, but -never reveal, the organizing principle of identity as a cause. Such acts, -gestures, enactments, generally construed, are performative in the sense -that the essence or identity that they otherwise purport to express are -fabrications manufactured and sustained through corporeal signs and -other discursive means. That the gendered body is performative suggests that it has no ontological status apart from the various acts which -constitute its reality. This also suggests that if that reality is fabricated -as an interior essence, that very interiority is an effect and function of -a decidedly public and social discourse, the public regulation of fantasy through the surface politics of the body, the gender border control -that differentiates inner from outer, and so institutes the “integrity” -of the subject. In other words, acts and gestures, articulated and enacted desires create the illusion of an interior and organizing gender core, -an illusion discursively maintained for the purposes of the regulation -of sexuality within the obligatory frame of reproductive heterosexuality. If the “cause” of desire, gesture, and act can be localized within -the “self ” of the actor, then the political regulations and disciplinary -~ -practices which produce that ostensibly coherent gender are effectively displaced from view. The displacement of a political and discursive -origin of gender identity onto a psychological “core” precludes an -analysis of the political constitution of the gendered subject and its -fabricated notions about the ineffable interiority of its sex or of its -true identity. -If the inner truth of gender is a fabrication and if a true gender is a -fantasy instituted and inscribed on the surface of bodies, then it seems -that genders can be neither true nor false, but are only produced as the -truth effects of a discourse of primary and stable identity. In Mother -Camp: Female Impersonators in America, anthropologist Esther Newton -suggests that the structure of impersonation reveals one of the key fabricating mechanisms through which the social construction of gender -takes place.68 I would suggest as well that drag fully subverts the distinction between inner and outer psychic space and effectively mocks -both the expressive model of gender and the notion of a true gender -identity. Newton writes: -At its most complex, [drag] is a double inversion that says, “appearance is an illusion.” Drag says [Newton’s curious personification] “my -‘outside’ appearance is feminine, but my essence ‘inside’ [the body] is -masculine.” At the same time it symbolizes the opposite inversion; -“my appearance ‘outside’ [my body, my gender] is masculine but my -essence ‘inside’ [myself] is feminine.”69 - -Both claims to truth contradict one another and so displace the entire enactment of gender significations from the discourse of truth -and falsity. -The notion of an original or primary gender identity is often parodied within the cultural practices of drag, cross-dressing, and the sexual stylization of butch/femme identities. Within feminist theory, such -parodic identities have been understood to be either degrading to -~ -sexuality, especially in the case of butch/femme lesbian identities. But -the relation between the “imitation” and the “original” is, I think, more -complicated than that critique generally allows. Moreover, it gives us a -clue to the way in which the relationship between primary identification—that is, the original meanings accorded to gender—and subsequent gender experience might be reframed.The performance of drag -plays upon the distinction between the anatomy of the performer and -the gender that is being performed. But we are actually in the presence -of three contingent dimensions of significant corporeality: anatomical -sex, gender identity, and gender performance. If the anatomy of the -performer is already distinct from the gender of the performer, and -both of those are distinct from the gender of the performance, then the -performance suggests a dissonance not only between sex and performance, but sex and gender, and gender and performance. As much as -drag creates a unified picture of “woman” (what its critics often oppose), -it also reveals the distinctness of those aspects of gendered experience -which are falsely naturalized as a unity through the regulatory fiction of -heterosexual coherence. In imitating gender, drag implicitly reveals the imitative structure of gender itself—as well as its contingency. Indeed, part of the -pleasure, the giddiness of the performance is in the recognition of a radical contingency in the relation between sex and gender in the face of cultural configurations of causal unities that are regularly assumed to be -natural and necessary. In the place of the law of heterosexual coherence, -we see sex and gender denaturalized by means of a performance which -avows their distinctness and dramatizes the cultural mechanism of their -fabricated unity. -The notion of gender parody defended here does not assume that -there is an original which such parodic identities imitate. Indeed, the -parody is of the very notion of an original; just as the psychoanalytic -notion of gender identification is constituted by a fantasy of a fantasy, -the transfiguration of an Other who is always already a “figure” in that -double sense, so gender parody reveals that the original identity after -which gender fashions itself is an imitation without an origin. To be -~ -more precise, it is a production which, in effect—that is, in its -effect—postures as an imitation. This perpetual displacement constitutes a fluidity of identities that suggests an openness to resignification -and recontextualization; parodic proliferation deprives hegemonic culture and its critics of the claim to naturalized or essentialist gender -identities. Although the gender meanings taken up in these parodic -styles are clearly part of hegemonic, misogynist culture, they are nevertheless denaturalized and mobilized through their parodic recontextualization. As imitations which effectively displace the meaning of the -original, they imitate the myth of originality itself. In the place of an -original identification which serves as a determining cause, gender -identity might be reconceived as a personal/cultural history of -received meanings subject to a set of imitative practices which refer -laterally to other imitations and which, jointly, construct the illusion of -a primary and interior gendered self or parody the mechanism of that -construction. -According to Fredric Jameson’s “Postmodernism and Consumer -Society,” the imitation that mocks the notion of an original is characteristic of pastiche rather than parody: -Pastiche is, like parody, the imitation of a peculiar or unique style, the -wearing of a stylistic mask, speech in a dead language: but it is a neutral -practice of mimicry, without parody’s ulterior motive, without the -satirical impulse, without laughter, without that still latent feeling that -there exists something normal compared to which what is being imitated is rather comic. Pastiche is blank parody, parody that has lost it -humor.70 - -The loss of the sense of “the normal,” however, can be its own occasion -for laughter, especially when “the normal,” “the original” is revealed to -be a copy, and an inevitably failed one, an ideal that no one can embody. -In this sense, laughter emerges in the realization that all along the original was derived. -~ -stand what makes certain kinds of parodic repetitions effectively disruptive, truly troubling, and which repetitions become domesticated -and recirculated as instruments of cultural hegemony. A typology of -actions would clearly not suffice, for parodic displacement, indeed, parodic laughter, depends on a context and reception in which subversive -confusions can be fostered. What performance where will invert the -inner/outer distinction and compel a radical rethinking of the psychological presuppositions of gender identity and sexuality? What performance where will compel a reconsideration of the place and stability of -the masculine and the feminine? And what kind of gender performance -will enact and reveal the performativity of gender itself in a way that -destabilizes the naturalized categories of identity and desire. -If the body is not a “being,” but a variable boundary, a surface whose -permeability is politically regulated, a signifying practice within a cultural field of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality, then -what language is left for understanding this corporeal enactment, gender, that constitutes its “interior” signification on its surface? Sartre -would perhaps have called this act “a style of being,” Foucault, “a stylistics of existence.” And in my earlier reading of Beauvoir, I suggest -that gendered bodies are so many “styles of the flesh.” These styles all -never fully self-styled, for styles have a history, and those histories condition and limit the possibilities. Consider gender, for instance, as a -corporeal style, an “act,” as it were, which is both intentional and performative, where “performative” suggests a dramatic and contingent -construction of meaning. -Wittig understands gender as the workings of “sex,” where “sex” is -an obligatory injunction for the body to become a cultural sign, to -materialize itself in obedience to a historically delimited possibility, and -to do this, not once or twice, but as a sustained and repeated corporeal -project. The notion of a “project,” however, suggests the originating -force of a radical will, and because gender is a project which has cultural survival as its end, the term strategy better suggests the situation of -~ -duress under which gender performance always and variously occurs. -Hence, as a strategy of survival within compulsory systems, gender is a -performance with clearly punitive consequences. Discrete genders are -part of what “humanizes” individuals within contemporary culture; -indeed, we regularly punish those who fail to do their gender right. -Because there is neither an “essence” that gender expresses or externalizes nor an objective ideal to which gender aspires, and because gender -is not a fact, the various acts of gender create the idea of gender, and -without those acts, there would be no gender at all. Gender is, thus, a -construction that regularly conceals its genesis; the tacit collective -agreement to perform, produce, and sustain discrete and polar genders -as cultural fictions is obscured by the credibility of those productions— -and the punishments that attend not agreeing to believe in them; the -construction “compels” our belief in its necessity and naturalness. The -historical possibilities materialized through various corporeal styles are -nothing other than those punitively regulated cultural fictions alternately embodied and deflected under duress. -Consider that a sedimentation of gender norms produces the -peculiar phenomenon of a “natural sex” or a “real woman” or any number of prevalent and compelling social fictions, and that this is a sedimentation that over time has produced a set of corporeal styles which, -in reified form, appear as the natural configuration of bodies into sexes -existing in a binary relation to one another. If these styles are enacted, -and if they produce the coherent gendered subjects who pose as their -originators, what kind of performance might reveal this ostensible -“cause” to be an “effect”? -In what senses, then, is gender an act? As in other ritual social dramas, the action of gender requires a performance that is repeated. This -repetition is at once a reenactment and reexperiencing of a set of -meanings already socially established; and it is the mundane and ritualized form of their legitimation.71 Although there are individual bodies -that enact these significations by becoming stylized into gendered -~ -tive dimensions to these actions, and their public character is not -inconsequential; indeed, the performance is effected with the strategic -aim of maintaining gender within its binary frame—an aim that cannot -be attributed to a subject, but, rather, must be understood to found -and consolidate the subject. -Gender ought not to be construed as a stable identity or locus of -agency from which various acts follow; rather, gender is an identity -tenuously constituted in time, instituted in an exterior space through a -stylized repetition of acts. The effect of gender is produced through the -stylization of the body and, hence, must be understood as the mundane -way in which bodily gestures, movements, and styles of various kinds -constitute the illusion of an abiding gendered self. This formulation -moves the conception of gender off the ground of a substantial model -of identity to one that requires a conception of gender as a constituted -social temporality. Significantly, if gender is instituted through acts -which are internally discontinuous, then the appearance of substance is -precisely that, a constructed identity, a performative accomplishment -which the mundane social audience, including the actors themselves, -come to believe and to perform in the mode of belief. Gender is also a -norm that can never be fully internalized; “the internal” is a surface signification, and gender norms are finally phantasmatic, impossible to -embody. If the ground of gender identity is the stylized repetition of -acts through time and not a seemingly seamless identity, then the spatial metaphor of a “ground” will be displaced and revealed as a stylized -configuration, indeed, a gendered corporealization of time. The abiding gendered self will then be shown to be structured by repeated acts -that seek to approximate the ideal of a substantial ground of identity, -but which, in their occasional discontinuity, reveal the temporal and -contingent groundlessness of this “ground.” The possibilities of gender -transformation are to be found precisely in the arbitrary relation -between such acts, in the possibility of a failure to repeat, a de-formity, -or a parodic repetition that exposes the phantasmatic effect of abiding -identity as a politically tenuous construction. -~ -If gender attributes, however, are not expressive but performative, -then these attributes effectively constitute the identity they are said to -express or reveal. The distinction between expression and performativeness is crucial. If gender attributes and acts, the various ways in -which a body shows or produces its cultural signification, are performative, then there is no preexisting identity by which an act or -attribute might be measured; there would be no true or false, real or -distorted acts of gender, and the postulation of a true gender identity -would be revealed as a regulatory fiction.That gender reality is created -through sustained social performances means that the very notions of -an essential sex and a true or abiding masculinity or femininity are also -constituted as part of the strategy that conceals gender’s performative -character and the performative possibilities for proliferating gender -configurations outside the restricting frames of masculinist domination -and compulsory heterosexuality. -Genders can be neither true nor false, neither real nor apparent, neither original nor derived. As credible bearers of those attributes, however, genders can also be rendered thoroughly and radically -incredible. - -~ -From Parody to Politics -I began with the speculative question of whether feminist politics could -do without a “subject” in the category of women. At stake is not whether -it still makes sense, strategically or transitionally, to refer to women in -order to make representational claims in their behalf.The feminist “we” -is always and only a phantasmatic construction, one that has its purposes, but which denies the internal complexity and indeterminacy of the -term and constitutes itself only through the exclusion of some part of -the constituency that it simultaneously seeks to represent. The tenuous -or phantasmatic status of the “we,” however, is not cause for despair or, -at least, it is not only cause for despair.The radical instability of the category sets into question the foundational restrictions on feminist political -theorizing and opens up other configurations, not only of genders and -bodies, but of politics itself. -The foundationalist reasoning of identity politics tends to assume -that an identity must first be in place in order for political interests to be -elaborated and, subsequently, political action to be taken. My argument -is that there need not be a “doer behind the deed,” but that the “doer” is -variably constructed in and through the deed. This is not a return to an -existential theory of the self as constituted through its acts, for the existential theory maintains a prediscursive structure for both the self and -its acts. It is precisely the discursively variable construction of each in -and through the other that has interested me here. -~ -The question of locating “agency” is usually associated with the viability of the “subject,” where the “subject” is understood to have some -stable existence prior to the cultural field that it negotiates. Or, if the -subject is culturally constructed, it is nevertheless vested with an agency, -usually figured as the capacity for reflexive mediation, that remains -intact regardless of its cultural embeddedness. On such a model, “culture” and “discourse” mire the subject, but do not constitute that subject. -This move to qualify and enmire the preexisting subject has appeared -necessary to establish a point of agency that is not fully determined by that -culture and discourse. And yet, this kind of reasoning falsely presumes -(a) agency can only be established through recourse to a prediscursive -“I,” even if that “I” is found in the midst of a discursive convergence, and -(b) that to be constituted by discourse is to be determined by discourse, -where determination forecloses the possibility of agency. -Even within the theories that maintain a highly qualified or situated subject, the subject still encounters its discursively constituted -environment in an oppositional epistemological frame. The culturally -enmired subject negotiates its constructions, even when those constructions are the very predicates of its own identity. In Beauvoir, for -example, there is an “I” that does its gender, that becomes its gender, -but that “I,” invariably associated with its gender, is nevertheless a point -of agency never fully identifiable with its gender. That cogito is never -fully of the cultural world that it negotiates, no matter the narrowness -of the ontological distance that separates that subject from its cultural -predicates. The theories of feminist identity that elaborate predicates -of color, sexuality, ethnicity, class, and able-bodiedness invariably close -with an embarrassed “etc.” at the end of the list.Through this horizontal trajectory of adjectives, these positions strive to encompass a situated subject, but invariably fail to be complete. This failure, however, is -instructive: what political impetus is to be derived from the exasperated “etc.” that so often occurs at the end of such lines? This is a sign of -exhaustion as well as of the illimitable process of signification itself. It -is the supplément, the excess that necessarily accompanies any effort to -~ -posit identity once and for all.This illimitable et cetera, however, offers -itself as a new departure for feminist political theorizing. -If identity is asserted through a process of signification, if identity -is always already signified, and yet continues to signify as it circulates -within various interlocking discourses, then the question of agency is -not to be answered through recourse to an “I” that preexists signification. In other words, the enabling conditions for an assertion of “I” are -provided by the structure of signification, the rules that regulate the -legitimate and illegitimate invocation of that pronoun, the practices -that establish the terms of intelligibility by which that pronoun can circulate. Language is not an exterior medium or instrument into which I -pour a self and from which I glean a reflection of that self. The -Hegelian model of self-recognition that has been appropriated by -Marx, Lukacs, and a variety of contemporary liberatory discourses -presupposes a potential adequation between the “I” that confronts its -world, including its language, as an object, and the “I” that finds itself as -an object in that world. But the subject/object dichotomy, which here -belongs to the tradition of Western epistemology, conditions the very -problematic of identity that it seeks to solve. -What discursive tradition establishes the “I” and its “Other” in an -epistemological confrontation that subsequently decides where and -how questions of knowability and agency are to be determined? What -kinds of agency are foreclosed through the positing of an epistemological subject precisely because the rules and practices that govern the -invocation of that subject and regulate its agency in advance are ruled -out as sites of analysis and critical intervention? That the epistemological point of departure is in no sense inevitable is naively and pervasively confirmed by the mundane operations of ordinary language—widely -documented within anthropology—that regard the subject/object -dichotomy as a strange and contingent, if not violent, philosophical imposition. The language of appropriation, instrumentality, and -distanciation germane to the epistemological mode also belong to a -strategy of domination that pits the “I” against an “Other” and, once -~ -that separation is effected, creates an artificial set of questions about -the knowability and recoverability of that Other. -As part of the epistemological inheritance of contemporary political discourses of identity, this binary opposition is a strategic move -within a given set of signifying practices, one that establishes the “I” in -and through this opposition and which reifies that opposition as a -necessity, concealing the discursive apparatus by which the binary -itself is constituted.The shift from an epistemological account of identity -to one which locates the problematic within practices of signification -permits an analysis that takes the epistemological mode itself as one -possible and contingent signifying practice. Further, the question of -agency is reformulated as a question of how signification and resignification work. In other words, what is signified as an identity is not signified at a given point in time after which it is simply there as an inert -piece of entitative language. Clearly, identities can appear as so many -inert substantives; indeed, epistemological models tend to take this -appearance as their point of theoretical departure. However, the substantive “I” only appears as such through a signifying practice that seeks -to conceal its own workings and to naturalize its effects. Further, to -qualify as a substantive identity is an arduous task, for such appearances are rule-generated identities, ones which rely on the consistent -and repeated invocation of rules that condition and restrict culturally -intelligible practices of identity. Indeed, to understand identity as a -practice, and as a signifying practice, is to understand culturally intelligible subjects as the resulting effects of a rule-bound discourse that -inserts itself in the pervasive and mundane signifying acts of linguistic -life. Abstractly considered, language refers to an open system of signs -by which intelligibility is insistently created and contested. As historically specific organizations of language, discourses present themselves -in the plural, coexisting within temporal frames, and instituting -unpredictable and inadvertent convergences from which specific -modalities of discursive possibilities are engendered. -~ -logical discourse refers to as “agency.”The rules that govern intelligible -identity, i.e., that enable and restrict the intelligible assertion of an “I,” -rules that are partially structured along matrices of gender hierarchy -and compulsory heterosexuality, operate through repetition. Indeed, -when the subject is said to be constituted, that means simply that the -subject is a consequence of certain rule-governed discourses that govern the intelligible invocation of identity. The subject is not determined -by the rules through which it is generated because signification is not a -founding act, but rather a regulated process of repetition that both conceals -itself and enforces its rules precisely through the production of substantializing effects. In a sense, all signification takes place within the -orbit of the compulsion to repeat; “agency,” then, is to be located within the possibility of a variation on that repetition. If the rules governing -signification not only restrict, but enable the assertion of alternative -domains of cultural intelligibility, i.e., new possibilities for gender that -contest the rigid codes of hierarchical binarisms, then it is only within -the practices of repetitive signifying that a subversion of identity -becomes possible.The injunction to be a given gender produces necessary failures, a variety of incoherent configurations that in their multiplicity exceed and defy the injunction by which they are generated. -Further, the very injunction to be a given gender takes place through -discursive routes: to be a good mother, to be a heterosexually desirable -object, to be a fit worker, in sum, to signify a multiplicity of guarantees -in response to a variety of different demands all at once. The coexistence or convergence of such discursive injunctions produces the possibility of a complex reconfiguration and redeployment; it is not a -transcendental subject who enables action in the midst of such a convergence. There is no self that is prior to the convergence or who -maintains “integrity” prior to its entrance into this conflicted cultural -field. There is only a taking up of the tools where they lie, where the -very “taking up” is enabled by the tool lying there. -What constitutes a subversive repetition within signifying practices of gender? I have argued (“I” deploy the grammar that governs the -~ -genre of the philosophical conclusion, but note that it is the grammar -itself that deploys and enables this “I,” even as the “I” that insists itself -here repeats, redeploys, and—as the critics will determine—contests -the philosophical grammar by which it is both enabled and restricted) -that, for instance, within the sex/gender distinction, sex poses as “the -real” and the “factic,” the material or corporeal ground upon which -gender operates as an act of cultural inscription. And yet gender is not -written on the body as the torturing instrument of writing in Kafka’s -“In the Penal Colony” inscribes itself unintelligibly on the flesh of the -accused.The question is not: what meaning does that inscription carry -within it, but what cultural apparatus arranges this meeting between -instrument and body, what interventions into this ritualistic repetition -are possible? The “real” and the “sexually factic” are phantasmatic constructions—illusions of substance—that bodies are compelled to -approximate, but never can. What, then, enables the exposure of the -rift between the phantasmatic and the real whereby the real admits -itself as phantasmatic? Does this offer the possibility for a repetition -that is not fully constrained by the injunction to reconsolidate naturalized identities? Just as bodily surfaces are enacted as the natural, so -these surfaces can become the site of a dissonant and denaturalized -performance that reveals the performative status of the natural itself. -Practices of parody can serve to reengage and reconsolidate the -very distinction between a privileged and naturalized gender configuration and one that appears as derived, phantasmatic, and mimetic—a -failed copy, as it were. And surely parody has been used to further a -politics of despair, one which affirms a seemingly inevitable exclusion -of marginal genders from the territory of the natural and the real. And -yet this failure to become “real” and to embody “the natural” is, I would -argue, a constitutive failure of all gender enactments for the very reason that these ontological locales are fundamentally uninhabitable. -Hence, there is a subversive laughter in the pastiche-effect of parodic -practices in which the original, the authentic, and the real are them- - -~ -selves constituted as effects. The loss of gender norms would have the -effect of proliferating gender configurations, destabilizing substantive -identity, and depriving the naturalizing narratives of compulsory heterosexuality of their central protagonists: “man” and “woman.” The -parodic repetition of gender exposes as well the illusion of gender -identity as an intractable depth and inner substance. As the effects of a -subtle and politically enforced performativity, gender is an “act,” as it -were, that is open to splittings, self-parody, self-criticism, and those -hyperbolic exhibitions of “the natural” that, in their very exaggeration, -reveal its fundamentally phantasmatic status. -I have tried to suggest that the identity categories often presumed -to be foundational to feminist politics, that is, deemed necessary in -order to mobilize feminism as an identity politics, simultaneously -work to limit and constrain in advance the very cultural possibilities -that feminism is supposed to open up. The tacit constraints that produce culturally intelligible “sex” ought to be understood as generative -political structures rather than naturalized foundations. Paradoxically, -the reconceptualization of identity as an effect, that is, as produced or -generated, opens up possibilities of “agency” that are insidiously foreclosed by positions that take identity categories as foundational and -fixed. For an identity to be an effect means that it is neither fatally -determined nor fully artificial and arbitrary. That the constituted status -of identity is misconstrued along these two conflicting lines suggests -the ways in which the feminist discourse on cultural construction -remains trapped within the unnecessary binarism of free will and -determinism. Construction is not opposed to agency; it is the necessary scene of agency, the very terms in which agency is articulated and -becomes culturally intelligible. The critical task for feminism is not to -establish a point of view outside of constructed identities; that conceit -is the construction of an epistemological model that would disavow its -own cultural location and, hence, promote itself as a global subject, a -position that deploys precisely the imperialist strategies that feminism - -~ -ought to criticize.The critical task is, rather, to locate strategies of subversive repetition enabled by those constructions, to affirm the local -possibilities of intervention through participating in precisely those -practices of repetition that constitute identity and, therefore, present -the immanent possibility of contesting them. -This theoretical inquiry has attempted to locate the political in the -very signifying practices that establish, regulate, and deregulate identity. This effort, however, can only be accomplished through the introduction of a set of questions that extend the very notion of the -political. How to disrupt the foundations that cover over alternative -cultural configurations of gender? How to destabilize and render in -their phantasmatic dimension the “premises” of identity politics? -This task has required a critical genealogy of the naturalization of -sex and of bodies in general. It has also demanded a reconsideration of -the figure of the body as mute, prior to culture, awaiting signification, -a figure that cross-checks with the figure of the feminine, awaiting the -inscription-as-incision of the masculine signifier for entrance into language and culture. From a political analysis of compulsory heterosexuality, it has been necessary to question the construction of sex as -binary, as a hierarchical binary. From the point of view of gender as -enacted, questions have emerged over the fixity of gender identity as -an interior depth that is said to be externalized in various forms of -“expression.” The implicit construction of the primary heterosexual -construction of desire is shown to persist even as it appears in the -mode of primary bisexuality. Strategies of exclusion and hierarchy are -also shown to persist in the formulation of the sex/gender distinction -and its recourse to “sex” as the prediscursive as well as the priority of -sexuality to culture and, in particular, the cultural construction of sexuality as the prediscursive. Finally, the epistemological paradigm that -presumes the priority of the doer to the deed establishes a global and -globalizing subject who disavows its own locality as well as the conditions for local intervention. - -~ -If taken as the grounds of feminist theory or politics, these -“effects” of gender hierarchy and compulsory heterosexuality are not -only misdescribed as foundations, but the signifying practices that -enable this metaleptic misdescription remain outside the purview of a -feminist critique of gender relations.To enter into the repetitive practices of this terrain of signification is not a choice, for the “I” that might -enter is always already inside: there is no possibility of agency or reality outside of the discursive practices that give those terms the intelligibility that they have. The task is not whether to repeat, but how to -repeat or, indeed, to repeat and, through a radical proliferation of gender, to displace the very gender norms that enable the repetition itself. -There is no ontology of gender on which we might construct a politics, for gender ontologies always operate within established political -contexts as normative injunctions, determining what qualifies as intelligible sex, invoking and consolidating the reproductive constraints on -sexuality, setting the prescriptive requirements whereby sexed or gendered bodies come into cultural intelligibility. Ontology is, thus, not a -foundation, but a normative injunction that operates insidiously by -installing itself into political discourse as its necessary ground. -The deconstruction of identity is not the deconstruction of politics; rather, it establishes as political the very terms through which -identity is articulated. This kind of critique brings into question the -foundationalist frame in which feminism as an identity politics has -been articulated.The internal paradox of this foundationalism is that it -presumes, fixes, and constrains the very “subjects” that it hopes to represent and liberate. The task here is not to celebrate each and every -new possibility qua possibility, but to redescribe those possibilities that -already exist, but which exist within cultural domains designated as -culturally unintelligible and impossible. If identities were no longer -fixed as the premises of a political syllogism, and politics no longer -understood as a set of practices derived from the alleged interests that -belong to a set of ready-made subjects, a new configuration of politics - -~ -would surely emerge from the ruins of the old. Cultural configurations -of sex and gender might then proliferate or, rather, their present proliferation might then become articulable within the discourses that -establish intelligible cultural life, confounding the very binarism of -sex, and exposing its fundamental unnaturalness. What other local -strategies for engaging the “unnatural” might lead to the denaturalization of gender as such? - -~ - -Preface (1999) -1. At this printing, there are French publishers considering the translation -of this work, but only because Didier Eribon and others have inserted the -arguments of the text into current French political debates on the legal -ratification of same-sex partnerships. -2. I have written two brief pieces on this issue: “Afterword” for Butch\Femme: -Inside Lesbian Gender, ed. Sally Munt (London: Cassell, 1998), and another Afterword for “Transgender in Latin America: Persons, Practices and -Meanings,” a special issue of the journal Sexualities, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1998. -3. Catharine MacKinnon, Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law -(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1987), pp. 6–7. -4. Unfortunately, Gender Trouble preceded the publication of Eve Kosofsky -Sedgwick’s monumental Epistemology of the Closet (Berkeley and Los -Angeles: University of California Press, 1991) by some months, and my -arguments here were not able to benefit from her nuanced discussion of -gender and sexuality in the first chapter of that book. -5. Jonathan Goldberg persuaded me of this point. -6. For a more or less complete bibliography of my publications and citations of my work, see the excellent work of Eddie Yeghiayan at the University of California at Irvine Library: http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctr/ -Wellek/index.html. -7. I am especially indebted to Biddy Martin, Eve Sedgwick, Slavoj Žižek, -Wendy Brown, Saidiya Hartman, Mandy Merck, Lynne Layton, Timothy -Kaufmann-Osborne, Jessica Benjamin, Seyla Benhabib, Nancy Fraser, - -~ -Diana Fuss, Jay Presser, Lisa Duggan, and Elizabeth Grosz for their insightful criticisms of the theory of performativity. -8. This notion of the ritual dimension of performativity is allied with the -notion of the habitus in Pierre Bourdieu’s work, something which I only -came to realize after the fact of writing this text. For my belated effort to -account for this resonance, see the final chapter of Excitable Speech: A -Politics of the Performative (New York: Routledge, 1997). -9. Jacqueline Rose usefully pointed out to me the disjunction between the -earlier and later parts of this text. The earlier parts interrogate the -melancholy construction of gender, but the later seem to forget the psychoanalytic beginnings. Perhaps this accounts for some of the “mania” of -the final chapter, a state defined by Freud as part of the disavowal of loss -that is melancholia. Gender Trouble in its closing pages seems to forget or -disavow the loss it has just articulated. -10. See Bodies that Matter (New York: Routledge, 1993) as well as an able and -interesting critique that relates some of the questions raised there to -contemporary science studies by Karen Barad, “Getting Real: -Technoscientific Practices and the Materialization of Reality,” differences, -Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 87–126. -11. Saidiya Hartman, Lisa Lowe, and Dorinne Kondo are scholars whose -work has influenced my own. Much of the current scholarship on “passing” has also taken up this question. My own essay on Nella Larsen’s -“Passing” in Bodies That Matter sought to address the question in a preliminary way. Of course, Homi Bhabha’s work on the mimetic splitting of the -postcolonial subject is close to my own in several ways: not only the -appropriation of the colonial “voice” by the colonized, but the split condition of identification are crucial to a notion of performativity that -emphasizes the way minority identities are produced and riven at the -same time under conditions of domination. -12. The work of Kobena Mercer, Kendall Thomas, and Hortense Spillers has -been extremely useful to my post-Gender Trouble thinking on this subject. -I also hope to publish an essay on Frantz Fanon soon engaging questions -of mimesis and hyperbole in his Black Skins,White Masks. I am grateful to -Greg Thomas, who has recently completed his dissertation in rhetoric at -Berkeley, on racialized sexualities in the U.S., for provoking and enriching my understanding of this crucial intersection. - -~ -13. I have offered reflections on universality in subsequent writings, most -prominently in chapter 2 of Excitable Speech. -14. See the important publications of the Intersex Society of North America -(including the publications of Cheryl Chase) which has, more than any -other organization, brought to public attention the severe and violent -gender policing done to infants and children born with gender anomalous bodies. For more information, contact them at -http://www.isna.org. -15. I thank Wendy Brown, Joan W. Scott, Alexandra Chasin, Frances -Bartkowski, Janet Halley, Michel Feher, Homi Bhabha, Drucilla Cornell, -Denise Riley, Elizabeth Weed, Kaja Silverman, Ann Pellegrini, William -Connolly, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Ernesto Laclau, Eduardo Cadava, -Florence Dore, David Kazanjian, David End, and Dina Al-kassim for -their support and friendship during the Spring of 1999 when this preface -was written. -1. Subjects of Sex/Gender/Desire -1. See Michel Foucault, “Right of Death and Power over Life,” in The History -of Sexuality, Volume I, An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley (New York: -Vintage, 1980), originally published as Histoire de la sexualité 1: La volonté -de savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). In that final chapter, Foucault discusses -the relation between the juridical and productive law. His notion of the -productivity of the law is clearly derived from Nietzsche, although not -identical with Nietzsche’s will-to-power. The use of Foucault’s notion of -productive power is not meant as a simple-minded “application” of -Foucault to gender issues. As I show in chapter 3, section ii, “Foucault, -Herculine, and the Politics of Sexual Discontinuity,” the consideration of -sexual difference within the terms of Foucault’s own work reveals central contradictions in his theory. His view of the body also comes under -criticism in the final chapter. -2. References throughout this work to a subject before the law are extrapolations of Derrida’s reading of Kafka’s parable “Before the Law,” in Kafka -and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan -Udoff (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987). -3. See Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ in -History (New York: Macmillan, 1988). - -~ -4. See Sandra Harding, “The Instability of the Analytical Categories of -Feminist Theory,” in Sex and Scientific Inquiry, eds. Sandra Harding and -Jean F. O’Barr (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. -283–302. -5. I am reminded of the ambiguity inherent in Nancy Cott’s title, The -Grounding of Modern Feminism (New Haven:Yale University Press, 1987). -She argues that the early twentieth-century U.S. feminist movement -sought to “ground” itself in a program that eventually “grounded” that -movement. Her historical thesis implicitly raises the question of whether -uncritically accepted foundations operate like the “return of the -repressed”; based on exclusionary practices, the stable political identities -that found political movements may invariably become threatened by the -very instability that the foundationalist move creates. -6. I use the term heterosexual matrix throughout the text to designate that -grid of cultural intelligibility through which bodies, genders, and desires -are naturalized. I am drawing from Monique Wittig’s notion of the “heterosexual contract” and, to a lesser extent, on Adrienne Rich’s notion of -“compulsory heterosexuality” to characterize a hegemonic discursive/ -epistemic model of gender intelligibility that assumes that for bodies to -cohere and make sense there must be a stable sex expressed through a -stable gender (masculine expresses male, feminine expresses female) -that is oppositionally and hierarchically defined through the compulsory -practice of heterosexuality. -7. For a discussion of the sex/gender distinction in structuralist anthropology and feminist appropriations and criticisms of that formulation, see -chapter 2, section i, “Structuralism’s Critical Exchange.” -8. For an interesting study of the berdache and multiple-gender arrangements -in Native American cultures, see Walter L. Williams, The Spirit and the -Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture (Boston: Beacon Press, -1988). See also, Sherry B. Ortner and Harriet Whitehead, eds., Sexual -Meanings: The Cultural Construction of Sexuality (New York: Cambridge -University Press, 1981). For a politically sensitive and provocative analysis -of the berdache, transsexuals, and the contingency of gender dichotomies, -see Suzanne J. Kessler and Wendy McKenna, Gender:An Ethnomethodological -Approach (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978). - -~ -9. A great deal of feminist research has been conducted within the fields of -biology and the history of science that assess the political interests inherent in the various discriminatory procedures that establish the scientific -basis for sex. See Ruth Hubbard and Marian Lowe, eds., Genes and Gender, -vols. 1 and 2 (New York: Gordian Press, 1978, 1979); the two issues on -feminism and science of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy, Vol. 2, -No. 3, Fall 1987, and Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1988, and especially The -Biology and Gender Study Group, “The Importance of Feminist Critique -for Contemporary Cell Biology” in this last issue (Spring 1988); Sandra -Harding, The Science Question in Feminism (Ithaca: Cornell University -Press, 1986); Evelyn Fox Keller, Reflections on Gender and Science (New -Haven:Yale University Press, 1984); Donna Haraway, “In the Beginning -was the Word:The Genesis of Biological Theory,” Signs: Journal ofWomen in -Culture and Society, Vol. 6, No. 3, 1981; Donna Haraway, Primate Visions -(New York: Routledge, 1989); Sandra Harding and Jean F. O’Barr, Sex -and Scientific Inquiry (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987); Anne -Fausto-Sterling, Myths of Gender: Biological Theories About Women and Men -(New York: Norton, 1979). -10. Clearly Foucault’s History of Sexuality offers one way to rethink the history -of “sex” within a given modern Eurocentric context. For a more detailed -consideration, see Thomas Lacqueur and Catherine Gallagher, eds., The -Making of the Modern Body: Sexuality and Society in the 19th Century -(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), originally published as -an issue of Representations, No. 14, Spring 1986. -11. See my “Variations on Sex and Gender: Beauvoir, Wittig, Foucault,” in -Feminism as Critique, eds. Seyla Benhabib and Drucilla Cornell (Basil -Blackwell, dist. by University of Minnesota Press, 1987). -12. Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, trans. E. M. Parshley (New York: -Vintage, 1973), p. 301. -13. Ibid., p. 38. -14. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex’’ Yale French Studies, -Simone de Beauvoir:Witness to a Century, No. 72,Winter 1986. -15. Note the extent to which phenomenological theories such as Sartre’s, -Merleau-Ponty’s, and Beauvoir’s tend to use the term embodiment. Drawn -as it is from theological contexts, the term tends to figure “the” body as a - -~ -mode of incarnation and, hence, to preserve the external and dualistic -relationship between a signifying immateriality and the materiality of the -body itself. -16. See Luce Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Porter with -Carolyn Burke (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), originally published as Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977). -17. See Joan Scott, “Gender as a Useful Category of Historical Analysis,” in -Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press, -1988), pp. 28–52, repr. from American Historical Review, Vol. 91, No. 5, -1986. -18. Beauvoir, The Second Sex, p. xxvi. -19. See my “Sex and Gender in Beauvoir’s Second Sex.” -20. The normative ideal of the body as both a “situation” and an “instrumentality” is embraced by both Beauvoir with respect to gender and Frantz -Fanon with respect to race. Fanon concludes his analysis of colonization -through recourse to the body as an instrument of freedom, where freedom is, in Cartesian fashion, equated with a consciousness capable of -doubt: “O my body, make of me always a man who questions!” (Frantz -Fanon, Black Skin,White Masks [New York: Grove Press, 1967] p. 323, -originally published as Peau noire, masques blancs [Paris: Éditions de Seuil, -1952]). -21. The radical ontological disjunction in Sartre between consciousness and -the body is part of the Cartesian inheritance of his philosophy. Significantly, it is Descartes’ distinction that Hegel implicitly interrogates at -the outset of the “Master-Slave” section of The Phenomenology of Spirit. -Beauvoir’s analysis of the masculine Subject and the feminine Other is -clearly situated in Hegel’s dialectic and in the Sartrian reformulation of -that dialectic in the section on sadism and masochism in Being and -Nothingness. Critical of the very possibility of a “synthesis” of consciousness and the body, Sartre effectively returns to the Cartesian problematic that Hegel sought to overcome. Beauvoir insists that the body can be -the instrument and situation of freedom and that sex can be the occasion -for a gender that is not a reification, but a modality of freedom. At first -this appears to be a synthesis of body and consciousness, where consciousness is understood as the condition of freedom. The question that - -~ -remains, however, is whether this synthesis requires and maintains the -ontological distinction between body and mind of which it is composed -and, by association, the hierarchy of mind over body and of masculine -over feminine. -22. See Elizabeth V. Spelman, “Woman as Body: Ancient and Contemporary -Views,” Feminist Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1, Spring 1982. -23. Gayatri Spivak most pointedly elaborates this particular kind of binary -explanation as a colonizing act of marginalization. In a critique of the -“self-presence of the cognizing supra-historical self,” which is characteristic of the epistemic imperialism of the philosophical cogito, she locates -politics in the production of knowledge that creates and censors the margins that constitute, through exclusion, the contingent intelligibility of -that subject’s given knowledge-regime: “I call ‘politics as such’ the prohibition of marginality that is implicit in the production of any explanation. From that point of view, the choice of particular binary oppositions -. . . is no mere intellectual strategy. It is, in each case, the condition of the -possibility for centralization (with appropriate apologies) and, correspondingly, marginalization” (Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, “Explanation -and Culture: Marginalia,” in In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics [New -York: Routledge, 1987], p. 113). -24. See the argument against “ranking oppressions” in Cherríe Moraga, “La -Güera,” in This Bridge Called My Back: Writings of Radical Women of Color, -eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and Cherríe Moraga (New York: Kitchen Table, -Women of Color Press, 1982). -25. For a fuller elaboration of the unrepresentability of women in phallogocentric discourse, see Luce Irigaray, “Any Theory of the ‘Subject’ Has -Always Been Appropriated by the Masculine,” in Speculum of the Other -Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985). -Irigaray appears to revise this argument in her discussion of “the feminine gender” in Sexes et parentés (see chapter 2, n. 10). -26. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 2, -Winter 1981, p. 53. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20, -see chapter 3, n. 49. -27. The notion of the “Symbolic” is discussed at some length in Section Two -of this text. It is to be understood as an ideal and universal set of - -~ -cultural laws that govern kinship and signification and, within the -terms of psychoanalytic structuralism, govern the production of sexual -difference. Based on the notion of an idealized “paternal law,” the -Symbolic is reformulated by Irigaray as a dominant and hegemonic discourse of phallogocentrism. Some French feminists propose an alternative language to one governed by the Phallus or the paternal law, and so -wage a critique against the Symbolic. Kristeva proposes the “semiotic” as -a specifically maternal dimension of language, and both Irigaray and -Hélène Cixous have been associated with écriture feminine. Wittig, however, has always resisted that movement, claiming that language in its structure is neither misogynist nor feminist, but an instrument to be deployed -for developed political purposes. Clearly her belief in a “cognitive subject” that exists prior to language facilitates her understanding of language as an instrument, rather than as a field of significations that -preexist and structure subject-formation itself. -28. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist -Issues, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 1983, p. 64. Also in The Straight Mind and Other -Essays, pp. 59–67, see chapter 3, n. 49. -29. “One must assume both a particular and a universal point of view, at least -to be part of literature” (Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist -Issues, Vol. 4, No. 2, Fall 1984, p. 68. Also see chapter 3, n. 41). -30. The journal, Questions Feministes, available in English translation as Feminist -Issues, generally defended a “materialist” point of view which took practices, institution, and the constructed status of language to be the “material grounds” of the oppression of women.Wittig was part of the original -editorial staff. Along with Monique Plaza, Wittig argued that sexual difference was essentialist in that it derived the meaning of women’s social -function from their biological facticity, but also because it subscribed to -the primary signification of women’s bodies as maternal and, hence, gave -ideological strength to the hegemony of reproductive sexuality. -31. Michel Haar, “Nietzsche and Metaphysical Language,” The New Nietzsche: -Contemporary Styles of Interpretation, ed. David Allison (New York: Delta, -1977), pp. 17–18. -32. Monique Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall -1985, p. 4. Also see chapter 3, n. 25. - -~ -33. Ibid., p. 3. -34. Aretha’s song, originally written by Carole King, also contests the naturalization of gender. “Like a natural woman” is a phrase that suggests that -“naturalness” is only accomplished through analogy or metaphor. In other -words, “You make me feel like a metaphor of the natural,” and without -“you,” some denaturalized ground would be revealed. For a further discussion of Aretha’s claim in light of Simone de Beauvoir’s contention that -“one is not born, but rather becomes a woman,” see my “Beauvoir’s -Philosophical Contribution,” in eds. Ann Garry and Marilyn Pearsall, -Women, Knowledge, and Reality (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989): 2nd ed. -(New York: Routledge, 1996). -35. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs -of a Nineteenth-Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDougall (New -York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite -Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978).The French -version lacks the introduction supplied by Foucault with the English -translation. -36. See chapter 2, section ii. -37. Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, p. x. -38. Robert Stoller, Presentations of Gender (New Haven:Yale University Press, -1985), pp. 11–14. -39. Friedrich Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. Walter Kaufmann -(New York:Vintage, 1969), p. 45. -40. Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” p. 48.Wittig credits both the notion -of the “mark” of gender and the “imaginary formation” of natural groups -to Colette Guillaumin whose work on the mark of race provides an analogy for Wittig’s analysis of gender in “Race et nature: Système des marques, idée de group naturel et rapport sociaux,” Pluriel, Vol. 11, 1977. -The “Myth of Woman” is a chapter of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. -41. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature: -Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian -(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 114. -42. Clearly,Wittig does not understand syntax to be the linguistic elaboration -or reproduction of a kinship system paternally organized. Her refusal of -structuralism at this level allows her to understand language as gender- - -~ -neutral. Irigaray’s Parler n’est jamais neutre (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, -1985) criticizes precisely the kind of humanist position, here characteristic of Wittig, that claims the political and gender neutrality of language. -43. Monique Wittig, “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” p. 63. -44. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1, -Summer 1980, p. 108. Also see chapter 3, n. 30. -45. Monique Wittig, The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, -1976), originally published as Le corps lesbien (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, -1973). -46. I am grateful to Wendy Owen for this phrase. -47. Of course, Freud himself distinguished between “the sexual” and “the -genital,” providing the very distinction that Wittig uses against him. See, -for instance, “The Development of the Sexual Function” in Freud, Outline -of a Theory of Psychoanalysis, trans. James Strachey (New York: Norton, -1979). -48. A more comprehensive analysis of the Lacanian position is provided in -various parts of chapter 2 of this text. -49. Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision (London:Verso, 1987). -50. Jane Gallop, Reading Lacan (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985); The -Daughter’s Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1982). -51. “What distinguishes psychoanalysis from sociological accounts of gender -(hence for me the fundamental impasse of Nancy Chodorow’s work) is -that whereas for the latter, the internalisation of norms is assumed -roughly to work, the basic premise and indeed starting point of psychoanalysis is that it does not. The unconscious constantly reveals the ‘failure’ of identity” (Jacqueline Rose, Sexuality in the Field of Vision, p. 90). -52. It is, perhaps, no wonder that the singular structuralist notion of “the -Law” clearly resonates with the prohibitive law of the Old Testament.The -“paternal law” thus comes under a post-structuralist critique through the -understandable route of a French reappropriation of Nietzsche. -Nietzsche faults the Judeo-Christian “slave-morality” for conceiving the -law in both singular and prohibitive terms. The will-to-power, on the -other hand, designates both the productive and multiple possibilities of -the law, effectively exposing the notion of “the Law” in its singularity as a -fictive and repressive notion. - -~ -53. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the -Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston: -Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), pp. 267–319. Also in Pleasure and -Danger, see Carole S. Vance, “Pleasure and Danger: Towards a Politics of -Sexuality,” pp. 1–28; Alice Echols, “The Taming of the Id: Feminist Sexual -Politics, 1968–83,” pp. 50–72; Amber Hollibaugh, “Desire for the -Future: Radical Hope in Pleasure and Passion,” pp. 401–410. See Amber -Hollibaugh and Cherríe Moraga, “What We’re Rollin Around in Bed -with: Sexual Silences in Feminism,” and Alice Echols, “The New Feminism of Yin and Yang,” in Powers of Desire:The Politics of Sexuality, eds. Ann -Snitow, Christine Stansell, and Sharon Thompson (London: Virago, -1984); Heresies, Vol. No. 12, 1981, the “sex issue”; Samois ed., Coming to -Power (Berkeley: Samois, 1981); Dierdre English, Amber Hollibaugh, and -Gayle Rubin, “Talking Sex: A Conversation on Sexuality and Feminism,” -Socialist Review, No. 58, July–August 1981; Barbara T. Kerr and Mirtha N. -Quintanales, “The Complexity of Desire: Conversations on Sexuality and -Difference,” Conditions, #8;Vol. 3, No. 2, 1982, pp. 52–71. -54. Irigaray’s perhaps most controversial claim has been that the structure -of the vulva as “two lips touching” constitutes the nonunitary and autoerotic pleasure of women prior to the “separation” of this doubleness -through the pleasure-depriving act of penetration by the penis. See -Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un. Along with Monique Plaza and -Christine Delphy, Wittig has argued that Irigaray’s valorization of -that anatomical specificity is itself an uncritical replication of a reproductive discourse that marks and carves up the female body into artificial “parts” like “vagina,” “clitoris,” and “vulva.” At a lecture at Vassar -College,Wittig was asked whether she had a vagina, and she replied that -she did not. -55. See a compelling argument for precisely this interpretation by Diana J. -Fuss, Essentially Speaking (New York: Routledge, 1989). -56. If we were to apply Fredric Jameson’s distinction between parody and pastiche, gay identities would be better understood as pastiche.Whereas parody, Jameson argues, sustains some sympathy with the original of which it -is a copy, pastiche disputes the possibility of an “original” or, in the case of -gender, reveals the “original” as a failed effort to “copy” a phantasmatic -ideal that cannot be copied without failure. See Fredric Jameson, - -~ -“Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on -Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend,WA: Bay Press, 1983). -2. Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the -Heterosexual Matrix -1. During the semester in which I write this chapter, I am teaching Kafka’s -“In the Penal Colony,” which describes an instrument of torture that -provides an interesting analogy for the contemporary field of power and -masculinist power in particular. The narrative repeatedly falters in its -attempt to recount the history which would enshrine that instrument as -a vital part of a tradition. The origins cannot be recovered, and the map -that might lead to the origins has become unreadable through time. -Those to whom it might be explained do not speak the same language -and have no recourse to translation. Indeed, the machine itself cannot be -fully imagined; its parts don’t fit together in a conceivable whole, so the -reader is forced to imagine its state of fragmentation without recourse to -an ideal notion of its integrity.This appears to be a literary enactment of -Foucault’s notion that “power” has become so diffuse that it no longer -exists as a systematic totality. Derrida interrogates the problematic -authority of such a law in the context of Kafka’s “Before the Law” (in -Derrida’s “Before the Law,” in Kafka and the Contemporary Critical Performance: Centenary Readings, ed. Alan Udoff [Bloomington: Indiana -University Press, 1987]). He underscores the radical unjustifiability of -this repression through a narrative recapitulation of a time before the -law. Significantly, it also remains impossible to articulate a critique of -that law through recourse to a time before the law. -2. See Carol MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern, eds. Nature, Culture and -Gender (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1980). -3. For a fuller discussion of these kinds of issues, see Donna Haraway’s chapter, “Gender for a Marxist Dictionary: The Sexual Politics of a Word,” in -Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention of Nature (New York: -Routledge, 1990). -4. Gayle Rubin considers this process at length in “The Traffic in Women: -Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of Sex,” in Toward an Anthropology of -Women, ed. Rayna R. Reiter (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1975). -Her essay will become a focal point later in this chapter. She uses the - -~ -notion of the bride-as-gift from Mauss’s Essay on the Gift to show how -women as objects of exchange effectively consolidate and define the -social bond between men. -5. See Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Principles of Kinship,” in The Elementary -Structures of Kinship (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969), p. 496. -6. See Jacques Derrida, “Structure, Sign, and Play,” in The Structuralist -Controversy, eds. Richard Macksey and Eugene Donato (Baltimore: Johns -Hopkins University Press, 1964); “Linguistics and Grammatology,” in Of -Grammatology, trans. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (Baltimore: Johns -Hopkins University Press,1974); “Différance,” in Margins of Philosophy, -trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982). -7. See Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 480; “Exchange— -and consequently the rule of exogamy which expresses it—has in itself a -social value. It provides the means of binding men together.” -8. Luce Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill (Ithaca: -Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 101–103. -9. One might consider the literary analysis of Eve Sedgwick’s Between Men: -English Literature and Homosocial Desire (New York: Columbia University -Press, 1985) in light of Lévi-Strauss’s description of the structures of -reciprocity within kinship. Sedgwick effectively argues that the flattering -attentions paid to women in romantic poetry are both a deflection and -an elaboration of male homosocial desire. Women are poetic “objects -of exchange” in the sense that they mediate the relationship of unacknowledged desire between men as the explicit and ostensible object -of discourse. -10. Luce Irigaray, Sexes et parentés (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1987), translated -as Sexes and Genealogies, trans. Gillian C. Gill (New York: Columbia -University Press, 1993). -11. Clearly, Lévi-Strauss misses an opportunity to analyze incest as both fantasy and social practice, the two being in no way mutually exclusive. -12. Lévi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, p. 491. -13. To be the Phallus is to “embody” the Phallus as the place to which it penetrates, but also to signify the promise of a return to the preindividuated -jouissance that characterizes the undifferentiated relation to the mother. -14. I devote a chapter to Lacan’s appropriation of Hegel’s dialectic of master -and slave, called “Lacan: The Opacity of Desire,” in my Subjects of Desire: - -~ -Hegelian Reflections in Twentieth-Century France (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987; paperback edition, 1999). -15. Freud understood the achievement of femininity to require a doublewave of repression: “The girl” not only has to shift libidinal attachment -from the mother to the father, but then displace the desire for the father -onto some more acceptable object. For an account that gives an almost -mythic cast to Lacan’s theory, see Sarah Kofman, The Enigma of Woman: -Woman in Freud’s Writings, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985), pp. 143–148, originally published as L’Enigme de la -femme: La femme dans les textes de Freud (Paris: Editions Galilée, 1980). -16. Jacques Lacan, “The Meaning of the Phallus,” in Feminine Sexuality: Jacques -Lacan and the École Freudienne, eds. Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose, -trans. Jacqueline Rose (New York: Norton, 1985), pp. 83–85. Hereafter, -page references to this work will appear in the text. -17. Luce Irigaray, Ce sexe qui n’en est pas un (Paris: Éditions de Minuit, 1977), -p. 131. -18. The feminist literature on masquerade is wide-ranging; the attempt here -is restricted to an analysis of masquerade in relation to the problematic -of expression and performativity. In other words, the question here is -whether masquerade conceals a femininity that might be understood as -genuine or authentic, or whether masquerade is the means by which -femininity and the contests over its “authenticity” are produced. For a -fuller discussion of feminist appropriations of masquerade, see Mary Ann -Doane, The Desire to Desire:The Woman’s Film of the 1940s (Bloomington: -Indiana University Press, 1987); “Film and Masquerade: Theorizing the -Female Spectator,” Screen, Vol. 23, Nos. 3–4, September–October 1982, -pp. 74–87; “Woman’s Stake: Filming the Female Body,” October, Vol. 17, -Summer 1981. Gayatri Spivak offers a provocative reading of woman-asmasquerade that draws on Nietzsche and Derrida in “Displacement and -the Discourse of Woman,” in Displacement: Derrida and After, ed. Mark -Krupnick (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983). See also Mary -Russo’s “Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory” (Working Paper, -Center for Twentieth-Century Studies, University of WisconsinMilwaukee, 1985). -19. In the following section of this chapter, “Freud and the Melancholia of -Gender,” I attempt to lay out the central meaning of melancholia as the - -~ -consequence of a disavowed grief as it applies to the incest taboo which -founds sexual positions and gender through instituting certain forms of -disavowed losses. -20. Significantly, Lacan’s discussion of the lesbian is continguous within the -text to his discussion of frigidity, as if to suggest metonymically that lesbianism constitutes the denial of sexuality. A further reading of the operation of “denial” in this text is clearly in order. -21. Joan Riviere, “Womanliness as a Masquerade,” in Formations of Fantasy, eds. -Victor Burgin, James Donald, Cora Kaplan (London: Methuen, 1986), -pp. 35–44. The article was first published in The International Journal of -Psychoanalysis, Vol. 10, 1929. Hereafter, page references to this work will -appear in the text. See also the fine essay by Stephen Heath that follows, -“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade.” -22. For a contemporary refutation of such plain inferences, see Esther -Newton and Shirley Walton, “The Misunderstanding: Toward a More -Precise Sexual Vocabulary,” in Pleasure and Danger, ed. Carole Vance -(Boston: Routledge, 1984), pp. 242–250. Newton and Walton distinguish among erotic identities, erotic roles, and erotic acts and show how -radical discontinuities can exist between styles of desire and styles of -gender such that erotic preferences cannot be directly inferred from the -presentation of an erotic identity in social contexts. Although I find -their analysis useful (and brave), I wonder whether such categories are -themselves specific to discursive contexts and whether that kind of fragmentation of sexuality into component “parts” makes sense only as a -counterstrategy to refute the reductive unification of these terms. -23. The notion of a sexual “orientation” has been deftly called into question by -bell hooks in Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (Boston: South End -Press, 1984). She claims that it is a reification that falsely signals on openness to all members of the sex that is designated as the object of desire. -Although she disputes the term because it puts into question the autonomy of the person described, I would emphasize that “orientations” themselves are rarely, if ever, fixed. Obviously, they can shift through time and -are open to cultural reformulations that are in no sense univocal. -24. Heath, “Joan Riviere and the Masquerade,” pp. 45–61. -25. Stephen Heath points out that the situation that Riviere faced as an intellectual woman in competition for recognition by the psychoanalytic - -~ -establishment suggests strong parallels, if not an ultimate identification, -with the analysand that she describes in the article. -26. Jacqueline Rose, in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and Rose, p. 85. -27. Jacqueline Rose, “Introduction-II” in Feminine Sexuality, eds. Mitchell and -Rose, p. 44. -28. Ibid., p. 55. -29. Rose criticizes the work of Moustapha Safouan in particular for failing to -understand the incommensurability of the symbolic and the real. See -his La sexualité féminine dans la doctrine freudienne (Paris: Éditions de -Seuil, 1976). I am indebted to Elizabeth Weed for discussing the antidevelopmental impetus in Lacan with me. -30. See Friedrich Nietzsche, “First Essay,” in The Genealogy of Morals, trans. -Walter Kaufmann (New York: Vintage, 1969), for his analysis of slavemorality. Here as elsewhere in his writing, Nietzsche argues that God is -created by the will-to-power as a self-debasing act and that the recovery -of the will-to-power from this construct of self-subjection is possible -through a reclaiming of the very creative powers that produced the -thought of God and, paradoxically, of human powerlessness. Foucault’s -Discipline and Punish is clearly based on On the Genealogy of Morals, most -clearly the “Second Essay” as well as Nietzsche’s Daybreak. His distinction -between productive and juridical power is also clearly rooted in -Nietzsche’s analysis of the self-subjection of the will. In Foucault’s terms, -the construction of the juridical law is the effect of productive power, -but one in which productive power institutes its own concealment and -subordination. Foucault’s critique of Lacan (see History of Sexuality,Volume -I,An Introduction, trans. Robert Hurley [New York:Vintage, 1980], p. 81) -and the repressive hypothesis generally centers on the overdetermined -status of the juridical law. -31. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, pp. 66–73. -32. See Julia Kristeva Desire in Language:A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, -ed. Leon Roudiez, trans. Thomas Gora, Alice Jardine, and Leon S. -Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1980); Soleil noir: -Dépression et mélancolie (Paris: Gallimard, 1987), translated as Black Sun: -Depression and Melancholia, trans Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia -University Press, 1989). Kristeva’s reading of melancholy in this latter -text is based in part on the writings of Melanie Klein. Melancholy is the - -~ -matricidal impulse turned against the female subject and hence is linked -with the problem of masochism. Kristeva appears to accept the notion of -primary aggression in this text and to differentiate the sexes according to -the primary object of aggression and the manner in which they refuse to -commit the murders they most profoundly want to commit. The masculine position is thus understood as an externally directed sadism, whereas -the feminine is an internally directed masochism. For Kristeva, melancholy is a “voluptuous sadness” that seems tied to the sublimated production of art. The highest form of that sublimation seems to center on the -suffering that is its origin. As a result, Kristeva ends the book, abruptly -and a bit polemically, extolling the great works of modernism that articulate the tragic structure of human action and condemning the postmodern -effort to affirm, rather than to suffer, contemporary fragmentations of the -psyche. For a discussion of the role of melancholy in “Motherhood -According to Bellini,” see chapter 3, section i, of this text, “The Body -Politics of Julia Kristeva.” -33. See Freud, “The Ego and the Super-Ego (Ego-Ideal),” The Ego and the Id, -trans. Joan Riviere, ed. James Strachey (NewYork: Norton, 1960, originally published in 1923), for Freud’s discussion of mourning and melancholia -and their relation to ego and character formation as well as his discussion -of alternative resolutions to the Oedipal conflict. I am grateful to Paul -Schwaber for suggesting this chapter to me. Citations of “Mourning and -Melancholia” refer to Sigmund Freud, General Psychological Theory, ed. Philip -Rieff, (New York: MacMillan, 1976), and will appear hereafter in the text. -34. For an interesting discussion of “identification,” see Richard Wollheim’s -“Identification and Imagination: The Inner Structure of a Psychic -Mechanism,” in Freud: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Richard Wollheim -(Garden City: Anchor Press, 1974), pp. 172–195. -35. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok take exception to this conflation of -mourning and melancholia. See note 39 below. -36. For a psychoanalytic theory that argues in favor of a distinction between -the super-ego as a punishing mechanism and the ego-ideal (as an idealization that serves a narcissistic wish), a distinction that Freud clearly does -not make in The Ego and the Id, one might want to consult Janine -Chasseguet-Smirgell, The Ego-Ideal, A Psychological Essay on the Malady of -the Ideal, trans. Paul Barrows, introduction by Christopher Lasch (New - -~ -York: Norton, 1985), originally published as L’ideal du moi. Her text -engages a naïve developmental model of sexuality that degrades homosexuality and regularly engages a polemic against feminism and Lacan. -37. See Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 81. -38. Roy Schafer, A New Language for Psycho-Analysis, (New Haven: Yale -University Press, 1976), p. 162. Also of interest are Schafer’s earlier distinctions among various sorts of internalizations—introjection, incorporation, identification—in Roy Schafer, Aspects of Internalization (New York: -International Universities Press, 1968). For a psychoanalytic history of -the terms internalization and identification, see W. W. Meissner, Internalization in Psychoanalysis (New York: International Universities Press, -1968). -39. This discussion of Abraham and Torok is based on “Deuil ou mélancholie, -introjecter-incorporer, réalité métapsychologique et fantasme,” in -L’Écorce et le noyau, (Paris: Flammarion, 1987) translated as The Shell and -the Kernel: Renewals of Psychoanalysis, ed., trans., and with intro by -Nicholas T. Rand (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994). Part of -this discussion is also to be found in English as Nicolas Abraham and -Maria Torok, “Introjection-Incorporation: Mourning or Melancholia,” in -Psychoanalysis in France, eds. Serge Lebovici and Daniel Widlocher (New -York: International University Press, 1980), pp. 3–16. See also by the -same authors, “Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud’s -Metapsychology,” in The Trial(s) of Psychoanalysis, ed. Francoise Meltzer -(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), pp. 75–80; and “A Poetics -of Psychoanalysis: ‘The Lost Object-Me,’” Substance, Vol. 43, 1984, pp. -3–18. -40. Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, p. 68. -41. See Schafer, A New Language for Psychoanalysis, p. 177. In this and in his earlier work, Aspects of Internalization, Schaefer makes clear that the tropes -of internalized spaces are phantasmatic constructions, but not processes. -This clearly coincides in an interesting way with the thesis put forward -by Nicholas Abraham and Maria Torok that “Incorporation is merely a -fantasy that reassures the ego” (“Introjection-Incorporation,” p. 5). -42. Clearly, this is the theoretical foundation of Monique Wittig’s The Lesbian -Body, trans. Peter Owen (New York: Avon, 1976), which suggests that the -heterosexualized female body is compartmentalized and rendered sexu- - -~ -ally unresponsive. The dismembering and remembering process of that -body through lesbian love-making performs the “inversion” that reveals -the so-called integrated body as fully disintegrated and deeroticized and -the “literally” disintegrated body as capable of sexual pleasure throughout -the surfaces of the body. Significantly, there are no stable surfaces on -these bodies, for the political principle of compulsory heterosexuality is -understood to determine what counts as a whole, completed, and -anatomically discrete body. Wittig’s narrative (which is at once an antinarrative) brings those culturally constructed notions of bodily integrity -into question. -43. This notion of the surface of the body as projected is partially addressed -by Freud’s own concept of “the bodily ego.” Freud’s claim that “the ego -is first and foremost a bodily ego” (The Ego and the Id, p. 16) suggests -that there is a concept of the body that determines ego-development. -Freud continues the above sentence: “[the body] is not merely a surface -entity, but is itself the projection of a surface.” For an interesting discussion of Freud’s view, see Richard Wollheim, “The bodily ego,” in -Philosophical Essays on Freud, eds. Richard Wollheim and James Hopkins -(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). For a provocative -account of “the skin ego,” which, unfortunately, does not consider the -implications of its account for the sexed body, see Didier Anzieu, Le moipeau (Paris: Bordas, 1985), published in English as The Skin Ego: A -Psychoanalytic Theory of the Self, trans. Chris Turner (New Haven: Yale -University Press, 1989). -44. See chapter 2, n. 4. Hereafter page references to this essay will appear in -the text. -45. See Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the -Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger, pp. 267–319. Rubin’s presentation on power and sexuality at the 1979 conference on Simone de -Beauvoir’s The Second Sex occasioned an important shift in my own thinking about the constructed status of lesbian sexuality. -46. See (or, rather, don’t see) Joseph Shepher, ed., Incest: A Biosocial View -(London: Acadaemic Press, 1985) for a deterministic account of incest. -47. See Michele Z. Rosaldo, “The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and Cross-Cultural Understanding,” Signs: Journal of -Women in Culture and Society, Vol. 5, No. 3, 1980. - -~ -48. Sigmund Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, trans. James -Strachey (New York: Basic Books, 1962), p. 7. -49. Peter Dews suggests in The Logics of Disintegration: Post-Structuralist Thought -and the Claims of Critical Theory (London: Verso, 1987) that Lacan’s appropriation of the Symbolic from Lévi-Strauss involves a considerable -narrowing of the concept: “In Lacan’s adaptation of Lévi-Strauss, which -transforms the latter’s multiple ‘symbolic systems’ into a single symbolic -order, [the] neglect of the possibilities of systems of meaning promoting -or masking relations of force remains” (p. 105). -3. Subversive Bodily Acts -1. This section, “The Body Politics of Julia Kristeva,” was originally published in Hypatia, in the special issue on French Feminist Philosophy,Vol. -3, No. 3,Winter 1989, pp. 104–118. -2. Julia Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. Margaret Walker, introduction by Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia University Press, 1984), -p. 132. The original text is La Revolution du language poetique (Paris: -Editions du Seuil, 1974). -3. Ibid., p. 25. -4. Julia Kristeva, Desire in Language,A Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, p. -135. See chapter 2, n. 32. This is a collection of essays compiled from -two different sources: Polylogue (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977), and -Σηµειωτιχη: Recherches pour une sémanalyse (Paris: Editions du Seuil, -1969). -5. Ibid., p. 135. -6. Ibid., p. 134. -7. Ibid., p. 136. -8. Ibid. -9. Ibid., p. 239. -10. Ibid., pp. 239–240. -11. Ibid., p. 240. For an extremely interesting analysis of reproductive metaphors as descriptive of the process of poetic creativity, see Wendy Owen, -“A Riddle in Nine Syllables: Female Creativity in the Poetry of Sylvia -Plath,” doctoral dissertation, Yale University, Department of English, -1985. -12. Kristeva, Desire in Language, p. 239. - -~ -13. Ibid., p. 239. -14. Gayle Rubin, “The Traffic in Women: Notes on the ‘Political Economy’ of -Sex,” p. 182. See chapter 2, n. 4. -15. See Plato’s Symposium, 209a: Of the “procreancy . . . of the spirit,” he -writes that it is the specific capacity of the poet. Hence, poetic creations -are understood as sublimated reproductive desire. -16. Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I: An Introduction, trans. -Robert Hurley (New York:Vintage, 1980), p. 154. -17. Michel Foucault, ed., Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently Discovered Memoirs -of a Nineteenth Century Hermaphrodite, trans. Richard McDongall (New -York: Colophon, 1980), originally published as Herculine Barbin, dite -Alexina B. presenté par Michel Foucault (Paris: Gallimard, 1978). All references will be from the English and French versions of that text. -18. “The notion of ‘sex’ made it possible to group together, in an artificial -unity, anatomical elements, biological functions, conducts, sensations, -pleasures, and it enabled one to make use of this fictitious unity as a -causal principle” Foucault, The History of Sexuality,Volume I, p. 154. See -chapter 3, section i, where the passage is quoted. -19. “Sexual Choice, Sexual Act: Foucault and Homosexuality,” trans. James -O’Higgins, originally printed in Salmagundi, Vols. 58–59, Fall 1982– -Winter 1983, pp. 10–24; reprinted in Michel Foucault, Politics, Philosophy, -Culture: Interviews and Other Writings, 1977–1984, ed. Lawrence Kritzman -(New York: Routledge, 1988), p. 291. -20. Michel Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaelogy of the Human Sciences -(New York:Vintage, 1973), p. xv. -21. Michel Foucault, ed., I, Pierre Rivière, Having Slaughtered My Mother, My -Sister, and My Brother: A Case of Parricide in the 19th Century, trans. Frank -Jellinek (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1975), originally published as Moi, Pierre Rivière ayant égorgé ma mère, ma soeur et mon frère . . . -(Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1973). -22. Jacques Derrida, “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism -without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, trans. Alan Bass (Chicago: -University of Chicago Press, 1978), originally published as L’Ecriture et la -différence (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967). -23. See Héléne Cixous, “The Laugh of Medusa,” in New French Feminisms. -24. Quoted in Anne Fausto-Sterling, “Life in the XY Corral,” Women’s - -~ -Studies International Forum, Vol. 12, No. 3, 1989, Special Issue on -Feminism and Science: In Memory of Ruth Bleier, edited by Sue V. -Rosser, p. 328. All the remaining citations in this section are from her -article and from two articles she cites: David C. Page, et al., “The sexdetermining region of the human Y chromosome encodes a finger protein,” in Cell, No. 51, pp. 1091–1104, and Eva Eicher and Linda -Washburn, “Genetic control of primary sex determination in mice,” -Annual Review of Genetics, No. 20, pp. 327–360. -25. Wittig notes that “English compared to French has the reputation of being -almost genderless, while French passes for a very gendered language. It -is true that strictly speaking, English does not apply the mark of gender -to inanimate objects, to things or nonhuman beings. But as far as the categories of the person are concerned, both languages are bearers of gender to the same extent” (“The Mark of Gender,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 5, No. -2, Fall 1985, p. 3. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 76–89. -See chapter 3, n. 4). -26. Although Wittig herself does not argue the point, her theory might -account for the violence enacted against sexed subjects—women, lesbians, gay men, to name a few—as the violent enforcement of a category -violently constructed. In other words, sexual crimes against these bodies -effectively reduce them to their “sex,” thereby reaffirming and enforcing -the reduction of the category itself. Because discourse is not restricted to -writing or speaking, but is also social action, even violent social action, -we ought also to understand rape, sexual violence, “queer-bashing” as the -category of sex in action. -27. Monique Wittig, “One is Not Born a Woman,” Feminist Issues,Vol. 1, No. 2, -Winter 1981, p. 48. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 9–20., -see chapter 3, n. 49. -28. Ibid., p. 17. -29. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4. -30. Monique Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” Feminist Issues, Vol. 1, No. 1, -Summer 1980, p. 105. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. -21–32, see chapter 3, n. 49. -31. Ibid., p. 107. -32. Ibid., p. 106. -33. “The Mark of Gender,” p. 4. - -~ -34. Ibid., p. 5. -35. Ibid., p. 6. -36. Ibid. -37. Ibid. -38. Ibid. -39. Monique Wittig, “Paradigm,” in Homosexualities and French Literature: -Cultural Contexts/Critical Texts, eds. Elaine Marks and George Stambolian -(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1979), p. 119. Consider the radical -difference, however, between Wittig’s acceptance of the use of language -that valorizes the speaking subject as autonomous and universal and -Deleuze’s Nietzschean effort to displace the speaking “I” as the center of -linguistic power. Although both are critical of psychoanalysis, Deleuze’s -critique of the subject through recourse to the will-to-power sustains -closer parallels to the displacement of the speaking subject by the -semiotic/unconscious within Lacanian and post-Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. For Wittig, it appears that sexuality and desire are selfdetermined articulations of the individual subject, whereas for both -Deleuze and his psychoanalytic opponents, desire of necessity displaces -and decenters the subject. “Far from presupposing a subject,” Deleuze -argues, “desire cannot be attained except at the point where someone is -deprived of the power of saying ‘I’,” Gilles Deleuze and Claire Parnet, -Dialogues, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberjam [New York: -Columbia University Press, 1987], p. 89. -40. She credits the work of Mikhail Bahktin on a number of occasions for this -insight. -41. Monique Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” Feminist Issues, Fall 1984, p. 47. Also -in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 68–75. See chapter 3, n. 49. -42. See “The Point of View: Universal or Particular?” Feminist Issues, Vol. 3, -No. 2, Fall 1983. Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 59–67. -See chapter 3, n. 49. -43. See Wittig, “The Trojan Horse.” -44. See Monique Wittig, “The Site of Action,” in Three Decades of the French -New Novel, ed. Lois Oppenheimer (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, -1986). Also in The Straight Mind and Other Essays, pp. 90–100. See chapter -3, n. 49. -45. Wittig, “The Trojan Horse,” p. 48. - -~ -46. “The Site of Action,” p. 135. In this essay, Wittig distinguishes between a -“first” and “second” contract within society:The first is one of radical reciprocity between speaking subjects who exchange words that “guarantee” -the entire and exclusive disposition of language to everyone” (135); the -second contract is one in which words operate to exert a force of domination over others, indeed, to deprive others of the right and social -capacity for speech. In this “debased” form of reciprocity, Wittig argues, -individuality itself is erased through being addressed in a language that -precludes the hearer as a potential speaker. Wittig concludes the essay -with the following: “the paradise of the social contract exists only in literature, where the tropisms, by their violence, are able to counter any -reduction of the ‘I’ to a common denominator, to tear open the closely -woven material of the commonplaces, and to continually prevent their -organization into a system of compulsory meaning” (139). -47. Monique Wittig, Les Guérillères, trans. David LeVay (New York: Avon, -1973), originally published under the same title (Paris: Éditions du -Minuit, 1969). -48. Wittig, “The Mark of Gender,” p. 9. -49. In “On the Social Contract,” a paper presented at Columbia University in -1987 (in The Straight Mind and Other Essays [Boston: Beacon Press, -1992], pp. 33–45), Wittig places her own theory of a primary linguistic -contract in terms of Rousseau’s theory of the social contract. Although -she is not explicit in this regard, it appears that she understands the presocial (preheterosexual) contract as a unity of the will—that is, as a general -will in Rousseau’s romantic sense. For an interesting use of her theory, see -Teresa de Lauretis, “Sexual Indifference and Lesbian Representation” in -Theatre Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2 (May 1988) and “The Female Body and -Heterosexual Presumption,” in Semiotica, Vol. 3–4, No. 67, 1987, pp. -259–279. -50. Wittig, “On the Social Contract.” -51. See Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “One is Not Born a Woman.” -52. Wittig, “On the Social Contract,” pp. 40–41. -53. Wittig, “The Straight Mind,” and “On the Social Contract.” -54. Michel Foucault, “Nietzsche, Genealogy, History,” in Language, CounterMemory, Practice: Selected Essays and Interviews by Michel Foucault, trans. -Donald F. Bouchard and Sherry Simon, ed. Donald F. Bouchard (Ithaca: - -~ -Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 148. References in the text are to -this essay. -55. Mary Douglas, Purity and Danger (London, Boston, and Henley: -Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1969), p. 4. -56. Ibid., p. 113. -57. Simon Watney, Policing Desire: AIDS, Pornography, and the Media (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988). -58. Douglas, Purity and Danger, p. 115. -59. Ibid., p. 121. -60. Ibid., p. 140. -61. Foucault’s essay “A Preface to Transgression” (in Language, Counter-Memory, -Practice) does provide an interesting juxtaposition with Douglas’ notion -of body boundaries constituted by incest taboos. Originally written in -honor of Georges Bataille, this essay explores in part the metaphorical -“dirt” of transgressive pleasures and the association of the forbidden orifice with the dirt-covered tomb. See pp. 46–48. -62. Kristeva discusses Mary Douglas’s work in a short section of Powers of -Horror: An Essay on Abjection, trans. Leon Roudiez (New York: Columbia -University Press, 1982), originally published as Pouvoirs de l’horreur -(Paris: Éditions de Seuil, 1980). Assimilating Douglas’ insights to her -own reformulation of Lacan, Kristeva writes, “Defilement is what is jettisoned from the symbolic system. It is what escapes that social rationality, -that logical order on which a social aggregate is based, which then -becomes differentiated from a temporary agglomeration of individuals -and, in short, constitutes a classification system or a structure” (p. 65). -63. Ibid., p. 3. -64. Iris Marion Young, “Abjection and Oppression: Dynamics of Unconscious -Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia,” paper presented at the Society of -Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Meetings, Northwestern -University, 1988. In Crises in Continental Philosophy, eds. Arleen B. Dallery -and Charles E. Scott with Holley Roberts (Albany: SUNY Press, 1990), -pp. 201–214. -65. Parts of the following discussion were published in two different contexts, in my “Gender Trouble, Feminist Theory, and Psychoanalytic -Discourse,” in Feminism/Postmodernism, ed. Linda J. Nicholson (New York: -Routledge, 1989) and “Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An - -~ -Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory,” Theatre Journal, Vol. 20, -No. 3,Winter 1988. -66. Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan -Sheridan (New York:Vintage, 1979), p. 29. -67. Ibid., p. 30. -68. See the chapter “Role Models” in Esther Newton, Mother Camp: Female -Impersonators in America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1972). -69. Ibid., p. 103. -70. Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The AntiAesthetic: Essays on Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Foster (Port Townsend, -WA.: Bay Press, 1983), p. 114. -71. See Victor Turner, Dramas, Fields and Metaphors (Ithaca: Cornell University -Press, 1974). See also Clifford Geertz, “Blurred Genres: The -Refiguration of Thought,” in Local Knowledge, Further Essays in Interpretive -Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1983). - -~ - -abject, the, 169–70 -Abraham, Nicolas, 86–87 -AIDS, 168–69 -Am I That Name? (Riley), 6 -Anti-Oedipus (Deleuze and Guattari), -151 -Anzieu, Didier, 208–9n. 43 -Barnes, Djuna, 152 -Bataille, Georges, 131 -“Being,” 27–28, 43, 55–60, -149–51 -berdache, 194n. 8 -binary sex, 18–19, 24–33, 149–63 -biology, cellular, 135–41 -bisexuality, 42, 69–70, 75–84, -98–100, 173 -bodily ego, the, 208–9, 209n. 43 -body, the: and binary sex, 10–11; as -boundary, variable, 44, 170–71, -177; construction of, 12–13, 17, -161, 168–69; inscription on, -163–67, 171–73; maternal, -101–19; permeability of, 168; -“re-membering,” 161–63; as surface, 163–70 -Borges, Jorge, 131 - -butch-femme identities, 41, 156–58 -chromosomes, 135–41 -Civilization and Its Discontents -(Freud), 92 -Cixous, Hélène, 131 -corporeal styles, 178–80 -Cott, Nancy F., 194n. 5 -de Beauvoir, Simone de, 3, 15–18, -35, 43, 141–43, 162, 177 -de Lauretis,Teresa, 214n. 49 -Deleuze and Guattari, 151 -Derrida, Jacques, 96, 131, 150, -193n. 2, 201–2n. 1 -de Saussure, Ferdinand, 51 -Descartes, René, 17, 164, 196n. 21 -Desire in Language (Kristeva), 104–5 -Dews, Peter, 209n. 49 -différance, 14, 25, 51–52, 131, 150 -Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 171 -dispositions, sexual, 77–84 -Douglas, Mary, 166–67, 169, -214–15n. 62 -drag, 174–80 -écriture feminine, 19 - -~ -Ego and the Id,The (Freud), 73–77, -79–82, 84 -ego-ideal, the, 79–81 -Eicher, Eva, 138–41 -Elementary Structures of Kinship, The -(Lévi-Strauss), 49–55 -empty space, 86 -Engels, Friedrich, 47 -epistemology and identity, 183–84 -Eros and Civilization (Marcuse), 92 -Fausto-Sterling, Anne, 137–41 -fêlure, 71, 100 -feminism: debates within, 18–22; -foundationalist frame of, -189–90; and patriarchy, 45–46; -and politics, 181–90; and sexual -difference, 35–44; women as -“subject” of, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 -Ferenczi, Sandor, 66 -Foucault, Michel: on category of -sex, 23, 24, 31–32, 117–18, -123–35; on genealogy, 165–66; -on homosexuality, 83, 130–31; -on inscription, 171–73; on -repressive hypothesis, 83, 96–97 -Franklin, Aretha, 29–30, -198–99n. 34 -Freud, Sigmund, 36–37, 54, 73–84, -203–4n. 15, 207nn. 33, 36 -Gallop, Jane, 37 -Garbo, Greta, 163 -Geertz, Clifford, 48, 50 -gender: category of, 9–11; construction of, 11–13, 40–44, 173–77; -as incredible, 180; in language, -28–30; overthrow of, 95–96, -151–54; as performative, -163–90; as regulatory, 23–33, - -42–43; vs. sex, 9–11, 23–33, -47–48, 141–65 -genealogy, feminist, 9, 165, 188 -genetics, sex and, 135–41 -Guérillères, Les (Wittig), 152–53, -160–61 -Guillaumin, Collette, 199n. 40 -Haar, Michel, 27–28 -Heath, Stephen, 67–68, 205n. 25 -Hegel, G.W.F., 51–52, 131, 183, -196–97n. 21, 203n. 14 -Herculine Barbin, Being the Recently -Discovered Journals of a NineteenthCentury Hermaphrodite (Foucault), -31–32, 120, 123–35 -heterosexuality, compulsory, 24–26, -30–31, 34–35, 147–50 -heterosexual matrix, 42–43, -45–100 -History of Sexuality,The,Volume 1 -(Foucault), 31–32, 83, 96, 117, -120–24, 135–36 -homosexuality: Foucault on, 83, -130–31; Freud on, 80–84; Lacan -on, 62–64; Kristeva on, 107–14; -and melancholy, 73–84; Riviere -on, 64–68; taboo against, 80–84, -87–88, 168–70;Wittig on, -24–33 -hooks, bell, 205n. 23 -Husserl, Edmund, 17 -identification in gender, 40–41, -80–91, 207n. 38 -identity: category of, 22–33; construction of, 173–77; politics of, -181–90 -imitation, 41, 174–76 -impersonation, 174–80 - -~ -incest taboo, 52–55, 80, 83–84, -87–88, 110, 204n. 19 -“incorporation” of identity, 86–91, -171–74 -internalization, 170–74, 207n. 38 -“In the Penal Colony” (Kafka), 166, -186, 201–2n. 1 -Irigaray, Luce, 14–18, 25–27, -34–37, 40, 52, 53, 60, 201n. 54 -Jameson, Fredric, 176, 201n. 56 -“Joan Riviere and the Masquerade” -(Heath), 67–68 -Jones, Ernest, 64 -jouissance, 55, 71 -Kafka, Franz, 166, 186, 193n. 2, -201–2n. 1 -Kant, Immanuel, 71 -kinship, 37, 49–55, 91–100, 115–16 -Klein, Melanie, 206–7n. 32 -Kristeva, Julia: on the abject, -169–70; on Lacan, 101–2, -104–5; on lesbianism, 107–14; -and the maternal body, 101–19; -on melancholy, 73, 206–7n. 32; -as orientalist, 114; on repression, -104–5, 115–17; on the -Symbolic, 102, 104–10 -Lacan, Jacques: Kristeva on, 101–2, -104–5; and lesbian sexuality, -62–64; and the Law, 55, 59, -70–72; and masquerade, 60–73; -on the Phallus, 56–60; on -sexual difference, 36–39; on -the Symbolic, 57, 70–73, -101–2, 104 -language: and culture, 55; gender in, -28–30; poetic, 101–12; and - -identity, 182–86; and power, -33–44 -law, paternal, 86–88, 101–2, -118–19, 200n. 52 -Law, the, 55, 59, 70–72 -Leibniz, Gottfried, 51 -Lesbian Body,The (Wittig), 35–36, -153, 159–60, 169 -lesbianism: and the body, 35–36, -159–60, 163–71; identities within, 41, 156–58; Lacan on, 62–64; -and overthrow of heterosexuality, 95–96, 151–55; and subjecthood, 25–27; vs. category of -women, 26–27, 162–63 -Lévi-Strauss, Claude, 49–55, 91–93 -“Life in the XY Corral” (FaustoSterling), 137–41 -literalization, 87–91 -Local Knowledge (Geertz), 50 -Locke, John, 158 -MacCormack, Carol, 48 -Marcuse, Herbert, 92 -“Mark of Gender,The” (Wittig), -28–29 -Marx, Karl, 8, 34, 44, 183 -masquerade, 60–73, 204n. 18 -melancholia, 73–84, 204n. 19, -206–7n. 32 -Mother Camp: Female Impersonators in -America (Newton), 163, 174 -“Motherhood According to Bellini” -(Kristeva), 71 -mourning, 73–84, 107–9 -“Mourning and Melancholia” -(Freud), 73–74, 78–79 -Newton, Esther, 163, 174, -205n. 22 - -~ -Nietzsche, Friedrich, 27–28, 33, 73, -166, 171, 206n. 30 -Oedipal complex, the, 75–84, -91–100 -“One Is Not Born a Woman” -(Wittig), 143–44 -On the Genealogy of Morals -(Nietzsche), 33, 73, 171, -206n. 30 -“On the Social Contract,” (Wittig), -159, 214n. 49 -Order of Things, The (Foucault), 131 -Owen,Wendy, 200n. 46, 210n. 11 -Page, David, 136–41 -Panizza, Oscar, 120 -“Paradigm” (Wittig), 151 -parody, 41–42, 174–77, 185–90 -pastiche, 176, 186–87 -patriarchy, 45–46 -performativity, 171–90 -person, unversal conception of, -14–15 -phallogocentrism, 15, 18, 37, 52 -Phallus, the, 55–73 -Plato, 17, 92, 116 -Pleasure and Danger (Vance), -200–201n. 53, 205n. 22 -pleasures, proliferation of, -35–36 -Policing Desire:AIDS, Pornography, and -the Media (Watney), 168 -politics: and “being,” 150–51; coalitional, 20–22; feminist, 3–9, -181–90; of identity, 181–87 -“Postmodernism and Consumer -Society” (Jameson), 176 -power: and category of sex, 25, -155–58; and language, 33–44; - -prohibition as, 91–100; and -volition, 158 -Powers of Horror (Kristeva), 169–70 -Proust, Marcel, 152 -psychoanalytic accounts of sexual -difference, 33–39, 44–100 -Purity and Danger (Douglas), 166–67, -169 -redeployment of categories, 163–90 -repetition, 141–42, 76–77, 185–87 -representation, problems of, 3–9 -repression, 82–84, 104–5, 115–17 -Revolution in Poetic Language -(Kristeva), 104 -Riley, Denise, 6 -Riviere, Joan, 61–73, 205n. 25 -Rose, Jacqueline, 37–38, 41, 70, -156n. 51, 205–6n. 29 -Rubin, Gayle, 92–96, 115, 202n. 4, -209n. 45 -Same/Other binary, 131–33 -Sarraute, Natalie, 152 -Sartre, Jean-Paul, 17, 164, -196–97n. 21 -Schafer, Roy, 86 -Second Sex,The (de Beauvoir), 15–18, -35, 141, 143 -Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky, 203n. 9 -semiotic, the, 101–19 -sex: category of, 9–11; “fictive,” -35–36, 141–63; and genetics, -135–41; vs. gender, 9–11, -23–33, 47–48, 141–65; and -identity, 23–33; as project, -177–78 -“Sex-Determining Region of the -Human Y Chromosome Encodes -a Finger Protein” (Page), 136–41 - -~ -Sexes et parentés (Irigaray), 53 -sexuality, 31–33, 40–44, 92–96, -120–24, 155–58 -signifying economy, masculinist, -18–19 -“slave morality,” 72–73, 206n. 30 -Soleil noir: Dépression et mélancholie -(Kristeva), 73 -space, internal, 86–91, 170–71 -Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty, -197n. 23, 204n. 18 -Stoller, Robert, 32 -“Straight Mind,The” (Wittig), 45, -159 -Strathern, Marilyn, 48 -structuralism, 49–55 -subject, the, 3–9, 19–22, 36–41, 48, -149–54, 169–70, 181–90 -substance, metaphysics of, 25–28, -34, 37 -Symbolic, the, 50–53, 57, 70–73, -102, 104–10 -Symposium (Plato), 116 -Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality -(Freud), 36, 52, 140 -Torok, Maria, 86–87 -Totem and Taboo (Freud), 54 -“Traffic of Women:The ‘Political -Economy’ of Sex” (Rubin), -92–96 -transsexuality, 90 - -Tristes tropiques (Lévi-Strauss), 50 -Tyler, Parker, 163 -“unity,” 20–22 -“universality,” 15–16 -Use of Pleasure,The (Foucault), -135–36 -Vance, Carol S., 200–201n. 53, -205n. 22 -Walton, Shirley, 205n. 22 -Washburn, Linda L., 138–41 -Watney, Simon, 168 -Wittig, Monique: and de Beauvoir, -143–44; and category of sex, -24–31, 34–39, 143–48, 154–59; -and heterosexual contract, -34–35, 147–50, 153–55; and -Lacan, 36–39; and language, 141, -147–55, 159–63, 199n. 42; as -materialist, 34–37, 151–52, 159 -“Womanliness as a Masquerade” -(Riviere), 61–73 -women: as “being” the Phallus, -55–60, 70–71; category of, 4–9, -19–22, 162–64; as object of -exchange, 49–55; as “subject” of -feminism, 3–9, 19–22, 181–90 -Writing and Difference (Derrida), 131 -Young, Iris Marion, 170 diff --git a/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt b/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt deleted file mode 100644 index def4b00..0000000 --- a/preprocessing/Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1521 +0,0 @@ -Sympathy and Telepathy: The Problem of Ethics in George Eliot's "The Lifted Veil" -Author(s): Thomas Albrecht -Source: ELH , Summer, 2006, Vol. 73, No. 2 (Summer, 2006), pp. 437-463 -Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press -Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019 -REFERENCES -Linked references are available on JSTOR for this article: -https://www.jstor.org/stable/30030019?seq=1&cid=pdfreference#references_tab_contents -You may need to log in to JSTOR to access the linked references. -JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide -range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and -facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. -Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at -https://about.jstor.org/terms - -The Johns Hopkins University Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and -extend access to ELH - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - SYMPATHY AND TELEPATHY: THE PROBLEM OF -ETHICS IN GEORGE ELIOT'S THE LIFTED VEIL -BY THOMAS ALBRECHT - -Presentiments are strange things! and so are sympathies; and so a -signs. - --Charlotte BrontW, Jane Eyre - -I. SYMPATHY AND ANTIPATHY - -If art does not enlarge men's sympathies, it does nothing morally. - --George Eliot, letter to Charles Bray - -I have never been encouraged to trust much in the sympathy of my - -fellow men. - --Latimer, in The Lifted Veil - -Although George Eliot's gothic novella The Lifted Veil is not oste - -sibly a work of realism, and although it has until recently been treate - -by critics as a marginal anomaly in Eliot's oeuvre, its themes are -several respects central to Eliot's work overall and to Eliot's ethics -particular. By the time she composed the story early in 1859, El -had developed in her essays and in her first full-length novel Ad -Bede an ethics of art and aesthetics, specifically of realist art. T -ethics is founded on emotional responses, what Eliot calls sympat -and compassion, by which she means a person's ability to feel and -suffer with another person. Her theory insists that art should giv -reader or viewer access to the experiences, thoughts, and feelings - -a great variety of different characters. Eliot proposes that our insigh - -into the minds and experiences of these characters "extend" our sy - -pathy for other people and for humanity in general, thereby producin - -ELH 73 (2006) 437-463 c 2006 by The Johns Hopkins University Press 4 - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - an ethical response in us. In her 1856 essay "The Natural History of -German Life," for example, she writes, "The greatest benefit we owe -to the artist, whether painter, poet, or novelist, is the extension of our -sympathies. ... Art is the nearest thing to life; it is a mode of amplifying experience and extending our contact with our fellow-men beyond - -the bounds of our personal lot."' So whereas a critic like Walter Pater -describes the experience of art as a retraction into the self ("What is -this song or picture, this engaging personality presented in life or in a -book, to me?"), Eliot describes it as an extension beyond the limitations - -of the self, as a coming up against some form of otherness. -Most recent scholars working on The Lifted Veil have noted in pass- - -ing that the relation between art and ethics is implicitly taken up in -the novella; however, their analyses have largely sidestepped this issue - -and concentrated instead on contextualizing elements from the plot -within such Victorian scientific theories and practices as mesmerism -and animal magnetism, phrenology, clairvoyance, vivisection, blood -transfusions, and physiological psychology.3 In this essay, I should like -to bring critical attention to the ethical dilemma that is implicitly and - -explicitly raised in The Lifted Veil. I will focus in particular on the -central conceit of telepathic power and on its equivocal relation to -the moral value Eliot calls sympathy. -The Lifted Veil is told retrospectively in the form of a confessional - -manuscript written by Latimer, an overly sensitive aesthete and misanthrope. As a young man, Latimer discovers that he is intermittently -and involuntarily subjected to two kinds of clairvoyant powers: he has -prescient visions of future events and telepathic access to the thoughts - -and feelings of those around him. His insights into what he describes -as the pettiness, stupidity, and egotism of other people alienate him -from all society. He eventually meets Bertha Grant, a beautiful young -woman who soon after becomes engaged to marry his half-brother -Alfred. He falls in love with Bertha, in part because "she made the -only exception, among all the human beings about me, to my unhappy - -gift of insight."4 He has a prescient vision of an older Bertha as his -wife, which reveals to him her cruelty and her hatred of him, but -he nevertheless continues to love and desire her. Following Alfred's -death in an accident, Latimer and Bertha are married and eventually -come to live together in the state of mutual alienation anticipated in -Latimer's vision. A visit from Latimer's childhood friend Meunier, now - -a renowned scientist, is the occasion for a gothic reanimation scene -in which a recently deceased maid is momentarily restored to life to -accuse Bertha of plotting to poison Latimer. In this climactic scene, - -438 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - Bertha is revealed to Latimer as a femme fatale whose outer beauty -has veiled her inner monstrosity. After the couple's final separation -following this incident, the story ends with Latimer finishing his account and awaiting, in the narrative present, his own death predicted -at the novella's outset.5 - -Following a suggestive essay by Charles Swann, I propose that The -Lifted Veil implicitly tests the premises of Eliot's ethics of sympathy -through the conceit of Latimer's telepathic "participation in other - -people's consciousness" (V, 17). Latimer's clairvoyance can be read -as an implicit figure for realist art as Eliot defines it, because it gives -Latimer access to the thoughts and feelings of a large number of -different people. Latimer is in this sense a stand-in for the reader or -viewer, and also, in another sense, a stand-in for Eliot herself and for - -the artist in general. As Swann puts it, "Latimer knows the pains and -joys of others. . . . [His] position is strikingly analogous to that of the - -reader of a George Eliot novel."6 Latimer himself characterizes his -telepathic powers as -the obtrusion in my mind of the mental process going forward in first - -one person, then another, with whom I happened to be in contact: -the vagrant, frivolous ideas and emotions of some uninteresting -acquaintance .., .would force themselves on my consciousness like an -importunate, ill-played musical instrument, or the loud activity of an - -imprisoned insect. (V, 13) - -Latimer's reference to an obtrusion of frivolous emotions, and his -metaphors of the importunate instrument and the imprisoned insect, -suggest the potential failure of Eliot's ethical theory of art. This is - -because while Latimer has access to the thoughts and feelings of -others, he does not respond according to Eliot's prescription; he feels -neither sympathy nor affection. Rather than eliciting pity and compassion, Latimer's telepathic insights elicit in him only boredom and -contempt. To have involuntary access to the minds of his neighbors, -he complains, is at best "wearying and annoying," at worst "an intense - -pain and grief" (V, 13-14). Thus Latimer's experiences would seem to -contradict Eliot's theory that art can and should enlarge our sympathy - -simply by granting us access to the thoughts and feelings of those -around us. Latimer in fact makes explicit reference to this theory, but -only to dismiss it as a wishful illusion: -This is one of the vain thoughts with which we men flatter ourselves. -We try to believe that the egotism within us would have easily been - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -439 - - melted, and that it was only the narrowness of our knowledge which -hemmed in our generosity, our awe, our human pity, and hindered -them from submerging our hard indifference to the sensations and -emotions of our fellow. (V, 21-22) - -Latimer briefly considers the possibility that an expansion of our insight into others might lead us to feel pity and generosity for them. -But his final assessment is that this is only "one of the vain thoughts - -with which we men flatter ourselves."7 - -Through Latimer's "hard indifference" to the sensations and emotions of the people around him, The Lifted Veil dramatizes a crisis for - -Eliot's ethics of sympathy. Latimer's misanthropic responses to other -people suggest a less stable relation between art and ethics than the -one necessitated by Eliot's theory. Eliot herself alludes to this more -unstable relation in a line she wrote to her friend Charles Bray at -the time of the novella's composition, "If art does not enlarge men's -sympathies, it does nothing morally."" There are at least two ways to -read this sentence, and the ambiguity nicely condenses the ethical -predicament in The Lifted Veil. On the one hand, Eliot maintains that -art can be morally effective by enlarging our sympathies. On the other -hand, her use of the double negative suggests that art is morally inef- - -ficient because it does not enlarge our sympathy, a more pessimistic -assessment which Latimer's experiences would seem to confirm.9 I -propose that Eliot both acknowledges and resolves this predicament -at the level of the plot. In order to defend her ethical theory against -the implications of Latimer's narcissism, she stages a conversion narrative in which Latimer makes an unexpected transition from antipathy to sympathy. She then projects Latimer's antipathy onto another -character, namely Bertha Grant, the femme fatale of her story. This -projection allows her to delineate and to demonize the antipathy more -distinctively (using the convenient figure of a transgressive woman), -and then, at a symbolic level, to expel it. -The initial step in the expulsion of Bertha and of the antipathy she - -represents is the moral conversion Latimer undergoes on the evening -of his father's death. The father's dying from an illness becomes the first - -occasion for Latimer to feel sympathy for another human being: -Perhaps it was the first day since the beginning of my passion for -[Bertha], in which that passion was completely neutralised by the -presence of an absorbing feeling of another kind. I had been watching -by my father's deathbed: I had been witnessing the last fitful yearning -glance his soul had cast back on the spent inheritance of life-the last - -440 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - faint consciousness of love he had gathered from the pressure of my -hand. What are all our personal loves when we have been sharing in -that supreme agony? In the first moments when we come away from -the presence of death, every other relation to the living is merged, to - -our feeling, in the great relation of a common nature and a common -destiny. (V, 31, my emphasis) - -This passage depicts unprecedented avowals of sympathy and compassion. For the first time in the novella, Latimer does not respond to -the consciousness of another person with contempt or indifference. -Instead, he claims a connection with his father by way of their shared - -mortality. The word sympathy derives from the Greek sympathes -(having common feelings) and is here evoked in Latimer's emphasis -on commonality ("the great relation of a common nature and a common destiny"). Through his communion with his father and through -the sense of their common mortality, Latimer is also able to claim a -connection with humanity in general, as indicated by his shift in the -passage from the first person singular to the first person plural.1o -Latimer's conversion to sympathy at his father's death leads directly -to his first clairvoyant insight into Bertha's mind. Up until this point - -in the narrative, Bertha has remained a "fascinating secret" (V, 20) -and an "oasis of mystery" (V, 18) to him, and for this reason an object - -of intense speculations and desires. But immediately following his -communion with his dying father, Latimer experiences a "terrible moment of complete illumination," which directly reveals to him Bertha's - -"scheming selfishness" and her "repulsion and antipathy harden[ing] -into cruel hatred" (V, 32). He explicitly depicts this illumination as an -effect of the bond he has just shared with his father: -In that state of mind I joined Bertha in her private sitting-room... -I remember, as I closed the door behind me, a cold tremulousness - -seizing me, and a vague sense of being hated and lonely-vague and -strong, like a presentiment. I know how I looked at that moment, for - -I saw myself in Bertha's thought as she lifted her cutting grey eyes, -and looked at me: a miserable ghost-seer, surrounded by phantoms - -in the noon-day, trembling under a breeze when the leaves were -still, without appetites for the common objects of human desire, but -pining after the moonbeams. We were front to front with each other, -and judged each other. The terrible moment of complete illumination - -had come. (V, 31-32) - -Among other things, this scene is explicitly a moment of judgment -("We ... judged each other"), a moment of moral recognition. I would -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -441 - - argue that in the exchange of looks between the two characters, the -specific function of Bertha's gaze is to appropriate Latimer's earlier -antipathy. What Latimer sees and recognizes is not so much Bertha's -inner self, but rather the way in which she sees him: "I saw myself -in Bertha's thought as she lifted her cutting grey eyes, and looked at -me: a miserable ghost-seer, surrounded by phantoms in the noon-day, -trembling under a breeze when the leaves were still, without appetite -for the common objects of human desire." The way in which Bertha -sees Latimer closely resembles the way in which he had earlier seen -the people around him: as miserable, pitiful, and as fundamentally -disconnected from one another. At the same time, her gaze stands in -explicit contrast to Latimer's clairvoyant communion with his dying -father in the scene just before, thus suggesting that Eliot has projected - -the antipathy away from Latimer and onto Bertha. The misanthropic -Bertha, it seems, is unveiled here by Latimer as his own uncanny -double." - -Eliot's purpose in exposing Bertha as Latimer's double is to protect -her ethics of sympathy from the implications of Latimer's antipathy. -By projecting that antipathy onto Bertha, Eliot leaves Latimer, the -proxy for both herself and the reader, free to convert to sympathy. The -subsequent redemption of Latimer in the plot signals the concurrent -redemption of Eliot's literary ethics and the successful warding off of an - -implicit threat. The protective effect of the projection lies in Bertha's - -more unequivocal embodiment of antipathy. While Latimer's misanthropy is exonerated in the plot by the oedipal and social pressures to -which he is continually subjected, and while it is ultimately (though -only partially) transformed into sympathy for the dying father and for -humanity in general, Bertha is an image of antipathy as pure, absolute -evil. Eliot uses the conventions of the nineteenth-centuryfemmefatale - -to make this evil intelligible, suggesting a direct correspondence between Bertha's character and her sex, an association readily available -in Victorian culture.'" The femme fatale provides Eliot with a stock -personification of antipathy, an antipathy that is unveiled and then -symbolically expelled, much as the character Bertha is expelled from -the plot once her secret plan to poison Latimer has been unveiled. - -442 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - II. SYMPATHY AND METAPHOR - -All of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors an -act fatally on the strength of them. - --Middlemarch, chapter 10 - -The structure outlined at the end of the previous section is w -Neil Hertz has identified as "a structure common in Eliot's novels - -double surrogation, in which the author's investment in her characte - -is split into 'good' and 'bad' versions, and the valued imaginative activ - -of the 'good' surrogate is purchased by the exiling of the 'bad.""'1 -The Lifted Veil, Latimer transforms into Eliot's good surrogate, w -Bertha is the bad surrogate. In his reading of Middlemarch, He -considers the overall structure, and the overcoming of the thr -posed by the bad surrogate, a protective displacement of a diffe -threat, one which Eliot cannot overcome as easily. He identifies -second threat as an "open and indeterminate self-dispersion ass - -ated with a plurality of signs and the plurality of interpretations th - -writing can provoke."14 For Hertz, the danger displaced by the m -conflict in Middlemarch between good and bad authorial surroga -is a categorical threat to the self as such, to its ability to conceiv -itself as a unified and coherent entity. My reading of The Lifted -follows Hertz in identifying an opposition between a good and a -surrogate for Eliot and in suggesting that the entire double surr -tion structure is a displacement of a different threat altogether. -unlike Hertz, I identify the latter not as an extra-moral threat to - -self's ability to constitute itself, but as another moral threat. I will b - -arguing that this second threat is ethically more troubling to - -than either Latimer's egotism or Bertha's evil. I specifically locate th - -threat not in any one character's disposition towards another charact - -but in the visual metaphors through which Latimer's moral insig - -are formulated. Insofar as these insights take the form of metaphor - -they are based on principles of similarity, analogy, and commona -Such principles are fundamentally at odds with Eliot's notion of w - -a true ethics should be, namely an attentiveness to what is irreducibl - -different or apart from oneself. Ultimately the more disturbing eth -conflict in The Lifted Veil is not between antipathy and sympathy b - -between an ethics based on similarity and one based on differenc -As its title suggests, The Lifted Veil has an interest in the co -monplace Victorian theme of knowledge and, more specifically, in -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -443 - - play between knowledge and ignorance, veiling and unveiling, secrecy -and initiation. The privileged object of knowledge for Eliot's novels -in general and for The Lifted Veil in particular is the consciousness -of other people. In The Lifted Veil, the theme of Latimer's telepathy -demonstrates the novella's preoccupation with the idea of gaining access to someone else's mind. For Eliot, the appreciation of another -person's consciousness that is made possible by art is the first step -towards moral agency, which is for her the aim of all great art and -criticism. Thus any understanding one may gain of another person's -thoughts and feelings is never a neutral kind of knowledge but always -has a strong moral dimension; in The Lifted Veil, for instance, Latimer's -sympathetic witnessing of his dying father's thoughts, and the revelation - -to him of Bertha's antipathy, are distinctly moral insights. -As its title also suggests, The Lifted Veil portrays the initiation into - -moral knowledge in specifically visual terms. Here, for example, is -Latimer's experience of his grieving father's consciousness: "As I saw -into the desolation of my father's heart, I felt a movement of deep -pity towards him, which was the beginning of a new affection" (V, 28, - -my emphasis). And here is Latimer's telepathic insight into Bertha's -mind, partially quoted earlier: "I saw myself in Bertha's thought as -she lifted her cutting grey eyes, and looked at me: a miserable ghostseer... The terrible moment of complete illumination had come to -me, and I saw the darkness had hidden no landscape from me, but -only a blank prosaic wall" (V, 32, my emphasis). Latimer's conversion to sympathy and the revelation of Bertha's antipathy are both -represented visually: Latimer sees into his father's desolate heart, he -sees into Bertha's mind, and he sees himself in Bertha's eyes. Both -moments demonstrate the extent to which Eliot frames morality and -immorality in visual terms and the extent to which she makes moral -conclusions intelligible through visual metaphors such as clairvoyance, -darkness, and illumination. These kinds of metaphors traditionally imply - -an epistemological reliability and would thus serve to strengthen the -authority of Latimer's insights. - -The "blank prosaic wall" as which Bertha is revealed to Latimer in -the second quotation indicates a second metaphorical strand in The -Lifted Veil that is intertwined with the visual metaphors (clairvoyance, - -illumination, darkness, and so on), namely a series of metaphorical -references to prose, that is to writing, reading, texts, and to language. - -Rather than comparing Bertha to a visual object, the latter metaphors -compare her to a text that must be deciphered or read. Latimer compares Bertha to an epigram (V, 26), her glances to "feminine nothings - -444 S1ympathq and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - which could never be quoted against her" (V, 16), and his recollections -of her to "an oriental alphabet" (V, 35). Like the visual metaphors, -these metaphors concentrate around Bertha in scenes of considerable -epistemological stress. But unlike the visual metaphors, they designate -her inaccessibility, rather than her accessibility, to Latimer's clairvoyant - -powers: "Bertha's inward self remained shrouded from me, and I still -read her thoughts only through the language of her lips and demeanour" (V, 31). In this line, Latimer associates vision with certainty, and -reading with uncertainty and tentativeness. -Several of the examples I have cited join together the two metaphori- - -cal strands in which Bertha is entwined: the visual metaphors (which -compare her to a visual object) and the textual metaphors (which -compare her to a piece of writing). For instance, the "blank prosaic -wall" simultaneously compares her to a wall and to a piece of prose. -Yet even as the two metaphorical strands sometimes overlap, they each -designate their referent, Bertha, in very distinct terms: the one in terms - -of the senses ("seeing" her) and the other in textual terms ("reading" -her). Reading and seeing are of course not wholly analogous, and in -fact the two strands sometimes come to interfere with one another, -and to comment on one another. As J. Hillis Miller has noted about the -relation between different metaphorical strands in Middlemarch, "the - -interpretation of one metaphor by another metaphor is characteristic -of Eliot's use of figure."'5 In The Lifted Veil, I would propose, the -textual metaphors interpret the visual metaphors as mere metaphors. -In doing so, they subvert the visual metaphors' privileged status as -decisive revelations. This is because simply by their juxtaposition with -the visual metaphors, the textual metaphors foreground, as it were, the -metaphorical nature of the visual metaphors. The combination of the -two strands, for instance in the "blank prosaic wall," emphasizes that -the "illumination" and "unveiling" of Bertha's inner self are also only -metaphors, just as the comparisons of Bertha to an oriental alphabet -or an epigram are metaphors. However, because the unveiling and -the illumination evoke the sensual experience of seeing an object with -one's eyes (rather than the experience of reading a text), they veil their -own metaphorical nature in a way that the textual metaphors arguably -do not. By veiling their status as figures, the visual metaphors imply -a revelation by means of the senses; this revelation would be decisive -and absolute insofar as it would not be mediated by means of language -and tropological figures, that is, by means of reading and writing. The -claim to a sensory rather than linguistic access to truth underwrites -the moral conclusions of the novella; I have shown this in my reading -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -445 - - of moral truths becoming visually intelligible in Latimer's visions of -his father's desolate soul and Bertha's misanthropic consciousness. My -claim now is that through the juxtaposition of Latimer's visual revela- - -tions with the textual metaphors, Eliot brings out the metaphorical -nature of those revelations. That metaphorical nature in turn implies -the revelations' potential arbitrariness and unreliability. -The comparisons of Bertha to a piece of writing suggest that rather -than being an object Latimer can see, Bertha is a kind of impenetrable -text that has to be read or deciphered. The metaphor of a text designates -the otherness of Bertha from Latimer; Eliot makes this explicit insofar - -as she repeatedly associates versions of this figure with opacity, as in -the image of the oriental alphabet. If the other is a kind of obscure -text, Eliot suggests, it is open to something like numerous, potentially -contradictory interpretations, but not to something like clear, unequivocal vision. As only one possible interpretation (out of many) of the text - -as which Bertha becomes manifest, then, Latimer's visual exposure of - -the character Bertha is not an absolute revelation of truth. It is rather - -the revelation of a truth that is more arbitrary and subjective, one that - -potentially says more about Latimer than about Bertha. Hence even -at the moment of her alleged unveiling, Bertha "remain[s] virtually -unknown" to Latimer and to us; she is "known merely as a cluster of -signs for [her] neighbour's false suppositions."'16 Latimer's recognition - -of her inner selfishness is only one supposition made on the basis of -the cluster of signs as which Bertha is intelligible to him. His insight -into her consciousness, and by extension any insight into it, is only -one interpretation of "the language of her lips and demeanour," of -that obscure language which (figuratively) indicates her difference -from him and from us. - -To some extent, the possibility that Latimer is interpreting Bertha, -rather than directly seeing into her, is covered over, so to speak, by the -veil of the visual metaphor, by the veil of Bertha's visual unveiling. Eliot - -covers it over because she wants to protect the authority of Latimer's -moral insights; once we realize that those insights are only metaphors -and interpretations, their authority would be compromised due to the -potential arbitrariness of metaphors and interpretations, which Eliot -famously acknowledges throughout her writings. At the same time -that she protects Latimer's insights, however, Eliot uses the textual -metaphors implicitly to undermine their authority, by showing that -Bertha is truly Latimer's other, and that his insights into her are only -his own approximations of that otherness via metaphor. Figuratively -speaking, those insights are like interpretations of a text and thus sub- - -446 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - ject to the same kind of uncertainty and capriciousness to which any -interpretation is subject."7 If Bertha in her otherness is more like a text -than like a visual object, Eliot implies, Latimer cannot literally see into - -her. She cannot literally be unveiled, only metaphorically. Thus Eliot -calls the epistemological authority of Latimer's visions into question. -In the concluding section of this essay, I will consider how she calls -the moral authority of those visions into question as well. -As a first step in that direction, I should like to offer an example -of how Latimer's use of figurative language destabilizes the moral -insights made possible by Bertha's visual unveiling. In the climactic -scene of The Lifted Veil, Bertha's recently deceased maid, Mrs. Archer, is temporarily brought back to life to reveal Bertha's secret plot - -to poison Latimer: -The dead woman's eyes were wide open, and met [Bertha's eyes] in full -recognition-the recognition of hate. With a sudden strong effort, the -hand that Bertha had thought for ever still was pointed towards her, and - -the haggard face moved. The gasping eager voice said-"You mean to -poison your husband." (V, 41-42) - -Like Latimer's insights into the consciousnesses of his father and -Bertha, Mrs. Archer's exposure of Bertha is pointedly visual; it takes -the form of her eyes meeting Bertha's eyes. The scene is crucial to -the plot because it provides empirical evidence for Bertha's exposure -and indictment, adding to Latimer's earlier clairvoyant evidence. -And it is also crucial to the double surrogation structure because it -provides empirical evidence for the indictment of Bertha as Eliot's -bad surrogate. In the passage, the good surrogate, Latimer, explicitly -equates Mrs. Archer's "full recognition" of Bertha with "the recognition of hate," the kind of hate of which Eliot wishes to purge him by -projecting it onto Bertha. -Yet the moral authority of Bertha's exposure ("we all felt that the -dark veil had completely fallen") is undermined by a suggestion that the - -evidence in question is as much metaphorical as empirical.'8 Bertha's -plan to poison Latimer is not only a secret plot unveiled by Mrs. Archer -but also a citation of one of Latimer's recurring metaphors for Bertha, -the figure of Lucrezia Borgia. Earlier in the story, Latimer and Bertha -are in Vienna, visiting a picture gallery: -I had been looking at Giorgione's picture of the cruel-eyed woman, -said to be a likeness of Lucrezia Borgia. I had stood long alone before -it, fascinated by the terrible reality of that cunning, relentless face, till - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -447 - - I felt a strange poisoned sensation, as if I had long been inhaling a fatal -odour, and was just beginning to be conscious of its effects. (V, 18-19, -my emphasis) - -Latimer's choice of the word "poisoned" to describe the strange sensation - -he feels while looking at the portrait would seem to be motivated by -the subject matter of the painting itself. At the same time, the epithet -"cruel-eyed" indicates an affinity between the woman in the portrait and -Bertha, an affinity that is confirmed in a scene immediately following. - -As Bertha takes Latimer's arm, he relates that "a strange intoxicating -numbness passed over me, like the continuance or climax of the sensa- - -tion I was still feeling from the gaze of Lucrezia Borgia" (V, 19). The -doubling of Bertha and Lucrezia Borgia raises the possibility that the -poisoning plot that is later revealed by Mrs. Archer is merely Latimer's - -taking his metaphor for Bertha to its logical conclusion. If Bertha is -(like) Lucrezia Borgia, it follows that she would attempt to eliminate -her enemy by poison. The literal poison intended for Latimer is in this - -sense just a variant of the "poisoned sensation" Latimer claims to feel -in the presence of the Lucrezia Borgia portrait.'9 - -The poison metaphor appears elsewhere in the novella as well. Latimer refers to the scene just described as "that hideous vision which -poisoned the passion it could not destroy" (V, 21), and he justifies his -ongoing infatuation with Bertha by claiming, "The fear of poison is feeble - -against the sense of thirst" (V, 20). Given this recurring and somewhat -banal metaphor, one has to be just a little suspicious when Bertha's plan -to poison Latimer is finally revealed. At best, Mrs. Archer's exposure of -Bertha's plan leaves us unable to choose between taking this moment as -a revelation of an empirical truth and taking it as one more recurrence of -the Lucrezia Borgia metaphor. The status of the revelation is ultimately -undecidable because Eliot provides us with no means by which to know -for sure. Certainly the unveiling of Bertha's secret plot is crucial to the -novella's resolution, but its truth is not empirically (that is to say, nonmetaphorically) verifiable. This is not because Latimer may be an unreli- - -able narrator, as Terry Eagleton has argued, but because the poisoning -plot is at the same time simply a quotation of a metaphor taken from a -series of metaphors that leads back to the woman in the portrait, "said -to be a likeness of Lucrezia Borgia" (V, 18-19, my emphasis)."20 -Caught in this predicament, we should not try to verify whether the -scene is "really" a moment of truth or "just" a citation of a metaphor. - -Eliot's point is that it is both at once, insofar as she does not make a -tenable distinction here between a true insight into the other and a meta- - -448 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - phor for the other. This is the epistemological predicament personified -by the figure of Bertha. The many textual metaphors for Bertha insist -that any revelation of Bertha's inner self, including this one, is already a -metaphor, whether that metaphor is drawn from the sensual realm or the - -linguistic realm or from elsewhere. To put it another way, the unveiling -of Bertha's character is one interpretation (among many possible interpretations) of the text as which Bertha is intelligible to Latimer and to -us. This general point about the constitutive relation between the other -and metaphor is merely reconfirmed here by the uncanny coincidence of -a frequently recurring metaphor and an alleged revelation of the other's -interiority or essence. -Eliot's recognition of metaphor's constitutive role in our insights into - -other people has fundamental consequences for her understanding of -morality, as she acknowledges in a comment made by her good surrogate, - -Latimer. At a point late in the narrative, Latimer explicitly interrogates -the validity of any moral judgment of another person that is mediated - -through one's own verbal representation of that person's experience. -He concludes an assessment of his and Bertha's unhappy marriage by -questioning the moral authority of such assessments: -That course of our life which I have indicated in a few sentences filled - -the space of years. So much misery-so slow and hideous a growth of -hatred and sin, may be compressed into a sentence! And men judge of -each other's lives through this summary medium. They epitomise the -experience of their fellow-mortal, and pronounce judgment on him in -neat syntax, and feel themselves wise and virtuous-conquerors over the -temptations they define in well-selected predicates. (V, 34) - -Latimer insists here on a distinction between years of misery and the -compression of those years into a single sentence, between actual -experience and the epitome of that experience (an epitome is a brief -verbal summary). What men judge when they judge one another, he -says, is never the other's actual experience, but always its epitome. -These kinds of judgments, he points out, allow the judges to "feel -themselves wise and virtuous-conquerors over the temptations they -define in well-selected predicates." At the same time, he calls this kind -of morality into question because it is built on one's own definition of - -the other's temptations and on one's own summations of the other's -experience, rather than on an appreciation of the other's experience -itself, of that experience in its otherness. - -Latimer's reflections on the ways our judgments of one another -are verbally mediated substantiate my earlier claim that Eliot's episThomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -449 - - temological emphasis on the metaphorical bases of moral insights into -other people puts not only the reliability but the morality of those -insights into question. The epistemological problem is that metaphors -are arbitrary and subjective, which in turn subjects one's insights to -a potential arbitrariness. The moral problem is that these metaphors -are always one's own figures for the other; as such, they refer back to - -oneself, not to the other. Metaphors are based on principles of analogy and similarity, not difference. They establish a relation between -the other and something that is already familiar to oneself in order -to make the other more familiar. In the Rhetoric, Aristotle identifies -familiarization as both the means and the aim of metaphors: "[I]n using - -metaphors to give names to nameless things, we must draw them not -from remote but from kindred and similar things, so that the kinship - -is clearly perceived as soon as the words are said."21 The kinship to be -perceived is not only between the metaphor and the nameless thing -but also between us and the thing. The ethical problem here is the -implicit emphasis on the other's kinship to oneself. Latimer suggests -in the passage quoted above that a more just ethics would be an appreciation of the other as other: an appreciation of the other's actual -experience, not an appreciation of one's definition of that experience. -His claim complements explicit claims Eliot makes throughout her -writings. In her essay "The Natural History of German Life," for -instance, she argues that great art "surprises even the trivial and the -selfish into that attention to what is apart from themselves, which may -be called the raw material of moral sentiment.""22 Elsewhere, in a letter - -to Bray from which I have quoted earlier, she writes, "[T]he only effect I ardently long to produce by my writings is that those who read - -them should be better able to imagine and to feel the pains and joys -of those who differ from themselves" (L, 3:111). And in Middlemarch, -her narrator specifically indicts the egotistic Rosamond for her inability -or unwillingness to engage with Lydgate as someone autonomous from - -herself: "Rosamond, in fact, was entirely occupied not exactly with -Tertius Lydgate as he was in himself, but with his relation to her."23 -So Eliot explicitly defines the ethics of art and of interpersonal relations as an attention to what is apart or different from oneself. This -appeal to our awareness of the other's difference from us, rather than -its similarity to us, has been largely overlooked by critics working on - -Eliot's ethics, critics who primarily define those ethics in terms of a -fellowship or sympathy between the self and the other.24 Eliot derives -the imperative to acknowledge the other's otherness from the work of - -Ludwig Feuerbach, a writer with whom she claimed a great affinity - -450 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - (L, 2:153), and especially from Feuerbach's Essence of Christianity, -a text she translated in 1854. "The consciousness of the moral law, -of right, of propriety, of truth itself," Feuerbach writes in Marian -Evans's translation, "is indissolubly connected with my consciousness -of another than myself."25 - -Eliot's appeal to a consciousness of the other's difference from -ourselves would seem to be at odds with her own attention to Bertha, -which pointedly does not acknowledge Bertha's otherness, even though - -Bertha is, by virtue of her gender (she is the only significant female -character in the story) and by virtue of her opacity, the novella's exem- - -plar of otherness. Eliot ultimately reveals Bertha as a deficient double -of Latimer and, by implicit extension, of herself, not as something truly - -apart from Latimer or herself. Like Rosamond in the citation from -Midlemarch, Eliot is preoccupied not with Bertha as she is, but with -Bertha's relation to herself. This preoccupation with Bertha as her own -bad double ultimately allows her to resolve her ethical dilemma and to -close the narrative, but the ethics of that closure are called into question by her simultaneous insistence that the other must be attended -to as other, not as a (negative or positive) reflection of the self. In the -final section of this essay, I will argue that this discrepancy between -an ethics based on true difference and an ethics based on similarity -points to an ethical dilemma in The Lifted Veil that is itself radically -different from the sympathy/antipathy problem on which the novella -and Eliot's work in general ostensibly concentrate. The latter problem, -I will propose, is a protective displacement of the former. -III. SYMPATHY AND TELEPATHY - -The moral is plain enough... the one-sided knowing of - -relation to the self. - --George Henry Lewes, on The Lifted V - -In The Lifted Veil, the truly ethical attention to the othe -from oneself" would seem to be exemplified by the conceit - -telepathy. Etymologically, the word telepathy implies distan - -apartness; literally, it means to feel something from a distan -is usually defined as extrasensory impressions of something - -far away and separate from oneself. Thus it designates an ap - -of the other from a distance, a relation to the other that is - -unmediated by one's senses or language. In accordance wi -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -451 - - junction to respect the difference between oneself and the other, it would -seem to be a figure for a purely ethical relation. It is a figure for gaining - -access to the actual person rather than to an epitome of the person. Yet -Eliot is tellingly unable to represent Latimer's telepathy except through -sensory metaphors like "microscopic vision" (V, 14) and "a preternaturally heightened sense of hearing" (V, 18). These metaphors indicate -the extent to which Eliot is forced to represent the radical alterity of -telepathic experience in familiar analogues. Something that is presumably -extrasensory is rendered by her in images of heightened sensory experiences. Telepathy, it would seem, can only be represented metaphorically, -which is to say it cannot be represented as such; thus the representation -of telepathy as heightened senses paradoxically points to the impossibility of representing telepathy. Along a similar vein, Eliot represents the -thoughts and feelings of other people to which Latimer gains clairvoyant -access not as any kind of irreducible otherness but in familiar (though -admittedly opaque) similes like "a ringing in the ears not to be gotten rid -of" (V, 18), "a sensation of grating metal" (V, 14), an "ill-played musical -instrument" (V, 13), "the loud activity of an imprisoned insect" (V, 13), -and "a roar of sound where others find perfect stillness" (V, 18). These -metaphors for the otherness of other people's consciousnesses ostensibly -designate the epistemological problem outlined in the previous section: -the recognition that the other necessarily becomes intelligible through -one's own metaphors for it.26 For Eliot, this epistemological problem -has profound and explicit ethical repercussions. -I would maintain that the novella's failure to represent Latimer's -telepathy is indicative of its true ethical dilemma: the inability to face -the other as other, despite Eliot's injunction that we must do precisely -that, and the inevitable recourse to framing the other in terms of oneself. This recourse to one's own terms is a recourse to metaphor, to a -framing of the relation to the other as a similarity, not as irreducibly -differential. Eliot's failure to write telepathically about telepathy suggests that the kinds of verbal summations and judgments we make of -each other's experiences are inevitable because the person doing the -judging could never have access to the other's experiences as such, -could never, that is, have telepathic access to the other. Through this -failure, Eliot insists that as soon as one enters into a relationship with -the other, a relation of ethically judging, say, this relationship is never -telepathic but always mediated through one's own metaphors and interpretations. This is the argument of the narrator in Middlemarch, who -states that people remain "virtually unknown" to one another, and can -be known only as clusters of signs for their neighbor's false suppositions. - -452 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - Latimer, for instance, comes to know Bertha through such signs and -sign clusters as the blank prosaic wall, the cold gaze, the secret plot -to poison him, and so on, but he does not know her telepathically, as -someone completely and irreducibly apart from himself. So despite -the novella's title, Bertha's veil is never truly lifted at all.27 - -Through her failure to represent Latimer's telepathy as such, Eliot suggests that an ethics based on difference may be impossible to -formalize. In attempting to attain a moral position, her only recourse -is sympathy, an ethics based on commonality, on what she calls the -fellowship of all human beings.2s The word sympathy, derived from -the Greek syn (with, together with) and pathos (feeling), would seem -to be opposed to telepathy, a word derived from tele (distant) and -pathos. The difference is between understanding and relating to the -other in terms of its similarity to oneself, and understanding it in terms - -of its irreducible distance from oneself. In The Lifted Veil, Eliot can -only understand or represent the other in terms of similarity, which -is to say in terms of metaphors (the ill-played musical instrument, -the imprisoned insect, the narrow room, and so on). The other is not -known as "apart from oneself," even though the conceit of telepathy -is a reminder of the (failed) imperative to know it in just such a way. -The other is known only in terms of an analogy to the self, in terms -of what Latimer at his father's deathbed calls "the great relation of -a common nature and a common destiny" (V, 31). Latimer's implicit -interpretation of his father's mortality as a figure for his own is indicative - -of this ethics of sympathy. It is indicative of the necessary recourse to -metaphor (for Latimer, the dying father is fundamentally a metaphor - -for himself). Latimer's conversion to sympathy is in this sense also a -figure for the failure of telepathy, for the impossibility of facing the -other as other.29 -Eliot's turn from telepathy to sympathy is not only an epistemologi- - -cal necessity but a compensatory move aimed at restoring for Eliot -the possibility of any ethical agency at all.30 To put it in the terms -of Freud's essay "Fetishism," it is an apotropaic belief in similarity -(here, the fellowship between oneself and the other) that indicates -and simultaneously covers over an awareness of difference (here, the -other's difference from oneself, and the difference between an ethics -based on difference and an ethics based on similarity). Sympathy is -a kind of fetish, and, like the Freudian fetish, it designates both the -presence and the absence of something deemed valuable (in Eliot's -case not the maternal phallus but an ethical relation to the other). It -enables Eliot and her reader to be moral agents, but it also subverts -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -453 - - that morality through its uncanny similarity, at a fundamental level, -to antipathy, its alleged opposite. -Insofar as sympathy is based on a presumed similarity between the -other and oneself, it effectively collapses the distinction between itself -and egotism. That distinction is the fundamental opposition within -which critics have traditionally located the defining ethical conflict in -Eliot's work. The distinction collapses, Eliot implies in The Lifted Veil, -because both sympathy and egotism similarly relate the other back to -the self, either in terms of its similarity or dissimilarity to the self. In -the end, the two kinds of relationships come back to the same thing, -namely the self, and neither meets Eliot's ethical criterion of being -attentive to what is "apart from oneself" (in other words neither is -telepathic). This is true no matter how good or bad one's intentions, - -or how compassionate or misanthropic one's language. Both positions are fundamentally metaphorical, since any relationship to the -other, whether friendly or hostile, is based on a (positive or negative) -comparison of the other to oneself. This implicit comparison is what -such diverse metaphors as the blank prosaic wall, the great relation -of a common destiny, and the ill-played musical instrument have in -common. Eliot's failure to represent the radical alterity of Latimer's -telepathy suggests that this recourse to metaphor is inevitable; it implies that we can only ever face the other as some kind of metaphor. -Eliot uses the figure of obscure writing to designate her awareness of -Bertha's irreducible otherness, but it too is just a metaphor. -If the recourse to sympathy and thus to metaphor is epistemologically -unavoidable, however, Eliot also indicts it as ethically deficient. Sympathy is in one crucial respect not a fully ethical position for her because -it does not attend to the other as such, but is rather, in George Henry -Lewes's words, a "one-sided knowing of things in relation to the self."31 - -It is a unilateral relation, not only insofar as it relates the other back -to the self via the assumption of a fellowship, but in that it empowers -and inflates the self by means of this relation. In The Lifted Veil, Eliot -suggests that there is a kind of narcissism implicit in sympathy, since -sympathy, not unlike antipathy, ultimately refers the other back to the - -self in order to confirm and nourish the self. As Latimer puts this in - -a phrase cited earlier, the assumption of a sympathetic bond between -ourselves and our neighbors "is one of the vain thoughts with which -we men flatter ourselves." His critique of sympathy here is twofold. On -the one hand, he argues that sympathy is simply impossible, due to our -"hard indifference to the sensations and emotions of our fellow." This -is his by now familiar misanthropic critique of sympathy, against which - -454 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - a defense of sympathy could meaningfully be opposed. On the other -hand, and much more problematically, he states that sympathy and the -very idea of sympathy are essentially narcissistic. According to this latter critique, we are not indifferent to the other at all but use the other -(and our relation to the other) as a means of flattering ourselves.32 In -this sense of an underlying narcissism, Latimer's "good" sympathy for -his father is not fundamentally distinct from his "bad" condemnations -of his neighbors' pettiness and stupidity. Neither is Latimer's antipathy -fundamentally distinct from his ostensibly moral recognition of Bertha's - -selfishness and shallowness, or from Eliot's indictment of Bertha as a -bad surrogate. These are all not only self-referential but self-serving, -self-confirming relationships; as Latimer puts it, they are relations that -make people "feel wise and virtuous-conquerors over the temptations they define in well-selected predicates." To use the words of the -Middlemarch narrator, they are a taking of the world as an udder to -feed the supreme self.33 In Middlemarch, Eliot equates our feeding -on the external world with infantilism and moral stupidity. The danger -she allows herself to dramatize in The Lifted Veil is that we can never -outgrow this infantile, narcissistic relation to what is outside of us by -a transition from immature egotism to mature sympathy. The collapse -in The Lifted Veil of any tenable distinction between sympathy and -egotism is an indictment of sympathy as implicitly narcissistic. Eliot -is not only asking whether sympathy is possible without narcissism, -without seeing the other in terms of its "great relation of a common -nature" to oneself. She is suggesting that compassion and sympathy -are disguised forms of narcissism and, as such, not fundamentally -different from the kinds of character-traits (selfishness, misanthropy) -she and her narrators routinely indict.34 -The Lifted Veil suggests Eliot's awareness of this ethical dilemma -in the problematic figure of Bertha, the privileged object of the text's -epistemological, moral, and sexual energies. It is this figure, I have -been arguing, which implies a true threat to Eliot.35 The threat is not -Bertha's ultimate revelation as afemmefatale, nor is it her role as Eliot's -bad surrogate. Those threats can be (and are) visually exposed and -then symbolically expelled from the text, so they pose no real danger. -The Fatal Woman is unveiled as such and then exiled, while the bad - -surrogate is replaced by the good surrogate, Latimer. Insofar as they -are recoverable threats, they in fact play an apotropaic role, much like -Freud's fetish which acknowledges but also protects against the threat - -of potential castration. The revelation of Bertha as the bad surrogate, -for instance, allows Latimer to be realized more fully as Eliot's good -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -455 - - surrogate, thereby helping to redeem Eliot's ethics of sympathy. At the -same time, however, Eliot's injunction to face the other as other implies - -that there is something unethical and narcissistic in the revealing of -Bertha as Latimer's and Eliot's bad double. This implication hints at a -second ethical threat in The Lifted Veil, one that is only partially veiled -by the more visible threat of Bertha's antipathy. This latter threat takes -the form not of antipathy but of sympathy, of a relation to the other - -that is fundamentally metaphorical (and therefore unethical insofar -as it is not telepathic).36 -Bertha is the face of both aspects of Eliot's ethical project and ethi- - -cal dilemma. She is the text's exemplary figure for otherness and for -the awareness of otherness: "[S]he made the only exception, among all -human beings about me, to my unhappy gift of insight. About Bertha - -I was always in a state of uncertainty" (V, 15). At various points in -the novella, Latimer compares Bertha to a piece of writing, often a -piece of writing he cannot read or comprehend, in order to designate -her inaccessibility. The illegible or incomprehensible writing to which -Bertha is compared is a metaphor for the other's irreducible otherness, - -just as Latimer's telepathy is a metaphor for the appreciation of that -otherness as such. At the same time, Latimer also compares Bertha -to a visual object, in order to designate her accessibility ("I saw all -around the narrow room of this woman's soul"). Here the other's accessibility is figured in terms of visibility, and telepathy is figured in - -sensory terms, as clairvoyance. In light of the traditional Aristotelian -association between perception and the use of metaphor, Latimer's -visions of Bertha are figures for a relation to the other that is based -on metaphorical principles of similarity and analogy. The complementary figures of Bertha as visual object and of Latimer's clairvoyance -are self-reflexive metaphors for how the other becomes intelligible -through one's own metaphors for it. They are indicative of how the -other becomes intelligible to us through its (visual) similarity and -dissimilarity to ourselves. In The Lifted Veil, Latimer tellingly gains -clairvoyant access to Bertha's mind at the moment when he looks at her -in terms of himself, or, more specifically, in terms of her dissimilarity -to himself. He contrasts her antipathy for him with his own sympathy -for his dying father, thereby converting her into his bad double. At -that moment, he also tellingly stops thinking of her as radically other -to himself, as an oriental alphabet he cannot read or decipher. The -revelation of Bertha by means of sight (that is, by means of metaphor) -enables the (moral) closure of the narrative but only partially veils that -which is left out by this closure: the other's otherness, the otherness - -456 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - for which the oriental alphabet is a metaphor or, more precisely, a -catachresis. Eliot's dilemma in the novella (and perhaps in her novels -and criticism more generally) is that her sympathetic ethics succeeds -only at the expense of a telepathic relation, at the expense of what she - -considers our obligatory "reverence before the secrets of each other's -souls" (L, 3:164). - -Tulane University -NOTES - -The intellectual debt my article owes to the teachings and writings of J. Hillis M - -will be apparent, and I am very grateful for his longstanding generosity and guida - -I also want to thank Megan Becker-Leckrone, Ellen Burt, Matthew Potolsky - -Barbara Spackman for their responses to the dissertation chapter on which this -is partially based. Thanks as well to Stefan Mattessich, Marc Redfield, and to Ken - -Reinhard and the U.C.L.A. 1998-1999 Humanities Consortium Seminar Series. - -deepest thanks go to Patience Moll for her careful reading and substantive, thou -ful suggestions. -1 George Eliot, Essays of George Eliot, ed. Thomas Pinney (New York: Colum -Univ. Press, 1963), 270-71. The figure of an expanded sympathy is indebted to W -sworth: "Thus daily were my sympathies enlarged." See The Prelude: 1799, 1805, 18 -ed. Jonathan Wordsworth and others (New York: Norton, 1979), 74. - -2 Walter Pater, The Renaissance: Studies in Art and Poetry, ed. Donald L. - -(Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1980), xix-xx. On the relation between aesth -and sympathy, see in particular chapter 17 of Adam Bede: "All honour and rever -to the divine beauty of form ... But let us love that other beauty too, which lies in -secret of proportion, but in the secret of deep human sympathy." Eliot, Adam B -ed. Stephen Gill (New York: Penguin, 1980), 224. On the ethics of sympathy in A -Bede, see J. Hillis Miller, The Ethics of Reading: Kant, de Man, Eliot, Trollope, Jam - -and Benjamin (New York: Columbia Univ. Press, 1987), 61-80. - -3 See Kate Flint, "Blood, Bodies, and The Lifted Veil," Nineteenth-Century Literat - -51 (1997): 455-73; Malcolm Bull, "Mastery and Slavery in The Lifted Veil," Es -in Criticism 48 (1998): 244-61; Richard Menke, "Fiction as Vivisection: G. H. L - -and George Eliot," ELH 67 (2000): 629-30; and Sally Shuttleworth, "Introduction - -Eliot, The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob, ed. Shuttleworth (New York: Penguin, 200 - -xi-xxxii. Much of this line of inquiry is indebted to B. M. Gray, "Pseudoscience -George Eliot's 'The Lifted Veil,"' Nineteenth-Century Fiction 36 (1982): 407-23. -4 Eliot, The Lifted Veil and Brother Jacob, ed. Helen Small (Oxford: Oxford Un -Press, 1999), 15. Hereafter abbreviated V and cited parenthetically by page num -page numbers for Small's introduction provided parenthetically in roman numer -5 The Lifted Veil was originally published anonymously in Blackwood's magazin -July 1859, six months after the publication of Adam Bede. Its composition coin -with Eliot's beginning work on what would eventually become The Mill on the F -Eliot did not republish the novella until 1878, two years before her death. On t -biographical circumstances of the text's composition and publication, see Go -Haight, George Eliot: A Biography (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968), 295-97; -U. C. Knoepflmacher, George Eliot's Early Novels: The Limits of Realism (Berke -Univ. of California Press, 1968), 128-39. - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -457 - - 6 Charles Swann, "Djai Vu: Djai Lu: 'The Lifted Veil' as an Experiment in Art," -Literature and History 5 (1979): 47. -My claims in this paragraph are based on some points in Swann's essay, especially -pages 46-49. Swann's argument about the ethical problem in The Lifted Veil is the -following: - -[Latimer] has "direct experience of the inner states of others." Yet-with - -all these advantages-he does not feel for others as a reader should... -Latimer is in literal possession of what Eliot normally offers as metaphors -for how to be a moral agent: but he is paralyzed into passivity by his insights. - -If Latimer is an example of a reader trapped in the book of life, then there -is the horrific possibility for Eliot that her key value of sympathy doesn't -open the door into the fully moral life. Her theories about the relationship -between her art and life may be entirely wrong. (47) -While Swann here identifies Latimer as Eliot's reader, other critics and Swann himself - -have also interpreted him as a stand-in for Eliot herself or for the novelist as such. -See Gillian Beer, "Myth and the Single Consciousness: Middlemarch and The Lifted -Veil," in This Particular Web: Essays on Middlemarch, ed. Ian Adam (Toronto: Univ. -of Toronto Press, 1975), 94-101; Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in -the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (New - -Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1979), 470-71; Neil Hertz, George Eliot's Pulse (Stanford: -Stanford Univ. Press, 2003), 42-62; and Swann, 46-49. These critics equate Latimer's -telepathy with the novelist's power to imagine the thoughts and feelings of a great variety of different characters. Whether Latimer is interpreted as the reader, the writer, - -or both at once, he points to a similar ethical problem: a lack of sympathy for those -to whose thoughts and feelings he has access. His responses to his clairvoyant visions -contradict Eliot's moral injunctions about creating and responding to art. -8 Eliot, The George Eliot Letters, ed. Haight, 9 vols. (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, -1954-1978), 9:220. Hereafter abbreviated L and cited parenthetically by volume and -page number. -9 My claims about the novella's negative implications for Eliot's aesthetics and ethics -are complementary to a critical tradition that has read The Lifted Veil as an allegorical -text about writing and the creative process. See, for example, Ruby Redinger, George -Eliot: The Emergent Self(New York: Knopf, 1975), 403; Knoepflmacher, 137-61; Hertz, - -Pulse, 42-62; Swann, 42; Beer, 94-101; and Gilbert and Gubar, 470. See also Carroll - -Vierra, "'The Lifted Veil' and George Eliot's Early Aesthetic," Studies in English Literature 24 (1984): 749-67. Vierra reads the novella in the context of Marian Evans's -critical writings about art and aesthetics from the 1840s and 1850s. Many critics locate -the allegory at the level of an autobiographical identification they find between the -emerging writer George Eliot and her protagonist Latimer, who identifies himself as -a failed poet. Both the young Marian Evans and Latimer, they maintain, are characterized by intense self-doubt, self-consciousness, insecurity, feelings of guilt vis-a-vis -their fathers and families, and "feminine" sensitivity. See, for example, Knoepflmacher, - -137, 150-52, 160-61; Redinger, 401-5; and Gilbert and Gubar, 450. Other critics focus -specifically on the problem of Latimer's misanthropy and selfishness but do not discuss -these character traits in terms of their potentially negative implications for Eliot's ethics -of sympathy. See Eliot L. Rubinstein, "A Forgotten Tale by George Eliot," Nineteenth- - -Century Fiction 17 (1962): 180-82; Edward Hurley, "'The Lifted Veil': George Eliot -as Anti-Intellectual," Studies in Short Fiction 5 (1968): 260-62; and Knoepflmacher, -154-59. It is only a few critics, in particular Swann and Beer, who have brought the - -458 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - theme of Latimer's misanthropy into a relation with Eliot's allegorical reflections in -The Lifted Veil on art and writing as such. -10 Latimer's conversion to sympathy anticipates that of Philip Wakem in The Mill on -the Floss, a text written concurrently with and after The Lifted Veil. There are notable -parallels between the two characters, as both are insecure, solipsistic, deeply alienated -from society, selfish, and devoid of sympathy for others. Philip indicates his conversion -in a letter he writes to Maggie late in the novel: -The new life I have found in caring for your joy and sorrow more than -for what is directly my own, has transformed the spirit of rebellious murmuring into that willing endurance which is the birth of true sympathy. -I think nothing but such complete and intense love could have initiated -me into that enlarged life which grows and grows by appropriating the life -of others; for before I was always dragged back from it by ever-present -painful self-consciousness. -Eliot, The Mill on the Floss, ed. A. S. Byatt (New York: Penguin, 1979), 634. -" The doubling is emphasized in the two characters' reciprocal gazes, and even at -the level of the sentence: "we were front to front with each other and judged each -other" (my emphasis). The mirroring between Bertha and Latimer has gone largely -unnoticed by critics. This oversight works in the interest of Eliot's ethical agenda, since -ultimately Eliot wants to disassociate the two characters in order to redeem Latimer -and to indict Bertha. Only Hertz has recognized Bertha as Latimer's clone (see Hertz, -Pulse, 55-56, 62). For Hertz, the doubling of Eliot's surrogate, Latimer, is a step towards -safely distancing Eliot (and, by extension, Marian Evans) from any direct implication -in the potentially harmful powers of her own language. Gilbert and Gubar also note -that Bertha and Latimer are "mutually reciprocal characters." They interpret the "effeminate Latimer" and the "castrating Bertha" autobiographically, as two aspects of -Eliot's allegedly divided self. See The Madwoman in the Attic, 465. -12 Consider, for example, Freud's statements on women and ethics. In his essay - -"Some Psychical Consequences of the Anatomical Distinction between the Sexes," -Freud writes, "I cannot evade the notion (though I hesitate to give it expression) that -for women the level of what is ethically normal is different from what it is in men" -(The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. and -trans. James Strachey and others, 24 vols. [London: The Hogarth Press, 1953-1974], -19:257). In the lecture on "Femininity," he makes this point in a less roundabout way: -"[W]e attribute a larger amount of narcissism to femininity" (22:132). On Bertha as a -version of the conventional nineteenth-century Fatal Woman figure, see Knoepflmacher - -(148-49), Gilbert and Gubar (459-61), and Vierra (755). - -13 Hertz, The End of the Line: Essays on Psychoanalysis and the Sublime (New York: - -Columbia Univ. Press, 1985), 224. -14 Hertz, End of the Line, 85. - -15 J. Hillis Miller, "Optic and Semiotic in Middlemarch," in George Eliot: Modern -Critical Views, ed. Harold Bloom (New York: Chelsea House, 1986), 102. -" The citation is from chapter fifteen of Middlemarch. The full sentence, which refers - -to Lydgate, runs as follows: "For surely all must admit that a man may be puffed and - -belauded, envied, ridiculed, counted upon as a tool and fallen in love with, or at least -selected as a future husband, and yet remain virtually unknown-known merely as a -cluster of signs for his neighbour's false suppositions" (Eliot, Middlemarch, ed. W. J. -Harvey [New York: Penguin, 1985], 171). I am arguing that The Lifted Veil explicitly -depicts Bertha as such a cluster of signs and Latimer's unveiling of her as one inter- - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -459 - - pretation of those signs. For a discussion of the characters in Middlemarch as texts -open to numerous and potentially conflicting interpretations by other characters, see -J. Hillis Miller, "Narrative and History," ELH 41 (1974): 465-68. -17 J. Hillis Miller makes a similar argument about perceptions in Middlemarch. He -proposes that the optical metaphors in the novel, and the kinds of knowledge they make -possible, are always subverted by other metaphors that qualify any (literal or figurative) -perceptions as interpretations, which is to say as having a subjective investment in what - -is seen and in particular ways of seeing. See Miller, "Optic and Semiotic," 109. -" The parenthetical citation is from The Lifted Veil, 41. -19 According to George Henry Lewes's journal, Marian Evans and he attended a -performance of Donizetti's opera Lucrezia Borgia in August 1857, not long before the -writing of The Lifted Veil. See Haight, 241. In her notes for The Lifted Veil, Helen -Small points out that the painting Latimer describes was for much of the nineteenth -century attributed to Giorgione in error, and identifies it as a copy of Lorenzo Lotto's - -A Lady with a Drawing of Lucretia. -20 Terry Eagleton, "Power and Knowledge in 'The Lifted Veil,'" Literature and -History 9 (1983): 58-59. Eagleton maintains that the revelation scene in The Lifted -Veil provides the reader with no means by which to verify its truth, but he lays out -the predicament very differently than I do. On the one hand, he argues, the conventions of realist fictions demand that Latimer's report be taken literally because he is -the narrator and as such the most reliable index of truth in the novella. On the other - -hand, he maintains, it is equally possible that "Latimer has rigged his tale to frame -his wife, impudently concocting an event as he may have previously, perhaps more -permissably, falsified perceptions" (58). For Eagleton, this ambiguity undermines the -implicit restoration of truth provided by narrative, a restoration that is generically -the aim of realist fiction as such. My own reading of the scene does not attribute its -ambiguity to character or intention (Latimer's alleged untrustworthiness) but rather -to the truth that is revealed. - -21 Aristotle, Rhetoric, trans. Rhys Roberts, in The Rhetoric and Poetics of Aristotle, -ed. Edward P. J. Corbett (New York: Modern Library, 1984), 1405a 170. Eliot famously -makes reference to Aristotle's theory of metaphor in book two, chapter one of The - -Mill on the Floss. - -22 Eliot, Essays, 270. In that same essay, she writes that art is a mode of "extending -our contact with our fellow-men beyond the bounds of our personal lot" (Essays, 271, -my emphasis). -23 Eliot, Middlemarch, 196, my emphasis. -24 This is true even for critics who do not endorse Eliot's ethics of sympathy and focus, - -rather, on her questioning of the possibility or viability of sympathetic identifications, as - -for instance John Kucich in Repression in Victorian Fiction: Charlotte Bronti, George -Eliot, and Charles Dickens (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1987), J. Hillis Miller -in The Ethics of Reading, or D. A. Miller in Narrative and Its Discontents: Problems -of Closure in the Traditional Novel (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1981). -25 Ludwig Feuerbach, The Essence of Christianity, trans. Eliot (New York: Harper, -1957), 268. -26 On the other in Middlemarch and in Eliot's work in general as an epistemological - -problem, see J. Hillis Miller, Others (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 2001), 67-79. -27 In the crucial revivification scene, Latimer writes, "[W]e all felt that the dark veil -had completely fallen" (V, 41). This remark is thoroughly ambiguous since it designates - -Bertha's complete obfuscation as much as her full exposure. - -460 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - 28 The ethics of sympathy is evoked explicitly by the epigraph Eliot wrote for The - -Lifted Veil fourteen years after its original publication: "Give me no light, great -heaven, but such as turns / To energy of human fellowship; / No powers save the -growing heritage / That makes completer manhood" (Letters, 5:380). This epigraph -first appears in a letter of February 1873 to her editor, John Blackwood. It has been -attached to all subsequently published versions of the novella, including the one in -the 1878 Cabinet edition of Eliot's works. Ostensibly, the epigraph serves to counter -the threat of Latimer's lack of sympathy, as Small has argued in her introduction to -the novella: "[The motto] is also an attempt to close down the threat of what [Eliot] -has allowed herself to imagine. ... [It] courts our compassionate insight into the narrator while he himself mocks us with the impossibility of sympathy" (xxx). I would add - -that Eliot's evocation of human fellowship also covers over (and defends against) the -impossibility of telepathy. - -29 On the success and failure of telepathy in The Lifted Veil, see Marc Redfield, -Phantom Formations: Aesthetic Ideology and the Bildungsroman (Ithaca: Cornell Univ. -Press, 1996), 160-70. Complementary to my juxtaposition of sympathy and telepathy, -Redfield reads the figure of telepathy as itself indicative of both identification and difference. He discusses telepathy as a metaphor for reading the materiality of language, -and, at the same time, as "a particularly appropriate metaphor for an aesthetic of -sympathy, grounded in a predicament of reading it must disavow" (162). So on the one -hand, he equates the distance (tele) in telepathy with the other's irreducible difference -as the otherness of language: "[T]his difference and distance is that of language in its -materiality" (162). At the same time, he takes the pathos in telepathy as a figure for -feeling, for sympathy, for aesthetically bringing the other close to oneself. These two -figures are for him in a relation of mutual disavowal, wherein feeling must disavow -the necessity of reading in order to succeed. Telepathy (as a figure for feeling with the -other) figuratively designates the possibility of sympathy, but (as a figure for reading -the material signs of language) it also designates sympathy's destruction. It insists that -one cannot feel with the other, one only reads the material signs that constitute the -other's otherness from oneself. Telepathy thus designates an irreducible difference -within sympathy that is also the ground of sympathy. For Eliot, I would add, the -other's otherness from oneself designates not only the epistemological destruction -of any grounds on which sympathy could take place but also an ethical imperative -that is heterogeneous to the ethical imperative called sympathy. Certainly the other's -otherness is for Eliot a metaphor for the materiality of language, as Redfield points -out; but this figurative relationship also functions in reverse, thereby supplementing -the epistemological problematic with an ethical one. -30 Insofar as this move to sympathy is at best a consolation, however, it also relegates - -sympathy to a questionable status. As D. A. Miller has argued, Eliot's ostensible endorsement of an ethics of sympathy coincides with an implicit questioning of sympathy. - -See Narrative and Its Discontents, 152-94. For Miller's reading of Eliot, sympathy -is on the one hand a genuinely ethical transcendence of egotism, of the separation -between self and other, and of the ambiguous material signs through which the other - -becomes intelligible. At the same time, Miller argues, sympathy is shown by Eliot -to be impossible, insofar as any moment of transcendence is subverted by the very -material signs that narrate it, signs which are demonstratively as much indicative of -egotism and obfuscation as of fellow feeling and transparency. Hence Eliot leaves us -in a kind of double bind: sympathetic transcendence would negate the problem of -interpersonal differences, but it is in turn negated by difference (in the form of mate- - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -461 - - rial signs). Miller's reading of sympathy as a structure of mutual negation is not unlike -the structure of mutual disavowal identified in Redfield's double reading of telepathy, - -discussed in the previous endnote. Both Redfield and Miller see the materiality of -signs as a difference Eliot would overcome in the name of a sympathetic ethics. In -The Lifted Veil, however, the association of Bertha with texts, writing, and signs not -only questions and potentially subverts the possibility of sympathetic identifications. -It is also a reminder of an entirely different ethical imperative, of an ethics that would -not transcend otherness but maintain it (this relation is what I am calling telepathy). -My emphasis on telepathy as a second ethical imperative (besides sympathy) refutes -received ideas about the formal impasse in which deconstructive readings of Eliot -are often said to terminate. Telepathy is for Eliot a figure for a genuine ethical value, -not only a figure for the simultaneous possibility and impossibility of interpersonal -identifications. - -3' This phrase is excerpted from a telling remark about The Lifted Veil made by -Lewes to the writer Edith Simcox, a remark that also serves as the epigraph for this -section of the essay: "the moral is plain enough ... the one-sided knowing of things in -relation to the self" (Eliot, Letters, 9:220). Lewes is presumably referring to Latimer's -egotism, but Latimer's sympathy, and perhaps any sympathy, is similarly unilateral, -similarly one-sided. -32 As Kucich has pointed out, egotism in Eliot's work is not an indifference to or an -isolation from other people. Rather, it is a dependence on others. For Kucich, Eliot's -egotists (such a Tito in Romola, Hetty in Adam Bede, Godfrey in Silas Marner, and -Gwendolen and Grandcourt in Daniel Deronda) depend on the thoughts and opinions -of the people around them to constitute themselves as selves, to have desires and motives, and to feel valuable (181-200). -33 "We are all of us born in moral stupidity, taking the world as an udder to feed our - -supreme selves" (Eliot, Middlemarch, 243). -34 It is on this point that my reading dovetails momentarily with Kucich's compelling - -and counterintuitive critique of sympathy as a moral value in Eliot's work (114-200). -Kucich too finds an unexpected and ironic similarity between sympathy and egotism -in Eliot's writings; both sympathy and egotism, he claims, are for Eliot fundamentally -similar kinds of relationships to other people. Both relationships represent a dangerous -dependence on, and vulnerability to, other people, and both represent an implicit submission of the self to the other (172, 181). As such, Kucich argues, both pose a threat -to the autonomy of the self (150). I would argue, by contrast, that neither sympathy -nor egotism poses a threat to the self (what they threaten, rather, is Eliot's ethics). Both -are fundamentally confirming and constitutive of the self, insofar as both are relations -to the other in which the other is defined in terms of the self (and not vice versa, as -Kucich would say), and in which the self constructs itself out of an appropriation of the - -other. According to Kucich, Eliot's solution to the problem of otherness is to bypass -any relation to the other altogether, and to advocate a model of selfhood and an ethics -that are constituted by an exclusively inner dialectic between desire and internalized -repression (117). On the contrary, I do not see Eliot advocating a turn inward and away -from the other but rather advocating a qualitatively different relationship to the other, - -one I am calling telepathy (as an alternative to both egotism and sympathy). It seems -to me significant that Kucich's critique of sympathy, a value which he understands as a -fusion with the other and as a renunciation of all individuation, does not acknowledge -Eliot's insistence on respecting and simultaneously engaging with the other's otherness. -Kucich cites part of a sentence from "The Natural History of German Life" about the - -462 Sympathy and Telepathy in The Lifted Veil - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - - obligatory movement from selfishness to moral sentiment, but tellingly elides Eliot's -call in that sentence for an "attention to what is apart from [ourselves]" (see Kucich, -114, and Eliot, Essays, 270). -35 To read Eliot's text and then to talk about Eliot being somehow threatened is to -reproduce the move from telepathy to sympathy that is performed within the text itself. - -Just as there is a movement in the novella from "reading" the other to "seeing into" or -"feeling with" the other, we perform, as soon as we talk about Eliot's awareness of a -threat, a movement from reading the text to psychologizing and anthropomorphizing -it. John Blackwell, for instance, writes to Eliot about the manuscript version, "Others -like me are thrilled [with the story], but wish the author in a happier frame of mind," -and elsewhere, "I think you must have been worrying and disturbing yourself about - -something when you wrote" (Eliot, Letters, 3:112, 67). Blackwell's attention moves -from the writing to a speculation about how the author must have been feeling when - -she wrote. This interest in Marian Evans's mindset is the move from reading the -manuscript to psychologizing it. The moment we ask about how Eliot might have -been feeling, and the moment we attempt to explain her awareness of a given threat, -we are operating at the level of similarity, of metaphor, of aesthetic ideology. We are -reproducing an ethics of sympathy, not an ethics of telepathy. As Eliot suggests, this -move is epistemologically unavoidable, but it also places us in an ethical predicament -similar to the one dramatized in her text. -I Eliot's suspicion of sympathy, and her shifting of the ethical dilemma away from - -an opposition between sympathy and egotism, distinguish her project from ethical -theories that equate morality with individual conscience, intention, or character psychology. Those theories often base their definition of ethics on psychology, typology, -the traditional subject, or the categorical valorization of some form of alterity. They -also tend to construct simple oppositions between good and bad, moral and immoral, -self and other. Eliot's own conclusions demonstrate how such projects can succeed -ethically only through celebrations and condemnations of the other (and of the self) -that are ultimately arbitrary and, in a manner of speaking, narcissistic. - -Thomas - -Albrecht - -This content downloaded from -128.59.222.107 on Mon, 06 Jun 2022 16:03:28 UTC -All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms - -463 - - \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/test b/preprocessing/test deleted file mode 100644 index c405e3a..0000000 --- a/preprocessing/test +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -hi hi hi hi hi \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb index b021fd0..2c4638e 100644 --- a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb +++ b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb @@ -10,10 +10,12 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, + "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ + "#Troubleshooting: !jupyter notebook --NotebookApp.iopub_data_rate_limit=1.0e10 if you \n", + "# get a message about the data rate limit\n", "from matcher import Text, Matcher\n", "import json\n", "import pandas as pd\n", @@ -31,7 +33,7 @@ "source": [ "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", - "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/testing.jsonl'\n", + "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/part-1.jsonl'\n", "with open(articles) as f: \n", " rawArticles = f.readlines()\n", "\n", @@ -44,7 +46,7 @@ "with open(text) as f: \n", " rawText = f.read()\n", "\n", - "mm = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" + "tx = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" ] }, { @@ -56,12 +58,7 @@ "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - " Matching article 22 of 231 total matches found.\n", - "\n", - "\n", - "match 1:\n", - "\u001b[32mGender Trouble\u001b[0m: (50788, 50940) desire? Are these terms discrete \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender, and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Chapter 2, “Prohibition, Psychoanalysis, and the Production of the Heterosexual\n", - "\u001b[32mhttp://www.jstor.org/stable/23345044\u001b[0m: (21407, 21558) Gender Trouble, Judith Butler asks \u001b[31mkinds of cultural practices produce subversive discontinuity and dissonance among sex, gender and desire and call into question their alleged relations\u001b[0m Butler, xxxii). Admittedly, application of the American feminist's\n" + " Matching article 5184 of 5185" ] } ], @@ -72,17 +69,20 @@ " if 'numMatches' not in article: \n", " articleText = Text(article[\"fullText\"], article['id'])\n", " article['numMatches'], article['Locations in A'], article['Locations in B'] = \\\n", - " Matcher(mm, articleText).match()" + " Matcher(tx, articleText).match()\n", + " article['fullText'] = ''" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 13, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", + "\n", + "#Replace 'finaldata.jsonl' with whatever name you want to give this file.\n", "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" ] } From 8f3fc1b2a9737a7eed084525e8810843f254a665 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2023 16:46:37 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 30/63] start cell for re-running ocr --- .gitignore | 1 + .../jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb | 21 +++-- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 84 +++++++++++++++++-- 3 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 7ed0c55..db00ba3 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -2,3 +2,4 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json +preprocessing/test_pdf.pdf diff --git a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb index 10de693..fac2706 100644 --- a/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb +++ b/algorithm-testing/jstor-retrieve-character-indexes.ipynb @@ -284,18 +284,15 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 48, + "execution_count": 54, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "\n", - "Article selected:\n", - "ID: http://www.jstor.org/stable/42827934\n", - "Title: \"THE INSTRUMENT OF THE CENTURY\": THE PIANO AS AN ICON OF FEMALE SEXUALITY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY\n", - "\n" + "18\n", + "\"THE INSTRUMENT OF THE CENTURY\":1 THE PIANO AS AN ICON OF FEMALE SEXUALITY IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY by LAURA VORACHEK University of Wisconsin-Madison The piano rapidly became the instrument of choice in the nineteenth century, a fixture in middle-class British households within 30 years of its first becoming available for domestic use in 1771. Absent from male educa- tion, learning to play the piano was a standard part of a middle-class girl's training since it was believed to provide discipline, diversion, and a skill that would help her attract a husband. The piano's specific class and gender associations suggest it functioned within a middle-class ideology which naturalized these distinctions, as well as defined women's sexuality. At the same time, both the piano and women's sexual purity were symbols of mid- dle-class economic status. Due to their association, the piano came to em- body the somewhat contradictory cultural conceptions of middle-class fe- male sexuality in the art and literature of the period. Nineteenth-century debates about the nature of women's sexuality have resulted in disparate representations by twentieth-century theoreticians and historians. Michel Foucault argues that medical discourse sought to order and define women's sexuality in this period by hystericizing women's bod- ies - attributing nervous disorders to sexual organs. Complementing this discourse of illness was a view of women as asexual. Thomas Laqueur contends that a change in the perception of women's sexuality, from women as carnal beings to women as \"passionless,\" occurred in the eighteenth century. This redefinition of women's sexuality, part of a new stress on oppositional differentiation between men and women, was supported by evidence of automatic ovulation which indicated that female orgasm was not necessary for conception as previously believed. Both the hysterization of women's bodies and medical discoveries about automatic ovulation pathologized women's sexuality. Both theses also emphasize the influence of medical discourse in shaping lay opinion and, consequently, women's sexuality. Michael Mason argues, however, that lay opinion differed from that of elite medical researchers in that the uterus was believed to have an influence on a woman's whole being, dis- persing sites of sexual arousal throughout a woman's body - a view cer- tainly at odds with passionlessness. He does note, though, that it was widely believed, despite evidence to the contrary, that \"women may acquire or at least develop their sexual appetite through sexual activity\" (221). The 26 work of these historians points to competing beliefs about and representa- tions of women's sexuality during the century. I would suggest that these competing beliefs reflect the manipulation of women's sexuality in representing class difference. Cora Kaplan and Nancy Armstrong remind us that along with sexual differentiation, (middle-class) Victorians were concerned with class differentiation. Kaplan argues that since the working classes were feminized by contemporary discourse, mid- die-class women distanced themselves by \"projecting and displacing on to women of lower social standing and women of colour, as well as on to the 'traditionally' corrupt aristocracy, all that was deemed vicious and regres- sive in women as a sex\" (168). Armstrong contends that this distancing is represented in eighteenth and nineteenth-century conduct books which emphasized the qualities that made a middle-class woman a good wife - her sexual innocence and moral purity - in order to differentiate her from the bodily display of the aristocratic woman and the physical labor of the working-class woman. Furthermore, the cultural narrative of the fallen woman, whose loss of moral purity is accompanied by a loss of class status, served as a warning and a boundary for middle-class women's sexual be- havior that favored, if not passionlessness, a less sexualized view of middle- class women.2 Thus cultural representations of bourgeois class status joined medical science in further circumscribing women's sexuality. As the middle-class woman is constructed with a bodiless, class-based sexuality, her desire, I will argue, is displaced onto the piano. The piano functions as a fetish, a location for her sex expression that allows her to re- main innocent, her body chaste, yet her desire communicated or mediated through playing. To account for this association, I turn now to the history of the piano in the nineteenth century. The development of factory manufacturing during the Industrial Revolution made ownership of a piano an accessible symbol of respectabil- ity and pretension to gentility. Its rise to popularity and institution in the education of the middle-class girl occurred in a relatively short period of time (see Grover, Harding, and Loesser). In 1766 the first English piano was produced in the workshop of Johann Zumpe. Five years later, John Broad- wood introduced the first square piano, which was amenable both in size and cost for the middle-class household. A new grand pianoforte is a sign of arrival for the upwardly mobile Cole family in Jane Austen's Emma (1816). \"[0]f low origin, in trade, and only moderately genteel,\" the Coles live quietly until experiencing a considerable increase in income (Austen 188). To mark their new economic status, the Coles increase the size of their house, the number of servants they employ and their general expenditures, including a grand pianoforte, purchased despite the fact that Mrs. Cole \"do[es] not know one note from another, and [her] little girls, who are but 27 just beginning, perhaps may never make anything of it\" (196).3 By 1820, a piano was within the reach of even the lower-middle-class family. Aware of their middle-class female market, piano manufacturers in the early part of the century produced pianos that doubled as drawing-room tables, writing tables, storage cabinets, sewing tables and work boxes (Harding 264-65). By the middle of the century, the piano was well established as the principal source of home entertainment. Writing in 1876, the Rev. H. R. Haweis esti- mated that 20,000 pianos were manufactured annually in Great Britain, and another 10,000 foreign-made pianos were imported each year. He further estimated that one million people played 400,000 pianos in Great Britain at this time (435-36). The piano's importance in the middle-class household lasted until the end of the century when the arrival of the phonograph and the cinema began to threaten its popularity. The piano was both a public and domestic instrument during this pe- riod with specific associations which corresponded to gender ideology, skill level and economic spheres. Usually found in a domestic setting, the piano was employed for amateur music making, and the performers were mainly women, \"as piano playing - at not too advanced a level - was one of the most desired feminine accomplishments\" (Plantinga 1). In addition to fam- ily entertainment, the piano was commonly believed to provide both disci- pline and an emotional outlet for women. Haweis notes that \"the piano makes a girl sit upright and pay attention to details.\" Moreover, \"a good play on the piano has not infrequently taken the place of a good cry up- stairs\" (346, 347). In William Thackeray's Vanity Fair , the piano aids Amelia Osborne in her expression of her grief at the death of her husband: she \"sate for long evening hours, touching, to the best of her simple art, melan- choly harmonies on the keys, and weeping over them in silence\" (Thackeray 577). While the piano was considered the province of the female amateur musician, she was not thought capable of serious artistic achievement. Nicholas Temper ley suggests that one reason for this was that serious devo- tion to music might interfere with a young lady's attempts to find a husband (\"Ballroom\" 119), although gender ideology concerning women's intellec- tual capacity certainly played a role as well (Scott 96). Intellectual develop- ment in women was thought to have a negative effect on their reproductive capabilities, redirecting their limited energy resources from their \"natural\" function of childbearing.4 The music these young women played also may have had a hand in creating this bias against the skill of female pianists. While drawing-room music was similar to the high art music of the period,5 it was less challenging technically and intellectually, \"a pale reflection of the music of the great composers of an earlier generation\" (Temperley, \"Ball- room\" 119). Further, popular drawing-room ballads played on sentiment 28 with lyrics that focused on domestic (British as well as home and family) virtues such as family loyalty, maternal love, patriotism and valor, 'Virtues lost in modern urban society or threatened by continental influences'' (Tem- perley, \"Ballroom\" 123). While not the stuff of high art music, the subject matter was appropriate for the middle-class woman's role as moral guide for her family.6 In addition to providing entertainment in her leisure hours, the middle- class woman could soothe away stresses of her husband's workplace with her playing. Lydgate's vision of married life, in George Eliot's Middlemarch, reflects this prevailing attitude. In his \"dreamland, ... Rosamond Vincy ap- peared to be that perfect piece of womanhood who would reverence her husband's mind after the fashion of an accomplished mermaid, using her comb and looking-glass and singing her song for the relaxation of his adored wisdom alone\" (Eliot 475). And, early in their marriage, she ac- commodates his fantasy: At home... he had his long legs stretched on the sofa, his head thrown back, and his hands clasped behind it according to his fa- vorite ruminating attitude, while Rosamond sat at the piano, and played one tune after another, of which her husband only knew (like the emotional elephant he was!) that they fell in with his mood as if they had been melodious sea-breezes. (373) Insensitive to her art, Lydgate recognizes only that the music creates a re- laxing atmosphere, naturalizing the harmony of his home. Haweis sug- gests, however, that the piano's primary function in the middle-class home is to relieve the stresses of domestic life by providing an outlet for a woman's enforced idleness and emotional restraint: \"That domestic and long-suffering instrument, the cottage piano, has probably done more to sweeten existence and bring peace and happiness to families in general, and to young women in particular, than all the homilies on the domestic virtues ever yet penned\" (104). Thus, the piano functioned as the \"visual-sonoric simulacrum of family, wife, and mother\" in the Victorian home, \"an analogical referent to social harmony and domestic order\" (Leppert 105, 115). This \"domestic order\" specifically belonged to the middle-class home, defined as it was against the economic sphere, thereby reinforcing the \"so- cial harmony\" of a gender-based division of labor that supported middle- class economic stability. An emblem of middle-class respectability and status, the piano came to be gendered female by association. However, the piano was also a public instrument during the nineteenth century, most notably used by the increasingly popular international concert virtuosi. The rise of this new type of musician was tied to the evolution of the piano. Technical developments in the 1820s increased the piano's range and volume, making it a perfect vehicle for solo performance as it was a 29 \"complete harmonic and melodic instrument\" (Sennett 197). Leon Plantinga notes that in addition to the popularity of solo piano playing, social and political conditions also fueled the rise of the concert virtuoso. The devel- opment of a bourgeois public which promoted individual achievement pro- vided an audience which recognized this in the virtuosi's technical mastery of the instrument (4). The newly middle-class also had the time and money with which to support these rising musicians. Perhaps as a result, the virtu- osi directed their work almost exclusively to this new public audience. Free from the obligations of church or aristocratic patronage, virtuosi were able to specialize in the piano, refining their skill and developing new keyboard techniques (Plantinga 6). Thus a middle-class ethos as well as middle-class audience was central to the appearance of this musical figure. As the focus in performance shifted to individual skill and technique, the performer rather than the music took center stage. In the spotlight, vir- tuosi infused music with their personalities and, perhaps as a result, their virtuosity was seen as a sign of sensitivity, their technical power a sign of personal power (Sennett 193). In contrast to the drawing-room ballad which relied on sentimental lyrics to evoke emotion, the compositions of virtuosi often incited strong emotions and overwhelmed the listener, which was taken as a testament to their personal power. The power to move listeners could take its toll on the musician as well, as is evidenced by Liszt's fainting after a performance in Paris in 1835. Perhaps because of scenes such as this, some feared that music would ef feminize men. While most concert virtuosi were men, it is important to note that almost none were British. British men of the aristocracy and mid- dle classes were discouraged from playing the piano in domestic circles, which likely prevented many from becoming skilled enough for public per- formance.7 Nicholas Temperley cites the \"aristocratic idea that music was no pursuit for a gentleman, except as a dilettante\" and that among the middle classes a serious interest in music in men was considered effeminate and unpractical as attitudes discouraging male musical achievement in these ranks (Lost Chord 10, 11). The view of \"musical performance as a time- wasting activity and a sign of degeneracy\" impeded the introduction of music into the curriculum of middle-class boys' boarding schools well into the second half of the century (Rainbow 34). Indeed, at mid-century, a \"Harrow [school] boy who went in for the study of music ... would have been looked upon as a veritable milksop.\" This view of music applied espe- cially to the piano. Men with a musical inclination were steered toward different instruments, such as stringed or wind instruments like the violin or flute, or voice (Sennett 197). \"Gentlemen were not expected to play the piano in the drawing room: the only male pianists were professional, pro- viders, not consumers of piano music\" (Temperley, \"Ballroom\" 120). The 30 feminizing of the amateur musical world and a strong distinction between women as consumers of piano music and men as producers suggests that the gendered distinction between public and domestic spheres carried into the musical world, at least as far at the piano is concerned. However, the public life of the instrument was not divorced from its domestic life. Some prominent pianists performed at concerts and salons held in private homes and, in London, often held their annual benefit con- certs, which were advertised in the press, in the homes of supporters (Weber 31). Additionally, many virtuosi endorsed pianos, published music for the home-music market and gave lessons, providing another connection with the domestic world of amateur music. And Richard Sennett contends that many women felt an affinity with virtuosi because they too played the pi- ano, often virtuosi's compositions transcribed for amateurs (197). The virtuosi, then, were foreigners on British soil,8 known for their emotional intensity, and playing an instrument that had been gendered female in the British mind - they were, in their mastery of technique and ability to affect an audience, powerful yet effeminized men. Set apart from British conceptions of masculinity by their musicality, these men did not dislodge the piano as a feminized symbol of middle-class domestic har- mony. My contention is that the piano became a sexual symbol at almost the same moment it became a symbol of middle-class domesticity. Its associa- tion with sexual desire was the result of several interrelated cultural phe- nomena. The piano's predecessors - the virginals, harpsichords and clavi- cords from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries - were commonly deco- rated with paintings, a tradition that sometimes carried onto the pianos of the nineteenth century. The wooden cases of harpsichords made by Hans Rucker in the seventeenth century were often decorated with paintings by Rubens, Van Dyck and Boucher (Swan 47). In the nineteenth century, Pre- Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones decorated the cases of several pi- anos, including one he received as a wedding present.9 This artwork indi- cates that the instrument was a source of visual as well as aural pleasure for the audience. Hunting scenes, a predominantly male activity, were a com- mon subject of these paintings (Leppert 109). Given this subject matter, I would argue that a specifically male audience was implied for the decorated instrument. Furthermore, in response to the concerns of its domestic market, piano manufacturers in the early decades of the century developed the small, upright pianoforte to remedy the drawbacks of the tall upright, which obscured a view of the performer whose voice was muffled by the silk front of the instrument (Harding 226). As pianists in the domestic arena were predominantly women, the instrument's redesign indicates that the woman playing the piano was also a source of visual pleasure for men. Since a 31 woman's ability to play the piano was considered a boon on the marriage market, the piano also carried connotations of sexual pleasure. Maria Edgeworth, in Practical Education (1798), advises her readers that musical skill improves \"a young lady's chance of a prize in the matrimonial lottery\" (6). Male desire, then, linked the woman and the piano. The piano was also sexualized in this period by popular Romantic male composers. Noting Chopin's affair with George Sand and Franz Liszt's nu- merous affairs with princesses, Anthony Burgess remarks: \"The piano, with them, seems to become a monstrous aphrodisiac\" (21). Liszt also excited a response more commonly associated with the modern rock star: women would fight for pieces of horsehair from his piano stool or faint when he approached the audience after concerts (Hueffer cited in Auerbach 32). Mary Burgan notes that \"[t]he great male virtuoso figures of the Victorian period were often depicted in demonic terms, suggesting a sexual source for sublime musical rapture\" and a corresponding \"fear that too powerful an inspiration [could] overwhelm impressionable female hearers, often in pathological ways\" (66). The infectious sexuality of these virtuosi, inciting lust, frenzy and fainting fits, suggests a veiled threat to the purity of Victo- rian women, and consequently domestic harmony, through the very in- strument they called their own. George Eliot presents a fictionalized version of such a Romantic male composer in Daniel Deronda with Herr Klesmer, who \"was not yet a Liszt, understood to be adored by ladies of all European countries with the excep- tion of Lapland\" (203).10 Not quite the Don Juan virtuoso, he is unaware that he is adored by his student Catherine Arrowpoint. Unable to verbally ex- press his feelings for Catherine because of his social position, Klesmer uses the piano as a means of expressing his passion. \"[I]f Miss Arrowpoint had been poor he should have made ardent love to her instead of sending a storm through the piano\" (205). This situation comes to a crisis when a new suitor provokes an argument between them, with Catherine referring to the time Klesmer spends in her family's house as a sacrifice. \"'Why should I make the sacrifice?\"' said Klesmer, going to seat himself at the piano, and touching the keys so as to give with the delicacy of an echo in the far dis- tance a melody which he had set to Heine's 'Ich hab' dich geliebvet und lieve dich noch'\" (\"I have loved you and I love you still\") as if subconsi- cously answering his own question with the piano (206). This tune serves as the prelude to both confessing their love for the other. The comparison between Liszt and Klesmer is apt since Klesmer has the power to arouse musical rapture in his listeners as well. At a gathering at the Arrowpoints, Klesmer plays his own composition, and he certainly fetched as much variety and depth of passion out of the piano as that moderately responsive instrument lends itself 32 to, having an imperious magic in his fingers that seemed to send a nerve-thrill through ivory key and wooden hammer, and compel the strings to make a quivering lingering speech for him. Gwendolen, in spite of her wounded egoism, had fullness of nature enough to feel the power of this playing, and it gradually turned her inward sob of mortification into an excitement which lifted her for the moment into a desperate indifference about her own do- ings, or at least a determination to get a superiority over them by laughing at them as if they belonged to somebody else. Her eyes had become brighter, her cheeks slightly flushed, and her tongue ready for any mischievous remarks. (39-40) The piano responds to Klesmer's touch, the \"magic in his fingers,\" in sen- sual, human terms: the keys become nerve endings subject to \"nerve-thrill\" and the strings become vocal chords producing \"quivering lingering speech\" as he brings \"passion\" out of the instrument. Likewise, Klesmer elicits a sensual response from Gwendolen, an \"excitement\" which makes her forget herself, brightening her eyes and flushing cheeks. The sexual lan- guage used to depict both the instrument's and Gwendolen's response to Klesmer's performance suggests an analogy between women's sexuality and the piano. The piano was an instrument to awaken female sexual desire. To re- turn to Emma, another piano figures prominently in the plot: Frank Chur- chill's anonymous gift to Jane Fairfax, a gift which suggests they may be keeping more than their engagement secret. All the characters in the novel remark upon Jane's skill at the piano, and Emma herself finds Jane's \"per- formance, both vocal and instrumental... infinitely superior to her own\" (208). Most feel it is a shame that one who plays so well should be without an instrument, and so it is a pleasant surprise, though one occasioning much gossip, when Jane mysteriously receives a square pianoforte. Emma, who speculates that Jane has retreated to Highbury after \"seduc[ing] Mr. Dixon's affections away from his wife,\" recognizes the gift as a token of his affection and proof of her suspicions of illicit activity (152). In Emma's mind, Nicho- las Preus reminds us, this supposed relationship between Jane and Mr. Dixon is based on forbidden sexual attraction (204). Frank, the true giver, ironically concurs with Emma's suspicions, agreeing that he \"'can see it in no other light than as an offering of love'\" (199). The piano here metonymi- cally represents relationships that do not conform to middle-class moral codes, either a single woman's seduction of a married man or a secret en- gagement that defies the social form of parental consent. Jane's noted skill at the piano suggests that her sexual desire plays a prominent role in both imagined and actual relationships. Frank is also a skilled musician, as he demonstrates when he joins Jane 33 in singing duets at the Cole's dinner party. The duets are a means of reex- periencing the intimacy they had at Weymouth, where \"[t]hey had sung together once or twice\" and where they were secretly engaged (208). In- deed, as they must maintain silence about this illicit engagement, and there- fore affect a distance in their acquaintance, they can communicate only indi- rectly via music about their true feelings. When Frank, Emma and others visit Jane to hear her play her new pianoforte, Frank comments to Emma, within hearing of Jane, \"'What felicity it is to hear a tune again which has made one happy! If I mistake not, that was danced at Weymouth'\" (221-22). He goes on to state that the thoughtfulness of the anonymous piano giver in also sending sheet music indicates true affection. Frank signals his love for Jane by his comments on music, recalling a dance they shared and desig- nating his gift as from the heart, while Jane expresses her feelings by play- ing the piano. After playing the tune that was danced at Weymouth, she turns to an Irish melody which also has particular associations. Frank comments to Emma that Jane \"'is playing 'Robin Adair' at this moment - his favorite\"' (222). Patrick Piggot points out the ambiguity in this statement, indicating that it is as likely Frank's favorite as Mr. Dixon's. \"It would be a natural thing for her to do after playing 'their' waltz\" (Piggot 101). Emma misinterprets Jane's blushing and smiling response to Frank's comments as her \"cherishing very reprehensible feelings\" for Mr. Dixon, thus analogi- cally highlighting the sexual nature of the musical exchange (222). 11 By coding Jane's sexual desire with the piano, the morality of her sup- posed and actual relationships, which defy the conventions governing courtship and hint at premarital sex, is side-stepped and her economic situation comes to the fore. Since Jane has no fortune, if she does not marry she must become a governess or live with her lower-middle-class aunt and grandmother. Both are dreary options. Becoming a governess is described in terms of entering a convent since Jane, the \"devoted novitiate,\" would have to \"sacrifice, and retire from all the pleasures of life, of rational inter- course, equal society, peace and hope, to penance and mortification for ever\" (149). But life with her relations would be on the same terms as her grandmother's income is barely enough to support their household. In ei- ther case Jane's sexual desire would have to be repressed since, as Emma aptly if unconsciously notes, Jane requires a man to \"giv[e] her independ- ence\" (152). Thus, in raising the specter of female sexual desire with the piano, Austen's text illuminates the economic and sexual constraints that middle-class ideology places on women. We need only to look at The Awakening Conscience (1854) to be reminded of how women's sexual desire was regulated by economic threat. In this painting, William Holman Hunt depicts a woman sitting in the lap of her lover at the piano, half rising as she is awakened to the immorality of her 34 present situation (Fig. 1). Critics often point to the \"literary\" nature of this painting, its images inviting narrative constructions. Indeed, Helene Rob- erts argues that during the first quarter of the Victorian period sentiment came to predominate over sensuality in painting, a shift which required the painter to \"tell enough about the heroine's character to prove her worthy of regard\" and to \"involve the heroine in a situation in which her response will win the viewer's sympathy. In other words, the artist must tell a story\" (46). Conveying this story to the viewer requires culturally recognizable symbols to be effective, and Roberts notes that \"Victorian painters became adroit at exploiting visual signs and contriving associative stimuli,\" relying on a lit- erate audience to recognize character types and fill in backgrounds (46). Critics ranging from Holman Hunt's contemporary, John Ruskin, to the present day have remarked that The Awakening Conscience is replete with objects and iconography reflecting and reinforcing the narrative of the fallen woman. Everything from the wallpaper, to the furniture, to the objects in the room, to the woman's attire, to the man's physiogomy, to the frame of the painting itself, has been noted for its reflection of the theme of sexual seduction, everything except the piano. However, placing the woman and her lover at the piano further emphasizes that she has lost her virtue by raising the specter of her sexual desire. Significantly, the gentleman is play- ing her instrument while she sits in his lap, indicating that he exerts sexual power over her and that her fall likely was due to his seduction.12 The wealth of detail which provides a narrative of events leading to this moment of awakening conscience, however, renders the painting's moral ambiguous. For instance, Roberts argues that Holman Hunt relies on the fact that the lyrics of the song titles legible on the sheet music would be familiar to Victorian audiences, thereby giving clues to the woman's state of mind - her regret and remorse at her present situation (66). 13 Robert Peters, on the other hand, suggests that the painting's meticulous detail obscures Holman Hunt's didactic intentions. He argues that the room is \"so invitingly opu- lent\" that the story's moral is read with \"some difficulty\" (208). I would argue, however, that the room's opulency is meant to contrast with the dirty streets the woman will end up on as her downward trajectory from inno- cence to degradation, middle-class angel to working-class whore, continues. Nevertheless, Hunt makes this final outcome ambiguous as he depicts the woman at the moment of her epiphany. As she realizes her fall from moral purity, she becomes an object of pity for the viewer. Ruskin remarks in his letter to The Times that the scene is \"tragical\": \"the very hem of the girl's dress, at which the painter has laboured so closely, thread by thread, has a story in it, if we think how soon its pure whiteness may be soiled with the dust and rain, her outcast feet failing in the street\" (qtd. in Roberts 67). Not in her father's house nor her husband's, she is soon to be homeless. Pity 35 Figure 1 W. Holman Hunt, The Awakening Conscience (1854) 36 for this outcast woman \"deflects the power [she poses in defying middle- class codes of morality] and redistributes it in terms of a conventional pater- nalistic relationship organized around social conscience, compassion and philanthropy\" (Nead, \"Magdalen\" 31). Portraying the fallen woman as a victim neutralizes the transgressive threat she poses to middle-class ideol- ogy. In \"reading\" the painting, the viewer then reifies this ideology. By piecing together a narrative from the culturally-encoded symbols, the viewer diffuses the woman's sexual power by pitying her loss of purity and impending loss of class status and by accepting that the two are naturally and inextricably linked. However, figuring middle-class female sexual desire in the piano - out- side the body but contained within the domestic realm - allows women access to it, allows them to arouse and manipulate their own sexuality, to seduce without contact.14 The piano, then, offered opportunities for repre- sentations of women's active sexual desire. In Middlemarch (1871-72), George Eliot explores all facets of the piano's symbolism through the character of Rosamond Vincy. From a newly middle-class family, the daughter of a manufacturer and an innkeeper's daughter, Rosamond learns to play the piano at Mrs. Lemon's finishing school where she acquires all the accom- plishments of a woman with pretensions to gentility through marriage. In the hopes of landing a husband, Rosamond tightens the snare she has laid for Lydgate with her musical skills. The narrator describes her performance as follows: \"Rosamond, with the executant's instinct, had seized upon [her music teacher's] manner of playing, and gave forth his large rendering of noble music with the precision of an echo.... A hidden soul seemed to be flowing forth from Rosamond's fingers\" (132). Lydgate, mistaking this soul for hers, \"was taken possession of, and began to believe in her as something exceptional\" (132). His \"possession\" and deepened admiration for Rosa- mond indicate that she has aroused his desire with her \"exceptional\" talent. As the narrator's critique of Rosamond's performance indicates, how- ever, her skill is not enough to entice Lydgate into marriage. Rather, it is the moment when Rosamond is uncharacteristically herself that causes Lydgate to fall in love with her. In an interview with Lydgate after Rosamond has begun to fear that he may not intend to marry her, she meets his eyes with tears in her own. \"At that moment she was as natural as she had ever been when she was five years old.... That moment of naturalness was the crystal- lizing feather-touch: it shook flirtation into love\" (247). Lydgate proposes to Rosamond on the spot. The piano does not disappear after this, however, but continues to preside over their courtship (Leng 55). Indeed, their love- making goes on \"in the corner of the drawing-room where the piano stood,\" indicating that sexual desire is decidedly a factor in this union (284). The association between sexual desire and the piano is plain to Mid- dlemarch society. Wishing to speak with Lydgate, Dorothea Brooke visits Rosamond for the first time and finds her with Will Ladislaw, the two hav- ing been singing together at the piano just before her entrance. Dorothea decides to seek Lydgate at the hospital since she wishes to conceal her er- rand, but is \"urged also by a vague discomfort\" to leave immediately (355). This discomfort is attributed to the situation she has just encountered, and she recalls as she drives away \"the notes of the man's voice and the accom- panying piano, which she had not noted much at the time... and she found herself thinking with some wonder that Will Ladislaw was passing his time with Mrs. Lydgate in her husband's absence\" (355). While part of Dorothea's response is due to her as yet unrealized feelings for Will, she also responds to the impropriety of a married woman entertaining a single man at the piano, the physical intimacy afforded by the instrument high- lighting the possible sexual nature of such an activity.15 Ironically, Ladislaw's flustered response to Dorothea's interruption suggests to Rosamond for the first time that \"women, even after marriage, might make conquests and enslave men\" (357). Thus, when Lydgate begins to disappoint her, Rosamond imagines she is making a second conquest of Ladislaw with their duets over the piano. The impropriety of this musical activity is noted in local gossip which Mrs. Cadwallader, the voice of mid- dle-class morality, cheerfully relates to Dorothea: Ladislaw is making a sad dark-blue scandal by warbling continu- ally with your Mr. Lydgate's wife, who they tell me is as pretty as pretty can be. It seems nobody ever goes into the house without finding this young gentleman lying on the rug or warbling at the piano. (513) This gossip causes Dorothea to remember with \"a vague uneasiness... that day when she had found Will Ladislaw with Mrs. Lydgate, and had heard his voice accompanied by the piano\" (513). For both Mrs. Cadwallader and Dorothea the activity at the piano is scandalous, suggesting that Mid- dlemarch society considers illicit sexual behavior implicit in it. Rosamond, too, believes that their duets indicate a mutual sexual de- sire. Imagining Ladislaw's manner toward her to be the \"disguise of a deeper feeling,\" Rosamond constructs a little romance which was to vary the flatness of her life: Will Ladislaw was to always be a bachelor and live near her, always to be at her command, and have an understood though never fully expressed passion for her, which would be sending out lambent flames every now and then in interesting scenes. (616, 617) In her fantasy, the sexual desire she imagines she excites in Ladislaw re- verses contemporary conceptions of male and female sexuality, with Ladis- law's latent sexuality responding to her initiation. However, as her per- 38 formance at the piano is a thin representation of her piano teacher's skill, so her sexual power is diluted by her artifice. She never is close to turning Will's affection from Dorothea. The piano can be metaphor for healthy female sexuality but, because it is a coded symbol, can be misread as a sign of an illicit sexual relationship, as Emma and Dorothea both misread piano-playing scenes. However, George Eliot mediates the reader's judgment of Rosamond: the pity gener- ated by a falling woman which, as we have seen with The Awakening Con- science , reinforces patriarchal proscriptions on women's sexuality. Here, Dorothea's \"pitying fellowship\" for this woman at the piano causes her to visit Rosamond, to reassure her that not everyone believes the gossip about Lydgate, in spite of her certainty that Rosamond and Will are having an affair (651). Dorothea's selfless action, based on her sympathy for the state of Rosamond's marriage and consequent turn to Will, prevents Rosamond's eventual fall; she \"never committed a second compromising indiscretion\" (679). Sympathy replaces pity for the falling woman and, though mortified by Will's preference for Dorothea, she is not penalized for her active sexual- ity. Rather, she returns to relative domestic harmony with her husband, and the piano perhaps returns to the use Rev. Ha weis saw for it: relieving the stresses of middle-class domestic life. Thus the piano provides authors and artists of the nineteenth century a means of representing female sexual de- sire without overturning, and in some cases even endorsing, middle-class constructions of women's sexuality - but not without bringing the contra- dictions of its medical and class-bound definitions to the fore. NOTES 'Leon Plantinga terms the piano thus in \"The Piano and the Nineteenth Century\" (1). 2While women's sexuality then served as a class marker, within the middle classes there was no uniform representation of passionlessness. Nancy Cott contends that women's passionlessness was adopted by both feminists and social conservatives to argue in favor of women's participa- tion in public life by the former, or for the value of separate spheres by the later. 3A grand pianoforte denotes a rather large increase in the Cole's in- come, not only because it would cost more than a smaller, square piano- forte, but also because of space limitations in middle-class homes. Leppert notes that grand pianos carried greater prestige because of their cost, \"[b]ut this prestige factor carried with it another sort of price tag; these large in- struments, 'good' only for music, took up a lot of floor space\" at a time when living quarters were being downsized (113). Thus, the Cole's addi- 39 tion to their home made have been made expressly for the purpose of ac- commodating so large an instrument. 4Cynthia Eagle Russett discusses this at some length in Chapter 4 of Sexual Science: The Victorian Construction of Womanhood. 5Nicholas Temperley defines high art music as that intended for culti- vated audiences familiar with contemporary European art music and which was intended to engage an intellectual response. He contrasts this type of music with both functional music, which he defines as \"intended to assist some other action - working, dancing, marching, worshipping - and so is not greatly concerned with listeners/' and popular music which was meant to be listened to but avoided intellectually challenging the audience (\"Intro- duction\" 4). Drawing-room music falls into this last category. 6Moreover, Derek B. Scott's examination of Victorian musical aesthetics suggests that women who attempted to professionalize their musical skill were ghettoized as drawing-room ballad composers. \"Contemporary social theory, domestic sphere ideology, the new scientia sexualis, and aesthetics of the sublime and the beautiful ensured that certain musical styles were con- sidered unsuitable or even unnatural for women composers\" (91). Infusing metaphorical musical terms with contemporary definitions of masculinity and femininity \"effectively fenced off the category of 'greatness' in music as a male domain\" by calling into question the womanliness of any female composer who aspired to the only musical forms considered sublime - \"masculine\" ones (99). Female composers were relegated to producing for a female audience popular, sentimental music which underscored traditional gender ideology. 7The lack of commentary on working-class men playing the piano was likely due to the fact that pianos, affordable for the middle classes, were above the reach of the average working-class income for most of the cen- tury. There was, however, a great interest in teaching working class chil- dren to sing and sight-read music in the early Victorian period. See Bernarr Rainbow, \"The Rise of Popular Music Education in Nineteenth-Century England\" in The Lost Chord (17-41). 8Mary Burgan notes that in Victorian fiction the male virtuoso was stereotypically foreign, arguing that this mirrors the bias against men play- ing the piano (69). I would suggest that the non-English character of these fictional virtuosi serves to further effeminize them. 9This piano and others are described in Leppert and Wainwright. Wainwright notes that Burne-Jones also two designed two grand pianos (209). Critics debate about which musician Klesmer was modeled on, most commonly citing Liszt and Anton Rubinstein. Emily Auerbach contends 40 that the character is an amalgamation of Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Rubin- stein, Liszt and fictional German Romantic musicians (167). See also Gray for a discussion of possible models (102-03). Mary Ann O'Farrell argues Emma's misreading of Jane's blush in this scene highlights the fantasy that identity is legible in the body's somatic expression (4-5). 12Lynn Nead argues that the man is of the aristocracy and, conse- quently, that the painting is a critique of his licentiousness in seducing an innocent girl, further solidifying middle-class identity on the basis of its moral code (\"Magdalen\" 36). 13The sheet music on the piano is for \"Oft in the Stilly Night\" from The Light of Other Days by Thomas Moore, while music for Tennyson's \"Tears, Idle Tears\" from The Princess lies on the floor. Roberts provides excerpts of lyrics from both (66). 14Nineteenth-century French novelist and artist Edmond de Goncourt noted the association of the piano with one form of illicit female sexuality activity, masturbation (Corbin 533). 15Andrew Leng reads this scene as an allusion to The Awakening Con- science , with Will corresponding to the gentleman at the piano and Rosa- mond, an analogue for Dorothea, corresponding to the woman. Remem- brance of this scene later spurs Dorothea's sympathy for Lydgate which causes her again to visit Rosamond, again finding Rosamond in a compro- mising situation with Will. Dorothea's emotional response to this second scene leads finally to her \"awakening consciousness\" of her love for Will. Thus, Leng argues, Dorothea's story is \"George Eliot's dechristianized equivalent of Holman Hunt's Awakening Conscience \" (61). WORKS CITED Armstrong, Nancy. \"The Rise of the Domestic Woman.\" The Ideology of Con- duct: Essays on Literature and the History of Sexuality. Ed. Nancy Arm- strong and Leonard Tennenhouse. New York: Methuen, 1987. 96-141. Auerbach, Emily. Maestros , Dilettantes , and Philistines: The Musician in the Victorian Novel. New York: Peter Lang, 1989. Austen, Jane. Emma. New York: Bantam, 1981. Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. London: Penguin, 1972. Briggs, Asa. Victorian Things. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1988. Burgan, Mary. \"Heroines at the Piano: Women and Music in Nineteenth- Century Fiction.\" Victorian Studies 30 (1986): 51-76. Burgess, Anthony. \"The Well-Tempered Revolution: A Consideration of the Piano's Social and Intellectual History.\" Gaines 3-39. 41 Corbin, Alain. \"The Lady's Hashish/' A History of Private Life: From the Fires of Revolution to the Great War. Vol. 4. Ed. Michelle Perrot. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1990. 531-33. Cott, Nancy. \"Passionless: An Interpretation of Victorian Sexual Ideology, 1790-1850.\" Signs 4.2 (1978): 219-33. Edgeworth, Maria, and R.L. Edgeworth. Practical Education. Vol. 3. 2nd ed. 1801. Poole: Woodstock, 1996. Eliot, George. Middlemarch. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1986. - . Daniel Deronda. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1984. Foucault, Michel. The History of Sexuality Volume 1: An Introduction. Trans. Robert Hurley. New York: Vintage, 1978. Gaines, James R. ed. The Lives of the Piano. New York: Holt, 1981. Gray, Beryl. George Eliot and Music. New York: St. Martin's, 1989. Grilli, Stephanie. \"Pre-Raphaelitism and Phrenology.\" Pre-Raphaelite Papers ed. Leslie Parris. London: The Tate Gallery, 1984. 44-60. Grover, David S. \"A History of the Piano from 1709-1980.\" March 1997. On- line posting. UK Piano Page, Airtime Internet Resources. 12 April 1999. Harding, Rosamond. The Pianoforte: Its History Traced to the Great Exhibition of 1851. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1933. Haweis, Rev. H.R. Music and Morals. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1876. Hunt, William Holman. The Awakening Conscience. 1853-54. Tate Gallery, London. Kaplan, Cora. \"Pandora's Box: Subjectivity, Class and Sexuality in Socialist Feminist Criticism.\" Sea Changes : Essays on Culture and Feminism. Lon- don: Verso, 1986. 147-76. Laqueur, Thomas. Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud. Cambridge, Harvard UP, 1990. Leng, Andrew. \"Dorothea Brooke's 'Awakening Consciousness' and the Pre-Raphaelite Aesthetic in Middlemarch .\" AUMLA 75 (1991): 52-64. Leppert, Richard. \"Sexual Identity, Death, and the Family Piano.\" Nine- teenth Century Music 16 (1992): 105-28. Loesser, Arthur. Men, Woman and Pianos: A Social History. New York: Simon, 1954. Mason, Michael. The Making of Victorian Sexuality. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1994. Nead, Lynda. Myths of Sexuality: Representations of Woman in Victorian Brit- ain. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988. Nead, Lynn. \"The Magdalen in Modern Times: The Mythology of the Fallen Woman in Pre-Raphaelite Painting.\" Oxford Art Journal 7.1 (1984): 26-37. O'Farrell, Mary Ann. Telling Complexions: The Nineteenth-Century Novel and the Blush. Durham: Duke UP, 1997. Peters, Robert L. \"Algernon Charles Swinburne and the Use of Integral De- tail.\" Sambrook 206-19. 42 Piggot, Patrick. The Innocent Diversion: A Study of Music in the Life and Writ- ings of Jane Austen. London: Douglas Cleverdon, 1979. Plantinga, Leon. \"The Piano and the Nineteenth Century.' Nineteenth- Century Piano Music. Ed. Larry Todd. New York: Schirmer Books, 1990. 1-15. Preus, Nicholas E. \"Sexuality in Emma : A Case History.\" Studies in the Novel 23.2 (1991): 196-216. Rainbow, Bernarr. \"The Rise of Popular Music in Nineteenth-Century Eng- land.\" Temperley, The Lost Chord 17-41. Roberts, Helene. \"Marriage, Redundancy or Sin: The Painter's View of Women in the First Twenty-Five Years of Victoria's Reign.\" Suffer and Be Still: Women in the Victorian Age. Ed. Martha Vicinus. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1972. 45-76. Russett, Cynthia. Sexual Science: The Victorian Construction of Womanhood. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1989. Sambrook, James, ed. Pre-Raphaelitism: A Collection of Critical Essays. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1974. Scott, Derek B. \"The Sexual Politics of Victorian Musical Aesthetics.\" Journal of the Royal Musical Association 1119.1 (1994): 91-114. Sennett, Richard. \"Pianists in Their Time: A Memoir.\" Gaines 187-208. Swan, Annalyn. \"Enlightenment's Gift to the Age of Romance: How the Piano Came to Be.\" Gaines 41-73. Temperley, Nicholas. \"Introduction: The State of Research on Victorian Mu- sic.\" The Lost Chord: Essays on Victorian Music. Ed. Nicholas Temperley. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1989. 1-16. - , ed. Music in Britain : The Romantic Age 1800-1914. London: Athlone, 1981. - . \"Introduction.\" Temperley 1-8. - . \"Ballroom and Drawing-Room Music.\" Temperley 109-34. Thackeray, William. Vanity Fair. Boston: Houghton, 1963. Wainwright, David. Broadwood by Appointment : A History. London: Quiller, 1982. Weber, William. Music and the Middle Class: The Social Structure of Concert Life in London , Paris and Vienna. London: Croom Helm, 1975. 43\n" ] } ], @@ -310,13 +307,15 @@ "\n", "# Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", "cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "print(len(article_text))\n", + "print((\" \").join(article_text))\n", "\n", "# Print out the title and ID of the article we selected as confirmation\n", - "print(f\"\"\"\n", - "Article selected:\n", - "ID: {article_id}\n", - "Title: {article_title}\n", - "\"\"\")\n" + "# print(f\"\"\"\n", + "# Article selected:\n", + "# ID: {article_id}\n", + "# Title: {article_title}\n", + "# \"\"\")\n" ] }, { diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 0db288a..233afce 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", "import json\n", "import pandas as pd\n", + "\n", "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", "%matplotlib inline\n", "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", @@ -34,7 +35,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -68,13 +69,14 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 21, + "execution_count": 34, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ + "['From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:', 'Popular', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention', 'of', 'Modernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870', 'MIRIAM', 'ELIZABETH', 'BURSTEIN', 'State', 'University', 'of', 'New', 'York-Brockport', 'In', 'the', 'famous', '\"Prelude\"', 'and', 'conclusion', 'to', 'Middlemarch', '(1871-72)', 'George', 'Eliot', 'addresses', 'the', 'question', 'of', \"woman's\", 'work', 'in', 'the', 'modern', 'world', 'via', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Saint', 'Theresa.', 'The', '\"later-born', 'Theresas,\"', 'Eliot', 'writes,', '\"were', 'helped', 'by', 'no', 'coherent', 'social', 'faith', 'and', 'order', 'which', 'could', 'perform', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'knowledge', 'for', 'the', 'ardently', 'willing', 'soul\";', 'sim-', 'ilarly,', 'she', 'says', 'in', 'the', 'conclusion,', '\"[a]', 'new', 'Theresa', 'will', 'hardly', 'have', 'the', 'opportunity', 'of', 'reforming', 'a', 'conventual', 'life,', 'any', 'more', 'than', 'a', 'new', 'Anti-', 'gone', 'will', 'spend', 'her', 'heroic', 'piety', 'in', 'daring', 'all', 'for', 'the', 'sake', 'of', 'a', \"brother's\", 'funeral:', 'the', 'medium', 'in', 'which', 'their', 'ardent', 'deeds', 'took', 'shape', 'is', 'forever', 'gone.\"\\'', 'Female', 'heroism', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'a', 'system', 'of', 'widely', 'accepted', 'beliefs', 'that', 'demarcates', 'the', '\"knowledge\"', 'graspable', 'by', 'the', 'questing', '\"soul.\"', 'In', 'this', 'coherent', 'order,', 'the', 'female', 'hero', 'is', 'intelligi-', 'ble', 'precisely', 'because', 'she', 'is', 'already', 'imagined', 'within', 'the', 'system', 'itself;', 'Saint', 'Theresa', 'is', 'a', 'reformer', 'in', 'the', 'cause', 'of', 'her', 'Christian', 'faith,', 'while', \"Antigone's\", '\"heroic', 'piety\"', 'is', 'exerted', 'to', 'preserve', 'rites', 'of', 'honorable', 'burial', 'that', 'have', 'been', 'denied.', 'Theresa', 'and', 'Antigone', 'are', 'rendered', 'coherent', 'as', 'figures', 'within', 'narrative', 'by', 'participating', 'in', 'searches', 'di-', 'rected', 'by', 'common', 'knowledge,', 'but', 'in', 'an', 'age', 'of', 'fragmented', 'belief', 'the', 'female', 'heroine', 'becomes', 'increasingly', 'unrecognizable', 'as', 'a', 'heroine', 'of', 'the', '\"epic\"', 'type,', 'her', '\"struggles\"', 'no', 'longer', 'easily', 'interpreted', 'by', 'the', 'average', 'observer;', 'whereas', 'Theresa', 'has', 'an', '\"epic', 'life,\"', 'her', 'later', 'avatars', 'have', '\"struggles\"', 'which', 'to', '\"common', 'eyes', '...', 'seemed', 'mere', 'inconsistency', 'and', 'formlessness.\"2', \"Eliot's\", 'nostalgia', 'for', 'a', 'lost', 'age', 'of', 'female', 'heroism', 'seems', 'to', 'invert', 'Victorian', 'domestic', 'ideology', 'as', 'we', 'conventionally', 'understand', 'it:', 'the', 'heroine', 'may', '\"now\"', '(in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century)', 'be', 'literally', 'unimagin-', '1.', 'George', 'Eliot,', 'Middlemarch,', 'ed.', 'Gordon', 'S.', 'Haight', '(Boston,', '1956),', 'pp.', '3,', '612.', '2.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '3.', '?', '1999', 'by', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago.', 'All', 'rights', 'reserved.', '0026-8232/2000/9701-0003$02.00', '46', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '47', 'able,', 'but', 'this', 'disappearance', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'public', 'narratives', 'is', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'loss', 'rather', 'than', 'progress.', 'The', \"novel's\", 'concluding', 'lines', 'might', 'at', 'first', 'be', 'read', 'positively:', '\"Her', 'full', 'nature,', 'like', 'that', 'river', 'of', 'which', 'Cyrus', 'broke', 'the', 'strength,', 'spent', 'itself', 'in', 'channels', 'which', 'had', 'no', 'great', 'name', 'upon', 'the', 'earth.', 'But', 'the', 'effect', 'of', 'her', 'being', 'on', 'those', 'around', 'her', 'was', 'incal-', 'culably', 'diffusive:', 'for', 'the', 'growing', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'world', 'is', 'partly', 'depen-', 'dent', 'on', 'unhistoric', 'acts;', 'and', 'that', 'things', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'ill', 'with', 'you', 'and', 'me', 'as', 'they', 'might', 'have', 'been,', 'is', 'half', 'owing', 'to', 'the', 'number', 'who', 'have', 'lived', 'faithfully', 'a', 'hidden', 'life,', 'and', 'rest', 'in', 'unvisited', 'tombs.\"3', 'Yet', 'the', 'only', 'truly', 'positive', 'element', 'here', 'is', 'the', '\"incalculably', 'diffusive\"', 'nature', 'of', 'Dor-', \"othea's\", '\"effect.\"', 'Additionally,', 'qualifiers', 'such', 'as', '\"partly\"', 'and', '\"half\"', 'make', 'hidden', 'actions', 'interdependent', 'with', 'public', 'ones;', 'female', 'influence', 'is', 'consequently', 'decentered', 'as', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'social', 'reform.', 'Finally,', \"Eliot's\", 'simile', 'of', 'the', 'dispersed', 'river', 'acidly', 'erodes', 'the', 'ideal', 'of', 'feminine', 'self-', 'sacrifice.', \"Dorothea's\", '\"unhistoric', 'acts\"', 'are', 'as', 'much', 'mandated', 'by', 'mod-', 'ern', 'culture', 'as', 'they', 'are', 'the', 'partial', 'means', 'of', 'redeeming', 'that', 'culture.', 'For', 'critics', 'such', 'as', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', 'Alison', 'Booth,', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', 'Middlemarch', 'offers', 'a', 'positive', 'alternative', 'to', 'contemporary', 'Victorian', 'historiography-not', 'just', 'to', 'the', '\"masculinist\"', 'focus', 'on', 'war', 'and', 'politics,', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'the', 'popular', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'that', 'flourished', 'during', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century.4', 'But', 'attempts', 'to', 'find', 'a', 'more', '\"truthful\"', 'represen-', 'tation', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', \"Eliot's\", 'fiction', 'raise', 'other', 'problems,', 'not', 'least', 'what', 'I', 'suggest', 'is', 'her', 'ambivalence', 'about', 'the', 'adequacy', 'of', 'any', 'mod-', 'ern', 'historical', 'narrative', 'to', 'explain', 'a', 'Victorian', \"woman's\", 'career.', 'Yet', 'to', 'go', 'further,', 'Eliot', 'also', 'questions', 'whether', 'the', 'absence', 'of', 'such', 'narratives', 'might', 'diagnose', 'a', 'still', 'greater', 'malaise', 'in', 'nineteenth-century', 'culture.', 'This', 'article', 'argues', 'that', \"Eliot's\", 'ambivalence', 'marks', 'key', 'issues', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'discourse', 'about', 'gender,', 'history,', 'and', 'modernity,', 'a', 'discourse', 'which', 'cannot', 'be', 'adequately', 'addressed', 'by', 'claiming', 'that', \"Eliot's\", 'more', 'truthful', 'or', 'realistic', 'representations', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'surpassed', 'it.', 'To', 'reconstruct', 'this', 'discourse,', 'I', 'consider', 'a', 'wide', 'range', 'of', 'Victorian', 'texts', 'that', 'either', 'wrote', 'the', 'history', 'of', '\"Woman\"', 'or', 'put', 'that', 'history', 'to', 'political', 'use,', 'including', 'biography', 'collections,', 'universal', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', '\"all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations,\"', 'periodical', 'articles,', 'and', 'devotional', 'materials.', 'In', 'general,', 'histories', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'seek', 'the', '\"origins\"', 'of', 'feminist', 'historiography,', 'an', 'approach', 'that', 'understandably', 'privileges', 'protofeminist', 'authors.', 'Indeed,', 'the', 'recent', 'surge', 'of', 'scholarly', 'interest', '3.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '613.', '4.', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', '\"The', 'Unhistoric', 'in', 'History:', 'George', \"Eliot's\", 'Challenge', 'to', 'Victorian', 'Historiography,\"', 'Clio', '26', '(1996):', '79-95;', 'Alison', 'Booth,', '\"Little', 'Dorrit', 'and', 'Dorothea', 'Brooke:', 'Interpreting', 'the', 'Heroines', 'of', 'History,\"', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Literature', '41', '(1986):', '190-216;', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '\"Reinventing', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'Discourses', 'of', 'Gender', 'and', 'Historiography\"', '(Ph.D.', 'diss.,', 'Cornell', 'University,', '1995),', 'pp.', '227-69.', '48', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'in', 'early', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'derives', 'from', 'an', 'author-centered', 'feminist', 'interest', 'in', '\"lost\"', 'women', 'historians.5', 'By', 'maintaining', 'this', 'specific', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'historians,', 'however,', 'historians', 'and', 'literary', 'critics', 'rein-', 'force', 'a', 'Victorian', 'stereotype', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', \"women's\", 'work-\"a', 'shower', 'of', 'pretty', 'books', 'in', 'red', 'and', 'blue,', 'gilded', 'and', 'illustrated,', 'light', 'and', 'dainty', 'and', 'personal\"6-thereby', 'marginalizing', 'the', 'men', 'responsi-', 'ble', 'for', 'at', 'least', 'half', 'of', 'the', 'nearly', '300', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'produced', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century.', 'Without', 'considering', 'the', 'multiple', 'authors', 'of', '(and', 'audiences', 'for)', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century,', 'it', 'is', 'impossible', 'to', 'understand', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'their', 'cultural', 'impact.7', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'authors', 'is', 'particularly', 'inadequate', 'when', 'one', 'considers', 'how', 'such', 'texts', 'were', 'produced.', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'were', 'churned', 'out', 'at', 'astounding', 'speed', 'with', 'no', 'attention', 'to', 'method-', 'ological', 'innovation:', 'books', 'published', 'in', '1829', 'and', '1889', 'are', 'virtually', 'indistinguishable', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'their', 'historiographical', 'standards.', 'Faced', 'with', 'demands', 'for', 'rapid', 'turnaround', 'time,', 'authors', 'wrote', 'encyclopedic', 'texts', 'characterized', 'by', 'instances', 'of', 'd6jia', 'lu,', 'plagiarism,', 'and', 'mutual', 'raid-', 'ing', 'of', 'sources.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'therefore', 'expresses', 'neither', 'a', 'uniquely', 'feminine', 'perspective', 'nor', 'a', 'distinctly', 'feminine', 'voice.', 'Ac-', 'cordingly,', 'I', 'shift', 'focus', 'from', '(female)', 'authors', 'to', 'texts', 'and', 'their', 'audi-', 'ences', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'trace', 'the', 'techniques', 'by', 'which', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'were', 'presented', 'as', 'appropriately', 'moralized', 'knowledge', 'about', '\"mod-', 'ern,\"', 'Christian', 'femininity.', '5.', 'Natalie', 'Zemon', 'Davis,', '\"Women\\'s', 'History', 'in', 'Transition:', 'The', 'European', 'Case,\"', 'Femi-', 'nist', 'Studies', '3', '(1976):', '83-103,', 'and', '\"Gender', 'and', 'Genre:', 'Women', 'as', 'Historical', 'Writers,', '1400-1820,\"', 'in', 'Beyond', 'Their', 'Sex:', 'Learned', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'European', 'Past,', 'ed.', 'Patricia', 'H.', 'La-', 'balme', '(New', 'York,', '1980),', 'pp.', '153-82;', 'Kathryn', 'Kish', 'Sklar,', '\"American', 'Female', 'Historians', 'in', 'Context,', '1770-1930,\"', 'Feminist', 'Studies', '3', '(1975):', '171-84;', 'and', 'Bonnie', 'Smith,', '\"The', 'Con-', 'tribution', 'of', 'Women', 'to', 'Modern', 'Historiography', 'in', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'France,', 'and', 'the', 'United', 'States,', '1750-1940,\"', 'American', 'Historical', 'Review', '89', '(1984):', '709-32.', 'D.', 'R.', \"Woolf's\", 'work', 'on', 'women', 'historians', 'in', 'the', 'early', 'modern', 'period', 'promises', 'to', 'be', 'definitive;', 'see', '\"A', 'Feminist', 'Past?', 'Gender,', 'Genre,', 'and', 'Historical', 'Knowledge', 'in', 'England,', '1500-1800,\"', 'American', 'His-', 'torical', 'Review', '102', '(1997):', '645-79.', '6.', '[Margaret', 'Oliphant],', '\"Modern', 'Light', 'Literature-History,\"', \"Blackwood's\", 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine', '78', '(1855):', '437.', '7.', 'For', 'a', 'sampling', 'of', 'work', 'devoted', 'to', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women,', 'see', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '\"\\'This', 'Feminine', \"Preserve':\", 'Historical', 'Biographies', 'by', 'Victorian', 'Women,\"', 'Victorian', 'Studies', '38', '(1995):', '371-93;', 'Billie', 'Melman,', '\"Gender,', 'History,', 'and', 'Memory:', 'The', 'Invention', 'of', \"Women's\", 'Past', 'in', 'the', 'Nineteenth', 'and', 'Early', 'Twentieth', 'Centuries,\"', 'History', 'and', 'Memory', '5', '(1993):', '5-41;', 'and', 'Martha', 'Vicinus,', '\"Models', 'for', 'Public', 'Life:', 'Biographies', 'of', \"'Noble\", \"Women'\", 'for', 'Girls,\"', 'in', 'The', \"Girl's\", 'Own:', 'Cultural', 'Histories', 'of', 'the', 'Anglo-American', 'Girl,', '1830-', '1915,', 'ed.', 'Claudia', 'Nelson', 'and', 'Lynne', 'Vallone', '(Athens,', 'Ga.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '52-70.', 'Ronald', 'J.', \"Zboray's\", 'sampling', 'of', 'one', 'American', \"library's\", 'loan', 'lists', 'suggests', 'that', 'Agnes', \"Strickland's\", 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'ofEngland', 'was', 'nearly', 'as', 'popular', 'with', 'men', '(eleven', 'patrons)', 'as', 'women', '(sixteen', 'patrons);', 'see', '\"Reading', 'Patterns', 'in', 'Antebellum', 'America:', 'Evidence', 'in', 'the', 'Charge', 'Records', 'of', 'the', 'New', 'York', 'Society', 'Library,\"', 'Libraries', 'and', 'Culture', '26', '(1991):', '310,', '316-21.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '49', 'I', 'do', 'not', 'presume,', 'however,', 'that', 'these', 'texts', 'either', 'unproblematically', 'reflected', 'or', 'produced', 'Victorian', 'attitudes', 'about', 'gender', 'and', 'history.', 'In-', 'stead,', 'the', 'majority', 'of', 'them', 'constituted', 'a', '\"commercially', 'respectable\"', 'discourse', 'on', \"women's\", 'history', 'that', 'was', 'inflected', 'by', 'multiple', 'factors:', 'the', \"publisher's\", 'sense', 'of', 'marketplace', 'trends,', 'the', \"author's\", 'financial', 'mo-', 'tivations,', 'and', 'the', 'pedagogical', 'ideals', 'of', 'teachers', 'and', 'parents.', 'Writers', 'of', 'popular', \"women's\", 'history', 'were', 'appealing', 'to', 'an', 'audience', 'of', 'their', 'pub-', 'lishers', 'and', 'of', 'other', 'popular', 'writers', 'as', 'much', 'as', 'to', 'recreational', 'readers.8', 'This', 'commercially', 'respectable', 'discourse', 'presents', 'a', 'condensed', 'form', 'of', 'the', 'debate', 'about', \"women's\", 'roles', 'and', 'their', 'relation', 'to', 'historical', 'moments', 'and', 'to', 'historiography,', 'a', 'debate', 'that', 'writers', 'such', 'as', 'Eliot', 'or', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'could', 'invoke', 'and', 'rewrite', 'for', 'their', 'own', 'purposes.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'ultimately', 'appeared', 'as', 'an', 'easily', 'recogniz-', 'able', 'set', 'of', 'frameworks', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'either', 'to', 'consolidate', 'or', 'to', 'critique', \"woman's\", 'position', 'in', 'Victorian', 'culture.', 'The', 'best-known', 'histories', 'of', \"women's\", 'history,', 'such', 'as', 'those', 'by', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen', 'and', 'Billie', 'Melman,', 'read', 'these', 'works', 'as', 'either', 'secular', 'or', 'pro-', 'gressively', 'secularized.', 'By', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'religious', 'investments', 'of', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history,', 'I', 'show,', 'by', 'contrast,', 'how', 'certain', 'historians', 'and', 'polemicists', 'confronted', 'the', 'simultaneously', 'exemplary', 'and', 'poten-', 'tially', 'subversive', '\"woman', 'in', 'history,\"', 'thematizing', 'the', 'problems', 'of', 'knowledge', 'which', 'the', 'writing', 'and', 'reading', 'of', 'such', 'a', 'figure', 'entailed.', \"Women's\", 'historians', 'sought', 'to', 'isolate', 'the', 'moment', 'when', 'modern', 'fem-', 'ininity', 'would', 'become', 'identical', 'with', 'the', 'representations', 'of', 'ideal', 'femi-', 'nine', 'virtue', 'they', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'New', 'Testament;', 'their', 'narratives', 'pointed', 'toward', 'the', '(implicitly', 'or', 'explicitly', 'millennial)', 'time', 'when', 'femininity', 'would', 'coincide', 'with', 'its', 'original', 'ideal', 'and', 'thus', 'would', 'no', 'longer', 'require', 'historical', 'debate', 'and', 'representation.9', 'But', 'such', 'texts', 'point,', 'paradoxi-', 'cally,', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'ultimate', 'irrelevance', 'in', 'a', 'truly', 'Christian', 'world.', 'I', 'demonstrate', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'tried', 'to', 'define', 'a', 'mod-', 'ern', 'Protestant', 'historical', 'perspective', 'that', 'rendered', \"women's\", 'history', 'knowable', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place,', 'even', 'as', 'they', 'argued', 'that', 'a', 'modernity', 'dom-', 'inated', 'by', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Christian', 'faith', 'should', 'render', 'the', 'actual', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'anachronistic.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'elucidates', '8.', 'I', 'here', 'qualify', 'Jonathan', \"Rose's\", 'empirical', 'studies', 'of', 'reader', 'reception,', 'which', 'dem-', 'onstrate,', 'for', 'example,', 'that', '\"women\\'s', 'literature\"', 'was', 'often', 'unpopular', 'with', 'its', 'target', 'audience.', \"Rose's\", 'sweeping', 'formulations', 'do', 'not', 'quite', 'come', 'to', 'grips', 'with', 'the', 'problem', 'that', '\"women\\'s', 'literature\"', 'continued', 'to', 'be', 'produced', 'anyway.', 'See', '\"Rereading', 'the', 'En-', 'glish', 'Common', 'Reader:', 'A', 'Preface', 'to', 'a', 'History', 'of', 'Audiences,\"', 'Journal', 'of', 'the', 'History', 'of', 'Ideas', '53', '(1992):', '47-70.', '9.', 'E', 'R.', 'Ankersmit', 'has', 'identified', 'historicity', 'with', 'multiplying', 'explanatory', 'narratives;', 'when', 'a', 'subject', 'no', 'longer', 'generates', 'debate,', 'it', 'becomes', 'a', '\"thing\"', 'beyond', 'the', 'reach', 'of', 'both', 'interpretation', 'and', 'historiography.', 'See', 'History', 'and', 'Tropology:', 'The', 'Rise', 'and', 'Fall', 'of', 'Metaphor', '(Berkeley,', '1994),', 'pp.', '39,', '42.', '50', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'popular', 'ideas', 'about', 'how', 'gender', 'was', 'shaped', 'by', 'historical', 'conditions', 'and', 'how', 'this', 'shaping', 'could', 'be', 'appropriately', 'narrated,', 'clarifying', 'the', 'significance', 'of', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'for', 'Victorian', 'historiography', 'in', 'general', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'novel', 'in', 'particular.', 'The', 'preoccupation', 'with', 'the', 'social', 'implications', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history', 'hardly', 'originated', 'with', 'the', 'Victorians.', 'In', 'the', 'previous', 'century,', 'for', 'example,', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'featured', 'prominently', 'in', 'books', 'such', 'as', 'John', \"Millar's\", 'The', 'Origin', 'of', 'the', 'Distinction', 'of', 'Ranks', '(1779),', 'which', 'con-', 'nected', 'the', 'progress', 'of', \"woman's\", 'social', 'position', 'to', 'the', 'development', 'of', 'civilization', 'more', 'generally.10', 'Nevertheless,', 'the', 'Victorians', 'signifi-', 'cantly', 'revised', 'the', 'meaning', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'by', 'using', 'particular', 'genres,', 'theories', 'of', 'religious', 'development,', 'and', 'moral', 'justifications', 'for', 'historical', 'writing.', 'Indeed,', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'most', '\"Victorian\"', 'aspects', 'of', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'its', 'reactionary', 'generic', 'form.', 'The', 'exem-', 'plary', 'biographical', 'collection,', 'which', 'identifies', '\"virtuous\"', 'or', '\"vicious\"', 'historical', 'figures', 'for', 'the', \"reader's\", 'emulation', 'or', 'disapprobation,', 'signaled', 'a', 'Victorian', 'return', 'to', 'a', 'genre', 'of', 'medieval', 'and', 'Renaissance', 'encomiastic', 'literature', 'on', 'women.', 'Like', 'these', 'earlier', 'texts,', 'Victorian', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'were', 'in', 'their', 'starkest', 'form', 'lists', 'or', 'catalogs,', 'using', 'sheer', 'numbers', 'to', 'emphasize', \"woman's\", 'significance', 'in', 'history.\"', 'But', 'new', 'to', 'the', 'mid-nine-', 'teenth-century', 'version', 'of', 'this', 'genre', 'was', 'an', 'interest', 'in', 'how', \"woman's\", 'so-', 'cial', 'position', 'diagnosed', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'society', 'as', 'a', 'whole.', \"Women's\", 'history', 'became', 'popular', 'in', 'the', '1830s', 'as', 'a', 'commercial', 'ven-', 'ture,', 'fueled', 'by', 'new', 'improvements', 'in', 'print', 'technology', 'which', 'cheap-', 'ened', 'publication', 'costs.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'allied', 'their', 'writings', 'with', 'popular', 'didactic', 'literature', 'and', 'directed', 'their', 'work', 'at', 'consumers', 'of', 'conduct', 'books', 'and', 'popular', 'theology.', 'Most', 'authors', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'were', 'popularizers', 'who', 'worked', 'in', 'several', 'commercial', 'genres', 'at', 'once.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'the', 'best', 'known', 'and', 'most', 'respected', 'of', 'them,', 'published', 'not', 'only', 'lives', 'of', 'English', 'queens', 'but', 'also', 'historical', 'novels,', 'lives', 'of', 'bishops', 'and', 'bachelor', 'kings,', 'poetry,', \"children's\", 'history,', 'book', 'reviews,', 'and', 'periodical', 'articles.', 'With', 'the', 'rare', 'exception', 'of', 'origi-', 'nal', 'researchers', 'such', 'as', 'Strickland,', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'tied', 'the', 'quality', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'its', 'moral', 'efficacy', 'instead', 'of', 'its', 'schol-', 'arly', 'credentials.', 'Few', 'authors', 'were', 'quite', 'so', 'self-exculpatory', 'as', 'the', 'evan-', '10.', 'For', 'a', 'useful', 'introduction', 'to', \"Millar's\", 'thought', 'on', 'women,', 'see', 'Paul', 'Bowles,', '\"John', 'Millar,', 'the', 'Four-Stages', 'Theory,', 'and', \"Women's\", 'Position', 'in', 'Society,\"', 'History', 'of', 'Political', 'Economy', '16', '(1984):', '619-38.', '11.', 'For', 'further', 'background', 'on', 'the', 'earlier', 'traditions,', 'see', 'Pamela', 'Joseph', 'Benson,', 'The', 'Invention', 'of', 'the', 'Renaissance', 'Woman:', 'The', 'Challenge', 'of', 'Female', 'Independence', 'in', 'the', 'Literature', 'and', 'Thought', 'of', 'Italy', 'and', 'England', '(University', 'Park,', 'Pa.,', '1992);', 'Alcuin', 'Blamires,', 'The', 'Case', 'for', 'Women', 'in', 'Medieval', 'Culture', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Glenda', 'McLeod,', 'Virtue', 'and', 'Venom:', 'Catalogs', 'of', 'Women', 'from', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Renaissance', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1991).', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '51', 'gelical', 'conduct-book', 'writer', 'Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis,', 'who', 'excused', 'her', 'work', 'on', 'the', 'grounds', 'that', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'female', 'historians', 'potentially', 'offered', 'a', 'greater', '\"moral', '...', 'than', 'in', 'those', 'which', 'might', 'justly', 'be', 'preferred', 'for', 'merits', 'of', 'a', 'purely', 'historical', 'order,\"', 'but', 'Ellis', 'stands', 'out', 'only', 'in', 'admit-', 'ting', 'to', 'the', 'common', 'practice', 'of', 'elevating', 'moral', 'didacticism', 'over', 'factual', 'accuracy.12', 'In', 'pursuit', 'of', 'their', 'ostensibly', 'moral', 'priorities,', 'these', 'histo-', 'rians', 'foregrounded', 'the', 'individual', 'Great', 'Woman', 'and', 'her', 'spiritual', 'work.', 'Great', 'Women', 'were', 'most', 'commonly', 'written', 'up', 'in', 'biography', 'col-', 'lections', 'with', 'titles', 'such', 'as', 'Biographies', 'of', 'Good', 'Women,', 'The', 'Book', 'of', 'Noble', 'Englishwomen,', \"Folly's\", 'Queen,', 'or,', 'Women', 'Whose', 'Loves', 'Have', 'Ruled', 'the', 'World,', 'and', 'Lives', 'of', 'Twelve', 'Bad', 'Women.', 'These', 'biographical', 'collections', 'were', 'organized', 'in', 'a', 'variety', 'of', 'ways,', 'by', 'chronology,', 'themes', '(moral', '\"types\"),', 'or', 'antithetical', 'characters.', 'As', 'collective', 'narratives,', 'they', 'underscored', 'similarities', 'between', 'individual', \"women's\", 'biographies;', 'the', 'overall', 'story', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'emerged', 'by', 'emphasizing', 'moral', 'progress', 'and', 'the', 'increas-', 'ing', 'effect', 'of', \"women's\", '\"invisible\"', \"work.'3\", 'One', 'of', 'the', 'most', 'obvious', 'characteristics', 'of', 'these', 'biographies,', 'as', 'I', 'will', 'show', 'in', 'detail', 'later,', 'is', 'the', 'emptiness', 'of', 'the', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'they', 'present.', 'Evil', 'figures', 'lead', 'eventful', 'lives,', 'which', 'could', 'be', 'sensationalized', 'under', 'the', 'guise', 'of', 'morality-\"the', 'record', 'of', 'such', 'crimes,', 'though', 'it', 'raises', 'a', 'thrill', 'of', 'breathless', 'horror,', 'conveys', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'a', 'useful', 'lesson\"14-but', 'virtuous', 'lives', 'are', 'defined', 'by', 'internal', 'qualities', 'such', 'as', 'piety.', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'piety', '(which', 'all', 'women', 'can', 'emulate)', 'and', 'the', 'downgrading', 'of', 'unique', 'experiences', '(reserved', 'for', 'a', 'few)', 'democratize', 'virtue,', 'holding', 'out', 'a', 'morally', 'positive', 'but', 'historically', 'vacuous', 'equality', 'accessible', 'to', 'all.', 'Moral', 'concerns', 'dictated', 'a', 'focus', 'on', 'Judeo-Christian', 'women,', 'with', 'emphasis', 'on', '\"Christian.\"', 'Biblical', 'women', 'were', 'popular', 'subjects,', 'inspiring', 'dozens', 'of', 'books,', 'including', 'Francis', 'Augustus', \"Cox's\", 'Female', 'Scripture', 'Biography', '(1817),', 'Phineas', 'Camp', \"Headley's\", 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Bible', '(1850),', 'and', 'Harriet', 'Beecher', \"Stowe's\", 'Women', 'in', 'Sacred', 'History', '(1874).15', 'In', 'general,', \"women's\", 'histories', 'were', 'biased', 'toward', 'ecumenical', 'Protestant', 'examples,', 'although', 'individual', 'denominations,', 'particularly', 'the', 'Methodists,', 'often', 'produced', 'more', 'theologically', 'specific', 'works.', 'Catholicism', 'was', 'a', 'different', 'matter.', 'Despite', 'Catholic', 'emancipation', 'in', '12.', 'Mrs.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney]', 'Ellis,', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'Great', 'Men', '(London,', '1859),', 'p.', '70.', '13.', 'I', 'am', 'indebted', 'to', 'Annette', 'Wheeler', \"Cafarelli's\", 'extensive', 'analysis', 'of', 'how', 'collective', 'biographies', 'function', 'as', 'narratives', 'in', 'Prose', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Poets:', 'Romanticism', 'and', 'Biographi-', 'cal', 'Narrative', 'from', 'Johnson', 'to', 'DeQuincey', '(Philadelphia,', '1990).', '14.', 'Madame', '[Laure]', 'Junot,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Women', 'of', 'All', 'Countries', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '65.', '15.', 'Mary', 'de', 'Jong', 'has', 'discussed', 'books', 'on', 'biblical', 'women', 'as', 'a', 'separate', 'genre', 'in', '\"Dark-Eyed', 'Daughters:', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Popular', 'Portrayals', 'of', 'Biblical', 'Women,\"', \"Women's\", 'Studies', '19', '(1991):', '293-308.', '52', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', '1829,', 'British', 'Catholic', 'writers', 'produced', 'little', 'in', 'the', 'way', 'of', 'popular', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century', 'aside', 'from', 'some', 'hagiogra-', 'phies', '(e.g.,', 'J.', 'M.', \"Neale's\", 'Annals', 'of', 'Virgin', 'Saints', '[1846]),', 'and', 'Protestant', 'histories', 'were', 'often', 'profoundly', 'anti-Catholic', 'in', 'sentiment.', 'The', 'Vic-', 'torians', 'were', 'chary', 'of', 'representing', 'women', 'of', 'classical', 'antiquity,', 're-', 'garding', 'them', 'at', 'best', 'as', 'representatives', 'of', 'a', 'lower', 'virtue', 'and', 'at', 'worst', 'as', 'irretrievably', 'debauched', 'by', 'ancient', 'sexual', 'attitudes-in', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'one', 'sermon,', '\"darkened', 'and', 'degraded,', 'without', 'knowledge,', 'without', 'influence,', 'without', 'honor,', 'the', 'mere', 'drudge', 'of', 'society,', 'or', 'still', 'worse,', 'the', 'miserable', 'slave', 'of', 'sensual', 'passion.\\'\"16', 'Victorian', 'historiographical', 'thinking', 'had', 'a', 'special', 'place', 'for', 'narra-', 'tives', 'formed', 'out', 'of', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'short', 'lives.', 'Such', 'texts', 'bridged', 'political', 'history', 'and', 'fiction:', 'the', 'former', 'a', 'source', 'of', 'empirical', 'truth', 'and', 'a', 'key', 'to', 'Providence,', 'but', 'absorbed', 'with', 'wars', 'and', 'governments;', 'the', 'latter', 'a', 'potential', 'repository', 'of', 'universal', 'moral', 'truth,', 'but', 'also', 'liable', 'to', 'dan-', 'gerously', 'mislead', 'in', 'its', 'representations', 'of', '\"real', 'life.\"', 'In', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'an', 'anonymous', 'writer', 'calling', 'for', 'an', '\"English', 'Plutarch,\"', '\"we', 'want', 'a', 'work', 'that', 'shall', 'bring', 'before', 'us', 'in', 'a', 'moderate', 'compass', 'an', 'outline', 'of', 'the', 'ac-', 'tions', 'and', 'fortunes', 'of', 'those', 'persons', 'who', 'have', 'stamped', 'on', 'it', 'or', 'em-', 'bodied', 'in', 'themselves', 'its', 'most', 'characteristic', 'features,', 'and', 'who', 'seem', 'to', 'us,', 'when', 'we', 'are', 'acquainted', 'with', 'their', 'history,', 'most', 'typical', 'of', 'all', 'that', 'we', 'mean', 'by', 'English.\"\\'7', 'As', 'personalized', 'history,', 'these', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'miniaturize', 'and', 'contain', '\"Englishness\"', 'in', 'a', 'comprehensible,', 'accessible', 'form.', 'The', 'distinguished', 'subjects', 'of', 'biographical', 'history', 'de-', 'serve', 'historical', 'treatment,', 'yet', 'the', 'virtues', 'that', 'make', 'them', 'great', 'are', 'in', 'fact', 'endemic', 'to', 'English', 'character.', 'An', 'English', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'articu-', 'late', 'both', 'the', 'formation', 'of', 'modern', 'Englishness', 'and', 'its', 'apparently', 'transhistorical', 'character.', 'And', 'with', 'some', 'necessary', 'modifications,', 'a', 'female', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'undertake', 'a', 'similar', 'project', 'for', 'women.', 'Writers', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'argued', 'that', 'narrative', 'events', 'and', 'their', 'impact', 'on', 'the', 'reader', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'evaluated', 'according', 'to', 'their', 'potential', 'for', 'producing', 'greater', 'moral', 'goods.', 'Biographical', 'history,', 'it', 'was', 'claimed,', 'downplayed', 'the', 'evils', 'of', 'political', 'history', 'while', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'moral', 'qualities', 'of', 'private', 'experience.', 'In', 'the', 'late', '1820s,', 'one', 'anonymous', 'biog-', 'rapher', 'wrote', 'that', 'while', 'history-that', 'is,', 'the', 'story', 'of', 'kings', 'and', 'queens,', '16.', 'J.', 'E', 'Stearns,', 'Female', 'Influence,', 'and', 'the', 'True', 'Christian', 'Mode', 'of', 'Its', 'Exercise:', 'A', 'Discourse', 'Delivered', 'in', 'the', 'First', 'Presbyterian', 'Church', 'in', 'Newburyport,', 'July', '30,', '1837', '(Newburyport,', 'Mass.,', '1837),', 'p.', '12.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'James', 'Donaldson', 'signals', 'his', 'feminist', 'leanings', 'by', 'prais-', 'ing', 'the', 'treatment', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'antiquity', 'over', 'that', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era.', 'Most', 'germane', 'is', 'the', 'last', 'in', 'his', 'series', 'of', 'five', 'essays,', '\"The', 'Position', 'of', 'Women', 'Among', 'the', 'Early', 'Christians,\"', 'Contemporary', 'Review', '56', '(1889):', '433-51.', 'Similarly,', 'see', 'B.', 'W.', 'Ball,', '\"Woman\\'s', 'Rights', 'in', 'Ancient', 'Athens,\"', 'Atlantic', 'Monthly', '27', '(1871):', '273-86.', '17.', '\"English', 'Biography,\"', 'Saturday', 'Review', '9', '(1860):', '301.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '53', 'wars', 'and', 'politics-\"too', 'often', 'presents', 'a', 'frightful', 'tissue', 'of', 'crimes', 'and', 'horrors,\"', 'biography', '\"frequently', 'reflects', 'from', 'its', 'calm', 'and', 'polished', 'sur-', 'face,', 'every', 'thing', 'that', 'is', 'excellent,', 'lovely,', 'and', 'of', 'good', 'report\"-an', 'echo', 'of', 'Philippians', '1:4-8,', 'here', 'used', 'to', 'represent', 'biography', 'as', 'the', 'supreme', 'repository', 'of', 'Christian', 'knowledge', 'and', 'an', 'incitement', 'to', 'greater', 'spirituality.', 'Is', 'In', 'this', 'revision', 'of', 'the', '\"mirror', 'of', 'history\"', 'topos,', 'horror', 'becomes', 'a', 'manifold', 'response:', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'evil', 'represented', 'in', 'his-', 'torical', 'narrative;', 'it', 'is', 'also', 'the', 'magnitude', 'of', 'implication', 'that', 'envelops', 'the', 'very', 'narrative', 'structure', '(the', '\"frightful', 'tissue\")', 'in', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'the', 'events', 'it', 'describes.', 'By', 'transforming', 'history', 'into', 'a', 'record', 'of', 'private', 'virtues,', 'the', 'biographical', 'narrative', 'seems', 'to', 'offer', 'the', 'most', 'efficient', 'method', 'for', 'eradicating', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation:', 'both', 'the', 'evils', 'represented', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'evil', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'wrought', 'on', 'unsuspecting', 'minds', 'by', 'the', 'reading', 'of', 'history.', 'Even', 'more', 'specifically,', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'of', 'women', 'with', 'no', 'other', 'claim', 'to', 'fame', 'than', 'their', 'spiritual', 'qualities', 'were', 'elevated', 'above', 'narratives', 'of', 'queens', 'and', 'concubines.', 'As', 'Stickney', 'Ellis', 'had', 'claimed,', '\"there', 'is', 'in', 'private', 'life', 'a', 'kind', 'of', 'heroism,', 'which', 'the', 'greater', 'part', 'of', 'men', 'pay', 'no', 'attention,', 'and', 'which', 'frequently', 'is', 'more', 'deserving', 'our', 'eulogiums', 'than', 'the', 'greatest', 'actions:', 'it', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'among', 'many', 'women,', 'whose', 'virtues,', 'without', 'ostentation,', 'only', 'make', 'themselves', 'noticed', 'in', 'the', 'inte-', 'rior', 'of', 'their', 'houses.\"19', 'When', 'translated', 'into', 'historical', 'practice,', \"Ellis's\", 'vision', 'of', 'a', 'female', 'heroism', 'everywhere', 'but', 'invisible', 'was', 'easily', 'assimi-', 'lated', 'into', 'the', 'moral', 'doctrine', 'of', 'Christian', 'humility.', 'If,', 'as', 'another', 'anon-', 'ymous', 'writer', 'explained,', 'the', 'world', '\"can', 'know', 'next', 'to', 'nothing', 'of', 'its', 'noblest', 'women\"', 'because', '\"her', 'highest', 'achievements', 'consist', 'in', 'the', 'per-', 'formance', 'of', 'the', 'lowliest', 'duties,', 'and', 'her', 'costliest', 'sacrifices', 'are', 'offered', 'out', 'of', 'the', \"'unseen\", 'treasure', 'of', 'her', 'heart\\',\"', 'still', 'it', 'is', 'occasionally', 'possible', 'to', 'memorialize', '\"the', 'names', 'of', 'those', 'whose', 'greatest', 'work', 'was', 'carried', 'on', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'hearts,', 'and', 'whose', 'fame', 'rose', 'highest', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'homes.\"20', 'Such', 'biographical', 'histories', 'elevated', 'the', 'invisible', 'work', 'of', 'the', 'meek', 'over', 'the', 'spectacular', 'doings', 'of', 'the', 'powerful,', 'inverting', 'the', 'po-', 'litical', \"historian's\", 'priorities', 'by', 'making', 'Christian', 'virtue', 'and', 'not', 'political', 'acumen', 'the', 'prime', 'mover', 'in', 'national', 'life.', 'If', 'politics', 'produced', 'a', \"reader's\", 'horrified', 'reaction', 'or,', 'worse,', 'seduced', 'the', 'reader', 'into', 'worldly', 'ways,', 'bio-', 'graphical', 'histories', 'of', 'good', 'women', 'quieted', 'the', \"reader's\", 'spiritual', 'anxi-', 'eties', 'while', 'providing', 'alternative', 'models', 'of', 'historical', 'greatness.', '18.', 'Selected', 'Female', 'Biography:', 'Comprising', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'British', 'Ladies,', 'Derived', 'from', 'Original', 'and', 'Other', 'Authentic', 'Sources,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1829),', 'p.', '22.', 'My', 'thanks', 'to', 'Janel', 'Mueller', 'for', 'calling', 'this', 'biblical', 'allusion', 'to', 'my', 'attention.', '19.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis],', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'England:', 'Their', 'Influence', 'and', 'Responsibility', '(London,', '1843),', 'p.', '153.', '20.', 'The', 'Home-Life', 'of', 'English', 'Ladies', 'in', 'the', 'XVIIth', 'Century', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', 'iii-iv.', '54', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'Conjoining', 'biography', 'and', 'history', 'offered', 'a', 'best-of-both-worlds', 'op-', 'portunity,', 'for', \"women's\", 'history', 'embraced', 'both', 'pain', 'and', 'eventual,', 'sanctified', 'pleasure', 'as', 'a', 'means', 'of', 'inspiring', 'spiritual', 'emulation.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'a', 'devotional', 'writer', 'and', 'author', 'of', 'biographical', 'collections', 'de-', 'voted', 'to', 'biblical', 'women,', 'modeled', 'the', 'interpretation', 'of', 'exemplarity', 'with', 'a', 'mock-biblical', 'illustration.', 'His', 'protagonist,', 'Rachel,', '\"proved', 'to', 'herself,', 'that', 'she', 'was', 'not', 'a', 'Miriam,', 'but', 'in', 'her', 'sin', 'and', 'punishment\";', 'nevertheless,', '\"still', 'the', 'parallel', 'haunted', 'her.', 'It', 'was', 'a', 'case', 'in', 'point,', 'so', 'far', 'as', 'their', 'sin', 'and', 'sentence', 'were', 'alike:-and', 'might', 'not', 'their', 'pardon', 'be', 'alike', 'too?\"21', 'By', 'identifying', 'her', 'difference', 'from', 'Miriam,', 'Rachel', 'lo-', 'cates', 'a', 'point', 'of', 'negative', 'similarity.', 'Then,', 'she', 'moves', 'to', 'a', 'positive', 'mo-', 'ment', 'of', 'future', 'identification', 'by', 'recognizing', 'that', 'true', 'repentance', 'and', 'submission', 'to', 'God', 'may', 'be', 'rewarded', 'by', 'the', 'cure', 'of', 'physical', 'leprosy', '(the', 'outward', 'signifier', 'for', 'curing', 'spiritual', 'leprosy).', \"Philip's\", 'model', 'stresses', 'that', 'the', 'reader', 'must', 'work', 'through', 'the', 'sense', 'of', 'an', 'absolute', 'difference', 'between', 'a', 'past', 'exemplar', 'and', \"one's\", 'present', 'self', 'to', 'find', 'some', 'analogy', 'between', 'the', 'two;', 'but', 'this', 'stage', 'is', 'only', 'a', 'preliminary', 'to', 'realiz-', 'ing', 'the', 'transformational', 'potential', 'of', 'analogizing', 'for', 'both', 'Rachel', '(the', 'fictional', 'reader)', 'and', 'the', 'actual', 'reader', 'of', 'the', 'text.', 'The', 'primary', 'bene-', 'fit', 'of', 'interpreting', 'an', 'exemplary', 'figure', 'lies', 'in', 'ascertaining', 'the', 'condi-', 'tions', 'for', 'spiritual', 'change,', 'which', 'apprises', 'the', 'female', 'reader', 'of', 'her', 'place', 'in', \"God's\", 'divine', 'plan.', 'Thus,', 'despite', 'connotations', 'of', 'immediacy', 'and', 'perfect', 'clarity', 'in', 'the', '\"mirror\"', 'image,', \"women's\", 'history', 'validates', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'interpretation', 'by', 'stressing', 'the', \"reader's\", 'ability', 'to', 'reconcile', 'potentially', 'distressing', 'facts', 'with', 'providential', 'truths.', 'Profane', '(secular)', 'history', 'and,', 'as', 'we', 'shall', 'see,', 'anomalous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'morally', 'dan-', 'gerous', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'reader', 'who', 'seeks', 'to', 'interpret', 'them', 'be-', 'comes', 'involved', 'in', 'a', 'morass', 'of', 'detail', 'that', 'obscures', 'all', 'correlation', 'between', 'individual', 'or', 'event', 'and', 'divine', 'truth.', 'Questions', 'of', 'proper', 'reading', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'and', 'the', 'kinds', 'of', 'spiritual', 'pleasures', 'to', 'be', 'derived', 'from', 'them,', 'were', 'key', 'to', 'defining', 'the', 'modern', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historian.', 'The', 'perspec-', 'tive', 'was', 'modern', 'in', 'two', 'senses:', 'that', 'of', 'the', \"writer's\", '\"now\"', 'and', 'its', 'spiri-', 'tual,', 'political,', 'and', 'social', 'differences', 'from', 'other', 'ages', '(or', 'other', 'nations);', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'era,', 'which', 'also', 'defined', 'the', '\"modern\"', 'of', 'Modern', 'History', 'in', 'the', 'university', 'curricula', 'of', 'Oxford', 'and', 'Cambridge.', 'Wondering', '(disingenuously)', '\"why', 'woman', 'has', 'never', 'found', 'an', 'histo-', 'rian,\"', 'one', 'anonymous', 'American', 'proclaimed', 'that', '\"the', 'historian', 'of', 'Women,', 'will', 'be', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'his', 'kind,', 'and', 'not', 'of', 'his', \"kind's\", 'tyrants.', '21.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'The', 'Marthas:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Varieties', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety,', '3d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1836),', 'p.', '107.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '55', 'He', 'will', 'trace', 'the', 'growth', 'of', 'civilization,', 'refinement,', 'religion,', 'and', 'all', 'that', 'is', 'good', 'and', 'beautiful.\"22', 'If', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'woman', 'must', 'treat', 'the', '\"good', 'and', 'beautiful,\"', 'then', 'he', '(or', 'she)', 'will', 'necessarily', 'portray', 'the', 'cu-', 'mulative', 'moment', 'of', 'goodness', 'and', 'beauty', 'that', 'marks', 'both', 'the', \"writer's\", 'position', 'and', 'the', \"narrative's\", 'closure.', 'As', 'the', 'foregoing', 'quotation', 'sug-', 'gests,', 'this', 'moment', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'by', 'analyzing', 'the', 'modern,', 'femi-', 'nine,', 'and', 'above', 'all', '(Protestant)', 'Christian', 'subject.', 'In', 'privileging', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'specifically', 'historical', 'frame', 'of', 'refer-', 'ence,', 'the', \"women's\", 'historians', 'engaged', 'with', 'a', 'theory', 'of', 'progress', 'that', 'permeated', 'the', 'historiography', 'of', 'figures', 'such', 'as', 'Thomas', 'Arnold,', 'Gold-', 'win', 'Smith,', 'and', 'William', 'Stubbs.23', 'For', 'these', 'scholars,', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'was', 'an', 'organic', 'whole,', 'and', 'all', 'events', 'within', 'it', 'fostered', 'progress', 'toward', 'an', 'ultimate', 'perfection', 'originally', 'envisioned', 'in', 'the', 'lessons', 'of', 'sacred', 'history.', 'Christianity', 'was', 'conceived', 'as', 'an', 'inner', 'life', 'force', 'that', 'both', 'shaped', 'the', 'experience', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'and,', 'as', 'Stubbs', 'said,', '\"cuts', 'it', 'off', 'from', 'the', 'death', 'of', 'the', 'past.\"24', 'What', 'Stubbs', 'meant', 'by', '\"death\"', 'was', 'that', 'Christianity', 'provided', 'a', 'historical', 'standpoint', 'from', 'which', 'the', 'ancient', 'world', 'could', 'be', 'impartially', 'studied', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'marked', 'an', 'absolute', 'break', 'between', 'the', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'worlds;', 'morally', 'and', 'politically', 'speaking,', 'antiquity', 'has', 'no', 'effect', 'on', 'modern', 'historical', 'events', 'or', 'even', 'modern', 'values.', '\"Death\"', 'is', 'thus', 'a', 'figure', 'for', 'the', 'absolute', 'difference', 'of', 'one', 'period', 'from', 'the', 'next.', 'The', 'absence', 'of', 'Christianity', 'produces', 'national', 'stasis', 'or', 'degeneration,', 'whereas,', 'as', 'one', 'theologian', 'argued,', '\"in', 'so', 'far..,', '.as', 'Christianity', 'becomes', 'the', 'ruling', 'principle', 'of', 'any', 'nation,', 'the', 'death,', 'or', 'utter', 'extinction', 'of', 'that', 'nation', 'is', 'impossible.\"25', 'A', 'dead', 'nation', 'is', 'one', 'exiled', 'from', 'modernity', 'and', 'from', 'change.', 'This', 'academic', 'argument', 'became', 'part', 'of', 'a', 'popular', 'interpretation', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispensation', 'that', 'provided', \"women's\", 'history', 'with', 'its', 'most', 'forcefully', 'articulated', 'scheme', 'of', 'periodization.', 'In', 'an', 'early', 'essay', 'on', 'this', 'subject,', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox', 'explained', 'that', 'his', 'system', '\"was', 'first', 'to', 'exhibit', 'a', 'complete', 'series', 'of', 'illustrations,', 'derived', 'from', 'a', 'view', 'of', 'the', 'circumstances', 'of', 'mankind', 'as', 'destitute', 'of', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'revelation,', 'and', 'then', 'to', 'compare', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'under', 'the', 'in-', 'fluence', 'of', 'a', 'precursory', 'and', 'imperfect', 'system', 'of', 'the', 'true', 'religion,', 'with', '22.', '\"Woman:', 'A', 'Rhapsody,\"', 'Western', 'Monthly', 'Magazine', '1', '(1833):', '40.', '23.', 'For', 'the', 'most', 'extensive', 'treatment', 'of', 'Arnold', 'and', 'the', 'Christian', 'aspects', 'of', 'early', 'Victorian', 'historiography,', 'see', 'Duncan', 'Forbes,', 'The', 'Liberal', 'Anglican', 'Idea', 'of', 'History', '(Cam-', 'bridge,', '1952).', '24.', 'William', 'Stubbs,', '\"Inaugural,\"', 'in', 'Seventeen', 'Lectures', 'on', 'the', 'Study', 'of', 'Medieval', 'and', 'Mod-', 'ern', 'History', 'and', 'Kindred', 'Subjects...', '(1866;', 'reprint,', 'New', 'York,', '1967),', 'p.', '15.', '25.', 'Rev.', 'W.', 'Maxwell', 'Herington,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Fulness', 'of', 'Time', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '376.', '56', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'their', 'actual', 'state,', 'or', 'with', 'the', 'privileges', 'secured', 'to', 'them', 'by', 'the', 'nobler', 'manifestations', 'of', 'CHRISTIANITY.\"26', 'For', 'Cox,', \"woman's\", 'social', 'position', 'was', 'determined', 'not', 'by', 'material,', 'economic', 'forces', 'but', 'by', 'the', 'state', 'of', 're-', 'ligion.', 'Not', 'surprisingly,', 'periodization', 'became', 'a', 'central', 'issue', 'for', 'those', 'who', 'wanted', 'to', 'draw', 'upon', \"women's\", 'history', 'for', 'political', 'purposes.', 'In', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', '(1869),', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'argues', 'that', 'while', '\"the', 'slavery', 'of', 'the', 'male', 'sex', 'has,', 'in', 'all', 'countries', 'of', 'Christian', 'Europe', 'at', 'least', '...', 'been', 'at', 'length', 'abolished,', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'has', 'been', 'gradually', 'changed', 'into', 'a', 'milder', 'form', 'of', 'dependence,\"', 'this', 'depen-', 'dence', 'is', 'not', '\"an', 'original', 'institution\"', 'emerging', 'from', 'Christian', 'think-', 'ing.', 'Instead,', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'women', 'is', '\"the', 'primitive', 'condition', 'lasting', 'on,', 'through', 'successive', 'mitigations', 'and', 'modifications', 'occasioned', 'by', 'the', 'same', 'causes', 'which', 'have', 'softened', 'the', 'general', 'manners,', 'and', 'brought', 'all', 'human', 'relations', 'more', 'under', 'the', 'control', 'of', 'justice', 'and', 'influence', 'of', 'humanity.\"27', 'Mill', 'refuses', 'to', 'periodize', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'moment', 'of', 'decisive', 'difference', 'in', \"women's\", 'history.', 'If', '\"Christian', 'Europe\"', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'the', 'modern', 'world,', 'then', 'the', 'persistence', 'of', 'what', 'Mills', 'calls', 'female', 'slavery', 'is', 'a', 'pagan', 'anachronism.', 'As', 'possessors', 'of', 'liberty,', 'men', 'enter', 'into', 'modernity;', 'in', 'continuing', 'to', 'live', 'as', 'slaves,', 'women', 'are', 'trapped', 'in', 'the', 'remnants', 'of', 'what', 'the', 'Victorians', 'considered', 'primitive', 'culture.', \"Women's\", 'equality', 'would', 'thus', 'redress', 'an', 'injustice', 'in', 'the', 'defini-', 'tion', 'of', 'modernity', 'itself.', 'Mill', 'here', 'does', 'not', 'refute', 'but', 'rather', 'builds', 'upon', 'more', 'conservative', 'interpretations', 'of', \"women's\", 'history.', 'For', 'example,', 'a', 'conservative', 'oppo-', 'nent,', 'Fanny', 'Kortright,', 'agreed', 'with', 'the', 'proposition', 'that', 'paganism', 'was', 'the', 'source', 'of', '\"modern\"', 'female', 'slavery;', 'but', 'she', 'crucially', 'differed', 'from', 'Mill', 'in', 'her', 'use', 'of', 'Christianity', 'to', 'periodize', \"women's\", 'history', 'there-', 'after.', 'Greek', 'and', 'Roman', 'women,', 'Kortright', 'explained,', 'were', '\"virtually', 'enslaved,\"', 'the', '\"supposed', 'soulless,', 'mindless', 'toys', 'of', 'their', 'capricious', 'masters.\"28', 'Kortright', 'identifies', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'being', 'under', 'imper-', 'fect', 'human', 'law', '(\"capricious\")', 'with', 'female', 'objectification;', 'by', 'contrast,', 'historical', 'progress', 'occurs', 'only', 'when', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'understand', 'true', 'freedom', 'as', 'submission', 'to', 'divine', 'law.', 'With', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispen-', 'sation,', 'woman', 'emerged', 'from', '\"her', 'sepulchre\"-invoking', 'the', 'Resur-', 'rection', 'while', 'equating', 'pre-Christian', \"women's\", 'history', 'with', 'death-in', 'order', 'to', 'become', '\"no', 'longer', 'his', 'slave,', 'but', 'his', 'aid;', 'not', 'his', 'rival,', 'but', 'his', 'co-adjutor;', 'to', 'work', 'and', 'labour', 'hand-in-hand', 'with', 'him,', 'for', 'the', 'glory', '26.', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox,', '\"Essay', 'on', 'what', 'Christianity', 'has', 'done', 'for', 'Women,\"', 'in', 'Fe-', 'male', 'Scripture', 'Biography:', 'Including', 'an', 'Essay', 'on', 'What', 'Christianity', 'has', 'Done', 'for', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1817),', '2:lxvii-lxviii', '(emphases', 'in', 'the', 'original).', '27.', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill,', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'On', 'Liberty', 'with', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', 'and', 'Chapters', 'on', 'Socialism,', 'ed.', 'Stefan', 'Collini', '(1869;', 'reprint,', 'Cambridge,', '1989),', 'p.', '123.', '28.', '[Fanny', 'Kortright],', 'The', 'True', 'Rights', 'of', 'Women,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '2.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '57', 'and', 'honour', 'and', 'happiness', 'of', 'humanity.\\'\"29', 'Kortright', 'here', 'reminds', 'her', 'readers', 'that', 'this', 'Christian', 'rebirth', 'of', 'womanhood', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'rebirth', 'into', 'individuality', 'and', 'a', 'new', 'dispensation', 'of', 'separate', 'spheres', 'with', 'equal', 'labor.', 'Her', 'interpretation', 'of', 'her', 'female', 'contemporaries,', 'however,', 're-', 'invokes', \"Mill's\", '\"paganism\":', '\"The', 'chief', 'objects', 'in', 'the', 'dress', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'children', 'now,', 'appear', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'what', 'Captain', 'Cook', 'found', 'in', 'his', 'day', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'principal', 'things', 'eagerly', 'sought', 'for', 'by', 'primitive', 'sav-', 'ages-feathers', 'and', 'beads!', '...', 'O', 'woman,', 'woman!', 'How', 'art', 'thou', 'fallen', 'since', 'the', 'day', 'when', 'thy', 'best', 'adorning', 'was', 'the', 'glory', 'of', 'innocence,', 'and', 'thy', 'loveliest', 'vestment', 'Christ-like', 'deeds', 'of', 'charity!\\'\"30', 'Modern', 'female', 'degradation', 'here', 'results', 'not', 'from', 'material', 'oppression', 'but', 'instead', 'from', 'spiritual', 'apostasy:', 'resisting', 'the', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'gendered', 'division', 'of', 'labor', 'in', 'favor', 'of', 'self-serving', 'goals.', \"Kortright's\", 'historical', 'rhetoric', 'closely', 'connects', 'Christianity', 'and', 'mod-', 'ern', 'femininity', 'in', 'a', 'manner', 'typical', 'of', 'representations', 'of', \"women's\", 'prog-', 'ress', 'from', 'the', 'late', 'teens', 'into', 'the', '1880s.', 'Collapsing', 'time', 'and', 'space', 'through', 'parallels', 'between', 'ancient', 'history', 'and', 'modern', 'paganism,', 'the', 'plot', 'of', 'Christian', 'progress', 'figured', 'historical', 'developments', 'as', 'freedom', 'from', 'enslavement', 'to', 'the', 'body.', 'Women', 'living', 'outside', 'of', 'Christianity', 'are', 'subjected', 'to', 'a', 'law', 'defined', 'by', 'male', 'desire', 'instead', 'of', 'divine', 'fiat;', 'yet', 'without', 'spiritual', 'enlightenment,', 'women', 'are', 'incapable', 'of', 'under-', 'standing', 'their', 'own', 'misery.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Christianity', 'enables', 'female', 'self-consciousness', 'while', 'producing', 'a', 'new', 'historical', 'consciousness.', 'Thus,', 'Isaac', 'Reeve', 'calls', 'attention', 'to', 'pagan', 'women', 'who', 'are', '\"illiterate,', 'despised,', 'half', 'unsexed', 'or', 'half', 'unsouled.\"', 'Feminine', 'subjectivity', 'is', 'con-', 'joined', 'with', 'access', 'to', 'books', 'and,', 'therefore,', 'to', 'the', 'Book', '(although', 'access', 'to', 'modern', 'novels', 'might', 'be', 'more', 'problematic).', 'In', 'contrast', 'to', 'lives', 'or-', 'ganized', 'by', '\"human', 'necessity,\"', 'Reeve', 'argues', 'that', '\"in', 'such', 'proportion', 'to', 'each', 'other', 'are', 'the', 'religion', 'of', 'the', 'Gospel', 'and', 'the', 'emancipation', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex,', 'that', 'their', 'liberty', 'is', 'precisely', 'raised', 'accordingly', 'as', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'Christianity', 'is', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'obscure', 'in', 'the', 'various', 'countries', 'of', 'Europe.\"3\\'1', 'Modernity', 'is', 'retrospectively', 'defined', 'by', 'the', 'numbers', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'can', 'be', '\"perceived\"', 'by', 'the', 'historian', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'by', 'their', 'qual-', 'ity', 'of', 'life:', 'from', 'the', \"historian's\", 'viewpoint,', \"woman's\", 'social', 'condition', 'is', 'translated', 'from', 'an', 'amorphous,', 'unreadable', 'mass', 'into', 'the', 'realm', 'of', 'virtually', 'statistical', 'clarity.', 'Drawing', 'upon', 'the', 'apologetics', 'of', 'Christian', 'superiority,', 'in', 'which', 'Gospel', 'knowledge', '\"has', 'placed', 'men', 'in', 'a', 'new', 'situ-', 'ation:', 'by', 'discovering', 'to', 'them', 'relations', 'not', 'before', 'apprehended,', 'by', '29.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '4.', '30.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '31.', '31.', '[Isaac]', 'Reeve,', 'An', 'Essay', 'on', 'the', 'Comparative', 'Intellect', 'of', 'Woman,', 'and', 'Her', 'Little', 'Recog-', 'nised', 'but', 'Resistless', 'Influence', 'on', 'the', 'Moral,', 'Religious,', 'and', 'Political', 'Prosperity', 'of', 'a', 'Nation,', '2d', 'ed.', '(Hounslow,', '1849),', 'pp.', '12-13.', '58', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'opening', 'to', 'them', 'prospects', 'not', 'before', 'known,', 'by', 'awakening', 'faculties', 'not', 'before', 'exercised,\"', 'John', 'Bird', 'Sumner', 'identifies', 'the', 'Christian', 'rea-', 'soner', 'as', 'one', 'who', 'sees,', 'by', 'the', '\"light\"', 'of', 'revelation,', 'that', 'women', 'possess', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'with', 'men.32', 'Yet', 'the', '\"light\"', 'works', 'in', 'the', 'opposite', 'di-', 'rection:', 'the', 'pagan', 'woman', 'is', 'not', 'only', 'in', 'spiritual', 'darkness', 'but', 'also', 'in', 'historical', 'darkness,', 'invisible', 'to', 'the', \"interpreter's\", 'eye.', 'The', 'spiritual', 'rebirth', 'enabled', 'by', 'Christianity', 'makes', 'masculine', 'fasci-', 'nation', 'with', 'female', 'sensuality', 'itself', 'historically', 'anachronistic.', 'Chris-', \"tianity's\", 'progress', 'produces', 'a', 'new', 'morality', 'of', 'love', 'in', 'place', 'of', 'violence,', 'a', 'morality', 'grounded', 'by', 'an', 'interior', '\"deep\"', 'self', 'and', 'a', 'sense', 'of', 'the', 'indi-', 'vidual', 'as', 'an', 'entity', 'separate', 'from', 'the', 'polity.', 'British', '(and', 'often', 'Ameri-', 'can)', 'Protestants', 'therefore', 'argued', 'that', 'true', 'femininity', 'and', 'true', 'female', 'equality', 'were', 'both', 'fully', 'constituted', 'under', 'the', 'Christian', 'moral', 'law', 'set', 'forth', 'in', 'Scripture.', 'As', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard', 'argued', 'in', 'one', 'sermon,', 'with', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'Christianity', '\"physical', 'power,\"', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'body,', 'was', 'transcended', 'by', 'feminine', '\"moral', 'power,\"', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'mind;', 'such', 'moral', 'power', 'was', 'distinguished', 'from', 'martial', 'conquest', 'by', 'the', '\"voluntary\"', 'nature', 'of', \"society's\", 'subjection', 'to', 'it.33', 'True', 'female', 'equality', 'was', 'therefore', 'not', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'power', 'understood', 'in', 'mundane', 'political', 'terms,', 'but', 'instead', 'of', \"woman's\", 'accession', 'to', 'her', 'own', 'peculiar', 'form', 'of', 'spiritual', 'power,', 'delegated', 'to', 'her', 'by', 'Christian', 'societies.', 'But', 'to', 'be', 'a', '\"modern', 'woman,\"', 'with', 'the', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'which', 'that', 'state', 'entails,', 'is', 'not', 'simply', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'existing', 'in', 'a', 'particular', 'time', 'and', 'space;', 'instead,', 'one', 'becomes', 'modern', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'biblical', 'text', 'through', 'conver-', 'sion.', 'By', 'extension,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'periodized', 'as', 'an', 'ongoing', 'cultural', 'conversion,', 'echoing', 'the', 'evangelical', 'emphasis', 'on', 'conversion', 'as', 'the', 'central', 'event', 'of', 'human', 'life.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', \"Hale's\", 'gigantic', \"Woman's\", 'Record', 'makes', 'the', 'stakes', 'clear:', '\"But', 'this', '[moral]', 'improvement', 'is', 'only', 'where', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'and', 'its', 'authority', 'acknowledged.', 'The', 'Chinese', 'nation', 'cannot', 'advance', 'in', 'moral', 'culture', 'while', 'their', 'women', 'are', 'consigned', 'to', 'ignorance', 'and', 'imbecility:', 'the', 'nations', 'of', 'the', 'East', 'are', 'slaves', 'to', 'sensuality', 'and', 'sin,', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'to', 'foreign', 'masters!', 'and', 'thus', 'they', 'must', 'remain', 'till', 'Christianity,', 'breaking', 'the', 'fetters', 'of', 'polygamy', 'from', 'the', 'female', 'sex,', 'shall', 'give', 'to', 'the', 'mothers', 'of', 'men', 'freedom,', 'educa-', 'tion,', 'and', 'influence.\"34', 'Christianity', 'educates', 'true', 'believers', 'in', 'the', 'eth-', 'ics', 'of', 'sexual', 'behavior,', 'subordinating', 'mere', 'sensuality', 'to', 'the', 'higher', 'goal', 'of', 'spiritual', 'union', 'in', 'monogamous', 'marriage.', 'Only', 'when', 'this', 'spiritual', '32.', 'Rev.', 'J[ohn]', 'B[ird]', 'Sumner,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Evidence', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Derived', 'from', 'its', 'Na-', 'ture', 'and', 'Reception', '(Philadelphia,', '1825),', 'p.', '113.', '33.', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard,', 'The', 'Moral', 'Power', 'of', 'Women', '...', '(Louth,', '1844),', 'p.', '8.', '34.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale,', \"Woman's\", 'Record;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'All', 'Distinguished', 'Women,', 'From', 'the', 'Creation', 'to', 'A.D.', '1854:', 'Arranged', 'in', 'Four', 'Eras,', 'with', 'Selections', 'from', 'Female', 'Writers', 'of', 'Every', 'Age,', '2d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1860),', 'p.', '157.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '59', 'enlightenment', 'is', 'achieved', 'can', 'nations', 'enter', 'into', 'modern', 'history.', 'Mo-', 'dernity', 'has', 'a', 'unitary', 'chronology,', 'but', 'not', 'all', 'individuals', 'or', 'cultures', 'occupy', 'the', 'same', 'chronological', 'moment-a', 'holdover', 'from', 'Enlighten-', 'ment', 'theories', 'of', 'progress,', 'in', 'which', 'contemporary', 'primitive', 'cultures', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'as', 'evidence', 'for', 'ancient', 'social', 'practices.', 'Emphasis', 'on', 'the', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'nature', 'of', 'modern', 'woman-', 'hood', 'is', 'clear', 'in', 'studies', 'of', 'biblical', 'women,', 'which', 'represent', 'the', 'shift', 'from', 'the', 'Old', 'to', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'as', 'also', 'a', 'shift', 'in', 'the', 'relationship', 'of', 'gender', 'to', 'its', 'historical', 'context.', 'Thus,', 'the', 'evangelical', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour', 'argued', 'that', '\"the', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'Hebrews', 'were', 'elevated', 'by', 'their', 'holy', 'faith', 'far', 'above', 'all', 'heathen', 'nations', 'in', 'social,', 'political,', 'and', 'reli-', 'gious', 'freedom;', 'yet', 'their', 'institutions', 'benefited', 'them', 'only,', 'were', 're-', 'stricted', 'to', 'them', 'only,', 'jealous', 'care', 'being', 'observed', 'in', 'their', 'restriction.\"', \"Balfour's\", 'Judaism', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'paganism,', 'but', 'the', 'Old', 'Testament', 'rep-', 'resents', 'merely', 'specific', 'historical', 'situations.', 'In', 'contrast,', '\"New', 'Testa-', 'ment', 'female', 'characters', 'are', 'more', 'valuable', 'as', 'models', 'for', 'imitation,', 'from', 'the', 'fact', 'of', 'their', 'illustrating', 'moral', 'principles,', 'rather', 'than', 'remark-', 'able', 'situations;', 'the', 'principles', 'being', 'important', 'to', 'all,', 'wonderful', 'situa-', 'tions', 'peculiar', 'to', 'a', 'few.\"', 'Representations', 'of', 'Christian', 'womanhood', 'fulfill', 'the', 'potential', 'of', 'Jewish', 'womanhood', 'and,', 'in', 'so', 'doing,', 'transcend', 'it.', \"Balfour's\", 'analysis', 'finds', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'older', 'dispensation', 'dead', 'to', 'the', 'present-that', 'is,', 'largely', 'irrelevant', 'for', 'determining', 'contemporary', 'morals-because', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'has', 'completed', 'and', 'perfected', 'their', 'examples.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'the', 'histories', 'of', 'New', 'Testament', 'women', 'always', 'renews', 'the', 'promise', 'of', 'modern', 'womanly', 'perfection:', 'the', 'modern', 'individual', 'who,', 'produced', 'by', 'Christianity,', 'helps', 'spread', 'this', 'perfec-', 'tion', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'eternally', 'relevant', 'Book.35', 'If', 'New', 'Testament', 'women', 'are', 'valuable', 'models', 'for', '\"imitation,\"', 'then', 'Christian', 'femininity', 'inhabits', 'an', 'atemporal', 'present', 'within', 'which', 'all', 'virtuous', 'characters', 'are', 'interchangeable,', 'regardless', 'of', 'local', 'circumstances.36', 'Virtuous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'thus', 'products', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'moment', 'whose', 'defining', 'char-', 'acteristic', 'is', 'to', 'sever', 'virtue', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all', 'from', 'the', 'trammels', 'of', 'merely', 'local', 'relevance.', '35.', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'Scripture', '(London,', '1847),', 'pp.', '218-19,', '222.', 'I', 'have', 'been', 'much', 'helped,', 'here', 'and', 'elsewhere', 'in', 'this', 'article,', 'by', 'discussions', 'of', 'Christian', 'historiography', 'and', 'biography', 'in', 'Boyd', 'Hilton,', 'The', 'Age', 'of', 'Atonement:', 'The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Evangelism', 'on', 'Social', 'and', 'Economic', 'Thought,', '1795-1865', '(Oxford,', '1988);', 'Peter', 'Hinchcliff,', 'God', 'and', 'History:', 'Aspects', 'of', 'British', 'Theology,', '1875-1914', '(Oxford,', '1972);', 'Elizabeth', 'Jay,', 'The', 'Religion', 'of', 'the', 'Heart:', 'Anglican', 'Evangelicalism', 'and', 'the', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Novel', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Christopher', 'Tolley,', 'Domestic', 'Biography:', 'The', 'Legacy', 'of', 'Evangelicalism', 'in', 'Four', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Families', '(Oxford,', '1997).', '36.', 'A', 'similar', 'phenomenon', 'has', 'been', 'observed', 'by', 'Tricia', 'Lootens', 'regarding', 'Victorian', 'representations', 'of', 'virtuous', 'Shakespearean', 'heroines;', 'see', 'Lost', 'Saints:', 'Silence,', 'Gender,', 'and', 'Victorian', 'Literary', 'Canonization', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1996).', '60', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'But', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'historians', 'argued,', 'Christianity', 'made', \"women's\", 'history', 'possible', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place:', 'Christianity', 'conferred', 'a', 'new', 'intellectual', 'and', 'spiritual', 'mindset', 'that', 'allowed', 'women', 'to', 'be', 'per-', 'ceived', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects', 'in', 'the', 'past,', 'present,', 'and', 'future.', '(We', 'have', 'already', 'seen', 'some', 'of', 'this', 'rhetoric', 'in', 'Isaac', 'Reeve.)', 'The', 'link', 'between', 'Christianity', 'and', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'a', 'twofold', 'sig-', 'nificance,', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'were', 'generally', 'expressed', 'in', 'vaguely', 'statistical', 'terms.', 'First,', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'diag-', 'nosed', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'civilization,', 'an', 'idea', 'derived', 'from', 'eighteenth-', 'century', \"women's\", 'historians', 'such', 'as', 'William', 'Alexander:', '\"The', 'rank,', 'therefore,', 'and', 'condition,', 'in', 'which', 'we', 'find', 'women', 'in', 'any', 'country,', 'mark', 'out', 'to', 'us', 'with', 'the', 'greatest', 'precision,', 'the', 'exact', 'point', 'in', 'the', 'scale', 'of', 'civil', 'society,', 'to', 'which', 'the', 'people', 'of', 'such', 'country', 'have', 'arrived;', 'and', 'were', 'their', 'history', 'entirely', 'silent', 'on', 'every', 'other', 'subject,', 'and', 'only', 'men-', 'tioned', 'the', 'manner', 'in', 'which', 'they', 'treated', 'their', 'women,', 'we', 'should,', 'from', 'thence,', 'be', 'enabled', 'to', 'form', 'a', 'tolerable', 'judgment', 'of', 'the', 'barbarity,', 'or', 'culture', 'of', 'their', 'manners.\"37', 'Alexander', 'here', 'reads', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'the', 'key', 'to', 'all', 'histories;', 'far', 'from', 'being', '\"unwritable,\"', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'in', 'fact', 'what', 'makes', 'otherwise', 'silenced', 'civilizations', 'speak', 'to', 'the', 'enlightened', 'interpreter.', 'The', 'Victorians,', 'however,', 'discarded', 'Alex-', \"ander's\", 'faith', 'in', 'the', 'ease', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history.', 'Instead,', 'they', 'pro-', 'posed', 'that', \"women's\", 'history', 'did', 'indeed', 'diagnose', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'culture,', 'but', 'it', 'did', 'so', 'progressively:', '\"The', 'progress', 'of', 'woman', 'cannot', 'be', 'denied', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'ratio', 'as', 'that', 'of', 'man,', 'both', 'from', 'an', 'original', 'state', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'and', 'again', 'just', 'in', 'the', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'elevation', 'of', 'woman', 'does', 'the', 'other', 'half', 'of', 'mankind', 'derive', 'advantage', 'from', 'her', 'existence.\"38', 'Here,', 'Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb', 'makes', 'no', 'mention', 'of', 'the', 'always-writable', 'nature', 'of', \"women's\", 'history.', 'Instead,', 'she', 'emphasizes', 'that', 'the', 'history', 'works', 'in', 'both', 'directions', '(man', 'diagnoses', 'woman,', 'and', 'vice', 'versa),', 'and', 'that', \"woman's\", 'social', 'influence', 'accumulates', 'over', 'time.', 'Moreover,', 'as', 'the', 'positivist', 'historian', 'Henry', 'Buckle', 'agreed', 'in', 'a', 'differ-', 'ent', 'key,', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'this', 'influence', 'was', 'definitely', 'a', 'product', 'of', 'modern', 'conditions;', 'if', 'in', '\"modern', 'Europe,', 'the', 'influence', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'civilization', 'have', 'been', 'nearly', 'commensurate,', 'both', 'advanc-', 'ing', 'with', 'almost', 'equal', 'speed,\"', 'the', 'same', 'is', 'not', 'true', 'of', 'nations', 'in', 'an-', 'tiquity,', 'which', '\"fell', 'because', 'society', 'did', 'not', 'advance', 'in', 'all', 'its', 'parts,', 'but', 'sacrificed', 'some', 'of', 'its', 'constituents', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'secure', 'the', 'progress', '37.', 'William', 'Alexander,', 'The', 'History', 'of', 'Women:', 'From', 'the', 'Earliest', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Present', 'Time;', 'Giving', 'Some', 'Account', 'of', 'Almost', 'Every', 'Interesting', 'Particular', 'Concerning', 'that', 'Sex,', 'Among', 'All', 'Nations,', 'Ancient', 'and', 'Modern,', '2', 'vols.', '(Dublin,', '1779),', '1:107.', '38.', '[Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb],', 'Can', 'Woman', 'Regenerate', 'Society?', '(London,', '1844),', 'p.', '165.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '61', 'of', 'others.\"39', 'The', 'modern', 'era', 'is', 'special', 'both', 'because', 'women', 'have', 'influenced', 'its', 'progress', 'and', 'because', 'it', 'has', 'recognized', 'that', 'its', 'progress', 'is,', 'in', 'fact,', 'contingent', 'upon', 'developing', \"woman's\", 'potential.', 'When', 'restated', 'in', 'expressly', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'this', 'last', 'formulation', 'be-', 'comes', 'the', 'second', 'item', 'of', 'significance:', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'a', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'act.', 'The', 'more', 'Christian', 'the', 'age,', 'the', 'more', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'acting', 'so', 'as', 'to', 'appear', 'in', 'its', 'records;', 'and', 'the', 'more', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'so', 'acting,', 'the', 'more', 'that', 'Christian', 'histori-', 'ans', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'writing', 'about', 'them.', '\"Unmentioned', 'as', 'she', 'is', 'in', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'heathendom,', 'several', 'of', 'her', 'sex', 'shine', 'like', 'stars', 'in', 'the', 'firma-', 'ment', 'of', 'the', 'Church,\"', 'wrote', 'W.', 'Landels', 'around', '1872.40', 'By', 'invoking', 'numbers,', 'the', 'Christian', 'author', 'denaturalizes', \"women's\", 'absence', 'from', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and', 'accounts', 'for', 'that', 'absence', 'by', 'the', 'shortcom-', 'ings', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'cultures.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale', 'was', 'even', 'more', 'ex-', 'plicit:', '\"Wherever', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'female', 'talents', 'are', 'cultivated', 'and', 'esteemed.', 'In', 'this', \"'Record'\", 'are', 'about', 'two', 'thousand', 'five', 'hundred', 'names,', 'including', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Female', 'Missionaries;', 'out', 'of', 'this', 'number', 'less', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'are', 'from', 'heathen', 'nations,', 'yet', 'these', 'constitute', 'at', 'this', 'moment', 'nearly', 'three-fourths', 'of', 'the', 'inhabitants', 'of', 'the', 'globe,', 'and', 'for', 'the', 'first', 'thousand', 'years', '.', '.', '.were', 'the', 'world.\"41', 'One', 'can,', 'quite', 'literally,', 'estimate', 'social', 'progress', 'by', 'counting', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'are', 'deemed', 'worthy', 'of', 'recollection.', 'And', 'percentages', 'count', 'too,', 'as', 'Horace', 'Mann', 'pointed', 'out:', '\"Within', 'the', 'last', 'half-century,', 'the', 'United', 'Kingdom', 'of', 'Britain', 'and', 'Ireland,', 'with', 'an', 'average', 'population', 'of', 'less', 'than', 'twenty-', 'five', 'millions,', 'has', 'produced', 'as', 'many', 'eminent', 'and', 'admirable', 'women', 'as', 'all', 'the', 'rest', 'of', 'Europe,', 'with', 'its', 'more', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'millions;', 'and', 'New', 'England,', 'with', 'its', 'population', 'of', 'between', 'two', 'and', 'three', 'millions,', 'has', 'now', 'nearly', 'or', 'quite', 'as', 'many', 'justly-distinguished', 'females', 'as', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'or', 'the', 'continent.\"42', 'In', 'other', 'words,', 'Britain', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'the', 'continent', 'and', 'America', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'Britain,', 'on', 'statistical', 'grounds;', 'progress', 'is', 'here', 'tied', 'not', 'simply', 'to', 'numbers', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'their', 'accel-', 'erated', 'accumulation.', 'The', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'visible', 'to', 'the', 'historian', 'simultaneously', 'attests', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'construction', 'of', 'womanhood,', '39.', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '\"The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Women', 'on', 'the', 'Progress', 'of', 'Knowl-', 'edge,\"', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'and', 'Posthumous', 'Works', 'of', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '3', 'vols.', '(London,', '1872),', '1:2.', '40.', 'W.', 'Landels,', 'Woman:', 'Her', 'Position', 'and', 'Power', '(London,', '[1872?]),', 'p.', '28.', '41.', 'Hale', '(n.', '34', 'above),', 'p.', '2.', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'points', 'out', 'that', \"Hale's\", 'text', 'is', '\"itself', 'an', 'event', 'in', 'history\";', 'see', 'American', 'Women', 'Writers', 'and', 'the', 'Work', 'of', 'History,', '1790-1860', '(New', 'Bruns-', 'wick,', 'N.J.,', '1995),', 'p.', '228.', '42.', 'Horace', 'Mann,', 'A', 'Few', 'Thoughts', 'on', 'the', 'Powers', 'and', 'Duties', 'of', 'Woman:', 'Two', 'Lectures', '(Syr-', 'acuse,', 'N.Y.,', '1853),', 'p.', '50.', '62', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'the', 'new', 'possibilities', 'of', 'female', 'influence', 'in', 'the', 'public', 'domain,', 'and', 'the', 'progressively', 'enlightened', '(in', 'a', 'Christian', 'sense)', 'consciousness', 'of', 'the', 'historian', 'capable', 'of', 'viewing', 'women', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects.', 'It', 'is', 'on', 'the', 'issue', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'or', '\"barbaric\"', 'women', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', \"dire'ctly\", 'conflict', 'with', \"today's\", 'belief', 'that', 'a', 'history', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'would', 'begin', 'with', '\"feminist', \"historians'\", 'critiques', 'of', 'the', \"discipline's\", 'habitual', '(one', 'might', 'say', 'historical)', 'neglect', 'of', \"women's\", 'ex-', 'perience.\"43', 'Unlike', 'the', 'utilitarian', 'George', 'Grote,', 'whose', 'twelve-volume', 'History', 'of', 'Greece', '(1845-56)', 'broke', 'new', 'ground', 'in', 'the', 'study', 'of', 'the', 'pre-', 'Christian', 'cultures', 'of', 'antiquity,', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'often', 'identified', 'the', 'modern', 'historical', 'viewpoint', 'with', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'recover', 'pagan', 'figures', 'lost', 'in', 'the', 'mists', 'of', 'time.', 'Certainly,', 'there', 'were', 'biograph-', 'ical', 'treatments', 'of', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Aspasia', 'or', 'Sappho.', 'But', '\"lost\"', 'women', 'were', 'unwritable', 'not', 'simply', 'because', 'they', 'were', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'archives', 'but,', 'more', 'importantly,', 'because', 'they', 'lacked', 'Christian', 'virtue.', 'Ancient', 'women', 'are', 'not', 'just', 'treated', 'inhumanely', 'but,', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'are', 'devoid', 'of', 'any', 'sense', 'of', 'social', 'obligations;', 'as', 'a', 'result,', 'even', 'the', '\"his-', 'torical\"', 'women', 'of', 'antiquity', 'fail', 'to', 'contribute', 'to', 'moral', 'progress.', 'As', 'Samuel', 'Young', 'argued', 'to', 'his', 'American', 'male', 'audience', 'regarding', 'Sap-', 'pho,', '\"had', 'she', 'received,', 'in', 'early', 'youth,', 'proper', 'moral', 'and', 'intellectual', 'culture,', 'and', 'been', 'taught', 'to', 'direct', 'her', 'wonderful', 'powers', 'to', 'the', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'human', 'race,', 'she', 'would', 'have', 'done', 'much', 'towards', 'civilizing', 'the', 'world.\"', '44', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'function', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'narrate', 'the', 'emergence', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'which', 'both', 'recognizes', 'and', 'facilitates', 'the', 'presence', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'modern', 'history', 'as', 'part', 'of', 'the', 'ongoing', 'Chris-', 'tianization', 'of', 'the', 'globe.', 'Lady', 'Morgan', 'was', 'not', 'alone', 'in', 'complaining', 'that', '\"the', 'historians', 'of', 'the', 'people,', 'the', 'chroniclers', 'of', 'private', 'life,', 'are', 'few', 'and', 'incidental,\"', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'meant', 'that', 'history', 'only', '\"unavoid-', 'ably', 'or', 'accidentally\"', 'relates', 'the', '\"great', 'deeds', 'of', 'great', 'women.\"45', 'Yet', \"women's\", 'history', 'itself', 'operates', 'through', 'a', 'process', 'of', 'exclusion', 'hinging', 'on', 'Christian', 'conversion.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'employs', 'what', 'his-', 'torians', 'of', 'religion', 'call', 'the', 'degenerationist', 'thesis', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'which', '43.', 'Lillian', 'Robinson,', '\"Sometimes,', 'Always,', 'Never:', 'Their', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'Ours,\"', 'in', 'History', 'and', '...', 'Histories', 'within', 'the', 'Human', 'Sciences,', 'ed.', 'Ralph', 'Cohen', 'and', 'Michael', 'S.', 'Roth', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'p.', '332.', '44.', 'Samuel', 'Young,', 'Suggestions', 'on', 'the', 'Best', 'Mode', 'of', 'Promoting', 'Civilization', 'and', 'Improve-', 'ment:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Influence', 'of', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'Social', 'State.', 'A', 'Lecture', 'Delivered', 'Before', 'the', '\"Young', \"Men's\", 'Association', 'for', 'Mutual', 'Improvement', 'in', 'the', 'City', 'of', 'Albany,', '\"January', '24th,', '1837', '(Albany,', 'N.Y.,', '1837),', 'p.', '13.', '45.', 'Sydney', 'Owenson,', 'Lady', 'Morgan,', 'Woman', 'and', 'Her', 'Master,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', '2:224-25.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '63', 'holds', 'that', 'human', 'evil', 'degrades', 'original', 'perfection', 'until', 'divine', 'revela-', 'tion', 'or', 'its', 'vehicle,', 'benevolent', 'Christian', 'imperialism,', 'intervenes.46', 'These', 'Victorian', 'writers', 'thus', 'promise', 'to', 'bring', 'women', 'of', 'other', 'nations', 'into', 'history', 'through', 'British', 'imperialist', 'expansion,', 'but', 'in', 'the', 'process', 'they', 'necessarily', 'preclude', 'the', 'desirability', 'of', 'non-Christian', \"women's\", 'history.', 'As', 'the', 'writer', 'of', 'a', 'late', 'work', 'on', 'great', 'women', 'bluntly', 'put', 'it,', 'there', 'was', 'nothing', 'worth', 'recovering:', '\"Paganism', 'ignored', 'what', 'is', 'grand-', 'est', 'and', 'truest', 'in', 'a', 'woman,', 'and', 'she', 'withered', 'like', 'a', 'stricken', 'tree.', 'She', 'succumbed', 'before', 'the', 'cold', 'blasts', 'that', 'froze', 'her', 'noblest', 'impulses,', 'and', 'sunk', 'sullenly', 'into', 'obscurity.\"47', 'Evangelical', 'rhetoric,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'iden-', 'tifies', 'progress', 'toward', 'the', 'millennium', 'with', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'true', 'Christian', 'feeling,', 'defines', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'out', 'of', 'history', 'while', 'always', 'maintain-', 'ing', 'that', 'the', \"individual's\", 'freely', 'willed', 'conversion', 'makes', 'entrance', 'into', 'history', 'possible.48', 'Yet', 'this', 'imagined', 'era', 'of', 'feminine', 'Christianity', 'would', 'fracture', 'along', 'lines', 'of', 'religious,', 'racial,', 'and', 'national', 'differences', 'once', 'authors', 'began', 'to', 'consider', 'immediate', 'historical', 'difficulties-which,', 'in', 'Victorian', 'Brit-', 'ain,', 'often', 'included', 'Catholicism.', 'Protestant', \"women's\", 'histories', 'iden-', 'tified', 'Catholicism', 'with', 'female', 'sexual', 'slavery', 'and', 'with', 'the', 'improper', 'idolization', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'fleshly', 'beings-an', 'identification', 'taken', 'to', 'an', 'extreme', 'in', 'anti-Catholic', 'pornography', 'like', 'The', 'Awful', 'Disclosures', 'of', 'Maria', 'Monk', '(1836)-while', 'assigning', 'to', 'Protestantism', 'a', 'purely', 'spiritual', 'under-', 'standing', 'of', 'womanhood.', 'Through', 'the', 'conjunction', 'of', 'spirit', 'and', 'text,', 'progress', 'takes', 'shape', 'as', 'the', 'ongoing', 'spread', 'of', 'female', 'spiritual', '\"influ-', 'ence\"', 'across', 'nations', 'and', 'empires.', 'Spirituality', 'in', 'turn', 'assures', 'the', 'proper', 'social', 'orientation', 'of', 'female', 'sexuality', 'toward', 'maternity,', 'which', 'becomes', 'the', 'foundation', 'of', 'the', 'uniquely', 'Protestant', 'domestic', 'sphere.', 'History', 'thus', 'progresses', 'from', 'the', 'Catholic,', 'feudal', 'insistence', 'on', 'eroti-', 'cized', 'femininity', 'to', 'the', 'Protestant,', 'middle-class', 'insistence', 'on', 'spiritual-', 'ized', 'femininity.', 'Always,', 'however,', 'this', 'progress', 'transpires', 'through', 'male', 'desire,', 'albeit', 'a', 'desire', 'reflexively', 'shaped.', 'Women', 'are', '\"deified\"', 'in', 'chiv-', 'alry,', 'then', 'valued', 'for', 'their', '\"intrinsic', 'qualities\";', '\"bright', 'eyes', 'give', 'place', 'to', 'bright', 'deeds,', 'good', 'looks', 'to', 'good', 'thoughts,', 'and', 'the', 'outward', 'form', '46.', 'For', 'a', 'standard', 'Victorian', 'exposition', 'of', 'this', 'argument,', 'see', 'Richard', 'Whately,', '\"On', 'the', 'Origin', 'of', 'Civilisation,\"', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'Lectures', 'and', 'Reviews', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '26-59.', '47.', 'John', 'Lord,', 'Great', 'Women,', 'vol.', '5', 'in', \"Lord's\", 'Beacon', 'Lights', 'of', 'History', '(New', 'York,', '1886),', 'pp.', '55-56.', '48.', 'Writing', 'about', 'American', \"women's\", 'history,', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'makes', 'what', 'at', 'first', 'seems', 'like', 'a', 'similar', 'point', 'when', 'she', 'argues', 'that', '\"a', 'virtual', 'absence', 'of', 'prominent', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'was', 'not', 'only', 'to', 'be', 'expected,', 'it', 'was', 'positively', 'hoped', 'for\"', '(p.', '215).', 'But', 'we', 'are', 'using', 'different', 'understandings', 'of', 'periodization:', 'she', 'argues', 'that', 'her', 'authors', 'are', 'defining', 'this', 'absence', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'nineteenth', 'century;', 'I', 'argue', 'that', 'my', 'au-', 'thors', 'are', 'defining', 'it', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'Christianity', 'per', 'se.', '64', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'to', 'the', 'magic', 'of', 'the', 'inner', 'life.\"49', 'Such', 'progressive', 'Protestant', 'narratives', 'became', 'a', 'clerical', 'specialty', 'in', 'both', 'Britain', 'and', 'America,', 'attracting', 'clergymen', 'across', 'the', 'denominational', 'spectrum.50', 'At', 'the', 'same', 'time,', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Protestantism', 'was', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'female', \"evangelist's\", 'in-', 'creasing', 'spiritual', 'freedom', 'and', 'cultural', 'literacy,', 'which', 'allegorized', 'the', 'Englishing', 'or', 'Americanizing', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation-as', 'well', 'as', 'of', 'global', 'history.', 'If', 'the', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'subject', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'beneficiary', 'and', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'providence,', 'then', 'logically', 'women', 'should', 'be', 'central', 'to', 'historical', 'rep-', 'resentation', 'and', 'investigation.', 'Yet', 'if', 'Christian', 'women', 'were', 'imagined', 'as', 'quintessentially', 'modern', 'subjects,', 'their', 'subjectivity', 'was', 'represented', 'as', 'threatened', 'with', 'moral', 'corruption', 'by', 'history', 'itself.', 'This', 'threat', 'ex-', 'isted', 'on', 'two', 'different', 'levels:', 'that', 'of', 'historicity', '(the', 'fact', 'that', \"women's\", 'history', 'could', 'be', 'written)', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation', '(the', 'act', 'of', 'reading', 'the', 'text).', 'Most', \"women's\", 'histories', 'systematically', 'avoid', 'refer-', 'ence', 'to', 'current', 'political', 'issues;', 'even', 'when', 'these', 'histories', 'do', 'engage', 'with', 'contemporary', 'crises,', 'they', 'do', 'so', 'obliquely,', 'by', 'representing', 'social', 'upheaval', 'as', 'ameliorated', 'by', 'individual', 'religious', 'consolation,', 'philan-', 'thropic', 'work,', 'or', 'maternity.', 'In', 'trying', 'to', 'attach', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'spir-', 'itual', 'universals,', 'politics', 'were', 'often', 'explicitly', 'thrown', 'by', 'the', 'wayside.', 'Thus,', 'Julia', \"Kavanagh's\", 'pro-Catholic', 'Women', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Exemplary', 'for', 'Acts', 'of', 'Piety', 'and', 'Charity', '(1852),', 'published', 'in', 'the', 'wake', 'of', 'the', 'outcry', 'over', 'the', '\"Papal', 'Aggression\"', '(the', 'restoration', 'of', 'the', 'Roman', 'Catholic', 'hierar-', 'chy', 'in', 'England),', 'raises', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'its', 'own', 'controversial', 'status', 'only', 'to', 'sidestep', 'theological', 'debate.', 'Its', 'ecumenical', 'exemplars-Teresa', 'of', 'Avila,', 'Elizabeth', 'Fry,', 'Sarah', 'Martin-all', 'coexisting', 'peacefully', 'within', '49.', 'Mrs.', 'John', 'Sandford,', 'Woman', 'in', 'Her', 'Social', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Character,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1833),', 'p.', '9;', 'and', 'Joseph', 'Johnson,', 'Willing', 'Hearts', 'and', 'Ready', 'Hands:', 'or,', 'The', 'La-', 'bours', 'and', 'Triumphs', 'of', 'Earnest', 'Women', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '43.', '50.', 'For', 'example,', 'Rev.', 'James', 'Anderson,', 'Ladies', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation:', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Distin-', 'guished', 'Female', 'Characters,', 'Belonging', 'to', 'the', 'Period', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation', 'in', 'the', 'Sixteenth', 'Century', '(London,', '1857),', 'and', 'Memorable', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Puritan', 'Times,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1862);', 'Daniel', 'C.', 'Eddy,', 'Daughters', 'of', 'the', 'Cross:', 'Or', \"Woman's\", 'Mission', '(Boston,', '1855);', 'Rev.', 'James', 'A.', 'Huie,', 'Records', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety:', 'Comprising', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'and', 'Extracts', 'from', 'the', 'Writings', 'of', 'Women', 'Eminent', 'for', 'Religious', 'Excellence,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Edinburgh,', '1845);', 'and', 'Thomas', 'Timpson,', 'British', 'Female', 'Biography;', 'Being', 'Select', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Pious', 'Ladies,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ranks', 'of', 'Public', 'and', 'Private', 'Life,', 'Including', 'Queens,', 'Princesses,', 'Martyrs,', 'Scholars,', 'Instructors,', 'Poetesses,', 'Philanthro-', 'pists,', \"Ministers'\", 'Wives', '(London,', '1854).', 'For', 'useful', 'analyses', 'of', 'the', 'relationship', 'between', 'religion,', 'femininity,', 'and', 'historical', 'progress', 'in', 'conduct', 'manuals,', 'see', 'Judith', 'Lowder', 'Newton,', '\"\\'Ministers', 'of', 'the', \"Interior':\", 'The', 'Political', 'Economy', 'of', \"Woman's\", 'Manuals,\"', 'in', 'Starting', 'Over:', 'Feminism', 'and', 'the', 'Politics', 'of', 'Cultural', 'Critique', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1994),', 'pp.', '125-', '45;', 'and', 'Jane', 'E.', 'Rose,', '\"Conduct', 'Books', 'for', 'Women,', '1830-1860:', 'A', 'Rationale', 'for', \"Women's\", 'Conduct', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Role', 'in', 'America,\"', 'in', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Women', 'Learn', 'to', 'Write,', 'ed.', 'Catherine', 'Hobbs', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '37-58.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '65', 'the', 'text,', 'provide', 'a', 'utopian', 'vision', 'of', 'Christian', 'religious', 'harmony', 'ex-', 'plicitly', 'unavailable', 'elsewhere.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman', 'has', 'argued', 'that', 'the', 'motif', 'of', 'uneventful', 'private', 'lives', 'in', 'exemplary', 'biography', 'deliberately', 'contrasts', 'with', 'the', \"heroine's\", '\"eruption\"', 'into', 'public', 'view,', 'as', 'the', 'private', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', '\"a', 'do-', 'mestic', 'detail', 'that', 'asserts', 'how', 'little', 'really', 'happened', 'in', 'it.\"\\'\\'51', 'Yet', 'far', 'more', 'common', 'during', 'the', 'Victorian', 'period', 'are', 'lives', 'lacking', 'any', '\"erup-', 'tion\"', 'whatsoever.', 'A', 'casual', 'survey', 'of', 'books', 'published', 'over', 'a', 'forty-four-', 'year', 'period', 'reveals', 'that', 'royalty,', 'actresses,', 'poets,', 'and', 'serving', 'maids', 'all', 'shared', 'supposedly', 'identical', 'and', 'empty', 'lives:', 'no', '\"romantic', 'inci-', 'dents\"', 'or', '\"eventful', 'occurrences,\"', 'nothing', '\"thrilling,\"', '\"passion-exciting,\"', 'or', '\"startling,\"', 'and', 'thus', '\"few', 'passages', 'on', 'which', 'the', 'faithful', 'biogra-', 'pher', 'can', 'enlarge.\"', 'Incidents', 'of', 'any', 'kind', 'verge', 'on', 'the', 'nonexistent,', 'leav-', 'ing', 'the', 'author', 'to', 'rely', 'on', 'a', '\"brief', '(too', 'brief)', 'memoir.\"52', 'This', 'language', 'of', 'uneventfulness', 'collapses', 'distinctions', 'between', 'class', 'and', 'profession', 'into', 'a', 'single', 'plot', 'that', 'resists', 'narration:', 'the', 'emphatically', 'negative', 'dis-', 'course', 'discloses', 'a', 'pattern', 'of', 'existence', 'so', 'unremarkable', 'that', 'it', 'escapes', 'biographical', 'writing,', 'yet', 'simultaneously', 'establishes', 'that', 'pattern', 'as', 'the', 'true', 'foundation', 'of', 'exemplary', 'representation.', 'In', 'these', 'popular', 'histo-', 'ries,', \"women's\", 'lives', 'lack', '\"scenes,\"', 'dramatic', 'plot', 'twists,', 'romantic', 'sorrows,', 'and', 'tragic', 'denouements.', 'This', 'rhetoric', 'of', 'antifiction', '(and,', 'in', 'its', 'em-', 'phasis', 'on', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'engage', 'with', 'public', 'events,', 'antipolitics)', 'implies', 'that', 'exemplary', 'value', 'is', 'constituted', 'not', 'by', 'events', 'internal', 'to', 'the', 'life,', 'but', 'instead', 'by', 'the', 'posthumous', 'differentiation', 'of', 'a', 'life,', 'as', 'a', 'perfect', 'whole,', 'from', 'all', 'those', 'lives', 'which', 'deviate', 'from', 'its', 'pattern.', 'As', 'a', 'result,', 'such', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'retrospectively', 'universalized,', 'made', 'to', 'speak', 'for', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'morality', 'instead', 'of', 'for', 'the', \"individual's\", 'own', 'achievements.', 'Even', 'eventful', 'lives', 'could', 'be', 'transposed', 'into', 'moral', 'universals', 'by', 'an', 'emphasis', 'on', 'private', 'experience;', 'in', 'extreme', 'instances,', \"women's\", 'historians', 'figured', 'their', 'work', 'as', 'the', 'domestication', 'of', 'national', 'culture', 'itself.', 'In', 'the', 'preface', 'to', 'her', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland,', 'for', 'example,', 'Agnes', 'Strickland', 'argued', 'that', 'since', 'England', 'and', 'Scotland', '\"are', 'now', 'ONE', '...', 'truly', 'and', 'effectually', 'by', 'friendship,', 'based', 'on', 'mutual', 'esteem,\"', '51.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman,', '\"Le', 'Theorie', 'qui', \"n'en\", 'est', 'pas', 'une;', 'or,', 'Why', 'Clio', \"Doesn't\", 'Care,\"', 'in', 'Feminists', 'Revision', 'History,', 'ed.', 'Ann-Louise', 'Shapiro', '(New', 'Brunswick,', 'N.J.,', '1994),', 'p.', '84.', '52.', 'I', 'cite', 'Mrs.', '[Anna]', 'Jameson,', 'The', 'Beauties', 'of', 'the', 'Court', 'of', 'King', 'Charles', 'the', 'Second', '...', '(London,', '1833),', 'p.', '87;', 'Francis', 'Lancelott,', 'The', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'and', 'their', 'Times:', 'From', 'Ma-', 'tilda,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Conqueror,', 'to', 'Adelaide,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Fourth,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', '2:1042-43;', 'Mrs.', '[Margaret]', 'C.', 'Baron', 'Wilson,', 'Our', 'Actresses;', 'or,', 'Glances', 'at', 'Stage', 'Favourites,', 'Past', 'and', 'Present,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:73;', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'The', 'Sunshine', 'of', 'Domestic', 'Life;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Virtues,', 'and', 'Stories', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Noble', 'Women', '(London,', '1867),', 'p.', '59;', 'and', 'Clara', 'L.', 'Balfour,', 'Women', 'Worth', 'Emulating', '(New', 'York,', '1877),', 'p.', '23.', '66', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'her', '\"Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'be', 'less', 'interesting', 'to', 'English,', 'than', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'have', 'proved', 'to', 'Scotch', 'readers.\"', 'Strickland', 'offers', 'the', 'phenomenon', 'of', 'her', 'Lives', 'as', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'long', 'process', 'of', 'national', 'unification,', 'in', 'which', 'authentic', 'senti-', 'ments', 'have', 'transcended', 'the', 'mere', 'legal', 'act', 'of', 'Union.', 'Reading', 'these', 'Lives', 'thus', 'proves', 'or', 'reaffirms', 'a', 'new', 'British', 'nationhood,', 'founded', 'in', 'love', 'instead', 'of', 'law.', 'The', 'affective', 'emphasis', 'is', 'further', 'underscored', 'by', \"Strickland's\", 'insistence', 'that', 'her', 'Lives', 'are', 'family', 'reading,', 'works', 'suitable', 'for', 'those', 'raised', 'on', 'Sir', 'Walter', \"Scott's\", 'romances', 'yet', 'now', 'desiring', 'a', '\"truth\"', 'not', 'sacrificed', 'to', '\"fastidiousness,\"', 'so', '\"that', 'they', 'may', 'read', 'it', 'with', 'their', 'children,', 'and', 'that', 'the', 'whole', 'family', 'party', 'shall', 'be', 'eager', 'to', 're-', 'sume', 'the', 'book', 'when', 'they', 'gather', 'round', 'the', 'work-table', 'during', 'the', 'long', 'winter', 'evenings.\"', 'The', 'new', 'national', 'family', 'is', 'reinforced', 'by', 'the', 'plea-', 'sures', 'of', 'historical', 'reading,', 'a', 'pleasure', 'that', 'Strickland', 'is', 'careful', 'to', 'counterbalance', 'with', 'a', 'setting', 'of', 'domestic', 'usefulness', '(the', '\"work-table,\"', 'where', 'presumably', 'the', 'women', 'are', 'sewing', 'as', 'they', 'listen', 'to', 'the', 'book', 'being', 'read).53', \"Strickland's\", 'domesticating', 'rhetoric', 'suggests', 'that', 'reading', 'and', 'writ-', 'ing', 'these', 'uneventful', 'lives', 'are', 'themselves', 'means', 'toward', 'social', '(and', 'ul-', 'timately', 'Christian)', 'reform,', 'but', 'it', 'also', 'suggests', 'that', 'such', 'reforms', 'must', 'already', 'be', 'under', 'way', 'for', 'her', 'writings', 'to', 'be', 'properly', 'appreciated.', 'In', 'making', 'the', 'reading', 'and', 'writing', 'of', 'her', 'history', 'a', 'triumph', 'of', 'love', 'over', 'force,', 'Strickland', 'announces', 'her', 'participation', 'in', 'exemplary', \"history's\", 'larger', 'pedagogical', 'project:', 'tutoring', 'her', 'readers', 'in', 'the', 'proper', 'work', 'of', 'both', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women.', 'Earlier,', 'Sarah', 'Lewis', 'had', 'argued', 'that', '\"the', 'moral', 'progress', 'of', 'our', 'race', 'does', 'not', 'keep', 'pace', 'with', 'the', 'intellectual;', 'and', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'assumed', 'that', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'chief', 'causes', 'of', 'this', 'slow', 'progress', 'is', 'the', 'misdirecting', 'of', 'influence,', 'and', 'expecting', 'power', 'to', 'supply', 'the', 'want,', 'and', 'perform', 'the', 'work', 'of', 'influ-', 'ence\";', 'she', 'directed', 'her', 'readers', 'to', 'their', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'place', 'in', 'society', 'so', 'that', 'they', 'could', '\"interfere', 'in', 'politics\"', 'by', 'becoming', '\"moral', 'agents,\"', 'and', 'in', 'so', 'doing', '\"instill', 'into', 'their', 'relatives', 'of', 'the', 'other', 'sex', 'the', 'uncompromising', 'sense', 'of', 'duty', 'and', 'self-devotion,', 'which', 'ought', 'to', 'be', 'their', 'ruling', 'principles!', '\"54', 'Female', 'influence', 'becomes', 'a', 'historical', 'force', 'only', 'when', 'detached', 'from', 'power,', 'that', 'is,', 'from', 'the', 'immediately', 'visible', 'and', 'traceable', 'exertion', 'of', 'force', 'in', 'political', 'circles.', 'This', 'influential,', 'in-', 'stead', 'of', 'political,', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'progressively', 'transforms', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'modernity', 'through', 'her', 'ongoing', 'regeneration', 'of', 'masculine', 'spiritu-', 'ality;', 'yet', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'exemplary', 'histories-and', 'conduct', 'manuals-', 'also', 'points', 'to', 'the', 'conditional', 'nature', 'of', 'these', 'transformations.', 'It', 'was', '53.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'and', 'English', 'Princesses', 'Connected', 'with', 'the', 'Regal', 'Succession', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain,', '2d', 'ed.,', '8', 'vols.', '(Edinburgh,', '1852),', '1:xvi.', '54.', '[Sarah', 'Lewis],', \"Woman's\", 'Mission,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1840),', 'pp.', '15,', '61.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '67', 'the', 'job', 'of', 'exemplary', 'history', 'to', 'call', 'the', 'truly', 'Christian', 'historical', 'woman', 'into', 'being,', 'proving', 'to', 'the', '\"complainant\"', 'who', 'yearns', 'for', 'public', 'activity', 'that', '\"in', 'most', 'of', 'the', 'triumphs', 'achieved', 'by', 'men..,', '.she', 'has', 'shared,', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'purest', 'form,', 'by', 'having', 'been', 'their', 'instructor,', 'inves-', 'tigator,', 'or', 'friend.\"55', 'The', 'narrative', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'was', 'thus', 'de-', 'signed', 'to', 'convince', 'readers', 'of', 'their', 'participation', 'in', 'a', 'modernity', 'that', 'they', 'obstinately', 'refused', 'to', 'recognize.', 'Even', 'men', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'convinced.', 'As', '\"C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus\"', 'reminded', 'his', 'male', 'readers,', 'the', 'improvement', 'of', '\"national', 'manners,', 'morals,', 'and', 'happiness\"', 'was', 'owed', 'to', '\"female', 'sway,\"', 'and', 'that', 'sway', 'was', 'progressing', 'toward', 'even', 'greater', 'refinement:', '\"The', 'lovely', 'mothers', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'day', 'attend', 'to', 'their', 'pleasing', 'duties', 'with', 'more', 'zeal', 'and', 'sense', 'than', 'their', 'grandmothers', 'did.\"56', 'These', 'writers', 'ex-', 'pect', 'the', 'reader', 'to', 'participate', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'social', 'conversion', 'to', 'the', 'his-', 'torical', 'revelation', 'of', \"woman's\", 'reforming', 'capacities,', 'either', 'acceding', 'to', 'female', 'influence', 'or', 'learning', 'to', 'wield', 'it.', 'Recognition', 'of', 'these', 'connections', 'makes', 'comprehensible', 'the', 'oft-', 'noted', 'anxieties', 'about', 'public,', '\"writable\"', 'women', 'whose', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'defined', 'as', 'historical', 'within', 'accepted', 'canons', 'of', 'evidence,', 'and', 'therefore', 'take', 'on', 'meaning', 'through', 'their', 'particularity.', 'If,', 'ideally,', 'a', \"woman's\", 'life', 'was', 'too', 'uneventful', 'to', 'warrant', 'narration', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'then', 'a', '\"historical', 'woman\"', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'as', 'a', 'disruption:', 'a', 'woman', 'with', 'a', 'fragmentary', 'or', 'nonexistent', 'domestic', 'existence', 'was', 'too', 'obviously', 'singular', 'to', 'be', 'situated', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history;', 'historians', 'had', 'to', 'account', 'for', 'and', 'explain', 'away', 'the', 'existence', 'of', 'such', 'figures.', 'For', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', '\"it', 'were', 'idle\"', 'to', 'regard', 'her', '\"World-noted', 'Women\"', 'as', 'anything', 'other', 'than', '\"isolated', 'exemplars', 'of', 'special', 'qualities;', 'they', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'much', 'types', 'of', 'a', 'class', 'of', 'women,', 'as', 'types', 'of', 'particular', 'womanly', 'at-', 'tributes.\"57', 'Women', 'who', 'stand', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'can', 'be', 'narrated', 'within', 'Cowden', \"Clarke's\", 'biographical', 'series', 'only', 'insofar', 'as', 'they,', 'as', 'individu-', 'als,', 'typify', 'fragmentary', 'qualities', 'possessed', 'by', 'women.', 'By', 'constructing', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'singular', 'lives,', 'Cowden', 'Clarke', 'also', 'constructs', 'a', 'single', 'unified', 'woman;', 'but', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'she', 'defines', 'famous', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'as', 'failures,', 'their', 'natures', 'fragmented', 'by', 'political', 'participation', 'instead', 'of', 'unified', 'by', 'domestic', 'and', 'Christian', 'harmony.', 'The', 'woman', 'who', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'too', 'different,', 'idiosyncratic,', 'unrepeatable,', 'atypical.', 'The', 'governing', 'metaphor', 'for', 'her', 'is', 'the', 'comet:', 'fashionable', 'women', '\"fly', 'off', 'like', 'comets', 'from', 'their', 'appointed', 'orbits,', 'and', 'threaten', 'destruc-', 'tion', 'to', 'the', 'whole', 'social', 'system\";', 'a', 'woman', 'out', 'of', 'her', 'sphere', 'is', '\"comet-', 'like,', 'wandering', 'in', 'irregular', 'orbits,', 'dazzling', 'indeed', 'by', 'their', 'brilliancy,', '55.', '\"On', 'Modern', 'Female', 'Cultivation.', 'No.', 'IV,\"', 'Athenaeum', '250', '(1832):', '521.', '56.', 'C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus,', 'Hints', 'on', 'Life;', 'and', 'How', 'to', 'Rise', 'in', 'Society', '(London,', '1845),', 'pp.', '109-10.', '57.', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', 'World-Noted', 'Women;', 'Or,', 'Types', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Attributes', 'of', 'All', 'Lands', 'and', 'Ages', '(New', 'York,', '1858),', 'p.', '3.', '68', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'but', 'terrifying', 'by', 'their', 'eccentric', 'movements', 'and', 'doubtful', 'utility\";', 'an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'would', 'be', 'like', 'the', 'star', 'of', 'Venus,', 'if', 'it', '\"should', 'be-', 'come', 'a', 'fiery', 'comet,', 'and', 'rush', 'through', 'the', 'sky,', 'bringing', 'dismay', 'with', 'her', 'light,', 'and', 'causing', 'a', 'deeper', 'darkness', 'as', 'she', 'passed', 'away.\"58', 'Like', 'comets,', 'women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'are', 'terrifying', 'precisely', 'because', 'they', 'deviate', 'from', 'the', 'norm.', 'No', 'writer', 'can', 'transform', 'them', 'into', 'exemplary', 'figures,', 'for', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'universal', 'about', 'their', 'moral', 'and', 'intellec-', 'tual', 'qualities', 'save', 'their', 'unpredictability.', \"Women's\", 'historians', 'thus', 'distinguished', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'women,', 'lying', 'passively', 'invisible', 'until', 'written', 'up', 'by', 'the', 'historian,', 'from', 'the', '\"comets,\"', 'making', 'themselves', 'visible', 'through', 'their', 'own', 'exertions.', 'In', 'making', 'this', 'distinction,', 'writers', 'further', 'stigmatized', 'attention', 'to', '\"event-', 'fulness\"', 'itself', 'as,', 'at', 'best,', 'a', 'misreading', 'of', 'history', 'and,', 'at', 'worst,', 'an', 'un-', 'Christian', 'practice.', 'Since', \"women's\", 'histories', 'often', 'used', 'sensationalism', 'as', 'a', 'selling', 'point', 'despite', 'their', 'contrary', 'moral', 'claims,', 'this', 'anti-event', 'rhetoric', 'was', 'also', 'a', 'means', 'for', 'an', 'individual', 'writer', 'to', 'clear', 'space', 'for', 'his', 'or', 'her', 'own', 'text.', 'Jane', 'Williams', 'complained', 'that', '\"several', 'miscellaneous', 'collections', 'of', 'the', 'lives', 'of', 'celebrated', 'women', 'have', 'been', 'published', 'in', 'England,', 'apparently', 'without', 'any', 'other', 'principle', 'of', 'selection', 'than', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'and', 'contemporary', 'notoriety,', 'and', 'perplexing', 'the', 'ambi-', 'tious', 'aspirations', 'of', 'youthful', 'readers,', 'by', 'setting', 'before', 'them', 'the', 'dark', 'doings', 'and', 'daring', 'ascents', 'of', 'the', 'Catherines', \"de'\", 'Medici', 'and', 'of', 'Russia,', 'and', 'the', 'discordant', 'careers', 'of', 'the', 'daughters', 'of', 'Sir', 'Anthony', 'Cooke', 'and', 'of', 'Queen', 'Elizabeth.\"\\'59', 'More', 'importantly,', 'this', 'strategy', 'led', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'apply', 'the', 'Christian', 'definition', 'of', 'political', 'historiography', 'as', 'itself', 'a', 'vehicle', 'of', 'evil,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'dwells', 'on', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.', 'For', 'the', 'more', 'doomsaying', 'writer,', 'this', 'evil', 'could', 'be', 'turned', 'to', 'account;', 'as', '\"M.A.K.\"', 'put', 'it,', '\"while', '[history]', 'communicates', 'the', 'events', 'of', 'past', 'ages,', 'it', 'clearly', 'pourtrays', 'the', 'unhappy', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'wicked,', 'and', 'demonstrates', 'most', 'awfully', 'the', 'retributive', 'justice', 'of', 'the', 'Almighty,', 'which', 'is', 'so', 'frequently', 'manifested', 'in', 'this', 'world-doubtless', 'for', 'our', 'ad-', 'monition.\"60', 'For', 'most', 'writers,', 'however,', 'this', 'approach', 'went', 'directly', 'against', 'their', 'doctrines', 'of', 'love', 'and', 'feminine', 'tenderness.', 'Women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'might', 'be', '\"comets,\"', 'but', 'the', 'historian', 'who', 'narrated', 'their', 'lives', 'succumbed', 'to', 'an', 'unworthy', 'desire', 'for', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.', 'The', 'anonymous', 'figure', 'who', 'wrote', 'that', '\"women', 'who', 'have', 'attained', 'no-', 'toriety', 'in', 'any', 'way,', 'have', 'been,', 'for', 'the', 'most', 'part,', 'wanting', 'in', 'the', 'accom-', '58.', 'Respectively,', 'Mrs.', 'Virginia', 'Cary,', 'Letters', 'on', 'Female', 'Character;', 'Addressed', 'to', 'a', 'Young', 'Lady', 'on', 'the', 'Death', 'of', 'Her', 'Mother,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Hartford,', 'Conn.,', '1831),', 'p.', '134;', 'Lewis,', 'p.', '47;', 'and', 'Hale,', 'p.', 'xlv.', '59.', 'Jane', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Literary', 'Women', 'ofEngland.', 'Including', 'a', 'Biographical', 'Epitome', 'of', 'All', 'the', 'Most', 'Eminent', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1700;', 'And', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Poetesses', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1850;', 'with', 'Extracts', 'from', 'their', 'Works,', 'and', 'Critical', 'Remarks', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '10-11.', '60.', 'M.', 'A.', 'K.,', 'Biography', 'for', 'Young', 'Ladies', '(London,', '1839),', 'p.', '214.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '69', 'plishment', 'of', 'virtue!\"', 'may', 'have', 'been', 'merely', 'a', 'misogynist,', 'but', 'others', 'who', 'were', 'not', 'agreed', 'with', 'him', '(or', 'her):', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'in', 'an', 'impor-', 'tant', 'early', 'work', 'on', \"Shakespeare's\", 'heroines', 'that', 'also', 'implicitly', 'retracted', 'her', 'earlier', 'biographical', 'histories,', 'complained', 'that', '\"women', 'are', 'illus-', 'trious', 'in', 'history,', 'not', 'from', 'what', 'they', 'have', 'been', 'in', 'themselves,', 'but', 'generally', 'in', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'mischief', 'they', 'have', 'caused,\"', 'and', 'the', 'abolitionist', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child', 'noted', 'that', '\"in', 'searching', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women,', 'the', 'mild,', 'unobtrusive', 'domestic', 'virtues..,', 'are', 'not', 'found', 'on', 'record.\"61', 'In', 'this', 'context,', 'women', 'in', 'history-even', 'women', 'in', '\"ev-', 'eryone', 'else\\'s\"', \"women's\", 'history-are', 'merely', 'anomalies', 'indexing', 'anom-', 'alies,', 'instead', 'of', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'figures', 'whose', 'private', 'virtues', 'can', 'be', 'universalized', 'by', 'an', 'appropriately', 'Christian', 'author.', 'The', 'only', 'excuse', 'for', 'a', \"woman's\", 'departure', 'from', 'the', 'private', 'sphere', 'is', 'the', 'pull', 'of', 'forces', 'beyond', 'her', 'control;', 'a', 'truly', 'feminine', 'woman', 'never', 'voluntarily', 'partici-', 'pates', 'in', 'historical', 'action.', '\"Sutherland', 'Menzies\"', '(Elizabeth', 'Stone)', 'de-', 'clared', 'this', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'moral', 'of', 'her', 'antifeminist', 'collection:', '\"Certain', 'celebrated', 'women', 'who', 'have', 'flung', 'themselves', 'with', 'ardour', 'into', 'the', 'vor-', 'tex', 'of', 'politics\"', 'had', 'necessarily', 'sacrificed', '\"conjugal', 'happiness,', 'the', 'wel-', 'fare', 'of', 'children,', 'domestic', 'peace,', 'reputation,', 'and', 'all', 'the', 'amenities', 'of', 'the', 'gentle', 'life.\"\\'62', 'By', 'contrast,', 'the', 'truly', 'heroic', 'woman', 'simply', 'relin-', 'quishes', 'her', 'will', 'in', 'the', 'face', 'of', 'extraordinary', 'events,', 'in', 'what', 'Samuel', 'Mossman', 'called', 'an', '\"involuntary', 'act', 'of', 'the', 'sentiments', 'or', 'affections.\"63', '\"History\"', 'in', 'these', 'citations', 'signifies', 'worldly', 'experience,', 'improperly', 'taken', 'as', 'a', 'norm', 'for', 'moral', 'behavior.', 'Yet', 'the', 'disruption', 'of', 'female', 'subjectivity', 'through', 'historical', 'participation,', 'even', 'if', 'that', 'participation', 'was', 'anomalous,', 'remained', 'an', 'insoluble', 'difficulty.', 'The', 'spectacle', 'of', 'the', '\"masculine\"', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'thus', 'the', 'sign', 'of', 'a', 'crisis', 'both', 'in', 'the', \"author's\", 'construction', 'of', 'history', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'larger', 'system', 'of', 'cultural', 'signification.', 'The', 'masculinized', 'woman', 'is', 'dangerous', 'not', 'simply', 'be-', 'cause', 'she', 'threatens', 'gender', 'categories', 'but', 'also', 'because', 'her', 'presence', 'complicates', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and,', 'by', 'posing', 'interpretive', 'difficul-', 'ties,', 'threatens', 'moral', 'categories', 'as', 'well.', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'masculine', 'woman,', 'not', '\"woman,\"', 'who', 'serves', 'as', 'the', 'trope', 'for', 'historical', 'anachronism;', 'when', 'she', 'qualifies', 'as', 'a', 'historical', 'woman,', 'she', 'overlaps', 'dangerously', 'with', 'the', 'Great', 'Man.', 'Invoking', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages', 'as', 'his', 'frame', 'for', 'an', 'antifemi-', 'nist', 'argument,', 'William', 'Hamley', 'asked', 'the', 'readers', 'of', 'the', 'conservative', '61.', 'Woman:', 'As', 'She', 'Is,', 'and', 'As', 'She', 'Should', 'Be,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1835),', '2:2;', 'Mrs.', '[Anna', 'Brownell]', 'Jameson,', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'Women,', 'Moral,', 'Poetical,', 'and', 'Historical,', '3d', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1836),', '1:18;', 'and', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child,', 'Brief', 'History', 'of', 'the', 'Condition', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations,', '5th', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1845),', '2:209.', '62.', '\"Sutherland', 'Menzies,\"', 'Political', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1873),', '1:vii.', '63.', 'Samuel', 'Mossman,', 'Gems', 'of', 'Womanhood:', 'Or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Distinguished', 'Women', 'in', 'Vari-', 'ous', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations', '(London,', '[', '1870?', ']),', 'p.', 'iv.', '70', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', \"Blackwood's\", 'Magazine', 'to', 'adjudicate', 'between', 'the', '\"ladies', 'of', 'manlike', 'ten-', 'dencies\"', 'and', 'the', '\"quiet,', 'soft', 'beings', 'who', 'held', 'fast', 'by', 'the', 'instincts', 'and', 'traditions', 'of', 'their', 'sex.\"', 'Even', 'though', 'he', 'was', 'willing', 'to', 'make', 'exceptions', 'for', 'such', 'manlike', 'women', 'as', 'Joan', 'of', 'Arc', 'and', 'Zenobia,', 'who', '\"impelled', 'by', 'patriotism', 'or', 'other', 'temporary', 'enthusiasm,', 'against', 'their', 'inclination', 'and', 'practice,', 'transform', 'themselves', 'for', 'a', 'time,\"', \"Hamley's\", 'argument', 'was', 'clear:', 'the', 'woman', 'who', 'entered', 'the', 'lists', 'of', 'war', 'and', 'politics', 'not', 'only', 'be-', 'came', 'a', 'hermaphroditic', 'figure', 'but', 'also', 'failed', 'to', 'measure', 'up', 'to', 'later', 'moral', 'standards.', 'Even', 'the', 'motives', 'ascribed', 'to', 'his', 'exceptions', 'are', 'dis-', 'paraged', 'as', '\"temporary', 'enthusiasm\";', 'instead', 'of', 'being', 'called', 'to', 'duty,', 'they', 'called', 'themselves', 'without', 'any', 'true,', 'permanent,', 'or', 'consistent', 'ded-', 'ication.', 'In', \"Hamley's\", 'formulations,', 'historical', 'specificity', 'marks', 'the', 'pecu-', 'liarity', 'and', 'hence', 'the', 'irrelevance', 'of', 'the', 'event,', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'discount', 'any', 'potential', 'relevance', 'for', 'future', 'practices.', '\"We', 'find', 'her', 'natural', 'relative', 'state', 'to', 'be', 'one', 'of', 'subordination', 'to', 'men', 'in', 'both', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'times,\"', 'Hamley', 'remarks,', 'and', '\"we', 'find', 'this', 'natural', 'condition', 'reversed', 'at', 'a', 'particular', 'period', 'on', 'one', 'quarter', 'of', 'the', 'world;', 'but', 'reversed', 'by', 'a', 'particular', 'combination', 'of', 'circumstances.\"64', 'In', 'his', 'call', 'to', 'judgment,', 'the', 'juxtaposition', 'of', 'past', 'and', 'present', 'invokes', 'a', 'modern', 'consensus', 'about', 'the', 'feminine', '(what', '\"we\"', 'think)', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'insist', 'upon', 'the', 'unfa-', 'miliarity', 'of', 'a', 'past', 'in', 'which', 'gender', 'difference', 'appears', 'fluid.', 'By', 'invok-', 'ing', 'historical', 'specificity', 'in', 'this', 'manner,', 'Hamley', 'makes', 'masculinity', 'in', 'a', 'woman', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'exemplarity.', 'The', 'masculine', 'woman', 'is', 'identified', 'with', 'the', 'anomalous', 'event', 'which', 'teaches', 'nothing', 'except', 'the', 'impossibility', 'of', 'its', 'repetition.', 'In', 'turn,', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'does', 'not', 'so', 'much', 'reduce', 'to', 'purely', 'masculine', 'actions', 'as', 'become', 'the', 'reposi-', 'tory', 'of', '\"true\"', 'feminine', 'behavior', '(\"quiet,', 'soft', 'beings\").', 'By', 'incorporat-', 'ing', 'women', 'who', 'do', 'nothing', 'manly', 'yet', 'exhibit', 'a', 'high', 'order', 'of', 'feminine', 'virtue,', 'while', 'simultaneously', 'excising', 'hybrid', 'figures', '(\"manlike', 'ladies\")', 'from', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'progress,', 'Hamley', 'temporarily', 'creates', 'a', 'unified', 'narrative', 'of', 'historical', 'change', 'couched', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'eternal', 'gender', 'differences.', 'If', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', 'moral', 'history', 'was', 'supposed', 'to', 'sup-', 'plant', 'political', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'most', 'valuable', 'realm', 'of', 'human', 'endeavor,', 'Hamley', 'reasserts', 'the', 'primacy', 'of', 'the', 'political', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'situate', 'the', 'feminine', 'as', 'its', 'supplement.65', '64.', '[William', 'Hamley],', '\"Women', 'in', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages,\"', \"Blackwood's\", 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine', '102', '(1867):', '627-28.', '65.', 'Postbellum', 'American', 'serial', 'biographies,', 'however,', 'often', 'challenge', 'this', 'insistence', 'upon', 'strictly', 'delineated', 'gender', 'roles.', 'L.', 'P.', \"Brockett's\", 'and', 'Mary', 'C.', \"Vaughan's\", \"Woman's\", 'Work', 'in', 'the', 'Civil', 'War:', 'A', 'Record', 'of', 'Heroism,', 'Patriotism,', 'and', 'Patience', '(1867),', 'William', 'Wor-', 'thington', \"Fowler's\", 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'American', 'Frontier...', '(1877),', 'and', 'Frank', \"Moore's\", 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'War;', 'Their', 'Heroism', 'and', 'Self-Sacrifice', '(1867)', 'all', 'redefine', 'masculinity', 'and', 'femininity', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'American', 'expansion', 'or', 'to', 'the', 'postbellum', 'social', 'order.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '71', 'If,', 'moreover,', 'the', 'project', 'of', 'domesticating', 'history', 'meant', 'that', 'event-', 'ful', 'narrative-profane', 'historiography-could', 'be', 'ended,', 'this', 'domesti-', 'cation', 'meant', 'educating', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'into', 'an', 'interpretive', 'process', 'that', 'would', 'end', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'further', 'interpretation.', 'Yet', 'such', 'ideally', 'do-', 'mesticated', 'history', 'proves', 'a', 'contradictory', 'exercise.', 'Supposedly,', 'women', 'are', 'born', 'into', 'a', 'Christian', 'era', 'that', 'judges', 'character', 'on', 'universal', 'moral', 'principles.', 'A', 'woman', 'perceptible', 'to', 'the', 'political', 'historian,', 'however,', 'chronologically', 'regresses', 'by', 'being', 'reinscribed', 'into', 'local', 'and', 'specific', 'circumstances;', 'in', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'she', 'reenacts', \"Eve's\", 'fall.', 'Yet', 'if', 'the', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'succumbs', 'to', 'the', 'new', 'apple', 'of', 'public', 'activity,', 'her', 'fall', 'is', 'nevertheless', 'merely', 'individual;', 'as', 'she', 'comes', 'into', 'view,', 'she', 'actually', 'reinforces', 'the', 'reality', 'of', 'the', 'new', 'Eden', 'inhabited', 'by', 'the', 'more', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'type.', 'As', 'the', 'prolific', 'popular', 'biographer', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams', 'argued', '(in', 'relation', 'to', 'Madame', 'de', 'Stadl),', 'a', 'woman', 'who', '\"lived', 'too', 'much', 'in', 'the', 'glare', 'of', 'the', 'lamps,', 'and', 'fed', 'too', 'eagerly', 'upon', 'the', 'ap-', 'plause', 'of', 'the', 'crowd\"', 'had,', 'from', 'the', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', '\"patient', 'analyst,\"', 'an', '\"imperfect', '...', 'career\":', 'it', 'showed', 'that', '\"so', 'prodigal', 'an', 'expenditure', 'of', 'power', 'accomplished', 'so', 'little', 'good.\"', 'According', 'to', 'the', \"analyst's\", 'patient', 'diagnosis,', 'which', 'directly', 'contrasts', 'with', 'his', \"subject's\", 'impulsiveness,', 'de', \"Stall's\", 'very', 'publicity', 'makes', 'her', 'irrelevant', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'moral', 'progress.66', 'In', 'order', 'to', 'explain', 'why', 'women', 'cannot', 'achieve', 'equality,', 'it', 'is', 'necessary', 'to', 'argue', 'that', 'local', 'circumstances', 'are', 'immediately', 'pertinent', 'once', 'women', 'enter', 'into', 'public', 'notice.', 'Madame', 'du', \"Chatelet's\", '\"relaxed', 'morals-the', 'mixture', 'of', 'pride,', 'worldliness,', 'and', 'intellect,', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'was', 'distinguished-her', 'external', 'observance', 'of', 'every', 'convenance-', 'and', 'her', 'total', 'want', 'of', 'religious', 'feeling-are', 'alike', 'characteristic', 'of', 'her', 'station', 'and', 'her', 'age,\"', 'observes', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh', 'of', 'one', 'influential', 'French', 'woman', 'of', 'letters', 'in', 'Enlightenment', 'France.', 'So', 'characteristic', 'that', 'the', 'nineteenth-century', 'Englishwoman', 'can', 'learn', 'nothing', 'from', 'her,', 'save', 'what', 'actions', 'and', 'beliefs', 'are', 'no', 'longer', 'possible', 'or', 'even', 'desirable;', 'it', 'is', 'significant', 'that', 'Kavanagh', 'stipulates', 'that', 'her', 'book', 'is', 'an', '\"analysis', 'of', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'eighteenth', 'century,\"', 'and', 'not,', 'as', 'is', 'usually', 'the', 'case,', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations.67', 'Even', 'as', 'authors', 'claim', 'that', 'women', 'have', 'truly', 'evolved', 'into', 'their', 'historically', 'proper', 'position', 'of', 'domestic', 'solitude,', 'their', 'texts', 'return', 'again', 'and', 'again', 'to', 'the', 'dangers', 'of', 'their', 'straying', 'outside', 'it', 'in', 'search', 'of', 'forbidden', 'fruits.', 'The', 'abstract', 'nature', 'of', 'womanliness', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'account,', 'in', 'other', 'words,', 'actually', 'requires', 'the', 'ever-present', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'woman', 'desiring', '66.', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'Famous', 'Beauties', 'and', 'Historic', 'Women:', 'A', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Croquis', 'Biographies,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1865),', '2:180.', '67.', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh,', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'Eighteenth', 'Century', '(Philadelphia,', '1850),', 'pp.', '14,', '112.', '72', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'to', 'engage', 'with', '(and', 'thus', 'be', 'inscribed', 'by)', 'the', 'historical', 'particularity', 'that', 'still', 'marks', 'the', 'postlapsarian', 'world.', 'Accordingly,', 'the', 'only', 'hope', 'for', 'the', '\"Great', 'Woman\"', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'to', 'transcend', 'circumstances', 'altogether,', 'leaving', 'her', 'character', 'unaffected', 'by', 'her', 'education.', 'Dr.', 'Elizabeth', \"Blackwell's\", '\"varied', 'experiences', 'would', 'never', 'lessen', 'that', 'feminine', 'delicacy', 'which', 'has', 'ever', 'yet', 'distinguished', 'her\";', 'Sarah', 'Trimmer,', 'despite', 'her', 'public', 'success', 'as', 'an', 'author,', 'was', 'nevertheless', '\"always', 'more', 'willing', 'to', 'listen', 'than', 'to', 'speak,', 'more', 'con-', 'scious', 'of', 'her', 'own', 'defects', 'than', 'her', 'success\";', 'Charlotte', \"Bronto's\", 'popular', 'success', '\"neither', 'altered', 'her', 'habits,', 'nor', 'overcame', 'her', 'dislike', 'and', 'shy-', 'ness', 'of', 'company,', 'nor', 'very', 'materially', 'affected', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'her', 'home\";', 'and', 'Fanny', \"Burney's\", 'celebrity', 'never', '\"unsettled', 'her', 'mind,', 'or', 'turned', 'her', 'aside', 'from', 'home', 'and', 'its', 'affections.\"68', 'Such', 'women', 'are', 'the', 'agents', 'of', 'historical', 'narrative', 'but', 'themselves', 'lack', 'subjectivities', 'amena-', 'ble', 'to', 'narration;', 'there', 'are', 'stories', 'told', 'about', 'them,', 'but', 'their', 'personal-', 'ities', 'do', 'not', 'change', 'between', 'the', 'beginning', 'and', 'the', 'end.', 'If', 'masculinized', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Elizabeth', 'I', 'precipitate', 'a', 'crisis', 'within', 'interpretation', 'by', 'shaping', 'their', 'identities', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'moment,', 'eternally', 'femi-', 'nine', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Trimmer', 'pose', 'a', 'similar', 'difficulty', 'presented', 'as', 'a', 'solution.', 'From', 'a', 'Victorian', 'perspective,', 'the', 'increasing', 'number', 'of', 'these', 'ahistorical', 'figures', 'is', 'a', 'peculiarly', 'modern', 'phenomenon,', 'however', 'the', 'chronological', 'boundaries', 'of', 'modernity', 'are', 'defined;', 'the', 'apex', 'of', 'his-', 'torical', 'development', 'occurs', 'when', 'femininity', 'is', 'defined', 'not', 'by', 'mate-', 'rial', 'circumstances', 'but', 'by', 'religious', 'faith', 'dissociated', 'from', 'its', 'worldly', 'situation.', 'Perhaps', 'ironically,', 'writers', 'seized', 'on', 'the', 'British', 'constitution', 'as', 'the', 'supreme', 'means', 'of', 'celebrating', 'the', 'apotheosis', 'of', 'gendered', 'historical', 'development', 'while', 'inadvertently', 'exposing', 'the', 'self-conflicting', 'nature', 'of', 'that', 'project.', 'Queen', \"Victoria's\", 'own', 'carefully', 'constructed', 'image', 'as', 'a', 'private', 'woman', 'could', 'be', 'inscribed', 'into', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', 'the', 'teleo-', 'logical', 'outcome', 'of', 'British', 'politics.', 'The', 'feminization', 'of', 'British', 'royalty', 'was', 'most', 'commonly', 'articulated', 'by', 'comparing', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Elizabeth', 'I.', 'Even', 'before', 'Victoria', 'came', 'to', 'the', 'throne,', 'the', 'art', 'historian', 'and', 'literary', 'critic', 'Anna', 'Jameson', 'had', 'argued', 'that', \"Elizabeth's\", 'reign', 'exemplified', 'the', 'woman', 'whose', 'absolutism', 'is', 'grounded', 'in', 'her', 'own', 'weakness,', 'for', 'she', 'conducts', 'all', 'her', 'business', '\"on', 'the', 'principle', 'of', 'self-preservation', 'and', 'self-interest,', 'rather', 'than', 'of', 'enlightened', 'benevolence', '....', '\"69', 'The', 'polit-', '68.', 'Respectively,', '[Joseph', 'Johnson],', 'Heroines', 'of', 'our', 'Time:', 'Being', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Women,', 'with', 'Examples', 'of', 'their', 'Benevolent', 'Works,', 'Truthful', 'Lives,', 'and', 'Noble', 'Deeds', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '262;', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'Working', 'Women', 'of', 'this', 'Century:', 'The', 'Lesson', 'of', 'their', 'Lives,', '3d', 'ed.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '31;', 'Women', 'of', 'Worth:', 'A', 'Book', 'for', 'Girls', '(London,', '1854),', 'p.', '119;', 'Mossman,', 'p.', '18.', '69.', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Female', 'Sovereigns,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1831),', '1:295-96.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '73', 'ical', 'woman', 'of', 'this', 'reading', 'is', 'a', 'mentally', 'blinkered', 'figure', 'motivated', 'by', 'irrational', 'private', 'desires', 'rather', 'than', 'public', 'patriotism.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Vic-', \"toria's\", 'maternal', 'devotion', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'staged', 'for', 'public', 'consumption)', 'combined', 'with', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'interest', 'in', 'state', 'affairs', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'repre-', 'sented', 'in', 'the', 'biographical', 'texts)', 'becomes', 'not', 'only', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'queenship', 'but', 'also', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'womanhood.', 'Elizabeth', 'remains', 'stigmatized', 'as', 'a', 'woman', 'of', 'primarily', '\"manly', 'qualities,\"', 'lacking', 'in', 'all', '\"ten-', 'derness,', 'softness,', 'pity,', 'and', 'forgiveness,\"', 'although', 'the', 'writer', 'who', 'claimed', 'that', 'the', 'word', '\"queen\"', 'on', 'her', 'tomb', 'should', 'be', 'changed', 'to', '\"quean\"', 'was', 'a', 'bit', 'extreme.70', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'however,', 'was', 'described', 'not', 'only', 'as', '\"the', 'noblest', 'example', 'of', 'domestic', 'purity', 'and', 'social', 'propriety\"', '-particularly', 'in', 'contrast', 'to', 'her', 'immediate', 'male', 'predecessors-but', 'also', 'as', 'the', 'pos-', 'sessor', 'of', 'a', 'fullness', 'of', 'private', 'life', 'unavailable', 'to', 'Elizabeth,', 'who', '\"enjoyed', 'no', 'real', 'and', 'solid', 'happiness\";', '\"never', 'had', 'a', 'country', 'a', 'brighter', 'or', 'more', 'perfect', 'example', 'of', 'all', 'home', 'duties,', 'and', 'all', 'social', 'virtues,', 'than', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'private', 'life', 'of', 'her', 'majesty.\\'\"71', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'thus', 'becomes', 'living', 'proof', 'that', 'history', 'progresses', 'toward', 'an', 'ever-increasing', 'feminine', 'domesticity.', 'She', 'is', 'the', '\"noblest', 'example\"', 'both', 'synchronically', 'and', 'diachronically,', 'the', 'sympathetic', 'sov-', 'ereign', 'who', 'shines', 'by', 'feminine', \"spirituality's\", 'authentic', 'light,', 'not', 'by', 'monarchical', \"spectacle's\", 'borrowed', 'tinsel.', 'As', 'the', \"nation's\", 'most', 'visible', 'woman,', 'yet', 'one', 'who', 'resists', 'masculinization', 'by', 'historical', 'events,', 'Victo-', 'ria', 'is', 'the', 'truly', 'virtuous', 'female', 'citizen,', '\"keeping', 'our', 'Empire', 'great,', 'and', 'true,', 'and', 'conquering\"', 'while', 'rendering', 'literal', 'the', 'boast', 'that', '\"her', 'king-', 'dom', 'reposes', 'on', 'the', 'sanctity', 'of', 'home.\"72', 'Thus', 'appropriated', 'to', 'image', 'the', 'proper', 'relation', 'of', 'woman', 'to', 'politics,', 'Victoria', 'also', 'becomes', 'the', 'figure', 'for', 'benevolent', 'imperial', 'government,', 'where', 'maternal', 'love', 'dis-', 'places', 'the', 'workings', 'of', 'force.', 'If', 'modernity', 'can', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'a', 'woman', 'on', 'the', 'throne,', 'then', 'futurity', 'can', 'be', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'feminization', 'of', 'the', \"empire's\", 'management.', 'But', \"Victoria's\", 'reign', 'also', 'meant', 'an', 'end', 'to', 'historical', 'writing', 'as', 'it', 'was', 'once', 'practiced.', '\"Isabella', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'were', 'one', 'and', 'the', 'same', 'thing;', '70.', 'Louisa', 'Stuart', 'Costello,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Englishwomen,', '4', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:iv;', 'and', 'Mary', 'Howitt,', 'ed.,', 'Biographical', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain.', 'From', 'the', 'Nor-', 'man', 'Conquest', 'to', 'the', 'Reign', 'of', 'Victoria.', 'Or,', 'Royal', 'Book', 'of', 'Beauty', '(London,', '1851),', 'p.', '404.', '71.', 'Howitt,', 'p.', '516;', 'Illustrious', 'Women', 'Who', 'Have', 'Distinguished', 'Themselves', 'for', 'Virtue,', 'Piety,', 'and', 'Benevolence', '(London,', '1852),', 'pp.', '10-11.', '72.', '[Stopford', 'Augustus', 'Brooke],', '\"Womanhood', 'and', 'Its', 'Mission,\"', 'Dublin', 'University', 'Magazine', '43', '(1859):', '656.', 'The', 'most', 'extensive', 'catalog', 'of', 'ways', 'in', 'which', \"Victoria's\", 'image', 'was', 'produced,', 'circulated,', 'and', 'attacked', 'is', 'now', 'that', 'of', 'Richard', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Contentious', 'Crown:', 'Public', 'Discussion', 'of', 'the', 'British', 'Monarchy', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Aldershot,', '1997).', 'See', 'also', 'Margaret', 'Homans', 'and', 'Adrienne', 'Munich,', 'eds.,', 'Remaking', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Cambridge,', '1997),', 'and', 'Margaret', 'Homans,', 'Royal', 'Representations:', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'and', 'Brit-', 'ish', 'Culture,', '1837-1876', '(Chicago,', '1998),', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'appeared', 'too', 'late', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'take', 'advantage', 'of', 'in', 'this', 'essay.', '74', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'Victoria', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'are', 'two', 'very', 'distinct', 'themes,\"', 'Frank', 'Goodrich', 'cannily', 'observed.', '\"The', 'one', 'is', 'within', 'the', 'province', 'of', 'Mrs.', 'Jameson;', 'the', 'other', 'within', 'that', 'of', 'Macaulay.\"73', 'Relegating', 'Victoria', 'to', \"Jameson's\", 'area', 'of', 'biographical', 'and', 'nonpolitical', 'expertise,', 'Goodrich', 'muffles', 'T.', 'B.', \"Macaulay's\", 'famous', 'call', 'for', 'a', 'unification', 'of', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'within', 'historical', 'narrative.', 'Where', 'women', 'are', 'concerned,', 'such', 'a', 'historical', 'project', 'must', 'be', 'referred', 'to', 'the', 'ages', 'before', 'the', 'privatization', 'of', 'the', 'monarchy.', 'Modern', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'are', 'produced', 'by', 'a', 'deliberate', 'rupture', 'between', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'spheres,', 'not', 'by', 'the', 'prospect', 'of', 'reunifying', 'them.', 'Instead', 'of', 'supplanting', 'profane', 'history', 'with', 'Christian', 'history', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all,', 'the', 'feminized', 'monarchy', 'guarantees', 'the', 'end-', 'less', 'necessity', 'for', 'profane', 'history', 'to', 'record', 'all', 'that', 'falls', 'outside', 'of', 'the', '\"province\"', 'of', 'Christian', 'history.', \"Goodrich's\", 'quip', 'neatly', 'suggests', 'that', 'the', '\"victory\"', 'of', 'the', \"women's\", 'historical', 'narrative,', 'in', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'justifies', 'not', 'the', 'end', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history', 'but,', 'in-', 'stead,', 'its', 'continuing', 'manufacture:', 'with', 'Queen', \"Victoria's\", 'advent,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'detached', 'from', 'political', 'narrative', 'instead', 'of', 'sub-', 'suming', 'and', 'ultimately', 'transcending', 'it.', 'The', 'ultimate', 'grounds', 'for', 'and', 'proof', 'of', 'the', 'propagation', 'of', 'Christian', 'truth', 'lay', 'in', 'the', 'unwritability', 'of', \"women's\", 'experience', 'according', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'canons', 'of', 'political', 'his-', 'toriography,', 'and', 'not', 'the', 'substitution', 'of', 'uneventful', \"women's\", 'history', 'for', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'political', 'violence.', 'I', 'have', 'argued', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'was', 'plotted', 'around', 'the', 'effacement', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'history', 'in', 'several', 'senses:', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'woman', 'disappeared', 'from', 'historical', 'view;', 'the', '\"masculine\"', 'woman', 'was', 'progressively', 'eliminated;', 'and', 'women', 'would', 'be', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'fu-', 'ture', \"historian's\", 'gaze', 'altogether.', 'Nonetheless,', 'this', 'plotting', 'claimed', 'to', 'establish', 'an', 'authentic', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'and,', 'by', 'extension,', 'an', 'authentic', 'means', 'of', 'promoting', 'moral', 'and', 'historical', 'progress.', 'By', 'cen-', \"tury's\", 'end,', 'however,', 'the', 'envisioned', 'culmination', 'of', \"women's\", 'historical', 'narrative', 'would', 'shift:', 'instead', 'of', 'explaining', 'the', 'progressive', 'domesti-', 'cation', 'of', 'modern', 'womanhood,', 'writers', 'began', 'seeking', 'the', 'origins', 'of', 'its', 'progressive', 'publicity', 'instead.', 'Nearly', 'twenty', 'years', 'after', 'Middlemarch', 'was', 'published,', 'the', 'well-known', 'antifeminist', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton-perhaps', 'recalling', \"Eliot's\", 'river', 'image-ended', 'her', 'serialized', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'by', 'characterizing', 'political', 'women', 'as', '\"the', 'shallow', 'brook\"', 'that', '\"brawls', 'where', 'the', 'noble', 'river', 'flows', 'silently.\"74', 'For', 'Linton,', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'narrative', 'of', 'public', 'femininity', '(at', 'which', 'Eliot', 'could', 'only', 'partially', '73.', 'Frank', 'B.', 'Goodrich,', 'Women', 'of', 'Beauty', 'and', 'Heroism', 'from', 'Semiramis', 'to', 'Eugenie:', 'A', 'Por-', 'trait', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Female', 'Loveliness,', 'Achievement,', 'and', 'Influence', '...', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', 'p.', '376.', '74.', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton,', '\"The', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'English', 'Women.', 'II,\"', 'Fortnightly', 'Review,', 'n.s.,', '45', '(1889):', '375.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '75', 'hint', 'in', '1871-72)', 'had', 'been', 'realized', 'in', '1889.', \"Linton's\", 'own', 'project', 'identifies', 'feminine', 'domesticity', 'with', 'national', 'salvation.', 'Yet', 'for', 'her,', 'modernity', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', 'the', 'failure', 'of', 'this', 'narrative', 'of', 'progres-', 'sive', 'domestication', 'and', 'by', 'the', 'increasing', 'participation', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'Eliot', 'had', 'raised', 'the', 'possibility', 'that', 'women', 'had', 'some', 'other,', 'as', 'yet', 'unidentified', 'role-\"what', 'else', 'she', 'ought', 'rather', 'to', 'have', 'done\"-and', 'in', \"Linton's\", 'eyes,', 'that', 'unspecified', '\"else\"', 'is', \"woman's\", 'future', 'participation', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'For', 'Linton,', 'such', 'public', 'activity', 'would', 'make', 'modernity', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'narrative', 'failure:', 'the', 'collapse', 'of', 'his-', \"tory's\", 'progress', 'toward', 'domestication', 'and', 'invisibility.', 'Linton', 'can', 'only', 'warn', 'that', '\"we', 'believe', 'our', 'men', 'will', 'never', 'let', 'this', 'monstrous', 'wrong', 'come', 'to', 'pass.', '..', '.\"75', 'By', 'explicitly', 'calling', 'on', 'men', 'to', 'repress', 'the', 'threat', 'of', 'public', 'femininity,', 'Linton', 'inadvertently', 'advertises', 'the', 'bankruptcy', 'of', 'a', \"women's\", 'history', 'that', 'no', 'longer', 'produces', 'domestic', 'exemplars;', 'despite', 'all', 'efforts,', 'the', 'domestic', 'femininity', 'that', 'would', 'identify', 'the', 'apo-', 'theosis', 'of', 'Christian', 'morality', 'stubbornly', 'refused', 'to', 'exist', 'anywhere,', 'save', 'in', 'an', 'ever-receding', 'future.', 'Among', 'later', 'feminists,', 'the', 'publicity', 'that', 'Eliot', 'uneasily', 'anticipated', 'and', 'that', 'Linton', 'attacked', 'would', 'be', 'con-', 'sciously', 'adapted', 'as', 'the', 'basis', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'historiography;', 'it', 'is', 'perhaps', 'appropriate', 'that', 'in', 'introducing', 'her', 'biography', 'of', 'Linton,', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson', 'describes', 'her', 'as', '\"an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'opposed', 'to', \"women's\", 'emancipation.\"76', 'Because', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'de-', 'manded', 'that', 'women', 'be', 'forgotten,', 'however,', 'its', 'own', 'rhetoric', 'consigned', 'it', 'to', 'historical', 'dust.', '75.', 'Eliot,', 'p.', '611;', 'and', 'Linton,', 'p.', '376.', '76.', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson,', 'Woman', 'against', 'Women', 'in', 'Victorian', 'England:', 'A', 'Life', 'of', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton', '(Bloomington,', 'Ind.,', '1987),', 'p.', 'x.']\n", "Percent incorrect: 0.16329941860465116\n" ] } @@ -107,14 +109,86 @@ " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", "\n", "incorrect_percentage = float(min(incorrect))/len(word_list)\n", + "\n" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Run OCR On PDF\n", + "\n", + "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 37, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "['@', '|', 'THE', 'UNIVERSITY', 'OF', 'CHICAGO', 'PRESS', 'JOURNALS\\n\\nFrom', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:', 'Popular', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention', 'of\\nModernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870\\n\\nAuthor(s):', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein\\nSource:', 'Modern', 'Philology,', 'Aug.,', '1999,', 'Vol.', '97,', 'No.', '1', '(Aug.,', '1999),', 'pp.', '46-75\\nPublished', 'by:', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago', 'Press\\n\\nStable', 'URL:', '|https://www.jstor.org/stable/', '439034\\n\\nREFERENCES\\n\\nJSTOR', 'is', 'a', 'not-for-profit', 'service', 'that', 'helps', 'scholars,', 'researchers,', 'and', 'students', 'discover,', 'use,', 'and', 'build', 'upon', 'a', 'wide\\nrange', 'of', 'content', 'in', 'a', 'trusted', 'digital', 'archive.', 'We', 'use', 'information', 'technology', 'and', 'tools', 'to', 'increase', 'productivity', 'and\\nfacilitate', 'new', 'forms', 'of', 'scholarship.', 'For', 'more', 'information', 'about', 'JSTOR,', 'please', 'contact', 'support@jstor.org.\\n\\nYour', 'use', 'of', 'the', 'JSTOR', 'archive', 'indicates', 'your', 'acceptance', 'of', 'the', 'Terms', '&', 'Conditions', 'of', 'Use,', 'available', 'at\\nhttps://about.jstor.org/terms\\n\\nThe', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago', 'Press', 'is', 'collaborating', 'with', 'JSTOR', 'to', 'digitize,', 'preserve', 'and', 'extend\\naccess', 'to', 'Modern', 'Philology\\n\\nJSTOR\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about', 'jstor.org/terms\\nFrom', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:\\nPopular', 'Women’s', 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention\\nof', 'Modernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870\\n\\nMIRIAM', 'ELIZABETH', 'BURSTEIN\\nState', 'University', 'of', 'New', 'York-Brockport\\n\\nIn', 'the', 'famous', '“Prelude”', 'and', 'conclusion', 'to', 'Middlemarch', '(1871-72)\\nGeorge', 'Eliot', 'addresses', 'the', 'question', 'of', 'woman’s', 'work', 'in', 'the', 'modern\\nworld', 'via', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Saint', 'Theresa.', 'The', '“later-born', 'Theresas,”', 'Eliot\\nwrites,', '“were', 'helped', 'by', 'no', 'coherent', 'social', 'faith', 'and', 'order', 'which', 'could\\nperform', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'knowledge', 'for', 'the', 'ardently', 'willing', 'soul”;', 'sim-\\nilarly,', 'she', 'says', 'in', 'the', 'conclusion,', '“[a]', 'new', 'Theresa', 'will', 'hardly', 'have', 'the\\nopportunity', 'of', 'reforming', 'a', 'conventual', 'life,', 'any', 'more', 'than', 'a', 'new', 'Anti-\\ngone', 'will', 'spend', 'her', 'heroic', 'piety', 'in', 'daring', 'all', 'for', 'the', 'sake', 'of', 'a', 'brother’s\\nfuneral:', 'the', 'medium', 'in', 'which', 'their', 'ardent', 'deeds', 'took', 'shape', 'is', 'forever\\ngone.”!', 'Female', 'heroism', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'a', 'system', 'of', 'widely\\naccepted', 'beliefs', 'that', 'demarcates', 'the', '“knowledge”', 'graspable', 'by', 'the\\nquesting', '“soul.”', 'In', 'this', 'coherent', 'order,', 'the', 'female', 'hero', 'is', 'intelligi-\\nble', 'precisely', 'because', 'she', 'is', 'already', 'imagined', 'within', 'the', 'system', 'itself;\\nSaint', 'Theresa', 'is', 'a', 'reformer', 'in', 'the', 'cause', 'of', 'her', 'Christian', 'faith,', 'while\\nAntigone’s', '“heroic', 'piety”', 'is', 'exerted', 'to', 'preserve', 'rites', 'of', 'honorable\\nburial', 'that', 'have', 'been', 'denied.', 'Theresa', 'and', 'Antigone', 'are', 'rendered\\ncoherent', 'as', 'figures', 'within', 'narrative', 'by', 'participating', 'in', 'searches', 'di-\\nrected', 'by', 'common', 'knowledge,', 'but', 'in', 'an', 'age', 'of', 'fragmented', 'belief', 'the\\nfemale', 'heroine', 'becomes', 'increasingly', 'unrecognizable', 'as', 'a', 'heroine', 'of\\nthe', '“epic”', 'type,', 'her', '“struggles”', 'no', 'longer', 'easily', 'interpreted', 'by', 'the\\naverage', 'observer;', 'whereas', 'Theresa', 'has', 'an', '“epic', 'life,”', 'her', 'later', 'avatars\\nhave', '“struggles”', 'which', 'to', '“common', 'eyes', '.', '.', '.', 'seemed', 'mere', 'inconsistency\\nand', 'formlessness.”*\\n\\nEliot’s', 'nostalgia', 'for', 'a', 'lost', 'age', 'of', 'female', 'heroism', 'seems', 'to', 'invert\\nVictorian', 'domestic', 'ideology', 'as', 'we', 'conventionally', 'understand', 'it:', 'the\\nheroine', 'may', '“now”', '(in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century)', 'be', 'literally', 'unimagin-\\n\\n1.', 'George', 'Eliot,', 'Middlemarch,', 'ed.', 'Gordon', 'S.', 'Haight', '(Boston,', '1956),', 'pp.', '3,', '612.\\n2.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '3.\\n\\n©', '1999', 'by', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago.', 'All', 'rights', 'reserved.', '0026-8232/2000/9701-0003$02.00\\n\\n46\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '47\\n\\nable,', 'but', 'this', 'disappearance', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'public', 'narratives', 'is', 'a', 'sign\\nof', 'loss', 'rather', 'than', 'progress.', 'The', 'novel’s', 'concluding', 'lines', 'might', 'at', 'first\\nbe', 'read', 'positively:', '“Her', 'full', 'nature,', 'like', 'that', 'river', 'of', 'which', 'Cyrus', 'broke\\nthe', 'strength,', 'spent', 'itself', 'in', 'channels', 'which', 'had', 'no', 'great', 'name', 'upon\\nthe', 'earth.', 'But', 'the', 'effect', 'of', 'her', 'being', 'on', 'those', 'around', 'her', 'was', 'incal-\\nculably', 'diffusive:', 'for', 'the', 'growing', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'world', 'is', 'partly', 'depen-\\ndent', 'on', 'unhistoric', 'acts;', 'and', 'that', 'things', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'ill', 'with', 'you', 'and', 'me\\nas', 'they', 'might', 'have', 'been,', 'is', 'half', 'owing', 'to', 'the', 'number', 'who', 'have', 'lived\\nfaithfully', 'a', 'hidden', 'life,', 'and', 'rest', 'in', 'unvisited', 'tombs.”>', 'Yet', 'the', 'only\\ntruly', 'positive', 'element', 'here', 'is', 'the', '“incalculably', 'diffusive”', 'nature', 'of', 'Dor-\\nothea’s', '“effect.”', 'Additionally,', 'qualifiers', 'such', 'as', '“partly”', 'and', '“half”', 'make\\nhidden', 'actions', 'interdependent', 'with', 'public', 'ones;', 'female', 'influence', 'is\\nconsequently', 'decentered', 'as', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'social', 'reform.', 'Finally,', 'Eliot’s\\nsimile', 'of', 'the', 'dispersed', 'river', 'acidly', 'erodes', 'the', 'ideal', 'of', 'feminine', 'self-\\nsacrifice.', 'Dorothea’s', '“unhistoric', 'acts”', 'are', 'as', 'much', 'mandated', 'by', 'mod-\\nern', 'culture', 'as', 'they', 'are', 'the', 'partial', 'means', 'of', 'redeeming', 'that', 'culture.\\n\\nFor', 'critics', 'such', 'as', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', 'Alison', 'Booth,', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,\\nMiddlemarch', 'offers', 'a', 'positive', 'alternative', 'to', 'contemporary', 'Victorian\\nhistoriography—not', 'just', 'to', 'the', '“masculinist”', 'focus', 'on', 'war', 'and', 'politics,\\nbut', 'also', 'to', 'the', 'popular', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'that', 'flourished', 'during', 'the\\nnineteenth', 'century.*', 'But', 'attempts', 'to', 'find', 'a', 'more', '“truthful”', 'represen-\\ntation', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'in', 'Eliot’s', 'fiction', 'raise', 'other', 'problems,', 'not\\nleast', 'what', 'I', 'suggest', 'is', 'her', 'ambivalence', 'about', 'the', 'adequacy', 'of', 'any', 'mod-\\nern', 'historical', 'narrative', 'to', 'explain', 'a', 'Victorian', 'woman’s', 'career.', 'Yet', 'to\\ngo', 'further,', 'Eliot', 'also', 'questions', 'whether', 'the', 'absence', 'of', 'such', 'narratives\\nmight', 'diagnose', 'a', 'still', 'greater', 'malaise', 'in', 'nineteenth-century', 'culture.\\nThis', 'article', 'argues', 'that', 'Eliot’s', 'ambivalence', 'marks', 'key', 'issues', 'in', 'a', 'larger\\ndiscourse', 'about', 'gender,', 'history,', 'and', 'modernity,', 'a', 'discourse', 'which\\ncannot', 'be', 'adequately', 'addressed', 'by', 'claiming', 'that', 'Eliot’s', 'more', 'truthful\\nor', 'realistic', 'representations', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'surpassed', 'it.\\n\\nTo', 'reconstruct', 'this', 'discourse,', 'I', 'consider', 'a', 'wide', 'range', 'of', 'Victorian\\ntexts', 'that', 'either', 'wrote', 'the', 'history', 'of', '“Woman”', 'or', 'put', 'that', 'history', 'to\\npolitical', 'use,', 'including', 'biography', 'collections,', 'universal', 'histories', 'of\\nwomen', 'in', '“all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations,”', 'periodical', 'articles,', 'and', 'devotional\\nmaterials.', 'In', 'general,', 'histories', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'seek', 'the', '“origins”', 'of\\nfeminist', 'historiography,', 'an', 'approach', 'that', 'understandably', 'privileges\\nprotofeminist', 'authors.', 'Indeed,', 'the', 'recent', 'surge', 'of', 'scholarly', 'interest\\n\\n3.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '613.\\n\\n4.', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', '“The', 'Unhistoric', 'in', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot’s', 'Challenge', 'to', 'Victorian\\nHistoriography,”', 'Clio', '26', '(1996):', '79-95;', 'Alison', 'Booth,', '“Little', 'Dorrit', 'and', 'Dorothea', 'Brooke:\\nInterpreting', 'the', 'Heroines', 'of', 'History,”', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Literature', '41', '(1986):', '190-216;\\nand', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '“Reinventing', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'Discourses', 'of\\nGender', 'and', 'Historiography”', '(Ph.D.', 'diss.,', 'Cornell', 'University,', '1995),', 'pp.', '227-69.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n48', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nin', 'early', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'derives', 'from', 'an', 'author-centered', 'feminist\\ninterest', 'in', '“lost”', 'women', 'historians.°', 'By', 'maintaining', 'this', 'specific', 'focus\\non', 'women', 'historians,', 'however,', 'historians', 'and', 'literary', 'critics', 'rein-\\nforce', 'a', 'Victorian', 'stereotype', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'women’s', 'work—“a\\nshower', 'of', 'pretty', 'books', 'in', 'red', 'and', 'blue,', 'gilded', 'and', 'illustrated,', 'light\\nand', 'dainty', 'and', 'personal”®—thereby', 'marginalizing', 'the', 'men', 'responsi-\\nble', 'for', 'at', 'least', 'half', 'of', 'the', 'nearly', '300', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'produced', 'in\\nthe', 'nineteenth', 'century.', 'Without', 'considering', 'the', 'multiple', 'authors', 'of\\n(and', 'audiences', 'for)', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century,', 'it', 'is\\nimpossible', 'to', 'understand', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'their', 'cultural', 'impact.”\\n\\nThe', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'authors', 'is', 'particularly', 'inadequate', 'when', 'one\\nconsiders', 'how', 'such', 'texts', 'were', 'produced.', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women\\nwere', 'churned', 'out', 'at', 'astounding', 'speed', 'with', 'no', 'attention', 'to', 'method-\\nological', 'innovation:', 'books', 'published', 'in', '1829', 'and', '1889', 'are', 'virtually\\nindistinguishable', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'their', 'historiographical', 'standards.', 'Faced\\nwith', 'demands', 'for', 'rapid', 'turnaround', 'time,', 'authors', 'wrote', 'encyclopedic\\ntexts', 'characterized', 'by', 'instances', 'of', 'déja', 'lu,', 'plagiarism,', 'and', 'mutual', 'raid-\\ning', 'of', 'sources.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'therefore', 'expresses', 'neither\\na', 'uniquely', 'feminine', 'perspective', 'nor', 'a', 'distinctly', 'feminine', 'voice.', 'Ac-\\ncordingly,', 'I', 'shift', 'focus', 'from', '(female)', 'authors', 'to', 'texts', 'and', 'their', 'audi-\\nences', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'trace', 'the', 'techniques', 'by', 'which', 'histories', 'of', 'women\\nwere', 'presented', 'as', 'appropriately', 'moralized', 'knowledge', 'about', '“mod-\\nern,”', 'Christian', 'femininity.\\n\\n5.', 'Natalie', 'Zemon', 'Davis,', '“Women’s', 'History', 'in', 'Transition:', 'The', 'European', 'Case,”', 'Femi-\\nnist', 'Studies', '3', '(1976):', '83-103,', 'and', '“Gender', 'and', 'Genre:', 'Women', 'as', 'Historical', 'Writers,\\n1400-1820,”', 'in', 'Beyond', 'Their', 'Sex:', 'Learned', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'European', 'Past,', 'ed.', 'Patricia', 'H.', 'La-\\nbalme', '(New', 'York,', '1980),', 'pp.', '153-82;', 'Kathryn', 'Kish', 'Sklar,', '“American', 'Female', 'Historians\\nin', 'Context,', '1770-1930,”', 'Feminist', 'Studies', '3', '(1975):', '171-84;', 'and', 'Bonnie', 'Smith,', '“The', 'Con-\\ntribution', 'of', 'Women', 'to', 'Modern', 'Historiography', 'in', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'France,', 'and', 'the', 'United\\nStates,', '1750-1940,”', 'American', 'Historical', 'Review', '89', '(1984):', '709-32.', 'D.', 'R.', 'Woolf’s', 'work', 'on\\nwomen', 'historians', 'in', 'the', 'early', 'modern', 'period', 'promises', 'to', 'be', 'definitive;', 'see', '“A', 'Feminist\\nPast?', 'Gender,', 'Genre,', 'and', 'Historical', 'Knowledge', 'in', 'England,', '1500-1800,”', 'American', 'His-\\ntorical', 'Review', '102', '(1997):', '645-79.\\n\\n6.', '[Margaret', 'Oliphant],', '“Modern', 'Light', 'Literature—History,”', 'Blackwood’s', 'Edinburgh\\nMagazine', '78', '(1855):', '437.\\n\\n7.', 'For', 'a', 'sampling', 'of', 'work', 'devoted', 'to', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women,', 'see', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,\\n“*This', 'Feminine', 'Preserve’:', 'Historical', 'Biographies', 'by', 'Victorian', 'Women,”', 'Victorian', 'Studies\\n38', '(1995):', '371-93;', 'Billie', 'Melman,', '“Gender,', 'History,', 'and', 'Memory:', 'The', 'Invention', 'of\\nWomen’s', 'Past', 'in', 'the', 'Nineteenth', 'and', 'Early', 'Twentieth', 'Centuries,”', 'History', 'and', 'Memory', '5\\n(1993):', '5-41;', 'and', 'Martha', 'Vicinus,', '“Models', 'for', 'Public', 'Life:', 'Biographies', 'of', '‘Noble\\nWomen’', 'for', 'Girls,”', 'in', 'The', 'Girl’s', 'Own:', 'Cultural', 'Histories', 'of', 'the', 'Anglo-American', 'Girl,', '1830-\\n1915,', 'ed.', 'Claudia', 'Nelson', 'and', 'Lynne', 'Vallone', '(Athens,', 'Ga.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '52-70.', 'Ronald', 'J.\\nZboray’s', 'sampling', 'of', 'one', 'American', 'library’s', 'loan', 'lists', 'suggests', 'that', 'Agnes', 'Strickland’s\\nLives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'was', 'nearly', 'as', 'popular', 'with', 'men', '(eleven', 'patrons)', 'as', 'women\\n(sixteen', 'patrons);', 'see', '“Reading', 'Patterns', 'in', 'Antebellum', 'America:', 'Evidence', 'in', 'the', 'Charge\\nRecords', 'of', 'the', 'New', 'York', 'Society', 'Library,”', 'Libraries', 'and', 'Culture', '26', '(1991):', '310,', '316-21.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '49\\n\\nI', 'do', 'not', 'presume,', 'however,', 'that', 'these', 'texts', 'either', 'unproblematically\\nreflected', 'or', 'produced', 'Victorian', 'attitudes', 'about', 'gender', 'and', 'history.', 'In-\\nstead,', 'the', 'majority', 'of', 'them', 'constituted', 'a', '“commercially', 'respectable”\\ndiscourse', 'on', 'women’s', 'history', 'that', 'was', 'inflected', 'by', 'multiple', 'factors:\\nthe', 'publisher’s', 'sense', 'of', 'marketplace', 'trends,', 'the', 'author’s', 'financial', 'mo-\\ntivations,', 'and', 'the', 'pedagogical', 'ideals', 'of', 'teachers', 'and', 'parents.', 'Writers\\nof', 'popular', 'women’s', 'history', 'were', 'appealing', 'to', 'an', 'audience', 'of', 'their', 'pub-\\nlishers', 'and', 'of', 'other', 'popular', 'writers', 'as', 'much', 'as', 'to', 'recreational', 'readers.®\\nThis', 'commercially', 'respectable', 'discourse', 'presents', 'a', 'condensed', 'form\\nof', 'the', 'debate', 'about', 'women’s', 'roles', 'and', 'their', 'relation', 'to', 'historical\\nmoments', 'and', 'to', 'historiography,', 'a', 'debate', 'that', 'writers', 'such', 'as', 'Eliot\\nor', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'could', 'invoke', 'and', 'rewrite', 'for', 'their', 'own', 'purposes.\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'ultimately', 'appeared', 'as', 'an', 'easily', 'recogniz-\\nable', 'set', 'of', 'frameworks', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'either', 'to', 'consolidate', 'or', 'to\\ncritique', 'woman’s', 'position', 'in', 'Victorian', 'culture.\\n\\nThe', 'best-known', 'histories', 'of', 'women’s', 'history,', 'such', 'as', 'those', 'by', 'Rohan\\nMaitzen', 'and', 'Billie', 'Melman,', 'read', 'these', 'works', 'as', 'either', 'secular', 'or', 'pro-\\ngressively', 'secularized.', 'By', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'religious', 'investments', 'of\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history,', 'I', 'show,', 'by', 'contrast,', 'how', 'certain', 'historians\\nand', 'polemicists', 'confronted', 'the', 'simultaneously', 'exemplary', 'and', 'poten-\\ntially', 'subversive', '“woman', 'in', 'history,’', 'thematizing', 'the', 'problems', 'of\\nknowledge', 'which', 'the', 'writing', 'and', 'reading', 'of', 'such', 'a', 'figure', 'entailed.\\nWomen’s', 'historians', 'sought', 'to', 'isolate', 'the', 'moment', 'when', 'modern', 'fem-\\nininity', 'would', 'become', 'identical', 'with', 'the', 'representations', 'of', 'ideal', 'femi-\\nnine', 'virtue', 'they', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'New', 'Testament;', 'their', 'narratives', 'pointed\\ntoward', 'the', '(implicitly', 'or', 'explicitly', 'millennial)', 'time', 'when', 'femininity\\nwould', 'coincide', 'with', 'its', 'original', 'ideal', 'and', 'thus', 'would', 'no', 'longer', 'require\\nhistorical', 'debate', 'and', 'representation.?', 'But', 'such', 'texts', 'point,', 'paradoxi-\\ncally,', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'ultimate', 'irrelevance', 'in', 'a', 'truly', 'Christian', 'world.', 'I\\ndemonstrate', 'that', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'tried', 'to', 'define', 'a', 'mod-\\nern', 'Protestant', 'historical', 'perspective', 'that', 'rendered', 'women’s', 'history\\nknowable', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place,', 'even', 'as', 'they', 'argued', 'that', 'a', 'modernity', 'dom-\\ninated', 'by', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Christian', 'faith', 'should', 'render', 'the', 'actual', 'writing\\nof', 'women’s', 'history', 'anachronistic.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'elucidates\\n\\n8.', 'I', 'here', 'qualify', 'Jonathan', 'Rose’s', 'empirical', 'studies', 'of', 'reader', 'reception,', 'which', 'dem-\\nonstrate,', 'for', 'example,', 'that', '“women’s', 'literature”', 'was', 'often', 'unpopular', 'with', 'its', 'target\\naudience.', 'Rose’s', 'sweeping', 'formulations', 'do', 'not', 'quite', 'come', 'to', 'grips', 'with', 'the', 'problem\\nthat', '“women’s', 'literature”', 'continued', 'to', 'be', 'produced', 'anyway.', 'See', '“Rereading', 'the', 'En-\\nglish', 'Common', 'Reader:', 'A', 'Preface', 'to', 'a', 'History', 'of', 'Audiences,”', 'Journal', 'of', 'the', 'History', 'of\\nIdeas', '53', '(1992):', '47-70.\\n\\n9.', 'FR.', 'Ankersmit', 'has', 'identified', 'historicity', 'with', 'multiplying', 'explanatory', 'narratives;\\nwhen', 'a', 'subject', 'no', 'longer', 'generates', 'debate,', 'it', 'becomes', 'a', '“thing”', 'beyond', 'the', 'reach', 'of\\nboth', 'interpretation', 'and', 'historiography.', 'See', 'History', 'and', 'Tropology:', 'The', 'Rise', 'and', 'Fall', 'of\\nMetaphor', '(Berkeley,', '1994),', 'pp.', '39,', '42.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n50', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\npopular', 'ideas', 'about', 'how', 'gender', 'was', 'shaped', 'by', 'historical', 'conditions\\nand', 'how', 'this', 'shaping', 'could', 'be', 'appropriately', 'narrated,', 'clarifying', 'the\\nsignificance', 'of', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'for', 'Victorian', 'historiography', 'in\\ngeneral', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'novel', 'in', 'particular.\\n\\nThe', 'preoccupation', 'with', 'the', 'social', 'implications', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'hardly', 'originated', 'with', 'the', 'Victorians.', 'In', 'the', 'previous', 'century,\\nfor', 'example,', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'featured', 'prominently', 'in', 'books', 'such\\nas', 'John', 'Millar’s', 'The', 'Origin', 'of', 'the', 'Distinction', 'of', 'Ranks', '(1779),', 'which', 'con-\\nnected', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'woman’s', 'social', 'position', 'to', 'the', 'development\\nof', 'civilization', 'more', 'generally.', '!°', 'Nevertheless,', 'the', 'Victorians', 'signifi-\\ncantly', 'revised', 'the', 'meaning', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'by', 'using', 'particular\\ngenres,', 'theories', 'of', 'religious', 'development,', 'and', 'moral', 'justifications\\nfor', 'historical', 'writing.', 'Indeed,', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'most', '“Victorian”', 'aspects', 'of\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'is', 'its', 'reactionary', 'generic', 'form.', 'The', 'exem-\\nplary', 'biographical', 'collection,', 'which', 'identifies', '“virtuous”', 'or', '“vicious”\\nhistorical', 'figures', 'for', 'the', 'reader’s', 'emulation', 'or', 'disapprobation,', 'signaled\\na', 'Victorian', 'return', 'to', 'a', 'genre', 'of', 'medieval', 'and', 'Renaissance', 'encomiastic\\nliterature', 'on', 'women.', 'Like', 'these', 'earlier', 'texts,', 'Victorian', 'exemplary', 'lives\\nwere', 'in', 'their', 'starkest', 'form', 'lists', 'or', 'catalogs,', 'using', 'sheer', 'numbers', 'to\\nemphasize', 'woman’s', 'significance', 'in', 'history.!!', 'But', 'new', 'to', 'the', 'mid-nine-\\nteenth-century', 'version', 'of', 'this', 'genre', 'was', 'an', 'interest', 'in', 'how', 'woman’s', 'so-\\ncial', 'position', 'diagnosed', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'society', 'as', 'a', 'whole.\\n\\nWomen’s', 'history', 'became', 'popular', 'in', 'the', '1830s', 'as', 'a', 'commercial', 'ven-\\nture,', 'fueled', 'by', 'new', 'improvements', 'in', 'print', 'technology', 'which', 'cheap-\\nened', 'publication', 'costs.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'allied', 'their\\nwritings', 'with', 'popular', 'didactic', 'literature', 'and', 'directed', 'their', 'work', 'at\\nconsumers', 'of', 'conduct', 'books', 'and', 'popular', 'theology.', 'Most', 'authors', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'were', 'popularizers', 'who', 'worked', 'in', 'several', 'commercial\\ngenres', 'at', 'once.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'the', 'best', 'known', 'and', 'most', 'respected\\nof', 'them,', 'published', 'not', 'only', 'lives', 'of', 'English', 'queens', 'but', 'also', 'historical\\nnovels,', 'lives', 'of', 'bishops', 'and', 'bachelor', 'kings,', 'poetry,', 'children’s', 'history,\\nbook', 'reviews,', 'and', 'periodical', 'articles.', 'With', 'the', 'rare', 'exception', 'of', 'origi-\\nnal', 'researchers', 'such', 'as', 'Strickland,', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'tied\\nthe', 'quality', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'its', 'moral', 'efficacy', 'instead', 'of', 'its', 'schol-\\narly', 'credentials.', 'Few', 'authors', 'were', 'quite', 'so', 'self-exculpatory', 'as', 'the', 'evan-\\n\\n10.', 'For', 'a', 'useful', 'introduction', 'to', 'Millar’s', 'thought', 'on', 'women,', 'see', 'Paul', 'Bowles,', '“John\\nMillar,', 'the', 'Four-Stages', 'Theory,', 'and', 'Women’s', 'Position', 'in', 'Society,”', 'History', 'of', 'Political\\nEconomy', '16', '(1984):', '619-38.\\n\\n11.', 'For', 'further', 'background', 'on', 'the', 'earlier', 'traditions,', 'see', 'Pamela', 'Joseph', 'Benson,', 'The\\nInvention', 'of', 'the', 'Renaissance', 'Woman:', 'The', 'Challenge', 'of', 'Female', 'Independence', 'in', 'the', 'Literature\\nand', 'Thought', 'of', 'Italy', 'and', 'England', '(University', 'Park,', 'Pa.,', '1992);', 'Alcuin', 'Blamires,', 'The', 'Case\\nfor', 'Women', 'in', 'Medieval', 'Culture', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Glenda', 'McLeod,', 'Virtue', 'and', 'Venom:\\nCatalogs', 'of', 'Women', 'from', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Renaissance', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1991).\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '51\\n\\ngelical', 'conduct-book', 'writer', 'Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis,', 'who', 'excused', 'her', 'work\\non', 'the', 'grounds', 'that', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'female', 'historians', 'potentially', 'offered\\na', 'greater', '“moral...', 'than', 'in', 'those', 'which', 'might', 'justly', 'be', 'preferred', 'for\\nmerits', 'of', 'a', 'purely', 'historical', 'order,”', 'but', 'Ellis', 'stands', 'out', 'only', 'in', 'admit-\\nting', 'to', 'the', 'common', 'practice', 'of', 'elevating', 'moral', 'didacticism', 'over', 'factual\\naccuracy.', '!?', 'In', 'pursuit', 'of', 'their', 'ostensibly', 'moral', 'priorities,', 'these', 'histo-\\nrians', 'foregrounded', 'the', 'individual', 'Great', 'Woman', 'and', 'her', 'spiritual\\nwork.', 'Great', 'Women', 'were', 'most', 'commonly', 'written', 'up', 'in', 'biography', 'col-\\nlections', 'with', 'titles', 'such', 'as', 'Biographies', 'of', 'Good', 'Women,', 'The', 'Book', 'of', 'Noble\\nEnglishwomen,', 'Folly’s', 'Queen,', 'or,', 'Women', 'Whose', 'Loves', 'Have', 'Ruled', 'the', 'World,\\nand', 'Lives', 'of', 'Twelve', 'Bad', 'Women.', 'These', 'biographical', 'collections', 'were\\norganized', 'in', 'a', 'variety', 'of', 'ways,', 'by', 'chronology,', 'themes', '(moral', '“types”),\\nor', 'antithetical', 'characters.', 'As', 'collective', 'narratives,', 'they', 'underscored\\nsimilarities', 'between', 'individual', 'women’s', 'biographies;', 'the', 'overall', 'story\\nof', 'these', 'texts', 'emerged', 'by', 'emphasizing', 'moral', 'progress', 'and', 'the', 'increas-\\ning', 'effect', 'of', 'women’s', '“invisible”', 'work.', '!%\\n\\nOne', 'of', 'the', 'most', 'obvious', 'characteristics', 'of', 'these', 'biographies,', 'as', 'I\\nwill', 'show', 'in', 'detail', 'later,', 'is', 'the', 'emptiness', 'of', 'the', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'they\\npresent.', 'Evil', 'figures', 'lead', 'eventful', 'lives,', 'which', 'could', 'be', 'sensationalized\\nunder', 'the', 'guise', 'of', 'morality—“the', 'record', 'of', 'such', 'crimes,', 'though', 'it\\nraises', 'a', 'thrill', 'of', 'breathless', 'horror,', 'conveys', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'a', 'useful\\nlesson”!4—but', 'virtuous', 'lives', 'are', 'defined', 'by', 'internal', 'qualities', 'such', 'as\\npiety.', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'piety', '(which', 'all', 'women', 'can', 'emulate)', 'and', 'the\\ndowngrading', 'of', 'unique', 'experiences', '(reserved', 'for', 'a', 'few)', 'democratize\\nvirtue,', 'holding', 'out', 'a', 'morally', 'positive', 'but', 'historically', 'vacuous', 'equality\\naccessible', 'to', 'all.', 'Moral', 'concerns', 'dictated', 'a', 'focus', 'on', 'Judeo-Christian\\nwomen,', 'with', 'emphasis', 'on', '“Christian.”', 'Biblical', 'women', 'were', 'popular\\nsubjects,', 'inspiring', 'dozens', 'of', 'books,', 'including', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox’s\\nFemale', 'Scripture', 'Biography', '(1817),', 'Phineas', 'Camp', 'Headley’s', 'The', 'Women\\nof', 'the', 'Bible', '(1850),', 'and', 'Harriet', 'Beecher', 'Stowe’s', 'Women', 'in', 'Sacred', 'History\\n(1874).!5', 'In', 'general,', 'women’s', 'histories', 'were', 'biased', 'toward', 'ecumenical\\nProtestant', 'examples,', 'although', 'individual', 'denominations,', 'particularly\\nthe', 'Methodists,', 'often', 'produced', 'more', 'theologically', 'specific', 'works.\\nCatholicism', 'was', 'a', 'different', 'matter.', 'Despite', 'Catholic', 'emancipation', 'in\\n\\n12.', 'Mrs.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney]', 'Ellis,', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'Great', 'Men', '(London,', '1859),', 'p.', '70.\\n\\n13.', 'Iam', 'indebted', 'to', 'Annette', 'Wheeler', 'Cafarelli’s', 'extensive', 'analysis', 'of', 'how', 'collective\\nbiographies', 'function', 'as', 'narratives', 'in', 'Prose', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Poets:', 'Romanticism', 'and', 'Biographi-\\ncal', 'Narrative', 'from', 'Johnson', 'to', 'DeQuincey', '(Philadelphia,', '1990).\\n\\n14.', 'Madame', '[Laure]', 'Junot,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Women', 'of', 'All', 'Countries', '(London,\\n1834),', 'p.', '65.\\n\\n15.', 'Mary', 'de', 'Jong', 'has', 'discussed', 'books', 'on', 'biblical', 'women', 'as', 'a', 'separate', 'genre', 'in\\n“Dark-Eyed', 'Daughters:', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Popular', 'Portrayals', 'of', 'Biblical', 'Women,”\\nWomen’s', 'Studies', '19', '(1991):', '293-308.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n52', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\n1829,', 'British', 'Catholic', 'writers', 'produced', 'little', 'in', 'the', 'way', 'of', 'popular\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century', 'aside', 'from', 'some', 'hagiogra-\\nphies', '(e.g.,', 'J.', 'M.', 'Neale’s', 'Annals', 'of', 'Virgin', 'Saints', '[1846]),', 'and', 'Protestant\\nhistories', 'were', 'often', 'profoundly', 'anti-Catholic', 'in', 'sentiment.', 'The', 'Vic-\\ntorians', 'were', 'chary', 'of', 'representing', 'women', 'of', 'classical', 'antiquity,', 're-\\ngarding', 'them', 'at', 'best', 'as', 'representatives', 'of', 'a', 'lower', 'virtue', 'and', 'at', 'worst\\nas', 'irretrievably', 'debauched', 'by', 'ancient', 'sexual', 'attitudes—in', 'the', 'words\\nof', 'one', 'sermon,', '“darkened', 'and', 'degraded,', 'without', 'knowledge,', 'without\\ninfluence,', 'without', 'honor,', 'the', 'mere', 'drudge', 'of', 'society,', 'or', 'still', 'worse,\\nthe', 'miserable', 'slave', 'of', 'sensual', 'passion.”!®\\n\\nVictorian', 'historiographical', 'thinking', 'had', 'a', 'special', 'place', 'for', 'narra-\\ntives', 'formed', 'out', 'of', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'short', 'lives.', 'Such', 'texts', 'bridged', 'political\\nhistory', 'and', 'fiction:', 'the', 'former', 'a', 'source', 'of', 'empirical', 'truth', 'and', 'a', 'key\\nto', 'Providence,', 'but', 'absorbed', 'with', 'wars', 'and', 'governments;', 'the', 'latter', 'a\\npotential', 'repository', 'of', 'universal', 'moral', 'truth,', 'but', 'also', 'liable', 'to', 'dan-\\ngerously', 'mislead', 'in', 'its', 'representations', 'of', '“real', 'life.”', 'In', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'an\\nanonymous', 'writer', 'calling', 'for', 'an', '“English', 'Plutarch,”', '“we', 'want', 'a', 'work\\nthat', 'shall', 'bring', 'before', 'us', 'in', 'a', 'moderate', 'compass', 'an', 'outline', 'of', 'the', 'ac-\\ntions', 'and', 'fortunes', 'of', 'those', 'persons', 'who', 'have', 'stamped', 'on', 'it', 'or', 'em-\\nbodied', 'in', 'themselves', 'its', 'most', 'characteristic', 'features,', 'and', 'who', 'seem\\nto', 'us,', 'when', 'we', 'are', 'acquainted', 'with', 'their', 'history,', 'most', 'typical', 'of', 'all\\nthat', 'we', 'mean', 'by', 'English.”', '7', 'As', 'personalized', 'history,', 'these', 'biographical\\nnarratives', 'miniaturize', 'and', 'contain', '“Englishness”', 'in', 'a', 'comprehensible,\\naccessible', 'form.', 'The', 'distinguished', 'subjects', 'of', 'biographical', 'history', 'de-\\nserve', 'historical', 'treatment,', 'yet', 'the', 'virtues', 'that', 'make', 'them', 'great', 'are', 'in\\nfact', 'endemic', 'to', 'English', 'character.', 'An', 'English', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'articu-\\nlate', 'both', 'the', 'formation', 'of', 'modern', 'Englishness', 'and', 'its', 'apparently\\ntranshistorical', 'character.', 'And', 'with', 'some', 'necessary', 'modifications,', 'a\\nfemale', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'undertake', 'a', 'similar', 'project', 'for', 'women.\\n\\nWriters', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'argued', 'that', 'narrative', 'events', 'and', 'their\\nimpact', 'on', 'the', 'reader', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'evaluated', 'according', 'to', 'their', 'potential\\nfor', 'producing', 'greater', 'moral', 'goods.', 'Biographical', 'history,', 'it', 'was', 'claimed,\\ndownplayed', 'the', 'evils', 'of', 'political', 'history', 'while', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'moral\\nqualities', 'of', 'private', 'experience.', 'In', 'the', 'late', '1820s,', 'one', 'anonymous', 'biog-\\nrapher', 'wrote', 'that', 'while', 'history—that', 'is,', 'the', 'story', 'of', 'kings', 'and', 'queens,\\n\\n16.', 'J.', 'F', 'Stearns,', 'Female', 'Influence,', 'and', 'the', 'True', 'Christian', 'Mode', 'of', 'Its', 'Exercise:', 'A', 'Discourse\\nDelivered', 'in', 'the', 'First', 'Presbyterian', 'Church', 'in', 'Newburyport,', 'July', '30,', '1837', '(Newburyport,\\nMass.,', '1837),', 'p.', '12.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'James', 'Donaldson', 'signals', 'his', 'feminist', 'leanings', 'by', 'prais-\\ning', 'the', 'treatment', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'antiquity', 'over', 'that', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era.', 'Most\\ngermane', 'is', 'the', 'last', 'in', 'his', 'series', 'of', 'five', 'essays,', '“The', 'Position', 'of', 'Women', 'Among', 'the', 'Early\\nChristians,”', 'Contemporary', 'Review', '56', '(1889):', '433-51.', 'Similarly,', 'see', 'B.', 'W.', 'Ball,', '“Woman’s\\nRights', 'in', 'Ancient', 'Athens,”', 'Atlantic', 'Monthly', '27', '(1871):', '273-86.\\n\\n17.', '“English', 'Biography,”', 'Saturday', 'Review', '9', '(1860):', '301.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '53\\n\\nwars', 'and', 'politics—‘“too', 'often', 'presents', 'a', 'frightful', 'tissue', 'of', 'crimes', 'and\\nhorrors,”', 'biography', '“frequently', 'reflects', 'from', 'its', 'calm', 'and', 'polished', 'sur-\\nface,', 'every', 'thing', 'that', 'is', 'excellent,', 'lovely,', 'and', 'of', 'good', 'report”—an\\necho', 'of', 'Philippians', '1:4-8,', 'here', 'used', 'to', 'represent', 'biography', 'as', 'the\\nsupreme', 'repository', 'of', 'Christian', 'knowledge', 'and', 'an', 'incitement', 'to\\ngreater', 'spirituality.', '!*', 'In', 'this', 'revision', 'of', 'the', '“mirror', 'of', 'history”', 'topos,\\nhorror', 'becomes', 'a', 'manifold', 'response:', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'evil', 'represented', 'in', 'his-\\ntorical', 'narrative;', 'it', 'is', 'also', 'the', 'magnitude', 'of', 'implication', 'that', 'envelops\\nthe', 'very', 'narrative', 'structure', '(the', '“frightful', 'tissue”)', 'in', 'the', 'horrors', 'of\\nthe', 'events', 'it', 'describes.', 'By', 'transforming', 'history', 'into', 'a', 'record', 'of', 'private\\nvirtues,', 'the', 'biographical', 'narrative', 'seems', 'to', 'offer', 'the', 'most', 'efficient\\nmethod', 'for', 'eradicating', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation:', 'both\\nthe', 'evils', 'represented', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'evil', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'wrought', 'on\\nunsuspecting', 'minds', 'by', 'the', 'reading', 'of', 'history.\\n\\nEven', 'more', 'specifically,', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'of', 'women', 'with', 'no\\nother', 'claim', 'to', 'fame', 'than', 'their', 'spiritual', 'qualities', 'were', 'elevated', 'above\\nnarratives', 'of', 'queens', 'and', 'concubines.', 'As', 'Stickney', 'Ellis', 'had', 'claimed,\\n“there', 'is', 'in', 'private', 'life', 'a', 'kind', 'of', 'heroism,', 'which', 'the', 'greater', 'part', 'of', 'men\\npay', 'no', 'attention,', 'and', 'which', 'frequently', 'is', 'more', 'deserving', 'our', 'eulogiums\\nthan', 'the', 'greatest', 'actions:', 'it', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'among', 'many', 'women,', 'whose\\nvirtues,', 'without', 'ostentation,', 'only', 'make', 'themselves', 'noticed', 'in', 'the', 'inte-\\nrior', 'of', 'their', 'houses.”!', 'When', 'translated', 'into', 'historical', 'practice,', 'Ellis’s\\nvision', 'of', 'a', 'female', 'heroism', 'everywhere', 'but', 'invisible', 'was', 'easily', 'assimi-\\nlated', 'into', 'the', 'moral', 'doctrine', 'of', 'Christian', 'humility.', 'If,', 'as', 'another', 'anon-\\nymous', 'writer', 'explained,', 'the', 'world', '“can', 'know', 'next', 'to', 'nothing', 'of', 'its\\nnoblest', 'women”', 'because', '“her', 'highest', 'achievements', 'consist', 'in', 'the', 'per-\\nformance', 'of', 'the', 'lowliest', 'duties,', 'and', 'her', 'costliest', 'sacrifices', 'are', 'offered\\nout', 'of', 'the', '‘unseen', 'treasure', 'of', 'her', 'heart’,”', 'still', 'it', 'is', 'occasionally', 'possible\\nto', 'memorialize', '“the', 'names', 'of', 'those', 'whose', 'greatest', 'work', 'was', 'carried\\non', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'hearts,', 'and', 'whose', 'fame', 'rose', 'highest', 'in', 'their', 'own\\nhomes.”*°', 'Such', 'biographical', 'histories', 'elevated', 'the', 'invisible', 'work', 'of\\nthe', 'meek', 'over', 'the', 'spectacular', 'doings', 'of', 'the', 'powerful,', 'inverting', 'the', 'po-\\nlitical', 'historian’s', 'priorities', 'by', 'making', 'Christian', 'virtue', 'and', 'not', 'political\\nacumen', 'the', 'prime', 'mover', 'in', 'national', 'life.', 'If', 'politics', 'produced', 'a', 'reader’s\\nhorrified', 'reaction', 'or,', 'worse,', 'seduced', 'the', 'reader', 'into', 'worldly', 'ways,', 'bio-\\ngraphical', 'histories', 'of', 'good', 'women', 'quieted', 'the', 'reader’s', 'spiritual', 'anxi-\\neties', 'while', 'providing', 'alternative', 'models', 'of', 'historical', 'greatness.\\n\\n18.', 'Selected', 'Female', 'Biography:', 'Comprising', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'British', 'Ladies,', 'Derived', 'from\\nOriginal', 'and', 'Other', 'Authentic', 'Sources,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1829),', 'p.', '22.', 'My', 'thanks', 'to', 'Janel\\nMueller', 'for', 'calling', 'this', 'biblical', 'allusion', 'to', 'my', 'attention.\\n\\n19.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis],', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'England:', 'Their', 'Influence', 'and', 'Responsibility\\n(London,', '1843),', 'p.', '153.\\n\\n20.', 'The', 'Home-Life', 'of', 'English', 'Ladies', 'in', 'the', 'XVIIth', 'Century', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', 'iii-iv.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n54', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nConjoining', 'biography', 'and', 'history', 'offered', 'a', 'best-of-both-worlds', 'op-\\nportunity,', 'for', 'women’s', 'history', 'embraced', 'both', 'pain', 'and', 'eventual,\\nsanctified', 'pleasure', 'as', 'a', 'means', 'of', 'inspiring', 'spiritual', 'emulation.', 'Robert\\nPhilip,', 'a', 'devotional', 'writer', 'and', 'author', 'of', 'biographical', 'collections', 'de-\\nvoted', 'to', 'biblical', 'women,', 'modeled', 'the', 'interpretation', 'of', 'exemplarity\\nwith', 'a', 'mock-biblical', 'illustration.', 'His', 'protagonist,', 'Rachel,', '“proved', 'to\\nherself,', 'that', 'she', 'was', 'not', 'a', 'Miriam,', 'but', 'in', 'her', 'sin', 'and', 'punishment”;\\nnevertheless,', '“still', 'the', 'parallel', 'haunted', 'her.', 'It', 'was', 'a', 'case', 'in', 'point,', 'so\\nfar', 'as', 'their', 'sin', 'and', 'sentence', 'were', 'alike:—and', 'might', 'not', 'their', 'pardon\\nbe', 'alike', 'too?”?!', 'By', 'identifying', 'her', 'difference', 'from', 'Miriam,', 'Rachel', 'lo-\\ncates', 'a', 'point', 'of', 'negative', 'similarity.', 'Then,', 'she', 'moves', 'to', 'a', 'positive', 'mo-\\nment', 'of', 'future', 'identification', 'by', 'recognizing', 'that', 'true', 'repentance', 'and\\nsubmission', 'to', 'God', 'may', 'be', 'rewarded', 'by', 'the', 'cure', 'of', 'physical', 'leprosy\\n(the', 'outward', 'signifier', 'for', 'curing', 'spiritual', 'leprosy).', 'Philip’s', 'model\\nstresses', 'that', 'the', 'reader', 'must', 'work', 'through', 'the', 'sense', 'of', 'an', 'absolute\\ndifference', 'between', 'a', 'past', 'exemplar', 'and', 'one’s', 'present', 'self', 'to', 'find', 'some\\nanalogy', 'between', 'the', 'two;', 'but', 'this', 'stage', 'is', 'only', 'a', 'preliminary', 'to', 'realiz-\\ning', 'the', 'transformational', 'potential', 'of', 'analogizing', 'for', 'both', 'Rachel', '(the\\nfictional', 'reader)', 'and', 'the', 'actual', 'reader', 'of', 'the', 'text.', 'The', 'primary', 'bene-\\nfit', 'of', 'interpreting', 'an', 'exemplary', 'figure', 'lies', 'in', 'ascertaining', 'the', 'condi-\\ntions', 'for', 'spiritual', 'change,', 'which', 'apprises', 'the', 'female', 'reader', 'of', 'her\\nplace', 'in', 'God’s', 'divine', 'plan.', 'Thus,', 'despite', 'connotations', 'of', 'immediacy\\nand', 'perfect', 'clarity', 'in', 'the', '“mirror”', 'image,', 'women’s', 'history', 'validates', 'the\\nneed', 'for', 'interpretation', 'by', 'stressing', 'the', 'reader’s', 'ability', 'to', 'reconcile\\npotentially', 'distressing', 'facts', 'with', 'providential', 'truths.', 'Profane', '(secular)\\nhistory', 'and,', 'as', 'we', 'shall', 'see,', 'anomalous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'morally', 'dan-\\ngerous', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'reader', 'who', 'seeks', 'to', 'interpret', 'them', 'be-\\ncomes', 'involved', 'in', 'a', 'morass', 'of', 'detail', 'that', 'obscures', 'all', 'correlation\\nbetween', 'individual', 'or', 'event', 'and', 'divine', 'truth.\\n\\nQuestions', 'of', 'proper', 'reading', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'and', 'the', 'kinds', 'of\\nspiritual', 'pleasures', 'to', 'be', 'derived', 'from', 'them,', 'were', 'key', 'to', 'defining', 'the\\nmodern', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historian.', 'The', 'perspec-\\ntive', 'was', 'modern', 'in', 'two', 'senses:', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'writer’s', '“now”', 'and', 'its', 'spiri-\\ntual,', 'political,', 'and', 'social', 'differences', 'from', 'other', 'ages', '(or', 'other', 'nations);\\nand', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'era,', 'which', 'also', 'defined', 'the', '“modern”', 'of\\nModern', 'History', 'in', 'the', 'university', 'curricula', 'of', 'Oxford', 'and', 'Cambridge.\\nWondering', '(disingenuously)', '“why', 'woman', 'has', 'never', 'found', 'an', 'histo-\\nrian,”', 'one', 'anonymous', 'American', 'proclaimed', 'that', '“the', 'historian', 'of\\nWomen,', 'will', 'be', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'his', 'kind,', 'and', 'not', 'of', 'his', 'kind’s', 'tyrants.\\n\\n21.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'The', 'Marthas:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Varieties', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety,', '3d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,\\n1836),', 'p.', '107.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '55\\n\\nHe', 'will', 'trace', 'the', 'growth', 'of', 'civilization,', 'refinement,', 'religion,', 'and', 'all\\nthat', 'is', 'good', 'and', 'beautiful.”', 'If', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'woman', 'must', 'treat', 'the\\n“good', 'and', 'beautiful,”', 'then', 'he', '(or', 'she)', 'will', 'necessarily', 'portray', 'the', 'cu-\\nmulative', 'moment', 'of', 'goodness', 'and', 'beauty', 'that', 'marks', 'both', 'the', 'writer’s\\nposition', 'and', 'the', 'narrative’s', 'closure.', 'As', 'the', 'foregoing', 'quotation', 'sug-\\ngests,', 'this', 'moment', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'by', 'analyzing', 'the', 'modern,', 'femi-\\nnine,', 'and', 'above', 'all', '(Protestant)', 'Christian', 'subject.\\n\\nIn', 'privileging', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'specifically', 'historical', 'frame', 'of', 'refer-\\nence,', 'the', 'women’s', 'historians', 'engaged', 'with', 'a', 'theory', 'of', 'progress', 'that\\npermeated', 'the', 'historiography', 'of', 'figures', 'such', 'as', 'Thomas', 'Arnold,', 'Gold-\\nwin', 'Smith,', 'and', 'William', 'Stubbs.2?', 'For', 'these', 'scholars,', 'the', 'Christian', 'era\\nwas', 'an', 'organic', 'whole,', 'and', 'all', 'events', 'within', 'it', 'fostered', 'progress', 'toward\\nan', 'ultimate', 'perfection', 'originally', 'envisioned', 'in', 'the', 'lessons', 'of', 'sacred\\nhistory.', 'Christianity', 'was', 'conceived', 'as', 'an', 'inner', 'life', 'force', 'that', 'both\\nshaped', 'the', 'experience', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'and,', 'as', 'Stubbs', 'said,', '“cuts', 'it', 'off\\nfrom', 'the', 'death', 'of', 'the', 'past.”*4', 'What', 'Stubbs', 'meant', 'by', '“death”', 'was', 'that\\nChristianity', 'provided', 'a', 'historical', 'standpoint', 'from', 'which', 'the', 'ancient\\nworld', 'could', 'be', 'impartially', 'studied', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'Christian', 'era\\nmarked', 'an', 'absolute', 'break', 'between', 'the', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'worlds;\\nmorally', 'and', 'politically', 'speaking,', 'antiquity', 'has', 'no', 'effect', 'on', 'modern\\nhistorical', 'events', 'or', 'even', 'modern', 'values.', '“Death”', 'is', 'thus', 'a', 'figure', 'for\\nthe', 'absolute', 'difference', 'of', 'one', 'period', 'from', 'the', 'next.', 'The', 'absence', 'of\\nChristianity', 'produces', 'national', 'stasis', 'or', 'degeneration,', 'whereas,', 'as', 'one\\ntheologian', 'argued,', '“in', 'so', 'far', '...as', 'Christianity', 'becomes', 'the', 'ruling\\nprinciple', 'of', 'any', 'nation,', 'the', 'death,', 'or', 'utter', 'extinction', 'of', 'that', 'nation', 'is\\nimpossible.”®>', 'A', 'dead', 'nation', 'is', 'one', 'exiled', 'from', 'modernity', 'and', 'from\\nchange.\\n\\nThis', 'academic', 'argument', 'became', 'part', 'of', 'a', 'popular', 'interpretation\\nof', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispensation', 'that', 'provided', 'women’s', 'history', 'with', 'its\\nmost', 'forcefully', 'articulated', 'scheme', 'of', 'periodization.', 'In', 'an', 'early', 'essay\\non', 'this', 'subject,', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox', 'explained', 'that', 'his', 'system', '“was\\nfirst', 'to', 'exhibit', 'a', 'complete', 'series', 'of', 'illustrations,', 'derived', 'from', 'a', 'view\\nof', 'the', 'circumstances', 'of', 'mankind', 'as', 'destitute', 'of', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'revelation,\\nand', 'then', 'to', 'compare', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'under', 'the', 'in-\\nfluence', 'of', 'a', 'precursory', 'and', 'imperfect', 'system', 'of', 'the', 'true', 'religion,', 'with\\n\\n22.', '“Woman:', 'A', 'Rhapsody,”', 'Western', 'Monthly', 'Magazine', '1', '(1833):', '40.\\n\\n23.', 'For', 'the', 'most', 'extensive', 'treatment', 'of', 'Arnold', 'and', 'the', 'Christian', 'aspects', 'of', 'early\\nVictorian', 'historiography,', 'see', 'Duncan', 'Forbes,', 'The', 'Liberal', 'Anglican', 'Idea', 'of', 'History', '(Cam-\\nbridge,', '1952).\\n\\n24.', 'William', 'Stubbs,', '“Inaugural,”', 'in', 'Seventeen', 'Lectures', 'on', 'the', 'Study', 'of', 'Medieval', 'and', 'Mod-\\nern', 'History', 'and', 'Kindred', 'Subjects', '.', '.', '.', '(1866;', 'reprint,', 'New', 'York,', '1967),', 'p.', '15.\\n\\n25.', 'Rev.', 'W.', 'Maxwell', 'Herington,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Fulness', 'of', 'Time', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '376.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n56', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\ntheir', 'actual', 'state,', 'or', 'with', 'the', 'privileges', 'secured', 'to', 'them', 'by', 'the', 'nobler\\nmanifestations', 'of', 'CHRISTIANITY.””6', 'For', 'Cox,', 'woman’s', 'social', 'position\\nwas', 'determined', 'not', 'by', 'material,', 'economic', 'forces', 'but', 'by', 'the', 'state', 'of', 're-\\nligion.', 'Not', 'surprisingly,', 'periodization', 'became', 'a', 'central', 'issue', 'for', 'those\\nwho', 'wanted', 'to', 'draw', 'upon', 'women’s', 'history', 'for', 'political', 'purposes.', 'In\\nThe', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', '(1869),', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'argues', 'that', 'while', '“the\\nslavery', 'of', 'the', 'male', 'sex', 'has,', 'in', 'all', 'countries', 'of', 'Christian', 'Europe', 'at\\nleast', '.', '..', 'been', 'at', 'length', 'abolished,', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'has', 'been\\ngradually', 'changed', 'into', 'a', 'milder', 'form', 'of', 'dependence,”', 'this', 'depen-\\ndence', 'is', 'not', '“an', 'original', 'institution”', 'emerging', 'from', 'Christian', 'think-\\ning.', 'Instead,', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'women', 'is', '“the', 'primitive', 'condition', 'lasting\\non,', 'through', 'successive', 'mitigations', 'and', 'modifications', 'occasioned', 'by', 'the\\nsame', 'causes', 'which', 'have', 'softened', 'the', 'general', 'manners,', 'and', 'brought\\nall', 'human', 'relations', 'more', 'under', 'the', 'control', 'of', 'justice', 'and', 'influence', 'of\\nhumanity.”?”', 'Mill', 'refuses', 'to', 'periodize', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'moment', 'of\\ndecisive', 'difference', 'in', 'women’s', 'history.', 'If', '“Christian', 'Europe”', 'is', 'to', 'be\\nidentified', 'with', 'the', 'modern', 'world,', 'then', 'the', 'persistence', 'of', 'what', 'Mills\\ncalls', 'female', 'slavery', 'is', 'a', 'pagan', 'anachronism.', 'As', 'possessors', 'of', 'liberty,\\nmen', 'enter', 'into', 'modernity;', 'in', 'continuing', 'to', 'live', 'as', 'slaves,', 'women', 'are\\ntrapped', 'in', 'the', 'remnants', 'of', 'what', 'the', 'Victorians', 'considered', 'primitive\\nculture.', 'Women’s', 'equality', 'would', 'thus', 'redress', 'an', 'injustice', 'in', 'the', 'defini-\\ntion', 'of', 'modernity', 'itself.\\n\\nMill', 'here', 'does', 'not', 'refute', 'but', 'rather', 'builds', 'upon', 'more', 'conservative\\ninterpretations', 'of', 'women’s', 'history.', 'For', 'example,', 'a', 'conservative', 'oppo-\\nnent,', 'Fanny', 'Kortright,', 'agreed', 'with', 'the', 'proposition', 'that', 'paganism', 'was\\nthe', 'source', 'of', '“modern”', 'female', 'slavery;', 'but', 'she', 'crucially', 'differed', 'from\\nMill', 'in', 'her', 'use', 'of', 'Christianity', 'to', 'periodize', 'women’s', 'history', 'there-\\nafter.', 'Greek', 'and', 'Roman', 'women,', 'Kortright', 'explained,', 'were', '“virtually\\nenslaved,”', 'the', '“supposed', 'soulless,', 'mindless', 'toys', 'of', 'their', 'capricious\\nmasters.”*8', 'Kortright', 'identifies', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'being', 'under', 'imper-\\nfect', 'human', 'law', '(“capricious”)', 'with', 'female', 'objectification;', 'by', 'contrast,\\nhistorical', 'progress', 'occurs', 'only', 'when', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'understand\\ntrue', 'freedom', 'as', 'submission', 'to', 'divine', 'law.', 'With', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispen-\\nsation,', 'woman', 'emerged', 'from', '“her', 'sepulchre”—invoking', 'the', 'Resur-\\nrection', 'while', 'equating', 'pre-Christian', 'women’s', 'history', 'with', 'death—in\\norder', 'to', 'become', '“no', 'longer', 'his', 'slave,', 'but', 'his', 'aid;', 'not', 'his', 'rival,', 'but', 'his\\nco-adjutor;', 'to', 'work', 'and', 'labour', 'hand-in-hand', 'with', 'him,', 'for', 'the', 'glory\\n\\n26.', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox,', '“Essay', 'on', 'what', 'Christianity', 'has', 'done', 'for', 'Women,”', 'in', 'Fe-\\nmale', 'Scripture', 'Biography:', 'Including', 'an', 'Essay', 'on', 'What', 'Christianity', 'has', 'Done', 'for', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.\\n(London,', '1817),', '2:lxvii—Ixviii', '(emphases', 'in', 'the', 'original).\\n\\n27.', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill,', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'On', 'Liberty', 'with', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women\\nand', 'Chapters', 'on', 'Socialism,', 'ed.', 'Stefan', 'Collini', '(1869;', 'reprint,', 'Cambridge,', '1989),', 'p.', '123.\\n\\n28.', '[Fanny', 'Kortright],', 'The', 'True', 'Rights', 'of', 'Women,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '2.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '57\\n\\nand', 'honour', 'and', 'happiness', 'of', 'humanity.”*°', 'Kortright', 'here', 'reminds', 'her\\nreaders', 'that', 'this', 'Christian', 'rebirth', 'of', 'womanhood', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'rebirth', 'into\\nindividuality', 'and', 'a', 'new', 'dispensation', 'of', 'separate', 'spheres', 'with', 'equal\\nlabor.', 'Her', 'interpretation', 'of', 'her', 'female', 'contemporaries,', 'however,', 're-\\ninvokes', 'Mill’s', '“paganism”:', '“The', 'chief', 'objects', 'in', 'the', 'dress', 'of', 'women\\nand', 'children', 'now,', 'appear', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'what', 'Captain', 'Cook', 'found', 'in\\nhis', 'day', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'principal', 'things', 'eagerly', 'sought', 'for', 'by', 'primitive', 'sav-\\nages—feathers', 'and', 'beads!', '...', 'O', 'woman,', 'woman!', 'How', 'art', 'thou', 'fallen\\nsince', 'the', 'day', 'when', 'thy', 'best', 'adorning', 'was', 'the', 'glory', 'of', 'innocence,', 'and\\nthy', 'loveliest', 'vestment', 'Christ-like', 'deeds', 'of', 'charity!”®°', 'Modern', 'female\\ndegradation', 'here', 'results', 'not', 'from', 'material', 'oppression', 'but', 'instead', 'from\\nspiritual', 'apostasy:', 'resisting', 'the', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'gendered', 'division\\nof', 'labor', 'in', 'favor', 'of', 'self-serving', 'goals.\\n\\nKortright’s', 'historical', 'rhetoric', 'closely', 'connects', 'Christianity', 'and', 'mod-\\nern', 'femininity', 'in', 'a', 'manner', 'typical', 'of', 'representations', 'of', 'women’s', 'prog-\\nress', 'from', 'the', 'late', 'teens', 'into', 'the', '1880s.', 'Collapsing', 'time', 'and', 'space\\nthrough', 'parallels', 'between', 'ancient', 'history', 'and', 'modern', 'paganism,', 'the\\nplot', 'of', 'Christian', 'progress', 'figured', 'historical', 'developments', 'as', 'freedom\\nfrom', 'enslavement', 'to', 'the', 'body.', 'Women', 'living', 'outside', 'of', 'Christianity\\nare', 'subjected', 'to', 'a', 'law', 'defined', 'by', 'male', 'desire', 'instead', 'of', 'divine', 'fiat;\\nyet', 'without', 'spiritual', 'enlightenment,', 'women', 'are', 'incapable', 'of', 'under-\\nstanding', 'their', 'own', 'misery.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Christianity', 'enables', 'female\\nself-consciousness', 'while', 'producing', 'a', 'new', 'historical', 'consciousness.\\nThus,', 'Isaac', 'Reeve', 'calls', 'attention', 'to', 'pagan', 'women', 'who', 'are', '“illiterate,\\ndespised,', 'half', 'unsexed', 'or', 'half', 'unsouled.”', 'Feminine', 'subjectivity', 'is', 'con-\\njoined', 'with', 'access', 'to', 'books', 'and,', 'therefore,', 'to', 'the', 'Book', '(although', 'access\\nto', 'modern', 'novels', 'might', 'be', 'more', 'problematic).', 'In', 'contrast', 'to', 'lives', 'or-\\nganized', 'by', '“human', 'necessity,”', 'Reeve', 'argues', 'that', '“in', 'such', 'proportion\\nto', 'each', 'other', 'are', 'the', 'religion', 'of', 'the', 'Gospel', 'and', 'the', 'emancipation', 'of\\nthe', 'female', 'sex,', 'that', 'their', 'liberty', 'is', 'precisely', 'raised', 'accordingly', 'as', 'the\\nlight', 'of', 'Christianity', 'is', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'obscure', 'in', 'the', 'various', 'countries\\nof', 'Europe.”*!', 'Modernity', 'is', 'retrospectively', 'defined', 'by', 'the', 'numbers', 'of\\nwomen', 'who', 'can', 'be', '“perceived”', 'by', 'the', 'historian', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'by', 'their', 'qual-\\nity', 'of', 'life:', 'from', 'the', 'historian’s', 'viewpoint,', 'woman’s', 'social', 'condition', 'is\\ntranslated', 'from', 'an', 'amorphous,', 'unreadable', 'mass', 'into', 'the', 'realm', 'of\\nvirtually', 'statistical', 'clarity.', 'Drawing', 'upon', 'the', 'apologetics', 'of', 'Christian\\nsuperiority,', 'in', 'which', 'Gospel', 'knowledge', '“has', 'placed', 'men', 'in', 'a', 'new', 'situ-\\nation:', 'by', 'discovering', 'to', 'them', 'relations', 'not', 'before', 'apprehended,', 'by\\n\\n29.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '4.\\n\\n30.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '31.\\n\\n31.', '[Isaac]', 'Reeve,', 'An', 'Essay', 'on', 'the', 'Comparative', 'Intellect', 'of', 'Woman,', 'and', 'Her', 'Little', 'Recog-\\nnised', 'but', 'Resistless', 'Influence', 'on', 'the', 'Moral,', 'Religious,', 'and', 'Political', 'Prosperity', 'of', 'a', 'Nation,', '2d', 'ed.\\n(Hounslow,', '1849),', 'pp.', '12-13.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n58', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nopening', 'to', 'them', 'prospects', 'not', 'before', 'known,', 'by', 'awakening', 'faculties\\nnot', 'before', 'exercised,”', 'John', 'Bird', 'Sumner', 'identifies', 'the', 'Christian', 'rea-\\nsoner', 'as', 'one', 'who', 'sees,', 'by', 'the', '“light”', 'of', 'revelation,', 'that', 'women', 'possess\\nspiritual', 'equality', 'with', 'men.*?', 'Yet', 'the', '“light”', 'works', 'in', 'the', 'opposite', 'di-\\nrection:', 'the', 'pagan', 'woman', 'is', 'not', 'only', 'in', 'spiritual', 'darkness', 'but', 'also', 'in\\nhistorical', 'darkness,', 'invisible', 'to', 'the', 'interpreter’s', 'eye.\\n\\nThe', 'spiritual', 'rebirth', 'enabled', 'by', 'Christianity', 'makes', 'masculine', 'fasci-\\nnation', 'with', 'female', 'sensuality', 'itself', 'historically', 'anachronistic.', 'Chris-\\ntianity’s', 'progress', 'produces', 'a', 'new', 'morality', 'of', 'love', 'in', 'place', 'of', 'violence,\\na', 'morality', 'grounded', 'by', 'an', 'interior', '“deep”', 'self', 'and', 'a', 'sense', 'of', 'the', 'indi-\\nvidual', 'as', 'an', 'entity', 'separate', 'from', 'the', 'polity.', 'British', '(and', 'often', 'Ameri-\\ncan)', 'Protestants', 'therefore', 'argued', 'that', 'true', 'femininity', 'and', 'true', 'female\\nequality', 'were', 'both', 'fully', 'constituted', 'under', 'the', 'Christian', 'moral', 'law', 'set\\nforth', 'in', 'Scripture.', 'As', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard', 'argued', 'in', 'one', 'sermon,', 'with\\nthe', 'progress', 'of', 'Christianity', '“physical', 'power,”', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'body,\\nwas', 'transcended', 'by', 'feminine', '“moral', 'power,”', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'mind;\\nsuch', 'moral', 'power', 'was', 'distinguished', 'from', 'martial', 'conquest', 'by', 'the\\n“voluntary”', 'nature', 'of', 'society’s', 'subjection', 'to', 'it.°>', 'True', 'female', 'equality\\nwas', 'therefore', 'not', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'power', 'understood', 'in', 'mundane', 'political\\nterms,', 'but', 'instead', 'of', 'woman’s', 'accession', 'to', 'her', 'own', 'peculiar', 'form', 'of\\nspiritual', 'power,', 'delegated', 'to', 'her', 'by', 'Christian', 'societies.', 'But', 'to', 'be', 'a\\n“modern', 'woman,”', 'with', 'the', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'which', 'that', 'state', 'entails,', 'is\\nnot', 'simply', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'existing', 'in', 'a', 'particular', 'time', 'and', 'space;', 'instead,\\none', 'becomes', 'modern', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'biblical', 'text', 'through', 'conver-\\nsion.', 'By', 'extension,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'periodized', 'as', 'an', 'ongoing\\ncultural', 'conversion,', 'echoing', 'the', 'evangelical', 'emphasis', 'on', 'conversion\\nas', 'the', 'central', 'event', 'of', 'human', 'life.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale’s', 'gigantic\\nWoman’s', 'Record', 'makes', 'the', 'stakes', 'clear:', '“But', 'this', '[moral]', 'improvement\\nis', 'only', 'where', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'and', 'its', 'authority', 'acknowledged.', 'The\\nChinese', 'nation', 'cannot', 'advance', 'in', 'moral', 'culture', 'while', 'their', 'women\\nare', 'consigned', 'to', 'ignorance', 'and', 'imbecility:', 'the', 'nations', 'of', 'the', 'East', 'are\\nslaves', 'to', 'sensuality', 'and', 'sin,', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'to', 'foreign', 'masters!', 'and', 'thus', 'they\\nmust', 'remain', 'till', 'Christianity,', 'breaking', 'the', 'fetters', 'of', 'polygamy', 'from\\nthe', 'female', 'sex,', 'shall', 'give', 'to', 'the', 'mothers', 'of', 'men', 'freedom,', 'educa-\\ntion,', 'and', 'influence.”**', 'Christianity', 'educates', 'true', 'believers', 'in', 'the', 'eth-\\nics', 'of', 'sexual', 'behavior,', 'subordinating', 'mere', 'sensuality', 'to', 'the', 'higher', 'goal\\nof', 'spiritual', 'union', 'in', 'monogamous', 'marriage.', 'Only', 'when', 'this', 'spiritual\\n\\n32.', 'Rev.', 'J[ohn]', 'B[ird]', 'Sumner,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Evidence', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Derived', 'from', 'its', 'Na-\\nture', 'and', 'Reception', '(Philadelphia,', '1825),', 'p.', '113.\\n\\n33.', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard,', 'The', 'Moral', 'Power', 'of', 'Women.', '.', '.', '(Louth,', '1844),', 'p.', '8.\\n\\n34.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale,', 'Woman’s', 'Record;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'All', 'Distinguished', 'Women,', 'From\\nthe', 'Creation', 'to', 'A.D.', '1854:', 'Arranged', 'in', 'Four', 'Eras,', 'with', 'Selections', 'from', 'Female', 'Writers', 'of', 'Every\\nAge,', '2d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1860),', 'p.', '157.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '59\\n\\nenlightenment', 'is', 'achieved', 'can', 'nations', 'enter', 'into', 'modern', 'history.', 'Mo-\\ndernity', 'has', 'a', 'unitary', 'chronology,', 'but', 'not', 'all', 'individuals', 'or', 'cultures\\noccupy', 'the', 'same', 'chronological', 'moment—a', 'holdover', 'from', 'Enlighten-\\nment', 'theories', 'of', 'progress,', 'in', 'which', 'contemporary', 'primitive', 'cultures\\ncould', 'be', 'used', 'as', 'evidence', 'for', 'ancient', 'social', 'practices.\\n\\nEmphasis', 'on', 'the', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'nature', 'of', 'modern', 'woman-\\nhood', 'is', 'clear', 'in', 'studies', 'of', 'biblical', 'women,', 'which', 'represent', 'the', 'shift\\nfrom', 'the', 'Old', 'to', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'as', 'also', 'a', 'shift', 'in', 'the', 'relationship\\nof', 'gender', 'to', 'its', 'historical', 'context.', 'Thus,', 'the', 'evangelical', 'Clara', 'Lucas\\nBalfour', 'argued', 'that', '“the', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'Hebrews', 'were', 'elevated', 'by', 'their\\nholy', 'faith', 'far', 'above', 'all', 'heathen', 'nations', 'in', 'social,', 'political,', 'and', 'reli-\\ngious', 'freedom;', 'yet', 'their', 'institutions', 'benefited', 'them', 'only,', 'were', 're-\\nstricted', 'to', 'them', 'only,', 'jealous', 'care', 'being', 'observed', 'in', 'their', 'restriction.”\\nBalfour’s', 'Judaism', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'paganism,', 'but', 'the', 'Old', 'Testament', 'rep-\\nresents', 'merely', 'specific', 'historical', 'situations.', 'In', 'contrast,', '“New', 'Testa-\\nment', 'female', 'characters', 'are', 'more', 'valuable', 'as', 'models', 'for', 'imitation,\\nfrom', 'the', 'fact', 'of', 'their', 'illustrating', 'moral', 'principles,', 'rather', 'than', 'remark-\\nable', 'situations;', 'the', 'principles', 'being', 'important', 'to', 'all,', 'wonderful', 'situa-\\ntions', 'peculiar', 'to', 'a', 'few.”', 'Representations', 'of', 'Christian', 'womanhood\\nfulfill', 'the', 'potential', 'of', 'Jewish', 'womanhood', 'and,', 'in', 'so', 'doing,', 'transcend\\nit.', 'Balfour’s', 'analysis', 'finds', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'older', 'dispensation', 'dead', 'to\\nthe', 'present—that', 'is,', 'largely', 'irrelevant', 'for', 'determining', 'contemporary\\nmorals—because', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'has', 'completed', 'and', 'perfected\\ntheir', 'examples.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'the', 'histories', 'of', 'New', 'Testament', 'women\\nalways', 'renews', 'the', 'promise', 'of', 'modern', 'womanly', 'perfection:', 'the', 'modern\\nindividual', 'who,', 'produced', 'by', 'Christianity,', 'helps', 'spread', 'this', 'perfec-\\ntion', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'eternally', 'relevant', 'Book.*>', 'If', 'New', 'Testament\\nwomen', 'are', 'valuable', 'models', 'for', '“imitation,”', 'then', 'Christian', 'femininity\\ninhabits', 'an', 'atemporal', 'present', 'within', 'which', 'all', 'virtuous', 'characters', 'are\\ninterchangeable,', 'regardless', 'of', 'local', 'circumstances.*®', 'Virtuous', 'female\\nfigures', 'are', 'thus', 'products', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'moment', 'whose', 'defining', 'char-\\nacteristic', 'is', 'to', 'sever', 'virtue', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all', 'from', 'the', 'trammels', 'of\\nmerely', 'local', 'relevance.\\n\\n35.', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'Scripture', '(London,', '1847),', 'pp.', '218-19,', '222.', 'I\\nhave', 'been', 'much', 'helped,', 'here', 'and', 'elsewhere', 'in', 'this', 'article,', 'by', 'discussions', 'of', 'Christian\\nhistoriography', 'and', 'biography', 'in', 'Boyd', 'Hilton,', 'The', 'Age', 'of', 'Atonement:', 'The', 'Influence', 'of\\nEvangelism', 'on', 'Social', 'and', 'Economic', 'Thought,', '1795-1865', '(Oxford,', '1988);', 'Peter', 'Hinchcliff,\\nGod', 'and', 'History:', 'Aspects', 'of', 'British', 'Theology,', '1875-1914', '(Oxford,', '1972);', 'Elizabeth', 'Jay,', 'The\\nReligion', 'of', 'the', 'Heart:', 'Anglican', 'Evangelicalism', 'and', 'the', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Novel', '(Oxford,\\n1997);', 'and', 'Christopher', 'Tolley,', 'Domestic', 'Biography:', 'The', 'Legacy', 'of', 'Evangelicalism', 'in', 'Four\\nNineteenth-Century', 'Families', '(Oxford,', '1997).\\n\\n36.', 'A', 'similar', 'phenomenon', 'has', 'been', 'observed', 'by', 'Tricia', 'Lootens', 'regarding', 'Victorian\\nrepresentations', 'of', 'virtuous', 'Shakespearean', 'heroines;', 'see', 'Lost', 'Saints:', 'Silence,', 'Gender,', 'and\\nVictorian', 'Literary', 'Canonization', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1996).\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n60', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nBut', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'historians', 'argued,', 'Christianity', 'made\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'possible', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place:', 'Christianity', 'conferred', 'a\\nnew', 'intellectual', 'and', 'spiritual', 'mindset', 'that', 'allowed', 'women', 'to', 'be', 'per-\\nceived', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects', 'in', 'the', 'past,', 'present,', 'and', 'future.', '(We', 'have\\nalready', 'seen', 'some', 'of', 'this', 'rhetoric', 'in', 'Isaac', 'Reeve.)', 'The', 'link', 'between\\nChristianity', 'and', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'a', 'twofold', 'sig-\\nnificance,', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'were', 'generally', 'expressed', 'in', 'vaguely', 'statistical\\nterms.', 'First,', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'diag-\\nnosed', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'civilization,', 'an', 'idea', 'derived', 'from', 'eighteenth-\\ncentury', 'women’s', 'historians', 'such', 'as', 'William', 'Alexander:', '“The', 'rank,\\ntherefore,', 'and', 'condition,', 'in', 'which', 'we', 'find', 'women', 'in', 'any', 'country,\\nmark', 'out', 'to', 'us', 'with', 'the', 'greatest', 'precision,', 'the', 'exact', 'point', 'in', 'the', 'scale\\nof', 'civil', 'society,', 'to', 'which', 'the', 'people', 'of', 'such', 'country', 'have', 'arrived;', 'and\\nwere', 'their', 'history', 'entirely', 'silent', 'on', 'every', 'other', 'subject,', 'and', 'only', 'men-\\ntioned', 'the', 'manner', 'in', 'which', 'they', 'treated', 'their', 'women,', 'we', 'should,', 'from\\nthence,', 'be', 'enabled', 'to', 'form', 'a', 'tolerable', 'judgment', 'of', 'the', 'barbarity,', 'or\\nculture', 'of', 'their', 'manners.”*’', 'Alexander', 'here', 'reads', 'the', 'history', 'of\\nwomen', 'as', 'the', 'key', 'to', 'all', 'histories;', 'far', 'from', 'being', '“unwritable,”', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'is', 'in', 'fact', 'what', 'makes', 'otherwise', 'silenced', 'civilizations', 'speak', 'to\\nthe', 'enlightened', 'interpreter.', 'The', 'Victorians,', 'however,', 'discarded', 'Alex-\\nander’s', 'faith', 'in', 'the', 'ease', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s', 'history.', 'Instead,', 'they', 'pro-\\nposed', 'that', 'women’s', 'history', 'did', 'indeed', 'diagnose', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'culture,\\nbut', 'it', 'did', 'so', 'progressively:', '“The', 'progress', 'of', 'woman', 'cannot', 'be', 'denied\\nto', 'be', 'precisely', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'ratio', 'as', 'that', 'of', 'man,', 'both', 'from', 'an', 'original\\nstate', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'and', 'again', 'just', 'in', 'the', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'elevation\\nof', 'woman', 'does', 'the', 'other', 'half', 'of', 'mankind', 'derive', 'advantage', 'from', 'her\\nexistence.”°®>', 'Here,', 'Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb', 'makes', 'no', 'mention', 'of', 'the\\nalways-writable', 'nature', 'of', 'women’s', 'history.', 'Instead,', 'she', 'emphasizes\\nthat', 'the', 'history', 'works', 'in', 'both', 'directions', '(man', 'diagnoses', 'woman,', 'and\\nvice', 'versa),', 'and', 'that', 'woman’s', 'social', 'influence', 'accumulates', 'over', 'time.\\nMoreover,', 'as', 'the', 'positivist', 'historian', 'Henry', 'Buckle', 'agreed', 'in', 'a', 'differ-\\nent', 'key,', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'this', 'influence', 'was', 'definitely', 'a', 'product', 'of', 'modern\\nconditions;', 'if', 'in', '“modern', 'Europe,', 'the', 'influence', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'the\\nspread', 'of', 'civilization', 'have', 'been', 'nearly', 'commensurate,', 'both', 'advanc-\\ning', 'with', 'almost', 'equal', 'speed,”', 'the', 'same', 'is', 'not', 'true', 'of', 'nations', 'in', 'an-\\ntiquity,', 'which', '“fell', 'because', 'society', 'did', 'not', 'advance', 'in', 'all', 'its', 'parts,\\nbut', 'sacrificed', 'some', 'of', 'its', 'constituents', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'secure', 'the', 'progress\\n\\n37.', 'William', 'Alexander,', 'The', 'History', 'of', 'Women:', 'From', 'the', 'Earliest', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Present\\nTime;', 'Giving', 'Some', 'Account', 'of', 'Almost', 'Every', 'Interesting', 'Particular', 'Concerning', 'that', 'Sex,', 'Among\\nAll', 'Nations,', 'Ancient', 'and', 'Modern,', '2', 'vols.', '(Dublin,', '1779),', '1:107.\\n\\n38.', '[Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb],', 'Can', 'Woman', 'Regenerate', 'Society?', '(London,', '1844),', 'p.', '165.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '61\\n\\nof', 'others.”°®', 'The', 'modern', 'era', 'is', 'special', 'both', 'because', 'women', 'have\\ninfluenced', 'its', 'progress', 'and', 'because', 'it', 'has', 'recognized', 'that', 'its', 'progress\\nis,', 'in', 'fact,', 'contingent', 'upon', 'developing', 'woman’s', 'potential.\\n\\nWhen', 'restated', 'in', 'expressly', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'this', 'last', 'formulation', 'be-\\ncomes', 'the', 'second', 'item', 'of', 'significance:', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history\\nis', 'a', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'act.', 'The', 'more', 'Christian', 'the', 'age,', 'the', 'more\\nwomen', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'acting', 'so', 'as', 'to', 'appear', 'in', 'its', 'records;', 'and', 'the\\nmore', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'so', 'acting,', 'the', 'more', 'that', 'Christian', 'histori-\\nans', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'writing', 'about', 'them.', '“Unmentioned', 'as', 'she', 'is', 'in', 'the\\nannals', 'of', 'heathendom,', 'several', 'of', 'her', 'sex', 'shine', 'like', 'stars', 'in', 'the', 'firma-\\nment', 'of', 'the', 'Church,”', 'wrote', 'W.', 'Landels', 'around', '1872.', 'By', 'invoking\\nnumbers,', 'the', 'Christian', 'author', 'denaturalizes', 'women’s', 'absence', 'from\\nthe', 'historical', 'record', 'and', 'accounts', 'for', 'that', 'absence', 'by', 'the', 'shortcom-\\nings', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'cultures.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale', 'was', 'even', 'more', 'ex-\\nplicit:', '“Wherever', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'female', 'talents', 'are', 'cultivated', 'and\\nesteemed.', 'In', 'this', '‘Record’', 'are', 'about', 'two', 'thousand', 'five', 'hundred', 'names,\\nincluding', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Female', 'Missionaries;', 'out', 'of', 'this', 'number', 'less\\nthan', 'two', 'hundred', 'are', 'from', 'heathen', 'nations,', 'yet', 'these', 'constitute', 'at', 'this\\nmoment', 'nearly', 'three-fourths', 'of', 'the', 'inhabitants', 'of', 'the', 'globe,', 'and', 'for\\nthe', 'first', 'thousand', 'years', '.', '.', '.', 'were', 'the', 'world.”*!', 'One', 'can,', 'quite', 'literally,\\nestimate', 'social', 'progress', 'by', 'counting', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'are\\ndeemed', 'worthy', 'of', 'recollection.', 'And', 'percentages', 'count', 'too,', 'as', 'Horace\\nMann', 'pointed', 'out:', '“Within', 'the', 'last', 'half-century,', 'the', 'United', 'Kingdom\\nof', 'Britain', 'and', 'Ireland,', 'with', 'an', 'average', 'population', 'of', 'less', 'than', 'twenty-\\nfive', 'millions,', 'has', 'produced', 'as', 'many', 'eminent', 'and', 'admirable', 'women', 'as\\nall', 'the', 'rest', 'of', 'Europe,', 'with', 'its', 'more', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'millions;', 'and\\nNew', 'England,', 'with', 'its', 'population', 'of', 'between', 'two', 'and', 'three', 'millions,\\nhas', 'now', 'nearly', 'or', 'quite', 'as', 'many', 'justly-distinguished', 'females', 'as', 'Great\\nBritain,', 'or', 'the', 'continent.”*?', 'In', 'other', 'words,', 'Britain', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'the\\ncontinent', 'and', 'America', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'Britain,', 'on', 'statistical', 'grounds;\\nprogress', 'is', 'here', 'tied', 'not', 'simply', 'to', 'numbers', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'their', 'accel-\\nerated', 'accumulation.', 'The', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'visible', 'to', 'the', 'historian\\nsimultaneously', 'attests', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'construction', 'of', 'womanhood,\\n\\n39.', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '“The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Women', 'on', 'the', 'Progress', 'of', 'Knowl-\\nedge,”', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'and', 'Posthumous', 'Works', 'of', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '3', 'vols.', '(London,\\n1872),', '1:2.\\n\\n40.', 'W.', 'Landels,', 'Woman:', 'Her', 'Position', 'and', 'Power', '(London,', '[1872?]),', 'p.', '28.\\n\\n41.', 'Hale', '(n.', '34', 'above),', 'p.', '2.', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'points', 'out', 'that', 'Hale’s', 'text', 'is', '“itself', 'an', 'event\\nin', 'history”;', 'see', 'American', 'Women', 'Writers', 'and', 'the', 'Work', 'of', 'History,', '1790-1860', '(New', 'Bruns-\\nwick,', 'N.J.,', '1995),', 'p.', '228.\\n\\n42.', 'Horace', 'Mann,', 'A', 'Few', 'Thoughts', 'on', 'the', 'Powers', 'and', 'Duties', 'of', 'Woman:', 'Two', 'Lectures', '(Syr-\\nacuse,', 'N.Y.,', '1853),', 'p.', '50.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n62', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nthe', 'new', 'possibilities', 'of', 'female', 'influence', 'in', 'the', 'public', 'domain,', 'and', 'the\\nprogressively', 'enlightened', '(in', 'a', 'Christian', 'sense)', 'consciousness', 'of', 'the\\nhistorian', 'capable', 'of', 'viewing', 'women', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects.\\n\\nIt', 'is', 'on', 'the', 'issue', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'or', '“barbaric”', 'women', 'that', 'Victorian\\nwomen’s', 'historians', 'directly', 'conflict', 'with', 'today’s', 'belief', 'that', 'a', 'history', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'would', 'begin', 'with', '“feminist', 'historians’', 'critiques', 'of', 'the\\ndiscipline’s', 'habitual', '(one', 'might', 'say', 'historical)', 'neglect', 'of', 'women’s', 'ex-\\nperience.”**', 'Unlike', 'the', 'utilitarian', 'George', 'Grote,', 'whose', 'twelve-volume\\nHistory', 'of', 'Greece', '(1845-56)', 'broke', 'new', 'ground', 'in', 'the', 'study', 'of', 'the', 'pre-\\nChristian', 'cultures', 'of', 'antiquity,', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'often\\nidentified', 'the', 'modern', 'historical', 'viewpoint', 'with', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'recover\\npagan', 'figures', 'lost', 'in', 'the', 'mists', 'of', 'time.', 'Certainly,', 'there', 'were', 'biograph-\\nical', 'treatments', 'of', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Aspasia', 'or', 'Sappho.', 'But', '“lost”', 'women\\nwere', 'unwritable', 'not', 'simply', 'because', 'they', 'were', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'archives\\nbut,', 'more', 'importantly,', 'because', 'they', 'lacked', 'Christian', 'virtue.', 'Ancient\\nwomen', 'are', 'not', 'just', 'treated', 'inhumanely', 'but,', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,\\nare', 'devoid', 'of', 'any', 'sense', 'of', 'social', 'obligations;', 'as', 'a', 'result,', 'even', 'the', '“his-\\ntorical”', 'women', 'of', 'antiquity', 'fail', 'to', 'contribute', 'to', 'moral', 'progress.', 'As\\nSamuel', 'Young', 'argued', 'to', 'his', 'American', 'male', 'audience', 'regarding', 'Sap-\\npho,', '“had', 'she', 'received,', 'in', 'early', 'youth,', 'proper', 'moral', 'and', 'intellectual\\nculture,', 'and', 'been', 'taught', 'to', 'direct', 'her', 'wonderful', 'powers', 'to', 'the', 'good', 'of\\nthe', 'human', 'race,', 'she', 'would', 'have', 'done', 'much', 'towards', 'civilizing', 'the\\nworld.”44\\n\\nIt', 'is', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'narrate', 'the', 'emergence', 'of\\na', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'which', 'both', 'recognizes', 'and', 'facilitates', 'the\\npresence', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'modern', 'history', 'as', 'part', 'of', 'the', 'ongoing', 'Chris-\\ntianization', 'of', 'the', 'globe.', 'Lady', 'Morgan', 'was', 'not', 'alone', 'in', 'complaining\\nthat', '“the', 'historians', 'of', 'the', 'people,', 'the', 'chroniclers', 'of', 'private', 'life,', 'are\\nfew', 'and', 'incidental,”', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'meant', 'that', 'history', 'only', '“unavoid-\\nably', 'or', 'accidentally”', 'relates', 'the', '“great', 'deeds', 'of', 'great', 'women.”*', 'Yet\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'itself', 'operates', 'through', 'a', 'process', 'of', 'exclusion', 'hinging\\non', 'Christian', 'conversion.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'employs', 'what', 'his-\\ntorians', 'of', 'religion', 'call', 'the', 'degenerationist', 'thesis', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'which\\n\\n43.', 'Lillian', 'Robinson,', '“Sometimes,', 'Always,', 'Never:', 'Their', 'Women’s', 'History', 'and', 'Ours,”\\nin', 'History', 'and.', '.', '.', 'Histories', 'within', 'the', 'Human', 'Sciences,', 'ed.', 'Ralph', 'Cohen', 'and', 'Michael', 'S.', 'Roth\\n(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'p.', '332.\\n\\n44.', 'Samuel', 'Young,', 'Suggestions', 'on', 'the', 'Best', 'Mode', 'of', 'Promoting', 'Civilization', 'and', 'Improve-\\nment:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Influence', 'of', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'Social', 'State.', 'A', 'Lecture', 'Delivered', 'Before', 'the', '“Young', 'Men’s\\nAssociation', 'for', 'Mutual', 'Improvement', 'in', 'the', 'City', 'of', 'Albany,”', 'January', '24th,', '1837', '(Albany,', 'N.Y.,\\n1837),', 'p.', '13.\\n\\n45.', 'Sydney', 'Owenson,', 'Lady', 'Morgan,', 'Woman', 'and', 'Her', 'Master,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', 'n.d.),\\n2:224-25.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '1fff', 'on', 'Thu,', '01', 'Jan', '1976', '12:34:56', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '63\\n\\nholds', 'that', 'human', 'evil', 'degrades', 'original', 'perfection', 'until', 'divine', 'revela-\\ntion', 'or', 'its', 'vehicle,', 'benevolent', 'Christian', 'imperialism,', 'intervenes.', '**\\nThese', 'Victorian', 'writers', 'thus', 'promise', 'to', 'bring', 'women', 'of', 'other', 'nations\\ninto', 'history', 'through', 'British', 'imperialist', 'expansion,', 'but', 'in', 'the', 'process\\nthey', 'necessarily', 'preclude', 'the', 'desirability', 'of', 'non-Christian', 'women’s\\nhistory.', 'As', 'the', 'writer', 'of', 'a', 'late', 'work', 'on', 'great', 'women', 'bluntly', 'put', 'it,\\nthere', 'was', 'nothing', 'worth', 'recovering:', '“Paganism', 'ignored', 'what', 'is', 'grand-\\nest', 'and', 'truest', 'in', 'a', 'woman,', 'and', 'she', 'withered', 'like', 'a', 'stricken', 'tree.', 'She\\nsuccumbed', 'before', 'the', 'cold', 'blasts', 'that', 'froze', 'her', 'noblest', 'impulses,', 'and\\nsunk', 'sullenly', 'into', 'obscurity.”*7', 'Evangelical', 'rhetoric,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'iden-\\ntifies', 'progress', 'toward', 'the', 'millennium', 'with', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'true', 'Christian\\nfeeling,', 'defines', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'out', 'of', 'history', 'while', 'always', 'maintain-\\ning', 'that', 'the', 'individual’s', 'freely', 'willed', 'conversion', 'makes', 'entrance', 'into\\nhistory', 'possible.', '®\\n\\nYet', 'this', 'imagined', 'era', 'of', 'feminine', 'Christianity', 'would', 'fracture', 'along\\nlines', 'of', 'religious,', 'racial,', 'and', 'national', 'differences', 'once', 'authors', 'began\\nto', 'consider', 'immediate', 'historical', 'difficulties—which,', 'in', 'Victorian', 'Brit-\\nain,', 'often', 'included', 'Catholicism.', 'Protestant', 'women’s', 'histories', 'iden-\\ntified', 'Catholicism', 'with', 'female', 'sexual', 'slavery', 'and', 'with', 'the', 'improper\\nidolization', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'fleshly', 'beings—an', 'identification', 'taken', 'to', 'an\\nextreme', 'in', 'anti-Catholic', 'pornography', 'like', 'The', 'Awful', 'Disclosures', 'of', 'Maria\\nMonk', '(1836)—while', 'assigning', 'to', 'Protestantism', 'a', 'purely', 'spiritual', 'under-\\nstanding', 'of', 'womanhood.', 'Through', 'the', 'conjunction', 'of', 'spirit', 'and', 'text,\\nprogress', 'takes', 'shape', 'as', 'the', 'ongoing', 'spread', 'of', 'female', 'spiritual', '“influ-\\nence”', 'across', 'nations', 'and', 'empires.', 'Spirituality', 'in', 'turn', 'assures', 'the\\nproper', 'social', 'orientation', 'of', 'female', 'sexuality', 'toward', 'maternity,', 'which\\nbecomes', 'the', 'foundation', 'of', 'the', 'uniquely', 'Protestant', 'domestic', 'sphere.\\nHistory', 'thus', 'progresses', 'from', 'the', 'Catholic,', 'feudal', 'insistence', 'on', 'eroti-\\ncized', 'femininity', 'to', 'the', 'Protestant,', 'middle-class', 'insistence', 'on', 'spiritual-\\nized', 'femininity.', 'Always,', 'however,', 'this', 'progress', 'transpires', 'through', 'male\\ndesire,', 'albeit', 'a', 'desire', 'reflexively', 'shaped.', 'Women', 'are', '“deified”', 'in', 'chiv-\\nalry,', 'then', 'valued', 'for', 'their', '“intrinsic', 'qualities”;', '“bright', 'eyes', 'give', 'place\\nto', 'bright', 'deeds,', 'good', 'looks', 'to', 'good', 'thoughts,', 'and', 'the', 'outward', 'form\\n\\n46.', 'For', 'a', 'standard', 'Victorian', 'exposition', 'of', 'this', 'argument,', 'see', 'Richard', 'Whately,', '“On', 'the\\nOrigin', 'of', 'Civilisation,”', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'Lectures', 'and', 'Reviews', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '26-59.\\n\\n47.', 'John', 'Lord,', 'Great', 'Women,', 'vol.', '5', 'in', 'Lord’s', 'Beacon', 'Lights', 'of', 'History', '(New', 'York,', '1886),\\npp.', '55-56.\\n\\n48.', 'Writing', 'about', 'American', 'women’s', 'history,', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'makes', 'what', 'at', 'first', 'seems\\nlike', 'a', 'similar', 'point', 'when', 'she', 'argues', 'that', '“a', 'virtual', 'absence', 'of', 'prominent', 'women', 'in', 'the\\nhistorical', 'record', 'was', 'not', 'only', 'to', 'be', 'expected,', 'it', 'was', 'positively', 'hoped', 'for”', '(p.', '215).', 'But\\nwe', 'are', 'using', 'different', 'understandings', 'of', 'periodization:', 'she', 'argues', 'that', 'her', 'authors', 'are\\ndefining', 'this', 'absence', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'nineteenth', 'century;', 'I', 'argue', 'that', 'my', 'au-\\nthors', 'are', 'defining', 'it', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'Christianity', 'per', 'se.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n64', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nto', 'the', 'magic', 'of', 'the', 'inner', 'life.”#°', 'Such', 'progressive', 'Protestant', 'narratives\\nbecame', 'a', 'clerical', 'specialty', 'in', 'both', 'Britain', 'and', 'America,', 'attracting\\nclergymen', 'across', 'the', 'denominational', 'spectrum.', '°°', 'At', 'the', 'same', 'time,\\nthe', 'spread', 'of', 'Protestantism', 'was', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'female', 'evangelist’s', 'in-\\ncreasing', 'spiritual', 'freedom', 'and', 'cultural', 'literacy,', 'which', 'allegorized', 'the\\nEnglishing', 'or', 'Americanizing', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation—as', 'well', 'as', 'of', 'global\\nhistory.\\n\\nIf', 'the', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'subject', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'beneficiary', 'and', 'an', 'agent', 'of\\nprovidence,', 'then', 'logically', 'women', 'should', 'be', 'central', 'to', 'historical', 'rep-\\nresentation', 'and', 'investigation.', 'Yet', 'if', 'Christian', 'women', 'were', 'imagined\\nas', 'quintessentially', 'modern', 'subjects,', 'their', 'subjectivity', 'was', 'represented\\nas', 'threatened', 'with', 'moral', 'corruption', 'by', 'history', 'itself.', 'This', 'threat', 'ex-\\nisted', 'on', 'two', 'different', 'levels:', 'that', 'of', 'historicity', '(the', 'fact', 'that', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'could', 'be', 'written)', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation', '(the', 'act\\nof', 'reading', 'the', 'text).', 'Most', 'women’s', 'histories', 'systematically', 'avoid', 'refer-\\nence', 'to', 'current', 'political', 'issues;', 'even', 'when', 'these', 'histories', 'do', 'engage\\nwith', 'contemporary', 'crises,', 'they', 'do', 'so', 'obliquely,', 'by', 'representing', 'social\\nupheaval', 'as', 'ameliorated', 'by', 'individual', 'religious', 'consolation,', 'philan-\\nthropic', 'work,', 'or', 'maternity.', 'In', 'trying', 'to', 'attach', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'spir-\\nitual', 'universals,', 'politics', 'were', 'often', 'explicitly', 'thrown', 'by', 'the', 'wayside.\\nThus,', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh’s', 'pro-Catholic', 'Women', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Exemplary', 'for\\nActs', 'of', 'Piety', 'and', 'Charity', '(1852),', 'published', 'in', 'the', 'wake', 'of', 'the', 'outcry', 'over\\nthe', '“Papal', 'Aggression”', '(the', 'restoration', 'of', 'the', 'Roman', 'Catholic', 'hierar-\\nchy', 'in', 'England),', 'raises', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'its', 'own', 'controversial', 'status\\nonly', 'to', 'sidestep', 'theological', 'debate.', 'Its', 'ecumenical', 'exemplars—Teresa\\nof', 'Avila,', 'Elizabeth', 'Fry,', 'Sarah', 'Martin—all', 'coexisting', 'peacefully', 'within\\n\\n49.', 'Mrs.', 'John', 'Sandford,', 'Woman', 'in', 'Her', 'Social', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Character,', 'London', 'ed.\\n(Boston,', '1833),', 'p.', '9;', 'and', 'Joseph', 'Johnson,', 'Willing', 'Hearts', 'and', 'Ready', 'Hands:', 'or,', 'The', 'La-\\nbours', 'and', 'Triumphs', 'of', 'Earnest', 'Women', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '43.\\n\\n50.', 'For', 'example,', 'Rev.', 'James', 'Anderson,', 'Ladies', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation:', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Distin-\\nguished', 'Female', 'Characters,', 'Belonging', 'to', 'the', 'Period', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation', 'in', 'the', 'Sixteenth', 'Century\\n(London,', '1857),', 'and', 'Memorable', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Puritan', 'Times,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1862);\\nDaniel', 'C.', 'Eddy,', 'Daughters', 'of', 'the', 'Cross:', 'Or', 'Woman’s', 'Mission', '(Boston,', '1855);', 'Rev.', 'James', 'A.\\nHuie,', 'Records', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety:', 'Comprising', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'and', 'Extracts', 'from', 'the', 'Writings', 'of\\nWomen', 'Eminent', 'for', 'Religious', 'Excellence,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Edinburgh,', '1845);', 'and', 'Thomas', 'Timpson,\\nBritish', 'Female', 'Biography;', 'Being', 'Select', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Pious', 'Ladies,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ranks', 'of', 'Public', 'and\\nPrivate', 'Life,', 'Including', 'Queens,', 'Princesses,', 'Martyrs,', 'Scholars,', 'Instructors,', 'Poetesses,', 'Philanthro-\\npists,', 'Ministers’', 'Wives', '(London,', '1854).', 'For', 'useful', 'analyses', 'of', 'the', 'relationship', 'between\\nreligion,', 'femininity,', 'and', 'historical', 'progress', 'in', 'conduct', 'manuals,', 'see', 'Judith', 'Lowder\\nNewton,', '“‘Ministers', 'of', 'the', 'Interior’:', 'The', 'Political', 'Economy', 'of', 'Woman’s', 'Manuals,”', 'in\\nStarting', 'Over:', 'Feminism', 'and', 'the', 'Politics', 'of', 'Cultural', 'Critique', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1994),\\npp.', '125-45;', 'and', 'Jane', 'E.', 'Rose,', '“Conduct', 'Books', 'for', 'Women,', '1830-1860:', 'A', 'Rationale', 'for\\nWomen’s', 'Conduct', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Role', 'in', 'America,”', 'in', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Women', 'Learn', 'to\\nWrite,', 'ed.', 'Catherine', 'Hobbs', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '37-58.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '65\\n\\nthe', 'text,', 'provide', 'a', 'utopian', 'vision', 'of', 'Christian', 'religious', 'harmony', 'ex-\\nplicitly', 'unavailable', 'elsewhere.\\n\\nCarolyn', 'Steedman', 'has', 'argued', 'that', 'the', 'motif', 'of', 'uneventful', 'private\\nlives', 'in', 'exemplary', 'biography', 'deliberately', 'contrasts', 'with', 'the', 'heroine’s\\n“eruption”', 'into', 'public', 'view,', 'as', 'the', 'private', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', '“a', 'do-\\nmestic', 'detail', 'that', 'asserts', 'how', 'little', 'really', 'happened', 'in', 'it.”5!', 'Yet', 'far\\nmore', 'common', 'during', 'the', 'Victorian', 'period', 'are', 'lives', 'lacking', 'any', '“erup-\\ntion”', 'whatsoever.', 'A', 'casual', 'survey', 'of', 'books', 'published', 'over', 'a', 'forty-four-\\nyear', 'period', 'reveals', 'that', 'royalty,', 'actresses,', 'poets,', 'and', 'serving', 'maids\\nall', 'shared', 'supposedly', 'identical', 'and', 'empty', 'lives:', 'no', '“romantic', 'inci-\\ndents”', 'or', '“eventful', 'occurrences,”', 'nothing', '“thrilling,”', '“passion-exciting,”\\n\\nr', '“startling,”', 'and', 'thus', '“few', 'passages', 'on', 'which', 'the', 'faithful', 'biogra-\\npher', 'can', 'enlarge.”', 'Incidents', 'of', 'any', 'kind', 'verge', 'on', 'the', 'nonexistent,', 'leav-\\ning', 'the', 'author', 'to', 'rely', 'on', 'a', '“brief', '(too', 'brief', ')', 'memoir.”>?', 'This', 'language\\nof', 'uneventfulness', 'collapses', 'distinctions', 'between', 'class', 'and', 'profession\\ninto', 'a', 'single', 'plot', 'that', 'resists', 'narration:', 'the', 'emphatically', 'negative', 'dis-\\ncourse', 'discloses', 'a', 'pattern', 'of', 'existence', 'so', 'unremarkable', 'that', 'it', 'escapes\\nbiographical', 'writing,', 'yet', 'simultaneously', 'establishes', 'that', 'pattern', 'as', 'the\\ntrue', 'foundation', 'of', 'exemplary', 'representation.', 'In', 'these', 'popular', 'histo-\\nries,', 'women’s', 'lives', 'lack', '“scenes,”', 'dramatic', 'plot', 'twists,', 'romantic', 'sorrows,\\nand', 'tragic', 'denouements.', 'This', 'rhetoric', 'of', 'antifiction', '(and,', 'in', 'its', 'em-\\nphasis', 'on', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'engage', 'with', 'public', 'events,', 'antipolitics)', 'implies\\nthat', 'exemplary', 'value', 'is', 'constituted', 'not', 'by', 'events', 'internal', 'to', 'the', 'life,\\nbut', 'instead', 'by', 'the', 'posthumous', 'differentiation', 'of', 'a', 'life,', 'as', 'a', 'perfect\\nwhole,', 'from', 'all', 'those', 'lives', 'which', 'deviate', 'from', 'its', 'pattern.', 'As', 'a', 'result,\\nsuch', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'retrospectively', 'universalized,', 'made', 'to', 'speak', 'for', 'the\\nprogress', 'of', 'morality', 'instead', 'of', 'for', 'the', 'individual’s', 'own', 'achievements.\\n\\nEven', 'eventful', 'lives', 'could', 'be', 'transposed', 'into', 'moral', 'universals', 'by\\nan', 'emphasis', 'on', 'private', 'experience;', 'in', 'extreme', 'instances,', 'women’s\\nhistorians', 'figured', 'their', 'work', 'as', 'the', 'domestication', 'of', 'national', 'culture\\nitself.', 'In', 'the', 'preface', 'to', 'her', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland,', 'for', 'example,\\nAgnes', 'Strickland', 'argued', 'that', 'since', 'England', 'and', 'Scotland', '“are', 'now\\nONE', '...', 'truly', 'and', 'effectually', 'by', 'friendship,', 'based', 'on', 'mutual', 'esteem,”\\n\\n51.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman,', '“Le', 'Théorie', 'qui', 'n’en', 'est', 'pas', 'une;', 'or,', 'Why', 'Clio', 'Doesn’t', 'Care,”\\nin', 'Feminists', 'Revision', 'History,', 'ed.', 'Ann-Louise', 'Shapiro', '(New', 'Brunswick,', 'N.J.,', '1994),', 'p.', '84.\\n\\n52.1', 'cite', 'Mrs.', '[Anna]', 'Jameson,', 'The', 'Beauties', 'of', 'the', 'Court', 'of', 'King', 'Charles', 'the', 'Second...\\n(London,', '1833),', 'p.', '87;', 'Francis', 'Lancelott,', 'The', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'and', 'their', 'Times:', 'From', 'Ma-\\ntilda,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Conqueror,', 'to', 'Adelaide,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Fourth,', '2', 'vols.', '(New\\nYork,', '1859),', '2:1042-43;', 'Mrs.', '[Margaret]', 'C.', 'Baron', 'Wilson,', 'Our', 'Actresses;', 'or,', 'Glances', 'at\\nStage', 'Favourites,', 'Past', 'and', 'Present,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:73;', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,\\nThe', 'Sunshine', 'of', 'Domestic', 'Life;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Virtues,', 'and', 'Stories', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Noble\\nWomen', '(London,', '1867),', 'p.', '59;', 'and', 'Clara', 'L.', 'Balfour,', 'Women', 'Worth', 'Emulating', '(New', 'York,\\n1877),', 'p.', '23.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n66', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nher', '“Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'be', 'less', 'interesting', 'to\\nEnglish,', 'than', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'have', 'proved', 'to', 'Scotch\\nreaders.”', 'Strickland', 'offers', 'the', 'phenomenon', 'of', 'her', 'Lives', 'as', 'the', 'outcome\\nof', 'a', 'long', 'process', 'of', 'national', 'unification,', 'in', 'which', 'authentic', 'senti-\\nments', 'have', 'transcended', 'the', 'mere', 'legal', 'act', 'of', 'Union.', 'Reading', 'these\\nLives', 'thus', 'proves', 'or', 'reaffirms', 'a', 'new', 'British', 'nationhood,', 'founded', 'in\\nlove', 'instead', 'of', 'law.', 'The', 'affective', 'emphasis', 'is', 'further', 'underscored', 'by\\nStrickland’s', 'insistence', 'that', 'her', 'Lives', 'are', 'family', 'reading,', 'works', 'suitable\\nfor', 'those', 'raised', 'on', 'Sir', 'Walter', 'Scott’s', 'romances', 'yet', 'now', 'desiring', 'a\\n“truth”', 'not', 'sacrificed', 'to', '“fastidiousness,”', 'so', '“that', 'they', 'may', 'read', 'it', 'with\\ntheir', 'children,', 'and', 'that', 'the', 'whole', 'family', 'party', 'shall', 'be', 'eager', 'to', 're-\\nsume', 'the', 'book', 'when', 'they', 'gather', 'round', 'the', 'work-table', 'during', 'the', 'long\\nwinter', 'evenings.”', 'The', 'new', 'national', 'family', 'is', 'reinforced', 'by', 'the', 'plea-\\nsures', 'of', 'historical', 'reading,', 'a', 'pleasure', 'that', 'Strickland', 'is', 'careful', 'to\\ncounterbalance', 'with', 'a', 'setting', 'of', 'domestic', 'usefulness', '(the', '“work-table,”\\nwhere', 'presumably', 'the', 'women', 'are', 'sewing', 'as', 'they', 'listen', 'to', 'the', 'book\\nbeing', 'read).°°\\n\\nStrickland’s', 'domesticating', 'rhetoric', 'suggests', 'that', 'reading', 'and', 'writ-\\ning', 'these', 'uneventful', 'lives', 'are', 'themselves', 'means', 'toward', 'social', '(and', 'ul-\\ntimately', 'Christian)', 'reform,', 'but', 'it', 'also', 'suggests', 'that', 'such', 'reforms', 'must\\nalready', 'be', 'under', 'way', 'for', 'her', 'writings', 'to', 'be', 'properly', 'appreciated.', 'In\\nmaking', 'the', 'reading', 'and', 'writing', 'of', 'her', 'history', 'a', 'triumph', 'of', 'love', 'over\\nforce,', 'Strickland', 'announces', 'her', 'participation', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history’s\\nlarger', 'pedagogical', 'project:', 'tutoring', 'her', 'readers', 'in', 'the', 'proper', 'work\\nof', 'both', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women.', 'Earlier,', 'Sarah\\nLewis', 'had', 'argued', 'that', '“the', 'moral', 'progress', 'of', 'our', 'race', 'does', 'not', 'keep\\npace', 'with', 'the', 'intellectual;', 'and', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'assumed', 'that', 'one', 'of', 'the\\nchief', 'causes', 'of', 'this', 'slow', 'progress', 'is', 'the', 'misdirecting', 'of', 'influence,', 'and\\nexpecting', 'power', 'to', 'supply', 'the', 'want,', 'and', 'perform', 'the', 'work', 'of', 'influ-\\nence”;', 'she', 'directed', 'her', 'readers', 'to', 'their', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'place', 'in\\nsociety', 'so', 'that', 'they', 'could', '“interfere', 'in', 'politics”', 'by', 'becoming', '“moral\\nagents,”', 'and', 'in', 'so', 'doing', '“instill', 'into', 'their', 'relatives', 'of', 'the', 'other', 'sex', 'the\\nuncompromising', 'sense', 'of', 'duty', 'and', 'self-devotion,', 'which', 'ought', 'to', 'be\\ntheir', 'ruling', 'principles!”>4', 'Female', 'influence', 'becomes', 'a', 'historical', 'force\\nonly', 'when', 'detached', 'from', 'power,', 'that', 'is,', 'from', 'the', 'immediately', 'visible\\nand', 'traceable', 'exertion', 'of', 'force', 'in', 'political', 'circles.', 'This', 'influential,', 'in-\\nstead', 'of', 'political,', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'progressively', 'transforms', 'the', 'nature\\nof', 'modernity', 'through', 'her', 'ongoing', 'regeneration', 'of', 'masculine', 'spiritu-\\nality;', 'yet', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'exemplary', 'histories—and', 'conduct', 'manuals—\\nalso', 'points', 'to', 'the', 'conditional', 'nature', 'of', 'these', 'transformations.', 'It', 'was\\n\\n53.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'and', 'English', 'Princesses', 'Connected', 'with\\nthe', 'Regal', 'Succession', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain,', '2d', 'ed.,', '8', 'vols.', '(Edinburgh,', '1852),', '1:xvi.\\n54.', '[Sarah', 'Lewis],', 'Woman’s', 'Mission,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1840),', 'pp.', '15,', '61.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '67\\n\\nthe', 'job', 'of', 'exemplary', 'history', 'to', 'call', 'the', 'truly', 'Christian', 'historical\\nwoman', 'into', 'being,', 'proving', 'to', 'the', '“complainant”', 'who', 'yearns', 'for', 'public\\nactivity', 'that', '“in', 'most', 'of', 'the', 'triumphs', 'achieved', 'by', 'men...', 'she', 'has\\nshared,', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'purest', 'form,', 'by', 'having', 'been', 'their', 'instructor,', 'inves-\\ntigator,', 'or', 'friend.”®>', 'The', 'narrative', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'was', 'thus', 'de-\\nsigned', 'to', 'convince', 'readers', 'of', 'their', 'participation', 'in', 'a', 'modernity', 'that\\nthey', 'obstinately', 'refused', 'to', 'recognize.', 'Even', 'men', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'convinced.\\nAs', '“C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus”', 'reminded', 'his', 'male', 'readers,', 'the', 'improvement', 'of\\n“national', 'manners,', 'morals,', 'and', 'happiness”', 'was', 'owed', 'to', '“female', 'sway,”\\nand', 'that', 'sway', 'was', 'progressing', 'toward', 'even', 'greater', 'refinement:', '“The\\nlovely', 'mothers', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'day', 'attend', 'to', 'their', 'pleasing', 'duties', 'with\\nmore', 'zeal', 'and', 'sense', 'than', 'their', 'grandmothers', 'did.”*°', 'These', 'writers', 'ex-\\npect', 'the', 'reader', 'to', 'participate', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'social', 'conversion', 'to', 'the', 'his-\\ntorical', 'revelation', 'of', 'woman’s', 'reforming', 'capacities,', 'either', 'acceding', 'to\\nfemale', 'influence', 'or', 'learning', 'to', 'wield', 'it.\\n\\nRecognition', 'of', 'these', 'connections', 'makes', 'comprehensible', 'the', 'oft-\\nnoted', 'anxieties', 'about', 'public,', '“writable”', 'women', 'whose', 'lives', 'can', 'be\\ndefined', 'as', 'historical', 'within', 'accepted', 'canons', 'of', 'evidence,', 'and', 'therefore\\ntake', 'on', 'meaning', 'through', 'their', 'particularity.', 'If,', 'ideally,', 'a', 'woman’s', 'life\\nwas', 'too', 'uneventful', 'to', 'warrant', 'narration', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'then', 'a\\n“historical', 'woman”', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'as', 'a', 'disruption:', 'a', 'woman', 'with\\na', 'fragmentary', 'or', 'nonexistent', 'domestic', 'existence', 'was', 'too', 'obviously\\nsingular', 'to', 'be', 'situated', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history;', 'historians', 'had', 'to', 'account\\nfor', 'and', 'explain', 'away', 'the', 'existence', 'of', 'such', 'figures.', 'For', 'Mary', 'Cowden\\nClarke,', '“it', 'were', 'idle”', 'to', 'regard', 'her', '“World-noted', 'Women”', 'as', 'anything\\nother', 'than', '“isolated', 'exemplars', 'of', 'special', 'qualities;', 'they', 'are', 'not', 'so\\nmuch', 'types', 'of', 'a', 'class', 'of', 'women,', 'as', 'types', 'of', 'particular', 'womanly', 'at-\\ntributes.”57', 'Women', 'who', 'stand', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'can', 'be', 'narrated', 'within\\nCowden', 'Clarke’s', 'biographical', 'series', 'only', 'insofar', 'as', 'they,', 'as', 'individu-\\nals,', 'typify', 'fragmentary', 'qualities', 'possessed', 'by', 'women.', 'By', 'constructing\\na', 'series', 'of', 'singular', 'lives,', 'Cowden', 'Clarke', 'also', 'constructs', 'a', 'single', 'unified\\nwoman;', 'but', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'she', 'defines', 'famous', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'as\\nfailures,', 'their', 'natures', 'fragmented', 'by', 'political', 'participation', 'instead\\nof', 'unified', 'by', 'domestic', 'and', 'Christian', 'harmony.', 'The', 'woman', 'who', 'stands\\nout', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'too', 'different,', 'idiosyncratic,', 'unrepeatable,', 'atypical.\\nThe', 'governing', 'metaphor', 'for', 'her', 'is', 'the', 'comet:', 'fashionable', 'women\\n“fly', 'off', 'like', 'comets', 'from', 'their', 'appointed', 'orbits,', 'and', 'threaten', 'destruc-\\ntion', 'to', 'the', 'whole', 'social', 'system”;', 'a', 'woman', 'out', 'of', 'her', 'sphere', 'is', '“comet-\\nlike,', 'wandering', 'in', 'irregular', 'orbits,', 'dazzling', 'indeed', 'by', 'their', 'brilliancy,\\n\\n55.', '“On', 'Modern', 'Female', 'Cultivation.', 'No.', 'IV,”', 'Athenaeum', '250', '(1832):', '521.\\n\\n56.', 'C.', 'B.C.', 'Amicus,', 'Hints', 'on', 'Life;', 'and', 'How', 'to', 'Rise', 'in', 'Society', '(London,', '1845),', 'pp.', '109-10.\\n\\n57.', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', 'World-Noted', 'Women;', 'Or,', 'Types', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Attributes', 'of', 'All\\nLands', 'and', 'Ages', '(New', 'York,', '1858),', 'p.', '3.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n68', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nbut', 'terrifying', 'by', 'their', 'eccentric', 'movements', 'and', 'doubtful', 'utility”;', 'an\\nemancipated', 'woman', 'would', 'be', 'like', 'the', 'star', 'of', 'Venus,', 'if', 'it', '“should', 'be-\\ncome', 'a', 'fiery', 'comet,', 'and', 'rush', 'through', 'the', 'sky,', 'bringing', 'dismay', 'with\\nher', 'light,', 'and', 'causing', 'a', 'deeper', 'darkness', 'as', 'she', 'passed', 'away.”°®', 'Like\\ncomets,', 'women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'are', 'terrifying', 'precisely', 'because', 'they\\ndeviate', 'from', 'the', 'norm.', 'No', 'writer', 'can', 'transform', 'them', 'into', 'exemplary\\nfigures,', 'for', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'universal', 'about', 'their', 'moral', 'and', 'intellec-\\ntual', 'qualities', 'save', 'their', 'unpredictability.\\n\\nWomen’s', 'historians', 'thus', 'distinguished', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'women,\\nlying', 'passively', 'invisible', 'until', 'written', 'up', 'by', 'the', 'historian,', 'from', 'the\\n“comets,”', 'making', 'themselves', 'visible', 'through', 'their', 'own', 'exertions.', 'In\\nmaking', 'this', 'distinction,', 'writers', 'further', 'stigmatized', 'attention', 'to', '“event-\\nfulness”', 'itself', 'as,', 'at', 'best,', 'a', 'misreading', 'of', 'history', 'and,', 'at', 'worst,', 'an', 'un-\\nChristian', 'practice.', 'Since', 'women’s', 'histories', 'often', 'used', 'sensationalism\\nas', 'a', 'selling', 'point', 'despite', 'their', 'contrary', 'moral', 'claims,', 'this', 'anti-event\\nrhetoric', 'was', 'also', 'a', 'means', 'for', 'an', 'individual', 'writer', 'to', 'clear', 'space', 'for', 'his\\nor', 'her', 'own', 'text.', 'Jane', 'Williams', 'complained', 'that', '“several', 'miscellaneous\\ncollections', 'of', 'the', 'lives', 'of', 'celebrated', 'women', 'have', 'been', 'published', 'in\\nEngland,', 'apparently', 'without', 'any', 'other', 'principle', 'of', 'selection', 'than', 'that\\nof', 'historical', 'and', 'contemporary', 'notoriety,', 'and', 'perplexing', 'the', 'ambi-\\ntious', 'aspirations', 'of', 'youthful', 'readers,', 'by', 'setting', 'before', 'them', 'the', 'dark\\ndoings', 'and', 'daring', 'ascents', 'of', 'the', 'Catherines', 'de’', 'Medici', 'and', 'of', 'Russia,\\nand', 'the', 'discordant', 'careers', 'of', 'the', 'daughters', 'of', 'Sir', 'Anthony', 'Cooke', 'and\\nof', 'Queen', 'Elizabeth.”5*', 'More', 'importantly,', 'this', 'strategy', 'led', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'to', 'apply', 'the', 'Christian', 'definition', 'of', 'political', 'historiography', 'as\\nitself', 'a', 'vehicle', 'of', 'evil,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'dwells', 'on', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.\\nFor', 'the', 'more', 'doomsaying', 'writer,', 'this', 'evil', 'could', 'be', 'turned', 'to', 'account;\\nas', '“M.A.K.”', 'put', 'it,', '“while', '[history]', 'communicates', 'the', 'events', 'of', 'past\\nages,', 'it', 'clearly', 'pourtrays', 'the', 'unhappy', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'wicked,', 'and\\ndemonstrates', 'most', 'awfully', 'the', 'retributive', 'justice', 'of', 'the', 'Almighty,\\nwhich', 'is', 'so', 'frequently', 'manifested', 'in', 'this', 'world—doubtless', 'for', 'our', 'ad-\\nmonition.”©', 'For', 'most', 'writers,', 'however,', 'this', 'approach', 'went', 'directly\\nagainst', 'their', 'doctrines', 'of', 'love', 'and', 'feminine', 'tenderness.', 'Women', 'of\\npublic', 'note', 'might', 'be', '“comets,”', 'but', 'the', 'historian', 'who', 'narrated', 'their\\nlives', 'succumbed', 'to', 'an', 'unworthy', 'desire', 'for', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.\\nThe', 'anonymous', 'figure', 'who', 'wrote', 'that', '“women', 'who', 'have', 'attained', 'no-\\ntoriety', 'in', 'any', 'way,', 'have', 'been,', 'for', 'the', 'most', 'part,', 'wanting', 'in', 'the', 'accom-\\n\\n58.', 'Respectively,', 'Mrs.', 'Virginia', 'Cary,', 'Letters', 'on', 'Female', 'Character;', 'Addressed', 'to', 'a', 'Young\\nLady', 'on', 'the', 'Death', 'of', 'Her', 'Mother,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Hartford,', 'Conn.,', '1831),', 'p.', '134;', 'Lewis,', 'p.', '47;', 'and\\nHale,', 'p.', 'xlv.\\n\\n59.', 'Jane', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Literary', 'Women', 'of', 'England.', 'Including', 'a', 'Biographical', 'Epitome', 'of', 'All\\nthe', 'Most', 'Eminent', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1700;', 'And', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Poetesses', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1850;', 'with', 'Extracts\\nfrom', 'their', 'Works,', 'and', 'Critical', 'Remarks', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '10-11.\\n\\n60.', 'M.', 'A.', 'K.,', 'Biography', 'for', 'Young', 'Ladies', '(London,', '1839),', 'p.', '214.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '69\\n\\nplishment', 'of', 'virtue!”', 'may', 'have', 'been', 'merely', 'a', 'misogynist,', 'but', 'others\\nwho', 'were', 'not', 'agreed', 'with', 'him', '(or', 'her):', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'in', 'an', 'impor-\\ntant', 'early', 'work', 'on', 'Shakespeare’s', 'heroines', 'that', 'also', 'implicitly', 'retracted\\nher', 'earlier', 'biographical', 'histories,', 'complained', 'that', '“women', 'are', 'illus-\\ntrious', 'in', 'history,', 'not', 'from', 'what', 'they', 'have', 'been', 'in', 'themselves,', 'but\\ngenerally', 'in', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'mischief', 'they', 'have', 'caused,”', 'and', 'the\\nabolitionist', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child', 'noted', 'that', '“in', 'searching', 'the', 'history\\nof', 'women,', 'the', 'mild,', 'unobtrusive', 'domestic', 'virtues', '...', 'are', 'not', 'found\\non', 'record.”®!', 'In', 'this', 'context,', 'women', 'in', 'history—even', 'women', 'in', '“ev-\\neryone', 'else’s”', 'women’s', 'history—are', 'merely', 'anomalies', 'indexing', 'anom-\\nalies,', 'instead', 'of', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'figures', 'whose', 'private', 'virtues', 'can', 'be\\nuniversalized', 'by', 'an', 'appropriately', 'Christian', 'author.', 'The', 'only', 'excuse\\nfor', 'a', 'woman’s', 'departure', 'from', 'the', 'private', 'sphere', 'is', 'the', 'pull', 'of', 'forces\\nbeyond', 'her', 'control;', 'a', 'truly', 'feminine', 'woman', 'never', 'voluntarily', 'partici-\\npates', 'in', 'historical', 'action.', '“Sutherland', 'Menzies”', '(Elizabeth', 'Stone)', 'de-\\nclared', 'this', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'moral', 'of', 'her', 'antifeminist', 'collection:', '“Certain\\ncelebrated', 'women', 'who', 'have', 'flung', 'themselves', 'with', 'ardour', 'into', 'the', 'vor-\\ntex', 'of', 'politics”', 'had', 'necessarily', 'sacrificed', '“conjugal', 'happiness,', 'the', 'wel-\\nfare', 'of', 'children,', 'domestic', 'peace,', 'reputation,', 'and', 'all', 'the', 'amenities', 'of\\nthe', 'gentle', 'life.”®?', 'By', 'contrast,', 'the', 'truly', 'heroic', 'woman', 'simply', 'relin-\\nquishes', 'her', 'will', 'in', 'the', 'face', 'of', 'extraordinary', 'events,', 'in', 'what', 'Samuel\\nMossman', 'called', 'an', '“involuntary', 'act', 'of', 'the', 'sentiments', 'or', 'affections.”\\n\\n“History”', 'in', 'these', 'citations', 'signifies', 'worldly', 'experience,', 'improperly\\ntaken', 'as', 'a', 'norm', 'for', 'moral', 'behavior.', 'Yet', 'the', 'disruption', 'of', 'female\\nsubjectivity', 'through', 'historical', 'participation,', 'even', 'if', 'that', 'participation\\nwas', 'anomalous,', 'remained', 'an', 'insoluble', 'difficulty.', 'The', 'spectacle', 'of', 'the\\n“masculine”', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'thus', 'the', 'sign', 'of', 'a', 'crisis', 'both', 'in', 'the\\nauthor’s', 'construction', 'of', 'history', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'larger', 'system', 'of', 'cultural\\nsignification.', 'The', 'masculinized', 'woman', 'is', 'dangerous', 'not', 'simply', 'be-\\ncause', 'she', 'threatens', 'gender', 'categories', 'but', 'also', 'because', 'her', 'presence\\ncomplicates', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and,', 'by', 'posing', 'interpretive', 'difficul-\\nties,', 'threatens', 'moral', 'categories', 'as', 'well.', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'masculine', 'woman,', 'not\\n“woman,”', 'who', 'serves', 'as', 'the', 'trope', 'for', 'historical', 'anachronism;', 'when\\nshe', 'qualifies', 'as', 'a', 'historical', 'woman,', 'she', 'overlaps', 'dangerously', 'with', 'the\\nGreat', 'Man.', 'Invoking', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages', 'as', 'his', 'frame', 'for', 'an', 'antifemi-\\nnist', 'argument,', 'William', 'Hamley', 'asked', 'the', 'readers', 'of', 'the', 'conservative\\n\\n61.', 'Woman:', 'As', 'She', 'Is,', 'and', 'As', 'She', 'Should', 'Be,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1835),', '2:2;', 'Mrs.', '[Anna\\nBrownell]', 'Jameson,', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'Women,', 'Moral,', 'Poetical,', 'and', 'Historical,', '3d', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.\\n(London,', '1836),', '1:18;', 'and', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child,', 'Brief', 'History', 'of', 'the', 'Condition', 'of', 'Women,', 'in\\nVarious', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations,', '5th', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1845),', '2:209.\\n\\n62.', '“Sutherland', 'Menzies,”', 'Political', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1873),', '1:vii.\\n\\n63.', 'Samuel', 'Mossman,', 'Gems', 'of', 'Womanhood:', 'Or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Distinguished', 'Women', 'in', 'Vari-\\nous', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations', '(London,', '[1870?]),', 'p.', 'iv.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n70', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nBlackwood’s', 'Magazine', 'to', 'adjudicate', 'between', 'the', '“ladies', 'of', 'manlike', 'ten-\\ndencies”', 'and', 'the', '“quiet,', 'soft', 'beings', 'who', 'held', 'fast', 'by', 'the', 'instincts', 'and\\ntraditions', 'of', 'their', 'sex.”', 'Even', 'though', 'he', 'was', 'willing', 'to', 'make', 'exceptions\\nfor', 'such', 'manlike', 'women', 'as', 'Joan', 'of', 'Arc', 'and', 'Zenobia,', 'who', '“impelled', 'by\\npatriotism', 'or', 'other', 'temporary', 'enthusiasm,', 'against', 'their', 'inclination\\nand', 'practice,', 'transform', 'themselves', 'for', 'a', 'time,”', 'Hamley’s', 'argument', 'was\\nclear:', 'the', 'woman', 'who', 'entered', 'the', 'lists', 'of', 'war', 'and', 'politics', 'not', 'only', 'be-\\ncame', 'a', 'hermaphroditic', 'figure', 'but', 'also', 'failed', 'to', 'measure', 'up', 'to', 'later\\nmoral', 'standards.', 'Even', 'the', 'motives', 'ascribed', 'to', 'his', 'exceptions', 'are', 'dis-\\nparaged', 'as', '“temporary', 'enthusiasm”;', 'instead', 'of', 'being', 'called', 'to', 'duty,\\nthey', 'called', 'themselves', 'without', 'any', 'true,', 'permanent,', 'or', 'consistent', 'ded-\\nication.', 'In', 'Hamley’s', 'formulations,', 'historical', 'specificity', 'marks', 'the', 'pecu-\\nliarity', 'and', 'hence', 'the', 'irrelevance', 'of', 'the', 'event,', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'discount', 'any\\npotential', 'relevance', 'for', 'future', 'practices.', '“We', 'find', 'her', 'natural', 'relative\\nstate', 'to', 'be', 'one', 'of', 'subordination', 'to', 'men', 'in', 'both', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern\\ntimes,”', 'Hamley', 'remarks,', 'and', '“we', 'find', 'this', 'natural', 'condition', 'reversed\\nat', 'a', 'particular', 'period', 'on', 'one', 'quarter', 'of', 'the', 'world;', 'but', 'reversed', 'by\\na', 'particular', 'combination', 'of', 'circumstances.”', 'In', 'his', 'call', 'to', 'judgment,\\nthe', 'juxtaposition', 'of', 'past', 'and', 'present', 'invokes', 'a', 'modern', 'consensus\\nabout', 'the', 'feminine', '(what', '“we”', 'think)', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'insist', 'upon', 'the', 'unfa-\\nmiliarity', 'of', 'a', 'past', 'in', 'which', 'gender', 'difference', 'appears', 'fluid.', 'By', 'invok-\\ning', 'historical', 'specificity', 'in', 'this', 'manner,', 'Hamley', 'makes', 'masculinity', 'in\\na', 'woman', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'exemplarity.', 'The', 'masculine', 'woman', 'is\\nidentified', 'with', 'the', 'anomalous', 'event', 'which', 'teaches', 'nothing', 'except', 'the\\nimpossibility', 'of', 'its', 'repetition.', 'In', 'turn,', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'does', 'not\\nso', 'much', 'reduce', 'to', 'purely', 'masculine', 'actions', 'as', 'become', 'the', 'reposi-\\ntory', 'of', '“true”', 'feminine', 'behavior', '(“quiet,', 'soft', 'beings”).', 'By', 'incorporat-\\ning', 'women', 'who', 'do', 'nothing', 'manly', 'yet', 'exhibit', 'a', 'high', 'order', 'of', 'feminine\\nvirtue,', 'while', 'simultaneously', 'excising', 'hybrid', 'figures', '(“manlike', 'ladies”)\\nfrom', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'progress,', 'Hamley', 'temporarily', 'creates', 'a', 'unified\\nnarrative', 'of', 'historical', 'change', 'couched', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'eternal', 'gender\\ndifferences.', 'If', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'moral', 'history', 'was', 'supposed', 'to', 'sup-\\nplant', 'political', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'most', 'valuable', 'realm', 'of', 'human', 'endeavor,\\nHamley', 'reasserts', 'the', 'primacy', 'of', 'the', 'political', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'situate', 'the\\nfeminine', 'as', 'its', 'supplement.', 'oo\\n\\n64.', '[William', 'Hamley],', '“Women', 'in', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages,”', 'Blackwood’s', 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine\\n102', '(1867):', '627-28.\\n\\n65.', 'Postbellum', 'American', 'serial', 'biographies,', 'however,', 'often', 'challenge', 'this', 'insistence\\nupon', 'strictly', 'delineated', 'gender', 'roles.', 'L.', 'P.', 'Brockett’s', 'and', 'Mary', 'C.', 'Vaughan’s', 'Woman’s\\nWork', 'in', 'the', 'Civil', 'War:', 'A', 'Record', 'of', 'Heroism,', 'Patriotism,', 'and', 'Patience', '(1867),', 'William', 'Wor-\\nthington', 'Fowler’s', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'American', 'Frontier...', '(1877),', 'and', 'Frank', 'Moore’s', 'Women\\nof', 'the', 'War;', 'Their', 'Heroism', 'and', 'Self-Sacrifice', '(1867)', 'all', 'redefine', 'masculinity', 'and', 'femininity\\nin', 'relation', 'to', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'American', 'expansion', 'or', 'to', 'the', 'postbellum', 'social', 'order.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '°', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '71\\n\\nIf,', 'moreover,', 'the', 'project', 'of', 'domesticating', 'history', 'meant', 'that', 'event-\\nful', 'narrative—profane', 'historiography—could', 'be', 'ended,', 'this', 'domesti-\\ncation', 'meant', 'educating', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'into', 'an', 'interpretive', 'process\\nthat', 'would', 'end', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'further', 'interpretation.', 'Yet', 'such', 'ideally', 'do-\\nmesticated', 'history', 'proves', 'a', 'contradictory', 'exercise.', 'Supposedly,', 'women\\nare', 'born', 'into', 'a', 'Christian', 'era', 'that', 'judges', 'character', 'on', 'universal', 'moral\\nprinciples.', 'A', 'woman', 'perceptible', 'to', 'the', 'political', 'historian,', 'however,\\nchronologically', 'regresses', 'by', 'being', 'reinscribed', 'into', 'local', 'and', 'specific\\ncircumstances;', 'in', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'she', 'reenacts', 'Eve’s', 'fall.', 'Yet', 'if', 'the\\nwoman', 'in', 'history', 'succumbs', 'to', 'the', 'new', 'apple', 'of', 'public', 'activity,', 'her', 'fall\\nis', 'nevertheless', 'merely', 'individual;', 'as', 'she', 'comes', 'into', 'view,', 'she', 'actually\\nreinforces', 'the', 'reality', 'of', 'the', 'new', 'Eden', 'inhabited', 'by', 'the', 'more', 'ideal\\nfeminine', 'type.', 'As', 'the', 'prolific', 'popular', 'biographer', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport\\nAdams', 'argued', '(in', 'relation', 'to', 'Madame', 'de', 'Staél),', 'a', 'woman', 'who', '“lived\\ntoo', 'much', 'in', 'the', 'glare', 'of', 'the', 'lamps,', 'and', 'fed', 'too', 'eagerly', 'upon', 'the', 'ap-\\nplause', 'of', 'the', 'crowd”', 'had,', 'from', 'the', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', '“patient', 'analyst,”\\nan', '“imperfect', '.', '.', '.', 'career”:', 'it', 'showed', 'that', '“so', 'prodigal', 'an', 'expenditure', 'of\\npower', 'accomplished', 'so', 'little', 'good.”', 'According', 'to', 'the', 'analyst’s', 'patient\\ndiagnosis,', 'which', 'directly', 'contrasts', 'with', 'his', 'subject’s', 'impulsiveness,', 'de\\nStaél’s', 'very', 'publicity', 'makes', 'her', 'irrelevant', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'moral\\nprogress.®', 'In', 'order', 'to', 'explain', 'why', 'women', 'cannot', 'achieve', 'equality,', 'it\\nis', 'necessary', 'to', 'argue', 'that', 'local', 'circumstances', 'are', 'immediately', 'pertinent\\nonce', 'women', 'enter', 'into', 'public', 'notice.', 'Madame', 'du', 'Chatelet’s', '“relaxed\\nmorals—the', 'mixture', 'of', 'pride,', 'worldliness,', 'and', 'intellect,', 'by', 'which', 'she\\nwas', 'distinguished—her', 'external', 'observance', 'of', 'every', 'convenance—\\nand', 'her', 'total', 'want', 'of', 'religious', 'feeling—are', 'alike', 'characteristic', 'of', 'her\\nstation', 'and', 'her', 'age,”', 'observes', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh', 'of', 'one', 'influential', 'French\\nwoman', 'of', 'letters', 'in', 'Enlightenment', 'France.', 'So', 'characteristic', 'that', 'the\\nnineteenth-century', 'Englishwoman', 'can', 'learn', 'nothing', 'from', 'her,', 'save\\nwhat', 'actions', 'and', 'beliefs', 'are', 'no', 'longer', 'possible', 'or', 'even', 'desirable;', 'it', 'is\\nsignificant', 'that', 'Kavanagh', 'stipulates', 'that', 'her', 'book', 'is', 'an', '“analysis', 'of', 'the\\npower', 'of', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'eighteenth', 'century,”', 'and', 'not,', 'as\\nis', 'usually', 'the', 'case,', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations.®”', 'Even\\nas', 'authors', 'claim', 'that', 'women', 'have', 'truly', 'evolved', 'into', 'their', 'historically\\nproper', 'position', 'of', 'domestic', 'solitude,', 'their', 'texts', 'return', 'again', 'and', 'again\\nto', 'the', 'dangers', 'of', 'their', 'straying', 'outside', 'it', 'in', 'search', 'of', 'forbidden', 'fruits.\\nThe', 'abstract', 'nature', 'of', 'womanliness', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'account,', 'in', 'other\\nwords,', 'actually', 'requires', 'the', 'ever-present', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'woman', 'desiring\\n\\n66.', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'Famous', 'Beauties', 'and', 'Historic', 'Women:', 'A', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Croquis\\nBiographies,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1865),', '2:180.\\n\\n67.', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh,', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'Eighteenth', 'Century', '(Philadelphia,\\n1850),', 'pp.', '14,', '112.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n72', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nto', 'engage', 'with', '(and', 'thus', 'be', 'inscribed', 'by)', 'the', 'historical', 'particularity\\nthat', 'still', 'marks', 'the', 'postlapsarian', 'world.\\n\\nAccordingly,', 'the', 'only', 'hope', 'for', 'the', '“Great', 'Woman”', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'to\\ntranscend', 'circumstances', 'altogether,', 'leaving', 'her', 'character', 'unaffected\\nby', 'her', 'education.', 'Dr.', 'Elizabeth', 'Blackwell’s', '“varied', 'experiences', 'would\\nnever', 'lessen', 'that', 'feminine', 'delicacy', 'which', 'has', 'ever', 'yet', 'distinguished\\nher”;', 'Sarah', 'Trimmer,', 'despite', 'her', 'public', 'success', 'as', 'an', 'author,', 'was\\nnevertheless', '“always', 'more', 'willing', 'to', 'listen', 'than', 'to', 'speak,', 'more', 'con-\\nscious', 'of', 'her', 'own', 'defects', 'than', 'her', 'success”;', 'Charlotte', 'Bronté’s', 'popular\\nsuccess', '“neither', 'altered', 'her', 'habits,', 'nor', 'overcame', 'her', 'dislike', 'and', 'shy-\\nness', 'of', 'company,', 'nor', 'very', 'materially', 'affected', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'her\\nhome”;', 'and', 'Fanny', 'Burney’s', 'celebrity', 'never', '“unsettled', 'her', 'mind,', 'or\\nturned', 'her', 'aside', 'from', 'home', 'and', 'its', 'affections.”®*', 'Such', 'women', 'are', 'the\\nagents', 'of', 'historical', 'narrative', 'but', 'themselves', 'lack', 'subjectivities', 'amena-\\nble', 'to', 'narration;', 'there', 'are', 'stories', 'told', 'about', 'them,', 'but', 'their', 'personal-\\nities', 'do', 'not', 'change', 'between', 'the', 'beginning', 'and', 'the', 'end.', 'If', 'masculinized\\nwomen', 'such', 'as', 'Elizabeth', 'I', 'precipitate', 'a', 'crisis', 'within', 'interpretation\\nby', 'shaping', 'their', 'identities', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'moment,', 'eternally', 'femi-\\nnine', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Trimmer', 'pose', 'a', 'similar', 'difficulty', 'presented', 'as', 'a\\nsolution.', 'From', 'a', 'Victorian', 'perspective,', 'the', 'increasing', 'number', 'of', 'these\\nahistorical', 'figures', 'is', 'a', 'peculiarly', 'modern', 'phenomenon,', 'however', 'the\\nchronological', 'boundaries', 'of', 'modernity', 'are', 'defined;', 'the', 'apex', 'of', 'his-\\ntorical', 'development', 'occurs', 'when', 'femininity', 'is', 'defined', 'not', 'by', 'mate-\\nrial', 'circumstances', 'but', 'by', 'religious', 'faith', 'dissociated', 'from', 'its', 'worldly\\nsituation.\\n\\nPerhaps', 'ironically,', 'writers', 'seized', 'on', 'the', 'British', 'constitution', 'as', 'the\\nsupreme', 'means', 'of', 'celebrating', 'the', 'apotheosis', 'of', 'gendered', 'historical\\ndevelopment', 'while', 'inadvertently', 'exposing', 'the', 'self-conflicting', 'nature\\nof', 'that', 'project.', 'Queen', 'Victoria’s', 'own', 'carefully', 'constructed', 'image', 'as\\na', 'private', 'woman', 'could', 'be', 'inscribed', 'into', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'teleo-\\nlogical', 'outcome', 'of', 'British', 'politics.', 'The', 'feminization', 'of', 'British', 'royalty\\nwas', 'most', 'commonly', 'articulated', 'by', 'comparing', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Elizabeth', 'I.\\nEven', 'before', 'Victoria', 'came', 'to', 'the', 'throne,', 'the', 'art', 'historian', 'and', 'literary\\ncritic', 'Anna', 'Jameson', 'had', 'argued', 'that', 'Elizabeth’s', 'reign', 'exemplified\\nthe', 'woman', 'whose', 'absolutism', 'is', 'grounded', 'in', 'her', 'own', 'weakness,', 'for', 'she\\nconducts', 'all', 'her', 'business', '“on', 'the', 'principle', 'of', 'self-preservation', 'and\\nself-interest,', 'rather', 'than', 'of', 'enlightened', 'benevolence.', '.', '.', '.”89', 'The', 'polit-\\n\\n68.', 'Respectively,', '[Joseph', 'Johnson],', 'Heroines', 'of', 'our', 'Time:', 'Being', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of\\nEminent', 'Women,', 'with', 'Examples', 'of', 'their', 'Benevolent', 'Works,', 'Truthful', 'Lives,', 'and', 'Noble', 'Deeds\\n(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '262;', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'Working', 'Women', 'of', 'this', 'Century:', 'The', 'Lesson', 'of\\ntheir', 'Lives,', '3d', 'ed.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '31;', 'Women', 'of', 'Worth:', 'A', 'Book', 'for', 'Girls', '(London,', '1854),\\np-', '119;', 'Mossman,', 'p.', '18.\\n\\n69.', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Female', 'Sovereigns,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1831),\\n1:295-96.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '73\\n\\nical', 'woman', 'of', 'this', 'reading', 'is', 'a', 'mentally', 'blinkered', 'figure', 'motivated', 'by\\nirrational', 'private', 'desires', 'rather', 'than', 'public', 'patriotism.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Vic-\\ntoria’s', 'maternal', 'devotion', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'staged', 'for', 'public', 'consumption)\\ncombined', 'with', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'interest', 'in', 'state', 'affairs', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'repre-\\nsented', 'in', 'the', 'biographical', 'texts)', 'becomes', 'not', 'only', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British\\nqueenship', 'but', 'also', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'womanhood.', 'Elizabeth', 'remains\\nstigmatized', 'as', 'a', 'woman', 'of', 'primarily', '“manly', 'qualities,”', 'lacking', 'in', 'all', '“ten-\\nderness,', 'softness,', 'pity,', 'and', 'forgiveness,”', 'although', 'the', 'writer', 'who', 'claimed\\nthat', 'the', 'word', '“queen”', 'on', 'her', 'tomb', 'should', 'be', 'changed', 'to', '“quean”', 'was', 'a\\nbit', 'extreme.', '7°', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'however,', 'was', 'described', 'not', 'only', 'as', '“the\\nnoblest', 'example', 'of', 'domestic', 'purity', 'and', 'social', 'propriety”', '—particularly\\nin', 'contrast', 'to', 'her', 'immediate', 'male', 'predecessors—but', 'also', 'as', 'the', 'pos-\\nsessor', 'of', 'a', 'fullness', 'of', 'private', 'life', 'unavailable', 'to', 'Elizabeth,', 'who', '“enjoyed\\nno', 'real', 'and', 'solid', 'happiness”;', '“never', 'had', 'a', 'country', 'a', 'brighter', 'or', 'more\\nperfect', 'example', 'of', 'all', 'home', 'duties,', 'and', 'all', 'social', 'virtues,', 'than', 'is', 'to', 'be\\nfound', 'in', 'the', 'private', 'life', 'of', 'her', 'majesty.””!\\n\\nQueen', 'Victoria', 'thus', 'becomes', 'living', 'proof', 'that', 'history', 'progresses\\ntoward', 'an', 'ever-increasing', 'feminine', 'domesticity.', 'She', 'is', 'the', '“noblest\\nexample”', 'both', 'synchronically', 'and', 'diachronically,', 'the', 'sympathetic', 'sov-\\nereign', 'who', 'shines', 'by', 'feminine', 'spirituality’s', 'authentic', 'light,', 'not', 'by\\nmonarchical', 'spectacle’s', 'borrowed', 'tinsel.', 'As', 'the', 'nation’s', 'most', 'visible\\nwoman,', 'yet', 'one', 'who', 'resists', 'masculinization', 'by', 'historical', 'events,', 'Victo-\\nria', 'is', 'the', 'truly', 'virtuous', 'female', 'citizen,', '“keeping', 'our', 'Empire', 'great,', 'and\\ntrue,', 'and', 'conquering”', 'while', 'rendering', 'literal', 'the', 'boast', 'that', '“her', 'king-\\ndom', 'reposes', 'on', 'the', 'sanctity', 'of', 'home.””?', 'Thus', 'appropriated', 'to', 'image\\nthe', 'proper', 'relation', 'of', 'woman', 'to', 'politics,', 'Victoria', 'also', 'becomes', 'the\\nfigure', 'for', 'benevolent', 'imperial', 'government,', 'where', 'maternal', 'love', 'dis-\\nplaces', 'the', 'workings', 'of', 'force.', 'If', 'modernity', 'can', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'a\\nwoman', 'on', 'the', 'throne,', 'then', 'futurity', 'can', 'be', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'feminization\\nof', 'the', 'empire’s', 'management.\\n\\nBut', 'Victoria’s', 'reign', 'also', 'meant', 'an', 'end', 'to', 'historical', 'writing', 'as', 'it', 'was\\nonce', 'practiced.', '“Isabella', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'were', 'one', 'and', 'the', 'same', 'thing;\\n\\n70.', 'Louisa', 'Stuart', 'Costello,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Englishwomen,', '4', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),\\nl:iv;', 'and', 'Mary', 'Howitt,', 'ed.,', 'Biographical', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain.', 'From', 'the', 'Nor-\\nman', 'Conquest', 'to', 'the', 'Reign', 'of', 'Victoria.', 'Or,', 'Royal', 'Book', 'of', 'Beauty', '(London,', '1851),', 'p.', '404.\\n\\n71.', 'Howitt,', 'p.', '516;', 'Illustrious', 'Women', 'Who', 'Have', 'Distinguished', 'Themselves', 'for', 'Virtue,', 'Piety,\\nand', 'Benevolence', '(London,', '1852),', 'pp.', '10-11.\\n\\n72.', '[Stopford', 'Augustus', 'Brooke],', '“Womanhood', 'and', 'Its', 'Mission,”', 'Dublin', 'University\\nMagazine', '43', '(1859):', '656.', 'The', 'most', 'extensive', 'catalog', 'of', 'ways', 'in', 'which', 'Victoria’s', 'image\\nwas', 'produced,', 'circulated,', 'and', 'attacked', 'is', 'now', 'that', 'of', 'Richard', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Contentious\\nCrown:', 'Public', 'Discussion', 'of', 'the', 'British', 'Monarchy', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Aldershot,\\n1997).', 'See', 'also', 'Margaret', 'Homans', 'and', 'Adrienne', 'Munich,', 'eds.,', 'Remaking', 'Queen', 'Victoria\\n(Cambridge,', '1997),', 'and', 'Margaret', 'Homans,', 'Royal', 'Representations:', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'and', 'Brit-\\nish', 'Culture,', '1837-1876', '(Chicago,', '1998),', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'appeared', 'too', 'late', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'take\\nadvantage', 'of', 'in', 'this', 'essay.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n74', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nVictoria', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'are', 'two', 'very', 'distinct', 'themes,”', 'Frank', 'Goodrich\\ncannily', 'observed.', '“The', 'one', 'is', 'within', 'the', 'province', 'of', 'Mrs.', 'Jameson;', 'the\\nother', 'within', 'that', 'of', 'Macaulay.””’', 'Relegating', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Jameson’s', 'area\\nof', 'biographical', 'and', 'nonpolitical', 'expertise,', 'Goodrich', 'muffles', 'T.', 'B.\\nMacaulay’s', 'famous', 'call', 'for', 'a', 'unification', 'of', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'within\\nhistorical', 'narrative.', 'Where', 'women', 'are', 'concerned,', 'such', 'a', 'historical\\nproject', 'must', 'be', 'referred', 'to', 'the', 'ages', 'before', 'the', 'privatization', 'of', 'the\\nmonarchy.', 'Modern', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'are', 'produced', 'by', 'a', 'deliberate\\nrupture', 'between', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'spheres,', 'not', 'by', 'the', 'prospect', 'of\\nreunifying', 'them.', 'Instead', 'of', 'supplanting', 'profane', 'history', 'with', 'Christian\\nhistory', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all,', 'the', 'feminized', 'monarchy', 'guarantees', 'the', 'end-\\nless', 'necessity', 'for', 'profane', 'history', 'to', 'record', 'all', 'that', 'falls', 'outside', 'of', 'the\\n“province”', 'of', 'Christian', 'history.', 'Goodrich’s', 'quip', 'neatly', 'suggests', 'that\\nthe', '“victory”', 'of', 'the', 'women’s', 'historical', 'narrative,', 'in', 'the', 'figure', 'of\\nQueen', 'Victoria,', 'justifies', 'not', 'the', 'end', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s', 'history', 'but,', 'in-\\nstead,', 'its', 'continuing', 'manufacture:', 'with', 'Queen', 'Victoria’s', 'advent,', 'the\\nhistory', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'detached', 'from', 'political', 'narrative', 'instead', 'of', 'sub-\\nsuming', 'and', 'ultimately', 'transcending', 'it.', 'The', 'ultimate', 'grounds', 'for', 'and\\nproof', 'of', 'the', 'propagation', 'of', 'Christian', 'truth', 'lay', 'in', 'the', 'unwritability', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'experience', 'according', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'canons', 'of', 'political', 'his-\\ntoriography,', 'and', 'not', 'the', 'substitution', 'of', 'uneventful', 'women’s', 'history\\nfor', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'political', 'violence.\\n\\nI', 'have', 'argued', 'that', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'was', 'plotted', 'around', 'the\\neffacement', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'history', 'in', 'several', 'senses:', 'the', 'non-Christian\\nwoman', 'disappeared', 'from', 'historical', 'view;', 'the', '“masculine”', 'woman', 'was\\nprogressively', 'eliminated;', 'and', 'women', 'would', 'be', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'fu-\\nture', 'historian’s', 'gaze', 'altogether.', 'Nonetheless,', 'this', 'plotting', 'claimed', 'to\\nestablish', 'an', 'authentic', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'and,', 'by', 'extension,', 'an\\nauthentic', 'means', 'of', 'promoting', 'moral', 'and', 'historical', 'progress.', 'By', 'cen-\\ntury’s', 'end,', 'however,', 'the', 'envisioned', 'culmination', 'of', 'women’s', 'historical\\nnarrative', 'would', 'shift:', 'instead', 'of', 'explaining', 'the', 'progressive', 'domesti-\\ncation', 'of', 'modern', 'womanhood,', 'writers', 'began', 'seeking', 'the', 'origins', 'of', 'its\\nprogressive', 'publicity', 'instead.', 'Nearly', 'twenty', 'years', 'after', 'Middlemarch', 'was\\npublished,', 'the', 'well-known', 'antifeminist', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton—perhaps\\nrecalling', 'Eliot’s', 'river', 'image—ended', 'her', 'serialized', 'history', 'of', 'women\\nby', 'characterizing', 'political', 'women', 'as', '“the', 'shallow', 'brook”', 'that', '“brawls\\nwhere', 'the', 'noble', 'river', 'flows', 'silently.””4', 'For', 'Linton,', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'a\\nnew', 'narrative', 'of', 'public', 'femininity', '(at', 'which', 'Eliot', 'could', 'only', 'partially\\n\\n73.', 'Frank', 'B.', 'Goodrich,', 'Women', 'of', 'Beauty', 'and', 'Heroism', 'from', 'Semiramis', 'to', 'Eugenie:', 'A', 'Por-\\ntrait', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Female', 'Loveliness,', 'Achievement,', 'and', 'Influence', '.', '.', '.', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', 'p.', '376.\\n\\n74.', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton,', '“The', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'English', 'Women.', 'II,”', 'Fortnightly', 'Review,\\nn.s.,', '45', '(1889):', '375.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '75\\n\\nhint', 'in', '1871-72)', 'had', 'been', 'realized', 'in', '1889.', 'Linton’s', 'own', 'project\\nidentifies', 'feminine', 'domesticity', 'with', 'national', 'salvation.', 'Yet', 'for', 'her,\\nmodernity', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', 'the', 'failure', 'of', 'this', 'narrative', 'of', 'progres-\\nsive', 'domestication', 'and', 'by', 'the', 'increasing', 'participation', 'of', 'women', 'in\\npublic', 'life.', 'Eliot', 'had', 'raised', 'the', 'possibility', 'that', 'women', 'had', 'some\\nother,', 'as', 'yet', 'unidentified', 'role—“what', 'else', 'she', 'ought', 'rather', 'to', 'have\\ndone”—and', 'in', 'Linton’s', 'eyes,', 'that', 'unspecified', '“else”', 'is', 'woman’s', 'future\\nparticipation', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'For', 'Linton,', 'such', 'public', 'activity', 'would\\nmake', 'modernity', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'narrative', 'failure:', 'the', 'collapse', 'of', 'his-\\ntory’s', 'progress', 'toward', 'domestication', 'and', 'invisibility.', 'Linton', 'can', 'only\\nwarn', 'that', '“we', 'believe', 'our', 'men', 'will', 'never', 'let', 'this', 'monstrous', 'wrong\\ncome', 'to', 'pass.', '.', '.', '.””°', 'By', 'explicitly', 'calling', 'on', 'men', 'to', 'repress', 'the', 'threat\\nof', 'public', 'femininity,', 'Linton', 'inadvertently', 'advertises', 'the', 'bankruptcy\\nof', 'a', 'women’s', 'history', 'that', 'no', 'longer', 'produces', 'domestic', 'exemplars;\\ndespite', 'all', 'efforts,', 'the', 'domestic', 'femininity', 'that', 'would', 'identify', 'the', 'apo-\\ntheosis', 'of', 'Christian', 'morality', 'stubbornly', 'refused', 'to', 'exist', 'anywhere,\\nsave', 'in', 'an', 'ever-receding', 'future.', 'Among', 'later', 'feminists,', 'the', 'publicity\\nthat', 'Eliot', 'uneasily', 'anticipated', 'and', 'that', 'Linton', 'attacked', 'would', 'be', 'con-\\nsciously', 'adapted', 'as', 'the', 'basis', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'historiography;', 'it', 'is', 'perhaps\\nappropriate', 'that', 'in', 'introducing', 'her', 'biography', 'of', 'Linton,', 'Nancy', 'Fix\\nAnderson', 'describes', 'her', 'as', '“an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'opposed', 'to\\nwomen’s', 'emancipation.”’°', 'Because', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'de-\\nmanded', 'that', 'women', 'be', 'forgotten,', 'however,', 'its', 'own', 'rhetoric', 'consigned\\nit', 'to', 'historical', 'dust.\\n\\n75.', 'Eliot,', 'p.', '611;', 'and', 'Linton,', 'p.', '376.\\n76.', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson,', 'Woman', 'against', 'Women', 'in', 'Victorian', 'England:', 'A', 'Life', 'of', 'Eliza\\nLynn', 'Linton', '(Bloomington,', 'Ind.,', '1987),', 'p.', 'x.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n']\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "from PIL import Image\n", + "import pytesseract\n", + "import urllib.request\n", + "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", + "\n", + "pdf = \"test_pdf.pdf\"\n", + "pages = convert_from_path(pdf)\n", + "\n", + "new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", + "for page in pages:\n", + " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(page, lang=\"eng\")" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Rerun Spellcheck" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 41, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "@\n", + "{'hilton,', 'century,', 'so\\nfar', 'catalogs,', 'at\\nleast', 'exemplarity\\nwith', 'demarcates', 'character;', 'world.\\n\\naccordingly,', 'england.', 'by\\nirrational', 'mcleod,', 'of\\n(and', 'particularity.', 'visible\\nwoman,', 'enthusiasm”;', 'rohan\\nmaitzen', 'evangelicalism', 'maitzen,', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n72', 'elizabeth’s', '(1877),', 'masculinization', 'mill,', '1850;', 'purposes.', '1851),', 'l.', '“m.a.k.”', 'anachronism;', 'past\\nages,', '262;', 'claims,', 'silence,', 'miriam,', '1837-1876', 'contemporary\\nmorals—because', 'accumulation.', 'the\\nimpossibility', 'ours,”\\nin', 'diffusive:', 's.', 'along\\nlines', 'was\\npublished,', 'factors:\\nthe', 'do-\\nmesticated', 'future\\nparticipation', 'manuals—\\nalso', '10-11.\\n\\n60.', 'caused,”', 'bowles,', 'in\\n\\n12.', 'prog-\\nress', 'best,', 'time,', 'words\\nof', 'whose\\nvirtues,', 'practices.', 'mod-\\nern', 'events,', 'for”', 'cox’s\\nfemale', 'with\\nher', 'magazine\\n102', 'anything\\nother', 'women”', 'feminists,', 'faculties\\nnot', '“virtually\\nenslaved,”', 'judeo-christian\\nwomen,', '5\\n(1993):', '376.\\n\\n74.', 'produced.', 'particular\\ngenres,', 'brunswick,', 'barbarity,', '1989),', 'jameson', 'chris-\\ntianity’s', 'career.', 'once.', 'us,', '(reserved', '“reinventing', '[anna]', 'history,\\nbook', 'indi-\\nvidual', 'femi-\\nnist', 'distin-\\nguished', 'speaking,', '1844),\\nl:iv;', 'whole,', 'impulses,', '376.\\n\\nthis', 'method-\\nological', 'mich.,', 'possess\\nspiritual', '301.\\n\\nthis', '(louth,', 'interpreter.', '“origins”', 'private\\nlives', 'these\\nlives', 'to\\ncritique', '(which', 'pos-\\nsessor', 'rose,', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n58', 'jstor', 'crowd”', 'indeed,', 'char-\\nacteristic', 'improve-\\nment:', 'different,', 'man,', '(e.g.,', 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'em-\\nphasis', 'be\\nfound', 'christian\\nsuperiority,', 'brockett’s', 'man.', 'beautiful,”', 'of\\ndecisive', '1999),', 'article,', 'kish', 'publisher’s', 'and,', 'raid-\\ning', 'elucidates\\n\\n8.', 'unwritable', 'imitation,\\nfrom', 'century\\n(london,', 'religion,', 'truthful\\nor', 'literally,\\nestimate', 'dan-\\ngerously', 'croquis\\nbiographies,', 'refinement:', 'daughters:', '“comets,”', 'such\\nas', 'brought\\nall', '310,', 'retrospectively', 'notice.', 'even\\nas', 'history.\\n\\neven', 'turn,', 'altogether,', 'heroines;', 'possible\\nto', 'worldly\\nsituation.\\n\\nperhaps', 'great,', '59\\n\\nenlightenment', '65\\n\\nthe', 'female\\nsubjectivity', 'strickland,', 'in\\nsociety', 'eliza\\nlynn', '°', 'ex-\\nperience.”**', 'good.”', 'reserved.', 'goodrich,', 'spirituality.', '“the\\nslavery', 'difficulties—which,', 'b.c.', 'un-\\nchristian', 'women,\\nlying', 'partici-\\npates', 'moral,', 'example,', 'lamb],', '227-69.\\n\\nthis', 'fall.', 'testament;', 'transition:', 'reprint,', '“death”', '“isabella', 'the\\naverage', 'every\\nage,', 'baym', 'femininity,', '214.\\n\\nthis', 'itself.', 'histo-\\nrians', 'ex-\\nplicit:', 'antiquity,', 'topos,\\nhorror', 'exemplarity.', 'popular\\nsuccess', 'philology\\n\\nvictoria', '1:xvi.\\n54.', 'by\\nstrickland’s', 'whole.\\n\\nwomen’s', 'aid;', 'n’en', 'lynne', 'methodists,', 'women\\n(sixteen', 'circulated,', 'and\\nexpecting', 'do-\\nmestic', 'senti-\\nments', 'democratize\\nvirtue,', '“few', 'france.', 'articu-\\nlate', 'women\\nand', 'de-\\nvoted', 'was\\nclear:', 'capacities,', 'written)', '(1866;', 're-\\nsume', 'blackwell’s', 'woman!', '157.\\n\\nthis', 'catholicism.', 'trammels', 'fix\\nanderson', 'shift:', 'bankruptcy\\nof', '49\\n\\ni', 'self-devotion,', 'instead\\nof', 'williams,', 'women\\nby', 'gold-\\nwin', 'genre:', 'respected\\nof', 'telos', 'narrated,', 'progressively:', 'poten-\\ntially', 'articles,', 'enlighten-\\nment', 'in-\\ncreasing', 'patient\\ndiagnosis,', 'account\\nfor', 'sovereigns,', 'ambi-\\ntious', 'hierar-\\nchy', 'practice.', '“can', 'en-\\nglish', 'whereas,', 'ul-\\ntimately', 'efficient\\nmethod', 'hinchcliff,\\ngod', 'account;\\nas', '“sometimes,', 'system”;', 'mossman,', 'recover\\npagan', 'j.\\nzboray’s', 'the\\nchief', '(1975):', '439034\\n\\nreferences\\n\\njstor', 'historiography;', '“imitation,”', 'those\\nwho', 'twists,', 'anachronism.', 'mo-\\ndernity', 'audi-\\nences', 'alexander,', 'death,', 'shy-\\nness', '39,', 'the\\nsupreme', '109-10.\\n\\n57.', 'is\\nnot', 'larger\\ndiscourse', 'care,”\\nin', 'ministers’', 'york-brockport\\n\\nin', 'periodization:', 'history.', 'review,\\nn.s.,', 'theologically', 'spiritual-\\nized', 'adelaide,', 'lowder\\nnewton,', 'history.!!', 'invert\\nvictorian', 'h.', 'rank,\\ntherefore,', 'responsi-\\nble', 'reposi-\\ntory', '3d', 'the\\nopportunity', 'life.”#°', 'this\\nmoment', 'an\\nextreme', 'moral\\nprogress.®', 'not\\nleast', 'sumner', 'king-\\ndom', 'the\\nfeminine', '“moral\\nagents,”', 'unvisited', '55-56.\\n\\n48.', 'influ-\\nence”;', 'dispen-\\nsation,', '(“manlike', '“lost”', 'literature—history,”', '“still', '50.\\n\\nthis', 'historians,', 'effectually', 'it\\nraises', 'image—ended', '332.\\n\\n44.', 'particularity\\nthat', 'narration;', 'few)', 'own\\nhomes.”*°', 'wicked,', 'sources,', 'kavanagh’s', 'consolation,', 'not,', 'historical\\nnovels,', 'rea-\\nsoner', 'home-life', 'darkness,', 'the\\n“comets,”', 'scripture.', 'is\\nsignificant', 'take\\nadvantage', 'or-\\nganized', 'female\\nequality', 'is\\nconsequently', 'want,', 'grounds;\\nprogress', '1854).', 'anachronistic.', 'enlarge.”', 'be-\\ncause', 'burney’s', 'expertise,', 'represented\\nas', '“mirror”', 'signifi-\\ncantly', '273-86.\\n\\n17.', 'america:', '[anne', 'implies\\nthat', 'conservative\\n\\n61.'}\n", + "0.22109782275375653\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", + "print(new_ocr_text[0])\n", + "word_list = new_ocr_text.split(\" \")\n", + "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", + "\n", + "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", + "print(misspelled)\n", + "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", "\n", - "print(\"Percent incorrect:\", incorrect_percentage)\n" + "print(incorrect_percentage)" ] } ], "metadata": { "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3.10.7 64-bit", + "display_name": "Python 3", "language": "python", "name": "python3" }, @@ -133,7 +207,7 @@ "orig_nbformat": 4, "vscode": { "interpreter": { - "hash": "0ec7a46e504a03a6c262f47983dcd02ef89fa5cad4a702285fe6c94bffe2d9b0" + "hash": "aee8b7b246df8f9039afb4144a1f6fd8d2ca17a180786b69acc140d282b71a49" } } }, From 4fdc1014d1852eac8a95091f2cb3d7ba8a81fbc5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2023 16:53:48 -0500 Subject: [PATCH 31/63] remove prints --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 56 ++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 23 insertions(+), 33 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 233afce..5626369 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -69,18 +69,9 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 34, + "execution_count": 43, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "['From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:', 'Popular', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention', 'of', 'Modernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870', 'MIRIAM', 'ELIZABETH', 'BURSTEIN', 'State', 'University', 'of', 'New', 'York-Brockport', 'In', 'the', 'famous', '\"Prelude\"', 'and', 'conclusion', 'to', 'Middlemarch', '(1871-72)', 'George', 'Eliot', 'addresses', 'the', 'question', 'of', \"woman's\", 'work', 'in', 'the', 'modern', 'world', 'via', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Saint', 'Theresa.', 'The', '\"later-born', 'Theresas,\"', 'Eliot', 'writes,', '\"were', 'helped', 'by', 'no', 'coherent', 'social', 'faith', 'and', 'order', 'which', 'could', 'perform', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'knowledge', 'for', 'the', 'ardently', 'willing', 'soul\";', 'sim-', 'ilarly,', 'she', 'says', 'in', 'the', 'conclusion,', '\"[a]', 'new', 'Theresa', 'will', 'hardly', 'have', 'the', 'opportunity', 'of', 'reforming', 'a', 'conventual', 'life,', 'any', 'more', 'than', 'a', 'new', 'Anti-', 'gone', 'will', 'spend', 'her', 'heroic', 'piety', 'in', 'daring', 'all', 'for', 'the', 'sake', 'of', 'a', \"brother's\", 'funeral:', 'the', 'medium', 'in', 'which', 'their', 'ardent', 'deeds', 'took', 'shape', 'is', 'forever', 'gone.\"\\'', 'Female', 'heroism', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'a', 'system', 'of', 'widely', 'accepted', 'beliefs', 'that', 'demarcates', 'the', '\"knowledge\"', 'graspable', 'by', 'the', 'questing', '\"soul.\"', 'In', 'this', 'coherent', 'order,', 'the', 'female', 'hero', 'is', 'intelligi-', 'ble', 'precisely', 'because', 'she', 'is', 'already', 'imagined', 'within', 'the', 'system', 'itself;', 'Saint', 'Theresa', 'is', 'a', 'reformer', 'in', 'the', 'cause', 'of', 'her', 'Christian', 'faith,', 'while', \"Antigone's\", '\"heroic', 'piety\"', 'is', 'exerted', 'to', 'preserve', 'rites', 'of', 'honorable', 'burial', 'that', 'have', 'been', 'denied.', 'Theresa', 'and', 'Antigone', 'are', 'rendered', 'coherent', 'as', 'figures', 'within', 'narrative', 'by', 'participating', 'in', 'searches', 'di-', 'rected', 'by', 'common', 'knowledge,', 'but', 'in', 'an', 'age', 'of', 'fragmented', 'belief', 'the', 'female', 'heroine', 'becomes', 'increasingly', 'unrecognizable', 'as', 'a', 'heroine', 'of', 'the', '\"epic\"', 'type,', 'her', '\"struggles\"', 'no', 'longer', 'easily', 'interpreted', 'by', 'the', 'average', 'observer;', 'whereas', 'Theresa', 'has', 'an', '\"epic', 'life,\"', 'her', 'later', 'avatars', 'have', '\"struggles\"', 'which', 'to', '\"common', 'eyes', '...', 'seemed', 'mere', 'inconsistency', 'and', 'formlessness.\"2', \"Eliot's\", 'nostalgia', 'for', 'a', 'lost', 'age', 'of', 'female', 'heroism', 'seems', 'to', 'invert', 'Victorian', 'domestic', 'ideology', 'as', 'we', 'conventionally', 'understand', 'it:', 'the', 'heroine', 'may', '\"now\"', '(in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century)', 'be', 'literally', 'unimagin-', '1.', 'George', 'Eliot,', 'Middlemarch,', 'ed.', 'Gordon', 'S.', 'Haight', '(Boston,', '1956),', 'pp.', '3,', '612.', '2.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '3.', '?', '1999', 'by', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago.', 'All', 'rights', 'reserved.', '0026-8232/2000/9701-0003$02.00', '46', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '47', 'able,', 'but', 'this', 'disappearance', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'public', 'narratives', 'is', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'loss', 'rather', 'than', 'progress.', 'The', \"novel's\", 'concluding', 'lines', 'might', 'at', 'first', 'be', 'read', 'positively:', '\"Her', 'full', 'nature,', 'like', 'that', 'river', 'of', 'which', 'Cyrus', 'broke', 'the', 'strength,', 'spent', 'itself', 'in', 'channels', 'which', 'had', 'no', 'great', 'name', 'upon', 'the', 'earth.', 'But', 'the', 'effect', 'of', 'her', 'being', 'on', 'those', 'around', 'her', 'was', 'incal-', 'culably', 'diffusive:', 'for', 'the', 'growing', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'world', 'is', 'partly', 'depen-', 'dent', 'on', 'unhistoric', 'acts;', 'and', 'that', 'things', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'ill', 'with', 'you', 'and', 'me', 'as', 'they', 'might', 'have', 'been,', 'is', 'half', 'owing', 'to', 'the', 'number', 'who', 'have', 'lived', 'faithfully', 'a', 'hidden', 'life,', 'and', 'rest', 'in', 'unvisited', 'tombs.\"3', 'Yet', 'the', 'only', 'truly', 'positive', 'element', 'here', 'is', 'the', '\"incalculably', 'diffusive\"', 'nature', 'of', 'Dor-', \"othea's\", '\"effect.\"', 'Additionally,', 'qualifiers', 'such', 'as', '\"partly\"', 'and', '\"half\"', 'make', 'hidden', 'actions', 'interdependent', 'with', 'public', 'ones;', 'female', 'influence', 'is', 'consequently', 'decentered', 'as', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'social', 'reform.', 'Finally,', \"Eliot's\", 'simile', 'of', 'the', 'dispersed', 'river', 'acidly', 'erodes', 'the', 'ideal', 'of', 'feminine', 'self-', 'sacrifice.', \"Dorothea's\", '\"unhistoric', 'acts\"', 'are', 'as', 'much', 'mandated', 'by', 'mod-', 'ern', 'culture', 'as', 'they', 'are', 'the', 'partial', 'means', 'of', 'redeeming', 'that', 'culture.', 'For', 'critics', 'such', 'as', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', 'Alison', 'Booth,', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', 'Middlemarch', 'offers', 'a', 'positive', 'alternative', 'to', 'contemporary', 'Victorian', 'historiography-not', 'just', 'to', 'the', '\"masculinist\"', 'focus', 'on', 'war', 'and', 'politics,', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'the', 'popular', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'that', 'flourished', 'during', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century.4', 'But', 'attempts', 'to', 'find', 'a', 'more', '\"truthful\"', 'represen-', 'tation', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', \"Eliot's\", 'fiction', 'raise', 'other', 'problems,', 'not', 'least', 'what', 'I', 'suggest', 'is', 'her', 'ambivalence', 'about', 'the', 'adequacy', 'of', 'any', 'mod-', 'ern', 'historical', 'narrative', 'to', 'explain', 'a', 'Victorian', \"woman's\", 'career.', 'Yet', 'to', 'go', 'further,', 'Eliot', 'also', 'questions', 'whether', 'the', 'absence', 'of', 'such', 'narratives', 'might', 'diagnose', 'a', 'still', 'greater', 'malaise', 'in', 'nineteenth-century', 'culture.', 'This', 'article', 'argues', 'that', \"Eliot's\", 'ambivalence', 'marks', 'key', 'issues', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'discourse', 'about', 'gender,', 'history,', 'and', 'modernity,', 'a', 'discourse', 'which', 'cannot', 'be', 'adequately', 'addressed', 'by', 'claiming', 'that', \"Eliot's\", 'more', 'truthful', 'or', 'realistic', 'representations', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'surpassed', 'it.', 'To', 'reconstruct', 'this', 'discourse,', 'I', 'consider', 'a', 'wide', 'range', 'of', 'Victorian', 'texts', 'that', 'either', 'wrote', 'the', 'history', 'of', '\"Woman\"', 'or', 'put', 'that', 'history', 'to', 'political', 'use,', 'including', 'biography', 'collections,', 'universal', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', '\"all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations,\"', 'periodical', 'articles,', 'and', 'devotional', 'materials.', 'In', 'general,', 'histories', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'seek', 'the', '\"origins\"', 'of', 'feminist', 'historiography,', 'an', 'approach', 'that', 'understandably', 'privileges', 'protofeminist', 'authors.', 'Indeed,', 'the', 'recent', 'surge', 'of', 'scholarly', 'interest', '3.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '613.', '4.', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', '\"The', 'Unhistoric', 'in', 'History:', 'George', \"Eliot's\", 'Challenge', 'to', 'Victorian', 'Historiography,\"', 'Clio', '26', '(1996):', '79-95;', 'Alison', 'Booth,', '\"Little', 'Dorrit', 'and', 'Dorothea', 'Brooke:', 'Interpreting', 'the', 'Heroines', 'of', 'History,\"', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Literature', '41', '(1986):', '190-216;', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '\"Reinventing', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'Discourses', 'of', 'Gender', 'and', 'Historiography\"', '(Ph.D.', 'diss.,', 'Cornell', 'University,', '1995),', 'pp.', '227-69.', '48', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'in', 'early', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'derives', 'from', 'an', 'author-centered', 'feminist', 'interest', 'in', '\"lost\"', 'women', 'historians.5', 'By', 'maintaining', 'this', 'specific', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'historians,', 'however,', 'historians', 'and', 'literary', 'critics', 'rein-', 'force', 'a', 'Victorian', 'stereotype', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', \"women's\", 'work-\"a', 'shower', 'of', 'pretty', 'books', 'in', 'red', 'and', 'blue,', 'gilded', 'and', 'illustrated,', 'light', 'and', 'dainty', 'and', 'personal\"6-thereby', 'marginalizing', 'the', 'men', 'responsi-', 'ble', 'for', 'at', 'least', 'half', 'of', 'the', 'nearly', '300', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'produced', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century.', 'Without', 'considering', 'the', 'multiple', 'authors', 'of', '(and', 'audiences', 'for)', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century,', 'it', 'is', 'impossible', 'to', 'understand', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'their', 'cultural', 'impact.7', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'authors', 'is', 'particularly', 'inadequate', 'when', 'one', 'considers', 'how', 'such', 'texts', 'were', 'produced.', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'were', 'churned', 'out', 'at', 'astounding', 'speed', 'with', 'no', 'attention', 'to', 'method-', 'ological', 'innovation:', 'books', 'published', 'in', '1829', 'and', '1889', 'are', 'virtually', 'indistinguishable', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'their', 'historiographical', 'standards.', 'Faced', 'with', 'demands', 'for', 'rapid', 'turnaround', 'time,', 'authors', 'wrote', 'encyclopedic', 'texts', 'characterized', 'by', 'instances', 'of', 'd6jia', 'lu,', 'plagiarism,', 'and', 'mutual', 'raid-', 'ing', 'of', 'sources.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'therefore', 'expresses', 'neither', 'a', 'uniquely', 'feminine', 'perspective', 'nor', 'a', 'distinctly', 'feminine', 'voice.', 'Ac-', 'cordingly,', 'I', 'shift', 'focus', 'from', '(female)', 'authors', 'to', 'texts', 'and', 'their', 'audi-', 'ences', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'trace', 'the', 'techniques', 'by', 'which', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'were', 'presented', 'as', 'appropriately', 'moralized', 'knowledge', 'about', '\"mod-', 'ern,\"', 'Christian', 'femininity.', '5.', 'Natalie', 'Zemon', 'Davis,', '\"Women\\'s', 'History', 'in', 'Transition:', 'The', 'European', 'Case,\"', 'Femi-', 'nist', 'Studies', '3', '(1976):', '83-103,', 'and', '\"Gender', 'and', 'Genre:', 'Women', 'as', 'Historical', 'Writers,', '1400-1820,\"', 'in', 'Beyond', 'Their', 'Sex:', 'Learned', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'European', 'Past,', 'ed.', 'Patricia', 'H.', 'La-', 'balme', '(New', 'York,', '1980),', 'pp.', '153-82;', 'Kathryn', 'Kish', 'Sklar,', '\"American', 'Female', 'Historians', 'in', 'Context,', '1770-1930,\"', 'Feminist', 'Studies', '3', '(1975):', '171-84;', 'and', 'Bonnie', 'Smith,', '\"The', 'Con-', 'tribution', 'of', 'Women', 'to', 'Modern', 'Historiography', 'in', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'France,', 'and', 'the', 'United', 'States,', '1750-1940,\"', 'American', 'Historical', 'Review', '89', '(1984):', '709-32.', 'D.', 'R.', \"Woolf's\", 'work', 'on', 'women', 'historians', 'in', 'the', 'early', 'modern', 'period', 'promises', 'to', 'be', 'definitive;', 'see', '\"A', 'Feminist', 'Past?', 'Gender,', 'Genre,', 'and', 'Historical', 'Knowledge', 'in', 'England,', '1500-1800,\"', 'American', 'His-', 'torical', 'Review', '102', '(1997):', '645-79.', '6.', '[Margaret', 'Oliphant],', '\"Modern', 'Light', 'Literature-History,\"', \"Blackwood's\", 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine', '78', '(1855):', '437.', '7.', 'For', 'a', 'sampling', 'of', 'work', 'devoted', 'to', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women,', 'see', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '\"\\'This', 'Feminine', \"Preserve':\", 'Historical', 'Biographies', 'by', 'Victorian', 'Women,\"', 'Victorian', 'Studies', '38', '(1995):', '371-93;', 'Billie', 'Melman,', '\"Gender,', 'History,', 'and', 'Memory:', 'The', 'Invention', 'of', \"Women's\", 'Past', 'in', 'the', 'Nineteenth', 'and', 'Early', 'Twentieth', 'Centuries,\"', 'History', 'and', 'Memory', '5', '(1993):', '5-41;', 'and', 'Martha', 'Vicinus,', '\"Models', 'for', 'Public', 'Life:', 'Biographies', 'of', \"'Noble\", \"Women'\", 'for', 'Girls,\"', 'in', 'The', \"Girl's\", 'Own:', 'Cultural', 'Histories', 'of', 'the', 'Anglo-American', 'Girl,', '1830-', '1915,', 'ed.', 'Claudia', 'Nelson', 'and', 'Lynne', 'Vallone', '(Athens,', 'Ga.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '52-70.', 'Ronald', 'J.', \"Zboray's\", 'sampling', 'of', 'one', 'American', \"library's\", 'loan', 'lists', 'suggests', 'that', 'Agnes', \"Strickland's\", 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'ofEngland', 'was', 'nearly', 'as', 'popular', 'with', 'men', '(eleven', 'patrons)', 'as', 'women', '(sixteen', 'patrons);', 'see', '\"Reading', 'Patterns', 'in', 'Antebellum', 'America:', 'Evidence', 'in', 'the', 'Charge', 'Records', 'of', 'the', 'New', 'York', 'Society', 'Library,\"', 'Libraries', 'and', 'Culture', '26', '(1991):', '310,', '316-21.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '49', 'I', 'do', 'not', 'presume,', 'however,', 'that', 'these', 'texts', 'either', 'unproblematically', 'reflected', 'or', 'produced', 'Victorian', 'attitudes', 'about', 'gender', 'and', 'history.', 'In-', 'stead,', 'the', 'majority', 'of', 'them', 'constituted', 'a', '\"commercially', 'respectable\"', 'discourse', 'on', \"women's\", 'history', 'that', 'was', 'inflected', 'by', 'multiple', 'factors:', 'the', \"publisher's\", 'sense', 'of', 'marketplace', 'trends,', 'the', \"author's\", 'financial', 'mo-', 'tivations,', 'and', 'the', 'pedagogical', 'ideals', 'of', 'teachers', 'and', 'parents.', 'Writers', 'of', 'popular', \"women's\", 'history', 'were', 'appealing', 'to', 'an', 'audience', 'of', 'their', 'pub-', 'lishers', 'and', 'of', 'other', 'popular', 'writers', 'as', 'much', 'as', 'to', 'recreational', 'readers.8', 'This', 'commercially', 'respectable', 'discourse', 'presents', 'a', 'condensed', 'form', 'of', 'the', 'debate', 'about', \"women's\", 'roles', 'and', 'their', 'relation', 'to', 'historical', 'moments', 'and', 'to', 'historiography,', 'a', 'debate', 'that', 'writers', 'such', 'as', 'Eliot', 'or', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'could', 'invoke', 'and', 'rewrite', 'for', 'their', 'own', 'purposes.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'ultimately', 'appeared', 'as', 'an', 'easily', 'recogniz-', 'able', 'set', 'of', 'frameworks', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'either', 'to', 'consolidate', 'or', 'to', 'critique', \"woman's\", 'position', 'in', 'Victorian', 'culture.', 'The', 'best-known', 'histories', 'of', \"women's\", 'history,', 'such', 'as', 'those', 'by', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen', 'and', 'Billie', 'Melman,', 'read', 'these', 'works', 'as', 'either', 'secular', 'or', 'pro-', 'gressively', 'secularized.', 'By', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'religious', 'investments', 'of', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history,', 'I', 'show,', 'by', 'contrast,', 'how', 'certain', 'historians', 'and', 'polemicists', 'confronted', 'the', 'simultaneously', 'exemplary', 'and', 'poten-', 'tially', 'subversive', '\"woman', 'in', 'history,\"', 'thematizing', 'the', 'problems', 'of', 'knowledge', 'which', 'the', 'writing', 'and', 'reading', 'of', 'such', 'a', 'figure', 'entailed.', \"Women's\", 'historians', 'sought', 'to', 'isolate', 'the', 'moment', 'when', 'modern', 'fem-', 'ininity', 'would', 'become', 'identical', 'with', 'the', 'representations', 'of', 'ideal', 'femi-', 'nine', 'virtue', 'they', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'New', 'Testament;', 'their', 'narratives', 'pointed', 'toward', 'the', '(implicitly', 'or', 'explicitly', 'millennial)', 'time', 'when', 'femininity', 'would', 'coincide', 'with', 'its', 'original', 'ideal', 'and', 'thus', 'would', 'no', 'longer', 'require', 'historical', 'debate', 'and', 'representation.9', 'But', 'such', 'texts', 'point,', 'paradoxi-', 'cally,', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'ultimate', 'irrelevance', 'in', 'a', 'truly', 'Christian', 'world.', 'I', 'demonstrate', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'tried', 'to', 'define', 'a', 'mod-', 'ern', 'Protestant', 'historical', 'perspective', 'that', 'rendered', \"women's\", 'history', 'knowable', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place,', 'even', 'as', 'they', 'argued', 'that', 'a', 'modernity', 'dom-', 'inated', 'by', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Christian', 'faith', 'should', 'render', 'the', 'actual', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'anachronistic.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'elucidates', '8.', 'I', 'here', 'qualify', 'Jonathan', \"Rose's\", 'empirical', 'studies', 'of', 'reader', 'reception,', 'which', 'dem-', 'onstrate,', 'for', 'example,', 'that', '\"women\\'s', 'literature\"', 'was', 'often', 'unpopular', 'with', 'its', 'target', 'audience.', \"Rose's\", 'sweeping', 'formulations', 'do', 'not', 'quite', 'come', 'to', 'grips', 'with', 'the', 'problem', 'that', '\"women\\'s', 'literature\"', 'continued', 'to', 'be', 'produced', 'anyway.', 'See', '\"Rereading', 'the', 'En-', 'glish', 'Common', 'Reader:', 'A', 'Preface', 'to', 'a', 'History', 'of', 'Audiences,\"', 'Journal', 'of', 'the', 'History', 'of', 'Ideas', '53', '(1992):', '47-70.', '9.', 'E', 'R.', 'Ankersmit', 'has', 'identified', 'historicity', 'with', 'multiplying', 'explanatory', 'narratives;', 'when', 'a', 'subject', 'no', 'longer', 'generates', 'debate,', 'it', 'becomes', 'a', '\"thing\"', 'beyond', 'the', 'reach', 'of', 'both', 'interpretation', 'and', 'historiography.', 'See', 'History', 'and', 'Tropology:', 'The', 'Rise', 'and', 'Fall', 'of', 'Metaphor', '(Berkeley,', '1994),', 'pp.', '39,', '42.', '50', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'popular', 'ideas', 'about', 'how', 'gender', 'was', 'shaped', 'by', 'historical', 'conditions', 'and', 'how', 'this', 'shaping', 'could', 'be', 'appropriately', 'narrated,', 'clarifying', 'the', 'significance', 'of', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'for', 'Victorian', 'historiography', 'in', 'general', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'novel', 'in', 'particular.', 'The', 'preoccupation', 'with', 'the', 'social', 'implications', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history', 'hardly', 'originated', 'with', 'the', 'Victorians.', 'In', 'the', 'previous', 'century,', 'for', 'example,', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'featured', 'prominently', 'in', 'books', 'such', 'as', 'John', \"Millar's\", 'The', 'Origin', 'of', 'the', 'Distinction', 'of', 'Ranks', '(1779),', 'which', 'con-', 'nected', 'the', 'progress', 'of', \"woman's\", 'social', 'position', 'to', 'the', 'development', 'of', 'civilization', 'more', 'generally.10', 'Nevertheless,', 'the', 'Victorians', 'signifi-', 'cantly', 'revised', 'the', 'meaning', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'by', 'using', 'particular', 'genres,', 'theories', 'of', 'religious', 'development,', 'and', 'moral', 'justifications', 'for', 'historical', 'writing.', 'Indeed,', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'most', '\"Victorian\"', 'aspects', 'of', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'its', 'reactionary', 'generic', 'form.', 'The', 'exem-', 'plary', 'biographical', 'collection,', 'which', 'identifies', '\"virtuous\"', 'or', '\"vicious\"', 'historical', 'figures', 'for', 'the', \"reader's\", 'emulation', 'or', 'disapprobation,', 'signaled', 'a', 'Victorian', 'return', 'to', 'a', 'genre', 'of', 'medieval', 'and', 'Renaissance', 'encomiastic', 'literature', 'on', 'women.', 'Like', 'these', 'earlier', 'texts,', 'Victorian', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'were', 'in', 'their', 'starkest', 'form', 'lists', 'or', 'catalogs,', 'using', 'sheer', 'numbers', 'to', 'emphasize', \"woman's\", 'significance', 'in', 'history.\"', 'But', 'new', 'to', 'the', 'mid-nine-', 'teenth-century', 'version', 'of', 'this', 'genre', 'was', 'an', 'interest', 'in', 'how', \"woman's\", 'so-', 'cial', 'position', 'diagnosed', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'society', 'as', 'a', 'whole.', \"Women's\", 'history', 'became', 'popular', 'in', 'the', '1830s', 'as', 'a', 'commercial', 'ven-', 'ture,', 'fueled', 'by', 'new', 'improvements', 'in', 'print', 'technology', 'which', 'cheap-', 'ened', 'publication', 'costs.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'allied', 'their', 'writings', 'with', 'popular', 'didactic', 'literature', 'and', 'directed', 'their', 'work', 'at', 'consumers', 'of', 'conduct', 'books', 'and', 'popular', 'theology.', 'Most', 'authors', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'were', 'popularizers', 'who', 'worked', 'in', 'several', 'commercial', 'genres', 'at', 'once.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'the', 'best', 'known', 'and', 'most', 'respected', 'of', 'them,', 'published', 'not', 'only', 'lives', 'of', 'English', 'queens', 'but', 'also', 'historical', 'novels,', 'lives', 'of', 'bishops', 'and', 'bachelor', 'kings,', 'poetry,', \"children's\", 'history,', 'book', 'reviews,', 'and', 'periodical', 'articles.', 'With', 'the', 'rare', 'exception', 'of', 'origi-', 'nal', 'researchers', 'such', 'as', 'Strickland,', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'tied', 'the', 'quality', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'its', 'moral', 'efficacy', 'instead', 'of', 'its', 'schol-', 'arly', 'credentials.', 'Few', 'authors', 'were', 'quite', 'so', 'self-exculpatory', 'as', 'the', 'evan-', '10.', 'For', 'a', 'useful', 'introduction', 'to', \"Millar's\", 'thought', 'on', 'women,', 'see', 'Paul', 'Bowles,', '\"John', 'Millar,', 'the', 'Four-Stages', 'Theory,', 'and', \"Women's\", 'Position', 'in', 'Society,\"', 'History', 'of', 'Political', 'Economy', '16', '(1984):', '619-38.', '11.', 'For', 'further', 'background', 'on', 'the', 'earlier', 'traditions,', 'see', 'Pamela', 'Joseph', 'Benson,', 'The', 'Invention', 'of', 'the', 'Renaissance', 'Woman:', 'The', 'Challenge', 'of', 'Female', 'Independence', 'in', 'the', 'Literature', 'and', 'Thought', 'of', 'Italy', 'and', 'England', '(University', 'Park,', 'Pa.,', '1992);', 'Alcuin', 'Blamires,', 'The', 'Case', 'for', 'Women', 'in', 'Medieval', 'Culture', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Glenda', 'McLeod,', 'Virtue', 'and', 'Venom:', 'Catalogs', 'of', 'Women', 'from', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Renaissance', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1991).', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '51', 'gelical', 'conduct-book', 'writer', 'Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis,', 'who', 'excused', 'her', 'work', 'on', 'the', 'grounds', 'that', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'female', 'historians', 'potentially', 'offered', 'a', 'greater', '\"moral', '...', 'than', 'in', 'those', 'which', 'might', 'justly', 'be', 'preferred', 'for', 'merits', 'of', 'a', 'purely', 'historical', 'order,\"', 'but', 'Ellis', 'stands', 'out', 'only', 'in', 'admit-', 'ting', 'to', 'the', 'common', 'practice', 'of', 'elevating', 'moral', 'didacticism', 'over', 'factual', 'accuracy.12', 'In', 'pursuit', 'of', 'their', 'ostensibly', 'moral', 'priorities,', 'these', 'histo-', 'rians', 'foregrounded', 'the', 'individual', 'Great', 'Woman', 'and', 'her', 'spiritual', 'work.', 'Great', 'Women', 'were', 'most', 'commonly', 'written', 'up', 'in', 'biography', 'col-', 'lections', 'with', 'titles', 'such', 'as', 'Biographies', 'of', 'Good', 'Women,', 'The', 'Book', 'of', 'Noble', 'Englishwomen,', \"Folly's\", 'Queen,', 'or,', 'Women', 'Whose', 'Loves', 'Have', 'Ruled', 'the', 'World,', 'and', 'Lives', 'of', 'Twelve', 'Bad', 'Women.', 'These', 'biographical', 'collections', 'were', 'organized', 'in', 'a', 'variety', 'of', 'ways,', 'by', 'chronology,', 'themes', '(moral', '\"types\"),', 'or', 'antithetical', 'characters.', 'As', 'collective', 'narratives,', 'they', 'underscored', 'similarities', 'between', 'individual', \"women's\", 'biographies;', 'the', 'overall', 'story', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'emerged', 'by', 'emphasizing', 'moral', 'progress', 'and', 'the', 'increas-', 'ing', 'effect', 'of', \"women's\", '\"invisible\"', \"work.'3\", 'One', 'of', 'the', 'most', 'obvious', 'characteristics', 'of', 'these', 'biographies,', 'as', 'I', 'will', 'show', 'in', 'detail', 'later,', 'is', 'the', 'emptiness', 'of', 'the', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'they', 'present.', 'Evil', 'figures', 'lead', 'eventful', 'lives,', 'which', 'could', 'be', 'sensationalized', 'under', 'the', 'guise', 'of', 'morality-\"the', 'record', 'of', 'such', 'crimes,', 'though', 'it', 'raises', 'a', 'thrill', 'of', 'breathless', 'horror,', 'conveys', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'a', 'useful', 'lesson\"14-but', 'virtuous', 'lives', 'are', 'defined', 'by', 'internal', 'qualities', 'such', 'as', 'piety.', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'piety', '(which', 'all', 'women', 'can', 'emulate)', 'and', 'the', 'downgrading', 'of', 'unique', 'experiences', '(reserved', 'for', 'a', 'few)', 'democratize', 'virtue,', 'holding', 'out', 'a', 'morally', 'positive', 'but', 'historically', 'vacuous', 'equality', 'accessible', 'to', 'all.', 'Moral', 'concerns', 'dictated', 'a', 'focus', 'on', 'Judeo-Christian', 'women,', 'with', 'emphasis', 'on', '\"Christian.\"', 'Biblical', 'women', 'were', 'popular', 'subjects,', 'inspiring', 'dozens', 'of', 'books,', 'including', 'Francis', 'Augustus', \"Cox's\", 'Female', 'Scripture', 'Biography', '(1817),', 'Phineas', 'Camp', \"Headley's\", 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Bible', '(1850),', 'and', 'Harriet', 'Beecher', \"Stowe's\", 'Women', 'in', 'Sacred', 'History', '(1874).15', 'In', 'general,', \"women's\", 'histories', 'were', 'biased', 'toward', 'ecumenical', 'Protestant', 'examples,', 'although', 'individual', 'denominations,', 'particularly', 'the', 'Methodists,', 'often', 'produced', 'more', 'theologically', 'specific', 'works.', 'Catholicism', 'was', 'a', 'different', 'matter.', 'Despite', 'Catholic', 'emancipation', 'in', '12.', 'Mrs.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney]', 'Ellis,', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'Great', 'Men', '(London,', '1859),', 'p.', '70.', '13.', 'I', 'am', 'indebted', 'to', 'Annette', 'Wheeler', \"Cafarelli's\", 'extensive', 'analysis', 'of', 'how', 'collective', 'biographies', 'function', 'as', 'narratives', 'in', 'Prose', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Poets:', 'Romanticism', 'and', 'Biographi-', 'cal', 'Narrative', 'from', 'Johnson', 'to', 'DeQuincey', '(Philadelphia,', '1990).', '14.', 'Madame', '[Laure]', 'Junot,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Women', 'of', 'All', 'Countries', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '65.', '15.', 'Mary', 'de', 'Jong', 'has', 'discussed', 'books', 'on', 'biblical', 'women', 'as', 'a', 'separate', 'genre', 'in', '\"Dark-Eyed', 'Daughters:', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Popular', 'Portrayals', 'of', 'Biblical', 'Women,\"', \"Women's\", 'Studies', '19', '(1991):', '293-308.', '52', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', '1829,', 'British', 'Catholic', 'writers', 'produced', 'little', 'in', 'the', 'way', 'of', 'popular', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century', 'aside', 'from', 'some', 'hagiogra-', 'phies', '(e.g.,', 'J.', 'M.', \"Neale's\", 'Annals', 'of', 'Virgin', 'Saints', '[1846]),', 'and', 'Protestant', 'histories', 'were', 'often', 'profoundly', 'anti-Catholic', 'in', 'sentiment.', 'The', 'Vic-', 'torians', 'were', 'chary', 'of', 'representing', 'women', 'of', 'classical', 'antiquity,', 're-', 'garding', 'them', 'at', 'best', 'as', 'representatives', 'of', 'a', 'lower', 'virtue', 'and', 'at', 'worst', 'as', 'irretrievably', 'debauched', 'by', 'ancient', 'sexual', 'attitudes-in', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'one', 'sermon,', '\"darkened', 'and', 'degraded,', 'without', 'knowledge,', 'without', 'influence,', 'without', 'honor,', 'the', 'mere', 'drudge', 'of', 'society,', 'or', 'still', 'worse,', 'the', 'miserable', 'slave', 'of', 'sensual', 'passion.\\'\"16', 'Victorian', 'historiographical', 'thinking', 'had', 'a', 'special', 'place', 'for', 'narra-', 'tives', 'formed', 'out', 'of', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'short', 'lives.', 'Such', 'texts', 'bridged', 'political', 'history', 'and', 'fiction:', 'the', 'former', 'a', 'source', 'of', 'empirical', 'truth', 'and', 'a', 'key', 'to', 'Providence,', 'but', 'absorbed', 'with', 'wars', 'and', 'governments;', 'the', 'latter', 'a', 'potential', 'repository', 'of', 'universal', 'moral', 'truth,', 'but', 'also', 'liable', 'to', 'dan-', 'gerously', 'mislead', 'in', 'its', 'representations', 'of', '\"real', 'life.\"', 'In', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'an', 'anonymous', 'writer', 'calling', 'for', 'an', '\"English', 'Plutarch,\"', '\"we', 'want', 'a', 'work', 'that', 'shall', 'bring', 'before', 'us', 'in', 'a', 'moderate', 'compass', 'an', 'outline', 'of', 'the', 'ac-', 'tions', 'and', 'fortunes', 'of', 'those', 'persons', 'who', 'have', 'stamped', 'on', 'it', 'or', 'em-', 'bodied', 'in', 'themselves', 'its', 'most', 'characteristic', 'features,', 'and', 'who', 'seem', 'to', 'us,', 'when', 'we', 'are', 'acquainted', 'with', 'their', 'history,', 'most', 'typical', 'of', 'all', 'that', 'we', 'mean', 'by', 'English.\"\\'7', 'As', 'personalized', 'history,', 'these', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'miniaturize', 'and', 'contain', '\"Englishness\"', 'in', 'a', 'comprehensible,', 'accessible', 'form.', 'The', 'distinguished', 'subjects', 'of', 'biographical', 'history', 'de-', 'serve', 'historical', 'treatment,', 'yet', 'the', 'virtues', 'that', 'make', 'them', 'great', 'are', 'in', 'fact', 'endemic', 'to', 'English', 'character.', 'An', 'English', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'articu-', 'late', 'both', 'the', 'formation', 'of', 'modern', 'Englishness', 'and', 'its', 'apparently', 'transhistorical', 'character.', 'And', 'with', 'some', 'necessary', 'modifications,', 'a', 'female', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'undertake', 'a', 'similar', 'project', 'for', 'women.', 'Writers', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'argued', 'that', 'narrative', 'events', 'and', 'their', 'impact', 'on', 'the', 'reader', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'evaluated', 'according', 'to', 'their', 'potential', 'for', 'producing', 'greater', 'moral', 'goods.', 'Biographical', 'history,', 'it', 'was', 'claimed,', 'downplayed', 'the', 'evils', 'of', 'political', 'history', 'while', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'moral', 'qualities', 'of', 'private', 'experience.', 'In', 'the', 'late', '1820s,', 'one', 'anonymous', 'biog-', 'rapher', 'wrote', 'that', 'while', 'history-that', 'is,', 'the', 'story', 'of', 'kings', 'and', 'queens,', '16.', 'J.', 'E', 'Stearns,', 'Female', 'Influence,', 'and', 'the', 'True', 'Christian', 'Mode', 'of', 'Its', 'Exercise:', 'A', 'Discourse', 'Delivered', 'in', 'the', 'First', 'Presbyterian', 'Church', 'in', 'Newburyport,', 'July', '30,', '1837', '(Newburyport,', 'Mass.,', '1837),', 'p.', '12.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'James', 'Donaldson', 'signals', 'his', 'feminist', 'leanings', 'by', 'prais-', 'ing', 'the', 'treatment', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'antiquity', 'over', 'that', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era.', 'Most', 'germane', 'is', 'the', 'last', 'in', 'his', 'series', 'of', 'five', 'essays,', '\"The', 'Position', 'of', 'Women', 'Among', 'the', 'Early', 'Christians,\"', 'Contemporary', 'Review', '56', '(1889):', '433-51.', 'Similarly,', 'see', 'B.', 'W.', 'Ball,', '\"Woman\\'s', 'Rights', 'in', 'Ancient', 'Athens,\"', 'Atlantic', 'Monthly', '27', '(1871):', '273-86.', '17.', '\"English', 'Biography,\"', 'Saturday', 'Review', '9', '(1860):', '301.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '53', 'wars', 'and', 'politics-\"too', 'often', 'presents', 'a', 'frightful', 'tissue', 'of', 'crimes', 'and', 'horrors,\"', 'biography', '\"frequently', 'reflects', 'from', 'its', 'calm', 'and', 'polished', 'sur-', 'face,', 'every', 'thing', 'that', 'is', 'excellent,', 'lovely,', 'and', 'of', 'good', 'report\"-an', 'echo', 'of', 'Philippians', '1:4-8,', 'here', 'used', 'to', 'represent', 'biography', 'as', 'the', 'supreme', 'repository', 'of', 'Christian', 'knowledge', 'and', 'an', 'incitement', 'to', 'greater', 'spirituality.', 'Is', 'In', 'this', 'revision', 'of', 'the', '\"mirror', 'of', 'history\"', 'topos,', 'horror', 'becomes', 'a', 'manifold', 'response:', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'evil', 'represented', 'in', 'his-', 'torical', 'narrative;', 'it', 'is', 'also', 'the', 'magnitude', 'of', 'implication', 'that', 'envelops', 'the', 'very', 'narrative', 'structure', '(the', '\"frightful', 'tissue\")', 'in', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'the', 'events', 'it', 'describes.', 'By', 'transforming', 'history', 'into', 'a', 'record', 'of', 'private', 'virtues,', 'the', 'biographical', 'narrative', 'seems', 'to', 'offer', 'the', 'most', 'efficient', 'method', 'for', 'eradicating', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation:', 'both', 'the', 'evils', 'represented', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'evil', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'wrought', 'on', 'unsuspecting', 'minds', 'by', 'the', 'reading', 'of', 'history.', 'Even', 'more', 'specifically,', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'of', 'women', 'with', 'no', 'other', 'claim', 'to', 'fame', 'than', 'their', 'spiritual', 'qualities', 'were', 'elevated', 'above', 'narratives', 'of', 'queens', 'and', 'concubines.', 'As', 'Stickney', 'Ellis', 'had', 'claimed,', '\"there', 'is', 'in', 'private', 'life', 'a', 'kind', 'of', 'heroism,', 'which', 'the', 'greater', 'part', 'of', 'men', 'pay', 'no', 'attention,', 'and', 'which', 'frequently', 'is', 'more', 'deserving', 'our', 'eulogiums', 'than', 'the', 'greatest', 'actions:', 'it', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'among', 'many', 'women,', 'whose', 'virtues,', 'without', 'ostentation,', 'only', 'make', 'themselves', 'noticed', 'in', 'the', 'inte-', 'rior', 'of', 'their', 'houses.\"19', 'When', 'translated', 'into', 'historical', 'practice,', \"Ellis's\", 'vision', 'of', 'a', 'female', 'heroism', 'everywhere', 'but', 'invisible', 'was', 'easily', 'assimi-', 'lated', 'into', 'the', 'moral', 'doctrine', 'of', 'Christian', 'humility.', 'If,', 'as', 'another', 'anon-', 'ymous', 'writer', 'explained,', 'the', 'world', '\"can', 'know', 'next', 'to', 'nothing', 'of', 'its', 'noblest', 'women\"', 'because', '\"her', 'highest', 'achievements', 'consist', 'in', 'the', 'per-', 'formance', 'of', 'the', 'lowliest', 'duties,', 'and', 'her', 'costliest', 'sacrifices', 'are', 'offered', 'out', 'of', 'the', \"'unseen\", 'treasure', 'of', 'her', 'heart\\',\"', 'still', 'it', 'is', 'occasionally', 'possible', 'to', 'memorialize', '\"the', 'names', 'of', 'those', 'whose', 'greatest', 'work', 'was', 'carried', 'on', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'hearts,', 'and', 'whose', 'fame', 'rose', 'highest', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'homes.\"20', 'Such', 'biographical', 'histories', 'elevated', 'the', 'invisible', 'work', 'of', 'the', 'meek', 'over', 'the', 'spectacular', 'doings', 'of', 'the', 'powerful,', 'inverting', 'the', 'po-', 'litical', \"historian's\", 'priorities', 'by', 'making', 'Christian', 'virtue', 'and', 'not', 'political', 'acumen', 'the', 'prime', 'mover', 'in', 'national', 'life.', 'If', 'politics', 'produced', 'a', \"reader's\", 'horrified', 'reaction', 'or,', 'worse,', 'seduced', 'the', 'reader', 'into', 'worldly', 'ways,', 'bio-', 'graphical', 'histories', 'of', 'good', 'women', 'quieted', 'the', \"reader's\", 'spiritual', 'anxi-', 'eties', 'while', 'providing', 'alternative', 'models', 'of', 'historical', 'greatness.', '18.', 'Selected', 'Female', 'Biography:', 'Comprising', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'British', 'Ladies,', 'Derived', 'from', 'Original', 'and', 'Other', 'Authentic', 'Sources,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1829),', 'p.', '22.', 'My', 'thanks', 'to', 'Janel', 'Mueller', 'for', 'calling', 'this', 'biblical', 'allusion', 'to', 'my', 'attention.', '19.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis],', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'England:', 'Their', 'Influence', 'and', 'Responsibility', '(London,', '1843),', 'p.', '153.', '20.', 'The', 'Home-Life', 'of', 'English', 'Ladies', 'in', 'the', 'XVIIth', 'Century', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', 'iii-iv.', '54', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'Conjoining', 'biography', 'and', 'history', 'offered', 'a', 'best-of-both-worlds', 'op-', 'portunity,', 'for', \"women's\", 'history', 'embraced', 'both', 'pain', 'and', 'eventual,', 'sanctified', 'pleasure', 'as', 'a', 'means', 'of', 'inspiring', 'spiritual', 'emulation.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'a', 'devotional', 'writer', 'and', 'author', 'of', 'biographical', 'collections', 'de-', 'voted', 'to', 'biblical', 'women,', 'modeled', 'the', 'interpretation', 'of', 'exemplarity', 'with', 'a', 'mock-biblical', 'illustration.', 'His', 'protagonist,', 'Rachel,', '\"proved', 'to', 'herself,', 'that', 'she', 'was', 'not', 'a', 'Miriam,', 'but', 'in', 'her', 'sin', 'and', 'punishment\";', 'nevertheless,', '\"still', 'the', 'parallel', 'haunted', 'her.', 'It', 'was', 'a', 'case', 'in', 'point,', 'so', 'far', 'as', 'their', 'sin', 'and', 'sentence', 'were', 'alike:-and', 'might', 'not', 'their', 'pardon', 'be', 'alike', 'too?\"21', 'By', 'identifying', 'her', 'difference', 'from', 'Miriam,', 'Rachel', 'lo-', 'cates', 'a', 'point', 'of', 'negative', 'similarity.', 'Then,', 'she', 'moves', 'to', 'a', 'positive', 'mo-', 'ment', 'of', 'future', 'identification', 'by', 'recognizing', 'that', 'true', 'repentance', 'and', 'submission', 'to', 'God', 'may', 'be', 'rewarded', 'by', 'the', 'cure', 'of', 'physical', 'leprosy', '(the', 'outward', 'signifier', 'for', 'curing', 'spiritual', 'leprosy).', \"Philip's\", 'model', 'stresses', 'that', 'the', 'reader', 'must', 'work', 'through', 'the', 'sense', 'of', 'an', 'absolute', 'difference', 'between', 'a', 'past', 'exemplar', 'and', \"one's\", 'present', 'self', 'to', 'find', 'some', 'analogy', 'between', 'the', 'two;', 'but', 'this', 'stage', 'is', 'only', 'a', 'preliminary', 'to', 'realiz-', 'ing', 'the', 'transformational', 'potential', 'of', 'analogizing', 'for', 'both', 'Rachel', '(the', 'fictional', 'reader)', 'and', 'the', 'actual', 'reader', 'of', 'the', 'text.', 'The', 'primary', 'bene-', 'fit', 'of', 'interpreting', 'an', 'exemplary', 'figure', 'lies', 'in', 'ascertaining', 'the', 'condi-', 'tions', 'for', 'spiritual', 'change,', 'which', 'apprises', 'the', 'female', 'reader', 'of', 'her', 'place', 'in', \"God's\", 'divine', 'plan.', 'Thus,', 'despite', 'connotations', 'of', 'immediacy', 'and', 'perfect', 'clarity', 'in', 'the', '\"mirror\"', 'image,', \"women's\", 'history', 'validates', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'interpretation', 'by', 'stressing', 'the', \"reader's\", 'ability', 'to', 'reconcile', 'potentially', 'distressing', 'facts', 'with', 'providential', 'truths.', 'Profane', '(secular)', 'history', 'and,', 'as', 'we', 'shall', 'see,', 'anomalous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'morally', 'dan-', 'gerous', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'reader', 'who', 'seeks', 'to', 'interpret', 'them', 'be-', 'comes', 'involved', 'in', 'a', 'morass', 'of', 'detail', 'that', 'obscures', 'all', 'correlation', 'between', 'individual', 'or', 'event', 'and', 'divine', 'truth.', 'Questions', 'of', 'proper', 'reading', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'and', 'the', 'kinds', 'of', 'spiritual', 'pleasures', 'to', 'be', 'derived', 'from', 'them,', 'were', 'key', 'to', 'defining', 'the', 'modern', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historian.', 'The', 'perspec-', 'tive', 'was', 'modern', 'in', 'two', 'senses:', 'that', 'of', 'the', \"writer's\", '\"now\"', 'and', 'its', 'spiri-', 'tual,', 'political,', 'and', 'social', 'differences', 'from', 'other', 'ages', '(or', 'other', 'nations);', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'era,', 'which', 'also', 'defined', 'the', '\"modern\"', 'of', 'Modern', 'History', 'in', 'the', 'university', 'curricula', 'of', 'Oxford', 'and', 'Cambridge.', 'Wondering', '(disingenuously)', '\"why', 'woman', 'has', 'never', 'found', 'an', 'histo-', 'rian,\"', 'one', 'anonymous', 'American', 'proclaimed', 'that', '\"the', 'historian', 'of', 'Women,', 'will', 'be', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'his', 'kind,', 'and', 'not', 'of', 'his', \"kind's\", 'tyrants.', '21.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'The', 'Marthas:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Varieties', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety,', '3d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1836),', 'p.', '107.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '55', 'He', 'will', 'trace', 'the', 'growth', 'of', 'civilization,', 'refinement,', 'religion,', 'and', 'all', 'that', 'is', 'good', 'and', 'beautiful.\"22', 'If', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'woman', 'must', 'treat', 'the', '\"good', 'and', 'beautiful,\"', 'then', 'he', '(or', 'she)', 'will', 'necessarily', 'portray', 'the', 'cu-', 'mulative', 'moment', 'of', 'goodness', 'and', 'beauty', 'that', 'marks', 'both', 'the', \"writer's\", 'position', 'and', 'the', \"narrative's\", 'closure.', 'As', 'the', 'foregoing', 'quotation', 'sug-', 'gests,', 'this', 'moment', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'by', 'analyzing', 'the', 'modern,', 'femi-', 'nine,', 'and', 'above', 'all', '(Protestant)', 'Christian', 'subject.', 'In', 'privileging', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'specifically', 'historical', 'frame', 'of', 'refer-', 'ence,', 'the', \"women's\", 'historians', 'engaged', 'with', 'a', 'theory', 'of', 'progress', 'that', 'permeated', 'the', 'historiography', 'of', 'figures', 'such', 'as', 'Thomas', 'Arnold,', 'Gold-', 'win', 'Smith,', 'and', 'William', 'Stubbs.23', 'For', 'these', 'scholars,', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'was', 'an', 'organic', 'whole,', 'and', 'all', 'events', 'within', 'it', 'fostered', 'progress', 'toward', 'an', 'ultimate', 'perfection', 'originally', 'envisioned', 'in', 'the', 'lessons', 'of', 'sacred', 'history.', 'Christianity', 'was', 'conceived', 'as', 'an', 'inner', 'life', 'force', 'that', 'both', 'shaped', 'the', 'experience', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'and,', 'as', 'Stubbs', 'said,', '\"cuts', 'it', 'off', 'from', 'the', 'death', 'of', 'the', 'past.\"24', 'What', 'Stubbs', 'meant', 'by', '\"death\"', 'was', 'that', 'Christianity', 'provided', 'a', 'historical', 'standpoint', 'from', 'which', 'the', 'ancient', 'world', 'could', 'be', 'impartially', 'studied', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'marked', 'an', 'absolute', 'break', 'between', 'the', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'worlds;', 'morally', 'and', 'politically', 'speaking,', 'antiquity', 'has', 'no', 'effect', 'on', 'modern', 'historical', 'events', 'or', 'even', 'modern', 'values.', '\"Death\"', 'is', 'thus', 'a', 'figure', 'for', 'the', 'absolute', 'difference', 'of', 'one', 'period', 'from', 'the', 'next.', 'The', 'absence', 'of', 'Christianity', 'produces', 'national', 'stasis', 'or', 'degeneration,', 'whereas,', 'as', 'one', 'theologian', 'argued,', '\"in', 'so', 'far..,', '.as', 'Christianity', 'becomes', 'the', 'ruling', 'principle', 'of', 'any', 'nation,', 'the', 'death,', 'or', 'utter', 'extinction', 'of', 'that', 'nation', 'is', 'impossible.\"25', 'A', 'dead', 'nation', 'is', 'one', 'exiled', 'from', 'modernity', 'and', 'from', 'change.', 'This', 'academic', 'argument', 'became', 'part', 'of', 'a', 'popular', 'interpretation', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispensation', 'that', 'provided', \"women's\", 'history', 'with', 'its', 'most', 'forcefully', 'articulated', 'scheme', 'of', 'periodization.', 'In', 'an', 'early', 'essay', 'on', 'this', 'subject,', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox', 'explained', 'that', 'his', 'system', '\"was', 'first', 'to', 'exhibit', 'a', 'complete', 'series', 'of', 'illustrations,', 'derived', 'from', 'a', 'view', 'of', 'the', 'circumstances', 'of', 'mankind', 'as', 'destitute', 'of', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'revelation,', 'and', 'then', 'to', 'compare', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'under', 'the', 'in-', 'fluence', 'of', 'a', 'precursory', 'and', 'imperfect', 'system', 'of', 'the', 'true', 'religion,', 'with', '22.', '\"Woman:', 'A', 'Rhapsody,\"', 'Western', 'Monthly', 'Magazine', '1', '(1833):', '40.', '23.', 'For', 'the', 'most', 'extensive', 'treatment', 'of', 'Arnold', 'and', 'the', 'Christian', 'aspects', 'of', 'early', 'Victorian', 'historiography,', 'see', 'Duncan', 'Forbes,', 'The', 'Liberal', 'Anglican', 'Idea', 'of', 'History', '(Cam-', 'bridge,', '1952).', '24.', 'William', 'Stubbs,', '\"Inaugural,\"', 'in', 'Seventeen', 'Lectures', 'on', 'the', 'Study', 'of', 'Medieval', 'and', 'Mod-', 'ern', 'History', 'and', 'Kindred', 'Subjects...', '(1866;', 'reprint,', 'New', 'York,', '1967),', 'p.', '15.', '25.', 'Rev.', 'W.', 'Maxwell', 'Herington,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Fulness', 'of', 'Time', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '376.', '56', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'their', 'actual', 'state,', 'or', 'with', 'the', 'privileges', 'secured', 'to', 'them', 'by', 'the', 'nobler', 'manifestations', 'of', 'CHRISTIANITY.\"26', 'For', 'Cox,', \"woman's\", 'social', 'position', 'was', 'determined', 'not', 'by', 'material,', 'economic', 'forces', 'but', 'by', 'the', 'state', 'of', 're-', 'ligion.', 'Not', 'surprisingly,', 'periodization', 'became', 'a', 'central', 'issue', 'for', 'those', 'who', 'wanted', 'to', 'draw', 'upon', \"women's\", 'history', 'for', 'political', 'purposes.', 'In', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', '(1869),', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'argues', 'that', 'while', '\"the', 'slavery', 'of', 'the', 'male', 'sex', 'has,', 'in', 'all', 'countries', 'of', 'Christian', 'Europe', 'at', 'least', '...', 'been', 'at', 'length', 'abolished,', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'has', 'been', 'gradually', 'changed', 'into', 'a', 'milder', 'form', 'of', 'dependence,\"', 'this', 'depen-', 'dence', 'is', 'not', '\"an', 'original', 'institution\"', 'emerging', 'from', 'Christian', 'think-', 'ing.', 'Instead,', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'women', 'is', '\"the', 'primitive', 'condition', 'lasting', 'on,', 'through', 'successive', 'mitigations', 'and', 'modifications', 'occasioned', 'by', 'the', 'same', 'causes', 'which', 'have', 'softened', 'the', 'general', 'manners,', 'and', 'brought', 'all', 'human', 'relations', 'more', 'under', 'the', 'control', 'of', 'justice', 'and', 'influence', 'of', 'humanity.\"27', 'Mill', 'refuses', 'to', 'periodize', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'moment', 'of', 'decisive', 'difference', 'in', \"women's\", 'history.', 'If', '\"Christian', 'Europe\"', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'the', 'modern', 'world,', 'then', 'the', 'persistence', 'of', 'what', 'Mills', 'calls', 'female', 'slavery', 'is', 'a', 'pagan', 'anachronism.', 'As', 'possessors', 'of', 'liberty,', 'men', 'enter', 'into', 'modernity;', 'in', 'continuing', 'to', 'live', 'as', 'slaves,', 'women', 'are', 'trapped', 'in', 'the', 'remnants', 'of', 'what', 'the', 'Victorians', 'considered', 'primitive', 'culture.', \"Women's\", 'equality', 'would', 'thus', 'redress', 'an', 'injustice', 'in', 'the', 'defini-', 'tion', 'of', 'modernity', 'itself.', 'Mill', 'here', 'does', 'not', 'refute', 'but', 'rather', 'builds', 'upon', 'more', 'conservative', 'interpretations', 'of', \"women's\", 'history.', 'For', 'example,', 'a', 'conservative', 'oppo-', 'nent,', 'Fanny', 'Kortright,', 'agreed', 'with', 'the', 'proposition', 'that', 'paganism', 'was', 'the', 'source', 'of', '\"modern\"', 'female', 'slavery;', 'but', 'she', 'crucially', 'differed', 'from', 'Mill', 'in', 'her', 'use', 'of', 'Christianity', 'to', 'periodize', \"women's\", 'history', 'there-', 'after.', 'Greek', 'and', 'Roman', 'women,', 'Kortright', 'explained,', 'were', '\"virtually', 'enslaved,\"', 'the', '\"supposed', 'soulless,', 'mindless', 'toys', 'of', 'their', 'capricious', 'masters.\"28', 'Kortright', 'identifies', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'being', 'under', 'imper-', 'fect', 'human', 'law', '(\"capricious\")', 'with', 'female', 'objectification;', 'by', 'contrast,', 'historical', 'progress', 'occurs', 'only', 'when', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'understand', 'true', 'freedom', 'as', 'submission', 'to', 'divine', 'law.', 'With', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispen-', 'sation,', 'woman', 'emerged', 'from', '\"her', 'sepulchre\"-invoking', 'the', 'Resur-', 'rection', 'while', 'equating', 'pre-Christian', \"women's\", 'history', 'with', 'death-in', 'order', 'to', 'become', '\"no', 'longer', 'his', 'slave,', 'but', 'his', 'aid;', 'not', 'his', 'rival,', 'but', 'his', 'co-adjutor;', 'to', 'work', 'and', 'labour', 'hand-in-hand', 'with', 'him,', 'for', 'the', 'glory', '26.', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox,', '\"Essay', 'on', 'what', 'Christianity', 'has', 'done', 'for', 'Women,\"', 'in', 'Fe-', 'male', 'Scripture', 'Biography:', 'Including', 'an', 'Essay', 'on', 'What', 'Christianity', 'has', 'Done', 'for', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1817),', '2:lxvii-lxviii', '(emphases', 'in', 'the', 'original).', '27.', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill,', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'On', 'Liberty', 'with', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', 'and', 'Chapters', 'on', 'Socialism,', 'ed.', 'Stefan', 'Collini', '(1869;', 'reprint,', 'Cambridge,', '1989),', 'p.', '123.', '28.', '[Fanny', 'Kortright],', 'The', 'True', 'Rights', 'of', 'Women,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '2.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '57', 'and', 'honour', 'and', 'happiness', 'of', 'humanity.\\'\"29', 'Kortright', 'here', 'reminds', 'her', 'readers', 'that', 'this', 'Christian', 'rebirth', 'of', 'womanhood', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'rebirth', 'into', 'individuality', 'and', 'a', 'new', 'dispensation', 'of', 'separate', 'spheres', 'with', 'equal', 'labor.', 'Her', 'interpretation', 'of', 'her', 'female', 'contemporaries,', 'however,', 're-', 'invokes', \"Mill's\", '\"paganism\":', '\"The', 'chief', 'objects', 'in', 'the', 'dress', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'children', 'now,', 'appear', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'what', 'Captain', 'Cook', 'found', 'in', 'his', 'day', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'principal', 'things', 'eagerly', 'sought', 'for', 'by', 'primitive', 'sav-', 'ages-feathers', 'and', 'beads!', '...', 'O', 'woman,', 'woman!', 'How', 'art', 'thou', 'fallen', 'since', 'the', 'day', 'when', 'thy', 'best', 'adorning', 'was', 'the', 'glory', 'of', 'innocence,', 'and', 'thy', 'loveliest', 'vestment', 'Christ-like', 'deeds', 'of', 'charity!\\'\"30', 'Modern', 'female', 'degradation', 'here', 'results', 'not', 'from', 'material', 'oppression', 'but', 'instead', 'from', 'spiritual', 'apostasy:', 'resisting', 'the', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'gendered', 'division', 'of', 'labor', 'in', 'favor', 'of', 'self-serving', 'goals.', \"Kortright's\", 'historical', 'rhetoric', 'closely', 'connects', 'Christianity', 'and', 'mod-', 'ern', 'femininity', 'in', 'a', 'manner', 'typical', 'of', 'representations', 'of', \"women's\", 'prog-', 'ress', 'from', 'the', 'late', 'teens', 'into', 'the', '1880s.', 'Collapsing', 'time', 'and', 'space', 'through', 'parallels', 'between', 'ancient', 'history', 'and', 'modern', 'paganism,', 'the', 'plot', 'of', 'Christian', 'progress', 'figured', 'historical', 'developments', 'as', 'freedom', 'from', 'enslavement', 'to', 'the', 'body.', 'Women', 'living', 'outside', 'of', 'Christianity', 'are', 'subjected', 'to', 'a', 'law', 'defined', 'by', 'male', 'desire', 'instead', 'of', 'divine', 'fiat;', 'yet', 'without', 'spiritual', 'enlightenment,', 'women', 'are', 'incapable', 'of', 'under-', 'standing', 'their', 'own', 'misery.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Christianity', 'enables', 'female', 'self-consciousness', 'while', 'producing', 'a', 'new', 'historical', 'consciousness.', 'Thus,', 'Isaac', 'Reeve', 'calls', 'attention', 'to', 'pagan', 'women', 'who', 'are', '\"illiterate,', 'despised,', 'half', 'unsexed', 'or', 'half', 'unsouled.\"', 'Feminine', 'subjectivity', 'is', 'con-', 'joined', 'with', 'access', 'to', 'books', 'and,', 'therefore,', 'to', 'the', 'Book', '(although', 'access', 'to', 'modern', 'novels', 'might', 'be', 'more', 'problematic).', 'In', 'contrast', 'to', 'lives', 'or-', 'ganized', 'by', '\"human', 'necessity,\"', 'Reeve', 'argues', 'that', '\"in', 'such', 'proportion', 'to', 'each', 'other', 'are', 'the', 'religion', 'of', 'the', 'Gospel', 'and', 'the', 'emancipation', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex,', 'that', 'their', 'liberty', 'is', 'precisely', 'raised', 'accordingly', 'as', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'Christianity', 'is', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'obscure', 'in', 'the', 'various', 'countries', 'of', 'Europe.\"3\\'1', 'Modernity', 'is', 'retrospectively', 'defined', 'by', 'the', 'numbers', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'can', 'be', '\"perceived\"', 'by', 'the', 'historian', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'by', 'their', 'qual-', 'ity', 'of', 'life:', 'from', 'the', \"historian's\", 'viewpoint,', \"woman's\", 'social', 'condition', 'is', 'translated', 'from', 'an', 'amorphous,', 'unreadable', 'mass', 'into', 'the', 'realm', 'of', 'virtually', 'statistical', 'clarity.', 'Drawing', 'upon', 'the', 'apologetics', 'of', 'Christian', 'superiority,', 'in', 'which', 'Gospel', 'knowledge', '\"has', 'placed', 'men', 'in', 'a', 'new', 'situ-', 'ation:', 'by', 'discovering', 'to', 'them', 'relations', 'not', 'before', 'apprehended,', 'by', '29.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '4.', '30.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '31.', '31.', '[Isaac]', 'Reeve,', 'An', 'Essay', 'on', 'the', 'Comparative', 'Intellect', 'of', 'Woman,', 'and', 'Her', 'Little', 'Recog-', 'nised', 'but', 'Resistless', 'Influence', 'on', 'the', 'Moral,', 'Religious,', 'and', 'Political', 'Prosperity', 'of', 'a', 'Nation,', '2d', 'ed.', '(Hounslow,', '1849),', 'pp.', '12-13.', '58', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'opening', 'to', 'them', 'prospects', 'not', 'before', 'known,', 'by', 'awakening', 'faculties', 'not', 'before', 'exercised,\"', 'John', 'Bird', 'Sumner', 'identifies', 'the', 'Christian', 'rea-', 'soner', 'as', 'one', 'who', 'sees,', 'by', 'the', '\"light\"', 'of', 'revelation,', 'that', 'women', 'possess', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'with', 'men.32', 'Yet', 'the', '\"light\"', 'works', 'in', 'the', 'opposite', 'di-', 'rection:', 'the', 'pagan', 'woman', 'is', 'not', 'only', 'in', 'spiritual', 'darkness', 'but', 'also', 'in', 'historical', 'darkness,', 'invisible', 'to', 'the', \"interpreter's\", 'eye.', 'The', 'spiritual', 'rebirth', 'enabled', 'by', 'Christianity', 'makes', 'masculine', 'fasci-', 'nation', 'with', 'female', 'sensuality', 'itself', 'historically', 'anachronistic.', 'Chris-', \"tianity's\", 'progress', 'produces', 'a', 'new', 'morality', 'of', 'love', 'in', 'place', 'of', 'violence,', 'a', 'morality', 'grounded', 'by', 'an', 'interior', '\"deep\"', 'self', 'and', 'a', 'sense', 'of', 'the', 'indi-', 'vidual', 'as', 'an', 'entity', 'separate', 'from', 'the', 'polity.', 'British', '(and', 'often', 'Ameri-', 'can)', 'Protestants', 'therefore', 'argued', 'that', 'true', 'femininity', 'and', 'true', 'female', 'equality', 'were', 'both', 'fully', 'constituted', 'under', 'the', 'Christian', 'moral', 'law', 'set', 'forth', 'in', 'Scripture.', 'As', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard', 'argued', 'in', 'one', 'sermon,', 'with', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'Christianity', '\"physical', 'power,\"', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'body,', 'was', 'transcended', 'by', 'feminine', '\"moral', 'power,\"', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'mind;', 'such', 'moral', 'power', 'was', 'distinguished', 'from', 'martial', 'conquest', 'by', 'the', '\"voluntary\"', 'nature', 'of', \"society's\", 'subjection', 'to', 'it.33', 'True', 'female', 'equality', 'was', 'therefore', 'not', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'power', 'understood', 'in', 'mundane', 'political', 'terms,', 'but', 'instead', 'of', \"woman's\", 'accession', 'to', 'her', 'own', 'peculiar', 'form', 'of', 'spiritual', 'power,', 'delegated', 'to', 'her', 'by', 'Christian', 'societies.', 'But', 'to', 'be', 'a', '\"modern', 'woman,\"', 'with', 'the', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'which', 'that', 'state', 'entails,', 'is', 'not', 'simply', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'existing', 'in', 'a', 'particular', 'time', 'and', 'space;', 'instead,', 'one', 'becomes', 'modern', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'biblical', 'text', 'through', 'conver-', 'sion.', 'By', 'extension,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'periodized', 'as', 'an', 'ongoing', 'cultural', 'conversion,', 'echoing', 'the', 'evangelical', 'emphasis', 'on', 'conversion', 'as', 'the', 'central', 'event', 'of', 'human', 'life.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', \"Hale's\", 'gigantic', \"Woman's\", 'Record', 'makes', 'the', 'stakes', 'clear:', '\"But', 'this', '[moral]', 'improvement', 'is', 'only', 'where', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'and', 'its', 'authority', 'acknowledged.', 'The', 'Chinese', 'nation', 'cannot', 'advance', 'in', 'moral', 'culture', 'while', 'their', 'women', 'are', 'consigned', 'to', 'ignorance', 'and', 'imbecility:', 'the', 'nations', 'of', 'the', 'East', 'are', 'slaves', 'to', 'sensuality', 'and', 'sin,', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'to', 'foreign', 'masters!', 'and', 'thus', 'they', 'must', 'remain', 'till', 'Christianity,', 'breaking', 'the', 'fetters', 'of', 'polygamy', 'from', 'the', 'female', 'sex,', 'shall', 'give', 'to', 'the', 'mothers', 'of', 'men', 'freedom,', 'educa-', 'tion,', 'and', 'influence.\"34', 'Christianity', 'educates', 'true', 'believers', 'in', 'the', 'eth-', 'ics', 'of', 'sexual', 'behavior,', 'subordinating', 'mere', 'sensuality', 'to', 'the', 'higher', 'goal', 'of', 'spiritual', 'union', 'in', 'monogamous', 'marriage.', 'Only', 'when', 'this', 'spiritual', '32.', 'Rev.', 'J[ohn]', 'B[ird]', 'Sumner,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Evidence', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Derived', 'from', 'its', 'Na-', 'ture', 'and', 'Reception', '(Philadelphia,', '1825),', 'p.', '113.', '33.', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard,', 'The', 'Moral', 'Power', 'of', 'Women', '...', '(Louth,', '1844),', 'p.', '8.', '34.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale,', \"Woman's\", 'Record;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'All', 'Distinguished', 'Women,', 'From', 'the', 'Creation', 'to', 'A.D.', '1854:', 'Arranged', 'in', 'Four', 'Eras,', 'with', 'Selections', 'from', 'Female', 'Writers', 'of', 'Every', 'Age,', '2d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1860),', 'p.', '157.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '59', 'enlightenment', 'is', 'achieved', 'can', 'nations', 'enter', 'into', 'modern', 'history.', 'Mo-', 'dernity', 'has', 'a', 'unitary', 'chronology,', 'but', 'not', 'all', 'individuals', 'or', 'cultures', 'occupy', 'the', 'same', 'chronological', 'moment-a', 'holdover', 'from', 'Enlighten-', 'ment', 'theories', 'of', 'progress,', 'in', 'which', 'contemporary', 'primitive', 'cultures', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'as', 'evidence', 'for', 'ancient', 'social', 'practices.', 'Emphasis', 'on', 'the', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'nature', 'of', 'modern', 'woman-', 'hood', 'is', 'clear', 'in', 'studies', 'of', 'biblical', 'women,', 'which', 'represent', 'the', 'shift', 'from', 'the', 'Old', 'to', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'as', 'also', 'a', 'shift', 'in', 'the', 'relationship', 'of', 'gender', 'to', 'its', 'historical', 'context.', 'Thus,', 'the', 'evangelical', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour', 'argued', 'that', '\"the', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'Hebrews', 'were', 'elevated', 'by', 'their', 'holy', 'faith', 'far', 'above', 'all', 'heathen', 'nations', 'in', 'social,', 'political,', 'and', 'reli-', 'gious', 'freedom;', 'yet', 'their', 'institutions', 'benefited', 'them', 'only,', 'were', 're-', 'stricted', 'to', 'them', 'only,', 'jealous', 'care', 'being', 'observed', 'in', 'their', 'restriction.\"', \"Balfour's\", 'Judaism', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'paganism,', 'but', 'the', 'Old', 'Testament', 'rep-', 'resents', 'merely', 'specific', 'historical', 'situations.', 'In', 'contrast,', '\"New', 'Testa-', 'ment', 'female', 'characters', 'are', 'more', 'valuable', 'as', 'models', 'for', 'imitation,', 'from', 'the', 'fact', 'of', 'their', 'illustrating', 'moral', 'principles,', 'rather', 'than', 'remark-', 'able', 'situations;', 'the', 'principles', 'being', 'important', 'to', 'all,', 'wonderful', 'situa-', 'tions', 'peculiar', 'to', 'a', 'few.\"', 'Representations', 'of', 'Christian', 'womanhood', 'fulfill', 'the', 'potential', 'of', 'Jewish', 'womanhood', 'and,', 'in', 'so', 'doing,', 'transcend', 'it.', \"Balfour's\", 'analysis', 'finds', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'older', 'dispensation', 'dead', 'to', 'the', 'present-that', 'is,', 'largely', 'irrelevant', 'for', 'determining', 'contemporary', 'morals-because', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'has', 'completed', 'and', 'perfected', 'their', 'examples.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'the', 'histories', 'of', 'New', 'Testament', 'women', 'always', 'renews', 'the', 'promise', 'of', 'modern', 'womanly', 'perfection:', 'the', 'modern', 'individual', 'who,', 'produced', 'by', 'Christianity,', 'helps', 'spread', 'this', 'perfec-', 'tion', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'eternally', 'relevant', 'Book.35', 'If', 'New', 'Testament', 'women', 'are', 'valuable', 'models', 'for', '\"imitation,\"', 'then', 'Christian', 'femininity', 'inhabits', 'an', 'atemporal', 'present', 'within', 'which', 'all', 'virtuous', 'characters', 'are', 'interchangeable,', 'regardless', 'of', 'local', 'circumstances.36', 'Virtuous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'thus', 'products', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'moment', 'whose', 'defining', 'char-', 'acteristic', 'is', 'to', 'sever', 'virtue', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all', 'from', 'the', 'trammels', 'of', 'merely', 'local', 'relevance.', '35.', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'Scripture', '(London,', '1847),', 'pp.', '218-19,', '222.', 'I', 'have', 'been', 'much', 'helped,', 'here', 'and', 'elsewhere', 'in', 'this', 'article,', 'by', 'discussions', 'of', 'Christian', 'historiography', 'and', 'biography', 'in', 'Boyd', 'Hilton,', 'The', 'Age', 'of', 'Atonement:', 'The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Evangelism', 'on', 'Social', 'and', 'Economic', 'Thought,', '1795-1865', '(Oxford,', '1988);', 'Peter', 'Hinchcliff,', 'God', 'and', 'History:', 'Aspects', 'of', 'British', 'Theology,', '1875-1914', '(Oxford,', '1972);', 'Elizabeth', 'Jay,', 'The', 'Religion', 'of', 'the', 'Heart:', 'Anglican', 'Evangelicalism', 'and', 'the', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Novel', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Christopher', 'Tolley,', 'Domestic', 'Biography:', 'The', 'Legacy', 'of', 'Evangelicalism', 'in', 'Four', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Families', '(Oxford,', '1997).', '36.', 'A', 'similar', 'phenomenon', 'has', 'been', 'observed', 'by', 'Tricia', 'Lootens', 'regarding', 'Victorian', 'representations', 'of', 'virtuous', 'Shakespearean', 'heroines;', 'see', 'Lost', 'Saints:', 'Silence,', 'Gender,', 'and', 'Victorian', 'Literary', 'Canonization', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1996).', '60', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'But', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'historians', 'argued,', 'Christianity', 'made', \"women's\", 'history', 'possible', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place:', 'Christianity', 'conferred', 'a', 'new', 'intellectual', 'and', 'spiritual', 'mindset', 'that', 'allowed', 'women', 'to', 'be', 'per-', 'ceived', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects', 'in', 'the', 'past,', 'present,', 'and', 'future.', '(We', 'have', 'already', 'seen', 'some', 'of', 'this', 'rhetoric', 'in', 'Isaac', 'Reeve.)', 'The', 'link', 'between', 'Christianity', 'and', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'a', 'twofold', 'sig-', 'nificance,', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'were', 'generally', 'expressed', 'in', 'vaguely', 'statistical', 'terms.', 'First,', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'diag-', 'nosed', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'civilization,', 'an', 'idea', 'derived', 'from', 'eighteenth-', 'century', \"women's\", 'historians', 'such', 'as', 'William', 'Alexander:', '\"The', 'rank,', 'therefore,', 'and', 'condition,', 'in', 'which', 'we', 'find', 'women', 'in', 'any', 'country,', 'mark', 'out', 'to', 'us', 'with', 'the', 'greatest', 'precision,', 'the', 'exact', 'point', 'in', 'the', 'scale', 'of', 'civil', 'society,', 'to', 'which', 'the', 'people', 'of', 'such', 'country', 'have', 'arrived;', 'and', 'were', 'their', 'history', 'entirely', 'silent', 'on', 'every', 'other', 'subject,', 'and', 'only', 'men-', 'tioned', 'the', 'manner', 'in', 'which', 'they', 'treated', 'their', 'women,', 'we', 'should,', 'from', 'thence,', 'be', 'enabled', 'to', 'form', 'a', 'tolerable', 'judgment', 'of', 'the', 'barbarity,', 'or', 'culture', 'of', 'their', 'manners.\"37', 'Alexander', 'here', 'reads', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'the', 'key', 'to', 'all', 'histories;', 'far', 'from', 'being', '\"unwritable,\"', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'in', 'fact', 'what', 'makes', 'otherwise', 'silenced', 'civilizations', 'speak', 'to', 'the', 'enlightened', 'interpreter.', 'The', 'Victorians,', 'however,', 'discarded', 'Alex-', \"ander's\", 'faith', 'in', 'the', 'ease', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history.', 'Instead,', 'they', 'pro-', 'posed', 'that', \"women's\", 'history', 'did', 'indeed', 'diagnose', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'culture,', 'but', 'it', 'did', 'so', 'progressively:', '\"The', 'progress', 'of', 'woman', 'cannot', 'be', 'denied', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'ratio', 'as', 'that', 'of', 'man,', 'both', 'from', 'an', 'original', 'state', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'and', 'again', 'just', 'in', 'the', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'elevation', 'of', 'woman', 'does', 'the', 'other', 'half', 'of', 'mankind', 'derive', 'advantage', 'from', 'her', 'existence.\"38', 'Here,', 'Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb', 'makes', 'no', 'mention', 'of', 'the', 'always-writable', 'nature', 'of', \"women's\", 'history.', 'Instead,', 'she', 'emphasizes', 'that', 'the', 'history', 'works', 'in', 'both', 'directions', '(man', 'diagnoses', 'woman,', 'and', 'vice', 'versa),', 'and', 'that', \"woman's\", 'social', 'influence', 'accumulates', 'over', 'time.', 'Moreover,', 'as', 'the', 'positivist', 'historian', 'Henry', 'Buckle', 'agreed', 'in', 'a', 'differ-', 'ent', 'key,', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'this', 'influence', 'was', 'definitely', 'a', 'product', 'of', 'modern', 'conditions;', 'if', 'in', '\"modern', 'Europe,', 'the', 'influence', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'civilization', 'have', 'been', 'nearly', 'commensurate,', 'both', 'advanc-', 'ing', 'with', 'almost', 'equal', 'speed,\"', 'the', 'same', 'is', 'not', 'true', 'of', 'nations', 'in', 'an-', 'tiquity,', 'which', '\"fell', 'because', 'society', 'did', 'not', 'advance', 'in', 'all', 'its', 'parts,', 'but', 'sacrificed', 'some', 'of', 'its', 'constituents', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'secure', 'the', 'progress', '37.', 'William', 'Alexander,', 'The', 'History', 'of', 'Women:', 'From', 'the', 'Earliest', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Present', 'Time;', 'Giving', 'Some', 'Account', 'of', 'Almost', 'Every', 'Interesting', 'Particular', 'Concerning', 'that', 'Sex,', 'Among', 'All', 'Nations,', 'Ancient', 'and', 'Modern,', '2', 'vols.', '(Dublin,', '1779),', '1:107.', '38.', '[Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb],', 'Can', 'Woman', 'Regenerate', 'Society?', '(London,', '1844),', 'p.', '165.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '61', 'of', 'others.\"39', 'The', 'modern', 'era', 'is', 'special', 'both', 'because', 'women', 'have', 'influenced', 'its', 'progress', 'and', 'because', 'it', 'has', 'recognized', 'that', 'its', 'progress', 'is,', 'in', 'fact,', 'contingent', 'upon', 'developing', \"woman's\", 'potential.', 'When', 'restated', 'in', 'expressly', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'this', 'last', 'formulation', 'be-', 'comes', 'the', 'second', 'item', 'of', 'significance:', 'the', 'writing', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'is', 'a', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'act.', 'The', 'more', 'Christian', 'the', 'age,', 'the', 'more', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'acting', 'so', 'as', 'to', 'appear', 'in', 'its', 'records;', 'and', 'the', 'more', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'so', 'acting,', 'the', 'more', 'that', 'Christian', 'histori-', 'ans', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'writing', 'about', 'them.', '\"Unmentioned', 'as', 'she', 'is', 'in', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'heathendom,', 'several', 'of', 'her', 'sex', 'shine', 'like', 'stars', 'in', 'the', 'firma-', 'ment', 'of', 'the', 'Church,\"', 'wrote', 'W.', 'Landels', 'around', '1872.40', 'By', 'invoking', 'numbers,', 'the', 'Christian', 'author', 'denaturalizes', \"women's\", 'absence', 'from', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and', 'accounts', 'for', 'that', 'absence', 'by', 'the', 'shortcom-', 'ings', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'cultures.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale', 'was', 'even', 'more', 'ex-', 'plicit:', '\"Wherever', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'female', 'talents', 'are', 'cultivated', 'and', 'esteemed.', 'In', 'this', \"'Record'\", 'are', 'about', 'two', 'thousand', 'five', 'hundred', 'names,', 'including', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Female', 'Missionaries;', 'out', 'of', 'this', 'number', 'less', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'are', 'from', 'heathen', 'nations,', 'yet', 'these', 'constitute', 'at', 'this', 'moment', 'nearly', 'three-fourths', 'of', 'the', 'inhabitants', 'of', 'the', 'globe,', 'and', 'for', 'the', 'first', 'thousand', 'years', '.', '.', '.were', 'the', 'world.\"41', 'One', 'can,', 'quite', 'literally,', 'estimate', 'social', 'progress', 'by', 'counting', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'are', 'deemed', 'worthy', 'of', 'recollection.', 'And', 'percentages', 'count', 'too,', 'as', 'Horace', 'Mann', 'pointed', 'out:', '\"Within', 'the', 'last', 'half-century,', 'the', 'United', 'Kingdom', 'of', 'Britain', 'and', 'Ireland,', 'with', 'an', 'average', 'population', 'of', 'less', 'than', 'twenty-', 'five', 'millions,', 'has', 'produced', 'as', 'many', 'eminent', 'and', 'admirable', 'women', 'as', 'all', 'the', 'rest', 'of', 'Europe,', 'with', 'its', 'more', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'millions;', 'and', 'New', 'England,', 'with', 'its', 'population', 'of', 'between', 'two', 'and', 'three', 'millions,', 'has', 'now', 'nearly', 'or', 'quite', 'as', 'many', 'justly-distinguished', 'females', 'as', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'or', 'the', 'continent.\"42', 'In', 'other', 'words,', 'Britain', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'the', 'continent', 'and', 'America', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'Britain,', 'on', 'statistical', 'grounds;', 'progress', 'is', 'here', 'tied', 'not', 'simply', 'to', 'numbers', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'their', 'accel-', 'erated', 'accumulation.', 'The', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'visible', 'to', 'the', 'historian', 'simultaneously', 'attests', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'construction', 'of', 'womanhood,', '39.', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '\"The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Women', 'on', 'the', 'Progress', 'of', 'Knowl-', 'edge,\"', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'and', 'Posthumous', 'Works', 'of', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '3', 'vols.', '(London,', '1872),', '1:2.', '40.', 'W.', 'Landels,', 'Woman:', 'Her', 'Position', 'and', 'Power', '(London,', '[1872?]),', 'p.', '28.', '41.', 'Hale', '(n.', '34', 'above),', 'p.', '2.', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'points', 'out', 'that', \"Hale's\", 'text', 'is', '\"itself', 'an', 'event', 'in', 'history\";', 'see', 'American', 'Women', 'Writers', 'and', 'the', 'Work', 'of', 'History,', '1790-1860', '(New', 'Bruns-', 'wick,', 'N.J.,', '1995),', 'p.', '228.', '42.', 'Horace', 'Mann,', 'A', 'Few', 'Thoughts', 'on', 'the', 'Powers', 'and', 'Duties', 'of', 'Woman:', 'Two', 'Lectures', '(Syr-', 'acuse,', 'N.Y.,', '1853),', 'p.', '50.', '62', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'the', 'new', 'possibilities', 'of', 'female', 'influence', 'in', 'the', 'public', 'domain,', 'and', 'the', 'progressively', 'enlightened', '(in', 'a', 'Christian', 'sense)', 'consciousness', 'of', 'the', 'historian', 'capable', 'of', 'viewing', 'women', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects.', 'It', 'is', 'on', 'the', 'issue', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'or', '\"barbaric\"', 'women', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', \"dire'ctly\", 'conflict', 'with', \"today's\", 'belief', 'that', 'a', 'history', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'would', 'begin', 'with', '\"feminist', \"historians'\", 'critiques', 'of', 'the', \"discipline's\", 'habitual', '(one', 'might', 'say', 'historical)', 'neglect', 'of', \"women's\", 'ex-', 'perience.\"43', 'Unlike', 'the', 'utilitarian', 'George', 'Grote,', 'whose', 'twelve-volume', 'History', 'of', 'Greece', '(1845-56)', 'broke', 'new', 'ground', 'in', 'the', 'study', 'of', 'the', 'pre-', 'Christian', 'cultures', 'of', 'antiquity,', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'historians', 'often', 'identified', 'the', 'modern', 'historical', 'viewpoint', 'with', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'recover', 'pagan', 'figures', 'lost', 'in', 'the', 'mists', 'of', 'time.', 'Certainly,', 'there', 'were', 'biograph-', 'ical', 'treatments', 'of', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Aspasia', 'or', 'Sappho.', 'But', '\"lost\"', 'women', 'were', 'unwritable', 'not', 'simply', 'because', 'they', 'were', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'archives', 'but,', 'more', 'importantly,', 'because', 'they', 'lacked', 'Christian', 'virtue.', 'Ancient', 'women', 'are', 'not', 'just', 'treated', 'inhumanely', 'but,', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'are', 'devoid', 'of', 'any', 'sense', 'of', 'social', 'obligations;', 'as', 'a', 'result,', 'even', 'the', '\"his-', 'torical\"', 'women', 'of', 'antiquity', 'fail', 'to', 'contribute', 'to', 'moral', 'progress.', 'As', 'Samuel', 'Young', 'argued', 'to', 'his', 'American', 'male', 'audience', 'regarding', 'Sap-', 'pho,', '\"had', 'she', 'received,', 'in', 'early', 'youth,', 'proper', 'moral', 'and', 'intellectual', 'culture,', 'and', 'been', 'taught', 'to', 'direct', 'her', 'wonderful', 'powers', 'to', 'the', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'human', 'race,', 'she', 'would', 'have', 'done', 'much', 'towards', 'civilizing', 'the', 'world.\"', '44', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'function', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'narrate', 'the', 'emergence', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'which', 'both', 'recognizes', 'and', 'facilitates', 'the', 'presence', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'modern', 'history', 'as', 'part', 'of', 'the', 'ongoing', 'Chris-', 'tianization', 'of', 'the', 'globe.', 'Lady', 'Morgan', 'was', 'not', 'alone', 'in', 'complaining', 'that', '\"the', 'historians', 'of', 'the', 'people,', 'the', 'chroniclers', 'of', 'private', 'life,', 'are', 'few', 'and', 'incidental,\"', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'meant', 'that', 'history', 'only', '\"unavoid-', 'ably', 'or', 'accidentally\"', 'relates', 'the', '\"great', 'deeds', 'of', 'great', 'women.\"45', 'Yet', \"women's\", 'history', 'itself', 'operates', 'through', 'a', 'process', 'of', 'exclusion', 'hinging', 'on', 'Christian', 'conversion.', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'employs', 'what', 'his-', 'torians', 'of', 'religion', 'call', 'the', 'degenerationist', 'thesis', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'which', '43.', 'Lillian', 'Robinson,', '\"Sometimes,', 'Always,', 'Never:', 'Their', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'Ours,\"', 'in', 'History', 'and', '...', 'Histories', 'within', 'the', 'Human', 'Sciences,', 'ed.', 'Ralph', 'Cohen', 'and', 'Michael', 'S.', 'Roth', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'p.', '332.', '44.', 'Samuel', 'Young,', 'Suggestions', 'on', 'the', 'Best', 'Mode', 'of', 'Promoting', 'Civilization', 'and', 'Improve-', 'ment:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Influence', 'of', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'Social', 'State.', 'A', 'Lecture', 'Delivered', 'Before', 'the', '\"Young', \"Men's\", 'Association', 'for', 'Mutual', 'Improvement', 'in', 'the', 'City', 'of', 'Albany,', '\"January', '24th,', '1837', '(Albany,', 'N.Y.,', '1837),', 'p.', '13.', '45.', 'Sydney', 'Owenson,', 'Lady', 'Morgan,', 'Woman', 'and', 'Her', 'Master,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', '2:224-25.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '63', 'holds', 'that', 'human', 'evil', 'degrades', 'original', 'perfection', 'until', 'divine', 'revela-', 'tion', 'or', 'its', 'vehicle,', 'benevolent', 'Christian', 'imperialism,', 'intervenes.46', 'These', 'Victorian', 'writers', 'thus', 'promise', 'to', 'bring', 'women', 'of', 'other', 'nations', 'into', 'history', 'through', 'British', 'imperialist', 'expansion,', 'but', 'in', 'the', 'process', 'they', 'necessarily', 'preclude', 'the', 'desirability', 'of', 'non-Christian', \"women's\", 'history.', 'As', 'the', 'writer', 'of', 'a', 'late', 'work', 'on', 'great', 'women', 'bluntly', 'put', 'it,', 'there', 'was', 'nothing', 'worth', 'recovering:', '\"Paganism', 'ignored', 'what', 'is', 'grand-', 'est', 'and', 'truest', 'in', 'a', 'woman,', 'and', 'she', 'withered', 'like', 'a', 'stricken', 'tree.', 'She', 'succumbed', 'before', 'the', 'cold', 'blasts', 'that', 'froze', 'her', 'noblest', 'impulses,', 'and', 'sunk', 'sullenly', 'into', 'obscurity.\"47', 'Evangelical', 'rhetoric,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'iden-', 'tifies', 'progress', 'toward', 'the', 'millennium', 'with', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'true', 'Christian', 'feeling,', 'defines', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'out', 'of', 'history', 'while', 'always', 'maintain-', 'ing', 'that', 'the', \"individual's\", 'freely', 'willed', 'conversion', 'makes', 'entrance', 'into', 'history', 'possible.48', 'Yet', 'this', 'imagined', 'era', 'of', 'feminine', 'Christianity', 'would', 'fracture', 'along', 'lines', 'of', 'religious,', 'racial,', 'and', 'national', 'differences', 'once', 'authors', 'began', 'to', 'consider', 'immediate', 'historical', 'difficulties-which,', 'in', 'Victorian', 'Brit-', 'ain,', 'often', 'included', 'Catholicism.', 'Protestant', \"women's\", 'histories', 'iden-', 'tified', 'Catholicism', 'with', 'female', 'sexual', 'slavery', 'and', 'with', 'the', 'improper', 'idolization', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'fleshly', 'beings-an', 'identification', 'taken', 'to', 'an', 'extreme', 'in', 'anti-Catholic', 'pornography', 'like', 'The', 'Awful', 'Disclosures', 'of', 'Maria', 'Monk', '(1836)-while', 'assigning', 'to', 'Protestantism', 'a', 'purely', 'spiritual', 'under-', 'standing', 'of', 'womanhood.', 'Through', 'the', 'conjunction', 'of', 'spirit', 'and', 'text,', 'progress', 'takes', 'shape', 'as', 'the', 'ongoing', 'spread', 'of', 'female', 'spiritual', '\"influ-', 'ence\"', 'across', 'nations', 'and', 'empires.', 'Spirituality', 'in', 'turn', 'assures', 'the', 'proper', 'social', 'orientation', 'of', 'female', 'sexuality', 'toward', 'maternity,', 'which', 'becomes', 'the', 'foundation', 'of', 'the', 'uniquely', 'Protestant', 'domestic', 'sphere.', 'History', 'thus', 'progresses', 'from', 'the', 'Catholic,', 'feudal', 'insistence', 'on', 'eroti-', 'cized', 'femininity', 'to', 'the', 'Protestant,', 'middle-class', 'insistence', 'on', 'spiritual-', 'ized', 'femininity.', 'Always,', 'however,', 'this', 'progress', 'transpires', 'through', 'male', 'desire,', 'albeit', 'a', 'desire', 'reflexively', 'shaped.', 'Women', 'are', '\"deified\"', 'in', 'chiv-', 'alry,', 'then', 'valued', 'for', 'their', '\"intrinsic', 'qualities\";', '\"bright', 'eyes', 'give', 'place', 'to', 'bright', 'deeds,', 'good', 'looks', 'to', 'good', 'thoughts,', 'and', 'the', 'outward', 'form', '46.', 'For', 'a', 'standard', 'Victorian', 'exposition', 'of', 'this', 'argument,', 'see', 'Richard', 'Whately,', '\"On', 'the', 'Origin', 'of', 'Civilisation,\"', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'Lectures', 'and', 'Reviews', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '26-59.', '47.', 'John', 'Lord,', 'Great', 'Women,', 'vol.', '5', 'in', \"Lord's\", 'Beacon', 'Lights', 'of', 'History', '(New', 'York,', '1886),', 'pp.', '55-56.', '48.', 'Writing', 'about', 'American', \"women's\", 'history,', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'makes', 'what', 'at', 'first', 'seems', 'like', 'a', 'similar', 'point', 'when', 'she', 'argues', 'that', '\"a', 'virtual', 'absence', 'of', 'prominent', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'was', 'not', 'only', 'to', 'be', 'expected,', 'it', 'was', 'positively', 'hoped', 'for\"', '(p.', '215).', 'But', 'we', 'are', 'using', 'different', 'understandings', 'of', 'periodization:', 'she', 'argues', 'that', 'her', 'authors', 'are', 'defining', 'this', 'absence', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'nineteenth', 'century;', 'I', 'argue', 'that', 'my', 'au-', 'thors', 'are', 'defining', 'it', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'Christianity', 'per', 'se.', '64', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'to', 'the', 'magic', 'of', 'the', 'inner', 'life.\"49', 'Such', 'progressive', 'Protestant', 'narratives', 'became', 'a', 'clerical', 'specialty', 'in', 'both', 'Britain', 'and', 'America,', 'attracting', 'clergymen', 'across', 'the', 'denominational', 'spectrum.50', 'At', 'the', 'same', 'time,', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Protestantism', 'was', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'female', \"evangelist's\", 'in-', 'creasing', 'spiritual', 'freedom', 'and', 'cultural', 'literacy,', 'which', 'allegorized', 'the', 'Englishing', 'or', 'Americanizing', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation-as', 'well', 'as', 'of', 'global', 'history.', 'If', 'the', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'subject', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'beneficiary', 'and', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'providence,', 'then', 'logically', 'women', 'should', 'be', 'central', 'to', 'historical', 'rep-', 'resentation', 'and', 'investigation.', 'Yet', 'if', 'Christian', 'women', 'were', 'imagined', 'as', 'quintessentially', 'modern', 'subjects,', 'their', 'subjectivity', 'was', 'represented', 'as', 'threatened', 'with', 'moral', 'corruption', 'by', 'history', 'itself.', 'This', 'threat', 'ex-', 'isted', 'on', 'two', 'different', 'levels:', 'that', 'of', 'historicity', '(the', 'fact', 'that', \"women's\", 'history', 'could', 'be', 'written)', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation', '(the', 'act', 'of', 'reading', 'the', 'text).', 'Most', \"women's\", 'histories', 'systematically', 'avoid', 'refer-', 'ence', 'to', 'current', 'political', 'issues;', 'even', 'when', 'these', 'histories', 'do', 'engage', 'with', 'contemporary', 'crises,', 'they', 'do', 'so', 'obliquely,', 'by', 'representing', 'social', 'upheaval', 'as', 'ameliorated', 'by', 'individual', 'religious', 'consolation,', 'philan-', 'thropic', 'work,', 'or', 'maternity.', 'In', 'trying', 'to', 'attach', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'spir-', 'itual', 'universals,', 'politics', 'were', 'often', 'explicitly', 'thrown', 'by', 'the', 'wayside.', 'Thus,', 'Julia', \"Kavanagh's\", 'pro-Catholic', 'Women', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Exemplary', 'for', 'Acts', 'of', 'Piety', 'and', 'Charity', '(1852),', 'published', 'in', 'the', 'wake', 'of', 'the', 'outcry', 'over', 'the', '\"Papal', 'Aggression\"', '(the', 'restoration', 'of', 'the', 'Roman', 'Catholic', 'hierar-', 'chy', 'in', 'England),', 'raises', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'its', 'own', 'controversial', 'status', 'only', 'to', 'sidestep', 'theological', 'debate.', 'Its', 'ecumenical', 'exemplars-Teresa', 'of', 'Avila,', 'Elizabeth', 'Fry,', 'Sarah', 'Martin-all', 'coexisting', 'peacefully', 'within', '49.', 'Mrs.', 'John', 'Sandford,', 'Woman', 'in', 'Her', 'Social', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Character,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1833),', 'p.', '9;', 'and', 'Joseph', 'Johnson,', 'Willing', 'Hearts', 'and', 'Ready', 'Hands:', 'or,', 'The', 'La-', 'bours', 'and', 'Triumphs', 'of', 'Earnest', 'Women', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '43.', '50.', 'For', 'example,', 'Rev.', 'James', 'Anderson,', 'Ladies', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation:', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Distin-', 'guished', 'Female', 'Characters,', 'Belonging', 'to', 'the', 'Period', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation', 'in', 'the', 'Sixteenth', 'Century', '(London,', '1857),', 'and', 'Memorable', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Puritan', 'Times,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1862);', 'Daniel', 'C.', 'Eddy,', 'Daughters', 'of', 'the', 'Cross:', 'Or', \"Woman's\", 'Mission', '(Boston,', '1855);', 'Rev.', 'James', 'A.', 'Huie,', 'Records', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety:', 'Comprising', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'and', 'Extracts', 'from', 'the', 'Writings', 'of', 'Women', 'Eminent', 'for', 'Religious', 'Excellence,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Edinburgh,', '1845);', 'and', 'Thomas', 'Timpson,', 'British', 'Female', 'Biography;', 'Being', 'Select', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Pious', 'Ladies,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ranks', 'of', 'Public', 'and', 'Private', 'Life,', 'Including', 'Queens,', 'Princesses,', 'Martyrs,', 'Scholars,', 'Instructors,', 'Poetesses,', 'Philanthro-', 'pists,', \"Ministers'\", 'Wives', '(London,', '1854).', 'For', 'useful', 'analyses', 'of', 'the', 'relationship', 'between', 'religion,', 'femininity,', 'and', 'historical', 'progress', 'in', 'conduct', 'manuals,', 'see', 'Judith', 'Lowder', 'Newton,', '\"\\'Ministers', 'of', 'the', \"Interior':\", 'The', 'Political', 'Economy', 'of', \"Woman's\", 'Manuals,\"', 'in', 'Starting', 'Over:', 'Feminism', 'and', 'the', 'Politics', 'of', 'Cultural', 'Critique', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1994),', 'pp.', '125-', '45;', 'and', 'Jane', 'E.', 'Rose,', '\"Conduct', 'Books', 'for', 'Women,', '1830-1860:', 'A', 'Rationale', 'for', \"Women's\", 'Conduct', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Role', 'in', 'America,\"', 'in', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Women', 'Learn', 'to', 'Write,', 'ed.', 'Catherine', 'Hobbs', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '37-58.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '65', 'the', 'text,', 'provide', 'a', 'utopian', 'vision', 'of', 'Christian', 'religious', 'harmony', 'ex-', 'plicitly', 'unavailable', 'elsewhere.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman', 'has', 'argued', 'that', 'the', 'motif', 'of', 'uneventful', 'private', 'lives', 'in', 'exemplary', 'biography', 'deliberately', 'contrasts', 'with', 'the', \"heroine's\", '\"eruption\"', 'into', 'public', 'view,', 'as', 'the', 'private', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', '\"a', 'do-', 'mestic', 'detail', 'that', 'asserts', 'how', 'little', 'really', 'happened', 'in', 'it.\"\\'\\'51', 'Yet', 'far', 'more', 'common', 'during', 'the', 'Victorian', 'period', 'are', 'lives', 'lacking', 'any', '\"erup-', 'tion\"', 'whatsoever.', 'A', 'casual', 'survey', 'of', 'books', 'published', 'over', 'a', 'forty-four-', 'year', 'period', 'reveals', 'that', 'royalty,', 'actresses,', 'poets,', 'and', 'serving', 'maids', 'all', 'shared', 'supposedly', 'identical', 'and', 'empty', 'lives:', 'no', '\"romantic', 'inci-', 'dents\"', 'or', '\"eventful', 'occurrences,\"', 'nothing', '\"thrilling,\"', '\"passion-exciting,\"', 'or', '\"startling,\"', 'and', 'thus', '\"few', 'passages', 'on', 'which', 'the', 'faithful', 'biogra-', 'pher', 'can', 'enlarge.\"', 'Incidents', 'of', 'any', 'kind', 'verge', 'on', 'the', 'nonexistent,', 'leav-', 'ing', 'the', 'author', 'to', 'rely', 'on', 'a', '\"brief', '(too', 'brief)', 'memoir.\"52', 'This', 'language', 'of', 'uneventfulness', 'collapses', 'distinctions', 'between', 'class', 'and', 'profession', 'into', 'a', 'single', 'plot', 'that', 'resists', 'narration:', 'the', 'emphatically', 'negative', 'dis-', 'course', 'discloses', 'a', 'pattern', 'of', 'existence', 'so', 'unremarkable', 'that', 'it', 'escapes', 'biographical', 'writing,', 'yet', 'simultaneously', 'establishes', 'that', 'pattern', 'as', 'the', 'true', 'foundation', 'of', 'exemplary', 'representation.', 'In', 'these', 'popular', 'histo-', 'ries,', \"women's\", 'lives', 'lack', '\"scenes,\"', 'dramatic', 'plot', 'twists,', 'romantic', 'sorrows,', 'and', 'tragic', 'denouements.', 'This', 'rhetoric', 'of', 'antifiction', '(and,', 'in', 'its', 'em-', 'phasis', 'on', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'engage', 'with', 'public', 'events,', 'antipolitics)', 'implies', 'that', 'exemplary', 'value', 'is', 'constituted', 'not', 'by', 'events', 'internal', 'to', 'the', 'life,', 'but', 'instead', 'by', 'the', 'posthumous', 'differentiation', 'of', 'a', 'life,', 'as', 'a', 'perfect', 'whole,', 'from', 'all', 'those', 'lives', 'which', 'deviate', 'from', 'its', 'pattern.', 'As', 'a', 'result,', 'such', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'retrospectively', 'universalized,', 'made', 'to', 'speak', 'for', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'morality', 'instead', 'of', 'for', 'the', \"individual's\", 'own', 'achievements.', 'Even', 'eventful', 'lives', 'could', 'be', 'transposed', 'into', 'moral', 'universals', 'by', 'an', 'emphasis', 'on', 'private', 'experience;', 'in', 'extreme', 'instances,', \"women's\", 'historians', 'figured', 'their', 'work', 'as', 'the', 'domestication', 'of', 'national', 'culture', 'itself.', 'In', 'the', 'preface', 'to', 'her', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland,', 'for', 'example,', 'Agnes', 'Strickland', 'argued', 'that', 'since', 'England', 'and', 'Scotland', '\"are', 'now', 'ONE', '...', 'truly', 'and', 'effectually', 'by', 'friendship,', 'based', 'on', 'mutual', 'esteem,\"', '51.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman,', '\"Le', 'Theorie', 'qui', \"n'en\", 'est', 'pas', 'une;', 'or,', 'Why', 'Clio', \"Doesn't\", 'Care,\"', 'in', 'Feminists', 'Revision', 'History,', 'ed.', 'Ann-Louise', 'Shapiro', '(New', 'Brunswick,', 'N.J.,', '1994),', 'p.', '84.', '52.', 'I', 'cite', 'Mrs.', '[Anna]', 'Jameson,', 'The', 'Beauties', 'of', 'the', 'Court', 'of', 'King', 'Charles', 'the', 'Second', '...', '(London,', '1833),', 'p.', '87;', 'Francis', 'Lancelott,', 'The', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'and', 'their', 'Times:', 'From', 'Ma-', 'tilda,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Conqueror,', 'to', 'Adelaide,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Fourth,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', '2:1042-43;', 'Mrs.', '[Margaret]', 'C.', 'Baron', 'Wilson,', 'Our', 'Actresses;', 'or,', 'Glances', 'at', 'Stage', 'Favourites,', 'Past', 'and', 'Present,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:73;', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'The', 'Sunshine', 'of', 'Domestic', 'Life;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Virtues,', 'and', 'Stories', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Noble', 'Women', '(London,', '1867),', 'p.', '59;', 'and', 'Clara', 'L.', 'Balfour,', 'Women', 'Worth', 'Emulating', '(New', 'York,', '1877),', 'p.', '23.', '66', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'her', '\"Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'be', 'less', 'interesting', 'to', 'English,', 'than', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'have', 'proved', 'to', 'Scotch', 'readers.\"', 'Strickland', 'offers', 'the', 'phenomenon', 'of', 'her', 'Lives', 'as', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'long', 'process', 'of', 'national', 'unification,', 'in', 'which', 'authentic', 'senti-', 'ments', 'have', 'transcended', 'the', 'mere', 'legal', 'act', 'of', 'Union.', 'Reading', 'these', 'Lives', 'thus', 'proves', 'or', 'reaffirms', 'a', 'new', 'British', 'nationhood,', 'founded', 'in', 'love', 'instead', 'of', 'law.', 'The', 'affective', 'emphasis', 'is', 'further', 'underscored', 'by', \"Strickland's\", 'insistence', 'that', 'her', 'Lives', 'are', 'family', 'reading,', 'works', 'suitable', 'for', 'those', 'raised', 'on', 'Sir', 'Walter', \"Scott's\", 'romances', 'yet', 'now', 'desiring', 'a', '\"truth\"', 'not', 'sacrificed', 'to', '\"fastidiousness,\"', 'so', '\"that', 'they', 'may', 'read', 'it', 'with', 'their', 'children,', 'and', 'that', 'the', 'whole', 'family', 'party', 'shall', 'be', 'eager', 'to', 're-', 'sume', 'the', 'book', 'when', 'they', 'gather', 'round', 'the', 'work-table', 'during', 'the', 'long', 'winter', 'evenings.\"', 'The', 'new', 'national', 'family', 'is', 'reinforced', 'by', 'the', 'plea-', 'sures', 'of', 'historical', 'reading,', 'a', 'pleasure', 'that', 'Strickland', 'is', 'careful', 'to', 'counterbalance', 'with', 'a', 'setting', 'of', 'domestic', 'usefulness', '(the', '\"work-table,\"', 'where', 'presumably', 'the', 'women', 'are', 'sewing', 'as', 'they', 'listen', 'to', 'the', 'book', 'being', 'read).53', \"Strickland's\", 'domesticating', 'rhetoric', 'suggests', 'that', 'reading', 'and', 'writ-', 'ing', 'these', 'uneventful', 'lives', 'are', 'themselves', 'means', 'toward', 'social', '(and', 'ul-', 'timately', 'Christian)', 'reform,', 'but', 'it', 'also', 'suggests', 'that', 'such', 'reforms', 'must', 'already', 'be', 'under', 'way', 'for', 'her', 'writings', 'to', 'be', 'properly', 'appreciated.', 'In', 'making', 'the', 'reading', 'and', 'writing', 'of', 'her', 'history', 'a', 'triumph', 'of', 'love', 'over', 'force,', 'Strickland', 'announces', 'her', 'participation', 'in', 'exemplary', \"history's\", 'larger', 'pedagogical', 'project:', 'tutoring', 'her', 'readers', 'in', 'the', 'proper', 'work', 'of', 'both', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women.', 'Earlier,', 'Sarah', 'Lewis', 'had', 'argued', 'that', '\"the', 'moral', 'progress', 'of', 'our', 'race', 'does', 'not', 'keep', 'pace', 'with', 'the', 'intellectual;', 'and', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'assumed', 'that', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'chief', 'causes', 'of', 'this', 'slow', 'progress', 'is', 'the', 'misdirecting', 'of', 'influence,', 'and', 'expecting', 'power', 'to', 'supply', 'the', 'want,', 'and', 'perform', 'the', 'work', 'of', 'influ-', 'ence\";', 'she', 'directed', 'her', 'readers', 'to', 'their', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'place', 'in', 'society', 'so', 'that', 'they', 'could', '\"interfere', 'in', 'politics\"', 'by', 'becoming', '\"moral', 'agents,\"', 'and', 'in', 'so', 'doing', '\"instill', 'into', 'their', 'relatives', 'of', 'the', 'other', 'sex', 'the', 'uncompromising', 'sense', 'of', 'duty', 'and', 'self-devotion,', 'which', 'ought', 'to', 'be', 'their', 'ruling', 'principles!', '\"54', 'Female', 'influence', 'becomes', 'a', 'historical', 'force', 'only', 'when', 'detached', 'from', 'power,', 'that', 'is,', 'from', 'the', 'immediately', 'visible', 'and', 'traceable', 'exertion', 'of', 'force', 'in', 'political', 'circles.', 'This', 'influential,', 'in-', 'stead', 'of', 'political,', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'progressively', 'transforms', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'modernity', 'through', 'her', 'ongoing', 'regeneration', 'of', 'masculine', 'spiritu-', 'ality;', 'yet', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'exemplary', 'histories-and', 'conduct', 'manuals-', 'also', 'points', 'to', 'the', 'conditional', 'nature', 'of', 'these', 'transformations.', 'It', 'was', '53.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'and', 'English', 'Princesses', 'Connected', 'with', 'the', 'Regal', 'Succession', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain,', '2d', 'ed.,', '8', 'vols.', '(Edinburgh,', '1852),', '1:xvi.', '54.', '[Sarah', 'Lewis],', \"Woman's\", 'Mission,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1840),', 'pp.', '15,', '61.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '67', 'the', 'job', 'of', 'exemplary', 'history', 'to', 'call', 'the', 'truly', 'Christian', 'historical', 'woman', 'into', 'being,', 'proving', 'to', 'the', '\"complainant\"', 'who', 'yearns', 'for', 'public', 'activity', 'that', '\"in', 'most', 'of', 'the', 'triumphs', 'achieved', 'by', 'men..,', '.she', 'has', 'shared,', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'purest', 'form,', 'by', 'having', 'been', 'their', 'instructor,', 'inves-', 'tigator,', 'or', 'friend.\"55', 'The', 'narrative', 'of', \"women's\", 'history', 'was', 'thus', 'de-', 'signed', 'to', 'convince', 'readers', 'of', 'their', 'participation', 'in', 'a', 'modernity', 'that', 'they', 'obstinately', 'refused', 'to', 'recognize.', 'Even', 'men', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'convinced.', 'As', '\"C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus\"', 'reminded', 'his', 'male', 'readers,', 'the', 'improvement', 'of', '\"national', 'manners,', 'morals,', 'and', 'happiness\"', 'was', 'owed', 'to', '\"female', 'sway,\"', 'and', 'that', 'sway', 'was', 'progressing', 'toward', 'even', 'greater', 'refinement:', '\"The', 'lovely', 'mothers', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'day', 'attend', 'to', 'their', 'pleasing', 'duties', 'with', 'more', 'zeal', 'and', 'sense', 'than', 'their', 'grandmothers', 'did.\"56', 'These', 'writers', 'ex-', 'pect', 'the', 'reader', 'to', 'participate', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'social', 'conversion', 'to', 'the', 'his-', 'torical', 'revelation', 'of', \"woman's\", 'reforming', 'capacities,', 'either', 'acceding', 'to', 'female', 'influence', 'or', 'learning', 'to', 'wield', 'it.', 'Recognition', 'of', 'these', 'connections', 'makes', 'comprehensible', 'the', 'oft-', 'noted', 'anxieties', 'about', 'public,', '\"writable\"', 'women', 'whose', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'defined', 'as', 'historical', 'within', 'accepted', 'canons', 'of', 'evidence,', 'and', 'therefore', 'take', 'on', 'meaning', 'through', 'their', 'particularity.', 'If,', 'ideally,', 'a', \"woman's\", 'life', 'was', 'too', 'uneventful', 'to', 'warrant', 'narration', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'then', 'a', '\"historical', 'woman\"', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'as', 'a', 'disruption:', 'a', 'woman', 'with', 'a', 'fragmentary', 'or', 'nonexistent', 'domestic', 'existence', 'was', 'too', 'obviously', 'singular', 'to', 'be', 'situated', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history;', 'historians', 'had', 'to', 'account', 'for', 'and', 'explain', 'away', 'the', 'existence', 'of', 'such', 'figures.', 'For', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', '\"it', 'were', 'idle\"', 'to', 'regard', 'her', '\"World-noted', 'Women\"', 'as', 'anything', 'other', 'than', '\"isolated', 'exemplars', 'of', 'special', 'qualities;', 'they', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'much', 'types', 'of', 'a', 'class', 'of', 'women,', 'as', 'types', 'of', 'particular', 'womanly', 'at-', 'tributes.\"57', 'Women', 'who', 'stand', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'can', 'be', 'narrated', 'within', 'Cowden', \"Clarke's\", 'biographical', 'series', 'only', 'insofar', 'as', 'they,', 'as', 'individu-', 'als,', 'typify', 'fragmentary', 'qualities', 'possessed', 'by', 'women.', 'By', 'constructing', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'singular', 'lives,', 'Cowden', 'Clarke', 'also', 'constructs', 'a', 'single', 'unified', 'woman;', 'but', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'she', 'defines', 'famous', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'as', 'failures,', 'their', 'natures', 'fragmented', 'by', 'political', 'participation', 'instead', 'of', 'unified', 'by', 'domestic', 'and', 'Christian', 'harmony.', 'The', 'woman', 'who', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'too', 'different,', 'idiosyncratic,', 'unrepeatable,', 'atypical.', 'The', 'governing', 'metaphor', 'for', 'her', 'is', 'the', 'comet:', 'fashionable', 'women', '\"fly', 'off', 'like', 'comets', 'from', 'their', 'appointed', 'orbits,', 'and', 'threaten', 'destruc-', 'tion', 'to', 'the', 'whole', 'social', 'system\";', 'a', 'woman', 'out', 'of', 'her', 'sphere', 'is', '\"comet-', 'like,', 'wandering', 'in', 'irregular', 'orbits,', 'dazzling', 'indeed', 'by', 'their', 'brilliancy,', '55.', '\"On', 'Modern', 'Female', 'Cultivation.', 'No.', 'IV,\"', 'Athenaeum', '250', '(1832):', '521.', '56.', 'C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus,', 'Hints', 'on', 'Life;', 'and', 'How', 'to', 'Rise', 'in', 'Society', '(London,', '1845),', 'pp.', '109-10.', '57.', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', 'World-Noted', 'Women;', 'Or,', 'Types', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Attributes', 'of', 'All', 'Lands', 'and', 'Ages', '(New', 'York,', '1858),', 'p.', '3.', '68', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'but', 'terrifying', 'by', 'their', 'eccentric', 'movements', 'and', 'doubtful', 'utility\";', 'an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'would', 'be', 'like', 'the', 'star', 'of', 'Venus,', 'if', 'it', '\"should', 'be-', 'come', 'a', 'fiery', 'comet,', 'and', 'rush', 'through', 'the', 'sky,', 'bringing', 'dismay', 'with', 'her', 'light,', 'and', 'causing', 'a', 'deeper', 'darkness', 'as', 'she', 'passed', 'away.\"58', 'Like', 'comets,', 'women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'are', 'terrifying', 'precisely', 'because', 'they', 'deviate', 'from', 'the', 'norm.', 'No', 'writer', 'can', 'transform', 'them', 'into', 'exemplary', 'figures,', 'for', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'universal', 'about', 'their', 'moral', 'and', 'intellec-', 'tual', 'qualities', 'save', 'their', 'unpredictability.', \"Women's\", 'historians', 'thus', 'distinguished', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'women,', 'lying', 'passively', 'invisible', 'until', 'written', 'up', 'by', 'the', 'historian,', 'from', 'the', '\"comets,\"', 'making', 'themselves', 'visible', 'through', 'their', 'own', 'exertions.', 'In', 'making', 'this', 'distinction,', 'writers', 'further', 'stigmatized', 'attention', 'to', '\"event-', 'fulness\"', 'itself', 'as,', 'at', 'best,', 'a', 'misreading', 'of', 'history', 'and,', 'at', 'worst,', 'an', 'un-', 'Christian', 'practice.', 'Since', \"women's\", 'histories', 'often', 'used', 'sensationalism', 'as', 'a', 'selling', 'point', 'despite', 'their', 'contrary', 'moral', 'claims,', 'this', 'anti-event', 'rhetoric', 'was', 'also', 'a', 'means', 'for', 'an', 'individual', 'writer', 'to', 'clear', 'space', 'for', 'his', 'or', 'her', 'own', 'text.', 'Jane', 'Williams', 'complained', 'that', '\"several', 'miscellaneous', 'collections', 'of', 'the', 'lives', 'of', 'celebrated', 'women', 'have', 'been', 'published', 'in', 'England,', 'apparently', 'without', 'any', 'other', 'principle', 'of', 'selection', 'than', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'and', 'contemporary', 'notoriety,', 'and', 'perplexing', 'the', 'ambi-', 'tious', 'aspirations', 'of', 'youthful', 'readers,', 'by', 'setting', 'before', 'them', 'the', 'dark', 'doings', 'and', 'daring', 'ascents', 'of', 'the', 'Catherines', \"de'\", 'Medici', 'and', 'of', 'Russia,', 'and', 'the', 'discordant', 'careers', 'of', 'the', 'daughters', 'of', 'Sir', 'Anthony', 'Cooke', 'and', 'of', 'Queen', 'Elizabeth.\"\\'59', 'More', 'importantly,', 'this', 'strategy', 'led', \"women's\", 'history', 'to', 'apply', 'the', 'Christian', 'definition', 'of', 'political', 'historiography', 'as', 'itself', 'a', 'vehicle', 'of', 'evil,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'dwells', 'on', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.', 'For', 'the', 'more', 'doomsaying', 'writer,', 'this', 'evil', 'could', 'be', 'turned', 'to', 'account;', 'as', '\"M.A.K.\"', 'put', 'it,', '\"while', '[history]', 'communicates', 'the', 'events', 'of', 'past', 'ages,', 'it', 'clearly', 'pourtrays', 'the', 'unhappy', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'wicked,', 'and', 'demonstrates', 'most', 'awfully', 'the', 'retributive', 'justice', 'of', 'the', 'Almighty,', 'which', 'is', 'so', 'frequently', 'manifested', 'in', 'this', 'world-doubtless', 'for', 'our', 'ad-', 'monition.\"60', 'For', 'most', 'writers,', 'however,', 'this', 'approach', 'went', 'directly', 'against', 'their', 'doctrines', 'of', 'love', 'and', 'feminine', 'tenderness.', 'Women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'might', 'be', '\"comets,\"', 'but', 'the', 'historian', 'who', 'narrated', 'their', 'lives', 'succumbed', 'to', 'an', 'unworthy', 'desire', 'for', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.', 'The', 'anonymous', 'figure', 'who', 'wrote', 'that', '\"women', 'who', 'have', 'attained', 'no-', 'toriety', 'in', 'any', 'way,', 'have', 'been,', 'for', 'the', 'most', 'part,', 'wanting', 'in', 'the', 'accom-', '58.', 'Respectively,', 'Mrs.', 'Virginia', 'Cary,', 'Letters', 'on', 'Female', 'Character;', 'Addressed', 'to', 'a', 'Young', 'Lady', 'on', 'the', 'Death', 'of', 'Her', 'Mother,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Hartford,', 'Conn.,', '1831),', 'p.', '134;', 'Lewis,', 'p.', '47;', 'and', 'Hale,', 'p.', 'xlv.', '59.', 'Jane', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Literary', 'Women', 'ofEngland.', 'Including', 'a', 'Biographical', 'Epitome', 'of', 'All', 'the', 'Most', 'Eminent', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1700;', 'And', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Poetesses', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1850;', 'with', 'Extracts', 'from', 'their', 'Works,', 'and', 'Critical', 'Remarks', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '10-11.', '60.', 'M.', 'A.', 'K.,', 'Biography', 'for', 'Young', 'Ladies', '(London,', '1839),', 'p.', '214.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '69', 'plishment', 'of', 'virtue!\"', 'may', 'have', 'been', 'merely', 'a', 'misogynist,', 'but', 'others', 'who', 'were', 'not', 'agreed', 'with', 'him', '(or', 'her):', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'in', 'an', 'impor-', 'tant', 'early', 'work', 'on', \"Shakespeare's\", 'heroines', 'that', 'also', 'implicitly', 'retracted', 'her', 'earlier', 'biographical', 'histories,', 'complained', 'that', '\"women', 'are', 'illus-', 'trious', 'in', 'history,', 'not', 'from', 'what', 'they', 'have', 'been', 'in', 'themselves,', 'but', 'generally', 'in', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'mischief', 'they', 'have', 'caused,\"', 'and', 'the', 'abolitionist', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child', 'noted', 'that', '\"in', 'searching', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women,', 'the', 'mild,', 'unobtrusive', 'domestic', 'virtues..,', 'are', 'not', 'found', 'on', 'record.\"61', 'In', 'this', 'context,', 'women', 'in', 'history-even', 'women', 'in', '\"ev-', 'eryone', 'else\\'s\"', \"women's\", 'history-are', 'merely', 'anomalies', 'indexing', 'anom-', 'alies,', 'instead', 'of', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'figures', 'whose', 'private', 'virtues', 'can', 'be', 'universalized', 'by', 'an', 'appropriately', 'Christian', 'author.', 'The', 'only', 'excuse', 'for', 'a', \"woman's\", 'departure', 'from', 'the', 'private', 'sphere', 'is', 'the', 'pull', 'of', 'forces', 'beyond', 'her', 'control;', 'a', 'truly', 'feminine', 'woman', 'never', 'voluntarily', 'partici-', 'pates', 'in', 'historical', 'action.', '\"Sutherland', 'Menzies\"', '(Elizabeth', 'Stone)', 'de-', 'clared', 'this', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'moral', 'of', 'her', 'antifeminist', 'collection:', '\"Certain', 'celebrated', 'women', 'who', 'have', 'flung', 'themselves', 'with', 'ardour', 'into', 'the', 'vor-', 'tex', 'of', 'politics\"', 'had', 'necessarily', 'sacrificed', '\"conjugal', 'happiness,', 'the', 'wel-', 'fare', 'of', 'children,', 'domestic', 'peace,', 'reputation,', 'and', 'all', 'the', 'amenities', 'of', 'the', 'gentle', 'life.\"\\'62', 'By', 'contrast,', 'the', 'truly', 'heroic', 'woman', 'simply', 'relin-', 'quishes', 'her', 'will', 'in', 'the', 'face', 'of', 'extraordinary', 'events,', 'in', 'what', 'Samuel', 'Mossman', 'called', 'an', '\"involuntary', 'act', 'of', 'the', 'sentiments', 'or', 'affections.\"63', '\"History\"', 'in', 'these', 'citations', 'signifies', 'worldly', 'experience,', 'improperly', 'taken', 'as', 'a', 'norm', 'for', 'moral', 'behavior.', 'Yet', 'the', 'disruption', 'of', 'female', 'subjectivity', 'through', 'historical', 'participation,', 'even', 'if', 'that', 'participation', 'was', 'anomalous,', 'remained', 'an', 'insoluble', 'difficulty.', 'The', 'spectacle', 'of', 'the', '\"masculine\"', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'thus', 'the', 'sign', 'of', 'a', 'crisis', 'both', 'in', 'the', \"author's\", 'construction', 'of', 'history', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'larger', 'system', 'of', 'cultural', 'signification.', 'The', 'masculinized', 'woman', 'is', 'dangerous', 'not', 'simply', 'be-', 'cause', 'she', 'threatens', 'gender', 'categories', 'but', 'also', 'because', 'her', 'presence', 'complicates', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and,', 'by', 'posing', 'interpretive', 'difficul-', 'ties,', 'threatens', 'moral', 'categories', 'as', 'well.', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'masculine', 'woman,', 'not', '\"woman,\"', 'who', 'serves', 'as', 'the', 'trope', 'for', 'historical', 'anachronism;', 'when', 'she', 'qualifies', 'as', 'a', 'historical', 'woman,', 'she', 'overlaps', 'dangerously', 'with', 'the', 'Great', 'Man.', 'Invoking', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages', 'as', 'his', 'frame', 'for', 'an', 'antifemi-', 'nist', 'argument,', 'William', 'Hamley', 'asked', 'the', 'readers', 'of', 'the', 'conservative', '61.', 'Woman:', 'As', 'She', 'Is,', 'and', 'As', 'She', 'Should', 'Be,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1835),', '2:2;', 'Mrs.', '[Anna', 'Brownell]', 'Jameson,', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'Women,', 'Moral,', 'Poetical,', 'and', 'Historical,', '3d', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1836),', '1:18;', 'and', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child,', 'Brief', 'History', 'of', 'the', 'Condition', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations,', '5th', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1845),', '2:209.', '62.', '\"Sutherland', 'Menzies,\"', 'Political', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1873),', '1:vii.', '63.', 'Samuel', 'Mossman,', 'Gems', 'of', 'Womanhood:', 'Or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Distinguished', 'Women', 'in', 'Vari-', 'ous', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations', '(London,', '[', '1870?', ']),', 'p.', 'iv.', '70', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', \"Blackwood's\", 'Magazine', 'to', 'adjudicate', 'between', 'the', '\"ladies', 'of', 'manlike', 'ten-', 'dencies\"', 'and', 'the', '\"quiet,', 'soft', 'beings', 'who', 'held', 'fast', 'by', 'the', 'instincts', 'and', 'traditions', 'of', 'their', 'sex.\"', 'Even', 'though', 'he', 'was', 'willing', 'to', 'make', 'exceptions', 'for', 'such', 'manlike', 'women', 'as', 'Joan', 'of', 'Arc', 'and', 'Zenobia,', 'who', '\"impelled', 'by', 'patriotism', 'or', 'other', 'temporary', 'enthusiasm,', 'against', 'their', 'inclination', 'and', 'practice,', 'transform', 'themselves', 'for', 'a', 'time,\"', \"Hamley's\", 'argument', 'was', 'clear:', 'the', 'woman', 'who', 'entered', 'the', 'lists', 'of', 'war', 'and', 'politics', 'not', 'only', 'be-', 'came', 'a', 'hermaphroditic', 'figure', 'but', 'also', 'failed', 'to', 'measure', 'up', 'to', 'later', 'moral', 'standards.', 'Even', 'the', 'motives', 'ascribed', 'to', 'his', 'exceptions', 'are', 'dis-', 'paraged', 'as', '\"temporary', 'enthusiasm\";', 'instead', 'of', 'being', 'called', 'to', 'duty,', 'they', 'called', 'themselves', 'without', 'any', 'true,', 'permanent,', 'or', 'consistent', 'ded-', 'ication.', 'In', \"Hamley's\", 'formulations,', 'historical', 'specificity', 'marks', 'the', 'pecu-', 'liarity', 'and', 'hence', 'the', 'irrelevance', 'of', 'the', 'event,', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'discount', 'any', 'potential', 'relevance', 'for', 'future', 'practices.', '\"We', 'find', 'her', 'natural', 'relative', 'state', 'to', 'be', 'one', 'of', 'subordination', 'to', 'men', 'in', 'both', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'times,\"', 'Hamley', 'remarks,', 'and', '\"we', 'find', 'this', 'natural', 'condition', 'reversed', 'at', 'a', 'particular', 'period', 'on', 'one', 'quarter', 'of', 'the', 'world;', 'but', 'reversed', 'by', 'a', 'particular', 'combination', 'of', 'circumstances.\"64', 'In', 'his', 'call', 'to', 'judgment,', 'the', 'juxtaposition', 'of', 'past', 'and', 'present', 'invokes', 'a', 'modern', 'consensus', 'about', 'the', 'feminine', '(what', '\"we\"', 'think)', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'insist', 'upon', 'the', 'unfa-', 'miliarity', 'of', 'a', 'past', 'in', 'which', 'gender', 'difference', 'appears', 'fluid.', 'By', 'invok-', 'ing', 'historical', 'specificity', 'in', 'this', 'manner,', 'Hamley', 'makes', 'masculinity', 'in', 'a', 'woman', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'exemplarity.', 'The', 'masculine', 'woman', 'is', 'identified', 'with', 'the', 'anomalous', 'event', 'which', 'teaches', 'nothing', 'except', 'the', 'impossibility', 'of', 'its', 'repetition.', 'In', 'turn,', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'does', 'not', 'so', 'much', 'reduce', 'to', 'purely', 'masculine', 'actions', 'as', 'become', 'the', 'reposi-', 'tory', 'of', '\"true\"', 'feminine', 'behavior', '(\"quiet,', 'soft', 'beings\").', 'By', 'incorporat-', 'ing', 'women', 'who', 'do', 'nothing', 'manly', 'yet', 'exhibit', 'a', 'high', 'order', 'of', 'feminine', 'virtue,', 'while', 'simultaneously', 'excising', 'hybrid', 'figures', '(\"manlike', 'ladies\")', 'from', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'progress,', 'Hamley', 'temporarily', 'creates', 'a', 'unified', 'narrative', 'of', 'historical', 'change', 'couched', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'eternal', 'gender', 'differences.', 'If', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', 'moral', 'history', 'was', 'supposed', 'to', 'sup-', 'plant', 'political', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'most', 'valuable', 'realm', 'of', 'human', 'endeavor,', 'Hamley', 'reasserts', 'the', 'primacy', 'of', 'the', 'political', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'situate', 'the', 'feminine', 'as', 'its', 'supplement.65', '64.', '[William', 'Hamley],', '\"Women', 'in', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages,\"', \"Blackwood's\", 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine', '102', '(1867):', '627-28.', '65.', 'Postbellum', 'American', 'serial', 'biographies,', 'however,', 'often', 'challenge', 'this', 'insistence', 'upon', 'strictly', 'delineated', 'gender', 'roles.', 'L.', 'P.', \"Brockett's\", 'and', 'Mary', 'C.', \"Vaughan's\", \"Woman's\", 'Work', 'in', 'the', 'Civil', 'War:', 'A', 'Record', 'of', 'Heroism,', 'Patriotism,', 'and', 'Patience', '(1867),', 'William', 'Wor-', 'thington', \"Fowler's\", 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'American', 'Frontier...', '(1877),', 'and', 'Frank', \"Moore's\", 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'War;', 'Their', 'Heroism', 'and', 'Self-Sacrifice', '(1867)', 'all', 'redefine', 'masculinity', 'and', 'femininity', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'American', 'expansion', 'or', 'to', 'the', 'postbellum', 'social', 'order.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '71', 'If,', 'moreover,', 'the', 'project', 'of', 'domesticating', 'history', 'meant', 'that', 'event-', 'ful', 'narrative-profane', 'historiography-could', 'be', 'ended,', 'this', 'domesti-', 'cation', 'meant', 'educating', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'into', 'an', 'interpretive', 'process', 'that', 'would', 'end', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'further', 'interpretation.', 'Yet', 'such', 'ideally', 'do-', 'mesticated', 'history', 'proves', 'a', 'contradictory', 'exercise.', 'Supposedly,', 'women', 'are', 'born', 'into', 'a', 'Christian', 'era', 'that', 'judges', 'character', 'on', 'universal', 'moral', 'principles.', 'A', 'woman', 'perceptible', 'to', 'the', 'political', 'historian,', 'however,', 'chronologically', 'regresses', 'by', 'being', 'reinscribed', 'into', 'local', 'and', 'specific', 'circumstances;', 'in', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'she', 'reenacts', \"Eve's\", 'fall.', 'Yet', 'if', 'the', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'succumbs', 'to', 'the', 'new', 'apple', 'of', 'public', 'activity,', 'her', 'fall', 'is', 'nevertheless', 'merely', 'individual;', 'as', 'she', 'comes', 'into', 'view,', 'she', 'actually', 'reinforces', 'the', 'reality', 'of', 'the', 'new', 'Eden', 'inhabited', 'by', 'the', 'more', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'type.', 'As', 'the', 'prolific', 'popular', 'biographer', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams', 'argued', '(in', 'relation', 'to', 'Madame', 'de', 'Stadl),', 'a', 'woman', 'who', '\"lived', 'too', 'much', 'in', 'the', 'glare', 'of', 'the', 'lamps,', 'and', 'fed', 'too', 'eagerly', 'upon', 'the', 'ap-', 'plause', 'of', 'the', 'crowd\"', 'had,', 'from', 'the', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', '\"patient', 'analyst,\"', 'an', '\"imperfect', '...', 'career\":', 'it', 'showed', 'that', '\"so', 'prodigal', 'an', 'expenditure', 'of', 'power', 'accomplished', 'so', 'little', 'good.\"', 'According', 'to', 'the', \"analyst's\", 'patient', 'diagnosis,', 'which', 'directly', 'contrasts', 'with', 'his', \"subject's\", 'impulsiveness,', 'de', \"Stall's\", 'very', 'publicity', 'makes', 'her', 'irrelevant', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'moral', 'progress.66', 'In', 'order', 'to', 'explain', 'why', 'women', 'cannot', 'achieve', 'equality,', 'it', 'is', 'necessary', 'to', 'argue', 'that', 'local', 'circumstances', 'are', 'immediately', 'pertinent', 'once', 'women', 'enter', 'into', 'public', 'notice.', 'Madame', 'du', \"Chatelet's\", '\"relaxed', 'morals-the', 'mixture', 'of', 'pride,', 'worldliness,', 'and', 'intellect,', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'was', 'distinguished-her', 'external', 'observance', 'of', 'every', 'convenance-', 'and', 'her', 'total', 'want', 'of', 'religious', 'feeling-are', 'alike', 'characteristic', 'of', 'her', 'station', 'and', 'her', 'age,\"', 'observes', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh', 'of', 'one', 'influential', 'French', 'woman', 'of', 'letters', 'in', 'Enlightenment', 'France.', 'So', 'characteristic', 'that', 'the', 'nineteenth-century', 'Englishwoman', 'can', 'learn', 'nothing', 'from', 'her,', 'save', 'what', 'actions', 'and', 'beliefs', 'are', 'no', 'longer', 'possible', 'or', 'even', 'desirable;', 'it', 'is', 'significant', 'that', 'Kavanagh', 'stipulates', 'that', 'her', 'book', 'is', 'an', '\"analysis', 'of', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'eighteenth', 'century,\"', 'and', 'not,', 'as', 'is', 'usually', 'the', 'case,', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations.67', 'Even', 'as', 'authors', 'claim', 'that', 'women', 'have', 'truly', 'evolved', 'into', 'their', 'historically', 'proper', 'position', 'of', 'domestic', 'solitude,', 'their', 'texts', 'return', 'again', 'and', 'again', 'to', 'the', 'dangers', 'of', 'their', 'straying', 'outside', 'it', 'in', 'search', 'of', 'forbidden', 'fruits.', 'The', 'abstract', 'nature', 'of', 'womanliness', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'account,', 'in', 'other', 'words,', 'actually', 'requires', 'the', 'ever-present', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'woman', 'desiring', '66.', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'Famous', 'Beauties', 'and', 'Historic', 'Women:', 'A', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Croquis', 'Biographies,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1865),', '2:180.', '67.', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh,', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'Eighteenth', 'Century', '(Philadelphia,', '1850),', 'pp.', '14,', '112.', '72', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'to', 'engage', 'with', '(and', 'thus', 'be', 'inscribed', 'by)', 'the', 'historical', 'particularity', 'that', 'still', 'marks', 'the', 'postlapsarian', 'world.', 'Accordingly,', 'the', 'only', 'hope', 'for', 'the', '\"Great', 'Woman\"', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'to', 'transcend', 'circumstances', 'altogether,', 'leaving', 'her', 'character', 'unaffected', 'by', 'her', 'education.', 'Dr.', 'Elizabeth', \"Blackwell's\", '\"varied', 'experiences', 'would', 'never', 'lessen', 'that', 'feminine', 'delicacy', 'which', 'has', 'ever', 'yet', 'distinguished', 'her\";', 'Sarah', 'Trimmer,', 'despite', 'her', 'public', 'success', 'as', 'an', 'author,', 'was', 'nevertheless', '\"always', 'more', 'willing', 'to', 'listen', 'than', 'to', 'speak,', 'more', 'con-', 'scious', 'of', 'her', 'own', 'defects', 'than', 'her', 'success\";', 'Charlotte', \"Bronto's\", 'popular', 'success', '\"neither', 'altered', 'her', 'habits,', 'nor', 'overcame', 'her', 'dislike', 'and', 'shy-', 'ness', 'of', 'company,', 'nor', 'very', 'materially', 'affected', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'her', 'home\";', 'and', 'Fanny', \"Burney's\", 'celebrity', 'never', '\"unsettled', 'her', 'mind,', 'or', 'turned', 'her', 'aside', 'from', 'home', 'and', 'its', 'affections.\"68', 'Such', 'women', 'are', 'the', 'agents', 'of', 'historical', 'narrative', 'but', 'themselves', 'lack', 'subjectivities', 'amena-', 'ble', 'to', 'narration;', 'there', 'are', 'stories', 'told', 'about', 'them,', 'but', 'their', 'personal-', 'ities', 'do', 'not', 'change', 'between', 'the', 'beginning', 'and', 'the', 'end.', 'If', 'masculinized', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Elizabeth', 'I', 'precipitate', 'a', 'crisis', 'within', 'interpretation', 'by', 'shaping', 'their', 'identities', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'moment,', 'eternally', 'femi-', 'nine', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Trimmer', 'pose', 'a', 'similar', 'difficulty', 'presented', 'as', 'a', 'solution.', 'From', 'a', 'Victorian', 'perspective,', 'the', 'increasing', 'number', 'of', 'these', 'ahistorical', 'figures', 'is', 'a', 'peculiarly', 'modern', 'phenomenon,', 'however', 'the', 'chronological', 'boundaries', 'of', 'modernity', 'are', 'defined;', 'the', 'apex', 'of', 'his-', 'torical', 'development', 'occurs', 'when', 'femininity', 'is', 'defined', 'not', 'by', 'mate-', 'rial', 'circumstances', 'but', 'by', 'religious', 'faith', 'dissociated', 'from', 'its', 'worldly', 'situation.', 'Perhaps', 'ironically,', 'writers', 'seized', 'on', 'the', 'British', 'constitution', 'as', 'the', 'supreme', 'means', 'of', 'celebrating', 'the', 'apotheosis', 'of', 'gendered', 'historical', 'development', 'while', 'inadvertently', 'exposing', 'the', 'self-conflicting', 'nature', 'of', 'that', 'project.', 'Queen', \"Victoria's\", 'own', 'carefully', 'constructed', 'image', 'as', 'a', 'private', 'woman', 'could', 'be', 'inscribed', 'into', \"women's\", 'history', 'as', 'the', 'teleo-', 'logical', 'outcome', 'of', 'British', 'politics.', 'The', 'feminization', 'of', 'British', 'royalty', 'was', 'most', 'commonly', 'articulated', 'by', 'comparing', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Elizabeth', 'I.', 'Even', 'before', 'Victoria', 'came', 'to', 'the', 'throne,', 'the', 'art', 'historian', 'and', 'literary', 'critic', 'Anna', 'Jameson', 'had', 'argued', 'that', \"Elizabeth's\", 'reign', 'exemplified', 'the', 'woman', 'whose', 'absolutism', 'is', 'grounded', 'in', 'her', 'own', 'weakness,', 'for', 'she', 'conducts', 'all', 'her', 'business', '\"on', 'the', 'principle', 'of', 'self-preservation', 'and', 'self-interest,', 'rather', 'than', 'of', 'enlightened', 'benevolence', '....', '\"69', 'The', 'polit-', '68.', 'Respectively,', '[Joseph', 'Johnson],', 'Heroines', 'of', 'our', 'Time:', 'Being', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Women,', 'with', 'Examples', 'of', 'their', 'Benevolent', 'Works,', 'Truthful', 'Lives,', 'and', 'Noble', 'Deeds', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '262;', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'Working', 'Women', 'of', 'this', 'Century:', 'The', 'Lesson', 'of', 'their', 'Lives,', '3d', 'ed.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '31;', 'Women', 'of', 'Worth:', 'A', 'Book', 'for', 'Girls', '(London,', '1854),', 'p.', '119;', 'Mossman,', 'p.', '18.', '69.', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Female', 'Sovereigns,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1831),', '1:295-96.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '73', 'ical', 'woman', 'of', 'this', 'reading', 'is', 'a', 'mentally', 'blinkered', 'figure', 'motivated', 'by', 'irrational', 'private', 'desires', 'rather', 'than', 'public', 'patriotism.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Vic-', \"toria's\", 'maternal', 'devotion', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'staged', 'for', 'public', 'consumption)', 'combined', 'with', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'interest', 'in', 'state', 'affairs', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'repre-', 'sented', 'in', 'the', 'biographical', 'texts)', 'becomes', 'not', 'only', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'queenship', 'but', 'also', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'womanhood.', 'Elizabeth', 'remains', 'stigmatized', 'as', 'a', 'woman', 'of', 'primarily', '\"manly', 'qualities,\"', 'lacking', 'in', 'all', '\"ten-', 'derness,', 'softness,', 'pity,', 'and', 'forgiveness,\"', 'although', 'the', 'writer', 'who', 'claimed', 'that', 'the', 'word', '\"queen\"', 'on', 'her', 'tomb', 'should', 'be', 'changed', 'to', '\"quean\"', 'was', 'a', 'bit', 'extreme.70', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'however,', 'was', 'described', 'not', 'only', 'as', '\"the', 'noblest', 'example', 'of', 'domestic', 'purity', 'and', 'social', 'propriety\"', '-particularly', 'in', 'contrast', 'to', 'her', 'immediate', 'male', 'predecessors-but', 'also', 'as', 'the', 'pos-', 'sessor', 'of', 'a', 'fullness', 'of', 'private', 'life', 'unavailable', 'to', 'Elizabeth,', 'who', '\"enjoyed', 'no', 'real', 'and', 'solid', 'happiness\";', '\"never', 'had', 'a', 'country', 'a', 'brighter', 'or', 'more', 'perfect', 'example', 'of', 'all', 'home', 'duties,', 'and', 'all', 'social', 'virtues,', 'than', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'private', 'life', 'of', 'her', 'majesty.\\'\"71', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'thus', 'becomes', 'living', 'proof', 'that', 'history', 'progresses', 'toward', 'an', 'ever-increasing', 'feminine', 'domesticity.', 'She', 'is', 'the', '\"noblest', 'example\"', 'both', 'synchronically', 'and', 'diachronically,', 'the', 'sympathetic', 'sov-', 'ereign', 'who', 'shines', 'by', 'feminine', \"spirituality's\", 'authentic', 'light,', 'not', 'by', 'monarchical', \"spectacle's\", 'borrowed', 'tinsel.', 'As', 'the', \"nation's\", 'most', 'visible', 'woman,', 'yet', 'one', 'who', 'resists', 'masculinization', 'by', 'historical', 'events,', 'Victo-', 'ria', 'is', 'the', 'truly', 'virtuous', 'female', 'citizen,', '\"keeping', 'our', 'Empire', 'great,', 'and', 'true,', 'and', 'conquering\"', 'while', 'rendering', 'literal', 'the', 'boast', 'that', '\"her', 'king-', 'dom', 'reposes', 'on', 'the', 'sanctity', 'of', 'home.\"72', 'Thus', 'appropriated', 'to', 'image', 'the', 'proper', 'relation', 'of', 'woman', 'to', 'politics,', 'Victoria', 'also', 'becomes', 'the', 'figure', 'for', 'benevolent', 'imperial', 'government,', 'where', 'maternal', 'love', 'dis-', 'places', 'the', 'workings', 'of', 'force.', 'If', 'modernity', 'can', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'a', 'woman', 'on', 'the', 'throne,', 'then', 'futurity', 'can', 'be', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'feminization', 'of', 'the', \"empire's\", 'management.', 'But', \"Victoria's\", 'reign', 'also', 'meant', 'an', 'end', 'to', 'historical', 'writing', 'as', 'it', 'was', 'once', 'practiced.', '\"Isabella', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'were', 'one', 'and', 'the', 'same', 'thing;', '70.', 'Louisa', 'Stuart', 'Costello,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Englishwomen,', '4', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:iv;', 'and', 'Mary', 'Howitt,', 'ed.,', 'Biographical', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain.', 'From', 'the', 'Nor-', 'man', 'Conquest', 'to', 'the', 'Reign', 'of', 'Victoria.', 'Or,', 'Royal', 'Book', 'of', 'Beauty', '(London,', '1851),', 'p.', '404.', '71.', 'Howitt,', 'p.', '516;', 'Illustrious', 'Women', 'Who', 'Have', 'Distinguished', 'Themselves', 'for', 'Virtue,', 'Piety,', 'and', 'Benevolence', '(London,', '1852),', 'pp.', '10-11.', '72.', '[Stopford', 'Augustus', 'Brooke],', '\"Womanhood', 'and', 'Its', 'Mission,\"', 'Dublin', 'University', 'Magazine', '43', '(1859):', '656.', 'The', 'most', 'extensive', 'catalog', 'of', 'ways', 'in', 'which', \"Victoria's\", 'image', 'was', 'produced,', 'circulated,', 'and', 'attacked', 'is', 'now', 'that', 'of', 'Richard', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Contentious', 'Crown:', 'Public', 'Discussion', 'of', 'the', 'British', 'Monarchy', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Aldershot,', '1997).', 'See', 'also', 'Margaret', 'Homans', 'and', 'Adrienne', 'Munich,', 'eds.,', 'Remaking', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Cambridge,', '1997),', 'and', 'Margaret', 'Homans,', 'Royal', 'Representations:', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'and', 'Brit-', 'ish', 'Culture,', '1837-1876', '(Chicago,', '1998),', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'appeared', 'too', 'late', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'take', 'advantage', 'of', 'in', 'this', 'essay.', '74', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY', 'Victoria', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'are', 'two', 'very', 'distinct', 'themes,\"', 'Frank', 'Goodrich', 'cannily', 'observed.', '\"The', 'one', 'is', 'within', 'the', 'province', 'of', 'Mrs.', 'Jameson;', 'the', 'other', 'within', 'that', 'of', 'Macaulay.\"73', 'Relegating', 'Victoria', 'to', \"Jameson's\", 'area', 'of', 'biographical', 'and', 'nonpolitical', 'expertise,', 'Goodrich', 'muffles', 'T.', 'B.', \"Macaulay's\", 'famous', 'call', 'for', 'a', 'unification', 'of', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'within', 'historical', 'narrative.', 'Where', 'women', 'are', 'concerned,', 'such', 'a', 'historical', 'project', 'must', 'be', 'referred', 'to', 'the', 'ages', 'before', 'the', 'privatization', 'of', 'the', 'monarchy.', 'Modern', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'are', 'produced', 'by', 'a', 'deliberate', 'rupture', 'between', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'spheres,', 'not', 'by', 'the', 'prospect', 'of', 'reunifying', 'them.', 'Instead', 'of', 'supplanting', 'profane', 'history', 'with', 'Christian', 'history', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all,', 'the', 'feminized', 'monarchy', 'guarantees', 'the', 'end-', 'less', 'necessity', 'for', 'profane', 'history', 'to', 'record', 'all', 'that', 'falls', 'outside', 'of', 'the', '\"province\"', 'of', 'Christian', 'history.', \"Goodrich's\", 'quip', 'neatly', 'suggests', 'that', 'the', '\"victory\"', 'of', 'the', \"women's\", 'historical', 'narrative,', 'in', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'justifies', 'not', 'the', 'end', 'of', 'writing', \"women's\", 'history', 'but,', 'in-', 'stead,', 'its', 'continuing', 'manufacture:', 'with', 'Queen', \"Victoria's\", 'advent,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'detached', 'from', 'political', 'narrative', 'instead', 'of', 'sub-', 'suming', 'and', 'ultimately', 'transcending', 'it.', 'The', 'ultimate', 'grounds', 'for', 'and', 'proof', 'of', 'the', 'propagation', 'of', 'Christian', 'truth', 'lay', 'in', 'the', 'unwritability', 'of', \"women's\", 'experience', 'according', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'canons', 'of', 'political', 'his-', 'toriography,', 'and', 'not', 'the', 'substitution', 'of', 'uneventful', \"women's\", 'history', 'for', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'political', 'violence.', 'I', 'have', 'argued', 'that', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'was', 'plotted', 'around', 'the', 'effacement', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'history', 'in', 'several', 'senses:', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'woman', 'disappeared', 'from', 'historical', 'view;', 'the', '\"masculine\"', 'woman', 'was', 'progressively', 'eliminated;', 'and', 'women', 'would', 'be', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'fu-', 'ture', \"historian's\", 'gaze', 'altogether.', 'Nonetheless,', 'this', 'plotting', 'claimed', 'to', 'establish', 'an', 'authentic', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'and,', 'by', 'extension,', 'an', 'authentic', 'means', 'of', 'promoting', 'moral', 'and', 'historical', 'progress.', 'By', 'cen-', \"tury's\", 'end,', 'however,', 'the', 'envisioned', 'culmination', 'of', \"women's\", 'historical', 'narrative', 'would', 'shift:', 'instead', 'of', 'explaining', 'the', 'progressive', 'domesti-', 'cation', 'of', 'modern', 'womanhood,', 'writers', 'began', 'seeking', 'the', 'origins', 'of', 'its', 'progressive', 'publicity', 'instead.', 'Nearly', 'twenty', 'years', 'after', 'Middlemarch', 'was', 'published,', 'the', 'well-known', 'antifeminist', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton-perhaps', 'recalling', \"Eliot's\", 'river', 'image-ended', 'her', 'serialized', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'by', 'characterizing', 'political', 'women', 'as', '\"the', 'shallow', 'brook\"', 'that', '\"brawls', 'where', 'the', 'noble', 'river', 'flows', 'silently.\"74', 'For', 'Linton,', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'narrative', 'of', 'public', 'femininity', '(at', 'which', 'Eliot', 'could', 'only', 'partially', '73.', 'Frank', 'B.', 'Goodrich,', 'Women', 'of', 'Beauty', 'and', 'Heroism', 'from', 'Semiramis', 'to', 'Eugenie:', 'A', 'Por-', 'trait', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Female', 'Loveliness,', 'Achievement,', 'and', 'Influence', '...', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', 'p.', '376.', '74.', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton,', '\"The', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'English', 'Women.', 'II,\"', 'Fortnightly', 'Review,', 'n.s.,', '45', '(1889):', '375.', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', 'o', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '75', 'hint', 'in', '1871-72)', 'had', 'been', 'realized', 'in', '1889.', \"Linton's\", 'own', 'project', 'identifies', 'feminine', 'domesticity', 'with', 'national', 'salvation.', 'Yet', 'for', 'her,', 'modernity', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', 'the', 'failure', 'of', 'this', 'narrative', 'of', 'progres-', 'sive', 'domestication', 'and', 'by', 'the', 'increasing', 'participation', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'Eliot', 'had', 'raised', 'the', 'possibility', 'that', 'women', 'had', 'some', 'other,', 'as', 'yet', 'unidentified', 'role-\"what', 'else', 'she', 'ought', 'rather', 'to', 'have', 'done\"-and', 'in', \"Linton's\", 'eyes,', 'that', 'unspecified', '\"else\"', 'is', \"woman's\", 'future', 'participation', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'For', 'Linton,', 'such', 'public', 'activity', 'would', 'make', 'modernity', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'narrative', 'failure:', 'the', 'collapse', 'of', 'his-', \"tory's\", 'progress', 'toward', 'domestication', 'and', 'invisibility.', 'Linton', 'can', 'only', 'warn', 'that', '\"we', 'believe', 'our', 'men', 'will', 'never', 'let', 'this', 'monstrous', 'wrong', 'come', 'to', 'pass.', '..', '.\"75', 'By', 'explicitly', 'calling', 'on', 'men', 'to', 'repress', 'the', 'threat', 'of', 'public', 'femininity,', 'Linton', 'inadvertently', 'advertises', 'the', 'bankruptcy', 'of', 'a', \"women's\", 'history', 'that', 'no', 'longer', 'produces', 'domestic', 'exemplars;', 'despite', 'all', 'efforts,', 'the', 'domestic', 'femininity', 'that', 'would', 'identify', 'the', 'apo-', 'theosis', 'of', 'Christian', 'morality', 'stubbornly', 'refused', 'to', 'exist', 'anywhere,', 'save', 'in', 'an', 'ever-receding', 'future.', 'Among', 'later', 'feminists,', 'the', 'publicity', 'that', 'Eliot', 'uneasily', 'anticipated', 'and', 'that', 'Linton', 'attacked', 'would', 'be', 'con-', 'sciously', 'adapted', 'as', 'the', 'basis', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'historiography;', 'it', 'is', 'perhaps', 'appropriate', 'that', 'in', 'introducing', 'her', 'biography', 'of', 'Linton,', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson', 'describes', 'her', 'as', '\"an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'opposed', 'to', \"women's\", 'emancipation.\"76', 'Because', 'Victorian', \"women's\", 'history', 'had', 'de-', 'manded', 'that', 'women', 'be', 'forgotten,', 'however,', 'its', 'own', 'rhetoric', 'consigned', 'it', 'to', 'historical', 'dust.', '75.', 'Eliot,', 'p.', '611;', 'and', 'Linton,', 'p.', '376.', '76.', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson,', 'Woman', 'against', 'Women', 'in', 'Victorian', 'England:', 'A', 'Life', 'of', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton', '(Bloomington,', 'Ind.,', '1987),', 'p.', 'x.']\n", - "Percent incorrect: 0.16329941860465116\n" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "from spellchecker import SpellChecker\n", "\n", @@ -124,14 +115,27 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 37, + "execution_count": 44, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "['@', '|', 'THE', 'UNIVERSITY', 'OF', 'CHICAGO', 'PRESS', 'JOURNALS\\n\\nFrom', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:', 'Popular', \"Women's\", 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention', 'of\\nModernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870\\n\\nAuthor(s):', 'Miriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein\\nSource:', 'Modern', 'Philology,', 'Aug.,', '1999,', 'Vol.', '97,', 'No.', '1', '(Aug.,', '1999),', 'pp.', '46-75\\nPublished', 'by:', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago', 'Press\\n\\nStable', 'URL:', '|https://www.jstor.org/stable/', '439034\\n\\nREFERENCES\\n\\nJSTOR', 'is', 'a', 'not-for-profit', 'service', 'that', 'helps', 'scholars,', 'researchers,', 'and', 'students', 'discover,', 'use,', 'and', 'build', 'upon', 'a', 'wide\\nrange', 'of', 'content', 'in', 'a', 'trusted', 'digital', 'archive.', 'We', 'use', 'information', 'technology', 'and', 'tools', 'to', 'increase', 'productivity', 'and\\nfacilitate', 'new', 'forms', 'of', 'scholarship.', 'For', 'more', 'information', 'about', 'JSTOR,', 'please', 'contact', 'support@jstor.org.\\n\\nYour', 'use', 'of', 'the', 'JSTOR', 'archive', 'indicates', 'your', 'acceptance', 'of', 'the', 'Terms', '&', 'Conditions', 'of', 'Use,', 'available', 'at\\nhttps://about.jstor.org/terms\\n\\nThe', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago', 'Press', 'is', 'collaborating', 'with', 'JSTOR', 'to', 'digitize,', 'preserve', 'and', 'extend\\naccess', 'to', 'Modern', 'Philology\\n\\nJSTOR\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about', 'jstor.org/terms\\nFrom', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts:\\nPopular', 'Women’s', 'History', 'and', 'the', 'Invention\\nof', 'Modernity,', 'ca.', '1830-1870\\n\\nMIRIAM', 'ELIZABETH', 'BURSTEIN\\nState', 'University', 'of', 'New', 'York-Brockport\\n\\nIn', 'the', 'famous', '“Prelude”', 'and', 'conclusion', 'to', 'Middlemarch', '(1871-72)\\nGeorge', 'Eliot', 'addresses', 'the', 'question', 'of', 'woman’s', 'work', 'in', 'the', 'modern\\nworld', 'via', 'the', 'figure', 'of', 'Saint', 'Theresa.', 'The', '“later-born', 'Theresas,”', 'Eliot\\nwrites,', '“were', 'helped', 'by', 'no', 'coherent', 'social', 'faith', 'and', 'order', 'which', 'could\\nperform', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'knowledge', 'for', 'the', 'ardently', 'willing', 'soul”;', 'sim-\\nilarly,', 'she', 'says', 'in', 'the', 'conclusion,', '“[a]', 'new', 'Theresa', 'will', 'hardly', 'have', 'the\\nopportunity', 'of', 'reforming', 'a', 'conventual', 'life,', 'any', 'more', 'than', 'a', 'new', 'Anti-\\ngone', 'will', 'spend', 'her', 'heroic', 'piety', 'in', 'daring', 'all', 'for', 'the', 'sake', 'of', 'a', 'brother’s\\nfuneral:', 'the', 'medium', 'in', 'which', 'their', 'ardent', 'deeds', 'took', 'shape', 'is', 'forever\\ngone.”!', 'Female', 'heroism', 'stands', 'out', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'a', 'system', 'of', 'widely\\naccepted', 'beliefs', 'that', 'demarcates', 'the', '“knowledge”', 'graspable', 'by', 'the\\nquesting', '“soul.”', 'In', 'this', 'coherent', 'order,', 'the', 'female', 'hero', 'is', 'intelligi-\\nble', 'precisely', 'because', 'she', 'is', 'already', 'imagined', 'within', 'the', 'system', 'itself;\\nSaint', 'Theresa', 'is', 'a', 'reformer', 'in', 'the', 'cause', 'of', 'her', 'Christian', 'faith,', 'while\\nAntigone’s', '“heroic', 'piety”', 'is', 'exerted', 'to', 'preserve', 'rites', 'of', 'honorable\\nburial', 'that', 'have', 'been', 'denied.', 'Theresa', 'and', 'Antigone', 'are', 'rendered\\ncoherent', 'as', 'figures', 'within', 'narrative', 'by', 'participating', 'in', 'searches', 'di-\\nrected', 'by', 'common', 'knowledge,', 'but', 'in', 'an', 'age', 'of', 'fragmented', 'belief', 'the\\nfemale', 'heroine', 'becomes', 'increasingly', 'unrecognizable', 'as', 'a', 'heroine', 'of\\nthe', '“epic”', 'type,', 'her', '“struggles”', 'no', 'longer', 'easily', 'interpreted', 'by', 'the\\naverage', 'observer;', 'whereas', 'Theresa', 'has', 'an', '“epic', 'life,”', 'her', 'later', 'avatars\\nhave', '“struggles”', 'which', 'to', '“common', 'eyes', '.', '.', '.', 'seemed', 'mere', 'inconsistency\\nand', 'formlessness.”*\\n\\nEliot’s', 'nostalgia', 'for', 'a', 'lost', 'age', 'of', 'female', 'heroism', 'seems', 'to', 'invert\\nVictorian', 'domestic', 'ideology', 'as', 'we', 'conventionally', 'understand', 'it:', 'the\\nheroine', 'may', '“now”', '(in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century)', 'be', 'literally', 'unimagin-\\n\\n1.', 'George', 'Eliot,', 'Middlemarch,', 'ed.', 'Gordon', 'S.', 'Haight', '(Boston,', '1956),', 'pp.', '3,', '612.\\n2.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '3.\\n\\n©', '1999', 'by', 'The', 'University', 'of', 'Chicago.', 'All', 'rights', 'reserved.', '0026-8232/2000/9701-0003$02.00\\n\\n46\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '47\\n\\nable,', 'but', 'this', 'disappearance', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'public', 'narratives', 'is', 'a', 'sign\\nof', 'loss', 'rather', 'than', 'progress.', 'The', 'novel’s', 'concluding', 'lines', 'might', 'at', 'first\\nbe', 'read', 'positively:', '“Her', 'full', 'nature,', 'like', 'that', 'river', 'of', 'which', 'Cyrus', 'broke\\nthe', 'strength,', 'spent', 'itself', 'in', 'channels', 'which', 'had', 'no', 'great', 'name', 'upon\\nthe', 'earth.', 'But', 'the', 'effect', 'of', 'her', 'being', 'on', 'those', 'around', 'her', 'was', 'incal-\\nculably', 'diffusive:', 'for', 'the', 'growing', 'good', 'of', 'the', 'world', 'is', 'partly', 'depen-\\ndent', 'on', 'unhistoric', 'acts;', 'and', 'that', 'things', 'are', 'not', 'so', 'ill', 'with', 'you', 'and', 'me\\nas', 'they', 'might', 'have', 'been,', 'is', 'half', 'owing', 'to', 'the', 'number', 'who', 'have', 'lived\\nfaithfully', 'a', 'hidden', 'life,', 'and', 'rest', 'in', 'unvisited', 'tombs.”>', 'Yet', 'the', 'only\\ntruly', 'positive', 'element', 'here', 'is', 'the', '“incalculably', 'diffusive”', 'nature', 'of', 'Dor-\\nothea’s', '“effect.”', 'Additionally,', 'qualifiers', 'such', 'as', '“partly”', 'and', '“half”', 'make\\nhidden', 'actions', 'interdependent', 'with', 'public', 'ones;', 'female', 'influence', 'is\\nconsequently', 'decentered', 'as', 'an', 'agent', 'of', 'social', 'reform.', 'Finally,', 'Eliot’s\\nsimile', 'of', 'the', 'dispersed', 'river', 'acidly', 'erodes', 'the', 'ideal', 'of', 'feminine', 'self-\\nsacrifice.', 'Dorothea’s', '“unhistoric', 'acts”', 'are', 'as', 'much', 'mandated', 'by', 'mod-\\nern', 'culture', 'as', 'they', 'are', 'the', 'partial', 'means', 'of', 'redeeming', 'that', 'culture.\\n\\nFor', 'critics', 'such', 'as', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', 'Alison', 'Booth,', 'and', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,\\nMiddlemarch', 'offers', 'a', 'positive', 'alternative', 'to', 'contemporary', 'Victorian\\nhistoriography—not', 'just', 'to', 'the', '“masculinist”', 'focus', 'on', 'war', 'and', 'politics,\\nbut', 'also', 'to', 'the', 'popular', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'that', 'flourished', 'during', 'the\\nnineteenth', 'century.*', 'But', 'attempts', 'to', 'find', 'a', 'more', '“truthful”', 'represen-\\ntation', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'in', 'Eliot’s', 'fiction', 'raise', 'other', 'problems,', 'not\\nleast', 'what', 'I', 'suggest', 'is', 'her', 'ambivalence', 'about', 'the', 'adequacy', 'of', 'any', 'mod-\\nern', 'historical', 'narrative', 'to', 'explain', 'a', 'Victorian', 'woman’s', 'career.', 'Yet', 'to\\ngo', 'further,', 'Eliot', 'also', 'questions', 'whether', 'the', 'absence', 'of', 'such', 'narratives\\nmight', 'diagnose', 'a', 'still', 'greater', 'malaise', 'in', 'nineteenth-century', 'culture.\\nThis', 'article', 'argues', 'that', 'Eliot’s', 'ambivalence', 'marks', 'key', 'issues', 'in', 'a', 'larger\\ndiscourse', 'about', 'gender,', 'history,', 'and', 'modernity,', 'a', 'discourse', 'which\\ncannot', 'be', 'adequately', 'addressed', 'by', 'claiming', 'that', 'Eliot’s', 'more', 'truthful\\nor', 'realistic', 'representations', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'surpassed', 'it.\\n\\nTo', 'reconstruct', 'this', 'discourse,', 'I', 'consider', 'a', 'wide', 'range', 'of', 'Victorian\\ntexts', 'that', 'either', 'wrote', 'the', 'history', 'of', '“Woman”', 'or', 'put', 'that', 'history', 'to\\npolitical', 'use,', 'including', 'biography', 'collections,', 'universal', 'histories', 'of\\nwomen', 'in', '“all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations,”', 'periodical', 'articles,', 'and', 'devotional\\nmaterials.', 'In', 'general,', 'histories', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'seek', 'the', '“origins”', 'of\\nfeminist', 'historiography,', 'an', 'approach', 'that', 'understandably', 'privileges\\nprotofeminist', 'authors.', 'Indeed,', 'the', 'recent', 'surge', 'of', 'scholarly', 'interest\\n\\n3.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '613.\\n\\n4.', 'Sophia', 'Andres,', '“The', 'Unhistoric', 'in', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot’s', 'Challenge', 'to', 'Victorian\\nHistoriography,”', 'Clio', '26', '(1996):', '79-95;', 'Alison', 'Booth,', '“Little', 'Dorrit', 'and', 'Dorothea', 'Brooke:\\nInterpreting', 'the', 'Heroines', 'of', 'History,”', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Literature', '41', '(1986):', '190-216;\\nand', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,', '“Reinventing', 'History:', 'George', 'Eliot', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'Discourses', 'of\\nGender', 'and', 'Historiography”', '(Ph.D.', 'diss.,', 'Cornell', 'University,', '1995),', 'pp.', '227-69.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n48', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nin', 'early', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'derives', 'from', 'an', 'author-centered', 'feminist\\ninterest', 'in', '“lost”', 'women', 'historians.°', 'By', 'maintaining', 'this', 'specific', 'focus\\non', 'women', 'historians,', 'however,', 'historians', 'and', 'literary', 'critics', 'rein-\\nforce', 'a', 'Victorian', 'stereotype', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'women’s', 'work—“a\\nshower', 'of', 'pretty', 'books', 'in', 'red', 'and', 'blue,', 'gilded', 'and', 'illustrated,', 'light\\nand', 'dainty', 'and', 'personal”®—thereby', 'marginalizing', 'the', 'men', 'responsi-\\nble', 'for', 'at', 'least', 'half', 'of', 'the', 'nearly', '300', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'produced', 'in\\nthe', 'nineteenth', 'century.', 'Without', 'considering', 'the', 'multiple', 'authors', 'of\\n(and', 'audiences', 'for)', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century,', 'it', 'is\\nimpossible', 'to', 'understand', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'their', 'cultural', 'impact.”\\n\\nThe', 'focus', 'on', 'women', 'authors', 'is', 'particularly', 'inadequate', 'when', 'one\\nconsiders', 'how', 'such', 'texts', 'were', 'produced.', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women\\nwere', 'churned', 'out', 'at', 'astounding', 'speed', 'with', 'no', 'attention', 'to', 'method-\\nological', 'innovation:', 'books', 'published', 'in', '1829', 'and', '1889', 'are', 'virtually\\nindistinguishable', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'their', 'historiographical', 'standards.', 'Faced\\nwith', 'demands', 'for', 'rapid', 'turnaround', 'time,', 'authors', 'wrote', 'encyclopedic\\ntexts', 'characterized', 'by', 'instances', 'of', 'déja', 'lu,', 'plagiarism,', 'and', 'mutual', 'raid-\\ning', 'of', 'sources.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'therefore', 'expresses', 'neither\\na', 'uniquely', 'feminine', 'perspective', 'nor', 'a', 'distinctly', 'feminine', 'voice.', 'Ac-\\ncordingly,', 'I', 'shift', 'focus', 'from', '(female)', 'authors', 'to', 'texts', 'and', 'their', 'audi-\\nences', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'trace', 'the', 'techniques', 'by', 'which', 'histories', 'of', 'women\\nwere', 'presented', 'as', 'appropriately', 'moralized', 'knowledge', 'about', '“mod-\\nern,”', 'Christian', 'femininity.\\n\\n5.', 'Natalie', 'Zemon', 'Davis,', '“Women’s', 'History', 'in', 'Transition:', 'The', 'European', 'Case,”', 'Femi-\\nnist', 'Studies', '3', '(1976):', '83-103,', 'and', '“Gender', 'and', 'Genre:', 'Women', 'as', 'Historical', 'Writers,\\n1400-1820,”', 'in', 'Beyond', 'Their', 'Sex:', 'Learned', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'European', 'Past,', 'ed.', 'Patricia', 'H.', 'La-\\nbalme', '(New', 'York,', '1980),', 'pp.', '153-82;', 'Kathryn', 'Kish', 'Sklar,', '“American', 'Female', 'Historians\\nin', 'Context,', '1770-1930,”', 'Feminist', 'Studies', '3', '(1975):', '171-84;', 'and', 'Bonnie', 'Smith,', '“The', 'Con-\\ntribution', 'of', 'Women', 'to', 'Modern', 'Historiography', 'in', 'Great', 'Britain,', 'France,', 'and', 'the', 'United\\nStates,', '1750-1940,”', 'American', 'Historical', 'Review', '89', '(1984):', '709-32.', 'D.', 'R.', 'Woolf’s', 'work', 'on\\nwomen', 'historians', 'in', 'the', 'early', 'modern', 'period', 'promises', 'to', 'be', 'definitive;', 'see', '“A', 'Feminist\\nPast?', 'Gender,', 'Genre,', 'and', 'Historical', 'Knowledge', 'in', 'England,', '1500-1800,”', 'American', 'His-\\ntorical', 'Review', '102', '(1997):', '645-79.\\n\\n6.', '[Margaret', 'Oliphant],', '“Modern', 'Light', 'Literature—History,”', 'Blackwood’s', 'Edinburgh\\nMagazine', '78', '(1855):', '437.\\n\\n7.', 'For', 'a', 'sampling', 'of', 'work', 'devoted', 'to', 'Victorian', 'histories', 'of', 'women,', 'see', 'Rohan', 'Maitzen,\\n“*This', 'Feminine', 'Preserve’:', 'Historical', 'Biographies', 'by', 'Victorian', 'Women,”', 'Victorian', 'Studies\\n38', '(1995):', '371-93;', 'Billie', 'Melman,', '“Gender,', 'History,', 'and', 'Memory:', 'The', 'Invention', 'of\\nWomen’s', 'Past', 'in', 'the', 'Nineteenth', 'and', 'Early', 'Twentieth', 'Centuries,”', 'History', 'and', 'Memory', '5\\n(1993):', '5-41;', 'and', 'Martha', 'Vicinus,', '“Models', 'for', 'Public', 'Life:', 'Biographies', 'of', '‘Noble\\nWomen’', 'for', 'Girls,”', 'in', 'The', 'Girl’s', 'Own:', 'Cultural', 'Histories', 'of', 'the', 'Anglo-American', 'Girl,', '1830-\\n1915,', 'ed.', 'Claudia', 'Nelson', 'and', 'Lynne', 'Vallone', '(Athens,', 'Ga.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '52-70.', 'Ronald', 'J.\\nZboray’s', 'sampling', 'of', 'one', 'American', 'library’s', 'loan', 'lists', 'suggests', 'that', 'Agnes', 'Strickland’s\\nLives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'was', 'nearly', 'as', 'popular', 'with', 'men', '(eleven', 'patrons)', 'as', 'women\\n(sixteen', 'patrons);', 'see', '“Reading', 'Patterns', 'in', 'Antebellum', 'America:', 'Evidence', 'in', 'the', 'Charge\\nRecords', 'of', 'the', 'New', 'York', 'Society', 'Library,”', 'Libraries', 'and', 'Culture', '26', '(1991):', '310,', '316-21.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '49\\n\\nI', 'do', 'not', 'presume,', 'however,', 'that', 'these', 'texts', 'either', 'unproblematically\\nreflected', 'or', 'produced', 'Victorian', 'attitudes', 'about', 'gender', 'and', 'history.', 'In-\\nstead,', 'the', 'majority', 'of', 'them', 'constituted', 'a', '“commercially', 'respectable”\\ndiscourse', 'on', 'women’s', 'history', 'that', 'was', 'inflected', 'by', 'multiple', 'factors:\\nthe', 'publisher’s', 'sense', 'of', 'marketplace', 'trends,', 'the', 'author’s', 'financial', 'mo-\\ntivations,', 'and', 'the', 'pedagogical', 'ideals', 'of', 'teachers', 'and', 'parents.', 'Writers\\nof', 'popular', 'women’s', 'history', 'were', 'appealing', 'to', 'an', 'audience', 'of', 'their', 'pub-\\nlishers', 'and', 'of', 'other', 'popular', 'writers', 'as', 'much', 'as', 'to', 'recreational', 'readers.®\\nThis', 'commercially', 'respectable', 'discourse', 'presents', 'a', 'condensed', 'form\\nof', 'the', 'debate', 'about', 'women’s', 'roles', 'and', 'their', 'relation', 'to', 'historical\\nmoments', 'and', 'to', 'historiography,', 'a', 'debate', 'that', 'writers', 'such', 'as', 'Eliot\\nor', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'could', 'invoke', 'and', 'rewrite', 'for', 'their', 'own', 'purposes.\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'ultimately', 'appeared', 'as', 'an', 'easily', 'recogniz-\\nable', 'set', 'of', 'frameworks', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'used', 'either', 'to', 'consolidate', 'or', 'to\\ncritique', 'woman’s', 'position', 'in', 'Victorian', 'culture.\\n\\nThe', 'best-known', 'histories', 'of', 'women’s', 'history,', 'such', 'as', 'those', 'by', 'Rohan\\nMaitzen', 'and', 'Billie', 'Melman,', 'read', 'these', 'works', 'as', 'either', 'secular', 'or', 'pro-\\ngressively', 'secularized.', 'By', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'religious', 'investments', 'of\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history,', 'I', 'show,', 'by', 'contrast,', 'how', 'certain', 'historians\\nand', 'polemicists', 'confronted', 'the', 'simultaneously', 'exemplary', 'and', 'poten-\\ntially', 'subversive', '“woman', 'in', 'history,’', 'thematizing', 'the', 'problems', 'of\\nknowledge', 'which', 'the', 'writing', 'and', 'reading', 'of', 'such', 'a', 'figure', 'entailed.\\nWomen’s', 'historians', 'sought', 'to', 'isolate', 'the', 'moment', 'when', 'modern', 'fem-\\nininity', 'would', 'become', 'identical', 'with', 'the', 'representations', 'of', 'ideal', 'femi-\\nnine', 'virtue', 'they', 'found', 'in', 'the', 'New', 'Testament;', 'their', 'narratives', 'pointed\\ntoward', 'the', '(implicitly', 'or', 'explicitly', 'millennial)', 'time', 'when', 'femininity\\nwould', 'coincide', 'with', 'its', 'original', 'ideal', 'and', 'thus', 'would', 'no', 'longer', 'require\\nhistorical', 'debate', 'and', 'representation.?', 'But', 'such', 'texts', 'point,', 'paradoxi-\\ncally,', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'ultimate', 'irrelevance', 'in', 'a', 'truly', 'Christian', 'world.', 'I\\ndemonstrate', 'that', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'tried', 'to', 'define', 'a', 'mod-\\nern', 'Protestant', 'historical', 'perspective', 'that', 'rendered', 'women’s', 'history\\nknowable', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place,', 'even', 'as', 'they', 'argued', 'that', 'a', 'modernity', 'dom-\\ninated', 'by', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'Christian', 'faith', 'should', 'render', 'the', 'actual', 'writing\\nof', 'women’s', 'history', 'anachronistic.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'these', 'texts', 'elucidates\\n\\n8.', 'I', 'here', 'qualify', 'Jonathan', 'Rose’s', 'empirical', 'studies', 'of', 'reader', 'reception,', 'which', 'dem-\\nonstrate,', 'for', 'example,', 'that', '“women’s', 'literature”', 'was', 'often', 'unpopular', 'with', 'its', 'target\\naudience.', 'Rose’s', 'sweeping', 'formulations', 'do', 'not', 'quite', 'come', 'to', 'grips', 'with', 'the', 'problem\\nthat', '“women’s', 'literature”', 'continued', 'to', 'be', 'produced', 'anyway.', 'See', '“Rereading', 'the', 'En-\\nglish', 'Common', 'Reader:', 'A', 'Preface', 'to', 'a', 'History', 'of', 'Audiences,”', 'Journal', 'of', 'the', 'History', 'of\\nIdeas', '53', '(1992):', '47-70.\\n\\n9.', 'FR.', 'Ankersmit', 'has', 'identified', 'historicity', 'with', 'multiplying', 'explanatory', 'narratives;\\nwhen', 'a', 'subject', 'no', 'longer', 'generates', 'debate,', 'it', 'becomes', 'a', '“thing”', 'beyond', 'the', 'reach', 'of\\nboth', 'interpretation', 'and', 'historiography.', 'See', 'History', 'and', 'Tropology:', 'The', 'Rise', 'and', 'Fall', 'of\\nMetaphor', '(Berkeley,', '1994),', 'pp.', '39,', '42.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n50', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\npopular', 'ideas', 'about', 'how', 'gender', 'was', 'shaped', 'by', 'historical', 'conditions\\nand', 'how', 'this', 'shaping', 'could', 'be', 'appropriately', 'narrated,', 'clarifying', 'the\\nsignificance', 'of', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'for', 'Victorian', 'historiography', 'in\\ngeneral', 'and', 'the', 'Victorian', 'novel', 'in', 'particular.\\n\\nThe', 'preoccupation', 'with', 'the', 'social', 'implications', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'hardly', 'originated', 'with', 'the', 'Victorians.', 'In', 'the', 'previous', 'century,\\nfor', 'example,', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'featured', 'prominently', 'in', 'books', 'such\\nas', 'John', 'Millar’s', 'The', 'Origin', 'of', 'the', 'Distinction', 'of', 'Ranks', '(1779),', 'which', 'con-\\nnected', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'woman’s', 'social', 'position', 'to', 'the', 'development\\nof', 'civilization', 'more', 'generally.', '!°', 'Nevertheless,', 'the', 'Victorians', 'signifi-\\ncantly', 'revised', 'the', 'meaning', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'by', 'using', 'particular\\ngenres,', 'theories', 'of', 'religious', 'development,', 'and', 'moral', 'justifications\\nfor', 'historical', 'writing.', 'Indeed,', 'one', 'of', 'the', 'most', '“Victorian”', 'aspects', 'of\\nVictorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'is', 'its', 'reactionary', 'generic', 'form.', 'The', 'exem-\\nplary', 'biographical', 'collection,', 'which', 'identifies', '“virtuous”', 'or', '“vicious”\\nhistorical', 'figures', 'for', 'the', 'reader’s', 'emulation', 'or', 'disapprobation,', 'signaled\\na', 'Victorian', 'return', 'to', 'a', 'genre', 'of', 'medieval', 'and', 'Renaissance', 'encomiastic\\nliterature', 'on', 'women.', 'Like', 'these', 'earlier', 'texts,', 'Victorian', 'exemplary', 'lives\\nwere', 'in', 'their', 'starkest', 'form', 'lists', 'or', 'catalogs,', 'using', 'sheer', 'numbers', 'to\\nemphasize', 'woman’s', 'significance', 'in', 'history.!!', 'But', 'new', 'to', 'the', 'mid-nine-\\nteenth-century', 'version', 'of', 'this', 'genre', 'was', 'an', 'interest', 'in', 'how', 'woman’s', 'so-\\ncial', 'position', 'diagnosed', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'society', 'as', 'a', 'whole.\\n\\nWomen’s', 'history', 'became', 'popular', 'in', 'the', '1830s', 'as', 'a', 'commercial', 'ven-\\nture,', 'fueled', 'by', 'new', 'improvements', 'in', 'print', 'technology', 'which', 'cheap-\\nened', 'publication', 'costs.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'allied', 'their\\nwritings', 'with', 'popular', 'didactic', 'literature', 'and', 'directed', 'their', 'work', 'at\\nconsumers', 'of', 'conduct', 'books', 'and', 'popular', 'theology.', 'Most', 'authors', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'were', 'popularizers', 'who', 'worked', 'in', 'several', 'commercial\\ngenres', 'at', 'once.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'the', 'best', 'known', 'and', 'most', 'respected\\nof', 'them,', 'published', 'not', 'only', 'lives', 'of', 'English', 'queens', 'but', 'also', 'historical\\nnovels,', 'lives', 'of', 'bishops', 'and', 'bachelor', 'kings,', 'poetry,', 'children’s', 'history,\\nbook', 'reviews,', 'and', 'periodical', 'articles.', 'With', 'the', 'rare', 'exception', 'of', 'origi-\\nnal', 'researchers', 'such', 'as', 'Strickland,', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'tied\\nthe', 'quality', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'its', 'moral', 'efficacy', 'instead', 'of', 'its', 'schol-\\narly', 'credentials.', 'Few', 'authors', 'were', 'quite', 'so', 'self-exculpatory', 'as', 'the', 'evan-\\n\\n10.', 'For', 'a', 'useful', 'introduction', 'to', 'Millar’s', 'thought', 'on', 'women,', 'see', 'Paul', 'Bowles,', '“John\\nMillar,', 'the', 'Four-Stages', 'Theory,', 'and', 'Women’s', 'Position', 'in', 'Society,”', 'History', 'of', 'Political\\nEconomy', '16', '(1984):', '619-38.\\n\\n11.', 'For', 'further', 'background', 'on', 'the', 'earlier', 'traditions,', 'see', 'Pamela', 'Joseph', 'Benson,', 'The\\nInvention', 'of', 'the', 'Renaissance', 'Woman:', 'The', 'Challenge', 'of', 'Female', 'Independence', 'in', 'the', 'Literature\\nand', 'Thought', 'of', 'Italy', 'and', 'England', '(University', 'Park,', 'Pa.,', '1992);', 'Alcuin', 'Blamires,', 'The', 'Case\\nfor', 'Women', 'in', 'Medieval', 'Culture', '(Oxford,', '1997);', 'and', 'Glenda', 'McLeod,', 'Virtue', 'and', 'Venom:\\nCatalogs', 'of', 'Women', 'from', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Renaissance', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1991).\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '51\\n\\ngelical', 'conduct-book', 'writer', 'Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis,', 'who', 'excused', 'her', 'work\\non', 'the', 'grounds', 'that', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'female', 'historians', 'potentially', 'offered\\na', 'greater', '“moral...', 'than', 'in', 'those', 'which', 'might', 'justly', 'be', 'preferred', 'for\\nmerits', 'of', 'a', 'purely', 'historical', 'order,”', 'but', 'Ellis', 'stands', 'out', 'only', 'in', 'admit-\\nting', 'to', 'the', 'common', 'practice', 'of', 'elevating', 'moral', 'didacticism', 'over', 'factual\\naccuracy.', '!?', 'In', 'pursuit', 'of', 'their', 'ostensibly', 'moral', 'priorities,', 'these', 'histo-\\nrians', 'foregrounded', 'the', 'individual', 'Great', 'Woman', 'and', 'her', 'spiritual\\nwork.', 'Great', 'Women', 'were', 'most', 'commonly', 'written', 'up', 'in', 'biography', 'col-\\nlections', 'with', 'titles', 'such', 'as', 'Biographies', 'of', 'Good', 'Women,', 'The', 'Book', 'of', 'Noble\\nEnglishwomen,', 'Folly’s', 'Queen,', 'or,', 'Women', 'Whose', 'Loves', 'Have', 'Ruled', 'the', 'World,\\nand', 'Lives', 'of', 'Twelve', 'Bad', 'Women.', 'These', 'biographical', 'collections', 'were\\norganized', 'in', 'a', 'variety', 'of', 'ways,', 'by', 'chronology,', 'themes', '(moral', '“types”),\\nor', 'antithetical', 'characters.', 'As', 'collective', 'narratives,', 'they', 'underscored\\nsimilarities', 'between', 'individual', 'women’s', 'biographies;', 'the', 'overall', 'story\\nof', 'these', 'texts', 'emerged', 'by', 'emphasizing', 'moral', 'progress', 'and', 'the', 'increas-\\ning', 'effect', 'of', 'women’s', '“invisible”', 'work.', '!%\\n\\nOne', 'of', 'the', 'most', 'obvious', 'characteristics', 'of', 'these', 'biographies,', 'as', 'I\\nwill', 'show', 'in', 'detail', 'later,', 'is', 'the', 'emptiness', 'of', 'the', 'exemplary', 'lives', 'they\\npresent.', 'Evil', 'figures', 'lead', 'eventful', 'lives,', 'which', 'could', 'be', 'sensationalized\\nunder', 'the', 'guise', 'of', 'morality—“the', 'record', 'of', 'such', 'crimes,', 'though', 'it\\nraises', 'a', 'thrill', 'of', 'breathless', 'horror,', 'conveys', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'a', 'useful\\nlesson”!4—but', 'virtuous', 'lives', 'are', 'defined', 'by', 'internal', 'qualities', 'such', 'as\\npiety.', 'The', 'focus', 'on', 'piety', '(which', 'all', 'women', 'can', 'emulate)', 'and', 'the\\ndowngrading', 'of', 'unique', 'experiences', '(reserved', 'for', 'a', 'few)', 'democratize\\nvirtue,', 'holding', 'out', 'a', 'morally', 'positive', 'but', 'historically', 'vacuous', 'equality\\naccessible', 'to', 'all.', 'Moral', 'concerns', 'dictated', 'a', 'focus', 'on', 'Judeo-Christian\\nwomen,', 'with', 'emphasis', 'on', '“Christian.”', 'Biblical', 'women', 'were', 'popular\\nsubjects,', 'inspiring', 'dozens', 'of', 'books,', 'including', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox’s\\nFemale', 'Scripture', 'Biography', '(1817),', 'Phineas', 'Camp', 'Headley’s', 'The', 'Women\\nof', 'the', 'Bible', '(1850),', 'and', 'Harriet', 'Beecher', 'Stowe’s', 'Women', 'in', 'Sacred', 'History\\n(1874).!5', 'In', 'general,', 'women’s', 'histories', 'were', 'biased', 'toward', 'ecumenical\\nProtestant', 'examples,', 'although', 'individual', 'denominations,', 'particularly\\nthe', 'Methodists,', 'often', 'produced', 'more', 'theologically', 'specific', 'works.\\nCatholicism', 'was', 'a', 'different', 'matter.', 'Despite', 'Catholic', 'emancipation', 'in\\n\\n12.', 'Mrs.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney]', 'Ellis,', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'Great', 'Men', '(London,', '1859),', 'p.', '70.\\n\\n13.', 'Iam', 'indebted', 'to', 'Annette', 'Wheeler', 'Cafarelli’s', 'extensive', 'analysis', 'of', 'how', 'collective\\nbiographies', 'function', 'as', 'narratives', 'in', 'Prose', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Poets:', 'Romanticism', 'and', 'Biographi-\\ncal', 'Narrative', 'from', 'Johnson', 'to', 'DeQuincey', '(Philadelphia,', '1990).\\n\\n14.', 'Madame', '[Laure]', 'Junot,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Women', 'of', 'All', 'Countries', '(London,\\n1834),', 'p.', '65.\\n\\n15.', 'Mary', 'de', 'Jong', 'has', 'discussed', 'books', 'on', 'biblical', 'women', 'as', 'a', 'separate', 'genre', 'in\\n“Dark-Eyed', 'Daughters:', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Popular', 'Portrayals', 'of', 'Biblical', 'Women,”\\nWomen’s', 'Studies', '19', '(1991):', '293-308.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n52', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\n1829,', 'British', 'Catholic', 'writers', 'produced', 'little', 'in', 'the', 'way', 'of', 'popular\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'in', 'the', 'nineteenth', 'century', 'aside', 'from', 'some', 'hagiogra-\\nphies', '(e.g.,', 'J.', 'M.', 'Neale’s', 'Annals', 'of', 'Virgin', 'Saints', '[1846]),', 'and', 'Protestant\\nhistories', 'were', 'often', 'profoundly', 'anti-Catholic', 'in', 'sentiment.', 'The', 'Vic-\\ntorians', 'were', 'chary', 'of', 'representing', 'women', 'of', 'classical', 'antiquity,', 're-\\ngarding', 'them', 'at', 'best', 'as', 'representatives', 'of', 'a', 'lower', 'virtue', 'and', 'at', 'worst\\nas', 'irretrievably', 'debauched', 'by', 'ancient', 'sexual', 'attitudes—in', 'the', 'words\\nof', 'one', 'sermon,', '“darkened', 'and', 'degraded,', 'without', 'knowledge,', 'without\\ninfluence,', 'without', 'honor,', 'the', 'mere', 'drudge', 'of', 'society,', 'or', 'still', 'worse,\\nthe', 'miserable', 'slave', 'of', 'sensual', 'passion.”!®\\n\\nVictorian', 'historiographical', 'thinking', 'had', 'a', 'special', 'place', 'for', 'narra-\\ntives', 'formed', 'out', 'of', 'a', 'series', 'of', 'short', 'lives.', 'Such', 'texts', 'bridged', 'political\\nhistory', 'and', 'fiction:', 'the', 'former', 'a', 'source', 'of', 'empirical', 'truth', 'and', 'a', 'key\\nto', 'Providence,', 'but', 'absorbed', 'with', 'wars', 'and', 'governments;', 'the', 'latter', 'a\\npotential', 'repository', 'of', 'universal', 'moral', 'truth,', 'but', 'also', 'liable', 'to', 'dan-\\ngerously', 'mislead', 'in', 'its', 'representations', 'of', '“real', 'life.”', 'In', 'the', 'words', 'of', 'an\\nanonymous', 'writer', 'calling', 'for', 'an', '“English', 'Plutarch,”', '“we', 'want', 'a', 'work\\nthat', 'shall', 'bring', 'before', 'us', 'in', 'a', 'moderate', 'compass', 'an', 'outline', 'of', 'the', 'ac-\\ntions', 'and', 'fortunes', 'of', 'those', 'persons', 'who', 'have', 'stamped', 'on', 'it', 'or', 'em-\\nbodied', 'in', 'themselves', 'its', 'most', 'characteristic', 'features,', 'and', 'who', 'seem\\nto', 'us,', 'when', 'we', 'are', 'acquainted', 'with', 'their', 'history,', 'most', 'typical', 'of', 'all\\nthat', 'we', 'mean', 'by', 'English.”', '7', 'As', 'personalized', 'history,', 'these', 'biographical\\nnarratives', 'miniaturize', 'and', 'contain', '“Englishness”', 'in', 'a', 'comprehensible,\\naccessible', 'form.', 'The', 'distinguished', 'subjects', 'of', 'biographical', 'history', 'de-\\nserve', 'historical', 'treatment,', 'yet', 'the', 'virtues', 'that', 'make', 'them', 'great', 'are', 'in\\nfact', 'endemic', 'to', 'English', 'character.', 'An', 'English', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'articu-\\nlate', 'both', 'the', 'formation', 'of', 'modern', 'Englishness', 'and', 'its', 'apparently\\ntranshistorical', 'character.', 'And', 'with', 'some', 'necessary', 'modifications,', 'a\\nfemale', 'Plutarch', 'would', 'undertake', 'a', 'similar', 'project', 'for', 'women.\\n\\nWriters', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'argued', 'that', 'narrative', 'events', 'and', 'their\\nimpact', 'on', 'the', 'reader', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'evaluated', 'according', 'to', 'their', 'potential\\nfor', 'producing', 'greater', 'moral', 'goods.', 'Biographical', 'history,', 'it', 'was', 'claimed,\\ndownplayed', 'the', 'evils', 'of', 'political', 'history', 'while', 'emphasizing', 'the', 'moral\\nqualities', 'of', 'private', 'experience.', 'In', 'the', 'late', '1820s,', 'one', 'anonymous', 'biog-\\nrapher', 'wrote', 'that', 'while', 'history—that', 'is,', 'the', 'story', 'of', 'kings', 'and', 'queens,\\n\\n16.', 'J.', 'F', 'Stearns,', 'Female', 'Influence,', 'and', 'the', 'True', 'Christian', 'Mode', 'of', 'Its', 'Exercise:', 'A', 'Discourse\\nDelivered', 'in', 'the', 'First', 'Presbyterian', 'Church', 'in', 'Newburyport,', 'July', '30,', '1837', '(Newburyport,\\nMass.,', '1837),', 'p.', '12.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'James', 'Donaldson', 'signals', 'his', 'feminist', 'leanings', 'by', 'prais-\\ning', 'the', 'treatment', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'antiquity', 'over', 'that', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era.', 'Most\\ngermane', 'is', 'the', 'last', 'in', 'his', 'series', 'of', 'five', 'essays,', '“The', 'Position', 'of', 'Women', 'Among', 'the', 'Early\\nChristians,”', 'Contemporary', 'Review', '56', '(1889):', '433-51.', 'Similarly,', 'see', 'B.', 'W.', 'Ball,', '“Woman’s\\nRights', 'in', 'Ancient', 'Athens,”', 'Atlantic', 'Monthly', '27', '(1871):', '273-86.\\n\\n17.', '“English', 'Biography,”', 'Saturday', 'Review', '9', '(1860):', '301.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '53\\n\\nwars', 'and', 'politics—‘“too', 'often', 'presents', 'a', 'frightful', 'tissue', 'of', 'crimes', 'and\\nhorrors,”', 'biography', '“frequently', 'reflects', 'from', 'its', 'calm', 'and', 'polished', 'sur-\\nface,', 'every', 'thing', 'that', 'is', 'excellent,', 'lovely,', 'and', 'of', 'good', 'report”—an\\necho', 'of', 'Philippians', '1:4-8,', 'here', 'used', 'to', 'represent', 'biography', 'as', 'the\\nsupreme', 'repository', 'of', 'Christian', 'knowledge', 'and', 'an', 'incitement', 'to\\ngreater', 'spirituality.', '!*', 'In', 'this', 'revision', 'of', 'the', '“mirror', 'of', 'history”', 'topos,\\nhorror', 'becomes', 'a', 'manifold', 'response:', 'it', 'is', 'the', 'evil', 'represented', 'in', 'his-\\ntorical', 'narrative;', 'it', 'is', 'also', 'the', 'magnitude', 'of', 'implication', 'that', 'envelops\\nthe', 'very', 'narrative', 'structure', '(the', '“frightful', 'tissue”)', 'in', 'the', 'horrors', 'of\\nthe', 'events', 'it', 'describes.', 'By', 'transforming', 'history', 'into', 'a', 'record', 'of', 'private\\nvirtues,', 'the', 'biographical', 'narrative', 'seems', 'to', 'offer', 'the', 'most', 'efficient\\nmethod', 'for', 'eradicating', 'the', 'horrors', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation:', 'both\\nthe', 'evils', 'represented', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'evil', 'that', 'could', 'be', 'wrought', 'on\\nunsuspecting', 'minds', 'by', 'the', 'reading', 'of', 'history.\\n\\nEven', 'more', 'specifically,', 'biographical', 'narratives', 'of', 'women', 'with', 'no\\nother', 'claim', 'to', 'fame', 'than', 'their', 'spiritual', 'qualities', 'were', 'elevated', 'above\\nnarratives', 'of', 'queens', 'and', 'concubines.', 'As', 'Stickney', 'Ellis', 'had', 'claimed,\\n“there', 'is', 'in', 'private', 'life', 'a', 'kind', 'of', 'heroism,', 'which', 'the', 'greater', 'part', 'of', 'men\\npay', 'no', 'attention,', 'and', 'which', 'frequently', 'is', 'more', 'deserving', 'our', 'eulogiums\\nthan', 'the', 'greatest', 'actions:', 'it', 'is', 'to', 'be', 'found', 'among', 'many', 'women,', 'whose\\nvirtues,', 'without', 'ostentation,', 'only', 'make', 'themselves', 'noticed', 'in', 'the', 'inte-\\nrior', 'of', 'their', 'houses.”!', 'When', 'translated', 'into', 'historical', 'practice,', 'Ellis’s\\nvision', 'of', 'a', 'female', 'heroism', 'everywhere', 'but', 'invisible', 'was', 'easily', 'assimi-\\nlated', 'into', 'the', 'moral', 'doctrine', 'of', 'Christian', 'humility.', 'If,', 'as', 'another', 'anon-\\nymous', 'writer', 'explained,', 'the', 'world', '“can', 'know', 'next', 'to', 'nothing', 'of', 'its\\nnoblest', 'women”', 'because', '“her', 'highest', 'achievements', 'consist', 'in', 'the', 'per-\\nformance', 'of', 'the', 'lowliest', 'duties,', 'and', 'her', 'costliest', 'sacrifices', 'are', 'offered\\nout', 'of', 'the', '‘unseen', 'treasure', 'of', 'her', 'heart’,”', 'still', 'it', 'is', 'occasionally', 'possible\\nto', 'memorialize', '“the', 'names', 'of', 'those', 'whose', 'greatest', 'work', 'was', 'carried\\non', 'in', 'their', 'own', 'hearts,', 'and', 'whose', 'fame', 'rose', 'highest', 'in', 'their', 'own\\nhomes.”*°', 'Such', 'biographical', 'histories', 'elevated', 'the', 'invisible', 'work', 'of\\nthe', 'meek', 'over', 'the', 'spectacular', 'doings', 'of', 'the', 'powerful,', 'inverting', 'the', 'po-\\nlitical', 'historian’s', 'priorities', 'by', 'making', 'Christian', 'virtue', 'and', 'not', 'political\\nacumen', 'the', 'prime', 'mover', 'in', 'national', 'life.', 'If', 'politics', 'produced', 'a', 'reader’s\\nhorrified', 'reaction', 'or,', 'worse,', 'seduced', 'the', 'reader', 'into', 'worldly', 'ways,', 'bio-\\ngraphical', 'histories', 'of', 'good', 'women', 'quieted', 'the', 'reader’s', 'spiritual', 'anxi-\\neties', 'while', 'providing', 'alternative', 'models', 'of', 'historical', 'greatness.\\n\\n18.', 'Selected', 'Female', 'Biography:', 'Comprising', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'British', 'Ladies,', 'Derived', 'from\\nOriginal', 'and', 'Other', 'Authentic', 'Sources,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1829),', 'p.', '22.', 'My', 'thanks', 'to', 'Janel\\nMueller', 'for', 'calling', 'this', 'biblical', 'allusion', 'to', 'my', 'attention.\\n\\n19.', '[Sarah', 'Stickney', 'Ellis],', 'The', 'Mothers', 'of', 'England:', 'Their', 'Influence', 'and', 'Responsibility\\n(London,', '1843),', 'p.', '153.\\n\\n20.', 'The', 'Home-Life', 'of', 'English', 'Ladies', 'in', 'the', 'XVIIth', 'Century', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', 'iii-iv.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n54', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nConjoining', 'biography', 'and', 'history', 'offered', 'a', 'best-of-both-worlds', 'op-\\nportunity,', 'for', 'women’s', 'history', 'embraced', 'both', 'pain', 'and', 'eventual,\\nsanctified', 'pleasure', 'as', 'a', 'means', 'of', 'inspiring', 'spiritual', 'emulation.', 'Robert\\nPhilip,', 'a', 'devotional', 'writer', 'and', 'author', 'of', 'biographical', 'collections', 'de-\\nvoted', 'to', 'biblical', 'women,', 'modeled', 'the', 'interpretation', 'of', 'exemplarity\\nwith', 'a', 'mock-biblical', 'illustration.', 'His', 'protagonist,', 'Rachel,', '“proved', 'to\\nherself,', 'that', 'she', 'was', 'not', 'a', 'Miriam,', 'but', 'in', 'her', 'sin', 'and', 'punishment”;\\nnevertheless,', '“still', 'the', 'parallel', 'haunted', 'her.', 'It', 'was', 'a', 'case', 'in', 'point,', 'so\\nfar', 'as', 'their', 'sin', 'and', 'sentence', 'were', 'alike:—and', 'might', 'not', 'their', 'pardon\\nbe', 'alike', 'too?”?!', 'By', 'identifying', 'her', 'difference', 'from', 'Miriam,', 'Rachel', 'lo-\\ncates', 'a', 'point', 'of', 'negative', 'similarity.', 'Then,', 'she', 'moves', 'to', 'a', 'positive', 'mo-\\nment', 'of', 'future', 'identification', 'by', 'recognizing', 'that', 'true', 'repentance', 'and\\nsubmission', 'to', 'God', 'may', 'be', 'rewarded', 'by', 'the', 'cure', 'of', 'physical', 'leprosy\\n(the', 'outward', 'signifier', 'for', 'curing', 'spiritual', 'leprosy).', 'Philip’s', 'model\\nstresses', 'that', 'the', 'reader', 'must', 'work', 'through', 'the', 'sense', 'of', 'an', 'absolute\\ndifference', 'between', 'a', 'past', 'exemplar', 'and', 'one’s', 'present', 'self', 'to', 'find', 'some\\nanalogy', 'between', 'the', 'two;', 'but', 'this', 'stage', 'is', 'only', 'a', 'preliminary', 'to', 'realiz-\\ning', 'the', 'transformational', 'potential', 'of', 'analogizing', 'for', 'both', 'Rachel', '(the\\nfictional', 'reader)', 'and', 'the', 'actual', 'reader', 'of', 'the', 'text.', 'The', 'primary', 'bene-\\nfit', 'of', 'interpreting', 'an', 'exemplary', 'figure', 'lies', 'in', 'ascertaining', 'the', 'condi-\\ntions', 'for', 'spiritual', 'change,', 'which', 'apprises', 'the', 'female', 'reader', 'of', 'her\\nplace', 'in', 'God’s', 'divine', 'plan.', 'Thus,', 'despite', 'connotations', 'of', 'immediacy\\nand', 'perfect', 'clarity', 'in', 'the', '“mirror”', 'image,', 'women’s', 'history', 'validates', 'the\\nneed', 'for', 'interpretation', 'by', 'stressing', 'the', 'reader’s', 'ability', 'to', 'reconcile\\npotentially', 'distressing', 'facts', 'with', 'providential', 'truths.', 'Profane', '(secular)\\nhistory', 'and,', 'as', 'we', 'shall', 'see,', 'anomalous', 'female', 'figures', 'are', 'morally', 'dan-\\ngerous', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'reader', 'who', 'seeks', 'to', 'interpret', 'them', 'be-\\ncomes', 'involved', 'in', 'a', 'morass', 'of', 'detail', 'that', 'obscures', 'all', 'correlation\\nbetween', 'individual', 'or', 'event', 'and', 'divine', 'truth.\\n\\nQuestions', 'of', 'proper', 'reading', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'and', 'the', 'kinds', 'of\\nspiritual', 'pleasures', 'to', 'be', 'derived', 'from', 'them,', 'were', 'key', 'to', 'defining', 'the\\nmodern', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historian.', 'The', 'perspec-\\ntive', 'was', 'modern', 'in', 'two', 'senses:', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'writer’s', '“now”', 'and', 'its', 'spiri-\\ntual,', 'political,', 'and', 'social', 'differences', 'from', 'other', 'ages', '(or', 'other', 'nations);\\nand', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'Christian', 'era,', 'which', 'also', 'defined', 'the', '“modern”', 'of\\nModern', 'History', 'in', 'the', 'university', 'curricula', 'of', 'Oxford', 'and', 'Cambridge.\\nWondering', '(disingenuously)', '“why', 'woman', 'has', 'never', 'found', 'an', 'histo-\\nrian,”', 'one', 'anonymous', 'American', 'proclaimed', 'that', '“the', 'historian', 'of\\nWomen,', 'will', 'be', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'his', 'kind,', 'and', 'not', 'of', 'his', 'kind’s', 'tyrants.\\n\\n21.', 'Robert', 'Philip,', 'The', 'Marthas:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Varieties', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety,', '3d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,\\n1836),', 'p.', '107.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '55\\n\\nHe', 'will', 'trace', 'the', 'growth', 'of', 'civilization,', 'refinement,', 'religion,', 'and', 'all\\nthat', 'is', 'good', 'and', 'beautiful.”', 'If', 'the', 'historian', 'of', 'woman', 'must', 'treat', 'the\\n“good', 'and', 'beautiful,”', 'then', 'he', '(or', 'she)', 'will', 'necessarily', 'portray', 'the', 'cu-\\nmulative', 'moment', 'of', 'goodness', 'and', 'beauty', 'that', 'marks', 'both', 'the', 'writer’s\\nposition', 'and', 'the', 'narrative’s', 'closure.', 'As', 'the', 'foregoing', 'quotation', 'sug-\\ngests,', 'this', 'moment', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'by', 'analyzing', 'the', 'modern,', 'femi-\\nnine,', 'and', 'above', 'all', '(Protestant)', 'Christian', 'subject.\\n\\nIn', 'privileging', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'specifically', 'historical', 'frame', 'of', 'refer-\\nence,', 'the', 'women’s', 'historians', 'engaged', 'with', 'a', 'theory', 'of', 'progress', 'that\\npermeated', 'the', 'historiography', 'of', 'figures', 'such', 'as', 'Thomas', 'Arnold,', 'Gold-\\nwin', 'Smith,', 'and', 'William', 'Stubbs.2?', 'For', 'these', 'scholars,', 'the', 'Christian', 'era\\nwas', 'an', 'organic', 'whole,', 'and', 'all', 'events', 'within', 'it', 'fostered', 'progress', 'toward\\nan', 'ultimate', 'perfection', 'originally', 'envisioned', 'in', 'the', 'lessons', 'of', 'sacred\\nhistory.', 'Christianity', 'was', 'conceived', 'as', 'an', 'inner', 'life', 'force', 'that', 'both\\nshaped', 'the', 'experience', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'and,', 'as', 'Stubbs', 'said,', '“cuts', 'it', 'off\\nfrom', 'the', 'death', 'of', 'the', 'past.”*4', 'What', 'Stubbs', 'meant', 'by', '“death”', 'was', 'that\\nChristianity', 'provided', 'a', 'historical', 'standpoint', 'from', 'which', 'the', 'ancient\\nworld', 'could', 'be', 'impartially', 'studied', 'precisely', 'because', 'the', 'Christian', 'era\\nmarked', 'an', 'absolute', 'break', 'between', 'the', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern', 'worlds;\\nmorally', 'and', 'politically', 'speaking,', 'antiquity', 'has', 'no', 'effect', 'on', 'modern\\nhistorical', 'events', 'or', 'even', 'modern', 'values.', '“Death”', 'is', 'thus', 'a', 'figure', 'for\\nthe', 'absolute', 'difference', 'of', 'one', 'period', 'from', 'the', 'next.', 'The', 'absence', 'of\\nChristianity', 'produces', 'national', 'stasis', 'or', 'degeneration,', 'whereas,', 'as', 'one\\ntheologian', 'argued,', '“in', 'so', 'far', '...as', 'Christianity', 'becomes', 'the', 'ruling\\nprinciple', 'of', 'any', 'nation,', 'the', 'death,', 'or', 'utter', 'extinction', 'of', 'that', 'nation', 'is\\nimpossible.”®>', 'A', 'dead', 'nation', 'is', 'one', 'exiled', 'from', 'modernity', 'and', 'from\\nchange.\\n\\nThis', 'academic', 'argument', 'became', 'part', 'of', 'a', 'popular', 'interpretation\\nof', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispensation', 'that', 'provided', 'women’s', 'history', 'with', 'its\\nmost', 'forcefully', 'articulated', 'scheme', 'of', 'periodization.', 'In', 'an', 'early', 'essay\\non', 'this', 'subject,', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox', 'explained', 'that', 'his', 'system', '“was\\nfirst', 'to', 'exhibit', 'a', 'complete', 'series', 'of', 'illustrations,', 'derived', 'from', 'a', 'view\\nof', 'the', 'circumstances', 'of', 'mankind', 'as', 'destitute', 'of', 'the', 'light', 'of', 'revelation,\\nand', 'then', 'to', 'compare', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'under', 'the', 'in-\\nfluence', 'of', 'a', 'precursory', 'and', 'imperfect', 'system', 'of', 'the', 'true', 'religion,', 'with\\n\\n22.', '“Woman:', 'A', 'Rhapsody,”', 'Western', 'Monthly', 'Magazine', '1', '(1833):', '40.\\n\\n23.', 'For', 'the', 'most', 'extensive', 'treatment', 'of', 'Arnold', 'and', 'the', 'Christian', 'aspects', 'of', 'early\\nVictorian', 'historiography,', 'see', 'Duncan', 'Forbes,', 'The', 'Liberal', 'Anglican', 'Idea', 'of', 'History', '(Cam-\\nbridge,', '1952).\\n\\n24.', 'William', 'Stubbs,', '“Inaugural,”', 'in', 'Seventeen', 'Lectures', 'on', 'the', 'Study', 'of', 'Medieval', 'and', 'Mod-\\nern', 'History', 'and', 'Kindred', 'Subjects', '.', '.', '.', '(1866;', 'reprint,', 'New', 'York,', '1967),', 'p.', '15.\\n\\n25.', 'Rev.', 'W.', 'Maxwell', 'Herington,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Fulness', 'of', 'Time', '(London,', '1834),', 'p.', '376.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n56', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\ntheir', 'actual', 'state,', 'or', 'with', 'the', 'privileges', 'secured', 'to', 'them', 'by', 'the', 'nobler\\nmanifestations', 'of', 'CHRISTIANITY.””6', 'For', 'Cox,', 'woman’s', 'social', 'position\\nwas', 'determined', 'not', 'by', 'material,', 'economic', 'forces', 'but', 'by', 'the', 'state', 'of', 're-\\nligion.', 'Not', 'surprisingly,', 'periodization', 'became', 'a', 'central', 'issue', 'for', 'those\\nwho', 'wanted', 'to', 'draw', 'upon', 'women’s', 'history', 'for', 'political', 'purposes.', 'In\\nThe', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women', '(1869),', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill', 'argues', 'that', 'while', '“the\\nslavery', 'of', 'the', 'male', 'sex', 'has,', 'in', 'all', 'countries', 'of', 'Christian', 'Europe', 'at\\nleast', '.', '..', 'been', 'at', 'length', 'abolished,', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'the', 'female', 'sex', 'has', 'been\\ngradually', 'changed', 'into', 'a', 'milder', 'form', 'of', 'dependence,”', 'this', 'depen-\\ndence', 'is', 'not', '“an', 'original', 'institution”', 'emerging', 'from', 'Christian', 'think-\\ning.', 'Instead,', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'women', 'is', '“the', 'primitive', 'condition', 'lasting\\non,', 'through', 'successive', 'mitigations', 'and', 'modifications', 'occasioned', 'by', 'the\\nsame', 'causes', 'which', 'have', 'softened', 'the', 'general', 'manners,', 'and', 'brought\\nall', 'human', 'relations', 'more', 'under', 'the', 'control', 'of', 'justice', 'and', 'influence', 'of\\nhumanity.”?”', 'Mill', 'refuses', 'to', 'periodize', 'Christianity', 'as', 'a', 'moment', 'of\\ndecisive', 'difference', 'in', 'women’s', 'history.', 'If', '“Christian', 'Europe”', 'is', 'to', 'be\\nidentified', 'with', 'the', 'modern', 'world,', 'then', 'the', 'persistence', 'of', 'what', 'Mills\\ncalls', 'female', 'slavery', 'is', 'a', 'pagan', 'anachronism.', 'As', 'possessors', 'of', 'liberty,\\nmen', 'enter', 'into', 'modernity;', 'in', 'continuing', 'to', 'live', 'as', 'slaves,', 'women', 'are\\ntrapped', 'in', 'the', 'remnants', 'of', 'what', 'the', 'Victorians', 'considered', 'primitive\\nculture.', 'Women’s', 'equality', 'would', 'thus', 'redress', 'an', 'injustice', 'in', 'the', 'defini-\\ntion', 'of', 'modernity', 'itself.\\n\\nMill', 'here', 'does', 'not', 'refute', 'but', 'rather', 'builds', 'upon', 'more', 'conservative\\ninterpretations', 'of', 'women’s', 'history.', 'For', 'example,', 'a', 'conservative', 'oppo-\\nnent,', 'Fanny', 'Kortright,', 'agreed', 'with', 'the', 'proposition', 'that', 'paganism', 'was\\nthe', 'source', 'of', '“modern”', 'female', 'slavery;', 'but', 'she', 'crucially', 'differed', 'from\\nMill', 'in', 'her', 'use', 'of', 'Christianity', 'to', 'periodize', 'women’s', 'history', 'there-\\nafter.', 'Greek', 'and', 'Roman', 'women,', 'Kortright', 'explained,', 'were', '“virtually\\nenslaved,”', 'the', '“supposed', 'soulless,', 'mindless', 'toys', 'of', 'their', 'capricious\\nmasters.”*8', 'Kortright', 'identifies', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'being', 'under', 'imper-\\nfect', 'human', 'law', '(“capricious”)', 'with', 'female', 'objectification;', 'by', 'contrast,\\nhistorical', 'progress', 'occurs', 'only', 'when', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'understand\\ntrue', 'freedom', 'as', 'submission', 'to', 'divine', 'law.', 'With', 'the', 'Christian', 'dispen-\\nsation,', 'woman', 'emerged', 'from', '“her', 'sepulchre”—invoking', 'the', 'Resur-\\nrection', 'while', 'equating', 'pre-Christian', 'women’s', 'history', 'with', 'death—in\\norder', 'to', 'become', '“no', 'longer', 'his', 'slave,', 'but', 'his', 'aid;', 'not', 'his', 'rival,', 'but', 'his\\nco-adjutor;', 'to', 'work', 'and', 'labour', 'hand-in-hand', 'with', 'him,', 'for', 'the', 'glory\\n\\n26.', 'Francis', 'Augustus', 'Cox,', '“Essay', 'on', 'what', 'Christianity', 'has', 'done', 'for', 'Women,”', 'in', 'Fe-\\nmale', 'Scripture', 'Biography:', 'Including', 'an', 'Essay', 'on', 'What', 'Christianity', 'has', 'Done', 'for', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.\\n(London,', '1817),', '2:lxvii—Ixviii', '(emphases', 'in', 'the', 'original).\\n\\n27.', 'John', 'Stuart', 'Mill,', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women,', 'in', 'On', 'Liberty', 'with', 'The', 'Subjection', 'of', 'Women\\nand', 'Chapters', 'on', 'Socialism,', 'ed.', 'Stefan', 'Collini', '(1869;', 'reprint,', 'Cambridge,', '1989),', 'p.', '123.\\n\\n28.', '[Fanny', 'Kortright],', 'The', 'True', 'Rights', 'of', 'Women,', '2d', 'ed.', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '2.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '57\\n\\nand', 'honour', 'and', 'happiness', 'of', 'humanity.”*°', 'Kortright', 'here', 'reminds', 'her\\nreaders', 'that', 'this', 'Christian', 'rebirth', 'of', 'womanhood', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'rebirth', 'into\\nindividuality', 'and', 'a', 'new', 'dispensation', 'of', 'separate', 'spheres', 'with', 'equal\\nlabor.', 'Her', 'interpretation', 'of', 'her', 'female', 'contemporaries,', 'however,', 're-\\ninvokes', 'Mill’s', '“paganism”:', '“The', 'chief', 'objects', 'in', 'the', 'dress', 'of', 'women\\nand', 'children', 'now,', 'appear', 'to', 'be', 'precisely', 'what', 'Captain', 'Cook', 'found', 'in\\nhis', 'day', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'principal', 'things', 'eagerly', 'sought', 'for', 'by', 'primitive', 'sav-\\nages—feathers', 'and', 'beads!', '...', 'O', 'woman,', 'woman!', 'How', 'art', 'thou', 'fallen\\nsince', 'the', 'day', 'when', 'thy', 'best', 'adorning', 'was', 'the', 'glory', 'of', 'innocence,', 'and\\nthy', 'loveliest', 'vestment', 'Christ-like', 'deeds', 'of', 'charity!”®°', 'Modern', 'female\\ndegradation', 'here', 'results', 'not', 'from', 'material', 'oppression', 'but', 'instead', 'from\\nspiritual', 'apostasy:', 'resisting', 'the', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'gendered', 'division\\nof', 'labor', 'in', 'favor', 'of', 'self-serving', 'goals.\\n\\nKortright’s', 'historical', 'rhetoric', 'closely', 'connects', 'Christianity', 'and', 'mod-\\nern', 'femininity', 'in', 'a', 'manner', 'typical', 'of', 'representations', 'of', 'women’s', 'prog-\\nress', 'from', 'the', 'late', 'teens', 'into', 'the', '1880s.', 'Collapsing', 'time', 'and', 'space\\nthrough', 'parallels', 'between', 'ancient', 'history', 'and', 'modern', 'paganism,', 'the\\nplot', 'of', 'Christian', 'progress', 'figured', 'historical', 'developments', 'as', 'freedom\\nfrom', 'enslavement', 'to', 'the', 'body.', 'Women', 'living', 'outside', 'of', 'Christianity\\nare', 'subjected', 'to', 'a', 'law', 'defined', 'by', 'male', 'desire', 'instead', 'of', 'divine', 'fiat;\\nyet', 'without', 'spiritual', 'enlightenment,', 'women', 'are', 'incapable', 'of', 'under-\\nstanding', 'their', 'own', 'misery.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Christianity', 'enables', 'female\\nself-consciousness', 'while', 'producing', 'a', 'new', 'historical', 'consciousness.\\nThus,', 'Isaac', 'Reeve', 'calls', 'attention', 'to', 'pagan', 'women', 'who', 'are', '“illiterate,\\ndespised,', 'half', 'unsexed', 'or', 'half', 'unsouled.”', 'Feminine', 'subjectivity', 'is', 'con-\\njoined', 'with', 'access', 'to', 'books', 'and,', 'therefore,', 'to', 'the', 'Book', '(although', 'access\\nto', 'modern', 'novels', 'might', 'be', 'more', 'problematic).', 'In', 'contrast', 'to', 'lives', 'or-\\nganized', 'by', '“human', 'necessity,”', 'Reeve', 'argues', 'that', '“in', 'such', 'proportion\\nto', 'each', 'other', 'are', 'the', 'religion', 'of', 'the', 'Gospel', 'and', 'the', 'emancipation', 'of\\nthe', 'female', 'sex,', 'that', 'their', 'liberty', 'is', 'precisely', 'raised', 'accordingly', 'as', 'the\\nlight', 'of', 'Christianity', 'is', 'more', 'or', 'less', 'obscure', 'in', 'the', 'various', 'countries\\nof', 'Europe.”*!', 'Modernity', 'is', 'retrospectively', 'defined', 'by', 'the', 'numbers', 'of\\nwomen', 'who', 'can', 'be', '“perceived”', 'by', 'the', 'historian', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'by', 'their', 'qual-\\nity', 'of', 'life:', 'from', 'the', 'historian’s', 'viewpoint,', 'woman’s', 'social', 'condition', 'is\\ntranslated', 'from', 'an', 'amorphous,', 'unreadable', 'mass', 'into', 'the', 'realm', 'of\\nvirtually', 'statistical', 'clarity.', 'Drawing', 'upon', 'the', 'apologetics', 'of', 'Christian\\nsuperiority,', 'in', 'which', 'Gospel', 'knowledge', '“has', 'placed', 'men', 'in', 'a', 'new', 'situ-\\nation:', 'by', 'discovering', 'to', 'them', 'relations', 'not', 'before', 'apprehended,', 'by\\n\\n29.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '4.\\n\\n30.', 'Ibid.,', 'p.', '31.\\n\\n31.', '[Isaac]', 'Reeve,', 'An', 'Essay', 'on', 'the', 'Comparative', 'Intellect', 'of', 'Woman,', 'and', 'Her', 'Little', 'Recog-\\nnised', 'but', 'Resistless', 'Influence', 'on', 'the', 'Moral,', 'Religious,', 'and', 'Political', 'Prosperity', 'of', 'a', 'Nation,', '2d', 'ed.\\n(Hounslow,', '1849),', 'pp.', '12-13.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n58', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nopening', 'to', 'them', 'prospects', 'not', 'before', 'known,', 'by', 'awakening', 'faculties\\nnot', 'before', 'exercised,”', 'John', 'Bird', 'Sumner', 'identifies', 'the', 'Christian', 'rea-\\nsoner', 'as', 'one', 'who', 'sees,', 'by', 'the', '“light”', 'of', 'revelation,', 'that', 'women', 'possess\\nspiritual', 'equality', 'with', 'men.*?', 'Yet', 'the', '“light”', 'works', 'in', 'the', 'opposite', 'di-\\nrection:', 'the', 'pagan', 'woman', 'is', 'not', 'only', 'in', 'spiritual', 'darkness', 'but', 'also', 'in\\nhistorical', 'darkness,', 'invisible', 'to', 'the', 'interpreter’s', 'eye.\\n\\nThe', 'spiritual', 'rebirth', 'enabled', 'by', 'Christianity', 'makes', 'masculine', 'fasci-\\nnation', 'with', 'female', 'sensuality', 'itself', 'historically', 'anachronistic.', 'Chris-\\ntianity’s', 'progress', 'produces', 'a', 'new', 'morality', 'of', 'love', 'in', 'place', 'of', 'violence,\\na', 'morality', 'grounded', 'by', 'an', 'interior', '“deep”', 'self', 'and', 'a', 'sense', 'of', 'the', 'indi-\\nvidual', 'as', 'an', 'entity', 'separate', 'from', 'the', 'polity.', 'British', '(and', 'often', 'Ameri-\\ncan)', 'Protestants', 'therefore', 'argued', 'that', 'true', 'femininity', 'and', 'true', 'female\\nequality', 'were', 'both', 'fully', 'constituted', 'under', 'the', 'Christian', 'moral', 'law', 'set\\nforth', 'in', 'Scripture.', 'As', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard', 'argued', 'in', 'one', 'sermon,', 'with\\nthe', 'progress', 'of', 'Christianity', '“physical', 'power,”', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'body,\\nwas', 'transcended', 'by', 'feminine', '“moral', 'power,”', 'which', 'acts', 'on', 'the', 'mind;\\nsuch', 'moral', 'power', 'was', 'distinguished', 'from', 'martial', 'conquest', 'by', 'the\\n“voluntary”', 'nature', 'of', 'society’s', 'subjection', 'to', 'it.°>', 'True', 'female', 'equality\\nwas', 'therefore', 'not', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'power', 'understood', 'in', 'mundane', 'political\\nterms,', 'but', 'instead', 'of', 'woman’s', 'accession', 'to', 'her', 'own', 'peculiar', 'form', 'of\\nspiritual', 'power,', 'delegated', 'to', 'her', 'by', 'Christian', 'societies.', 'But', 'to', 'be', 'a\\n“modern', 'woman,”', 'with', 'the', 'spiritual', 'equality', 'which', 'that', 'state', 'entails,', 'is\\nnot', 'simply', 'a', 'matter', 'of', 'existing', 'in', 'a', 'particular', 'time', 'and', 'space;', 'instead,\\none', 'becomes', 'modern', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'biblical', 'text', 'through', 'conver-\\nsion.', 'By', 'extension,', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'periodized', 'as', 'an', 'ongoing\\ncultural', 'conversion,', 'echoing', 'the', 'evangelical', 'emphasis', 'on', 'conversion\\nas', 'the', 'central', 'event', 'of', 'human', 'life.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale’s', 'gigantic\\nWoman’s', 'Record', 'makes', 'the', 'stakes', 'clear:', '“But', 'this', '[moral]', 'improvement\\nis', 'only', 'where', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'and', 'its', 'authority', 'acknowledged.', 'The\\nChinese', 'nation', 'cannot', 'advance', 'in', 'moral', 'culture', 'while', 'their', 'women\\nare', 'consigned', 'to', 'ignorance', 'and', 'imbecility:', 'the', 'nations', 'of', 'the', 'East', 'are\\nslaves', 'to', 'sensuality', 'and', 'sin,', 'as', 'well', 'as', 'to', 'foreign', 'masters!', 'and', 'thus', 'they\\nmust', 'remain', 'till', 'Christianity,', 'breaking', 'the', 'fetters', 'of', 'polygamy', 'from\\nthe', 'female', 'sex,', 'shall', 'give', 'to', 'the', 'mothers', 'of', 'men', 'freedom,', 'educa-\\ntion,', 'and', 'influence.”**', 'Christianity', 'educates', 'true', 'believers', 'in', 'the', 'eth-\\nics', 'of', 'sexual', 'behavior,', 'subordinating', 'mere', 'sensuality', 'to', 'the', 'higher', 'goal\\nof', 'spiritual', 'union', 'in', 'monogamous', 'marriage.', 'Only', 'when', 'this', 'spiritual\\n\\n32.', 'Rev.', 'J[ohn]', 'B[ird]', 'Sumner,', 'M.A.,', 'The', 'Evidence', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Derived', 'from', 'its', 'Na-\\nture', 'and', 'Reception', '(Philadelphia,', '1825),', 'p.', '113.\\n\\n33.', 'Abijah', 'Blanchard,', 'The', 'Moral', 'Power', 'of', 'Women.', '.', '.', '(Louth,', '1844),', 'p.', '8.\\n\\n34.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale,', 'Woman’s', 'Record;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'All', 'Distinguished', 'Women,', 'From\\nthe', 'Creation', 'to', 'A.D.', '1854:', 'Arranged', 'in', 'Four', 'Eras,', 'with', 'Selections', 'from', 'Female', 'Writers', 'of', 'Every\\nAge,', '2d', 'ed.', '(New', 'York,', '1860),', 'p.', '157.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '59\\n\\nenlightenment', 'is', 'achieved', 'can', 'nations', 'enter', 'into', 'modern', 'history.', 'Mo-\\ndernity', 'has', 'a', 'unitary', 'chronology,', 'but', 'not', 'all', 'individuals', 'or', 'cultures\\noccupy', 'the', 'same', 'chronological', 'moment—a', 'holdover', 'from', 'Enlighten-\\nment', 'theories', 'of', 'progress,', 'in', 'which', 'contemporary', 'primitive', 'cultures\\ncould', 'be', 'used', 'as', 'evidence', 'for', 'ancient', 'social', 'practices.\\n\\nEmphasis', 'on', 'the', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'nature', 'of', 'modern', 'woman-\\nhood', 'is', 'clear', 'in', 'studies', 'of', 'biblical', 'women,', 'which', 'represent', 'the', 'shift\\nfrom', 'the', 'Old', 'to', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'as', 'also', 'a', 'shift', 'in', 'the', 'relationship\\nof', 'gender', 'to', 'its', 'historical', 'context.', 'Thus,', 'the', 'evangelical', 'Clara', 'Lucas\\nBalfour', 'argued', 'that', '“the', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'Hebrews', 'were', 'elevated', 'by', 'their\\nholy', 'faith', 'far', 'above', 'all', 'heathen', 'nations', 'in', 'social,', 'political,', 'and', 'reli-\\ngious', 'freedom;', 'yet', 'their', 'institutions', 'benefited', 'them', 'only,', 'were', 're-\\nstricted', 'to', 'them', 'only,', 'jealous', 'care', 'being', 'observed', 'in', 'their', 'restriction.”\\nBalfour’s', 'Judaism', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'paganism,', 'but', 'the', 'Old', 'Testament', 'rep-\\nresents', 'merely', 'specific', 'historical', 'situations.', 'In', 'contrast,', '“New', 'Testa-\\nment', 'female', 'characters', 'are', 'more', 'valuable', 'as', 'models', 'for', 'imitation,\\nfrom', 'the', 'fact', 'of', 'their', 'illustrating', 'moral', 'principles,', 'rather', 'than', 'remark-\\nable', 'situations;', 'the', 'principles', 'being', 'important', 'to', 'all,', 'wonderful', 'situa-\\ntions', 'peculiar', 'to', 'a', 'few.”', 'Representations', 'of', 'Christian', 'womanhood\\nfulfill', 'the', 'potential', 'of', 'Jewish', 'womanhood', 'and,', 'in', 'so', 'doing,', 'transcend\\nit.', 'Balfour’s', 'analysis', 'finds', 'women', 'of', 'the', 'older', 'dispensation', 'dead', 'to\\nthe', 'present—that', 'is,', 'largely', 'irrelevant', 'for', 'determining', 'contemporary\\nmorals—because', 'the', 'New', 'Testament', 'has', 'completed', 'and', 'perfected\\ntheir', 'examples.', 'A', 'reading', 'of', 'the', 'histories', 'of', 'New', 'Testament', 'women\\nalways', 'renews', 'the', 'promise', 'of', 'modern', 'womanly', 'perfection:', 'the', 'modern\\nindividual', 'who,', 'produced', 'by', 'Christianity,', 'helps', 'spread', 'this', 'perfec-\\ntion', 'by', 'returning', 'to', 'the', 'eternally', 'relevant', 'Book.*>', 'If', 'New', 'Testament\\nwomen', 'are', 'valuable', 'models', 'for', '“imitation,”', 'then', 'Christian', 'femininity\\ninhabits', 'an', 'atemporal', 'present', 'within', 'which', 'all', 'virtuous', 'characters', 'are\\ninterchangeable,', 'regardless', 'of', 'local', 'circumstances.*®', 'Virtuous', 'female\\nfigures', 'are', 'thus', 'products', 'of', 'a', 'historical', 'moment', 'whose', 'defining', 'char-\\nacteristic', 'is', 'to', 'sever', 'virtue', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all', 'from', 'the', 'trammels', 'of\\nmerely', 'local', 'relevance.\\n\\n35.', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'The', 'Women', 'of', 'Scripture', '(London,', '1847),', 'pp.', '218-19,', '222.', 'I\\nhave', 'been', 'much', 'helped,', 'here', 'and', 'elsewhere', 'in', 'this', 'article,', 'by', 'discussions', 'of', 'Christian\\nhistoriography', 'and', 'biography', 'in', 'Boyd', 'Hilton,', 'The', 'Age', 'of', 'Atonement:', 'The', 'Influence', 'of\\nEvangelism', 'on', 'Social', 'and', 'Economic', 'Thought,', '1795-1865', '(Oxford,', '1988);', 'Peter', 'Hinchcliff,\\nGod', 'and', 'History:', 'Aspects', 'of', 'British', 'Theology,', '1875-1914', '(Oxford,', '1972);', 'Elizabeth', 'Jay,', 'The\\nReligion', 'of', 'the', 'Heart:', 'Anglican', 'Evangelicalism', 'and', 'the', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Novel', '(Oxford,\\n1997);', 'and', 'Christopher', 'Tolley,', 'Domestic', 'Biography:', 'The', 'Legacy', 'of', 'Evangelicalism', 'in', 'Four\\nNineteenth-Century', 'Families', '(Oxford,', '1997).\\n\\n36.', 'A', 'similar', 'phenomenon', 'has', 'been', 'observed', 'by', 'Tricia', 'Lootens', 'regarding', 'Victorian\\nrepresentations', 'of', 'virtuous', 'Shakespearean', 'heroines;', 'see', 'Lost', 'Saints:', 'Silence,', 'Gender,', 'and\\nVictorian', 'Literary', 'Canonization', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1996).\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n60', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nBut', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,', 'historians', 'argued,', 'Christianity', 'made\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'possible', 'in', 'the', 'first', 'place:', 'Christianity', 'conferred', 'a\\nnew', 'intellectual', 'and', 'spiritual', 'mindset', 'that', 'allowed', 'women', 'to', 'be', 'per-\\nceived', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects', 'in', 'the', 'past,', 'present,', 'and', 'future.', '(We', 'have\\nalready', 'seen', 'some', 'of', 'this', 'rhetoric', 'in', 'Isaac', 'Reeve.)', 'The', 'link', 'between\\nChristianity', 'and', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'a', 'twofold', 'sig-\\nnificance,', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'were', 'generally', 'expressed', 'in', 'vaguely', 'statistical\\nterms.', 'First,', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'era', 'diag-\\nnosed', 'the', 'progress', 'of', 'civilization,', 'an', 'idea', 'derived', 'from', 'eighteenth-\\ncentury', 'women’s', 'historians', 'such', 'as', 'William', 'Alexander:', '“The', 'rank,\\ntherefore,', 'and', 'condition,', 'in', 'which', 'we', 'find', 'women', 'in', 'any', 'country,\\nmark', 'out', 'to', 'us', 'with', 'the', 'greatest', 'precision,', 'the', 'exact', 'point', 'in', 'the', 'scale\\nof', 'civil', 'society,', 'to', 'which', 'the', 'people', 'of', 'such', 'country', 'have', 'arrived;', 'and\\nwere', 'their', 'history', 'entirely', 'silent', 'on', 'every', 'other', 'subject,', 'and', 'only', 'men-\\ntioned', 'the', 'manner', 'in', 'which', 'they', 'treated', 'their', 'women,', 'we', 'should,', 'from\\nthence,', 'be', 'enabled', 'to', 'form', 'a', 'tolerable', 'judgment', 'of', 'the', 'barbarity,', 'or\\nculture', 'of', 'their', 'manners.”*’', 'Alexander', 'here', 'reads', 'the', 'history', 'of\\nwomen', 'as', 'the', 'key', 'to', 'all', 'histories;', 'far', 'from', 'being', '“unwritable,”', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'is', 'in', 'fact', 'what', 'makes', 'otherwise', 'silenced', 'civilizations', 'speak', 'to\\nthe', 'enlightened', 'interpreter.', 'The', 'Victorians,', 'however,', 'discarded', 'Alex-\\nander’s', 'faith', 'in', 'the', 'ease', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s', 'history.', 'Instead,', 'they', 'pro-\\nposed', 'that', 'women’s', 'history', 'did', 'indeed', 'diagnose', 'the', 'state', 'of', 'culture,\\nbut', 'it', 'did', 'so', 'progressively:', '“The', 'progress', 'of', 'woman', 'cannot', 'be', 'denied\\nto', 'be', 'precisely', 'in', 'the', 'same', 'ratio', 'as', 'that', 'of', 'man,', 'both', 'from', 'an', 'original\\nstate', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'and', 'again', 'just', 'in', 'the', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'elevation\\nof', 'woman', 'does', 'the', 'other', 'half', 'of', 'mankind', 'derive', 'advantage', 'from', 'her\\nexistence.”°®>', 'Here,', 'Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb', 'makes', 'no', 'mention', 'of', 'the\\nalways-writable', 'nature', 'of', 'women’s', 'history.', 'Instead,', 'she', 'emphasizes\\nthat', 'the', 'history', 'works', 'in', 'both', 'directions', '(man', 'diagnoses', 'woman,', 'and\\nvice', 'versa),', 'and', 'that', 'woman’s', 'social', 'influence', 'accumulates', 'over', 'time.\\nMoreover,', 'as', 'the', 'positivist', 'historian', 'Henry', 'Buckle', 'agreed', 'in', 'a', 'differ-\\nent', 'key,', 'the', 'extent', 'of', 'this', 'influence', 'was', 'definitely', 'a', 'product', 'of', 'modern\\nconditions;', 'if', 'in', '“modern', 'Europe,', 'the', 'influence', 'of', 'women', 'and', 'the\\nspread', 'of', 'civilization', 'have', 'been', 'nearly', 'commensurate,', 'both', 'advanc-\\ning', 'with', 'almost', 'equal', 'speed,”', 'the', 'same', 'is', 'not', 'true', 'of', 'nations', 'in', 'an-\\ntiquity,', 'which', '“fell', 'because', 'society', 'did', 'not', 'advance', 'in', 'all', 'its', 'parts,\\nbut', 'sacrificed', 'some', 'of', 'its', 'constituents', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'secure', 'the', 'progress\\n\\n37.', 'William', 'Alexander,', 'The', 'History', 'of', 'Women:', 'From', 'the', 'Earliest', 'Antiquity', 'to', 'the', 'Present\\nTime;', 'Giving', 'Some', 'Account', 'of', 'Almost', 'Every', 'Interesting', 'Particular', 'Concerning', 'that', 'Sex,', 'Among\\nAll', 'Nations,', 'Ancient', 'and', 'Modern,', '2', 'vols.', '(Dublin,', '1779),', '1:107.\\n\\n38.', '[Anne', 'Richelieu', 'Lamb],', 'Can', 'Woman', 'Regenerate', 'Society?', '(London,', '1844),', 'p.', '165.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '61\\n\\nof', 'others.”°®', 'The', 'modern', 'era', 'is', 'special', 'both', 'because', 'women', 'have\\ninfluenced', 'its', 'progress', 'and', 'because', 'it', 'has', 'recognized', 'that', 'its', 'progress\\nis,', 'in', 'fact,', 'contingent', 'upon', 'developing', 'woman’s', 'potential.\\n\\nWhen', 'restated', 'in', 'expressly', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'this', 'last', 'formulation', 'be-\\ncomes', 'the', 'second', 'item', 'of', 'significance:', 'the', 'writing', 'of', 'women’s', 'history\\nis', 'a', 'specifically', 'Christian', 'act.', 'The', 'more', 'Christian', 'the', 'age,', 'the', 'more\\nwomen', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'acting', 'so', 'as', 'to', 'appear', 'in', 'its', 'records;', 'and', 'the\\nmore', 'women', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'so', 'acting,', 'the', 'more', 'that', 'Christian', 'histori-\\nans', 'are', 'capable', 'of', 'writing', 'about', 'them.', '“Unmentioned', 'as', 'she', 'is', 'in', 'the\\nannals', 'of', 'heathendom,', 'several', 'of', 'her', 'sex', 'shine', 'like', 'stars', 'in', 'the', 'firma-\\nment', 'of', 'the', 'Church,”', 'wrote', 'W.', 'Landels', 'around', '1872.', 'By', 'invoking\\nnumbers,', 'the', 'Christian', 'author', 'denaturalizes', 'women’s', 'absence', 'from\\nthe', 'historical', 'record', 'and', 'accounts', 'for', 'that', 'absence', 'by', 'the', 'shortcom-\\nings', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'cultures.', 'Sarah', 'Josepha', 'Hale', 'was', 'even', 'more', 'ex-\\nplicit:', '“Wherever', 'the', 'Bible', 'is', 'read,', 'female', 'talents', 'are', 'cultivated', 'and\\nesteemed.', 'In', 'this', '‘Record’', 'are', 'about', 'two', 'thousand', 'five', 'hundred', 'names,\\nincluding', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Female', 'Missionaries;', 'out', 'of', 'this', 'number', 'less\\nthan', 'two', 'hundred', 'are', 'from', 'heathen', 'nations,', 'yet', 'these', 'constitute', 'at', 'this\\nmoment', 'nearly', 'three-fourths', 'of', 'the', 'inhabitants', 'of', 'the', 'globe,', 'and', 'for\\nthe', 'first', 'thousand', 'years', '.', '.', '.', 'were', 'the', 'world.”*!', 'One', 'can,', 'quite', 'literally,\\nestimate', 'social', 'progress', 'by', 'counting', 'the', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'who', 'are\\ndeemed', 'worthy', 'of', 'recollection.', 'And', 'percentages', 'count', 'too,', 'as', 'Horace\\nMann', 'pointed', 'out:', '“Within', 'the', 'last', 'half-century,', 'the', 'United', 'Kingdom\\nof', 'Britain', 'and', 'Ireland,', 'with', 'an', 'average', 'population', 'of', 'less', 'than', 'twenty-\\nfive', 'millions,', 'has', 'produced', 'as', 'many', 'eminent', 'and', 'admirable', 'women', 'as\\nall', 'the', 'rest', 'of', 'Europe,', 'with', 'its', 'more', 'than', 'two', 'hundred', 'millions;', 'and\\nNew', 'England,', 'with', 'its', 'population', 'of', 'between', 'two', 'and', 'three', 'millions,\\nhas', 'now', 'nearly', 'or', 'quite', 'as', 'many', 'justly-distinguished', 'females', 'as', 'Great\\nBritain,', 'or', 'the', 'continent.”*?', 'In', 'other', 'words,', 'Britain', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'the\\ncontinent', 'and', 'America', 'is', 'superior', 'to', 'Britain,', 'on', 'statistical', 'grounds;\\nprogress', 'is', 'here', 'tied', 'not', 'simply', 'to', 'numbers', 'but', 'also', 'to', 'their', 'accel-\\nerated', 'accumulation.', 'The', 'number', 'of', 'women', 'visible', 'to', 'the', 'historian\\nsimultaneously', 'attests', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'construction', 'of', 'womanhood,\\n\\n39.', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '“The', 'Influence', 'of', 'Women', 'on', 'the', 'Progress', 'of', 'Knowl-\\nedge,”', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'and', 'Posthumous', 'Works', 'of', 'Henry', 'Thomas', 'Buckle,', '3', 'vols.', '(London,\\n1872),', '1:2.\\n\\n40.', 'W.', 'Landels,', 'Woman:', 'Her', 'Position', 'and', 'Power', '(London,', '[1872?]),', 'p.', '28.\\n\\n41.', 'Hale', '(n.', '34', 'above),', 'p.', '2.', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'points', 'out', 'that', 'Hale’s', 'text', 'is', '“itself', 'an', 'event\\nin', 'history”;', 'see', 'American', 'Women', 'Writers', 'and', 'the', 'Work', 'of', 'History,', '1790-1860', '(New', 'Bruns-\\nwick,', 'N.J.,', '1995),', 'p.', '228.\\n\\n42.', 'Horace', 'Mann,', 'A', 'Few', 'Thoughts', 'on', 'the', 'Powers', 'and', 'Duties', 'of', 'Woman:', 'Two', 'Lectures', '(Syr-\\nacuse,', 'N.Y.,', '1853),', 'p.', '50.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n62', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nthe', 'new', 'possibilities', 'of', 'female', 'influence', 'in', 'the', 'public', 'domain,', 'and', 'the\\nprogressively', 'enlightened', '(in', 'a', 'Christian', 'sense)', 'consciousness', 'of', 'the\\nhistorian', 'capable', 'of', 'viewing', 'women', 'as', 'historical', 'subjects.\\n\\nIt', 'is', 'on', 'the', 'issue', 'of', 'pre-Christian', 'or', '“barbaric”', 'women', 'that', 'Victorian\\nwomen’s', 'historians', 'directly', 'conflict', 'with', 'today’s', 'belief', 'that', 'a', 'history', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'would', 'begin', 'with', '“feminist', 'historians’', 'critiques', 'of', 'the\\ndiscipline’s', 'habitual', '(one', 'might', 'say', 'historical)', 'neglect', 'of', 'women’s', 'ex-\\nperience.”**', 'Unlike', 'the', 'utilitarian', 'George', 'Grote,', 'whose', 'twelve-volume\\nHistory', 'of', 'Greece', '(1845-56)', 'broke', 'new', 'ground', 'in', 'the', 'study', 'of', 'the', 'pre-\\nChristian', 'cultures', 'of', 'antiquity,', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'historians', 'often\\nidentified', 'the', 'modern', 'historical', 'viewpoint', 'with', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'recover\\npagan', 'figures', 'lost', 'in', 'the', 'mists', 'of', 'time.', 'Certainly,', 'there', 'were', 'biograph-\\nical', 'treatments', 'of', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Aspasia', 'or', 'Sappho.', 'But', '“lost”', 'women\\nwere', 'unwritable', 'not', 'simply', 'because', 'they', 'were', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'archives\\nbut,', 'more', 'importantly,', 'because', 'they', 'lacked', 'Christian', 'virtue.', 'Ancient\\nwomen', 'are', 'not', 'just', 'treated', 'inhumanely', 'but,', 'even', 'more', 'importantly,\\nare', 'devoid', 'of', 'any', 'sense', 'of', 'social', 'obligations;', 'as', 'a', 'result,', 'even', 'the', '“his-\\ntorical”', 'women', 'of', 'antiquity', 'fail', 'to', 'contribute', 'to', 'moral', 'progress.', 'As\\nSamuel', 'Young', 'argued', 'to', 'his', 'American', 'male', 'audience', 'regarding', 'Sap-\\npho,', '“had', 'she', 'received,', 'in', 'early', 'youth,', 'proper', 'moral', 'and', 'intellectual\\nculture,', 'and', 'been', 'taught', 'to', 'direct', 'her', 'wonderful', 'powers', 'to', 'the', 'good', 'of\\nthe', 'human', 'race,', 'she', 'would', 'have', 'done', 'much', 'towards', 'civilizing', 'the\\nworld.”44\\n\\nIt', 'is', 'the', 'function', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'narrate', 'the', 'emergence', 'of\\na', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'which', 'both', 'recognizes', 'and', 'facilitates', 'the\\npresence', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'modern', 'history', 'as', 'part', 'of', 'the', 'ongoing', 'Chris-\\ntianization', 'of', 'the', 'globe.', 'Lady', 'Morgan', 'was', 'not', 'alone', 'in', 'complaining\\nthat', '“the', 'historians', 'of', 'the', 'people,', 'the', 'chroniclers', 'of', 'private', 'life,', 'are\\nfew', 'and', 'incidental,”', 'by', 'which', 'she', 'meant', 'that', 'history', 'only', '“unavoid-\\nably', 'or', 'accidentally”', 'relates', 'the', '“great', 'deeds', 'of', 'great', 'women.”*', 'Yet\\nwomen’s', 'history', 'itself', 'operates', 'through', 'a', 'process', 'of', 'exclusion', 'hinging\\non', 'Christian', 'conversion.', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'employs', 'what', 'his-\\ntorians', 'of', 'religion', 'call', 'the', 'degenerationist', 'thesis', 'of', 'barbarism,', 'which\\n\\n43.', 'Lillian', 'Robinson,', '“Sometimes,', 'Always,', 'Never:', 'Their', 'Women’s', 'History', 'and', 'Ours,”\\nin', 'History', 'and.', '.', '.', 'Histories', 'within', 'the', 'Human', 'Sciences,', 'ed.', 'Ralph', 'Cohen', 'and', 'Michael', 'S.', 'Roth\\n(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'p.', '332.\\n\\n44.', 'Samuel', 'Young,', 'Suggestions', 'on', 'the', 'Best', 'Mode', 'of', 'Promoting', 'Civilization', 'and', 'Improve-\\nment:', 'Or,', 'the', 'Influence', 'of', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'Social', 'State.', 'A', 'Lecture', 'Delivered', 'Before', 'the', '“Young', 'Men’s\\nAssociation', 'for', 'Mutual', 'Improvement', 'in', 'the', 'City', 'of', 'Albany,”', 'January', '24th,', '1837', '(Albany,', 'N.Y.,\\n1837),', 'p.', '13.\\n\\n45.', 'Sydney', 'Owenson,', 'Lady', 'Morgan,', 'Woman', 'and', 'Her', 'Master,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', 'n.d.),\\n2:224-25.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '1fff', 'on', 'Thu,', '01', 'Jan', '1976', '12:34:56', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '63\\n\\nholds', 'that', 'human', 'evil', 'degrades', 'original', 'perfection', 'until', 'divine', 'revela-\\ntion', 'or', 'its', 'vehicle,', 'benevolent', 'Christian', 'imperialism,', 'intervenes.', '**\\nThese', 'Victorian', 'writers', 'thus', 'promise', 'to', 'bring', 'women', 'of', 'other', 'nations\\ninto', 'history', 'through', 'British', 'imperialist', 'expansion,', 'but', 'in', 'the', 'process\\nthey', 'necessarily', 'preclude', 'the', 'desirability', 'of', 'non-Christian', 'women’s\\nhistory.', 'As', 'the', 'writer', 'of', 'a', 'late', 'work', 'on', 'great', 'women', 'bluntly', 'put', 'it,\\nthere', 'was', 'nothing', 'worth', 'recovering:', '“Paganism', 'ignored', 'what', 'is', 'grand-\\nest', 'and', 'truest', 'in', 'a', 'woman,', 'and', 'she', 'withered', 'like', 'a', 'stricken', 'tree.', 'She\\nsuccumbed', 'before', 'the', 'cold', 'blasts', 'that', 'froze', 'her', 'noblest', 'impulses,', 'and\\nsunk', 'sullenly', 'into', 'obscurity.”*7', 'Evangelical', 'rhetoric,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'iden-\\ntifies', 'progress', 'toward', 'the', 'millennium', 'with', 'the', 'spread', 'of', 'true', 'Christian\\nfeeling,', 'defines', 'the', 'non-Christian', 'out', 'of', 'history', 'while', 'always', 'maintain-\\ning', 'that', 'the', 'individual’s', 'freely', 'willed', 'conversion', 'makes', 'entrance', 'into\\nhistory', 'possible.', '®\\n\\nYet', 'this', 'imagined', 'era', 'of', 'feminine', 'Christianity', 'would', 'fracture', 'along\\nlines', 'of', 'religious,', 'racial,', 'and', 'national', 'differences', 'once', 'authors', 'began\\nto', 'consider', 'immediate', 'historical', 'difficulties—which,', 'in', 'Victorian', 'Brit-\\nain,', 'often', 'included', 'Catholicism.', 'Protestant', 'women’s', 'histories', 'iden-\\ntified', 'Catholicism', 'with', 'female', 'sexual', 'slavery', 'and', 'with', 'the', 'improper\\nidolization', 'of', 'women', 'as', 'fleshly', 'beings—an', 'identification', 'taken', 'to', 'an\\nextreme', 'in', 'anti-Catholic', 'pornography', 'like', 'The', 'Awful', 'Disclosures', 'of', 'Maria\\nMonk', '(1836)—while', 'assigning', 'to', 'Protestantism', 'a', 'purely', 'spiritual', 'under-\\nstanding', 'of', 'womanhood.', 'Through', 'the', 'conjunction', 'of', 'spirit', 'and', 'text,\\nprogress', 'takes', 'shape', 'as', 'the', 'ongoing', 'spread', 'of', 'female', 'spiritual', '“influ-\\nence”', 'across', 'nations', 'and', 'empires.', 'Spirituality', 'in', 'turn', 'assures', 'the\\nproper', 'social', 'orientation', 'of', 'female', 'sexuality', 'toward', 'maternity,', 'which\\nbecomes', 'the', 'foundation', 'of', 'the', 'uniquely', 'Protestant', 'domestic', 'sphere.\\nHistory', 'thus', 'progresses', 'from', 'the', 'Catholic,', 'feudal', 'insistence', 'on', 'eroti-\\ncized', 'femininity', 'to', 'the', 'Protestant,', 'middle-class', 'insistence', 'on', 'spiritual-\\nized', 'femininity.', 'Always,', 'however,', 'this', 'progress', 'transpires', 'through', 'male\\ndesire,', 'albeit', 'a', 'desire', 'reflexively', 'shaped.', 'Women', 'are', '“deified”', 'in', 'chiv-\\nalry,', 'then', 'valued', 'for', 'their', '“intrinsic', 'qualities”;', '“bright', 'eyes', 'give', 'place\\nto', 'bright', 'deeds,', 'good', 'looks', 'to', 'good', 'thoughts,', 'and', 'the', 'outward', 'form\\n\\n46.', 'For', 'a', 'standard', 'Victorian', 'exposition', 'of', 'this', 'argument,', 'see', 'Richard', 'Whately,', '“On', 'the\\nOrigin', 'of', 'Civilisation,”', 'in', 'Miscellaneous', 'Lectures', 'and', 'Reviews', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '26-59.\\n\\n47.', 'John', 'Lord,', 'Great', 'Women,', 'vol.', '5', 'in', 'Lord’s', 'Beacon', 'Lights', 'of', 'History', '(New', 'York,', '1886),\\npp.', '55-56.\\n\\n48.', 'Writing', 'about', 'American', 'women’s', 'history,', 'Nina', 'Baym', 'makes', 'what', 'at', 'first', 'seems\\nlike', 'a', 'similar', 'point', 'when', 'she', 'argues', 'that', '“a', 'virtual', 'absence', 'of', 'prominent', 'women', 'in', 'the\\nhistorical', 'record', 'was', 'not', 'only', 'to', 'be', 'expected,', 'it', 'was', 'positively', 'hoped', 'for”', '(p.', '215).', 'But\\nwe', 'are', 'using', 'different', 'understandings', 'of', 'periodization:', 'she', 'argues', 'that', 'her', 'authors', 'are\\ndefining', 'this', 'absence', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'their', 'own', 'nineteenth', 'century;', 'I', 'argue', 'that', 'my', 'au-\\nthors', 'are', 'defining', 'it', 'in', 'relation', 'to', 'Christianity', 'per', 'se.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n64', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nto', 'the', 'magic', 'of', 'the', 'inner', 'life.”#°', 'Such', 'progressive', 'Protestant', 'narratives\\nbecame', 'a', 'clerical', 'specialty', 'in', 'both', 'Britain', 'and', 'America,', 'attracting\\nclergymen', 'across', 'the', 'denominational', 'spectrum.', '°°', 'At', 'the', 'same', 'time,\\nthe', 'spread', 'of', 'Protestantism', 'was', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'female', 'evangelist’s', 'in-\\ncreasing', 'spiritual', 'freedom', 'and', 'cultural', 'literacy,', 'which', 'allegorized', 'the\\nEnglishing', 'or', 'Americanizing', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation—as', 'well', 'as', 'of', 'global\\nhistory.\\n\\nIf', 'the', 'ideal', 'feminine', 'subject', 'is', 'both', 'a', 'beneficiary', 'and', 'an', 'agent', 'of\\nprovidence,', 'then', 'logically', 'women', 'should', 'be', 'central', 'to', 'historical', 'rep-\\nresentation', 'and', 'investigation.', 'Yet', 'if', 'Christian', 'women', 'were', 'imagined\\nas', 'quintessentially', 'modern', 'subjects,', 'their', 'subjectivity', 'was', 'represented\\nas', 'threatened', 'with', 'moral', 'corruption', 'by', 'history', 'itself.', 'This', 'threat', 'ex-\\nisted', 'on', 'two', 'different', 'levels:', 'that', 'of', 'historicity', '(the', 'fact', 'that', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'could', 'be', 'written)', 'and', 'that', 'of', 'historical', 'interpretation', '(the', 'act\\nof', 'reading', 'the', 'text).', 'Most', 'women’s', 'histories', 'systematically', 'avoid', 'refer-\\nence', 'to', 'current', 'political', 'issues;', 'even', 'when', 'these', 'histories', 'do', 'engage\\nwith', 'contemporary', 'crises,', 'they', 'do', 'so', 'obliquely,', 'by', 'representing', 'social\\nupheaval', 'as', 'ameliorated', 'by', 'individual', 'religious', 'consolation,', 'philan-\\nthropic', 'work,', 'or', 'maternity.', 'In', 'trying', 'to', 'attach', 'women’s', 'history', 'to', 'spir-\\nitual', 'universals,', 'politics', 'were', 'often', 'explicitly', 'thrown', 'by', 'the', 'wayside.\\nThus,', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh’s', 'pro-Catholic', 'Women', 'of', 'Christianity,', 'Exemplary', 'for\\nActs', 'of', 'Piety', 'and', 'Charity', '(1852),', 'published', 'in', 'the', 'wake', 'of', 'the', 'outcry', 'over\\nthe', '“Papal', 'Aggression”', '(the', 'restoration', 'of', 'the', 'Roman', 'Catholic', 'hierar-\\nchy', 'in', 'England),', 'raises', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'its', 'own', 'controversial', 'status\\nonly', 'to', 'sidestep', 'theological', 'debate.', 'Its', 'ecumenical', 'exemplars—Teresa\\nof', 'Avila,', 'Elizabeth', 'Fry,', 'Sarah', 'Martin—all', 'coexisting', 'peacefully', 'within\\n\\n49.', 'Mrs.', 'John', 'Sandford,', 'Woman', 'in', 'Her', 'Social', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Character,', 'London', 'ed.\\n(Boston,', '1833),', 'p.', '9;', 'and', 'Joseph', 'Johnson,', 'Willing', 'Hearts', 'and', 'Ready', 'Hands:', 'or,', 'The', 'La-\\nbours', 'and', 'Triumphs', 'of', 'Earnest', 'Women', '(London,', '1869),', 'p.', '43.\\n\\n50.', 'For', 'example,', 'Rev.', 'James', 'Anderson,', 'Ladies', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation:', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Distin-\\nguished', 'Female', 'Characters,', 'Belonging', 'to', 'the', 'Period', 'of', 'the', 'Reformation', 'in', 'the', 'Sixteenth', 'Century\\n(London,', '1857),', 'and', 'Memorable', 'Women', 'of', 'the', 'Puritan', 'Times,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1862);\\nDaniel', 'C.', 'Eddy,', 'Daughters', 'of', 'the', 'Cross:', 'Or', 'Woman’s', 'Mission', '(Boston,', '1855);', 'Rev.', 'James', 'A.\\nHuie,', 'Records', 'of', 'Female', 'Piety:', 'Comprising', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'and', 'Extracts', 'from', 'the', 'Writings', 'of\\nWomen', 'Eminent', 'for', 'Religious', 'Excellence,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Edinburgh,', '1845);', 'and', 'Thomas', 'Timpson,\\nBritish', 'Female', 'Biography;', 'Being', 'Select', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Pious', 'Ladies,', 'in', 'Various', 'Ranks', 'of', 'Public', 'and\\nPrivate', 'Life,', 'Including', 'Queens,', 'Princesses,', 'Martyrs,', 'Scholars,', 'Instructors,', 'Poetesses,', 'Philanthro-\\npists,', 'Ministers’', 'Wives', '(London,', '1854).', 'For', 'useful', 'analyses', 'of', 'the', 'relationship', 'between\\nreligion,', 'femininity,', 'and', 'historical', 'progress', 'in', 'conduct', 'manuals,', 'see', 'Judith', 'Lowder\\nNewton,', '“‘Ministers', 'of', 'the', 'Interior’:', 'The', 'Political', 'Economy', 'of', 'Woman’s', 'Manuals,”', 'in\\nStarting', 'Over:', 'Feminism', 'and', 'the', 'Politics', 'of', 'Cultural', 'Critique', '(Ann', 'Arbor,', 'Mich.,', '1994),\\npp.', '125-45;', 'and', 'Jane', 'E.', 'Rose,', '“Conduct', 'Books', 'for', 'Women,', '1830-1860:', 'A', 'Rationale', 'for\\nWomen’s', 'Conduct', 'and', 'Domestic', 'Role', 'in', 'America,”', 'in', 'Nineteenth-Century', 'Women', 'Learn', 'to\\nWrite,', 'ed.', 'Catherine', 'Hobbs', '(Charlottesville,', 'Va.,', '1995),', 'pp.', '37-58.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '65\\n\\nthe', 'text,', 'provide', 'a', 'utopian', 'vision', 'of', 'Christian', 'religious', 'harmony', 'ex-\\nplicitly', 'unavailable', 'elsewhere.\\n\\nCarolyn', 'Steedman', 'has', 'argued', 'that', 'the', 'motif', 'of', 'uneventful', 'private\\nlives', 'in', 'exemplary', 'biography', 'deliberately', 'contrasts', 'with', 'the', 'heroine’s\\n“eruption”', 'into', 'public', 'view,', 'as', 'the', 'private', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', '“a', 'do-\\nmestic', 'detail', 'that', 'asserts', 'how', 'little', 'really', 'happened', 'in', 'it.”5!', 'Yet', 'far\\nmore', 'common', 'during', 'the', 'Victorian', 'period', 'are', 'lives', 'lacking', 'any', '“erup-\\ntion”', 'whatsoever.', 'A', 'casual', 'survey', 'of', 'books', 'published', 'over', 'a', 'forty-four-\\nyear', 'period', 'reveals', 'that', 'royalty,', 'actresses,', 'poets,', 'and', 'serving', 'maids\\nall', 'shared', 'supposedly', 'identical', 'and', 'empty', 'lives:', 'no', '“romantic', 'inci-\\ndents”', 'or', '“eventful', 'occurrences,”', 'nothing', '“thrilling,”', '“passion-exciting,”\\n\\nr', '“startling,”', 'and', 'thus', '“few', 'passages', 'on', 'which', 'the', 'faithful', 'biogra-\\npher', 'can', 'enlarge.”', 'Incidents', 'of', 'any', 'kind', 'verge', 'on', 'the', 'nonexistent,', 'leav-\\ning', 'the', 'author', 'to', 'rely', 'on', 'a', '“brief', '(too', 'brief', ')', 'memoir.”>?', 'This', 'language\\nof', 'uneventfulness', 'collapses', 'distinctions', 'between', 'class', 'and', 'profession\\ninto', 'a', 'single', 'plot', 'that', 'resists', 'narration:', 'the', 'emphatically', 'negative', 'dis-\\ncourse', 'discloses', 'a', 'pattern', 'of', 'existence', 'so', 'unremarkable', 'that', 'it', 'escapes\\nbiographical', 'writing,', 'yet', 'simultaneously', 'establishes', 'that', 'pattern', 'as', 'the\\ntrue', 'foundation', 'of', 'exemplary', 'representation.', 'In', 'these', 'popular', 'histo-\\nries,', 'women’s', 'lives', 'lack', '“scenes,”', 'dramatic', 'plot', 'twists,', 'romantic', 'sorrows,\\nand', 'tragic', 'denouements.', 'This', 'rhetoric', 'of', 'antifiction', '(and,', 'in', 'its', 'em-\\nphasis', 'on', 'the', 'refusal', 'to', 'engage', 'with', 'public', 'events,', 'antipolitics)', 'implies\\nthat', 'exemplary', 'value', 'is', 'constituted', 'not', 'by', 'events', 'internal', 'to', 'the', 'life,\\nbut', 'instead', 'by', 'the', 'posthumous', 'differentiation', 'of', 'a', 'life,', 'as', 'a', 'perfect\\nwhole,', 'from', 'all', 'those', 'lives', 'which', 'deviate', 'from', 'its', 'pattern.', 'As', 'a', 'result,\\nsuch', 'lives', 'can', 'be', 'retrospectively', 'universalized,', 'made', 'to', 'speak', 'for', 'the\\nprogress', 'of', 'morality', 'instead', 'of', 'for', 'the', 'individual’s', 'own', 'achievements.\\n\\nEven', 'eventful', 'lives', 'could', 'be', 'transposed', 'into', 'moral', 'universals', 'by\\nan', 'emphasis', 'on', 'private', 'experience;', 'in', 'extreme', 'instances,', 'women’s\\nhistorians', 'figured', 'their', 'work', 'as', 'the', 'domestication', 'of', 'national', 'culture\\nitself.', 'In', 'the', 'preface', 'to', 'her', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland,', 'for', 'example,\\nAgnes', 'Strickland', 'argued', 'that', 'since', 'England', 'and', 'Scotland', '“are', 'now\\nONE', '...', 'truly', 'and', 'effectually', 'by', 'friendship,', 'based', 'on', 'mutual', 'esteem,”\\n\\n51.', 'Carolyn', 'Steedman,', '“Le', 'Théorie', 'qui', 'n’en', 'est', 'pas', 'une;', 'or,', 'Why', 'Clio', 'Doesn’t', 'Care,”\\nin', 'Feminists', 'Revision', 'History,', 'ed.', 'Ann-Louise', 'Shapiro', '(New', 'Brunswick,', 'N.J.,', '1994),', 'p.', '84.\\n\\n52.1', 'cite', 'Mrs.', '[Anna]', 'Jameson,', 'The', 'Beauties', 'of', 'the', 'Court', 'of', 'King', 'Charles', 'the', 'Second...\\n(London,', '1833),', 'p.', '87;', 'Francis', 'Lancelott,', 'The', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'and', 'their', 'Times:', 'From', 'Ma-\\ntilda,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Conqueror,', 'to', 'Adelaide,', 'Queen', 'of', 'William', 'the', 'Fourth,', '2', 'vols.', '(New\\nYork,', '1859),', '2:1042-43;', 'Mrs.', '[Margaret]', 'C.', 'Baron', 'Wilson,', 'Our', 'Actresses;', 'or,', 'Glances', 'at\\nStage', 'Favourites,', 'Past', 'and', 'Present,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),', '1:73;', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,\\nThe', 'Sunshine', 'of', 'Domestic', 'Life;', 'or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Virtues,', 'and', 'Stories', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of', 'Noble\\nWomen', '(London,', '1867),', 'p.', '59;', 'and', 'Clara', 'L.', 'Balfour,', 'Women', 'Worth', 'Emulating', '(New', 'York,\\n1877),', 'p.', '23.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n66', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nher', '“Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'ought', 'not', 'to', 'be', 'less', 'interesting', 'to\\nEnglish,', 'than', 'those', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'England', 'have', 'proved', 'to', 'Scotch\\nreaders.”', 'Strickland', 'offers', 'the', 'phenomenon', 'of', 'her', 'Lives', 'as', 'the', 'outcome\\nof', 'a', 'long', 'process', 'of', 'national', 'unification,', 'in', 'which', 'authentic', 'senti-\\nments', 'have', 'transcended', 'the', 'mere', 'legal', 'act', 'of', 'Union.', 'Reading', 'these\\nLives', 'thus', 'proves', 'or', 'reaffirms', 'a', 'new', 'British', 'nationhood,', 'founded', 'in\\nlove', 'instead', 'of', 'law.', 'The', 'affective', 'emphasis', 'is', 'further', 'underscored', 'by\\nStrickland’s', 'insistence', 'that', 'her', 'Lives', 'are', 'family', 'reading,', 'works', 'suitable\\nfor', 'those', 'raised', 'on', 'Sir', 'Walter', 'Scott’s', 'romances', 'yet', 'now', 'desiring', 'a\\n“truth”', 'not', 'sacrificed', 'to', '“fastidiousness,”', 'so', '“that', 'they', 'may', 'read', 'it', 'with\\ntheir', 'children,', 'and', 'that', 'the', 'whole', 'family', 'party', 'shall', 'be', 'eager', 'to', 're-\\nsume', 'the', 'book', 'when', 'they', 'gather', 'round', 'the', 'work-table', 'during', 'the', 'long\\nwinter', 'evenings.”', 'The', 'new', 'national', 'family', 'is', 'reinforced', 'by', 'the', 'plea-\\nsures', 'of', 'historical', 'reading,', 'a', 'pleasure', 'that', 'Strickland', 'is', 'careful', 'to\\ncounterbalance', 'with', 'a', 'setting', 'of', 'domestic', 'usefulness', '(the', '“work-table,”\\nwhere', 'presumably', 'the', 'women', 'are', 'sewing', 'as', 'they', 'listen', 'to', 'the', 'book\\nbeing', 'read).°°\\n\\nStrickland’s', 'domesticating', 'rhetoric', 'suggests', 'that', 'reading', 'and', 'writ-\\ning', 'these', 'uneventful', 'lives', 'are', 'themselves', 'means', 'toward', 'social', '(and', 'ul-\\ntimately', 'Christian)', 'reform,', 'but', 'it', 'also', 'suggests', 'that', 'such', 'reforms', 'must\\nalready', 'be', 'under', 'way', 'for', 'her', 'writings', 'to', 'be', 'properly', 'appreciated.', 'In\\nmaking', 'the', 'reading', 'and', 'writing', 'of', 'her', 'history', 'a', 'triumph', 'of', 'love', 'over\\nforce,', 'Strickland', 'announces', 'her', 'participation', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history’s\\nlarger', 'pedagogical', 'project:', 'tutoring', 'her', 'readers', 'in', 'the', 'proper', 'work\\nof', 'both', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'and', 'the', 'history', 'of', 'women.', 'Earlier,', 'Sarah\\nLewis', 'had', 'argued', 'that', '“the', 'moral', 'progress', 'of', 'our', 'race', 'does', 'not', 'keep\\npace', 'with', 'the', 'intellectual;', 'and', 'it', 'has', 'been', 'assumed', 'that', 'one', 'of', 'the\\nchief', 'causes', 'of', 'this', 'slow', 'progress', 'is', 'the', 'misdirecting', 'of', 'influence,', 'and\\nexpecting', 'power', 'to', 'supply', 'the', 'want,', 'and', 'perform', 'the', 'work', 'of', 'influ-\\nence”;', 'she', 'directed', 'her', 'readers', 'to', 'their', 'divinely', 'appointed', 'place', 'in\\nsociety', 'so', 'that', 'they', 'could', '“interfere', 'in', 'politics”', 'by', 'becoming', '“moral\\nagents,”', 'and', 'in', 'so', 'doing', '“instill', 'into', 'their', 'relatives', 'of', 'the', 'other', 'sex', 'the\\nuncompromising', 'sense', 'of', 'duty', 'and', 'self-devotion,', 'which', 'ought', 'to', 'be\\ntheir', 'ruling', 'principles!”>4', 'Female', 'influence', 'becomes', 'a', 'historical', 'force\\nonly', 'when', 'detached', 'from', 'power,', 'that', 'is,', 'from', 'the', 'immediately', 'visible\\nand', 'traceable', 'exertion', 'of', 'force', 'in', 'political', 'circles.', 'This', 'influential,', 'in-\\nstead', 'of', 'political,', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'progressively', 'transforms', 'the', 'nature\\nof', 'modernity', 'through', 'her', 'ongoing', 'regeneration', 'of', 'masculine', 'spiritu-\\nality;', 'yet', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'exemplary', 'histories—and', 'conduct', 'manuals—\\nalso', 'points', 'to', 'the', 'conditional', 'nature', 'of', 'these', 'transformations.', 'It', 'was\\n\\n53.', 'Agnes', 'Strickland,', 'Lives', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Scotland', 'and', 'English', 'Princesses', 'Connected', 'with\\nthe', 'Regal', 'Succession', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain,', '2d', 'ed.,', '8', 'vols.', '(Edinburgh,', '1852),', '1:xvi.\\n54.', '[Sarah', 'Lewis],', 'Woman’s', 'Mission,', 'London', 'ed.', '(Boston,', '1840),', 'pp.', '15,', '61.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '67\\n\\nthe', 'job', 'of', 'exemplary', 'history', 'to', 'call', 'the', 'truly', 'Christian', 'historical\\nwoman', 'into', 'being,', 'proving', 'to', 'the', '“complainant”', 'who', 'yearns', 'for', 'public\\nactivity', 'that', '“in', 'most', 'of', 'the', 'triumphs', 'achieved', 'by', 'men...', 'she', 'has\\nshared,', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'purest', 'form,', 'by', 'having', 'been', 'their', 'instructor,', 'inves-\\ntigator,', 'or', 'friend.”®>', 'The', 'narrative', 'of', 'women’s', 'history', 'was', 'thus', 'de-\\nsigned', 'to', 'convince', 'readers', 'of', 'their', 'participation', 'in', 'a', 'modernity', 'that\\nthey', 'obstinately', 'refused', 'to', 'recognize.', 'Even', 'men', 'had', 'to', 'be', 'convinced.\\nAs', '“C.', 'B.', 'C.', 'Amicus”', 'reminded', 'his', 'male', 'readers,', 'the', 'improvement', 'of\\n“national', 'manners,', 'morals,', 'and', 'happiness”', 'was', 'owed', 'to', '“female', 'sway,”\\nand', 'that', 'sway', 'was', 'progressing', 'toward', 'even', 'greater', 'refinement:', '“The\\nlovely', 'mothers', 'of', 'the', 'present', 'day', 'attend', 'to', 'their', 'pleasing', 'duties', 'with\\nmore', 'zeal', 'and', 'sense', 'than', 'their', 'grandmothers', 'did.”*°', 'These', 'writers', 'ex-\\npect', 'the', 'reader', 'to', 'participate', 'in', 'a', 'larger', 'social', 'conversion', 'to', 'the', 'his-\\ntorical', 'revelation', 'of', 'woman’s', 'reforming', 'capacities,', 'either', 'acceding', 'to\\nfemale', 'influence', 'or', 'learning', 'to', 'wield', 'it.\\n\\nRecognition', 'of', 'these', 'connections', 'makes', 'comprehensible', 'the', 'oft-\\nnoted', 'anxieties', 'about', 'public,', '“writable”', 'women', 'whose', 'lives', 'can', 'be\\ndefined', 'as', 'historical', 'within', 'accepted', 'canons', 'of', 'evidence,', 'and', 'therefore\\ntake', 'on', 'meaning', 'through', 'their', 'particularity.', 'If,', 'ideally,', 'a', 'woman’s', 'life\\nwas', 'too', 'uneventful', 'to', 'warrant', 'narration', 'and', 'interpretation,', 'then', 'a\\n“historical', 'woman”', 'could', 'be', 'identified', 'as', 'a', 'disruption:', 'a', 'woman', 'with\\na', 'fragmentary', 'or', 'nonexistent', 'domestic', 'existence', 'was', 'too', 'obviously\\nsingular', 'to', 'be', 'situated', 'in', 'exemplary', 'history;', 'historians', 'had', 'to', 'account\\nfor', 'and', 'explain', 'away', 'the', 'existence', 'of', 'such', 'figures.', 'For', 'Mary', 'Cowden\\nClarke,', '“it', 'were', 'idle”', 'to', 'regard', 'her', '“World-noted', 'Women”', 'as', 'anything\\nother', 'than', '“isolated', 'exemplars', 'of', 'special', 'qualities;', 'they', 'are', 'not', 'so\\nmuch', 'types', 'of', 'a', 'class', 'of', 'women,', 'as', 'types', 'of', 'particular', 'womanly', 'at-\\ntributes.”57', 'Women', 'who', 'stand', 'out', 'in', 'history', 'can', 'be', 'narrated', 'within\\nCowden', 'Clarke’s', 'biographical', 'series', 'only', 'insofar', 'as', 'they,', 'as', 'individu-\\nals,', 'typify', 'fragmentary', 'qualities', 'possessed', 'by', 'women.', 'By', 'constructing\\na', 'series', 'of', 'singular', 'lives,', 'Cowden', 'Clarke', 'also', 'constructs', 'a', 'single', 'unified\\nwoman;', 'but', 'at', 'the', 'same', 'time', 'she', 'defines', 'famous', 'women', 'in', 'history', 'as\\nfailures,', 'their', 'natures', 'fragmented', 'by', 'political', 'participation', 'instead\\nof', 'unified', 'by', 'domestic', 'and', 'Christian', 'harmony.', 'The', 'woman', 'who', 'stands\\nout', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'too', 'different,', 'idiosyncratic,', 'unrepeatable,', 'atypical.\\nThe', 'governing', 'metaphor', 'for', 'her', 'is', 'the', 'comet:', 'fashionable', 'women\\n“fly', 'off', 'like', 'comets', 'from', 'their', 'appointed', 'orbits,', 'and', 'threaten', 'destruc-\\ntion', 'to', 'the', 'whole', 'social', 'system”;', 'a', 'woman', 'out', 'of', 'her', 'sphere', 'is', '“comet-\\nlike,', 'wandering', 'in', 'irregular', 'orbits,', 'dazzling', 'indeed', 'by', 'their', 'brilliancy,\\n\\n55.', '“On', 'Modern', 'Female', 'Cultivation.', 'No.', 'IV,”', 'Athenaeum', '250', '(1832):', '521.\\n\\n56.', 'C.', 'B.C.', 'Amicus,', 'Hints', 'on', 'Life;', 'and', 'How', 'to', 'Rise', 'in', 'Society', '(London,', '1845),', 'pp.', '109-10.\\n\\n57.', 'Mary', 'Cowden', 'Clarke,', 'World-Noted', 'Women;', 'Or,', 'Types', 'of', 'Womanly', 'Attributes', 'of', 'All\\nLands', 'and', 'Ages', '(New', 'York,', '1858),', 'p.', '3.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n68', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nbut', 'terrifying', 'by', 'their', 'eccentric', 'movements', 'and', 'doubtful', 'utility”;', 'an\\nemancipated', 'woman', 'would', 'be', 'like', 'the', 'star', 'of', 'Venus,', 'if', 'it', '“should', 'be-\\ncome', 'a', 'fiery', 'comet,', 'and', 'rush', 'through', 'the', 'sky,', 'bringing', 'dismay', 'with\\nher', 'light,', 'and', 'causing', 'a', 'deeper', 'darkness', 'as', 'she', 'passed', 'away.”°®', 'Like\\ncomets,', 'women', 'of', 'public', 'note', 'are', 'terrifying', 'precisely', 'because', 'they\\ndeviate', 'from', 'the', 'norm.', 'No', 'writer', 'can', 'transform', 'them', 'into', 'exemplary\\nfigures,', 'for', 'there', 'is', 'nothing', 'universal', 'about', 'their', 'moral', 'and', 'intellec-\\ntual', 'qualities', 'save', 'their', 'unpredictability.\\n\\nWomen’s', 'historians', 'thus', 'distinguished', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'women,\\nlying', 'passively', 'invisible', 'until', 'written', 'up', 'by', 'the', 'historian,', 'from', 'the\\n“comets,”', 'making', 'themselves', 'visible', 'through', 'their', 'own', 'exertions.', 'In\\nmaking', 'this', 'distinction,', 'writers', 'further', 'stigmatized', 'attention', 'to', '“event-\\nfulness”', 'itself', 'as,', 'at', 'best,', 'a', 'misreading', 'of', 'history', 'and,', 'at', 'worst,', 'an', 'un-\\nChristian', 'practice.', 'Since', 'women’s', 'histories', 'often', 'used', 'sensationalism\\nas', 'a', 'selling', 'point', 'despite', 'their', 'contrary', 'moral', 'claims,', 'this', 'anti-event\\nrhetoric', 'was', 'also', 'a', 'means', 'for', 'an', 'individual', 'writer', 'to', 'clear', 'space', 'for', 'his\\nor', 'her', 'own', 'text.', 'Jane', 'Williams', 'complained', 'that', '“several', 'miscellaneous\\ncollections', 'of', 'the', 'lives', 'of', 'celebrated', 'women', 'have', 'been', 'published', 'in\\nEngland,', 'apparently', 'without', 'any', 'other', 'principle', 'of', 'selection', 'than', 'that\\nof', 'historical', 'and', 'contemporary', 'notoriety,', 'and', 'perplexing', 'the', 'ambi-\\ntious', 'aspirations', 'of', 'youthful', 'readers,', 'by', 'setting', 'before', 'them', 'the', 'dark\\ndoings', 'and', 'daring', 'ascents', 'of', 'the', 'Catherines', 'de’', 'Medici', 'and', 'of', 'Russia,\\nand', 'the', 'discordant', 'careers', 'of', 'the', 'daughters', 'of', 'Sir', 'Anthony', 'Cooke', 'and\\nof', 'Queen', 'Elizabeth.”5*', 'More', 'importantly,', 'this', 'strategy', 'led', 'women’s\\nhistory', 'to', 'apply', 'the', 'Christian', 'definition', 'of', 'political', 'historiography', 'as\\nitself', 'a', 'vehicle', 'of', 'evil,', 'insofar', 'as', 'it', 'dwells', 'on', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.\\nFor', 'the', 'more', 'doomsaying', 'writer,', 'this', 'evil', 'could', 'be', 'turned', 'to', 'account;\\nas', '“M.A.K.”', 'put', 'it,', '“while', '[history]', 'communicates', 'the', 'events', 'of', 'past\\nages,', 'it', 'clearly', 'pourtrays', 'the', 'unhappy', 'condition', 'of', 'the', 'wicked,', 'and\\ndemonstrates', 'most', 'awfully', 'the', 'retributive', 'justice', 'of', 'the', 'Almighty,\\nwhich', 'is', 'so', 'frequently', 'manifested', 'in', 'this', 'world—doubtless', 'for', 'our', 'ad-\\nmonition.”©', 'For', 'most', 'writers,', 'however,', 'this', 'approach', 'went', 'directly\\nagainst', 'their', 'doctrines', 'of', 'love', 'and', 'feminine', 'tenderness.', 'Women', 'of\\npublic', 'note', 'might', 'be', '“comets,”', 'but', 'the', 'historian', 'who', 'narrated', 'their\\nlives', 'succumbed', 'to', 'an', 'unworthy', 'desire', 'for', 'the', 'anomalous', 'and', 'horrific.\\nThe', 'anonymous', 'figure', 'who', 'wrote', 'that', '“women', 'who', 'have', 'attained', 'no-\\ntoriety', 'in', 'any', 'way,', 'have', 'been,', 'for', 'the', 'most', 'part,', 'wanting', 'in', 'the', 'accom-\\n\\n58.', 'Respectively,', 'Mrs.', 'Virginia', 'Cary,', 'Letters', 'on', 'Female', 'Character;', 'Addressed', 'to', 'a', 'Young\\nLady', 'on', 'the', 'Death', 'of', 'Her', 'Mother,', '3d', 'ed.', '(Hartford,', 'Conn.,', '1831),', 'p.', '134;', 'Lewis,', 'p.', '47;', 'and\\nHale,', 'p.', 'xlv.\\n\\n59.', 'Jane', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Literary', 'Women', 'of', 'England.', 'Including', 'a', 'Biographical', 'Epitome', 'of', 'All\\nthe', 'Most', 'Eminent', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1700;', 'And', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Poetesses', 'to', 'the', 'Year', '1850;', 'with', 'Extracts\\nfrom', 'their', 'Works,', 'and', 'Critical', 'Remarks', '(London,', '1861),', 'pp.', '10-11.\\n\\n60.', 'M.', 'A.', 'K.,', 'Biography', 'for', 'Young', 'Ladies', '(London,', '1839),', 'p.', '214.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '69\\n\\nplishment', 'of', 'virtue!”', 'may', 'have', 'been', 'merely', 'a', 'misogynist,', 'but', 'others\\nwho', 'were', 'not', 'agreed', 'with', 'him', '(or', 'her):', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'in', 'an', 'impor-\\ntant', 'early', 'work', 'on', 'Shakespeare’s', 'heroines', 'that', 'also', 'implicitly', 'retracted\\nher', 'earlier', 'biographical', 'histories,', 'complained', 'that', '“women', 'are', 'illus-\\ntrious', 'in', 'history,', 'not', 'from', 'what', 'they', 'have', 'been', 'in', 'themselves,', 'but\\ngenerally', 'in', 'proportion', 'to', 'the', 'mischief', 'they', 'have', 'caused,”', 'and', 'the\\nabolitionist', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child', 'noted', 'that', '“in', 'searching', 'the', 'history\\nof', 'women,', 'the', 'mild,', 'unobtrusive', 'domestic', 'virtues', '...', 'are', 'not', 'found\\non', 'record.”®!', 'In', 'this', 'context,', 'women', 'in', 'history—even', 'women', 'in', '“ev-\\neryone', 'else’s”', 'women’s', 'history—are', 'merely', 'anomalies', 'indexing', 'anom-\\nalies,', 'instead', 'of', 'truly', 'exemplary', 'figures', 'whose', 'private', 'virtues', 'can', 'be\\nuniversalized', 'by', 'an', 'appropriately', 'Christian', 'author.', 'The', 'only', 'excuse\\nfor', 'a', 'woman’s', 'departure', 'from', 'the', 'private', 'sphere', 'is', 'the', 'pull', 'of', 'forces\\nbeyond', 'her', 'control;', 'a', 'truly', 'feminine', 'woman', 'never', 'voluntarily', 'partici-\\npates', 'in', 'historical', 'action.', '“Sutherland', 'Menzies”', '(Elizabeth', 'Stone)', 'de-\\nclared', 'this', 'to', 'be', 'the', 'moral', 'of', 'her', 'antifeminist', 'collection:', '“Certain\\ncelebrated', 'women', 'who', 'have', 'flung', 'themselves', 'with', 'ardour', 'into', 'the', 'vor-\\ntex', 'of', 'politics”', 'had', 'necessarily', 'sacrificed', '“conjugal', 'happiness,', 'the', 'wel-\\nfare', 'of', 'children,', 'domestic', 'peace,', 'reputation,', 'and', 'all', 'the', 'amenities', 'of\\nthe', 'gentle', 'life.”®?', 'By', 'contrast,', 'the', 'truly', 'heroic', 'woman', 'simply', 'relin-\\nquishes', 'her', 'will', 'in', 'the', 'face', 'of', 'extraordinary', 'events,', 'in', 'what', 'Samuel\\nMossman', 'called', 'an', '“involuntary', 'act', 'of', 'the', 'sentiments', 'or', 'affections.”\\n\\n“History”', 'in', 'these', 'citations', 'signifies', 'worldly', 'experience,', 'improperly\\ntaken', 'as', 'a', 'norm', 'for', 'moral', 'behavior.', 'Yet', 'the', 'disruption', 'of', 'female\\nsubjectivity', 'through', 'historical', 'participation,', 'even', 'if', 'that', 'participation\\nwas', 'anomalous,', 'remained', 'an', 'insoluble', 'difficulty.', 'The', 'spectacle', 'of', 'the\\n“masculine”', 'woman', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'thus', 'the', 'sign', 'of', 'a', 'crisis', 'both', 'in', 'the\\nauthor’s', 'construction', 'of', 'history', 'and', 'in', 'the', 'larger', 'system', 'of', 'cultural\\nsignification.', 'The', 'masculinized', 'woman', 'is', 'dangerous', 'not', 'simply', 'be-\\ncause', 'she', 'threatens', 'gender', 'categories', 'but', 'also', 'because', 'her', 'presence\\ncomplicates', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'and,', 'by', 'posing', 'interpretive', 'difficul-\\nties,', 'threatens', 'moral', 'categories', 'as', 'well.', 'It', 'is', 'the', 'masculine', 'woman,', 'not\\n“woman,”', 'who', 'serves', 'as', 'the', 'trope', 'for', 'historical', 'anachronism;', 'when\\nshe', 'qualifies', 'as', 'a', 'historical', 'woman,', 'she', 'overlaps', 'dangerously', 'with', 'the\\nGreat', 'Man.', 'Invoking', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages', 'as', 'his', 'frame', 'for', 'an', 'antifemi-\\nnist', 'argument,', 'William', 'Hamley', 'asked', 'the', 'readers', 'of', 'the', 'conservative\\n\\n61.', 'Woman:', 'As', 'She', 'Is,', 'and', 'As', 'She', 'Should', 'Be,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1835),', '2:2;', 'Mrs.', '[Anna\\nBrownell]', 'Jameson,', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'Women,', 'Moral,', 'Poetical,', 'and', 'Historical,', '3d', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.\\n(London,', '1836),', '1:18;', 'and', 'Lydia', 'Maria', 'Child,', 'Brief', 'History', 'of', 'the', 'Condition', 'of', 'Women,', 'in\\nVarious', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations,', '5th', 'ed.,', '2', 'vols.', '(New', 'York,', '1845),', '2:209.\\n\\n62.', '“Sutherland', 'Menzies,”', 'Political', 'Women,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1873),', '1:vii.\\n\\n63.', 'Samuel', 'Mossman,', 'Gems', 'of', 'Womanhood:', 'Or,', 'Sketches', 'of', 'Distinguished', 'Women', 'in', 'Vari-\\nous', 'Ages', 'and', 'Nations', '(London,', '[1870?]),', 'p.', 'iv.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n70', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nBlackwood’s', 'Magazine', 'to', 'adjudicate', 'between', 'the', '“ladies', 'of', 'manlike', 'ten-\\ndencies”', 'and', 'the', '“quiet,', 'soft', 'beings', 'who', 'held', 'fast', 'by', 'the', 'instincts', 'and\\ntraditions', 'of', 'their', 'sex.”', 'Even', 'though', 'he', 'was', 'willing', 'to', 'make', 'exceptions\\nfor', 'such', 'manlike', 'women', 'as', 'Joan', 'of', 'Arc', 'and', 'Zenobia,', 'who', '“impelled', 'by\\npatriotism', 'or', 'other', 'temporary', 'enthusiasm,', 'against', 'their', 'inclination\\nand', 'practice,', 'transform', 'themselves', 'for', 'a', 'time,”', 'Hamley’s', 'argument', 'was\\nclear:', 'the', 'woman', 'who', 'entered', 'the', 'lists', 'of', 'war', 'and', 'politics', 'not', 'only', 'be-\\ncame', 'a', 'hermaphroditic', 'figure', 'but', 'also', 'failed', 'to', 'measure', 'up', 'to', 'later\\nmoral', 'standards.', 'Even', 'the', 'motives', 'ascribed', 'to', 'his', 'exceptions', 'are', 'dis-\\nparaged', 'as', '“temporary', 'enthusiasm”;', 'instead', 'of', 'being', 'called', 'to', 'duty,\\nthey', 'called', 'themselves', 'without', 'any', 'true,', 'permanent,', 'or', 'consistent', 'ded-\\nication.', 'In', 'Hamley’s', 'formulations,', 'historical', 'specificity', 'marks', 'the', 'pecu-\\nliarity', 'and', 'hence', 'the', 'irrelevance', 'of', 'the', 'event,', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'discount', 'any\\npotential', 'relevance', 'for', 'future', 'practices.', '“We', 'find', 'her', 'natural', 'relative\\nstate', 'to', 'be', 'one', 'of', 'subordination', 'to', 'men', 'in', 'both', 'ancient', 'and', 'modern\\ntimes,”', 'Hamley', 'remarks,', 'and', '“we', 'find', 'this', 'natural', 'condition', 'reversed\\nat', 'a', 'particular', 'period', 'on', 'one', 'quarter', 'of', 'the', 'world;', 'but', 'reversed', 'by\\na', 'particular', 'combination', 'of', 'circumstances.”', 'In', 'his', 'call', 'to', 'judgment,\\nthe', 'juxtaposition', 'of', 'past', 'and', 'present', 'invokes', 'a', 'modern', 'consensus\\nabout', 'the', 'feminine', '(what', '“we”', 'think)', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'insist', 'upon', 'the', 'unfa-\\nmiliarity', 'of', 'a', 'past', 'in', 'which', 'gender', 'difference', 'appears', 'fluid.', 'By', 'invok-\\ning', 'historical', 'specificity', 'in', 'this', 'manner,', 'Hamley', 'makes', 'masculinity', 'in\\na', 'woman', 'a', 'sign', 'of', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'exemplarity.', 'The', 'masculine', 'woman', 'is\\nidentified', 'with', 'the', 'anomalous', 'event', 'which', 'teaches', 'nothing', 'except', 'the\\nimpossibility', 'of', 'its', 'repetition.', 'In', 'turn,', 'the', 'historical', 'record', 'does', 'not\\nso', 'much', 'reduce', 'to', 'purely', 'masculine', 'actions', 'as', 'become', 'the', 'reposi-\\ntory', 'of', '“true”', 'feminine', 'behavior', '(“quiet,', 'soft', 'beings”).', 'By', 'incorporat-\\ning', 'women', 'who', 'do', 'nothing', 'manly', 'yet', 'exhibit', 'a', 'high', 'order', 'of', 'feminine\\nvirtue,', 'while', 'simultaneously', 'excising', 'hybrid', 'figures', '(“manlike', 'ladies”)\\nfrom', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'progress,', 'Hamley', 'temporarily', 'creates', 'a', 'unified\\nnarrative', 'of', 'historical', 'change', 'couched', 'in', 'terms', 'of', 'eternal', 'gender\\ndifferences.', 'If', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'moral', 'history', 'was', 'supposed', 'to', 'sup-\\nplant', 'political', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'most', 'valuable', 'realm', 'of', 'human', 'endeavor,\\nHamley', 'reasserts', 'the', 'primacy', 'of', 'the', 'political', 'in', 'order', 'to', 'situate', 'the\\nfeminine', 'as', 'its', 'supplement.', 'oo\\n\\n64.', '[William', 'Hamley],', '“Women', 'in', 'the', 'Middle', 'Ages,”', 'Blackwood’s', 'Edinburgh', 'Magazine\\n102', '(1867):', '627-28.\\n\\n65.', 'Postbellum', 'American', 'serial', 'biographies,', 'however,', 'often', 'challenge', 'this', 'insistence\\nupon', 'strictly', 'delineated', 'gender', 'roles.', 'L.', 'P.', 'Brockett’s', 'and', 'Mary', 'C.', 'Vaughan’s', 'Woman’s\\nWork', 'in', 'the', 'Civil', 'War:', 'A', 'Record', 'of', 'Heroism,', 'Patriotism,', 'and', 'Patience', '(1867),', 'William', 'Wor-\\nthington', 'Fowler’s', 'Woman', 'on', 'the', 'American', 'Frontier...', '(1877),', 'and', 'Frank', 'Moore’s', 'Women\\nof', 'the', 'War;', 'Their', 'Heroism', 'and', 'Self-Sacrifice', '(1867)', 'all', 'redefine', 'masculinity', 'and', 'femininity\\nin', 'relation', 'to', 'the', 'nature', 'of', 'American', 'expansion', 'or', 'to', 'the', 'postbellum', 'social', 'order.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '°', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '71\\n\\nIf,', 'moreover,', 'the', 'project', 'of', 'domesticating', 'history', 'meant', 'that', 'event-\\nful', 'narrative—profane', 'historiography—could', 'be', 'ended,', 'this', 'domesti-\\ncation', 'meant', 'educating', 'men', 'and', 'women', 'into', 'an', 'interpretive', 'process\\nthat', 'would', 'end', 'the', 'need', 'for', 'further', 'interpretation.', 'Yet', 'such', 'ideally', 'do-\\nmesticated', 'history', 'proves', 'a', 'contradictory', 'exercise.', 'Supposedly,', 'women\\nare', 'born', 'into', 'a', 'Christian', 'era', 'that', 'judges', 'character', 'on', 'universal', 'moral\\nprinciples.', 'A', 'woman', 'perceptible', 'to', 'the', 'political', 'historian,', 'however,\\nchronologically', 'regresses', 'by', 'being', 'reinscribed', 'into', 'local', 'and', 'specific\\ncircumstances;', 'in', 'Christian', 'terms,', 'she', 'reenacts', 'Eve’s', 'fall.', 'Yet', 'if', 'the\\nwoman', 'in', 'history', 'succumbs', 'to', 'the', 'new', 'apple', 'of', 'public', 'activity,', 'her', 'fall\\nis', 'nevertheless', 'merely', 'individual;', 'as', 'she', 'comes', 'into', 'view,', 'she', 'actually\\nreinforces', 'the', 'reality', 'of', 'the', 'new', 'Eden', 'inhabited', 'by', 'the', 'more', 'ideal\\nfeminine', 'type.', 'As', 'the', 'prolific', 'popular', 'biographer', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport\\nAdams', 'argued', '(in', 'relation', 'to', 'Madame', 'de', 'Staél),', 'a', 'woman', 'who', '“lived\\ntoo', 'much', 'in', 'the', 'glare', 'of', 'the', 'lamps,', 'and', 'fed', 'too', 'eagerly', 'upon', 'the', 'ap-\\nplause', 'of', 'the', 'crowd”', 'had,', 'from', 'the', 'perspective', 'of', 'the', '“patient', 'analyst,”\\nan', '“imperfect', '.', '.', '.', 'career”:', 'it', 'showed', 'that', '“so', 'prodigal', 'an', 'expenditure', 'of\\npower', 'accomplished', 'so', 'little', 'good.”', 'According', 'to', 'the', 'analyst’s', 'patient\\ndiagnosis,', 'which', 'directly', 'contrasts', 'with', 'his', 'subject’s', 'impulsiveness,', 'de\\nStaél’s', 'very', 'publicity', 'makes', 'her', 'irrelevant', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'of', 'moral\\nprogress.®', 'In', 'order', 'to', 'explain', 'why', 'women', 'cannot', 'achieve', 'equality,', 'it\\nis', 'necessary', 'to', 'argue', 'that', 'local', 'circumstances', 'are', 'immediately', 'pertinent\\nonce', 'women', 'enter', 'into', 'public', 'notice.', 'Madame', 'du', 'Chatelet’s', '“relaxed\\nmorals—the', 'mixture', 'of', 'pride,', 'worldliness,', 'and', 'intellect,', 'by', 'which', 'she\\nwas', 'distinguished—her', 'external', 'observance', 'of', 'every', 'convenance—\\nand', 'her', 'total', 'want', 'of', 'religious', 'feeling—are', 'alike', 'characteristic', 'of', 'her\\nstation', 'and', 'her', 'age,”', 'observes', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh', 'of', 'one', 'influential', 'French\\nwoman', 'of', 'letters', 'in', 'Enlightenment', 'France.', 'So', 'characteristic', 'that', 'the\\nnineteenth-century', 'Englishwoman', 'can', 'learn', 'nothing', 'from', 'her,', 'save\\nwhat', 'actions', 'and', 'beliefs', 'are', 'no', 'longer', 'possible', 'or', 'even', 'desirable;', 'it', 'is\\nsignificant', 'that', 'Kavanagh', 'stipulates', 'that', 'her', 'book', 'is', 'an', '“analysis', 'of', 'the\\npower', 'of', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'eighteenth', 'century,”', 'and', 'not,', 'as\\nis', 'usually', 'the', 'case,', 'the', 'power', 'of', 'women', 'in', 'all', 'ages', 'and', 'nations.®”', 'Even\\nas', 'authors', 'claim', 'that', 'women', 'have', 'truly', 'evolved', 'into', 'their', 'historically\\nproper', 'position', 'of', 'domestic', 'solitude,', 'their', 'texts', 'return', 'again', 'and', 'again\\nto', 'the', 'dangers', 'of', 'their', 'straying', 'outside', 'it', 'in', 'search', 'of', 'forbidden', 'fruits.\\nThe', 'abstract', 'nature', 'of', 'womanliness', 'in', 'the', 'Christian', 'account,', 'in', 'other\\nwords,', 'actually', 'requires', 'the', 'ever-present', 'possibility', 'of', 'a', 'woman', 'desiring\\n\\n66.', 'W.', 'H.', 'Davenport', 'Adams,', 'Famous', 'Beauties', 'and', 'Historic', 'Women:', 'A', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Croquis\\nBiographies,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1865),', '2:180.\\n\\n67.', 'Julia', 'Kavanagh,', 'Woman', 'in', 'France', 'during', 'the', 'Eighteenth', 'Century', '(Philadelphia,\\n1850),', 'pp.', '14,', '112.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n72', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nto', 'engage', 'with', '(and', 'thus', 'be', 'inscribed', 'by)', 'the', 'historical', 'particularity\\nthat', 'still', 'marks', 'the', 'postlapsarian', 'world.\\n\\nAccordingly,', 'the', 'only', 'hope', 'for', 'the', '“Great', 'Woman”', 'in', 'history', 'is', 'to\\ntranscend', 'circumstances', 'altogether,', 'leaving', 'her', 'character', 'unaffected\\nby', 'her', 'education.', 'Dr.', 'Elizabeth', 'Blackwell’s', '“varied', 'experiences', 'would\\nnever', 'lessen', 'that', 'feminine', 'delicacy', 'which', 'has', 'ever', 'yet', 'distinguished\\nher”;', 'Sarah', 'Trimmer,', 'despite', 'her', 'public', 'success', 'as', 'an', 'author,', 'was\\nnevertheless', '“always', 'more', 'willing', 'to', 'listen', 'than', 'to', 'speak,', 'more', 'con-\\nscious', 'of', 'her', 'own', 'defects', 'than', 'her', 'success”;', 'Charlotte', 'Bronté’s', 'popular\\nsuccess', '“neither', 'altered', 'her', 'habits,', 'nor', 'overcame', 'her', 'dislike', 'and', 'shy-\\nness', 'of', 'company,', 'nor', 'very', 'materially', 'affected', 'the', 'condition', 'of', 'her\\nhome”;', 'and', 'Fanny', 'Burney’s', 'celebrity', 'never', '“unsettled', 'her', 'mind,', 'or\\nturned', 'her', 'aside', 'from', 'home', 'and', 'its', 'affections.”®*', 'Such', 'women', 'are', 'the\\nagents', 'of', 'historical', 'narrative', 'but', 'themselves', 'lack', 'subjectivities', 'amena-\\nble', 'to', 'narration;', 'there', 'are', 'stories', 'told', 'about', 'them,', 'but', 'their', 'personal-\\nities', 'do', 'not', 'change', 'between', 'the', 'beginning', 'and', 'the', 'end.', 'If', 'masculinized\\nwomen', 'such', 'as', 'Elizabeth', 'I', 'precipitate', 'a', 'crisis', 'within', 'interpretation\\nby', 'shaping', 'their', 'identities', 'to', 'the', 'historical', 'moment,', 'eternally', 'femi-\\nnine', 'women', 'such', 'as', 'Trimmer', 'pose', 'a', 'similar', 'difficulty', 'presented', 'as', 'a\\nsolution.', 'From', 'a', 'Victorian', 'perspective,', 'the', 'increasing', 'number', 'of', 'these\\nahistorical', 'figures', 'is', 'a', 'peculiarly', 'modern', 'phenomenon,', 'however', 'the\\nchronological', 'boundaries', 'of', 'modernity', 'are', 'defined;', 'the', 'apex', 'of', 'his-\\ntorical', 'development', 'occurs', 'when', 'femininity', 'is', 'defined', 'not', 'by', 'mate-\\nrial', 'circumstances', 'but', 'by', 'religious', 'faith', 'dissociated', 'from', 'its', 'worldly\\nsituation.\\n\\nPerhaps', 'ironically,', 'writers', 'seized', 'on', 'the', 'British', 'constitution', 'as', 'the\\nsupreme', 'means', 'of', 'celebrating', 'the', 'apotheosis', 'of', 'gendered', 'historical\\ndevelopment', 'while', 'inadvertently', 'exposing', 'the', 'self-conflicting', 'nature\\nof', 'that', 'project.', 'Queen', 'Victoria’s', 'own', 'carefully', 'constructed', 'image', 'as\\na', 'private', 'woman', 'could', 'be', 'inscribed', 'into', 'women’s', 'history', 'as', 'the', 'teleo-\\nlogical', 'outcome', 'of', 'British', 'politics.', 'The', 'feminization', 'of', 'British', 'royalty\\nwas', 'most', 'commonly', 'articulated', 'by', 'comparing', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Elizabeth', 'I.\\nEven', 'before', 'Victoria', 'came', 'to', 'the', 'throne,', 'the', 'art', 'historian', 'and', 'literary\\ncritic', 'Anna', 'Jameson', 'had', 'argued', 'that', 'Elizabeth’s', 'reign', 'exemplified\\nthe', 'woman', 'whose', 'absolutism', 'is', 'grounded', 'in', 'her', 'own', 'weakness,', 'for', 'she\\nconducts', 'all', 'her', 'business', '“on', 'the', 'principle', 'of', 'self-preservation', 'and\\nself-interest,', 'rather', 'than', 'of', 'enlightened', 'benevolence.', '.', '.', '.”89', 'The', 'polit-\\n\\n68.', 'Respectively,', '[Joseph', 'Johnson],', 'Heroines', 'of', 'our', 'Time:', 'Being', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Lives', 'of\\nEminent', 'Women,', 'with', 'Examples', 'of', 'their', 'Benevolent', 'Works,', 'Truthful', 'Lives,', 'and', 'Noble', 'Deeds\\n(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '262;', 'Clara', 'Lucas', 'Balfour,', 'Working', 'Women', 'of', 'this', 'Century:', 'The', 'Lesson', 'of\\ntheir', 'Lives,', '3d', 'ed.', '(London,', 'n.d.),', 'p.', '31;', 'Women', 'of', 'Worth:', 'A', 'Book', 'for', 'Girls', '(London,', '1854),\\np-', '119;', 'Mossman,', 'p.', '18.\\n\\n69.', 'Anna', 'Jameson,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Celebrated', 'Female', 'Sovereigns,', '2', 'vols.', '(London,', '1831),\\n1:295-96.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '73\\n\\nical', 'woman', 'of', 'this', 'reading', 'is', 'a', 'mentally', 'blinkered', 'figure', 'motivated', 'by\\nirrational', 'private', 'desires', 'rather', 'than', 'public', 'patriotism.', 'By', 'contrast,', 'Vic-\\ntoria’s', 'maternal', 'devotion', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'staged', 'for', 'public', 'consumption)\\ncombined', 'with', 'her', 'lack', 'of', 'interest', 'in', 'state', 'affairs', '(at', 'least', 'as', 'repre-\\nsented', 'in', 'the', 'biographical', 'texts)', 'becomes', 'not', 'only', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British\\nqueenship', 'but', 'also', 'the', 'telos', 'of', 'British', 'womanhood.', 'Elizabeth', 'remains\\nstigmatized', 'as', 'a', 'woman', 'of', 'primarily', '“manly', 'qualities,”', 'lacking', 'in', 'all', '“ten-\\nderness,', 'softness,', 'pity,', 'and', 'forgiveness,”', 'although', 'the', 'writer', 'who', 'claimed\\nthat', 'the', 'word', '“queen”', 'on', 'her', 'tomb', 'should', 'be', 'changed', 'to', '“quean”', 'was', 'a\\nbit', 'extreme.', '7°', 'Queen', 'Victoria,', 'however,', 'was', 'described', 'not', 'only', 'as', '“the\\nnoblest', 'example', 'of', 'domestic', 'purity', 'and', 'social', 'propriety”', '—particularly\\nin', 'contrast', 'to', 'her', 'immediate', 'male', 'predecessors—but', 'also', 'as', 'the', 'pos-\\nsessor', 'of', 'a', 'fullness', 'of', 'private', 'life', 'unavailable', 'to', 'Elizabeth,', 'who', '“enjoyed\\nno', 'real', 'and', 'solid', 'happiness”;', '“never', 'had', 'a', 'country', 'a', 'brighter', 'or', 'more\\nperfect', 'example', 'of', 'all', 'home', 'duties,', 'and', 'all', 'social', 'virtues,', 'than', 'is', 'to', 'be\\nfound', 'in', 'the', 'private', 'life', 'of', 'her', 'majesty.””!\\n\\nQueen', 'Victoria', 'thus', 'becomes', 'living', 'proof', 'that', 'history', 'progresses\\ntoward', 'an', 'ever-increasing', 'feminine', 'domesticity.', 'She', 'is', 'the', '“noblest\\nexample”', 'both', 'synchronically', 'and', 'diachronically,', 'the', 'sympathetic', 'sov-\\nereign', 'who', 'shines', 'by', 'feminine', 'spirituality’s', 'authentic', 'light,', 'not', 'by\\nmonarchical', 'spectacle’s', 'borrowed', 'tinsel.', 'As', 'the', 'nation’s', 'most', 'visible\\nwoman,', 'yet', 'one', 'who', 'resists', 'masculinization', 'by', 'historical', 'events,', 'Victo-\\nria', 'is', 'the', 'truly', 'virtuous', 'female', 'citizen,', '“keeping', 'our', 'Empire', 'great,', 'and\\ntrue,', 'and', 'conquering”', 'while', 'rendering', 'literal', 'the', 'boast', 'that', '“her', 'king-\\ndom', 'reposes', 'on', 'the', 'sanctity', 'of', 'home.””?', 'Thus', 'appropriated', 'to', 'image\\nthe', 'proper', 'relation', 'of', 'woman', 'to', 'politics,', 'Victoria', 'also', 'becomes', 'the\\nfigure', 'for', 'benevolent', 'imperial', 'government,', 'where', 'maternal', 'love', 'dis-\\nplaces', 'the', 'workings', 'of', 'force.', 'If', 'modernity', 'can', 'be', 'identified', 'with', 'a\\nwoman', 'on', 'the', 'throne,', 'then', 'futurity', 'can', 'be', 'linked', 'to', 'the', 'feminization\\nof', 'the', 'empire’s', 'management.\\n\\nBut', 'Victoria’s', 'reign', 'also', 'meant', 'an', 'end', 'to', 'historical', 'writing', 'as', 'it', 'was\\nonce', 'practiced.', '“Isabella', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'were', 'one', 'and', 'the', 'same', 'thing;\\n\\n70.', 'Louisa', 'Stuart', 'Costello,', 'Memoirs', 'of', 'Eminent', 'Englishwomen,', '4', 'vols.', '(London,', '1844),\\nl:iv;', 'and', 'Mary', 'Howitt,', 'ed.,', 'Biographical', 'Sketches', 'of', 'the', 'Queens', 'of', 'Great', 'Britain.', 'From', 'the', 'Nor-\\nman', 'Conquest', 'to', 'the', 'Reign', 'of', 'Victoria.', 'Or,', 'Royal', 'Book', 'of', 'Beauty', '(London,', '1851),', 'p.', '404.\\n\\n71.', 'Howitt,', 'p.', '516;', 'Illustrious', 'Women', 'Who', 'Have', 'Distinguished', 'Themselves', 'for', 'Virtue,', 'Piety,\\nand', 'Benevolence', '(London,', '1852),', 'pp.', '10-11.\\n\\n72.', '[Stopford', 'Augustus', 'Brooke],', '“Womanhood', 'and', 'Its', 'Mission,”', 'Dublin', 'University\\nMagazine', '43', '(1859):', '656.', 'The', 'most', 'extensive', 'catalog', 'of', 'ways', 'in', 'which', 'Victoria’s', 'image\\nwas', 'produced,', 'circulated,', 'and', 'attacked', 'is', 'now', 'that', 'of', 'Richard', 'Williams,', 'The', 'Contentious\\nCrown:', 'Public', 'Discussion', 'of', 'the', 'British', 'Monarchy', 'in', 'the', 'Age', 'of', 'Queen', 'Victoria', '(Aldershot,\\n1997).', 'See', 'also', 'Margaret', 'Homans', 'and', 'Adrienne', 'Munich,', 'eds.,', 'Remaking', 'Queen', 'Victoria\\n(Cambridge,', '1997),', 'and', 'Margaret', 'Homans,', 'Royal', 'Representations:', 'Queen', 'Victoria', 'and', 'Brit-\\nish', 'Culture,', '1837-1876', '(Chicago,', '1998),', 'both', 'of', 'which', 'appeared', 'too', 'late', 'for', 'me', 'to', 'take\\nadvantage', 'of', 'in', 'this', 'essay.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n74', 'MODERN', 'PHILOLOGY\\n\\nVictoria', 'and', 'her', 'reign', 'are', 'two', 'very', 'distinct', 'themes,”', 'Frank', 'Goodrich\\ncannily', 'observed.', '“The', 'one', 'is', 'within', 'the', 'province', 'of', 'Mrs.', 'Jameson;', 'the\\nother', 'within', 'that', 'of', 'Macaulay.””’', 'Relegating', 'Victoria', 'to', 'Jameson’s', 'area\\nof', 'biographical', 'and', 'nonpolitical', 'expertise,', 'Goodrich', 'muffles', 'T.', 'B.\\nMacaulay’s', 'famous', 'call', 'for', 'a', 'unification', 'of', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'within\\nhistorical', 'narrative.', 'Where', 'women', 'are', 'concerned,', 'such', 'a', 'historical\\nproject', 'must', 'be', 'referred', 'to', 'the', 'ages', 'before', 'the', 'privatization', 'of', 'the\\nmonarchy.', 'Modern', 'histories', 'of', 'women', 'are', 'produced', 'by', 'a', 'deliberate\\nrupture', 'between', 'public', 'and', 'private', 'spheres,', 'not', 'by', 'the', 'prospect', 'of\\nreunifying', 'them.', 'Instead', 'of', 'supplanting', 'profane', 'history', 'with', 'Christian\\nhistory', 'once', 'and', 'for', 'all,', 'the', 'feminized', 'monarchy', 'guarantees', 'the', 'end-\\nless', 'necessity', 'for', 'profane', 'history', 'to', 'record', 'all', 'that', 'falls', 'outside', 'of', 'the\\n“province”', 'of', 'Christian', 'history.', 'Goodrich’s', 'quip', 'neatly', 'suggests', 'that\\nthe', '“victory”', 'of', 'the', 'women’s', 'historical', 'narrative,', 'in', 'the', 'figure', 'of\\nQueen', 'Victoria,', 'justifies', 'not', 'the', 'end', 'of', 'writing', 'women’s', 'history', 'but,', 'in-\\nstead,', 'its', 'continuing', 'manufacture:', 'with', 'Queen', 'Victoria’s', 'advent,', 'the\\nhistory', 'of', 'women', 'is', 'detached', 'from', 'political', 'narrative', 'instead', 'of', 'sub-\\nsuming', 'and', 'ultimately', 'transcending', 'it.', 'The', 'ultimate', 'grounds', 'for', 'and\\nproof', 'of', 'the', 'propagation', 'of', 'Christian', 'truth', 'lay', 'in', 'the', 'unwritability', 'of\\nwomen’s', 'experience', 'according', 'to', 'the', 'narrative', 'canons', 'of', 'political', 'his-\\ntoriography,', 'and', 'not', 'the', 'substitution', 'of', 'uneventful', 'women’s', 'history\\nfor', 'the', 'annals', 'of', 'political', 'violence.\\n\\nI', 'have', 'argued', 'that', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'was', 'plotted', 'around', 'the\\neffacement', 'of', 'women', 'from', 'history', 'in', 'several', 'senses:', 'the', 'non-Christian\\nwoman', 'disappeared', 'from', 'historical', 'view;', 'the', '“masculine”', 'woman', 'was\\nprogressively', 'eliminated;', 'and', 'women', 'would', 'be', 'absent', 'from', 'the', 'fu-\\nture', 'historian’s', 'gaze', 'altogether.', 'Nonetheless,', 'this', 'plotting', 'claimed', 'to\\nestablish', 'an', 'authentic', 'historical', 'consciousness', 'and,', 'by', 'extension,', 'an\\nauthentic', 'means', 'of', 'promoting', 'moral', 'and', 'historical', 'progress.', 'By', 'cen-\\ntury’s', 'end,', 'however,', 'the', 'envisioned', 'culmination', 'of', 'women’s', 'historical\\nnarrative', 'would', 'shift:', 'instead', 'of', 'explaining', 'the', 'progressive', 'domesti-\\ncation', 'of', 'modern', 'womanhood,', 'writers', 'began', 'seeking', 'the', 'origins', 'of', 'its\\nprogressive', 'publicity', 'instead.', 'Nearly', 'twenty', 'years', 'after', 'Middlemarch', 'was\\npublished,', 'the', 'well-known', 'antifeminist', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton—perhaps\\nrecalling', 'Eliot’s', 'river', 'image—ended', 'her', 'serialized', 'history', 'of', 'women\\nby', 'characterizing', 'political', 'women', 'as', '“the', 'shallow', 'brook”', 'that', '“brawls\\nwhere', 'the', 'noble', 'river', 'flows', 'silently.””4', 'For', 'Linton,', 'the', 'possibility', 'of', 'a\\nnew', 'narrative', 'of', 'public', 'femininity', '(at', 'which', 'Eliot', 'could', 'only', 'partially\\n\\n73.', 'Frank', 'B.', 'Goodrich,', 'Women', 'of', 'Beauty', 'and', 'Heroism', 'from', 'Semiramis', 'to', 'Eugenie:', 'A', 'Por-\\ntrait', 'Gallery', 'of', 'Female', 'Loveliness,', 'Achievement,', 'and', 'Influence', '.', '.', '.', '(New', 'York,', '1859),', 'p.', '376.\\n\\n74.', 'Eliza', 'Lynn', 'Linton,', '“The', 'Characteristics', 'of', 'English', 'Women.', 'II,”', 'Fortnightly', 'Review,\\nn.s.,', '45', '(1889):', '375.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\nMiriam', 'Elizabeth', 'Burstein', '©', 'From', 'Good', 'Looks', 'to', 'Good', 'Thoughts', '75\\n\\nhint', 'in', '1871-72)', 'had', 'been', 'realized', 'in', '1889.', 'Linton’s', 'own', 'project\\nidentifies', 'feminine', 'domesticity', 'with', 'national', 'salvation.', 'Yet', 'for', 'her,\\nmodernity', 'is', 'characterized', 'by', 'the', 'failure', 'of', 'this', 'narrative', 'of', 'progres-\\nsive', 'domestication', 'and', 'by', 'the', 'increasing', 'participation', 'of', 'women', 'in\\npublic', 'life.', 'Eliot', 'had', 'raised', 'the', 'possibility', 'that', 'women', 'had', 'some\\nother,', 'as', 'yet', 'unidentified', 'role—“what', 'else', 'she', 'ought', 'rather', 'to', 'have\\ndone”—and', 'in', 'Linton’s', 'eyes,', 'that', 'unspecified', '“else”', 'is', 'woman’s', 'future\\nparticipation', 'in', 'public', 'life.', 'For', 'Linton,', 'such', 'public', 'activity', 'would\\nmake', 'modernity', 'the', 'outcome', 'of', 'a', 'narrative', 'failure:', 'the', 'collapse', 'of', 'his-\\ntory’s', 'progress', 'toward', 'domestication', 'and', 'invisibility.', 'Linton', 'can', 'only\\nwarn', 'that', '“we', 'believe', 'our', 'men', 'will', 'never', 'let', 'this', 'monstrous', 'wrong\\ncome', 'to', 'pass.', '.', '.', '.””°', 'By', 'explicitly', 'calling', 'on', 'men', 'to', 'repress', 'the', 'threat\\nof', 'public', 'femininity,', 'Linton', 'inadvertently', 'advertises', 'the', 'bankruptcy\\nof', 'a', 'women’s', 'history', 'that', 'no', 'longer', 'produces', 'domestic', 'exemplars;\\ndespite', 'all', 'efforts,', 'the', 'domestic', 'femininity', 'that', 'would', 'identify', 'the', 'apo-\\ntheosis', 'of', 'Christian', 'morality', 'stubbornly', 'refused', 'to', 'exist', 'anywhere,\\nsave', 'in', 'an', 'ever-receding', 'future.', 'Among', 'later', 'feminists,', 'the', 'publicity\\nthat', 'Eliot', 'uneasily', 'anticipated', 'and', 'that', 'Linton', 'attacked', 'would', 'be', 'con-\\nsciously', 'adapted', 'as', 'the', 'basis', 'of', 'a', 'new', 'historiography;', 'it', 'is', 'perhaps\\nappropriate', 'that', 'in', 'introducing', 'her', 'biography', 'of', 'Linton,', 'Nancy', 'Fix\\nAnderson', 'describes', 'her', 'as', '“an', 'emancipated', 'woman', 'opposed', 'to\\nwomen’s', 'emancipation.”’°', 'Because', 'Victorian', 'women’s', 'history', 'had', 'de-\\nmanded', 'that', 'women', 'be', 'forgotten,', 'however,', 'its', 'own', 'rhetoric', 'consigned\\nit', 'to', 'historical', 'dust.\\n\\n75.', 'Eliot,', 'p.', '611;', 'and', 'Linton,', 'p.', '376.\\n76.', 'Nancy', 'Fix', 'Anderson,', 'Woman', 'against', 'Women', 'in', 'Victorian', 'England:', 'A', 'Life', 'of', 'Eliza\\nLynn', 'Linton', '(Bloomington,', 'Ind.,', '1987),', 'p.', 'x.\\n\\nThis', 'content', 'downloaded', 'from\\n18.29.104.163', 'on', 'Fri,', '10', 'Mar', '2023', '20:58:57', 'UTC\\nAll', 'use', 'subject', 'to', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n']\n" + "ename": "KeyboardInterrupt", + "evalue": "", + "output_type": "error", + "traceback": [ + "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", + "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", + "Cell \u001b[0;32mIn[44], line 11\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 9\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 10\u001b[0m \u001b[39mfor\u001b[39;00m page \u001b[39min\u001b[39;00m pages:\n\u001b[0;32m---> 11\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m pytesseract\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mimage_to_string(page, lang\u001b[39m=\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39meng\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m)\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:423\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string\u001b[0;34m(image, lang, config, nice, output_type, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[0;32m--> 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39;49m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;49;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs)},\n\u001b[1;32m 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:426\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string..\u001b[0;34m()\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[1;32m 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39margs)},\n\u001b[0;32m--> 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:288\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_and_get_output\u001b[0;34m(image, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout, return_bytes)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 277\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m save(image) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m (temp_name, input_filename):\n\u001b[1;32m 278\u001b[0m kwargs \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m {\n\u001b[1;32m 279\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39minput_filename\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: input_filename,\n\u001b[1;32m 280\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: temp_name,\n\u001b[0;32m (...)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 285\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtimeout\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 286\u001b[0m }\n\u001b[0;32m--> 288\u001b[0m run_tesseract(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49mkwargs)\n\u001b[1;32m 289\u001b[0m filename \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mf\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mkwargs[\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m]\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextsep\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextension\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 290\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mopen\u001b[39m(filename, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mrb\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m output_file:\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:262\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_tesseract\u001b[0;34m(input_filename, output_filename_base, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 259\u001b[0m \u001b[39melse\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 260\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractNotFoundError()\n\u001b[0;32m--> 262\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m timeout_manager(proc, timeout) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m error_string:\n\u001b[1;32m 263\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode:\n\u001b[1;32m 264\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractError(proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode, get_errors(error_string))\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/contextlib.py:135\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_GeneratorContextManager.__enter__\u001b[0;34m(self)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 133\u001b[0m \u001b[39mdel\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39margs, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mkwds, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mfunc\n\u001b[1;32m 134\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 135\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnext\u001b[39;49m(\u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mgen)\n\u001b[1;32m 136\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mStopIteration\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 137\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m(\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39mgenerator didn\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mt yield\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mfrom\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39m\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:127\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mtimeout_manager\u001b[0;34m(proc, seconds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 125\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 126\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m seconds:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 127\u001b[0m \u001b[39myield\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mcommunicate()[\u001b[39m1\u001b[39m]\n\u001b[1;32m 128\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 130\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:1152\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen.communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1149\u001b[0m endtime \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1151\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1152\u001b[0m stdout, stderr \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_communicate(\u001b[39minput\u001b[39;49m, endtime, timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 1153\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 1154\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# https://bugs.python.org/issue25942\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1155\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# See the detailed comment in .wait().\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1156\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m timeout \u001b[39mis\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m:\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:2003\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen._communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, endtime, orig_timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1996\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 1997\u001b[0m stdout, stderr,\n\u001b[1;32m 1998\u001b[0m skip_check_and_raise\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m)\n\u001b[1;32m 1999\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m( \u001b[39m# Impossible :)\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2000\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39m_check_timeout(..., skip_check_and_raise=True) \u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 2001\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mfailed to raise TimeoutExpired.\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m)\n\u001b[0;32m-> 2003\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mselect(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 2004\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout, stdout, stderr)\n\u001b[1;32m 2006\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# XXX Rewrite these to use non-blocking I/O on the file\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2007\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# objects; they are no longer using C stdio!\u001b[39;00m\n", + "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/selectors.py:416\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_PollLikeSelector.select\u001b[0;34m(self, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 414\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m []\n\u001b[1;32m 415\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 416\u001b[0m fd_event_list \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mpoll(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 417\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mInterruptedError\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m ready\n", + "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m: " ] } ], @@ -159,30 +163,16 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 41, + "execution_count": 42, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "@\n", - "{'hilton,', 'century,', 'so\\nfar', 'catalogs,', 'at\\nleast', 'exemplarity\\nwith', 'demarcates', 'character;', 'world.\\n\\naccordingly,', 'england.', 'by\\nirrational', 'mcleod,', 'of\\n(and', 'particularity.', 'visible\\nwoman,', 'enthusiasm”;', 'rohan\\nmaitzen', 'evangelicalism', 'maitzen,', 'https://about.jstor.org/terms\\n72', 'elizabeth’s', '(1877),', 'masculinization', 'mill,', '1850;', 'purposes.', '1851),', 'l.', '“m.a.k.”', 'anachronism;', 'past\\nages,', '262;', 'claims,', 'silence,', 'miriam,', '1837-1876', 'contemporary\\nmorals—because', 'accumulation.', 'the\\nimpossibility', 'ours,”\\nin', 'diffusive:', 's.', 'along\\nlines', 'was\\npublished,', 'factors:\\nthe', 'do-\\nmesticated', 'future\\nparticipation', 'manuals—\\nalso', '10-11.\\n\\n60.', 'caused,”', 'bowles,', 'in\\n\\n12.', 'prog-\\nress', 'best,', 'time,', 'words\\nof', 'whose\\nvirtues,', 'practices.', 'mod-\\nern', 'events,', 'for”', 'cox’s\\nfemale', 'with\\nher', 'magazine\\n102', 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'ul-\\ntimately', 'efficient\\nmethod', 'hinchcliff,\\ngod', 'account;\\nas', '“sometimes,', 'system”;', 'mossman,', 'recover\\npagan', 'j.\\nzboray’s', 'the\\nchief', '(1975):', '439034\\n\\nreferences\\n\\njstor', 'historiography;', '“imitation,”', 'those\\nwho', 'twists,', 'anachronism.', 'mo-\\ndernity', 'audi-\\nences', 'alexander,', 'death,', 'shy-\\nness', '39,', 'the\\nsupreme', '109-10.\\n\\n57.', 'is\\nnot', 'larger\\ndiscourse', 'care,”\\nin', 'ministers’', 'york-brockport\\n\\nin', 'periodization:', 'history.', 'review,\\nn.s.,', 'theologically', 'spiritual-\\nized', 'adelaide,', 'lowder\\nnewton,', 'history.!!', 'invert\\nvictorian', 'h.', 'rank,\\ntherefore,', 'responsi-\\nble', 'reposi-\\ntory', '3d', 'the\\nopportunity', 'life.”#°', 'this\\nmoment', 'an\\nextreme', 'moral\\nprogress.®', 'not\\nleast', 'sumner', 'king-\\ndom', 'the\\nfeminine', '“moral\\nagents,”', 'unvisited', '55-56.\\n\\n48.', 'influ-\\nence”;', 'dispen-\\nsation,', '(“manlike', '“lost”', 'literature—history,”', '“still', '50.\\n\\nthis', 'historians,', 'effectually', 'it\\nraises', 'image—ended', '332.\\n\\n44.', 'particularity\\nthat', 'narration;', 'few)', 'own\\nhomes.”*°', 'wicked,', 'sources,', 'kavanagh’s', 'consolation,', 'not,', 'historical\\nnovels,', 'rea-\\nsoner', 'home-life', 'darkness,', 'the\\n“comets,”', 'scripture.', 'is\\nsignificant', 'take\\nadvantage', 'or-\\nganized', 'female\\nequality', 'is\\nconsequently', 'want,', 'grounds;\\nprogress', '1854).', 'anachronistic.', 'enlarge.”', 'be-\\ncause', 'burney’s', 'expertise,', 'represented\\nas', '“mirror”', 'signifi-\\ncantly', '273-86.\\n\\n17.', 'america:', '[anne', 'implies\\nthat', 'conservative\\n\\n61.'}\n", - "0.22109782275375653\n" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", - "print(new_ocr_text[0])\n", "word_list = new_ocr_text.split(\" \")\n", "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", "\n", "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - "print(misspelled)\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", - "\n", - "print(incorrect_percentage)" + "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)" ] } ], From 159c3f9326d5c28f5ffaade9d4e6179135ec1f9f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 15:52:08 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 32/63] changed language detection improved language detection using random sample rather than first 50 words --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 492 ++++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 252 insertions(+), 240 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index d967c98..34d3a8d 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -1,243 +1,255 @@ { - "cells": [ - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Import libraries" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 82, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", - "import json\n", - "import pandas as pd\n", - "import random\n", - "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", - "%matplotlib inline\n", - "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", - "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", - "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Load in our Data Files\n", - "\n", - "🛑 Input a link to the json file of articles to run the spell-check on\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 83, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", - "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", - "articles = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Importing the spell-check package\n", - "\n", - "Languages tested:\n", - "* English - ‘en’\n", - "* Spanish - ‘es’\n", - "* French - ‘fr’\n", - "* German - ‘de’\n", - "\n", - "Make sure to run `pip install pyspellchecker` in terminal before running the cell below\n", - "\n", - "Recommended upper bound of anomaly beyond 75% percentile based on normal distribution:\n", - "\n", - " mean = 0.12764241550612537\n", - " n = 30\n", - " std = 0.02330421008\n", - " [25 percentile, 75 percentile]: [0.1119237258,0.1433611052]\n", - "\n", - " Reccomended bound: 85.66\n" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 162, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "{}\n" - ] - } - ], - "source": [ - "from spellchecker import SpellChecker\n", - "\n", - "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the desired accuracy bound 🛑 ‼️\n", - "bound = 85.66\n", - "\n", - "#initialize dictionary pairing readability scores and article id's\n", - "articles_read_scores = {}\n", - "\n", - "#print(len(articles.index))\n", - "\n", - "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", - "for index in range(0,1):\n", - " article_index = index\n", - "\n", - " # defining variables\n", - " article_id = articles['id'].loc[article_index] \n", - " article_text = articles['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", - " article_title = articles['title'].loc[article_index]\n", - "\n", - " # Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", - " cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", - "\n", - " word_list = cleaned_article_text.getTokens()\n", - " \n", - " #word_list = ((\" \").join(cleaned_article_text)).split(\" \")\n", - "\n", - " #word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(1)))\n", - "\n", - " #word_list = word_list[:int(len(word_list)*6/10)]\n", - "\n", - " # finding the document language\n", - " languages = ['en','fr','es','de']\n", - " abbrev_word_list = word_list[:50]\n", - " incorrect = []\n", - " for lg in languages:\n", - " spell = SpellChecker(language = lg)\n", - " misspelled = spell.unknown(abbrev_word_list)\n", - " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", - " lang = languages[incorrect.index(min(incorrect))]\n", - "\n", - " # find those words that may be misspelled\n", - " spell = SpellChecker(language = lang)\n", - " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - "\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(min(incorrect))/len(word_list)\n", - "\n" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Run OCR On PDF\n", - "\n", - "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it.", - " #output the readability score\n", - " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", - "\n", - " if (1 - incorrect_percentage) < float(bound)/100:\n", - " articles_read_scores[article_id] = [article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage]\n", - "\n", - "print(articles_read_scores)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 44, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "ename": "KeyboardInterrupt", - "evalue": "", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "Cell \u001b[0;32mIn[44], line 11\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 9\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 10\u001b[0m \u001b[39mfor\u001b[39;00m page \u001b[39min\u001b[39;00m pages:\n\u001b[0;32m---> 11\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m pytesseract\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mimage_to_string(page, lang\u001b[39m=\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39meng\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m)\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:423\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string\u001b[0;34m(image, lang, config, nice, output_type, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[0;32m--> 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39;49m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;49;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs)},\n\u001b[1;32m 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:426\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string..\u001b[0;34m()\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[1;32m 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39margs)},\n\u001b[0;32m--> 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:288\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_and_get_output\u001b[0;34m(image, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout, return_bytes)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 277\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m save(image) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m (temp_name, input_filename):\n\u001b[1;32m 278\u001b[0m kwargs \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m {\n\u001b[1;32m 279\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39minput_filename\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: input_filename,\n\u001b[1;32m 280\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: temp_name,\n\u001b[0;32m (...)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 285\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtimeout\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 286\u001b[0m }\n\u001b[0;32m--> 288\u001b[0m run_tesseract(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49mkwargs)\n\u001b[1;32m 289\u001b[0m filename \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mf\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mkwargs[\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m]\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextsep\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextension\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 290\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mopen\u001b[39m(filename, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mrb\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m output_file:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:262\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_tesseract\u001b[0;34m(input_filename, output_filename_base, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 259\u001b[0m \u001b[39melse\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 260\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractNotFoundError()\n\u001b[0;32m--> 262\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m timeout_manager(proc, timeout) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m error_string:\n\u001b[1;32m 263\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode:\n\u001b[1;32m 264\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractError(proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode, get_errors(error_string))\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/contextlib.py:135\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_GeneratorContextManager.__enter__\u001b[0;34m(self)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 133\u001b[0m \u001b[39mdel\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39margs, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mkwds, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mfunc\n\u001b[1;32m 134\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 135\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnext\u001b[39;49m(\u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mgen)\n\u001b[1;32m 136\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mStopIteration\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 137\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m(\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39mgenerator didn\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mt yield\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mfrom\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39m\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:127\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mtimeout_manager\u001b[0;34m(proc, seconds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 125\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 126\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m seconds:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 127\u001b[0m \u001b[39myield\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mcommunicate()[\u001b[39m1\u001b[39m]\n\u001b[1;32m 128\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 130\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:1152\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen.communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1149\u001b[0m endtime \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1151\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1152\u001b[0m stdout, stderr \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_communicate(\u001b[39minput\u001b[39;49m, endtime, timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 1153\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 1154\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# https://bugs.python.org/issue25942\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1155\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# See the detailed comment in .wait().\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1156\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m timeout \u001b[39mis\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:2003\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen._communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, endtime, orig_timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1996\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 1997\u001b[0m stdout, stderr,\n\u001b[1;32m 1998\u001b[0m skip_check_and_raise\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m)\n\u001b[1;32m 1999\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m( \u001b[39m# Impossible :)\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2000\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39m_check_timeout(..., skip_check_and_raise=True) \u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 2001\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mfailed to raise TimeoutExpired.\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m)\n\u001b[0;32m-> 2003\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mselect(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 2004\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout, stdout, stderr)\n\u001b[1;32m 2006\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# XXX Rewrite these to use non-blocking I/O on the file\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2007\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# objects; they are no longer using C stdio!\u001b[39;00m\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/selectors.py:416\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_PollLikeSelector.select\u001b[0;34m(self, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 414\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m []\n\u001b[1;32m 415\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 416\u001b[0m fd_event_list \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mpoll(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 417\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mInterruptedError\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m ready\n", - "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m: " - ] - } - ], - "source": [ - "from PIL import Image\n", - "import pytesseract\n", - "import urllib.request\n", - "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", - "\n", - "pdf = \"test_pdf.pdf\"\n", - "pages = convert_from_path(pdf)\n", - "\n", - "new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", - "for page in pages:\n", - " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(page, lang=\"eng\")" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# Rerun Spellcheck" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 42, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", - "word_list = new_ocr_text.split(\" \")\n", - "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", - "\n", - "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)" - ] - } + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Import libraries" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 172, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from text_matcher.matcher import Text, Matcher\n", + "import json\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import random\n", + "from IPython.display import clear_output\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Load in our Data Files\n", + "\n", + "🛑 Input a link to the json file of articles to run the spell-check on\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 168, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Load in the JSON file with our JSTOR articles and data from TextMatcher\n", + "# (Note: must have the file 'default.json' in the same directory as this notebook)\n", + "articles = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Importing the spell-check package\n", + "\n", + "Languages tested:\n", + "* English - ‘en’\n", + "* Spanish - ‘es’\n", + "* French - ‘fr’\n", + "* German - ‘de’\n", + "\n", + "Make sure to run `pip install pyspellchecker` in terminal before running the cell below\n", + "\n", + "Recommended upper bound of anomaly beyond 75% percentile based on normal distribution:\n", + "\n", + " mean = 0.12764241550612537\n", + " n = 30\n", + " std = 0.02330421008\n", + " [25 percentile, 75 percentile]: [0.1119237258,0.1433611052]\n", + "\n", + " Reccomended bound: 85.66\n", + "\n", + "20 articles in 12.7 seconds: 0.64\n", + "\n", + "50 articles in 39.7 seconds: 0.79\n", + "\n", + "100 articles in 59.4 seconds: 0.594\n", + "\n", + "500 articles in 385.5 seconds: 0.77\n", + "\n", + "~ 0.775 seconds/article from median of 100 articles" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 208, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from spellchecker import SpellChecker\n", + "\n", + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the desired accuracy bound 🛑 ‼️\n", + "bound = 85.66\n", + "\n", + "#initialize dictionary pairing readability scores and article id's\n", + "articles_read_scores = {}\n", + "\n", + "#print(len(articles.index))\n", + "\n", + "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", + "for index in range (0,10):\n", + " article_index = index\n", + " \n", + " # defining variables\n", + " article_id = articles['id'].loc[article_index] \n", + " article_text = articles['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", + " article_title = articles['title'].loc[article_index]\n", + "\n", + " # Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", + " cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", + "\n", + " word_list = cleaned_article_text.getTokens()\n", + " \n", + " #word_list = ((\" \").join(cleaned_article_text)).split(\" \")\n", + "\n", + " #word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(1)))\n", + "\n", + " #word_list = word_list[:int(len(word_list)*6/10)]\n", + "\n", + " # finding the document language\n", + " languages = ['en','fr','es','de']\n", + " abbrev_word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(40)))\n", + " incorrect = []\n", + " for lg in languages:\n", + " spell = SpellChecker(language = lg)\n", + " misspelled = spell.unknown(abbrev_word_list)\n", + " incorrect.append(len(misspelled))\n", + " lang = languages[incorrect.index(min(incorrect))]\n", + "\n", + " # find those words that may be misspelled\n", + " spell = SpellChecker(language = lang)\n", + " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", + "\n", + " #output the readability score \n", + " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", + "\n", + " #adds the article id:[index, title, and percentage] to the dictionary\n", + " if (1 - incorrect_percentage) < float(bound)/100 and lang == 'en':\n", + " articles_read_scores[article_id] = [article_id, article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage, lang]\n", + "\n", + "#articles and scores stored in dictionary articles_read_scores\n", + "articles_scores = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(articles_read_scores, orient='index', columns=['ArticleID', 'OriginalIndex', 'Title', 'Score', 'Language'])\n", + "\n", + "#max_score = max(articles_scores.loc[:,\"Score\"])\n", + "#most_wrong = articles_scores.loc[articles_scores['Score'] == max_score]\n", + "#print(most_wrong)\n", + "\n", + "#print(articles_read_scores)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Visualizing the article scores as a table" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 209, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757http://www.jstor.org/stable/409787572Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...0.277379en
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abstractcreatordocSubTypedocTypeidentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguagepageCountpublicationYearpublishersourceCategorytdmCategorytitlewordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in B
0This paper investigates the logic of explanati...[Merje Kuus]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00202754'}, {'name...Transactions of the Institute of British Geogr...1[eng]122007Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute...[Geography, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Pu...96331[[101032, 101482]][[11865, 12316]]
1Seeking to elucidate understandings of sexual ...[Rebecca M. Herzig]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10400656'}, {'name...NWSA Journal3[eng]172000The Johns Hopkins University Press[Feminist & Women's Studies, Social Sciences][Social sciences - Communications, Philosophy ...The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertric...75092[[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]][[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]]
2NoneNoneresearch-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '11440821'}, {'name...Rue Descartes40[fre]52003Presses Universitaires de France[Humanities, Philosophy]NoneRéférences bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...15101[[481404, 481466]][[6685, 6747]]
6None[Kathryn R. King]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01935380'}, {'name...The Eighteenth Century2[eng]181994University of Pennsylvania Press[Language & Literature, History, History, Huma...[Arts - Literature]THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMA...86261[[143468, 143592]][[23255, 23380]]
7None[Chicago Cultural Studies Group]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00931896'}, {'name...Critical Inquiry3[eng]261992The University of Chicago Press[Language & Literature, Social Sciences, Cultu...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Critical Multiculturalism123241[[481404, 481471]][[77772, 77838]]
.........................................................
5170None[Judy Tobler]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10117601'}, {'name...Journal for the Study of Religion1/2[eng]302000Association for the Study of Religion in South...[Religion, Humanities][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]\"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred...139974[[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ...[[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315...
5171None[Andreas Spiegl, Fiona Elliot]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '14654253'}, {'name...Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry3[eng]82001University of Chicago Press[Art & Art History, Arts][Arts - Literature, Arts - Art history]A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICA...55522[[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]][[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]]
5175None[Sonia Núñez Puente]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '02721635'}, {'name...Anales de la literatura española contemporánea2[spa]222009Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies[Language & Literature, Latin American Studies...NoneCorporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero,...76841[[493724, 493799]][[45214, 45288]]
5178None[David Chioni Moore]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00917710'}, {'name...Journal of Anthropological Research4[eng]211994University of New Mexico[Anthropology, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Epistemology, Arts - Literature,...Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog...97991[[147640, 147832]][[16061, 16251]]
5181None[Irene Gedalof]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01417789'}, {'name...Feminist Review64[eng]42000Sage Publications, Ltd.[Gender Studies, Feminist & Women's Studies, S...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme...17891[[443416, 443517]][[2982, 3089]]
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\n", + "
" + ], + "text/plain": [ + " abstract \\\n", + "0 This paper investigates the logic of explanati... \n", + "1 Seeking to elucidate understandings of sexual ... \n", + "2 None \n", + "6 None \n", + "7 None \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 None \n", + "5171 None \n", + "5175 None \n", + "5178 None \n", + "5181 None \n", + "\n", + " creator docSubType docType \\\n", + "0 [Merje Kuus] research-article article \n", + "1 [Rebecca M. Herzig] research-article article \n", + "2 None research-article article \n", + "6 [Kathryn R. King] research-article article \n", + "7 [Chicago Cultural Studies Group] research-article article \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "5170 [Judy Tobler] research-article article \n", + "5171 [Andreas Spiegl, Fiona Elliot] research-article article \n", + "5175 [Sonia Núñez Puente] research-article article \n", + "5178 [David Chioni Moore] research-article article \n", + "5181 [Irene Gedalof] research-article article \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "0 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00202754'}, {'name... \n", + "1 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10400656'}, {'name... \n", + "2 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '11440821'}, {'name... \n", + "6 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01935380'}, {'name... \n", + "7 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00931896'}, {'name... \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10117601'}, {'name... \n", + "5171 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '14654253'}, {'name... \n", + "5175 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '02721635'}, {'name... \n", + "5178 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00917710'}, {'name... \n", + "5181 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01417789'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber language \\\n", + "0 Transactions of the Institute of British Geogr... 1 [eng] \n", + "1 NWSA Journal 3 [eng] \n", + "2 Rue Descartes 40 [fre] \n", + "6 The Eighteenth Century 2 [eng] \n", + "7 Critical Inquiry 3 [eng] \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "5170 Journal for the Study of Religion 1/2 [eng] \n", + "5171 Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry 3 [eng] \n", + "5175 Anales de la literatura española contemporánea 2 [spa] \n", + "5178 Journal of Anthropological Research 4 [eng] \n", + "5181 Feminist Review 64 [eng] \n", + "\n", + " pageCount publicationYear \\\n", + "0 12 2007 \n", + "1 17 2000 \n", + "2 5 2003 \n", + "6 18 1994 \n", + "7 26 1992 \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 30 2000 \n", + "5171 8 2001 \n", + "5175 22 2009 \n", + "5178 21 1994 \n", + "5181 4 2000 \n", + "\n", + " publisher \\\n", + "0 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute... \n", + "1 The Johns Hopkins University Press \n", + "2 Presses Universitaires de France \n", + "6 University of Pennsylvania Press \n", + "7 The University of Chicago Press \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 Association for the Study of Religion in South... \n", + "5171 University of Chicago Press \n", + "5175 Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies \n", + "5178 University of New Mexico \n", + "5181 Sage Publications, Ltd. \n", + "\n", + " sourceCategory \\\n", + "0 [Geography, Social Sciences] \n", + "1 [Feminist & Women's Studies, Social Sciences] \n", + "2 [Humanities, Philosophy] \n", + "6 [Language & Literature, History, History, Huma... \n", + "7 [Language & Literature, Social Sciences, Cultu... \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [Religion, Humanities] \n", + "5171 [Art & Art History, Arts] \n", + "5175 [Language & Literature, Latin American Studies... \n", + "5178 [Anthropology, Social Sciences] \n", + "5181 [Gender Studies, Feminist & Women's Studies, S... \n", + "\n", + " tdmCategory \\\n", + "0 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "1 [Social sciences - Communications, Philosophy ... \n", + "2 None \n", + "6 [Arts - Literature] \n", + "7 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "5171 [Arts - Literature, Arts - Art history] \n", + "5175 None \n", + "5178 [Philosophy - Epistemology, Arts - Literature,... \n", + "5181 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "\n", + " title wordCount \\\n", + "0 Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Pu... 9633 \n", + "1 The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertric... 7509 \n", + "2 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 1510 \n", + "6 THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMA... 8626 \n", + "7 Critical Multiculturalism 12324 \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 \"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred... 13997 \n", + "5171 A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICA... 5552 \n", + "5175 Corporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero,... 7684 \n", + "5178 Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog... 9799 \n", + "5181 Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme... 1789 \n", + "\n", + " numMatches Locations in A \\\n", + "0 1 [[101032, 101482]] \n", + "1 2 [[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]] \n", + "2 1 [[481404, 481466]] \n", + "6 1 [[143468, 143592]] \n", + "7 1 [[481404, 481471]] \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 4 [[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ... \n", + "5171 2 [[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]] \n", + "5175 1 [[493724, 493799]] \n", + "5178 1 [[147640, 147832]] \n", + "5181 1 [[443416, 443517]] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \n", + "0 [[11865, 12316]] \n", + "1 [[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]] \n", + "2 [[6685, 6747]] \n", + "6 [[23255, 23380]] \n", + "7 [[77772, 77838]] \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315... \n", + "5171 [[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]] \n", + "5175 [[45214, 45288]] \n", + "5178 [[16061, 16251]] \n", + "5181 [[2982, 3089]] \n", + "\n", + "[2125 rows x 18 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 14, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "articles = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl'\n", + "with open(articles) as f: \n", + " rawData = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "# Parse the data. \n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawData]\n", + "\n", + "df = pd.DataFrame(data)\n", + "# Drop the irrelevant columns and rows with no matches\n", + "df = df.drop(['id', 'url', 'outputFormat', 'volumeNumber', 'subTitle', 'provider', 'datePublished', \\\n", + " 'pagination', 'pageEnd', 'pageStart'], axis=1)\n", + "articlesWithMatches = df[df['numMatches'].apply(lambda x: x > 0)]\n", + "articlesWithMatches" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "base", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 9536ddf6da22d94d041feec3ebb4d12e18634b59 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 15:56:25 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 34/63] add to ocr cells --- .gitignore | 5 +-- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 57 ++++++++-------------------- 2 files changed, 18 insertions(+), 44 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 9bd1389..155fbff 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -2,8 +2,7 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json -<<<<<<< HEAD preprocessing/test_pdf.pdf -======= algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl ->>>>>>> cdaa97a50a7b8b4f9fc58990975edf3773b4e65c +preprocessing/test_english.pdf +preprocessing/test_french.pdf \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index d967c98..963ffb7 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 82, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 83, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 162, + "execution_count": 26, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -140,53 +140,27 @@ "source": [ "# Run OCR On PDF\n", "\n", - "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it.", - " #output the readability score\n", - " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", - "\n", - " if (1 - incorrect_percentage) < float(bound)/100:\n", - " articles_read_scores[article_id] = [article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage]\n", - "\n", - "print(articles_read_scores)" + "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it.\n", + " \n", + "Before this can work, you need to install tesseract and all tesseract languages. This can be done with \"brew install tesseract\" and \"brew install tesseract-lang\" on Mac. " ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 44, + "execution_count": 27, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "ename": "KeyboardInterrupt", - "evalue": "", - "output_type": "error", - "traceback": [ - "\u001b[0;31m---------------------------------------------------------------------------\u001b[0m", - "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m Traceback (most recent call last)", - "Cell \u001b[0;32mIn[44], line 11\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 9\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 10\u001b[0m \u001b[39mfor\u001b[39;00m page \u001b[39min\u001b[39;00m pages:\n\u001b[0;32m---> 11\u001b[0m new_ocr_text \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m pytesseract\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mimage_to_string(page, lang\u001b[39m=\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39meng\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39;49m)\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:423\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string\u001b[0;34m(image, lang, config, nice, output_type, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[0;32m--> 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39;49m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;49;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39;49m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs)},\n\u001b[1;32m 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;49;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:426\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mimage_to_string..\u001b[0;34m()\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 419\u001b[0m \u001b[39mReturns the result of a Tesseract OCR run on the provided image to string\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 420\u001b[0m \u001b[39m\"\"\"\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 421\u001b[0m args \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m [image, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtxt\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m, lang, config, nice, timeout]\n\u001b[1;32m 423\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m {\n\u001b[1;32m 424\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mBYTES: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39m(args \u001b[39m+\u001b[39m [\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m])),\n\u001b[1;32m 425\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mDICT: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: {\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtext\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39margs)},\n\u001b[0;32m--> 426\u001b[0m Output\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mSTRING: \u001b[39mlambda\u001b[39;00m: run_and_get_output(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49margs),\n\u001b[1;32m 427\u001b[0m }[output_type]()\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:288\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_and_get_output\u001b[0;34m(image, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout, return_bytes)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 277\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m save(image) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m (temp_name, input_filename):\n\u001b[1;32m 278\u001b[0m kwargs \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m {\n\u001b[1;32m 279\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39minput_filename\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: input_filename,\n\u001b[1;32m 280\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: temp_name,\n\u001b[0;32m (...)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 285\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mtimeout\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m: timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 286\u001b[0m }\n\u001b[0;32m--> 288\u001b[0m run_tesseract(\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m*\u001b[39;49mkwargs)\n\u001b[1;32m 289\u001b[0m filename \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mf\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mkwargs[\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39moutput_filename_base\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m]\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextsep\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m{\u001b[39;00mextension\u001b[39m}\u001b[39;00m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 290\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mopen\u001b[39m(filename, \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mrb\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m output_file:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:262\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mrun_tesseract\u001b[0;34m(input_filename, output_filename_base, extension, lang, config, nice, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 259\u001b[0m \u001b[39melse\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 260\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractNotFoundError()\n\u001b[0;32m--> 262\u001b[0m \u001b[39mwith\u001b[39;00m timeout_manager(proc, timeout) \u001b[39mas\u001b[39;00m error_string:\n\u001b[1;32m 263\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode:\n\u001b[1;32m 264\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m TesseractError(proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mreturncode, get_errors(error_string))\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/contextlib.py:135\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_GeneratorContextManager.__enter__\u001b[0;34m(self)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 133\u001b[0m \u001b[39mdel\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39margs, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mkwds, \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39mfunc\n\u001b[1;32m 134\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 135\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnext\u001b[39;49m(\u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mgen)\n\u001b[1;32m 136\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mStopIteration\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 137\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m(\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m\u001b[39mgenerator didn\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mt yield\u001b[39m\u001b[39m\"\u001b[39m) \u001b[39mfrom\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39m\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pytesseract/pytesseract.py:127\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mtimeout_manager\u001b[0;34m(proc, seconds)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 125\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 126\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m seconds:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 127\u001b[0m \u001b[39myield\u001b[39;00m proc\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mcommunicate()[\u001b[39m1\u001b[39m]\n\u001b[1;32m 128\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 130\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:1152\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen.communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1149\u001b[0m endtime \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1151\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m-> 1152\u001b[0m stdout, stderr \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_communicate(\u001b[39minput\u001b[39;49m, endtime, timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 1153\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 1154\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# https://bugs.python.org/issue25942\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1155\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# See the detailed comment in .wait().\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 1156\u001b[0m \u001b[39mif\u001b[39;00m timeout \u001b[39mis\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mnot\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mNone\u001b[39;00m:\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/subprocess.py:2003\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36mPopen._communicate\u001b[0;34m(self, input, endtime, orig_timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 1996\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout,\n\u001b[1;32m 1997\u001b[0m stdout, stderr,\n\u001b[1;32m 1998\u001b[0m skip_check_and_raise\u001b[39m=\u001b[39m\u001b[39mTrue\u001b[39;00m)\n\u001b[1;32m 1999\u001b[0m \u001b[39mraise\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mRuntimeError\u001b[39;00m( \u001b[39m# Impossible :)\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2000\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39m_check_timeout(..., skip_check_and_raise=True) \u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\n\u001b[1;32m 2001\u001b[0m \u001b[39m'\u001b[39m\u001b[39mfailed to raise TimeoutExpired.\u001b[39m\u001b[39m'\u001b[39m)\n\u001b[0;32m-> 2003\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mselect(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 2004\u001b[0m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39m_check_timeout(endtime, orig_timeout, stdout, stderr)\n\u001b[1;32m 2006\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# XXX Rewrite these to use non-blocking I/O on the file\u001b[39;00m\n\u001b[1;32m 2007\u001b[0m \u001b[39m# objects; they are no longer using C stdio!\u001b[39;00m\n", - "File \u001b[0;32m/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/selectors.py:416\u001b[0m, in \u001b[0;36m_PollLikeSelector.select\u001b[0;34m(self, timeout)\u001b[0m\n\u001b[1;32m 414\u001b[0m ready \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m []\n\u001b[1;32m 415\u001b[0m \u001b[39mtry\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[0;32m--> 416\u001b[0m fd_event_list \u001b[39m=\u001b[39m \u001b[39mself\u001b[39;49m\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49m_selector\u001b[39m.\u001b[39;49mpoll(timeout)\n\u001b[1;32m 417\u001b[0m \u001b[39mexcept\u001b[39;00m \u001b[39mInterruptedError\u001b[39;00m:\n\u001b[1;32m 418\u001b[0m \u001b[39mreturn\u001b[39;00m ready\n", - "\u001b[0;31mKeyboardInterrupt\u001b[0m: " - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "from PIL import Image\n", "import pytesseract\n", "import urllib.request\n", "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", "\n", - "pdf = \"test_pdf.pdf\"\n", + "pdf = \"test_english.pdf\"\n", "pages = convert_from_path(pdf)\n", "\n", "new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", - "for page in pages:\n", + "for page in pages[1:]:\n", " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(page, lang=\"eng\")" ] }, @@ -200,16 +174,17 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 42, + "execution_count": 28, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", - "word_list = new_ocr_text.split(\" \")\n", "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", - "\n", + "text = Text(new_ocr_text, \"Title\")\n", + "word_list = text.getTokens()\n", "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)" + "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", + "print(\"New incorrect percentage\": incorrect_percentage)" ] } ], @@ -240,4 +215,4 @@ }, "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 -} \ No newline at end of file +} From e5aee717de7bd1fe347595cf2401efb8eecc2708 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 16:01:32 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 35/63] fix print statement --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 514f98f..4cd0500 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ "word_list = text.getTokens()\n", "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", - "print(\"New incorrect percentage\": incorrect_percentage)" + "print(\"New incorrect percentage:\", incorrect_percentage)" ] } ], @@ -306,4 +306,4 @@ }, "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 -} \ No newline at end of file +} From 92968c32b41da639cd166e6227a7c617752eda9b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 16:17:47 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 36/63] added article number removed extraneous comments and added article numbers as keys for dict --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 59 +++++++++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 28 insertions(+), 31 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 4cd0500..6f3f3f3 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 208, + "execution_count": 210, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -95,8 +95,6 @@ "#initialize dictionary pairing readability scores and article id's\n", "articles_read_scores = {}\n", "\n", - "#print(len(articles.index))\n", - "\n", "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", "for index in range (0,10):\n", " article_index = index\n", @@ -106,17 +104,14 @@ " article_text = articles['fullText'].loc[article_index]\n", " article_title = articles['title'].loc[article_index]\n", "\n", + " # get articleID number\n", + " article_number = article_id.split('/')[-1]\n", + "\n", " # Assign the full text of this article to a variable called `cleaned_article_text`, with text-matcher's Text function\n", " cleaned_article_text = Text(article_text, article_title)\n", "\n", " word_list = cleaned_article_text.getTokens()\n", " \n", - " #word_list = ((\" \").join(cleaned_article_text)).split(\" \")\n", - "\n", - " #word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(1)))\n", - "\n", - " #word_list = word_list[:int(len(word_list)*6/10)]\n", - "\n", " # finding the document language\n", " languages = ['en','fr','es','de']\n", " abbrev_word_list = random.sample(word_list, int(len(word_list)/float(40)))\n", @@ -131,21 +126,15 @@ " spell = SpellChecker(language = lang)\n", " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", "\n", - " #output the readability score \n", + " # output the readability score \n", " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", "\n", " #adds the article id:[index, title, and percentage] to the dictionary\n", " if (1 - incorrect_percentage) < float(bound)/100 and lang == 'en':\n", - " articles_read_scores[article_id] = [article_id, article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage, lang]\n", + " articles_read_scores[article_number] = [article_id, article_index, article_title, incorrect_percentage, lang]\n", "\n", "#articles and scores stored in dictionary articles_read_scores\n", - "articles_scores = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(articles_read_scores, orient='index', columns=['ArticleID', 'OriginalIndex', 'Title', 'Score', 'Language'])\n", - "\n", - "#max_score = max(articles_scores.loc[:,\"Score\"])\n", - "#most_wrong = articles_scores.loc[articles_scores['Score'] == max_score]\n", - "#print(most_wrong)\n", - "\n", - "#print(articles_read_scores)" + "articles_scores = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(articles_read_scores, orient='index', columns=['ArticleID', 'OriginalIndex', 'Title', 'Score', 'Language'])" ] }, { @@ -158,7 +147,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 209, + "execution_count": 211, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -191,7 +180,7 @@ " \n", " \n", " \n", - " http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757\n", + " 40978757\n", " http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757\n", " 2\n", " Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...\n", @@ -203,17 +192,11 @@ "" ], "text/plain": [ - " ArticleID \\\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 \n", - "\n", - " OriginalIndex \\\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 2 \n", + " ArticleID OriginalIndex \\\n", + "40978757 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 2 \n", "\n", - " Title \\\n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... \n", - "\n", - " Score Language \n", - "http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 0.277379 en " + " Title Score Language \n", + "40978757 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 0.277379 en " ] }, "metadata": {}, @@ -231,6 +214,20 @@ "source": [ "# Run OCR On PDF\n", "\n", + "## Preparing for rerunning OCR\n", + "\n", + "Download the pdf's of the articles listed above and place them into a folder called 'incorrect_articles_pdfs'\n", + "\n", + "Name the pdfs with the corresponding articleID number (ie 409787) " + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Run OCR On PDF\n", + "\n", "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it.\n", " \n", "Before this can work, you need to install tesseract and all tesseract languages. This can be done with \"brew install tesseract\" and \"brew install tesseract-lang\" on Mac. " @@ -260,7 +257,7 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "# Rerun Spellcheck" + "## Rerun Spellcheck" ] }, { From c33bf82e0843b0f5addd15cbda140007c7296640 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 16:21:22 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 37/63] loop over folder of pdfs --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 59 ++++++++++++++++++++++------ 1 file changed, 47 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 4cd0500..f54a8c7 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -238,21 +238,53 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 27, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "test_french.pdf\n", + "get_index.py\n", + "test\n", + "input_re-run-ocr.ipynb\n", + "test_english.pdf\n", + "Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt\n", + "test_pdf.pdf\n" + ] + } + ], "source": [ "from PIL import Image\n", "import pytesseract\n", "import urllib.request\n", "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", + "import os\n", + "\n", + "# mapping of language shortcut for spellcheck to tessarect\n", + "lang_mapping = {\n", + " \"en\": \"eng\",\n", + " \"es\": \"spa\",\n", + " \"fr\": \"fra\",\n", + " \"de\": \"deu\"\n", + "}\n", "\n", - "pdf = \"test_english.pdf\"\n", - "pages = convert_from_path(pdf)\n", + "folder = \"incorrect_pdfs\"\n", "\n", - "new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", - "for page in pages[1:]:\n", - " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(page, lang=\"eng\")" + "for pdf in os.listdir(folder):\n", + "\n", + " # remove the \".pdf\" to have the article_number\n", + " article_number = pdf[:-4]\n", + "\n", + " # converts the pdf into images that are used for OCR \n", + " pdf_page_images = convert_from_path(\"incorrect_pdfs/\" + pdf) \n", + "\n", + " pdf_lang = articles_read_scores[article_number][4]\n", + "\n", + " new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", + " for image in pdf_page_images[1:]:\n", + " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(image, lang=lang_mapping[pdf_lang])" ] }, { @@ -269,9 +301,12 @@ "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ - "spell_check_language = 'en'\n", - "spell = SpellChecker(language = spell_check_language)\n", - "text = Text(new_ocr_text, \"Title\")\n", + "article_lang = articles_read_scores[article_number][4]\n", + "article_title = articles_read_scores[2]\n", + "\n", + "spell = SpellChecker(language = article_lang)\n", + "\n", + "text = Text(new_ocr_text, article_title)\n", "word_list = text.getTokens()\n", "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", @@ -281,7 +316,7 @@ ], "metadata": { "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3.10.7 64-bit", + "display_name": "Python 3", "language": "python", "name": "python3" }, @@ -300,7 +335,7 @@ "orig_nbformat": 4, "vscode": { "interpreter": { - "hash": "0ec7a46e504a03a6c262f47983dcd02ef89fa5cad4a702285fe6c94bffe2d9b0" + "hash": "aee8b7b246df8f9039afb4144a1f6fd8d2ca17a180786b69acc140d282b71a49" } } }, From 2a2209d7eb7f9dceb02a37a60f0f31d27cc77d8f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 16:47:44 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 38/63] clean up code --- .gitignore | 4 +- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 74 ++++++++++------------------ 2 files changed, 28 insertions(+), 50 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 155fbff..ee6abdf 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -2,7 +2,5 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json -preprocessing/test_pdf.pdf algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl -preprocessing/test_english.pdf -preprocessing/test_french.pdf \ No newline at end of file +preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 3afed68..7dbe6da 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 172, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 168, + "execution_count": 4, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -83,7 +83,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 210, + "execution_count": 13, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ "articles_read_scores = {}\n", "\n", "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", - "for index in range (0,10):\n", + "for index in range(0, 30):\n", " article_index = index\n", " \n", " # defining variables\n", @@ -147,7 +147,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 211, + "execution_count": 8, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -218,44 +218,37 @@ "\n", "Download the pdf's of the articles listed above and place them into a folder called 'incorrect_articles_pdfs'\n", "\n", - "Name the pdfs with the corresponding articleID number (ie 409787) " + "Name the pdfs with the corresponding articleID number (ie 409787) (JSTOR should automatically do this when you download the files)." ] }, { - "attachments": {}, "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "## Run OCR On PDF\n", + "## Rerunning OCR and Spellcheck\n", "\n", - "This cell converts a pdf to an image and then runs ocr on it.\n", + "This cell iterates through all the pdfs in the \"incorrect_articles_pdfs\" folder, reruns ocr on them, runs spellcheck on the new ocr-ed text, and replaces the article text in the json data file. \n", " \n", - "Before this can work, you need to install tesseract and all tesseract languages. This can be done with \"brew install tesseract\" and \"brew install tesseract-lang\" on Mac. " + "Before this can work, you need to install tesseract and all tesseract languages. This can be done with \"brew install tesseract\" and \"brew install tesseract-lang\" on Mac. For other installation, check the documenation: https://tesseract-ocr.github.io/\n", + "\n", + "You also need to install pdf2image, which converts the pdf into an image usuable for the tesseract OCR. Installation guide here: https://pypi.org/project/pdf2image/" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 2, + "execution_count": 14, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "test_french.pdf\n", - "get_index.py\n", - "test\n", - "input_re-run-ocr.ipynb\n", - "test_english.pdf\n", - "Albrecht-2006-pdftotext.txt\n", - "test_pdf.pdf\n" + "New incorrect percentage: 0.1407035175879397\n" ] } ], "source": [ - "from PIL import Image\n", "import pytesseract\n", - "import urllib.request\n", "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", "import os\n", "\n", @@ -267,7 +260,7 @@ " \"de\": \"deu\"\n", "}\n", "\n", - "folder = \"incorrect_pdfs\"\n", + "folder = \"incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", "\n", "for pdf in os.listdir(folder):\n", "\n", @@ -275,39 +268,26 @@ " article_number = pdf[:-4]\n", "\n", " # converts the pdf into images that are used for OCR \n", - " pdf_page_images = convert_from_path(\"incorrect_pdfs/\" + pdf) \n", + " pdf_page_images = convert_from_path(\"incorrect_articles_pdfs/\" + pdf) \n", "\n", " pdf_lang = articles_read_scores[article_number][4]\n", + " article_title = articles_read_scores[article_number][2]\n", "\n", + " # run ocr \n", " new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", " for image in pdf_page_images[1:]:\n", - " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(image, lang=lang_mapping[pdf_lang])" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "## Rerun Spellcheck" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 28, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "article_lang = articles_read_scores[article_number][4]\n", - "article_title = articles_read_scores[2]\n", + " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(image, lang=lang_mapping[pdf_lang])\n", + "\n", + " # rerun spellcheck for readability score\n", + " spell = SpellChecker(language = pdf_lang)\n", + " text = Text(new_ocr_text, article_title)\n", + " word_list = text.getTokens()\n", + " misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", + " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", + " print(f\"New incorrect percentage for:{article_number}\", incorrect_percentage)\n", "\n", - "spell = SpellChecker(language = article_lang)\n", "\n", - "text = Text(new_ocr_text, article_title)\n", - "word_list = text.getTokens()\n", - "misspelled = spell.unknown(word_list)\n", - "incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", - "print(\"New incorrect percentage:\", incorrect_percentage)" + " # TODO: replace texts with in json file (decide when we shold do this and whether user input should be involved)" ] } ], From 90b778e38a413e41e7d9a03dfd330ab39772d4ca Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Gianni Date: Fri, 17 Mar 2023 16:55:17 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 39/63] added what portions of texts are most quoted --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 88 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 82 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index 38f0fbf..3c53b70 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ "cells": [ { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 13, + "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 14, + "execution_count": 7, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -440,13 +440,13 @@ "[2125 rows x 18 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 14, + "execution_count": 7, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } ], "source": [ - "articles = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl'\n", + "articles = '../text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl'\n", "with open(articles) as f: \n", " rawData = f.readlines()\n", "\n", @@ -460,6 +460,77 @@ "articlesWithMatches = df[df['numMatches'].apply(lambda x: x > 0)]\n", "articlesWithMatches" ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## What portions of texts are most quoted? (aka first-half, first-quarter, last-third) Does this change across genres?" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 53, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "2665\n", + "0 585\n", + "1 296\n", + "2 138\n", + "3 1646\n" + ] + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": { + "needs_background": "light" + }, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", + "\n", + "genderRaw = '../visualization/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "total_char_count = 0\n", + "with open(genderRaw) as f: \n", + " # genderTroubleTxt = f.readlines()\n", + " for line in f:\n", + " total_char_count += len(line)\n", + "\n", + "total_char_count\n", + "text_occurrance = {\"0\":0, \"1\":0, \"2\": 0, \"3\":0}\n", + "\n", + "quarter = [(0, total_char_count/4), (total_char_count/4, (total_char_count/4)*2), ((total_char_count/4)*2,(total_char_count/4)*3), ((total_char_count/4)*3,total_char_count)]\n", + "for index, row in articlesWithMatches.iterrows():\n", + " for (quot_start,quot_end) in row['Locations in A']:\n", + " for index,values in enumerate(quarter):\n", + " if (values[0]<=quot_start<=values[1]):\n", + " text_occurrance[str(index)] += 1\n", + "\n", + "total_occ = sum(text_occurrance.values())\n", + "print(total_occ)\n", + "for (key, val) in text_occurrance.items():\n", + " print(key,val)\n", + "\n", + "plt.bar(range(len(text_occurrance)), list(text_occurrance.values()),tick_label=list(text_occurrance.keys()))\n", + "\n", + "plt.show()\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "\n", + " " + ] } ], "metadata": { @@ -478,9 +549,14 @@ "name": "python", "nbconvert_exporter": "python", "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.8.8" + "version": "3.9.12" }, - "orig_nbformat": 4 + "orig_nbformat": 4, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "b31404d2d39db7148e47afcb326bbd83efd3d5c6a4ff77f117fb9ae6ba2aba44" + } + } }, "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 From fa87d611879c786d58f0610824da52a58ec60510 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Gianni Date: Tue, 21 Mar 2023 17:51:37 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 40/63] added modifiability of distribution for what portions of texts are most quoted question --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 87 ++++++++++++++++++++++---------- 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+), 28 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index 3c53b70..b9fbeb7 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ "cells": [ { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 1, + "execution_count": 4, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 7, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -440,7 +440,7 @@ "[2125 rows x 18 columns]" ] }, - "execution_count": 7, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" } @@ -471,7 +471,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 53, + "execution_count": 80, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -479,22 +479,26 @@ "output_type": "stream", "text": [ "2665\n", - "0 585\n", - "1 296\n", - "2 138\n", - "3 1646\n" + "0 124\n", + "1 306\n", + "2 304\n", + "3 66\n", + "4 81\n", + "5 48\n", + "6 43\n", + "7 90\n", + "8 599\n", + "9 1004\n" ] }, { "data": { - "image/png": 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X11ejT2o5++c//4mOHTuia9euGDFiBDIzM7Fp0yb4+flpjWXOpCM6OhodO3ZEjx498Morr+D+/fvYv38/PDw8NMZJKW/FxcV4++23sWDBAp1/9DyKeZOGmzdvIjQ0FO+99x7s7e0bHCulvPXr1w+rV69GXFwcDhw4gOnTp+Ozzz6Dm5ubzm0wb/rl5uaGsLAwHD58GHv27MGoUaMQEREBDw8PrYMvUsnZ1atXAUB9sDMqKgr79++Hg4MDFi9erP5326NrZ870S7XfAgICUFhYiD179iAmJgbGxsbw8/PTOttfKnnTJSYmBgDw5ptv6uxn3qQnJiYGMpkMc+fO1eqTStYMDQ2RnJyM/v37IyAgAA4ODujVqxdWrFiB7du3Y+3atTrXzqzpj7W1NZKTk9GuXTtMnToVdnZ26N27N3bs2IGEhAStK3CkkrV+/foBAE6dOqXRnpeXh19++QUA8Ntvv2mtnVlref369UNRUREuXbqk0X7p0iX1nVhu376tbpdKpp7mnIB2FkpKSpCamqpxBWBTFBUVoaKiQuecJiYmaN++PfMnIY271pFI4srLy3UW4gCozwooLy+HsbExqqqq8OWXX+Ltt99+ovkA6Jyz7nwtISkpCV5eXjAyMmrW6/W59j8jqedt06ZNiI+Px/z58zFq1CitfuZNWkJCQnDu3Dl88MEHcHFxUbdLMWfu7u5ISUlBRUUFfvrpJxw6dAhFRUVQKpVat1pgzqRj4sSJ6N27N8rKypCRkYHk5GTk5+drjJFa3pYtW4ba2lp8+OGHjRrPvElDYGCgurjQEKnl7dixYxrfT58+HSNGjMCMGTMQGhqKXbt2afQzb/p1/vx5je9nzZoFV1dXrF69Gh9//DFWr14NQFo5U93Krbq6GmfPnkX79u0BAFOnTkXfvn2xYcMGhISEwNraWv0a5kz/VPvN0tISqampMDY2BgBMmjQJPXv2xKpVq+Dv7w+5XC6pvD3q/v37SEhIQK9evTBixAidY5g3abl69SrS09Px8ssvw8HBQaNPalkzMzODk5MThgwZglGjRqG8vBx79uxBcHAwzM3NMWvWLI3xzJr+WVhYoH///pgwYQKGDRuGwsJC7NixA76+vjhy5AjGjBkDQFpZCwwMRFRUFAIDA1FVVQV3d3dkZ2dj6dKlqKmp0bkdZq11hISEICkpCVOnTsXWrVvRv39/ZGZmIiQkBEZGRhq3eJZSplp6zie9ArChOVXzMn/SwSvj6JmgUCjUl6I/qrKyUj0GAE6ePInS0tJmn3FQd1u65nx0vrKyMty5c0fjq+5Vek3x008/4dq1a622dnpyUs5bdHQ0li5dCi8vL523CGPepOX//u//EBERgfnz52PlypUafVLMWYcOHTB69Gh4e3tj+fLl+OKLLxAZGYmgoCCNccyZtHTv3h2jR4/GxIkTER4ejj179mD58uUahS4p5S09PR27du3Cpk2bGvXsAOZNGvbv34+vvvoKUVFRjz3oIaW81cfX1xf29vZahTrmTZqWLl0KY2Njjf0lpZypbtP22muvqQtxAGBkZARfX19UVlbi3Llz6nbmTBpU+83Hx0ddiAMeXlkyYcIE3LlzR331nJTy9qi4uDhUVFRg3rx5WrcRA5g3KWroSkYpZe3OnTsYMmQIbG1tsXPnTkyZMgWzZs1CSkoKhg4diuDgYI1nFDNr+vfjjz9i2LBhGDNmDD766CNMmjQJ8+bNQ3p6Orp06YKAgAB1cUtKWevVqxeOHTsGc3NzTJ8+Hfb29vD09ET37t3V/5+0adNGvW1mrfV4eHjg4MGDKC0thZeXF+zs7ODt7Y2RI0fitddeA/DffSOlTLXUnCqJiYno378/evXq1eT5Hjenal7mTzpYjKNnQteuXVFQUKDzg+f3339Hhw4d1H8UJSYmokePHnj++eefaD7VtnXNJ5PJ1GM2btwIGxsbja9//etfzZo3MTERpqamWg9lfpprB3RfTk3NI9W87d69G/Pnz8fYsWORkJCg82Ao8yYdYWFheP/99zFnzhxERUVp9Us1Z49uf/To0YiJidH4rGbOpM3V1RWDBg3Czp071W1SyltQUBAGDhyIoUOHIisrS/0FPDxDMCsrS+O5A8yb/lVVVWHx4sUYP348unTpot5n2dnZAB7edjQrKwv3798HIK28NcTe3l4ja6q1M2/SY2RkpP7bQUVKOevevTsA6HxmiI2NDQBoHLBmzqShKftNSnl7VExMDAwNDTF79myd/cybtCiVSuzduxft2rXTecBaSln75JNPcO/ePbzxxhsa25DL5Xj99ddRWlqKixcvaqydWdOvLVu2oLKyUmufKRQKeHl5ITs7G7du3QIgrawBwEsvvYTr168jMzMTp0+fxu3bt5GQkKD+3d+7d2/1WGatdb3xxhvIyclBRkYGzpw5g9zcXERFRSEnJweGhobqgpTUMvW05gQ0s6C6ArC5V8UBD0/8MTMz0zlnVVUV7t27x/xJCItx9EwYMmQIamtr8d1332m0V1ZW4tKlS/jLX/4C4OFDLZOTk5/oQ041HwB8++23Wn3nz5+Hi4sLLCwsAEB9tlfdr4EDBzZr3sTERIwZMwbm5uYtsvZz586hTZs2cHZ2bvb26b+kmrfY2FgEBARg9OjRSEpKqvdSduZNGsLDwxEeHo5Zs2YhOjpa6yxlqeZMl4qKCtTU1KCkpETdxpxJX0VFBQoLCwFIL2/Z2dm4dOkSnJycNL4AIDU1FU5OThoPl2fe9K+iogL5+fk4duyYxj5TPaNj//79cHJyQnR0tOTy1pCsrCx07txZo415k6bKykrk5OSo95fUcubm5gYAyMnJ0dqOqq1Tp07qNuZMGhq736SWt7ouXbqEixcvwsvLS2dREWDepObo0aO4e/cu/Pz8tP6mk1rWVAeJVVdS1aVUKjX+CzBrUtDYfSa1rKnIZDL07dsXI0aMQI8ePVBVVYVTp06hV69eGvudWWt9BgYGeO655+Dh4YFOnTrhzp07yMjIgKenJxQKhWQz1Rg2Njbo1q2bxl0MVFRtqmPUAJCSkoKysrInugJQLpdj8ODByMjI0LpI5bvvvkNtba3GnKRngugZcPnyZSGTycTkyZM12rdt2yYAiH379gkhhDhz5owAIE6dOtXg9i5cuCAAiNDQUJ39//nPf4SZmZlwc3MTSqVS3Z6cnCwAiLVr1zbrfXh5eYn6/re8ffu2ACB2797d4Dby8/MFAOHv76+zv7q6WtjY2AhbW1tRWlqqbr906ZKQy+Vi3rx5zVr7n1W/fv2EnZ2dzj4p5i02NlbI5XLx8ssvi/Ly8nrHMW/SEB4eLgAIPz8/UVNTo3OM1HJ2584dne2ZmZnC3Nxc9OzZU93GnElHXl6ezvZTp04JuVwuRo0aJYSQXt6OHDki4uPjtb4AiOeff17Ex8eLjIwMIQTzJhXV1dU699nOnTsFADFu3DgRHx8vrl69Krm83bt3T2d7RESEACACAwPVbcyb/hUUFOhsX7JkiQAg1q9fL4SQ3ueaUqkUdnZ2QqFQiJycHHV7WVmZ6NGjh7CyshJlZWVCCOZMSgoLC4WlpaXo1q2bxs8wNzdXmJubCycnJyGE9PJWV1BQkAAgkpOTdfYzb9KjOn5w+fJlrT6pZW3r1q1avyuFeJgHV1dXYWhoKO7evSuEYNakIiQkROP3pUpRUZGwsbER1tbW4sGDB5LLWn0WL14sAIjY2Fh1G7OmfzU1NeKNN94QMplMnSGpZ6qhY7dC/PffmnV/nyqVSjFkyBBhZWUlSkpK1O1z584Vtra2j51T9Tv65s2bOvtVf49s27ZNo33y5MnC0NBQ3Lhx47FzUOswfPJyHpH+DRgwAEFBQYiIiMDkyZMxfvx4/Pzzz9i2bRs8PT3h6+sL4OEZL+3atYOHh4fWNoqLi7F9+3YAQG5uLgDgzJkzeP/99wEAEyZMgKurKwCgY8eOWLt2LZYsWYLRo0fDx8cHv//+OzZt2oTevXsjJCSk0Ws/evQo/v3vfwOA+tZaqjmtrKwQHBysXruBgQG8vb11bkf1GtVDOS9fvqxuGzFihPoB3EZGRvj4448xbdo0eHh4ICAgACUlJdiyZQs6duyI8PDwRq/9z2rfvn3q22nl5+ejurpa/bO2s7ODn58fAOnlLTk5GfPmzUObNm0wbdo0JCQkaPRbWFiozzxi3vRvx44dCA0Nha2tLUaPHo24uDiN/s6dO2PMmDGSy9mHH36IlJQUeHl5wd7eHkIIXLlyBfv27cODBw+0bnfInElDYGAg8vLyMGrUKNjZ2aGyshI//PADDh48CEtLS2zatAmA9D7XJkyYUG9fly5dMGXKFPX3zJs0GBkZaewXFdVtjhwdHdX9UVFRksrb3r17ERMTg3HjxsHe3h5KpRJpaWlISkqCo6Ojxr5n3vTv/fffx7lz5zBy5EjY2tqirKwMx48fR2pqKoYOHYq33noLgPQ+1wwMDBAZGQlvb2+88MILWLRoEYyNjREbG4vffvsNMTEx6rP3mTPpsLa2xsaNG7FgwQK4u7tj7ty5qK6uRmRkJKqrq9XPZ5Za3lQqKysRFxeHrl27Yvz48TrHMG/SkpubixMnTsDNzQ0DBgzQ6pda1ubMmYOPP/4YkZGRyMnJwSuvvILy8nLs378fly9fxtKlS9VX/TJr0hASEoK9e/dixYoV+PHHHzF8+HAUFhZi165dyMvLw44dO2BoaCi5rAHA888/j5EjR8LJyQlVVVVISkpCamoq5s+fr3EbXmatdZWVlcHNzQ2TJk2Cg4MDiouLceDAAfzwww9Yt24dRo4cCUB6n19A44/dAsCKFSsQHx8PX19fLF68GN26dcOBAwdw4cIFREdHw9LSEsDDK5iPHj0KHx8fnXOeOXMGZ86cAQB8//33AICIiAj1s9LXrFmjHhsQEIDY2FgsXrwYt27dQp8+fXD8+HEkJiZizZo1cHBwaPR7pRam72og0dOiVCrFxo0bhbOzszA2NhZdu3YV7777rsZZKQ4ODvWeyXLz5k0BoN6vumfPqMTGxgpXV1dhYmIiOnbsKObMmaM+m6ux/P39652z7hVXI0eOFJ6envVup6G16zpL5OjRo2Lo0KHCzMxMWFlZiddff11kZWU1ae1/Vp6envX+rOvuI6nlLTQ0tME5mTdpaeizoW7WpJazlJQUMXnyZGFnZyfMzMyEsbGxcHBwELNnzxZXrlzRGMucScehQ4fE+PHjRffu3YWJiYkwNTUVLi4uIjg4WGRnZ6vHSS1v9QEgvLy8NNqYN2lT5ScoKEjdJrW8paenC29vb9GjRw9hamoqTExMRO/evcXy5ctFUVGRxljmTf+SkpLE2LFjRdeuXYWJiYlQKBRi4MCBYt26daKiokI9Tmo5U0lLSxMjR44UFhYWwszMTAwbNkzriiXmTHoSEhLE0KFDhUKhEBYWFmLMmDEiPT1d3S/VvH322WcCgFi1alW9Y5g3aVm3bp0AID755BOd/VLM2t27d0VQUJCwt7cXRkZGQqFQiCFDhohPPvlE1NbWqscxa9KRlZUlZs2aJbp16yYMDQ2FpaWl8PDwEAkJCeoxUszaokWLhJOTkzAzM1OvOS4uTmscs9a6qqqqxLRp04S9vb0wMTER1tbWYuzYseLEiRMa46SYqcYeu1XJyckRM2fOFO3btxcmJiZi0KBB4uDBgxpjTp8+LQCI1NRUnXM+7hjeo4qKikRQUJCwsbERxsbGok+fPmL79u0an6+kfyzG0Z/GpUuXBACRmJio76U0WUFBgTAwMBBbtmzR91KokZg3ag3MGbUm5o1aE/NGrYE5o9bEvFFrYdaotTBr9LT9L2eqqUJCQkT79u01bqFJzz45iP4kqqqqEBoairFjx+p7KU127949rFmzBlOnTtX3UqiRmDdqDcwZtSbmjVoT80atgTmj1sS8UWth1qi1MGv0tP0vZ6qp+vTpg23btsHAwEDfS6FWJBNCCH0vgoiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiOhZxCvjiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiFoIi3FERERERERERERERERELYTFOCIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIqIWwmIcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohbAYR0RERERE9BiffvopZDIZ0tLS9DqnPtahz3nrunXrFmQyGcLCwp76tmUyGWbPnv3Ut9sUYWFhkMlkuHXrll7XQURERERETx+LcURERERE9KeRlpYGmUym/jIwMIC1tTX69+8Pf39/nDhxAkKIpzpnWFgYkpKSnuo2W0JaWhrCwsJw//59fS+FiIiIiIjomcJiHBERERER/en4+Phg3759+PTTT7Fu3Tq8/PLLSEtLw6uvvoqxY8dqFaT8/PxQUVGBESNGNHmu8PDwZhXjnmTO5khLS0N4eLjOYlxrr0UXOzs7VFRUYM2aNXpbAxERERERUXMY6nsBRERERERErW3w4MGYOXOmRtvmzZuxbNkybN68GT4+Pvjyyy/VfQYGBjAwMGiVtZWWlsLS0rJV53wcKaxFJpPB1NRUr2sgIiIiIiJqDl4ZR0REREREhIcFp02bNuHFF1/EiRMnkJ6eru7T9cy0yspKhIWFwcXFBQqFAlZWVhgwYACWLl0K4L/POAOAPXv2aNweU0X1rLKTJ0/ixRdfhIWFBby9veudU0WpVCIsLAx2dnYwMTGBq6srDh48qDWuvmehPbrt2bNnIzw8HADg4OCgXqfq+Wz1raWgoABBQUHo0aMHjI2N0aNHDwQFBeHevXs65zt16hQ2btwIR0dHmJiYwNnZGXv27NHeGTroemZc3bYvvvgCQ4YMgampKWxsbLB06VIolcpGbVvl66+/hru7OxQKBbp06YJ33nkHf/zxh861+Pn5oXPnzjAxMYGjoyNWrVqF8vLyJxr7qJqaGixcuBByuRwbNmxo0nshIiIiIiLp4JVxREREREREdcybNw/p6ek4duwYXnzxxXrHBQUFYffu3Zg1axbeffdd1NTU4Pr16zh16hQAoGPHjti3bx/8/Pzg4eGB+fPn69zO999/j4SEBAQEBMDf379Ra1y+fDn++OMPBAYGQiaTITY2Fj4+PqisrNRZfHucBQsWoKSkBImJidiyZQs6dOgAAHB1da33NcXFxRg2bBiysrIwd+5cDB48GBkZGYiMjMSpU6fw3XffwdLSUuM1q1atQkVFBRYsWAATExNERkZi9uzZ6NWrF4YPH97kdascP34cO3fuxMKFCzF37lwcOXIEGzduhLW1NVatWtWobVy8eBGHDx9GQEAAZs2ahdTUVGzbtg1XrlxBSkoK5PKH57JmZ2fDzc0NxcXFCAwMhLOzM9LS0vDhhx/im2++wcmTJ2FoaNjksY+qqKiAj48Pjh8/jr1792pdyUlERERERP87WIwjIiIiIiKqQ1WAunbtWoPjEhMT8eqrr9Z7ZZe5uTlmzpwJPz8/9OzZs95iSmZmJlJSUjB69OhGr7GgoACXL19G27ZtAQALFy6Eq6srFi9ejGnTpsHMzKzR2wKAF154Aa6urkhMTMTEiRNhb2//2Nds2LAB169fx44dO7Bo0SJ1+3PPPYfg4GBs2LABa9eu1XhNVVUVLly4AGNjYwDAlClT0LNnT0RERDxRMS4zMxOZmZnqdS9cuBADBgzA9u3bG12M+/HHH9XvHwAWLVqEd955B9u2bcPnn3+O6dOnA3hYUMzPz8exY8cwfvx49dilS5di48aN2LNnD+bNm9fksXUVFhbC29sbly9fxhdffIGxY8c2+2dDRERERET6x9tUEhERERER1dGmTRsAQElJSYPj2rZti8zMTFy5cuWJ5hs4cGCTCnEAEBgYqC7EqdaycOFCFBUV6bytZUtITExEx44dta74W7BgATp06IDExESt1yxatEhdiAOAbt26wdnZGdevX3+itTxaQJTJZBg5ciTu3LmDsrKyRm3DxcVFXYhTWbFiBQCo30ttbS2Sk5MxaNAgdXFNZeXKlZDL5c0aW1d2djaGDx+OX3/9FadPn2YhjoiIiIjoGcBiHBERERERUR2qIpyqKFefrVu3oqioCAMGDICjoyPefPNNHDlyBLW1tU2az9nZuclr7NOnj1Zb3759AQA3btxo8vaa4+bNm3BxcdG6zaKhoSFcXFx0rqNnz55abe3bt9d6xlxT1bddAI3etq6fqY2NDaysrNTvJT8/H2VlZejXr5/W2Hbt2sHGxqZZY+vy9vZGdnY20tPTMXjw4EatnYiIiIiIpI3FOCIiIiIiojouX74M4OGVUg3561//ilu3bmHfvn0YNWoUTp48iYkTJ+Kll15CdXV1o+dTKBRNXqNMJtNqE0I0+vVKpbLJcz4NBgYGOtubsvambLcp29b1M3309U1ZZ3Pfk6+vLyoqKrB27domF3aJiIiIiEiaWIwjIiIiIiKqIyYmBgDg5eX12LHt2rXDzJkzsWvXLty4cQPLli3D2bNnceTIkRZd408//aTV9vPPPwPQvEqsXbt2KCws1Bqr64qs+opR9enZsyeuXr2qVdhTKpW4du2azqvVpEzXzzQvLw/FxcXq99KpUydYWloiMzNTa2xRURHy8vKaNbauFStW4KOPPsLevXvh5+eHmpqaJ31rRERERESkZyzGERERERERAaipqcGSJUuQnp6O8ePHY/jw4Q2OvX//vkabTCbDoEGDAECjAGZhYaGzIPYkIiMjUVxcrP6+uLgYUVFRsLKygqenp7rd2dkZ3377LcrLy9VtRUVFiI2N1dqmhYWF1tobMnHiROTn5yM6OlqjfdeuXcjPz8ekSZOa9J707erVq0hKStJoW79+PQConyUnl8vh7e2NjIwMnDhxQmPs3//+d9TW1qrfd1PGPmrJkiXYunUr4uLi4Ovrq7crGYmIiIiI6OkwfPwQIiIiIiKiZ8vFixexf/9+AEBpaam6EJOdnY2xY8ciLi6uwdeXlpbCxsYGEyZMwKBBg9CpUyfcvHkTkZGRsLa2hre3t3qsu7s7vv76a6xfvx62traQyWSYPn36E62/Q4cOGDp0KObOnQshBGJjY3H79m1ER0dr3PYyODgYM2fOxKhRo+Dn54f79+9j165dsLOzw507dzS26e7uDgBYvnw5ZsyYAVNTU/Tv3x/9+/fXuYZly5YhPj4eQUFBuHjxIgYNGoSMjAzExMTAxcUFy5Yte6L32NoGDBiAmTNnIiAgAE5OTkhNTcXhw4fh6emJadOmqcd98MEHSElJwcSJE7Fo0SL06tULZ86cwaFDhzBixAj4+/s3a+yj3nnnHRgZGSE4OBhKpRIHDx6EkZFRi/4MiIiIiIioZbAYR0REREREfzoHDhzAgQMHIJfLYWFhge7du8PT0xM+Pj4YN27cY1+vUCgQEhKCkydP4uuvv0ZZWZm6OLdy5Up07dpVPXbnzp0ICgrCunXrUFpaCgBPXIxbv349zp49i4iICNy9exdOTk747LPP4OvrqzFuxowZyM3NRUREBBYvXoyePXvivffeg1wux/nz5zXGDh8+HOvXr0dUVBQCAgKgVCoRGhpabzGubdu2+OabbxAaGork5GTExsaic+fOWLhwIcLDw2FpaflE77G1DR48GJs3b8bq1asRFRWFNm3aIDg4GB988AHk8v/eVMbOzg7nz5/He++9h/379+P+/fvo3r07Vq5ciTVr1sDQ0LBZY3VZtGgRjIyMsGDBAkyZMgXx8fEwNjZusZ8BERERERG1DJl40idlExEREREREREREREREZFOfGYcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohbAYR0RERERERERERERERNRCWIwjIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiaiEsxhERERERERERERERERG1EBbjiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiFoIi3FERERERERERERERERELYTFOCIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIqIWwmIcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohfw/f1tTwHqKwGsAAAAASUVORK5CYII=", "text/plain": [ - "
" + "
" ] }, - "metadata": { - "needs_background": "light" - }, + "metadata": {}, "output_type": "display_data" } ], @@ -504,32 +508,59 @@ "genderRaw = '../visualization/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", "total_char_count = 0\n", "with open(genderRaw) as f: \n", - " # genderTroubleTxt = f.readlines()\n", " for line in f:\n", " total_char_count += len(line)\n", "\n", "total_char_count\n", - "text_occurrance = {\"0\":0, \"1\":0, \"2\": 0, \"3\":0}\n", "\n", - "quarter = [(0, total_char_count/4), (total_char_count/4, (total_char_count/4)*2), ((total_char_count/4)*2,(total_char_count/4)*3), ((total_char_count/4)*3,total_char_count)]\n", - "for index, row in articlesWithMatches.iterrows():\n", - " for (quot_start,quot_end) in row['Locations in A']:\n", - " for index,values in enumerate(quarter):\n", - " if (values[0]<=quot_start<=values[1]):\n", - " text_occurrance[str(index)] += 1\n", + "def divideBySections(amount):\n", + " text_occurrance, rangeBreakdown, xLabels = {}, [], []\n", + "\n", + " for i in range(0, amount):\n", + " text_occurrance[str(i)] = 0\n", + " rangeBreakdown.append(((total_char_count/amount)*(i), (total_char_count/amount)*(i+1)))\n", + " xLabels.append(f\"{i}/{amount}-{i+1}/{amount}\")\n", + "\n", + " return text_occurrance, rangeBreakdown, xLabels\n", + "\n", + "def plotPortionsOfQuotes(amount):\n", + "\n", + " text_occurrance, rangeBreakdown, xLabels = divideBySections(amount)\n", + "\n", + " for index, row in articlesWithMatches.iterrows():\n", + " for (quot_start,quot_end) in row['Locations in A']:\n", + " for index,values in enumerate(rangeBreakdown):\n", + " if (values[0]<=quot_start<=values[1]):\n", + " text_occurrance[str(index)] += 1\n", + "\n", + " total_occ = sum(text_occurrance.values())\n", + " print(total_occ)\n", + " for (key, val) in text_occurrance.items():\n", + " print(key,val)\n", "\n", - "total_occ = sum(text_occurrance.values())\n", - "print(total_occ)\n", - "for (key, val) in text_occurrance.items():\n", - " print(key,val)\n", "\n", - "plt.bar(range(len(text_occurrance)), list(text_occurrance.values()),tick_label=list(text_occurrance.keys()))\n", + " plt.figure(facecolor='white')\n", + " plt.bar(range(len(text_occurrance)), list(text_occurrance.values()),tick_label=xLabels)\n", "\n", - "plt.show()\n", + " plt.xlabel(\"Distribution in book\")\n", + " plt.ylabel(\"Amount of quotations\")\n", + " plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = (30,10)\n", + " plt.rcParams.update({'font.size': 18})\n", + " plt.title(\"Portions of text most quoted\")\n", "\n", + " plt.show()\n", "\n", "\n", - " " + "distributionCount = 10\n", + "plotPortionsOfQuotes(distributionCount)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Which sourceCategory of books are most quoted/ which genres are least quoted?" ] } ], From 3282b99930b28ad73122d8f114605a64f49e0db1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Tue, 21 Mar 2023 17:52:08 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 41/63] replace fixed article text - need to test replaces articles json file with fixed article texts and returns pd dataframe of articles that cannot be fixed. --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 78 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 1 file changed, 75 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index 7dbe6da..e61c9df 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 3, + "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -22,7 +22,8 @@ "%matplotlib inline\n", "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]\n", - "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)" + "#pd.set_option('display.max_colwidth', None)\n", + "import os, json, uuid" ] }, { @@ -234,6 +235,17 @@ "You also need to install pdf2image, which converts the pdf into an image usuable for the tesseract OCR. Installation guide here: https://pypi.org/project/pdf2image/" ] }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# ‼️ 🛑 Make sure to change the variable below to the desired replacement bound (ie how much improvement to replace the old OCR with new OCR) 🛑 ‼️\n", + "\n", + "replace = 0.10\n" + ] + }, { "cell_type": "code", "execution_count": 14, @@ -262,6 +274,10 @@ "\n", "folder = \"incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", "\n", + "articles_chg = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)\n", + "\n", + "no_improvement = {}\n", + "\n", "for pdf in os.listdir(folder):\n", "\n", " # remove the \".pdf\" to have the article_number\n", @@ -287,7 +303,63 @@ " print(f\"New incorrect percentage for:{article_number}\", incorrect_percentage)\n", "\n", "\n", - " # TODO: replace texts with in json file (decide when we shold do this and whether user input should be involved)" + " # TODO: replace texts with in json file (decide when we shold do this and whether user input should be involved)\n", + " old_error = articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['Score']]\n", + " if old_error - incorrect_percentage > 0.10:\n", + " articles_chg.loc[articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['OriginalIndex']],['fullText']] = new_ocr_text\n", + " print('+')\n", + " else:\n", + " no_improvement[article_number] = [article_number, article_title, articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['ArticleID']], old_error, pdf_lang]\n", + " print('-')\n", + "\n", + " articles_chg.head(5)\n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Replace fixable articles with new article text" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# create randomly named temporary file to avoid \n", + "# interference with other thread/asynchronous request\n", + "filename = '../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl'\n", + "\n", + "tempfile = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), str(uuid.uuid4()))\n", + "\n", + "with open(tempfile, 'w') as f:\n", + " json.dump(articles_chg, f, indent=4)\n", + "\n", + "# rename temporary file replacing old file\n", + "os.rename(tempfile, filename)" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Displays the articles that were unable to be fixed through rerunning OCR" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "no_improvement_pd = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(articles_chg, orient='index', columns=['ArticleNumber', 'ArticleTitle', 'ArticleID', 'Score', 'Language'])\n", + "\n", + "display(no_improvement_pd)" ] } ], From fd25d6b5080e337005060c8e6de4e171ccccd0a0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2023 15:18:44 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 42/63] added replace article text code the final cell block replaces the initial article json file with one with the fixed text > ie a permanent fix --- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 76 +++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 59 insertions(+), 17 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index e61c9df..a43271a 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 1, + "execution_count": 2, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 3, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 13, + "execution_count": 4, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 8, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -188,6 +188,46 @@ " 0.277379\n", " en\n", " \n", + " \n", + " 23131522\n", + " http://www.jstor.org/stable/23131522\n", + " 11\n", + " SYLLEPSIS, MIMESIS, SIMULACRUM: \"THE MONK\" AND...\n", + " 0.147149\n", + " en\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " 24191440\n", + " http://www.jstor.org/stable/24191440\n", + " 14\n", + " The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass:...\n", + " 0.172303\n", + " en\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " 41147854\n", + " http://www.jstor.org/stable/41147854\n", + " 15\n", + " Re-viewing the \"Entrapment\" controversy: Megap...\n", + " 0.147606\n", + " en\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " 20119721\n", + " http://www.jstor.org/stable/20119721\n", + " 16\n", + " Playing Gender\n", + " 0.145977\n", + " en\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " 30038067\n", + " http://www.jstor.org/stable/30038067\n", + " 20\n", + " Fashionable Dancing: Gender, the Charleston, a...\n", + " 0.153173\n", + " en\n", + " \n", " \n", "\n", "" @@ -195,9 +235,19 @@ "text/plain": [ " ArticleID OriginalIndex \\\n", "40978757 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 2 \n", + "23131522 http://www.jstor.org/stable/23131522 11 \n", + "24191440 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24191440 14 \n", + "41147854 http://www.jstor.org/stable/41147854 15 \n", + "20119721 http://www.jstor.org/stable/20119721 16 \n", + "30038067 http://www.jstor.org/stable/30038067 20 \n", "\n", " Title Score Language \n", - "40978757 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 0.277379 en " + "40978757 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 0.277379 en \n", + "23131522 SYLLEPSIS, MIMESIS, SIMULACRUM: \"THE MONK\" AND... 0.147149 en \n", + "24191440 The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass:... 0.172303 en \n", + "41147854 Re-viewing the \"Entrapment\" controversy: Megap... 0.147606 en \n", + "20119721 Playing Gender 0.145977 en \n", + "30038067 Fashionable Dancing: Gender, the Charleston, a... 0.153173 en " ] }, "metadata": {}, @@ -237,7 +287,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 6, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -248,17 +298,9 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 14, + "execution_count": null, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "New incorrect percentage: 0.1407035175879397\n" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "import pytesseract\n", "from pdf2image import convert_from_path\n", @@ -272,7 +314,7 @@ " \"de\": \"deu\"\n", "}\n", "\n", - "folder = \"incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", + "folder = \"../incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", "\n", "articles_chg = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)\n", "\n", From f611581cbeb4fc092917378c9d1ae39684253913 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2023 15:20:39 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 43/63] initial pdf to text notebook --- .gitignore | 4 ++ preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 65 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 69 insertions(+) create mode 100644 preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index dcf02d5..cf7fb1f 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -1,3 +1,7 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ +preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs +preprocessing/gender_trouble.pdf +algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl +algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b10eb3 --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,65 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 20, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "is\n", + "xxxi\n", + "\n", + "\f\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "import pdftotext\n", + "\n", + "with open(\"gender_trouble.pdf\", \"rb\") as f:\n", + " pdf = pdftotext.PDF(f)\n", + "\n", + " for i in range(len(pdf)):\n", + " page = pdf[i]\n", + " pdf_page_num = i + 1\n", + "\n", + " print(pdf_page_num)\n", + " if len(page.strip()) != 0:\n", + " print(\"PAGE\", page.strip()[-5:])\n", + "\n", + "\n", + " # write code that adds the printed page number and the actual page number in the pdf\n" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.7" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4, + "vscode": { + "interpreter": { + "hash": "aee8b7b246df8f9039afb4144a1f6fd8d2ca17a180786b69acc140d282b71a49" + } + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 67f2006344794b0d76c646d446d52ed38239dcf4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 24 Mar 2023 17:01:32 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 44/63] added benjamin and fanon data --- text_matcher/benjamindata.jsonl | 7878 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl | 4281 +++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 12159 insertions(+) create mode 100644 text_matcher/benjamindata.jsonl create mode 100644 text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl diff --git a/text_matcher/benjamindata.jsonl b/text_matcher/benjamindata.jsonl new file mode 100644 index 0000000..646f5bf --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/benjamindata.jsonl @@ -0,0 +1,7878 @@ +{"creator":["ULISES ALI MEJIAS"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt3fh6jh.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780816679003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90c2afdd-933d-3656-80e6-fd48ac6736d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctt3fh6jh.15"}],"isPartOf":"Off the Network","keyphrase":["digital","social","facebook","technology","huan liu","internet","university","mass mit","john salerno","macarthur foundation"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"177","pagination":"177-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt3fh6jh.15","wordCount":4347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diane Cole Ahl"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1353\/ren.2008.0348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00344338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032182"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaae4f14-ca74-3475-91d9-aa6f4a265e08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1353\/ren.2008.0348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renaquar"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"870","pageStart":"869","pagination":"pp. 869-870","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1353\/ren.2008.0348","wordCount":685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Petroski"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29775188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f6fa29f-14de-310e-b0c9-4955fa2a094f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29775188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Engineering: Men and Women of Progress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29775188","wordCount":3268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keren Omry"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3789f032-e7a9-37dd-a15a-35b3093a688f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bodies and Digital Discontinuities: Posthumanism, Fractals, and Popular Music in the Digital Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0104","wordCount":8886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This article focuses on popular music by mapping out a shift in recent popular culture that has incorporated both the technologies and the discontinuities of our contemporary digital reality. While musicians from Sun Ra to Daft Punk have been interested in sf themes, I concentrate here on four musicians who move beyond thematic content or performative stance, and adapt their creative processes, the resulting outputs, and their overall aesthetic programs to accomodate changing relations between the body and creativity that are marked by contemporary technology. Amon Tobin, Bj\u00f6rk, Beck, and Kutiman are all thoroughly enmeshed in the sf effects and aesthetics that pervade Western popular culture, acknowledging the inextricable penetration of technology, even in its most sophisticated forms, into the commonplace and the aesthetic. I claim that fractal geometry can provide a system of analysis through which current cultural, aesthetic, and political productions can be better understood. In turning to the fractal\u2014literally, thematically, technically, and\/or metaphorically\u2014these musicians map out the geometry of a natural world in which the technological has become organic and is welcomed as a productive source of beauty in our posthuman and distinctly science-fictional era.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gyorgy Markus"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07978473-e028-377a-89b0-8f888781eaa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Walter Benjamin or: The Commodity as Phantasmagoria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827788","wordCount":17552,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[57855,57918]],"Locations in B":[[56382,56451]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"83","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Christensen"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ef86cd0-7db8-38c6-b8e9-bbeb15c0ae7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Romantic Movement at the End of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343865","wordCount":11521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iris Parush"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10987371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227000"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30227361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bookhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Book History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Another Look at \"The Life of 'Dead' Hebrew\": Intentional Ignorance of Hebrew in Nineteenth-Century Eastern European Jewish Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227361","wordCount":20869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Moseley"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d17abcee-354e-3097-b4a4-db23c91fec61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.10"}],"isPartOf":"Keys to Play","keyphrase":["homo ludens","huizinga homo","marsyas","huizinga homo ludens","musical","kittler","ludus tonalis","d\u00fcrer gemalt","digital","quoted and translated"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"275","pagination":"275-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.10","wordCount":46294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.23","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462864"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad2b32f6-418b-3422-89fc-1eafabd7e01a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvh4zjfz.23"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","nobel prize","french","politician","minister","politician born","educated","novelist","president","english"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"848","pageStart":"771","pagination":"771-848","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.23","wordCount":67554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William A. Camfield"],"datePublished":"1966-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3048388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8348cf50-9dd2-32d9-bdf0-4179aa07de76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3048388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Machinist Style of Francis Picabia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3048388","wordCount":14579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Jefferson","Joyce Henri Robinson"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c3830b4-e6b2-35b4-9ff2-9fefef630e47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An American Cabinet of Curiosities: Thomas Jefferson's \"Indian Hall at Monticello\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618481","wordCount":13587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James E. B. Breslin"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"249eaf3b-36f2-3db7-ae87-fda242adae27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Trials of Mark Rothko","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928511","wordCount":20253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"16","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graham J. Matthews"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d286695-5193-3597-ab70-bb5e5ab05b0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"659","pagination":"pp. 659-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHINESE HISTORICAL FICTION IN THE WAKE OF POSTMODERNISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421893","wordCount":7842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":"TWO VERSIONS OF YAN GELING'S THE FLOWERS OF WAR<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. McSherry Fowble"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1181526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1891063c-c239-3e81-9eb6-9fcd58285128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1181526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Classical Maryland, 1815-1845: Fine and Decorative Arts from the Golden Age: An Exhibition Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1181526","wordCount":3752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesca Billiani"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.3.0839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6c48d73-38fd-36aa-b799-c6fa60cf802d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.3.0839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"862","pageStart":"839","pagination":"pp. 839-862","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"RETURN TO ORDER AS RETURN TO REALISM IN TWO ITALIAN ELITE LITERARY MAGAZINES OF THE 1920s AND 1930s: LA RONDA<\/em> AND ORPHEUS<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.3.0839","wordCount":12368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":"This article discusses two short-lived Italian Modernist journals, La Ronda (1919\u201323) and Orpheus (1932\u201334), that across the Fascist Ventennio embraced an ethos of engaged indifference in order to function as comparable forces for aesthetic innovation. It explores the concepts of \u2018return to order\u2019 and \u2018return to realism\u2019 in aesthetics and politics, while placing these debates within the European network of periodical culture, in order to demonstrate how, in the age of totalitarianisms in Italy, such intellectual indifference translated into a productive form of engaged indifference that sought aesthetic innovation and intellectual exchange while often avoiding direct political confrontation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria H. Loh"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b2ea3fc-4213-3bae-aa4e-ec9aa2705b8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25650874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341, 343-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Renaissance Faciality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650874","wordCount":11202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"In 1966 John Pope-Hennessy declared in Portrait in the Renaissance that 'portrait painting is empirical'. It consolidated a certain model not only for the study of Renaissance portraiture anchored around the cult of the individual, but also for the Renaissance as a field of inquiry built upon the anachronistic precept of Renaissance individualism. This paper proposes another history of the portrait in early-modern Italian art that turns from the humanism of Renaissance faces to engage with the abstraction of Renaissance faciality. Faciality is used here to interrogate the knowledge that has been produced by these silent faces of the past and to deterritorialise portraiture from the heroic model of the Renaissance individual. The discussion will focus upon the mythical faces of Michelangelo in art history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. T. Bell"],"datePublished":"1942-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2303336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7722e52b-6419-3299-8713-94ee0d84ae57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2303336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amermathmont"}],"isPartOf":"The American Mathematical Monthly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Newton After Three Centuries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2303336","wordCount":12374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Mathematical Association of America","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irving Wohlfarth"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2906562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"987","pageStart":"956","pagination":"pp. 956-987","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hibernation: On the Tenth Anniversary of Adorno's Death","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906562","wordCount":13919,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[14753,14831],[14990,15098],[15295,15395],[15466,16377],[15466,16387]],"Locations in B":[[43216,43295],[43335,43455],[43538,43637],[43644,44553],[43644,44563]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kent Greenawalt"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d146259-b138-3511-b3d7-e522769eb902"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Variations on Some Themes of a \"Disporting Gazelle\" and His Friend: Statutory Interpretation as Seen by Jerome Frank and Felix Frankfurter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123558","wordCount":20065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"In 1947, this Review published two lectures on statutory interpretation by Jerome Frank and Felix Frankfurter. Both jurists were concerned with a basic question: How constrained are judges when they interpret legislation? The answers each gives, while similar in some respects, differ strikingly. In arguing that interpretation necessarily involves a creative element, Frank analogizes the role of a judge in interpreting legislation to that of a performer in interpreting a musical composition. Although he argues that judicial creactivity is constrained, Frank views statutory interpretation as \"a kind of legislation.\" For Frankfurter, by contrast, in construing a statute, a judge is to disinterestedly carry out the purposes of the legislature. Judicial legislation oversteps the function of the courts. In this Essay, Professor Greenawalt examines these competing paradigms by contrasting them not only with each other, but also with certain illuminating opinions written by Frank and Frankfurter. While the opinions help to point out the limitations of each theory, Professor Greenawalt argues that the Frank and Frankfurter's accounts remain important voices in the contemporary debates about statutory interpretation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Cummings"],"datePublished":"1962-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754390"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53398409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"812f5918-77a8-32ce-9506-b6bb3598449d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/750551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwarbcourinst"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nature and the Antique in B. R. Haydon's 'Assassination of Dentatus'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750551","wordCount":9868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Warburg Institute","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LYNN K. NYHART","SCOTT LIDGARD"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41488412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f90a3261-071b-3453-8bc2-f3497d143f1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41488412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Individuals at the Center of Biology: Rudolf Leuckart's \"Polymorphismus der Individuen\" and the Ongoing Narrative of Parts and Wholes. With an Annotated Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41488412","wordCount":29874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Rudolf Leuckart's 1851 pamphlet Ueber den Polymorphismus der Individuen (On the polymorphism of individuals) stood at the heart of naturalists' discussions on biological individuals, parts and wholes in mid-nineteenth-century Britain and Europe. Our analysis, which accompanies the first translation of this pamphlet into English, situates Leuckart's contribution to these discussions in two ways. First, we present it as part of a complex conceptual knot involving not only individuality and the understanding of compound organisms, but also the alternation of generations, the division of labor in nature, and the possibility of finding general laws of the organic world. Leuckart's pamphlet is important as a novel attempt to give order to the strands of this knot. It also solved a set of key biological problems in a way that avoided some of the drawbacks of an earlier teleological tradition. Second, we situate the pamphlet within a longer trajectory of inquiry into part-whole relations in biology from the mid-eighteenth century to the present. We argue that biological individuality, along with the problem-complexes with which it engaged, was as central a problem to naturalists before 1859 as evolution, and that Leuckart's contributions to it left a long legacy that persisted well into the twentieth century. As biologists' interests in part-whole relations are once again on the upswing, the longue dur\u00e9e of this problem merits renewed consideration.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Taran Kang"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04cdf941-a66f-3220-ad59-acb560dff55d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23354926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistoryideas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Ideas","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Science & Technology Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Origin and Essence: The Problem of History in Hannah Arendt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354926","wordCount":9327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES L. CAW"],"datePublished":"1936-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae5cfe13-7586-3058-aab8-812a1f4366ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41830371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ALLAN RAMSAY, PORTRAIT PAINTER, 1713\u20141784","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830371","wordCount":27437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Christine M. Roysdon","Judith A. Mistichelli"],"datePublished":"1985-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ffbf054-0330-33e4-96e9-1ac365c2efc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3104384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1983)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104384","wordCount":62362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALAIN POTTAGE"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23819784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26311642-9bea-3ede-b328-9c7575f8f63e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23819784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"WHO OWNS ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23819784","wordCount":8297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Swenson"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Small Change in Terminology or a Great Leap Forward? 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Millions were affected by the process through which the time of a single meridian was selected as an all-India railway time, and gradually deemed civil time, continuing even today as Indian Standard Time. The paper explores everyday responses to this dramatic change in 'time-sense' engendered through railways, both as speedy transport and as standardized time. This allows for a historical analysis of how individuals and societies deal in practice with abstract technological transformations, and of how colonized populations have navigated the modernizing intervention of imperialist states. It argues that the ways in which the population of colonial India accepted, contested, and appropriated the temporal standardization instituted through railways and railway time challenged imperial policies determined by reified presumptions of metropolitan versus colonial 'time-sense'. Since these responses were often analogous to how people and societies across the globe were responding to temporal standardization, they disrupt imperial strategies that used time-sense to locate colonized populations outside of History, in effect excluding them from their own present. They thus serve to materially de-stabilize a narrative of colonial time-lag and to reclaim the historical present as a time in which the colonizer and colonized exist contemporaneously. Consequently, they reconfigure modernity as an experiential rather than as a normative historical present.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2000-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab303c00-d7bd-310b-8e6b-94cdf0caf626"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Las Vegas Today: Rome in a Day: Corporate Development Practices and the Role of Professional Designers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425593","wordCount":10025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"This article considers a specific corporate history, land use practices, and the role of professional designers. It argues that large-scale corporate development of space for public use employs tactics that participate fully in the visitors' active process of lifestyle creation, and that this entangles to the same degree commerce, desire, and professional designers. By investigating Circus Circus Enterprises and its Monte Carlo Casino Resort in Las Vegas, this article analyzes the ways in which professional designers are embedded in a dominant development paradigm that can be seen across building types, in both tourist and cultural developments.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Coulston Gillispie"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20020411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aebeed01-a54a-35f6-91f8-09d0d543b454"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20020411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":435.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xix, 1, 3-63, 65-163, 165, 167-243, 245, 247-349, 351, 353-411, 413-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Essays and Reviews in History and History of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20020411","wordCount":182503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Calvin Thomas"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49c41291-48f5-3b46-b540-7b2e2cd6501d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Knowledge That Would Not Be Power: Adorno, Nostalgia, and the Historicity of the Musical Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488237","wordCount":8526,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55986,56079]],"Locations in B":[[48657,48750]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"48","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2445799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"740ad87e-d68e-367b-8376-1957fdfffcb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2445799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjbotany"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":191.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2445799","wordCount":134410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Botanical Society of America","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W.E. 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Bassel"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26390592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220957"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39211041"},{"name":"lccn","value":"99-034975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b96beabb-f5dc-39e1-9739-91003aa4f663"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26390592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jexperbota"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Experimental Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"591","pageStart":"567","pagination":"pp. 567-591","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Seed vigour and crop establishment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26390592","wordCount":23041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"Seeds are central to crop production, human nutrition, and food security. A key component of the performance of crop seeds is the complex trait of seed vigour. Crop yield and resource use efficiency depend on successful plant establishment in the field, and it is the vigour of seeds that defines their ability to germinate and establish seedlings rapidly, uniformly, and robustly across diverse environmental conditions. Improving vigour to enhance the critical and yield-defining stage of crop establishment remains a primary objective of the agricultural industry and the seed\/breeding companies that support it. Our knowledge of the regulation of seed germination has developed greatly in recent times, yet understanding of the basis of variation in vigour and therefore seed performance during the establishment of crops remains limited. Here we consider seed vigour at an ecophysiological, molecular, and biomechanical level. We discuss how some seed characteristics that serve as adaptive responses to the natural environment are not suitable for agriculture. Past domestication has provided incremental improvements, but further actively directed change is required to produce seeds with the characteristics required both now and in the future. We discuss ways in which basic plant science could be applied to enhance seed performance in crop production.","subTitle":"extending performance beyond adaptation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sambudha Sen"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"970","pageStart":"945","pagination":"pp. 945-970","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Bleak House\" and \"Little Dorrit\": The Radical Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030214","wordCount":11227,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27844156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17f65934-7bdd-3ed0-a4d4-b463c8abe659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27844156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"769","pageStart":"763","pagination":"pp. 763-769","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27844156","wordCount":5852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"540c358d-349a-3272-a45c-405e9e8824f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"948","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-948","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948624","wordCount":20621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1462","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f55fa874-3539-3d80-b68b-a8067465f83d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/660768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":334.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"I","pagination":"pp. I-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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This simultaneously theoretical and archaeological concept has produced another way of thinking about the relationship between viewer and film, taking as its starting point precisely the web of relationships found in early cinema and its connection to the era\u2019s popular entertainments","subTitle":"Obsessions with the Vision Machine in Early Film Theories","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Cohen"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c2802bc-3656-3d44-9e51-b0aaff894f9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cort\u00e1zar and the Apparatus of Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208014","wordCount":5560,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43868,43957]],"Locations in B":[[19503,19592]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Salmon"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76ce7b50-c96f-323c-ad25-31ed129d430b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Signs of Intimacy: The Literary Celebrity in the \"Age of Interviewing\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058379","wordCount":8749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjorie C. 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Four digital imaging techniques are discussed as possibilities for a new syntax and, hence, for the expansion of cinematic language.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Pedro Schwartz"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1f61404-07c7-31f0-8ade-7fd2eabcf2fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45172811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Politics and Poetics of the Museum in \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172811","wordCount":9324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"The Dublin Museum's pervasive and persuasive force in Ulysses is manifested in a number of intersecting themes, among them classical aesthetics and the Hellenism of which it forms a part. I begin by comparing Leopold Bloom's and Buck Mulligan's very different versions of this cultural agenda with Matthew Arnold's plan for reforming British society. Arnold invokes the free play of consciousness and presses aesthetics into the service of civilization. Bloom evokes the freer play of the appetites and accommodates desire and the body to his aesthetics, while Mulligan parodies the Victorian cultural mission to improve people through art. Next, I analyze the Dublin Museum in relation to Irish nationalism to reveal their mutual implication in and out of the novel. At the turn of the twentieth century, nationalist discourse often invoked the Irish myths of a Golden Age of cultural achievement and political and ethnic unity, followed by a decadence that resulted from the English invasions, and the possibility of a resurgent Ireland based upon a return to the values of the past, as expressed in the country's archaeology and antiquities. Finally, I study the relation of elite to popular culture as articulated by Bloom in his museum-going and -gazing. His engagement with both the Dublin Museum and that museum for the masses, the World's Fair Waxwork Exhibition, challenges critical accounts of modernism and the avant-garde that reify the \"institution of art\" and the \"great divide\" between high art and mass culture. 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To create significant artworks of this type, it will be necessary to improve the computer's capacity to be an autonomous artmaking subject; this will require the extension of the computer's senses, the expansion of its capabilities, and means for the computer to provide sensory inputs to the human nervous system and to other computers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Broeckmann"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3d69856-6a22-3d89-a169-912a70adc587"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576642","wordCount":2194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Lipsitz"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba6838c3-9139-3cb0-a0ba-93defb87db9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"798","pageStart":"796","pagination":"pp. 796-798","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231271","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDRA WILSON"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54ff3d89-6409-3dde-9d14-e2cb0cf50aef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26291205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Unreliable Authors, Unreliable History: Opera in Joe Wright's Adaptation of \"Atonement\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291205","wordCount":11089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Music is frequently overlooked by scholars of adaptation, who concentrate primarily on questions of literary and visual transformation. Undertaking a close reading of a pivotal scene in Joe Wright's Atonement, this article demonstrates the vital contribution music can make to the adaptation process. Wright uses music, and Puccini's in particular, in ways that are both narrative and reflexive, creating shifts of emphasis, deliberate ambiguities and intertextual allusions. Opera becomes a tool that allows the film-maker to interrogate notions of authorial and historical reliability, themes that lie at the heart of Ian McEwan's highly self-aware novel.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George B. Watts"],"datePublished":"1963-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/384110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":155.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Teaching of French in the United States: A History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384110","wordCount":71036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787469"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1acb2b0-68ba-3aa4-a88a-d50fe8154a9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacicoasphil"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Coast Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1968)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102890","wordCount":28932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1309741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99168165-579f-3909-8056-c8ad09fc9e62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1309741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1309741","wordCount":6798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Murray"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf8250f9-da99-3030-9beb-0d2e26b0aa02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"664","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-664","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Foul Sheets to Legitimate Model: Antitheater, Text, Ben Jonson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468705","wordCount":11218,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[7243,7743],[7809,8058]],"Locations in B":[[50782,51285],[51879,52122]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALAN MARSHALL"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbc3cb17-2914-3128-8203-c6db3d1f8e8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24485832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From This Point on It's All about Loss: Attachment to Loss in the Novels of Don DeLillo, from \"Underworld to Falling Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485832","wordCount":7780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"Between 1997 and 2007, Don DeLillo published three novels concerned with loss and mourning. Two of these, Underworld (1997) and Falling Man (2007), revolve around unique historical events in which the question of American exceptionality is foregrounded, and both relate this question of exceptionality to the experience of loss. This essay argues that while DeLillo accepts the historical specificity of the events of 9\/11, his novel Falling Man is wary of any claim to their exceptionality. It argues further that while Falling Man and Underworld both contain moving explorations of the vicissitudes of loss, Falling Man is more concerned with the loss of loss, the end of mourning, an idea which illuminates the novel's arresting juxtaposition of S\u00f8ren Kierkegaard and T. S. Eliot. As the three novels appeared, DeLillo seemed increasingly concerned to explore the overcoming of grief, the loss of loss, in the context of female subjectivity, and to trace the failure to overcome it to the masculine psyche, and I draw upon the work of Julia Kristeva in order to address this. The pattern is at its starkest in The Body Artist (2001), with which the essay briefly concludes. We begin by looking at Underworld, where loss seems to be the presiding masculine emotion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne A. Verplanck"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5215\/pennmaghistbio.138.4.0395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcf018f1-fc56-3534-8cb4-8ea1a1870545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5215\/pennmaghistbio.138.4.0395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Making History: Antiquarian Culture in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5215\/pennmaghistbio.138.4.0395","wordCount":13291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Historical Society of Pennsylvania","volumeNumber":"138","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Hetzel Gunkel"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00322806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"320635026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e944988-4276-33d7-a3d6-9e40e5041a31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20533156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Polish American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ethnic Aesthetics: Considering Polish-American Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533156","wordCount":5282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Polish American Historical Association","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christoph Uehlinger"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"315dbff7-411f-344d-a987-d040d7cf2fd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"384","pagination":"pp. 384-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Approaches to Visual Culture and Religion: Disciplinary Trajectories, Interdisciplinary Connections, and Some Suggestions for Further Progress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907208","wordCount":16446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4\/5","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\\s, the article asks why the so-called \"visual turn\" has not left a major effect on the study of religion\\s as an academic discipline and how things could be improved to that effect. It offers a synthetic account of earlier and contemporary involvements of scholars of religion and scholarly networks with images and visual culture, pointing to a general lack of sustained training and little exposure to relevant methodology and theory developed in relevant neighbouring disciplines. The author argues that the study of religion\\s would benefit from increased attention to images and visual culture, emphasizing the potential of earlier (iconology in the Warburg-Panofsky tradition and the Groningen trajectory) as well as more recent approaches developed in Europe and the U.S., which theorize the visual in terms of visual culture, visual media, visual and scopic regimes, religious aesthetics and material religion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allan Sekula"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"452fc61c-9890-3b5e-875f-5c61215a6b2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Traffic in Photographs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776511","wordCount":12726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Cohen"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a7973be-352e-35c1-ae83-e6b12962b9b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE EMPIRE FROM THE STREET: VIRGINIA WOOLF, WEMBLEY, AND IMPERIAL MONUMENTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286283","wordCount":10709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEOFFREY SIRC"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx7x.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874214352"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68bd338d-2256-3d0d-bb92-a39e59cd17bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46nx7x.5"}],"isPartOf":"English Composition As A Happening","keyphrase":["jackson","pollock","painting","process","canvas","happenings","bartholomae","painter","greenberg","writing"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"69","pagination":"69-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE AMERICAN ACTION WRITERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx7x.5","wordCount":22976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Two brief comments, made in fairly proximate places, in New York, at almost precisely the same moment in time, August 1956, revealing two radically different world views. First:Life is beautiful, the trees are beautiful, the sky is beautiful. Why is it that all I can think about is death? (Naifeh and Smith 789)This morose remark was made by a compositionist who\u2019d neared the end; whose theories, forms, processes, relationships, even his own body\u2014all had entirely worn down. His very life, in fact, as this speaker was to die about a day after he articulated this stark vision.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans J. Fabian"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40146402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40146402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"German Letters: The Correspondence of Georg Kaiser and of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem as Opposing Mirrors of Inner and Outer Reality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40146402","wordCount":3876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3575901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"378c9f0e-78af-31b7-87c6-25204fcb29a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3575901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"647","pageStart":"647","pagination":"p. 647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3575901","wordCount":2446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Radiation Research Society","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EITAN WILF"],"datePublished":"2010-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40784616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0d4a11c-8a92-3aa5-953a-daea53d369b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40784616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"582","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-582","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Swinging within the iron cage: Modernity, creativity, and embodied practice in American postsecondary jazz education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40784616","wordCount":18968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"In this article, I seek to contribute to the anthropology of embodied practice by asking, what would embodied practical mastery that mandates constant differentiation look like, and what would be its cultural and social determinants? In doing so, I draw on ethnographic fieldwork I conducted in a postsecondary jazz school in the United States. Through an exploration of how jazz educators cope with the paradoxical task of training the body and liberating it, I inquire into the challenge of negotiating the tension between the two key modernist ideas of rationalized schooling and Romantic creativity in contemporary institutional contexts. [embodied practice, schooling, creativity, modernity, improvisation, jazz music, USA]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Breu"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70ea4d85-b664-3cc8-ab93-0d1c9366630a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Materialisms Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0009","wordCount":7858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iain Chambers"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50e2c9ee-a585-3b95-8558-28ba1cbcddd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/852974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Some Critical Tracks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852974","wordCount":7543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1sq5v63.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783740871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adb0bab2-2ae0-3b69-9754-ef96116eebd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1sq5v63.17"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth-Century Russian Poetry","keyphrase":["moscow","vospominaniia sovremennikov","sobranie sochinenii","voprosy literatury","vols moscow","katharine hodgson","hodgson joanne","petr gorelik","joanne shelton","zhurnal neva"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"425","pagination":"425-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1sq5v63.17","wordCount":13088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. Aaron Potter"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"607","pageStart":"593","pagination":"pp. 593-607","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Centripetal Textuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829021","wordCount":6120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Klaus Hentschel"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41133977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39966759"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38afd771-2f46-3b6e-8814-dcbdda0f8ff7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41133977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archhistexacscie"}],"isPartOf":"Archive for History of Exact Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Erwin Finlay Freundlich and Testing Einstein's Theory of Relativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41133977","wordCount":26382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1922-02-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25589913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 20, no. 18","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589913","wordCount":24295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. A. Schufle"],"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00959367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565629410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27757274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chymia"}],"isPartOf":"Chymia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Torbern Bergman, Earth Scientist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757274","wordCount":14781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Slifkin"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7e1ec8c-0f10-37ac-a005-949b8118279d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"One More Time with Feeling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500066","wordCount":4167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29781373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00417939"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"408712b2-b200-3c3d-8e0d-4ae9ab54dbf5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29781373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quajlibcon"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities","Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Recent Acquisitions of the Manuscript Division","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29781373","wordCount":12104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Library of Congress","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrizia C. McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bb74265-b33a-3222-a909-de095c15c511"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08k8.6"}],"isPartOf":"The Chatter of the Visible","keyphrase":["montage","era montage","weimar era","objects","mimesis","photomontage","weimar era montage","imitative","parody","dadaists"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"14","pagination":"14-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Weimar-Era Montage:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.6","wordCount":11135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The terms montage<\/em> and collage<\/em> have become synonymous with the radical experimentation that altered the status and physiognomy of art in early twentieth-century Europe. They encompass a wide array of practices premised on quoting, combining, and juxtaposing materials that straddle the bounds of old and new media\u2014from literature and stage drama to painting, sculpture, photography, film, and radio. Common to these practices is the exuberant transgression of the canons of normative aesthetics, coupled with an often belligerent contempt for the institutions of academic art and an optimistic willingness to draw inspiration from the world of consumer culture, advertisement, and","subTitle":"Perception, Expression, Storytelling","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy J. Lukes"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1601422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01925121"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44689900"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc81cdb0-b985-37d5-99a0-a6e48ce6bd3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1601422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intepoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Political Science Review \/ Revue internationale de science politique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Prepositional Phases: The Political Effects of Art on Audience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1601422","wordCount":10888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Social realism, postmodernism, modernism, and romanticism have all been pressed to resist politically the excesses of modern industrial society. The purported political fortes of these movements can be arranged and analyzed around simple prepositions, if not propositions. Social realism is of its audience, highlighting progressive tendencies while disparaging laggards. Postmodernism is championed as disruptive of habitual behaviors, and thus is at its audience. Modernism is said to inspire a purer alternative which is above its audience. And romanticism goes beyond its audience to levels of unfettered transcendence. After justifying this prepositional taxonomy, this essay exposes the weakness of each artform's connection with politics, finally speculating on the possibility of a more universal incompatibility of art and politics. \/\/\/ Le r\u00e9alisme social, le postmodernisme, le modernisme et le romantisme: autant d'\u00e9coles qui ont eu pour effet, dit-on, de faire obstacle politique aux exc\u00e8s de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 industrielle. Les temps forts de chacun de ces mouvements r\u00e9v\u00e8lent des contrastes frappants qui facilitent la classification. Le r\u00e9alisme social d\u00e9peint le public auquel il s'adresse, il met en lumi\u00e8re des tendances per\u00e7ues comme \u00e9tant progressistes et d\u00e9nigre les tra\u00eenards. Le postmodernisme s'impose \u00e0 un public dont il cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9sagr\u00e9ger les comportements courants. Le modernisme offre une alternative plus \u00e9th\u00e9r\u00e9e qui se situe au-dessus du public. Quant au romantisme il s'efforce d'atteindre, au-del\u00e0 de son public, une transcendance libre de contrainte. Ayant justifi\u00e9 cette classification liminaire, l'article d\u00e9montre combien sont t\u00e9nus les liens entre l'Art et la politique et propose quelques hypoth\u00e8ses sur ce qui pourrait \u00eatre la cause de leur incompatibilit\u00e9 fondamentale.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RACHEL E. PERRY"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82567c65-5703-3def-85cc-2d844d12e544"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44972833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Immutable Mobiles: UNESCO's Archives of Colour Reproductions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972833","wordCount":13364,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[898,1094]],"Locations in B":[[81973,82169]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":"Soon after its establishment, UNESCO embarked on an ambitious project, its Archives of Colour Reproductions of Paintings, that would span three decades (1949\u201379) and reach all states in the United Nations. Collecting, publishing, and exhibiting high-quality color reproductions of paintings throughout the world, UNESCO played a crucial role in transforming the education, appreciation, and consumption of art globally, but it was also decisive in reinforcing a particularly French modernist canon internationally. Although UNESCO promoted itself as an impartial \"clearinghouse,\" the project, with French professionals (Andr\u00e9 Malraux, Ren\u00e9 Huyghe, Jean Cassou) playing central positions in UNESCO's program, reflected French interests.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra K. Danziger"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc44d305-2ab5-3aae-ab14-ccdcf8857cd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1156","pageStart":"1154","pagination":"pp. 1154-1156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231346","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Constant"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"750936c8-017f-3986-baf4-5e6af8f163f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/990937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"E. 1027: The Nonheroic Modernism of Eileen Gray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990937","wordCount":10120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"Using the lens of recent feminist theory and gender studies, this paper offers a reading of E. 1027, Eileen Gray's villa built between 1926 and 1929 in collaboration with Jean Badovici. Because her architecture emanated from a critical relationship to certain leaders of the European avant-garde, Gray was both assailed by her peers and neglected in historical accounts of modernism. Adopting and working within the framework of certain modern spatial devices, such as Le Corbusier's \"five points of a new architecture,\" Gray sought to overcome the reductive dehumanizing qualities associated with abstraction by prioritizing the subjective qualities of experience. The article analyzes Gray's critical engagement with modern movement principles at E. 1027 in light of both her early involvement in furniture design and her coeval collaboration in Badovici's V\u00e9zelay houses. It concludes with an examination of the events surrounding the murals Le Corbusier painted on the walls of E. 1027 in 1938-39 and his subsequent efforts to control the villa's fate.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3824865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002712X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f078fbec-872b-361c-b6b9-221b1d2243d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3824865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullameracadarts"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"New Members: Class of 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3824865","wordCount":13761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Academy of Arts & Sciences","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNA POLETTI"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"AUTO\/ASSEMBLAGE: READING THE ZINE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540922","wordCount":6589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"This article investigates the zine as a compelling example of autographics, theorizing the dynamics of self-representation in these handmade texts. Reading the intersection of text, layout, and production as a complex site of selfrepresentation, the materiality of the zine form is examined as a meta-critical reflection on the form of the book and the potential of the photocopier as a means of production.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1933-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1875873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01165b45-62df-3d4b-b0f9-33226568245d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1875873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1875873","wordCount":13998,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAMELA H. SMITH"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"649595715"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"2","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-31, 2","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Artisanal Knowledge and the Representation of Nature in Sixteenth-Century Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622430","wordCount":8512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Mendilow"],"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eff05bcf-ede7-358e-8052-7e5738a698a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3234506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Carlyle, Marx & the ILP: Alternative Routes to Socialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234506","wordCount":10218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"There are striking similarities as well as differences between how Carlyle and Marx viewed the industrial revolution and capitalism. Jonathan Mendilow argues here that their differences result from their opposite modes of analysis: materialism in the case of Marx and, for Carlyle, an axiological theory which posits that social relations, and our interpretations of them, are determined by ethical values which, in turn, are conditioned by the modes of communication in society. The similarities and differences between Carlyle and Marx both contributed to the distinctness of British socialism as represented in the thought of the founders of the Independent Labour Party.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENCE NANAY"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26ed1979-c3bb-3271-9642-31e209eff2c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The History of Vision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496579","wordCount":10702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11245,11531]],"Locations in B":[[4092,4378]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"One of the most influential ideas of twentieth-century art history and aesthetics is that vision has a history and it is the task of art history to trace how vision has changed. This claim has recently been attacked for both empirical and conceptual reasons. My aim is to argue for a new version of the history of vision claim: if visual attention has a history, then vision also has a history. And we have some reason to think that at least in certain contexts (namely, in the context of looking at pictures), visual attention does have a history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicolas Rasmussen"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb44cee0-cd53-3c37-8e6a-763b9840e523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4331362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Mitochondrial Structure and the Practice of Cell Biology in the 1950s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331362","wordCount":20659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HORACIO TORRENT","Irina Verona"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15262065"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"praxis"}],"isPartOf":"PRAXIS: Journal of Writing + Building","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THIS IS NOT A DETAIL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328858","wordCount":5397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacqueline Cruz"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20539981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03630471"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297290668"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fc96111-8114-3717-a854-01a153147eb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20539981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispamerica"}],"isPartOf":"Hispam\u00e9rica","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Discursos de la modernidad en las culturas perif\u00e9ricas: La vanguardia latinoamericana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20539981","wordCount":7485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"76\/77","publisher":"Saul Sosnowski","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Owen Schur"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44378261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60f8bbbe-612f-3e59-b5d9-e4eaa7df8300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44378261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Desire in \"The Well-Beloved\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44378261","wordCount":3458,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[16431,16498]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Breanne Robertson"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a096dd20-f7fc-3ff0-a4bb-7eb23e1e079c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26556683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pan-Americanism, Patriotism, and Race Pride in Charles White\u2019s Hampton Mural","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556683","wordCount":10209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfredo Cesar Melo"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7649a1b1-0e60-3176-90f1-d921aaaa8d79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4490664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Os mundos misturados de Gilberto Freyre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490664","wordCount":7851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This article attempts to argue that Gilberto Freyre's work, far from being a nostalgic lament against modernity, displays great awareness of the upcoming modernity. Freyre's main intellectual concerns focused on how Brazilian society should incorporate features from modern (and, at same time, keep the values of patriarchal) society. In this article I discuss: (1) Freyre's strategy to reconcile nostalgia with an enthusiastic tone towards Brazilian future (2) the aesthetization of politics played out by Freyre in order to rationalize the violence and power asymmetry in the process of modernization, (3) the advantage of reading-against the grain-a modern conservative as Gilberto Freyre. Articulating these three points, I offer a new angle to analyze how modernity was grasped by Freyre's thought, and how his thought, once deconstructed, bares the consciousness of a conservative-yet non-reactionary-elite.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janina Struk"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6b4dd83-3190-3b6a-a3cc-cc809b6c9d22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30140879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Images of Women in Holocaust Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30140879","wordCount":5272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"88","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Allen"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"995bb369-a504-38a5-a7e7-629e028af274"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painter and Collector","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711551","wordCount":3787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Larry Silver"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce410a3e-0784-34e3-8f5f-b26b485590aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"535","pageStart":"518","pagination":"pp. 518-535","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The State of Research in Northern European Art of the Renaissance Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051038","wordCount":19778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. L. SPENCER"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346551"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709637"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227135"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf3d2aa4-971d-334a-af9b-5a19d6cddbc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24541170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revienglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of English Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"811","pageStart":"790","pagination":"pp. 790-811","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"F. J. FURNIVALL'S LAST FLING: THE WYCLIF SOCIETY AND ANGLO-GERMAN SCHOLARLY RELATIONS, 1882\u20131922","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24541170","wordCount":11792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"272","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"The Wyclif Society (1882) was the last of F. J. Furnivall's text societies, prompted by the approaching quincentenary of Wyclif's death (1384), and by celebrations commemorating Luther's birth (1483); moreover, the Bohemian reformer, Jan Hus, was thought to have been heavily influenced by Wyclif's writings. Luther's works were published in authoritative editions to coincide with the anniversary. Protestant religious sentiment was indissolubly mixed with patriotism, and, in central Europe, with nationalist aspirations in the German states before and after unification in 1871, and among Czech patriots seeking independence. The Society concentrated on Wyclif's Latin works, of which many of the best manuscripts were in libraries in the historic Bohemian lands, and also Vienna. Though English-run, the Society necessarily relied heavily on German-speaking editors who could gain access to the manuscripts. They brought to the task the familiarity with critical text editing and philological methods for which German scholarship was famed. Its publications were ground-breaking in applying methods of text editing devised for classical texts to medieval Latin, while also offering practical demonstrations of how to prepare critical editions for the benefit of English scholars more familiar with parallel texts and diplomatic transcription. The Society testifies to remarkable cultural exchanges and friendship between English- and German-speaking scholars at a time of rising Anglo-German political tension, as well as pressures within the German-speaking and Slav communities in central Europe, Catholic and Protestant. The Society was even briefly revived in 1918 to complete work in progress before war broke out.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent P. Pecora"],"datePublished":"1987-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afeed6fb-3946-39e6-89b4-b7de7009b40e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Adversarial Culture and the Fate of Dialectics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354216","wordCount":7895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel Teukolsky"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c68b0d4b-046b-37ba-bf3d-b54303d970b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"727","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-727","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernist Ruskin, Victorian Baudelaire: Revisioning Nineteenth-Century Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501739","wordCount":10829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":"John Ruskin's Modern Painters V (1860) and Charles Baudelaire's \"The Painter of Modern Life\" (1863) are contemporaneous texts that both champion modern painters. Yet the two have rarely been considered together; while Ruskin's work is usually taken to represent a moralistic Victorianism, Baudelaire's essay is a foundational text of aesthetic modernism. This article compares the two texts in order to arrive at a more accurate, descriptive sense of nineteenth-century aesthetics, especially at the mid-century moment when \"the modern\" emerges as an aesthetic value in both England and France. Ruskin and Baudelaire are shown to propose surprisingly similar aesthetic theories, in part because they negotiate the same traumas of modernity, such as the derailment of religion and the commodification of the material world. Positioned on the ruins of Romanticism, each text intimates an idea of the modern that is not quite modernism but is, in fact, eminently Victorian.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gillian Rose"],"datePublished":"1979-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2504676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2504676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2504676","wordCount":4643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92b5e4ff-deef-3b52-95c7-d8534e7dae1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3102647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"S123","pageStart":"S20","pagination":"pp. S20-S123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"II. 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How the castrati sounded to their audiences cannot be considered independently of the relations (spatial, political, economic, erotic) his voice could signify. Contemporary satires of castrati remark a struggle between the public representativeness of the courtly aristocracy and the emergent publicness of propertied, private men. \"Gender\" performs men's membership in a public sphere enabled by opposition to operatic effeminacy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William A. 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Documentary evidence from first person accounts, TV and video portrayals, and clinical reports is used for purposes of explication. A review of previous literature on schizophrenic language is provided to identify the particular contribution of this study for the development of more inclusive interactions with people afflicted with schizophrenia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. D. 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Gruen"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkjxph.7","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19771def-b18f-31b9-8a25-fd4a5b90bfc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvbkjxph.7"}],"isPartOf":"The Construct of Identity in Hellenistic Judaism","keyphrase":["jewish","aseneth","century bce","ezekiel","jewish creations","holladay fragments","greek genres","demetrius","joseph","biblical"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"21","pagination":"21-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hellenistic Judaism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkjxph.7","wordCount":25097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Alexander the Great burst like a thunderbolt upon the history of the Near East. Within a dozen years in the late fourth century B.C.E., he humbled the mighty Persian Empire, marching its length and breadth, defeating its armies, toppling its satraps, terminating its monarchy, and installing a Greek hegemony from the Hellespont to the Indus. It was a breathtaking achievement\u2014and on more than just the military front. The conquests of Alexander provided a springboard for the expansion of Greek culture in the lands of the eastern Mediterranean. That world would never be quite the same again.No direct confrontation","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-02-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3074717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b8c545b-c352-3572-98ef-befe02cac45e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3074717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"1352","pageStart":"1287","pagination":"pp. 1287-1352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Business - Industry","Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Psychology","Information science - Informetrics","Business - Business administration"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3074717","wordCount":52401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5456","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"287","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Honeycutt"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b3636b2-a8b4-3296-9af4-e6e06356d91d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1487","pageStart":"1485","pagination":"pp. 1485-1487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231112","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Guido"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11743","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5691c0ef-c10c-3049-b680-b6ea66603483"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"TERRORIST SANCTUARY IN THE SAHARA: A CASE STUDY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11743","wordCount":21052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Denying terrorists sanctuary has become a pillar of U.S. defense strategy since the September 11, 2001 (9\/11) attacks. Violent extremist organizations in North Africa, such as the group al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), have used remote and sparsely populated areas in the Sahara for protection from security forces to conduct a range of terrorist activities, such as training, planning, and logistics.\u00b9 Despite the time elapsed since the 9\/11 attacks, and the resources dedicated to denying sanctuary globally, the concept of sanctuary remains largely unexplored and poorly understood. This monograph proposes a functional understanding of sanctuary and offers fresh ideas","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407063"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50649976"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99ff3f5c-b54c-34a1-b89a-3dc3d132e286"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26369351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecompbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Integrative and Comparative Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":157.0,"pageEnd":"e157","pageStart":"e1","pagination":"pp. e1-e157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Symposia and Oral Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369351","wordCount":164889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BHARANI KOLLIPARA"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24734812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23bd0bd8-2889-30ba-bea3-a467a1edc0b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24734812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"1402","pageStart":"1327","pagination":"pp. 1327-1402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Tradition and Discipline: How should one read ancient Indian texts?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24734812","wordCount":32173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"This is a review article of two recent books. The first is D. Venkat Rao's Cultures of Memory in South Asia: Orality, Literacy and the Problem of Inheritance; the second, Vishwa Adluri and Joydeep Bagchee's The Nay Science: A History of German Indology. Rao's conviction is that Indology has failed in its mandate. He claims that Indology so far has produced only European representations of India and not what should have been the choicest self-images of India's past. If Rao begins with a hostile tone towards Indology and expresses his intention to do something with India's texts without either relying on or having recourse to anything that belongs to the Indologist's ragbag, Adluri and Bagchee set out to expose what they refer to as Indology's 'pretension' to scientific method and objectivity in their The Nay Science, an unprecedented polemical history of German Indology. I divide this review into two parts: a critical examination of The Nay Science's critique of German Indology and its commitment to a methodological reform, and a distilled critical account of Cultures of Memory's approach to Indian textual traditions and the problems of such an approach. Finally, after examining the important challenges facing Indology, I'll make a case for how the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre may help our understanding of the nature, dynamics, and the relevance of tradition in South Asia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1917-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43809558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"24726060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e730aff5-1228-3e64-bb11-cfbca9f7aeb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43809558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artsdeco1910"}],"isPartOf":"Arts & Decoration (1910-1918)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1917,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43809558","wordCount":11211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-10-17","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1728098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67e3c361-3fb4-39d6-98f6-254434f4cfc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1728098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - 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Virginia Woolf 's representations of the city demand an adjusted framework: absorption is also a critical point of intersection between Woolf 's historical, psychological, and formal concerns. Mrs. Dalloway (1925) tells the story of a post-war metropolis that has absorbed the shocking blows of recent history. The novel also turns absorptive processes into a distinct narrative procedure: Woolf 's free indirect discourse allows the narrator to absorb and be absorbed by the novel's extensive cast of characters. Woolf moves beyond the matter of how the psyche absorbs shock and trauma to consider how the urban atmosphere itself functions as shock absorber, a kind of affective repository for the past. Form and history meet in Woolf 's understanding of what is \u201cin the air.\u201d","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thorsten Sellin","James C. 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These notions have emerged from a metaphysics which privileges the origin as the centre of semantic production. However, this discursive preoccupation with the past is not entirely irrelevant in sampling practice. Rather, the historically inscribed aura of the original holds a redefined, but necessary, place in the practice. This essay examines the theoretical underpinnings of the discussion so far, then reconciling these with the specific culture of sample-based hip-hop production. Through close readings of some musical examples, it posits a theoretical framework for sampling practice which takes its unique properties into account. By mapping the trajectory of several samples from source to new incarnation, the sample is revealed as the space of simultaneous play and rupture, where the past both defines the present and is effaced by it. As such, sampling creates a tradition that involves the past without deferring to its structures and limitations, restoring a revised mode of agency to the practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan David Gross"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30213220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f41ea9e-490b-33cd-8ccc-01267ff011b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30213220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30213220","wordCount":34168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcello Pagnini","Keir Elam"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Case of Cummings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771901","wordCount":6967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-02-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24742580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34298537"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 96036234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9850830e-fbf6-30ba-a98b-50966f980e30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24742580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24742580","wordCount":43873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6274","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"351","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josephine Cobb"],"datePublished":"1953-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40067665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08979049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a3de13e-e64d-3050-8c80-27857c516692"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40067665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"recocoluhistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C.","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mathew B. 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From the spectacle of warfare to the intricate ruins of destroyed buildings, besieged Sarajevo inspires creative pleasure among authors and filmmakers who mould physical destruction into parcels of poetic or cinematic lyricism. In his prose and poetry collectionSarajevo blues<\/em> , Semezdin Mehmedinovic \u00b4 (born 1960) lets the war be the muse that helps him come of age as a poet \u2013 but in doing so, he questions the principles behind this symbiosis of war as art, as beauty, as artistic fulfilment. This transforms Sarajevo blues into a crucible in which the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel J. 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In the second half of the twentieth century, however, photography promoted the re-enchantment of the monarchy, as evidenced by the iconic status attributed to the king's portraits. By examining the production, circulation, and reception of photographic portraits at two historical junctures\u2014the second half of the nineteenth century and the second half of the twentieth\u2014when the monarchy underwent major reconfigurations, this paper places these images in the broader context of Thailand's cultural and political change.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-02-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1696687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d27ae28-1357-3c0e-a296-ba79bb06b258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1696687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"896","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-896","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1696687","wordCount":24073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4740","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"231","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John S. 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As active agents in their own performances and promotional imagery during the late-nineteenth-century American \u201cFreak Show\u201d performers offer insightful glimpses into the shadow archive of honorific and repressive functions of visual practice. Yet this was always a contested process, further complicated by intersecting shifts in popular culture, the gradual separation of amusement from instruction, the professionalization of medical science, and the growing influence of eugenic racial ideas concerning bodily difference, all of which contributed to the disenchantment of the \u201cextraordinary body.\u201d Photographic practices played a key role as a modern technology involved in such bodily disenchantment, but it also demonstrates how Freak Show performers were nonetheless able to turn this technology to their own advantage, as they navigated shifting regimes of bodily normalcy by offering complex layers of photographic meaning against reductive discourses of bodily pathology in need of correction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lionel Gossman"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15m7nfn.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783741281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd3b116c-793f-3bac-ace3-fbe599299585"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt15m7nfn.11"}],"isPartOf":"Thomas Annan of Glasgow","keyphrase":["photography","loch katrine","edinburgh","scottish","scotland","joseph swan","octavius hill","david octavius","endnotes","roddy simpson"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"127","pagination":"127-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Endnotes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15m7nfn.11","wordCount":17656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43439900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07330707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43439900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"restmananote"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration & Management Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43439900","wordCount":11912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b97465f-c8f1-38bf-a774-3eaa95ad4d30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Book Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.21.1-2.0393","wordCount":17006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David E. 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The first section begins by proposing how and why such protests can be usefully theorized in terms of Blommaert's (1999) concept of a \"language ideological debate,\" and then describes the historical background essential for an understanding of this legal dispute. The second section focuses on a critical analysis of the case brought against the reform, looking at the details of the challenge itself, together with the justification for its rejection by the Constitutional Court. The third section considers what this dispute can tell us about debates over the perceived origin of orthographic norms, with particular reference to the ideological relationship between individual, speech community, and (nation-)state. Finally, there is a brief summary of the way in which the matter was finally -- albeit unsatisfactorily -- resolved in 1998-1999.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea150ec8-5f0b-3608-a927-eeb88795357d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24119492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"569","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509, 511-569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Science and Mathematics","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Preface to the Two \"Amici Curiae\" Briefs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119492","wordCount":22563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2561393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcb93d3c-d846-3cde-a03a-3b00179c39cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2561393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 57th Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers Miami Beach, Florida, April 22-26, 1962","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2561393","wordCount":37083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William R. 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The essay ends with an explanation of the author's survey strategy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Conn"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3590666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3590666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Narrative Trauma and Civil War History Painting, or Why Are These Pictures so Terrible?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3590666","wordCount":13689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"The Civil War generated hundreds of history paintings. 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This review looks at their new books: Unoriginal Genius and Attack of the Difficult Poems, asking the question, how can poetry be original in the twenty-first century? Basing her investigation in the established modernisms of Eliot, Pound and Benjamin, Marjorie Perloff suggests answers through a series of close readings of texts by poets including Yoko Tawada, Caroline Bergvall, Susan Howe and Kenneth Goldsmith. These writers, claims Perloff, represent a contemporary shift from poetries of confession or creation to poetries of reinvention, citation and translation. While addressing the same shift, Charles Bernstein's collection of \u201cessays and inventions,\u201d takes a less traditional critical approach. His speeches, reviews, satirical prose-poems and essays range in subject from Tin-Pan Alley and PennSound to the Yasusada hoax and Yiddish shtick. At times comic, at times earnest and always highly idiosyncratic, Bernstein's Attack of the Difficult Poems has something for everyone. Together, these two books blaze a trail into a new century of poetry, boldly going where, it seems, we have gone before.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurel Kendall"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25163772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18826865"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298239510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-266704"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f5951bf-198e-368d-9d30-8f892c3af359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25163772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianeth"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Ethnology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Religion","Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Editor's Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25163772","wordCount":9880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Nanzan University","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"The eight articles in this issue testify to the vitality of popular religion in Vietnam in the Renovation Era (\u0110\u1ed5i M\u1edbi, post-1986). Six articles on sacred objects wed material culture studies to the anthropology of religion and magic and to the practical work of museums that house sacred objects in their collections. Underscoring the importance of material goods in popular religious practice, our work appears at the intersection of three trends: a revival of interest in and rethinking of the broad concept of \"magic,\" material culture studies' new emphasis on commodities and market relations that sometimes finds \"magic\" at work in these transactions, and the insistence by aboriginal communities that museums treat some material artifacts as sacred objects. This introduction situates the six object-oriented studies in relation to these developments as resonant with other work on religious revival in Vietnam today, represented in this issue by two additional contributions: an account of a village's quarrel with folkloric representations of its festival, and a study of sacred healing by spirit mediums in the Mother Goddess Religion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam Rosenberg"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdbcbb6a-8a6f-315f-882d-911daac7982f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1494","pageStart":"1492","pagination":"pp. 1492-1494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Indeed some contemporary authors would argue that they have never been closer to that brink. The first part of this paper argues against this tendency by focusing on the preponderance of activities of repair and maintenance. Having looked at the state of this forgotten infrastructure, in the second part of the paper I turn to an examination of why this Cassandra interpretation is so prevalent. I argue that, in particular, it draws on wellsprings of misanthropy which are rarely voiced in writings on cities because sociality is too often confused with liking. Yet it seems vital to me to tackle misanthropy head on. Then, in the third part of the paper, I argue that currently there is a coming together in cities of all kinds of affective politics of concern which can act, through all manner of small achievements, as a counter to misanthropy but which do not mistake the practice of this politics for a search after perfection.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Breckenridge"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9e8d9c9-0462-3f8b-be6d-58a1d3536508"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"The Politics of the Parallel Archive: Digital Imperialism and the Future of Record-Keeping in the Age of Digital Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566488","wordCount":12729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This paper takes as its subject the fact that digital archival production \u2014 of existing materials and born-digital records \u2014 has collapsed in contemporary South Africa, and it offers some arguments about why it is important to reverse this process. The current situation can be explained by the fact that digitisation has been widely described as a form of intellectual imperialism, a characterisation that echoes influential strands of postcolonial theory and South African nationalism. The reasons for this unusual understanding lie in the difficult history of the last major digitisation effort, the Mellon-funded collaboration between Aluka and the Digital Imaging Project of South Africa (DISA). The paper reconstructs that project in some detail in an effort to understand what went wrong, arguing that in place of the geopolitical explanation that many participants adopted, most of what went wrong was much more narrowly technological. Yet, the same technological issues have already been great assets to South African researchers, holding out the promise of solutions to some pressing local difficulties of digital preservation and archival assembly. The last section of the paper takes up some of the reasons why scholars need to take digital record-keeping much more seriously than they have to date \u2014 chief amongst these being the fertile possibilities of forgery and impersonation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tag Gronberg"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315866","wordCount":4029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DONALD SPECTOR"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08705283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"595601370"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b260cbf-c4a8-3885-beae-1d32449c855c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26869263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviportfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"2136","pageStart":"2103","pagination":"pp. 2103-2136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"If Physics Be the Framework of Music, Play On","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869263","wordCount":16520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":"We explore a variety of fundamental questions regarding music that arise philosophically and culturally, and find that they can be usefully analyzed with ideas that have their home in and around theoretical physics. The notions of Kolmogorov complexity, of micro and macro states in statistical mechanics, and of dualities among physical theories turn out to be effective tools for understanding how people respond to various genres of music and how the identities of pieces of music can be understood. As we range across issues associated with the contrast between tonal and atonal music, with ontological questions regarding music, with digital and analogue encodings and error correction, and with thermodynamics, magnetic systems, and particle physics, the common thread is the question of how information is represented and followed. Thus, the deeper message is that the apparently surprising connection between music and physics is really just a reflection of the fact that both systems are rooted in processing and analyzing information about particular entities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marvin C. Dubb\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1965-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/581429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08860394"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227365"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ddc080-3e1a-30fe-be0b-981a3a303d91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/581429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"familifecoor"}],"isPartOf":"The Family Life Coordinator","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Communications","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"What Parents Are Not Told May Hurt: A Study of Communication between Teen-Agers and Parents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/581429","wordCount":45476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"National Council on Family Relations","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William S. Larson"],"datePublished":"1957-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3343872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44683915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236973"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ef7c804-3354-34cc-b912-b573fa40ad8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3343872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":164.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61+63-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography of Research Studies in Music Education, 1949-1956","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3343872","wordCount":72274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"MENC: The National Association for Music Education","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f80e7749-82ea-3cb0-8e59-5959726381f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/878372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"lxxii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-lxxii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878372","wordCount":24191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"877","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"118","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. T. R. Preston","Roberts Beaumont"],"datePublished":"1902-02-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a25d5d35-ae74-3ed6-9406-6050d3cf1715"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1902,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 50, no. 2571","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335624","wordCount":21143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2571","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pirkkoliisa Ahponen"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4200816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72c2016e-d426-3630-8d78-57e315ec7fbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4200816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Signifying the Signs: Simulating Cultural Political Subjectivity in Postmodernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4200816","wordCount":8870,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[5783,6051],[13769,14263]],"Locations in B":[[2658,2931],[24836,25325]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Representing a marginal sociological viewpoint, the subject of this article aims to problematize postmodernity polemically as a challenge to modern cultural subjectivity. Postmodernity is important simply because it allows new features in culture and society to be characterized. In its seductivity, seriality and penetrability, with continuous transfigurations postmodernity will become discontinuous with the representations and referential logic of the 'authenticity' of aesthetic modernism. Considering its ideals side by side, modern culture has become aestheticized as oppositional to 'nature' as well as to 'technology'. However, without a meaningfully experienced relationship with nature the modern individual becomes estranged. Without technological advance the development of modern society is considered to be stagnant. Culture is now increasingly mediated -- coded, copied and simulated by technological means. The advancement of modern society, and also postmodernity as a reaction to it, is now increasingly and acceleratingly measured by means of the circulation and consumption of technologically mediated cultural products. That is why the interpretative plunge into a postmodern scene may bring the subject floating back to the surface of a control screen lacking depth. This kind of 'postmodern culture' will produce obscenity just when it is presented to solve the problems of alienation. Its subject can emerge only as a fractal 'sign-subject', subjected constantly to the 'videoscreen of statistics' in the form of ever present opinion polls, quiz shows, personality tests, as well as of 'deep interviews'. By these means the ideal styles of the consumer's behaviour are measured and the 'terror' included within these signifying processes is covered by the pleasure principle, which will represent the simulative 'alibi' of the essence of cultural democracy. An increasing tendency towards 'positive' administrating of all the spheres of life, including culture, will accelerate this process as the taming of expressions of anarchy-like graffiti. But publicizing the immanent elements of postmodernity may also mean new possibilities for the now devalued concept of 'meaning'. Therefore it seems essential that intellectuals absorbed by postmodernity need to orientate anew towards surviving as critical subjects, not innocently believing any more in the utopia of modernity but traversing it as transmodern subjects.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James McFarland"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a1a6251-1eaa-34d4-b8e2-612e24c616b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Der Fall Faustus: Continuity and Displacement in Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno and Thomas Mann's Californian Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669189","wordCount":12493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"100","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Robert Cohen","Benjamin Knysak"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00156191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559677761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"209004ee-efb3-38b1-86d4-ad96cf1e1ad2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fontartimusi"}],"isPartOf":"Fontes Artis Musicae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"RIPM: ONLINE ARCHIVE OF MUSIC PERIODICALS (1800\u20141950)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511884","wordCount":17807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"International Association of Music Libraries, Archives, and Documentation Centres (IAML)","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"R\u00e9pertoire international de la presse musicale (RIPM) has evolved from an annotated index of important nineteenth-century music journals to a project that will offer detailed and complex full-text access to a large number of music periodicals published between 1800 and 1950. The authors discuss the background of the project, the funding, and the technology; make comparisons with similar indexing projects, and conclude with an overview of the forthcoming RIPM Online Archive of Music Periodicals (full-text). Le R\u00e9pertoire international de la presse musicale (RIPM), a \u00e9volu\u00e9 d'un index annot\u00e9 des revues musicales importantes du dix-neuvi\u00e8me si\u00e8cle vers un projet pouvant permettre l'acc\u00e8s d\u00e9taill\u00e9 au plein texte d'un grand nombre de p\u00e9riodiques musicaux publi\u00e9s entre 1800 et 1950. Les auteurs pr\u00e9sentent le cadre du projet, son financement et la technologie requise. Ils mettent en parall\u00e8le des projets d'indexation similaires et concluent par un panorama du prochain RIPM Online Archive of Music Periodicals (full-text). Das R\u00e9pertoire international de la presse musicale (RIPM) entwickelt sich von einem bibliographischen Nachweisinstrument f\u00fcr wichtige Zeitschriften des 19. Jahrhunderts zu einem Projekt, das detaillerten Volltextzugang zu diesen Zeitschriften aus den Jahren 1800\u20141950 bieten wird. Die Autoren er\u00f6rtern den Hintergrund des Projektes, die Finanzierung und dessen technische Umsetzung. Sie ziehen Vergleiche mit anderen, \u00e4hnlich gearteten bibliographischen Unternehmungen und schlie\u00dfen mit einem \u00dcberblick \u00fcber das RIPM Online Archive of Music Periodicals (Volltext).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ross Chambers"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9990d724-bfc1-37d8-9c94-a9d312dfaa66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"806","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-806","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"MEDITATION AND THE ESCALATOR PRINCIPLE (ON NICHOLSON BAKER'S \"THE MEZZANINE\")","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284590","wordCount":17673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-09-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27c1308a-ccf5-3d5a-b9d8-d44a7ca3ee85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"1346","pageStart":"1247","pagination":"pp. 1247-1346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713854","wordCount":12801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3638","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"145","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59ec9898-282d-334f-af82-7bb4167c2b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/230492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":290.0,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-225+227-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"One Hundred Fifth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (to January 1980)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230492","wordCount":155073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zelda F. Gamson"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca766740-885c-3ff7-b666-3fb5ed13ef06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1506","pageStart":"1504","pagination":"pp. 1504-1506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231122","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAUREL KENDALL"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26572392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33186c3b-d55c-3447-a1c7-377551a3df0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26572392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"861","pagination":"pp. 861-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Things Fall Apart","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26572392","wordCount":9946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":"In popular religious traditions in Korea, Vietnam, and Myanmar, spirits (or gods) become visible through their material realization in the corporeal bodies of shamans and spirit mediums and via ensouled statues and paintings that give the gods or spirits presence on altars. This discussion concerns a basic problem of material religion, that even ensouled, numinous, or otherwise empowered materials are subject to material decay. In the three cases presented and in many other places as well, the images are produced in commercial workshops where knowing craftsmanship entangles (what we commonly call) technique with what we might (more cautiously) call magic to produce an efficacious or agentive image. Questions of object efficacy are also linked to the prospect of decay, which may be hastened or postponed in relation to both individual choices and enveloping circumstance, from questions of climate to political economy.","subTitle":"Material Religion and the Problem of Decay","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dana B. Polan"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Above All Else to Make You See\": Cinema and the Ideology of Spectacle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303021","wordCount":7953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SASKIA ELIZABETH ZIOLKOWSKI"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9be46cb1-fb63-3c0f-9dd9-117d28748024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26237211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cSo, then people do come here in order to live\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237211","wordCount":11032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Interiority in the Novels of Rainer Maria Rilke and Scipio Slataper","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1922-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/914168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55113e29-272f-36d1-8c1a-4eea2398b8f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/914168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"877","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-877","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"London Concerts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/914168","wordCount":5344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"958","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH EZRA"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bcc8508-743f-327f-b280-119db2b9faf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cl\u00e9o's Masks: Regimes of Objectification in the French New Wave","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337086","wordCount":5685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"118\/119","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank N. Egerton"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff591fbe-2d92-361c-99cd-181745849765"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26739984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"History of Ecological Sciences, Part 63","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739984","wordCount":25487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Biosphere Ecology","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman Gabriel"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44469367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607367784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb2d79d9-a8fe-3855-b13e-7c57b577bfdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44469367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Growing Up in Society \u2013 A Historical Social Psychology of Childhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44469367","wordCount":9088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4 (162)","publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"\u00bbAufwachsen in (der) Gesellschaft. Eine historische Psychologie der Kindheit\u00ab. This paper develops a historical social psychology that can be used to understand young children's social development. It compares the theoretical frameworks of three of the most important relational thinkers in the 20th century \u2013 Norbert Elias, Pierre Bourdieu, and Erich Fromm \u2013 to shed light on their attempts to integrate the insights of psychoanalysis into their sociological perspectives. I begin by exploring Bourdieu's \"uneasy\" relationship with psychoanalysis, arguing that this has led to a less than successful quest by his followers for bridging concepts that can further develop the concept of social habitus. Fromm, one of the foremost but relatively neglected psychoanalysts of his generation, developed a relational psychoanalysis to explain the social relatedness of individuals in society. However, although his key concept of social character is a bold attempt to make sense of the historical forces that shape our individual and collective lives, it is still too heavily tied to the influence of economic structures in society. I argue that Elias is a more consistent, relational sociologist, able to develop highly nuanced concepts that can fully explain the social habitus of young children, focusing on his concept of \"love and learning relationships\" to explain how they grow up in society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John R. Whitaker"],"datePublished":"1924-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1015816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d2fb4eb-484d-39f6-ac3b-c4b445a75515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1015816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1924,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1015816","wordCount":2656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Anacker","Jutta Biedebach","Michael Flacke","Ralf Goeres"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25171129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09254560"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5683917-1a72-304c-a2fa-946556bb4e27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25171129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgenphilscience"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for General Philosophy of Science \/ Zeitschrift f\u00fcr allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"[Journal Report]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25171129","wordCount":23920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Schwabsky"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10897909"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d2c0a7b-c248-3f61-98b2-ec22be73c869"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24554518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"onpaper"}],"isPartOf":"On Paper","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The End of Objectivity: Thomas Ruff, from \"Portraits\" to \"Other Portraits\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554518","wordCount":3092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mickey Vallee"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"723c3258-e85a-3530-8811-70510af5b005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"577","pageStart":"558","pagination":"pp. 558-577","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Take and the Stutter: Glenn Gould's Time Synthesis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331833","wordCount":8319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"In A Thousand Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari refer to Glenn Gould as an illustration of the third principle of the rhizome, that of multiplicity: 'When Glenn Gould speeds up the performance of a piece, he is not just displaying virtuosity, he is transforming the musical points into lines, he is making the whole piece proliferate' (1987: 8). In an attempt to make sensible their ostensibly modest statement, I proliferate the relationships between Glenn Gould's philosophy of sound recording, Deleuze's theory of passive synthesis, and Deleuze and Guattari's concept of the stutter. I argue, ultimately, that Glenn Gould's radical recording practice stutters and deterritorialises the temporality of the recorded performance. More generally, the Deleuzian perspective broadens the scope of Gould's aesthetic practices that highlights the importance of aesthetic acts in the redistribution of sensory experience. But the study serves a broader purpose than celebrating a pianist\/recordist that Deleuze admired. Rather, while his contemporaries began to use the studio as a compositional element in sound recording, Gould bypassed such a step towards the informational logics of recording studios. Thus, it is inappropriate to think of Gould as having immersed himself in 'technology' than the broader concept of a complex, one that redistributed the striated listening space of the concert hall.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antoine Hennion","Stephen Muecke"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24772781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cb482cd-783a-3ede-875e-a5b7b1da417d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24772781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From ANT to Pragmatism: A Journey with Bruno Latour at the CSI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24772781","wordCount":9423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Kohl"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/899215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37c4fa4c-a84b-3f4e-99ed-f3084e7c9b7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/899215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/899215","wordCount":2087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2440405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c49b7f7-4ef2-3c03-bbc1-a66666279a88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2440405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjbotany"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"629","pagination":"pp. 627-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Program with Abstracts of Papers to be Presented at the Meetings of the Botanical Society of America and Certain Affiliated Groups at Texas A & M University College Station August 27-31, 1967","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2440405","wordCount":37378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Botanical Society of America","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. Fuerst"],"datePublished":"1982-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3b28c06-9404-36c1-a04c-00d1939bd6db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/284764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Role of Reductionism in the Development of Molecular Biology: Peripheral or Central?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284764","wordCount":15156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"It has been claimed that 'reductionism' (broadly understood as a belief in explanation of biological phenomena wholly in physical and chemical terms) has been only of peripheral significance to the development of molecular biology, and even that various forms of non- or anti-reductionism have been important in that development. To examine these claims, this paper investigates the problems of analytical approaches to reductionism and reviews the early scientific and institutional history of molecular biology with respect to the role of reductionist assumptions. It is argued that for complete historical and sociological understanding of the role of philosophical assumptions in molecular biology, reductionism must be considered as a belief system more complex than that implied by any one definition of 'reduction' derived from philosophical analysis. It is concluded from the historical review that reductionism was of central significance to the development of molecular biology, since it was central to institutions financially supporting and promoting early molecular biology, and to all the heuristically significant scientific areas of the emerging molecular biological specialty.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diarmuid Costello"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d55097d4-1d72-3088-bcc4-7317c4937368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/529058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Very Idea of a \u2018Specific\u2019 Medium: Michael Fried and Stanley Cavell on Painting and Photography as Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529058","wordCount":15984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willy Thayer"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/665549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37ef556a-8e5a-38a0-a5a9-f21ca6053331"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/665549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":null,"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Eugenio Dittborn: No Man\u2019s Land Paintings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/665549","wordCount":10840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian R\u00fcmelin"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919064"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dcf0234-24ea-3fce-92e2-c9e5f8e1e41f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1483719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibushistoriae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus et Historiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Stichtheorie und Graphikverst\u00e4ndnis im 18. Jahrhundert","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483719","wordCount":11759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"44","publisher":"IRSA s.c.","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Whoever deals with graphic arts has to reckon with the rarely considered theoretical analysis and the not very comprehensive scientific treatment of this field. These peculiarities are the result of an attitude that was typical for the early 19th century, but does not correspond to the historical reality. The article discusses in detail the claims and possibilities of prints after another works of art. The graphic arts are represented either as \"translations\" of a work of art or as \"imitations\", but not in the same way as the \"mimesis\" in painting. In the theoretical literature concerning different graphic techniques great attention was given to the expression of optic and artistic phenomena.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mzz3.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053568163"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35bd1870-49bd-369c-8c6d-38b6f2100bcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mzz3.3"}],"isPartOf":"Sign Here!","keyphrase":["handwriting","writing","sonja neef","van dijck","authenticity","jos\u00e9 van","jos\u00e9 van dijck","cultural","dijck and sonja","remediation"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"7","pagination":"7-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sign Here! 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The exploration of the ways in which copies of these works\u2014executed in paint, manuscript, and print\u2014functioned within expanding spheres of dissemination raises questions of audience and medium in relation to broader concerns with authenticity and originality in Cinquecento religious and artistic culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Goodwin Liu"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3898c483-5c7d-3cc0-98b0-deed4b71635e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20439093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Seattle and Louisville","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439093","wordCount":21961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noel Polk"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27747977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e17c91e9-5208-3996-adc9-a13af2136485"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27747977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal1870"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism, 1870-1910","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":105.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Guide to Dissertations on American Literary Figures, 1870-1910: Part One","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27747977","wordCount":58234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol A. 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The case law thus far has adopted four main approaches to judging copyright infringement claims in software cases. One, now mostly discredited, test would treat all structure, sequence, and organization (SSO) of programs as protectable expression unless there is only one way to perform a program function. A second, now widely applied, three-step test calls for creating a hierarchy of abstractions for an allegedly infringed program, filtering unprotectable elements, and comparing the protectable expression of the allegedly infringed program with the expression in the second program that is the basis of the infringement claim. A third approach has focused on whether the allegedly infringing elements are program processes or methods of operation that lie outside the scope of protection available from copyright law. A fourth approach has concentrated on whether the allegedly infringing elements of a program are instances in which ideas or functions have merged with program expression. This Article offers both praise and criticism of the approaches taken thus far to judging software copyright infringement and proposes an alternative unified test for infringement that is consistent with traditional principles of copyright law and that will promote healthy competition and ongoing innovation in the software industry.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer M. 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It oscillates between two positions on nontextual creative works such as images \u2014 either they are transparent, or they are opaque. When courts treat images as transparent, they deny that interpretation is necessary, claiming both that the meaning of the image is so obvious that it admits of no serious debate and that the image is a mere representation of reality. When they treat images as opaque, they deny that interpretation is possible, pretending that images are so far from being susceptible to discussion and analysis using words that there is no point in trying. The oscillation between opacity and transparency has been the source of much bad law. This Article explores the ungovernability of images in copyright, beginning with an overview of the power of images in the law more generally. The Article then turns to persistent difficulties in assessing copyrightability and infringement for visual works. In assessing copyrightability, courts draw lines between artistic choice and mere reproduction of reality, but also treat the artist as a person with a special connection to reality who possesses a way of seeing that ordinary mortals lack. Infringement analysis repeats this doubling, using the representation\/reality divide to separate protected elements of a specific work from unprotected ones while simultaneously insisting that works are indivisible gestalts. Current doctrine makes impossible and self-contradictory demands on factfinders. It should be replaced with a true \"reproduction\" right against exact or near-exact copying. Despite this radical proposal, much of my argument is critical and diagnostic. I therefore turn to more specific problems in authorship questions for multimedia works and fair use that highlight the instabilities in current approaches to nontextual works. Greater epistemic humility, recognizing that images make multiple meanings in multiple ways, could combat the judicial tendency to presume that images are nothing more than what they seem.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20031906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e6585cd-f41c-3941-9aaa-8811b408ad9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20031906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Affairs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20031906","wordCount":20557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25036296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3485d4c-0f2e-367c-b6b0-d75ab2afe48d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25036296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":200.0,"pageEnd":"42a","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-194, 32a, 34a, 36a, 38a, 40a, 42a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Attending to links between field and home, politics and ecology, the paper explores how field cultures are implicated in the mutual and imaginative constitution of nature and society. The paper examines the scientific culture within which Pallis operated, and the wider cultures of travel and identity within which her scientific fieldwork took place. Fieldwork was facilitated and shaped by a range of encounters with officials and informants whose presence is variously engaged with and erased in Pallis's published account. 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Leading beyond the privileged medium of the text, this understanding approaches religion as a multi-media phenomenon that mobilizes the full sensorium. The central point of this article is that forms of visual culture are a prime medium of religion, and studying them offers deep insights into the genesis of worlds of lived experience. Pictorial media streamline and sustain religious notions of the visible and the invisible and involve embodied practices of seeing that shape what and how people see. Discussing the implications of the \"pictorial turn\" for the study of religion, I argue that a more synthesized approach is needed that draws these fields together. The methodological and theoretical implications of this approach are exemplified by turning to my research on video and representations of the \"spiritual\" in Southern Ghana.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Elsaesser"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f331637-48a2-3d1d-b90d-4f7348bc4835"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cinema -- The Irresponsible Signifier or \"The Gamble with History\": Film Theory or Cinema Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488132","wordCount":9631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Townsend"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"238dba0d-c554-32ed-a908-91f14d9ef00e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25564491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Caroline McCarthy: Best before Yesterday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564491","wordCount":3334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"118","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert W. 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Menell"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24114639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00461121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"280d01e7-436d-3236-9179-0a2e56ea0155"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24114639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ecollawquar"}],"isPartOf":"Ecology Law Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Law","Law","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Property Rights Movement's Embrace of Intellectual Property: True Love or Doomed Relationship?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24114639","wordCount":19905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeannene M. Przyblyski"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08a2017e-ae74-3464-8da0-8ac5689ba1be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Visions at the Paris Exposition, 1900: Another Look at Frances Benjamin Johnston's Hampton Photographs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777972","wordCount":5212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HOWARD C. RICE, JR."],"datePublished":"1951-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26402701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e8dc95c-007b-3ff9-b08f-3bcb48cabaca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26402701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Album of Saint-M\u00e9min Portraits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26402701","wordCount":3570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-09-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b73113a-276d-35bb-8401-ca76472873c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4523755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"80A","pageStart":"1A","pagination":"pp. 1A-80A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers. Fifty-Sixth Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523755","wordCount":103945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Bennett"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"047844d8-7a0d-3f5b-b576-7739f19f3c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sociology, Aesthetics, Expertise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983822","wordCount":10901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara D. Wesser","W. Scott Armbruster"],"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2937111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129615"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35699178"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"209be9e2-9813-3b10-8780-a5cc1e59f83c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2937111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ecolmono"}],"isPartOf":"Ecological Monographs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Species Distribution Controls Across A Forest-Steppe Transition: A Causal Model and Experimental Test","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2937111","wordCount":12701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Ecological Society of America","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"Steppe communities of interior Alaska are restricted to steep, generally southfacing bluffs. Two competing hypotheses explain this distribution: (1) steppe taxa are restricted to bluffs by their requirements for the abiotic conditions of these sites, and (2) steppe taxa have broader physiological ranges than expressed in nature, but are restricted to bluff sites by competition with other plants. We addressed these hypotheses using correlative and experimental methods to identify controls over the distribution of steppe and forest understory species on Eagle Bluff, Alaska. We developed a causal model and used path analysis, a correlative method, to estimate strengths of hypothesized causal relationships. Based on the results of path analysis we hypothesized that light intensity and soil moisture were important controls over the composition of the vegetation and species distributions. We tested this hypothesis by examining the responses of two species native to steppe (Linum lewisii and Potentilla hookeriana) and two species native to forest (Moehringia lateriflora and Pyrola secunda) to manipulation of light intensity, soil moisture, and soil type. The forest species had reduced survival and biomass when grown in the high light and dry soil moisture characteristic of steppe environments. Conversely, survival of steppe taxa was independent of treatments, and the response of survivors to treatments differed between species. Linum had higher seed production with higher soil moisture than it normally experiences and grew less under lower light intensity. Potentilla responded positively to higher moisture and had weakly negative (but not significant) response to reduced light levels. Our experiments confirmed the importance of light and soil moisture to vegetation on Eagle Bluff, but revealed the individualistic nature of species response to environment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren\u00e9 Ranc\u0153ur"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40530999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40530999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":311.0,"pageEnd":"633","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-633","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVIe \u2013 XXe si\u00e8cles). Ann\u00e9e 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40530999","wordCount":150370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BLAIR HOXBY"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83275307-38c0-3b4f-bab0-0fc2e9c7395b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41412155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Was Tragedy? The World We Have Lost, 1550\u20131795","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412155","wordCount":19245,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61991,62078]],"Locations in B":[[108987,109049]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Oregon","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.22","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787353954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1fa4f3d-54a7-3933-9a14-4a3ff336cff4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv550d3p.22"}],"isPartOf":"Being Modern","keyphrase":["unser dasein","berlin alexanderplatz","crystal","alfred","modernist science","inorganic","nature","liquid","d\u00f6blin\u2019s modernist","humans"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"357","pagination":"357-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Liquid crystal as chemical form and model of thinking in Alfred D\u00f6blin\u2019s modernist science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.22","wordCount":7086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In 1933, Alfred D\u00f6blin, a novelist and doctor, published a long and complex book, titledUnser Dasein<\/em>(Our Existence<\/em>).\u00b9Unser Dasein<\/em>is a difficult book and has enjoyed nothing of the success ofBerlin Alexanderplatz<\/em>, but it is also a book that presents in a variety of ways \u2013 scientific, fictionalised, philosophical amongst others \u2013 a mode of thought characteristic of D\u00f6blin, in which a kind of monism is at work, whereby science and art, scientific approaches and artistic responses, are presented as equally appropriate, equally evocative, equally generative of knowledge and understanding. If one were seeking the model of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d47ab7da-d298-343e-9e44-76dfb610fd55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2tx.8"}],"isPartOf":"Alexander Kluge","keyphrase":["gabi teichert","patriot","anton kaes","history","german","montage","viewer","german history","images","germany alexander"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"95","pagination":"95-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"In Search of Germany:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.8","wordCount":15674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"\u2018We must begin to work on our history. I mean something very concrete by that; we could even start by telling each other stories\u2019.\u00b9 Alexander Kluge made this statement in his Fontane Prize acceptance speech in September 1979; it announced a programme that he himself wanted to fulfil in his film Die Patriotin\/The Patriot, which premiered in the same month.\u00b2 Although the original conception of the film goes back to the fall of 1977,\u00b3 it had lost none of its relevance two years later. On the contrary, at the beginning of 1979 the American television seriesHolocaust<\/em>had reignited interest","subTitle":"Alexander Kluge\u2019s The Patriot","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Berenice Reynaud","Thomas Repensek"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caad719c-be70-339c-8400-eee0a17611f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 58-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Stuart Sherman: Object Ritual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778226","wordCount":7631,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[32359,32709]],"Locations in B":[[26414,26762]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c25b9cd6-095e-3193-b8bd-cdbf90051f12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/230556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":197.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-181+183-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"One Hundred Second Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (to January 1977)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230556","wordCount":123268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Pelzer-Montada"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1046b00-e799-3630-b8c0-b94be6d4a9f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40598943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Attraction of Print: Notes on the Surface of the (Art) Print","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598943","wordCount":8022,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. S. R. Boase"],"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754390"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53398409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47ec40a5-1302-38a6-b977-9b3fbce0c9d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/750325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwarbcourinst"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Decoration of the New Palace of Westminster, 1841-1863","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750325","wordCount":24941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Warburg Institute","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRENDA LONGFELLOW"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"959b92e8-f024-33ca-b924-f7c3eeaa7f95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE RED VIOLIN\", COMMODITY FETISHISM, AND GLOBALIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408039","wordCount":5399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"Cet article sugg\u00e8re que le film Le Violon rouge de Fran\u00e7ois Girard incarne un certain id\u00e9al du cin\u00e9ma national tel que formul\u00e9 en janvier 1999 dans le Rapport du comit\u00e9 consultatif f\u00e9d\u00e9ral sur le long m\u00e9trage. L'id\u00e9ologie de la mondialisation a \u00e9t\u00e9 d\u00e9terminante \u00e0 la fois dans la production du film et la r\u00e9daction du Rapport. Le Rapport \u00e9rige en v\u00e9ritable f\u00e9tiche la co-production \u00e0 gros budget visant le march\u00e9 international. C'est \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de ce parti pris id\u00e9ologique que l'auteur \u00e9value les effets socio-\u00e9conomiques, esth\u00e9tiques et textuels de ce film qui est constamment cit\u00e9 comme nouveau mod\u00e8le du cin\u00e9ma canadien.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Housefield"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marcel Duchamp's Art and the Geography of Modern Paris","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140931","wordCount":10019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Geographical Society","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"Modern artist Marcel Duchamp's concept of the readymade remains influential though controversial. I propose a new interpretation of the readymades as a coherent series of works that re-create the landscape of Paris in the artist's New York City studio. Using techniques that parallel the conceptual and visual transformations of space performed by cartography and by landscape painting, Duchamp created a personal, monumental, and three-dimensional \"map\" by replacing Parisian monuments with small-scale objects. The readymades thus expand on the quest of modern artists for innovative ways to represent landscape and, at the same time, offer geographers new ways of seeing landscape.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID DODDS HENRY"],"datePublished":"1954-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21558159"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd9c6f3-d6e6-36c3-92ff-96e55edb823f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"junivfilmproas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the University Film Producers Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The 1954 Kenneth M. 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In this paper I focus on the implementation of, and challenges to, recent immigration policies in California. Through an analysis of media coverage and Operation Gatekeeper in San Diego County, I illustrate the means by which discussions of safety, legality, and mobility have infused efforts to bound and challenge distinct notions of \"US,\" \"Mexican,\" and immigrant identities and spaces. In particular, the increased presence of US Border Patrol agents and the introduction of surveillance technologies has resulted in a border landscape that has been viewed by some groups as providing a safe space for US citizens, while others see these changes to the social and physical landscape as intimidating and discriminatory. In particular, I argue that contradictory uses of surveillance and transportation technology suggest that the border is less a symbol of separation and fixity than an icon of mobility, and as such, points to the significance of the border as a process of journeying across and within cultures.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Quendler"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43025827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Autopsy and Autography in the First Decades of Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43025827","wordCount":9881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. 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No mere rite of passage, it developed numerous traits and skills useful to lawyers, it revealed a true picture of the political and atomized nature of American law, and it nurtured many of the civic virtues that American law teachers have sought to nurture since the time of George Wythe.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rub\u00e9n Gallo"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"942e6de0-a18c-3d82-b994-b78c97046c71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27668740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Jaime Torres Bodet's \"Primero de enero\": The anti-novel of the Mexican Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668740","wordCount":10427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAMANTHA HOOVER"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a093684e-c57f-3568-a5ea-23abce028180"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE AURA IN POSTMODERN PHOTOGRAPHY: ANNETTE MESSAGER, DOUG AND MIKE STARN, AND BILL BARRETTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876121","wordCount":2901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"24","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gyewon Kim"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.120.1.115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"750eddef-6d93-330b-93b6-6e2a20ba9bad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2012.120.1.115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Tracing the Emperor: Photography, Famous Places, and the Imperial Progresses in Prewar Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.120.1.115","wordCount":14280,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":"This essay examines the relations between two distinctive photographic projects in prewar Japan: the photographic records of the imperial progresses from 1872 to 1886 and the photographic commemoration of the emperor\u2019s sacred trace during the subsequent half-century. Together, these photographic projects re-present and re-make local landscapes through the mediation of the emperor\u2019s sacred gaze, thereby providing a ground for new knowledge and political subjectivity in early twentieth-century Japan.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09277544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"894ac1c0-9f69-3447-bee7-0755355294b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44103322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrealestalite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Real Estate Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - 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They cannot be extracted from the kin formations in which they came into being because they are part of the transformed relations that their manufacture effects. In an unprecedented event in 2010, a large slit-gong used by a local community school was attacked during a dispute. In light of this, I examine irreplaceability and substitutability in relation to persons on the Rai Coast and explore what the attack implies about the changing status of objects and things under new economic and social conditions. Fabriqu\u00e9s et utilis\u00e9s dans le cadre des \u00e9changes affinaux sur la C\u00f4te de Rai, en Papouasie-Nouvelle-Guin\u00e9e, les tambours \u00e0 fente sont consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme des sortes de personnes. Ils ne peuvent pas \u00eatre extraits des formations de parent\u00e9 transform\u00e9es qu'a caus\u00e9es leur fabrication. En 2010, lors d'un incident sans pr\u00e9c\u00e9dent, un gros tambour \u00e0 fente utilis\u00e9 par une \u00e9cole locale a \u00e9t\u00e9 la cible d'une attaque au cours d'un conflit. \u00c0 la lumi\u00e8re de cet \u00e9v\u00e9nement, l'auteur examine ce qui est irrempla\u00e7able et substituable dans une personne sur la C\u00f4te de Rai et explore les implications de cette attaque en termes de changement de statut des objets et des choses dans le nouveau contexte \u00e9conomique et social.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dimitris Tselos"],"datePublished":"1944-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba573549-4fb1-3f5d-b83e-715763e4558f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3046921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Enigma of Buffington's Skyscraper","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046921","wordCount":11093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kirk Wetters"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znz5q.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780810129764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c40a58f-a58c-3160-9431-dae7e3d2184a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3znz5q.10"}],"isPartOf":"Demonic History","keyphrase":["benjamin","elective affinities","demonic ambivalences","mythic","goethe","spengler","ambiguity","morphology","character","gundolf"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"111","pagination":"111-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Demonic Ambivalences:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znz5q.10","wordCount":11242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One of the most likely places where the contemporary reader may have encountered the idea of the demonic is the work of Walter Benjamin. Other candidates would be Kierkegaard or Georg Luk\u00e1cs, who, though certainly aware of Goethe\u2019s use of the term, do not so directly establish their understandings through readings of Goethe. The deliberate lack of clarity about the demonic and its conceptual origins causes it to be simultaneously exposed and hidden. This is the case in Benjamin as well, but to a lesser degree, because he more extensively and philologically articulates the connections to Goethe. The demonic, however,","subTitle":"Walter Benjamin\u2019s Counter-Morphology","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23805366"},{"name":"oclc","value":"926718072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015203103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"893508b5-651b-34e1-ba92-3fe7dd1e6b3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43481202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefine"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Acquisitions JULY 2004-JUNE 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481202","wordCount":18242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-10-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20031539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a4b3088-97b5-3b2b-b868-5c9b26a8a3fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20031539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20031539","wordCount":51653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5797","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"314","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Sutherland"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fictional Economies: Adam Smith, Walter Scott and the Nineteenth-Century Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873052","wordCount":13343,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[65712,65797]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH FRANK"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40547959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8df7c3d9-6d4e-30b2-bad7-73ec89fbaa04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40547959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Harold Rosenberg: The \"Transformal\" Critic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40547959","wordCount":8350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"74\/75","publisher":"Skidmore College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James P. 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colonial Afterlife of Political Arithmetic: Swift, Demography, and Mobile Populations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354718","wordCount":12032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"56","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALLAN JOHNSTON"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8792a49-52bc-3f6d-831d-9629b79c2659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44085894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ecology and \u00c6sthetics: Robinson Jeffers and Gary Snyder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44085894","wordCount":11222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madhava Prasad"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Art history"],"title":"Ernst J\u00fcnger and the Transformed World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778701","wordCount":8531,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52817,52885]],"Locations in B":[[7396,7464]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia Wall"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03f46171-d2e3-3c13-9711-0b0ff8f0fbcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"724","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-724","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Restoration and Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844526","wordCount":28479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"An assessment of recent scholarly work treating the literature of the Restoration and Eighteenth Century and some general observations on the state of the profession. A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1919-02-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25589414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1919,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 17, no. 18","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589414","wordCount":19061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. G. POLLARD"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42681912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00782696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07d6a19a-cdac-3161-9567-1be5cd5fb1b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42681912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"numischron"}],"isPartOf":"The Numismatic Chronicle (1966-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Art & Art History","Arts","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"MATTHEW BOULTON AND CONRAD HEINRICH K\u00dcCHLER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42681912","wordCount":25707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Royal Numismatic Society","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. H. Plumb"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/531828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07d7fdba-8eee-30b5-873e-2366fc57367e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/531828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noterecoroyasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Britain and America. The Cultural Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/531828","wordCount":7570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen L. Wood","Donald E. Bright Jr."],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23377663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0160239X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddfc520f-7df0-3c99-b790-aaeece77a385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23377663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"grebasnatmem"}],"isPartOf":"Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":687.0,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Catalog of Scolytidae and Platypodidae (Coleoptera), Part 1: Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23377663","wordCount":540063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Presented are 21,488 references to published articles that treat the scientific study of bark and ambrosia beetles (Coleoptera: Platypodidae and Scolytidae) worldwide from 1758 to 1984 (about 200 post-1984 articles are included) in all subject areas. Each reference is accompanied by an indication of (a) whether or not the authors examined a copy of the article, and (b) the subject areas treated by the article.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernd Roling"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26485658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13707493"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646175456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c73c57-80a6-3698-91f6-a65263e79f04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26485658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rechtheophilmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Recherches de th\u00e9ologie et philosophie m\u00e9di\u00e9vales","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"466","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DIE GEOMETRIE DER BIENENWABE: ALBERTUS MAGNUS, KARL VON BAER UND DIE DEBATTE \u00dcBER DAS VORSTELLUNGSVERM\u00d6GEN UND DIE SEELE DER INSEKTEN ZWISCHEN MITTELALTER UND NEUZEIT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26485658","wordCount":42593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Peeters Publishers","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"How to explain the architectonic skills of insects, best represented by the hexagonal structure of the honeycomb? This was one of the most striking puzzles in the history of science and epistemology. How was such a lowly animal able to construct complex structures, which obviously imitated geometrical patterns? How could the obvious gap between the product and its maker be explained? These questions ignited a debate that started with Albert the Great in the High Middle Ages and included such figures as Thomas Aquinas, Roger Bacon, the Cartesians, Johannes Kepler, as well as philosophically trained natural scientists like Georges Buffon, Ren\u00e9-Antoine R\u00e9aumur, Charles Bonnet, and of course Charles Darwin and the outstanding naturalists of the 19th and 20th century. Taking the skills of the bee as a starting point, the present paper reconstructs this long discussion of insect architecture and insect intelligence, and tries to uncover its medieval beginnings. Although in the early modern period the amount of relevant empirical observation grew continuously, nevertheless the solutions to the riddle of the honeycomb followed patterns that remained almost unchanged since the time of Albert the Great.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Bogue"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae253bd-1f8c-3787-a687-2ae01987ac40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"424","pagination":"pp. 424-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247014","wordCount":1338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23883659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23883659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry","Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23883659","wordCount":2109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Luke"],"datePublished":"1980-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41855054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"142341b9-fa03-39a0-842d-4be8ce65708f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41855054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"728","pageStart":"695","pagination":"pp. 695-728","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"TECHNICS\" AND MARX'S MATERIALIST CONCEPTION OF HISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41855054","wordCount":11848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Eleanor Nevins"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.79","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eef09fee-81f1-31ff-889d-52f2729de43f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.79"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"\u201cGrow with That, Walk with That\u201d: Hymes, Dialogicality, and Text Collections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.79","wordCount":13140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Abstract This article elaborates upon Dell Hymes's contributions to dialogic anthropology by comparing two accounts of Apache lives, one spoken by Lawrence Mithlo to Harry Hoijer and published in a 1938 text collection, and another spoken by Eva Lupe to the author in 1996. First, I show that neither account is cast by its speaker as neutral information; rather, both are extensions of an oratorical genre labeled b\u00e1'hadziih, through which the speaker presents a group with which she identifies to an audience that includes those figured as other. Through b\u00e1'hadziih the speaker attempts to transform the relationship between her own group and the addressed others by first invoking what she anticipates to be the image held of her group from the other's point of view and then posing terms for its transformation. I show that a parallel strategy is also evident in a short creation narrative performed by Mithlo for Hoijer. I show that the ethnological framework within which Hoijer casts Mithlo's performances interposes a colonial lens that misrecognizes, with unintended irony, what Mithlo frames as misunderstandings on the part of White people as straightforward statements of fact. By contrast, considerations of genre and addressivity introduced via Hymes's ethnography of communication and ethnopoetics enable a latter-day recognition of the terms of mediation utilized by persons like Mithlo and Lupe to address researchers in ethnographic dialogues. A commentary to this essay by Richard Bauman appears later in this special issue.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-02-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1755627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caed9069-8b23-39f1-8a2f-f5943ae10c25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1755627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"410","pagination":"pp. 410-414+416-420+422-423+425-426+428-429+431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Reports of Sections and Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1755627","wordCount":14877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3295","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"127","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael W. Scott"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45182832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e5a7603-ba97-3405-84af-decb6b29a3dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45182832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"474","pagination":"pp. 474-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"To be Makiran is to see like Mr Parrot: the anthropology of wonder in Solomon Islands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45182832","wordCount":14129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"This article lays out a general thesis for the development of a comparative ethnographic approach to the anthropology of wonder. It suggests that wonder is both an index and a mode of challenge to existing ontological premises. Through analytical engagement with the theme of wonder in Western philosophy and the anthropology of ontology, it extends this thesis to include the corollary that different ontological premises give rise to different wonders. Ethnographically, the article supports these claims via analysis of wonder discourses among the Arosi of Solomon Islands. These discourses, it is argued, both respond to and promote ontological transformations in a context where the premises at stake are neither those of the Cartesian dualism commonly ascribed to modernity nor of the relational non-dualism commonly ascribe to anthropology's ethnographic 'others', but of a non-Cartesian pluralism termed poly-ontology. Le pr\u00e9sent article expose une th\u00e8se g\u00e9n\u00e9rale pour l'\u00e9laboration d'une approche ethnographique comparative de l'ethnologie de l'\u00e9merveillement. Il sugg\u00e8re que l'\u00e9merveillement est \u00e0 la fois un indicateur des pr\u00e9suppos\u00e9s ontologiques existants et un moyen de les remettre en question. A partir d'un dialogue analytique avec le th\u00e8me de l'\u00e9merveillement dans la philosophie occidentale ainsi que l'anthropologie de l'ontologie, il \u00e9largit cette th\u00e8se pour y inclure la corollaire que des pr\u00e9misses ontologiques diff\u00e9rentes donnent naissance \u00e0 des \u00e9merveillements diff\u00e9rents. Du point de vue ethnographique, cet article \u00e9taie ces affirmations par l'analyse des discours de l'\u00e9merveillement chez les Arosi des \u00eeles Salomon. Il avance que ces discours r\u00e9pondent aux transformations ontologiques tout en les favorisant, dans un contexte o\u00f9 les pr\u00e9misses en jeu ne sont ni celles du dualisme cart\u00e9sien habituellement associ\u00e9 \u00e0 la modernit\u00e9, ni celles du non-dualisme habituellement assign\u00e9 \u00e0 \u00ab l'autre \u00bb ethnographique de l'anthropologie, mais celles d'un pluralisme non cart\u00e9sien que l'on peut appeler poly-ontologie.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-10-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20048541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4930083e-9b7e-3ec1-915c-50f1999ceba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20048541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20048541","wordCount":30895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5847","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"318","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. D. Chrostowska"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40801075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e1097b-7a59-37c3-8a1f-3a0f90ff3810"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40801075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Consumed by Nostalgia?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40801075","wordCount":10061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Faulkner"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fd0135e-c141-361e-9198-317b911f6078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24402383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Affective Identities: French National Cinema and the 1930s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402383","wordCount":9079,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Toronto Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"La Martin Walsh Memorial Lecture de 1994, ce texte traite de la nation en tant que formation discursive dont la carat\u00e9ristique d\u00e9terminante est l'instabilit\u00e9, l'ins\u00e9curit\u00e9. La nation est instable d'une mani\u00e8re inn\u00e9e parce que ces d\u00e9finitions normatives dependent des int\u00e9r\u00eats Marginaux et d\u00e9centr\u00e9s avec lesquelles elle est en n\u00e9gotiation constante. Ces int\u00e9r\u00eats marginaux et d\u00e9centr\u00e9s permettent de tester les limites et potentiels des identit\u00e9s personelles et sociales \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de la nation. Un example de tels in\u00e9r\u00eats se pr\u00e9sente dans la fonction de l'allusion coloniale et des r\u00e9ferences coloniales dans certains films fran\u00e7ais des ann\u00e9es 1930. Le pouvoir et la resistance de ces int\u00e9r\u00eats r\u00e9sident dans leurs dimensions affectives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maya Socolovsky"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"923eb677-712b-3471-90f4-396cab7754bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Homelessness of Immigrant American Ghosts: Hauntings and Photographic Narrative in Oscar Hijuelos's The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O'Brien","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823272","wordCount":9245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":"Cuban American literature and Oscar Hijuelos's texts in particular have generally been approached through a consideration of their material, multicultural aspects. This essay analyzes Hijuelos's The Fourteen Sisters of Emilio Montez O'Brien, on which there is little critical work, by combining the novel's descriptions of photography and immigrant experiences with theories of photography. My reading considers the placing of ghosts and memory in the narrative and problematizes the undialectical presence of death in it. Referring to Hijuelos's text as an \"imagetext\" (photographs exist in it only through descriptions, never appearing visually), I read it through Roland Barthes's Camera Lucida and his development of the wounding punctum of a photograph, which produces a melancholy lingering trace of the past in the present moment. In this reading, the immigration experience in Hijuelos's novel exceeds narrativization and is unrepresentable by it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arthur F. 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Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2013","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/675358","wordCount":248106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert S. 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By regarding spirit possession in West Africa sensuously as an embodied practice, the author reveals the phenomenological arena in which cultural memory is fashioned and refashioned to produce and reproduce power.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio Pace"],"datePublished":"1965-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/476920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50afccd2-1e98-3435-a1bc-9ecd43110293"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/476920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Giambattista Scandella and His American Friends","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/476920","wordCount":6970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gay Gibson Cima"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e292208b-7bbf-331a-a795-90c253d2808e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Acting on the Cutting Edge: Pinter and the Syntax of Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207359","wordCount":7267,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28130,28217]],"Locations in B":[[41336,41423]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. 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Goodell; Dr. Alexander McKenzie; Toryism in Worcester County; Letters of William Pynchon; Charles Eliot Norton; Francis Cabot Lowell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080028","wordCount":30076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/960846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f58d937f-f53b-3dbe-862c-e91dd532bd8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/960846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/960846","wordCount":15936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1656","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Bratu Hansen"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91861e07-9080-3102-a4f5-6149e5c8f9a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Benjamin and Cinema: Not a One-Way Street","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344205","wordCount":19252,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40728,40988]],"Locations in B":[[117235,117426]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DOMINIC BATE","SUSANNA BERGER","MICHAEL BURY","PIERA GIOVANNA TORDELLA","AD STIJNMAN","PAOLO DELORENZI","LOUIS MARCHESANO","MARK MCDONALD","MARIO BEVILACQUA","CONSTANCE C. MCPHEE","MARTIN HOPKINSON","LIESKE TIBBE","RACHEL SLOAN","MARIA STARKOVA-VINDMAN","MARZIA FAIETTI","DORIT SCH\u00c4FER","ANITA HALDEMANN","STEPHEN J. BURY","JEANNETTE STOSCHEK","CELINA FOX"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45375894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557541785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0fb760e-3fcc-3647-b7b5-aa3b412aed23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45375894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45375894","wordCount":15658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luiz E. Castel\u0151es"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20696544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164679"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f170551a-3feb-3722-ab14-4a68cd4b45bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20696544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Catalogue of Music Onomatopoeia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20696544","wordCount":17314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"The subject of musical onomatopoeia, or imitation of environmental sounds by musical instruments, has long been dismissed as marginal and unimportant in the context of Western art music. The purpose of this article is both to counter this dismissal and to propose the development of a field of study focused on musical onomatopoeia. After explaining the choice of the term musical onomatopoeia to refer to this compositional practice, based on the criteria of historical pertinence, frequency of use in the literature, and terminological coherence, I examine a number of factors that have determined the views of nineteenth- and twentieth- century commentators on the subject. The article closes with a brief catalogue of examples from the Western art music repertoire. Tema o glazbenoj onomatopeji ili opona\u0161anju zvukova iz okoli\u0161a glazbenim instrumentima dugo je bila zanemarena kao marginalna i neva\u017ena u kontekstu umjetni\u010dke glazbe Zapada. Namjera je ovog \u010dlanka da se suprotstavi tom zanemarivanju i da predlo\u017ei razvitak istra\u017eiva\u010dkog podru\u010dja kojem bi u \u017eari\u0161tu bila glazbena onomatopeja. Nakon \u0161to se obrazlo\u017eio izbor termina glazbena onomatopeja (musical onomatopoeia) u odnosu na ovu kompozicijsku praksu, a temelji se na kriteriju povijesne valjanosti, u\u010destalosti uporabe u literaturi i terminolo\u0161ke koherentnosti, istra\u017euju se brojni \u010dimbenici koji su odredili poglede na tu temu tuma\u010da 19. i 20. stolje\u0107a. Me\u00f0u tim su \u010dimbenicima Platonova rasprava o onomatopeji u tre\u0107oj knjizi Dr\u017eave, odnos izme\u00f0u klasi\u010dnog njema\u010dkog idealizma i idealisti\u010dke misli u estetici glazbe 19. stolje\u0107a, prepirka izme\u00f0u zagovornika apsolutne i programne glazbe, obezvrje\u00f0enje humora u umjetni\u010dkoj glazbi Zapada, te imitativni kompozicijski pristupi u 20. stolje\u0107u. \u010clanak zavr\u0161ava kratkim katalogom primjera iz repertoara umjetni\u010dke glazbe Zapada (djela skladatelja kao \u0161to su G. Gershwin, G. Mahler, E. Var\u00e8se, F.-B. M\u00e2che, M. Kagel, G. Ligeti, N. Rorem, R. Strauss, Gherardello da Firenze, B. Britten, H. Villa-Lobos, A. Vivaldi, H. Berlioz, G. Crumb, O. Messiaen, J.S. Bach, C. Saint-Sa\u00ebns, S. Prokofjev, J.-Ph. Rameau, E. Krieger).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1943-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3888ff3-f45a-3e8c-bbb5-332fef245ce9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25691749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":119.0,"pageEnd":"H420","pageStart":"H2","pagination":"pp. H2-H95, H396-H420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[Handbook]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691749","wordCount":61661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Leafstedt","Darwin F. Scott"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4487184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e6d5e6a-c8af-3d22-ae75-61b1bd5b9d17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4487184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"524","pagination":"pp. 524-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4487184","wordCount":3687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Aherne"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b674bad3-d467-35c8-ae19-b343ec74480d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25564023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"91","pagination":"p. 91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Limerick: Padraig Cunningham at Belltable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564023","wordCount":640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"105","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eduard Farber"],"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d71db03d-43ca-3e14-b23d-c26306d33b06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/301680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"422","pagination":"pp. 422-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Forces and Substances of Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301680","wordCount":5633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Johannes Potgieter"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.51.3.0072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adfd1399-8973-3e8b-a675-2013739c7ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.51.3.0072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Educational Perspective and a Poststructural Position on Everyday Aesthetics and the Creation of Meaning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.51.3.0072","wordCount":8482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda Phyllis Austern"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bc73ea9-6c2f-31be-aed3-dad64316f55f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nature, Culture, Myth, and the Musician in Early Modern England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831896","wordCount":18483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"In sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England, music was often considered an aspect of natural philosophy, the general study of natural and cultural phenomena that had been inherited from classical antiquity and the Middle Ages, but was undergoing rapid metamorphosis into more modern fields of science, technology, and the arts. Against this background, many writers began to invoke machine metaphors and the triumph of cultural products over raw nature and Nature's corollaries in the form of women and animals. Older epistemologies of magic and metaphor, which had also incorporated gendered ideas of artifice, perfection, nature, and creation, informed these emerging ideas. The result on the one hand was a practice of secular musical composition that included sounds from the natural world as feminine novelties to be bounded and improved by stylistic artifice. On the other was a documentary allegorization of music that drew from chronicle history, mythology, natural science, religion, and politics to demonstrate the moral and aesthetic superiority of music and musicians that elevated natural elements into enduring musical artifice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heinz Paetzoldt","Sue Westphal"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20629747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388384"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213772"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"228b1cc6-40cc-33a6-95d0-910e7c7056d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20629747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Walter Benjamin's Theory of the End of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20629747","wordCount":17390,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[12776,12948],[15041,15228],[17383,17666],[27174,27578],[30561,30693],[36748,37020]],"Locations in B":[[46683,46855],[47436,47622],[49309,49593],[55946,56350],[56871,57008],[58528,58813]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VIN NARDIZZI"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43446135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034429X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646848243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c26cc3bc-4dff-3e87-bb47-0d641f5b54aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43446135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renarefo"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespeare's Penknife: Grafting and Seedless Generation in the Procreation Sonnets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43446135","wordCount":10254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Renaissance and Reformation \/ Renaissance et R\u00e9forme","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"Cet essai remet dans son contexte la figure de la greffe qu'utilise Shakespeare dans ses \u00ab sonnets de procr\u00e9ation \u00bb (num\u00e9ro 1-17) par l'examen de la pr\u00e9sentation de cette technique horticole dans la litt\u00e9rature de jardinage des seizi\u00e8me et dix-septi\u00e8mes si\u00e8cles. On y argue que le personnage du sonnet 15 se r\u00e9f\u00e8re \u00e0 cette litt\u00e9rature, se terminant sur le vers \u00ab I engraft you new \u00bb, visualisant lagreffe horticole autant comme une technique d'\u00e9criture que comme une forme analogue \u00e0 la procr\u00e9ation humaine. En tant qu'\u00e9criture, la greffe permet \u00e0 l'orateur de se hisser au niveau des h\u00e9ritiers et de la po\u00e9sie, puisque le canif est indispensable autant au po\u00e8te qu'au jardinier, respectivement pour pr\u00e9parer une plume et une greffe. Toutefois, en tant qu'analogue de la procr\u00e9ation humaine, la greffe ne proc\u00e8de pas par semis ou par m\u00e9lange des semences. Au lieu de cela, elle constitue une forme de g\u00e9n\u00e9ration ne n\u00e9cessitant pas de semences, et de ce fait \u00e9voque le potentiel de la greffe comme reproduction travestie dans les Sonnets de Shakespeare.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20768147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040005X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"126fff93-21b5-33fc-85f8-7c058fcbe977"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20768147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"taxlawyer"}],"isPartOf":"The Tax Lawyer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":419.0,"pageEnd":"1515","pageStart":"1097","pagination":"pp. 1097-1515","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"IMPORTANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE YEAR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20768147","wordCount":197906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Shiff"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Handling Shocks: On the Representation of Experience in Walter Benjamin's Analogies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360503","wordCount":15961,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46979,47217]],"Locations in B":[[11099,11336]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael D. Kirkpatrick"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26587996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08263663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"473dc141-2e35-3dae-ab11-d5324a05e2d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26587996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajlatiamercar"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies \/ Revue canadienne des \u00e9tudes latino-am\u00e9ricaines et cara\u00efbes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mid-twentieth-century Guatemalan modernism and the anesthetic of progress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26587996","wordCount":11440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"This article uses Guatemala City's Centro C\u00edvico as a point of departure to consider the wider implications of shared Western epistemological assumptions during the ColdWar. It argues that an \"esthetic of progress\", based on notions of economic development as well as teleological beliefs about historical change, became a dominant artistic motif in mid-twentieth-century Guatemalan modernism, emblematic of the artists belonging to the Generation of 1940. Owing to the homogenizing tendencies of the idea of progress and its universality within Guatemalan politics, however, the article suggests that the esthetic of progress also possessed anesthetic qualities that muted its political importance. In so doing, the work of the Generation of 1940 appealed to a wide variety of political actors and the \"anesthetic of progress\" helps to explain why the Centro C\u00edvico project was conceived and constructed by governments of opposing ideological convictions. Prenant \u00e0 t\u00e9moin le centre civique de la ville de Guatemala, con\u00e7u et construit durant la guerre froide, cet article s'int\u00e9resse \u00e0 l'impact g\u00e9n\u00e9ral des pr\u00e9misses \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques occidentales de l'\u00e9poque. Il soutient qu'une \"esth\u00e9tique du progr\u00e8s\" (fond\u00e9e sur des notions de d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique et une vision t\u00e9l\u00e9ologique des changements historiques) a domin\u00e9 le modernisme guat\u00e9malt\u00e8que du milieu du 20e si\u00e8cle, l'embl\u00e8me des artistes de la G\u00e9n\u00e9ration de 1940. L'omnipr\u00e9sence de l'id\u00e9e de progr\u00e8s dans la politique guat\u00e9malt\u00e8que, de m\u00eame que son caract\u00e8re homog\u00e9n\u00e9isant nous am\u00e8nent toutefois \u00e0 consid\u00e9rer l'esth\u00e9tique du progr\u00e8s comme porteuse de qualit\u00e9s anesth\u00e9siantes, lesquelles ont min\u00e9 son importance politique. Ces forces contradictoires \u00e0 m\u00eame le travail de la G\u00e9n\u00e9ration de 1940 lui ont valu d'\u00eatre appr\u00e9ci\u00e9 d'une grande vari\u00e9t\u00e9 d'acteurs politiques. Ainsi, 'l'anesth\u00e9sie du progr\u00e8s' permet de comprendre pourquoi les gouvernements qui se sont succ\u00e9d\u00e9 \u00e0 cette \u00e9poque ont tous, malgr\u00e9 leurs divergences id\u00e9ologiques, particip\u00e9 \u00e0 la conception et \u00e0 la construction du centre civique.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40292527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2534f43-2ceb-3ed0-b516-6c5494f20439"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40292527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40292527","wordCount":25518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan A. Su\u00e1rez"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"910a9b8f-f53e-3949-b476-bc5b689491c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"652","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-652","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Warhol\u2019s 1960s\u2019 Films, Amphetamine, and Queer Materiality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0623","wordCount":13236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Cheyfitz"],"datePublished":"1989-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1898c148-09b8-346b-b150-5d35a5369a44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2713029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Matthiessen's American Renaissance: Circumscribing the Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713029","wordCount":10797,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2650,2735]],"Locations in B":[[67415,67500]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Tambling"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f225fa8-e9e0-334b-ba90-8688a5c244ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Towards a Psychopathology of Opera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823625","wordCount":9376,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48596,48653]],"Locations in B":[[1630,1687]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barrett Watten"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0467ccc-571b-320d-a868-87530ad9ab27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE CONSTRUCTIVIST MOMENT: FROM EL LISSITZKY TO DETROIT TECHNO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686083","wordCount":14002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-05-10","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05da648f-bdb5-3745-a27a-f15414917891"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1694559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"776","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-776","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694559","wordCount":23406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4700","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"228","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43870918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da31bc2b-3964-3ea7-8126-7c667eea7aa2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43870918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report: JULY 1, 2014-JUNE 30, 2015","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43870918","wordCount":8386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Howardena Pindell"],"datePublished":"1977-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44130284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328537"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570184597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efbda277-b90e-3d52-adf0-1ab5a594f3eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44130284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"princollnews"}],"isPartOf":"The Print Collector's Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-109, 120-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The Dreyfusards, Julien Benda, \"new class\" theorists, and Pierre Bourdieu treated intellectuals as potentially a class-in-themselves, that is, as having interests that distinguish them from other groups in society. Antonio Gramsci, Michel Foucault, and theorists of \"authenticity\" treated intellectuals as primarily class-bound, that is, representatives of their group of origin. Karl Mannheim, Edward Shils, and Randall Collins treated intellectuals as relatively class-less, that is, able to transcend their group of origin to pursue their own ideals. These approaches divided the field at its founding in the 1920s, during its mid-century peak, and in its late-century revival.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Menne"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2011.114.1.36","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6d8e329-50bc-3903-99b5-49063bec9a88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2011.114.1.36"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cinema of Defection: Auteur Theory and Institutional Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2011.114.1.36","wordCount":14319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":"This essay identifies a genre of Hollywood film developed in certain peak years of poststudio reorientation, 1967\u20131974, the narratives of which might be deemed anticlassical for their tendency to depict protagonists\u2014typically a defecting couple\u2014as objects more than subjects. These films, significantly the work of those directors known as auteurs, can be taken as the aesthetic version of the New Left's political repudiation of institutional life.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wu Hung"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f99e002d-223f-3cd4-93ea-11668bcf3340"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Painted Screen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344077","wordCount":15910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-08-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"082a7de2-4f13-355d-9f3c-b39ec233d9fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1695675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695675","wordCount":17358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4712","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"229","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1927-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5e1a23e-ca6f-33e7-a51c-4b2399f8a17b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1927,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twentieth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization. (To May 1926)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224186","wordCount":31734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stuart Culver"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Philosophy of language","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1x07z9t.14","wordCount":4747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Phillips"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25164635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25164635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6zd9v0.13","wordCount":7214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Beller"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.35.1.0046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee80b9ed-0c1a-3152-b6b6-728a2dc33650"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.35.1.0046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Metaphysics"],"title":"Building in \"Memento Mori\": Theses on the Photography of Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23289500","wordCount":6461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Alexandrine Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"First the concept of influence is questioned and, instead, the Derridean notion of 'border crossing', is introduced. This announces itself with a movement of a certain step [pas], which is also its negation. Second, it is stressed that 'architecture after photography' is about this undecidable border crossing. Architecture and photography both enter the zone of border crossing with an indivisible, or invisible line, separating and connecting, one step [pas] apart from each other, in the age of reproduction. Photography is thus presented as the 'vanishing mediator' between architecture and other disciplines. In this speculation, 'architecture after photography' is about death and the decentring subject of vision.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41367492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9142c98c-ba36-3d49-97e6-40c596716cc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41367492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41367492","wordCount":10255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5088","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. 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Rice"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Modern Chivalry and the Resistance to Textual Authority","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927789","wordCount":10886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Igor Polianski"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746105965"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234712"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e2fcb80-3b33-3586-8c23-d6209ad06e48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24573282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medizinhistj"}],"isPartOf":"Medizinhistorisches Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Nachlese","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573282","wordCount":1992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer L. 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Such practices involve the substitution of one entity for another entity, insofar as these entities have shared properties, and insofar as they hold a role in an obligatory position. For example, one man may substitute his labor for another man\u2019s labor insofar as men have similar degrees of strength and skill, and insofar as a position in a labor-pool must be filled. In this paper, I explore the relation between replacement, as an idea and institution, and \u2018lived time\u2019. To do this, I offer five different ways of framing temporality (as repetition, irreversibility, roots and fruits, reckoning, and worldview); and I show how replacement may be figured through each of these frames. Along the way, I show how entities caught up in replacement are different from other items of value, such as singularities and commodities; and I offer an entity-centered, as opposed to event-centered, framing of time. Entre los hablantes de maya q\u2019eqchi\u2019, la noci\u00f3n de remplazo (\u2013eeqaj) se refiere a actividades tan diversas como la fabricaci\u00f3n de una casa, la elecci\u00f3n de cargos civiles o religiosos, la venganza, los pr\u00e9stamos, las curaciones, el adulterio, o los tocayos. Dichas pr\u00e1cticas implican la sustituci\u00f3n de una entidad por otra, en la medida en que estas entidades comparten propiedades comunes, y que cumplen un papel en una posici\u00f3n obligatoria. Por ejemplo, un hombre puede substituirse a otro en un trabajo en la medida en que los dos hombres comparten grados similares de fuerza y habilidad, y que una posici\u00f3n en un equipo de trabajo tenga que ser ocupada. En este art\u00edculo, exploro la relaci\u00f3n entre el remplazo, entendido como idea e instituci\u00f3n, y el \u201ctiempo vivido\u201d. Para ello, propongo cinco modos distintos de abarcar la temporalidad (como repetici\u00f3n, irreversibilidad, ra\u00edces y frutos, c\u00e1lculo y visi\u00f3n del mundo); y muestro c\u00f3mo el remplazo puede concebirse en cada uno de estos marcos. En ese proceso, muestro tambi\u00e9n c\u00f3mo las entidades implicadas en la operaci\u00f3n de remplazo son diferentes de otros art\u00edculos de valor, tales como las singularidades y las mercanc\u00edas, y propongo una aprehensi\u00f3n del tiempo centrada en las entidades, mas que en los eventos. Pour les locuteurs du maya q\u2019eqchi\u2019, la notion de remplacement (\u2013eeqaj) r\u00e9f\u00e8re \u00e0 des activit\u00e9s aussi diverses que la construction d\u2019une maison, les \u00e9lections civiles et religieuses, la vengeance, les pr\u00eats, les cures m\u00e9dicinales, l\u2019adult\u00e8re ou encore les personnes homonymes. De telles pratiques impliquent la substitution d\u2019une entit\u00e9 par une autre, sous la condition que ces entit\u00e9s partagent des propri\u00e9t\u00e9s et remplissent un r\u00f4le \u00e0 une position obligatoire. Ainsi, le travail d\u2019un homme peut-il \u00eatre substitu\u00e9 par celui d\u2019un autre, dans la mesure o\u00f9 les deux hommes ont des degr\u00e9s similaires de force et d\u2019habilet\u00e9, et o\u00f9 une position au sein d\u2019une \u00e9quipe de travail doit \u00eatre occup\u00e9e. Dans cet article, j\u2019explore la relation entre le remplacement, en tant qu\u2019id\u00e9e et institution, et le \u00ab temps v\u00e9cu \u00bb. Pour ce faire, je propose cinq modes distincts de concevoir la temporalit\u00e9 (comme r\u00e9p\u00e9tition, irr\u00e9versibilit\u00e9, racines et fruits, mesure et vision du monde), et je montre comment le remplacement peut s\u2019inscrire au sein de chacun de ces modes. Ce faisant, je mets au jour la fa\u00e7on dont les entit\u00e9s prises dans des op\u00e9rations de remplacement diff\u00e8rent d\u2019items de valeur, tels que les singularit\u00e9s et les marchandises, et je propose d\u2019appr\u00e9hender le temps \u00e0 partir des entit\u00e9s plut\u00f4t que des \u00e9v\u00e8nements.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Lowood","Judith A. Adams","Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Katalin Hark\u00e1nyi","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"299e62da-5fa2-39cf-9586-800d5fd63784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":135.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1991)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106496","wordCount":78972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Raymond Derby"],"datePublished":"1949-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2871683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Romantic Movement: A Selective and Critical Bibliography for the Year 1948","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2871683","wordCount":23752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-05-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1721956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70e014c1-5e21-34a0-9976-a8b77e8332a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1721956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":100.0,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Physics","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826583","wordCount":12993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mxjv.24","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640680"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c65b65c-e831-3f88-a188-c2f5640da434"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mxjv.24"}],"isPartOf":"Digital Material","keyphrase":["virtual","new media","player","internet","network","culture","mona lisa","object","playing game","social"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"285","pagination":"285-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Sociology","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mxjv.24","wordCount":5069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donna J. Cox"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17487331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4cafa68-19e1-3cdd-907a-8d61d8b7c2cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonsuppissu"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo. Supplemental Issue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"The Tao of Postmodernism: Computer Art, Scientific Visualization and Other Paradoxes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557936","wordCount":5687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":"The author suggests that a paradigm shift must occur in art criticism to assimilate the nonlinear branching of aesthetic activities in our era. These activities include computer art and scientific visualization, and they reflect many issues addressed in postmodern dialogue such as our image-synthetic, \"simulacrum\" society. Postmodernism unexpectedly informs most disciplines, including the natural sciences, and is a cultural systemic norm that relates to our electronic information age. The Taoist concept of oneness is used as a metaphor for the interrelatedness of electronic-mediated societies, and this social connectedness explains the enfolding and complex nature of contemporary aesthetic activity. A cybernetic paradigm might provide a better model for criticism than modernism or postmodernism, since this paradigm presents a holistic view that concentrates on creativity and the organization of interrelated systems. The convergence of art with science is assumed as a logical interdisciplinary outgrowth of this electronic oneness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel Beckles Willson"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3526344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"613","pageStart":"602","pagination":"pp. 602-613","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Study in Geography, 'Tradition', and Identity in Concert Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526344","wordCount":7796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":"Responding to recent work on historical performance and to cultural anthropologies of music, this article presents a case study in performance practice within the Western classical tradition. It argues that the methods of performance preparation characteristic of the Hungarians Gy\u00f6rgy Kurt\u00e1g and Ferenc Rados share underlying beliefs that, while by no means representative of a 'school', nonetheless indicate a common tradition of thought. Through observation and analysis, I demonstrate that this is characterized by a shared sense of ancestry, an emphasis on 'nature' and spontaneity, and a rejection of artifice and rationality. Typical of a strand of post-Enlightenment thought (represented most prominently in musicology by Theodor Adorno), the belief system is yet more specifically congruent with modern ideas of 'Central Europe' as projected by Milan Kundera and subsequent writers from the former Eastern Bloc. In that it shuns rationalized commercialism (artifice, showbiz) it comes to celebrate imperfection. A celebrated, or 'necessary', failure emerges as a critique of modernity's reified slickness. In other words, performance practice equals social utopia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSANA VIEGAS"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08705283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"595601370"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"094d0b78-67d4-3d95-8a45-1ccd84b21c48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26869274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviportfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"2392","pageStart":"2375","pagination":"pp. 2375-2392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Philosophical Machine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869274","wordCount":7092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":"What is Philosophy?, the third volume of the series of books that Gilles Deleuze and F\u00e9lix Guattari wrote on \u201cCapitalism and Schizophrenia\u201d, presents us with a rather unusual idea, but one that is essential to understanding contemporary philosophical thought: the notion that philosophy is a concept-creating machine that must be connected to other machines, such as the arts and the sciences. Philosophy, science, and art are three distinct forms of reliable thinking. Given the heterogeneity of thinking, in what sense can the three distinct forms of thinking answer the problem of creating concepts and using the machine as an allegory? This essay aims to analyse philosophy\u2019s role in its relation to artistic and scientific practices by examining Dziga Vertov\u2019s Man with a Moving Camera (1929). It will focus on three guiding principles: creation is not exclusive to art and the sensible; philosophy mediates the relation between art and the sciences; and this mediation aims to keep their discord alive, not to solve it.","subTitle":"Vertov, Deleuze and Guattari on the Interchanging Movement from Art to Philosophy","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN BAZARGAN"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26798611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212528"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b40f3ed5-1de1-33af-90a3-ec7739565f68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26798611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Leopold Bloom and William Ellis's Three Visits to Madagascar<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26798611","wordCount":12794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19492,19589]],"Locations in B":[[49232,49329]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Fordham University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Photography, Botany, and Race","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elisabeth L. 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McNaughton"],"datePublished":"1983-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3544305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00301299"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47679669"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3544305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oikos"}],"isPartOf":"Oikos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Compensatory Plant Growth as a Response to Herbivory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3544305","wordCount":6615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Nordic Society Oikos","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Compensatory growth in plants subjected to herbivory may alleviate the potential deleterious effects of tissue damage, whether to vegetative or reproductive organs. Tissue destruction is rarely, if ever, translated monotonically into a proportional reduction of final yield. Internal mechanisms of compensation involve modifications of plant metabolism; external mechanisms of compensation involve modifications of the plant environment that are favorable to plant growth and yield. \/\/\/ \u041a\u043e\u043c\u043f\u0435\u043d\u0441\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0440\u043e\u0441\u0442 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0437\u0443\u043f\u044c\u0442\u0430\u0442\u0435 \u0432\u044b\u0435\u0434\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0444\u0438\u0442\u043e\u0444\u0430\u0433\u0430\u043c\u0438 \u043c\u043e\u0436\u0435\u0442 \u0441\u043c\u044f\u0433\u0447\u0430\u0442\u044c \u043f\u043e\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u043e\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0446\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u044d\u0444\u0444\u0435\u043a\u0442 \u043f\u043e\u0432\u0440\u0435\u0436\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0442\u043a\u0430\u043d\u0435\u0439 \u0432\u0435\u0433\u0435\u0442\u0430\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043b\u0438\u0431\u043e \u0440\u0435\u043f\u0440\u043e\u0434\u0443\u043a\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043e\u0440\u0433\u0430\u043d\u043e\u0432. \u0414\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0443\u043a\u0446\u0438\u044f \u0442\u043a\u0430\u043d\u0435\u0439 \u0440\u0435\u0434\u043a\u043e, \u0435\u0441\u043b\u0438 \u044d\u0442\u043e \u043d\u0430\u0431\u043b\u044e\u0434\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0432\u043e\u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435, \u043e\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0436\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0432 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u043f\u043e\u0440\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u043c \u0441\u043d\u0438\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0438 \u043e\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0447\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0443\u0440\u043e\u0436\u0430\u044f. \u0412\u043d\u0443\u0442\u0440\u0435\u043d\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u043a\u043e\u043c\u043f\u0435\u043d\u0441\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0437\u043c\u044b \u0432\u043a\u043b\u044e\u0447\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u043c\u043e\u0434\u0438\u0444\u0438\u043a\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0438 \u043c\u0435\u0442\u0430\u0431\u043e\u043b\u0438\u0437\u043c\u0430 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439; \u0432\u043d\u0435\u0448\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u043a\u043e\u043c\u043f\u0435\u043d\u0441\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0437\u043c\u044b \u0432\u043a\u043f\u044e\u0447\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u043c\u043e\u0434\u0438\u0444\u0438\u043a\u0430\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u0441\u0440\u0435\u0434\u044b, \u0441\u043f\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0431\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0443\u044e\u0449\u0438\u0435 \u0440\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0443 \u0438 \u0443\u0440\u043e\u0436\u0430\u0439\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asa G. Hilliard, III"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2295254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"370","pagination":"pp. 370-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Behavioral Style, Culture, and Teaching and Learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295254","wordCount":3524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27845771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10973152-c713-3e86-bedd-8fec662c509e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27845771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"594","pagination":"pp. 594-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27845771","wordCount":9085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bed\u0159ich Baumann"],"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41128362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5915bf89-feb4-30a8-b6fc-be647fd99cb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41128362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"490","pagination":"pp. 490-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pozoruhodn\u00fd polsk\u00fd p\u0159\u00edsp\u011bvek k sociologii filmu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41128362","wordCount":1704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorena Rizzo"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03615413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56138172"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236879"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f6d9fa8-b417-3046-8d43-571d12f4aaa6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26362090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyafrica"}],"isPartOf":"History in Africa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Visual Impersonation \u2014 Population Registration, Reference Books and Identification in the Eastern Cape, 1950s\u20131960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362090","wordCount":12324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"The paper looks at the population registration and issuing of reference books in the Transkei in the 1950s and 1960s. The dompas became the iconic object of apartheid policing within the logic of urban racial segregation and capitalist labour exploitation. The analysis proposed here investigates population registration through the lens of materiality and visuality. It sketches the visual economies that facilitated the scheme in a rural area and explores the role of photography in one of apartheid\u2019s most notorious administrative schemes. Along the lines of Walter Benjamin\u2019s reflections on technological mediation the paper retraces how the dompas as an image\/object oscillated between panoptic surveillance and subaltern contestation. Cet article concerne le recensement de population et l\u2019\u00e9mission de documents d\u2019identit\u00e9 (\u201creference books\u201d) au Transkei dans les ann\u00e9es \u201950 et \u201960. Le dompas devint un objet iconique du contr\u00f4le politique de l\u2019apartheid dans une logique de s\u00e9gr\u00e9gation raciale urbaine et d\u2019exploitation capitaliste du travail. L\u2019analyse ici propos\u00e9e s\u2019oriente sur le recensement de la population \u00e0 travers le filtre de la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 et de la visualit\u00e9. Elle \u00e9bauche les \u00e9conomies visuelles qui facilit\u00e8rent la mise en place de ce syst\u00e8me en milieu rural et explore le r\u00f4le de la photographie dans un des syst\u00e8mes administratifs de l\u2019apartheid les plus connus. Dans le sillage des r\u00e9flexions de Walter Benjamin sur la m\u00e9diation technologique, cet article montre comment le dompas en tant qu\u2019image\/objet oscilla entre surveillance panoptique et contestation \u201cpar le bas.\u201d","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Downey"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40606063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5363ba42-a99b-3e55-9d26-1c51ba1189bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40606063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"S40","pageStart":"S22","pagination":"pp. S22-S40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"'Practice without theory': a neuroanthropological perspective on embodied learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40606063","wordCount":10762,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"This paper, drawing on research on skill acquisition and sports training, asks two questions. First, how does the mimetic channel function and thus limit what can be acquired by bodily enculturation? Second, given that it was acquired through imitation, what must be the nature of the resulting bodily knowledge? These questions are addressed through a close examination of movement education, especially its neurological, psychological, and interactional dynamics in the Afro-Brazilian art capoeira. The study of embodied knowledge and its development in bodily practices suggests that gaining bodily skills requires more than 'knowledge', involving changes in physiology, perception, comportment, and behaviour patterns in unsystematic, diverse modes. Embodied knowledge from this perspective appears more complex, less systematic or susceptible to structural account, than typically modelled. \u00c0 partir de travaux sur l'acquisition de comp\u00e9tences et l'entra\u00eenement sportif, l'article pose deux questions. D'une part, comment fonctionne le canal mim\u00e9tique, et comment limite-t-il ce qui peut \u00eatre acquis par une enculturation corporelle ? D'autre part, sachant que l'apprentissage s'est fait par imitation, quelle peut \u00eatre la nature des connaissances corporelles en r\u00e9sultant ? Ces questions sont abord\u00e9es par le biais d'un examen attentif de l'\u00e9ducation au mouvement, et notamment de sa dynamique neurologique, psychologique et interactive, dans l'art afro-br\u00e9silien de la capoeira. L'\u00e9tude des connaissances incorpor\u00e9es et de leur d\u00e9veloppement dans les pratiques corporelles sugg\u00e8re que l'acquisition de comp\u00e9tences physiques n\u00e9cessite plus que des \u00ab connaissances \u00bb et implique des changements physiologiques, perceptifs et comportementaux de nature diverse et non syst\u00e9matique. De ce point de vue, les connaissances incorpor\u00e9es semblent plus complexes, moins syst\u00e9matiques ou susceptibles de faire l'objet d'un compte-rendu structural, que dans les mod\u00e8les classiques.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Abt"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23116644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20ba6521-a07d-39fb-bf57-6a9fd346c340"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23116644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23116644","wordCount":1802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ara H. Merjian"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ce49521-e513-3349-9465-22acc9c5c11b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23322152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Future by Design: Giacomo Balla and the Domestication of Transcendence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322152","wordCount":13889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Uncharacteristically for a Futurist, Giacomo Balla practised far more than he pontificated. His written corpus is slim. By contrast, his work in a spectrum of media \u2014 an extension of what he proposed, along with his colleague Fortunato Depero, as 'The Futurist Reconstruction of the Universe' (1915) \u2014 is the most wide-ranging of the original Futurist artists. Comprising everything from transformable clothes to smoking stands to designs for 'noise-making' buildings, Balla's corpus stands not only as a metaphor for Futurism's exponential ambitions, but a prototype for burgeoning notions of design. The productive tensions between practicality and dysfunction in his work, moreover, cut across the rigid pigeonholes into which early-twentieth-century modernism is so often slotted. Considering these tensions in the light of specific objects, I address how Balla's oeuvre frustrates certain art historical narratives: that the radicalism of the pre-war avant-garde was summarily chastened by a return to order that drained it of revolutionary mordancy; that the avant-garde's relationship to bourgeois material culture was one of utter negation; and that Futurism's ideological compromise lay chiefly in its willing engagement with the Fascist regime. At stake is not simply a reconsideration of Futurism's contribution to the total work of art, but the role of design \u2014 and its protean politics \u2014 as the inexorable surrogate of avant-garde totality.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"806625f0-d655-37b4-a6dc-c9ce2f29a779"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"460","pagination":"p. 460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374469","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Harrison"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"596eb514-5beb-3853-a278-ce1147e83798"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"After the Fall","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068454","wordCount":4048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Denys Johnson-Davies","\ufea9\ufef3\ufee8\ufef4\ufeb2 \ufe9f\ufeee\ufee7\ufeb4\ufeee\ufee5-\ufea9\ufef3\ufed4\ufef4\ufeb0","Ferial Ghazoul","\ufed3\ufeae\ufef3\ufe8e\ufedd 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Literature"],"title":"Collections and\/of Data:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt1cn6thb.30","wordCount":8426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Compared to other humanities disciplines, art history has a relatively recent origin story for the birth of an \u201cempirical\u201d version of the field. While nineteenth-century historians enshrined the Thucydidean rejection of supernatural causes and moral lessons as the mythical foundation for fact-based history, efforts to objectively map and understand the development of art (read: Western art) were still very much inchoate at the time (Suessmann, 85). This is not to say that there had been no attempts to systemically narrate the history of art-making. Such eighteenth-century thinkers as Johann Winkelmann and Gotthold Lessing sought to replace a prior emphasis on","subTitle":"Art History and the Art Museum in the DH Mode","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-05-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e91a114a-7e6a-3d17-bccf-2409087525e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1716324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":97.0,"pageEnd":"872","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-872","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716324","wordCount":48609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3671","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"148","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William N. 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Frickey","Lani Guinier"],"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b71f799e-0731-3b5c-b25b-1a2800af6243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":356.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-137+139-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 1993 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341990","wordCount":188427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marie E. 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Greiff"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"369c0cf4-d64b-3fae-95c4-5b6344890936"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44234495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234495","wordCount":1160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Gallope"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2014.31.2.199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af92619a-6e2c-35d7-8622-c4990f0821e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jm.2014.31.2.199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why was this Music Desirable? On A Critical Explanation of the Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2014.31.2.199","wordCount":14518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In the introduction to his Oxford History of Western Music (2005), Richard Taruskin writes that his account of music history is based in the work of individual people, their statements, and their actions, as opposed to the power of ideas, teleologies, and romantic attachments to style criticism. He also claims that a \u201ctrue history\u201d of music can overcome the survey genre by offering causal explanations of historical events. In his discussion of the Cold War avant-garde, however, Taruskin points the way toward a slightly different kind of historiography by employing what I call a critical explanation. It is based in a causal question\u2014Why was this desirable?\u2014but the ensuing explanation resembles the hermeneutics of suspicion typically associated with thinkers such as Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud, all of whom were skeptical of the view that individuals are agents of their actions. I argue that Taruskin\u2019s approach to the era has a methodological upshot, enabling readers to evaluate how the Cold War avant-garde might be linked with social and intellectual history in new ways. To demonstrate this, the article begins with a theoretical discussion of causality and its complex relationship to empiricism, proceeds through a survey of Taruskin\u2019s use of existentialism as a critical explanation of the Cold War avant-garde, and ends with an account of some historical details concerning the era\u2019s intellectual actors that expands on a few of the issues his critical explanation presents.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Homer A. Thompson","R. E. Wycherley"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15588610"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76886135"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2539a568-9816-3379-bec0-d7bc3d1e2e41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3601981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"athenianagora"}],"isPartOf":"The Athenian Agora","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":391.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. ii-v+vii-xxiii+1-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"The Agora of Athens: The History, Shape and Uses of an Ancient City Center","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601981","wordCount":172975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The American School of Classical Studies at Athens","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvqr1bnw.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0555e987-1ae3-3ced-8894-d6635117bb14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvqr1bnw.6"}],"isPartOf":"Boredom, Shanzhai, and Digitisation in the Time of Creative China","keyphrase":["bik chuen","clutter","frog king","anneke coppoolse","ranci\u00e8re","everyday","accessed","jacques ranci\u00e8re","everyday life","kwok mang"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"53","pagination":"53-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Business","Art & Art History","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Create No More!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvqr1bnw.6","wordCount":8626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Henri Lefebvre argues that the relation between interest and boredom may well be \u2018one of the dialectical movements within \u201cmodernity\u201d, one of its concealed movements\u2019.\u00b2 \u2018The interesting\u2019 or \u2018the new\u2019 is short-lived: it wears out and becomes boring.\u00b3 Modern boredom induces a desire for stimulation, which is often found in commodities. Modern life can therefore be seen as structured following a constant rejection of commodities and a demand for more. This is a global situation that prompts particular stories in different localities: also, in Hong Kong where space is limited and everyday conduct has been historically informed by an insistence","subTitle":"Clutter and Boredom, a Hong Kong Perspective","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward L. Greenstein"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvzpv5k8.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781946527837"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"429a1289-30ed-3c50-820f-065d641ab40f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvzpv5k8.11"}],"isPartOf":"Essays on Biblical Method and Translation","keyphrase":["bible translation","idiomatic","literal","language","hebrew","rosenzweig","literary","jewish","taber theory","literal mode"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"85","pagination":"85-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Theories of Modern Bible Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvzpv5k8.11","wordCount":16767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The Sumerians saw it as a nasty prank by a trickster god.\u00b9 The Israelites took it as the Creator\u2019s defense against the threat of human collaboration.\u00b2 It has been derogated by some as a barrier to human fellowship and lauded by others as an instrument for widening our perceptions. One mind. many languages \u2014 the universality of the human faculty for language, the diversity of human speech. Those who want to know what the other person is saying must learn that one\u2019s language or get a translation. The vast majority of those who want to hear what the Biblical God is","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesca Bray"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e785961-d39e-3f0b-b34d-0a58cac7ba26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/301876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Technics and Civilization in Late Imperial China: An Essay in the Cultural History of Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301876","wordCount":12255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Esposito"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b00b73f0-cacf-3f25-9918-292d4ee31dcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Antonioni and Benjamin: Dialectical Imagery in \"Eclipse\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018767","wordCount":5788,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41976,42232]],"Locations in B":[[31753,32013]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Day"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"873bc059-4f0c-3f65-aa2c-ef9929c350f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26488655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"828","pageStart":"775","pagination":"pp. 775-828","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"COMPETITION AND PIRACY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488655","wordCount":24393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"Intellectual property infringement has been characterized by over two hundred years of judicial opinions and scholarly writings as a socially destructive behavior akin to theft and trespassing. Modern intellectual property laws are faithful to this approach, punishing those who willfully infringe upon patent rights with treble damages and remedying acts of copyright infringement with statutory damages and, in some instances, prison time. This Article argues, however, that deterring infringement with such hyper\u2013compensatory remedies squanders the benefits of piracy. Using an economic framework, certain acts of infringement are shown to increase society\u2019s level of innovation and efficiency in ways that the law should\u2014but does not currently\u2014encourage. From a conceptual standpoint, infringement should be reframed as a rational response to intellectual property\u2019s anticompetitive structure, as opposed to a normatively bad behavior.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon P. 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Thus it is no coincidence that the development of an independent language of film can be","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Ackerman","Samuel Beckett"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1209027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44899691-e793-3f25-a264-13afa11e80de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1209027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Samuel Beckett's \"Spectres du Noir\": The Being of Painting and the Flatness of \"Film\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1209027","wordCount":18552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15547000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfe33054-02a3-37bb-afd6-f043540befb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26942993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"levinasstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Levinas Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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After an historical exploration of the role of cinematic representations of war and its aftermath in the development of American political culture, the article analyzes an increasingly complex, philosophically disturbing, and ideologically ambivalent cinematic genre of the past two decades, films concerned with the American war in Vietnam. While Hollywood films about the Vietnam war to date have disclosed the psychological and subjective dimensions and the toll the war took, they have systematically concealed the tougher, more important moral and political lessons that that tragedy has to teach us. As a form of mass entertainment, films may not exist primarily to help teach us such painful lessons; that social science and political theory can show us that they might is one of this article's animating hopes. \/\/\/ Le cin\u00e9ma offre \u00e0 l'observateur du politique et du social de riches possibilit\u00e9s d'analyse. Apr\u00e8s avoir fait l'historique de la repr\u00e9sentation cin\u00e9matographique de la guerre, et de ses suites, dans la culture politique \u00e9tatsunienne, l'article analyse les films am\u00e9ricains des vingt derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es traitant de la guerre du Vietnam. Ces films, lors m\u00eame qu'ils nous d\u00e9crivent les traumatismes psychologiques caus\u00e9s par la guerre, ignorent syst\u00e9matiquement le plus important: les le\u00e7ons morales et politiques qu'il conviendrait d'en tirer. Le cin\u00e9ma pourrait et devrait \u00eatre l'occasion d'une r\u00e9flexion politique et morale.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan P. Mains"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41147850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c1c224e-14c5-3a95-ac31-70570e76b59c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41147850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imagining the border and Southern spaces: Cinematic explorations of race and gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41147850","wordCount":11158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":"For some time the US-Mexico border has been a symbol - and site - of conflict, collaboration, and transnational mobility. Related to the border, the topic of undocumented immigration, and Mexican migrants in particular, has received considerable attention in US mainstream media. Cinema in particular, provides a context for producing and interrogating discourses of nationalism, nativism, and fear. The cinematic examples I draw on illustrate an ongoing fear (and terror) about borders and border crossing of various forms. In this paper I explore how narratives of borders and nationhood are mapped onto immigrant bodies and border spaces through specific filmic representations. In order to undertake this study I focus on three cinematic examples exploring immigration at the US-Mexico border - Touch of Evil, The Border and Lone Star. I examine how concepts of borders, race, and gender, and tropes of The South' are reterritorialized around immigrant bodies and specific locales. I argue that an inability to control and 'fix' boundaries around possible 'threats' to specific US spaces and identities is counteracted by displacing this fear onto more easily marked targets that are viewed as posing challenges to US national (and personal) security, i.e., undocumented immigrants. At the same time, cinematic images illustrate that the threats and spaces for immigrants themselves become increasingly marginalized, blurred, and frequently erased.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Bernstein"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87dcdf69-318b-3642-a4db-882e446609c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20492227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"346","pagination":"pp. 346-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Objectivist Blues: Scoring Speech in Second-Wave Modernist Poetry and Lyrics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492227","wordCount":9471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc2c9790-928e-3461-bc0d-fdabf71c16e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948708","wordCount":18987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1467","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vanessa Warne"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3bc0c4d-1bcb-3b4a-be76-24bb39c9670d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20084128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thackeray among the Annuals: Morality, Cultural Authority and the Literary Annual Genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084128","wordCount":8638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph F. Grcar"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23070113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00361445"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e65bdf5-f459-3389-aa17-c9dbaf6c61b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23070113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"siamreview"}],"isPartOf":"SIAM Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"682","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-682","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"John von Neumann's Analysis of Gaussian Elimination and the Origins of Modern Numerical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23070113","wordCount":39549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"Just when modern computers (digital, electronic, and programmable) were being invented, John von Neumann and Herman Goldstine wrote a paper to illustrate the mathematical analyses that they believed would be needed to use the new machines effectively and to guide the development of still faster computers. Their foresight and the congruence of historical events made their work the first modern paper in numerical analysis. Von Neumann once remarked that to found a mathematical theory one had to prove the first theorem, which he and Goldstine did for the accuracy of mechanized Gaussian elimination\u2014but their paper was about more than that. Von Neumann and Goldstine described what they surmized would be the significant questions once computers became available for computational science, and they suggested enduring ways to answer them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAMELA ROBERTSON WOJCIK"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30d642d8-81e2-3465-b06d-035a69b27eb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Sound of Film Acting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688517","wordCount":8338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24888375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0be7c1dc-1505-3058-a2cd-2710b7d30cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24888375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report: JULY 1, 2015\u2014JUNE 30, 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24888375","wordCount":8934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben G. Blount"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/680344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0073eeab-a519-313e-ad89-a012a7ba10b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/680344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"702","pagination":"pp. 702-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Issues in Bonobo (Pan Paniscus) Sexual Behavior","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/680344","wordCount":7535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"Sexual behavior is one of the reported similarities between Pan paniscus and Homo sapiens that has stimulated recent interest in the phylogeny of the Pan and the Australopithecus\/Homo genera. Similarities do exist, but an understanding of the forms and functions of Pan paniscus sexual behavior is best achieved through a comparison to Pan troglodytes. Pan paniscus shows increased female receptivity, variability in copulatory position, male or female initiation of sexual behavior, differential male and female preferences for copulatory position, and association of food sharing and sexual behavior. Their sexual behavior appears to function in proximate terms as a tension-reduction mechanism. Lowered tension, in turn, facilitates multi-male, multi-female social groups. Lowered levels of aggression and increased sexual activity appear to be associated with paedomorphism, and the behavioral and anatomical\/physiological characteristics of the species appear to be a consequence of a feeding ecology that promotes large groupings of the animals at preferential and comparatively rich feeding sites.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Smith"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26059824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09683445"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42423837"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfaa3137-d6e4-3a5f-8af8-7df17e4302dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26059824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"warinhistory"}],"isPartOf":"War in History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History","Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"Bletchley Park and the Development of the Rockex Cipher Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26059824","wordCount":9966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"AbstractIn 1943 Britain's security experts began to investigate the development of new cipher machine technologies. This resulted in the creation of the initial projects to construct the Rockex family of cipher systems. The development of the systems marked a major step in the building of a technocratic culture within Britain's primary wartime cryptanalysis agency, the Government Code and Cypher School housed at Bletchley Park. This article explores the evolution of Bletchley Park's wartime technocratic culture and utilizes the Rockex project as a case study; moreover it establishes the importance of the project as a catalyst of further institutional cultural change.","subTitle":"Building a Technocratic Culture, 1941\u20131945","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"683ecd44-d2cb-3670-89e7-f94cb389ab95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250817","wordCount":2694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44807148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346632"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60547586"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f58774-a1c0-32f0-aa25-4d5bea8aa2e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44807148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revmetaphysics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Metaphysics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"PHILOSOPHICAL ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44807148","wordCount":11643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Philosophy Education Society Inc.","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary D. Sandefur"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67169155-19e4-30e9-bb51-d2bfafa05a5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1472","pageStart":"1470","pagination":"pp. 1470-1472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231104","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b688ec6-fc99-3cfd-8bdc-d131cd974b1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25564892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art, Politics, Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564892","wordCount":4581,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56079]],"Locations in B":[[13670,13798]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"123","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hugh Brigstocke","Eckart Marchand","A. E. Wright"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"741483181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"944d818e-d173-3fea-8609-991b576dba95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41830771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":625.0,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45, 47-87, 89-117, 119-185, 187-285, 287-339, 341-575, 577-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"JOHN FLAXMAN AND WILLIAM YOUNG OTTLEY IN ITALY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830771","wordCount":249636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD KEARNEY"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE CRISIS OF NARRATIVE IN CONTEMPORARY CULTURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439060","wordCount":6045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"This article explores the crisis of narrative in contemporary culture. It begins by examining the challenge represented by the mass media for the continuing art of storytelling. Taking up Walter Benjamin's warning that we are moving from an age of narrative experience to an age of instant information, it analyses the implications of the post-modern 'cult of simulation' for education, historiography and ethics. The paper concludes by advocating a critical hermeneutic approach as the most apt response to this contemporary dilemma. Only by means of such hermeneutic retrieval, inspired by the work of Ricoeur and Gadamer, can we avoid the current reduction of temporal experience to a 'depthless present' without past or future, thereby reaffirming the crucial narrative dimensions of historical memory and hope.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TRICIA STUTH"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e94cf70-9e06-3d09-8369-cc63a767f346"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20778820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Continuity, Criticality, and Change: The Barnes Foundation Controversy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778820","wordCount":9947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"This article reconsiders a joint seminar and studio that studied how an expanded vision of site and culture influences architectural production. The Barnes Foundation controversy provided a vehicle for this study. The Barnes is a private, world-renowned collection of art situated in an unlikely suburban Philadelphia neighborhood. Arguing that its current home was untenable, in 2002 the foundation announced plans to relocate\u2014a move that runs counter to its founding charter, which bars any change to the collection, its content, or its location. Against a background of continued public protest and legal appeals, the Barnes decision prompts myriad vexing questions that are valuable for consideration in architectural education. Chief among these: is replication a valid, meaningful, or sufficient way to preserve cultural value, and if so, how?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Overbergh"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f33217d-ada7-3118-a48d-c6dd1e71f72b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Technological innovation and the diversification of audiovisual storytelling circuits in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758422","wordCount":8880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Through a selection of case studies this article demonstrates how technological innovation in Kenya is instrumental in an emerging diversification in the production and the distribution of local audiovisual narratives. The article thus adds a new perspective to the literature on technological innovation and related evolutions in African film industries, which so far has focused largely on technology's democratizing effects, particularly with the emergence of popular cinema. I posit that, more than being part of a democratizing process in movie-making, technology makes a greater diversity in audiovisual narratives and new means of dissemination possible. However, other factors \u2013 economic, social, societal, demographic \u2013 influence the outcome and the mid-to-long term sustainability of new circuits of audiovisual storytelling. In other words, technology can facilitate but cannot in itself 'establish' diversification.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LIAM LENIHAN"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907915"},{"name":"oclc","value":"312753405"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ad371a-8728-320d-b815-4d599b77c92b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24389727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentirel"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Ireland \/ Iris an d\u00e1 chult\u00far","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Arguing for Art: James Barry's Cultural Strategy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389727","wordCount":11612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Eighteenth-Century Ireland Society","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This article explores the cultural strategies James Barry (1741-1806) deployed in his writings on art throughout his artistic career. In commercial terms, Barry was a marginal figure who worked in an artistic genre, history painting, in aesthetic and economic decline. However, throughout his literary career, Barry argued for the artistic, philosophical and cultural centrality of the history painter in shaping an enlightened public in late eighteenth-century London. This article examines the various ways Barry drew on historical, political and aesthetic precedents \u2013 embodied by diverse literary, mythological and artistic figures \u2013 to argue for the importance of the genre of history painting in general and his own history painting work, notably The Progress of Human Culture, in particular.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lloyd","Paul Thomas"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Society or \"Culture and the State\"?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466465","wordCount":14733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"30","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George P. Watkins"],"datePublished":"1907-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2999952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10497498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45879060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3541ebf0-dc62-361a-84f9-813bd4f2f84f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2999952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publamereconasso"}],"isPartOf":"Publications of the American Economic Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":170.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1907,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Growth of Large Fortunes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2999952","wordCount":55353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40716724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05775132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38571860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-214721"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffd2014b-ded2-33b8-a2c9-863ce3d3a7f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40716724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"challenge"}],"isPartOf":"Challenge","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Little Books\u2014BIG Business","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40716724","wordCount":2452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.13.3.0053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e3d6117-42ee-3ea9-90b0-da9840a2c85a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.13.3.0053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Scattering Being: Leo Bersani and Diasporic Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.13.3.0053","wordCount":14159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Becherer"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cc82744-376f-3e90-bf4f-8a0477d01fd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 16-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Past Remembering: Robert Mallet-Stevens's Architecture of Duration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171440","wordCount":11792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"31","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARELYS VALENCIA"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03614441"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54052869"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b93a591-2c2c-3c32-b8fa-a773ba8370dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26614623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cubanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Cuban Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Por primera vez<\/em> y Coffea Ar\u00e1biga<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614623","wordCount":9605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"46","publisher":"University of Pittsburgh Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"El despliegue del documental cubano tiene lugar en los a\u00f1os sesenta. Los cineastas comienzan a experimentar con ideas y conceptos tanto de Europa Occidental como del llamado Bloque Comunista, que se referenciar\u00e1n en este trabajo. A partir del an\u00e1lisis textual de dos documentales, exploramos la reflexividad como una herramienta conceptual y cr\u00edtica utilizada por los cineastas para visualizar el proceso mismo de producci\u00f3n cinematogr\u00e1fica. Comparo este concepto en las obras Por primera vez, de Octavio Cort\u00e1zar, y Coffea Ar\u00e1biga, de Nicol\u00e1s Guill\u00e9n Landri\u00e1n. El primero afirma la distancia entre espectadores urbanos y rurales, una brecha que intenta disminuir al transmitir el autodescubrimiento del campesino como audiencia. A pesar de que el documental revela al individuo detr\u00e1s de las masas (a lo Ivens), el supuesto sujeto protagonista de la revoluci\u00f3n est\u00e1 privado de agencia en ambos proyectos: el cine y la agenda del estado. En cambio, la reflexividad de Coffea Ar\u00e1biga arroja luz sobre la falibilidad de las narrativas dentro y fuera del arte. Revela la naturaleza construida de los reg\u00edmenes de la verdad, reivindicados por la revoluci\u00f3n y el g\u00e9nero documental. The national and international display of the Cuban documentary has its place in the 1960s, when film makers began to experiment with ideas and concepts from both Western Europe and the so-called Communist Bloc. From the textual analysis of two documentaries, we grapple with reflexivity as a conceptual and critical tool used by cinematographers to visualize the very process of filmmaking. I attempt to compare this concept in the works Por primera vez, by Octavio Cort\u00e1zar, and Coffea Ar\u00e1biga, by Nicol\u00e1s Guill\u00e9n Landri\u00e1n. The former affirms the distance between urban and rural spectators, a gap that it attempts to diminish by conveying the campesino\u2019s self-discovery as audience. Moreover, despite the fact that the documentary reveals the individual behind the masses (a l\u00e0 Ivens), the supposed subject or protagonist of the revolution is deprived of agency in both projects: the film and the state political agenda. On the other hand, Coffea Ar\u00e1biga\u2019s reflexivity sheds light on narrative fallibility both within and outside art; it reveals the constructed nature of regimes of truth, entangled and claimed either by the revolution or the documentary genre.","subTitle":"Dos po\u00e9ticas documentales reflexivas en el ojo de la tormenta revolucionaria de los a\u00f1os sesenta","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1308364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b55fb7b4-5880-303d-84e4-6a027a29ab98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1308364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"843","pageStart":"797","pagination":"pp. 797-843","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1308364","wordCount":6267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Reid Busk"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.37.4.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43c18bbd-abcb-3fdf-96fe-f07638332523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.37.4.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rag-and-Bone Angel: The Angelus Novus in Charles Bernstein's Shadowtime<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.37.4.1","wordCount":8094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"When analyzing Walter Benjamin's oeuvre, and perhaps in particular his \u201cTheses on the Philosophy of History,\u201d many commentators have pointed out the apparently irreconcilable strains of dialectical materialism and Jewish Messianism in his thought. In Charles Bernstein's libretto to the opera Shadowtime, which focuses on the last night of Benjamin's life, Bernstein wrestles with these competing worldviews poetically. While Bernstein does not attempt to reconcile Benjamin's idiosyncratic thought, he does point out ways that the apparently divergent strands can be understood side-by-side. In particular, he focuses on the image of the Angelus Novus, the Angel of History, an image Benjamin fleshes out in his essay, based upon the Paul Klee painting that Benjamin himself owned.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frieder Nake"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94088f77-7951-3aff-bed7-e5f574214539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40598954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Semiotic Engine: Notes on the History of Algorithmic Images in Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598954","wordCount":6604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janet Johnson"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b156eb9-6024-3e35-8b33-fd2f335d1e92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831955","wordCount":7275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas D. Clark","Pamela J. Bennett","Frances J. Krauskopf"],"datePublished":"1964-03-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161391X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35781793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba777000-2734-362c-96ab-e1400a677fc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24026151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missvallhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Valley Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":453.0,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-x, 1-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fifty-Year Index: Mississippi Valley Historical Review, 1914-1964","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026151","wordCount":703390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1931-02-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1655774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26b79f01-bca8-3677-9759-6c10db523329"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1655774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The American Association for the Advancement of Science: Reports of the Fourth Cleveland Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Associated Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1655774","wordCount":27582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1884","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent Demoulin"],"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4353870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00068101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b37760c-6fa1-36f5-a545-6522ac0ad359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4353870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"botarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Botanical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Origin of Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes: The Case for a Red Algal Ancestry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4353870","wordCount":12984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"An updated argumentation is presented in favour of the red algal ancestry of the Ascomycetes and Basidiomycetes. The features they present in common with red algae, especially in life cycle and ultrastructure, are considered as less easily explained by convergent evolution than biochemical similarities between those fungi and Chytridiomycetes. The origin of higher fungi is supposed to be through parasitic red algae giving rise to parasitic fungi, the borderline of red algae and higher fungi being considered a delay in caryogamy which has some morphological consequence on the cysts where this event finally occurs. \/\/\/ Une argumentation mise \u00e0 jour est pr\u00e9sent\u00e9e en faveur de l'origine rhodophyc\u00e9enne des Ascomyc\u00e8tes et des Basidiomyc\u00e8tes. Les caract\u00e8res qu'ils pr\u00e9sentent en commun avec les algues rouges, sp\u00e9cialement du point de vue des cycles reproductifs et de l'ultrastructure sont de l'avis de l'auteur moins ais\u00e9ment expliqu\u00e9 par une \u00e9volution convergente que les similitudes biochimiques entre ces champignons et les Chytridiomyc\u00e8tes. L'origine des champignons sup\u00e9rieurs est suppos\u00e9e \u00eatre le passage d'algues rouges parasites \u00e0 des champignons parasites, la limite entre les deux groupes \u00e9tant un d\u00e9lai dans la caryogamie qui eut certaines cons\u00e9quences morphologiques sur les cystes o\u00f9 cet \u00e9v\u00e9nement est finalement report\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24190629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569508573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"524fb1ee-f4b0-38e4-a2f4-0bdecbb4314a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24190629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglassstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Glass Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CHECK LIST of Recently Published Articles and Books on Glass 1979","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24190629","wordCount":37637,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Corning Museum of Glass","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel T. Goggin","Carmen R. Delle Donne"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d091cafb-5208-380c-81e2-dc65145d7c46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40291708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"627","pagination":"pp. 627-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"News Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291708","wordCount":12103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID J. WRIGHT"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40660577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"881f61b5-e8bc-3898-994c-fcd734493c36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40660577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"659","pageStart":"658","pagination":"pp. 658-659","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40660577","wordCount":1062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugene Lunn"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7a351b7-4d05-35e5-8d92-ca4795351e58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marxism and Art in the Era of Stalin and Hitler: A Comparison of Brecht and Luk\u00e1cs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487735","wordCount":13915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Diener","E. N. Anderson, Jr.","Michael I. Asch","Susan M. Ford","Kenneth Maddock","Donald M. Nonini","Eugene E. Robkin","Frederick J. Simoons","Philip Richard Thompson","Martin Van Bakel"],"datePublished":"1980-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf8bdda-6541-3948-9d10-52d7c3f3521f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2742057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Quantum Adjustment, Macroevolution, and the Social Field: Some Comments on Evolution and Culture [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742057","wordCount":25096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Ever since the neo-Darwinian synthesis, stability models have dominated both ecology and population genetics. This has discouraged the biological study of progressive evolution. The introduction of biological models into cultural anthropology has been marked by an emphasis upon stability models as well, and progressive evolution in cultural systems has therefore not received adequate attention. Recent developments in the life sciences, however, have made progressive macroevolution a topic of great interest. In this paper, some biological ideas are used as \"creative analogies\" for cultural theory, taking the origin of Indian sacred-cattle practices as an example. Quantum behavior adjustments, macroevolutionary speciation events, and field sensitivity are three issues of interest to both biologists and cultural anthropologists.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Constance Pierce"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c6de5ce-bd35-3924-b274-2fde2d26cee1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Language \u2022 Silence \u2022 Laughter: The Silent Film and the \"Eccentric\" Modernist Writer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685385","wordCount":8755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BECKETT STERNER","SCOTT LIDGARD"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44980374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33140d4a-fd06-3d80-b376-21da261d926c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44980374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Moving Past the Systematics Wars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44980374","wordCount":14682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"It is time to escape the constraints of the Systematics Wars narrative and pursue new questions that are better positioned to establish the relevance of the field in this time period to broader issues in the history of biology and history of science. To date, the underlying assumptions of the Systematics Wars narrative have led historians to prioritize theory over practice and the conflicts of a few leading theorists over the lesspolarized interactions of systematists at large. We show how shifting to a practiceoriented view of methodology, centered on the trajectory of mathematization in systematics, demonstrates problems with the common view that one camp (cladistics) straightforwardly \"won\" over the other (phenetics). In particular, we critique David Hull's historical account in Science as a Process by demonstrating exactly the sort of intermediate level of positive sharing between phenetic and cladistic theories that undermines their mutually exclusive individuality as conceptual systems over time. It is misleading, or at least inadequate, to treat them simply as holistically opposed theories that can only interact by competition to the death. Looking to the future, we suggest that the concept of workflow provides an important new perspective on the history of mathematization and computerization in biology after World War II.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josie Gill"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc6a6ec6-1e44-3f6c-95f7-384bc02d09d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"862","pageStart":"844","pagination":"pp. 844-862","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"WRITTEN ON THE FACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421759","wordCount":8597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":"RACE AND EXPRESSION IN KAZUO ISHIGURO'S NEVER LET ME GO<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy M. Lilly"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cfe6332-1a53-31dd-b300-8f94fd511d2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fascist Aesthetics and Formations of Collective Subjectivity in \"Finnegans Wake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473996","wordCount":8953,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56051]],"Locations in B":[[30021,30121]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maura Nolan"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/chaucerrev.47.4.0465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43359050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b66a2ae-d76c-3af0-a0af-2317c81c8d6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/chaucerrev.47.4.0465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Medieval Habit, Modern Sensation:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/chaucerrev.47.4.0465","wordCount":4857,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743],[8276,8702]],"Locations in B":[[16668,16746],[21948,22374]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Reading Manuscripts in the Digital Age","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Siegel"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b214741-e23e-38c2-b61d-69c2f9ac6f4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Babbage's Apparatus: Toward an Archaeology of the Black Box","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442765","wordCount":10355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"28","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn Spigel"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"424befcc-478c-3d65-bd68-2008417318c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44072149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back to the Drawing Board: Graphic Design and the Visual Environment of Television at Midcentury","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072149","wordCount":13742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"This article explores the history of graphic design on television of the midcentury period. Modern graphic design played a major role in early television, both aesthetically and politically. Nevertheless, historians have for the most part neglected the relationships between design and the television image. After offering an overview of title art at the networks, the article focuses on \"star\" designers like Charles and Ray Eames, who worked on TV specials produced by major corporations. TV specials used graphic design to promote ideologies of progress through consumerism and to promote America itself as the center of progress for the \"free world.\" Finally, the article considers some of the countercultural trajectories of TV graphics during the 1960s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annette Yoshiko Reed"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"558539b0-2b8a-3211-8f85-fd1f27f5acf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"From Sacrifice to the Slaughterhouse: Ancient and Modern Approaches to Meat, Animals, and Civilization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907142","wordCount":21545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"This essay uses a focus on meat and animals to illumine ancient and modern discourses about sacrifice and \"civilization.\" It suggests that attention to recent research on meat-production and the \"sociology of the slaughterhouse\" might open new perspectives on the range of ways in which the sanctified ritual slaughter of animals has been understood by its proponents, critics, and theorists\u2014both ancient and modern. It begins by historicizing the rise of modern scholarly interest in animal sacrifice, with reference to dramatic shifts in the production and consumption of meat in modern European societies. Then, it looks to the Vedas and the Torah\/Pentateuch to reflect upon the place of meat and animals in two of the best documented of ancient sacrificial systems. Lastly, it considers some trajectories in their Nachleben with an eye to the value and limits of dominant narratives about the cessation, interiorization, or spiritualization of sacrifice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert William Rix"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/681804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42815961"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ebae6b2-7178-37f2-b0dd-d8535d903d3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/681804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyreligions"}],"isPartOf":"History of Religions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Joanna Southcott and the Strange Effects of Printing: Publishing Prophecies in the Early Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/681804","wordCount":9404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rob Wilkie"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt14brzk3.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780823234226"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab5e092a-edde-3a03-8fe4-eded1122b241"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt14brzk3.7"}],"isPartOf":"The Digital Condition","keyphrase":["derrida","writing","mallarme","reality","reading","reading and writing","mimesis","theory","meaning","capitalism"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"122","pagination":"122-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reading and Writing in the Digital Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt14brzk3.7","wordCount":20123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One of the main arguments in cultural theory today is that the transition from what is described as a closed print-based culture to an open digital culture is part of a broader shift in how culture is produced and consumed. It is argued that digital technologies turn consumers and readers into producers and writers by giving them access to the necessary tools for remixing and remaking culture for themselves. In this chapter, I locate the question of cultural production within a broader historical debate over the status of mimesis and propose that the theory of nonmimetic reflection, in which culture","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miguel Vatter"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20616533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-57, 59-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"In Odradek's World: Bare Life and Historical Materialism in Agamben and Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616533","wordCount":15982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26474645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2502fabf-07c0-3bb3-82e7-a95aea5886f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26474645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Subject Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43041541","wordCount":64286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Brigham Young University","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1845699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43024caa-2803-36c7-b9f6-ad52a3eacf16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1845699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":134.0,"pageEnd":"632","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-632","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The study of angels (\u2018angelology\u2019\u00b9) is an epiphenomenon of monotheism: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam have added a more or less extensive army of angels to the statuary isolation of their God; the constitutional invisibility, unrepresentability, and remoteness of God is therefore supplemented with the offer of something holy that is visible, representable, and close, which takes on an allegorical form in angels. Angels are not simply there, but rather","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wolfgang M. Freitag"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2fcb31-0222-3b98-a5a3-30df00862fb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Early Uses of Photography in the History of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776397","wordCount":5380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shubhangana Atre"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43941279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03781143"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297259348"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3032d1e-4d4f-3dbf-adfc-f308ac075bdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43941279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annbhaoriresins"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE FEMININE AS ARCHETYPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43941279","wordCount":17812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3526453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526453","wordCount":3967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fdda583-929d-3f5c-9dea-76c65bc8e05e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3102649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"S184","pageStart":"S141","pagination":"pp. S141-S184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"IV. Metaphysical and Epistemological Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102649","wordCount":26754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander M. 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H. Dettmar"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e18c7fc9-9ac0-3cfe-aa32-26ca7a42ec32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25515769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"812","pageStart":"795","pagination":"pp. 795-812","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Selling \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515769","wordCount":8308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"30\/31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans H. Gerth"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6155a5f6-e9b4-36cf-9acc-4af238db7d87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20007155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Development of Social Thought in the United States and Germany: Critical Observations on the Occasion of the Publication of C. Wright Mills' \"White Collar\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007155","wordCount":24070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Weinstock Netanel"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3ba0add-4e9c-382f-9052-255fc5ed8e81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Locating Copyright within the First Amendment Skein","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229424","wordCount":44936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8228bc4-8659-3bfc-bb34-295e08af503e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1914330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":480.0,"pageEnd":"549","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Biographical Listing of Members","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914330","wordCount":1102890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian R. Jacobson"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84fad530-26b0-371b-8e2c-0fe2064594a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"EX MACHINA<\/em> IN THE GARDEN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413710","wordCount":8251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Flint"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e094fa53-e7c6-34a3-9ee4-34490c59d149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Surround, Background, and the Overlooked","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.3.449","wordCount":8408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"Abstract This piece invites attention to the background of photographs, or, as James Elkins would call it, the surround. He argues that the characteristics of the surround mean that this feature can be used to distinguish the genre of photography from that of painting. This essay maintains that there is much more of an overlap between photography and painting in this respect than he allows, since photographic surrounds were frequently artificial, or depended on aesthetic effects. It considers two different types of Victorian and early Edwardian photographs to support this claim: studio portraits, especially those featuring members of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show posed against non-Native scenes; and those in which atmospheric darkness was created through flash.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James S. Miller"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Inventing the \"Found\" Object: Artifactuality, Folk History, and the Rise of Capitalist Ethnography in 1930s America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137716","wordCount":11692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"466","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":"As numerous scholars have chronicled, the decade of the 1930s in America witnessed an explosion ofpopular interest in the presumptions and protocols of cultural ethnography. The Depression years were a time when such academic-sociological studies as Constance Rourke's American Humor, Zora Neal Hurston's Mules and Men, Ruth Benedict's Patterns of Culture, and Howard Odum's various studies of rural Appalachia became virtual bestsellers in their own right-each animated by what might be called an indexical-excavatory enthusiasm for unearthing, itemizing, and exhibiting the vestiges (both material and human) of America's putatively \"vanishing\" past. This article sets out to assess the cultural and ideological work this wide-ranging impulse performed, probing the ways that mainstream or popular ethnography in the 1930s (despite its often explicit interest in critiquing or challenging commercial modernity) came to underwrite a particular and highly over-determined narrative of corporate-capitalist \"progress.\" To accomplish this, I examine three discrete yet exemplary ethnographic texts: Dorothea Lange's An American Exodus, John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, and James Agee and Walker Evans's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men. Documenting places and people feared to be most immediately threatened by industrial-commercial development, I argue that these writers ultimately depicted America's socioeconomic fringes not as the repository of a redemptive \"folk\" culture, but as the site and source of commercial capitalism's own heroic and authentic \"roots.\" Behind their interest in excavating and documenting the artifacts of a bygone age was a more formative desire to invent a model of the vernacular past that could somehow imbue capitalism's rationalized and articulated operations with a tangible sense of historicity, a palpable and authenticating texture of \"pastness.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William V. 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In Falling Man, intervention comes in the form of David Janiak, a performance artist who encourages New Yorkers to refocus attention on the body. In Man in the Dark, Auster examines both the appeal and the hazards of images, showing how the lure of the media can eventually lead to disaster. In Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, Foer and his characters subvert public spectacle by appropriating visual and print media for private purposes. Looking at these three novels together, we can see that post-9\/11 fiction challenges readers to develop an ethics that can respond to the aesthetics of an age dominated by images.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELISHA COHN"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41818873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bd554cf-6e22-34bb-9512-3873023da13e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41818873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"860","pageStart":"843","pagination":"pp. 843-860","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Still Life: Suspended Animation in Charlotte Bront\u00eb's \"Villette\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41818873","wordCount":7829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"This essay considers Charlotte Bronte's Villette (1853) as an intervention in Victorian literature's assumptions about individual consciousness and its alliance with moral perfectionism. 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But by the 1980s and '90s, angura was co-opted. Even so, there is some critical and transgressive post-angura theatre worth noting, most especially Kawamura Takeshi's Daisan Erotica.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Gregory Cornelius"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08488525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61236541"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237202"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edac1821-d1f0-3fbf-aeac-afac07e517e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aptbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"APT Bulletin: The Journal of Preservation Technology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Museum Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cement and Concrete, Creativity and Community, and Charles E. Peterson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004677","wordCount":8769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Association for Preservation Technology International (APT)","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Lee"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20755722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b918d210-111c-33f5-98d2-6186db6781e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20755722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Readings in the \u00bbNew Science\u00ab A Selective Annotated Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20755722","wordCount":17246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1 (65)","publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"In this sampling of the literature\u2014under the rubrics Undecidability, Uncertainty and Complexity; Macrostructures: Systems and the Human Scale (Entropy, Dynamical Systems, Computation); The Very Big and the Very Small: Physics, Astrophysics and Cosmology; Time; Culture and Epistemology\u2014the emphasis is on the complexity brought to focus in studies of dynamical systems. The recent flowering of this work, characteristically scornful of traditional disciplinary boundaries, evidences, shift to relation over substance, synthesis over reduction, simulation over analysis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Davis","Edward Levine"],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5e00a5a-225c-3eb0-b19d-7079a4ab476d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Challenge of New Media: Two Viewpoints","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776495","wordCount":4058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seymour Howard"],"datePublished":"1988-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051178","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12c1874-2489-39fa-a0dc-7b94fa425dcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"485","pageStart":"478","pagination":"pp. 478-485","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bartolomeo Cavaceppi's Saint Norbert","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051178","wordCount":7483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"Cavaceppi's lost statue of Saint Norbert, once erected in stucco near the crossing in St. Peter's as the concluding monument of the Founders of the Church series, is here published in the form of a once-suppressed contemporary print, recently rediscovered. The complex machinations leading to the original commission and the statue's rejection and removal are retraced and discussed. Its conservative and venturesome stylistic and iconographic elements are reviewed in the context of the other founder saints and their descendants. A working list is appended of original productions by the artist, a largely neglected classicizing sculptor-restorer.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Rigal"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Framing the Fabric: A Luddite Reading of Penn's Treaty with the Indians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490221","wordCount":12229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Bermingham"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2007.70.2.203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fefcf6ed-3e7e-31e5-8aa6-480f1552deb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hlq.2007.70.2.203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction: Gainsborough's Show Box: Illusion and Special Effects in Eighteenth-Century Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2007.70.2.203","wordCount":2819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"ABSTRACT In the introduction to this special issue of the Huntington Library Quarterly, Ann Bermingham uses Thomas Gainsborough's show box to reflect on the major themes of the issue, including imagination, the privatization of the aesthetic, the technologies of illusion, and the uncanny. The show box opens onto the realm of visual magic and imagination, and in doing so anticipates many of the popular visual spectacles that emerge at the end of the eighteenth century. The box embodies the period's fascination with art's power to realize imagination, and imagination's power to destabilize the boundaries between psychic and material realities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/456761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"192c69d2-f04e-38fb-8962-7849ca4f4c7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/456761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"ccxiv","pageStart":"cxlv","pagination":"pp. cxlv-ccxiv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/456761","wordCount":20240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Justine Dymond"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68d159ed-0c76-3549-98e3-3e84111fd59c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"VIRGINIA WOOLF SCHOLARSHIP FROM 1991 TO 2003: A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286290","wordCount":15285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom McDonough"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/662970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa3a4464-21cd-3084-b195-25481cd86894"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/662970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":null,"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Unrepresentable Enemies: On the Legacy of Guy Debord and the Situationist International","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/662970","wordCount":7166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"28","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL J. SHAPIRO"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2052524-6a99-323e-87ca-78a5248e8c1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26299704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The New Violent Cartography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299704","wordCount":10074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Mapping the 'new violent cartography', an inter-articulation of geographic imaginaries and antagonisms, based on models of identity-difference, this article begins with the analysis of a piece of photo-journalism, an image of a US soldier in a bombed-out bunker during the war in Afghanistan, and goes on to trace the institutions that are part of the contemporary aspects of militarization and securitization constituting the 'war on terror'. The article ends with an analysis of the anti-war impetus of cinema and the cinematic spaces of film festivals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Remo Guidieri"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Commentary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167727","wordCount":9571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"51","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. Pinar","William M. Reynolds","Patrick Slattery","Peter M. Taubman"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c381834-1e4d-395d-8ffd-5dbc67bf5bcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"660","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-660","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 12: Understanding Curriculum as Theological Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974928","wordCount":26719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1916-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1013727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6911eeec-c476-35a1-be2b-0c7178242333"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1013727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":165.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i+iii+v-xi+1-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"[Index]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1013727","wordCount":122081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Z. Schoenberg"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24647837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a958a81e-9364-32aa-98b1-4ddc68ca74ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24647837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Influence of the French Prose Poem on Peter Altenberg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24647837","wordCount":7411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"This article traces the influence of French prose-poets Bertrand, Baudelaire, and Huysmans on the prose sketches of Peter Altenberg. The essay argues that a study of these French predecessors in the genre of prose poetry will result in a better understanding of the work and innovations of Peter Altenberg.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leora Auslander","Amy Bentley","Leor Halevi","H. Otto Sibum","Christopher Witmore"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23303431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c908783d-2664-3ff1-bd55-914872ab77e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23303431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"1404","pageStart":"1354","pagination":"pp. 1354-1404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"AHR Conversation: Historians and the Study of Material Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23303431","wordCount":27394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Drott"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/681784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69b92eb8-982e-331b-816a-cd83cf6b8cfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/681784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"756","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-756","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rereading Jacques Attali\u2019s Bruits<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/681784","wordCount":17007,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrizia C. McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71bd8c1c-cf79-3337-8ab0-07a4851f6ac8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08k8.13"}],"isPartOf":"The Chatter of the Visible","keyphrase":["montage","mimesis","benjamin","taussig mimesis","walter benjamin","main suhrkamp","adorno","erz\u00e4hler","erz\u00e4hlen","georg luk\u00e1cs"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"183","pagination":"183-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.13","wordCount":19891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46979,47061]],"Locations in B":[[59496,59578]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank I. Michelman"],"datePublished":"1969-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1339772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b3621e2-9d12-351c-ab61-499c9823da2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1339772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":276.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 1968 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1339772","wordCount":136481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K.E. Brashier"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03625028"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23354201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlychina"}],"isPartOf":"Early China","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE SPIRIT LORD OF BAISHI MOUNTAIN: FEEDING THE DEITIES OR HEEDING THE \"YINYANG\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23354201","wordCount":31033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"26\/27","abstract":"Overseen by hungry gods on the one hand or structured by impersonal cyclic forces on the other, the Eastern Han cosmos eluded a single consistent model accepted by everyone. Yet these cosmological perspectives were not competing arguments held by different people; they were inconsistent genres of discourse found within the same people and sometimes even within the same texts. Late Eastern Han mountain inscriptions may ritually appease sacrifice-eating gods with their hymns of praise, but they simultaneously describe the cosmos as a single pervasive system of qi-vapors, yinyang, and the five phases. How could these two models coexist? Dated to 183 C.E., the \"Stele to the Spirit Lord of Baishi Mountain\" (baishi shenjun bei \ufeff\u767d\u77f3\u795e\u541b\u7891) demonstrates how certain compromise positions existed between a universe overseen by external agencies and that consisting of resonating cycles. The inscription explains why this mountain deity merited sacrifice, describes the official process in which permission to sacrifice was secured, and identifies this hungry deity as one component within ritualized systems within spatial lineages and geographic bureaucracies and so he is not recognized as an entirely free agent. In addition, the inscription systematizes him by obligating him to participate in mechanical rituals of recompense and by reducing him to a ritualized Classicist stereotype, further diminishing his independence and individuality. The stele inscription s focus on ritual demonstrates how ritual lessens any perceived inconsistency between cosmic agencies and cosmic system. This article first surveys the Han history of mountain sacrifices and mountain stelae, thereby placing the Spirit Lord of Baishi Mountain into historical context. The translation of the inscription dedicated to him follows, which for the purpose of analysis I divide into eight sections that address themes such as rituals of recompense, the generation of rain, and the transformation of the god into a Classicist hero. 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He also assembled in the 1780's a reference and teaching collection of minerals, rocks, and ores\u2013the first natural history collection at Harvard\u2013that, following a gift by an English friend, J. C. Lettsom, became a cynosure of the College. Following Waterhouse's dismissal in 1812, the instruction was carried on by John Gorham until 1824. Waterhouse, his colleague Aaron Dexter, and Gorham all were professors in the Harvard Medical School, established 1782. The latter two men successively held an endowed chair therein, the Erving Professorship of Chemistry and Materia Medica. They produced some notable graduates: Parker Cleaveland in 1799, Lyman Spalding in 1797, Joseph Green Cogswell in 1806, John White Webster in 1811, John Fothergill Waterhouse in 1813, and Samuel Luther Dana and James Freeman Dana in 1813. Following years of futile effort by the Administration to establish a professorship of mineralogy and geology, with Cogswell as the selected candidate, the instruction in mineralogy and geology fell to John White Webster in 1824 in the Chemistry Department. The Erving Professorship also passed to him, with a change in title to Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy. Webster's death in 1850, following his conviction for murder in a famous trial, terminated the first period of development of the geological sciences at Harvard. In this period, in spite of the early start by Waterhouse, Harvard lagged much behind the developments at Yale and other colleges in New England and beyond. The main period of development of the geological sciences at Harvard come in the latter 1800's. It was a consequence primarily of the founding of the the Lawrence Scientific School in 1848, with its emphasis on the applied aspects of the sciences, the appointments of Josiah Dwight Whitney and Raphael Pumpelly in 1865 and 1866, respectively to a School of Mines and Practical Geology endowed as a sub-unit therein, and the appointment of Josiah Parsons Cooke in 1850 as successor to Webster in the Chemistry Department.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Z.S. Strother"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43306187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e47a920-5fea-3873-80cc-3cbd54b6bc55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43306187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Looking for Africa in Carl Einstein's Negerplastik","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43306187","wordCount":11278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/283151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04df95c9-5450-37b0-bc6d-bfd31630cae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/283151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":109.0,"pageEnd":"cix","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cix","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Criminal law","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Proceedings of the Seventy-Second Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association. 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Showing, touring, collecting, restoring, and dealing all organize the expression of a passionate commitment closely fitting Weber's description of wertrationalitat--which typically is religiously oriented. I use the work of Berger and his associates to help point out the ways in which a collectible can serve as a kind of religious object, and to analyze how experience in specific social worlds relates to the ideal type of modern consciousness. Finally, I relate this to the work of Levi-Strauss.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Klaus Benesch"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26241318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21905088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"756033c5-34af-363e-9b69-f9a1c69aea5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26241318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rccperspectives"}],"isPartOf":"RCC Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Curb Your Enthusiasm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26241318","wordCount":3015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Rachel Carson Center","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"On Scarcity and Replenishment in Literature","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorraine Sim"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653403","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"849496170"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014265026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dd211d8-0d51-3edd-88bf-7244dc7b184d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26653403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pilgrimages"}],"isPartOf":"Pilgrimages: The Journal of Dorothy Richardson Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DOROTHY RICHARDSON\u2019S PILGRIMAGE<\/em> AND THE SOCIETY OF THE STREET","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653403","wordCount":7890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Dorothy Richardson Society","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Tunbridge"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2013.123.1.53","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14ce8bc9-78a9-3cd6-9926-186ea9d7ef0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2013.123.1.53"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Singing Translations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2013.123.1.53","wordCount":15737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":"British attitudes toward German-language song repertoire were transformed in the interwar period by a potent combination of politics and technology. The use of translations gained and lost ground; native musicians struggled to compete with international stars; and new listening strategies developed around the gramophone and radio. In the process, notions of cosmopolitan connoisseurship became established that still dominate reception and performance practices today.","subTitle":"The Politics of Listening Between the Wars","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. 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This article contests this reputation by turning to a source that Horkheimer and Adorno are at pains to occlude: Ernst Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms (1923-29). Drawing on the tradition of eighteenth-century German Christology revived by the Young Hegelians in general and F.W.J. Schelling in particular, Cassirer evolves a critical strategy broader than that in the Dialectic, yet clearly implied by it. Most particularly, Cassirer's Schelling analysis discriminates philosophy, art, and religion as forms of knowledge and forms of epistemological critique, where Horkheimer and Adorno recast the art of the Bildungsb\u00fcrger to occlude Cassirer's innovation, a new materialist semiotics that offers cultural critique in the broader terms that the Dialectic's critics would favor.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9373c1ef-a411-3b17-8fe8-a267fc74fa96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2tx.5"}],"isPartOf":"Alexander Kluge","keyphrase":["public sphere","phantasy","cinema","spectator","montage","documentary film","german cinema","documentary","near kaliningrad","kaliningrad"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"33","pagination":"33-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Film and the Public Sphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.5","wordCount":7438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"I wouldn\u2019t be making films if it weren\u2019t for the cinema of the 1920s, the silent era. Since I have been making films it has been in reference to this classical tradition. Telling stories, this is precisely my conception of narrative cinema; and what else is the history of a country but the vastest narrative surface of all? Not one story but many stories.This means montage. There can be no doubt that the narrative of an individual fate, unfolded in ninety minutes, can convey historical material only at the price of dramaturgical incest. The fictional threat displaces experience from","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David B. Clarke","Marcus A. Doel"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50e07d90-164a-3c93-ad14-af8c4854a05c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"609","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-609","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Shooting space, tracking time: the city from animated photography to vernacular relativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251180","wordCount":12307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"The article reflects on the visualization of the city in the late 1890s and early 1900s, with reference to English animated photography and film: two media that are intimately related in terms of technology but worlds apart in terms of form. While both animated photography and film shared an elective affinity with the city, each was drawn to the urban environment for different reasons. Anima-photographers were particularly concerned with the movement and pace of the city and endeavoured to capture the 'true motion' of such a dynamic space. Film, by contrast, began to probe the 'optical unconscious' of urban space as a way of drawing out its undisclosed potential. Consequendy, concerns with rendering 'true motion' gave way to an appreciation of modernity's 'vernacular relativity', especially in the form of montage. It was this shift that enabled filmmakers to re-engineer space and time, developing all manner of editing techniques with which to rearticulate the world. Hence the revolutionary potential of film. To demonstrate the significance of this shift, two recent projects that rework animated photographs taken in the 1890s and 1900s are explored: Patrick Keiller's The City of the Future (2005), which splices together a number of animated photographs to create a work of narrative cinema; and Gustav Deutsch's Welt Spiegel Kino (World Mirror Cinema) (2005), which uses archival panning shots of squares as the basis for a hypertextual montage. The article concludes by outlining the specificity of the ways in which animated photography and film, respectively, envisage the city.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1928-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/8120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00963771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7acb8505-ce85-3511-b071-9083906413c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/8120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciemont"}],"isPartOf":"The Scientific Monthly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"viii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/8120","wordCount":4017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anders Stephanson","Craig Owens"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Interview with Craig Owens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466307","wordCount":7938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alessandro Vettori"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - 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Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24031995","wordCount":21667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Schechter"],"datePublished":"1987-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"165ec5f0-ccc7-3eea-be5a-771f724f8c74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"528","pagination":"pp. 528-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Patton"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10224556"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41438060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-047752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef34a62e-6ba6-3d3a-9225-654e9b913548"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20106739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhindstud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Hindu Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Viniyogavij\u00f1\u0101na: The Uses of Poetry in Vedic Ritual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106739","wordCount":10395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauro Jos\u00e9 Zavala"],"datePublished":"1952-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01860658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3269c718-8e7e-33bc-9494-28e46940d090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40959143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bbaabolbibantame"}],"isPartOf":"B.B.A.A. Bolet\u00edn Bibliogr\u00e1fico de Antropolog\u00eda Americana","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":191.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"REVISTA DE REVISTAS \u2014 REVIEW OF REVIEWS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959143","wordCount":81960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Pan American Institute of Geography and History","volumeNumber":"15\/16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond A. Mazurek"],"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19c07926-bbf5-3f98-aec2-017058efa74d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Realism, Naturalism, Modernism: Three Revaluations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712930","wordCount":3979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11e63a14-603a-34bc-a7da-14f5eb4993a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":165.0,"pageEnd":"1284","pageStart":"1122","pagination":"pp. 1122-1284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462110","wordCount":52002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JUSTIN NEUMAN"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd256be0-00e1-3c31-a902-f920f8389b24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44211698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imitation Games","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211698","wordCount":2911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Alfoldy"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42631207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5fce212-22ad-3625-9d81-d4353d059b3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42631207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Commodification of William Morris: Emotive Links in a Mass-Produced World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42631207","wordCount":5869,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16474]],"Locations in B":[[11947,12027]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Cet article cherche \u00e0 comprendre les inconsistences entre les id\u00e9es socialistes de William Morris et ses pratiques commerciales, en explorant leurs impacts constants sur les consommateurs de produits inspir\u00e9s par Morris. Quoique d'agr\u00e9ables motifs d\u00e9coratifs, les reproductions commerciales des designs de Morris sont souvent per\u00e7ues comme \u00e9tant d\u00e9pourvues de sens, puisqu'elles ne soutiennent aucune id\u00e9ologie particuli\u00e8re. Tout en offrant au lecteur quelques d\u00e9tails de la vie et l'oeuvre de Morris, en particulier sur la fondation de Morris & Co. et sa conversion au socialisme, la croissance du conflit entre ces deux int\u00e9r\u00eats peut \u00eatres soulign\u00e9. Le d\u00e9veloppement r\u00e9ussi, par Morris, de produits de design d'int\u00e9rieur qu'on pourrait qualifier \u00ab d'\u00e9thique \u00bb a eu pour r\u00e9sultat un changement d'id\u00e9aux de la part du designer face aux artisans, qui avaient \u00e9t\u00e9 jusqu'alors responsables de la cr\u00e9ation d'un objet en entier, mais qui devenaient avec la cr\u00e9ation du nouveau r\u00f4le de designer, des ex\u00e9cutants dans la fabrication de produits de design. Cet article puise aux sources premi\u00e8res afin de donner sens au traitement r\u00e9serv\u00e9 par Morris \u00e0 ses travailleurs, dans le context de ses principes socialistes. Utilisant les nouvelles th\u00e9ories culturelles, particuli\u00e8rement celles formul\u00e9es par Raymond Williams, Antonio Gramsci et Stuart Hall, l'auteur termine son article en \u00e9tablissant un lien entre les philosophies originales de Morris et les usages contemporains de ses designs, et le pouvoir d'identit\u00e9 de consommation et d'identit\u00e9 politique cernant le travail de William Morris.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Camille"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d33607f-965b-3c25-a70d-4077715191d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"Tr\u00e8s Riches Heures\": An Illuminated Manuscript in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343727","wordCount":14708,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9919,10207]],"Locations in B":[[1900,2188]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecdf758e-f9b0-3f29-8fff-6478c3b0917c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":260.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Program and Abstracts 79th Annual ESA Meeting: Science and Public Policy, Knoxville, Tennessee, 7-11 August 1994","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167861","wordCount":229817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise H. Ivers"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41171226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00383929"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746495452"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-204580"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8941b6c-7c85-3112-bce7-3b2c93f8016e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41171226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcaliquar"}],"isPartOf":"Southern California Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Evolution of Modern Architecture in Long Beach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41171226","wordCount":6048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"110a1d9b-8a67-3d11-a288-d9f0a6a1db59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776784","wordCount":10283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNE MARIE GUERRETTAZ","BILL JOHNSTON"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43651705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d2a33f5-8a5c-3f55-990c-417d20cd0db0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43651705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"796","pageStart":"779","pagination":"pp. 779-796","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Materials in the Classroom Ecology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43651705","wordCount":12694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"Though there is an extensive literature on materials in language teaching, little if any of it examines the relationship between materials such as textbooks and the totality of the classroom experience. The present study makes use of the concept of classroom ecology (Tudor, 2001; van Lier, 1996) to explore the interrelationships among materials and other crucial elements in an advanced ESL grammar class offered in the Intensive English Program of an American university. We focus in particular on the ways in which the textbook\u2014Azar's (2002) Understanding and using English grammar\u2014constituted the de facto curriculum of the course, and how it provided structure for the majority of the classroom interaction. Finally, we speculate on the relationship between the materials and language learning in this classroom. We argue that the framework of ecology, with its emphasis on affordances and emergence, provides a compelling lens through which to study the ways in which materials are actually deployed in classrooms, and how teachers and students conceive of the work being done there.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin B. Olshin"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23787091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"oclc","value":"915396059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03ef2be0-ade7-35b9-aebf-20052cc3a195"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23787091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Sophistical Devices: Leonardo da Vinci's Investigations of Perpetual Motion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23787091","wordCount":16588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"International Committee for the History of Technology (ICOHTEC)","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"Although the engineering drawings of Leonardo da Vinci are well known, they are not necessarily well understood. Leonardo used the pages of his notebooks as a method of \"visual thinking,\" to investigate and work out problems in everything from mechanics to hydraulics. Leonardo used this same method to investigate the possibility \u2014 or impossibility \u2014 of perpetual motion. In many of the folio pages, we find pictures and text dealing with a range of designs for perpetual motion machines powered by weights or water. This paper examines Leonardo's investigations of the belief in perpetual motion, a belief that already had a long history by the time he began his studies. In addition, this paper allows us to recreate a typology of his renderings of different kinds of perpetual motion machines \u2014 that is, a classification scheme according to the various mechanical elements that he posited or analyzed, and motive forces employed. Finally, this paper reveals that Leonardo carried out his investigations in a detailed and systematic, if at times episodic, manner over a period of years. It also argues that he used his folio drawings to both depict perpetual motion devices and to articulate the problems and impossibilities that such schemes presented.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cary M. Mazer"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bceae817-ce2e-3191-8a42-8dd53bae50f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Actors or Gramophones: The Paradoxes of Granville Barker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207357","wordCount":9624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Morash"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25513001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d1a0374-ff41-3ca9-bd67-e8f4803153dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25513001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Little Black Rose Revisited: Church, Empire and National Destiny in the Writings of Aubrey de Vere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25513001","wordCount":3076,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52817,52885]],"Locations in B":[[16131,16199]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Canadian Association of Irish Studies","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine Weiss"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09273131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51392071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234422"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae4c6e0-02b9-35ba-9dac-a48cca57aecf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25781369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"samubecktoda"}],"isPartOf":"Samuel Beckett Today \/ Aujourd'hui","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PERCEIVING BODIES IN BECKETT'S \"PLAY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781369","wordCount":3250,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25613,25719]],"Locations in B":[[6916,7022]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"This essay examines Play in relation to the modernists' anxiety over technology. Walter Benjamin argued that the camera transforms the audience into an uncritical viewer because the image is mass reproduced as a commodity. Seven years earlier, Sigmund Freud asserted that while prosthetic tools perfect motor and sensory organs, they also inversely heighten the awareness of human limits. Both Benjamin and Freud fear that these 'prosthetic' tools result in an alienation of the critical human perspective. Play does not reproduce the same critique but challenges the audience's responses as mechanised and uncritical, questioning their participation in authorial structures.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43170735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20e98351-6074-3442-a47d-4a7f6aceddd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43170735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciechil"}],"isPartOf":"Science and Children","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"95S","pageStart":"73S","pagination":"pp. 73S-95S","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","General Science","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Media Producers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43170735","wordCount":14825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David A. Kronick"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25542243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08948631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45856037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adb7c33a-7276-329f-88dd-7dd03bd576cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25542243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"librandcult"}],"isPartOf":"Libraries & Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Notes on the Printing History of the Early \"Philosophical Transactions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25542243","wordCount":11963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Henry Oldenburg, one of the first secretaries of the Royal Society of London, established a new medium of scientific communication when he began the first scientific journal, the \"Philosophical Transactions\", in 1665 in London. It has been characterized as one of the most important contributions to the scientific revolution of that period. A study of its early printing history, relationship with the Royal Society, distribution mechanisms, editorial policies, and procedures provides some insights not only into the history of science of that period, but also into the evolution of the scientific journal as the most important medium of scientific communication in the modern world. The checklist of editions, translations, and abridgments appended is one indication of the impact it had in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Fitch"],"datePublished":"1992-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2164539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72a54657-6ce2-32da-ab3f-e884b811c6b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2164539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mass Culture, Mass Parliamentary Politics, and Modern Anti-Semitism: The Dreyfus Affair in Rural France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2164539","wordCount":23539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maggie Humm"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"721b0a03-0591-335c-851b-3d276012541d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visual Modernism: Virginia Woolf's \"Portraits\" and Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906478","wordCount":5807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pace University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-10-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05b74f43-51f8-3230-a553-63b3a560b293"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23269489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269489","wordCount":33446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex Soojung-Kim Pang"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/236234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0de0afa-cdd5-303d-83a8-80613dfc75e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/236234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Applied sciences - Imaging"],"title":"The Social Event of the Season: Solar Eclipse Expeditions and Victorian Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/236234","wordCount":14963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. Cook","John F. Doershuk","Robert J. Jeske","Timothy R. Pauketat","Melody K. Pope","Amy L. Rosebrough","Ronald C. Schirmer"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26599919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01461109"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608726034"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe297639-59c1-342c-a906-0cc91c399e88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26599919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"midcontjarch"}],"isPartOf":"Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Sense and Sensibility in Midwestern Archaeology and the Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology<\/em>, Part III","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26599919","wordCount":7988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Afonso Dias Ramos"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26936584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2e2d99e-eda1-35b0-a170-1f3d0acf2ee2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26936584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26936584","wordCount":2259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"235 (2)","publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-03-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1739432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"412eb8b9-0c5c-3e9b-a4eb-d7cc39ddffe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1739432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"1004","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-1004","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Information science - Coding theory"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1739432","wordCount":23652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4180","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"187","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilbert Carr"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20467433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a896de78-79f6-3a9f-961c-298261d5b656"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20467433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"780","pageStart":"768","pagination":"pp. 768-780","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Figures of Repetition: Continuity and Discontinuity in Karl Kraus's Satire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20467433","wordCount":6842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":"Karl Kraus's undaunted campaign to halt the rotary mechanism of the press determined that his own work and his self-reflection as a satirist were bound by structures of continuity and repetition and their rhetorical expression. A crisis comparable to the 'language crisis' of modernism alternates with qualitatively different repetition, the regeneration of the artist of language in literary and erotic experience. The image of a conservative anti-modernist invoking the values of 'the origin' against modernity is revised, in so far as the negations of satire exploit repetition and differentiation performatively, a practice that is compared and contrasted with deconstruction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c5b3843-648b-37a7-b7b6-0948502451f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25698320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698320","wordCount":11480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David F. Maas"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42577196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0014164X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"414ccd18-e8e1-3645-8617-d522b3e4dfee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42577196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etcrevgensem"}],"isPartOf":"ETC: A Review of General Semantics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"IMAGES THAT UNIFY: THE ROLE OF ANALOGUES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42577196","wordCount":3494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Institute of General Semantics","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Charosh"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3052383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c6dc6b2-3b7e-3ba6-ae49-2ae7f4e6fdc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3052383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Territoriality, map-mindedness, and the politics of place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24717525","wordCount":18301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Political sociologists have paid closer attention of late to the territoriality of political communities, and have even begun theorizing the theme of territoriality's legitimation. To date, however, the field has mostly overlooked the topic of maps, the quintessential territorial tool. Thus, we know little regarding maps' crucial role in shaping modern subjects' relationship to territory. This article argues that \"map-mindedness\"\u2014i.e., the effects of map imagery on how subjects experience territory\u2014 can be productively theorized by working through the social-scientific concept of \"place.\" Using a range of modern and contemporary examples, I illustrate how maps can draw on and manipulate political subjects' experience of place. Maps, I submit, allow political communities to render themselves more place-like, thus bridging the phenomenological distance between these abstract, territorially vast units and their \"emplaced\" subjects. More specifically, maps solve this \"problem of distance\" through three ideal-typical processes: 1) they render the political community as a proximate \"object in the world\"; 2) they present the political community as a body-like target for cathexis and identification; and 3) they mediate the traffic of meaning between the local and the national to produce a multi-scalar sense of place that can be harnessed in the service of the political community. Maps are a potent means of \"re-personalizing\" politics; their study suggests that territoriality is not only a form of \"impersonal rule,\" as recent works have observed, but always also implicated in the production of political subjects.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marc Shell"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2906988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"570","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-570","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"What is Truth?\": Lessing's Numismatics and Heidegger's Alchemy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906988","wordCount":9323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Beverley"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Going Baroque?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303244","wordCount":5952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"15\/16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcia Landy"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Politics in the Work of Antonio Gramsci","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303233","wordCount":10379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NEIL PRENDERGAST"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23049856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10845453"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53060078"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23049856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihist"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Raising the Thanksgiving Turkey: Agroecology, Gender, and the Knowledge of Nature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23049856","wordCount":12717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Forest History Society","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"To raise Thanksgiving turkeys, nineteenth-century farmwomen crossed wild and domestic birds. Today, this custom is largely forgotten, leading many writers to claim that domestic turkeys, the ones purchased every year from supermarkets, are not domesticated from the wild turkey common to the eastern United States but are descended entirely from a Mexican subspecies traded throughout the early modern Atlantic world. By showing that domestic turkeys are, indeed, descended primarily from the eastern wild turkey, this essay restores awareness of the environmental knowledge held by nineteenth-century farmwomen. It also traces how that loss of memory occurred through two channels: the development of twentieth-century wildlife conservation and the simultaneous growth of poultry agribusiness. Neither placed significant value on the knowledge of the farmwomen who preceded them in raising turkeys. The essay concludes by suggesting implications for today's heritage turkeys and the conservation of agricultural biodiversity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Christian Thompson"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b94a5a-d7b8-3a54-a02c-6f888329f3ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Voodoo Fascism: Fascist Ideology in Arna Bontemps's Drums at Dusk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029777","wordCount":8986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred W. Cramer"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2006.30.2.133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dbc77cb-d044-353a-8eff-dd639fbf4c73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2006.30.2.133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Of Serpentina and Stenography: Shapes of Handwriting in Romantic Melody","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2006.30.2.133","wordCount":19451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"Like nineteenth-century handwriting, Romantic melody consisted of a single unbroken, shaped curviline and was invested with the ability to evoke the ideal, maternal feminine, to evoke deeper images and specific meanings, and to function simultaneously as language and as signifier of infinite meaning. It can be fruitfully compared with stenography, a handwriting-based information technology flourishing in the middle nineteenth century. This article documents the perceived handwriting-like nature of music and the perceived musicality of stenography through writings of E. T. A. Hoffmann, Robert Schumann, Wagner, and the stenographer F. X. Gabelsberger. The perceptual phenomenon of auditory streaming, along with analytical approaches developed by Robert O. Gjerdingen and Eugene Narmour, makes it possible to demonstrate structural similarities between stenography and melody (in examples by Berlioz, Mendelssohn, and Wagner) and to show commonalities between the notion of the \"music of the future\" and the futuristic aspirations of stenography. In turn, it becomes possible to perform the shapes of handwriting in Romantic melody and hear voices and fantastic visions in those shapes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacques Derrida","David Wills"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40c2d654-7a53-3496-a473-b9820c064d6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Animal That Therefore I Am (More to Follow)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344276","wordCount":27545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward L. Rubin"],"datePublished":"1988-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"529a05b7-ea6f-337d-be22-98f808966b1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1289072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"1905","pageStart":"1835","pagination":"pp. 1835-1905","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Practice and Discourse of Legal Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289072","wordCount":36486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS MORGAN EVANS"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24915317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53397979"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58cee31a-ae8b-3127-8134-129306b9eb8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24915317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"988","pageStart":"987","pagination":"pp. 987-988","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24915317","wordCount":1063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1365","publisher":"Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"158","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65sxk1.9","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce28d61d-4b13-3b2b-947b-5ffd5d33d920"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv65sxk1.9"}],"isPartOf":"Originality, Imitation, and Plagiarism","keyphrase":["cloud gate","sculpture","millennium park","public","photography","chicago","lessig","bob horsch","horsch","anish kapoor"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"64","pagination":"64-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cloud Gate:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65sxk1.9","wordCount":5103,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52047,52194]],"Locations in B":[[13825,13970]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Jessica Litman argues that the basic reproductive unit of U.S. copyright law, the copy, \u201cno longer serves our needs, and we should jettison it completely\u201d (180). The challenge posed by modern technologies is central to her argument. Computers routinely produce \u201ccopies\u201d of program code and data in use. Litman suggests thatuse<\/em>\u2014distinguished as commercial or noncommercial\u2014would be a better way of organizing copyright legislation. Butuse<\/em>is a complex and nuanced term, especially when applied to one ubiquitous reproductive technology, photography.Photography can be described as a group of technologies with multiple uses. Reproduction, in the sense of","subTitle":"Challenging Reproducibility","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua A.T. Fairfield"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a1b614e-307b-34c1-8f08-f0232521230d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24119476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Mixed Reality: How the Laws of Virtual Worlds Govern Everyday Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119476","wordCount":29159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Just as the Internet linked human knowledge through the simple mechanism of the hyperlink, now reality itself is being hyperlinked, indexed, and augmented with virtual experiences. Imagine being able to check the background of your next date through your cell phone, or experience a hidden world of trolls and goblins while you are out strolling in the park. This is the exploding technology of Mixed Reality, which augments real places, people, and things with rich virtual experiences. As virtual and real worlds converge, the law that governs virtual experiences will increasingly come to govern everyday life. The problem is that offline and online law have significantly diverged. Consider the simple act of purchasing something. If you purchase a book offline, you are its owner. If you purchase an e-book, you own nothing. As Mixed Reality technologies merge realspace and cyberspace, the question is whether online or offline law will determine consumers' rights over their property and data. There is a very real risk that courts will continue to reason from online analogies rather than turning to offline common law rules to determine consumers' rights. This Article offers a modest proposal for rebalancing the law. The common law proceeds by reasoned progression based on the closest available analogy. The Article suggests that the common law has long evolved internal checks and balances for rules that govern citizens' everyday lives. The Article proposes rebalancing the law of Mixed Reality by using analogies to real world situations, rather than limiting legal analysis to intellectual property and online licensing law.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Benamou"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"297ef2d7-1f75-3a6b-99ec-e5e8275166c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3346613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cuban Cinema: On the Threshold of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3346613","wordCount":9728,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[55060,55130]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-11-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eb2e072-90f5-3ce8-8b88-3558d1b6053b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1695336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"1084","pageStart":"1032","pagination":"pp. 1032-1084","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695336","wordCount":27399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4729","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"230","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JO ANNA ISAAK"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7e5bb8d-0912-3052-84a5-ac7ba196bf7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"What's love got to do, got to do with it?\": Woman as the Glitch in the Postmodernist Record","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304305","wordCount":8172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a5a4960-7798-31a6-b0b1-6e5b1fce15e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"441","pagination":"p. 441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374427","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Carpenter","Robert P. McIntosh"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2425122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030031"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446837"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af319b97-cdf6-3cea-a295-a41fd3a9f61d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2425122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amermidlnatu"}],"isPartOf":"The American Midland Naturalist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Author Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2425122","wordCount":46777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Notre Dame","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans-J\u00f6rg Rheinberger"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44471823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919714"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51169498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-263456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff6312d-6d96-397e-a82c-6d1c023a6f0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44471823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histphillifescie"}],"isPartOf":"History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Preparations, models, and simulations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44471823","wordCount":4834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn - Napoli","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"This paper proposes an outline for a typology of the different forms that scientific objects can take in the life sciences. The first section discusses preparations (or specimens)\u2014a form of scientific object that accompanied the development of modern biology in different guises from the seventeenth century to the present: as anatomical-morphological specimens, as microscopic cuts, and as biochemical preparations. In the second section, the characteristics of models in biology are discussed. They became prominent from the end of the nineteenth century onwards. Some remarks on the role of simulations\u2014characterising the life sciences of the turn from the twentieth to the twenty-first century\u2014conclude the paper.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony M. Cummings"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55125852"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"399b2221-cc8e-342e-83dc-357fbc78335f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24395829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":408.0,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-ix, xi-xxi, xxiii, xxv-xxxii, 1, 3-51, 53-71, 73, 75-125, 127-153, 155-191, 193-201, 203-241, 243-293, 295-337, 339-353, 355-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Nino Pirrotta: An Intellectual Biography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395829","wordCount":155303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alana M. Vincent"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44490852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50065227"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002256062"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26631937-acd9-3fac-9e2b-c77a0d9e7862"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44490852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"397","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE WORK OF CREATION: IMAGE, IDOLATRY, AND JEWISH DISCOURSE IN THEOLOGY AND THE ARTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44490852","wordCount":8608,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[3220,3403]],"Locations in B":[[46140,46323]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"The Second Commandment, prohibiting both the worship and manufacture of graven images, is often employed as a mechanism for explaining a perceived absence of Jewish participation in the visual arts, in spite of a well recorded history of Jewish participation in the manufacture of graven images which are typically classed as craft objects. This article aims to introduce to theology the scepticism towards hierarchical distinctions between art and craft which is already familiar in the world of art theory, and by so doing prompt a dislocation of theological reflection on works of art from the point of visual engagement to the point of manufacture. It suggests that attentiveness to Jewish discourses about material production opens up interesting and potentially generative possibilities for work in theology and the arts beyond the consideration of specifically Jewish art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurie Essig","Sujata Moorti"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b4f9bcb-967a-35a0-ad16-b205f6fa5725"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/qed.3.2.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"qed"}],"isPartOf":"QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction to the Special Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/qed.3.2.0001","wordCount":2497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JENNIFER RICHARDS"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"202d9ba9-ef5d-37a5-b062-c04aa8d8b169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A wanton trade of living\"? Rhetoric, Effeminacy, and the Early Modern Courtier","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124303","wordCount":11223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vernon A. Howard"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40495412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40495412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Virtuosity as a Performance Concept: A Philosophical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40495412","wordCount":8019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hilde Heynen","T. W. Adorno"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e69e7a70-03e6-3c47-8c52-183d77b37215"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 78-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Architecture between Modernity and Dwelling: Reflections on Adorno's \"Aesthetic Theory\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171226","wordCount":8763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"17","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1934-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0c4209d-87fc-35c4-8fa2-6b6f73be2a66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/225124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":148.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Thirty-Ninth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To September 1933,--With Special Reference to the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225124","wordCount":51961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":167.0,"pageEnd":"1151","pageStart":"985","pagination":"pp. 985-1151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Individual Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831012","wordCount":79658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Russell A. Berman"],"datePublished":"1982-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/404635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"258e1db9-099c-363f-83af-b41254eede74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/404635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Recipient as Spectator: West German Film and Poetry of the Seventies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/404635","wordCount":5929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cody Hartley"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41473707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01601040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a8b157f-5066-3f0b-b307-22d9c26ff31e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41473707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iajsocinduarch"}],"isPartOf":"IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Maria Martinez, Industrial Designer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41473707","wordCount":10594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Society for Industrial Archeology","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETROS BEIMANAVIS"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08705283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"595601370"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40773d4b-e57b-3283-89d3-26731928e42d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26869268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviportfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"2246","pageStart":"2229","pagination":"pp. 2229-2246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Drawing Parallels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26869268","wordCount":8395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":"This is an attempt to answer the following question in the affirmative: Is it possible to draw a parallel between science and art? To carry out this task successfully, Bas van Fraassen\u2019s account on the subject is introduced and discussed. The prominent philosopher of science has frequently presented solid arguments that demonstrate points of proximity between these two fields of human activity. He stresses that science and art should both be considered as domains of representational nature. On this ground, he sets off to show that science, as is the case with art, bears a decisive pragmatic aspect, often depends on inaccuracy in order to achieve its aim, and manifests an openness to interpretational pluralism. Eventually, it becomes evident that van Fraassen tackles the issue of the science-art relation to reinforce his antirealist philosophical stance and undermine key concepts of scientific realism. Still, his effort to \u2018save\u2019 antirealism while making a major contribution to lift the prevalent notion that science and art are worlds apart is truly stimulating.","subTitle":"Bas van Fraassen on Representation in Science and in the Arts","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES SLOTTA"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45106496"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fb7e394-4c45-3313-87b7-707457ce4851"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43904616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"552","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-552","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The perlocutionary is political: Listening as self-determination in a Papua New Guinean polity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43904616","wordCount":14205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"J. L. Austin's influential dissection of speech acts into locutionary, illocutionary, and perlocutionary acts has given rise to much scholarly attention to illocutionary acts and forces. While the perlocutionary facet of speech acts has gone largely undiscussed by philosophers and linguists, folk theories of language often attend closely to the relation between speech and its consequences. In this article, I discuss one conception of perlocutions prominent in Yopno speaking communities in Papua New Guinea that emphasizes the agentive role of listeners in mediating between speech and its outcome. This cultural conception of perlocutions, I argue, is tied to a political sensibility that stresses the self-determination and equality of adult men. The article shows how cultural conceptions of perlocutions provide insight into political values and practices, and how political concerns inform folk models of perlocutions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1952-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e51a671e-d6ad-351d-bda1-23cad1f0a155"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/459854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":156.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459854","wordCount":124593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Myron Tuman"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45284846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00954489"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7c951e3-3c0c-343b-8a23-ce62c9633cab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45284846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studbrowcirc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Browning and His Circle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BROWNING'S HISTORICAL INTENTION IN \"THE RING AND THE BOOK\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45284846","wordCount":8017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Armstrong Browning Library, Baylor University","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gunn Engelsrud"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20444700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Teaching Styles in Contact Improvisation: An Explicit Discourse with Implicit Meaning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444700","wordCount":8735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Takashi Fujitani"],"datePublished":"1992-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2059038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74532a86-8d03-3fe4-aeb1-ce24a6abe492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2059038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"850","pageStart":"824","pagination":"pp. 824-850","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Electronic Pageantry and Japan's \"Symbolic Emperor\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2059038","wordCount":14524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"In this issue's last article, based on the Showa Emperor's funeral and the Heisei Emperor's succession rites, Takashi Fujitani reflects on the altered imperial presence in Japanese society. Fujitani concludes that, during the post-1945 era, the imperial aura has become smaller, shriveled, and banalized. Television, he finds, turns the Japanese monarch and the imperial household into \"simply other commodities, to be consumed.\" Thus, while he does not share the fear that the Japanese emperor may somehow reemerge as the powerful, remote, and divine talisman of national greatness, he concludes that the figure of the emperor still may serve as the vehicle for new brands of neo-nationalism, possible in large measure because of the way the contemporary media, especially television, appropriate the emperor, which empties his figure of all meaning, providing only diversion through spectacle, and transmitting historical forgetfulness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Richardson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aee21c65-c913-354f-82b3-62299ff26adc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Disabling as Mimesis and Alterity: Making Humanoid Robots at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758174","wordCount":8040,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13405,13506]],"Locations in B":[[9777,9878]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ansgar Hillach","Jerold Wikoff","Ulf Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49994d8a-8ae2-389b-b1b2-33f2205f750b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Politics: Walter Benjamin's \"Theories of German Fascism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488012","wordCount":10452,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[54543,54758]],"Locations in B":[[11952,12167]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"17","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":199.0,"pageEnd":"778","pageStart":"580","pagination":"pp. 580-778","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Individual Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902229","wordCount":165898,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 M. Del Pino"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19353017-a316-375e-a2d7-7563b840c11a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Po\u00e9ticas enfrentadas: teatro y cine en Antonio Espina y \"Revista de Occidente\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742036","wordCount":8069,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[41976,42060],[42144,42321]],"Locations in B":[[26082,26166],[26175,26352]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf71e35-facb-370a-8e49-257f4497a042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/878614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"892","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-892","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878614","wordCount":34059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"885","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"118","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward H. Cohen"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":142.0,"pageEnd":"644","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-644","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828669","wordCount":82851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alice Staveley"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95600bef-5dbd-3e07-9ac1-6ffc95fc9e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906903","wordCount":2774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pace University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEVIN E. KO"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66799df1-3764-3800-8501-475b01d32a14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Anatomical Perspective: Epistemology and Ethics in a Colonial Missionary Clinic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908388","wordCount":14050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[25597,25664]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"For Dutch Calvinist missionaries in Central Java, two events bookended the radically transformative decade of the 1890s. The first, at the start of the decade, was the severing of relations with a charismatic Javanese leader named Sadrach, a decision that marked a redoubled commitment to suppress local Christian syncretism and to promote Calvinist orthodoxy in its stead. The second, at the decade's end, was the establishment of a modern clinic to serve as the flagship institution of a reformulated and reinvigorated missionary project. This article considers how these two seemingly disparate events are related. It suggests that much of what was troubling to missionaries about Sadrach and his indigenous Christian movement involved their understandings and uses of the body. I then consider how the mission attempted to use modern clinical experience and the anatomical perspective to address a range of ethical and epistemological problems posed by Sadrach and his followers' understandings of the body. The modern clinic would serve as a key pedagogical and disciplinary tool for the reordering of a vocabulary and syntax of bodies and souls, a grammar of religious and social expression.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Stolnitz"],"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/429896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/429896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Apparent Demise of Really High Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/429896","wordCount":10354,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[6582,6691],[9983,10068],[13262,13402]],"Locations in B":[[8134,8243],[12102,12187],[14017,14157]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-10-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2894464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4e2f121-f65f-376b-ad84-9676c37f4664"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2894464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":96.0,"pageEnd":"980","pageStart":"885","pagination":"pp. 885-980","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2894464","wordCount":74796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5339","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"278","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Buck-Morss"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e531dfa0-f65d-3102-8a89-f6884071ff70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Benjamin's Passagen-Werk: Redeeming Mass Culture for the Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487795","wordCount":14049,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42327,42674]],"Locations in B":[[13390,13730]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEOFFREY SIRC"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx7x.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874214352"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72f76b46-a4ba-34fc-9f3a-1ca00b3c64b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46nx7x.3"}],"isPartOf":"English Composition As A Happening","keyphrase":["happenings","childan","writing","modernist","bartholomae","artists","happenings artists","freshman english","writing instruction","gallery"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE STILL-UNBUILT HACIENDA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx7x.3","wordCount":14006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"I suppose the reason none of us burn incense in our writing classes any more is because of the disk drives. Smoke\u2019s not supposed to be good for them, right? But what about the sounds, the candlelight, the students on the floor, the dark? What about thatother scene<\/em>of writing instruction? Where has that gone, the idea of the writing classroom as blank canvas, ready to be inscribed as a singular compositional space?The next class was held in the same room; only this time I made a few alterations in the physical arrangements. There were no neat lines","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Meyer-Lee"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e648816f-20c0-3025-aa6a-11e76e7418bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Toward a Theory and Practice of Literary Valuing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542764","wordCount":10097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REY CHOW"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33ee2d46-71f4-35c5-bf93-527f6f014b8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sacrifice, Mimesis, and the Theorizing of Victimhood (A Speculative Essay)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131","wordCount":9396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay is an attempt to identify and elaborate the inextricable mutual implications between mimesis and sacrifice in considerations of victimhood (understood as dominated or stigmatized existence), especially as found in prominent examples of contemporary cultural theory. The authors discussed include Giorgio Agamben, Luce Irigaray, Homi Bhabha, and Ren\u00e9 Girard.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1943-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25014226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00088080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45416719"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcee6ca0-e54b-3c51-b17e-3f7641a3ebe5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25014226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cathhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Catholic Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"552","pagination":"pp. 552-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25014226","wordCount":10810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Catholic University of America Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Bailey Carroll"],"datePublished":"1958-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30235689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038478X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e18c3c23-4b78-3d15-b6e7-e8ac51661711"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30235689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"swesthistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Texas Collection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30235689","wordCount":9871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Texas State Historical Association","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Tallman"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24558679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15217922"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93a5a33f-9c25-3e67-9081-cb1956e63b9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24558679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artpaper"}],"isPartOf":"Art on Paper","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Meisterst\u00fccke in the Candy Shop: The Prints of Linda Schwarz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24558679","wordCount":2896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-04-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1728500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7077325-bc0c-35ed-a0a1-d451361f7c94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1728500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1728500","wordCount":37186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3927","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"168","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Scholnick"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20770997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10547479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"014a4dd1-b27e-3b62-8c50-932cef8ee65c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20770997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerperi"}],"isPartOf":"American Periodicals","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Scribner's Monthly\" and the \"Pictorial Representation of Life and Truth\" in Post-Civil War America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20770997","wordCount":10912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hanor A. Webb"],"datePublished":"1936-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1487549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd13bc18-2cd0-3655-8c81-6edecf0a1bd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1487549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The High School Science Library for 1935-36","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1487549","wordCount":10182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John N. Duvall"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ad9c905-2f1a-343b-b98c-6f3b25408d2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"INTRODUCTION FROM VALPARAISO TO JERUSALEM: DELILLO AND THE MOMENT OF CANONIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285569","wordCount":3638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-03-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29777376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"745db185-e8fb-3310-b75b-19c34485b960"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29777376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29777376","wordCount":21499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Czarniawska"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20913d9f-3694-36eb-aadd-926fa89c9689"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25611210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Symbolism in Public Administration Organization Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611210","wordCount":11042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"This paper deals with public administration organization studies as a type of social science which emerged originally from public administration but which at present resides at the crossroads of political science and organization theory--the latter having in turn emerged from business economics and sociology, with trace influences of psychology and anthropology. Like any other science, public administration organization research reacts to the fashions and trends typical of a given period and place, but due to its complicated history, it is more open to a variety of influences which sometime reinforce and sometimes oppose one another. The topic of this paper is one such important influence: symbolism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. M. Kirk"],"datePublished":"1986-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1221300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00400262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"810b99dd-f4e5-39c1-be0f-7a7f66a2c545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1221300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"taxon"}],"isPartOf":"Taxon","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"(815) Proposal to Conserve Mucor Fresenius over Mucor Micheli ex L. and (816) Proposal to Conserve Rhizopus Ehrenberg over Ascophora Tode (Fungi) with Notes on the Nomenclature and Taxonomy of Mucor, Ascophora, Hydrophora and Rhizopus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1221300","wordCount":4403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"International Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT)","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"The generic name Mucor Micheli ex Linnaeus has been misapplied since 1850 and provides an earlier name for species presently referred to Rhizopus. The generic name Hydrophora, ignored by the majority of workers for over 100 years should be applied to species presently referred to Mucor. In the interest of nomenclatural stability proposals to conserve the names Mucor and Rhizopus as presently applied are presented.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Houston A. Baker, Jr."],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dfadc7f-234b-3591-b063-b80393cf147f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Handling \"Crisis\": Great Books, Rap Music, and the End of Western Homogeneity (Reflections on the Humanities in America)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931668","wordCount":11372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4619282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"General Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619282","wordCount":32659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deborah Wong"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/834074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00449202"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0794f6f-ae93-39b8-a6e8-a389e8812144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/834074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Thai Cassettes and Their Covers: Two Case Histories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/834074","wordCount":7462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tamara Trodd"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf7bac57-037f-35ac-842d-5fff1e3d860a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20108007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"Drawing in the Archive: Paul Klee's Oil-Transfers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108007","wordCount":11108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Paul Klee's oil-transfers are a distinctive body of his works, made in the main between 1919 and 1925. Because the method of their production required the use of an existing drawing, and the use of such a drawing is made explicit in the resulting work, I argue that the oil-transfers supply an exemplary case for investigation of the continuing significance of Klee's drawing to his works in other media. I re-examine Klee's method for producing oil-transfer works and argue that the oil-transfers should be interpreted in relation to the 'de-skilling' of drawing undertaken by other avant-garde artists of the 1920s, including Moholy-Nagy's advocacy of the 'mechanization' of line. I propose that Klee's oil-transfers, with their strongly tactile, blurred and 'mis-handled' line and their bright, acid colours, should be seen as the result of taking mechanization inside his practice, where it is accommodated by the physical gestures and operations of the artist, in a fantasized expansion of the space of the 'apparatus' I compare with Bauhaus models of photography. This reading suggests that Klee's oil-transfers supply a model for the internalization of automated, technological production which may fruitfully be compared with the alternative models proposed by two recent accounts: Molly Nesbit's interpretation of works by Duchamp in relation to state-funded programmes of industrialized drawing, and Rosalind Krauss's theorization of Picasso's 'neo-classical' line of ca 1916-1924 as a traumatized reaction to photography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Brett"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"762fe3e1-2c9c-3cd8-ad18-1379719a57ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/746896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Piano Four-Hands: Schubert and the Performance of Gay Male Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746896","wordCount":16405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Levin"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcedbcac-b727-350e-a90d-34634f600312"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Dialectical to Normative Specificity: Reading Luk\u00e1cs on Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488131","wordCount":12109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deborah L. Stein"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv941vz0.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780520296336"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f37ccebe-9d3b-394c-aa14-9e1b91c2d2a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv941vz0.15"}],"isPartOf":"The Hegemony of Heritage","keyphrase":["new delhi","university","epigraphia indica","artibus asiae","indian","leiden brill","temple","architecture","temple architecture","princeton"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"287","pagination":"287-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv941vz0.15","wordCount":7282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert V. Andelson"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3488074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44545933"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233991"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3488074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjeconsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Economics and Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":300.0,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii+273+275-317+319-335+337-359+361-379+381-409+411-431+433-505+507-541+543+545-569+571-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critics of Henry George: An Appraisal of Their Strictures on Progress and Poverty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3488074","wordCount":113638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Inc.","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-08-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97a3669d-1386-3c90-af17-771e1900246d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713752","wordCount":24764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3633","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"145","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-10-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3084851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"577a159a-273c-3962-bd80-33ebb5e0fa74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3084851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3084851","wordCount":64852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5541","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"294","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elias Wynshaw"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44074943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0008199X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46886374"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef06d676-d56d-3940-9751-6bc8507de9ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44074943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Surgeon and Magician: Speech, Sight, and the Shakespearean Corpus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44074943","wordCount":8603,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36406,36479]],"Locations in B":[[1245,1313]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Walter Benjamin's distinction between painting and cinematography forms the basis of an exploration of two constellations of metaphor in Shakespeare's texts: that which exists between speech, penetration and surgical healing, and that between sight, distance and magical healing. The ambivalence of penetration as a force that harms as well as heals is then expanded into a reading of the history of Shakespearean scholarship in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It is shown that various editors metaphorised their labour as undertaking to heal the Shakespearean 'corpus' surgically. The editions of Charles Knight and the psychological criticism of Bradley are then used to show that the nineteenth century saw a movement towards healing the text 'magically' rather than 'surgically'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harshana Rambukwella"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787351295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1381916b-a231-3dac-88b5-d781bc8fbfa4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9"}],"isPartOf":"Politics and Poetics of Authenticity","keyphrase":["sinhala","sri lanka","cultural","village","sinhala cultural","discourse","gam udawa","postcolonial","sinhala authenticity","popular culture"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"137","pagination":"137-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conclusion:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9","wordCount":6142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Liyanage Amarakeerthi\u2019s award-winning 2013 novelKurulu Hadawatha<\/em>(A Bird\u2019s Heart) features as its protagonist Dinasiri Kurulugangoda, a budding radio producer struggling for fresh ideas to promote his channel. Earlier in the novel, Dinasiri changes his name from Walangangoda, which means \u2018Village of Potters\u2019 (indicative of his low caste), to Kurulugangoda, which means \u2018Village of Birds\u2019, which has more aesthetic appeal and no caste overtones. Idly doodling a rough sketch of his village in the studio, he has a moment of epiphany. He realises that his village is shaped like a bird\u2019s head and that his house, at the centre of","subTitle":"the postcolonial afterlife of authenticity","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Blyn"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e443f7ec-ac9b-35d4-bd14-c0eb679465db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sounding American Surrealism: The Sensational Subject of \"The Day of the Locust\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201473","wordCount":7169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David McCarthy"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23eea04f-295c-37e0-9b22-d038c603920f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Andy Warhol's Silver Elvises: Meaning through Context at the Ferus Gallery in 1963","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067249","wordCount":13645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher S. Wood"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44398528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecd702f1-d828-32f3-b535-6f0fa545e196"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44398528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jritualstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Ritual Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ritual and the Virgin on the Column: The Cult of the Sch\u00f6ne Maria in Regensburg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44398528","wordCount":7598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Pamela J. Stewart and Andrew J. Strathern","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"The pilgrimage to the Sch\u00f6ne Maria of Regensburg (1519-21) is often called the last great pilgrimage of the Middle Ages. From all over southern Germany people streamed toward the site of a miraculous healing, usually in hope of further wonders. The focus of their devotions was at first a painted icon in a chapel. But to accommodate the crowds, the city soon erected a stone statue of the Virgin on an outdoor column. This highly unusual format incited pilgrims to ever wilder and more indecorous devotions. The pilgrimage drew the censure of church and civil officials and was eventually discontinued. This account of the episode examines the power of the sculpture on the column, especially its ability to disrupt traditional models of ritualized public worship.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4173606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e74b923a-dc86-3cc8-93ac-7061212cd3f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4173606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":356.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Literature of the Renaissance in 1967","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4173606","wordCount":125339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Mueller"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07313403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24322775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medirenadramengl"}],"isPartOf":"Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Early Modern Banquet Receipts and Women's Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322775","wordCount":10565,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[15515,15600]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Rosemont Publishing & Printing Corp DBA Associated University Presses","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Coleman Rosenberger"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40067701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08979049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08ce8461-76d7-37bd-879e-567f9d32a8e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40067701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"recocoluhistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C.","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"xxxv","pageStart":"xxiii","pagination":"pp. xxiii-xxxv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40067701","wordCount":5397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Historical Society of Washington, D.C.","volumeNumber":"69\/70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRISON T. MESEROLE","JOHN B. SMITH"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0411fda5-c825-3802-9251-01ff942dabb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44990752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":311.0,"pageEnd":"988","pageStart":"678","pagination":"pp. 678-988","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography: Shakespeare: Annotated World Bibliography for 1984","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990752","wordCount":215334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henderson Downing"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23595546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a8a31e8-be8b-3f57-8ad0-642773a0d803"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23595546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fitzrovia Phantasmagoria: Notes for a Newman Passagenwerk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23595546","wordCount":5081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"67","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher A. Kent"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Short of Tin\" in a Golden Age: Assisting the Unsuccessful Artist in Victorian England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828254","wordCount":9818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea Bachner"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46239585-bfdd-3614-ae70-533fdf6e5918"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergstudglobasia"}],"isPartOf":"Verge: Studies in Global Asias","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theses on the Translation of (Chinese) Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.2.1.0106","wordCount":13116,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49190,49321]],"Locations in B":[[40976,41107]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":"This essay analyzes recent discourses on architecture and urban change in China by proposing three modes of translation of and around Chinese architecture: imitation as a mode of theorizing the iconic translation of the world into Chinese architecture transmediation as a mode of iconically translating China for the world, by way of the media-assisted circulation of Chinese architecture displacement as a mode of translating space in China through global and transcultural patterns of real and symbolic spatial dislocation By rethinking architecture in and as translation, this essay scrutinizes the frequently essentialist and binary logic of discourses on Chinese architecture and urbanism as well as reflecting critically on the exemplarity of \u201cChinese\u201d architecture in the context of global phenomena.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosemary Pountney"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346551"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709637"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3070522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revienglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of English Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3070522","wordCount":1755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"205","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1928-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c929b54c-32b2-3dbe-855d-9ec0ba2e1f14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":210.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twenty Second Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To May 1927)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224756","wordCount":81371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ari Linden"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5815d155-7d92-3589-970e-81ecc9a9fe66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43555140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"536","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-536","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond Repetition: Karl Kraus's \"Absolute Satire\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43555140","wordCount":11341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"This article reassesses the theoretical import of the Viennese satirist Karl Kraus, arguing that his satire challenges conventional understandings of the genre. Most notably in The Last Days of Mankind (Die letzten Tage der Menschheit), Kraus's satire delegitimizes any given historical or political position, addressing, rather, what he calls \"posterity\" as the only viable alternative. This moment lies beyond the repetitive structures inherent to modernity, specifically as they were articulated in the First World War. Kraus's \"absolute satire\" (Hermann Broch) thus contains a temporal dimension insofar as its intended audience is one that does not yet exist.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher S. Wood"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Michael Pacher and the Fate of the Altarpiece in Renaissance Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166787","wordCount":11392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mar\u00eda Luengo Cruz"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02105233"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f7fb968-d19b-3c2e-bf24-e76e4b060107"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40184768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reis"}],"isPartOf":"Reis","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Fundamentos y carencias de los estudios culturales: una revisi\u00f3n te\u00f3rico-cr\u00edtica del \u00e1mbito popular culture (Cultural Studies: Foundations and Shortcomings. A Theoretical and Critical Review of the Popular Culture Field)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40184768","wordCount":15090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"115","publisher":"Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"El presente estudio revisa los presupuestos te\u00f3ricos de los estudios culturales y el \u00e1rea de la cultura popular en Gran Breta\u00f1a a partir de 1950. Esta esfera de lo popular fue definida por la sociedad de masas mediado el siglo xx, y por quienes como Theodor W. Adorno y Max Horkheimer teorizaron sobre la cultura que le es propia. Los artistas modernos y sus cr\u00edticos abrieron entonces una brecha insalvable entre el arte y los objetos comerciales de dicha cultura. El primero se reserv\u00f3 la esfera del saber y del arte, mientras que los segundos pasaban a engrosar la esfera del mercado social. La noci\u00f3n moderna de cultura de masas estableci\u00f3 el precedente de las consideraciones del brit\u00e1nico Raymond Williams y de los estudios culturales posteriores a \u00e9l. La corriente brit\u00e1nica trat\u00f3 de superar esta comprensi\u00f3n moderna de la cultura. \/\/\/ This study is a conceptual revisi\u00f3n of the background of cultural studies and the popular culture field in Great Britain in the 1950s. This academic domain was defined by mass society in the middle of the 20th century, and by those who, like Theodor W. Adorno and Max Horkheimer, spoke about mass culture. Modern artists and their critics then created an insuperable divide between art and the commercial objects of popular culture. The former claimed the sphere of art and knowledge, whereas popular culture belonged to the social market. Based on this divisi\u00f3n, the modern notion of mass culture set the precedent of Raymond Williams' popular culture concept, and the theoretical formulation of other authors who developed the British cultural perspective. It was a project which tried to overe\u00f3me this modern vision of culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sonia K. Katyal"],"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d82f0683-fbba-3f02-9346-802bb42c2666"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"1172","pageStart":"1111","pagination":"pp. 1111-1172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Computer science","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Technoheritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630780","wordCount":29476,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[69633,69700]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":"This Article explores the legal revolution that is swiftly unfolding regarding the relationship between technology, user interactivity, and cultural institutions, both inside and outside of the law. At the same time that cultural properties are facing destruction from war and environmental change, we are also living in an age of unprecedented interactivity and reproduction\u2014everywhere, museums are offering their collections for open access, 3-D printing, and new projects involving virtual and augmented reality. With the advent of other sophisticated forms of digital technology, the preservation and replication of antiquities have never been easier. Today's archaeological moment demonstrates both the possibilities and limitations behind \"technoheritage\" \u2014the marriage of technology and cultural heritage. Toward that end, this Article argues that, in order to understand the relationship between technology and cultural heritage, it might be helpful to study the theoretical dimensions behind interactivity itself Just as technology has the power to preserve and protect ancient artifacts, it also invites a dizzying array of legal conflicts over their digitization and replication, particularly with regards to the intersection of copyright law with cultural identity. Unpacking this further, this Article offers a tripartite taxonomy of interactivity: the first, described as extractive (drawing upon the accumulation and selection of data); the second, immersive (drawing upon new forms of user participation through virtual and augmented reality); and the third, derivative (drawing upon new possibilities of user creation). Normatively, I argue that these models of interactivity provide us with an important framework with which to examine the importance of copyright protection for cultural heritage. In the concluding section, I suggest a potential way of rethinking the museum by drawing on the logic and legal protection extended to databases and archives in an age of unprecedented user interactivity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sumita S. Chakravarty"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23347183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a15ad94-df8c-312f-836f-c04a9b7070b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23347183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on the Body Beautiful in Indian Popular Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23347183","wordCount":8132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The New School","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"1171","pageStart":"1167","pagination":"pp. 1167-1171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251672","wordCount":2647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorraine V. Aragon"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24030418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0268540X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f0a8c60-e055-33de-86ed-a664bee96a21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24030418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthtoda"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Law versus lore: Copyright and conflicting claims about culture and property in Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24030418","wordCount":5752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8d19889-5a30-375d-80db-256a4ffcda03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40927429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":789.0,"pageEnd":"798","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-798","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE DE LA LITT\u00c9RATURE FRAN\u00c7AISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927429","wordCount":413375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-05-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa09638b-9083-3937-a316-801dfdf3466b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23483107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483107","wordCount":29719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3392604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e30335d-d349-3c41-87ff-7c101ede34d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3392604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3392604","wordCount":7912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jackie Byars","Jeff Gould","Peter Fitting","Judith Newton","Tony Safford","Clayton Lee","Charles Elkins","M. A."],"datePublished":"1980-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fe3a89c-e33f-30e6-af19-64c0ef06d262"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4239357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Symposium on \"Alien\" (Un Symposium sur \"Alien\")","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239357","wordCount":16046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"Jackie Byars, animateur de ce d\u00e9bat sur \"Alien\", r\u00e9sume le film en insistant sur les traits topiques et les id\u00e9olog\u00e8mes les plus patents. Il pr\u00e9sente ensuite les points de vue et th\u00e8ses des diff\u00e9rents participants \u00e0 ce symposium. Pour sa part, en s'inspirant d'une remarque de W. Benjamin, il s'attache au mode de transmission de ce dispositif id\u00e9ologique qu'est \"Alien\". \"Alien\" t\u00e9moigne des transformations radicales de l'industrie filmique am\u00e9ricaine. Le vieux syst\u00e8me hollywoodien est mort dans les ann\u00e9es soixante. Son r\u00f4le d'homog\u00e9nisateur de la culture U.S. a \u00e9t\u00e9 transmis \u00e0 la t\u00e9l\u00e9vision. \"Alien\", avec son co\u00fbt de 10 millions de dollars, est typique de la technique des m\u00e9gasucc\u00e8s contemporains (\"Blockbusters\"). Jeff Gould centre son analyse du film sur la mani\u00e8re dont il transpose et all\u00e9gorise les rapports sociaux d'une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 post-industrielle. L'extraterrestre, dans sa perfection mena\u00e7ante, est lui-m\u00eame un analogue des corporations multinationales. Peter Fitting voit dans \"Alien\" un bon exemple de la fa\u00e7on dont les artefacts culturels visent \u00e0 r\u00e9soudre dans l'imaginaire des contradictions de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 r\u00e9elle. Il relie le film \u00e0 la longue tradition du cin\u00e9ma de SF \"\u00e0 monstres\" et \u00e0 sa vulgarisation de th\u00e8mes freudiens li\u00e9s aux effets d'horreur (li\u00e9s aussi \u00e0 une all\u00e9gorie des craintes imp\u00e9rialistes face \u00e0 la barbarie tiers-mondiste et aux exigences des exploit\u00e9s). Le besoin qu'\u00e9prouve le spectateur de films centr\u00e9s sur ces th\u00e8mes et ces types d'affects doit \u00eatre examin\u00e9: de tels films sont des leurres qui jouent avec l'ali\u00e9nation et les frustrations contradictoires du public. L'impulsion utopique en est forclose. Judith Newton s'int\u00e9resse sp\u00e9cialement au personnage f\u00e9minin, Ripley, en position de h\u00e9ros individualiste dans le film. Le film ici joue avec certaines angoisses f\u00e9minines, mais aussi il fait un usage ambigu de certains lieux communs du mouvement f\u00e9ministe. L'extraterrestre, phallique, est une expression de la terreur masculine face \u00e0 la sexualit\u00e9 des femmes et \u00e0 la castration. Tony Safford traite de la repr\u00e9sentation grin\u00e7ante de la Volont\u00e9 de Savoir, incarn\u00e9e dans l'andro\u00efde Ash. Le conflit entre science et humanisme est essentiel \u00e0 l'intrigue. L'humain et l'animal domestique (le chat) s'opposent paradigmatiquement \u00e0 l'andro\u00efde et \u00e0 l'extraterrestre. Clayton Lee voit dans le film un \u00e9chantillon d'une esth\u00e9tique mani\u00e9riste et baroque propre \u00e0 l'\u00e8re post-moderne. Il examine la combinaison de distanciation cognitive et d'horreur, et rapproche Alien d'autres films r\u00e9cents de SF et d'horreur.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Serguei Alex. 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The Significance of Max Weber's Thought for Modern Cultural History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618620","wordCount":8327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Regina B. 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Thomas writes that in Bleak House \"photographic images are contrasted . . . with a set of painted portraits which do not tell the truth.'' If we consider the novel in the context of contemporary writings on photography, however, this claim becomes problematic. The ubiquity of portraits among the novel's middle-class characters raises questions about representation that resonate not just through the 1830s (the era of the novel's setting), but also through Dickens's own era of the 1850s, a time in which the photograph had largely replaced the painted portrait as a means of memorializing the middle classes. Advertisements for John E. Mayall's photographic studio appearing in serialized issues of Bleak House, Dickens's letter to Angela Burdett Coutts describing his first sitting for May all in December of 1852, and articles published in Household Words in the early 1850s all attest to the popular fascination with photography, but also suggest the writers' ambivalence toward the new technology, ambivalence born of the rigidity, artificiality, and potential distortion of early photographic images. These same qualities are attributed to painted portraits in Bleak House. In subtly equating photography (the new technology of the middle classes) with painting (traditionally the means of preserving the images of the elite), the novel cautions readers against naive celebration of the documentary accuracy of any type of representation while also suggesting the susceptibility of the rising middle classes to the foibles of the erstwhile ruling classes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4480925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4480925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4480925","wordCount":15264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth C. 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BROCKMAN-HAWE"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5305\/intelegamate.49.5.1341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207829"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49234981"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213862"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05fc7536-5a01-3e44-866f-3e212441c1ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5305\/intelegamate.49.5.1341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelegamate"}],"isPartOf":"International Legal Materials","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"1379","pageStart":"1341","pagination":"pp. 1341-1379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"INTRODUCTORY NOTE TO THE EXTRAORDINARY CHAMBERS OF THE COURTS OF CAMBODIA: DECISION ON THE APPEALS AGAINST THE CO-INVESTIGATIVE JUDGES ORDER ON JOINT CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE (JCE)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5305\/intelegamate.49.5.1341","wordCount":33029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1946-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dec49d9f-26dd-3410-995f-fe6687a0ff40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1840141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"528","pagination":"pp. 528-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840141","wordCount":25179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anneliese Harding"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/426758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c583c810-e11a-3a63-8467-79b00ebf8b7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/426758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"British and Scottish Models for the American Genre Paintings of John Lewis Krimmel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/426758","wordCount":9069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"German immigrant painter John Lewis Krimmel, America's first genre artist, was influenced, at least initially, by English artists such as William Hogarth and Scottish painters such as David Wilkie. Krimmel is documented to have painted a picture titled The Village Politicians, but in order to determine whether an unsigned canvas depicting Wilkie's Village Politicians, which was found in the New Orleans area in 2001, is Krimmel's slightly Americanized version of the famous Scottish scene, Krimmel scholar Dr. Anneliese Harding traces the Philadelphia\u2010based painter's development and finds direct influences of Wilkie and other British and Scottish painters' work on Krimmel's original designs.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a0e13d8-d9d2-333e-bd54-ba3365cb477d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23269542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23269542","wordCount":30784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FREDERICK BUELL"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23259137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c3e44a8-11a7-3924-b691-f9ef5a0c26c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23259137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Short History of Oil Cultures: Or, the Marriage of Catastrophe and Exuberance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23259137","wordCount":9951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"In opposition to energy historian Vaclav Smil, who argues that \"timeless literature... show[s] no correlation with advances in energy consumption,\" this essay makes the general claim that energy history is significantly entwined with cultural history. Energy history is in fact entwined with changing cultural conceptualizations and representations of psyche, body, society, and environment; it is correlated not just with changing material cultures, but with symbolic cultures as well. To see this, the essay argues, one must conceptualize energy history in terms of a succession of energy systems \u2014 systems that are constituted by sociocultural, economic, environmental, and technological relationships. The essay's specific argument then traces the effects on symbolic culture, especially literature, of the nineteenth \u2014 and twentieth-century shift from coal capitalism to oil\u2014electric capitalism. It starts by looking at the features of early oil extraction culture, from Drake's 1859 oil strike in Titusville, Pennsylvania to Upton Sinclair's novel Oil!, and examines how oil\u2014electric capitalism develops and defines itself culturally against the previous era of coal capitalism. Then the essay considers how the consolidation of the oil\u2014electric capitalist system is significantly related to the emergence of modernist culture, affecting the production of both popular culture and high art. By the end of the twentieth century, a new phase in oil\u2014electric capitalism emerges with the expansion of the postwar petrochemical industry, the dramatic expansion of environmental crisis discourse in the 1960s and 1970s, and the return of peak-oil discourse to the mainstream in the last decade. The essay examines how the material features of oil, as well as its dominant uses as luminant, motor fuel, lubricant, and eventually petrochemical feedstock, take on cultural importance. Exemplifying both the cultural innovations and reinventions of oil capitalism from the extraction era to the consolidation era and the post-World War II period, the essay focusses throughout on the two recurring motifs, exuberance and catastrophe, as they play out in a wide range of literary texts and popular enthusiasms.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pilar Villar-Arg\u00e1iz","Alan Grossman","\u00c1ine O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44363751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1602124X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"241298206"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-236267"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40ea1a5c-c5c7-38a8-b973-e3c9eefedb2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44363751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nordirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nordic Irish Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","Irish Studies","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Humanising the lived experiences of migrants': An Interview with Alan Grossman and \u00c1ine O'Brien","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44363751","wordCount":7950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Dalarna University Centre for Irish Studies","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allan Sekula"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bdf2cb0-8594-34b0-bcf2-3ccffe61c823"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Between the Net and the Deep Blue Sea (Rethinking the Traffic in Photographs)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779129","wordCount":14911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ghenete Zelleke"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00693235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00d0accf-3544-3662-8f4a-81fc07691b27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4113042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artinstchicmuses"}],"isPartOf":"Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 22-89+93-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Embarrassment of Riches: Fifteen Years of European Decorative Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113042","wordCount":30108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Art Institute of Chicago","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynda J. King"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bac940d7-c5f9-3fc6-8584-758675a9cf70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Vicki Baum and the \"Making\" of Popular Success: \"Mass\" Culture or \"Popular\" Culture?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688822","wordCount":8286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"This study examines the reasons for international literary star Vicki Baum's immense success. After first detailing the promotion of Baum and her works and briefly analyzing her 1928\u201329 novel stud. chem. Helene Willf\u00fcer, the study contends that advertising and writing for the marketplace were prerequisites to success, but did not ensure that she or her works would indeed become best-sellers. Based on theories of \"popular\" rather than \"mass\" culture, it goes on to explore the delicate and complicated balance of power between producers and consumers that leads to popular success.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M\u00f3nica Gonz\u00e1lez Garc\u00eda"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/revchilenalit.88.127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcc036e0-0942-3cfe-adac-47dcee9a9dff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/revchilenalit.88.127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"HAMBRE, REVOLUCI\u00d3N Y DERROTA:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/revchilenalit.88.127","wordCount":10735,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30806,30951]],"Locations in B":[[55810,55954]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"88","publisher":"Universidad de Chile","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"RESUMEN En este ensayo recorro diversas pel\u00edculas del Cinema Novo brasile\u00f1o de la d\u00e9cada de 1960, a partir de los conceptos hambre, revoluci\u00f3n y derrota, para examinar lo que describo como el \u00faltimo gran desencuentro de la modernidad en Am\u00e9rica Latina \u2013a saber, el fin de las utop\u00edas redentoras de izquierda. Seg\u00fan explico, en ciertas obras cinematogr\u00e1ficas de esta d\u00e9cada es posible hallar claves del profundo cambio que experiment\u00f3 el campo cultural brasile\u00f1o, donde la introducci\u00f3n de la violencia de la \u201cdial\u00e9ctica de la marginalidad\u201d (Castro Rocha) fue superada por la jovialidad de la \u201cdial\u00e9ctica del malandrinaje\u201d (Candido). No obstante, esta vez el malandrinaje trajo consigo la mediaci\u00f3n \u201ccordial\u201d del mercado. Mi an\u00e1lisis, centrado principalmente en pel\u00edculas de Nelson Pereira dos Santos, Glauber Rocha y Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, busca leer los cambios sintomatizados por el Cinema Novo de la d\u00e9cada de 1960 como sin\u00e9cdoque de transformaciones culturales similares en el resto de Am\u00e9rica Latina.","subTitle":"EL CINEMA NOVO<\/em> Y LOS DESENCUENTROS DE LA MODERNIDAD LATINOAMERICANA","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-04-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c3d8dab-a29d-3604-a320-0944f0236a11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1694867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694867","wordCount":24252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4697","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"228","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Justin Thomas McDaniel"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1wn0qv2.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780824865986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4d91a3b-e472-3210-bf81-1c12379d4bf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1wn0qv2.11"}],"isPartOf":"Architects of Buddhist Leisure","keyphrase":["bangkok","buddhism","university","honolulu university","buddha","tange kenzo","singapore","buddha tooth","tooth relic","tadao ando"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"205","pagination":"205-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1wn0qv2.11","wordCount":4943,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[1962,2032]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1948-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1876467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14206085-3f80-3f87-89cd-13a694bd25fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1876467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1876467","wordCount":23681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noah Viernes"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fefd81e-4953-306d-801b-597fdfa84409"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23752550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The geo-body of contemporary Thai film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752550","wordCount":10427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Contemporary Thai films such as Salween (Chatrichalerm Yukol, 1995), Handle Me With Care (Kongdej Jaturanrasamee, 2008) and Mysterious Object at Noon (Apichatpong Weerasethakul, 2000) emphasize connections between geographical space and national belonging in unconventional ways. By employing new creative techniques to present continuing political conflicts in the region, these films lay claim to a visual tradition of territorial recognition. This article interprets this recent cinematic direction as a continuation of Thongchai Winichakul's critique of the 'geo-body'. The geo-body, a conceptual framing that links seeing subjects with visual representations, enables the imagination of national space by mapping bodies. This article shows how the aesthetic techniques of film reorient the imagination of national space through a reconfiguration of the geo-body of film.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. Moore"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031569"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381485"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3883000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerzool"}],"isPartOf":"American Zoologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":165.0,"pageEnd":"747","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-747","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Science as a Way of Knowing: Genetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883000","wordCount":93067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"This essay is part of the third presentation of an educational project of the American Society of Zoologists. The purpose is to offer suggestions for improving the first-year biology courses in the universities. The method consists of emphasizing the conceptual framework of the biological sciences, showing how scientific information is obtained and evaluated, pointing out the strengths and limitations of scientific procedures, and above all showing the relevance of science for human hopes and well being. This is done annually with a major symposium, an essay distributed at the symposium, a film program, and, finally, the published proceedings, which are widely distributed to scientist-teachers throughout the world. Each year a major topic is considered. In 1983 it was Evolutionary Biology and in 1984 it was Human Ecology. This year it is Genetics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f11d70b0-4b9f-3d86-a9bb-62f9c5222364"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43280792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280792","wordCount":5627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katelin Trowbridge"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48150607"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0052f1e2-40bc-3ddf-880f-21bce932a3a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45116773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The War between Words and Images\u2014Sunset Boulevard","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116773","wordCount":6859,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[36331,36398]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Enda Duffy"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c60dd45a-4f06-32e7-ab9c-77bdec26532b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23342951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"407","pagination":"pp. 407-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Ulysses\" Becomes Electra: Electric Energy in Joyce's Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342951","wordCount":8603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"The arrival, at the turn of the twentieth century, of the new technology of mass electrification led to a diffusion of a new kind of pervasive energy in the world and a new experience of energy for its users. This was not only mentioned in modernist texts; it infiltrated the way those texts attended to the human energy of the characters portrayed. Modernist experiments, particularly in Joyce's Ulysses, often serve the purpose of delineating, with an accuracy never before attempted, the shifts in the nervous energy expenditure of their characters. In such passages as the final scene of \"Lestrygonians,\" when Bloom catches sight of Boylan and swerves to avoid meeting him, Ulysses is more interested in mapping the ebb and flow of Bloom's energy than in tracing the motivations and dilemmas that are generally taken to be most novels' concerns. This represents Ulysses's \"adrenaline aesthetic.\" It marks a cultural turn in which texts attend less to human motivations and more to the modulations of human energy. Bloom's fl\u00e2nerie, which marks the overall rhythm of his energy use, allows him both to hoard and to disperse his energies, all within a social framework in which the consumption of commodities is key.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1906-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1075324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00366773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54678474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a2ac9d9-73c7-3cae-973d-5492fd1ba901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1075324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"schoolreview"}],"isPartOf":"The School Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1906,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Textbooks in Rhetoric and in Composition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1075324","wordCount":18092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grace Quimby"],"datePublished":"1959-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40289765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22982ca2-d758-361d-881e-e7d693166e07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40289765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Writings on Archives, Current Records, and Historical Manuscripts, June 1957-May 1958: Part 1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40289765","wordCount":11075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan M. Ziolkowski"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5zfv24.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783745210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b3912dc-5ac0-321e-8bf7-b0bc4748e87c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5zfv24.4"}],"isPartOf":"The Juggler of Notre Dame and the Medievalizing of Modernity","keyphrase":["henry adams","gothic","middle ages","tumbling worlds","postcard depicting","mont saint","chartres","medieval","harvard","mont saint michel"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"5","pagination":"5-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Architecture and Architectural History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Tumbling Worlds of Henry Adams","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5zfv24.4","wordCount":15476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"From the 1890s on, the ground for the reception of the medieval taleOur Lady\u2019s Tumbler<\/em>in the United States was readied among the elite. Yet the individuals and media involved in the projection of the story in the New World before the cultured public are only loosely comparable to those who from the 1870s on motivated the success of the medieval poem and the fin-de-si\u00e8cle short story in France. Among the authors who ensured that cultivated readers would be acquainted with the narrative, one stands out: Henry Brooks Adams. He contributed in major ways to the hearty American response.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Garry Whannel"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42a62740-a5fd-36e7-9a07-3b8da3e56a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Television and the Transformation of Sport","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375916","wordCount":6981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"625","abstract":"Sport played a significant part in the growth of television, especially during its emergence as a dominant global medium between 1960 and 1980. In turn, television, together with commercial sponsorship, transformed sport, bringing it significant new income and prompting changes in rules, presentation, and cultural form. Increasingly, from the 1970s, it was not the regular weekly sport that commanded the largest audiences but, rather, the occasional major events, such as the Olympic Games and football's World Cup. In the past two decades, deregulation and digitalization have expanded the number of channels, but this fragmentation, combined with the growth of the Internet, has meant that the era in which shared domestic leisure was dominated by viewing of the major channels is closing. Yet, sport provides an exception, an instance when around the world millions share a live and unpredictable viewing experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael B. Bakan"],"datePublished":"2016-05-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.60.2.0358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daf822ee-21b6-3d3f-b282-a37dea48fae7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/ethnomusicology.60.2.0358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/ethnomusicology.60.2.0358","wordCount":3700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lomas"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f62cc4d-93ae-3669-b06c-f08e32d0aa00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23322190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Artist \u2014 Sorcerers: Mimicry, Magic and Hysteria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23322190","wordCount":12581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"The article explores certain ramifications of mimicry as a theme in surrealist art and writing, with particular reference to the self-presentation of surrealist artists such as Max Ernst. It is concerned with a set of connections between mimicry, masquerade and hysteria, all of which have in common a tendency to simulation. In his extensive writings on the subject of mimicry, initially in a surrealist milieu, Roger Caillois likened mimicry in insects to a human propensity for simulation, evident in games and play as well as in social institutions such as shamanism. Anthropological accounts of shamanism that stressed the role of pretense, simulation and even hysteria in shamanistic rituals influenced Ernst's adoption of an avian alter-ego called Loplop, as well as the way Andr\u00e9 Breton and others wrote about him. Mimicry is likewise relevant to various women Surrealist artists in whose work it will be claimed that animal disguises and masquerade comprise an anti-essentialist identity strategy. In the interwar period, the psychoanalytic theorization of female masquerade is one legacy of the hysteria diagnosis, a condition closely allied with simulation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH G. HERZOG"],"datePublished":"1938-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72424d77-34ee-3757-a57c-2ab622123c17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24476003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":125.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"GENERAL INDEX: AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGICAL LITERATURE AND MEMOIRS OF THE AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION 1929-1938","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476003","wordCount":58437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ferenc Feher"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a13bfbb9-37b2-38e2-84ed-433157ae5c2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Luk\u00e1cs and Benjamin: Parallels and Contrasts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488341","wordCount":6203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"34","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K.-PETER LADE"],"datePublished":"1969-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"477cf059-be1d-3dbe-877a-edcbb5673340"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24476007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":356.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iv, 1-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"[Cumulative Index 1959-1969]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476007","wordCount":222694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Delphine Mordey"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41418808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bafff40d-6a23-3f1f-9e51-21d619308443"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41418808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'DANS LE PALAIS DU SON, ON FAIT DE LA FARINE': PERFORMING AT THE OP\u00c9RA DURING THE 1870 SIEGE OF PARIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41418808","wordCount":17879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":"The period of the 1870 siege of Paris has often been dismissed as a musical vacuum; few new works were written, and many of the capital's theatres closed. But as the war persisted, initial objections to entertainment were overridden by a desire to escape the tedium of life under siege. In response, the artists of the Op\u00e9ra formed a cooperative to present a series of soir\u00e9es musicales. The hitherto neglected archives for these concerts offer a fascinating insight not only into the difficulties faced by musicians, but also into the ideological and aesthetic debates that preoccupied the musical culture of Paris in this time of political crisis. Central to these debates was the prominence of the enemy's music in the concert programmes: investigation of this repertory's reception reveals the complex nature of French attitudes to German culture during this period. But the unique performing conditions imposed by the siege provoked as much discussion as the chosen repertory. The Op\u00e9ra and its audience were forced to adapt to the absence of costumes, d\u00e9cor, and lighting\u2014a compromise that would bring with it intriguing aesthetic consequences.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Win Sharples, Jr."],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbe6c7c4-a9dd-388e-991d-fcee8a40e400"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Selected and Annotated Bibliography of Books and Articles on Music in the Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225489","wordCount":14169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn R. Wilkinson"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40919921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8124c7b4-0bb7-34dd-9c22-9f97a52228fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40919921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Strindberg, Peter Szondi, and the Origins of Modern (Tragic) Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40919921","wordCount":11225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex M. Nading"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23339797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08946019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d58b388-ddee-3c63-a4a0-4b536446b150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23339797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbaanthstudcult"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Foundry Values: Artisanal Aluminum Recyclers, Economic Involution, And Skill In Periurban Managua, Nicaragua","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23339797","wordCount":12249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This article analyzes the processes by which informal recyclers in periurban Managua, Nicaragua turned salvaged aluminum into pots, pans, and decorative items. It situates such artisanal aluminum recycling in a context of what Burawoy (1996) and Davis (2004) call \"economic involution.\" Recycling proliferated in a post-revolutionary Nicaraguan economy in which an already fledgling industrial metalworks sector had nearly collapsed; in which flexible export capitalism and tourism were growing; and in which informal production was also expanding. From the perspective of aluminum artisans, the honing of skills (smelting, sculpting, molding, and alloying) was a creative response to this trend. Even after the return to power of a nominally pro-poor Sandinista government in 2007, recyclers continued to self-consciously style themselves as artisanal laborers (obradores artesanales). The recyclers avoided formal associations such as Sandinista cooperatives and private microcredit schemes. Drawing on fieldwork carried out in two artisanal aluminum shops between 2008 and 2011, the article guides readers through the recycling labor process, revealing the ways in which these urban craft laborers came to see embodied skills as potential sources of value and potential pathways to a middle class and tourist markets.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20746055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2de07c52-27b8-3503-81d3-f6108323ade5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20746055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerbarassoj"}],"isPartOf":"American Bar Association Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Coding theory","Applied sciences - Computer science","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20746055","wordCount":21604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geoffrey Hartman"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e6a5d2d-f4c1-37e4-8d6f-fdf87cd48b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literary Criticism and Its Discontents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342885","wordCount":8113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iain A. D. Stewart"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3736218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"545","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-545","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3736218","wordCount":1758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zhu Feng"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.2.0109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43103179-8312-3e13-b5dc-5c1d477532a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.2.0109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Revolution of View: Visual Presentation under the Influence of Multidimensional Concepts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.45.2.0109","wordCount":3911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-12-10","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1733433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f767c2b-0cf3-387b-afcb-586066fdea5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1733433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"1168","pageStart":"1057","pagination":"pp. 1057-1168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1733433","wordCount":22534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4014","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"174","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harrison T. Meserole"],"datePublished":"1967-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d795be7a-51d8-3091-ba78-13f9236c7a97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":439.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-413+415+417-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1966 MLA International Bibliography of Books and Articles on the Modern Languages and Literatures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261109","wordCount":435907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Michael DeLuca","Christine Harold","Kenneth Rufo"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"653","pageStart":"627","pagination":"pp. 627-653","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Q.U.I.L.T.: A Patchwork of Reflections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940328","wordCount":8501,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[26225,26292]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"This essay, through an interrelated patchwork of \"thought panels,\" explores the themes of visuality, representation, and trauma in the AIDS Memorial Quilt. We argue that as a text visually representing the magnitude of the global AIDS crisis, the Quilt fails miserably. However, this failure to represent is precisely why the Quilt succeeds as a gathering point for AIDS awareness and compassion, where traditional memorials might not. Indeed, to understand the rhetorical function of the Quilt, we argue that the Quilt must not be conceived as a \"monument\" to the crisis, but as an \"archive\" Whereas a monument enshrines an event in a particular place and time, an archive records and makes accessible a (partial, contingent) history, a history that is more than the sum of the parts on its timeline.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Myers"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1192075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcfe3018-781e-3f53-ba97-ed9d017d35ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1192075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawcontprob"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Contemporary Problems","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Trademark Parody: Lessons from the Copyright Decision in Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1192075","wordCount":16561,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University School of Law","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher P. Wilson"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eda8333a-493f-36af-84cb-f95f57671f02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Picturing Art and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041570","wordCount":3755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Gatrall"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3593496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Between Iconoclasm and Silence: Representing the Divine in Holbein and Dostoevskii","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593496","wordCount":10666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Esther Leslie"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Walter Benjamin: Traces of Craft","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316160","wordCount":6346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"This paper considers Walter Benjamin's theory of the object in the industrial age. Benjamin's work is replete with images of craft practices. Pot-throwing and weaving appear as paradigms of authentic experience and the processes of memory. Prominent in Benjamin's account of craft practice is the hand that feels and marks its objects; authentic knowledge of the world is envisioned as a 'grasping hold' of the world. The shift from artisan labour to industrial labour, with its growing redundancy of the hand in the processes of production, impacts on modes of memory and experience. Benjamin's delineation of modern, industrialized experience is shown to be redemptive. He re-evaluates Dada and photography as manual craft processes that might rediscover a modern authenticity of experience and memory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodore M. Porter"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18700465-30d9-37be-ab19-aeb02261de9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/667828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thin Description: Surface and Depth in Science and Science Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667828","wordCount":9211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Since the time of the French Revolution, a sequence of modern thinkers has theorized the thinning of the world in relation to the growth of science. In a large, diverse, and politicized world, subtlety seems to recede into nooks and corners, while information is revered for its ready accessibility and seeming solidity. The sciences, adapting their public voice and some of their inward practices to such expectations, have over the twentieth century flourished more and more in the public sphere as preeminent sites of facts, data, and statistics. Yet the aspiration to superficiality yields up all kinds of unexpected consequences, which provide fascinating opportunities for historical and social studies of science if we can ourselves resist the siren song of thinness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642929"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53a1eddf-e6cf-3dc3-80e0-29a948cfd3e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n14t.16"}],"isPartOf":"Jean Epstein","keyphrase":["cinema","perception","turvey","technology","temporal perspective","writings","cinematic","photog\u00e9nie","human perception","trond lundemo"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"207","pagination":"207-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Temporal Perspective:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.16","wordCount":9205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The essence of technology, Martin Heidegger explains in \u201cThe Question Concerning Technology\u201d (1953), is nothing technological. It is a matter of theErscheinung<\/em>(\u201ccoming to presence\u201d) of Being of the work of art.\u00b9 The later writings of Jean Epstein also identify a question of technology to be answered in the realm of aesthetics and in processes of subjectivity. Instead of serving the development of a necessarily strained and reductive analogy between Heidegger\u2019s concepts and Jean Epstein\u2019s writings on cinema \u2013 indeed, Heidegger\u2019s apparent techno-skepticism and Epstein\u2019s celebrations of film technology immediately seem irreconcilable \u2013 this relationship may prompt us to ask which","subTitle":"Jean Epstein\u2019s Writings on Technology and Subjectivity","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-05-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e563785d-b647-38a0-b89a-0bbf31688911"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1718517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":98.0,"pageEnd":"996","pageStart":"813","pagination":"pp. 813-996","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718517","wordCount":45471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3724","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"152","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RACHEL JOSEPH"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96d3a999-3734-3641-b4fe-409c900e3a45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"442","pagination":"pp. 442-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE SCREENED STAGES OF SLAVOJ \u017dI\u017dEK: THE SURPLUS OF THE REAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544453","wordCount":9658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"This essay explores the poetics of surplus in relationship to reproducibility, theatricality, and presentness by analyzing Sophie Fiennes's documentary film The Pervert's Guide to Cinema (2006). The film restages moments from cinema history with Slavoj \u017di\u017eek acting as performer, guide, philosopher, and Lacanian analyst. When \u017di\u017eek embeds himself within reproductions of the sets of the films he discusses (ranging from Chaplin and Hitchcock to the Marx Brothers and David Lynch) he creates a surplus by, as Samuel Weber has explored, \"installing\" a theatricality that is in excess to reproducibility. Fiennes and \u017di\u017eek frame these theatrical interruptions in such a way that they establish \"screened stages\"\u2014moments when theatre appears within cinema. \u017di\u017eek's performance creates within the reproducible universe a sense of presence: the surplus that screened stages produce. These instances of surplus offer a glimpse of the Lacanian Real, that aspect of reality that eludes comprehension and the symbolic order.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt1pwt6wq.27","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781517902858"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b263b66-a3cd-382b-8301-694cd5161d98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctt1pwt6wq.27"}],"isPartOf":"Making Things and Drawing Boundaries","keyphrase":["life mask","dialogic","objects","smithsonian","lincoln","susan garfinkel","lincoln life","dialogic objects","dialogic object","lincoln life mask"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"206","pagination":"206-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dialogic Objects in the Age of 3-D Printing:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt1pwt6wq.27","wordCount":5740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Smithsonian Now Allows Anyone To 3D Print (Some) Historic Artifacts,\u201d declared a headline on theForbes Tech<\/em>blog page (Mack). \u201cThese New 3D Models Put the Smithsonian\u2019s Most Renowned Items in Your Hands,\u201d explained another, at the website ofSmithsonian Magazine<\/em>(Stromberg). Both appeared in November 2013, when a simultaneous press release and conference announced the launch of \u201cSmithsonian X 3D,\u201d an initiative to scan significant museum artifacts and turn them into three-dimensional digital models to either view online or download and 3-D\u2013print via a new portal website.\u00b9 \u201cThe future has arrived,\u201d tweeted Mythbusters host Adam Savage (2013). \u201cIs","subTitle":"The Case of the Lincoln Life Mask","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Clark Doeren"],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1314750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263419"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2789eab-86ed-3597-9e72-193974f44ce0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1314750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullmidwmodelang"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Midwest Modern Language Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theory of Culture, Brooklyn Bridge, and Hart Crane's Rhetoric of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1314750","wordCount":5245,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9673,9767]],"Locations in B":[[12108,12202]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Dietrich"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1578284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bab627c-422d-3c47-bc32-73104337fe22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1578284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Visual Intelligence: The First Decade of Computer Art (1965-1975)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1578284","wordCount":7242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"The author traces developments in computer art worldwide from 1965, when the first computer art exhibitions were held by scientists, through succeeding periods in which artists collaborated with scientists to create computer programs for artistic purposes. The end of the first decade of computer art was marked by economic, technological and programming advances that allowed artists more direct access to computers, high quality images and virtually unlimited color choices.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tam\u00e1s Tukacs"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"286642bf-5d44-3a05-ba61-59d96744beb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43487817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"I am a camera\": Melancholia in Christopher Isherwood's \"Goodbye to Berlin\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487817","wordCount":8339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"The paper examines Christopher Isherwood's two 1930s novels, Mr Norris Changes Trains (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939), from the aspect of melancholic remembering. The study consistently links the motif of melancholia to photography, looking into the ways how the narrator's gaze creates a melancholic world and, conversely, how he is affected by the acedia hidden in the outside world. The paper specifically examines the melancholic characters in the novels and the narrator's desire to identify with them, claiming that the two texts might serve as \"photo albums,\" which, in Susan Sontag's definition, are surrealist and melancholic collections. In a more general sense, Isherwood's two early novels might be seen as melancholic monuments erected in the honor of the key myths of the Auden generation, also shedding light on the contrast between modernist, epiphanic, revelatory, \"deep\" memory and the more fragmented and surface-bound remembering of late modernism denying epiphanic experiences.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Jobling"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3527274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527274","wordCount":3196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas A. 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Generative architecture is thus a subset, albeit a prominent one, of what architectural historian Mario Carpo terms, in the title of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meng Yue"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43150555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1562918X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7682cfcc-a584-3a1a-b934-526cf0f2c468"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43150555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eastasiascietech"}],"isPartOf":"East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Technology","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hybrid Science versus Modernity: The Practice of the Jiangnan Arsenal, 1864-1897","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43150555","wordCount":18490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"16","publisher":"International Society of East Asian Science, Technology, and Medicine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kati Curts"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24488182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b250336a-8e82-3d9d-b936-c5dcd0df8fdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24488182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"749","pageStart":"722","pagination":"pp. 722-749","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Temples and Turnpikes in \"The World of Tomorrow\": Religious Assemblage and Automobility at the 1939 New York World's Fair","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24488182","wordCount":10732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":"This article examines three exhibits at the 1939 New York World's Fair, where religion and religious subjectivity were automobilized and reassembled: the Temple of Religion, the General Motors' Futurama, and the Ford Exposition. In each exhibit, interwar religious visions trafficked with secular futures, demonstrating both the inherent messiness of religion and the secular as analytic categories and the shared patterns and paths by which they have been historically produced, traversed, and transformed. As popular articulations of more deeply entrenched heuristics, each Fair locale reveals descriptive and diagnostic contours for what too often serve as obfuscating scholarly shorthand: religious liberalism, secularization, and industrial religion. This article interrogates these slogans of religious studies as historical and interpretive artifacts and argues that the 1939 Fair can help scholars trace futurist descriptions of religion in the twentieth century as well as shared forms of subjectivity and scholarship reproduced in relation to them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kamillou Elliottovou","Miroslav Kot\u00e1sek"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090468"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8551d3a1-c43d-3d7c-af7c-0754a4295860"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42687968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskaliteratura"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00e1 literatura","keyphrase":null,"language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Podvratn\u00e1 adaptace: O KULTURN\u00cd PRAXI, NARU\u0160EN\u00c9 TEORII A NOV\u00ddCH CEST\u00c1CH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42687968","wordCount":5309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Institute of Czech Literature, The Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noa Steimatsky"],"datePublished":"2014-10-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.55.2.0191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed402be7-728f-3245-b474-d17b2d08af89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/framework.55.2.0191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pass\/Fail: The Antonioni Screen Test","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.55.2.0191","wordCount":10609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Drake Stutesman","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lucy Fischer"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2010.64.2.85","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42a0fc2b-147e-358e-b0c0-ba3b6dfae8c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2010.64.2.85"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2010.64.2.85","wordCount":1737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony R. Guneratne"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Birth of a New Realism: Photography, Painting and the Advent of Documentary Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815280","wordCount":15601,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Ward"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzdcv.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089648532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a3319b4-23e9-3962-8a7c-58a884fc6885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv8pzdcv.4"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Memory and Visual Culture in Berlin","keyphrase":["place memory","huyssen","encounter","spatial image","halbwachs","built environment","connerton","assmann","object","synchronic"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"11","pagination":"11-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzdcv.4","wordCount":13649,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[18826,18897]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Contemporary Berlin, a city scarred by the twentieth century, displays its past on almost every street corner, it would seem. The upheavals it has experienced have not just been political, but have also been accompanied by a series of radical physical transformations in the built environment. A large body of literature has been produced on the sophisticated memory work that has been undertaken in Germany, and Berlin in particular. One of those authors, Aleida Assmann, asserts that German places of memory cannot be adequately understood through Pierre Nora\u2019s model of lieux de m\u00e9moire<\/em>, in which modernity\u2019s process of accelerated renewal","subTitle":"Berlin and the Question of \u2018Urban Memory\u2019","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent J. Scully Jr."],"datePublished":"1953-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3047474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e5806c-ab88-3b86-9c86-bdbfd676968b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3047474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Romantic Rationalism and the Expression of Structure in Wood: Downing, Wheeler, Gardner, and the \"Stick Style,\" 1840-1876","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3047474","wordCount":18595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt12877zb.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089646354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70453743-dbd4-3fde-9581-dd6af792440a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt12877zb.5"}],"isPartOf":"The Work of Authorship","keyphrase":["romantic authorship","erlend lavik","originality","erlend","ideology","aesthetics","authorship ideology","doctrine","literary","skinner"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"45","pagination":"45-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Romantic authorship in copyright law and the uses of aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt12877zb.5","wordCount":22066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Scholars of the arts as well as scholars of copyright law \u2013 especially in the US\u00b9 \u2013 have for decades struggled to kill off the ideology of Romantic authorship, though it is far from clear precisely what it consists of, or why and to whom it poses such danger. The situation brings to mind film historian Tom Gunning\u2019s memorable observation in a different context that the persistent attacks \u2018begin to take on something of the obsessive and possibly necrophilic pleasure of beating a dead horse\u2019 (1998, p. xiii).This chapter is divided into two main parts. The first part critically examines the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"810a6941-68f6-39c4-80ba-59f85e9c198f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2699242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":287.0,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1963 MLA International Bibliography of Books and Articles on the Modern Languages and Literatures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699242","wordCount":276915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cyrille Arnavon"],"datePublished":"1945-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2920931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2920931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theodore Dreiser and Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2920931","wordCount":5537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3627290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00228443"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"862a197f-c93c-361b-8f55-25dc7d56fd64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3627290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trankansacadscie"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science (1903-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"The One Hundred Eighth Annual Meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science, Emporia, Kansas, April 9, 1976: [Abstracts of Papers]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3627290","wordCount":18542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Kansas Academy of Science","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07d3ab6b-5fbf-30fe-bafc-2f1a483048ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27850788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"700","pageStart":"687","pagination":"pp. 687-694, 696-700","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850788","wordCount":14144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Sentilles"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23927405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f819127-7c6b-3692-9159-af45b361b2a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23927405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"MISREADING FEUERBACH: SUSAN SONTAG, PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE IMAGE-WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23927405","wordCount":8436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"Attention to Susan Sontag's (mis)reading of Ludwig Feuerbach's Essence of Christianity reveals her agenda in On Photography: to depart from 'the new age of unbelief' and return to 'something like the primitive status of images' in which an image participates in the reality of the object depicted. For Sontag, photography has reduced the world to its image, yet it is photography that can get us back to 'reality'. Sontag's project is more similar to Feuerbach's than she allows. Like Feuerbach, Sontag argues that human beings have mistaken the copy for the thing itself and, as a result, have created a false division between the copy and the 'real,' devalued both the copy and the thing itself, and overlooked the profound ways images affect the world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. L. Reid"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27543686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373052"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48157598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216116"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27543686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sewaneerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Sewanee Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The View from the Side","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27543686","wordCount":11236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-09-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1710275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"208ddf67-c790-377a-9ff0-68cd4cfdc285"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1710275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106.0,"pageEnd":"931","pageStart":"781","pagination":"pp. 781-931","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1710275","wordCount":38380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3533","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"137","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luisa Dolza","H\u00e9l\u00e8ne V\u00e9rin"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20531099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00488003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3acec1fe-3215-30f6-aa58-6b3a8edfd882"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20531099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revhistmodcont"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine (1954-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Figurer la m\u00e9canique: l'\u00e9nigme des th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines de la Renaissance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20531099","wordCount":14212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Societe d'Histoire Moderne et Contemporaine","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"\u00c0 partir des ann\u00e9es 1570, un nouveau genre litt\u00e9raire se r\u00e9pand en Europe, celui des \"th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines\". Ces livres in-folio sont des recueils de planches comment\u00e9es qui pr\u00e9sentent les inventions m\u00e9caniques de leurs auteurs: experts m\u00e9caniciens, ing\u00e9nieurs, math\u00e9maticiens. La multitude et la diversit\u00e9 des machines mises en sc\u00e8ne n'ont cess\u00e9 de fasciner le lecteur et ont assur\u00e9 la fortune du genre. Longtemps, ces planches ont constitu\u00e9 la principale source des \u00e9tudes sur la m\u00e9canique pratique avant la r\u00e9volution scientifique. Les historiens y ont cherch\u00e9 des r\u00e9f\u00e9rences s\u00fbres pour dater les inventions, ou encore pour \u00e9tudier les progr\u00e8s de l'efficacit\u00e9 technique et de l'application des sciences math\u00e9matiques et m\u00e9caniques. Mais les th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines n'apportaient pas de r\u00e9ponse satisfaisante \u00e0 leurs questions et, la d\u00e9ception aidant, c'est presque toujours n\u00e9gativement que ces ouvrages ont \u00e9t\u00e9 appr\u00e9ci\u00e9s. Cet article \u00e9tudie les espoirs et les d\u00e9boires de cet usage des th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines comme sources de l'histoire des techniques. Il met en jeu trois niveaux d'analyse: celui, descriptif, du genre; celui du bilan historiographique qui d\u00e9gage et th\u00e9matise les critiques adress\u00e9es aux th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines; enfin, les \u00e9l\u00e9ments de r\u00e9ponses que l'on trouve sous la plume de leurs auteurs et aussi dans leur mode d'expression iconique. Ce travail critique vise \u00e0 d\u00e9gager l'\u00e9tude des th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines de la pesanteur des id\u00e9es re\u00e7ues et \u00e0 en rendre possibles d'autres lectures. \/\/\/ From the 1570s, a new literary genre, the th\u00e9\u00e2tres de machines, spread in Europe. These in-folio books contain commented plates featuring mechanical inventions by their authors, technicians, engineers, and mathematicians. Since then, the variety and diversity of the machines displayed in the th\u00e9\u00e2tres have fascinated the reader, ensuring the genre's popularity. For a long time these plates have been the main source for studying practical mechanics before the Scientific Revolution. Scholars have considered them as trusty sources for dating the inventions, as well for gauging progress in mastering technical efficiency and applying mathematical and mechanical sciences. As the th\u00e9\u00e2tres, however, did not provide a satisfactory answer to such questions, a certain deception has arisen and such texts came to be seen almost under a negative light. This paper focuses on the hopes and delusions born out of this use of the th\u00e9\u00e2tres as sources in the history of technology. It follows there different levels of analysis: that, descriptive, of the genre, that of the historiographical balance that is brought about by the criticisms levied at the th\u00e9\u00e2tres, and finally the clarifying elements that their authors themselves provided, including under the iconical angle. This critical effort tries to free the scholarship on the th\u00e9\u00e2tres from the burden of conventional wisdom and provide new forms for analyzing them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Alan Fine"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ea35c30-4a79-3e25-999a-36eb14664c72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1489","pageStart":"1487","pagination":"pp. 1487-1489","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231113","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-03-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06956dce-20eb-34c1-9909-bfb91532d080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1718428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":105.0,"pageEnd":"1302","pageStart":"1117","pagination":"pp. 1117-1302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718428","wordCount":39696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3715","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"151","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1945-01-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20347365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c675159f-609f-3641-8a61-ebb47f2223af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20347365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Medical treatment","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20347365","wordCount":46023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4383","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2cn.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053564943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3de6e9cb-1f4f-3a9c-87e9-db66fdecee1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2cn.10"}],"isPartOf":"Camera Obscura, Camera Lucida","keyphrase":["cinema","photography","painting photography","photography film","metropolis","vertov","annette michelson","transfiguring","nagy painting","urban gray"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"109","pagination":"109-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Transfiguring the Urban Gray","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2cn.10","wordCount":6756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Few episodes in cinema history appear more secure than the genre of the city symphony that emerged in the 1920s and whose best-known examples remain Berlin: Symphony of a Great City (Walther Ruttmann, 1927) and Man with a Movie Camera (Dziga Vertov, 1929). Encompassing around twenty titles, city symphonies rely heavily upon montage to represent a cross-section of life in the modern metropolis.\u00b9 They typically are set in one or more identifiable metropoles whose population, central thoroughfares, and places of residence, employment, and leisure they depict over the course of a day, a temporal structure that has inflected films noir","subTitle":"L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Moholy-Nagy\u2019s Film Scenario \u2018Dynamic of the Metropolis\u2019","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2982855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Library science"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982855","wordCount":2134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"156","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08838364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f045cf32-aa17-3800-9bec-872a41d67e17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4295871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"invitrcelldeve"}],"isPartOf":"In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Developmental & Cell Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295871","wordCount":3495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for In Vitro Biology","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shirley MacWilliam"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4eabf6f6-d552-3f4d-95f1-d39fe5ca344e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25563245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sound: Sound, Sense and Sensibilities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563245","wordCount":4292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"83","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jo. B. Brown"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10827161"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608201706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ff840c2-09a7-3a95-b9a6-f6bd51cfa4f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41446784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Appalachian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Journal of Appalachian Studies Annual Bibliography, 2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446784","wordCount":24354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Appalachian Studies Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDWARD ROSEN"],"datePublished":"1956-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24619648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49963229"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd6b1bc5-472c-3b5e-9b90-17bf11a368ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24619648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistmediallisci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Medicine & Allied Health","Science & Technology Studies","Health Sciences","History","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Invention of Eyeglasses: Part II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24619648","wordCount":20975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25727159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b790eba-22aa-3b60-acf3-d36de78a6ba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25727159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerbarassoj"}],"isPartOf":"American Bar Association Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25727159","wordCount":14308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Robertson"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a7158b9-85e2-3e54-b310-6a6cf780f6c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40061214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"699","pageStart":"698","pagination":"pp. 698-699","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061214","wordCount":682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Farland"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"171f9e98-7132-35d6-8fcf-eb192f94f6db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1045","pageStart":"1017","pagination":"pp. 1017-1045","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"W. E. B. DuBois, Anthropometric Science, and the Limits of Racial Uplift","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068404","wordCount":11483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Fuchs"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3738414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9afbd9ad-c1f9-35c2-92e3-ac08199067f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3738414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"W. G. Sebald's Painters: The Function of Fine Art in His Prose Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3738414","wordCount":9652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":"While a growing body of literature deals with W. G. Sebald's use of photography, this article focuses on his treatment of fine art in his prose writings, arguing that Sebald makes an epistemologically as well as aesthetically significant distinction between photography and fine art that deserves closer analysis. Whereas the photographs tend to explore the relationship between history and trauma by inviting an investigation of their representational status, works of fine art in Sebald's prose often provide a therapeutic haven of contemplation, a counterpoint that enshrines moments of transcendence. The argument is developed with reference to Sebald's important essay on the painter Jan Peter Tripp and his treatment of masterpieces in \"Schwindel.\" \"Gef\u00fchle.,\" \"Die Ausgewanderten,\" \"Die Ringe des Saturn,\" and \"Austerlitz.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Scholar"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"261da261-8408-303a-8543-1b958dcc71da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45172841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Joyce, Heidegger, and the Material World of \"Ulysses\": \"Ithaca\" as Inventory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172841","wordCount":13720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"The objects of \"Ithaca,\" the penultimate episode of Ulysses, contribute much to the episode's uncanny mingling of domesticity and strangeness. Engaging with Martin Heidegger's evolving theories of objects and things, and with Roland Barthes's \"reality effect,\" this essay tries to show how and why \"Ithaca'\"s objects behave in this way. \"Ithaca\"'s narrator's scientific scrutiny transforms the familiar objects of Bloom's home into bizarre devices. At first, this technical account of Bloom's material world seems to do no justice to the familiarity with which he inhabits it, a charge Heidegger leveled at post-Cartesian science and philosophy. On closer reading, however, the narrator's alienation of the material world mimics Bloom's alienation from a home containing the material evidence of Molly's adultery. But \"Ithaca\" goes on to suggest that science itself may ultimately reintegrate humans into their physical and human environment. Heidegger's phenomenology helps us see that Bloom's famous provisional acceptance of Molly's infidelity in this episode seems to be significantly indebted to \"Ithaca\"'s materialist vision, rather than simply to Bloom's humanity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Berkley"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29f4aae7-1625-346e-8a71-11a70eb0b07d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"356","pagination":"pp. 356-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Post-Human Mimesis and the Debunked Machine: Reading Environmental Appropriation in Poe's \"Maelzel's Chess-Player\" and \"The Man That Was Used Up\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247418","wordCount":9702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARLOS FORTUNA"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23004377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0039291X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85448329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc424c85-f2ee-37ad-81d6-b1879f1030f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23004377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studisociologia"}],"isPartOf":"Studi di Sociologia","keyphrase":null,"language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"TURISMO, AUTENTICIT\u00c0 E CULTURA URBANA: PERCORSO TEORICO CON BREVI TAPPE A \u00c9VORA E COIMBRA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23004377","wordCount":11597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Vita e Pensiero \u2013 Pubblicazioni dell\u2019Universit\u00e0 Cattolica del Sacro Cuore","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Tourism is a phenomenon which has been widely studied from a sociological point of view in recent years. The article reviews a large part of the sociological literature on the topic, focusing especially on urban and cultural tourism. Moving from the contributions offered by other components of contemporary sociological thought, the Author claims that tourism should be analyzed by keeping into account: i) recent trasformation of capitalism; ii) the hegemony of visual culture and consumption; iii) symbolic universals and tourisists' motivations. In the final part, tourism \u2014 as an expression of modernity and as a disordering element \u2014 is proposed as a factor which is potentially able to subvert identities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. P. Winship","Flora V. Livingston","Howard M. 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P\u00e9guy believed Christianity's dominant eschatological traditions promoted bourgeois individualism and apathy in the face of suffering. P\u00e9guy's rejection of these doctrines illustrates a paradoxical strategy of using Jeanne as an advocate in this struggle against expectation of a wrathful divine judgment. With help from theologian Hans Urs von Balthasar (1905-1988), I explain how contemporary Christians can appropriate P\u00e9guy's eschatological alternative.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cef5fd9c-7b92-30e7-bdbd-cf394c09b36b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1688551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688551","wordCount":15489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4528","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"215","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean Franco"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"278c5394-1b9d-3c07-b5c2-a56bf9d693e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23287468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"JULIO CORTAZAR: UTOPIA AND EVERYDAY LIFE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23287468","wordCount":5245,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[51516,51705]],"Locations in B":[[17956,18144]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10\/11","publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauren Kroiz"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a505cb6-fdd0-3674-b756-22f03aed4701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Breeding Modern Art: Criticism, Caricature, and Condoms in New York's Avant-garde Melting Pot","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983291","wordCount":11398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"This essay examines early twentieth-century modernism in New York through a study of the Mexican-born caricaturist and critic Marius de Zayas, an influential participant in the avant-garde circle around photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz. Tracing the racially charged rhetoric used in aesthetic theory and art criticism of the period, particularly that of eugenic sexual mixing, the study contextualizes and explores de Zayas's influential call for an American art based on diversity in the country's immigrant population and in the modern artists' mediums. De Zayas's artwork and his criticism\u2014from his own cubistinfluenced, hybrid mode of abstract caricature to his role introducing Picasso's drawings and African sculpture to New York\u2014advanced an influential argument that U. S. artists must invent a scientifically derived, evolutionary aesthetic theory to direct the fertile crossbreeding of artistic strategies and mediums, as well as ethnic and racial differences, in order to create a unique national and modern art. Rather than a movement that codified purity and stable boundaries, in this New York context early U.S. modernism can be defined precisely by its crossbred, composite nature.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William R. 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Crane"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25478766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25478766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Choosing Not to Look: Representation, Repatriation, and Holocaust Atrocity Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25478766","wordCount":12497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This essay considers, from ethical and historical-critical perspectives, alternatives to unconditional public access to Holocaust atrocity photographs. Photographic images have become the common coin of public awareness and historical information about the Holocaust. For the generations immediately following the genocide, atrocity photos and images of Nazi crimes served as vital testimony. For succeeding generations, however, access to certain \"recirculated\" images (Barbie Zelizer) has created a sense of familiarity with the Holocaust and with the National Socialist era that may prevent, rather than facilitate, engagement with the historical subject, particularly for students. Few of the victims of the Shoah pictured in either the best known or the least circulated images were willing subjects. As such, the bulk of Holocaust and National Socialist photography should perhaps fall under the same category as the results of Nazi medical experiments: they have been rendered inadmissible because they are ethically compromised materials, made without the participants' consent. While I am not advocating the wholesale destruction of Holocaust photographs, I will suggest that removing them from view or \"repatriating\" them might serve Holocaust memory better than their reduction to atrocious objects of banal attention. Just as the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act of 1990 provided a mechanism for the reclassification of human remains, from ethnographic to spiritually sacred artifacts, we should consider what a similar reclassification of Holocaust photographs could offer. Have Holocaust atrocity photographs reached the limits of their usefulness as testimony?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rainer Stollmann","Ronald L. Smith"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1620645-6e36-348d-a78f-8004f4b5784e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fascist Politics as a Total Work of Art: Tendencies of the Aesthetization of Political Life in National Socialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488060","wordCount":9883,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52301,52410]],"Locations in B":[[56151,56261]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"14","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom R. 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Fessler"],"datePublished":"2018-07-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26486326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09628436"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44150838"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbaad548-100a-39da-90f3-b7b705e5e8d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26486326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtranbiolscie"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Ectoparasite defence in humans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26486326","wordCount":12442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1751","publisher":"Royal Society","volumeNumber":"373","abstract":"Currently, disgust is regarded as the main adaptation for defence against pathogens and parasites in humans. Disgust's motivational and behavioural features, including withdrawal, nausea, appetite suppression and the urge to vomit, defend effectively against ingesting or touching sources of pathogens. However, ectoparasites do not attack their hosts via ingestion, but rather actively attach themselves to the body surface. Accordingly, by itself, disgust offers limited defence against ectoparasites. We propose that, like non-human animals, humans have a distinct ectoparasite defence system that includes cutaneous sensory mechanisms, itch-generation mechanisms and grooming behaviours. The existence of adaptations for ectoparasite defence is supported by abundant evidence from non-human animals, as well as more recent evidence concerning human responses to ectoparasite cues. Several clinical disorders may be dysfunctions of the ectoparasite defence system, including some that are pathologies of grooming, such as skin picking and trichotillomania, and others, such as delusory parasitosis and trypophobia, which are pathologies of ectoparasite detection. We conclude that future research should explore both distinctions between, and overlap across, ectoparasite defence systems and pathogen avoidance systems, as doing so will not only illuminate proximate motivational systems, including disgust, but may also reveal important clinical and social consequences. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Evolution of pathogen and parasite avoidance behaviours'.","subTitle":"relationships to pathogen avoidance and clinical implications","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Bodmer"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Arthur Hughes, Walter Crane, and Maurice Sendak: The Picture as Literary Fairy Tale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389903","wordCount":7018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[7519,7619]],"Locations in B":[[3464,3568]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"Illustrations, in reinterpreting and extending traditional fairy tales, act as literary fairy tales, adding more images and stories to our culture as they depart from the original source material. Victorian Arthur Hughes through his wood engravings embellished the stories of George MacDonald, as Walter Crane did to Grimm, and both influenced contemporary picture-book artist Maurice Sendak, who copied the look of wood engravings for his versions of Grimm and MacDonald. The restrictions of this improvement over the wood cut created a contrast of light and dark that these artists found appropriate to their readings of Victorian fairy tales.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jutta Biedebach","Bernd Buldt","Kathrin Dahlhaus","Ralf Goeres"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25170972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09254560"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eba3fd6-5b94-3997-aae0-d78f8312ebfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25170972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgenphilscience"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for General Philosophy of Science \/ Zeitschrift f\u00fcr allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"[Journal Report]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25170972","wordCount":19035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Simonsen"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c24f0021-4067-3bd5-a24a-ce5dc8b1f034"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Descendants of Black Hawk: Generations of Identity in Sauk Portraits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237549","wordCount":13234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-10-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44007203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71107060-19fa-3d19-90fe-011e4770ef3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44007203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44007203","wordCount":20177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"214","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luca Russo"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00356247"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570955888"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014268500"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc6621d3-a953-33f4-8fce-c40e053faf32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26504810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rivifiloneoscol"}],"isPartOf":"Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"625","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-625","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Axiology","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"TWO CONCEPTIONS OF WILL IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF CHARLES S. PEIRCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504810","wordCount":17595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Vita e Pensiero \u2013 Pubblicazioni dell\u2019Universit\u00e0 Cattolica del Sacro Cuore","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":"Charles Sanders Peirce dealt with the theme of Will several times, usually when discussing other topics. The treatment of this topic did not remain constant in the course of the years; two different conceptions of the Will can be detected in different moments. The first one is rooted in his attempt to create a semiotic theory of mind. Whereas the thought is identified with a set of signs having a general import, the proper place for volition is found in the aspects of individuality and contingency: Willing is identified with actually acting, that is, with a reaction to the clash of the outward world. The second conception emerged from the interest in the foundations of ethics and relies to the central role of self-control for the normative sciences. The nature of voluntary acts is now to be found in the capability of deliberate long-term planning and of self-correction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James der Derian"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2600571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The (S)pace of International Relations: Simulation, Surveillance, and Speed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600571","wordCount":10284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"International Studies Association","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Against the neorealist claim that the \"reflectivist\" or postmodernist approach is a dead-end unless it merges with the \"rationalist\" conception of research programs, this essay argues that new technological and representational practices in world politics require not synthesis but theoretical heterogeneity to comprehend the rise of chronopolitics over geopolitics. The theoretical approaches of Baudrillard, Foucault, and Virilio are drawn upon to investigate three global forces in particular: simulation, surveillance, and speed. They have eluded the traditional and re-formed delimitations of the international relations field-the geopolitics of realism, structural political economy of neorealism, and neoliberal institutionalism-because their power is more \"real\" in time than space, it comes from an exchange of signs rather than goods, and it is transparent and diffuse rather than material and discrete. This essay offers an alternative, poststructuralist map to plot how these and other new forces are transforming the traditional boundaries in international relations between self and other, domestic and international, war and peace.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Christine M. Roysdon","Judith A. Adams"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3105612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8650758b-9ad9-3bd3-9c0b-d2a2bfdde7c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3105612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":138.0,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1985)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3105612","wordCount":74235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. Bernard Cohen"],"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2707656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e50d5b4c-c9f6-3c22-9e8c-5ab92e655d1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2707656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistoryideas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Ideas","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Science & Technology Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Some Recent Books on the History of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2707656","wordCount":16205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["McLain Clutter"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ceb75f28-db0f-3133-87d0-86f215861ed9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Imaginary Apparatus: Film Production and Urban Planning in New York City, 1966-1975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627764","wordCount":13819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[10077,10207]],"Locations in B":[[57609,57739]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"35","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/731826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/731826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/731826","wordCount":3434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1926-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1d401bd-056b-3f94-a39f-8db06968ccd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":129.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"526","pagination":"pp. 526-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1926,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighteenth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and the History of Civilization. (To November 1925)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223928","wordCount":60516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3635623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c00664ad-807c-3c2d-bab1-b413c987bfa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3635623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacihistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3635623","wordCount":5077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3080915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23f0c0a0-de7e-3529-8389-bdc1166c4997"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3080915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":232.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3080915","wordCount":158300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT W. SWEENY"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40650513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed18c23f-b6c5-331a-a975-1669176a2217"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40650513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pixellated Play: Practical and Theoretical Issues Regarding Videogames in Art Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40650513","wordCount":7197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"Videogames represent one of the fastest growing and most influential forms of contemporary visual culture. In this article, the author looks to five aspects of current videogames: perspective, interactivity, interface, narrative, and time and movement. Each of these videogame modalities is analyzed as related to a wide range of popular media, including film and new media. Art educators are provided with specific suggestions for incorporating aspects of videogames in practice, questions that point to the problematic nature of many videogames, as well as general theoretical directions for future research.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen Mazur Thomson"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3b18e0e-4452-3b90-a2ae-284489e83185"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1511627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Alms for Oblivion: The History of Women in Early American Graphic Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511627","wordCount":11796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie Dick"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/661623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd9132f2-1750-32ea-82ce-a24d9a2a1ddb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/661623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"505","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-505","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Computer science","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"AfterMath: The Work of Proof in the Age of Human\u2013Machine Collaboration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/661623","wordCount":7018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":"ABSTRACTDuring the 1970s and 1980s, a team of Automated Theorem Proving researchers at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago developed the Automated Reasoning Assistant, or AURA, to assist human users in the search for mathematical proofs. The resulting hybrid humans+AURA system developed the capacity to make novel contributions to pure mathematics by very untraditional means. This essay traces how these unconventional contributions were made and made possible through negotiations between the humans and the AURA at Argonne and the transformation in mathematical intuition they produced. At play in these negotiations were experimental practices, nonhumans, and nonmathematical modes of knowing. This story invites an earnest engagement between historians of mathematics and scholars in the history of science and science studies interested in experimental practice, material culture, and the roles of nonhumans in knowledge making.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45360804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00304557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9765e66a-075b-3adb-bd0e-f117f2b25cec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45360804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ordnance"}],"isPartOf":"Ordnance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"624","pagination":"pp. 624-630, 632, 634, 636, 638, 640, 642, 644, 646, 648, 650, 652, 654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"ASSOCIATION AFFAIRS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45360804","wordCount":13369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"214","publisher":"National Defense Industrial Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Volker Straebel"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44911674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7edcbdd8-febe-3fab-b01e-7326e513609d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40926345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From Reproduction to Performance: Media-Specific Music for Compact Disc","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926345","wordCount":7272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"When the compact disc was introduced in 1982, it was considered the first recording medium to vanish behind the audio information carried by it. Artists nevertheless discovered media-specific features unique to the CD. This paper focuses not so much on sound production (skipping CDs, glitches, etc.) as on musical form and listener participation in music for CD, which seems to have anticipated certain aspects of iPod culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Flint"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18e60e40-9b0f-3fcd-8ff2-375d3e4dee51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"923","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844540","wordCount":21117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"An assessment of recent scholarly work treating the literature of the Nineteenth Century and some general observations on the state of the profession. A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WALTER MOSER"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"729d4b1c-8d87-3e87-acc5-29175469b76d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Concept of Baroque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764241","wordCount":11957,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Apoy\u00e1ndose en la escuela alemana de historia de los conceptos, este art\u00edculo describe algunas etapas de la historia del t\u00e9rmino barroco. A la vez, articula algunos desaf\u00edos del trabajo sobre el concepto: su estatus como noci\u00f3n hist\u00f3ricamente ex\u00f3gena, su circulaci\u00f3n interdisciplinaria, sus apropiaciones nacionales y regionales, las estrategias cognitivas a las cuales se presta, sus migraciones transculturales, el programa est\u00e9tico que vehicula y los usos ideol\u00f3gicos-pol\u00edticos a los cuales este programa puede dar lugar y, finalmente, sus inestabilidades axiol\u00f3gicas combinadas con sus intermitencias hist\u00f3ricas. Considerando todo lo anterior, se trata de un concepto en el que tanto la configuraci\u00f3n como la trayectoria hist\u00f3ricas poseen una gran complejidad. M\u00e1s que desear reducir esta complejidad, reconoceremos en ella el signo de una notable eficiencia del barroco en la historia cultural que llega hasta nuestros d\u00edas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clark T. Rogerson","Herman F. Becker","Pierre Dansereau","Richard M. Klein","Testsuo Koyama","Bassett Maguire","Pascal P. Pirone"],"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43646987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05715725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b0845a0-339b-34bd-a115-a2ca418a9844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43646987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullassotropbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin (Association for Tropical Biology)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"TROPICAL BIOLOGY LITERATURE INDEX - BOTANY Part 5","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43646987","wordCount":7194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAWRENCE M. ZBIKOWSKI"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7a7ab04-9ef9-3c45-b2c9-7d4e8ed79d67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90012445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musitheospec"}],"isPartOf":"Music Theory Spectrum","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90012445","wordCount":6250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHARLES TASHIRO"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58176759-788a-3808-b2ed-f5063932100a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"HOME VIDEO AND FILM: THE CASE OF WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688094","wordCount":5290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Dressman"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/748064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"On the Use and Misuse of Research Evidence: Decoding Two States' Reading Initiatives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748064","wordCount":24196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"This study investigates the claims of scientific objectivity that support recent changes in policies toward early literacy instruction in the states of Texas and California. According to recent reading initiatives in both states, conclusive findings in literacy research, particularly in the area of phonemic\/phonological awareness (PPA), now mandate state policies of explicit, systematic instruction in phonics and the use of phonetically regular texts in early grades. A framework suggested by Habermas's (1987) Theory of Communicative Action was used to assess the validity of this claim, through the analysis of 10 major studies of PPA, 2 seminal reviews of early literacy research, and 2 policy documents. Close analysis of these texts generally supported the objective claims for PPA research but challenged the poor performance of minority and low-socioeconomic status (SES) populations on tests of PPA on the grounds that differences in the norms of those populations' phonological systems may bias test results. Additionally, objectively referenced claims made in two major research reviews that the poor performance of nonmainstream students on tests of PPA and reading achievement are linked to the social or genetic inferiority of the students' families and communities appeared to be grounded in untested and unacknowledged normative assumptions about the home lives and genetic backgrounds of children who struggle to learn to read. A concluding analysis of the two states' curricular policy statements found them to be highly selective in their use of research evidence and, from a |Habermasian perspective, more strategic than communicative in their orientation and intent. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Este estudio investiga los supuestos de objetividad cient\u00edfica que fundamentan cambios recientes en las pol\u00edticas sobre la alfabetizaci\u00f3n inicial en los estados de Texas y California. De acuerdo con las iniciativas recientes adoptadas en ambos estados, existe evidencia conclusiva en la investigaci\u00f3n sobre alfabetizaci\u00f3n, particularmente en el \u00e1rea de conciencia fon\u00e9mica\/fonol\u00f3gica, que demanda pol\u00edticas estatales de ense\u00f1anza f\u00f3nica expl\u00edcita y sistem\u00e1tica y el uso de textos fon\u00e9ticamente regulares en los grados iniciales. Se utiliz\u00f3 el marco sugerido por La teor\u00eda de la acci\u00f3n comunicativa de Habermas (1987) para evaluar la validez de este supuesto, a partir del an\u00e1lisis de 10 extensos estudios de conciencia fonol\u00f3gica, 2 importantes revisiones sobre la investigaci\u00f3n en alfabetizaci\u00f3n inicial y dos documentos de pol\u00edtica educativa. En t\u00e9rminos generales el an\u00e1lisis detallado de estos textos apoya la objetividad de los supuestos de la investigaci\u00f3n en conciencia fonol\u00f3gica, pero tambi\u00e9n presenta un desaf\u00edo al mal desempe\u00f1o de los ni\u00f1os pertenecientes a minor\u00edas y a niveles socioecon\u00f3micos bajos en las pruebas de conciencia fonol\u00f3gica. Ello se basa en que las diferencias en las normas de los sistemas fonol\u00f3gicos de esas poblaciones podr\u00edan sesgar los resultados de las pruebas. Adem\u00e1s, los supuestos bien fundamentados de dos importantes revisiones de la investigaci\u00f3n acerca de que el mal desempe\u00f1o de los estudiantes de poblaciones minoritarias en pruebas de conciencia fonol\u00f3gica y lectura est\u00e1 vinculado a la inferioridad social y\/o gen\u00e9tica de las familias y comunidades, parecen estar basados en concepciones no evaluadas objetivamente sobre los estilos de vida y caracter\u00edticas gen\u00e9ticas de ni\u00f1os que luchan por aprender a leer. Para concluir, un an\u00e1lisis de los fundamentos de la pol\u00edtica curricular de ambos estados revela que son altamente selectivos en el uso de la evidencia cient\u00edfica y, desde una perspectiva Habermasiana, m\u00e1s estrat\u00e9gicos que comunicativos en su orientaci\u00f3n y prop\u00f3sito. \/\/\/ [German] Diese studie untersucht die Anspr\u00fcche auf wissenschaftlicher Objektivit\u00e4t, welche k\u00fcrzlich durchgef\u00fchrte \u00c4nderungen bei Verordnungen \u00fcber fr\u00fche Lese- und Schreibanweisungen in den Staaten Texas und Kalifornien unterst\u00fctzen. Aufgrund k\u00fcrzlicher Leseinitiativen in beiden Staaten, \u00fcberzeugender Erkenntnisse in der Forschung \u00fcber das Lesen und Schreiben, besonders auf dem Gebiet des phonemischen\/phonologischen Auffassungsbewu\u00dftseins (PPA) machen sie es jetzt zur Pflicht, da\u00df die staatlich verordneten, ausf\u00fchrlichen Richtlinien und Anweisungen \u00fcber die Phonemik vokaler Laute und dem Gebrauch allgemein-phonetischer Texte in den Einschulungsstufen befolgt werden. Ein Rahmenkonzept nach Vorschl\u00e4gen von Habermas' (1987) Theorie der kommunikativen Aktion wurde angewandt, um die g\u00fcltige Beweisf\u00fchrung dieses Anspruchs zu bewerten, durch die Analyse von 10 Hauptstudien \u00fcber PPA, 2 halbfertigen [seminalen] Kritiken \u00fcber fr\u00fcherkenntliche Lese- und Schreibforschung, sowie 2 Dokumentationen zur Verfahrensweise. Eine n\u00e4here Analyse dieser Texte unterst\u00fctzte im allgemeinen die Objektivit\u00e4t der Aussagen zugunsten der PPA Forschung, machten jedoch Einwendungen in bezug auf das schlechte Abschneiden bei Minderheiten und sozialschwachen [SES] Teilen der Bev\u00f6lkerung in den PPA Tests aufgrund dessen, da\u00df Abweichungen von der Norm bei jenen Bev\u00f6lkerungsschichten mit differenzierenden phonologischen Systemen die Testergebnisse ungerecht einseitig beeinflussen k\u00f6nnen. Hinzu kommen die als objektiv angesprochenen Behauptungen, die in zwei Hauptforschungsberichten erhoben wurden, da\u00df die schwachen Leistungen von Studenten der Minderheit in PPA Pr\u00fcfungen und in Leseleistungen mit der sozialen und\/oder genetischen Unterlegenheit der Familien und Gemeinschaften dieser Studenten in Verbindung gebracht wurden. Es hat den Anschein, da\u00df dies in nicht \u00fcberpr\u00fcfbaren und nicht best\u00e4tigten nominativen Annahmen \u00fcber die h\u00e4uslichen Lebensbedingungen und den Abstammungshintergrund jener Kinder begr\u00fcndet sei, welche beim Lernen und Lesen mit Schwierigkeiten ringen. Eine schl\u00fcssige Analyse der Aussagen zu den Lehrplan-Richtlinien beider Staaten ergab, da\u00df sie hochgradig selektiv in ihrer Anwendung von Forschungsbeweisen und, aus der Habermas Perspektive, mehr strategisch als kommunikativ in ihrer Richtung und Absicht sind. \/\/\/ [French] Cette etude s'int\u00e9resse aux pr\u00e9tentions d'objectivit\u00e9 scientifique qui appuient les changements r\u00e9cents de la politique concernant l'enseignement de l'entr\u00e9e dans l'\u00e9crit dans les \u00c9tats du Texas et de Californie. Selon de r\u00e9centes initiatives en lecture prises dans les deux \u00c9tats, les conclusions finales des recherches en litt\u00e9racie, en particulier dans le domaine de la conscience phon\u00e9mique\/phonologique (CPP), commandent maintenant une politique officielle d'enseignement explicite, syst\u00e9matique de la phon\u00e9tique et l'emploi de textes r\u00e9guliers sur le plan phon\u00e9tique dans les petites classes. Nous avons utilis\u00e9 une structure sugg\u00e9r\u00e9e par La th\u00e9orie de l'action communicationnelle d'Habermas (1987) pour \u00e9valuer la validit\u00e9 de cette pr\u00e9tention, en proc\u00e9dant \u00e0 l'analyse de 10 recherches majeures relatives \u00e0 la CPP, de 2 importantes revues de question relatives aux recherches sur l'entr\u00e9e dans l'\u00e9crit, et de 2 documents politiques. Une analyse serr\u00e9e de ces textes appuie de mani\u00e8re g\u00e9n\u00e9rale les pr\u00e9tentions objectives des recherches de CPP mais conteste les mauvais r\u00e9sultats des enfants issus de minorit\u00e9s ethniques et de milieux sociaux d\u00e9favoris\u00e9s dans les tests de CPP du fait que des diff\u00e9rences dans les normes des syst\u00e8mes phonologiques de ces populations pourraient biaiser les r\u00e9sultats des tests. En outre, les pr\u00e9tentions objectivement r\u00e9f\u00e9renc\u00e9es faites dans les deux revues de question majeures selon lesquelles les mauvais r\u00e9sultats aux tests de CPP et de lecture des \u00e9l\u00e8ves n'appartenant pas au courant principal seraient li\u00e9s \u00e0 une inf\u00e9riorit\u00e9 sociale et\/ou g\u00e9n\u00e9tique des familles et des communaut\u00e9s de ces \u00e9l\u00e8ves apparaissent fond\u00e9es sur des positions normatives non test\u00e9es et non av\u00e9r\u00e9es relatives \u00e0 la vie familiale et \u00e0 l'\u00e9quipement g\u00e9n\u00e9tique d'enfants qui s'efforcent d'apprendre \u00e0 lire. L'analyse enfin des fondements de la politique des programmes des deux \u00c9tats indique qu'ils sont tr\u00e8s s\u00e9lectifs dans l'utilisation qu'ils font de la recherche et, dans une perspective habermasienne, ont une orientation et une intention plus strat\u00e9giques que communicationnelles.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08863040"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36f1200e-026c-375d-8485-ca3bbcf47d94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Technology Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690448","wordCount":20820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kimberly Hart"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5778e48f-5fab-390d-829e-aae298277e94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24510847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Images and Aftermaths: The Use and Contextualization of Atat\u00fcrk Imagery in Political Debates in Turkey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510847","wordCount":8454,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10207]],"Locations in B":[[14354,14668]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48513921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00015652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcbbe0eb-852c-377d-94b3-f4a1a2a2106f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48513921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humanheredity"}],"isPartOf":"Human Heredity","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48513921","wordCount":6524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"frontmatter","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"S. Karger AG","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDWARD BARNABY"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3dca87ac-d701-3cad-be32-4542a2dee29a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Airbrushed History: Photography, Realism, and Rushdie's \"Midnight's Children\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030365","wordCount":6958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Informed by Rushdie's non-fiction, the social history of photography in India, and the work of Debord and Sontag, in this reading of Midnight's Children, I contend that Rushdie uses fictional photographs to stage a realist satire of colonial and nationalist ideologies, thus countering various attempts to label Midnight's Children as magic realism or exoticism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1491379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bce16e2-7712-3aa0-8c7d-ab995bf6d924"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1491379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Peabody Bimonthly Booknotes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1491379","wordCount":16344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9c0d418-4fc1-3537-a2b0-739e7835ac22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/664935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":360.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2011","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664935","wordCount":268100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctvrxk41c.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789004344235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3e38fa1-93c7-37dc-bfe5-4910e03fe965"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1163\/j.ctvrxk41c.7"}],"isPartOf":"Fabricating Modern Societies: Education, Bodies, and Minds in the Age of Steel","keyphrase":["luxembourg","karin priem","frederik herman","geert thyssen","industrial","social","emile metz","priem and herman","machine","institut emile"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctvrxk41c.7","wordCount":12478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This book deals with the period of industrial revolution in Luxembourg at the turn of the nineteenth to the twentieth century. Starting in the 1880s, the young nation underwent a rapid and massive industrialization process driven by its booming mining and metallurgical industry.\u00b2 In Luxembourg, as elsewhere in the West, the dawn of the \u201cmachine age,\u201d or the \u201cage of steel,\u201d and its associated transformations quickly evoked a wide range of strong and occasionally very opinionated statements, feelings, and emotions.\u00b3 People felt overwhelmed by the massive and tremendous changes everywhere around them: the new cult of speed, rhythm, noise, and","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Sica"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"965b40e8-e14b-3831-811f-0689170fe221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/202007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Gabel's \"Micro\/Macro\" Bridge: The Schizophrenic Process Writ Large","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202007","wordCount":20420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"Joseph Gabel's theoretical synthesis of psychiatry, political sociology, the sociology of knowledge, and Marxism is examined, partly by evaluating the use he makes of ideas common to the works of Lukacs, Mannheim, Minkowski, Binswanger, Dupreel, Lalo, Meyerson, and others. Gabel's major contention-that false consciousness and schizophrenia are mutually illuminating phenomena at analytic and empirical levels-is considered, principally by hermeneutic analysis of his key concepts: \"de-dialecticization,\" \"reified consciousness,\" \"socio-pathological parallelism,\" and so on. His work is contextualized among competing theories of ideological expressiveness and collectively significant cognitive distortions of reality.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d783e62a-7b0c-31ac-b471-8cbbbe13b19e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":163.0,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thirty-Year Index: James Joyce Quarterly, Volumes 1-30","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473644","wordCount":62508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Splendora"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f315bb9f-cde0-316a-80ee-b169080a6ccb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44982346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Participant Observance: Crane, Finitude, \"Anthropologism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982346","wordCount":11118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"Confronting unrejoined critical challenges regarding Stephen Crane's impeti while acknowledging his ambiguous mens auctoris and other difficulties, this paper illuminates Crane's fictions as direct rational-aesthetic witnessing to his intrasubjective conditions and milieu. Focused personalizations, his originary linguistic declarations, invariably actualized in significant monologic speech, manifest as logoi, projective performatives (conferred substantialities) bearing autonomous metalinguistic sentence in a myth-toned (stripped of specifics) art both persistent and interdictively rebellious with humanistic meaning. Shown impending pervasively and indicatively in an age of objectified alterities are Crane's melodramatic portrayals of relative time, both as suspensively crystallized quasi-mythically and as expent preciously in evanescent, living theater, especially in crucial, allegorizing, Modernistic self-dramatization. Essayed here are not granular textual exegeses, not analyses of internal forms, but a partial mapping of Crane's critically unique historical and psychological situatedness, an adverbial reading proffering a narratological \"how,\" \"why\" and \"wherefore\" of his fiction by functioning in the rhetorical-analytical speech-performative plane of inference whereupon, as touchstone, Shakespeare's avatar Prospero (pro + spes = \"according to hope,\" \"as desired,\" \"I profit\"), epilogically addressing Tempest audiences metadramatically, discharges.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danilyn Rutherford"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20bba905-6d94-3397-bd96-49f649d9bb3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The White Edge of the Margin: Textuality and Authority in Biak, Irian Jaya, Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647175","wordCount":16187,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[90,175]],"Locations in B":[[82924,83009]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"In Biak, Irian Jaya, in the far east of Indonesia, foreign slogans, narratives, and books are considered a crucial source of authority. In this article, I examine how amber beba (big foreigners), the Biak term for respected leaders, harness the potency attributed to distant lands by presenting their words as translations of an alien text. I explore the implications of this strategy for pursuing authority by examining the worldview expressed in big foreigners' translations of the Bible and other imported works. The case of Biak calls into question scholarly treatments that have taken literacy and Christian conversion as setting the stage for the emergence of postcolonial forms of hegemony. In valorizing the textual aspects of outsiders' words, Biaks reproduce a boundary between local and national structures of meaning, keeping foreign orders at a distance even as they tap them for authority and power. [leadership, literacy, translation, Christianity, intercultural relations, postcolonial societies, modernity]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW LEACH"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0afd80c4-0d0b-3330-b833-ea68b74b0cff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Electricity, Writing, Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029964","wordCount":6872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"This essay examines Francis Ponge's 1954 \"Texte sur l'\u00e9lectricit\u00e9\" as an example of interdisciplinary interaction. The writer sits between electrician and architect as a technical translator; his response to this circumstance provokes a discussion of the role of \"technique\" in specifically framed modern discourses.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Werner Hamacher","Kirk Wetters"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Guilt History: Benjamin's Sketch \"Capitalism as Religion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566446","wordCount":16496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN H. WATSON"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00855553"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b82fbbda-39f8-31ff-be6b-8063f715415d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24654833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resephen"}],"isPartOf":"Research in Phenomenology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"GADAMER, AESTHETIC MODERNISM, AND THE REHABILITATION OF ALLEGORY: THE RELEVANCE OF PAUL KLEE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654833","wordCount":12203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Paul Klee's art found broad impact upon philosophers of varying commitments, including Hans-Georg Gadamer. Moreover, Klee himself was not only one of the most important artists of aesthetic modernism but one of its leading theoreticians, and much in his work, as in Gadamer's, originated in post-Kantian literary theory's explications of symbol and allegory. Indeed at one point in Truth and Method, Gadamer associates his project for a general \"theory of hermeneutic experience\" not only with Goethe's metaphysical account of the symbolic but equally with a \"rehabilitation\" of allegory. In this paper, I examine this position and Gadamer's own use of it in his analysis of Klee's work, contrasting it with that of Walter Benjamin's account of allegory, equally indebted to Goethe and this archive. Finally, I contrast the resulting interpretations of Klee, discussing the implications that evolve for understanding both Gadamer and Benjamin\u2014but equally for understanding Klee's work and, provisionally, the work of art, thus construed, for philosophy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas J. Stanly"],"datePublished":"1962-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43945559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00278602"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e3f6363-bfd9-38aa-b50c-46b1b5b4649a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43945559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnatiassocollte2"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the National Association of College Teachers of Agriculture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","Environmental Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR AN UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGE AGRICULTURAL LIBRARY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43945559","wordCount":9946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"North American Colleges and Teachers of Agriculture (NACTA)","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Swanstrom"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfc58d4f-b316-358a-bee4-cd2a84b55178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"External Memory Drives: Deletion and Digitality in Agrippa (A Book of The Dead)<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.43.1.0014","wordCount":9406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"While William Gibson's cyberpunk fiction is fundamental for understanding the relationship between digitality and science fiction, I suggest that Gibson's most important \u201cdigital\u201d work is neither cyberpunk, science fiction, nor even fiction. It is, instead, an autobiographical poem, Agrippa: (A Book of The Dead), published in 1992. Agrippa marks a pivotal point in Gibson's writing for its engagement with actual\u2014as opposed to speculative\u2014digital editing techniques, not merely in terms of the disk that contains the poem encoded within it, but in terms of Gibson's tendency to triangulate digitization, identity, and memory. Agrippa as a whole\u2014that is, as a work of poetry, a printed book, and a self-effacing digital object\u2014functions initially as a modernist monument to subjectivity at the very moment of its dismantling and, in this respect, is wholly consistent with Gibson's cyberpunk fiction, which tends to treat digital technology in analog terms. Yet in the twenty-plus years since its initial publication, Agrippa has continued to evolve, and a reading of this strange text today yields different possibilities. In what might be termed Agrippa's afterlife, a more fluid form of memory has emerged, one that is collective, participatory, collaborative, and much more in tune with the nature of digitality.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arianne Conty"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f3a6830-9c4c-3954-bd34-7a2f51a04fd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"472","pagination":"pp. 472-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"THEY HAVE EYES THAT THEY MIGHT NOT SEE: WALTER BENJAMIN'S AURA AND THE OPTICAL UNCONSCIOUS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926992","wordCount":7008,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743],[9852,10068],[12677,13402]],"Locations in B":[[2957,3035],[3140,3359],[7356,8081]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This essay will reflect upon the significance of Walter Benjamin's conception of the aura. Much has been written about the aura, particularly in relation to Benjamin's essay 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction'. In this work and elsewhere, Benjamin speaks of the aura as 'the unique appearance of a distance, however near it may be', and associates this auratic distance with the inapproachability of the cult image. But in other texts, Benjamin speaks of the aura in different terms, as the ability of phenomena to 'look back' (den Blick aufzuschlagen), to return our gaze. This definition moves beyond a merely aesthetic model to a conception of the aura as a mode of perception that rather than seeking to rationally control and reduce phenomena to objects of perception, allows them to appear of their own accord. At stake in this second definition is intersubjective relationality, the possibility of encountering alterity. This essay will attempt to explain the divergence between these two conceptions of aura by re-evaluating the role of the optical unconscious in Benjamin's work. In the same way that Benjamin used Proust's m\u00e9moire involontaire as a tool to formulate his understanding of the redemption of history, he can be understood as using the optical unconscious to allow the world to appear outside the hegemonic control of the alienating cult image. In this sense, rather than simply celebrating the decline of aura as his Artwork essay proclaims, Benjamin can be understood as seeking to replace the traditional aura of full presence by an unconscious aura that allows the past to meet our gaze without being appropriated by institutional power.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SARAH NORRIS"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01971360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52367447"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236625"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74cb915d-52f5-3f83-959c-789efe84bfb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26158740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerinstcons"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Institute for Conservation","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Library science"],"title":"TOWARD AN ONTOLOGY OF AUDIO PRESERVATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158740","wordCount":8460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"This study examines a selection of philosophical frameworks that influence decision-making in audio preservation. Issues of reproduction and digitization, materiality, and the acceptance of change are considered and contextualized among other conservation specialties. Comparisons are drawn between audio recordings, fine art, and library materials, with attention to general and special collections concepts. A spectrum of authenticity is proposed and applied to three real-world case studies to demonstrate the utility of philosophical constructs as applied to audio preservation programs and techniques. Cette \u00e9tude examine les diff\u00e9rents cadres philosophiques qui influencent la prise de d\u00e9cision dans la pr\u00e9servation du mat\u00e9riel audio. Les questions de reproduction et de digitalisation, la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9, et l'acceptation du changement sont consid\u00e9r\u00e9es et contextualis\u00e9es par rapport \u00e0 d''autres sp\u00e9cialit\u00e9s dans le domaine de la conservation. Des comparaisons sont faites entre les enregistrements audio, les arts d\u00e9coratifs et les documents de biblioth\u00e8que, avec une attention particuli\u00e8re port\u00e9e sur les concepts reli\u00e9s aux collections g\u00e9n\u00e9rales versus ceux qui s'appliquent aux collections sp\u00e9ciales. Un \u00e9ventail de niveaux d'authenticit\u00e9 est propos\u00e9 et appliqu\u00e9 \u00e0 trois \u00e9tudes de cas pour d\u00e9montrer l'utilit\u00e9 des cadres philosophiques, tels qu'appliqu\u00e9s aux programmes et techniques de pr\u00e9servation du mat\u00e9riel audio. Este estudio examina una selecci\u00f3n de marcos de referencia filos\u00f3ficos que influyen sobre la toma de decisiones para la preservaci\u00f3n de audio. Temas de reproducci\u00f3n y digitalizaci\u00f3n, la \"materialidad' (el objeto mismo y su valor como artefacto), la aceptaci\u00f3n del cambio, son considerados y contextualizados dentro de otras especialidades de conservaci\u00f3n. Se hacen comparaciones entre grabaciones de audio, bellas artes y material de biblioteca, prestando atenci\u00f3n a los conceptos de colecciones generales y especiales. Se propone un espectro de autenticidad y se aplica a tres estudio de casos de la vida real para demostrar la utilidad de los postulados filos\u00f3ficos al ser aplicados a los programas y t\u00e9cnicas de preservaci\u00f3n de audio. Esse estudo examina uma sele\u00e7\u00e3o de arcabou\u00e7os filos\u00f3ficos que influenciam a tomada de decis\u00e3o na preserva\u00e7\u00e3o de \u00e1udio. Quest\u00f5es como reprodu\u00e7\u00e3o e digitaliza\u00e7\u00e3o, materialidade, e admiss\u00e3o de mudan\u00e7as s\u00e3o consideradas e contextualizadas entre outras especialidades da conserva\u00e7\u00e3o. Compara\u00e7\u00f5es s\u00e3o esbo\u00e7adas entre grava\u00e7\u00f5es de \u00e1udio, belas artes e materiais bibliogr\u00e1ficos, com aten\u00e7\u00e3o aos conceitos gerais e de cole\u00e7\u00f5es especiais. Um espectro de autenticidade \u00e9 proposto e aplicado a tr\u00eas estudos de caso da realidade para demonstrar a utilidade das constru\u00e7\u00f5es filos\u00f3ficas quando aplicadas em t\u00e9cnicas e programas de preserva\u00e7\u00e3o.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD BRAVERMAN"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29532389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f22ea8ba-4aa6-3487-aea9-51d8b1368365"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29532389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"CRUSOE'S LEGACY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29532389","wordCount":13748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Estelle Sohier"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"313345eb-ac59-38ca-b107-088aaf78c09e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hybrid Images: From Photography to Church Painting: Iconographic Narratives at the Court of the Ethiopian King of Kings, Menelik II (1880s\u20131913)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720707","wordCount":10950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Beard"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11047a1b-128d-3f90-ac05-6ca745cd2f2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4126441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'A Face like Music': Shaping Images into Sound in \"The Second Mrs Kong\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126441","wordCount":13295,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47081,47175]],"Locations in B":[[53734,53828]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"Premi\u00e8red at Glyndebourne in October 1994 and subsequently performed in the UK, Austria, Germany and Holland, The Second Mrs Kong was the result of a collaboration between the American writer Russell Hoban and British composer Harrison Birtwistle. The opera's reception has tended to emphasise the disparity between Hoban's diverse and eclectic interests, which emerge not only in the libretto but also in his novels and essays, and Birtwistle's more introspective and linear approach. Possible connections between Hoban's aesthetics and Birtwistle's music have generally been disregarded. I argue, however, that the opera's main aesthetic concerns - namely, the mediation of images through ideas and the workings of image-identification in diverse media - are shaped by a productive exchange between librettist and composer. The clearest expression of this interaction is the love between Kong, who embodies 'the idea of King Kong from the 1933 RKO film, and Pearl, a character drawn from Vermeer's iconic painting Girl with a Pearl Earring. The representation of these visual icons in The Second Mrs Kong is inflected by Birtwistle's own views on images, by his attempts to find musical analogues for visual techniques, as revealed especially in his sketches, and by his lively engagement with Hoban's ideas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ULRICH KOPPITZ"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26381933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00258431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746105965"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234712"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0954b6ed-5799-3d57-8f1e-c0e899c9bbf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26381933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medizinhistj"}],"isPartOf":"Medizinhistorisches Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Internationale Zeitschriftenschau","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26381933","wordCount":10570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Franz Steiner Verlag","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Venelin I. Ganev"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c1a6c8e-3e83-305f-843b-563e53a67c2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"514","pagination":"pp. 514-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Borsa: The Black Market for Rock Music in Late Socialist Bulgaria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.514","wordCount":12345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"This paper offers an empirical description and analytical interpretation of the borsa\u2014the largest black market for rock music in Bulgaria in the 1980s. The text illuminates the distinct characteristics of the urban locale that became the focal point of rock fans' desires and ambitions, examines how the interactions between the entrepreneurs who supplied the music and their adolescent clients were embedded in enduring networks of trust, and explores the peculiarities of the borsa as a site where western works of art were mechanically reproduced. It also demonstrates that the place where admirers of rock music met was enlivened by political energies and deliberately demarcated as a space in which ideological differences could manifest themselves, thus contesting Alexei Yurchak's argument that in late socialism it was possible to be loyal to and love \u201cboth Lenin and Led Zeppelin.\u201d","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1546315X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55126320"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5604b069-81bc-3e92-9a58-ebb0191dd6ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newsprogpublconc"}],"isPartOf":"Newsletter of the Program on Public Conceptions of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Partial List of Groups Active in Areas Related to the Ethical and Human Value Implications of Science and Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108847","wordCount":16750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Lardas"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23551752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f24db936-7e08-3232-8e1b-6924107d2a33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23551752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DEUS IN MACHINA MOVET: RELIGION IN THE AGE OF TECHNOLOGICAL REPRODUCIBILITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23551752","wordCount":13553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14145,14281]],"Locations in B":[[1282,1418]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"This essay demonstrates that the concept of feedback\u2014as a technological condition, historical ontology, and theoretical frame\u2014challenges traditional ways of conceiving of religion and writing its history. This essay \"begins\" in 1920's America, a moment when the capacity of machines to regulate both nonhuman and human systems reached a point of critical mass and intensity. Integrating theoretical exploration with historical specificity, I address responses to this changing technological atmosphere among Anglo-Protestant leaders as well as leaders of the infamous \"Revival\" of Herman Melville and his long-forgotten Moby-Dick (1851). Historically, I argue that Protestant strategies of self-centering, so pervasive in the early twentieth century, failed to hold their ground against the billowing nature of feedback technology. Theoretically, I argue that Protestant-inspired definitions of what constitutes religious belief and practice, still pervasive in the modern academic study of religion, are not equipped to deal with crises of the natural within (post)modernity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WALTER RIPPMANN"],"datePublished":"1901-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20471211"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680120629"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235800"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"237217a7-109d-3393-b19c-cb7d9f8583e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41065292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangquar1900"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Quarterly (1900-1904)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1901,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A CLASSIFIED LIST OF RECENT PUBLICATIONS, WITH REVIEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS. November 1st 1900 to March 31st 1901","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065292","wordCount":31758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Howe"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9063df10-19bc-33f6-aaae-0db045f61a55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Through the Looking Glass: Reflexivity, Reciprocality, and Defenestration in Hitchcock's \"Rear Window\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115476","wordCount":10712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"The importance of the gaze in \"Rear Window\" has been appreciated for quite some time, and many interpretations of Hitchcock's film and career note how the framing of multiple narratives implicates the spectator in the ethics of watching. This article draws upon the insights of previous studies of this phenomenon, but it also emphasizes the ways in which seeing and being seen are important reciprocal processes within the social dynamic. Examining the voyeur's resistance to being seen, its impact on his interpersonal relationships, and the implications of that resistance on the structure of urban life, this article's analysis will show how urban spaces are figured as zones of subjectivity and objectification that the voyeur relies on to maintain his privileged position as observer. When he is finally dislodged from his safe position as subject, he is able to overcome his resistance to being seen by others and to be interpersonally connected to others.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.25","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787353954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b50b5f65-a239-3181-a757-27c991eadf32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv550d3p.25"}],"isPartOf":"Being Modern","keyphrase":["science","cambridge","university","modernism","oxford","london","history","britain","pyenson lewis","corbusier"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"394","pagination":"394-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Select bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.25","wordCount":5306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Blair"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/427303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b90e4eb-908a-3ef8-a5ca-422bce537bf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/427303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Note Taking as an Art of Transmission","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/427303","wordCount":9990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DINA SMITH"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26477307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d62b2c09-defc-3e0d-9783-6f01164d0a2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26477307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cinematic Modernism and Eudora Welty's \"The Golden Apples\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26477307","wordCount":7718,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[12841,12974]],"Locations in B":[[32853,32986]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John R. Pfeiffer"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40681698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07415842"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d49e3da6-33ba-330f-b611-c235f732f9c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40681698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shaw"}],"isPartOf":"Shaw","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A CONTINUING CHECKLIST OF SHAVIANA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40681698","wordCount":12194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEVIN ATTELL"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a688ec5b-1dfb-30ef-99c3-a3a54876ad3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of Questionable Character: The Construction of the Subject in \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285160","wordCount":10823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Fordham University","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yu Jin Ko"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a1cc499-e882-3852-8d90-311cdc1dcbe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26347418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Mousetrap\" and Remembrance in Michael Almereyda's \"Hamlet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347418","wordCount":5890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Paroissien"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"151c8326-0e76-3188-b9b3-296a9833e724"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":120.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397, 399-401, 403, 405-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Oliver Twist: An Annotated Bibliography Supplement I\u20141984-2004","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372122","wordCount":50454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Works annotated in this Supplement include editions of Oliver Twist and other materials directly related to the novel published between 1986 and the present. The Supplement aims at a reasonably complete listing from a variety of sources but excludes dissertations and works in foreign languages. The arrangement of entries follows the divisions originally employed in the Oliver Twist: An Annotated Bibliography published in 1986, adjusted to present needs. Where appropriate, I have provided cross-references to entries in the Supplement and to entries in the 1986 bibliography. Throughout, I have followed the numbering employed within the divisions of the original work. Used in conjunction with the 1986 survey, this Supplement provides an extensive overview of past and current scholarship and criticism on Oliver Twist.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James S. Duncan","Nancy G. Duncan"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccf0423c-7b34-3167-a317-4e3d6686f729"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aestheticization of the Politics of Landscape Preservation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651267","wordCount":17677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":"This article examines the aestheticization of the politics of exclusion in a suburban American community. The research for this study focuses on the relationships among landscapes, social identity, exclusion, and the aesthetic attitudes of residents of Bedford, New York. By being thoroughly aestheticized, class relations are mystified and reduced to questions of lifestyle, consumption patterns, taste, and visual pleasure. Landscapes become possessions that play an active role in the performance of elite social identities. As such, social distinction is achieved and maintained by preserving and enhancing the beauty of places such as Bedford. This aestheticizing of place is managed through highly restrictive zoning policies for residential land and by \"protecting\" hundreds of acres of undeveloped land as nature preserves. This article explores the role of romantic ideology, localism, antiurbanism, antimodernism, and a class-based aesthetic in the construction of \"wild\" nature in these preserves. We argue that, in places such as Bedford, the celebration of localism, environmental beauty, and preservation mask the interrelatedness of issues of aesthetics and class identity on the one hand and residential land shortages in the New York metropolitan region on the other. The seemingly innocent pleasure in the aesthetic appreciation of landscapes and the desire to protect nature can act as a subtle but highly effective mechanism of social exclusion and the reaffirmation of elite class identities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16dc6129-69b5-3000-a9b2-7512b1eebaec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/879128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"xcvi","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xcvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879128","wordCount":20613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"900","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua Robert Gold"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4490832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"602","pagination":"pp. 602-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Another Nature Which Speaks to the Camera\": Film and Translation in the Writings of Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4490832","wordCount":9431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ca24c8e-4493-380b-bb29-37cba1301622"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/235818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":297.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235818","wordCount":224951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Braun"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Henry Moore and Pre-Columbian Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166819","wordCount":19271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"17\/18","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrizia C. McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a56a9da-56ed-3535-96b6-ae7c42444d2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08k8.5"}],"isPartOf":"The Chatter of the Visible","keyphrase":["montage","narrative","montage practices","weimar","perception","weimar era","allegorical","physiognomic play","storytelling","aesthetics"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.5","wordCount":5012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One of the most striking pictures featured in L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Moholy-Nagy\u2019s Malerei Fotografie Film<\/em> (Painting Photography Film<\/em>, 1925\u201327) is without a doubt Hannah H\u00f6ch\u2019s The Multi-Millionaire<\/em>, from 1923. Tucked in Moholy\u2019s extensive compendium of the new visual modes of expression made possible by photography and film in the first decades of the twentieth century, H\u00f6ch\u2019s photomontage has an eye-popping quality that well documents her gift for laying bare the conventions of contemporary visual media and debunking gender and class stereotypes with compositions of uncommon virtuosity and mordant wit. At first sight the image evokes an unhinged world made of intersecting,","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID JAFFEE"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb39c8d9-df4c-3f60-9c59-d2e3c7e36e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24476614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond the Atlantic: Visual and Material Culture Studies of Early America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476614","wordCount":5750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrian Rifkin"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Success Disavowed: The Schools of Design in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Britain. (An Allegory)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315889","wordCount":11789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Zamostny"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"762193ec-1cb0-3864-a78d-78a8afa151cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ricardo Dar\u00edn and the Animal Gaze: Celebrity and Anonymity in \"El aura\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490112","wordCount":7670,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13207,13283]],"Locations in B":[[13613,13687]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorottya Fabian"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt17rw4xk.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783741533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afcef575-c556-3d99-b0c7-efdd9580b1fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt17rw4xk.4"}],"isPartOf":"A Musicology of Performance","keyphrase":["music performance","recordings","violinists","farnham ashgate","solo violin","perception","vibrato","barton pine","dancing","architecture"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Dancing to Architecture?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt17rw4xk.4","wordCount":10052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Starting this book with such a quote is not just a flippant rhetorical device. It flags my very strongly felt unease regarding the subject matter of the undertaking and my research in general. It is not that I agree with music theorist Heinrich Schenker (1868-1935), who famously began his thesis The Art of Performance<\/em> by stating that \u201ca composition does not require a performance in order to exist. [\u2026] The reading of the score is sufficient,\u201d\u00b2 thus similarly negating the importance of his topic. No, I believe all perception of music is performative whether it is reading a score, hearing","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Synthia Sydnor"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43610559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00941700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23be9664-cf2d-34d6-bdf8-d1fa23c8f6d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43610559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsporthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Sport History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A History of Synchronized Swimming","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43610559","wordCount":7192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/950054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b25e365b-4bbf-3e45-a127-b2eb2f935087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/950054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"920","pageStart":"841","pagination":"pp. 841-920","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/950054","wordCount":20573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1450","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GUERRIC DEBONA"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22f426b4-85d8-35b6-a900-3543fe04550c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE CANON AND CULTURAL STUDIES: CULTURE AND ANARCHY IN GOTHAM CITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688133","wordCount":7340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman Birnbaum"],"datePublished":"1971-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d90afa4e-1b6c-3c4e-bc58-2313ed9851de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25088151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"620","pagination":"pp. 620-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Problem of a Knowledge Elite","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088151","wordCount":7407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN J. 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Specifically, it investigates, among a range of material culture spin-offs and visual adaptations, a selection of fine-printed editions (and their paratextual interpretation of Thomson's classic) targeted at middle-to upper-class consumers, the high-cultural furniture print of scenes from The Seasons by Angellica Kauffman, and the appropriation of Thomson's work by Thomas Stothard, one of the most popular book illustrators at the end of the eighteenth century, for two numbers of the ephemeral diary-cum-almanac, The Royal Engagement Pocket Atlas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen D. 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This essay documents and discusses the discursive structure of Maya texts. New evidence on glyphic aspect and deixis show the presence of a \"shifting now\" or \"alternating historical incompletive\" in Classic narratives. There were two possible motivations for this pattern: to sequence events and establish textual boundaries between incompletive events and, more speculatively, to provide performance cues from hieroglyphic inscriptions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OLIVIA LAHS-GONZALES"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40716179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097691"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b99645c1-080b-391f-8c6c-3c78093838ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40716179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullstlouartmus"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin (St. Louis Art Museum)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PHOTOGRAPHY IN MODERN EUROPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40716179","wordCount":23597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"St. Louis Art Museum","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anita Silvers"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e75a1034-d580-30f0-b9f3-f4e560f9693c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Multiculturalism and the Aesthetics of Recognition: Reflections on \"Celebrating Pluralism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333741","wordCount":3979,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[19275,19342]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43545685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030112"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43545685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amermusitea"}],"isPartOf":"American Music Teacher","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"2000-2001 MTNA Student Competitions Rules, Requirements, Official Application Forms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43545685","wordCount":14759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Music Teachers National Association","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTOPHER S. 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I describe the palace hierarchy's incorporation of the procreational powers of apprenticed carvers and examine a separate group of nonapprenticed carvers and the alternative network of new-elite patrons for whom they work. This case study leads to a deconstruction of the dichotomies pitting locality against the state, palatine against business elites, and tradition against modernity, suggesting that tradition may conceal social change and that modernist youth movements may conversely provide sources of historical continuity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Apter"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f2d1e04-cb28-38ac-bbf5-218aa413d96c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Africa, Empire, and Anthropology: A Philological Exploration of Anthropology's Heart of Darkness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223407","wordCount":11015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"As an artifact of imperial culture, Africanist anthropology is historically associated with the colonization of Africa in ways that undermine the subdiscipline's claims of neutrality and objectivity. A critical literature on the ideological and discursive inventions of Africa by the West challenges the very possibility of Africanist anthropology, to which a variety of responses have emerged. These range from historical reexaminations of imperial discourses, colonial interactions, and fieldwork in Africa, including dialogical engagements with the very production of ethnographic texts, to a more dialectical anthropology of colonial spectacle and culture as it was coproduced and reciprocally determined in imperial centers and peripheries. Understood philologically, as an imperial palimpsest in ethnographic writing, the colonial legacy in Africanist ethnography can never be negated, but must be acknowledged under the sign of its erasure.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Guillory"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/648528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ffb9f18-2e3b-30a1-9554-71c5c11fac67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/648528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genesis of the Media Concept","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/648528","wordCount":20216,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[21605,21690]],"Locations in B":[[91497,91582]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xiao Yang"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10695834"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42671683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211014"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb3cf751-8248-3419-8ceb-11c9a47b702f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26892151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinreviinte"}],"isPartOf":"China Review International","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"336","pagination":"pp. 336-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892151","wordCount":1723,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amir Gorzalczany"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07928424"},{"name":"oclc","value":"603671335"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"801e0b32-e09d-362c-aea4-ae6ccb2fc9eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26563108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atiqot"}],"isPartOf":"'Atiqot \/ \u05e2\u05ea\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":94.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"The Chalcolithic Cemetery at Palma\u1e25im (North)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26563108","wordCount":32855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Israel Antiquities Authority \/ \u05e8\u05e9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05e2\u05ea\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":"New Evidencnce of Burial Patterns from the Central Coastal Plain","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3389621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da701c7f-f494-3412-b0d2-657ec615c921"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3389621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3389621","wordCount":8108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. Harner","Harrison T. Meserole","Priscilla J. Letterman"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d0d52e6-07b9-3c1f-a505-a29726fbfe5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44990259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":408.0,"pageEnd":"930","pageStart":"520","pagination":"pp. 520-534, 539-930","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY: World Shakespeare Bibliography 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990259","wordCount":347331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTHONY HAMBER"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a9eb7b7-67cd-32d3-878f-8d9208fb9a34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"Facsimile, Scholarship, and Commerce: Aspects of the Photographically Illustrated Art Book (1839-1880)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622555","wordCount":12332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27828632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5108d55f-4d82-3cb3-8664-5d171e73a674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27828632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"232A","pageStart":"227A","pagination":"pp. 227A-232A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"BOOKS RECEIVED FOR REVIEW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27828632","wordCount":4146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25694377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fc81555-096f-364d-8424-9bccee36d556"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25694377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605, 607-625, 627-659, 663-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[ALA Organization and Information, 1953-54]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25694377","wordCount":43250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN CHEEKE"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23079667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43810477"},{"name":"lccn","value":"215448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a99c58f-7c08-35f9-b11b-d65395efabe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23079667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"437","pagination":"pp. 437-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Browning, Renaissance Painting, and the Problem of Raphael","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23079667","wordCount":12105,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[74165,74232]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josef Nguyen"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671482","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67bed7d3-b182-3bd9-8c8e-6e0e342cf507"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"How Makers and Preppers Converge in Premodern and Post-Apocalyptic Ruin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671482","wordCount":10016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"This article investigates how US maker culture affirms values of self-reliance and personal responsibility through its increasing convergence with future-oriented preparation in order to construct a US maker identity differentiated from other making cultures worldwide as an ideological project of white American exceptionalism. I argue that the convergence of contemporary making with apocalyptic preparation in the US articulates making practices as vital for individual survival for apocalyptic futures as well as constructs nonwhite and non-Western geographies as simultaneously premodern and post-apocalyptic sites of ruin. US maker culture, while drawing inspiration from these geographies, suggests that such locales will be unaffected by apocalypse and, thus, cannot prepare for it. Consequently, US maker culture excludes the nonwhite inhabitants of these non-Western geographies from the idealized subjecthood rooted in the do-ityourself (DIY) ideology and preparatory logic that maker culture endorses.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CYRUS C.M. MODY","MICHAEL LYNCH"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9738c63-6554-3740-aab2-9cabd5e05ef0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Test objects and other epistemic things: a history of a nanoscale objects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962542","wordCount":18263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This paper follows the history of an object. The purpose of doing so is to come to terms with a distinctive kind of research object -which we are calling a 'test object' -as well as to chronicle a significant line of research and technology development associated with the broader nanoscience\/nanotechnology movement. A test object is one of a family of epistemic things that makes up the material culture of laboratory science. Depending upon the case, it can have variable shadings of practical, mathematical and epistemic significance. lear cases of test objects have highly regular and reproducible visible properties that can be used for testing instruments and training novices. The test object featured in this paper is the silicon (111) 7x7, a particular surface configuration (or, as it is often called, a 'reconstruction') of silicon atoms. Research on this object over a period of several decades has been closely bound up with the development of novel instruments for visualizing atomic structures. Despite having little direct commercial value, the Si(111) 7x7 also has been a focal object for the formation of a research community bridging industry and academia. It exhibits a complex structure that became a sustained focus of observation and modelling. Our study follows shifts in the epistemic status of the Si(111) 7x7, and uses it to re-examine familiar conceptions of representation and observation in the history, philosophy and social study of science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25041098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c80b5c28-87d7-3e32-8243-e7818310b610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25041098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":193.0,"pageEnd":"56a","pageStart":"15a","pagination":"pp. 15a, 17a-18a, 30a, 37a-38a, 1-172, 40a-42a, 44a-50a, 52a-56a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Accountancy","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Water Pollution Control Federation Yearbook: 1981","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25041098","wordCount":121780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Morris"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20771043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10547479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d04609b-a670-378e-8416-f24893bf0da5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20771043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerperi"}],"isPartOf":"American Periodicals","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hemingway and Life: Consuming Revolutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20771043","wordCount":5773,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7cb1882-df13-3716-9b46-876e6112d04a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26371569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371569","wordCount":15463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anton Kaes"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87baea0f-6d01-3285-9438-efa00e070197"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cold Gaze: Notes on Mobilization and Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488225","wordCount":5587,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55865,56079]],"Locations in B":[[13317,13531]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"59","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Byron McCormick"],"datePublished":"1931-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25708240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1bb2f41-3f12-3206-8803-1f7180ea9dc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25708240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerbarassoj"}],"isPartOf":"American Bar Association Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"SOME LEGAL PROBLEMS OF THE MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25708240","wordCount":7461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aaron M. Lamperti","Aaron R. French","Ellen S. Dierenfeld","Mark K. Fogiel","Kenneth D. Whitney","Donald J. Stauffer","Kimberly M. Holbrook","Britta D. Hardesty","Connie J. Clark","John R. Poulsen","Benjamin C. Wang","Thomas B. Smith","V. Thomas Parker"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43831726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02664674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446962"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e30c0451-d33b-38db-ae27-c1bb7aed1874"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43831726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jtropicalecology"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Tropical Ecology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Diet selection is related to breeding status in two frugivorous hornbill species of Central Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43831726","wordCount":9915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"Avian diet selection is hypothesized to be sensitive to seasonal changes in breeding status, but few tests exist for frugivorous tropical birds. Frugivorous birds provide an interesting test case because fruits are relatively deficient in minerals critical for reproduction. Here, we quantify annual patterns of fruit availability and diet for two frugivorous hornbill (Bucerotidae) species over a 5.5-y period to test for patterns of diet selection. Data from the lowland tropical rain forest of the Dja Reserve, Cameroon, are used to generate two nutritional indices. One index estimates the nutrient concentration of the diet chosen by Ceratogymna atrata and Bycanistes albotibialis on a monthly basis using 3165 feeding observations combined with fruit pulp sample data. The second index is an estimate of nutrient concentration of a non-selective or neutral diet across the study area based on tree fruiting phenology, vegetation survey and fruit-pulp sample data. Fifty-nine fruit pulp samples representing 40 species were analysed for 16 nutrient categories to contribute to both indices. Pulp samples accounted for approximately 75% of the observed diets. The results support expected patterns of nutrient selection. The two hornbill species selected a diet rich in calcium during the early breeding season (significantly so for B. albotibialis in July and August). Through the brooding and fledging periods, they switched from a calcium-rich diet to one rich in iron and caloric content as well as supplemental protein in the form of invertebrates. Calcium, the calcium to phosphorus ratio and fat concentration were the strongest predictors of breeding success (significant for calcium and Ca:P for B. albotibialis in June). We conclude that hornbills actively select fruit based on nutritional concentration and mineral concentration and that the indices developed here are useful for assessing frugivore diet over time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Speidel","Daniel Straub","Kristine Miller"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44673735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee60fe59-a47d-3bbe-bc51-a9dc0d3b78cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44673735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landarch"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Architecture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Garden & Landscape","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"letters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44673735","wordCount":1628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"American Society of Landscape Architects","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abby Coykendall"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4915738-c75e-3ab3-86b5-18f214b58dc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23365025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chance Enlightenments, Choice Superstitions: Walpole's Historic Doubts and Enlightenment Historicism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365025","wordCount":8954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen Wayland-Smith"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"907","pageStart":"887","pagination":"pp. 887-907","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Passing Fashion: Mallarm\u00e9 and the Future of Poetry in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251922","wordCount":8571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. Hicks"],"datePublished":"1941-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1898047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161391X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35781793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42ab42ce-2eb2-30a5-8637-b2bc7e70f1e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1898047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missvallhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Valley Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"728","pageStart":"705","pagination":"pp. 705-728","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Historical News and Comments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1898047","wordCount":9461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Madsen"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d825fe23-7730-3da9-a255-2cba8d5b957b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1075","pageStart":"1073","pagination":"pp. 1073-1075","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231303","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/597813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ae88f6f-99ac-38ea-bf8e-dc256f1e5c45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/597813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":349.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2008","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/597813","wordCount":258548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-09-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ca84e1f-200f-3712-af2e-489711db6f75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"1346","pageStart":"1340","pagination":"pp. 1340+1342-1343+1345-1346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Forthcoming Events","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713909","wordCount":4526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3638","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"145","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey C. Kinkley"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40727547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02549948"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568558052"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234208"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adbc318c-50e3-3b76-aa4a-70180043e751"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40727547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monumentaserica"}],"isPartOf":"Monumenta Serica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"SHEN CONGWEN AMONG THE CHINESE MODERNISTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40727547","wordCount":15667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[28749,28819]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Maney Publishing","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hugh Brigstocke"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"741483181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"910007e7-e16f-383a-9a64-ce46da494266"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41830767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":235.0,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"JAMES IRVINE: A SCOTTISH ARTIST IN ITALY. PICTURE BUYING IN ITALY FOR WILLIAM BUCHANAN AND ARTHUR CHAMPERNOWNE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830767","wordCount":124301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric M. Meyers","A. Thomas Kraabel","James F. Strange"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3768529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00660035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cbab24e-ae19-3e90-aa6e-4a1f74651f8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3768529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annuamerschoorie"}],"isPartOf":"The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":456.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-v+vii-ix+xi-xvii+xix-xxi+xxiii-xxvii+1-267+269-289+291-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Ancient Synagogue Excavations at Khirbet Shema', Upper Galilee, Israel 1970-1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3768529","wordCount":139497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The American Schools of Oriental Research","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-02-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44b21c4f-38ad-3c42-886e-e510fad97999"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26370240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370240","wordCount":34358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen B. Hodin"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30043430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751275"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44849568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af971405-3662-3ff0-8af3-20c0ffd4cc7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30043430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlyrepublic"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Early Republic","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Mechanisms of Monticello: Saving Labor in Jefferson's America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30043430","wordCount":16736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luc\u00eda Coral Aguirre Mu\u00f1oz","PETER MCLAREN"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dd4cd69-c851-35fb-9e78-1b8779fa4607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interview 3: the globalization of capital, critical pedagogy, and the aftermath of September 11","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978940","wordCount":23282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"295","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel J. Royer"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5f384fd-bc6e-37e8-ab85-4d30665612b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3041973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Process of Literacy as Communal Involvement in the Narratives of Frederick Douglass","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041973","wordCount":6983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana State University","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUIS I. PR\u00c1DANOS"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rjgt.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786941343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b358dd99-28cb-3c52-8c4b-a4859ccd599e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rjgt.8"}],"isPartOf":"Postgrowth Imaginaries","keyphrase":["disaster","catastrophe","tsunami","dominant imaginary","socioecological","disaster fiction","fiction pedagogy","slow violence","neoliberal","nonhuman"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"209","pagination":"209-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","Latin American Studies","Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Disaster Fiction, the Pedagogy of Catastrophe, and the Dominant Imaginary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rjgt.8","wordCount":8628,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55839,56079]],"Locations in B":[[162,402]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Buena crisis: hacia un mundo postmaterialista<\/em> (2009) by Jordi Pigem and La buena crisis<\/em> (2010) by Alex Rovira are two of the many examples of recent Iberian texts that understand the ongoing crisis as an opportunity to challenge the cultural hegemony and to abandon the dominant imaginary.\u00b2 However, the notion of crisis is also co-opted by neoliberal reason as a business opportunity for those equipped with entrepreneurial adaptability and personal flexibility. A number of recent blog posts and op-eds with titles such as \u2018Bendita crisis\u2019 (Blessed crisis) and the like offer acritical celebrations of personal strength and private motivation as","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Briggs"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.49.3.319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a9be4b7-897d-3e59-ace7-b39622c336fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.49.3.319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Toward a New Folkloristics of Health","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.49.3.319","wordCount":10519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"Abstract Folk medicine has fallen under the purview of folkloristics since the latter's prehistory in the seventeenth-century writings of John Aubrey; nevertheless, the field has long been relegated to subordinate status and rarely considered as a source of new disciplinary perspectives. Although folklorists now contribute to contemporary medical debates, research on health has seldom gained the visibility in folklore studies that it has enjoyed recently in anthropology, sociology, and science-technology-society (STS) studies. Here I point to some of the historical strengths of the field of folk medicine and suggest how they can resonate with research advances in these other fields. Rather than advocating that folklorists follow other disciplinary leads, this article proposes a framework and methodology for overcoming entrenched assumptions and tackling the complex ethnographic and analytic work that would be required to develop a comprehensive folkloristics of health.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard M. Clark"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313112"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2017202169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7d17d49-f410-3d5d-9c41-1ec2e5f0c4a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44695759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695759","wordCount":9752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angela Carr"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f91a820a-c634-3f2a-a6e2-db022c770843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Leaders, Legends and Felons: negotiating portraiture, from veneration to vandalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630717","wordCount":9539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"En 2003, lors de l'arriv\u00e9e en Iraq de la coalition dirig\u00e9e par les \u00c9tats-Unis, un grand nombre de portraits de Saddam Hussein, dirigeant de l'Iraq \u00e0 l'\u00e9poque, furent d\u00e9truits. Deux ans auparavant, les talibans avaient dynamit\u00e9 deux bouddhas g\u00e9ants, sculpt\u00e9s dans les falaises du nord de l'Afghanistan. M\u00eame si la destruction violente d'images est traditionnellement qualifi\u00e9e de vandalisme ou d'iconoclasme, le \u00ab texte \u00bb esth\u00e9tique, selon Umberto Eco, serait davantage un outil de communication que de repr\u00e9sentation, outil dont les significations peuvent changer et auquel on ne r\u00e9servera pas le m\u00eame accueil avec le temps. D'apr\u00e8s le concept de communaut\u00e9 imagin\u00e9e de Benedict Anderson, les monuments d'\u00c9tat illustrent des id\u00e9aux collectifs, tandis que Michael Taussig estime que l'\u00c9tat est un \u00ab autre \u00bb f\u00e9tichis\u00e9, distinct de la population qu'il est cens\u00e9 servir. Dans les cas o\u00f9 les portraits d'\u00c9tat favorisent un culte de la personnalit\u00e9, ces images rappellent constamment le pouvoir du r\u00e9gime en place et d\u00e9finissent le territoire o\u00f9 ce pouvoir s'exerce. Contrairement \u00e0 ce que soutient Antonio Gramsci au sujet du concept d'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie, les portraits de dictateurs ne consolident pas l'ascendant sur les classes : ils orchestrent un culte \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard d'une personne. La transgression des r\u00e8gles relatives au sujet ou \u00e0 la pr\u00e9sentation peut entra\u00eener des r\u00e9actions violentes. Dans ces cas, entre autres, le spectateur peut consid\u00e9rer l'image comme un moyen de communiquer avec l'artiste, la personne repr\u00e9sent\u00e9e ou le public en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral. Des \u00ab communications \u00bb de ce type, notamment par la violence, r\u00e9sistent aux strat\u00e9gies analytiques li\u00e9es au signifiant flottant, au simulacre et au f\u00e9tiche, m\u00eame si ces d\u00e9marches restent utiles en ce qui concerne d'autres aspects de l'analyse du portrait.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1937-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/727304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/727304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/727304","wordCount":11059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cathy J. Schlund-Vials"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfefb4a9-fb18-3e48-be12-f24360bb54b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Crisis of Memory: Memorializing 9\/11 in the Comic Book Universe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445147","wordCount":7709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Studies","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. Forbes"],"datePublished":"1927-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4301215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03627861"},{"name":"oclc","value":"248573533"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235304"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0159693b-99e1-34c4-87e4-2f8c41d36d99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4301215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepofogg"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Fogg Art Museum)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1927,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"[Report of the Fogg Art Museum, 1927-28]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4301215","wordCount":7229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1927\/1928","publisher":"Harvard University Art Museums","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mich\u00e8le C. Cone"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b50fe61f-74fe-32c4-8649-33dd6f0a4d47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2903227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pierre Restany and the Nouveaux R\u00e9alistes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903227","wordCount":5746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"98","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leon Litvack"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/dickstudannu.47.2016.0165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb980184-6013-3e1e-83b8-7fa5ea8780ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/dickstudannu.47.2016.0165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dickens in the Eye of the Beholder: The Photographs of Robert Hindry Mason","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/dickstudannu.47.2016.0165","wordCount":14397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This illustrated essay treats the complex web of relations between Charles Dickens and the London photographer Robert Hindry Mason (1824\u201385), who executed a fascinating series of portraits of the author and his circle in the early and mid-1860s. These depict Dickens in a wide range of poses, modes of dress, and locations; they vary from the formal and professional, to the seemingly informal and familial. Taken together, they constitute the most diverse group of Dickensian images captured by a single photographic operator. A close reading of sixteen selected images offers insight into the various guises in which Dickens\u2014aided by his photographer\u2014wished himself to be seen by his public, and memorialized for posterity. Through information gleaned from newspaper advertisements, exhibition reviews in the periodical press, law reports, criminal records, bankruptcy records, post office directories, references in the specialist photographic press, comments written on the back of individual prints, and brief references in Dickensian correspondence, Mason's personality and working practices are usefully disclosed. This piece opens up an avenue of Dickens studies which has not been heretofore extensively explored; it also offers detailed consideration of how the professional and artistic elements of nineteenth-century photography contributed to the forging of Dickens's public reputation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-09-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20144759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcdeb306-ce86-364d-b015-90ae99f89e6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20144759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20144759","wordCount":29010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5894","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"321","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN E. 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It contributes to the discussion of the photograph's role in communicating meaning in architecture through its potential to \"reveal\" the idiomatic.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-02-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24743145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34298537"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 96036234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bd59d29-f5fb-3dcb-bee7-1e3e1806888f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24743145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"926","pageStart":"902","pagination":"pp. 902-926","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Gordon Research Conferences: frontiers of science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24743145","wordCount":39712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6173","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"343","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Blumenthal-Barby"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43556005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71e755ed-1f55-3ed4-a0c5-c2c53147dbac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43556005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Cinematography of Devices\": Harun Farocki's \"Eye\/Machine\" Trilogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43556005","wordCount":10181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Harun Farocki's 2001-2003 installation Eye\/Machine tackles issues of surveillance surrounding the \"intelligent\" weapon systems deployed in the 1990\/91 Gulf War. Farocki is especially interested in the image processing systems behind these weapons, their operational images that are both generated by machines and read by machines\u2014 images that require neither human creators nor human spectators. The article examines how Farocki turns these images into aesthetic artifacts even though they were never meant to be seen. Concomitantly, it interrogates our own status as spectators and explores how we can avoid complicity with the imagistic logic of war that Farocki confronts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4173492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe4b42bf-428d-3fca-8ff3-501685264ead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4173492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":276.0,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-219+221-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Literature of the Renaissance in 1964","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4173492","wordCount":104644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sebouh D. 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Technology","Applied sciences - Engineering","Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"The John Scott Medal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/985940","wordCount":11032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynette Miller Gottlieb"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25172820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25172820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Images, Technology, and Music: The Ballets Su\u00e9dois and \"Les mari\u00e9s de la Tour Eiffel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25172820","wordCount":13050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[77064,77419]],"Locations in B":[[37287,37635]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4301588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10656448"},{"name":"oclc","value":"248577659"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94debadb-595e-3dfb-8f27-f2ab6982733f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4301588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvunivartmuse"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard University Art Museums Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Epistemology"],"title":"Rethinking English Physico-theology: Samuel Parker's \"Tentamina de Deo\" (1665)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24269391","wordCount":22496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Recent historiography has claimed that a radically new, non-dogmatic physico-theology gained prominence with, and simultaneously promoted, the new science. This article challenges this view by focusing on an important physico-theological work by the young Oxford cleric Samuel Parker, published in 1665. It received a glowing review in the first volume of the Philosophical Transactions and gained its author election to the Royal Society, yet has been almost entirely ignored by modern scholars. Parker's work demonstrates both how easily the pious rhetoric of the naturalists could be incorporated into the traditional \u2013 largely humanist \u2013 knowledge gained by a typical M.A. student in mid-seventeenth-century England. Moreover, far from being non-dogmatic, Parker's physico-theology culminated in a remarkable deployment of the new philosophy (specifically Thomas Willis's neurology) to explain scriptural passages referring to God's passions. Parker believed himself not to be doing something radically new, but to be working in the traditions of scholastic theology. At the same time, his work was one of the most important conduits for the early English reception of both Descartes and Gassendi.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/652112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28d1466c-e8b2-3925-85e7-884bcb06155a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/652112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":309.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/652112","wordCount":226691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1401924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03731138"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60574671"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1401924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuinstintestat"}],"isPartOf":"Revue de l'Institut International de Statistique \/ Review of the International Statistical Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie statistique internationale \/ International Statistical Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1401924","wordCount":47381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1\/3","publisher":"International Statistical Institute (ISI)","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Murray"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11092391-5135-353e-b610-86027a832207"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Subliminal Libraries: Showing Lady Liberty and Documenting Death","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389091","wordCount":5605,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[38025,38365]],"Locations in B":[[15614,15954]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26227757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b5a969-c28a-351b-b008-0e660a0d559d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26227757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamermetesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26227757","wordCount":5908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Meteorological Society","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26437401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac5c2e3f-487c-3bfb-b9d8-21dabbf74eb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26437401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-46, 48-50, 52-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26437401","wordCount":14450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Barnes"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/vs.2010.5.3.106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1559372X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62763830"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-228027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dce8421b-5dc4-3e2a-b9d1-fd03de6e93a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/vs.2010.5.3.106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvietstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vietnamese Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cinema as Cultural Translation: The Production of Vietnam in Tr\u1ea9n Anh H\u00f9ng's Cyclo<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/vs.2010.5.3.106","wordCount":9866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"This article examines Tr\u1ea9n Anh H\u00f9ng's Cyclo (1995) as a work of cinematic autoethnography, that is, as a record of Vietnamese culture reflected not in the \"objective\" detailing of behavior but in a creative assemblage, or montage, of cultural codes. After addressing the question of fiction and ethnography, I examine the film's formal translation of the verbal and nonverbal signs that traditional ethnographic approaches would conserve in written form. By encouraging confusion and ongoing creative recombination, Tr\u1ea9n Anh H\u00f9ng's film questions not only the possibility of a faithful rendering of one's culture, but the very existence of an original to be rendered.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALISON BYERLY"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bf3f850-bbbf-3a8e-ba15-45352d395778"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Effortless Art: The Sketch in Nineteenth-Century Painting and Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124216","wordCount":7056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Campbell"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a6d5bee-2003-3458-915d-28918cac1f31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1067","pageStart":"1066","pagination":"pp. 1066-1067","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231299","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. RAMASWAMY"],"datePublished":"1960-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43953764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13ee49a3-de54-3108-b99e-6773104307e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43953764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jindilawinst"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Indian Law Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"INDIAN CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS AGAINST BARRIERS TO TRADE AND COMMERCE EXAMINED IN THE LIGHT OF AUSTRALIAN AND AMERICAN EXPERIENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43953764","wordCount":36350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Indian Law Institute","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Kavanagh","Annette Hervey"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2484340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00409618"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446704"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"707f428a-2f20-396e-b860-d723d3522d2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2484340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulltorrbotaclub"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"William Jacob Robbins: February 22, 1890-October 5, 1978","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2484340","wordCount":18278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Torrey Botanical Society","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL NOVAK"],"datePublished":"2004-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2004.85.1.58","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0d4e5e7-0537-3378-98ea-6b2d769b0042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2004.85.1.58"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Model Jew: \u201cLiterary Photographs\u201d and the Jewish Body in Daniel Deronda<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2004.85.1.58","wordCount":19863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay examines the relationship between George Eliot's representation of the Jewish body in Daniel Deronda and Francis Galton's photographic race-science. It argues that, for both Eliot and Galton, Jewish racial identity is, paradoxically, defined by a corporeal evacuation and abstraction\u2014that is, by a ghostly disembodiment. While Eliot's representation of Deronda has traditionally been read as a radical departure from the realism that Eliot was so instrumental in defining, in a sense, Daniel Deronda represents a thorough adaptation to photographic technology and scientic realism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren\u00e9e M. Silverman"],"datePublished":"2016-08-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.53.3.e-5","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b3f9cc1-85bd-3d95-81ae-92698a0387b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.53.3.e-5"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"e-10","pageStart":"e-5","pagination":"pp. e-5-e-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.53.3.e-5","wordCount":1925,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2378,2465]],"Locations in B":[[11466,11553]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. Renner","Don G. Stafford"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4607003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00053155"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3569d233-f210-31c9-8c72-052f45976ef7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4607003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bios"}],"isPartOf":"Bios","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Elementary School Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4607003","wordCount":4392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Beta Beta Beta Biological Society","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ryan Cull"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2010.65.1.38","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c76649f-f463-3524-bdcb-0a4ceb95606e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncl.2010.65.1.38"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond the Cheated Eye: Dickinson's Lyric Sociality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2010.65.1.38","wordCount":10278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"Ryan Cull, \"Beyond the Cheated Eye: Dickinson's Lyric Sociality\" (pp. 38\u201364) During the past generation, Dickinson scholarship has shown how historicist and printculture methodologies can illuminate the social nexus of even a notoriously reticent figure. It has also had a broader impact on how we think about lyric poetry in general. For Emily Dickinson's experiments with dual authorship, hybrid-collage forms, and the blurring of stylistic and formal lines between poem and letter indicate the social embeddedness of what critics often still consider a private genre. This essay blends these two lines of thought in order to consider the lyric (and here, especially, Dickinson's lyrics) not only as a socio-historically embedded form but also as a form that may have application to our theorizing of the social. The essay argues that in a sequence of poems and letters in the period from 1862 to 1863 Dickinson identifies a possessiveness at the heart of the lyrical subjectivity that poisons social relations and stands as the most pervasive legacy of Romanticism. The essay then shows how Dickinson criticism, which can serve as a microcosm of critical trends in general, critiques but never casts aside this post-Romantic subjectivity that still limits our social theorizing. Then it shows how Dickinson seeks to do just this, to present within her lyrics an alternative poetic subjectivity that makes possible a revolutionary, pacifistic (though not passive) form of social relation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BREGT LAMERIS"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1v2xssp.19","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089648266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f4c9b46-7e17-371c-99ec-f9f24f5ebe14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1v2xssp.19"}],"isPartOf":"The Film Museum Practice and Film Historiography","keyphrase":["cinema","amsterdam","film history","moving image","cin\u00e9ma paris","early cinema","nederlands","geschiedenis van","amsterdam nederlands","nederlands filmmuseum"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"245","pagination":"245-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1v2xssp.19","wordCount":5984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Oberhardt"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19c77a05-dece-38e6-a901-e81c99a319ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Looking Through Frame 3: The Art Museum in Popular Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976615","wordCount":18342,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[37409,37598]],"Locations in B":[[2691,2893]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"167","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven L. Winter"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8addfd2b-a25a-3c57-a9b7-7eb5643970df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":133.0,"pageEnd":"1237","pageStart":"1105","pagination":"pp. 1105-1237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Transcendental Nonsense, Metaphoric Reasoning, and the Cognitive Stakes for Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312131","wordCount":66085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"137","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-10-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42580656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a0e7b87-4803-35f5-bac9-d31f4e7dcb1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42580656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical treatment","Business - Industry","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42580656","wordCount":9959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"208","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Hayes"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b2c4b18-48d2-304e-ab3e-aef8d7d6632b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25621437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Santu Mofokeng, Photographs: \"The Violence Is in the Knowing\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621437","wordCount":8274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Born in 1956, Santu Mofokeng formed part of the Afrapix Collective that engaged in expos\u00e9 and documentary photography of anti-apartheid resistance and social conditions during the 1980s in South Africa. However, Mofokeng was an increasingly important internal critic of mainstream photojournalism, and of the ways black South Africans were represented in the bigger international picture economy during the political struggle. Eschewing scenes of violence and the third-party view of white-on-black brutality in particular, he began his profound explorations of the everyday and spiritual dimensions of African life, both in the city and in the countryside. His formal techniques favor \"fictions\" that contain smoke, mist, and other matters and techniques that occlude rather than expose. Using angularity and ambivalence, he also ruptures realist expectations and allows space for the uncanny and the supernatural. He works with the notion of seriti (a northern seSotho term encompassing aura, shadow, power, essence, and many other things). The essay follows strands in Mofokeng's writings and statements in relation to certain of his photographs, most recently repositioned in the substantial 2007 exhibition Invoice, to argue that he has pushed for a desecularization and Africanization of photography from the 1980s to the present. In more recent work the scourge of apartheid has been replaced by the HIV\/AIDS virus, a mutation of nature, exacerbating the spiritual insecurities of many people in post-apartheid South Africa. The essay concludes that Mofokeng's work poses a critique of the parallel paradigms of Marxist-influenced social history and documentary photography in 1980s South Africa, both still highly influential, by attempting to reinsert aura (seriti) into photography and by highlighting what secular Marxism has concealed and proscribed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rita Barnard"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"When You Wish Upon a Star\": Fantasy, Experience, and Mass Culture in Nathanael West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927983","wordCount":11714,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13262,13402]],"Locations in B":[[40092,40233]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ABIGAIL SOLOMON-GODEAU"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24552884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90441841-b1a6-32d1-a866-04c7d4faa6d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24552884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"princollnews"}],"isPartOf":"The Print Collector's Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CANON FODDER: AUTHORING EUGENE ATGET","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24552884","wordCount":8107,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara J. Black"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/vic.2010.52.3.486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5429f7b-04d7-348d-ada0-35c75c830d74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/vic.2010.52.3.486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"486","pagination":"pp. 486-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Material Cultures, 1740-1920: The Meanings and Pleasures of Collecting<\/em>, edited by John Potvin and Alla Myzelev","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/vic.2010.52.3.486","wordCount":1578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3x99.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089644725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08313af5-1a44-30a0-9040-24532ddea086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt15r3x99.8"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Biographies","keyphrase":["avebury","stukeley","gillings","gillings joshua","mark gillings","druidical temple","joshua pollard","gillings joshua pollard","archaeological","boyd haycock"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"117","pagination":"117-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Archaeology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Authenticity, Artifice and the Druidical Temple of Avebury","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3x99.8","wordCount":9267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The prehistoric stone circle complex at Avebury on the Wiltshire chalkland of southern England is the largest of its kind in Europe (figure 5.1). A 420-metre-diameter earthwork encloses a ring of huge standing stones, which in turn encloses two other roughly circular configurations of megaliths with further stone settings at their centres. Radiating out to the south and west are linear avenues of megaliths that snake out across 3.5 kilometres of the surrounding chalk landscape to link the Avebury structures to other prehistoric earth and stone monuments. The henge earthwork and the stone settings all belong to the third millennium","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christina Kiaer"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf8b332f-55af-3b21-ab81-a8cfb32bd15e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rodchenko in Paris","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778897","wordCount":16261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 V. Saval"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30208362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a248b93a-8cc0-3eaf-a2f1-2e3cb2c0cc0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30208362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"La lucha de clases se sienta a la mesa en \"Los mares del Sur\" de Manuel V\u00e1zquez Montalb\u00e1n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30208362","wordCount":6211,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42327,42478]],"Locations in B":[[29186,29337]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54077ac8-bdeb-36c5-a2d6-53770f4088db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775208","wordCount":25174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv157bjk.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089649669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe15f657-e789-3ce1-90c6-d95b1222afa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv157bjk.9"}],"isPartOf":"Unpopular Culture","keyphrase":["wonder girls","music video","karaoke americanism","korean","jaap kooijman","americanism gangnam","gangnam","korean wave","cultural","american pop"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"113","pagination":"113-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Karaoke Americanism Gangnam Style","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv157bjk.9","wordCount":6795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Motown meets K-pop. A promotional photograph of the 2012 TNT Christmas in Washington<\/em> television special features the show\u2019s two headliners Diana Ross and PSY, both dressed in campy sequined outfits and smiling broadly into the camera. The two stars performed in front of America\u2019s First Family, Barack and Michelle Obama with their two daughters, the latter two visibly most enjoying PSY\u2019s performance of \u2018Christmas Gangnam Style\u2019. As lead singer of the Supremes in the 1960s and solo superstar in the 1970s and early 1980s, Diana Ross signifies the traditional dominance of America in global pop culture, currently most explicitly embodied","subTitle":"K-pop, Wonder Girls, and the Asian Unpopular","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN Z. KAMHOLTZ"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23102683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af3d22ac-8af5-3311-a53c-70e523f88646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23102683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thomas Wyatt's Poetry: The Politics of Love","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23102683","wordCount":6803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha C. Nussbaum","Heather K. Gerken","James E. Ryan","J. Harvie Wilkinson III"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40042783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97607b0b-025c-3ec1-8c68-6182eaa5516f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40042783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":448.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-183, 185-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Supreme Court 2006 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40042783","wordCount":220910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1952-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26439862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fc0574d-c2e5-3ea9-9610-24e2b96abcdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26439862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"liv","pageStart":"xxxvi","pagination":"pp. xxxvi, xxxviii-xlvi, xlviii-liv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26439862","wordCount":11983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JENNIFER QUICK"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e900f388-b126-3b9c-93ba-795d29518271"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44972950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pasteup Pictures: Ed Ruscha's \"Every Building on the Sunset Strip\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972950","wordCount":16589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"Ed Ruschas 1960s books, among his best-known works, have long been considered touchstones of Conceptual art. Despite their renown, there has been little discussion of their relation to the technical knowledge and economics of post-World War II commercial art\u2014another key context for Conceptual art. The analysis of Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966) demonstrates that Ruscha deployed pasteup layout as a means of thinking through arts representational capacities, perceptual structures, and communicative potential. Ruschas \"pasteup pictures\" embody his navigation between the worlds of art and design, shedding light on Conceptual arts ideational nature and its formulation of artistic labor.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Fiott"],"datePublished":"2019-12-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep21145","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"892a37ee-42ca-3611-8b94-ad77a79786d9"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"STRATEGIC INVESTMENT Making geopolitical sense of the EU\u2019s defence industrial policy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep21145","wordCount":22948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"European Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS)","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One of the major policy legacies that former President Jean-Claude Juncker and the European Commission will leave behind after 2019 is the creation of the European Defence Fund (EDF). Breaking a long-standing taboo that held that the EU should not use the Union\u2019s budgetary resources to invest in military capabilities, the Juncker Commission sought to make a difference in European defence by financially incentivising cooperation. Given that the EU is far from achieving strategic autonomy in defence, and bearing in mind also the geopolitical competition underway between the US and China, one has to be realistic about what can be","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Table of Contents","EXECUTIVE SUMMARY","INTRODUCTION","MARKET FORCES","INSTRUMENTS OF INNOVATION","THE VALLEY OF DEATH","CONCLUSION","ABBREVIATIONS","Back Matter"],"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marnie Holborow"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13699725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c292b99-f2cc-3af6-a47f-cc748a52bb63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26920409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keywords"}],"isPartOf":"Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neoliberal Keywords, Political Economy and the Relevance of Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26920409","wordCount":7008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"14","publisher":"Raymond Williams Society","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendy Lesser"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24429913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58801727"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234555"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7af53b40-dfc7-3f91-b679-3cf11f8e0a17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24429913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"threrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Threepenny Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Richter's Masterpiece","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24429913","wordCount":5604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"131","publisher":"Threepenny Review","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shyamkrishna Balganesh"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0540657-667c-3977-bf5a-1ddeff8e5784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44072330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"CAUSING COPYRIGHT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072330","wordCount":37262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":"Copyright protection attaches to an original work of expression the moment it is created and fixed in a tangible medium. Yet modern copyright law contains no viable mechanism by which to examine whether someone is causally responsible for the creation and fixation of the work. Whenever the issue of causation arises, copyright law relies on its preexisting doctrinal devices to resolve the issue, in the process cloaking its intuitions about causation in altogether extraneous considerations. This Article argues that copyright law embodies an unstated yet distinct theory of authorial causation, which connects the element of human agency to a work of expression using the myriad goals and objectives of the copyright system. This theory of causation would be best realized through an independent requirement\u2014copyrightable causation\u2014that the creator of a work must satisfy in order to qualify as its author for copyright protection. Tracking authorial causation, the requirement would embody both a factual dimension (creation in fact) and a normative component (legal creation). The former would examine the connection between the work and the putative author as a purely epistemic matter, while the latter would do so through an evaluative understanding of copyright's myriad goals and policies. The Article unpacks the structural and substantive foundations of authorial causation in copyright law and argues that making causation an explicit requirement for protection would introduce a measure of coherence and rationality into the question of copyrightability while simultaneously allowing copyright law to overtly affirm and promote its various institutional ideals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Israel Gershoni"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/176462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2d5c1df-9c41-385e-a880-f9c3a9a44b96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/176462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"576","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-576","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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The paintings depend upon viewers to construct meaning, thus offering an illustration and critique of theories of American literary realism that rely on a Cartesian metaphorics of vision.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Keenan"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97b689f3-0b14-3435-bd8d-5df881e206a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Publicity and Indifference (Sarajevo on Television)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823254","wordCount":8476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a848e692-7269-35cc-99f1-1ef6ff2d9d92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contributors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973808","wordCount":2872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Bennett"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24423727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49709375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009233377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"570d76ae-c1e7-32d1-b8cb-ee4500156554"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24423727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renastudies"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"John Aubrey and the rhapsodic book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24423727","wordCount":8180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"This article argues that John Aubrey and his biographical collaborator, Anthony Wood, pioneered a new kind of encyclopaedic collection, which they understood to be empirically grounded 'truth' but which contemporaries derided as a 'rhapsody'. A 'rhapsody' implies a basis in a new empirical practice, and a rejection of rhetorical tradition. Aubrey's voluminous collections were never published, largely because his work was overwhelmed by its attempt at comprehensiveness. Aubrey collaborated with Wood in his biographical encyclopaedia Athenae Oxonienses, which was prosecuted for its political content and also widely criticised as 'barbarous' in style and 'trivial' in content for 'heaping up' biographical detail gleaned, via Aubrey, from letters, documents, and lives specially written by a vast range of people. The 'rhapsody' is therefore remarkably socially broad-ranging. In this article I examine Aubrey's Brief Lives as an anti-rhetorical rhapsody stuffed with strange bedfellows; also his play The Countrey Revell and his three-volume antiquarian collection Monumenta Britannica. 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But while a considerable secondary literature has emerged around his work, efforts to build upon his contributions by operationalizing the method they elaborate have remained relatively rare. Nevertheless, I maintain that it is solely through such operationalization that Benjamin\u2019s intellectual project can truly be understood. In this article, I provide a sketch of Benjamin\u2019s intellectual biography\u2014with particular emphasis given to the purported tension between his metaphysics and his materialism\u2014to highlight the overarching methodological coherence of his approach. In conclusion, I demonstrate how this method might be operationalized by cultural studies scholars today.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mar\u00eda Carla S\u00e1nchez"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43022236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43022236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Western American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Immovable: Wllla Catcher's Logic of Art and Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43022236","wordCount":5624,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6596,6755]],"Locations in B":[[19353,19519]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Medb Ruane"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1649217X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d966a5fc-4a8a-3362-96e4-e8e258caaa30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27821387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisartsrevi2002"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Arts Review (2002-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Dual performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27821387","wordCount":827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Irish Arts Review","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. 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Le film t\u00e9moigne du courage de la r\u00e9alisatrice face \u00e0 l'intimidation des forces patriarcales qui ont essay\u00e9 de lui mettre des b\u00e2tons dans les roues. Le fait que Mehta ait put produire son film dans de telles circonstances confirme sa nature intr\u00e9pide et son amour tenace du m\u00e9tier. Cela t\u00e9moigne \u00e9galement de la confiance que le producteur David Hamiltion lui porte. Water pr\u00e9sente des images inoubliables compos\u00e9es avec sensibilit\u00e9 et subtilit\u00e9 pour cr\u00e9er beaut\u00e9 et \u00e9motion. La douleur muette des veuves indoues, repr\u00e9sent\u00e9e par des images saisissantes, engage le spectateur dans un \u00e9change dialectique. Par une lecture attentive du film de Mehta, cet article vise \u00e0 \u00e9lucider la mani\u00e8re par laquelle la r\u00e9alisatrice r\u00e9ussit \u00e0 cr\u00e9er un film porteur de sens et un texte social extr\u00eamement important. La m\u00e9thodologie analytique de cette \u00e9tude est inspir\u00e9e par les expos\u00e9s de Walter Benjamin sur l'image dialectique et les questions de \u00ab reproduction \u00bb et de \u00ab reproductibilit\u00e9 \u00bb de l'\u0153uvre d'art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-07-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39d831f7-2685-3997-aed3-aeefeaf4822d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23249966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249966","wordCount":19722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Huaiyu Wang \u738b\u61f7\u807f"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43643554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214400"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f5d8332-9f06-3b31-80fe-9d932cd4de2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43285777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phileastwest"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy East and West","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"A GENEALOGICAL STUDY OF DE: POETICAL CORRESPONDENCE OF SKY, EARTH, AND HUMANKIND IN THE EARLY CHINESE VIRTUOUS RULE OF BENEFACTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285777","wordCount":22125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"By identifying the basic meanings of de as \"spiritual endowment\" and \"grateful offering,\" this treatise aims to clarify the original meanings and structure of de and to establish the early Chinese moral and political order based on dezhi as the virtuous rule of benefaction. A critical reexamination of the influential mana thesis will lay bare the spiritual power of de as the sympathetic correspondence (gantong WtW) of cosmic forces of yin and yang. As a principle o\u00ed genus, de stands for the grounding spiritual power nurturing the growth of human communities in empathetic and reciprocal harmony with the cyclical rhythm of cosmic forces. The true foundation of the early Chinese rule of benefaction consists precisely in such senses of empathy and reciprocity originating in the poetical correspondence of sky, earth, and humankind. The investigation of de here shall reveal a distinctively Chinese understanding of human person that is based not on the philosophy of entitlement but on the poetical way of embodiment. As a distinctive site of embodiment, the primary function of a Confucian political leader is not to uphold the consigned spiritual power with exclusive authority, but to promote its proper dissemination for the harmonious coalescence of all kinds of beings. I shall argue further that such sagacious personalities should be regarded as the archetype and origin of early Chinese and Confucian moral virtues.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven J. Dick"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abd92c48-8307-37d2-bc78-3cd5c794985e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Centralizing Navigational Technology in America: The U.S. Navy's Depot of Charts and Instruments, 1830-1842","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106634","wordCount":19128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23213317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0f7c36d-5a53-3921-9ca6-5d054da888bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23213317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Medical treatment","Business - Industry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23213317","wordCount":13541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred Block"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf837d3-6336-3828-9425-6c632c23e11f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1114","pageStart":"1113","pagination":"pp. 1113-1114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231324","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Inga Pollmann"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/671356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"446afd7a-b908-3d9e-950d-130ffd93d016"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/671356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"816","pageStart":"777","pagination":"pp. 777-816","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Invisible Worlds, Visible: Uexk\u00fcll's Umwelt<\/em>, Film, and Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/671356","wordCount":17763,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35267,35361]],"Locations in B":[[82195,82289]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joyce Cutler Shaw"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e31b7eea-2c7c-35b9-9f37-9c8530e76805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1575946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"\"The Anatomy Lesson\": The Body, Technology and Empathy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575946","wordCount":8993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"As the first artist-in-residence and visiting scholar at the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego, the author crosses disciplines of visual art and medical science. Through drawings and multimedia works, she explores the body at its most raw and essential during anatomical dissection and at its most ephemeral as it is dematerialized in this visual age by the proliferation of new medical imaging technologies. Her focus is on the human and the dehumanizing consequences of splitting the image of the body from the physical and sentient self.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Sinkoff"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3654046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc0c981d-dbf2-3a90-aa19-a84b438b90d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3654046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistoryideas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Ideas","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Science & Technology Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Benjamin Franklin in Jewish Eastern Europe: Cultural Appropriation in the Age of the Enlightenment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3654046","wordCount":8578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen P. 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The Western tradition of medicine traces its roots back to ancient Greece, where medical writers such as Hippocrates, Aristotle, and Galen sought to understand human physiology and were much exercised to explain the peculiarities of the female body in relation to the male body, which they perceived as both normative and superior.\u00b9 Medical authorities debated whether women were best defined in terms of their cooler and moister constitutions or in terms of","subTitle":"The Maternal Body in Medical Literature","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alla Efimova"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1203a50-3210-3b09-8cb0-71638fc8eca5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Connor"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cba9814b-e6ef-3536-9ef3-01caf7e37ab0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25515771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"843","pageStart":"825","pagination":"pp. 825-843","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Radio Free Joyce: \"Wake\" Language and the Experience of Radio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515771","wordCount":7993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"30\/31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KATE LAWLESS"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26305100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95004253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3c2c471-4b1d-389b-a5a1-80202cb31a8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26305100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Memory, Trauma, and the Matter of Historical Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26305100","wordCount":9240,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43868,43957]],"Locations in B":[[24341,24430]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":"The Controversial Case of Four Photographs from Auschwitz","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mabel Haller"],"datePublished":"1953-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08861730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6adc1a6a-932d-32cc-976c-88a170ef28e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41179327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transmorahistsoc"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":418.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iii, v-xiii, 1-81, 83-113, 115-397, 399-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Early Moravian Education in Pennsylvania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179327","wordCount":157050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Moravian Historical Society","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dermot Ryan"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41818941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebbcbc3f-6be4-3ebc-bc69-ab9dd8d51533"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41818941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Future of an Allusion: \"Po\u00efesis\" in Karl Marx's \"The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41818941","wordCount":10056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David H. Miles"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"229b0482-d6af-3794-8a16-756833a81f2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Portrait of the Marxist as a Young Hegelian: Luk\u00e1cs' Theory of the Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461798","wordCount":10581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":"Composed in the tradition of German idealist aesthetics, Luk\u00e1cs' Theory of the Novel (1916) establishes him not only as an heir to Hegel but, more important, as a forerunner of Benjamin, Adorno, Goldmann, and Auerbach. Luk\u00e1cs begins by constructing a phenomenology of narrative mind in which modern consciousness is played off against its Other, against the epic vision of earlier poets. Whereas the Homeric epic is characterized by a wholeness of sensibility and vision, novelistic consciousness is ironic, alienated and self-divided. Thus the novelistic hero's journey becomes a Hegelian one into the problematic realms of inwardness, memory, and imagination: from Cervantes to Flaubert we witness a retreat from participation in the world to interpretation of it. Luk\u00e1cs' philosophical meditations prefigure much in recent novel theory: Benjamin's and Adorno's commentaries on alienation in narrative, Goldmann's notion of the problematic hero, and Auerbach's concept, in Mimesis, of Homeric realism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harvey Young"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fec14c6a-c290-32d8-b5fd-b159154a9f77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1213400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"83","pagination":"p. 83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213400","wordCount":939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert F. Carley","Stefanie A. Jones","Eero Laine","Chris Alen Sula"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671554","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e78d8f4-86a8-3251-acd8-84af5ea03ffe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cultural Studies in the Interregnum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671554","wordCount":2173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"This issue of Lateral contributes to a number of ongoing questions and conversations. In it, we see a range of methodologies that span particular sites, take up theoretical debates, and cross borders and boundaries, both political and cultural. The work of this issue sits in conversation with the present moment, even as it at times draws on and excavates the past. 2020 has seemed to both accelerate and extend a number of ongoing crises and emergencies that have defined the decade. Contributors to this issue are working in and through this gap. Many new structures, including a new structure of feeling, are ascendant, and the task of contemporary cultural studies is clear: thinking and theorizing the interregnum will define the work of the present conjuncture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BETTE LA VERNE FAUTH","WARREN WESLEY FAUTH"],"datePublished":"1955-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44391960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002726X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5aac9bc6-5d22-3a7a-846e-5ebc058d2552"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44391960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerannadeaf"}],"isPartOf":"American Annals of the Deaf","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Education","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"A Study of the Proceedings of the Convention of American Instructors of the Deaf 1850-1949\u2014VIII","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44391960","wordCount":13735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Gallaudet University Press","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary L. Long"],"datePublished":"1987-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35c8278c-0f08-33d8-8441-356755131165"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2579019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"1001","pageStart":"964","pagination":"pp. 964-1001","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Organizations and Identity: Obituaries 1856-1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579019","wordCount":17844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"On the assumptions that the terms for portraying identities change as the structure of a society changes, and that one of the master trends in American society has been the growth of organizations, I coded and analyzed the content of 630 urban, rural, and black obituaries, randomly selected from within five, 6-year time periods between 1856 and 1972. I hypothesized a trend toward organizationally related content and expected a growing presence of organizations within obituaries to be indexed by change in the ways biographical time was marked: personal characteristics were indexed, in the kinds of events and relationships used to depict lives, and in the settings from which they were drawn. I found, instead, inferential evidence for the presence of routinization in the form of trends toward impersonal, standardized, categorical, \"objective\" portrayals. Changes in obituaries over time suggest versions of identity as residing in social structures and arrangements.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth John Myers"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"384fec19-a248-3c99-9d99-f5d7a7228ca7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"528","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-528","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art and Commerce in Jacksonian America: The Steamboat Albany Collection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051399","wordCount":25645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":"When the Stevens family of Hoboken, New Jersey, commissioned twelve paintings by seven leading American artists in 1826 and then installed them in its new Hudson River steamboat, the Albany, it constituted one of the earliest important instances of arts patronage by a private business in the United States. The Albany collection included paintings by Birch, Doughty, Cole, Vanderlyn, Sully, and Morse. In this essay, I reconstruct this historically influential collection and explore its significance for the Stevenses who commissioned it, for the artists who contributed to it, and for travelers who could have seen it in its original installation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2cn.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053564943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67ae30c5-d42a-31d8-9cd2-52bd0a8104ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2cn.14"}],"isPartOf":"Camera Obscura, Camera Lucida","keyphrase":["antonioni","aerial","landscape","modernist","fascist","neorealist","cinema","documentary","cinematic","aerial photograph"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"183","pagination":"183-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From the Air","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2cn.14","wordCount":13096,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[54038,54158]],"Locations in B":[[73561,73681]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"On April 25th of 1939 \u2013 designated also as the year XVII, the seventeenth year of the Italian Fascist regime \u2013 Michelangelo Antonioni, film critic, publishes in the magazineCinema<\/em>an article accompanied by photographic illustrations: \u2018For a Film on the River Po.\u2019\u00b9 Though he had previously written for the localCorriere Padano<\/em>published in his native Ferrara, Antonioni\u2019s article in the prestigious Roman film magazine with national circulation can be seen to constitute a first statement of intentions regarding filmmaking. While it has lent itself to association with early writings on Neorealism, the article binds its regionalist-documentary pretext with","subTitle":"A Genealogy of Antonioni\u2019s Modernism","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David F. Greenberg","Marcia H. Bystryn"],"datePublished":"1982-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"749e18f0-a0a4-3e09-b754-82ae559c7a0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2779118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Christian Intolerance of Homosexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779118","wordCount":16426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"From late antiquity to the Middle Ages there was historical variability in Christian responses to homosexuality. This paper traces Christian intolerance of homosexuality to the ascetic movements that arose from the social crises of the ancient Mediterranean world and to the Gregorian reforms of the medieval Church.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kyle Bishop"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23418071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ffe03a9-c5f2-30d0-b1a9-722efb94e804"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23418071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Artistic Schizophrenia: How \"Fight Club\"'s Message Is Subverted by Its Own Nature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23418071","wordCount":5638,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[25632,25707]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandra Dodd"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"081ece8a-9ed7-3a54-aac0-0ccfdece591b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Live Transmission\": Intimate Ancestors in Santu Mofokeng's \"Black Photo Album\/Look at Me: 1890\u20131950\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720690","wordCount":10655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4446a5bf-09cd-3886-ac13-c3236bd21b9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Books Received (August-November 2003)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177410","wordCount":9188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dai Griffiths"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edb8da58-c46a-3933-b7af-892ef829d8c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/854453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The High Analysis of Low Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854453","wordCount":22744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2078255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2f70c43-5a2a-3110-8842-cedad5674336"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2078255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"OUR INDIANS IN OUR AMERICA: Anti-Imperialist Imperialism and the Construction of Brazilian Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926269","wordCount":12127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Indigenous peoples have been used and imagined as guardians of the Brazilian frontier since at least the mid-nineteenth century. This association was central to the foundation of the Indian Protection Service (Servi\u00e7o de Prote\u00e7ao aos \u00cdndios, or SPD during the early 1900s and culminated with the Amazonian Vigilance System (Sistema de Vigel\u00e2ncia da Amazonia, or SWAM) at the turn of the millennium. Throughout the period, the abiding desire to establish defensive dominion over disputed national territory subjected individuals and groups identified as \"Indians\" to the power of overlapping discourses of scientific progress, national security, and economic development. A trinity of Brazilian modernity, these goals interpellated native peoples primarily through the practice and rhetoric of education, which grounds their historical relationship with dominant national society. Drawing on SPI records, government documents, journalism, personal testimonies, and visual media, this article traces the impact of this modernist trinity on indigenist policy and in the lives of those who have been affected by its tutelary power. By transforming private indigenous spaces into public domain, Brazils politics of antiimperialist imperialism propagated a colonialist, metonymie relationship between \"our Indians\" and \"our America\" into the twenty-first century. Os povos ind\u00edgenas t\u00eam sido usados e imaginados como guardi\u00f5es das fronteiras brasileiras desde meados do s\u00e9culo XIX. Esta associa\u00e7ao esteve no cerne da funda\u00e7\u00e3o do Servi\u00e7o de Prote\u00e7\u00e3o aos \u00cdndios (SPI) durante a primeira parte do s\u00e9culo XX e culminou, na virada do novo mil\u00eanio, no Sistema de Vigil\u00e2ncia da Amaz\u00f4nia (SIVAM). O antigo desejo nacional de estabelecer um dom\u00ednio protetor sobre territ\u00f3rios nacionais em disputa sujeitou indiv\u00edduos e grupos identificados como \u201c\u00edndios\u201d ao poder dos discursos convergentes de progresso cient\u00edfico, seguran\u00e7a nacional e desenvolvimento econ\u00f4mico. Esta trindade da modernidade brasileira interpelou os povos nativos atrav\u00e9s da pr\u00e0tica e ret\u00f3rica da educa\u00e7\u00e3o, que formam a base da sua rela\u00e7\u00e3o com a sociedade dominante do pa\u00eds. Usando como fontes princip\u00e1is os arquivos do SPI, documentos governamentais, jornalismo popular, fotografia e filmografia etnogr\u00e1fica, al\u00e9m de testemunhos individuais, este trabalho busca analisar o impacto da \u201ctrindade modernista\u201d na pol\u00edtica indigenista do estado e na vida das pessoas que foram subjugadas ao seu \u201cpoder tutelar.\u201d Ao transformar os espa\u00e7os privados dos ind\u00edgenas em um dominio p\u00fablico e aberto, a pol\u00edtica brasileira de imperialismo anti-imperialista acabou estendendo a rela\u00e7\u00e3o meton\u00edmica e colonialista entre \u201cnossos indios\u201d e \u201cnossa Am\u00e9rica\u201d at\u00e9 a primeira parte do s\u00e9culo XXI.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Hitchcock"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Antillanit\u00e9 and the Art of Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820159","wordCount":10164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robbie B. H. Goh"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e69d841-bac9-399a-adc3-6c577f70b66f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30224562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Clockwork\" Language Reconsidered: Iconicity and Narrative in Anthony Burgess's \"A Clockwork Orange\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224562","wordCount":6699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Russell W. Belk"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25757924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a95c53f-ee5b-3ed7-a001-4425eb844fc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25757924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Double Nature of Collecting: Materialism and Anti-Materialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25757924","wordCount":6702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julian Murphet"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3a2ada8-762d-3f39-b24c-47526854972f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25195187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Pitiable or Political Animals?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195187","wordCount":8944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Knight"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af0966ee-e77a-3579-b4ce-329349d4e204"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40347230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Figuring out the Fascination: Recent Trends in Criticism on Victorian Sensation and Crime Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40347230","wordCount":6027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David H. Bell"],"datePublished":"1985-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9caa8607-ed5f-3b53-96c6-c563c7b1ef45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1424960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"1","pageStart":"1","pagination":"p. 1","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reflection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424960","wordCount":1147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kirtley F. Mather"],"datePublished":"1944-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81461bb8-cb95-31e6-b73a-d358ccbef5eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27826022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"xxx","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158, xviii, xx, xxii-xxiv, xxvi-xxviii, xxx","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"THE SCIENTIST'S BOOK SHELF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826022","wordCount":6791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Brandon Kershner"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a45315be-c723-3930-96d0-33047f214bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CONTEXTS OF CULTURAL STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871140","wordCount":5047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"425","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Cook","Richard Schulhof"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26431044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00042633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"166882582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008242360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f2aae0c-9c74-38fa-ab45-800cf3797602"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26431044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arnoldia"}],"isPartOf":"Arnoldia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Horticulture"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"DIRECTOR\u2019S REPORT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26431044","wordCount":19195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":"2003\u20132007","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Kockelman"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eeac9e21-8501-3d74-a9be-5204e08ef89d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Semiotic Ontology of the Commodity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104082","wordCount":16710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The commodity is analyzed from a semiotic stance. Rather than systematically unfold a subject-object dichotomy (via Hegel's history as dialectic), it systematically deploys a sign-object-interpretant trichotomy (via Pence's logic as semiotic). Rather than conflate economic value and linguistic meaning through the lens of Saussure's semiology, it uses Pence's semiotic to provide a theory of meaning that is general enough to include commodities and utterances as distinct species. Rather than relegate utility and measure to the work of history (as per the opening pages of Marx's Capital), these are treated as essential aspects of political economy. And rather than focus on canonical 19th-century commodities (such as cotton, iron, and cloth), the analysis is designed to capture salient features of modern immaterial commodities (such as affect, speech acts, and social relations).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jasper Bernes"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e1d2696-9b9c-37a3-8869-807b8cb547d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26547638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"782","pageStart":"760","pagination":"pp. 760-782","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Art, Work, Endlessness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547638","wordCount":10100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Flarf and Conceptual Poetry among the Trolls","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1955-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/891972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef7c3033-bb0b-3dd0-9225-8d4104939c01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/891972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index of Record Reviews: With Symbols Indicating Opinions of Reviewers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/891972","wordCount":25048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Harpold"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75de07cd-9b72-32ae-a460-8640d5b66014"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201280","wordCount":2736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Napier"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9909957b-e4b4-3cae-86e1-6f0b1a85e30e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A 'Failed' Unison or Conscious Differentiation: The Notion of 'Heterophony' in North Indian Vocal Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032186","wordCount":9485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"This paper is inspired in part by the necessity for examination of the cross-cultural application of musical terminology, and suggests that such examination is illuminating of both our understanding and of our own interpretative assumptions. I examine the term \"heterophony\", both in general and in how it is used to describe melodic accompaniment, or sangat, in North Indian music. I argue that the value of heterophony as a term of translation lies in its insistent multivalence, its imprecision. I emphasise the importance of understanding both musical processes and the aesthetic and socio-musical factors that help to determine and are represented therein. \/\/\/ Ovaj je tekst djelomice nadahnut potrebom za ispitivanjem me\u0111ukulturalnih primjena glazbene terminologije. Nakon kratkog navo\u0111enja primjera za takve probleme ispitivanjem primjene termina 'drone' (trubanj) sugerira se da takvo ispitivanje mo\u017ee osvijetliti i na\u0161e razumijevanje vlastitih interpretativnih pretpostavki. Ispituje se termin 'heterofonija' kako op4enito tako i u uporabi pri opisivanju melodijske pratnje, ili sangata, u sjevernoindijskoj vokalnoj glazbi. Prvo se donosi uvid u rane opise heterofonije ispitivanjem nekih trajnih pretpostavki. Tada se preciznije usredoto\u010duje na sangat, ispituju\u0107i nekoliko razlikovnih to\u010daka izme\u0111u solistove melodije i prate\u0107eg sloja za koji se ka\u017ee da predstavlja njegov odjek ('eho'). Nagla\u0161ava se va\u017enost razumijevanja glazbenih procesa te esteti\u010dkih i dru\u0161tveno-glazbenih \u010dimbenika koji poma\u017eu da se odredi sangat i koji su u njemu predstavljeni. Sugerira se da tradicionalne hijerarhijske dru\u0161tvene strukture koje odre\u0111uju odnose me\u0111u izvoditeljima i moderne analogije takvih struktura vr\u0161e pritisak na stvaranje glazbene teksture zahtijevaju\u0107i to\u010dnu i podlo\u017enu imitaciju solista od strane pratitelja. Istodobno, tradicionalni druStveni stavovi insistiraju na proizvodnji pratnje od strane izvoditelja pojedinca te tako osiguravaju neizbje\u017eni stupanj neslaganja. Navode se argumenti da vrijednost heterofonije kao termina le\u017ei u njegovoj postojanoj polivalentnosti i njegovoj nepreciznosti, pa da se glazbu o kojoj se ovdje radi mo\u017ee slu\u0161ati fleksibilno: kao teksturu koja je poseban tip unisonog, ili polifonija, ili heterofonija.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas J. Otten"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Spoils of Poynton and the Properties of Touch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902811","wordCount":12030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-10-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b6c3d0c-dd16-38e6-9009-9ef4e54b7faa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1700701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700701","wordCount":29689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4825","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"238","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meili Steele"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125417","wordCount":1819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Batchelor"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48505841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13554905"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40485039"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233542"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1841fe0d-462d-36b8-93bc-7c0ebafcfc5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48505841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curtbotamaga1995"}],"isPartOf":"Curtis's Botanical Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Horticulture"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"JOHN BRADBY BLAKE, THE CHINESE TALLOW TREE AND THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF BOTANICAL EXPERIMENTATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48505841","wordCount":7549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Recent studies of the spread of the invasive Chinese tallow tree, \u70cf\u67cf, Triadica sebifera (L.) Small, downplay the role of the dissemination of seeds in the 18th century compared with the impact of 20th century state-sponsored agriculture. But the long-term development of Chinese, then European and American botanical knowledge, even in cases like the tallow tree, can be shown to have enabled and legitimized ecological expansion and large scale environmental experimentation. John Bradby Blake, who obtained, experimented with, described and illustrated tallow tree seed in the 1770s, played an important role in the dissemination of tallow trees to the southeastern American colonies, the British Caribbean and northeast India.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna McMullan"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03095207"},{"name":"oclc","value":"647512503, 500984954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea6839ce-9f09-3a9e-b0b0-47d1fba938d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26468484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbeckettstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Beckett Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Virtual Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468484","wordCount":2798,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[13207,13524]],"Locations in B":[[7410,7476],[7544,7861]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1 and 2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Performance, Technology and the Body in Beckett\u2019s Late Theatre","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Wallach"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e853b6-8dcb-353a-b099-eebf37afa7be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Thomas Cole's \"River in the Catskills\" as Antipastoral","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177272","wordCount":15002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"Art historians and American Studies scholars have interpreted Cole's \"River in the Catskills\" (1843)-a landscape view that includes a train-as a pastoral. This article maintains that Cole intended \"River in the Catskills\" as an antipastoral-as a deliberate attack on the conventions of pastoral landscape painting and consequently on a pervasive, if often contested, ideology that lauded improvement and material progress. Through an examination of historical and visual evidence and an analysis of the work's landscape painting conventions, the article aims to recover meanings the painting may have held for the artist and for some of his contemporaries.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41370956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2c474d0-3e16-37e0-a84d-cc9fc933a1b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41370956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41370956","wordCount":13003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5184","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Antliff"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6842358a-e172-3f32-88b6-f17c3b2a609a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fascism, Modernism, and Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177257","wordCount":20657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Barclay"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33bfcf20-49b2-31cd-bf71-fa5582c5e18b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Consuming Artifacts: Dante Gabriel Rossetti's Aesthetic Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003660","wordCount":9705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1849614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed31f028-2948-305a-bb97-dee2827eef16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1849614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":96.0,"pageEnd":"547","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-547","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1849614","wordCount":56224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gavriel Moses"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24004190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24004190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Film Theory as Literary Genre in Pirandello and the Film-Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24004190","wordCount":15802,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743],[19322,19658],[37002,37056],[37203,37402],[57855,58372],[57923,58390],[75652,75816]],"Locations in B":[[67000,67161],[67824,68155],[69468,69522],[69759,69958],[72773,73292],[72843,73310],[78568,78731]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Parncutt"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40285633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307829"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45906020"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dda0a6f6-a885-326c-8194-5c8ef130ef7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40285633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicperception"}],"isPartOf":"Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"A Perceptual Model of Pulse Salience and Metrical Accent in Musical Rhythms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40285633","wordCount":23770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"In Experiment 1, six cyclically repeating interonset interval patterns (1,2:1,2:1:1,3:2:1,3:1:2, and 2:1:1:2) were each presented at six different note rates (very slow to very fast). Each trial began at a random point in the rhythmic cycle. Listeners were asked to tap along with the underlying beat or pulse. The number of times a given pulse (period, phase) was selected was taken as a measure of its perceptual salience. Responses gravitated toward a moderate pulse period of about 700 ms. At faster tempi, taps coincided more often with events followed by longer interonset intervals. In Experiment 2, listeners heard the same set of rhythmic patterns, plus a single sound in a different timbre, and were asked whether the extra sound fell on or off the beat. The position of the downbeat was found to be quite ambiguous. A quantitative model was developed from the following assumptions. The phenomenal accent of an event depends on the interonset interval that follows it, saturating for interonset intervals greater than about 1 s. The salience of a pulse sensation depends on the number of events matching a hypothetical isochronous template, and on the period of the template\u2014pulse sensations are most salient in the vicinity of roughly 100 events per minute (moderate tempo). The metrical accent of an event depends on the saliences of pulse sensations including that event. Calculated pulse saliences and metrical accents according to the model agree well with experimental results (r > 0.85). The model may be extended to cover perceived meter, perceptible subdivisions of a beat, categorical perception, expressive timing, temporal precision and discrimination, and primacy\/recency effects. The sensation of pulse may be the essential factor distinguishing musical rhythm from nonrhythm.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Comay"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0ef7247-347a-35f7-bc79-a178e8e771a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Impressions: Proust, Photography, Trauma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389810","wordCount":8635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharon Keefe Ugalde"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"543df79f-9ebc-385f-8aa1-e01c68e7971f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Performing Gender in Life and Art: Pilar Mir\u00f3 and \"El p\u00e1jaro de la felicidad\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572749","wordCount":7646,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41976,42074]],"Locations in B":[[29187,29287]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"Pilar Mir\u00f3's positions in the public sector and the film industry are an indication of the rapidly evolving roles of women in Spain during the mid-1970s through the 1980s. Most significant, and the focus of this study, is how Mir\u00f3 as director of El p\u00e1jaro de la felicidad reflects the transformation of gender constructs during that period. Mir\u00f3's artistry succeeds in expressing the protagonist's inner turmoil as she counters normative gender behavior. An intricate design of chiaroscuro, symbolism, the presence of the camera, intertextuality, and the foregrounding of art as process makes palpable the protagonist's emotional state of disempowerment and her resolve to find an elsewhere where viable positions of subjectivity are possible.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nergis Ert\u00fcrk"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1c7f39f-1d6d-3640-aee7-32b9a112f49b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernity and Its Fallen Languages: Tanp\u0131nar's \"Hasret\", Benjamin's Melancholy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501826","wordCount":10333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":"A comparative study of the politics and theory of language in the writings of Ahmet Hamdi Tanp\u0131nar and Walter Benjamin, this article suggests that a rethinking of the discursive commensurability and incommensurability of modern Turkish language and literature with western European representational practices has crucial implications for critical comparative methodology today. I leave behind conventional accounts based on models of European literary influence, emphasizing instead changes in writing practices that accompanied the development of modern literature and comparatism. Of particular significance for my analysis are the intensification of print culture and language reforms. I examine Tanp\u0131nar's writings as a special archive registering the problematic of representational writing, while exploring their continuities and discontinuities with Benjamin's work. I configure an alternative critical comparative framework, troubling the uneven epistemological categories of modernity through which \"East\" and \"West\" continue to structure even the transnationalist critical discourse that interrogates them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Corse"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf58da75-066a-3c03-a84b-9f4fd25889f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Henry James and Theodor Adorno on the Aesthetic Whole: The Spoils of Poynton and the Fetish-Character of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550342","wordCount":3574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher A. Reed"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baa53712-e32a-31fe-9fcd-d6f44278f708"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41490829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re\/Collecting the Sources: Shanghai's \"Dianshizhai Pictorial\" and Its Place in Historical Memories, 1884-1949","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490829","wordCount":10690,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20132,20247]],"Locations in B":[[48753,48867]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.72.3.0761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac05bfb5-0e16-3639-bf28-e0f2dc41d894"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.72.3.0761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"843","pageStart":"761","pagination":"pp. 761-843","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"New & Notable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.72.3.0761","wordCount":24141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynda Gaudemard"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41723194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13837427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da23cf0e-0c10-36a3-b07c-da0eb6655231"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41723194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlsciemedi"}],"isPartOf":"Early Science and Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Les \u00ab marques d'envie \u00bb : m\u00e9taphysique et embryologie chez Descartes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41723194","wordCount":13880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"BRILL","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"This paper explores the interaction between medicine and metaphysics in modern natural philosophy and especially in Descartes' philosophy. I argue that Descartes' hypothetical account of birthmarks in connection with his embryology provides an argumentative proof of the metaphysical necessity of a substantial union between mind and body, which however does not threaten his doctrine of the real distinction between these two substances. It would appear that his argument relies on a temporal conception of alethic modalities and provides a new answer to Henricus Regius who in 1641 claimed that, for Descartes, the human being is an ens per accidens.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A-Chr (Tina) Engels-Schwarzpaul"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26407843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2bd70f5-e363-3991-9835-8d1b3445ccd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26407843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","History - Historical methodology","Political science - Political geography","Political science - Government"],"title":"Traveling Houses: Performing Diasporic Relationships in Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26407843","wordCount":9508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"The paper explores the mutual impact of Pacific houses and people in diasporic relationships. Tracing the fates of several whare and fale now located in Europe, it explores changes over time that resulted from different degrees of closeness or distance between the people gathered around them. Three houses feature prominently in the paper: Hinemihi o te Ao Tawhito in Clandon Park (close to London, UK); Rauru at the Museum f\u00fcr V\u00f6lkerkunde (Hamburg, Germany); and a fale from Apia at the Tropical Islands Resort (close to Berlin, Germany). They enjoy and have historically enjoyed different degrees of connection with their source communities, which, I suggest, directly impact their role and state of being in their current locations. What their stories show is that identities and angles of vision change in particular ways during processes of colonization and globalization. These changes are relevant for local and global cultural developments and their role in cultural tourism, but also for the consideration of global identities generally. Together, Pacific notions of generative (rather than objectifying) relationships between people, and Benjamin's notion of a performative relationship between present and past opening new angles and future possibilities, suggest that present and past relationships can be redeemed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard R. Nelson"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2728910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220515"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5a050d0-65bd-3ac7-8c47-bb4b6bc7d8a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2728910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconlite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Recent Evolutionary Theorizing About Economic Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2728910","wordCount":25775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25695739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"239d0f7e-fefe-342c-a20b-829c70222084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25695739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25695739","wordCount":9515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David C. Ward","Sidney Hart"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3c09497-138b-3493-846d-117911124167"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 96-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Subversion and Illusion in the Life and Art of Raphaelle Peale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109174","wordCount":11960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carlo Ginzburg"],"datePublished":"1979-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"577874c5-f031-3057-b341-ce8d739298ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1rfsrst.23","wordCount":66323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beth Buggenhagen"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d123ea3b-5359-318e-a45b-86d9ef832721"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24525547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A SNAPSHOT OF HAPPINESS: PHOTO ALBUMS, RESPECTABILITY AND ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY IN DAKAR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525547","wordCount":10702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"Young women who live in the improvised urban spaces on the ourskirts of Senegal's capital city, Dakar, extemporize their respectability in a time of fiscal uncertainty through personal photography. The neighbourhood of Khar Yalla is an improvised, interconnected and multilayered space settled by families removed from the city centre during clean-up campaigns from the 1960s to the 1970s, by families escaping conflict in Casamance and Guinea-Bissau, and by recent rural migrants. As much as Khar Yalla is an improvised neighbourhood, it is also a space of improvisation. When women pose for, display, and pass around portraits of themselves at key moments in their social life, whether in the medium of social networking sites or photo albums, they reveal as much as they conceal the elements of individual and social life. They index their social networks and constitute their urban space not as peripheral, but as central to the lives and imaginations of their siblings and spouses who live abroad. Photographs actively shape and construct urban spaces, which are often loud, unruly and fraught spaces with vast inequalities and incommensurabilities. How women deal with economic and social disparity, within their own families, communities, and globally, is the subject of this article. Les jeunes femmes qui vivent dans les espaces urbains improvis\u00e9s de la p\u00e9riph\u00e9rie de la capitale du S\u00e9n\u00e9gal, Dakar, improvisent leur respectabilit\u00e9 \u00e0 une \u00e9poque d'incertitude fiscale \u00e0 travers la photographie personnelle. Le quartier de Khar Yalla est un espace improvis\u00e9, interconnect\u00e9 et multicouche peupl\u00e9 par des familles expuls\u00e9es du centre-ville lors de campagnes d'\u00e9puration dans les ann\u00e9es 1960 et 1970, par des familles qui ont fui les conflits en Casamance et en Guin\u00e9e-Bissau, et par des migrants ruraux r\u00e9cents. Khar Yalla est un quartier improvis\u00e9, mais aussi un espace d'improvisation. Lorsque les femmes posent pour des photos, affichent et font circuler des portraits d'elles-m\u00eames \u00e0 des moments cl\u00e9s de leur vie sociale, que ce soit sur des sites de r\u00e9seaux sociaux ou dans des albums photo, elles r\u00e9v\u00e8lent autant qu'elles dissimulent des \u00e9l\u00e9ments de vie personnelle et sociale. Elles r\u00e9pertorient leurs r\u00e9seaux sociaux et constituent leur espace urbain non pas en p\u00e9riph\u00e9rie mais au centre des existences et imaginations de leurs fratries et \u00e9poux qui r\u00e9sident \u00e0 l'\u00e9tranger. Les photographies fa\u00e7onnent et construisent activement des espaces urbains o\u00f9 r\u00e9gnent souvent le bruit, le d\u00e9sordre et les tensions, ainsi que de vastes in\u00e9galit\u00e9s et incommensurabilit\u00e9s. Cet article traite de la mani\u00e8re dont les femmes g\u00e8rent les disparit\u00e9s \u00e9conomiques et sociales au sein de leurs propres familles et communaut\u00e9s, ainsi qu'\u00e0 l'\u00e9chelle mondiale.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-01-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1743827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fea4bb8-449a-3a92-9769-8c321e7160bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1743827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1743827","wordCount":11842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4274","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"195","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Conlon"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3bec92c-db4b-3e3e-bca2-afc7c7f7968d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Men Reading Women Reading: Interpreting Images of Women Readers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137395","wordCount":9909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bonnie Blackwell"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Tristram Shandy\" and the Theater of the Mechanical Mother","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031960","wordCount":24403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER W. 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In his performances for the camera, for audio recordings, and for live audiences, the artist Kalup Linzy explores the urgency of this question for contemporary black and queer subjects. Linzy's 2009 video song cycle, SweetBerry Sonnet, is a musical archive of radical passivity\u2014one that manifests the anticipatory stance taken towards the world by the multiple personae Linzy invents for his live performances and videos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Burton Gulick"],"datePublished":"1931-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3290272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ff5601b-205a-3343-8730-5880c1428fb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3290272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"classicalj"}],"isPartOf":"The Classical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Adventures in Philology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3290272","wordCount":6527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Classical Association of the Middle West and South","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Christensen"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24040900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24040900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Thoughts That Do Often Lie Too Deep for Tears\": Toward a Romantic Concept of Lyrical Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24040900","wordCount":7264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas V. 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Holley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069415","wordCount":24483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Educational Research Association","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"This study examines accommodationism, a tactic of racial uplift used by black school founders and teachers in the Jim Crow South. For founders, accommodationism was a dangerous process of collaboration, resistance, and compromise. The subject understudy is Joseph Winthrop Holley. Born in South Carolina, Holley studied in the North at Phillips Academy and Lincoln University. Despite a liberal education, Holley returned to the South and founded a Bible and industrial school. Holley was the most conservative founder of his day. His life and work take us beyond the Washington-Du Bois paradigm and help to clarify the work and meaning of accommodationism. The study also evaluates the degree to which conservative forms of schooling became a means for social control.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARK BYERS"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45171885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608020566"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e3345a7-5a75-3bb5-8395-44ab19dd460d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45171885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma2"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma: Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MOVING METRES: HILDA MORLEY AND GESTURAL ABSTRACTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45171885","wordCount":7004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Poetry Foundation","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1935-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05faedd6-7666-3448-80ed-2a134298e283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808468","wordCount":25465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen A. 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Therein, Tiryakian claimed, lies the origins of the famous \"iron cage\" metaphor that appears in the final pages of Talcott Parsons' translation of The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Challenging his view, this article argues that Weber was little affected by his reading of Puritan material, since he subsumed its example of inner worldly asceticism into German ideational models provided by Nietzsche and Goethe. The \"iron cage\" metaphor is the result of a mistranslation by Parsons, and cannot be attributed to Weber. Moreover, by conceiving of the Puritans as \u00dcbermenschen, Weber was unable to see the extent to which a desire for revenge against those in power helped to shape the economic activities of at least one Puritan group, the Quakers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stan Allen"],"datePublished":"1995-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32b2a888-b7d0-3ab2-8527-3d31877f3b17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dazed and Confused","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171429","wordCount":4873,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[49190,49321],[49837,50156],[50438,50517]],"Locations in B":[[5302,5433],[5696,6530],[7421,7503]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2079693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ba95b4a-e26a-3a9c-bd88-24405ca31bcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2079693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"823","pageStart":"770","pagination":"pp. 770-823","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Literature"],"title":"Introduction to a Forum on Religion, Popular Music, and Globalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621929","wordCount":2955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Detlef Mertins"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10684220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"039c82ee-8f93-348e-a045-808cb18248bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anyarchnewyork"}],"isPartOf":"ANY: Architecture New York","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Walter Benjamin's \"Tectonic\" Unconscious","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852139","wordCount":8302,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[40738,40972],[42327,42464]],"Locations in B":[[23935,24169],[28740,28867]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"14","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-08-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe8d6e11-b9c0-3cc7-abf4-28d4a3a6841a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43708520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708520","wordCount":30402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"210","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Ayers Trotti"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4250142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d46226f-afde-3310-ba82-e84342ab56e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4250142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virghistbiog"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Murder Made Real: The Visual Revolution of the Halftone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4250142","wordCount":14299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Virginia Historical Society","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William N. West"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Rooms: Architecture and Agency in the Houses of Michel de Montaigne and Nicholas Bacon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125444","wordCount":10630,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50756,50990]],"Locations in B":[[429,662]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kneale T. Marshall","F. Russell Richards"],"datePublished":"1976-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23849657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030364X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c49edde6-b0bf-315a-9445-0f524133e77d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23849657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"operrese"}],"isPartOf":"Operations Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":316.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-169, 171-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Information science - Informetrics","Applied sciences - Computer science","Mathematics - Mathematical values"],"title":"THE OR\/MS Index 1952-1976: A Cumulative Index of MANAGEMENT SCIENCE Volumes 1-22, OPERATIONS RESEARCH Volumes 1-24, INTERFACES Volumes 1-6","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23849657","wordCount":167806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"INFORMS","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dionysios Kapsaskis"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf7b25d5-1d9c-3c16-9e9e-e3f6950fcb45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45172525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Yourcenar, Sartre and the Limits of Authenticity: Re-reading \"M\u00e9moires d'Hadrien\" from an Existentialist Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172525","wordCount":7901,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[47143,47208]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":"This article proposes a critical reassessment of Marguerite Yourcenar's novel M\u00e9moires d'Hadrien (1951) in relation to the existentialist philosophy and literature that was prominent in France at that time. The article argues that Yourcenar's novel responds both to the need for a non-essentializing humanism and to the perceived lack of metaphysical grounding in the aftermath of the Second World War. As such, it shares a number of concerns with the fiction and philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre of that period. The discussion employs Sartre's notion of authenticity in order to interpret Hadrien's comments on creativity, the self, and the relationship between experienced reality and narrative representation. The analysis teases out certain tensions and contradictions in Yourcenar's thinking but stops short of aligning itself with the vehement criticism to which she was subjected, especially in the 1990's, supposedly for silencing or excluding various forms of otherness in her work. Examination of representations of the Other in Memoires d'Hadrien, especially that of the Jews, shows that Yourcenar chose to stage the confrontation between European humanism and the others that it forgets in a precise and informed way, so that some urgent ethical, political and aesthetic questions could be asked. The article concludes that these questions may not have been answered convincingly in the novel, but they nonetheless testify to Yourcenar's subtle understanding of the challenges that Western thought was faced with in the mid-20th Century. Cet article propose une r\u00e9\u00e9valuation critique du roman de Marguerite Yourcenar M\u00e9moires d'Hadrien (1951) en relation avec la pens\u00e9e et la litt\u00e9rature existentialistes qui pr\u00e9valaient en France \u00e0 cette \u00e9poque. L'article fait valoir que le roman de Yourcenar r\u00e9pond \u00e0 la fois \u00e0 la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'un humanisme non essentialiste et \u00e0 l'absence per\u00e7ue de fondement m\u00e9taphysique au lendemain de la Seconde Guerre mondiale. A ce titre, il partage un certain nombre de pr\u00e9occupations avec la fiction et la philosophie de Jean-Paul Sartre de cette p\u00e9riode. La discussion utilise la notion d'authenticit\u00e9 de Sartre afin d'interpr\u00e9ter les commentaires d'Hadrien sur la cr\u00e9ativit\u00e9, le soi et la relation entre la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 v\u00e9cue et la repr\u00e9sentation narrative. L'analyse met en lumi\u00e8re certaines tensions et contradictions dans la pens\u00e9e de Yourcenar mais ne s'aligne pas sur la critique v\u00e9h\u00e9mente \u00e0 laquelle elle a \u00e9t\u00e9 soumise, surtout dans les ann\u00e9es 1990, en particulier pour passer sous silence ou exclure diverses formes d'alt\u00e9rit\u00e9 dans son oeuvre. L'examen des repr\u00e9sentations de l'Autre dans M\u00e9moires d'Hadrien, notamment celle des Juifs, montre que Yourcenar a choisi de mettre en sc\u00e8ne la confrontation entre l'humanisme europ\u00e9en et les autres que celui-ci oublie d'une mani\u00e8re pr\u00e9cise et bien inform\u00e9e, afin que certaines questions \u00e9thiques, politiques et esth\u00e9tiques urgentes puissent \u00eatre pos\u00e9es. L'article conclut que ces questions n'ont peut\u00eatre pas re\u00e7u de r\u00e9ponses convaincantes dans le roman, mais qu'elles t\u00e9moignent n\u00e9anmoins de la compr\u00e9hension subtile de Yourcenar des d\u00e9fis auxquels la pens\u00e9e occidentale \u00e9tait confront\u00e9e au milieu du XXe si\u00e8cle.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Pappas"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41686059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfac92dd-f9c9-361f-8ae2-eb92deedfb5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41686059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE SUPERIMPOSITION OF VISION: \"Napoleon\" and the Meaning of Fascist Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41686059","wordCount":5139,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52540,52619]],"Locations in B":[[6712,6791]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. E. Somol"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2feef03d-a3ff-361a-a52f-7d906aa12ff6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"No Place like Home: Domesticating Assemblages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171107","wordCount":6944,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[53792,53858]],"Locations in B":[[22202,22267]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Brackett"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16635a9b-a7cb-3c66-916f-002c2c1be670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831847","wordCount":6605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Petzold"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41615013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14672006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f94418f5-4e2b-3326-8025-06b51cb1cf5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41615013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britartj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Stained glass in the Age of Neoclassicism: The case of Eglington Margaret Pearson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41615013","wordCount":7034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The British Art Journal","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EPIFANIO SAN JUAN, JR."],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41853634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317810"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41853634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Sociological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"WESTERN SOCIOLOGICAL LITERARY THEORY: A HISTORICAL SURVEY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41853634","wordCount":8567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Philippine Sociological Society","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"The decline of New Critical formalism in the Anglo-Saxon world in the 1950s also witnessed a simultaneous revival of a sociologically-oriented practice and theory of literary criticism derived from a critical, non-dogmatic Marxism associated with Louis Althusser and Antonio Gramsci. Traditional sociological approaches based on the ideas of the founders of modern sociology, Weber and Durkheim, displaced in time by positivism and idealism, have influenced New Criticism to the point that society and literature have been irrevocably separated. Comparatists have tried to remedy this separation but failed. It was left to three influential Marxists \u2014 the Frenchman Lucien Goldmann, the British Terry Eagleton, and the American Fredric Jameson \u2014 to theorize the complex, dialectical mediations between society and literature in the social practices and institutions of specific formations. A summary of the contributions of these three influential thinkers is presented here, together with a brief account of how the semiotics of the Russian aesthetician Mikhail Bakhtin, now recently re-discovered, can supplement and advance contemporary theorizing on society and culture in general.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rita Felski"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f6f86c2-eeaf-32aa-8234-7ed4eb42b9e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"1105","pageStart":"1094","pagination":"pp. 1094-1105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Counterdiscourse of the Feminine in Three Texts by Wilde, Huysmans, and Sacher-Masoch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462682","wordCount":8391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"The texts of the late-nineteenth-century European male avant-garde reflect an imaginary identification with the feminine. Examined here with specific reference to Huysmans's Against the Grain, Wilde's Picture of Dorian Gray, and Sacher-Masoch's Venus in Furs, this topos is evident both in the representation of \"feminized\" male subjects (the aesthete and the dandy) and in a self-conscious writing practice that foregrounds style, parody, and quotation. While ostensibly challenging sexual and textual norms through a subversion of bourgeois masculinity and realist aesthetics, these works in fact reinforce gender dichotomies by persistently associating woman with vulgarity, materiality, and the tyranny of the natural. The preference for art over nature in early modernism thus reveals a misogynistic dimension that is intimately linked to, rather than dissolved by, its parodistic and antirealist aesthetic.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clark T. Rogerson","Lazella Schwarten","Herman Becker"],"datePublished":"1961-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2482719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00409618"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446704"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"730dbb50-a261-3df6-bf8b-09c5a8a5bd36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2482719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulltorrbotaclub"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Index to American Botanical Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2482719","wordCount":12297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Torrey Botanical Society","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul-Andr\u00e9 Rosental","Jonathan Mandelbaum"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16342941"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47a94e53-e85e-3656-8ef7-13c5d39a57d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3246646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popuengledit2002"}],"isPartOf":"Population (English Edition, 2002-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Novelty of an Old Genre: Louis Henry and the Founding of Historical Demography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246646","wordCount":17529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Institut National d'\u00c9tudes D\u00e9mographiques","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"Why did Louis Henry create a scientific discipline-historical demography-that dominated population history from the 1950s to the 1980s, and even influenced the \u00c9cole des Annales? Beyond historiography and the history of demographic theories, the answer lies in the history of government, public policy, demographic institutions, and population policies. After 1945, international organizations, most notably the U.N. Population Division, placed analytical demography \u00e1 la Lotka on a planetary footing. They developed a special interest in fertility. The rich countries' baby boom undermined the concepts of demographic forecasting and demographic transition, and jeopardized the family allowance systems. World population growth raised the issue of birth control in the developing countries. Demographers wanted to determine \"natural fertility\"-which they assumed to be the fertility of non-contracepting populations-but were prevented by the dearth of statistical records in the Third World. For Henry, these difficulties could be overcome by the use of parish registers. The relevance of his approach was such that Alfred Sauvy at INED agreed to finance his work, and the leading demographers of his time-including Notestein, Glass, and Hajnal-were convinced from the outset that historical demography provided a major contribution to theoretical demography. \/\/ Pourquoi Louis Henry a-t-il cr\u00e9\u00e9 une discipline scientifique, la d\u00e9mographie historique, qui domine l'histoire des populations des ann\u00e9es 1950 aux ann\u00e9es 1980, en remontrant m\u00eame \u00e0 l'\u00e9cole des Annales? Au-del\u00e0 de l'historiographie et de l'histoire des th\u00e9ories d\u00e9mographiques, la r\u00e9ponse suppose une histoire de l'Etat, des politiques publiques, des institutions d\u00e9mographiques et des politiques de population. Apr\u00e8s 1945, les organisations internationales, notamment la Division de la population \u00e0 l'Onu, donnent \u00e0 la d\u00e9mographie analytique \u00e0 la Lotka une assise plan\u00e9taire. Elles s'int\u00e9ressent particuli\u00e8rement \u00e0 la f\u00e9condit\u00e9. Le baby-boom des pays riches remet en cause l'id\u00e9e de pr\u00e9visions d\u00e9mographiques, la notion de transition d\u00e9mographique, et menace les syst\u00e8mes d'allocations familiales. L'expansion de la population mondiale soul\u00e8ve la question du contr\u00f4le des naissances dans les pays en d\u00e9veloppement. Les d\u00e9mographes souhaitent d\u00e9terminer la << f\u00e9condit\u00e9 naturelle >>, qui serait celle de populations ne pratiquant pas la contraception, mais butent sur les probl\u00e8mes d'enregistrement statistique dans le Tiers-Monde. Pour Henry, les registres paroissiaux de l'Ancien R\u00e9gime permettent de les surmonter. L'actualit\u00e9 du probl\u00e8me est telle qu'Alfred Sauvy \u00e0 l'Ined accepte de financer ses \u00e9tudes, et que les grands d\u00e9mographies de son \u00e9poque comme Notestein, Glass ou Hajnal sont d'embl\u00e9e convaincus que la d\u00e9mographie historique apporte une contribution majeure \u00e0 la d\u00e9mographie theorique. \/\/\/ \u00bfPorqu\u00e8 cre\u00f3 Louis Henry una disciplina cient\u00edfica, la demograf& hist\u00f3rica, que domina la historia de las poblaciones desde los a\u00f1os cincuenta hasta los ochenta, remont\u00e1ndose a la escuela de los Anales? M\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la historiograf\u00eda y de la historia de las teor\u00edas demogr\u00e1ficas, para entender su \u00e9xito hay que tener en cuenta la historia del Estado, las pol\u00edticas p\u00fablicas, las instituciones demogr\u00e1ficas y las pol\u00edticas de poblaci\u00f3n. A partir de 1945, las organizaciones internacionales, y en particular la Divisi\u00f3n de Poblaci\u00f3n de las Naciones Unidas, otorgaron a la demograf\u00eda anal\u00edtica a la Lotka una dimensi\u00f3n planetaria. Estas instituciones se interesaban, en particular, por la fecundidad. El baby-boom que tuvo lugar en los p\u00e1ises ricos puso en cuesti\u00f3n las previsiones demogr\u00e1ficas, la noci\u00f3n de transici\u00f3n demogr\u00e1fica y supuso una amenaza para los sistemas de prestaciones familiares. La expansi\u00f3n de la poblaci\u00f3n mundial pone de relieve el tema del control de nacimientos en los pa\u00edses en desarrollo. Los dem\u00f3grafos intentan determinar el nivel de \"fecundidad natural\", que es el nivel que se observa en poblaciones que no usan m\u00e9todos anticonceptivos, pero no lo consiguen debido a los problemas de registro estad\u00edstico existentes en los pa\u00edses del Tercer Mundo. Los registros parroquiales del Antiguo R\u00e9gimen permiten a Henry superar los problemas de datos. El tema es de tal actualidad que Alfred Sauvy, del INED, acepta financiar sus estudios, y los grandes dem\u00f3grafos de su \u00e9poca como Notestein, Glass o Hajnal se convencen r\u00e1pidamente de que la demograf\u00eda hist\u00f3rica aporta una contribuci\u00f3n significativa a la demograf\u00eda te\u00f3rica.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis W. Arrow"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e27eeeb7-ad90-3b38-8fa2-22a2dbfbd657"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":230.0,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pomobabble: Postmodern Newspeak and Constitutional \"Meaning\" for the Uninitiated","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290146","wordCount":138586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Bledsoe"],"datePublished":"1984-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a3df684-ee9f-34e1-9901-1d3bfcd079cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/644626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Political Use of Sande Ideology and Symbolism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644626","wordCount":11495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"Recent studies of the women's Sande society of West Africa have argued that the Sande seeks to produce symbolically pure adult women as well as bonds of female solidarity. This paper shows that Sande elite often side with elite men and exploit subordinate women. Crucial Sande symbolism merges differentiating features between the sexes. Conclusions are drawn about strategic uses of the Sande ideology by the elite in the context of its regional political economy. [West Africa, social organization, politics, symbolism, women]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1942-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"883f6d75-edf9-379a-a19c-8efe954fe157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sixty-second Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to April 1942)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226008","wordCount":43446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Flaxman","Ben Rogerson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.18.1-2.0281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab2c245f-50af-3250-98d1-d99550f3cc69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.18.1-2.0281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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It explores the relationship between early studios and the training of Burma-born photographers, the expansion of the photographic economy in the 1950s, and the challenges created by nationalisation after 1963. Using extensive interviews with local photographers and archival materials, it explores innovations around photography in the longer term. In doing so, it argues that recent developments using digital media are part of a much longer tradition of local technical innovation than is usually considered the case.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a134e9e-771d-390e-94b7-2a3f1d863e37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/951086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951086","wordCount":17739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1439","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75444ce0-f7d1-3274-8624-b4e2466562ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25697744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697744","wordCount":5500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PATRICIA A. 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The Difference is in the Eye of the Beholder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476649","wordCount":11237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Mississippi State University","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Freeman"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9cfb7ca-8c17-33df-b034-7610c61f837b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26312101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Re-Proofing the \"Zero Part of Speech\" in \"Hamlet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312101","wordCount":9149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Comparative Drama","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/571317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/571317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/571317","wordCount":7599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"398","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Horace Taylor"],"datePublished":"1950-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba3b26f9-9726-30ab-a028-65b6fd760905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":238.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i+iii-xiii+1-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Teaching of Undergraduate Economics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804866","wordCount":102967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NICK HOPWOOD","PETER MURRAY JONES","LAUREN KASSELL","JIM SECORD"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54bace5d-fe61-3175-8830-3955c877ce28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26309051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26309051","wordCount":11941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":"Communication should be central to histories of reproduction, because it has structured how people do and do not reproduce. Yet communication has been so pervasive, and so various, that it is often taken for granted and the historical specificities overlooked. Making communication a frame for histories of reproduction can draw a fragmented field together, including by putting the promotion of esoteric ideas on a par with other practical activities. Paying communication close attention can revitalize the history of reproduction over the long term by highlighting continuities as well as the complex connections between new technologies and new approaches. Themes such as the power of storytelling, the claiming and challenging of expertise, and relations between knowledge and ignorance, secrecy and propriety also invite further study.","subTitle":"Communicating Reproduction","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter McCleary"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0312b6f4-1952-34e7-b17b-31fc9bb31ea3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1424994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Some Characteristics of a New Concept of Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424994","wordCount":6020,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[198,429],[522,615]],"Locations in B":[[34754,34984],[34989,35082]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"A partial answer or \"informing response\" is sought to the question, \"what are the characteristics of knowledge derived during the production of the built environment?\" The dialectical relationship between builders and their environments leads to a special kind of knowledge which comes from their use of technical equipment, processes and theories. Understanding of production ranges from experience of the environment through the equipment, etc., to experience of the equipment, etc., i.e. from transparent to opaque mediation. The concepts of amplification and reduction explain the extensions and losses of experience that result from the particular functional characteristics of equipment, processes and theories. Architects as builders respond to the scientific, ethical and aesthetic agenda of societies; and their production exhibits an appropriateness--to and\/or appropriation--of aspects of those agenda. Understanding the characteristics of the new concept of technology leads to new questions and identifies new dangers. Is there an inexorable shift from transparency to opacity? Can it be reversed? Should we return to a pre-technical condition? And among the dangers that mediation presents are: a fragmentation of perception and experience; the abstract seems more real than the mundane; the persistence of the codifications of architectural languages from archaic perceptions; and the separation of the professional from the layman. The new concept of technology will generate new perceptions that might lead to new concepts of architectural space and time which will demand a new language of architecture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Bernstein"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"855","pageStart":"834","pagination":"pp. 834-855","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-re-re-reading Jena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251206","wordCount":9587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbfa599e-1aca-3909-9964-3d93709c1905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360+362+364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775532","wordCount":3403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Leighten"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46fd0d3d-07a9-3fdb-bd91-6d466db0bdf5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revising Cubism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776977","wordCount":8682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0m4.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053560549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d950883f-d717-3203-8137-20d6cea16968"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n0m4.17"}],"isPartOf":"Writing for the Medium","keyphrase":["television","thomas elsaesser","literature","culture","cinema","martin amis","jane austen","melvyn bragg","luc godard","times arrow"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"137","pagination":"137-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"LITERATURE AFTER TELEVISION:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0m4.17","wordCount":5190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Let me start with a quotation by Jean Luc Godard: \u2018La t\u00e9l\u00e9vision fabrique de l\u2019oubli, tandis que le cin\u00e9ma fabrique des souvenirs (television is in the business of making you forget, while the cinema produces memories)\u2019.\u00b9 Whether we agree with Godard or not, his aphorism has the virtue of clarity, since it polarizes not only the two media we are concerned with here, it also marks a historical parallel. Eighty years ago, in 1913, a very similar sentiment was expressed by Georg Lukacs, contrasting a medium of \u2018fate\u2019 with one of pure \u2018surface\u2019.\u00b2 The difference, of course, is that Lukacs","subTitle":"AUTHOR, AUTHORITY, AUTHENTICITY","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert M. Hayden"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e64e27a-7c21-3fcc-8805-65af889f7e79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/204686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"926","pageStart":"924","pagination":"pp. 924-926","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Tactical Uses of Passion on Bosnia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204686","wordCount":16206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miyako Inoue"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ce2e08f-e577-3874-afb4-1208a1e2a059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3095173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Gender, Language, and Modernity: Toward an Effective History of Japanese Women's Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095173","wordCount":17356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"\"Women's language\" is a critical cultural category and an unavoidable part of practical social knowledge in contemporary Japan. In this article, I examine the genealogy of Japanese women's language by locating its emergence in the late 19th and early 20th centuries when state formation, capitalist accumulation, industrialization, and radical class reconfiguration were taking off. I show how particular speech forms were carved out as women's language in a network of diverse modernization practices. I theorize the historical relationship between Japan's linguistic modernity-language standardization, the rise of the novel, and print capitalism-and the emergence of Japanese women's language.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Bartsch","Karyn E Medcalf","Alison L Park","Joel G Ray","High Risk of Pre-eclampsia Identification Group"],"datePublished":"2016-04-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09598138"},{"name":"oclc","value":"32595642"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f430499-63d5-3462-8d09-54047b0dea53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26942317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bmjbritmedj"}],"isPartOf":"BMJ: British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Clinical risk factors for pre-eclampsia determined in early pregnancy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942317","wordCount":145701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"353","abstract":"OBJECTIVE To develop a practical evidence based list of clinical risk factors that can be assessed by a clinician at \u226416 weeks\u2019 gestation to estimate a woman\u2019s risk of pre-eclampsia. DESIGN Systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies. DATA SOURCES PubMed and Embase databases, 2000-15. ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA FOR SELECTING STUDIES Cohort studies with \u22651000 participants that evaluated the risk of pre-eclampsia in relation to a common and generally accepted clinical risk factor assessed at \u226416 weeks\u2019 gestation. DATA EXTRACTION Two independent reviewers extracted data from included studies. A pooled event rate and pooled relative risk for pre-eclampsia were calculated for each of 14 risk factors. RESULTS There were 25 356 688 pregnancies among 92 studies. The pooled relative risk for each risk factor significantly exceeded 1.0, except for prior intrauterine growth restriction. Women with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome had the highest pooled rate of pre-eclampsia (17.3%, 95% confidence interval 6.8% to 31.4%). Those with prior pre-eclampsia had the greatest pooled relative risk (8.4, 7.1 to 9.9). Chronic hypertension ranked second, both in terms of its pooled rate (16.0%, 12.6% to 19.7%) and pooled relative risk (5.1, 4.0 to 6.5) of pre-eclampsia. Pregestational diabetes (pooled rate 11.0%, 8.4% to 13.8%; pooled relative risk 3.7, 3.1 to 4.3), prepregnancy body mass index (BMI) > 30 (7.1%, 6.1% to 8.2%; 2.8, 2.6 to 3.1), and use of assisted reproductive technology (6.2%, 4.7% to 7.9%; 1.8, 1.6 to 2.1) were other prominent risk factors. CONCLUSIONS There are several practical clinical risk factors that, either alone or in combination, might identify women in early pregnancy who are at \u201chigh risk\u201d of pre-eclampsia. These data can inform the generation of a clinical prediction model for pre-eclampsia and the use of aspirin prophylaxis in pregnancy.","subTitle":"systematic review and meta-analysis of large cohort studies","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Baker","Kenneth Womack"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d84b2a3-713e-3968-9011-27eeb4f6d2cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":95.0,"pageEnd":"643","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Work in Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946270","wordCount":47560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Four hundred eighteen recently published monographs and articles treat critical theory: specifically semiotics, narratology, rhetoric, and language systems; postmodernist criticism and de-construction; reader-response and phenomenological criticism; feminist and gender studies; psychoanalytic criticism; and his-torical criticism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert E. 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The encounter is always also an intrusion, undermining the supposed discreteness of any<\/em> body and offering us an ethical way to position ourselves towards one another. In what follows, intrusions generate a feminist cinematic ethics through the encounters staged amongst the work of Claire Denis and of two philosophers, Jean-Luc Nancy and Emmanuel Levinas, although other voices interrupt throughout. Denis is one of the most challenging and distinctive filmmakers working in France today. Despite the significant amount of scholarly","subTitle":"Denis, Levinas, Nancy","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DARKO SUVIN"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"852b0605-1d4b-3aa3-ac3b-220009d876d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Cognitive Commodity: Fictional Discourse as Novelty and Circulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777694","wordCount":7056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas McEvilley"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"An Archaeology of Yoga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166655","wordCount":27290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Alvarado Saggese","Christopher Patrick Miller","Emily O'Rourke","Genevieve Renard Painter"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cd60985-35f8-3094-aa6b-653f5c746e8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Essays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193","wordCount":20445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander M. Cruickshank"],"datePublished":"1979-03-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1747402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5b97494-fd9d-333f-adf2-a920af5b2429"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1747402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1169","pageStart":"1141","pagination":"pp. 1141-1169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Gordon Research Conferences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1747402","wordCount":25820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4385","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"203","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne-Lise Fran\u00e7ois"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20a0a81f-06d7-3371-ba5e-36d0b816bed9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cShadow Boxing\u201d: Empty Blows, Practice Steps, and Nature's Hold","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0137","wordCount":15938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vaheed Ramazani"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37004d53-2bc0-3aba-9e63-0704e545c74c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25195129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, War, and the Department Store: Zola's \"Au Bonheur des Dames\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25195129","wordCount":10506,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55052,55168]],"Locations in B":[[29018,29134]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Braham","Robert Bruce-Gardner"],"datePublished":"1988-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/883596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f342769-43e2-3fcd-9348-03d8428c496e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/883596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rubens's 'Landscape by Moonlight'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/883596","wordCount":15600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1025","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephan Palmi\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27054430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03355985"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618955"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235462"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eee48dc2-4b0d-39a8-8ee5-469feae98ae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27054430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archscisocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Archives de sciences sociales des religions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Episode in the History of an Acoustic Mask","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27054430","wordCount":10139,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[56839,57038]],"Locations in B":[[49830,50032]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"187","publisher":"EHESS","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":"In 1908, two black Cuban brothers, held a temple on Philadelphia's North Fairmount Avenue, which appears to have combined Edinsonian sound technology with elements from the ritual repertoire of the Abaku\u00e1 male esoteric brotherhood. I suggest that the technologically enriched \"echo\" of the Leal brothers can be analysed heuristically as the locus of a remarkable convergence between phonic and auditory ideologies underlying the mediation of the divine in the Abaku\u00e1, and acoustic transmission technologies through time and space \u2013 particularly telephony and phonography \u2013 that had begun to reconfigure the Western auditory worlds by the second half of the 19th century. En 1908, deux fr\u00e8res noirs cubains, tenaient un temple sur l'avenue North Fairmount de Philadelphia, qui para\u00eet avoir combin\u00e9 la technologie \u00e9disonienne du son avec des \u00e9l\u00e9ments du r\u00e9pertoire rituel de la fraternit\u00e9 \u00e9sot\u00e9rique masculine Abaku\u00e1. Je sugg\u00e8re ici que l'\u00ab \u00e9cho \u00bb technologiquement enrichi des fr\u00e8res Leal peut \u00eatre analys\u00e9 heuristiquement comme le site d'une convergence remarquable entre les id\u00e9ologies phoniques et auditives sous-tendant la m\u00e9diation du divin dans l'Abaku\u00e1, et les technologies de transmission acoustique \u00e0 travers le temps et l'espace \u2013 en particulier la t\u00e9l\u00e9phonie et la phonographie \u2013 qui avaient commenc\u00e9 \u00e0 reconfigurer les mondes auditifs occidentaux d\u00e8s la seconde moiti\u00e9 du xix\u1d49 si\u00e8cle. En 1908, dos hermanos negros cubanos sosten\u00edan un templo en la avenida North Fairmount de Philadelphia, que parece haber combinado la tecnolog\u00eda del sonido de edisonia con elementos del repertorio ritual de la fraternidad esot\u00e9rica masculina Abaku\u00e1. Sugiero aqu\u00ed que el \u00abeco\u00bb tecnol\u00f3gicamente enriquecido de los hermanos Leal pueda ser analizado felizmente como el lugar de una notable convergencia entre las ideolog\u00edas f\u00f3nicas y auditivas que subyace a la mediaci\u00f3n de lo divino en la abaku\u00e1, y las tecnolog\u00edas de transmisi\u00f3n ac\u00fastica a trav\u00e9s del tiempo y el espacio \u2013 en particular la telefon\u00eda y la Phonograf\u00eda \u2013 que hab\u00edan comenzado a reconfigurar los mundos auditivos occidentales desde la segunda mitad del siglo xix.","subTitle":"Philadelphia, 1908","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Ewen"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3173806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e1fc61d-34f3-3d6c-9f61-484a5462db57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3173806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"S66","pageStart":"S45","pagination":"pp. S45-S66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"The Thinking Man and the femme sans t\u00eate: Collective Perception and Self-Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167515","wordCount":13101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"38","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marshall Brown"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93e8f521-2a19-338b-9a9a-5da7ef018f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/746689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746689","wordCount":9017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hannah Frank"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780520303621"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63c3b89e-e6e6-3f1a-822f-db572bc33bed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvr7fd7m.9"}],"isPartOf":"Frame by Frame","keyphrase":["animation","camera","warner bros","animated cartoons","cel animation","photographic","cinema","photograph","camera operator","am\u00e9lie"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"44","pagination":"44-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A View of the World:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.9","wordCount":13859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"For most of the twentieth century, to animate was to photograph\u2014and to photograph a lot<\/em>. A theatrical split-reel short produced by an animation studio might involve five to ten thousand separate frames. Like most photographic archives, from microform periodicals to crime galleries to geographical surveys to digitized books, works of cel animation were produced under tightly regulated conditions. Following frame-by-frame instructions enumerated on exposure sheets, camera technicians took picture after picture after picture, and as has been routinely acknowledged, their task was uniquely \u201ctedious,\u201d \u201cmechanical,\u201d \u201cmonotonous,\u201d \u201cenervating,\u201d \u201cexacting,\u201d and \u201cexhausting.\u201d\u00b3 The operator of the animation camera was a \u201cproletarian","subTitle":"Toward a Photographic Theory of Cel Animation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wieland Herzfelde","Brigid Doherty"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d07f6c7-032c-3997-8416-03e47cb18c4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction to the First International Dada Fair","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397683","wordCount":5238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Schiller Johnson"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91c59950-3e9f-3d02-9a1e-23b6edec742f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41407520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"646","pageStart":"644","pagination":"pp. 644-646","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Public Anthropology \"at the Fair\": 1893 Origins, 21st-century Opportunities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407520","wordCount":2346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":"What have been the connections between anthropology and public fairs and festivals in the United States? Anthropologists have been involved in public fairs and festivals in the United States for over 100 years. Back in 1893, members of the new discipline of anthropology played a major role in the Chicago World's Columbian Exposition, both in the huge Anthropology Building and on the sprawling Midway Plaisance. Today, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, D. C., is in many ways a modern laboratory for research and experience in public anthropology, ethnomusicology, and folklore. In this essay, I examine the profound changes in the control of voices and discourse surrounding the activities at these types of fairs and festivals. I challenge anthropologists to observe and participate in this expanding discursive field and ask how sites like YouTube can aid in the process and enable critical future developments in pubic anthropology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvqr1bnw.5","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34aab3af-3f35-3d9c-b34f-f7205b20aeee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvqr1bnw.5"}],"isPartOf":"Boredom, Shanzhai, and Digitisation in the Time of Creative China","keyphrase":["creativity","creative practice","eitan wilf","imitation","social hierarchy","elizabeth hallam","romantic","cultural improvisation","tim ingold","modern romantic"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"39","pagination":"39-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Business","Art & Art History","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\u2018Creative China\u2019 and Its Potential to Problematise Western-Modern-Romantic Ideologies of Creativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvqr1bnw.5","wordCount":4653,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6582,6732],[6751,7235]],"Locations in B":[[20843,20993],[21525,22010]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Not being a sinologist, I am unqualified to write anything substantial that can be anchored in the ethnographic context of creative practices in contemporary China. What I can do is to point at the tremendous potential of the three discussion axes identified in the book\u2019s introduction to productively problematise Western-Modern-Romantic discourses and practices of creativity, which have had a widespread impact on the ways in which creativity has been understood and practiced in and beyond the West. I will argue that each of the three discussion axes \u2013 boredom, imitation, and digitisation \u2013 undermines a different building block of Romantic ideologies of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. Bernard Cohen","Harry Woolf","Phyllis Brooks Bosson"],"datePublished":"1959-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2fb5787-a613-3aa7-8c22-89a15a40c1a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/227330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":119.0,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-Fourth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1959)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227330","wordCount":81506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642929"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"003f634a-6841-324a-b792-ffb60b9ef2c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n14t.7"}],"isPartOf":"Jean Epstein","keyphrase":["cinema","bonjour cin\u00e9ma","cinematic","sarah keller","finis terrae","coeur fid\u00e8le","camera","demi onze","photog\u00e9nie","poetry"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.7","wordCount":12002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"As filmmaker and theorist, Jean Epstein has observed that the fundamental energies undergirding cinema are those that valorize both rapt attention (associated with stillness) and incessant flux (associated with movement), with a strong emphasis in his own work upon the latter. One of the cinema\u2019s most conspicuous tensions, for example, lies in the balance between its still frames and the way, when they are set into motion, that they revivify whatever these individual shots depict \u2013 a tension between stasis and change. Within his assertions about cinema as the ultimate negotiator of thestate of becoming<\/em>characterizing existence, we find a","subTitle":"Jean Epstein and the Revolt of Cinema","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue E. Estroff"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2bf0269-c3e0-31e3-913d-bf1a289b000f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1509","pageStart":"1508","pagination":"pp. 1508-1509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231124","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"059774fd-87f0-38b0-b3b1-4272a8f54229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776016","wordCount":6368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1951-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7fac5f0-d94b-37ac-8332-5d506740667c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1840478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840478","wordCount":39873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malcolm Heath","D. E. Hill","Thomas Harrison","Barbara Levick","Nigel Spivey","George Boys-Stones","Vedia Izzet","Robert Shorrock"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00173835"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206579"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227389"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20204203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greecerome"}],"isPartOf":"Greece & Rome","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Subject Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204203","wordCount":32450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Classical Association","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CORINNE A. KRATZ"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f6fc686-3fbf-33b2-8664-2745430ce13b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26610867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Where did you cry? Crafting Categories, Narratives, and Affect through Exhibit Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26610867","wordCount":10059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"44","publisher":"University of Western Cape","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RINA KNOEFF"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24632176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49963229"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a831c53-13c6-388c-8829-f86f49843328"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24632176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistmediallisci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Medicine & Allied Health","Science & Technology Studies","Health Sciences","History","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Reins of the Soul: The Centrality of the Intercostal Nerves to the Neurology of Thomas Willis and to Samuel Parker's Theology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24632176","wordCount":11670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":"Thomas Willis's description of the intercostal nerves has not received much attention by historians of medicine. Yet the intercostal nerves are of paramount importance for his neurology. Willis explained that via these nerves, which connect the brain to the heart and lower viscera, the brain controls the passions and instincts of the lower body. In other words, Willis believed that the intercostal nerves mediate a kind of rationality and that therefore they make a human a rational being. Willis's theory, I argue, must be seen in the context of the early modern mind-body problem. In the second part of the article I discuss how Oxford theologian Samuel Parker took up Willis's argument while stating that the intercostal nerves are the most important instruments (reins) of the soul. They control the bodily passions so that humans can transform into more virtuous beings. The explanation of the intercostal nerves offered by Willis and Parker fits the Anglican optimism about the abilities of human reason as well as about the moral potential of humankind.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25370801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"936ba828-5166-3177-a3e1-0e33671d661e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25370801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Medical specialties","Business - Industry"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25370801","wordCount":50237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4591","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Roberts"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8041f6f-ce32-3378-92e2-2ed09b6e5b07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Epistemology"],"title":"The Regenerative Geography of the Text in William Blake","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195380","wordCount":11565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Studies","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781909254268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4532cff4-1f6c-32e4-b61b-69d3950e979d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjtt3.14"}],"isPartOf":"Digital Humanities Pedagogy","keyphrase":["programming","students","computer","computational thinking","software","computer science","humanists","course","programming with humanists","language"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"227","pagination":"227-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Education","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Data products","Education - Educational resources","Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Programming with Humanists:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.14","wordCount":5372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"\u201cProgram or be programmed.\u201d That is the strong claim made by Douglas Rushkoff in a recent book that eloquently\u2014at times, movingly\u2014articulates an argument often made by those who teach programming:In the emerging, highly programmed landscape ahead, you will either create the software or you will be the software. It\u2019s really that simple: Program, or be programmed. Choose the former, and you gain access to the control panel of civilization. Choose the latter, and it could be the last real choice you get to make. [\u2026] Computers and networks finally offer us the ability to write. And we","subTitle":"Reflections on Raising an Army of Hacker-Scholars in the Digital Humanities","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pat Gilmour"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be801b9c-a4a7-39e9-b109-463a7c0aeeda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41826844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On Originality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826844","wordCount":5603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Scheper-Hughes","Margaret M. Lock"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/648769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07455194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205070"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4068b55-4022-3c4a-af50-bcca9149292f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/648769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medianthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Medical Anthropology Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Mindful Body: A Prolegomenon to Future Work in Medical Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/648769","wordCount":17774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"Conceptions of the body are central not only to substantive work in medical anthropology, but also to the philosophical underpinnings of the entire discipline of anthropology, where Western assumptions about the mind and body, the individual and society, affect both theoretical viewpoints and research paradigms. These same conceptions also influence ways in which health care is planned and delivered in Western societies. In this article we advocate the deconstruction of received concepts about the body and begin this process by examining three perspectives from which the body may be viewed: (1) as a phenomenally experienced individual body-self; (2) as a social body, a natural symbol for thinking about relationships among nature, society, and culture; and (3) as a body politic, an artifact of social and political control. 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L. DOCTOROW'S \"RAGTIME\", HEINRICH VON KLEIST'S \"MICHAEL KOHLHAAS,\" AND THE SPECTACLE OF MODERNITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366960","wordCount":12105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Shapin"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3183104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee9df9a9-c0fb-3423-a605-13a718b59133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3183104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"769","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-769","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Proverbial Economies: How an Understanding of Some Linguistic and Social Features of Common Sense Can Throw Light on More Prestigious Bodies of Knowledge, Science for Example","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3183104","wordCount":21398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"An evaluative contrast between learned expertise and lay knowledge is a pervasive and longstanding feature of modern culture. Occasionally, the learned have pointed to folkish proverbs to illustrate the inadequacies of common-sense reasoning and judgement. Proverbs are said perspicuously to display the superficiality, the imprecision, and even the logical contradictions of common-sense thinking. I offer an interpretation of proverbs in their naturally occurring settings as epistemically powerful, mnemonically robust, practically pertinent, and referentially flexible. My purpose is not just to recuperate the value of proverbial reasoning but, ultimately, to show the relevance of such reasoning to a revised appreciation of modern technical practices, including science, technology and medicine. To that end, the paper concludes with some speculative remarks about the linguistic forms in which the heuristics of present-day technical practices are expressed and transmitted.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kingsbury Browne, Jr.","Walter G. 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This article offers a refutation of Lewellen's claims. Following an examination of the evidence on Qolla homicide rates, the author discusses Lewellen's explanations for the inconsistent conclusions of different ethnographers concerning levels of aggression in Qolla society. He rejects Lewellen's hypotheses and proposes alternatives. A review of the literature on the hypoglycemia-aggression hypothesis shows that, contrary to Lewellen's assertion, there is considerable support for a relationship between these two phenomena. The article concludes with a discussion of the problem of stereotyping and of ethical issues related to research with strong policy implications.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nazli Kibria"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e09e9c45-89f2-36db-96b7-d9df347eab1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1141","pageStart":"1140","pagination":"pp. 1140-1141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231338","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arvind Rajagopal"],"datePublished":"1994-07-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4401425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13a19608-7531-3759-82a5-c73da29fb891"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4401425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1668","pageStart":"1659","pagination":"pp. 1659-1668","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ram Janmabhoomi, Consumer Identity and Image-Based Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4401425","wordCount":13337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Underlying the adaptation and encroachment of communal discourse within commodity culture is the rise to prominence of mass-mediated images as a centralised locus of social and political discourse, indexed by the recent establishment of national television. With this crucial development emerges a new era of symbolic politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna McCarthy"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6de728c-2ded-3617-a372-0e3faa290b84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"756","pageStart":"752","pagination":"pp. 752-756","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174848","wordCount":2170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Nestingen"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c83d8e0-412a-34f9-92d1-fe8698262be1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40920515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Timely Subjects: Leena Krohn Between Universal and Particular","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920515","wordCount":10064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B\u00c4RBEL BRODT","PAUL ELLIOTT","BILL LUCKIN"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44613531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09639268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94fc5e86-2b50-31f4-b303-694c79ffe6f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44613531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Political science - Government"],"title":"Review of periodical articles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44613531","wordCount":18189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Burns"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/429976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d52da8b6-d138-35ad-bc96-faa301b0968a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/429976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ordering the Artist's Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/429976","wordCount":10419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Thomas Eakins\u2019s obsession with the body is well known and much studied. But what of the painter\u2019s obsession with his own body? Throughout his career, he inserted himself into his paintings of modern life. We see him rowing, bird hunting, swimming, observing surgical procedures, and even sculpting. In photography too he was ever\u2010present. While not technically self\u2010portraits, the many photographs of the painter, candid or posed, clothed or naked, further suggest an uncommon desire for both psychological and physical exposure. This article examines Eakins\u2019s acts of exposure as manifestations of inner turmoil and fears of disintegration that haunted him from an early age and underlay the elaborate systems of control by which he sought to achieve in art the order that eluded him in life.","subTitle":"Thomas Eakins's Acts of Self\u2010Portrayal","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1867034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"572a1cf8-5567-3cfc-9b3d-692bc000fbe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1867034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"572","pageStart":"564","pagination":"pp. 564-572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Collected Essays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1867034","wordCount":7660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42765126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36882988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 97001952"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42765126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annabota"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42765126","wordCount":6427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chauncy Lennon"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4f9e58b-4bb5-3bca-805a-b5fe87f37225"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"815","pageStart":"814","pagination":"pp. 814-815","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231279","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Talal Asad"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2802150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00251496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646610"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23436"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2802150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"man"}],"isPartOf":"Man","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"627","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-627","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anthropology and the Analysis of Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2802150","wordCount":12324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"This lecture discusses some of the conceptual problems involved in anthropological treatments of ideology, and argues that most of the difficulties arise from a theoretical preoccupation with essential human meanings-as embodied in the authentic social categories, actions and discourses of given cultures. This preoccupation, it is maintained, is shared by anthropologists who are often thought of as being radically different from each other, and it accounts for the difficulties they have encountered in conceptualising social change. The first and longer part of the lecture explores these difficulties in some writings by Bloch, Bourdillon. Leach and Mary Douglas. The tendency to reduce anthropological problems about the nature and consequence of particular public discourses to the philosophical problem of the origin of essential human concepts is noted. The tendency to see authoritative meanings as the a priori totality which defines and reproduces the essential integrity of a given social order is also criticised, on the grounds that it leaves an important question unasked: namely, how particular political and economic conditions maintain or undermine given forms of authoritative discourse as systems. The final part of the lecture is devoted to a general critique of the vulgar Marxist theory of the social function of ideology, with particular reference to the kinds of reductionism which that theory undertakes in its attempt to determine essential meanings, and the kinds of question which it fails to consider adequately.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDIT T\u00d3TH"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28b812ec-4789-32f6-9cc6-67d9a58e7b5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23360988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Breuer's Furniture, Moholy-Nagy's Photographic Paradigm, and Complex Gender Expressivity at the Haus am Horn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360988","wordCount":9033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"50","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN McCABE"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8076b526-3d51-36ad-865b-f09d02e62763"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"Ballet M\u00e9canique\" of Marianne Moore's Cinematic Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029683","wordCount":7277,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[8480,8565]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Contending that modernist poetry and avant-garde film have significant connections, this essay examines Marianne Moore's poem \"Those Various Scalpels\" in light of Fernand L\u00e9ger's Ballet M\u00e9canique. Through this analysis, I explore how both media simultaneously figure forth and fragment the gestural body.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex Soojung-Kim Pang"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08909997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45919525"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214626"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99889e6e-5d89-338b-8924-2fa2fca7f5d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27757789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudphysbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visual Representation and Post-Constructivist History of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757789","wordCount":15221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAHANA UDUPA"],"datePublished":"2012-01-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09ba8426-2fd5-3fdb-9518-609a89d31e20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41419771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Beyond Acquiescence and Surveillance: New Directions for Media Regulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419771","wordCount":9066,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52309,52410]],"Locations in B":[[12225,12326]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"The increasingly complex and elusive media landscape has thrown fresh challenges to an unsettled ecosystem of media policy in India. 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In the context of growing state practices of surveillance and staggered acquiescence to corporate interests, policy interventions should move beyond the contradictory impulses of \"policing\" the media and media-enabled development to craft innovative ways of leveraging the benefits of current media architecture as well as several recent legal provisions aimed at enhancing the capacity of public information.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward N. 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My central thesis is that Simmel fails to satisfactorily conceptualize the nature and origin of value because of his devotion to an asocial, Cartesian-Kantian conception of mind, human freedom, and agency. In contrast, I incorporate recent data from neuroscience, social self theory, developmental psychology, and elements of Marx's theory of the commodity form to provide the terms of a postmetaphysical, intersubjective alternative.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Casson","J. F. 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Over time, this technology meant to gratify instead creates new desire, eliciting within us yearnings of its own making. Herein lies the evolution of art and of marketing campaigns. In popular culture, our hankering to see and to be seen via digital video has been generated by technology\u2019s ability to make it so. In the province of art, what was once valued for its uniqueness is now valued for its ubiquity. Reproducibility, once the bane of the artistic object, now seeds mass audience for mass products. In short, in an era of instantaneous and omnipresent","subTitle":"The Work of Art in an Age of Digital Reproduction","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Light"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a594e9d9-279a-3302-b13b-ac631c024db3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"792","pageStart":"790","pagination":"pp. 790-792","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231268","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69546999-715b-3736-89e7-8415267ec3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24769411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":214.0,"pageEnd":"1262","pageStart":"1049","pagination":"pp. 1049-1262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Program of the 2014 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769411","wordCount":115441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"128","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Klingmann"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606242963"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55d70363-45c2-31ed-a47c-a819e0522b0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Meaningless Popularity of Rem Koolhaas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876236","wordCount":5248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl A. Wittfogel","F\u00eang Chia-Sh\u00eang"],"datePublished":"1946-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca640e93-64f4-321f-adc0-888243a6b445"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1005570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":774.0,"pageEnd":"752","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xv+1-752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"History of Chinese Society Liao (907-1125)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005570","wordCount":526398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Saffle","Hon-Lun Yang"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89d9f8af-0491-38f5-a8c7-c37149ea41cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Aesthetic and Social Aspects of Emerging Utopian Musical Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203371","wordCount":9556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"The article identifies and examines aspects of Utopian thought and action in music, especially popular music, in several real, imagined, and virtual aesthetic and social manifestations. Three new terms characterize these and other, closely related phenomena: logotopias or imagined communities organized largely around texts; phonotopias or virtual communities organized largely around recorded sounds; and tachytopias or real-life communities organized around intermittent, often retrospective, and occasionally tourist-like events. Special attention is paid to three pop-music tachytopias: the self-proclaimed Guitar Army of 1960s and early 1970s Europe and the USA; the migratory American Dead Heads of the later 20th century; and the Cantopop concerts held in Hong Kong during the early 2000s. U \u010dlanku se identificiraju i istra\u017euju va\u017eni aspekti utopijske misli i akcij\u00e2 vezanih uz glazbu, osobito popularnu glazbu, u nekoliko recentnih suvremenih stvarnih, zami\u0161ljanih i virtualnih esteti\u010dkih i dru\u0161tvenih manifestacija. Termin utopija dolazi iz gr\u010dkih rije\u010di za \u00bbne\u00ab (ili \u00bbdobro\u00ab) i \u00bbmjesto\u00ab, sugeriraju\u0107i neki imaginarni ili savr\u0161en lokalitet. Za karakterizaciju ovih i drugih usko vezanih utopijskih pojava rabe se tri nova termina. Prvi je logotopias (logotopija, od gr\u010dkih rije\u010di za \u00bbrije\u010d\u00ab i \u00bbmjesto\u00ab) i ozna\u010duje imaginame zajednice organizirane uglavnom oko tekstova; primjer za to je \u010ditateijstvo koje se okupilo oko \u010dasopisa Neue Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Musik Roberta Schumann tijekom 1830-ih i 1840-ih. Drugi je phonotopias (fonotopija, od gr\u010dkih rijeci za \u00bbzvuk\u00ab i \u00bbmjesto\u00ab) i ozna\u010duje virtualne zajednice organizirane uglavnom oko snimijenog zvuka; fonotopijskim se mogu smatrati entuzijasti\u010dki sljedbenici Glenna Goulda, Artura Toscaninija, i do neke mjere pop skupine Beatles. Tre\u0107i je tachytopias (tahitopija, od gr\u010dkih rije\u010di za \u00bbbrzo\u00ab i \u00bbmjesto\u00ab ) i ozna\u010duje zbiljske zajednice organizirane oko povremenih, \u010desto retrospektivnih, doga\u0111aja, pokatkad turisti\u010dkog tipa. Posebna je pozornost upu\u0107ena trima tahitopijama na podru\u010dju pop glazbe. Prva tahitopija su zajedni\u010dka okupijanja, javni protesti i koncerti koje organizira i poha\u0111a samoprogla\u0161ena \u00bbGuitar Army\u00ab (\u00bbGitarska armija\u00ab) - termin koji je izmislio John Sinclair kako bi ozna\u010dio solidamu i revolucionamu djelatnost u ime rock skupine MC5 - tijekom 1960-ih i 1970-ih u Europi i SAD-u. Druga tahitopija bili su lutala\u010dka skupina American Dead Heads i njihove aktivnosti u SAD-u tijekom 1960-ih, 1970-ih, 1980-ih i 1990-ih. Tre\u0107a tahitopija je podulji niz koncerata Cantopopa (tj. pop\u00falame glazbe na kantonsko-kineskom jeziku), odr\u017ean u Coliseumu u Hong Kongu tijekom ranih 2000-ih godina.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74350e08-cba5-375c-9996-56ff68ec1ed2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1297159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297159","wordCount":11949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben P. Robertson"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cac8651f-6c3f-366c-b738-57aa67cccca1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30210676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Annual Bibliography for 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210676","wordCount":17590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Tanaka"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.11418981.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781643150031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3981b998-5064-3261-96c3-7923707121e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3998\/mpub.11418981.9"}],"isPartOf":"History without Chronology","keyphrase":["absolute time","understanding","chronological time","situatedness","activity","classical time","longue dur\u00e9e","temporalities","human activity","people"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"85","pagination":"85-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"HETEROGENEOUS PASTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.11418981.9","wordCount":10424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The epigraphs above from Wiener and Jordheim emphasize that heterogeneity is inherent to life\u2014biologically and conceptually\u2014but, as Harootunian points out, for centuries we have accepted a myth or masquerade that has (imperfectly) hidden this essence for a fictive unity, a unity rooted in chronological time. My goal of this chapter is to explore the possibility of heterogeneity serving as the basis for historical inquiry where difference does not become an unintended outcome, a good that serves as ornamentation, or a place\/idea\/person needing correction.The difficulty of any discussion on the heterogeneity of time is the inclusion of difference","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN DREW"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a625768d-5d78-3625-baf1-d145a97fa23a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43663186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"2011 Michael Wolff Lecture An Uncommercial Proposition?: At Work on \"Household Words\" and \"All the Year Round\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663186","wordCount":11049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEN WEBB","TONY SCHIRATO"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2230355-f3dd-34f7-884e-2524f850cb46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24405638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"DISENCHANTMENT AND THE CITY OF LOST CHILDREN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405638","wordCount":7032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"La Cit\u00e9 des enfants perdus de Jean-Pierre Jeunet et Marc Caro s'interroge sur l'\u00e9cart qui s\u00e9pare l'enfance, telle que v\u00e9cue par les enfants, et le r\u00eave de l'enfance, tel que con\u00e7u par l'imaginaire culturel. \u00c0 partir des travaux d'Arjun Appadurai sur la marchandisation (des enfants), les auteurs montrent comment le film examine, par des images fantastiques mais avec beaucoup de s\u00e9rieux, la perte (ou l'absence) de l'innocence et de l'enchantement, in\u00e9vitable dans un monde capitaliste, et investigue les tactiques que les enfants emploient pour assurer leur propre survie et donner un sens \u00e0 cette survie.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304844","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9436ce19-11b6-34ba-9897-ae5c7acbf845"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40304844"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Staff: As of July 1, 1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304844","wordCount":6266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"110","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd Alden"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84a611ef-b85e-37d7-89a4-f09ac60cf2a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24554336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"princollnews"}],"isPartOf":"The Print Collector's Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MARCEL BROODTHAERS: ON THE TAUTOLOGY OF ART & MERCHANDISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554336","wordCount":2648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Acker"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7112a95d-7265-39b3-b632-1f442acdbb26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25486349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"702","pagination":"pp. 702-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Horror and the Maternal in \"Beowulf\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486349","wordCount":11011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":"Grendel's mother projects Anglo-Saxon cultural anxieties about weaknesses in the system of feuding and revenge. Killing off one opponent (Grendel) will only trigger the appearance of another (Grendel's mother) as long as the system of revenge by kin is in place. That she is an avenging mother may have seemed particularly monstrous, in ways that resonate with Julia Kristeva's comments on abjection and the maternal. Grendel's mother attacks to avenge her son shortly after Wealhtheow has attempted to weave the ties of kinship on behalf of her sons. By contrast, women in Old Norse literature often incite men to vengeance or on rare occasions take vengeance themselves. Seen from the social world of the Anglo-Saxon hall, however, a maternal avenger can only be imagined as monstrous or subhuman, carrying the male hero to the threshold of death. The abjected mother returns, with a vengeance, to haunt the patriarchal stronghold.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-04-10","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eca680cc-78c1-3717-91a7-090b66d7ddd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713561","wordCount":31264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3615","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"144","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES S. K. TUNG","AB","STEPHEN FERGUSON","O. J. ROTHROCK","ALEXANDER P. CLARK"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26403992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1142216-3920-3f02-9016-f3060f885d4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26403992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"New & Notable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26403992","wordCount":7827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandru Baitag","Sonja Smets"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41494944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00397857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233322"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91996ad5-9d9c-3d1f-a318-f7748c5a8e64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41494944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"synthese"}],"isPartOf":"Synthese","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"773","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-773","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"The dynamic turn in quantum logic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41494944","wordCount":10830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"186","abstract":"In this paper we show how ideas coming from two areas of research in logic can reinforce each other. The first such line of inquiry concerns the \"dynamic turn\" in logic and especially the formalisms inspired by Propositional Dynamic Logic (PDL); while the second line concerns research into the logical foundations of Quantum Physics, and in particular the area known as Operational Quantum Logic, as developed by Jauch and Piron (Helve Phys Acta 42: 842-848, 1969), Pir\u00f3n (Foundations of Quantum Physics, 1976). By bringing these areas together we explain the basic ingredients of Dynamic Quantum Logic, a new direction of research in the logical foundations of physics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HOWARD C. RICE, JR."],"datePublished":"1959-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26403007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a654aed9-c2a4-37b2-9630-6d0e28ebb6bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26403007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Saint-M\u00e9min's Portrait of Jefferson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26403007","wordCount":4863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1961-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41369133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e165b966-bb43-3ea2-a834-6adb3fcc07f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41369133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":231.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41369133","wordCount":164701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5064","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Priya Satia"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3457e45-97bb-3a40-8bbe-2da8f40c9ae1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25096695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Developing Iraq: Britain, India and the Redemption of Empire and Technology in the First World War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096695","wordCount":20943,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55383,55538]],"Locations in B":[[124030,124185]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"197","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH CAROLYN MILLER"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swhm.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8110e6b4-9175-3045-a497-7515146994c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv65swhm.6"}],"isPartOf":"Framed","keyphrase":["holmes","visual","conan doyle\u2019s","stories","imagistic","criminal","irene adler","public","watson","public eyes"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"25","pagination":"25-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"PRIVATE AND PUBLIC EYES:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swhm.6","wordCount":15624,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[11289,11531]],"Locations in B":[[6712,6779],[6834,7115]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Consider figure 7, an illustration from Arthur Conan Doyle\u2019s \u201cA Scandal in Bohemia,\u201d the first installment in what would become a long-running, endlessly influential series of short detective stories featuring Sherlock Holmes. Outside the context of the narrative, the image seems to represent an exchange of glances between a young man passing through a nighttime street and two gentlemen on the threshold of a residence. The interplay of their gazes is complex: the walker meets one of the gentlemen\u2019s eyes, while the second gentleman looks at his companion and digs in his pocket for a key. The picture provides a","subTitle":"Sherlock Holmes and the Invisible Woman","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C.J. Ackerley"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03095207"},{"name":"oclc","value":"647512503, 500984954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"528b6346-d2d1-3a93-8216-d75bdbc0d9ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26468980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbeckettstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Beckett Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":289.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 1-6, 8-213, 215-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Obscure Locks, Simple Keys: The Annotated Watt<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26468980","wordCount":137327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1 and 2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARK HAWORTH-BOOTH","DAVID MELLOR"],"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24471593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7689fe67-01f9-3197-9ff7-b5b22df1c860"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24471593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"BILL BRANDT: Behind the Camera: PHOTOGRAPHS 1928-1983","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24471593","wordCount":33377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"99","publisher":"Princeton University Art Museum","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valerie Polakow Suransky"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14108a60-30d2-3b61-a004-d977283d4cc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42772830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TALES OF REBELLION AND RESISTANCE: THE LANDSCAPE OF EARLY INSTITUTIONAL LIFE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42772830","wordCount":10791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","volumeNumber":"165","abstract":"In this article the metaphor of the storyteller is employed to argue the case fora critical phenomenology applied to understanding the \"text\" of the daily life-world of young children in childcare settings. The ideology of \"preschooling\" is examined and specific case studies of young rebels are presented. With the aid of Gadamer's notion of the \"fusion of horizons,\" an attempt is made to understand the expenential world of the young child. In the process, themes depicting the social landscape of early institutional life are discussed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3125784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03061078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38949504"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3125784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlymusic"}],"isPartOf":"Early Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"640","pageStart":"528","pagination":"pp. 528-640","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3125784","wordCount":10182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leah Dickerman"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14778170-51b8-33a5-ab90-2979bbff4c68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dada Gambits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397679","wordCount":3938,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46197,46321]],"Locations in B":[[16929,17053]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bob Rogers"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94d13385-c8ad-39a5-90be-5332d1e6f6be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photography and the Photographic Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776252","wordCount":4723,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. 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As spirit possession practices become connected with global markets, and as specific musical genres associated with trance are reinterpreted within secular frameworks (Indo-Pakistani Sufi qawwali singing and Afro-Cuban Ocha batd drumming, for example), ecstatic religious contexts, and decreasing emphasis is placed on the culturally specific locales from which these performance practices emerge. Why are self-identified nonbelievers interested in consuming musical genres that have their origins in ecstatic religious practices? What do these commodified and recontextualized ecstatic religious practices provide the people who consume them?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Leeder"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24b6204d-d1fa-36ad-909e-7712fad0c13b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43910668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Figuring Lateness in Modern German Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910668","wordCount":13608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"125","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-08-17","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1750494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87677f02-d733-3434-b2c2-5c190a6a06fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1750494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-332+334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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In an exploration of notions of materiality and virtuality, the author addresses the material and institutional existence of medieval manuscripts and traces the evolution of the facsimile as a solution to problems of access. Within this framework, the various altered engagements with manuscripts in physical and digital form are assessed in order to establish the costs and benefits of virtuality. The roles of new technologies that produce high-quality facsimiles are investigated through theories of (re)presentation with respect to visual materials, including images and historical text.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lubin"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"364f707b-deef-3b25-bee6-fc3bd742d81c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Projecting an Image: The Contested Cultural Identity of Thomas Eakins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177312","wordCount":13895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Besteman"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90ba58de-2500-31fe-aa5e-ace866f07178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/204685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"924","pageStart":"922","pagination":"pp. 922-924","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Agrarian Production Practices and Settlement Patterns","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204685","wordCount":16206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. Stephen Jaeger"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab1fd080-1e81-3bf6-bb3a-bcae140ea28a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41288112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aura and Charisma: Two Useful Concepts in Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288112","wordCount":8513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"114","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Ballagh"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24367360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1649217X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34466102-86b4-3d75-8cb1-b0604fb6aed2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24367360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisartsrevi2002"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Arts Review (2002-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Her Nobel work began in 1944, and by 1950 McClintock began presenting her work on \"controlling elements.\" McClintock performed her studies through the use of controlled breeding experiments with known mutant stocks, and read the action of controlling elements (transposons) in visible patterns of pigment and starch distribution. She taught close colleagues to \"read\" the patterns in her maize kernels, \"seeing\" pigment and starch genes turning on and off. McClintock illustrated her talks and papers on controlling elements or transposons with photographs of the spotted and streaked maize kernels which were both her evidence and the key to her explanations. Transposon action could be read in the patterns by the initiated, but those without step by step instruction by McClintock or experience in maize often found her presentations confusing. The photographs she displayed became both McClintock's means of communication, and a barrier to successful presentation of her results. The photographs also had a second and more subtle effect. As images of patterns arrived at through growth and development of the kernel, they highlight what McClintock believed to be the developmental consequences of transposition, which in McClintock's view was her central contribution, over the mechanism of transposition, for which she was eventually recognized by others. Scientific activities are extremely visual, both at the sites of investigation and in communication through drawings, photographs, and movies. Those visual messages deserve greater scrutiny by historians of science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Copper Giloth","Lynn Pocock-Williams"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"630ec2b0-fa18-3f43-9ef0-542ba9ddc5ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A Selected Chronology of Computer Art: Exhibitions, Publications, and Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777121","wordCount":7145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24145927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368555"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24145927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scienceteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Science Teacher","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"102S","pageStart":"1S","pagination":"pp. 1S-24S, 25S-80S, 81S-102S","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","General Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"NSTA Science Education Suppliers 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24145927","wordCount":53422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Science Teachers Association","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valerie J. 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The collage asks you to read the world as a negotiation of fertility and decay, intent and importunity. What matters, what disposes matter, is literally that which stands between what we perceive as form and content\u2014namely, relation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy D. 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The essay reads Ormond as a critique of the seduction novel genre, its didacticism, and its models for reading books and people. Brown modifies the structure of the didactic seduction novel by disaligning the threat of dissimulation from the mechanics of genteel social distinction and, as a result, Ormond exposes how the genre sustains the latter by regulating the former. Moreover, Ormond interrogates the same visual forms and discourses that seduction novelists and, more generally, the period promoted as strategies for counteracting dissimulation: portraiture and physiognomy. In contrast to the static, instantaneous, and permanent notion of character obtained by the physiognomic scrutiny of a face or portrait, Ormond proposes a more fluid, sequential, and r\u00e9visable notion of character accumulated from the flow of multiple persons, times, and sources. Ormond suggests that the type of reflection encouraged by reading seduction novels\u2014Which was what distinguished them from the dangerous effects of romances and justified them in the eyes of its post-Revolutionary moral critics\u2014should not be associated with the static visual arts (portraiture) and the kinds of discourses used to interpret them (physiognomy), but with the temporality and multiple perspectives of fiction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VANESSA MEIKLE SCHULMAN"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23461237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10547479"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54313087"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b179877-99a6-3e96-86ff-f6e7ba016230"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23461237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerperi"}],"isPartOf":"American Periodicals","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Making the Magazine\": Visuality, Managerial Capitalism, and the Mass Production of Periodicals, 1865\u20141890","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23461237","wordCount":10254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAR SORIA L\u00d3PEZ"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02721635"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b092559-9c5f-322d-80f5-04ad8db08859"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44071826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analliteespacont"}],"isPartOf":"Anales de la literatura espa\u00f1ola contempor\u00e1nea","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A \"CASTIZA\" COMMODITY: THE SALESGIRL IN RAM\u00d3N G\u00d3MEZ DE LA SERNA'S \"LA NARDO\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071826","wordCount":8715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This article explores how the construction of Aurelia, the female protagonist of Ram\u00f3n G\u00f3mez de la Serna's La Nardo (1931), not only responds to the representation of the Madrilenian essence, as different literary critics have stated, but also to the author's ambivalent relationship with modernity. Considering the avant-garde author's feelings of anguish and displacement motivated by the economic and social changes of his time, the protagonist, a castiza salesgirl in the Madrilenian Rastro who becomes a prostitute, embodies the artificial, degenerate, and shifting nature of modern consumer culture that corrupts the Spanish essence. Additionally, by portraying the working-class protagonist both as a commodity and as the Spanish essence, the novel seems to participate in the same mechanisms of imperial and sexist representation used in previous cultural movements. Este art\u00edculo explora como la construcci\u00f3n de Aurelia, el personaje femenino principal en la novela La Nardo (1931) de Ram\u00f3n G\u00f3mez de la Serna, responde tanto a la representaci\u00f3n de la esencia madrile\u00f1a, corno la cr\u00edtica literaria ha se\u00f1alado, como a la relaci\u00f3n ambivalente del autor con la modernidad. Considerando la angustia y dislocati\u00f3n experimentadas por G\u00f3mez de la Serna motivadas por los cambios econ\u00f3micos y sociales de la \u00e9poca, el personaje de Aurelia -vendedora castiza en un puesto del Rastro y m\u00e1s tarde prostituta- encarna la artif\u00efcialidad, degenerati\u00f3n y mutabilidad de la cultura de consumo que corrompe la esencia espa\u00f1ola. Lo que es m\u00e1s, al retratar a la protagonista de clase trabajadora corno un art\u00edculo de consumo y como s\u00edmbolo de la naci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola, La Nardo parece participar de los mismos mecanismos de representaci\u00f3n imperialistas y sexistas empleados por movimientos culturales previos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William R. 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Sachs"],"datePublished":"1975-10-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1740535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a17b7d02-4b42-3c43-9824-1e12c401edee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1740535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"484","pagination":"pp. 484-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Ejaculatory Pattern in Female Rats Without Androgen Treatment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1740535","wordCount":3768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4213","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"190","abstract":"Adult female rats receiving long-term estrogen treatment displayed the species-typical motor pattern of ejaculation during copulation. This hormone treatment produced pituitary hypertrophy and concomitant pressure damage to brain areas dorsal to the pituitary, but did not cause clitoral hypertrophy. The demonstration of the ejaculatory pattern in perinatally untreated female rats indicates that the potential for the expression of the ejaculatory or \"orgasmic\" pattern is not dependent on exogenous androgen at any stage of development and is more widely represented among female mammals than previously believed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie A. Downey","William R. Buck","P. 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The authors speculate that changing global relations that have given rise to new hybrid identities are transforming the anthropological unconscious with implications for ethnographic practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83e6fd7d-4223-37b8-a8e0-426215cf7219"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3103896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":112.0,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1977)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103896","wordCount":61294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUKAS ENGELMANN"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1073f90-9652-3ca7-9458-b592eafdb29d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26310871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Photographing AIDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310871","wordCount":12180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"The photography of people with AIDS has been subject to numerous critiques in the 1980s and has become a controversial way of visualizing the AIDS epidemic. While most of the scholarly work on AIDS photography is based in cultural studies and concerned with popular representations, the clinical value of photographs of people with AIDS usually remains overlooked. This article addresses photographs as a \"way of seeing\" AIDS that contributed crucially to the making of the disease entity AIDS within the history of medicine. Cultural studies methods are applied to analyze clinical photography in the case of AIDS, thus contributing to the medical history of AIDS through the lens of photography. The article reveals the conflation of disease morphology and patient identity as a characteristic feature of both clinical photography and a now historical nature of AIDS.","subTitle":"On Capturing a Disease in Pictures of People with AIDS","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. Harner","Priscilla J. 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Hannah"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43299156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edd322fc-5cfc-3530-8415-ff7414245eb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43299156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. 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The argument begins by reflexively placing the problematic of attention within a brief genealogy of constructions of modern perception. Within this frame, the article takes a closer look at the ambivalent and hesitant response to the problem of attention in phenomenology. This field is best positioned to give a foundational account of the political character of attention and to explain the sense in which its relevance transcends the era in which it was first clearly formulated. However, a strong upsurge of phenomenological interest in attention has only appeared in recent years. A review of this work, particularly in the writings of Bernhard Waidenfels, shows how attending to attention can deepen critical analyses of capitalism and spectacle offered by Benjamin, Debord, Ranci\u00e8re and Bellen The final section of the article illustrates key points by staging an imaginary trip through the corporate agricultural landscapes of California.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751275"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44849568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abec663c-b25d-3e20-8e75-308b66335ee9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlyrepublic"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Early Republic","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"482","pagination":"p. 482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - 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Agriculture"],"title":"Indexes to Volumes 1-50, 1947-1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4255909","wordCount":244060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Mowitt"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Mice and Kids","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466397","wordCount":5339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arden Reed"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.2.0069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7647815-f03b-3b12-b651-084f4bb5618b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.22.2.0069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"New Sites for Slowness: Speed and Nineteenth-Century Stereoscopy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.2.0069","wordCount":9836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noah Isenberg"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0eb12e8a-fa1d-3fc8-860f-7a5815cacd35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Perennial Detour: The Cinema of Edgar G. Ulmer and the Experience of Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225912","wordCount":11438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This article offers an examination of the unusual career of Austrian-born filmmaker Edgar G. Ulmer. Several examples from the director's eclectic oeuvre are used to support the idea that exile is a vital strain in Ulmer's aesthetic and cultural sensibility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3b6423f-fac4-3cf2-9d89-bfa15e36cb1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3424519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"2059","pageStart":"1893","pagination":"pp. 1893-2059","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424519","wordCount":42850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Boschetti"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26a66fc5-46f7-32d0-ac59-06d1a6ea1473"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Field Theory Can Contribute to Knowledge of World Literary Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263819","wordCount":8146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Anglophone scholars with a postcolonial perspective have forcefully challenged eurocentric definitions of comparative literature and the limits of national frameworks. But this debate 'offers few methodological solutions to the pragmatic issue of how to make credible comparisons among radically different languages and literatures' (Emily Apter). Moreover, some have even rejected the very notion of comparison, impugning its association with nationalistic and imperialistic perspectives or its unsuitability for the study of historical, dynamic and multidimensional processes. This article offers a synthetic overview of the tools field theory provides for literature studies in a global perspective without sacrificing methodological rigour and empirical validation. It discusses the epistemological principles set out in The Craft of Sociology to address problems of comparison; the possibility of rational dialogue between different the oretical frameworks; the properties which make Bourdieu's model more complete than other approaches to literary phenomena; and finally, developments of field theory and issues raised by globalization.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Berthrong"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4145560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08820945"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88024563-9ba7-3862-b2ab-cf3ef9ed7217"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4145560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"buddchristud"}],"isPartOf":"Buddhist-Christian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1+3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Love, Lust, and Sex: A Christian Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4145560","wordCount":11656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Lynne Hanna","Roger D. Abrahams","N. Ross Crumrine","Robert Dirks","Renate Von Gizycki","Paul Heyer","Alan Shapiro","Yoshihiko Ikegami","Adrienne L. Kaeppler","Joann W. Kealiinohomoku","Gerhard Kubik","Roderyk Lange","Anya Peterson Royce","Jill Drayson Sweet","Stephen A. Wild"],"datePublished":"1979-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5e115c4-1356-3ac8-b0a8-d2e57dccfb7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2741929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Movements Toward Understanding Humans Through the Anthropological Study of Dance [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741929","wordCount":29897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"An attempt is made to identify the study of dance as a specialization and peripheral interest within each of the four fields of anthropology, in order to suggest how our understanding of Homo sapiens may be enhanced by dance study. The neglect, gestation, and emergence of the anthropological study of dance, its theoretical and methodological areas of consensus and disagreement, and some specific approaches and their strengths and limitations are surveyed. A theoretical orientation-or model-is then proposed which attempts to link various approaches which have been used in the anthropological study of dance. The orientation is applicable to the study of performance broadly conceived, e.g., to include ritual and play.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William S. Brockman"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f5f25fa-7ec8-34e5-99b5-b9c8cf88b790"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CURRENT JJ CHECKLIST (117)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598825","wordCount":7299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter K. Manning"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86ef84f4-497d-30bd-8bda-c879f193871d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"772","pageStart":"769","pagination":"pp. 769-772","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231258","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lorenzo Boyd"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3817898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67159bf5-534f-3d88-8e16-58987ad5d3b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3817898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Social Texts: Bodley 686 and the Politics of the Cook's Tale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3817898","wordCount":7652,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[45428,45495]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Blake Stimson"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8567c75f-bb6b-3401-95e1-4c8f1c37df86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43826246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Photography and God","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826246","wordCount":16431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"This essay takes as its starting point Paul Strand's call to synthesize a 'new religious impulse' to counter the theotechnical drive that was the main concern of his 1922 essay 'Photography and the New God'. 'Some may grind their teeth at such prose', Alan Trachtenberg once noted about Strand's call, while others have taken it to be a misguided Bergsonism, and others still have cast it as the first, vague reach for what would later emerge as a 'mawkish' romantic socialism. This paper risks a different tack: first, by working to take Strand's theological impulse seriously and on its own terms; second, by working to reconcile that impulse with his later political convictions and those of the larger critical, political tradition stemming from Hegel's foundational theory of the state as an 'actual God'; and, third, by considering the implications of such a theopolitical reconciliation for us now.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodney Harrison"],"datePublished":"2006-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/497673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f062dee-9c4c-3aff-ab50-fcbc2133a04c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/497673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Artefact of Colonial Desire?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/497673","wordCount":9511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This paper considers several areas of anthropological research which have yet to be drawn into conversation: Alfred Gells anthropological theory of art, the literature on collecting and museum studies and the colonial art histories of Nicholas Thomas and others, and the archaeology of colonialism in Australia. The implications of the nexus of these various areas of research are considered with reference to the archaeological study of Kimberley points in Australia. While these points have been understood by both archaeologists and antiquarians as the pinnacle of Australian Aboriginal stone working practices, this paper considers them as an artefact of colonial desire. Their captivating agency for latenineteenthcentury collectors largely resided in their mysterious method of manufacture, but even after this was understood they continued to enthral antiquarians and archaeologists, who have come to represent their manufacture as typical of Australian Aboriginal stone tool working despite its limited chronological and geographic distribution and its relationship to colonial trade. The acceptance of these objects, which essentially functioned as virtuoso tourist art, by colonial collectors and archaeologists as authentic ethnographic objects within a discourse which would normally be prejudiced against such items suggests that Aboriginal people engaged actively in this process of captivationindeed, that the agency of such virtuoso objects continued long after the lifetimes of their makers, as Gell suggested. This has wider implications for an understanding of both archaeology and colonial collecting and the relationship between objects and identity in settler societies and provides an opportunity to reflect on the usefulness of Gells work in colonial contexts.","subTitle":"Kimberley Points and the Technologies of Enchantment","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT STILLING"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b54807d1-4671-3a1f-b045-8e8bf47a3fe2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Image of Europe: Yinka Shonibare's Postcolonial Decadence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489062","wordCount":11095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"128","abstract":"In 1891 Oscar Wilde argued that \"Lying, the telling of beautiful untrue things, is the proper aim of art.\" A hundred years later, the Anglo-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare MBE takes up where Wilde left off, arguing that \"[t]o be an artist you have to be a good liar.\" This essay explores how Shonibare reinvents Wilde's antirealism for a globalized, postcolonial world. Building on Leela Gandhi's notion of \"interested autonomy,\" I argue that in works such as his 2001 photo series Dorian Gray, Shonibare turns to Wilde's aestheticism as a means of upending the relation between realism and politics found in Chinua Achebe's critique of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, rediscovering the disparate racial and sexual geographies at stake in Wilde's novel The Picture of Dorian Gray and in Albert Lewin's 1945 film version of it. Shonibare's post-colonial decadence, I argue, demonstrates how decadent aestheticism may become central to postcolonial imaginings of the real.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Cotkin"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4434f90-4e25-3a5d-83f4-99866f073fc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40642823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Hyping the Text\": Hypertext, Postmodernism, and the Historian","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642823","wordCount":6133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Hale","Richard Hawkins","Michael Partridge"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3698631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9486090-8ed2-3211-972d-b48beb9583e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3698631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"771","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-771","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"List of Publications on the Economic and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland Published in 2003","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3698631","wordCount":29348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Economic History Society","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan Schonig"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.40.1.0030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f700c7cf-b575-34db-9978-18f112f198c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.40.1.0030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Contingent Motion: Rethinking the \u201cWind in the Trees\u201d in Early Cinema and CGI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.40.1.0030","wordCount":13749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph R. McElrath, Jr."],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27745879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90205c06-449b-36c2-8504-b15153cfd54e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27745879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal1870"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism, 1870-1910","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Frank Norris: Early Posthumous Responses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27745879","wordCount":45374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victor Yuzefovich","Marina Kostalevsky"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":136.0,"pageEnd":"885","pageStart":"750","pagination":"pp. 750-885","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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I conclude with some cultural considerations for teaching a Net Generation of students about culture, art, and aesthetics in art education.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Anchor"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2505194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505194","wordCount":6467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane Hertel"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dcf63de-5132-379f-b5ee-462cf7553214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"617","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-617","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Sebald's first prose narrative, which adapts various texts by Franz Kafka, in order to explore how in each work the protagonist must re-negotiate his identity in a confrontation with his death, whether literally or metaphorically. Venice is never simply setting or backdrop to the action, emerging as emblematic of a cultural moment in which representation and reality have become inextricably entangled, and in which the human subject is unavoidably transformed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08838364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5eee64b-5ccb-3d25-86dd-c582392c1072"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4295895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"invitrcelldeve"}],"isPartOf":"In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Developmental & Cell Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295895","wordCount":4056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society for In Vitro Biology","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Debra Ann MacComb"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"797","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-797","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Wives for Old: Divorce and the Leisure-Class Marriage Market in Edith Wharton's The Custom of the Country","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928137","wordCount":13855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3077480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"264a3691-20fb-3046-b01d-faf26592b3b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3077480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":77.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Education - Educational resources","Information science - Coding theory","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3077480","wordCount":47014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5476","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"289","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3830936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":171.0,"pageEnd":"525","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-525","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"General Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830936","wordCount":83527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Kramer"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87e2a282-354b-3a87-a6c2-c20ec0396617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/854378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Mysteries of Animation: History, Analysis and Musical Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/854378","wordCount":12233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Tushnet"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4135692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8376609-ebb0-3ab6-bb4f-b33ddefc03c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4135692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"590","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-590","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Copy This Essay: How Fair Use Doctrine Harms Free Speech and How Copying Serves It","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4135692","wordCount":29698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":"Recent cases and scholarship have debated whether copyright law is consistent with the First Amendment. Much of the discussion has centered on copyright law's ability to suppress transformative, creative reuses of copyrighted works and on copyright's fair use doctrine as a mechanism to protect such transformative uses. This Essay argues that the increasing centrality of transformativeness to fair use has made it easier for copyright owners to control all instances of ordinary copying. Yet pure copying also serves valuable First Amendment purposes, both for audiences and, less obviously, for speakers, for whom copying often serves interests in self-expression, persuasion, and participation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARLY COLLIER","CAROLINE PALMER"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24855768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"741483181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0edcc1a-f5bd-3aba-a6b0-de01c13b859e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24855768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":360.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-vii, ix-x, 1-121, 123-247, 249-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DISCOVERING ANCIENT AND MODERN PRIMITIVES: THE TRAVEL JOURNALS OF MARIA CALLCOTT, 1827\u201328","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24855768","wordCount":264768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dana R. Chandler"],"datePublished":"2018-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02723433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46314299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb221fb6-639e-391a-af4d-dd34f1f91cbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26504432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publichistorian"}],"isPartOf":"The Public Historian","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Library science","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Lifting the Veil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504432","wordCount":6674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Council on Public History","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Tuskegee University\u2019s rich archival collections have remained hidden to the public for many years. To alleviate the problem, the University Archives focused on a multilevel process of digitization and public outreach. This paper focuses on Tuskegee\u2019s endeavors to digitize its large collection of photographic images, negatives, and audio media. The process of learning about proper equipment and techniques has propelled the archives into one of the top digitizing archives among HBCUs, receiving over 850,000 hits (45 percent from abroad) in seven years.","subTitle":"Digitizing Black Archives at Tuskegee University","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. Bernard Cohen","Katharine Strelsky"],"datePublished":"1958-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36a6513e-3b22-3092-ad1c-bfe8b64b3dca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-Third Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1958)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226934","wordCount":94383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/936602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6dcf444-5b39-3fc0-aefa-bc8506069146"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/936602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/936602","wordCount":6649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1383","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1845629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c2acff4-eba3-3e7f-9e4d-5769219f5c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1845629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"719","pageStart":"637","pagination":"pp. 637-719","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1845629","wordCount":48323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Rajchman"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77045132-307d-3ca1-9493-e240d2bd6e04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Lyotard's Underground Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779104","wordCount":7496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Hoelscher"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"733184e4-f54b-3318-9b09-66911a938eb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41148294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Angels of memory: photography and haunting in Guatemala City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41148294","wordCount":12835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"This article explores the relationship between historical memory, urban space, and photography by way of a case study: the place-specific public art of the Guatemalan photographer and human rights activist, Daniel Hern\u00e1ndez-Salazar. As one of a growing number of Latin American artists committed to combating the \"institutionalized forgetfulness\" of human rights violations throughout the hemisphere, Hern\u00e1ndez-Salazar deploys geographically-rich photographic installations to help his society remember its difficult past. The installations, known as Street Angel, are like ghosts haunting the graves of the murdered, fortresses of the powerful, bastions of the complicit. By shedding light on these ghostly angels, this article reveals the important role of photography, as a crucial vehicle of memory, in bearing witness to the unimaginable horrors that consumed much of the twentieth century, as well as that technology's limitations. It also shows how remembrances of those atrocities depend on urban space for their grounding, articulation, and maintenance. Finally, by probing the artistic impulse and political sensibility that created Guatemala City's angels of memory, it makes the case that, in the combustible political climate of post-war Central America, the work of remembering the past is not an antiquarian exercise: the labor of memory is a fundamental component of building a just society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1929-07-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25333016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ad80a2f-04f0-3d19-aed3-f1cd834c0fea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25333016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25333016","wordCount":83849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3574","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Yusoff"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b0669e3-cf58-3811-995c-ada64acca344"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Antarctic exposure: archives of the feeling body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251141","wordCount":9458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"This article examines attempts to capture and form knowledge about the Antarctic landscape through expeditionary photography and embodied practice. It begins with a visual piece. As an antidote to contemporary investment in heroic Antarctic narratives, Action Man, Antarctic Inertia takes the original 1970s special issue Antarctic Action Man on another kind of journey, restaging his adventures through the landscape. Concentrating on the excessive expenditure of explorers' accounts, as opposed to the heroic destinations of the original, this visual mapping considers nonproductive landscape encounters in order to explore other possibilities of staging history and geography. The written essay that forms the second part of this article concentrates on the anxieties of representation that emerge from the interplay between mark making and being marked, and the marks that fall beyond this visual register. Using the metaphor of light, which includes both the light cast on a photographic plate and the dubious physical light of the Antarctic landscape, I examine how this marker both constitutes a trace of history and a fleeting form of knowledge production. As a mode of representation, landscape photography simultaneously illuminates and obscures the histories of encounter with landscape. The argument proceeds by looking at how the photographic frame both arrests landscape and points to a subtle beyond (Barthes). Using narratives from the Heroic era (1890s-1910s) expeditions, I then consider how landscape exposure collides with photographic exposure to present other inhabitations that are in excess of the photograph. In these other narratives, the landscape writes through the body to disrupt the heroic narrative of a contained and purposeful body in the landscape. This Antarctic 'look back' ultimately points the way to new geographies of visual culture that expand understand ings of the Antarctic landscape. At the same time, by exceeding the visual, this approach provides the grounds for a renewed ethics of engagement with the ability of landscape to inscribe the explorer's body as he inscribes the surface of the continent through embodied journeys and representational practice. In conclusion, I argue for a reciprocal dialogue between landscape and vision, one that acknowledges that vision is entangled with pain, blindness and excess as much as with a clear sighting of encounter.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danny Hoffman"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7781f21-104a-35fc-a905-ba3ec223d1f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"975","pageStart":"949","pagination":"pp. 949-975","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Political science - Politics","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Violent Virtuosity: Visual Labor in West Africa's Mano River War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427075","wordCount":11278,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[90,175]],"Locations in B":[[62167,62266]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"In this essay, I argue that the Mano River War should be understood as a conflict to which the ubiquitous presence of digital media was crucial. This was a war structured by the economy of attention. To profit in this economy combatants and non-combatants were required to play to an audience that they knew was there, but often could only sense or apprehend in the most abstract way. The realities of constantly being available to be seen were crucial to understanding the spectacular performance of violence in this conflict.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Secord"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/343245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"279a0109-6dfa-3808-b6ad-2a743c878942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/343245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Botany on a Plate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/343245","wordCount":20730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":"Abstract In early nineteenth\u2010century Britain the use of pictures in introducing novices to the study of science was contentious, leading to debates over the ways in which words and images constituted knowledge and over the role of pleasure in intellectual pursuits. While recent studies have stressed visual representation as a critical element of science and considered its relation to the written word in conveying information, this essay explores the nineteenth\u2010century preoccupation with the mind and mental faculties in relation to corporeal responses to explain concerns over the role of images and the process of recognition. By considering illustration in this way, it argues that popular botany was defined by many expert naturalists as the means by which private individuals could best be encouraged to extend their aesthetic appreciation and love of plants to an active and participatory pursuit of science.","subTitle":"Pleasure and the Power of Pictures in Promoting Early Nineteenth\u2010Century Scientific Knowledge","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Finbarr Barry Flood"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"172b7f19-072c-3ddc-a9ac-c80d73403ad4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"659","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-659","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Between Cult and Culture: Bamiyan, Islamic Iconoclasm, and the Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177288","wordCount":18995,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[15104,15366]],"Locations in B":[[552,814]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"This article uses the recent controversy regarding the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas as a paradigm to challenge essentializing notions of an \"Islamic\" response to the image. Beginning with a history of premodern iconoclastic practice in the Islamic world, it explores the reception of the Bamiyan Buddhas in light of evidence for a complex range of responses to Buddhist and Hindu images in Afghanistan. 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In some situations, such as those he explores in short stories such as 'Kelly's Hall' and 'Among the Ruins', he offers positive portrayals of mechanized culture's ability to unify communities when that new technology is properly controlled, while in others, such as 'Foundry House', 'The Potato Gatherers', and 'Everything Neat and Tidy', he shows the debilitating effects of technology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2922099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2922099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Articles on American Literature Appearing in Current Periodicals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2922099","wordCount":7096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911307273"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da3d9ea6-5d63-3490-9ae8-9568dfc68be4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.8"}],"isPartOf":"Drawing Futures","keyphrase":["hodgetts fung","computer","artificial intelligence","tandem","convolutional neural","hsinming fung","sketch","human art","architectural","citta pulpa"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"205","pagination":"205-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Architecture and Architectural History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Protocols","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.8","wordCount":71008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Our world is saturated with data. 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Weldon"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3652370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee0f95a3-9c54-3623-bb36-56f56b75d00f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3652370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":248.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-205+207-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences 2004","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3652370","wordCount":158512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Ryan"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41287811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43bf315a-cdbc-3421-9758-79d061bee0a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41287811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In\/visible Men: Hurston, \"Sweat\" and Laundry Icons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41287811","wordCount":11028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25224055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba4b7e04-a638-3f35-a2e4-da3d043067b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25224055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Information science - Informetrics","Information science - Information management","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25224055","wordCount":2411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gavin Williams"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2013.37.2.113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c827f51-6774-3766-b63c-652a8d78ebd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2013.37.2.113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Voice of the Crowd: Futurism and the Politics of Noise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2013.37.2.113","wordCount":11384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Abstract In his 1913 manifesto \u201cL'arte dei rumori\u201d (The Art of Noises), Futurist painter Luigi Russolo exhorted readers to \u201cwalk across a great modern metropolis with ears more attentive than eyes.\u201d For Russolo, attentive listening to the urban environment enacted a visionary aurality: the city was a mine for \u201cnew\u201d noises, such as rumbling motors and jolting trams. However, Russolo's embrace of noise\u2014much like that of Futurist painter Umberto Boccioni and Futurist poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti\u2014was undeniably a product of its time and place. This article excavates the sounds of 1913 Milan as a crucial location for the noises of early Italian Futurism. Not only was this city the Futurists' base, but it also inflected their representations of noise both through its symbolic architectural sites (above all the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele) and the buzz of its human multitudes. In this latter respect, late-nineteenth-century positivist crowd psychology can provide an illuminating context because it shares with Futurism the notion of modern, urban crowd united by a collective unconscious\u2014one that could, moreover, be heard by the attentive listener on a city's streets. This article tracks this historical mode of listening from Russolo's manifesto until the reception of his first concert for an entire orchestra of newly wrought noise intoners\u2014his \u201cGran concerto per intonarumori,\u201d held at Milan's Teatro Dal Verme in 1914\u2014and explores what was, in this case, a slippery (but critical) distinction between \u201caudience\u201d and \u201ccrowd.\u201d Russolo's clamorously received premiere forced its listeners and performers to attend to off- (rather than on-) stage noises, thus raising still-vital questions about where to locate Futurism's noise, influence, and politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pablo Abend","Francis Harvey"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44202521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41566699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6e6232f-6db4-3318-90e8-353c4436666d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44202521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Maps as geomedial action spaces: considering the shift from logocentric to egocentric engagements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44202521","wordCount":9353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":"This paper considers some significant questions in geography and cognate fields about the roles of maps in the information age. Most maps are now digital products, offering immersive environments for user involvement. The increasingly networked digital distribution of geographic information in consumer-orientated cartographic representations leads to substantial changes how people individually and collaboratively experience and produce space and place. This article focuses on the ongoing metamorphosis arising through geobrowsing, the media-based flexible production of geographic knowledge through interactive maps. Drawing on work in media studies influenced by the so-called spatial turn\u2014the rediscovering of geography-related questions in the social sciences and humanities, after modernism's claimed prioritization of time and history (Soja in Postmodern Geographies. The reassertion of space in critical social theory, London, 1989; Jameson in Postmodernism, or, the cultural logic of late capitalism, Duke University Press, Durham, 1991)\u2014this paper develops a theoretical framework built on the dynamic networked geomedial action spaces concept to understand the changing roles of information age maps as imagined materialist spaces for the experience and production of space\u2014ultimately a medial turn. Following this concept, maps change from offering static and noninteractive frames of geographic reference for the production of space and place and as geomedia support a veritable infinity of interactive and mapbased activities. Geobrowsing facilitates some new modes of geographic interactions that move from logocentric engagements with static maps to egocentric dynamic interactions with code-based elements of geomedial action spaces. Google Earth and similar geomedia facilitate maps that become intrinsic to a growing number of social action spaces and alter the experience and production of space and place.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ihab Hassan"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Abstractions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464637","wordCount":5182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Ferng"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20532630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897651"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-215552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f6f1498-f5c6-30b3-a7b4-af0714980000"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20532630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20532630","wordCount":964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Leonardo","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-11-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1684574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88b8bb4f-594a-3004-b25d-da76415ced9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1684574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"832","pageStart":"781","pagination":"pp. 781-832","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1684574","wordCount":27883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4471","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"210","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Schwab"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3337b14-d37f-3687-8680-98f4fdb0be39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Mirror of Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389090","wordCount":8361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1614919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42936599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1614919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcellbiology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Cell Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"568a","pageStart":"483a","pagination":"pp. 483a-568a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Developmental & Cell Biology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1614919","wordCount":224959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert C. Dunnell"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20210077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01628003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcb8e883-87c1-3aca-bdc0-dfea008d6d56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20210077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"advarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Methodological Issues in Americanist Artifact Classification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20210077","wordCount":26173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Setina"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26180677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"426e8307-85bb-3a18-93d0-ca166d15dea8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26180677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"1112","pageStart":"1080","pagination":"pp. 1080-1112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Proust's Darkroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26180677","wordCount":13522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"131","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas B. Ellis"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83c60ea2-9bcc-308e-9c95-0e6b25d68fe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44645825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Of Gods and Devils: Differential Cognition and the Adaptive Illusions of Control","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44645825","wordCount":15073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4\/5","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Perceiving the lack of control over the natural and social spheres is psychologically averse. The resulting depression has an effect upon the human animal's inclusive fitness. In moments of despair and depression, sexual intercourse may be impossible. In order to restore a modicum of control, and thus libido, the human animal turns to religion. Religion provides compensatory, and thus adaptive illusions of control. It does this by first turning to the intentional stance and the presence of gods who may be socially manipulated to achieve a desired outcome. This is the nature of worship. Alternatively, religion employs the design stance and the presence of devils that may be mechanically compelled to withdraw. This is the nature of exorcism. Where the latter reflects the \"illusion of control,\" the former reflects the \"illusion of qualified control\" Both cognitive stances are in the service of promoting illusions of power amidst truly random circumstances.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Michel"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff6696d2-f7ff-34f2-96d9-f8b2c72a9a55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30161394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161394","wordCount":1971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arielle Zibrak"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2787b149-cf29-381d-8a48-2ed533c3ddd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Kissing a Photograph: Reproductive Panic in Kate Chopin and Thomas Hardy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.3.0355","wordCount":8882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Baldwin"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.106.1.0086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93c09a50-869b-3bed-aff4-6f1daae3ec4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/modelangrevi.106.1.0086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Thickness of Art: Paintings and Photographs in Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.106.1.0086","wordCount":6841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"The aim of this article is to show that Proust's \u2018c\u00e9l\u00e8bre jet d'eau d'Hubert Robert' is a strange hybrid: it is a three-dimensional object in a garden, a painting, and a photograph. Moreover, the referential convolutions of Proust's fountain narrative are compounded at its points of contact with the work of other writers, most notably Diderot. Proust's narrative also anticipates key developments in twentieth-century aesthetics, particularly with regard to mechanical reproduction. The article examines the \u2018definitive\u2019 version of Proust's description, a number of early (manuscript) versions, and other passages in A la recherche du temps perdu in which Robert's name occurs","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1924-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/911207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5c4512c-5a98-3995-b3e9-ffe594c8bcae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/911207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"xv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1924,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/911207","wordCount":21200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"971","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Blyn"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2f1fa8f-dede-340c-b2c6-d58e15f6e144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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At approximately the same time that Benjamin published this piece, his contemporary Alfred Stieglitz was concluding his own decade-long study of photography: a series of cloudscapes that highlighted the ungrounded character of the photographic image. This article provides an examination of Benjamin's and Stieglitz's respective attempts to develop an emphatically medial understanding of photography via the figure of the cloud. In perpetually drifting away from itself and harboring the potential to assume myriad forms, the cloud marks an uncontainable state of alterity and multiplicity, and therefore serves for Benjamin and Stieglitz as an apt figure for exploring the non-self-identical medium of photography itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.61.2.0291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0806a821-bf9f-3548-8e3f-d40c4aedfe99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.61.2.0291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"New and Notable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.61.2.0291","wordCount":9707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maureen Whalen"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9160f393-fe43-3325-bae5-4e4a53d5f1c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27949518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management","Education - Educational resources","Information science - Informetrics","Information science - Information resources","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"What's Wrong With This Picture? 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The article argues that, notwithstanding the declining print publication opportunities for art history monographs and the limited numbers of respected art history journals, art historians want to continue their love affair with print. It then concludes that art historians are jeopardizing the long-term vitality of their field by staying on the other side of the digital divide.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James M. 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Indeed, many traditions of optical media, including but not limited to that of China, have been subsumed into or allegedly superseded by\u2014and thus rendered invisible within\u2014contemporary \"global\" practices, which are simply those of the Euclidean tradition propagated broadly. Yet it would be difficult to sketch a \"global\" history of optical media in a single book, let alone a single article. Consequently, this article examines the development of light as a medium in China in order to understand how the Mohist epistemology of light and its media can be understood in contrast, connection, and comparison to the Euclidean framework of early optics and its subsequent developments, now presumed to be normative. This article thus seeks to expose the limitations of such paradigms, and moreover, to provoke revision of other narratives of light and its media before and beyond the Euclidean tradition, while attending to the methodology of \"postglobal\" art history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTONY GRIFFITHS","JEAN MICHEL MASSING","ALEKSANDRA KOUTNY","CHRISTOPHER WHITE","ASIA HAUT","SHEILA O'CONNELL","ALBERTO MILANO","RALPH HYDE","MARTIN HOPKINSON","ERNST VEGELIN","ZOE WHITLEY","STUART DURANT","CHRISTIAN R\u00dcMELIN","BARBARA BADER","TESSA SIDEY","PETER BLACK","ROBIN FRANCIS","KATE JARAM"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557541785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3675305a-0633-31ac-aad7-0af915fe59c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41826448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826448","wordCount":38732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1842814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cfcab58-3a5a-3fa0-a32b-81841c25ca08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1842814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":101.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1842814","wordCount":59772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u00f6ran Hermer\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213306"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ba62f4c-2525-30e7-b9eb-4fbd49dd9752"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23350754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iyyun"}],"isPartOf":"Iyyun: The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly \/ \u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05df: \u05e8\u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05df \u05e4\u05d9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"The Relevance of Aesthetics to Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350754","wordCount":12939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"S.H. Bergman Center for Philosophical Studies \/ \u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d6 \u05e9. \u05d4. \u05d1\u05e8\u05d2\u05de\u05df \u05dc\u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05e4\u05d9\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Luckhurst"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7589aeab-76ad-3543-9e98-a84dbedc6544"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Laboratories for Global Space-Time: Science-Fictionality and the World\u2019s Fairs, 1851-1939","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0385","wordCount":7905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"ABSTRACT This article examines the world\u2019s fair movement between The Great Exhibition of 1851 and The New York World\u2019s Fair of 1939, suggesting that these sites are science-fictional spaces that expose their mass audiences to forms of space-time compression that enable early figurations of globalization. Fair sites embody specific forms of economic transfer and exchange that anticipate dreams of the borderless flows of capital in some current versions of globalization theory. This \u201csfnal\u201d condition of the world\u2019s-fair site is not just in the futuristic displays of techno-scientific \u201cprogress,\u201d which became an insistent form of spectacle in the world\u2019s fair, but also in the spatialization of developmental histories, reading conceptions of modernity remorselessly through hierarchies of racial \u201cprogress\u201d or spectacles of anachronistic \u201carrest\u201d or degenerative \u201cdecline.\u201d Long before the famous Futurama of 1939 New York, world\u2019s fairs were one of the first spaces in which large populations experienced deliberate and sustained disadjustment in time within a bounded zone, an early sense of immersion in the \u201cscience-fictional.\u201d","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1293133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0369d97-3fe7-3a86-959e-8a6316362421"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1293133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1293133","wordCount":17240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Verdi"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"757cb766-d226-3639-8bba-20f37174e5eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23182477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Symbolic Body and the Rhetoric of Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182477","wordCount":8450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"In this article I will discuss the human body, both physical and social, as an instrument of political and aesthetic power and will analyze the processes of its social construction, starting with the notion of Corpus Mysticum Christi as the metaphoric organizational structure of consensus to power. From the Low Middle Ages to the present day, we will observe how the treatment of the body has evolved and how present-day show business and politics make use of charisma, from typically conceived 'concentrated stardom' to a conception of 'diffused stardom'. Both models are given aesthetic significance and rhetorical amplification, thus resulting in images of power and a means of social control. The conclusion of the article examines how power relations are currently being affected in a social environment that is highly influenced by the media and how, no matter which era is being discussed, the existence of the social body still depends on the physical body.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26442048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"108d9e88-d6a7-3b93-a127-d77abe24dfd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26442048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"xxvi","pageStart":"viii","pagination":"pp. viii-xxiv, xxvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26442048","wordCount":12368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley V. Kleppinger"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/inditheorevi.33.1-2.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02718022"},{"name":"oclc","value":"639856574"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffae8899-18cb-3a74-9b0b-4a6dc5048f19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/inditheorevi.33.1-2.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inditheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Theory Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Practical and Philosophical Reflections Regarding Aural Skills Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/inditheorevi.33.1-2.06","wordCount":9728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"Department of Music Theory, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Niamh O'Sullivan"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07913540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b37dbe2e-ac35-371a-b757-7729e971c1dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20492997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisartsreviyear"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Arts Review Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painters and Illustrators Aloysius O'Kelly and Vincent Van Gogh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20492997","wordCount":3689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Irish Arts Review","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7171552a-9264-3852-a4f6-606e4dfd3665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/949445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Archive, Archive, Archive!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564523","wordCount":5805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"119","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig Hickman"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04eac257-d289-32e5-a868-723982c8e165"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Signal to Noise: A Computer-Based Artist's Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777120","wordCount":3979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1936-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eba7389-7ce2-3e02-875d-1787399d9542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":151.0,"pageEnd":"589","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439, 441-589","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Meetings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080340","wordCount":45810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert D. Bell"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1587052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03071243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49b0f827-d41b-3c8a-b977-7c4df7497a07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1587052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gardenhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Garden History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Archaeology and the Rococo Garden: The Restoration at Painswick House, Gloucestershire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1587052","wordCount":9307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Garden History Society","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Excavations by Bath Archaeological Trust at Painswick House between 1988 and 1991 located garden features and structures, which had been illustrated by Thomas Robins in 1748 but were otherwise virtually undocumented. The resulting archaeological evidence made a major contribution to the accurate restoration of the rococo garden.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Tambling"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.111.3.0858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c581e4f-4699-39c6-958d-3bfd6b1baaa6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/modelangrevi.111.3.0858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"860","pageStart":"858","pagination":"pp. 858-860","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.111.3.0858","wordCount":1550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula Rabinowitz"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"838ed378-463f-3f28-b747-11a755d1ae03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"DOMESTIC LABOR: FILM NOIR, PROLETARIAN LITERATURE, AND BLACK WOMEN'S FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286030","wordCount":10287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Bloomer"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29543830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd606c98-5e0a-3c78-9e78-31fdcf2ec861"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29543830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"... and \"venustas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29543830","wordCount":8430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[57855,57918]],"Locations in B":[[41257,41318]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"25","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Lempert"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce76d322-b513-3a39-b446-2c6e815dcd3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Imitation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049581","wordCount":9884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"\"Imitation\" in contemporary anthropology comprises numerous topics whose relations have seldom been explored. In surveying mimetic phenomena that range from television parodies to postural mirroring, I offer reflections designed to stimulate exploration of \"mimetic practice.\" The review encourages work at the nexus of sociocultural and linguistic anthropology, for without appreciating the communicative specificities of mimetic practice, one can neither narrate nor theorize adequately what mimesis does, and thus is. 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Once social technology allows the abstraction of the individual from the performance, machine technology can complete the abstraction process. This process transforms traditional aesthetic definitions of what constitutes live musical experience: the relationship of the performer to the audience, to his sound and aura, to other musicians making music together, to his ears and environment, and to time. The discussion of musical time illustrates how aesthetics can function as a theory of experience rooted within a symbolic universe. Further, as the technological symbolic universe becomes dominant, we can observe a parallel shift in aesthetic theories.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA GARCIA MORENO"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ddf8321-7246-37f7-a71e-5185d5719c94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Troubled Materiality\": The Installations of Doris Salcedo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030626","wordCount":8172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"In her early installations, contemporary Colombian sculptor Doris Salcedo re-signifies damaged domestic objects in ways that trigger processes of memory and mourning. They thus acquire the potential to perform profanatory acts, which Giorgio Agamben understands as a way of returning things to human use and potentiality in our time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raphael Samuel"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03092984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60812507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005263080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4288292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histwork"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Methods of History Workshop: A Reply","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288292","wordCount":9700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asbj\u00f8rn Gr\u00f8nstad"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a0e787a-b736-305e-9f65-f53623562672"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Abbas Kiarostami's Shirin and the Aesthetics of Ethical Intimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777860","wordCount":6027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noah Isenberg","Walter Benjamin"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ca93182-f9a0-398f-af71-0e7d564b9097"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of Walter Benjamin in the Age of Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827791","wordCount":14074,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19377,19658]],"Locations in B":[[55486,55765]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"83","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Griffin"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Text in Motion: Eighteenth-Century \"Roxanas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029979","wordCount":9223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shoshana Felman"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eecfc4dd-3ed7-3644-9d42-3726b5838cba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Benjamin's Silence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344200","wordCount":15594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Felix Frankfurter"],"datePublished":"1931-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1331296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f632ba8-985e-3d16-b198-bda6a8dbf83c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1331296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Mr. Justice Brandeis and the Constitution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1331296","wordCount":36785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zhange Ni"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43664520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50065227"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002256062"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddd8a50e-524b-386e-b44f-98f4fb361f22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43664520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"STRANGE PARADISE: WRESTLING WITH THE GOLEM AND DOUBLE IDOLATRY IN CYNTHIA OZICK'S \"PUTTERMESSER PAPERS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43664520","wordCount":9542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This article reads the stories of the paradise and the golem in Cynthia Ozick's novel Puttermesser Papers. I argue that these two intertwined stories, the dystopian Utopia of the paradise and the birth and death of the golem, encapsulate the author's endeavour to wrestle with the idolatry of aesthetic culture and that of pagan nature. From her rather idiosyncratic perspective of anti-idolatry, Ozick challenges the transcendent claims of the modern Western cult of literature\/art in revealing the utopia of literary imagination as ultimately dystopian on the one hand, while on the other, endeavours to reconfigure the relationship between Jewish monotheism and its pagan other by narrating the story of the golem with much ambiguities and ambivalence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tollof Nelson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"030d2046-ae5f-3f66-bdce-f4e03ae554a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Passing Time in Intercultural Cinema: The Exilic Experience of the Time-Passer in Atom Egoyan's Calendar (1993)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685623","wordCount":6672,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42542,42684]],"Locations in B":[[32810,32942]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilles Bibeau"],"datePublished":"1995-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc5923a9-4d19-3cf9-b2e5-c9963bb2ca7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/645988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"628","pageStart":"626","pagination":"pp. 626-628","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645988","wordCount":2970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEVIN CHABOT"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26875654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfb43b32-cf50-3945-9585-1fccff8aa714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26875654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"QUEER SPECTRALITIES AND UNTIMELY SUBJECTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26875654","wordCount":9836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Toronto Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Queer Ghost Hunters (Stu Maddux, 2016\u2013) est une s\u00e9rie Web de production ind\u00e9pendante, diffus\u00e9e sur YouTube, dans laquelle des enqu\u00eateurs paranormaux queers cherchent \u00e0 communiquer avec des fant\u00f4mes queers du pass\u00e9. La s\u00e9rie met en sc\u00e8ne une intervention dans une \u00e9mission de t\u00e9l\u00e9r\u00e9alit\u00e9 paranormale, dans laquelle le manque de contenu queer dans les \u00e9missions populaires comme SOS Fant\u00f4mes est critiqu\u00e9. Malgr\u00e9 des enqu\u00eates de routine dans les prisons et les asiles psychiatriques, lieux traditionnels d\u2019oppression pour les personnes queers, les fant\u00f4mes queers ne sont pas recherch\u00e9s dans la t\u00e9l\u00e9r\u00e9alit\u00e9 paranormale moderne, ce qui fait que l\u2019histoire des personnes queers et l\u2019injustice dont elles sont victimes demeurent invisibles. Queer Ghost Hunters a pour but de rem\u00e9dier \u00e0 cette invisibilit\u00e9 en tentant de communiquer avec des fant\u00f4mes queers et de r\u00e9v\u00e9ler le pass\u00e9 oubli\u00e9. L\u2019auteur affirme ici que Queer Ghost Hunters utilise la s\u00e9ance de spiritisme comme m\u00e9thodologie historiographique mettant en lumi\u00e8re la pr\u00e9sence fantomatique du pass\u00e9 absent. L\u2019\u00e9mission rejette la masculinit\u00e9 technophile affich\u00e9e dans des \u00e9missions comme SOS Fant\u00f4mes au profit d\u2019une rencontre affective avec le spectral. Ce faisant, Queer Ghost Hunters r\u00e9siste \u00e0 une conception lin\u00e9aire du temps comme \u00e9tant associ\u00e9 au progr\u00e8s, \u00e9tablissant le lien entre les \u00e9conomies temporelles du fant\u00f4me et du queer \u2014 qui rejettent de part et d\u2019autre la stabilit\u00e9 de la progression lin\u00e9aire, s\u00e9quentielle en faveur d\u2019un flux itin\u00e9rant instaur\u00e9 par la simultan\u00e9it\u00e9 du pass\u00e9, du pr\u00e9sent et du futur. Queer Ghost Hunters (Stu Maddux, 2016-) in an independently-produced YouTube web series in which queer paranormal investigators set out to contact queer ghosts of the past. The show stages an intervention within the paranormal reality television genre, critiquing the lack of queer content in popular shows such as Ghost Hunters. Despite the routine investigations of prisons and mental asylums, sites that have historically functioned to oppress queer people, queer ghosts are not sought after in mainstream pa\u00adranormal reality TV, thereby rendering queer history and injustice invisible. Queer Ghost Hunters aims to rectify this invisibility by attempting to contact queer ghosts and revealing the presence of lost pasts. This article argues that Queer Ghost Hunters employs the seance as a queered historiographical methodology that emphasizes the haunted presence of absent histories. The show rejects the technophilic masculinity on display in shows like Ghost Hunters in favour of an affective encounter with the spectral. In so doing, Queer Ghost Hunters resists a linear conception of time as progress, linking the temporal economies of the ghost and the queer\u2014each rejecting the stability of linear, sequential progression in favour of an itinerant flow infused by a simultaneity of past, present, and future.","subTitle":"QUEER GHOST HUNTERS<\/em> AND PARANORMAL REALITY TELEVISION","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Hake"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7fbc516-43b1-3961-8c8c-cc6e2ceda351"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Girls and Crisis - The Other Side of Diversion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488136","wordCount":7991,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[51516,51705]],"Locations in B":[[19567,19754]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Britt"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/648526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34a08c16-11af-3da0-ad16-ae08bb068831"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/648526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Schmittian Messiah in Agamben's The Time That Remains<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/648526","wordCount":11490,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52625,52815]],"Locations in B":[[60667,60857]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Carrier"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2678030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Art Museums, Old Paintings, and Our Knowledge of the Past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678030","wordCount":10694,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14291,14384]],"Locations in B":[[44716,44809]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Art museums frequently remove old paintings from their original settings. In the process, the context of these works of art changes dramatically. Do museums then preserve works of art? To answer this question, I consider an imaginary painting, The Travels and Tribulations of Piero's Baptism of Christ, depicting the history of display of Piero della Francesca's Baptism of Christ. This example suggests that how Piero's painting is seen does depend upon its setting. According to the Intentionalist, such changes in context have no real influence upon the meaning of Piero's painting, and consequently museums can be said to preserve works of art. According to the Skeptic, if such changes are drastic enough, we can no longer identify the picture's original meaning, and museums thus fail to preserve works of art. Skepticism deserves attention, for such varied influential commentators as Theodore Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Maurice Blanchot, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Martin Heidegger, Hans Sedlmayr, and Paul Valery hold this pessimistic view of museums. I develop the debate between the Intentionalist and the Skeptic. Ultimately skepticism is indefensible, I argue, because it fails to take account of the continuities in the history of art's display. But Intentionalism is also deficient because it is ahistorical. In presenting the history of Piero's painting, The Travels and Tribulations of Piero's Baptism of Christ shows that we can re-identify the original significance of Piero's work and the recognizable continuities that obtain through its changes. It thus makes sense to claim that at least in certain circumstances art museums can preserve works of art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Schechner","Timothy K. Beal","William E. Deal","Talia Rodgers","Claire L'Enfant","Judith Butler","Marvin Carlson","Tracy C. Davis","David Savran","Shannon Jackson","Branislav Jakovljevic","Jill Dolan","Phillip Zarrilli","W. B. Worthen","Joseph Roach","Peggy Phelan"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c937716f-8d38-39b0-8a8f-3ec3fa402ef2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25599451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"TDR Comment: Concerning \"Theory for Performance Studies\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599451","wordCount":25404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"In 2007, Routledge published \"Theory for Performance Studies\" as part of its Theory 4 series, listing Philip Auslander as author. When, in August, The Chronicle of Higher Education revealed that much of the book was lifted word-for-word from the template for the series, Theory for Religious Studies by Timothy K. Beal and William E. Deal, TDR editor Richard Schechner convened via email and phone conversations a \"TDR Forum,\" asking leaders in the field to respond to the book and the series. Schechner and other respondents address issues of plagiarism, corporate takeovers of academic publishing, and the dumbing down of performance studies, asking why a notable scholar such as Auslander would undertake such an egregious piece of \"scholarship.\" Deal and Beal answer some questions put to them by Schechner, and Routledge's Claire L'Enfant and Talia Rodgers offer their perspectives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER PARSHALL"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"649595715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02c1fdd0-6850-3c40-a267-22d6b92fcdd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction: The Modern Historiography of Early Printmaking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622512","wordCount":4935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malte Hagener"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46msnh.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053569610"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9944749f-edd4-3677-abfc-886473d3afd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46msnh.6"}],"isPartOf":"Moving Forward, Looking Back","keyphrase":["cinema","ruttmann","industry","film industry","walter ruttmann","hans richter","filmmaking","film avant","commercial","joris ivens"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"41","pagination":"41-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Dialectics of Self-Conception \u2013 Film Avant-garde and Industry Around 1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46msnh.6","wordCount":16778,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41799,41969]],"Locations in B":[[49694,49864]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The avant-garde was \u2013 by the mid- to late-1920s \u2013 theoretically and practically well on its way toward aMedienverbund<\/em>which can be conceptualised as a media offensive in keeping with the avant-garde motto of converting art into life and life into art.\u00b2 There was no doubt that producing ground-breaking and innovative films was simply not enough, and that a concerted effort of publication, distribution, production, teaching, lecturing, exhibiting and networking was needed in order to create and win over a public toward their aims. One of the problems at the time was, as we shall see, that whereas there","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C\u0103lin-Andrei Mih\u0103ilescu"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaff8831-4a91-3972-b099-a6af28da0d03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44366958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"RITUAL AT THE BIRTH OF KITSCH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366958","wordCount":9446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19097,19467]],"Locations in B":[[15159,15529]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42580525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"831cd7dc-cb69-347a-9759-62ad9913f639"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42580525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42580525","wordCount":9595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"208","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"333d122a-ebea-331f-91a8-b92f27138635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30045157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":115.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7, 9, 11-13, 15-65, 67-112, 133-135, 137-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The American Philosophical Association Pacific Division: Seventy-Ninth Annual Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045157","wordCount":28250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Philosophical Association","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jorge Salessi"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe72a9c5-3896-3064-8999-3512ed1f2d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3704350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Argentine Dissemination of Homosexuality, 1890-1914","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3704350","wordCount":14120,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20208,20421]],"Locations in B":[[63698,63919]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Wyman McCarty"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e10ed8bb-8630-3f3b-9601-58bb27423fa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"776","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-776","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Good Readers and Good Liberals: Nabokov's Aesthetic Liberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571696","wordCount":10872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This article offers an interpretation of Vladimir Nabokov's unique contribution to political theory as seen primarily through the lens of his novel Invitation to a Beheading. Although most frequently interpreted as an indictment of totalitarianism, the novel depicts a form of cruelty practiced not only by totalitarians, but also by the rulers and citizens of milder political orders, including liberalism. The novel suggests that such cruelty is more insidious than that familiar to readers of dystopian novels precisely because of its universality. This article demonstrates that Nabokov's contribution to liberalism may be found in the surprising coherence between his aesthetic principles and his art, both of which critique the imposition of \"general ideas\" on either persons or books. What emerges is a picture of aesthetic liberalism in which Nabokov's model for the ideal liberal citizen is neither the sensitive artist nor the apolitical aesthete, but rather the careful reader.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward N. Schelb"],"datePublished":"2016-03-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.18.1.0081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646892547"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011202778"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71f13cc7-afe2-38ae-9ca0-e04b4d5f81d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/intelitestud.18.1.0081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Embalmed in the Camera's Glowing Formaldehyde: On John Yau's Hollywood Asians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.18.1.0081","wordCount":5413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"The poetry of John Yau has examined identity and exile through complex portraits of pop culture icons. His portraits of Peter Lorre as Mr. Moto draw upon postmodern techniques from the visual arts, particularly the aesthetic strategies of Jasper Johns, and his poetic experiments embody the thematics of interior exile and displacement in dense surrealist texts. His dominant strategy is to undermine representation in ways similar to both philosophies of deconstruction and postmodern aesthetics, but without losing sight of the cultural politics of ethnicity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Lowood","Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Katalin Hark\u00e1nyi","Patrick Harshbarger","Roger Launius","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7414cf67-7f69-3080-8e7d-298d49f50b7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":167.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1995)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106997","wordCount":101352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Laird"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf84571c-6095-373b-88b3-2e5d9d2fc61b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40327307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Musical Hunger: A Philosophical Testimonial of Miseducation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40327307","wordCount":7847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"Reflecting upon Simone Weil's conception of beauty as food, this essay proposes musical hunger as a metaphoric way of understanding a particular species of u cultural miseducation\" as conceived by Jane Roland Martin, that disadvantages children musically and perhaps therefore also spiritually. It examines such musical miseducation with regard to an ethical conception of educational achievement as children's growing capacities and responsibility for learning to love, survive, and thrive despite their troubles, especially their mothers' absence, before narrating at length an educational autobiography of musical hunger and posing questions about formal and informal secular educative possibilities for musical nourishment","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie Gottlieb"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9fdd4b2-3ed5-34d3-933d-6a18adaf465e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30036369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Marketing of Megalomania: Celebrity, Consumption and the Development of Political Technology in the British Union of Fascists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30036369","wordCount":11014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This article offers a reassessment of British fascist politics during the 1930s by shifting the empirical focus away from area studies and investigations of policy and ideology to the reading of the movement's visual culture, its relations with the media, and its development of a distinctive material culture and innovative political technologies. It seeks to place the BUF within its own national and metropolitan context by adopting an approach informed by cultural history to extremist politics in the 1930s. Critical discourses about British fascism appropriated the language of popular culture to describe and understand the phenomenon of the BUF. The movement was clearly not to be understood only as the next phase in the history of party formation, and thus the language of high politics was either inappropriate or insufficient to conceptualize the movement. Instead, the BUF seemed to represent a merger between a politics of provocation and the new lexicon of cinema and celebrity, a protean movement that blurred the lines between high politics and popular culture. Mosley was described as a dog track promoter, a pantomime character and a swashbuckling movie star. His meetings rivalled the cinema, and his followers were figured as 'fans'. This examination of the BUF's cultural production and cultural responses to the movement invites us to problematize the easy dichotomy between left-wing modernism and extreme-right anti-modernism, and to ponder whether the BUF represented political innovation despite political failure.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1926-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37e5cca0-1a3c-34b5-aa4c-344eb0d8e497"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1926,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"October Meeting, 1926. Charles William Eliot; William Sturgis Bigelow; Three Plymouth Portraits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080195","wordCount":8647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARC JAMES L\u00c9GER"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f97d0e5-6f8e-3a9c-b04c-edc5a3abf39f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SAD BUNNY: Vincent Gallo and The Melancholia of Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408472","wordCount":8659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"Cet article examine deux films r\u00e9alis\u00e9s par le cin\u00e9aste ind\u00e9pendant Vincent Gallo \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de la th\u00e9orie queer et de l'analyse des r\u00f4les sexuels. La fonction du masochisme masculin chez Gallo s'articule selon un version h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuelle du queer, ce qui permet de rajeunir le cool contre-culturel et de distinguer l\u0153uvre de Gallo de celles des r\u00e9alisateurs lib\u00e9raux grand public. Nous utilisons le model sociologique de production culturelle de Pierre Bourdieu pour d\u00e9velopper l'id\u00e9e du cin\u00e9ma \u00ab branch\u00e9 \u00bb et expliquer la d\u00e9centralisation subjective, la thanatophilie et la traumatophilie contemporaines. La psychanalyse et la th\u00e9orie queer s'amalgament \u00e0 cette lecture sociologique pour explorer les politiques culturelles de Buffalo 66 et The Brown Bunny de Gallo.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendy Bellion"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"138b8f87-9d42-3660-8ae9-f62594e1247a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 18-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Illusion and Allusion: Charles Willson Peale's \"Staircase Group\" at the Columbianum Exhibition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109434","wordCount":11600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARK ANDERSON"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342489"},{"name":"oclc","value":"493260789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-203474"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13d6dc94-2a16-310f-bc8c-230f16d97964"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41510930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mech"}],"isPartOf":"Mechademia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Apparitions of \u2018Freedom\u2019 (the Word)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48616388","wordCount":7533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"Derrida thematises his writing through a change of perspective which moves from very detailed examination of an argument to more general statements. This paper is a consideration of how Derrida anchors his close attention to the detail of an argument in a wider philosophical-historical and indeed social framework. In this paper, the word in question is \u2018freedom\u2019, discussed with the philosopher and psychoanalyst Elisabeth Roudinesco; this paper moves back chronologically to Force of Law, and finally to a passage in Of Grammatology to demonstrate that in Derrida\u2019s work from early to late there is a web of reflection about freedom.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Boli"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc8340f1-4775-38e3-bec4-be34574b5c4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"796","pageStart":"794","pagination":"pp. 794-796","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231270","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luca Cottini"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44983604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709751"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdcf62bd-7e86-384f-99b2-e9a5fada7d2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44983604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"488","pagination":"pp. 488-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Palazzeschi's \u201cLa passeggiata\u201d and the Urban Miniatures of the Modern World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44983604","wordCount":10602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":"This essay examines miniature figures and modes of writing in Italian culture at the turn of the 20th century, starting from the experimental urban vision of Palazzeschi's poem \"La passeggiata\" (1913). While reconstructing the implications of Palazzeschi's micro-scale thinking vis-\u00e0-vis the broader cultural history of miniatures (as expressed throughout the centuries in illuminations, painting, portraiture, and toy manufacture), this article relates the poet's construction of a mini city-world to contemporary forms of urban miniaturizations: in European Modernist art (as expressed in Baudelaire, Rilke, Kafka, photography, and cinema) and in the Italian literature of the early industrial age (in the toy cities designed in De Amicis' expositional narratives or in the archetypical wonderland of Collodi's paese dei balocchi). Palazzesch's mise en scene of the metropolis as a humorous micro-theater defines an ambivalent image of Italian industrialization, connected to infancy, as a site of thrill and loss. At the same time, Palazzeschi's playful miniaturization of the present illuminates other similar reductions and constructions of the modern world on a small-scale: in children's magazines (starting with Il giornalino della domenica and Il corriere dei piccoli), in Second Futurism (after Balla and Depero's 1915 manifesto on the \"Futurist Reconstruction of the Universe\"), in modernist architecture, and in post-WWII urban literature (as expressed in the work of Italo Calvino).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Abramovitch Krejn","Christian von Borries","John Cage","Andrew Culver","John Tilbury","Paul de Marinis","Robert Ashley","Henning Christiansen","Alvin Lucier","Peter Cusack","Shelley Hirsch","Jerry Hunt","Michael Schell","Frieder Butzmann","Michael Snow"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12eadde-4e9b-385c-8778-3f8ef2cf8548"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 64-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Ghosts and Monsters\": Contributors' Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513403","wordCount":10722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lydia H. 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Bohrer"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0f7c0cd-3848-3fb1-a50e-3c7bb8c75d93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"336","pagination":"pp. 336-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Inventing Assyria: Exoticism and Reception in Nineteenth-Century England and France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051236","wordCount":18994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"Using aspects of postcolonial and reception theory, this article explores how mid-nineteenth-century France and England responded to the sudden rediscovery of ancient Assyrian artifacts. The conception of Assyria, exemplified in the paintings of John Martin and Eug\u00e8ne Delacroix, before the discoveries was variously transformed and disrupted in the different institutional, critical, social, and political situations of France and England during and directly after the discoveries. The result was a more complex and hybrid range of artistic representations of Assyria, in which judgments of aesthetic value, historical veracity, and gender identities were both restated and contested.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann W. Astell"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd5fa5a5-fdaf-335f-b7cd-2a565bfd9b9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nietzsche, Chaucer, and the Sacrifice of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094294","wordCount":8479,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16850,16906]],"Locations in B":[[51745,51802]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shyamkrishna Balganesh"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23364851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44197618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-25383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e80ebd4-dbee-3d38-a378-296aaf458dc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23364851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"THE NORMATIVITY OF COPYING IN COPYRIGHT LAW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23364851","wordCount":33565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University School of Law","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"Not all copying constitutes copyright infringement. Quite independent of fair use, copyright law requires that an act of copying be qualitatively and quantitatively significant enough\u2014or \"substantially similar\"\u2014for it to be actionable. Originating in the nineteenth century, and entirely the creation of courts, copyright's requirement of \"substantial similarity\" has thus far received little attention as an independently meaningful normative dimension of the copyright entitlement. This Article offers a novel theory for copyright's substantial-similarity requirement by placing it firmly at the center of the institution and its various goals and purposes. As a common-law-style device that mirrors the functioning of other areas of private law, such as tort law, substantial similarity remains an unappreciated source of flexibility and pluralism in copyright law. It allows courts to modulate the copyright entitlement's operational robustness by altering the amount of exclusivity that a work obtains, based on different criteria, and thereby introduces \"thickness\" as an altogether new dimension of the entitlement. It also renders the adjudication of copyright infringement overtly pluralistic by sequencing the introduction of incommensurable values into the inquiry in a particular, reasoned order. As a mechanism of conceptual sequencing\u2014a multicriterion decision-making process long known to the common law\u2014substantial similarity allows copyright law to affirm both utilitarian and personality-based considerations, while prioritizing the former over the latter systemically. Viewing copyright law through the lens of substantial similarity sheds new light on the compatibility of the institution's goals and purposes, copyright's structure as a \"property\" right, and the role of courts within its overall scheme.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie McBride"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20798534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1649217X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6571b70e-9985-3e81-87be-d53a30f652fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20798534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisartsrevi2002"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Arts Review (2002-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Showcase","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20798534","wordCount":1873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Irish Arts Review","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Schmalenberger"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25433806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02763605"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810536"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235625"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25433806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacmusiresej"}],"isPartOf":"Black Music Research Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology"],"title":"\"Visible Memory, Visual Method\": Objectivity and the Photographic Archives of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23079012","wordCount":8253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Dalton"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"664ac187-fa6d-3cf9-a6e2-cea67dd5a98a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3648935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Creativity, Habit, and the Social Products of Creative Action: Revising Joas, Incorporating Bourdieu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648935","wordCount":11603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Hans Joas's The Creativity of Action (1996) posits that conceiving of all action as fundamentally creative would overcome problems inherent in rational and normative theories of action and would provide an alternative basis for action-based theories of macrosociological phenomena. Joas conceives of creativity as a response to the frustration of \"prereflective aspirations,\" which necessitates innovative adjustment to reestablish habitual intentions. This conceptualization creates an unsupportable duality between habitual action and creativity that neglects other possible sources of creative action, including habit itself. Combining strengths from Bourdieu's concept of habitus, creativity can be redefined as the necessary adaption of habitual practices to specific contexts of action. Creative action continually introduces novel possibilities in practical action and provokes a variety of social responses to its products. This revised concept of creativity overcomes the dichotomy presented by Joas, identifies a microsocial source of innovation in creative action, and calls attention to patterns of creative authority in society at large.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Wicke"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e37b74ee-baea-3db8-bb82-d2bde9f38576"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernity Must Advertise: Aura, Desire, and Decolonization in Joyce","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598779","wordCount":9290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"This essay's largest claim is for the complex integration of mass culture with modernism, where neither partner in the dialectical relationship is reduced to a monolithic opposite or \"other.\" Arguing that mass culture and media across disparate forms intertwine with modernist literature as with all the cultural practices and modes of modernity, it advances the notion that the \"great divide\" posited between a supposedly \"high\" or autonomous literature and its shadow partner, mass culture, breaks down when the dynamic of modernity is recognized as an immanently mass-cultural one. The essay's title, \"modernity must advertise,\" signals in its play on words just how intimate and how inevitable the pairing must be. Advertising stands in for mass culture as its synecdoche and calling card; a symbolic currency circulated through culture by all the means available to mass media, advertising's circuit announces itself\u2014the word \"advertisement\" originates in \"avertissement\" or \"announcement\"\u2014through aesthetic forms shared with literature and visual art. James Joyce's Ulysses is not only the specimen case of this dialectic informing modernism, but also its singular messenger: the book's revolutionary aesthetic emerges from that nexus. While Joyce laces his book with mass-cultural references from Tit Bits to popular songs and posters, just as he installs Leopold Bloom in a career as an advertising middleman, mass culture inscribes Ulysses far beyond surface references or mere context. Instead, mass culture and its modes of consumption are enlisted as the engines of transformation in a revolutionary transubstantiation of modern language, thought, and life, the active manifestation of a modernist commons. Ulysses allows us to see the politics of its novel aesthetic form as a luminous advertisement for an alternative modernity performed by its words, one with the power to posit a new world as it unmakes the present world. Joyce's epic novel makes manifest, or announces, what its literary work or labor performs through the ineluctable dynamic of social reading it borrows from mass culture in all its myriad forms: the advertisement of a modernity that inheres in and is inseparable from the act, and the agency, of reading\u2014an advertisement for a future brought into being by its readers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1942-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e53a7bf4-f699-390f-88ea-dab9b2082405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25691571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":108.0,"pageEnd":"H418","pageStart":"H2","pagination":"pp. H2-H89, H399-H418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[Handbook]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691571","wordCount":56185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Michele Ford"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c41beb0a-bd61-33af-af28-05521d03c51a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Are We To Be Forever Trapped Between the Two? The Internet, Modernity, and Postmodernity in the Early 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250007","wordCount":7915,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6596,6875]],"Locations in B":[[21534,21813]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Social Thought and Research","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Social theory has traditionally argued that the modern and the postmodern are chronologically ordered (that is, the postmodern comes after the modern) and mutually exclusive. I find, however, that contemporary American society is full of elements of both the modern\/industrial and the postmodern\/postindustrial. The Internet serves as an example of one social site in which these two concepts are in constant contact and often in tension. Based on an examination of the relationship between the modern\/industrial and the postmodern\/postindustrial on the Internet, we can begin to determine whether or not the concepts of \"modern\" and \"postmodern\" accurately describe 21st century society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-08-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e674a34f-09f7-3ae8-8c79-38e428112dd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1695978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695978","wordCount":17078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4713","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"229","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.4","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7130678e-a4b4-3908-b6f6-2ec41d0af16c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.4"}],"isPartOf":"Bibliography of Southern Appalachia","keyphrase":["appalachian","tennessee","virginia","asu wcu","appalachian regional","masters thesis","carolina","asu lmc","mountain","typescript hillsville"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":262.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"AUTHOR INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.4","wordCount":343815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Beverley"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Through All Things Modern\": Second Thoughts on Testimonio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303277","wordCount":9354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Kucich"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3b5f373-40ae-3b39-a464-42e537a367ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44371791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Dickens Studies: 1989","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371791","wordCount":20433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Epstein"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"408c29dd-9601-37ba-9336-d3d4b7d9091e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1485","pageStart":"1483","pagination":"pp. 1483-1485","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231111","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILBURT C. DAVISON"],"datePublished":"1942-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44440702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f96f13b2-a0a1-3fc7-ad80-549e6eca9ae0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44440702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"REFLECTIONS ON THE MEDICAL BOOK AND JOURNAL SITUATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44440702","wordCount":6955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angela Marie Smith"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"402013dd-e3d2-3f31-925f-ad9c58c3858c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fiery Constellations: Winterson's \"Sexing the Cherry\" and Benjamin's Materialist Historiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115286","wordCount":13179,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[90,175]],"Locations in B":[[79646,79736]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"Consideration of Jeanette Winterson's novel \"Sexing the Cherry\" alongside selected Walter Benjamin essays illuminates the novel's commitment to a politicized historical narrative. Like Benjamin's essays, \"Sexing\" interweaves strains of materialist, postmodern, and redemptive historiographies. First, the novel's reinterpretation of England's Puritan Revolution enacts a Benjaminian materialist historiography in adopting elements of premodern storytelling, and attending to stories of the marginalized, \"constellated\" with present-day revolutionary moments, although Winterson's revision also foregrounds the roles of sexuality and gender in historiographic narrative. Second, the novel's postmodern traits, particularly the figure of the hybrid cherry, index the kind of historical narrative Benjamin mandated, grafting together narrative forms, and transplanting history into the present through artistic\/technological acts of representation\/reproduction. And third, the novel's evocations of light and space recall Benjamin's theological vision of Messianic time; both authors implant images of transcendence in their political historiographies, finding redemptive possibilities in the sparks and fragments of history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren\u00e9 Ranc\u0153ur"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40531390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4682620d-ed2d-35a8-99cf-7bdad2f4209c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40531390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":327.0,"pageEnd":"731","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-731","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVIe-XXe si\u00e8cles). Ann\u00e9e 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40531390","wordCount":155731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1939-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1537843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dca9b31b-c02d-3b4c-896f-1c07fc71d89e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1537843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biolbull"}],"isPartOf":"Biological Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"The Marine Biological Laboratory Forty-First Report, for the Year 1938: Fifty-First Year","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1537843","wordCount":21740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Marine Biological Laboratory","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNY BROOKSBANK JONES"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5d4aa8e-0914-34f3-b1dc-4e045c44e4af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sensing an Ending: Predestination in Imanol Uribe's D\u00edas contados","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763779","wordCount":13051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Este art\u00edculo explora lo que se denomina la \"estructura de la predestinaci\u00f3n\" de D\u00edas contados, de Imanol Uribe. Su objetiva es analizar c\u00f3mo esta estructura resuena en relaci\u00f3n a una serie de procesos y sucesos hist\u00f3ricos definatorios de los primeros a\u00f1os de la d\u00e9cada de los noventa, entre ellos la debilidad de los sistemas de producci\u00f3n y distribuci\u00f3n de la industria cinematogr\u00e1fica espa\u00f1ola, el declive ideol\u00f3gico-discursivo de ETA, y la crispaci\u00f3n socio-pol\u00edtica, que es inseparable de un deasosiego m\u00e1s general. Considera la adaptaci\u00f3n por Uribe de la novela (casi) ep\u00f3nima de Juan Madrid, contrastando sus enfoques tem\u00e1ticos y sus recursivos t\u00e9cnico-expresivos. Concluye relacionando la denominada estructura de la predestinaci\u00f3n con cierto sentido de resaca te\u00f3rico-cultural contempor\u00e1neo.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Eastham"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09273131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51392071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234422"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68c71ee8-d24f-393e-a174-c8d9dcc8ea1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25781791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"samubecktoda"}],"isPartOf":"Samuel Beckett Today \/ Aujourd'hui","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"BECKETT'S SUBLIME IRONIES: The \"Trilogy\", \"Krapp's Last Tape\", and the Remainders of Romanticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781791","wordCount":5095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"This essay theorizes the status of Romantic irony in Beckett's work according to its relationship with the sublime, which takes three different forms. First, in the \"German Letter,\" irony is conceived of as the way to the sublime. I argue that a diagnostic account of this process emerges in Trilogy, where Romantic irony is framed as the symptom of a moribund condition. Finally, I suggest that in Krapp's Last Tape Beckett works to ironize the rhetoric of Romanticism, whilst the Romantic irony of his narrators is constituted by an aspiration to repeat an irrecoverable sublime encounter.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Webster"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20706055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00324000"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557485930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235457"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c25b906-b961-3b48-be5b-8891132a30ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20706055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolynesiansoc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Polynesian Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"STRUCTURALIST HISTORICISM AND THE HISTORY OF STRUCTURALISM: SAHLINS, THE HANSONS' COUNTERPOINT IN MAORI CULTURE, AND POSTMODERNIST ETHNOGRAPHIC FORM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20706055","wordCount":14736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Polynesian Society","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23302750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07705d6a-8036-36d3-8daa-9f3e8166198a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23302750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"658","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-658","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Other Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23302750","wordCount":7763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Rosenberg","Stephen J. Whitfield"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/pft.2002.22.1-2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9432567-87b2-375e-b6fb-64d541a06dc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/pft.2002.22.1-2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Cinema of Jewish Experience:<\/strong> Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/pft.2002.22.1-2.1","wordCount":3894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Garstki"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10725369"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44162171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56127bd7-8452-303b-a194-41a46c5944e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26748339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"750","pageStart":"726","pagination":"pp. 726-750","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management","Applied sciences - Systems science","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Virtual Representation: the Production of 3D Digital Artifacts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748339","wordCount":13744,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9200,9351]],"Locations in B":[[12373,12524]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"As new digital technologies now pervade the discipline of archaeology, the practice of creating digital 3D representations of artifacts has become widespread. The rapid growth and acceptance of these technologies into the discipline leaves us in a position where we must engage with how these tools fit our epistemologies. I propose that we look to a much older technology, photography, to inform the way that these digital artifacts are dealt with as we move into an increasingly digital field. In doing so, I will argue that the creation of a 3D digital artifact is a productive process, just as any form of media used to document and interpret the archaeological record. Through this production, the digital form is decoupled from the original physical artifact. The creation of a new representation of the artifact (in the form of a photograph or digital model) provides a new dimension to our interactions with these artifacts. The result of the digital movement in archaeology is a more interactive experience with artifacts, allowing researchers and the public alike digital access to archaeological collections. If the current trend continues, digital artifact modeling will become as indispensable to archaeology as traditional photography. It is therefore necessary for archaeologists to be aware of the subjectivities and biases that exist during this productive act as we move into a more integrated field of digital, representational technologies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas B. Holt"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2489569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00935301"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48417873"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227346"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47cea381-0d60-32f0-b4c6-32797a60a88a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2489569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Consumer Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Marketing & Advertising","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Poststructuralist Lifestyle Analysis: Conceptualizing the Social Patterning of Consumption in Postmodernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2489569","wordCount":21578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"In the sociology of consumption, a core research issue is the symbolic expression, reproduction, and potential transformation of social collectivities through consumption. The two theoretical perspectives that have long dominated both consumer research and sociological investigations of this class of research questions-what I term personality\/values lifestyle analysis and object signification research-have become less useful in the postmodern era. In this study, I develop an alternative poststructuralist approach for analyzing lifestyles. I describe five core principles of poststructuralist lifestyle analysis that distinguish this approach from the two predominant paradigms. Drawing from a series of unstructured interviews, I argue that each of these five features allows for more nuanced description of lifestyles than the two predominant approaches. Poststructuralist lifestyle analysis can be used to unravel the social patterning of consumption according to important social categories such as social class, gender, race\/ethnicity, nationality, and generation in advanced capitalist countries in which postmodern cultural conditions make tracing these pattems difficult with conventional approaches.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yve-Alain Bois","Rosalind Krauss"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b654c295-9a93-3a20-94da-64add0f1b73e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 38-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A User's Guide to Entropy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778906","wordCount":20799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26440754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97c7f32-33e6-39a4-9625-625d3228bb8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26440754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26440754","wordCount":18528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"128cf96c-c4f9-30d9-be72-a766c07c4f13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43708185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708185","wordCount":24224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"210","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29521729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02670623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"644843e8-6903-369b-b8b5-1ca9b6be7584"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29521729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedjclires"}],"isPartOf":"British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Edition)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29521729","wordCount":69182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"291","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H\u00e9ctor M. 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This paper reviews related artistic projects and practices and situates the concept of the lunar cemetery in relation to Michel Foucault's articulation of the notions of heterotopia and biopolitics to explore the implications of perceiving the Moon as a globally shared space populated by the dead. The author also suggests that the possibility of a cemetery on the Moon reveals peculiar biopolitical approaches toward lunar space, in which death is used to uphold its heterotopic potential and support the envisioning of prospects for humanity's future beyond the globe.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Pettus"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e351b78-778d-3ec4-934d-f8af0bd50b38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TERMINAL SIMULATION: \"REVOLUTION\" IN CHUCK PALAHNIUK'S \"FIGHT CLUB\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274099","wordCount":8078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRISON T. 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Almost thirty books are discussed, and articles from the three major outlets for Dickens scholarship\u2014The Dickensian, Dickens Studies Annual, and Dickens Quarterly\u2014are all included, as well as many essays from other publications. The materials are arranged according to topic, including the following: Latin America, Gender, Urban Life and Literature, Health, Education, Science, Interdisciplinary Approaches in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Visual and Print Culture, Style, Sketches by Boz, Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, The Old Curiosity Shop, Christmas Books and Christmas Stories, Dombey and Son, David Copperfield, Hard Times, Little Dorrit, Great Expectations, Our Mutual Friend, and Influence and Afterlife.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David C. Ward"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6207e196-82e6-3cdc-b1fb-11311d440014"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 8-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Celebration of Self: The Portraiture of Charles Willson Peale and Rembrandt Peale, 1822-27","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109132","wordCount":9145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1907-07-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84837873-a1e7-3d7f-b5c7-58b90c8134ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"850","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-850","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1907,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 55, no. 2850","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335975","wordCount":15985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2850","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha Buskirk"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c35a5cab-b6cb-30fc-9dc3-1235aa26a359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Repeat Offenders: Reprinting Visual Satire Across France's Long Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24327421","wordCount":7063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Dans cet article, nous nous penchons sur deux caricatures fran\u00e7aises du XVIIIe si\u00e8cle et sur leurs diff\u00e9rents tirages parus au courant des XVIIIe et XIXe si\u00e8cles : Triomphe des Arts Modernes ou Carnaval de Jupiter, d'auteur inconnu, et L'Assembl\u00e9e de Brocanteurs, attribu\u00e9e au comte de Caylus. Empruntant aux m\u00e9thodologies des \u00e9tudes de la culture mat\u00e9rielle et visuelle, nous examinons la signification cach\u00e9e du geste \u00e9ditorial qui consiste \u00e0 produire de nouveaux tirages de ces plaques de cuivre, geste riche de similarit\u00e9s avec la nature m\u00eame de la satire et avec la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 de l'estampe. En d\u00e9chiffrant l'iconographie dense de chaque image et en examinant les diff\u00e9rences dans le fonctionnement de chaque estampe selon la date du tirage, nous traitons de la tendance de ces caricatures \u00e0 citer de fa\u00e7on parasitique les cibles de leurs attaques. Par ailleurs, nous mobilisons l'interpr\u00e9tation de Miriam Hansen de l'essai de Walter Benjamin, \u00ab L'\u0152uvre d'art \u00e0 l'\u00e9poque de sa reproductibilit\u00e9 technique \u00bb, afin d'analyser l'importance de la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 de l'estampe par rapport au statut de chaque nouveau tirage et de r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir aux notions d'\u00ab image \u00bb vs \u00ab chose \u00bb, et d'\u00e9loignement vs proximit\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GERHARD RICHTER"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27809428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7c9de00-b78e-3422-b110-dcefc8fe07e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27809428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Modernity, Authenticity, and the Blues in Sterling Brown's Flood Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44384170","wordCount":10365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johndan Johnson-Eilola"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07316755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33c1e156-09e7-3b27-9631-2e37dcbba0a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20865923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadvacomp"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Advanced Composition","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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It surveys the ways in which a number of oral forms\u2014epic, fable, proverb, fairy tale, and ballad\u2014have been \"antiqued\" and reproduced by literary culture from the late 17th century forward. In creating such \"distressed genres,\" the literary culture attempted to invent a domain of authenticity and originality just as literary culture was itself undergoing dramatic changes in its modes of production and reception.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick J. Cummings","William H. Peck","Larry J. Curry","Susanne F. Hilberry","Ellen Sharp","Willis F. Woods","Robert V. Rubyan","Audley M. Grossman","Edith J. Freeman","Richard C. M\u00fchlberger","Susan F. Rossen","Charles H. Elam","F. Warren Peters","James L. Greaves","Joseph Klima Jr.","Robert R. Rodgers","William A. Bostick","Lawrence W. Jackson"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00119636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7245315-f78e-358f-952f-1d490f983d7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulldetrinstarts"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Curatorial and Museum Department Reports","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445347","wordCount":16816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Detroit Institute of Arts","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Farquhar"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73735237-ee3e-39a7-ad33-b569f1bbccd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Market Magic: Getting Rich and Getting Personal in Medicine after Mao","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646542","wordCount":13034,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[13442,13524]],"Locations in B":[[50254,50328],[50805,50887]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"Focusing on private medical practices in a north China county town I explore a shift toward the personal in the world of small business and popular healing. In contrast to the mass representation techniques of the currently threatened Maoist state--explored in this article through the figure of Lei Feng, the model soldier--private entrepreneur doctors now seek to embody medicine and health, attracting patients by cultivating personal auras and practicing medicine with touches of magic. China's new culture of \"getting rich\" invites an ethnography of the individual, the personal, and the embodied, not as a natural foundation of culture but as a particular cultural response to the demise of the pervasive collectivism of the Maoist state. [rural entrepreneurs, magic, state discourses, postsocialism, medical practice]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Selden B. Daume","E. P. Richardson","Wm. A. Bostick"],"datePublished":"1962-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41504299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00119636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6493e184-9ef0-39a0-b927-ac444e2f432a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41504299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulldetrinstarts"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Arts Commission","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41504299","wordCount":7082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Detroit Institute of Arts","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allison Arieff"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"446cfcf7-172d-3fdb-aaf6-2852f6bca5ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading the Victoria and Albert Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002329","wordCount":8265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yakup Bektas"],"datePublished":"2017-09-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359149"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206473"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1be994d-a2a2-3a6c-95a2-32d38cbbca49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26312851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noterecoroyasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE CRIMEAN WAR AS A TECHNOLOGICAL ENTERPRISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312851","wordCount":14653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Royal Society","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":"Discussions of the Crimean War (1853\u201356) often emphasize its leaders' military and political incompetence and logistic failures, which led to heavy losses both on the battlefield and to disease. This portrayal ignores the significant entrepreneurial and technological novelties that emerged from the war. Begun and fought for the most part along traditional lines, the Crimean War became a stage for the display of innovative technologies ranging from telegraphy to photography, railways to steamships, and ironclads to sanitary hospitals. It became a business opportunity for entrepreneurs to promote their enterprises and to gain prestige, with the sanction of patriotism. These technologies, new and untried on such a scale though they were, began to shape the way in which the war was organized, fought and reported. More importantly, they generated enormous public excitement and helped make the war a spectacle for distant audiences, presented swiftly and vividly through the new media of telegraphy and photography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07330707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43440353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"restmananote"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration & Management Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-98, 103-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"NOTES & ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440353","wordCount":28456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46a50d91-4e94-3ee8-b3db-5dccc94b6cb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23484016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484016","wordCount":34705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Breines"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"984d0e01-9dec-38d0-a4cc-6f282e5fe005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Germans, Journals and Jews\/Madison, Men, Marxism and Mosse: A Tale of Jewish-Leftist Identity Confusion in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487707","wordCount":12181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"20","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24302001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0006128X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f21cc47-8f62-3d1b-a787-7a3822a43e14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24302001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papebiblsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index to Volume 62, Papers of The Bibliographical Society of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24302001","wordCount":11550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacques Derrida","Eric Prenowitz"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465144","wordCount":37126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Kawalko Roselli"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2007.26.1.81","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02786656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"27357526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn93-004785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e64a2b25-6d30-3ee0-aa1a-5e5ad0b76f11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ca.2007.26.1.81"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasanti"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Antiquity","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":89.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender, Class and Ideology: The Social Function of Virgin Sacrifice in Euripides' Children of Herakles<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ca.2007.26.1.81","wordCount":52828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Abstract This paper explores how gender can operate as a disguise for class in an examination of the self-sacrifice of the Maiden in Euripides' Children of Herakles. In Part I, I discuss the role of human sacrifice in terms of its radical potential to transform society and the role of class struggle in Athens. In Part II, I argue that the representation of women was intimately connected with the social and political life of the polis. In a discussion of iconography, the theater industry and audience I argue that female characters became one of the means by which different groups promoted partisan interests based on class and social status. In Part III, I show how the Maiden solicits the competing interests of the theater audience. After discussing the centrality (as a heroine from an aristocratic family) and marginality (as a woman and associated with other marginal social groups) of the Maiden's character, I draw upon the funeral oration as a comparative model with which to understand the quite different role of self-sacrifice in tragedy. In addition to representing and mystifying the interests of elite, lower class and marginal groups, the play glorifies a subordinate character whose contradictory social status (both subordinate and elite) embodies the social position of other \u201cmarginal\u201d members of Athenian society. The play stages a model for taking political action to transform the social system and for commemorating the tragic costs of such undertakings.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorens Holm"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70d100b1-7838-3fe2-b562-9438c6201e3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 20-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading through the Mirror: Brunelleschi, Lacan, Le Corbusier: The Invention of Perspective and the Post-Freudian Eye\/I","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171204","wordCount":10448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Rickard"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"379c2583-4c9e-3004-bc8e-fc779e55debe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A quaking sod\": Hybridity, Identity and Wandering Irishness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871103","wordCount":10846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"An examination of the trope of wandering in selected works of Yeats, Lady Gregory, Synge and Joyce allows us to see how these writers used wandering as a metaphor for Irishness. All of these writers demonstrate an ambivalent relationship to Irishness which is figured in the wanderer's inability to find a home or resting place in a degenerate Ireland. Yet such an investigation demonstrates that while Yeats and Synge endorsed the myth of rural Ireland as the only possible locus for Irishness, thus leaving their wanderers no where to go, Joyce, as an urban, cosmopolitan writer, in his later works created wanderers free to explore new forms of subjectivity and Irishness. In Joyce's work wandering begins as a negative expression of paralyzed Irishness and ends as a positive sign of fluid identity and hybridity. Joyce's acceptance of the \"modern\" and of racial hybridity and his implicit rejection of an essentialized or racial Irishness allows his wanderers-unlike Yeats's or Synge's-to construct more tenable Irish identities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Wingfield"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e09a298-d9fc-32c4-b848-32c67a1383b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44982185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gazing on Fu-Manchu: Obscurity and Imperial Crisis in the Work of Sax Rohmer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44982185","wordCount":6517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Inciardi"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6967f5ab-6858-3b2a-b0ad-f9a91ad5ac2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1104","pageStart":"1103","pagination":"pp. 1103-1104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231319","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NIKOLAI DUFFY"],"datePublished":"2016-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28762790-eaf8-393f-887b-2efc18e8fd10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44162762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"698","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-698","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading the Unreadable: Kenneth Goldsmith, Conceptual Writing and the Art of Boredom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162762","wordCount":9704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"This article explores conceptual writing and the linked concept of boredom in the work of Kenneth Goldsmith. Specifically, the article examines Goldsmith's claims about boredom and uncreativity; suggesting that Goldsmith's work furthers our understanding both of the materiality of language and of the \"function of language,\" situating Goldsmith's work within the context of a \"gift economy,\" and, most centrally, proposing Goldsmith's poetics as \"durational\" rather than \"spatial.\" The argument then develops this reading via an extended discussion of the role of boredom in Goldsmith's volume Day.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emil H. Richter"],"datePublished":"1904-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43478073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2380534X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43478073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefin2"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report for the Year ... (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"REPORT OF THE CURATOR OF THE PRINT DEPARTMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43478073","wordCount":1773,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Gusevich"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec5cfc31-b031-3fd6-a7c7-b55c00dd4ead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Purity and Transgression: Reflections on the Architectural Avantgarde's Rejection of Kitsch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389099","wordCount":8823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER BRIER"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43472294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43472294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southwestreview"}],"isPartOf":"Southwest Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Walter Benjamin's Sparks of Holiness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43472294","wordCount":6404,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[47189,47305],[75444,75868]],"Locations in B":[[18411,18526],[18592,19016]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Southern Methodist University","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry D. Delcore"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37646410-1ec5-3d47-8a1f-6439299a13d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nongovernmental Organizations and the Work of Memory in Northern Thailand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805209","wordCount":22555,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) provide an ideal context in which to examine the production and reproduction of identities and modernities in the contemporary world because they tend to concentrate within themselves ideas, people, and resources drawn from various sites in the world system. In this article, I examine the practice of memory among NGO activists, village leaders, and farmers in Nan Province, northern Thailand. Assessing the impact of NGOs on the cultural constitution of Thai modernity, I trace contending representations of the rural past to different social concerns with identity and interests that have emerged in the era of planned development and increasing global interconnectedness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Morton"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14682702"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b24f0be4-1cc0-3f7b-ab56-b2544e64e9d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26160467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jecongeog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Geography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Business & Economics","Economics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160467","wordCount":1323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Lukinbeal","Laura Sharp"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41566699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c1eb204-fc6b-3dac-84a0-70c3f574b2ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44076341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"892","pageStart":"881","pagination":"pp. 881-892","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing America's Toughest Sheriff: media as practice in Joe Arpaio's Old West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44076341","wordCount":7041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"Joe Arpaio, or \"America's Toughest Sheriff,\" uses hardline tactics that have won the hearts of conservative Republicans on the one hand and the condemnation of groups such as Amnesty International and the American Civil Liberties Union on the other. In order to legitimize his extreme tactics toward illegal immigration Joe mobilizes the media to create an identity for himself and his opposition. This performative act of the lawman and the careful construction of the modern day Wild West in which it is situated are used to cover up practices of cruelty, racism, and corruption. With this paper we explore how Joe Arpaio uses the media to produce and reify his own mythic image. Empirical facts and the \"real\" may not be as powerful as myth and media in a land where Phoenicians, (illegal) aliens, and coyotes (someone who traffics immigrants from Mexico to the United States in an illegal fashion) roam through the Valley of the Sun under the watchful eye of Sheriff Joe and his posse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susanne Kuchler"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09547169"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607827434"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecefcb25-b253-3be0-ac08-46b7a244fa75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmuseumethnog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Museum Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"FROM ART TO MATHEMATICS: LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE NET: A NOTE ON THE CATALOGUING OF VISUAL INFORMATION IN MUSEUMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793619","wordCount":5824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Museum Ethnographers Group","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Sielke"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70482696-6bee-33a3-a22a-5b430e1227e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44071896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Network and Seriality: Conceptualizing (Their) Connection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071896","wordCount":7150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"Just as the concepts of networks and networking, the principle of seriality and forms of series production have enjoyed much currency lately in divergent fields of scholarly and scientific inquiry. Moreover, both networks and series are increasingly recognized as viable structural patterns of media and media formats. Why is it, then, that we embrace the trope of the network wholeheartedly and tend to downplay the insistence of seriality? This essay first addresses a few possible answers to this question to subsequently explore the proximity of the two concepts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sean M. O'Connor"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43410705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9083fd3b-78c8-3030-8196-37e13fc83155"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43410705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":98.0,"pageEnd":"830","pageStart":"733","pagination":"pp. 733-830","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Overlooked French Influence on the Intellectual Property Clause","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43410705","wordCount":48728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Law Review","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":"The Intellectual Property Clause (\"IP Clause\") of the US Constitution has long been a puzzle for courts and commentators. It authorizes Congress to secure exclusive property rights for authors and inventors, but it does not use the terms \"patent\" or \"copyright,\" and its objects of \"Science\" and \"useful Arts\" do not cleanly map onto the subject matter of current patent and copyright systems. As the Supreme Court has noted, under popular usage of the terms \"arts\" and \"science,\" would expect patents to promote science and copyrights to promote arts, yet we know from the historical record that exactly the opposite is the case. Other terms, such as \"progress\" and \"discoveries,\" remain contested. IP Clause interpretations date rely exclusively on British legal and intellectual antecedents. I argue that the great French Encyclop\u00e9die project\u2014a landmark of the mid-eighteenth-century Enlightenment\u2014provides crucial context to the IP Clause. James Madison, a drafter of the IP Clause, owned and approvingly cited the work. Founding Fathers Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin were enthusiastic advocates of the Encyclop\u00e9die. The Encyclop\u00e9die has as its twin goals the promotion of progress in science and in mechanical (useful) arts. I argue that the reliance of early courts and commentators on British antecedents to interpret the federal patent and copyright statutes led to an improperly narrow sense of the context of the IP Clause. Using entries from the Encyclop\u00e9die on \"art,\" \"science,\" \"discoveries,\" \"inventions,\" \"writers\/authors,\" and other relevant topics, I propose a new interpretation of the IP Clause that is more coherent and compelling than existing accounts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1930-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/457730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c8a4048-2a7d-38df-b4a7-06486885cd1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/457730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":109.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1930,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"American Bibliography for 1929","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/457730","wordCount":32872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yoshikuni Igarashi"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d85ddea0-416f-3bc4-a466-6d8ce73f9775"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20203276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1169","pageStart":"1167","pagination":"pp. 1167-1169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203276","wordCount":869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"965d87e0-eafa-3995-9250-9cc4a7b3f957"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/953674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953674","wordCount":19122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1475","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Masahide Kato"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a03277f-2238-3b7c-9f88-2577d2763773"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nuclear Globalism: Traversing Rockets, Satellites, and Nuclear War via the Strategic Gaze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644779","wordCount":9439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Russell"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.54.2.0243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e235644e-6401-30a8-b759-412ec2724ee3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/framework.54.2.0243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Archival Cinephilia in the Clock<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.54.2.0243","wordCount":6627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Drake Stutesman","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Sussman"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"1116","pageStart":"1106","pagination":"pp. 1106-1116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Freeze-Frame: An Essay-Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251682","wordCount":4431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grace M. Jantzen"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"BEAUTY FOR ASHES: NOTES ON THE DISPLACEMENT OF BEAUTY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926828","wordCount":11825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Hausman","Bennett Reimer"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"193af265-8b35-36d6-9dca-775fe8a1131c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333753","wordCount":1957,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[37409,37485]],"Locations in B":[[5046,5122]],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Austin C. Kozlowski","Matt Taddy","James A. Evans"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d32d4d9-b514-34d8-8cdb-cac8294b7200"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"949","pageStart":"905","pagination":"pp. 905-949","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Pure mathematics","Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"The Geometry of Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602120","wordCount":23174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"We argue word embedding models are a useful tool for the study of culture using a historical analysis of shared understandings of social class as an empirical case. Word embeddings represent semantic relations between words as relationships between vectors in a highdimensional space, specifying a relational model of meaning consistent with contemporary theories of culture. Dimensions induced by word differences (rich\u2013poor) in these spaces correspond to dimensions of cultural meaning, and the projection of words onto these dimensions reflects widely shared associations, which we validate with surveys. Analyzing text from millions of books published over 100 years, we show that the markers of class continuously shifted amidst the economic transformations of the twentieth century, yet the basic cultural dimensions of class remained remarkably stable. The notable exception is education, which became tightly linked to affluence independent of its association with cultivated taste.","subTitle":"Analyzing the Meanings of Class through Word Embeddings","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NEEPA MAJUMDAR"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c83d061-b3eb-3f4d-a2ec-3bf1fe8accc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FILM FRAGMENTS, DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, AND COLONIAL INDIAN CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408069","wordCount":7622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"Seulement trois documentaires muets indiens existent toujours. Au-del\u00e0 de l'analyse textuelle, l'examen de ces films soul\u00e8ve plusieurs questions historiographiques, telles que la formation accidentelle du canon reli\u00e9e au hasard de la survie ou de la disparation des \u0153uvres; les conditions de lecture partielle que ces films permettent; les relations entre le cin\u00e9ma local et le cin\u00e9ma colonial, en particulier pour les films de promotion de la Indian Railways; et les styles de photographies d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s dans ces documentaires, tel le pittoresque.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia L\u00f3pez-Gay"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbc78ce3-ac2d-3632-af34-97f287a3869f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26596288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"497","pagination":"pp. 497-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CLARICE LISPECTOR\u2019S INVISIBLE ARCHIVE OF THE QUOTIDIAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596288","wordCount":4647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":"A POLITICAL MONOLOGUE WITH LIFE","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert G. Mead, Jr."],"datePublished":"1954-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/335251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17acf265-d5a1-3177-82d6-2ceaab044509"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/335251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"504","pagination":"pp. 504-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Hispanic World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/335251","wordCount":7352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Beller"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1x07z9t.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745337302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46daf6d3-ee35-37bb-9cfd-b5d3d1675130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1x07z9t.8"}],"isPartOf":"The Message is Murder","keyphrase":["capital","karl marx","informatic","social","internet","private property","externality","content indifferent","exchange","machine"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"76","pagination":"76-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Internet of Value, by Karl Marx:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1x07z9t.8","wordCount":8417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"There is a deceptively simple but nonetheless correct equation between what has become the media-environment and the unconscious, discernable from the evidence that is the global warming of the material substrate of our thought and now entering a new stage variously christened, the anthropocene, \u201cthe capitalocene,\u201d \u201cthe white supremacist capitalocene,\u201d (Mark Driscoll), plantationocene, chthulucene (Haraway). There is also a growing recognition that these hot materialities are indeed the return of the repressed of centuries of idealism, alienated science and all its attendant if unfathomable colonial violence. However the argument of Message, that both \u201cthe environment\u201d and \u201cthe unconscious\u201d are computational","subTitle":"Information as Cosmically Distributed Alienation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1904-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/116738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03701662"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02b65274-7621-3bfa-a111-75032894ce4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/116738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procroyasocilon3"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":369.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Obituary Notices of Fellows Deceased","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/116738","wordCount":161881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kcq9.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"966eeb07-10ed-34cb-ad26-6aa0c9463a28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt45kcq9.18"}],"isPartOf":"Ostrannenie","keyphrase":["shklovsky","cinema","viktor shklovsky","russian formalism","early cinema","tom gunning","russian futurism","gunning","eisenstein","markov russian"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"205","pagination":"205-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kcq9.18","wordCount":19050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDER KAUFFMAN"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5261dee-1878-3f22-9c09-cdb0ba9314d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44973139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Anemic Cinemas of Marcel Duchamp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973139","wordCount":25155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":"Marcel Duchamp was among the first artists in the transatlantic avant-garde to acquire his own movie camera in 1920 but would produce only a single complete film, Anemic Cinema (1926), over the course of his decades-long career. Scrutiny of written sources and other archival materials reveals significant experimentation with the moving image in other formats and media, particularly after his relocation to the United States in the 1940s. Avoiding standard filmmaking, the artist interrogated period conceptions of the cinematic medium and spectatorship through a series of filmic and nonfilmic works, including Discs (ca. 1945-47), Please Touch (1947), and \u00c9tant donn\u00e9s... 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The review gives special emphasis to studies of humor in American culture, broadly conceived.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Rosser"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23076968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"192a7478-10ec-3c2e-aa38-5735cb4b3b4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23076968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Brian Ferneyhough and the \"Avant-Garde Experience\": Benjaminian Tropes in \"Fun\u00e9railles\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23076968","wordCount":11909,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[8120,8264],[42695,42932],[46399,46499]],"Locations in B":[[29706,29850],[29957,30194],[48163,48263]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ewa Mazierska","Laura Rascaroli"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a740942-9f68-3bf0-9111-51b4519d081f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Trapped in the Present: Time in the Films of \"Wong Kar-Wai\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019075","wordCount":7669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. 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These measurements in the anesthetized dolphin demonstrate the pressure-damping effect of the retia mirabile.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Postle"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be763a5-fac0-3f18-bebd-8afd6bd6292d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41829527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":110.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE FOUNDATION OF THE SLADE SCHOOL OF FINE ART : FIFTY-NINE LETTERS IN THE RECORD OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829527","wordCount":59798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan S. 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A second type of geometric diagrams related to musical arithmetic is looked at in the final section of this article.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20745430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac41a6e4-fe0d-365d-8be7-f6651610f494"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20745430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerbarassoj"}],"isPartOf":"American Bar Association Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20745430","wordCount":24661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Wright"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17487331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f0fb8f3-057a-37f5-ba84-e959ecef95c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonsuppissu"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo. 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This leads to a redefinition of the intimacy of the relationship between artist and art object. Such issues contribute to the comparative study of digital media and physical\/mechanical media and the computer's impact on the creation and apprehension of imagery.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25685189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b900ef0-32c0-315e-adb7-462c259ec0b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25685189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamerlibrasso"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Library Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources","Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"[College and reference]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25685189","wordCount":29633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lutz Koepnick"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59c94c83-a19e-343a-b166-7dda7e6e4660"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3211146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Doubling the Double: Robert Siodmak in Hollywood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211146","wordCount":10045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"89","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARY A. 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Fawcett"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08dp.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"200c347a-7043-3cfc-8da5-67065ab57a97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08dp.7"}],"isPartOf":"Spectacular Disappearances","keyphrase":["tristram shandy","sterne","yorick","cibber","printed","celebrity","celebrity autobiography","characters","printed page","critics"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"98","pagination":"98-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Language & Literature","British Studies","European Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Canon of Print:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08dp.7","wordCount":17118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"\u201cI wrote not [to] be fed<\/em>, but to be famous.\u201d\u00b9 With these words, Laurence Sterne announced to a critic his ambitions for The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman<\/em>, shortly after its first two volumes appeared in print in 1759. Formerly a subparson in the relative backwater of York, Sterne became an overnight sensation when his bawdy, blustery, and partially bowdlerized book arrived in London, soon to be followed by its attention-seeking author. As the book\u2019s fame grew, Sterne crafted a public identity around his fictional personae: he signed his letters as Tristram, published his sermons as Yorick, and","subTitle":"Laurence Sterne and the Overexpression of Character","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1931-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15436314"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53397913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2956c84e-409d-3d4c-957f-00f02eeb55d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/770420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"parnassus"}],"isPartOf":"Parnassus","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770420","wordCount":5380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"College Art Association","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Benjamin Kinchen, Jr."],"datePublished":"1986-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23547200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00095028"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e1939ed-d5bf-39e4-9179-592ee8cae934"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23547200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"choralj"}],"isPartOf":"The Choral Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Black Gospel Music and Its Impact on Traditional Choral Singing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23547200","wordCount":7547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Choral Directors Association","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Humphreys"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"699","pageStart":"686","pagination":"pp. 686-699","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Looking Backward: History, Nostalgia, and American Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490042","wordCount":5434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-04-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67cd46ad-4a27-3e9a-98c7-420c5c2c755f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1718705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1718705","wordCount":20192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3719","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"152","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Binkley"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17487331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cab8b7e-d21e-372f-a584-77e8174ade5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonsuppissu"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo. Supplemental Issue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"The Wizard of Ethereal Pictures and Virtual Places","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557937","wordCount":6555,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[27741,27808]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":"Renaissance artists constructed pictorial space using algorithms based on Euclidean geometry. Computer artists use algorithms based on the analytic geometry of Descartes to compute pictures as well as the subjects in them. An examination of the workings of these two different types of algorithm reveals that the computer offers a radical new approach to making art, which is not yet well understood. Postmodern algorithms for picturemaking are more evanescent than their Renaissance counterparts because computers process information conceptually instead of storing it physically. The computer is neither a passive medium nor a pliant tool, but an active creative partner.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Duy Lap Nguyen"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.3.0546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fafa5e5-2408-33fe-8e79-43c88363f463"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.3.0546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"546","pagination":"pp. 546-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Alternate Histories of Korean National Sovereignty in 2009: Lost Memories<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.44.3.0546","wordCount":8147,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16841]],"Locations in B":[[45116,45561]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"This essay reads the South Korean sf thriller 2009: Lost Memories as an allegory about the history of Korean national sovereignty. Set in an alternate timeline in which this national history has been erased as a result of a Japanese conspiracy, the film's time-travel plot focuses on a group of Korean resistance fighters who struggle to restore the \u201clost memory\u201d of an authentic Korean national past. This alternate timeline\u2014a timeline in which the national past is portrayed, paradoxically, as the product of an alternate present\u2014achieves two related ideological functions. First, by erasing the problems posed to Korean national identity by the collaboration of a Korean elite during the colonial era, the film's allohistorical narrative perpetuates the myth of an effective anti-colonial movement. Second, the alternate timeline provides a fictional mechanism to circumvent what Michel Foucault has described as the historical limit imposed by the atom bomb (and threat of mutually assured destruction) upon the institution of sovereignty and its ability to wage all-out war. Unable to assert its sovereignty in a war with Japan, Korea carries out its anti-colonial myth in the form of an allohistorical narrative. This nationalist appropriation of the genre of alternate history, however, fails to suppress what Marx describes in the Eighteenth Brumaire as the reduction of tragic action to farce, resulting from the repetition of historic events. In Lost Memories, the same time-travel narrative that allows the film to live out its anti-colonial fantasy has the unintended effect of reducing its nationalistic melodrama to an inauthentic historical parody.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HSIEN-CHUN WANG"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae0bdd0f-a161-3cde-ae95-8824d6f7c267"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40646991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Discovering Steam Power in China, 1840s-1860s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646991","wordCount":10657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Tehranian"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24120585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fe14d6e-f28f-35e6-964f-cfe37b7e0a19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24120585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"1459","pageStart":"1399","pagination":"pp. 1399-1459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Emperor Has No Copyright: Registration, Cultural Hierarchy, and the Myth of American Copyright Militancy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24120585","wordCount":27824,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[5036,5121]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"This Article subverts the myth of American copyright militancy by providing a more nuanced view of our enforcement regime and detailing how, in the age of mechanical (and digital) reproduction, procedural nicities establish cultural hierarchy through the selective restoration of Benjaminian 'aura' to creative works. As it turns out, the Emperor has been sold a suit of copyright that leaves a surprising number of authors naked\u2014without sufficiently meaningful remedies for infringements of their creative output. Copyrighted works are effectively placed into a hierarchy of protection that, in many ways, safeguards creators less vigorously than regimes in other countries. Through the use of ostensibly neutral formalities, the current system privileges the interests of repeat, sophisticated rights holders, often at the expense of smaller, less sophisticated creators. Moreover, existing law practically encourages certain kinds of infringement. In the end, sophisticated players enjoy powerful remedies when enforcing their copyrights. They dangle the legal Sword of Damocles\u2014draconian statutory damages\u2014over the heads of accused infringers, threatening to hand defendants their heads on a platter with more fervor than Salom\u00e9's dance (to licensed music, of course). By sharp contrast, when they function as users of intellectual property (something all creators do), these same players often face only the most paltry of penalties for unauthorized exploitation\u2014even when they infringe willfully. Our copyright regime therefore beatifies the works of elites\u2014consecrating their cultural production as sacred texts and subjecting any use to permission and payment\u2014while rendering the creative output of the rest of society into fodder for unauthorized manipulation and commercialization. The point of this analysis is not to call for even greater copyright protection for all creators. Rather, this Article deconstructs the beneficiaries of the existing regime and highlights the need for holistic reform that equalizes protection among different classes of authors and rights holders while also balancing the interests of copyright users.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ana Olenina"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.35.3.0297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b95e288e-0512-3121-beb2-7026223def40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.35.3.0297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Engineering Performance: Lev Kuleshov, Soviet Reflexology, and Labor Efficiency Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.35.3.0297","wordCount":13564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen F. 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These military and non-military activities oblige us to take account of the entire Russian defense establishment, its capabilities, and its objectives. This book aims to accomplish that task. Based on a 2016 conference with an international lineup of prominent experts on the Russian military, the papers collected here aim to provide a synoptic view of domestic developments, the ability of Russia\u2019s economy (and in particular, its science and technology sectors) to support its defense programs, its operations in Syria and Ukraine, Russian information warfare, nuclear issues, the","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","FOREWORD","SUMMARY","Table of Contents","INTRODUCTION","CUTTING THE PUTIAN KNOT:","RUSSIA\u2019S MILITARY INDUSTRIAL RESURGENCE:","RUSSIAN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY:","MILITARY EXERCISES:","THE MOBILIZATION OF RUSSIAN SOCIETY","MODERNIZATION VERSUS MOBILIZATION","RUSSIA\u2019S \u201cLESSONS LEARNED\u201d FROM UKRAINE AND SYRIA","RUSSIAN NUCLEAR WEAPONS POLICY AND PROGRAMS, THE EUROPEAN SECURITY CRISIS, AND THE THREAT TO NATO","FUTURE RUSSIAN STRATEGIC NUCLEAR AND NON-NUCLEAR FORCES:","A CLINIC ON CLAUSEWITZ:","RUSSIA\u2019S EXPANDING CYBER ACTIVITIES:","RUSSIAN NAVAL POWER UNDER VLADIMIR PUTIN","RUSSIA\u2019S STRATEGIC UNDERBELLY:","RUSSIAN MILITARY INTERESTS IN THE BALTIC REGION IN LIGHT OF THE CRIMEAN OPERATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PERCEPTIONS IN THE MILITARY SPHERE","WHEN DO YOU KNOW IT IS A BRIDGE TOO FAR?","UKRAINE AND THE BLACK SEA REGION:","RUSSIA IN NORTH CAUCASUS:","RUSSIA\u2019 S MILITARY PRESENCE IN CENTRAL ASIA:","RUSSIAN MILITARY POWER AND POLICY IN THE FAR EAST","RESPONDING TO RUSSIA\u2019S CHALLENGE TO EASTERN EUROPE:","NATO AND A RESURGENT RUSSIA:","ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS","Back Matter"],"editor":["Stephen J. 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While this description seems straightforward and absolute, it has in fact been used to denote several different attributes of archives: the uniqueness of records; the uniqueness of information in records; the uniqueness of the processes which produce records; and the uniqueness of the aggregations of documents into files. This essay explores how the idea of uniqueness has evolved, especially in relation to the changing technologies of recordmaking, and it speculates on the future usefulness of the idea for archival theory and practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41447385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c707f579-7586-3cb0-86d4-816a58f790db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41447385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humanbiology"}],"isPartOf":"Human Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"580","pagination":"pp. 580-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Biological Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health","Public Health","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"RECENT LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41447385","wordCount":11100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"813b48ec-a2ff-34b1-bd4f-3ce397809323"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wp64r.18"}],"isPartOf":"Bastard or Playmate?","keyphrase":["antonia baehr","performers","audience","theatre","theater topics","webcam","choreography","camera","different","movie theatre"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"238","pagination":"238-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Between Solitaire and a Basketball Game","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.18","wordCount":4501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Antonia Baehr is a Berlin-based choreographer, performer and filmmaker. She has created numerous performances with other choreographers and performers like William Wheeler, Val\u00e9rie Castan and Lindy Annis. Characteristic is her non-disciplinary work and her way of collaborating with different people, using a game structure with switching roles: each person is alternately host and guest<\/em>.Antonia Baehr\u2019s work does not offer simple narratives. As a choreographer, she focuses on and isolates the seemingly mundane: an everyday movement or action. Like a surgeon, she dissects not only these acts but also the potential that is hidden within them. At a second level<\/em>","subTitle":"Dramaturgical Strategies in the Work of Antonia Baehr","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-02-23","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2889854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1917794f-df2c-3afa-a4b8-dc3f5d07556f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2889854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"1200","pageStart":"1150","pagination":"pp. 1150-1200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2889854","wordCount":37652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5252","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"271","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-09-25","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7fe0766-a89e-3136-a08b-0109772fce28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4524139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"A86","pageStart":"A1","pagination":"pp. A1-A22+A25-A80+A82-A86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers. Sixtieth Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524139","wordCount":101860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J.\u00a0F.\u00a0M. Clark"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/501099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b3812b9-38a5-332a-816c-a4b2753a0fbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/501099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History from the Ground Up","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/501099","wordCount":18162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"ABSTRACT William Kirby and William Spence\u2019s Introduction to Entomology is generally recognized as one of the founding texts of entomological science in English. This essay examines the ideological allegiances of the coauthors of the Introduction. In particular, it analyzes the ideological implications of their divergent opinions on animal instinct. Different vocational pursuits shaped each man\u2019s natural history. Spence, a political economist, pursued fact\u2010based science that was shorn of references to religion. Kirby, a Tory High Churchman, placed revelation at the very heart of his natural history. His strong commitment to partisan sectarianism cautions against reference to a homogeneous \u201cnatural theology\u201d that was an agent of mediation. Fissures in the \u201ccommon intellectual context\u201d reached beyond the clash between natural theologians and radical anatomists to render the intellectual edifice of natural theology structurally less sound for the future.","subTitle":"Bugs, Political Economy, and God in Kirby and Spence\u2019s Introduction to Entomology<\/em> (1815\u20131856)","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward S. Hodgson"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031569"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381485"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3883543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerzool"}],"isPartOf":"American Zoologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":103.0,"pageEnd":"505","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-505","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Long-Range Perspectives on Neurobiology and Behavior","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883543","wordCount":59122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"This essay is part of the seventh presentation of a yearly educational project of the American Society of Zoologists. The purpose is to provide background materials for those who teach the first-year biology courses in colleges and universities. The Science as a Way of Knowing project emphasizes the conceptual framework of the biological sciences, shows how scientific information is obtained and validated, and relates science to human concerns. The topic for consideration this year is Neurobiology and Behavior. The introductory essay is concerned mainly with the conceptual framework of neurobiology, as developed over the ages, and a few examples of behavioral studies which can be related to neurobiology or which are of special interest through links to human considerations and problems.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30199568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96c10434-d6f8-3a9a-b269-dc50b2b71e92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30199568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comphuma"}],"isPartOf":"Computers and the Humanities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Annual Bibliography for 1972 and Supplement to Preceding Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30199568","wordCount":12736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jackson Lears"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e24d5d0d-8f75-351c-813d-8af4efbf3f2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Buck Owens, Country Music, and the Struggle for Discursive Control","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853323","wordCount":7785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yve-Alain Bois","Kimball Lockhart","Douglas Crimp"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f44cddee-3236-3954-b116-f96ed9e9f5c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Sculptural Opaque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684328","wordCount":13751,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Sivan"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FRAMING QUESTIONS: CYNTHIA OZICK'S 'SHOTS'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926847","wordCount":6744,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9983,10058]],"Locations in B":[[9968,10046]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The philosophical (and stern) divide between the Hellenic and Hebraic, especially in relation to aesthetics and ethics, is what critics of Cynthia Ozick's fiction so often focus on. Yet I will argue that in her short story, 'Shots', Cynthia Ozick's passion for the Judaic collective memory and moral consciousness has created a character whose principal life's work, the production of visual images, rejects such a facile exiling of beauty and visual aesthetics to the realm of the pagan. For this protagonist, a photographer, sees herself as a creator who is not only not a mere maker of idols, a trafficker in vanity, but is rather a seeker, a critical eye, a woman attempting to understand the world both ethically and aesthetically through the interpretation of what she finds in her viewfinder.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d53b002-8694-3f7a-820d-a7aee50b7e5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/954516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"1315","pageStart":"1209","pagination":"pp. 1209-1315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954516","wordCount":23001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1522","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gordon Birrell"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57ee3469-542d-3d18-92da-2284d8195136"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/408511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Everything is E[x]ternally Related: Brentano's Wehm\u00fcller","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/408511","wordCount":10178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":"Beyond its surface of playful wit and persiflage, Die mehreren Wehm\u00fcller und ungarischen Nationalgesichter raises and astutely interconnects a variety of serious issues: the commodification of art, the propriety of nationalistic stereotypes, the problematic nature of borders and boundaries as designating factors. While Wehm\u00fcller's portraiture creates debased images that promote interchangeability and convert character into caricature, Brentano presents a counter-model to this reductive art in the chain of narratives beginning with Baciochi's tale, a collaborative text that builds toward precision and inclusiveness of definition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marc Treib"],"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44666036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c49e5c72-d9f4-315f-97ad-3e305d6b3b6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44666036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landarch"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Architecture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Garden & Landscape","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FRAGMENTS ON A VOID: TSUKUBA CENTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44666036","wordCount":3932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Society of Landscape Architects","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DRAGANA OBRADOVI\u0106"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3138\/j.ctt1whm98w.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781442629547"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71d4f90c-5670-3d45-ba01-8e5ad0295d71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3138\/j.ctt1whm98w.13"}],"isPartOf":"Writing the Yugoslav Wars","keyphrase":["kitsch","postmodernism","serbian","sarajevo","aesthetic","literary","literature","croatian","serbian literature","representation"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"211","pagination":"211-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3138\/j.ctt1whm98w.13","wordCount":2788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anat Zanger"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtk0.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053567845"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bddb3554-7ec1-3c89-9d05-7c6258a8fbc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mtk0.5"}],"isPartOf":"Film Remakes as Ritual and Disguise","keyphrase":["psycho","cinematic","repetition","cinematic institution","psycho inside","shower scene","hitchcock","susanna","no\u00ebl carroll","legitimized voyeurism"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"13","pagination":"13-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","History","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Psycho:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtk0.5","wordCount":6137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The cinematic medium, by virtue of its technology, encapsulates 24 versions of potential movement per second. Within the same shot, each frame is an earlier version of the frame about to be seen. Seriality is constitutive in the very material of the cinema, i.e., its film strip. The cinema\u2019s \u201cself-differing\u201d elements might be identified as its specificity (Krauss, 2000: 44) but its differences are countered in favor of continuity during the screening process (Bellour, 1979; Baudry, 1985[1970]; Usai, 2001).\u00b9 A parallel process of difference, repetition and denial also exists in the cinema\u2019s imaginary archive. This imaginary archive exists in the","subTitle":"Inside and Outside the Frame","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Blyn"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c371bc7-cf8b-3857-95de-769d0fd6fce8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imitating the Siren: West's \"The Day of the Locust\" and the Subject of Sound","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797153","wordCount":6082,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11366,11531]],"Locations in B":[[29699,29864]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Art & Language"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/509748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aed3768-00d3-3622-a8e9-86bbb7181029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/509748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Voices Off: Reflections on Conceptual Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/509748","wordCount":10545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald Preziosi"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d146351c-5152-3b75-aec0-e4ea81b1f1d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Question of Art History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343788","wordCount":11486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Koehler"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/991460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c355fb1-de7d-38a9-bffc-feb1cc9d137a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/991460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"432","pagination":"pp. 432-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Kandinsky's \"Kleine Welten\" and Utopian City Plans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/991460","wordCount":11076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"Wassily Kandinsky's Kleine Welten (Small Worlds) was printed at the Bauhaus in 1922, shortly after he joined the faculty in Weimar, having left his post with the People's Commissariat for Enlightenment in Moscow. Kleine Welten illustrates how Kandinsky's utopian visions of community united with Walter Gropius's changing visions for the Bauhaus. Through an examination of Kandinsky's writings and drawings, as well as the historical conditions of their making, it can be demonstrated that his Kleine Welten portfolio is connected to material and imaginary city-planning efforts in Russia and Germany. Additionally, it can be shown that Kandinsky's portfolio is related to utopian theories and representational conventions of city portraiture. Finally, Kandinsky's ideas about social organization are shown to correspond to the shifting philosophies of art and life current at the Bauhaus in the 1920s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.5","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f74720c-182d-34b8-949e-178bb39e0c78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.5"}],"isPartOf":"Bibliography of Southern Appalachia","keyphrase":["soil survey","tennessee","virginia","kings mountain","carolina","asu lmc","alabama","app cities","appalachian","tennessee soil"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":238.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences"],"title":"SUBJECT INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3ks7.5","wordCount":256762,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Lee"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4cbe792-b535-354c-bce1-69f0ed18d359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Readings in the \"New Science\": A Selective Annotated Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241214","wordCount":17547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"In this sampling of the literature--under the rubrics Undecidability, Uncertainty and Complexity; Macrostructures: Systems and the Human Scale (Entropy, Dynamical Systems, Computation); The Very Big and the Very Small: Physics, Astrophysics and Cosmology; Time; Culture and Epistemology--the emphasis is on the complexity brought to focus in studies of dynamical systems. The recent flowering of this work, characteristically scornful of traditional disciplinary boundaries, evidences, shift to relation over substance, synthesis over reduction, simulation over analysis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Michael Hays"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e91a884-f73d-3712-bd2b-a9684d469f13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171031","wordCount":1364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25038170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd293b29-5fd1-3345-a6b6-699fdcadb851"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25038170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":514.0,"pageEnd":"46a","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-506, 33a-34a, 36a, 38a, 40a, 42a, 44a, 46a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The move to retailing Hindu identity declared an intention to seek and build on far more partial forms of support, with the explicit aim of securing political power. Liberalisation proceeds with its reorganisation of public and private spaces in ways that are articulated to the Hindu right's political project but not necessarily identical with it. Late capitalism's attempts to revitalise itself demonstrate an eruption of the contradictions of community onto the stage of capital, and an effort to harness these contradictions in furthering accumulation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HENRIK SCHOENEFELDT"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43489749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0066622X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62483180"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e26d46ec-931f-3af8-8d52-93a7e826ac1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43489749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archhist"}],"isPartOf":"Architectural History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - 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A primary requirement of the project was to replicate the layout of the galleries of the original Paul Philippe Cret (1876\u20131945) building in the Philadelphia suburb of Merion, in which the priceless art collection of Dr. Alfred C. Barnes had been housed since 1922. Barnes's Trust Indenture had specified that his paintings remain \u201cin exactly the same places,\u201d but the court permitted the move under \u201cdoctrine of deviation,\u201d provided that the galleries and painting \u201censembles\u201d were replicated. The essay explores how Williams and Tsien replicate but also deviate from the Cret original, and situates the project within the history of museum \u201cperiod\u201d rooms, as well as the current fascination with architectural replication. Ultimately the author argues that Williams and Tsien's replica of the Merion Barnes not only enables its preservation, it also \u201cadds\u201d originality to its predecessor and challenges the boundary between invention and imitation through an original reproduction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olga M. Hubard"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9781b80-879d-35e7-90ae-f1d0e783d318"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Originals and Reproductions: The Influence of Presentation Format in Adolescents' Responses to a Renaissance Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475828","wordCount":8250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"This is a qualitative examination of how the presentation mode of a Renaissance painting-original artwork, printed reproduction, or digital reproduction-influences the critical responses of adolescents. In contrast to prior experimental research in this area, the findings of this study provide insights into the experiential dimensions of students' responses. The findings suggest that both originals and reproductions can be the source of meaningful experiences and that there is considerable consistency in children's responses across presentation modes. Nevertheless, the varying qualities of the different formats can lead to diverging responses. Tactile experiences, reflection regarding materials, and consideration of the artist's process occurred only in response to the original painting. Participants preferred the original painting to both reproductions, and they favored the postcard over the digital image. These preferences were influenced by the physical properties of the three pictures and by viewers' notions about the status of original art in Western society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. W. Odell"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4174066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee06b917-4f03-3529-a974-bb078294a0ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4174066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"The Argument of Young's \"Conjectures on Original Composition\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4174066","wordCount":8931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rod Morgan"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/591380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"567","pagination":"pp. 567-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591380","wordCount":1340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winifred J. Wood"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"626508a4-3d85-3959-8a97-3620c5224854"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bunnies for Pets or Meat: The Slaughterhouse as Cinematic Metaphor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866984","wordCount":13503,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[24476,24576],[27132,27250],[36039,36479],[36365,36678]],"Locations in B":[[14016,14116],[14184,14302],[50580,51010],[50896,51165]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"JAC","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Meyer"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557232"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b5e0375-40a0-305f-8134-6add3f2d767a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24644867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"numen"}],"isPartOf":"Numen","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Emergence of \"Religious Studies\" (\"zongjiaoxue\") in Late Imperial and Republican China, 1890\u20131949","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24644867","wordCount":14772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"This article contextualizes the rise of \"early religious studies in China\" with its apex in the 1920s within the heated debates on the role of religion in a modern Chinese society. While the most recent development of religious studies (zongjiaoxue) in China (including Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan) is well known, its early emergence in the late Qing and Republican periods (ca. 1890\u20131949) has been a neglected topic. The author demonstrates first how antagonistic anti-religious and affirmative positions, received from Western modernization discourse and informed by the contested character of the concept of religion itself, led to the emergence of this new discipline in Republican China as a product of broader discourses on modernization. Secondly, the article evaluates the limited institutionalization of religious studies as a distinct \"full\" discipline in relation to the broader interdisciplinary \"field\" of research and public debates on religion. While the interdisciplinary character is typical of the field in general (also in the West), the limited degree of \"full disciplinarity\" depended on specific, local discursive and political factors of its time. As \"religion\" appears as an important modern discourse in East Asia, the early emergence of religious studies in China thereby reflects social, political, and intellectual transitions from Imperial to Republican China, and offers a unique perspective on Asian discourses on religious and secular modernities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Anderson"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"497178420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010250503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"949f3822-8aff-35ee-a829-4f44083893a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24353026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Only We Have Perished\": Karel \u010capek's R.U.R. and the Catastrophe of Humankind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24353026","wordCount":9867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3 (91)","publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"In Karel \u010capek's R.U.R., the mass production of an artificial workforce precipitates several catastrophes that culminate with humanity's extinction. For Harry Domin, Central Director of Rossum's Universal Robots, to build Robot slaves is to liberate human beings from the brute necessity of work and secure unconditioned and unconditional self-realization. Yet the attempt to achieve human autonomy through the automation of labor ultimately results in an autoimmune disorder, in which human life extinguishes itself. Drawing upon Hannah Arendt's argument that automated labor represents an intensification of nature's \"devouring character,\" I argue that the play does not present the well-trod cautionary tale of technology run amok, but rather a biopolitical horror story of uncontrollably voracious life. In so doing it offers insight into the relationship between technology and finitude, and invites reflection upon the responsibilities we hold toward future generations, both human and nonhuman.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1953-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/893753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f732178-2c4a-39b0-848e-7cc616c0e591"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/893753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"615","pageStart":"570","pagination":"pp. 570-615","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index of Record Reviews: With Symbols Indicating Opinions of Reviewers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/893753","wordCount":23065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T'Ai Smith"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"383cd410-7fda-3742-8d3d-436821ecab9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Limits of the Tactile and the Optical: Bauhaus Fabric in the Frame of Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442740","wordCount":11069,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50359,50517]],"Locations in B":[[68924,69082]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"25","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/955891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"972df702-d221-3e4c-a203-f9fb071576a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/955891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/955891","wordCount":18940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1538","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. Frederick Flindell"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41640539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00053600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32728742-4181-3221-810a-474f7d196108"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41640539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bach"}],"isPartOf":"Bach","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":121.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bach and the Middle Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41640539","wordCount":45543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Riemenschneider Bach Institute","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24647133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564699596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fe3ef0a-9b70-3ab6-9520-744803208ff6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24647133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24647133","wordCount":1235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSEMARY LLOYD"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23538019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Unpacking a Proven\u00e7al Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538019","wordCount":5523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"The recent acquisition of the library of the Aubanel family, whose best-known member was the poet, Th\u00e9odore Aubanel, allows a study of the F\u00e9librige movement, its friends, and its critics, through an analysis of the manuscript inscriptions. Of the library's 1,300 books and ten boxes of pamphlets, periodicals, newspapers, and academic bulletins, there are some six hundred inscriptions and manuscript insertions written in French, Proven\u00e7al, Catalan, Italian, English, and Esperanto. Ranging form brief definitions to sonnets, from praise to provocation, they shed an unaccustomed light on the writers, presses, and preoccupations of nineteenth-century Provence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Afshin Hafizi"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce53e990-ec3b-3580-a824-f6004654757f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41209952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Archival Machine of Language and the Logic of Spectrality: Of Repetitions, Translations, and Ghosts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209952","wordCount":7332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nandini Bhattacharya"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bdaa487-bb3a-3be4-af9e-5c2be69968a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Annu Palakunnathu Matthew's \"Alien: Copy with a Difference\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338685","wordCount":8641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Louis Pearce","D. G. C. Allan","A. J. Stirling","Mark Jones","Donald Simpson","William Gardner","Tim O'Donovan"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41374357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7edc0fc9-dba9-3e23-b310-b47a3bef7f05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41374357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"597","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"QUEEN VICTORIA'S GOLDEN JUBILEE 1887","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41374357","wordCount":16100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5372","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"135","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bert O. States"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d4a8184-3000-3776-897b-622f0368af99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PERFORMANCE AS METAPHOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711423","wordCount":15748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25041296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a08de60a-d99c-3b0a-ae8e-bf51ee3bb8f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25041296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":164.0,"pageEnd":"50a","pageStart":"6a","pagination":"pp. 6a, 8a, 18a, 20a, 22a, 24a, 27a, 30a, 1-144, 34a-38a, 40a-42a, 44a, 46a, 48a, 50a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Water Pollution Control Federation Yearbook: 1982","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25041296","wordCount":108815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel C. Mattingly"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26867767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a909025a-4ddd-3a5d-bfb4-2bbde8af16cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26867767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Responsive or Repressive? How Frontline Bureaucrats Enforce the One Child Policy in China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26867767","wordCount":9150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"How do authoritarian states implement policies that curb individual freedom? In this article, I examine the implementation of the One Child Policy in China, which has had an enormous impact on Chinese society and yet has received little attention from political scientists. I argue that the success or failure of the policy hinged on using frontline bureaucrats to infiltrate society. Important theories suggest that bureaucratic penetration may increase bureaucrats' responsiveness to citizens and decrease implementation of the law. Drawing on a unique dataset and natural experiment, I show the opposite to be true in China: a one standard deviation increase in bureaucratic penetration lowers over-quota births by 2 to 7 percentage points. There is suggestive evidence that bureaucrats leverage their social embeddedness to control society. The article shows how frontline bureaucrats beyond the police, military, or ruling party are key agents of repression and political control.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346164","wordCount":2519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan Nadaner"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3192902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de404231-d44e-3f87-9720-87edad6c8a72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3192902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arteducation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Responding to the Image World: A Proposal for Art Curricula","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3192902","wordCount":2847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BETH ANN MUELLNER"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23982697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"When the Ethnographic Subject Resists: Stinnes and S\u00f6derstr\u00f6m in China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982697","wordCount":7804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gustavus Stadler"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c677bec7-3890-3967-a8a4-17ced278b69a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cMy Wife\u201d: The Tape Recorder and Warhol\u2019s Queer Ways of Listening","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0425","wordCount":14896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82b03e00-675f-3bfd-81f4-ac79c01ad3c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"922","pageStart":"909","pagination":"pp. 909-922","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657339","wordCount":4896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Michael Hays"],"datePublished":"1989-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"787e0cff-1d6d-3cb2-a02a-2dfa0ae10b16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 104-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tessenow's Architecture as National Allegory: Critique of Capitalism or Protofascism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171017","wordCount":7960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1294111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0dc5ea2-1a5d-3c9f-a816-8f46977fe134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1294111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1294111","wordCount":13526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-09-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3837882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33886ca6-321d-3f7a-858a-6513aaded176"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3837882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"2034","pageStart":"1976","pagination":"pp. 1976-2034","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3837882","wordCount":49002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5692","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"305","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graham M. Jones","Rachel Flamenbaum","Manduhai Buyandelger","Greg Downey","Orin Starn","Catalina Laserna","Shreeharsh Kelkar","Carolyn Rouse","Tom Looser"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c51261b-d5e5-342e-ab26-dbe675b459ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24476059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"838","pageStart":"829","pagination":"pp. 829-838","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Anthropology in and of MOOCs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476059","wordCount":8584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter F. 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Puritans accused the Rattle-Head of indecisiveness and hypocrisy, for claiming allegiance to the English church while really behaving as a papist idolater. The very personification of the Rattle-Head was the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud, who during the 1630s undertook a campaign to beautify English churches while placing a new emphasis on the importance of sacramental ritual in the service. Another group that can properly be described as rattle-headed is the protestant religious community at Little Gidding, which during the 1630s developed a habit of illustrating hand-made bible concordances with Catholic prints. In 1640, the Little Gidding community presented Laud with one of these concordances, a lavishly illustrated harmony of the Pentateuch. Here I attempt to think along with the Archbishop's book, which in its rattle-headed approach to the printed image opens up a space for reflection in between sensuous proximity and scholarly distance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-06-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43709546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6904e48-2d97-32d4-96da-a0593ba3030c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43709546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43709546","wordCount":32162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"211","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen B. 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He began surreptitious infringement of printing patents in the late 1570s; when the infringed patentees, influential members of the Stationers' Company, began reprisals, Wolfe became the leader of a large group of the Company's malcontents. Their agitation provoked the company leadership to a crackdown supported by both municipal and royal authorities and led eventually to a consolidation of the Company's powers of self-regulation. This conflict thus confirmed literary property as a commercial problem, a matter of tense social practice, and as the book trade became more heavily capitalized, the issue of literary property became increasingly problematic. 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The goal of this paper is to bring molecular modelling into focus as a constitutive yet overlooked element of chemical practices. It begins with a short technical introduction to molecular models, and then moves into a participantcentred analysis of molecular modelling. Central points of this analysis include, first, a discussion of the dichotomy between graphical and material forms of representation, with suggestions about its consequences for a semiotically-centred view of scientific activity; and, second, a look at the problem of the interpretation of molecular models, as discussed in the chemical literature. The last section focuses on the design of modelling systems through two related historical case studies - namely, the production of two space-filling modelling kits developed in the United States between the late 1930s and the late 1960s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick H. 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If the law knows no heresy, then copyright law should not serve as a tool for repressing religious dissent.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-09-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1742373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63055979-5632-32f4-92d7-312436b8ae0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1742373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"1279","pageStart":"1177","pagination":"pp. 1177-1279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1742373","wordCount":13638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4259","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"193","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annette Lareau"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe04ec16-b9f9-31c9-8124-83e9a609d686"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"817","pageStart":"816","pagination":"pp. 816-817","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231280","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hillary Chute"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0d9b9f9-514c-3a07-a2ce-e7c93fb337aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"RAGTIME, KAVALIER & CLAY\", AND THE FRAMING OF COMICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287623","wordCount":14852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anselmo Marino Flores"],"datePublished":"1963-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40974442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01860658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e951d7-c506-3845-b08e-bba9831774f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40974442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bbaabolbibantame"}],"isPartOf":"B.B.A.A. 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This project is a prototype of a small virtual museum that presents the University of Missouri-Columbia Museum of Art and Archaeology's Kress Study Collection through digital images and scholarly text stored in a relational database that is accessible on the World Wide Web, and uses new technology for electronic curatorship in a virtual museum. The project's paper describes the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, which holds a rich collection of European artworks, mostly Old Master paintings from the thirteenth to the eighteenth century. Also treated are the digitizing of the Kress paintings, the construction of the database, the realization of Web accessibility, and the problem of defining the virtual museum. A searchable virtual museum based on a user-centered philosophy is hard to find because museums are reluctant to make their holdings accessible on the World Wide Web. It is even harder to define, both because of the heated discussion in the museum literature and the fascination of the new medium that often leads to sites lacking quality and a user-driven philosophy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Effie Rentzou"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"069ddd6b-055b-3aec-aec5-e946228aebf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"579","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-579","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cPartout et Nulle Part\u201d: Apollinaire's Body after the War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.57.4.0557","wordCount":9910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beatrice Hanssen"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1013","pageStart":"991","pagination":"pp. 991-1013","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Portrait of Melancholy (Benjamin, Warburg, Panofsky)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251039","wordCount":8337,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19304,19658]],"Locations in B":[[1278,1627]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lotte Hanemann","Howard Anderson","Henry R. 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Helfand","Benjamin Franklin Fisher IV","Joseph Sendry"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a393b038-3d6b-39f3-9be1-0878dedd955f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry: 1977","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002393","wordCount":24099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie Sandler"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27652942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9f8268b-1394-3497-9f83-ecddc132472f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27652942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"641","pageStart":"610","pagination":"pp. 610-641","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Visual Poetry after Modernism: Elizaveta Mnatsakanova","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27652942","wordCount":13088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"The impact of neither Andrei Belyi nor Velimir Khlebnikov has been fully comprehended, and their legacies are joined in unusual combination in the work of the contemporary visual poet Elizaveta Mnatsakanova. Her poetry appeals to both eye and ear, expanding on innovations introduced by Belyi and Khlebnikov, and it raises broad questions about the integration of sensory experiences by readers of visual poetry. Mnatsakanova uses illustrative handwriting, calligraphy, and images of a hand or a face in her one-of-a-kind albums and books, and her poems are set out in symmetrical columns or other spatial arrangements. Repetition is the central rhetorical device in her work, yet her unique albums emphasize individualized aesthetic production and anticipate highly charged reader reaction. Special attention is paid to \"Das Hohelied,\" a part of Das Buch Sabeth, which engages both the literary tradition and the immediacy of a reader's experience with the text.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2231733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108906"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23310"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2231733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"economicj"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic policy"],"title":"Book Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2231733","wordCount":18180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"361","publisher":"Royal Economic Society","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward D. Melillo"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1974f556-2680-3dd6-aa6d-43d5b91b26f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24545157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"GLOBAL ENTOMOLOGIES: INSECTS, EMPIRES, AND THE 'SYNTHETIC AGE' IN WORLD HISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545157","wordCount":16159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"223","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3419767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73e19dd9-abaa-3904-a93e-84dfe66475cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3419767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":116.0,"pageEnd":"1455","pageStart":"1205","pagination":"pp. 1205-1455","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3419767","wordCount":65870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin J. McFarland","Thomas Peter Bennett"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00973157"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d39a0c2d-f26f-3696-9754-f351fe29ec20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4065026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procacadnatuscie"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Image of Edgar Allan Poe: A Daguerreotype Linked to the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065026","wordCount":19859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Academy of Natural Sciences","volumeNumber":"147","abstract":"From 1830 to 1850, Philadelphia's scientific, artistic, and literary communities experienced unprecedented synergy. Scientific societies founded in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, such as the American Philosophical Society, the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and the Franklin Institute, reached a stage of broad expansion. Medical science and education ballooned, and magazines, newspapers, and publishers were proliferating. The circle of the educated elite in Philadelphia was large enough to exhibit wide professional diversity, yet small enough to allow frequent associations among its members, whether scientists, artists, or both. We propose that a daguerreotype that has appeared since 1937 in several articles, often without attribution, was taken by Paul Beck Goddard in the winter of 1842-43 in the Academy of Natural Science of Philadelphia's recently constructed building at the corner of Broad and Sansom Streets. Goddard had announced as early as 1842 that he made daguerreotypes \"by the diffused light of a room.\" The daguerreotype studied here is America's earliest existing attempt to photograph a complex interior scene using natural lighting with human subjects. Our evidence suggests that Edgar Allan Poe and Joseph Leidy are in the photo. The final man's identification remains speculative: Samuel G. Morton, John K. Mitchell or James C. Booth. The earliest daguerreotype of its kind tells us much about the development of photography by 1842-43. The picture also illustrates Philadelphia's synergistic linking of the scientific and the artistic creative impulse. The history of the Academy during a determinative period is reflected in the daguerreotype images: place, people, specimens, and science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1953-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d1222e5-8c06-38b9-8f7f-ffc80bddf892"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/227672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":103.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Seventy-Ninth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To 31 August 1952)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227672","wordCount":85703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KAREN STRASSLER"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71272836-f673-3783-a4b1-d522a6a2c492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Seeing the Unseen in Indonesia's Public Sphere: Photographic Appearances of a Spirit Queen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908284","wordCount":14951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13442,13506]],"Locations in B":[[79592,79657]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"Ratu Kidul is a legendary spirit queen who plays a significant role in Javanese political ontologies and has come to be an icon of Indonesian public culture. In this paper, I trace the history of her mediation as image via paint, photography, television, film, and the Internet in order to ask how this queen of the unseen world came to be so visible a feature of the postcolonial landscape and to interrogate the nature and effects of this visibility. I argue that becoming accessible via the image was necessary to her continued political agency within a mass-mediated national public sphere in which visibility and circulation are preconditions of political recognition. Yet popular reception of images of Ratu Kidul as auratic conduits of her spiritual power reveal the continued presence of a visuality within Indonesian national modernity that runs counter to dominant logics of transparency. I offer an ethnographic examination of images of Ratu Kidul across a range of media, attending to their material qualities as mediums by which the spirit queen appears and circulates. Broadly, the essay argues that national political orders and their public spheres cannot be understood apart from a history of visual mediation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMY LAWRENCE"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6c2deb0-e2a6-3d4b-8563-ec1ef0c58194"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE PLEASURES OF ECHO: THE LISTENER AND THE VOICE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687835","wordCount":7042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAI-TZE FAN"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb4bd159-cfe7-3a7c-b369-6b7c327afa92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90021824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Material Matters in Digital Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021824","wordCount":7880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"In a digital era of representation, where screen content is abstracted from material objects\/apparatuses, how do we still associate \u201ctext\u201d and \u201cbook\u201d with materiality? This essay analyzes Jonathan Safran Foer\u2019s Tree of Codes as a \u201cliterature of disembodiment\u201d\u2014experimental print texts that represent objects from which materiality is erased.","subTitle":"Tree of Codes<\/em> as a Literature of Disembodiment","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard R. Koos"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e634fd29-da04-3dc4-b1c1-9b7a311f60e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40836940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Executing the Real in fin de si\u00e8cle France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836940","wordCount":6987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-12-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1678474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c581ba50-fd8e-30fd-a5b2-08d4595f01a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1678474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"670","pagination":"pp. 670-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Education - Specialized education","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Preview of the 117th Meeting, AAAS, Cleveland December 26-30, 1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1678474","wordCount":27597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2919","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin H. D. Buchloh"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1da38519-d2db-39cc-850d-aac6ee19928b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 36-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Raymond Pettibon: Return to Disorder and Disfiguration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779232","wordCount":6205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret Morse"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f422f741-532e-3777-be01-605b1e9ecbf8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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HARRINGTON III"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23289440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02637960"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4c5e6c1-11ab-3f01-9c27-fde7508840c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23289440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"builenvi1978"}],"isPartOf":"Built Environment (1978-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Black Stars or Black Holes? Cities as Sites for Verticality in Popular Black Music Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23289440","wordCount":9256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Alexandrine Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"The popular Black music genre has been a principal feature of the US recorded music industry, instrumental for creativity, innovation and for the long-term cyclical patterns of growth, change and sustainability within this vital cultural products industry. Urban locations have acted as the central terrains for music production, industry corporate ownership, music distribution and consumption. Cities constitute the sites for verticality in music production; they function as both artistic centres of creative expression and as sites of industrial production of musical products via recording and processing music for mass distribution. This paper analyses the interlinked, changing spatial-geographic, social and cultural variables, patterns and relations that comprise Black musical genres within the US music industry, rectifying the conspicuous neglect of the critical role of urban space and of the location of Black music production in the musical recording business.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Y. Levin"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90b833d1-f5e6-3f40-b5d7-067b4dbe9a09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"For the Record: Adorno on Music in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778934","wordCount":11105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madhavi Sunder"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86bbeed6-b240-3a63-a9d1-e8a1f1e30d20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40040300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IP\u00b3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","wordCount":38281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":"A quarter century ago, Margaret Jane Radin interrupted the hegemonic law and economics discourse on property with a theory of personhood. And the New Jersey Supreme Court declared in the historic case of State v. Shack that \"property rights serve human values.\" From these our modern \"social relations\" theory of property was born. Now, the pundits declare that \"intellectual property has come of age.\" But is intellectual property philosophically and theoretically mature enough to face the world? Unlike its cousins property law and the First Amendment, which bear the weight of values such as autonomy, culture, equality, and democracy, in the United States intellectual property is understood almost exclusively as being about incentives. To put it bluntly, there are no \"giant-sized\" intellectual property values. But there should be. Intellectual property has grown, perhaps exponentially, but its march into all corners of our lives and to the most destitute corners of the world has paradoxically exposed the fragility of its economic foundations while amplifying its social and cultural effects. Indeed, with full compliance to the TRIPS Agreement now required in all but the world's very least developed countries, bringing with it patents in everything from seeds to drugs, intellectual property law becomes literally an issue of life or death. Despite these real-world changes, intellectual property scholars increasingly explain their field through the lens of economics alone, evidence of Amartya Sen's observation that \"[t]heories have lives of their own, quite defiantly of the phenomenal world that can be actually observed.\" The theory is behind the practice. On the ground, underground, and in the ether, intellectual property is spurring what the New York Times says \"could be the first new social movement of the century.\" I show that in case after case, from MGM v. Grokster, to new licenses from the Creative Commons for developing nations, to the rise of Internet auteurs of fan fiction, mash-ups, and machinima, to efforts to deliver medicines to the world's poor, to demands for \"Geographical Indications\" for sarees and other crafts of the developing world, and to the nascent global movement for \"Access to Knowledge,\" traditional economic analysis fails to capture fully the struggles at the heart of local and global intellectual property law conflicts. This Article builds from these examples to lay a foundation for a cultural analysis of intellectual property. I offer \"IP\u00b3\" as a metonym. The twentieth century closed with the rise of identity politics, the Internet Protocol, and intellectual property rights. I suggest that the convergence of these \"IPs\" begins to explain the growth of intellectual property rights where traditional justifications for intellectual property do not. IP\u00b3 reveals intellectual property's social effects and this law as a tool for crafting cultural relations. Call it the ripping, mixing, and burning of law.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1854251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d802a6ce-06cc-3365-8d45-f0f54ccd3add"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1854251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"1582","pageStart":"1570","pagination":"pp. 1570-1582","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1854251","wordCount":10302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-09-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24749348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34298537"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 96036234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4611a19-d59a-3890-b1a8-9a11e6609a14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24749348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"1405","pageStart":"1360","pagination":"pp. 1360-1405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Alternate Presents: The Ambivalent Historicism of \"Pattern Recognition\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241466","wordCount":11145,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[49011,49083]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"\"Pattern Recognition,\" Gibson's most recent novel, is purportedly set in \"the present,\" and so purportedly marks a significant break both in his own work and in the way sf is conceived. The book's treatment of the concepts of past, present, and future, however, is inherently ambivalent-that is to say, simultaneously oriented toward several possible alternative positions, some of them mutually exclusive. To clarify this ambivalence, this article engages notions of alternative history, counterfactual conditionals, and historicism to show that Gibson's novel demonstrates a fundamental fact about fictional discourse: that it necessarily forms an \"alternative present\" of the readerly now.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3575000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f97ea1c-4f8b-3e53-8f4c-d29db8337306"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3575000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Art history"],"title":"Irony, Dream, and Kitsch: Max Klinger's Paraphrase of the Finding of a Glove and German Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045852","wordCount":18933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"This article investigates Klinger's visual dream narrative in the context of German modernism. Walter Benjamin's discussion of the significant image and object in the context of modernity sheds light on Klinger's mythological justification of his narrative technique and on technique itself as a powerful instrument in a perceived crisis in artistic language and signification. Max Ernst's collage novel La Femme 100 t\u00eates is seen here as a radical demonstration of Surrealistic technique, representing a dream world parodying and fetishizing the same cultural heritage as Klinger's Glove Cycle. A comparison of these series effects a suspension of Klinger's subjectivity and irony and exposes his content as kitsch.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aaron Keyt"],"datePublished":"1988-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9f50d24-e03d-3b9c-979c-684e0f2b46a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3480618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"An Improved Framework for Music Plagiarism Litigation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480618","wordCount":23114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":"This Comment examines existing and suggested criteria for distinguishing legitimate creative uses of copyrighted musical material from illegitimate uses. It argues that current copyright law fails to take into account both modern theoretical insights into the nature of musical compositions and the social context in which composers create. Abstract tests for \"infringement\" should be replaced with fact-specific inquiries into market damage and apportionment of each composer's creative contributions to the composite work. Finally, the current bias in favor of injunctive relief should be replaced with a preference for compulsory licensing in order to ensure continued public access to a variety of musical works.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Aynsley"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3527018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Graphic Change: Design Change: Magazines for the Domestic Interior, 1890-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527018","wordCount":8736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"This article examines the character of magazine publishing for the design of the domestic interior between 1890 and 1930. Its primary focus is on German-language publications that appeared from specialist presses between the height of Jugendstil and early modernism. It suggests that Alexander Koch, the Darmstadt-based publisher, established a paradigm for how the new design could be interpreted for a contemporary readership. From examining the visual strategies employed by Koch and other contemporary magazine publishers, the article traces the significant shift which occurred in the modernist magazine in the 1920s. The latter offered a resistance to the increasingly commodified representation of the interior in consumer interest magazines and attempted to present interiors through techniques that stressed information above advertising.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEX NIVEN"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd90a18a-43fc-3bb1-ac85-a157d911d334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TOWARDS A NEW ARCHITECTURE: BASIL BUNTING'S POSTWAR RECONSTRUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475598","wordCount":11829,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8528,8702]],"Locations in B":[[67753,67927]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. W. Widney"],"datePublished":"1929-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27786385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00196673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2dd0b53-dc39-3fa6-be2b-22b24ffd92da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27786385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indimagahist"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Magazine of History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"REPRINT OF Pioneer Sketches of DeKalb County","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27786385","wordCount":29976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Department of History","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Arac"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25600647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c6d3339-50dd-3394-b69f-5e3105b8890a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25600647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Youth, Crime, and Cultural Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767040","wordCount":8129,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[36416,36483]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4 (70)","publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mzz3.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053568163"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bdb981f-9d28-37fa-bffb-0d06455ff587"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mzz3.14"}],"isPartOf":"Sign Here!","keyphrase":["fingerprint","fingerprint files","thomas fechner","vera icon","bryson","handwriting","yves klein","fechner smarsly","bal and bryson","georges didi"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"196","pagination":"196-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Blood Samples and Fingerprint Files:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mzz3.14","wordCount":3890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"All handwriting leaves a trace, even if it is only the trace of an absent body that produced this trace. This trace can be anything from a drawn line or a scribble to a short note, a sketch or a signature, and it can mean anything, ranging from mere \u2018non-sense\u2019 produced in the process of a bodily automatism while thinking of something else, to a meaningful act of leaving a message or even of authenticating oneself through the act of signing.Therefore, writing, handwriting, and drawing may always commence with a playful act without definite purpose: a face drawn in","subTitle":"Blood as Artificial Matter, Artistic Material, and Means of the Signature","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry Woolf","Phyllis Brooks Bosson","Carol B. Hewitt"],"datePublished":"1961-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f7e63dc-234b-3e99-a89d-6de44fce5ead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/228099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82.0,"pageEnd":"526","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-526","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1961)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228099","wordCount":53721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emma Widdis"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.71.3.0590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"200db824-abca-3ab5-9d53-f16bfb296990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.71.3.0590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"618","pageStart":"590","pagination":"pp. 590-618","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Socialist Senses: Film and the Creation of Soviet Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.71.3.0590","wordCount":14903,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[43175,43363],[43511,43910]],"Locations in B":[[59390,59578],[59590,59991]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":"In this article, Emma Widdis suggests that a sensory history is a crucial counterpart to the recent emotional turn in Russian and Slavic scholarship on Russian and Slavic history and culture. In particular, the Soviet revolutionary project was a unique attempt to create new models of human experience to correspond to the new political order\u2014an attempt to shape sensory experience itself. Widdis suggests that the still-young medium of cinema was a privileged site for the investigation of new models of sensory perception, for the working out of the problematic relationship between the body, the mind, and the world that had such ideological potency in early Soviet Russia. Linking close readings of little-known films from this period to a broader analysis of the discursive field within which they operated, Widdis suggests that, in the period of transition between 1928 and 1932, intensified sensory (and particularly tactile) experience emerged as a new and revolutionary mode of being in the world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Temkin"],"datePublished":"1987-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/882988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"337ebe4a-7410-3102-94f0-47e789da02df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/882988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Max Ernst. New York and Ann Arbor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/882988","wordCount":1137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1010","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"129","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amir H. Ameri"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1773368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On Life, by Analogy: Architecture and the Critical Discourse on Extrinsic Constraints: A Historic Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773368","wordCount":12396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The recent critical discourse in the fields of philosophy, history, and literary criticism presents a disquieting challenge to many fundamental and historically pervasive hypotheses in the field of architecture. The premises in question include those concerning originality, imitation, signification, representation, and intention. The response to the current challenge from outside the field has been twofold within it. A number of architects, theoreticians, and critics have tried, for better or worse, to grapple with this challenge. Others discount their efforts either as an irrelevant fashionable exercise-a \"new fad\"-or, worse, as a \"tortured or incomprehensible\" exertion. What I examine here is the manner in which the field of architecture traditionally responds to external challenges to its presumed internal and autonomous concerns. This response, more often than not, takes the form of critical recourse to life, by analogy; that is, it draws parallels between buildings and animate objects by way of posing a critical distinction between a theory\/praxis that is internally focused, hence original, meaningful, and productive, and one that is externally focused in space or time, hence, imitative, incomprehensible, and inherently destructive. Using the same \"extrinsic\" critical methodologies that instigate, in part, the current desire to redraw the line between the autonomous and the extraneous concerns in architecture, I point out, through a close analysis of John Ruskin's and Frank Lloyd Wright's recourse to the life analogy, the inherent paradoxes and contradictions that riddle the attempt to isolate, identify, and enumerate the signs of life in architecture. I take issue with the use of the life analogy as a critical and ultimately ideological tool for delimiting practice to a specific mode of design. I point out that the direct or the indirect use of the life analogy is related to a desire for control over signification and that the desire for life in architecture, by analogy or otherwise, bears the seeds of its dissatisfaction within and\/as without.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian James Baer","\u0628\u0631\u0627\u064a\u0646 \u062c\u064a\u0645\u0633 \u0628\u0627\u064a\u0631"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32129307-d7ac-3a02-b568-bbfdbe632c62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26924869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Cultural Translation to Untranslatability - \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924869","wordCount":8720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This article discusses two recent influential conceptualizations of translation that arose outside Translation Studies: cultural translation and untranslatability. 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The author advocates for a poor translation theory, one that refuses to let translation as abstraction become untethered from interlingual translation, while recognizing incommensurabilty to be distributed across natural languages. .\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0634 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0641\u0647\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u0624\u062b\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0644\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0638\u0647\u0631\u0627 \u062d\u062f\u064a\u062b\u0627\u064b \u062e\u0627\u0631\u062c \u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 (\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u0644 \u0645\u0646 \u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u062e\u0631\u0649 \u0645\u0639 \u062a\u0639\u062f\u064a\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0635\u0627\u062d\u0628\u0629) \u0648\u0627\u0633\u062a\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 (\u0639\u062f\u0645 \u0625\u0645\u0643\u0627\u0646 \u0646\u0642\u0644 \u0628\u0639\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0645\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0646 \u0644\u063a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u062e\u0631\u0649). \u062a\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062a\u0636\u0627\u0631\u0628 \u0643\u0644\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0647\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u0639 \u0645\u0641\u0647\u0648\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u064a\u0646\u064a\u0629 (\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u063a\u0627\u062a). \u0641\u0645\u062c\u0627\u0632\u064a\u0627\u064b\u060c \u062a\u0645\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636 \u0645\u0641\u0647\u0648\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u064a\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0637\u0645\u0633\u0647\u060c \u0628\u064a\u0646\u0645\u0627 \u062a\u062d\u062f\u0651 \u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u0641\u0647\u0645\u0646\u0627 \u0644\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u064a\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0628\u062a\u0631\u0643\u064a\u0632\u0647\u0627 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u062c\u0645\u0648\u0639\u0629 \u0645\u0646\u0641\u0635\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0644\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0625\u0644\u0645\u0627\u062d\u0647\u0627 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0646 \u0643\u0644 \u0634\u064a\u0621 \u0625\u0644\u0627 \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0644\u0645\u0627\u062a \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u0646\u0642\u0644\u0647 \u0628\u0633\u0647\u0648\u0644\u0629. \u064a\u062f\u0639\u0648 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0627\u062a\u0628 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u062a\u0648\u0627\u0636\u0639\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0644\u0627 \u062a\u0642\u0635\u064a \u062a\u0639\u0631\u064a\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0639\u0646 \u0645\u0645\u0627\u0631\u0633\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u064a\u0646\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0642\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u062a\u062f\u0631\u0643 \u0641\u064a\u0647 \u0623\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0627\u0645\u0634\u062a\u0631\u0643 \u0645\u0644\u0645\u062d \u0645\u0648\u062c\u0648\u062f \u0641\u064a \u0643\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u063a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0628\u0634\u0631\u064a\u0629","subTitle":"Theorizing Translation outside Translation Studies","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RODOLPHE GASCH\u00c9"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90007851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b8db7ed-c9ea-3446-9f44-9f72fb7ef485"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90007851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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This process culminates in the art of cinema as a public art in which total transparency is achieved. The essay is an attempt to investigate the changes in perception that come with the new technologies and the progressive evacuation of the sacred and the auratic from art.","subTitle":"On Walter Benjamin\u2019s Theory of Film","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcus Bullock"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2906019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"454","pagination":"pp. 454-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Eclipse of the Sun: Mystical Terminology, Revolutionary Method and Esoteric Prose in Friedrich Schlegel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906019","wordCount":12385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Felicity D. 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Bailey Carroll"],"datePublished":"1946-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30237264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038478X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9a7791e-12c2-3c27-a25a-c80282c0e89d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30237264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"swesthistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Texas Collection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30237264","wordCount":26331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Texas State Historical Association","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Watts","Iain Boal"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Working-Class Heroes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935294","wordCount":8688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"68","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger O'Toole"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10694404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57422143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-221959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3711946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socireli"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Salvation, Redemption, and Community: Reflections on the Aesthetic Cosmos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711946","wordCount":11653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"This article suggests that enhanced understanding of religion may result from an incursion into the realm of aesthetics. Beginning with Weber's brief and fragmentary allusion to art as an alternative to religion, it pursues parallels between religious and artistic phenomena through an inspection of various commentaries on aesthetics. In the process, it indicates the functionally inclusive character of many conceptions of art. Discerning elements of Weber's view of aesthetics in the writings of Nietzche, it considers the destinies of both art and religion under conditions of disenchantment. Despite Weber's pessimism, it asserts that epitaphs to art are as dubious as obituaries to religion are premature. It concludes by recommending the collaboration of sociologists of religion in broad, interdisciplinary cultural analyses of the human imagination.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GARRETT STEWART"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70a558c2-906d-37ec-ab30-5e7202a5aaac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24780385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thresholds of the Visible: The Death Scene of Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780385","wordCount":11080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark C. Taylor"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.2.300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d29e970-aa31-3166-b303-aa1a683f3b80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.33.2.300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"FuturePerfect: Tense","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.2.300","wordCount":4328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"The tension between perfections anticipated in the future and the imperfections plaguing the present mark the story of history especially in times of transition and instability. Theological fantasies with happy, if apocalyptic, endings proliferate in the stories about a technologically fantastic future where the Promised Land sometimes appears as an aesthetic utopia as in Constructivist and Futurist manifestoes. Information and telematic technologies currently drive the theological fantasies of a perfect future. In its current incarnation, these stories often make the cyber-space into a move toward perfect immateriality as a kind of merger with God. Disincarnation becomes a new fantasy, described by many important contemporary scientists, of human consciousness surviving without bodies as they evolve into machines. Immortality becomes a real possibility as the distinction between machines and humans fades in these fantastic futures currently under construction. As a corollary to these perfect futures, the tension and worry arises because the technological fantasies seek to expose everything to a connectedness until there is nothing left but disincarnated machines. With the increasing eccentricity of information flows, an uncertainty appears because no one can locate who has access to what information. Transparent systems lead to opaque situations. The inescapability of noise means that the future can never be truly perfect or perfectly transparent. That noise also allows the systems to move and for the fantasies to continue. Any completely perfect future is a dreamless sleep without even the tense noise of speculations and fantasies of perfect futures. (C. S.)","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas C. Laudadio"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.38.2.0304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cd62765-77aa-3da2-b988-187f1e6843cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.38.2.0304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"304","pagination":"pp. 304-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cSounds like a Human Performance\u201d: The Electronic Music Synthesizer in Mid-Twentieth-Century Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.38.2.0304","wordCount":8927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"ABSTRACT This article examines the role electronic music and musical instruments played in the musicological discourse of the mid-twentieth century by analyzing two early sf stories about synthesizers: Charles Harness\u2019s novella \u201cThe Rose\u201d (1953) and Lloyd Biggle, Jr\u2019s short story \u201cThe Tunesmith\u201d (1957). It argues that science fiction echoed both the concerns of critics fearful that new electronic forms would \u201cdehumanize\u201d music and the optimistic rhetoric of those who dreamt of the technology\u2019s enormous potential. I argue that by examining sf\u2019s contribution to the perception of electronic music and musical instruments, one can find a prescient analysis of the consequences of an increasingly technologized culture, as well as a farsighted and thoughtful analysis of a nascent technology that would soon become one of the most significant cultural developments of the twentieth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JENNIFER SHRYANE"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaff7f69-e52a-3341-a592-bab29feb878c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40926941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'A small Utopia': Unterst\u00fctzer not Anh\u00e4nger. Einst\u00fcrzende Neubauten's Supporter Initiative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926941","wordCount":11852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This paper argues that the Internet strategy weated and used by Berlin musicians, Einst\u00fcrzende Neubauten, emulates many aspects of Attali's (2006) hopes for the future of music - in particular, the creation of new social relations through a participatory listening and, in Chns Cutler's words (2008), to be 'research as well as entertainment'. I set out to show that Neubauten's use of the world wide web made their Supporter Initiative a radical innovation. My evidence is that their Subskribentenmodell provided access dunng 2002-2007 to web-streamed 'open studio' rehearsals which facilitated a new relationship between artist and recipient in its declaration of fallibility and attention to feedback. Secondly, I argue that Neubauten's international network of 2,000 Unterst\u00fctzers (not Anh\u00e4ngers) became a virtual and actual 'extended family' who created the cottage industry ethos necessary for successful independence. This family not only supported the band financially and contributed to artistic and practical decisions - as with the DIY Berlin concert Grundst\u00fcck - but also provided grass roots knowledge and skill for independent dissemination and touring (in 2008) of Alles Wieder Offen. Finally, this anti-record company model now offered a paradigm to 'infect' other fringe artists and hence upheld Beuysian\/Cageian social aims of art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela M. Lee"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Value, the Fetish of Method: A Case Study at the Peabody Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166922","wordCount":8509,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[29526,29604]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"General Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831514","wordCount":59583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin F. McCarthy","Elizabeth Heneghan Ondaatje"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7249\/mr1552rf.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780833030764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbe863e7-4746-325d-baf9-658dda833d5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7249\/mr1552rf.7"}],"isPartOf":"From Celluloid to Cyberspace","keyphrase":["artists","sector","nonprofit","nonprofit sector","organizations","arts organizations","arts environment","audiences","technology","nonprofit arts"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"11","pagination":"11-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business operations"],"title":"THE ARTS ENVIRONMENT IN AMERICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7249\/mr1552rf.7","wordCount":5020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"As we have already indicated, the arts environment in America is changing. In this chapter, we discuss the nature of these changes in greater detail. Although we focus on the shape of change rather than its dynamic, we devote special attention to technology and the role it has played in reshaping the arts environment. There are several reasons for this. First, the role of technology in the arts is often overlooked (Lovejoy, 1992). Second, as we have already noted, we anticipate that technological developments will play an increasing role both in the creation and the distribution of the arts in","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Chiong"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf957078-4591-3950-9aff-45c7cf91c315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 50-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Kawara on Kawara","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779080","wordCount":8891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20417,20663]],"Locations in B":[[4974,5231]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind Krauss"],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85f0a8df-4e0f-347f-813b-05449b3b1241"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Notes on the Index: Seventies Art in America. Part 2","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778480","wordCount":4079,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20669,20919]],"Locations in B":[[21833,22096]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAURIZIA BOSCAGLI"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bcb2e96-237d-3824-a0b4-448711fd356d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SPECTACLE RECONSIDERED: JOYCEAN SYNAESTHETICS AND THE DIALECTIC OF THE MUTOSCOPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871335","wordCount":9054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John O'Neill"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2505652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Two Body Criticism: A Genealogy of the Postmodern Anti-Aesthetic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505652","wordCount":6913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Barbara Maria Stafford's Body Criticism (1992) is analyzed for its reliance upon monstrous bodies as the source of an alternative to the art history of the Enlightenment. A counterculture of the flesh caught in its own vision of skin diseases, bumps, and medical pathologies is painstakingly reproduced as the official opposition to reason's body. The art establishment is required to admit engravers, cartoonists, kaleidoscopists, and phrenologists. Critical questions are raised regarding Stafford's use of iconology and genealogy, as well as a critical difference over the question of the revolutionary status of the postmodern aesthetic traced from the camera obscura to virtual reality perception.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Biro"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"History at a Standstill: Walter Benjamin, Otto Dix, and the Question of Stratigraphy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167544","wordCount":17176,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynda Nead"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Posthuman Comedy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664550","wordCount":10066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bef7c9be-bfcb-312c-a675-cfa6d4677fc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":308.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Ecological Society of America. Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167192","wordCount":202386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David P. Haney"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb5c6d2a-e643-3171-a472-72557a123cdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetics and Ethics in Gadamer, Levinas, and Romanticism: Problems of Phronesis and Techne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463425","wordCount":10338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":"Aristotle's distinction between phronesis, or ethical knowledge, and techne, or productive knowledge, is relevant both to Romantic and to modern discussions of the relations between aesthetic and ethical experience. Wordsworth and Coleridge try in different ways to negotiate between the two kinds of knowledge, advocating the ethical force of poetry while acknowledging its status as techne; in contrast, modern criticism tends either to accept the ubiquity of techne or to revive phronesis while undervaluing the tension between the two. Hans-Georg Gadamer and Emmanuel Levinas provide a way to link phronesis to aesthetic autonomy through the means-end unity of phronesis and the ethical claim of the other, although Gadamer overemphasizes the autonomy of the artwork and Levinas underemphasizes the ethical possibilities of the aesthetic. Wordsworth and Coleridge present the ethical encounter with the other as in tension with techne, but they also show that tension itself to be ethically significant.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42936599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3526711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcellbiology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Cell Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":441.0,"pageEnd":"438a","pageStart":"1a","pagination":"pp. 1a-438a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Developmental & Cell Biology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the First International Congress on Cell Biology, The American Society for Cell Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3526711","wordCount":365247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Christopher Johnson"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffefe1da-99ff-3006-9211-2249a6578fca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26778577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fakecraft","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778577","wordCount":12403,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[19962,20144]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"The essay defines and explores the dimensions of \u2018fakecraft\u2019. It unpacks authenticity in relation to problems of identity, the aura of the original, and commodification. It then shows how notions of authenticity and the fake generate centers and peripheries in the study of religion. The essay explores how traditions of African descent in the Caribbean and Brazil have long been marginalized in the study of religion as lacking depth or authenticity. The essay then takes up a specific example of fakecraft and its prolific work, namely in early modern Christianity\u2019s process of purification and self-definition through evaluations of demonic possession as \u2018real\u2019 or \u2018fake\u2019, terms that were then applied to the west coast of Africa. In the broadest terms, the article argues that fakecraft \u2013 discourses of the real versus the merely mimetic \u2013 is basic to religion-making.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erika Balsom"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c23e064f-fa0e-3202-9ab5-1b788e89fb36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Original Copies: How Film and Video Became Art Objects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653637","wordCount":12731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"This article examines the sale of film and video as art objects, with particular attention to the development of the limited-edition model throughout the twentieth century. It offers an explanation for the ascendance of this model in the 1990s and explores both the support and criticism it has received.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giuliana Bruno"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61217418-d5b6-3f4e-9520-bbd602082191"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Film, Aesthetics, Science: Hugo M\u00fcnsterberg's Laboratory of Moving Images","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627776","wordCount":10679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"36","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Duro"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INHOUDSOPGAVE VAN DE BIJDRAGEN TOT DE TAAL-, LAND- EN VOLKENKUNDE: DEEL 121 (1965) \u2014 DEEL 130 (1974): MET ALFABETISCH REGISTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861435","wordCount":33219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth S. Noyes"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e5ba445-3479-3fb3-a861-43a7a0dfa846"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44973258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mattheus Greuter's Sunspot Etchings for Galileo Galilei's \"Macchie Solari\" (1613)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973258","wordCount":18710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"For the series of etchings that he produced in Rome for Galileo Galilei's 1613 astronomical publication on sunspots, German-born Catholic convert Mattheus Greuter used an experimental copperplate etching technique that subsumed Galileo's observation-based conclusions about the sunspots' quiddity. It adapted an exceptionally subtle linear manner from devotional prints, their fine style inflecting Lucretian mechanics and metaphors of vision and complicating early modern perceptions regarding northern lines as inherently devout and accurate. Greuter's sunspots capture the poignancy of the all-too-brief historical moment in which Galileo, the German diaspora artist, Jesuit scientists, and Roman inquisitors might coexist.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andy Stafford"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a992a8d7-a391-3b2f-9a89-27f981f5233a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bazin and Photography in the Twenty-First Century: Poverty of Ontology?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151964","wordCount":7253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"According to Andr\u00e9 Rouill\u00e9 (2005) the search for photography's ontology is both fruitless and pointless. Six decades after Andr\u00e9 Bazin's seminal essay, 'The Ontology of the Photographic Image' (1945), there is a concerted attempt to remove photography from the 'reliquary' of death in which Bazin had (seemingly) locked it. Preferring 'genesis' to 'result', Bazin had suggested that photography benefited from an essential objectivity' and that it was close to being a 'natural phenomenon': for the first time in history, representation of the external world emerges, mechanically, without human intervention. For Rouill\u00e9 however, this is a 'poverty of ontology', a theory of the 'index' based on Peirce erroneously attached to a semiotics of the photographic image. So what happens to the photograph's temporal dimension, crucial to Bazin's definition, if we reject the image as record of the 'that-has-been' (Barthes)? Can we still use Bazin's ontology in the twenty-first century?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James P. Martin"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29e3ecee-6c05-394f-9eef-dfc753e86989"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24649825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Die bezaubernde Anmut eines chemischen Prozesses\u2014Photography in the Works of Gerhard Roth and W. G. Sebald","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649825","wordCount":7656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Author and Germanist W. G. Sebald wrote two essays on Austrian author Gerhard Roth in which his opinion of Roth's writing radically changes within the space of just a few years. This article examines the role of photography in both authors' work as a means of understanding Sebald's radical reversal of opinion concerning Roth. Although on the surface their use of photography appears very different, a closer investigation reveals a shared thematic concern with the omnipresence of destruction that informs the text\/image relationship in both authors' writing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAM SLOTE"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03f8d2e3-cb8b-35f0-9fc4-5f5946fae04e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Prolific and the Devouring in \"The Ondt and the Gracehoper\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285214","wordCount":7293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Fordham University","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bert O. States"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2546e1a-af88-3352-86f2-18df45c52f3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performance as Metaphor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208711","wordCount":15645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-08-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1691044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42a6ab87-14c4-35be-88a3-7c4730cdf791"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1691044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"800","pageStart":"743","pagination":"pp. 743-800","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Since then, it has become a burgeoning art historical research field, yet its academic status remains ambiguous, its position in relation to art criticism is contradictory, and its goals and procedures are radically undertheorized. Nonetheless, the concept of the contemporary offers as rich a resource for understanding art within contemporaneity as did the concept of the modern for art within modernity, as revealed by this survey of the concept's emergence, history, and current status in art historical discourse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHARON MARCUS"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41414172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6e4ab51-cc2b-3198-9f10-eb58e2c1eb99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41414172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1021","pageStart":"999","pagination":"pp. 999-1021","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Salom\u00e9!! 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Bernhardt, Wilde, and Salome, a play in which almost every character is both fan and idol, were all defined by the volatile conjunctions shared by theatricality and celebrity: the asymmetrical interdependence of actors and audiences, stars and acolytes, exhibition and attention, distance and proximity, absolutism and democracy, exemplarity and impudence, worship and desecration, and presence and representation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN JOHNSTON"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b02ef37-657d-30c6-a694-9eba48dbbc7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Historical Picturesque: Adapting \"Great Expectations\" and \"Sense and Sensibility\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030067","wordCount":8129,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13195,13402]],"Locations in B":[[13311,13517]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Examining the reception of two film adaptations of nineteenth-century novels in the context of critical postmodernism, this essay investigates the obsession with fidelity and authenticity among critics. Noting links between the heritage film and the aesthetic of the picturesque, the author proposes Alfonso Cuar\u00f3n's counter-picturesque film as a model for heritage adaptations.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans Morgenthaler"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85dae38-a50f-3bd2-85a3-f1f72b5bf8e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Chronology versus System: Unleashing the Creative Potential of Architectural History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425384","wordCount":7755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"This article proposes a change in the teaching of architectural history to improve its potential for architectural education. A study of architectural history textbooks reveals the inadequacy of relying on the chronological organization of history. Instead, systems theory is recommened as the framework for history teaching. This should be complemented by a new understanding of the role of historical time in generating change and by a teaching method that responds to the breakup of metaphysical foundations. A different way of framing knowledge and a greater exploitation of students' intuitive capabilities will support these changes. This model is expected to better integrate history into the architectural curriculum.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ESTHER M. K. 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This paper examines how his films are characterised by a variety of accents, images of authenticity, a quotidian ambience, and a new sense of materiality within the local-global nexus. Within a tripartite model of truth, identity, and performance, Jia's oeuvres demonstrate the powerful performativity of different modes of realism arising out of a state of conundrum when China undergoes a transition from planned economy into wholesale marketisation and globalisation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES HARRISON"],"datePublished":"1982-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41373447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"592e4e50-965b-3215-ac5d-f68fa7b736a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41373447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"GENERAL NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41373447","wordCount":6053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5314","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. 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Garascia"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"995d76d4-135d-341a-a37e-bf503def8bfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"485","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-485","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Handcrafting Archives: The Sounds of the Cockettes\u2019 Intimate Archiving Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.4.0455","wordCount":10652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"This essay uses the collections of two artists formerly associated with the Cockettes\u2014a 1970s queer, handcrafting, theatrical troupe\u2014to propose a method of critical archival research that explores the possibilities and limitations of queer archival recovery acts within institutional settings. Combining sound, performance, material, and visual studies, the author analyzes the \u201csonic materiality\u201d of these collections. This practice demonstrates how close reading the material condition of documents sharpens the researcher's receptivity to embedded traces of past sounds, making the documents capable of relaying histories of queer performance that would otherwise go unnoticed through archival research methods centering on visual empiricism. Resisting common narratives of synced archival bodies and the silencing imperatives of institutional accessioning, reading the sonic materiality of these collections alongside one another reveals archival remixes wherein persisting traces of the informal artist-archivists cut up and through the meanings that the documents and archives\u2019 infrastructures generate. Traversing disciplinary borders between humanities and archival studies, this method of critical archival research provokes ongoing collaborations among artists, archivists, and researchers to formulate new models of documentation and archiving that more fully account for queer histories within institutional repositories.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN HOFFMANN"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/j.ctv3znxwd.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780271080079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1150eaca-179e-3461-bfcd-7ea6cc4bf016"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/j.ctv3znxwd.10"}],"isPartOf":"Posthumous America","keyphrase":["cultivateur am\u00e9ricain","d\u2019un cultivateur","d\u2019un cultivateur am\u00e9ricain","lettres d\u2019un cultivateur","chateaubriand","lettres d\u2019un","zanelli gallipolis","voyage dans","moreau zanelli","cr\u00e8vec\u0153ur lettres"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"189","pagination":"189-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/j.ctv3znxwd.10","wordCount":12425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas R. Winpenny"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27773281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314528"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8e8f439-9eb5-3a05-afbe-89789c7db7de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27773281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"They Shall Mount Up With Wings as Eagles: Aeronaut John Wise Reflects on Man and Flight","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27773281","wordCount":5015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Golding"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PHOTOGRAPHY, MEMORY AND SURVIVAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926234","wordCount":8323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"Death insults and embarrasses us. Barthes drew attention to the way death is figured in the photograph in a way that compels us to engage with it. This article explores, through the work of Christian Boltanski and others, how the photograph\u2014which both captures the uniqueness of the moment and makes its infinitely replaceable\u2014perpetuates a sense of ourselves and is able to offer a public commemoration.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorottya Fabian"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt17rw4xk.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783741533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06ca15f1-43b5-3de0-8706-f43dd9b0c23d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt17rw4xk.14"}],"isPartOf":"A Musicology of Performance","keyphrase":["dxdoiorg","violin","partitas","farnham ashgate","solo violin","engl trans","sonatas","sonatas and partitas","leech wilkinson","emery schubert"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"313","pagination":"313-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt17rw4xk.14","wordCount":6742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHANIE SCHWARTZ"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a2867d1-dc62-379a-b35d-2b71a1eddcbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24917006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revolution and After","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917006","wordCount":12294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"158","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura G. Pedraza-Fari\u00f1a"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d40e379-1c5c-324f-823d-f28b82694bac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43917628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding the Federal Circuit: An Expert Community Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917628","wordCount":32303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (\"CAFC\")\u2014the appeals court in charge of virtually all patent cases\u2014has been fraught with controversy since its creation in 1982. To its critics, the Federal Circuit engages in puzzling behaviors, out of step with its role as an Article III appellate court. The Federal Circuit shows little deference to district courts on questions of fact and to the Patent and Trademark Office (\"PTO\") on technical issues. It surprisingly resorts to formalistic rules in an area of the law that requires flexibility to adapt to changing technological landscapes. These criticisms have become increasingly salient, leading to calls for an end to the Federal Circuit's exclusive jurisdiction over patent appeals. Several explanations have been put forth to account for these puzzling behaviors. Yet, none can fully explain the range of unique Federal Circuit conduct. Without a full explanation for Federal Circuit behavior, however, the debate over Federal Circuit jurisdiction will remain gridlocked. Drawing upon studies from the sociology of expertise, this Article provides a model of Federal Circuit decision-making that explains and predicts Federal Circuit behavior as a product of four distinct but interrelated expert community features: (1) epistemic control, (2) codification, (3) typecasting, and (4) inability to self-coordinate. The drive that expert communities exhibit for maximal control and autonomy over their knowledge base\u2014referred to as epistemic control\u2014explains why the Federal Circuit is less likely to defer to solutions proposed by other expert communities, such as the PTO, than would be expected of generalist courts. Those motivations also predict that expert communities such as the Federal Circuit will be more likely to defy non-expert superior generalists, such as the Supreme Court, than would be expected under traditional accounts of behavior in judicial hierarchies. The codification feature of expert communities gives a richer account than existing narratives of when and why the Federal Circuit may prefer inflexible rules of decision over flexible standards. It predicts that the Federal Circuit will resort to rules not only to simplify technical knowledge or control subordinate communities, but also to build external legitimacy and manage internal dissent. Normatively, this model offers a path out of the gridlock by revealing a framework to evaluate and design proposals for Federal Circuit reform. To minimize the distortive effects of typecasting in the context of a centralized court, while retaining the advantages of expertise, this Article proposes the use of advisory panels to house technological, sociological, and economic expertise. Additionally, the model has important implications beyond the Federal Circuit, as it provides a novel theoretical lens to analyze the behavior of other specialized courts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Daniels","Hayden Lorimer"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea885fde-4b55-332c-b353-4261e3deee5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Editorial: Until the end of days: narrating landscape and environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251449","wordCount":4466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23426744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6de49f62-c586-3173-a1dd-627d7908fe97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23426744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23426744","wordCount":40084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alastair Williams"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e844d977-aab7-38b1-8fc4-654235f290c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Technology of the Archaic: Wish Images and Phantasmagoria in Wagner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823710","wordCount":7503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Trevor A. Strunk"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"676aad87-6836-374c-8ece-6b0b0480c3ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Dollar at the End of the Book: Vanessa Place, Inc., and Allegory in Conceptual Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.2.0195","wordCount":11361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"This article engages the poet Vanessa Place's recent \u201ccorporate\u201d venture, Vanessa Place, Inc., in order to ask in what ways conceptual poetry can be understood as a conflation between art object and commodity. What becomes clear through a reading of not only Vanessa Place, Inc., but also Place's critical poetics in Notes on Conceptualisms as well as her long-form conceptual poem Dies: A Sentence, is that the relationship between the conceptual poem and the commodity form is by no means simply antagonistic or complementary. Ultimately, this essay argues, it is Vanessa Place, Inc.'s precarious but dialectical nature as a commodified poetics that allows it to successfully and critically, if provisionally, embody the complexities and contradictions of late capitalist culture itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AARON SMUTS"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d850834-a6db-34cf-8349-dc3311fd837c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25656247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Is Interactivity?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656247","wordCount":9840,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25309,25538]],"Locations in B":[[51035,51265]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-12-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1717615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ef8ace3-341d-367c-b38b-aefa16b34430"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1717615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"1390","pageStart":"1205","pagination":"pp. 1205-1390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1717615","wordCount":25571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3701","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"150","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. A. Fleming","H. Snowden Ward","Charles J. Innes Baillie"],"datePublished":"1901-01-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00da9bf9-71f2-3e44-84d5-7accabb8f2d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1901,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 49, no. 2513","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335554","wordCount":22508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2513","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1961-08-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1707779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f0227ed-8eb0-3200-b544-0c62f1106f4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1707779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1707779","wordCount":32391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3477","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"134","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. Stein"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Work in Victorian Urban Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829774","wordCount":5229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/384219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384219","wordCount":4939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.29","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d54f996f-80bb-38ea-92cf-75c8b0705571"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2tx.29"}],"isPartOf":"Alexander Kluge","keyphrase":["cinema","public sphere","early cinema","nickelodeon","nickelodeon notes","miriam hansen","television","reinventing the nickelodeon","kluge bestandsaufnahme","negt \u00f6ffentlichkeit"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"389","pagination":"389-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reinventing the Nickelodeon:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.29","wordCount":9883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Images from Griffith\u2019s Intolerance, the French story, the rape of Brown Eyes, tinted blue, projected in cinemascope onto the background of an opera stage, under a ceiling painted with purple sky and palm trees; on the soundtrack, Giacomo Meyerbeer\u2019sLes Huguenots;<\/em>all this on a television screen. Uptown music video, nostalgic modernism, or postmodern collage? Kluge\u2019s recent work for television continues the eclectic juxtaposition of found materials familiar from his films \u2013 montage clusters combining old footage, still photographs, magic lantern slides, popular illustrations, written titles, second-hand music, and occasional voice-over. While these nondiegetic clusters suspend the flow of the narrative","subTitle":"Notes on Kluge and Early Cinema","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1909-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/905885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ddc9e8b-1616-3ea0-94b4-2225f1b7a37d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/905885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"836","pageStart":"812","pagination":"pp. 812-836","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/905885","wordCount":22436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"802","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1937-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25689251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b738a35-e1c2-3f79-b306-9886bb8937b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25689251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamerlibrasso"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Library Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":291.0,"pageEnd":"H354","pageStart":"H64","pagination":"pp. H64-H354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25689251","wordCount":189240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin McCabe"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bf8a9f1-81e7-3540-9ebe-3a3366f1c904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25563279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Timecode, Glitch, and Noise: Some Notes on Video","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563279","wordCount":4247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"84","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HANS BERTENS"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fleeing forwards","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263537","wordCount":3818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Caputi"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fa1f9d0-e682-3658-bf7f-b97ef737ade6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 486-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeing Elephants: The Myths of Phallotechnology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178062","wordCount":14367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"478986e5-7be1-3315-828a-299ed56006d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26475333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":176.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography A Checklist of Scholarship on Southern Literature for 1987","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475333","wordCount":71116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Mississippi State University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JACQUES-OLIVIER B\u00c9GOT"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039632"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565442947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6f80bb9-da07-31c9-8c6b-c2e5d359a0ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44840387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archphil"}],"isPartOf":"Archives de Philosophie","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'antinomie de l'autonomie: Benjamin, Adorno et les enjeux d'une esth\u00e9tique critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840387","wordCount":7142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Centre S\u00e8vres \u2013 Facult\u00e9s j\u00e9suites de Paris","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"Partant d'une reconstruction d\u00e9taill\u00e9e du d\u00e9bat au sujet de l'\u0153uvre d'art qui, dans la seconde moiti\u00e9 des ann\u00e9es 1930, oppose Adorno et Benjamin, l'article montre que la profondeur du d\u00e9saccord entre leurs positions respectives, notamment apropos de l'aura et de la reproductibilit\u00e9 technique, n'exclut pas certains recoupements. En particulier, Benjamin et Adorno se montrent attach\u00e9s \u00e0 une conception originale de la forme qui les situe \u00e0 \u00e9gale distance du formalisme et d'un mat\u00e9rialisme \u00ab vulgaire \u00bb : pour l'un comme pour l'autre, la forme est \u00e0 la fois le lieu de l'invention proprement artistique et l'instance o\u00f9 la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 fait irruption au sein des \u0153uvres. Based on a detailed reconstruction of the debate about the artwork carried out between Adorno and Benjamin in the mid-1930s, this article shows that no matter how deep their disagreement may have been (especially concerning the aura or mechanical reproduction), both theorists share common presuppositions and come to similar conclusions on certain issues. In particular, Benjamin and Adorno both end up being committed to a conception of form that is at odds with formalism as well as \"vulgar\" materialism: according to them, form is not only the site of artistic invention properly speaking, but also the locus where society makes itself manifest in the artworks.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30200291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f06ad8c-9e15-3dfe-a933-d688ecca739e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30200291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comphuma"}],"isPartOf":"Computers and the Humanities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30200291","wordCount":1985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1917-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"24726060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4899dc62-c6cd-3c74-8d11-3fb6ccfeea9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artsdeco1910"}],"isPartOf":"Arts & Decoration (1910-1918)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1917,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808969","wordCount":5106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jillian Taylor Lerner"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfdf0360-28d0-31fa-a2b2-7465b84b3526"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The French Profiled by Themselves: Social Typologies, Advertising Posters, and the Illustration of Consumer Lifestyles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442756","wordCount":11815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7829\/j.ctt19z397k.35","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789633860830"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48e50cce-29dd-3ac9-b65e-0a693094a6b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7829\/j.ctt19z397k.35"}],"isPartOf":"Art beyond Borders","keyphrase":["socialist realism","siqueiros","aragon","bazinbookccpart2 indd","lettres fran\u00e7aises","soviet","moscow","havana mexico","picasso","communist"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"405","pagination":"405-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Moscow\u2013Paris\u2013Havana\u2013Mexico, 1945\u201360","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7829\/j.ctt19z397k.35","wordCount":7334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the Soviet Union, socialist realism is the official doctrine from which people can hardly escape. Since the 1930s, this is most evident in the visual arts. Artists such as Gerasimov devote themselves to magnifying the cult of Stalin and celebrating the success of his regime in every area, as well as the happiness of the entire population. The artists not in possession of the rare talents of Deyneka merely present a sycophantic naturalism, a new Soviet academicism. The other cultural sectors obey the new order, expurgating the literature of authors or ideas regarded to be reactionary, or producing films","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Thornton"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3179708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01971360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52367447"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236625"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aba4300-446e-31ba-8641-23eef4eae77f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3179708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerinstcons"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Institute for Conservation","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"The History, Technology, and Conservation of Architectural Papier M\u00e2ch\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3179708","wordCount":5470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Maney Publishing","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"The use of paper or paper fiber in the production of three-dimensional objects seems to have closely followed the spread of papermaking itself. Brief notice of this ancient history is followed by description of papier m\u00e2ch\u00e9 as an architectural material from the 17th to the early 19th century, focusing on the mid-18th century, when it appears to have been used most extensively. The practices of the London craftspeople who produced sculptural detail in this medium for domestic use and export are examined as illuminated by the technical examination of papier m\u00e2ch\u00e9 in the Miles Brewton House of Charleston, South Carolina, dating from the 1760s. Discussion of the Brewton house material includes the complete rococo-style ceiling in the parlor, the reconstruction of gilded molding based on fragments from the drawing room found in a rat's nest during restoration, and a bas-relief of Apollo and a gilded border in the stair hall that was damaged but largely complete. Restoration of original decorative schemes required the replication of more than 150 ft of gilded and burnished cotton rag paper molding based on the conserved rat's nest fragments and the replication of gilded and ungilded moldings from the stair hall both to infill losses in extant molding and to replace missing molding for which physical and documentary evidence existed. The research required to duplicate this forgotten art is described as well as the modeling, carving, and mold-making techniques eventually used in accomplishing this extensive retoration project. Conservation methods used on existing 18th-century material are also detailed, focusing on lightweight materials chosen to support and reconstruct the Apollo relief.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorraine Plourde"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Disciplined Listening in Tokyo: Onky\u014d and Non-Intentional Sounds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174589","wordCount":12096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Shellman"],"datePublished":"1957-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64432323"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-263074"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae0607b3-a91e-3280-97fc-33a63db96560"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1424272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc194719"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1947-1974)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"An Introduction to the Study of Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424272","wordCount":4827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. F. Hill"],"datePublished":"1920-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40310341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00682462"},{"name":"oclc","value":"561629473"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40310341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papbritschrome"}],"isPartOf":"Papers of the British School at Rome","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1920,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","Classical Studies","History","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Roman Medallists of the Renaissance to the Time of Leo X","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40310341","wordCount":22956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"British School at Rome","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dario Del Puppo"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26484524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17249090"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62172635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"801a9daa-0ef4-3a3d-a5df-b94d17acb73a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26484524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medilettdital"}],"isPartOf":"Medioevo letterario d'Italia","keyphrase":null,"language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"REMAKING PETRARCH\u2019S \u00abCANZONIERE\u00bb IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26484524","wordCount":12576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Fabrizio Serra Editore","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"Questo saggio esamina aspetti problematici della trasmissione testuale del Canzoniere di Petrarca nel tardo Trecento e nel Quattrocento. Dopo un accenno al rapporto tra forme grafico-materiali del manoscritto e storiografia letteraria, il saggio studia sintomatiche varianti grafiche e testuali delle poesie di Petrarca dovute a copisti di competenze diverse, prendendo anche in considerazione come i Triumphi condizionarono la fortuna del Canzoniere. Bench\u00e9 non tutti i codici esaminati siano importanti per ricostruire la versione originale del poeta, sono pur sempre essenziali per capire come la sua opera fu interpretata nel secolo dopo la sua morte. Cos\u00ec il saggio intende dimostrare come lo studio degli aspetti materiali e grafici dei codici letterari \u00e8 necessario alla storiografia letteraria. This essay deals with several transcriptional problems faced by late-Trecento and Quattrocento scribes of Petrarch\u2019s Canzoniere. After a brief discussion of the relationship between the material and graphic formats of manuscripts and literary historiography, the study illustrates some of the graphic and textual changes that Petrarch\u2019s poems underwent as the result of scribal transmission in several transcriptional contexts. It also considers the way the poet\u2019s Triumphi helped shape the fortuna of the Canzoniere. Although the scribal copies examined are not important in re-constructing Petrarch\u2019s original text, they are essential to understanding the way the poet was interpreted by readers in the century after his death. Hence, more generally, the essay aims to show that the study of the material and graphic formats of literary manuscripts is necessary to literary historiography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Gelley"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"961","pageStart":"933","pagination":"pp. 933-961","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Contexts of the Aesthetic in Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251037","wordCount":13035,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[2994,3149],[55608,55779]],"Locations in B":[[28505,28660],[31221,31666]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"256b2719-e517-380b-912b-0a3e023c77bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2700773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"1682","pageStart":"1633","pagination":"pp. 1633-1682","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700773","wordCount":23879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. Harner","Harrison T. Meserole","Priscilla J. Letterman"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a515498c-3204-3c0d-a29c-5ff54cf3ca24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44990761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":407.0,"pageEnd":"912","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-519, 521-912","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY: World Shakespeare Bibliography 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990761","wordCount":344596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1953-06-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20311706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f248d189-b5b2-3b1e-908d-d399a9400a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20311706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20311706","wordCount":53225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4825","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Widick"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3649656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5e608e7-53f8-3c48-ba7d-c017d250527b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3649656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"723","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-723","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Flesh and the Free Market: (On Taking Bourdieu to the Options Exchange)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3649656","wordCount":19540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5\/6","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"On the options trading floor at the Pacific Exchange in San Francisco, traders spend their days \"making markets\" in option contracts, a mentally and bodily intense practice that requires the acquisition of a series of embodied knowledges specific to the occupation. In this article, I report on field research conducted at the exchange, during which I explored the cultural turn of practice theory to the body. Taking direction from Pierre Bourdieu's changing descriptions of habitus, field, and practical action, I argue that the logic of trading does proceed to some extent beneath the level of reflexive application of the rules of the game; but my encounter with traders' talk, their cultural production, and their gendered performance led my interpretation of this unconscious dimension beyond the limits of cognitivist metaphors for knowledgeable bodies toward an identificatory logic of practice. Whereas Bourdieu stopped short of taking practice theory all the way in to psychoanalysis, I found the imaginary order it brings into the picture decisive in shaping the experience of trading.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARNOLD W. FOSTER"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc853904-6b87-368d-9c14-bda87afe1344"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23999246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"DOMINANT THEMES IN INTERPRETING THE ARTS : MATERIALS FOR A SOCIOLOGICAL MODEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999246","wordCount":16237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey L. Meikle"],"datePublished":"1985-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41278744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0883105X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9499d738-07e5-3c06-8187-6f9de310e016"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41278744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudinter"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies International","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Design History: A Bibliography of Sources and Interpretations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41278744","wordCount":15688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew C. Hunter"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a60cba2-f788-3afe-9b1d-ceacfe643736"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43947719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Joshua Reynolds's \"Nice Chymistry\": Action and Accident in the 1770s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947719","wordCount":18710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"The first president of Britain's Royal Academy of Arts, Joshua Reynolds was described by contemporaries as a dangerously misguided chemist. Using a secretive laboratory of fugitive materials, he crafted visually striking images that came together quickly and stopped audiences dead in their tracks. But, just as rapidly, those paintings began to deteriorate as objects\u2014flaking, discoloring, visibly altering in time. When framed around the \"nice chymistry\" he prescribed for aspiring artists in his famous Discourses, Reynolds's risky pictorial enterprise can be situated within a broader problematic of making and thinking with temporally evolving chemical images in the later eighteenth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Branden W. Joseph"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4394c1ab-ab51-33ea-bf1a-1a94cd36706a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Future Anterior: History and Speculation in the Work of Angela Bulloch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442802","wordCount":11669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"32","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sian Lazar"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"179ac32d-7c8f-38c4-af47-afb6b1abd5ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40732219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Schooling and Critical Citizenship: Pedagogies of Political Agency in El Alto, Bolivia<\/bold>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732219","wordCount":16201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This article explores the formation of citizenship as social practice in a school in El Alto, Bolivia. I examine interactions between \"banking\" forms of education, students' responses, and embodied practices of belonging and political agency, and argue that the seemingly passive forms of knowledge transmission so criticized by critical pedagogy need not preclude the development of critical citizenship in young people,","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL NAAS"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c51ab6f9-3b19-3256-9e19-1028d7531ce2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Back"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2749072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0033362X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670016"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23408"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2749072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publopinquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Public Opinion Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Metaphors for Public Opinion in Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2749072","wordCount":4817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"The changing meaning of public opinion is investigated through use of metaphors in literature. Public opinion can be seen as an integral part of society; it is represented by such varied metaphors as a chorus, voices from the gods, destiny, an expression of the common people against their rulers, threatening peer pressure to enforce social norms, or a manipulable set of individual opinions. The metaphors expressing these views range from the chorus in Greek drama, to the goddess of Rumor, to stories of disguised rulers exploring the views of the people, to more complicated plots about the manipulation of public opinion. These metaphors and their relation to social organization are fruitful to consider in constructing theories of public opinion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Sherer"],"datePublished":"1991-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a260d07-7d94-3679-8051-7e5a31f5f823"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Re: The Politics of Formal Autonomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171128","wordCount":2896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Johnson"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3680912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01489267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41963634"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213543"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06cc4c09-7755-3a26-8764-cfd50ed0b45f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3680912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"computermusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Computer Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Computer Science","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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As physical objects, both are deeply suggestive: each is a manuscript comprised entirely of printed matter, a unique object fashioned from mass-produced material. This essay uses these collections to explore the historical imagination in the early decades of the nineteenth century, a time when the theater loomed large as a metaphor for the broader social world and a time when that world came increasingly to be defined by print and commerce.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorraine Ferguson","Douglass Scott"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4091232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00119415"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d696606-8d71-3928-a00c-4c308142afc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4091232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Design Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Time Line of American Typography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4091232","wordCount":11249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"148","publisher":"Walker Art Center","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/877691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bf7a198-28e2-3b68-a580-0b8221101d19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/877691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":184.0,"pageEnd":"clxxxii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-clxxxii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/877691","wordCount":33913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"855","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1944-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35be51fa-cbdb-3313-9f4f-06bf10e271c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25691994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":119.0,"pageEnd":"H401","pageStart":"H2","pagination":"pp. H2-H96, H378-H401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[Handbook]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691994","wordCount":65865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barnaby Haran"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab1ed54c-732a-3005-8c47-bd339cedcaf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43826249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tractor Factory Facts: Margaret Bourke-White's \"Eyes on Russia\" and the Romance of Industry in the Five-Year Plan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826249","wordCount":12311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"This article examines the particular form of documentary that the photographer Margaret Bourke-White employed in her images of sovietisation during the first Five-Year Plan in Russia. By her own admission she was more interested in machines than politics in producing the images that appeared in her 1931 book Eyes on Russia and in several magazine publications. Aiming to provide' photographic records might have some historical value' by detailing the Five-Year Plan in action, the images present these epic transformations in atmospheric vignettes that convey, as Maurice Hindus notes in Ejes on Russia's preface, the 'romantic appeal' of industrialisation and agricultural collectivisation. I discuss the ideological considerations relating to the publication of these photographs in both Fortune and USSR in Construction, the capitalist communist forums on industry, and as such reflect upon the continued importance of contexts of display and dissemination. Bourke-White was honest about the fabrication of the images, in contrast to Soviet worker photographers who fetishised facts and expressed antagonism towards artifice. The article situates Bourke-White within a discourse on photographic facticity in which few of the photographers were innocent of manipulating evidence for aesthetic or ideological purposes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1957-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45363860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00304557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee510f64-0465-31cb-99d1-e7ed26fbbfba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45363860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ordnance"}],"isPartOf":"Ordnance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94, 96, 98, 100, 102, 104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"ASSOCIATION AFFAIRS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45363860","wordCount":16086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"223","publisher":"National Defense Industrial Association","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Howard Singerman"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d80c9cd3-ae3f-3ffe-a9e9-f8a0bf4252bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40598957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Artistic Labor and Management","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598957","wordCount":4800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. Anthony Rotundo"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9258878b-b35d-36f8-84da-5a8eda1f00b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1160","pageStart":"1158","pagination":"pp. 1158-1160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231348","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAWRENCE HOWE"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d6db130-ab58-3df8-aac8-ef53aa628e23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24543206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN THE AGE OF MECHANICAL REPRODUCTION: REFLEXIVE AMBIGUITY IN \"MODERN TIMES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543206","wordCount":10771,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[24159,24318],[24476,24576],[30245,30347]],"Locations in B":[[27828,27989],[27995,28095],[46199,46301]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Charlie Chaplin produced Modern Times in the midst of social upheaval and professional peril: the Great Depression called into question the optimism that had surrounded the 'Machine Age,' and the success of talking motion pictures threatened Chaplin's cinematic career as a silent filmmaker and star. These factors have influenced a critical consensus that views Modern Times as resorting to exhausted Chaplin formulas and shying away from social criticism. In light of a careful reading of the reflexive gestures in Chaplin's film and of primary documents of the period, Howe questions this consensus. Instead, his analysis interprets the reflexivity in Chaplin's film as representations of production and consumption that emphasize the dynamism that these two economic forces exerted on society as a whole and on Hollywood in particular. The film's double reflexivity, Howe concludes, establishes a parallel between Chaplin's dilemma as a filmmaker and the equivocal cultural attitudes toward the influence of industrial technology on economics, politics, and aesthetics because both derive from the tension between technological change in society and the technological basis of art in the early twentieth century. In that intersection of forces, Modern Times reflects not only Chaplin's own political and aesthetic concerns, but also the complex meanings that technology had acquired in both the production of culture and the culture of production.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEVIN NEWMARK"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44122735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b1e6b7-6c86-332f-818b-0fd4b3be5517"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44122735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Now You See It, Now You Don't: Baudelaire's \"Modernit\u00e9\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44122735","wordCount":12439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"The concept of modernity remains a crux for literary studies because it attempts to combine historical categories with principles of form. Modernity refers to a moment of change: change in history and change in aesthetic forms indissociable from it. This essay examines the privileged case of Baudelaire, where a reflection on modernity\u2014\"Le Peintre de la vie moderne\"\u2014is doubled by writings regularly taken as examples of modernity\u2014especially Les Fleurs du Mal and Le Spleen de Paris. Is it possible to identify the formal element in Baudelaire's writing that distinguishes it as \"modern\"? After juxtaposing the incompatible responses offered by Paul Val\u00e9ry and Walter Benjamin, the essay considers \"Le Thyrse\" as a particular case in point. The reading discloses how only a radically \"prosaic\" element\u2014though one equally at work in the verse and prose poetry\u2014could prove adequate to a \"modernity\" at one and the same time poetic and historical.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas O. Haakenson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82a4d51c-95d9-31a6-a829-040e57ce792f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"The Merely Illusory Paradise of Habits\": Salomo Friedl\u00e4nder, Walter Benjamin, and the Grotesque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669258","wordCount":12242,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[39665,39976],[50092,50433],[50756,50990]],"Locations in B":[[60901,61198],[66964,67305],[67318,67553]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"106","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Aycock Metz"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68a53813-82c6-3e4f-a5fd-e1eccc4c3ed1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":98.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Dickens Studies: 2010","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372280","wordCount":47566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This review surveys over a hundred articles, book chapters, and books comprising the year's scholarship on Dickens studies published in 2010. In addition, I consider two recent fictionalizations of the Dickens biography\u2014a novel and a play. Where scholarly materials are concerned, I aimed to be comprehensive. I have not, however, attempted to examine the full range of Dickens adaptations and representations in popular culture. Throughout the review, my goal has been to serve readers engaged in their own scholarly projects suggesting what could prove valuable to them in the methods, insights, and subjects of this impressive and wideranging\u2014but dauntingly voluminous\u2014body of research. The article is organized under the following headings: Biography, History, and Reference; Dickens the Writer\/Dickens and His Readers; Sources, Influence, Intertextual Engagements; Language, Structure, Style, and Genre; Gender, Family, Children, Education; Social Class, Economics, Politics, and the Law; Urban and Cosmopolitan Contexts; Science, Technology, and the Arts; Ethical and Philosophical Approaches; Adaptation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. R. Burn","\u0391. \u0397. M. Jones","R. H. C. Davis","D. Slay","R. H. Hilton","P. J. Jones","T. F. T. Plucknett","Margaret Sharp","Rosalind M. T. Hill","G. R. Potter","C. H. Philips","\u0395. \u0392. Fryde","W. \u039f. Henderson","A. Cobban","C. R. Boxer","F. W. Brooks","J. Hurstfield","M. A. Thomson","C. Lloyd","\u0395. L. Ellis","A. Davies","J. S. Bromley","M. A. Lewis","G. S. Graham","L. S. Sutherland","C. S. Orwin","A. Birch","H. P. R. Finberg","H. G. Schenk","W. L. Burn","\u0391. \u0391. Conway","J. \u0395. Bowle","P. M. Williams","C. A. Macartney","W. \u039d. Medlicott","M. \u0395. Howard","R. \u0392. Pugh","W. H. Chaloner","G. P. Jones"],"datePublished":"1955-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24403996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182648"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24403996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"history"}],"isPartOf":"History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SHORT NOTICES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24403996","wordCount":15806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"138\/139","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mwr9.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053562185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d234b22f-52ea-3709-bb57-079058ad6396"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mwr9.10"}],"isPartOf":"The Value of Culture","keyphrase":["modern","cities","village","big cities","framework","durkheim","simmel","wittgenstein","sociologists","artists"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"108","pagination":"108-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Economics","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Big City, Great Art:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mwr9.10","wordCount":7271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In his inaugurallecture \u201cThe Valueof Culture\u201d, Arjo Klamer presents a conceptual problem for economists and policy-makers with a professionalinterest in the arts (see chapter 1). Conceding that economists have much to say about the prices of theproducts<\/em>of art, Klamer argues that theactivities<\/em>andexperiences<\/em>that are involved escape from the vocabulary economists routinely use. Economic concepts such as \u201cprice\u201d are just not fit for the kind of activity art happens to be. Art has value, but as activity and expenence it is literally priceless.\u2019 Those who confine their language to the standard economic vocabulary will be barred","subTitle":"A Myth about Art Production","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meg Roland"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.6.2.48","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15592936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71801176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213693"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b31c19b-75d0-3b5e-a406-a3e759f7f47f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/textcult.6.2.48"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"textcult"}],"isPartOf":"Textual Cultures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Facsimile Editions: Gesture and Projection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.6.2.48","wordCount":4815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"Abstract Although often considered a simple editorial tool, facsimile editions comprise a complex and under-theorized editorial terrain. An introduction to a collection of essays on the editorial form of the facsimile, this essay also traces the reproduction of the Behaim Globe as an example of historical and technological approaches to facsimile editions, suggesting the cartographic principle of \u201c\u201cprojection\u201d\u201d as a useful analog for facsimile editions. As the following collection of essays makes clear, our impulse to make a similar text (fac-simile) connects us to the core process of literary transmission itself \u2014\u2014 a process philosophically nuanced and editorially fraught.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u00edsli P\u00e1lsson"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44169294"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b44bf30c-2e8a-3a74-ac86-9ba278c5dd57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23257134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"576","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-576","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"These Are Not Old Ruins: A Heritage of the Hrun","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257134","wordCount":8260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The economic boom and subsequent collapse (Hrun) of the mid 2000s had a marked effect on Reykjav\u00edk, leaving various half-finished and empty structures with uncertain futures. Although the material culture of the economic collapse has been examined to some degree, the abandoned building sites have not. The Icelandic heritage discourse has so far had very little engagement with twentieth-century materiality and even less with twenty-first-century materiality but this paper contends that these places can nevertheless be seen as heritage. In order to engage with such places, the Icelandic authorized heritage discourse must be significantly broadened.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Needham"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24293713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0006128X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34f8f94b-b8da-3616-b394-f8d6bf97841f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24293713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papebiblsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Bodleian Library Incunables","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24293713","wordCount":26418,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2001.54.4.42","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3e64405-86e7-367c-9399-d75b076d3f91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2001.54.4.42"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Annual Film Quarterly Film Book Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2001.54.4.42","wordCount":28375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1923-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e684e752-6474-3230-961c-a8ecb84605da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"569","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1923,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Fourteenth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization. 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This article demonstrates that many of Benjamin's best-known claims can be found in the writings of the Czech avant-garde theorist Karel Teige in the early 1920s. Rather than debunking the Work of Art essay, however, this article traces Benjamin's critical perspective on liquidationism, identifying an avant-garde wish-image in the metaphor of the \u2018vanishing point\u2019.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVEN T. 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My suggestion is, however, that such exceptionalism is widespread in the art world, and is implicated in the art world\u2019s economic and political order. Indeed, it is profoundly rooted in Western thought.In his book Shanzhai: Deconstruction in Chinese<\/em>, Byung-Chul Han summarizes such a thought and provides a countermodel to it.\u00b2 Starting from Hegel\u2019s frustration with the Buddhist notion of \u201cemptiness,\u201d Han points out that \u201cemptiness in Chinese Buddhism means the negativity","subTitle":"Alex Robbins\u2019s \u201cComplements\u201d","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-09-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20394156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6112ddee-bc07-3b25-8ff4-39937c15de56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20394156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20394156","wordCount":51566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5621","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"877c23de-87dc-3815-ba21-5d2ffdec0db4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3103076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1974)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103076","wordCount":48071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Leddy"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1559147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559147","wordCount":1269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. 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The way in which the future was conceptualized by way of the image technologies of photography and film fundamentally changed between the mid-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Through an analysis of the Italian futurist Anton Giulio Bragaglia\u2019s experiments on movement photography between the years of 1911 and 1913, this article argues that expectations for the future shifted from one of technological optimization (from still photography to film) to an alternate paradigm of recurrence, recombination, and reconceptualization of older image techniques. By reassessing the so-called failures, or incapacities, of the chronophotographic practices of the 1880s and considering their reevaluation as a new mode of representing what Bragaglia called \u201cthe inner logic of movement,\u201d the futurist photographs question the linear teleology of technological optimization typically found within the history of photography. Instead, they propose a recursive structure that refers to preexisting, \u201coutmoded\u201d image techniques that open up unexpected horizons of the future.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacques Derrida","Peggy Kamuf"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"648e8c89-8852-31a8-8095-4b9adfc2a0ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"873","pageStart":"812","pagination":"pp. 812-873","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Biodegradables Seven Diary Fragments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343692","wordCount":32069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3080727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d8e7ab1-1b76-30be-a947-88c83a57f556"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3080727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":181.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2000","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3080727","wordCount":104393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alberto A. Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41134234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39966759"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d8a3cfd-7c26-3d8c-9279-5f9321b1c447"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41134234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archhistexacscie"}],"isPartOf":"Archive for History of Exact Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Replication of Coulomb's Torsion Balance Experiment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41134234","wordCount":22110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chad Anderson"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/earlamerstud.14.3.478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215920"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d744a206-c9eb-3868-886d-3ccc53500e53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/earlamerstud.14.3.478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"505","pageStart":"478","pagination":"pp. 478-505","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Rediscovering Native North America: Settlements, Maps, and Empires in the Eastern Woodlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/earlamerstud.14.3.478","wordCount":12099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"ABSTRACT Scholarship has long emphasized how Europeans justified colonial expansion by imagining North America as an unsettled continent, but eighteenth-century maps reveal the limits of this European fantasy. Rather than portraying North America as a land in need of settlers, British mapmakers needed to build an empire on the settlements of Indians. No mapmaker did this to a greater extent than John Mitchell in his famous 1755 work, A Map of the British and French Dominions in North America. This article explores the uncertain decades surrounding the Seven Years\u2019 War and the ambiguous but essential place of Indian settlements in the contest for North America. By taking European rhetoric at face value, we have overlooked a world where American Indians had the power to define the nature of settlement across much of North America\u2014a power reflected in European maps. It was not until the early American republic and the creation of Indian reservations that these Native American settlements disappeared from maps of America east of the Mississippi.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4619283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"550","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Individual Authors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619283","wordCount":45813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Crouch","David Matless"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/622935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Refiguring Geography: Parish Maps of Common Ground","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622935","wordCount":12433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"The Parish Maps Project, initiated by the environment and arts group Common Ground, has raised questions around the social role of mapping and the production of local knowledge. The work and philosophy of Common Ground are introduced and the key themes of mapping, place and aesthetics informing the project are outlined. Maps produced by individual artists and community groups are discussed in detail. The paper concludes by drawing out the relationship between such 'non-academic' investigations of place and recent debates within academic geography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KATIE SUTTON"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ca341b9-eba8-307c-ab3f-aff64d991eb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"442","pagination":"pp. 442-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexology's Photographic Turn: Visualizing Trans Identity in Interwar Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862279","wordCount":15357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89d02c73-544a-3965-853b-1de025db3bab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/230066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":204.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-17+19-153+155-185+187-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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As suffragists reassessed their strategies and reinterpreted the definition of womanhood relative to the vote-and as living Indians themselves underwent change-their representations of Indian culture altered. The construction of Indian women's history thus served simultaneously as a symbol of women's past power and natural rights, on the one hand, and as a validation of women's special \"civilizing\" qualities, necessary to the contemporary goals of reform and American expansion, on the other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Zipes"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41948950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15505340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ef2e309-7072-33a0-aef6-9cc09e2efbe2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41948950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"storselfsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Storytelling, Self, Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"To Eat or Be Eaten: The Survival of Traditional Storytelling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41948950","wordCount":8423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry B. 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What made cinema magic, the ability to convincingly (and seemingly objectively) capture the world before the lens, also cast a shadow of dispersion: if an image could be created without the intervention of the human hand, how could this be Art? In addition to having to defend itself against claims that it merely was a form of tawdry mechanical reproduction, cinema has suffered an ongoing identity crisis as its delivery technologies (celluloid, electronic tape, pixels) come and go. As with VHS and Beta tapes, digital technologies have","subTitle":"Where the Future So Eloquently Nests, or: What is Cinema Again?","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Natasha V. 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The aim of the survey is to illustrate how the tools of urban morphology, in particular the idea of urban tissue as a key, coordinating point of reference, can provide an essential foundation for understanding the structure and complexity of the built environment as well as for creating, transforming and managing it. Along the way, analogies are drawn with anatomy, surgery and craftsmanship to highlight the fact that skill in practice depends on an articulated and comprehensive understanding of the material with which you are working. The paper ends by concluding that such analogies in themselves are not a substitute for the detailed knowledge of the substance and structure of urban form provided by urban morphology, particularly if our aim is to plan and design a better built environment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"782","pageStart":"774","pagination":"pp. 774-782","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618947","wordCount":3461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.87.2014.bm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18706dbe-2795-3313-9081-d41c54ec49ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.87.2014.bm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.87.2014.bm","wordCount":1963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. 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A network of Centers for Medical Countermeasures against Radiation (CMCRs) has been established across the U. S.; one of the missions of this network is to identify and develop mitigating agents that can be used to treat the civilian population after a radiological event. The development of such agents requires comparison of data from many sources and accumulation of information consistent with the \"Animal Rule\" from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Given the necessity for a consensus on appropriate animal model use across the network to allow for comparative studies to be performed across institutions, and to identify pivotal studies and facilitate FDA approval, in early 2008, investigators from each of the CMCRs organized and met for an Animal Models Workshop. Working groups deliberated and discussed the wide range of animal models available for assessing agent efficacy in a number of relevant tissues and organs, including the immune and hematopoietic systems, gastrointestinal tract, lung, kidney and skin. Discussions covered the most appropriate species and strains available as well as other factors that may affect differential findings between groups and institutions. This report provides the Workshop findings.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John T. 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The four conditions of prolongation postulated by Joseph Straus are adopted as the basis of the discussion, but the method of identifying harmonies with pitch-class sets is rejected. This is justified partly on perceptual grounds. Using a conception of intervals and harmonies with restricted octave equivalence, an analysis is presented showing a structure in which the four conditions are fulfilled to a significant degree. 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In Paris, harpsichordshaped pianos were known in the 1760s, but probably as special harpsichords. Square pianos were considered to be new instruments when they arrived in the 1770s. These events seem to have given rise to the idea that the piano appeared everywhere at the end of the 18th century and took over from the harpsichord. Earlier appearances of the piano are brushed aside as premature. Earlier in the 18th century, however, and not in London or Vienna, the piano and the harpsichord were both appreciated without any thought of a takeover of one by the other. Queen Maria Barbara of Spain owned five pianos and seven harpsichords and was taught by Domenico Scarlatti from about 1719 until 1757. Her choice of instruments must reflect Scarlatti's preferences in some way and this must in turn have a bearing on a modern understanding of his keyboard sonatas. In 1740 Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach became keyboard player to Frederick the Great. When Bach left, the King owned three Hammerfl\u00fcgel and about six harpsichords. The Silbermann Hammerfl\u00fcgel Bach played at Potsdam for some 20 years should be taken into consideration for an understanding of his preference for the piano for improvisation and of his pieces written for the piano. Whereas the choice of instruments for the keyboard music of Haydn and Mozart could do well to take notice of the takeover of the piano, a process that took place during the lives of these two composers, the choice of instruments for the keyboard music of Domenico Scarlatti and Philipp Emanuel Bach needs rather to be made in the light of the ways in which the two instruments, favoured for their differing qualities, were used alongside each other at the courts at which these two composers served.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane Hertel"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2165669X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3ddfb05-cacb-3f9f-b588-8da253492f4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43947310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaustrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Austrian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Fernbild\": On Otto Friedlaender Writing \"Vienna 1900 in Vienna 1938-1942\/45\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947310","wordCount":16928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"Between 1938 and 1945 the Viennese lawyer Otto Friedlaender (1889-1963) wrote Letzter Glanz der M\u00e4rchenstadt: Bilder aus dem Leben um die Jahrhundertwende 1890-1914 and Wolken drohen \u00fcber Wien: Lebens-und Sittenbilder aus den jahren vor dem ersten Weltkrieg. Written side by side, these books nostalgically, but also critically, evoke the Habsburg myth of the mutually sustaining powers of Empire and Church and thus of the empire's spiritual unity. Writing from his position of \"inner exile\" and protected survival in central Vienna, Friedlaender employs a very particular, shifting lens characterized by loving humor, critical irony, and striking visuality. The term Fernbild, introduced in 1893 into optical art theory and soon adopted into cultural criticism, defines an image's mnemonic oscillation between spatial-temporal distance and presence. This concept sheds light on Friedlaender's dialectical work in both texts, in which he interweaves Habsburg Vienna's anti-Semitism with foreboding and the knowledge of complete loss.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Bess"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08948410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5b34953-8a97-3478-abb6-02f786bbfc19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24394909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsouthwest"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Southwest","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Applied sciences - Food science"],"title":"Indigenizing the Safety Zone: Contesting Ideologies in Foodways at the Chilocco Indian Industrial School, 1902\u20131918","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24394909","wordCount":18605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Journal of the Southwest","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan A. 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Spengler"],"datePublished":"1935-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1807805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"667664d2-ab5b-3592-b0f1-f1c70922b5f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1807805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Malthusianism In Late Eighteenth Century America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1807805","wordCount":9600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Opinions tinctured with the Malthusian dictum, \"population grows to the limits of subsistence,\" were expressed by Benjamin Franklin and writers influenced by him as well as by Madison, Jefferson, Ellsworth, and Adams. Franklin utilized his population doctrine to refute the arguments of those who favored the restriction of manufacturing by the colonists or opposed granting the American colonists the right to migrate westward or into Canada. Franklin implied that in the long run population could neither be increased nor decreased by migration, that eventually population pressure would reduce wages and lead to the establishment and spread of manufacturing in the colonies. The American writers believed that population could double every 20 or 25 years under favorable conditions. While they developed no law of diminishing returns, the American writers believed that poverty, etc., accompanied population pressure. None specifically advocated moral restraint, however. Only Adams employed Malthusianism to attack radicalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeanine Ferguson"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27948682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8430c24-78dd-362d-8240-4d6e9f55c324"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27948682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Benjamin's Blur: The Site of Practice in the History of Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27948682","wordCount":3585,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan Diner"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d76ac0e-8f1b-31e7-bdbf-756e89f5de30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23357061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reimagining Enlightenment: In Pursuit of Prudent Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357061","wordCount":2914,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"117","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41236180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afe80b12-0645-3191-9e39-063d9ebcbc85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41236180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41236180","wordCount":15214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helene E. Roberts"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00496189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"310470821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235076"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20084845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpernewsl"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":194.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10, 1-3, 3a, 4-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"British Art Periodicals of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20084845","wordCount":26752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURIE A. FINKE","MARTIN B. SHICHTMAN"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10786279"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618108"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c48d2ce-3e11-339d-9068-b4e4306a7f54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arthuriana"}],"isPartOf":"Arthuriana","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Arthur Pendragon, Eco-Warrior","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486006","wordCount":7206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Scriptorium Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"This essay explores the environmental agendas and ambitions that motivate John Timothy Rothwell, 'a mad biker chieftain wielding an axe,' who, claiming to be a 'post-Thatcher' King Arthur, changes his name and links his political struggles against the state to myths that mourn the lost original purity of ancient Britain. This article looks backward to authoritarian values his ecocriticism should interrogate. (LAF and MBS)","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Halberstam"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07406959"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-238251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84d02859-28bf-3519-aa47-c737a7209ee8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25595911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"profession"}],"isPartOf":"Profession","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Animation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595911","wordCount":2438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard G. Milo","Duane Quiatt","Leslie C. Aiello","Robbins Burling","David W. Frayer","Robert H. Gargett","Kathleen R. Gibson","Steve Jessee","Jenny Kien","Grover S. Krantz","Elizabeth H. Peters","Sonia Ragir","Ron Wallace","Roger W. Wescott","Lucy Wilson","Milford H. Wolpoff","Thomas Wynn"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bbbe892-60ba-3615-8cfd-d8896691bb75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2744275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Glottogenesis and Anatomically Modern Homo Sapiens: The Evidence for and Implications of a Late Origin of Vocal Language [and Comments and Replies]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2744275","wordCount":28648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfb772cb-bde6-3c94-9b5c-cc420b76d8a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"791","pageStart":"757","pagination":"pp. 757-791","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"IV Bibliographie analytique de toutes les publications relatives a l'Histoire, et a l'Organisation de la Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223798","wordCount":12136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARVEY GREISMAN","H. C. Greisman"],"datePublished":"1981-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"774b4519-a5c5-35d0-8877-68f995e4eff1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42852317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MATRIARCHATE AS UTOPIA, MYTH, AND SOCIAL THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852317","wordCount":8243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"After a relative silence of nearly four decades, matriarchal theory has been the subject of renewed interest in the social sciences. This paper traces the origins of matriarchal theory to its proximate roots in the nineteenth century speculative literature, and analyzes its impact on the development of utopian models for the restructuring of society along feminist and humanist lines.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily\u00a0Dana Shapiro"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/500231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21c2ee61-16b7-3e4c-aae0-1d3f4a5be313"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/500231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"J. D. Chalfant's Clock Maker<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/500231","wordCount":8464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Art historians and scholars of American culture typically view Gilded Age images of artisanal labor, a popular subject for genre painting during this period, as reactionary assertions of an idealized pre\u2010industrial past. This essay, by contrast, suggests that these seemingly anachronistic depictions of handicraft production often played an active role in promoting the very industrial culture they initially appeared to eschew. Images like The Clock Maker, painted in 1899 by the Wilmington, Delaware, artist Jefferson David Chalfant, at first seem to stand firmly opposed to industrial culture but ultimately make the shift from a manual to a mechanical civilization appear inevitable. On the one hand, Chalfant\u2019s carefully \u201ccrafted\u201d depiction of artisanal production functioned as a symbolic assertion of the skilled human hand in an age characterized by the subordination of mindful manual work to mechanical efficiency. On the other, Chalfant\u2019s methodical process of image making embraced the industrial ideals of efficiency, precision, and uniformity, and his sentimental iconography was readily adopted and adapted to modern ends. As an artist who identified with the obsolete craftsmen in his genre pictures yet emulated the techniques and principles of mass production, Chalfant embodied the contrariety that characterized Americans\u2019 attitudes toward industrial culture at a crucial moment of transition from the Gilded Age to the modern era.","subTitle":"The Image of the Artisan in a Mechanized Age","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87627b6d-93a2-34eb-9663-1c8f6e0d3cee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":200.0,"pageEnd":"2000","pageStart":"1801","pagination":"pp. 1801-2000","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Program of the 2006 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501664","wordCount":99176,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roy S. Porter"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fe94657-7e2c-3f7d-884b-2f37e08db190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/532103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noterecoroyasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wilkins Lecture 2000. Medical Futures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532103","wordCount":7000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"This paper examines forecasts made by writers, medical and non-medical alike, as to the nature of medicine in a future society. In particular, starting from Plato and Sir Thomas More, it explores what place (if any) has been envisaged for medicine in a future Utopian society. By way of an explanatory device, predictions concerning medicine are compared and contrasted to expectations as to the role of the sciences, natural and social. Investigation of the corpus of social prognostications in fact reveals a dearth of glorious expectations as to the future of medicine as such, although certain writings have held out great hopes for biologistic disciplines, such as eugenics. It is often in 'golden age' fantasies about the early history of mankind that the most glowing descriptions of complete health are painted. Similarly, perfect health is something often viewed not in social but in individualistic terms. Explanations are offered of these perhaps slightly surprising facts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. C. Hall"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44607926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560807841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cb13def-7b6c-3bd4-9913-90d3289fa712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44607926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryengineer"}],"isPartOf":"The Military Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering","Military Studies","Technology","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Society Affairs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44607926","wordCount":16926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"426","publisher":"Society of American Military Engineers","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Klinger"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fc27e36-5121-32bc-8464-264c90fde5d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Digressions at the Cinema: Reception and Mass Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225392","wordCount":8320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/452847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709499"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/452847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanspeech"}],"isPartOf":"American Speech","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/452847","wordCount":6083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ville Erkkil\u00e4"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvf3w2r4.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783161566912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f218e23-c3b2-3224-97d3-c4a9918e4054"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvf3w2r4.8"}],"isPartOf":"The Conceptual Change of Conscience","keyphrase":["kieler schule","national socialist","communality","legal science","legal conscience","radbruch","gustav radbruch","scholars","togetherness","concept"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"177","pagination":"177-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rechtsgewissen:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvf3w2r4.8","wordCount":49891,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In Privatrechtsgeschichte der Neuzeit<\/em> Wieacker built his narrative of European legal history on the concept of Rechtsgewissen<\/em>, \u2018legal conscience,\u2019 which, he asserted, would present a solution to the \u2018crisis of justice\u2019 which had plagued the European legal culture throughout modern history. Thus, the meaning of the concept of Rechtsgewissen<\/em> was fundamental not only for the Privatrechtsgeschichte der Neuzeit,<\/em> but for Wieacker\u2019s legal scientific legacy in general. I argue that in order to analyze the longer line in Franz Wieacker\u2019s legal scientific works, under standing the relation between the concepts of Rechtsbewusstsein<\/em> and Rechtsgewissen<\/em> is crucial.As analyzed in chapter III,","subTitle":"Conscience in history and in legal science","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deac Rossell"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":122.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Chronology of Cinema, 1889-1896","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815166","wordCount":84636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leo van Bergen","Heidi de Mare","Frans J. Meijman"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27017542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13623699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51276081-5880-302e-b364-03fb6a263d56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27017542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medconfsurv"}],"isPartOf":"Medicine, Conflict and Survival","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","Political Science","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Goya to Afghanistan \u2013 an essay on the ratio and ethics of medical war pictures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27017542","wordCount":9449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"For centuries pictures of the dead and wounded have been part and parcel of war communications. Often the intentions were clear, ranging from medical instructions to anti-war protests. The public\u2019s response could coincide with or diverge from the publisher\u2019s intention. Following the invention of photography in the nineteenth century, and the subsequent claim of realism, the veracity of medical war images became more complex. Analysing and understanding such photographs have become an ethical obligation with democratic implications. We performed a multidisciplinary analysis of War Surgery (2008), a book containing harsh, full-colour photographs of mutilated soldiers from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Our analysis shows that, within the medical context, this book is a major step forward in medical war communication and documentation. In the military context the book can be conceived as an attempt to put matters right given the enormous sacrifice some individuals have suffered. For the public, the relationship between the \u2018reality\u2019 and \u2018truth\u2019 of such photographs is ambiguous, because only looking at the photographs without reading the medical context is limiting. If the observer is not familiar with medical practice, it is difficult for him to fully assess, signify and acknowledge the value and relevance of this book. We therefore assert the importance of the role of professionals and those in the humanities in particular in educating the public and initiating debate.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRISON T. MESEROLE","JAMES L. HARNER","PRISCILLA J. LETTERMAN","YANWING LEUNG","JOHN B. SMITH"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b153db8b-a770-3712-ab25-50dfaf9bca5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44990250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":444.0,"pageEnd":"998","pageStart":"554","pagination":"pp. 554-571, 573-998","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography: Shakespeare: Annotated World Bibliography for 1989","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990250","wordCount":315774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory L. 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These conventions, she claims, have a social, not a biological foundation, and depend\u2014however arbitrarily\u2014on signs of sexual difference, Two late nineteenth-century novels, Villiers de l'Isle-Adam's L'Eve future and Jules Verne's Le Ch\u00e2teau des Carpathes, deal with the self-aware female performer who threatened to demystify the belief in the natural origins of gendered roles and the imbalance of power. These novels reflect the resulting practice of fetishizing the female body in order to render visible sexual, and ostensibly social difference, a practice necessitating the stripping or scripting of her voice by means of the new communication technologies: the phonograph, the moving-picture camera, the telephone, and radio.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-08-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42a178dc-b0f2-35b3-8b48-e885ee22fd7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24032058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032058","wordCount":37249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Trueman Wood"],"datePublished":"1912-06-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41340196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"992660d7-c590-360a-8971-77f4e4efc409"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41340196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"755","pageStart":"732","pagination":"pp. 732-755","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1912,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTS. 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His notion of \u201cviv\u00eancia est\u00e9tica\u201d (the lived experience of the aesthetic) bridged supposed gaps between performance and objecthood while offering a redefinition of what constitutes political action and what constitutes artistic matter.","subTitle":"The Problem of Color in H\u00e9lio Oiticica\u2019s Early Works","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e204fca-6394-31fe-a132-a4eb79d206b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808410","wordCount":21406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Hake"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0340613X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618142"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235708"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a9c8c7b-faea-30af-a0fd-bf6b2ce58b44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gescgese"}],"isPartOf":"Geschichte und Gesellschaft","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Workers, Work, and the Thingspiel<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976585","wordCount":11083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"A heavily promoted theatrical form after 1933, the Thingspiel was staged folk community, political mass choreography, and v\u00f6lkisch event theater. Drawing on the Weimar-era speaking chorus, the representatives of the Thingspiel movement sought to integrate proletarian forms of identification into the discourse of Arbeitertum (workerdom) and replace the analysis of class with racialized forms of communalization. The article reconstructs this process of appropriation as an integral part of the medially constructed and emotionally charged configurations of class, race, and community in the Thingspiel, with special attention paid to critical controversies and thematic continuities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSEPH DONATELLI","GEOFFREY WINTHROP-YOUNG"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c022d1ac-a6ef-37f7-b032-b764c0f9ece7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24775783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Literature and Media Change: A Selective Multidisciplinary Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775783","wordCount":8776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1541950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"702475ae-5a0c-387b-835b-e8e9e4a9c110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1541950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biolbull"}],"isPartOf":"Biological Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"\"To See What Everyone Has Seen, to Think What No One Has Thought\" Albert Szent-Gy\u00f6rgyi: A Symposium in His Memory and Honor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1541950","wordCount":38620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Marine Biological Laboratory","volumeNumber":"174","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1939-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82fb20fc-18f8-3b68-bd75-71a69009ab53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25690309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":391.0,"pageEnd":"H466","pageStart":"H72","pagination":"pp. H72-H381, H386-H466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690309","wordCount":266959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. T. S. 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The early versions reflecting the weaknesses of French Symbolist theatre are marred by a conflict between lyrical text and dramatic action. However, consultation with the theatre directors, Aur\u00e9lien Lugn\u00e9-Po\u00eb (1911-1912) and Charles Dullin (1940), eventually enabled Claudel to bridge the gap between the language of literary expression on the one hand and the language of the theatrical event on the other. As a result, the final version of \"L'Annonce faite \u00e0 Marie\" (1948) is characterized by an inherent theatrical energy representative of the spiritual forces that fuel both Claudel's aesthetic and religious visions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3105708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6543569-06bc-36b3-aa71-3dc76d8e7662"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3105708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - 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Metaphysics"],"title":"The Imperative of Individuality, Vocation of Man and the End of Metaphysics in Modern Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26196979","wordCount":12620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"Abstract In traditional societies the relationship between the group members was more personal and less individual. Most societies were patriarchal, hierarchical and static and most people understood themselves according to their social position. Only a small minority of the members tried to differentiate themselves from the collective in order to follow their potential of individuality. In modern times the social relations became less personal and more individual and the ideal was to allow every citizen to strive for accomplishing his special vocation. The ideal of the vocation of man was presented in the writings of many philosophers and it reflected social, technological and scientific changes. Kant\u2019s ideal of autonomic reason and Nietzsche\u2019s ideal of authenticity were the two ideals of individuality. The first aim of this paper is to reexamine the limits of these ideals by following the ideas of different writers and to convince that this historical change should be conceived as the burden of individuality. The second aim is to rethink the relation between the imperative of individuality and the status of metaphysics in the writings of modern philosophers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23030992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5a5e64f-1e2c-3e92-af5e-b5b957d38a8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23030992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23030992","wordCount":14775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARY BLACKSTONE"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43505361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07009283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43505361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"recoearlengldram"}],"isPartOf":"Records of Early English Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":104.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Self and Other in Aliento<\/em> by Oscar Mu\u00f1oz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26974161","wordCount":8701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"The essay considers ethical and political dimensions of Aliento, an installation by Colombian artist Oscar Mu\u00f1oz. It establishes affinities between the installation, Emmanuel Levinas\u2019s intersubjective understanding of ethics, and the firefly motif that Georges Didi-Huberman develops as a political metaphor of resistance and interrogative memory.","subTitle":"Spectral Encounters or the Ghostly Afterlife of Images","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Falls","Jessica Smith"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c15e372-46d8-33ea-812f-944f9008d408"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23020324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Branding Authenticity: Cambodian Ikat in Transnational Artisan Partnerships (TAPs)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020324","wordCount":9017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"This article is based on research of Cambodian silk woven ikat textiles produced at the behest of what we are calling Transnational Artisan Partnerships (TAPs). We analyse the role TAPs play in the production of value, particularly with regard to aesthetics, marketing, notions of authenticity and green consumerism. First-World TAP participants often support a continued asymmetrical reliance on the developed world. While this dynamic is apparent in more obvious commercialized approaches that provide Westernized trend and market research to weavers, cottage-industry style TAPs, although more subtle in their colonizing impulses, continue to foster the construction of an exotic Other through (often inadvertent) promotion of invented traditions. We consider the extent to which TAP organizations function as arbiters of Cambodian design choice within their own localized heritage.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Srivatsan"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4397434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fe2a0fe-ee73-3dcb-938b-d365031fbf2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4397434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"788","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-773+775-777+779-781+783-788","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Photography and Society: Icon Building in Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4397434","wordCount":22654,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[10149,10228],[16271,16841]],"Locations in B":[[36686,36774],[37183,37758]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11\/12","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"If one were to propose a theory of photography, it would necessitate the rigorous constitution of the object of the theory and a clear delineation of its boundaries, that is a binary classification of the area of study in terms of the photographic and the non-photographic. Such a categorisation would have its limitations, lose a wealth of detail, miss out the essential political function of photographic practice, and result in a study which would approach photography at the level of the structure of the medium, its grammar, rather than its practice. In contrast a study of the photographic in the realm of its practice would try to account for it in all its 'impurity', as it interacts with and gets inflected by the word, sound and thought. It would try to grasp the politics of photography at the level of its interactions with discourse, its collusion with the state and its institutions, and its determinations by investment and apparatus. This article attempts such a study which while it does not attempt any topological or methodological rigour, facilitates discussion and permits access to areas which would not fall under the strict theoretical category of still photography. The result of such a study would not be a theory, but would more satisfactorily be termed as an analytic of photography; an analytic which, instead of asking the question 'what is photography?' would ask instead 'how does photography work?'","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2942809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25908c8e-3a26-3956-89ea-5085b465418d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2942809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":77.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2942809","wordCount":59960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":136.0,"pageEnd":"576","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-576","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Individual Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831222","wordCount":66701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3881267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031569"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381485"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3881267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerzool"}],"isPartOf":"American Zoologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-569+571-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3881267","wordCount":65785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1543464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be22a52-edae-35da-bc99-5c90a3a98793"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1543464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biolbull"}],"isPartOf":"Biological Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":100.0,"pageEnd":"R98","pageStart":"R1","pagination":"pp. R1-R98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Marine Biological Laboratory Woods Hole Massachusetts. One Hundred and Fourth Report for the Year 2001 One Hundred and Thirteenth Year","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1543464","wordCount":63789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Marine Biological Laboratory","volumeNumber":"203","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-09-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1751448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af735db5-e041-3a9b-89c2-44d84e386686"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1751448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"594","pagination":"pp. 594-596+598-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Educational resources","Biological sciences - Ecology","Education - Formal education","Business - Industry","Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Law - Computer law","Information science - Informetrics","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3832799","wordCount":48035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5597","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"298","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Don Herzog"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be5434a1-222d-3852-a5e0-6088c6f3a1b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"832","pageStart":"830","pagination":"pp. 830-832","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231288","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Cooper"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"647fba99-c3be-3c3e-9d08-43609b9b3543"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Anxiety in the Age of Digital Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876608","wordCount":834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"21","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Clovis Bishop"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36eaa0e7-d13c-3dd7-96aa-ff6c7c9d472b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24642459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642459","wordCount":1026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANGELINA LUCENTO"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24567608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12526576"},{"name":"oclc","value":"220954172"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6a7b607-59ec-3c47-99a2-c1fb773d82d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24567608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahimondruss"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers du Monde russe","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE CONFLICTED ORIGINS OF SOVIET VISUAL MEDIA: Painting, Photography, and Communication in Russia, 1925-1932","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24567608","wordCount":13398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"EHESS","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"Dans le domaine culturel, la p\u00e9riode comprise entre la r\u00e9volution d'Octobre et la mise en \u0153uvre du Premier Plan quinquennal a \u00e9t\u00e9 marqu\u00e9e par une s\u00e9rie de vifs d\u00e9bats publics sur la fonction des arts visuels et des m\u00e9dia dans la toute nouvelle soci\u00e9t\u00e9 socialiste. Des th\u00e9oriciens \u00e9minents, tel le commissaire du peuple \u00e0 l'Instruction publique Anatolij Luna\u010darskij, et des \u00e9crivains affili\u00e9s au journal Lef, tels Boris Arvatov et Sergej Tret'jakov, participaient \u00e0 ces d\u00e9bats au m\u00eame titre que des artistes modernistes et des peintres r\u00e9alistes. La photographie \u00e9tait un th\u00e8me central et, en 1925, la question d'\u00e9valuer comment les avanc\u00e9es technologiques en mati\u00e8re de photographie ou de toute autre forme de reproduction m\u00e9canique pouvaient changer la nature du visuel s'\u00e9tait impos\u00e9e comme la plus pressante. Alors que dans tous les d\u00e9bats les factions participantes reconnaissaient l'importance de la photographie, elles admettaient aussi que les composants mat\u00e9riels de la peinture, notamment les couleurs et la texture de la surface, demeuraient essentiels au d\u00e9veloppement de relations socialistes de bonne camaraderie. Cet article apporte pour la premi\u00e8re fois un \u00e9clairage sur les aspects de la jeune pens\u00e9e sovi\u00e9tique sur l'esth\u00e9tique et la communication qui conduisirent \u00e0 \u00e9tablir fermement la peinture comme un m\u00e9dia visuel essentiel au socialisme. Il d\u00e9montre en particulier que la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 de la peinture et ses traces \u00e9taient li\u00e9es \u00e0 l'activation et \u00e0 la transmission des sensations du corps, lesquelles \u00e9taient consid\u00e9r\u00e9es comme n\u00e9cessaires \u00e0 la formation de connexions socialistes. In the cultural sphere, the period between the October Revolution and the initiation of the first five-year plan was marked by a series of heated public debates about the function of visual art and media in the new socialist society. Prominent theorists, including the Commissar of Enlightenment, Anatolii Lunacharskii, and writers associated with the journal Lef, such as Boris Arvatov and Sergei Tret'iakov, participated in these debates, as did modernist artists and realist painters. Photography was a central theme, and by 1925 the question of how the advances in photographic and other forms of mechanical reproduction were changing the nature of the visual had emerged as the debates' most pressing problem. While all of the debates' contending factions recognized the significance of photography, they also agreed that the material components of painting \u2014 particularly color and surface texture\u2014remained essential to the development of comradely socialist relations. This article brings to light for the first time the aspects of early Soviet thought on aesthetics and communication that led to the firm establishment of painting as a visual medium essential to socialism. It demonstrates in particular that the materiality of painting and its traces were linked to the activation and transmission of the sensations of the body, which were considered necessary for the formation of socialist connections.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Kriebel"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25609147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb3111c5-3fe5-3fe8-b251-41ea980d2e37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25609147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Manufacturing Discontent: John Heartfield's Mass Medium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25609147","wordCount":13308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"107","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY HAMBURGER"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53397979"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53280162-8bbf-38ad-b15e-7f237ea5c399"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25781955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hans Belting's 'Bild und Kult: eine Geschichte des Bildes vor dem Zeitalter der Kunst', 1990","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781955","wordCount":6539,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[15235,15366]],"Locations in B":[[12430,12561]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1294","publisher":"Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"153","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Dodson"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09512314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16ab83a5-7935-315f-bf89-962bd69edf57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradian"}],"isPartOf":"The Conradian","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CONRAD'S \"LORD JIM\" AND THE INAUGURATION OF A MODERN SUBLIME","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874058","wordCount":9526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Joseph Conrad Society UK","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melissa A. Johnson"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20358148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"119221ef-191e-3ef9-aefb-c1d3c674fa14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20358148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20358148","wordCount":3599,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46197,46280]],"Locations in B":[[6918,6996]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Teresa Stoppani"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41765321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"After the First Miracle: Greenaway On \"Veronese\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765321","wordCount":2416,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[6953,7030]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurt W. Forster","David Britt"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40f09ffd-a493-3b26-8f52-427abd306fe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aby Warburg: His Study of Ritual and Art on Two Continents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778958","wordCount":8785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4893315f-c14c-37d2-8898-86e265da75aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wp64r.16"}],"isPartOf":"Bastard or Playmate?","keyphrase":["theatre","installation","recording","soundscape","performance","theater topics","liveness","matthew tickle","mediality","gallery"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"196","pagination":"196-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Theatre of Recorded Sound and Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.16","wordCount":11562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The ontology and location of theatre have undergone many strange mutations over time. Its cultural status has also waxed and waned. On the one hand, notions such as theatricality or spectacle, whether intended positively or negatively, have tended to expand theatre beyond the strict confines of the performing arts and have turned it into a globalizing medium, occupying the whole of the social scene. On the other hand, ever since the rise of cinema, television and now digital media, theatre has often been depicted as an increasingly residual form, under siege from newer technologies of representation, as though theatre were,","subTitle":"Vacating Performance in Michael Curran\u02b9s Look What They Done To My Song","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9541a40-5696-32e1-a5d0-9e9c4515770d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23249931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23249931","wordCount":20824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto Giuliani","Charles Nopar"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24323754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00356867"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24323754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"riviitalmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Rivista Italiana di Musicologia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"625","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-625","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"SOUND AND AUDIOVISUAL SOURCES AND CONTEMPORARY HISTORIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24323754","wordCount":21010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Libreria Musicale Italiana (LIM) Editrice","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Max Donnelly"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23409217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00163058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae7e3296-5d06-3a39-bce7-33619886444a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23409217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"furnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Furniture History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"BRITISH FURNITURE AT THE PHILADELPHIA CENTENNIAL EXHIBITION, 1876","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23409217","wordCount":12174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Furniture History Society","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacob Emery"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81128c2d-8453-332b-9952-8e298f3a4995"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Keeping Time: Reading and Writing in \u201cConversation about Dante\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.3.494","wordCount":11059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"This article approaches Osip Mandel\u2032shtam's \u201cConversation about Dante\u201d as a demonstration of and meditation on reading. As such, Mandel\u2032stam's essay addresses the perennial problems of our relationship to the authority of writing and the preservation of literary culture across time, largely through a cluster of metaphors around the central image of a conductor's baton. The visible instrument of musical measure, the baton figures synesthetic transcription in the arts and, most urgently, the undulating line of script traced by the writing pen that becomes realized as waves of sound in the poem's oral performance. \u201cKeeping Time\u201d elucidates the philosophy of notation and performance to which the figure of the baton alludes, and contextualizes it within Mandel\u2032shtam's efforts to reconcile the political and poetical functions of written authority.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH AMANN"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fde16ad-d6af-3d9c-b09c-157d023a4916"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Magasin to Magazine: Au Bonheur des Dames and Gald\u00f3s' Tormento","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763939","wordCount":11481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza la relaci\u00f3n entre Tormento (1884) de Benito P\u00e9rez Gald\u00f3s y Au Bonheur des Dames (1883) de Emile Zola. Las dos obras son semejantes en su estructura, su cronolog\u00eda y sus descripciones. Ambas reelaboran el cuento de la Cenicienta en un ambiente moderno y capitalista (el Madrid de 1867\u20131868 y el Par\u00eds de 1864\u20131869), y exploran las tensiones sociales que desencadenaron una revoluci\u00f3n (la Gloriosa en Gald\u00f3s y la Comuna en Zola). A ra\u00edz de esta semejanza, examinamos c\u00f3mo Gald\u00f3s traslada la obra de Zola a un contexto espa\u00f1ol para estudiar la historia del pa\u00eds y el impacto de la modernizaci\u00f3n en su sociedad. Contrastando las dos novelas, intentamos ver por qu\u00e9 la resoluci\u00f3n ut\u00f3pica de la obra de Zola es imposible en el Madrid de Gald\u00f3s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert C. Ulin"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe9b4329-7ea9-3625-83e4-72aa37866600"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/683271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"527","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-527","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Philosophy of history","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Invention and Representation as Cultural Capital: Southwest French Winegrowing History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683271","wordCount":7361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"The paramount reputation of Bordeaux wines is believed to follow from superior techniques of vinification and a climate and soil reputedly ideal for winegrowing. Through a qualification of the invention of tradition theme, this essay argues that Bordeaux's paramount reputation follows from a social history and a hegemonic, invented winegrowing tradition that enabled winegrowing elites to replicate and profit from the cultural capital associated with the aristocracy. The essay concludes that commodity production tends to naturalize the social.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Krassimira Zourkova"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.59.1.0083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3b5d8d3-8217-333c-be09-bf070f3cc97c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.59.1.0083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Library Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.59.1.0083","wordCount":3749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eaf172e-d7b3-37e5-8718-a12d535f1dc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wp64r.15"}],"isPartOf":"Bastard or Playmate?","keyphrase":["julien maire","cinema","theater topics","memory cone","photographic","camera","viewer","digital","images","zielinski"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"178","pagination":"178-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Productivity of the Prototype","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.15","wordCount":6677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In his artworks and performances, Julien Maire (b. 1969, France) systematically re-invents the technology of visual media.\u00b9 His research is a manifest hybrid between mediaarchaeology and the production of new media constellations. His output consists of prototypes that perform exactly what their etymology promises (from \u2018protos<\/em>\u2019, \u2018first\u2019 and \u2018typos<\/em>\u2019, \u2018impression\u2019 or \u2018model\u2019): proposing unique technological configurations that produce a new, specific image quality. As industrial prototypes, these original creations \u2013 no matter how technically clever and refined \u2013 are rather useless: they are too complex, too delicate and too clunky to ever be considered for mass production. As artistic statements,","subTitle":"On Julien Maire\u02b9s \u02b9Cinema of Contraptions\u02b9","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marie GALVEZ"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24722091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab3c8486-319b-399b-bb3b-935a167364b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24722091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":750.0,"pageEnd":"761","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-709, 711-761","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE DE LA LITT\u00c9RATURE FRAN\u00c7AISE (XVI e<\/sup> -XXI e<\/sup> SI\u00c8CLES). 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I argue that the effigy, which appears in a number of guises in The Revenger's Tragedy, warrants inclusion among the constellation of key allegorical objects that distinguish the genre of Trauerspiel and its English counterparts, chiefly revenge drama. By tracing the effigeal semiotics of The Revenger's Tragedy, this paper demonstrates that the key images (corpse, skull, puppet, and ruin) from Benjamin's corporeal lexicon of baroque allegory are also relevant to early Stuart revenge tragedy. The Benjaminian view of baroque mourning as a loyalty to the world of things and as a deep investment in ruins and evacuated objects helps to explain Vindice's otherwise baffling acts of irreverence and betrayal to the remains of his beloved.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES D. 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What is your choice?\u201d I think I would choose blindness; it would interfere with me less [\u2026]. I would be more obstructed by not being able to use my hands when making a film than by not being able to use my eyes.\u00b2Godard\u2019s assertion","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Lison"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dc3ecbb-a238-35ed-8412-f8f14728a7ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cThe very idea of place\u201d: Form, Contingency, and Adornian Volition in The Man in the High Castle<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0045","wordCount":12702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9606]],"Locations in B":[[31509,31945]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"In his essay \u201cCommitment,\u201d Theodor W. Adorno elaborates on the paradox of poetry (or any form of literature) after Auschwitz: literature as form must somehow persist despite its barbarity. To this end, he champions \u201cautonomous\u201d art, often understood as abstract or non-representational, against \u201ccommitted\u201d political art. Another way of conceiving autonomy, however, might be in the form of aleatory occurrences that make possible new realms of perception and thought. In Philip K. Dick's 1962 novel The Man in the High Castle, the classical Chinese oracle, the I Ching, plays just such a contingent role by alerting the novel's characters to the fact that their history, in which Japan and Germany have emerged victorious from World War II, is untrue. Reconsidering The Man in the High Castle, an sf novel that Adorno himself would have surely dismissed as unliterary, in light of his paradoxical aesthetics, and re-examining the relationship between history and chance in the novel, we can see how the aleatory becomes autonomous, opening up the formal enclosures of both the novel and history from within.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Rowland, Jr."],"datePublished":"1964-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2718346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eafb6159-c638-3263-837e-7260ff16ba95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2718346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art Along The Silk Roads: A Reappraisal of Central Asian Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2718346","wordCount":7232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martine Sonnet","Isabelle Havelange","F. DUGAST"],"datePublished":"1988-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41159146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02216280"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8436a07e-7d5b-3ca5-ad77-0053c3c18526"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41159146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histoireeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Histoire de l'education","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":195.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-163, 165-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE D'HISTOIRE DE L'\u00c9DUCATION FRAN\u00c7AISE: Titres parus au cours de l'ann\u00e9e 1985 et suppl\u00e9ments des ann\u00e9es ant\u00e9rieures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41159146","wordCount":60136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"39\/40","publisher":"Ecole normale sup\u00e9rieure de lyon","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1918-01-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20309064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e55f6dc3-652c-3e95-a727-c0fd6a9987a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20309064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1918,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20309064","wordCount":50382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2975","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILL GOODWIN"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d981684-2725-35da-9a10-b9f102c2bfcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Annual James Joyce Checklist: 1990","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283644","wordCount":23415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Fordham University","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELENA LAHR-VIVAZ"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12d4fc63-64a3-3630-9f1f-dbdb43612e31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20779179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Timeless Rhetoric, Special Circumstances: Sex and Symbol in \"La nada cotidiana\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779179","wordCount":8887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"En este art\u00edculo propongo que La nada cotidiana (publicada por la autora cubana Zo\u00e9 Vald\u00e9s en 1995) demuestra dos tendencias contradictorias: si por un lado se sit\u00faa en un momento hist\u00f3rico bien espec\u00edfico, retratando y criticando las exigencias del as\u00ed llamado \"per\u00edodo especial en tiempos de paz,\" tambi\u00e9n emplea una ret\u00f3rica de la eternidad para intentar superar las dificultades y frustraciones que testimonia. Empleando eficazmente el humor, el texto indica claramente las limitaciones de la pol\u00edtica de Fidel Castro en los a\u00f1os noventa; utilizando el s\u00edmbolo y el erotismo, tambi\u00e9n logra que el lector vislumbre un espacio alternativo, \u1e1fuera de las limitaciones temporales. Sin embargo, en \u00faltimo an\u00e1lisis la ret\u00f3rica del texto y la ret\u00f3rica del r\u00e9gimen de Castro se parecen mucho, problematizando los intentos de la autora de crear un espacio nuevo y distinto en el cual un p\u00fablico global de lectores podr\u00eda juntarse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-05-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3452deff-2090-3476-9f3e-0c91470562a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1716831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"1158","pageStart":"997","pagination":"pp. 997-1158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Electronics","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716831","wordCount":37843,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3673","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"148","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johan Callens"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40660551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0543dc3-b229-364c-adf1-dfc874faaaa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40660551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"561","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-561","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Wooster Group's Hamlet, According to the True, Original Copies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40660551","wordCount":11686,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16419,16494]],"Locations in B":[[13308,13383]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"To all appearances, the Wooster Group's Hamlet evades the burden of critical interpretation by reconstructing John Gielgud's 1964 memorial production starring film celebrity, Richard Burton, as mediated through Bill Colleran's filmic record of it. Upon closer inspection, though, director Elizabeth LeCompte stages the dynamic between the archive and the repertoire to foreground the problematic performance of compulsive mourning, an issue exacerbated by the digital media relied on in the 1964 production's intermedial reconstruction. For all its humor, the Wooster Group's Hamlet brings home, with a vengeance, the idea that any attempt at working through traumatic losses by remediating them inevitably is suffused by the paradoxical logic of reproduction that forces us endlessly to repeat the painful resuscitation of specters, private and cultural, domestic and foreign: Shakespeare's son; sorely missed Wooster Group members; the deceased philosopher, Jacques Derrida; the democratizing challenges to Shakespeare's canonical status; and the fear of communism in the capitalist US and in the patriarchal International Labor Federation's feminist shadow. The Wooster Group's reenactment thus rejoins Andy Warhol's mechanically reproduced memorial silkscreens of Liz Taylor, whose presence equally haunts Kathe Burkhart's Liz Taylor Series\u2014two visualarts \"libraries\" that perform a counter-memory to the Wooster Group's Hamlet and supplement the promotional imagery on the company's web site, in the program for the production's preview, and in Richard Prince's publicity card for the New York Public Theater's opening.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8342a0f-f3dc-3159-81dd-5ff2d7813b9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808500","wordCount":27419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Cowart"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25cc353d-a4a6-32b2-bdcc-6d80a103e1e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"SIGNIFICANT, INSIGNIFICANT\": REALIST AND POSTMODERNIST ART IN HAWKES'S \"WHISTLEJACKET\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285769","wordCount":6674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Dodds"],"datePublished":"1992-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b16ac68-2681-3b95-819e-b2055e2cdd2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Place of Architectural Speculation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425201","wordCount":10255,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[3413,3488],[3864,3984]],"Locations in B":[[18933,19008],[19022,19143]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"This paper considers the nature of the speculative architectural project, its distinction from building, and its relationship to a particular aspect of mimetic inquiry. Moreover, this paper considers the impact that the rise of technique has had on the mimetic and suggests a conceptual model that may contribute to ameliorating this impact while enhancing the mimetic capacity of a speculative architectural project. Architectural speculation is considered through the relationship of \"making\" and \"place,\" evidenced in the somewhat unlikely conjunction of Gothic Scholasticism, surrealist theater, and the cinquecento conceptual model of disegno. This paper intends to explicate their interrelationship through reconstructing a program that invites participation in the collective mimesis of the speculative architectural project.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Natalia Sucre"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20062876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a08f47b-98cb-3bf3-ae8a-55a63c9b7476"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20062876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"482","pagination":"pp. 482-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Distracting Art: Reading Shock in Felisberto Hern\u00e1ndez's \"Las Hortensias\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20062876","wordCount":7442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":"Felisberto Hern\u00e1ndez has long held an equivocal place in the canon of modern Latin American literature, uneasily labeled as an exponent of fantastic literature and often dismissed for his discursive and eccentric accounts of social interactions in a petit bourgeois setting. Hern\u00e1ndez's renowned singularity can be explained through an analysis of his art's ambivalent opennes towards the intensified commercial frame and technological reproducibility shaping modern life. Read as a parody of the modern artist's alienation, \"Las Hortensias\" may be understood as Hern\u00e1ndez's attempt to create a viable aesthetics in a consumer culture. Through this parody, Hern\u00e1ndez mixes high and low culture in a way that complicates their very opposition in a modernist tradition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Pinney"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23171711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ca9f226-7d81-34d5-84da-baf7f1c19b35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23171711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"AN AUTHENTIC INDIAN 'KITSCH'\": the Aesthetics, Discriminations and Hybridity of Popular Hindu Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23171711","wordCount":6935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"38","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malcolm Miles"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90574c64-8244-317e-bf0c-66a0e8391317"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Representing nature: art and climate change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251311","wordCount":9801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"Climate change is now an established scientific fact, and dealing with it may require significant shifts in consumption and economic organization. A key question is how these changes can be achieved, by regulation or shifts of consciousness on the parts of individuals. Among the means by which a shift of awareness might occur is cultural work - including the production and reception of art and literature. But does art which represents climate change distance or normalize the problem, or can new kinds of art construct new ways in which to see or intervene in the conditions and systems which produce global warming? The article considers recent exhibitions of art dealing with environmental and climate change issues in the UK and USA. Before that, the article summarizes aspects of recent relevant work on art by geographers. Looking at cases of environmentalist art, the article initially differentiates art representing climate change in dramatic images from an emerging tendency to practical intervention. It argues that art may contribute to a shift in attitudes, but wonders whether intervention-as-art is in its way another form of representation, and whether art inevitably distances whatever problems it addresses. This is an insoluble difficulty: the real is always mediated and distanced in culture, yet art may still draw attention to conditions and to the inherent contradictions they contain.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07f6964c-a3c0-3a9c-8884-f204f2ef233a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/951610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951610","wordCount":20250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1476","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETRA DREISER"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"069fb18d-ff6b-3c6b-a4f5-e57afe0dc8bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Black, Not Blank: Photography's (Invisible) Archives in John Edgar Wideman's \"Two Cities\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030033","wordCount":7709,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[10229,10344]],"Locations in B":[[17918,18033]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"This essay examines the photographic practice at the heart of John Edgar Wideman's Two Cities. Considering the photographs as a kind of archive, it suggests that they reflect the problematic framework of black visual representation in dominant American culture while simultaneously pointing to the possibility of a radical new vision.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irving Wohlfarth"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"No-Man's-Land: On Walter Benjamin's \"Destructive Character\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465131","wordCount":12344,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2642,2735]],"Locations in B":[[18635,18726]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-10-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3835564","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfeca611-dab0-3c48-95a2-077bdb9b372a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3835564"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"930","pageStart":"839","pagination":"pp. 839-930","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3835564","wordCount":42507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5646","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"302","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard W. Allen"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a03196d0-22a0-3e51-ab50-adca0e6a0f22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Aesthetic Experience of Modernity: Benjamin, Adorno, and Contemporary Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488139","wordCount":6412,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42485,42684]],"Locations in B":[[21539,21729]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rolf J. 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This essay situates Kafka's Paris episode from \"Beschreibung eines Kampfes\" (1904-07?) and his notes of a visit to the French capital (1911) in the context of Benjamin's Passagen-Werk and his comments on Baudelaire (1927-40). The comparison yields surprising correspondences: the phantasmagoric inscription of history in the present, fashion, the imitation of nature in urban space, the reign of fa\u00e7ades, the disorientation of the human subject in the anonymous crowds and hectic traffic, and the disappearing figure of the fl\u00e2neur. Placed in the constellation of Benjamin's dense socio-cultural analysis, the allusive surface signifiers of Kafka's Paris become readable as ironic emblems of commodity capitalism, bourgeois self-representation, and the fragmentation of experience in modern urbanity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan L. Burk","Mark A. 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The paper critiques na\u00efve arguments that the blogosphere is totally oppositional by examining some of the religious discourses of 'embedded intellectuals'. But it also critiques the idea that Iranian intellectual life must be examined solely through the prism of Islam. We explore how more critical voices have gravitated to the web in the absence of other sites for engagement with the regime. Using Gramsci's notion of oppositional intellectuals, coupled with Mouffe's argument about political space, we explore the emergent voices of women as well as the range of mundane economic issues being articulated through blogs and websites. Hence we suggest that Iranian virtual politics is quite robust, for the moment, even while under the censor's gaze.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1929-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f7c6c9b-2f9d-306c-8251-f07a007ae0c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twenty-Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To March 1, 1929)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224619","wordCount":43895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Morley Cohen"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"470","pagination":"pp. 470-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Forgotten Audiences in the Passion Pits: Drive-in Theatres and Changing Spectator Practices in Post-War America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815021","wordCount":10424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James F. 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Leibowitz","Vern L. Bullough","James E. O'Neill"],"datePublished":"1963-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24621786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225045"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49963229"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ab30b57-143c-37ba-98c3-6bf36bdd1601"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24621786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistmediallisci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Medicine & Allied Health","Science & Technology Studies","Health Sciences","History","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes and Events","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24621786","wordCount":5793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind P. Blakesley"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27653031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26a360c5-291d-31b9-8c40-f60212977cc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27653031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"933","pageStart":"912","pagination":"pp. 912-933","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art, Nationhood, and Display: Zinaida Volkonskaia and Russia's Quest for a National Museum of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27653031","wordCount":11742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"In 1831, the journal \"Teleskop\" published Princess Zinaida Volkonskaia's proposal for a national art museum in Moscow. Volkonskaia's project was progressive to a degree (Russia had no such museum at the time), yet the model she proposed was highly traditional. She excluded Russian art entirely, despite her support of modern Russian artists. Instead, Volkonskaia privileged classical and more recent western European art, underlining the deference to western practice that influenced cultural politics even as Russia moved toward a stronger national sense of self. Volkonskaia's project marks an important juncture in Russia's cultural history: the intersection of aristocratic female patronage and the institutionalization of academic procedure. It also provides a platform from which to consider Russia's self-image vis-\u00e0-vis Europe in the aftermath of the Napoleonic campaigns. By tracing an intricate dialogue in which national pride developed alongside continuing admiration for neoclassical ideals, Rosalind P. Blakesley addresses the paradoxes of Volkonskaia's project, and the difficulties of conceptualizing a \"national\" space of artistic display. Volkonskaia's project poses significant interpretive problems and her exclusion of Russian art prefigures the segregation of Russian and western art in Russian museums today, which has marginalized Russian art even within Russia itself. Volkonskaia's project thus has wide resonance, for the question of whether and how museums encapsulate national cultural identities remains an issue of great intellectual concern.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Conrad Murray","Soraya Murray"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9cfaa84-8d4c-3503-839f-077dcec2f7c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uneasy Bedfellows: Canonical Art Theory and the Politics of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068437","wordCount":7130,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Curtis"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Taste of a Nation: Training the Senses and Sensibility of Cinema Audiences in Imperial Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815020","wordCount":15709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise A. Kulp"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/680568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb0f06e5-0add-3c64-a173-3ba703db9dbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/680568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Teaching with Artists\u2019 Books: An Interdisciplinary Approach for the Liberal Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/680568","wordCount":6411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"AbstractThe author considers the relevancy of artists\u2019 books collections in liberal arts colleges, specifically their ability to support teaching in multiple disciplines. The development of the collection at Franklin & Marshall College is discussed, along with strategies for identifying teaching opportunities and educating faculty. Three specific teaching instances are presented in detail. Each example includes a bibliography of the books used in class with brief annotations and rationale for use. The article concludes with an examination of lingering challenges and ideas for expanding the pedagogical use of artists\u2019 books for liberal arts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Grusin"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/682998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dd5a7c4-dcd9-3f9c-b524-3e8271b9265e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/682998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Radical Mediation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/682998","wordCount":8503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u00d6zen Nergis Dolcerocca"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e6614c-dd48-3d0c-a474-979f55d065ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43932915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1178","pageStart":"1150","pagination":"pp. 1150-1178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Chronometrics in the Modern Metropolis: the City, the Past and Collective Memory in A.H. 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The article assesses Luhmann's vision of the economy, summarized mainly in his Wirtschaft der Gesellschaft, wherein he addresses basic economic notions: the economic system, money, prices, rationality, and the market. I then interpret his ideas in the context of modern discussions in economics (intersubjective structures, complex systems, and evolutionary modeling). I also propose some heuristics implied by Luhmann's economic ontology, which are potentially interesting for methodological and theoretical strategies of modern economics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35edb796-862d-3aea-bb2b-420afe33ceca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":218.0,"pageEnd":"1221","pageStart":"971","pagination":"pp. 971-1221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261121","wordCount":417178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charlotte Herzog"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1224831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1f6de8a-393a-3658-b6f9-f6f34c8b7866"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1224831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Movie Palace and the Theatrical Sources of Its Architectural Style","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1224831","wordCount":8317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"The integration of the functional and iconographic motifs of the earliest movie locales in the single context of the movie palace helped to define the appeal of the movies in the 1920s. It also identified the social function of the movie theater as a tool for smoothing over class distinctions apparent in the earliest showplaces by appealing to a more general family and emerging semi-classless audience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brooke Belisle"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d9a354c-e21e-3d95-a9ed-99368fa6c827"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Depth Readings: Ken Jacobs's Digital, Stereographic Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653566","wordCount":13153,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42494,42575]],"Locations in B":[[70728,70806]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"Digitally composed from stereo photographs over a century old, Ken Jacobs's 2006 Capitalism films unsettle spatiotemporal relationships that structure not only photographic and cinematic representation but also dimensions of perception and history. They explore depth as an aesthetic and a conceptual paradox, which has driven Jacobs's career-long experiments in \"paracinema.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68e3284e-5889-33b9-abee-f41f3c3cc523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622591","wordCount":13341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Karr Richards"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"776","pageStart":"755","pagination":"pp. 755-776","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gerty MacDowell and the Irish Common Reader","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873005","wordCount":9298,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[28800,28868]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald G. 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Biology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swcp.12","wordCount":7537,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[5032,5096]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Denis Hollier","Liesl Ollman"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4795e9c-45ef-3064-8042-6417e463275b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Use-Value of the Impossible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779026","wordCount":10844,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[72034,72274]],"Locations in B":[[20769,21009]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vike Martina Plock"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51a56858-6605-39d9-94a8-be3efae70f8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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For that historical reason, aesthetics is not just \u201cart theory,\u201d as it articulates both more general and more particular issues, for instance: perception through the senses, the definition of beauty, judgment of taste, the truth content of an artwork and its relationship to (physical, psychological, economic etc.) reality, the questions of originality and newness; eventually, the definition and the very possibility of \u201cart\u201d itself, which becomes a serious matter","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Luzzi"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8e5c651-85ae-33ea-9335-443d94a4bb5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40279437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Rhetoric of Anachronism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279437","wordCount":9894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Shelby Blum"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24138686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0736623X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65d1cb39-5b6f-372c-8c4d-dce8de8623e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24138686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eartsciehist"}],"isPartOf":"Earth Sciences History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Geology","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"A BETTER STYLE OF ART\": THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE \"Paleontology of New York\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24138686","wordCount":7639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"James Hall, like other authors and editors of 19th-century American state and federal surveys, learned first hand that publishing illustrations was time-consuming, frustrating and expensive. But illustrations were indispensible, providing the graphic communication of morphology that justified the author's taxonomic decisions. That essential information, however, passed through the hands of an illustrator and either an engraver or lithographer before it reached the scientific audience that would test and judge it. Artists and printers, therefore, needed close supervision; plates required careful proofing and sometimes cancellation. Hall, like his colleagues, vastly underestimated the time and expense that his project would entail. The plates illustrating the Palaeontology reflected changes occurring in American science and printing. Over the decades spanned by the publication, picture printing techniques changed from craft to industry, and converted from engraving to lithography; so did the New York survey. Meanwhile, the scientific profession developed illustration conventions to which publications with professional intent increasingly conformed. These conventions combined standards of \"accuracy\" with issues of style to reflect both scientific activity and its social context. The early illustrations drawn by Mrs. Hall were no less \"accurate\" although clearly less polished than the collaborations between R.P. Whitfield and F.J. Swinton, or the later work of J.H. Emerton and E. Emmons, Jr. The artists and printers of the Palaeontology plates emulated and contributed to the emerging national style of zoological and paleontological illustration, and thus helped consolidate the \"look\" of American science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. 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Series B, Human Geography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Geography's Place in Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40205021","wordCount":11569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"From the moment it began to engage with time in a considered way, human geography has employed a variety of analytical and conceptual approaches to it. Recent work especially has greatly extended the range of these different approaches by stressing the innate variability of time, leading some to talk of 'multiple temporalities' and to pronounce time as 'uneven' even within the same society. Fractured by such differences over how time may be used and interpreted, the possibility of an overarching concept of time in human geography has long gone. However, this does not prevent us from asking whether it is still possible to produce a coherent review of the differences involved. This paper offers such a review, arguing that setting these differences down within a structured framework can provide a clearer sense of how diverse the debate among human geographers has become and the trends of thought that have underpinned this growing diversity. Among the trends identified, it places particular stress on the shift from objectified interpretations to those dealing with relational forms of lived and experiential time and on how the separation of early discussions of space from those on time, their dimensional stand-off from each other, has slowly given way to a view in which space and time are treated as sticky concepts that are difficult to separate from each other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Woodson"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313112"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2017202169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78950dd6-7b39-3a53-8bc3-d3a00d59ef64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44695712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Doctor Wesselhoeft and Doctor Rappaccini","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695712","wordCount":11429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1c40c3e-0171-3e3f-b972-6c5471b8e522"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27850122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850122","wordCount":11319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["No\u00ebl Carroll"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/431263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Ontology of Mass Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431263","wordCount":10235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne McCauley"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4166557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03621979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf4e493-e1e0-3d19-8732-231fbf0ff4c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4166557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpaulgettmusej"}],"isPartOf":"The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photographs for Industry: The Career of Charles Aubry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4166557","wordCount":8812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"J. Paul Getty Trust","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES R. WATSON","TRISH MAUD"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82b5065b-df96-3b91-91c6-3fc417a933e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"In the New Republic of Digital (Re)Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030368","wordCount":7111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"A brief historical account of the unfolding of photography as a weapon of the state against revolutionaries and troublemakers serves as context for our description of recent developments in digital imaging production and reproduction. We distinguish specific photographic and digital imaging practices from oppressive state security practices using the same technology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio Gilman","Robert McC. Adams","Anna Maria Bietti Sestieri","Alberto Cazzella","Henri J. M. Claessen","George L. Cowgill","Carole L. Crumley","Timothy Earle","Alain Gallay","A. F. Harding","R. J. Harrison","Ronald Hicks","Philip L. Kohl","James Lewthwaite","Charles A. Schwartz","Stephen J. Shennan","Andrew Sherratt","Maurizio Tosi","Peter S. Wells"],"datePublished":"1981-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"192b92e2-ef50-38b4-8391-44fd294e7213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2742414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Development of Social Stratification in Bronze Age Europe [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742414","wordCount":28058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The emergence of a hereditary elite class in Bronze Age Europe is now widely interpreted in terms of the redistributive activities of a managerial ruling class. This fuctionalist account of elite origins goes against a uniformitarian understanding of what ruling classes do in complex societies. It also is poorly suited to the concrete evidence for Bronze Age cultures in Europe. The rise of hereditary, superordinate social strata in prehistoric Europe is better understood as a consequence of the development of capital-intensive subsistence techniques. Plow agriculture, Mediterranean polyculture, irrigation, and offshore fishing limited the possibility of group fission and thereby gave leaders the opportunity to exploit basic producers over the long term. The observations that capital-intensification preceded elite emergence and that areas with greater intensification exhibited greater social inequalities confirm this nonfuctionalist account of the development of stratification in later prehistoric Europe.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Siegfried Zielinski","Michelle Mattson"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e3d4887-eae9-3d6a-814e-5adf56f68b83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Karger AG","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SIRI HUSTVEDT"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41638790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630650"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcde45ec-b625-3c3e-9509-a78c7c442aa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41638790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Freud's Playground: Some Thoughts on the Art and Science of Subjectivity and Intersubjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41638790","wordCount":7648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"174\/175","publisher":"Skidmore College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f18aef39-5e8e-37c5-b5be-f9794ea6a48d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41209644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The American Scholar","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209644","wordCount":9910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Phi Beta Kappa Society","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandre Cremers","Emmanuel Chemla"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26636701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0925854X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"907922184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9e09b71-f39b-3ee4-ae30-0f8574221a77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26636701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natulangsema"}],"isPartOf":"Natural Language Semantics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"Experiments on the acceptability and possible readings of questions embedded under emotive-factives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26636701","wordCount":17938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Emotive-factive predicates, such as surprise or be happy, are a source of empirical and theoretical puzzles in the literature on embedded questions. Although they embed wh-questions, they seem not to embed whether-questions. They have complex interactions with negative polarity items such as any or even, and they have been argued to preferentially give rise to weakly exhaustive readings with embedded questions (in contrasts with most other verbs, which have been argued to give rise to strongly exhaustive readings). We offer an empirical overview of the situation in three experiments collecting acceptability judgments, monotonicity judgments, and truth-value judgments. The results straightforwardly confirm the special selectional properties of emotive-factive predicates. More interestingly, they reveal the existence of strongly exhaustive readings for surprise. The results also suggest that the special properties of emotive-factives cannot be solely explained by their monotonicity profiles, because they were not found to differ from the profiles of other responsive predicates.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Len Unsworth"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40015633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aca7237-7c81-32ca-bf15-d9001baf2eaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40015633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"521","pageStart":"508","pagination":"pp. 508-521","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Developing Critical Understanding of the Specialised Language of School Science and History Texts: A Functional Grammatical Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40015633","wordCount":7435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha Rosler","Caroline Walker Bynum","Natasha Eaton","Michael Ann Holly","Amelia Jones","Michael Kelly","Robin Kelsey","Alisa LaGamma","Monika Wagner","Oliver Watson","Tristan Weddigen"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2943ce-2378-3b24-817a-c1be27b34887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43188793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"NOTES FROM THE FIELD: Materiality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188793","wordCount":18977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. 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But the most prominent accounts of these practices nevertheless remain firmly individualistic, seeking to explain the obligations that such agreements involve in terms of one or another service that they render to the parties to them taken severally. This Article articulates a new theory of the philosophical foundations of promise and contract that reclaims for practical philosophy the relations among persons that promises and contracts create and that the dominant, individualistic accounts obscure. The Article proposes that promises and contracts establish relations of recognition and respect-and indeed a kind of community-among those who participate in them and explains the morality of promise and contract in terms of the value of this relation. Although the Article takes up promise quite generally, and proposes new solutions to familiar philosophical problems concerning the will's place among the grounds of promissory obligation, the Article emphasizes the particular case of contract, which it addresses in much greater detail. The Article argues that contract participates in the ideal of respectful community even though contracts typically arise among self-interested parties who aim to appropriate as much of the value that the contracts create as they can. The Article finds the peculiarly contractual variety of community directly in the form of the contract relation rather than in any substantive ends that the parties to contracts pursue. It presents a detailed account of the characteristic intentions that this form of community, which it calls collaboration, involves. The Article also emphasizes that contractual collaboration is no mere academic conceit but instead arises in actual legal practice. In particular, it considers two familiar doctrinal puzzles presented by the law of contracts-involving the consideration doctrine and the expectation remedy-in light of the collaborative values that it finds in the contract relation. It argues that the collaborative theory of contract underwrites a more satisfactory account of these doctrines than has so far been available. Finally, the Article concludes by suggesting that the collaborative ideal makes it possible to return contract, understood as a distinctive category of legal obligation, to the center of our legal system and to connect contract to broader principles that lie at the foundations of modern, pluralist, economic and political institutions. In addition to the legal theory of contract, the Article therefore also contributes to the political theory of the market and indeed of liberalism. Throughout the analysis, the Article applies a philosophical methodology that avoids casuistry, favoring an effort to elaborate the moral meanings of existing legal institutions and practices, and thus to reveal the moral relationships that are immanent in the law. This approach promises to connect moral philosophy to legal doctrine in a way that casuistic analysis cannot.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald E. 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Wade","Fred Blum"],"datePublished":"1965-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/894980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595520"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212089"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7eb26ae9-d8db-362d-bdf5-1e2b751d3877"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/894980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"937","pageStart":"922","pagination":"pp. 922-937","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Other Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/894980","wordCount":8228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1916-04-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588853","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25588853"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 14, no. 27","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588853","wordCount":22839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/335872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"562c5652-af3c-359c-a7a1-847c361361a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/335872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Hispanic World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/335872","wordCount":19482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44015781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a498406d-5e64-3156-b718-e28f51265bb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44015781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":208.0,"pageEnd":"1120","pageStart":"913","pagination":"pp. 913-1120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Program of the 2016 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44015781","wordCount":117954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Virgil W. Peterson"],"datePublished":"1949-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1138545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08852731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10aa2323-71f2-3b72-b5e8-b8c0e72bbd1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1138545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcrimlawcrim1931"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1931-1951)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Gambling. Should It Be Legalized?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1138545","wordCount":31800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Northwestern University School of Law","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Yaeger"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be817b54-89c1-3b30-b3ce-e4f345ae281b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Editor's Column: The Death of Nature and the Apotheosis of Trash; Or, Rubbish Ecology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501857","wordCount":8283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele Filippini"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1h64kxd.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745335698"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6523d7ff-0381-38ac-8bcd-00c701fc127b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1h64kxd.14"}],"isPartOf":"Using Gramsci","keyphrase":["prison notebooks","georges sorel","translation","ideology","maurizio ricciardi","political","author\u2019s translation","antonio gramsci","benedetto croce","italian"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"124","pagination":"124-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1h64kxd.14","wordCount":16035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Taws"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9369170-b5a5-3c0a-83b8-ef803f7d3db3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Trompe-l'Oeil and Trauma: Money and Memory after the Terror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500070","wordCount":12628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"In February 1796, following a period of disastrous hyperinflation, millions of assignats - the revolutionary paper currency originally issued in 1789 as a state bond, its value based on the sale of recently confiscated clerical land - were symbolically burned, along with the technology used for their production, in an iconoclastic public spectacle on the Place Vend\u00f4me. Shortly afterwards trompe-l'oeil composite representations of assignats appeared incongruously in narrative visual histories of the Revolution, and in a variety of other formats, from fans to calendars, in the printshops of Directoire Paris. These prints appear to mobilise the image of the assignat in the services of diverse and contradictory political motivations. In many cases, the prints explicitly reference revolutionary violence, and come complete with hidden silhouette portraits of dead revolutionaries and royalists. However, later versions of this subgenre, such as the print published anomalously in the series Tableaux historiques de la R\u00e9volution fran\u00e7aise, minimise these references. This article examines the relationship between these enigmatic images and the assignats they represent as a series of traumatic encounters with the revolutionary past, paying particular attention to the appropriateness of trompe-l'oeil to this task. I read these illusionistic representations of assignats as ambiguous attempts to negotiate the economic, political and psychic alienation which the devaluation of the assignat and the experience of Terror brought about.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michel De Dobbeleer","Dieter De Bruyn"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbd0e963-f968-3317-a03c-4e6f594ea5ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24642445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GRAPHIC GROTESQUE? COMICS ADAPTATIONS OF BOHUMIL HRABAL AND BRUNO SCHULZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642445","wordCount":11410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"Esej analyzuje grafickou narativn\u00ed adaptaci rom\u00e1nu Bohumila Hrabala P\u0159\u00edli\u0161 hlu\u010dn\u00e1 samota (Une trop bruyante solitude, 2004), auto\u0159i: Lionel Tran, Ambre a Val\u00e9rie Berge, a pov\u00eddek Bruna Schulze Heimsuchung und andere Erz\u00e4hlungen von Bruno Schulz (1995), autor: Dieter J\u00fcdt, za \u00fa\u010delem vyrovnat se s ot\u00e1zkou adaptovatelnosti modernistick\u00e9ho, p\u0159inejmen\u0161\u00edm, m\u00e9n\u011b realistick\u00e9ho\u2014v tomto p\u0159\u00edpad\u011b groteskn\u00edho\u2014liter\u00e1rn\u00edho textu do um\u011bleck\u00e9 podoby prost\u0159ednictv\u00edm vizu\u00e1ln\u00edch m\u00e9di\u00ed, v tomto p\u0159\u00edpad\u011b do podoby komiksu. Rozbor ukazuje, \u017ee tv\u016frci komiksu maj\u00ed k dispozici velk\u00e9 mno\u017estv\u00ed prost\u0159edk\u016f mnohovrstevn\u00e9 \u00farovn\u011b, v\u00edce \u010di m\u00e9n\u011b v\u00e1zan\u00fdch na m\u00e9dia, s jejich\u017e pomoc\u00ed kreativn\u00edm zp\u016fsobem kompenzuj\u00ed ty str\u00e1nky origin\u00e1lu, kter\u00e9 museli b\u011bhem v procesu adaptace tzv. \"ob\u011btovat\". P\u0159esto\u017ee Tran, Ambre a Berge ve sv\u00e9 adaptaci P\u0159\u00edli\u0161 hlu\u010dn\u00e9 samoty vypou\u0161t\u011bj\u00ed n\u011bkter\u00e9 sm\u011b\u0161n\u011b absurdn\u00ed rysy d\u00edla, dok\u00e1zali zachovat poutavou celistvost obsahu a formy ve vnit\u0159n\u00ed hloubavosti protagonist\u016f p\u0159esahuj\u00edc\u00ed jejich vlastn\u00ed trag\u00e9dii. J\u00fcdt naopak \"ob\u011btoval\" onu \u010d\u00e1st Schulzova fantasmagorick\u00e9ho liter\u00e1rn\u00edho sv\u011bta, kter\u00e1 se m\u016f\u017ee jevit jako dvojzna\u010dn\u00e1, av\u0161ak vizu\u00e1ln\u00ed ztv\u00e1rn\u011bn\u00ed groteskn\u00edch p\u0159edstav adaptovan\u00e9ho textu, jeho s\u00e9miotickou hustotu, stejn\u011b jako narativn\u00ed v\u00fdraznost lze hodnotit jednozna\u010dn\u011b jako zda\u0159il\u00e9. Artyku\u0142 skupia si\u0119 na dw\u00f3ch adaptacjach tekst\u00f3w literackich autorstwa Bohumila Hrabala (Lionel Tran, Ambre, i Val\u00e9rie Berge, Une trop bruyante solitude (2004)) oraz Brunona Schulza (Dieter J\u00fcdt, Heimsuchung und andere Erz\u00e4hlungen von Bruno Schulz (1995)) w ramach kwestii adaptacyjno\u015bci literatury modernistycznej albo przynajmniej w mniej stopniu realistycznej\u2014w tym wypadku: groteskowej\u2014do wizualnych medi\u00f3w artystycznych\u2014w tym wypadku: komiksu. Analiza pokazuje, \u017ce adaptuj\u0105c w formie komiksowej ma si\u0119 do dyspozycji, na r\u00f3\u017cnych poziomach, ca\u0142y wachlarz mniej lub bardziej specyficznych (dla danego \u015brodku) chwyt\u00f3w kompensuj\u0105cych w spos\u00f3b kreatywny tak zwane \"ofiary\" w wyniku procesu adaptacyjnego. W swojej adaptacji Tran, Ambre i Berge, omijaj\u0105c cechy bardziej absurdalne Zbyt g\u0142o\u015bnej samotno\u015bci, potrafili zachowa\u0107 intryguj\u0105c\u0105 z\u0142o\u017cono\u015b\u0107 zar\u00f3wno tre\u015bci jak i formy kontemplacji wewn\u0119trznych bohatera o swojej tragedii. J\u00fcdtowi natomiast, chocia\u017c by\u0142 zmuszony zrezygnowa\u0107 z cz\u0119\u015bci niejednoznaczno\u015bci \u015bwiata literackiego Schulza, \u015bwietnie uda\u0142o si\u0119 przekaza\u0107 w formie wizualnej zar\u00f3wno obrazy groteskowe, g\u0119sto\u015b\u0107 semiotyczn\u0105, jak i znamienno\u015b\u0107 narracyjn\u0105 tekstu adaptowanego.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Ingram"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a70b3aa-1d42-3eb4-aa99-81ccfe23be80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Smith's laissez-faire doctrine contains distinctive value postulates intended to promulgate an egalitarian agrarian capitalism in the spirit of physiocracy. Criticisms of Smith by Alexander Hamilton, J.-B. Say, Andrew Ure, and Friedrich List are instanced to support the present interpretation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. Edward White"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec4aeb70-07fc-3471-a55f-78c1ac57f5b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1073979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":149.0,"pageEnd":"633","pageStart":"485","pagination":"pp. 485-633","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Arrival of History in Constitutional Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1073979","wordCount":57361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Virginia Law Review","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YIMAN WANG"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55316691-53cc-3eb4-a6cc-783ae7f9b433"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From the Indexical to the Spectacle: On Zhang Yimou's Postmodern Turn in Not One Less","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688494","wordCount":6781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[40217,40295]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles H. Morgan"],"datePublished":"1952-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/146861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018098X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3f3a41a-9eff-3bcd-9465-16b19b2d268f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/146861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hesperia"}],"isPartOf":"Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts","Classical Studies","Humanities","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pheidias and Olympia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/146861","wordCount":21607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The American School of Classical Studies at Athens","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard D. Friedman"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6adf3bb-30b1-3f66-9865-9047223dfdcf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"1765","pageStart":"1738","pagination":"pp. 1738-1765","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Cardozo the [Small r] rEalist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290262","wordCount":16122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Miller"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00804606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e2e8e36-cad4-36c6-a162-36822ad17fa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/770342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biogmemofellroya"}],"isPartOf":"Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":140.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 368-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Sir Karl Raimund Popper, C. H., F. B. A. 28 July 1902-17 September 1994","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770342","wordCount":59774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Pittenger"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2870460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2870460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dispatch Quickly: The Mechanical Reproduction of Pages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2870460","wordCount":11874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stacey Olster"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc17d27f-adc9-333e-9b9e-8ebbdcb2bed4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"REMAKES, OUTTAKES, AND UPDATES IN SUSAN SONTAG'S \"THE VOLCANO LOVER\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285770","wordCount":8624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boris Groys"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91d0803a-c39c-3cf9-8553-b5b76e5d8fda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"336","pagination":"pp. 336-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Invisibility of the Digital: Religion, Ritual, Immortality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608854","wordCount":3011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"55\/56","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Bushell"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.4.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b14a683b-eb2a-38bd-a863-6585745c60a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.4.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mapping Victorian Adventure Fiction: Silences, Doublings, and the Ur-Map in Treasure Island<\/em> and King Solomon's Mines<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.57.4.02","wordCount":10553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743]],"Locations in B":[[44028,44189]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"Abstract While there has been much critical interest in the relationship between visual and verbal forms in the Victorian period, there has been no real attempt to develop ways of exploring and interpreting the relationship between maps and texts. This paper begins to address such a lack by theorizing the dynamic between map and text for the map in adventure fiction. Two iconic maps (those for Treasure Island and King Solomon's Mines) are analyzed in an interdisciplinary way by drawing upon the discipline of cartography, particularly critical cartography. Three cartographic concepts are explored in relation to the literary examples: the accuracy of the map; the concept of cartographic silence; and the authenticity of the map.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MaryAnn Snyder-K\u00f6rber"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc35209c-3621-3465-b160-3cf6d05b8281"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lost and Found Lives: \"The Portraits of Grief\" and the Work of September 11 Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158511","wordCount":14872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"How do we mourn at the millennium? In her recent work, Sandra Gilbert has explored the ways in which new medial possibilities, on the one hand, and the particular media narratives and experiences of September 11, on the other, have shaped public response to a catastrophe repeatedly linked to a cultural paradigm shift: from postmodern modes to a renewed valorization of the 'real' and 'authentic' This essay considers the New York Times series Portraits of Grief against this backdrop. The biographical profiles model themselves less on traditional obituaries than on the improvised memorial practices which emerged in the aftermath of the attacks and, in particular, the ideal of the snapshot. \"Snapshots of their Lives\" was the first headline of September 15, and it served as the compositional model for the series. I argue that the Portraits turn to the snapshot as a marker of the authentic in the supposedly post-photographic age of the digital. The argument explores this snapshot aesthetic through the lens of adaption: following the transformation of the missing person flyers from a means of search to a medium of memorialization, considering the Times's reworking of urban memorial forms into print remembrance, and finally, analyzing the Portraits within a wider adaptive frame. This frame includes Diane Schoemperlen's Names of the Dead: Elegy for the Victims of September 11 (2004), which uses the series as material for a new form of elegy and, as I further argue, a new form of mourning. In close readings attuned to shifting medial and response contexts surrounding the Portraits, my analysis aims to illuminate the dynamics modulating mourning and its constitution of national feeling post-9\/11.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruno Chaouat"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3e6e7bd-8140-3b4d-940f-9c838b9b3f5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288963","wordCount":716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Wilmerding"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f92d8bea-5d87-35c3-a048-723007542b9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Essential Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109246","wordCount":4086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1941-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/330799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"026aa097-c7d3-3e4c-9584-f59e708630fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/330799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Sixty-First Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to May 1941)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/330799","wordCount":35465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Staiger"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24242939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10531297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46728412"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250653"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02d09efd-ca34-30d7-aaf7-7797ab651c3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24242939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newenglandrev"}],"isPartOf":"New England Review (1990-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"340","pagination":"pp. 340-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Kindle 451","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24242939","wordCount":8479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Middlebury College Publications","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Lucy"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Flying Home\": Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, and the Black Folk during World War II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487555","wordCount":15733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"477","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":"This article examines the theories of the black folk (those African Americans understood to constitute a folk group) as an economic, cultural, and literary category in the wartime writing of Richard Wright and Ralph Ellison. It rereads this work within the context of current scholarship that historicizes and contests the construction of the folk in folklore and literary theory and their applications. This article has a particular focus on the numerous and uncollected articles by Ellison and on the oral history narratives he recorded for the Federal Writers' Project. While both writers initially adopted a Marxist perspective on the folk, as defined by Wright's \"Blueprint for Negro Writing\" (1937), the work of Ellison and Wright diverged from this platform, though in radically different ways. Ellison's perspective developed to encompass a cultural nationalist position that was, in turn, deeply embedded in a pluralist and syncretic vision of American culture. In African American folk culture, Ellison limned a political agenda for activism. Wright, in contrast, aligned himself with the views of Gunnar Myrdal, which Ellison disputed. Recovering and delineating the ways in which Ellison's construction of the black folk ultimately diverges from that of Wright is a key element in the rereading of the cultural politics of wartime African American writing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b406f994-2a08-3b4a-8baf-8ddaff300926"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/951819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951819","wordCount":18825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1478","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REBECCA WARBURTON BOYLAN"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45273339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02685418"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25f0a2db-d245-3eb0-8149-d6cc2b698c17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45273339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thomashardyj"}],"isPartOf":"The Thomas Hardy Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PHANTOM PHOTOGRAPHS: THE CAMERA'S PURSUIT AND DISRUPTION OF CONSCIOUSNESS IN \"JUDE THE OBSCURE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45273339","wordCount":5828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Thomas Hardy Society","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. 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Performing arts"],"title":"Telemann in the Marketplace: The Composer as Self-Publisher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2005.58.2.275","wordCount":39842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"Abstract This article tells the story of a self-publishing business maintained by Georg Philipp Telemann in Frankfurt and Hamburg from 1715 through the late 1730s, a remarkable venture that illuminates much about music commerce during the early eighteenth century. At a time in Germany when conditions were generally unfavorable for the publishing of music, Telemann issued forty-six entirely new editions of his own works. Not only did he solicit subscribers to his publications and set up a network of agents across Europe (anticipating the activities of Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach a half century later), but he also did much, if not all, of the engraving himself and pioneered the use of pewter plates and punches in Germany. A recently discovered supplement to the subscriber list printed with the Nouveaux quatuors (Paris, 1738) enriches our knowledge of Telemann's audience, while a close examination of his engraving practices provides evidence for a redating of the well-known Hamburg collection Essercizii musici. Despite the continuing success of his Selbstverlag, Telemann suddenly dissolved the business in 1740 with the sale of his entire stock of engraved plates, a move that seems to have been motivated in part by his aspirations as a music theorist.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Auner"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a7dc29a-7755-39be-be95-0e8b3baaaea2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Sing It for Me': Posthuman Ventriloquism in Recent Popular Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557466","wordCount":13686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"128","abstract":"Drawing on writings concerning the cyborg and the posthuman, this article considers songs by Radiohead, Moby and others that use processed voices, digitally generated speech and sampled vocal loops. In these songs the technological sphere is made the locus of expression, while the human voices are mechanized and drained of subjectivity. These pieces - products of a rock band that relinquishes its voice to a computer, and of a 'techno' DJ striving to make mechanized dance music sing - can illustrate some ways musicians have used posthuman voices to chart and destabilize the boundaries of race, gender and the human.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Z. S. Strother"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167520","wordCount":12611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"39","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DERMOT BOYD"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29791473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13938770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f67ce7e-3f2b-3b20-807b-10938ba01e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29791473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"buildingmaterial"}],"isPartOf":"Building Material","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"in praise of competitions: 1996 nissan art project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29791473","wordCount":1087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Architectural Association of Ireland","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie George Katz"],"datePublished":"1978-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3850053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018702X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616103"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e58e621-768d-35c2-88af-a594f975c3cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3850053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hudsonreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Hudson Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Communications","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Between Benjamin and McLuhan: Vil\u00e9m Flusser's Media Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926588","wordCount":12047,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36825,36930]],"Locations in B":[[20604,20701]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"110","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2317693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0c210a7-7b6e-3939-a806-7be786f56a8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2317693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amermathmont"}],"isPartOf":"The American Mathematical Monthly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"941","pageStart":"928","pagination":"pp. 928-941","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Telegraphic Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2317693","wordCount":6679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Mathematical Association of America","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Marschall"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e5ba886-b89e-3da7-b70b-cada328bf5be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"The Virtual Memory Landscape: The Impact of Information Technology on Collective Memory and Commemoration in Southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001343","wordCount":8358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"The article considers the impact of new digital technologies and the internet on the process of commemorating the past and memorialising the dead in Southern Africa, with some comparative reference to the developed world context. The theoretical framework is inspired by Wulf Kansteiner's contention that collective memory is the result of the interaction between three overlapping elements \u2013 the media of memory, the makers and the consumers or users of memory. It is argued that internet-based commemoration represents the third successive and concurrent phase in the culture of collective remembrance in Southern Africa, following pre-colonial indigenous or vernacular memory practices and colonial forms of 'institutionalised' memory sites. Web-based commemoration is represented as a potentially new form of vernacular memory practice which collapses Kansteiner's groups of makers and users of memory. Selected case studies, mostly from South Africa, will be critically examined and their openness as a democratic space for negotiating the memory of the past assessed. The article maintains that new technologies, although currently still in their infancy, are bound to have an increasingly profound influence on commemoration and the formation and transfer of collective memory in Southern Africa.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5491187-6cde-3305-94d7-3a6a74637569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/949924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949924","wordCount":19432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1455","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Joselit"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6424e564-bd34-3483-841a-7d5c23925808"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 8-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marcel Duchamp's \"Monte Carlo Bond\" Machine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778829","wordCount":7329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Knelman"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44405208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"549d6dbf-b560-3ba0-b0a4-c7db6448aa58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44405208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"\"Rigoroso (\u266a = 126)\": \"The Rite of Spring\" and the Forging of a Modernist Performing Style","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/832000","wordCount":27149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"It is only recently that we have begun to consider modernist performing style-especially its brisk, unyielding tempos and abhorrence of \"expressive\" rubato-as a historical phenomenon. Much of the credit (or blame) for this style has been ascribed to the composer of The Rite of Spring; Richard Taruskin argues that \"all truly modern musical performance... treats the music performed as if it were composed-or at least performed-by Stravinsky.\" But the performing history of the Rite shows that the composer struggled mightily to get his own music played \"as if composed by Stravinsky.\" Early interpretations of the Rite were slower and more elastic-more \"romantic\"-than the composer wanted. Focusing on the \"Danse sacrale,\" this paper examines the battles over tempo and rubato evidenced by historic recordings, piano rolls, and published documents. It also considers the unpublished compositional and performing materials for the Rite: Stravinsky's autograph short and full scores, and his annotated personal copies of the 1913 piano reduction and the 1922 and 1948 full scores. The record indicates (1) that tempo and pacing of many sections of the Rite were radically rethought between sketch and 1922 printed score; (2) that someone (Pierre Monteux?) indicated rubatos and changed many of Stravinsky's metronome marks on the autograph; (3) that early performances of the \"Danse sacrale\" featured unwritten tempo modifications for dramatic effect; and (4) that Stravinsky had to work for decades to fix in his score the rigoroso that has become the characteristic performing tempo of our time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marc Tabani"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20877382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4cd83a3-8d59-35cf-b229-1ebf7cc013ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20877382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Carnival of Custom: Land Dives, Millenarian Parades and Other Spectacular Ritualizations in Vanuatu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20877382","wordCount":14753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"This paper deals with the aestheticization and commoditization of culture in specific grand rituals held in Vanuatu. Through political, commercial and juridical processes, the traditional referent of these neo-ritualizations has been replaced by a celebration of the kastom theme itself; the official value of a regional, national, and global cultural heritage. The examination of two iconic rituals, the Nagol land dive on Pentecost island and the 15th February annual commemoration of John Frum on Tanna island, reveals them as similarly invoking a Christian and colonially inspired reverence in their idealization of an ancestral past. Nevertheless, the increasing monetarization of village communities through the global promotion of kastom spectacles by media and for touristic purposes is ever more frequently considered locally as a factor of inequality or division.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Eklund"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44526527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00251003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c9a505d-9f47-301e-a5ea-ea1d3bdfeed4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44526527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintephonasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the International Phonetic Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"324","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-324","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Pulmonic ingressive phonation: Diachronic and synchronic characteristics, distribution and function in animal and human sound production and in human speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44526527","wordCount":51049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"This paper looks at the phenomenon of ingressive speech, i.e. speech produced on a pulmonic ingressive airstream, set in the context of human and animal ingressive phonation. The literature on ingressive speech and phonation spanning several centuries is reviewed, as well as contemporary reports of their incidence and characteristics from both functional and acoustic perspectives. Ingressive phonation has been used as a deliberate means of speech or sound production for hundreds of years in order to achieve specific effects, and it is still used for the same purposes, by e.g. shamans and ventriloquists. In normal spoken conversation \u2013 contrary to what is often claimed \u2013 present-day ingressive speech is not limited to Scandinavia or Nordic languages, but is found on all continents, in genetically unrelated languages. Where ingressive speech occurs, it serves more or less the same paralinguistic functions, such as a feedback marker in a dialog. Since pulmonic ingressive phonation is also common in the calls of monkeys and apes, thus exhibiting a biological basis, it is suggested that ingressive speech might constitute a neglected universal phenomenon, rather than being highly marked, which is how it is commonly described in the literature.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-01-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5805b39-fbe3-3e9a-af2e-525377322161"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873598","wordCount":43556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4938","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"247","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Rolleston"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24645924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04697c81-e888-3e2b-b6be-78203d6ef18a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24645924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Temporal Space: a Reading of Kafka's \"Betrachtung\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24645924","wordCount":5546,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36748,36855]],"Locations in B":[[4068,4175]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN FIZER"],"datePublished":"1982-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03635570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70152989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007249005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvukrastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Ukrainian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Performing arts"],"title":"WB on the Treadmill","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23009795","wordCount":3090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"57","publisher":"Agni","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-02-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2889899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73f91a1f-9587-3bd5-aaf6-19dcfa6fda94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2889899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"876","pageStart":"826","pagination":"pp. 826-876","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2889899","wordCount":42754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5250","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"271","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carlos Gallego"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40800641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ead5a36-9943-33a3-9079-b68ab2a99a69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40800641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"COORDINATING CONTEMPORANEITY: (POST) MODERNITY, 9\/11, AND THE DIALECTICAL IMAGERY OF MEMENTO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40800641","wordCount":13395,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[7915,8114],[41799,41969],[47081,47305]],"Locations in B":[[12858,13052],[13573,13743],[13760,13992]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"75","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Trachtenberg"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3043765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"387e8607-e7b3-3071-a77b-45d2ec5f1372"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3043765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657395","wordCount":2190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol Gigliotti"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07b7da33-6b70-3058-8744-7839429e2abb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Aesthetics of a Virtual World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576192","wordCount":7253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"The author explores the emerging aesthetics of interactive technologies--such as virtual reality, multimedia and telecommunication--and the inherent commitment artists must assume in accepting responsibility for the impact of these aesthetics. By examining connections between ethics and aesthetics throughout Western history, the author attempts to transform the aesthetics of virtual worlds to impact ethical thought. She lists six factors integral to responsible aesthetics in virtual systems: interface, content, environment, perception, performance and plasticity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93c39f13-6590-3457-9cbd-02be0e3cd6ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Subject Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106699","wordCount":17954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. C. Amoroso","G. W. Corner"],"datePublished":"1972-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/769658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00804606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fec72afd-5134-33df-925f-94486ba20b98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/769658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biogmemofellroya"}],"isPartOf":"Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":105.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 82-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Herbert McLean Evans. 1882-1971","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/769658","wordCount":51825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL S. MOORE"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70e770b0-4656-3001-a1c1-211c48a0bd81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"NATHAN L. NATHANSON INTRODUCES CANADIAN ODEON: Producing National Competition in Film Exhibition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408024","wordCount":10517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"\u00c0 partir de documents publi\u00e9s dans les journaux locaux ainsi que dans les revues professionnelles comme le Canadian Moving Picture Digest et le Canadian Film Weekly, l'auteur examine la carri\u00e8re de Nathan L. Nathanson et son r\u00f4le crucial dans la cr\u00e9ation du Canadian Odeon en 1941. Les affiliations et l'identit\u00e9 m\u00eame du Canadian Odeon changeaient selon le lieu g\u00e9ographique des sous-cha\u00eenes implant\u00e9es \u00e0 Vancouver, Toronto, Montr\u00e9al et ailleurs au pays. En s'attardant plus \u00e0 la construction des salles de cin\u00e9ma qu'aux questions de distribution, cette \u00e9tude d\u00e9passe les simples param\u00e8tres du control qu'a toujours exerc\u00e9 Hollywood sur le cin\u00e9ma canadien pour offrir un cadre de recherche permettant de comprendre la sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 locale de l'enthousiasme des foules pour le cin\u00e9ma.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Cass"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ef5852-9b62-3683-9173-c9b76890f469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SS Troopers: Cybernostalgia and Paul Verhoeven's Fascist Flirtation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414533","wordCount":4429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Gitelman"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/742465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/742465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Reading Music, Reading Records, Reading Race: Musical Copyright and the U. 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The Article contends that in the current lottery-like environment of many media markets, copyright law disproportionately inflates the revenues of the most popular creations, which leads publishers to spend increasing amounts on promotional campaigns, which, intentionally or not, drowns out economically marginal creations. This discourages, rather than encourages, investment in many new creations. Consequently, current copyright law may actually reduce the overall production of new creations. As an alternative to the current strict limits copyright law imposes on copying, this Article explains how new technologies, social norms, and much weaker prohibitions against unauthorized copying may be combined to create viable business models for financing new creations. These business models appear capable of ensuring creators and publishers a sufficient profit to stimulate creation and distribution but without the significant harms produced by broad prohibitions against unauthorized copying.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. A. 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No less than three centuries earlier, however, the Netherlandish master, Jan Van Eyck, drew exposures of natural rock whose features are so remarkably accurate as to permit modem-day geologic analysis of their lithology, fossil content, sedimentary structures, and depositional environment. Van Eyck clearly studied, drew, and painted a specific outcrop \"in the field,\" long before such practice had become common in art or science. As the first modem geologic \"observer,\" Van Eyck greatly extended an existing tradition of naturalism with regard to organic phenomena (esp. plants, insects, human figures) fully into the realm of inorganic reality. In this, he far surpassed other scholar-artists, such as Leonardo da Vinci, who have been credited with similar achievements. Van Eyck's achievement proved exceptional. It was matched neither by later artists, scientists, or illustrators until the late 18th-early 19th century, when conventions in travel literature and landscape inspired new attention to the drawing of rock materials. The reasons for this historical gap have everything to do with the limitations of observation in early geological study, which show important parallels to those in art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard Burkat"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"029bc87d-12f5-3728-b526-db64c6c068da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/940434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Challenge of Music Librarianship in the Public Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940434","wordCount":3373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"086b141f-59b8-3fa9-a23d-3f5ace2bf75d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodernism in Parallax","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778862","wordCount":8964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan E. Goldman"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Joyce, the Propheteer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267612","wordCount":9242,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30689,30789]],"Locations in B":[[42704,42804]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Drew"],"datePublished":"1980-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/945448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00402982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"792e51c3-125d-320e-90f4-ca547cf0507d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/945448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tempo"}],"isPartOf":"Tempo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Markevitch: The Early Works and beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/945448","wordCount":7370,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55673,55765]],"Locations in B":[[41040,41132]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"133\/134","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Pfohl"],"datePublished":"1990-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/800574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"442","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Welcome to the PARASITE CAFE: Postmodernity as a Social Problem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800574","wordCount":14090,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52301,52410]],"Locations in B":[[74147,74256]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"This is an ethnoGRAPHic text, if somewhat surreally--a story of the dense and high velocity technostructuring of the society in which I find myself knotted in a complex of ritual network relations to others. Technological relations. Telecommunicative relations. Relations of modelling and simulation and control. This is a story of a postmodern society in The USA Today; a sociological story of the inFORMational powers of an ultra-modern form of straight whitemale CAPITAL gone trans-global. It is also a story of those sentenced to circulate at the peripheries of an imperially anchored and electronically mass-mediated U. S. will to power without end: women, peoples of color, and the economically impoverished. Beware: this is not a pleasing story to (w)rite. By connecting postmodernity to sociological questions of parasitism, I hope to explore the bodily invasion of an increasing number of fleshy human animals by a cold and uncanny addiction to a seemingly endless flow of inFORMation. This is CAPITAL to such an intense degree that it becomes a motion picture environment, a fragmentary televisionary collage of fears and fascinations. This is a social problem. It operates under the panicky sign-work of asetheticization, commodification, and excess. Throughout this text I read such signs as indicative of both the disembodying flight of metropolitan men of ultra-modern power and of the sacrificial ascendency of a \"new and improved\" form of fascist cultural rituals. READ MY LIPS! Beware: this is not a pleasing story to read.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Amber Condis"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1679bb0b-45a8-3b6b-a253-bd4063116826"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Playing the Game of Literature: Ready Player One<\/em>, the Ludic Novel, and the Geeky \u201cCanon\u201d of White Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.01","wordCount":9627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"Ernest Cline's Ready Player One (2011) illustrates the anxieties and uncertainties of embodiment and identity in the digital age by constructing a pop culture \u201ccanon\u201d of texts that all participants in video game culture must know. The texts in this canon are \u201ctaught\u201d via a series of references and puzzles that the characters in the novel (as well as the reader) must solve. Being a \u201cgamer\u201d thus becomes synonymous with having proper knowledge of the canon. However, the construction of this canon privileges certain kinds of bodies and identities over others. The result is an image of gamer culture in which white maleness is the default assumption against which all participants are measured.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15225e25-f48a-30b4-bf9a-eab063ef77dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Exhibitions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775951","wordCount":6468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb67b9f7-5f24-3967-9b25-e41912baa7b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 36-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Death in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778898","wordCount":9444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/576791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/576791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"1110","pageStart":"1033","pagination":"pp. 1033-1110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notices of Periodical and Occasional Publications, Mainly of 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/576791","wordCount":51071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"448","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Gans"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9257936-7267-3201-9751-966e4819ba2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"814","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-814","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Last Word in Lyric: Mallarm\u00e9's Silent Siren","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057572","wordCount":13426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALBERT D. PIONKE","CLINTON MACHANN","MARJORIE STONE","SUZANNE BAILEY","ROSEMARIE MORGAN","FRANK FENNELL","BENJAMIN F. FISHER","FLORENCE S. BOOS","YISRAEL LEVIN","LINDA K. 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Domas","David V. Tiedeman"],"datePublished":"1950-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20153846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44519016"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215263"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90d120df-a54c-3004-9b10-6c3de6679b86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20153846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jexperimentedu"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Experimental Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Teacher Competence: An Annotated Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20153846","wordCount":79582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c933fd52-4948-3891-82bb-dfb8158574fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/879581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":135.0,"pageEnd":"cxxxii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cxxxii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879581","wordCount":21263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"914","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Briggs"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8784a918-d607-3a8f-86d3-50ad58f86b56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/683999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Linguistic Magic Bullets in the Making of a Modernist Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/683999","wordCount":16621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":"This article engages current debates about concepts of culture in U.S. anthropology by examining how assumptions about language shape them. Characterizing linguistic patterns as particularly inaccessible to conscious introspection, Franz Boas suggested that culture is similarly automatic and unconscious - except for anthropologists. He used this notion in attempting to position the discipline as the obligatory passage point for academic and public debate about difference. Unfortunately, this mode of inserting linguistics in the discipline, which has long outlived Boas, reifies language ideologies by promoting simplistic models that belie the cultural complexity of human communication. By pointing to the way that recent work in linguistic anthropology has questioned key assumptions that shaped Boas's concept of culture, the article urges other anthropologists to stop asking their linguistic colleagues for magic bullets and to appreciate the critical role that examining linguistic ideologies and practices can play in discussions of the politics of culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgrx5.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874217506"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51f061c4-89a0-31eb-8f59-af1a0e5464e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt4cgrx5.14"}],"isPartOf":"Folklore and the Internet","keyphrase":["wikipedia http","accessed","enwikipediaorg wiki","wikipedia http enwikipediaorg","http enwikipediaorg","http enwikipediaorg wiki","american folklore","western folklore","logan utah","alan dundes"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"231","pagination":"231-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgrx5.14","wordCount":8139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARJORIE H. PARKER","MARION E. WILES","ETHEL ALPENFELS","ROBERT L. FRENCH","M. VIRGINIA BIGGY","Thomas Jefferson","Sylvia Vopni","Roberta B. Shine","Dorothy May Abbott","Edith L. Ball","Shata L. Ling","Muriel A. Rose","M. Adeline Olson","Jane M. Hill","Lois Knowles","Carmen Johnson","Alberta L. Meyer","May V. Seagoe","Verna M. Wulfekammer","Florene B. Fratcher","Frances I. Purdy","Lois Taylor","Hilda M. Wilson","Martha J. Kuhlmann","Virginia Lee Block","Gladys H. Bronson","Sarah G. Danzig","Helen A. Fielstra","Helen Huus","Elsie Jevons","Adelaide H. Karsian","Carol K. Knudson","Ruth J. Larson","Alberta Lowe","Geneva E. McDonald","Charlotte Miller","Louise P. Owen","Clara Pederson","Gladys S. Sadd","Dorothy M. Sherman","Celia G. Snow","Alma A. Williams","Miriam M. Bryan","Maxine Dunfee","Frances A. Mullen","Margaret Ruth Smith","Maude A. Stewart","Helen M. Robinson","Bernice Baxter","Margaret W. Efraemson","Catherine Allen","Frances M. Beck","Margareta B. Bentley","Orpha B. 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Lyons"],"datePublished":"1961-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42925485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013175X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4188749-4cd1-3e97-b406-c84d6a4cc5cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42925485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educhori"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Horizons","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":114.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Proceedings of the Twenty-second Biennial Council of Pi Lambda Theta Northwestern University Chicago Campus Chicago, Illinois August 23-26, 1961","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42925485","wordCount":57500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marika Takanishi Knowles"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b832dba-db9c-3d42-bf9e-6089a39699fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lost Ground: The Performance of Pierrot in Nadar and Adrien Tournachon's Photographs of Charles Deburau","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825858","wordCount":10508,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[24159,24306]],"Locations in B":[[41722,41869]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"In 1855, Nadar and his brother Adrien Tournachon produced a series of large format photographs of the mime Charles Deburau in the costume of Pierrot. Here I argue that these photographs severed the figure of Pierrot from his previous environmental ground, as this ground had been produced and mythologized by the authors Jules Janin and Champfleury. Prior to 1855, Janin and Champfleury had successively insisted upon the relationship between Pierrot and the \"popular\" milieu of a working class theater on the Boulevard du Temple. Yet the photographs, for technical, aesthetic, and cultural reasons, exclude this milieu. Instead, the photographs perform and reform Pierrot's identity, detaching the identity of the character from the popular and attaching it to the distinctive features of Charles Deburau. Through the photographs, Pierrot loses the particularity of a historically specific cultural ground \u2014 however mythologized that ground had become \u2014 and is now free to move between any ground whatsoever. This transformation of the character thematizes one of the effects of photography as an emergent technology, which was to exacerbate the fissures between figures and grounds that haunted nineteenth-century art. Pierrot proved only too ready to lose a determining historical ground and to float instead into the immateriality of spectacle.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARK OSTEEN"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26634612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08993114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259372100"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720c772f-83de-3562-b005-67a04ae7c219"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26634612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoyclitesupp"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Literary Supplement","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"19","pagination":"p. 19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism in the Marketplace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26634612","wordCount":1772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Miami","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VIKTORIA TKACZYK"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"559ab371-8c0c-3cf9-937f-c428746db3ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Shot Is Fired Unheard: Sigmund Exner and the Physiology of Reverberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832231","wordCount":6303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara A. Babcock"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f5c171b-85b7-32e0-8093-07daaf1592ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pueblo Cultural Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541072","wordCount":4978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"423","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":"This essay discusses the reproduction of cultural bodies and the fact that both Pueblo pots and Pueblo women were\/are receptacles of desire and containers of cultural value for Anglo viewers, consumers, and scholars. Part of a larger project, \"Mudwomen and Whitemen,\" concerned with the politics of reproduction, it addresses how and why a traditionally dressed Pueblo woman shaping or carrying a water jar has become the metonymic misrepresentation of the Pueblo Southwest.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence R. Schehr"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c50966c7-2269-3a90-8f39-7bc8da127863"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Quoin of the Realm: \"La Muse du d\u00e9partement\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286623","wordCount":4663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Eagleton"],"datePublished":"1977-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23103205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c5cbb43-b63d-3363-ab9e-ae90e30b06d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23103205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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WEYLER","ED WHITE","SI\u00c2N SILYN ROBERTS","CATHY N. 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Performing arts"],"title":"Ramayan: The Video","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146030","wordCount":26694,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[10467,11042]],"Locations in B":[[51,623]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paige Reynolds"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b44d3bf-7a74-3f98-bb80-5c9e820be9fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Brower"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.1999.11.1.77","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a36119bf-2740-3d50-a8f5-6867858f13a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/his.1999.11.1.77"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Preserving Machine: The \u201cNew\u201d Museum and Working through Trauma\u2014the Mus\u00e9e M\u00e9morial pour la Paix of Caen<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.1999.11.1.77","wordCount":10060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Rosenberg"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23605895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00658987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565053385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23605895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjewiyearbook"}],"isPartOf":"The American Jewish Year Book","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1972)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102926","wordCount":51145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura-Lee Kearns"],"datePublished":"2015-01-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.1.0098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2316fe5f-6b0e-355f-85ba-f8b881d38b30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.1.0098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Subjects of Wonder: Toward an Aesthetics, Ethics, and Pedagogy of Wonder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.1.0098","wordCount":11391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"What is wonder? What would it mean to live our lives in wonder or with wonder? Is it possible for wonder to play an integral role in our aesthetic, ethical, and pedagogical experiences? Philosophy is said to begin with wonder. For Plato, wonder is the arche that grounds all philosophical inquiry. I propose to begin my ethical and aesthetic investigation of wonder with Plato, but, unlike Plato who places the imagination\u2019s capacity to be astonished at the bottom of a hierarchy that quests for knowledge and understanding, I will argue that an ethics and aesthetics based on wonder would allow for the imagination to play an active role in all our encounters. First, I look at different philosophical treatments of wonder and then consider the role wonder plays as a virtue. Next I examine the wondrous in relation to aesthetic and ethical experiences, exploring art exhibits and a play, and conclude by drawing upon the many sides of wonder and considering its role in education. In my wanderings on wonder, I seek to value wonder as an integral part of ourselves, in all our imaginings, understandings, growth, and knowledge acquisition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sheila Liming"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.99","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9f42211-7dae-3fc8-904b-8161dcc67fc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.99"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Suffer the Little Vixens: Sex and Realist Terror in \u201cJazz Age\u201d America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.99","wordCount":9775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Jazz was, as a generic mode and organizational device, crucially misunderstood by some early twentieth century audiences, so much so that it became itself a genre built upon the manufacture of misunderstanding. Edith Wharton and Theodor Adorno, disparate figures in literary history, are linked here through their criticisms of jazz culture, as both strive to appraise jazz's corrosion of the artistic form (be that form literary, musical, or otherwise). Such popular misapprehension becomes, over the course an additional hundred years, a deeply entrenched and dogmatic acceptance of form: jazz is not only best understood as form, but, in fact, may only be definitively understood as such, following Paul Whiteman's famous statement that jazz is \u201cnot the thing said, but the manner of saying it.\u201d Focusing, then, not on the \u201cthing\u201d \u2014 that is, jazz music in specific \u2014 but the \u201cmanner of saying it,\u201d or its stylistic properties, Wharton and Adorno's critiques of jazz culture connect to a woman who was, in the early 1920s, both a living instantiation and emblem of it: Olive Thomas. Thomas embodied the jazz aesthetic in her public character and in her personal life; she was \u201cthe first flapper,\u201d but far from the last, becoming an ultimately replaceable figure conscripted for use in the programs of both jazz and modernity, and helping furthermore to found a tradition of such generic replacement for women like her.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3985795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10845453"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53060078"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3985795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihist"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"586","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-586","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - 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Astronomy"],"title":"The Near East in the Southwest: Essays in Honor of William G. Dever","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3768554","wordCount":101089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The American Schools of Oriental Research","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl Hindrichs"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdc2e7f0-83cf-3742-a634-50289d879a66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40607968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Feminist Optics and Avant-Garde Cinema: Germaine Dulac's \"The Smiling Madame Beudet\" and Virginia Woolf's \"Street Haunting\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40607968","wordCount":11124,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[42327,42437],[42597,42684],[43175,43363]],"Locations in B":[[2419,2529],[2686,2767],[2856,3043]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EEF MASSON"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mttc.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089643124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8761920f-e153-379b-bb07-f3389d0516a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mttc.5"}],"isPartOf":"Watch and Learn","keyphrase":["educational","visual","teaching","ottley","didactic","vignaux","cinema","visual instruction","educational film","medium"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"27","pagination":"27-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Film for Education:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mttc.5","wordCount":33868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"On 6 May 1941, about a year after the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands had begun, the Dutch Ministry of Education, Arts and Sciences ratified the establishment of a new public body: Stichting Nederlandse Onderwijs Film or NOF.\u00b9 The foundation\u2019s remit was to centrally organise the production, acquisition and distribution of films for primary and early secondary education in Holland. The establishment of the new institute was an ambitious enterprise. In previous decades, attempts had been made to facilitate the use of film for teaching, but never before on such a scale. After a mere four years of operation, NOF","subTitle":"Debates, Idea(l)s and Practices","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula Quigley"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"560e9f4d-d610-31ce-baaa-67132fbc8a16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Realism and Eroticism: Re-Reading Bazin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151963","wordCount":7789,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[43561,43623]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Bazin's distinction between different kinds of realism discriminates between an authentic mode of apprehension and mere sight, or between revelation and spectacle, as it were, where spectacle, significantly, is connected with the arousal of physical sensation. My argument is that this resonates in unexpected ways with a 'modernist' conceptual paradigm, specifically in relation to the persistent prioritization of the temporal over the spatial as the superior aesthetic register, itself based upon a residual resistance to the visual realm. To pursue this, I shall return to some of Bazin's most influential texts and concepts. In addition, a consideration of his more marginal discussions of cinema, sex and censorship will offer an oblique entry point into some of these broader issues at play in his work.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. M. Tyree"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2015.69.2.47","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dadffd2-5ac1-3ecc-82f2-e10d8ce42556"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2015.69.2.47"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Movie Madness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2015.69.2.47","wordCount":3767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"Mostly Lost is a workshop convened by the US Library of Congress that invites participants to help identify and learn about lost, unknown, and underidentified silent films. Mostly Lost 4 took place from June 11\u201313, 2015, at the Packard Campus of the National Audio Visual Conservation Center in Culpepper, Virginia. Film archives from North America and Europe screened fragments during Unidentified Film Sessions, with lectures and presentations interspersed between sessions. Evening screenings included recent restoration projects on Chaplin (The Bank, 1915), William Gillette (Sherlock Holmes, 1916), and Norma Talmadge (The Moth, 1917). This report summarizes the events of Mostly Lost 4 and offers descriptions of archiving, digitization, and restoration of early cinema, along with critical commentary on the quest for lost films. Participants were able to identify only 30 percent of the unknown films screened during the workshop.","subTitle":"Mostly Lost 4 Workshop","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rey Chow"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1986a15f-9a6b-345e-8c3c-16cc91ad7edb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1395","pageStart":"1386","pagination":"pp. 1386-1395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Phantom Discipline","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463542","wordCount":6626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407063"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50649976"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af298529-099a-31a2-b251-345402834a25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26369348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecompbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Integrative and Comparative Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":197.0,"pageEnd":"e197","pageStart":"e1","pagination":"pp. e1-e197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Symposia and Oral Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369348","wordCount":209827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Schacker"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unruly Tales: Ideology, Anxiety, and the Regulation of Genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487576","wordCount":10436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"478","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":"Drawing on nineteenth-century writings about the \"fairy tale\" or \"popular tale,\" this article explores ideologies of genre-specifically, tacit assumptions regarding generic coherence, stability, and transparency. The history of the fairy tale in England was marked by semiotic, linguistic, and cultural border crossings, including seventeenth-century French literary tales adapted to various forms of English print and theater culture and the transformation of field-based collections into popular folklore books. Early delineations of the \"real traditional fairy tale\" attempted to regulate the boundaries of an emergent discipline and a genre undergoing some radical reevaluation. These constructions were intertwined with anxieties about a number of binary oppositions, including the domestic and the foreign, the oral and the written, male and female, adult and child, and art and commerce. Although such statements sought to contain and regulate the production and reception of the fairy tale as a popular genre, to the exclusion of literary \"contes de f\u00e9es,\" they tell only a partial story. I propose that the rowdy, bawdy, and satirical stage genre of English pantomime suggests an alternate and frequently overlooked medium for the transmission of fairy tales during these formative decades in the history of folklore studies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1613637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42936599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1613637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcellbiology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Cell Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":403.0,"pageEnd":"409a","pageStart":"1a","pagination":"pp. 1a+3a-91a+93a+95a-185a+187a-193a+195a-279a+281a-285a+287a-349a+351a-373a+375a-409a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Developmental & Cell Biology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1613637","wordCount":664285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-12-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1715012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fed347a-ea42-3ee5-87d7-456b35cb1768"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1715012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"1369","pageStart":"1331","pagination":"pp. 1331-1358+1361+1363-1364+1366-1369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"131st AAAS Annual Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1715012","wordCount":28731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3649","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"146","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Garrett Longaker"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89b9e7d1-ca20-317b-853e-1af67b56a05f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"508","pagination":"pp. 508-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Economics of Exposition: Managerialism, Current-Traditional Rhetoric, and Henry Noble Day","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044646","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold N. Fowler"],"datePublished":"1901-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/496601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c1b632d-f4bf-38cc-9e04-66c31f48551a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/496601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1901,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Archaeological News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/496601","wordCount":23913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vered Maimon"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40856493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2474607-0fd6-30d8-b522-634c6b34fe66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40856493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Towards a New Image of Politics: Chris Marker's Staring Back","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40856493","wordCount":10190,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42764,42932]],"Locations in B":[[53094,53250]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"This essay analyzes Chris Marker's recent exhibition and book of photographs Staring Back. This project joined together black and white photographs of political demonstrations from the 1960s to the present and portraits from Marker's oeuvre. Some of the images are actual photographs and some were extracted from Marker's film and video footage and altered digitally using Photoshop and Painter. The first part of the essay focuses on the way the 'people' are represented in these images in relation to current political philosophy, mainly the writings of Etienne Balibar, Giorgio Agamben, Jacques Ranci\u00e8re, and Gilles Deleuze's cinema books. The second part is concerned with individual portraits and the face in relation to Deleuze's concept of the 'affection image' and the cinematic close-up. The essay argues that what unites these two groups of images is an epistemological and political move beyond identity. On the one hand these images suggest 'a new politics of the image' because they indicate that 'virtuality' is not simply the outcome of the technological digital revolution in image production in which the indexical status of analogical photography is eliminated, but of a different way of thinking and making visual images beyond what Deleuze calls 'representation,' a form of thought that is based on notions of resemblance, truth, and identity. On the other hand they offer 'a new image of the people' because they show that in the current age politics can only exist beyond the realm of identities, precisely in the possibility, as Balibar argues, of creating transnational forms of citizenship.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Corman","James Maloney"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43292460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43292460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SOME CURRENT PUBLICATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43292460","wordCount":24831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Tennessee","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/458614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ccfa37f-adc3-3c80-8153-9176fe268043"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/458614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":100.0,"pageEnd":"1312","pageStart":"1213","pagination":"pp. 1213-1312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"American Bibliography for 1938","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/458614","wordCount":37931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Siegfried Zielinski"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kfjs.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053563137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4415db4-264e-3dfe-a3b6-f72ce76534fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt45kfjs.5"}],"isPartOf":"Audiovisions","keyphrase":["cinema","apparatus","magic lantern","vanishing point","pictures","point cinema","television","exhibition","electrical","vanishing point cinema"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"25","pagination":"25-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Vanishing Point - Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kfjs.5","wordCount":26440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The location could not have been more appropriate for the event. Paris, symbol of metropolitan life and backdrop for the cultural dreams of the nations located between Asia and the Americas, hosted the most opulent World Exhibition at the transition from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. Never before held on such an imposing scale, Paris was the scene for staging the globally achieved standards of the means of production: technological, economical, cultural, and political power. Covering an area of some 1,080,000 square meters, magnificent cathedrals of high capitalism were erected along both banks of the Seine, architectural monuments to","subTitle":"The Founding Years of Audiovision","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mathew Brundage"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10583947"},{"name":"oclc","value":"472230254"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-242076"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f72b79d-d917-320f-aba3-d888d3e5d5da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44630628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameeasasirel"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American-East Asian Relations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Somewhere Between Civilization and Savagery: American Rhetoric of Stagnation and Opportunity between the Opium Wars, 1843\u20141856","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44630628","wordCount":11686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"This article examines the language in mid-19th Century accounts emphasizing Chinese cultural \"stagnation\" in the face of growing American influence in East Asia to investigate the emergence of a belief in the rising position of the United States on the world stage. This construction played off of critical observations that attempted to explain how the China trade was strong enough to be of U.S. national interest, while at the same time clarifying how the Chinese were weak enough to succumb to foreign influence. As such, Americans attempted to diagnose and cure the ills of stagnation through intervention. From religious conversion, to economic expansion, to cultural influence, Americans proposed a litany of solutions to China's problems. A common theme within these larger tropes focused on the unique role that Chinese women played in American hopes for enacting change in China. In defining Chinese stagnation, Americans betrayed their own perspectives on the role of women in society and attempted to influence Chinese women to adopt that idealized model as the means by which the United States could profit from elevating China into the ranks of modern civilized nations.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Carey"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06594ebe-249a-3c9b-8c7c-1da1c453cee0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41826332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"425","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Paragon Press","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826332","wordCount":2072,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16419,16474]],"Locations in B":[[9650,9712]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth S. 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In particular, the piece takes up an unexplored sociology of record collecting by discussing Joyce's text alongside early-twentieth-century record-collecting journals that facilitated the group consumption of audio artifacts. In doing so, I argue that Ulysses similarly coordinates networked sound collecting and listening both as text and as recording, and this essay will broadly discuss two types of Joycean \"sound coteries\" produced by these practices: listening ones, those groups primarily geared towards the reception of audio artifacts, and recording ones, those communities that gather to produce new sound objects. The essay traces both types of coteries from the early-twentieth-century text of \"Sirens\" and Joyce's rendition of \"Aeolus\" to LibriVox's 2007 version of Ulysses, illuminating the social phenomenon of audio recording in which Joyce and his reader-listeners participate to this very day. The gramophone may have suggestions of death for Joyce and other modernists, but the machine also offers occasions for gathering, listening, and living together. The sound coteries constituted within and around Joyce's Ulysses suggest that the same technology also offers an alternative, ritualized mode of listening characterized by live, social attention and communities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Scheie"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b438dc3-3b53-3a7e-9245-259867171ee7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Body Trouble: Corporeal \"Presence\" and Performative Identity in Cixous's and Mnouchkine's \"L'Indiade ou l'Inde de leurs r\u00eaves\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208953","wordCount":7350,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6755]],"Locations in B":[[18782,18883]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard H. 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It also examines Warburg's understanding of anti-Semitism; it argues that due to his attachment to a concern with the recurrence of repressed trauma, he proved totally unable to account for the modern phenomenon of anti-Semitism, except by recourse to notions of mythic archetypes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07e7b2cf-87da-3218-8241-d2bd2055abcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 64-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Armor Fou","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778724","wordCount":13989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luc D\u00f6bereiner"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41241763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01489267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41963634"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213543"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d3ad842-32fe-3576-9b7d-dd679f4bea53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41241763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"computermusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Computer Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Computer Science","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Models of Constructed Sound: Nonstandard Synthesis as an Aesthetic Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41241763","wordCount":7862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Eli Adams"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f487b7b-e934-3f9f-9499-a71d1f864d72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1556209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"879","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-879","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556209","wordCount":22085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b52af24-10b6-3b7e-b04d-211c88383ac4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808387","wordCount":21609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PATRICIA A. 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While the body of work produced in this year has been wide-ranging and diverse in its interests, some scholarly trends emerge. Particularly vibrant fields of study are life writing about Dickens, no doubt in anticipation of his bicentennial year; Dickens adaptations, particularly in performance; and Dickens's relationship to economics. These common interests reflect our contemporary preoccupations, and the extent to which Dickens's life and works are relevant to these current concerns. The scholarship surveyed is organized into the following categories: Life Writing; General Studies; Influences on Dickens, Dickens's Influence: Intertextualities; Performance and Adaptation; Places and Spaces: Geography, Internationalism, and the Urban Imagination; Material Culture and Publication; Reading, Writing, Textuality; Inner Lives: Psychology, Philosophy, Religion; Social Institutions and Issues: Capitalism, Law, Politics; Science and Technology; and Gender and Sexuality, Family and Children.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER J. 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By scrutinizing the material things Shaw purchased and the artistic groups he supported, we enter a Shavian world of paradoxes, contradictions, and unresolved tensions. In many ways these embodied the condition of modernity itself: the site of intersection among art, aesthetics, commodities, and commerce where the categories of genuine and fake are rendered unstable. Shaw criticized the idea of authenticity as the expression of fundamental \u201ctruths\u201d\u2014particularly the notion that certain aspects of culture existed apart from the commercial world. Drawing on recent work by Elizabeth Outka, his complex relationship to the \u201ccommodifed authentic\u201d is explored in prefaces, plays, and other writings with specific reference to material and visual culture. Finally, this essay focuses on various mass-produced images of the playwright. The work of the critic Walter Benjamin provides the backdrop to a discussion of Shaw's ideas on art, photography and its reproducibility.","subTitle":"Shaw's Critique of Authenticity in Modernity","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7193c969-6be8-3ec8-acd5-e935c7c97fa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/954466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954466","wordCount":20079,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1487","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93112cf0-0c92-3634-91e1-221cbe94f619"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Corpse and Accomplice: Fredric Jameson, Raymond Chandler, and the Representation of History in California","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.77.2011.0205","wordCount":14064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Courtney Lehmann"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61314128"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006213903"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec3a0e01-51ea-3c05-a06d-43fcca0aca17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26355007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cTurn off the dark\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355007","wordCount":7422,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55839,56191]],"Locations in B":[[42718,43128]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":"A Tale of Two Shakespeares in Julie Taymor\u2019s Tempest<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. M. M."],"datePublished":"1922-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25136573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e50b3098-9dab-3811-b933-93391890c84e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25136573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulleclevmuseart"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Annual Exhibition. Foreword","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25136573","wordCount":3815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cleveland Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Riefstahl"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4171540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00067997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49fe24b0-3eb8-3fbd-a0a0-13d41fc0f72f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4171540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bostmusebull"}],"isPartOf":"Boston Museum Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"244","pagination":"pp. 244-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Note on Ancient Fashions: Four Early Egyptian Dresses in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4171540","wordCount":6242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"354","publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HIZKY SHOHAM"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43282182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50951428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233851"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc2ae546-fa5e-36ce-af0e-e0139229c06f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43282182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rethinking Tradition: From Ontological Reality to Assigned Temporal Meaning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43282182","wordCount":11641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"The article seeks to revitalize the concept of tradition and re-claim its usefulness for contemporary sociological thought and research. Instead of ontological entity, tradition is defined here as an assigned temporal meaning, i. e., a symbolic activity in which various social groups attribute traditional qualities to certain sectors of life that are understood as binding together different times. The article analyzes two incompatible approaches with which tradition was hitherto conceptualized in sociology: (1) tradition as the anti-modern, and (2) tradition as synonymous with \"culture.\" The analysis introduces a few middle-ground options that support the theory of tradition as assigned meaning. L'article entend redonner vie au concept de tradition en sociologie et montrer son utilit\u00e9 pour la recherche aujourd'hui. Il met en \u00e9vidence les insuffisances des deux interpr\u00e9tations usuelles : tradition comme refus de la modernit\u00e9 et tradition rendue synonyme de culture. Il propose de voir dans l'appel \u00e0 tradition une activit\u00e9 symbolique par laquelle des groupes sociaux divers attribuent des caract\u00e8res \u00ab traditionnels \u00bb \u00e0 certains aspects de la vie sociale regard\u00e9s comme assurant un lien inter-temporel. Dieser Aufsatz setzt sich zum Ziel der Tradition in der Soziologie einen neuen Aufschwung zu geben und ihre Bedeutung f\u00fcr die heutige Forschung zu verdeutlichen. Er hebt die Unzul\u00e4nglichkeiten zweier g\u00e4ngiger Interpretationsschemen hervor: Tradition als Verweigerung der Moderne und Tradition als Synonym f\u00fcr Kultur. Er schl\u00e4gt vor, den Aufruf an die Tradition als symbolischen Akt zu begreifen, dem verschiedene soziale Gruppen traditionelle Werte im sozialen Miteinander beimessen, die als intertemporales Bindeglied fungieren","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-07-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1699573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44ae715f-21bc-3f94-af2f-f2bf59f2f612"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1699573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"444","pagination":"pp. 444-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1699573","wordCount":21915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4813","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"237","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johann Pillai"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"875","pageStart":"836","pagination":"pp. 836-875","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Death and Its Moments: The End of the Reader in History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251422","wordCount":19203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kimberly Jannarone"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"327b1a9b-3875-3d6a-9274-3c5e696784e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Audience, Mass, Crowd: Theatres of Cruelty in Interwar Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587389","wordCount":11951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"This essay interprets the Theatre of Cruelty's ideal spectator in light of early twentieth-century theatre audiences and the field of crowd theory. Artaud was writing at a moment when the role and identity of the audience was being radically redefined. The late nineteenth century transformed the audience from an active assembly to a refined, domesticated, and physically restrained group of people who obeyed the command to contemplate in stillness what transpired behind the proscenium. While much of the avant-garde rebelled against this new bourgeois audience and developed strategies to attempt to reinvigorate the spectator, many other performance theorists built on this new means of control. During the 1920s and 1930s, some theatres sought to intensify the audience's emotional experience while keeping it physically restrained, orchestrating an ecstatic loss of self. This essay suggests that, contrary to all our familiar associations with Artaud's work, Artaud's contemporary doubles were the creators of peoples' theatres in interwar Italy and Germany; while the avant-garde was still thinking in terms of \"audience,\" these theatres were thinking of \"crowds.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00967645"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60339763"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"083f3ab0-4336-3f2c-a2fa-d600157614a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1292672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aibsbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"AIBS Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":77.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"General Program. Meeting of Biological Societies. Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana August 24-28, 1958","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292672","wordCount":57912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhodri Lewis"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.2.261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e748300f-e02b-3421-b2b3-3acbf6ad764f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.2.261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"William Petty's Anthropology: Religion, Colonialism, and the Problem of Human Diversity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.2.261","wordCount":16372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"In the late 1670s, William Petty wrote \u201cOf the Scale of Creatures,\u201d an unfinished treatise that reinterprets the scala naturae or \u201cchain of being.\u201d On the strength of its appendix on human anthropology, Petty has been identified as a founding father of modern racism. By reconsidering the history of the work's dissemination and examining the language and assumptions of the \u201cScale\u201d as a whole, Rhodri Lewis challenges this reading. This essay shows that the \u201cScale\u201d was virtually unknown until the twentieth century, and that it offers what was then a conventional geo-humoral explanation of human diversity, one quite distinct from modern racialism. It was motivated primarily by Petty's theological concerns and his desire to vindicate the scriptural account of the origins and demographic growth of humankind.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24334569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00136220"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24334569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jelismitcsciesoc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences","Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Proceedings and Abstracts from the Seventy-Second Annual Meeting of the North Carolina Academy of Science, Inc., April 4\u20135, 1975, at Duke University, Durham, N.C.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24334569","wordCount":26920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodris Roth"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14695821-f082-37f3-8342-728eb69227a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1180512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Interior Decoration of City Houses in Baltimore: The Federal Period","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180512","wordCount":13212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Rawlings"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27556478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Kodak Refraction of Henry James's \"The Real Thing\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556478","wordCount":6993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Dunlavy Valenti"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.37.2.0048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee42a457-fafd-3ddf-9b8d-b5ad61c79ba9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.37.2.0048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sophia Peabody Hawthorne and \u201cThe\u2014What?\u201d: Creative Copies in Art and Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/nathhawtrevi.37.2.0048","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John R. Pfeiffer"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40691880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07415842"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43626814"},{"name":"lccn","value":"214387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbebf883-46d2-3f1e-938c-be5f3843e5cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40691880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shaw"}],"isPartOf":"Shaw","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A CONTINUING CHECKLIST OF SHAVIANA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40691880","wordCount":13012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642929"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd0c9794-f56e-3735-9018-14126ef1659b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n14t.8"}],"isPartOf":"Jean Epstein","keyphrase":["photog\u00e9nie","epstein\u2019s photog\u00e9nie","cinema","bonjour cin\u00e9ma","corporeal vision","turvey","benjamin","pierre quint","christophe wall","wall romana"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"51","pagination":"51-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Epstein\u2019s Photog\u00e9nie as Corporeal Vision:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n14t.8","wordCount":9968,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[12834,12905]],"Locations in B":[[10221,10294]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Let us begin with a puzzle. In the following passage, Jean Epstein is referring tosomething<\/em>\u2026\u2026all the planes and volumes of which have been rounded and polished by patient forces into a symphony of forms that unfold out of each other [se d\u00e9roulent les unes des autres<\/em>], that conjoin each other [s<\/em>\u2019entr<\/em>\u2019\u00e9pousent<\/em>] into a complex yet unbreakable unity, like that of revolving solids \u2013 these spatial matrices defined by the movement of a mathematical function.This language of serial and kinetic fusion will be familiar to readers of silent cinema theoreticians who found ever more ingenious ways of describing how","subTitle":"Inner Sensation, Queer Embodiment, and Ethics","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzi Mirgani"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1fxdv4.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837633528"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82bcf24c-1de6-3808-898a-ccb0ea06de0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1fxdv4.6"}],"isPartOf":"Target Markets \u2013 International Terrorism Meets Global Capitalism in the Mall","keyphrase":["shopping","shopping mall","contemporary shopping","department stores","arcades","westgate","ism meets","consumption","shopping center","westgate mall"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"45","pagination":"45-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business operations"],"title":"Designing the Shopping Mall","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1fxdv4.6","wordCount":11449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"During al-Shabaab\u2019s four-day siege, Westgate Mall became a site, both physical and metaphorical, for locating the intersection of the prevailing discourses of terrorism, capitalist practice, cultures of consumption, the security apparatus, and corporate media network competition, among a number of other issues constituting the contemporary urban experience. In order to understand how the shopping mall may host these complex relationships, it is important to map formative moments in the evolutionary and historical trends of shopping mall development and to examine the architectural impetus of its design in shaping patterns of consumption, as well as contestation.As a sign of continuously","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTOPHER J. LEE"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27011700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cf6baeb-bdc6-3a9a-888c-1ba8f46b4396"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27011700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Decolonising Camera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27011700","wordCount":11129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"46","publisher":"University of Western Cape","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This article examines the visual archive of the 1955 Asian-African Conference held in Bandung, Indonesia. Better known as the Bandung Conference or simply Bandung, this diplomatic meeting hosted 29 delegations from countries in Africa and Asia to address questions of sovereignty and development facing the emergent postcolonial world. A number of well-known leaders attended, including Jawaharlal Nehru of India, Zhou Enlai of China, Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, and Sukarno of the host country, Indonesia. Given its importance, the meeting was documented extensively by photojournalists. The argument of this article is that the visual archive that resulted has contributed to the enduring symbolism and mythology of Bandung as a moment of Third World solidarity. More specifically, the street photography style of many images \u2013 with leaders walking down the streets of Bandung surrounded by adoring crowds \u2013 depicted an informality and intimacy that conveyed an accessible, anti-hierarchical view of the leaders who were present. These qualities of conviviality and optimism can also be seen in images of conference dinners, airport arrivals, delegate speeches, and working groups. Drawing upon the critical work of scholars of southern Africa and Southeast Asia, this article summarily positions the concept of the \u2018decolonising camera\u2019 to describe both the act of documenting political decolonisation as well as the ways in which visual archives produced during decolonisation can contribute to new iconographies of the political, which are both factual and mythic at once.","subTitle":"Street Photography and the Bandung Myth","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olivia Mattis"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/742477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/742477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"583","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-583","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Var\u00e8se's Multimedia Conception of \"D\u00e9serts\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/742477","wordCount":11284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vicky Newman","Paul Theobald"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Communitarian and Liberal Theories: Nostalgia, Utopia, and the New Call for School Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589585","wordCount":8247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malte Rolf"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24774c22-4157-3fbe-99cf-5861d7139d27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25621659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"630","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Hall of Mirrors: Sovietizing Culture under Stalinism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621659","wordCount":14149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":"This article explores how culture in the USSR became \"Soviet.\" Malte Rolf describes how different fields of communication and cultural production generated criteria that could be used to attach the label \"Soviet\" to all features of culture. Sovietizing culture was a work in progress, and various institutions, agencies, and experts actively participated in defining an adequate \"Soviet style.\" Focusing on this interplay of agencies and taking mass festivals as an example, Rolf portrays the dynamics of a growing self-referentiality within Soviet culture in the 1930s in such cultural spheres as architecture, city planning, and mass celebrations. Under Stalinism, can-onized \"Soviet\" standards also set the agenda for everyday communications. By reproducing an officially privileged agenda, participants in these daily communications encouraged a cultural inner Sovietization during the prewar decade. This article explores how and why the cultural canon of a closed system of \"Soviet\" references made its way so smoothly into the microstructures of society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. Gregory Lastowka","Dan Hunter"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0694610f-04e6-338a-b706-4f68876dc70d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Laws of the Virtual Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481444","wordCount":36847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"Virtual worlds are places where millions of people come to play, trade, create, and socialize. In this Article, we provide a brief history of virtual worlds and examine two legal questions raised by virtual world societies. First, we ask whether virtual objects might be understood as constituting legal property. Second, we discuss whether democracy and governance are concepts that might be applied meaningfully to social conflicts that arise within virtual worlds. As virtual worlds continue to evolve into virtual communities with separate rules and expectations, it is important to understand the interaction between the laws of the real world and the laws of the virtual worlds.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44581594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"213842eb-61fa-3beb-b837-fef182cab873"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44581594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44581594","wordCount":23439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Flint"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f355969e-04aa-3e69-87dd-c069469efdfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Speaking Objects: The Circulation of Stories in Eighteenth-Century Prose Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463361","wordCount":11243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":"An enormously popular narrative device, speaking objects were used frequently in eighteenth-century British fiction to express authorial concerns about the circulation of books in the public sphere. Relating the speaking object to the author's status in a print culture, works featuring such narrators characteristically align authorship, commodification, and national acculturation. The objects celebrate their capacity to exploit both private and public systems of circulation, such as libraries, banks, booksellers' shops, highways, and taverns. Linking storytelling to commodities and capital, they convey an implicit theory of culture in which literary dissemination, economic exchange, and public use appear homologous. But as object narratives dramatize, such circulation estranges modern authors from their work. Far from mediating between private and public experience or synthesizing national and cosmopolitan values, these narratives record the indiscriminate consumption that characterizes the public sphere in a print culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luis Fern\u00e1ndez Cifuentes"],"datePublished":"1988-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2905343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Signs for Sale in the City of Gald\u00f3s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905343","wordCount":9682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JENNIFER L. ROBERTS"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23258334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ceaadd50-246a-3481-827a-5d06666cec31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23258334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Post-telegraphic Pictures: Asher B. Durand and the Nonconducting Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23258334","wordCount":9965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"48","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice R. Greenberg"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep21838","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1852de5c-099b-3486-8dc6-94580ce5d615"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":146.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Digital Decarbonization Promoting Digital Innovations to Advance Clean Energy Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep21838","wordCount":41098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In 2017, the Economist<\/em> proclaimed that data was the new oil.\u00b9 Just as trade in oil has underpinned the global economy for a century, flows of data\u2014 the most valuable resource of the twenty-first century\u2014now drive economic value. Indeed, in 2017, all five of the world\u2019s most valuable publicly traded companies specialized in digital technologies, whereas just a decade earlier three of the top five companies were in the energy sector. This does not mean that the energy sector has been left behind by the digital revolution. To the contrary, digitalization is at the heart of the tectonic shifts","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Table of Contents","Introduction","Endnotes","Acknowledgments","About the Authors","Back Matter"],"editor":["Varun Sivaram"]} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1943-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad449ca4-424b-3c9c-bb95-7489e4ca6a24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25691750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":296.0,"pageEnd":"H391","pageStart":"H96","pagination":"pp. H96-H391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691750","wordCount":192796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Rika Maniates"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/932566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016241"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53171967"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-236606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a939dc85-c6de-3a29-aa9d-96b5fbdafc64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/932566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actamusicologica"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Musicologica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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(to May 1930)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224589","wordCount":44864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. K. Seth"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4354466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00068101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24773a76-2a33-37d7-a2b2-f2813e6b73e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4354466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"botarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Botanical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Applied sciences - Food science"],"title":"Trees and Their Economic Importance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4354466","wordCount":22209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"The biological and logical meaning of trees, which are one of the important woody plants of our ecosystem, are reviewed in this article. Trees are mostly used for timber purposes, but in the present article the utility of trees with respect to their importance in restoring, reclaiming and rejuvenating denuded and disturbed soils, their ecological, ecodevelopmental and environmental use, and their educational and recreational value in gardening, landscaping and bioesthetic planning is described. In addition, the importance of trees is discussed with reference to their value as a source of sustenance: food, sugars, starches, spices and condiments, beverages, fumitories, masticatories and narcotics, medicines, essential oils, fatty oils and vegetable fats, waxes, soap substitutes, vegetable ivory, fodder, fuel, bioenergy or biofuel, fertilizers, fiber, pulp and paper, tannins, dyes, rubber and other latex products, gums, resins and cork. Lastly, the food plants of mulberry and non-mulberry silkworms, which feed on the leaves of many forest trees, are mentioned.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ana Milja\u010dki"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00790958"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6742043b-ebb8-340e-9678-ae836e3b5d6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1567323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspecta"}],"isPartOf":"Perspecta","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Anti-Lobotomy: The Visible Evidence of Resistance in 1990s Belgrade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567323","wordCount":12168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bob Cunningham","A. Tracy Row"],"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41859344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219053"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c40350db-7e5a-3c51-b486-8e3b867785bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41859344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarizhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Arizona History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Journal of Arizona History: A Bibliography of Articles Published during the First Twenty-five Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41859344","wordCount":16087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Arizona Historical Society","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth C. 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Coombe"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17cc5ba2-54bf-3434-aa54-1b4cf4dc5e02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Embodied Trademarks: Mimesis and Alterity on American Commercial Frontiers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656448","wordCount":10538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulf Lindberg"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Popular Modernism? The 'Urban' Style of Interwar Tin Pan Alley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877576","wordCount":9005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The approach of this article complements those of previous critics that account for the rise of the 'mature' style of Tin Pan Alley chiefly in terms of the internal logic of the field of American popular music. It suggests that the so-called golden age of the Alley (ca. 1920-1940) should be considered in broader cultural terms, provided by modernisation and especially the growth of a 'cool', urban sensibility, representing a crucial reassessment of Victorian emotional style. In their contributions to this reassessment, the Alley greats stretched the conventions of popular song-writing in a number of ways, usually described vaguely in terms of 'wit', 'sophistication' and the like. Qualifying these concepts by lyrical analysis, the article suggests that the self-reflexive use of irony, linguistic play and 'realist' imperatives makes a number of songs approach contemporary 'high' literature in such a way that it makes sense to speak of a popular modernism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles A. Kraus"],"datePublished":"1939-03-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1664346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d4d06d1-fb93-3761-a457-b81592e07b82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1664346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Josiah Willard Gibbs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1664346","wordCount":7249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2309","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Holly Rogers"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24c38d69-0f90-3948-b2d3-59f60e2b057f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fitzcarraldo's Search for Aguirre: Music and Text in the Amazonian Films of Werner Herzog","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557489","wordCount":12110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"129","abstract":"This article explores the filmic relationship between music, text and image through an intertextual reading of Herzog's two Amazonian films, Aguirre: Wrath of God and Fitzcarraldo. When Aguirre and Fitzcarraldo encounter each other in the rainforest, 300 years apart, a complicated interplay of history and legend, truth and fiction, is initiated. Awash with magical occurrence, the forest has its own endlessly repeating soundtrack (written by Popul Vuh). The ability of both explorers to defend themselves from the forest depends on their relationship to this music: Aguirre, the earlier explorer, is deaf to the circular sound and attempts to overlay it with a written account of their journey. Fitzcarraldo, on the other hand, enters the forest equipped with a gramophone that plays Verdi arias; he comes with his own soundtrack. Comparison between the two journeys exposes the conventional uses of text\/speech and music\/song in film, to reveal music as the predominant driving force behind filmic narrative.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hope Sabanpan-Yu"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01150243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"566025042"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c89436e5-0158-3e39-a96a-d0edcb5f4145"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41762432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philquarcultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ni\u00f1o Mamumuo: The Question of Reading Child Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762432","wordCount":5527,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27075,27578]],"Locations in B":[[22206,22710]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of San Carlos Publications","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Block de Behar","Virginia Guti\u00e9rrez Berner"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf97e5ae-d8dd-3340-b053-0f5575777e49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Literary Escapes and Astral Shelters of an Incarcerated Conspirator","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949656","wordCount":12190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oded Balaban"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24360851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00038946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24360851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archbegr"}],"isPartOf":"Archiv f\u00fcr Begriffsgeschichte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Meaning of >Craft< (\u03c4\u03ad\u03c7\u03bd\u03b7) in Plato's Early Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24360851","wordCount":13521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"The aim of craft-analogies in Plato's early dialogues is to put forward a theory of knowledge in which only the content of intentional processes can be known. I will argue that, with this goal in mind, Plato offers an idea of craft that differs from, and is even opposed to the views of his time, as well as to those of our own day, by changing the prevailing definition of craft\u2014from the expertise of means to the expertise of ends. I will address the far-reaching consequences of this shift. Part 1 will expose what I understand by Plato's approach to craft. Part 2 will expose Plato's denial of the actual existence of the process of knowledge reducing it to its object or reference. Part 3 will address what I think are misinterpretations of Plato approach. Part 4 will present some textual evidence. And in Part 5 I will analyse Plato's shuttle-analogy, the more sophisticated of his craft-analogies. Finally, I will append a critical note on Terence Irwin's understanding of virtue as craft-knowledge.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44555525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560807841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eacc17f1-f945-31e9-a902-41d598684501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44555525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryengineer"}],"isPartOf":"The Military Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":159.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering","Military Studies","Technology","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Political science - Government"],"title":"DIRECTORY OF MEMBERS: Constitution and By-Laws of The Society of American Military Engineers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44555525","wordCount":197846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"181","publisher":"Society of American Military Engineers","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f04942f2-7414-3a81-88bb-cc96157f8ad6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40304939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Staff: As of June 30, 1986","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304939","wordCount":7261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"116","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a3050b9-159e-350e-bdd1-a6d975e0f331"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/235275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":333.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235275","wordCount":248225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Desmond Rochfort"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"International Reflections of a National Struggle: The Murals of the Nicaraguan Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360673","wordCount":3265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Wayne Thomas"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Replicas and Originality: Picturing Agency in Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Victorian Manchester","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829602","wordCount":13483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Gaskell"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167745","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167745"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rembrandt's Genius, Wittgenstein's Warning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167745","wordCount":8403,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58402,58724]],"Locations in B":[[5431,5753]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"52","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amir Ameri"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c427a6fe-d6bf-33df-8aaa-105a26cc468b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Spatial Dialectics of Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685404","wordCount":13642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clarisa Long"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3202440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21a97996-de7f-3647-bf57-f928033257b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3202440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85.0,"pageEnd":"549","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-549","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Information Costs in Patent and Copyright","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3202440","wordCount":35732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Virginia Law Review","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele Stephen"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a566b11a-28a6-3eb5-a4ea-bec56fa313ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/647444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"737","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-737","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Witchcraft, Grief, and the Ambivalence of Emotions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/647444","wordCount":17583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"In this article, I argue that Melanie Klein's psychoanalytic theory of mourning can shed new light on an old anthropological topic: witchcraft and sorcery. Beginning with sociocentric analyses of sorcery and witchcraft, and linking these beliefs to the experiential context of grief and bereavement, I focus on two ethnographic case studies--Balinese witchcraft and Mekeo sorcery. I use Klein's theory of mourning to extend Freud's concept of the ambivalence of emotions in order to show how unresolved childhood fears and images of the destructive mother give rise to persecutory fears at the death of a loved person. From this perspective, several problems left hanging by sociocentric and structuralist approaches to witchcraft and sorcery can be answered in new ways. [ambivalence, grief, Melanie Klein, mourning, sorcery, witchcraft]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda J. Demaine","Aaron Xavier Fellmeth"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1d1ac59-d87b-3e39-9891-74cddacccff6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":160.0,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Reinventing the Double Helix: A Novel and Nonobvious Reconceptualization of the Biotechnology Patent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229595","wordCount":82460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Leask"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hummingbirds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473022","wordCount":3166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"66","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amparo Porta"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26844649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164679"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28927cbc-6c64-3804-9d26-dde1f8d5d0f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26844649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Music that Children Listen to in Movies, Series and TV Documentaries. An Empirical Study on its Meaning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26844649","wordCount":8209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"Numerous authors find that music in audiovisuals has a major impact, but little research has explored its repercussions for children. This article reports research on musical interpretations in children\u2019s films, series, and TV documentaries. It describes an observational experience based on 11 year-old children\u2019s favourite audiovisuals, the design and application of questionnaires, and the quantitative and qualitative results of the case study obtained from the audiovisual experience of sequences edited in three versions and applied in two public schools. The results reveal the meaning and sense of music in the selected audiovisuals, and also demonstrate how meaning is lost when the soundtrack is removed. The results confirm that music provides elements related to space, time, emotions and context that persuasively configure scenarios, characters and values. The study prepares the basis for educational interventi ons to foster understand ing of the sound habitat through general education and musical education in particular. Mnogi su autori prona\u0161li da glazba u audiovizualnim medijima ima velik utjecaj, ali malo je istra\u017eivanja istra\u017eilo njezine odjeke na djecu. U ovom se \u010dlanku izvje\u0161tava o istra\u017eivanju o glazbenim interpretacijama u dje\u010djim filmovima, serijama i televizijskim dokumentarcima. U njemu se opisuje promatra\u010dko iskustvo temeljeno na omiljenim audiovizualnim uradcima jedanaestogodi\u0161nje djece, planu i upotrebi upitnih araka te kvantitativnih i kvalitativnih rezultata studije slu\u010daja dobivene iz audiovizualnog do\u017eivljaja serij\u00e2 izdanih u tri verzije (samo zvuk, samo slika, cjelina) i primijenjenih u dvije javne \u0161kole u gradu Castell\u00f3n u \u0160panjolskoj. Rezultati otkrivaju zna\u010denje i smisao glazbe u odabranim audiovizualnim uradcima, te istodobno pokazuju kako se zna\u010denje gubi kada se ukloni zvu\u010dni zapis. Rezultati potvr\u0111uju da glazba pru\u017ea elemente vezane uz prostor, vrijeme, emocije i kontekst koji uvjerljivo oblikuju scenarije, likove i vrijednosti. Studija priprema osnove za obrazovne intervencije koje poti\u010du razumijevanje zvukovnog habitata putem op\u0107eg obrazovanja i glazbenog odgoja napose.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vernon Shetley","Alissa Ferguson"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd5de82c-700b-3342-a058-df88147f31b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reflections in a Silver Eye: Lens and Mirror in \"Blade Runner\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240951","wordCount":6203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"\"Blade Runner\" is a film centrally concerned with vision. Prostheses of vision-the Voigt-Kampff test and the Esper machine-permit detective Rick Deckard to probe physical and even mental space, and extend his search for android \"replicants\" into distant rooms and into the minds of the characters he encounters. In the Esper sequence, Deckard analyzes the photograph cherished by the replicant Leon, an analysis that turns on the presence of a convex mirror at the center of the image. This photograph echoes the mirror seen in Jan van Eyck's famous painting, The Arnolfini Portrait. Both mirrors are signs of artistic self-consciousness, pointing to the way these works sustain an extended meditation on pictorial or cinematic vision. In \"Blade Runner\", the form of vision embodied by the Esper machine-which is characterized as probing, dominating, and ultimately lethal-is played off against a mode of vision tentatively but crucially present in the moment when Rachael's photograph \"comes alive\" in Deckard's hands, a mode of vision that turns on imaginative empathy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["IAIN P. WATTS"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43820510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"198bfba0-60f7-3f39-9653-ee01afe260c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43820510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Information resources","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"'We want no authors': William Nicholson and the contested role of the scientific journal in Britain, 1797-1813","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43820510","wordCount":13760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This article seeks to illuminate the shifting and unstable configuration of scientific print culture around 1800 through a close focus on William Nicholson's Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry, and the Arts, generally known as Nicholson's Journal. Viewing Nicholson as a mediator between the two spheres of British commercial journalism and scientific enquiry, I investigate the ways he adapted practices and conventions from the domain of generalreadership monthly periodicals for his Journal, forging a virtual community of scientific knowledge exchange in print. However, in pursing this project Nicholson ran up against disreputable associations connected with the politics of journalism and came into conflict with more established models of scientific publication. To illustrate this, I turn to examine in detail the practice of reprinting, a technique of information transmission which the Journal adapted from general periodicals and newspapers, looking at a clash between Nicholson and the Royal Society that exposes disagreements over the appropriate role for journals during this period of reorganization in the scientific world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3107090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fed58ff3-5a04-3649-9cbd-c7de60f78f17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3107090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Subject Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3107090","wordCount":22055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharad Chari"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e1bc575-290d-3f40-919e-edee43961a69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40270735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"521","pagination":"pp. 521-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photographing Dispossession, Forgetting Solidarity: Waiting for Social Justice in Wentworth, South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40270735","wordCount":12666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19986,20116]],"Locations in B":[[25569,25700]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"South Africans today inhabit a fragmented and discontinuous landscape, often despite their most cosmopolitan intentions. Grounded in the Coloured neighbourhood of Wentworth in Durban, this paper asks how remains of the past appear as differently temporalised artefacts, some buried in the archaic past and others more readily used to critique the present. In particular, I explore photographs of inmates of a concentration camp from 1902, township youth appropriating a specific commons in the early 1980s, black political photography from the late 1980s, and film wrestling with the ambiguities of post-apartheid political life in a Coloured neighbourhood next to an oil refinery. What unites these moments is not just a meta-theoretical concern with photography as both documentary and aesthetic, but the specific political uses of images, exemplified by the work of two black political photographers. Their practice provides cues for situating these other photographs in a long century of multiple dispossessions. The paper explores when and how photographs might shock the viewer into recognising resemblances, connections and potential solidarities, not just with the past, but with subaltern critique of racial space and subjectivity in the present. I suggest how we might view photographs from various moments relationally, to understand how, in one corner of contemporary South Africa, people continue to wait for justice despite uncertainty and official dissimulation, in a state of anticipatory frustration.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yoram S. Carmeli"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"274830ba-6b99-3ff9-ac9e-af77fb7a57fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Text, Traces, and the Reification of Totality: The Case of Popular Circus Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469447","wordCount":12887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. Hall, Jr."],"datePublished":"1984-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/414000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebc8e682-5674-38aa-8ba0-e6ec20acfe9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/414000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"630","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/414000","wordCount":3312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Arthur"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41690431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16b372a4-940c-3611-9a72-8c4226ba8fa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41690431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Unseen No More? The Avant-Garde on DVD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41690431","wordCount":7149,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[6595,6671]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marta Cerezo Moreno"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54a04da2-3c69-3881-b46b-f911278d4b4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Returning Home versus Movement without Return: A Levinasian Reading of John Banville's \"The Sea\" \/ El regreso al hogar frente al movimiento sin retorno: estudio de \"El mar\" de John Banville desde una perspectiva levinasiana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757730","wordCount":9328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Taking as its starting point the contrast Emmanuel Levinas outlines between returning to consciousness as homecoming and the theory of the trace of the other as a movement towards alterity, or a movement without return, this paper analyses how the narrative configuration of John Banville's The Sea (2005) shows an internal dialectic between an inner and an outer movement. It centres on the study of Max and his wife Anna, the protagonists of the novel, as fictional impersonations of this dual dynamic. Framed within the Levinasian perception of totality as the reduction of the other to the same, this paper envisions Max's return home as a totalising journey that constitutes individuality. Parallel to Max's inner exploration, it regards Anna's photographs of her fellow patients during her stay at the hospital\u2014as a terminal stomach cancer patient\u2014as a representation of Levinas' conceptualisation of infinite responsibility for the other. By merging the philosopher's theory of the trace of the other with Walter Benjamin's theory of the optical unconscious and Roland Barthes' photographic concept of the punctum, it will be shown how Anna's pictures call for new social ethical narratives around terms of social integration and equality for disabled people that could dismantle restrictive, and in Levinas' terms, ontological conceptions of normality. Partiendo de la oposici\u00f3n que establece Emmanuel Levinas entre la vuelta a la consciencia como regreso al hogar y la teor\u00eda de la huella del otro como movimiento hacia la alteridad o movimiento sin retorno, este art\u00edculo analiza el modo en que la configuraci\u00f3n narrativa de El mar (2005) de John Banville presenta una dial\u00e9ctica interna entre dos movimientos opuestos, uno interno y otro externo. Bas\u00e1ndome en la percepci\u00f3n por parte de Levinas de la totalidad como la reducci\u00f3n que el Mismo hace del Otro, realizar\u00e9 un an\u00e1lisis de los protagonistas, Max y su esposa Anna, considerando la vuelta a casa de Max como un viaje totalizador que ensalza su propia individualidad en tanto que las fotograf\u00edas que Anna, enferma terminal de c\u00e1ncer de est\u00f3mago, realiza de los pacientes que la acompa\u00f1an durante su estancia en el hospital representan la conceptualizaci\u00f3n levinasiana de la responsabilidad infinita que el Mismo tiene hacia el Otro. Mediante la confluencia de las teor\u00edas de la huella del otro de Levinas, el inconsciente \u00f3ptico de Walter Benjamin y el concepto fotogr\u00e1fico del punctum de Roland Barthes, mostrar\u00e9 c\u00f3mo las im\u00e1genes tomadas por Anna destacan la necesidad de nuevas narrativas sociales de car\u00e1cter \u00e9tico que alienten aspectos de integraci\u00f3n social y de igualdad en t\u00e9rminos de discapacidad y desmantelen la percepci\u00f3n del concepto normalidad como un elemento restrictivo y, en t\u00e9rminos levinasianos, ontol\u00f3gico.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1936-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25688937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2675e64a-f688-3620-a73e-05ba6892d8f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25688937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamerlibrasso"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Library Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":268.0,"pageEnd":"H322","pageStart":"H55","pagination":"pp. H55-H322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25688937","wordCount":173973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ville Erkkil\u00e4"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvf3w2r4.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783161566912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95825624-bb75-320c-8309-be387df049b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvf3w2r4.5"}],"isPartOf":"The Conceptual Change of Conscience","keyphrase":["franz wieacker","stolleis","historical","vandenhoeck ruprecht","g\u00f6ttingen vandenhoeck","national socialist","michael stolleis","scholars","behrends","scientific"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvf3w2r4.5","wordCount":24855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This book is about the German legal historian Franz Wieacker\u00b9 and the body of scientific writings\u00b2 he produced during the years from 1933 to 1968. I study changes in Wieacker\u2019s ideas, and the way these are reflected in his legal histori cal texts. Wieacker\u2019s legal historical works constituted an influential and essential contribution to contemporary knowledge of European jurisprudence in the past. Therefore, a larger task for this study, in which I utilize Wieacker\u2019s case, is to analyze the pre-and post-Second World War turmoil of German legal history \u2013 the scientific context in which Wieacker\u2019s texts were situated \u2013 and the manner","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dewey G. Meyers"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4064834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00973157"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"842377b5-b92b-3649-b276-4c741f4a8a8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4064834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procacadnatuscie"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Darwin's Investigations of Carnivorous Aquatic Plants of the Genus Utricularia: Misconception, Contribution, and Controversy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4064834","wordCount":5612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Academy of Natural Sciences","volumeNumber":"134","abstract":"In his book, Insectivorous Plants (1875), Charles Darwin's morphological description of Utricularia that emphasized the trapping structures or bladders was completed with such accuracy that much of his original terminology is still in current scientific usage. His speculation concerning filamentous structures around the bladder entrance or valve that limit the size of captured prey has been authenticated. He also suggested a recently verified hypothesis that these structures create a funnel shape directing prey toward the valve and enhancing capture success. Darwin was the first to report an association between water quality or productivity, and abundance of captured prey. Misconceptions about bladder width and air bubble inclusions led Darwin to mistakenly assume a passive trapping mechanism through which prey forced their entrance. Lack of digestive enzymes, also a conclusion of Darwin, has remained a topic of controversy. His belief that captured prey contributed to plant nutrition has been confirmed by axenic laboratory and direct prey capture studies. His assertion that structures within the bladders termed quadrifids have an absorptive function has also been proven in two connections: removal of captured-prey nutrients, and excess water during bladder reset. Darwin's Utricularia investigations, therefore, have been the basis of significant scholarly contributions for over a century and will undoubtedly remain so for another one hundred years.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea240599-982c-331d-9a3c-6b31123de977"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3424246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"1883","pageStart":"1713","pagination":"pp. 1713-1883","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424246","wordCount":34420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1961-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25155444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"300325998"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235275"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83710d1d-2e7f-3588-9143-ad0c7fd9d278"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25155444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calihistsociquar"}],"isPartOf":"California Historical Society Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":492.0,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index to California Historical Society Quarterly Volumes One to Forty 1922-1961","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25155444","wordCount":207611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luther K. Bell"],"datePublished":"1951-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1baf961b-bc05-3709-b14b-25bf34bebebf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27826363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190, 194, 196, 198, 200, 202, 204, 206, 208, 210, 212, 214, 216, 218, 220, 222, 350, 352, 354-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"EDITORIAL MISCELLANY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826363","wordCount":11927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0335eda-ff18-3a23-bad1-319f27a30405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"452","pagination":"p. 452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374454","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Winkiel"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Circuses and Spectacles: Public Culture in \"Nightwood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831573","wordCount":10799,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14145,14281]],"Locations in B":[[96,232]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Rigal"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3817668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d6ecb9-576d-39dc-b48b-d4ea850a390a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3817668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 232-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Wetter"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2995929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00409618"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446704"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a9db908-793a-3ed0-abdb-6097ac050fc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2995929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulltorrbotaclub"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Index to American Botanical Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2995929","wordCount":29703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Torrey Botanical Society","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martino Stierli"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29546066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d5c279c-ba4a-30ee-824b-240c8ee4e09c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29546066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mies Montage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29546066","wordCount":11487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"61","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-06-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1742889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7af28a87-fa79-35dd-b697-bbfac4ae090d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1742889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"1152","pageStart":"1033","pagination":"pp. 1033-1152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1742889","wordCount":18535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4244","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"192","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ananay Aguilar"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24547136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7c167aa-899c-3656-a282-03d4769cc5c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24547136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"NEGOTIATING LIVENESS: TECHNOLOGY, ECONOMICS, AND THE ARTWORK IN LSO LIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24547136","wordCount":13015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":"In 2000, following a decade of steadily decreasing investment in classical recordings, the London Symphony Orchestra launched its own label, LSO Live. By combining live recording with an innovative business and rights management model, and aided by falling distribution costs through the development of MP3 files and the internet, the orchestra was able to offer recordings at budget prices. Yet the success of the label, which 'even penetrated the hallowed shelves of the Sainsbury's supermarkets chain, normally occupied only by pop CDs or \"crossover\" albums', was the product of a carefully crafted publicity campaign. Traditionally considered second best in the record industry, live recording had to be justified by the musicians for themselves and the outer world. This article, based on interviews and observations of the LSO while recording during the 2007\u20138 season, examines the aesthetic discourses that came to the fore while making sense of the less than ideal working conditions. As I aim to illustrate, the conflicting expressions of classical music emerging during this period are concisely captured by Lydia Goehr's dialectic of the 'perfect musical performance' and the 'perfect performance of music'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna G. Piotrowska"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01380907-5fa3-3580-8593-ae7b72e52a39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23342825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Expressing the Inexpressible: The Issue of Improvisation and the European Fascination with Gypsy Music in the 19th Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23342825","wordCount":7761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"Improvisation as a musical phenomenon has been described from various points of views and angles. Most authors concentrating on the historical perspective underline the steady growth of its popularity in the European artistic music and the decline by the mid of the 19th century. At the same time, when improvising became relegated from artistic music, the (re)discovery of Gypsy music in European culture took place and the figure of Gypsy virtuoso substituted the professional musician \u2014 a virtuoso as a great improviser. The key role in this process can be assigned to Franz Liszt as a composer, performer and an author who wrote influential book on Gypsy music. Hence in this article I will claim that the refusal of performers to improvise (publicly) in the second half of the 19th century was, inter alia, indirectly connected with the romantic fascination with exotic cultures and especially with Gypsy music. Improvizaciju kao glazbeni fenomen opisivalo se iz razli\u010ditih gledi\u0161ta i uglova: povijesnih, analiti\u010dkih, komparativnih, usredoto\u010denih na jedan stil (npr. jazz), itd. \u010cesto se isti\u010de da je do sredine 19. stolje\u0107a improviziranje u europskoj umjetni\u010dkoj glazbi izgubilo svoj istaknuti status. Tvrdi se da je propadanje improvizacije bilo rezultat kriti\u010dkog pohoda protiv virtuoziteta i posljedica sklonosti spram ideje skladbe kao dovr\u0161enog savr\u0161enog umjetni\u010dkog djela, kao i povezanosti s tendencijom srozavanja stava o pjesni\u010dkom improviziranju. Me\u0111utim, istodobno kada je improviziranje bilo izop\u0107eno iz umjetni\u010dke glazbe, u europskoj se kulturi dogodilo (ponovno) otkri\u0107e ciganske glazbe i figura ciganskog virtuoza zamijenila je onu profesionalnog glazbenika-virtuoza kao velikog improvizatora. Ciganski glazbenici \u2014 osobito oni iz Ma\u0111arske \u2014 ve\u0107 su bili slavni kao vje\u0161ti izvo\u0111a\u010di koji su pratili razna dru\u0161tvena doga\u0111anja. Klju\u010dna uloga u \u0161irenju poznavanja ciganskih virtuoza mo\u017ee se pripisati Franzu Lisztu koji je 1859. objavio knjigu Des Boh\u00e9miens et de leur musique en Hongrie (O Ciganima i o njihovoj glazbi u Ma\u0111arskoj), hvale\u0107i njihove improvizatorske vje\u0161tine. Kao skladatelj i izvo\u0111a\u010d Liszt je njegovao ideale koji su bili bli\u017ei pojmu savr\u0161ene glazbene izvedbe, shva\u0107ene prije kao glazbeno iskustvo \u0161to se zbiva u stvarnom vremenu, a manje kao izvedbe djela, shva\u0107ene kao vjernost skladateljevoj zamisli instrumentalnog izvo\u0111enja izra\u017eenoj notama zabilje\u017eenim u partituri. U ovom se \u010dlanku dokazuje da je odbijanje izvo\u0111a\u010da u drugoj polovici 19. stolje\u0107a da (javno) improviziraju bilo, me\u0111u ostalim, neizravno povezano s romanti\u010dkom fascinirano\u0161\u0107u egzoti\u010dnim kulturama i posebno ciganskom glazbom. Tako\u0111er se pokazuje kako su i drugi \u010dimbenici koji se ti\u010du percepcije improvizacije bili povezani u mre\u017eu me\u0111usobnih utjecaja, \u0161to je imalo za posljedicu sni\u017eavanje popularnosti instrumentalne improvizacije.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Archibald Geikie"],"datePublished":"1913-01-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/93154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09501207"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84428905-82ea-35e0-b938-4e1281ce12b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/93154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procroyasocilon5"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Containing Papers of a Mathematical and Physical Character","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Address of the President, Archibald Geikie, K.C.B., at the Anniversary Meeting on November 30, 1912","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/93154","wordCount":5051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"600","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MELISSA RENN"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43155542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62266454"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02597cb9-f366-3511-8dcb-da0580d098c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43155542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archamerartj"}],"isPartOf":"Archives of American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Within Their Walls: LIFE Magazine's \"Illuminations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43155542","wordCount":8668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Smithsonian American Art Museum","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas W. Texter"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20719846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11fbb719-e3f5-3e0f-8184-28acad3b9313"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20719846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Dystopia\": The Culture Industry's Neutralization of Stephen King's The Running Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20719846","wordCount":11882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Weber"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45295578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15685098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21545220-eb6a-37a4-85ee-2931497ffe67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45295578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"benjstudstud"}],"isPartOf":"Benjamin Studien \/ Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25, 27-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between a Human Life and a Word. Walter Benjamin and the Citability of Gesture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45295578","wordCount":8814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harlan Hamilton"],"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43754512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0015119X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9e07a6f-dd26-39f9-b48b-34391ec7b129"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43754512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcomment"}],"isPartOf":"Film Comment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Les Allures du Cheval\" EADWEARD JAMES MUYBRIDGE'S Contribution to the Motion Picture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43754512","wordCount":14159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Film Society of Lincoln Center","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andr\u00e9s Bartolom\u00e9 Leal"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f2b723c-c090-3d39-8762-441c985c4218"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Strangers in a Strange Land: Cinema, Identity and the Modern Nation-State in Roman Polanski's \"The Ghost Writer\" \/ Forasteros en tierra extra\u00f1a: cine, identidad y el estado-naci\u00f3n moderno en \"The Ghost Writer\" de Roman Polanski","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757786","wordCount":8532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Cinema and the modern nation-state, both key offsprings of the late stages of the nineteenth century, have had a somewhat parallel, and arguably problematic, relationship throughout their existence. From being a committed partner in the spreading of the traditions and identities that cemented the formation of modern nation-states, cinema has become one of the most prolific media for the contestation of many of the fixities that sustain them. My aim in this article is, first, to explore the reasons and phenomena behind this change of perspective and, second, to apply this analysis to the specific case of Roman Polanski's film The Ghost Writer (2010). For this purpose, I will analyse the film from a transnational perspective at different levels, exploring its portrayal of the decayed condition of the modern nation-state, its depiction of the exiled foreigner as a universal trope for contemporary identities, and its careful use of space and mise-en-sc\u00e8ne for the transmission of these meanings. El cine y el estado-naci\u00f3n modernos, ambos frutos de las \u00faltimas etapas del siglo XIX, han mantenido una relaci\u00f3n paralela, pero ciertamente problem\u00e1tica, durante su existencia. Otrora un medio comprometido con la diseminaci\u00f3n de las tradiciones e identidades que cimentaron la formaci\u00f3n del estado moderno, el cine ha pasado a ser uno de los canales m\u00e1s f\u00e9rtiles para la contestaci\u00f3n de las certidumbres que los sosten\u00edan. Mi objetivo en este art\u00edculo es, primero, analizar las razones y fen\u00f3menos que han dado lugar a este cambio ideol\u00f3gico y, segundo, aplicarlos al caso espec\u00edfico de la pel\u00edcula de Roman Polanski The Ghost Writer (2010). Para ello, analizar\u00e9 la pel\u00edcula a diferentes niveles desde un punto de vista transnacional, explorando su representaci\u00f3n de la descomposici\u00f3n del estado-naci\u00f3n moderno, su percepci\u00f3n del exiliado como un tropo universal para las identidades contempor\u00e1neas y su meticuloso uso del espacio f\u00edlmico para la transmisi\u00f3n de estos significados.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Briony Fer"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9af73db2-89a0-3465-868f-b4f6fab4b82e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40368456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Eva Hesse and Color","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368456","wordCount":7131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Kaizen"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b49708f2-a2c8-34f6-a496-d884291c02fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1262630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 80-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Framed Space: Allan Kaprow and the Spread of Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262630","wordCount":12728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Zissovici"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e608f1a-098c-3bf3-b793-6f5d1016fe1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-51, 91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"From here to infinity: Make-Believe and Virtuality On the Japanese Driving Range","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876780","wordCount":3825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"38","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Carmen Africa Vidal"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"306fbe5d-2a26-34fb-aec2-4efbe90dd001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Death of Politics and Sex in the Eighties Show","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469277","wordCount":10507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie LeMenager"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41329628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0194fd3a-91c5-39d1-a010-9d0190e0a649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41329628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Petroleum, after Oil!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41329628","wordCount":12200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u00e9rard Raulet","Sheila Elizabeth Keene","Gail Ellement"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efcb3e7b-cf41-3f3e-9d56-48eaa901cd65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Logic of Decomposition: German Poetry in the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487998","wordCount":13083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"21","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eva-Lotta E. Hedman"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23747111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"448544bf-1697-317b-bde0-3d8f4e806130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23747111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The spectre of populism in Philippine politics and society: artista, masa, Eraption!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23747111","wordCount":17879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"This paper seeks to explore the origins of the populist appeal of President Joseph Ejercito Estrada, and to recapture some of its peculiar workings in the broader context of Philippine post-colonial politics and society. To that end, the paper provides a brief glimpse of the rapidly changing urban landscape which first saw the rise of Estrada as the superstar of the moviescreen and the mayor of San Juan municipality in Metropolitan Manila during the 1960s. In the following section of the paper, key developments in the Philippine film industry are identified, and an attempt is made to demonstrate the emerging possibility of a new kind of social imaginary, or mass consciousness, reflective of cinema's power to reveal to an audience entirely new structural formations of the subject. Here, the notion of Tagalog movies as a 'visualized lingua franca' \u2014 unburdened by tradition, hierarchy, and easily accessible to a wide spectrum of the population \u2014 suggests one possible link between the expanding cinema audience at lower-class theatres and the new forms of recognition implied by the rise of artista politicians in Manila in the 1960s. Finally, a closer look at narrative and character in some Estrada films from the peak years of his movie stardom in the 1960s and 1970s points to the kind of familiarity and appropriation Estrada may inspire among his fans and followers. The paper was completed as (former) President Estrada faced, first, an unprecedented impeachment trial in the Philippine Senate and, eventually, an unceremonious end to his presidency in the parliament of the streets (ie 'People Power' at 'EDSA').","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold Bloom"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8be5ff7-9eee-3e25-b92e-d8f576e860bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Auras: The Sublime Crossing and the Death of Love","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973628","wordCount":7873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elliott Oring"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3358b9de-76b9-3153-84d7-e12d51ab8caa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Arts, Artifacts, and Artifices of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541199","wordCount":12158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"424","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":"Despite the recent prominence of the term identity in the discourse of folklorists, folklore studies have always been vitally concerned with identity. Notions of identity have been fundamental to the definition of folklore. Diverse definitions, methodologies, and theories of folklore cohere in their concern with the arts, artifacts, and artifices by which identity is created, conceptualized, and expressed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony J. Steinbock"],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40888480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1370575X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608869614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f7144e9-ab81-3fe6-a68d-8bcb1571903b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40888480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tijdfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Tijdschrift voor Filosofie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"648","pageStart":"621","pagination":"pp. 621-648","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"TOTALITARIANISM, HOMOGENEITY OF POWER, DEPTH : TOWARDS A SOCIO-POLITICAL ONTOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40888480","wordCount":11290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Tijdschrift voor Filosofie","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tan Lin"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"307b0efa-b91a-35f3-a200-5242a9f4199d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Disco, Cybernetics, and the Migration of Warhol\u2019s Shadows<\/em> into Computation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.56.3.0481","wordCount":18057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amanda Jane Graham"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c46554ba-0b2c-3dc3-bfba-dd2876f835b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23238982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Assisted Breathing: Developing Embodied Exposure in Oscar Mu\u00f1oz's \"Aliento\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238982","wordCount":6031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"The Colombian artist Oscar Mu\u00f1oz's Aliento (Breath)\u201410 steel discs, photoserigraph with grease\u2014is an experiment with materials. On the surface it is minimalist\u2014art about the surface of art, the stuff art is made of. Yet Mu\u00f1oz's surfaces are deceiving, for his images become clear only when viewers breathe on them. With a breath, sepia photographs of desaparecidos\u2014young Colombian men proclaimed \"disappeared\" by their government\u2014appear and momentarily return viewers' gaze. As the condensation fades on the mirror-like metal, so do the images. Here the aesthetic disappearance parallels the corporeal-political one. For a moment, viewers recognize the \"Other\" in their own reflections and in so doing begin to comprehend how Mu\u00f1oz's piece forces the repetition of the moment of encounter and in the process uncovers hidden truths. La obra Aliento del artista colombiano Oscar Mu\u00f1oz (10 discos de metal, fotoserigraf\u00eda con grasa) es un experimento con materiales. Superficialmente se trata de un trabajo minimalista\u2014arte que habla sobre las superficies del arte y los materiales que la componen. Pero las superficies de Mu\u00f1oz son enga\u00f1osas, ya que las im\u00e1genes s\u00f3lo aparecen debidamente cuando el espectador respira sobre ellas. Un aliento revela moment\u00e1neamente fotografias en sepia de j\u00f3venes colombianos declarados desaparecidos por su gobierno. Conforme la condensaci\u00f3n se esfuma del metal especular, las im\u00e1genes tambi\u00e9n se desvanecen y la desaparici\u00f3n est\u00e9tica hace eco al desvanecimiento corp\u00f3reo y pol\u00edtico. Por un instante, el espectador reconoce al \"Otro\" en su propio reflejo y comienza as\u00ed a entender las maneras en las que la obra de Mu\u00f1oz obliga a repetir el momento del encuentro, develando en el proceso verdades ocultas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John de La Valette"],"datePublished":"1936-05-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41360751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"183d2210-3c30-33a9-aa30-79251e3640a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41360751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"726","pageStart":"705","pagination":"pp. 705-726","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE FITMENT AND DECORATION OF SHIPS: from the \"Great Eastern\" to the \"Queen Mary\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41360751","wordCount":12018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4357","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Warren Brodsky"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3a27d5b-690e-32f9-84e2-d73a54b05ad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Joseph Schillinger (1895-1943): Music Science Promethean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250556","wordCount":13709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Carrier"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23537067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Baudelaire's Philosophical Theory of Beauty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537067","wordCount":12243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"Baudelaire's \"Le Peintre de la vie moderne\" argues that beauty requires the unity of two elements, the eternal beauty found in old master art and the beauty of images from contemporary life. Baudelaire is responding to the mechanical reproduction of art displayed in the museum. He doesn't explicity explain how these two components of beauty are unified. The best way to explain his theory, I argue, is by analogy to the structure of consciousness. Baudelaire's argument deserves study by art critics, for it suggests new ways of understanding Clement Greenberg's canonical account of modernism and recent theorizing about postmodernism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SALIM AL-GAILANI"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0c9f748-4bf5-3085-92be-1fa3fff5d518"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26310959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"The \"Ice Age\" of Anatomy and Obstetrics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310959","wordCount":12859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"In the late nineteenth century anatomists claimed a new technique\u2014slicing frozen corpses into sections\u2014translated the three-dimensional complexity of the human body into flat, visually striking, and unprecedentedly accurate images. Traditionally hostile to visual aids, elite anatomists controversially claimed frozen sections had replaced dissection as the \"true anatomy.\" Some obstetricians adopted frozen sectioning to challenge anatomists' authority and reform how clinicians made and used pictures. To explain the successes and failures of the technique, this article reconstructs the debates through which practitioners learned to make and interpret, to promote or denigrate frozen sections in teaching and research. Focusing on Britain, the author shows that attempts to introduce frozen sectioning into anatomy and obstetrics shaped and were shaped by negotiations over the epistemological standing of hand and eye in medicine.","subTitle":"Hand and Eye in the Promotion of Frozen Sections around 1900","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH E. BARKER"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00778958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61966680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237248"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"980df70c-b158-3f9a-9ea3-51df06bb7ed7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25699105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metrmusej"}],"isPartOf":"Metropolitan Museum Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Joseph Wright's Pastel Portrait of a Woman Part I: A Survey of the Drawings of Joseph Wright","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699105","wordCount":6424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher L. Tomlins"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07382480"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27a24267-5ffa-3435-9a80-6f404d3041e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/743687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawhistoryreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law and History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"A Mysterious Power: Industrial Accidents and the Legal Construction of Employment Relations in Massachusetts, 1800-1850","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743687","wordCount":31137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Society for Legal History","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NADER VOSSOUGHIAN"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec3ad7a7-6916-37bd-bff8-f65c8e36da19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Standardization Reconsidered: \"Normierung\" in and after Ernst Neufert's \"Bauentwurfslehre\" (1936)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832436","wordCount":8659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"54","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS A. VOGLER"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29532716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"419324b5-1105-30bb-89ff-8f79391d3800"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29532716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WONDER DID HE WROTE IT HIMSELF: MEDITATIONS ON EDITING \"FINNEGANS WAKE\" IN THE \"GABLER ERA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29532716","wordCount":11974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hazel Gold"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/473120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d544fa6-a496-39f2-94ed-c1b50aab3275"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/473120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back to the Future: Criticism, the Canon, and the Nineteenth-Century Spanish Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/473120","wordCount":9815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PHYLLIS STERNBERG PERRAKIS"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77f7d804-4200-374f-8e1d-598918acb5d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Atwood's \"The Robber Bride\": The Vampire as Intersubjective Catalyst","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029828","wordCount":8654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"Drawing on the intersubjective theories of psychoanalysts Daniel Stern and Jessica Benjamin, this essay explores the paradoxical role that Zenia, Margaret Atwood's psychological vampire, plays in The Robber Bride. Although Zenia's seductive narratives steal away the loved ones of the three female protagonists, her function is ultimately liberating.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Button Kambic"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"642074684"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04e9b6b9-3137-3389-bbfe-00af6e03d596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"The Changing Lives of Women's Knives: \"Ulus\", Travel, and Transformation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757024","wordCount":8716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"As the biographies of objects reflect the practices, values, and connections of the people who own and exchange them, the circulation of material culture across and between societies can demonstrate how people navigate cultural contact. In the 19th-century North American Arctic, ulus were not only utilitarian tools that entered transcontinental trading networks, they were signs from which indigenous people in whaling villages and nonnative sailores, explorers, and collectors drew impressions of each other. 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Berlin's search for a historical identity is manifested in contradictory ways; while the concern for architecture shrinks to surfaces as representations of \"traditional\" images, the surface of the city expands, transforming Berlin into an archaeological site, unearthing historical layers beneath it. The site of the Palace of the Republic constitutes a micro model, representing these facets of urban transformation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yu Zhang"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42940462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf8e3982-dd75-336c-9af9-1bf492bc9969"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42940462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Visual and Theatrical Constructs of a Modern Life in the Countryside: James Yen, Xiong Foxi, and the Rural Reconstruction Movement in Ding County (1920s-1930s)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42940462","wordCount":15921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Biella"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e003b762-c3b4-3569-89f2-81bd90f815b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"744","pageStart":"743","pagination":"pp. 743-744","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805488","wordCount":1385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela O. Long"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"934fb62a-78bb-38b0-82a9-f9fcf8146d04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/235824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Power, Patronage, and the Authorship of Ars: From Mechanical Know-How to Mechanical Knowledge in the Last Scribal Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235824","wordCount":33014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"\"Power, Patronage, and the Authorship of Ars\" is a study of books on the mechanical arts that appeared in the fifteenth century from Italy and south Germany. At this time a significant proliferation of such books occurred, some profusely illustrated, others exclusively textual. They include Latin books on military apparatus and other kinds of machines, German-language codices on gunpowder artillery and machines, humanist treatises on painting, sculpture, architecture, and the military arts, and vernacular writings on such subjects by practitioners. The author argues that the patronage that encouraged the creation of such books developed because of a new close alliance between political and military praxis and the mechanical arts. She suggests that such authorship elevated the status of the mechanical arts by explicating them in writing, rationalizing them, and associating them with ancient traditions. They were thus prepared for appropriation by the new experimental philosophy of the next era.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Lowood","Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Katalin Hark\u00e1nyi","Roger Launius","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29b70d30-b123-303a-a1b9-3e2c16b285da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":146.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1993)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106697","wordCount":83436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHANNES VON MOLTKE"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e8537cc-7cb0-3c3c-8063-86d44fb7a064"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theory of the Novel: The Literary Imagination of Classical Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586591","wordCount":13117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"144","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Prochaska"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"336612fe-f688-30f8-8f6a-ea85bd65bd99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3337043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-47+98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fantasia of the Phototh\u00e8que: French Postcard Views of Colonial Senegal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337043","wordCount":7063,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[17032,17110],[19097,19175],[20132,20202]],"Locations in B":[[11450,11528],[11640,11718],[11750,11821]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saskia Asser"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40383579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01659510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04ef848-7ba9-39c6-8b6d-48e9499bd815"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40383579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullrijk"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum","keyphrase":null,"language":["dut"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"A Handsome & Highly Finished Present\": Foto's voor de juryrapporten van de Great Exhibition, 1851","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40383579","wordCount":16370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Rijksmuseum Amsterdam","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER J. KOEHLER","STANLEY FINGER","MARCO PICCOLINO"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ce6f7d7-cfaa-30db-8c95-959c673b8f57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25650627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"763","pageStart":"715","pagination":"pp. 715-763","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The \"Eels\" of South America: Mid-18th-Century Dutch Contributions to the Theory of Animal Electricity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25650627","wordCount":19580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"During the mid-18th century, when electricity was coming into its own, natural philosophers began to entertain the possibility that electricity is the mysterious nerve force. Their attention was first drawn to several species of strongly electric fish, namely torpedoes, a type of African catfish, and a South American \"eels.\" This was because their effects felt like those of discharging Leyden jars and could be transmitted along known conductors of electricity. Moreover, their actions could not be adequately explained by popular mechanical theories. Many of the early documents supportive of the hypothesis of animal electricity were associated with the Dutch colonies in South America. This article presents and examines those documents, and shows how Dutch scientists on both sides of the Atlantic conducted experiments and communicated with each other in the 1750s and 1760s. It reveals the important roles played by inquisitive physicians and lovers of nature in South America, and by natural philosophers and collectors of exotic specimens in the Netherlands\u2014learned men who began to make a credible case for animal electricity in some exciting places at a pivotal moment in time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-05-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3075113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99395061-4522-3adb-8615-10a22455ee0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3075113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"1124","pageStart":"1065","pagination":"pp. 1065-1124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3075113","wordCount":38128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5468","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"288","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u00c9ric F\u00e9rey"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40534489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40534489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":741.0,"pageEnd":"1133","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-1133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la Litt\u00e9rature Fran\u00e7aise (XVIe - XXe Si\u00e8cles) Ann\u00e9e 2000","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40534489","wordCount":376737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuel Moreno\u2010Evans"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1eb56e42-d007-3455-adbb-e06fe014d5c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1476","pageStart":"1474","pagination":"pp. 1474-1476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231106","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. 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More precisely, it is about the fate of objects in the contemporary world. Such objects are extraordinarily peculiar, volatile cocktails of media, genres, things, forms, materials, fantasies and phantasms. This book tries to confront these objects with three sets of interrelated questions. First, what is the status of objects in a \u201cvirtual\u201d world? How are they produced, distributed and consumed? How do they differ from previous \u201cepochs of objectness\u201d? Second, how is the status of affect transformed by these objects? What sorts of subjective investments in objects are now possible or impossible? And how","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-09-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d64bbd47-7997-3278-aa34-a77137d74adb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4524027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":"A93","pageStart":"A1","pagination":"pp. A1-A27+A29-A87+A89-A93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstract of Papers. Fifty-ninth Annual Meeting Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524027","wordCount":113284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Roeser","Veronica Alfano","Caroline Nevejan"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44955606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13862820"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41560159"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233892"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2fef654-c920-341b-a51e-f1449d0eea4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44955606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethitheomoraprac"}],"isPartOf":"Ethical Theory and Moral Practice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Role of Art in Emotional-Moral Reflection on Risky and Controversial Technologies: the Case of BNCI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44955606","wordCount":8734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"In this article, we explore the role that art can play in ethical reflection on risky and controversial technologies. New technologies often give rise to societal controversies about their potential risks and benefits. Over the last decades, social scientists, psychologists, and philosophers have criticized quantitative approaches to risk on the grounds that they oversimplify its societal and ethical implications. There is broad consensus amongst these scholars that stakeholders and their values and concerns should be included in decision-making about technological risks. It has also been argued that the emotional responses of people can shed important light on the ethical aspects of risk and uncertainty. However, people's emotions can be narrowly focused and biased. This article therefore assesses the role that technology-inspired artworks can play in overcoming such biases, by challenging our imagination and providing us with different perspectives on possible technological developments and their implications for society. Philosophers have not yet studied such artworks, so this constitutes an entirely new field of research for scholars of risk and moral theory. In particular, we focus on the case of BNCI (Brain\/Neural Computer Interface) technologies and related artworks. These technologies and artworks touch on questions of what it means to be human, thereby raising profound ethical and philosophical challenges. We discuss the experiences of artists, scientists, and engineers who are directly involved with BNCI technologies, and who were interviewed during a Hackathon at Amsterdam's Waag Society in June 2016. Their views are analyzed in light of philosophical and aesthetic theories, which allows us to consider relevant ethical and conceptual issues as well as topics for further investigation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derrick Bell","Martha A. Field"],"datePublished":"1985-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55a781be-5f10-36a5-96c0-545a529e3cde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":327.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-2+4-118+120-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 1984 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341120","wordCount":173247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-12-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1709468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfae55ed-d28f-31c8-b68c-cc2dff4dd055"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1709468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":146.0,"pageEnd":"1198","pageStart":"1009","pagination":"pp. 1009-1198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1709468","wordCount":83041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3545","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"138","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/22268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00963771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e35cd18-6293-3a4c-9c43-ab22c2a29477"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/22268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciemont"}],"isPartOf":"The Scientific Monthly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"x","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-x","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/22268","wordCount":7376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. Michael Johnstone"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.5.2.63","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15592936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71801176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213693"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"737360eb-5ea6-3189-95c7-ac7377dfdf58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/textcult.5.2.63"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"textcult"}],"isPartOf":"Textual Cultures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Toward a Book History of William Wordsworth's 1850 Prelude<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.5.2.63","wordCount":12620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"Abstract This essay argues for the necessity of a book history of the 1850 first edition of William Wordsworth's poem The Prelude, which is currently a liber non gratus: a marginalized, unwelcome book. Editing of and scholarship on The Prelude since 1926 have promoted earlier, manuscript versions at the expense of the 1850 edition, despite accepting it as a \u201cfact of literary history\u201d. Thus, attention to the material life of the 1850 poem with Victorian readers \u2014 such as in criticism and biographies of Wordsworth, and the giving of books as gifts \u2014 recovers its significance to our conceptions of nineteenth-century literary history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-12-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1717666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21f806ff-18f4-3c46-ab8f-672dc7506def"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1717666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"1376","pageStart":"1323","pagination":"pp. 1323-1362+1364-1365+1367-1372+1375-1376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"132nd AAAS ANNUAL MEETING Berkeley, California 26-31 December 1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1717666","wordCount":40544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3701","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"150","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Brest"],"datePublished":"1976-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9957a893-39df-3c31-ab65-83f9224b383c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1340306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":281.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-54+56-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 1975 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340306","wordCount":136452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13510711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41236398"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250513"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"617c46c5-9a1b-3822-8873-dddd665717d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26895606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"occuenvimedi"}],"isPartOf":"Occupational and Environmental Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":651.0,"pageEnd":"A651","pageStart":"A1","pagination":"pp. A1-A651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"32nd Triennial Congress of the International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH), Dublin, Ireland, 29th April to 4th May 2018","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895606","wordCount":598818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geoffrey Eley"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0039d1d-22d0-3442-8e3f-5280c4b45cd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What Is Cultural History?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488530","wordCount":7540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"65","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam Weintraub","Helen K. Smith","Gus P. Plessas","Nancy L. Roser","Michael Rowls"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/747300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":335.0,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Summary of Investigations Relating to Reading July 1, 1975, to June 30, 1976","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747300","wordCount":133463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Summarizes 599 reports of reading research published between July 1, 1975, and June 30, 1976. The research studies are categorized into 6 major areas, 4 of which have been further subcategorized. The majority of studies reported were classified into the Physiology and Psychology of Reading area. Large subdivisions under that major category include the following: Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Reading and Language Abilities, and Factors Related to Reading Disability. Under the Teaching of Reading category, the Testing subcategory remains one of the larger divisions. A large grouping of studies in the Sociology of Reading is concerned with the content analysis of newspapers, books, texts, and other printed materials. A listing of other bibliographies and reviews of reading research appears as the first major category of the present summary. Reviews have been classified under specific subcategories or placed under a Miscellaneous subheading. An annotated bibliography appears following the written text.\/\/\/ [French] Resum\u00e9 599 rapports dans le domaine de la lecture publi\u00e9s entre le ler juillet 1975 et le 30 juin 1976. Les rapports sont r\u00e9partis sous 6 rubriques principales dont 4 ont \u00e9t\u00e9 subdivis\u00e9es \u00e0 leur tour. La majorit\u00e9 des \u00e9tudes a \u00e9t\u00e9 group\u00e9e sous la rubrique intitul\u00e9e \"La Physiologie et Psychologie de lecture\". De grandes subdivisions ont \u00e9t\u00e9 faites sous cette cat\u00e9gorie principale et contiennent les rubriques suivantes: \"La Perception visuelle\", \"La Perception auditive\", \"L'Aptitude au language et \u00e0 la lecture\", ainsi que \"Les Facteurs touchant a l'inhabilet\u00e9 en lecture\". Sous \"L'Enseignement de lecture\", la subdivision ayant trait a l'administration des tests est une des plus nombreuses de toutes les subdivisions de cette rubrique. La plupart des \u00e9tudes comprises sous l'enseigne de la sociologie de la lecture se rapporte a l'analyse textuelle de journaux, de livres, ainsi que de divers mat\u00e9riaux de lecture. Une liste d'autres bibliographies et de comptes rendus sur la recherche en mati\u00e8re de lecture parait comme la premi\u00e8re cat\u00eagorie principale de ce volume. Les comptes rendus ont \u00e9t\u00e9 plac\u00e9s soit sous de cat\u00e9gories sp\u00e9cifiques, soit sous la rubrique \"\u00c9tudes diverses\". Une bibliographie annot\u00e9e suit ce text \u00e9crit.\/\/\/ [Spanish] Se efectua un resumen de 599 informes sobre investigaciones realizadas en el campo de la lectura, publicados entre el 1\u00b0 de Julio de 1975 y el 30 de Junio de 1976. Los estudios de investigaci\u00f3n se clasifican en 6 categorias principales, siendo 4 de ellas, a su vez, subclasificados. La mayor\u00eda de los estudios presentados se clasifican dentro del \u00e1rea de la Fisiolog\u00eda y Psicolog\u00eda de la Lectura. Dentro de las numerosas subdivisiones que pertenecen a la categor\u00eda principal, se encuentran las siguientes: Percepci\u00f3n Visual, Percepci\u00f3n Auditiva, Aptitud para la Lectura ye el Lenguaje, y Factores Relacionados con la Inaptitud para la Lectura. La subclasificaci\u00f3n denominada Examinaci\u00f3n, constituye una de las mayores divisiones correspondientes a la categor\u00eda de la Ense\u00f1anza de la Lectura. La gran agrupaci\u00f3n de estudios efectuados en Sociolog\u00eda de la Lectura, se refiere al an\u00e1lisis del contenido de peri\u00f3dicos, libros, textos y otros materiales impresos. En la primera categor\u00eda principal del presente resumen, aparece una lista de otras bibliograf\u00edas y rese\u00f1as realizadas en la investigaci\u00f3n de la lectura. Las rese\u00f1as han sido clasificadas en subclasificaciones espec\u00edficas, o colocadas bajo el subt\u00edtulo de Miscel\u00e1nea. A continuaci\u00f3n del texto aparece una bibliograf\u00eda comentada.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Heins"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"893acffa-e583-392f-a799-1c27a3343cd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43910693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"Psyche of the White Man\" and the Mass Face on Film: B\u00e9la Bal\u00e1zs between Racialist and Marxist Physiognomics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43910693","wordCount":13043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"127","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SPYROS PAPAPETROS"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41417920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cad98bc7-c13b-3259-96f1-2cabc50231d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41417920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Between the Academy and the Avant-Garde: Carl Einstein and Fritz Saxl Correspond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41417920","wordCount":8824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"139","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. H. Port"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1568323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0066622X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62483180"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6831314-603d-369a-b70a-5f9e1e8c6e64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1568323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archhist"}],"isPartOf":"Architectural History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-93+113-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The New Law Courts Competition, 1866-67","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1568323","wordCount":12714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"SAHGB Publications Limited","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Barr\u00e8re","Walter Santagata"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41064648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14808986"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56839394"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004255556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8833084c-37fd-3486-9954-88395eb61ca6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41064648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejourartsmana"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Arts Management","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Defining Art: From the Brancusi Trial to the Economics of Artistic Semiotic Goods","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41064648","wordCount":7554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"HEC - Montr\u00e9al - Chair of Arts Management","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"The special nature of artistic and cultural goods is commonly stressed in inquiries into the failings of the art market. Though artistic goods are not clearly defined, their special character is held up as a rationale for art policies. This paper attempts to ground them theoretically. In the first section, we introduce the concept of artistic goods as a class of semiotic goods - that is, goods that are bearers of an aesthetic sign acknowledged in a specific cultural context. The second section relates the semiotic nature of art to three models of organization and regulation of the artistic field, namely the model based on institutions and hierarchies, the gift model and the market model. La sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 des activit\u00e9s et des biens culturels et l'impossibilit\u00e9 de g\u00e9rer les arts par les simples forces du march\u00e9 sont couramment invoqu\u00e9es pour justifier des politiques culturelles \u00e9labor\u00e9es en d\u00e9pit de l'impr\u00e9cision qui caract\u00e9rise la d\u00e9finition d'une activit\u00e9 artistique. Les auteurs s'efforcent justement de donner \u00e0 cette derni\u00e8re un fondement th\u00e9orique. Dans la premi\u00e8re partie de l'article, ils introduisent la notion de bien culturel s\u00e9miotique, c'est-\u00e0-dire porteur d'un signe esth\u00e9tique reconnu dans un contexte culturel donn\u00e9. Dans la seconde, ils \u00e9tablissent un lien entre la nature s\u00e9miotique de l'art et trois mod\u00e8les d'organisation et de r\u00e9gulation du domaine artistique, fond\u00e9s soit sur les institutions et les hi\u00e9rarchies, soit sur les dons, soit sur le march\u00e9. Los estudios realizados sobre las debilidades del mercado art\u00edstico hacen usualmente hincapi\u00e9 en la naturaleza singular de los bienes art\u00edsticos y culturales. Aunque los bienes art\u00edsticos no est\u00e1n claramente definidos. Las pol\u00edticas en el campo de las artes se basan en su car\u00e1cter particular. Este art\u00edculo intenta dar un fundamento te\u00f3rico a esta argumentaci\u00f3n. En la primera parte, introducimos el concepto de bienes art\u00edsticos como una categor\u00eda de bienes semi\u00f3ticos, es decir, bienes portadores de un signo est\u00e9tico reconocido en un contexto cultural espec\u00edfico. La segunda parte vincula la naturaleza semi\u00f3tica del arte a tres modelos organizativos y normativos que existen en el \u00e1mbito art\u00edstico, a saber, el modelo institucional y jer\u00e1rquico, el modelo orientado al concepto de regalo y el modelo orientado al mercado.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID LINTON"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea75d4ec-3f4e-36ab-9306-d229de71e8e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespeare As Media Critic: Communication Theory and Historiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029744","wordCount":9284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"A survey of Shakespeare's plays indicates that he was highly sensitive to the media environment of his age, especially to the impact of the relatively new medium of print and the attendant rise in literacy rates. A close reading of Henry VI, Part II reveals specific, though veiled, references to the manipulation of laws and patents pertaining to the economics of the printing industry.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Berndt Ostendorf"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1887f7b8-8a30-372a-8f09-a46306348ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2713082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"601","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Musical World of Doctorow's Ragtime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713082","wordCount":9952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liedeke Plate"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d30ff86-2bb2-3616-b944-8d51bd256bc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550523","wordCount":658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctttv8hq.27","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780816677948"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"827d31d9-00f3-3c63-9049-d637248ddb99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctttv8hq.27"}],"isPartOf":"Debates in the Digital Humanities","keyphrase":["scholarship","computing","humanities computing","dave parry","textual","digital humanists","computing technologies","rather","kirschenbaum","humanities based"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"429","pagination":"429-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Education"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"The Digital Humanities or a Digital Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctttv8hq.27","wordCount":4544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"We should all probably start by admitting that none of us really knows what digital humanities is or, more precisely, that none of us is fully in control of what digital humanities (DH) is. As with so many disciplinary practices, the answer to the \u201cwhat is\u201d question is likely to be legion. And as Matthew Kirschenbaum has noted in a recent ADE Bulletin article, defining DH has become something of a genre essay. But contrary to any suggestion that the definition is settled or has been fully explored, the rising number of conference presentations along with the surplus of writings","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Cummings"],"datePublished":"1963-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754390"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53398409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cece3260-c723-3f20-8f38-374264d147ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/750505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwarbcourinst"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"B. R. Haydon and His School","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/750505","wordCount":12619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Warburg Institute","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ajay J. 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The comparative analysis employs concepts from art history, sociology of culture, anthropology and science studies to explore the appeal of \"high technology\" in comparison with the aura of original artworks and the status accrued by symbolic tools. Additionally, the role standardization has played in the development of engineering as a profession is explored in historical context as are the recurring themes of speed and \"the new.\" The findings reveal that how engineers use new technologies in the world of messy practice and their conceptual framework regarding so-called \"high technology\" do not map well onto one another. The study illustrates the perspective of science and technology studies that views all technology as socially shaped and society shaping, its construction accomplished through messy patched-up practices rather than clean, linear paths or perfect techniques.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulrich Halfmann","William Dean Howells"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27747894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb641d15-9884-3a63-b6d9-fa90018fef27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27747894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal1870"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism, 1870-1910","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":149.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-275, 277-279, 281-399, 401-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interviews with William Dean Howells","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27747894","wordCount":87337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Saint Larance"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61b19087-899c-352e-962c-babe90a29189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25477955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":302.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-225, 227-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Forty Year Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477955","wordCount":98486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas R. Edwards","C. Thomas McCollough","Neil Silberman","Ofer Bar-Yosef","Zvi Gal","Howard Smithline","Dina Shalem","William G. Dever","Carol Meyers","Joe D. Seger","Gary A. Rendsburg","Julia M. O'Brien","Raymond F. Person Jr.","Adam Porter","John Dominic Crossan","Volkmar Fritz","Steven Fine","Carol Selkin Wise","Katharina Galor","Stuart S. Miller","Byron R. McCane","Rachel Hachlili","Peter Richardson","Bill Grantham","James F. Strange","Alysia Fischer","Melissa Aubin","Rami Arav","Vassilios Tzaferis","Barbara Geller","Stephen Goranson","Eric C. Lapp","Zeev Weiss","Anna de Vincenz","Ze'ev Safrai","Ofer Sion"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27799186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00660035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b354562-b57e-3a5f-bc5d-165dd0c0a501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27799186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annuamerschoorie"}],"isPartOf":"The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":410.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iii, v-vii, ix-xiii, 1-11, 13-17, 19-39, 41-93, 95-107, 109-117, 119-125, 127-137, 139, 141-213, 215-255, 257-277, 279-289, 291-299, 301-331, 333-347, 349-369, 371-411, 413-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF DIFFERENCE: GENDER, ETHNICITY, CLASS AND THE \"OTHER\" IN ANTIQUITY: STUDIES IN HONOR OF ERIC M. MEYERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27799186","wordCount":231443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The American Schools of Oriental Research","volumeNumber":"60\/61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ZAC ZIMMER"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f48d5abb-2e5e-34c2-a192-01f1bed3777e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90021782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lossyness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90021782","wordCount":8276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Material Loss in the Cloud or Digital Ekphrasis","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter McLaren","Gustavo Fischman","Silvia Serra","Estanislao Antelo"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Specters of Gramsci: Revolutionary Praxis and the Committed Intellectual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589542","wordCount":14332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-10-23","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a837552-1649-3e93-87ac-436c16c7ab61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1700555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"559","pagination":"pp. 559-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700555","wordCount":28236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4826","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"238","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda L. Layne"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73135327-4624-37f2-a65c-d8d934e2fd5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"492","pagination":"pp. 492-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Cultural Fix: An Anthropological Contribution to Science and Technology Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690174","wordCount":12695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Since at least the 1960s, science and technology studies (STS) scholars have distinguished between technological and social fixes. The author introduces a new concept for the STS theoretical tool kit-the cultural fix-and illustrates this concept using examples from her own research on pregnancy loss and neonatal intensive care, as well as that of anthropologists Katherine Newman and Sherry Ortner on downward mobility and unemployment in the United States. It is argued that the cultural fix represents a distinctive anthropological contribution to the field.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erin O'Connor"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Preface for a Post-Postcolonial Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829770","wordCount":12750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL GARDINER"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20719608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c1e8307-3fa0-38e6-80bc-774f7d029775"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20719608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Postmodern Utopia? 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Performance is often assumed to be something that can only be authentic if experienced live, yet mediated performances have the ability to disrupt this assumption in two primary ways: by creating a \"shared,\" though asymmetric, experience and by imploding the idea of a \"live\" original performance to be recorded. In this paper we bring Walter Benjamin's concepts of aura and authenticity into conversation with Katie King's theorizations of reenactments to explore how mediated experiences can still constitutes authentic, \"shared\" performance. That is, we deploy the concept of the pastpresent to problematize, complicate, and begin to break down the assumed division between live and mediated performance based on Benjamin's ideas of aura and authenticity. As we'll discuss, what makes this especially interesting is the relationship between space and time in mediated performances. We illustrate this basic argument using three examples: (1) dance through the medium of film; (2) street performance through the medium of the internet; and (3) pop music through the medium of digitally recorded music. In all cases, the \"authenticity\" of the mediated performance is based on the imagined authenticity of its first rendering, thus the viewer\/listener becomes an active participant in making meaning out of the past, in the present. The changing relationships between space, time, and authenticity within performance are important for understanding how their audiences experience modern mediated performances.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Patteson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d37fc3f4-843b-3eaf-bfb7-ca90c9bd0b39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.6"}],"isPartOf":"Instruments for New Music","keyphrase":["mechanical","mechanical music","stuckenschmidt","welte mignon","musical","player","precision","machine","gramophone","mechanical instruments"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"18","pagination":"18-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\u201cThe Joy of Precision\u201d:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.6","wordCount":13535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"On the evening of July 25, 1926, an unusual concert took place in the small Black Forest town of Donaueschingen, Germany. Presented as \u201coriginal compositions for mechanical instruments,\u201d the event featured three pieces by Ernst Toch, six \u201cPolyphonic \u00c9tudes\u201d by Gerhart M\u00fcnch, and two works by Paul Hindemith, all written especially for a model of piano called the Welte-Mignon, which played automatically by means of a pneumatic mechanism activated by a spinning paper roll. The finale was an experimental stage performance called theTriadic Ballet,<\/em>with costumes and choreography by the Bauhaus teacher Oskar Schlemmer and accompaniment for mechanical organ","subTitle":"Mechanical Instruments and the Aesthetics of Automation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio G\u00f3mez L\u00f3pez Qui\u00f1ones"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c496d06a-6366-3241-beda-b80bc42b45e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27923081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Ese arte superior\": el \"Guernica\" seg\u00fan Antonio Saura y el recuerdo de la Guerra Civil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27923081","wordCount":8786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEOFFREY HARTMAN"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40548825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a09434d8-fe40-3f9e-872c-f4483195605a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40548825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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It is almost universally assumed that cryogenic storage supports genetic and phenotypic stability of organisms. However, certain components of the cryopreservation process, particularly some cryoprotective additives (CPAs) and free radical mediated cryoinjury, may potentially cause genetic alterations. Genetic integrity in cryopreserved microalgae was assessed using a very sensitive molecular fingerprinting technique, AFLP, on 28 terrestrial microalgal strains. In about half of all investigated strains the AFLP fingerprints revealed, with high levels of reproducibility, clearly detectable genomic differences after cryopreservation employing a widely used standard two-step cooling protocol. Differences ranged from a single fragment position to multiple fragment changes and were compared to differences found between wild-type and UV-light- or radioisotope-induced mutants of Parachlorella kessleri. The basis of the changes are discussed in terms of their reversibility, as may be the case if they are attributed to DNA methylation and\/or whether they are true mutations that may potentially manifest in the phenotype. The possibility that cryopreservation selects for genotypically different subpopulations of microalgae is also considered.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susana Torre","Stanley Tigerman","Robert Yudell"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4090995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00119415"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b102ba8-b75b-314a-b24f-d2613e0fba62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4090995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Design Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Architecture with People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4090995","wordCount":5546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"109","publisher":"Walker Art Center","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carlos Palombini"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3680690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01489267"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41963634"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213543"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"854f6682-705b-3a7d-9fca-f623ea744bff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3680690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"computermusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Computer Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Computer Science","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3680690","wordCount":2076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dympna Callaghan"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bcaee6e-54df-3b45-b547-f59a3cf22a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in Tudor and Stuart Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844637","wordCount":16536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"An assessment of recent scholarly work treating Tudor and Stuart drama and some general observations on the state of the profession. A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lee Grieveson"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23253890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e6bec86-f83e-3cc6-a54c-b61380c8ad2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23253890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Work of Film in the Age of Fordist Mechanization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23253890","wordCount":14480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"This article describes and analyzes the Ford Motor Company's extensive use of film in the 1910s and 1920s, tracing out the ways that this connected to the company's elaboration of new mass production processes and corresponding strategies of worker control that together were central to the establishment of the political economy of advanced capitalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE LIPSITZ"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f9be40-07b9-329a-8a3a-f1edd0543eae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41556183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'The Culture of War'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556183","wordCount":3855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52817,52880]],"Locations in B":[[16499,16562]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sudhanva Deshpande"],"datePublished":"2009-04-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40278693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1af53ff1-d885-39f1-a443-7adf80dd732f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40278693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Authorship and Copyright in Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40278693","wordCount":3046,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[5212,5310],[5783,6051]],"Locations in B":[[4233,4331],[5932,6188]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"14","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Copying, imitation and reproducibility are central to the fine arts and therefore the concept of copyright sits uneasy. Experience suggests that copyright is designed to protect corporate profits rather than artists' creativity. It is imperative for artists and theatre persons to work out alternatives to copyright which recognise the creator's work without obstructing wider dissemination and adaption.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1909-10-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 8, no. 1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590499","wordCount":13966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/234170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f304cfcd-2e82-3e23-9dd1-f27098fd697d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/234170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":271.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/234170","wordCount":199811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eileen J. Cheng"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5912f2a9-691f-375e-b144-393894e973cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41490962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Recycling the Scholar-Beauty Narrative: Lu Xun on Love in an Age of Mechanical Reproductions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490962","wordCount":14015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce B. Collette"],"datePublished":"1978-12-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1443720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00458511"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48166077"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237208"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dc6471d-9975-3d11-b76f-09d0efdbaac3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1443720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"copeia"}],"isPartOf":"Copeia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"763","pageStart":"742","pagination":"pp. 742-763","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Summary of the Meetings 1978","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1443720","wordCount":16357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists (ASIH)","volumeNumber":"1978","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5113e8c-1c95-3497-a165-2f988d27205d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"U.S. Dissertations, 2003","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177426","wordCount":16194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Metz"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0cbab1a-1002-30ec-aace-b1426ea6ef0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1358624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ellen and Rolinda Sharples: Mother and Daughter Painters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358624","wordCount":8889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan Adler"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5454af57-f518-37b5-a0b3-9a261b8b60b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Apparatus: On the Photography of Thomas Ruff","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967753","wordCount":11855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Jost Janssen"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24139028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09366784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564446955"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3162d82c-5f9f-354d-87eb-8fc1cbec55e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24139028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsociresesupp"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":343.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Historical Social Research: An International Journal for the Application of Formal Methods to History. Retrospective, 2004-2014","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24139028","wordCount":148233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"26","publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In this introduction to HSR Supplement 26, the findings of the journal Historical Social Research from 2004 to 2014 are presented. With the journal being in its 40th year of existence, one could split the journal's history into three phases: First, the constitutional period (1976-1988), then, second, the establishing period (1988-2000). The third period consists of the last 10-14 years. It may be characterized by processes of focusing, digitalization and internationalization, and it is this third period which is the subject of this article. In a short overview, some developments with respect to the contents are highlighted. Afterward, some structural changes in HSR publication formats and journal management are given. Finally, the article presents some bibliometric analyses, particularly concerning download and citation statistics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Michael Farmer"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4528833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00825433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47298280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"552caab6-5de9-320b-a034-44805d3e758f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4528833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"toungpao"}],"isPartOf":"T'oung Pao","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Art, Education, & Power: Illustrations in the Stone Chamber of Wen Weng","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4528833","wordCount":15429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/3","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex Silk"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26636718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0925854X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"907922184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ded1147-7da8-3949-96d2-b0c1fe6da077"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26636718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natulangsema"}],"isPartOf":"Natural Language Semantics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Commitment and states of mind with mood and modality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26636718","wordCount":21126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"This paper develops an account of mood selection with attitude predicates in French. I start by examining the \"contextual commitment\" account of mood developed by Portner and Rubinstein (in: Chereches (ed) Proceedings of SALT 22, CLC Publications, Ithaca, NY, pp 461\u2013487, 2012). A key innovation of Portner and Rubinstein's (P&R's) account is to treat mood selection as fundamentally depending on a relation between individuals' attitudes and the predicate's modal backgrounds. I raise challenges for P&R's qualitative analysis of contextual commitment and explanations of mood selection. There are indicative-selecting predicates that are felicitous in contexts where there isn't contextual commitment (in P&R's sense); and there are subjunctive-selecting predicates that involve no less contextual commitment (in P&R's sense) than certain indicative-selecting verbs. I develop an alternative account of verbal mood. The general approach, which I call a state-of-mind approach, is to analyze mood in terms of whether the formal relation between the predicate's modal backgrounds and an overall state of mind represents a relation of commitment. Indicative mood in French presupposes that the informational-evaluative state determined by the predicate's modal backgrounds is included in the informational-evaluative state characterizing the event described by the predicate. The account provides an improved explanation of core mood-selection puzzles, including subjunctive-selection with emotive factives, indicative-selection with fiction verbs, indicative-selection with esp\u00e9rer 'hope' versus subjunctive-selection with vouloir 'want', and indicative-selection with commissives versus subjunctive-selection with directives. Subjunctive-selection with modal adjectives is briefly considered. The mood-selection properties of the predicates are derived from the proposed analysis of mood, independently attested features of the predicates' semantics, and general principles of interpretation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam G. Beaver"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d80a1efd-8af7-37b9-8174-5d54678cf8d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23360255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"FROM JERUSALEM TO TOLEDO: REPLICA, LANDSCAPE AND THE NATION IN RENAISSANCE IBERIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360255","wordCount":15752,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9592]],"Locations in B":[[57612,58036]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"218","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43440839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ecolrest"}],"isPartOf":"Ecological Restoration","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"NOTES & ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440839","wordCount":15559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24145161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368555"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24145161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scienceteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Science Teacher","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","General Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24145161","wordCount":18827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Science Teachers Association","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2983037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2983037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Applied sciences - Systems science","Information science - Information resources","Information science - Library science","Law - Civil law","Business - Accountancy","Political science - Government","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2983037","wordCount":2120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"154","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Gorra"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4383509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85cbc749-cada-3104-b66f-5fd4b4639262"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4383509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"threrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Threepenny Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"People as Props","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4383509","wordCount":4222,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[13135,13506],[13827,13974],[19506,19658],[30806,30990]],"Locations in B":[[16422,16793],[16818,16965],[18230,18377],[18846,19027]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"Threepenny Review","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen J. Scott"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/623142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Capitalism, Cities, and the Production of Symbolic Forms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/623142","wordCount":9373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"A striking characteristic of contemporary capitalism is the increasing importance (in terms of growth, employment, revenue, etc.) of sectors whose outputs are imbued with significant cultural or symbolic content. Sectors of these sorts are predominantly, though not exclusively, located in large cities. I describe how these cities function as creative fields generating streams of both cultural and technological innovations. Post-Fordist cities are shown to be especially fertile terrains of commodified cultural production. A number of these cities have become major centres of image-producing industries such as film, music recording, or fashion clothing, and this phenomenon is also often associated with profound transformations of their physical landscapes. I argue that the economic foundations of these trends reside, in part, in the structural characteristics of image-producing industries, marked as they frequently are by modularized, network structures of production and a strong proclivity to geographic agglomeration. At the same time, the main centres of the contemporary cultural economy are caught up in insistent processes of globalization. I suggest that after an initial phase of product standardization and concentrated development in only a few major centres, the cultural economy of capitalism now appears to be entering a new phase marked by increasingly high levels of product differentiation and polycentric production sites. I also submit that the contemporary cultural economy of capitalism constitutes a historical shift beyond consumer society as such.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juli Highfill"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b94f9baf-570e-3298-885b-d883d605f14a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20641748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Metaphoric Commerce: The Greguer\u00edas nov\u00edsimas and Their Circumstance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641748","wordCount":8353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23517284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00292494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564636684"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250567"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e527de27-f4fd-3388-b1f9-4cfbeac98437"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23517284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortcarohistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The North Carolina Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23517284","wordCount":22691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"North Carolina Office of Archives and History","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"113e7859-f8f8-3f61-924e-c5c9e7bc1c9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43708592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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These motifs shaped Le Tombeau de Couperin (1917) and L'Enfant et les sortil\u00e8ges (1925), and are significant generally in musical modernism. To trace their historical and philosophical meanings, we begin with a peculiar visual icon: Rousseau's tomb in the Panth\u00e9on (1794), which symbolizes an Enlightenment sense of tombeau as \"containing the dead\" yet also \"animated from within.\" This characterization, in an imaginative leap, could also be applied to a box that reproduces music: the musical automaton. Such automata were perfected in the eighteenth century, and musical performers were compared to them, suggesting the uncanny aspects of both; a full intellectual history of this phenomenon has yet to be written. But given this history, which assumed new forms by 1900, we understand more fully the meanings borne by symptoms of mechanism in Ravel's piano suite and his opera. They are modernist reflections on human subjectivity in music, its loss in mechanical reproduction, and the futility of seeking lost objects by breaking open a tomb.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-10-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3078035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"611f4e0a-7a48-3086-8f0a-e5d22e8bc9e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3078035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":124.0,"pageEnd":"660","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-660","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3078035","wordCount":93505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5491","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"290","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria M. Carri\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96ea0fb0-14d7-38f1-9aac-2b45c4a500f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"HISTORIAS DE VIOLENCIA Y ESCOPOFILIA, O LA CASU\u00cdSTICA DEL HONOR ENTRE LOPE DE VEGA Y CALDER\u00d3N","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803121","wordCount":5597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara K. 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Correlations (the units of analysis) of intelligence, motivation, and achievement with indexes of parent stimulation of the student in the home are considerably higher than those with indexes of socioeconomic status (SES); specifically the medians (and ranges) of 92 simple correlations of home environment and learning are .37 (and .02 to .82) and of 62 multiple-regression-weighted composites are .44 (and .23 to .81). Jackknifed regression estimates indicate that gender and SES of the sample affect the sizes of the correlations and suggest priorities for future primary investigations. The analyses suggest that ability and achievement are more closely linked to the socio-psychological environment and intellectual stimulation in the home than they are to parental socio-economic status indicators such as occupation and amount of education.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1900-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18e00cf4-7a8f-3c49-ad8b-fd9e9cc6288a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/282650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":108.0,"pageEnd":"cviii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i+iii-cviii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1900,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Proceedings of the Thirty-Second Annual Session of the American Philological Association Held at Madison, Wisconsin, July, 1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282650","wordCount":47366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle Facos"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10698825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3fd9598-f4c9-3dd1-8d62-02a9872878eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40662729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studdecoarts"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Decorative Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662729","wordCount":2827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/670266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49882921"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d2d8c03-042f-3bba-887b-60f5c1c985a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/670266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":162.0,"pageEnd":"S162","pageStart":"S1","pagination":"pp. S1-S162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"CIES Bibliography 2012","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/670266","wordCount":67727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"S2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind C. 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In the process, they are altering the visual characteristics of the moving image and changing the viewer's perceptual understanding of the nature of cinema, leading to the emergence, for the first time in the medium's history, of filmic artifacts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward L. 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The translator may work within a well-designed method or operate intuitively.\u00b9 But behind the act of translation lie a number of difficult theoretical questions, each of which bears upon our understanding of the translational enterprise and its evaluation.Translation is a problem because, among other reasons, people hold opposing views on the question of whether translation is truly possible. Can, in the words of Eugene Nida and Charles Taber, mentors of the American Bible Society translations, \u201canything that can be said in","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN LAMB"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edf7caf6-ccdb-33a2-8f2b-6e47138ee47d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24510550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"737","pageStart":"667","pagination":"pp. 667-737","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Restoration and Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510550","wordCount":30156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"An assessment of recent scholarly work treating the literature of the Restoration and Eighteenth Century and some general observations on the state of the profession. A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charissa N. 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Although rarely paired, curator and critic Burnham and philosopher Cavell offer similar ontologies of art in the post-World War II period. Their ideas freed artists from old constraints of formalism and medium specificity while foreshadowing the rise of an artistic atomization driven by technology and economics. If Burnham's concept of systems aesthetics is concerned with a sense of cybernetic connectivity based on a feedback loop between the artist, artwork, art community and monetizing power of the market, then Cavell's automatisms describe a condition of laissez-faire independence in which each artist must work entrepreneurially, wholly for and unto herself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel T. 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Branham"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20169093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00837156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f217585-48a9-3b0c-883f-0546a43d0d31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20169093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwaltartgallery"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Walters Art Gallery","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sacrality and Aura in the Museum: Mute Objects and Articulate Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20169093","wordCount":6924,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13769,14004]],"Locations in B":[[20361,20591]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walters Art Museum","volumeNumber":"52\/53","abstract":"The incompatibility of museum space and \"sacred space,\" and the curious complicity shared by those two spatial constructions, render problematic curatorial efforts both to decontextualize\/desacralize religious works of art and to recontextualize\/re-empower such pieces. Moreover, experiential enterprises--i.e., atmospheric recreations designed to invest museum-goers with perceptions similar to those of the original observer--throw into question the shifting meaning of art and its relationship to an ever-changing audience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Bradby","Brian Torode"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30023281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332060X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac66f199-8f41-3784-a68c-c6027b132a18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30023281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cranebag"}],"isPartOf":"The Crane Bag","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"To Whom Do U2 Appeal?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30023281","wordCount":4107,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Richard Kearney","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Plotz"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e73ba2-e4f3-3a38-a6e1-836ebc448618"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Objects of Abjection: The Animation of Difference in Jean Genet's Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441699","wordCount":8645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leora Hadas"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44867508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2c787d3-d47c-3092-8bcb-d114ade8f8b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44867508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A New Vision: J. J. Abrams, \"Star Trek\", and Promotional Authorship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44867508","wordCount":11654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"This article examines the use of authorship discourses in the promotion of media content through a case study of the 2009 Star Trek film, directed by J. J. Abrams. Analyzing press interviews and promotional paratexts, I focus on the potential conflict in which a franchise long associated with a distinct auteur figure was rebooted by a different creator, and the implications for marketing Star Trek to different audiences: new viewers and longtime fans. I demonstrate the careful management involved in the establishment of film authorship, and how the association with a particular author figure shapes the identity of a franchise.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1842815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f28f5bf5-5170-3d12-bdc8-eac20b5ec060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1842815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Historical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1842815","wordCount":7511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cecily Swanson"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.23","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"837369e5-6bd9-3860-a082-90e1fa53494f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.23"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Conversation Pieces: Circulating Muriel Draper's Salon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.23","wordCount":10573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Muriel Draper, a once preeminent American modernist literary figure, turned conversation into a mode of authorship through her varied career as a salon hostess, writer, and radio broadcaster. The archival papers surrounding her memoir of her music salon,Music at Midnight (1929), and her NBC radio program, \u201cIt's a Woman's World\u201d (1937\u20131938), reveal that Draper's contribution to modernism was not literature as we typically conceive it. By providing an alternative articulation of literary form, which blended oral and written modes, her memoir and radio show activated a network of female fan mail writers. Correlating conversation with the music of her salon, Draper challenged modernist claims about music's impersonality while also encouraging her audience to take seriously the literary merits of their talk. From her audience of listeners and readers emerged a public of women writers, for whom the smallest acts of literary participation gained importance through Draper's example.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Kaufman"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2d00d8e-5ca9-38e5-85f7-63f4b3bfa91e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Poetry's Ethics? Theodor W. Adorno and Robert Duncan on Aesthetic Illusion and Sociopolitical Delusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669156","wordCount":20576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"97","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Wenke"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20170166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01628003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"314abaf2-093c-3ab1-bef2-9a26df705e90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20170166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"advarchmeththeo"}],"isPartOf":"Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Explaining the Evolution of Cultural Complexity: A Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20170166","wordCount":20582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1903-11-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24988242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368733"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006255042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3481548-40c8-3875-a837-a1985b4cca00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24988242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieamer"}],"isPartOf":"Scientific American","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1903,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"MAGAZINE AND BOOK PRESSES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24988242","wordCount":3633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"20","publisher":"Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09277544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0156bcd9-0252-31ba-9bb9-7976bcad7e26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44103231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrealestalite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Real Estate Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103231","wordCount":2881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Real Estate Society","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Koray De\u011firmenci"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"174df88f-bbbd-3aee-bb01-ec504fc7dea1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41228644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Local Music from out There': Roman (Gypsy) Music as World Music in Turkey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41228644","wordCount":14182,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10058]],"Locations in B":[[73463,73621]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"This article discusses how Gypsyness (Romanness) and the notions of the Gypsy (Roman) community and locality are discursively articulated and reconstructed so as to constitute particular elements of 'world music' discourses in Turkey. The discussion attempts to trace and unbundle various elements of Romanness as they are articulated into world music discourses. On the one hand Romanness symbolizes popular Roman images and their associated notions, but on the other it is used to constitute various market discourses of world music. Different discourses of Romanness are oftentimes overlapped and redefined or they replace each. The discussion looks at two of the most popular Roman musicians in Turkish world music market, Selim Sesler and H\u00fcsn\u00fc \u015fenlendirici, by using data obtained from ethnographic research that the author carried out in Istanbul. U \u010dlanku se raspravlja kako su 'romskost' ('ciganskost') i pojmovi ciganske (romske) zajednice i podru\u010dja diskurzivno artikulirani i rekonstruirani, tako da predstavljaju osobite elemente diskurs\u00e2 'glazbi svijeta' u Turskoj. Proizlazeci iz pretpostavke da romskost i snjom povezani elementi nose mnoge maske u diskurzivnom procesu, rasprava poku\u0161ava prona\u0107i tragove i razmrsiti te razli\u010dite elemente romskosti na na\u010din kako su artikulirani u diskursima o glazbama svijeta. Romskost s jedne strane simbolizira popularnu sliku o Romima i s njima povezanim pojmovima (kao \u0161to su ideje o romskoj zajednici ili podru\u010dju, izvedbenim stilovima povezanim s Ciganima, etnicitetu, njihovim \u017eivotnim stilovima, itd.), a s druge ju se strane koristi za stvaranje raznih tr\u017ei\u0161nih diskursa o glazbama svijeta (kao \u0161to su iskrenost, osje\u0107aj podru\u010dnosti, egzotika, izvornost, davnina, autenti\u010dnost, i dr.). Unato\u010d tome \u0161to izgledaju raznorodni, ovi diskursi o romskosti \u010desto se preklapaju i redefiniraju ili jedan drugoga zamjenjuju kada ih se koristi u stvaranju tr\u017ei\u0161nih strategija i glazbenih subjektiviteta sudionik\u00e2 te pri promicanju albuma na tr\u017ei\u0161tu. Rasprava se bavi dvojicom najpopularnijih romskih glazbenika na turskom tr\u017ei\u0161tu glazbi svijeta; to su Selim Sesler and H\u00fcsn\u00fc \u015eenlendirici. Pritom su upotrijebljeni podatci iz etnografskih istra\u017eivanja koja je autor s\u00e2m proveo u Istanbulu.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HEIDRUN FRIESE"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Literal Letters. On the Materiality of Words","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263542","wordCount":13036,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[45113,45348],[45633,45768]],"Locations in B":[[31615,31892],[35833,35968]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29704512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09598138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dd5c7f4-6f87-3e3a-87d8-1dc6fc07cc66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29704512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bmjbritmedj"}],"isPartOf":"BMJ: British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29704512","wordCount":56783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"298","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mike Hammond"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Vernacular Modernism 'Film: The First Global Vernacular?' University of London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472777","wordCount":1988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"58","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vicky Lowe"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25165412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Acting with Feeling: Robert Donat, the 'Emotion Chart' and \"The Citadel\" (1938)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165412","wordCount":8476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"This article looks at approaches to film acting in 1930s British Cinema by examining the papers of the actor Robert Donat (1905-1958), now housed in the Donat Archive in the John Rylands University Library, Manchester. Using Donat's original documents, particularly the 'The Emotion Chart', that was used in preparation for his role in \"The Citadel\" (MGM, 1938), it argues that film acting methodologies in Britain were developed from the cross-fertilisation of stage acting and existing film acting practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Jay"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"152c9f72-8789-35b1-a316-814e30ecb361"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43909568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Little Shopgirls Enter the Public Sphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909568","wordCount":4815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"122","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Louise Roberts"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2167545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4f840bf-b330-3283-b182-a11d3a9cefd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2167545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"684","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-684","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Samson and Delilah Revisited: The Politics of Women's Fashion in 1920s France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2167545","wordCount":15820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lester W. 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This has been added to in recent years by examination of the ways in which bodily knowledge was used as the basis of governance in industrial societies. There is likewise now a significant modern literature on exploration and colonialism. Here we link these two domains; using the examples of Africa and North America we investigate the ways in which the surgical opening of the body and the exploration and colonization of the earth were deeply related enterprises. We make this linkage in several ways: the shared cultures of manliness and heroism, through the social history of professions, the epistemological similarities in the objects of knowledge, and through everyday practices. We conclude that both enterprises were related colonizations, rooted in modern industrial capitalism, one of the body the other of foreign territory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark W. Van Wienen"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60005500-242a-3790-8530-0f1e23e9d146"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MEN (AND WOMEN) OF IRON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421854","wordCount":15463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":"LABOR, POWER, AND THE RAILROAD IN WILLA CATHER'S NOVELS","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt2b.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837622164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"966dbdec-5490-322d-8322-ae4612b805a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1wxt2b.11"}],"isPartOf":"The Transatlantic Sixties","keyphrase":["postmodernism","gombrowicz","lyotard","tomasz basiuk","tomasz","fiction","aesthetic","hassan","literary","witold gombrowicz"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"202","pagination":"202-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fiction in the 1960s and the Notion of Change:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt2b.11","wordCount":8865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The current fiscal and, in some places, political crisis, which includes insurgencies and massive demonstrations taking place in the US and in some European and Arab countries seems reminiscent of the social and political turmoil associated with the 1960s. With events connected to the civil rights movement, as well as the 1969 student riots in Paris and in Warsaw, the Prague Spring, and the Stonewall Inn riots in New York, that the same year, the decade has gone down in history as a time in which a demand for change was especially vivid. Popular culture has since canonized the 1960s","subTitle":"American and European Concepts of Postmodernism","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saloni Mathur"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b63f50ac-c387-3e27-94fd-04a4a82f8de9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Diasporic Body Double: The Art of the Singh Twins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068465","wordCount":8676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Eamon"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25622088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"812fda53-88c8-3581-bbf4-ccdd65c7cda0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25622088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25622088","wordCount":2311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-07-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5aa9b095-a3eb-3f50-a7ce-1e00a08b593c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23483004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483004","wordCount":41049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1952-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41235883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be40924f-70c7-34b6-a778-fa576860562b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41235883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41235883","wordCount":16216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bradley C. Livezey"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40168337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00786594"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214348"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7115060-a332-38ef-a82e-d705c2c150e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40168337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ornithmono"}],"isPartOf":"Ornithological Monographs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":662.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-x, 1-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Evolution of Flightlessness in Rails (Gruiformes: Rallidae): Phylogenetic, Ecomorphological, and Ontogenetic Perspectives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40168337","wordCount":307464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"53","publisher":"American Ornithologists' Union","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"More than 50 species of flightless rails (Gruiformes: Rallidae) have been discovered on islands throughout the world, including members from most of the tribes and genera of the family. In the present study, qualitative and morphometric analysis of 3,220 study skins, more than 1,200 associated (complete and partial) skeletons, approximately 4,000 disassociated subfossil elements, and pectoral dissections of 41 fluid-preserved specimens formed the primary basis for investigation. Analyses emphasized statistical comparisons of flightless species with closest flighted relatives, augmented by analyses of data on body mass, wing areas, wing lengths, clutch sizes, egg dimensions, and ecophysiological parameters. These were integrated with a companion cladistic analysis and current evolutionary theory. Flightless members of the Rallidae span more than two orders of magnitude in body mass. Univariate comparisons of skin specimens confirmed a repeated pattern of relatively or absolutely shortened wings and (with a few exceptions) tails in flightless taxa. Greatest reductions in relative wing size were evident in Habroptila wallacii, Gallirallus australis-group, Tricholimnas spp., Habropteryx insignis, Amaurornis ineptus, and Tribonyx mortierii. These shifts were confounded by diverse changes in body size; most flightless species were characterized by increases in body size of various magnitudes (greatest in Porphyrio mantelligroup, Nesotrochis debooyi, Gallirallus australis-group, Tricholimnas lafresnayanus, Aphanapteryx bonasia, Erythromachus leguati, Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi, and Amaurornis ineptus), whereas a minority showed substantial decreases (Cabalus modestus), modest decreases (Dryolimnas aldabranus, Rallus recessus, Gallirallus wakensis, Atlantisia rogersi, most flightless Porzana, and Tribonyx hodgenorum), or virtual stasis (Porzana palmeri) in directly measured or estimated body masses. Sexual dimorphism was significant in virtually all external dimensions, although magnitudes of these differences were substantially less than within-sex differences between congeners. Although confounded by subspecific variation in some taxa, indications were found of inflated variance in some external dimensions (e.g., tail length) of flightless species relative to flighted relatives (e.g., Amaurornis ineptus). Limited data on wing loadings--ratios of body mass divided by area of wings--confirmed that two flightless species had significantly higher values than flighted relatives of similar size. Only the estimate for bulky Porphyrio hochstetteri exceeded the \"threshold of flightlessness\" of Meunier, whereas the value for tiny, flightless Porzana atra was roughly one fourth of the threshold value. The latter indicates the inapplicability of this criterion in taxonomic groups (e.g., Rallidae) in which reductions of the pectoral musculature are critical to flightlessness. Principal component analyses (PCAs) and canonical analyses (CAs) of studyskins provided multidimensional discrimination of species and sexes within key clades with respect to both size and shape. These not only confirmed the variably pronounced reductions in relative wing length and overall size in flightless species indicated by univariate analyses, but revealed that corresponding multivariate shifts were exceptionally great in Porphyrio hochstetteri, Porzana sandwichensis, and Amaurornis ineptus, and that sexual dimorphism was exaggerated in P. hochstetteri, Habroptila wallacii, Gallirallus owstoni, and Cabalus modestus. PCAs of lengths of extracted remiges revealed that flightless species, in addition to differences in overall size, were characterized by disproportionately short (in extreme cases, absent) distal primary remiges (i.e., had more rounded wings). Remiges displayed several important trends associated with flightlessness: reductions in length relative to body size; variably pronounced changes in shape; disproportionate shortening of the distalmost remiges, resulting in comparatively rounded wings; losses of the distalmost one or two remiges primarii and several remiges secundarii (a minority of taxa); and microanatomical reductions in the integrity of margins of vanes (\"fringing\"). Univariate comparisons confirmed the relative and (in some cases) absolute reductions in lengths of wing elements, and also quantified the reductions in dimensions of elements of the pectoral girdle and widths of appendicular elements. These shifts were accompanied by increased size of the cranium and pelvic apparatus in a number of flightless taxa (e.g., Porphyrio hochstetteri, Gallirallus australis-group, Amaurornis ineptus, and Tribonyx mortierii). Subfossil coots (Fulica chathamensis-group and F. newtoni) largely qualify as allometrically enlarged versions of typical congeners, comparable to two large Andean coots (Fulica cornuta and F. gigantea). Univariate sexual dimorphism was significant in most rallids. However, intersexual differences in bill lengths of several subfossil rails (Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi, Aphanapteryx bonasia, and possibly Cabalus modestus) were exceptionally great and suggestive of intersexual differences in feeding niche. Bivariate correlations within flightless species differed from those for flighted species, notably in the low correlations between most sternal measurements and other osteological variables, a pattern indicative of the virtual disjunction between sternum and other skeletal elements in flightless species. Comparisons of proportions within the pectoral limb revealed that the antebrachium, carpometacarpus, and (to a generally lesser degree) the phalanges were disproportionately short and the brachium was disproportionately long in flightless species. These patterns and the disproportionately robust alulae in flightless rails are consistent with the effects of two largely perpendicular developmental axes acting on both the skeletal and muscular derivatives of the mesoderm in the avian pectoral limb: a primary, proximal-distal growth axis; and a secondary, cranial-caudal growth axis that principally affects the manus. Proportions within the pelvic limb showed a diversity of shifts associated with the loss of flight, one of the most marked being a disproportionate elongation of the pedal digits in highly aquatic Fulica. Ratios of humerus length divided by femur length provided a remarkably robust indicator of flight capacity of rallids (with the exception of natatorial Fulica), with ratios for flighted taxa averaging above 0.90, whereas those for flightless taxa averaged below 0.90. A PCA of detailed matrices of skulls displayed the diversity of size and bill manifested by species of the Rallidae, among which the most extreme bill shapes (and probably foraging modes) were those of several flightless species (e.g., Capellirallus karamu, Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi, Aphanapteryx bonasia, and Erythromachus leguati). Pectoral allomorphosis (intraspecific allometry) displayed higher slopes in many flightless species, consistent with termination of pectoral growth at an earlier stage of skeletal development through heterochrony. CAs of skeletal measurements within clades confirmed relative magnitudes of shifts related to loss of flight that were broadly consistent with those apparent in PCAs, and confirmed significant increases in sexual dimorphism in most flightless lineages. Qualitative changes associated with flightlessness were found in most pectoral elements (especially the humerus and sternum), with many extending to the extinct adzebills (Gruiformes: Aptornithidae), and corroborated homoplasy among flightless species. Tallies of these apomorphies indicated that the most-derived flightless lineages were Porphyrio hochstetteri, Habroptila wallacii, Gallirallus australis-group, Cabalus modestus, Capellirallus karamu, and Diaphorapteryx hawkinsi. Comparisons of the pectoral musculature of rails revealed that reductions in bulk and cranial extents of mm. pectoralis et supracoracoideus were the most conspicuous myological changes. As a percentage of mean body mass, these underwent reductions among flightless taxa as high as 15% (Gallirallus australis and Tribonyx mortierii) and as low as 5-6% (Dryolimnas aldabranus and Gallinula comeri). Also typical of most flightless rails was an increase in the prominence of m. cucullaris capitis pars clavicularis (associated with the caudal regression of the apex carina sterni), attenuation of mm. biceps brachii et humerotriceps, greater distal extent of m. pronator superficialis relative to the underlying (foreshortened) radius, and a corresponding increase in the impressio m. brachialis relative to the ulna. A minority of flightless rails also showed variably pronounced weakening of fibrous portions of m. rhomboideus profundus, m. flexor digitorum superficialis, and m. ulnometacarpalis ventralis, and increased conformational variation in several muscles of the manus (mm. abductor alulae capita dorsale et ventrale, and m. extensor brevis alulae). PCAs of mean muscle measurements indicated greatest morphometric shifts in Gallirallus australis, G. wakensis, Atlantisia rogersi, Porzana palmeri, and Gallinula comeri, patterns not entirely congruent with reductions in breast muscles. A correspondence analysis of ecomorphological variables principally discriminated three groups: small crakes on small, extremely isolated islands (Porzana palmeri and P. atra), large terrestrial species from New Zealand (Porphyrio hochstetteri and Gallirallus australis), and robust, aquatic species from moderately large islands (Habroptila wallacii, Amaurornis ineptus, and Tribonyx mortierii). Most flightless rails manifest variably pronounced increases in size, and in accordance with the substantial literature on giantism, these shifts appear to confer selective advantages related to thermodynamics, procurement of mates, territoriality, capacity for fasting, and interspecific competition. These gains were accompanied by negative implications, including greater total energetic requirements, diminished capacity for stealth, and vulnerability to selected environmental and predatory agents, with the latter contributing to the minority of flightless rails showing dwarfism. Changes in body size are accompanied by allometric changes in numerous, fundamental ecophysiological parameters, among which are several critical to flight capacity. Departures from familial isometry in relative wing size accompany flightlessness in most cases, but in rails reductions in pectoral musculature (and the associated skeleton) appear to be paramount, changes that were associated with variably pronounced changes in the integument, modifications in bill shape, increased sexual dimorphism, energetically efficient reductions in basal metabolic rates, and changes in reproductive and dietary parameters. The latter are consistent with r-K shifts in life histories, and most of the ecological changes are typical of insular birds. Heterochrony, combining pectoral paedomorphosis with (in most taxa) peramorphosis of the axial and pelvic complexes, appears to underlie most anatomical apomorphies related to flightlessness in rails. Morphological and ecological changes in flightless rails provide a strong qualitative analogy with those of vertebrate and invertebrate endemics of caves (troglomorphs). Phylogenetic reconstructions of rallids are replete with morphological homoplasy, apparent irreversibility of the apomorphy associated with flightlessness, and only a few candidates for speciation following the loss of flight. Many rails show metapopulational demographic characteristics, and a number of migratory species show high vagrancy and qualify as consummate colonists of islands. These qualities suggest that a number of flighted rails, especially a core group with high fecundities and longdistance migratory patterns, may maintain dispersal polymorphisms in which a minority of progeny are predisposed to vagrancy and colonization of insular habitats. Insular colonizations occasioned thereby essentially represent \"permanent migratory stopovers\" followed by evolutionary refinements for year-round residency. The highly convergent morphology of flightless rails indicates a shared, readily triggered, canalized bifurcation in ontogeny that leads to the morphological and physiological changes that result in flightlessness. Conditional advantages of resources redirected in flightless lineages (e.g., conversion of investments in musculature, pectoral skeletons, and metabolic characteristics) are substantial, as indicated by the exorbitant anatomical and physiological requirements of the primary capacity surrendered, migration. The potential for this transformation may be preserved through dispersal polymorphisms and bethedging against overdependence on ephemeral, variable, natal breeding locales. Alternative patterns of dispersal also may be accelerated in some rallids through selectively maintained, environmentally induced plasticity through threshold traits or developmental reactionnorms within small demes subject to founder effects, genetic drift, and population bottlenecks. Distributions of flightless rails are explainable by a complex history of colonizations by flighted ancestors, a scant number of colonizations or nearisland expansions by flightless lineages, and extinctions related to small demes, marginal habitats, earthquakes, volcanoes, El Ni\u00f1o-La Nina events, and (especially) tsunamis of islands during recent millennia. Many flightless rails encountered ecological opportunities beyond those of continental confamilials. Selective advantages under these circumstances were accrued through decreased clutch size, increased egg size, and protracted developmental periods. Flightlessness in rails represents the selectively advantageous, ontogenetically mediated conversion of anatomical and caloric assets of the pectoral apparatus and associated metabolic parameters related to flight toward multiple evolutionary alternatives of intensified selective importance in insular habitats and the adoption of a nonmigratory lifestyle. The evolutionary scenario can be summarized as follows: migration-imposed anatomical and physiological requirements for migration preconditioned key rallids for a conversion of resources; vagrancy (possibly enhanced by polymorphism of dispersal and accelerated cladogenetic capacity maintained among metapopulations) provided opportunities for insular colonization; one or a suite of similar alternative, heterochronic, developmental avenue(s) retained by key rallids (perhaps triggered and hastened as threshold traits or by developmental reaction norms) facilitated the anatomical and physiological transformation to the local optimal, flightless phenotype(s) after colonization; successful colonization may have been advanced by differences in preferred stopover habitats between sexes and ages, and the acceleration of kin-selected altruism among close relatives migrating in concert; concomitant changes in size carried multiple allometrically related changes in physiology and metabolism; and despite a resilience to natural disasters (notably tsunamis), anthropogenic agencies ultimately led to extinction for most flightless lineages effectively by breaching key aspects of insularity essential to their provision of refuge. Accordingly, the \"ideal avian colonist\" would possess a combination of a capacity to modulate metabolic and physiological parameters; manifest dispersal polymorphism that includes long-distance, gregarious vagrancy as one component tactic; comparatively high sexual dimorphism or a potential for such; and expanded ontogenetic variance and cladogenesis that facilitates evolutionary changes in size and pectoral paedomorphosis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Gibbs Hill"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3de75037-de2b-3d16-9fd9-8708fbd20f50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between English and Guoyu: \"The English Student, English Weekly,\" and the Commercial Press's Correspondence Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491053","wordCount":14403,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[7928,8014]],"Locations in B":[[65840,65927]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gertrud Seidmann","Robert L. Wilkins"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de62ad98-1e8c-3bf2-8f43-6bfc212fe469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41829502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":122.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1, 3, 5-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"NATHANIEL MARCHANT, GEM-ENGRAVER 1739-1816","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829502","wordCount":61590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malcolm Baker"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Squabby Cupids and Clumsy Graces': Garden Sculpture and Luxury in Eighteenth-Century England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360591","wordCount":8259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Binstock"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rembrandt's Paint","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167480","wordCount":15840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"36","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avigdor W. G. Pos\u00e8q"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919064"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bac12280-3d47-3923-9ad5-e287c535f897"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1483684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibushistoriae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus et Historiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On Mirror Copying of the Sistine Vault and Mannerist \"Invenzioni\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483684","wordCount":11223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"45","publisher":"IRSA s.c.","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"In Mannerist painting \"invenzione\" frequently coincides with citations of works done by predecessors which looks like the opposite of what one would describe as inventiveness. In discussing some of the adaptations of the pre-existent motifs, the author proposes to show that although the Mannerist apprehension of invention is not compatible with what is now understood by this term, their modus operandi anticipates the procedures which we recognise as signs of creativity in modern art. Because critical appreciation of Mannerist painting was based on prestigious precedents, inventiveness, as we know it, was not considered a pre-requisite. Creative innovation remained the privilege of the truly great masters whom lesser practitioners were expected to emulate. At a time when artistic training consisted in copying, more or less explicit citations from earlier works would be aesthetically acceptable and even commended. The Mannerist citations, however, are seldom replicas: The poetic license of the painters is especially evident in their adaptations of the scenes painted on the Sistine vault, which in the sixteenth century became a sort of academy of drawing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Stern"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24311882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420220"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51785050"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235681"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6278632b-1e73-3154-af42-c7d43a712db4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24311882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univtorolawj"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Toronto Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Civil law"],"title":"COPYRIGHT ORIGINALITY AND JUDICIAL ORIGINALITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24311882","wordCount":16346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Toronto Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"Whereas eligibility for copyright protection requires originality, that criterion is not normally applied to judicial opinions. Like other forms of legal prose, judgments are collaborative products that reflect a wide range of imitative writing practices, including quotation, paraphrase, and pastiche. Yet the definition of originality in copyright law has important commonalities with the generic expectations associated with judicial decisions. One way in which judges show that they have considered all sides of a dispute is to explain the outcome by means of an independently produced rationale. Precisely because judicial prose typically includes a significant amount of copying, however, it is doubtful that any requirement concerning original prose is desirable or could be consistently applied. To explore that issue, this article considers the least demanding standard that might plausibly satisfy the parties \u2013 namely, a standard demanding that judges display their own skill and judgment in every part of the judgment that may determine the outcome. This requirement, it turns out, would be difficult to apply and would promote meritless appeals. The analysis shows why judicial copying is different from plagiarism, and this distinction sheds light on recent disputes over various forms of copying in trial judgments, involving copying from the pleadings (with or without attribution) and unattributed copying from law journal articles or from other judgments by the same judge or by others.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/229586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd9ac4b7-6add-33bf-9f73-4e69b2edeb0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/229586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":227.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-11+13-205+207-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Ninety-Seventh Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (to January 1972)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/229586","wordCount":161818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick L. L\u00ea","David Mass\u00e9","Thomas Paris"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24587112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14808986"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56839394"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004255556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"718aa272-118c-3ba5-97e3-6238c1ef4814"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24587112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejourartsmana"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Arts Management","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Technological Change at the Heart of the Creative Process: Insights From the Videogame Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24587112","wordCount":11631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"HEC - Montr\u00e9al - Chair of Arts Management","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"While technological change has been much studied in the arts field, it has never been considered in terms of the creative process from a micro perspective. The authors analyze the creative process in the context of a cultural industry characterized by both digital plasticity and the intertwining of creativity and technology: the videogame industry. They use a case study approach to examine the extent to which technology, when used as a tool for creation, interacts with the creative process and highlights the relationship between human creativity and materiality. The authors identify two interconnected processes: the design of gameplays for next-gen consoles and the design of new games initiated by improvements to an existing engine. They find that digital plasticity enables constant inquiry and a reworking and accumulation of artifacts. They identify several configurations of human and material agency linked to two concepts: triggering and alignment. Finally, they characterize this interplay as a process of \"creative negotiation\" by stressing its nonlinear and unpredictable nature. These findings refine our understanding of the creative process in the cultural and creative industries by stressing the importance of materiality at a micro level, suggesting ongoing change in technology rather than revolutionary disruptions at the macro level. The results also enrich the technology literature by adding a more nuanced account due to the specific open-ended nature of the cultural industries. La question des progr\u00e8s technologiques a largement \u00e9t\u00e9 trait\u00e9e dans la litt\u00e9rature du management des arts. Cependant, les perspectives consid\u00e9rant cette question sous l'angle plus micro des processus cr\u00e9atifs ont \u00e9t\u00e9 n\u00e9glig\u00e9es. Cet article analyse le processus de cr\u00e9ation dans le contexte d'une industrie cr\u00e9ative caract\u00e9ris\u00e9e par une forte imbrication entre cr\u00e9ativit\u00e9 et technologie: l'industrie des jeux vid\u00e9o. \u00c0 partir d'une \u00e9tude de cas portant sur une entreprise de production de jeux, il montre comment les progr\u00e8s de la technologie sont pris en compte dans les processus de cr\u00e9ation. L'\u00e9tude de cas, r\u00e9alis\u00e9e au sein de l'entreprise Ubisoft, nous permet de cerner deux phases du processus de cr\u00e9ation impliquant des d\u00e9veloppements technologiques: la conception de jouabilit\u00e9 (gameplay) pour les consoles de nouvelle g\u00e9n\u00e9ration et la conception de nouveaux jeux initi\u00e9e par l'am\u00e9lioration d'un moteur de jeu. L'analyse des r\u00e9sultats s'appuie sur la litt\u00e9rature sur la technologie et les agences humaine et mat\u00e9rielle. Nous mettons ainsi en \u00e9vidence une interaction entre technologie et cr\u00e9ativit\u00e9 que nous qualifions de \"n\u00e9gociation cr\u00e9ative\". Notre contribution est double. Tout d'abord, elle nous permet d'affiner notre compr\u00e9hension des processus de cr\u00e9ation dans les industries culturelles et cr\u00e9atives, en soulignant l'importance de la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 \u00e0 un niveau microscopique. Nous \u00e9tudions un changement technologique permanent, par opposition \u00e0 des ruptures technologiques r\u00e9volutionnaires op\u00e9rant \u00e0 un niveau macroscopique. En second lieu, cette \u00e9tude enrichit la litt\u00e9rature sur la technologie en proposant une vision plus nuanc\u00e9e \u00e9tant donn\u00e9e la nature ouverte propre aux industries culturelles et cr\u00e9atives. El tema de los avances tecnol\u00f3gicos ha sido ampliamente tratado en las publicaciones sobre la gesti\u00f3n de las artes. Sin embargo, se han descuidado los puntos de vista que consideran este tema desde el \u00e1ngulo m\u00e1s micro, el de los procesos creativos. Este art\u00edculo analiza el proceso de creaci\u00f3n en el contexto de una industria creativa caracterizada por un fuerte enlazamiento entre creatividad y tecnolog\u00eda: la industria de los videojuegos. Partiendo de un estudio de caso sobre una empresa de producci\u00f3n de juegos, este muestra c\u00f3mo se tienen en cuenta los progresos tecnol\u00f3gicos en los procesos creativos. El estudio de caso, que se llev\u00f3 a cabo en el seno de la empresa Ubisoft, nos permite identificar dos fases del proceso creativo que incumben los desarrollos tecnol\u00f3gicos: la concepci\u00f3n de experiencia de juego (gameplay) para las consolas de nueva generaci\u00f3n y la concepci\u00f3n de nuevos juegos iniciada por la mejora de un motor de juego. El an\u00e1lisis de los resultados se apoya sobre la documentaci\u00f3n que trata de tecnolog\u00eda y de agenciamiento humano y material. Demostramos as\u00ed una interacci\u00f3n entre tecnolog\u00eda y creatividad que llamamos \"negociaci\u00f3n creativa\". Nuestra contribuci\u00f3n se sit\u00faa a dos niveles. En primer lugar, nos permite afinar nuestro entendimiento de los procesos de creaci\u00f3n en las industrias culturales y creativas al subrayar la importancia de la materialidad al nivel microsc\u00f3pico. Estudiamos un cambio tecnol\u00f3gico permanente, opuestamente a las disrupciones tecnol\u00f3gicas revolucionarias que operan al nivel macrosc\u00f3pico. En segundo lugar, este estudio viene a enriquecer lo publicado sobre la tecnolog\u00eda al proponer una visi\u00f3n m\u00e1s matizada en vista de la caracter\u00edstica apertura de las industrias culturales y creativas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-02-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47134a0f-c362-3917-8863-89b45f9ae9f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23365972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23365972","wordCount":31793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6121","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"339","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip Edmonds"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.28","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925261042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84db4c02-d517-367f-b76b-794cfb5eac59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.28"}],"isPartOf":"Tilting at Windmills","keyphrase":["australian","australian literary","pag web","web accessed","weekend australian","pag web accessed","australian literature","spec issue","robyn sheahan","literary studies"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"279","pagination":"279-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Works cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.28","wordCount":3516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isabelle Havelange","Christine Bournerie","Daniel Dayen","Isabelle Durand","Anne-Marie Fabry"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02216280"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d73e488-fcd9-3ec1-8256-a4e75fc96b7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histoireeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Histoire de l'education","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":316.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5, 7-273, 275-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE D'HISTOIRE DE L'\u00c9DUCATION FRAN\u00c7AISE: Titres parus au cours de l'ann\u00e9e 1993 et suppl\u00e9ments des ann\u00e9es ant\u00e9rieures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157996","wordCount":111629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"71\/72","publisher":"Ecole normale sup\u00e9rieure de lyon","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1932-10-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42845428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00934901-d8f8-35e7-be53-1e81a312376b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42845428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1932,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42845428","wordCount":2936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William P. Bintz"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23047629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b09be2cf-f46f-3be6-9212-4be6a27bfee6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23047629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middschoj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle School Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Way-In\" Books Encourage Exploration in Middle Grades Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23047629","wordCount":8667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association for Middle Level Education (AMLE)","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN F. BUCK","WALTER G. HJERTSTEDT","ROBERT I. WHITE","JOSEPHINE MACK","GEORGE A. BEERS","COVERDALE RENNISON","DANIEL F. O'HEARN","JOHANNA H. DONIAT","MARY E. COURTENAY","HARRY KEELER","EDNA C. DUNLAP","FLORA E. EDDY","SOPHIE THIELGARD","LORETTO D. KENNEY"],"datePublished":"1931-12-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42842152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d445f07-e1d4-3700-acf8-5482c67f6545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42842152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"400","pagination":"pp. 400-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Some Senior High Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42842152","wordCount":3103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"17","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c57a619a-503f-3b0b-864f-f45cd86f082b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1914405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":492.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Biographical Listings of Members","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914405","wordCount":1153002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2609b5cb-1892-32bb-ae67-2b7f706f8d1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/957777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"912","pageStart":"822","pagination":"pp. 822-912","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957777","wordCount":21054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1628","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Arbour"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24304069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0006128X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc0f817f-3e41-36b7-9d71-258b90b8c258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24304069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papebiblsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"James Franklin, Apprentice, Artisan, Dissident, and Teacher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24304069","wordCount":8285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonidas K. Cheliotis"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.36.4.337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49846124"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236970"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bb14004-8619-37b3-853b-ee65e3a0eaee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajsocicahican.36.4.337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and Narcissism: A Frommian Perspective on Destructiveness under Authoritarianism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.36.4.337","wordCount":9839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Abstract. This article offers a sympathetic appraisal of Erich Fromm's concept of narcissism as it relates to the emergence, sustenance, and resolution of authoritarian violence. The discussion is first placed within the methodological debate over the analytic operations that are required for an adequate understanding of authoritarian violence, explaining why a psychoanalytic perspective is necessary. The focus then shifts to Fromm's take on the Freudian concept of narcissism, before proceeding to explore in some depth his account of the symbolic mechanisms and contextual climate that must combine in practice in order for narcissistic energies to be channeled into authoritarianism and violence. Attention in this regard is paid both to the populace and governing elites. The article concludes with a short exposition of Fromm's notion of benign narcissism, from its specific content to the conditions of its possibility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas E. Weir, Jr."],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40292806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b7f53f0-0c7b-3281-986d-09376a45f10e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40292806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"485","pagination":"pp. 485-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"News Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40292806","wordCount":7274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DULCE G\u00d3MEZ","RAFAEL CASTILLO ZAPATA","CLINTON KRUTE"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23041528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07433204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e324fc2f-72df-32e5-b5bd-636d26486652"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23041528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bomb"}],"isPartOf":"BOMB","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Humanities","Language & Literature","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"DULCE G\u00d3MEZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23041528","wordCount":4883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"110","publisher":"New Art Publications","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernadette Baker"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a878e23-aa24-3596-97a8-f3caf8a73ea9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30054792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Animal Magnetism and Curriculum History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30054792","wordCount":16721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"This article elaborates the impact that crises of authority provoked by animal magnetism, mesmerism, and hypnosis in the 19th century had for field formation in American education. Four layers of analysis elucidate how curriculum history's repetitive focus on public school policy and classroom practice became possible. First, the article surveys external conditions of possibility for the enactment of compulsory public schooling. Second, \"internal\" conditions of possibility for the formation of educational objects (e.g., types of children) are documented via the processes of diff\u00e9rance that were generated from within the experiences of confinement. Third, the article maps how these were interpenetrated by animal magnetic debates that were lustered and planished in education's emerging field, including impact upon behavior management practices, the contouring of expertise and authority, the role of Will in intelligence testing and child development theories, and the redefinition of public and private. Last, the article examines implications for curriculum history, whether policy-or practice-oriented, especially around the question of influence, the theorization of child mind, and philosophies of Being.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Haines"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23133920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0372d0d1-b4b1-35f9-93ef-a91bade594eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23133920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"LIFE IN CRISIS: THE BIOPOLITICAL AMBIVALENCE OF JOSEPH CONRAD'S \"THE SECRET AGENT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23133920","wordCount":15070,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[82919,82983]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diarmuid Costello","Margaret Iversen"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e3a0f65-63fc-3dc4-86b0-854a0332f00b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/667419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"693","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-693","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Introduction: Photography between Art History and Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667419","wordCount":6038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul F. 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Because of the pluralism of possible value systems and orders of worth, tensions and critiques are an important empirical phenomenon to be addressed in the health care system. The contribution sketches main positions and perspectives of EC in the analysis of values, medical professions, and ethics of datafication, quantification, classification (related to health and health care institutions), and of social inequalities as well as in the analysis of health policies and health capitalism. Furthermore, the COVID-19 pandemic and its consequences are discussed from the standpoint of EC and, finally, social trends and perspectives in times of the pandemic are outlined.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24188492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569508573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46f76bce-1a8d-327e-836e-87f15059ec60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24188492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglassstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Glass Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CHECK LIST of Recently Published Articles and Books on Glass","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24188492","wordCount":41811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Corning Museum of Glass","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aris Sarafianos"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c86324af-384d-324a-b22a-b3b229924d92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Natural History of Man and the Politics of Medical Portraiture in Manchester","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067227","wordCount":14227,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann C. Colley"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43156860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10646051"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"930287fb-af29-3786-a825-58c655b44237"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43156860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"writingontheedge"}],"isPartOf":"Writing on the Edge","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From the Photograph to the Written Text: Writing as Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43156860","wordCount":4311,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[43175,43957]],"Locations in B":[[22496,22563],[22673,23456]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jimena Canales"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/375953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc2f9d0b-8be9-3409-81af-3c74513a4313"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/375953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"613","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-613","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Photogenic Venus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/375953","wordCount":16852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":"Abstract During the late nineteenth century, scientists around the world disagreed as to the types of instruments and methods that should be used for determining the most important constant of celestial mechanics: the solar parallax. Venus\u2019s 1874 transit across the sun was seen as the best opportunity for ending decades of debate. However, a mysterious \u201cblack drop\u201d that appeared between Venus and the sun and individual differences in observations of the phenomenon brought traditional methods into disrepute. To combat these difficulties, the astronomer Jules Janssen devised a controversial new instrument, the \u201cphotographic revolver,\u201d that photographed Venus at regular intervals. Another solution came from physicists, who rivaled the astronomers\u2019 dominance in precision measurements by deducing the solar parallax from physical measurements of the speed of light. Yet other astronomers relied on drawings and well\u2010trained observers. The new space emerging from this debate was characterized by a decline in faith in (nonstandardized, nonreproducible) photography and in (pure) geometry and by the growing realization of the importance of alternative elements needed for establishing scientific truths: power and authority, skill and discipline, standardization, mechanical reproducibility, and theatricality. By examining the \u201ccinematographic turn\u201d in science and its alternatives, this essay brings to light unexplored multidisciplinary connections that contribute to the histories of psychology, philosophy, physics, and film studies.","subTitle":"The \u201cCinematographic Turn\u201d and Its Alternatives in Nineteenth\u2010Century France","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4463096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b2df422-ace0-3647-9574-fa6ddf03f2ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4463096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4463096","wordCount":24829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN JOSEPH","MARGUERITE JOHNSON"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040975"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31864718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79b9d848-c0b5-332b-9648-8e6944e06ff5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44578498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arethusa"}],"isPartOf":"Arethusa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231121","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Cunningham"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c427752-e09b-35a8-aa37-14951d1d2907"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Moreover, in the past 20 years, professional historians at Colonial Williamsburg have become articulate on-site critics of the epistemology of authenticity as they promulgate a historiography currently popular in history museums and in the academy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Morris"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9050b73-b804-33ef-924c-5281096a9665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Sound of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072631","wordCount":7210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"This essay conceptualizes the circulation of memory that we now designate as \"postmemory\" in acoustic terms, thus rethinking the role of sound within cultural memory. By exploring several key iconic sounds that generate German and Jewish memory-Hitler's voice, Klezmer music-this essay shifts the focus from the visual found in much recent critical work on Holocaust representation to the aural and suggests that the sites of memory must also be conceptualized as the sound of memory. Can an exploration of sound demarcate the lines that shape and define German and Jewish memory? And can a turn to the aural help us rethink the trope of the unspeakability of the Holocaust?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MATTHEW GUMPERT"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c264d483-2f7c-384b-87e2-296c83a77d10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Venus de Kitsch: Or, The Passion of the Venus de Milo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124291","wordCount":11461,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14495,14751]],"Locations in B":[[48764,49020]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Fuchs"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddf2.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911534044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"917ac42e-7ae5-3285-9319-88221eb15448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5vddf2.5"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Theory of Communication","keyphrase":["adorno","luk\u00e1cs","knowledge","culture","social","commodity","dialectic","machlup","stalinism","auschwitz"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"75","pagination":"75-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Business","Sociology","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theodor W. Adorno and the Critical Theory of Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddf2.5","wordCount":14536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This chapter asks: what insights of Adorno\u2019s philosophy can be used for grounding a critical theory of knowledge?It is a common prejudice that Adorno was a pessimist, saw humans as passively manipulated, considered instrumental society to be without alternative, and thought political change was hopeless. What many want to make us believe is that Adorno\u2019s theory of knowledge is a theory of ideological manipulation that creates and reproduces false consciousness. Such prejudice and its repetition can keep theoretically interested readers from exploring the wealth and richness of Adorno\u2019s works beyond theCulture Industry<\/em>chapter in theDialectic of Enlightenment<\/em>","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan A. Feigenbaum"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057410"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205048"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227222"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The China Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Soldiers, Weapons and Chinese Development Strategy: The Mao Era Military in China's Economic and Institutional Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656082","wordCount":15093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"158","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Chandler"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44087006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63c91b1d-1547-3914-9821-7e39a3f9b749"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44087006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reading Atmospheres: The Ecocritical Potential of Gernot B\u00f6hme's Aesthetic Theory of Nature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44087006","wordCount":6359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annette Michelson"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caf6f42b-16c7-3657-85c0-1974d7e6f329"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 30-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dr. Crase and Mr. Clair","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778234","wordCount":7964,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43740,43957]],"Locations in B":[[45311,45522]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matt Losada"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ede969e-3b99-3b97-8319-4e4070a36c83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90011960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"EL CINE DE LA REVOLUCI\u00d3N","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90011960","wordCount":5095,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[38149,38365]],"Locations in B":[[29104,29320]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"175","publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"DANGEROUS SPECTATORSHIP AND INSTRUMENTALIZATION OF THE FILMIC IMAGE IN MART\u00cdN LUIS GUZM\u00c1N\u2019S EL \u00c1GUILA Y LA SERPIENTE<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MEGAN R. 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Throughout this discussion, the essay attempts to resist the predictable binary that yokes sentimentalism and the avant-garde in a state of irreconcilable enmity, or which pits Stowe, sentimentalism's apotheosis, against the more ambivalent, modernist aesthetics of Cummings. Rather, the essay shows how the ballet scenario relies upon tensions of literary sensibility, perhaps playfully. The essay begins with an examination of Cummings's verbal representation of the ballet's anticipated dances. By emphasizing his own linguistic mastery in the scenario's descriptions of these dances, which are more like poems than performances, Cummings rejects Kleist's famous thesis that the apex of puppetry is achieved only when the puppeteer surrenders his skill to the unseen gravity that moves his puppets. Later sections of the essay show how the doll motif also obscures Cummings's historicism, in true Kleistean fashion, relegating all such commentary on slavery and whatever reflections about it the modern viewer may be induced to have to an unknowable, unseen gravity \u2014\u2014 the cosmic force of comic resemblance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elana Gomel","Stephen A. 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Unconventional trade marks involving sounds, smells and shapes have started appearing on trade mark registries in Europe and the United States. The owners of well-known marks like Coca-Cola, which has long been firmly protected against imitators and \"free riders\", have also not been content with the protection they receive under national laws and have managed apparently to secure even more advantages from national legislatures and international fora. The United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement of 2003 compelled Singapore to strengthen its trade mark laws to encompass these developments. This paper examines unconventional and well-known marks from a comparative, primarily European law, perspective. It argues that the expanded protection accorded to these marks is not self-evidently a good thing in public policy terms. It concludes that re-forming the law is not the same as reforming it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcus Bullock"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccf86c1d-6b0b-3067-bb3b-c4100fd960da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40985296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Replik: Falling Motion, Endless Moment: Reading to the end of Kafka's \u201cUrteil\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985296","wordCount":14697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":"The way the father in Kafka's \"Das Urteil\" has come to figure as a symbol illustrates the strange fate that overtakes central features of a literary work when symptomatic readings neglect the development of such motifs within the integrity of a narrative. Reading a literary work by fragmenting it and interpreting each motif outside its situation and function in the body of the text, but instead according to the authority of an extraneous system of symbolic equivalents, subordinates everything to the incompatible relationship between these authorities. The resulting rampant multiplication of incommensurable meanings inclines critics to give up on the legibility of the text itself, as Andreas H\u00e4rter recently noted in his Monatshefte review essay on Kafka criticism. The theoretical justifications for dismembering and disfiguring the body of a work mainly stress how enjoyably emancipating it is to do so. This paper investigates how enjoyable it may be not to.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. Todd Groce"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565102618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b43f54bc-ab77-342a-ad57-3146121e6200"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23621700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":102.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report of the Georgia Historical Society Fiscal Year 2011","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23621700","wordCount":27546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Georgia Historical Society","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. Hyatt Mayor"],"datePublished":"1964-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"084a0569-3192-37f1-8306-06139b67d609"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3190455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arteducation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"A Historical Survey of Printmaking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3190455","wordCount":4010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willard B. 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Marks"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1e60d9b-4bfa-3950-a9f3-50e55b2d44f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Monad, Database, Remix: Manners of Unfolding in The Last Angel of History<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.112","wordCount":10191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"Abstract Black Audio Film Collective's The Last Angel of History (1996) sketches the artistic and intellectual movements that have come to be called Afrofuturism, which argues that since the great rupture of the Middle Passage, African diaspora people have been doing science fiction, assembling futures from fragments of the past. The film's creative and intellectual energy lie in its manners of unfolding, that is, forms of historiography that would make sense of perceptible artifacts. This essay examines several manners of unfolding, including aniconism, unfolding from fragments, unfolding from a database, fabulation, and unfolding deep history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Faulkner"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2cac250-45cc-370e-8a1b-abfccec1af36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41261499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Musical Automata, \"La R\u00e8gle du jeu\", and the Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261499","wordCount":9911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Morris"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2719143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0c0d4ba-e1a8-36e3-ae83-9de91eb7d3bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2719143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"610","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-610","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Waka and Form, Waka and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2719143","wordCount":23478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank R. 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Scherpe","Brent O. Peterson"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74c5207b-0930-381c-a0d9-28f34683b69b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dramatization and De-Dramatization of \"The End\": The Apocalyptic Consciousness of Modernity and Post-Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354358","wordCount":14038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eamonn Slater","Michel Peillon"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43304129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15586073"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61836861"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"119f0297-4225-3407-afff-7c2a1e8e1d92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43304129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natureculture"}],"isPartOf":"Nature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Science & Mathematics","Sociology","Environmental Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Suburban Front Garden: A Socio-Spatial Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43304129","wordCount":10507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":"This article argues that the physical structure of the front garden and its ecosystem is determined by an ensemble of diverse social and natural processes. The essential social form is that of visuality, an abstract compositional force that provides conventions for assessing objects as well as for reshaping their surface countenance and establishing their location within the garden. Accordingly, the social processes of visuality are materially realized in the labor processes of gardening, while their consumption is mediated through the concrete process of gazing. The identified social processes include the prospect, aesthetic, and panoptic dimensions of visual ity. Labor conceives and creates them, while the physical structures and the natural processes reproduce and maintain them beyond the production time attributed to gardening. But they are increasingly undermined by the natural tendency of the plant ecosystem to grow. Consequently, the essential contradiction of the front garden is how the laws and tendencies of the plant ecosystem act as a countertendency to the social forms of visuality. This article demonstrates that beneath the surface appearance, there exists complex relationships between nature and society in this space we call the front garden.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd418fb6-08a7-320a-9371-c8957ecf4fd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4331033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":157.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Index of Names and Topics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331033","wordCount":67595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. 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These and other questions arise from consideration of a famous photograph of the retinal image formed by the eye of a glowworm in Sigmund Exner\u2019s authoritative treatise on compound eyes of 1892.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Forman"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsps.2007.37.2.271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08909997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45919525"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214626"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa788df1-a962-3901-9248-573900fa72a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hsps.2007.37.2.271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudphysbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"How Lewis Mumford saw science, and art, and himself","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsps.2007.37.2.271","wordCount":33806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"review-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Brickhouse"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"039972a9-17ac-340a-b53f-4f5ab1410742"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2903281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nella Larsen and the Intertextual Geography of Quicksand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903281","wordCount":17445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana State University","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Gunning"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c48c3ef2-47d2-373c-af38-e94977e3e2a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43909560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Miriam Hansen's Preface and Epilogue: Mourning and Media","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909560","wordCount":4911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"122","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-05-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc307f92-13d6-352f-a104-a3e03f3b817b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"1076","pageStart":"913","pagination":"pp. 913-1076","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713158","wordCount":31836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3621","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"144","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. 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My experiences documenting and presenting women engaged in body modification are utilized here, attempting to reconcile the presentation of peoples, lives, and cultures with the creation of a narrative and of a mimesis. In order to be ethical, our creation of ethnographic narratives must constantly be reexamined, and, in the end, perhaps our ethics lie not in our ability to answer, but in our abil to question.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-12-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1714967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b615f3c-ba6a-3b5d-b59b-18ea9e352faf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1714967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"1388","pageStart":"1207","pagination":"pp. 1207-1388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1714967","wordCount":39468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3649","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"146","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01618202"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49342591"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242180"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fee3098d-39c1-3cff-911e-a6b9844117de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarachnology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Arachnology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"658","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-658","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149984","wordCount":2099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Arachnological Society","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Tillis"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afe6bfcc-acef-3e65-a65e-029561e5ce62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Art of Puppetry in the Age of Media Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146776","wordCount":8364,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6637,6743]],"Locations in B":[[4322,4428]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"The microchip has replaced clockworks as the intelligence driving performing objects. What of virtual animation-the magical CGI's or computer graphics images? Tillis considers this question from Walter Benjamin through to Waldo-an \"ergonomic-gonio-kineti-telemetric device.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel K. L. Chua"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2009.62.3.571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c24e6c49-193e-3c44-aa91-88f9db9eb75b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jams.2009.62.3.571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"645","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-645","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beethoven's Other Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2009.62.3.571","wordCount":37517,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[206849,206913]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"Beethoven's Promethean image has been reenforced in recent scholarship by the idea of the \u201cheroic.\u201d Although the escalation of the concept has been recognized as an act of selective hearing based on a handful of \u201cheroic\u201d works, Beethoven's Promethean identity is likely to remain because it embodies the ethical values of a particularly virulent strain of humanism; Beethoven is still employed today to mark the epochal events of human history\u2014from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the atrocities of 9\/11. However, the humanism this hero champions has been accused as a cause of the very inhumanity the music is suppose to erase. To offer an alternative is not difficult\u2014there are many works by the composer that do not conform to the Promethean image; but the alternative would be meaningless if it were merely a matter of registering other topics or narratives without grounding the difference in a set of values that challenge the ethical force of the hero. This article sketches the possibility of such an alternative through the ethics of philosophers such as Emmanuel L\u00e9vinas and Theodor W. Adorno. It explores an-Other humanism in Beethoven both in the sense of an other Beethoven and a humanism founded on the Other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Robinson"],"datePublished":"1902-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43479230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2380534X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43479230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefin2"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report for the Year ... (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1902,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43479230","wordCount":5788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Prita Meier"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2abddbc-6b6d-31de-a5d2-3958418b37b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Objects on the Edge: Swahili Coast Logics of Display","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627024","wordCount":11968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Moseley"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.11","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79a51f6e-f6eb-3659-8471-60c163733cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.11"}],"isPartOf":"Keys to Play","keyphrase":["cambridge","university","translated","oxford","london","musical","mozart","improvisation","american musicological","\u0153uvres compl\u00e8tes"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"365","pagination":"365-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.11","wordCount":22967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAR\u00cdA SOLEDAD FERN\u00c1NDEZ UTRERA"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e782e74e-62c8-3264-87da-035fc3a9048f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ciberculturas, hispanismos y tecnolog\u00eda digital en el nuevo milenio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764096","wordCount":12554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Moseley"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.13","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb362636-dae1-3f81-a774-4433c919e921"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.13"}],"isPartOf":"Keys to Play","keyphrase":["piano sonata","johann","luhmann niklas","ars combinatoria","joseph","cpu bach","v\u00e1clav prokop","friedrich","foucault michel","huizinga johan"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"423","pagination":"423-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.13","wordCount":16517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 E. Lim\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/chiricu.3.1.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02777223"},{"name":"oclc","value":"656694927"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016200526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5973e26d-7858-32a0-bfad-93736ad4d6a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/chiricu.3.1.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiricu"}],"isPartOf":"Chiric\u00fa Journal: Latina\/o Literatures, Arts, and Cultures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sighting Mexican America among the Phantoms: Jesse Trevi\u00f1o, Photorealism, and the Art of Remembrance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/chiricu.3.1.07","wordCount":10778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"This paper discusses the paintings and murals of the artist Jesse Trevi\u00f1o, from San Antonio, Texas, in relation to international art history, the history of Mexican American art, and the general history of Mexican America. Drawing on but revising the conceptual work of UCLA art critic Chon Noriega on \u201cphantom sightings,\u201d I argue that since the 1960s, Mexican American artists have ostensibly turned to the daily visual culture of their community but have transformed such a culture in response to trends in modernist art with the result that they have distanced themselves from this community. I offer two examples: Yolanda M. L\u00f3pez's Portrait of the Artist as the Virgin of Guadalupe and C\u00e9sar Mart\u00ednez's Mona Lupe: The Epitome of Chicano Art. While enormously creative, such art exists within this contradiction. I suggest that such a contradiction has also occurred in other kinds of discourses, such as literature but also scholarly writing. Using the technique of photorealism, itself a dissident tradition in American art, Trevi\u00f1o largely overcomes this contradiction by rendering his native Mexican American community of San Antonio in a far more accessible aesthetic form and in all of its sociological complexity and thus uses his art to forge a stronger community.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1839350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d597badf-d12c-3600-a2a7-d3111f6bde11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1839350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"838","pageStart":"798","pagination":"pp. 798-838","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Historical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1839350","wordCount":18649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26281056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f359cf28-7278-3026-ad0a-eb531b841bf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26281056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26281056","wordCount":2063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy E. Elkins"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d4cb799-cca7-34a0-ad9d-bd137e2f3ce8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43739007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"2011 SAMLA Graduate Student Essay Award Cross-Cultural Kodak: Snapshot Aesthetics in the Fiction of Virginia Woolf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739007","wordCount":7669,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42695,42932]],"Locations in B":[[24432,24668]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Fowler"],"datePublished":"1986-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40789d16-3c7a-37e1-96f4-1c600de1f279"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25557071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557071","wordCount":2218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"27","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin H. D. Buchloh"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca21a4ec-9b37-3e85-97b3-3718eeaf9e56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Figures of Authority, Ciphers of Regression: Notes on the Return of Representation in European Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778374","wordCount":11547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Earle"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3525924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3525924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"643","pageStart":"608","pagination":"pp. 608-643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Taste, Power, and Trying to Understand Op. 36: British Attempts to Popularize Schoenberg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3525924","wordCount":21126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"From the late 1950s onwards, significant parts of the British musical establishment became involved in vigorous proselytizing activity on behalf of the later work of Arnold Schoenberg. Over the next three decades, as many as half a dozen distinguished British writers on music produced books devoted to the explanation of this difficult repertory to non-specialist audiences, books that have become only too familiar to generations of students taking compulsory courses on the Second Viennese School. Employing a variety of sociological and analytical methods, I provide close readings both of these texts and of key passages from that most intractable and unloved of Schoenberg's serial compositions, the Violin Concerto, Op. 36. The aim is to deliver a thorough critique of the ideological presuppositions informing British attempts to popularize music of this kind, attempts that can now safely be said to have failed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nat Hansen","Emmanuel Chemla"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26169375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01650157"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41973628"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd89ecda-4ea8-3d7a-b74c-434907d11254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26169375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lingphil"}],"isPartOf":"Linguistics and Philosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Color adjectives, standards, and thresholds: an experimental investigation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26169375","wordCount":17580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Are color adjectives (\"red\", \"green\", etc.) relative adjectives or absolute adjectives? Existing theories of the meaning of color adjectives attempt to answer that question using informal (\"armchair\") judgments. The informal judgments of theorists conflict: it has been proposed that color adjectives are absolute with standards anchored at the minimum degree on the scale, that they are absolute but have near-midpoint standards, and that they are relative. In this paper we report two experiments, one based on entailment patterns and one based on presupposition accommodation, that investigate the meaning of scalar adjectives. We find evidence confirming the existence of subgroups of the population who operate with different standards for color adjectives. The evidence of interpersonal variation in where standards are located on the relevant scale and how those standards can be adjusted indicates that the existing theories of the meaning of color adjectives are at best only partially correct. We also find evidence that paradigmatic relative adjectives (\"tall\", \"wide\") behave in ways that are not predicted by the standard theory of scalar adjectives. We discuss several different possible explanations for this unexpected behavior. We conclude by discussing the relevance of our findings for philosophical debates about the nature and extent of semantically encoded context sensitivity in which color adjectives have played a key role.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-05-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d56fed71-77a9-3d47-933d-e49237ca1628"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26371100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371100","wordCount":42871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Boellstorff"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f81a2d-59b8-3c53-ae1d-f4af0cec37ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Dubbing Culture: Indonesian \"Gay\" and \"Lesbi\" Subjectivities and Ethnography in an Already Globalized World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805374","wordCount":16229,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8528,8682]],"Locations in B":[[77714,77868]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"In this article I explore how Indonesians come to see themselves as lesbi or gay through fragmentary encounters with mainstream mass media (rather than lesbian and gay Westerners or Western lesbian and gay media). By placing this ethnographic material alongside a recent debate on the dubbing of foreign television programs into the Indonesian language, I develop a theoretical framework of \"dubbing culture\" to critically analyze globalizing processes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Corey E. Andrews"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2230f152-47c1-3844-8efd-c2f5ea97003e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41467989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Almost the Same, but Not Quite\": English Poetry by Eighteenth-Century Scots","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41467989","wordCount":10160,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13769,14004]],"Locations in B":[[60406,60636]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jackie Stacey"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ea1740-ecb1-332f-af15-ec3e59040105"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24713012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Crossing over with Tilda Swinton\u2014the Mistress of \"Flat Affect\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713012","wordCount":17386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Tilda Swinton is hard to classify as a performer because flux and mutability have become her signature qualities. One enduring element in her repertoire, however, can be brought into focus through Lauren Berlant's concept of \"flat affect.\" Typically described as mysterious, otherworldly, or ethereal, Swinton often brings to her screen and live performances a quality or atmosphere that contradicts the conventional expectations of feminine emotional expressiveness and legibility in popular cinema. As a contribution to this special issue on Berlant's work, my article traces Swinton's styles of flat affect as an aesthetic relationality across a number of films, including Teknolust, Michael Clayton, The Deep End, and Orlando. My reading of Swinton's capacity for flatness places it within the history of her unusual facility to cross between independent and more popular cultural forms and to set femininity as genre in motion as she does so. Famous for embodying gender ambiguity since her performance as Orlando, Swinton's association with androgyny as a pre-queer promise of limitlessness folds femininity back upon its historical conventions and imperatives. In tracing the history of Swinton's gender fluctuations, this article concludes by reflecting on some of the failures of feminist and queer language to articulate the nuances of affective registers; androgyne, butch, tomboy, trans, and genderqueer designate styles of gendered and sexual embodiment, but these do not extend satisfactorily to aesthetic moods and atmospheres. Closing with a discussion of \"offgender\" flux, the article considers Swinton's recent twinning with David Bowie to open up how her performances reinvent affective genres while calling forth their histories and temporalities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MATTHEW GARRETT"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f27cedfd-e0d5-3dad-a00c-c12645488057"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24475516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"519","pagination":"pp. 519-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SELF-MADE SON: SOCIAL COMPETITION AND THE VANISHING MOTHER IN FRANKLIN'S \"AUTOBIOGRAPHY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24475516","wordCount":11068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Feld"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/767805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07401558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53166061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/767805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yeartradmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Yearbook for Traditional Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Pygmy POP. A Genealogy of Schizophonic Mimesis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/767805","wordCount":17530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"International Council for Traditional Music","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leon Jackson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10987371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"866eae2f-bff6-3794-ab56-17ba57326f9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40930535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bookhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Book History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Talking Book and the Talking Book Historian: African American Cultures of Print\u2014The State of the Discipline","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930535","wordCount":29056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHELE MARTINEZ"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680371818"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235180"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b92f933b-c1cd-3018-8fc2-c0e16e89e4a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41413874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Elizabeth Barrett Browning and the Perils of Portraiture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413874","wordCount":13415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Wragg"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e833263e-3f66-37cd-aec5-8933db237c75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Or Any Art at All?': Frank Zappa Meets Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853652","wordCount":10855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lucy Wood"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43946348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00163058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"693138956"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"906e85c7-91ee-3029-8259-9446a136fea7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43946348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"furnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Furniture History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Astronomy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/200277","wordCount":71226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Geographical Society","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Waterman","Russell Schechter","Noshir S. Contractor"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41810459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08852545"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bd2a6ac-ed55-39c9-a715-f8794e1e851f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41810459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcultecon"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Cultural Economics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"OVERCOMING BARRIERS TO THE LIVE ARTS: CAN THE MEDIA COMPENSATE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41810459","wordCount":7286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"Authors employ a data base of 2561 U.S. adults (the Survey of Public Participation in the Arts) to investigate two questions: (1) the degree to which electronic media successfully extend the \"reach\" of the arts to those who otherwise face obstacles (such as cost or geographic location) to live participation, and (2), the degree to which participation in the arts via the media serves as substitutes, in the economic sense, for individuals who face such obstacles. Media clearly extend the reach of the arts to vast numbers of individuals, including those who face obstacles to live participation due to unfavorable geographic location, low income, the presence of small children, or advanced age. But, the absence of substitution effects may be because media are inadequate to replicate the live arts experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Abblitt"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad6ae8b3-9908-34a3-834f-58a742292218"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"693","pagination":"pp. 693-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mourning Joyce, Touching Responsibility: The Body, the Book, and the Ghost","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598575","wordCount":6787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Presented as an unreliable ficto-critical memoir, this essay inconclusively examines the theoretical relationship between reading, mourning, touching, and responsibility as experienced by the author when confronted with a first edition of Joyce's Ulysses and as the aftermath of this chance encounter unfolds. Drawing on Jacques Derrida's work on mourning and its impossibility, I reinterpret the distance between the reader and the page as both an act of mourning and a touching poetic symbol of a responsibility to read faithfully before finally bearing witness to the transfiguration of Joyce's body into the book, facing the revelation of a revenant Joyce, ontologically uncertain and still haunting this uneasy, untimely reading.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert C. Morgan"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a070c3f-ed64-38a9-aba5-5f2acef01542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1575579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Exhibition Catalog as a Distancing Apparatus: Current Tendencies in the Promotion of Exhibition Documents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575579","wordCount":3947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"The range of high-quality exhibition catalogs for gallery and museum exhibitions has expanded in recent years to include more lavish and expensive publications with full-color illustrations. It would appear that these compendiums have much in common with the design and operation of mail-order catalogs. One of the hallmarks of recent postmodern thought is the conflation of art and mass culture, thus implying that the appearance of the sign is contextually bound in terms of its function. While some art catalogs aspire toward a popular model of representation, others attempt to read as theoretical texts divorced of any of the presence engendered by the exhibition. This essay argues in favor of a balance between a popular format and an adequate theoretical text in order to give the catalog the role of a vital form of art documentation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Elfenbein"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.60.4.30","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2817f30b-6193-3df6-952b-f48e6bf3db3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.60.4.30"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"693","pageStart":"690","pagination":"pp. 690-693","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.60.4.30","wordCount":2209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oliver Herford"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42967226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0008199X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d355380a-d1b7-3d27-8066-e36a4c0e2db8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42967226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"John Keats by Joseph Severn: On Likeness and Life-writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42967226","wordCount":11053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"Joseph Severn's first posthumous portrait of John Keats stands in a complex relation to the quality of likeness in biographical representation. Severn pictures Keats as an absorbed reader, whose unawareness of observation is and is not like his final obliviousness in death. A comparable scene recurs in memoirs of Keats by other friends, and likewise in his letters, in an imaginative movement that is both essentially fanciful and oriented towards the truth of a remembered relation. 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It considers the Goncourt Journal as a text which offers not only an aesthetic response to the urban experience, but also an interpretation of the city in politically critical terms. Particular attention is paid to the figure of the fl\u00e2neur, who emerges as a significant urban subject during this period. The article concludes by suggesting that Edmond's critique of the social, political and economic failures of the Second Empire strongly anticipates Walter Benjamin's later work on Paris and the commodity culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Roche"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ed66e95-7ad3-3d84-9646-cbb276e4d15d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25517230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517230","wordCount":1140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Kulchyski"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1185715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2464206a-54df-3a62-95b2-4a6386c24a03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1185715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Military science"],"title":"Air Youth: Performance, Violence and the State in Cameroon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3034831","wordCount":16980,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":"This article examines responses to state violence by youth groups in the Cameroon Grassfields with special reference to Air Youth, a dance group from the kingdom of Oku. The role played by masquerades and their embodiment of animality is first examined. Air Youth, which incorporates a modernist aesthetic and eschews masks in favour of costumes reminiscent of the national gendarmerie, is then described. This military aesthetic is compared with that of other groups of youths throughout the history of the region to demonstrate that the appropriation of the material culture of armed force marks a long-established regional means of confronting colonial and state violence. It is further argued that this form of appropriation reveals a continuity with the techniques used by masquerade groups. An interpretation of Air Youth performances in terms of mimesis is finally suggested as a means of highlighting the ways in which these performances may offer a means of transforming memories of oppression.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claes Oldenburg","Andy Warhol","Robert Morris","Benjamin H. D. 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THACKERAY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533617","wordCount":7076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mel Stanfill"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa1cb231-9b63-319f-b534-b8b57ed615ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Spinning Yarn with Borrowed Cotton: Lessons for Fandom from Sampling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653441","wordCount":3491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Lee"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.09","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"042bec36-d709-3357-b987-1405125fb7d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.09"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dark Romantic: F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Specters of Gothic Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.09","wordCount":8835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"While critics have historically maligned F. Scott Fitzgerald's fantastical writings as side experiments in allegory and nonsense, this unusual set of fictions highlights a previously unrecognized \u201cGothic mode\u201d that compels us to reinterpret much of his literary corpus. Tracing the archetypal figure of the ghost in \u201cA Short Trip Home,\u201d \u201cThe Ice Palace,\u201d \u201cOne Trip Abroad,\u201d \u201cThank You for the Light,\u201d and This Side of Paradise reconfigures our understanding of the unusual presence of supernatural figures in his work, his relationship with Jazz Age social politics, and his engagement with Gothic literary history. Fitzgerald's latent Gothicism not only throws new light on his forgotten short stories and most acclaimed novels but also positions him as a central figure in the emerging discourse of Gothic modernism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-10-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"182c2659-92ca-3f4a-aa85-37e144b2cda9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1700057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700057","wordCount":28659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4824","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"238","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEAN MICHEL AUGSBURG","L. ELIZABETH UPPER","SUSANNE MEURER","SUZANNE BOORSCH","MASSIMILIANO ROSSI","ROBERT E. GERHARDT","AUDE PRIGOT","MARTIN HOPKINSON","RICHARD TAWS","CAMILLA MURGIA","HOWARD COUTTS","ELISABETH PRELINGER","MARTIN HOPKINSON","JUDITH BRODIE","TERESA ECKMANN","MARTIN HOPKINSON","ROBERTA CREMONCINI","MARTIN HOPKINSON","KATE McCRICKARD","JOHN-PAUL STONARD","CHRISTIAN R\u00dcMELIN","JOHN PHILLIPS"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23766550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557541785"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18e272a2-c774-346b-97e3-a987c6cc45ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23766550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23766550","wordCount":25034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjorie B. 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This essay explores Rossetti's anxieties about photography that led him both to destroy portrait photographs of Siddal and to preserve her artwork in a photographic album that he created after her death. To understand the artist's conflicted use of the medium, this essay turns to Rossetti's elegiac \u201cWillowwood\u201d sonnets from The House of Life (1870), which present a metaphor for the concealment and exposure of the lost beloved, demonstrated by an overpainted photograph of Siddal.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NEIL CURTIS"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43915886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09547169"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607827434"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2d444d-9bd5-3f48-b376-de5afb346d3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43915886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmuseumethnog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Museum Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Emancipation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108030","wordCount":4361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lily Woodruff"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fa93242-67fe-30a7-b1c1-4d1dc91689bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43188653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Groupe de Recherche d'Art Visuel against the Technocrats","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188653","wordCount":11718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gustav Glaesser"],"datePublished":"1973-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29755898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b020bbbc-81b9-3643-9845-aa28bbb2c577"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29755898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eastwest"}],"isPartOf":"East and West","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29755898","wordCount":4776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Brown"],"datePublished":"1963-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9ea9dbf-a582-3351-902e-01cd52f668a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2699278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":278.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1962 Annual Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699278","wordCount":271595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DARIUSZ GAFIJCZUK"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1de318ca-5cef-3373-9a3b-f949327ceb8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"DWELLING WITHIN: THE INHABITED RUINS OF HISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542849","wordCount":11795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Addressing the recent call to rethink history as a form of presence, the essay works toward a recovery of a space in which such presence of history is encoded. I argue that history as a form of active perception is akin to virtual witnessing of the past in the moment of our encounter with historical artifacts, be they texts, photographs, or buildings. To this end, I engage with the conceptual and material aspects of historical perception, deriving a model of history as \"inhabited ruins,\" the way it emerges together with historical consciousness and finds an especially dynamic expression in Georg Simmel's philosophy of culture. Throughout, I work with the notion of distance and trans-dimensional presence as the forces that shape and reshape historical awareness. Ruins, intimately connected to the modern historical imagination, are approached not as sites of commemoration or nostalgia, but as spaces of active exchange between presence and disappearance. As such, they are taken to be the models for the transitive character of history itself, blurring the division between perception and thought. In other words, ruins are taken as structures that evoke and summon the past to an encounter with contemporary reality\u2014a type of co-appearance that opens the possibility of virtually witnessing the past. I conclude that the logic of \"inhabited ruins\" constitutes the event-horizon of modern identity, always placing history right at the threshold of fragmentation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard M. Merelman"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27f141c9-2bcc-30e6-908a-109274f4a83a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1152","pageStart":"1151","pagination":"pp. 1151-1152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231344","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stuart Curran","Peter J. 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This insight, however, has not been fully appreciated in the examination of various forms of literary criticism-scholarly books and articles, journalistic essays, book reviews in newspapers, and the like. Yet studies that deal with literary works in one way or another should also be recognized as literary texts and should be se en against their own background. Literary criticism, to borrow a definition from Ernst Robert Curtius, is that form of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Riggs"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/764045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"324b4aeb-dd9a-3b1f-b97c-5120d4cdcd2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/764045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Mozart's Notation of Staccato Articulation: A New Appraisal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/764045","wordCount":16348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Bell"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23290304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1023a01-0939-3b1c-a325-949269bbf7ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23290304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE \"FUENTES\" OF FUENTES AND THE AURA OF \"AURA\": CARLOS FUENTES' UP-DATING OF A CERVANTEAN THEME","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23290304","wordCount":4732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"45","publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Domna C. Stanton"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ad6d84d-7bc9-34f4-a928-4be4a6c5e2d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Editor's Column: On Multiple Submissions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463007","wordCount":3154,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Graham Sawyer"],"datePublished":"1949-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2698980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65a09de7-41b2-31d5-a772-a38a2d7a2c4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2698980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":198.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-97+101-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1949 Research in Progress in the Modern Languages and Literatures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2698980","wordCount":126012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Brown"],"datePublished":"1960-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8f2a2ba-bf55-30e9-a744-bf9af751d955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2699365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":288.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1959 Annual Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699365","wordCount":233183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Svetlana Alpers","Emily Apter","Carol Armstrong","Susan Buck-Morss","Tom Conley","Jonathan Crary","Thomas Crow","Tom Gunning","Michael Ann Holly","Martin Jay","Thomas Dacosta Kaufmann","Silvia Kolbowski","Sylvia Lavin","Stephen Melville","Helen Molesworth","Keith Moxey","D. N. Rodowick","Geoff Waite","Christopher Wood"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b6d3c63-7f60-392e-891e-64dd0558dbec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visual Culture Questionnaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778959","wordCount":20909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lutz P. Koepnick"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f068e1d4-e675-3e16-948c-3f9e9b9854ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Spectacle, the \"Trauerspiel,\" and the Politics of Resolution: Benjamin Reading the Baroque Reading Weimar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343972","wordCount":11218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janet Browne"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/644630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8020bfbf-4333-3f9d-ac0e-f64d573a04d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/644630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"570","pageStart":"542","pagination":"pp. 542-570","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Looking at Darwin: Portraits and the Making of an Icon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/644630","wordCount":13110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"ABSTRACT With increased attention on the visual in the history of science, there is renewed interest in the role of portraiture and other forms of personal imagery in constructing scientific reputation and the circulation of scientific ideas. This essay indicates some directions in which researchers could push forward by studying the dissemination of pictures and portraits of Charles Darwin. Selected portraits are discussed, with particular attention paid to their circulation. The mode of production and original intent of these portraits is briefly addressed, but the thrust of the argument is to highlight subsequent shifts in usage. While self\u2010fashioning is an important part of the story, it is useful also to dwell on the rise and diversification of printed media in conjunction with escalating interest in Darwin as a celebrity figure. Historicizing the variety of opportunities that people have had of \u201clooking\u201d at Darwin adds considerably to our understanding of scientific fame.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John T. Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40279350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Integration, Subversion, and the Rape of Europa: Heinrich B\u00f6ll's \"Er Kam als Biefrahrer\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40279350","wordCount":7535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William S. Smith"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a67a7174-5e85-3ca4-ab9e-dc5d80c5e4a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Concrete Experience of Nothing: Paul Sharits's Flicker Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608849","wordCount":9274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"55\/56","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08838364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f6921ac-7568-3776-9c6f-524030fab1ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4295849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"invitrcelldeve"}],"isPartOf":"In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Developmental & Cell Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4295849","wordCount":5211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Society for In Vitro Biology","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Crown"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2739229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2739229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Eighteenth-Century Visual Culture and Current British Art History: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2739229","wordCount":2290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paolo Cherchi Usai"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393630"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc6277a7-dc6c-3b24-af92-247c13c9dd86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42751725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studcons"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Conservation","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Conservation of Moving Images","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751725","wordCount":6027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Maney Publishing","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"Generally speaking, moving image preservation has developed in relative isolation from other disciplines related to the conservation of the cultural heritage. This is mainly due to the short history of the medium and to the fact that film preservation has become the object of scientific study only in the past few decades. However, there are other reasons for this phenomenon, ranging from the popular perception of cinema and video as expressions of the entertainment industry, to the belief that moving image carriers represent an 'art of reproduction' and therefore do not possess the 'uniqueness' required to warrant the conservation treatment given to other artifacts. The transition from analog photographic motion picture film to digital media has both exacerbated and contradicted this perception: while digital moving images can apparently be duplicated indefinitely, the physical elements produced before the digital era are now acquiring the status of unique objects previously denied to them. This paper presents a case for the inclusion of film preservation in the overall context of the preservation of cultural heritage through an enhanced collaboration between moving image conservators and specialists in other areas. D'une fa\u00e7on g\u00e9n\u00e9rale, la pr\u00e9servation d'images de cin\u00e9ma s'est d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e de fa\u00e7on relativement isol\u00e9e par rapport aux autres disciplines en rapport avec la conservation du patrimoine culturel. Ceci est d\u00fb principalement \u00e0 l'histoire encore de ce m\u00e9dia et au fait que la pr\u00e9servation des films a \u00e9t\u00e9 essentiellement consid\u00e9r\u00e9e, au cours des quatre derni\u00e8res d\u00e9cennies, une \u00e9tude purement scientifique. Cependant, il existe d'autres raisons \u00e0 ce ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne, allant de la perception populaire du cin\u00e9ma et de la vid\u00e9o comme expression de l'industrie des loisirs, \u00e0 la aoyance que les images de cin\u00e9ma repr\u00e9sentent un \u00ab reproduction \u00bb, et par cons\u00e9quent ne poss\u00e8dent pas l'unit\u00e9 identitaire qui serait requise pour garantir un traitement de dont b\u00e9n\u00e9ficient les autres oeuvres. La transition de l'image analogique \u00e0 l'image num\u00e9rique a \u00e0 la fois exacerb\u00e9 et contrari\u00e9 perception: alors que les images num\u00e9riques peuvent en apparence \u00eatre dupliqu\u00e9es \u00e0 l'infini, les \u00e9l\u00e9ments physiques produits avant l'\u00e8re num\u00e9rique acqui\u00e8rent aujourd'hui le statut d'objets uniques, qui leur \u00e9tait refus\u00e9 ant\u00e9rieurement. Cet article pr\u00e9sente un casa y int\u00e9gration de la conservation d'un film dans le contexte g\u00e9n\u00e9ral de la conservation des biens culturels, par le biais collaboration am\u00e9lior\u00e9e entre restaurateurs d'images et sp\u00e9cialistes d'autres domaines. Allgemein hat sich die Konservierung bewegter Bilder in relativer Isolation von anderen Disziplinen der Konservierung von Kulturg\u00fctern entwickelt. Dies ist haupts\u00e4chlich durch die kurze Geschichte des Mediums bedingt und durch die Tatsache, dass die Konservierung von Filmen erst seit einigen Dekaden Gegenstand wissenschaftlicher Studien ist. Indessen gibt es gibt es f\u00fcr dieses Ph\u00e4nomen noch andere Gr\u00fcnde, beginnend mit der allgemeinen Wahrnehmung von Kino und Video als Ausdruck der Unterhaltungsindustrie, bis hin zu der Annahme, dass das bewegte Bild eine \u201e reproduzierbare Kunst\" ist und daher nicht die \u201eEinzigartigkeit\" besitzt, die Voraussetzung f\u00fcr den Konservierungsansatz bei anderen Kulturg\u00fctern ist. Der \u00dcbergang von einem analogen, photographischen Film zum digitalen Medium hat die Situation sowohl verschlimmert als auch die Voraussetzung ver\u00e4ndert: W\u00e4hrend digitale Filme augenscheinlich unendlich reproduzierbar sind, bekommen die vor der digitalen \u00c4ra produzierten physikalischen Elemente nun den Status einzigartiger Objekte, der ihnen vorher abgesprochen wurde. In dieser Arbeit wird eine Lanze f\u00fcr die Eingliederung der Filmkonservierung in den generellen Kontext der Konservierung von Kulturg\u00fctern gebrochen, die durch eine verst\u00e4rkte Zusammenarbeit zwischen den Konservatoren Bewegter Bilder und Spezialisten andere Gebieten gew\u00e4hrleistet werden wird. Hablando de una manera general, la preservaci\u00f3n de im\u00e1genes m\u00f3viles se a desarrollado en un relativo aislamiento con relaci\u00f3n a otras disciplinas vinculadas con la conservaci\u00f3n del patrimonio cultural. Esto es debido principalmente a la corta historia de este tipo de material y al hecho de que la preservaci\u00f3n de pel\u00edculas ha llegado a ser un objeto de estudio cient\u00edfico solo a partir de las \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas. Sin embargo, hay otras razones para este fen\u00f3meno: desde la percepci\u00f3n popular de que el cine y el video son expresiones de la industria del entretenimiento, a la creencia de que los soportes de imagen m\u00f3vil representan un \"arte de la reproducci\u00f3n\" y, por tanto, no poseen la caracter\u00edstica de ser \"\u00fanicos\" requerida para garantizar los tratamientos de conservaci\u00f3n dados a otros objetos. La transici\u00f3n de pel\u00edcula m\u00f3vil de fotograf\u00eda anal\u00f3gica a medio digital ha exacerbado y contradicho esta percepci\u00f3n: mientras que las im\u00e1genes digitales m\u00f3viles pueden ser, aparentemente, duplicadas indefinidamente, los elementos fisicos producidos antes de la era digital est\u00e1n ahora adquiriendo el estatus de objetos \u00fanicos que previamente les fue negado. Este art\u00edculo presenta la conservaci\u00f3n de pel\u00edcula en el contexto de la preservaci\u00f3n del patrimonio cultural a trav\u00e9s de la colaboraci\u00f3n entre restauradores de im\u00e1genes m\u00f3viles y especialistas en otras \u00e1reas y campos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anat Zanger"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtk0.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053567845"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60e0faf3-44e4-32ec-89d9-4f4cc808bf09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mtk0.13"}],"isPartOf":"Film Remakes as Ritual and Disguise","keyphrase":["cinema","london","jeanne d\u2019arc","carmen","translated","university","york routledge","aviv university","poetics today","hitchcock"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"131","pagination":"131-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","History","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtk0.13","wordCount":5277,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[3512,3575]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49a3ff50-82aa-3aad-b5df-b2ebaaa7d93f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/230495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":243.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-19+21-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"One Hundred Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (to January 1981)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/230495","wordCount":126533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thalia Gouma-Peterson","Patricia Mathews"],"datePublished":"1987-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f6576b5-93a6-3066-a8f4-1d955ca79478"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Feminist Critique of Art History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051059","wordCount":33038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"Art criticism and art history from a feminist perspective are recent phenomena, emerging only during the last fifteen years. They have, in their short history, moved from a first generation in which \"the condition and experience of being female\" was emphasized, to a second generation, beginning in the late 1970s, influenced by feminist criticism in other disciplines and offering a more complex critique of both art and culture through an investigation of the production and evaluation of art and the role of the artist. In this survey, we propose, first, to outline the history of feminist art and art history, then to discuss the interrelated themes in each, and, finally, in the concluding and pivotal sections (IV and V), to discuss various feminist art-critical and art-historical methodologies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Dyson"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41811971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b4f3fea-3610-3eb6-b7a2-e049f36b6f7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41811971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Images Interpreted: Landseer and the Engraving Trade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41811971","wordCount":9911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1afa42e-3b07-3284-9482-70561687f359"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"482","pagination":"pp. 482-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374516","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald E. Freeman"],"datePublished":"1971-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3825971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3825971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3825971","wordCount":40117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Garrett Stewart"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c73a8e4b-02e8-331b-878f-6b122caf4d50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"768","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-768","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"\"Cin\u00e9criture\": Modernism's Flicker Effect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057510","wordCount":16847,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42327,42575]],"Locations in B":[[28926,29174]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407063"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50649976"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53c03c78-7989-3f0c-8764-688b5b5dad76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26369354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecompbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Integrative and Comparative Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":201.0,"pageEnd":"e201","pageStart":"e1","pagination":"pp. e1-e201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Symposia and Oral Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369354","wordCount":213494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Courtney Federle"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db948878-d85b-3091-a87f-e3fc53fe34ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Kuchenmesser DADA<\/italic>: Hannah H\u00f6ch's Cut Through the Field of Vision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685953","wordCount":5351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nell Haynes"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvkjb58d.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eca05f3a-01c0-3b5d-b196-32d1b8dc8e61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvkjb58d.6"}],"isPartOf":"Las Redes Sociales en el Norte de Chile","keyphrase":["est\u00e9tica","publicaciones visuales","normatividad","fotograf\u00edas","alto hospicio","menudo","selfies","vida diaria","instagram","cap\u00edtulo iii publicaciones"],"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"89","pagination":"89-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Publicaciones visuales:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvkjb58d.6","wordCount":6768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"En Alto Hospicio el paisaje est\u00e9tico est\u00e1 impregnado de homogeneidad. La gente, cada cual con sus diferencias individuales, encaja perfectamente en el entorno. Sus camisetas y jeans, a menudo comprados usados de segunda mano la feria, raramente pretenden llamar la atenci\u00f3n. Hay algunos edificios grandes y muy poca publicidad. Las casas parecen todas iguales, como bloques de lego gigantes apilados en una o dos alturas en cada calle estrecha. Las calles tambi\u00e9n parecen iguales con sus filas de casa flanqueadas por tiendas en las esquinas; los autom\u00f3viles que pasan por la plaza principal parecen ser todos de las mismas marcas","subTitle":"La est\u00e9tica de Alto Hospicio","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex Hall"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43604238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10716084"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42031620"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d77af54-387a-3c88-8c9c-5136ad343e41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43604238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jtechstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Technology Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A Way of Revealing\": Technology and Utopianism in Contemporary Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43604238","wordCount":6829,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6073,6274]],"Locations in B":[[27080,27278]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Epsilon Pi Tau, Inc.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Although technology was once viewed literally as a means of bringing about Utopian society, its means to that end was exhausted in the minds of many when it fostered the nuclear attacks on Japan in 1945. Since then, not only has technology lost its Utopian verve, but it also has been viewed by some quite pessimistically. Nevertheless, technology does provide an avenue for Utopian cultural production, whose Utopian energy must often be rescued by readers and scholars using the Blochian Utopian hermeneutic. In this way technology is as Heidegger described it\u2014 \"a way of revealing,\" that is, the tool that brings the carving out from within the rock. This article argues that although technology has come to be viewed by some pessimistically in the years since Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it is now experiencing a Utopian renaissance in that it allows for Utopian cultural production to be widespread as never before. This is occurring thanks to new technologyfacilitated genres such as the Alternate Reality Game, the mass audiences tuned in to Internet avenues for Utopian production, and the continued improvement of older technologies such as film and television. Technology cannot be the impetus for ideal change by itself, no matter how embraced such a concept might have been upon the introduction of the telegraph or the Internet, but it has brought about new methods of injecting new energy into culture, which can only serve to benefit society as a whole.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Parshall"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f03f7f3-75c0-3366-9817-74cb54f47d3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3046044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046044","wordCount":3434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David A. Gall"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.52.1.0022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8e1c773-80d6-3654-8547-a6d66eb55a17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.52.1.0022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Undoing Sophisticated Illusions: Bricolage Genealogy and Resonant Iconic Similarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.52.1.0022","wordCount":14738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edyta Frelik"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4c3c0da-faf4-3bdf-981a-674a083e4714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/679709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ad Reinhardt: Painter-as-Writer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679709","wordCount":7797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Unlike his paintings, Ad Reinhardt\u2019s writings remain unstudied and largely unpublished. Scholars have approached his literary output as a subsidiary product, accepting at face value his insistence on the separation of art and life (and, by implication, art and writing). Even those who acknowledge the significance of the painter\u2019s texts do so mainly because of the texts\u2019 informational content (autobiographical, historical, theoretical, and philosophical). No scholar to date has methodically studied them as works of literary art, which they clearly are, especially when looked at as analogues to Reinhardt\u2019s paintings, particularly those in his black square series. The essay investigates the interplay of Reinhardt\u2019s visual sensibility and verbal dexterity and draws parallels between his permutational purgative methods employed in painting and the meticulous verbal procedures applied in crafting his texts on art. Experimenting with inflection and forms, Reinhardt challenged and subverted conventions and\u00a0established norms to expose the verbal underpinnings of thought and vision.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Ebbatson"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45288049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00822841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c66e6dc0-ec03-3292-8ed3-ae47e2b50a45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45288049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tennresebull"}],"isPartOf":"Tennyson Research Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'IMPASSIONED SONG': ARTHUR HALLAM AND THE CRISIS IN LYRIC POETRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45288049","wordCount":3358,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[12776,12958]],"Locations in B":[[11684,11866]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Tennyson Society","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Sener Rusk"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fd8bd31-a8a8-36e1-b2df-a9825d31dd10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106+108+110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775650","wordCount":3785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1399163-d7cd-3af7-a730-816e6f2a6f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43708164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708164","wordCount":15660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"210","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grant P. McAllister"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a32b130-de88-3260-83ab-dc875538c9b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27668290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Romantic Imagery in Tykwer's \"Lola rennt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27668290","wordCount":8754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"\"Lola rennt\" engages twenty-first-century audiences through a plethora of post-modern themes such as chance, circumstance, and time. However, the film's treatment of representation, in particular its circular re-presentation of a single event, reflects questions of aesthetic representation introduced by Romantics such as Schlegel and Novalis. In accordance with Romantic theories of representation, Tom Tykwer's cinematic recontextualizing of representation centers on the definition of the subject as a self-reflective construction of art through art. Lola's action, her running, mirrored by the film's literal act of \"running\" defines Lola's and the film's aesthetic and figurative essence, which is \"Lola rennt.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0m4.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053560549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91f80acf-3d91-398e-b233-6f7ae18b7377"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n0m4.12"}],"isPartOf":"Writing for the Medium","keyphrase":["television","malcolm bradbury","alan plater","writer","thomas elsaesser","fay weldon","television drama","literature","bradburys history","script"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"91","pagination":"91-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0m4.12","wordCount":3152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Nowhere is the sentiment that \u2018traduction, c\u2019est trahison\u2019 more quickly on everyone\u2019s lips than when the discussion turns to literature and television. It hardly appears worth arguing that a writer is trivialized by being visualized, a fate bad enough when a novel is adapted for the cinema, but an enterprise compromised beyond redemption once the small screen is involved. In the case of dead writers, television can at least claim a public duty when bringing the nation\u2019s literary heritage to new generations of viewers. With living authors, the medium stands accused of crass insensitivity, sensationalism, philistinism. If, having sold the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-11-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41361450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31791647-fc3c-382b-9179-066407c05497"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41361450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41361450","wordCount":8664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4485","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vicky Unruh"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b36ee8a-a770-30c6-8de3-bb3b9c30d73c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"It's a Sin to Bring down an Art Deco\": Sabina Berman's Theater among the Ruins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501676","wordCount":10386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":"This essay explores the ruins trope in representations of the turn-of-the-millennium Latin American city. Like Sabina Berman in her dramatic evocation of Mexico City, Latin American artists represent urban ruins as volatile locales of cultural and historical presences that conflict and resist banishment. This analysis of Berman's Muerte s\u00fabita (\"Sudden Death\"), first staged in 1988, draws on recent theoretical inquiries that highlight the ruin's nonlinear juxtaposition of time frames and its association with the underbelly of Western modernity's rationalist narratives of progress and with a forward-looking critical consciousness. I examine the play's work with ruins and the ghostly presences they harbor to evoke contentious social, cultural, and artistic presences in a disintegrating Mexico City landscape. In stirring up the debris of vanishing urban utopias, works such as Berman's play constitute critical refusals of closure and conjure up unresolved cultural debates vying for a hearing. They also link the ruins trope to constructive, nonutopian imaginings of a less ruinous future and to creative engagements with the urban terrain, however devastated, in search of something of value.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Dator","Dick Pratt","Yongseok Seo"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3zp081.31","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780824829506"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eee7c7b6-d6f4-328b-8079-e2eb7c4559cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3zp081.31"}],"isPartOf":"Fairness, Globalization, and Public Institutions","keyphrase":["governance","westport conn","conn praeger","university","public administration","phnom penh","democracy","york routledge","westport conn praeger","rowman littlefield"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"361","pagination":"361-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3zp081.31","wordCount":10775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Skoller"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"295371be-1167-335b-bb7c-8ed65acb41de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Shadows of Catastrophe: Towards an Ethics of Representation in Films by Antin, Eisenberg, and Spielberg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389435","wordCount":11590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert W. Reichert"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30156493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0434839-6d7f-3b06-937b-f06fe0b091e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30156493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30156493","wordCount":448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Ann Doane"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50fc62a4-cc11-3ff9-bf75-646e56036c08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Voice in the Cinema: The Articulation of Body and Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930003","wordCount":6817,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13039,13402]],"Locations in B":[[7303,7667]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodore Stern"],"datePublished":"1952-04-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3143721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003049X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20df0204-08c8-31cd-88cb-42fd6e3303b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3143721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Chickahominy: The Changing Culture of a Virginia Indian Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3143721","wordCount":54849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94e4d26d-31fa-3b4f-a104-3ff30bce5e7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656828","wordCount":2253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kirsten Harjes","Tanja Nusser"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f630864f-0e26-3760-87eb-edec92198ce1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Authentic Experience of History: Tourism in Ulrike Ottinger's Exil Shanghai","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688898","wordCount":6766,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6751,6997],[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[27754,28001],[28024,28206]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"A sign of commodification and mass culture, tourism is usually treated as a disturbance and contamination of the otherwise \"authentic\" atmosphere of historical artifacts. Drawing on Siegfried Kracauer's and Susan Sontag's theories of photography, this paper argues that transgressions of the genre of historical documentary in Exil Shanghai (1997) cast tourism as an authenticating factor in the perception of historical sites. The film thus suggests a notion of historical authenticity grounded in a perception of the passing of time, rather than the authority of witness accounts or archival material. This notion of historical authenticity relies on a feminist epistemology that debunks the traditional binary opposition between subject and object by suggesting that the experience of the other is essentially a reflexive experience of the self.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1943-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1081550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00366773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54678474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d7e3b5d-1f5a-32a1-b107-9961c7a1dede"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1081550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"schoolreview"}],"isPartOf":"The School Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Selected References on Secondary-School Instruction: III. The Subject Fields (Continued)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1081550","wordCount":6881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie F. 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Can a conclusive account be constructed or would we find too many outliers and perversions to detect one definitive trail? With such an amount of material and precedent to build upon, it is tempting to question what contemporary drawing can achieve on top of all the seminal projects and concepts developed on the page across history. Of course, we only need watch a Hollywood film set in the past to realise how fluid and mutable history can become. The drawing can become a site for deviating and challenging the historical, whether through imaginary flights","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Candace Waid"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50901653"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ad9504a-581d-31e4-9380-c11d01dbc063"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"The Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Burying the Regional Mother: Faulkner's Road to Race through the Visual Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908347","wordCount":29582,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[127601,127671]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Der Derian"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab5296e5-3e32-35ea-ad87-6340963dcb0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3993761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imaging Terror: Logos, Pathos and Ethos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993761","wordCount":6946,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[53561,53780]],"Locations in B":[[10380,10601]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"As verb, code and historical method, terrorism has consistently been understood as an act of symbolically intimidating and, if deemed necessary, violently eradicating a personal, political, social, ethnic, religious, ideological or otherwise radically differentiated foe. Yet, as noun, message and catch-all political signifier, the meaning of terrorism has proven more elusive. After the Cold War terror mutated from a logic of deterrence based on a nuclear balance of terror into a new imbalance of terror based on a mimetic fear and an asymmetrical willingness and capacity to destroy the other without the formalities of war. This imbalance is furthered by the multiple media, which transmit powerful images as well as triggering pathological responses to the terrorist event. Thanks to the immediacy of television, the internet and other networked information technology, we see terrorism everywhere in real time, all the time. In turn, terrorism has taken on an iconic, fetishised and, most significantly, highly optical character.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeongwon Joe"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4487222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fa82d5d-7c0f-3c37-ac0d-8b2c37e46ec0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4487222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"709","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-709","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4487222","wordCount":1487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johannes Birringer"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4462900a-0172-3ece-8ea6-3e92f5e675ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24580306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Theatre and Its Screen Double","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24580306","wordCount":8985,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[24414,24728],[25114,25285],[25309,25779]],"Locations in B":[[35681,35996],[36656,36827],[36876,37333]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":"This essay offers a close exploration of the live filming and sound production in the Schaub\u00fchne Berlin staging of Strindberg's Fr\u00e4ulein Julie (directed by Katie Mitchell, shown on tour at the Barbican, London, in 2012). It provides a series of theoretical and critical angles from which to discuss contemporary intermedia performance and audiovisual scenography. After a brief evocation of Artaud's writings in \"Theatre and Cruelty\" and on raw cinema, the essay builds on a historical understanding of Western theatre's evolving and hardly settled relationship to cinematography and moving-image technologies, as well as the \"choreographic unconscious,\" as examined in contemporary dance and technology, before delving into an analysis of Mitchell's dramaturgy of real-time film construction and her use of the \"camera-actor.\" A particular emphasis is placed on the question whether the live mediatization of realist drama, under Mitchell's direction, deliberately weakens the theatricality of the physical body and spoken language while proffering an extenuated, if uncritical\/unpolitical modulation of digital prosthetics in a superbly crafted, seamless intermedial performance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TERI SILVIO"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342489"},{"name":"oclc","value":"493260789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-203474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41510911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mech"}],"isPartOf":"Mechademia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Art Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3256886","wordCount":60435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Keilbach","Kirsten W\u00e4chter"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25478837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2749c994-fa73-39a1-8799-318cad5b6622"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25478837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photographs, Symbolic Images, and the Holocaust: On the (IM)Possibility of Depicting Historical Truth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25478837","wordCount":11796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Photography has often been scrutinized regarding its relationship to reality or historical truth. This includes not only the indexicality of photography, but also the question of how structures and processes that comprise history and historical events can be depicted. In this context, the Holocaust provides a particular challenge to photography. As has been discussed in numerous publications, this historic event marks the \"limits of representation.\" Nevertheless there are many photographs \"showing\" the Holocaust that have been produced in different contexts that bespeak the photographers' gaze and the circumstances of the photographs' production. Some of the pictures have become very well known due to their frequent reproduction, even though they often do not show the annihilation itself, but situations different from that; their interpretation as Holocaust pictures results rather from a metonymic deferral. When these pictures are frequently reproduced they are transformed into symbolic images, that is, images that can be removed from their specific context, and in this way they come to signify abstract concepts such as \"evil.\" Despite being removed from their specific context these images can, as this essay argues, refer to historical truth. First, I explore the arguments of some key theorists of photography (Benjamin, Kracauer, Sontag, Barthes) to investigate the relationship between photography and reality in general, looking at their different concepts of reality, history, and historical truth, as well as the question of the meaning of images. Second, I describe the individual circumstances in which some famous Holocaust pictures were taken in order to analyze, by means of three examples, the question what makes these specific pictures so particularly suitable to becoming symbolic images and why they may-despite their abstract meaning-be able to depict historical truth.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert T. Hatt"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3249984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c1571ea-ecc5-34ea-a40a-ab1097ca0499"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3249984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibusasiae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus Asiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"A Thirteenth Century Tibetan Reliquary. 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The development of technology from science as magic to science as information is used as a framework to (re)discover relationships between (1) the perception of space and the tools of visualization and (2) their effects on architectural education.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24188813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569508573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16a2ca95-5610-3faa-9efd-86b1ad7f40b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24188813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglassstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Glass Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - 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Instead of being a self-reliant heroine, Elaine is a damsel in distress, which prompted a contemporaneous reviewer to claim that \u2018 it would be more accurate to say that Elaine is exploited rather than that she carries out any exploits\u2019 (Pangburn 1915). Craig Kennedy (Arnold Daly), the hero coming to her rescue, is just as much","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BURTON BLACK","J. E. 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With the exception of a few historical studies, most information simply describes the designs. The author, drawing on long relationships with several ritual masters within and outside Hanoi, was able to gain esoteric knowledge of amulet production and empowerment and to talk with a variety of amulet consumers about their motivations for using them. The production of the woodblock mingles magic and technology in anticipation of the further magic that animates the amulet struck from the block. As the demand for amulets swells, cheap, stenciled amulets are widely used and ritual masters are less scrupulous about personal prohibitions and purifications before empowering these mass-manufactured amulets. Ritual masters describe these changes in terms compatible with Benjamin's notion of \"auras\" and the relative power of amulets.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karim Mattar"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09681361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782651"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-252095"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25540154-7b64-3a8c-86d5-e83ea123de1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24585338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"translit"}],"isPartOf":"Translation and Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Orhan Pamuk and the Limits of Translation: Foreignizing \"The Black Book\" for World Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24585338","wordCount":10951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madeleine DOR\u00c9"],"datePublished":"1958-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24603931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379174"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d968ed61-743e-3615-9169-f3515dd1af8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24603931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Journal de la Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des am\u00e9ricanistes","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":127.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE AM\u00c9RICANISTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24603931","wordCount":67923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des Am\u00e9ricanistes","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Franz H. 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Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. Vol. 51 (1912) to Vol. 75 (1935)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/984747","wordCount":29746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin S. 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Drawing on historical reprintings as well as Native American linguistic reappropriations of A Key, I argue that crosscultural encounter emerges most powerfully in relation to Williams's text not as a vestige of the past, accessible through the dialogues or the language, but as a function of the text's reproduction, the audiences' imagination of its reproducibility, and the points at which it fails to be a mimetic record.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lyn H. Lofland"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c79d6181-8bfd-3a81-882e-8aed26f234f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"828","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-828","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231286","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHASE DIMOCK"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f672b474-92bb-3da8-94ce-c63564b0aef6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CRAFTING HERMAPHRODITISM: GALE WILHELM'S LESBIAN MODERNISM IN \"WE TOO ARE DRIFTING\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544600","wordCount":11911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This article argues for a renewed interest in forgotten modernist lesbian author Gale Wilhelm through an examination of her 1935 novel We Too Are Drifting. Aimed at a wide readership, Wilhelm's novel differs from the work of high-modernist lesbians like Gertrude Stein and Djuna Barnes with its middlebrow sensibilities. Furthermore, it presents the hermaphrodite as a new metaphor for conceptualizing lesbian identity in contrast to the dominant model of the invert espoused by Radclyffe Hall's famous The Well of Loneliness. Without engaging in explicit politics, entering into clinical considerations of sexual psychology, or including gratuitously titillating scenes that the public had come to expect with the subject of lesbianism, Wilhelm's revolutionary gesture needs to be gauged differently: it assumes the lesbian's right to define her own existence as the a priori condition for writing about lesbian love by focusing on how lesbian artists use visual media to express their identities and desires.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1941-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d8378b1-0fda-3186-a05e-e92ce9accbd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"581","pagination":"pp. 581, 583-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Meetings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080366","wordCount":24009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26396353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38983929"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 98007717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3007dc3d-8e69-3edb-9cad-db22262617f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26396353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamermetesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":296.0,"pageEnd":"S280","pageStart":"Si","pagination":"pp. Si-S280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"STATE OF THE CLIMATE IN 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26396353","wordCount":164832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Meteorological Society","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"In 2016, the dominant greenhouse gases released into Earth\u2019s atmosphere\u2014carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide\u2014 continued to increase and reach new record highs. The 3.5 \u00b1 0.1 ppm rise in global annual mean carbon dioxide from 2015 to 2016 was the largest annual increase observed in the 58-year measurement record. The annual global average carbon dioxide concentration at Earth\u2019s surface surpassed 400 ppm (402.9 \u00b1 0.1 ppm) for the first time in the modern atmospheric measurement record and in ice core records dating back as far as 800 000 years. One of the strongest El Ni\u00f1o events since at least 1950 dissipated in spring, and a weak La Ni\u00f1a evolved later in the year. Owing at least in part to the combination of El Ni\u00f1o conditions early in the year and a long-term upward trend, Earth\u2019s surface observed record warmth for a third consecutive year, albeit by a much slimmer margin than by which that record was set in 2015. Above Earth\u2019s surface, the annual lower troposphere temperature was record high according to all datasets analyzed, while the lower stratospheric temperature was record low according to most of the in situ and satellite datasets. Several countries, including Mexico and India, reported record high annual temperatures while many others observed near-record highs. A week-long heat wave at the end of April over the northern and eastern Indian peninsula, with temperatures surpassing 44\u00b0C, contributed to a water crisis for 330 million people and to 300 fatalities. In the Arctic the 2016 land surface temperature was 2.0\u00b0C above the 1981\u20132010 average, breaking the previous record of 2007, 2011, and 2015 by 0.8\u00b0C, representing a 3.5\u00b0C increase since the record began in 1900. The increasing temperatures have led to decreasing Arctic sea ice extent and thickness. On 24 March, the sea ice extent at the end of the growth season saw its lowest maximum in the 37-year satellite record, tying with 2015 at 7.2% below the 1981\u20132010 average. The September 2016 Arctic sea ice minimum extent tied with 2007 for the second lowest value on record, 33% lower than the 1981\u20132010 average. Arctic sea ice cover remains relatively young and thin, making it vulnerable to continued extensive melt. The mass of the Greenland Ice Sheet, which has the capacity to contribute ~7 m to sea level rise, reached a record low value. The onset of its surface melt was the second earliest, after 2012, in the 37-year satellite record. Sea surface temperature was record high at the global scale, surpassing the previous record of 2015 by about 0.01\u00b0C. The global sea surface temperature trend for the 21st century-to-date of +0.162\u00b0C decade\u22121 is much higher than the longer term 1950\u20132016 trend of +0.100\u00b0C decade\u22121. Global annual mean sea level also reached a new record high, marking the sixth consecutive year of increase. Global annual ocean heat content saw a slight drop compared to the record high in 2015. Alpine glacier retreat continued around the globe, and preliminary data indicate that 2016 is the 37th consecutive year of negative annual mass balance. Across the Northern Hemisphere, snow cover for each month from February to June was among its four least extensive in the 47-year satellite record. Continuing a pattern below the surface, record high temperatures at 20-m depth were measured at all permafrost observatories on the North Slope of Alaska and at the Canadian observatory on northernmost Ellesmere Island. In the Antarctic, record low monthly surface pressures were broken at many stations, with the southern annular mode setting record high index values in March and June. Monthly high surface pressure records for August and November were set at several stations. During this period, record low daily and monthly sea ice extents were observed, with the November mean sea ice extent more than 5 standard deviations below the 1981\u20132010 average. These record low sea ice values contrast sharply with the record high values observed during 2012\u201314. Over the region, springtime Antarctic stratospheric ozone depletion was less severe relative to the 1991\u20132006 average, but ozone levels were still low compared to pre-1990 levels. Closer to the equator, 93 named tropical storms were observed during 2016, above the 1981\u20132010 average of 82, but fewer than the 101 storms recorded in 2015. Three basins\u2014the North Atlantic, and eastern and western North Pacific\u2014experienced above-normal activity in 2016. The Australian basin recorded its least active season since the beginning of the satellite era in 1970. Overall, four tropical cyclones reached the Saffir\u2013Simpson category 5 intensity level. The strong El Ni\u00f1o at the beginning of the year that transitioned to a weak La Ni\u00f1a contributed to enhanced precipitation variability around the world. Wet conditions were observed throughout the year across southern South America, causing repeated heavy flooding in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Wetter-than-usual conditions were also observed for eastern Europe and central Asia, alleviating the drought conditions of 2014 and 2015 in southern Russia. In the United States, California had its first wetter-than-average year since 2012, after being plagued by drought for several years. Even so, the area covered by drought in 2016 at the global scale was among the largest in the post-1950 record. For each month, at least 12% of land surfaces experienced severe drought conditions or worse, the longest such stretch in the record. In northeastern Brazil, drought conditions were observed for the fifth consecutive year, making this the longest drought on record in the region. Dry conditions were also observed in western Bolivia and Peru; it was Bolivia\u2019s worst drought in the past 25 years. In May, with abnormally warm and dry conditions already prevailing over western Canada for about a year, the human-induced Fort McMurray wildfire burned nearly 590 000 hectares and became the costliest disaster in Canadian history, with $3 billion (U.S. dollars) in insured losses.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Bramlett","David Raabe"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b75bdaf3-2d43-3697-aeb3-e3af0ed4962e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Redefining Intimacy: Carver and Conversation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107341","wordCount":9340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nrfk.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874212587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f00cb168-784a-3138-a30b-440fb01367d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46nrfk.13"}],"isPartOf":"Passions Pedagogies and 21st Century Technologies","keyphrase":["duchamp","bartholomae","writing","composition","gangsta","salt seller","gangsta rap","geoffrey sire","interzone","reading"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"178","pagination":"178-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cWhat is Composition \u2026 ?\u201d After Duchamp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nrfk.13","wordCount":13675,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[10467,10662],[32359,32929]],"Locations in B":[[43832,44027],[48290,48860]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"1. By all means, let\u2019s start with Duchamp (as all twentieth century composition already does, consciously or not). Particularly, as this is in part a story of seemingly failed writing, writing which doesn\u2019t win prizes, let\u2019s start with some of Duchamp\u2019s failures. I can think of three right off: First, coming home in a taxi, March 1912, with a painting that was supposed to \u2026 well, not win prizes, of course. It couldn\u2019t have. It was his \u201cNude Descending a Staircase,\u201d and the show where it was to be exhibited was in Paris at the Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des Artistes Ind\u00e9pendants. The slogan","subTitle":"(Notes Toward a General Teleintertext)","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.31","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b40ad9c-8258-3b66-be0d-850482be4792"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2tx.31"}],"isPartOf":"Alexander Kluge","keyphrase":["eric rentschler","rentschler new","germanic review","german filmmakers","german critique","new german","film visions","london holmes","eric rentschler new","rentschler new york"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"417","pagination":"417-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Selected Bibliography of English-Language Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.31","wordCount":1756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27836586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98777398-9e44-3762-8bf4-fb8930ef07bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27836586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"426A","pageStart":"414A","pagination":"pp. 414A, 416A, 418A-426A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"BOOKS RECEIVED FOR REVIEW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27836586","wordCount":7349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. Cheeke"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d5a0a2c-b35a-3813-b17c-582632bd00d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30210569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hazlitt and the Louvre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210569","wordCount":10631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-11-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1749067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24d64d48-3cc2-3bec-b759-5dff5e3a35d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1749067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"860","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-860","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1749067","wordCount":10606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4420","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"206","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":131.0,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Individual Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831106","wordCount":64324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Christensen"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0d7402d-9dcd-3cc7-9de0-395da74d6ae6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Four-Hand Piano Transcription and Geographies of Nineteenth-Century Musical Reception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831999","wordCount":20909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Throughout the nineteenth century, massive quantities of four-hand piano transcriptions were published of virtually every musical genre. Indeed, no other medium before the advent of the radio and phonograph was arguably so important for the dissemination and iterability of concert and chamber repertories. Yet such transcriptions proved to be anything but innocent vehicles of translation. Not only did these four-hand arrangements offer simplified facsimiles of most orchestral works blanched of their instrumental timbres (a result that was often compared to the many reproductive engravings and black-and-white lithographs of artworks that were churned out by publishers at the same time); such arrangements also destabilized traditional musical divisions between symphonic and chamber genres, professional and amateur music cultures, and even repertories gendered as masculine and feminine. By bringing music intended for the public sphere of the concert hall, opera house, and salon into the domestic space of the bourgeois home parlor, the four-hand transcription profoundly altered the generic identity and consequent reception of musical works.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana Fuss"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92c634c7-b09b-306a-98bf-ff2b765f659b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"737","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-737","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fashion and the Homospectatorial Look","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343827","wordCount":8009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Klaus Benesch"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab8c1def-42e8-39d0-bdcb-70482270da44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Technology, Art, and the Cybernetic Body: The Cyborg as Cultural Other in Fritz Lang's \"Metropolis\" and Philip K. Dick's \"Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157479","wordCount":7582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Taking the latest development in the production of military weapons, the cloning of so-called \"virtual officers,\" as a point of departure, the essay examines this project not only in the light of cyberspace and the proliferation of artificial bodies (cyborgs) but also with a backward glance at the history of metaphorical encodings of technology in Western culture at large. I will argue that the way in which we confront technology is determined by much more than just the efficacy of the machine itself. It is equally determined by a symbolic investment, that is, the desire to construct human identity as basically different from the realm of the technological. While my theoretical frame of reference includes psychoanalytic and recent anthropological theory (Lacan and Taussig), the two major representations of technology which will be discussed in detail are taken from the world of art: Fritz Lang's now classic silent movie Metropolis and Philip K. Dick's science fiction cult novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH DAUPHIN\u00c9E"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f92cb0b1-3100-3698-9831-1aef23cafc2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26299649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Politics of the Body in Pain: Reading the Ethics of Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299649","wordCount":8290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Images of the body in pain are the primary medium through which we come to know war, torture and other pain-producing activities. The Cartesian paradigm of subjectivity suggests that pain is an interior event that can only be imperfectly expressed through language or visuality. This creates a significant disjuncture between the body that experiences pain and the one who observes this body through the technologies of visual culture. The imperative to make pain visible is driven by the desire to access the pain of the other; but, in the context of the Cartesian subject, this access is simultaneously impossible. This article explores the ethics of using such imagery for projects that seek to resist or oppose war and torture, and suggests alternative ways of understanding and responding to bodies in pain.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2805784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0007196X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f64cecfb-da5f-3787-b2c7-53d224f205e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2805784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"brittonia"}],"isPartOf":"Brittonia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"lix","pageStart":"xli","pagination":"pp. xli-lix","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"The Taxonomic Index, Vol. 30 no. 4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2805784","wordCount":8505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan M. Kahan","Martha C. Nussbaum"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74d417c2-a238-3855-80fe-30b7bceaa515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Axiology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Two Conceptions of Emotion in Criminal Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123166","wordCount":55724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Andriopoulos"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c6ebf52-e650-3eb2-9479-362ec3c1f397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Terror of Reproduction: Early Cinema's Ghostly Doubles and the Right to One's Own Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669180","wordCount":9526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"99","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amanda Kelly"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41714682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00358991"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468020148, 468014877"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235763, 2009-235764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a469331-85f2-34eb-b5de-b681eeac284d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41714682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procriasectc"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Archaeology","Science & Mathematics","History","Biological Sciences","Irish Studies","History","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A neo-Assyrian relief in the Weingreen Museum of Biblical Antiquities, Trinity College Dublin\u2014a case study in artefact acquisition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41714682","wordCount":12360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Royal Irish Academy","volumeNumber":"112C","abstract":"The focus of this paper is a neo-Assyrian relief discovered in the Weingreen Museum of Biblical Antiquities at Trinity College Dublin (hereafter the Weingreen Museum). The shallow relief depicts a pictorial vignette of a kneeling genie, rendered in profile, facing a tree of life, on a horizon formed by a cuneiform border (WM 1189). Details surrounding the relief's acquisition were completely unknown to Trinity College Dublin staff during 2008\u20139. This investigation follows a paper trail which illuminates the circumstances behind its procurement and subsequent journey from Iraq to Dublin in the Victorian period. The results establish the relief as the uncontested prize piece of the Weingreen Museum.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2080030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7f6696d-0729-3ec1-94ef-917823979e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2080030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"836","pageStart":"777","pagination":"pp. 777-836","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2080030","wordCount":32727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Wardle"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40383222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01659510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b7b45e1-1ebb-345c-8781-6e9a77b1668d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40383222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullrijk"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Analysis of this Christian popular culture compels us to acknowledge the relevance of the material dimension of the Christian imagination, and, in so doing, to address the genesis of a Christian environment with powerful pictures that involve people into a particular religious aesthetics. My key concern is to show how Christian pictures, though thriving through modern possibilities of reproduction, ultimately refuse to appear as \"mere\" representations and tend to retain the somewhat excessive potential to partially merge with the divine--and above all satanic--power which they depict, calling for adequate action.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hannah Frank"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780520303621"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a68ef6c-fba5-3113-a4c0-08e5e6dc1ad3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvr7fd7m.13"}],"isPartOf":"Frame by Frame","keyphrase":["animation","jay leyda","walter benjamin","emily dickinson","cinema","sergei eisenstein","university","donald crafton","disney","andr\u00e9 bazin"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"157","pagination":"157-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.13","wordCount":15519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hall"],"datePublished":"1983-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/590775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/590775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/590775","wordCount":1225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Ferrall"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9aa22a52-6fde-31a6-aa35-0f2ea4be4b54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"667","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-667","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE \"NEW AGE\" AND THE EMERGENCE OF REACTIONARY MODERNISM BEFORE THE GREAT WAR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283493","wordCount":6879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Will Abberley"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/resilience.4.1.0063","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e035ffe-f5fe-3dd1-b56c-3a164c80397b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/resilience.4.1.0063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resilience"}],"isPartOf":"Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Brutal Visions: Mimicry, Biosemiotics, and the Animal-Human Binary in Thomas Belt's The Naturalist in Nicaragua<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/resilience.4.1.0063","wordCount":8921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grant H. 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Given that whiteness and antiracism are often framed as antonyms, white engagement with matters commonly deemed \"nonwhite issues\" often involves a presentation of self that unsettles established habit and expected modes of interaction. Adding to the research on race and stigma, I demonstrate how privileged actors repeatedly construct a broken and stigmatized white and antiracist identity in which management of one recreates the stigmatization of the other. They not only accept a \"spoiled\" identity (whiteness-as-racist and antiracism-as-too-radical), but embrace stigma as markings of moral commitment and political authenticity. This dynamic\u2014what I call stigma allure\u2014illuminates how stigma, rather than a status to be shunned or entirely overcome, can become a desired component of identity formation that drives and orders human behavior toward utilitarian, symbolic, and selfcreative goals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSALIND E. 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GREENSTEIN"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20689053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20689053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Theories of Modern Bible Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20689053","wordCount":15092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgrx5.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874217506"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de90c1b6-d236-3b29-8966-22def8a4fe24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt4cgrx5.5"}],"isPartOf":"Folklore and the Internet","keyphrase":["bronner","dundes","digital","tradition","virtualizing folklore","analog","digital culture","culture","cultural","computer"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"21","pagination":"21-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Digitizing and Virtualizing Folklore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgrx5.5","wordCount":21070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One popular sense of tradition signals a human, even naturalistic connection. In this view, tradition is down home, out in the fields, back in the woods, where socializing, ritualizing, and storytelling occur unencumbered by machines or corporations. Hearingtradition<\/em>uttered often raises images of family huddled around the dinner table at holidays or the neighborhood gang getting together for play, and it might be imaginatively set in opposition to the socially alienating quality of modernity dominated by technology. The rhetoric of tradition cited in folkloristic annals is not that far off from these characterizations, although it may broaden to a","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Barnaby"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40d1c338-c725-33c0-9c52-15e596efd18e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Realist Novel as Meta-Spectacle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304876","wordCount":8929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elissa Marder"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fd5b630-fa29-3b27-a16f-a5919545ee3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26288312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Nothing to Say: Fragments on the Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26288312","wordCount":5175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David D. 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This article examines the techniques of making and knowing engineered into those information-laden drawings, images built in anticipation of metropolitan reuse. Against the kaleidoscopic, polychromatic richness of Church's exhibition paintings, the graphic production examined here now exists only as negative photostats. Reckoning with that reproductive transfer sits at the heart of this article. Engaging with such thick mediation offers new insight into Church's pragmatic encounters with South American targets in the 1850s, I argue, just as it foregrounds the painter's complex enmeshment in an expanding insurance industry rooted in his native Hartford, Connecticut. But it also serves to clarify the methodological patterns by which art-historical logic makes and knows its objects.","subTitle":"Transfer and Countertransference in Frederic Edwin Church's South American Drawings","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa984338-f5bf-3924-b16b-0b2aeab6fb30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2699159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Proceedings of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699159","wordCount":10351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon J. 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In this essay, the circumstances that led to the custom's rise and fall along with the ensuing controversies over the appropriateness of the tradition to student life are examined. Analysis of the tradition's relevance to the construction of masculinity and adulthood applies social psychological concepts of \"narcissism of minor differences\" and \"play frames.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24444435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f308dfe-a91a-3bc5-9bbf-23dc47040243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24444435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historian"}],"isPartOf":"The Historian","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"News of Phi Alpha Theta","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24444435","wordCount":11793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roswitha Mueller"],"datePublished":"1987-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89355f99-d628-3f74-8b48-cc29eb867a60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Montage in Brecht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208249","wordCount":5760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isabelle Pingree","John M. 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A novel mode of allusion, which serves to explode connections rather than to make them, brings these histories into view as limits beyond which members of the audience cannot see. In this way, the deaths of Antony and Cleopatra are reconstituted beyond the interpretive horizons that had originally denied their force as endings.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gustav Kr\u00fcger"],"datePublished":"1933-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1508217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3775f2a-d556-35f2-9068-5748d1fe3fa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1508217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":149.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Decade of Research in Early Christian Literature, 1921-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1508217","wordCount":62469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angelos Koutsourakis"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f14bfa72-7f18-35a5-9c5a-22924218ccad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44072095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Dialectics of Cruelty: Rethinking Artaudian Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44072095","wordCount":13478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"Antonin Artaud's concept of a theater of cruelty and his scarce writings on cinema have profoundly influenced film scholarship, especially in view of the large number of contemporary European films that employ images of extreme violence and utilize an aesthetics of visual unpleasure. But is the politics of the Artaudian aesthetic to be reduced to the reproduction of gory images of revolting violence? This article explores the politics of Artaudian cinema by going back to Artaud's writings on the medium and comparing them to Brecht's writings on film. The focus of this article is twofold: the first part goes back to Artaud's writings and investigates the politics of the cinema of cruelty, while the second uses as case studies Jonas Mekas's The Brig (1964) and Costas Zapas's The Rebellion of Red Maria (2011). The first film is a screen adaptation of a performance renowned for reconciling the theater of cruelty with a political context, while the second is a contemporary paradigm of a film that draws on the Artaudian and Brechtian traditions with a view to responding to the political concerns of the present.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb6cb452-78ac-3d9b-974c-3bfeda56a49f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/459518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Proceedings of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459518","wordCount":14934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Flesch"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60ead4bc-f07b-3dfa-b983-9ca3a722cdc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Proximity and Power: Shakespearean and Cinematic Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208150","wordCount":9765,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[25309,25596]],"Locations in B":[[36557,36844]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23377602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0160239X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a24ffdbd-97c4-3d9c-8901-aafe065f5bd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23377602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"grebasnatmem"}],"isPartOf":"Great Basin Naturalist Memoirs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":723.0,"pageEnd":"1553","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-1553","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Catalog of Scolytidae and Platypodidae (Coleoptera), Part 2: Taxonomic Index Volume B","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23377602","wordCount":476081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"Monte L. 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Each reading constitutes \u2018an appreciation, a living-through, of the invention that makes the work not just different but a creative reimagination of cultural materials\u2019.\u00b9 My contention is that the singularity of Ciaran Carson\u2019s writing rests upon his far-reaching imaginative engagements with ideas of space and place, and particularly urban spatiality in an Irish context. It is the purpose of this chapter to set out a critical framework for exploring these engagements in their widest manifestations. 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Ruth Rogaski has argued that Tianjin's distinctiveness deserves the appellation ' hypercolony', a term which reflects Tianjin's socio-political intricacies and the multiple colonial discourses of power and space. This article focuses on the representations of the ex-Italian concession in Tianjin, a site which is currently renegotiating its identity between reinvention of the past (1901-45) and property-led regeneration. The article employs the concept of heterotopia to explore 'semi-colonial', 'hypercolonial' and 'globalizing' representations of Tianjin's built form.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Branislav Jakovljevic"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf251498-a213-3ade-90d4-801a758b8c1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40927953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Wooster Baroque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40927953","wordCount":21717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"MIT Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"In the decade following 9\/11, the Wooster Group staged three landmark 17th-century plays, Phaedra, Hamlet, and La Didone. This turn to baroque theatre is both a comment on American culture of the first decade of the 21 st century and a significant departure in the history of the group itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Delphine Grass"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"oclc","value":"65211423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006212212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0e5c54d-2fdd-38a1-9b3e-7c95d03a4edd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - 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Walter Benjamin's work on translation and language places a similar emphasis on the ethical subject. His essay, 'The Task of the Translator', considers the analysis employed by poetic criticism to lead to a deep appreciation of the relationship between poet and audience. A proper reading of poetry deepens our feeling for communication. Further, criticism has the power to wake us up to our relationships. The Jewish element of Levinas and Benjamin's thought influences their notions of the ethics driving those relationships. This essay traces Levinas and Benjamin's development of an ethical readership which, while not itself strictly 'Jewish', has Jewish origins.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel H. 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Pater\u2019s choice of period was easily recognized (even at the time) as a subtle but sweeping polemic against Ruskin\u2019s \u201dGothic.\u201d\u00b9 Pater chose instead to \u201cthrow into relief\u201d the age when classical art seemed to bring \u201cthe mind of man\u201d back to its senses after the dark night of Christian asceticism. The perspective ofThe Renaissance<\/em>\u2014\u00adPater\u2019s volume, like his imagination of the period\u2014asserts a disengagement","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GRAHAM HOLDERNESS","CAROL BANKS"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3808466-33fb-3892-bb08-bbc2ff3afaf5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41555944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mimesis: Text and reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41555944","wordCount":3367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manishita Dass"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ceb23b06-f2f2-350c-ae44-94c114005b4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25619729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Crowd outside the Lettered City: Imagining the Mass Audience in 1920s India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619729","wordCount":11799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Drawing on the Indian Cinematograph Committee Report of 1928 and the transcripts of its hearings and interviews, this essay shows how middle-class elites in colonial India imagined the mass public created and made visible by the cinema as a divided audience, primarily segmented along class lines, simultaneously menacing and vulnerable.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gail Day"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74eea283-4eee-3b09-a61f-4df05f959e01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Allegory: Between Deconstruction and Dialectics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360685","wordCount":10017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The question of allegory -- and, by implication, that of the symbol -- has been an important feature of art-historical debate in recent years, significant in disputes about, inter alia, modernism and postmodernism and in arguments about method. This article aims to reexplore some of the founding texts for these debates, specifically Walter Benjamin's book on the German \"Trauerspiel\" and the writings of Paul de Man. 'Allegory: Between Deconstruction and Dialectics' draws on a close reading of these texts to question the widespread tendency to treat the allegory-symbol distinction as a static dichotomy. The argument considers the claim -- common to both supporters and detractors -- that allegory is an 'unmediated construction' opposed to the symbol's 'immediacy'. In art-theoretical polemics, the opposition of symbol and allegory has often reproduced a methodological argument between, respectively, dialectics and deconstruction. This essay explores a different framing of the problem: how the conception of allegory itself seems torn between dialectical and deconstructive approaches.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRY FRIEDENWALD"],"datePublished":"1935-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44438126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25764810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdccaceb-68b0-3fc0-b2e3-a9b8d8c929e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44438126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullinsthistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"555","pagination":"pp. 555-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"MOSES MAIMONIDES THE PHYSICIAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44438126","wordCount":11682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhys H. Williams"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"558f3107-05f0-3ec9-ba60-707680b96942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1083","pageStart":"1081","pagination":"pp. 1081-1083","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231307","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karina Eileraas"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"840","pageStart":"807","pagination":"pp. 807-840","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reframing the Colonial Gaze: Photography, Ownership, and Feminist Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251988","wordCount":8916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"118","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. Michael Matin"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf8cff7-e9bc-31ed-b11f-b22c14e0012b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41307873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"SCRUTINIZING \"THE BATTLE OF DORKING\": THE ROYAL UNITED SERVICE INSTITUTION AND THE MID-VICTORIAN INVASION CONTROVERSY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41307873","wordCount":14647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Homer T. Rosenberger"],"datePublished":"1948-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40067332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08979049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c742d49-63bb-3128-8cbd-328e8e43b762"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40067332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"recocoluhistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C.","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Thomas Ustick Walter and the Completion of the United States Capitol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40067332","wordCount":15806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Historical Society of Washington, D.C.","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["O. K. Werckmeister"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c349cd55-8527-33b4-9207-9209f32e80a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Walter Benjamin's Angel of History, or the Transfiguration of the Revolutionary into the Historian","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343971","wordCount":13223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. Pinar","William M. Reynolds","Patrick Slattery","Peter M. Taubman"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9387c736-d696-33b7-91f9-055f3f4f442e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 5: Understanding Curriculum as Political Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974921","wordCount":34450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Walter Leimgruber"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfr.2010.47.1-2.161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b6cf095-7687-373e-9a83-156c696eb53b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfr.2010.47.1-2.161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Switzerland and the UNESCO Convention on Intangible Cultural Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfr.2010.47.1-2.161","wordCount":13015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"Abstract In 2008, Switzerland ratified both the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expression and the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage. In a direct democracy these decisions closely involve multiple stakeholders. In this article, organizations and associations involved in the ratification process will be introduced and discussed against the background of the history of the intangible heritage convention. Next, I will address questions about particular understandings of culture and cultural concepts held by these different organizations, as well as the cultural and socio-political objectives or agendas they pursue through the implementation of the Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage. The term Volkskultur plays a particularly important role in this context since it is often directly equated with intangible culture; thus, the article discusses the implications of this equation, including the cultural and political approaches that stem from it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Oatsvall","Vaughn Scribner"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3098\/ah.2018.092.4.461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00021482"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45905785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c723ce7-4b40-3162-bcd0-b5c7b93e211e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3098\/ah.2018.092.4.461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agrihist"}],"isPartOf":"Agricultural History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Agriculture","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cThe Devil Was in the Englishman that He Makes Everything Work\u201d: Implementing the Concept of \u201cWork\u201d to Reevaluate Sugar Production and Consumption in the Early Modern British Atlantic World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3098\/ah.2018.092.4.461","wordCount":13700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Agricultural History Society","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"This article utilizes a scientific definition of \u201cwork\u201d to shift enslaved laborers and the environments within which they toiled to the heart of the historical conversation. Though British plantation owners and consumers often figure prominently in historical analysis of Caribbean sugar plantations and rum production, this article's perspective necessarily relegates them to the fringe of the historical conversation. The preponderance of work on early modern sugar plantations took place at the nexus of human labor and environmental processes. When we understand work as a form of energy transfer, and place it at the center of sugar production, then the Atlantic world emerges as a series of interconnected energy flows rather than merely a collection of shared human experiences. Just as in the present day, early modern sugar agroecosystems were organized around the goal of creating products for blissfully unaware consumers in order to extract as much profit as possible from the work of humans and the environment, often with devastating outcomes for both.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shelly Jarenski"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"102b2767-febc-339a-81bc-8de4655849c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41809550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Delighted and Instructed\": African American Challenges to Panoramic Aesthetics in J. P. Ball, Kara Walker, and Frederick Douglass","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809550","wordCount":16301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. 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Colonialism, Labour, and Power Relations in Pierre Bourdieu\u2019s Algerian Inquiries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26394875","wordCount":14474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"This article analyses the Algerian inquiries of Pierre Bourdieu. It begins by retracing the most pervasive, medium- and long-term interventions of French colonial power in Algerian society: the introduction of capitalism and the internment of civilians in the centres de regroupement. Next, it outlines the social subjects studied by the young agr\u00e9g\u00e9 of philosophy and his representation of labour. Subsequent sections deal with shifts in the public stance of Bourdieu regarding the revolutionary propensity of these people. On this tricky testing ground, Bourdieu engaged with and critically confronted the ideas of Germaine Tillion and Frantz Fanon. His position is reviewed from a historical-philological approach in order to set the texts in their temporal and spatial contexts, establish parallels and\/or divergences, and verify the effects such comparisons produced. The conclusions emphasize the richness and originality of Bourdieu\u2019s inquiries given the era in which they were made and highlight, in light of the recent global reorientation of labour history, some of the vital viewpoints expressed on the origins of capitalism in the colony. Cet article analyse les \u00e9tudes alg\u00e9riennes de Pierre Bourdieu. Il commence par retracer les interventions les plus r\u00e9pandues \u00e0 moyen et \u00e0 long terme de la puissance fran\u00e7aise coloniale en Alg\u00e9rie: l\u2019introduction du capitalisme et l\u2019internement de civils dans les centres de regroupement. L\u2019auteur analyse ensuite les sujets sociaux que le jeune agr\u00e9g\u00e9 de philosophie \u00e9tudie et la repr\u00e9sentation qu\u2019il fait des travailleurs. Les parties suivantes portent sur les changements dans la position publique de Bourdieu concernant la propension des travailleurs \u00e0 faire la r\u00e9volution. Sur ce terrain d\u2019essai d\u00e9licat, Bourdieu examine les id\u00e9es de Germaine Tillion et de Frantz Fanon, en les abordant dans une perspective critique. Sa position est \u00e9tudi\u00e9e selon une approche historicophilosophique pour replacer les textes dans leur cadre temporel et spatial, \u00e9tablir des parall\u00e8les et\/ou des divergences et v\u00e9rifier les effets que ces comparaisons produisent. Les conclusions soulignent la richesse et l\u2019originalit\u00e9 des recherches de Bourdieu pour l\u2019\u00e9poque \u00e0 laquelle elles furent faites et mettent en valeur, \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de la r\u00e9cente r\u00e9orientation globale d\u2019histoire du travail, certains points de vue essentiels qui y sont exprim\u00e9s sur les origines du capitalisme dans la colonie. Dieser Beitrag analysiert Pierre Bourdieus Untersuchungen zu Algerien. Einleitend werden die tiefgreifendsten mittel- und kurzfristigen Interventionen der franz\u00f6sischen Kolonialmacht in die algerische Gesellschaft rekonstruiert: die Einf\u00fchrung des Kapitalismus und die Inhaftierung von Zivilisten in den centres de regroupement. Anschlie\u00dfend werden die sozialen Subjekte skizziert, die der junge agr\u00e9g\u00e9 in der Philosophie untersuchte, ebenso seine Darstellung der Arbeiterklasse. Die darauf folgenden Abschnitte befassen sich mit den Ver\u00e4nderungen in den \u00f6ffentlichen \u00c4u\u00dferungen Bourdieus hinsichtlich der revolution\u00e4ren Neigungen dieser Menschen. Auf diesem verf\u00e4nglichen Untersuchungsterrain setzte sich Bourdieu kritisch mit den Ideen Germaine Tillions und Frantz Fanons auseinander. Seine Position wird von einem historisch-philologischen Standpunkt aus betrachtet, damit die Texte in ihre zeitlichen und r\u00e4umlichen Kontexte gestellt, Parallelen bzw. Unterschiede bestimmt und die von solchen Vergleichen gezeitigten Effekte \u00fcberpr\u00fcft werden k\u00f6nnen. Abschlie\u00dfend wird die Reichhaltigkeit und Originalit\u00e4t betont, die Bourdieus Untersuchungen im Vergleich zu anderen Texten der Zeit auszeichnet, und es werden, mit Blick auf die j\u00fcngere globale Neuausrichtung der Geschichte der Arbeit, einige der wesentlichen Perspektiven Bourdieus auf die Urspr\u00fcnge des Kapitalismus in der Kolonie hervorgehoben. En este texto se analizan los planteamientos de Pierre Bourdieu sobre Argelia. Comienza por poner recordar las intervenciones m\u00e1s persiasivas a medio y largo plazo del poder colonial franc\u00e9s en la sociedad argelina: la introducci\u00f3n del capitalismo y el internamiento de civiles en los centres de regroupement. A continuaci\u00f3n se subrayan los sujetos sociales estudiados por el joven agr\u00e9g\u00e9 de Filosof\u00eda y su representaci\u00f3n de trabajo. Las secciones siguientes tratan de los cambios en la esfera p\u00fablica de Bourdieu tomando en consideraci\u00f3n la propensi\u00f3n revolucionaria de las personas que la compon\u00edan. En este delicado \u00e1mbito de an\u00e1lisis Bourdieu se acab\u00f3 enfrentando con las ideas defendidas por Germaine Tillion y Frantz Fanon, planteando una confrontaci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica. Su posici\u00f3n se analiza desde una perspectiva hist\u00f3rico-filol\u00f3gica para situar los escritos en sus contextos temporales y espaciales, estableciendo paralelismos y\/o divergencias, y comprobando los efectos que resultan de tales comparaciones. Las conclusiones permiten enfatizar la riqueza y originalidad de los planteamientos de Bourdieu para una \u00e9poca en la que estos fueron hechos y pone de relieve, a la luz de la reciente reorientaci\u00f3n global de historia del trabajo, alguno de los puntos de vista vitales expresados sobre los or\u00edgenes del capitalismo en la colonia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. 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Ure's book occupies an important place in debates on the labour process as well as historical accounts of industrialization and the regulation of factory labour. Through a detailed reading of the text's figurative language it is argued that Ure constructs a capitalist utopia of the production process without labour. Central to Ure's book is a social fantasy of autogenesis-machines that produce without workers. In contrast to Taylorist models that promote a fusion of worker and apparatus, I argue that Ure effects a radical separation in which the worker is imagined as the other to the machine. Ure's text is compared to popular utopian thought and located in contemporary medicalizations of the factory. This essay proposes that The Philosophy of Manufactures, and the 'factory guide books' of the 1830s more generally, worked to produce a space for technical experts such as Ure in the emerging middle-class state.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deborah Garwood"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1520281X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27ff685d-3107-3d57-aec2-964a9edd8483"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pajjperfart"}],"isPartOf":"PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Future of an Idea 9 Evenings: Forty Years Later","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140055","wordCount":5582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILLARD ROUSE JILLSON"],"datePublished":"1946-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23372270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23288183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"483d83aa-c70e-35fe-bc3a-e0edf00772bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23372270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"regikentstathist"}],"isPartOf":"Register of Kentucky State Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY: Designed to Portray the Changing Historical Scene from 1774-1946 (With Annotations) (Continued)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23372270","wordCount":13070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"149","publisher":"Kentucky Historical Society","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William C. 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The resulting images invest the stars' original auras with a new, more ambiguous significance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEREMY G. BUTLER"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f8e28dc-0d17-3b6b-bc5a-df6c24252b1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"COLLEGE COURSE FILE: STAR IMAGES, STAR PERFORMANCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687920","wordCount":9586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alison Murry","Stephen Cumbaa","Richard Day","Robert Holmes","Kieran Shepherd","Xiao-Cun Wu","Hans Larsson","Karen Sears","F. Robin O'Keefe","Tamaki Sato","Suzanne Strait","Alistair Evans","Ewan Fordyce","Mark Uhen","Greg Buckley","Jason Head","F. Robin O'Keefe","Ted Daeschler","David Archibald","Kristina Curry Rogers","Donald Prothero","David Froehlich","Eric Dewar"],"datePublished":"2006-09-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a748ad5-edcc-3914-bf37-b056e2ed454e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4524627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":149.0,"pageEnd":"152A","pageStart":"1A","pagination":"pp. 1A-32A+35A-144A+146A-152A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Sixty-Sixth Annual Meeting Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Canadian Museum of Nature Marriott Ottawa Crowne Plaza Ottawa Ottawa, Ontario, Canada October 18-21,2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524627","wordCount":200977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSEPH BROWNING"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bac9868-b37d-3eb1-b414-fd20b2ccee3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26414196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Assembled Landscapes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414196","wordCount":9795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"This article examines the folding together of music and landscape in some recent albums featuring the shakuhachi, a Japanese bamboo flute that today animates an active and international music scene. Through analysis of the texts, images, and sounds on these albums, I explore the reimagining of the shakuhachi\u2019s musical geography as the instrument reaches new players and places in Europe, Australia, and North America. Using recordings that incorporate environmental sounds alongside the shakuhachi, I examine ideas about the perceived authenticity of particular sounds, performance spaces, and recording aesthetics. These recordings unsettle our thinking about the relationship between music and landscape in several ways. First they document performers\u2019 connections with particular sites, yet complicate any notion that the shakuhachi is related to a single place or nation, signalling a distinctly contemporary sense of place. Second, the centrality of mediation in these artistic projects makes technology crucial to the production of the natural and renders the naturalness of the shakuhachi audible in new ways. Third, the use of environmental sounds provokes questions about agency and the boundaries between human and non-human sound-making. By treating these albums as assemblages of material, social, technological, and natural elements, I reveal the lively and complex character of otherwise everyday musical objects.","subTitle":"The Sites and Sounds of Some Recent Shakuhachi Recordings","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH EMERY"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23537857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"652","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-652","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art as Passion in Anatole France's \"Le Lys rouge\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537857","wordCount":5283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"At first glance, Anatole France's Le Lys rouge (1894) is a straightforward love story capitalizing on a fin-de-si\u00e8cle vogue for medieval Italian art. Closer study, however, reveals a mordant satire of contemporaries' aesthetic pronouncements. A regular guest on the salon circuit, France was a privileged witness to contemporary taste and a powerful arbiter of aesthetic trends. Although Le Lys rouge is a work of fiction, his careful descriptions of fin-de-si\u00e8cle taste and his sly references to real-life writers, artists, and collectors influenced his readers, while providing twenty-first century scholars with a valuable appreciation of late nineteenth-century French attitudes to art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GAIL KENNING"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43834289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42897651"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-215552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a89acdd0-9ce7-32cd-a4b9-b8b220478717"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43834289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"450","pagination":"pp. 450-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creative Craft-Based Textile Activity in the Age of Digital Systems and Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43834289","wordCount":5132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Leonardo","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Domestic craft-based textile activities, such as knitting, crochet, hand weaving and lace making, are often viewed as being of limited creative potential. The perceived lack of creativity arises, in part, out of the extent to which these activities copy, reproduce and re-create existing pattern forms and use preexisting templates. This paper reports on the findings of an experimental research project that explored the creative potential of crochet lace making using digital media, technologies and practices. It provides critical analysis of how new technologies, practices and theoretical frameworks have implications for ongoing domestic craft-based textile activities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aidan Southall"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c34c023b-65e1-348e-b5ae-630e937a54a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Contribution of Anthropology to African Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524162","wordCount":7521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Huron"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/mp.2001.19.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307829"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45906020"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b835db93-f1e7-3cfc-a2d8-9dc6aef79744"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/mp.2001.19.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicperception"}],"isPartOf":"Music Perception: An Interdisciplinary Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tone and Voice: A Derivation of the Rules of Voice-Leading from Perceptual Principles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/mp.2001.19.1.1","wordCount":25979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"The traditional rules of voice-leading in Western music are explicated using experimentally established perceptual principles. Six core principles are shown to account for the majority of voice-leading rules given in historical and contemporary music theory tracts. These principles are treated in a manner akin to axioms in a formal system from which the traditional rules of voice-leading are derived. Nontraditional rules arising from the derivation are shown to predict formerly unnoticed aspects of voice-leading practice. In addition to the core perceptual principles, several auxiliary principles are described. These auxiliary principles are occasionally linked to voice-leading practice and may be regarded as compositional \"options\" that shape the music-making in perceptually unique ways. It is suggested that these auxiliary principles distinguish different types of part writing, such as polyphony, homophony, and close harmony. A theory is proposed to account for the aesthetic origin of voice-leading practices.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurie Monahan"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0df10ee1-6172-3f3a-b0b3-cec9ee769a81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rock Paper Scissors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397594","wordCount":8610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gordon Hull"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"808cb7e3-4944-3eb2-aea5-f2dd35f276de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"DIGITAL COPYRIGHT AND THE POSSIBILITY OF PURE LAW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686164","wordCount":10587,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841]],"Locations in B":[[36144,36355]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-04-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1739907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea0e9fd1-2deb-3208-83a0-bdc815113419"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1739907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1739907","wordCount":18509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4185","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"188","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bradley Deane"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.4.689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c809b87-1c32-3c77-aa07-322ae6de3071"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.4.689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"689","pagination":"pp. 689-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imperial Boyhood: Piracy and the Play Ethic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.4.689","wordCount":11217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"Abstract Representations of perpetual boyhood came to fascinate the late Victorians, partly because such images could naturalize a new spirit of imperial aggression and new policies of preserving power. This article traces the emergence of this fantasy through a series of stories about the relationship of the boy and the pirate, figures whose opposition in mid-Victorian literature was used to articulate the moral legitimacy of colonialism, but who became doubles rather than antitheses in later novels, such as R. L. Stevenson's Treasure Island and Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim. Masculine worth needed no longer to be measured by reference to transcendent, universal laws, but by a morally flexible ethic of competitive play, one that bound together boyishness and piracy in a satisfying game of international adventure.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helena Goscilo"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459479","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1a73dbd-0537-3315-9f2b-4e0031b97dde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20459479"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Re-Conceptualizing Moscow (W)hole\/Sale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20459479","wordCount":8768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"\u0424\u0438\u043b\u044c\u043c \u0410. \u0417\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0434\u043e\u0432\u0438\u0447\u0430 \"\u041c\u043e\u0441\u043a\u0432\u0430\" (2000), \u0441\u0446\u0435\u043d\u0430\u0440\u0438\u0439 \u0434\u043b\u044f \u043a\u043e\u0442\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0431\u044b\u043b \u043d\u0430\u043f\u0438\u0441\u0430\u043d \u0440\u0435\u0436\u0438\u0441\u0441\u0435\u0440\u043e\u043c \u0432 \u0441\u043e\u0430\u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435 \u0441 \u0412. 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(\u0434\u0435)\u043a\u043e\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0443\u0438\u0440\u0443\u0435\u0442 \u041c\u043e\u0441\u043a\u0432\u0443 \u043a\u0430\u043a \u043d\u043e\u043b\u044c \u0438\u043b\u0438 \u043e\u0442\u0441\u0443\u0442\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0438\u0435.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maya Socolovsky"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d313c11-aaf4-35d8-a078-021eddb0b274"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20462734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From Rumba to Funeral March: Remembering Cuba in Oscar Hijuelos's \"A Simple Habana Melody\" (From When the World Was Good)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20462734","wordCount":11653,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[8608,8702],[52301,52410]],"Locations in B":[[31798,31894],[64450,64559]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norbert Bolz","Michelle Mattson"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3100d96d-14de-3d37-ac3c-57ab67228d9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Farewell to the Gutenberg-Galaxy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488455","wordCount":9822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"78","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Collins"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/832751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78b7d695-0171-3784-a57c-45d8999a3842"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/832751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ritual Sacrifice and the Political Economy of Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/832751","wordCount":4526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noah Simblist"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9228cf74-3f05-37b1-aea3-bf6b14bf897a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43188609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From the Civic Imaginary to the Nongovernmental Commons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188609","wordCount":3256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KATHERINE BOOTLE ATTIE"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43607765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50030946"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233854"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41419244-9c9f-3f1d-9a2d-162381d5999e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43607765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englliterena"}],"isPartOf":"English Literary Renaissance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tragic Proportions: The Art of Tyranny and the Politics of the Soul in \"Hamlet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43607765","wordCount":12521,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13411,13524]],"Locations in B":[[7322,7435]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Establishing the Platonic context of Shakespeare's aestheticized politics, this essay reads Hamlet as a moral philosophic study in tyrannical regimes both internal and external. It argues that Hamlet, imbued with the spirit of Plato's Republic, represents tyranny as an aesthetic problem of size, scale, and proportion. Focusing on images of imbalance, from the \"disjoint and out of frame\" state of Denmark to the strange spatial poetics of Hamlet's being \"bounded in a nutshell,\" close readings trace a pattern of disproportion that runs throughout the play and that signals passion's usurpation of reason's rightful rule. The essay clarifies certain aspects of Shakespeare's Platonism that are strongly present in Hamlet: the equivalence of the moral and the political; statecraft as a form of mimesis; tyranny as an exploitation of sensory weakness, spatial misjudgment, and perceptive instability; and the dangerous alliance of the tyrant and the tragedian. The argument suggests that by focusing our attention on the confusion of larger with smaller, of wholes with parts, and of internal with external, Shakespeare plays up the ontological instability of the early modern worldview while revealing tyranny, like tragedy, to be an art of disproportion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILLIAM N. WEST"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13011a26-dc64-3fbc-a948-c380d538b5d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Idea of a Theater: Humanist Ideology and the Imaginary Stage in Early Modern Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917341","wordCount":16285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcia Landy"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9b406ea-5af8-3f79-a5ae-76ed273c30f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Politics, Aesthetics, and Patriarchy in the Confessions of Winifred Wagner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487854","wordCount":7943,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52309,52534]],"Locations in B":[[48194,48639]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Wooster Stallman"],"datePublished":"1945-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ac6af72-b701-3bf6-a958-c54243f962d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/459085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Annotated Bibliography of A. E. Housman: A Critical Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459085","wordCount":17272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordi L\u00f3pez Sintas","Konstantina Zerva","Ercilia Garc\u00eda-\u00c1lvarez"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83f3c965-9362-3d7c-8d01-38c6c4e31da8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Business - Business operations"],"title":"Accessing recorded music: Interpreting a contemporary social exchange system","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250538","wordCount":8592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"Grounded in how individuals access recorded music, we have developed a comprehensive description that classifies social exchanges aimed at accessing cultural resources and that also clarifies the forces that shape individual choices regarding particular social exchanges. We also highlight the exchange properties that socially integrate and classify individuals in a social context. Our analysis integrates, but also demonstrates as misleading, recent interpretations regarding the sharing of cultural resources as a gift or consumer-to-consumer system, suggesting instead a correspondence with generalized exchanges. Finally, we discuss the implications of our interpretation for the dematerialization of cultural resources.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohammed Tabishat"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212224"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4c587dc-6d3e-32e7-a836-452a7327c68e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23350070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Society in Cinema: Anticipating the Revolution in Egyptian Fiction and Movies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350070","wordCount":7445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"New School","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Galligan"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68ceb244-79e3-395f-8427-e22367ed4f18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 138-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Self Pictured: Manet, the Mirror, and the Occupation of Realist Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051257","wordCount":30001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"This essay is a hermeneutic investigation into a \"mirror mode of looking,\" which the author defines as a strategy of semiotic representation inherited by Manet from a host of predecessors, including Van Eyck, Titian, Vel\u00e1zquez, Steen, Vermeer, and Watteau. It is proposed that the early historical precedence of a \"mirror mode\" in realist painting calls for a new, multivalent reading of the praxis of mimesis (and its public reception) in the premodern era. In turn, the subjective visuality of nineteenth-century modernism signals perhaps not so radical a departure from a former \"ocularcentric regime\" than is commonly presumed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan B. Landes"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"315a54ff-5125-3ba5-a79f-06f83dd9e808"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3234493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hegel's Conception of the Family","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234493","wordCount":10277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"Hegel advances a theory of family life which takes account of the forms of consciousness of the modern world as well as its characteristic social practices. He attempts to forge a new unity between ethical and political life in the face of the social fragmentation that has accompanied the rise of modern economic relationships. The immense appeal of Hegel's conception of the family, however, is marred according to Professor Landes by a series of internal contradictions concerning the relationships between the family and property, the family and love, the position of women, and the inevitability of the historical form of the family associated with the rise of industrial capitalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas J. Provart","Jose Alonso","Sarah M. Assmann","Dominique Bergmann","Siobhan M. Brady","Jelena Brkljacic","John Browse","Clint Chapple","Vincent Colot","Sean Cutler","Jeff Dangl","David Ehrhardt","Joanna D.Friesner","Wolf B. Frommer","Erich Grotewold","Elliot Meyerowitz","Jennifer Nemhauser","Magnus Nordborg","Craig Pikaard","John Shanklin","Chris Somerville","Mark Stitt","Keiko U. Torii","Jamie Waese","Doris Wagner","Peter McCourt"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/newphytologist.209.3.921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0028646X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446781"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85369362-27d6-3876-914f-488b1a6fed25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/newphytologist.209.3.921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newphytologist"}],"isPartOf":"The New Phytologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"944","pageStart":"921","pagination":"pp. 921-944","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"50 years of Arabidopsis research: highlights and future directions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/newphytologist.209.3.921","wordCount":23539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"209","abstract":"Summary The year 2014 marked the 25th International Conference on Arabidopsis Research. In the 50 yr since the first International Conference on Arabidopsis Research, held in 1965 in G\u00f6ttingen, Germany, > 54 000 papers that mention Arabidopsis thaliana in the title, abstract or keywords have been published.Wepresent herein a citational network analysis of these papers, and touch on some of the important discoveries in plant biology that have been made in this powerful model system, and highlight how these discoveries have then had an impact in crop species. We also look to the future, highlighting some outstanding questions that can be readily addressed in Arabidopsis. Topics that are discussed include Arabidopsis reverse genetic resources, stock centers, databases and online tools, cell biology, development, hormones, plant immunity, signaling in response to abiotic stress, transporters, biosynthesis of cells walls and macromolecules such as starch and lipids, epigenetics and epigenomics, genome-wide association studies and natural variation, gene regulatory networks, modeling and systems biology, and synthetic biology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SCOTT COHEN"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40658424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f13b186d-3eab-3624-ab00-121063b8de4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40658424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Counterfeiting and the Economics of Kingship in Milton's Eikonoklastes<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40658424","wordCount":12315,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[46041,46223]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"John Milton's 1649 prose tract Eikonoklasies aimed to undermine the popular image of Charles I as portrayed in Eikon Basilike, the document professing to be a record of the king's final meditations in prison. This essay argues that Milton revitalizes the ideology of iconoclasm by appropriating the logic and rhetoric of counterfeiting and posits a different economy of authority. When read in light of economic and numismatic discourses of early modem England, Milton can be seen to make a sweeping critique of representational authority that extends beyond the executed king and rewrites the economics of political authority.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Elizabeth C. Bartlet"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9f7b638-d102-3a14-b594-04a90377b741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Politics and the Fate of \"Roger et Olivier,\" a Newly Recovered Opera by Gr\u00e9try","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831160","wordCount":15256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44562709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560807841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19e07c78-8c87-3215-9c7d-a7e84974a763"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44562709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryengineer"}],"isPartOf":"The Military Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-61, 63-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering","Military Studies","Technology","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Forty-Third Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To End of February 1935, -- With special Reference to the Fourteenth Century and Asia)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224866","wordCount":38145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy Bauer"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d16efebd-c398-3a05-8dea-b24b729999a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusictheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Music Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The writings and compositions of two contemporary composers, Gy\u00f6rgy Ligeti and Helmut Lachenmann, echo this argument, confronting the role of criticism as a responsibility the modernist object bears toward a skeptical listener. Ligeti's Apparitions (1959) deals specifically with serialism as both a modernist legacy and a hindrance to the composer's \"seriousness and... sincerity\" that Cavell considers of central importance to modernist art. It functions as a metaphor in se, representing Cavell's hypothetical example of a solution to a compositional problem that \"has become identical with the aesthetic result itself.\" Lachenmann's Kontrakadenz (1970-71) concerns itself with the strained relation of artwork and audience in an era that demands an unprecedented trust in the musical object. It thus engages its audience in its own critical project, in an open dialogue with traditional forms and functions. Both works suggest that modernist music can escape the cycle of justification between the musical object and its analysis only when the object itself acknowledges the dangers inherent in the modernist situation and engages its audience directly in its risky endeavor.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1900-01-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1627366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4185baab-1762-327a-98ab-f21d47069585"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1627366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"viii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1900,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1627366","wordCount":5447,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"262","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Burchell"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24412766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24412766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renastudies"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Burckhardt redivivus: renaissance pedagogy as self-formation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24412766","wordCount":10227,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"The classic accounts of the humanistic school curriculum of Renaissance Italy stressed its capacity to mould persons into special kinds of individuals with enhanced capacities for political and intellectual autonomy. This claim has fallen into disrepair and even disrepute. Here I scrutinize one particularly influential account of the school curricula of the Renaissance which disparages the classical account, and note some of its shortcomings. I then return to the classic account associated with Burckhardt and suggest some reasons why it should still be treated with respect.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graham Freeman"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23013011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0894c4b4-97b1-3640-a33b-19fc72f5e8dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23013011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"410","pagination":"pp. 410-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"`IT WANTS ALL THE CREASES IRONING OUT': PERCY GRAINGER, THE FOLK SONG SOCIETY, AND THE IDEOLOGY OF THE ARCHIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23013011","wordCount":15903,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[40342,40662],[41004,41327],[42695,42895],[43175,43811]],"Locations in B":[[61579,61900],[61919,62242],[62468,62668],[62904,63543]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"The legacy of the Folk Song Society in England in the early twentieth century has been a difficult one. As historiographical winds have changed direction, so too has the reputation of the Society risen and fallen. Percy Grainger's contribution to folk music scholarship has proven perhaps the most divisive, both in his time and ours, and has, as a result, rarely been given the credit it deserves for its insight into the performance practice of the English folk singer. Instead, Grainger has become a weapon with which historians of various persuasions attack one another. This study examines Grainger's work and its reception by the Folk Song Society, as well as studies of Grainger by both Marxist historians and more recent revisionists in the field of musicology and social history, after which an alternative and more fruitful perspective of his work will be provided using the tools of post-structuralism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3577069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a6881dc-5f3e-3a63-9119-52f7c46feefa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3577069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"211","pagination":"p. 211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Art history"],"title":"Why Does Fred Sandback's Work Make Me Cry?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442711","wordCount":7213,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"22","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhonda Taube"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee185584-ed53-3586-a2d2-0afacc22b593"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23238995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Manufacturing Identities: Masking in Postwar Highland Guatemala","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23238995","wordCount":7944,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16265,16387]],"Locations in B":[[18103,18225]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"At their patron saints' annual fiestas, the Maya and the Ladinos of western highland Guatemala perform dances in costumes that take their inspiration from film, television, music, and the Internet. The two groups adapt the costume dance to their own interests, and the tension between them is evident in the different types of costumes they rent and purchase. Ladino costumes distinguish their wearers as modern consumers, while K'iche' costumes stress communitas, adding to the borrowed images to connect with indigenous forms of subsistence and lifestyle and to allow comment on proper forms of behavior and on social ills. The costume makers act as cultural intermediaries, producing both the context and the meaning of the dances and enabling performers and spectators alike to construct different identities through them. Durante las fiestas anuales de sus santos patrones, los mayas y ladinos de los altos occidentales de Guatemala llevan a cabo danzas con vestuarios basados en el cine, la televisi\u00f3n, el \u00e1mbito musical y el Internet. Ambos grupos adaptan la vestimenta de acuerdo a sus intereses y la tensi\u00f3n entre ellos se hace evidente en el tipo de ropas que rentan y compran. Los vestuarios ladinos identifican a sus portadores como consumidores modernos, mientras que los K'iche' enfatizan un sentido de comunidad, a\u00f1adiendo im\u00e1genes prestadas que se conectan con formas de subsistencia y vida ind\u00edgena a la vez que comentan sobre formas sancionadas de comportamiento y males sociales. Los fabricantes de vestuario fungen como intermediarios culturales, produciendo tanto el contexto como el significado de las danzas y permitiendo que tanto participantes como espectadores construyan diversas identidades a trav\u00e9s de \u00e9ste.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1936-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41447268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f8c906d-2b21-3242-a190-d9bddcd49621"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41447268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humanbiology"}],"isPartOf":"Human Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Biological Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health","Public Health","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"RECENT LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41447268","wordCount":11371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Fleischer"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Study through Stills of \"My Darling Clementine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831034","wordCount":3422,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[43175,43493]],"Locations in B":[[18122,18188],[18196,18740]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sidney N. Deane"],"datePublished":"1921-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/497702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da9aaa2f-0f86-3c4a-acb9-74908b8bab10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/497702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1921,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Archaeological Discussions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/497702","wordCount":24471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Lowood","Judith A. Adams","Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Jane Morley","Christine M. Roysdon","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a3cd6fe-6202-3773-a013-f473b91920b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":177.0,"pageEnd":"835","pageStart":"659","pagination":"pp. 659-835","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1989)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106149","wordCount":92366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDER WILFING"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.5","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30cb89aa-7b0a-3c76-bfd4-2b005fcd5d0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvktrwbs.5"}],"isPartOf":"Re-Reading Hanslick's Aesthetics","keyphrase":["eduard hanslick","hanslicks vms","vms traktat","hanslicks vms traktat","hanslick forschung","\u00e4sthetik","forschung","musikalisch sch\u00f6nen","historische entwicklung","dahlhaus"],"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"17","pagination":"17-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"TENDENZEN UND HISTORISCHE ENTWICKLUNG DER HANSLICK-FORSCHUNG","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.5","wordCount":29020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Die Forschung zu Hanslicks VMS<\/em>-Traktat weist keine methodisch einheitliche Ausrichtung auf, sondern umfasst zahlreiche divergente Arbeitsweisen, die separat er\u00f6rtert werden m\u00fcssen, damit deren jeweilige Spezifika abgekl\u00e4rt werden k\u00f6nnen. Hier sind zwei \u201aBr\u00fcche\u2018 zentral, die als geographische (deutsch \/ englisch) und disziplin\u00e4re (Musikphilosophie \/ Musikwissenschaft) Demarkationen gefasst werden m\u00fcssen.\u00b3 W\u00e4hrend die \u201adeutsche\u2018 Forschung mit dem engen Fokus auf die geschichtliche Lokalisierung von Hanslicks VMS-Traktat ein ann\u00e4hernd homogenes Erkenntnisprofil demonstriert, k\u00f6nnen andere entsprechende Bem\u00fchungen im englischen Sprachraum au\u00dferdem thematisch in historische und philosophische Fragestellungen geteilt werden. Fred Everett Maus scheint hierbei einer der wenigen Forscher, der die aktuelle Situation deutlich erkannte, ohne","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mathieu Deflem"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"795afe96-2566-3f23-b635-919d8c97ec4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"809","pageStart":"808","pagination":"pp. 808-809","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231276","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23690317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220957"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39211041"},{"name":"lccn","value":"99-034975"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23690317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jexperbota"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Experimental Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23690317","wordCount":7813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"132","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy J. Elias"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f091ceb-880e-3aff-894f-419e4c04bc69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41300194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Narrativity of Post-Convergent Media: \"No Ghost Just a Shell\" and Rirkrit Tiravanija's \"(ghost reader C. H.)\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300194","wordCount":9643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claire Gilman"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f22eff2-2b5b-35b9-85cf-0e56d7fa1978"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 32-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Asger Jorn's Avant-Garde Archives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778837","wordCount":8704,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36365,36456]],"Locations in B":[[25317,25408]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Clark"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1772060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772060","wordCount":1824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1925-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1904531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d05987b-ef8f-3303-b877-f05c598cd82a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1904531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1925,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Minor Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1904531","wordCount":12815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Verner W. Clapp"],"datePublished":"1968-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4305927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00242519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54843411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07c40a6d-a959-3940-801a-33acb2d23896"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4305927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"libraryq"}],"isPartOf":"The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Copyright Dilemma: A Librarian's View","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4305927","wordCount":21432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Levenson"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9076ea1e-bd00-3148-961b-b685c9b3b1c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Novelty, Modernity, Adjacency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328991","wordCount":7850,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48839,49124]],"Locations in B":[[29170,29456]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. T. Kozlowski"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4354186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00068101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a88ed6c-ea0d-3d55-b35b-92481543ede2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4354186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"botarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Botanical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":116.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Carbohydrate Sources and Sinks in Woody Plants","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4354186","wordCount":65599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"Each perennial woody plant is a highly integrated system of competing carbohydrate sinks (utilization sites). Internal competition for carbohydrates is shown by changes in rates of carbohydrate movement from sources to sinks and reversals in direction of carbohydrate transport as the relative sink strengths of various organs change. Most carbohydrates are produced in foliage leaves but some are synthesized in cotyledons, hypocotyls, buds, twigs, stems, flowers, fruits, and strobili. Although the bulk of the carbohydrate pool moves to sinks through the phloem, some carbohydrates are obtained by sinks from the xylem sap. Sugars are actively accumulated in the phloem and move passively to sinks along a concentration gradient. The dry weight of a mature woody plant represents only a small proportion of the photosynthate it produced. This discrepancy results not only from consumption of plant tissues by herbivores and shedding of plant parts, but also from depletion of carbohydrates by respiration, leaching, exudation, secretion, translocation to other plants through root grafts and mycorrhizae and losses to parasites. Large spatial and temporal variations occur in the use of reserve- and currently produced carbohydrates in metabolism and growth of shoots, stems, roots, and reproductive structures. A portion of the carbohydrate pool is diverted for production of chemicals involved in defense against fungi, herbivores, and competing plants. Woody plants accumulate carbohydrates during periods of excess production and deplete carbohydrates when the rate of utilization exceeds the rate of production. Stored carbohydrates play an important role in metabolism, growth, defense, cold hardiness, and postponement or prevention of plant mortality. \/\/\/ Jede mehrj\u00e4hrige Holzpflanze stellt ein komplexes System von miteinander konkurrierenden Kohlenhydratverbrauchsorten (sinks) dar. Interne Konkurrenz um Kohlenhydrate zeigt sich in Ver\u00e4nderungen der Kohlenhydrattransportraten vom Produktionsort (source) zum Verbrauchsort (sink) und in Richtungs\u00e4nderungen des Kohlenhydrattransportes, wenn der relative Kohlenhydratverbrauch einzelner Organe sich \u00e4ndert. Die meisten Kohlenhydrate werden in Laubbl\u00e4ttern produziert, einige jedoch werden in Keimbl\u00e4ttern, Hypokotylen, Knospen, Zweigen, Stengeln, Bl\u00fcten, Fr\u00fcchten und Bl\u00fctenachsen synthetisiert. Obwohl sich der gr\u00f6\u00dfte Teil des Kohlenhydratpools im Phloem zu den Verbrauchsorten bewegt, werden jedoch einige Kohlenhydrate dem Xylem entnommen. Zucker werden aktiv im Phloem akkumuliert und bewegen sich entlang eines Konzentrationsgef\u00e4lles passiv zum Verbrauchsort. Das Trockengewicht einer ausgewachsenen Holzpflanze stellt nur einen geringen Teil der photosynthetischen Produktion dar. Diese Diskrepanz beruht nicht nur auf dem Verbrauch von pflanzlichem Gewebe durch Herbivore und Abwurf von Pflanzenteilen, sondern auch auf der Absch\u00f6pfung von Kohlenhydraten durch Atmung, Auswaschung, Ausscheidung, Translokation in andere Pflanzenteile durch Wurzelpfropfe und Verluste an Parasiten. Gro\u00dfe r\u00e4umliche und zeitliche Ver\u00e4nderungen zeigen sich beim Verbrauch von gespeicherten und laufend produzierten Kohlenhydraten im Stoffwechsel und Wachstum von Keimlingen, Spro\u00dfachsen, Wurzeln und reproduktiven Organen. Ein Teil des Kohlenhydratpools wird in die Produktion von Abwehrstoffen gegen Pilze, Herbivoren und konkurrierende Pflanzen umgelenkt. Holzpflanzen akkumulieren Kohlenhydrate in Zeiten der \u00dcberproduktion, die wieder abgebaut werden, wenn die Verbrauchstrate die Produktionstrate \u00fcbersteigt. Speicherkohlenhydrate spielen eine wichtige Rolle im Stoffwechsel, Wachstum, Abwehr, K\u00e4lteresistenz, und in der Verz\u00f6gerung oder Vermeidung von Pflanzentod.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40727204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02549948"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568558052"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234208"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c369cf8-7ff6-3c1d-ac4c-c4bc5647a334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40727204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monumentaserica"}],"isPartOf":"Monumenta Serica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40727204","wordCount":14743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Maney Publishing","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Charlesworth","Barbara Kruger"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40422377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07433204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45fd2da9-299e-38d4-8feb-f210e6793bcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40422377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bomb"}],"isPartOf":"BOMB","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Humanities","Language & Literature","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Glossolaia, Sarah Charlesworth and Barbara Kruger","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40422377","wordCount":1974,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16265,16494]],"Locations in B":[[5765,5994]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"New Art Publications","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chrissie Steyn"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"410174a1-344d-352e-a4d7-0f2b44d16d21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Literature","Business - Industry"],"title":"SPIRITUAL HEALING IN \"NEW AGE\" GROUPS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764179","wordCount":9707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"This article explores spiritual healing practices that are widespread in the New Age movement. It examines the different views on the origins of illness and disease as well as the sources of healing power. The healing process, the role of healers, and the possible benefits for the country as a whole are investigated. In conclusion the practices are shown to be reinterpretations of much older techniques and philosophies which are ultimately religious in nature.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GERALD FIEBIG"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44911674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45d881c6-add6-34ab-bd7a-1e01e345f705"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Sonic Witness: On the Political Potential of Field Recordings in Acoustic Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832522","wordCount":2280,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[678,745]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Contemporary sonic artworks often use field recordings from places of historic or social significance to address political issues. This article discusses relevant works for radio and fixed media by Peter Cusack, Jacob Kirkegaard, Eli\u0161ka C\u00edlkov\u00e1, Anna Friz and Public Studio, St\u00e9phane Garin and Sylvestre Gobart, Ultra-red, and Matthew Herbert and outlines how they use both audio and visual\/textual information to create awareness of the issues inscribed in these places, from current environmental concerns to the memory of genocide and displacement.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenn Jellenik"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"534f6982-4f73-3e2a-a465-d14cd1e5fa69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Task of the Adaptation Critic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/soutatlarevi.80.3-4.254","wordCount":6542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3-4","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15c3df87-8247-3b25-a0ed-6f90ca2415e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948333","wordCount":19391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1447","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Vik\u00e1rius"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43858008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09419535"},{"name":"oclc","value":"639610872"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7aa8642-ea5c-39ae-a872-27c9ebc6cc48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43858008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmusi"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bart\u00f3k and the Ideal of a \"Sentimentalit\u00e4ts-Mangel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43858008","wordCount":18854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"Bart\u00f3k's aesthetic vocabulary was rather limited both in its choice and its application. In his early years, for example, he almost consistently used \"poetic\" to express certain positive judgments and \"dry\" for negative characterization. Later, a new and again somewhat rigidly used expression made its appearance in Bart\u00f3k's writings, the \"Sentimentalit\u00e4t-Manger\" (i.e., the lack of sentimentality). The recognition and proper understanding of such phrases are essential in evaluating an artist's ideals, especially of one so concise as Bart\u00f3k. \"Sentimental\" seems to have represented for Bart\u00f3k a clearly defined concept that has certainly very much to do with what he had disapprovingly called \"romantic\" or even \"banal.\" Arguably, it was one of the main concepts against which he defined - in partly changing ways - his own personal and musical ego. At least from the late 1920s, \"want of sentimentality\" (so used once by Bart\u00f3k in English) was his prime characterization of positive artistic values (e.g. in a pianist's style of performance). In his writings, he happily pointed out this particular quality in folk music. Referring to this, he even went so far as to propose folk or, rather, peasant music as a compositional source comparable and rival to the then fashionalble new objectivity. In music, one of the most emotionally loaded devices is the leading tone. Among his analyses of individual folk songs, Bart\u00f3k describes the absence of the leading tone as lack of sentimentality. In connection with analyzing the idea of a \"Sentimentalit\u00e4t-Mangel\" and related phrases within Bart\u00f3k's aesthetic vocabulary, I will discuss the history of the employment of the leading tone and some comparable elements in his composition. The rejection or, occasionally, cautious handling of such means can be interpreted as a deliberate act of deprivation on the part of the composer, who was actually born and educated in the Romantic tradition. Thus, the discussion will not only focus on the presence and often the absence of certain compositional means and strategies, but will also point out some of Bart\u00f3k's methods of compensating for this ascetic (self-) mutilation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KAREN L. CARTER"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23646029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04675b0d-a975-3586-87b0-4575e79d50eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23646029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Specter of Working-Class Crowds: Political Censorship of Posters in the City of Paris, 1881\u20141893","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23646029","wordCount":11074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"122","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Kreilkamp"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Voice without a Body: The Phonographic Logic of \"Heart of Darkness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829202","wordCount":14739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zahid Chaudhary"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"204059b9-4633-3539-8692-8735d7420471"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Phantasmagoric Aesthetics: Colonial Violenca and the Management of Perception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489198","wordCount":21330,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[51601,51687]],"Locations in B":[[112956,113035]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"59","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Kaufman"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4622ec93-490a-3dae-b156-18a97b343cd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"724","pageStart":"682","pagination":"pp. 682-724","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Red Kant, or the Persistence of the Third \"Critique\" in Adorno and Jameson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344327","wordCount":21383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jenifer Presto"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.3.0569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2edd9fb0-751e-33c1-ae7c-c606cc4b1947"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.70.3.0569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"590","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-590","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Disaster: Blok, Messina, and the Decadent Sublime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.3.0569","wordCount":11694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"In this article, Jenifer Presto argues that the 1908 Messina-Reggio Calabria earthquake had an impact on Aleksandr Blok no less significant than that which the 1755 Lisbon earthquake had on writers of the Enlightenment and proceeds to demonstrate how it shaped Blok\u2019s aesthetics of catastrophe. This aesthetics can best be termed the \u201cdecadent sublime,\u201d an inversion of the Kantian dynamic sublime with its emphasis on bourgeois optimism. Following Immanuel Kant, Blok acknowledges the fear and attraction that nature\u2019s forces can inspire; however, unlike Kant, he insists that modern man remains powerless in the face of nature, owing to his decadence\u2014a decadence endemic to European civilization. The decadent sublime is manifested in a host of Blok\u2019s writings, ranging from \u201cThe Elements and Culture\u201d to Lightning Flashes of Art and The Scythians; it is intensely visual and is indebted to images of ruin by artists such as Giovanni Battista Piranesi and Luca Signorelli.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James C. Bonbright","Charles Pickett"],"datePublished":"1929-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1114861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"863c8c67-c814-33b9-8f13-5829126a5b03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1114861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"582","pagination":"pp. 582-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Valuation to Determine Solvency under the Bankruptcy Act","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1114861","wordCount":24107,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven A. Taubeneck"],"datePublished":"1987-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787469"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9013130e-6c9e-3b9e-b98a-a8dd11e0fd13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1316662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacicoasphil"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Coast Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Subversive Quotation as a Postmodernist Pattern","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1316662","wordCount":4952,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2395,2465]],"Locations in B":[[406,476]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claire I. Viadro"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"369b37ed-d2ae-3a8d-af9e-ebc99ac6a0f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1483","pageStart":"1482","pagination":"pp. 1482-1483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231110","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KASIA A. OZGA"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45149282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e7f6f04-7b48-3bca-a2ea-53817e0a0994"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45149282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Effects of Photography-Based Public Art on the School Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45149282","wordCount":8357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"This article analyzes how public art commissions provide opportunities for informal dialogue and alternative forms of inquiry within the secondary school environment in Europe and North America. Through case studies of site-specific works produced between 1995 and 2012,1 examine how permanent photography installations question and reinforce educational authority, encourage critical thinking, and raise social consciousness among secondary school students. Techniques used by Susan Bowen, Rita Marhaug, Dennis Adams, and Frank Video include murals, montage, backlit display, and object-integration. The diversity of the works profiled, which alternately invite and avoid student participation, as well as references to local history, demonstrates that no single formula yields works that provoke, encourage, and inspire students. Using different means, these artists reflect the values of their host communities, enabling educational facilities to feel less institutional. Beyond placemaking, school-based public art can incite viewers to question how images are made both within and beyond the art education classroom, strengthening emotional and cultural literacy. In bringing the past alive, public art also breathes new life into the school environment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabetai Unguru"],"datePublished":"1975-12-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41133441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39966759"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c9e58f6-453e-3372-9287-f97f998751c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41133441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archhistexacscie"}],"isPartOf":"Archive for History of Exact Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"On the Need to Rewrite the History of Greek Mathematics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41133441","wordCount":27314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Lesjak"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27fe93b4-d61d-3331-8398-84247d13c76d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377233","wordCount":2445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1294320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"763a1c23-6840-3635-9f02-3da474da2fba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1294320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"749","pagination":"pp. 749-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1294320","wordCount":14515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09277544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8191a5d-b28f-3bb9-818b-d8bd1244f3d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44103281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrealestalite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Real Estate Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103281","wordCount":2946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Real Estate Society","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Woods"],"datePublished":"1989-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b75e3cc-817b-3abb-909e-fbfaf5d7edf5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/990351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The First American Architectural Journals: The Profession's Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990351","wordCount":14812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"American architectural journals first appeared in the second half of the 19th century. Encouraged by advances in printing and graphic technologies, they were part of a general trend toward specialized journalism during this period. The architectural periodical developed along with journals for women, clerics, railroad engineers, and grocers. Yet it also resulted from publishers' desires to capitalize on the success of house pattern books and the widespread interest in architecture that they created. Despite these favorable omens the early American architectural journals foundered; they had troubled and short lives, generally lasting only two years. The premise of this paper is that their success depended on the architectural profession's direct involvement and support and the backing of a major publishing house. Beginning with the first periodicals of the 1850s and 1860s, architectural journalism identified itself with the emerging profession; its editorials asserted the architects' primacy in design and construction and distinguished their role from the builders'. Professional and educational issues, in fact, took precedence over aesthetic and stylistic discussions in editorial columns and articles. Yet the journals displayed the same pragmatism that had characterized builders' guides and pattern books, the first architectural literature published in the United States.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Lydon"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03148769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559279177"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6da6631-e33e-31eb-a2b0-fb1c553ff73c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24046049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aborhist"}],"isPartOf":"Aboriginal History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The experimental 1860s: Charles Walter's images of Coranderrk Aboriginal Station, Victoria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24046049","wordCount":17586,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"ANU Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Madow"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e99d2d08-75d1-3c81-8e33-08571cc3423f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3480785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":115.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125+127-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Private Ownership of Public Image: Popular Culture and Publicity Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480785","wordCount":65551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":"The \"right of publicity\" gives famous people an assignable and descendible right in the commercial value of their names, likenesses, and other identifying characteristics. In this Article, Professor Madow challenges the standard arguments that are made in favor of this right, and suggests some significant disadvantages of existing legal doctrine. Writing from a \"Cultural Studies\" perspective, Professor Madow argues that private, centralized ownership and control of celebrity images poses a more serious threat to cultural pluralism and self-determination than is sometimes realized. The author traces the origins and development of the right of publicity, suggesting that its emergence reflects a fundamental change in the way fame is understood and valued in our society. Finally, Professor Madow criticizes the moral, economic, and consumer protection arguments commonly made in support of the right of publicity, and raises the possibility that the right creates socially undesirable incentives and promotes, rather than prevents, unjust enrichment. While the Article finds the existing case for the right of publicity unconvincing, it does not call for immediate abolition. Instead, it offers a theoretical and evaluative framework for future research and discussion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philp S. Foner"],"datePublished":"1976-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00282529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cfc0ac5-66bb-321f-8357-c8322c266f93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44176280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"negrhistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Negro History Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Participation in the Centennial of 1876","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176280","wordCount":7829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katharine Young"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.2.177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86c62750-1d3f-34b4-ae86-e189334ed93a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.2.177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetic Ecologies: Reflections on What Makes Artifacts Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.51.2.177","wordCount":6961,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9211,9351]],"Locations in B":[[26705,26845]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"Abstract Aesthetics has to do not only with an axiology of value, with the beautiful, with criteria of judgment but also with a phenomenology of pleasure, with the sensuous, with categories of experience and matters of taste, taste in the crude sense of tasting things, of devouring and incorporating, not in the prim bourgeois sense of discerning superiority. The word aesthetics comes from the Greek aisth\u0113tik\u0113, meaning sense perception. Aesthetic ecologies, affective ecologies, and somaesthetics pierce the body and pinion its parts to its worlds. Aesthetic inquiry in folkloristics properly undertakes an anatomy of desire.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-06-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f08210b2-a081-39be-9a80-5b78ccdf711b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43707572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707572","wordCount":24696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"209","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Geisler"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"079c60a3-78cb-39da-b754-6b044e0bcc8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Building Blocks to Radical Construction: West German Media Theory since 1984","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488454","wordCount":14587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"78","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy B. Cochran"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2014.31.4.503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b872019-0fc1-37f3-84e5-2829995a1e88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jm.2014.31.4.503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cThe Pebble in the Water\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2014.31.4.503","wordCount":15989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In volume six of Trait\u00e9 de rythme, de couleur, et d\u2019ornithologie, Olivier Messiaen uses the phrase \u201cthe pebble in the water\u201d to identify a class of especially stark rhythmic contrasts in Debussy\u2019s music that feature long durations interrupted by rapid rhythms. He invests these contrasts with an expressive logic built around the concept of shock\u2014that is, the sudden stimulation of a static context by an outside presence. Messiaen unites various images\u2014both natural and psychological\u2014around this expressive pattern via analogy, suggesting that its essence is transferrable within a network of associated metaphors. Although for the most part in volume six Messiaen refrains from linking interpretations of Debussy with his own music, many of his rhythmic contrasts manifest the same expressive logic that he ascribes to Debussy\u2019s music, particularly durational events that signify the interjection of birdsong within serene environments and that signal the striking appearance of divine power on earth. In addition to stylistic and semiotic correlations, the logic of shock theorized for the pebble in the water recurs more abstractly in Messiaen\u2019s idiomatic views on musical experience and spiritual encounter. His interpretation of rhythmic contrast bears the marks of his more general aesthetics of shock, which in turn can be read as a reorientation of a broader modernist hermeneutic.","subTitle":"Messiaen, Debussy and the Meaning of Rhythmic Contrast","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig Joyce"],"datePublished":"1985-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a84469a9-fdc8-3e68-90f2-53a24b61e073"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1288984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":101.0,"pageEnd":"1391","pageStart":"1291","pagination":"pp. 1291-1391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"The Rise of the Supreme Court Reporter: An Institutional Perspective on Marshall Court Ascendancy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288984","wordCount":53648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward H. Cohen"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":131.0,"pageEnd":"583","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-583","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828491","wordCount":80313,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1939-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1844475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2399ae0e-d905-3038-b96e-251268a51a16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1844475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"1016","pageStart":"943","pagination":"pp. 943-1016","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notice of Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1844475","wordCount":43218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-10-10","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1740925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb1b410c-60eb-3889-b10e-a86f44e3ac05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1740925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1740925","wordCount":17480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4210","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"190","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Gregory"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Interventions in the Historical Geography of Modernity: Social Theory, Spatiality and the Politics of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490924","wordCount":23172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"The contemporary interest in social theory and human geography involves a double movement: both the 'socialisation' of geographical analysis and the mapping of human geography into social theory. The second of these tasks is the more important because it adresses a series of strategic weaknesses in modern social theory. Such a reconstructive project also bears directly on the way in which geographies are reconstructed and represented, and the present essay uses this connection to explore the politics and poetics of three interventions in the historical geography of modernity: David Harvey's account of Second Empire Paris, Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project (which saw Paris as 'the capital of the nineteenth century'), and Allan Pred's reconstruction of fin-de-si\u00e8cle Stockholm.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian McLaren"],"datePublished":"1992-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aa8ac85-6688-386f-9446-0fe9c0b2a4f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Under the Sign of the Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425277","wordCount":7208,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10207]],"Locations in B":[[17140,17454]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"With the advent of technical reproduction, the publication of architecture, as a medium through which architectural ideas have been disseminated, has both conditioned our understanding of architecture and exacted profound changes within the very art that it has reproduced. In this article I investigate this twofold phenomenon, using the example of the Italian publications \"Casabella\" and \"Architettura\" from the period between the two world wars, and focusing specifically on the publication of the Mostra della Rivoluzione Fascista, held in Rome in 1932. I examine this exhibition through the means of its production and reproduction, under the assumption that publication is a cultural text, with its own message and its own potential to condition our understanding of architecture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDER WILFING"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.7","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cad7c3ae-1fb0-3f2b-ac2d-f2b6a0dfc59c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvktrwbs.7"}],"isPartOf":"Re-Reading Hanslick's Aesthetics","keyphrase":["hanslicks vms","vms traktat","hanslicks vms traktat","hanslick rezeption","rezeption","englischen sprachraum","historische entwicklung","wagner","anglophonen hanslick","musical"],"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"117","pagination":"117-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DIE HISTORISCHE ENTWICKLUNG DER ANGLOPHONEN HANSLICK-REZEPTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.7","wordCount":27290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Wenn man nun die historische Rezeption von Hanslicks VMS<\/em>-Traktat geographisch differenziert, muss eine wichtige Disparit\u00e4t betont werden, die Hanslicks Wirkung nachhaltig beeinflusst. Denn wenn seine \u00e4sthetische Abhandlung der \u201adeutschen\u2018 Diskussion der ersten H\u00e4lfte des 19. Jahrhunderts entstammte und vor diesem spezifischen Hintergrund interpretiert worden ist, der sich bald einer hitzig gef\u00fchrten Wagner-Debatte zuwandte, ist dieser geschichtliche Zusammenhang f\u00fcr andere Diskurse nicht derart gegeben. Die Hanslick-Rezeption im englischen Sprachraum ist von mehreren Faktoren abh\u00e4ngig, die die \u201adeutsche\u2018 Diskussion niemals pr\u00e4gen konnten, wie von der betreffenden \u00dcbersetzung (Kap. 3.5), bereits vorhandenen \u00e4sthetischen Konzeptionen (Kap. 3.3) oder eben der Abwesenheit von Kunstdiskursen wie","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BILL SOLOMON"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0329ec5-bfdb-3950-9bd1-5b1614c1acbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Novel in Distress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764379","wordCount":3976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Moltke-Hansen","Sallie Doscher"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27567575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00383082"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1c2781e-57da-34e7-b24b-9ed2a5d22634"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27567575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southcarohistmag"}],"isPartOf":"The South Carolina Historical Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":162.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"South Carolina Historical Society Manuscript Guide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27567575","wordCount":57452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"South Carolina Historical Society","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Crimp"],"datePublished":"1980-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92cd7581-7eee-381c-9e4c-8489013cab21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Photographic Activity of Postmodernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778455","wordCount":4227,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[10467,10662]],"Locations in B":[[10162,10367]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie L. Hawkins"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e29c1570-b038-33f5-b775-e5ebab6c34ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE SCIENCE OF SUPERSTITION: GERTRUDE STEIN, WILLIAM JAMES, AND THE FORMATION OF BELIEF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286353","wordCount":12155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b7afa30-629f-35e8-a025-27c2b12f5d06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462011","wordCount":10835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bronwen Wilson"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00344338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032182"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"346e8489-c81d-34f1-b677-f92e6c6eab00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renaquar"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Il bel sesso, e l'austero Senato\": The Coronation of Dogaressa Morosina Morosini Grimani","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902017","wordCount":19400,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6677,6743]],"Locations in B":[[41861,41935]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"The Venetian printmaker Giacomo Franco produced several engravings for the 1597 coronation of Morosina Morosini, the wife of doge Marin Grimani (1595-1605). Focusing on three of these prints in which a bird's-eye view of the city is framed with illustrations of the festivities, this essay explores relations between space, gender, allegory and costume as they were manifested in this rare female procession. An examination of the pictorial conventions used by Franco and other artists to depict the event suggests that Morosina's coronation functioned both to resist existing codes of gender but also to reassert female patrician status.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ferenc Feher"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb140d37-89b1-3820-95ed-ccfebfc99b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Wolin on Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487618","wordCount":5062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"28","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darko Suvin"],"datePublished":"1982-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba79c084-22be-3edb-9093-8d7e5e3be741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4239453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative Logic, Ideological Domination, and the Range of Science Fiction: A Hypothesis with a Historical Test (Logique narrative, dominate id\u00e9ologique et l'\u00e9ventail de la S-F: hypoth\u00e8se et \u00e9preuve historique)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239453","wordCount":14816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"La pr\u00e9sente \u00e9tude se fonde sur une hypoth\u00e8se relative aux pr\u00e9suppositions et \u00e0 la vraisemblance narratives dans la mesure o\u00f9 celles-ci ne sont jamais immanentes au texte, mais toujours d'ordre intertextuel. Des diff\u00e9rents types de vraisemblance, l'un joue un r\u00f4le h\u00e9g\u00e9monique dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 globale. L'approche intertextuelle permet une analyse des \u00e9crits qui s'\u00e9carte \u00e0 la fois de l'id\u00e9ologie con\u00e7ue comme manipulation pragmatique ou d'une critique atomis\u00e9e des \"influences\" trait\u00e9es dans un vacuum. En appliquant \u00e0 l'\u00e9tude de la SF victorienne les th\u00e9ories d'Angenot sur le \"Paradigme absent\" et l'article de Wells \"Fiction about the Future\", on voit le spectre des motifs S-F se pr\u00e9senter comme une sorte d'\u00e9ventail d\u00e9ploy\u00e9 entre une base \u00e9troite d'optima et une large zone de pessima (voir figure). La S-F optimale emploie une logique narrative coh\u00e9rente; l'interaction de l'univers de fiction et de l'univers empirique du lecteur d\u00e9termine une zone de libert\u00e9. Les pessima du spectre S-F peuvent \u00eatre simplement dus \u00e0 l'incoh\u00e9rence ou \u00e0 la banalit\u00e9, au dogmatisme ou \u00e0 l'invalidation du r\u00e9cit, c.-\u00e0-d. s'articuler aux intertextes du conte ou du r\u00e9cit r\u00e9aliste banal (roman d'aventure ou d'amour), du mod\u00e8le sp\u00e9culatif conceptuel et de l'explication et des genres m\u00e9taphysiques (fantastiques, p. ex.). Entre ces id\u00e9al-types, il y a des contaminations et les \"bons\" r\u00e9cits de S-F peuvent se trouver d'ordinaire dans la zone interm\u00e9diaire entre les optima et pessima du genre. Les pessima se rangent sur la ligne de l'id\u00e9ologie h\u00e9g\u00e9monique, neutralisent le novum cognitif et invalident le paradigme fictionnelle de la diff\u00e9rence radicale. A la base de la d\u00e9bilit\u00e9 si r\u00e9pandue en S-F on trouve cette r\u00e9ification de la litt\u00e9rature en marchandise, d\u00e9j\u00e0 pr\u00e9sente dans la 1\u00e8re moiti\u00e9 du 19e si\u00e8cle. Le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne est discut\u00e9 en r\u00e9f\u00e9rence \u00e0 Tocqueville, Poe et W. Benjamin. Dans la production et la diffusion de masse, l'authentique originalit\u00e9 signifiante (valeur d'usage) est r\u00e9cup\u00e9r\u00e9e par la r\u00e9p\u00e9tition infinie de la circulation (valeur d'\u00e9change) dont le r\u00e9sultat est le sensationnalisme au go\u00fbt du jour. Des occurrences ponctuelles se substituent aux continuit\u00e9s et cumulations de la valeur d'usage, \u00e0 la mani\u00e8re des strat\u00e9gies de jeux. Ce ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne entra\u00eene une nouvelle structure de sensibilit\u00e9 aux exp\u00e9riences fondamentales, comme celle du temps, per\u00e7ue d\u00e9sormais comme d\u00e9moniaque (ex. \"Ma\u00eetre Zacharias\" de J. Verne). Une telle structure d\u00e9coule de l'exp\u00e9rience du client-consommateur fond\u00e9e sur l'excitation. La seconde partie de l'article fait l'\u00e9preuve des hypoth\u00e8ses expos\u00e9es ci-dessus sur des \u00e9crits de S-F publi\u00e9s au Royaume-Uni entre 1848 et 1870; d'abord les r\u00e9cits de Poe; (2) dix-huit autres livres dispos\u00e9s en cat\u00e9gories narratives et id\u00e9ologiques: prescriptions politiques et sociales (utopies et histoires futures), banalit\u00e9s dans la zone interm\u00e9diaire (Rowcroft et Lang) et, dans une cat\u00e9gorie \u00e0 soi seul, le Voyage \u00e0 la Lune de Trueman, o\u00f9 culmine la S-F britannique entre Shelley et Abbott. On utilise comme th\u00e8mes r\u00e9v\u00e9lateurs de lib\u00e9ration id\u00e9ologique le traitement du r\u00f4le des femmes et les images du vol (de l'anti-gravit\u00e9). L'ensemble des livres se polarise entre la communication du pouvoir et la communication du savoir. Les tendances h\u00e9g\u00e9moniques cherchent \u00e0 contenir le savoir ou \u00e0 la d\u00e9grader en transformant le novum signifiant en pure et simple bizarrerie qui ne peut donner naissance \u00e0 une parabole \u00e9pist\u00e9mique ou \u00e0 un contre-projet politique. Les mod\u00e8les narratifs, les id\u00e9ologies et le destinataire social ont \u00e9t\u00e9 pris en consid\u00e9ration pour une connaissance pleine et enti\u00e8re de la S-F comme genre de masse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward A. Malone"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43092884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00493155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"907681870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd75fe07-a8dd-30e1-a3e9-1e66d9d7f160"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43092884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Technical Communication","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Communication Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"The First Wave (1953\u20141961) of the Professionalization Movement in Technical Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43092884","wordCount":13738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society for Technical Communication","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"Purpose: To demonstrate that the professionalization of our field is a long-term project that has included achievements as well as setbacks and delays Methods: Archival research and analysis. Results: Many of the professionalization issues that we are discussing and pursuing today find their genesis\u2014or at least have antecedents\u2014in the work of the founders of the profession in the 1950s. Conclusions: Our appraisal of our professionalization gains must be tempered by a certain amount of realism and an awareness of the history of the professionalism movement in technical communication.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David G. Riede","Donald E. Hall","Clinton Machann","Marjorie Stone","Mary Ellis Gibson","Rosemarie Morgan","Jeffrey B. Loomis","Benjamin F. Fisher","Florence S. Boos","Margot K. Louis","Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4a5e58d-a27e-35e2-82d4-1b87d6dcf325"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":97.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002636","wordCount":44708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothy Hill Gersack","Philip P. Mason","H. G. Jones","Victor Gondos, Jr.","Helen L. Davidson","Robert M. Warner","August R. Suelflow","Morris Rieger","Harriet C. Owsley","Everett O. Alldredge","Clark W. Nelson","Robert B. Eckles","Charles F. Hinds","T. Harold Jacobsen"],"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b247341a-01e6-3c61-b1e7-7dd1623da00f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40290701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"News Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290701","wordCount":21885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas H. Clulee"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2859862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00344338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032182"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79bd97ce-0023-3837-9cf0-999dcce65a3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2859862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renaquar"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"632","pagination":"pp. 632-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Astrology, Magic, and Optics: Facets of John Dee's Early Natural Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2859862","wordCount":23575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Kluge","Thomas Y. Levin","Miriam B. 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O'Connor"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20070538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49342616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c14964b7-7599-3d8b-95dc-c117cede3e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20070538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"400","pagination":"pp. 400-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art Critics, Connoisseurs, and Collectors in the Southeast Asian Rain Forest: A Study in Cross-Cultural Art Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20070538","wordCount":5696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nell Tenhaaf"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e05d1612-e2b7-371b-83dd-8f84b859dc24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1424870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pandora Revisited: Art and New Technologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424870","wordCount":5890,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[2378,2465],[36689,36855]],"Locations in B":[[3951,4018],[17708,17795],[18656,18822]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"The article sets out to investigate a relationship between the camera as the revolutionary new technology of twentieth-century arts and the computer as a potential artistic medium that could also radically change art practices. The socially oriented strategies of contemporary \"interventionist\" film and video artists are used as the basis for the investigation. Ideas about the camera as both creator and revealer of artifice (or illusion, beliefs, stereotypes) are discussed from the viewpoint of social concerns, in particular, feminist concerns. These ideas are set in the historical context of early-twentieth-century technologically referenced art and theory, from the Russian Constructivists through to Walter Benjamin. Throughout the text, the notion of myth as a matrix for absorbing technological change is a sub-current, used to gain access to our deep-seated biases and pre conceptions about technology and its meaning. Finally, the article proposes that the computer as a \"thinking machine,\" i.e., as it is used in current artificial intelligence research, can be relevant to the representational practices and concerns of contemporary artists.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Westover"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50573849"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2d86387-5bf2-383e-bcd1-38b668b944b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25602194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"William Godwin, Literary Tourism, and the Work of Necromanticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602194","wordCount":9880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Boston University","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26457293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00682837"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa4c5949-1ff3-3e7d-a60a-ea5856616501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26457293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"broomuseannu"}],"isPartOf":"The Brooklyn Museum Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"Department of Prints and Drawings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26457293","wordCount":10571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brooklyn Museum","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fadwa AbdelRahman","\u0641\u062f\u0648\u0649 \u0639\u0628\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0631\u062d\u0645\u0646"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"decce1b7-dc4d-3707-8f18-33443d00733d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27929799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Page to Celluloid: Michael Cunningham's \"The Hours\" \/ \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u0641\u062d\u0629 \u0673\u0644\u0649 \u0634\u0631\u064a\u0637 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0646\u0645\u0627: \u0627\u0642\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0633 \u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0627\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0644\u0645\u0627\u064a\u0643\u0644 \u0643\u0646\u0646\u062c\u0647\u0627\u0645","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929799","wordCount":6731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"28","publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Michael Cunningham's \"The Hours\" is a typical postmodern novel which relies on intertextuality, crossing boundaries between fact and fiction, and an interwoven narrative. 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Art history"],"title":"Motors and Machines, Robots and Rockets: Harry Piel and Sci-Fi Film in the Third Reich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140982","wordCount":8896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"The prolific German film actor, director, and producer Harry Piel can be considered the first German pop-culture icon of action entertainment during the 1920s and 1930s. The sci-fi and action features of the \"dynamite director\" and \"man with nerves of steel\" showcased the smooth surfaces and powerful forces of technology and charged technological advance with hopes for and fears of political change, dreams of national grandeur, and expectations of individual opportunity. Piel's 1933\/34 films provide a superb example of how visions of technology folded into National Socialist utopias and illusions, while offering seemingly non-ideological spaces of leisure and mass entertainment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Metzer"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"601aa028-6e36-33f6-b757-a21b7fec995b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3250683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Musical Decay: Luciano Berio's \"Rendering\" and John Cage's \"Europera 5\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3250683","wordCount":10326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"125","abstract":"Restoration and reproduction have served as two of the primary means by which the present has approached the past. These practices are the focus of Luciano Berio's Rendering and John Cage's Europera 5, two recent works that draw upon earlier compositions. In Rendering, Berio 'restores' the drafts for what would have been Schubert's Tenth Symphony. Contrary to conventional restorations, Berio not only builds up the sketch materials but also fragments them, having Schubert's themes disappear into musical voids. Europera 5 looks back at eighteenth- and nineteenth-century opera, which is presented in a collage of live performance and reproductions. During the course of the work, opera gradually disappears into a world of reproductions, losing its vocality and presence. In both compositions, restoration and reproduction ultimately make the past more distant and inaccessible. A similar use of these two practices occurs in recent visual artworks by Igor Kopystiansky and Mike and Doug Starn. Both the musical and visual artworks create scenes of decay, in which the past appears as crumbling and the present as an emptiness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith F. Davis"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25081150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263894"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d3cf9a-773b-37a2-8394-282b6d0a96c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25081150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"masshistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Massachusetts Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The High-Speed Photographs of Francis Blake","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25081150","wordCount":7012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elsa K. 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Literature"],"title":"Index: Volume 69","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23883701","wordCount":1626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Galvez"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3dc0a6ff-2a2e-39c1-bab1-7c8ba201ef1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Self-Portrait of the Artist as a Monkey-Hand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779159","wordCount":14024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally-ann Baggott","Brian Stokoe"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b000b78d-5188-3e2f-b0ab-f93667da2ea2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Success of a Photographer: Culture, Commerce, and Ideology in the Work of E. O. Hopp\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600389","wordCount":13391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"In this paper we focus upon two collections of E. O. Hopp\u00e9's work from 1926, \"Picturesque Great Britain: The Architecture and the Landscape and London Types Taken from Life\" which, we argue, register Hopp\u00e9's ability to move across differing modes of photographic representation, and thus to respond effectively to contemporary market opportunities. We are concerned with how, in a British context, Hopp\u00e9 was able to produce saleable imagery whilst seemingly aligning his work with other wider cultural forces. We argue that both \"London Types\" and \"Picturesque Great Britain\" are implicated within certain ideological tensions permeating British culture in the 1920s; that Hopp\u00e9's work in these volumes is positioned within the realm of cultural problems as much as that of aesthetic solutions. Seeking to elucidate the relation of imagery and text, we discuss both works in terms of discourses circulating beyond the immediate spheres of photography and literature, situating \"London Types\" within contemporary ideologies of class, and \"Picturesque Great Britain\" within those of Englishness. Our subject, therefore, concerns a particular historical coincidence of culture, commerce and ideology within the problematics of an envisioned future and a mythic past.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1936-04-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3913189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00964018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290688"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3913189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scienewslett"}],"isPartOf":"The Science News-Letter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"New Books on Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3913189","wordCount":10233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"784","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. John Williams"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccc8e593-0171-369b-9737-599da97bb578"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25619826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Global English Ideography and the Dissolve Translation in Hollywood Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619826","wordCount":15228,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30794,30990]],"Locations in B":[[73997,74183]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"72","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIRANDA MARVIN"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42620154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"649595715"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42620154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Copying in Roman Sculpture: The Replica Series","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42620154","wordCount":11690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1925-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaae6202-342b-310a-b69d-f5ea13ff6c0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/282898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":116.0,"pageEnd":"cxv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cxv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1925,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Proceedings of the Fifty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association. Also of the Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282898","wordCount":42583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Pankenier"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25593790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c268d344-8edd-3d22-98cf-fc218d084e5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25593790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"824","pageStart":"804","pagination":"pp. 804-824","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Birth of Memory and the Memory of Birth: Daniil Kharms and Lev Tolstoi on Infantile Amnesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25593790","wordCount":11045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":"Through the juxtaposition of early autobiographical fragments by Lev Tolstoi and Daniil Kharms, Sara Pankenier argues that both writers similarly push beyond the limits of memory to recover the infant self from the abyss of infantile amnesia. Their accounts of preternatural memory and precocious self-awareness counter the phenomenon, which psychologists now term infantile amnesia, whereby the onset of memory occurs only several years after birth. They thus flagrantly violate human experience, as well as the literary conventions that otherwise govern the representation of infancy. By endowing the infant self with adult memory-and narrative voice-these writers create a hybrid autobiographical self that unites the divided autobiographical subject posited by Philippe Lejeune. Despite the differences in their tragic and comic tone, both Tolstoi and Kharms employ the infant subject to explore issues of power and voice through narrative experimentation in an uncharted region of memory otherwise made inaccessible by infantile amnesia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1919-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3701678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d6748ff-9abe-35ca-9fb2-e3a7090724ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3701678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"viii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1919,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3701678","wordCount":10363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"912","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f60cb576-0757-3f83-9b33-203f5a692804"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2700594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"1280","pageStart":"1232","pagination":"pp. 1232-1280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700594","wordCount":24238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Durham"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e220ed46-3cfc-31c2-acf5-c81df8fc2ecf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4239880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"P.K. Dick: From the Death of the Subject to a Theology of Late Capitalism (P.K. Dick: de la mort du sujet \u00e0 une th\u00e9ologie du capitalisme avanc\u00e9)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239880","wordCount":7189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"L'\u0153uvre de Dick rend compte d'un \u00e9v\u00e9nement capital de la culture post-moderne, \"la mort du sujet\". Nous pouvons admettre que cette mort est charact\u00e9ris\u00e9e \u00e0 la fois par la fermeture de la distance m\u00e9diatis\u00e9e par l'esth\u00e9tique qui jadis s\u00e9para le sujet du d\u00e9sir du monde-objet social ainsi que par l'implication corr\u00e9lativement directe du d\u00e9sir dans le social. Or cela n'entra\u00eene pas l'abolition de la n\u00e9gation dans son \u0153uvre, mais plut\u00f4t son r\u00e9tablissement \u00e0 travers une exp\u00e9rience intense immanente au quotidien. Dick essaie de traduire la n\u00e9gation immanente (telle que l'exp\u00e9rimente le sujet d\u00e9sagr\u00e9g\u00e9 du v\u00e9cu quotidien dans le capitalisme avanc\u00e9) par une politique de l'exp\u00e9rience radicalement contestataire li\u00e9e \u00e0 la naissance des contre-cultures des ann\u00e9es 60. Mais \u00e0 mesure que son \u0153uvre avance, Dick doit faire face fr\u00e9quemment aux questions suivantes concernant la forme. Quelle est la relation entre le sujet-auteur de la narration et le sujet en voie de dissociation dont l'histoire est racont\u00e9e par le premier? Le sujet-auteur subit-il la mort qu'il s'efforce de d\u00e9crire? Si oui, quelle ruse utilise-t-il pour raconter sa propre mort? Ces interrogations sont aussi bien de nature formelle que politique car l'\u00e9tablissement d'une anti-m\u00e9moire n\u00e9cessaire au projet contre-culturel \u00e0 partir duquel s'\u00e9l\u00e8ve l'\u0153uvre de Dick d\u00e9pend de ces r\u00e9ponses. Dans Substance Mort, Dick a essay\u00e9 de les r\u00e9soudre en demeurant dans les limites formelles de la science-fiction mais cela l'a conduit \u00e0 une impasse politique. Dans SIVA, il tente de r\u00e9pondre \u00e0 ces questions en abandonnant la science-fiction et peut-\u00eatre m\u00eame la litt\u00e9rature au profit de ce que l'on peut appeler une th\u00e9ologie de la lib\u00e9ration du capitalisme avanc\u00e9. \/\/\/ Dick's work takes up a major \"event\" of post-modern culture: the \"death of the subject.\" If this death is characterized by the closing of the aesthetically-mediated distance which once separated the subject of desire from the social object-world and by desire's correlative immediate investment in the social, it entails in Dick's work not the abolition of negation, but its re-emergence in an intensive experience immanent to the everyday itself. Dick attempts to think the immanent negation lived by the dissolving subject of late-capitalist everyday life in terms of a radically contestatory politics of experience associated with the emerging counter-cultures of the '60s. But as his work progresses, Dick must increasingly confront the following questions at the level of form: What is the relation of the narrating authorial subject to the dissolving subject whose intensive experience it narrates? Does the authorial subject undergo the death for which it attempts to account? And if so, by what ruse does it narrate its own death? These questions are not only formal, but political, for upon their resolution depends the constitution of a counter-memory for the counter-cultural project out of which Dick's work emerges. Dick's attempt, in A Scanner Darkly, to resolve them within the formal limits of SF leads to a political impasse; in VALIS, he attempts to resolve them by abandoning not only SF, but perhaps even literature as such, in favor of what one might describe as a liberation-theology of late capitalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Ann Wells"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9299fcd-400d-321a-a62b-6c6ab9796a0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43905361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mass Culture and the Laboratory of Late Modernism in Patr\u00edcia Galv\u00e3o's \"Parque industrial\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905361","wordCount":10555,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"O presente artigo analisa o romance Parque industrial (1933), de Patr\u00edcia Galv\u00e3o (Pagu), como uma tentativa de repensar a forma do romance em rela\u00e7\u00e3o com a esfera crescente da cultura de massas nos anos 30 no Brasil. Minha proposta \u00e9 ler o romance como um texto do modernismo tard\u00edo preocupado, pela primeira vez, tanto com o registro quanto com aprodu\u00e7\u00e3o da figura emergente e inst\u00e1vel das massas. Eu focalizo em duas m\u00eddias: o cinema, espec\u00edficamente na montagem sovi\u00e9tica, e a voz humana, mostrando como Pagu negocia com elas. A partir das teor\u00edas contempor\u00e2neas de Walter Benjamin e a reflex\u00e3o mais recente de Roberto Schwarz, situo o romance de Pagu como parte de uma batalha mais ampia em torno de como escrever com e atrav\u00e9s da l\u00f3gica da reprodu\u00e7\u00e3o seriada.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. J. Wilsmore"],"datePublished":"1986-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20128347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"838b3283-3c6b-3d6e-b638-07a443f84bce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20128347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revmetaphysics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Metaphysics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Normative Structure of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20128347","wordCount":7019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Philosophy Education Society Inc.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e8e021-a484-3fda-b59d-71760aab8135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Biological sciences - Biology","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975350","wordCount":5306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40293492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80ed8257-d567-3817-b4aa-2cf6d1a1404b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40293492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40293492","wordCount":9848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48507370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02506807"},{"name":"oclc","value":"719728309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a37d3bc-c01c-3525-b24b-e74310828050"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48507370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annanutrmeta"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":905.0,"pageEnd":"1328","pageStart":"424","pagination":"pp. 424-1328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Abstracts Presented as Posters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48507370","wordCount":741481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"S. 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The movie blends genres (documentary, comic, silent, 'avant-garde'), and spools together usual Broodthaersian themes along with those that were previously untreated. To better understand this film, it is important to take Broodthaers' cue and investigate many of the novel associations that it introduces into his repertoire (waxworks, fashion, Jeremy Bentham, corpses, etc.) in connection with its reconfiguration of his usual artistic preoccupations (with moulds, modes of display, self-depiction, the use of rhetoric, et cetera). In this case, the themes and cinematographic techniques constellate the artist\/filmmaker's musing on a myriad of relationships \u2014 such as that of value to time, and of wax and film to memory \u2014 and connected to these, a musing upon 'the farther uses of the dead to the living' (as Bentham had once phrased it). Indeed, Broodthaers found an unlikely model in Bentham, and created a genealogy for this film in the Enlightenment figure and his peculiar waxwork, or 'Auto-Icon', that houses the sage's remains. This genealogy is traceable through various historical conventions, such as cabinets de figures, and the rhetorical tradition, or topos, of talking with the dead. Interestingly, when the filmmaker stages a conversation with the strange waxwork, he realizes Bentham's own, earlier conceit; but also, importantly, he thereby reveals a distinctly post-war revision of that antiquated rhetorical topos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. 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It argues that Forest has staked out an original position in the field of web art by virtue of a number of online rituals that problematize the threshold, or limen, between the \"real world\" and cyberspace.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katarzyna Beilin"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23526360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfe4a90e-418b-3759-ada1-00b23c0aa3da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23526360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Split-Screen Syndrome\": Structuring (Non)Seeing in Two Plays on Abu Ghraib","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23526360","wordCount":9254,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46979,47061]],"Locations in B":[[21999,22081]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Comparative Drama","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTIE PETERSON"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680371818"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235180"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"916e09d2-9eea-3d0b-9078-bba7c4ea5736"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41413876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Level of the Beasts that Perish\": Animalized Text in Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna's: \"Helen Fleetwood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413876","wordCount":9360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leah Ulansey"],"datePublished":"1983-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2906080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"1322","pageStart":"1319","pagination":"pp. 1319-1322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906080","wordCount":1429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MATTHEW H. EDNEY"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24269960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03085694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55939414"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236896"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fe8579b-9565-36a4-9aac-69c10d2d4167"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24269960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"imagomundi"}],"isPartOf":"Imago Mundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Information science - Information resources","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Academic Cartography, Internal Map History, and the Critical Study of Mapping Processes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24269960","wordCount":18565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":"Academic cartographers consistently expressed an interest in the history of map form (design and practice), at least until the 1980s. This essay reviews the formation of academic cartography, primarily in central Europe and the United States, and the scholarly work on the internal history of cartography that was clearly manifested in Imago Mundi. Internal map history catalysed the development of socio-cultural map histories after 1980 but did not itself change along those new lines. This was unfortunate because it is by paying attention to internal questions of the physical and graphic form of maps and the practices of mapping\u2014albeit critically reconfigured as the processes of producing, circulating and consumping maps\u2014that map historians will discover new and fertile intellectual ground. Les cartographes universitaires ont r\u00e9guli\u00e8rement montr\u00e9 de l'int\u00e9r\u00eat pour la forme cartographique (dessin et utilisations), au moins depuis les ann\u00e9es 1980. Cette \u00e9tude examine la formation des cartographes universitaires, principalement en Europe centrale et aux Etats-Unis, ainsi que les travaux de recherche sur l'histoire interne de la cartographie qui se rep\u00e8rent clairement dans Imago Mundi. L'histoire interne de la carte acc\u00e9l\u00e9ra le d\u00e9veloppement d'histoire socio-culturelles de la carte apr\u00e8s 1980, mais n'emprunta pas elle-m\u00eame cette voie nouvelle. Ce fut regrettable, car c'est en s'int\u00e9ressant \u00e0 des questions internes relatives aux formes mat\u00e9rielles et graphiques des cartes et aux pratiques cartographiques \u2013quoique transform\u00e9es de fa\u00e7on critique en processus de production, circulation, et utilisation de cartes- que les historiens de la carte d\u00e9couvriront un champ intellectuel nouveau et fertile. Kartographen mit Universit\u00e4tsausbildung interessierten sich, zumindest bis in die 1980er Jahre, in Bezug auf die Geschichte der Karte stets vorrangig f\u00fcr Fragen der Kartengestaltung und -herstellung. Dieser Beitrag beschreibt die Entstehung und Entwicklung der akademischen Kartographie (besonders in Mitteleuropa und den Vereinigten Staaten) sowie die von ihren Protagonisten geleistete wissenschaftliche Arbeit in Bezug auf die Geschichte der Kartographie, die in Imago Mundi nachvollziehbar zum Ausdruck gebracht wurde. Diese fachinterne wissenschaftliche T\u00e4tigkeit wirkte zwar nach den 1980er Jahren als Katalysator f\u00fcr soziokulturelle Forschungsans\u00e4tze, \u00f6ffnete sich selbst jedoch nicht in diese Richtungen. Das war bedauerlich, denn\u2014 obwohl die physischen und graphischen Aspekte der Karten und die Kartenherstellung kritisch als Prozesse der Kartenherstellung, -verbreitung und -nutzung umschrieben wurden\u2014es sind die Fragen nach hinter diesen Ebenen versteckten Faktoren, die die Kartenhistoriker zu neuen und fruchtbaren Erkenntnissen f\u00fchren. Los cart\u00f3grafos acad\u00e9micos expresaron constantemente un inter\u00e9s por la historia de la forma de los mapas (su dise\u00f1o y pr\u00e1ctica), al menos hasta la d\u00e9cada de 1980. En este art\u00edculo se analizan la formaci\u00f3n de la cartograf\u00eda acad\u00e9mica, principalmente en el centro de Europa y en Estados Unidos, y el trabajo de investigaci\u00f3n sobre la historia interna de la cartograf\u00eda que se manifiesta claramente en Imago Mundi. La historia interna de los mapas cataliz\u00f3 el desarrollo de sus historias socioculturales despu\u00e9s de 1980, pero no cambi\u00f3 por s\u00ed misma esas nuevas l\u00edneas. Fue una l\u00e1stima, ya que solo prestando atenci\u00f3n a cuestiones internas de la forma f\u00edsica y gr\u00e1fica de los mapas y de las pr\u00e1cticas de cartografiar\u2014aunque sea reformulada cr\u00edticamente como los procesos de producci\u00f3n, circulaci\u00f3n y consumo de mapas\u2014es como los historiadores de los mapas descubrir\u00e1n un terreno intelectual nuevo y f\u00e9rtil.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clifford J. Rogers"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2944058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08993718"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23040"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2944058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmilitaryhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Military History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Military Revolutions of the Hundred Years' War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2944058","wordCount":17635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amira Jarmakani"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e57027e4-dbeb-33ce-b1b9-ef3441c2b234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27933911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dancing the Hootchy Kootchy: The Bellydancer as the Embodiment of Socio-Cultural Tensions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933911","wordCount":8421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/1","publisher":"Arab Studies Institute","volumeNumber":"12\/13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jason Borge"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30219044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54b68fc3-822e-38ed-b7e0-da40aa4c9942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30219044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Olympio Guilherme: Hollywood Actor, Auteur and Author","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30219044","wordCount":8696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"O presente artigo oferece uma aproxima\u00e7\u00e3o te\u00f3rica, anal\u00edtica e hist\u00f3rica \u00e0 vida e obra de Olympio Guilherme, jornalista, ator, cineasta efinalmente romancista, cuja produ\u00e7\u00e3o liter\u00e1ria e cinematogr\u00e1fica hollywoodiana \u00e9 sem par nas letras brasileiras. A breve carreira de Guilherme \u00e9 especialmente not\u00e1vel porque foi narrada quase totalmente por ele mesmo. Trata-se, por\u00e9m, de uma narrativa baseada principalmente numa s\u00e9rie de fracassos pessoais. Apesar de ter vencido ainda no Brasil um concurso para atores promovido pela Fox, que o leva para os Estados Unidos em 1927, Guilherme nunca chegou a se tornar uma estrela de Hollywood. Embora ele tenha tentado criar sua pr\u00f3pria celebridade produzindo um filme semi-autobiogr\u00e1fico (Fome) sobre as lutas de um ator latino-americano em Hollywood, o filme, n\u00e3o obstante suas v\u00e1rias inova\u00e7\u00f5es t\u00e9cnicas, n\u00e3o conseguiu nemr p\u00fablico nem cr\u00edtica favor\u00e1ivel. Os v\u00e1rios desencontros quixotescos de Guilherme serviram de base \u00e0s suas v\u00e1rias cr\u00f4nicas publicadas na revista carioca Cinearte. Mais tarde, Guilherme converteu em fic\u00e7\u00e3o suas experi\u00eancias como ator e jornalista no romance Hollywood, o qual constitui uma cr\u00edtica amarga n\u00e3o somente \u00e0 comercializa\u00e7\u00e3o da ind\u00fastria cinematogr\u00e1fica nos prim\u00f3rdios do cinema falado (nesse sentido, trata-se do primeiro romance sobre Hollywood de um escritor brasileiro e um dos primeiros de um latino-americano), como tamb\u00e9m uma defesa da express\u00e3o art\u00edstica \"pura\" diante dos avan\u00e7os implac\u00e1veis da cultura de massa norte-americana.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro Ignacio Alonso"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23595442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04a9bb14-915c-3f51-bee1-61f5db6ac747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23595442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mountaineering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23595442","wordCount":3329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"66","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-02-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1686040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fa6bac7-77de-3cc4-a1ee-3b33fbc7a428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1686040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"864","pageStart":"814","pagination":"pp. 814-864","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1686040","wordCount":17787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4484","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"211","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. S. W.","J. F.","C. V.","M. B. C.","E. M. B.","K. M.","J. McK.","W. K. S.","H. S.","R. M.","L. G.","L. C. L.","S. L. S.","S. W. R.","C. S. A.","L. S.","Charlotte Thomson"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4171574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00067997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76409f7e-8440-396a-beba-600445d6aed4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4171574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bostmusebull"}],"isPartOf":"Boston Museum Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Some Recent Accessions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4171574","wordCount":15274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"361\/362","publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5608e971-f358-3808-8489-315b30bbde47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":200.0,"pageEnd":"1272","pageStart":"1073","pagination":"pp. 1073-1272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Program of the 2013 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489080","wordCount":112567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"127","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL SUBIALKA"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54086dd1-0994-3d07-87f3-4a6c0c716a4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44211307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Meaning of Acting in the Age of Cinema: Benjamin, Pirandello, and the Italian Diva","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44211307","wordCount":11951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[26907,26982]],"Locations in B":[[19582,19647]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Fuchs"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddf2.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911534044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a395a73a-fb9b-3306-952a-4cd3ad7a018d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5vddf2.3"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Theory of Communication","keyphrase":["frankfurt school","labour","marxism","luk\u00e1cs","capitalism","cultural marxism","bonefeld","marcuse","dialectical","surplus labour"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Business","Sociology","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddf2.3","wordCount":19611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The task of this book is to provide new readings about how some specific works of authors related to the Frankfurt School matter for critically understanding communication today. It presents five essays that review aspects of the works of Georg Luk\u00e1cs, Theodor W. Adorno, Herbert Marcuse, Axel Honneth and J\u00fcrgen Habermas and applies these ideas for grounding foundations of a critical theory of communication in the age of the Internet and social media. Each chapter is dedicated to revisiting specific ideas of one of these thinkers. The book is intended as a reader on aspects of cultural Marxism in the","subTitle":"Critical Theory of Communication: New Readings of Luk\u00e1cs, Adorno, Marcuse, Honneth and Habermas in the Age of the Internet","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ira Nadel"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15f17124-2d88-3819-be0f-4ce3ba8d9de1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45172846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172846","wordCount":2236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LITA M. TIRAK"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27000397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18778127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"772462645"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-242021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"536958d2-db50-38d9-b443-dfd57941cfe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27000397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rijkbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Rijksmuseum Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Black and Blue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27000397","wordCount":9952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stichting het Rijksmuseum","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"Approximately ninety cyanotypes and negatives depicting interior views of the human body \u2013 among the most obscure works in the art world \u2013 are now in the Rijksmuseum Photography Collection. They have no established provenance, production or creator, and without these factors, interpretations for the last thirty years have resulted in speculations. By examining an original negative and print, aided by research in X-ray history, this study uncovered the missing information. Harold Mahoney, a Chicago-based X-ray technician and an academically trained artist of the early twentieth century, was the original creator of the negatives. With his radiographic process, he managed to capture detailed soft tissue and bone in the same image on film, decades before computerized tomography scans. Art museums around the world have until now emphasized the universal humanness in the cyanotypes, as the social identity and context were unknown. This research has brought a racial identity to the series through a surviving photo- graph of a subject that Mahoney chose to supplement his published study. The racial core that appears from beneath the X-rays creates an interpretive framework for an American narrative about this photographic series, resonating with the historical and contemporary need for Black visibility and value. With new social inequities discovered in the cyanotypes that could complicate exhibition, this study also suggests an approach for museums to welcome a Black reclamation of the narrative. This research establishes the provenance and foundational analysis for the series that has fascinated museums and collectors for three decades.","subTitle":"Revelations in Harold Mahoney\u2019s X-rayed Anatomical Sections","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mitchell B. Frank"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb316763-1876-3657-ac5d-da404aecd7e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painterly Thought: Max Liebermann and the Idea in Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630870","wordCount":9666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Max Liebermann est surtout connu comme peintre naturaliste\/impressionniste. Il \u00e9tait \u00e9galement un \u00e9crivain passionn\u00e9 : Die Phantasie in der Malerei (L'Imagination dans ta peinture) est l'expression la plus d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e de sa th\u00e9orie de l'art. Au tournant du XXe si\u00e8cle, les \u00e9crits allemands sur l'art ont souvent oppos\u00e9 le naturalisme fran\u00e7ais \u00e0 l'id\u00e9alisme allemand. Liebermann tente de concilier ces oppositions en proposant une th\u00e9orie de l'art qui rejette ce qu'il consid\u00e8re comme des cat\u00e9gories absolues, telles que le naturalisme et l'id\u00e9alisme, et les remplace par ce qu'il estime \u00eatre des termes relationnels, tels na\u00eff et sentimental (d\u00e9coulant de Schiller). Cet essai discute du rapport de la th\u00e9orie de l'art de Liebermann \u00e0 sa pratique \u00e0 travers une analyse de son tableau L'Atelier (1902) et de la relation de celui-ci avec Las Meninas de Vel\u00e1zquez. De m\u00eame que la th\u00e9orie d'Erwin Panofsky sur l'Id\u00e9e dans l'art et l'analyse de la th\u00e9orie de l'argent de Georg Simmel, la th\u00e9orie de l'art de Liebermann s'articule sur le rapport entre la distance et la pr\u00e9sence. L'enjeu pour ces \u00e9crivains est la compr\u00e9hension du relationnel comme une caract\u00e9ristique fondamentale de la subjectivit\u00e9 moderne.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DHIRAJ MURTHY"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46d6d670-51a9-3c81-a251-846c4dac65be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23889436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A South Asian American diasporic aesthetic community? Ethnicity and New York City's 'Asian electronic music' scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889436","wordCount":9821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"In the late 1990s, a diverse group of British South Asian musicians began to gain notoriety in the UK for their distinctive blends of synthesized beats with what were considered South Asian elements (e.g. tabla, sitar and 'Hindustani' samples). Following these successes, the British media industries engaged in discourses on whether these South Asian musicians should be labelled under preexisting musical genres such as acid jazz and electronic music or under an ethnically oriented classification such as 'The Asian Underground'. Despite vociferous opposition, the latter categorization became the most promulgated. However, this discourse underwent a second iteration when South Asian musicians in New York City created a dance night largely influenced by their transatlantic diasporic colleagues. The purpose of this study was to examine the tensions between ethnically categorizing this New York dance night and not doing so. Using ethnographic data gathered during three months of fieldwork in 2001 as well as through a web-based questionnaire, this study yields interesting findings regarding not only ethnic labelling, but also the larger debate of ethnic essentialism. More specifically, the findings suggest that, on the one hand, ethnically labelling this dance hall as South Asian could facilitate an increased solidarity (sociopolitically) within the diaspora in New York City. While, on the other hand, such labelling could be dangerous to diasporic interests, as it essentializes the South Asian community into a homogenous entity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susanna W. Gold"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64b86255-bd9e-3407-b00a-b007a3d68dc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1189","pageStart":"1167","pagination":"pp. 1167-1189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Recovering Identity: Nineteenth-Century African American Portraiture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068410","wordCount":8406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Coleman Sellers","Charles Willson Peale"],"datePublished":"1952-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bb3d209-7c01-3861-8895-3d7db73fb425"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1005692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":367.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Portraits and Miniatures by Charles Willson Peale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005692","wordCount":247263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lionel Gossman"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Philhellenism and Antisemitism: Matthew Arnold and His German Models","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771612","wordCount":18364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph P. Fishman"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44865916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46968396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20334a55-a303-3ab3-a4d2-45ecb394d6a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44865916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"1923","pageStart":"1861","pagination":"pp. 1861-1923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MUSIC AS A MATTER OF LAW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44865916","wordCount":32306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"131","abstract":"What is a musical work? Philosophers debate it, but for judges the answer has long been simple: music means melody. Though few recognize it today, that answer goes all the way back to the birth of music copyright litigation in the nineteenth century. Courts adopted the era's dominant aesthetic view identifying melody as the site of originality and, consequently, the litmus test for similarity. Surprisingly, music's single-element test has persisted as an anomaly within the modern copyright system, where multiple features of eligible subject matter typically are eligible for protection. Yet things are now changing. Recent judicial decisions are beginning to break down the old definitional wall around melody, looking elsewhere within the work to find protected expression. Many have called this increasing scope problematic. This Article agrees \u2014 but not for the reason that most people think. The problem is not, as is commonly alleged, that these decisions are unfaithful to bedrock copyright doctrine. A closer inspection reveals that, if anything, they are in fact more faithful than their predecessors. The problem is instead that the bedrock doctrine itself is flawed. Copyright law, unlike patent law, has never shown any interest in trying to increase the predictability of its infringement test, leaving second comers to speculate as to what might or might not be allowed. But the history of music copyright offers a valuable look at a path not taken, an accidental experiment where predictability was unwittingly achieved by consistently emphasizing a single element out of a multi-element work. As a factual matter, the notion that melody is the primary locus of music's value is a fiction. As a policy matter, however, that fiction has turned out to be useful. While its original, culturally myopic rationale should be discarded, music's unidimensional test still offers underappreciated advantages over the \"everything counts\" analysis that the rest of the copyright system long ago chose.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kia Lindroos"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46c0e338-150b-3181-bccf-f437a53d0b2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetic Political Thought: Benjamin and Marker Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645077","wordCount":8694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victor I. Stoichita","James Bugslag"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b63c233-09dd-37a6-bd70-408cbc6d0a60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Vaporization and\/or Centralization: On the (Self-)Portraits of Manet and Degas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630607","wordCount":7059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Admiration r\u00e9ciproque, rivalit\u00e9, incompatibilit\u00e9 caract\u00e9rielle font partie du rapport entre Edouard Manet (1832-1883) et Edgar Degas (1834-1917). Puisque les sources \u00e9crites sont avares de renseignements \u00e0 ce propos, il faudra interroger les oeuvres des deux ma\u00eetres elles-m\u00eames pour trouver les raisons de cette incompatibilit\u00e9. On aura alors la chance de cerner deux positions inconciliables quant \u00e0 l'art en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral et l'art moderne en particulier. Les pages qui suivent se proposent de le faire, en partant de l'analyse des autoportraits des deux peintres et des rares portraits de l'un faits par l'autre. Une attention sp\u00e9ciale est vou\u00e9e au tableau intitul\u00e9 M. et Mme Manet, r\u00e9alis\u00e9 par Degas vers 1865 et d\u00e9coup\u00e9 par Manet peu apr\u00e8s l'avoir re\u00e7u comme cadeau de la part de son confr\u00e8re.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Morowitz"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b84b2687-7249-327c-8de8-33a50495c225"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Waking from the Dream: The Arcades Project, Copia<\/em>, and the American Consumer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0001","wordCount":10691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":"Brian Ulrich's photographic series Copia (2001\u20132011) is a powerful expos\u00e9 of modern consumer culture and lays bare the inner workings of contemporary American life. Set in the ubiquitous box stores, thrift shops, and decaying malls of cities around the United States, the images of Copia reveal the empty promises and exhausting rituals of the current consumer dream. In the final chapter of Copia, Dark Stores, Ulrich focuses his lens on the economic recession and the collapse of the retail economy. Yet despite their powerful evocation of twenty-first-century consumption, the photographs that compose Ulrich's series are haunted by ideas and images first articulated by the German philosopher and critic Walter Benjamin, in his magisterial\u2014and never finished\u2014Arcades Project of the 1930s. I argue in the pages that follow that a close reading of Benjamin's texts unlocks some of the mythic, phantasmagoric content of Ulrich's images and that the photographs, in their specificity, give form to Benjamin's doomed project and to the dialectical image.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b89b3464-eb78-36cd-96b5-9fe818257f43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/879231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":109.0,"pageEnd":"cvi","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/879231","wordCount":19255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"903","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Tannehill Neely"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06ec2eee-90e9-3b90-884d-6a148021098d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25613174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Haul and Pull up: History, \"Mento\" and the eBay Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613174","wordCount":11473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Since eBay's emergence in 1997, the international market for vintage Jamaican records has surged, yielding a bounty of rare and previously unavailable materials. This article asks whether Jamaica's history in sound is becoming irretrievably fragmented and explores how this development affects the academic study of music in the Caribbean. History and historiographic data are crucial in some kinds of ethnographic research. While the material traces of traditional musics fall outside the collection mandates of many research institutions, eBay has emerged as an excellent alternative for researchers looking for important archival materials. In Jamaica today, an increasing number of entrepreneurs sell such material on eBay, which has become a viable part of the country's informal market economy. While creating a global engagement with traditional Jamaican music on one level, the sale of these records may also be seen as part of a process of de-contextualization. By looking at the trade of early Jamaica mento music, this article addresses how collecting across borders, the process by which cultural artifacts move across national boundaries and into private collections, opens discursive authority over these objects more broadly. \/\/\/ Con el surgimiento de eBay en 1997, el mercado internacional para discos jamaicanos antiguos (vintage) aument\u00f3 repentinamente, dando paso a una abundante cantidad de materiales raros y previamente inaccesibles. Este art\u00edculo plantea si la historia del sonido en Jamaica est\u00e1 siendo fragmentada irremediablemente y explora c\u00f3mo este desarrollo afecta el estudio acad\u00e9mico de la m\u00fasica en el Caribe. Los datos hist\u00f3ricos e historiogr\u00e1ficos son de crucial importancia para algunos tipos de investigaci\u00f3n etnogr\u00e1fica. Mientras que los trazos materiales de las m\u00fasicas tradicionales no forman parte de las gu\u00edas de colecciones de numerosas instituciones de investigaci\u00f3n, eBay ha surgido como una excelente alternativa para los investigadores en b\u00fasqueda de importantes materiales archiv\u00edsticos. Actualmente en Jamaica un creciente n\u00famero de empresarios venden dichos materiales en eBay, lo que se ha convertido en una parte viable de la econom\u00eda del mercado informal del pa\u00eds. Adem\u00e1s de crear un compromiso global con la m\u00fasica jamaicana, la venta de estos discos tambi\u00e9n se puede ver como un proceso de de-contextualizaci\u00f3n. Al estudiar el comercio de la m\u00fasica mento jamaicana, este art\u00edculo aborda c\u00f3mo el coleccionismo entre fronteras, el proceso a trav\u00e9s del cual los artefactos culturales se mueven cruzando los l\u00edmites nacionales hacia las colecciones privadas, abre m\u00e1s ampliamente la autoridad discursiva sobre estos objetos. \/\/\/ Avec l'apparition de eBay en 1997, le march\u00e9 international des disques anciens de la Jama\u00efque a connu un succ\u00e8s fulgurant en facilitant l'acquisition du nombre de mat\u00e9riels qui \u00e9taient pr\u00e9alablement inaccessibles. Cet article s'interroge sur une \u00e9ventuelle fragmentation de l'histoire de la Jama\u00efque avec du support sonore et comment ce d\u00e9veloppement influence l'\u00e9tude des musiques de la Cara\u00efbe. Les donn\u00e9s historiques et historiographiques jouent un r\u00f4le crucial dans certains travaux de recherches ethnographiques. Tandis qu'un grand nombre d'institutions de recherche ne disposent d'aucune trace de mat\u00e9riels de musique traditionnelle, eBay s'est impos\u00e9 comme une r\u00e9f\u00e9rence de qualit\u00e9 pour des chercheurs en qu\u00eate d'importants mat\u00e9riels d'archives. De nos jours, le nombre d'entrepeneurs int\u00e9ress\u00e9 \u00e0 la vente de ces mat\u00e9riels sur eBay va grandissant, ce qui entre autres fortifie le march\u00e9 informel du pays. D'un cot\u00e9, la vente de ces disques supporte la musique jama\u00efcaine traditionnelle; mais, de l'autre, elle peut \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme un processus de d\u00e8-contextualisation. En \u00e9tudiant le commerce de la musique mento jama\u00efcaine, cet article s'est propos\u00e9 d'aborder comment le collectionnisme entre fronti\u00e8res, le processus par lequel les mat\u00e9riels culturels vont au del\u00e0 des limites nationales et int\u00e8grent des institutions de collection priv\u00e9es, peut \u00eatre une source d'ouverture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1228475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"399db0d4-ea5c-35fc-9295-2ee55b15eb61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1228475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":195.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Index Digest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1228475","wordCount":82490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald A. Nielsen"],"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61138057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3711297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianal"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Analysis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Charles Manson's Family of Love: A Case Study of Anomism, Puerilism and Transmoral Consciousness in Civilizational Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711297","wordCount":13215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"This essay examines the Charles Manson Family in civilizational perspective, and stresses the role of changing structures of consciousness in the Family's organization and operation. Employing Nelson's typology of structures of consciousness, we argue that the Family represents a radical \"regression\" in these structures from a rationalized one to a syncretism, with alternating stresses on a faith structure and a sacro-magical structure. This syncretistic structure of consciousness emerged within the charismatic community surrounding Manson. The elements of a faith structure appeared in the form of a radical anomism, a spirit of acosmic love, and a transmoral conscience. The elements of the sacro-magical structure appeared especially in their mythology of childhood perfection, in an attitude of omnipresent play (puerilism, in Huizinga's phrase), and a bricolage construction of a millenial script for dramatic enactment. The Family ultimately followed a millenial dream which led to murder, a dream fusing the motifs of love and death. In conclusion, we stress certain destructive features of the civilizational analytic approach to such groups and argue that the Family is best seen as a radical anomistic sect similar to the various Medieval and early modern heresies such as the Free Spirit, the Ranters and others more recent.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Mariner"],"datePublished":"1978-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2906478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1135","pageStart":"1133","pagination":"pp. 1133-1135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2906478","wordCount":1530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Mazzola"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24712421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10a20a2d-e4ab-3a06-bc28-ddacf41beb65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24712421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Going Rogue: Bianca at Large","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24712421","wordCount":11020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This article explores how Shakespeare transforms his early picture of female virtue embodied by Bianca Minola \u2013 safely stowed in her chambers in The Taming of the Shrew \u2013 into the freedom we find in Othello's Bianca, who is an emblem of the larger world; her movements aligned with integrity, the ability to reason, and mastery of her body. I investigate how Bianca's 'nomadic' status guarantees her safety and speech, and also locate her agency and mobility alongside the movements of female characters like Moll Cutpurse, Isabella Whitney's dejected maidservant, and Spenser's Britomart \u2013 all guardians of a world to which they only peripherally belong.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriela Stoicea"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45f1141b-dd2a-31c7-8f1d-08dc132c335c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Producing the Class and Gender Divide: Fritz Lang's Metropolis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688260","wordCount":9539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The following article outlines the economy of gender relations in Fritz Lang's Metropolis (1927). I approach the topic of gender relations from a previously neglected perspective that examines connections between gender, sexuality, and work as conceptualized by Marx and the early Socialists who preceded him. Close analyses of several key sequences will demonstrate that Metropolis translates cinematically the inversion of causality between work and sexuality that Marx introduced after the Saint-Simonians, from whom he otherwise distanced himself. By keeping women either completely outside the cinematic space or relegating them to certain strategic roles within the narrative, Harbou and Lang move towards their own understanding of the relationship between work, gender, and sexuality, suggesting that cinema not only reflects, but actively participates in the creation and maintenance of the status quo.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ADEN KUMLER"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23647789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23647789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The multiplication of the species: Eucharistic morphology in the Middle Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23647789","wordCount":8888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"59\/60","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52e6d0a7-23dd-3e31-b746-e5f195ed8014"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Emergent Forms of Life: Anthropologies of Late or Postmodernities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223402","wordCount":11821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Anthropologies of late modernity (also called postmodernity, postindustrial society, knowledge society, or information society) provide a number of stimulating challenges for all levels of social, cultural, and psychological theory, as well as for ethnographic and other genres of anthropological writing. Three key overlapping arenas of attention are the centrality of science and technology; decolonization, postcolonialism, and the reconstruction of societies after social trauma; and the role of the new electronic and visual media. The most important challenges of contemporary ethnographic practice include more than merely (a) the techniques of multilocale or multisited ethnography for strategically accessing different points in broadly spread processes, (b) the techniques of multivocal or multiaudience-addressed texts for mapping and acknowledging with greater precision the situatedness of knowledge, (c) the reworking of traditional notions of comparative work for a world that is increasingly aware of difference, and (d) acknowledging that anthropological representations are interventions within a stream of representations, mediations, and unequally inflected discourses competing for hegemonic control. Of equal importance are the challenges of juxtaposing, complementing, or supplementing other genres of writing, working with historians, literary theorists, media critics, novelists, investigative or in-depth journalists, writers of insider accounts (e.g. autobiographers, scientists writing for the public), photographers and film makers, and others.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Kaufman"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa33cd51-343b-3812-b41c-759aa78ec792"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lyric Commodity Critique, Benjamin Adorno Marx, Baudelaire Baudelaire Baudelaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501840","wordCount":5386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xinyu Dong"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41482533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4300d3bd-6ea4-3039-b31e-1f56a40fbd6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41482533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Laborer at Play: \"Laborer's Love\", the Operational Aesthetic, and the Comedy of Inventions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41482533","wordCount":13494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Naremore"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84a462e0-86a9-303c-9016-f34052ea3982"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1212695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Authorship and the Cultural Politics of Film Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212695","wordCount":6553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bayne Peterson"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01601040"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233145447"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-252103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3489416e-521c-3e8c-b29f-2ba7fc4e6d41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26924261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iajsocinduarch"}],"isPartOf":"IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History of Science & Technology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"In Search of the Primus Stove Artist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924261","wordCount":6276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Society for Industrial Archeology","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"In the mid-nineteenth century, increased contact with European and American whalers and traders and the industrial objects they brought with them to the Arctic affected the art of the Inuit. Some Inuit artists began depicting these objects in small walrus ivory sculptures that they traded with outsiders. In the 1930s, an unknown Inuit artist on Baffin Island made a 2.5-in.-tall walrus ivory sculpture of a Swedish-manufactured Primus Stove, the first pressurized-burner kerosene stove. This mysterious sculpture became a source of inspiration for my artwork. Through research in the special collections at the Canadian Museum of Civilization I learned more about this sculpture and others like it. Then, on a trip to Pangnirtung, Baffin Island, interviews with contemporary Inuit artists gave me a deeper insight into the possible motivations of the artist who made the Primus Stove, as well as the current conditions of being an artist in Pangnirtung.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-04-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e7f9b4c-08e7-3a66-a912-7f0386b143aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23053494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053494","wordCount":20281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KATHLEEN MCHUGH"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23541066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PROFANE ILLUMINATIONS: HISTORY AND COLLABORATION IN JAMES LUNA AND ISAAC ARTENSTEIN'S \"THE HISTORY OF THE LUISE\u00d1O PEOPLE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541066","wordCount":11721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"This essay studies narrative collaboration in film, focusing on The History of the Luise\u00f1o People, produced collaboratively by performance artist James Luna and filmmaker Isaac Artenstein. The film uses the ephemeral quality of performance art to allegorize the loss of a material history that would register its story. Rather than invoking division, plurality, and ambiguity, Luna and Artenstein limit their film's historical space to the media and the domestic, and its temporality to a version of what Walter Benjamin called \"now-time.\" Although History's apparent collaboration with negative stereotypes of Native Americans has angered many critics, McHugh reads the film as an instance of Benjaminian \"profane illumination.\" Her essay details Luna and Artenstein's profane apprehension of the historical, as she considers their strategies within the contexts in which the film was funded, produced, distributed, and exhibited.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE EDWARD MERCER"],"datePublished":"1972-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41370957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"095b0164-c513-383e-aaa6-feedfd420fcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41370957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"648","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-648","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"NOTICES OF THE SOCIETY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41370957","wordCount":490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5194","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1843239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6005af06-f538-345a-b771-f58f68bdc567"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1843239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"398","pagination":"pp. 398-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1843239","wordCount":46189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miyako Inoue"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f61922a-282a-3054-aea7-67c52df95fc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Listening Subject of Japanese Modernity and His Auditory Double: Citing, Sighting, and Siting the Modern Japanese Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651520","wordCount":18450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Brenkman"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346166","wordCount":12919,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brett Neilson"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"History's Stamp: Wyndham Lewis's The Revenge for Love and the Heidegger Controversy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771454","wordCount":8013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulf Strohmayer"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Technology, Modernity and the Restructuring of the Present in Historical Geographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490654","wordCount":9581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":"The following essay attempts to illuminate the production of \"presences\" in the course of European modernity. It argues that the disintegration of a stable and local presence is one of the defining, albeit largely ignored, characteristics of modernity. The consequences of what could rightly be called an \"exploded\" presence are then examined with the help of particularly illustrative innovations which originated within European modernity: paper money, iron and glass architecture and photography. In conclusion, the essay attempts an outline for a new geography of technology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mathieu Couttenier","Veronica Petrencu","Dominic Rohner","Mathias Thoenig"],"datePublished":"2019-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26848486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b4dafee-304f-3515-8b2f-a1421cbdae6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26848486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"4425","pageStart":"4378","pagination":"pp. 4378-4425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Human geography","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Violent Legacy of Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26848486","wordCount":27310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":"We study empirically how past exposure to conflict in origin countries makes migrants more violence-prone in their host country, focusing on asylum seekers in Switzerland. We exploit a novel and unique dataset on all crimes reported in Switzerland by the nationalities of perpetrators and of victims over 2009\u20132016. Our baseline result is that cohorts exposed to civil conflict\/mass killing during childhood are 35 percent more prone to violent crime than the average cohort. This effect is particularly strong for early childhood exposure and is mostly confined to co-nationals, consistent with inter-group hostility persisting over time. We exploit cross-region heterogeneity in public policies within Switzerland to document which integration policies are best able to mitigate the detrimental effect of past conflict exposure on violent criminality. We find that offering labor market access to asylum seekers eliminates two-thirds of the effect.","subTitle":"Evidence on Asylum Seekers, Crime, and Public Policy in Switzerland","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henrietta Lidchi"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09547169"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607827434"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6540062-a184-39be-b698-9eda0371e4f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmuseumethnog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Museum Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Collecting in the Southwest: Detached Mastery or Private Passion?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793713","wordCount":6782,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"Museum Ethnographers Group","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurence Roth"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42944417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Oppositional Culture and the \"New Jew\" Brand: From \"Plotz\" to \"Heeb\" to \"Lost Tribe\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944417","wordCount":11185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Purdue University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"This essay considers how an amateur literary production, Plotz: The Zinefor the Vaclempt, helped to construct both an oppositional and an eminently marketable form of contemporary Jewish identity. Barbara RushkofF, n\u00e9e Kligman, the wit behind Plotz, yoked zine writing practices and attitudes with Jewish humor and thereby repositioned Jewishness in her zine as a kind of \"alt-Jewishness,\" another type of oppositional culture within zine subcultures of the 1990s. Plotzs cultural significance is evident in the direct and indirect emulations of Rushkoff's formula in Heeb: The New Jew Review and in the visual and editorial packaging of Lost Tribe, an anthology of \"Jewish Fiction From the Edge.\" Both developed that formula into a market brand, thus enabling fans of American Jewishness to buy and to buy into, the values and practices that currently lend cultural legitimacy and social prestige to Jewish identity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID BELL"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41318787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f652203f-2819-3a28-99f4-a1b434c730e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41318787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Irritation of Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41318787","wordCount":7167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":"A century ago, Adolf Loos articulated a unique sensibility regarding function and posed the controversial idea that architecture is not an art. Fifty years later, Theodor Adorno, who supported many of Loos' opinions, contended that Loos' argument in this respect was critically insufficient because it lacked dialectical depth. The following discussion intends to demonstrate that Loos' thought was dialectical in the fashion Adorno believed legitimate. To do so, it is necessary to consider Loos' built works as a way of thinking complementary to his written ideas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chandra Mukerji"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65b757c8-7759-37e2-8e2e-158e957b5086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40061117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"733","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-733","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Tacit Knowledge and Classical Technique in Seventeenth-Century France: Hydraulic Cement as a Living Practice among Masons and Military Engineers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061117","wordCount":10794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Blood"],"datePublished":"1986-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2905650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"837","pageStart":"817","pagination":"pp. 817-837","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Baudelaire Against Photography: An Allegory of Old Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905650","wordCount":8862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411655"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"461bbf8e-b919-3638-a06b-283a85c75663"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25769149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transcience"}],"isPartOf":"Transportation Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Transportation Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Systems science","Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769149","wordCount":2259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"INFORMS","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuel J. Mart\u00edn-Hern\u00e1ndez"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.11.2.0041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15499715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"162135983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96d91036-be19-3883-bdc8-3a7bfcdf1709"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/futuante.11.2.0041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"futuante"}],"isPartOf":"Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation, History, Theory, and Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Museum Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Time and Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.11.2.0041","wordCount":3170,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[12415,12597]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"This essay reexamines the history of the preservation discourse that linked a monument's authenticity to the conservation of its patina. It puts this discourse in a broader intellectual context in order to show it to be related to changes in the Western cultural understanding of time, which were partially brought about by Henri Bergson's notion of duration. The idea that the nature of objects was to be in a state of perpetual change put into crisis the practice of restoring buildings to a past frozen moment in time and gave rise to the conservation of monuments in their \u201cas found\u201d condition. Important European preservation theorists such as Cesare Brandi, Paolo Torsello, Piero Sanpaolesi, and Paul Philippot debated how to express aesthetically the idea that monuments constantly change over time, despite being under a strict conservation regime. Their answers relied on the cleaning of surfaces and the limit of what was considered acceptable visual change. Their collective discourse theorized the patina as a discursive surface where preservationists were called on to express architecture's existence in time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Rosecrance"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b964ba3-00f8-327c-9439-b6780c0c45dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"777","pageStart":"775","pagination":"pp. 775-777","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231261","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bobby M. Wilson"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3693958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf6ad76f-8c1b-3618-a502-88d91e930617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3693958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"587","pagination":"pp. 587-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race in Commodity Exchange and Consumption: Separate but Equal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3693958","wordCount":16491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":"The movement of blacks from the status of a slave to that of a consumer had tremendous social and geographic consequences. Slaves were not possessors of money and did not engage in the commodity circuit. Emancipation elevated blacks to wage laborers and consumers. The commodity circuit produced social relations that were problematic for race relations in the postbellum South. The geographical and social solution to this problem was neither integration nor exclusion of blacks from the commodity circuit, but segregation. While the model of consumption may be white, the way of capitalism is not to deny anyone access to the commodity circuit. Exclusion would have provided too rigid a boundary for the commodity circuit. The Plessy decision satisfied the structural imperative of capital to expand consumption while also retaining race as a social marker. It provided for the right amount of inclusion and exclusion in the commodity circuit, reducing just enough of the racial obstacle to expand the sphere of consumption to include the former slaves.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1900-12-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20266893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f433a78e-386e-35bf-afcb-b05f26dafb2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20266893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1900,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20266893","wordCount":44328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2087","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ca63ebd-73d2-359f-8baf-c195b7c4bca0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":250.0,"pageEnd":"947","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-947","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461431","wordCount":468442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Abraham"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberty without Equality: The Property-Rights Connection in a \"Negative Citizenship\" Regime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828921","wordCount":34928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Bar Foundation","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Why, in comparison with other liberal capitalist democracies, is the social welfare state so poorly anchored in American law and public discourse? Surely American political and social history have contributed much to the weakness of our \"social state.\" But law, too, has played a significant material, as well as ideological, role and has provided the terrain for much of our social development. This essay explores the particular contribution of the property-liberty nexus to the stunted development of positive liberty and social citizenship in the United States. It traces this connection from the natural rights and bourgeois Founders through several key conjunctures in American history, including Reconstruction, the New Deal, and the civil rights periods and compares some of the results with developments in Germany and the aspirations of American progressives. The essay contends that left and right alike have operated within a highly resilient and constricting framework that has made progress in the area of social citizenship both awkward and fragile. Although some possibilities for forward movement have always existed and still remain, the prospects for positive-liberty social-state law are not abundant: The master's house is not about to be taken down with his own tools.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Monica Obniski"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43831618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f0a5362-4c55-3cc2-ba25-98cabb2f3fa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43831618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Selling Folk Art and Modern Design: Alexander Girard and Herman Miller's Textiles and Objects Shop (1961-1967)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43831618","wordCount":12182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Under the guidance of director of textiles Alexander H. Girard, the Herman Miller Furniture Company embarked on an experimental showroom in New York City that sold contemporary textiles (designed by Girard) alongside global folk art and other handcrafted objects (sourced by Girard). Although not as recognized as his colleagues, George Nelson and Charles Eames, during the period Girard was a well-known architect, tastemaker and folk art collector who designed dwellings, exhibitions, showrooms and contract interiors, among other works. This paper will locate one of his showroom projects for Herman Miller, the Textiles & Objects Shop, to explore how modern design and folk art was displayed and sold jointly in the period. Related to Girard's design process was the Herman Miller brand image as projected by the O Shop\u2014Herman Miller as a modern furniture retailer enlivened by whimsical folk art and handcrafted objects. In addition to examining the architecture and design of the showroom, archival documents reconstruct this little-known chapter in Herman Miller's history, shedding light on the business of selling seemingly antithetical works in mid-twentieth century America. For Girard, folk art was a marker of modernity, and he construed it as a good companion to modern design.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Weinstock Netanel"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eb54e17-00a3-3d04-a3bd-be8a924ec805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":105.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management"],"title":"Copyright and a Democratic Civil Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797212","wordCount":61060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTINA ZWARG"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19474644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c1a9ad4-acd3-30fc-9afa-328e60f67603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48599386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poestud"}],"isPartOf":"Poe Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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But in drawing on different facets of the emerging visual culture and in looking to the images produced by the new visual technologies to find the hand of God in nature, these popularizers subtly transformed the natural theology tradition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S\u00e9rgio Freire","Carlos Palombini"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"395aaa53-4629-3d2d-b651-c7d11c38c695"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Early Musical Impressions from Both Sides of the Loudspeaker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513452","wordCount":6368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"Ametaphoric image of the loudspeaker and its sides sums up the spatio-temporal ruptures that started shaping aural perception in the late 19th century: on one side, the listener; on the other, sound events conveyed by phonographic products, radio and various sound-recording devices. 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Peddie"],"datePublished":"1914-02-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afedf104-57f2-38a4-8738-200071c0a492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41341456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE HISTORY OF COLOUR PRINTING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341456","wordCount":7712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3195","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8a8ecc9-e666-3344-80d3-00d7d9490606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/235821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":300.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 1994","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/235821","wordCount":221493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrienne Brown"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58901109-ee8b-3ffc-9087-eca9c657667e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44840725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Architecture of Racial Phenomena","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840725","wordCount":3266,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50460,50517]],"Locations in B":[[18031,18088]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"42","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandra Kieffer"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2015.39.1.56","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"532400da-fa95-32a1-b0dc-d0e66afa9a33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2015.39.1.56"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Debussyist Ear","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2015.39.1.56","wordCount":16557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"Musicologists have long recognized that \u201csensation\u201d played an important role in the musical culture of debussysme. Close readings of the writings of Debussy and his circle in the first decade of the twentieth century reveal that a key, though often overlooked, aspect of Debussyist sensation is a specifically auditory one\u2014a special mode of attentive listening that claims a privileged knowledge of the natural phenomenon of sound. This account of sensation and listening, which both recapitulates and critiques central components of Helmholtzian sensory physiology, puts Debussy and Debussyism in dialogue with a network of late-nineteenth- and earlytwentieth-century discourses on the limits of sensory knowledge and resultant problems of representation. Considering Debussyism in this light demonstrates the extent to which musical culture in this period negotiated a modernist crisis of representation salient across high-art culture around the turn of the twentieth century even as it inflected this problem specifically toward issues of sound and listening.","subTitle":"Listening, Representation, and French Musical Modernism","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cord Pagenstecher"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44993579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01430955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617145"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5d9459a-9a33-3277-b9ef-281f9407a8bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44993579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oralhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Oral History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Testimonies in digital environments: comparing and (de-)contextualising interviews with Holocaust survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44993579","wordCount":6751,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oral History Society","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"This article discusses the role of digital technology in oral history. After describing the digital environments for large-scale interview collections created at Freie Universit\u00e4t Berlin, the article reflects on the impact of digital technology on recording, narrating and interpreting testimony. Then it suggests a comparative approach to recorded interviews as multimodal and multilingual historical sources. Some exemplary analyses of two interviews with Holocaust survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, recorded in 1998 and 2006, demonstrate the potential of digital research in oral history archives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kdfw.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089644558"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b1258e6-664a-3994-b7f0-25941f66e569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt45kdfw.14"}],"isPartOf":"The Making of the Humanities","keyphrase":["chinese","jesuits","couplet","low countries","confucius","middle kingdom","thijs weststeijn","vossius","societatis iesu","missionaries"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"209","pagination":"209-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"The Middle Kingdom in the Low Countries:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kdfw.14","wordCount":14426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"China is a \u2018noble diamond, sparking divinely in the eye\u2019, according to Joost van den Vondel (1587-1679).\u00b9 The Dutch \u2018Prince of Poets\u2019 was not alone in esteeming the Middle Kingdom so highly. Not only was Amsterdam a staple market of Chinese goods and works of applied art. Various efforts of early European scholarship on China were products of the Netherlands as well. The earliest illustrated books, printing types, discussions of Chinese history, and editions of Confucius originated in the Low Countries. We may call this the \u2018proto-sinology\u2019 of the seventeenth century, as Chinese studies became an academic discipline only in","subTitle":"Sinology in the Seventeenth-Century Netherlands","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda L. Layne"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d90b40a-7398-3eae-84d4-4f3f5829c693"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Cultural Fix: An Anthropological Contribution to Science and Technology Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690131","wordCount":12853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Since at least the 1960s, science and technology studies (STS) scholars have distinguished between technological and social fixes. The author introduces a new concept for the STS theoretical tool kit-the cultural fix-and illustrates this concept using examples from her own research on pregnancy loss and neonatal intensive care, as well as that of anthropologists Katherine Newman and Sherry Ortner on downward mobility and unemployment in the United States. It is argued that the cultural fix represents a distinctive anthropological contribution to the field.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip G. Roeder"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7eeb6358-fca9-3012-8846-b24297ba80f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"832","pagination":"pp. 832-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231289","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred Botting"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41506385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21500428"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e714c1d5-63fb-3537-8c5e-8396069f7b3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41506385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"edgallpoerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Edgar Allan Poe Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Poe's Phantasmagoreality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41506385","wordCount":5042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49c08255-eeca-314a-887d-dea310f79f85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/953921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953921","wordCount":22425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1488","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick B. Pierson","C. Jason Williams","Patrick R. Kormos","Stuart P. Hardegree","Patrick E. Clark","Benjamin M. Rau"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15507424"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56019540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213212"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ccb69a-c36b-3879-bc04-670a9446043d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40961071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rangecolmana"}],"isPartOf":"Rangeland Ecology & Management","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"629","pageStart":"614","pagination":"pp. 614-629","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Hydrologic Vulnerability of Sagebrush Steppe Following Pinyon and Juniper Encroachment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961071","wordCount":13101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Allen Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"Woodland encroachment on United States rangelands has altered the structure and function of shrub steppe ecosystems. The potential community structure is one where trees dominate, shrub and herbaceous species decline, and rock cover and bare soil area increase and become more interconnected. Research from the Desert Southwest United States has demonstrated areas under tree canopies effectively store water and soil resources, whereas areas between canopies (intercanopy) generate significantly more runoff and erosion. We investigated these relationships and the impacts of tree encroachment on runoff and erosion processes at two woodland sites in the Intermountain West, USA. Rainfall simulation and concentrated flow methodologies were employed to measure infiltration, runoff, and erosion from intercanopy and canopy areas at small-plot (0.5 m\u00b2) and large-plot (13 m\u00b2) scales. Soil water repellency and vegetative and ground cover factors that influence runoff and erosion were quantified. Runoff and erosion from rainsplash, sheet flow, and concentrated flow processes were significantly greater from intercanopy than canopy areas across small-and large-plot scales, and site-specific erodibility differences were observed. Runoff and erosion were primarily dictated by the type and quantity of ground cover. Litter offered protection from rainsplash effects, provided rainfall storage, mitigated soil water repellency impacts on infiltration, and contributed to aggregate stability. Runoff and erosion increased exponentially (r\u00b2=0.75 and 0.64) where bare soil and rock cover exceeded 50%. Sediment yield was strongly correlated (r\u00b2=0.87) with runoff and increased linearly where runoff exceeded 20 mm.h\u207b\u00b9. Measured runoff and erosion rates suggest tree canopies represent areas of hydrologie stability, whereas intercanopy areas are vulnerable to runoff and erosion. Results indicate the overall hydrologie vulnerability of sagebrush steppe following woodland encroachment depends on the potential influence of tree dominance on bare intercanopy expanse and connectivity and the potential erodibility of intercanopy areas. La expansi\u00f3n del monte en pastizales de los Estados Unidos (EE.UU.) ha alterado la estructura y funci\u00f3n de los ecosistemas de estepa arbustiva. La estructura potencial de la comunidad es aquella en la que los \u00e1rboles son dominantes, las especies arbustivas y herb\u00e1ceas declinan y la cobertura de rocas y suelo desnudo aumenta y se torna m\u00e1s interconectada. Investigaciones del Desierto del Sudoeste de los EE.UU. ha demostrado que las \u00e1reas debajo de los canopeos de los \u00e1rboles efectivamente almacenan agua y recursos ed\u00e1ficos mientras que las \u00e1reas entre canopeos (el intercanopeo) generan significativamente m\u00e1s escorrent\u00eda superficial y erosi\u00f3n. Investigamos estas relaciones y los impactos de la invasi\u00f3n de \u00e1rboles sobre los procesos de escurrimiento superficial y erosi\u00f3n en dos sitios de la regi\u00f3n entre las Rocallosas y las Sierras Madre del Oeste de los EE.UU. Se emplearon metodolog\u00edas de simulaci\u00f3n de lluvias y flujo concentrado para medir infiltraci\u00f3n, escurrimiento superficial, y erosi\u00f3n de \u00e1reas de intercanopeo y canopeo a escalas de parcelas peque\u00f1as (0.5 m\u00b2) y grandes (13 m\u00b2). La escorrent\u00eda superficial y la erosi\u00f3n derivada del impacto de las gotas de lluvia y flujo laminar, y los procesos de flujo concentrado fueron significativamente mayores en \u00e1reas de intercanopeo que en \u00e1reas de canopeo tanto a escala de parcelas peque\u00f1as como grandes, y se observaron diferencias sitio-espec\u00edficas de propensi\u00f3n a la erosi\u00f3n. La escorrent\u00eda superficial y la erosi\u00f3n estuvieron determinadas principalmente por el tipo y la cantidad de cobertura basai. La broza ofreci\u00f3 protecci\u00f3n de los efectos de las gotas de lluvia, provey\u00f3 almacenamiento de agua de lluvia, mitig\u00f3 los impactos de la repelencia h\u00eddrica del suelo sobre la infiltraci\u00f3n, y contribuy\u00f3 a la estabilidad de los agregados. La escorrent\u00eda superficial y la erosi\u00f3n aumentaron de modo exponencial (r\u00b2=0.75 and 0.64) en lugares donde el suelo desnudo y la cobertura de roca fueron superiores al 50%. La cantidad de sedimentos producida estuvo fuertemente correlacionada (r\u00b2=0.87) con la escorrent\u00eda superficial y aument\u00f3 de modo lineal en lugares donde el escurrimiento superficial super\u00f3 los 20 mm h\u207b\u00b9. Las tasas de escurrimiento superficial y erosi\u00f3n medidas sugieren que los canopeos de los \u00e1rboles representan \u00e1reas de estabilidad hidrol\u00f3gica mientras que las \u00e1reas de intercanopeo son vulnerables al escurrimiento superficial y la erosi\u00f3n. Los resultados indican que la vulnerabilidad hidrol\u00f3gica de la estepa de Artemisia luego de la expansi\u00f3n del monte depende de la influencia potencial de la dominancia de \u00e1rboles sobre el \u00e1rea de intercanopeo y la conectividad y el potencial erosivo de dichas \u00e1reas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREAS H\u00d6FELE"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04863739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50415030"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"176c15d8-43a3-3689-807c-d275e94387e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"renadram1964"}],"isPartOf":"Renaissance Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Performing Arts","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Rebirth of Tragedy, or No Time for Shakespeare (Germany, 1940)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917477","wordCount":7638,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52540,52885]],"Locations in B":[[19711,20056]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Margolis"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/431570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconciling Analytic and Feminist Philosophy and Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431570","wordCount":6256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Satchidanandan"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23340766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f77672e-77b1-38e5-97c1-9c48bd8aae75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23340766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Defining New Voices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23340766","wordCount":2054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4 (228)","publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paolo Prato"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8cb9cbc-09b4-30b5-8388-f9fb4e59b89d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Music in the Streets: The Example of Washington Square Park in New York City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853361","wordCount":5123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN ERIC BRONNER"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23982297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"THE TAPESTRY UNRAVELS: Considerations on the Structure of Walter Benjamin's Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23982297","wordCount":8784,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9613,10314]],"Locations in B":[[51214,51917]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Osteen"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ae29ea8-427d-3169-97db-41194eeb2f54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"843","pageStart":"821","pagination":"pp. 821-843","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE MONEY QUESTION AT THE BACK OF EVERYTHING: CLICH\u00c9S, COUNTERFEITS AND FORGERIES IN JOYCE'S \"EUMAEUS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284104","wordCount":11248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60691c2c-a790-3558-bebf-3c536bbff56b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26370135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370135","wordCount":45338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthea J. Bogel"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a20cc2c8-7b36-3fe3-b883-6eb32902a86b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Canonizing Kannon: The Ninth-Century Esoteric Buddhist Altar at Kanshinji","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177252","wordCount":33427,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58086,58264]],"Locations in B":[[114312,114491]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"The celebrated ninth-century Nyoirin Kannon statue of Kanshinji is regarded by scholars as the temple's original honzon (main icon) and a paradigm of Esoteric Buddhist expression. This essay highlights the canonizing strategies of modern scholarship and suggests another honzon for Kashinji's early history. A study of records and contexts points to the importance of both extant and lost ninth-century statues at the temple. At the same time, historiographic investigation highlights the adverse relationship between scholarly research on Kanshinji and modern apologists' presentation of Esoteric Buddhism and its icons as enigmatic and sensual, and other misrepresentations of their function.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Molly Thomasy Blasing"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c225027-bcda-3d3f-8282-16370156ba23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.73.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Through the Lens of Loss: Marina Tsvetaeva's Elegiac Photo-Poetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.73.1.0001","wordCount":14277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"Marina Tsvetaeva is often described as a poet of keen aural sensibilities, while the visual world has been thought to be of secondary importance to her. This study of the influence of photography on Tsvetaeva's poetic writing contributes new evidence of the role of visual culture in her creative world. In detailing Tsvetaeva's experiences with the material and metaphysical properties of photographic imagery, Molly Thomasy Blasing argues that photography played a significant role in shaping the poet's elegiac writings on death, loss, and separation. The article makes available a number of previously unpublished archival photographs taken by Tsvetaeva\u2014images that are directly linked to her cycle of poems dedicated to Nikolai Gronskii, Nadgrobie. Blasing contextualizes this discovery within a network of other photo-poetic encounters in Tsvetaeva's life and works, revealing the extent to which the poet's thinking about photography relates to the goals of her poetic practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avner Ben-Amos","Eyal Ben-Ari"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbe8cc84-22f7-397e-bec1-61bbe304e8f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/658096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Resonance and Reverberation: Ritual and Bureaucracy in the State Funerals of the French Third Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/658096","wordCount":12076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Panos D. Bardis"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41886101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377848"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdf6b6bb-eb97-32e6-b1c6-297e4edeae09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41886101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociscience"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"History of Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41886101","wordCount":17077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Pi Gamma Mu, International Honor Society in Social Sciences","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Wolin"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cac51d2-73b7-3452-84da-15bd67198290"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Messianism to Materialism: The Later Aesthetics of Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487865","wordCount":14153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"22","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth W. Dam"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/724614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472530"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47622501"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffa67926-686f-3b0e-8b27-275d98c20e4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/724614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlegalstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Legal Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Law","Business","Economics","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Some Economic Considerations in the Intellectual Property Protection of Software","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/724614","wordCount":28739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"Intellectual property has frequently had to confront the issue of how to protect new technologies. The rise of software as a major industry is one such new challenge. An economic approach to the protection of software adds to the already extensive legal analysis. On the one hand, existing copyright and patent law provides a sound basis for an economically efficient system of protection. Copyright law deals with the appropriability problem without creating significant monopoly or rent-seeking problems. Copyright law also provides a sound basis for preserving a balance between innovation today and innovation tomorrow. These conclusions depend crucially, however, on maintaining the distinctions between attachment and replacement and between transformative and substitutive uses. Software-related patents are economically sound. However, as actually administered, the system may generate too many invalid patents. Sui generis protection is less desirable than copyright and patent protection.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gideon Parchomovsky","Alex Stein"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43153769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eff804d-8e2c-3257-a9b4-550d5613877b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43153769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"CATALOGS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43153769","wordCount":22100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":"It is a virtual axiom in the world of law that legal norms come in two prototypes: rules and standards. The accepted lore suggests that rules should be formulated to regulate recurrent and frequent behaviors, whose contours can be defined with sufficient precision. Standards, by contrast, should be employed to address complex, variegated behaviors that require the weighing of multiple variables. Rules rely on an ex ante perspective and are therefore considered the domain of the legislature; standards embody a preference for ex post, ad hoc analysis and are therefore considered the domain of courts. The rules\/standards dichotomy has become a staple in economic analysis of the law, as well as in legal theory in general. This Essay seeks to contribute to the jurisprudential literature by unveiling a new form of legal command: the catalog. A catalog, as we define it, is a legal command comprising a specific enumeration of behaviors, prohibitions, or items that share a salient common denominator and a residual category\u2014often denoted by the words \"and the like\" or \"such as\"\u2014that empowers courts to add other unenumerated instances. This Essay demonstrates that the catalog formation is often socially preferable to both rules and standards and can better enhance the foundational values of the legal system. In particular, catalogs are capable of providing certainty to actors at a lower cost than rules, while avoiding the costs of inconsistency and unbridled discretion inimical to standards. Moreover, the use of catalogs leads to a better institutional balance of powers between the legislature and the courts by preserving the integrity and autonomy of both institutions. This Essay shows that these results hold in a variety of legal contexts, including bankruptcy, intellectual property, criminal law, torts, constitutional law, and tax law.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. J. West"],"datePublished":"1949-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3203558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131989"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52794095"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a24c71fa-368e-317f-99b5-dc004b70a234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3203558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eductheaj"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Barry Sullivan: Shavian and Actual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3203558","wordCount":12588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sydney D. 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Organized by some of Italy's most talented painters and architects, the Mostra emphasized some of Fascism's fundamental themes and showcased some of the peninsula's most avant-garde designs. But it also expressed Fascist rituals in architectural and symbolic form, transforming earlier traditions on behalf of the new order.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrizia C. McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3ac1243-6dcc-3e8e-a306-f150632a3cb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08k8.8"}],"isPartOf":"The Chatter of the Visible","keyphrase":["montage","storytelling","technological reproducibility","benjamin","artwork essay","auratic","filmic montage","immediacy","auratic art","illusionism"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"62","pagination":"62-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Storytelling in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.8","wordCount":9583,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[35267,35361],[47184,47253],[49071,49196]],"Locations in B":[[31912,32007],[43017,43081],[47138,47343]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"\u201cThe Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility\u201d (1935\u201339) and \u201cThe Storyteller\u201d share much common ground. Both texts seize on the transformed status of art and aesthetic experience as a privileged point of entry for reflecting on the modern condition. Each essay examines the changes wrought by a watershed event in the development of technology\u2014in \u201cThe Storyteller,\u201d the propagation of movable print and a book culture that displaces the oral practice of storytelling, marking the dislocation of the collective wisdom of tradition by the putative objectivity of information; in the artwork essay, the advent of","subTitle":"Benjamin on Film and Montage","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Slavishak"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5215\/pennmaghistbio.139.2.0135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"761902bb-7718-3c9f-ba2b-509d6e2f70ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5215\/pennmaghistbio.139.2.0135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Expert Vision: J. 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Focusing on the novel's inspiration from Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth, as well as\u2014more indirectly\u2014Georg Luk\u00e1cs's critique of naturalism, the article argues that Xala's literary form explores the links between ideologically disjointed temporal and spatial dimensions, which can only be re-connected negatively, through a principle embodied symbolically in the figure of the xala (meaning the curse of impotence). By bringing together different, and mutually exclusive, dimensions, the literary form of Xala traces the underlying causes and effects of neocolonialism a decade after Senegal gained independence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BETH BUGGENHAGEN"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"975708db-f264-35e0-8538-b5df573286f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"732","pageStart":"714","pagination":"pp. 714-732","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Are births just \"women's business\"?: Gift exchange, value, and global volatility in Muslim Senegal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410428","wordCount":15585,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Through global circuits of wage labor and capital, the Murid way has become an economic force in the Senegalese postcolony amid conditions of protracted global volatility. In this article, I analyze women's actions within these global circuits. Women create value by giving gifts during the celebration of births and marriages, gifts that are the product of and the motivating force behind Murid global trade. Female ritual activities, on which male honor rests, draw women into conflict with the Murid clergy, which views women's actions as customary and not part of its modern, austere, and global vision of Islam in Senegal.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katharina Loew"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dc52a4d-0f5d-36d0-9ab9-be20d99987dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tangible Specters: 3-D Cinema in the 1910s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777978","wordCount":9829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/1","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"37\/38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Crow"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20028033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d41e6d8e-ed23-3c16-ace6-15bdb4d6902c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20028033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Practice of Art History in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20028033","wordCount":11988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"135","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis Rowell"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02718022"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24045284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inditheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Theory Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Time in the Romantic Philosophies of Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24045284","wordCount":15268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Department of Music Theory, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Goodman"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02179520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"217397d7-32ea-3fdd-958d-5fc07ead21d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sojourn"}],"isPartOf":"Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Area Studies","Asian Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Meritocracy Myth: National Exams and the Depoliticization of Thai Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186948","wordCount":10126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Thailand's national exam, the Ordinary National Educational Test (\" O-Net\"), is explicitly intended to standardize education, but it has also become the producer and product of what the test writers consider ordinary knowledge in Thailand \u2014 the knowledge of the dominant class. While branches of the Ministry of Education claim to use exam results as a means of objectively measuring students' and schools' capacity, a closer inspection of O-Net exam questions reveals that the test perpetuates biases in the Thai education system. Through the ritual of taking the exam at the same time in the same formation, students across the country are indoctrinated into an \"imagined community\" and convinced of the exam's equalizing power, with the result that the exam is spared a social critique. Thus, through an illusion of objectivity, the exam is successful in depoliticizing the preferential access to higher education enjoyed by Bangkok's middle class and elite and in reinforcing the myth of meritocracy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1808729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fab74b89-1656-343f-981b-c89d04806e86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1808729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"xxxvi","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xxxvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1808729","wordCount":11440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167655","wordCount":747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"47","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heike Paul"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxsdq.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837614855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9350b6dc-8bec-32bb-a1b5-68ded88ed979"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1wxsdq.11"}],"isPartOf":"The Myths That Made America","keyphrase":["made man","self made man","success","expressive individualism","horatio alger","cawelti apostles","american","immigrant","bartleby","upward mobility"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"367","pagination":"367-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Expressive Individualism and the Myth of the Self-Made Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxsdq.11","wordCount":20047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The legendary hero of America is the self-made man.Irvin G. Wyllie,The Self-Made Man in America<\/em>It is strange to see with what feverish ardour the Americans pursue their own welfare, and to watch the vague dread that constantly torments them lest they should not have chosen the shortest path which may lead to it.Alexis de Tocqueville,Democracy in America<\/em>Besides notions of religious predestination, political liberty, and social harmony, the imagined economic promises of the \u2018new world\u2019 constitute another important dimension of American exceptionalism and US foundational mythology. The popular phrase \u2018rags to riches\u2019 describes social mobility","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vdd8n.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911534440"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04e23f7-39fa-319e-b573-316116ef64a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5vdd8n.17"}],"isPartOf":"The Spectacle 2.0","keyphrase":["digital","debord","debord guy","labour","surugiu romina","technological determinism","digital artisans","kavka misha","bulut ergin","erdogan tayyip"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"233","pagination":"233-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vdd8n.17","wordCount":1867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Kamholtz"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23739108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"LITERATURE AND PHOTOGRAPHY: THE CAPTIONED VISION VS. THE FIRM, MECHANICAL IMPRESSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739108","wordCount":6028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah J. Townsend"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b565dad-4338-349d-b79b-36aafb28bcb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Radio\/Puppets; or, The Institutionalization of a (Media) Revolution and the Afterlife of a Mexican Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0032","wordCount":15660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":"In February 1933, a character called Troka el poderoso began to regale young listeners who tuned into the radio station of Mexico's Secretariat of Public Education with fables in which modern machines conquer space and time while flaunting their strength and speed in the face of the older technologies they claim to supersede. This paper traces Troka's connections to a puppet theater movement founded in the early thirties by former members of Mexico's estridentista avant-garde. In doing so, it (re)constructs this radio\/puppet as a figure for the imaginary agent of technological progress\u2014the protagonist of the fantasies of liberation via industrialization that fueled capitalist expansion during the thirties and facilitated a fraught alliance among the artistic avant-garde, the political Left, and the Mexican state.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anand Pandian"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667504","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8383c1ef-cc24-3992-a540-1fc70d9c1793"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27667504"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Tradition in Fragments: Inherited Forms and Fractures in the Ethics of South India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667504","wordCount":14063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"\"Tradition\" is a vital concept for anthropology, framing cultural and ethical life in the present as a field of inherited possibilities. The work of Alasdair MacIntyre yields useful means for understanding the concept, but certain of his postulates concerning the necessary coherence of moral traditions may be queried and loosened. I explicate this argument with evidence drawn from a fragmentary tradition of moral virtue in south India, one that persists through scattered forms of moral argumentation, rival narratives and images of a moral selfhood, and diverse domains of ethical practice through which such arguments and narratives find articulation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nina Sylvanus"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb0a0f1f-e7c2-3024-ab78-2a42c168b364"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41446038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Fakes: Crisis in Conceptions of Value in Neoliberal Togo (Faux: Crise dans les conceptions de la valeur dans le Togo n\u00e9olib\u00e9ral)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446038","wordCount":9870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"205","publisher":"EHESS","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Togolese subjects, the paper argues, have come to experience the contemporary moment as a crisis in conceptions of value congealed around the notion of fake. As commodities have become increasingly volatile as stable material forms in postcolonial Togo (and elsewhere), the paper suggests that disjunctures between what the law recognizes as fake and what consumers think of as fake are increasingly exposed. By using the \"fakeness\" of African wax-prints as a tool to investigate the constantly shifting field in which the social and legal construction of authenticity and counterfeit take place, the paper shows how Togolese citizen-consumers and traders conduct themselves in relation to \"grey\" goods as they redefine the practical taxonomies of everyday life. Cet article montre comment les Togolais en sont venus \u00e0 vivre l'\u00e9poque contemporaine comme une p\u00e9riode de crise dans les conceptions de la valeur, concr\u00e9tis\u00e9e autour de la notion de faux. En consid\u00e9ration du fait que les biens de consommation sont devenus de plus en plus volatiles en tant que formes mat\u00e9rielles stables dans le Togo postcolonial (et ailleurs), cette analyse sugg\u00e8re que des disjonctions entre ce que la loi reconna\u00eet comme faux et ce que les consommateurs con\u00e7oivent comme faux, tendent, l\u00e0, \u00e0 se produire de mani\u00e8re croissante. En utilisant la \"fausset\u00e9\" des tissus africains en tant qu'outil pour \u00e9tudier le champ en constante \u00e9volution dans lequel la construction sociale et juridique de l'authenticit\u00e9 et de la contrefa\u00e7on ont lieu, l'article examine comment les citoyens-consommateurs togolais et les commer\u00e7ants se comportent par rapport \u00e0 une telle \"zone grise\" des biens de consommation, en m\u00eame temps qu'ils red\u00e9finissent les taxonomies pratiques de la vie quotidienne.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONAH SIEGEL"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41059780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70bb70d8-52d3-3998-aa46-80b5d3509de2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41059780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Display Time: Art, Disgust, and the Returns of the Crystal Palace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41059780","wordCount":9711,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13207,13385]],"Locations in B":[[46388,46567]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This essay is a study of the ways in which structures for the display of art may be read as reflecting a crisis about value in time characteristic of modernity. Three sources are used to illustrate the paradoxical importance of return in the period: the journalistic response to the closing of the Crystal Palace in 1851; John Ruskin's own analyses of the ways in which the exhibitions that followed and, in a measure, recapitulated the Crystal Palace marked their own troubled response to time; and Tennyson's 'Palace of Art', which is read as a poem about the impossibility of permanence (or inescapability of repetition).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Nehring"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3dd6a64b-e052-389e-a94c-46d81a1efa90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Shifting Relations of Literature and Popular Music in Postwar England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389142","wordCount":10560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Moxey","Partha Mitter"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"236d7445-52cb-32ee-8b73-18a189cf23ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43188838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A \"Virtual Cosmopolis\": Partha Mitter in Conversation with Keith Moxey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188838","wordCount":11517,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[15121,15228]],"Locations in B":[[42479,42587]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DUNCAN GREENLAW"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8fc2d93-b1f0-3f9b-b31b-94cfae5e6e56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24411818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"UNTIL JUSTICE IS DONE\": AUTHENTICITY AND MEMORY IN PAUL GREENGRASS'S \"BLOODY SUNDAY\" AND \"UNITED 93\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411818","wordCount":11252,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[12714,12781]],"Locations in B":[[7005,7070]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"\u00c9tablissant des liens entre les vis\u00e9es des repr\u00e9sentations politique et cin\u00e9matographique dans les films de Paul Greengrass Bloody Sunday et United 93, cet article pose la question de ce que signifie \u00ab faire justice \u00bb \u00e0 des \u00e9v\u00e9nements nationaux traumatiques. Les strat\u00e9gies du r\u00e9alisateur pour faire justice \u00e0 ces \u00e9v\u00e9nements en capturant authentiquement aussi bien l'histoire que les identit\u00e9s culturelles des sujets impliqu\u00e9s (les soldats britanniques et les manifestants r\u00e9publicains en 1972 et les passagers et les pirates de l'air en 2001) font \u00e9cho \u00e0 des distinctions th\u00e9oriques non r\u00e9solues du travail de Derrida et Benjamin, entre la loi et la justice, entre les conceptions auratiques et non-auratiques de l'art et entre la m\u00e9moire volontaire et non volontaire. Oscillant d'un p\u00f4le \u00e0 l'autre de ces oppositions, les films d\u00e9montrent comment les r\u00e9cits de l'authenticit\u00e9 et de la justice exc\u00e8dent les pr\u00e9suppositions m\u00eames sur lesquelles ils reposent. Mais encore, ils r\u00e9v\u00e8lent aussi que, dans cet \u00e9chec pour rendre compte de l'histoire, un genre particulier de \u00ab justice disjonctive \u00bb \u00e9merge \u2013 un qui anticipe la r\u00e9\u00e9valuation cr\u00e9ative et la rem\u00e9moration continue des \u00e9v\u00e9nements traumatiques.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-09-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5b5f23d-32af-39a6-8893-176a757adeca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4524374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":124.0,"pageEnd":"128A","pageStart":"1A","pagination":"pp. 1A-27A+29A-113A+115A-120A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Sixty-Third Annual Meeting Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Science Museum of Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota October 15-18, 2003","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4524374","wordCount":166917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen E. 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Focusing on \"Poetry\": A Magazine of Verse, this article argues for the importance of these elements, showing how format leads to form. It contends that \"Poetry\" extended the poetic presentation already at work in middlebrow mass circulation magazines, turning the poem into an aesthetic object for contemplation isolated on the page and framed by a border of white space. Subsequently this promoted a consolidation of genre and an opening up of form that pitted \"poetry\" against popular \"verse.\" Finally, this article shows that these formal and generic innovations uniquely positioned \"Poetry\" to showcase Imagism(e) and offers a re-reading of one of its most lasting examples, Pound's \"In a Station of the Metro.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1950-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6626408b-b362-3dca-9f41-1867fddf2529"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/227083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":97.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Seventy-Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To May 1950)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227083","wordCount":78635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beth Rigel Daugherty"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33187637-8514-3004-84ca-0681085bb5fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":211.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"You see you kind of belong to us, and what you do matters enormously\": Letters from Readers to Virginia Woolf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907034","wordCount":73636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pace University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul N. 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It gathers together political strands from Anarchism, humanist Marxism, and a crude materialism. These ideas play out in a critique of the traditional conception and reception of Western High Art. Central to the novel's view of such art is not only that artistic value is socially constructed but that there is a classist element to its reception. The latter point is implicitly critiqued in the cross-class relationship between the Saaldiener, Irrsigler and the haut bourgeois, Reger, that the novel somewhat apotheosizes. The essay also suggests that the destruction of the aura of the Western High Artwork is at the same time related to the Anarchist critique of the traditional top-down political power structure of western political theory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Clapper"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c313229-6b84-31ad-b0b9-f888b31ddb1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 16-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Jameson"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b01c338-4d12-3051-b58a-608d64f0bec1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Symbolic Inference; Or, Kenneth Burke and Ideological Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343072","wordCount":8480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"181a1615-1ff4-3a79-a0fd-c1d555e3d2bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26282177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282177","wordCount":1869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. P. Filedt Kok"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3780404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00375411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86618e3d-1c99-3131-bff1-2f9d62d76e14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3780404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"siminethquarhist"}],"isPartOf":"Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3780404","wordCount":7318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stichting voor Nederlandse Kunsthistorische Publicaties","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fran\u00e7ois Pichault"],"datePublished":"1983-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/836519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eea5af40-1c5e-3095-827e-d6bbeac22fd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/836519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Vers une th\u00e9orie sociologique de l'art. \u00c9laboration d'un mod\u00e8le d'explication et application \u00e0 l'oeuvre musicale de Karlheinz Stockhausen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/836519","wordCount":11218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"Summary: Towards a Sociological Theory of Art: Elaboration of an Explanatory Model and Its Application to the Musical Work of Karlheinz Stockhausen. In this article a proposal is given for a model for the sociological reading of works of art, especially musical works, by means of a critical reflection on different contemporary theories of cultural production. The epistemological basis for this model is that of the genetical structuralism of Lucien Goldmann, the essential postulates of which are accepted, although, on several levels, distinctions are made: the rejection of the importance given to the contents of the analysed work and the insistence on a larger scale on the specificity of artistic activity in relation to other forms of human activity (routine work, polysemics), which makes partial all those analyses which tend to isolate only one of the manifold dimensions of the sense of the work of art; the rejection of an explanation based on the sole influence of the world vision of the class to which an artist belongs; the tendency to expand the method by other artistic forms. Is it still necessary to distinguish between a sociology of literature, a sociology of music, etc., if a sociological explanation is not characterised by its object, but by its approach to reality? Therefore it is not intended to call into question the specificities of different artistic forms, but to show the possibility of their explanation within the same perspective. It is intentional that the illustration of the model uses for its analysis, in sketches only, of course, the musical production of Karlheinz Stockhausen, while previously genetical structuralism has been primarily directed towards the explanation of literary works. Pierre Bourdieu's model freed from the influence of the relation structure in the intellectual field in cultural production, is here integrated as a medium intended to re-form the basic structure of the work in an ideological sense: the artist is in fact forced to take up extreme positions in order to defend his status and his legitimacy. Finally, the works of Theodor W. Adorno enable us to perfect the explanation by examining to what extent formal phenomena correspond very precisely with a certain socio-historical situation, especially in regard to the development of the market. This \"pluralistic\" model seems to have a methodological advantage in explaining artistic production, because it avoids mechanical determinism and because it prefers the concept of a creative individual as a specific and unique synthesis of multiple social determinants.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/231517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16dafdee-1795-342f-916b-d76e403264c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/231517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":193.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-17+19-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"One Hundred Seventh Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (to January 1982)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/231517","wordCount":123761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Bruegel"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3788464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3788464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"564","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-564","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"\"Time That Can Be Relied upon.\" The Evolution of Time Consciousness in the Mid-Hudson Valley, 1790-1860","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3788464","wordCount":10075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"The analysis of the relationship between the timepiece as a commodity in the marketplace and time consciousness in the mid-Hudson Valley from the 1790s to 1860 suggests a refinement of the argument about the causal relation between economic imperatives and interiorization of time discipline. Whereas the social utility of clocks and watches in the organization of work and leisure appeared upon their introduction to cities, the countryside underwent a two-stage process. The dissemination of clocks and watches initially responded to proclivities of self-definition in a society that saw the formation of classes: watches and clocks functioned as objects of conspicuous consumption before they facilitated a capitalist order as instruments that measured productivity. Only when their diffusion had reached a majority of rural households in the 1820s did they attract people's attention to their capacity as timekeepers. This threshold passed, tensions articulated around the mastery of time occurred in families and shops.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. A. Elliott","Isidore Spielmann"],"datePublished":"1905-03-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42f271b0-d15f-3f16-bdcf-614759071b4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 53, no. 2728","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335815","wordCount":29074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2728","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1909-01-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26027515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368733"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006255042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddd80cb1-3b32-3499-9de4-58e843175068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26027515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieamer"}],"isPartOf":"Scientific American","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-3, 5-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Art history","Applied sciences - Engineering","Political science - Military science"],"title":"RETROSPECT OF THE YEAR 1908","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26027515","wordCount":9768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"661aa4de-5277-357f-ae3c-b95b4fc8e0a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/204688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"934","pageStart":"931","pagination":"pp. 931-934","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204688","wordCount":16206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23805366"},{"name":"oclc","value":"926718072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015203103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b1f4697-8187-360d-a0c8-fec0b148c462"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43481084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefine"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"EMPLOYEES OF THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS July 1997 - June 1998","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481084","wordCount":3583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F.L.","J.-M. de T","\u00c9tienne Nodet","Luc Devillers","Justin Taylor","J. Murphy-O'Connor"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44089442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00350907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20b03b2d-45da-3f51-986a-b22739a4c9cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44089442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revubibl1946"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Biblique (1946-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BULLETIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44089442","wordCount":28162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Peeters Publishers","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e60d20f-2b0d-3431-a04d-0aba66b8a00b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1577592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"Materials Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577592","wordCount":2584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID GILLETTE"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43089194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00493155"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"824b762e-4411-3ca8-a116-d2934e5d71d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43089194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Technical Communication","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Looking to Cinema for Direction: Incorporating Motion into On-screen Presentations of Technical Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43089194","wordCount":14031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for Technical Communication","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"\u2666 Examines how motion can be used to create effective interactive information systems \u2666 Demonstrates how a number of cinema techniques influence new media production and can be applied directly to technical communication practice","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauren Langman"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ceb4991-4e26-3d62-bb97-0eb5d129bf12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"I HATE, THEREFORE I AM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250036","wordCount":13329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Social Thought and Research","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia Fuchs Epstein"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/684552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/684552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Symbolic Segregation: Similarities and Differences in the Language and Non-Verbal Communication of Women and Men","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/684552","wordCount":10168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"Societies use symbolic means to segregate the sexes conceptually as well as physically. Social rules designate some forms of verbal and non-verbal communication according to sex, to maintain distinctions. This paper explores both the non-verbal means of communication and the content and form of verbal modes as they are related to (1) the creation and maintenance of gender distinctions, (2) the symbolic ways they reinforce social arrangements between the sexes, and (3) the problems of analysis researchers have found in attempting to describe and explain sex differences in communication. The paper points out that in the field of language and communication there has been a tendency to emphasize the findings of differences between the sexes rather than of similarities. It also illustrates that linguistic differences tend to be superficial, to be linked to power differentials, and to be context specific. The paper concludes that these differences are socially created and therefore may be socially altered.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44570616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560807841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72fff36b-bc21-34d3-b129-a40604045d72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44570616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryengineer"}],"isPartOf":"The Military Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering","Military Studies","Technology","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"NEWS and COMMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44570616","wordCount":7363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"318","publisher":"Society of American Military Engineers","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugene Stelzig"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e73d587-b4df-35c6-8c02-6b873309244d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24044449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044449","wordCount":3135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan Carlos Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41702338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b11aff15-8771-378f-873d-9f07a19f5d2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41702338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Framing Ruins: Patricio Guzm\u00e1n's Postdictatorial Documentaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41702338","wordCount":7538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"The representations of ruins in three of Patricio Guzm\u00e1n's postdictatorial documentaries\u2014Chile, la memoria obstinata (1997), La isla de Robinson Crusoe (1999), and El caso Pinochet (2001)\u2014can be seen as allegories of different aspects of Chilean history: the defeat of Allende s democratic alliance, the end of the Pinochet regime, and the challenges of social reconciliation in contemporary Chile. Guzman's strategy of screening architectonic ruins evokes the ruin of the socialist and dictatorial regimes in Chile. The filmmaker also presents a second image of ruin that evokes the ruin of the screen and, in this way, confronts viewers with the limits of representation, language, reconciliation, and testimony. Las representaciones de ruinas en tres de los documentales de la posdictadura de Patricio Guzm\u00e1n\u2014Chile, la memoria obstinada (1997), La isla de Robinson Crusoe (1999), y Le cas Pinochet (2001)\u2014pueden verse como aleg\u00f3ricas de aspectos distintos de la historia de Chile: la derrota de la Alianza Democr\u00e1tica de Allende, elfin del r\u00e9gimen de Pinochet, y los retos de la reconciliaci\u00f3n social en el Chile contempor\u00e1neo. La estrategia de Guzm\u00e1n de proyectar ruinas arquitect\u00f3nicas evoca la ruina de los reg\u00edmenes socialistas y dictatoriales en Chile. Tambi\u00e9n se presenta otro imagen de ruina que evoca la ruina de la pantalla, de modo de que se elaboran los limites de la representaci\u00f3n, la lengua, la reconciliaci\u00f3n, y el testimonio.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-09-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1725658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1efbdded-5567-3c6e-968c-8b04be4716c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1725658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"1059","pageStart":"1001","pagination":"pp. 1001+1042-1044+1047-1048+1050-1056+1058-1059","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1725658","wordCount":6877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3845","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"161","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Tansman"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00956848"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a2137a3-e5ae-3d2b-93b0-e078ba1834bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4126777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjapanesestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Japanese Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Images of Repose and Violence in Three Japanese Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4126777","wordCount":15764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Society for Japanese Studies","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Images of repose and violence suffused the writings of Kawabata Yasunari, Shiga Naoya, and Yasuda Yoj\u016ar\u014c in the 1920s and 1930s. In a time of political and cultural crisis, they shared a yearning for \"fascistic\" moments of aesthetic wholeness tinged with violence. Such images were bora not from explicitly political or tendentious motivations, but largely from aesthetic concerns. In this way they partook of a language of politics, for though fascism most conspicuously appears in the political realm, its promise of salvation is made aesthetically, not only in mass cultural products but also in the most rarified of literary texts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0130rv\u0131n Cem\u0131l Schick"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41cdeee-a275-3713-8c0c-cd48ff2b0db7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Representing Middle Eastern Women: Feminism and Colonial Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177854","wordCount":14406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David R. Brillinger"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2530689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0006341X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075978"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"216b3b82-a54f-386c-ae44-9e0c4e492445"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2530689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biometrics"}],"isPartOf":"Biometrics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"734","pageStart":"693","pagination":"pp. 693-734","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"A Biometrics Invited Paper with Discussion: The Natural Variability of Vital Rates and Associated Statistics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2530689","wordCount":21300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"The first concern of this work is the development of approximations to the distributions of crude mortality rates, age-specific mortality rates, age-standardized rates, standardized mortality ratios, and the like for the case of a closed population or period study. It is found that assuming Poisson birthtimes and independent lifetimes implies that the number of deaths and the corresponding midyear population have a bivariate Poisson distribution. The Lexis diagram is seen to make direct use of the result. It is suggested that in a variety of cases, it will be satisfactory to approximate the distribution of the number of deaths given the population size, by a Poisson with mean proportional to the population size. It is further suggested that situations in which explanatory variables are present may be modelled via a doubly stochastic Poisson distribution for the number of deaths, with mean proportional to the population size and an exponential function of a linear combination of the explanatories. Such a model is fit to mortality data for Canadian females classified by age and year. A dynamic variant of the model is further fit to the time series of total female deaths alone by year. The models with extra-Poisson variation are found to lead to substantially improved fits.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Tushnet","Laurence H. Tribe"],"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46968396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f91f67e6-9c89-33cf-9028-3e06bb1b4e41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":385.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-198+200-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 1998 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342368","wordCount":210118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simonetta Falasca Zamponi"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1171571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01455532"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42413348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4904"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f3aff88-2dbc-343e-aba0-e0a4f687b84d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1171571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciehist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Storytellers and Master Narratives: Modernity, Memory, and History in Fascist Italy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1171571","wordCount":11511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam L. Tate"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4250121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8524c855-aef1-38aa-8df6-0c3a1c02a803"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4250121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virghistbiog"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Republicanism and Society: John Randolph of Roanoke, Joseph Glover Baldwin, and the Quest for Social Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4250121","wordCount":14057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Virginia Historical Society","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mwjd.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642554"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f04fc57a-b686-371f-92dd-448b718f5451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mwjd.4"}],"isPartOf":"Mapping Intermediality in Performance","keyphrase":["theatre","digital","digital culture","digital technologies","prospective mapping","virtual","mediums","introduction prospective","live theatre","portal posthumanism"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"13","pagination":"13-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Prospective Mapping","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mwjd.4","wordCount":4937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This volume is a successor to Chapple and Kattenbelt (eds.),Intermediality in Theatre and Performance<\/em>(2006) in that it has grown, as noted, out of the IFTR group\u2019s work. Two aspects follow from this context, which might now helpfully be framed in Ellestr\u00f6m\u2019s recently constructed \u201cModel for Understanding Intermedial Relations\u201d (2010, 11).\u00b2 The first is an emphasis on the principles of composition of live theatre as a \u201cstrongly multimodal media\u201d (Ellestr\u00f6m 2010, 38) phenomenon with, in Kattenbelt\u2019s formulation, a distinctive capacity to be a hypermedium which \u201cstages\u201d other mediums (see 2006, 37).\u00b3 The second is an established acknowledgement that the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2080205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08953138-126b-35e1-b2dd-469dba9f73f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2080205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"820","pageStart":"763","pagination":"pp. 763-820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Brian Rose","Frances Spalding","Chris Spring"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab278043-5f04-3ff9-97f7-464df6e8cd50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23268275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"NOTES FROM THE FIELD: Contingency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268275","wordCount":13854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daphne de Marneffe"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecadb730-4e7d-3f72-8ab5-90c760be5711"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Looking and Listening: The Construction of Clinical Knowledge in Charcot and Freud","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174446","wordCount":17624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1916-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34232326-ce0f-3659-8e34-c07d9099199b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/282836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":95.0,"pageEnd":"xciv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xciv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Proceedings of the Forty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association Held at St. Louis, Mo., December, 1916. 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He does so, however, not because he believes that the dialectical processes of history are progressive, leading ultimately and inevitably to liberation. If Adorno cannot subscribe to the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohamed Salah Eddine Madiou"],"datePublished":"2021-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.3.0249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6910575e-16fd-36a0-ab42-c0f390027856"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.3.0249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Abject Talks Gibberish: \u201cTranslating\u201d Abjection in Rabih Alameddine's An Unnecessary Woman<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.3.0249","wordCount":9365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Pluto Journals","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"The Lebanese Civil War, stretching over two decades of Lebanon's history, features prominently in any discussion of Rabih Alameddine's An Unnecessary Woman (2014), a novel fashioned according to the pent-up frustrations of a post-trauma period. Alameddine's novel manifests traumatic signposts of the civil war, which make it indelibly situational, and accordingly latches onto complex psychological issues. It is branded with the mark of \u201cabject,\u201d which besots its pages, a phenomenon that threatens identity beyond measure, triggering even an existentialist entropy. In making an effort to (persistently) \u201cdescribe\u201d this complex phenomenon beyond ken, the novel enmeshes in a baroque and a quite wordy style that tells of an arduous quest on the author's (and characters\u2018) part to find the \u201cright\u201d word for \u201cabject.\u201d Drawing mainly on Sigmund Freud's essay \u201cThe Uncanny\u201d and Julia Kristeva's Powers of Horror, this article proposes to skirt the psychological archaeology of \u201cabject\u201d in An Unnecessary Woman. It argues that the Lebanese Civil War is not the originator of the characters\u2019 feeling of abjection in the novel. Rather, it contends that this feeling, already inherent in the human being and thus universal, is activated by abject threats, such as, in this premise, the civil war, its suspect entourage, and aging.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Mwangi"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"719743ef-9123-3986-9bac-dae6b43a38b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Amandina Lihamba's Gendered Adaptation of Sembene Ousmane's \"The Money-Order\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468142","wordCount":13987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This essay examines the adaptation and translation of Sembene Ousmane's novella The Money-Order (originally published in French in 1966 as Le mandat) into \"Hawala ya Fedha\" (1980), a Kiswahili play by the Tanzanian woman dramatist Amandina Lihamba. Drawing on the contemporary theories of translation and adaptation that demote fidelity to the original as the cornerstone of translation, I demonstrate that the changes that Lihamba introduces in her text do not result from the incommensurability among the languages involved (Wolof, French, English, and Kiswahili), the muchvaunted clash of civilizations, or the supposed incompatibility between the two genres (novel and play); rather, she is invested in amplifying gender issues in Sembene's novel through a popular public medium to signify the urgent need for women's literacy in Julius Nyerere's Tanzania.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Apter"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224fc552-5a08-36b5-b77b-f88f7bd0ab72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3045923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"694","pageStart":"692","pagination":"pp. 692-694","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Seventy-Second Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To January 1948)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227716","wordCount":31173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Rigal"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3209039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a2b28b1-2f18-3c8e-8668-c18300194707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3209039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Commentaries, signatures, and scribbling defacements\u2014together with fictional representations of young people writing in books\u2014illustrate relationships among canonical authority, playful subversion, commodity value, and archival preservation that all contribute to (and may critique) our current fascination with book history as a discipline.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Brown","Allan G. Chester","Henry W. Nordmeyer","Arnold G. Reichenberger","Bodo L. O. Richter","Alfred Senn","Matthias A. Shaaber","James Woodress"],"datePublished":"1956-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2698975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eeaf4262-53b8-31a8-ac43-60c30d358857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2698975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1955 American Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2698975","wordCount":105696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00967645"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60339763"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bf19377-87cc-3352-af58-00b393713806"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1292781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aibsbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"AIBS Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-21+23-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"General Program. Meeting of Biological Societies. Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma. 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In particular, answers to the key question, how the social world is related to mind or events to cognitive and affective responses, seem as remote as ever. At the same time, ironically, a number of prominent social theorists, compelled to acknowledge the failure of rational choice and resource mobilization theories, have expressed a renewed interest in issues of collective identities, norms, values, moral obligations and transgressions, that is, in issues that have been central to psychohistory from the beginning. Historians no doubt will try to follow the paths taken by theorists, as they have in the past, but it is uncertain what paths they, in turn, will take.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John R. 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Fromer"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44197618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-25383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d11124a-9c29-30e0-9007-4cb1b8c394fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"1414","pageStart":"1329","pagination":"pp. 1329-1414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY CLAUSE'S EXTERNAL LIMITATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267749","wordCount":36469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Duke University School of Law","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"The text, structure, and history of the Intellectual Property Clause (IP Clause), as well as subsequent governmental activity, Supreme Court doctrine, and policy, show that the IP Clause limits Congress from using any of its other powers \"To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts\" through laws that reach beyond the power conferred by the IP Clause to \"secur[e] for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries.\" That is, the evidence marshaled by this Article shows that the IP Clause externally limits Congress from seeking, via legislation, to promote the progress of science and useful arts, in any way other than by enacting laws that secure to authors and inventors exclusive rights in their writings and discoveries for limited times. Yet the story of Congress's power in this area has another side: Since the late twentieth century, Congress has increasingly reached beyond the IP Clause's means to promote the Clause's ends, often asserting its expansive\u2014and less limited\u2014commerce and treaty powers. To some degree, this shift reflects the fact that laws regulating intellectual property often have multiple purposes, including trade and foreign-relations interests, which sometimes point in more expansive directions than do those of the more limited IP Clause. This Article synthesizes these competing purposes and provides an analytical framework under which courts, legislators, and others can assess the constitutionality of federal legislation. This framework affords a presumption against the constitutionality of laws that promote the IP Clause's ends but subvert its means, a presumption that may be overcome only by clear and convincing evidence that Congress, pursuant to its other more permissive powers, intentionally chose to supersede the IP Clause's means because of paramount, legitimate interests. This framework suggests that a number of existing federal laws, such as federal trade-secrecy provisions and antibootlegging laws, might be unconstitutional. The framework also suggests how to assess the constitutionality of laws that would protect databases, laws passed pursuant to international agreements with other countries, and laws that establish federal funding for scientific and artistic works.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Henry Hart","John Noble","James F. Rhodes","Worthington C. Ford","Samuel A. Green"],"datePublished":"1905-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25079922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae5993dd-fce4-3400-ae68-3652d25d4bb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25079922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"January Meeting, 1905. Edward Savage, Painter and Engraver; Boundary Line Dispute; Negro Suffrage and Reconstruction; The Case of Samuel Shrimpton; John Foster, Engraver; John Foster, Engraver; Memoir of Walbridge A. Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25079922","wordCount":33574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Nehring"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0102583-6149-34ca-a204-0dc8ea5483a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revolt into Style: Graham Greene Meets the Sex Pistols","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462659","wordCount":10931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"Some relatively obscure citations of Graham Greene's Brighton Rock that appear in a 1978 work by older bohemian cohorts of the Sex Pistols, the most prominent punkrock band, help considerably in dissolving the conventional hierarchy of literature and mass culture. A decade earlier, these elders had learned the theory of textual appropriation espoused by the Situationist International, and their subversion of elitist evaluative standards has much in common with the original theorists of the avant-garde-especially Bakhtin and Benjamin-and, more recently, with the field of cultural studies, specifically British subcultural sociology. Thus out of one minor moment a longer, continuous avant-grade tradition can be reconstructed, consisting of artists and critics, including Greene himself, who have sought to challenge the formation of common sense in both \"high culture\" and the mass media. These anarchists share in particular a materialist orientation toward literary and mass texts-as well as toward the social outcomes that the affective qualities of those texts enable in everyday life, ultimately the most crucial arena of avant-garde activity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["IASAIL"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"307a009f-5dac-3f6e-a7ff-af387289a15b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"IASAIL Bibliography Bulletin for 1990","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484442","wordCount":29222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diane P. 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SMITH"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23534589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02757664"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95d1995e-96aa-39cf-b3af-3e107c73b19f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23534589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greaplaiquar"}],"isPartOf":"Great Plains Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MODERNITY, MULTIPLES, AND MASCULINITY: HORACE POOLAW'S POSTCARDS OF ELDER KIOWA MEN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23534589","wordCount":10617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOM GRIMWOOD"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"985b82dd-ca67-3fe2-8f32-905bee4c333c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE MEANING OF CLICH\u00c9S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776623","wordCount":11498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Louis Hippolyte"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29a060f8-befd-301c-b906-5017a48f5ef8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4152867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Christian Oster: From Courtly Love to Modern Malaise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152867","wordCount":5359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darko Suvin"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1773040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Approach to Topoanalysis and to the Paradigmatics of Dramaturgic Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773040","wordCount":10827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID E. LILIENFELD"],"datePublished":"1978-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44450519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70348031-6c0d-3b36-953d-82ff0f065a1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44450519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"528","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-528","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"THE GREENING OF EPIDEMIOLOGY\": SANITARY PHYSICIANS AND THE LONDON EPIDEMIOLOGICAL SOCIETY (1830-1870)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44450519","wordCount":10989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wm. Keith Heimann"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26608325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15227464"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607517484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-200755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6526ca8e-d7da-38d2-b91c-bc401e4856b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26608325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicinart"}],"isPartOf":"Music in Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Road to Success","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26608325","wordCount":6290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Research Center for Music Iconography, The Graduate Center, City University of New York","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"In the early twentieth century, Americans were obsessed with the dream of individual success, inspired in part by the motivational discourse published in the burgeoning mass media industry. Soon thereafter, \u201cThe Golden Age of Illustration\u201d provided expansive visual commentary that reinforced the written rhetoric. The National Cash Register Company published \u201cThe Road To Success\u201d in 1913, a virtuoso pen and ink allegorical cartoon. In it, NCR employees were invited to negotiate an arduous ascending road that culminated in the pinnacle of success. However, the journey required to reach the summit was congested with an infinite number of possible detours, dangers and even death. Success was attainable only by a one, rather obscured option. The Etude Music Magazine (1883\u20131957), the leading publication for private music teachers in the United States, adapted the cartoon, substituting corporate signifiers with those of music education. In 1918, The Etude revisited the concept of the original illustration, but highly modified with sensitivities reflective of World War I.","subTitle":"\u201cThe Long Glorious Grind\u201d","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steffi de Jong"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzsd.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781785336430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30d94919-fa6d-3fce-8de5-4c3ebc3a8dda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3znzsd.10"}],"isPartOf":"The Witness as Object","keyphrase":["yad vashem","video testimonies","knowledge unlatched","authenticity","objects","holocaust","museum","exhibition","war museum","imperial war"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"110","pagination":"110-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Exhibiting:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzsd.10","wordCount":31574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In 1926, the German author and war veteran Kurt Tucholsky visited the French First World War museum in Vincennes. He looked at pictures painted by war artists and soldiers, at posters, military plates and improvised shoes and clothes made out of newspapers. The ration stamps for sugar made him halt:There they lie, the worn out, grey things. Isn\u2019t that a real piece of history -? Well, yes, somehow \u2013 but then something is missing. It is not the real thing. It was like this \u2013 and then again it wasn\u2019t. Is this how we will enter posterity? In that case, we","subTitle":"The Witness to History as a Museum Object","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NICOLA PEZOLET"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27809418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ce8b1a0-cfc1-38f3-9ae4-4c9129e8cf45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27809418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cavern of Antimatter: Giuseppe \"Pinot\" Gallizio and the Technological Imaginary of the Early Situationist International","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27809418","wordCount":11483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"38","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin H. D. Buchloh"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfb8803d-c8db-3e77-b2ab-64278f667a37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 60-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Divided Memory and Post-Traditional Identity: Gerhard Richter's Work of Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778899","wordCount":9865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard McIntyre"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29769594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346764"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44714743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-233327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a057b2af-6fc5-3948-8441-b53c8ccd89d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29769594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revisociecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Social Economy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Consumption in Contemporary Capitalism: Beyond Marx and Veblen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29769594","wordCount":8306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. H. Reichman","Jonathan A. Franklin"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7988f483-73ff-32cc-984e-d67a175d8f02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":96.0,"pageEnd":"970","pageStart":"875","pagination":"pp. 875-970","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Privately Legislated Intellectual Property Rights: Reconciling Freedom of Contract with Public Good Uses of Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312764","wordCount":48788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"147","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN FIELD"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23351521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03625028"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"952df233-0b50-3bdb-9857-c85e562eb84c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23351521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlychina"}],"isPartOf":"Early China","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"COSMOS, COSMOGRAPH, AND THE INQUIRING POET: NEW ANSWERS TO THE \"HEAVEN QUESTIONS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23351521","wordCount":12188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Society for the Study of Early China","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"A Qing dynasty commentator was the first to discover that line 79 of the Chuci \"Tianwen,\" tian shi zong heng \u5929\u5f0f\u7e31\u8861, referred to the diviner's board, or what the author calls the \"cosmograph.\" This instrument was a model of the cosmos used by the diviner to determine, among other things, the position of asterisms beneath the horizon. The discovery was echoed by noted scholars in the twentieth century, but no one could determine the significance of the reference. This article analyzes the quatrain in which the line appears and shows how the cosmograph is the microcosmic key to the poem's cosmic interpretation. Quite simply, the answer to the question lies among the stars. The likelihood that the author of \"Tianwen\" had a cosmograph in mind when he wrote verse 79 is evidence that other lines may also reflect the existence of such devices. For example, with regard to verse 7, huan ze jiu chong \u571c\u5247\u4e5d\u91cd, in which commentators have always perceived a \"nine-tiered\" heaven, the author argues that what is \"round\" is the cosmos, and the jiu chong refers to its \"manifold\" dimensions. 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Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3833079","wordCount":38812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5601","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"298","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-01-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1685845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"060ac99c-455d-373f-8882-ef768090400f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1685845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1685845","wordCount":25473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4478","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"211","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Wexler"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf17471c-b49d-392e-99cd-a8cf162670b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Secular Alchemy of Social Science: The Denial of Jewish Messianism in Freud and Durkheim","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802401","wordCount":8579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"116","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This essay presents a reading of the work of two central figures of modern social theory that locates their work within not simply mainstream Jewish thought, but a particular Hasidic tradition. Further, I argue that lying behind this, in a repressed form, is an even older tradition of Jewish alchemy. I make no claim to have evidence that either Freud or Durkheim were directly influenced by Hasidism or alchemy, but I examine the parallels between the structure of their thoughts and those of the two traditions. Both Freud and Durkheim display a social psychology that is analytically similar to the dualism of Hasidism's Tanya and the general transformational models of alchemy. This formal model is in opposition to the messianic tradition in Jewish thought and analyzes Freud and Durkheim as antimessianic social psychologists. Hasidism offers a template for modern theories of social psychology, social interaction and the relation between the social and the individual, that is, collective identity. This essay also considers more generally how modern social theory might make sense of contemporary social phenomena by opening itself to the messianic and mystical traditions in Jewish thought. I suggest that the social and structural transformation associated with the information or network society requires new analytic tools that allow us to explain social energy differently to the way Freud and Durkheim have guided social theory. Contemporary analyses of individualization, social movements and sacralization as forms of and reactions to alienation are inadequate. Instead, I ask whether we should not 'restore a messianic, truly utopian \"lost unity\", which the alchemical, secular gnosis of modern social science displaced, and so renew social theory?'","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Shaw"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2002.19.3.434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0796520a-6573-3928-939d-a6fde9b6798d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jm.2002.19.3.434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"New Performance Sources and Old Modernist Productions: Die Jakobsleiter<\/em> in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2002.19.3.434","wordCount":12006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Although Schoenberg certainly regarded his most important wartime composition, the half-finished oratorio Die Jakobsleiter, as an autonomous and performable work, his conception of the piece changed dramatically over the three decades that it remained a \"work in progress.\" Yet recent productions confirm a remarkable consistency of interpretation, based less on the Schoenberg\/Winfried Zillig-orchestrated Urtext than on a 1980 performance conducted by Boulez. This \"definitive\" commercial release has not only dictated the parameters of productions that have followed but has erased from the record several earlier performances of the work, including the only version that Schoenberg heard and authorized. Two performance sources, both held in collections in Vienna but not yet discussed in published studies, may prove to be extremely significant for future performances of the oratorio. The first, Schoenberg's libretto manuscript for his oratorio, contains an extended concept sketch for the musical and dramatic climax. The second, a copy of the published libretto, includes extensive annotations in Alban Berg's hand which record aspects of Schoenberg's rehearsals for the premiere performance of the oratorio in 1921. Both sources highlight Schoenberg's and Berg's sensitivity to the innovative musical language of the oratorio, its fragmentary form, and its problematic literary style, yet both also suggest novel approaches to its realization in 21st-century productions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shelley C. Berg"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01472526"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48483212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6d3a0e8-0c64-388f-9918-6f2564543cc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1567837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dancechronicle"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sada Yacco in London and Paris, 1900: Le R\u00eave R\u00e9alis\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567837","wordCount":22494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. 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In 'Hesse's Endgame: Facing the Diagram,' he positions Hesse's work in relation to artists who, it is claimed, use the diagrammatic mode to signal 'the disenchantment of the world and the total subjection of the body and its representations to legal and administrative control.' These artists formally acknowledge that subjection, but also resist it in residual ways by the addition of small gestural marks or patches of colour. Appealing to the work of Gabriel Orozco, amongst other artists, this article makes the counter-argument that the diagram need not be considered coercive or alienating and, further, that the relation between desire and the diagrammatic need not be conceived as intractably oppositional. On the contrary, many contemporary artists' work is aimed at negotiating or reconciling the split between diagram and gesture, technology and the body.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernst G. 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Y a partir del florecimiento de la exportaci\u00f3n de pel\u00edculas hechas por directoras como Mar\u00eda Novaro \u2013 Danz\u00f3n (1991) en particular \u2013 la representaci\u00f3n visual de la mujer mexicana moderna se establece firmemente en nuestro imaginario frente al milenio. En este art\u00edculo intento reconsiderar el fen\u00f3meno de la Fridaman\u00eda bajo una categor\u00eda innovadora: el surgimiento de la competencia entre la pintura y la fotograf\u00eda (que luego pasar\u00e1 al campo del video y del cine) como medios de representaci\u00f3n que acompa\u00f1an la larga trayectoria hacia la modernidad. 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El an\u00e1lisis se enfoca en el concepto benjaminiano del aura y las implicaciones est\u00e9ticas e ideol\u00f3gicas del intento de reencontrar alguna experiencia genuina en las b\u00fasquedas de una identidad femenina en los autorretratos y el cine.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45361430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00304557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86321fa5-3a59-3a26-8830-b4d3e08c8871"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45361430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ordnance"}],"isPartOf":"Ordnance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":108.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45361430","wordCount":24503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"218","publisher":"National Defense Industrial Association","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9426ffb0-723c-3abc-ba68-83898959e99f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wp64r.12"}],"isPartOf":"Bastard or Playmate?","keyphrase":["stefan kaegi","landscape","rimini protokoll","theatrical","experts","theater topics","theatre","rimini protokoll\u2019s","intermedial","memories"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"144","pagination":"144-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of Art in the Age of Its Intermedial Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.12","wordCount":4163,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41976,42321]],"Locations in B":[[14583,14927]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Based upon an actual railway model \u2013 on a scale of 1:87 \u2013 Rimini Protokoll\u2019sMnemopark<\/em>stages reality through an installation of mini-cameras manipulated by four modelists, retirees who are passionate model railway buffs. Max Kurrus was seven when he got his first small-scale locomotive and has since bought 12 engines and 35 cars. His railway landscapes are inspired by the Swiss Graub\u00fcnden canton. Hermann L\u00f6hle received his first locomotive 50 years ago and has since acquired 53 locomotives and 290 cars. His landscapes reproduce Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg. Ren\u00e9 M\u00fchlethaler bought his first locomotive with his first salary. With 40 locomotives and","subTitle":"Rimini Protokoll\u02b9s Mnemopark","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto Schwarz","R. Kelly Washbourne","Neil Larsen"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60e4d3bd-ded2-35d1-986b-43a997e49d2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"National Adequation and Critical Originality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354700","wordCount":9912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"49","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. 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However, looking at images of human suffering is often said to prolong this very suffering and to fix human subjects as victims. Especially when acts of violence have been committed in order to produce images of these very acts the relationship between viewing the images and participating in the acts of violence qua viewer appears to be uncomfortably close indeed. Thus, looking is not an option, either. This article, in the first part, engages with standard criticisms of photography, especially with accusations according to which photographs aestheticise that which they depict and desensitise their viewers. In the second part it discusses Alfredo Jaar's and Jeff Wall's work in order to show possible ways to circumvent the looking\/not looking dilemma.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1921-12-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25589878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1921,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 20, no. 11","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589878","wordCount":17439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-08-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2893183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee125396-6911-342f-a130-701d488928fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2893183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"1168","pageStart":"1118","pagination":"pp. 1118-1168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2893183","wordCount":40906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5329","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"277","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KYLE DEVINE"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7f2c85b-2b73-39f1-9e41-bae0f4de8405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24736940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Decomposed: a political ecology of music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24736940","wordCount":14565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"This article is about what recordings are made of, and about what happens to those recordings when they are disposed of. It inscribes a history of recorded music in three main materials: shellac, plastic and data. These materials constitute the five most prevalent recording formats since 1900: 78s, LPs, cassettes, CDs and MP3s. The goal is to forge a political ecology of the evolving relationship between popular music and sound technology, which accounts not only for human production and consumption but also material manufacture and disposal. Such an orientation is useful for developing an analytical framework that is adequate to the complexities of the global material\u2013cultural flows in which the recorded music commodity is constituted and deconstituted. It also strives towards a more responsible way of thinking about the relationship between popular music's cultural and economic value, on the one hand, and its environmental cost, on the other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent Crapanzano"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Translation: Truth or Metaphor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166983","wordCount":4212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"32","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT BARNETT"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23614949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14648172"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607494420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-242001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f11d6af-21bc-39e9-98db-2df4f5501a78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23614949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"innerasia"}],"isPartOf":"Inner Asia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Understated Legacies: Uses of Oral History and Tibetan Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23614949","wordCount":16073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"This paper aims to stimulate discussion about the complexity of oral history as a practice by recalling its origins and early associations, such as criminal confessions, war-reporting, the novel, exotic art and other early forms of first-person narratives, and by tracing some of their recurrent echoes in contemporary work. It looks at some of the uses to which oral history or related practices have been put in the field of Tibetan studies, ranging from rigorously academic studies through nostalgic political testimonies to wholly invented pseudo-histories. It discusses the importance of silent oral histories, the ones that cannot be recorded, as well as of failed ones, which are recorded but rejected by certain types of researchers because they do not meet their desires for a certain kind of narrative. Commoditisation of the archive is described, not just in the obvious cases where large amounts of money are exchanged, but also an instance in Tibetan studies in which an important archive was stolen, apparently just for the prestige of secretly possessing it. These forms of prototypical oral history and its near relatives still hover on the sidelines of the practice, despite the efforts of scholars to insulate academic practice from them. The widespread circulation of fabricated narratives produced within the contemporary Tibetan exile economy to gain access to western countries underlines the pervasive and under-acknowledged role of the state throughout all these practices, banning, allowing, celebrating, regulating and exploiting all forms of oral history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul V. 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This paper explores similarities between sociology and art based on the use of conventions and creativity. More specifically, by comparing the construction of musical mix tapes, the author draws parallels between creating sociology and mix tapes. Looking at the process of how a mix tape is created using other artists' songs and music for a specified purpose illuminates sociology and our roles as sociologists in a new light that leaves open new possibilities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl Hufbauer"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08909997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45919525"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214626"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6c37faf-ef85-3b28-b06f-6665c70c4b14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27757726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudphysbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"394","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-394","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - 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Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1703234","wordCount":22556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4890","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"243","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alain Touraine"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f752aed7-037c-3cae-8671-34c13e0fbae9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"765","pageStart":"763","pagination":"pp. 763-765","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231255","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Alan Watkins"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21535531"},{"name":"oclc","value":"528726992"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2fb91de-88f5-3569-8d86-517a7232ae27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/679981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"west86th"}],"isPartOf":"West 86th: A Journal of Decorative Arts, Design History, and Material Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Tea Table\u2019s Tale: Authenticity and Colonial Williamsburg\u2019s Early Furniture Reproduction Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679981","wordCount":15526,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6997]],"Locations in B":[[27916,28331]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"In July 1936 Tomlinson of High Point, a mid-priced North Carolina furniture manufacturer, began a franchising and marketing concept called the Williamsburg Galleries that gained broad national acceptance in stores and among consumers. Outraged by Tomlinson\u2019s actions and unwilling to abandon the retail market to those it felt were interlopers, Colonial Williamsburg set up a subsidiary corporation, Williamsburg Craftsmen, Inc., that licensed manufacturers to create reproductions of objects owned by the Restoration. Furniture was the most important part of the plan, and Williamsburg licensed the Kittinger Company of Buffalo, New York, as the manufacturer. Selected department stores were encouraged to build sales spaces that were period replicas of Raleigh Tavern rooms, and craft shops were developed in the historic area to promote the work of the various manufacturers. Because a number of stores sold both Tomlinson and Kittinger products, Williamsburg developed the concept of \u201cauthenticity\u201d to distinguish the copies being made by Kittinger from Tomlinson\u2019s generic eighteenth-century adaptations. Virtually handmade, said the Restoration, these Kittinger pieces were line-by-line reproductions, inside and out, of originals on display in Williamsburg, Virginia. Regardless of what Colonial Williamsburg said and believed, however, recent examination of individual pieces of Kittinger furniture made for the Restoration reveals that the New York factory relied far more on modern machine production methods than on craft methods of the eighteenth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Purchla"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a65d8b31-3fe1-3652-9511-20db290c185f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The powers that be: Processes of control in 'crew scene hardcore'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047963","wordCount":13158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"This article adds to the literature about youth orientated music scenes by analyzing norms of control in 'crew scene hardcore'. Data were collected in three northeastern US cities. This study contributes by proposing a framework in which enclave groups known as 'crews' can be studied; by exploring the experiences of women who are involved with crew scene hardcore; and by illustrating how norms of control are formed and managed through processes of interaction. Distinctive gender roles illustrate that the norms of this music scene are derived from 'hypermasculine' controls. This results in the marginalization of women in the scene, no matter what their contribution to it is.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margot Lovejoy"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"493fa28f-ac3a-3cf9-81ac-2d1e155668c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Artists' Books in the Digital Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684835","wordCount":7335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Westerst\u00e5hl Stenport","Garrett Traylor"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9aebaa0-4b88-3401-b513-73308d35ae1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Eradication of Memory: Film Adaptations and Algorithms of the Digital","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653486","wordCount":12071,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6637,6743]],"Locations in B":[[35945,36051]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"This article analyzes how film adaptations and remakes exemplify and illustrate what the authors argue have recently emerged as two dominant conceptual frameworks for understanding cultural representation and digital information organization: an accelerated techno-historical forgetful ness, or an increasingly rapid cultural half-life of ideas, and theories of database logic and practices of digitally networked search culture. Discussing these frameworks with respect to film adaptation and remake theory and history, we draw on the global phenomenon of Stieg Larsson's crime-fiction Millennium trilogy and especially the two film versions of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Niels Arden Oplev (2009) and David Fincher (2011), respectively.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hanor A. 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This illustration reveals how writing works on multiple levels of scale, and adds to the body of theoretical knowledge that can be taught within the discipline of writing studies. In so doing, it shows how a complex systems writing pedagogy can benefit both researchers and students.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Auerbach"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b65e9ecb-f731-3b8d-813b-2cde591cf25f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"820","pageStart":"798","pagination":"pp. 798-820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Chasing Film Narrative: Repetition, Recursion, and the Body in Early Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344331","wordCount":11388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c00b715-e5a1-3cf2-b9df-8911834e0661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":172.0,"pageEnd":"1086","pageStart":"915","pagination":"pp. 915-1086","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program of the 1987 Convention of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462397","wordCount":83702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Burke"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2639808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018246X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"458b64e7-3a40-309d-8934-deada240f3d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2639808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historicalj"}],"isPartOf":"The Historical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"992","pageStart":"989","pagination":"pp. 989-992","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Social History of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2639808","wordCount":2123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Carson Berry"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27639411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27639411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusictheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Music Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Journal of Music Theory\" under Allen Forte's Editorship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27639411","wordCount":9276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"This article addresses the role played by Allen Forte in establishing the \"Journal of Music Theory\" as a journal of record for the American discipline of music theory, as it emerged and evolved in the 1960s. The journal was founded at Yale University in 1957 by editor David Kraehenbuehl. When he left his position at both the university and the journal in 1960, the editorship passed to Allen Forte, who functioned in that capacity for the next seven years, making him not only the longest-serving editor in the journal's history, but also one at an especially crucial period, when conceptions of the field were beginning to crystallize and circulate in the forms recognizable today. This article explores, in turn, the path Forte took to the journal (and Yale); aspects of editorship, design, and production during his time; the personal imprint he made on the journal, in terms of his editorial agenda; and his departure from the editorship and the legacy he left behind. Quotations from the author's interviews with Forte are included.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. G. Boring"],"datePublished":"1939-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1416490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9329482c-3143-3f62-88d8-ceb5cad9e9c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1416490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjpsyc"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Psychology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"655","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-655","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1416490","wordCount":1691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EUG\u00c9NIE SHINKLE"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea677b0e-d7a2-3a7e-b83a-e01b667e44d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Boredom, Repetition, Inertia: Contemporary Photography and the Aesthetics of the Banal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030032","wordCount":7871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tacey A. 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Kouritzin"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3202199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"277ff6fb-62c9-3de5-8f78-b871b33e7a98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3202199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The British Columbia Literature 12 Curriculum and I: A Soliloquy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3202199","wordCount":14558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"A critique of the prescribed Literature 12 curriculum for British Columbia teachers, this article is a life-history narrative juxtaposed against my own literary education, examining how my lived experiences were reflected and reinforced in the Literature 12 curriculum, and in the literary canons of both high school and university English teaching-and vice versa. After first introducing the curriculum documents and the required textbook for the teaching of Literature 12, this article then deconstructs the curriculum objectives and the canon, pointing out that the study of English literature, as traditionally conceived in high schools and universities, reinforces Eurocentrism, racism, elitism, and, particularly for the purposes of this article, misogyny. It concludes by reminding teachers that some students bring experiences of oppression with them to the classroom, and that it is therefore our responsibility to challenge the norms present in the literary canon.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josh Stenger"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92d54ec3-4481-3c90-b436-c537c3456420"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4137166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Clothes Make the Fan: Fashion and Online Fandom When \"Buffy the Vampire Slayer\" Goes to eBay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4137166","wordCount":10138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"The public's reception of eBay's auction of Buffy the Vampire Slayer wardrobe items marked an instructive collision of online fandom, television production\/consumption and e-commerce. As opportunities for critique and fantasy production, the clothes crystallized tensions within the series and among fans: between ownership and authorship; a viable feminist politics and the sexualization of cast and characters; the perceived egalitarianism of online communities and eBay's explicit competitiveness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig Dworkin"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Textual Prostheses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125327","wordCount":13324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1504403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08488525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61236541"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237202"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9596523-8300-3902-af89-1f5beff137a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1504403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aptbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"APT Bulletin: The Journal of Preservation Technology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22+24-46+48-70+72-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Museum Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Index to Volumes I-XXIV","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1504403","wordCount":67222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Association for Preservation Technology International (APT)","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Frank"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25149106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Short Takes: The Canadian Worker on Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149106","wordCount":10707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Is there a canadian labour film? After a century of film production in Canada, the answer is uncertain. Canadian workers do appear in a variety of documentary and feature film productions, but their presence often arises from the incidental processes of documentation and fictionalization. There is also a more purposeful body of work focused on the concerns of labour history, but its promise remains relatively underdeveloped. Although film has become one of the dominant languages of communications at the end of the 20th century, the practice of visual history stands to benefit from closer collaboration between historians and film makers. \/\/\/ Y-a-t'il un film sur la classe ouvri\u00e8re canadienne? Apr\u00e8s un si\u00e8cle de r\u00e9alisation de films au Canada, la r\u00e9ponse est incertaine. Les travailleurs canadiens figurent en effet dans une vari\u00e9t\u00e9 de documentaires et de grands films, mais leur pr\u00e9sence fait souvent partie d'un processus annexe ou secondaire de documentation et de fiction. Il existe aussi des oeuvres dont l'objectif est de se concentrer sur l'histoire de la classe ouvri\u00e8re, mais la mise en valeur de ces films reste relativement insuffisante. Alors que le film est devenu l'un des langages de communication les plus importants \u00e0 la fin du 20e si\u00e8cle, l'histoire visuelle pourra certainement b\u00e9n\u00e9ficier de la collaboration \u00e9troite entre les historiens et les cin\u00e9astes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL K. SAINT-AMOUR"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b740456-f04c-392e-8d90-f9572cf2920f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"OVER ASSEMBLAGE: \"ULYSSES\" AND THE \"BO\u00ceTE-EN-VALISE\" FROM ABOVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871141","wordCount":15771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"Taking its cue from Daedalus, who flew by collecting and ligating feathers, this essay adopts the aerial perspectives immanent in Ulysses in order to peer down into what the novel designates as its innards (its compartments, containers, zones, chapters, neighborhoods, organs), rethinking the text as conversant with its status as an assemblage. The essay enlists Marcel Duchamp's Bo\u00eete-en-Valise not only for its reflexive museology, but for its kindred obsessions with scale, display, recession, the conflations of the body with the city, and the involutions that characterize both. Duchamp's box exists in a relation of formal reciprocity with Joyce's book that sheds light on conditions both works respond to: the vertiginous pleasure and necessity of self-reference in a culture of mechanical reproduction; the collapse of a stable sense of scale and singularity in the aggregate life of the city; the leavetaking of \"home\" for the diasporic construction of a virtual \"back home.\" The essay then considers the novel's grief over what it destroys by commemorating\u2014its invocations of catastrophe as its own precondition\u2014and concludes with a fantasia on the hysterical culture of mourning that is Joyce criticism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-04-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3076531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"768f05cf-913c-3c65-9085-a15e340431f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3076531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3076531","wordCount":34555,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5566","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"296","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Whitney Davis","Alice T. 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Sweeny"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41b1354d-debb-3c23-97fa-b8ffcd53d3fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20715366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Three Funerals and a Wedding: Art Education, Digital Images, and an Aesthetics of Cloning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715366","wordCount":7408,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[9169,9373],[9384,9575],[16395,16474]],"Locations in B":[[15224,15431],[15443,15635],[17102,17181]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In this paper the author describes how contemporary digital technologies have changed the way in which images are constructed, distributed, appropriated, and understood. The metaphor of cloning best describes this process, one that is dramatically different from images produced through mechanical means. Outlining an \"aesthetics of cloning,\" the author proposes three shifts associated with the increased use of digital images in art educational spaces that might lead to a better understanding of contemporary issues related to digital technologies as they relate to the field of art education in general.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26437429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b87f7ec8-c705-361e-a362-14da632d8c20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26437429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26437429","wordCount":13688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. 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Failure to consider copyright issues could result in unintended consequences for database owners. The fair use doctrine is not a complete bar to potential liability. Even though copyright protection for a database is \"thin,\" owners should address the copyright issue by contract and may want to consider using an open source model for database ownership.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mayer N. Zald"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0c5bb01-1ee3-31b2-81f1-0e26495fca91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1097","pageStart":"1096","pagination":"pp. 1096-1097","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231315","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHELE MARTINEZ"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43592676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43810477"},{"name":"lccn","value":"215448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c12a599-8186-3342-96ff-eb9a74b2b57f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43592676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Creating an Audience for a British School: L.E.L.'s \"Poetical Catalogue of Pictures\" in \"The Literary Gazette\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43592676","wordCount":10583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Wolin"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"744ec18b-21a1-318c-b862-9940a85cdbd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"NOTES ON THE EARLY AESTHETICS OF LUK\u00c1CS, BLOCH, AND BENJAMIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035290","wordCount":10295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD A. GAUNT"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26624604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38912614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233856"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e2a0ef1-8633-3866-9de8-d63e118d9a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26624604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"history"}],"isPartOf":"History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26624604","wordCount":1634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4 (347)","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARGOT SZARKE"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26539528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57165f6c-0588-350a-ba3c-a99a35bddd96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26539528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Copies and Perceptions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26539528","wordCount":7202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This article places Doctor Duchenne de Boulogne\u2019s 1862 study, M\u00e9canisme de la physionomie humaine, in dialogue with Emile Zola\u2019s 1872 novel, La Cur\u00e9e, arguing that both texts experimented with copied human expressions and their reader\u2019s ability to decode them. In the first part, this article shows that Duchenne\u2019s use of photography and his recasting of sculptures trained the reader to detect how facial expressions were copied and modified in different media. In the second part, this article proposes that Zola\u2019s narrative, which is an adaptation of Racine\u2019s Ph\u00e8dre, mirrors and extends this form of perceptual training in its use of photography, tableaux vivants, and an embedded stage production of the play it copies. By highlighting practices of making and observing copies, Duchenne\u2019s study and Zola\u2019s novel cultivated a form of spectatorship in which human expressivity was perceived, and evaluated, through an appreciation of the technical means of its reproduction.","subTitle":"Human Expression in Duchenne and Zola","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Tobias","John P. Farrell","Thomas J. Collins","Evelyn Barish","Frank R. Giordano Jr.","Howard W. Fulweiler","Allan R. 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Greenberg","Joseph Sendry"],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86dcfd2f-117a-3c32-856f-5bbbf84b6cb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry: 1976","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002118","wordCount":21527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome Silbergeld"],"datePublished":"1987-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2057105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cffa971-53c4-326f-ad38-b4eaeccf7f24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2057105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"897","pageStart":"849","pagination":"pp. 849-897","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Chinese Painting Studies in the West: A State-of-the-Field Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2057105","wordCount":27347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Finally, Jerome Silbergeld provides a state-of-the-field essay about recent trends and developments in the study of Chinese painting by art historians in the West. He is especially concerned with changes--often interdisciplinary in character--in scholarly inquiry, which have come to distinguish Western studies from traditional Chinese art history and methods. He discusses some 250 books and articles, dividing them into the areas of stylistic studies, theoretical studies, studies of content, and studies of context.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887853","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25cd8df7-12e0-3398-b664-8f8ad5f37dfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41887853"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudasbu"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Studies Association Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ELEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF MESA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887853","wordCount":3928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Middle East Studies Association of North America (MESA)","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOBY GELFAND"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44450373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f61792d8-c2ff-3640-961e-034af3542d6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44450373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"535","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-535","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"THE ORIGINS OF A MODERN CONCEPT OF MEDICAL SPECIALIZATION: JOHN MORGAN'S \"DISCOURSE\" OF 1765","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44450373","wordCount":12353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swr0.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58b36cfe-443a-3a8e-a048-79f2f993a475"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv65swr0.10"}],"isPartOf":"Pastplay","keyphrase":["learning","abort retry","retry pass","game design","students","gameplay","abort retry pass","learning outcomes","retry pass fail","teaching"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"121","pagination":"121-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Abort, Retry, Pass, Fail:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swr0.10","wordCount":7457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Games and play have always served an educational function. Computer games are only the latest incarnation in a vast history of playful learning environments and educational game tools. Three particular threads interweave in this general introduction. First, play and games are ancient elements of human learning. The former instills basic social cues that facilitate human interaction and group cohesions, while the latter improve complex skill acquisition, abstract thinking, and peer cohesion. Johan Huizinga, who described play as an essential (although not sufficient) element to cultural development, paid tribute to this dual nature by titling his bookHomo Ludens<\/em>, or \u201cMan","subTitle":"Games as Teaching Tools","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Big Ideas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360542","wordCount":5434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-05-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2881781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94dbed9f-c8de-3e52-848f-10c30b7270be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2881781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"1396","pageStart":"1362","pagination":"pp. 1362-1396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2881781","wordCount":28483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5112","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"260","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Stiltner"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1992bbfa-2d5a-3137-8a0f-d013b163ed58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hard Times: The Disciplinary City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372015","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"As Dickens's \"industrial novel,\" Hard Times confronts the complexities of the Victorian class structure. However, the novel also elaborates a critique of institutional mechanisms, in particular the disciplinary operations of Utilitarianism and coordinate industrial structures. As D.A. Miller, Jeremy Tambling, and Cynthia Northcutt Mahne (among others) have well established, Dickens prefigures, if not precedes, Michel Foucault in recognizing the disciplinary machinery that insinuated itself into Western culture in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Hard Times is one of the more extensive considerations ofthat recognition in the Dickens world; the novel dramatically diagnoses apparatuses of Foucauldian \"discipline\" in Victorian culture andproblematizes the nature of the \"self\" in that paradigm.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles M. 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Advancing the idea of a withdrawn subjectivity, likened to a state of \"undeath\", these projects accentuate the gap between sign and signified in order to mediate the phantoms of war without necessarily rendering them visible. Like vampires, the phantoms of Lebanon's wars bear no reflection and cannot be imaged directly. This article asks if the representation of monstrous specters can elucidate the invisible, unsayable, and unrepresentable under conditions of \"official amnesia.\" \u062a\u0642\u062f\u0645 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u062f\u0629 \u0641\u0646\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0646 \u0648\ufeb3\ufef4\ufee8\ufee4\ufe8e\ufe8b\ufef4\ufef4\ufee6 \u064a\u0639\u0645\u0644\u0648\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u0644\u0628\u0646\u0627\u0646 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0645\u0631\u062d\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0647\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0643\u064a\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062e\u062f\u0627\u0645\u0647\u0645 \ufedf\ufeee\ufeb3\ufe8e\ufe8b\ufede \u0627\u0644\u0673\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0645 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0648\u0633\u0627\ufe8b\ufec2 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0631\u064a\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0643\u064a \u064a\u0639\u0628\u0651\u0631\u0648\u0627 \u0639\u0646 \u0643\u0627\u0631\u062b\u0629 \u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0629. \u0648\u062a\u0637\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0641\u0647\u0648\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0627\u062a\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u0633\u062d\u0628\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u062a\u0628\u0637\u0629 \u0628\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 ((\u0627\u0644\u0644\u0627\u0645\u0648\u062a))\u060c \u062d\u064a\u062b \u062a\u0631\u0643\u0632 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0634\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0631\u064a\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u062c\u0648\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0642\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0635\u0648\u0631\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0647\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0644\u0627\u0632\u0645\u0647\u0627\u060c \u0643\u064a \u062a\u0634\u064a\u0631 \u0673\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0634\u0628\u0627\u062d \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0628 \u062f\u0648\u0646 \u0623\u0646 \u062a\u062a\u0645\u062b\u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0628\u0634\u0643\u0644 \ufee3\ufeae\ufe8b\ufef2\u060c \u0641\u0644\u064a\u0633\u062a \u0644\u0623\u0634\u0628\u0627\u062d \u062d\u0631\u0648\u0628 \u0644\u0628\u0646\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0646\u0639\u0643\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0644\u0627 \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u062a\u062e\u064a\u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0645\u0628\u0627\u0634\u0631\u0629. \u0648\u062a\u0633\u062a\u0643\u0634\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u062f\u0649 \u0673\u0645\u0643\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0637\u064a\u0627\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0647\u064a\u0628\u0629 \u062a\u064e\u0645\u062b\u064f\u0644 \u0645\u0627 \u0647\u0648 \u0644\u0627\u0645\u0631\ufe8b\ufef2 \u0648\u0645\u0645\u062a\u0646\u0639 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0648\u0644 \u0648\u064a\u0633\u062a\u062d\u064a\u0644 \u062a\u0635\u0648\u064a\u0631\u0647 \u0641\u064a \u0623\u0648\u0636\u0627\u0639 \u064a\u062d\u0643\u0645\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0633\u0645\u064a \u0648\u062a\u062c\u0627\u0647\u0644\u0647 \u0644\u0644\u0643\u0627\u0631\u062b\u0629 .","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["St\u00e9phane Gerson"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/316044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e68c88a3-1049-33e6-803d-ea2bd2414668"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/316044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"682","pageStart":"628","pagination":"pp. 628-682","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Town, Nation, or Humanity? 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HUANG"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41508053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392448"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004906"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eba438d2-7982-37d2-832c-dcce9689390e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41508053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworldhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From the Imperial Court to the International Art Market: Jingdezhen Porcelain Production as Global Visual Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41508053","wordCount":12051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"This article describes the emergence, circulation, and provenance of major visual sources on Jingdezhen ceramic history and production. Beginning with the album referred to as \"Taoye tu\" (Pictures of porcelain production) in eighteenth-century Qing court documents, it follows the dissemination of the visual genre from the Qing imperial court to European, Japanese, and North American consumers across various mediums and disparate political units. Rather than analyze them as disparate genres, this article proposes to view Qing court paintings, export art, woodblock prints, and foreign translations as global historical phenomena, in order to show the existence of a shared visual culture in which production was the primary pictorial theme.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Laird","H. Barker","A. E. Taylor","A. G. Widgery","A. E. 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With the recent surge of far-Right populism throughout the West,\u00b2 this Frankfurt School warning reveals its prescience. But there is much more than this. A wealth of insights pertinent to authoritarian and populist trends is contained in their writings. In view of everything that is engulfing Europe, the United States, and perhaps the whole world, the work of the early Frankfurt School demands concerted revisiting. Such is the purpose of the present volume. Before providing an outline of its","subTitle":"The Frankfurt School and Authoritarian Populism \u2013 A Historical Outline","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alicia Tromp"],"datePublished":"2013-09-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.46.1.0058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15403084"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174970348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73a838b6-1061-3bf1-a7d9-e2f20c96a90c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/amerlitereal.46.1.0058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Platonic Parody: Mark Twain and the Quest for the Idea(l) in \"My Platonic Sweetheart\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.46.1.0058","wordCount":8264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shirley Samuels"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"482","pagination":"pp. 482-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Miscegenated America: The Civil War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490177","wordCount":8284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1901-12-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44054236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646209115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc745644-9353-37a1-afec-0f8f9927646f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44054236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1901,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44054236","wordCount":13504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"22 (1356)","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Musser"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27670734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27670734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Passions and the Passion Play: Theatre, Film and Religion in America, 1880-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27670734","wordCount":21336,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6073,6571]],"Locations in B":[[102935,103437]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eitan Wilf"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3dcea78-7049-3c11-b592-36e0a2b5d3d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Semiotic Dimensions of Creativity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049582","wordCount":9551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"Recurrent, most recently Romantic, ideologies conceptualize creativity as the solitary, ex nihilo creation of products of self-evident and universal value\u2014most emblematically in the field of art\u2014by highly exceptional individuals. Such ideologies obscure the social dimensions of creativity that come into view via anthropological analysis: (a) the nature and ubiquity of creative processes as communicative and improvisational events, with real-time emergent properties, involving human and nonhuman agents in the context of pre-existing yet malleable genres and constraints; (b) the role of socialization in the making of creative individuals, implicating processes of social reproduction; and (c) the processes by which certain objects and individuals are recognized and constructed as exemplars of creativity and thus acquire their value. This review discusses these dimensions by synthesizing cultural and linguistic\/semiotic anthropological research. It concludes by addressing the recent transformation of creativity into the neoliberal philosopher's stone and the potential contribution of anthropology to the demystification of this transformation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anita Haya Patterson"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"502b8e65-f750-38f4-9244-41bcd33f8f1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Resistance to Images of the Internment: Mitsuye Yamada's Camp Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467680","wordCount":5507,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[7709,7776]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Hiner"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"189675af-673b-3d42-b80b-95e53083ec2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lust for \"Luxe\": \"Cashmere Fever\" in Nineteenth-Century France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339543","wordCount":10315,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8708,8875]],"Locations in B":[[52722,52889]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Davis"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3233f0ce-b213-390e-ab5f-216b8ea17884"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction (An Evolving Thesis: 1991-1995)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576221","wordCount":5758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"THE AUTHOR ARGUES THAT THE WORK OF ART IN THE AGE OF DIGITAL reproduction is physically and formally chameleon. There is no longer a clear conceptual distinction between original and reproduction in virtually any medium. These two states, one pure and original, the other imitative and impure, are now fictions. Images, sounds, and words are received, deconstructed, rearranged, and restored wherever they are seen, heard, and stored. What has happened to the aura surrounding the original work of art, so prized by generations of collectors and critics? Digitalization transfers this aura to the individuated copy. Artist and viewer perform together. The dead replica and the living, authentic original are merging, like lovers entwined in mutual ecstasy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1911-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1834878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc2ccd15-bbda-3865-a193-19eaf4c01280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1834878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"680","pageStart":"654","pagination":"pp. 654-680","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1911,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Minor Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1834878","wordCount":13150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lexi Rudnitsky"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20541064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"125ff08c-07d6-3dcd-8aee-95608d389085"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20541064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Planes, Politics, and Protofeminist Poetics: Muriel Rukeyser's \"Theory of Flight\" and \"The Middle of the Air\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20541064","wordCount":9857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55673,55779]],"Locations in B":[[8355,8461]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Kurczynski"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Expression as vandalism: Asger Jorn's \"Modifications\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608823","wordCount":14337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"53\/54","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-02-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1723184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"233c11a5-e32c-39d8-970f-787ab6141ef7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1723184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"795","pageStart":"728","pagination":"pp. 728+767-768+770-774+776-777+779-780+782+785-786+788-789+791-795","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1723184","wordCount":9978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3816","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"159","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lucia Re"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30133957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30133957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Futurism, Film and the Return of the Repressed: Learning from \"Tha\u00efs\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30133957","wordCount":10039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony L. Pellegrini"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40166309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00702862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"435607495"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21f9cd01-173f-372b-9b3a-9975172b1cde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40166309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dantestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Dante Studies, with the Annual Report of the Dante Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","ita","lat"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"American Dante Bibliography for: 1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40166309","wordCount":15748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"99","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bart Landry"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b9a2d8-7d69-303c-853f-169c613380b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"821","pageStart":"819","pagination":"pp. 819-821","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231282","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marisa Lajolo"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1773100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Role of Orality in the Seduction of the Brazilian Reader: A National Challenge for Brazilian Writers of Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1773100","wordCount":6645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"In this paper I analyze the possibilities for literary practices in nineteenth-century Brazil, where the literacy rate was far lower than in Europe at that time and where Brazilian novelists had to \"seduce\" their readers into becoming a \"reading public.\" This was often accomplished by evoking traces of residual orality as a narrative strategy, for, like many other postcolonial countries and cultures in the Americas, nineteenth-century Brazil was a mixture of European (cultural) literacy and Amerindian and African oral traditions. In analyzing the history of Brazil's literate culture \"from the inside\" via close readings of a small selection of nineteenth-century \"metafictional\" Brazilian novels, I point out that while some novelists equated writing with urbanization and Western civilization, and oral traditions with Amerindian and popular cultures, others wrote hybrid novels in which a diversity of languages and cultural traditions coexisted, accommodating a plurality of Brazilian voices. By representing the oral traditions of people of Amerindian or African descent alongside the Western literary narrative tradition, these novels established a new audience of readers, or a reading public, in nineteenth-century Brazil. However, as some of the narrative strategies discussed in this paper reveal, nineteenth-century Brazilian novelists clearly affiliated themselves with the Western literary canon nonetheless.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2168596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eac3ddb5-b9f9-3218-b97c-2c76fc14fbd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2168596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"50(a)","pageStart":"1830","pagination":"pp. 1830-50(a)","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2168596","wordCount":20823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY MATHES McCARTHY"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24027147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fc4d50a-b1b0-3490-844b-f11a72b1320c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24027147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"THE FOUL SYSTEM\": THE GREAT WAR AND INSTRUMENTAL RATIONALITY IN \"PARADE'S END\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24027147","wordCount":10747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-05-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2886412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3833a0e3-47dc-3c91-891e-cee55800e460"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2886412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"772","pageStart":"747","pagination":"pp. 747-772","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2886412","wordCount":21786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5211","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"268","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard I. Johnson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26453321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10926194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381506"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-252618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f86083f-76e8-30f7-9edb-3675a3e0b169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26453321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortnatu2"}],"isPartOf":"Northeastern Naturalist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dwight Blaney and William Procter on the Molluscan Faunas of Frenchman Bay and Ironbound Island, Maine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26453321","wordCount":17110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Eagle Hill Institute","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"In the early twentieth century, Dwight Blaney (1865\u20131944) and William Procter (1872\u20131951), two men of disparate genteel backgrounds, congregated in the summers with many of America\u2019s social elite in Maine\u2019s Bar Harbor region. Not prone to idleness, Blaney and Procter dredged the waters of Frenchman Bay for marine mollusks, Blaney in 1901\u20131909 and Procter in 1926\u20131932. Blaney collected 149 species: 6 chitons, 62 bivalves, 2 scaphopods, and 79 gastropods. Two of the mollusks were new species that were named after him: Tonicella blaneyi (a chiton) and Oenopota blaneyi (a gastropod). In 1904, Blaney made a survey of the land snails of Ironbound Island, his home in Frenchman Bay, finding 19 species. This survey remains the definitive study of the island. In 1916, Blaney and paleontologist Frederic Brewster Loomis extricated 23 marine mollusks from the Pleistocene clays of Mount Desert Island. Nine of these species were no longer living in Frenchman Bay, but had presumably moved to more northern climes. From 1904 to 1916, Blaney published seven scientific papers on the mollusks of Maine. His collection of Indian artifacts from coastal shell middens was among the earliest acquisitions of the Abbe Museum in Acadia National Park. Procter, working from his research laboratory at Corfield Cottage, his summer estate at Bar Harbor, collected 137 molluscan species from Frenchman Bay and environs: 5 chitons, 52 bivalves, 2 scaphopods, 77 gastropods (including O. blaneyi), and 1 cephalopod. Together, Blaney and Procter discovered 159 marine mollusk species in the vicinity of Frenchman Bay, of which 126 (79.3%) were in both collections. Their efforts still constitute the documented molluscan inventory for the region. Between 1927 and 1946, Procter published four volumes on natural history studies, especially of insects but including the marine mollusks and other fauna, under the title Biological Survey of the Mount Desert Region.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fernando G\u00f3mez"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3247020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31d6298d-8ca9-3be3-81ba-7a252c6a18a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3247020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Est\u00e9tica manierista en los albores modernos de la periferia colonial americana. Acerca de la \"Grandeza mexicana\" de Bernardo de Balbuena (1562-1627)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3247020","wordCount":9324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRISON T. MESEROLE","JOHN B. SMITH"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c721f6fc-eb52-340e-8ee4-88682a82a590"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44990805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":269.0,"pageEnd":"784","pageStart":"516","pagination":"pp. 516-784","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography: Shakespeare: Annotated World Bibliography for 1982","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44990805","wordCount":182899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Thompson"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1573397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d4cc85c-1f22-3e9a-9cdd-c50c19d1c0ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1573397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1573397","wordCount":2568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD HELGERSON"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23110437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a568fd4-60d9-3126-98eb-7e3f294b897e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23110437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Paradigmatic Social Function in Anglican Church Architecture of the Fifteen Colonies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42620157","wordCount":14116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Van Meter Ames"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/429572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/429572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature"],"title":"The Fascist Narrative of Concha Espina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641391","wordCount":8118,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[52540,52798],[52802,53000],[53515,53574],[53646,53703]],"Locations in B":[[29743,29997],[30006,30204],[30272,30330],[30455,30513]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy Adler"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59f031d8-d4b0-3101-b2c3-8a88ed2deacb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"1572","pageStart":"1499","pagination":"pp. 1499-1572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What's Left?: Hate Speech, Pornography, and the Problem for Artistic Expression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481093","wordCount":39594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"Some portion of the political left in the United States has called for the restriction of pornography and hate speech. Those who advocate such censorship do so on the ground that pornography and hate speech cause harm to disadvantaged \"outsider\" groups in society. For this reason, the leftist censorship advocates do not accept traditional First Amendment doctrines that protect much pornography and hate speech. In calling for censorship, the author argues, leftists endanger a great deal of activist speech, particularly in the form of artwork, that in fact seeks to undermine the very pornography and hate speech the censorship advocates target. Because much postmodern art appropriates the language and images of hate speech and pornography in order to deconstruct or otherwise subvert them, leftist attempts at censorship carry a grave danger of silencing leftist activists. Furthermore, the author maintains, leftist advocates of censorship have not, and ultimately cannot, develop theories of interpretation capable of protecting activist expression while still restricting or banning pornography and hate speech. Because of the indeterminacy of language, censorship advocates must choose whether to sacrifice vital voices of protest and criticism from within the left or whether to suppress pornography and hate speech.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Muckelbauer"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.2003.21.2.61","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07348584"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45952466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fbb225d-3260-348b-9a57-f3ae261b3969"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rh.2003.21.2.61"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetorica"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetorica: A Journal of the History of Rhetoric","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Imitation and Invention in Antiquity: An Historical-Theoretical Revision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rh.2003.21.2.61","wordCount":11462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Contemporary scholarship on classical imitation tends to analyze the practice by dividing it up based on the subjects and objects of imitation. The result of this common procedure has been an anachronistic solidification of disciplinary lines among rhetoric, philosophy, and poetics. An equally relevant effect has been the polarization of the practices of imitation and those concerned with invention. This paper seeks to elaborate a different taxonomy with which to approach imitation, one that focuses primarily on the encounter between subjects and objects in the actual practice of imitation. By attending to the complex relations of repetition and variation across disciplinary lines, this new taxonomy offers insight into the often overlooked connections between imitation and invention in the intersecting realms of rhetoric, philosophy, and poetics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALBERTO RUY S\u00c1NCHEZ","Michelle Suderman","Rafael Vargas","Daniel C. Schechter","Federico Serrano-D\u00edaz","Andr\u00e9s Atayde Arteche","Marco Buenrostro","Ruth D. Lechuga","Mercurio L\u00f3pez Casillas","Beatriz Zamorano Navarro"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24316433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03004953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24316433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artesmexico"}],"isPartOf":"Artes de M\u00e9xico","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE CIRCUS II LEGEND & COLOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24316433","wordCount":12669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"84","publisher":"Margarita de Orellana","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bert De Munck"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b0405b5-f228-378a-837d-61ba1257c1ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24545174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ARTISANS, PRODUCTS AND GIFTS: RETHINKING THE HISTORY OF MATERIAL CULTURE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24545174","wordCount":15065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"224","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Dart"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42968064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0008199X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42968064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fragments of Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42968064","wordCount":1564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2983148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2983148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 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J. Stoddart"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33051a0c-ee16-3c6f-8f7f-b14dc4b6e0e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23252126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology, Hegemony, Discourse: A Critical Review of Theories of Knowledge and Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252126","wordCount":13311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"For over a century, social theorists have attempted to explain why those who lack economic power consent to hierarchies of social and political power. They have used ideology, hegemony and discourse as key concepts to explain the intersections between the social production of knowledge and the perpetuation of power relations. The Marxist concept of ideology describes how the dominant ideas within a given society reflect the interests of a ruling economic class. In this paper, I trace the movement from this concept of ideology to models of hegemony and discourse. I then trace a second set of ruptures in theories of ideology, hegemony and discourse. Marx and others link ideology to a vision of society dominated by economic class as a field of social power. However, theorists of gender and \"race\" have questioned the place of class as the locus of power. I conclude by arguing that key theorists of gender and \"race\"\u2014Hall, Smith, hooks and Haraway\u2014offer a more complex understanding of how our consent to networks of power is produced within contemporary capitalist societies. This argument has important implications for theory and practice directed at destabilizing our consent to power.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2628050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00251909"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60d3534a-94a1-395c-8b02-4b56b604f7cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2628050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"manascie"}],"isPartOf":"Management Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"C400","pageStart":"C235","pagination":"pp. C235-C400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Management & Organizational Behavior"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"[Complete Program for the XIV International Meeting in Mexico in August]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2628050","wordCount":89981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"INFORMS","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Chen"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.2.0035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73e8551d-7cd5-3bde-b230-e61cbf01b01f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.2.0035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Parts to Sing Empty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.2.0035","wordCount":1092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachael N. 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The success of Pars vite et reviens tard depends on the representation of place, both generally and specifically. Although the character of Chief Inspector Adamsberg, the hero of the two works, is often cited as the primary obstacle to adaptation, Wargnier turns Vargas's introspective hero into an exemplary \u03a1arisian fl\u00e2neur and Paris into the star of the film.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BERNADETTE BUCKLEY"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23398798-7058-36bd-933b-986649a6e1c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40588077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"857","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-857","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The workshop of filthy creation: or do not be alarmed, this is only a test","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588077","wordCount":14123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"In this article I explore the nature of the relationship between art and terror\/ism and ask why identifications between the two are so routinely and often insistently made. In so doing, my aim is twofold. Firstly, I explore the possibility of there being a deep-seated structural link that exists between art, terror\/ism and creativity. In other words, I ask if terror is a necessary corollary of the 'creative event'. Secondly, I explore explicit examples in which artists have sought to create or to emphasise this relationship, from the perspective of Contemporary Art practices. In the spirit of experiment rather than of judgment then, this article sets up a series of trials in which art and terror\/ism are philosophically, aesthetically and politically blended. It asks where else should such tests be conducted, if not in relation to the artwork and in particular, in relation to those artworks which toy with terror\/ism and those artists who claim on some level, to be 'terrorists'? How is the 'artist-as-terrorist' to be interpreted and understood alongside existing definitions of both terrorism and of Art? And finally, what role does imagination play in the construction of experience?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27e5bb8c-b3d4-3486-a70f-8335b368b83a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25042092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042092","wordCount":18952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25071157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00916765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35526936"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn96-47857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25071157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihealpers"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Health Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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Informed by Bearden's appropriation of Andr\u00e9 Malraux's idea that art is a continuously evolving semiotic system, the collages and photostat enlargements that comprise Projections participate in a complex, intertextual process of signifying identity that is one of the master tropes of African American cultural expression.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ira Nadel"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.40.4.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c08a2d5b-9a1c-324f-b486-e80238004b94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.40.4.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beckett, Proust, and the Darkroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.40.4.04","wordCount":5558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"The use of photography in Beckett and Proust makes evident a parallel relationship between the two writers. Through a reading of Beckett's self-image and the treatment of photography in his work, one can provide a more unified view of Beckett the writer and of Beckett's image as a writer. Beckett's model was Proust, a writer who similarly favored photography. In many photographs, Beckett presented to viewers and readers an image unlike that promoted by his biographers or texts: aloof, reticent, recalcitrant and withdrawn. Frequently and directly, he faced the camera and, despite his pursuit of privacy and isolation, paradoxically provided a variety of photographers access to both his Paris apartment and Paris life. The construction of his own iconography and use of photography in his work, adopted from Proust (subject of his first book), are explored through similarities between A la recherche du temps perdu and Beckett's texts, as well as Beckett's Film.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Uchill"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.12.2.0013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15499715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"162135983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87f1144e-cdcb-38aa-91e3-6b6a8a446d22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/futuante.12.2.0013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"futuante"}],"isPartOf":"Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation, History, Theory, and Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Original und Reproduktion<\/em>: Alexander Dorner and the (Re)production of Art Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.12.2.0013","wordCount":9821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14386,14480]],"Locations in B":[[23759,23853]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Original und Reproduktion was the title of a 1929 exhibition hosted by a small Hanover art society in which original artworks were displayed alongside replicas. Launched amid a lengthy published debate over the ethics of art facsimiles, the exhibition was overseen by curator Alexander Dorner, one of the more prolific contributors to the debate and perhaps its most radical apologist for the value of art reproductions. From the cautionary traditionalism of Dorner's contemporaries Max Sauerlandt and Kurt Karl Eberlein to the more liberal provocations of Erwin Panofsky\u2014and later reverberations in the work of Walter Benjamin\u2014the debate saw repeated elisions of reproduction, restoration, and exhibition, revealing broader period anxieties about defining and protecting the true nature of artistic experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles R. Morris","FRANCIS X. KEUL","MARGARET MARY REHER","FRANK FARRELL","PAULINE M. 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The \"technology\" of record represented the dialogic nature of abolitionist oratory, creating a discursive space for identification for attending and reading publics. Authorized by an appeal to accuracy, full-text reproductions of speeches were both a reflection and a performance of publicness. Full-text records represented abolitionists as truthful (offering an alternative to proslavery designations of \"fanatic\"), while also facilitating the circulation of the sounds of abolitionist events, using the means of mass production. The rhetorical force of these records depended on their assertions of accuracy, as well as the aural and embodied public presence that they implied. The narrative created by the phonographer, operating in the transitional space between fixed and unfixed text, emphasizes the rational, inclusive nature of abolitionist public discourse, simultaneously creating and representing an abolitionist public sphere.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAUL JARCHO"],"datePublished":"1955-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44446706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d1e4554-50b6-3843-980c-a1d944df3286"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44446706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"CADWALLADER COLDEN AS A STUDENT OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44446706","wordCount":7472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2982723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 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Ancient Greek myth identified Orpheus as the son of Apollo and Calliope (the Muse of epic poetry). He was renowned as a skilled player of the lyre (a gift from his father) and his music bewitched the Sirens and Hades. \u201cNot only his fellow-mortals but wild beasts were softened by his strains.\u201d\u00b3 According to Aeschylus, the Maenads tore Orpheus to pieces, and his severed head, perched on","subTitle":"DECODING NABOKOV\u2019S BURLESQUE OF SEX AND VIOLENCE IN INVITATION TO A BEHEADING","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maxwell L. 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Karger AG","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDER WILFING"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d78fdd7f-1370-3210-b026-79263029d56e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvktrwbs.10"}],"isPartOf":"Re-Reading Hanslick's Aesthetics","keyphrase":["eduard hanslick","bde hrsg","philosophy","musikwissenschaft","oxford","aesthetics hrsg","musical","gernot gruber","\u00e4sthetik","wiener ver\u00f6ffentlichungen"],"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":94.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"329","pagination":"329-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LITERATURVERZEICHNIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvktrwbs.10","wordCount":31814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geo Quinot"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104051"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69a7efda-448f-3c7f-93f5-b8f24bfae060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23252183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comintlawjsouafr"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The right to die in American and South African constitutional law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252183","wordCount":21119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Institute of Foreign and Comparative Law","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Since controlling one's own death emerged as a legal question in the 1970s in the United States of America it has remained both a contentious and undecided legal issue in that country. As a matter of constitutional law it seems clear that there is no general right to die in American law, only the limited right to refuse medical treatment. In federal constitutional law this unenumerated right flows, according to the US Supreme Court, from the liberty interest protected in the Fourteenth Amendment and as such forms part of the court's substantive due process jurisprudence. Other US courts have found that this right may be based on First Amendment religious rights, the general unenumerated right to privacy or on state constitutional privacy rights. An analysis of the right to die in South African constitutional law based upon the experience in the US suggests that in South Africa there will most likely develop a much broader constitutional right to die than is the case in the US. This is partly due to a larger range of enumerated fundamental rights being protected in the South African 1996 Constitution which will allow the Constitutional Court to shy away from the problematic substantive due process analysis with which the US Supreme Court has had to grapple in this context. While the US jurisprudence regarding the right to die provides a solid comparative point of departure for a South African analysis, local courts should be mindful of the significant differences between the jurisdictions, which might be dispositive in this instance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44581429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8867fb32-9e05-356b-95f9-3f350ea0fb19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44581429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44581429","wordCount":34630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane Hertel"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18c53cc4-9d31-30a9-8062-d63f50b3c2b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dis\/Continuities in Dresden's Dances of Death","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051366","wordCount":28228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":"One central claim of the Dance of Death, namely, that in death all are equal, is examined here in its manifestation in the history and culture of Dresden. Emphasis is on three works: Christoph Walther I's frieze (1535), Alfred Rethel's print series (1849), and Richard Peter's photobook (1949). Rethel's and Peter's secularization of the Dance of Death is accompanied by a shift in attention from the dead to the living, understood as survivors. This shift raises difficult questions about the Dance of Death's central claim, its authors, and their audiences, which are explicitly addressed from a late twentieth-century perspective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Walter G. Berl"],"datePublished":"1970-11-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1731244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd85ddfa-90bf-3c04-88a7-d41e9bd13661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1731244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"899","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-899","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A Brief Guide to the 1970 AAAS Annual Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1731244","wordCount":21893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3960","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"170","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph H. Schwarcz"],"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3192614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f64eb4a-c713-3c30-9a9e-730bc54474cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3192614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arteducation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Reproduction in Art Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3192614","wordCount":5179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Jacobson"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40753285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09445706"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235516"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40753285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewistudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Studies Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Understanding Walter Benjamin's Theological-Political Fragment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40753285","wordCount":21541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. KG","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30a5d314-bdbe-3a0a-ab9f-364a84e2940a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775062","wordCount":15689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Wise"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72926cee-3370-3161-badc-066941330317"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40783174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Jimmie Rodgers and the Semiosis of the Hillbilly Yodel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783174","wordCount":14549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alf Seegert"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99fc9b31-911a-3d7c-866e-688dac594b3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24352933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Mistress of Sp[l]ices: Technovirtual Liaisons in Adolfo Bioy Casares's \"The Invention of Morel\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352933","wordCount":8465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2 (85)","publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"As Georges M\u00e9li\u00e8s discovered to his astonished glee in the late nineteenth century, moving pictures do more than just record reality\u2014they create one. Through stop-trick substitutions, multiple exposures, and splices, celluloid becomes a portal translucent not only to the projector's bulb, but to the projections of the fantastic. For Argentine writer Adolfo Bioy Casares, such cinematic sleights-of-hand become so compelling that they promise to substitute a special effect for all of reality itself. In his 1940 novel The Invention of Morel, Bioy Casares represents two dissociated worlds that, although temporally estranged, are spliced together spatially through layered technological projections\u2014creating the illusion of two lovers immortalized in a virtual union, played back without end. This Borgesian splicing of virtual and actual demonstrates the fantastical possibilities\u2014and tremendous manipulative power\u2014of the splice and the image overlay. In so doing, Bioy Casares raises striking questions about our ability to embrace fantastical projections and attempt to achieve satisfaction from virtual liaisons.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Itai Vardi"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f1c610c-b1ee-366f-b640-a415379f6c2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41678815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Auto Thrill Shows and Destruction Derbies, 1922-1965: Establishing the Cultural Logic of the Deliberate Car Crash in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678815","wordCount":14341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"The profuse historiography on the automobile in America near completely overlooks the ubiquitous cultural practice of entertaining live audiences by deliberately crashing cars. This paper seeks to rectify some of this ongoing neglect by providing a socio-historical exploration into the origins of this unique genre. The planned automobile wreck's birth is traced to the early 1920s and is situated contextually within an established tradition of disaster and destruction reenactments, key historical developments in the system of automobility, and the phenomenon of traffic accidents. By exposing the political economy behind this form of amusement and the dominant discourse surrounding it, the paper provides an explanation for how and why the deliberate demolition of such an iconic and celebrated technology was able to flourish in America.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mitchell B. Frank"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19e1dea7-140c-3590-a092-90f9ad2738db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'he painted everything, so to say, from his head': Arnold B\u00f6cklin's Great Memory and Artistic Practice in Wilhelmine Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825875","wordCount":14883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"This article examines the role of memory in discussions of art theory, practice, and education in Wilhelmine Germany (1890\u20141918). Its focus is on the artist Arnold B\u00f6cklin, whose prodigious memory is often cited in accounts of his work. In the B\u00f6cklin literature, as well as in contemporaneous writing on art theory and art education, memory work was considered an essential and necessary cognitive function in the creative process. Conservative art historians like Henry Thode and such progressive artists as Max Liebermann summoned B\u00f6cklin's fabled memory in these debates, as did writers on art theory and art education. Georg Simmel also invoked concepts of memory in his discussions of the mood (Stimmung) of B\u00f6cklin's landscapes, which he considered in terms of a counterbalancing trend to rational and visual regimes of modernity. In all these discussions around B\u00f6cklin's memory, remembering was understood not as an end in itself, but as a means to something new.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/875429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdbfd5eb-ec9f-31df-ade6-6ae3e16277b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/875429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":100.0,"pageEnd":"xcviii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xcviii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/875429","wordCount":18523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"776","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd281d3c-8c9a-37f0-8d4e-14f58c0f56ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40588370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Industry"],"title":"Scientific Notes and News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1627798","wordCount":3529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"310","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN GASPAR"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3046f783-fe54-328b-88d4-d33450762536"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41478094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE NEW TASK OF THE TRANSLATOR IN LATIN AMERICAN FICTION: THE CASE OF ALAN PAULS' \"THE PAST\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478094","wordCount":9170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"78","publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gottfried J\u00e4ger"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ed4096c-bcde-3cdc-bf83-a232aca25b0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Animato: The Work of Art in the Age of Potential Electronic Manipulation. Audio-Visual Paraphrases of the Painting \"K XVII\" (1923)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576567","wordCount":2219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Electronic technology today offers new and fascinating possibilities for reinterpretation of existing works in the fine arts, music and language. Works of art contain creative potential that challenges the participant to become involved. Works are open to interpretation and must constantly be subjected to new approaches in order to remain vital. Celebrating the occasion of the centennial of L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Moholy-Nagy's birthday, the author and his colleagues created Animato, a 12-min multimedia performance for computer-animated video, piano and percussion based on Moholy's painting \"K XVII\". This new work releases the material from its static state and renders it dynamic.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura G. Pedraza-Fari\u00f1a","Ryan Whalen"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26850513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a45cdb53-3250-3fe5-a0a1-1bbf0dfd2eef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26850513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"A Network Theory of Patentability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26850513","wordCount":34211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Law Review","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":"Patent law is built upon a fundamental premise: only significant inventions receive patent protection while minor improvements remain in the public domain. This premise is indispensable for maintaining an optimal balance between incentivizing new innovation and providing public access to existing innovation. Despite its importance, the doctrine that performs this gatekeeping role\u2014nonobviousness\u2014has long remained indeterminate and vague. Judicial opinions have struggled to articulate both what makes an invention significant (or nonobvious) and how to measure nonobviousness in specific cases. These difficulties are due in large part to the existence of two clashing theoretical frameworks, cognitive and economic, that have vied for prominence in justifying nonobviousness. Neither framework, however, has generated doctrinal tests that can be easily and consistently applied. This Article draws on a novel approach\u2014network theory\u2014to answer both the conceptual question (what is a nonobvious invention?) and the measurement question (how do we determine nonobviousness in specific cases?). First, it shows that what is missing in current conceptual definitions of nonobviousness is an underlying theory of innovation. It then supplies this missing piece. Building upon insights from network science, we model innovation as a process of search and recombination of existing knowledge. Distant searches that combine disparate or weakly connected portions of social and information networks tend to produce high-impact, new ideas that open novel innovation trajectories. Distant searches also tend to be costly and risky. In contrast, local searches tend to result in incremental innovation that is more routine, less costly, and less risky. From a network theory perspective, then, the goal of nonobviousness should be to reward, and therefore to incentivize, those risky distant searches and recombinations that produce the most socially significant innovations. By emphasizing factors specific to the structure of innovation\u2014namely, the risks and costs of the search and recombination process\u2014a network approach complements and deepens current economic understandings of nonobviousness. Second, based on our network theory of innovation, we develop an empirical, algorithmic measure of patentability\u2014what we term a patent's \"network nonobviousness score\" (NNOS). We harness data from US patent records to calculate the distance between the technical knowledge areas recombined in any given invention (or patent), allowing us to assign each patent a specific NNOS. We propose a doctrinal framework that incorporates an invention's NNOS to nonobviousness determinations both at the examination phase and during patent litigation. Our use of network science to develop a legal algorithm is a methodological innovation in law, with implications for broader debates about computational law. We illustrate how differences in algorithm design can lead to different nonobviousness outcomes, and discuss how to mitigate the negative impact of black box algorithms.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. Edwin Baker"],"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75f4dcd3-ef5f-3555-a1e2-8acf1de761fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":147.0,"pageEnd":"2243","pageStart":"2097","pagination":"pp. 2097-2243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Advertising and a Democratic Press","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312414","wordCount":64533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"140","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth E Barker"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41614962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14672006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bded0d14-623d-3dbc-9e35-6bce43c30b76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41614962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britartj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"New light on \"The Orrery\": Joseph Wright and the representation of astronomy in 18th-century Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41614962","wordCount":10719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The British Art Journal","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard Faure"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7cb0a94-4202-38d6-831b-645f0d8472a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"813","pageStart":"768","pagination":"pp. 768-813","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"The Buddhist Icon and the Modern Gaze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344089","wordCount":23933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Brightman"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"611496d2-40e7-306f-a60e-430bff6dc250"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Forget Culture: Replacement, Transcendence, Relexification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656256","wordCount":17467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Baxstrom","Todd Meyers"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt175x2kv.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780823268245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35a2bd19-62a7-3f16-b73d-a6209aaf0958"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt175x2kv.5"}],"isPartOf":"Realizing the Witch","keyphrase":["christensen","images","woodcut","sabbat","wild ride","witches","visual","witchcraft","furious horde","viewer"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"32","pagination":"32-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Evidence, First Movement:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt175x2kv.5","wordCount":9563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the beginning there is a word. That word is \u201cH\u00e4xan.\u201dBenjamin Christensen\u2019s biblical echo is intentional. From the first frame ofH\u00e4xan<\/em> , Christensen is seeking to dismantle the conventional cinematic image. This is an image of a word. In light of what is to follow, the formal conventions of the silent film by definition destabilize any easy relation to the object \u201cH\u00e4xan\u201d; it exists multiply. Already reaching into his source material, Christensen borrows Italian inquisitor Zacharia Visconti\u2019s categories of language to show us how the word relates to meaning, expressed in the distance between the thing and the thing","subTitle":"Words and Things","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert S. Rantoul"],"datePublished":"1914-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f2fe04c-a9ed-30e0-af29-7852682fc100"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":87.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"January Meeting, 1915. Gifts to the Society; Manuscript Massachusetts Colony Note; Nietzsche and the Doctrine of Force; The Copyright Law of 1900; The British Proclamation of May, 1861; William Endicott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080031","wordCount":36714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexis Easley"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41038815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ed6e8e7-f6c0-3f98-a9ac-2acc497e179a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41038815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217, 219-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"RSVP Bibliography: 2007-2009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41038815","wordCount":15743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elana Gomel"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d1122b7-1a79-3068-80b6-5621eedca8ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtechnique"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Narrative Technique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"HAPTIC INTERFACES: The Live and the Recorded Body in Beckett's \"Eh Joe\" on Stage and Screen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781943","wordCount":5031,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13769,14004]],"Locations in B":[[3673,3903]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Beckett's sparse and minimalist pieces have continuously addressed the nature and characteristics of the media for which they were written. What does it mean when a work written specifically for television is transposed to the stage, as film director Atom Egoyan did in his 2006 version of Beckett's Eh Joe? This article will focus on the implications of such a transposition and discuss how Egoyan's version reveals the haptic interface present in the original piece, between body and technology, between the flesh and \"spirit made light\" of the electronic broadcast.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sima Godfrey"],"datePublished":"1982-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ff6a520-151b-3f8a-809a-9d31f0677d78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Baudelaire's Windows","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283966","wordCount":7537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ra\u00fal Rodr\u00edguez-Hern\u00e1ndez"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a0aa64a-133b-3d84-852b-b114277413d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"All Streetcars Are Named Desire: The Lost Cities of Juan Garc\u00eda Ponce's Personas, lugares y anexas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949491","wordCount":12164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen D. Grimshaw"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9cc2fd3-22d0-382e-95c5-752f9fe18c95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1108","pageStart":"1106","pagination":"pp. 1106-1108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231321","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07831f7f-c089-3fe6-a7c5-ca928440f8e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Index Theories of the Novel Now: Parts I(42:2), II(42:3), and III(43:1)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764389","wordCount":3364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phil Ford"],"datePublished":"2008-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2008.103.1.107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14683dfb-fdb8-39a1-821c-544378ece659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2008.103.1.107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Taboo: Time and Belief in Exotica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2008.103.1.107","wordCount":12931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":"In the 1950s, exotica was a genre of pop music that specialized in depicting imaginary exotic paradises and conventionalized natives. By the late 1960s, exotica pop had disappeared, but its tropes of temporal and spatial disjuncture persisted, structuring the music, visual art, and social theory of the utopian counterculture. While 1950s and 1960s kinds of exotica differ in their preferred imaginary destinations, both raise the question of what intermediate shades between belief and disbelief are demanded by aestheticized representations of human life. This essay theorizes exotica as a mode of representation governed by a peculiar mode of reception\u2014one of willed credulity enabled by submission to its spectacle. What exotica demands is what intellectuals are least likely to give, though, and the peculiar pleasures of exotica spectacle are denigrated or rendered invisible in the hermeneutic regime.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F\u00e9lix Guattari","Juliana Schiesari","Georges Van Den Abbeele"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67efd505-4704-3ef1-9522-977181023567"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ritornellos and Existential Affects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389153","wordCount":6437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3394972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2840b4e5-7625-30ce-8a52-e11c7c7f2441"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3394972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3394972","wordCount":10648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wallace K. Ferguson","Benjamin Rowland Jr."],"datePublished":"1952-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3047443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d21c243-3444-3e55-a80c-a77445d3998a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3047443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3047443","wordCount":6042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mira Pajes Merriman"],"datePublished":"1968-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/875545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"350f89b4-548f-3027-9b77-077c0a43bfc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/875545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Two Late Works by Giuseppe Maria Crespi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/875545","wordCount":5085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"780","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geoff Eley"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64071439-d6eb-33d0-9240-14ec62463053"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/175886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture, Britain, and Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175886","wordCount":10733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert P. Merges"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e4caa88-28fa-33b8-b261-722e32475741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3481215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"2240","pageStart":"2187","pagination":"pp. 2187-2240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"One Hundred Years of Solicitude: Intellectual Property Law, 1900-2000","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3481215","wordCount":28351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"The elaboration of intellectual property law is closely intertwined with new technologies. The Review Essay draws on selected episodes from the past 100 years to illustrate the three typical stages by which the legal system accomodates new technologies: (1) disequilibrium; (2) adaptation and adjustment; and (3) legislative consolidation. The final section of the Article introduces a cautionary contemporary note. As a byproduct of the increasing value of intellectual property, there has recently been a rapid increase in legislative activity, and concomitant lobbying activity. This changing political economy is greatly compressing the traditional three-step process, and may bypass it entirely in some circumstances. As a counterbalance to overzealous legislation, courts may be forced to look to the constitutional foundations of intellectual property as a source of limiting principles.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01b2ed9e-11f6-3b13-aabe-8b8546f050a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2742926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"551","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-551","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742926","wordCount":12301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Elizabeth Sweeney"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/edgallpoerev.19.2.0206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21500428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456171712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-200532"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b2e1d2a-bbb5-3288-800b-0da7cf8459d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/edgallpoerev.19.2.0206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"edgallpoerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Edgar Allan Poe Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Death, Decay, and the Daguerreotype's Influence on \u201cThe Black Cat\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/edgallpoerev.19.2.0206","wordCount":7438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"In \u201cThe Black Cat,\u201d Poe's narrator discovers an odd pictorial representation of a crime he just committed. An \u201cimpression\u201d of the cat he killed appears with astonishing accuracy\u2014even the rope around the animal's neck\u2014on his bedroom wall. This portrait resembles a daguerreotype in its placement, its durability, its verisimilitude, and its effect on viewers. The narrator's explanation for how it was produced alludes, moreover, to Louis-Jacques-Mand\u00e9 Daguerre's pioneering technique for developing images on photosensitive plates that have been exposed in a camera obscura. Indeed, \u201cThe Black Cat\u201d grotesquely parodies each step in Daguerre's procedure, as Poe himself depicted it in his initial essay on \u201cThe Daguerreotype.\u201d The proliferating forms, figures, and facsimiles of the black cat\u2014including how the story's second half recapitulates the first\u2014recall other aspects of daguerreotypes, such as their print reproduction and their use in postmortem portraiture. Although the processes described in this story clearly suggest daguerreotypy, they produce different results. \u201cThe Black Cat\u201d reflects not only Poe's familiarity with early photography but also his awareness of techniques for resisting or assisting decomposition, as explained by chemists like Humphry Davy, Justus von Liebig, and Alexander Petzholdt. Whereas early photography provided a means to preserve optical reflections\u2014including those of family members who have died\u2014Poe's narrator attempts to abolish such traces of the past. By modeling the macabre processes that the narrator describes on Daguerre's technique for developing latent photographic images, Poe's horror story transforms the very nature of the daguerreotype portrait to emphasize not preservation, but decay.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9040cb0a-0a3d-3996-a6c9-3034048e63fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24554223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"princollnews"}],"isPartOf":"The Print Collector's Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"BOOKS RECEIVED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24554223","wordCount":3364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Reuss"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25147310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2edc4926-c2d5-37b4-814a-591632dbf28a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25147310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"292","pagination":"pp. 292-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"The Art of Scientific Precision: River Research in the United States Army Corps of Engineers to 1945","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25147310","wordCount":15800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William C. Wimsatt"],"datePublished":"1980-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20115499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00397857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233322"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cf31ddf-8abf-3fe8-8747-2f7a8f016b5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20115499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"synthese"}],"isPartOf":"Synthese","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Randomness and Perceived-Randomness in Evolutionary Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20115499","wordCount":16550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Trish Saunders","Jennifer Terrell","Beverley Carron Payne"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25169095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223344"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49726313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238437"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81b307a5-81ee-38fa-9508-718ac30f6f67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25169095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpacihist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Pacific History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Pacific History Bibliography 1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25169095","wordCount":21177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Journal of Pacific History Inc","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noriko T. Reider"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgpqc.19","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874217933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7356c793-701f-37a9-a822-016e25e2a174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt4cgpqc.19"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Demon Lore","keyphrase":["iwanami shoten","tokyo iwanami","tokyo iwanami shoten","monogatari","vols tokyo","kadokawa shoten","tokyo heibonsha","tokyo kadokawa","shuppan","komatsu kazuhiko"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"210","pagination":"210-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgpqc.19","wordCount":9298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Neiworth"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45297372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15431789"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"260fa674-1f50-3365-9dcd-56592a0ee723"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45297372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poestuddarkroma"}],"isPartOf":"Poe Studies\/Dark Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"International Poe Bibliography: 1998-2000","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45297372","wordCount":19931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin D. 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A relationship of complementarity exists between the problems internal to history and the demands and desires of memory, so much so that together they form integral parts of a single operation, the historiographical operation. Yet memory sometimes appears the obverse of history making. Human action, as this article remonstrates, sometimes overcomes the bounds of passivity imposed by memory and this is also what determines history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lutz Koepnick"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce8790fe-8d71-3389-b161-2086e9e98004"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3211135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reframing the Past: Heritage Cinema and Holocaust in the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211135","wordCount":15069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"87","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond L. 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While Symbolist painters and poets made plain their contempt for the vulgar locutions of crass society at large, I argue that Seurat and others engaged linguistic themes that were also being debated in apparently unrelated domains of official culture. But Symbolist artists turned those linguistic themes inside out, manipulating them in ways that ultimately subverted bourgeois society's goals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Goble"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b472bce5-3bd7-35d5-ba73-e03200721d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"DELIRIOUS HENRY JAMES: A SMALL BOY AND NEW YORK","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286738","wordCount":14034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irving Wohlfarth"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"181efa34-cd4d-3df9-baf6-79ab0f9f8e2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Ecology"],"title":"ABSTRACTS FROM THE 2016 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE SOCIETY FOR NORTHWESTERN VERTEBRATE BIOLOGY, HELD JOINTLY WITH NORTHWEST PARTNERS IN AMPHIBIAN AND REPTILE CONSERVATION, IDAHO BAT WORKING GROUP, IDAHO BIRD CONSERVATION PARTNERSHIP, AND IDAHO PARTNERS IN AMPHIBIAN AND REPTILE CONSERVATION, AT THE COEUR D'ALENE RESORT, COEUR D'ALENE, IDAHO, 22\u201326 FEBRUARY 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382491","wordCount":23047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for Northwestern Vertebrate Biology","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Christine M. Roysdon","Judith A. Adams","Victoria Dow","Jane Morley","Louis Rodriquez","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c6fac58-16ef-3986-a4b5-6ce1850c2f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":155.0,"pageEnd":"877","pageStart":"723","pagination":"pp. 723-877","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1987)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106003","wordCount":80531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1923-07-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20423941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d9fbddf-ef34-3177-ac0b-3c09d034c020"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20423941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1923,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20423941","wordCount":70016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3262","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44911674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213663"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"220a9ad9-ce9d-3468-a570-926b4c732d6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40926361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926361","wordCount":10131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wolfgang Sohlich"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"797a5fa7-9592-359e-8762-214ee79a3260"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Dialectic of Mimesis and Representation in Brecht's \"Life of Galileo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208582","wordCount":9269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heather A. Haveman","Daniel N. Kluttz"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45095065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24fe67a7-2f47-3e14-91da-3e0f65e07302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45095065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cultural Spillovers: Copyright, Conceptions of Authors, and Commercial Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45095065","wordCount":14358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Economists, sociologists, and legal scholars agree that intellectual-property law is fundamental to markets because legal control over copying motivates creative production. But in many markets, such as fashion and databases, there is little or no intellectual-property protection, yet producers still create innovative products and earn profits. Research on such \"negative spaces\" in intellectual-property law reveals that social norms can constrain copying and support creative production. This insight guided our analysis of markets for American literature before the Civil War, in both magazines (a negative space, where intellectual-property law did not apply) and books (a positive space, where intellectual-property law did apply). We observed similar understandings of authors and similar commercial practices in both spaces because many authors published the same work in both spaces. Based on these observations, we propose that cultural elements that develop in positive spaces may spill over to related negative spaces, inducing changes in buyers' and sellers' behavior in negative spaces. Our historical approach also revealed nuances\u2014shades of gray\u2014beyond the sharp distinction typically drawn between negative and positive spaces. In the 1850s, a few large-circulation magazine publishers began to claim copyright, but many still allowed reprinting and none litigated to protect copyright.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BEATRIX DARMST\u00c4DTER"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20753662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00720127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52966757"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235640"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8bc12ec-9e68-3cb5-a750-e9116c89af6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20753662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"galpinsocietyj"}],"isPartOf":"The Galpin Society Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-207, 232-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"FRANZKONRAD BARTL, HIS TREATISE, AND THE KEYED GLASS HARMONICA SAM 1001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20753662","wordCount":17804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Galpin Society","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"This article focuses on a rare keyed glass harmonica taken into the Sammlung alter Musikinstrumente, Vienna (SAM 1001) in 1996. This anonymous instrument matches details published in Franz Konrad Bartl's Abhandlung von der Tastenharmonica (1797\/98). Chemical and physical analyses suggest that SAM 1001 was made between 1840 and 1865, probably using 'original' components produced within Bartl's lifetime. Contacts between Bartl and the Viennese Court during the late eighteenth century are recorded in documents in the \u00d6sterreichisches Staatsarchiv and the St\u00e1tn\u00ed okresn\u00ed archiv Olomouc, and Emperor Franz II became a patron of Bartl's musical projects. Following the recommendations of Antonio Salieri and other artists and scientists, Franz II supported the printing of Bartl's treatise and bought at least one keyed glass harmonica. This was integrated within a new exhibition in the Kunst-Cabinet at Josefsplatz in Vienna. As the 'true' inventor of the keyed glass harmonica, Carl R\u00f6llig, worked as librarian of the adjacent Court Library, a rivalry developed; it was settled by R\u00f6llig's mischievous article in the Allgemeine Musikalische Zeitung Leipzig. Contemporaries reported that the sound and the musical potential of Bartl's instrument were remarkable \u2014 the bass register and colourful sound were especially appreciated by both audience and players.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhonda Hammer"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bf310df-b49b-3226-8d11-89dcd3d34e3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Chapter II: Rethinking the Dialectic: A Critical Semiotic Meta-Theoretical Approach for the Pedagogy of Media Literacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974973","wordCount":20265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv512x65.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911507055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86d51586-ea98-32a9-a095-a9c897334d32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv512x65.16"}],"isPartOf":"Electronic Evidence","keyphrase":["digital","forensic","forensics","digital evidence","computer","digital forensics","digital forensic","java devs","devs stop","computer forensics"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"285","pagination":"285-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Proof:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv512x65.16","wordCount":29170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The activities associated with the investigation and examination of electronic evidence are relatively new compared to other forms of forensic analysis. A number of respected commentators who also practice as digital evidence professionals encourage their peers to advance the process of dealing with electronic evidence as a separate forensic science discipline.\u00b9 This is reflected in the United Kingdom, where the government created a new post, that of the Forensic Science Regulator, in 2008. Under that post, a number of specialists groups were established, including the digital forensics specialist group. The Forensic Science Regulator is currently in the process of reviewing","subTitle":"the technical collection and examination of electronic evidence","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Adams"],"datePublished":"1985-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3050962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6285595d-3acc-3f5a-b2ab-2ae36c6bdb71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3050962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"485","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-485","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"John La Farge's Discovery of Japanese Art: A New Perspective on the Origins of Japonisme","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3050962","wordCount":32381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"Although generally omitted from studies of Japonisme, the American artist John La Farge was apparently the first Western artist to collect Japanese prints appreciatively, and to make use of Japanese effects in his own work. In addition, La Farge's essay of 1870 on Japanese art is the most perceptive of its time in singling out those traits which influenced modernist painters. La Farge's artistic use of Japanese effects does not conform to current assumptions about the normal development of Japonisme. Rather than initially imitating the superficial aspects of Japanese art, he concentrated first on general principles of design.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-12-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25308314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f38ece6f-34cc-3f48-97e9-2a7148767c69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25308314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25308314","wordCount":96332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2765","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Bleich","Eugene R. Kintgen","Bruce Smith","Sandor J. Vargyai"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45108805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7207a1aa-59e0-33df-aadb-5d613634bb85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45108805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":98.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"THE PSYCHOLOGICAL STUDY OF LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE: A SELECTED ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45108805","wordCount":40806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"This list represents what the compilers consider to be some of the more significant research initiatives in the attempt to understand language and literature as aspects of human psychology. The bibliography is divided into two main sections, with a number of subsections. Part I lists works on the perception and cognition of language. Part II lists works on the affective and philosophical considerations of language in relation to literature and aesthetics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stuart C. Aitken","Deborah P. Dixon"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25647920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140015"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c249e454-9b82-3baf-b5f1-116bbf2725ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25647920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"erdkunde"}],"isPartOf":"Erdkunde","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imagining Geographies of Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25647920","wordCount":9355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Erdkunde","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"Da die Geographie des Films mittlerweile erwachsen geworden ist, ist es an der Zeit, nicht mehr nur fachspezifische Fragen zu er\u00f6rtern, sondern bestehende theoretische Grenzen auszuweiten. Geographischem Interesse f\u00fcr das Thema Film fehlt h\u00e4ufig die notwendige kritische Perspektive; Hauptaugenmerk liegt bislang auf dem geographischen Realismus der Filme und weniger auf der Art und Weise, wie diese Bedeutung erzeugen. Geographen sollten durch den Einsatz r\u00e4umlicher Theorien Einblicke erarbeiten, die \u00fcber die reine Repr\u00e4sentation filmischen Raums hinausreicht und vielmehr materielle Niederschl\u00e4ge lebensweltlicher Erfahrung und allt\u00e4gliche soziale Praktiken in den Fokus r\u00fccken. Mit diesem Essay fordern wir mehr kritische Filmgeographien. Indem wir dieser Forderung nachkommen, beobachten wir, wie eine Reihe traditioneller und auftauchender geographischer Bet\u00e4tigungsfelder \u2014 Landschaft, Raum\/R\u00e4umlichkeiten, Mobilit\u00e4t, Ma\u00dfstab und Netzwerke \u2014 neu bewertet werden m\u00fcssen und auf diese Weise nicht nur Disziplingrenzen der Geographie ausweiten, sondern auch die der Filmwissenschaften. \/\/\/ To the extent that the geographic study of film has come of age, it is important to not only tie it to disciplinary issues but also to push theoretical boundaries. Geographic concern is often lacking a critical perspective, focusing primarily on the geographic realism of films rather than how they produce meaning. Geographers needed to elaborate insights through critical spatial theories, so that our studies are not only about filmic representations of space but are also about the material conditions of lived experience and everyday social practices. With this essay, we argue for more critical film geographies. In doing so, we note how a series of traditional and emergent geographic 'primitives' \u2014 landscapes, spaces\/spatialities, mobilities, scales and networks \u2014 are reappraised and push disciplinary boundaries for geography and film studies in general.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank P. Tomasulo"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3661110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"802054d8-0409-3b95-be15-7ec794643436"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3661110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"[Introduction]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3661110","wordCount":1521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/965174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"003cb394-9807-38f4-a0c3-07f686f3003b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/965174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Reports","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/965174","wordCount":8207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1720","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"127","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS STUBBLEFIELD"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96264dad-f640-3982-904b-cf5bded36b0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24411820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TWO KINDS OF DARKNESS: JEAN-LUC NANCY AND THE COMMUNITY OF CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411820","wordCount":11400,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"En d\u00e9pit de l'importance qu'elle a dans l'exp\u00e9rience du cin\u00e9ma, l'\u00e9tude de l'espace social que constitue la salle de projection a longtemps \u00e9t\u00e9, en \u00e9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques, subordonn\u00e9e \u00e0 la lecture des \"textes\" filmiques. Alors que depuis une dizaine d'ann\u00e9es, les chercheurs ont essay\u00e9 de mettre en lumi\u00e8re la compr\u00e9hension de cet espace, pour la plupart, les recherches ont ignor\u00e9 le discours potentiellement int\u00e9ressant, \u00e9mergeant au m\u00eame moment en philosophie, ayant trait au probl\u00e8me de la communaut\u00e9. Cet article utilisera la conception qu'a Jean-Luc Nancy de la \u00ab communaut\u00e9 inop\u00e9rante \u00bb pour initier un dialogue entre les th\u00e9ories du spectateur cin\u00e9matographique et les recherches philosophiques sur la conception de la communaut\u00e9. Cette convergence servira \u00e0 revisiter la compr\u00e9hension habituelle de la fonction id\u00e9ologique de l'exp\u00e9rience du cin\u00e9ma en salle commerciale et aussi \u00e0 jeter une lumi\u00e8re nouvelle sur les modes alternatifs d'exploitation qui remettent en question cette exp\u00e9rience. Cette derni\u00e8re discussion mettra l'accent sur MobMov, un groupe international de projectionnistes amateurs qui utilisent la technologie mobile et l'internet pour organiser des projections dans certains coins oubli\u00e9s des villes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27843231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c83b28f-a0a7-3485-bb03-f40660ab7f71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27843231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27843231","wordCount":7935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Rutherford"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7a26140-cd77-37d2-92b8-f55ae3406e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27607154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'La cantante delle passioni': Giuditta Pasta and the Idea of Operatic Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27607154","wordCount":16470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"This essay explores the artistry of the nineteenth-century Italian singer Giuditta Pasta within the broad context of an 'artwork' (Goehr) and ideas of 'presence' (Gumbrecht). Pasta was the acknowledged diva del mondo during the 1820s, famed not only for an extraordinary if flawed voice, but also for the physicality of her performance modes. Her innovative practices contributed to the development and reconceptualisation of opera's dramatic potential on the early Romantic stage. Making her reputation in roles such as Medea (Mayr) and Semiramide (Rossini), Pasta later inspired the composition of three of the most striking operatic heroines of the period: Amina in La sonnambula (Bellini) and the title-roles of Norma (again Bellini) and Anna Bolena (Donizetti). Focusing on her performance as Norma, I consider a polemical debate in 1835 in the Italian periodicals Il Figaro and Il corriere delle dame that illuminates aspects of Pasta's gestural style in relation to those of her younger colleague and rival, Maria Malibran, and ultimately raises questions about the 'authenticity' of performance in the emerging economy of the operatic marketplace.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Kreilkamp"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"One More Picture\": Robert Browning's Optical Unconscious","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030018","wordCount":11819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42695,42932]],"Locations in B":[[70703,70940]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30236861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038478X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5de60682-0593-3b78-bde5-171e11d4d883"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30236861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"swesthistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30236861","wordCount":22938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Texas State Historical Association","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles O. 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The authors conduct a \"netnographic\" analysis of two prominent retro brands, the Volkswagen New Beetle and Star Wars: Episode I-The Phantom Menace, that reveals the importance of Allegory (brand story), Aura (brand essence), Arcadia (idealized community), and Antinomy (brand paradox). Retro brand meanings are predicated on a utopian communal element and an enlivening paradoxical essence. Retro brand management involves an uneasy, cocreative, and occasionally clamorous alliance between producers and consumers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Shaffer"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1211436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27b1768a-9208-34c3-95f2-d9ec26af89da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1211436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Night for Day, Film for Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1211436","wordCount":4700,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[762,828]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20034342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51aaee7c-d600-37fd-a846-de1427dce4fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20034342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Affairs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20034342","wordCount":25969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95a5d68e-09bb-322b-8413-c37ed20886b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622562","wordCount":11041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Flagg Miller"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adb3c89c-3c48-3312-9ccf-0d0f7098fc23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of Songs and Signs: Audiocassette Poetry, Moral Character, and the Culture of Circulation in Yemen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805151","wordCount":15598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"A problematic of authorial subjects, character ($\\d tib\\bar a^c$) has long provided a generative reflexive template in Yemeni textual practice. As contemporary vernacular poets and singers consider the benefits and costs of an audio-recording industry for the integrities of political speakers, they use a graphic alienation inherent to a trope of character to articulate moral ambivalences over, and expressive possibilities of, authorial iteration. In this article, I propose a framework for considering the moral entailments of a culture of circulation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FROMA I. 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In the Wake Shem tricks Shaun into drawing a figure from Euclid that also depicts their mother's reproductive and excretory organs. Stephen's aesthetic theory in Ulysses unfolds amidst comparable imagery. Although Plato and Homer are its generative elements, both renderings of Joyce's forge cast Shakespeare as the Demiurge, the agent of creation in Plato.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YOUNG-OK AN"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9777694-909b-3e84-aae9-e12a0ba77703"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23118201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beatrice's Gaze Revisited: Anatomizing \"The Cenci\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118201","wordCount":17253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antoine Picon"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c6b768a-d539-3faa-8884-e1383203b65c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3655289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Political science - Government"],"title":"Nineteenth-Century Urban Cartography and the Scientific Ideal: The Case of Paris","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655289","wordCount":7754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"Nineteenth-century Parisian cartography was marked by the emergence of a new cartographic genre: the specialized atlas of the city. This genre was linked to a change in the function assigned to urban maps. Before the French Revolution, the plans of Paris had been shaped by either the desire to portray the city and its singularity or the quest for accuracy in the representation of its layout. In contrast, nineteenth-century plans and atlases reflected the ambition to understand the city according to the light provided by the various natural and social sciences. This article explores the different kinds of maps and atlases produced throughout the nineteenth century in relation to this ambition. Of special interest in this respect are the Bertillon family's thematic maps based on statistics gathered by the Parisian administration.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jedediah Purdy"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23364860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44197618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-25383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"845b73a4-9492-32b0-8d98-870297fa2122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23364860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"932","pageStart":"857","pagination":"pp. 857-932","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"OUR PLACE IN THE WORLD: A NEW RELATIONSHIP FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND LAW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23364860","wordCount":33054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University School of Law","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"Forty years ago, at the birth of environmental law, both legal and philosophical luminaries assumed that the new field would be closely connected with environmental ethics. Instead, the two grew dramatically apart. This Article diagnoses that divorce and proposes a rapprochement. Environmental law has always grown through changes in public values; for this and other reasons, it cannot do so without ethics. Law and ethics are most relevant to each other when there are large open questions in environmental politics: lawmakers act only when some ethical clarity arises; but law can itself assist in that ethical development. This process is true now in a set of emerging issues: the law of food systems, animal rights, and climate change. This Article draws on philosophy, history, and psychology to develop an account of the ethical changes that might emerge from each of these issues, and proposes legal reforms to foster that ethical development.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1891776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161391X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35781793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e307921d-5869-32e7-8f14-fb0723efc7d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1891776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missvallhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Valley Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Historical News and Comments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1891776","wordCount":7802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela Cooper"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c0fa232-0023-3fe3-abde-2415251e4493"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"IMPERIAL TOPOGRAPHIES: THE SPACES OF HISTORY IN \"WATERLAND\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285783","wordCount":9849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SVEN BIRKERTS"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45119691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1046218X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54450390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-202539"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"410bea08-30ca-393c-9f6e-d4a0dcebcf60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45119691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agni"}],"isPartOf":"Agni","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Editor's Note: Losing, Finding, Improvising","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45119691","wordCount":2461,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13405,13506]],"Locations in B":[[6896,6997]],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"89","publisher":"Agni","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. 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Pipes"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00903779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48436598-d793-3bb1-8635-68d29e6ac3b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40932090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"appalachianj"}],"isPartOf":"Appalachian Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Southern Mountaineer in Fact and Fiction: Part II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932090","wordCount":36433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Appalachian Journal & Appalachian State University","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffd765a1-b1ad-37ec-ad26-9c3b57b2fb5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25042227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":163.0,"pageEnd":"54a","pageStart":"4a","pagination":"pp. 4a, 8a, 10a-12a, 16a, 18a, 20a, 22a, 1-138, 25a-32a, 34a, 36a-41a, 54a","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Accountancy","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Water Pollution Control Federation Yearbook: 1984","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042227","wordCount":108945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Zieger"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.1.31","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abd4cb15-4002-36f0-acfa-f5cc517fc513"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.1.31"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cDu Maurierness\u201d and the Mediatization of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.1.31","wordCount":10240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"Abstract George Du Maurier's second novel, Trilby (1894), refers to its heroine's refreshing appeal as \u201cTrilbyness\u201d; in this article, \u201cDu Maurierness\u201d describes the author's well-noted ingratiating rapport with the consumers of his illustrated fiction and cartoons. Focusing on Du Maurier's first novel, Peter Ibbetson (1891), the essay shows how this charming immediacy draws on an abiding cultural fantasy of transparent media technologies. The novel's protagonist clairvoyantly reconstructs the past so that he may consume music, art, and history; this ideal of \u201cdreaming true\u201d idealizes the technological mediation and commodification of memory. As novelist and cartoonist, Du Maurier consistently celebrated the possibilities for media technologies to extend the self, even as they eroded embodied memory, the unconscious, and conventional experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norton Batkin"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43154248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Conceptualizing the History of the Contemporary Museum: On Foucault and Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43154248","wordCount":5377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1952-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26439468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"566d20ce-7c57-3bb4-9274-7abf905666b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26439468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"xxvi","pageStart":"viii","pagination":"pp. viii, x, xii-xiv, xvi-xxvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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This article will posit The Candidate (1972), Tanner '88 (1988), Wag the Dog (1997) and The West Wing (1999-2006) as crucial sites of popular cultural critique of this aspect of the electoral process: The Candidate as a damning critique of television's influence, Tanner '88 as a satirical take on campaign films in the Reagan era, Wag the Dog as a savage indictment of spin-doctoring during Clinton's presidency, and The West Wings attempt to rescue the process through the construction of an \"authentic\" political candidate. This involves close textual analysis of the four examples identified, examining the contrasting visual styles, strategies and tones. The textual discussions will not take place in isolation, however: this article will chart the simultaneous developments in realworld electoral politics, with particular focus on the influence of the media in the election campaigns contemporaneous with the fictional examples discussed. The article charts a shift in the representation of political authenticity, from a cynical attitude towards its possibility in the 1970s, to an uncomplicated reversion to traditional markers of this elusive concept in the 2000s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43473990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23805366"},{"name":"oclc","value":"926718072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015203103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c3b29cc-6011-30b1-95d7-250941b46259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43473990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefine"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"ACQUISITIONS JULY 2006-JUNE 2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43473990","wordCount":19432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christine MacLeod","Jennifer Tann"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65de702f-b685-398f-b99a-bdefbdf0ef1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"From Engineer to Scientist: Reinventing Invention in the Watt and Faraday Centenaries, 1919-31","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500749","wordCount":12363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"While important research on the history of scientific commemorations has been published in recent years, relatively little attention has been paid to the commemoration of invention and inventors. A comparison of the centenaries of James Watt's death in 1919 and of Michael Faraday's discovery of electromagnetic induction in 1931 reveals how the image of the inventor was being refashioned in the early twentieth century. Although shortly after his death Watt had been acclaimed by the Royal Society as a great 'natural philosopher', a century later his reputation had been appropriated by the engineering professions and trades. As the title of Dickinson's 1935 biography described him, he was seen primarily as a 'craftsman and engineer', not a scientist. With poor publicity, which failed in particular to make any connection between steam power and electricity, the 1919 centenary excited little interest outside engineering circles. Meanwhile, professional scientists, who were seeking financial recognition for the importance of their research in 'pure' science, had found a new icon in Michael Faraday. They seized the occasion of the 1931 centenary to reinforce the link between Faraday's scientific research and the wonders of modern electrical technology and thereby to elevate the role of 'blue-sky' research over its 'mere' application.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NOURI GANA"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f219d21-5901-3c1f-82f6-6b3cc6a16ff2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Remembering Forbidding Mourning: Repetition, Indifference, Melanxiety, Hamlet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030381","wordCount":9262,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[7519,7619]],"Locations in B":[[17085,17189]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"By reading Freud's metapsychological papers in tandem with Shakespeare's Hamlet, this essay strives both to caution against the boomerang effects inherent in the psychically volatile act of remembering, effects that are oftentimes slighted or completely overlooked by the currently proliferating positivistic discourses of remembering, and to offer thereof a corrective to many previous psychoanalytic diagnoses of Shakespeare's most worked-over play.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Hoberman"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626553"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"In Quest of a Museal Aura: Turn of the Century Narratives about Museum-Displayed Objects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058637","wordCount":9457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oliver Schilke","Gabriel Rossman"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48588586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"897362cf-e256-3dc3-95a5-07c824ce9c96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48588586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1107","pageStart":"1079","pagination":"pp. 1079-1107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"It\u2019s Only Wrong If It\u2019s Transactional","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48588586","wordCount":19260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":"A wide class of economic exchanges, such as bribery and compensated adoption, are considered morally disreputable precisely because they are seen as economic exchanges. However, parties to these exchanges can structurally obfuscate them by arranging the transfers so as to obscure that a disreputable exchange is occurring at all. In this article, we propose that four obfuscation structures\u2014bundling, brokerage, gift exchange, and pawning\u2014will decrease the moral opprobrium of external audiences by (1) masking intentionality, (2) reducing the explicitness of the reciprocity, and (3) making the exchange appear to be a type of common practice. We report the results from four experiments assessing participants\u2019 moral reactions to scenarios that describe either an appropriate exchange, a quid pro quo disreputable exchange, or various forms of obfuscated exchange. In support of our hypotheses, results show that structural obfuscation effectively mitigates audiences\u2019 moral offense at disreputable exchanges and that the effects are substantially mediated by perceived attributional opacity, transactionalism, and collective validity.","subTitle":"Moral Perceptions of Obfuscated Exchange","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Brown"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a32e247-9e8f-3a51-bbe0-c029e7470a63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Joseph (Smith) in Egypt: Babel, Hieroglyphs, and the Pure Language of Eden","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618647","wordCount":19545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Society of Church History","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-10-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2897677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c530c06b-01d5-3997-a4e9-192cc86275dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2897677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2897677","wordCount":73266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5387","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"282","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen F. Roberts"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48103def-205d-34a3-9ad4-90857488283d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3337383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-99+104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337383","wordCount":7530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Crowther"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40206323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ontology and Aesthetics of Digital Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206323","wordCount":7972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30166361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0031935X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49610468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-227648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51495da3-4fc7-3f7b-af81-9e6ef5d57f9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30166361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"physzool"}],"isPartOf":"Physiological Zoology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":162.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"[Abstracts of] Symposia and Poster Presentations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30166361","wordCount":120990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1923-04-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297261192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25591271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artnews1923"}],"isPartOf":"The Art News (1923-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1923,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Art News, Vol. 21, no. 29","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591271","wordCount":24792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Lyman"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27698408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d87e5b2-6b48-3c85-adf2-4b6f487075c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27698408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sociological Literature in an Age of Computerized Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27698408","wordCount":7714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Although scholars have quickly adopted computers for word processing, new forms of interactive electronic texts pose important questions for the nature of scholarly literature in the social sciences. The social relationships constructed by interactive electronic texts devalue the authority of the writer and empower the reader. This is due in part to the phenomenology of electronic texts; in part to the social contexts governing the use of textual artifacts; and in part to the origin of electronic texts in the reading culture of computer technologists. Although narrative reading cultures empower the writer (as \"author\") over readers, technical reading strategies construct the text as information which is given form by the reader. New information technologies thus challenge the scholarly concept of authorship, the status of scholarly writing as a \"literature,\" and the notion of copyright of texts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernd H\u00fcppauf"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"205d9053-c925-320a-869e-88661caa5756"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Experiences of Modern Warfare and the Crisis of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488223","wordCount":14978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"59","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. Kronik"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"845ffce1-10e6-326a-b637-7f37c667e4e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Editor's Column","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462656","wordCount":2436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"706e98b0-84fb-3c23-82db-10c7fafaba11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25697646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":95.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697646","wordCount":19224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjt9v.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781906924195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93dd7f82-bc77-3e91-9491-5bcf47b8720c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjt9v.15"}],"isPartOf":"Privilege and Property","keyphrase":["engravers","blaine","paintings","protection","artists","engravers act","ronan deazley","chiaro oscuro","legislation","picture"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"289","pagination":"289-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Breaking the Mould?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjt9v.15","wordCount":14794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Throughout the mid to late nineteenth century the issue that came to dominate the concerns of the national copyright regime was that of international copyright relations. From the 1830s onwards, a network of bilateral copyright treaties began to mushroom throughout Europe. In 1838, Britain passed the International Copyright Act which was designed to facilitate the negotiation of such bilateral arrangements, although efforts under the 1838 legislation came to nothing as no agreements were ever concluded under the Act. After the enactment of a second International Copyright Act in 1844, however, the British government enjoyed more success in negotiating a series","subTitle":"The Radical Nature of the Fine Arts Copyright Bill 1862","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenn W. Most"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45cb1b19-b297-33b6-ac68-40141643390d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Languages of Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469422","wordCount":7856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00695696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fb97321-195a-3ff4-86f3-0cfe4933e4d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40375173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collmusisymp"}],"isPartOf":"College Music Symposium","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Education","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Report of the Twenty-Third Annual Meeting: Denver, Colorado\u2014November 6-9, 1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40375173","wordCount":14243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"College Music Society","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip L. Kohl","Lucien R. B\u00e4ck","Henri J. M. Claessen","Antonio Gilman","Christopher L. Hamlin","Kensaku Hayashi","C. C. Lamberg-Karlovsky","Hans J. Nissen","Joan Oates","Akira Ono","Daniel Potts","H. D. Sankalia","Jim G. Shaffer","Wilhelm G. Solheim II","Mary V. Stark","Trevor Watkins"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0e58fd1-5f4e-36aa-b027-8797f648b692"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2741769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"The Balance of Trade in Southwestern Asia in the Mid-Third Millennium B.C. [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741769","wordCount":33976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Trade frequently is considered an important and distinct subsystem that is integrated within a prehistoric cultural system. This paper rejects this interpretation and attempts a structural analysis of a specific trading network that existed in southwestern Asia in the mid-3d millennium B.C. in order to uncover the motivational factors and contradictions operative in trading relationships. An ideal dichotomy between sparsely populated, resource-rich highland centers and densely settled lowland cities is proposed, and the evolutionary significance of the relationship that developed between these areas is discussed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Kaufman"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27783464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03603709"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f0dab98-6766-3db7-a0ca-03b321294309"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27783464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoetrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Poetry Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Future for Modernism: Barbara Guest's Recent Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27783464","wordCount":8360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Poetry Review","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTON MARKO"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13507532"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55135080"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236569"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8050af6e-f731-3877-9859-9177b4375592"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27944914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Austrian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Das Erdorchester bedienen': Epiphany, Enchantment and the Sonorous World of Peter Handke","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27944914","wordCount":7077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"Musical models and themes have been essential features in the work of Peter Handke from his rock-concert-like 'language plays' of the 1960s and early 1970s on. As a temporal medium, music connects directly with a hallmark of Handke's writing, namely the narrative feature of epiphany. These pronounced moments of connection between self and world set amid narrative flow are in turn linked to a thematic model of enchantment rooted in both neo-Romantic and modernist aesthetic and critical traditions in Austria and Central Europe. Particular attention is paid to Handke's motif of the jukebox, a globalizing musical mechanism that advances both a collective reading of cultural narrative and a subjective critical construction of it. Seit seinen rockkonzerthaften Sprechst\u00fccken der 1960er und fr\u00fchen 1970er Jahre spielen Vorbilder und Themen aus der Sph\u00e4re der Musik in der Schreibkarriere Peter Handkes bis heute eine bestimmende Rolle. Als zeitverbundenes Medium schlie\u00dft sich die Musik unmittelbar an einem Grundkennzeichen handkeschen Schreibens an, und zwar dem Epiphanischen. Jene inmitten narrativer Bewegung ausgesprochenen Augenblicke des miteinander Verbundenseins zwischen Ich und Welt verkn\u00fcpfen sich mit dem thematischen Modell der Verzauberung \u2014 einer Thematik, die in \u00e4sthetischen und kulturkritischen Traditionen der \u00f6sterreichischen Neuromantik und der mitteleurop\u00e4ischen Moderne tief verwurzelt ist. Weiterer Schwerpunkt des Beitrags bezieht sich auf das handkesche Motiv der Jukebox, die als globalisierender Musikmechanismus dient, der sowohl kollektives Ablesen als auch subjektiv-kritische Konstruktionen kultureller Narrative f\u00f6rdert.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.26","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787353954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8024231-904c-3228-b309-6d0f9a95370b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv550d3p.26"}],"isPartOf":"Being Modern","keyphrase":["kibbo kift","science","wireless","radio programme","jeanneret","wartime broadcasts","corbusier","friedrich","charles","wilhelm"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"404","pagination":"404-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d3p.26","wordCount":6895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James F. 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It explores the philosophical, poetic, and political dimensions of this vision and the manner in which it explodes the nature\/culture divide, calling into question the Western anthropocentric concept of the human. Affinities are detected with the thought of Philippe Descola, Bruno Latour, and Gilles Deleuze. It examines two extracts from the author's fictional texts illustrating the themes of animal intelligence and of equality or partnership between human and non-human animals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meredith A. Bak"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/movingimage.16.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15323978"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51005951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78cc7cf3-1a82-3eaa-b902-06ec05fb34dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/movingimage.16.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movingimage"}],"isPartOf":"The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ludic Archive: The Work of Playing with Optical Toys","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/movingimage.16.1.0001","wordCount":6571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"Precinematic optical toys such as the thaumatrope, zoetrope, and phenakistoscope have enjoyed renewed critical attention in recent years as objects implicated within histories of cinema and within visual culture more broadly. Although optical toys have been extensively theorized, the unique challenges and opportunities associated with studying optical toys in archival settings have been underexamined. Drawing on examples from a range of archival contexts, this essay argues for play as a key methodology in the archival study of precinema apparatus. I argue that some features of play, such as repetition and improvisation, as well as the dynamic interplay between researcher and archivist\/collector, are vital in thinking through the broader significance of optical toys within historical and contemporary film and media culture. Moreover, play becomes an especially important theoretical lens and methodological approach when considering these toys as objects related to historical childhoods. Encountering these toys in archives requires assembly, experimentation, and tactile manipulation, which the researcher must do while simultaneously negotiating the challenges of working with fragile, fragmented, or incomplete objects. Similarly, the size, complexity, and various classifications of these objects (as both \u201chardware\u201d and \u201csoftware\u201d) often challenge or exceed the boundaries of institutional access policies: it is frequently necessary to \u201cplay with\u201d the rules governing access to operate and experience these devices.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donna A. 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Metaphysics"],"title":"Between \"Athlos\" and \"Arbeit\": Myth, Labor, and \"Cement\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926586","wordCount":12301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"110","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Aaron"],"datePublished":"1953-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1226086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8162c797-3a0f-390f-b428-799f3ad601b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1226086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"721","pageStart":"680","pagination":"pp. 680-721","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Governmental Restraints on Featherbedding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1226086","wordCount":18058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BEATRICE GUENTHER"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4035a484-b16f-387d-98b4-5c37a7bc3e8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23538801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Trading on Cultural Capital: Madame de Sta\u00ebl's Politics of Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538801","wordCount":8526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This article examines how Sta\u00ebl was able to sustain her public status even while in exile, especially in light of her continued commitment to Revolutionary (although not strictly democratic) ideals and her public opposition to Napoleonic ideology. How she was able to keep her vision in circulation or, to draw on Pierre Bourdieu's terminology, how she traded on her cultural capital\u2014her ideas and published commodities\u2014is tracked by contrasting Sta\u00ebl's text on Jean-Jacques Rousseau, published at the beginning of her literary career, with Dix ann\u00e9es d'exil (1820) and Consid\u00e9rations sur la R\u00e9volution fran\u00e7aise (1818), both published posthumously.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10511733"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56475424"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242173"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f178edc-d93f-3a30-a139-b69ff0316ae2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortnatu"}],"isPartOf":"Northwestern Naturalist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Abstracts from the 2009 Joint Annual Meeting of the Society for Northwestern Vertebrate Biology and Washington Chapter of the Wildlife Society, Held at Skamania Lodge, Stevenson, Washington, February 18-21, 2009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628132","wordCount":18110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for Northwestern Vertebrate Biology","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth Benoit","Kevin Munger","Arthur Spirling"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45132491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00925853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38310017"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7f546ea-a026-36e4-98b6-ea677605eaf8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45132491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Political Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"508","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-508","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Measuring and Explaining Political Sophistication through Textual Complexity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45132491","wordCount":12284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Midwest Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"Political scientists lack domain-specific measures for the purpose of measuring the sophistication of political communication. We systematically review the shortcomings of existing approaches, before developing a new and better method along with software tools to apply it. We use crowdsourcing to perform thousands of pairwise comparisons of text snippets and incorporate these results into a statistical model of sophistication. This includes previously excluded features such as parts of speech and a measure of word rarity derived from dynamic term frequencies in the Google Books. data set. Our technique not only shows which features are appropriate to the political domain and how, but also provides a measure easily applied and rescaled to political texts in a way that facilitates probabilistic comparisons. We reanalyze the State of the Union corpus to demonstrate how conclusions differ when using our improved approach, including the ability to compare complexity as a function of covariates.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriela Stoicea"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18fadc8a-580a-3273-b461-c661838107e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44968602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Moosbrugger and the Case for Responsibility in Robert Musil's \"Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44968602","wordCount":9199,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20816,20919]],"Locations in B":[[44655,44760]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":"Robert Musil's epic novel Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften comes back time and again to the case of Christian Moosbrugger, an enigmatic figure accused of brutally killing a prostitute. Musil never resolved this character's fate, or his exact significance for the novel. Despite (or precisely because of) this, the Moosbrugger leitmotif continues to provide fodder for debate. This article argues that the positioning of this \"musical murderer\" at the interface of law, morality, and the arts makes him the perfect vehicle for exploring the notion of responsibility in its myriad juridical, ethical, and philosophical intricacies. Underlying it all, I argue, is a deep reflection on the role of literary narratives in shaping readers'approach to responsible reading, thinking, acting, and being in the world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Hullot-Kentor"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"285103bf-bedb-3b98-9f9b-38984e7b5056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Second Salvage: Prolegomenon to a Reconstruction of \"Current of Music\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489212","wordCount":13803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Camfield"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25149664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neoliberalism and Working-Class Resistance in British Columbia: The Hospital Employees' Union Struggle, 2002-2004","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149664","wordCount":15494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"In british columbia in the spring of 2004, over 40,000 hospital and long-term care facility workers, mostly members of the Hospital Employees Union [HEU], struck to defend their jobs and services against attacks from an aggressive neoliberal government and employers. This strike was distinguished by the social composition of the workforce, the fact that HEU had one of the more left-wing leaderships in the Canadian labour movement, and the determination of the strikers to persevere even in the face of back-to-work legislation. HEU's resistance evoked an unusual degree of support that took the form of active solidarity rather than just passive sympathy. The BC labour leadership was pushed towards a confrontation of the kind that the existing regime of industrial legality was designed to prevent. This article identifies the systemic causes of the BC health care strike in public sector restructuring and the building of a lean state, explores its background, traces its trajectory, and explains and assesses its outcome. This strike highlights the significance of the character of the contemporary labour officialdom as a social layer whose conditions of existence lead it to usually oppose forms of collective action outside the bounds of industrial legality. \/\/\/ En colombie-britannique au printemps de 2004, plus de 40 000 travailleuses et travailleurs d'h\u00f4pitaux et d'\u00e9tablissements de soins prolong\u00e9s, dont la plupart \u00e9taient membres du Hospital Employees Union [HEU], ont fait la gr\u00e8ve pour d\u00e9fendre leurs emplois et services contre les assauts d'un gouvernement n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9ral agressif et des employeurs. Cette gr\u00e8ve s'est distingu\u00e9e par la composition sociale de la main-d'\u0153uvre, le fait que le HEU avait l'un des chefs de gauche les plus importants au sein du mouvement syndical canadien, et la d\u00e9termination des gr\u00e9vistes de pers\u00e9v\u00e9rer m\u00eame face \u00e0 la loi de reprise du travail. La r\u00e9sistance du HEU a \u00e9voqu\u00e9 un degr\u00e9 inhabituel d'appui qui a pris la forme d'une solidarit\u00e9 active plut\u00f4t que juste d'une sympathie passive. Les dirigeants syndicaux de la Colombie-Britannique ont \u00e9t\u00e9 pouss\u00e9s vers un type de confrontation que le r\u00e9gime actuel de l\u00e9galit\u00e9 industrielle aurait o\u00fb pr\u00e9venir. Cet article identifie les causes complexes de la gr\u00e8ve relative aux soins de sant\u00e9 en Colombie-Britannique dans le cadre de la restructuration du secteur public et de la formation d'un gouvernement d\u00e9graiss\u00e9. Il explore les ant\u00e9c\u00e9dents de la gr\u00e8ve, trace son parcours; explique et \u00e9value le r\u00e9sultat. Cette gr\u00e8ve met en \u00e9vidence l'importance des officiers syndicaux contemporains comme couche sociale dont les conditions d'existence l'am\u00e8ne habituellement \u00e0 s'opposer \u00e0 des formes d'action collective au-del\u00e0 des limites de l\u00e9galit\u00e9 industrielle.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1928-02-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1653681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"226a8f62-b383-3028-ba84-7102a65d8fcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1653681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Reports of the Sessions of Sections and Societies at the Second Nashville Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1653681","wordCount":15942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1727","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alice D. Snyder"],"datePublished":"1940-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/434210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3663a100-1b7d-30fe-bb04-71573642e47c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/434210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coleridge and the Encyclopedists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/434210","wordCount":9409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Druker"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24009907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24009907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24009907","wordCount":1384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Kearon"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbfc0852-c266-39b7-8391-75bbe7b318e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23257672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Arbiter to Omnivore. The Bourgeois Transcendent Self and the Other in Disorganised Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23257672","wordCount":8121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"This article will examine the emergence of a distinct bourgeois identity in modernity which differentiated itself from comparable social groups through its desire to exert 'virtuous' control through engagement with reform and philanthropy, and through the symbolic construction of a transgressive, socially marginal but redeemable other as subject of this reform. The ontological insecurities of late modernity had a profound impact on the sources of bourgeois identity, and this article will explore the emergence of the cultural omnivore as a new form of social distinction which is no longer virtuous, but is still a manifestation of the desire to express identity through demonstrating control. It will outline the impact of the emerging omnivore on relationships between the bourgeois self and the marginal\/deviant other, particularly in terms of the extent to which the reconceptualisation of 'other' as cultural univore exacerbates the exclusion and criminalisation of the marginalized other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Sellin"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3795229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a09f05b-0488-3e0e-b534-1e45fd7b3390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3795229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmuseartbull"}],"isPartOf":"Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-2+5-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The First Pose: Howard Roberts, Thomas Eakins, and a Century of Philadelphia Nudes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3795229","wordCount":27617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"311\/312","publisher":"Philadelphia Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clark Lunberry"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Quiet Catastrophe: Robert Smithson's \"Spiral Jetty\", Vanished","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389647","wordCount":15384,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[39131,39209]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45360784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00304557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e34f6dd-fa01-3226-b966-75416eea7376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45360784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ordnance"}],"isPartOf":"Ordnance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45360784","wordCount":18932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"214","publisher":"National Defense Industrial Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDWARD SHILS"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41820363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00264695"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42210051"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233264"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6baed820-b7ca-360e-b927-0c1f9adc2ab3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41820363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"minerva"}],"isPartOf":"Minerva","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","Science & Technology Studies","General Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"RENDER UNTO CAESAR ...\" GOVERNMENT, SOCIETY AND THE UNIVERSITIES IN THEIR RECIPROCAL RIGHTS AND DUTIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41820363","wordCount":25775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1957-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20023785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01999818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"586fbc79-775d-37b1-8368-305875a9c339"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20023785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procameracadarts"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Records of Meetings, 1956-1957","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20023785","wordCount":10627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Academy of Arts & Sciences","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandra Supper"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e27655f-e4d1-390c-ab14-2de055059970"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43284219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Sublime frequencies: The construction of sublime listening experiences in the sonification of scientific data","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43284219","wordCount":13482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"In the past two decades, the sonification of scientific data - an auditory equivalent of data visualization in which data are turned into sounds - has become increasingly widespread, particularly as an artistic practice and as a means of popularizing science. Sonification is thus part of the recent trend, discussed in public understanding of science literature, towards increased emphasis on 'interactivity' and 'crossovers' between science and art as a response to the perceived crisis in the relationship between the sciences and their publics. However, sonification can also be understood as the latest iteration in a long tradition of theorizing the relations between nature, science and human experience. This article analyses the recent public fascination with sonification and argues that sonification grips public imaginations through the promise of sublime experiences. I show how the 'auditory sublime' is constructed through varying combinations of technological, musical and rhetorical strategies. Rather than maintain a singular conception of the auditory sublime, practitioners draw on many scientific and artistic repertoires. However, sound is often situated as an immersive and emotional medium in contrast to the supposedly more detached sense of vision. The public sonification discourse leaves intact this dichotomy, reinforcing the idea that sound has no place in specialist science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Loewenstein"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3043780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb918470-ea20-3612-adc7-7fb5c4515ce4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3043780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Script in the Marketplace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3043780","wordCount":7234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel N. 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Art history"],"title":"Andy Warhol's Production Kitchen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/gfc.2009.9.2.45","wordCount":2719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"Through an examination of Andy Warhol's use of food imagery, this article considers the artist's representational strategies during the 1960s. In particular, it discusses Warhol's Campbell's soup paintings of ca.1961 \u2013 \u203262 and his 1968 television advertisement for the Schrafft's chain of diners as two points on a spectrum of representation, revealing his shifting approaches to the art object. By exploring the commercial interests that drove each project, the different media in which they were completed, and the artist's public statements about each work, this article traces Warhol's early indebtedness to the romanticized notion of the personally inflected artwork to his later promotion of an art of pure surface.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Coleman Sellers","Charles Willson Peale"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53e9ab78-e5c3-366f-a25e-edbbaae30673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1006131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":146.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Charles Willson Peale with Patron and Populace. A Supplement to \"Portraits and Miniatures by Charles Willson Peale\". With a Survey of His Work in Other Genres","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006131","wordCount":79393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Fishzon"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b590a49b-e5a0-365d-9ef7-8beca2d0cc5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"818","pageStart":"795","pagination":"pp. 795-818","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Operatics of Everyday Life, or, How Authenticity Was Defined in Late Imperial Russia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0795","wordCount":13064,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[56410,56598]],"Locations in B":[[58083,58271]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"In this article, Anna Fishzon explores how the phenomena of celebrity culture and early sound recording contributed to notions of authentic selfhood in late imperial Russia. Public discussions about celebrities like the Bol\u2019shoi Theater bass Fedor Shaliapin helped forge understandings of sincerity and spoke to contemporary concerns regarding the relationship between fame and artifice, the public persona and the inner self. Fishzon suggests that the emergent recording industry penetrated and altered every day emotional experience, the arena of work, and the organization of leisure, linking gramophonic discourses to celebrity culture and its rhetoric of authenticity and sincerity. In part because Russian audio magazines and gramophone manufacturers heavily promoted celebrity opera recordings, sonic fidelity was equated with the capacity of the recorded voice to convey \u201csincerity,\u201d understood, in turn, as the announcement of ardent feelings. Fan letters to Shaliapin and Ivan Ershov document these new sensibilities regarding self, authenticity, desire, and emotions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cassandra Hartblay"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26497952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"137349448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c97602a7-dd89-3aa4-914f-8a6862fb8008"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26497952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"This is not thick description","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26497952","wordCount":13101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"What happens when an ethnographer takes up the idiom of contemporary art installation to explore an ethnographic problem? Building on performance ethnography as developed by Dwight Conquergood and D. Soyini Madison, in which the research process itself is cultural performance, this article describes a methodological innovation that encourages a rethinking of ethnographic outputs. Contemporary art installation is generative as well as representational, and challenges ethnographers to think by doing. This article describes one such project to show that while a minimalist installation aesthetic does not on the surface constitute \u2018thick description\u2019 in the Geertzian sense, it can be a generative part of a dialogic practice of ethnographic knowledge production. Integrating the interpretive tradition with feminist disability studies, my argument is that art installation offers a possible mode for ethnographers to work through ideas, solicit participation from academic audiences and research participants, create semiotic relationships, and come to know by doing.","subTitle":"Conceptual art installation as ethnographic process","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d28a2f2-a226-3d48-b540-2b371f212991"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3104939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111.0,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1979)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104939","wordCount":63045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruno Reinhardt"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"323e6a9e-81a3-37da-ba2a-d0f6467039d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26571876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Pedagogies of Preaching","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571876","wordCount":14523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This article investigates Pentecostal preaching from a pedagogical angle, more exactly from the point of view of its transmission to apprentice pastors in a Ghanaian seminary or Bible school. My concern is the reproduction of a specific preaching style in this institution, an \u201cinternational\u201d one, governed by explicit and implicit norms. I revisit ethnographically some of these norms as they are conveyed and embodied through lectures about preaching, devotional routines, and student services. I call attention to the emic notion of \u201cflow\u201d, arguing that it lends good legibility to how Pentecostals articulate the multivalent status of preaching as a mimetic skill, a contingent performance, and an authentic expression of charisma. By doing so, flow also provides an interesting entry into the pedagogical dimension of the power assembling and expanding this organization transnationally.","subTitle":"Skill, Performance, and Charisma in a Pentecostal Bible School from Ghana","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/231037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49b1d27b-0ee1-33bd-a092-1c79b44fa399"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/231037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/231037","wordCount":6644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1193912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e097b55-b649-3491-a5f8-d380ce997b32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1193912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1193912","wordCount":18985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1584","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy A. 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Fisher Jr."],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ea6288d-4aff-3455-8de1-3a986ac281b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20010389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"Meaning and Method in the Social Sciences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20010389","wordCount":11360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Academia's mathematical metaphysics are briefly explored en route to an elaboration of the qualitatively rigorous requirements underpinning the calibration and unambiguous interpretation of quantitative instrumentation in any science. Of particular interest are Gadamer's emphases on number as the paradigm of the noetic, on the role of play in interpretation, and on Hegel's sense of method as the activity of the thing itself that thought experiences. These point toward and overlap with (1) Latour's study of the metrological social networks through which technological phenomena are brought into language as modes of being that can be understood, and (2) the way that Rasch's models for measurement comprise a potential beginning for metaphysically astute, qualitatively and quantitatively integrated, mathematical methods in the social sciences. The paper closes with observations on the general problem that is philosophy, the need to remain open to multiplicities of meaning even as clear understandings are sought and obtained.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44670090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238031"},{"name":"oclc","value":"672578156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f55fe252-5be8-3572-88d1-d806cf4f24af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44670090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landarch"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Architecture Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Garden & Landscape","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44670090","wordCount":9214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Society of Landscape Architects","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Howe"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24293689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0006128X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ee372b-281c-3f26-bdbd-fc597accb4e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24293689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"papebiblsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Authority of Presence: The Development of the English Author Portrait, 1500\u20131640","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24293689","wordCount":8939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1861464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b676740c-05ea-3ad1-8e23-ee31735d0f84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1861464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":120.0,"pageEnd":"84(a)","pageStart":"1543","pagination":"pp. 1543-84(a)","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1861464","wordCount":51621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David G. Riede","Donald E. Hall","Clinton Machann","Marjorie Stone","Mary Ellis Gibson","Rosemarie Morgan","Jeffrey B. Loomis","Florence S. Boos","Margot K. Louis","Linda K. Hughes"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08e9b24d-dc40-3cfa-9acf-36c2e4619e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002774","wordCount":49316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2080206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85070d7-dd19-3b69-9342-2fc11ef5accd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2080206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2080206","wordCount":17096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James E. Fleming"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06dcb6d6-c24d-328a-a772-64ce856b826c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Securing Deliberative Autonomy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229149","wordCount":41250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"In this article, Professor Fleming proposes to tether the right of autonomy by grounding it within a constitutional constructivism, a guiding framework for constitutional theory with two fundamental themes: deliberative democracy and deliberative autonomy. He advances deliberative autonomy as a unifying theme that shows the coherence and structure of certain substantive liberties on a list of familiar \"unenumerated\" fundamental rights (commonly classed under privacy, autonomy, or substantive due process). The bedrock structure of deliberative autonomy secures basic liberties that are significant preconditions for persons' ability to deliberate about and make certain fundamental decisions affecting their destiny, identity, or way of life. As against critics' charges that the right of privacy or autonomy is dangerously unruly and unconstrained, Professor Fleming argues that deliberative autonomy is rooted, along with deliberative democracy, in the language and design of our Constitution. Each theme, he contends, has a structural role to play in securing the basic liberties that are preconditions for our scheme of deliberative self-governance. Finally, Professor Fleming argues for reconceiving the substantive due process inquiry in terms of a criterion of the significance of an asserted liberty for deliberative autonomy, charting a middle course between Scalia-the rock of liberty as \"hidebound\" historical practices-and Charybdis-the whirlpool of liberty as unbounded license.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Wm. Moreland"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094002X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"236318c6-3134-3e9b-9e06-45cfdb86dc79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindlawrev"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Law Review ","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","Area Studies","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Indians and the Right to Privacy: A Psycholegal Investigation of the Unauthorized Publication of Portraits of American Indians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068677","wordCount":16736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Oklahoma College of Law","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS ELSAESSER"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mt94.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053560594"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fa29119-e0b3-3bb8-93eb-0e231bbc9054"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mt94.17"}],"isPartOf":"Fassbinder's Germany","keyphrase":["fassbinder","werner fassbinder","rainer werner","cinema","rainer werner fassbinder","wim wenders","sparrow cineaste","die anarchie","limmer","jansen"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"341","pagination":"341-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mt94.17","wordCount":21597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wallis Reid"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41475317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0167806X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41975899"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41475317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natulanglingtheo"}],"isPartOf":"Natural Language & Linguistic Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"1146","pageStart":"1087","pagination":"pp. 1087-1146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The communicative function of English verb number","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41475317","wordCount":30307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This paper offers an account of English verb number solely in terms of communicative function. In this account, verb number is a full-fledged expressive device comparable to the number system for English nouns; all instances of verb number are accounted for in terms of meaning, with the caveat that meaning pertains to conceptualization, not reference. Two points emerge from this line of analysis. First, verb number is not controlled by subject number; each is a separate communicative choice governed by discourse-based principles of semantic coherence. Second, even though the subject usually precedes the verb, speakers can nevertheless think ahead and choose subject number so as to accommodate an anticipated choice of verb number just as well as the reverse, and appear to do both on different occasians. Thus, both choices are best understood in terms of symmetrical relations of textual cohesion, usually with ach other but sometimes with other features of the context.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paulina Su\u00e1rez-Hesketh"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ca56023-c03d-36ed-a025-b26cfae19b5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Frivolous Scene: Cosmopolitan Amusements in Mexico City's 1920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.06","wordCount":14042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"This article historically excavates the ludic performance scene and transregional leisure culture that significantly shaped Mexico City's far\u00e1ndula, or entertainment industry. It focuses on theatrical revue, cinema, and the cabaret scene of the 1920s, an overlapping arena of cosmopolitan combustion, frivolous pleasures, and aesthetic experimentation that would play a critical role in revamping public life after the Revolution (1910\u20131917). Defined by the commercial exchange of music, song, dance, and also sexuality, the city's theater and dance venues created a key matrix for the emergence of sound media, particularly the radio and musical film industries of the 1930s. More than any other phenomena, including silent cinema and Hollywood, the city's amusement milieus established the conditions of possibility for show business, as they created a space for emerging social relations, aesthetic formats, and genres of labor and leisure. This article argues that the city's expanded arena of lowbrow diversions was fundamental, and not merely incidental, to the consolidation of an entertainment industry as a counter-public sphere. The implications of this shift are crucial to writing an account of public amusements and mass culture that challenges existing national and transnational historiographies: grounded in urban history, my exploration of entertainment practices reveals how travelling comediennes and troubadours, regional migrants and itinerant impresarios, congregated in the capital as they moved to the beat of show business. In doing so, I outline an argument for how to think about the ways in which Mexico City's frivolous, playful, and commercial culture played a pivotal role in the making of the modern.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donna Greschner"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"967b8d45-d2fd-3ac8-81dd-8b2c2a530ff8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"790","pageStart":"789","pagination":"pp. 789-790","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231267","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Kartomi Thomas"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24737048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5bd87bd-2041-3cd3-ad40-70efb31d28e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24737048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiantheatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"597","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Masks of Sumatra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24737048","wordCount":8426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"In this article I focus on the performance practices of one of Sumatra's little-known mask varieties, that of sakura theatre, performed in the southernmost province of Lampung. I also draw attention to four other Sumatran mask types, namely, those used in funeral ceremonies of the Karo Batak in North Sumatra, mak yong theatre of Bintan, gobang ritual of the Anambas islands, and mendu theatre of Natuna. In order to gain a greater understanding of the Sumatran mask images and to illuminate their use in performance, I first trace the history of Sumatran mask design, sourcing relevant iconographical and archeological data dating back to the migrations to the island in the Dongson era (500\u20131000 BCE) and the subsequent Hindu-Buddhist period (first to fourteenth centuries CE). The masks' facial features and their functions in Lampung personify animals, gods, demons, and humans and resemble carvings of supernatural beings on Buddhist temple remains throughout Sumatra. The ancestors are believed to have traveled along South Sumatra's and Lampung's extensive river system to Skala Brak in West Lampung along the southwestern Bukit Barisan mountain range, bringing with them their cultures and artistic skills. Moreover, the later interethnic contact between southern Sumatrans and the Benanek Dayak community in Kalimantan may have influenced the designs of the masks, given the similarities between them in the two areas. Today Lampung sakura masking in its various forms, dating back to the pre\u2013Hindu-Buddhist period in Skala Brak, takes place in mystical healing and village cleansing ceremonies, at pole-climbing festivals, and in street processions on the Muslim feast day of Idul Fitri. As an indirect means of affecting the people's mindset, sakura processional performance practices and their allure affirm the Lampung worldview.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jayne Merkel"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40260572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"062aef74-9cf7-3e33-9e70-aed8d08f1d6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40260572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Museum as Artifact","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40260572","wordCount":5702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Pedro Schwartz"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e3b73f2-4779-347e-8bfd-d140ab9eed42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25570995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"In Greater Support of His Word\": Monument and Museum Discourse in \"Finnegans Wake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570995","wordCount":7853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I\u015f\u0131lay G\u00fcrsu"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af886615-3698-3da3-931b-4edc7a0a65b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"If You Do Not Visit, We Will Take It Away\": An Analysis of a Communication Campaign for Italian Cultural Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653003","wordCount":9030,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743]],"Locations in B":[[32425,32586]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"In January 2010, Italy's famous ancient objects and sites, namely Leonardo da Vinci's \"Last Supper,\" the \"Colosseum,\" and Michelangelo's \"David,\" appeared as protagonists in a communication campaign by the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities (MiBAC). Gigantic panels with images of these \"superstars\" being removed from their original locations were displayed in the main squares of Milan and Rome. This entire virtual symphony\u2014accompanied by the threatening slogan \"If you do not visit, we will take it away\"\u2014emerged since, according to MiBAC, Italians do not visit national cultural sites as often as they visit foreign ones. Explaining this particular campaign, the aim of this article is to explore the ways in which cultural heritage becomes subject to contemporary uses under specific political, social, economic, and legal conditions. Official approaches toward cultural heritage are discussed with their political and economic connotations, which are the partial reflections of a \"new public management.\" Analyzing these recent cultural heritage management practices sheds light on the circumstances which lead to the creation of such a campaign. These circumstances\u2014be they the assignment of the former CEO of the Italian branch of McDonald's as the new general director for museums and archaeological sites, or the implementation of various laws and regulations which favor decentralization movements\u2014are analyzed in order to develop a multilayered reading of the campaign. Apart from this political context, the article analyzes the tone and the secondary messages of the visuals via Bourdieu's concept of \"cultural capital.\" In addition to being relevant for describing the consumption of culture, \"cultural capital\" also sheds light on the relationship between citizen and consumer. This article concludes by reconstructing the relationship between the state and the people regarding the ownership and use of cultural heritage, within the framework of Italy's communication campaign.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1945-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44391927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002726X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a324c8bd-49b5-3722-857f-27c59ac444cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44391927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerannadeaf"}],"isPartOf":"American Annals of the Deaf","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":221.0,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Education","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index VIII Volumes LXXXI-XC, 1936-1945","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44391927","wordCount":88821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Gallaudet University Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yuriko Saito"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3332938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad427c29-c6ba-32d5-9d31-5aa02c2bbe5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3332938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The justifications of copyright as an author's \"natural right\" and as a means of furthering the production and dissemination of authorial works are similarly dependent on the convention, which they purport to explain.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANA POLAN"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419311"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bdefb80-2019-3651-b87d-6ea9ce138aa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"junivfilmasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the University Film Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687412","wordCount":4849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amanda Milbourn"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/673517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b63ad90-67f6-3cc8-a704-b2013aad48d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/673517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"A Big Picture Approach: Using Embedded Librarianship to Proactively Address the Need for Visual Literacy Instruction in Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/673517","wordCount":3398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"AbstractAs images become ubiquitous and more accessible in digital culture, their role in the creation and dissemination of knowledge across academic disciplines is growing. 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In addition, the article encourages a two-way exchange between sociology and creative industry studies to develop a better understanding of cultural goods, items and works of art. Such a focus on the material object or outcome of creative practice also opens up the possibility for a more collaborative exchange with the cultural producers.","subTitle":"Methods for Creative Economy Research","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ay\u015feg\u00fcl \u00d6zsomer","Selin Altaras"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27755578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1069031X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18750abb-3d1a-3176-8101-a6d396006d44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27755578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintermarket"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Marketing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Marketing & Advertising"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Global Brand Purchase Likelihood: A Critical Synthesis and an Integrated Conceptual Framework","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27755578","wordCount":13099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Marketing Association","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The authors build a model of global brand attitude and purchase likelihood with a nomological net comprised of constructs derived from three theoretical streams in consumer behavior: consumer culture theory, signaling theory, and the associative network memory model. By integrating these diverse theories, the authors provide a conceptual framework, explaining the processes leading to consumers' attitudes toward and likelihood of purchasing global brands. Global brand authenticity, cultural capital, and perceived brand globalness are constructs based mainly on consumer culture theory, and global brand credibility is borrowed from signaling theory. Global brand quality, social responsibility, prestige, and relative price are included as brand associations, deriving mainly from the associative network memory model. These constructs have direct and indirect effects on global brand attitude and global brand purchase likelihood, reflecting the three-dimensional belief\u2013attitude\u2013behavior model in consumer behavior. The authors also introduce self-construal and cosmopolitanism as two pertinent moderators of some of the model paths.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sonya S. 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The structure's architecture, location, and pictorial program bear a remarkable degree of similarity to the caves of his predecessors. The apparent repetition of the earlier designs has led past scholars to dismiss Cave 61 and the art of the time as formulaic and sterile. A closer look at Cave 61 reveals that this project was in fact motivated by a new understanding and practice of artistic appropriation in tenth-century Dunhuang.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d993665-18f1-340f-9c15-f0e25c788d11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2945834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"1203","pageStart":"1149","pagination":"pp. 1149-1203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945834","wordCount":30238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fiona Hackney"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0489ec86-944d-3b51-8af0-1764db9139fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41419665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419665","wordCount":1763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30769835-78d7-334a-81a8-23ceab2e3e7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948997","wordCount":10563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1404","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1722802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bbf0405-9430-3603-82cd-fb06e54e7539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1722802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1242","pageStart":"1093","pagination":"pp. 1093-1242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1722802","wordCount":25156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3805","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"158","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Kauffman","Eric A. Walden"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27750992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10864415"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50154501"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213763"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc755b0a-8d8b-306c-9a25-853c4462013d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27750992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjeleccom"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Electronic Commerce","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":112.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Economics and Electronic Commerce: Survey and Directions for Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27750992","wordCount":53272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"This article reviews the growing body of research on electronic commerce from the perspective of economic analysis. It begins by constructing a new framework for understanding electronic commerce research, then identifies the range of applicable theory and current research in the context of the new conceptual model. It goes on to assess the state-of-the-art of knowledge about electronic commerce phenomena in terms of the levels of analysis here proposed. And finally, it charts the directions along which useful work in this area might be developed. This survey and framework are intended to induce researchers in the field of information systems, the authors' reference discipline, and other areas in schools of business and management to recognize that research on electronic commerce is business-school research, broadly defined. As such, developments in this research area in the next several years will occur across multiple business-school disciplines, and there will be a growing impetus for greater interdisciplinary communication and interaction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbcf2fda-65bb-3173-b638-507f1a9408d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3424674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"1663","pageStart":"1487","pagination":"pp. 1487-1663","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3424674","wordCount":36174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel Carroll"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Return of the Century: Time, Modernity, and the End of History in Angela Carter's 'Nights at the Circus'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509252","wordCount":7684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Middleton"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d008372-9b77-3fd1-bf0c-2076c80a7669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4500299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"O Brother, Let's Go down Home: Loss, Nostalgia and the Blues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4500299","wordCount":12220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"The blues genre is commonly (and not incorrectly) regarded as a key marker of African-American identity and one with 'deep' (folk, or 'down home') roots. But this status is inadequately understood unless it is placed in a context of inter-racial exchange, in which 'roots' are a product of a complex transaction between 'modernity' and 'tradition'. This territory is explored in terms of a thematics of loss, nostalgia and trauma, evident both in blues content and in the historical structure of revival to which the genre has been continually subject. A useful background is the film O Brother, Where Art Thou?, a nostalgic celebration of nostalgia with a blues\/bluegrass inter-racial dimension, and a productive theoretical framework is provided by Lacan's approach to fantasy, loss and nostalgia.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f55d29d2-6610-311e-a4da-866b07a3a168"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"469","pagination":"p. 469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374491","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAULA MARANTZ COHEN"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43821007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384712"},{"name":"oclc","value":"450111086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cbc91f5-246e-3187-9c03-27b30242e916"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43821007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southwestreview"}],"isPartOf":"Southwest Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art theory","Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Meanings of Forgery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43821007","wordCount":5636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Southern Methodist University","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tsun Hang Tey"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20486715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20486715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"905","pageStart":"876","pagination":"pp. 876-905","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Confining the Freedom of the Press in Singapore: A \"Pragmatic\" Press for \"Nation-Building\"?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20486715","wordCount":16064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"Singapore's political leadership has molded a sophisticated press control regime that befits its \"pragmatic\" political ideology on the primacy of executive leadership and limited freedom of expression. This article--setting Singapore's constitutional and legal framework and political system as a backdrop--delves into the legal structure that has been constructed, fine-tuned, and consolidated over decades of legislative amendments to explore its essential features and strictures. This article advances the view that the legal framework is reinforced with a non-legal combination of an ideological construct of a hegemonic culture and consensus politics through strategic political co-optation. The court litigation that was resorted to for vindication also seems to have produced a reinforcing effect. The article also reflects on how the unique press control regime has turned Singapore's de-constructed Fourth Estate into an established political institution.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YVETTE R. PIGGUSH"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51bc1a6c-1fc9-3b3f-b188-7926a22a0e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24476357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernity, Gender, and the Panorama in Early Republican Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24476357","wordCount":12776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANA MORA\u00d1A"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44507840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03630471"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297290668"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c58c754-d9f1-3198-b20e-8934e882a13f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44507840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispamerica"}],"isPartOf":"Hispam\u00e9rica","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Balconeando la historia: La Primera Guerra Mundial en \"Caras y Caretas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44507840","wordCount":2708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"135","publisher":"Saul Sosnowski","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARDIS O. HIGGINS"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42925783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0013175X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba92ecb3-32a3-35bf-8523-29cb71a4eb8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42925783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educhori"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Horizons","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The American contribution to the humanities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42925783","wordCount":7208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Edward Mallot"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24625019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46487730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"200-1214148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd5bc59-9a0a-3639-ab6d-caab21f52131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24625019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Irish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"There's No Good Riot Footage Any More\": Waging Northern Ireland's Media War in Eoin McNamee's \"Resurrection Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24625019","wordCount":10256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1949-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"950b6a6e-db1a-3e03-ac40-82e8a0c7d571"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/227043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Seventy-Third Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To November 1948)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227043","wordCount":55905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1957-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2936107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129682"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705710"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23014"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05f36f2f-e188-3f93-90a1-868cf6e1b951"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2936107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econometrica"}],"isPartOf":"Econometrica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":167.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic","Mathematics - Mathematical analysis"],"title":"Biographical Directory of Members of Econometric Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2936107","wordCount":250696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Partha Mitter"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6c93e34-a24e-320b-a976-83795acfc3b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decentering Modernism: Art History and Avant-Garde Art from the Periphery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619633","wordCount":17794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JESSICA A. HOLMES"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fade9ce5-0691-34bb-b682-3b94dbb50c9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Expert Listening beyond the Limits of Hearing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417288","wordCount":22980,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"Attitudes to the relationship between music and deafness suffer from two related misconceptions: the enduring assumption that hearing is central to musical experience in conjunction with an extreme impression of deafness as total aural loss; and, more recently, the tendency to reduce deaf listening to tactility, as narratives about inborn sensory acuities among the deaf proliferate in the popular imaginary. Increasingly, deafness symbolizes a set of sensory polarities that obscure an intrinsic diversity of musical experiences from which musicology stands to gain, a diversity that encompasses members of Deaf culture and non-culturally deaf people alike, and that is signaled through the person-centered compound \u201cd\/Deaf.\u201d My article builds on recent music scholarship on disability to offer a pluralistic understanding of music and deafness. Beginning with Scottish deaf percussionist Evelyn Glennie, I investigate a range of d\/Deaf accounts of music, including those of Deaf sign language users, hearing aid wearers, and cochlear implant recipients, and of people with music-induced hearing loss. Deafness resists automatic entry points into music, unsettling any straightforward hierarchy of the senses. Deaf people reflect on the musical status of aurality in markedly different ways, just as they offer a complex understanding of vision and touch. For instance, vision is a highly versatile listening strategy and is often more reliable than vibration; touch is feasible because of its contextual dependence on visual cues, and is further tied to a set of material and environmental variables. Ultimately, I argue that d\/Deaf listeners enrich customary notions of musical expertise: deafness belongs in musicology as a diverse set of experiences within the full spectrum of listening.","subTitle":"Music and Deafness","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey C. Alexander"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"909d37ce-2e46-33c2-a5aa-ae50b3722813"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24917105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Performance and Politics: President Obama's Dramatic Reelection in 2012","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917105","wordCount":8020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"Contemporary elections are less about rational policies or even just desserts than they are melodramatic performances about who wears the white and who the black hat. Politics is about performing good versus evil in the dangerously shifting currents that create contemporary social scenes. Economics and poll numbers had Obama an underdog in 2012. How were his performances so felicitous as to prove them a lie?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Kowalski"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25164632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50557235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25164632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Why We Refuse to Listen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25164632","wordCount":24363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16265,16387]],"Locations in B":[[107867,107989]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noga Stiassny"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.23.2.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10849513"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388186"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fccd4c7-9a25-3ab2-8e73-e1a85645774c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/israelstudies.23.2.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond the Local Discourse: Re-thinking the Israeli-Jewish \u201cHitler-wave\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/israelstudies.23.2.06","wordCount":9722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"Hitlerwelle, F\u00fchrerboom, Hitlernostalgie in the German language; in Hebrew there is the famous La'Hit-Ler (Hitler-Schlager) coined by Israeli poet David Avidan, or what Professor Moshe Zuckermann has just recently called Hitleriada (a combination between Hitler and Olympiad):1 all phrases share the wish to describe the great interest that people often (re-)find in the figure of the Nazi F\u00fchrer. And this interest usually emerges in waves. During the 1990s, Israeli art showed an obsessive preoccupation with the figure of Hitler that lasted around a decade and is considered to be a turning point with respect to the ways the Holocaust is represented among Israeli-Jewish artists. By focusing on the work of Israeli artist Boaz Arad, Marcel Marcel (2000), which ended this decade, in comparison to the work of German artist Rudolf Herz, ZUGZWANG (1995), this essay wishes to re-think the recruiting of the image of Hitler in Israeli art, in order to introduce the advantages of transnationalism and a comparative approach to the local art discourse with respect to Holocaust related imagery.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u00c9va Forg\u00e1cs"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec9b76ee-0afc-3c1a-8708-dad19dc5eb9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983249","wordCount":4022,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[16755,16837]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert P. Fletcher"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48122c82-dfdb-3345-9092-32a28c649db7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"394","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-394","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Visual Thinking and the Picture Story in The History of Henry Esmond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463347","wordCount":13744,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20669,20919]],"Locations in B":[[3862,4112]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":"This essay argues that Thackeray's unillustrated three-volume novel The History of Henry Esmond is shaped by modes of perception and representation nascent in the visual culture of nineteenth-century England and epitomized in the comic strip. Through one of Thackeray's own picture stories, it first describes the ekphrastic basis of his narrative imagination and then contextualizes his visual thinking by relating his journalistic reflections on images in society to recent cultural histories of visual experience. Subsequently, the essay demonstrates that Henry Esmond, a seemingly monumental historical novel, is structured by the fractured syntax of the comic picture story and that the picture story's revisionist impulse decenters the autobiographical subject, Henry Esmond, and highlights the heuristic function of his narrative. The argument concludes by revisiting Thackeray's meditations on the picture story, the railroad, and modernity, suggesting that his texts-both picture stories and this bildungsroman-foreground a transformative vision and thus reveal the contingency of subjectivity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Folland"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29546136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b7596a1-7a5d-3f90-acc4-d7979ea87d1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29546136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Robert Rauschenberg's Queer Modernism: The Early Combines and Decoration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29546136","wordCount":16624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"The Combines that Robert Rauschenberg produced between 1953 and 1956 represent a \"queering\" of Abstract Expressionism and, by extension, the culture of postwar modernism itself, through the artist's pronounced use of decoration. The decorative materiality of his work is overlooked by current scholarship, which frames the Combines as either a postmodern allegory of representation or an icongraphically read revelation of his gay identity. An alternative view is to refuse biography and draw on queer theory's opposition to legible\u2014and legislated\u2014identity to read the decorative as a queerly deconstructive strategy deployed to undermine postwar American art's grand narratives of subjectivity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-09-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1738448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66610fcd-f3e2-3016-b4dc-2f7ed126f94f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1738448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"1080","pageStart":"1042","pagination":"pp. 1042+1072-1074+1076-1078+1080","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1738448","wordCount":6650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4156","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"185","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvp7d57c.16","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"028ee7d6-23c9-3f2f-afd5-1c5b365953aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvp7d57c.16"}],"isPartOf":"Anton Pannekoek","keyphrase":["milky way","jeronimo voss","planetarium","galaxy","night sky","blanqui","inverted night","phantasmagoria","astronomy","projection"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"305","pagination":"305-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","Astronomy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Galaxy of Appearances:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvp7d57c.16","wordCount":5195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the research of Dutch astronomer and socialist Anton Pannekoek (1873-1960), the Milky Way was a bewitching paradox of appearances and disappearances. Within that inky darkness, endless particulates and matter obscure the galaxy\u2019s own image. Under ideal conditions for observation, the shape of the Milky Way shoots up from the horizon, cutting obliquely into the sky, and although these elements may render the general contours of the Milky Way visible, there is so much that is not visible. Pannekoek reached towards these vagaries and lacunae in order to grasp the Milky Way\u2019s vast immensity. Throughout a large part of his","subTitle":"Anton Pannekoek and the Planetary Cinema of Jeronimo Voss","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3ee4606-28ee-3048-8ffe-d179796b7883"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"1352","pageStart":"1189","pagination":"pp. 1189-1352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461832","wordCount":64257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-02-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2893371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c07e2aa6-08c4-3a0b-b39f-52f860192005"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2893371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"1228","pageStart":"1143","pagination":"pp. 1143-1228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry","Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2893371","wordCount":69070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5303","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"275","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman K. Denzin"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1996.19.4.341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"102e6a60-24b8-3e8f-b4d3-77836118fc09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1996.19.4.341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prophetic Pragmatism and the Postmodern: A Comment on Maines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1996.19.4.341","wordCount":7603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Belinda Loftus"],"datePublished":"1988-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52905d04-f937-3d61-aeb6-cb0bd4081b2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25557319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"In Search of a Useful Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557319","wordCount":5183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43755365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0015119X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5758b10b-58aa-3ffe-9818-6ac9971f68b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43755365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcomment"}],"isPartOf":"Film Comment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-54, 56-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Jonathan Rosenbaum Polls 29 British Filmpersons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43755365","wordCount":6369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Film Society of Lincoln Center","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glynn S. Lunney Jr."],"datePublished":"2018-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60d9166f-69c8-3627-b113-986ffa00d234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26577740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"1276","pageStart":"1195","pagination":"pp. 1195-1276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Trademark\u2019s Judicial De-Evolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577740","wordCount":44973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"Trademark law has de-evolved. It has transitioned from an efficient mechanism for ensuring competition into an inefficient regime for capturing economic rents. In this Article, I focus on the role that party self-interest has played in biasing the evolution of trademark law. This self-interest tends to lead parties to (1) challenge efficient legal rules and seek to replace them with inefficient, anticompetitive rules, and (2) accede to inefficient, anticompetitive rules once they are in place. Almost by definition, when a rule of trademark law promotes competition, it reduces the market surplus or rents that current producers capture. As a result, parties will seldom spend resources either to defend an efficient trademark rule or to challenge an inefficient trademark rule in the hope of replacing it with a more efficient rule. Instead, inefficient trademark rules offer a party, usually the trademark owner, the opportunity to capture rents. As a result, at least one party will have a correspondingly strong interest in defending such inefficient trademark rules or, if necessary, challenging efficient trademark rules in the hope of replacing them with inefficient trademark rules. The net result has been something of a perfect storm for trademark law. Efficient legal rules are repeatedly challenged until they are replaced with inefficient legal rules, at which point no one challenges them. The entirely predictable result of this process is exactly what scholars have observed: courts have re-written trademark law so that it protects far too much and far too broadly. Rather than ensure competition, it serves to restrict competition and to maximize the profits of trademark owners. Rather than promote consumer welfare, it has become a form of corporate welfare. We cannot, however, fix the problems with trademark law through substantive trademark doctrine. Substantive reform, even radical substantive reform, would simply provide a new starting point from which inefficient common law evolution would again proceed. To fix the ongoing de-evolution of trademark law, we need to change the process of trademark litigation to ensure, first, that parties have an adequate incentive to defend and fight for efficient legal rules, and second, that courts have the information they need to recognize the efficient legal rule and render judgment accordingly. In this Article, I identify and evaluate several possible mechanisms for solving trademark\u2019s ongoing common law de-evolution.","subTitle":"Why Courts Get Trademark Cases Wrong Repeatedly","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Rollins"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3985799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10845453"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53060078"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-214157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3985799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihist"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"723","pageStart":"684","pagination":"pp. 684-723","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reflections on a Spare Tire: Suvs and Postmodern Environmental Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3985799","wordCount":21378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Forest History Society","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"This article identifies sport utility vehicles (SUVs) with postmodern developments in industrial society, automobile manufacturing and marketing, land use, and the environment. A historical backdrop demonstrates links between vehicular systems and conceptions of nature protection: nineteenth-century rail produced monuments at discrete points, whereas the modernist automobile culture of the 1930s-1950s separated nature and urban civilization and created zones of wilderness. Today's SUV culture echoes a more complicated \"de-differentiated\" ideal that can be approached through advertising slogans and spare-tire covers. Viewed pessimistically, this postmodernism means \"no boundaries\" in people's exploitation of the environment; more optimistically it means seamlessly integrated concern-even in vehicles.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zena Pearlstone"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40170154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08948410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9a0e36a-fa5a-389c-be30-41bc0a545fba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40170154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsouthwest"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Southwest","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"832","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-832","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mail-Order \"Katsinam\" and the Issue of Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40170154","wordCount":13763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Journal of the Southwest","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["World Health Organization"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep35807","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd966767-b697-30ce-b9b5-f8bd33a63ebb"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":270.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care First Global Patient Safety Challenge Clean Care is Safer Care","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep35807","wordCount":156116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"World Health Organization","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The WHO Guidelines on Hand Hygiene in Health Care<\/em> provide health-care workers (HCWs), hospital administrators and health authorities with a thorough review of evidence on hand hygiene in health care and specific recommendations to improve practices and reduce transmission of pathogenic microorganisms to patients and HCWs. The present Guidelines<\/em> are intended to be implemented in any situation in which health care is delivered either to a patient or to a specific group in a population. Therefore, this concept applies to all settings where health care is permanently or occasionally performed, such as home care by birth attendants. Definitions of health-care","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Table of Contents","INTRODUCTION","REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC DATA RELATED TO HAND HYGIENE","CONSENSUS RECOMMENDATIONS","PROCESS AND OUTCOME MEASUREMENT","TOWARDS A GENERAL MODEL OF CAMPAIGNING FOR BETTER HAND HYGIENE","PATIENT INVOLVEMENT IN HAND HYGIENE PROMOTION","COMPARISON OF NATIONAL AND SUB-NATIONAL GUIDELINES FOR HAND HYGIENE","REFERENCES","Appendix 1.","Appendix 2.","Appendix 3.","Appendix 4.","Appendix 5.","Appendix 6.","ABBREVIATIONS","AKNOWLEDGEMENTS","Back Matter"],"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel J. Monti, Jr."],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f304122b-c2b4-3026-928c-9a60147dd582"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"830","pageStart":"828","pagination":"pp. 828-830","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231287","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1331262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb99ba77-b133-37e8-9996-e1c648a797a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1331262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1428","pageStart":"1419","pagination":"pp. 1419-1428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - 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Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053170","wordCount":30841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isabelle Launay","Allegra Barlow","Mark Franko"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Citational Poetics in Dance: \"... of a faun (fragments)\" by the Albrecht Knust Quartet, before and after 2000","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524576","wordCount":13616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathan Sivin","Harry Woolf","Phyllis Brooks Bosson"],"datePublished":"1960-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f21d6dd-8448-3572-8de1-ed83c978b09e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":114.0,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Webb"],"datePublished":"1945-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1490019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3413157-ebfd-37e5-8fa2-c5f960e3de2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1490019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The High School Science Library for 1943-1944","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1490019","wordCount":9718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1898661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161391X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35781793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2e69bf-44fe-3f40-b354-94f64170cece"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1898661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missvallhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Valley Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Historical News and Comments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1898661","wordCount":8299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Randall McLeod"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e59bf90-a111-31fb-ae84-f61d722018ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Gogol, the Picturesque, and the Desire for the People: A Reading of \"Rome\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2679280","wordCount":9543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amanda Clarke"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43410729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468000989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa83d647-2602-3899-9dbc-fa08767895cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43410729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Irish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Keepin' a home together\": Performing Domestic Security in Sean O'Casey's \"The Plough and the Stars\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43410729","wordCount":8677,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[49144,49217]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"When Sean O'Case's The Plough and the Stars opened in Dublin in 1926 his contemporary audience was scandalized by his inversions of nationalist historiography. Unlike earlier plays, which employed a naturalist mode to inspire national communion, The Plough portrays the home and homeland of propaganda as overtly theatrical. His set and his characters' participation in the Rising are predicated on visibility, and their theatrical images of domestic security take precedence over reality. This article examines how O'Casey achieves this irony through metatheatrical scenography. A Brechtian reading of the play exposes how he manipulates Irish drama's dominant set\u2014the home\u2014to challenge the increasingly censorious relationship between theatre and state. His treatment of the home reveals how he alters the Abbey's dramatic canon at a crucial nationalist juncture, and opens possibilities for alternative representations of Irishness. Lorsque The Plough and the Stars de Sean O'Casey fut pr\u00e9sent\u00e9e pour la premi\u00e8re fois \u00e0 Dublin en 1926, son public contemporain fut scandalis\u00e9 par ses inversions de l'historiographie nationaliste. Contrairement aux pi\u00e8ces ant\u00e9c\u00e9dentes, qui d\u00e9ployaient le mode naturaliste en vue d'inspirer la communion nationale, Plough dresse un portrait de la patrie et de l'origine, telles que v\u00e9hicul\u00e9es par la propagande, comme relevant de la th\u00e9\u00e2tralit\u00e9 manifeste. Le d\u00e9cor, de m\u00eame que la participation de ses personnages \u00e0ia R\u00e9volte ont comme fondement la visibilit\u00e9, et leurs images th\u00e9\u00e2trales de la s\u00e9curit\u00e9 de la patrie ont precedence sur la r\u00e9alit\u00e9. Cet article examine les m\u00e9thodes par lesquelles O'Casey r\u00e9ussit \u00e0 exprimer cette ironie en d\u00e9ployant une sc\u00e9nographie m\u00e9tath\u00e9\u00e2trale. Une interpr\u00e9tation Brechtienne de la pi\u00e8ce met en \u00e9vidence ses manipulations du d\u00e9cor pr\u00e9dominant du th\u00e9\u00e2tre irlandais - la demeure - dans le but de contester le traitement de censure qu'imposait progressivement \u00e0 l'\u00e9poque l'\u00e9tat au th\u00e9\u00e2tre. Son traitement de la demeure r\u00e9v\u00e8le une transformation du canon dramaturgique de l'Abbaye \u00e0 un stade critique du questionnement nationaliste, en ouvrant des possibilit\u00e9s de repr\u00e9sentations alternatives de l'identit\u00e9 irlandaise.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gertrud Koch","Miriam Hansen"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce391543-bf08-3922-8024-181c748a97d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"B\u00e9la Bal\u00e1zs: The Physiognomy of Things","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488137","wordCount":4361,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[37242,37325]],"Locations in B":[[13582,13665]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"40","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. D. King"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3827933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"When Theater Becomes History: Final Curtains on the Victorian Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827933","wordCount":4265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elissa Marder"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"456221833"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cb1b616-ffbb-34c4-aafc-59601999aebf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dark Room Readings: Scenes of Maternal Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030780","wordCount":15822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Depoorter"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4561828-bb87-324c-ab80-f4551fa6b3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40380280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"1868","pageStart":"1831","pagination":"pp. 1831-1868","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Technology and Uncertainty: The Shaping Effect on Copyright Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380280","wordCount":17128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"157","abstract":"This Article examines the symbiotic relationship between copyright law and technology. I describe how an environment characterized by rapid technological change creates two conditions that determine the direction and evolution of copyright law: legal delay and legal uncertainty. I explain how uncertainty over the application of existing copyright law to newly emerging technology catalyzes the actions of copyright owners and users. I argue that uncertainty and delay (1) have an enabling effect on anticopyright sentiments, (2) lead to a greater reliance on self-help efforts by content providers and users, and (3) induce legislative involvement in copyright law. In the final Part of this Article, I consider how the framework of technological uncertainty and delay helps to explain a number of emerging issues in copyright law. I conclude by providing normative proposals for copyright reform. These proposals relate to the choice between standards and rules, as well as the role of courts, legislators, and administrative agencies in the development of copyright law.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Bann"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3d1bbb4-e676-318f-b1f5-e2c0bc1f25c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Response: Reasons to Be Cheerful","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067298","wordCount":4991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allison de Fren"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40649958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ab0b268-81ad-37be-aab9-0766b6142a42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40649958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Anatomical Gaze in Tomorrow's Eve","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40649958","wordCount":15461,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36689,37056]],"Locations in B":[[70611,71018]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"In the sf novel L'Eve future [Tomorrow's Eve, 1886] by Philippe Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam, the female body is dissected repeatedly: a female android is technologically disassembled, a living woman is poetically blazoned, and a dead woman is cinematically deconstructed. This article explores the novel's central thematic of dissection, tracing its rhetorical and visual coding to the anatomy theater of the Renaissance, and in particular to the work of Andreas Vesalius, to whom the scientist-anatomist Thomas Edison (a character in the novel) is explicitly compared. Within the anatomy theater, the medical investigation of the body was conducted within a highly symbolic and ritualized environment in which the act of dissection was intended not only to foster empirical analysis but also to inspire metaphysical awe. Such awe was cultivated via an anamorphic or doubled vision, which encouraged a sublime reading of grotesque phenomena\u2014 that is, a reading in which dissection is simultaneously a revelation of the interior wonders and horrors of the body and of larger, universal truths that defy both vision and intelligibility. This doubled vision via dissection is reproduced in the novel with the help of modern technological inventions that encourage the kind of \"cognitive estrangement\" and \"sense of wonder\" that will become associated with later science fiction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4330352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f40cb4c-650e-361b-a7fd-09dc958705a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4330352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4330352","wordCount":3563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Middle East Institute","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2939128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4b8f67f-aed4-3b02-a874-440221233ef8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2939128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2939128","wordCount":22856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1911-06-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25286830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a18921e1-5f2c-3e5c-b134-3b3de992850f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25286830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1911,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25286830","wordCount":97162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2634","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Drouet","William A. Daily"],"datePublished":"1956-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24477637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00964336"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24477637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"butlerubotastud"}],"isPartOf":"Butler University Botanical Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":218.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"REVISION OF THE COCCOID MYXOPHYCEAE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24477637","wordCount":150428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Butler University","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arnold Goldman"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99e25da8-ded5-3d9d-9225-65f28cfa2a17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25485375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Elliot Paul's \"Transition\" Years: 1926-28","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25485375","wordCount":15381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DINA SMITH"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d0e3a7b-836b-34e7-a5b7-324238b86f9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Narrative Limits of the Global Guggenheim","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029967","wordCount":7316,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49875,50050]],"Locations in B":[[32032,32207]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Focussing on the recent exhibition of artist Marjetica Potrc, this essay relates the Guggenheim New York and the Guggenheim Bilbao to theories of globalization, asking how globalizing processes have influenced the arts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurie Kane Lew"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce38195f-b0bc-3722-b6b5-870d0e6a06b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Collection and Recollection: William Hazlitt and the Poetics of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601239","wordCount":19197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Boston University","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-06-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f730ea9-d482-36d8-a20d-505c83372380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1716556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"1523","pageStart":"1457","pagination":"pp. 1457+1502-1503+1505-1508+1512+1514-1516+1518-1523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1716556","wordCount":12539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3676","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"148","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Hird"],"datePublished":"1999-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23408010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00163058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"896680b1-ef5c-38a8-93c0-cb683d73318f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23408010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"furnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Furniture History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Rantoul","Dr. Green","W. R. Livermore","Mr. Howe","Mr. Matthews","C. H. Hart","Mr. Ford","Charles Francis Adams"],"datePublished":"1909-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25079975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8812d0e4-9862-3038-91c0-33b3d2af465d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25079975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Civil law"],"title":"January Meeting, 1910. Anniversary Reminiscences; Campaign around Vicksburg, 1862; Verses by John Quincy Adams; Thomas Paine, Declaration of Independence; Supposed Miniature of Cromwell; Broadside on Old Tenor, 1751; Proclamation by Spencer Phips, 1751; Slavery in Virginia, 1819; Memoir of William Phineas Upham","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25079975","wordCount":27799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Tryon"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4812c629-57cb-3a1b-8f98-9c73db6adda3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Virtual Cities and Stolen Memories: Temporality and the Digital in \"Dark City\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019162","wordCount":8188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Sims"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25046648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"186b0d99-5671-335b-b557-a01c5a692c66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25046648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Safe Science: Material and Social Order in Laboratory Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25046648","wordCount":17269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Scientific laboratories can sometimes be dangerous places to work, and safety concerns can have a significant impact on the scientific research process. Because safety practices specify both behavioral norms and technical standards, they provide an opportunity to better understand the relationships between the organizational and epistemic aspects of scientific culture. This paper presents a case study of a 'pulsed-power' facility at the US Los Alamos National Laboratory, where electrical hazards are a major concern. Drawing on work by Mary Douglas and others, I show how safety in the pulsed-power laboratory can be understood in terms of concepts of order and pollution. In particular, I argue that the laboratory is a cultural setting that generates both material and social order in science. The concept of 'traceability' - the ideal of being able to trace visual and logical connections between system components - is the central metaphor for material order in this setting. This metaphor is enacted in the design of pulsed-power systems and through various safety procedures that function as rituals. These rituals, and the concept of traceability itself, also contribute to social order by helping to shape norms of conduct in the laboratory, which in turn structure relationships between the laboratory work group and the larger institution.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-06-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25399207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7fe2ce0-af2d-3916-8b5a-943c4cc079e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25399207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical treatment","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25399207","wordCount":84365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5399","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hannah Landecker"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/501105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2f39828-bb9f-3a5e-82ba-76846b600864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/501105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Microcinematography and the History of Science and Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/501105","wordCount":6469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41721,41795]],"Locations in B":[[26276,26350]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"ABSTRACT The history of microcinematography is explored here as an example of the possible historiographical directions for work on science and film in the twentieth century. Topics discussed include investigations of the role of time in experiment, and the constant interplay between static and dynamic modes of imaging in scientific research; the role of films as depictions of both the objects of science and the process of scientific looking itself; and the possibility for telling a social history of science through investigation of the production and reception of cinema.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Russo","Daniel Warner"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1056a8e-fd47-3e2d-b518-5d8edeff1aa2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rough Music, Futurism, and Postpunk Industrial Noise Bands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389097","wordCount":7661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/237901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce0ece83-35f6-3cd6-a040-b50305cc054c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/237901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":309.0,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 1999","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/237901","wordCount":225426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie E. Cohen"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90a1fbd1-5029-3c4e-8b5f-e27bd7f0182f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":102.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"462","pagination":"pp. 462-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lochner in Cyberspace: The New Economic Orthodoxy of \"Rights Management\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290291","wordCount":54690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26365072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3100ce5a-27b9-3304-85a1-e1f75df45fd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26365072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Preface:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155jhw3.5","wordCount":6641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Kosovo and the outlines of Europe\u2019s new order","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD BENJAMIN"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8a17cea-e614-38ca-81d4-92a5ae2a0e4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Hartley","Lewis M. Schwartz","G. Curtis Olsen"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b25cbb46-acc8-3e17-bd86-70b028444446"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30210131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210131","wordCount":36349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"21\/22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark !Neumann","Timothy A. Simpson"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1997.20.4.319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b86a5d-a8d3-338d-ba59-650d2a078b69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1997.20.4.319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Smuggled Sound: Bootleg Recording and the Pursuit of Popular Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1997.20.4.319","wordCount":13201,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16265,16494]],"Locations in B":[[19615,19885]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"This paper explores the meanings that bootleg recording holds in peoples' lives. \u201cBootlegging\u201d refers to the practice of making unauthorized recordings of live performances. Our paper is an interpretive analysis of interviews with bootleg producers and collectors. In their accounts, they suggest how their activities offer an extraordinary example of what it means to participate in contemporary popular culture. As bootleggers smuggle tape recorders into concerts, or trade tapes in underground networks, they pursue rare artifacts of popular culture. Their stories of bootleg taping, collecting and trading suggest an alternative to depictions of popular culture as merely a process of production and consumption. Instead, these accounts demonstrate how some people document their participation in mass cultural events on their own terms and for their own uses. Here, bootlegging is seen as an attempt by people to capture live performances, to collect them as a source of memory and authenticity, and to mediate the events of their lives through means of technological reproduction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosemary J. 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Murphy"],"datePublished":"2018-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/utopianstudies.29.1.0021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92b633dd-000a-353d-af9d-65c919888a0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/utopianstudies.29.1.0021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Physiology Is Destiny: The Fate of Eugenic Utopia in the Fiction of H. P. Lovecraft and Olaf Stapledon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/utopianstudies.29.1.0021","wordCount":6725,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Lovecraft and Stapledon imagined alien societies as utopias whose order and destiny derive from their citizens' eugenically altered physiologies. Stapledon's focus on eugenics as a means for achieving utopia during the interwar period is well known, but Lovecraft's worldview is generally understood to be dysgenic and dystopian in its obsession with racial and cultural degeneration. Lovecraft's fullest depiction of an alien civilization, the Old Ones in At the Mountains of Madness, relies upon a eugenic prehistory that is never explicitly narrated. The Old Ones' implicitly eugenic origin accounts for the utopian features of their society but also foreshadows their fall to their genetically engineered slave species, the shoggoths, which supplant their creators through their superior adaptability. The failure of the Old Ones' eugenics of homogeneity contrasts with the triumph of the eugenic project of diversification pursued by the Symbiotic civilization, which leads the cosmos to utopia in Stapledon's Star Maker.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN MARKS"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0734919X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"308996a7-aa54-3373-9225-53590c3081cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"junivfilmvidas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the University Film and Video Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Film Music: The Material, Literature and Present State of Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686878","wordCount":25165,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[46501,46658],[46743,47061],[47131,47274]],"Locations in B":[[8611,8766],[8857,9176],[9247,9386]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tzvetan Todorov","Arthur Goldhammer"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20028089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94a8d4a5-8e99-31ca-b21e-d2a49424c842"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20028089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Avant-Gardes & Totalitarianism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20028089","wordCount":9215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"136","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marsha Kinder"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db997e10-d7d0-304e-b2e4-b8a671fa4d04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23722028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Honoring the Past and Creating the Future in Cyberspace: New Technologies and Cultural Specificity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722028","wordCount":8908,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43975,44285]],"Locations in B":[[19752,20061]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"After tracing my academic journey from eighteenth-century English literary scholarship to new media production, I interweave three discursive strands: descriptions and demonstrations of several experimental interdisciplinary projects being produced at the Labyrinth Project, a research initiative on interactive narrative that I direct at the University of Southern California Annenberg Center for Communication; five general principles learned while making these projects; and tentative suggestions about how they might be applied to Pacific Islands studies. Despite the diversity of works presented (Mysteries and Desire: Searching the Worlds of John Rechy, an interactive memoir about gay Chicano novelist John Rechy; The Danube Exodus, a museum installation developed in collaboration with Hungarian filmmaker P\u00e9ter Forg\u00e1cs; The Dawn at My Back: a Memoir of a Black Texas Upbringing, a DVD-ROM based on an autobiography by African-American photographer Carroll Parrott Blue; an e-learning course on Russian Modernism with an online role-playing game at its center; a computer game for teens called Runaways; and a website called Dreamwaves), all adhere to five basic principles: honoring the past, emphasizing conceptualization over technical mastery, taking a collaborative approach to interface design, searching for culturally specific metaphors, and leveraging the transformative potential of database narratives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles T. Wolfe"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23335072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919714"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51169498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-263456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddebbf8a-9648-38ec-8a6b-1d630842e12f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23335072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histphillifescie"}],"isPartOf":"History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Do Organisms Have An Ontological Status?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23335072","wordCount":16633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn - Napoli","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"The category \"organism\" has an ambiguous status: is it scientific or is it philosophical? Or, if one looks at it from within the relatively recent field or sub-field of philosophy of biology, is it a central, or at least legitimate category therein, or should it be dispensed with? In any case, it has long served as a kind of scientific bolstering for a philosophical train of argument which seeks to refute the mechanistic or reductionist trend, which has been perceived as dominant since the 17th century, whether in the case of Stahlian animism, Leibnizian monadology, the neo-vitalism of Hans Driesch, or, lastly, of the \"phenomenology of organic life\" in the 20th century, with authors such as Kurt Goldstein, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Georges Canguilhem. In this paper I try to reconstruct some of the main interpretive stages or layers of the concept of organism in order to evaluate it critically. How might organism be a useful concept if one rules out the excesses of organismic biology and metaphysics? Varieties of instrumentalism and what I call the projective concept of organism are appealing, but perhaps ultimately unsatisfying.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Esther Bols","Luc Smits","Matty Weijenberg"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43775122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03932990"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41560754"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237051"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70185ec8-f485-3673-bfab-8847528785e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43775122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojepid"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Epidemiology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":293.0,"pageEnd":"1001","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-1001","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Healthy Living: The European Congress of Epidemiology, 2015","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43775122","wordCount":298190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Teuvo Ahti"],"datePublished":"2000-03-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4393890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00715794"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ff92520-7aea-3cf2-a563-b174581f2562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4393890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"florneot"}],"isPartOf":"Flora Neotropica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":366.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Cladoniaceae","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4393890","wordCount":180109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":"The neotropical Cladoniaceae (lichen-forming Ascomycota: Lecanorales) comprise 184 known species in four genera, Cladia Nylander, Cladina Nylander, Cladonia Hill ex P. Browne, and Pycnothelia Dufour. Twenty-nine taxa are described as new: Cladia globosa Ahti, Cladina arbuscula subsp. pachyderma Ahti, C. atrans Ahti, C. kalbii Ahti, C. kriegeri Ahti & S. Stenroos, Cladonia chimantae Ahti, C. cinerella Ahti, C. crustacea Ahti, C. curta Ahti & Marcelli, C. cyanescens Ahti, C. farinophylla Ahti, C. glabra Ahti, C. hians Ahti, C. huberi Ahti, C. itatiaiae Ahti & Marcelli, C. latiloba Ahti & Marcelli, C. lingulata Ahti, C. marcellii Ahti & S. Stenroos, C. megaphylla Ahti & Marcelli, C. obscurata Ahti, C. obtecta Ahti, C. piedadensis Ahti, C. polystomata Ahti & Sipman, C. prancei Ahti, C. pumila Ahti, C. sipmanii Ahti, C. spathulata Ahti, C. tachirae Ahti, and Cladonia sect. Strepsiles Ahti. New nomenclatural combinations are Cladina arbuscula subsp. boliviana (Ahti) Ahti, C. arbuscula subsp. imshaugii (Ahti) Ahti, Cladonia anaemica (Nylander) Ahti, C. multipartita (M\u00fcller Argoviensis) Ahti, C. parvipes (Vainio) S. Stenroos, and C. pulverulenta (L. Scriba) Ahti. Many previously described taxa are reduced to synonymy. Keys are provided for the species. Synonymy, typifications, descriptions, secondary chemistry, distribution maps, habitats, economic uses, and a selection of herbarium voucher specimens are given for each species. Most of the species are restricted to the Neotropics and the greatest species diversity is found in southeast Brazil, the Guayana Shield, the northern Andes, and Hispaniola. \/\/\/ Las Cladoniaceae (Ascomycota liquenizados: Lecanorales) de Am\u00e9rica tropical y subtropical (N\u00e9otropico) est\u00e1n constituidas hasta el momento por 184 especies, distribuidas en cuatro g\u00e9neros diferentes: Cladia Nylander, Cladina Nylander, Cladonia Hill ex. P. Browne y Pycnothelia Dufour. Se describen los siguientes 29 nuevos t\u00e1xones: Cladia globosa Ahti, Cladina arbuscula subsp. pachyderma Ahti, C. atrans Ahti, C. kalbii Ahti, C. kriegeri Ahti & S. Stenroos, Cladonia chimantae Ahti, C. cinerella Ahti, C. crustacea Ahti, C. curta Ahti & Marcelli, C. cyanescens Ahti, C. farinophylla Ahti, C. glabra Ahti, C. hians Ahti, C. huberi Ahti, C. itatiaiae Ahti & Marcelli, C. latiloba Ahti & Marcelli, C. lingulata Ahti, C. marcellii Ahti & S. Stenroos, C. megaphylla Ahti & Marcelli, C. obscurata Ahti, C. obtecta Ahti, C. piedadensis Ahti, C. polystomata Ahti & Sipman, C. prancei Ahti, C. pumila Ahti, C. sipmanii Ahti, C. spathulata Ahti, C. tachirae Ahti y Cladonia sect. Strepsiles Ahti. Se proponen las siguientes nuevas combinaciones: Cladina arbuscula subsp. boliviana (Ahti) Ahti, C. arbuscula subsp. imshaugii (Ahti) Ahti, Cladonia anaemica (Nylander) Ahti, C. multipartita (M\u00fcller Argoviensis) Ahti, C. parvipes (Vainio) S. Stenroos y C. pulverulenta (L. Scriba) Ahti. Se establecen numerosas sinonimias para algunos t\u00e1xones descritos con anterioridad. Se incluyen claves para las especies y sus sinonimias. Para cada especie se realiza la tipificaci\u00f3n, descripci\u00f3n, qu\u00edmica, mapa de distribuci\u00f3n geogr\u00e1fica y habitat, tambi\u00e9n se indican los herbarios donde est\u00e1n depositados los pliegos. La mayor parte de las especies son end\u00e9micas para la regi\u00f3n neotropical, aunque algunas especies tienen \u00e1reas de distribuci\u00f3n mas amplias. Destacan el sureste de Brasil, el Escudo de Guayana, el Norte de los Andes y las Antillas por presentar el mayor n\u00famero de endemismos y la mayor diversidad.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wm. E. Ritter"],"datePublished":"1928-03-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1654453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b66247d6-3f7e-3ad5-99da-98a5e963f766"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1654453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Science and the Newspapers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1654453","wordCount":7144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1733","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1904-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abab6f8c-b42b-320c-8d0a-e06980a2e47c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/282659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":139.0,"pageEnd":"cxxxviii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cxxxviii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association Held at St. Louis, Missouri, September, 1904 Also of the Fifth and Sixth Annual Meetings of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast Held at San Francisco, California December, 1903 and December, 1904","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282659","wordCount":63765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d05efa5-7704-3177-a8ed-3ccd88283720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/957176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957176","wordCount":29374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1560","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407063"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50649976"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0cb07cc-8215-3e24-9fdc-2d88766cdda5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26370093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecompbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Integrative and Comparative Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":250.0,"pageEnd":"e250","pageStart":"e1","pagination":"pp. e1-e250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Symposia and Oral Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370093","wordCount":264498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Gelderloos"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43556112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6fab18d-b51f-329c-a400-bc43ac080b14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43556112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Simply Reproducing Reality\u2014Brecht, Benjamin, and Renger-Patzsch on Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43556112","wordCount":11804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"This article reads Albert Renger-Patzsch's photographic theory and practice in the context of Benjamin's and Brecht's dismissals of his work in order to recover the paradoxical interplay between documentation and perceptual training central to debates about photography as a specifically modern medium during the 1920s. I argue that, rather than evincing a na\u00efve faith in verisimilitude, Renger-Patzsch mobilized ideas of visual analogy, formal play, and embodied vision to foreground the camera's potential for disrupting perceptual habits. Returning to this moment of Weimar photographic theory can help recover deeper aesthetic tensions among formal, documentary, and critical demands made of the medium.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle E. Bloom"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pygmalionesque Delusions and Illusions of Movement: Animation from Hoffmann to Truffaut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771350","wordCount":14657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Endelman"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43694757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cada144b-ba86-3271-93aa-01ff4fc48ae6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43694757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Displaying the state: visual signs and colonial construction in Jordan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43694757","wordCount":11704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"How do colonial states make themselves known to their citizens? Drawing on sociological, post-colonial, and feminist theories, this article argues that colonial authorities make the state visible to its citizens and thereby establish its territoriality. The case of Jordan is considered as a prime example for the visual means of creating state ideological power through the cult of the Hashemite monarch. The origins and logic of this practice must be traced back to the British colonial mandate over the country that operated from 1922 to 1946. When in Jordan, British officials constructed state presence through a variety of methods including building desert forts, designing ornate tribal uniforms for the military, and showing the Jordanian flag in various areas throughout the country. The present account analyzes these and other instances of the display of state power through a reappraisal of the work of Clifford Geertz. This article identifies the foundation of the state-citizen relationship especially for new states in ideological power expressed materially.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Godfrey"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6be00d0-3d21-397c-89d1-183253398c90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 90-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photography Found and Lost: On Tacita Dean's Floh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397626","wordCount":12770,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19181,19467]],"Locations in B":[[54046,54330]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NICHOLAS MATHEW"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26643944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c965f22-9493-39b4-84a6-52895c00bbe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26643944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interesting Haydn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26643944","wordCount":18821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":"This article examines the idea of interest and the interesting in the late eighteenth century through Haydn\u2019s London experiences of the 1790s. It argues that several of Haydn\u2019s London compositions, together with the surviving records of his English trips, bear the traces of a metropolitan mediascape and urban commercial environment in which attention and desire were newly conceivable in terms of the psychic \u201cinvestments\u201d of interest\u2014a concept that notably oscillates between what we would nowadays consider separate economic and aesthetic meanings. Looking again at Haydn\u2019s late encounter with England\u2019s burgeoning commercial society might prompt musicologists to rethink the nature of their own scholarly interests, as well as the deeper histories of currently popular methodological paradigms that aim to resolve musicology\u2019s objects of study into networks of people and things gathered together by entangled interests and \u201cconcerns.\u201d","subTitle":"On Attention\u2019s Materials","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geraldine Joncich Clifford"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/368144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976310"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e836caa0-8683-3bc1-883f-dd54a9391097"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/368144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histeducquar"}],"isPartOf":"History of Education Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Home and School in 19th Century America: Some Personal-History Reports from the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/368144","wordCount":15450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"History of Education Society","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Anthony Reese"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ced0275f-239d-392f-b522-4686bd7ac21f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"1534","pageStart":"1489","pagination":"pp. 1489-1534","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Copyrightable Subject Matter in the \u201cNext Great Copyright Act\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377574","wordCount":20798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"The drafters of the Next Great Copyright Act will have to establish the subject matter that their statute will protect. Currently, the 1976 Copyright Act protects a very broad range of subject matter, though its reach is not unlimited. Perfume, for example, falls outside all of the categories of subject matter protected in the current statute. The question of what subject matter copyright law protects has been largely, though not entirely, uncontroversial in recent years, and this Article does not propose that the Next Great Copyright Act expand or contract copyright\u2019s subject matter. Instead, it draws on experience under the current act and its predecessor (the 1909 Copyright Act) to offer lessons to guide legislators in drafting a new statute\u2019s subject-matter provisions. Most importantly, Congress should expressly and exhaustively enumerate in the statute all of the categories of subject matter that it intends to protect. Congress should not delegate authority to the courts or the Copyright Office to find other, unenumerated categories of subject matter copyrightable. In the past, Congress appears to have left open the possibility that subject matter not enumerated in the statute\u2014such as, for example, perfume under the 1976 Act\u2014might nevertheless be copyrightable, either by writing a statute (the 1909 Act) that could be read to protect every type of authorship that the Constitution authorizes Congress to protect or by indicating (in the 1976 Act) that the statutory list of categories of copyrightable subject matter is nonexhaustive. The Next Great Copyright Act should reject both approaches. In addition to identifying all of the categories of authorship that it wishes to protect, Congress should statutorily define each enumerated category, and should do so with sufficient breadth that rapid technological developments do not quickly make the definitions obsolete. The current statute, in contrast to the 1909 Act, demonstrates how this can be done. Finally, Congress should make clear that works of authorship incorporating preexisting material\u2014in particular, compilations of preexisting material\u2014are copyrightable only if they come within one of the expressly enumerated categories.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARIA DAMON"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b99078c-7c8b-3f18-8d57-46ba0cc93d4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24726737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma2"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TWO MODERNIST PRECURSORS IN CULTURAL STUDIES AND POETICS: (HOW) CAN THEY HELP US NOW?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726737","wordCount":4074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Poetry Foundation","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Hicks Olivas"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"William Carlos Williams at the Whitney: The Search for the Lost Object","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466403","wordCount":5084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Huyssen","Anson Rabinbach"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8fdf1c9-02ba-3b18-a9d4-1e6f91738e94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30040958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New German Critique: The First Decade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040958","wordCount":9456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"95","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clarissa Vierke"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.1.09","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db11993b-1c66-32d3-b18d-c41f990ab852"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.1.09"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cWhat Is There In My Speaking\u201d: Re-Explorations of Language in Abdilatif Abdalla's Anthology of Prison Poetry, Sauti Ya Dhiki<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.1.09","wordCount":12513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"This paper undertakes an aesthetic reading of Abdilatif Abdalla's anthology of his prison poetry, Sauti ya Dhiki [Voice of Agony]. While his poetry has been repeatedly analyzed as a form of critical discourse, its poetic angle has so far been rather neglected. Instead of presenting a catalogue of stylistic features, this article aims to show that in his poetry \u201cmeaning\u201d emerges not beyond but out of poetic form. Concentrating on the centrality of language, the prosodic pattern, as well as the use of topoi in his poetry, it questions the concept of poetry as giving form to an underlying idea. Poetry does not merely \u201ctranslate\u201d political ideas or prison experience into poetic form; rather, poetic form and language shape the production of thoughts, if not the whole experience of prison. Conceptually, I refer to notions like \u201ccultural figuration\u201d as well as Michael Taussig's concept of mimesis that seek to go beyond a dichotomy of form and content to highlight the thought-inspiring force of language that has taken form.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ando Arike"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8a36218-ae94-3426-8f82-34624fdc9205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1577239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Are Humans for?: Art in the Age of Post-Human Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577239","wordCount":3997,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55673,56079]],"Locations in B":[[14091,14496]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"If the development of mass media utterly revolutionized the situation of art in the 20th century, current research into the technological reconfiguration and replacement of the human organism promises an even more radical disruption of art's cultural status. As engineers contemplate the creation of artificial life, artistic creation again finds its traditional values and procedures called into question. How will artists respond to the challenges posed by cyborg culture?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Lechner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3190ae2d-fa5a-394e-a0f9-cc398b8e2b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1088","pageStart":"1086","pagination":"pp. 1086-1088","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231310","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-12-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2879453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9840599a-5304-39d1-8f0b-18ae30496fa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2879453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"1556","pageStart":"1533","pagination":"pp. 1533-1556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2879453","wordCount":24705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5037","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"254","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1932-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/498269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"976d60ad-4296-3dcf-bf01-14575862ce57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/498269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1932,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"General Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America December 29-31, 1931","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/498269","wordCount":4123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. P. RICHARDSON","Edgar B. Whitcomb","Edsel B. Ford","K. T. Keller","Robert H. Tannahill","William A. Bostick","Lillian Henkel Haass"],"datePublished":"1950-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41505099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00119636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f5fcdd1-9be4-3649-8ab7-5038c4312951"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41505099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulldetrinstarts"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE ARTS COMMISSION ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR 1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41505099","wordCount":10507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Detroit Institute of Arts","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eitan Wilf"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41515312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ec919a-b211-319f-95eb-fecba8e8f49f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41515312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rituals of Creativity: Tradition, Modernity, and the \"Acoustic Unconscious\" in a U.S. Collegiate Jazz Music Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41515312","wordCount":11648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":"In this article, I seek to complicate the distinction between imitation and creativity, which has played a dominant role in the modern imaginary and anthropological theory. I focus on a U.S. collegiate jazz music program, in which jazz educators use advanced sound technologies to reestablish immersive interaction with the sounds of past jazz masters against the backdrop of the disappearance of performance venues for jazz. I analyze a key pedagogical practice in the course of which students produce precise replications of the recorded improvisations of past jazz masters and then play them in synchrony with the recordings. Through such synchronous iconization, students inhabit and reenact the creativity epitomized by these recordings. I argue that such a practice, which I call a \"ritual of creativity,\" suggests a coconstitutive relationship between imitation and creativity, which has intensified under modernity because of the availability of new technologies of digital reproduction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helmut Engelhart"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4166658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03621979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c530158-9abd-32dc-8f11-4d2536ef6a73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4166658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpaulgettmusej"}],"isPartOf":"The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Early History of Jacques-Louis David's \"The Farewell of Telemachus and Eucharis\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4166658","wordCount":18542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"J. Paul Getty Trust","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Wood"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Regarding Soviet Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360609","wordCount":6275,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42327,42674]],"Locations in B":[[2387,2724]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manfred Thaller"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44384248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09366784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564446955"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d72d56ca-76cb-3e56-bd73-42776e128e56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44384248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsociresesupp"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung. Supplement","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":103.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between the Chairs. An Interdisciplinary Career","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44384248","wordCount":56557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The author was one of the earliest representatives of computer applications within historical research in Germany, later being appointed to the first professorship for computer applications in the Humanities in Germany outside of linguistics. The following text describes his experiences as part of that development, which lead from the beginnings in the seventies to the current state of \"Digital Humanities\". His view on this development of an interdisciplinary area left him with rather mixed memories: behind a sparkling front story of an enfolding field, he frequently had the feeling that there was a tendency to ignore the huge epistemic potential of a serious attempt to apply computer science to the field of history in favor of glamorous but shallow short term goals.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julius Bryant"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02609568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502280417"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f2e01b2-b0dc-37a9-817e-aae9b66af7b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24395447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdecartsocpre"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Decorative Arts Society 1850 - the Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u2018The progress and present condition of Modern Art\u2019: FINE ART AT THE 1862 EXHIBITION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24395447","wordCount":10240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"38","publisher":"The Decorative Arts Society 1850 to the Present","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liang Luo"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51b29778-3ba8-351f-8a02-7e4fc39ea17e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24886568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Communications"],"title":"Drill and Distraction in the Yellow Submarine: On the Dominance of War in Friedrich Kittler\u2019s Media Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/341236","wordCount":13637,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[44113,44250]],"Locations in B":[[32850,32987]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl Pearson","G. M. Morant"],"datePublished":"1934-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2332202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063444"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23406"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2332202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biometrika"}],"isPartOf":"Biometrika","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":225.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Wilkinson Head of Oliver Cromwell and Its Relationship to Busts, Masks and Painted Portraits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2332202","wordCount":85553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shoshana Felman"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0257c7c-a6f2-301c-8db8-14fee43404ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2903217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In an Era of Testimony: Claude Lanzmann's Shoah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903217","wordCount":19084,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[14848,14961],[16265,16387]],"Locations in B":[[64690,64802],[64821,64966]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"97","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Sturm"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae9fec48-1e52-30ef-a4ed-87ead0411bcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"458","pagination":"pp. 458-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Second Generation Employment Discrimination: A Structural Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123737","wordCount":56851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":"The judiciary's traditional rule-based approach has been successful in reducing overt discrimination against women and people of color. It has been less effective in addressing more subtle and complex forms of workplace inequity. These second generation forms of bias result from patterns of interaction, informal norms, networking, mentoring, and evaluation. Drawing on the potential of recent Supreme Court decisions, Professor Sturm proposes a structural regulatory solution to this problem of second generation employment discrimination. Her approach links the efforts of courts, workplaces, employees, lawyers, and mediating organizations to construct a regime that encourages employers to engage in effective problem solving. This approach enables employers to combine legal compliance with proactive efforts to improve their firms. This Article details three case studies that reveal some of the building blocks of a successful structural approach.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne LUSSAGNET"],"datePublished":"1949-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379174"},{"name":"oclc","value":"105851932, 85447168"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7913d550-a020-3c43-9c85-fb524b35c15f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Journal de la Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des am\u00e9ricanistes","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE AM\u00c9RICANISTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720824","wordCount":41836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des Am\u00e9ricanistes","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jedidiah J. Kroncke"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5bb08ad-c156-340f-9827-a616087e50d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26794290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"environmentallaw"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Law","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DISCIPLINING UTOPIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26794290","wordCount":29717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Lewis & Clark Law School","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"Experimentation in communal land is an American tradition. From the colonial era onward, citizens have been inspired to build communities predicated on religious or economic ideas of property that would today be considered radical. Many historical American social movements, especially those tied to racial justice, explicitly imagined a communal relationship to land. Thus, while often held out internationally as the leading normative proponent of individual property rights, the United States has historically been seen as a destination for enacting experiments in cooperative landholding. While customary land practices are still pervasive globally, the trope of the tragedy of the commons has nevertheless lent an air of inevitability to the privatization of land. Yet, at the turn of the twentieth century the most popular American economist was Henry George. George inspired attempts at home and abroad to recommunalize land based on an aggressive critique of private land markets. Georgist communities used common law trusts to organize land collectively on which communities could then grow. While experiments in this vein and other traditions of what are now called \u201cintentional communities\u201d have shown some durability, they have not yet been able to provide an easily accessible precedent for large segments of the American population to \u201copt-out\u201d of land markets\u2014equally true internationally in the struggle over alternative forms of development. This Article examines these visions of cooperative landholding through a historical and comparative analysis to develop new insights for this now-frustrated and submerged American tradition. Primary among these is the growing disconnect of intentional land communities from social movement politics and their flawed embrace of idealized imaginations of how traditional communal land tenure systems operated. Such traditional systems were both routinely nondemocratic, and required the production of coercive norms which precluded easy exit by participants. In contrast, the domestic and international experience of other common interest land communities demonstrates that modern legal forms are unlikely to generate these types of coercive bonds on their own, and that thinner forms of commitment are more likely to produce dynamics of replication. Conservation and indigenous land trusts hold similar lessons for how the legal design of communal land is central to their success. At the same time, the transition over the twentieth century from communal land being held in a trust to being held through the corporate form has only hastened the degeneration of land cooperatives, as many communitarians have prioritized localist direct democracy over the legal self-discipline that enables longitudinal commitments and durability. This Article posits that constructive legal self-discipline can be achieved through a renewed use of trusts or hierarchically-organized corporate collectives. Networking such institutions can more effectively confront startup barriers and regulatory dissonance, but most importantly allows communitarian land holding develop into genuine alternative models which can be accessed by citizens from all strata of society.","subTitle":"THE FUTURE OF COOPERATIVE LANDHOLDING","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Troy L. Best"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384909"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7710188-3f02-301f-8043-2448c00418a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41407864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutnatu"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Naturalist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":126.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INDEX TO VOLUMES 47 THROUGH 56","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407864","wordCount":93692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Southwestern Association of Naturalists","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Gould"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/432307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"The Interplay between Avant-Garde Theatre and Semiology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245092","wordCount":5595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James M. Harding"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"912cff35-c24d-353d-84b6-4f65870ad6d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Simplest Surrealist Act: Valerie Solanas and the (Re)Assertion of Avantgarde Priorities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146934","wordCount":11005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"She shot pop art superstar Andy Warhol-but, really, who was Valerie Solanas? And what was \"SCUM\"? Answering those questions tells a lot about the radically changing landscape of the American avantgarde of the late 1960s.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARLOS FORTUNA"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ab5c839-97c3-3c63-93de-4df43822d140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26939782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","keyphrase":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"O mundo social do ru\u00eddo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939782","wordCount":18730,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11245,11531]],"Locations in B":[[2279,2565]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"234 (1)","publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"Um socialmente curioso percurso fez do ru\u00eddo o incontorn\u00e1vel ambiente sonoro da moderna urbanidade. O texto analisa a hist\u00f3ria do \u201cmundo social do ru\u00eddo\u201d e mostra como com o tempo o seu inicial estranhamento deu lugar a uma generalizada condescend\u00eancia e \u00e0 aceita\u00e7\u00e3o social deste \u201csom indesejado\u201d como lhe chama Murray Schafer. Depois de argumentar como alguns artistas, no campo da pintura, da m\u00fasica e da poesia contribu\u00edram para a acomoda\u00e7\u00e3o social do ru\u00eddo, o artigo d\u00e1 conta de duas c\u00e9lebres investidas hist\u00f3ricas antirru\u00eddo, destacando o papel do fil\u00f3sofo alem\u00e3o Th. Lessing e da m\u00e9dica norte-americana Julia Rice. Hoje, os efeitos sociol\u00f3gicos mais importantes do ru\u00eddo s\u00e3o a enuncia\u00e7\u00e3o da presen\u00e7a do \u201coutro\u201d e o silenciamento da dissid\u00eancia. O texto termina remetendo para o reconhecimento do ru\u00eddo como territ\u00f3rio de continuadas disputas sociais que convidam a aturada investiga\u00e7\u00e3o sociol\u00f3gica. A rather curious social trajectory turned noise into the unavoidable sound environment of modern urbanity. The text analyzes the history of the \u201csocial world of noise\u201d, showing how over time its initial estrangement gave way to widespread indulgence and social acceptance of such \u201cunwanted sound\u201d in Murray Schafer\u2019s words. After sustaining the way some artists, in painting, music, and poetry contributed to the social acceptance of noise, the article reports two historical anti-noise initiatives led by the German philosopher Th. Lessing and by the American doctor Julia Rice. Today, the most sensitive sociological effects of noise refer to the recognition of the \u201cother\u201d and the silencing of dissent. The article closes sustaining the way that noise turns into a territory of persistent social disputes calling for accurate socio-logical attention.","subTitle":"contributos para uma abordagem sociol\u00f3gica","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan Troeller"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25800368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c91dc93-123d-379f-a1e1-127250ebaba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25800368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Against Abstraction: Zoe Leonard's \"Analogue\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25800368","wordCount":6351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Elsen","H. R. H."],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c2fd29d-e16e-3e49-b512-518186b321e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"College Museum Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775579","wordCount":14740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24557595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15217922"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fab47435-b537-3059-8de7-5e4dc66d0f1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24557595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artpaper"}],"isPartOf":"Art on Paper","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24557595","wordCount":3574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cornelia Klecker"],"datePublished":"2011-05-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.63.2.0011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e95ff4a-2570-386d-a49c-8999b76d6039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.63.2.0011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chronology, Causality . . . Confusion: When Avant-Garde Goes Classic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.63.2.0011","wordCount":11297,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[34953,35039],[50840,50990]],"Locations in B":[[21459,21545],[57949,58110]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1951-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdb2d733-83ef-37a4-a596-67ccdb1861cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":87.0,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Seventy-Seventh Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To March 1951)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226816","wordCount":72588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pablo Alonso Gonz\u00e1lez","David Gonz\u00e1lez \u00c1lvarez"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44169294"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9834997a-9cb2-31ca-8cb8-e596b0a82a1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26174190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Contemporary Archaeology of Cultural Change in Rural North-Western Spain: From Traditional Domesticity to Postmodern Individualisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174190","wordCount":10676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"This paper explores the built environment in two rural areas of Northwest Spain that were historically inhabited by two of the so-called \"cursed peoples.\" Combining contemporary archaeology and material culture studies, we analyze the role played by the house in processes of socio-economic and cultural change, and in the reproduction of internal hegemony within villages. To do so, we study the tensions and connections existing between the transformations undergone by the built environment during the last century and different socio-economic processes, including the depopulation of the rural areas, their conversion into tourist attractions, and the current process of individualisation of subjectivity in line with the transformations taking place in the postmodern era.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan Bear"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33287485-d828-3ebc-9e7c-312b5dfc905d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photographic Exceptionalism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825850","wordCount":4602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1932-02-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41358975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f68dc39-a904-3124-b99c-c2fdacfd48cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41358975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1932,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41358975","wordCount":2146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4134","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fa05909-48de-3e2d-90e3-3e2a41d667ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/949353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949353","wordCount":19657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1454","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Eugene Sawyer"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05694345"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38371916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236555"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720800fd-bbac-3ef9-bcb7-864e43797a0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25602965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerecon"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Labor Migration, Relative Wage Levels, and Unemployment in Less Developed Countries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25602965","wordCount":6224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig J. Thompson"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8fbdd96-073b-35b0-b1ff-68603e286054"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4120759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Natural Health Discourses and the Therapeutic Production of Consumer Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120759","wordCount":14580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Social critics of the natural health movement charge that it indoctrinates consumers in a therapeutic consumerist ideology. This \"dominated consumer\" thesis ignores that socially situated individuals must negotiate a plethora of institutionally specific power structures aiming to classify and govern their identities. Accordingly, resistance toward specific institutional constructions of identity can be produced through marketplace ideologies. I explore this understudied ideological effect by analyzing the narratives of women who are using natural health alternatives to resist their ascribed medico-administrative identities. Natural health's therapeutic ideology enables these women to contest the degenerative implications of their medical diagnoses and, conversely, to reconstruct their chronic illnesses as an opportunity for discovering their inner regenerative potential and expanding their spiritual horizons. This analysis has implications for prior studies suggesting that resistance toward the technocratic and bureaucratic aspects of conventional medicine exemplifies a Foucauldian \"care of the self.\" I argue that a postmodern adaptation of Foucauldian theory is needed to address the complex interrelationships among the care of the self, medical consumerism, and the therapeutic ideology of the natural health marketplace.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Watson"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b4bb96a-928c-3765-ad1e-161f37306af5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Criticism and the Closure of \"Modernism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684102","wordCount":7696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacob Emery"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.2.0410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"606ac450-1b55-31ba-bfed-03a802dc3f4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.2.0410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"410","pagination":"pp. 410-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Clone Playing Craps Will Never Abolish Chance: Randomness and Fatality in Vladimir Sorokin's Clone Fictions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.2.0410","wordCount":13753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This essay uses the theme of a clone playing a game of chance as a point of entry into a narrative mode that treats characters as interchangeable ciphers in relation to a transcendent plot. For example, in John Varley's The Ophiuchi Hotline (1977), one clone heroine is killed and another, functionally identical, clone heroine takes her place. This narrative mode is the aesthetic counterpart to a critique of individualist humanism. Where discourses that emanate from unique subjects making free choices will tend to conceal or mystify forces beyond conscious control, the conceit of a plot operating independently of the characters that fulfill its functions suggests an effort to represent the impersonal course of history as, to use Louis Althusser's phrase, a \u201cprocess without a subject.\u201d The motif of the gambling clone crystallizes a cluster of issues surrounding narrative fatality and reproductive normativity that this essay examines in a range of Western texts before addressing their synthesis in the work of contemporary Russian author Vladimir Sorokin.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen P. Weldon"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3652364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17ae1806-fae1-3c46-82bd-df3916363451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3652364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":241.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-199+201-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3652364","wordCount":154981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. W. ADORNO","Rafael Cook"],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42707539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4307721-cdfe-3f5d-b9d7-7042ad74358b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42707539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE CULTURE INDUSTRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42707539","wordCount":3695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462864"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17e24ff0-7118-3f64-8ed8-4756c1dc3a70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvh4zjfz.6"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","minister","baldwin","francis bacon","english","politician","scottish","educated","novaya zemlya","french"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":92.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"47","pagination":"47-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"B","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.6","wordCount":79539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd B. Tepper"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01601040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5be17db4-4192-34df-b943-72ce9f07b5cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41308854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iajsocinduarch"}],"isPartOf":"IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Industrial Plumbism: Antiquity to Modern Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308854","wordCount":9319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for Industrial Archeology","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Manifestations consistent with industnal lead poisoning \u2014 plumbism \u2014 have been recognized for perhaps 2,000 years.A definitive clinical profile was established in the early-19th century: (1) constipation and colic, (2) anemia, (3) paralysis, and in severe cases, (4) encephalopathy. Evidence of plumbism has occurred in virtually every segment of the lead trades and in many \"downstream\" circumstances among users of lead-containing products. Mining, smelting, the casting of lead sheet, and pipe fabncation have been cited since ancient times. The preparation and use of white lead as a pigment in paint has been a major cause of plumbism over the course of centunes, and lead paint residues from deteriorating residential surfaces remain a problem. Excessive lead absorption in the manufacture of lead-acid storage battenes and in the post-use recovery of lead components continues, especially in the \"informar industnal sector. The production of tetraethyl lead anti-knock additives for motor fuels was associated with encephalopathy. Recognition of important lead effects at levels of absorption previously regarded as acceptable has led to effective regulation and reductions in lead exposure.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL CHRISTIAN JONES"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19474644"},{"name":"oclc","value":"301795599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009253029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"672e4bca-0682-3d3e-b510-b0c0c3c6270e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48599966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poestud"}],"isPartOf":"Poe Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cNevermore!\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599966","wordCount":9570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"This essay argues that queer approaches to Poe\u2019s work can benefit from a consideration of his poem \u201cThe Raven,\u201d a work invested in finding connections between a subject\u2019s desire and object-choice and his experience of time. The poem is especially relevant to what has been called the \u201ctemporal turn\u201d in queer theory over the last decade: it demonstrates how non-normative desire excludes individuals from what Lee Edelman has called \u201creproductive futurism,\u201d the heteronormative prescription that requires individuals to produce future generations through heterosexual pairing, and that casts individuals who do not participate in this behavior as \u201cqueer.\u201d In the poem\u2019s famous repetition of \u201cnevermore,\u201d first by the raven and then by the narrator, we can see a growing acknowledgment of the subject\u2019s exclusion from \u201creproductive futurism.\u201d And, in its conclusion, \u201cThe Raven\u201d gestures toward the potential liberation that this exclusion offers as a temporal orientation to queer individuals\u2014the freedom to invent new and more creative life paths as they deviate from heteronormative norms.","subTitle":"Non-Normative Desire and Queer Temporality in Poe\u2019s \u201cThe Raven\u201d","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VYTAUTAS KAVOLIS"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40535896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5421a935-4c1b-3c27-a038-d5cda8598ffe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40535896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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According to Mildred Friedman, then-Design Curator of the Walker Art Center, writing fifty years after the publication of the last issue of the journal of the same name, the De Stijl movement was afocus for wide-ranging invention in painting, architecture, furniture and graphic design.\u00b2This observation is somewhat problematic, however, because anyone who encounters such a statement in an art history handbook would","subTitle":"De Stijl","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth A. 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Part 1 examines the epistemology and operation of unpredictability; Part 2 investigates one musical event, a Karimojo\u014b beer-party, at three levels-overall performance, verbal structure, and musical sound-with the aim of discovering the unpredictable aspects of each. Part 3 considers the implications of unpredictability in relation to total performance and suggests that, for one music at least, the dialectical interplay between the unpredictable and the predictable provides much of its dynamic and significance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1961-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1401554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03731138"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60574671"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1401554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuinstintestat"}],"isPartOf":"Revue de l'Institut International de Statistique \/ Review of the International Statistical Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Political science - Government"],"title":"Autres communications sur l'organisation et l'administration statistiques \/ Further Communications on Statistical Organization and Administration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1401554","wordCount":21498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"International Statistical Institute (ISI)","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86c85eb7-4d75-33d0-a276-d1958d2478d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513365","wordCount":6256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boyd Tonkin"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03092984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60812507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005263080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4288686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histwork"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Icons of the Dispossessed': Bert Hardy and the Documentary Photograph","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288686","wordCount":4273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"21","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kai Alderson"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15163c03-5af8-31fb-b009-7e6a26d65e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Sense of State Socialization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097743","wordCount":10097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"At present, International Relations scholars use the metaphor of 'state socialization' in mutually incompatible ways, embarking from very different starting points and arriving at a bewildering variety of destinations. There is no consensus on what state socialization is, who it affects, or how it operates. This article seeks to chart this relatively unmapped concept by defining state socialization, differentiating it from similar concepts, and exploring what the study of state socialization can contribute to important and longstanding theoretical debates in the field of international relations.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karin Brown","James E. 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The film's success in the U.S. and other Western countries can be traced back mainly to the fact that it creates the impression of telling a true, apparently authentic, story. This essay investigates how this impression of historical truth and authenticity emerges in a fiction film. For this purpose the essay reverts to a concept developed by J\u00f6rn R\u00fcsen, which distinguishes among three dimensions of historical culture, namely political, aesthetic, and cognitive. In addition to the historical context that serves as a specific precondition for the film's success, the essay primarily investigates the strategies of authentication Spielberg applied at both the visual and narrative levels. The investigation concludes that the impression of evidence produced by the movie is significantly a result of the sophisticated balancing of the three dimensions mentioned above. The film utilizes artifacts of an existing and increasingly transnational (visual) memory for the benefit of a closed, archetypical narrative. It follows the aesthetic and artistic rules of popular narrative cinema, and largely recurs to conventions of representation that were common in film and television programs of the 1990s. Although these forms condense the historical course of events, the film manages to stay close to insights gained by historiography. The hybrid amalgamation of history and memory, and of the imaginary and the real, as well as the combination of dramaturgies of popular culture with an instinct for what can (not) be shown-all of these factors have helped \"Schindler's List\" to render a representation of the founding Holocaust myth in Western societies that can be sensually experienced while being emotionally impressive at the same time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bertram Wyatt\u2010Brown"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c213b04-4ed1-3bba-b43a-2721aa32a30c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1460","pageStart":"1458","pagination":"pp. 1458-1460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231098","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Wilkins"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fdbd961-924b-30c6-965d-8b67911910ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1577434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"104","pagination":"p. 104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Musica Automata: Machines and Bodies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577434","wordCount":910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2982886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 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Depiciting a crowd in the mirror-the modern public of men and some women whose gazes are being solicited-the painting is related to the discourses of mass consumption, the development of department stores, and the expanded visual culture of illustrations and advertising posters during the second half of the nineteenth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne-Kathrin Wielgosz"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8a86d5f-35be-32c8-a740-61cc4a8fe5c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtechnique"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Narrative Technique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Displacement in Raymond Federman's \"Double or Nothing\" or: \"Noodles and Paper Coincide\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225425","wordCount":6172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua Scodel"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4174336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68506898-223f-3a28-bee5-3e824921fb4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4174336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genre and Occasion in Jonson's \"On My First Sonne\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4174336","wordCount":11525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1952-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e23f9fb-066b-3307-8aba-937558b6a1f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27826456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1952,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics","Applied sciences - Technology","Applied sciences - Electronics"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826456","wordCount":15034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick R. 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The strictness of copyright liability has long been criticized as immoral, inefficient, and inconsistent with usual tort doctrine. However, this Article questions whether copyright infringement really is a strict liability tort. It advances the thesis that copyright infringement in the United States is a fault-based tort, closely related to the tort of negligence. Using both doctrinal and economic methods, this Article explicates the role that fault plays in copyright infringement. Doing so not only demonstrates that copyright's liability rule is more normatively defensible than previously appreciated, but also provides a unique tort perspective on the nature of the fair use doctrine. By seriously engaging with the analytic question of whether liability for copyright infringement is strict or not, we highlight how the fair use analysis blends and confuses two separate issues: on one hand, did the defendant cause the plaintiff harm, and, on the other, was that harm justifiable? The Article concludes that, while no substantive changes need to be made to copyright's liability rule, judges ought to restructure the fair use analysis in order to keep these concepts distinct from one another.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER GODFREY-SMITH"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48568275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022362X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37699220"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f73947b3-6b19-382f-ab77-2de440a73feb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48568275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Philosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"MIND, MATTER, AND METABOLISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48568275","wordCount":11702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Journal of Philosophy, Inc.","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1914-10-17","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25588430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 13, no. 2","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588430","wordCount":15772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Jay"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f12308f-f57d-3ec4-aad4-0ca407679fa2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Taking On the Stigma of Inauthenticity: Adorno's Critique of Genuineness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669153","wordCount":7678,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[7519,7619],[9223,9351],[16632,16841],[56839,57038]],"Locations in B":[[9634,9727],[12181,12309],[12606,12815],[13000,13198]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"97","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/232936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f32db65c-481c-33b6-9fdf-a46aa18d5e71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/232936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"454","pagination":"pp. 454-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/232936","wordCount":8292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Y. 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The title draws upon and argues with Roland Barthes's critique of the duplicity of the \"insistent fringes\" that supposedly reduce and naturalize \"Roman-ness\" to fringed hair in popular historical film. Barthes presumes a \"certainty\" in such a cinematic image, and hence deems it mythological-that is, \"it goes without saying.\" Countering Barthes with Walter Benjamin, one might argue that the \"insistent fringe\" is insistently historical and constitutes, in its insistence, a \"dialectical image\": a site and sight full of contradictions and open to excavation. That is, it concretizes historiographic saying by showing. Neither historiographic saying nor showing are privileged in medias res-in a culture saturated in images and textuality, in competing modes of expression each of which has its limits. Historical consciousness is sparked and constituted from both showing and saying. Indeed, the \"insistent fringe\" is precisely not clear-cut-and, if it insists on anything, it is its serrated nature, its articulation as a limit that differs from, but is constituted by, the elements of the two distinct domains which it both separates and connects. Similarly, there is a dynamic, functional, and hardly clear-cut relation that exists between the mythological histories wrought by Hollywood cinema (and other visual arts) and the academic histories written by scholars. They co-exist, compete, and cooperate in a contingent, heteroglossic, and always shifting ratio-thus constituting the \"rationality\" of contemporary historical consciousness.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc3f3ac4-bf7e-3483-8f32-a76b393d4c70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":396.0,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-6, 8-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"77th Annual ESA Meeting Honolulu, Hawaii August 8, 1992-August 13, 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167352","wordCount":234644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William R. 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Meeting of Biological Societies. Purdue University Lafayette, Indiana. August 26-31, 1961","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292669","wordCount":65695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine P. 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Martinez"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff1a1905-0e0e-358a-a26f-299f588a325e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1389525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Popular Culture as Oppositional Culture: Rap as Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389525","wordCount":10125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Bonnie Mitchell and Joe Feagin (1995) build on the theory of oppositional culture, arguing that African Americans, American Indians, and Mexican Americans draw on their own cultural resources to resist oppression under internal colonialism. In this paper, rap music is identified as an important African American popular cultural form that also emerges as a form of oppositional culture. A brief analysis of the lyrics of political and gangsta rappers of the late 1980s and early 1990s, provides key themes of distrust, anger, resistance, and critique of a perceived racist and discriminatory society. Rap music is discussed as music with a message of resistance, empowerment, and social critique, and as a herald of the Los Angeles riots of 1992. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Joe Feagin y Bonnie Mitchell (1995) desarrollaron sobre la teor\u00eda de la cultura de opposici\u00f3n, el argumento que los Afro Americanos, los Indios Americanos, y los Mexico Americanos obtuvieron dentro de a sus propios recursos culturales la forma de resistir la opresi\u00f3n bajo colonialismo interno. En este trabajo, la m\u00fasica Rap se identifica como una forma popular importante Afro Americana que tambi\u00e9n emerge como una forma de cultura de oposici\u00f3n. Un an\u00e1lisis breve de la l\u00edrica sobre pol\u00edtica y gangsters del final de las d\u00e9cadas de 1980 y el inicio de 1990, proporciona t\u00e9rminos clave de desconfianza, enojo, resistencia, y cr\u00edtica de una sociedad percibida como racista y discriminatoria. La m\u00fasica Rap est\u00e1 considerada como m\u00fasica con un mensage de resistencia, facultativo, y de cr\u00edtica social, y como un heraldo del los motines de Los Angeles de 1992. \/\/\/ [Chinese] (Unicode for Chinese abstract). \/\/\/ [Japanese] (Unicode for Japanese abstract).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fabio Presutti"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40505806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11fb57a0-f12e-36d1-80da-c61afec555a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40505806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"294","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-294","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Saxophone and the Pastoral. Italian Jazz in the Age of Fascist Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40505806","wordCount":9660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Shaw","Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress","Shea Cotton","Joshua Pollack","Masako Toki","Ruby Russell","Olivia Vassalotti","Syed Gohar Altaf"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep17539","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a69f79b9-c773-3037-9a76-6942c1931827"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":164.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Evaluating WMD Proliferation Risks at the Nexus of 3D Printing and Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep17539","wordCount":65422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS)","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"US nonproliferation policy has relied principally on the notion that the proliferation of nuclear weapons can be controlled by limiting access to nuclear or missile technology through export controls on items of concern and preventing access to nuclear materials. According to this approach, the sophistication of the technology limits its direct proliferation. The key to preventing proliferation is therefore to \u201crestrict access rather than reduce demand.\u201d\u00b3 Export controls for nuclear technology have been based on the Zangger Committee\u2019s Trigger List for the past several decades. It is now necessary to consider whether items in the NSG Guidelines Parts 1 and","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Table of Contents","EXECUTIVE SUMMARY","ITEM-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING","LEGAL USERS-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING","ILLICIT USERS-LEVEL ANALYSIS OF ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING","RISK MATRIX","CONCLUSION","APPENDIX","3D PRINTING MISSILE COMPONENTS","DRONES AND DRONE COMPONENTS","NATIONAL-LEVEL INTEREST IN AM AND STRATEGIC PLANNING","JAPAN\u2019S METAL 3D PRINTERS","ONLINE 3D PRINTING SERVICES","MAKERSPACES:","DIY COMMUNITIES, MANUFACTURING, AND 3D PRINTING","SCIENCE, ADVANCED INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY, AND STRATEGIC WEAPONS PROGRAMS IN NORTH KOREA","POTENTIAL WMD TERRORISTS AND ACCESS TO AM:","Back Matter"],"editor":null} +{"creator":["LOUISE M. 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The study is structural rather than historical, but a developmental sequence is inferred from the features of proleptic and other accusative constructions observed in Homeric and classical texts\u00b9.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Hawley"],"datePublished":"1987-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25159990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8c5e566-6997-3c74-8d24-0c7b2d12c49b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25159990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulleclevmuseart"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Furniture of the Mid-Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25159990","wordCount":10303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cleveland Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Visconi"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24042983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24042983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24042983","wordCount":4820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781909254268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abbe53f2-d4b3-33a9-a630-ba3fe1946ad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjtt3.17"}],"isPartOf":"Digital Humanities Pedagogy","keyphrase":["archives remix","nomadic archives","students","nomadic archives remix","praxis","participatory archive","images","fairey","digital media"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"291","pagination":"291-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Education","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nomadic Archives:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.17","wordCount":7145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In opening our discussion of pedagogical strategies within the digital humanities, we begin by outlining what we see as the mission of the field. That is, while we often operate as if in agreement about what is included under the umbrella term of \u201cdigital humanities,\u201d it is unclear that our sense of this field or its objectives extends beyond a family resemblance. For our purposes, we first define the humanities quite broadly as disciplines concerned with the ongoing life of culture, and we note our firm belief in the value of humanities education. Indeed, in Academically Adrift<\/em>, a recent book","subTitle":"Remix and the Drift to Praxis","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29543561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2ea92c5-fa62-3f17-9836-387a8b5adf4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29543561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NEO-FUTURISM: ARCHITECTURE AND TECHNOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29543561","wordCount":3509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"14","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert Mann","P. 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Histoire, Sciences Sociales","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Rituels publics \u00e0 usage priv\u00e9: M\u00e9tamorphose t\u00e9l\u00e9vis\u00e9e d'un mariage royal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27581624","wordCount":9522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"EHESS","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"The televising of public events of a political nature adapts the traditional realm of ceremony to a very modern form of \"publicness\", one inherited from cinema. Audience members are isolated, separated, both from each other and from the focus of the occasion. Their experience is one of not-being-there. Exploring a particular festive occasion\u2014the wedding of the Prince Charles and the Lady Diana Spencer (London, 1981)\u2014this paper extends Benjamin's thesis on the status of \"art in the age of mechanical reproduction\" to the domain of ritual. We suggest that one can no longer conceive of occasions without television, but only (and only in the abstract) of occasions minus television. In other terms, television's broadcast of an event increasingly turns into the \"real\" event, while the original event is demoted to the status of a matrix, of a studio-setting, of a convenient but ancillary prop. Based on a comparison between different types of public occasions and the mode of participation involved in each, this paper analyses the way in which a collective event survives the family-centered circumstances of its reception. Television seems to blur the dividing line between \"public\" and \"private\". Public ceremonies are offered for private consumption. Is such a consumption still ceremonial in nature?","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine Hoag"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10987371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227000"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30227328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bookhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Book History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Caxtons of the North: Mid-Nineteenth-Century Arctic Shipboard Printing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227328","wordCount":14821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Walter Benjamin","Knut Tarnowski"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"934b4a4b-dbd3-3a87-a895-f8c04f9eb816"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Theology","Arts - Applied arts","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"September 11: The Burden of the Ephemeral","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40600535","wordCount":22326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Western States Folklore Society","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":"This article concentrates on the performativity of the ephemeral in a range of vernacular responses to the events of September 11 in New York City by widening the frame for folkloristic interpretations of tradition and temporality. When random and sudden death interrupts the course of logic and prediction, memorial making acts to combine ephemerality with tradition in a gesture towards recovery through remembrance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Gelderloos"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99ba0989-4aea-3c15-ac2b-66f16100e042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24756621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Jetzt kommt das Leben\": The Technological Body in Alfred D\u00f6blin's \"Berge Meere und Giganten\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24756621","wordCount":13360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"In his science fiction novel from 1924, Berge Meere und Giganten, Alfred D\u00f6blin reconfigures the trope of the technological body to critique a notion of subjectivity that situates the sovereign self within the unbroken contours of the individual body. In its portrayal of futuristic technologies that rupture the bounds of the human body, D\u00f6blin's novel mirrors his programmatic rejection of the autonomous individual. Yet in contrast to the technophilic anti-psychologism exemplified in the avant-garde trope of the armored body, in Berge Meere und Giganten D\u00f6blin deploys this trope to depict a subjectivity that is distributed according to the ecological relationship of the body to the environment, thereby reworking the relationship between subjectivity and collectivity. D\u00f6blin's oft-neglected science fiction novel is thus not only key to understanding the underlying relationship in his work between avant-garde critique and philosophical monism: it also offers a novel point of entry into Weimar-era technological discourse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James E. Young"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be4543d9-c701-31b3-b9dd-5cca59034872"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Biography of a Memorial Icon: Nathan Rapoport's Warsaw Ghetto Monument","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928524","wordCount":16106,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743]],"Locations in B":[[72778,72939]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"26","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvp7d57c.11","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d2a0883-0a8e-300e-9e80-6e9c048c7b75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvp7d57c.11"}],"isPartOf":"Anton Pannekoek","keyphrase":["astronomy","milky way","scientif","science","jennifer tucker","photography","history","popularizing the cosmos","popularizing","astrology"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"173","pagination":"173-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","Astronomy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Popularizing the Cosmos:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvp7d57c.11","wordCount":9026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In his 1961 historical account of the origin and development of astronomy, Pannekoek touched only lightly on the two subjects that had brought him greatest scientific fame: his investigations of the Milky Way and stellar spectra. Instead, he mapped the unfolding of what he referred to as \u2018the concept of the universe\u2019, which he defined as a \u2018new concept of the world\u2019 that had opened \u2018new ways of thinking\u2019. Driven by \u2018a strong social development\u2019, he stated, astronomy since the sixteenth century had unsettled beliefs and certainties, disclosing \u2018 that what seemed the most certain knowledge of the foundation of","subTitle":"Pedagogies of Science and Society in Anton Pannekoek\u2019s Life and Work","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Jaszi"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97d5e46-10fa-3e65-b734-7153553b4336"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1372734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - 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Language"],"title":"Commodity Registers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104277","wordCount":14543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Commodities mediate roles and relationships through discourses that formulate them as social indexicals. Discourses that typify commodities make indexical stereotypes widely known through their own dissemination, thereby linking commodities to registers of conduct. Phenomenally diverse objects (durable goods, forms of speech) readily come under commodity formulations, and many objects acquire distinct formulations in distinct phases of their social existence. The case of lifestyle formulations is discussed in some detail. Yet all commodity formulations and their fragments (products, services, discourses about them) are recontextualized and transformed through the activities of those acquainted with them. Many commodity formulations come to be treated as common culture. Others function as emblems of group differentiation, or of forms of individuality prized in liberal society. Commodities are thus cultural forms through which images of diverse social phenomena (persons, groups, ideals) become manifest in perceivable activities through which culture is transformed in social history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUCY FISCHER"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"MARLENE\": MODERNITY, MORTALITY, AND THE BIOPIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540209","wordCount":7364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"One of the major genres in Hollywood is the so-called \"biopic,\" and, frequently, such films have focused on the life of a well-known actress: Gertrude Lawrence, Frances Farmer, or Susan Hayward, for instance. Just as recent cinema has re-worked genres like the western and the musical (in films like Silverado or Pennies from Heaven), so the biopic is subject to modernist or postmodernist elaboration. This is the project of Maximilian Schell's experimental biopic Marlene (1983)\u2014which seeks to examine the life and career of Marlene Dietrich. Frustrating Schell's desire, however, is the fact that, although she commissioned the film, Dietrich refuses to appear in it, leaving the filmmaker\/biographer to deal with only photographs and archival film footage. Nonetheless, this highly self-reflexive work raises questions about the nature of biography, the relationship between cinema and death, and the ontology of the film medium.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Gotzler"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671523","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bda7604-ae0c-30c6-b129-b931358bbb67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"1956\u2014The British New Left and the \u201cBig Bang\u201d Theory of Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671523","wordCount":11718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"In intellectual histories of cultural studies, the year 1956 usually gures as a \u201cbig bang\u201d moment. Centered on the geopolitical ashpoints of the Hungarian Revolution and the Suez Crisis, it was the year that catalyzed the British new left, and thus, the story goes, provided a new front of political critique that would serve as the jumping-off point for the nascent formation of cultural studies in Britain. This article presents a brief overview of this conventional pre-history of cultural studies in Britain. It then departs from this familiar story to outline several other notable \u201cbig bang\u201d moments happening elsewhere in 1956 with resonance across literature, global labor history, the visual arts, and the women\u2019s movement. These other moments each arguably have considerable bearing on the articulation of cultural studies in Britain, and their examples provide a more globally diverse and textured frame for re-situating the emergence of cultural studies at midcentury beyond the narrow focus on new left politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy D. Munn"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30f383d9-52f5-3cd5-80fe-900c613a164d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2155982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Cultural Anthropology of Time: A Critical Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155982","wordCount":16357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roy F. Nichols"],"datePublished":"1936-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20086968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff1e17e1-de2b-3d9c-abf6-aab654ad54b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20086968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Society News and Accessions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20086968","wordCount":4613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Historical Society of Pennsylvania","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jens Lachmund"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"060c9ed3-3fc1-3e36-a352-ae3fe5393227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/690227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Making Sense of Sound: Auscultation and Lung Sound Codification in Nineteenth-Century French and German Medicine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/690227","wordCount":14505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"With the introduction of the technique of auscultation in nineteenth-century medicine, the auditory became a most important means of producing diagnostic knowledge. The correct classification and interpretation of the sounds revealed by auscultation, however, remained an issue of negotiation and often controversy throughout the mid-nineteenth century. This article examines the codification of lung sounds within two cultural and geographic contexts: first, the original approach as it was developed by Laennec and his followers in Paris that came to be dominant in French medicine, and second, the alternative approach that grew out of Joseph Skoda's reception of Laennec's method in Vienna and became widely adopted in the German-speaking world. On one hand, it will be argued that lung sound classifications attempted a standardization of the perception and the interpretation of auscultation sounds. On the other hand, it will be shown that the development of auscultation sounds was shaped by the local context in which it took place. This article seeks to shed light on the way in which auditory experiences were instrumentalized for epistemic purposes in medicine. Furthermore, it discusses the role of standardization both as a mechanism for the universalization of knowledge and as a contextually bounded practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shane Cullen","Peter Suchin"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1f10423-0ac8-3e9d-a626-c45c54ed5b32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25563001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art Writing: Measured Words","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25563001","wordCount":2325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"77","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marta Sierra"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad1fad43-965f-39db-b68c-eb7ff3c09dd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Fragmento, recolecci\u00f3n y nostalgia: la figura del artista en la literatura de vanguardia hispanoamericana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922908","wordCount":6016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Curry Stephenson Malott","Lisa Waukau","Lauren Waukau-Villagomez"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca5bbd9b-73ba-362d-b30e-097a27e35eb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: Why Is Philosophy Important in Teaching the Americas?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979265","wordCount":14097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"349","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret Scanlan"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40754987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20f5fd83-42f0-3bd8-8b3b-81f1346ed694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40754987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"380","pagination":"pp. 380-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Terrorism and the Realistic Novel: Henry James and The Princess Casamassima","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40754987","wordCount":10363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tania Pellegrini","Laurence Hallewell"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2634229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25c5aefb-c5ca-34a6-a8ab-702e1946811a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2634229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Aspects of the Contemporary Production of Brazilian Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2634229","wordCount":9851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1948-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40087756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00067431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5d184d6-471a-3ccd-bf8e-5fde3858a2ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40087756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"booksabroad"}],"isPartOf":"Books Abroad","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Once Over","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40087756","wordCount":8000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Oklahoma","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seamus Deane"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b5d809-8982-3e16-8f20-cbac51a3ef53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Real Thing: Brian Moore in Disneyland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484218","wordCount":3993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aaron Mauro"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e017cbdf-d95e-3b66-91ed-4abf8a7036d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE LANGUISHING OF THE FALLING MAN: DON DELILLO AND JONATHAN SAFRAN FOER'S PHOTOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF 9\/11","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287215","wordCount":9780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine VIEILLEDENT"],"datePublished":"1990-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20872047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c561f9bd-7666-3604-973d-ea48675087c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20872047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mythe et r\u00e9cit dans \"Passion\" ou, L'Art inessentiel de Robert Steiner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20872047","wordCount":4720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"43","publisher":"Editions Belin","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Le court roman de Steiner appara\u00eet ici comme une entreprise de d\u00e9motivation des signes romanesques. Cette \u00ab \u00e9criture-bricolage \u00bb tend \u00e0 d\u00e9gager le roman de son rapport au sacr\u00e9 et au mythe et \u00e0 lui d\u00e9finir un statut radicalement s\u00e9culier et marginal parmi la constellation des valeurs \u00ab modernes \u00bb. Une telle renonciation \u00e0 l' \u00ab Esth\u00e9tique \u00bb passe toutefois par la mise en question des hi\u00e9rarchies qui fondent le syst\u00e8me de la perspective, l'ordre du r\u00e9cit et le couple m\u00e9taphysique copie et original. Steiner's novel is here read as an enterprise in demotivating the genre. His \u00ab do-it-yourself \u00bb writing tends to disengage the novel from its relationship to the sacred and to myth by defining its status as radically secular and marginal within the constellation of \u00ab modern \u00bb values. Relinquishing traditional esthetics, however, Passion questions the hierarchies upon which the system of the perspective, the order of the narrative and the metaphysical couple of the copy and the original are based.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Jane Edge"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"005d98c8-23a0-3daa-911f-1c01b0c88594"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25058650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photographic History and the Visual Appearance of an Irish Nationalist Discourse 1840-1870","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25058650","wordCount":9676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Anysley"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44a08139-c5e0-3bf5-80f4-18a586f7ab2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1511692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 52-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pressa Cologne, 1928: Exhibitions and Publication Design in the Weimar Period","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511692","wordCount":9739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georges Teyssot"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10684220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac040ff0-72fd-3062-8703-e1c0a8f41efe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41856805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anyarchnewyork"}],"isPartOf":"ANY: Architecture New York","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"La Libert\u00e9 d'errer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856805","wordCount":2941,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16850,17029]],"Locations in B":[[14578,14758]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8db1922-56e1-38dc-ab7c-20d8788d3ebf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25698608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25698608","wordCount":3860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert V. 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Although Giddens and Habermas recognize that the \"totalizing critique\" of poststructuralism lacks a convincing analysis of social interaction, neither of their perspectives adequately addresses the postmodern themes of aesthetics, play, and cultural memory. Giddens and Habermas believe that these dimensions of social life are important; yet they remain underdeveloped in their approaches. This essay explores the theoretical consequences of aesthetics, play, and cultural traditions for social theory, drawing on the pragmatists, the psychoanalyst Winnicott, and early critical theory. The aesthetic and playful moments of experience must be recast in terms of social theory to avoid the solipsism so often characteristic of postmodernism. The essay ends by suggesting how the theories of Habermas and Giddens could benefit by a closer consideration of these issues.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William B. 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I argue that this familiar (but historically specific) construction of selfhood-in-time is enabled by, and contingent upon, the rise of photography, whose advent ushers in new ways of relating to our pasts, and to our past selves. More generally, insofar as Sassoon is concerned, I illustrate broader ways in which his compulsive reiteration of his past is mediated through an imagination and a memory which is ineluctably photographic, and I try to show the ways in which his \"autobiographies,\" both \"real\" and \"fictionalized,\" are indebted, in general and in particular ways, to early photographic images.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jilly Traganou"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44910652"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f67c18b-a1ec-3ec9-939b-8c4f60da71ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"National and Post-National Dynamics in the Olympic Design: The Case of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627818","wordCount":7378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Owen Gardner"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2005.28.1.135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d89725a-9aef-32cb-a1c7-6f58ebed1117"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2005.28.1.135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tradition and Authenticity in Popular Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2005.28.1.135","wordCount":4502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Reviews of Creating Country Music: Fabricating Authenticity<\/em> by Richard Peterson; Blue Chicago: The Search for Authenticity in Urban Blues Clubs<\/em> by David Grazian; and Music and Gender: Perspectives from the Mediterranean<\/em> edited by Tulia Magrini","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9326365-6430-3483-94d8-051c6b02a27f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2945637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945637","wordCount":38123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SARAH K. BOOKER"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2962460-d366-370e-962d-0f5f3d9c1cb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26310060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"295","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-295","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On Mediation and Fragmentation: The Translator in Valeria Luiselli's \"Los ingr\u00e1vidos\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310060","wordCount":9855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"Teniendo en cuenta las voces narrativas que traducen, la estructura y la geograf\u00eda, el presente art\u00edculo examina la funci\u00f3n de la traducci\u00f3n en la novela Los ingr\u00e1vidos (2011) de Valeria Luiselli. Luiselli representa a los traductores de la novela como personajes liminales y ef\u00edmeros que median el intercambio cultural; en el proceso de la traducci\u00f3n, el lector puede ver que la identidad de los tres narradores se fractura al incorporarse a las vidas y los espacios geogr\u00e1ficos de otros personajes. Las m\u00faltiples capas de traducci\u00f3n representadas en Los ingr\u00e1vidos, destacan, pues, la fragmentaci\u00f3n y transformaci\u00f3n de identidad experimentadas por estas figuras intermediarias. In consideration of narrative voices that translate, structure, and geography, this article examines the function of translation within Valeria Luiselli's novel Los ingr\u00e1vidos (2011). Luiselli represents translators in the novel as liminal and ephemeral characters that mediate cultural exchange; in the process of translation, the reader can see that the identity of the three narrators fractures as they are incorporated into the lives and spaces of others. The multiple levels of translation represented in Los ingr\u00e1vidos, then, highlights the fragmentation and transformation of identity that is experienced by these intermediary figures.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Lloyd"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00720127"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6d341a1-b9d9-3539-a894-314131de4995"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"galpinsocietyj"}],"isPartOf":"The Galpin Society Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Designer's Guide to Bowed Keyboard Instruments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044414","wordCount":17207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Galpin Society","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CAROLYN ABBATE"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4ce5706-4465-358e-8445-8531be27aa01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26417271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"829","pageStart":"793","pagination":"pp. 793-829","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sound Object Lessons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26417271","wordCount":15799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"Two brief film sequences, in which paper blowing down a street (The Informer, 1935) and a candle passed along a table (The Old Dark House, 1931) make sounds. Next to them lies an antique microphone. This article charts the genealogies, cultural resonances, and interactions of these sound objects, drawing on the history of sound and acoustic technologies, film music aesthetics, and music philosophy. The sound objects give expression to fables about hearing in the machine age (1870\u20131930), and they disenthrall the inaudible: a sign of modernity. They provoke us to consider technological artifacts not as embodying empirical truths, but as mischief-makers, fabulists, or liars; and to confront technological determinism\u2019s sway in fields such as sound studies and music and science, which has given rise to intellectual talismans that sidestep the complexities in interactions between humans, instruments, and technologies. To underline this dilemma I make a heuristic separation between imaginarium, sensorium, and reshaped hand. This separation contextualizes a return to the film sequences and their historical precedents, with an emphasis on their patrimony from soundengineer improvisation, and as aesthetic negotiations with the microphone itself. The carbon microphone, invented in 1878, had delivered a shock to machine age imaginations; its history is largely untold, and is sketched here to suggest that a fuller history centered on microphonics would lie athwart conventional scholarly accounts of sound technologies, listening, and hearing ca. 1830\u20131930. The sound objects, finally, give voice to a vernacular philosophy of music\u2019s efficacy. They merit an ethical metaphysics, where metaphysical language, ironically, asks us to be attentive to mundane objects that have been disdained and overlooked.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Everett"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f63a707-204b-32b5-a02d-2f1491951c79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lester Walton's \"\u00c9criture Noir\": Black Spectatorial Transcodings of \"Cinematic Excess\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225532","wordCount":12396,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46979,47061]],"Locations in B":[[16276,16358]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"For many scholars and students of American film history, the black press campaign against D. W. Griffith's \"The Birth of a Nation\" (1915) signifies the founding moment of significant black writing on the cinema. This essay investigates the pre-Birth film criticism of \"New York Age\" columnist Lester A. Walton so as to challenge that misconception and recover a lost legacy of early black film spectatorship.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sean Latham"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3002acac-1e97-3990-9c3d-be471ff4c892"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"New Age\" Scholarship: The Work of Criticism in the Age of Digital Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057846","wordCount":7409,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13827,14004]],"Locations in B":[[16617,16791]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FRED DALLMAYR"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dc8d588-f3fe-3191-a150-0cb63257b422"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"712","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-712","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Bernhard Waldenfels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970561","wordCount":10334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The New School","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shoshana Felman"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5f52f62-a646-3cc5-b332-3171b17508d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"788","pageStart":"738","pagination":"pp. 738-788","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Forms of Judicial Blindness, or the Evidence of What Cannot Be Seen: Traumatic Narratives and Legal Repetitions in the O. J. Simpson Case and in Tolstoy's \"The Kreutzer Sonata\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344048","wordCount":24380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue Hum"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24238161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a98ac892-3cc0-31e6-98ae-7e2f62798c11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24238161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\"Between the Eyes\": The Racialized Gaze as Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24238161","wordCount":10802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Weingrad"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49197dc9-f4c3-3590-b794-b1e1f644ebbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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This pioneering work at Bell Labs was a significant contribution to digital art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve McCann","Tammy Ravas"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea8a3d27-eb1d-3792-bf22-edbfec73778e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27949538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Educational resources","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Impact of Image Quality in Online Art History Journals: A User Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949538","wordCount":6440,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6582,6755],[6877,6997]],"Locations in B":[[6545,6721],[6717,6837]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Upon conducting a serials review to prepare for conversion of art journal subscriptions from print to electronic format, the visual and performing arts librarian at the University of Montana discovered that many of the articles in these online journals had poor image quality. This fostered further inquiry into how poor image quality affected graduate student and faculty experience in using online art journals for research. As a result, a user study on this topic was conducted in the fall of 2008. Eight graduate students and faculty from the School of Art discussed their experience of reading an excerpt of an art history journal article with poor image quality. The goals of this study were to discover art scholars' perceptions when encountering digitally reproduced journal articles, examine the effect of poor image quality art reproductions in art scholarly literature among sophisticated readers, and examine the effects of art reproduction placement in an online art history journal article.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-03-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2883486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e06362a-7c97-3158-8d8b-d9cc66be915a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2883486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"1344","pageStart":"1304","pagination":"pp. 1304-1344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Applied sciences - Engineering","Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Education - Formal education","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2883486","wordCount":34353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5151","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"263","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Groth"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66d950d9-0e36-3274-8f50-ad9c2da40215"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40007038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"611","pagination":"pp. 611-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Consigned to Sepia: Remembering Victorian Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007038","wordCount":4327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicolas Howe"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff7ed280-041d-3b6e-8c02-e0930aaf7d50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25515129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thou Shalt Not Misinterpret: Landscape as Legal Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25515129","wordCount":20451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"Since the early 1990s cities and towns across the United States have been embroiled in a series of increasingly contentious lawsuits over displays of the Ten Commandments on government land. Part of a broader wave of litigation over religious iconography in public places, these cases are seen to embody a national confrontation between conservative Christians and their liberal enemies over the separation of church and state. In many cases, one side argues that the displays merely acknowledge the nation's Judeo-Christian heritage, the other that they alienate non-Christians and thus exclude them from public life. On both sides, efforts to explain how landscapes \"speak\"-and more important, to describe the psychological effects of such speech-have focused on the affective modalities of observation. How, courts ask, should a reasonable observer respond emotionally to religious symbols in the public square? What, if anything, is the political significance of his or her feelings? This debate is best understood as a form of agonistic social performance that serves not only to define substantive legal rights but also to shape the moral and aesthetic sensibilities of its audiences. By dramatizing landscape's power to inspire and overawe, alienate and offend, its adversaries seek to affirm different standards of public discourse and civic piety. In so doing, they ground the poetics of public space in the politics of national memory. \/\/\/ \u81ea 1990 \u5e74\u4ee3\u521d\u671f,\u7f8e\u56fd\u5404\u5730\u57ce\u9547\u5df2\u5377\u5165\u4e86\u4e00\u7cfb\u5217\u6709\u5173\u5728\u653f\u5e9c\u571f\u5730\u4e0a\u5c55\u793a\u5341\u8beb\u7684\u8d8a\u6765\u8d8a\u5177\u6709\u4e89\u8bae\u7684\u5b98\u53f8. \u8fd9\u4e9b \u6848\u4ef6\u5c5e\u4e8e\u5bf9\u516c\u5171\u573a\u6240\u5b97\u6559\u5f71\u50cf\u8bc9\u8bbc\u4e4b\u5e7f\u6cdb\u6d6a\u6f6e\u7684\u4e00\u90e8\u5206.\u5b83\u4eec\u88ab\u8ba4\u4e3a\u662f\u4fdd\u5b88\u57fa\u7763\u5f92\u4e0e\u4ed6\u4eec\u7684\u81ea\u7531\u6d3e\u5bf9\u654c\u5728\u653f \u6559\u5206\u79bb\u4e00\u4e8b\u4e0a\u7684\u5bf9\u5cd9.\u5728\u8bb8\u591a\u4e2a\u6848\u4e2d,\u4e00 \u65b9\u8ba4\u4e3a\u8fd9\u4e9b\u5b97\u6559\u5c55\u793a\u53ea\u4e0d\u8fc7\u662f\u627f\u8ba4\u4e86\u7f8e\u56fd\u7684\u72b9\u592a- \u57fa\u7763\u6559\u9057\u4ea7; \u53e6\u4e00\u65b9\u5374\u8ba4\u4e3a\u5b83\u4eec\u6392\u6324\u975e\u57fa\u7763\u6559\u5f92\u5e76\u5bfc\u81f4\u4ed6\u4eec\u65e0\u6cd5\u53c2\u4e0e\u516c\u5171\u751f\u6d3b. \u53cc\u65b9\u4e5f\u6ce8\u91cd\u4e8e\u60c5\u611f\u7684\u89c2\u5bdf\u65b9\u5f0f\u6765\u89e3\u91ca\u666f\u89c2\u662f\u5982 \u4f55\u4f20\u9012\u8baf\u606f\u4ee5\u53ca\u8fd9\u4e9b\u8baf\u606f\u5bf9\u5fc3\u7406\u4e0a\u7684\u5f71\u54cd.\u6cd5\u9662\u8be2\u95ee\u4e00\u4e2a\u7406\u6027\u89c2\u5bdf\u8005\u5e94\u8be5\u5bf9\u516c\u5171\u573a\u6240\u91cc\u7684\u5b97\u6559\u8c61\u5f81\u6709\u7740\u600e\u4e48 \u6837\u7684\u60c5\u611f\u53cd\u5e94?\u4ed6\u7684\u611f\u53d7\u53c8\u4ee3\u8868\u4e86\u4ec0\u4e48\u653f\u6cbb\u610f\u4e49\u5462?\u8fd9\u4e2a\u8fa9\u8bba\u6700\u597d\u88ab\u7406\u89e3\u4e3a\u4e00\u79cd\u683c\u6597\u6027\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u5c55\u6f14. \u6b64\u5c55\u6f14 \u4e0d\u4ec5\u754c\u5b9a\u4e86\u5b9e\u8d28\u6027\u6cd5\u5f8b\u6743\u5229,\u4e5f\u6709\u52a9\u4e8e\u5f62\u6210\u89c2\u4f17\u7684\u9053\u5fb7\u4e0e\u5ba1\u7f8e\u60c5\u9762. \u901a\u8fc7\u51f8\u73b0\u666f\u89c2\u9f13\u52b1,\u5371\u6151,\u758f\u79bb\u4ee5\u53ca\u5192 \u72af\u7684\u80fd\u529b.\u5b83\u7684\u5bf9\u624b\u8bd5\u56fe\u7533\u660e\u516c\u5171\u8bdd\u8bed\u548c\u516c\u6c11\u8654\u656c\u7684\u4e0d\u540c\u6807\u51c6. \u8fd9\u6837\u7684\u884c\u4e3a\u4f7f\u516c\u5171\u7a7a\u95f4\u7684\u8bd7\u5b66\u9576\u5d4c\u4e8e\u6c11\u4e3b\u8bb0 \u5fc6\u653f\u6cbb\u91cc. \/\/\/ Desde principios de la d\u00e9cada de los 90, varias ciudades y pueblos de todo Estados Unidos han estado enredados en una serie de demandas cada vez m\u00e1s conflictivas sobre la exhibici\u00f3n de los Diez Mandamientos en propiedades del gobierno. Estos casos, parte de una ola m\u00e1s amplia de pleitos sobre la iconograf\u00eda religiosa en lugares p\u00fablicos, son vistos como la expresi\u00f3n de una confrontaci\u00f3n nacional de los cristianos conservadores con sus enemigos liberales sobre la separaci\u00f3n entre la iglesia y el estado. En muchos casos, un lado argumenta que estas exhibiciones meramente representan la herencia judeocristiana del pa\u00eds, mientras el otro declara que se est\u00e1 alienando a los no cristianos y por lo tanto se les est\u00e1 excluyendo de la vida p\u00fablica. En ambos lados, los esfuerzos para explicar c\u00f3mo el paisaje \"habla\"-y m\u00e1s importante, para describir los efectos psicol\u00f3gicos de tal mensaje-se han concentrado en las modalidades afectivas de la observaci\u00f3n. \u00bfC\u00f3mo, preguntan los tribunales, debe responder emocionalmente un observador razonable a los s\u00edmbolos religiosos presentes en las \u00e1reas p\u00fablicas? \u00bfCu\u00e1 es el significado pol\u00edtico de sus sentimientos, si es que existe? Este debate se entiende mejor como una forma de desempe\u00f1o social agon\u00edstico que sirve, no s\u00f3lo para definir los derechos legales fundamentales, sino tambi\u00e9n para conformar las sensibilidades morales y est\u00e9ticas de su p\u00fablico. Al dramatizar el poder del paisaje para inspirar e intimidar, alienar y ofender, sus adversarios buscan afirmar normas diferentes de discurso p\u00fablico y devoci\u00f3n c\u00edvica. Al hacerlo, mezclan la poes\u00eda de los espacios p\u00fablicos en la pol\u00edtica de la memoria nacional.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Block De Behar"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40147601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40147601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narration under Discussion: A Question of Men, Angels, Proper Names, and Pronouns","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40147601","wordCount":9811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2775301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a8dc125-f739-3ce3-b6f4-5e217c74af4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2775301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":93.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Author Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2775301","wordCount":75090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heather Dubnick"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"1148","pageStart":"1143","pagination":"pp. 1143-1148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251688","wordCount":2764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren\u00e9 Ranc\u0153ur"],"datePublished":"1986-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40528543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cfe9b3d-21da-3fed-930c-49aa0c4ead6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40528543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":245.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVIe \u2013 XXe si\u00e8cles). Ann\u00e9e 1985","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40528543","wordCount":117289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e42f506-7b6d-3ad0-bc90-1871e9d07bf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/959252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959252","wordCount":20208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1599","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Shiro Tashiro"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"408ac8d2-8bca-31bf-bcd5-bd9ca7341726"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1212669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Imaging","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Videophilia: What Happens When You Wait for It on Video","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1212669","wordCount":7112,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[24023,24090]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy L. Green"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00161071"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976306"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/286690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenhiststud"}],"isPartOf":"French Historical Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"748","pageStart":"722","pagination":"pp. 722-748","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art and Industry: The Language of Modernization in the Production of Fashion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/286690","wordCount":11525,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[371,438]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"The purpose of this article is twofold. I propose a rereading of the history of the modern garment industry as a reflection of changing representations of art and industry. At the same time I will show how French industrial discourse, in particular, can help us reexamine the shift in values attributed to both sides of this modern dichotomy. The garment industry offers a perfect vantage point for examining these two poles of production in the age of mass production. We can see how a language of art has at times been at war with the imperatives of productivity and how French garment industrialists have attempted to reconcile the two by constructing an industrial image incorporating an otherwise troublesome discourse on art. Furthermore, in the battle over customers, we can see how women are both praised and blamed in the art-industry debate and how culture--a differentiation between French women and others--is used to explain French garment makers' successes and difficulties on the world market.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-03-23","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1692800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f52e972f-b991-3e6d-bb65-5ccc9086d765"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1692800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"1344","pageStart":"1287","pagination":"pp. 1287-1344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1692800","wordCount":28178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4642","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"223","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Murray"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0b34b7d-7403-3852-9ea1-64f4450a4104"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3245489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"performingartsj"}],"isPartOf":"Performing Arts Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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He taught anatomy to artists and surgeons, illustrated his own anatomical texts, and wrote a treatise on the use of anatomy in art. The author explores the connections among visual displays representing human anatomy, aesthetics, and pedagogical practices for Bell and a particular group of British surgeon-anatomists. Creating anatomical models and drawings was thought to discipline the surgeon's hand, while the study of anatomy and comparative anatomy would discipline the artist's eye. And for Bell, beauty made drawings into better pedagogical tools.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23482810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e59a2479-eaeb-3cd4-8df3-658e5d100232"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23482810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23482810","wordCount":34566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Cormack"],"datePublished":"2006-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44231428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379700"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607734255"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9873402a-c4be-37ff-9de4-34ff3651d3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44231428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociarmyhistrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":165.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i, iii-iv, 1, 3-7, 9, 11-91, 93-105, 107-135, 137-145, 147, 149-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Military Studies","History","Peace & Conflict Studies","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"GENERAL INDEX VOLUMES 1991-2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44231428","wordCount":80161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Society for Army Historical Research","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-06-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5a23118-6ef0-3241-8c18-6d856c13ca49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23483403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23483403","wordCount":46609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27838457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"228b3dc4-4285-390b-9e0c-20d75226d6b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27838457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27838457","wordCount":18826,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise M. 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Among other things, the sources trace the migrants and laborers in and around the plantation island of Fernando P\u00f3, moving through numerous empires and societies in Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon and Gabon for most of the twentieth century. Having sources \u201cspeak for themselves\u201d to the \u201cpublic\u201d and even \u201camongst themselves\u201d contributes not only to an expansionary information commons, but also to a methodological reorganization and pluralization. When a multiplicity of sources are displayed and interlinked as hypertext, the static conceptual lenses of traditional social and cultural history dissolve. Les sources d\u2019archives collect\u00e9es dans le cadre de ma th\u00e8se de doctorat ont \u00e9t\u00e9 toutes post\u00e9es sur un blog, opensourceguinea.org. Entre autres, les sources retracent l\u2019histoire des migrants et travailleurs dans et autour de l\u2019ile \u00e0 plantations de Fernando Po, traversant des nombreux empires et soci\u00e9t\u00e9s dans la Guin\u00e9e \u00e9quatoriale, le Nigeria, le Cameroun et le Gabon pendant la plupart du XXe si\u00e8cle. Ayant les sources \u201cparl\u00e9 pour elles-m\u00eames\u201d au \u201cpublic\u201d et aussi \u201centre elles-m\u00eames,\u201d celles-ci contribuent non seulement \u00e0 partager les documents num\u00e9ris\u00e9s, mais aussi \u00e0 une r\u00e9organisation et une pluralisation m\u00e9thodologique. Lorsqu\u2019une multiplicit\u00e9 de sources sont d\u00e9ploy\u00e9es et interconnect\u00e9es comme hypertexte, les filtres conceptuels statiques de l\u2019histoire culturelle et sociale traditionnelle se dissolvent.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Dimendberg"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e09e420-2931-3069-a382-ec147a28e288"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"667","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493, 665-667","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - 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Taking issue with Walter Benjamin's essays on mechanical reproduction, I argue here that both works represent responses to the new technology that emphasize its critical potential.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1933-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2766878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eeba2dbd-47af-36de-9a29-079f044725b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2766878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"728","pagination":"pp. 728-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Research Projects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2766878","wordCount":16535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1932-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5ae9f57-7bca-3271-b45a-b9b04dfbeef0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1932,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808374","wordCount":18832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Hoelscher"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/215712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/215712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Geographical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"570","pageStart":"548","pagination":"pp. 548-570","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Photographic Construction of Tourist Space in Victorian America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/215712","wordCount":8945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Geographical Society","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"Tensions and contradictions surround photographic representations of landscape-and the practices that created those representations-during the medium's so-called golden age in the late nineteenth century. These are examined by focusing on the landscape views of H. H. Bennett, a photographer of considerable renown whose stereographs and oversized panoramas of the Wisconsin Dells transformed a working river into a picturesque landscape. Such a construction of genteel tourist space in Victorian America suggests a post-frontier aesthetic in which nature is valued less as an opportunity for progress or an occasion for terror than as pleasing scenery.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefanie Harris"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19661cb6-e7c7-30b8-bd26-e7b7425389ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Exposures: Rilke, Photography, and the City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669179","wordCount":13412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"99","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melvin J. 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Picture-study advocates favored using these photomechanically produced halftone reproductions which shared the qualities of line and tone found in older intaglio and relief printing processes. This historical description of the reproductions used in picture study illustrates how popularist attitudes toward art and technological changes set the context for a curriculum movement in art education. At the same time, traditional assumptions about appropriate aesthetic qualities for reproductions prevented many art educators from making the best use of new technologies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deborah Waite"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23411061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10184252"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cff9c9a5-85c6-30bb-b8c6-ac016aee46b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23411061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificarts"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Architectural Tie Beam in Transition, Solomon Islands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23411061","wordCount":6995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15\/16","publisher":"Pacific Arts Association","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. 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\u0431\u043e\u043b\u044c\u0448\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0440\u0435\u0431\u0435\u043d\u043a\u0430\u2014\u043a\u0430\u043a \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0442\u0438\u0432\u043e\u044f\u0434\u0438\u0435 \u043e\u0442 \u0437\u043b\u043e\u0433\u043e, \u0433\u0440\u0443\u043f\u043f\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0441\u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430. \u042d\u0442\u0438 \u0441\u0442\u0438\u0445\u043e\u0442\u0432\u043e\u0440\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f, \u043a\u0430\u043a \u0438\u0437\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0441\u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430 \u0438 \u0440\u0435\u0430\u043a\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u043f\u043e\u044d\u0442\u0430 \u043d\u0430 \u0442\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u043c\u0435\u0445, \u0432\u0441\u0442\u0443\u043f\u0430\u044e\u0442 \u0432 \u0438\u043d\u0442\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0441\u043d\u0435\u0439\u0448\u0438\u0439 \u0434\u0438\u0430\u043b\u043e\u0433 \u0441 \u0442\u0435\u043e\u0440\u0438\u044f\u043c\u0438 \u0411\u043e\u0434\u043b\u0435\u0440\u0430 \u0438 \u0411\u0435\u0440\u0433\u0441\u043e\u043d\u0430. \u041f\u043e\u0434\u0440\u043e\u0431\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0430\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437 \u0441\u0442\u0438\u0445\u043e\u0442\u0432\u043e\u0440\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u041c\u0430\u044f\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0440\u0430\u0441\u043a\u0440\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u044d\u0442\u0438 \u0441\u0432\u044f\u0437\u0438 \u0438 \u043f\u043e\u043a\u0430\u0437\u044b\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u043f\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0436\u0438\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u0438 \u043e\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0446\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0439 \u043f\u043e\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b \u0441\u043c\u0435\u0445\u0430 \u0432 \u0435\u0433\u043e \u0442\u0432\u043e\u0440\u0447\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435\u2014\u0435\u0433\u043e \u0441\u043e\u0437\u0438\u0434\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u0443\u044e, \u0438\u043b\u0438, \u043d\u0430\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0440\u043e\u0442, \u0440\u0430\u0437\u0440\u0443\u0448\u0438\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u0443\u044e \u043c\u043e\u0449\u044c.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Snait B. Gissis"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.41","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19391811"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156802914"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0143e16-b48e-3c86-80cb-77f99d42daf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.41"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudnatsci"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Visualizing \"Race\" in the Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.41","wordCount":21502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This paper looks at the conditions of the emergence of \"race\" as a new scientific category during the eighteenth century, arguing that two modes of discourse and visualization played a significant role: that on society, civility, and civilization\u2014as found principally in the travel literature\u2014and that on nature, as found in natural history writings, especially in botanical classifications. The European colonizing enterprise had resulted in an extensive flow of new objects at every level. Visual representations of these new objects circulated in the European cultural world and were transferred and transformed within travelogue and natural history writings. The nature, boundaries, and potentialities of humankind were discussed in this exchange within the conceptual grid of classifications and their visual representations. Over the course of the century the discourse on society, civility, and civilization collapsed into the discourse on nature. Humans became classified and visually represented along the same lines as flora, according to similar assumptions about visible features. Concurrently, these visible features were related necessarily to bundles of social, civilized, and cognitive characteristics taken from the discourse on society, civility, civilization, as found in the contemporaneous travelogue.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue Rainey"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/518924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a2b15c9-9657-3fec-b459-4566cba1d54d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/518924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mary Hallock Foote","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/518924","wordCount":29267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"When she was in her twenties, Mary Hallock Foote\u2019s designs embellished popular periodicals and works by Whittier, Longfellow, and Hawthorne. Although her later Western fiction has received attention, the details of her illustrating career are little known. Her experiences at Cooper Union\u2019s School of Design for Women, her commissions from 1869 through 1882, her working methods as an artist, her juggling of the roles of artist and mother, and her efforts to illustrate her own essays and stories reveal that Foote\u2019s unprecedented accomplishments encouraged, and perhaps enabled, other women to enter this important field of popular art.","subTitle":"A Leading Illustrator of the 1870s and 1880s","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43439909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07330707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43439909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"restmananote"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration & Management Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-58, 61-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Notes and Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43439909","wordCount":29477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DELIA CASADEI"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf9ac10d-f854-3205-ad60-53c10efb63e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Milan's Studio di Fonologia: Voice Politics in the City, 1955-8","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862998","wordCount":22900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"141","abstract":"The Studio di Fonologia Musicale of Milan, Italy's first electronic music studio, opened in 1955. Housed in the national broadcasting (RAI) studios in Milan, the studio was founded by two celebrated Italian composers: Luciano Berio and Bruno Maderna. The institution is often remembered nowadays for being the first electronic music studio to focus its activity on the human voice. As I argue, this focus was not only of an aesthetic nature, but rather reflected long-standing political and intellectual conceptions of voice, speech and public space that were rooted in Italy's early days as a republic, and in mid-twentieth-century Milan as the flagship city for this newly achieved political modernity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane H. Hill"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e94f9241-7560-3571-98a3-2429bd9069e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1103","pageStart":"1101","pagination":"pp. 1101-1103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231318","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63e34083-8de7-30a5-981d-0a92dd8e841e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":77.0,"pageEnd":"615","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-615","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Four Genealogies for a Recombinant Anthropology of Science and Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497785","wordCount":33956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Inga Pollmann"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5nph05.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462983656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"072da701-114c-37b2-9af6-a93876de3f2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5nph05.8"}],"isPartOf":"Cinematic Vitalism","keyphrase":["axolotl","cinema","theater","merleau","andr\u00e9 bazin","vitalist","theater and cinema","evolution","bergson","open stories"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"207","pagination":"207-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Open Bodies, Open Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5nph05.8","wordCount":21406,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35267,35361]],"Locations in B":[[118252,118346]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the post-war period, European film theory was dominated by approaches to film that incorporated post-catastrophic narrative forms and visual styles, especially those of Italian neorealism. Yet this period also saw a return of vitalist motifs in film theory. Even more so than in pre-war film theory, the vitality of the moving image was related to the question of the human being and its relationship to other forms of life, as well as questions of humanism. This novel combination of interest in life, realism, and modes of narration is especially evident in the work of Andr\u00e9 Bazin, but also seems","subTitle":"Evolution, Narration, and Spectatorship in Post-war Film Theory","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1950-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/891325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4a62cab-caad-380d-a5d9-618f937a4153"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/891325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index of Record Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/891325","wordCount":9407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Buck-Morss"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0163cd47-6446-3f96-bf0e-cb5df4f62431"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetics and Anaesthetics: Walter Benjamin's Artwork Essay Reconsidered","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778700","wordCount":15048,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[52418,52489],[53634,54041]],"Locations in B":[[1993,2071],[2447,2842]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Ackerman"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.36.2.0139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d280a66e-a90d-3010-9f55-167dae393957"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.36.2.0139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Comedy, Capitalism, and a Loss of Gravity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.36.2.0139","wordCount":15091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Trevor Ross"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2739239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2739239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Copyright and the Invention of Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2739239","wordCount":11606,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14291,14384]],"Locations in B":[[70321,70414]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEAN DAUDELIN"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23917218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0021969X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23917218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jchurchstate"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Church and State","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Dependence and Religious Policy: Protestants and the State in Pre-Revolutionary Nicaragua (1937-1979)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23917218","wordCount":12629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36882988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 97001952"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annabota"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771011","wordCount":12154,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1935-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6e5bcf1-8fd9-3c90-a3ec-523f5c88a57d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/949150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"London Concerts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949150","wordCount":6979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1103","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ded4b0a2-f7e5-3d38-830e-18465e3e9dcb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40290669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":198.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii, 1-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"The American Archivist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290669","wordCount":90388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher I. Lehrich"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afad595a-9fc8-3b2c-a90f-c898f35450da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Unanswered Question: Music and Theory of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907408","wordCount":9408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Several of the great \"founding fathers\" of theory of religion discerned a deep connection between religion and music, particularly Western \"classical\" music. Our relatively recent acceptance that \"religion\" as universal category was an early modern European invention should prompt suspicion that this connection is historically specific. Yet while scholars in many disciplines have recognized the importance of music in Western imagination, modern scholars of religion have largely ignored it. This article surveys three important discussions of music and religion, in Rudolf Otto, Johan Huizinga, and Max Weber, to provide groundwork for rethinking an important, unanswered question. In conclusion, some preliminary remarks are made about reconstituting this question in contemporary theory, using a brief discussion of Igor Stravinsky's Rite of Spring to suggest the potential value of treating Western music as a discourse of imagining religion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Hill","Stephen Herbert"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Eadweard Muybridge and the Kingston Museum Bequest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815404","wordCount":5299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1948-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1138565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08852731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b600c110-fc39-3382-a3b8-3936371110b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1138565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcrimlawcrim1931"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1931-1951)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"ix","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-ix","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1138565","wordCount":5032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Northwestern University School of Law","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2082180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"238af4d1-ecda-33a4-9b43-c90ef335f1a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2082180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2082180","wordCount":31462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sonja Mejcher-Atassi"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43303035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0235ca6b-e300-3d3e-ade6-f091b61dc1c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43303035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"535","pagination":"pp. 535-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ART AND POLITICAL DISSENT IN POSTWAR LEBANON: WALID SADEK'S \"FI ANNANI AKBAR MIN BIKASU [BIGGER THAN PICASSO]\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43303035","wordCount":11069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Taking Walid Sadek's fi annani akbar min bikasit [bigger than picasso] as its starting point, this article examines relations of art and politics in post-civil war Lebanon. A tiny and inexpensive paperback related to Picasso unfolds into a work of art that raises questions about the place of art and political dissent. After situating bigger than picasso in the context of contemporary book art and artistic practices of the postwar generation in Lebanon, the article focuses on the juxtaposition of text and image. By placing narratives of art vandalism next to the image of a monument dedicated to the late Syrian President Hafiz al-Asad, bigger than picasso playfully and provocatively breaks with political taboos at a time when the silence about the Lebanese Civil War (1975-90) and about Lebanese-Syrian relations was met with increasing anxiety. At the same time, the work makes room for aesthetic inquiries, exploring new possibilities of art at the margins of cultural production. The article concludes that bigger than picasso brings to the fore the discrepancy between public monumentality and artistic practices, which in finding ways around political violence and censorship have recourse to ephemeral and private spheres, and holds unexpected meanings in ever-changing political circumstances.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Kincaid"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26adf743-4603-391a-9770-429710009ef8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Memory and the City: Urban Renewal and Literary Memoirs in Contemporary Dublin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115265","wordCount":12520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"Changing cities lend themselves to reflections on memory, on what is lost and what is gained. Many of the major theorists of modernity lived in cities that were undergoing rapid development. The history of modernity in Ireland is no exception to this combination of urbanism and modernism. Each phase of the modernization project in Ireland's capital has produced debates about architecture and planning alongside literary and historical reflections. We see these debates in the 1960s, during which reforms geared toward internationalizing the economy and society were enacted, and we see them in the 1990s, when a new wave of globalization transformed the urban center of Dublin into a tourist destination and financial hub. Into this mix of gentrification and renewal came a literary upsurge, the updated urban memoir. This paper theorizes the relationship between memory, memoir and urban renewal.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Lawee"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15650\/hebruniocollannu.86.2015.0265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609049"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56017725"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221966"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdd6a631-a379-31b5-93e2-64927997b56a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15650\/hebruniocollannu.86.2015.0265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hebruniocollannu"}],"isPartOf":"Hebrew Union College Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Biblical Scholarship in Late Medieval Ashkenaz: The Turn to Rashi Supercommentary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15650\/hebruniocollannu.86.2015.0265","wordCount":19591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":"This article provides orientation in the mostly terra incognita that is Ashkenazic biblical exegesis from 1350 through 1500. In particular, it focuses on interpretive activities involving Rashi's Commentary on the Torah. The study moves between the two poles of fluctuating but generally increasing Ashkenazic ambivalence toward Bible study, on one hand, and a growing exegetical engagement with Rashi on the other. This new impulse to supercommentarial activity arose in part from an intensified study of Rashi that accompanied the role assigned to his Commentary in fulfilling the talmudically mandated review of the weekly Torah lectionary. The developments explored here bridge the less formal engagement with the Commentary characteristic of high medieval Franco-German exegesis and the systematic supercommentaries on Rashi that proliferated in early modern times. In the latter period, remarkably, this genre became the dominant form of exegetical expression in central and eastern European seats of Jewish learning.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt16gzb17.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780253353283"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34677c89-0eb9-3185-afe7-74777013920c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt16gzb17.18"}],"isPartOf":"The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933-1945","keyphrase":["buchenwald","subcamp","inmates","prisoners","allendorf","concentration camp","buchenwald concentration","buchenwald camp","buchenwald mahnung","bartel buchenwald"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":144.0,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"297","pagination":"297-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"BUCHENWALD SUBCAMP SYSTEM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt16gzb17.18","wordCount":144838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The subcamp complex of the Buchenwald concentration camp developed in similar ways to other subcamp systems in the Nazi concentration camp system, especially in relation to the administration\u2019s changing labor needs. Due to an ever-increasing demand for armaments production as the war continued, the camps were restructured to provide a supply of laborers to support the war economy. In 1942, the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps (IKL) was subsumed within the new SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA), and the camps previously under the IKL were administered under WVHA Office Group D. WVHA chief Oswald Pohl entered into negotiations with the Armaments","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. D. Kay"],"datePublished":"1968-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/769448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00804606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dec48ab0-cdbd-34d3-b673-a5fea56cfe2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/769448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biogmemofellroya"}],"isPartOf":"Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Rupert Edward Cecil Lee Guinness, Second Earl of Iveagh. 1874-1967","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/769448","wordCount":10961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carey Monserrate"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EDITORIAL: THE PASSION OF CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460737","wordCount":1477,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75444,75868]],"Locations in B":[[43,466]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paolo Amaldi","Annelle Curulla"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25834972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15499715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"162135983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d1126ef-8781-34e9-be19-c11390f3d6b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25834972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"futuante"}],"isPartOf":"Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation, History, Theory, and Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Museum Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Chairs, Posture, and Points of View: For an Exact Restitution of the Barcelona Pavilion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25834972","wordCount":2890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne K. Swartz"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"290d49f4-18a5-3916-9966-ca1549ed5cf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art after September 11: A Consideration of the Twin Towers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550716","wordCount":6122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erin L. Thompson"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.15.1.0045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15499715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"162135983"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"467dbc58-d8a6-3e38-a5ce-b4be1232b24e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/futuante.15.1.0045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"futuante"}],"isPartOf":"Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation, History, Theory, and Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Museum Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Recreating the Past in Our Own Image: Contemporary Artists' Reactions to the Digitization of Threatened Cultural Heritage Sites in the Middle East","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/futuante.15.1.0045","wordCount":4188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"The destruction of archaeological sites in Syria and Iraq by the Islamic State has been widely covered in the Western media, and has launched a flurry of projects with the goal of combatting the destruction through the use of digital technologies. Technologies such as 3D modeling and printing have been hailed as salvific, and their ability to preserve threatened sites, xvii reconstruct destroyed ones, and disseminate knowledge of the past cheaply and easily all over the globe have been called the only possible remedy for destruction by the IS. This article surveys the work of a number of contemporary artists who are questioning these narratives and pointing to potential downsides to digital reconstructions of threatened cultural heritage.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willem Frijhoff","Dani\u00e8le Benoist","Sarah Boumendil","Robert Gougnard","Guillaume K\u00e9rour\u00e9dan","Jacqueline Salouadji","Martine Walker"],"datePublished":"1981-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02216280"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5588d7c6-c98d-3016-beaf-3ee9a4146ebf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histoireeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Histoire de l'education","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":192.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE D'HISTOIRE DE L'\u00c9DUCATION FRAN\u00c7AISE: Titres parus au cours de l'ann\u00e9e 1978 et suppl\u00e9ments des ann\u00e9es ant\u00e9rieures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158580","wordCount":63475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11\/12","publisher":"Ecole normale sup\u00e9rieure de lyon","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nanna Verhoeff"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtwb.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089643797"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbf3ed26-e3d7-32a9-a7bd-2952345b6b90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mtwb.8"}],"isPartOf":"Mobile Screens","keyphrase":["gadget","console","nintendo","touchscreen","theoretical","theoretical console","theoretical consoles","mobility","object","newness"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"73","pagination":"73-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Technology","Film Studies","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Theoretical Consoles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mtwb.8","wordCount":10756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Theoretical objects are things that compel us to propose, interrogate and theorize. They counter the influence of approaches that try to define, position and fix. The handheld, mobile screen offers us a specific kind of theoretical object. Smartphones and tablet computers are a rapidly developing type of screen object. Hybrid screen devices that encompass multiple interfaces, they raise questions about the specificity of the screen gadget as object, and about the entanglement of technologies, applications and practices. Moreover, the very speed of the development of this type of technological object demands an assessment of their historicity: how can we understand","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Barenberg"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"851b9903-dc34-32e4-a1ba-298dc8f0af4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":231.0,"pageEnd":"983","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-983","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democracy and Domination in the Law of Workplace Cooperation: From Bureaucratic to Flexible Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123248","wordCount":112225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keumsoo Hong"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc34b5fb-1364-36d2-85d9-9ebfef45af5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44582612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Geography of Time and Labor in the Late Antebellum American Rural South: Fin-de-Servitude Time Consciousness, Contested Labor, and Plantation Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582612","wordCount":13010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Over the past few decades the conceptual metaphors of time, space, and labor have been an organizing focus of the geohistorical discourse of social change. This essay explores the involvement of contested time and labor in shaping the fragmented social geographies of the late antebellum American South. The examination is focused on the intraregional differentiation of time and labor systems and on their ramifications for the development of agrarian capitalism in the context of southern plantations. The descriptive and analytical evidence supports the new staple theory. The physical character of staple crops such as cotton, sugar, tobacco and rice made determinant influences on cultivation methods, seasonal routines, labor organizations, mentalit\u00e9, and the development of plantation capitalism. Ces derni\u00e8res d\u00e9cennies, le temps, l'espace et le travail furent les m\u00e9taphores conceptuelles selon lesquelles s'organisa le discours g\u00e9ographique et historique du changement social. Cet essai montre que le temps et le travail contest\u00e9s entra\u00een\u00e8rent les geographies sociales fragment\u00e9es du Sud des \u00c9tats-Unis juste avant la Guerre de S\u00e9cession. L'auteur r\u00e9v\u00e8le les diff\u00e9rences entre les syst\u00e8mes de temps et de travail d'une r\u00e9gion \u00e0 l'autre et leurs effets sur le d\u00e9veloppement du capitalisme agraire dans les plantations du Sud. La description et l'analyse renforcent la nouvelle th\u00e9orie fondamentale avanc\u00e9e: l'aspect physique des r\u00e9coltes de base \u2013 coton, sucre, tabac et riz \u2013 influen\u00e7a largement les m\u00e9thodes de culture, les routines saisonni\u00e8res, les organisations du travail, la mentalit\u00e9 et le d\u00e9veloppement du capitalisme de plantation. W\u00e4hrend der vergangenen Jahrzehnte sind die konzeptuellen Metaphern von Zeit, Raum und Arbeit ein organisierender Fokus des geohistorischen Diskurses sozialen Wandels gewesen. Der Autor untersucht die Verkn\u00fcpfung von Konflikten um Zeit und Arbeit, die die fragmentierten sozialen Geographien des amerikanischen S\u00fcdens in der sp\u00e4ten Vorkriegszeit formten. Die Untersuchung konzentriert sich auf die intraregionale Differenzierung von Zeit- und Arbeitssystemen und deren Verzweigung f\u00fcr die Entwicklung des Agrarkapitalismus im Kontext der Plantagen im S\u00fcden. Die deskriptive und analytische Evidenz unterst\u00fctzt die neue Theorie der Massenprodukte. Der physische Charakter der Ernten von Massenprodukten wie Baumwolle, Zucker, Tabak und Reis beeinflusste entscheidend Kultivierungsmethoden, Saisonverlauf, Arbeitsorganisation, Mentalit\u00e4t und Entwicklung des Plantagen-Kapitalismus. En las \u00faltimas d\u00e9cadas las met\u00e1foras conceptuales de tiempo, espacio y trabajo han sido un foco ordenador del discurso geohist\u00f3rico del cambio social. Este trabajo examina la implicaci\u00f3n de tiempo y trabajo impugnado en la formaci\u00f3n de las geograf\u00edas sociales fragmentadas del sur de Estados Unidos a finales de la \u00e9poca preb\u00e9lica. La investigaci\u00f3n concentra en la diferenciaci\u00f3n intrarregional de sistemas de tiempo y trabajo y en sus consecuencias para el desarrollo del capitalismo agrario en el contexto de las plantaciones del sur. Las pruebas descriptivas y anal\u00edticas sostienen la nueva teor\u00eda sobre cultivos principales. El car\u00e1cter f\u00edsico de los cultivos principales como el algod\u00f3n, el az\u00facar, el tabaco y el arroz tuvieron influencias determinantes sobre los m\u00e9todos de cultivo, las rutinas estacionales, las organizaciones obreras, la mentalidad y el capitalismo de plantaci\u00f3n.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael W. Jennings"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"578ab24d-8d96-34df-a95f-13b901120963"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re: Richard Sieburth on Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171081","wordCount":2334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt12877w9.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089645647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0723b5b1-d813-3aba-b406-184e48c16b4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt12877w9.4"}],"isPartOf":"New Publication Cultures in the Humanities","keyphrase":["digital humanities","twardowski","jacques dubucs","pisma filozoficzne","wybrane pisma","meaning","big commensurability","mental activity","products","illuminations essays"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Digital Humanities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt12877w9.4","wordCount":5327,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,7251]],"Locations in B":[[21254,21924]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"We must keep in mind some numerical data when we evoke the transition from the paper to the digital age. In particular, the following contrast speaks for itself:1. All the books ever written represent 50 billion bytes.2. The information produced in 2006 represents 150 quintillion (150 x 10\u00b9\u2078) bytes. That is to say, during 2006 alone, the world produced three million times the informational content of all the books ever written.3. Things continue in this way at high speed: the only internet track of May 2009 has generated 500 billion bytes.Thus, our paper-based heritage is already","subTitle":"Foundations","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. J. McCosker"],"datePublished":"1941-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20087415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99bac6fd-86ff-3f0c-8c18-9858cd2f6f1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20087415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"419","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-419","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Philadelphia and the Genesis of the Motion Picture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20087415","wordCount":7362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Historical Society of Pennsylvania","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1933-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2179919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318108"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39648313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2179919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Philosophical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"448","pagination":"pp. 448-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2179919","wordCount":1714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peggy Phelan"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/339640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cf47b10-3469-38c1-87df-5673ba5508d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/339640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"1004","pageStart":"979","pagination":"pp. 979-1004","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Francesca Woodman\u2019s Photography: Death and the Image One More Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/339640","wordCount":8208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37b7252f-f693-3a42-b9ab-cd08d8999b70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374452","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CLIFF MAK"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26173881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c048dd7-f8b2-36ff-9b0b-e8d26cbee13f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26173881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"898","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-898","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ON FALLING FASTIDIOUSLY: MARIANNE MOORE'S SLAPSTICK ANIMALS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26173881","wordCount":10920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isabel Capeloa Gil"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"218b7e68-b993-33eb-8b68-a77bcbd750c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40621807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Visuality of Catastrophe in Ernst J\u00fcnger's Der gef\u00e4hrliche Augenblick<\/italic> and Die ver\u00e4nderte Welt<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40621807","wordCount":11154,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"Ernst J\u00fcnger conceived, edited and wrote from 1928 to 1933 introductory essays to seven photo albums depicting contemporary catastrophic events. In these books he put across his radical ideas of a total mobile society energized through continuous violence. The photo books were the visual counterpart to his opus magnum, Der Arbeiter (1932), where he devised the ideal type of the worker as the herald of a new political order. The article discusses J\u00fcnger's theory of representation and the role played by photography in the aesthetics of catastrophe by looking at the enclosed visual system of the images selected for Der gef\u00e4hrliche Augenblick (1931) and Die ver\u00e4nderte Welt (1933) within the larger framework of Weimar's visual aesthetics. Whilst J\u00fcnger's visual rhetoric is the contingent product of Weimar's haunted relationship to the war, the catastrophic image also creates a discursive practice of its own. The image of disaster, either artificial or man-made, became a cultural palimpsest turning the past into an emerging present that provided instruction for the future. The article contends that the catastrophic image allows at times a double encoding that, albeit naturalizing disaster and thus becoming a producer of myths, may also suggest a reverse appropriation within the framework of the wider Weimar visual literacy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aaron Rosen"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41482515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85445931"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db692015-4040-335a-92ab-ef710be0a480"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41482515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studrose"}],"isPartOf":"Studia Rosenthaliana","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Diasporist Unpacks: The Epigonic Rummagings of R.B. Kitaj","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41482515","wordCount":7066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peeters Publishers","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-12-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25591121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 12, no. 12","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591121","wordCount":22432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angelos Koutsourakis"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95f2420f-7665-38b0-bddb-531986b74e0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24550140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Utilizing the 'Ideological Antiquity': Rethinking Brecht and Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24550140","wordCount":13427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":"Bertolt Brecht's writings have been influential in film theory and cinema. Yet Brecht's enthusiastic reception on the part of 1970s film theory has been followed by skepticism and criticism on the part of contemporary cognitivist film theory. For many years film scholars understood the adjective \"Brechtian\" to characterize a set of stylistic devices which are radical in themselves yet not a method. One of the reasons for this has to do with the fact that film scholarship relied on Brecht's writings on theatre (which have so far only been available in unsatisfactory selection in translation) and not on his film essays. Marc Silberman's brilliant translation, published as Bertolt Brecht: on Film and Radio (London: Methuen, 2001) has not changed Brecht's critical reception in the discipline of film studies, because film scholars tend to associate Brecht with his reception within 1970s film theory. This article goes back to Brecht's writings on the film medium so as to trace the misunderstandings of his reception in the field of film studies. I suggest that Brechtian film theory and cinema remains an \"unfinished project.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAY WICKERSHAM"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20752713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284866"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709799"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"124725c3-c04a-3844-937a-52d6ead5fcfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20752713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newenglquar"}],"isPartOf":"The New England Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Financial Misadventures of Charles Bulfinch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20752713","wordCount":22290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"New England Quarterly, Inc.","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric J. Sundquist"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"373b14a6-b143-389f-ac03-a2d18405afe5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Mark Twain and Homer Plessy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928477","wordCount":14125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"24","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26455668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5736f65-ff31-393a-a6e8-1116fd18472d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26455668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":332.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xxx, 1-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2015","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26455668","wordCount":242437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2446604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06ce4bae-cd2f-3636-8c93-a01171fc0054"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2446604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjbotany"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":183.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2446604","wordCount":139449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Botanical Society of America","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ace342-543b-3622-b80b-22bf2c4d9920"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report JULY 1, 2016\u2013JUNE 30, 2017","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378759","wordCount":10304,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arthur R. Miller"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0b6cd87-45b9-30e4-8145-44c17ffaa937"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":97.0,"pageEnd":"1073","pageStart":"977","pagination":"pp. 977-1073","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Copyright Protection for Computer Programs, Databases, and Computer-Generated Works: Is Anything New Since CONTU?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341682","wordCount":53565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"In 1976, Congress created the National Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works (CONTU) to examine the implications of computer and other information technologies and to advise Congress on whether it would be wise to assimilate these new technologies into the existing copyright regime. Ever since, a number of people have voiced criticisms of CONTU's recommendations, arguing for a modification of the current copyright regime or even a different legal structure for these issues. Although these critics have many different approaches, they share the fear that incorporating these technologies into the current copyright system will lead to overprotection. In this Article, Professor Miller examines these arguments and concludes that CONTU's recommendations were correct and that the current regime is flexible enough to address the critics' concerns. First, Professor Miller surveys the progress of the court decisions involving computer programs, and demonstrates that a set of coherent copyright principles is beginning to develop in this area. Next, Professor Miller discusses the newer phenomenon of artificial intelligence, and utilizes copyright principles that have developed in the areas of computer programs and databases to demonstrate that at its current stage of development, artificial intelligence does not pose any significant obstacles to copyright analysis. Finally, Professor Miller addresses the claim that it eventually will be impossible to assimilate computer-generated works into the copyright system because they may have no obvious human author, and concludes not only that the caselaw contains no persuasive objection to extending copyright protection to these works, but also that such an extension would fulfill the constitutional imperative of promoting progress in these areas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-10-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1684741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc06408c-6357-39f6-8d02-6cf23d4671e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1684741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Spectacle and the Singularity:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vdd8n.8","wordCount":10379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The spectacular character of technology in capitalist society, which has always seemed to be a force unto itself, has reached new heights in recent years and demands that we contemplate the self-movement of objects we make. In May 2014, a group of renowned physicists, including Stephen Hawking, did an unusual thing among their lot: they wrote a review of a Hollywood blockbuster\u2014Morgan Freeman and Johnny Depp\u2019s,Transcendence<\/em>. In it, Hawking, et al. warn of the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI) and what has come to be known as the \u2018Singularity\u2019\u2014uncontrollable technological self-enhancement. The scientists describe, in the most","subTitle":"Debord and the \u2018Autonomous Movement of Non-Life\u2019 in Digital Capitalism","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CATHERINE RUSSELL"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a637184-6daf-3f33-8abc-ad2358520a72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24402343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DYSTOPIAN ETHNOGRAPHY: Peter Kubelka's \"Unsere Afrikareise\" Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24402343","wordCount":4377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"Bien que le film de Peter Kubelka Unsere Afrikareise ait \u00e9t\u00e9 produit dans le contexte d'une esth\u00e9tique moderniste, sa riche utilisation de l'image d\u00e9fie les r\u00e8gles formalistes \u00e9tablies par la critique du cin\u00e9ma d'avant-garde que Kubleka luim\u00eame d\u00e9fendait au cours des ann\u00e9es soixantes. Les images de chasseurs autrichiens, d'animaux morts et de femmes africaines nues, combin\u00e9es \u00e0 une trame sonore dense et \u00e9vocatrice, incitent une analyze des discours colonialistes de l'ethnographie, du voyage, de la violence et de la suveillance. Le film met ainsi en march la \"machine d\u00e9sirant\" du regard colonialiste pour en d\u00e9menteler la position subjective de ma\u00eerise et de contr\u00f4le.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1bw1h8n.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760460099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd5aaece-ecec-3f5d-aed1-1740c7c4c030"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1bw1h8n.6"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","baldwin","minister","francis bacon","politician","english","french","educated","novaya zemlya","balfour"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"45","pagination":"45-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Language"],"title":"Statistical Analysis at the Birth of Close Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542675","wordCount":10861,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSEPH DARDA"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"148143d2-e140-30c7-8dae-3f7cc96f713f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44162978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Exceptionalist Optics of 9\/11 Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44162978","wordCount":8339,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42764,42932]],"Locations in B":[[1494,1662]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"During and after the 2001 attacks on New York City and Washington, thousands of photographs were taken. None, however, would become as iconic as Thomas Franklin's photo of three firefighters raising an American flag above the rubble of the World Trade Center. Franklin's photo, I argue in this essay, casts 9\/11 in the familiar myth of American exceptionalism, screening out but still gesturing to the heterogeneous memories left unsettled and animate in amateur photographs, missing-person posters, bodies in pain, and performance. In considering the struggle over the visual memory of the attacks, I first consider how, in the wake of 9\/11, the discourse of exceptionalism served to disavow the exceptions historically taken by the state and to rationalize the War on Terror. I show how this system of myths works in dialectical relation to other disruptive forms of cultural memory. I then read Franklin's iconic photograph as a screen by which traumatic memories are masked and onto which nationalist desires are projected. Finally, I analyze 9\/11 photography that troubles the exceptionalist optics of Franklin's photo by evoking the visual legacy of the Vietnam War and so challenging the logic of righteous warfare.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bertram C. Bruce"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40016859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3164c1da-dda3-3dcf-b070-d0ad0a4bb4f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40016859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40016859","wordCount":2990,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[198,1094],[6582,6743]],"Locations in B":[[8878,9774],[9799,9960]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY F. HAMBURGER"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"649595715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"701dcc43-4e7b-3a18-b24d-7d9b1bdb6791"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42622517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"In gebeden vnd in bilden geschriben\": Prints as Exemplars of Piety and the Culture of the Copy in Fifteenth-Century Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42622517","wordCount":16505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zsuzsa Baross"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77bb7016-0d0c-3273-a95d-e9d877dc87ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Lessons to Live (2): Deleuze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331695","wordCount":10662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"Part of a series on the question of what is the good life, the essay is structured as a montage. Part 1 contests the received notion that death is exterior to the work of Deleuze. To this end, it gathers together a telegraphic collection of examples-'corpses' in his corpus-that invariably show up whenever the question is raised. Part 2 attempts a Deleuzian move: it puts death to work. If death is not nothing, it argues, it must be productive of something absolutely new. Drawing upon Blanchot's seminal essay, 'The Two Versions of the Imaginary', it makes the case that this creation is the cadaver: the first time-image.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c442d2e6-90c1-316b-84de-9d3e104ec87e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Folklore's Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541312","wordCount":24182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"441","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":"The field of folklore is experiencing topic drift, as the gap widens between the name of the field and what it now signifies. This article traces the history of a mutating disciplinary subject and its relationship to the discipline's formation, institutionalization, and name. Three themes are of special importance: folklore's temporality or the problem of a contemporary subject, orality and the question of technology, and folklore as a mode of cultural production. This explication of folklore as a keyword goes to the root of our history as a field, to the atavism that popular understanding preserves in the notion of folklore as error, and to the revolutionary energy that Walter Benjamin found in its embrace.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geraldine E. Ostrove"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00156191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559677761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"290cd432-2817-3e12-8674-4f33e9eb06dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fontartimusi"}],"isPartOf":"Fontes Artis Musicae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","fre","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"762","pageStart":"673","pagination":"pp. 673-762","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"RECENT PUBLICATIONS IN MUSIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512645","wordCount":60555,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"International Association of Music Libraries, Archives, and Documentation Centres (IAML)","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela H. Smith"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/665680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21535531"},{"name":"oclc","value":"528726992"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202902"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfb17fac-32af-3bb8-ab65-612718f7104d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/665680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"west86th"}],"isPartOf":"West 86th: A Journal of Decorative Arts, Design History, and Material Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"In the Workshop of History: Making, Writing, and Meaning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/665680","wordCount":11123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"What does it mean to reconstruct historical experience? In a sense, all historians attempt to reconstruct historical experience out of the vestiges\u2014the texts, practices, and artifacts\u2014of the past, and the cultural historian in particular seeks to reconstruct the material and mental worlds of past ages. What techniques are available to the historian? Textual sources are the most familiar; however, technical writings (manuals, recipes, treatises) by early modern European artisans and practitioners are seldom able to provide sufficient information to actually carry out a procedure or make an object, and so it is not clear what these technical writings were intended to convey. Why, then, were such techniques written down? What, indeed, was the relationship between making and writing for the artisan? If the historian cannot rely on texts for the reconstruction of this component of historical experience, perhaps knowledge gained through hands-on experience\u2014whether of craft techniques, of sensation, or of historical actions\u2014can be employed as a reliable source by historians. Can reenactment and reconstruction give insight not only into the material conditions but also the mental worldview of the past? Through the examination of a variety of case studies focusing especially on the replication of craft techniques, this article considers what may be learned by the historian through historical reconstruction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amos Morris-Reich"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.20.1.150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f51a303b-94d7-3784-884c-43137e9571fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jewisocistud.20.1.150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Photography in Economies of Demonstration: The Idea of the Jews as a Mixed-Race People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.20.1.150","wordCount":12517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"Abstract Photographs played an important role in the development of the idea of the Jews as a mixed-race people. This article tracks the trajectory of this idea from the 1880s, when it was first introduced by the liberal Austrian anthropologist and archaeologist Felix von Luschan, through the works of American Jewish physician Maurice Fishberg and German Jewish linguist Sigmund Feist, to its appropriation and inversion by the prominent Nazi theoretician of race Hans F. K. G\u00fcnther in the 1920s. By tracing the circulation of one photograph, analyzing the roles of photographs in argumentation, comparing their status with other types of empirical sources, and arguing that the key to their analysis is performative, pertaining to the relationships photographs form, I argue for the essential contingency of ideas that in retrospect have been identified as fundamental to antisemitic arguments.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darryl Sterk"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ee636f5-c1bd-3aca-98a7-5d492e9d5c96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24886578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Apotheosis of Montage: The Videomosaic Gaze of \"The Man with the Compound Eyes\" as Postmodern Ecological Sublime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24886578","wordCount":12804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b63fc6ab-6016-3602-86ea-7a4a7d9a4e00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41510296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41510296","wordCount":4620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. J. S.","F. K.","J. H. W.","B. E. C. D."],"datePublished":"1933-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3715910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3715910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Short Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3715910","wordCount":1883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Wolff"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20082404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20082404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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J. Long"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24648860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6aedf86-bc61-3ef1-bddd-4c8ba7d0592f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24648860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeaustlite"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Austrian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Die Teufelskunst unserer Zeit\"? Photographic Negotiations in Thomas Bernhard's \"Ausl\u00f6schung\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24648860","wordCount":7900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Association of Austrian Studies","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"By examining the function of photography within the narrative economy of Bernhard's last published novel, Ausl\u00f6schung, and within the psychic economy of its narrator, Franz-Josef Murau, this article posits that photography is a social practice by means of which Murau is able to negotiate between the competing familial imperatives he faces in the aftermath of his parents' and brother's death.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory L. Lucente"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40246240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b93f259-a882-393c-9181-df2cf3d284aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40246240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Creation of Myth's Rhetoric: Views of the Mythic Sign","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40246240","wordCount":8858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["No\u00ebl Carroll"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1559213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mass Art as Art: A Response to John Fisher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559213","wordCount":3669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Hansen"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aba23f4a-4e06-3fc3-9ee7-558ee8e25af6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Decentric Perspectives: Kracauer's Early Writings on Film and Mass Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488426","wordCount":13178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"54","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1942-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1841751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4ca1219-98aa-3f13-90d5-b48ab26c200c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1841751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"442","pagination":"pp. 442-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Historical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1841751","wordCount":7943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Fabian Witt"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/829134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"755","pageStart":"717","pagination":"pp. 717-755","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"From Loss of Services to Loss of Support: The Wrongful Death Statutes, the Origins of Modern Tort Law, and the Making of the Nineteenth-Century Family","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/829134","wordCount":20216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Bar Foundation","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"The wrongful death statutes enacted in most states during the mid-nineteenth century have long represented a classic moment in the narrative of American legal history. Historians have not observed, however, that American wrongful death statutes amended the English act on which they were modeled to introduce a gender asymmetry peculiar to the United States. Led by New York, most American jurisdictions limited wrongful death actions to \"the widow and next of kin\" of the decedent, categories that did not include husbands of deceased wives. Thus, a wife could bring a wrongful death action for the death of her husband, but a husband could not bring a wrongful death action on his own behalf for the death of his wife. The wrongful death statutes represent a heretofore unrecognized conjuncture of the beginnings of the modern law of torts with the nineteenth-century legal reconstruction of the family. The statutes moved accident litigation away from an eighteenth-century model of masters suing for loss of the services of a servant, slave, wife, or child, toward the now more familiar model of suits for loss of wages and support. Moreover, the gender asymmetry of the statutes embodied and reproduced a new nineteenth-century conception of the family in which men worked as free laborers and women were confined to relatively narrow domestic roles, removed from the market and dependent for their support on the wages of their husbands. Indeed, the statutes anticipated by over half a century the American welfare state's two-track approach to support for wage-earning men and dependent women.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Blandine Joret"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvrs8xh6.5","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b732844-041f-3ccb-a593-85bd0728e0bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvrs8xh6.5"}],"isPartOf":"Studying Film with Andr\u00e9 Bazin","keyphrase":["cinema","kon tiki","reality","realism","integral realism","transl barnard","authenticity","ellipsis","shark attack","documentary authenticity"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"47","pagination":"47-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Communication Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Art of Reality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvrs8xh6.5","wordCount":16813,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13769,14139]],"Locations in B":[[28984,29350]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Regardless of Bazin\u2019s fierce rejection of prescriptive aesthetics, several of his major essays could easily be \u2013 and often have been \u2013 qualified as an attempt at formulating fundamental laws or basic principles of cinema: a theory of film. In \u2018The Myth of Total Cinema\u2019 (1946), for instance, he approaches film through the framework of \u2018integral realism\u2019,\u00b9 cinema\u2019s undeniable association with reality, which he grounds in the ontology<\/em> of film, explained in another seminal essay, \u2018The Ontology of the Photographic Image\u2019 (1945). Perhaps uncomfortable with the philosophical weight of the term, he reformulates \u2018ontology\u2019 in lay terminology for his introduction to What<\/em>","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.23","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925022247"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd13f1bd-9b91-36f4-bf89-1bc4a32a4a7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt15r3xcb.23"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","french","nobel prize","politician","minister","composer","novelist","president","educated","scarlatti"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"826","pageStart":"751","pagination":"751-826","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.23","wordCount":64146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iris Sandler","Laurence Sandler"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23328361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919714"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51169498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-263456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7286bbf3-8926-3d8d-9129-907b9056cd44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23328361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histphillifescie"}],"isPartOf":"History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A Conceptual Ambiguity that Contributed to the Neglect of Mendel's Paper","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23328361","wordCount":30584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn - Napoli","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"Four possible categories of cause are examined in respect of the almost total neglect of Gregor Mendel's theory of heredity from 1865 to 1900. From this examination, we conclude that these categories do not adequately account for that neglect, and, therefore, that Mendel's paper must have been incomprehensible to his contemporaries and immediate successors primarily on other, presumably conceptual, grounds. We suggest the possibility that in the latter half of the nineteenth century there was no conceptual distinction between the transmission of an hereditary trait from parent to offspring (genetics) and the subsequent development of that trait in the offspring (embryology).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank F. Furstenberg"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc3c6145-c1f0-3431-a224-395f26722f34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"806","pageStart":"803","pagination":"pp. 803-806","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231274","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Haven Blake"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"337aa753-d955-3ae4-9c79-2db3252616ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41809570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"When Readers Become Fans: Nineteenth-Century American Poetry as a Fan Activity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809570","wordCount":10567,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30689,30990]],"Locations in B":[[59017,59312]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gertrud Koch"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e37a233-1725-3884-b794-685ca900c295"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Rudolf Arnheim: The Materialist of Aesthetic Illusion: Gestalt Theory and Reviewer's Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488176","wordCount":5963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"51","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Dobraszczyk"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"767588cd-fdc6-36cc-bd79-d8c4823b1386"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40061428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"568","pagination":"pp. 568-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Image and Audience: Contractual Representation and London's Main Drainage System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40061428","wordCount":12364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VICTOR W. PAGE"],"datePublished":"1916-09-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26015055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368733"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006255042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0eeaf5e3-40b1-3a36-889f-bc04bfef1231"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26015055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieamer"}],"isPartOf":"Scientific American","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"266","pagination":"pp. 266-267, 269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Technology","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"The Motor-driven Commercial Vehicle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26015055","wordCount":3822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/460981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6364c60a-09e5-3bc0-8f0d-a7c5068d1418"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/460981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":241.0,"pageEnd":"901","pageStart":"613","pagination":"pp. 613-901","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/460981","wordCount":458765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrice Petro"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d10cbdb-d857-39b1-b2f2-19652e1c6473"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"After Shock \/ Between Boredom and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389315","wordCount":9365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander D. King"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.41","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6c071c4-2d0c-32d6-97f7-fc0fadcab485"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.41"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Patterning of Style: Indices of Performance through Ethnopoetic Analysis of Century-Old Wax Cylinders","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.41","wordCount":13233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Abstract This article demonstrates the value of Dell Hymes's theory of ethnopoetics through an analysis of two Koryak stories recorded during the winter of 1900\u20131901. It builds upon a tradition of linguistic anthropology established by Franz Boas. I provide some background to Boasian documentation of oral literature as well as Hymes's theory of ethnopoetics and then offer a close reading of two stories in Koryak. Such close analysis uncovers the artistry of the storytellers, and I discuss aesthetic commonalities as well as differences among texts produced by Koryak narrators. Hymesian ethnopoetic analysis can uncover indices of performance in the written transcription of sound recordings. The complete texts of the two stories are formatted in Hymesian verse form and presented in appendices. A commentary to this essay by Richard Bauman appears later in this special issue.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Brown","Harrison T. Meserole"],"datePublished":"1966-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf4666a7-1428-35a2-8095-6605bbc93394"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":397.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1965 MLA International Bibliography of Books and Articles on the Modern Languages and Literatures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261225","wordCount":390036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theresa M. Towner"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68b9f765-8cde-3518-9706-8ad3c9ef9af0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond The Old Marshal: \"Patriotic Nonsense,\" the Vernacular Cosmopolitan, And Faulkner's Fiction of the Early 1940s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908227","wordCount":8976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Faulkner Journal","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Stokes"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3060728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09681221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164413"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-252831"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49c5f5f6-2f79-3d97-b605-30311a8fd3ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3060728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjethn"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Ethnomusicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Media and Reform: The saz and elektrosaz in Urban Turkish Folk Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3060728","wordCount":6049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"British Forum for Ethnomusicology","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"Arabesk, a popular genre of Turkish music, is explicitly condemned by the dominant Kemalist political tradition. This critique is frequently cast in terms of an ideological distinction between the forces of a bureaucratic, secular centre and a reactionary, \"Islamist\" periphery. The former has promoted a reconstructed national folk musical tradition, in opposition to the \"oriental\" fatalism of Arabesk, associated with the latter. This dualism is however more of a political myth than a useful model of the social reality of popular music. It also obscures the strategies developed by urban professional instrumental musicians to reconcile the often contradictory demands of the state, the varied contexts of the market (piyasa) and their rapidly changing technologies. The paper examines current developments in techniques on the acoustic and electrified long-necked lute, the saz and the elektrosaz as aspects of these strategies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":123.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Individual Authors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831515","wordCount":63340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kristina Jacobsen"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a1fe9a1-0b01-3666-94a4-6d4f707c9a24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Rita(hhh): Placemaking and Country Music on the Navajo Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653087","wordCount":12815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1942-09-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e8e16f6-f763-361e-b3df-3f59725945e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25691508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25691508","wordCount":15971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Burri"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26575131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2165669X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829386115"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013200688"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c22c33d9-fa93-33d3-affa-78c4492aacaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26575131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaustrianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Austrian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Austrian Studies and the Disembrace from Foreign Cultural Diplomacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26575131","wordCount":7020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"A contribution to the ongoing discussion regarding the present and the possible futures of Austrian Studies, this essay proceeds from the deterritorialized character of the current practice in Austrian Studies. This deterritorialized status raises the question of how Austrian Studies should understand itself positioned relative to the aims and activities of Austrian foreign cultural diplomacy, and ultimately to Austria itself. In particular, how consciously or unconsciously do emotional and identificatory investments, developed in the course of professional training, create an alignment of perspectives that may be helpful for the Austrian state but perhaps not for Austrian Studies? This paper argues that \"doing Austrian Studies\" requires that we acknowledge in our own practice the deterritorialized context in which Austrian Studies emerged and operates. It explores the national agenda of Austrian cultural diplomacy and suggests that scholars working in \"Austrian Studies\" may be at their best when they take full measure of the distance between themselves and Austria.","subTitle":"A Response to the Current Discussion","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-09-06","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a2314ee-6d5c-3923-91e2-32d03af98821"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1695602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1014","pageStart":"964","pagination":"pp. 964-1014","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695602","wordCount":28814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4717","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"229","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maarten Doorman"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz0k.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053565858"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"404cbba2-d108-3c00-9a31-b0c8e0f3d4ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mz0k.10"}],"isPartOf":"Art in Progress","keyphrase":["visual arts","pagina","arthur danto","conceptual","history","artists","hegelian","gallery owner","notions","century"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The End of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz0k.10","wordCount":7379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The previous chapter described how one artistic movement, De Stijl, utilized concepts of progress. It also looked at the extent to which this movement viewed as progress the innovations it propagated and implemented. Chapter four, \u2018On Making Revolution,\u2019 offered an explanation for the major role that such concepts can play. The explanation made use of Thomas S. Kuhn\u2019s model for change in the sciences, a model that pays considerable attention to the revolutionary character of transitional phases and that, moreover, allows for a number of external factors, unlike earlier explanatory models.Kuhn\u2019s model casts light from various angles on the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kcq9.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a725485-9552-3a15-8e4e-759e82d0fac7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt45kcq9.13"}],"isPartOf":"Ostrannenie","keyphrase":["ostranenie","perception","specificity","perception ostranenie","object","shklovsky","defamiliarization","l\u00e1szl\u00f3 tarnay","categorical perception","perceptual"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"141","pagination":"141-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On Perception, Ostranenie, and Specificity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kcq9.13","wordCount":7577,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[12677,12974],[13195,14004]],"Locations in B":[[21971,22317],[22319,24225]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In my contribution to this book, I would like to hint at a possible lineage of the concept ofostranenie<\/em>(\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435) in aesthetic and film theory from the Russian Formalists to the present day. My approach is basically conceptual and unorthodox. My particular aim here is to define a golden thread for the conceptual labyrinth that would lead from Shklovsky\u2019s idea \u2013 both theoretically and historically \u2013 to what I take to be a fundamental challenge to the theory of the moving image, namely the arrival of the newest digital technology of simulation. And I hope to be able to","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD L. W. CLARKE"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824959","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd74a36d-6fb3-393d-b8b0-c2b376d01d0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26824959"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"261","pagination":"pp. 261-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Fanonian Poetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824959","wordCount":26769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Cultural Decolonization as Translation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raleigh B. 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Adamson"],"datePublished":"1982-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56364330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237212"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3234679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconceiving the Spheres of Social Life: Culture & Politics in Recent Marxist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234679","wordCount":10569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"The relationship between culture and politics as posited in classical Marxism is open to discussion on numerous grounds. Gramsci, for instance, thought it was a distortion to regard culture as an \"ideological superstructure.\" Sahlins and Habermas allege that Marx impoverished the concept of culture by assigning priority to labor over symbolization. Professor Adamson examines these critiques, finds them wanting, and proposes ways of rethinking the relationship between culture and politics within the Marxist tradition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Serguei Alex. Oushakine"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bc863d6-58ec-3afd-ac70-41708359936b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Flexible and the Pliant: Disturbed Organisms of Soviet Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651626","wordCount":16200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"In the texts of prominent Soviet figures such as writer Maxim Gorky, the agrobiologist Trofim Lysenko, and the educator Anton Makarenko, the uncertainty of social norms in early Soviet society became equated with an instability of environment in general and nature in particular. A powerful and vivid rhetoric of a \"second nature,\" to use Gorky's phrase, overcame the absence of clearly articulated models for subjectivity. A series of disciplining routines and activities capable of producing the new Soviet subject compensated in the 1930s for the dissolution of the daily order of things and all the structuring effects, social networks, and reciprocal obligations that were associated with it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2568924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"745d8b59-c7e2-34d8-8108-85efe2f11996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2568924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"809","pageStart":"771","pagination":"pp. 771-809","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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By comparing some foundational concepts underlying these traditions, such as the nature of the sign in Peirce and Saussure and Durkheim and Mead, and then exploring recent developments in structuralism and symbolic interactionism, a critical appraisal of their theories of meaning is made in the context of an emerging semiotic sociology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Auricchio"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30053338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669816"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30053338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Because the machine is execution and does not change, mechanical order becomes artistic order.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Campbell"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1150948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03085694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55939414"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236896"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7a0529c-6ccc-30ca-ae30-89c6f409b35c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1150948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"imagomundi"}],"isPartOf":"Imago Mundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Chronicle for 1983","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1150948","wordCount":7574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Imago Mundi, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruno Gil"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26877461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10502092"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607146732"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89546972-1ea7-3217-9f89-69c61243d013"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26877461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traddwelsettrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"77","pagination":"p. 77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"THEORIZING TRADITION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26877461","wordCount":934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments (IASTE)","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":"HOW RESEARCH CENTERS HAVE INQUIRED INTO TRADITION","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23213356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50e943b3-44c5-3cfc-b2a8-823f941e7869"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23213356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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H. Lawrence:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv346p26.11","wordCount":18351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"D. H. Lawrence has always provoked strong and divisive reactions among his critics, his censors and his readers, being often dismissed for celebrating sexuality and rejoicing in the lubricious moments abundantly present in his works. Boldly innovative, deeply sensual and radically experimental, he was surprisingly prone to the whims of literary fashion; but, in distinction to the majority of the modernist oeuvre associated primarily with the highbrow aestheticism of the elite, his works did have a broader cultural impact on the readership of the time, being listed among the top literary bestsellers and the best examples of fiction written during","subTitle":"\u2018Russia Will Certainly Inherit the Future\u2019","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEVIN LOTERY"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2ed6430-913c-30c9-9fc8-0f98a144a1ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"an Exhibit\"\/an Aesthetic: Richard Hamilton and Postwar Exhibition Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586566","wordCount":11086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"150","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2565017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220515"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99b34fa9-e25c-372a-bf94-a659546ceaf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2565017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconlite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Contents of Current Periodicals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2565017","wordCount":37242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. 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Scholarship on the film focuses on its unique construction, its content, and its use as a tool for Nazi ideology, but has not fully addressed the cinematic techniques that accomplish its goals. This article demonstrates through the lens of physiognomic and film theory the manner in which Der ewige Jude emerges as a more complex and sophisticated film than it first appears, employing a shrewd method of racial indoctrination. Finally, this analysis reveals the way that the Third Reich used racist cinema as a response to a distinctly modern paradox: namely, the fact that Nazi Germany's theories of race conflicted empirically with Jewish assimilation and geographical\u2014as well as social\u2014mobility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41374158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24418bd1-6fe5-3b2a-8786-005fcd90f384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41374158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"NOTICES OF THE SOCIETY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41374158","wordCount":3573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5359","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"134","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel O. 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Following Benjamin's impulse to create dialectical images, this paper argues that the reuse of television and film screens within films is, at times, a form of re-enchantment. Calling on technology's magical transformative power, these scenes have powerful effects both within the diegesis of the films and for the spectator who watches the screen within the screen. They do so, I argue, not so much because of their narrative utility, but because they highlight cinema at its most technological. The visceral quality of these moments is one of the compelling reasons to begin to think that cinema has an important affinity with magical practices.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B.D. WORTHAM-GALVIN"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41758722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10502092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c01baf23-2d22-3bb7-a306-f1ca5566aebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41758722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traddwelsettrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Fabrication of Place in America: The Fictions and Traditions of the New England Village","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41758722","wordCount":9955,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6997]],"Locations in B":[[39353,39768]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments (IASTE)","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"One of the enduring origin myths of America is the idea of the New England village. As a symbol of how to make place, the story of New England represents the story of the nation, with the former being smoothed over and whitewashed to relieve the tensions of the latter. The mythology of New England reveals the necessity of fabricating heritage as a means to convey truth \u2014 the world, not as it is, but as it should be. It is the process of constructing America as a cultural landscape, and its relation to the enduring ideal of the New England village, from the eighteenth to the twenty-first centuries, that this article addresses.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Hale","Graham Raymond","Catherine Wright"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"530def57-0572-3bcd-bdc6-809409466f94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23271700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"1568","pageStart":"1524","pagination":"pp. 1524-1568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"List of publications on the economic and social history of Great Britain and Ireland published in 2011","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271700","wordCount":32916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JANICE SCHROEDER"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"oclc","value":"680371818"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235180"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af609718-8b1d-3f1d-ac7f-e9cc8aec26c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41413880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Village Voices: Sonic Fidelity and the Acousmatic in \"Adam Bede\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41413880","wordCount":9338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven M. 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Arts education is typically subjected to the bureaucratic imagination, which assigns to arts education a particular state-sanctioned role. Whether to ennoble students as citizens of a newly independent nation or to endow them with the innovativeness believed to be necessary to a knowledge-based economy, arts education in Singapore has often shouldered the sociocultural aspirations of the ruling elite. This has been true even if the subject has not always been the recipient of unwavering political support.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John N. 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It is absolutely essential for heterodox economics to have at its disposal an alternative theory of action with which to counter the homo \u0153conomicus of neoclassical economics, which underpins the dominant mode of economic theorizing. Such a theory is lacking in both the regulationist and conventionalist schools, and is ultimately the missing piece in the heterodox jigsaw puzzle, without which radical institutionalism is condemned to remain a theoretical archipelago without any real power in the face of the neoclassical continent. We will investigate how, without always fully accepting it, these two schools point towards a common theory of economic action, for which we will attempt to prepare the ground.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMY BOESKY"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57270e4d-fc69-3269-9421-3a5ff083ced3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SOLVING THE CRIME OF MODERNITY: NANCY DREW IN 1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533976","wordCount":8110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HEDY HABRA"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8baf6fee-cd63-3f8f-8d75-006c442433c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41478073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LOS SUBMUNDOS PICT\u00d3RICOS DE UN DIARISTA: DUALISMO E HIBRIDEZ DE GAUGUIN EN \"EL PARA\u00cdSO EN LA OTRA ESQUINA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478073","wordCount":8867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"77","publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brinton Tench Coxe"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25748152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163450X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"562178321"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd43decb-7a8d-38f9-acf7-8bebce328ae7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25748152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ulbarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Ulbandus Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Scholars are re-evaluating the object of their study and archivists are rethinking the aims of their work. Both are questioning the nature of film and how film is changing while moving from grain to pixel. It is precisely at this time of transition that the dialogue between scholars and archivists can be particularly valuable for both theory and practice.However, although both film archivists and film scholars are dealing with similar dilemmas, the dialogue between them is","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marco Livingstone"],"datePublished":"1980-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/880055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bca1c67-e548-3e4b-ae6c-c9631e4e8626"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/880055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"488","pagination":"pp. 488+490-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Iconology as Theme in the Early Work of R. 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Drawing on two ethnographic projects, we discuss the purposes and the difficulties of the particular methodology of auto-visual ethnography which we deployed. Our specific focus was the relationship and the tension between the representation and the individual everyday experiences. Through focusing upon the micro worlds of the young people themselves within their wider 'parent' cultures, their engagement with home, school, and outside leisure activities, were revealed to be strategically (if sometimes unconsciously) part of much larger overlapping social spheres and powerful cultural influences. The pre-teenage and teenage female participants were invited to document any aspects of their worlds on cameras and video.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6aca83dd-670c-3360-b8d6-1334d03051bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":171.0,"pageEnd":"1950","pageStart":"1780","pagination":"pp. 1780-1950","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261334","wordCount":62068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul S. 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At the same time, 'practicing medicine' often meant minor surgery to missionaries, who lagged behind Europe's medical advances at the turn of the century. Whereas southern Africans located their well-being in the nexus of person and community, missionaries' surgery attacked this nexus. Surgery implied, and missionaries asserted, that healing derived from a resolution of interior somatic conflicts, in which troublesome body parts might be removed. A new way of speaking about certain kinds of physical pain was developed, whereby the body briefly became a total site for illness and healing. At the same time, Nonconformist evangelism demanded that individuals rid their interior selves of unsavory forces and extract themselves from those aspects of their communal lives which generated such influences. Because both Africans and missionaries moralized illness, and because some forms of surgery, like tooth-pulling, 'worked' for Africans, surgery marked a rite of passage to a new group of peers: Christians, who could recontextualize the catharsis of getting well.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David J. Buch","Hana Worthen"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d2c7d0c-c504-39c9-be6d-d2d19d127056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ideology in Movement and a Movement in Ideology: The Deutsche Tanzfestspiele 1934 (9-16 December, Berlin)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070007","wordCount":12113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":"This essay analyzes the Berlin Deutsche Tanzfestspiele 1934, focusing on the discrepancy between the values embodied in National Socialist discourse and those represented on the stage. Reconstructing the festival and examining archival sources and reception, the essay places the Tanzfestspiele in its historical dis \/ continuity. By considering the Tanzfestspiele program's enforced conformity to the canon of \"new German dance,\" the essay highlights the festival's negotiations between established and emerging dance paradigms as well as with the emotive rhetoric of the Third Reich.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steffen Hantke"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd4b3991-486a-3a97-8003-8afbb228b1a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Surgical Strikes and Prosthetic Warriors: The Soldier's Body in Contemporary Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240727","wordCount":7839,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[54764,54979]],"Locations in B":[[44618,44833]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"In a series of science-fiction novels describing future warfare-Robert Heinlein's \"Starship Troopers\" (1959), Joe Haldeman's \"The Forever War\" (1972), and Orson Scott Card's \"Ender's Game\" (1985)-the technologically augmented body serves as a site of anxiety. Cultural and social fears about what it means specifically to be male or generally to be human are expressed and negotiated here. These fears are triggered by the complex realization that the promise of prosthetics to heal, integrate, and strengthen the body is accompanied by the further dissolution of the body and the radical challenge to human agency and autonomy. In a culture characterized by the discourse of the surgical strike and the prosthetic body, resolving these ambiguities and contradictions becomes the task not only for each author in the individual texts, but for readers as they determine their own subjectivity in relation to high-tech culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARIA STAVRINAKI","ZOE STILLPASS"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd040cc2-b960-3d00-9237-88c2523451f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Carl Einstein's History without Names: From Geology to the Masses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832304","wordCount":12764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"62","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Justus Nieland"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce40ae38-c82a-3866-a6f8-7e43792f1d24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"DIRTY MEDIA: TOM MCCARTHY AND THE AFTERLIFE OF MODERNISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292921","wordCount":12372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Francis Dutilh Rigaud","WILLIAM L. 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E. WINSHIP","Channing H. Cox","AGNES S. WINN","James M. Curley","KATHERINE D. 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This paper seeks to re-embed it within space and time by situating its emergence within colonial and imperial histories. Based on this discussion, it ends with three lessons for contemporary work on gender and sexuality and a broader theorization of sex-gender-sexuality regimes beyond the heterosexual matrix.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1930-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c975603e-8cd9-371b-9103-a6154a1fb94e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1930,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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In contrast to the post-Lockean texts that posit that model, A Brief Account of Mr Valentine Greatrak's and Divers of the Strange Cures by Him Lately Performed incorporates Greatrakes's unorthodox method of healing by touch over time into the process of literary self-representation. As it plays between poles of distance and proximity, objectivity and contingency, shadow and substance the resulting textual \"perform[ance]\" may be historicized in terms of late-seventeenth-century conceptions of what Greatrakes's implied reader, the pneumatic chemist Robert Boyle, called the \"little atmospheres\" that surround human bodies\u2014\"atmospheres\" that anticipate Walter Benjamin's modern notion of the aura but treat aura as a uniquely communicative aspect of the person. Greatrakes's shamanistic practice binds his readers to his patients, thereby developing a therapeutic form of transpersonal, transhistorical, transgeneric personal identity uniquely realized in the literary text.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Hansen"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"147dcccb-fcb6-315a-9284-70f2a6a82859"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"683","pageStart":"663","pagination":"pp. 663-683","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Formalism and Its Malcontents: Benjamin and De Man on the Function of Allegory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057865","wordCount":9325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua A. Bell","Briel Kobak","Joel Kuipers","Amanda Kemble"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60ceb4d8-c7f5-3ff6-9424-04cf7db6329a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26646209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Biological sciences - Ecology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: Unseen Connections: The Materiality of Cell Phones","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26646209","wordCount":8830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard J. Morse-Fortier"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07380895"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43029134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarchplanrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural and Planning Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"FROM FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT'S USONIAN AUTOMATIC BUILDING SYSTEM: LESSONS AND LIMITATIONS IN A LOST PARADIGM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029134","wordCount":8737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Locke Science Publishing Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":"Frank Lloyd Wright's designs for affordable houses include many within the body of his work known as Usonian houses. After experimenting with a range of prefabrication and system ideas, Wright developed the Usonian Automatic Building System (UABS) for use in Usonian houses. Based upon standard, Wright-designed masonry blocks, the UABS was intended to support independent, owner-designed and built housing. However, few houses were built using the system. Wright designed each, and contractors were more likely to build them than their owners. The system did not achieve wide use, the houses were difficult and expensive to build, and so the system has to be called a failure. Nevertheless, the UABS represents an interesting kit-of-parts approach to providing affordable housing. One definition of an ideal building system is one that embraces a standardization of the part and an infinite variety of the whole. The UABS comes close to meeting this definition. Research into the system included surveys of current house owners, together with research into Wright's and others' accounts of the system. An analysis of strengths and weaknesses is presented within the context of Wright's larger body of work on systems and pr\u00e9fabrication ideas, and leads to the question: Can current technology be applied to solve its problems and make the UABS viable? This question remains open, but through a series of discussions on component size, design versus manufacturing flexibility, and mass production versus site building, the UABS is presented as possibly meeting both the goals of the ideal system and the requirements for viability.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerry L. 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Marshall"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4645853-9e4a-3a58-b951-f53e2c585179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"803","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-803","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231273","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melinda Alliker Rabb"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132586"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad1a66dd-7317-3857-bafd-4422341d3997"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23524256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcentstud"}],"isPartOf":"Eighteenth-Century Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Johnson, Lilliput, and Eighteenth-Century Miniature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23524256","wordCount":9467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Samuel Johnson's observation that \"there is nothing... too little for so little a creature as man\" is substantiated by eighteenth-century material culture, which produced thousands of small versions of familiar items. The phenomenon of downsizing indicates changes in the relationships between things, human cognition, and literature. Such changes inform Johnson's work, beginning with his early adaptation of Jonathan Swift's Lilliput, the period's most famous literary miniature. Johnson's reworking of Gulliver's first voyage establishes a cognitive paradigm at the intersection of material culture and moral thought, a paradigm to which Johnson returns in order to test the miniature's promise of comprehending the whole at once.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesca Parmeggiani"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f54faa2-a6b1-3841-8f32-25199c6a1ebe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30038794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","keyphrase":null,"language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Lo sguardo rivolto al passato: storia e storie nel cinema dei Taviani (1971-1984)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30038794","wordCount":9177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcus Bullock"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bad Company: On the Theory of Literary Modernity and Melancholy in Walter Benjamin and Julia Kristeva","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303723","wordCount":10058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df88dd02-8321-3564-b395-f0289b948717"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40920657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Idle Spectator: Hans Christian Andersen's \"Dryaden\" (1868), \"Illustrevet Tidende\", and the Universal Exposition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40920657","wordCount":9783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Moniques Richard"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92f2212a-3907-3376-b281-98294726d3d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20715446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Engaging \"Looking-Glass\" Youth in Art through the Visual Narratives of the Transforming Self in Popular Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715446","wordCount":6967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"This article examines how we can engage \"looking-glass\" youth in art through the visual narratives of the transforming self in popular culture. Part of the theoretical framework of two descriptive studies will be presented by focusing on the concepts of a permuting identity, prophetic reality, and technologies of self through the metaphor of the mirror and the screen of critical theories. Visual narratives from popular culture, artists' work, and children's play that use graphic or electronic genres such as comic strips, paper dolls, and coloring books will be described throughout. A special focus will be given on art projects on the topic of permutable identity, and on the relations between body and machine. In a posthuman era of mass communications and biotechnological extensions, art educators should encourage students to understand how popular culture creates identity by engaging them in playful yet critical practices of the transforming self.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7f7ff99-8545-3181-8910-866a7e6f4fb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/953721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/953721","wordCount":22191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1511","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARINA WELKER"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac9fb8fb-1c12-35db-bec7-a9cb901680cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"The Green Revolution's ghost: Unruly subjects of participatory development in rural Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250829","wordCount":16008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"After the Batu Hijau mine in Sumbawa, Indonesia, began operating in 2000, mine managers identified area farmers as a top security risk because they were threatening to shut down the mine unless they were given jobs there. Among various efforts to get local residents \"back on the land,\" the mine began sponsoring participatory integrated pest management trainings that were supposed to turn residents into productive and self-reliant subjects. Instead, these trainings evoked subjects who claimed\u2014through their resistance to certain aspects of the trainings\u2014that they were dependent on and entitled to conventional forms of development aid from the mine.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Archibald MaCleish"],"datePublished":"1944-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4303280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00242519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54843411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23e95b7b-092d-3b28-96d6-b4d987d546ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4303280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"libraryq"}],"isPartOf":"The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Information science - Library science","Business - Business operations"],"title":"The Reorganization of the Library of Congress, 1939-44","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4303280","wordCount":22312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thurston Dart"],"datePublished":"1965-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"505fca60-f37c-3ee4-89a7-90faf72af587"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Handel and the Continuo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948713","wordCount":3159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1467","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1907-11-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/80046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09501193"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96864bf4-5844-3d17-bd0c-fed2f33b7635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/80046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procroyasocilon4"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"lxiii","pageStart":"ii","pagination":"pp. i-lxiii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1907,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Obituary Notices of Fellows Deceased","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/80046","wordCount":31007,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"535","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1931-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15436314"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53397913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6edd592f-4fda-3527-a617-5e8324381f8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/770617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"parnassus"}],"isPartOf":"Parnassus","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/770617","wordCount":8109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"College Art Association","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHAUN HORTON"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25652052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284866"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709799"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d15421ab-3575-30f7-b9b0-b8ccce54f042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25652052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newenglquar"}],"isPartOf":"The New England Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"608","pagination":"pp. 608-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of Pastors and Petticoats: Humor and Authority in Puritan New England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25652052","wordCount":10210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The New England Quarterly, Inc.","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23303634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bd869c5-7a7d-33cf-bbd5-fb60febe9475"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23303634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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In spite of the facts known thanks to his correspondence, for example Beckett's reading in the 1930s of texts published by Rudolf Arnheim, Vsevolod Pudovkin and Sergei Eisenstein, and in spite of the attention that critics, including Deleuze, have given to Beckett's works for the cinema and television, Beckett's use of these modernist film theories has not been analyzed structurally. Color, sound, close-up: these three hotly debated issues are re-examined by Beckett in the sixties, largely along the lines of early film theory. Cet article \u00e9value l'influence des premi\u00e8res th\u00e9ories du cin\u00e9ma, celles des ann\u00e9es vingt et trente du vingti\u00e8me si\u00e8cle, sur le premier sc\u00e9nario pour l'\u00e9cran \u2014 et la seule \u0153uvre strictement cin\u00e9matographique \u2014 que Beckett ait \u00e9crit: Film. Malgr\u00e9 des faits connus gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 la correspondance, par exemple les lectures de Beckett dans les ann\u00e9es trente de textes de Rudolf Arnheim, de Vsevolod Poudovkine et de Sergei Eisenstein, et malgr\u00e9 l'attention que les critiques, dont Deleuze, ont accord\u00e9 aux \u0153uvres de Beckett pour le cin\u00e9ma et la t\u00e9l\u00e9vision, l'utilisation par Beckett de ces th\u00e9ories \u2014 modernistes \u00e0 bien des \u00e9gards \u2014 n'a pas fait l'objet d'une analyse structur\u00e9e.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ana Mar\u00eda Le\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41765184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Boudoir in The Expanded Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765184","wordCount":9307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. S. Pearson"],"datePublished":"1936-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2333951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063444"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23406"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2333951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biometrika"}],"isPartOf":"Biometrika","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Karl Pearson: An Appreciation of Some Aspects of His Life and Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2333951","wordCount":36054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Baker"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7857ca28-f655-3053-9e63-a66a5d38ea96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 72-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photography between Narrativity and Stasis: August Sander, Degeneration, and the Decay of the Portrait","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778773","wordCount":16732,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841]],"Locations in B":[[84852,85079]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. FRED BLAKE"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41302314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6ea17ac-9243-3a27-9601-1e91ac27d09b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41302314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Lampooning the Paper Money Custom in Contemporary China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41302314","wordCount":10817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"Over the past millennium and across the length and breadth of China and beyond, people have been burning paper replicas of the material world to send to their deceased family members, ancestors, and myriads of imaginary beings. The paper replicas, which include all types of goods and treasures, mostly old and new forms of money, is commonly referred to as the paper money custom. Studies of the paper money custom have neglected the native opposition to it, especially that of the contemporary intelligentsia, one form of which consists of news reports and human interest stones in the popular press that lampoon the practice of burning paper money. Many stones lampoon the paper money custom by showing how it burlesques traditional virtues such as filial piety. One of the interesting maneuvers in this criticism is how it employs the old and newer kinds of paper monies to shape the response of the readers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fabian Barba"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"714275e2-5dde-3a4f-b7ae-7aaa2f32b9b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23266827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Research into Corporeality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266827","wordCount":5048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chan E. 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The letters are drawn in the main from the Wedgwood deposit at the University of Keele, but some are from the National Library of Ireland. They cover both domestic and public matters and range from requests for Wedgwood to supply articles from the current range of Wedgwood products to serious matters of political moment. The two men of genius show themselves to be radical in thought, intelligent in approach, of moral integrity and with a genuine capacity for warmth and friendship. These letters show them both in a good light.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"071cbcea-cb72-3cba-abc7-103b7ac894c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40961466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":423.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"v","pagination":"pp. v-vi, xv-xxvi, 1-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology","Social sciences - Anthropology","Information science - Informetrics","Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961466","wordCount":157960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome McGann"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5823cbc-582b-34ef-a476-2f5fa282aef7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40002201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the Betrayal of Truth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40002201","wordCount":11070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind Krauss"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e8ad408-0b9c-33d5-8e7e-68a50003b1c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes on the Index: Seventies Art in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778437","wordCount":4753,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[20417,20919]],"Locations in B":[[20029,20540]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SVEN BIRKERTS","S. 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The meanings generated, past and present, by casts of faces and other body parts can be investigated by addressing their materiality. As three-dimensional artifacts, positives deriving from negatives, casts have been understood as deathly in that they present an absence. 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Performing arts"],"title":"Forty-Ninth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To End of December 1936 -- With Special Reference to Sections 15 to 19)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225041","wordCount":26321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ec9908-4028-3d7c-8014-298fbe4cb6bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25693457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"ALA ORGANIZATION AND INFORMATION 1950-51","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693457","wordCount":23078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen F. Roberts","Mary Nooter Roberts"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21e88058-a3c6-35f6-8f57-9a198d87f298"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27666892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mystical Graffiti and the Refabulation of Dakar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666892","wordCount":12118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"Since late 2003 or early 2004, Pape Diop has been adorning the walls of inner-city Dakar with graffiti depicting Cheikh Amadou Bamba (1853\u20141927), the Senegalese holy man whose writings and life lessons are central to the Sufi movement known as the Mouride Way. What differentiates Diop's works from those of Dakar's other street artists is the layering of his portraits: he paints image upon image. In doing so, he produces astonishing effects, among them a three-dimensionality known as auto-stereopsis, which seems to reach out to viewers, or to receive them into mesmerizing intricacies. Bamba's portrait is based upon the only known photograph of the man, taken in 1913; yet Mourides consider the portrait to be an active presence, which conveys God's blessings (baraka). Diop's mystical graffiti refabulates or transforms the streets, making them protective and promotional of well-being, while the images' pronounced repetition recalls zikr (dhikr), half-chanted, half-sung \"recollections\" of God, which provide the cadenced pulse of Mouride life. Fruitful cross-cultural comparison can be drawn to devotions addressed to Eastern Orthodox and Byzantine icons.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1945-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26442006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce42aa1d-103b-36f8-9a34-738a968caeae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26442006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"xxiii","pageStart":"viii","pagination":"pp. viii, x, xii, xiv, xvi-xix, xxii-xxiii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26442006","wordCount":6291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pallabi Chakravorty"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20444667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Dancing into Modernity: Multiple Narratives of India's Kathak Dance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444667","wordCount":10981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jesse C. Bockstedt","Robert J. Kauffman","Frederick J. Riggins"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27751191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10864415"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50154501"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213763"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28b8d1d4-6658-3d03-b674-14ce5b5c8646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27751191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjeleccom"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Electronic Commerce","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Information management"],"title":"The Move to Artist-Led On-Line Music Distribution: A Theory-Based Assessment and Prospects for Structural Changes in the Digital Music Market","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27751191","wordCount":13971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"New forms of digital distribution are dramatically transforming market structures in the recorded music industry value chain. We propose a model and theoretical perspective that take account both of the music industry's traditional value chain and distribution network, and the product characteristics of digital music as related to consumer value creation. The model highlights changes in the market structure from the perspective of the players in the music industry value chain. Utilizing a series of propositions, we characterize the forces at work in the market transformation and show how each player's role in the industry value chain is likely to change. We also examine the effects of market structure changes on intellectual property rights issues. Finally, we present a series of minicases that provide evidence in support of the proposed theoretical perspective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. Bohn"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/432064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Museums and the Culture of Autography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432064","wordCount":8577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold A. Innis"],"datePublished":"1929-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/136520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03836258"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227201"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/136520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contcanaecon"}],"isPartOf":"Contributions to Canadian Economics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Political science - Government"],"title":"A Bibliography of Recent Publications on Canadian Economics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/136520","wordCount":17479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Canadian Economics Association","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-09-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5579696d-0162-3c0a-96b9-eb1a21bc40ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4523848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":93.0,"pageEnd":"A93","pageStart":"A1","pagination":"pp. A1-A93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology"],"title":"Abstract of Papers. Fifty-Seventh Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523848","wordCount":110445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN J. G. ALEXANDER"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42620156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"649595715"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42620156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studhistart"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Facsimiles, Copies, and Variations: The Relationship to the Model in Medieval and Renaissance European Illuminated Manuscripts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42620156","wordCount":6722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Gallery of Art","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis Pyenson"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19391811"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156802914"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebafeee0-3de8-3494-8cd1-b540d480e65e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudnatsci"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Enlightened Image of Nature in the Dutch East Indies: Consequences of Postmodernist Doctrine for Broad Structures and Intimate Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hsns.2011.41.1.1","wordCount":16581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"Eighteenth-century natural-history illustration in the Dutch East Indies reveals verisimilitude as a goal shared between colonial artists and their counterparts in Europe. Natural-history images more generally exhibit common styles in the world settled and dominated by Europeans. Apparently dramatic differences in the local settings of the artists produced only trivial variations in representing nature pictorially, in just the way that astronomy and physics in the European colonies and spheres of influence departed hardly at all from European practice. The overwhelming strength of disciplinary norms, in science and in art, is the standard explanation for this circumstance. An alternative explanation from social history is proposed. It centers on the hypothesis of a homology between households in colonial settings and in Europe. The alternative explanation implies that both the observatory and the artist's workshop were insensitive to superstructural variation in costume and architecture, as well as variation in climate and cuisine. The hypothesis behind the alternative explanation, designated by the term complementarity, derives directly from the postmodernist dictum that ideas are extrusions of social interactions. Nevertheless, just as the strength of disciplinary norms is unresolved in postmodernist doctrine, so complementarity directly challenges the postmodernist predilection for affirming the distinctiveness of colonial cultures.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine K. Gazda"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19400977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"263448435"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008252976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0696da60-763c-32f0-8baf-6615a042bde9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4238443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"memoameracadrom2"}],"isPartOf":"Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. Supplementary Volumes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Beyond Copying: Artistic Originality and Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238443","wordCount":16193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Academy in Rome and University of Michigan Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44725038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0096736X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"659357364"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2018201240"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66fe62b1-5dc3-3a8a-82c5-951c3b99419f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44725038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saetransactions"}],"isPartOf":"SAE Transactions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44725038","wordCount":7593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"SAE International","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwin Wolf 2nd"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29781779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00417939"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea2b13db-986d-3bd5-a80c-56a71be023fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29781779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quajlibcon"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities","Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Origins of Early American Printing Shops","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29781779","wordCount":7123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Library of Congress","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Smith"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68b97715-7e87-3810-85bc-d986a9fc370f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Course in \"Cultural Studies\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315024","wordCount":5074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. Frederick Hunter"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dd34d40-9455-3e61-8bb6-6827f6c2525c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Commitment and Autonomy in Art: Antinomies of Frankfurt Esthetic Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035343","wordCount":10656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jojada Verrips"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d66b2b1-ce5b-3f5d-8abf-c62e0ca17abb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"'Haptic Screens' and Our 'Corporeal Eye'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758021","wordCount":13905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"This essay is about what happens to 'us' when 'seeing' or 'watching' 'real, fictive or virtual worlds' on or through screens. A significant number of scholars, for example McLuhan, has already paid attention to this topic and tried to sketch the nature of the interaction between these 'shining' and 'enlightening' and human subjects. Usually screens are immediately associated with the eyes, with vision, with the supremacy of the visual. This, however, is a culturally biased, superficial and confined association, as not only McLuhan, but also a series of other scholars, film theorists and artists have attempted to demonstrate. The main goal of this article is to show that there is a lot more involved than sheer vision when watching screens or that is not only our eyes which are touched by what we seen on film, TV and PC screens, but our whole body.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Whittaker","Rue Harrison Whittaker"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jung.2009.3.3.87","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342039"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71835646"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006215637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c12d6427-035f-365d-af8a-5a027411fb06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jung.2009.3.3.87"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jungjcultpsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Vital Image: Interview with Michael Evans and David Parker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jung.2009.3.3.87","wordCount":9553,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[44737,44807]],"docSubType":"review-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"This interview with British artists David Parker and Michael Evans explores their opinions about the role of the aesthetic in life and the modern antagonism toward the spiritual in art. Jung's contemporary standing in the academic world is considered. Is it problematic because of that community's difficulty with the spiritual? Both Parker and Evans refer to historical views of the sublime and ponder whether it's possible to create paintings today that evoke the ineffable. Perhaps the Unconscious could be seen as a secular map or locus for transcendent experience, but not in the reductionist sense of neo-Freudian academic criticism and interpretation of art. They discuss the erosion of language to express spiritual experience, the historical reasons for this decline, and its effects on artists. They track the trajectory of Romanticism, and Evans speculates that Postmodern uncertainty, that engagement with the unknown and unfamiliar, could be vitalizing. Both artists consider contemporary views of the Unconscious and the role of the body in this regard. They ask whether, in our age of accelerating culture, we have lost respect for wisdom. They suggest that artwork is really an affirmation and painting a celebration of matter.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jochen Hung"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00089389"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47795498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227108"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aecc8a28-c8e5-36ff-9374-063b407a9e01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26291410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centeurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Central European History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Bad\" Politics and \"Good\" Culture: New Approaches to the History of the Weimar Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26291410","wordCount":7298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Remenyi"],"datePublished":"1949-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4204050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376795"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da4892f3-a3a2-3ea2-b81f-c6795129a127"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4204050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteurorev2"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavonic and East European Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Two Hungarian Men of Letters (IGNOTUS, 1869-)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4204050","wordCount":5700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"69","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane Arndt"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30154240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eee38b6-f4a8-3a3b-b166-17dd65e28501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30154240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"595","pagination":"pp. 595-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the Transgression of Frames in Theodor Storm's Novella \"Aquis submersus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30154240","wordCount":11095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"In Theodor Storm's novella Aquis submersus, the frame novella is introduced as an aesthetic form, which displays the principle of immortalization through art. The function of the narrative frame on the textual level is symbolized by actual picture frames in the story, such as the picture of a dead child serving as the Dingsymbol of the novella. The opposition between the dead child and the immortal work of art is overcome by the transgression of the frame, first with respect to the picture frame and ultimately with respect to the narrative frame on the textual level. The boundaries that the frames introduce, such as the distinction between life and death or between past and present, are overcome through and by the emergence of a work of art. In the end, the prevalence of the literary text marks a qualitative distinction between painting and writing as artistic production.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Moseley"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f52d1511-c784-3c5f-9fd2-1e203e71c9cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.6"}],"isPartOf":"Keys to Play","keyphrase":["digital","keyboard","digital analogies","musical","marsyas","jevons","binary","kittler","apollo","schumann"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"67","pagination":"67-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Digital Analogies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1kc6k47.6","wordCount":19841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"From the clavichord to the Moog synthesizer and far beyond, the keyboard has established conditions under which ludomusical behavior can emerge. Whether instantiated as an ordering principle, cognitive schema, or material interface, it provides a platform on which musical motives, gestures, propositions, and ripostes can be put into play. But in what terms can these conditions and the unfolding of such play be described? At the most literal level, addressing this question entails examining the relationship between keyboard and gameboard, conceiving of both as fields of tactical calculation and action: as we shall see, a thread of historical evidence bears","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Tyner","Stian Rice"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26986039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"22911847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33e031c4-5161-3c26-83b6-e23ebbcf5626"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26986039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"genocidestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Genocide Studies International","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cambodia\u2019s Political Economy of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26986039","wordCount":6535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Toronto Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"Between 1975 and 1979, approximately two million Cambodians died from exposure, disease, starvation, and execution under the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK), also known as the Khmer Rouge. The standard narrative interprets these murders as the brutal acts of a cadre of radical communist ideologues, bent on establishing a pure, despotic, and autarkic state. Using a Marxist approach to political economy, this paper challenges the standard narrative, finding that these killings were a consequence of the CPK\u2019s attempt to establish a system of state capitalism that exploited workers through the production of increasing surpluses. This analysis reveals the particular and deliberate structural arrangements that made the deaths of millions a justifiable consequence. In so doing, we seek to highlight the broader benefits of a Marxist analysis of political economy in the study of genocide; notably its emphasis on the materiality of violence and its ability to expose the forms of social organization that produce mass violence.","subTitle":"Space, Time, and Genocide Under the Khmer Rouge, 1975\u201379","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sonnet H. Retman"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a3f572a-9ca8-39e4-985d-76eb4a2297a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"1464","pageStart":"1448","pagination":"pp. 1448-1464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black No More: George Schuyler and Racial Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501946","wordCount":10569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":"As Schuyler's story hones in on market-driven formulations of identity, it speaks to fantasies and anxieties about increasing urban industrialization, racial assimilation, and the reproduction of raced bodies in the black modernist moment. Tracing the manufacture, promotion, and regulation of race in the novel, I argue that Black No More illuminates new market possibilities for the trade of racial property in commodity form during the Fordist era. In this way, Schuyler's narrative offers a complex and prescient understanding of racial capitalism in the interwar period, one that portends our contemporary negotiations with mass-mediated identity and consumer culture on a global scale.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zolt\u00e1n K\u00f6vecses"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6c4819a-0a0e-3bfc-83f7-599fe45f7077"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"AMERICAN STUDIES IN THE AGE OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274128","wordCount":8870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-12-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1698837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d95ae9f0-2e76-3224-871c-fc29818f6fa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1698837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"XII","pageStart":"1596","pagination":"pp. 1596-XII","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1698837","wordCount":46441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4783","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"234","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Wilkinson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"284535d0-a1c6-3928-9c1f-8efb99b228bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art History on the Radio: Walter Benjamin and Wilhelm Pinder, 1930\/1940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825874","wordCount":10076,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[32864,32947]],"Locations in B":[[29792,29877]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"Despite its invisibility, radio was a popular medium for the discussion of art and architecture during the Weimar Republic. Walter Benjamin made several broadcasts on the topic, in which he attempted to circumvent ekphrasis by refunctioning his language. However, the medium was plagued by other deficiencies, not least its limited audience. The latter problem was resolved by the introduction of the Volksempf\u00e4nger after 1933, when other voices took to the air. One of these belonged to the prominent art historian Wilhelm Pinder, who used the radio to discuss the transmission of German art across Europe.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1924-01-25","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1647764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd3f0f67-5244-35ee-8f84-fcc8b95b3836"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1647764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1924,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The American Association for the Advancement of Science: Cincinnati, December 27, 1923 to January 2, 1924","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1647764","wordCount":22496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1517","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Elizabeth Boone"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11da4245-cb6c-3ddc-9325-8b3405b50a1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"A renewal of the fraternal relations that shared blood and history demand\": Latin American Painting, Spanish Exhibitions, and Public Display at the 1910 Independence Celebrations in Argentina, Chile, and Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630896","wordCount":10903,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Les c\u00e9l\u00e9brations comm\u00e9morant les ind\u00e9pendances nationales invitent les organisateurs et visiteurs \u00e0 r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir sur les caract\u00e9ristiques des cultures nationales et leurs rapports aux autres traditions culturelles. Les expositions d'art espagnol mont\u00e9es en 1910 \u00e0 l'occasion de f\u00eates c\u00e9l\u00e9brant cent ans d'ind\u00e9pendance dans trois villes d'Am\u00e9rique latine \u2014 Buenos Aires, Mexico et Santiago de Chile \u2014 ont offert \u00e0 ces trois endroits culturellement et historiquement distincts l'occasion de r\u00e9fl\u00e9chir sur leurs rapports historiques et actuels avec l'Espagne. Cet article s'appuie sur des t\u00e9moignages journalistiques, images populaires, correspondance diplomatique et oeuvres d'art provenant d'Argentine, du Mexique et du Chili pour examiner plusieurs questions relatives \u00e0 l'Am\u00e9rique latine. Que nous apprennent ces expositions sur l'art espagnol et latino-am\u00e9ricain produit \u00e0 cette \u00e9poque ? Que nous disent-elles sur l'Argentine, le Mexique et le Chili et leurs rapports avec l'Espagne ? Comment la r\u00e9ception de l'art espagnol dans ces trois pays latino-am\u00e9ricains peut-elle nous aider \u00e0 comprendre les enjeux politiques et culturels de chaque nation ? En consid\u00e9rant la participation de l'Espagne \u00e0 ces trois centenaires, nous examinons des questions qui touchent \u00e0 la cr\u00e9ation des identit\u00e9s latinoam\u00e9ricaines vis-\u00e0-vis de l'Europe et entre elles, ainsi qu'au riche domaine des \u00e9tudes transnationales.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barton Beebe"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40041357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236954"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"867147a6-7af3-3aa3-b6c1-a0350feff4b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40041357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"549","pagination":"pp. 549-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"An Empirical Study of U.S. Copyright Fair Use Opinions, 1978-2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40041357","wordCount":32588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"156","abstract":"Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976 establishes the affirmative defense to copyright infringement of \"fair use,\" by far the most enigmatic doctrine in U.S. copyright law and by far the most important. Without it, much of our economic and communicative action would constitute copyright infringement. Yet despite the importance of the fair use defense, and despite the enormous amount of scholarly attention that it has received, we continue to lack any systematic, comprehensive account of our fair use case law and the actual state of our fair use doctrine. Instead, our conventional wisdom derives from a small set of conventionally agreed-upon leading cases. This Article presents the results of the first empirical study of our fair use case law to show that much of our conventional wisdom about that case law is mistaken. Working from a data set consisting of all reported federal opinions that made substantial use of the section 107 four-factor test for fair use through 2005, the Article shows which factors and subfactors actually drive the outcome of the fair use test in practice, how the fair use factors interact, how courts inflect certain individual factors, and the extent to which judges stampede the factor outcomes to conform to the overall test outcome. It also presents empirical evidence of the extent to which lower courts either deliberately ignored or were ignorant of fair use doctrine set forth in the leading cases, particularly those from the Supreme Court. Based on these descriptive findings, the Article prescribes a set of doctrinal practices that will improve courts' adjudication of the fair use defense.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan S. Williams"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3481791f-2d42-3607-b4f4-49edf41711ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2933982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Aspiring Purpose of an Ambitious Demagogue\": Portraiture and The House of the Seven Gables","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933982","wordCount":8902,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19377,19496]],"Locations in B":[[37329,37448]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"In the House of the Seven Gables (1851) Hawthorne uses portraits to figure the relation between word and image in antebellum America. This relation assumed particular interest following the advent of the dagurreotype in 1839, an event that made portraits more accessible to the middle class, which was also enjoying increased access to books and magazines. Within the novel Hawthorne explores the effects of the proliferation of images in the market by inverting the \"natural\" attributes of portraits, revealing them to be not static images but rather active agents that extend through time: images that become surrogates for narrative itself. At the same time, the narrative itself. At the same time, the narrative of Seven Gables itself frequently aspires to imitate the still eternity usually associated with the portrait. By thus inverting the traditional attributes of the sister arts, Hawthorne shows that romance can bring visual images to life while also providing a \"frame\" through which to interpret them. In this way Hawthorne makes an implicit claim for the superiority of fiction over the visual arts. Ultimately, however, this claim for superiority fails as Hawthorne realizes that, in the market, books-no less than portraits-can become static works of art: a stasis necessary in order to maintain \"positive contact\" with the world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Cottom"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6987014d-2051-36df-95b5-a54d7e0b1501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Digestion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902879","wordCount":12135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"66","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1927-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25012365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00088080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45416719"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f65c4034-e1c7-357b-998f-2f5b179c8590"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25012365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cathhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Catholic Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"684","pageStart":"661","pagination":"pp. 661-684","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1927,"sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Chronicle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25012365","wordCount":11546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Catholic University of America Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Federico J. Herschel"],"datePublished":"1968-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20856013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00413011"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c8e63ca-9db7-3755-aa0f-04d91987ff68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20856013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trimecon"}],"isPartOf":"El Trimestre Econ\u00f3mico","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"NOTAS SOBRE LA T\u00c9CNICA DE SIMULACI\u00d3N Y SU POSIBLE UTILIZACI\u00d3N EN LA PREVISI\u00d3N ECON\u00d3MICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20856013","wordCount":11896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"139(3)","publisher":"Fondo de Cultura Econ\u00f3mica","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN EISNER"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00702862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"435607495"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"859d8356-ac28-3403-8491-2d1a70893cdb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dantestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Dante Studies, with the Annual Report of the Dante Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Word Made Flesh in \"Inferno\" 5: Francesca Reading and the Figure of the Annunciation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490490","wordCount":10910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"131","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victoria Kahn"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2003.83.1.67","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4027feea-eae1-3744-baa3-f50f3fa76ddf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2003.83.1.67"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Hamlet or Hecuba: Carl Schmitt's Decision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2003.83.1.67","wordCount":15529,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":"This essay explores the importance of the early modern period for the work of the German jurist Carl Schmitt. It argues that Schmitt's misreading of Shakespeare and Hobbes can in turn shed light on Schmitt's own aestheticizing of politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roslyn Z. 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Civil law"],"title":"Publication in Copyright Law: The Question of Phonograph Records","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3310086","wordCount":12276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Docherty"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42967374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0008199X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42967374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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He suggests the existence of a 'clandestine university' within the official university, one which refuses to prioritise the official workings of the university and sees its task as being to get on with what Virginia Woolf called the work of the 'unknown and uncircumscribed spirit' \u2013 a search for the limits of knowledge and the boundaries of freedom.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ryan Whyte"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c312d53-e04f-38b2-80f4-aacf83ae7370"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Repeat Performance: Chardin's Aesthetics of Repetition in the Paris Salons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630834","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Cet article examine comment Jean-Baptiste-Sim\u00e9on Chardin a tir\u00e9 profit du Salon du Louvre ainsi que des gravures de reproduction et des critiques d'art que cet \u00e9v\u00e9nement p\u00e9riodique suscitait pour d\u00e9montrer l'originalit\u00e9 de son oeuvre. Dans un premier temps, nous repla\u00e7ons dans leur contexte la coordination et l'exposition de ses r\u00e9pliques autographes et de ses estampes de reproduction en soutenant l'id\u00e9e que le peintre y recourait pour attirer l'attention sur la pr\u00e9sence et la disponibilit\u00e9 continues de sa production en Europe sous forme de r\u00e9p\u00e9titions originales. Ensuite, nous analysons leur r\u00e9ception en avan\u00e7ant l'hypoth\u00e8se que le fait d'exposer ses oeuvres reproduites mettait en \u00e9vidence sa capacit\u00e9 unique \u00e0 se copier lui-m\u00eame. Enfin, nous examinons les propri\u00e9t\u00e9s formelles des gravures r\u00e9alis\u00e9es d'apr\u00e8s Chardin en relation avec l'accueil qui leur \u00e9tait fait pour postuler que leur r\u00e9ception se fondait davantage sur leur syntaxe visuelle interne que sur les qualit\u00e9s formelles absolues de ses peintures, ce qui confirmait paradoxalement leur capacit\u00e9 \u00e0 v\u00e9hiculer l'originalit\u00e9 de Chardin. En conclusion, l'examen de la pratique de Chardin nous conduit \u00e0 \u00e9mettre l'hypoth\u00e8se que la mani\u00e8re dont les m\u00e9dias imprim\u00e9s reproduisent, documentent et commentent les oeuvres d'art est \u00e0 l'origine de l'esth\u00e9tique moderne, avec sa tendance \u00e0 mettre en avant le caract\u00e8re unique de la \u00ab main \u00bb de l'artiste, l'originalit\u00e9 et l'authenticit\u00e9 de l'objet d'art ainsi que la formation du jugement esth\u00e9tique par consensus.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosella Mallardi"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41059235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb9efb09-c5df-33e8-bd27-ea3091dfc915"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41059235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"572","pageStart":"548","pagination":"pp. 548-572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Photographic Eye and the Vision of Childhood in Lewis Carroll","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41059235","wordCount":10663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Gunning"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"422","pagination":"pp. 422-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The World as Object Lesson: Cinema Audiences, Visual Culture and the St. Louis World's Fair, 1904","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815019","wordCount":13905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-05-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1687697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"718cfa03-b7e4-3432-b6d8-a9e9aa4b8e94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1687697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"664","pageStart":"618","pagination":"pp. 618-664","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1687697","wordCount":16571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4546","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"216","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith R. Blau"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2580347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98e28565-5961-3821-8680-53f91974a9c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2580347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"1177","pageStart":"1159","pagination":"pp. 1159-1177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Toggle Switch of Institutions: Religion and Art in the U.S. in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2580347","wordCount":9225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"An institution is taken for granted when it is enveloped within a cultural and moral framework that is not contested. The usual account of the institution of high culture that emerged in the U.S. in the late nineteenth century relates to the growing importance of elites and the uncertainties of modernization. This raises an important puzzle: how did the visual arts that had been so dominated by the morality of popular religion acquire secular worth? Weber's writings provide a point of departure for analyzing institutional transformations involving art, religion, and the emergence of the avant-garde. A framework for understanding institutional change is sketched out. It includes the importance of ideology, social and economic interests, and intellectuals who articulate emerging new views. The metaphor of the \"toggle switch,\" adapted from Weber's term, switchmen, captures the idea that transformation occurs when there are underlying cultural contradictions and the resolution of these contradictions depend on the investments and prospects of competing interests.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Durs Gr\u00fcnbein","Daniel Slager"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25008581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07345496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bee209f4-a25b-3759-9855-911d289fd435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25008581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"granstre"}],"isPartOf":"Grand Street","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Childhood in the Diorama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25008581","wordCount":3450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"70","publisher":"Jean Stein","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evelleen Richards"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a9e00a2-f589-3c4f-a239-0f43f84fdd30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4331106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Moral Anatomy\" of Robert Knox: The Interplay between Biological and Social Thought in Victorian Scientific Naturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4331106","wordCount":28582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nile Green"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27919919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd3cbd39-6e90-39b5-97ee-a42267b37cd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27919919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"305","pagination":"pp. 305-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Stones from Bavaria: Iranian Lithography in its Global Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27919919","wordCount":13855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This essay traces the circulation of the industrial commodities of lithographic presses and stones and compares the uses to which these commodities were put in Iran with other regions at the same time. Using Persian travelogues as sources on scientific exchange, the essay compares Iran's access to lithography with its spread through Europe, Russia and South and Southeast Asia. Using lithography as a gauge of Iran's integration into an industrializing global economy, it compares state-led Iranian attempts to access lithographic commodities with attempts by other regional powers to develop local sources for these 'stones from Bavaria'. After tracing the role of Christian Evangelicalism in the technology's dissemination, the essay finally contextualizes Iranian uses of lithography in global developments in illustrated and newspaper printing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula E. Geyh"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20c8e1e5-8500-355d-9718-7078f562a5d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Assembling Postmodernism: Experience, Meaning, and the Space In-Between","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112717","wordCount":12884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TREVOR L. WILLIAMS"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b29099b-eaae-3d12-9b54-78dba530634d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24780518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Hungry man is an angry man\": A Marxist Reading of Consumption in Joyce's \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780518","wordCount":10999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Drake"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"946c50d0-00e6-3499-a705-afabecbff91f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40480611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The \"Chiasm\" and the Experience of Space: Steven Holl's Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480611","wordCount":5719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":"Stephen Holl's winning entry for the Helsinki Museum of Contemporary Art comp\u00e9tition, begun in 1992, was titled \"chiasma\/' a Creek term for \"intertwining\" borrowed from the writings of French phenomenologist Maurice Merleau-Ponty. The Museum is made up of two primary volumes: A rectilinear form aligned with the main city grid, enveloped by a larger, curvilinear form to the north and east. The two forms allow Holl to explore the th\u00e8me of intertwining on various levels: between nature and culture, object and space, movement and stasis, and light and material. This paper explores th\u00e8se various relationships and the way in which they reflect the connection between body and space that is fundamental to Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Gunther Kodat"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d897d1e-9f6f-3d15-804a-2c3973380a92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pulp Fictions: Reading Faulkner for the 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907777","wordCount":8425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Faulkner Journal","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alvin C. Kibel"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a58011f4-6fff-345c-a62a-2c6fbab7df33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Canonical Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024846","wordCount":6750,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16117,16622]],"Locations in B":[[23304,23829]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40305235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2521625-e808-39cb-b1c5-45388a945fb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40305235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1715456","wordCount":41102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3660","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"147","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacob Heil","Todd Samuelson"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.13.4.90","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9255c30-a630-383e-b790-798e793c3195"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jearlmodcultstud.13.4.90"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management"],"title":"Book History in the Early Modern OCR Project, or, Bringing Balance to the Force","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.13.4.90","wordCount":6121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boris Groys"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc29e3d0-ca9b-362c-8a28-312f8d0cefc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Art history"],"title":"Postmodernity, \"M\u00e9taphore manqu\u00e9e\", and the Myth of the Trans-Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1578418","wordCount":10217,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[44163,44285]],"Locations in B":[[32014,32136]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"The writings of Modernist and Postmodernist cultural theorists are evaluated in light of the existential, conceptual and technological shifts that have occurred in the art and literature of these two eras and thus serve to distinguish them. Many theorists emphasize Modernism's optimism and predominantly metaphorical vision and characterize Postmodernism as the pessimistic era of the 'failed metaphor'. The author argues that the more unfamiliar and creative aspects of Postmodernism have been largely overlooked and that Postmodernism can be viewed both as a substantial alternative to Modernism and as a significant movement in its own right.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathan Sivin"],"datePublished":"1988-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2056359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a731b1e-909e-3a7c-9f3e-55cdd84c7642"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2056359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Science and Medicine in Imperial China--The State of the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2056359","wordCount":28608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"In the final article, Nathan Sivin examines studies in the science and medicine of imperial China. He notes that most publication is still oriented toward the translation or description of texts, the reconstruction of techniques, and heroic accounts of priority or discovery. Some recent works, however, deal with issues more current in the history of science and Chinese studies and draw on the indispensable resources of social and intellectual history, anthropology, and sociology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxsqf.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837621792"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a8a20c6-1eae-3764-a389-11ce5b5c5e26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1xxsqf.7"}],"isPartOf":"Soundscapes of the Urban Past","keyphrase":["berlin alexanderplatz","aalbers annelies","radio play","jasper aalbers","annelies jacobs","jasper aalbers annelies","aalbers annelies jacobs","intermediality","jelavich","montage"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"77","pagination":"77-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sounds Familiar.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxsqf.7","wordCount":16327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"When Franz Biberkopf, the protagonist of Alfred D\u00f6blin\u2019s novelBerlin Alexanderplatz<\/em> steps out of the prison in Tegel after four years of imprisonment, \u00bbthe horrible moment\u00ab has arrived. Instead of being delighted about his reclaimed liberty, Biberkopf panics and feels frightened: \u00bbthe pain commences\u00ab.\u00b9 He is not afraid of his newly gained freedom itself, however. What he suffers from is the sensation of being exposed to the hectic life and cacophonic noises of the city \u2013 his \u00bburban paranoia\u00ab.\u00b2The tension between the individual and the city, between the inner life of a character and his metropolitan environment is of","subTitle":"Intermediality and Remediation in the Written, Sonic and Audiovisual Narratives of Berlin Alexanderplatz","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victoria D. Alexander"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c22e2ab-8e15-36d9-9c1a-75e5dad07640"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1106","pageStart":"1104","pagination":"pp. 1104-1106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231320","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a86af5c-1ad5-3f3d-9d18-c19a1559320e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"1144","pageStart":"979","pagination":"pp. 979-1144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Program of the 1989 Convention of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462298","wordCount":87006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yong Li Lan"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edf61555-5bb1-31c6-b70a-9090d8ec3672"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ong Keng Sen's \"Desdemona\", Ugliness, and the Intercultural Performative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069422","wordCount":10736,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14990,15228]],"Locations in B":[[36795,37032]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"The Singaporean director Ong Keng Sen's production of \"Desdemona\" (2000) brought several traditional and contemporary Asian performance forms, languages, and mediums together as a response to Shakespeare's Othello. This essay examines this production as an instance of how Asian intercultural Shakespeare performance exposes our investments in Shakespeare and\/or Asia as its material, its attractions, and its meta-fictions. It explores the performativity of failure in cultural exchange and connection in \"Desdemona\", through its presentation of the inauthentic, of performance rituals, and of antitheses that construct Asia in opposition to notions of the beauty of Asian theatres.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Christiansen"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzcv5.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462981881"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95f67a10-fde6-3ad3-bc83-1ae76c6a6151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv8pzcv5.4"}],"isPartOf":"Orchestrating Public Opinion","keyphrase":["political ads","wolves","advertising","campaign","television","negative ads","seducing america","schoening","political advertising","hart seducing"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"10","pagination":"10-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Political science - Politics","Political science - Government"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzcv5.4","wordCount":8783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Democratic candidate John Kerry was stunned when he realized that he would have to concede the US presidential election on November 3, 2004. Throughout the summer, his polling numbers had showed him leading Republican candidate George W. Bush. Several factors working against Bush\u2014his failure to capture or kill Osama bin Laden, two protracted expensive wars, a sluggish economy\u2014forced the Republican campaign into crisis mode. Although ad blitzes in battleground states had tightened the gap as Election Day approached, exit polls seemed to indicate Kerry\u2019s eventual victory.Bush won, however, with a razor-thin 51% to 49% margin in Ohio,","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Mayerfeld Bell"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ac1868f-c3e3-33b5-85c1-f9c6e8414214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"836","pageStart":"813","pagination":"pp. 813-836","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Ghosts of Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657936","wordCount":10532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruno Bosteels"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24881282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13960482"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b33914fa-e334-3336-8084-295ee1146d6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24881282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"variborg"}],"isPartOf":"Variaciones Borges","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"BEGGARS BANQUET: FOR A CRITIQUE OF THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE SIGN IN BORGES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24881282","wordCount":20578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"Borges Center, University of Pittsburgh","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marshall J. Schneider"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thematic Representation and \"Skiascopic\" Vision in Ram\u00f3n J. Sender's \"El rey y la reina\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251457","wordCount":6608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcus Bullock"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee3bb0ec-599e-334b-be47-45eefd286da8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30153235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Teaching a Classic in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Walter Benjamin and the Case of Goethe's \"Wahlverwandtschaften\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153235","wordCount":8806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":"Theodor Adorno and Walter Benjamin accepted the intrinsic aesthetic distinction of classical works, but opposed the conservative historical function and authoritarian political meaning ascribed to the traditional canon. The essay Benjamin wrote in 1925 on Goethe's novel Die Wahlverwandtschaften is the most effective illustration of this theoretical position in a particular study of an individual text. Benjamin demonstrates that even though a book may approach perfection as a formal achievement, the reader must learn not to extend this to an assumption of equal perfection as a value in any of the figures or acts represented. His analysis shifts the function of this most canonical work into a new role opposing authoritarian literary pedagogy. The connections between his writings on Goethe and the later discussions of mass culture situate his apparent enthusiasm for film in the 1935 essay \"Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit\" within a historically more adequate process of argument.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Marks"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0db5318-28c4-3cc6-96f9-d9410cbda1b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/940186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"282","pagination":"pp. 282-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Film Music: The Material, Literature, and Present State of Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940186","wordCount":23140,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46501,47305]],"Locations in B":[[7116,7919]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Weintraub","Helen M. Robinson","Helen K. Smith","Gus P. Plessas","Michael Rowls"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/747287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":277.0,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Summary of Investigations Relating to Reading July 1, 1973, to June 30, 1974","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747287","wordCount":111548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"Summarizes 431 reports of reading research published between July 1, 1973, and June 30, 1974. The research studies are categorized into 6 major areas, 4 of which have been further subcategorized. The majority of studies reported was classified into the Physiology and Psychology of Reading area. Large subdivisions under that major category include the following: Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Reading and Language Abilities, and Factors Related to Reading Disability. Under the Teaching of Reading category, the Testing subcategory remains one of the larger divisions. A large grouping of studies in the Sociology of Reading is concerned with the content analysis of newspapers, books, texts and other printed materials. A listing of other bibliographies and reviews of reading research appears as the first major category of the present summary. Reviews have been classified under specific subcategories or placed under a Miscellaneous subheading. An annotated bibliography appears following the written text.\/\/\/ [French] R\u00e9sume 431 rapports dans le domaine de la lecture publi\u00e9s entre le ler juillet 1973 et le 30 juin 1974. Les rapports sont r\u00e9partis sous 6 rubriques principales dont 4 ont \u00e9t\u00e9 subdivis\u00e9es \u00e0 leur tour. La majorit\u00e9 des \u00e9tudes a \u00e9t\u00e9 group\u00e9e sous la rubrique intitul\u00e9e \"La Physiologie et Psychologie de lecture\". De grandes subdivisions ont \u00e9t\u00e9 faites sous cette cat\u00e9gorie principale et contiennent les rubriques suivantes: \"La Perception visuelle\", \"La Perception auditive\", \"L'Aptitude au langage et \u00e0 la lecture\", ainsi que \"Les Facteurs touchant \u00e0 l'inhabilet\u00e9 en lecture\". Sous \"L'Enseignement de lecture\", la subdivision ayant trait \u00e0 l'administration des tests est une des plus nombreuses de toutes les subdivisions de cette rubrique. La plupart des \u00e9tudes comprises sous l'enseigne de la sociologie de la lecture se rapporte \u00e0 l'analyse textuelle de journaux, de livres, ainsi que de divers mat\u00e9riaux de lecture. Une liste d'autres bibliographies et de comptes rendus sur la recherche en mati\u00e8re de lecture para\u00eet comme la premi\u00e8re cat\u00e9gorie principale de ce volume. Les comptes rendus ont \u00e9t\u00e9 plac\u00e9s soit sous de cat\u00e9gories sp\u00e9cifiques, soit sous la rubrique \"\u00c9tudes diverses\". Une bibliographie annot\u00e9e suit ce text \u00e9crit.\/\/\/ [Spanish] Se efectua un resumen de 431 informes sobre investigaciones realizadas en el campo de la lectura, publicados entre el 1\u00b0 de Julio de 1973 y el 30 de Junio de 1974. Los estudios de investigaci\u00f3n se clasifican en 6 categori\u00e1s principales, siendo 4 de ellas, a su vez, subclasificadas. La mayor\u00eda de los estudios presentados se clasifican dentro del \u00e1rea de la Fisiolog\u00eda y Psicolog\u00eda de la Lectura. Dentro de las numerosas subdivisiones que pertenecen a la categor\u00eda principal, se encuentran las siguientes: Percepci\u00f3n Visual, Percepci\u00f3n Auditiva, Aptitud para la Lectura y el Lenguaje, y Factores Relacionados con la Inaptitud para le Lectura. La subclasificaci\u00f3n denominada Examinaci\u00f3n, constituye una de las mayores divisiones correspondientes a la categor\u00eda de la Ense\u00f1anza de la Lectura. La gran agrupaci\u00f3n de estudios efectuados en Sociolog\u00eda de la Lectura, se refiere al an\u00e1lisis del contenido de peri\u00f3dicos, libros, textos y otros materiales impresos. En la primera categor\u00eda principal del presente resumen, aparece una lista de otras bibliograf\u00edas y rese\u00f1as realizadas en la investigaci\u00f3n de la lectura. Las rese\u00f1as han sido clasificadas en subclasificaciones espec\u00edficas, o colocada\u015b bajo el subt\u00edtulo de Miscel\u00e1nea. A continuaci\u00f3n del texto aparece una bibliograf\u00eda comentada.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giuliana Bruno"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adfba2f7-9140-3481-9c11-85da0826c29f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 110-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Streetwalking around Plato's Cave","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779037","wordCount":7730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["COLIN CHERRY"],"datePublished":"1966-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41369622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db12893b-6a09-3d77-9ce0-8413e7be99bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41369622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WORLD COMMUNICATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41369622","wordCount":25329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5115","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin J. H. Dettmar"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bookcases, Slipcases, Uncut Leaves: The Anxiety of the Gentleman's Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267636","wordCount":10516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3700506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3700506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-Seventh Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1962)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227747","wordCount":65907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LESLIE CAMHI"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24555487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5f47f01-382a-3108-926d-c0bb70365776"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24555487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"princollnews"}],"isPartOf":"The Print Collector's Newsletter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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The author presents an analysis of the relationship between works of art and digital visual culture, employing aspects of network analysis drawn from the work of Barab\u00e1si, Newman, and Watts (2006) and Castells (1994). Describing complex network dynamics as they relate to digital image data sets, the author explores notions of influence and interpretation through the language of network analysis and suggests opportunities for art education taking place within complex digital visual systems.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katerina Ruedi Ray"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26145623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915650"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233805"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4eb81638-99d3-3d7a-a9eb-28f298e47868"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26145623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"2849","pageStart":"2847","pagination":"pp. 2847-2849","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26145623","wordCount":1473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yve-Alain Bois"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37ea8d9c-d64d-356b-a16b-391b971df62c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 60-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Thermometers Should Last Forever","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397673","wordCount":8753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sherwin Simmons"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3527066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Hand to the Friend, Fist to the Foe': The Struggle of Signs in the Weimar Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527066","wordCount":13039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"This article focuses on the use of graphic signs in the political struggle between the National Socialist German Workers' Party and the German Communist Party during the 1920s. 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A former soldier and statesman, he was, by all accounts, ruthless and arrogant, callously cunning and devious, an unprincipled spy and a calculating womanizer; but he was also a philanthropist, a brilliantly effective social reformer, an ingenious inventor and an exceptionally innovative scientist. His name was Benjamin Thompson, better known as Count von Rumford of the Holy Roman Empire. He would found the Royal Institution.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. 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If, as is argued, native ability in some domain is a rare commodity, then harnessing it and developing it through practice would provide an opportunity for a potential aggrandizer to control prestige goods and accrue social capital. In situations where raw material, knowledge, and know-how are ubiquitous, as may have been true for flint technology in southern Scandinavia during the Late Neolithic, this might be one of few means available for a would-be aggrandizer to control prestigious goods.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meir Wigoder"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2001.13.1.19","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d20aedfb-53e0-375f-8969-090174131ebe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/his.2001.13.1.19"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"History Begins at Home: Photography and Memory in the Writings of Siegfried Kracauer and Roland Barthes<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2001.13.1.19","wordCount":14705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans Rudolf Vaget"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6499d605-dbae-3dc6-80ce-c0f195f733c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Wagnerian Self-Fashioning: The Case of Adolf Hitler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669199","wordCount":8718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"101","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARTHUR S. 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This volume is a study of the manufacturers and marks of that district. It includes a brief history of the local pottery industry from its inception in 1840 to the present, skeletal histories of 85 individual firms, and photographs of 993 known marks utilized by these companies. This treatise is designed to provide a reference for the identification and interpretation of archaeological data. 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Simpson, Jr.","Donald Steven McAllister"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23519098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00292494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564636684"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-250567"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c1e6ac3-b229-3eea-abe9-ddc6c0413da1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23519098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortcarohistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The North Carolina Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Alexander Wilson's Southern Tour of 1809: The North Carolina Transit and Subscribers to the \"American Ornithology\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23519098","wordCount":25149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"North Carolina Office of Archives and History","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen J. Scott"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a761dcd-58aa-3051-a3a1-c664e36799b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40835412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"CULTURAL ECONOMY AND THE CREATIVE FIELD OF THE CITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40835412","wordCount":12247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":"I begin with a rough sketch of the incidence of the cultural economy in US cities today. I then offer a brief review of some theoretical approaches to the question of creativity, with special reference to issues of social and geographic context. The city is a powerful fountainhead of creativity, and an attempt is made to show how this can be understood in terms of a series of localized field effects. The creative field of the city is broken down (relative to the cultural economy) into four major components, namely, (a) intra-urban webs of specialized and complementary producers, (b) the local labour market and the social networks that bind workers together in urban space, (c) the wider urban environment, including various sites of memory, leisure, and social reproduction, and (d) institutions of governance and collective action. I also briefly describe some of the path-dependent dynamics of the creative field. The article ends with a reference to some issues of geographic scale. Here, I argue that the urban is but one (albeit important) spatial articulation of an overall creative field whose extent is ultimately nothing less than global.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CRISTIANO TURBIL"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44980373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225010"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e1338e2-7672-3db0-8446-68c0f470bed5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44980373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Heredity Matter: Samuel Butler's Idea of Unconscious Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44980373","wordCount":9183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"Butler's idea of evolution was developed over the publication of four books, several articles and essays between 1863 and 1890. These publications, although never achieving the success expected by Butler, proposed a psychological elaboration of evolution (robustly enforced by Lamarck's philosophy), called 'unconscious memory'. This was strongly in contrast with the materialistic approach suggested by Darwin's natural selection. Starting with a historical introduction, this paper aspires to ascertain the logic, meaning and significance of Butler's idea of'unconscious memory' in the postDarwinian physiological and psychological Pan-European discussion. Particular attention is devoted to demonstrating that Butler was not only a populariser of science but also an active protagonist in the late Victorian psychological debate.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1954-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/892655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ea48d2c-b8a1-35b4-aed1-dc3449ae025c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/892655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index of Record Reviews: With Symbols Indicating Opinions of Reviewers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/892655","wordCount":17324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1611913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42936599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1611913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcellbiology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Cell Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"1145","pageStart":"1127","pagination":"pp. 1127-1145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Developmental & Cell Biology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lost in Transcription: Postwar Typewriting Culture, Andy Warhol's Bad Book, and the Standardization of Error","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614438","wordCount":9713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"125","abstract":"This essay considers the instability of the typewriter as a writing machine and as an object within the media history of the twentieth century, examining how the typewriter keyboard and the transcriptive protocols of the modern office materially shape writing practice. The standardization of the typewriter system produces a textual aesthetics of error and uncertainty rather than of mechanized circumscription. Andy Warhol's a is a novel whose mode of production explores the limits of the typewriter's transcriptive uncertainty. Written by a distributed network of typists and inundated with errors and ambiguities, a offers a radically defamiliarizing representation of how the typewriter system opens new pathways of authorship, embodiment, and literary production. Drawing on a's aesthetic experimentation, this essay argues that the localized, idiosyncratic, yet often suppressed disruptions produced by the typewriter suggest the possibility of an alternative to linear, teleological conceptions of media history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Hirschkind"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08f52917-e362-3529-a295-1c1e59f09d88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3095066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"649","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-649","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Ethics of Listening: Cassette-Sermon Audition in Contemporary Egypt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095066","wordCount":16085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"In this article, I focus on the practice of listening to tape-recorded sermons among contemporary Muslims in Egypt as an exercise of ethical self-discipline. I analyze this practice in its relation to the formation of a sensorium: the visceral capacities enabling of the particular form of Muslim piety to which those who undertake the practice aspired. In focusing on both the homiletic techniques of preachers and the traditions of ethical audition that inform the contemporary practice of sermon listening, I explore how sermon listeners reconstruct their own knowledge, emotions, and sensibilities in accord with models of Islamic moral personhood. Normative models of moral personhood grounded in Islamic textual and practical traditions provide a point of reference for the task of ethical self-improvement.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5hgxtt.23","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781922144492"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53e644a3-763d-33d0-9c99-87985e5b38f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5hgxtt.23"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","french","nobel prize","politician","minister","composer","president","novelist","scarlatti","writer"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"811","pageStart":"737","pagination":"737-811","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5hgxtt.23","wordCount":63294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44434068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0096736X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49346d14-562e-3971-86b0-b49a62d071d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44434068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saetransactions"}],"isPartOf":"SAE Transactions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":315.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1, 3-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44434068","wordCount":364867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"SAE International","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William E. 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The Mammon episode in particular mounts a critique of temperance in its protocapitalistic conception--the virtue of patient delay Max Weber would call the \"Protestant ethic\"--as a whitewashing fiction obscuring the violent truth of colonial mining. Spenser's Guyon hides behind his eponymous virtue to deny his complicity in the hellish suffering of New World labor, revealing the inadequacy of temperance to serve as an ethical foundation in the newly transatlantic world.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-03-19","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a22e1936-455f-39d2-9e1a-92f357085705"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1730575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"1184","pageStart":"1081","pagination":"pp. 1081-1184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730575","wordCount":13895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3976","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"171","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn M. 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Astronomy"],"title":"The Tr\u00fcbner Stele Re-Examined: Epigraphic and Literary Evidence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25261879","wordCount":9415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Artibus Asiae Publishers","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddz9.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911534327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a94532b8-a7bf-3f10-8af4-fbb0df67399d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5vddz9.8"}],"isPartOf":"TASTE","keyphrase":["gustatory perception","nicola perullo","visual","cooking","visual and gustatory","cuisine","york routledge","aesthetics","correspondence between visual","correspondence"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"175","pagination":"175-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On the Correspondence Between Visual and Gustatory Perception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5vddz9.8","wordCount":7081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"We are currently facing a curious paradox: taste, usually thought of as a \u2018minor sense\u2019 in the sensory hierarchy, is celebrated and \u2018culturalised\u2019 first and foremost through vision, the supreme sense par excellence.\u00b9 It is visible to everyone: gastronomy, cooking, food and wine in general have acquired their own place as objects of education, reflection and appreciation. This paradox has actually just become apparent: the process to the visualisation of taste was born and developed in the context of the scientific and philosophical revolutions of modernity; science as analytic and experimental method, and philosophy mostly conceived as epistemology produced a","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea Carosso"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea264bd9-c55a-3e73-b2c7-da9fbc82af8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"America's Disneylands and the end-of-century American Cityscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874664","wordCount":4821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"83","publisher":"Editions Belin","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Les notions am\u00e9ricaines d'espace et de spatialit\u00e9 correspondent historiquement \u00e0 une tentative de rompre avec la tradition centraliste europ\u00e9enne. Face \u00e0 la difficult\u00e9 d'appr\u00e9hender l'espace am\u00e9ricain au XXe si\u00e8cle, la notion foucaldienne d'\u00ab h\u00e9t\u00e9rotopie \u00bb \u2014 fond\u00e9e sur l'id\u00e9e que la postmodernit\u00e9 implique qu'on vive dans un r\u00e9seau de relations d\u00e9limitant des sites irr\u00e9ductibles les uns aux autres \u2014 appara\u00eet pertinente. En se d\u00e9marquant de ladite notion, on vise dans cet article \u00e0 cerner l'\u00e9mergence d'espaces totaux dans l'Am\u00e9rique urbaine contemporaine. Disneyland, les centres commerciaux, les hotels multifonctionnels et la partie sud du strip de Las Vegas, tous ces espaces se pr\u00e9sentent comme des lieux clos, coup\u00e9s du monde ext\u00e9rieur, qui menacent l'acc\u00e8s \u00e0 l'espace public tout en fondant leur ethos sur le recours au r\u00e9cit et \u00e0 l'imaginaire.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iliana Rodr\u00edguez","Marc Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74b8cb28-0d95-3660-a15b-dee4715f1fb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"First Aesthetic Meditations on Capital","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684069","wordCount":12803,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[71181,71250]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. L. H. Wells"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45142621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f0afdbd-db5b-36d9-9798-1058d31f3b5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45142621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Laboring Under Globalization: Tapestries by Contemporary Artists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45142621","wordCount":11423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRETT PYPER"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2210fe5b-8984-38bd-96cd-49ccb3f6c7ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44176047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Hearing \"Red\": Aurality and Performance in a Film by Simon Gush","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176047","wordCount":6584,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"42","publisher":"University of Western Cape","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Focusing on the film that accompanies Simon Gush's installation Red, this article positions itself within the 'ambient humanities' and explores sound as its primary mode of inquiry. I consider how sound constitutes not just the soundtrack but also, at particular moments, becomes the subject of the film itself I believe these moments are worth attending to because, empirically speaking, they render audible some aspects of history that might otherwise literally be overlooked. Taking my cue from a striking aural performance recounted in the film, I consider possible archaeologies of insurrectionary noise in South Africa and beyond. Beyond the empirical, I am interested in theorising not only about but also with sound, and reflecting on how doing so with respect to history might be productive. I thus tease out thinking about sound in history, sound with history, sounding history and the like, in the process asking what aesthetics can do for the work of history. Drawing on ideas advanced recently by John Mowitt (2015), I consider how the notions of echo and resonance illustrate the kinds of alternative epistemological perspectives that attention to sound might enable for historiography. In the conclusion, I tie these back to the foregrounding of performance \u2013 particularly performance with a strong aural dimension \u2013 in the constitution of social and public memory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1943-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1839713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76af2284-1680-3eaf-9b91-9cf5716e6adc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1839713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"679","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-679","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1839713","wordCount":28372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Patteson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.11","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad1e6aad-eb8c-33c6-80e4-e59540826487"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.11"}],"isPartOf":"Instruments for New Music","keyphrase":["j\u00f6rg mager","mager eine","mondrian","oskar schlemmer","neue epoche","stuckenschmidt","elektrische","mechanisierung","ferruccio busoni","scheper oskar"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"169","pagination":"169-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjn9k.11","wordCount":17081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Todd"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/429918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29311a0e-587e-39ed-9735-f6704dd4c2db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/429918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Roots of Pictorial Reference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/429918","wordCount":7420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1905-10-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 4, no. 3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590140","wordCount":14588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith G. Coffin"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad4e9564-3af6-3a91-8cca-bf40ca809e2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Interiority to Intimacy: Psychoanalysis and Radio in Twentieth-Century France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0114","wordCount":14702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40560,40662]],"Locations in B":[[66495,66597]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":"This essay situates French radio host Menie Gr\u00e9goire's 1960s \u201cradio-psy\u201d program in the long history of radio and psychoanalysis. It moves from Gr\u00e9goire's program back to what I see as particularly interesting antecedents: modernist radio during the 1920s and 30s, in the first flush of artistic and intellectual enthusiasm for the new medium's communicative power. Paul Deharme and Robert Desnos, among others, drew from both inherited conceptions of the auditory and newer theories of consciousness and mind, especially psychoanalysis, with its compelling reinterpretation of interiority, intersubjectivity, and listening. Politics and war pushed such experiments off the air in the 1940s and 50s. But aspects of those experiments reemerged in the late 1960s. In a very different historical context of a \u201ccrisis of listening,\u201d interwar ideas, including the relevance of psychoanalysis to radio practice, again made sense.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bradford Vivian"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fdb2f6b-2086-3e24-91f7-2ffff59d507d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"In the Regard of the Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866797","wordCount":11257,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16722,16841]],"Locations in B":[[46484,46603]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"JAC","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26444265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8074916-6209-3d46-80d4-a513e4504e38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26444265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"lxxvi","pageStart":"xl","pagination":"pp. xl-xli, xliv, xlvi, l, lii, lvi, lx, lxiv, lxvi-lxvii, lxx-lxxi, lxxiv-lxxvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26444265","wordCount":10691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1543325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e18b758f-dc51-3b8c-aad0-2a8234290680"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1543325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biolbull"}],"isPartOf":"Biological Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1543325","wordCount":5915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Marine Biological Laboratory","volumeNumber":"201","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BREGT LAMERIS"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1v2xssp.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089648266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"412386dc-384b-3d89-a631-20838c1d07c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1v2xssp.10"}],"isPartOf":"The Film Museum Practice and Film Historiography","keyphrase":["nitrate","nitrate prints","cherchi usai","film museums","nitrate material","preservation","film prints","nitrate films","passive preservation","film historians"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"79","pagination":"79-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Passive Preservation:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1v2xssp.10","wordCount":7173,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6997]],"Locations in B":[[26593,27016]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Three different views on nitrate material are apparent during the period under investigation: the nitrate copy was seen as a functional item, as a perishable, fragile object, or as a unique print. These varying attitudes not only directly determined how film museums and institutions coped with the active and passive preservation of the nitrate films in their archives, but were also closely related to the positions film historians adopted towards this material and the value they attached to \u2018original prints\u2019. Hence, the most interesting question is how ideas about the value of this material as a historical source were synchronised","subTitle":"An Historical Overview","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40871632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"624d698e-df00-3901-8ef2-3cb29094b9d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40871632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"478","pagination":"pp. 478-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BOOKS RECEIVED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40871632","wordCount":1474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Earle Johnson"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a267bad1-a83e-3ca1-9ad1-cf48426c3880"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Folio of White, Smith and Company","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051965","wordCount":7714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Naomi Schor"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cce861b-a1c5-305a-9ec9-77b7fc4d9fd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Pensive Texts and Thinking Statues: Balzac with Rodin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344249","wordCount":9254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Larry Ceplair"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40405575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"583d4dc7-9235-38b9-897d-a7e2ae781d40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40405575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Base and Superstructure Debate in the Hollywood Communist Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40405575","wordCount":11888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Guilford Press","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":"The base and superstructure concept developed by Marx and Engels has attracted many interpreters over the years. Most of these have focused on what it reveals about the state. But there is also a stream of writers, from Plekhanov to Eagleton, who have been fascinated with its aesthetic dimensions. Only a handful have tried to apply it to creative workers in cultural industries. The most notable attempt was made by a small group of blacklisted Hollywood screenwriters, in the early 1950s. Their debate capped a century of discourse regarding the cultural ramifications of the base-superstructure concept, from its inception by Marx and Engels, through its transmutation by the Russian Marxists, to its use by Marxists and Communists in the United States.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1944-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/330738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbe450ef-064a-37e8-a5bf-12a3f654a985"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/330738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Sixty-Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To July 1944)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/330738","wordCount":42729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haidee Wasson"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Woman Film Critic: Newspapers, Cinema and Iris Barry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815632","wordCount":6408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"Through the example of Iris Barry's film criticism, the author underlines the significant role that women played in articulating serious film culture. Barry's writing, argues Wasson, comprises a method by which to understand the ways in which gender has figured historically in questions of identifying and valuing a range of women's work and forms of cultural production that exist outside of filmmaking per se, yet nonetheless shape ideas undergirding the meaning and significance of specific films, and of cinema in general.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Dodel","Lothar Karschny","Ricarda Van De Groote Poort"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25170740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00442216"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4417e84c-46d3-31b2-bc7e-bd0f3fe3b8a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25170740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitallgwissen"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie \/ Journal for General Philosophy of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Logic","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"[Bibliographie]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25170740","wordCount":16499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leigh Raiford"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8041153-5b01-3c78-be40-af85cbe03e78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25621443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photography and the Practices of Critical Black Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621443","wordCount":8862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Not too long after photography's grand debut in 1839, physician and inventor Oliver Wendell Holmes described the new technology as a \"mirror with a memory.\" What might this phrase mean for the question of African Americans and their relationship to the vicissitudes of photography and the vagaries of memory in particular? Through readings of works of art and social activism that make use of lynching photographs, this essay considers ways in which photography has functioned as a technology of memory for African Americans, what the essay calls critical black memory, and proffers a mode of historical interpretation that both plays upon and questions photography's documentary capacity. The essay makes two claims specifically. First, the mechanical reproduction of lynching by way of the photograph has been central to the recounting and reconstitution of black political cultures throughout the Jim Crow and post-Civil Rights era. From the usage of lynching photography in pamphlets by early twentieth-century anti-lynching activists, to posters created by mid-century civil rights organizations, to their deployment in contemporary art and popular culture, this archive has been a constitutive element of black visuality more broadly. Second, African American engagements with photography as a \"site of memory\" suggest a mode of historical interpretation in which African Americans simultaneously critique the \"truth-claims\" of photography while they mobilize the medium's documentary capacity to intervene in the classification and subjugation of black life.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Paltin"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf4ebcad-eda4-3879-96f9-9b39cc9ed4a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45172809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Music, Intermediality, and Shock in \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45172809","wordCount":8550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"This essay studies intermedial compositional practice in Ulysses, a text that extends musical reference and the phono-icon to reconfigure textual articulations of knowledge, sociality, and emotion. In Ulysses, music with its formal qualities serves as a complex marker of affective surge and withdrawal, energy, and fatigue. Its production of consciousness as an \"individuating rhythm\" allows characters to admit music as an exemplary praxis especially able to hold attention, inform reality, and contain affect.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25689563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644049"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ecc8c75-a6b2-3593-bfc8-bbeb6382174c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25689563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamerlibrasso"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Library Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":142.0,"pageEnd":"H442","pageStart":"H5","pagination":"pp. H5-H69, H367-H442","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[Handbook]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25689563","wordCount":93345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald Figal"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2646528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2799f156-ebff-342f-b3e7-9c742087da0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2646528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"933","pageStart":"902","pagination":"pp. 902-933","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"How to jibunshi: Making and Marketing Self-Histories of Sh\u014dwa among the Masses in Postwar Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2646528","wordCount":17589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"Gerald Figal delineates the political and social context out of which the phenomenon of jibunshi or \"self-history\" emerged in postwar Japan. He traces its origin back to the grass-roots \"Everyday Writing Movement\" (Fudangi undo) headed by Hashimoto Yoshio which encouraged local housewives to write their life stories. The aim of these stories--and of the meetings of local writers that were convened to discuss them--was to promote a new culture of egalitarianism and solidarity that opposed the autocratic nationalism of the prewar period. The self-histories, furthermore, were intended to be the stories of and by ordinary people, and written in an everyday language that avoided the elitist vocabulary of professional historians. The possibilities of this \"radical\" historiography were never fully realized, however. Although an alternative historiography has emerged in some writings, jibunshi-writing has increasingly become homogenized and commodified, a tendency that the author locates \"within the mass reproduction of history and culture in a late capitalist society such as Japan's.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0043873-327f-3da5-bfd3-2c83a8f9262b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25042258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042258","wordCount":21606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenn Willmott"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"088791a0-914c-3e48-ad14-87964bb4169d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Implications for a Sartrean Radical Medium: From Theatre to Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389151","wordCount":7801,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[26508,27008]],"Locations in B":[[5631,6134]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Bukatman"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7726efa3-aa12-3dea-9d37-edaf8776ccb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"There's Always Tomorrowland: Disney and the Hypercinematic Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778872","wordCount":9112,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75444,75718]],"Locations in B":[[51546,51820]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris T. 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Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The bodily threat of miracles: Security, sacramentality, and the Egyptian politics of public order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23357962","wordCount":13585,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This article examines the political and public culture of Coptic Christian miracles through the circulation and reproduction of images and the mimetic entanglements of artifacts and objects. To understand the threat posed by one case of a woman's oil-exuding hand, this study points to how semiotic orders of security and sacramentality intersect in the regulation of bodily miracles. It explores Coptic Orthodox Church and Egyptian state efforts to contain the activity of images and transform the public nature of truthful witness and divine testimony. In doing so, it suggests how the material structure of saintly imagination introduces bodily and visual challenges to an authoritarian politics of public order.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Dyer"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919064"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04493e5-736a-3b72-88bd-a2b9a887d42c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1483746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibushistoriae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus et Historiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Metaphysics of the Mundane: Understanding Andy Warhol's Serial Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483746","wordCount":11542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"49","publisher":"IRSA s.c.","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"The serial structure of Andy Warhol's silkscreens articulates a dynamic structure of actualization of which anything is an instance, thus providing a model of how the mundane world comes to be, persists to be the same, but is always changing. His serial works enact iterative structures of free, synthetic, iterative self-realization, a rational process of the actualization of things. In making numerous depthless images identical, Warhol makes them different through obvious surface printing accidents, spontaneous traces of differentiating activity. They reveal the constructive activity irreducible to any element involved in making the series. This underivable activity is spontaneous, non-deterministic and free, but also relational because serial.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mxjv.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640680"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db56d8f1-310a-37b1-b413-d72212d7b4af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mxjv.9"}],"isPartOf":"Digital Material","keyphrase":["digital recombination","database","mechanical reproduction","mona lisa","digitally recombined","benjamin","exhibition value","computer","database ontology","cult value"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"95","pagination":"95-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Sociology","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The work of art in the age of digital recombination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mxjv.9","wordCount":5956,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[6582,6890],[6895,7332],[9169,9351],[14839,15366]],"Locations in B":[[3497,3960],[3979,4419],[4431,4613],[4851,5401]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Artists, from the prehistoric painters who engraved and painted figures on cave walls to new media artists whose work depends on computer technologies, have always used media. Media, used here in the broad sense as \u2018means for presenting information\u2019\u00b9, are not innocent instruments. Ever since Kant\u2019s Copernican revolution, we know that experience is constituted and structured by the forms of sensibility and the categories of human understanding, and after the so-called linguistic and mediatic turns in philosophy, it is generally assumed that media play a crucial role in the configuration of the human mind and experience. Media are interfaces that","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Joseph Shulman"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08859884"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9c5d31a-6c6f-3813-b5c4-835011968d23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jassoteacjapa"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Association of Teachers of Japanese","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":107.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Dissertation Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489603","wordCount":37594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Wu"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2066e31-ce04-3cc8-85c3-32162d9c738c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":89.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Copyright's Communications Policy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141920","wordCount":38462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53924359-0ed6-31e5-837c-e66578264ccd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3106498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Subject Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3106498","wordCount":15004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. 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A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shadi Neimneh"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24265165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"234eb71c-7bf5-3947-bd85-40be6d963214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24265165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"709","pageStart":"692","pagination":"pp. 692-709","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE VISCERAL ALLEGORY OF WAITING FOR \"THE BARBARIANS\": A Postmodern Re-reading of J. 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J. Conkwright's creative imagination was grounded in knowledge of his chosen field, knowledge which he expanded during a lifetime of research and study. Early in his career he wrote a Master's thesis for the University of Oklahoma in which he explored the history of printing technology in America. His 1938 thesis was divided into four chapters\u2014\"Typefounding and Typefounders,\" \"Composing Machines,\" \"American Type Design,\" and \"Presses and Printing\"\u2014two of which are published here. In them, two of the major characteristics of P. J. Conkwright, Typographer, are already manifest: his appreciation of elegant and legible types, and his profound and enduring respect for craftsmanship.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1939-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/316929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/316929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"French Book List","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/316929","wordCount":4276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Tweedie"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"641a2773-f46a-3049-af19-2011ff243b1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Caliban's Books: The Hybrid Text in Peter Greenaway's \"Prospero's Books\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225819","wordCount":12026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This essay discusses Peter Greenaway's \"Prospero's Books\" as an allegory of the adaptation of canonical literature to cinema, with \"The Tempest'\"s colonial concerns refigured as a confrontation between a \"masterful\" original and an \"unfaithful\" follower. The essay then situates the film's meditation on the literary artifact and neobaroque aesthetics in opposition to the discourses of heritage circulating in Thatcherite Britain.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elmar G. M. 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Recent interpretations of this debate have tended to view it as a clash between modernity and traditionalism, or Unitarian enlightenment and Calvinist repression, or capitalism and paternalism. This paper argues that, far from being forward-looking capitalist modernizers, Horace Mann and other exponents of \"the New England pedagogy\" were deeply troubled by the menacing moral consequences of the market and Jacksonian revolutions and that, in response, they developed and deployed a \"disciplinary\" pedagogy that simultaneously reflected their faith in the ability of education to promote the development of the powers of the self and cultivate the capacity for \"self-government\" while at the same time preventing, or at least limiting, the commercialization of the school classroom.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madhurima Chakraborty"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43798999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48150607"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"891cef9e-c545-38ac-b0df-f55f5344cc0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43798999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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A full bibliography and price list of the works received by SEL for consideration follow.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00431303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13004b2c-8ec3-3f1b-9006-84c6a5f30afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25042577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwatpollcontfed"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (Water Pollution Control Federation)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":162.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-9, 11-135, 137-144, 146, 148, 150, 152, 154-156, 158-159, 161-162, 164-174, 176, 178-179, 182, 192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Water Pollution Control Federation Yearbook: 1985","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25042577","wordCount":106522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Water Environment Federation","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-04-02","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20413888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ff65fbe-3bde-3b06-898a-59489fd57455"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20413888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Law - 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In this article, I return to the problematic question of African origins in the black Americas, arguing that despite the distortions of baseline genealogies and associated myths of tribal purity, West African cultural frameworks-when critically reformulated-illuminate New World dynamics of creolization. Focusing on the Petwo paradox in Haitian Vodou, which opposes Creole powers of money and magic to the venerated, if enervated, authority of Ginen (Africa), I address a fairly narrow debate regarding the division of Petwo and Rada deities and their imputed Creole versus African origins. Against the ideology of Haitian Vodou, and its misleading influence on various scholars, a Yoruba-Dahomean cultural hermeneutic reveals the African origins and revisionary principles of the Petwo and Rada opposition, as it emerged before the Haitian revolution and realigned with class relations under Fran\u00e7ois Duvalier.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjorie Perloff"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43738967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c78e598-a64c-34de-bffb-833c63744af1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43738967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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It is on this path that we discover ignored moments and personalities and clarify challenging ideas, thus approaching history from multiple perspectives. This historical study attempts to reframe the past of colonial Indian art education within the broader context of art education histories. It raises questions about the teaching of drawing and negotiation of teaching practices in between the cultures of the colonizer and the colonized and analyzes the similarities and differences between the art education practices of England and India. The study offers a powerful reference point from which present day practices for teaching of drawing and issues of culturally embedded pedagogy in art schools in India can be examined. By reframing the colonial past, this study invites students, especially South East Asian students, to establish a relationship with their past in the postcolonial context. It is an historical, theoretical, and comparative analysis, providing an opportunity to examine Indian art education from the position of both the colonizer and the colonized.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Desa Philippi"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b3a040d-3e69-39cb-8709-20554e6da4d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 114-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Moments of Interpretation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778705","wordCount":3496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elisabeth Dutton","Maria Sachiko Cecire","James McBain"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07482558"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61314128"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006213903"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f07f8cd2-6f72-392b-9471-dfc06f42e3d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26355008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakbull"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging and Filming John Bale\u2019s Three Laws<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355008","wordCount":7755,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16494]],"Locations in B":[[46133,46233]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"053e1e08-0f55-300c-a7cf-8d9792fb0e62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26573517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573517","wordCount":9503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"JULY 1, 2017\u2013JUNE 30, 2018","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren\u00e9 Ranc\u0153ur"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40532815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d24fde7b-afff-3676-9458-d0e86d63e62d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40532815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":322.0,"pageEnd":"874","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-874","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Bibliographie de la litt\u00e9rature fran\u00e7aise (XVIe \u2013 XXe si\u00e8cles). 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CBA\/CEA Literature: 1991 to 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3767465","wordCount":83089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Hanscom"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43998362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559530872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc937922-364b-3208-8129-f0b4f8cbdf1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43998362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies (1979-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kim Yuj\u014fng's \"Thoughts from a Sickbed\" and the Critique of Empiricist Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43998362","wordCount":12972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"This article examines canonical author Kim Yuj\u014fng's only sustained piece of literary-critical writing with an eye toward rethinking the genre conventions which structure our perceptions of colonial-period Korean literature. In his \"Thoughts from a Sickbed,\" a wide-ranging essay written in epistolary form and published in the month of his death in 1937, Kim grapples with what I call empiricist discourse in the areas of science, love, and aesthetics and presents a critique of subjectivism and objectivism in all three registers. Kim takes issue with a na\u00efve belief in the capacity of language to fully capture its referent, a tendency he finds basic to both naturalist and \"new psychological\" fiction. He argues instead for a mode of writing that confronts such assumptions with the impossibility of complete representation, a continual grasping toward always unattainable ideals of human knowledge and understanding. This study frames Kim's engagement with empiricist discourse in the context of the more general crisis of representation which crossed ideological boundaries in the Seoul literary circles of the 1930s and suggests that Kim's critique \u2014and subsequent advocacy of ethical literary practice \u2014 points toward irony and idealism as categories through which the relationship between discourse and reality in colonial-period literary history might be productively thought.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hilde Hein"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27903361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269662"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60532856"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-233200"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27903361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"themonist"}],"isPartOf":"The Monist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"556","pagination":"pp. 556-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INSTITUTIONAL BLESSING: THE MUSEUM AS CANON-MAKER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27903361","wordCount":8003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurel Kendall","Th\u1ecb Thanh T\u00e2m V\u0169","Th\u1ecb Thu H\u01b0\u01a1ng Nguy\u1ec5n"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25163774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18826865"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298239510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-266704"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7207bd46-d45b-35ca-a819-e038fb42f187"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25163774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asianeth"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Ethnology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Religion","Anthropology","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Three Goddesses in and out of Their Shrine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25163774","wordCount":7714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Nanzan University","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"When the spirit medium of Ph\u1ee7 D\u1ea7y Temple visited the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology in 2002, she was shocked to see the gold-plated Mother Goddess statues her temple had given to the museum placed on the storeroom floor (for cleaning). This incident led Dr. Laurel Kendall, Ms. V\u0169 Th\u1ecb Thanh T\u00e2m, and Ms. Nguy\u1ec5n Th\u1ecb Thu H\u01b0\u01a1ng to learn more about how Ph\u1ee7 D\u1ea7y Temple had conceptualized the manufacture of statues that would never be ritually animated but had been presented to the Goddess as \"offerings.\" Although ritual animation makes the statue a god, a complex mix of ritual and technology insures that the statue will be an auspicious container and complicates its identity as sacred or mundane.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chad Bryant"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16eb7ba4-0a45-3a8d-b925-d7798f1bfcd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"919","pageStart":"918","pagination":"pp. 918-919","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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L. Rutsky"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.2.267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cca9114-a66c-310f-b00d-89e3a87c6b53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.33.2.267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Techno-Cultural Interaction and the Fear of Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.33.2.267","wordCount":7487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Fears of information and information overload are often figured in terms of fluidity and otherness: as, for example, an ocean of information that threatens to overwhelm or drown us. Interacting with this postmodern ocean of data frequently evokes a sense of being lost, unable to chart a course. In response to this fear of becoming lost, techno-cultural interaction is often figured in terms that stress the importance of mapping and navigation. Yet, the metaphor of navigation, with its emphasis on the human mastery of the world, is as much a metaphor of colonialism and corporate strategy as it is of empowerment and political action. In contrast to the figure of navigation, the often maligned metaphor of surfing, with its non-Western origins and emphasis on performance over instrumentality, offers a different way of thinking about our interactions with the fluidity and otherness of the data ocean. Instead of attempting to maintain a human mastery over the world of information, surfing suggests an interaction with it--an interaction in which human beings are not the sole actors.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily M. Hinnov"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41429a73-96ce-34f5-828c-b0f4d3b15d7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Each is part of the whole: We act different parts; but are the same\": From Fragment to Choran Community in the Late Work of Virginia Woolf","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907088","wordCount":10737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pace University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c940817b-9ea9-336b-8cb4-7e0e2e423974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40304091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Staff: As of July 1, 1981","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304091","wordCount":6228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"111","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gal Gerson"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3792343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3792343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"794","pageStart":"769","pagination":"pp. 769-794","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Object Relations Psychoanalysis as Political Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3792343","wordCount":12440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"This article examines the political contents of object relations psychoanalysis, a theory that perceives dependence as the natural state of all humans. Unlike the views advanced by the classical state-of-nature models of Locke, Hobbes, and Rousseau, object relations perceives humans in their original state as already grouped and driven by an urge to associate. Company (rather than privacy, property, or political participation) stands out as the basic right, and all the other rights follow on it as instruments for fulfilling it. The primacy of care lends itself to the justification of distributive measures meant to bolster family cohesion and individual confidence at the expense of the open market. The theory is therefore compatible with the premises of the social-democratic welfare state.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Steiner"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4335030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163075X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c70fed5-dae2-39c8-a100-183fcdbe7575"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4335030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kenyrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Kenyon Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":120.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"The Portage to San Cristobal of A. H.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4335030","wordCount":53650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Kenyon College","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1930-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1837487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f14205e-3663-3408-9b1c-282ac2ff75b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1837487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"386","pagination":"pp. 386-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1930,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shorter Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1837487","wordCount":21682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1309263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b0563e2-9692-3af2-b9b1-8486eac2798c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1309263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1309263","wordCount":14195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy L. Parrish"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05371cc7-732a-3437-9ba3-e21cbdbb114c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"723","pageStart":"696","pagination":"pp. 696-723","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"FROM HOOVER'S FBI TO EISENSTEIN'S \"UNTERWELT\": DELILLO DIRECTS THE POSTMODERN NOVEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285575","wordCount":11172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joann Moser"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51031ff0-7a76-3de0-b8ce-92dd8a028b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3109103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 58-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Collages of Joseph Stella: \"Macchie\/Macchine Naturali\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3109103","wordCount":6680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Thoms"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc3b7eda-cd2f-37d1-8425-a79e6d2c66f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2933689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Narrow Track of Blood\": Detection and Storytelling in Bleak House","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2933689","wordCount":7797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Detection in Bleak House is not only a response to actual crime but, more expansively, a way of being-a response to pervasive and ingrained notions of guilt. This habitual detection arised both as an oppressive process of self-scrutiny in which characters police themselves and as a perphas delusory attempt to escape such entrapment by investigating and thus writing others. As the former, detection is internalized so that the individual embodies a system of regulation, being both the oppressive law and the guilty transgressor. At its most destructive, such self-regulation-the attempt to repress or hide one's criminal self-leads to self-obliteration, as in the examples of Nemo and Lady Dedlock. For the most part, however, the common anxieties of guilt and the desire for concealment are managed more effectively. Characters distance themselves from the fearful and private world of the self by indulging a distracting interest in the world of society and, particularly, by adopting the psychologically disfiguring roles of detectives. Instead of being constructed by their own guilt (and the investigations of others), the detectives assume authoritative and more comfortable positions on the right side of the law. Lacking (and dreading) a defining sense of themselves, these detectives compensate by attempting to read and write the objects of their detection; they attempt to nourish their own spiritual hunger by feeding upon the identities of others.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vitaly Chernetsky"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/308420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4c62b03-b21c-394e-a57c-42ca6f384ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/308420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"655","pagination":"pp. 655-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Epigonoi or Transformations of Writing in the Texts of Valerija Narbikova and Nina Iskrenko","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/308420","wordCount":10130,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marta Gutman"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jsah.2008.67.4.532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45ba3cd5-4bc7-35e1-87b8-5c414edb2beb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jsah.2008.67.4.532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"561","pageStart":"532","pagination":"pp. 532-561","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Race, Place, and Play: Robert Moses and the WPA Swimming Pools in New York City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jsah.2008.67.4.532","wordCount":19167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth J. Perry"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1a1aa52-e4da-331a-8d68-85bd64cae30f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20203481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"1164","pageStart":"1147","pagination":"pp. 1147-1164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reclaiming the Chinese Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203481","wordCount":8129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":"Focusing on the Chinese Communists' mobilizational efforts at the Anyuan coal mine in the early 1920s, the author argues for reconsidering a sometimes forgotten part of Chinese revolutionary history. At Anyuan, idealistic young Communist cadres led a highly successful nonviolent strike and launched a major educational program for workers, peasants, and their families. The result was a remarkable outpouring of popular support for the Communist revolutionary effort. Although the meaning of the \"Anyuan revolutionary tradition\" has been obscured and distorted over the years to serve a variety of personal, political, and pecuniary agendas, the author seeks to recover from its early history the possibility of alternative revolutionary paths, driven less by class struggle and cults of personality than by the quest for human dignity through grassroots organization.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Gelshorn","Louis Marin"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23209209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ea17040-725c-3fcb-83ec-49bd28f40aca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23209209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"A \"New Totality\"?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833717","wordCount":5992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eecec71-8722-3ba7-8675-9a7acaaf3904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Archives of Modern Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779125","wordCount":6905,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[56839,57038]],"Locations in B":[[31831,32063]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Benjamin"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Decline of Art: Benjamin's Aura","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360414","wordCount":4849,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[12602,12882],[12949,13069]],"Locations in B":[[10117,10400],[10433,10553]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Brent McBride"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1b88b95-fa0a-36b4-b93c-f757369d6f95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30153733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"465","pagination":"pp. 465-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Romantic Phantasms: Benjamin and Adorno on the Subject of Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30153733","wordCount":10669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"It has often been assumed that Walter Benjamin's dialogue with Theodor W. Adorno on popular culture ended in an antinomy, with Adorno's fear of manipulation canceling Benjamin's hope for emancipation. Following a tip from Adorno, this essay analyzes their dispute as the clash between two models of Romantic subjectivity: bourgeois individuation and democratic socialization. These divergent concepts of political and aesthetic subjectivity are paradigmatically represented in the two friends' contrasting interpretations of Charlie Chaplin's woefully inept \"eccentric.\" By tracing how Benjamin and Adorno exorcise the ghosts of Romantic subjectivity, this essay arrives at a new point of departure, indicated by their common interest in technological progress. Here Benjamin's notion of the \"dispersed mass\" is explicated as a post-Romantic model of critical subjectivity developed to meet the exigencies of modern media culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jenny Edkins"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f1fcac9-ba37-3818-9908-78ea5192f090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23412534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Politics and Personhood: Reflections on the Portrait Photograph","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412534","wordCount":10590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"The faces of the missing are held aloft on placards in demonstrations or posted on walls in the aftermath of disappearances. They appear massed on the pages of newspapers and in the displays of genocide museums. Often nothing more than family snapshots given a public place, such images can be compelling. Although photographs of atrocity and war have frequently been discussed, little attention has been paid to these other images: images that do not show suffering but still seem, at least potentially, to be politically effective. How do these photographs work? What form of personhood do they instantiate and what politics do they point to? How are they different from other photographs? This article examines what might be special about a photograph, especially a photograph of a face, and how its political impact might be understood. Drawing on Lacanian psychoanalytic concepts of trauma and subjectivity, the article suggests that a photograph embodies in its very temporal structure a personhood that is inimical to contemporary structures of sovereign power. The destabilizing political potential of a photograph, like that of certain forms of literary text, could be understood as arising from its potential as an encounter with the trauma that inhabits sovereign power and sovereign subjectivity but that is generally concealed. The account presented offers an alternative approach to the analysis of the politics of a photograph and gestures toward other manifestations of personhood and politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20100428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393797"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c868e2-b5d8-3d7c-b083-91906f56c289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20100428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studsovithou"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Soviet Thought","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20100428","wordCount":7885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Daly"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Railway Novels: Sensation Fiction and the Modernization of the Senses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032080","wordCount":13104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carmen Merport Qui\u00f1ones"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.59.4.0511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aafc2a51-19ce-3960-8691-9f64e02c3b8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.59.4.0511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"538","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-538","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Color: Looking Through Language in Warhol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.59.4.0511","wordCount":11733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959731","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"962d5855-c9a4-39aa-a8e5-e1de00b3b21d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/959731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959731","wordCount":15818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1577","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Leistra-Jones"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2015.38.3.243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f9ec4bf-b2cf-3e12-ae12-ca45171cf420"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2015.38.3.243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Improvisational Idyll","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2015.38.3.243","wordCount":17699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Abstract Boris Schwarz once characterized Brahms's Violin Concerto, op. 77, as an \u201cintangible interplay between the art of Brahms and that of Joachim.\u201d The celebrated violinist was not only the inspiration for this concerto; he also played a crucial role in its compositional genesis and early performance history. But while Joachim's compositional contributions to the concerto have been well documented, his importance as a performer is usually acknowledged only in vague terms. We sense that Joachim the performer is somehow \u201cin\u201d this concerto without being able to articulate how. This article examines the intersections between Joachim's style and persona as a performer, the cultural meanings ascribed to performance, and specific formal and expressive features of the Violin Concerto. Particularly important was Joachim's perceived ability to present composed musical works as though they were being improvised, created on the spot through a mysterious fusion of Joachim himself with the mind and spirit of the composer. In the later nineteenth century, as the practice of improvisation began to disappear from the concert stage, improvisation could represent a lost ideal of spontaneous, unmediated subjective expression. An analysis of the concerto's first movement shows that it thematizes tensions between two contrasting visions of creativity\u2014one involving spontaneous inspiration and improvisation at an instrument, the other, the rigors of logical, planned out, and written composition. These expressive features take on additional meanings when considered in the context of Joachim's performances of the concerto, and they allow for a recovery of some of its historical meanings that resided not only in the notated score, but also in performed events.","subTitle":"Joachim's \u201cPresence\u201d and Brahms's Violin Concerto, op. 77","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a1e50a6-3ea1-3844-be12-5e78b37a3304"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/529412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":327.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529412","wordCount":246784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Scott"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"417a5b44-d013-30eb-bb00-8eff6b7ca450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1113","pageStart":"1110","pagination":"pp. 1110-1113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231323","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Apter"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe476d7a-00a6-349b-85d4-2308bd6f0501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"564","pagination":"pp. 564-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On Imperial Spectacle: The Dialectics of Seeing in Colonial Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879380","wordCount":13770,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13802,14004]],"Locations in B":[[64379,64576]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. J. T. Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8308ae17-8060-3d76-9070-0fe43657ef9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Is an Image?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468718","wordCount":16286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Masco"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484507","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"054a755f-1d5c-3106-9d38-4addce7e21cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20484507"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"\"Survival Is Your Business\": Engineering Ruins and Affect in Nuclear America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484507","wordCount":15380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"In this article, I interrogate the national cultural work performed by the mass circulation of images of a nuclear-bombed United States since 1945. It argues that the production of negative affect has become a central arena of nation-building in the nuclear age, and tracks the visual deployment of nuclear fear on film from the early Cold War project of civil defense through the \"war on terror.\" It argues that the production and management of negative affect remains a central tool of the national security state, and demonstrates the primary role the atomic bomb plays in the United States as a means of militarizing everyday life and justifying war.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Whiteman"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00790958"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfebcdc7-0d93-3bc6-a46e-4e69969c1d7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1567175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspecta"}],"isPartOf":"Perspecta","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 40-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"That Skepticism Might Be a Place. Building, Theory, and Tragedy in the Play of Architectural Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1567175","wordCount":7796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1948-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1490015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd0c3995-1e6f-3c73-813f-d04b426fa218"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1490015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Peabody Bimonthly Booknotes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1490015","wordCount":13178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Graham"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23781451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02616823"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607455921"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013234419"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"418d2f6b-1164-3132-9d3f-07a6c6fd0744"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23781451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aafiles"}],"isPartOf":"AA Files","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Musique en fer forg\u00e9: Erik Satie, Le Corbusier and the Problem of Aural Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23781451","wordCount":14031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"68","publisher":"Architectural Association School of Architecture","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon Goss"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2564034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e84c4198-a611-3bce-b379-473359d3e970"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2564034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Once-Upon-a-Time in the Commodity World: An Unofficial Guide to Mall of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2564034","wordCount":19012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":"This paper provides an account of the contemporary operation of the commodity aesthetic through a critical reading of Mall of America, the largest themed retail and entertainment complex in the U.S. Inspired by Walter Benjamin's analysis of nineteenth century arcades, I argue that the modern megamall is a dreamhouse of the collectivity, where fantasies of authentic life are displaced onto commodities that are fetishized in the spatial, anthropological, and psychological senses. Vital to these processes is the construction of temporal-spatial contexts, or chronotopes of consumption, which include the spatial archetypes of Public Space, Marketplace, and Festival Setting, and temporal archetypes of original Nature, Primitiveness, Childhood, and Heritage. Within these contexts, fetishism operates through themes of transport, both bodily in terms of motion and travel, and imaginatively in the form of memory and magic. Following a critique of a failure of dialectic thinking in existing literature on commodity consumption, I provide a dialectical \"reading\" of Mall of America, and outline its implications for a progressive political engagement with the contemporary retail built environment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1907-06-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c8767af-da4f-32b9-a37d-4e667b6d9c6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"834","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-834","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1907,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 55, no. 2849","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335974","wordCount":20623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2849","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40406925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1686247a-1069-343f-9c54-5c37c0618e9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40406925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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However, in a modest manner, his ensuing activities will add a dimension to the development of American fiction, since his story is among the first dealing with the adventures of an American abroad.\u00b9 Yet Newman\u2019s most important impact will not be precisely in the area of literary aesthetics. Rather, his experiences or, more properly, the experiences which his creator affords him, will have an influence in the broader realm of Franco-American cultural","subTitle":"The American","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1946-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"496624fe-57c4-32a3-884f-e35221b29149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/459162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"1386","pageStart":"1351","pagination":"pp. 1351-1386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Proceedings of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/459162","wordCount":14102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HEYWARD EHRLICH"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ff8f6ab-7c71-332d-b1c8-e3a716c587ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"JOYCE, BENJAMIN, AND THE FUTURITY OF FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871338","wordCount":12518,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5935,6026]],"Locations in B":[[31528,31621]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a2d8379-9524-3ef2-ac97-15929b726be6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25693388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A.L.A. ORGANIZATION AND INFORMATION 1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693388","wordCount":25112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Marie Todd"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10856633"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46778371"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethicsenviro"}],"isPartOf":"Ethics and the Environment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"The Aesthetic Turn in Green Marketing: Environmental Consumer Ethics of Natural Personal Care Products","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339089","wordCount":6503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"Green consumerism is on the rise in America, but its environmental effects are contested. Does green marketing contribute to the greening of American consciousness, or does it encourage corporate green washing? This tenuous ethical position means that eco-marketers must carefully frame their environmental products in a way that appeals to consumers with environmental ethics and buyers who consider natural products as well as conventional items. Thus, eco-marketing constructs a complicated ethical identity for the green consumer. Environmentally aware individuals are already guided by their personal ethics. In trying to attract new consumers, environmentally minded businesses attach an aesthetic quality to environmental goods. In an era where environmentalism is increasingly hip, what are the implications for an environmental ethics infused with a sense of aesthetics? This article analyzes the promotional materials of three companies that advertise their environmental consciousness: Burt's Bee's Inc., Tom's of Maine, Inc., and The Body Shop Inc. Responding to an increasing online shopping market, these companies make their promotional and marketing materials available online, and these web-based materials replicate their printed catalogs and indoor advertisements. As part of selling products to consumers based on a set of ideological values, these companies employ two specific discursive strategies to sell their products: they create enhanced notions of beauty by emphasizing the performance of their natural products, and thus infuse green consumerism with a unique environmental aesthetic. They also convey ideas of health through community values, which in turn enhances notions of personal health to include ecological well-being. This article explicates the ethical implications of a personal natural care discourse for eco-marketing strategies, and the significance of a green consumer aesthetic for environmental consciousness in general.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KN Panikkar"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6eeaf868-8fb1-3873-a8bb-907939154c23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25655996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture as a Site of Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655996","wordCount":7834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5\/6","publisher":"Social Scientist","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Tame"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44946600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16268717"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1077300905"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d31f4ff1-59b4-3c43-8a96-bcd4edd9fabd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44946600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presandrmalr"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence d'Andr\u00e9 Malraux","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Malraux's Cultural Legacy Today: Heritage Conservation: How much the world heritage owes Malraux","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44946600","wordCount":3082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"Amiti\u00e9s Internationales Andr\u00e9 Malraux","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. DEIRDRE PHELPS"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20698010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07363974"},{"name":"oclc","value":"300516480"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234739"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20698010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"text"}],"isPartOf":"Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Where's the Book? The Text in the Development of Literary Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20698010","wordCount":11508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.22","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781909254268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a3b353c-b5c8-35d3-a038-b80c3c749990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjtt3.22"}],"isPartOf":"Digital Humanities Pedagogy","keyphrase":["humanities computing","computing","education","university","learning","teaching","select bibliography","cambridge mit","linguistic computing","malden blackwell"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"407","pagination":"407-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Education","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Select Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjtt3.22","wordCount":6964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00693235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"725e1b0a-2cab-3424-9884-2f006d434594"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4113053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artinstchicmuses"}],"isPartOf":"Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-105+111-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PortFolio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113053","wordCount":12255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Art Institute of Chicago","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Zuromskis"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"981717d2-5acf-31ee-aa6f-d460903df2f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40598945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ordinary Pictures and Accidental Masterpieces: Snapshot Photography in the Modern Art Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598945","wordCount":10763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Clapper"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/597172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aa56cb9-f6f9-317f-aa49-d3a4ca405a72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/597172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Imagining the Ordinary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/597172","wordCount":17877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"John Rogers developed and satisfied a mass market for sculpture as no previous American sculptor had. He self\u2010consciously rejected the prevailing neoclassical style, sought popular acclaim from the outset, and molded his art to that end. In his most popular groups, Coming to the Parson (1870) and Checkers Up at the Farm (1875), he imagined an ordinary world of warm, pure sentiment and harmonious social relationships. Rogers\u2019s genre sculptures functioned both as a means of self\u2010identification with a broadly middle\u2010class value system and as a way to help reconcile internal contradictions within it.","subTitle":"John Rogers\u2019s Anticlassical Genre Sculptures as Purposely Popular Art","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erik Parens","Adrienne Asch"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00930334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38867822"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212569"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d657114-4e70-3af7-8d1a-901d53cc5515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3527746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hastcentrepo"}],"isPartOf":"The Hastings Center Report","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"S22","pageStart":"S1","pagination":"pp. S1-S22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Special Supplement: The Disability Rights Critique of Prenatal Genetic Testing Reflections and Recommendations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3527746","wordCount":19665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Hastings Center","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e2c8318-5390-3b3c-9ede-cbcf2d6a8c0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1340807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"xxxviii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xxxviii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340807","wordCount":13820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nils Gore"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8fbe756-f9c6-3c11-93b7-9e0309138d03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40480523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Craft and Innovation: Serious Play and the Direct Experience of the Real","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480523","wordCount":5404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"This paper looks at a way of studio teaching that emphasizes direct experience with real materials. It argues that innovation takes place when a student \"plays\" with real materials and adopts a critical attitude toward craft. Recent studios demonstrate a way of working that discovers forms, strategies, and techniques unlike those discovered by a student when working to scale in drawing or model. An essential aspect of this teaching is the emphasis revealing to the student the critical thinking inherent in the activity of making.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Sayer"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f9b178e-597f-3fc1-ab38-cb404db68796"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"819","pageStart":"818","pagination":"pp. 818-819","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231281","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruno Reinhardt"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"629d69f8-2170-3f22-98a2-5e089880c6be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Soaking in tapes: the haptic voice of global Pentecostal pedagogy in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907660","wordCount":13072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"Can a voice touch? This possibility is indeed what underlies 'soaking in tapes', a devotional practice performed in Anagkazo Bible and Ministry Training Center, a Pentecostal seminary based in Accra, Ghana. Soaking in tapes is a form of impartation, or grace transmission, homologous to the biblical method of laying on of hands. In this article, I explore the conditions of possibility of this transposition of touch into speaking and hearing, arguing that the haptic voice of soaking in tapes is predicated upon a cultivated receptivity and a specific bond connecting addresser and addressee. I situate the practice in the school's broader pedagogical apparatus, where it operates simultaneously as a spiritual exercise, a method of discipleship, and a technology of church government. I conclude by showing how soaking in tapes gives a pedagogical inflection to the general tactility and flow-orientated materiality of global Pentecostal power. Une voix peut-elle toucher, au sens propre ? C'est bien cette possibilit\u00e9 qui sous-tend la pratique appel\u00e9e soaking in tapes, \u00ab l'absorption de la Parole \u00bb, une pratique de d\u00e9votion du s\u00e9minaire pentec\u00f4tiste Anagkazo Bible and Ministry Training Center \u00e0 Accra, au Ghana. Il s'agit d'une forme de transmission de la gr\u00e2ce, proche de la m\u00e9thode biblique de l'imposition des mains. Dans cet article, l'auteur \u00e9tudie les conditions qui rendent possible cette transposition du toucher en parole et en \u00e9coute, en avan\u00e7ant que la voie haptique de l'absorption de la Parole est pr\u00e9diqu\u00e9e sur la base d'une r\u00e9ceptivit\u00e9 cultiv\u00e9e et d'un lien sp\u00e9cifique entre \u00e9nonciateur et r\u00e9cepteur. Il situe cette pratique dans le cadre plus large de l'appareil p\u00e9dagogique de l'\u00e9cole, dans lequel elle sert \u00e0 la fois d'exercice spirituel, de m\u00e9thode d'apprentissage et de technique de gouvernement eccl\u00e9sial. Pour conclure, il montre comment le soaking in tapes donne une inflexion p\u00e9dagogique, \u00e0 la tactilit\u00e9 et \u00e0 la mat\u00e9rialit\u00e9 \u00e0 tendance fluctuelle de la puissance pentec\u00f4tiste globale.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Briggs"],"datePublished":"2007-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a67cf19-e37e-3b8b-982c-8833cd928373"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mediating Infanticide: Theorizing Relations between Narrative and Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497777","wordCount":17777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Much anthropological research on narrative and violence treats their relationship as immanent and performative, an assumption shared by many media, legal, medical, and other professionals and lay persons. This view is predicated on constructing the production, circulation, and reception of knowledge about violence in particular ways. In this article, I examine newspaper accounts of infanticide in Venezuela, along with interviews with reporters, detectives and legal professionals and focus groups. This analysis suggests that these articles, which receive widespread attention, become stories about stories-specifically narratives that recount how the story of the crime unfolded naturally and automatically from material and corporeal evidence, and the words of relatives, neighbors, doctors, detectives, defendants, and the vox populi. These constructions of discourse about violence create a very limited range of subject positions, generate standardized scripts for persons interpellated in each slot, and make it difficult to advance counternarratives, thereby inscribing the legitimacy of state institutions during a period (the 1990s) when the nation-state project seemed to be collapsing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25696968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99d0ca99-c69b-3315-98d2-4f342c71284e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25696968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Highlights of the St. Louis Conference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25696968","wordCount":12997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. P. Deshpande"],"datePublished":"1987-12-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4377856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"036b42a4-89aa-3e81-8a6f-07026cca6711"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4377856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"2176","pageStart":"2170","pagination":"pp. 2170-2176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dialectics of Defeat: Some Reflections on Literature, Theatre and Music in Colonial India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4377856","wordCount":10010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"50","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Trends and tendencies in Indian literature and theatre today owe their origin to the colonial experience. In the three language areas dealt with here the patterns of aesthetic and creative enterprise of those times were remarkably similar. The scope of the argument here is limited to the nineteenth century when the bhadralok of British India tried to imitate Victorian mores and morals. And it was in contra-distinction to the arrogance and ideals of the age that India's search for a bourgeois sensibility and identity was carried out.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean Franco"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b8cb6e3-bed4-300d-9f28-b3feb3a78377"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Modernization to Resistance: Latin American Literature 1959-1976","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633340","wordCount":11711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David J. Herman"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1772982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism versus Postmodernism: Towards an Analytic Distinction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772982","wordCount":14206,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[87225,87289]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23212762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea92f362-df33-3a1f-a29c-f7f7e75dabea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23212762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Medical conditions","Business - Industry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23212762","wordCount":30677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brooke Hindle","John B. Rae","Robert P. Multhauf","Melvin Kranzberg","Merritt Roe Smith","Carroll Pursell","Arthur L. Norberg"],"datePublished":"1976-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4259c37e-2d61-3e5d-86d1-9518391c5d91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3103531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Bicentennial Meeting, Washington, October 16-19, 1975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103531","wordCount":5841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William H. Gerdts"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027359"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ade822b-2941-34da-9cca-4752cef5f775"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1594605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanartj"}],"isPartOf":"American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 38-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Chicago Is Rushing Past Everything\": The Rise of American Art Journalism in the Midwest, from the Development of the Railroad to the Chicago Fire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594605","wordCount":17373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Kennedy Galleries, Inc.","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald Egan"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"347b3898-02ca-3a79-8e41-b46459d41e50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41468066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Radical Moral Authority and Desire: The Image of the Male Romantic Poet in Frontispiece Portraits of Byron and Shelley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41468066","wordCount":8916,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978],[19181,19658]],"Locations in B":[[8621,8706],[9112,9586]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John C. Welchman"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Signs of the Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360678","wordCount":4880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Alan Fine","Ugo Corte"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88c714e4-cbb8-36e8-8a56-61149569cc88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26382906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Group Pleasures: Collaborative Commitments, Shared Narrative, and the Sociology of Fun","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26382906","wordCount":13592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"As a consequence of their size and fragility, small groups depend on cohesion. Central to group continuation are occasions of collective hedonic satisfaction that encourage attachment. These times are popularly labeled fun. While groupness can be the cause of fun, we emphasize the effects of fun, as understood by participants. Shared enjoyment, located in temporal and spatial affordances, creates conditions for communal identification. Such moments serve as commitment devices, building affiliation, modeling positive relations, and moderating interpersonal tension. Further, they encourage retrospective narration, providing an appealing past, an assumed future, and a sense of groupness. The rhetoric of fun supports interactional smoothness in the face of potential ruptures. Building on the authors' field observations and other ethnographies, we argue that both the experience and recall of fun bolster group stability. We conclude by suggesting that additional research must address the role of power and boundary building in the fun moment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Barrett"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6abd18db-88f4-3b56-bf3a-c2d471423f7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27784832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Framing the Past: Photography and Memory in Housekeeping and The Invention of Solitude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27784832","wordCount":9508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977507","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d4935a2-d595-33da-b4ba-1a0ea6c38b9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977507"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977507","wordCount":1829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"168","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurya Wickstrom"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de9c2760-c6ad-393f-b4bb-8942f9442ce2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Commodities, Mimesis, and \"The Lion King\": Retail Theatre for the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068677","wordCount":7119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTHONY HOWE"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjhr3.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781846319716"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e90b0c9f-5fe9-324f-984c-db98d9ed1125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjhr3.8"}],"isPartOf":"Byron and the Forms of Thought","keyphrase":["bowles","poetry","johnson","warton","poetical","johnson bow","critical","thou shalt","english bards","john murray"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"75","pagination":"75-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Need for \u2018all this\u2019:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjhr3.8","wordCount":13249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"On 31 March 1821 Byron, by publishing the prose essay known as the Letter to John Murray<\/em>, publicly entered the controversy surrounding William Lisle Bowles\u2019s provocative editing and subsequent pamphleteering which queried Pope\u2019s status in the English canon.\u00b9 Appalled by what he saw as Bowles\u2019s modish but ill-considered depreciation of Pope, Byron gave vent to his ire in an extended and uneven prose broadside. He was the only major literary figure of the day to become so involved; his prominent contemporaries, although they would have been aware of the controversy through its dissemination in the literary press, tended to be","subTitle":"Johnson, Bowles and the Forms of Prose","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederik Kortlandt","Jos Schaeken"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01690124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40e11933-ca24-363c-9c16-45cb8150af65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41261579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stuslavgenling"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","pol"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":454.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-iv, vii-xi, 1-5, 7-39, 41-49, 51-65, 67-73, 75-97, 99-109, 111-115, 117-133, 135-155, 157-197, 199-205, 207-209, 211-233, 235-243, 245-309, 311-317, 319-327, 329-333, 335-381, 383-393, 395-401, 403-411, 413-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Selected Writings on Slavic and General Linguistics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261579","wordCount":178321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-09-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1695481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7165cbfb-61d7-3bf5-aa40-6276bb0cd74d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1695481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"1430","pageStart":"1381","pagination":"pp. 1381-1430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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Biology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting: The American Society for Cell Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1607568","wordCount":283414,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalyn Deutsche"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"362ee29a-b972-3ec6-9922-d602f1ce02f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Allston himself disclaimed authorship of one of his earlier paintings after it was cleaned. His painting \"The Spanish Maid,\" his poetry, his palette, and his color theories are also considered, primarily through study of contemporary documents and visual impact.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Alan Carr","Steve Carr"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eb490da-0f90-3213-b2b6-26bed41ee5c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Holocaust in the Text: Victor Hugo's \"Les Mis\u00e9rables\" and the Allegorical Film Adaptation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019252","wordCount":4534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Hird"],"datePublished":"1989-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23407117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00163058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23a3633f-a4ee-3d49-8ff4-a4e49d13e629"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23407117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"furnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Furniture History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Black"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"435bb4a5-e75c-3487-9713-2ace8dec4292"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Works on the Wall Must Take Their Chance\": A Poetics of Acquisition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003075","wordCount":8431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan B. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"921dd212-6ee7-3c1c-ae7c-7eaccb5f2ca7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Dickens and the Transformation of Nineteenth-Century Narratives of \"Legitimacy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372036","wordCount":28160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"One paradoxically secures some interior legitimacy only by denying another assumed patriarchal legitimacy that, through three-quarters of Bleak House, Great Expectations, and Our Mutual Friend, successfully mimes the real thing. Yet, one becomes authentically legitimate only by renouncing the pretense of legitimacy, thereby preserving the right to self-determination. The denial of any foundational idea of legitimacy alone can make the law, the criminal, or the orphan\u2014similar discontinuities\u2014narratively, but not necessarily \"legally\" legitimate. The conversion from narratives of judgment to narratives of detection in Dickens's last novels enables legitimacy to be self-generated, whereby \"internal consistency\" (of the plot) and authenticity (of character) become synonymous. Only then, can justice become more than an institutionally-mandated procedure for the recovery of precedent, and come to be intricated, as with the plots of novels, in the distribution of belief-formation, both among the characters and between those characters and the reader.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Fluet"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Antisocial Goods","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267700","wordCount":4183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Jay"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42800179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09134700"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607605918"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-203351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e94739e-7f22-39ff-9d88-c07b38bb3620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42800179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revijapacultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Japanese Culture and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Walter Benjamin, Remembrance, and the First World War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42800179","wordCount":9547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","volumeNumber":"11\/12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EMILY I. DOLAN"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73cb4794-8646-3157-ab24-1ed757f204c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40926945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'... This little ukulele tells the truth': indie pop and kitsch authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926945","wordCount":7548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Indie pop, like rock and other independent genres more generally, has had a complicated relationship with mass culture. It both depends upon and simultaneously deconstructs notions of authenticity and truth. Independent genres have invited scholarly analysis and critique that often seek to unmask indie as 'elite' or to show the extent to which indie musics are, ironically, defined and shaped by consumer capitalism. Using songwriter Stephin Merritt's music and career as a case study, this essay explores the kinds of authenticities at work in indie pop. Indie pop, I argue, is a genre especially adept at generating 'personal authenticity'. It is useful to turn to the concept of kitsch, understood here as an aesthetic and not a synonym for 'bad'. Kitsch functions to cultivate personal attachment in the face of impersonal mass culture; it is this aesthetic, I argue, that indie pop has cultivated through its lo-fi and often nostalgic sound world and through its dissemination, which has relied upon dedicated collectors. The 'honesty' of this music does not arise from an illusion of unmediated communication, but instead from the emphasis on the process of mediation, which stresses the materiality of the music and the actual experience of listening.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Pfohl"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42de364d-bf80-3e22-ba4f-e43db1a5e56b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3096918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Twilight of the Parasites: Ultramodern Capital and the New World Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3096918","wordCount":14670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This text explores the economic, sex\/gender, and racialized passage of CAPITAL from its modern to its ultramodern phase. Here the parasitism of CAPITAList power shifts to a New World Order of social domination based, not simply upon the exploitation of human labor, but upon the technological invasion of human bodies by cybernetic feedback mechanisms, high\/speed image-processing, and self-liquifying social control. Rooted in \"military metaphysics\" and a whitemale imagination of flexible economic accumulation, the HIStorical emergence of ultramodern CAPITAL signals a dangerous new ritual environment for contemporary social problems. It also presents important theoretical, methodological, and political challenges to the critical sociological imagination. Structured as an analytic collage, the paper asks that we, as social scientists, reflexively double back upon our own complicities with current informational modalities of power, so as to jam or uproot the most \"possessive\" features of cybernetic culture. Originally \"performed\" as part of the 1992 SSSP Presidential Address, the text includes visual images used during that presentation. It also includes a discussion of the relationship between telecommunicative mediums of memory and the eclipse of HIStorical awareness, the ultramodern police bombing of the Move community in Philadelphia, and a critical analysis of CAPITAList appropriations of Voodoo-based religious practices and other African-American styles of resistance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eleanor D. Glor"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212731","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15236803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1e645ca-607e-3fce-b851-96ce724522ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40212731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpubaffeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Public Affairs Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Preparing for Work in Government","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212731","wordCount":8863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA)","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"This paper applies a pattern-based concept of public sector functioning to the problem of preparing students for work in government. A set of complex factors influences the public service organization, which in turn forms complex and enduring patterns of organizational behavior (Glor, 2001a, b). The factors and their patterns are at work in innovation, in other change efforts, and in the way all things are done in government. To be effective, public servants should pay attention to these patterns. New entrants to government and students who are already public servants but who have changed their perspectives through education may be particularly interested in organizational change. Professors should teach these factors in an integrated way and should use the patterns as tools to prepare their students for work in government and especially for work on change.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1905-06-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 3, no. 80","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590128","wordCount":15149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"80","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan L. Siegfried"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b374160c-d864-369c-a766-09953f8140ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43947720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Visual Culture of Fashion and the Classical Ideal in Post-Revolutionary France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947720","wordCount":20626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"In her little-known painting A Study of a Woman after Nature (1802), Marie-Denise Villers exploited a conjuncture between masculine-inflected ideals of Neoclassical art and feminine-inflected ideas of fashionability in the post-Revolutionary period in France by making a feature of female dress while emulating the standards of history painting. The artist's confident synthesis of idioms is examined in the context of Albertine Cl\u00e9ment-H\u00e9mery's memoir of a women's art studio. Walter Benjamin's notion of gestus is enlisted as a means of understanding how the quite different image cultures invoked in this work communicated social ideas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Wojcik"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efbf5cfe-7fbd-3854-ab68-6ce79a3506c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Polaroids from Heaven\": Photography, Folk Religion, and the Miraculous Image Tradition at a Marian Apparition Site","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541832","wordCount":10618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"432","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":"At a Marian apparition site in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, New York, Catholic pilgrims use photography to document miraculous phenomena, produce signs of the supernatural, and create sacred images. As an emergent folk religious practice, \"miraculous photography\" constitutes a creative, technological innovation on traditional Catholic beliefs about miraculous images. This essay explores the meaning of miraculous photography for believers, discusses the compatibility of photographic image-making with previous miraculous image traditions, and examines the appeal of photography as a means of affirming the reality of the supernatural through the creation of tangible, sacred proofs.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. J. Demos"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"682f3a3c-7e26-31e0-802f-b737cd227630"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Moving Images of Globalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627781","wordCount":9676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"37","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexis McCrossen"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/651538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d00bb3c-156b-383b-8d2e-848f21dfe713"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/651538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The \u201cVery Delicate Construction\u201d of Pocket Watches and Time Consciousness in the Nineteenth\u2010Century United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/651538","wordCount":15316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"This essay, about pocket watches and time consciousness in the nineteenth\u2010century United States, suggests that the increasing volume of pocket watches in circulation throughout the United States after the 1830s prodded a wide cross section of Americans into more than just simple awareness of mechanical time. The evidence, some of which is drawn from accounts relaying details about repairs to watches, shows that watches augmented, rather than replaced, already complex temporal sensibilities. The article includes estimates about the incidence of watch ownership, the kinds of watches Americans owned, and the sorts of repairs watches most commonly required.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Della Pollock"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4495291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940798"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954894"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214643"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4495291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oralhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Oral History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Telling the Told: Performing \"Like a Family\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4495291","wordCount":14158,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55865,56151]],"Locations in B":[[19210,19496]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY ESCOFFIER"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9c71425-0b47-39fc-91b8-cd557aae48d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sex in the Seventies: Gay Porn Cinema as an Archive for the History of American Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862346","wordCount":13074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.2.fm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32709d8f-62f3-3285-b446-fdce6de6674d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.2.fm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jewisocistud.21.2.fm","wordCount":1325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard C. Tobias"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3827429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":84.0,"pageEnd":"576","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-576","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1978","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827429","wordCount":46554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diane Losche"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8f09158-fbe7-340f-bb51-84d09231d11b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23170103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Making Visible: Objects, Images, and Archives in Visual Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170103","wordCount":7635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3764\/aja.120.1.online","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205117"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227231"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f7cf188-7709-392f-b73f-97a69d4af29c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3764\/aja.120.1.online"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjarch"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Archaeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Online-Only Content","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3764\/aja.120.1.online","wordCount":552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Archaeological Institute of America","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":"SUPPLEMENTARY CONTENT New Evidence of Post-Destruction Reuse in the Main Building of the Palace of Nestor at Pylos BOOK REVIEWS World Antiquarianism: Comparative Perspectives, edited by Alain Schnapp. Reviewed by Stephen L. Dyson The Origins of Monsters: Image and Cognition in the First Age of Mechanical Reproduction, by David Wengrow. Reviewed by Marta Ameri Prioritizing Death and Society: The Archaeology of Chalcolithic and Contemporary Cemeteries in the Southern Levant, by Assaf Nativ. Reviewed by Aren M. Maeir Remembering the Dead in the Ancient Near East: Recent Contributions from Bioarchaeology and Mortuary Archaeology, edited by Benjamin W. Porter and Alexis T. Boutin. Reviewed by Carrie L. Sulosky Weaver Family and Household Religion: Toward a Synthesis of Old Testament Studies, Archaeology, Epigraphy, and Cultural Studies, edited by Rainer Albertz, Beth Alpert Nakhai, Saul M. Olyan, and R\u00fcdiger Schmitt. Reviewed by Miriam M\u00fcller \u039a\u03cd\u03b8\u03b7\u03c1\u03b1: \u03a4\u03bf \u03bc\u03b9\u03bd\u03c9\u03b9\u03ba\u03cc \u03b9\u03b5\u03c1\u03cc \u03ba\u03bf\u03c1\u03c5\u03c6\u03ae\u03c2 \u03c3\u03c4\u03bf\u03bd \u0386\u03b3\u03b9\u03bf \u0393\u03b5\u03ce\u03c1\u03b3\u03b9\u03bf \u03c3\u03c4\u03bf \u0392\u03bf\u03c5\u03bd\u03cc. Vol. 4, \u039a\u03b5\u03c1\u03b1\u03bc\u03b5\u03b9\u03ba\u03ae \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 \u03b5\u03c0\u03bf\u03c7\u1f75\u03c2 \u03c4\u03bf\u03c5 \u03c7\u03b1\u03bb\u03ba\u03bf, by Iphigeneia Tournavitou, edited by Yannis Sakellarakis. Reviewed by Gerald Cadogan Mortuary Behavior and Social Trajectories in Pre- and Protopalatial Crete, by Borja Legarra Herrero. Reviewed by Joanne Murphy Rough Cilicia: New Historical and Archaeological Approaches. Proceedings of an International Conference Held at Lincoln, Nebraska, October 2007, edited by Michael C. Hoff and Rhys F. Townsend. Reviewed by Jody Michael Gordon The Land of the Elephant Kings: Space, Territory, and Ideology in the Seleucid Empire, by Paul J. Kosmin. Reviewed by Jan P. Stronk The Rise of the Greek Aristocratic Banquet, by Marek W\u0119cowski. Reviewed by Ann Steiner Shaping Ceremony: Monumental Steps in Greek Architecture, by Mary B. Hollinshead. Reviewed by Margaret M. Miles \u2018Art in the Round\u2019: New Approaches to Ancient Coin Iconography, edited by Nathan T. Elkins and Stefan Krmnicek. Reviewed by Jane DeRose Evans Shipsheds of the Ancient Mediterranean, by David Blackman, Boris Rankov, Kalliopi Baika, Henrik Gerding, and Jari Pakkanen. Reviewed by Elizabeth S. Greene The Archaeology of South-East Italy in the First Millennium BC: Greek and Native Societies of Apulia and Lucania Between the 10th and the 1st Century BC, by Douwe Yntema. Reviewed by Elizabeth C. Robinson Making Textiles in Pre-Roman and Roman Times: People, Places, Identities, edited by Margarita Gleba and Judit P\u00e1szt\u00f3kai-Sze\u0151ke. Reviewed by Agnete Wisti Lassen Monumentality in Etruscan and Early Roman Architecture: Ideology and Innovation, edited by Michael L. Thomas and Gretchen E. Meyers. Reviewed by Jeffrey A. Becker The Economics of the Roman Stone Trade, by Ben Russell. Reviewed by Lynne C. Lancaster Depicting the Dead: Self-Representation and Commemoration on Roman Sarcophagi with Portraits, by Stine Birk. Reviewed by Diana E.E. Kleiner Crisis and Ambition: Tombs and Burial Customs in Third-Century CE Rome, by Barbara E. Borg. Reviewed by Katharina Meinecke The Roman and Byzantine Graves and Human Remains, by Joseph L. Rife. Reviewed by Megan A. Perry Anglo-Saxon Graves and Grave Goods of the 6th and 7th Centuries AD: A Chronological Framework, edited by John Hines and Alex Bayliss. Reviewed by Nancy L. Wicker Cyprus and the Balance of Empires: Art and Archaeology from Justinian I to the Coeur de Lion, edited by Charles Anthony Stewart, Thomas W. Davis, and Annemarie Weyl Carr. Reviewed by James G. Schryver Books Received","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tina Rivers"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41553497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41553497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Alienation to Hallucination: Peter Whitehead's \"The Fall\" and the Politics of Perception in the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41553497","wordCount":12742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Banes"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1442bcef-cc93-350a-b935-be2d36d5e68c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1146041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Will the Real... Please Stand up?: An Introduction to the Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1146041","wordCount":3583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Mehlman"],"datePublished":"1983-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25600431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ddfb62b-e2b9-3824-9e14-0772e5c6eaba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25600431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literature and Hospitality: Klossowski's Hamann","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25600431","wordCount":8936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Boston University","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Sicker"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6e2e979-5369-3e9d-be35-4de73b61026f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25477796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477796","wordCount":2542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Rosenbaum"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Elizabeth Bishop and the Miniature Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831716","wordCount":19410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Alexander Pogo","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1933-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d3b60e1-d2ca-3995-9de7-3e8233ef6278"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":101.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"440","pagination":"pp. 440-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Thirty-Fourth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to March 1932)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224465","wordCount":32331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John K. Howat","Berry B. Tracy","Vaughn E. Crawford","Helmut Nickel","Stella Blum","Jacob Bean","Christine Lilyquist","Dietrich von Bothmer","Richard Ettinghausen","Carmen G\u00f3mez-Moreno","J. L. Schrader","Laurence Libin","Douglas Newton","Colta Feller Ives","Henry Geldzahler","Olga Raggio","Elizabeth R. Usher","Margaret P. Nolan"],"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba0dbf02-740e-36d2-b62b-d20ef5abf2d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40303874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Departmental Accessions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303874","wordCount":22106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"105","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EVELYN J. HINZ"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed838c9b-7125-360c-a71c-abc376a96327"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"v","pageStart":"ii","pagination":"pp. ii-v","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: \"concernin questions arty\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029720","wordCount":1644,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43975,44285]],"Locations in B":[[4755,5063]],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth King","J. M. Bernstein","Carolyn Dean","Caroline van Eck","Finbarr Barry Flood","Dario Gamboni","Jane Garnett","Gervase Rosser","James Meyer","Miya Elise Mizuta","Alina Payne"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23209208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8e84e63-6bea-3a2b-8035-5886e2a56555"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23209208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"NOTES FROM THE FIELD: Anthropomorphism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23209208","wordCount":16215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maya Socolovsky"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"045190d1-84e8-304c-b42d-db534aa6e55c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3347089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Moving beyond the Mint Green Walls: An Examination of (Auto)Biography and Border in Ruth Behar's \"Translated Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3347089","wordCount":12250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daryl Chin"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aedcacff-e1b1-3abf-895d-10a09eb60a7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3245500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"performingartsj"}],"isPartOf":"Performing Arts Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Popular to Pop. The Arts in\/of Commerce: Mass Media and the New Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3245500","wordCount":7021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Black"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/832660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b8e4af6-7868-3a2c-b3d6-ab57bb59efb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/832660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"... And Each Harmonical Has a Point of Its Own...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/832660","wordCount":1592,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43975,44241]],"Locations in B":[[7731,7996]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Channing Adams"],"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2564314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fde2f43-dd4d-31b1-af37-ec87c8a3bf87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2564314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"A Reconsideration of Personal Boundaries in Space-Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2564314","wordCount":12046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":"An appropriate image of the person for geographers is an entity with fluctuating boundaries that reach through space and time in constantly changing patterns. Such extensions through space and time are not merely \"internal\" or psychological states of being in the world; they are integral to economic, political, and cultural processes. Human extensibility is fundamental to the ongoing processes of social structuration in which social practices are constitutive of social structures and social structures constrain persons and practices. Whereas the body is a point-entity located at a particular space-time, important aspects of personhood are not confined to this point entity. Authority depends on ranges of sensation, knowledge, and action through diverse communication systems. While extensibility is partly determined by the body, as categorized by society, the distinction between presence and absence can be considered as a gradation rather than a binary opposition. Extensibility transcends the body, allowing a person to overcome social and physical limitations and to participate in distant social contexts which affect his or her personal situation and shape social processes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba0403d8-ea05-3bad-8607-3c042240a42d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3104076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1981)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3104076","wordCount":41973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WEN-SHING CHOU"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43553295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97e3dac5-4f2e-3b5b-aca8-8a22819535bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43553295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Reimagining the Buddhist Universe: Pilgrimage and Cosmography in the Court of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama (1876-1933)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43553295","wordCount":12401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"During his exiles from Lhasa in the 1910s, the Thirteenth Dalai Lama visited the holy places of Wutai Shan in China and Bodh Gaya in India. After his return, he commissioned paintings of these two places in cosmological mural programs of his palaces. While conforming to earlier iconographic traditions, these paintings employed empirical modes of representation unprecedented in Tibetan Buddhist paintings, revealing a close connection to the Dalai Lama's prior travels. This essay traces how these \"modernized\" renditions were incorporated into an existing pictorial template, and examines the deft rearticulation of a Buddhist cosmology in light of the Dalai Lama's own encounter with the shifting geopolitical terrains of the early twentieth century. I show that painting served as a powerful medium through which the Dalai Lama asserted his spiritual sovereignty and temporal authority over modernity's work of boundary making. The study elucidates a sphere of agency and creativity in the court of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama that has evaded historical inquiries to date.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tie Xiao"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42940558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1e41cda-6e77-324a-8f48-3324dde4fb06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42940558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lure of the Irrational: Zhu Qianzhi's Vision of \"Qunzhong\" in the \"Era of Crowds\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42940558","wordCount":18281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynnette Arnold"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbff6fd6-63f3-3ae1-9233-710f0502823f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43104307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Reproducing Actions, Reproducing Power: Local Ideologies and Everyday Practices of Participation at a California Community Bike Shop","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43104307","wordCount":11236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The study of participation within linguistic anthropology has developed a nuanced understanding of participant roles and examined the process by which such roles are enacted in participation frameworks. This paper examines what I call modes of engagement, that is, role-based differential use of forms of embodied and linguistic participation. I argue that such engagement modes are central in defining and differentiating participant roles themselves. The analysis focuses on data gathered at a bilingual bicycle-repair shop with an overtly prescriptive ideology of participation. Ethnographic and interactional analysis demonstrates that such ideologies both influence and are shaped by local practices, and have material consequences for who can participate and how they do so.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRANDEN W. 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This article shows that war pictures in both countries relied on a Western-inspired iconography. Moreover, it argues that Japan triumphed not only on the battlefield but also in the 'picture war', adopting more of the discourses which were important in the West at the end of the nineteenth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry Mount"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41614487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14672006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11295b99-c848-3390-b42e-a3442418d603"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41614487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britartj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"'The Pan-and-Spoon Style': The role of the accessories in David Wilkie's Academy pictures 1806-9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41614487","wordCount":10513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The British Art Journal","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kristin Len\u00e9 Hole"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3366\/j.ctt1bgzccd.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781474403276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"397eaa1e-d5e6-34f2-a27f-e0c5f96b49a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3366\/j.ctt1bgzccd.10"}],"isPartOf":"Towards a Feminist Cinematic Ethics","keyphrase":["claire denis","cinema","last accessed","levinas","nancy jean","york routledge","university","luc nancy","nancy jean luc","beau travail"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"161","pagination":"161-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3366\/j.ctt1bgzccd.10","wordCount":4064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Coski"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25480591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25480591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Emotion and Poetry in Condillac's Theory of Language and Mind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25480591","wordCount":6501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"Condillac's Essai provides a narrative of how human beings progress from a primitive, purely emotional state to a civilized, rational state made possible by language. This article focuses on the role of emotion and poetic expression in that narrative. Eighteenth-century thought holds that \"rational\" languages are superior to \"emotional\" and \"poetic\" languages. Condillac superficially appears to value reason over emotion, but in fact upsets this accepted opposition of emotional-poetic and rational languages. The dissolution of this opposition is a key component in Condillac's creation of a viable sensualist theory of cognition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. Harner","Krista L. May"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45023521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b494f98-6f65-33d8-b3b5-7b2d06ef6f37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45023521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":285.0,"pageEnd":"772","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487, 489-772","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY: World Shakespeare Bibliography 2002","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45023521","wordCount":229595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arvind Thiruvengadam","Saroj Pradhan","Pragalath Thiruvengadam","Vishnu Padmanaban","Marc Besch","Oscar Delgado","Nic Lutsey"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27034074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19463936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"320365122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009202697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c0c1376-7786-3fc1-92a6-c42a444bcc3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27034074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saeintejengi"}],"isPartOf":"SAE International Journal of Engines","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"600","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-600","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Characterization of Energy Distribution and Efficiency in a Modern Heavy-Duty Diesel Engine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27034074","wordCount":10983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"SAE International","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"This study presents an assessment focused on benchmarking the energy distribution and engine efficiency of a pre-2014, United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) 2010 emissions-compliant, heavy-duty (HD) diesel, long-haul truck engine as a reference of baseline technology. Further, the study used the baseline energy distribution as the baseline to factor in the efficiency gains of various future engine technologies to evaluate the impact of future greenhouse gas (GHG) standards on HD vehicle fuel consumption. Furthermore, the study predicted the maximum achievable fuel consumption benefit from a future engine technology that will employ breakthrough technologies that are not in the near-term production pathway of engine manufacturers. The baseline energy distribution was experimentally assessed by conducting a detailed engine dynamometer testing of an HD diesel engine over a wide range of engine operations. The fuel consumption prediction results for the model year (MY) 2017 and MY 2020-future (2020+) engine platforms showed reductions of 7.9% and 18.3%, respectively, relative to baseline engine fuel consumption. The study predicts future technologies will result in lower energy loss to exhaust, pumping work, and the coolant circuit. The possibility of a waste heat recovery (WHR) system shows promise of delivering a maximum of 3% improvement to the brake thermal efficiency (BTE) for a MY 2020+ engine technology. Overall, the study sought to provide a detailed breakdown of engine energy flows and loss mechanisms involved that can help in model development to forecast the impact of modern technologies on overall engine efficiency.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1929-06-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25333003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"010390c8-55f7-3591-9b68-736ee0c3ec87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25333003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Supplementary Report Of Council, 1928-29","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25333003","wordCount":38887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3573","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul W. 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In the final sequence of Wait Disney\u2019s cartoon, MICKEY\u2019S GALA PREMIERE, the goddess Creta Carbo breathes huskily into the microphone, \u2018Ah tank ah go home. I vant to be alone,\u2019 These were the last words to be broadcast from Alexandra Palace, the main BBC transmitting station, at noon on 1 September 1939, before the screens went blank and the medium of television was taken off the air for six years. At 12.10 a.m., the order to dose down was given. Only","subTitle":"Between the Dispositifs","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOM McENANEY"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54ac4cdd-c94b-3dee-83c3-e55c7eed5475"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26420593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Real-to-Reel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420593","wordCount":10469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"137","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This article develops a linguistic media theory that brings together Peircean materialist indexicality from Barthes, Bazin, Doane, Krauss, and others with linguistic anthropologist Michael Silverstein\u2019s nonreferential (social) indexicality. Following Argentine sound artist Eduardo Costa\u2019s practice with tape recording, the article challenges critical theory to account for the sonic meaning at play in pragmatic (nonsemantic) communication related to gender, race, and diasporic community. More than a mere supplement or limit, material sonic media expand aesthetic representation, and media archaeology opens new possibilities to intervene in language politics.","subTitle":"Social Indexicality, Sonic Materiality, and Literary Media Theory in Eduardo Costa\u2019s Tape Works","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Celina Jeffery"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09547169"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607827434"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1eb3850f-6020-3bf2-ac4b-1d42fb6f4fbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmuseumethnog"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Museum Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE LEON UNDERWOOD COLLECTION OF AFRICAN ART","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793641","wordCount":6595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Museum Ethnographers Group","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James F. 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A tentative reading of \"Zum Planetarium\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45295580","wordCount":17035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55403,55605]],"Locations in B":[[101215,101413]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Fried"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23bb864b-f5a6-33fa-9ba2-be7521b7131c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painting Memories: On the Containment of the past in Baudelaire and Manet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343305","wordCount":16665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HAIDEE WASSON"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15323978"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51005951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41167040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movingimage"}],"isPartOf":"The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE CINEMATIC SUBTEXT OF THE MODERN MUSEUM: Alfred H. Barr and MoMA's Film Archive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167040","wordCount":11400,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilad Padva"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3661080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa440391-4b73-3f90-8380-976d910557c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3661080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Radical Sissies and Stereotyped Fairies in Laurie Lynd's \"The Fairy Who Didn't Want to Be a Fairy Anymore\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3661080","wordCount":6939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Laurie Lynd's film \"The Fairy Who Didn't Want to Be a Fairy Anymore\" (1992) examines the cultural mechanisms of normalization and masculinization in contemporary heterocentrist society. This article compares Lynd's essentialist approach to sexual identification, camp subculture, and the economy of sissyness and body politics with Hans Christian Andersen's tragic story \"The Little Mermaid\" and with Tim Burton's romantic fantasy \"Edward Scissorhands\" (1990).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Rennie"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8fd3d28-0a5a-38e6-a336-8f16adb3add5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072676","wordCount":741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raphael Samuel","Alison Light"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1309517","wordCount":5691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Casey Michael Henry"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7648b8e3-14ca-3115-861d-afbbdb0cbfb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Vibrating Wire: Nicholson Baker's Vox<\/em> and the Art of Analog","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.39.2.02","wordCount":9726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"There is a lack of critical understanding of Nicholson Baker's \u201cphone sex novel\u201d Vox (1992). Chiefly overlooked is the exact function of Vox's complex system of outmoded telecommunications technology, which the novelist uses in order to experiment with erotic possibilities of the human voice. Viewed historically, Baker's embrace of analog technology occurs out of sync with the concurrent development of the ARPAnet into the public Internet. His strategic disruption of the Internet's potential for communication foregrounds personal voice as a more intimate mode of sexual mediation than sterile and deterministic digital models. Understanding the full nature of Baker's analog-directed perspective is essential for unpacking Baker's recurring interest in idiosyncratic sexuality.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodney D. Elliott","Bernard N. Meltzer"],"datePublished":"1981-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1981.4.2.225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4219797-b1aa-3e7c-afbf-e817c612c1bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.1981.4.2.225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Symbolic Interactionism and Psychoanalysis: Some Convergences, Divergences, and Complementarities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.1981.4.2.225","wordCount":9370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":"In spite of a number of fundamental contrasts between the assumptions and methodologies of symbolic interactionist and psychoanalytic theories of social interaction in general and socialization in particular, the two perspectives embrace several common interpretations of human action. Moreover, many of the divergences can be appreciated as complementing, rather than contradicting, each other. Some of the more important convergences and complementarities, as well as unresolved differences, are noted and briefly treated under four broad rubrics: (1) human nature and human habitat; (2) the nature and stages of socialization; (3) the structure and functions of personality; and (4) the nature of social relationships. The points of synthesis implied by the complementarities between the two perspectives do not necessarily lead to eclecticism. On the other hand, such syntheses can enhance the analytical power of each perspective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1rmjj8.23","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1b3c979-54cc-3aa7-a3b7-a07248678bb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1rmjj8.23"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","nobel prize","french","politician","minister","politician born","educated","composer","novelist","president"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"826","pageStart":"751","pagination":"751-826","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1rmjj8.23","wordCount":66987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrianna M. Paliyenko"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/j.ctt1wf4ct1.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780271077086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44a2c345-6b20-3aad-bd10-6bd856e559cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/j.ctt1wf4ct1.17"}],"isPartOf":"Genius Envy","keyphrase":["desbordes valmore","po\u00e9sies","siefert","poetic","ackermann","desbordes valmore\u2019s","premi\u00e8res po\u00e9sies","poetry","barbey d\u2019aurevilly","girardin"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"327","pagination":"327-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/j.ctt1wf4ct1.17","wordCount":9761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolin Duttlinger"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"908f239f-6f5b-3a94-b622-383b0ea43844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Benjamin's Literary History of Attention: Between Reception and Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151782","wordCount":7748,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[51047,51131]],"Locations in B":[[22134,22221]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"This article argues that attention and distraction form a central concern of Benjamin's writings on literature. Individually and in conjunction, they underpin processes of textual production and reception, yet their relationship is fluid and subject to historical change. In this respect, Benjamin's exploration of the interplay of attention and distraction in writers such as Leskov, Baudelaire and Brecht also leads to more general reflections about the social, cultural and psychological shifts brought about by industrialization and modern mass culture. Benjamins writings on literature trace developments which he also explores in relation to film. And echoes of his 'literary history of attention' can also be found in both his own critical approach and his self-reflexive comments on the process of writing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grace Lees-Maffei"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63d547b5-a49f-357e-a692-7a1cab4419ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Production\u2014Consumption\u2014Mediation Paradigm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653137","wordCount":15968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"This article elaborates a production\u2014consumption\u2014mediation (PCM) paradigm in design history, to examine both the development of design history over the past three decades and the current and future practice of design history, specifically within the UK. While John A. Walker made the case in 1989 for increased design historical attention to be paid to issues of consumption, this article identifies mediation as a third stream in design history, with three currents: first, the mediation emphasis continues the consumption turn within design history by exploring the role of channels such as television, magazines, corporate literature, advice literature and so on in mediating between producers and consumers, forming consumption practices and ideas about design; second, the mediation emphasis examines the extent to which mediating channels are themselves designed and therefore open to design historical analysis\u2014indeed, these channels have increasingly constituted the design historian's object of study; third, the mediation emphasis investigates the role of designed goods themselves as mediating devices. The identification of the PCM paradigm and the discussion of the methodological and interdisciplinary issues arising provided here, including the relationship of design history to neighbouring fields, have implications for conceptions of the field of design history, in both content and approach.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ISABELLE CHARLEUX"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24913615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61966661"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"804eed0a-6b96-3212-ac6f-0d6954d16285"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24913615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibusasiae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus Asiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"the view from the road: katharine kellock's new deal guidebooks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642279","wordCount":11042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alejandra Osorio"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6089f891-871f-3a5f-aa4a-67d816ca0e11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"The Return of the Salon: Jean L\u00e9on G\u00e9r\u00f4me in the Art Institute","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113019","wordCount":9608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Art Institute of Chicago","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen P. Weldon"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"584d453a-b575-3b22-82c0-de0e7942934d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3648116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":237.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences 2002","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3648116","wordCount":115067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Imma Ramos"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24739830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08887314"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496559"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237230"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8383cfa-f01b-336f-a2ac-025da899aef7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24739830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdecoproparts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE FRAGMENTATION OF SATI: CONSTRUCTING HINDU IDENTITY THROUGH PILGRIMAGE SOUVENIRS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24739830","wordCount":8309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Florida International University Board of Trustees on behalf of The Wolfsonian-FIU","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle E. 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Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Fourth Gospel in \"Finnegans Wake\": Joyce's Middle Way and \"the point of eschatology\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598696","wordCount":8869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"In this paper, I examine the influence of the Gospel of John on Joyce's aesthetic. My basic claim is that the gospel aided Joyce in charting a middle course between materialism (body without spirit) and spiritualism (spirit without body). After examining the temptations of flying too high (symbolism, mysticism, gnosticism) and flying too low (historicism, realism, materialism), I show how Joyce made use of the Johannine strategies of epiphany and realized eschatology to achieve a synthesis between these extremes. The essay is much indebted to two students of John\u2014Rudolph Bultmann and Franz Mussner\u2014who examined John's peculiar synthesis of fact and allegory. In addition, the scholar Jacques Aubert was indispensable for his analysis of a similar trajectory in Joyce's aesthetic.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Uberoi"],"datePublished":"1990-04-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4396224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0169befa-7636-36f2-b7ee-d437341cbf80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4396224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"WS48","pageStart":"WS41","pagination":"pp. WS41-WS48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Feminine Identity and National Ethos in Indian Calendar Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4396224","wordCount":10424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"17","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Women have been and still are excluded from the production of and representation in many social and cultural activities, but even when they are included they do not receive their due recognition. In many genres of representation however, women are not only visible: they are prominent objects of attention. The issue is then transformed into one of the correctness or incorrectness of the representation, or of the socially constraining nature of the stereotypical imagery, or of the relationship between women's subjectivity and objectivity. This paper looks at the representation of women in a little discussed genre of Indian popular art-what has been called 'calendar art' or 'bazaar art'. These representations are seen as instancing two processes, the commoditisation of women and the tropising of the feminine, within an overall cultural context that was both homogenising and hegemonising.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27827098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"128d3a02-5cdc-3961-9443-c2ab58a32112"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27827098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27827098","wordCount":16610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phil Kirby"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23325819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e69954-4a2d-32f9-a57f-40950d160515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23325819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23325819","wordCount":1077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marissa McClure Vollrath"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d8dc0e5-9961-3d2d-9ffb-fb94cbe0b168"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20715449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Play as Process: Choice, Translation, Reconfiguration, and the Process of Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715449","wordCount":4445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John H. Evans"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt2204r5c.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780520297432"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71e7daac-e8f9-3723-b463-d293fbf6bdbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt2204r5c.7"}],"isPartOf":"Morals Not Knowledge","keyphrase":["religion","scientists","science","darwinism","secularization","conflict","debate","debates","knowledge conflict","morality"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"63","pagination":"63-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Recent Transformation of Elite Academic and Public Debates","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt2204r5c.7","wordCount":10510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"My claim is that the religion of the American public has changed in the past fifty years\u2014within the lifetimes of many current participants in these debates. Moreover, the public\u2019s view of science as primarily a means of generating facts about nature has similarly changed. These changes have resulted in the current relationship between religion and science being primarily concerned with morality. In this chapter I will show that religion and science conflicts of the past fifty years, as well as sociological theory developments in the same time frame, have already demonstrated the same change\u2014although this has not been","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan C. Pearce"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e7e73c4-fdb0-3935-aa3c-3492900703f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Polish Solidarity Movement in Retrospect: In Search of a Mnemonic Mirror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608223","wordCount":14616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The legacy of the Solidarity movement of the 1980s, which was a leading force in the region's 1989 revolutions, culminating most symbolically with the fall of the Berlin Wall, has yet to be institutionalized in Polish social memory. A spate of official commemorations marking the movement's 25th anniversary in 2005 provided a palette on which Poles projected\u2014or refused to project\u2014their memories. The movement's legacy continues to play out in current and contentious electoral politics, since the leaders of the top contending parties are former Solidarity activists. Despite and partly because of this active presence of Solidarity movement players, Polish civil society appears to be in a liminal state of active hesitation over the task of concretizing this movement's past in commemorative forms. This article proposes six cultural and political explanations for this hesitation. It also recommends that social scientists disaggregate the concept of memory work into various manifestations on a continuum from hesitation to deliberation and agitation to institutionalization. As the article illustrates, hesitation can constitute action. At stake in this exercise is a larger discourse\u2014 over the direction of the post-1989 sociopolitical changes vis-a-vis the aims of the 1989 revolutions and the meaning of democracy and transitional justice in a posttotalitarian context.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1953-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"060bc322-d9de-382a-b31e-6a23d9156697"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25693966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25693966","wordCount":4216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth le Roux"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10987371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0735fd2-b4a1-3540-8af5-67a83a7f6c0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23315050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bookhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Book History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Book History in the African World: The State of the Discipline","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23315050","wordCount":24729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Lucas"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"761","pageStart":"745","pagination":"pp. 745-761","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fiction, Politics, and Chocolate Whipped Cream: Wallace Stevens's \"Forces, the Will, & the Weather\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031991","wordCount":7377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Pouchet Paquet"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee61931c-f1a5-34be-9932-d3faa1575870"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Caribbean Writer as Nomadic Subject or Spatial Mobility and the Dynamics of Critical Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019918","wordCount":9942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael J. 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Emme","Anne Kirova"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74d8bd8f-390d-3ec6-b5b7-21204d7e4b24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20715375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Photoshop Semiotics: Research in the Age of Digital Manipulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20715375","wordCount":4938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In this article a theoretical connection is described between Brockelman's (2001) reading of collage as an art form that captures the relationship between the modern and postmodern, and a proposed role for digitally manipulated photography in educational research. Tracing the tension Brockelman posits between fragmented and universalizing meaning, the paper argues that a social semiotic approach can be brought to photographs created by or about children in schools. This approach, which understands photographs as a resource in the construction of meaning, describes a number of functionalist dimensions that images can serve in meaning making. The paper gives examples of several overt digital manipulations to research photographs and asks the reader to consider their effectiveness in creating a selective realism that, like collage, both promises and questions its own readability.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41687373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ff1fff4-b008-3a2a-8178-c1313b9ab0c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41687373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41687373","wordCount":3168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yifeng Wu","\u5434\u30fc\u4e30","William S-Y. 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This paper is a study of indigenous techniques used in textile production. The structural and orgnisational features of the industry were interwined with the technology in use, which also determined the responses of the system to the challenges of modern technology and factory production, independent of exogenous historical developments like the beginning of colonial rule. The details of techniques also contribute to an understanding of the totally different concepts and values regarding productivity and cost effectiveness in the indigenous system.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry J. Mauer"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b59d0f7a-4bcc-31d8-8ea2-c39bdac8582c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Film Stills Methodologies: A Pedagogical Assignment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225563","wordCount":7491,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50756,50990]],"Locations in B":[[2372,2957]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This essay describes an innovative film studies assignment in which students explore still photography and Hollywood cinema. The author and his freshman cinema studies students learned by doing--they created their own film stills after Cindy Sherman, employing frame analysis, semiotics, and Barthes's concept of the \"third meaning\" along the way.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fernando Feli\u00fa"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f7d13aa-8b82-3845-a718-1f4dbae438ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entre el eco y la m\u00fasica: la vellonera en la cultura y la literatura puertorrique\u00f1a","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922710","wordCount":7892,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lital Helman","Gideon Parchomovsky"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41305153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d65c1098-c012-331b-93aa-7eea4218c082"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41305153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"1243","pageStart":"1194","pagination":"pp. 1194-1243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"THE BEST AVAILABLE TECHNOLOGY STANDARD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41305153","wordCount":26692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":"Copyright liability for webhosting will be a key determinant of the evolution of the Internet in years to come. Depending on their design, the legal rules that shape the liability of webhosts can stunt the development of the Internet as a medium of expression or enhance it. Hence, adopting the optimal liability regime is a matter of crucial importance. This Article proposes a radical change in webhosts 'copynght liability for illegal content posted by users. Our main thesis is that webhosts' liability should be guided by the \"Best Available Technology \"principle, according to which webhosts that employ the bestfiltenng technology available on the market will be immune from liability for copynght infringement. Adoption of our proposed liability regime would offer several key advantages relative to the extant regime. First, it would provide webhosts with the certainty they need to continue to operate and grow. Second, it would result in supenor and more balanced enforcement of the nghts of copynght holders and would achieve this at a much lower cost. Third, it would spur competition in the market for filtering technology and induce constant improvement in enforcement technology. Fourth, and finally, it would dramatically reduce the rate of copynght infringement suits against website operators and the cost of adjudicating them. We further demonstrate that the analytical framework we construct represents a supenor approach not only to the liability of webhosts, but also to those of file shanng and possibly Internet Service Provider liability.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bianca Theisen"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3840756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3840756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Art of Erasing Art. 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The first part concerns the text \u2014the novel in progress, textual commentary, editions with new illustrations and\/or commentary and criticism, and various adaptations. Chronological ordering of the first part's entries traces the process of the novel's different editions and adaptations. The second, and larger part of the bibliography, lists, alphabetically by author, studies of David Copperfield\u2014criticism, literary influences and parallels, teaching and study materials, and biographical discussions. The starting point for most users should be the supplement's index, although the text includes entry-number cross-references, indicated by parentheses (references to items in the 1981 volume are in brackets).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alicia Ely-Yamin"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/762401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"640","pagination":"pp. 640-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Empowering Visions: Toward a Dialectical Pedagogy of Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762401","wordCount":21287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A\u00edfe Murray"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20646355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f759787-511c-3b5a-a291-a7c948c197ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20646355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Yankee Poet's Irish Headwaters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20646355","wordCount":4056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. 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TWO \"ADVANCED COMPOSITION\" TEXTS AND ONE DRAFTEE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865499","wordCount":3987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"JAC","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dimitrios Latsis"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/movingimage.18.2.0048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15323978"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51005951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213955"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d96577a-38c1-3d5c-a563-8baabff1b026"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/movingimage.18.2.0048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movingimage"}],"isPartOf":"The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Riding, Shooting, Viewing: Railroads, Amusement Parks, and the Experience of Place in Early Hollywood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/movingimage.18.2.0048","wordCount":9740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bertram Kaschek"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26740775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16118944"},{"name":"oclc","value":"989725005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cf8b929-a285-3f39-9059-6b8e1d97313c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26740775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeeurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern European History \/ Zeitschrift f\u00fcr moderne europ\u00e4ische Geschichte \/ Revue d'histoire europ\u00e9enne contemporaine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Face to Face","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26740775","wordCount":10233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":"The Artist Portraits from 1975\/76 were Christian Borchert\u2019s (1942\u20132000) first great project as a freelance photographer. For almost two years, Borchert travelled the GDR in order to take the likenesses of about 200 artists (painters, sculptors, writers, composers and film-makers). He finally presented a good number of them in two much-noticed Berlin exhibitions in the fall of 1976. This article investigates the aesthetic, social and political implications of Borchert\u2019s complex project, which so far has never been subject to detailed scholarly analysis. It demonstrates how Borchert, working in a totalitarian system, which attempted to socialize, profile and control public discourse, made use of photography as a medium of negotiation between the private and the public, between individual aspirations and official ideals, and between art and politics.","subTitle":"Christian Borchert\u2019s Artist Portraits from 1975\/76","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claudius Sittig"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23978787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03237982"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"149c9565-f694-3716-8eaa-660fdf6c4cd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23978787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitfurgerm"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Germanistik","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Die R\u00fcckkehr des K\u00f6nigs. Peter Handkes Welttheater der \u201eZur\u00fcstungen f\u00fcr die Unsterblichkeit\u201c in wechselnden epochalen Konstellationen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23978787","wordCount":8530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magdalena L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44475393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4ad4560-b493-3307-9452-62f6ee7bd7ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44475393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El derrotado heroico: Eduardo Lalo y el regreso de la \u00e9pica letrada puertorrique\u00f1a","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44475393","wordCount":8991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"81","publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"La novela Simone (2013) del puertorrique\u00f1o Eduardo Lalo propone una \u00e9pica letrada en la que el intelectual se concibe como una figura de resistencia contra la econom\u00eda neoliberal y la sociedad de consumo. Desde la defensa de los valores absolutos de la escritura y el arte, el intelectual se configura como un \"derrotado heroico\" que se mantiene al margen de su sociedad porque se niega a cualquier tipo de negociaci\u00f3n con el orden dominante. Su visi\u00f3n jer\u00e1rquica y su aislamiento de la multitud nos permiten insertar esta novela en una tradici\u00f3n modernista (Rod\u00f3, Dar\u00edo) y espec\u00edficamente puertorrique\u00f1a (Pedreira y Marqu\u00e9s) en la que el antimperialismo no ha implicado necesariamente una posici\u00f3n anticlasista o democr\u00e1tica. The novel Simone (2013) by the Puerto Rican Eduardo Lalo constitutes a \"lettered epic\" in which the intellectual is seen as a figure of resistance against the neoliberal economy and consumist society. From the defense of the absolute values of writing and art, the intellectual is configured as a \"heroic loser\" that remains outside of society because he refuses any kind of negotiation with the dominant order. Its hierarchical view and isolation from the crowd allows us to include this novel in the modernist (Rod\u00f3, Dario) and Puerto Rican traditions (Pedreira and Marqu\u00e9s) in which anti-imperialism has not necessarily meant a democratic or anti-classist position.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LYNN M. THOMAS"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23308225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38098da9-1308-3497-b371-4000360bd3a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23308225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"740","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-740","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Modernity's Failings, Political Claims, and Intermediate Concepts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23308225","wordCount":7850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Williams"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828475","wordCount":1676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Cody"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt32b5k9.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801452024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e61e5309-e8eb-3ff9-acbd-5bd8c7c61d35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt32b5k9.15"}],"isPartOf":"The Light of Knowledge","keyphrase":["new delhi","university","delhi oxford","literacy","cambridge","delhi oxford university","madurai","princeton","berkeley university","anthropology"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"225","pagination":"225-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt32b5k9.15","wordCount":6614,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[90,175]],"Locations in B":[[6231,6321]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth E. Brusco"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73e71946-17ee-3192-a4c1-269f9bad429e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1480","pageStart":"1478","pagination":"pp. 1478-1480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231108","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-07-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1758064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"794df722-5d97-3f13-8c25-b969456f99ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1758064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"xxiv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xxiv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1758064","wordCount":29353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3366","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FIELDING H. GARRISON"],"datePublished":"1933-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44437769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25764810"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56d54c33-d020-3c00-a6b8-25fbd611cc03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44437769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullinsthistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":102.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"REVISED STUDENTS' CHECK-LIST OF TEXTS ILLUSTRATING THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE, WITH REFERENCES FOR COLLATERAL READING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44437769","wordCount":69928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1902-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2667a6fe-e9e8-3dcb-b147-2586218886eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40303171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":157.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1902,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Art history","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303171","wordCount":51686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Ridout"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08bn.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119073"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"550a659f-2ce2-3383-a43e-863443cfa8fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08bn.7"}],"isPartOf":"Passionate Amateurs","keyphrase":["theatre","proletarian","program","benjamin","education","proletarian children\u2019s","revolutionary","children","bourgeois","future"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"58","pagination":"58-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"All Theatre, All the Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08bn.7","wordCount":12000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the autumn of 1928 the Latvian theatre director Asja Lacis visited Berlin as part of her work for Narkompros, the culture and education department of the government of the Soviet Union.\u00b9 Among her priorities for this visit, undertaken as a member of the film section of the Soviet trade mission, was to make contact, on behalf of the \u201cProletarian Theatre\u201d group within Narkompros, with the German Union of Proletarian Revolutionary Playwrights. She also gave lectures on film, based on recent work developing a children\u2019s cinema in Moscow. During the course of conversations in Berlin with two leading members of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. C. Torrey"],"datePublished":"1909-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/528035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10620516"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227233"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51fdfca0-8de2-36ca-bdf2-dc7ecded4968"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/528035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsemilanglit"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Ezra Story in Its Original Sequence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/528035","wordCount":16018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John O'Kane"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6c41079-eee3-3c57-8d68-d9ae5722aba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marxism, Deconstruction, and Ideology: Notes toward an Articulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488363","wordCount":13250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"33","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ted McCormick"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24700883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce638ef7-c065-3945-a76b-d5046f168685"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24700883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"857","pageStart":"829","pagination":"pp. 829-857","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Arithmetic and Sacred History: Population Thought in the English Enlightenment, 1660\u20131750","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24700883","wordCount":16272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Current approaches to the history of early modern population thought focus on the state and secular governance, while standard treatments of Restoration and Augustan \"political arithmetic\" emphasize its economic or social-scientific content. This article recovers nonsecular uses of demographic quantification, excavating the use of political arithmetic in religious polemic between ca. 1660 and ca. 1750. As a form of empirical natural philosophy, political arithmetic suited the polemical needs of latitudinarian Anglicans and others combating deism, atheism, and preadamism; the demographic regularities it revealed furnished evidence of providential solicitude, while the history of population growth was a potential prop for scriptural chronologies. A strand of \"sacred\" political arithmetic thus contributed to natural theology while modeling\u2014albeit inconsistently\u2014new historical applications for empirical methodology. The article concludes by considering possible causes for the decline of this \"sacred\" strand of demographic quantification, while suggesting connections between it and better-known secular forms of Enlightenment-era population thought.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3575743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8734502c-c967-3281-9076-e9808353746e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3575743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"653","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-653","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3575743","wordCount":3649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Radiation Research Society","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Max Paddison"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c76cd423-6444-3d81-bd44-8adf8e81af51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/852982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Critique Criticised: Adorno and Popular Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852982","wordCount":8492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Benson"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8e76eaf-362e-320f-8eb0-8c51d49ed5fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20484521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"629","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-629","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"El Campo: Faciality and Structural Violence in Farm Labor Camps","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484521","wordCount":17979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"In this essay, I examine interlocking political, economic, and cultural processes involved in the continuous reproduction of the structural violence that affects migrant farmworkers in the United States. Excluded from rights and protections afforded other workers, migrant and seasonal farm labor--a social class comprising mainly undocumented Mexican and Latino persons--endures endemic poverty, poor health outcomes, and squalor living conditions. This structural violence is sustained by government neglect and illegal hiring practices and liberalized production regimes that benefit multinational corporations and large-scale agricultural producers, putting migrant workers in harm's way. Emphasizing the importance of the phenomenology of perception to the anthropology of structural violence, I argue that this system is also underpinned by a mode of perception built on specific understandings of alterity and community. The setting for this article is rural North Carolina, where I have conducted 16 months (2004-07) of ethnographic field study on tobacco farms and in farm labor camps. Among growers and other locals, I find that the faces of migrants do not compel infinite responsibility, as in the face-to-face interaction idealized by Levinas. Instead, an essentializing discourse of culture portrays migrants as \"other\" and \"outside,\" equates them with trash, and makes them available for various kinds of blame. I develop the concept of \"faciality\" to take account of how social power overlaps with perception to legitimize patterns of social subordination, economic exploitation, and spatial segregation. I also examine everyday tactics of resistance among migrants, who take command of the stigmatizing quality of vision to morally indict manifestations of structural violence. In this study, I enhance our understanding of the dialectics of domination and subordination in U.S. agriculture, which provides fruitful ground for theorizing the dangerous constitution of structural violence in the context of transnational labor migration and international agricultural restructuring.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2073164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f9ead25-b7d5-389d-8d91-185c4db9cdd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2073164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"938","pageStart":"925","pagination":"pp. 925-938","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2073164","wordCount":12679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas E. Williams"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01925121"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44689900"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64c2e9aa-28b7-3d3b-9293-6782d128d96b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1600763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intepoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Political Science Review \/ Revue internationale de science politique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"394","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-394","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ideology as Dystopia: An Interpretation of \"Blade Runner\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600763","wordCount":8130,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[41976,42148]],"Locations in B":[[10314,10485]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"Film and other forms of popular culture place enormously powerful tools at the disposal of students of politics and society. This paper analyses an aesthetically complex, philosophically disturbing and ideologically ambivalent cinematic dystopia of a few years ago, \"Blade Runner\". Unlike the vast majority of films in the science fiction genre, \"Blade Runner\" refuses to neutralize the most abhorrent tendencies of our age and casts serious doubt on a host of the clich\u00e9s about where we should locate their causes. Among the most significant questions it challenges us to confront are: In what does the \"truly human\" consist? Does the concept of imitating \"truly human\" beings retain any coherence once the feasibility of designing \"more human than human\" robots becomes an increasingly imaginable technological possibility? What might relations between the sexes and family life become if the twin eventuality of an uninhabitable earth and the perfection of robotic technologies should come about? While political theorists are asking themselves, \"What and where should political theory be now?\", this paper contends that at least part of their time should be spent at the cinema, deep in thought and imagination. \/\/\/ Le cin\u00e9ma nous offre de riches sujets de r\u00e9flexion sur la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 et sur la politique. Le film de science-fiction \"Blade runner\" est ici pris comme exemple d'une interrogation essentiellement philosophique sur la condition humaine dans un univers robotis\u00e9 et, par implication, dans le monde contemporain.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yigal Schwartz"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01464094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298955990"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202565"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa175908-29f8-378c-93b0-46b842587af8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hebrewstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Hebrew Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cA STORY OR A BULLET BETWEEN THE EYES\u201d ETGAR KERET","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304277","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Association of Professors of Hebrew (NAPH)","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"The central strategy in Etgar Keret\u2019s entire body of work is the combination of and the confrontation between two poetic moves: the looping repetition of narrative scenes, which seems mechanical, and the sudden appearance of an unusual conscious event, which disrupts the mechanism of repetition. The looping repetition is perceived here as a \u201cnarrative epidemic\u201d that is hostile to any individual human performance. The appearance of the unusual event, which is seen here as a \u201cnarrative mutation,\u201d creates a caesura in which a humanistic existential space, whose realization is a task imposed on the \u201cright readers,\u201d exists for an instant. These \u201cright readers\u201d must recognize this caesura, mark it, and then enlarge and expand it, and by doing so halt the looping movement and create a moral space, if only for a brief moment.","subTitle":"REPETITIVENESS, MORALITY, AND POSTMODERNISM","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noriko J. Horiguchi"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"855861023"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013203182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64dcc23b-f275-3f52-b925-ecae9afb8410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42771992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usjapawomej"}],"isPartOf":"U.S.-Japan Women's Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Migrant Women, Memory, and Empire in Naruse Mikio's Film Adaptations of Hayashi Fumiko's Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42771992","wordCount":14367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"36","publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1929-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24976299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368733"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006255042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa7aaa36-08f5-35de-b178-2be0859f3230"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24976299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieamer"}],"isPartOf":"Scientific American","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"556","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"Patents Recently Issued","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24976299","wordCount":6659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"141","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ramesh Srinivasan","Katherine M. Becvar","Robin Boast","Jim Enote"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224d2d49-18b6-35c7-87ed-b54553b55a84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25746392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"768","pageStart":"735","pagination":"pp. 735-768","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Diverse Knowledges and Contact Zones within the Digital Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25746392","wordCount":12918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8276,8392]],"Locations in B":[[33856,33972]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"As museums begin to revisit their definition of \"expert\" in light of theories about the local character of knowledge, questions emerge about how museums can reconsider their documentation of knowledge about objects. How can a museum present different and possibly conflicting perspectives in such a way that the tension between them is preserved? This article expands upon a collaborative research project between the Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology at Cambridge University, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and the A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center to compare descriptions of museum objects by multiple expert communities. We found that narratives and objects in use are key omissions in traditional museum documentation, offering us several possibilities to expand our concept of digital objects. Digital objects will allow members of indigenous source communities to contribute descriptive information about objects to support local cultural revitalization efforts and also to influence how objects are represented in distant cultural institutions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL A. PETERS","RODRIGO BRITEZ","ERGIN BULUT"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26803992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19489145"},{"name":"oclc","value":"732289208"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014202796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91eb486c-5cc7-3507-9e01-e1bb5e75307c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26803992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geophistinterela"}],"isPartOf":"Geopolitics, History, and International Relations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CYBERNETIC CAPITALISM, INFORMATIONALISM AND COGNITIVE LABOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26803992","wordCount":10105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Addleton Academic Publishers","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"This paper provides a synoptic view of \u2018cybernetic capitalism\u2019 \u2013 a term that attempts to capture the leading sector developments within modern capitalism and to profile the leading accounts of these developments. \u2018Cybernetic capitalism\u2019 is a term used in this paper in order to distinguish a group of theories, or, better, positions, on the Left that attempt to theorize the nature of the new capitalism. \u2018Third capitalism\u2019 (after mercantilism and industrialism) now relies on a systems architecture that draws on cybernetics and modern supercomputing that connects five aspects of cybernetic capitalism: informational capitalism, cultural capitalism, cognitive capitalism, finance capitalism and biocapitalism. The paper examines two of these groups, namely informational capitalism and cognitive capitalism and their differences and similarities. Among the different positions thinking about the nature of modern capitalism, there are strong overlapping characteristics which coalesce around aesthetization, design and immateriality. Value creation is still central to contemporary capitalism. That is, the universal contradiction, which might manifest itself differently in different localities, between capital and labor is still there and has been diffused to every sphere of our lives. Cybernetic capitalism implies forms of accumulation at the core of the productive process of the most relevant sectors of economy at times implying antithetical stances with the ways that capital accumulation and production is conceived by industrial capitalist economies and cultures. This implies a radical change in the dominant paradigm of organization and production generating different sets of social dilemmas for human beings and societies, sets of contradictions and overlapping tendencies in relation to other capitalisms.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Lou Emery"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdeb6de4-a369-398b-b516-bd1ca929384d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"ROBBED OF MEANING\": THE WORK AT THE CENTER OF \"TO THE LIGHTHOUSE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284324","wordCount":8068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Outhwaite"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"490e8844-5551-3e90-bc2d-5ddd35054cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1071","pageStart":"1069","pagination":"pp. 1069-1071","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231301","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Inge Hinterwaldner"],"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2013.124.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e11be2e2-0a23-3f5b-8d9b-13fda3c0568f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2013.124.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Parallel Lines as Tools for Making Turbulence Visible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2013.124.1.1","wordCount":15489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"124","abstract":"This article discusses how two physicists\u2014Etienne-Jules Marey and Friedrich Ahlborn\u2014visualized turbulence in air and water around 1900. Their depictions are based upon several creative and conceptual presuppositions that can be revealed by comparing the work of the two, each of whom employed a field of parallel-aligned lines to depict results. Their similar means of visualizing comparable phenomena turn out to function differently, however, depending on the differences in the ways these lines were conceived and made.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon Goss"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2569414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e864f28e-d152-3df4-8dac-bfaee38fde10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2569414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"Magic of the Mall\": An Analysis of Form, Function, and Meaning in the Contemporary Retail Built Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2569414","wordCount":19836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":"Shopping is the most important contemporary social activity, and, for the most part, takes place in the shopping center. Developers and designers of the retail built environment exploit the power of place and an intuitive understanding of the structuration of space to facilitate consumption and thus the realization of retail profits. They strive to present an alternative rationale for the shopping center's existence, manipulate shoppers' behavior through the configuration of space, and consciously design a symbolic landscape that provokes associative moods and dispositions in the shopper. These strategies are examined to obtain an understanding of how the retail built environment works, and how we might work against it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pablo N. Barrera"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/aboriginal.2.2.0327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"24710938"},{"name":"oclc","value":"936337751"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016200156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac60afc4-1da2-3b1e-80cb-06932206e7b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/aboriginal.2.2.0327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aboriginal"}],"isPartOf":"ab-Original","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/aboriginal.2.2.0327","wordCount":1537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMIE HILDER"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13cfe8e3-0603-3d4c-9e57-7c931e7b291f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43297923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"578","pagination":"pp. 578-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Concrete Poetry and Conceptual Art: A Misunderstanding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297923","wordCount":12622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Huntting Howell"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ae2f90b-fd0b-37e6-9f0c-c815b5a78c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25096749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"790","pageStart":"757","pagination":"pp. 757-790","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A More Perfect Copy: David Rittenhouse and the Reproduction of Republican Virtue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25096749","wordCount":14978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen A. Keely"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27557063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75d3870e-fca0-33ff-9ceb-8148394924c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27557063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poverty, Sterilization, and Eugenics in Erskine Caldwell's \"Tobacco Road\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27557063","wordCount":9266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIRIAM BRATU HANSEN"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9417c3f5-8f17-30ce-9ff7-0bc6b4250616"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24405635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ROOM-FOR-PLAY: BENJAMIN'S GAMBLE WITH CINEMA: The Martin Walsh Memorial Lecture 2003","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24405635","wordCount":13275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"Dans la deuxi\u00e8me version de son article \u00ab L'\u0153uvre d'art \u00e0 l'\u00e9poque de sa reproduction m\u00e9canis\u00e9e \u00bb (1936), Walter Benjamin note que l'an\u00e9antissement de l'aura ou apparence (Schein) dans l'art s'accompagne d'une augmentation \u00e9norme de \u00ab l'espace de jeu \u00bb (Spielraum) surtout, et gr\u00e2ce, au cin\u00e9ma. Cet article examine les nombreuses connotations du terme allemand Spiel chez Benjamin\u2014le jeu d'enfant, le jeu de l'acteur, le jeu de hasard--et \u00e9tudie sa notion du cin\u00e9ma comme jeu en relation avec sa th\u00e9orie anthropologique-mat\u00e9rialiste de la technologie. De l\u00e0 d\u00e9coule l'importance \u00e0 la fois esth\u00e9tique et politique du cin\u00e9ma en tant que forme de jeu de \u00ab seconde nature \u00bb.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CRAIG BUCKLEY"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bafcdbc0-f274-331e-bee8-4929f9ac6280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23014875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Graphic Constructions: The Experimental Typography of Edward Wright","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23014875","wordCount":11618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"136","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Buccafusco","Mark A. Lemley"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26401667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47016858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52993027-4f9e-3559-a9d6-aa3d768c70fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26401667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85.0,"pageEnd":"1377","pageStart":"1293","pagination":"pp. 1293-1377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"FUNCTIONALITY SCREENS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26401667","wordCount":31342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Virginia Law Review","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":"Among intellectual property (\"IP\") doctrines, only utility patents should protect function. Utility patents offer strong rights that place constraints on competition, but they only arise when inventors can demonstrate substantial novelty after a costly examination. Copyrights, trademarks, and design patents are much easier to obtain than utility patents, and they often last much longer. Accordingly, to prevent claimants from obtaining \"backdoor patents,\" the other IP doctrines must screen out functionality. As yet, however, courts and scholars have paid little systematic attention to the ways in which these functionality screens operate across and within IP law. We have four tasks in this Article. First, we identify three separate functionality screens that IP laws use: Filtering, Exclusion, and Threshold. Second, we illustrate the use of these different screens in copyright, trademark, and design patent laws. Each law takes a different approach to screening functionality. Third, we model the relative costs and benefits of the different screening regimes, paying particular attention to administrative and error costs and how these costs affect incentives and competition. Finally, we assess the current screening regimes and offer suggestions for how they might be improved.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82fe0782-c0aa-3718-a86a-ed7283b46292"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":232.0,"pageEnd":"707","pageStart":"452","pagination":"pp. 452-707","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462390","wordCount":398169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Parshall"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26408680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23305606"},{"name":"oclc","value":"757826995"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011203603"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4dad1f7-66e7-3de0-bfc3-92ae4d2d0476"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26408680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artprint"}],"isPartOf":"Art in Print","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Why Study Prints Now? Or, The World According to Bartsch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26408680","wordCount":7817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Art in Print Review","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tan Lin"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23130867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2890f05-5493-3a6e-929c-42a00a4947a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23130867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"DISCO AS OPERATING SYSTEM, PART ONE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23130867","wordCount":8120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher P. Long"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"799d8afe-b9a3-39df-8cc3-6bd95da64eca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art's Fateful Hour: Benjamin, Heidegger, Art and Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827790","wordCount":12843,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[73217,73285]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"83","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JO APPLIN"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24917067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a93dbf0-c2e5-3c1a-86f9-4ef3fe6a8a29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24917067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700378","wordCount":37174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4828","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"238","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2324742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fcbbbf-fd54-336e-adcb-577e14a2d638"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2324742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amermathmont"}],"isPartOf":"The American Mathematical Monthly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"768","pageStart":"757","pagination":"pp. 757-768","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Telegraphic Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2324742","wordCount":10341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Mathematical Association of America","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Travis Workman"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjnb3.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7e9ac1c-84c4-345c-9ca6-041419acc483"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjnb3.10"}],"isPartOf":"Imperial Genus","keyphrase":["ecstatic temporality","modernism","cinematic","cinema","culturalism","colonial","subject","aesthetic","modernism without","social space"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"213","pagination":"213-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism without a Home:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1ffjnb3.10","wordCount":18163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Yi Sang\u2019s poem \u201cThe Infinite Hexagon of Architecture,\u201d published in 1932, begins with a philosophical reflection on post-Euclidean geometry and twentiethcentury visuality, particularly in poetry after the advent of cinema: \u201cA square inside a square inside a square inside a square inside a square \/ A square circle of a square circle of a square circle. A person sees through the scent of soap from a vein where soap passes. The Earth imitates a globe imitates the Earth.\u201d\u00b9 The image expresses amise en abyme<\/em>\u2014two mirrors are facing each other, framing smaller and smaller frames of infinitesimal sizes, infinitely.","subTitle":"Cinematic Literature, Colonial Architecture, and Yi Sang\u2019s Poetics","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Garfinkel"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/324761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/324761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - 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Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Controlling Resistance, Resisting Control: The g\u00e9nero chico and the Dynamics of Mass Entertainment in Late Nineteenth-Century Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20641801","wordCount":8947,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[53540,53604]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tam\u00e1s B\u00e9nyei"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c19c7186-cbcf-3f80-be71-c6d5ca9c2c45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Views of the Taj\u2014Figure in the Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43323846","wordCount":9292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Since the Taj complex was built in the mid-17th century, the mausoleum has been an object of wonder and delight, yet viewed differently by each era. The Mughal emperors saw it from across the river Yamuna, reflected in the river's waters and in the fountains of Mahtab Bagh, and framed by the balconies of the Red Fort. The Europeans painted, photographed, and made it an object of romantic gaze in a picturesque setting that fitted their notions of the exotic and mysterious East. The post-colonial period has seen proliferations of its image for virtual consumption and commodification, making the Taj the most visited tourist destination in India. Today, the Taj complex is a tourist enclave that is cut off from its surroundings, and limited movement patterns restrict visitor views and experiences of the monument. This article proposes that ways of seeing the building should include perceiving it as a \"figure in the landscape.\" \"Landscape\" is understood to be not just the neo-colonial version of the Mughal garden that dominates the foreground of the Taj's ubiquitous imagery, but also the larger cultural landscape of the river Yamuna and its flood plain, rural hamlets and farmfields, and the streets and open spaces of urban Agra. By knitting together the public gardens, parks, and other landscapes in a continuous system of open spaces, a green belt can be created around the Taj to protect it from environmental pollution and provide recreational spaces. View corridors proposed in this landscape will function as conservation easements and will engage the visitor in an extended visual experience of the Taj.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5f55c7b-9d5d-35ed-8514-48d3ea6ecab5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3655261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3655261","wordCount":6041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Freind"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Why Do You Want to Put Your Ideas in Order?\": Re-Thinking the Politics of Ezra Pound","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831675","wordCount":9835,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[52821,52885],[53867,54000],[55865,56191]],"Locations in B":[[8910,8974],[9115,9248],[10908,11233]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giulia Palladini"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fbf88aa-9141-331b-98fd-5eb73d93fb0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41635634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Amateur Hour: On Value, Personality and the Form of Appearance in the Economy of Attention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635634","wordCount":7500,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49190,49321]],"Locations in B":[[15528,15659]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis A. Renza"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Killing Time with Mark Twain's Autobiographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873054","wordCount":11086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard T. Gray"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40574864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3196f41-9b34-3bef-a1f1-c96733cf58f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40574864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"526","pageStart":"495","pagination":"pp. 495-526","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"From Grids to Vanishing Points: W. G. Sebald's Critique of Visual-Representational Orders in Die Ringe des Saturn<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40574864","wordCount":13443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"W. G. Sebald's Die Ringe des Saturn develops its own peculiar indictment of Enlightenment rationality. This critique manifests itself as an interrogation of two prominent rationalizing strategies introduced into the visual arts in the modern age: the grid as a mechanism for parceling out and representing visual space; and the vanishing point, which organizes objects in a relational scheme that creates an illusion of depth. Juxtaposing illustrations that manifest these visual-representational techniques with deliberations on the destructive consequences of rigid rational systems, Sebald's text both argues for, and mirrors in its own compositional strategies, a dialectical balance between entropie chaos and hyperrational order. His narrator's successful negotiations of labyrinthine structures emblematize a discourse able to maneuver between the myopia of proximity and the sterile taxonomy afforded by the bird's-eye view.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. Goyer","John Bachmann","Thomas W. Clarkson","Benjamin G. Ferris, Jr.","Judith Graham","Paul Mushak","Daniel P. Perl","David P. Rall","Richard Schlesinger","William Sharpe","John M. Wood"],"datePublished":"1985-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3429982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00916765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35526936"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn96-47857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3429982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihealpers"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Health Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Potential Human Health Effects of Acid Rain: Report of a Workshop","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3429982","wordCount":12178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"This report summarizes the potential impact of the acid precipitation phenomenon on human health. There are two major components to this phenomenon: the predepositional phase, during which there is direct human exposure to acidic substances from ambient air, and the post-depositional phase, in which the deposition of acid materials on water and soil results in the mobilization, transport, and even chemical transformation of toxic metals. Acidification increases bioconversion of mercury to methylmercury, which accumulates in fish, increasing the risk to toxicity in people who eat fish. Increase in water and soil content of lead and cadmium increases human exposure to these metals which become additive to other sources presently under regulatory control. The potential adverse health effects of increased human exposure to aluminum is not known at the present time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David R. Wrone"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4636029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00436534"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f651ab9-47ff-3aee-8759-5d9264d7a140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4636029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wiscmagahist"}],"isPartOf":"The Wisconsin Magazine of History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Indian Treaties and the Democratic Idea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4636029","wordCount":15424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wisconsin Historical Society","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Huyssen"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ba0676d-a800-3002-8a4a-8f541301d076"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fortifying the Heart: Totally Ernst J\u00fcnger's Armored Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488219","wordCount":8858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"59","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OLIVER WUNSCH"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"735a7319-6343-3c28-a9b9-ceaf777b4ad4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44972947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Watteau, through the Cracks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972947","wordCount":16664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"Antoine Watteau's paintings decayed rapidly. Soon after his death, his contemporaries bemoaned the cracks ravaging his works. They regarded the problem as the product of Watteau's restless character, noting that his shortsighted personality led him to paint improperly. A deeper explanation situates Watteau s impatient attitude and impermanent techniques within an emerging culture of ephemeral consumption. An examination of the afterlife of Watteaus decaying work in the form of reproduction points to an alternative understanding of permanence based less on material immutability than on commercial dissemination. Permanence has a history, and Watteau oifers insight into a crucial transition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Bielawski"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b443eb5-71f7-3978-81bb-2d0b4dee7e22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"(Dis)figuring the Dead: Embalming and Autopsy in \"Absalom, Absalom!\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908356","wordCount":14658,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[35878,36530],[36365,36697]],"Locations in B":[[46607,47259],[47094,47440]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Faulkner Journal","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3387783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a30557c9-f0bb-33cd-accd-c6e7998a9ddb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3387783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Astronomy"],"title":"Making sense of transience: an anticipatory history","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251451","wordCount":11416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"In climate change discourse the concept of anticipatory adaptation has emerged to refer to proactive strategies for preparing communities for future change. This paper makes a proposal for what might be called anticipatory history. At designated heritage sites prevailing narratives tend to project long-term conservation indefinitely forward into the future. These narrative formulations fall short when confronted with the impending transformation, or even disappearance, of landscapes and artefacts of cultural heritage \u2014 a process that is likely to become increasingly common with the acceleration of environmental change in coastal and other contexts. Might it be possible to experiment with other ways of storying landscape, framing histories around movement rather than stasis, and drawing connections between past dynamism and future process? At the core of this paper is an experimental narration of the history of a Cornish harbour. The narrative presents a reverse chronology of moments gleaned from diverse sources ranging over three centuries, looking to a fractured landscape past to find resources for encountering a future unmaking.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1904-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20283297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be160dbd-bfc0-372c-855c-61bdbb314683"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20283297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20283297","wordCount":63467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2296","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1904-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43478082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2380534X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43478082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefin2"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report for the Year ... (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"DONATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43478082","wordCount":1303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN TEDESCHI"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44706553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468030288"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235772"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c3c9482-d5b9-3e06-a1a0-271085e1d6c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44706553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Technology and the Production of Islamic Space: The Call to Prayer in Singapore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852695","wordCount":6674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[36655,36722]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Greenhill"],"datePublished":"1925-12-25","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41357122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bb02432-f141-3b00-b31f-ccddad8cb161"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41357122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1925,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Metaphysics"],"title":"Tradition and Destruction: Benjamin's Politics of Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904799","wordCount":11828,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[1180,2190],[2348,2744],[2728,3008],[59181,60798]],"Locations in B":[[3137,4147],[4148,6424],[7981,10937],[21998,23696]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Watson Smith","Benjamin W. 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It continues through Wupatki, Awatovi, Berkeley, and Cambridge. Finally, it comes to rest in Tucson at Harvard University's Far West outpost, the Peabody Museum West of the Pecos. Along the way are numerous anecdotal accounts of noteworthy persons, cooks, cars, and dogs. \/\/\/ Esta historia hace un recuento personal de las aventuras arqueol\u00f3gicas del autor, empezando por la menci\u00f3n de su temprana predilecci\u00f3n por hacer hoyos en la tierra y de su primera experiencia de campo en Colorado. La historia de sus experiencias contin\u00faa por Wupatki, Awatovi, Berkeley y Cambridge. Finalmente, Ilega a terminar en Tucs\u00f3n en el lejano puesto avanzado del oeste de la Universidad de Harvard, el Peabody Museum West of the Pecos. A lo largo del camino, existen un gran n\u00famero de relatos anecd\u00f3ticos de personajes c\u00e9lebres, de cocineros, de autom\u00f3viles y de perros.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christina Schwenkel"],"datePublished":"2006-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aedf79e6-ae14-3ff4-ba00-246684359845"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Recombinant History: Transnational Practices of Memory and Knowledge Production in Contemporary Vietnam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651546","wordCount":12781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13405,13524]],"Locations in B":[[66338,66459]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Recent years have seen the diversification of knowledge, memory, and meaning at former battlefields and other social spaces that invoke the history of the \"American War\" in Vietnam. Popular icons of the war have been recycled, reproduced, and consumed in a rapidly growing international tourism industry. The commodification of sites, objects, and imaginaries associated with the war has engendered certain rearticulations of the past in the public sphere as the terrain of memory making becomes increasingly transnational. Diverse actors-including tourism authorities, returning U.S. veterans, international tourists, domestic visitors, and guides-engage in divergent practices of memory that complicate, expand, and often transcend dominant modes of historical representation in new and distinct ways.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ursula McTaggart"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d11fe5c9-4154-3b47-9adc-0c15282b67f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Opening the Door\": The Hogarth Press as Virginia Woolf's Outsiders' Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337032","wordCount":8830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This essay argues that Virginia Woolf's personal publishing venture, the Hogarth Press, both prefigured and influenced her later vision of a feminist, transnational Outsiders' Society, a proposal that she outlined in the 1938 text Three Guineas. Woolf imagined an Outsiders' Society with neither meetings nor leaders that pieced together a multiplicity of private actions to exert political influence. The Hogarth Press, however, was already a material incarnation of this strategy as its translations, feminist works, political pamphlets, and political fiction challenged both the male-dominated British canon and the nationalistic patriarchy that Woolf deplored in Three Guineas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert E. 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Coleman African Studies Center","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nabeel Zuberi"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9c5011c-6b68-3de2-98b0-ba669893bd6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is This the Future? Black Music and Technology Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241526","wordCount":9192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"As a dispersed assemblage of ideas and aesthetics, sonic Afrofuturism operates across the porous borders between and among music, sf, the academy, journalism, and the blogosphere. In this article I am interested in the value of these rhetorics for media studies. In particular, how can writing that focuses on the materiality of music inform our understanding of the technological changes associated with digitization? I will argue that music forms, commodities, and practices provide ample evidence of the continuities as well as discontinuities in the mediascape. Today's popular music culture is marked by the mediations of the past, even as recorded sounds take on more informational characteristics. I also seek to ground the technological sublime of Afrofuturist poetics in the widespread social practices associated with records, sound-system dances, and music networks. Underpinning the sonic imagination in techno-centric writing and music-making are the quotidian practices of music cultures, the more \"worldly\" fictions behind \"sonic fictions,\" to borrow Kodwo Eshun's suggestive adaptation of literary and visual sf for music recordings. This paper examines the material possibilities of techno-discourse for transnational media studies through a discussion of digital sampling, and points to the limitations of technological utopianism in relation to writing about music and black bodies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel T. O'Hara","Paul A. Bov\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mask Plays: Theory, Cultural Studies, and the Fascist Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303568","wordCount":11037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tamar Avishai"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45294547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26988976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c413dd41-344a-382e-993d-ae6ae94150bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45294547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"benjaminstudien"}],"isPartOf":"Benjamin-Studien","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Shock and Aura: Benjamin on Dada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45294547","wordCount":8502,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[16395,16494],[44580,44684],[46169,46280],[46743,46827],[47069,47305]],"Locations in B":[[6980,7078],[22967,23074],[24201,24313],[24475,24559],[24569,24817]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman K. 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It explores the aesthetic dimensions of regal culture produced outside of the traditionally defined sphere of art and politics by focusing on the variety of royal images and symbols depicted on hanging signs in eighteenth-century London. Despite the overwhelming presence of kings and queens on signboards, few study these as a form of regal visual culture or seriously question the ways in which these everyday objects affected representations of royalty beyond asserting an unproblematic process of declension. Indeed, even in the Restoration and early eighteenth century, monarchical signs were the subject of criticism and debate. This article explains why this became the case, arguing that signs were criticized not because they were trivial commercial objects that cheapened royal charisma, but because they were overloaded with political meaning. They emblematized the failures of representation in the age of print and party politics by depicting the monarchy\u2014 the traditional center of representative stability\u2014in ways that troubled interpretation and defied attempts to control the royal image. Nevertheless, regal images and objects circulating in urban spaces comprised a meaningful political-visual language that challenges largely accepted arguments about the aesthetic inadequacy and cultural unimportance of early eighteenth-century monarchy. Signs were part of an urban, graphic public sphere, used as objects of political debate, historical commemoration, and civic instruction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2388160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063606"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446876"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2388160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biotropica"}],"isPartOf":"Biotropica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2388160","wordCount":10707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4058220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19386761"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52b13048-5b7b-342d-98ab-0887ab56ac36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4058220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musemodeartbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Museum of Modern Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1+5-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Film Notes. 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Portraitists especially suffered this indignity, probed here through the topos of the tailor, a persistent character in artist narratives. In the effort to redefine their activity as a liberal art, an art of gentlemen, painters employed varying strategies. Copley's politics of representation are exposed in close examination of two works from the late 1760s: his self-portrait and portrait of silversmith Paul Revere.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin McCabe"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30060565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332060X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b42e688-293a-30a8-937d-4672282e794c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30060565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cranebag"}],"isPartOf":"The Crane Bag","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Joyce and Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30060565","wordCount":3567,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[52817,53221],[53320,53703]],"Locations in B":[[17178,17582],[17589,17968]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Richard Kearney","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1929-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcc2a3f6-42b1-36bf-9d96-f705e2e8540d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":94.0,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twenty Fifth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to October 1928)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224799","wordCount":32744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie L. Canington"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00763519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df0679a7-a40c-3e97-964a-5ea95394669e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26895143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mammalianspecies"}],"isPartOf":"Mammalian Species","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Gorilla beringei<\/em> (Primates: Hominidae)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895143","wordCount":14616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"967","publisher":"American Society of Mammalogists","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Gorilla beringei Matschie, 1903 is a great ape commonly called the eastern gorilla. Highly sexually dimorphic, this diurnal knuckle-walking quadruped is 1 of 2 species of Gorilla, the largest living primates. It is endemic to northwest Rwanda and southwest Uganda as G. b. beringei, and to eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo as G. b. beringei and G. b. graueri. G. beringei is known to both highland and lowland montane forests and subalpine environments, though only G. b. beringei is called the \u201cmountain gorilla.\u201d Those inhabiting higher elevations are more folivorous than those at lower elevations. Groups are highly cohesive polygamous social units, varying in size and composition. G. b. beringei and G. b. graueri are both listed as \u201cCritically Endangered\u201d by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabrielle Dean"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48647121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15592936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71801176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213693"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ebee7a4-5e7c-3593-8d91-d006fe76899e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48647121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"textcult"}],"isPartOf":"Textual Cultures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genius Trouble","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48647121","wordCount":11856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society for Textual Scholarship","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"This essay assesses the contradiction between the widespread critical acceptance of the post-structuralist mortification of authorship, on one hand, and the rise and continued purchase of authorship-focused scholarship, on the other. What seems to be missing is a theory of authorship that takes into account the fact that authors themselves have had to reckon with authorship as a construction, particularly the ideological emphasis on genius as it was commercialized during the \u201cindustrial era\u201d of print publication. Several stories by Henry James that stage author-reader relations offer glimpses of his idea of authorship and suggest that, for him, authorial self-consciousness plays out as a queer performance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-05-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1690652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80f171bd-68ef-32ef-922a-e2a2ec4f615c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1690652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"996","pageStart":"946","pagination":"pp. 946-996","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1690652","wordCount":16290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4600","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"220","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conway Zirkle"],"datePublished":"1941-04-25","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/984852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003049X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f37edade-8cbd-3060-86b9-1cc373329939"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/984852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Natural Selection before the \"Origin of Species\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/984852","wordCount":25331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"The history of the concept of natural selection has generally been traced back through the personal development of Charles Darwin to Thomas Malthus, whose Essay on the Principles of Population gave Darwin the clue which led him to formulate the doctrine. Actually the conception of natural selection is very old, although originally it was not used to explain the origin of new species (evolution) but to account for the existence of adaptation. The survival of the fit organism, of course, implies the survival of fitness itself, and thus natural selection can serve as an alternative explanation of those facts which are generally cited as evidences of teleology. Natural selection was used for this purpose by Empedocles (400 B. C.), Lucretius (99-55 B. C), Diderot (1749), Maupertius (1756), and Geoffrey St. Hillaire (1833); but it was specifically rejected in favor of teleology by Aristotle (384-321 B. C.), Lactantius (260-340 A. D.), St. Albertus Magnus (1236), and Whewell (1833). Natural selection was used to explain organic evolution by Wells (1813), Matthews (1831), Darwin (1858), and Wallace (1858). As an explanation of evolution, natural selection involves a number of distinct though subordinate propositions, such as the existence of heritable variations, of population pressure, of a struggle for existence and the consequent survival of the fit or better adapted. A number of philosophers and naturalists recognized the validity of one or more of these propositions without however, gaining any clear conception of the implications of the whole doctrine. One such component, population pressure, was described by Hale (1677), Buffon (1751), Benjamin Franklin (1751), Bonnet (1764), Monboddo (1773), Herder (1784), Smellie (1790), Malthus (1798), Prichard (1808), Wells (1813), Matthews (1831), De Candolle (1833), Lyell (1833), Geoffrey St. Hillaire (1833), and Spencer (1852). The struggle for existence was described by al-J\u00e2hiz (9th cent.), Hobbes (1651), Hale (1677), Buffon (1751), Monboddo (1773), Kant (1775), Herder (1784), Smellie (1790), Erasmus Darwin, (1794) Wells (1813), De Candolle (1832), Lyell (1833), and Spencer (1852). Several eighteenth and nineteenth century scientists almost grasped the full significance of natural selection but just failed to recognize all of its implications. Among these were Rousseau (1749), Prichard (1808, 1826), Lawrence (1819), Geoffrey St. Hillaire (1833), Herbert (1837), Spencer (1852), and Naudin (1852).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1308840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c032f5f-5e02-3e21-971e-cca19db07b39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1308840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1308840","wordCount":10180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Rehding"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3601015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Wax Cylinder Revolutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601015","wordCount":15293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. Bernard Cohen","Katharine Strelsky"],"datePublished":"1957-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8c74319-94b4-31bb-acd2-235bb577d80a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/227031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":92.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Eighty-Second Critical Bibliography of The History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1957) (Endorsed by the History of Science Division of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/227031","wordCount":69917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Rocco"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c0180a3-bf35-3752-a033-c3548939601b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Drinking \"Ulysses\": Joyce, Bass Ale, and the Typography of Cubism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473743","wordCount":5049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jo. B. Brown"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10827161"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608201706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d46318b-2738-3f25-8bdf-89583c7ec9f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41446783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Appalachian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Journal of Appalachian Studies Annual Bibliography, 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446783","wordCount":24561,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Appalachian Studies Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nell Haynes"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1g69xv2.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781910634585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61f9ceac-9989-3b14-812f-aa5cc754efad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1g69xv2.14"}],"isPartOf":"Social Media in Northern Chile","keyphrase":["york routledge","university","london ucl","anthropology","gender","marginality","duke university","new york routledge","citizenship","berkeley university"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"207","pagination":"207-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1g69xv2.14","wordCount":3939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Lowenstein"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db7d68d0-99a1-3ce7-b74f-ea9de2773bef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Films without a Face: Shock Horror in the Cinema of Georges Franju","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225726","wordCount":12127,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[75444,75642]],"Locations in B":[[25411,25623]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"Georges Franju's contribution to the horror genre--through his films \"Blood of the Beasts\" (1949) and \"Eyes Without a Face\" (1959)--is \"shock horror\": the employment of graphic, visceral shock to access the historical substrate of traumatic experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. G. POLLARD"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42666556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00782696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a7bf2a3-bafb-371b-b9e9-138a7ece176b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42666556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"numischron"}],"isPartOf":"The Numismatic Chronicle (1966-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Art & Art History","Arts","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Law - Civil law"],"title":"MATTHEW BOULTON AND J.-P. DROZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42666556","wordCount":11662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Royal Numismatic Society","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rob Shields"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a03163dd-d694-3672-ae8f-ad45652c9c42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1466","pageStart":"1464","pagination":"pp. 1464-1466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231101","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN JAY"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40548074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fce3184a-33da-3343-8a87-8891d4bec74b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40548074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photography and the Mirror of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40548074","wordCount":3365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"84","publisher":"Skidmore College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1930-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1114588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c967635-7df7-376e-ae34-fc6e23b3ae95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1114588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":942.0,"pageEnd":"1224","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-1224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1930,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Index of Subjects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1114588","wordCount":554138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jayanth K. Krishnan"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45e9e940-1a5c-30f6-afd6-cc40bca9128a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20439042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"615","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-615","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lawyering for a Cause and Experiences from Abroad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439042","wordCount":22083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH AMANN"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6d24756-3fc2-385b-a0af-8cd6ced2a5d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27763509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genres in Dialogue: Antonio Mu\u00f1oz Molina's El jinete polaco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27763509","wordCount":9892,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"Este art\u00edculo es un an\u00e1lisis ideol\u00f3gico de tres discursos gen\u00e9ricos en El jinete polaco de Antonio Mu\u00f1oz Molina. Primero mostramos que la trama de la historia que enmarca la novela \u2013 la relaci\u00f3n entre Nadia y Manuel \u2013 adopta las convenciones de la novela bizantina, una forma conservadora que afirma la estabilidad social. En cambio, la historia que \u00e9sta enmarca \u2013 la de la mujer emparedada \u2013 se acerca al g\u00e9nero g\u00f3tico, el cual se caracteriza por la ambig\u00fcedad de su significado pol\u00edtico, aunque la indeterminaci\u00f3n de lo g\u00f3tico se encuentra neutralizada por el marco bizantino que lo contiene. 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This is becoming problematic as the global marketplace develops. The authors argue that to meet the theoretical and methodological challenges of global branding, international marketing scholars will need to revise some key premises and foundations. Branding research in the future will need to be contextually and historically grounded, polycentric in orientation, and acutely attuned to the symbolic significance of brands of all types. The authors offer some conceptual foundations for a culturally relative, contextually sensitive approach to international branding in which the construct of brand mythology is central.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUZANNE GAUCH"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91bb0b86-809f-3958-a82f-7206d43041ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Phantasmatic Artifacts: Postcolonial Meditations by a Tunisian Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029775","wordCount":9886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Exploring manipulations of perception in postcolonial representations, Abdelwahab Meddeb's novel Phantasia employs architecture as a metaphor for the construction of identities and ideologies and uses the concept of exile to expose the politics of representation which inform cultural artifacts, and through them, history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40256779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dad21237-e8fd-3886-9cc9-a38fd9cf2524"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40256779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Periodicals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40256779","wordCount":12952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Bottomore"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Film Museums: A Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815487","wordCount":13142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"A chronologically organized international bibliography dealing with the collection and exhibition of film technology and related artifacts, either as part of existing museum structures or as stand-alone motion picture museums. The bibliography emphasizes permanent installations over temporary shows, and does not include television-related collections or film libraries\/archives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonah Corne"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.1.0047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd3d2288-e438-3ecd-a4c0-344ca4b4fe1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.60.1.0047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Regicide on Repeat: The Pensive Spectator of Rebecca West's Black Lamb and Grey Falcon<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.60.1.0047","wordCount":12188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"This essay examines Rebecca West's treatment of the 1934 newsreel footage of the assassination of King Alexander of Yugoslavia in her classic book on the Balkans, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (1941). 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Relating ideas of unhurried seeing in Bellour and Mulvey to West's famously long, timetaking book, the essay identifies in West's evocation of cinematic spectatorship a pattern of endlessly refracting self-projection that speaks to the complexities of her devotion not to \u201clos[e] sight of the importance of process.\u201d Enlarging and pushing backwards in time the genealogy of the pensive spectator, West offers to film studies a rich nodal point in the ongoing project of writing the prehistory of the digital.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brigid 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\u0645\u0627\u062a\u064a\u0644\u0627\u0631 \u0648\u0632\u0645\u0644\u0627\u0626\u0647 \u0628\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0629 \u0643\u064a\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0623\u0646\u062a\u0627\u062c \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u064a\u0645\u0646\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0634\u0628\u0643\u0629 \u0648\u0633\u0627\u0626\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0645 \u0648\u0641\u064a \u0647\u0630\u0627 \u062a\u0642\u0627\u0637\u0639\u0648\u0627 \u0645\u0639 \u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0642\u0627\u0645 \u0628\u0647\u0627 \u0646\u0639\u0648\u0645 \u062a\u0634\u0648\u0645\u0633\u0643\u064a \u0628\u0639\u064a\u0631\u0647 \u0639\u0646 \"\u062a\u0635\u0646\u064a\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0628\u0648\u0644\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vaheed K. Ramazani"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"222cfda3-9834-3ed0-b2a2-304841b5a455"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Historical Clich\u00e9: Irony and the Sublime in L'\u00e9ducation Sentimentale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462857","wordCount":10440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":"Flaubert's representation of the 1848 revolution in L'\u00e9ducation sentimentale brings irony and the sublime into a relation of simultaneous opposition and dependency. An uncertain irony constructs the revolution as an aporia: as both an impoverished imitation of 1789 (a clich\u00e9) and a tragic modern apocalypse. Particularly in the famous Fontainebleau episode, where the rhetorical violence of irony is enacted in the analogy between the awesome turbulence of nature and the chaos of a nonteleological historical process, irony gives rise to the affects of fear and transport characteristic of the sublime. And the turn from an uncanny irony to the countermode of self-empowerment is set in motion by the same fear of death that haunts the novel's historiographical intertext, the Micheletist clich\u00e9 of resurrection. But while the Micheletist sublime constructs a version of historical and ontological truth, the Flaubertian sublime transforms meaninglessness itself into power. Reified as ideology, that power would be neither inflexible nor monolithic, for it emerges and recedes repeatedly in the context of a self-interrogating and fundamentally ironic narrative.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2165721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55643c71-cc10-3f25-930f-71030cc11002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2165721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"60(a)","pageStart":"1368","pagination":"pp. 1368-60(a)","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2165721","wordCount":21523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe R. 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What is the role of schooling in that transmission? The authors address these questions by reporting on a thirty-month longitudinal study into how home, school, and larger society served as contexts for the development of historical consciousness among adolescents. Fifteen families drawn from three different school communities participated. By adopting an intergenerational approach, the authors sought to understand how the defining moments of one generation-its \"lived history\"'-becomes the \"available history\" to the next. In this article, the authors focus on what parents and children shared about one of the most formative historical events in parents' lives: the Vietnam War. Drawing on notions of collective memory, as articulated by the French sociologist Maurice Halbwachs, the authors sought to understand which stories, archived in historical memory and available to the disciplinary community, are remembered and used by those beyond its borders. In contrast, which stories are no longer widely shared, eclipsed by time's passage and unable to cross the bridge separating generation from generation? The authors conclude by discussing the forces that act to historicize today's youth and suggest how educators might marshal these forces-rather than spurning or simply ignoring them-to advance young people's historical understanding.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emanuel Alloa"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Spark highlights fascism's modes of consensus-building rather than its more readily visible authoritarian qualities and in doing so, usefully shifts our attention from the regimes' culpable deception of the masses to the fascist subject's motivations for shielding him or herself from the recognition of fascist violence. In particular, it inquires into how and why followers invested fascism with a rebellious capacity to break up a sedimented status quo, especially how some female subjects attributed to it a capacity for radical departures from patriarchal conceptions of womanhood.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Woessner"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41288136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"316ce197-90db-3f63-b090-4f219742ae0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41288136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Is Heideggerian Cinema? 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On Richard Rorty's New Pragmatism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802102","wordCount":8448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"92","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon Newsom"],"datePublished":"1971-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/939330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e50cbd9d-c46d-36de-afe0-f87590fec149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/939330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Books Recently Published","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/939330","wordCount":7839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1n2txnx.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781608010929"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a14dd86-b44e-320a-9d80-8598b9efe4c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1n2txnx.7"}],"isPartOf":"Austrian Lives","keyphrase":["therese schlesinger","gabriella hauch","k\u00e4the leichter","hauch therese","schlesinger eckstein","sozialdemokratische monatsschrift","auguste fickert","federn","kampf sozialdemokratische","innsbruck studienverlag"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"71","pagination":"71-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cAgainst the Mock Battle of Words\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1n2txnx.7","wordCount":8568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Interests, preferences, and aversions, with all their contradictions, unite or divide people; they form the chemistry between them, providing that which cannot be expressed in words but which can still be lived and can define reality. Behind all of this, we find an ambiguous variety of experiences, character traits, conscious decisions and unconscious predilections. Like a sounding board, this complexity amplifies the biographer\u2019s interest in approaching a historical person. Life stories are never logical and goaloriented chains of events, and we must abandon the illusion of coherence, which is a product of retrospective wishful thinking. Like we do in friendships,","subTitle":"Therese Schlesinger, ne\u00e9 Eckstein (1863-1940), a Radical Seeker","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dick van Lente"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23788120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13618113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f98f55b6-fa15-3617-ab45-dd09f98dac7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23788120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"icon"}],"isPartOf":"Icon","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Huizinga's Children: Play and Technology in Twentieth Century Dutch Cultural Criticism (From the 1930s to the 1960s)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23788120","wordCount":10930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"This article traces the development of critical thought about the socio-political impact of technology in the Netherlands between the 1920s and the 1960s, from the perspective of thinkers and movements that developed theories about play and put these into practice. The historian Johan Huizinga, the painter Constant Nieuwenhuys and the Provo youth movement shared the conviction that play was a crucial element in society. In the late 1930s, Huizinga argued that play, which he believed was at the basis of all culture, was gradually suppressed in modern societies, as a consequence of the ascendancy of utility and technological efficiency as dominant goals. A much more optimistic view of the future of play and technology was developed after World War II, first in the utopian designs of Nieuwenhuys and then, from the middle of the 1960s, in more practical proposals developed by the Provo youth movement and its successor, the Kabouter Partij. This article describes an intellectual trajectory from deep cultural pessimism and technological determinism towards a utopian constructivist view, issuing in what was later called 'appropriate technology'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13e2364b-4d6d-3cc1-9ce9-ac7d8d12dae2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/954339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"999","pageStart":"917","pagination":"pp. 917-999","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/954339","wordCount":20423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1474","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deming Liu"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24913910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14672006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47924088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"430ca1ee-441c-3872-99f7-adf7317c0341"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24913910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britartj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Sweeny"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.43.1.0050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07360770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3a9fecc-6fad-3afd-be95-08b901867451"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/visuartsrese.43.1.0050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"visuartsrese"}],"isPartOf":"Visual Arts Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Ghosts in the Machinic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/visuartsrese.43.1.0050","wordCount":2919,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This paper outlines a number of ways in which contemporary life is influenced by networked digital technologies. The author specifically looks to examples from video games and social media to inquire about aspects of contemporary art educational practices that might benefit from further analysis in these areas. The notion of the machinic will be used to expand beyond literal and determinist descriptions of digital technologies in art educational practices, drawing upon the work of Deleuze and Guattari.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary E. Vogel"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3115099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"feb6a712-36ff-37e1-aa10-d62ac92c49fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3115099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Social Origins of Plea Bargaining: Conflict and the Law in the Process of State Formation, 1830-1860","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3115099","wordCount":40160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"One striking feature of American courts is the widespread practive of plea bargaining. Paradoxically, the practice rewards precisely those who appear guilty. Contrary to popular perception of plea bargaining as an innovation or corruption of the post-World War II years, this study shows the practice to have emerged early in the American republic. Amid social conflict wrought by industrialization, immigration, and urbanization during the Age of Jackson, politicians acutely realized the potential for revolution in Europe. Local political institutions being spare and fragmentary, the courts stepped forward as agents of the state to promote social order necessary for healthy market functioning, personal security, and economic growth. Plea bargaining arose during the 1830s and 1840s as part of a process of political stabilization and an effort to legitimate institutions of self-rule-accomplishments that were vital to Whig efforts to reconsolidate the political power of Boston's social and economic elite. To this end, the tradition of episodic leniency from British common law was recrafted into a new cultural form-plea bargaining-that drew conflicts into courts while maintaining elite discretion over sentencing policy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/956729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f207083-d378-39dc-adb5-2cf789db9e55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/956729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/956729","wordCount":21278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1524","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Herscher"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"447f38e4-a266-37ce-8f5c-bcb3fa72cd66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Media(tion) of Building: Manifesto Architecture in the Czech Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107976","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This essay examines the mass mediation of interwar Czech avant-garde architecture. Existing accounts of modern architecture's mass mediation have tended to shift historical analysis from a consideration of 'author as producer' to 'author as reproducer'; in contrast, this essay considers authorship itself as an effect of mediated reproduction, of a circulation of signs that was not only managed by the avant-garde but also constituent of avant-garde subject positions and modes of object production. Thus, in an attempt to acknowledge the transformations in subjectivity, authorship, and the architectural work wrought by mass mediation, I track architectural effects that emerged through an array of avant-garde media practices, focusing on the typography, editing and advertising work of Karel Teige. Rather than seeing this work as a mediation of Teige's theoretical claims about architecture, I argue that it was structured by the dynamics of mass media discourse, a structuring evident in the slide of media texts and images processed by Teige into advertising -- for avant-garde goods and services and for the media platforms that hosted them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Walton"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2011.64.1.239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e256e9ed-c646-340d-a6bf-3b0b3ebd817c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jams.2011.64.1.239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jams.2011.64.1.239","wordCount":2940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3576878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691ebb71-94ef-3c48-adab-ba86cf03ef16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3576878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"171","pagination":"p. 171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3576878","wordCount":2235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Radiation Research Society","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jo. B. Brown"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10827161"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608201706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02b54c4c-16b5-3dc6-89eb-0879a5017c7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41446522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Appalachian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Annual Bibliography, 2001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41446522","wordCount":18391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Appalachian Studies Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David E. Nye"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ea29e6b-b9d6-3689-b4e5-11f31c81335a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"618","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-618","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Technology and the Production of Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068385","wordCount":9867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Wagner"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14654253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607578676"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fe42a22-2d1a-3f3a-a75c-beaee8630a8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20711520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afterall"}],"isPartOf":"Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mechanics of Meaning, or, the Painting Machine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20711520","wordCount":5176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[2636,2723]],"Locations in B":[[5135,5222]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27829227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1df031a7-4d99-3f61-9ef6-bce889cf6a84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27829227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"456","pageStart":"448","pagination":"pp. 448-456","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27829227","wordCount":7518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Schiffer Levine"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44f7cab7-9aa8-3b1a-b8a4-870b6d9bb17d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Originality and Repetition in Finnegans Wake and Ulysses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461804","wordCount":11880,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10273]],"Locations in B":[[9673,10053]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":"Recent poststructuralist criticism argues that language cannot be understood merely as a name-giving system and that reading is not a process of deciphering language in order to pass through it to the experience it communicates. If words are part of a larger articulation, then the question of origins, and of originality, must be recast. Finnegans Wake and Ulysses play on, and with, the dilemma of originality and repetition in literary discourse. The Wake involves us in the appeal to a source, and although the origins of knowledge, authority, life, and language may remain unlocatable we continue to search for them. The Wake suggests, too, that discourse binds us to a wheel of repetition. The complex use of clich\u00e9 in Ulysses draws us even more specifically into the uses of repetition. Stereo-type is more than the butt of Joyce's satire: it shares in the whole process of deconstruction that characterizes the text.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JENNIFER BARKER"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.26.1.0073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51525883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9ab5967-4e3a-3c5e-9928-c63d72b59e6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/womgeryearbook.26.1.0073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Indifference, Identification, and Desire in Virginia Woolf\u2019s Three Guineas<\/em>, Leni Riefenstahl\u2019s The Blue Light<\/em> and Triumph of the Will<\/em>, and Leontine Sagan\u2019s Maedchen in Uniform<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/womgeryearbook.26.1.0073","wordCount":10360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Abstract This article seeks to deepen understanding of the complex and unique position of women vis-\u00e0-vis fascist ideology by examining Virginia Woolf\u2019s ideas on resistance from Three Guineas (1938) in relation to Leni Riefenstahl\u2019s The Blue Light (1932) and Triumph of the Will (1935) and Leontine Sagan\u2019s Maedchen in Uniform (1931). In Three Guineas, Woolf outlines two important ideas about women\u2019s resistance in the political arena: an outsider\u2019s indifference to patriarchal structures and an expansive identification that accepts and transforms otherness. Woolf favors indifference as the more realistic option, but in this article I argue otherwise. Examination of Riefenstahl\u2019s films and her interpretation of herself as an indifferent outsider demonstrates that women\u2019s indifference leads to further absence and even retributive violence. On the other hand, a reading of Maedchen in Uniform in relation to Woolf\u2019s theories reveals that an outsider\u2019s indifference only becomes meaningful if it is accepted and allowed to alter uniformity in a process of transformation that disrupts the tyrant\u2019s power of fascination and his hierarchical reproduction of sameness. I conclude, therefore, that the process of expansive identification taking place in Maedchen in Uniform allows the private to reorganize the public, creates a space for the recognition of women\u2019s resistance in the political world, and demonstrates that Woolf\u2019s theory of identification is a potentially effective form of antifascist resistance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tanya Kiang"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25562953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2177a986-ae82-320e-bccb-2cb63b0243aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25562953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"4","pagination":"p. 4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25562953","wordCount":903,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"76","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAOLA CORT\u00c9S-ROCCA"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4b0fc1a-737c-3db6-b9b9-e8b9b134a6d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Ghost in the Machine: Photographs of Specters in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030373","wordCount":5889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"\"Spirit Photography\" consists of photographs in which the sitter appears near to the shadowy image of a dead beloved. This essay examines the ways that this practice both reaffirms the early promise of immortality made by photography and presents the technological catastrophes of the twentieth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/955818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05332375-f634-3b27-8696-322d3fcc16af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/955818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"1285","pageStart":"1177","pagination":"pp. 1177-1285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/955818","wordCount":20764,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1534","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Fisher III"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229248","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93f6f4d6-cf1c-305a-b34d-ce408ea13690"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229248"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"1110","pageStart":"1065","pagination":"pp. 1065-1110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Texts and Contexts: The Application to American Legal History of the Methodologies of Intellectual History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229248","wordCount":24718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"In this article, Professor William Fisher surveys how recent work in American legal history has been influenced by four methodologies developed by intellectual historians. He then identifies nine possible purposes of legal history and evaluates how the four methodologies might further each objective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald A. Nielsen"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20006843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46f5751a-5ea5-35eb-9284-873911527844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20006843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"A Theory of Communicative Action or a Sociology of Civilizations? A Critique of J\u00fcrgen Habermas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20006843","wordCount":13402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marco Frascari"],"datePublished":"1990-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"550bbed2-89ad-32bb-9942-ca07081e1ecb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1424971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A New Angel\/Angle in Architectural Research: The Ideas of Demonstration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1424971","wordCount":7006,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50460,50517]],"Locations in B":[[2976,3034]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Based on a research agenda monopolized by a theory of concept embodied in normative prescriptions, present \"official\" researches in architecture are an outcome of the search for an anthological knowledge, a gathering of data that contributes to make buildings safe and durable but lacking the human quality of imagination. Seeing the imaginal dimension as the core of the profession, I present an alternative research in architecture based on a theory of image in this paper. This theory, which stresses the role of demonstration in architectural production, is based on the merging of symbolic and instrumental images. The aim suggested for future architectural research is to produce information, new \"angelic standards,\" regarding the nature of architectural demonstrations. The images necessary for these demonstrations are in an amazing thesaurus, a meandered storehouse of monstrous, non-normative technological images that are played in architectural projects, but not properly declared.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane C. Ginsburg"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5107d751-9b18-351e-9e27-aa7746715f00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26377572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"1446","pageStart":"1383","pagination":"pp. 1383-1446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Fair Use for Free, or Permitted-but-Paid?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26377572","wordCount":28635,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"The U.S. Supreme Court in Sony Corporation of America v. Universal City Studios fended a fork in the fair use road. The Court there upset the longstanding expectation that uses would rarely, if ever, be fair when the whole of a work was copied. In the aftermath of that decision, lower courts have rendered a plethora of decisions deeming the copying of an entire work (even with no additional authorship contribution) a fair use, and therefore \u201cfree\u201d in both senses of the word. A perceived social benefit or some market failure appears to motivate these decisions. This is because fair use is an on\/off switch: either the challenged use is an infringement of copyright or it is a fair use, which section 107 declares \u201cis not an infringement of copyright.\u201d As a result, either the copyright owner can stop the use, or the user not only is dispensed from obtaining permission, but also owes no compensation for the use. I contend that fair use for free should be available only where a second author copies in the creation of a new work (instances which I will call productive uses). By contrast, when the entire work is copied for essentially distributive purposes, courts and legislatures should sometimes allow the use, but subject it to an obligation to compensate authors and rights holders. This is not a radical idea: the United States is in fact an outlier in the broader international landscape of copyright exceptions. Many countries have permitted-but-paid regimes for various uses, including those by libraries, educational institutions, and technologies. Indeed, the United States has some as well, particularly respecting new technological modes of dissemination. For many authors and other members of the creative communities, while their works stoke the engines of others\u2019 enterprises, the Internet age has proffered more rags than riches. Creators should be compensated for the non-creative reuse of their works.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ilona Hongisto"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18z4gzx.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089647559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed6b1cb5-f63b-3c45-b67a-316fd196dbfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt18z4gzx.15"}],"isPartOf":"Soul of the Documentary","keyphrase":["cinema","deleuze","ranci\u00e8re","deleuze cinema","film fables","ranci\u00e8re film","guattari","deleuze guattari","chris marker","fabulation"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"139","pagination":"139-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18z4gzx.15","wordCount":12401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dale L. Morgan"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgn4q.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874216516"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cb30301-1e08-3323-b2ae-02fc5925457d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt4cgn4q.10"}],"isPartOf":"Shoshonean Peoples and the Overland Trail","keyphrase":["shoshoni","fort bridger","washakie","sho nies","utah superintendency","indian aff","wyoming shoshoni","valley","indian aff airs","mountains"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":268.0,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"127","pagination":"127-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Washakie and the Shoshoni:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt4cgn4q.10","wordCount":122794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"SCARCELY a beginning has been made in reconstructing the history of the Shoshoni. Grace Raymond Hebard in two biographies,Sacajawea<\/em>andWashakie<\/em>, dealt with the two most famous figures of Shoshoni history, and published incidentally a good deal of information about the history of the tribe, but conscientious as was Dr. Hebard\u2019s work, her books are merely suggestive of the riches that await a serious student of the Shoshoni. The same may be said of the few ethnological studies that have so far appeared. No one has yet undertaken a serious investigation of Shoshoni contacts with the Spanish frontier, a","subTitle":"A Selection of Documents from the Records of the Utah Superintendency of Indian Affairs, 1850\u20131869 (originally in ten parts, 1953\u20131957)","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter John Chen"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt2jbkkn.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781922144393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"869c6ec6-8d8e-3683-b2b5-16f65e7fbc8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt2jbkkn.17"}],"isPartOf":"Australian Politics in a Digital Age","keyphrase":["accessed","twitter","social","html accessed","public","ojs indexphp","election","canberra","democracy","policy"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"215","pagination":"215-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt2jbkkn.17","wordCount":13729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peggy J. Miller","Heidi Fung","Shumin Lin","Eva Chian-Hui Chen","Benjamin R. Boldt"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41408750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037976X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a79325a7-7267-344a-8bbc-a2a060a68d9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41408750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monosociresechil"}],"isPartOf":"Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":148.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-viii, 1-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Education","Psychology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"HOW SOCIALIZATION HAPPENS ON THE GROUND: NARRATIVE PRACTICES AS ALTERNATE SOCIALIZING PATHWAYS IN TAIWANESE AND EUROPEAN-AMERICAN FAMILIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41408750","wordCount":57780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":"This monograph builds upon our cumulative efforts to investigate personal storytelling as a medium of socialization in two disparate cultural worlds.Drawing upon interdisciplinary fields of study that take a discourse-centered approach to socialization, we combined ethnography, longitudinal home observations, and microlevel analysis of everyday talk to study this problem in Taiwanese families in Taipei and European-American families in Longwood, Chicago. Comparative analyses of 192 hours of video-recorded observations revealed that conversational stories of young children's past experiences occurred in both sites at remarkably similar rates and continued apace across the age span (2,6, 3,0, 3,6, and 4,0), yielding nearly 900 narrations. These and other similarities coexisted with differences in culturally salient interpretive frameworks and participant roles, forming distinct socializing pathways.The Taipei families enacted a didactic framework, prolifically and elaborately narrating and correcting children's misdeeds. They privileged the bystander and listener roles for child participants, whereas the Longwood families privileged the co-narrator role. The Longwood families repeatedly enacted a child-affirming interpretive framework, erasing or downplaying children's misdeeds, accentuating their strengths, accepting their preferences, and lightening stories with humor. Over time, the Taipei and Longwood children participated more actively and developed holistic but divergent senses of problem, reflecting the distinct socializing pathways that they navigated day by day.These findings open a window on how socialization operates on the ground: Socialization through personal storytelling is a highly dynamic process in which redundancy and variation are conjoined and children participate as active, creative, affectively engaged meaning makers.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44434222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0096736X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e846edf-8fec-34bb-bfae-f20bddb8ba9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44434222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saetransactions"}],"isPartOf":"SAE Transactions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":460.0,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1, 3-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Systems science","Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44434222","wordCount":559707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"SAE International","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Will Hasty"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35900a42-cf24-30a5-b796-49895ee24023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20622246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Singularity of Aura and the Artistry of Translation: Martin Luther's Bible as Artwork","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622246","wordCount":6080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":"The present essay argues that Martin Luther's Bible translation is an important moment in the cultural history of aura as conceptualized by Walter Benjamin. Luther's vernacular New Testament, along with the larger translation project of which it was the auspicious beginning, is one of the most important and influential of translations, and in his \"Sendbrief vom Dolmetschen\" (1530), Luther provides crucial information about how he approached his translation that is important for an appreciation of its distinctive aura. We shall see that, in the \"Sendbrief,\" Luther conceives of his Bible as a work of art, and of his translating activity in terms of a very individual kind of artistry. This view of Luther's Bible within the context of Benjamin's conception of aura contributes to the understanding both of the cultural importance of the early modern Bible translation and also of the influential early 20th century essay on the artwork in the age of its technical reproducibility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Tatham"],"datePublished":"1985-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027359"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a60eaf9-6b28-3698-ad65-bb0e396f98be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1594401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanartj"}],"isPartOf":"American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Elihu Vedder's \"Lair of the Sea Serpent\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594401","wordCount":8409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Kennedy Galleries, Inc.","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Masco"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9658a9f-2f28-32ac-82cb-2cc086f1d550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"It is a Strict Law That Bids Us Dance\": Cosmologies, Colonialism, Death, and Ritual Authority in the Kwakwaka'wakw Potlatch, 1849 to 1922","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179376","wordCount":17779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Natasha Kurchanova"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb77683b-e034-301e-b65b-3ae0d8d3aaea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40598956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Totalitarianism of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40598956","wordCount":3132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41a19dd-7337-3730-9828-52f91540c7b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44371872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371872","wordCount":527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roshanak Kheshti"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c261e6fc-a979-3cd6-b702-8a12788a6175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"731","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-731","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Touching Listening: The Aural Imaginary in the World Music Culture Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237573","wordCount":9695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Thoburn"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt1j7x9vm.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780816621965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3497bfd-5901-323f-a0a5-d3c1ebdb863f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctt1j7x9vm.11"}],"isPartOf":"Anti-Book","keyphrase":["deleuze","guattari","gilles deleuze","thousand plateaus","f\u00e9lix guattari","mao tse","richard kostelanetz","deleuze and guattari","university","scum manifesto"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"301","pagination":"301-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctt1j7x9vm.11","wordCount":20630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Soli\u00f1a Barreiro"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43798876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48150607"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"768cfc2d-7a8d-32c0-af48-ea95e7fed9cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43798876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Epstein's \"The Fall of the House of Usher\": Research on Altered States of Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43798876","wordCount":6281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Griffin"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"223d7011-3ab8-3311-b129-8cf72516dd32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Literary Studies +\/- Literature: Friedrich A. Kittler's Media Histories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057386","wordCount":3630,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11366,11531]],"Locations in B":[[9484,9649]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen H. Cutcliffe","Christine M. Roysdon","Judith A. Adams","Jane Morley","Louis Rodriquez","Ian Winship"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3105563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a32b443c-d70c-3f00-8f88-043382d0c6b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3105563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":155.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1986)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3105563","wordCount":86629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREAS BUSCHE"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15323978"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51005951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41167250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movingimage"}],"isPartOf":"The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"JUST ANOTHER FORM OF IDEOLOGY? Ethical and Methodological Principles in Film Restoration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167250","wordCount":11968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN H. D. BUCHLOH"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77178ce5-4181-3cd5-a870-78f59c2d6e54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23361979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painting as Diagram: Five Notes on Frank Stella's Early Paintings, 1958\u20141959","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23361979","wordCount":7014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"143","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Cooke"],"datePublished":"1990-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf87bc1e-2f26-3310-b54f-7361a9bad919"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Locality, Structure, and Agency: A Theoretical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656501","wordCount":5924,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francisco Gonz\u00e1lez","Beatriz Sarlo"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b576ce5-0b2a-3632-9ad0-997b2b801463"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Forgetting Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354703","wordCount":3265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"49","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":189.0,"pageEnd":"831","pageStart":"643","pagination":"pp. 643-831","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Individual Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902383","wordCount":159455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1928-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f3aee0b-c23a-3bf9-907e-19e757422d9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":122.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twenty Third Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to October 1927)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224774","wordCount":44920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saverio Tomaiuolo"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45287881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00822841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"971e49d6-0e26-3ef2-a7a3-316435e4c46e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45287881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tennresebull"}],"isPartOf":"Tennyson Research Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tennyson and the Crisis of the Narrative Voice in Maud","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45287881","wordCount":6999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Tennyson Society","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["COURTNEY A. RAYES","JAMES BEATTIE","IAN C. DUGGAN"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09673407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45739177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14a594b8-84be-348a-b1a7-550bc01981f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24810623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"environmenthist"}],"isPartOf":"Environment and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Boring Through History: An Environmental History of the Extent, Impact and Management of Marine Woodborers in a Global and Local Context, 500 BCE to 1930s CE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810623","wordCount":15114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"White Horse Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"While depictions of mariners fighting fearsome sea monsters or battling terrifying storms entertain us to this day, it is perhaps ironic that one of the main threats to commerce over the last millennium or more has come from a series of very small organisms whose history has been submerged in historical accounts. Despite their marked long-term and large-scale impacts on global marine infrastructure, shipping and economies, shipworms, pillbugs and gribbles \u2013 collectively referred to as marine woodborers \u2013 have received no substantial scholarly attention from environmental historians. This article first overviews their historical spread around the world, demonstrating, too, their disruption of global travel and trade, then traces past problems and management attempts in New Zealand from the arrival of the first humans, c. 1300, to the 1930s. New Zealand presents a particularly rich study demonstrating the spread, impacts and management responses to marine woodborers. Until the more widespread and successful use from the 1900s of both ferro-concrete pilings and chromated copper arsenate (CCA) as a wood preservative, colonists in different parts of New Zealand unknowingly experimented with techniques which had failed elsewhere in the country. A longstanding inability to learn from past failures in nineteenth-century New Zealand demonstrates the lack of co-ordinated application of management techniques in the colony, and suggests both the fragmentation of colonial knowledge and the limitations of colonial science, as new ideas were introduced at a local level rather than nationally. Due to the overwhelming attention given to globalisation's role in spreading terrestrial plants and animals \u2013 and to a lesser extent aquatic freshwater fishes \u2013 an examination of the extent and response to marine woodborers provides significant new perspectives on the neglected subject of non-indigenous marine organisms.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL MARTIN"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41220407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bc78edf-92e2-3fe8-9628-b6c938ed4af2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41220407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Railway Fatigue and the Coming-of-Age Narrative in \"Lady Audley's Secret\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41220407","wordCount":11542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter S. Menell","David Nimmer"],"datePublished":"2007-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aff7284a-0ad8-3461-a32c-65599c0c78e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20439117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85.0,"pageEnd":"1025","pageStart":"941","pagination":"pp. 941-1025","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Unwinding Sony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439117","wordCount":37602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":"The dawning of the digital age has brought the Supreme Court's Sony \"Staple article of commerce\" doctrine to center stage in legal and policy discussions about the proper role and scope of copyright protection. The origins of this doctrine have always been somewhat obscure. Without reference to the text or the legislative history of the then-recently enacted overhaul of the copyright system, the Supreme Court adverted to patent law to determine the scope of indirect liabilita--a fundamental issue that would loom large in the subsequent shift from the analog to the digital distribution platform for content. A slim majority of the Supreme Court justified this interpretation of the Copyright Act of 1976 on the basis of a vague assertion of \"historic kinship\" between patent and copyright. This Article scrutinizes that critical logical premise. Part I exhaustively reviews the litigation and correspondence of the justices to understand why the Court paid so little attention to the legislative materials while paying so much to the patent law. It finds that gaps in the information provided to the Court, in conjunction with the Justices' unfamiliarity with copyright law generally and the Copyright Act of 1976 in particular, led the Court astray. Part II tests the \"historic kinship\" premise, finding that it cannot withstand scrutiny. Had the Court traced the origins of copyright and patent back to their sources, it would have seen that both areas of jurisprudence derive from a common wellspring: tort principles. Concerns about patent misuse and improper leveraging of monopoly power led the courts, and later Congress, to carve out an express safe harbor in patent law for sellers of \"staple articles of commerce\" -- products suitable for substantial non-infringing uses. Part III demonstrates that the 1976 Copyright Act envisioned that courts would continue to use the traditional tort wellspring, informed by the distinctive challenges of copyright enforcement. That course of action would have brought the reasonable alternative design framework of products liability law into play. The Article shows that this approach almost certainly would have resulted in the same outcome that the Sony Court reached; but, of critical importance, it would have provided a more sound and dynamic jurisprudential framework for calibrating liability as new technologies develop.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shannon McKellar"],"datePublished":"1999-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/855029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/855029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Music, Image and Ideology in Britten's 'Owen Wingrave': Conflict in a Fissured Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/855029","wordCount":9477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Dunn"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a328962-8dc1-3ad3-876a-f20267106130"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Contrapontos Fragment\u00e1rios: Meta-Fic\u00e7\u00e3o E Produ\u00e7\u00e3o Simb\u00f3lica Em \"O Conceto de Jo\u00e3o Gilberto No Rio de Janeiro\" de S\u00e9rgio Sant'Anna","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741433","wordCount":5638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Petra Watzke"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/femigermstud.34.2018.0049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25785206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1038016337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2018200276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe728597-acbe-3310-bcf1-012e21d430c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/femigermstud.34.2018.0049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femigermstud"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist German Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Objects and Objectification: Women and Technology in Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach's Lotti, die Uhrmacherin<\/em> and \u201cEin Original\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/femigermstud.34.2018.0049","wordCount":11384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"This essay examines representations of women's relationships to technical objects as a negotiation of ownership and control in Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach's Lotti, die Uhrmacherin (1880; Lotti, the watchmaker) and \u201cEin Original\u201d (1898; \u201cOne of a Kind,\u201d 2001). I consider how the protagonists and objects in these two stories interact with, transform, and destabilize each other. Their engagement speaks to underlying issues of women's objectification in late-nineteenth-century society. Ultimately, both female protagonists, in struggling through their social objectification and relationship to everyday objects, communicate a frustration with gender-based social injustice. I apply object-oriented feminism to my examination of the relationships between objects and female protagonists in this literature in order to demonstrate how hierarchical power structures and the social circumscription of women's roles are negotiated in the object world through the industrial, patriarchal culture of the late nineteenth century.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Alf\u00f6ldi","Marvin C. Ross"],"datePublished":"1959-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1291132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00707546"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3489e8b8-60f4-3420-9396-353c5bff6461"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1291132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dumboakspape"}],"isPartOf":"Dumbarton Oaks Papers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169+171-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Cornuti: A Teutonic Contingent in the Service of Constantine the Great and Its Decisive Role in the Battle at the Milvian Bridge. With a Discussion of Bronze Statuettes of Constantine the Great","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1291132","wordCount":8137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Dumbarton Oaks, Trustees for Harvard University","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lane Kauffman"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Critical Theory: The Nonidentity Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465028","wordCount":6205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JANAKI NAIR"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5331426-2d66-3676-9599-7486b6ce6efb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24494220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"1587","pageStart":"1549","pagination":"pp. 1549-1587","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mysore's Wembley? The Dasara Exhibition's Imagined Economies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494220","wordCount":16065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"Most scholarly works on exhibitionary practices of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have focused on the meaning and importance of display, and the cultural bases, and indeed biases, that supported various inclusions and exclusions. The exhibition has usually formed part of a larger narrative of new rituals that were enacted in the modern period to serve, variously, imperial, market or patriotic objectives. Can the persistence with which the Princely Mysore state organized its Dasara Exhibition from 1907 until well after independence be understood solely within these frames? In both its choice of location and its timing, the Dasara Exhibition was organized with dogged insistence, despite its obvious failures. This can only be understood in relation to the larger changes that were envisaged for the economy of the region, as the state attempted to build a supplement, even an alternative, to the princely splendour and pomp that was on conspicuous display. This paper looks at the subtle changes and shifts that occurred during the first half of the twentieth century in exhibitionary practices as they related to both real and envisaged changes within the economy that the Mysore bureaucracy was obliged to bring into being.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ram\u00f3n Sald\u00edvar"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a428094-47d4-39be-8153-2eb01f2614c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Dialectic of Difference: Towards a Theory of the Chicano Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466954","wordCount":9656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ezra Y. S. Tjung","Daniel Kaufmann","Michael G. Littman"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jwashacadscie.100.3.0049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00430439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563621283"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bd8f78d-40a3-381b-8b65-1ff1ac3dd2fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jwashacadscie.100.3.0049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwashacadscie"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational administration","Political science - Government","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Joseph Henry's House and Plan for the Princeton Campus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jwashacadscie.100.3.0049","wordCount":6664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Washington Academy of Sciences","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"Joseph Henry is often credited with the design of the Joseph Henry House, a registered National Historic Landmark on the Princeton University Campus. Joseph Henry was Professor of Natural Philosophy and Mathematics at Princeton College at the beginning of the 19th century. He also taught Architecture and Geology, and had worked earlier in the State of New York as a surveyor. In 1846, Prof. Henry moved to Washington, D.C. to assume leadership of the Smithsonian as its first Secretary. We set out to verify that Joseph Henry was responsible for the design of the House that bears his name, and found to our surprise that it is unlikely he designed it. Our conclusion is based on reviewing: financial documents and other College records; published and unpublished papers and letters of Joseph Henry; and, the diary of a College Building Committee member. We have established that Ezekial Howell, a local mason, was the principal builder of the house. We also determined that Charles Steadman, a local builder and carpenter, was responsible for certain drawings of the house. While it is possible that Steadman, as draftsman, was following Henry's specifications, we find that this is unlikely given that the 1838 house is so similar to others previously built by Steadman in the Princeton area. Prof. Henry did make his own drawing for a house and submitted it to the Building Committee, but his design is not like the design of the house that was built. That withstanding, Joseph Henry did select the location of the house as well as that of several other early buildings as part of his influential Campus Plan. A previously unknown freehand draft of the Campus Plan was discovered at the Smithsonian indicating the location of several unrealized buildings.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Solomon"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"545405c4-1bd0-3661-abd1-712ca1f8d7d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20479846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Capote and the Trillings: Homophobia and Literary Culture: At Midcentury","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479846","wordCount":14378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Negar Mottahedeh"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad520c04-7754-392f-9194-90fe818bdefc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25597580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Iranian Cinema in the Twentieth Century: A Sensory History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597580","wordCount":7152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"This essay addresses itself to the century long history of cinema in Iran, focusing on the history of the senses as they combine with and are extended by film technologies. It argues that Khomeini's aim was to produce a transformed and Shi'ite Iran by purifying the sensorial national body by means of film technologies.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Niedenthal"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf1ab842-615d-3111-9882-c5165bb01b67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Glamourized Houses\": Neutra, Photography, and the Kaufmann House","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425171","wordCount":7184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"The current debate on reproduction and architectural publication has established new terms for the examination of architectural photographs. No longer treated simply as a species of architectural documentation--such as renderings or plans--photographs of building are acknowledged as sharing in the cultural power of the photographic medium and must consequently be examined as a form of social production. The publication of Richard Neutra's 1946 Kaufmann house reveals the power of the print media in the establishment of an architectural canon; moreover, Neutra's habit of reworking photographs of his built designs suggests the appropriateness of reexamining his contribution to the legacy of involving photography and the media in the architectural process.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Tobias","William B. Thesing","Dorothy Mermin","John Maynard","Carole Silver","Frank Giordano Jr.","Jerome Bump","Joseph Sendry","Benjamin Franklin Fisher IV"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"426c7554-87cf-3bd5-9fd1-998753517fbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry: 1984","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003027","wordCount":26977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magdalena Perkowska-\u00c1lvarez"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2f0a156-2d31-3617-9678-db58a7ea564b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El ojo de la guerra y la mirada ilusionada: Reflexiones sobre el corpus fotogr\u00e1fico en \"La llegada (Cr\u00f3nica con \"Ficci\u00f3n\")\" de Jos\u00e9 Luis Gonz\u00e1lez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119905","wordCount":11089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"62","publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26314831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"704c08bb-73b8-38d2-ad53-95878c1ebb77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26314831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26314831","wordCount":4932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise E. J. Hornby"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21ee8777-4dad-3108-9b2c-addbad53cb3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25570958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Visual Clockwork: Photographic Time and the Instant in \"Proteus\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570958","wordCount":8258,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/4","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"42\/43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23805366"},{"name":"oclc","value":"926718072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015203103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"accb351c-3087-315c-b41d-5e64afdb4bab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43481214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefine"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Employees JULY 2004-JUNE 2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43481214","wordCount":4334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vicky Unruh"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2503698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31483f51-7dd5-3a1b-9335-c5ef1460ec7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2503698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mariategui's Aesthetic Thought: A Critical Reading of the Avant-Gardes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2503698","wordCount":11854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-05-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1708858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43a521ee-1940-3525-b9e5-ed7c41e8ebbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1708858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":135.0,"pageEnd":"601","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1708858","wordCount":64099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3515","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"136","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-17","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3833398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28f2b6d3-8092-3fa5-a290-eccb0f1c4ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3833398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3833398","wordCount":31612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5605","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"299","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lois Oppenheim"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"752","pageStart":"741","pagination":"pp. 741-752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Animation of the Work of Art: Michel Butor's L'Embarquement de la Reine de Saba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904972","wordCount":4925,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35878,37052]],"Locations in B":[[18495,19661]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Maynard"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b12a1cb9-7bca-3067-a1e0-c87a5496e972"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/667422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"745","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-745","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Arts, Agents, Artifacts: Photography's Automatisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667422","wordCount":7600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence J. Ross"],"datePublished":"1967-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70240550-c2c6-3dfc-9e96-039a5caceafe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41152432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Symbol and Structure in the \"Secunda Pastorum\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152432","wordCount":14081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Comparative Drama","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Connor"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de35a6b6-6256-32fb-b046-56b621226bb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Strategies for Hyperreal Travelers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240215","wordCount":5999,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6997]],"Locations in B":[[6983,7396]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":"Hyperreality occurs in a culture when that culture loses the distinction between image and thing, appearance and reality. By reifying the image, the hyperreal culture opens a new level in ontology midway between textual reality and object reality. The difference between original and copy, thing and mirror image collapses, so that all stand at the same ontological level. In this way, a culture has \"More,\" viz. that added bit of hype-turned-sense-impression that is blended into the original mixture to create a new experience. The colors on color TV are more colorful than in real life, as the fake desert at Disneyland is more desert-like. Women and men in magazines are more beautiful than real people, and a pinch of monosodium glutamate brings out the flavor in every meal. There are two strategies for creating hyperreal cultures. The first is \"apophatic,\" a term borrowed from Medieval mysticism, meaning \"The Negative Way.\" In this strategy, the real world is deconstructed into mirror images, its reality undercut. This is the way used by Borges and Lem, Borges by associating the world with mirror images, Lem by constructing a \"carousel\" form of reasoning, whereby each argument leads to its opposite, and then leads back again to the original premise. The second strategy is \"cataphatic,\" or \"The Positive Way,\" which raises the sensory order of appearance until it approaches that of the default, real world. Here, more and more of the real world is assimilated into the simulation, reproduced in the reproduction, until the two versions of the world approach one another asymptotically. This is the strategy employed by the creators of Virtual Reality technology. The real world gradually becomes indistinguishable from the simulacra. Hyperreal cultures are produced by both of these \"ways.\" Gradually, image and reality mix, until a new kind of reality is produced.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51a42862-1397-3d2f-90c2-0d4b77ef4947"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1840762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"732","pageStart":"678","pagination":"pp. 678-732","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notices of Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840762","wordCount":30757,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1844345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"242e035c-9c13-394d-997c-799399a6fee4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1844345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"971","pageStart":"906","pagination":"pp. 906-971","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1844345","wordCount":38376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Shank"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"537a1096-85a5-3a1c-bdf5-2793f8341920"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41237578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"855","pageStart":"831","pagination":"pp. 831-855","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Political Agency of Musical Beauty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41237578","wordCount":12150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juliano Spyer"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1wc7rdn.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787351660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ea89d81-4483-3adb-9252-800cd54da15a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1wc7rdn.13"}],"isPartOf":"Social Media in Emergent Brazil","keyphrase":["s\u00e3o paulo","baldu\u00edno","plano cde","brenneis","classe m\u00e9dia","ci\u00eancias sociais","ibge pnad","pelo contr\u00e1rio","brasileira s\u00e3o","cde ibge"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"199","pagination":"199-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Technology","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1wc7rdn.13","wordCount":20457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karin L. Crawford"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25609151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91d90ccc-0de0-364f-80f8-f579f62e9349"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25609151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gender and Terror in Gerhard Richter's October 18, 1977 and Don DeLillo's \"Baader-Meinhof\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25609151","wordCount":11043,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[19533,19600]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"107","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-11-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2878619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fdf9311-256e-315b-b335-208236d8247e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2878619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"872","pageStart":"844","pagination":"pp. 844-872","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2878619","wordCount":27461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4982","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"250","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rodchenko's Monochromes and the Perfection of Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167645","wordCount":10521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"46","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth C. Land"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fe2c797-2b39-360b-913f-c760ee13818a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1149","pageStart":"1147","pagination":"pp. 1147-1149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231342","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Wolin"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"151d28f5-4df3-39e8-8475-c3b264fb7198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Benjamin's Materialist Theory of Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657284","wordCount":12348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dell Upton"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43323752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02772426"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43323752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landscapej"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sound as Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43323752","wordCount":8345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"This essay explores the role of sounds in the antebellum city, challenging our customary emphasis on the visible and the designed or intentional in the cultural landscape. It examines the ways in which nineteenth-century Americans interpreted ambient urban sounds, ranging from industrial noises to articulate speech, as parts of a continuum that paralleled the cues of social order and disorder. Then as now, discussion of urban environmental reform was inextricably entwined with ideals of identity and social roles. The implication is that any study of place\u2014of the ways that environments can enrich the self and society\u2014must engage these intangible aspects of urban experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27854949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11709197-5888-3ca5-ae6c-34a2ba019f68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27854949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"655","pageStart":"650","pagination":"pp. 650-655","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27854949","wordCount":9261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-12-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1741254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd5c79b7-e2de-30dc-b008-bad040b3b83e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1741254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1140","pageStart":"1131","pagination":"pp. 1131-1140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1741254","wordCount":10803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4219","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"190","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandie Holgun"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7073f0c-9171-3106-a47c-f89402f2870a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"1426","pageStart":"1399","pagination":"pp. 1399-1426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cNational Spain Invites You\u201d: Battlefield Tourism during the Spanish Civil War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.110.5.1399","wordCount":15172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcus D. Watson","Evans A. Atuick"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcd9fff0-6c2d-30e0-b4fe-c37fd20e5a21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43905008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cell Phones and Alienation among Bulsa of Ghana's Upper East Region: \u201dThe Call Calls You Away\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905008","wordCount":10011,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56079]],"Locations in B":[[50361,50489]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"Many scholars have concluded, perhaps prematurely, that information and communication technologies (ICTs) are inherently empowering for Africans. In order to look more closely at the impact of ICTs on relationships and society, this article focuses on everyday life. Specifically, it uses ethnographic methods and the theory of \"affordances\" to illuminate the use of cell phones among Bulsa of Ghana's Upper East Region. While cell phones help users connect with distant loved ones, they also plant seeds of alienation between users and those who remain physically present. These changes are evident in new body habits and in social behaviors that would be culturally unacceptable in face-to-face interactions but are largely excused in the interventions of the virtual world. De nombreux chercheurs ont conclu, peut-\u00eatre pr\u00e9matur\u00e9ment, que les technologies de la information et de la communication (TIC) \u00e9taient des outils de lib\u00e9ration pour les Africains. Afin d\u2019examiner de plus pr\u00e8s l\u2019impact des TIC sur les relations et la soci\u00e9t\u00e9, cet article se concentre sur certains aspects de la vie quotidienne. Plus pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment, il utilise des m\u00e9thodes ethnographiques et la th\u00e9orie de Gibson du principe d'\"affordance\u201d pour mettre en lumi\u00e8re l'impact de l'utilisation des t\u00e9l\u00e9phones cellulaires chez les Bulsa de la r\u00e9gion nord est du Ghana. Bien que les t\u00e9l\u00e9phones cellulaires permettent aux utilisateurs de communiquer avec leurs proches \u00e9loign\u00e9s, ils plantent aussi des graines d'ali\u00e9nation entre les utilisateurs et ceux qui restent physiquement pres\u00e9nts. Ces changements sont \u00e9vidents dans de nouveaux comportements physiques et sociaux qui seraient culturellement inacceptables en face-\u00e0-face, mais qui sont largement tol\u00e9r\u00e9es dans le contexte du monde virtuel.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1222650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00400262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bc8338f-3314-373b-b6fe-3c38bb35ac7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1222650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"taxon"}],"isPartOf":"Taxon","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"634","pageStart":"620","pagination":"pp. 620-634","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1222650","wordCount":9838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"International Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT)","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Spurr"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1qv5nb5.9","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61c31b03-739f-3edf-be09-7ef0cca0733b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1qv5nb5.9"}],"isPartOf":"Architecture and Modern Literature","keyphrase":["viollet","ruskin","restoration","gothic","architectural","allegory","symbol","aesthetic","architectural restoration","ruin and restoration"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"142","pagination":"142-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Figures of Ruin and Restoration:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1qv5nb5.9","wordCount":7692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The two most prominent architectural theorists of the nineteenth century\u2014Eug\u00e8ne-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc and John Ruskin, both champions of the Gothic\u2014held diametrically opposed ideas on the question of architectural restoration. Viollet-le-Duc devoted a successful career to restoring many of France\u2019s great architectural monuments of the Middle Ages and wrote extensively in defense of his practices. Ruskin, on the other hand, abhorred restoration of any kind, and defended the aesthetic value of ruins. The reason for this difference in architectural doctrine has been put down to one of temperament between the rationalarchitecte de terrain<\/em> and the eccentric Oxford aesthete. However, in attempting","subTitle":"Ruskin and Viollet-le-Duc","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38376720"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a45a580d-60a5-3155-bb22-0106c225ac2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25618492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlibr"}],"isPartOf":"American Libraries","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618492","wordCount":7327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Spence"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2001.75.1.33","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c13f2cd1-a3f1-344e-9c21-0ec4f6d307fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2001.75.1.33"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Van Gogh in Alabama, 1936","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2001.75.1.33","wordCount":11311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurel Kendall"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23943287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20937288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ae85379-6314-3f8b-a3d4-9502869da1a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23943287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorereli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Korean Religions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-91, 93-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"On the Problem of Material Religion and Its Prospects for the Study of Korean Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23943287","wordCount":8316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Institute for the Study of Religion, Sogang University, Korea","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"This paper argues that the \"material turn\" evident both in recent scholarly studies of East Asian religion (and religious studies more generally) and within the discipline of anthropology holds great promise for the study of Korean religions. The study of material religion raises questions about how aspects of the material world come to be regarded as sacred, how they come to be regarded as empowered and agentive things, how devotees engage material religion through embodied practice and visual regimes of understanding and venerating, and how specific historic moments influence material religion. Anthropology brings to the discussion an awareness of material objects as possible nodes of human relationships, relationships between humans and gods or other entities, and between humans, deities, positive and negative power, and the sacred things themselves. It raises questions about the production, maintenance, and proper disposal of sacred objects. It also brings magic back into the mix as a means of understanding some of the essentially religious ways contemporary people contend with the quirkiness of the market and other uncertainties, and how the modern commodity market itself accommodates the production, appropriation, and consumption of sacred and magical goods.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1934-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3256951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"151a4743-a010-3275-99c4-f9da37218393"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3256951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metrmuseartbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3256951","wordCount":5155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Inga Pollmann"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5nph05.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462983656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8b6d983-704d-3692-b6be-061286dbe277"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv5nph05.6"}],"isPartOf":"Cinematic Vitalism","keyphrase":["uexk\u00fcll","umwelt","animal","diorama","nipper","gramophone","perception","umwelt theory","new worlds","painting"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"97","pagination":"97-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"New Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv5nph05.6","wordCount":27240,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35267,35361]],"Locations in B":[[96649,96743]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In 1934, the German biologist Jakob von Uexk\u00fcll published his second book, intended for a general audience. Streifz\u00fcge durch die Umwelten von Tieren und Menschen: Ein Bilderbuch unsichtbarer Welten<\/em> (A Foray into the Worlds of Animals and Humans: Picture Book of Invisible Worlds<\/em>) promised its readers \u2018 worlds (that) are not only unknown; they are also invisible\u2019. At the same time, it invited its readers to transform their very way of seeing and step into a new world: We begin such a stroll on a sunny day before a flowering meadow in which insects buzz and butterflies flutter, and we","subTitle":"Uexk\u00fcll\u2019s Umwelt Theory at the Movies","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ravi Sundaram"],"datePublished":"2004-01-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4414465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4171b9c6-0181-3536-a378-c6240be24cad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4414465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Uncanny Networks: Pirate, Urban and New Globalisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4414465","wordCount":8774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"Cities have borne the brunt of the new globalisation both in transformative and imaginative terms. Yet at the very moment that scholarship seems ready to engage with the Indian city, contemporary globalisation has in fact slowly eroded the old modernist compact of 'the city'. This splintered urbanism has become a significant theatre of elite engagement with claims of globalisation. Using Delhi's media networks as an example this article suggests that new domains of non-legal practices could pose significant problems for classic strategies of incorporation and management in political society. These non-legal domains open up new spaces of disorder and constant conflict in Indian cities that threaten the current self-perceptions of the globalising elite.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Johnson"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"What Is Cultural Studies Anyway?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466285","wordCount":21323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"16","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Gottheil"],"datePublished":"1905-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1451043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216682"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56634092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213347"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01a479c7-894c-3199-94c4-fb38f10bbb8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1451043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewiquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Jewish Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"655","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-655","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Some Hebrew Manuscripts in Cairo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1451043","wordCount":18858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b58b1637-f458-3d5a-9b0f-7361b5fd0e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463190","wordCount":27904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey L. Kidder"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01956086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f9ba993-cb92-357f-a46d-d44f116dcbc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symbinte"}],"isPartOf":"Symbolic Interaction","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Bike Messengers and the Really Real: Effervescence, Reflexivity, and Postmodern Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/si.2006.29.3.349","wordCount":12024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"review-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Out of more than two thousand bike messengers in New York City, a few hundred participate in alleycats\u2014illegal races held in open traffic. Surrounding this racing scene is a vibrant messenger community. Messengers who race in or attend alleycats carry their messenger identity into all aspects of their lives. Through direct participant observation, this article proposes that alleycats function as Durkheimian rituals for these messengers. Alleycats express the central values of the social world. Lost in collective effervescence, the individual confronts these values as objectified truths, which allow messengers to form stable identities. Further, bicycles, messenger bags, and other objects become sacred symbols within this ritualization process. The ability of messengers to construct such nonreflexive identities is juxtaposed with theories about the self in postmodernity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Marrinan"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dreams of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360672","wordCount":5783,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841]],"Locations in B":[[21904,22115]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ENDA DUFFY","MAURIZIA BOSCAGLI"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72c1da14-1ed4-3594-8c70-6d0069a30dbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: JOYCE, BENJAMIN AND MAGICAL URBANISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871331","wordCount":11374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg Baselitz","Christian Katti","Kirk Ambrose","Elizabeth Edwards","Ursula Anna Frohne","Cordula Grewe","Daniel Heller-Roazen","Ian McLean","Saloni Mathur","Lisa Pon","Iain Boyd Whyte"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb1f3fe2-995d-3e04-8dc1-9f572cb9939a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23268310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"NOTES FROM THE FIELD: Appropriation: Back Then, In Between, and Today","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268310","wordCount":15631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anson Rabinbach"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23736493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10450300"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67815944-bbf1-31f9-bdf7-0cb4bbd67b16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23736493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germpolisoci"}],"isPartOf":"German Politics & Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"German-Jewish Connections: The New York Intellectuals and the Frankfurt School in Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23736493","wordCount":8733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3 (36)","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael B. MacDonald"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eea0effa-8ceb-3cfc-b12c-7bde04154052"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CRITICAL PEDAGOGY OF AESTHETIC SYSTEMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157175","wordCount":5247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"475","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giulio Douhet"],"datePublished":"2019-09-01","docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep19547","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"441c8b41-41e3-3e7e-bdc1-a8190b1d59a2"}],"isPartOf":null,"keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":378.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Command of the Air","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep19547","wordCount":150687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Air University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Giulio Douhet stands out among military theorists for his prescient insights into how the advent of airpower would change modern warfare. Despite having very little actual flying experience, Douhet formed a theory of airpower that still deserves study today. He recognized that the development of the airplane would make \u201ccommand of the air\u201d the first objective in any campaign and the ultimate enabler of victory in war. While his insights into the importance of air superiority deserve study, it is his recognition of how the character of war would change in the airpower age that proved prophetic. In true Clausewitzian","subTitle":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Table of Contents","Foreword","Editor\u2019s Preface","Introduction to the 1983 Edition","Preface to the 1927 Edition","Book Two:","Index","Back Matter"],"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1936-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46d185b6-43bd-317a-b18a-9bd079f045a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/225403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":92.0,"pageEnd":"613","pageStart":"522","pagination":"pp. 522-613","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Forty-Sixth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To End of February 1936,--With Special Reference to China and Japan)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225403","wordCount":29797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter L. 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In this article, I reconsider the relationship between the piano piece and the excerpt from Lenau's Faust (pub. 1836) that inspired it, and I explore potential programmatic interpretations of the rhetorical features and idiosyncratic structure of the music, informed by knowledge of Liszt's aesthetic stance around this period. This hermeneutic approach is framed in terms of certain important sociocultural concerns of the time, including the widespread fascination with the virtuoso as a daemonic agent. The poetic excerpt tells of a crowd being roused to frenzy by the playing of a diabolical instrumentalist, a process that the piece both depicts and (in the act of performance) reenacts. This also links back to Liszt's mercurial career as a performer, during which period such scenes were commonplace. Written long after he had ceased his tours as a virtuoso to concentrate on composition, the Waltz may use Liszt's own remembered experiences, but more importantly it is part of the legacy whereby he hoped to ensure his own lasting place in the cultural memory.","subTitle":"Liszt's Mephisto Waltz<\/em> and the Encounter with Virtuosity","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. 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Medical sciences","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26373573","wordCount":41032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avital Ronell"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 62-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Differends of Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465389","wordCount":6853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ricarda Schmidt"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aa8e47b-d963-3e02-81d6-987a6d86dba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"E.T.A. Hoffman's \"Der Sandmann\": An Early Example of \u00c9criture F\u00e9minine? A Critique of Trends in Feminist Literary Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688700","wordCount":9120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Forster"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.34.4.114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18307315-2006-3a7f-a7f4-09b211d6cbd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.34.4.114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Pornometric Gospel: Wyndham Lewis, Walter Sickert and the History of the Nude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.34.4.114","wordCount":10862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"In this essay I argue that changes in technologies of reproduction precipitated a crisis in the status of the nude evident in the paintings of Walter Sickert and in Wyndham Lewis's novel Tarr. I begin with a controversy between the English painters Walter Sickert and Wyndham Lewis in which each accuses the other of producing pornography, rather than art. I trace this conflict to the differing responses of these two figures to the changing place of the nude in English culture at the beginning of the twentieth century. I close by considering the suffragette Mary Richardson alongside Lewis and Sickert. Each of these figures, I contend, used violence as a way to respond to the nude and its position within the larger culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Coyne"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"015045f1-db6a-3892-94c9-18f1674cfd1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1575952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Heidegger and Virtual Reality: The Implications of Heidegger's Thinking for Computer Representations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575952","wordCount":10250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This author addresses the assumptions that underlie most research into virtual reality (VR) and other interactive computer systems. These assumptions relate to tensions between views of perception as a matter of data input versus the notion of perception as mental construction. Similarly, there is a tension between the assumption that pictures are meaningful as representations of things and the opposing idea that pictures are meaningful as socially constructed human practices. Aspects of the philosophy of Martin Heidegger are invoked as a means of cutting through these dilemmas. This reading of Heidegger presents truthful representation as a matter of correspondence only when the truth is understood as a means of disclosing a world. The article concludes with practical suggestions for VR research and development appropriated from a Heideggerian perspective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrice Ladwig","Ricardo Roque"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52713944"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c50f01-2f51-387d-8f04-6274812a3430"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26952411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952411","wordCount":11615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":"Engaging critically with literature on mimesis, colonialism, and the state in anthropology and history, this introduction argues for an approach to mimesis and imitation as constitutive of the state and its forms of rule and governmentality in the context of late European colonialism. It explores how the colonial state attempted to administer, control, and integrate its indigenous subjects through mimetic policies of governance, while examining how indigenous polities adopted imitative practices in order to establish reciprocal ties with, or to resist the presence of, the colonial state. In introducing this special issue, three main themes will be addressed: mimesis as a strategic policy of colonial government, as an object of colonial regulation, and, finally, as a creative indigenous appropriation of external forms of state power.","subTitle":"Mimetic Governmentality, Colonialism, and the State","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. Richard Turner"],"datePublished":"1981-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3522642f-7a2f-3e8d-8600-d8df0d2f82d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/776449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Instant Masterpieces: Raphael, Polaroid, and the Holy Ghost","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/776449","wordCount":4066,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Osvald Sir\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"1920-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/861145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09510788"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c1928fa-e59c-3330-a205-226297896024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/861145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmagaconn"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-291+294-295+298-300+303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1920,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Early Italian Pictures at Cambridge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/861145","wordCount":4745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"213","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSANNE CURRARINO"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26070277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21544727"},{"name":"oclc","value":"702148177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c636f462-c0a6-3491-ab83-00da1edb47f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26070277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcivilwarera"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Civil War Era","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"585","pageStart":"564","pagination":"pp. 564-585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Toward a History of Cultural Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26070277","wordCount":9990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Berthold Laufer"],"datePublished":"1931-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29782182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08948380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1054519-b112-3d98-86e1-f5e6e52d4150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29782182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pubfmnhanthroser"}],"isPartOf":"Publications of the Field Museum of Natural History. Anthropological Series","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201, 203, 205-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"THE DOMESTICATION OF THE CORMORANT IN CHINA AND JAPAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29782182","wordCount":25448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Field Museum of Natural History","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brigid Doherty"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"514be7f2-7b17-36c4-93c8-3f9f36c1e58f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Between the Artwork and its 'Actualization': a Footnote to Art History in Benjamin's 'Work of Art' Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151785","wordCount":10813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"This article analyses a footnote to the third version of the 'Work of Art' essay in which Walter Benjamin presents an account of 'a certain oscillation' between 'cult value' and 'exhibition value' as typical of the reception of all works of art. Benjamin's example in that footnote is the Sistine Madonna (1512\u201413), a painting by Raphael in the Dresden Gem\u00e4ldegalerie that has played an important part in German aesthetics since Winckelmann. Benjamin's footnote on the Sistine Madonna, along with his critique of Hegel's aesthetics in that context, demand to be understood in relation to his remarks on Dada elsewhere in the artwork essay, and to his claim that technological reproducibility leads to the 'actualization' of the original reproduced. In that connection, the article concludes with an analysis of Kurt Schwitters's 1921 montage picture Knave Child Madonna with Horse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Carrier","Robert Cavalier"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c56e640-4c6a-3004-a611-5b13636657a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1575238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information management","Arts - Literature","Applied sciences - Imaging","Health sciences - Medical specialties","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Theoretical and Practical Perspectives on Technology and the History of Art History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575238","wordCount":5847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The creation and development of art history has historically been linked with the availability of the technology of photographic reproductions. Present-day computer-based technology provides some new ways of handling such reproductions as well as novel instructional tools. After describing the development and evaluation of an interactive videodisc system, the authors suggest some ways in which such an apparatus both provides new methods of teaching aesthetics and may suggest novel ways of thinking about art history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45002712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00961736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49c02dfd-36d1-38fc-b894-7c0fc62f97df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45002712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joccumedi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Occupational Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"American Occupational Health Conference: April 25-28, 1977 - Boston, Mass. Annual Meetings of AMERICAN OCCUPATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH NURSES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45002712","wordCount":2777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Mandell"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4626279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4626279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imaging Interiority: Photography, Psychology, and Lyric Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4626279","wordCount":3723,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19437,19589]],"Locations in B":[[14808,14961]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"Considered together, William Blake's Songs of Innocence and of Experience and William Wordsworth's \"Tintern Abbey\" suggest how the romantic lyric anticipates photography. Offering up imagery deployed both graphically and typographically, these songs provide a model for the photographer's work of capturing inner states, thereby exploring what printed media up to 1810 could not. In thematizing the loss of sound, both poems produce a sense of psychological depth in the figure of a seer struggling to hear. Physical marks-whether printed texts or graphic images-are unified into a human perspective as (absent) phonology becomes associated with (present) morphology. These lyric poems teach us, in other words, to warm up cool graphic marks by anthropomorphizing them into a \"voice,\" the voice that in subsequent decades will be conveyed by figures in photographs or photographers' ways of seeing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Hoberman"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20083987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20083987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Constructing the Turn-of-the-Century Shopper: Narratives about Purchased Objects in the \"Strand Magazine,\" 1891-1910","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20083987","wordCount":7616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Krieg"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfb4bc42-0177-31ce-b633-254cf13e35fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"1585","pageStart":"1565","pagination":"pp. 1565-1585","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Copyright, Free Speech, and the Visual Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796164","wordCount":11629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea Henderson"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7180448a-797a-391d-b26f-4bf005029904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Magic Mirrors: Formalist Realism in Victorian Physics and Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2012.117.1.120","wordCount":12983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":"This essay argues that British photography of the 1850s and \u201960s wedded realism\u2014understood as a commitment to descriptive truthfulness\u2014with formalism, or a belief in the defining power of structural relationships. Photographers at midcentury understood the realistic character of photography to be grounded in more than fidelity to detail; the technical properties of the medium accorded perfectly with the claims of contemporary physicists that reality itself was constituted by spatial arrangements and polar forces rather than essential categorical distinctions. The photographs of Clementina, Lady Hawarden exemplify this formalist realism, dramatizing the power of the formal logic of photography not only to represent the real but to reveal its fundamentally formal nature.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1945-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25692243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a8c0abf-ff3f-3834-8f5b-e46cd5afc34e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25692243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":280.0,"pageEnd":"H385","pageStart":"H106","pagination":"pp. H106-H385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25692243","wordCount":198967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"13","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine VIEILLEDENT"],"datePublished":"1989-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20871951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"982789cc-0ffa-3780-a8a3-8039a5bd4ff4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20871951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Texte et image: la collaboration de Henry James et Alvin Langdon Coburn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20871951","wordCount":6519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"39","publisher":"Editions Belin","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Les rapports du texte et de l'image sont rarement idylliques ou m\u00eame, simplement sym\u00e9triques. L'illustration au dix-neuvi\u00e8me si\u00e8cle offre l'exemple d'un parasitisme de l'image que la pratique moderne inverse. La collaboration entre Henry James et A.L. Coburn au d\u00e9but du si\u00e8cle \u00e0 l'occasion de l'\u00e9dition d\u00e9finitive des \u0153uvres du premier, annonce le statut moderne de l'image, son \u00e9mancipation \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des partages id\u00e9ologiques toujours actifs de l'objectivit\u00e9 et de l'imaginaire. Texte et image \u00e9changent ici leurs qualit\u00e9s et int\u00e9riorisent une structure complexe de r\u00e9ciprocit\u00e9 habituellement d\u00e9ni\u00e9e par les arts visuels. L'association des deux artistes, tel est le propos de cet article, reposait sur un r\u00e9examen des pr\u00e9suppos\u00e9s de l'image et du texte. There are hardly ever harmonious, or simply, symmetrical relationships between text and image. Nineteenth-century illustrations exemplify a parasitical dependence on text, which the modern practice usually reverses. Early in the century, the publication of Henry James's Definitive Edition was the occasion of an unusual collaboration of novelist and photographer. A.L. Coburn's illustrations herald the modern status of the image, its emancipation from the still active ideological divisions of objectivity and imagination. In this case, image and text exchange qualities and interiorize a complex structure of reciprocity commonly ignored in the visual arts. Such a close association, as this article attempts to demonstrate, reconsidered the divisions that image and text affected to take for granted.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel Adams"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19fb6844-0ef1-3262-8963-b8481f2a999f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bringing out the Dead: Inside the Arbus Archive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068256","wordCount":6189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25823970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337072"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6295ffc-9f74-3be7-b06b-2f2d08a5029e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25823970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rq"}],"isPartOf":"RQ","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25823970","wordCount":10094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glen M. Leonard"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43042793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f9283f9-8a22-3192-a630-018402ddba77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43042793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"brigyoununivstud"}],"isPartOf":"Brigham Young University Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Picturing the Nauvoo Legion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43042793","wordCount":12120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Brigham Young University","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yasunao Tone"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b7d9346-605b-3d68-9766-697cdce0cb0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"John Cage and Recording","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513443","wordCount":6124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"There is general agreement that John Cage's attitude toward records and recording was ambiguous and not necessarily coherent. However, if one closely analyzes his work and his evolution of the concept of the art-that is, from his pieces for prepared piano to his use of the I Ching for Music of Changes to 4\u203233\u2033 to his prototype of Happenings at Black Mountain College in 1952-one finds a critique of something that other composers take as self-evident. Cage's critique of recording relates to the representation as re-presentation of music. The author aims in this article to discover\/uncover Cage's critique of the metaphysics of presence through his work and utterances.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard C. Tobias","John P. Farrell","Gardner B. Taplin","Roma King","G. B. Tennyson","Michael Timko","Wendell V. Harris","Michael S. Helfand","Frank R. Giordano Jr.","John Pick","Thomas C. Pinney","C. Stephen Dessain","Martin J. Svaglic","Howard W. Fulweiler","Benjamin Franklin Fisher IV","Robert A. Greenberg","Francis G. Townsend","Dan J. Tannacito"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40001728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50ea9662-0029-36ba-8f0d-59b037d0e4b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40001728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Guide to the Year's Work in Victorian Poetry and Prose: 1973","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40001728","wordCount":22031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Donnelly"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43632238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3fddf8a-72ea-36d5-8d8d-97aca952805f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43632238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Inversion of Originality through Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43632238","wordCount":9248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"Si la nouveaut\u00e9 et l'originalit\u00e9 sont au centre de l'autod\u00e9finition de la modernit\u00e9 et des discussions sur son avant-garde critique, nous examinons l'id\u00e9e de la critical i t\u00e9 pourvoir comment, dans le graphisme, c'est au contraire la reproduction, la mimesis, et m\u00eame la copie fid\u00e8le qui ont donn\u00e9 lieu \u00e0 des pratiques et \u00e0 des transformations critiques percutantes. Notre discussion d'une nouvelle criticante (malgr\u00e9 la perte d'originalit\u00e9) repose entre autres sur la th\u00e9orie cybern\u00e9tique, sur la philosophie poststructuraliste et sur des exemples tir\u00e9s de la premi\u00e8re histoire du design : l'origine de l'alphabet abstrait occidental et la production europ\u00e9enne de masse de lettres et d'imprimerie. Concluant avec une lecture de la th\u00e9orie critique, notamment autour de probl\u00e9matiques pos\u00e9es par Adomo, nous sugg\u00e9rons que la mimesis du design professionnel donne lieu \u00e0 une transformation sociale critique malgr\u00e9 sa position en dehors de l'avant-garde autonome et gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 ses racines dans le besoin quotidien.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVE PINKERTON"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41319887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c71aaea-6e29-3a49-a815-8d6a48301c76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41319887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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DAWSON"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e8818b7-fbe5-3f55-84e5-c13051f3e1f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24780398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Ragtime\" and the Movies: The Aura of the Duplicable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780398","wordCount":5232,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[13419,13524],[29865,30021]],"Locations in B":[[20864,20969],[23995,24124]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tamara Griggs"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.3.471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65004230-acd3-35d7-9caf-02b5ec0ea528"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.3.471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ancient Art and the Antiquarian: The Forgery of Giuseppe Guerra, 1755\u20131765","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/hlq.2011.74.3.471","wordCount":17453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"How did eighteenth-century scholars and art connoisseurs understand the difference between ancient and modern works of art? In 1755, at the height of the classical revival, Giuseppe Guerra, a minor painter in Rome, sold hundreds of counterfeit paintings to kings, cardinals, and collectors who considered themselves learned devotees of the antique. Tamara Griggs uses Guerra's forgery as a case study for understanding the link between eighteenth-century antiquarianism, art connoisseurship, and historiography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol P. James"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b38dfde5-9115-3b03-8904-c5e482588445"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 104-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Art through Duchamp's \"Glass\" and Derrida's \"Glas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684331","wordCount":11455,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841]],"Locations in B":[[49980,50190]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sigrid Weigel","Translated by Chadwick Truscott Smith","Christine Kutschbach"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f3b38ab-59ab-3ac6-82e8-a8cdd660eb43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/679079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Flash of Knowledge and the Temporality of Images: Walter Benjamin\u2019s Image-Based Epistemology and Its Preconditions in Visual Arts and Media History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679079","wordCount":8382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerd Gigerenzer","Wolfgang Gaissmaier","Elke Kurz-Milcke","Lisa M. Schwartz","Steven Woloshin"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40062369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15291006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45416721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-252832"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2f1fa21-dd25-3586-bb0b-2cfe46dd2d73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40062369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"psychscipubint"}],"isPartOf":"Psychological Science in the Public Interest","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Helping Doctors and Patients Make Sense of Health Statistics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40062369","wordCount":35335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association for Psychological Science","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"Many doctors, patients, journalists, and politicians alike do not understand what health statistics mean or draw wrong conclusions without noticing. Collective statistical illiteracy refers to the widespread inability to understand the meaning of numbers. For instance, many citizens are unaware that higher survival rates with cancer screening do not imply longer life, or that the statement that mammography screening reduces the risk of dying from breast cancer by 25% in fact means that 1 less woman out of 1,000 will die of the disease. We provide evidence that statistical illiteracy (a) is common to patients, journalists, and physicians; (b) is created by nontransparent framing of information that is sometimes an unintentional result of lack of understanding but can also be a result of intentional efforts to manipulate or persuade people; and (c) can have serious consequences for health. The causes of statistical illiteracy should not be attributed to cognitive biases alone, but to the emotional nature of the doctor-patient relationship and conflicts of interest in the healthcare system. The classic doctor-patient relation is based on (the physician's) paternalism and (the patient's) trust in authority, which make statistical literacy seem unnecessary; so does the traditional combination of determinism (physicians who seek causes, not chances) and the illusion of certainty (patients who seek certainty when there is none). We show that information pamphlets, Web sites, leaflets distributed to doctors by the pharma- ceutical industry, and even medical journals often report evidence in nontransparent forms that suggest big benefits of featured interventions and small harms. Without understanding the numbers involved, the public is susceptible to political and commercial manipulation of their anxieties and hopes, which undermines the goals of informed consent and shared decision making. What can be done? We discuss the importance of teaching statistical thinking and transparent representations in primary and secondary education as well as in medical school. Yet this requires familiarizing children early on with the concept of probability and teaching statistical literacy as the art of solving real-world problems rather than applying formulas to toy problems about coins and dice. A major precondition for statistical literacy is transparent risk communication. We recommend using frequency statements instead of single-event probabilities, absolute risks instead of relative risks, mortality rates instead of survival rates, and natural frequencies instead of conditional probabilities. Psychological research on transparent visual and numerical forms of risk communication, as well as training of physicians in their use, is called for. Statistical literacy is a necessary precondition for an educated citizenship in a technological democracy. Understanding risks and asking critical questions can also shape the emotional climate in a society so that hopes and anxieties are no longer as easily manipulated from outside and citizens can develop a better-informed and more relaxed attitude toward their health.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RUB\u00c9N A. GAZTAMBIDE-FERN\u00c1NDEZ"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"411a345b-b412-32ee-968f-52b0ff4b5e9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Editorial: Interruption and Imagination in Curriculum and Pedagogy, or How to Get Caught Inside a Strange Loop","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962974","wordCount":5373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Freedman"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/377790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ca384cd-2601-33d1-9ad2-b7523f7578fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/377790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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It applies Walter Benjamin's discussion of \"aura\" and exhibition value to argue that analyzing human rights through the lens of museum arrangement and display practices enables a comparative look at multiple spheres of social activity where human bodies are staged and made legible: war zones, residential environs, and the art world and its galleries. Such interdisciplinary focus helps show significant interconnections between military and artistic practices in sites of militarized, violent surveillance, creativity, and destruction and in sites of artistic production and circulation; it also demonstrates that aesthetic evaluation and exhibition value are fundamental means through which human bodies acquire and lose rights. The article concludes with a discussion of the human rights potential of radical curation in the works of Vik Muniz, Kara Walker, and Ursula Biemann.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. 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It is also the third part of my attempt to produce a \"Conceptual Framework for Biology.\" The discussion of Evolution continues and is followed by Classification, Ecology, Geographic Distribution, Biology and Human Welfare, and the Nature of Science. The intended audience is those who teach the first-year biology courses in colleges and universities as well as biology teachers in the precollege grades.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Rabasa"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1faa28a8-cccd-3a06-938b-83228f72277b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetics of Colonial Violence: The Massacre of Acoma in Gaspar de Villagr\u00e1's \"Historia de la Nueva M\u00e9xico\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112061","wordCount":8560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Grimshaw"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"472","pagination":"pp. 472-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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As Gerald Graff has demonstrated, while some felt in the early period that literature could not evenbe<\/em>taught and simply stood alone as art, those who wanted to professionalise the discipline began prescribing set lists of texts for examination. Surprisingly, as Graff notes, there was consensus on these texts, mostly because this gave the appearance of a coherent object of study","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abraham Bell","Gideon Parchomovsky"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98aa7388-d0a4-38d1-94ef-e01e05117fc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1290417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Pliability Rules","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1290417","wordCount":40631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Krapp"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6afc64eb-f366-3727-a884-64802e0bbe64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - 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Patterns of dissemination and ritual display surrounding the 1932 bicentennial celebration of the birth of George Washington highlight the Athenaeum\u2019s totemic function, symbolically linking individuals to national traditions and to one another. Consideration of this cult practice reveals how the Athenaeum was sacralized as a national icon and employed during the 1930s to assuage anxieties arising from potentially disruptive domestic threats and as an ideologically charged visual component of American foreign policy.","subTitle":"The Apotheosis of Gilbert Stuart\u2019s Athenaeum Portrait of George Washington","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean Parker Murphy","Kate Burns Ottavino"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1494116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00449466"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7897fb25-1d3d-37c9-beab-4470e5372747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1494116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullassoprestech"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Association for Preservation Technology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"The Rehabilitation of Bethesda Terrace: The Terrace Bridge and Landscape, Central Park, New York","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1494116","wordCount":8156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Association for Preservation Technology International (APT)","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul O'Brien"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a79f2b4b-bd39-3174-8545-5aa279a40be2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25557817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Art & Technology: Metal and Meat - the Human in the Age of Non-Biological Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25557817","wordCount":3153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"65","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip Edmonds"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.25","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925261042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0272f65d-1d68-3166-aa89-584608c8fa4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.25"}],"isPartOf":"Tilting at Windmills","keyphrase":["magazines","creative writing","writers","internet","literary","commodification","literary magazines","literary magazine","universities","little magazines"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"237","pagination":"237-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"An unreliable commodity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1sq5wf6.25","wordCount":5199,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[898,1094],[1619,1701]],"Locations in B":[[45,110],[256,452],[611,694]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In his essayThe Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction<\/em>Walter Benjamin prefigured some of the current contradictions. He quotes from Paul Valery as an epigram. At the conclusion of the quote, Valery suggests thatwe must expect great innovations to transform the entire technique of the arts, thereby affecting artistic invention itself and perhaps even bringing about an amazing change in our very notion of art. (Qtd. in Benjamin 217)Benjamin suggested that future changes to the means of production would result in more intensive exploitation of the proletariat and \u2018ultimately \u2026 create conditions which would","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lutz P. Koepnick"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf23974b-62d8-3e28-8e32-4929687c3aef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/407984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Negotiating Popular Culture: Wenders, Handke, and the Topographies of Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/407984","wordCount":12325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":"Responding to the shifting nature of today's academy, the essay discusses the relation between current trajectories of American German Studies as Culture Studies and the landscapes of intellectual discourse in German-speaking cultures today. In order to probe paradigms that map the boundaries between high culture and the popular dimension, the essay projects onto the scenes of contemporary German culture current concerns regarding the legacies of the Frankfurt School and of British Marxism in the United States. More specifically, the essay examines the differences between classical Critical Theory and the Cultural Studies movement to examine the different figurations of popular culture-its texts, institutions, practices, and meanings-in Wenders's In weiter Ferne, so nah! (1993) and Handke's Versuch \u00fcber die Jukebox (1990).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Neimoyer"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e2eb53d-7a50-3a6c-8278-6c441aa200d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41289200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"George Gershwin and Edward Kilenyi, Sr.: A Reevaluation of Gershwin's Early Musical Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289200","wordCount":21360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nozomi Irei"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.70.2.150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2a1dd4e-a523-38df-924c-a8ff39501655"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/rockmounrevi.70.2.150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cAbolishing Aesthetics\u201d:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.70.2.150","wordCount":10792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":"This essay takes up Brecht\u2019s 1941 play, Der aufhaltsame Aufstieg des Arturo Ui [The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui] and investigates the question of whether or not the play mitigates against \u201caestheticizing\u201d the figure of Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. In \u201cCommitment,\u201d Adorno is highly skeptical of the effectiveness (implying also, appropriateness) of portraying Hitler\u2019s rise in a comical manner. The piece explores how the play may be considered in ways other than as a play which, as Adorno describes, \u201ctakes the teeth out of fascism.\u201d A guiding principle is Brecht\u2019s view of Gestus as a collection of contradictions that suspends the movement of a dialectic. Gestus offers a way to consider the specificity of Brecht\u2019s various theories on art, including epic theatre, parody, and the parable, among others.","subTitle":"Gestus<\/em> in Brecht\u2019s Arturo Ui<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carsten Strathausen"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2413f57-5763-383f-87f5-6c86a5f2525b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Return of the Gaze: Stereoscopic Vision in J\u00fcnger and Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488636","wordCount":10346,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27121,27191]],"Locations in B":[[59777,59847]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"80","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl Buckley","Hazel Clark"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d38f4b45-865d-3021-8c5a-ca9978ff8c9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23273848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Conceptualizing Fashion in Everyday Lives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273848","wordCount":5953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip H. Round"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4496980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Indigenous Illustration: Native American Artists and Nineteenth-Century US Print Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496980","wordCount":8510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Mosher"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24396672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08833680"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e5d806d-e76f-3def-b598-a6c0a60c1acf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24396672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"materialculture"}],"isPartOf":"Material Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painting Material Culture: Community Art Research in Saginaw, Michigan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24396672","wordCount":8300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"International Society for Landscape, Place & Material Culture","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"In the painted and digitally assembled murals in the industrial city of Saginaw, Michigan, Saginaw Valley State University art students worked with inner-city youth to collaboratively create artworks that incorporate local motifs, youth artwork, and photography that express educational and social aspirations. Experiences \u2013 my students' and my own \u2013 in creating public art at three sites in Saginaw are examined.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel L. McKinley"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08861730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93416833-cf2b-3a27-ab6d-620ed80ce17d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41179795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transmorahistsoc"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Moravian Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"ANNA ROSINA (KLIEST) GAMBOLD (1762-1821), MORAVIAN MISSIONARY TO THE CHEROKEES, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO HER BOTANICAL INTERESTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179795","wordCount":18912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Moravian Historical Society","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. Crowley"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.47.2.0095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15403084"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174970348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62d55544-621a-38f7-99bc-8a28a556ab68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/amerlitereal.47.2.0095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Kate Chopin, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Chopin, and the Music of the Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.47.2.0095","wordCount":10815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3573881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8554fcfd-fb34-3f44-88b9-661c8e0e87e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3573881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radirese"}],"isPartOf":"Radiation Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":312.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the Fifth International Congress of Radiation Research, Seattle, Washington, USA July 14-20, 1974","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3573881","wordCount":209374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Radiation Research Society","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadja Rottner"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f10bc7-01da-36b4-9dcc-87c8ef66c15f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41415638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Oldenburg's \"Moveyhouse\": Performing a Cinema without Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415638","wordCount":10089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"In Moveyhouse (1965), Claes Oldenburg instructed the audience to stand in the aisles of a cinema. While the projector ran empty, performers in the seats enacted typical film-going behaviors, such as laughing, smoking, or eating popcorn. Building on both the experimental cinema of Stan Brakhage and the theatre work of John Cage, Oldenburg's critique of film is part of a much larger twentieth-century intellectual tradition: the belief that art, and, by extension, technology, can lastingly alter the way viewers experience reality. This essay argues that Oldenburg's relationship with film is indicative of an avant-garde aesthetic of ameliorative renewal in the postwar period that seeks to combat feelings of alienation and distance\u2014 a visionary side of his art long neglected.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Hutton"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8acb8fa-54c7-32fe-938b-ab878e21083d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1101","pageStart":"1099","pagination":"pp. 1099-1101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231317","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BIRGIT MEYER"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40603073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55afc64c-ddc8-311b-8429-9869ce6ee661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40603073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"There Is a Spirit in that Image\": Mass-Produced Jesus Pictures and Protestant-Pentecostal Animation in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40603073","wordCount":14817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/773523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15436322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50592481"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d841c55d-6e41-34e9-b5ca-a73bec3ee44f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/773523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeartj"}],"isPartOf":"College Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"News Reports","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/773523","wordCount":2974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"College Art Association","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HENRY E. SIGERIST"],"datePublished":"1941-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44440666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45fcd90b-272a-3c45-a0ad-05650769c973"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44440666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"364","pagination":"pp. 364-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"THE JOHNS HOPKINS INSTITUTE OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE DURING THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1940-1941","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44440666","wordCount":15929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n09s.23","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053569450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ae0c7cb-7a1e-34be-8971-d35dd2ffd95d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n09s.23"}],"isPartOf":"The Cinema of Attractions Reloaded","keyphrase":["sensation","bullet time","eisenstein","deleuze","moving images","movement","gilles deleuze","immobility","bullet time effect","muybridge"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"321","pagination":"321-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Figures of Sensation:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n09s.23","wordCount":7433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"It was Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten\u2019sAesthetica<\/em>(1750), which gave the new discipline of aesthetics its name. Aesthetics was concerned with a special faculty of perception that Baumgarten titled \u201csensuous knowledge\u201d (cognitio sensitiva<\/em>). In contrast to clear and distinct conceptual knowledge, sensuous knowledge is acognitio confusa<\/em>, a confused knowledge form. \u201cIt is not aimed at distinctions; it pursues an animated intertwinement of aspects even when it is a matter of a stationary object. It lingers at a process of appearing,\u201d Martin Seel remarks.\u00b9 These processes of aesthetic appearing involve compounds of sensation or what I will call figures of sensation.","subTitle":"Between Still and Moving Images","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ned O\u2019Gorman","Kevin Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/rhetpublaffa.19.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b87c3333-0180-3668-aa5e-ff29c1c39a78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/rhetpublaffa.19.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Sensibility of the State: Lookout Mountain Laboratory\u2019s Operation Ivy<\/em> and the Image of the Cold War \u201cSuper\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/rhetpublaffa.19.1.0001","wordCount":17227,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"In 1953 a Hollywood-based U.S. Air Force film studio, Lookout Mountain Laboratory, produced a documentary film about America\u2019s first detonation of a thermonuclear device, the 1952 \u201cMIKE\u201d device. The film, called Operation Ivy, was initially shown only to the highest-level government officials, but a later, edited version was eventually released for public distribution. We argue that the story of Operation Ivy illuminates not only the ways in which the rhetoric of the \u201cSuper\u201d was managed but also the way in which the Cold War state was both subject to and productive of political and aesthetic sensibilities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"544b398e-d25d-3959-bb1c-248a955e4220"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Poetics of Politics: Yeats and the Founding of the State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685891","wordCount":13092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mako Fitts"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e24f7f84-c165-321f-9beb-2d6cc41e56e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Drop It like It's Hot\": Culture Industry Laborers and Their Perspectives on Rap Music Video Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338918","wordCount":10194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"This paper describes results from a qualitative study of the music video production industry and the creative process in rap music video production and artist marketing. Participant responses are presented in three areas: the music video production process, recent trends in rap musk videos, and the music video set as a site of gender exploitation. Findings surest a concern over artisticfreedom of expression and the mechanical production of the \"booty video\" formula that saturates music video programming and is a template for rap videos. Participants agreed that there is something lackluster about rap music played on radio and aired on music video programming. Additionally, gendered hierarchies on video sets create divisions among women working in various positions, and discourage women from supporting one another, which,from a black feminist perspective, does not accommodate an ethic of care and personal responsibility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sylvia Nannyonga-Tamusuza","Andrew N. 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Both the public understanding of folklore and the ways it is studied by folklorists continue to be affected by the nature of its emergence. The identification of folklore with territory, and with its symbolically endowed landscape, emerged in early modern Europe as arguments for divine right kingship developed. As a field invented by antiquarians, the social emplacement of these virtuosi is investigated and the politics of culture of early modern Europe is brought to bear on nationalistic movements and tied to the present through the spectre of wars of national formation. The argument focuses on how folkloristic thinking has encouraged nationalistic movements, and on how folklorists might begin to think about a new politics of culture, one based on pluralist rather than nationalist perspectives.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Ho"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1520281X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fe350d5-5648-340a-9a73-b3b4ce266252"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3246486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pajjperfart"}],"isPartOf":"PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Within and beyond: Felix Gonzalez-Torres's \"Crowd\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3246486","wordCount":6727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Performing Arts Journal, Inc.","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lindsay Smith"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23133924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc5f3aef-6e6a-3835-b7de-4822bf75f164"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23133924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PHOTOGRAPHIC SIMULATION AND NINETEENTH-CENTURY EXPRESSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23133924","wordCount":3021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Ann Doane"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2712e62b-40fd-3c21-b69d-c4aa89f4bb27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Abstraction of a Lady: \"La Signora di tutti\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225017","wordCount":10611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89478dbe-fd90-3861-88a4-5ea67b4874a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"CD Companion Introduction: Splitting Bits, Closing Loops: Sound on Sound","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513459","wordCount":1582,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[6683,6753]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth W. 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Recognizing its importance raises critical issues, particularly the relation between custom and reason and the role of authoritative custom in supporting political and social power. Locke explains in detail the various psychological and sociological mechanisms by which the power of custom is manifested; but he nonetheless consistently and emphatically rejects its authority. Instead, Locke is a champion of the authority of reason. Because custom is powerful, but reason is authoritative, Locke attempts to enlist the power of custom in the service of reason and of reasonable politics, and because custom is powerful and its impact unavoidable, individual intellectual independence cannot mean being without cultural prejudices. At best, it means the ability to gain some critical distance from them. These observations place Locke's relation to the Enlightenment in a new perspective.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN SUNDERLAND"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ad9b5f-187f-39ee-b989-d1e7241f85d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41829591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":392.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-v, vii, ix, xi-xxi, xxiii-xxv, 1-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"JOHN HAMILTON MORTIMER HIS LIFE AND WORKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41829591","wordCount":160876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1946-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25692330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61edfa69-baa3-355f-a30d-3ed074b9e1f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25692330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-184, 146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1946,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Tentative Program of the Sixty-Fifth Annual Conference, Buffalo, June 16-22, 1946","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25692330","wordCount":7506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry Cooper"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7049be5-d405-3eb1-a4b0-9bccdda972c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"On \"\u00dcber Jazz\": Replaying Adorno with the Grain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778901","wordCount":17845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Horacio Zabala"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"390b2235-d9e9-3b77-b0fa-8226d042f085"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1575620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Image of Duplication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1575620","wordCount":2310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"This author discusses the theoretical perspective behind the production of his artworks, which stem from the ambiguous relationship between the terms 'original' and 'duplicate'. His 'originals' are mass-produced newspaper images. Conversely, his 'duplications' are handcrafted one-of-a-kind fine artworks that challenge viewers' notions of reality and appearance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Gaskell"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1559113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Being True to Artists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1559113","wordCount":5822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SOPHIA ROSENFELD"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23307698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a713af1c-73ea-3631-814d-89c719f602dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23307698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Translation as De-canonization: Matthew's Gospel According to Pasolini: To the memory of Paul Hessert","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24461277","wordCount":4501,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[341,426]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theo Mortimer"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30101421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00126861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2023a136-e4d0-3c69-ab95-8545b2ee7b81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30101421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dublhistreco"}],"isPartOf":"Dublin Historical Record","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"The Man of the Millennium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30101421","wordCount":7271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Old Dublin Society","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hyangsoon Yi"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43796892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ebdf47a-f015-309b-9c65-fc9b33801bc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43796892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"210","pagination":"pp. 210-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kurosawa and Gogol: Looking through the Lens of Metonymy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43796892","wordCount":5590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Frost"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb50ccb4-a1e1-3563-a444-521c2008f2a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20479785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Huxley's Feelies: The Cinema of Sensation in \"Brave New World\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479785","wordCount":12120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAMANTHA BENNETT"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7af65660-b1ee-33f5-81b7-98fedee3bc98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26358300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"396","pagination":"pp. 396-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Behind the magical mystery door: history, mythology and the aura of Abbey Road Studios","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358300","wordCount":11856,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[45994,46176]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"In rock historiography, Abbey Road Studios is depicted as the rock canon's ultimate recording house; home to the Beatles, Pink Floyd and a generation of classic rock album production. In recent years, the studio has struggled to maintain itself as an operational recording house, yet effectively exploits its past to secure its future. This article considers issues of heritage, pilgrimage and tourism before elucidating brand 'Abbey Road' as a conflation of geographical location, zebra crossing, graffiti wall, recording house and aura. In separating the tangible aspects of Abbey Road's heritage \u2013 the zebra crossing, graffiti wall and the Beatles Abbey Road album \u2013 out from its intangibles \u2013 its 'magic', legacy and studio 'vibe' \u2013 Abbey Road's studio aura is exposed as a commodity in its own right.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hanor A. Webb"],"datePublished":"1929-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1488636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9bf708d-d220-3c91-978b-870d3ceb6a5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1488636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The High-School Science Library for 1928-1929","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1488636","wordCount":8392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1926-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e00765-c485-3337-b565-dac826a6c480"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":92.0,"pageEnd":"823","pageStart":"732","pagination":"pp. 732-823","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1926,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Nineteenth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To February 1926)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223875","wordCount":39908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan L. Beller"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Spectatorship of the Proletariat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303727","wordCount":25997,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35140,35313]],"Locations in B":[[20625,20800]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul S. Moore"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43562326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07030428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43562326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbahistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History Review \/ Revue d'histoire urbaine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Movie Palaces on Canadian Downtown Main Streets: Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43562326","wordCount":15184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Urban History Review","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"The emergence of movie palaces is traced for St. Catherine Street in Montreal, Yonge Street in Toronto, and Granville Street in Vancouver. Beginning in 1896, film shows were included in a range of urban amusement places. When dedicated movie theatres opened by 1906, they were quickly built throughout the city before the downtown \"theatre districts\" became well defined. Not until about 1920 were first-run vaudeville-movie palaces at the top of a spatial hierarchy of urban film-going, lasting into the 1950s. After outlining the formation of movie palace film-going, the paper notes how the downtown theatres were next to each city's major department store. A theoretical analysis of how amusement and consumption make \"being downtown\" significant in everyday urban life follows. A review of the social uses of electric lighting and urban amusements finds that movie palace marquees become a symbol for the organization of downtown crowds and consumers into attentive mass audiences. A brief account of the decline of the movie palace, from the 1970s to 2000, concludes by reviewing the outcomes of replacement by multiplex theatres, demolition, or preservation. Les rues Sainte-Catherine \u00e0 Montr\u00e9al, Yonge \u00e0 Toronto et Granville \u00e0 Vancouver accueillent les premi\u00e8res salles de cin\u00e9ma. \u00c0 partir de 1896, les films sont pr\u00e9sent\u00e9s dans des lieux de divertissement vari\u00e9s. Lorsque les salles consacr\u00e9es au cin\u00e9ma apparaissent en 1906, elles sont \u00e9difi\u00e9es \u00e7\u00e0 et l\u00e0, avant la d\u00e9limitation nette au centre-ville d'un quartier r\u00e9serv\u00e9 au cin\u00e9ma. C'est vers 1920 que les th\u00e9\u00e2tres de vari\u00e9t\u00e9s, avec leurs primeurs cin\u00e9matographiques, occupent une place pr\u00e9dominante quant \u00e0 la fr\u00e9quentation du cin\u00e9ma en milieu urbain, position qu'ils conservent jusque dans les ann\u00e9es 1950. Apr\u00e8s avoir expos\u00e9 bri\u00e8vement la mani\u00e8re dont a pris forme la fr\u00e9quentation des salles de cin\u00e9ma, l'article traite de la proximit\u00e9 entre les salles du centre-ville et le plus grand magasin de chaque ville. Vient ensuite une analyse th\u00e9orique portant sur la mani\u00e8re dont le divertissement et la consommation donnent un sens au fait d'\u00eatre au \u00ab coeur de la ville \u00bb dans le quotidien en milieu urbain. Les marquises des salles de cin\u00e9ma renouvellent l'utilisation sociale de l'\u00e9clairage \u00e9lectrique et du divertissement urbain, et deviennent ainsi un symbole de l'organisation des foules et des consommateurs du centreville en grand public attentif. La conclusion offre un bref expos\u00e9 du d\u00e9clin des salles de cin\u00e9ma, des ann\u00e9es 1970 \u00e0 l'ann\u00e9e 2000, et pr\u00e9sente les cons\u00e9quences de leur remplacement par les complexes cin\u00e9matographiques, soit leur d\u00e9molition ou leur pr\u00e9servation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5474b1a9-7cb3-33e4-87d5-f80ac7f54b24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Value of Literature as a Public Institution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115392","wordCount":12938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"The essay centers on the politics of knowledge inside and outside of academia. It also answers back to the witch hunt that still dogs Orientalism a quarter of a century after its first publication. The conservative Right continues to be blinded by their own insight. In seeking the alternative, the essay hopes to engage in a dialogue that reflects both the classroom and the society at large.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth E. Barker"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01410016"},{"name":"oclc","value":"741483181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67861507-f93a-397b-880c-8df70b4cae68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41830757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"voluwalpsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The Volume of the Walpole Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":216.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"DOCUMENTS RELATING TO JOSEPH WRIGHT 'OF DERBY' (1734-97)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41830757","wordCount":138160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Walpole Society","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-10-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2882349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df2a6520-189f-3f01-a104-0215ae76279c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2882349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2882349","wordCount":37627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5131","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"262","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Thompson"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/237829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b8be1ea-76e2-3fcb-96e1-21baa46bd149"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/237829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Dead Rooms and Live Wires: Harvard, Hollywood, and the Deconstruction of Architectural Acoustics, 1900-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/237829","wordCount":16809,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"In 1900 Wallace Sabine, a physicist at Harvard University, published a mathematical formula for calculating the reverberation time in a room, a measure of how quickly or slowly sound energy dies away in an enclosed space. In 1930 Carl Eyring, a physicist working in the Sound Motion Picture Studio at Bell Telephone Laboratories, revised Sabine's equation. This essay examines material changes in the practice of architectural acoustics in order to explain how and why Eyring was motivated to reformulate the Sabine equation. Sabine's equation was the product of experimentation in highly reverberant rooms. Eyring worked in a world increasingly constructed of sound-absorbing building materials--a world of acoustically \"dead\" rooms in which Sabine's original assumptions were no longer valid. Further, Eyring's world was filled with electroacoustic devices that had not existed in 1900. \"Live\" wires powered new tools for producing, measuring, and controlling sound, and the new electroacoustic technologies additionally provided a new conceptual framework for thinking about the behavior of sound. Eyring's equation is shown to be a direct product of these new material conditions of the science and practice of architectural acoustics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Murray"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207616","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b5c6405-f719-3077-a3c7-3422f06c98a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207616"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"4","pagination":"p. 4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Comment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207616","wordCount":566,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[12776,13402]],"Locations in B":[[12,638]],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chandra Mukerji"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2777852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25979ecf-eccb-3265-b3aa-a92c91bbd875"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2777852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Artwork: Collection and Contemporary Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2777852","wordCount":8333,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[9682,10068],[14291,14751]],"Locations in B":[[22653,23039],[23048,23506]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":"The definitional transformation of film from industrial commodity to art form that took place in the United States during the 1950s represents a more general change in the treatment of industrial commodities, as more outmoded goods have become \"collectibles.\" This pattern has consequences which should be important to sociologists of culture since collection keeps pieces of material culture in the environment longer, perhaps to be used as design precedents for future objects.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30148030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00154113"},{"name":"oclc","value":"69023195"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235270"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea093244-a9eb-348e-8a4d-3862458283e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30148030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"florhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Florida Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"527","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-527","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Book Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30148030","wordCount":4216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Florida Historical Society","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Elliott Wert"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24771649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0dde53a-0ffe-3495-98e6-0448ec13b9af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24771649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hanging Around Us in Plain Sight: The Great American Political Campaign Poster, 1844\u20132012","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24771649","wordCount":8556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. V. Blomster"],"datePublished":"1976-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/897527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccb0f31d-2084-3083-931c-f29ac04dd2d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/897527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/897527","wordCount":1273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c014da5f-66bc-35c9-a854-2e668b63ca8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":108.0,"pageEnd":"1363","pageStart":"1256","pagination":"pp. 1256-1363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463402","wordCount":58514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27855819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b71be17-065b-3b48-bcb7-38c41cd0be0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27855819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"311","pageStart":"304","pagination":"pp. 304-311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27855819","wordCount":12298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judy Giles"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/340907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42ac4ee3-23b5-3a9d-b2b8-37c8f6150cf7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/340907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Narratives of Gender, Class, and Modernity in Women's Memories of Mid\u2010Twentieth Century Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/340907","wordCount":8248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["No\u00ebl M. Valis"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2b8369c-e2a1-329c-b38c-55405111c2d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"867","pageStart":"856","pagination":"pp. 856-867","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Perfect Copy: Clar\u00edn's Su \u00fanico hijo and the Flaubertian Connection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462577","wordCount":9220,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10068]],"Locations in B":[[49555,49730]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":"Copying as both duplication and writing informs the structure and thematics of Leopoldo Alas's Su \u00fanico hijo (1891). In building an entire novel around a copy clerk, Alas, known as Clarin, taps into a rich literary tradition. He also ends up suggesting that the imaginative impulse emerges out of a deeply felt and little understood desire to copy. Clar\u00edn's own \"corrective copying\" of Flaubert illustrates the classic artistic formula of \"schema and correction,\" revision of the canonical schemata to come up with an \"original.\" His homage to Flaubert, reenacted textually through the issue of paternity in Su \u00fanico hijo, operates paradoxically by denying the nihilistic implications of Flaubertian repetition and paternal absenteeism. Where Bouvard et P\u00e9cuchet is about copying and an absent father, Clarin's novel is about the inescapable paternal presence, the sign of individuality, and the assertion of self.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067178","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91f38875-2021-3290-83fc-625e0aa755ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"U.S. and Canadian Dissertations, 2004","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067178","wordCount":23979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicolas Cane"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03361519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567916371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccfb92af-2c0e-3fe3-b6c0-06035acfdd37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26921084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecolfranextr"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin de l'\u00c9cole fran\u00e7aise d'Extr\u00eame-Orient","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Temples, Inscriptions and Historical (Re)construction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921084","wordCount":13979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"\u00c9cole fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Extr\u00eame-Orient","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":"Taking a bronze sculpture housed by the prestigious Freer Gallery of Art of Washington, D.C., as point of departure, this paper aims to retrace historians' (re)construction of the tenth-century C\u014d\u1e3ba Queen Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b's biography in a vivid illustration of the omnipotence often allotted to epigraphical sources when it comes to dealing with material culture. Wife and mother of C\u014d\u1e3ba kings, Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b is unanimously hailed nowadays as one of the greatest historical figures of medieval south India, a queen who \"carved a niche for herself\" (Balambal 1998: 176) in History by her impressive patronage of the holy places of Tamil \u015aaivism. What people are less aware of, however, is that without the numerous inscriptions mentioning her name which have been collected since the turn of the twentieth century and the launch by the Archaeological Survey of British India of its program for south Indian epigraphy, the destiny of the \"Queen Mother of the C\u014d\u1e3ba house\" would have simply remained unknown to us. The article points how interpretive strategies implemented by successive generations of scholars in order to engage in dialogue with a largely unknown and scattered corpus of epigraphical testimonies lead to the elaboration and diffusion throughout the secondary literature of what can be called Queen Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b's \"epigraphical persona\". Prenant pour point de d\u00e9part un bronze expos\u00e9 par la Freer Gallery de Washington (D.C.) en tant que repr\u00e9sentation de la souveraine Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b, l'article propose une r\u00e9flexion sur la construction historiographique de cette reine C\u014d\u1e3ba du xe si\u00e8cle, destin\u00e9e \u00e0 illustrer la fr\u00e9quente omnipotence des donn\u00e9es \u00e9pigraphiques d\u00e8s lors qu'il s'agit d'interpr\u00e9ter la culture mat\u00e9rielle. \u00c9pouse et m\u00e8re de souverains C\u014d\u1e3ba, Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b est unanimement salu\u00e9e comme l'une des grandes figures historiques de l'Inde du Sud m\u00e9di\u00e9vale, une reine qui \u00ab s'est taill\u00e9e une place \u00bb dans l'Histoire gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 un impressionnant patronage des lieux saints du shivaisme tamoul. L'on sait moins que sans les nombreuses inscriptions pari\u00e9tales recueillies depuis le tournant du xxe si\u00e8cle avec le lancement par l'Agence de recensement arch\u00e9ologique du Raj britannique d'un programme d'\u00e9pigraphie du sud de l'Inde, l'existence et le destin de la \u00ab reine m\u00e8re de la maison C\u014d\u1e3ba \u00bb nous seraient demeur\u00e9s inconnus. L'article vise ainsi \u00e0 d\u00e9monter les strat\u00e9gies d'interpr\u00e9tation mises en place par les g\u00e9n\u00e9rations successives d'\u00e9rudits cherchant \u00e0 dialoguer avec ce corpus de t\u00e9moignages \u00e9pigraphiques largement in\u00e9dit et dispers\u00e9 ; des strat\u00e9gies interpr\u00e9tatives qui ont conduit \u00e0 l'\u00e9laboration et la diffusion dans la litt\u00e9rature secondaire de ce que l'on peut appeler une persona \u00e9pigraphique bien particuli\u00e8re.","subTitle":"The \"Epigraphical Persona<\/em>\" of the C\u014d\u1e3ba Queen Cempiya\u1e49 Mah\u0101dev\u012b (Tenth Century)","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. San Juan, Jr."],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00915637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"095bf2d1-bfe8-387c-91ed-10dcf95fd665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40873121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsasianlit"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of South Asian Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"ENCIRCLE THE CITIES BY THE COUNTRYSIDE: THE CITY IN PHILIPPINE WRITING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873121","wordCount":9985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Hernadi"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e202fed8-5460-35c1-b5ec-6d3a0dbaa59a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Reconceiving Notation and Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333090","wordCount":4433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward H. Cohen"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830102","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3830102"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":141.0,"pageEnd":"839","pageStart":"699","pagination":"pp. 699-839","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1999","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830102","wordCount":83665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Hannan"],"datePublished":"1933-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41225900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1de1fb64-d9fa-3f98-be2d-4472955bff17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41225900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"908","pageStart":"886","pagination":"pp. 886-908","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"ABSTRACTS OF WATER WORKS LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41225900","wordCount":11788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sunny Stalter"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.70","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"860a907c-1495-35d5-a8b2-aa925795b7a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.70"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Subway Ride and Subway System in Hart Crane's \u201cThe Tunnel\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.70","wordCount":11020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Criticism of Hart Crane's American epic The Bridge has long focused on technological tropes. Readings of the subway's importance within the poem, however, tend to foreground the oppressive aspects of that space. This essay, by contrast, argues that New York's transit infrastructure enables Crane to re-imagine formal possibilities in the modernist poem. \u201cThe Tunnel\u201d shows commuters ultimately making sense of their fragmented perceptions through routine and habit. The abstract subway system, the poem suggests, is only knowable through an accretion of partial information that comes from regular rides. This mediated relationship of part to whole plays out in Crane's poetics, suggesting a new way in which we might understand how mechanized routine and urban space shapes modernist literary form.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037976X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50058875"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214336"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c1438ce-0404-3328-911c-bd45401cb9fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monosociresechil"}],"isPartOf":"Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333871","wordCount":9288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4\/5","publisher":"Society for Research in Child Development","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1958-06-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25381052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea7e59b7-9914-3ae6-821f-f381680f6068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25381052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1958,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25381052","wordCount":62959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5086","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashutosh Singh"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c813c4fd-8b44-37b3-bb45-33892ab890a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Time and Waiting: The Fulcrum of Palestinian Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0317","wordCount":6643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Pluto Journals","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"The theoretical concepts of time and waiting have evolved mostly around the units of clocks and calendars. The Palestinians have been forced to let waiting be part of their national and cultural life. The forced displacement has scattered many Palestinians in exile around the globe. These Palestinians in diasporas have been waiting to return home one day and this perpetual state of waiting is one of the greatest tragedies of our time. The Palestinians' experience of time and waiting are quite different from most parts of the world. The linearity of time seems to break its rhythm when it enters Palestinian lives. The temporality appears to have multiple dimensions when it comes to Palestine. There are times when the clock is not the reference point of Palestinians' time, and hours and minutes can no longer gauge their waiting. They have given a new meaning to time, waiting and exile through not only the physical existence of their being, but also through their literature and art. Although we live in a culture that denigrates waiting, we have a whole Palestine hanging on for what can put an end to its wait. The concept of time, waiting and exile suddenly jumps out of the theoretical notions and embodies itself in Palestine. Palestinians' literature, movies and other art forms have encompassed these ideas to strengthen their collective memory and identity. The life of a dispossessed Palestinian has many internal contradictions that are at times not obvious but beyond the contradiction typically experienced by individuals in life. The Palestinian struggle for land is also a struggle against the established unitary idea of time and waiting of colonizers. This article will try to delve into such meanings of time and waiting for Palestinians in their cultural lives and their everyday existence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Hale","Richard Hawkins","Michael Partridge"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2597974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b07c8f6-1717-30f1-bfa6-81f6d9784e97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2597974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"827","pageStart":"787","pagination":"pp. 787-827","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"List of Publications on the Economic and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland Published in 1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2597974","wordCount":28251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Economic History Society","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Rennie"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40958925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53316812"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ed795b-df4c-3d0b-b061-dc0cac54eab8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40958925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40958925","wordCount":1876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4636644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00436534"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9763d518-a286-363d-ba5b-836e38aefcd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4636644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wiscmagahist"}],"isPartOf":"The Wisconsin Magazine of History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Society at One Hundred Fifty Years","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4636644","wordCount":59064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wisconsin Historical Society","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Orrin N. 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Wang"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e877990d-252f-3513-afb7-1872014e6223"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Coming Attractions: \"Lamia\" and Cinematic Sensation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601643","wordCount":18387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Boston University","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2232157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108906"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23310"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2232157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"economicj"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic policy","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2232157","wordCount":26508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"350","publisher":"Royal Economic Society","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen L. 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They have transformed the way Palestinians represent themselves to each other and to the international community, whereby appeals to human rights help to constitute a human subject with certain kinds of rights that are seen to arise not from a political status but from the state of (human) nature. In this article, I explore the \"politics of immediation\" at work during the second Palestinian intifada, which began in 2000, to explain why social actors mobilize representations of people in states of acute physical and emotional distress as part of their political projects.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dominique Pa\u00efni","Rosalind E. 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Besides Cantonese opera, there were two opera films on Princess Cheung Ping (1959, 1976). In addition, the performance was recorded by Crown Records Ltd in 1960. We can find the scripts of Princess Cheung Ping in Tang Disheng Xiqu Xinshang, one edited by Ye Shaode in 1987-88, another edited by Cheung Man Wai in 2015-16. Importance of the latter edition is the revival of the original mud prints of Tang Disheng. This paper is going to examine 5 pieces of information as follows: Tang Disheng Xiqu Xinshan, 1987-88 Tang Disheng Xiqu Xinshang, 2015-16 1 First Act \u201cHope for the evergreen of the two trees which have grown together to form a double trunk\u201d (p. 26). 2 Second Act \u201cEmperor\u2019s son-in-law is not without the intention for death\u201d (p. 43). 3 Fourth Act \u201cThe young beauty dies young\u201d (p. 68). 4 Fifth Act \u201cThe famous flower would not be polluted by the earthly dirt\u201d (p. 92) 5 Sixth Act \u201cLove forever, pairing with the male phoenix\u201d (p. 109). First Act \u201cWish we were the two trees which have grown together to form a double trunk\u201d (p. 47). Second Act \u201cEmperor\u2019s son-in-law has the righteousness to die for a good course\u201d (p. 68). Fourth Act \u201cFatal death of the young beauty\u201d (p. 100). Fifth Act \u201cPurity, would not be polluted by the earthly dirt\u201d (p. 128) Sixth Act \u201cThe male phoenix pairs with the female phoenix with love\u201d (p. 149). This paper deals with the text study in two directions, one is to study the relationship of character and fate, another one is to study the love images. The strong principle of purity in the character of Princess Cheng Ping (no 4 of the above table) drives the princess to face and fight back when confronting the inevitability of fate (no 3 of the above table). Emperor\u2019s son-in-law, with the strong righteousness (no 2 of the above table), leads the princess onto the path of loyality and martyrdom. In addition, the great romance of the opera is built and enhanced by the two beautiful images: phoenix (no 5 of the above table) and trees which have grown together to form a double trunk (no 1 of the above table).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Bruce"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcb22e63-979c-34bf-81a2-872d3fc387b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1084","pageStart":"1083","pagination":"pp. 1083-1084","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231308","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Kindall"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39d208cc-6100-3a41-b5e9-516606c95b45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23268279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"412","pagination":"pp. 412-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Experiential Readings and the Grand View: \"Mount Jizu\" by Huang Xiangjian (1609\u20141673)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23268279","wordCount":23266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":"Some Chinese artists exploited the spatial and temporal potential of the handscroll format by moving beyond traditional linear readings to experiential readings. 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Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1706674","wordCount":21705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3440","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"132","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1907-06-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20295007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08be9731-eeb6-3dae-84c1-e0c858a83d69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20295007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1907,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20295007","wordCount":48297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2426","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane von Buelow"],"datePublished":"1985-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2905739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Allegorical Gaze of C\u00e9sar Vallejo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2905739","wordCount":12030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Victoria McDonald"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4089751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00048038"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381486"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"368e3dca-9d27-3948-a067-9c5fcca0d184"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4089751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"auk"}],"isPartOf":"The Auk","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"51AA","pageStart":"1AA","pagination":"pp. 1AA-51AA","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Proceedings of The One Hundred and Seventeenth Stated Meeting of the American Ornithologists' Union","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4089751","wordCount":22834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Ornithological Society","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Phillips"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"859fb3d9-10f1-38f2-be42-d89fcda222a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42751004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Clash of Harmony: Forgery as Politics in the Work of Thomas Chatterton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751004","wordCount":10261,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56079]],"Locations in B":[[5335,5463]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"If Thomas Chatterton is remembered at all now, it is for his supposed suicide rather than for his work. He has become the all-but-forgotten 'poster boy' for tragic Romanticism, a talented but misunderstood teenager who killed himself in the face of social prejudice and poverty. This article attempts a revaluation of the work, both the forgeries of mediaeval manuscripts (the so-called 'Rowleyan' texts) and the 'acknowledged' writings. Recognising the importance of the Chatterton mythology in shaping narratives of interpretation, it also makes a case for understanding his creations as uniquely prescient of the current age of digital production. In this respect, Chatterton's apparently antiquarian manner and reputation are seen to be in complex tension with a formal critique of emergent mass media culture. Particular concerns of the piece are the essential materiality of Chatterton's forgeries and the dissenting animus of his non-Rowley works. Establishing a critical framework that encompasses critical and new media theory, the article suggests that Chatterton's collected works constitute a singularly political engagement with modernity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Duncan Robinson"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"635","pageStart":"633","pagination":"pp. 633-635","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829407","wordCount":1681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert R. Haynes","L. B. Holm-Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41761609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434534"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcc709d6-8fd0-3de2-ac48-3b8e90ac9259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41761609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harpapbot"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Papers in Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"THE GENERA OF HYDROCHARITACEAE IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41761609","wordCount":56544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Harvard University Herbaria","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1943-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225866","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"843bcb2f-9821-33a6-a6f6-42f8ea5009c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/225866"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"238","pagination":"pp. 238-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1943,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sixty-third Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to October 1942)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225866","wordCount":36918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Dekter"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26693096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468000989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd426242-4534-390f-9a12-369124911db6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26693096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Irish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cBlack and White, Flickering\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26693096","wordCount":8201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"In the mid-1930s Elizabeth Bowen was among the first writers to notice a direct affinity between film and the short story, and saw reflected in both emergent mediums a new type of expression, one working with identical methods and conventions in pursuit of exposing \u201can affair of reflexes \u2026 of associations not examined by reason.\u201d Nearly eighty years later, Kevin Barry reiterated this relationship when he identified an intermedial vocabulary linking contemporary short story writing with the \u201cpans and fades and jump-cuts of film\u201d\u2014a literary-cinematic framework that, throughout the form generally, and in Barry\u2019s fiction specifically, works to construct a highly visual narrative immediacy. Borrowing in part from Gilles Deleuze\u2019s post-structuralist associations of film and literature, this paper examines two such stories, \u201cThere Are Little Kingdoms\u201d and \u201cDark Lies the Island,\u201d and argues that in these works, cinematic and literary subjects are not just mutually intelligible, but innately hybridized, identified first in the forms and techniques of their outward material construction, and then ontologically, where cinematic principles are a bedrock to human thought and behavior.","subTitle":"The Visual Cycle in Kevin Barry\u2019s Short Fiction","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda S. Kauffman"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc5970d6-4602-34e3-b543-0beaac7b3287"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE WAKE OF TERROR: DON DELILLO'S \"IN THE RUINS OF THE FUTURE,\" \"BAADER-MEINHOF,\" AND \"FALLING MAN\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287626","wordCount":11120,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[54764,54979]],"Locations in B":[[21513,21728]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26224723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"339cef9e-d4c2-3b8f-9065-bbe5fe1f02ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26224723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullamermetesoci"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26224723","wordCount":6863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"American Meteorological Society","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Sterritt"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/432095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Revision, Prevision, and the Aura of Improvisatory Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432095","wordCount":7666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony White"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33bd6e33-3edb-341c-bf6e-a4b3a37fcb80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40368502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Industrial Painting's Utopias: Lucio Fontana's \"Expectations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368502","wordCount":10857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"124","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marian Zwerling Sugano"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b8bb1a9-a3f1-3110-8205-83f8dbc189c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42946055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond What Meets the Eye: The Photographic Analogy in Cort\u00e1zar's Short Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42946055","wordCount":10009,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[21279,21346],[42764,42932],[43175,43363]],"Locations in B":[[49346,49413],[49800,49867],[50236,50404],[50412,50602]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"In his 1963 essay on \"Some Aspects of the Short Story,\" Julio Cort\u00e1zar defined the short story in terms of its structural equivalence to the photograph, both artistic forms presupposing a strict delimitation beforehand, both creating an \"opening\" onto a \"much wider reality, like a dynamic vision that spiritually transcends\" the initial image or anecdote. The photographic analogy is constantly reinvoked throughout Cort\u00e1zar's works: in the collage texts to reinvent the notion of the \"book\" and in the short stories themselves, especially \"Blow-up\" and \"Apocalypse at Solentiname,\" in which photography as a metaphor for the short story is transformed into its basis, subject, theme, and critique. In both stories Cort\u00e1zar explodes the myth of photography's ability to register the direct, unmediated representation of experience by emphasizing the perfidious role of the machine in the production of image or text. \"Apocalypse\" must be read as a \"blow-up\" of \"Blow-up,\" in which the political ramifications of the use and reading of the space of representation take us beyond contemplation into the realm of social responsibility.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Mowitt"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaede9c4-3e9a-36ed-b0d3-f19fbd8ceb48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Towards a Non-Euclidean Rhetoric: Lautr\u00e9amont and Ponge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684398","wordCount":11264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence H. 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Cummings Society","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Meiches"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80b87769-a997-35d9-8135-ef5857547a40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26292330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"492","pageStart":"476","pagination":"pp. 476-492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A political ecology of the camp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26292330","wordCount":10531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Critical scholarship on the camp tends to focus on the institution\u2019s historical role in producing forms of social exclusion often by linking the emergence of the camp to the creation of abstract political divisions such as citizenship and nationality. While this approach has unquestionable value, it overemphasizes the importance of social constructions in the history and development of the camp. This article calls for a re-examination of the material elements composing camp spaces by offering attention to how non-human entities and processes contribute to the development of practices of confinement, security and governance. Drawing on the work of Manuel DeLanda, Gilles Deleuze, and F\u00e9lix Guattari, this article develops an outline of the camp as a material assemblage and examines how the camp emerges from the interaction of barbed wire, war, and the rise of motorized transport. This process of historical emergence helps to explain the elastic and transient dimensions of the camp as constitutive of a new form of fluid political control. Moreover, the article claims that attending to the materiality of the camp helps to explain the expanding role that camps will play in the future of political governance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d02bddc-be81-35d3-9a5f-a4f3c1afea48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948416","wordCount":21457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1440","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-08-29","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20144660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98760c61-c671-3356-9657-9a7b1ca2943a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20144660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20144660","wordCount":8416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5893","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"321","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1913-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9ed82ed-75ec-3a4f-b188-3c32f87f9e47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/432798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/432798","wordCount":9326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shira Wolosky"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07938934"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54702421"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238622"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02cf9b67-0d3f-377e-9ca4-f42b3ee50358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nashim"}],"isPartOf":"Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Jewish Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"What Do Jews Stand For? Muriel Rukeyser's Ethics of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/nas.2010.-.19.199","wordCount":11446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52540,52619]],"Locations in B":[[63937,64016]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"19","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The Jew has been and remains one of the most potent figures in Western culture. In Muriel Rukeyser's poetry, Jewish figuration joins with other central involvements of hers\u2014feminist, leftist, historical, poetic\u2014in complex relationships that raise vital questions about the constitution of identity and the way the Jew both symbolizes and enacts challenges of difference and continuities of commitment.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25160032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08bd2831-acd6-34ef-874c-1b8ff1815b02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25160032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulleclevmuseart"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"1987 Annual Report","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25160032","wordCount":40242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Cleveland Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GERHARD F. STRASSER","ANTONY GRIFFITHS","CELINA FOX","MARTIN HOPKINSON","HELENA BATLLE I ARGIMON","MARZIA FAIETTI","REBA WHITE WILLIAMS","PAUL MCCARRON","IAN LOWE","ANDREW DEMPSEY","SYLVAN COLE","WILLIAM SCHUPBACH"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7c3fa07-1aa1-3c7c-9aa3-fadc3703b818"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41826415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826415","wordCount":17536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/231436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eb6a432-81fd-381e-8b43-0e0465626928"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/231436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":236.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Such photographs have formed some of our most fundamental perceptions of sculpture, and they define their own realities, which are dense, problematic, and self-referential. When critical questions are asked of these images, used in art history as frequently as the verbal texts that accompany them, the nature of inquiry can be broadened and deepened.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Ney"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12f0868a-020c-3c34-b844-bdae445afb4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1073","pageStart":"1071","pagination":"pp. 1071-1073","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231302","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Martin"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10601503"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88c2e78a-f66c-3e50-8058-d788fb9443a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victlitcult"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"547","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-547","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"SOME TRICK OF THE MOONLIGHT\": SEDUCTION AND THE MOVING IMAGE IN BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819956","wordCount":13839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JUDITH BRIGGS"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20694790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043125"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839029"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236603"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"440e956f-0eb1-32a2-bb17-7ff7396bd741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20694790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arteducation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Star Wars, Model Making, and Cultural Critique: A Case for Film Study in Art Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20694790","wordCount":3401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Denise Helly","Robert F. Barsky","Patricia Foxen"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b0c5ab3-b0fe-3e08-accb-039d8a1828f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3341873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Cohesion and Cultural Plurality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3341873","wordCount":10126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"The notion of social cohesion implies the definition of a modern society as inclusive and founded upon a sense of communality and responsibility of its members towards each other. It therefore insists on a necessary participation to public affairs, to the labor force, to communities of life, and on a sense of societal belonging to enhance the solidarity and trust between members of a society. We discuss these ideas as well as their implications for the ethnic minorities in Canada. We try to show how the notion of social cohesion rests upon a deficient definition of the concepts of democratization, social capital, and membership to a society. We point its omission of the structural reproduction and production of inequalities, its deny of legitimacy to protests aiming at a change of power relations, its misinterpretation of the concept of social capital, and its injunction to develop a sense of societal belonging. \/\/\/ La notion de coh\u00e9sion sociale renvoie \u00e0 une d\u00e9finition de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 moderne comme int\u00e9gr\u00e9e and bas\u00e9e sur une communalit\u00e9 entre ses membres et sur leur responsabilit\u00e9 sociale. Elle insiste sur la n\u00e9cessaire participation des individus aux affaires publiques, au march\u00e9 du travail, \u00e0 une communaut\u00e9 de vie, et sur leur d\u00e9veloppement d'un sens d'appartenance soci\u00e9tale, autant de conditions pour accro\u00eetre confiance et solidarit\u00e9 entre eux. Cet article discute ces diff\u00e9rentes id\u00e9es et leurs implications pour les minorit\u00e9s ethniques et nationales, notamment dans le cas canadien. Il montre comment la notion de coh\u00e9sion sociale repose sur une conception d\u00e9ficiente de la d\u00e9mocratie, du capital social et du sens d'appartenance \u00e0 une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 en omettant les fondements structurels de la production et de la reproduction des in\u00e9galit\u00e9s et le r\u00f4le des contestations des relations de pouvoir, en limitant le sens du concept de capital social et en exigeant une all\u00e9geance \u00e0 l'\u00c9tat et le partage de valeurs culturelles.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2227237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108906"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23310"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2227237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"economicj"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Periodicals and New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2227237","wordCount":21692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"237","publisher":"Royal Economic Society","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Grimes"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00d2c10f-da7d-34b2-955b-fff1a364eea3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"779","pageStart":"777","pagination":"pp. 777-779","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231262","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seiji M. Lippit"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00956848"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227193"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d995628-9377-3aa4-8117-e9c1faaf1e1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjapanesestudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Japanese Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337656","wordCount":2158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Society for Japanese Studies","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David M. J. Wood"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02613050"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38871257"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236966"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5eca74da-0e41-3da8-b511-396dcfd77c29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27733821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulllatiamerrese"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Latin American Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Indigenismo and the Avant-Garde: Jorge Sanjin\u00e9s' Early Films and the National Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733821","wordCount":9665,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36990,37052]],"Locations in B":[[19205,19267]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"Jorge Sanjin\u00e9s' 1960s films \"Revoluci\u00f3n\" and \"Ukamau\" challenge the class and ethnic hierarchies of Bolivian society by casting the proletarian and indigenous masses as revolutionary liberators. The new national imaginary they evoke is tightly bound to the experimental cinematic techniques they employ, since their rejection of rationalist, realist aesthetics signals a partial undermining of the linear time of the modern nation. \"Ukamau\" both recalls and resists previous Bolivian indigenismo, which sought to co-opt the Indian into a national mestizo consciousness. Its exoticist portrayal of the Indian ultimately limits its political effectiveness, but textual and contextual analyses show subversive Indian agency leaking through.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NANCY OWEN"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662580","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10698825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f354322-2938-3d83-9659-13c3a5379551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40662580"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studdecoarts"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Decorative Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marketing Rookwood Pottery: Culture and Consumption, 1883-1913","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40662580","wordCount":8392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. 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Currier"],"datePublished":"1915-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/738039","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/738039"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1915,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Edward Mac Dowell: As I Knew Him","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/738039","wordCount":15399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Lettis"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"oclc","value":"793911460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012202873"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a59d28bc-a736-334a-b117-c8dd2e351901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44371527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dickens and Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44371527","wordCount":25254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen H. Brown"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f9331e5-3992-3f8f-a8a7-93bee2ad5e1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3337384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-100+104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337384","wordCount":4507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jen Katz-Buonincontro"],"datePublished":"2015-11-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.4.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6823a055-f727-3742-a62b-07c0fd2e373c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.4.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Implications of Kant's Theories of Art for Developing Creative Identity in Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.49.4.0001","wordCount":8730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"In light of the enduring question of whether student creativity and artistic talent are inborn traits versus learnable skills, this paper presents an exploration of these tensions outlined in an interpretation of philosopher Immanuel Kant's Critique of the Power of Judgment, in which Kant outlines his theories of \"fine art,\" \"genius,\" and taste.\" This paper builds upon past explorations of Kant's relevance to art appreciation and production to reveal how the intrinsic purpose of making fine art is the primary way that humans can expand their imaginative and reflective capacities and, hence, their phenomenological experiences. Three areas of teaching for developing creative identity are discussed in light of Kant's theories: First, it is important to help art students transition from other academic norms and learn to immerse themselves in the artistic process without fear of peer- or instructor-based judgment. Second, encouraging students to explore art media freely is essential for strengthening their abilities to take risks, even when that means defying conventional behavior expectations in mainstream academic disciplines. Finally, expanding what Kant calls \"reflective judgment\" can help make the \"crit,\" or critique format, a positive learning experience to help students' better manage their apprehension about their artistic abilities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter U. 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This article seeks to examine the increasingly close relationship between the US military and the digital-game industry, along with the geographies of militarism that this has produced. Focusing on the contribution that digital war games make to a culture of perpetual war and in the manufacture of consent for US domestic and foreign policy, the Pentagon's mobilization and deployment of digital games as an attempt to create a modern version of the noble war fantasy is critically examined. With particular reference to America's Army, the official US Army game, the article seeks to examine the influence of digital war games in the militarization of popular culture and in shaping popular understandings of geopolitics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-07-26","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1665792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20aed7be-c110-399f-9eac-141ea43a357b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1665792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Political science - Government"],"title":"Scientific Notes and News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1665792","wordCount":2470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2378","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1922-11-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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M."],"datePublished":"1903-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2248375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00264423"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40463594"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2248375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mind"}],"isPartOf":"Mind","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1903,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2248375","wordCount":8846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"45","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carrie J. Preston"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e2c263a-c83d-3847-af93-e25cf7f3e1d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Posing Modernism: Delsartism in Modern Dance and Silent Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587390","wordCount":10534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":"This essay establishes a genealogy of modernist performance that foregrounds the popular movement based on the ideas of the French acting theorist and voice teacher Fran\u00e7ois Delsarte (1811-71). Delsartism has been understood as either a short-lived, anti-modern histrionic acting style or an affected regimen of self-improvement and physical culture, and is virtually absent from discussions of modernism. Yet the move-ment established a modernist kinaesthetic\u2014a movement ideal\u2014and bodily technique based on a tension between stasis and movement: a pose modeled after classical statuary melting into another pose. This essay demonstrates that Delsartism provided the training regimen for modern dancers and silent film actors, who used Delsartean poses, coded with an emotional valence and a mythic narrative, as a method for making meaning in bodily expression. Examining the work of the early posers Emma Lyon Hamilton and Eugen Sandow, the dancers Isadora Duncan and Ted Shawn, the silent film star Louise Brooks, and the directors D. W. Griffith and Lev Kuleshov, Preston details the widespread impact of Delsartism on modernist performance. The Delsartean genealogy unites disparate strains of modernist performance, including ideas of the natural and mediated body, classicism, and the machine age.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Masco"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caaa54f6-7120-3fd3-9262-2635bf29453c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nuclear Technoaesthetics: Sensory Politics from Trinity to the Virtual Bomb in Los Alamos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805363","wordCount":20889,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56079]],"Locations in B":[[97659,97787]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In this article I investigate the politics of nuclear weapons production by examining how weapons scientists have experienced the exploding bomb at the level of sense perception through three experimental regimes: underground testing (1945-62), aboveground testing (1963-92), and stockpile stewardship (1995-2010). I argue that, for weapons scientists, a diminishing sensory experience of the exploding bomb has, over time, allowed nuclear weapon research to be increasingly depoliticized and normalized within the laboratory. The result is a post-Cold War nuclear project that assesses the atomic bomb not on its military potential as a weapon of mass destruction but, rather, on the aesthetic pleasure afforded by its computer simulations and material science.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4296645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08838364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc91d41d-00cf-37c5-bd42-38cfee60559a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4296645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"invitrcelldeve"}],"isPartOf":"In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":138.0,"pageEnd":"173A","pageStart":"36A","pagination":"pp. 36A-173A","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Developmental & Cell Biology","Science and Mathematics","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4296645","wordCount":123229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society for In Vitro Biology","volumeNumber":"27A","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1906345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a277fa8b-f411-3d23-840a-b372633d72eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1906345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"440","pagination":"pp. 440-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notices of Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1906345","wordCount":31913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Hawkins","Michael Partridge","Simon Ville"],"datePublished":"1987-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2596397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130117"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"603f3e0c-481a-3c7f-8dbc-f79d3bba4990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2596397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"647","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","Economics","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"List of Publications on the Economic and Social History of Great Britain and Ireland Published 1986","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2596397","wordCount":25731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Economic History Society","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reinhard Blutner","Peter beim Graben"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24898000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00397857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233322"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b29198ae-4799-34d5-8042-5092b34aa832"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24898000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"synthese"}],"isPartOf":"Synthese","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"3291","pageStart":"3239","pagination":"pp. 3239-3291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Quantum cognition and bounded rationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24898000","wordCount":27145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"193","abstract":"We consider several puzzles of bounded rationality. These include the Allais- and Ellsberg paradox, the disjunction effect, and related puzzles. We argue that the present account of quantum cognition\u2014taking quantum probabilities rather than classical probabilities\u2014can give a more systematic description of these puzzles than the alternate treatments in the traditional frameworks of bounded rationality. Unfortunately, the quantum probabilistic treatment does not always provide a deeper understanding and a true explanation of these puzzles. One reason is that quantum approaches introduce additional parameters which possibly can be fitted to empirical data but which do not necessarily explain them. Hence, the phenomenological research has to be augmented by responding to deeper foundational issues. In this article, we make the general distinction between foundational and phenomenological research programs, explaining the foundational issue of quantum cognition from the perspective of operational realism. This framework is motivated by assuming partial Boolean algebras (describing particular perspectives). They are combined into a uniform system (i.e. orthomodular lattice) via a mechanism preventing the simultaneous realization of perspectives. Gleason's theorem then automatically leads to a distinction between probabilities that are defined by pure states and probabilities arising from the statistical mixture of pure states. This formal distinction relates to the conceptual distinction between risk and ignorance. Another outcome identifies quantum aspects in dynamic macro-systems using the framework of symbolic dynamics. Finally, we discuss several ideas that are useful for justifying complementarity in cognitive systems.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Silvio A. Bedini"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb03318d-de86-3350-97e1-35943b4657fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1006654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xi+1-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"The Mace and the Gavel: Symbols of Government in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006654","wordCount":27200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"87","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15694070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"668143808"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4a7ca74-96e2-3d8c-b014-615cb42166e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fordmadoxford"}],"isPartOf":"International Ford Madox Ford Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ABBREVIATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871563","wordCount":915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danille Elise Christensen"],"datePublished":"2011-07-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerfolk.124.493.0175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b4b204-7707-31fa-af13-330777e9cbb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jamerfolk.124.493.0175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Folklore","Anthropology","American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"\u201cLook at Us Now!\u201d: Scrapbooking, Regimes of Value, and the Risks of (Auto)Ethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerfolk.124.493.0175","wordCount":17928,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[40738,40852]],"Locations in B":[[60435,60549]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"493","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"124","abstract":"By the early 2000s, scrapbook construction in the United States had shifted from a relatively private mode of assemblage into a visible practice bolstered by robust marketing and public venues for creation and display. But today\u2019s scrapbooks often also perform the value of activities long characterized as ephemeral, mundane, and private by recasting them\u2014using archival-safe products and visual documentation\u2014as durable, artistic, and public. In effect, these books perform everyday lives. Arbiters of culture have questioned the authenticity or aesthetic merit of these exhibits in moves that deflect attention from the risks that attend any form of cultural documentation, including their own. Because scrapbooking makes visible the estrangement and objectification that occur when experience is entextualized, this popular hobby prompts reflections about ethnographic practice, the risks of performance, and the regulation of cultural hierarchies more generally.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-08-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26368083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c6f107c-c903-30fe-a016-605f14ff996e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26368083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26368083","wordCount":71884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winfried N\u00f6\u00f6th"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/trancharpeirsoc.47.4.445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00091774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615710"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215848"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a2fab86-aaf4-342d-8082-9cfb72f75812"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/trancharpeirsoc.47.4.445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"trancharpeirsoc"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"445","pagination":"pp. 445-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Representation to Thirdness and Representamen to Medium: Evolution of Peircean Key Terms and Topics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/trancharpeirsoc.47.4.445","wordCount":18114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"Abstract The evolution of Peirce's semiotics and his doctrine of phenomenological categories resulted in new concepts and in several significant revisions of earlier key terms. The paper examines Peirce's concept of representation and its derivatives (representamen, to represent, representational function, etc.) in their relation to terms and conceptual metaphors such as sign, sign vehicle, embodiment, medium, and mediation. From representation and its derivatives, Peirce gradually shifted his focus of attention to medium and mediation. The paper examines how, why, and when Peirce changed the semantic scope of his terms and why and in which way he used some of them in a broader and a narrower sense at the same time. It argues that major characteristics of Peirce's terminology and scholarly rhetoric have their roots in his ethics of terminology, his theory of scientific writing, and his doctrine of fallibilism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1911-12-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25295510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10f31ec2-8a61-3b73-b8f1-db123976fa9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25295510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1911,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25295510","wordCount":96008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2661","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anja Kl\u00f6ck"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66bdc790-afd7-3762-bf60-1bba26432262"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Cyborg Technologies and Fascistized Mermaids: Giannina Censi's \"Aerodanze\" in in 1930s Italy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068708","wordCount":10651,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[52817,52880],[53062,53461],[53561,53757]],"Locations in B":[[7018,7081],[7091,7490],[7560,7755]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41367188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af7a1ffb-fe0a-3546-b005-96d5d6bd9893"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41367188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"637","pageStart":"618","pagination":"pp. 618-637","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"208TH ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41367188","wordCount":8202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5073","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 J. \u00c1lvarez"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26864514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13960482"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67617860"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f6c57e8-b6ae-34fa-adcf-b32759d60812"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26864514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"variborg"}],"isPartOf":"Variaciones Borges","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernist Aesthetics and the Question of Ownership in Borges's \"Funes el memorioso\" and Heidegger's \"The Origin of the Work of Art\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26864514","wordCount":8051,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[39665,39831]],"Locations in B":[[25914,26074]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"47","publisher":"Borges Center, University of Pittsburgh","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael C. Blumm"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43265682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00462276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e46c1d-6b1c-3308-a87c-7b43bf560f18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43265682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"environmentallaw"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Law","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"IMPLEMENTING THE PARITY PROMISE: AN EVALUATION OF THE COLUMBIA BASIN FISH AND WILDLIFE PROGRAM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43265682","wordCount":38657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"This Article evaluates the Northwest Power Act's Fish and Wildlife Program, assesses the Program's prospects for restoring fish and wildlife resources to the Columbia Basin, and describes some of the Program's implementation difficulties.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael T. Jones"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44bd7a85-52bc-382e-b1e7-ba60ab77338b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Assessing Neo-Marxist Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487729","wordCount":3443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.66.1.0203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5077845-e443-3a71-a99a-e12c9ee0f169"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.66.1.0203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"New & Notable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.66.1.0203","wordCount":13778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Lutgendorf"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10224556"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41438060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-047752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86946481-fb16-326a-bb5b-db99181879fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20106974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhindstud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Hindu Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is There an Indian Way of Filmmaking?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106974","wordCount":14727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24019997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f32662-9fdc-384d-91be-7e9eaa8754e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24019997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":431.0,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iii, 1-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"General Index to Volumes XLI\u2013LX 1935\u20131955","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24019997","wordCount":319755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. 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Van Vogt's 800-Word Rule and P.K. Dick's \"The Game-Players of Titan\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241255","wordCount":10486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Notwithstanding the huge bibliography of secondary literature on P.K. Dick and his oeuvre, there are very few articles or books that focus on single works by this very well-known writer. This essay is an attempt to undertake a step-by-step analysis of the plot of one of Dick's \"minor\" novels, \"The Game-Players of Titan\" (1963), in order to examine how a Dickian text really works. The text is read by locating the moments where Dick has interrupted the narrative flow by inserting genre shunts that shift the story from one genre or subgenre to another, and\/or from one specific fictional reality to another. The use of these shunts is one of Dick's distinctive textual strategies, also demonstrated in, for example, his short story \"Small Town\" (1954). This strategy is the main element in what Thomas M. Disch has called the Game of the Rat-i.e., Dick's bewildering ability abruptly to change the narrative rules of his fictions and thus to repeatedly thwart the expectations of his readers. This game is not a naive device that allows a hack writer to propel his plot when the action is lagging (Van Vogt's 800-word rule); rather, it is a skillful textual strategy that allows Dick to build complex maze-like texts that challenge our mindsets and question various aspects of postmodern (or late modern) societies. Thus Dick's Game of the Rat may cast light on his own fiction, as well as on other larger (and just as rigged) games of virtual economy and politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LIAM BUCKLEY"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"707f39f8-454b-3e14-9dfe-a82cbec15ef2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48579359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"743","pageStart":"720","pagination":"pp. 720-743","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PHOTOGRAPHY AND PHOTO-ELICITATION AFTER COLONIALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579359","wordCount":8633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"In photo-elicitation studies of colonial imagery, photographs are seen as repositories of historical data. This article examines the author\u2019s experience of photo-elicitation in the postcolonial context of The Gambia, West Africa. Here, Gambian viewers responded to the aesthetic and compositional details of colonial photographs rather than their historical content. This attention to the surface of the photograph and its aesthetic qualities suggests a disconnection or distraction from the colonial history depicted in the images. This photo-elicitation does not engage or resolve a historical relationship with the colonial past. Rather, it reveals an engagement with elements of the photograph in which the visual legacies of colonialism\u2014identification, representation, memorialization\u2014remain absent. The absence of acknowledged connections to the past calls into question the ability of the photograph to represent the colonial past or its subjects to the viewer. In Gambian viewers\u2019 preoccupation with aesthetic details, the photograph becomes a crafted object, rather than a link to colonial subordination. This calls into question the efficacy of photo-elicitation to demonstrate reactions to colonialism that move beyond Eurocentric frameworks.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Downs","P. S.","F. P. L.","William Clifford","A. H. N.","P. S. H.","M. B. D.","Richard F. Bach"],"datePublished":"1936-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3256628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72a3c4d6-deb4-34c4-82fd-33d5457ec1de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3256628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metrmuseartbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3256628","wordCount":5047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Kammen"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/526476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59299f5c-7b53-3644-85a5-886f91a07748"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/526476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Photography and the Discipline of American Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/526476","wordCount":3059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Mellencamp"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43385518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43385518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"VIDEO POLITICS: \"Guerrilla TV\", Ant Farm, \"Eternal Frame\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43385518","wordCount":9062,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5783,6051]],"Locations in B":[[6000,6268]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjorie L. DeVault"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9641f2e-3af7-3666-8e51-6d8bb64fb872"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1492","pageStart":"1491","pagination":"pp. 1491-1492","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231115","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BORIS YARUSTOVSKY"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44651031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"620000756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1209b65e-e078-38fd-95a7-78546e0bd335"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44651031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldofmusic"}],"isPartOf":"The World of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","fre","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Even though a digital-being is not a physical thing, it has many essential features of physical things such as substantiality, extensions, and thing-totality (via Heidegger). Despite their lack of material bases, digital-beings can provide us with perceivedness or universal passive pregivenness (via Husserl). Still, a digital-being is not exactly a thing, because it does not belong to objective time and space. Due to its perfect duplicability, a digital being can exist at multiple locations simultaneously-that is, it defies normal spatiotemporal constraints. With digital beings on the Internet, we can establish intercorporeal relationships. The World Wide Web opens up new possibilities of Dasein's \"being-able-to-be-with-one-another\" and new modes of \"Being-with-others\" (Mitsein). The new modes of communication based on digital-beings compel us to re-read Heidegger's basic concepts such as \"Dasein as Being-in-the-world,\" since Dasein becomes the \"Digi-sein as Being-in-the-World-Wide-Web.\" By exploring the ontological characteristics of digital-being, this paper suggests that we conceive digital-beings as res digitalis -- a third entity which is located somewhere between res cogitans and res extensa.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alicja Helman"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919064"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5175f129-1d16-310d-8eaa-a7b9667c6599"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1483218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibushistoriae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus et Historiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Present-Day Meaning of a Work of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1483218","wordCount":8260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"IRSA s.c.","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":"The changes in contemporary art are approached by analysing the evolution of the character of a work of art and its related concepts. The concept of the \"open work\" proposed by Umberto Eco is modified by representing the development of art as the process of a gradual liberation of the work from its limitations. Strict principles of interpretation have been given up in favour of free and variable readings. The next phase has been the liberation of the work from its status as an object -- a modern artist is apt to leave some freedom to the performers as readers, allowing for a more or less free handling of his materially unfinished product. The most recent development has been the rejection of the rules which used to govern all artistic communication. The author analyses two determinants of contemporary changes in the work of art. One of them is the substitution of the process for the object principle: a contemporary work is apt to be a phenomenon, a happening, a show. Another factor which is claimed to be of essential significance is the random element in the process of creation and reception of art, appearing in three aspects: 1. random patterns, independent of the artist's intentions, are included in a material artistic object; 2. random performance; 3. random reception is allowed, as the audience is expected to influence actively the structure of the work as an object, or even to cooperate with the artist. The analyses are supported by examples from music, visual arts, and film.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geoffrey Yeo"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40294496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a621cee-aea6-35d6-b443-8aad9e51b5e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40294496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Concepts of Record (2): Prototypes and Boundary Objects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40294496","wordCount":13057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":"This paper argues that, within the recordkeeping community, perceptions of records are subject to the \"prototype\" effects identified in recent psychological studies. Archivists and records managers perceive certain records as prototypical, while other records are more distant from their mental prototypes. Prototype effects apply both to item-level records and to record aggregations. Moreover, the boundaries of the record concept are fuzzy, and some records are \"boundary objects\" shared with other communities. The characterization of records as persistent representations embraces nonprototypical records as well as those more central to the concept.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barnaby Haran"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40856514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0aee351-c805-33f0-bb07-4f1d8ca68f44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40856514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Homeless Houses: Classifying Walker Evans's Photographs of Victorian Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40856514","wordCount":12449,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19986,20234]],"Locations in B":[[49173,49421]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans Robert Jauss","Benjamin Bennett","Helga Bennett"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ae4e3e8-f217-3429-8231-7c6c1e510f92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Levels of Identification of Hero and Audience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468397","wordCount":15434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Vromen"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2071986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dbb4e3c-3a7f-37b7-b228-35d5412e7ad3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2071986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2071986","wordCount":656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Hamm"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/763708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41ff9599-79b9-37c8-89f2-19bf30ece46d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/763708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"376","pagination":"pp. 376-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/763708","wordCount":8737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl A. Wall"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd5881ca-55c3-3cff-9f69-284712ba8a13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"574","pageStart":"552","pagination":"pp. 552-574","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sifting Legacies in Lucille Clifton's \"Generations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208794","wordCount":9310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Cruickshank"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26289327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7786c15-1ca0-383b-aa46-71e9be2e3261"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26289327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of Art in the Age of Global Consumption: Agn\u00e8s Varda's \"Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26289327","wordCount":6148,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[16305,16387],[17373,17449],[34570,34639],[46586,46804]],"Locations in B":[[5686,5768],[8324,8400],[20051,20120],[20804,21022]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Guerlac"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b9f1ef1-7d5c-3293-a2c2-d1b1af4ee4b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4152860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152860","wordCount":1737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Luiza Ilkiu-Borges"],"datePublished":"2016-04-25","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00715794"},{"name":"oclc","value":"248594182"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235307"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d235e806-00f4-39f1-af33-ed1059bb71e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26312815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"florneot"}],"isPartOf":"Flora Neotropica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":129.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"PRIONOLEJEUNEA (Lejeuneaceae, Jungermanniopsida)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26312815","wordCount":61482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"New York Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":"Based on the examination of types and additional specimens, currently 21 species and 3 newly described taxa of Prionolejeunea are recognized; 26 names are proposed as new synonyms. Prinololejeunea is characterized by the following features: leaf margins toothed by conically projected cells crowned by a small papilla, lobules with a proximal hyaline papilla, absence of ocelli, 2-keeled perianths and occasionally lejeuneoid subgynoecial innovations. The greatest diversity of this Afro-American genus is found in the Americas, where it is represented by 22 species. Only two species are known from Tropical Africa. The species of Prionolejeunea are usually epiphyllous or corticolous epiphytes in moist lowland to lower montane rain forests. Phylogenetic analyses based on morphological evidence and trnL-trnF spacer and nrITS region sequences indicate that the trnL-trnF data set supports the monophyly of Prionolejeunea and demonstrates that Cyclolejeunea is the most closely related genus. A key to the species, as well as morphological descriptions, illustrations, and distribution maps for each species are presented. Com base no exame de tipos e esp\u00e9cimes adicionais, s\u00e3o reconhecidas 21 esp\u00e9cies e 3 novos taxa para Prionolejeunea; 26 nomes s\u00e3o propostos como novos sin\u00f4nimos. Prionolejeunea \u00e9 reconhecida pelas seguintes caracter\u00edsticas: margens dos fil\u00eddios denteadas por c\u00e9lulas c\u00f4nicas projetadas e coroadas por uma pequena papila, l\u00f3bulos com uma papila hialina proximal, aus\u00eancia de oc\u00e9los, periantos com duas quilhas e ocasionalmente inova\u00e7\u00f5es subginoeciais lejeune\u00f3ides. A maior diversidade deste g\u00eanero Afro-Americano \u00e9 encontrada nas Am\u00e9ricas, onde est\u00e1 representado por 22 esp\u00e9cies. Somente duas esp\u00e9cies s\u00e3o conhecidas para a Africa Tropical. As esp\u00e9cies de Prionolejeunea s\u00e3o geralmente ep\u00edfilas ou cortic\u00edcolas em florestas \u00famidas de plan\u00edcie a baixo-montanhosas. An\u00e1lises filogen\u00e9ticas baseadas em evid\u00eancias morfol\u00f3gicas e sequencias do espa\u00e7ador trnL-trnF e da regi\u00e3o nrITS indicam que o conjunto de dados do trnL-trnF d\u00e3o suporte a monofilia de Prionolejeunea e demonstram que Cyclolejeunea \u00e9 o seu g\u00eanero-irm\u00e3o. Uma chave para as esp\u00e9cies, assim como descri\u00e7\u00f5es morfol\u00f3gicas, ilustra\u00e7\u00f5es e mapas de distribui\u00e7\u00e3o para todas as esp\u00e9cies s\u00e3o apresentados.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert W. Witkin"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b4e8320-4d27-38fc-b745-ed9946d8e825"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Why did Adorno \"Hate\" Jazz?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223286","wordCount":16419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"Adrono's jazz essays have attracted considerable notoriety not only for their negative and dismissive evaluation of jazz as music but for their outright dismissal of all the claims made on behalf of jazz by its exponents and admirers, even of claims concerning the black origins of jazz music. This paper offers a critical exposition of Adorno's views on jazz and outlines an alternative theory of the culture industry as the basis of a critique of Adorno's critical theory. Adorno's arguments are discussed in the context of his wider theoretical commitment to a model of structuration-in both musical and social relations-that establishes a dividing line between a moral aesthetic praxis that can be approved as having \"truth-value\" and one that betrays and subverts the truth. In Adorno's analysis, jazz finds itself positioned on the wrong side of that line and, accordingly, is condemned. It is argued that it is Adorno's commitment to a formalist model of art works that has been superseded by modern aesthetic practice in both so-called \"serious\" art as well as in the works of the culture industries that binds him to a regressive model of aesthetic praxis. An alternative theory of the culture industry is outlined that explores its positive functions in enhancing the resources available for culture creation through its transmission of aesthetic codes, and in mediating relations between so-called high and low art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna C. Chave"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"851161d5-6018-3d00-bf71-fc02d3bbcd44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revaluing Minimalism: Patronage, Aura, and Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619622","wordCount":21043,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[58895,58981]],"Locations in B":[[78252,78347]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"The Minimalist canon has been largely restricted to a core group of New York\u2014based artists, cast as materialists, while sidelining their \"idealist\" Californian counterparts. Yet the movement's foremost patrons\u2014Giuseppe Panza di Biumo and Dia Art Foundation founders Heiner and Fariha Friedrich\u2014encompassed East and West Coast artists alike in their distinctly spiritualized vision of Minimalism. Over time, these patrons would substantially affect the development and the institutional framing of the movement, in part by funding epic projects to function effectively as pilgrimage sites. Claims that this auratic version of Minimalism represented a distortion are evaluated and partly questioned here.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tullio Pagano"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Diaspora to Empire: Enrico Corradini's Nationalist Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251723","wordCount":7087,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55971,56085]],"Locations in B":[[36869,36993]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Denis Cosgrove"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/622249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Prospect, Perspective and the Evolution of the Landscape Idea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622249","wordCount":11984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":"The landscape concept in geography has recently been adopted by humanistic writers because of its holistic and subjective implications. But the history of the landscape idea suggests that its origins lie in the renaissance humanists' search for certainty rather than a vehicle of individual subjectivity. Landscape was a 'way of seeing' that was bourgeois, individualist and related to the exercise of power over space. The basic theory and technique of the landscape way of seeing was linear perspective, as important for the history of the graphic image as printing was for that of the written word. Alberti's perspective was the foundation of realism in art until the nineteenth century, and is closely related by him to social class and spatial hierarchy. It employs the same geometry as merchant trading and accounting, navigation, land survey, mapping and artillery. Perspective is first applied in the city and then to a country subjugated to urban control and viewed as landscape. The evolution of landscape painting parallels that of geometry just as it does the changing social relations on the land in Tudor, Stuart and Georgian England. The visual power given by the landscape way of seeing complements the real power humans exert over land as property. Landscape as a geographical concept cannot be free of the ideological overlays of its history as a visual concept unless it subjects landscape to historical interrogation. Only as an unexamined concept in a geography which neglects its own visual foundations can landscape be appropriated for an antiscientific humanistic geography.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anton van der Hoven"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41801922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6117cc3c-64ca-3c0a-82ae-c8e48be414eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41801922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetics, Ideology, and the Position of the Critic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41801922","wordCount":11071,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[10467,10662],[37409,37741],[42088,42498],[42503,42684]],"Locations in B":[[45547,45743],[45858,46190],[46363,46768],[46786,46960]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"77","publisher":"Berghahn Books","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oren Bracha"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20454710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2faf09ea-f399-3897-b385-6c2fc2f52ff1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20454710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"186","pagination":"pp. 186-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ideology of Authorship Revisited: Authors, Markets, and Liberal Values in Early American Copyright","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20454710","wordCount":38258,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"118","abstract":"The concept of the author is deemed to be central to copyright law. An important strand of copyright scholarship explores how the development of modern copyright law was intertwined with the rise of a new ideology of authorship as an individualist act of creation ex nihilo. This Article remedies two common shortcomings of this scholarship: implying that the process of embedding original authorship in copyright law was complete by the end of the eighteenth century, and presenting the relation between the ideology of authorship and copyright law as an exact correlation. These two shortcomings neglect the complexity of the interaction between authorship and copyright law and attract the criticism that much of modern copyright doctrine seems diametrically opposed to the presuppositions of original authorship. This Article focuses on copyright law and discourse in nineteenth-century America. It argues that much of the weaving of the ideology of authorship into copyright law took place during this later period and in three main contexts: originality doctrine, the emergence of the notion of copyright as ownership of an intellectual work, and the rules that allocate initial copyright ownership. The result was the modern structure of copyright-authorship discourse as a motivated distortion. Various parts of this discourse incorporate conflicting images and assumptions about authorship, which often stand in tension with the legal doctrines of copyright and their actual effects. These patterns, which still dominate copyright law today, are traceable to the history of the power struggles, economic interest motivations, and the ideological constraints that produced them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48418558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227348"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"manadeciecon"}],"isPartOf":"Managerial and Decision Economics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"v","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-v","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108134","wordCount":2064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Gough"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Peale's extensive documentation of his drawing instruments enables a reconstruction of his experiment and points to an early American engagement with the aesthetics of the panoramic. The projected design of his circular print also invites analysis in relation to debates over ratification of the United States Constitution: as Federalist politicians urged Americans to \"extend the sphere\" and assume a \"comprehensive view\" of government, Peale imagined a pictorial analogue for the new republic.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dawn Ades"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/888437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6512bdd-e2bf-39f2-9a12-1058511d76fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/888437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cornell and Duchamp. 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Philosopher, sociologist, and cultural theorist Georg Simmel's 1900 magnum opus, the Philosophy of Money, provides valuable orientation at a moment when the expectation that public discourse must be oriented by norms of truth and accuracy is under siege\u2014not least by those who ascended to power openly denigrating the value of expertise and the specialized knowledge long regarded as essential to modern government. Trump has an instinctive grasp of Simmel's decisive insight that \u201cmoney is the strongest and most immediate symbol\u201d of the cynical truism that \u201cthe only absolute is the relativity of things.\u201d Situating philosophy at the limits of disciplinary ways of knowing, the Philosophy of Money develops a modernist, performative strategy of thought that turns relativity into a philosophical resource. It can help us to counter the dissolution of the ideal of veracity in an era of absolutized marketing by disentangling thought from narratives of rational progress that obscure its opposite and interrogating the limitations of the professionalized ordering of knowledge practices in which expertise continues to be produced and maintained. Simmel's strategy for embracing the fragmentation, multiplicity, and uncertainty of human experience may thereby help us address the complexity and ambiguity of a historical situation growing increasingly surreal as techno-scientific progress goes hand in hand with post-truth politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3429858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00916765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35526936"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn96-47857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3429858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihealpers"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Health Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Report on the Consensus Workshop on Formaldehyde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3429858","wordCount":49510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"The Consensus Workshop on Formaldehyde consisted of bringing together scientists from academia, government, industry and public interest groups to address some important toxicological questions concerning the health effects of formaldehyde. The participants in the workshop, the Executive Panel which coordinated the meeting, and the questions posed, all were chosen through a broadly based nomination process in order to achieve as comprehensive a consensus as possible. The subcommittees considered the toxicological problems associated with formaldehyde in the areas of exposure, epidemiology, carcinogenicity\/histology\/genotoxicity, immunology\/sensitization\/irritation, structure activity\/biochemistry\/metabolism, reproduction\/teratology, behavior\/neurotoxicity\/psychology and risk estimation. Some questions considered included the possible human carcinogenicity of formaldehyde, as well as other human health effects, and the interpretation of pathology induced by formaldehyde. These reports, plus introductory material on the procedures used in setting up the Consensus Workshop are presented here. Additionally, there is included a listing of the data base that was made available to the panel chairmen prior to the meeting and was readily accessible to the participants during their deliberations in the meeting. This data base, since it was computerized, was also capable of being searched for important terms. These materials were supplemented by information brought by the panelists. The workshop has defined the consensus concerning a number of major points in formaldehyde toxicology and has identified a number of major deficits in understanding which are important guides to future research.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2775589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22b60009-59a5-3f5c-a6d5-b83a5832e0fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2775589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2775589","wordCount":12380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. 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Carr","Richard L. Kremer"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2541381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03610160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"538ec8c5-7bcf-37ca-9ef6-2a786f376c8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2541381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sixtcentj"}],"isPartOf":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Child of Saturn, The Renaissance Church Tower at Nideraltaich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2541381","wordCount":12461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"There is a plaque in the foundation of the west towers of the cloister of Saint Mauritius in Niederaltaich, Germany, which shows a horoscope with Saturn at the Ascendent. To explain this astrologic inscription in an ecclesiastical setting, this article uses the theology and rhetoric of church foundation ceremonies, the approach of astrology, pre-reformation humanism, and the evolution of Saturn from a malific planet to the patron of creative genius.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Morton W. 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This essay examines Blavatsky\u2019s reading practices and the interpretive protocols she followed in challenging the hegemony of certain knowledge structures, whose origin she located in religious orthodoxy. A key point of her critique was that dominant religions consigned competing theories of the world to oblivion by denouncing them as heresies or blasphemies. These so-called heresies were, for her, lost or esoteric knowledge, just as magic was a placeholder for religious debates erased from the historical record. Maintaining that the dislocated past can only be salvaged by nonrational experiences, Blavatsky shifted the weight of truth from the exoteric to the esoteric, thereby creating a space for the recovery of core meanings through such eclectic means as memory, imagination, and the paranormal faculties.","subTitle":"Reading the Exoteric, Retrieving the Esoteric","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephanie Porras"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44657325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01696726"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559862664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014268566"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d699fe4f-4890-3cee-b595-871157c70182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44657325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nedekunsjaarnkjn"}],"isPartOf":"Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek (NKJ) \/ Netherlands Yearbook for History of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Going viral? 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Literature"],"title":"On the Wings of a Bird: Folklore, Nativism, and Nostalgia in Meiji Letters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030371","wordCount":8836,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Nanzan University","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"In the wake of Western colonial expansion in Asia, the Meiji government of Japan (1868-1912) began a massive push toward bunmei kaika [Japanese characters] (civilization and enlightenment). This campaign was not limited to the political sphere but extended into the cultural realm, resulting in growing public interest in all things Western. Despite this sea change in Japanese cultural orientation, however, there was a constant literary undercurrent of nativism and a recurrent interest in folk practices and oral traditions as well as in the Japanese countryside, rather than the developing cityscape. Focusing on the work of ethnographer Yanagita Kunio and his impact on the Meiji literary climate and particularly on the work of Izumi Kyoka, this article will suggest some of the ways in which Japanese authors in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries mined the folklore and rural customs of Japans past in order to express their fear, excitement, and ambivalence about life in the modern age.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elspeth Whitney"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ebda95d-dc36-3cf5-bf59-d57bca9f663b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1006521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Paradise Restored. The Mechanical Arts from Antiquity through the Thirteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006521","wordCount":86667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MORGAN MYERS"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"869af0ea-5ce2-35ad-a65e-79dd2c74fded"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24726741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma2"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"EZRA POUND ME FECIT: MEMORIAL OBJECT AND AUTONOMOUS POEM IN \"THE CANTOS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726741","wordCount":9935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Poetry Foundation","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Savran"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22ca2d8f-37a7-340b-9a86-0826a73f1781"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ambivalence, Utopia, and a Queer Sort of Materialism: How \"Angels in America\" Reconstructs the Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208484","wordCount":12019,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16294,16387]],"Locations in B":[[25199,25292]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fernand H\u00f6rner"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23339028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16190548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57358041"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236605"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7734e023-f1b3-3523-b61b-e65a5397b9b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23339028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"liedpopukultsong"}],"isPartOf":"Lied und popul\u00e4re Kultur \/ Song and Popular Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Wenn das Original ins Wohnzimmer kommt. Musik und Reproduktion im Zeitalter von Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23339028","wordCount":9441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Zentrum f\u00fcr Popul\u00e4re Kultur und Musik","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"Benjamin's ideas about the loss of aura and cult value through technical reproduction leave many questions open concerning auditory elements. The case of music is contemplated by Benjamin but it is hardly thought through to a conclusion. Nevertheless the technical reproducibility of sounds plays a central albeit implicit role. Unlike the majority of available studies up until now, which apply the idea of the loss of aura to contemporary musical (re)production techniques, Benjamin's ideas will be illuminated here in historical context with regard to developments in both musical theory as well as media technology in his time.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1613868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219525"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42936599"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227177"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1613868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcellbiology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Cell Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Developmental & Cell Biology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1613868","wordCount":7028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":null,"volumeNumber":"110","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Raiger"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393738"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"706785da-f01e-3106-b6a7-689551c5df47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24392118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studphil"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"665","pageStart":"637","pagination":"pp. 637-665","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Fancy, Dreams, and Paradise: Miltonic and Baconian Garden Imagery in Coleridge's \"Kubla Khan\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392118","wordCount":13357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":"This article challenges conventional readings of Coleridge's Kubla Khan that interpret the poem as presenting an ideal model of poetic creativity. In locating the intertextual web of references that point to Milton's Paradise Lost and various texts by Francis Bacon, the garden imagery of the poem, which has been so resistant to critical interpretation, can be read in the context of a rejection of Coleridge's own empirically grounded theory of inspiration expressed in his 1796 volume of poems. A Coleridgean theory of dreams is presented as a framework by which the prose Preface to Kubla Khan can be shown to reveal the poet's criticism of the dream-language by which the poem was purportedly constructed. The Preface affixed to the 1816 version of Kubla Khan will be subject to critical reassessment, in order to understand the circumstances surrounding its publication history. The major contention of this article is that Kubla Khan is a revision and rejection of Fancy, the poetic form of inspiration, material in its operations, and conceived as the agency by which Coleridge's early poetry was produced.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER BROOKS"],"datePublished":"1986-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da55cf30-a90c-302e-9e83-3ffebb44bbf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Psychoanalytic constructions and narrative meanings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151618","wordCount":11217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin M. Jones"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03071022"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45096141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2de52ad5-bc5f-3e3b-ba3d-32c311228192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socihist"}],"isPartOf":"Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"461","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'A horizon lit with blood': public poetry and mass politics in Iraq","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246554","wordCount":9893,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6665,6743]],"Locations in B":[[10327,10405]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"This article analyses the role of public poetry in facilitating the emergence of mass politics in Iraq during the late 1940s and early 1950s. Popular neo-classical poets like Muhammad Mahid al-Jawahiri and Muhammad Salih Bahr al-'Ulum began to subvert traditional networks of political patronage that tied poets to rival factions of the political establishment and to compose poems that instead spoke directly to mass audiences. The insistence of these poets on reciting their poetry before mass audiences in highly public acts of defiance and dissidence helped to formulate a revolutionary ethos that shaped the tenor of radical politics over the final decade of monarchy. The tremendous influence of this new form of radical political poetry provoked a campaign of severe state repression in which dissident poets were imprisoned, tortured and exiled. While the advent of modernist poetics in the 1950s opened new space for subaltern 'voices' and transformed the landscape of cultural politics in modern Iraq, the far-reaching effects of these public interventions of the radical neo-classical poets laid the groundwork for the mass political movements of the period.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wyndham Miles"],"datePublished":"1953-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00959367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565629410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27757159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chymia"}],"isPartOf":"Chymia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"iv","pagination":"pp. iv, 37-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Benjamin Rush, Chemist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757159","wordCount":19276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILLIAM VIESTENZ"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff5034fb-e4d2-3c87-bf33-91c26b872c5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20779176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Memory Interment through Literary Sepulcher in Josep Pla's \"El quadern gris\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779176","wordCount":10255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Poco despu\u00e9s de la muerte de Josep Pla en 1981, muchos cr\u00edticos volvieron a estudiar El quadern gris y encontraron all\u00ed una multitud de falsedades y anacronismos, poniendo en entredicho la clasificaci\u00f3n gen\u00e9rica del texto como una autobiograf\u00eda. Con tanto \u00e9nfasis en el dilema taxon\u00f3mico, no se ha analizado con la debida atenci\u00f3n el v\u00ednculo entre la teor\u00eda de memoria que desarrolla Pla a lo largo del texto y las irregularidades hist\u00f3ricas. En este art\u00edculo se considera sobre todo que la memoria moral, una especie de catexis, es el centro organizador de la obra. Una gran preocupaci\u00f3n de Pla es establecer un orden coherente en los recuerdos. Viendo que el paso de los a\u00f1os ha vuelto la rememoraci\u00f3n de su juventud inestable, Pla utiliza la escritura para enterrar los fantasmas de su pasado y atajar su vaiv\u00e9n intermitente. El reto es reconciliar la noci\u00f3n de la escritura, como la construcci\u00f3n de una sepultura textual, con la pol\u00e9mica sobre el g\u00e9nero. Este art\u00edculo, por tanto, postula que Pla, al estilo de Nietzsche, erige un autorretrato permitiendo que una m\u00e1scara desusada de la identidad vuelva a servir como firmante del texto.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Foner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8b1ed47-e9ee-350e-b758-5ea9c9d41dca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1158","pageStart":"1156","pagination":"pp. 1156-1158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231347","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46968396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd5895e5-c290-390e-b93c-b802179e4213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23415895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":212.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system","Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"LEADING CASES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23415895","wordCount":105423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"126","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-05-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1746983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"140bacbd-e69d-3136-8616-970a3b0ce170"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1746983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"704","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-704","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1746983","wordCount":14677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4342","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"200","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1841226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcaf554f-c0e1-32de-ba9b-ee87eaac5d99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1841226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"1026","pageStart":"954","pagination":"pp. 954-1026","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1841226","wordCount":42467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barton Beebe"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"773e2cd7-afed-3140-8874-3aeb9c9258fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40648469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"889","pageStart":"810","pagination":"pp. 810-889","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW AND THE SUMPTUARY CODE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648469","wordCount":41313,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9713,10068]],"Locations in B":[[108377,108732]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"123","abstract":"This Article assesses intellectual property law's emerging role as a modern form of sumptuary law. The Article observes that we have begun to rely on certain areas of intellectual property law to provide us with the means to preserve our conventional system of consumption-based social distinction, our sumptuary code, in the face of incipient social and technological conditions that threaten the viability of this code. Through sumptuary intellectual property law, we seek in particular to suppress the revolutionary social and cultural implications of our increasingly powerful copying technology. Sumptuary intellectual property law is thus taking shape as the socially and culturally reactionary antithesis of the more familiar technologically progressive side of intellectual property law. The Article identifies the conditions that are bringing about this peculiar juncture of intellectual property law and sumptuary law and evidences this juncture in various evolving intellectual property law doctrines. The Article further predicts that intellectual property law cannot succeed in sustaining our conventional system of consumption-based social distinction and identifies in this failure the conditions for a different and superior system of social distinction, one characterized more by the production of distinction than by its consumption and one in which intellectual property law promises to play a crucial \u2014 and progressive \u2014 social role.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JACK MILES"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24460981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Global Requiem: The Apocalyptic Moment in Religion, Science, and Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460981","wordCount":7053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Lischi"],"datePublished":"1986-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26207306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00060941"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d6484b8-83f4-320d-a898-94666bf75427"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26207306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bibliofilia"}],"isPartOf":"La Bibliofil\u00eda","keyphrase":null,"language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Exactitude, elegance\". Il problema degli errori di stampa e la correzione delle bozze nell'\"Encyclop\u00e9die\" Diderot-D'Alembert","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26207306","wordCount":6465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki s.r.l.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard A. Posner"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74b3545f-2481-3781-96e2-022a87aeb8e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"1717","pageStart":"1637","pagination":"pp. 1637-1717","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Problematics of Moral and Legal Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342477","wordCount":38535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":"In these Holmes Lectures, delivered a century after the publication of Oliver Wendell Holmes's great essay The Path of the Law, Judge Posner argues for an essentially Holmesian conception of the proper relations among modern normative moral philosophy (\"academic moralism\"), morality, and law. Academic moralism, he argues, lacks either the intellectual cogency or the emotional power to change people's beliefs or behavior; the power to do so resides in \"moral entrepreneurs,\" which academic moralists emphatically are not. Academic moralism's lack of cogency disqualifies it to guide judicial decisionmaking even - in fact, especially - in cases involving controversial moral issues, such as abortion and euthanasia, as the Supreme Court has recognized.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Huyssen"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"becce3df-e18b-31fc-b4bb-62c23dd20a06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Adorno in Reverse: From Hollywood to Richard Wagner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487786","wordCount":13905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bj\u00f6rn Weyand"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26422489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16161203"},{"name":"oclc","value":"233857144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4be29db2-57a4-3277-8473-3224b9a3626d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26422489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kulturpoetik"}],"isPartOf":"KulturPoetik","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Das Fotografische und der Blick. Zwei Studien zum Verh\u00e4ltnis von Literatur und Fotografie(n)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26422489","wordCount":3656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht (GmbH & Co. KG)","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Levi"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5de5bd2-14f7-301c-99c6-71aabe853fcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Judge for Yourselves!\"-The \"Degenerate Art\" Exhibition as Political Spectacle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779182","wordCount":10850,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[58782,58867]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1933-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f176dae-d71a-3723-ab4c-3b09baee1042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"521","pagination":"pp. 521-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1933,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Grimsted"],"datePublished":"1981-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5a7f729-cef9-356b-a5a2-a96e5039c17c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1180776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1180776","wordCount":1564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRIAN COLLINS"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26887839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216682"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56634092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213347"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a40bffb-ba36-34da-a152-0383f9022d1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26887839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewiquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Jewish Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - 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Performing arts"],"title":"Handel at a Crossroads: His 1737-1738 and 1738-1739 Seasons Re-Examined","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40539063","wordCount":20372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":"The years 1738 and 1739 saw a dramatic reversal in Handel's life and career. Wide popularity, admiration, and financial success in the spring of 1738 gave place to unexpected competition and performance clashes with the Italian opera party a year later, spoiling Handel's first oratorio season and exhausting his current account. New documentary evidence culled from a variety of sources allows us to reconsider this period, probe its central episodes, and reveal new ones. Among the topics explored in this essay are a hitherto unknown attempt by female aristocrats to produce Italian operas in 1739, Handel's long-standing interest in musical innovation, a Frenchman's eyewitness account of key Handelian events in 1738, a reconsideration of Saul's and Israel in Egypt's reception in 1739, and the earliest attempt to promote English Oratorio as a British national genre.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24190155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00754250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569508573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d30623a-790e-382b-98b5-b42b8c2821af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24190155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglassstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Glass Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Marxism and the Past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40547833","wordCount":8636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"68\/69","publisher":"Skidmore College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Schaffer","Sophie No\u00ebl"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27587648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03952649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8777a1d0-353e-39a7-8353-fbe5f073bce0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27587648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annahistscisoc"}],"isPartOf":"Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"815","pageStart":"791","pagination":"pp. 791-815","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'inventaire de l'astronome: Le commerce d'instruments scientifiques au XVIIIe si\u00e8cle (Angleterre-Chine-Pacifique)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27587648","wordCount":13199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"EHESS","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"En 1791, le gouvernement britannique envoyait une exp\u00e9dition majeure de recherches sur le littoral nord-est du Pacifique avec pour objectif, entre autres, de prendre la ma\u00eetrise du commerce des fourrures entre l'Am\u00e9rique et l'Asie. L'ann\u00e9e suivante, les Britanniques envoyaient une d\u00e9l\u00e9gation en Chine pour obtenir des am\u00e9liorations des conditions du commerce entre la Compagnie des Indes orientales et l'Empire des Qing. Dans chaque projet, les instruments astronomiques ont jou\u00e9 un r\u00f4le d\u00e9cisif. Signes de la puissance britannique, ils \u00e9taient aussi des moyens de mesure de haute pr\u00e9cision. Ils faisaient l'objet de d\u00e9monstrations th\u00e9\u00e2trales, de manipulations destin\u00e9es \u00e0 mettre en valeur leur ing\u00e9niosit\u00e9, mais \u00e9taient aussi, en retour, victimes de vols, quand ils n'\u00e9taient pas cass\u00e9s et vendus. L'article examine la mani\u00e8re dont ces instruments, au cours de ces exp\u00e9ditions, servaient d'interm\u00e9diaires entre des groupes humains diff\u00e9rents, indig\u00e8nes, marchands, fonctionnaires, savants et voyageurs. Parce que les instruments peuvent incorporer des valeurs et des cosmologies tr\u00e8s diff\u00e9rentes, voire oppos\u00e9es, leurs cursus sont des moyens tr\u00e8s efficaces de tracer les voies d'acc\u00e8s aux rencontres transculturelles et d'observer leurs cons\u00e9quences. \/\/\/ In 1791, the British government sent a major survey expedition to the Northeast coast of the Pacific as part of its campaign to master the fur trade between America and Asia. The next year, the British also sent an embassy to China to seek changes in the terms of trade between the East India Company and the Qing Empire. In both these enterprises, astronomical instruments played a crucial role. They acted as signs of British virtue and as means of precision measurement. They were displayed theatrically, ingeniously manipulated, stolen, broken and sold. this article examines the role of such instruments in these expeditions in order to see how astronomical equipment mediated between different groups of residents, merchants, administrators. Because of their different values and cosmologies, their careers are very useful ways of tracing the course and consequences of cross-cultural encounters.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roderick D. Gordon"],"datePublished":"1964-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3344517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44683915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236973"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f522c25-ad7e-3950-a9ea-f27d283f2924"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3344517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1+3-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Doctoral Dissertations in Music and Music Education, 1957-1963","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3344517","wordCount":52379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"MENC: The National Association for Music Education","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Tannoch-Bland"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0e665dd-2c37-314c-a54e-46fac2e34b62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Aperspectival Objectivity to Strong Objectivity: The Quest for Moral Objectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810256","wordCount":10328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Sandra Harding is working on the reconstruction of scientific objectivity. Lorraine Daston argues that objectivity is a concept that has historically evolved. Her account of the development of \"aperspectival objectivity\" provides an opportunity to see Harding's \"strong objectivity\" project as a stage in this evolution, to locate it in the history of migration of ideals from moral philosophy to natural science, and to support Harding's desire to retain something of the ontological significance of objectivity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAWRENCE KLEIN"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43896596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bf053f3-4e8b-3003-b2c6-37042917074e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43896596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kissing for Virtuosi: William Stukeley's Philosophy of Pleasure (1757)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43896596","wordCount":15712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"549","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"131","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lambert Zuidervaart"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/431200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Social Significance of Autonomous Art: Adorno and B\u00fcrger","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431200","wordCount":12171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"778e7098-f1e1-3022-8f9f-9ad588f66e16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":156.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Program and Abstracts 80th Annual ESA Meeting: The Transdisciplinary Nature of Ecology, Snowbird, Utah, 30 July-3 August 1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167928","wordCount":54701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"76","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John C. Parish"],"datePublished":"1935-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19350708"},{"name":"oclc","value":"123209312"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3818175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Huntington Library Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"California Books and Manuscripts in the Huntington Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818175","wordCount":23078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD BROWN"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2251c8f4-bd7d-379d-841b-163a0028cc4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"BODY WORDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871276","wordCount":9075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"Exploring aspects of the Modernist and Postmodernist attempts at the imaginative reclamation of the body, this essay discusses the insistence on the body in the strategies of representation in the \"Penelope\" episode, offering an analysis of its so-called \"cardinal\" or \"wobbling\" points (the words \"because\", \"bottom\", \"woman\" and \"yes\"), arguing that these may be understood as central to either or both of these Modernist and Postmodernist projects by virtue of their providing a tangential form of structure and reference that attempts to redress the constraints on the libidinal that may be characteristic of conventional representations, working to make \"sense\" in partial resistance to the instrumental, pathologizing or criminalizing tendencies of the \"sentence\".","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Shor"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4467154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Walter Benjamin as Guide: Images in the Modern City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4467154","wordCount":5282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CLAUDETTE LAUZON"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3138\/j.ctt1whm8v6.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781442649828"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b0ad33b-e0ad-3dc6-b7ad-7fefbf7609ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3138\/j.ctt1whm8v6.6"}],"isPartOf":"The Unmaking of Home in Contemporary Art","keyphrase":["matta clark","unhomely genealogy","matta clark\u2019s","rosler","martha rosler","gordon matta","domestic","memory","homelessness","gordon matta clark"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"26","pagination":"26-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"An Unhomely Genealogy of Contemporary Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3138\/j.ctt1whm8v6.6","wordCount":14738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Fifteen years ago, historian Kerwin Lee Klein issued a scathing report on what he termed the advent of the \u201cmemory industry\u201d \u2013 the exponential growth of memory as a key vector of concern in the arts and humanities. And indeed, a collective turn to memory \u2013 variously referred to as an industry, a boom, an avalanche, and a crisis \u2013 undeniably began to materialize in both Western culture and critical discourse in the late 1990s.\u00b9 As elaborated by Andreas Huyssen, this turn can be mapped along three trajectories: the rejection of modernity\u2019s blind trust in progress and development, the articulation of anxiety around","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lydia Goehr"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92cbd25f-bc11-3c71-9fac-e4ea8543e619"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Three Blind Mice: Goodman, McLuhan, and Adorno on the Art of Music and Listening in the Age of Global Transmission","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669229","wordCount":13933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"104","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a382127-d3d6-34b2-bb36-c3aca44bbce3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4124728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Cultural Analysis as Experimental Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4124728","wordCount":30444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Arguing that without a differentiated and relational notion of the cultural, the social sciences would he crippled, reducing social action to notions of pure instrumentality, in this article, I trace the growth of cultural analysis from the beginnings of modern anthropology to the present as a layered set of experimental systems whose differential lenses create epistemic objects with increasing precision and differential focus and resolution. Arguing that culture is not a variable-culture is relational, it is elsewhere or in passage, it is where meaning is woven and renewed, often through gaps and silences, and forces beyond the conscious control of individuals, and yet the space where individual and institutional social responsibility and ethical struggle take place-I name culture as a set of central anthropological forms of knowledge grounding human beings' self-understandings. The challenge of cultural analysis is to develop translation and mediation tools for helping make visible the differences of interests, access, power, needs, desires, and philosophical perspective. In particular, as we begin to face new kinds of ethical dilemmas stemming from developments in biotechnologies, expansive information and image databases, and ecological interactions, we are challenged to develop differentiated cultural analyses that can help articulate new social institutions for an evolving civil society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Miller"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27549422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373052"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48157598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216116"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27549422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sewaneerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Sewanee Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"cxxiv","pageStart":"cxxi","pagination":"pp. cxxi-cxxiv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Inventive Philosophical Men","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27549422","wordCount":1107,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Colvin"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1491d892-9037-357d-ac00-461529d2ef1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1450","pageStart":"1448","pagination":"pp. 1448-1450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231093","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Hoberman"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24472118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4093e890-969d-385b-beeb-c2fae1e12044"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24472118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Fascist Guns in the West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24472118","wordCount":3004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"110","publisher":"Princeton University Art Museum","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVE SAVAGE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472117857"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86441e66-be32-3262-83a5-641f59fe7d66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvc5pf3g.16"}],"isPartOf":"Bytes and Backbeats","keyphrase":["musical","groove","african","african music","african folkloric","milee yookoee","cultural","rhythmic","popular music","bass drum"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"129","pagination":"129-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Communication Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Application Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.16","wordCount":8592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Some years ago I studied and played in ensembles with Kwaku Dadey, a master drummer from Ghana who lives and teaches in the San Francisco Bay Area. One of the classes I took with him involved learning traditional folklore pieces from the Yoruba tradition. This music is part of the West African storytelling practice in which the drum pattern is linked to lyrics, in effect telling the story through the drumming. As we studied these various pieces I became interested in transcribing them, and I worked with Kwaku on making transcriptions. Of course there are innumerable dif\u2039 culties in transcribing","subTitle":"African Folklore and Music Communities","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Zaret"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e73d98-3dda-3be6-9b2c-db1fe196928f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1095","pageStart":"1094","pagination":"pp. 1094-1095","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231314","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3590839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3590839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3590839","wordCount":25127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernhard Dietz"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkk2tn.7","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d010adf7-9ad2-3824-b2f9-eb11fdb4a1bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvbkk2tn.7"}],"isPartOf":"Neo-Tories","keyphrase":["eugenik","degeneration","zentraler topos","grossbritannien","sterilisation","eugenics and","weltanschauung","neo toryismus","ludovici","britischen"],"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":130.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"75","pagination":"75-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Neo-Toryismus als Weltanschauung","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkk2tn.7","wordCount":63207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Im folgenden soll Neo-Toryismus als Weltanschauung dargestellt werden. Gewisserma\u00dfen handelt es sich bei diesem Kapitel um den ideengeschichtlichen Kern der Untersuchung. Wie in der Einleitung bereits angek\u00fcndigt, ist es ein zentrales Anliegen dieses Buches, Neo-Toryismus als Begriff f\u00fcr eine eigenst\u00e4ndige ideologische Spielart der britischen Zwischenkriegszeit zu etablieren und gegen andere Str\u00f6mungen abzugrenzen.Der selbst der intellektuellen Rechten zugeh\u00f6rige Autor Armin Mohler beschrieb als das Kennzeichnende des Ph\u00e4nomens \u201aWeltanschauung\u2018, \u201eda\u00df in ihr Denken, F\u00fchlen, Wollen nicht mehr reinlich geschieden werden k\u00f6nnen.\u201c\u00b9 In diesem aufschlu\u00dfreichen Kommentar vermischt sich historische Analyse mit politischer Selbstbeschreibung: Von Oswald Spengler bis Armin Mohler haben insbesondere Vertreter","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ilya Vinitsky"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20620673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20620673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Table Talks: The Spiritualist Controversy of the 1870s and Dostoevsky","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20620673","wordCount":12874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Bruce"],"datePublished":"1936-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/890642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595520"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212089"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e282512a-8427-35b1-9290-a4be50193997"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/890642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"[Partial Index to Encyclopedie de la Musique et Dictionnaire du Conservatoire]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/890642","wordCount":6303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lukas Rieppel"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3af57041-5a5b-3fa8-9b2e-09b38a514eb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/667969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bringing Dinosaurs Back to Life: Exhibiting Prehistory at the American Museum of Natural History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/667969","wordCount":15655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":"ABSTRACTThis essay examines the exhibition of dinosaurs at the American Museum of Natural History during the first two decades of the twentieth century. Dinosaurs provide an especially illuminating lens through which to view the history of museum display practices for two reasons: they made for remarkably spectacular exhibits; and they rested on contested theories about the anatomy, life history, and behavior of long-extinct animals to which curators had no direct observational access. The American Museum sought to capitalize on the popularity of dinosaurs while mitigating the risks of mounting an overtly speculative display by fashioning them into a kind of mixed-media installation made of several elements, including fossilized bone, shellac, iron, and plaster. The resulting sculptures provided visitors with a vivid and lifelike imaginative experience. At the same time, curators, who were anxious to downplay the speculative nature of mounted dinosaurs, drew systematic attention to the material connection that tied individual pieces of fossilized bone to the actual past. Freestanding dinosaurs can therefore be read to have functioned as iconic sculptures that self-consciously advertised their indexical content.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1917-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3406320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"545b0fe4-8a72-334b-a3cf-17af6f692a34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3406320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":183.0,"pageEnd":"1027","pageStart":"845","pagination":"pp. 845-1027","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1917,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Convention of the American Nurses' Association","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3406320","wordCount":83307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James M. Jasper"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d017f4fe-69cd-3c0c-a459-99a8faa3f469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1478","pageStart":"1476","pagination":"pp. 1476-1478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231107","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER VERSTRATEN"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1d8hb79.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089649430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1e05638-1ac8-30d5-a4dd-396c6397664f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1d8hb79.6"}],"isPartOf":"Humour and Irony in Dutch Post-war Fiction Film","keyphrase":["nette mensen","alleen maar","shouf habibi","maar nette","moroccan","maar nette mensen","alleen maar nette","vox populi","comedy","uncle youssef"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"83","pagination":"83-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Film Studies","Communication Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Multicultural Comedies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1d8hb79.6","wordCount":14497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"For Bakhtin, carnival laughter which marks the anti-establishment or folk humour that has been the subject of the first chapter, is ambivalent: it is not only reactionary and toothless, but its mock and derision also have some subversive impact, no matter how minimal. For one, the comedies contradict the utopian assumption that class distinctions are hardly relevant in the Netherlands. Moreover, the laughter could be aimed at some social mischief or situation, as was the case with Schatjes!, Flodder or New Kids Turbo. By contrast, the deliberate banality of Filmpje! and Vet hard seemed to be shown for the sake","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. J. Vierra"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26432380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038478X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625229"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"568f6089-a92c-39b7-b096-1c46125178b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26432380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"swesthistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"\u201cMaybe It Will Turn Out Better Than We Had Expected\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26432380","wordCount":11776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Texas State Historical Association","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":null,"subTitle":"The School of Mines and the Legal Foundation of the University of Texas System","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Myron S. Heidingsfield","Harold R. Hosea"],"datePublished":"1939-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24019561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01621459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125238"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fd12522-ae5f-3078-bd59-ec4cc915ea5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24019561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstatasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Statistical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":106.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iv, 1-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Index to the Journal of the \"AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION\": Volumes 1\u201434 1888\u20141939","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24019561","wordCount":33750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Statistical Association","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Swinkin"],"datePublished":"2019-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26844666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164679"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14745d25-9708-3f16-bd31-7ce19d10b4fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26844666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Paratactic Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26844666","wordCount":17285,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[41893,41970]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Can one cull from Adorno\u2019s oeuvre a single coherent theory of musical performance? One wonders, since the main work he devoted to the topic, Towards a Theory of Musical Reproduction, is incomplete and often enigmatic. However, one especially suggestive desideratum for performance is evident in Adorno\u2019s praise for musical amateurs: \u201cLively music-making, by children, amateurs . . . supplies the theory with the most important exemplary material. Firstly, because here the music appears with all its cracks and holes, so to speak . . . through [which] one can observe, as with broken toys, how it \u2018works\u2019.\u201d These and other remarks point to parataxis being a crucial performative criterion for Adorno. This essay substantiates that thesis by, first, reviewing Adorno\u2019s theory of musical performance; second, placing it in the wider context of his philosophical thought; third, rehearsing his remarks on Schubert, for him a paratactic composer par excellence; fourth, proposing some performative equivalents to hypotaxis and parataxis and pondering the repertoire for which each performance style may be suitable; finally, exposing deficiencies in Adorno\u2019s approach while at the same time trying to salvage it. Mo\u017ee li se iz Adornova opusa izlu\u010diti jedinstvena koherentna teorija glazbene izvedbe? To je upitno, jer njegovo glavno djelo posve\u0107eno toj temi, Prema teoriji glazbene reprodukcije, nekompletno je i \u010desto zagonetno. Me\u0111utim, ono \u0161to je naro\u010dito po\u017eeljno za izvedbu razvidno je iz Adornove pohvale glazbenim amaterima: \u00bb\u017divo izvo\u0111enje glazbe od strane djece, amatera \u2026 podupire teoriju s najva\u017enijim primjerima. Prvo, zato \u0161to se tu glazba pojavljuje sa svim svojim pukotinama i rupama, pa se takore\u0107i \u2026 u [tomu] mo\u017ee promatrati, kao kod slomljenih igra\u010daka, kako ona \u2018radi\u2019. Suze su mnogi prozori u probleme interpretacije \u0161to ih vje\u0161ta izvedba normalno skriva\u00ab. Prema autorovoj procjeni, ove i druge primjedbe upu\u0107uju na parataksu kao klju\u010dni kriterij za Adorna glede izvedbe. Naju\u017ee definirana, parataksa ima za nu\u017enu posljedicu stavljanje rije\u010di ili kratkih fraza jednu do druge bez ikakvih veznika me\u0111u njima: \u00bbDo\u0111oh, vidjeh, pobijedih\u00ab. Njezina antinomija hipotaksa rabi rije\u010di koje stvaraju sintakti\u010dke i hijerarhijske odnose. Paratakti\u010dkom tekstu tako op\u0107enito manjkaju ti odnosi, ostavljaju\u0107i lingvisti\u010dke \u0107elije ogoljelima. \u0160ire uzeto, parataksa izbjegavaju\u0107i linearnu gramatiku, a tako\u0111er izbjegava i linearnu logiku i teleologiju. Napokon, parataksa je beskorisna za transparentno opona\u0161anje. Paratakti\u010dki tekst, za koji je pjesni\u010dki stih paradigmati\u010dan, je autorefleksivan. Adorno smje\u0161ta u tu osnovu puno filozofskog kapitala. Kao \u0161to on i Horkheimer raspravljaju u Dijalektici prosvjetiteljstva, razum i pojmovi povijesno su slu\u017eili za dominaciju nad prirodom, potiskuju\u0107i inherentne tendencije prirodnih predmeta. Paratakti\u010dki jezik djelomice izbjegava tu \u0161tetnu tendenciju i zahva\u0107a vi\u0161e nego \u0161to gu\u0161i posebnosti pojava. Tome je tako jer takav jezik tvori pojmovne konstelacije. Konstelacija prije opona\u0161a nego \u0161to namjerava objasniti predmet: odnosi me\u0111u pojmovima prete\u017eu nad odre\u0111enim zna\u010denjem bilo kojeg pojma, a u tim odnosima do\u017eivljavamo u ne-pojmovnom obliku odnose koji tvore predmet u njegovoj istan\u010danoj jedinstvenosti. H\u00f6lderlin je Adornov heroj pjesni\u010dke paratakse, a Schubert Adornov heroj glazbene paratakse. Schubert predstavlja teme sonatnih forma koje za razliku od Beethovenovih ne sintetiziraju sve \u0161to im je na putu. Umjesto toga, njih se ponavlja s varijacijom kao \u0161to kristal razli\u010dito prelama svjetlo iz razli\u010ditih uglova. Schubertova glazba, sa svojim konstelacijama bezvremenskih i nepovezanih elemenata, istinita je u tome \u0161to se ne pretvara da su tema i forma, subjekt i objekt, kompatibilniji nego \u0161to to uistinu jesu. \u0160to bi to zna\u010dilo izvoditi paratakti\u010dki? Poput amatera, sviralo bi se na iskidan na\u010din, strate\u0161kom uporabom dinami\u010dkih krajnosti, promjenljivim prstometom, nepovezanom artikulacijom koja proizvodi suprotne kretnje. Na taj na\u010din izvo\u0111a\u010d bio izbjegao izra\u017eavanje dojma sinteze i nametanje cjelovitosti i koherentnosti na glazbeni materijal. Kakva bi se to glazba mogla svirati na taj na\u010din? S obzirom da Adorno izjavljuje da izvo\u0111a\u010d mora rekreirati unutarnju dinamiku djela, \u010dini se da, sasvim jednostavno re\u010deno, on mora svirati paratakti\u010dku glazbu paratakti\u010dki poput Schubertove glazbe (i hipotakti\u010dku glazbu poput Beethovenove hipotakti\u010dki, s dugim, logi\u010dnim nitima). Me\u0111utim, valja u razmatranje uzeti ne samo \u0161to je Adorno rekao nego i kako je to rekao: njegova je proza prete\u017eno paratakti\u010dka, aurati\u010dka (gnomi\u010dka) i autoreferencijalna, bez obzira na temu kojom se bavi. Mo\u017eda taj stil odra\u017eava ethos njegova doba kako ga je on vidio, doba subjektno\/objektnog otu\u0111enja. Vo\u0111eni njime, svirati u pravom adornovskom duhu moglo bi biti svirati svu glazbu bez obzira na stil s paratakti\u010dkom samosvije\u0161\u0107u kako bi se promicala autenti\u010dna svijest na\u0161eg sada\u0161njeg ljudskog stanja.","subTitle":"Toward an Adornian Theory of Musical Interpretation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1948-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88d23514-96a0-3423-9e44-f28bffc7820f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1840615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"657","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-657","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840615","wordCount":41758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul R. Deslandes"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.3.470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f459d352-598f-370b-a79e-a6b2d1fbfcfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.3.470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"470","pagination":"pp. 470-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Visual Victorians: Response","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.56.3.470","wordCount":3381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/419920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81390e3d-c47b-3934-97fe-0010a6f01d37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/419920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/419920","wordCount":2268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Political Science Association","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TREVOR STARK"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04f0972-0f40-32ca-a4c8-f6cec9eb5684"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Complexio Oppositorum: Hugo Ball and Carl Schmitt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586628","wordCount":16607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"146","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69ac2029-03d7-3438-9bc4-8572a0c06b80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41328466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41328466","wordCount":6567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali Altaf Mian"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09289380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918157"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff48117f-b7c3-3dc5-b089-476031ad3f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26571282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islalawsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Islamic Law and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Law","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Troubling Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26571282","wordCount":12708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"This article contributes to Islamicist scholarship on the relationship between modern technology and Muslim thought and practice by closely reading and historicizing a twentieth-century South Asian \u1e24anafi\u0304 treatise on the use of the loudspeaker in ritual prayers. In this treatise, the \u1e24anafi\u0304 jurist Mu\u1e25ammad Shafi\u0304\u02bf discusses the reasons for changing his legal opinion. The jurist first argued that the use of the loudspeaker invalidates the ritual prayer of the congregant (muqtadi\u0304). In his revised position, however, he held that the loudspeaker should be avoided in ritual prayers, but that its use does not invalidate the prayer. While Mu\u1e25ammad Shafi\u0304\u02bf appears to have revised his position in response to newfound scientific knowledge about the ontological status of the loudspeaker\u2019s sound or for the sake of public benefit (mas\u0323lah\u0323ah), I suggest that his revised fatwa\u0304 was based on distinctive \u1e24anafi\u0304 modes of legal reasoning. By grounding his revised position in casuistry, the mufti\u0304 renewed his commitment to his law school\u2019s methodologies in a social context in which scientific knowledge and legal pluralism were weakening \u1e24anafi\u0304 modes of reasoning.","subTitle":"The Deobandi Debate on the Loudspeaker and Ritual Prayer","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yolanda Molina-Gavil\u00e1n","Andrea Bell","Miguel \u00c1ngel Fern\u00e1ndez-Delgado","M. Elizabeth Ginway","Luis Pestarini","Juan Carlos Toledano Redondo"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"707991c0-e100-3803-b291-5279a752b6ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Chronology of Latin American Science Fiction, 1775-2005","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475074","wordCount":26560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"This bibliography presents the most comprehensive inventory to date of science fiction published in Latin America. Arranged chronologically and spanning more than two centuries (1775-2005), it gives bibliographic information about sf novels, anthologies, magazines, and key short stories originally published in Spanish or Portuguese. The listings are prefaced by an essay that reviews the genre's development and its major exponents in each country and region studied. The bibliography also contains a directory of primary works available in English translation and concludes with a guide to relevant critical essays.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Catherine Harper"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ec889d3-b8f1-39ea-89e2-38ab688e614f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Incurably Alien Other: A Case for Feminist Cyborg Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240459","wordCount":11765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"The fictions of feminist-oriented cyborg writers such as Pat Cadigan, Misha, Laura J. Mixon, Lisa Mason, and Sue Thomas indicate a critique and refiguration of the gendered humanist subject. However, the emerging subjectivity depicted in feminist cyborg literature is not necessarily as anti-humanist as cyberpunk literature. Instead, such novels as Synners, Red Spider White Web, Glass Houses, Arachne, and Correspondence entertain various ways of incorporating the marginalized, feminized body into what is traditionally constructed as the masculine transcendent mind. The cyborgs of these novels, associated with the Alien Other Feminine, are representations of a subjectivity which will not be cured of its humanist foundations. Rather, these cyborgs are mind-driven, willful agents even as they are commodified, technologized bodies. Feminist cyborg literature articulates our culture's inescapable humanist dream of transcendence while creatively addressing the condition of diversity in gender, technology, and biology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Verena Andermatt Conley"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ac9afa-f054-302e-9632-a8fe63729684"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Fraying of Voices: Jean-Luc Godard's \"Pr\u00e9nom Carmen\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285905","wordCount":5810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles R. Simpson"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20006797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07439245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"153e1729-79a5-3d5b-9b89-adf4ea7f4ebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20006797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"statcultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"State, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Popular Culture as Civil Religion: The Collective Imagination and the Social Integration of Mass Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20006797","wordCount":7765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis A. Ruprecht Jr."],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/arion.26.1.0165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00955809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235555"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"434f828a-6818-3cb8-b731-f01d9321e67e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/arion.26.1.0165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arion"}],"isPartOf":"Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Who Owes What to Whom? Some Classical Reflections on Debt, Greek and Otherwise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/arion.26.1.0165","wordCount":10795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University through its publication Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vassiliki\u00a0Betty Smocovitis"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/644632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01acdd3d-2415-305b-974b-2d3110764b2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/644632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"590","pagination":"pp. 590-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Singing His Praises: Darwin and His Theory in Song and Musical Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/644632","wordCount":9619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay offers a chronological survey of the range of songs and musical productions inspired by Darwin and his theory since they entered the public sphere some 150 years ago. It draws on an unusual set of historical materials, including illustrated sheet music, lyrics and librettos, wax cylinder recordings, vinyl records, and video recordings located in digital and sound archives and on the Internet. It also offers a characterization of the varied genres and a literary analysis of the forms as a way of understanding the diverse audiences engaging, and indeed \u201centertaining,\u201d Darwin and the implications of his theory. It argues that the engagement with Darwin and his celebrated theory is far more creative than has been appreciated and recommends that historians of science further explore Darwin and his theory as embodied in a fuller range of cultural expressions. This will lead to an understanding of Darwin's \u201ciconic\u201d status that draws on a fuller range of human sensory experience and that also enables us to appreciate his\u2014and his theory's\u2014enduring power to engage the human imagination.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a4a8dc3-ac68-3501-9349-f402980e3332"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/949497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/949497","wordCount":16534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1432","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d9eb6ad-0a15-388d-9f1f-a42395360157"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25486282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":200.0,"pageEnd":"1915","pageStart":"1716","pagination":"pp. 1716-1915","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program of the 2005 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486282","wordCount":100633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"120","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Friedberg"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"faba7094-86a4-30c2-b805-b1e8eb4cf3db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Les Fl\u00e2neurs du Mal(l): Cinema and the Postmodern Condition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462776","wordCount":8465,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42391,42794]],"Locations in B":[[641,1532]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"This essay provides a historical prologue for theorizing the cinema in postmodernity. The origins of the mobilized gaze are situated in the nineteenth-century fl\u00e2neur, that paradigm of modernity. As the department store supplanted the arcade, space opened for a new urban subject, a female fl\u00e2neur-a fl\u00e2neuse. The mobilized consumer gaze led in turn to an apparatus that simulates spatial and temporal mobility: the cinema. The most profound symptoms of the postmodern condition-the disappearance of a sense of history, entrapment in a perpetual present, the loss of temporal referents-stem in part from the implicit time travel of cinematic and televisual spectation. The shopping mall-the present-day extension of the arcade-has the multiplex cinema and the VCR as apparatical exponents. The title of the essay is thus an appropriative double pun (on fleurs and on mal), locating the fl\u00e2nerie of the postmodern cinema spectator in the shopping mall.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Tresch"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4027862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92e3882b-c638-327b-9466-9301582d72d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4027862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'The Potent Magic of Verisimilitude': Edgar Allan Poe within the Mechanical Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4027862","wordCount":8779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. 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P."],"datePublished":"1928-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/863554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09510788"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00d9cf16-acad-3d62-9223-4ba912cb9d47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/863554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmagaconn"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/863554","wordCount":2157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"299","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniela Garofalo"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755392","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88c95ab4-9fe3-3b81-8785-d8902fa3a46b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755392"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Transnational studies have long emphasized processes of mediation, migration, hybridization, and circulation as key elements of international and transcultural encounters and confrontations. DH provides us with new tools and methods to put the processes of dissemination, circulation, and mediation at the center of our work on transnationalism. One of the innovative opportunities that text and image mining offer concerns semi-automatic and computer-assisted searches and filters. This aspect is particularly useful in addressing issues related to the circulation and distribution of images in national and international media such as newspapers, magazines, or books and can then lead the researcher to explore more refined computational research methods and questions. Tracing the circulation of images and identifying its photographic grammar helps us to better understand the pace of changes in the United States and Europe, and to map systematically the transformative power of the U.S. recovery program on a regional, national, and transnational level. How can we move from a practical digital revolution to a new way of thinking about and creatively engaging with material, charts, clusters, patterns or maps generated or distilled via digital algorithms? In this article, I argue for a systematic outline of a photographic grammar that can be applied to documentary photographic archives in the twentieth century. After discussing the combination of photographic grammar and rhetoric as well as photographic grammar and mapping, I will outline a systematic approach to address the opportunities, challenges, and shortcomings of a semiautomatic digital search that investigates the dissemination of photographs. As photographic grammar and the semi-automatic clustering of the Marshall Plan's visual rhetoric will show, one lesson that needs to be re-learned when we talk about a United States of Europe or a new Marshall Plan for Africa or Europe is that it was not only the economic dimension that turned the Marshall Plan into a commonplace myth of success but also the visual narrative that provided its cultural script.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antoine Traisnel"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313112"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2017202169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"932ea404-78ec-3785-bc52-8a4775f9dd35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44695856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Temptation of Kitsch: The Fall of Hawthorne","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44695856","wordCount":7425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-09-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1704287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0c971fd-6783-3d49-bbcd-bb5961b92452"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1704287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"1424","pageStart":"1404","pagination":"pp. 1404-1424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1704287","wordCount":23117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4924","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"245","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1929-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb77b1da-a442-3b3f-9679-fbef93c1f7e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1838512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Minor Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838512","wordCount":19579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J.P. Telotte"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44075903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1363768e-188b-3679-bf1f-0bfd1ece856c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44075903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Science Fiction in Double Focus: \"Forbidden Planet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44075903","wordCount":6027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthias Konzett"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1f13e1f-4d91-3975-b1d6-b7c975036ebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30161649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"452","pageStart":"438","pagination":"pp. 438-452","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Christa Wolf's \"Was bleibt\": The Literary Utopia and Its Remaining Significance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161649","wordCount":6917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":"This essay, written more than a year after the surfacing of the Wolf debate, examines the complex connection between politics and art which the case of Christa Wolf exemplifies. Was bleibt, a novella which evokes H\u00f6lderlin's grand assertion of the poet's pervasive founding spirit-\"Was aber bleibt, stiften die Dichter\"-forms the central point of the inquiry. The essay challenges the facile dismissal of literature, as exemplified in Wolf's case, on the sole basis of ideological deficiencies of the writer. It interprets these two domains as essentially different yet complementary in their aspiration towards social transformation. In this light, Christa Wolf's work can be seen as a belated attempt to work towards such a differentiation so as to free the artist from a false confusion and entanglement of these two domains.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Wells Rutledge"],"datePublished":"1949-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fb915c2-d070-3117-ab11-b165175907da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1005623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":151.0,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Artists in the Life of Charleston. Through Colony and State from Restoration to Reconstruction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1005623","wordCount":115995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesca Trivellato"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6065fb33-5a2f-3083-aa59-efbf6a7f1024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/664732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Credit, Honor, and the Early Modern French Legend of the Jewish Invention of Bills of Exchange","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/664732","wordCount":19326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL VON CANNON"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19474644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a3dc414-f186-34d2-b617-2ca2d8165d4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48599353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poestud"}],"isPartOf":"Poe Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Tale of Optics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599353","wordCount":9296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"\u201cA Tale of Optics\u201d situates many of Poe\u2019s tales and sketches\u2014including \u201cThe Man of the Crowd\u201d and \u201cThe Literati of New York City\u201d\u2014alongside antebellum interest in magazine illustrations and daguerreotypy. In a publishing world where editors and mass readership privileged commodified visual culture, Poe crafted his image in various, often contradictory, ways. In some moments he satirizes that readership, and in others he markets a symbiotic relationship between writer and visual artist. Likewise, he touts the \u201crealism\u201d of early photography (in opposition to engravings and other kinds of illustrations) while using the veil of objectivity to hide his own self-interest. Poe\u2019s image is as familiar to us as some of his best-known works. \u201cA Tale of Optics\u201d reveals an intriguing literary history behind such image making by including but also moving beyond daguerreotype portraiture.","subTitle":"Poe, Visual Culture, and Antebellum Literary Celebrity","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Hills"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Road Not Taken","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360718","wordCount":5708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GARRETT STEWART"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23541021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"VITAGRAPHIC TIME","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23541021","wordCount":12103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Two screen narratives from 2004 take up autobio\/graphic techniques of visual mediation from opposite sides of a division suggested long ago by Gilles Deleuze between \"European humanism\" and \"American science fiction.\" Pedro Almod\u00f3var's Bad Education, about a Spanish film director confronted with a script that implicates his own erotic past, carries the stylistic possibilities of the Deleuzian \"time-image\" to new digitally implemented extremes in the mode of elegiac melodrama. By contrast, Omar Naim's futurist fable The Final Cut, about a digital implant that records one's entire life and then requires a \"cutter\" to edit it down for the funeral rites of \"rememory,\" explores a dystopian reduction of human temporality to mere cybernetic storage. In response to such autobiographical extremes, an approach through \"narratography\" is able to chart the tracings of memory along the grain of the cinematographic and digitized image\u2014and their ironic amalgams\u2014in both films.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brien Brothman"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23079044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0beec07b-7533-3413-9045-770bfea3aac2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23079044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Society of American Archivists at Seventy-Five: Contexts of Continuity and Crisis, A Personal Reflection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23079044","wordCount":23620,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[800,851]],"Locations in B":[[75612,75666]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":"This essay does not recount the history of the Society of American Archivists' first seventy-five years. It suggests one possible framework for understanding the complex context of the Society's evolution\u2014the cultural milieu and multiple intersecting influences that have contributed to making the SAA the organization it is. It proposes that the past seventy-five years can be construed as a single moment, the moment of the SAA's emergence. The last seventy-five years can be regarded as an era of chronic crisis and evolving frontiers. In fact, our own experience bears a marked resemblance to the 1930s, which seems more current today than it often did to those generations between the thirties and ours. Starkly put, the SAA's founding members are not only our predecessors; they are also our contemporaries.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adi Kuntsman"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26000187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17506352"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"932b7ac5-22d9-37d3-aec9-48401d0a2daa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26000187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mediawarconflict"}],"isPartOf":"Media, War & Conflict","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Webs of hate in diasporic cyberspaces: the Gaza War in the Russian-language blogosphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26000187","wordCount":7532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"This article looks at ways in which a military conflict can produce circuits of hatred in online social spaces. Ethnographically, the article is based on the analysis of selected discussions of Israeli warfare in Gaza in 2008 and 2009 as they took place in the Russian-language networked blogosphere. Bringing together Sara Ahmed's notion of affective economies, Avtar Brah's concept of 'diaspora space', Judith Butler's idea of 'frames of war' and Eyal Weizman's notion of 'elastic frontiers', the author addresses the disorienting similarity between anti-Jewish and anti-Arab hatred as it emerged in discussions of the conflict. The article examines online circulation of hatred as an integral part of cyber-diasporic connections and ruptures, on the one hand, and of digital circulation of affect, on the other.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d1f26c-deaa-3141-aaca-b50dae3d541a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40480532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - 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Earth sciences","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Index to The Geographical Review: VOLUMES I\u2013XV: 1916\u20131925","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24000962","wordCount":265270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Geographical Society","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Frick"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4335326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163075X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84ec69b6-45f9-318d-91f0-3d122fe7946e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4335326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kenyrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Kenyon Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ghost Texts: Film about Writing\/Writing about Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4335326","wordCount":5512,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[31473,31597]],"Locations in B":[[214,335]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Kenyon College","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1939-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e14bc98-5789-3e60-a4fa-6102f12d763e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/225599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Fifty-Fifth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To End of July 1938,--With Special Reference to Sections 50 to 58)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/225599","wordCount":23923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Knapp"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4496753c-6326-3c27-a8e3-ef7204c2464c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mass Entertainment Before Mass Entertainment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542540","wordCount":10853,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27991,28074]],"Locations in B":[[97,172]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Onhoon Choi"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.35.3.103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba6218f5-a892-31b2-a64e-2210505521b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.35.3.103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Autophonography: Common Voice and the Recording Imperative in Thirties America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.35.3.103","wordCount":8942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"Carl Sandburg's The People, Yes (1936) was pivotal in establishing Sandburg as a recorder of \u201cthe voice of the people\u201d in the 1930s U.S. Calling to critical attention Sandburg's appropriation of recording metaphors to figure \u201cthe voice of the people\u201d in the poem, this essay shows that such seemingly sentimental affirmation of the popular voice is in fact a reworking of twentieth-century modernism's fascination with \u201coriginal\u201d languages. Through the concept of autophonography, it explores the mediating logic by which the poem represents \u201cthe voice of the people\u201d as original and linguistically originary.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefanie L. Rokosz"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26660985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1064590X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2703b61-94aa-3f31-a06d-390e3071ac97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26660985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fooddruglawj"}],"isPartOf":"Food and Drug Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Law","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Food Studies","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Assisted Reproductive Technologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26660985","wordCount":7264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Food and Drug Law Institute (FDLI)","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":"Although human subject research is regulated by federal agencies, the differences between research and innovative clinical practice are often blurred. Research and innovative practices share the similar goals of obtaining additional knowledge and improving medical treatment. Research, however, is more specifically defined as \u201ca systematic investigation, including research development, testing and evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge.\u201d A procedure consistent with this definition is subject to distinct federal regulations and other ethical procedural safeguards. When unregulated innovative practices, not neatly fitting within this definition of research, are first implemented, safeguards do not necessarily exist because use of these procedures is primarily guided by individual physician judgment. Recognizing that the application of innovative advancements in ART may very well benefit numerous prospective infertile patients and may initially appear to be safe and effective, these new and novel procedures may be associated with yet unknown long-term risks and safety concerns unless more formal scientific study is conducted to support efficacy and safety.","subTitle":"Advances in Medical Practice or Human Subject Research?","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. R. Moulton"],"datePublished":"1937-08-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1663710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09ec42d9-a47a-3f91-90ff-78ca9d85284b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1663710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Second Denver Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1663710","wordCount":15786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2224","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ISOBEL M. FINDLAY"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27794870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08481512"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13de671d-72d7-39c4-a5ec-6458f4dfc4e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27794870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27794870","wordCount":2186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Herzfeld"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Sponseller","Martyn Futter","Annika Nordin","Kevin Bishop","Tomas Lundmark","Gustaf Egnell","Anneli M. \u00c5gren"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45134556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00447447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381482"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e9a1d8a-bacc-3a4a-a6d6-8d6039eccdf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45134556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ambio"}],"isPartOf":"Ambio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"S162","pageStart":"S152","pagination":"pp. S152-S162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Aquatic Sciences","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"The role of biogeochemical hotspots, landscape heterogeneity, and hydrological connectivity for minimizing forestry effects on water quality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45134556","wordCount":7710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Protecting water quality in forested regions is increasingly important as pressures from land-use, longrange transport of air pollutants, and climate change intensify. Maintaining forest industry without jeopardizing sustainability of surface water quality therefore requires new tools and approaches. Here, we show how forest management can be optimized by incorporating landscape sensitivity and hydrological connectivity into a framework that promotes the protection of water quality. We discuss how this approach can be operationalized into a hydromapping tool to support forestry operations that minimize water quality impacts. We specifically focus on how hydromapping can be used to support three fundamental aspects of land management planning including how to (i) locate areas where different forestry practices can be conducted with minimal water quality impact; (ii) guide the off-road driving of forestry machines to minimize soil damage; and (iii) optimize the design of riparian buffer zones. While this work has a boreal perspective, these concepts and approaches have broad-scale applicability.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3204340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00131989"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52794095"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236614"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5e1c074-0241-3265-b5fa-2ecd7d70b65e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3204340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eductheaj"}],"isPartOf":"Educational Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"li","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-li","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3204340","wordCount":10784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Pask"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"747","pageStart":"727","pagination":"pp. 727-747","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Plagiarism and the Originality of National Literature: Gerard Langbaine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032040","wordCount":9002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTIAN HITE"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0de570f5-b485-3a58-80b2-42538b7b1b94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Art of Suicide: Notes on Foucault and Warhol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586574","wordCount":14049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"153","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GERALD J. ALRED"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43095604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00493155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"907681870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09be31b0-6a35-3e04-8db4-2ef33b3775f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43095604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Technical Communication","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Communication Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Essential Works on Technical Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43095604","wordCount":25201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society for Technical Communication","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"\u25c6 Presents an annotated list of 115 essential works on technical communication compiled from a list of over 600 titles from a wide variety of print, Internet, and professional sources \u25c6 Constitutes what might be called \"essential literacy\" in technical communication","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. H. Hill"],"datePublished":"1955-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41503062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23047550"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b9799f5-36ab-3d63-b950-d6dcf62db628"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41503062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmalayanras"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":352.0,"pageEnd":"354","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-354","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Hikayat Abdullah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41503062","wordCount":182620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3 (171)","publisher":"Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Strickfaden","Aymeric Vildieu"],"datePublished":"2014-05-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.48.2.0105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddef2dd9-3f5c-326d-87db-6514a89ecf61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jaesteduc.48.2.0105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On the Quest for Better Communication through Tactile Images","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jaesteduc.48.2.0105","wordCount":7566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Art in Western civilization has become a commodity that is fixed to walls and viewed through the eyes. In fact, most museums and galleries post \"Do not touch\" signs dissuading audiences from partaking in anything but the visual aspects of art. Yet art production is something that is inherently tactile; it involves engaging with art media such as paint and brush or clay that is molded by the human hand. Compounded by the \"Do not touch\" attitude is the taboo in society that draws people away from sensuality, especially touch. Yet touch is a natural way of exploring the world and, according to many researchers, a natural and important way of exploring art as well. There are many historical examples of art that have tactile components, for example, relief on Egyptian stone tablets and brush-stroked textures on a Mondrian painting. Even so, these are typically intended for visual-centric audiences and are not necessarily designed or intended to be touched. Yet, another story exists, which is the development of tactile representations of maps, artwork, and other materials for people who are visually impaired.3","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anton Shammas"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4384452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef530ae1-6634-348a-96b8-28ff0b0aa70d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4384452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"threrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Threepenny Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Autocartography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4384452","wordCount":4112,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[7519,7619],[9169,9351]],"Locations in B":[[13863,13930],[13942,14040],[14048,14230]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"63","publisher":"Threepenny Review","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Regula Burckhardt Qureshi"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8adec6f0-c963-3021-b4fb-5ef988f77730"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/852653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Confronting the Social: Mode of Production and the Sublime for (Indian) Art Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852653","wordCount":11089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey K. Olick","Joyce Robbins"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"730fc6eb-9a42-338c-b302-bbe8aca084dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Memory Studies: From \"Collective Memory\" to the Historical Sociology of Mnemonic Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223476","wordCount":17415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"Despite substantial work in a variety of disciplines, substantive areas, and geographical contexts, social memory studies is a nonparadigmatic, transdisciplinary, centerless enterprise. To remedy this relative disorganization, we (re-)construct out of the diversity of work addressing social memory a useful tradition, range of working definitions, and basis for future work. We trace lineages of the enterprise, review basic definitional disputes, outline a historical approach, and review sociological theories concerning the statics and dynamics of social memory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mike Mosher"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bcd3c80-0270-3fc1-8293-89cec68832cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"69","pagination":"p. 69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576641","wordCount":1067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stewart E. Sterk"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eda082ef-b12c-3276-8d48-ab8b6d3ca239"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1289851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"1249","pageStart":"1197","pagination":"pp. 1197-1249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Rhetoric and Reality in Copyright Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1289851","wordCount":24532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0966f6aa-9da9-318a-b340-beb1b2fe0cac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"652","pageStart":"599","pagination":"pp. 599-652","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223408","wordCount":25816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hubert Kiesewetter"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40695298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03422852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c0a0dc5-9437-3fac-b1d1-4c8e51e3884a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40695298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeituntegesc"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Unternehmensgeschichte \/ Journal of Business History","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Erfinder ohne Fortune. Friedrich Koenigs Englandaufenthalt 1806-1817","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40695298","wordCount":14626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Verlag C.H.Beck","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":"After a fruitless search through Germany and Russia for financial assistance to build his wooden printing machine, Frederick Koenig arrived in London in November, 1806. There he met the printer Thomas Bensley, who willingly supported Koenig's far-flung plans financially, but without useful results. Then, in 1809, the printers George Woodfall and Richard Taylor became partners, and on 29 March, 1810, Koenig took out his first patent on a printing machine. With his second patent, in 30 October 1811, which contains the first workable iron printing machine with a cylinder, Koenig became embroiled in endless disputes over the originality of his invention. This essay attempts to clarify the correctness of the different standpoints of those disputes. Meanwhile, around the end of 1812 or early 1813, Koenig was able to interest the owner of The Times, John Walter, in ordering two printing presses built under the supervision of Andreas Bauer in a workshop in Whitecross Street. These and a steam engine were secretly brought to Fleet Street, and during the night of 28 November 1814, The Times was printed on Koenig's machines. The next morning Walter presented his puzzled compositors and pressmen the newly printed paper with the words: 'The Times is already printed - by steam!\" Even though English and German papers publicized this mos important invention since Gutenberg, Koenig couldn't sell many more machines because they were too complicated and much too expensive. Other inventors competed with Koenig's and Bauer's machines, and Bensley was unwilling to alter his contract in favour of Koenig. As a result, Koenig and Bauer, embittered, left England in 1817 and 1818, respectively. They founded a printingmachine factory in Oberzell, near Wurzburg, which is still one of the leading printing-press manufacturers in the world today. It is in any case astonishing that a man like Koenig succeeded, after having tried in vain in the industrially backward Germany, in giving the leading industrial country, the \"workshop of the world\", a most important invention, though the 19th-century English were unwilling to concede this technology transfer form a foreigner. In his nearly twelve years in London, Koenig had no financial success, and his four English patents were no longer protected after he left England. Still he remained resolutely determined to succeed in his native Germany. Though he didn't recognize the less developed continental markets, Koenig remained optimistic, and after his early death in 1833, his sons were able to reap the harvest of his labours.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George H. Daniels"],"datePublished":"1967-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1722253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96636e79-7776-385c-a250-b33cd6b0b585"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1722253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"1705","pageStart":"1699","pagination":"pp. 1699-1705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Pure-Science Ideal and Democratic Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1722253","wordCount":7852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3783","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"156","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley Cavell"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"deb14c94-f50e-3eae-9691-b9911210be2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The \u201cReturn\u201d of 3-D: On Some of the Logics and Genealogies of the Image in the Twenty-First Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/668523","wordCount":13493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARIA GOUGH"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b692321-59b7-3172-bc87-08609612f41d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40926706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Kentridge's Nose","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40926706","wordCount":10597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"MIT Press","volumeNumber":"134","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathaniel Mills"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3886d808-1bfe-317e-969f-3647558613fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4619326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Dialectic of Electricity: Kenneth Fearing, Walter Benjamin, and a Marxist Aesthetic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4619326","wordCount":11770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"This essay reads Kenneth Fearing's Depression-era poetry as an innovative body of Marxist verse, one that attempts to craft an aesthetic reaction of shock and disorientation in the reader. In order to explicate the use-value of aesthetic shock to a Marxist politics concerned with anti-capitalist praxis, it draws on Susan Buck-Morss's interpretation of Walter Benjamin, an interpretation that focuses on the latter's theorization of aesthetic sensation in the modern period. Because the modern condition is one of anaesthetized sensory existence (an existence managed by and conducive to hegemonic capitalism), the use of poetry to spark sensation in the reader can be a revolutionary project. Fearing accomplishes this project by confronting the primary agent of shock in the modern period, electricity, and exploring it in its full dialectical complexity. Fearing is a Marxist poet, but of a diferent sort than most Depression-era proletarian poets. His poems do not provide ideological guidance in the manner of propaganda, nor do they stop at ideology critique. Instead, they act upon the senses of the reader in order to awaken him or her from the dreamworld of modern capitalism to the real need for transformative struggle.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mutlu Konuk Blasing"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09c140f0-181c-3296-a243-838fb28f5199"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Nazim Hikmet and Ezra Pound: \u201cTo Confess Wrong without Losing Rightness\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.1","wordCount":12397,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55839,56191]],"Locations in B":[[25565,25917]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Ezra Pound and Nazim Hikmet, quintessential modernist poets, share similarities as striking as their differences. Both poets were charged with treason and incarcerated for long periods because of their radical ideologies \u2014 fascism and communism, respectively. This essay focuses on modernist poetry at the intersections of formal revolutions in poetic techniques, radical politics, and state curtailment of the rights of free speech. I trace the complicated relationship between poetry and the state, and the effect of incarceration on the formal redirection of the two poets' work while they were in prison, where they produced what is generally considered to be their best work.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Onno Kosters"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c82bb5e0-5fdc-3b8d-a51e-bcd339f38cb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598831","wordCount":1750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1921-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bab4a4c-5e59-3fc7-a39b-fcd2bfdf479e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/224125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1921,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Materials for the Biography of Contemporary Scientists (Chiefly Obituary Notices)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/224125","wordCount":25102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-11-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a66e619a-fa6b-308a-9d05-7b71349033d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24032305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032305","wordCount":41443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAURAV DASTHAKUR"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0764fd79-39d0-33de-b9a9-2087e92aa1f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24738614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"World-History,\" \"Itih\u0101sa,\" and Memory: Rabindranath Tagore's Musical Program in the Age of Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738614","wordCount":12127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":"This essay attempts an exploration of the historical and historiographical implications of the interplay of individual, local, \"national,\" and global forms of memory in the music of Rabindranath Tagore. Produced at a time of crises in the Indian postcolonial subjectivity, this music offers a critique of the Eurocentric discourses of \"World-history\" and nationalism, by invoking alternative Indian discourses of \"Itih\u0101sa\" and \"sam\u0101j\". At the same time, Tagore departs from the contemporary Hindu cultural nationalist revivalist approach of the tradition of North Indian (Hindustani) classical music and subjects it to a creative regenerative endeavor by reconnecting the tradition with its original subaltern roots. Skeptical of several kinds of homogeneous impulses, this music offers an alternative idea of universalism that is as much human as a specific civilizational concept. Tagore's musical program thus offers an aesthetic blueprint of a more inclusive indigenous modernity in the subcontinent.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Beckman"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ffc3723-27e4-32a6-9b08-4f42a49196b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20627758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Nothing to Say: The War on Terror and the Mad Photography of Roland Barthes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20627758","wordCount":12161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"34","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175668","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be0cf92-0810-35ef-b4cf-3cd24498d1f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175668"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Art history"],"title":"Anne-Marie Boisvert, Manon Oligny, and Thomas Isra\u00ebl: Three Artists in Search of Cindy Sherman<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40650521","wordCount":10195,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16494]],"Locations in B":[[11983,12082]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"One dancer, one choreographer, one filmmaker. Together they recursively confront Sherman's by now famous, gender-inflected, photographic self-enactments, probing the conventions and lingering specificity, if any, of the media and art forms in our hybridized digital culture. In their intermedial performances, these media and art forms become the means and the objects of analysis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-03-14","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29526399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02670623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0bee53f-5b6f-3104-90f0-6ca8c49eadf1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29526399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedjclires"}],"isPartOf":"British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Edition)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"711","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-711","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Medical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29526399","wordCount":4343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6573","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"294","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dana Gioia"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3851413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018702X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616103"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d079ca30-e85f-39f2-8c25-980cd644392f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3851413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hudsonreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Hudson Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Poetry and the Fine Presses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3851413","wordCount":7619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Hudson Review, Inc","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Steinlight"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.1.133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2fc9951-1145-33d0-86a8-7427278166f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.1.133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Advertising, Subjectivity and the Nineteenth-Century Novel: Dickens, Balzac and the Language of the Walls<\/em>, by Sara Thornton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/victorianstudies.53.1.133","wordCount":1323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1d10hk8.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760460075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a835ff32-9434-3180-b78c-833a6523d8d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1d10hk8.11"}],"isPartOf":"New Mana","keyphrase":["episodic tapu","relational tapu","tongan","relationally tapu","polynesian","bodies permeable","gifford","regulatory tapu","ritual","christian tonga"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"77","pagination":"77-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bodies Permeable and Divine:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1d10hk8.11","wordCount":9666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This ethnohistorical essay explores the body\u2019s metaphysical conceptualisation in pre-Christian Tonga to explain the former relationship between the concepts ofmana<\/em>(metaphysical efficacy),tapu<\/em>(ritual prohibition or closure) and\u2018eiki<\/em>(chiefliness). These concepts have often been discussed as interrelated in historical Polynesia\u2014chiefly persons and things being considered mana and therefore sources of tapu. The precise theological basis of their relationship, however, has not been adequately addressed. Here I explore the nature of mana and tapu in pre-Christian Tonga up to the early nineteenth century. It is well documented that Christian conversion in Tonga triggered the breakdown of what Methodist","subTitle":"Tapu, Mana and the Embodiment of Hegemony in Pre-Christian Tonga","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1953-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/935618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69905a41-09f3-3b67-bb8c-d69fe23939d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/935618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/935618","wordCount":7089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1319","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nandini Sikand"],"datePublished":"2015-09-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.3-4.0042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8444dbb2-31dc-331c-bb2d-99206c4ae8ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.3-4.0042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Filmed Ethnography or Ethnographic Film? Voice and Positionality in Ethnographic, Documentary, and Feminist Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.67.3-4.0042","wordCount":10242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3-4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alice Haemmerli"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"248ce6be-0f95-32ef-92ee-9122d22b30bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":108.0,"pageEnd":"1752","pageStart":"1645","pagination":"pp. 1645-1752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Insecurity Interests: Where Intellectual Property and Commercial Law Collide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123293","wordCount":60736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nirvana Tanoukhi"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rewriting Political Commitment for an International Canon: Paul Bowles's \"For Bread Alone\" as Translation of Mohamed Choukri's \"Al-Khubz Al-Hafi\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618297","wordCount":8967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chin Kim"],"datePublished":"1971-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38376720"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2da6540f-da6f-3d32-b91a-5fedf5f4b43b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25618365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlibr"}],"isPartOf":"American Libraries","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"Librarians and Copyright Legislation: The Historical Background","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618365","wordCount":7562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy\u00a0F. Ogata"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/433197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c34fb9de-44c7-3f62-a2fb-aaa24e055449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/433197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creative Playthings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/433197","wordCount":15626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"Educational toys, objects intended to teach skill or develop abilities, became a common feature of postwar childhood. With the rise of the American birthrate after World War II, toymakers exploited the newly prosperous middle\u2010class market and promoted educational toys as fundamental equipment for raising baby\u2010boom children. The major American toymakers, including Holgate, Playskool, and Creative Playthings, as well as architects, designers, and even art museums, promised to develop a child's creativity and imagination through the manipulation of specially designed objects. The elevation of creativity in the promotion of toys developed along with discourses on psychology, education, and art.","subTitle":"Educational Toys and Postwar American Culture","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL CLINTON"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26503666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5724b762-01a1-3046-b071-c181617f8c3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26503666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Line and Lineage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26503666","wordCount":10364,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6732]],"Locations in B":[[43908,44058]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":"This essay examines Herman Melville\u2019s reflections on form, line, and perspective in his novel Pierre (1852) and his poems on art and architecture in Timoleon (1891), a late book of verse partly inspired by his tour of the Mediterranean during 1856\u201357. I argue that Melville arrives at his understanding of literary form through the language of optical perspective, particularly the terms of \u2018\u2018foreshortening\u2019\u2019 and \u2018\u2018outline.\u2019\u2019 I compare Melville\u2019s figurative conception of outline with the artistic theories and practices of William Blake, George Cumberland, John Ruskin, and the artist John Flaxman, whose illustrations of Homer and Dante feature prominently in Pierre. Widely circulated as engravings by Tommaso Piroli and others, Flaxman\u2019s clean-lined drawings fascinate Melville because they emphasize implied narrative rather than optical verisimilitude. Melville responds to a romantic discourse that positions \u2018\u2018outline\u2019\u2019 on the conceptual boundary between sense-perception and free-floating thought, as a mediating term between competing notions of art\u2019s truth. In both his fiction and poetry, Melville\u2019s reflection on the materiality of pictures doubles as a reflection on the materiality of thought. The formal features of visual art suggest the workings of the mind as it flattens unconscious possibilities and disparate truths into a manageable picture of the world.","subTitle":"Visual Form in Herman Melville\u2019s Pierre<\/em> and Timoleon<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Z. Sui"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9e9aad2-836f-3c26-ad2a-6dbff9472ec3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1515237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Visuality, Aurality, and Shifting Metaphors of Geographical Thought in the Late Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515237","wordCount":15824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Broadbent"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25511821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b440f8e1-f2bd-3c4b-922d-8d7815479db3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25511821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Phenomenology of Absence: Benjamin, Nietzsche and History in Cees Nooteboom's \"All Souls Day\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25511821","wordCount":11560,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35267,35361]],"Locations in B":[[67739,67834]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"Contemporary Berlin novels commonly anchor representations of post-unification Berlin within an ethics of remembering in which the city's mottled topography is frequently portrayed as a historically saturated site. Invariably, this historical focus is supported by an aesthetics in which representing Berlin is concomitant with an ethical obligation to address in some form the city's pasts. It is argued in this paper that through an engaged comparison of Walter Benjamin's theory of critical pedestrianism with Nietzsche's \"The Uses and Disadvantages of History for Life,\" Dutch novelist Cees Nooteboom's novel \"All Souls Day\" questions the possibility of representing the city as a discursive space in which the past and the present can mutually co-exist. Nooteboom's text offers a singular and unique perspective on the ethical burden the recently unified cities faces in the post-unification era, namely the obligation to remember the division and pre-division German pasts, by questioning whether it is at all possible for the city to fulfill this duty of historical remembering.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Reinert"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d541d4e0-3e9e-30e1-8f56-a66621355d46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/450598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"496","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Johnson and Conjecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450598","wordCount":6248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothy Hill Gersack","Dolores C. Renze","Leon deValinger, Jr.","Vincent A. Nunziato","Victor Gondos, Jr.","Sherrod East","Paul Lewinson","Richard W. Hale, Jr.","Oliver W. Holmes","William L. Rofes","Robert M. Brown"],"datePublished":"1961-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e64a49a-7881-3607-9bbe-01b0606a164d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40290042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"News Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40290042","wordCount":15630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy Powell"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e876b37-9452-3f7a-ae42-eed3525d9e14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25067283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"728","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-728","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Point \"Ceaselessly Pushed Back\": The Origin of Early Netherlandish Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25067283","wordCount":18382,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[3475,3583]],"Locations in B":[[48361,48469]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Cowlishaw"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23413690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01d8712f-e331-3cee-b893-2e1c8f507ab1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23413690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bingo as an Expression of Late Twentieth-Century Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23413690","wordCount":3912,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[11366,11531]],"Locations in B":[[6571,6736]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan Susina"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41380762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15214281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70948073-9410-3595-bda5-f9b2c7c6919f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41380762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marvelstales"}],"isPartOf":"Marvels & Tales","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41380762","wordCount":1284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marijke de Valck"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mv45.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053561928"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d4280a3-dd3c-3503-904b-6bebd34d0904"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mv45.4"}],"isPartOf":"Film Festivals","keyphrase":["cinema","hollywood","international film","festival circuit","network","cannes","international film festival","film festival circuit","film avant","european film"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"13","pagination":"13-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mv45.4","wordCount":14634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"I was not raised in a cinephile environment, but I shared an interest in film and television with my sister from an early age. My parents keep a series of slides in the family collection that is a wonderfully accurate representation of the comfortable viewing pleasures of our suburban childhood. It shows my mother, my sister and I cuddled up on the couch in the living room. We were aged seven and nine respectively and completely immersed in The Sound of Music (USA: Robert Wise, 1965). Our cheeks are flushed with excitement, eyes wide open from a mix of fascination","subTitle":"Film Festivals as Sites of Passage","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Les Turnbull"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26661609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b02c3ba5-66aa-3f78-9503-4ffce8b6aa15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26661609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Elizabeth Montagu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26661609","wordCount":14680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":"In the eighteenth century, the Northumberland and Durham coalfield was the largest and most technically advanced in the world, and the Montagu family played a major role in its affairs. Elizabeth Montagu was one of several female coal owners, and the Montagus' East Denton Colliery was an important coal mine on Tyneside. Using principally the records of the mining engineers, this essay charts the development of the mine under Elizabeth and Edward Montagu; in so doing it provides a detailed study of the coal industry on Tyneside at this period. Hopefully, this will aid scholars in understanding many of the Montagus' letters. The essay also evaluates Elizabeth Montagu's position in relation to the Wortley branch of the Montagu family and to other coal owners in the region; finally, it assesses the role played by women in the management of the Tyneside coal trade and determines whether Elizabeth Montagu's position was unique.","subTitle":"\"A Critick, a Coal Owner, a Land Steward, a Sociable Creature\"","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1916-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1078452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00366773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54678474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c174786-84ff-3c3d-9606-ddff28c48de9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1078452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"schoolreview"}],"isPartOf":"The School Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"471","pageStart":"462","pagination":"pp. 462-471","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources"],"title":"A Proposed Departure in the Method of Defining Unit Courses for Secondary Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1078452","wordCount":4451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1939-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1488976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"001e3e03-3365-3b7f-9b6f-0eab700df7ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1488976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1939,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 12, no. 3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591089","wordCount":17716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08970521"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43308058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfantarts"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GENERAL REFERENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43308058","wordCount":20045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3 (7)","publisher":"Brian Attebery, as Editor, for the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2509893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182168"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2509893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispamerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Hispanic American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["History","Latin American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Book Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2509893","wordCount":39821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernest Pascucci"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10684220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4c6e83e-e5b7-3b38-ba87-badb18b3dec5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anyarchnewyork"}],"isPartOf":"ANY: Architecture New York","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Face of Money: Currency, Crisis, and Remediation in Post-Suharto Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484531","wordCount":14700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":"In the period of transition following Suharto's resignation as president of Indonesia in 1998, the image of the 50,000Rp bill bearing his face become a visual shorthand for the corruption and abuse of power that had characterized his regime. Accessible, decentralized consumer technologies enabled people to alter money's appearance, transforming it from a fetish of the state into a malleable surface available for popular reinscription. As the medium of money was \"remediated\"--absorbed into other media, refashioned, and circulated along new pathways--it became a means by which people engaged questions of state power, national integrity, political authenticity, and economic relations opened up by the crisis of Reformasi (Reform). The essay argues that remediations of public forms play a crucial role in times of political transition by enabling people to materialize alternative visions of political authority and authenticity. Moreover, remediated forms have become a characteristic modality of political communication in the post Suharto period under conditions of democratization and an increasingly diversified media ecology.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. Hattendorf"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e260d4f-bc44-3eb6-8d56-475793328838"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44366848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE \"ENSEMBLE CONCERTANT\" OF REVERDY AND PICASSO'S \u201cLE CHANT DES MORTS\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44366848","wordCount":7955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Troy Jollimore"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26842546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02782324"},{"name":"oclc","value":"80905176"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ed1a2bb-fd4e-3c22-8fc3-44c4618a0712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26842546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conjunctions"}],"isPartOf":"Conjunctions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"The World Heard: Casablanca<\/em> and the Music of War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/505376","wordCount":15727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gertrud Koch","Jeremy Gaines"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75a47d30-2cca-38d5-a540-73502ea1ec23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Technology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1719527","wordCount":35277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3741","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"153","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1909-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1909,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 7, no. 29","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590453","wordCount":14679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SONJA LUEHRMANN"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6037c57-1c9f-394e-95f3-3591a9b86024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41238330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE MODERNITY OF MANUAL REPRODUCTION: Soviet Propaganda and the Creative Life of Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238330","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"In supposedly postideological times, late Soviet propaganda seems to epitomize the futile practices of a moribund regime. Instead, the material practices of ideological transmission in the 1960s and 1970s Soviet Union urge us to reconsider how ideas gain mobilizing force in a variety of political settings. This article looks at the use of handmade artifacts and personalized performances in Soviet cultural work to argue that personal reproduction is a crucial mediating factor between counterintuitive, Utopian ideas and lived experience. As comparisons between the Soviet case and post-Soviet movements show, semiotic slippages that take documented activity as evidence of broader social dynamism remain key to the sense of agency of mobilizing networks.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tapati Guha Thakurta"],"datePublished":"1991-10-26","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a87f5b7-7ee4-31b8-8e66-e4fd3e0f1f2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4398221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"WS99","pageStart":"WS91","pagination":"pp. WS91-WS99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Women as 'Calendar Art' Icons: Emergence of Pictorial Stereotype in Colonial India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398221","wordCount":12408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"43","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"This paper attempts to trace the genealogy of the kind of feminine images that have become the stock-type for today's 'calendar' pictures to the intervention of the first mass-produced lithographs and oleographs in India's popular art market in the late 19th century. Both the images and the discourses that invest them with their particular values are seen to have their origins in some critical breaks in techniques, perception and thought in colonial India. The study focuses on the specific historical conjuncture of the late 19th century, when the disjunction with 'tradition' and the encounter with 'modernity' assumed a sharp edge in all cultural representations, and the precursors of modern 'bazaar' images emerged as a dominant and standardised mass-art form.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hill Morgan"],"datePublished":"1918-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26459056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25787632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"287e46ea-ac57-3e8c-873d-60e87d9c75c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26459056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"broomusequar"}],"isPartOf":"The Brooklyn Museum Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1918,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Work of M. Fevret de Saint-M\u00e9min","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26459056","wordCount":6443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brooklyn Museum","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Curran"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24f84d6f-12a2-3bf0-a35f-77a765a73dca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25621414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rethinking Race History: The Role of the Albino in the French Enlightenment Life Sciences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25621414","wordCount":17025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"The scholarly quest to recover the construction of racial difference in the Enlightenmentera life sciences generally overlooks a singular fact: the vast majority of eighteenth-century thinkers who were engaged in theorizing the human were often far more preoccupied with preserving a belief in an essential human sameness than they were in creating categories of essential difference. This article charts the problem of a potential human sameness as it related to questions of category, biological processes, and the human and non-human through an examination of a neglected and key construct in the eighteenth-century life sciences, the albino. The albino was absorbed into a scientific narrative in 1744 when Maupertuis used the concept to put forward a theory of shared origins or monogenesis. Positing that the n\u00e8gre blanc\u2014quite literally a \"white Negro\"\u2014was a racial throwback, a reversion to a primitive whiteness, Maupertuis inspired a new generation of thinkers, most notably the great French naturalist Buffon, to assert categorically that blacks had degenerated from a prototype white variety. The significance of the concept n\u00e8gre blanc, which has not been studied sufficiently, cannot be overestimated. In addition to the fact that the new role of the n\u00e8gre blanc clearly said as much about whiteness as it did about blackness, the albino generated a new diagnostic chronology of the human species.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen L. Carter"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09524649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"140e5c38-6e8e-38bc-bbf2-330e70d8a6d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41419655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdesignhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Design History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Spectatorship of the \"Affiche Illustr\u00e9e\" and the Modern City of Paris, 1880-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41419655","wordCount":13349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"As a response to Susan Sontag's writing on the poster, this essay analyses the phenomenon of the French 'pictorial' publicity poster, which developed in coccert with a specific type of spectatorship delineated in contemporary poster criticism as linked to the city of Paris at the end of the nineteenth century. By comparing the collective reading of political placards and announcements in the early modern period to the hurried viewing of illustrating publicity posters at the dawn of the consumer economy, this essay contextualizes poster's spectatorship as dependent upon its conditions of public display in Paris the city's renovation and rationalization under Haussmannization.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxrtf.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837631494"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c67b5d2-56cf-3513-b4ea-f6b99a6473eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1xxrtf.6"}],"isPartOf":"Resistance","keyphrase":["popular culture","kaspar maase","cultural radicalism","subjectivization","cultural studies","resistance cultural","practices","culture resistance","aesthetic","hegemonic"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"45","pagination":"45-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Popular Culture, \u2018Resistance,\u2019 \u2018Cultural Radicalism,\u2019 and \u2018Self-Formation\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxrtf.6","wordCount":8961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This article follows up on the debate over the resistance potential of popular culture. The first part traces the historical constellation of ideas in which the question arose and remains to this day. The second part attempts to systematize different dimensions of \u2018resistance.\u2019 The third part examines the development and criticism of this approach in the field of Cultural Studies. This leads to the fourth part, which investigates the role \u201ccultural radicalism\u201d (Fluck, \u201cDie Wissenschaft\u201d 115) has played in this discussion. The fifth part introduces the concept of self-formation. The sixth discusses the ways in which the political relevance of","subTitle":"Comments on the Development of a Theory","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30199311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e747e27-2114-3fe0-b508-a24cac794fec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30199311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comphuma"}],"isPartOf":"Computers and the Humanities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","fre","ita","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"280","pagination":"pp. 280-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Directory of Scholars Active","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30199311","wordCount":18091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Niva Elkin-Koren"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24117455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74734227-50db-37df-860f-7982566d7e64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24117455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"1155","pageStart":"1119","pagination":"pp. 1119-1155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Science and Mathematics","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Making Room for Consumers Under the DMCA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24117455","wordCount":16192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9852,9927]],"Locations in B":[[78696,78772]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David P. 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After a hnef introduction to the theoretical issues concerning the indexical nature of the photograph, I consider the Japanese colonial photographic industry and its products (portraits) in three contexts: the state of photographic technology in the world at that time, the ideological machinery of colonization in Taiwan, and the wider phenomenon of colonial mimicry. In this consideration, I offer a diachronic analysis of photo albums and commercial directories that contain formal portraits of politically and economically influential (almost exclusively) men. Bringing these considerations together suggests an aspect of the colonial ideological machinery that has been underrepresented in other studies: the colonial portrait as a mask in several forms.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RYAN JAY FRIEDMAN"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06ea6e03-031c-360f-82d6-af9561f08435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"ENOUGH FORCE TO SHATTER THE TALE TO FRAGMENTS\": ETHICS AND TEXTUAL ANALYSIS IN JAMES BALDWIN'S FILM THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664637","wordCount":12120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1928-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fff7afa9-df46-34d2-8a4b-b7cc4ab52dfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":474.0,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-v, vii-xi, xiii-xxv, 1, 3-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1928,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index to the Third Series of the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Volumes 41-60, 1907-1928","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080207","wordCount":259638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Florian Cajori"],"datePublished":"1923-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1967725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003486X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032255"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6031e8db-24c7-30d8-8ca6-daf77cbf3d2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1967725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annamath"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of Mathematics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1923,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"The History of Notations of the Calculus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1967725","wordCount":21028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Annals of Mathematics","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent Luciani"],"datePublished":"1950-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/476322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bce6e79f-9331-3610-8130-62deb1394c43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/476322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"italica"}],"isPartOf":"Italica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"256","pagination":"pp. 256-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bibliography of Italian Studies in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/476322","wordCount":2670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Italian","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert E. 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Not only has the law long offered inadequate protection for idea-creators, but its meandering development has produced a legal landscape riddled with inconsistency. Much of the doctrine's inadequacy stems from a judicially created threshold demand that the plaintiff demonstrate the submitted idea's concreteness and novelty - a barrier that typically proves impenetrable. This Article argues that these threshold requirements are motivated by two deeper concerns that induce courts to dismiss plaintiffs' claims: a fear of conferring a monopoly in ideas and a desire to circumvent evidentiary and administrative difficulties. It then offers a new functional mode of analysis that promises to bring a much-needed measure of fairness and consistency to the law of ideas, one that more directly and effectively addresses the principal judicial concerns. Under this functional analysis, several traditional causes of action would survive preemption under the Constitution and federal statutes, including in particular the preemption provision of the 1976 Copyright Act, because those causes would be properly limited and could coexist with federal interests.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DALIA JUDOVITZ"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23113570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17f93fe8-629f-311e-8139-536ae97d3dac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23113570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Harper-Scott"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43864543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02625245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49884796"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44bce647-f6ed-396f-b3a9-74c6191a0d08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43864543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicanalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Music Analysis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43864543","wordCount":8502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley Sultan"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3831357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3831357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Supplement","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":326.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1, 3-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung. An International Journal for the Application of Formal Methods to History. 1978 \u2013 2003. Bibliographie, Abstracts, Register","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986001","wordCount":153740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hannan Hever","Lisa Katz"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.30.3.321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25010303-6a5e-34f6-b0be-1c07a0cbd1d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.30.3.321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cLocation, not identity\u201d: The Politics of Revelation in Ronit Matalon's The One Facing Us<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.30.3.321","wordCount":6848,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19097,19651]],"Locations in B":[[20582,21162]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"This article traces the profound ambivalence toward religion in Ronit Matalon's novel, Ze im ha-panim eleinu (The One Facing Us). The novel tells the story of Esther, sent by her Israeli family to Cameroon, to her maternal uncle Jacques Sicourelle and his family, perhaps in order to marry her cousin Erouan or simply to reunite with distant relatives. Spreading over large geographical expanses, it is the story of the national identity of Mizrahi Jews. The novel strongly criticizes the rigidity of identity politics, and Matalon suggests replacing it with politics of location; location is fluid and may change frequently without our becoming fixed in any one particular identity. The photographic images in the novel grant their subjects identifying visual features; and the exposure of the photographic process is in and of itself an exposure of the process of identity building. Roland Barthes depicts photography as an intense experience of union with the reality \u201cbeyond\u201d the photograph: an experience that crosses the boundaries of the photograph to move toward the reality it represents. In this light, it is possible to examine the extraordinary process Matalon offers in her novel, which seeks to reconstruct the aura\u2014that is, the revelation, after it has disappeared\u2014through the means of photographs. She breaks the photograph down to its constituent parts, pointing to the source of its aura, its revelatory effect, even though the revelation is invisible in the finished image as a whole. The opposite action\u2014emphasis on the photograph's artificiality\u2014externalizes and reveals a contradiction. It fixes and freezes a unique moment, but also freezes the disturbance and so recalls for us both the status of a photo as a reproduced signifier lacking an aura as well as the unique moment it seems to memorialize. From her Mizrahi stance, Matalon refuses to completely participate in the theological\u2013Zionist enterprise: that is, on the one hand she is attracted to the revelatory effect of the photographs, but on the other she will not take on religious identity as an essentialist and fixed component of selfhood.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW COREY YERKES"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"330197f6-4f60-31fd-beb0-7c71c54ca4ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A BIOLOGY OF DICTATORSHIPS\": LIBERALISM AND MODERN REALISM IN SINCLAIR LEWIS'S \"IT CAN'T HAPPEN HERE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203474","wordCount":8630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07330707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43440014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"restmananote"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration & Management Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Biological sciences - Biology","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43440014","wordCount":12956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Teemu Ruskola"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b68c5a89-437f-3a81-9918-fe336959d805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":131.0,"pageEnd":"1729","pageStart":"1599","pagination":"pp. 1599-1729","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceptualizing Corporations and Kinship: Comparative Law and Development Theory in a Chinese Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229500","wordCount":73859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"In this article, Professor Teemu Ruskola places China's recent Company Law in a broader historical and cultural perspective. Noting that the Company Law consists of transplanted Western corporation law, Professor Ruskola argues that, in a new cultural context, even the most basic provisions of transplanted law are liable to be interpreted in new and unexpected ways. To provide an informed understanding of that context, he begins by analyzing China's indigenous tradition of corporation law. Challenging the conventional wisdom that late imperial China had no entities analogous to the Western business corporation, he maintains that traditional Chinese family law performed many of the functions that modern American corporation law performs today. He outlines the historical development of Chinese \"clan corporations,\" or professionally managed commercial enterprises organized in the form of the family, and illustrates how these clan corporations engaged in creative contracting to construct business entities that formally corresponded to the idealized Confucian family defined by patrilineal kinship. Professor Ruskola then shows how twentieth-century attempts to transplant Western corporation law have achieved limited success, while the family itself has continued to maintain a distinctive legal status, and the Chinese have continued to take advantage of that status in organizing their businesses. Next, he contrasts the traditional Chinese view of the corporation as a kinship group with the contract-based view of recent American corporate jurisprudence. Although the two views offer diametrically opposed justifications for a similar business entity, the Chinese and American traditions are in fact functionally much closer than they first appear to be. Professor Ruskola concludes by speculating on the jurisprudential significance of this fact and its implications for policy-makers engaged in development. Despite their surface similarities, Chinese and Western corporation law are unlikely to converge in a meaningful way so long as their legal, political, and discursive interpretations remain informed by distinct local understandings of the nature and purpose of corporations.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Galton"],"datePublished":"1904-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2762125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dcf111a-2adf-361c-9392-af4fc41ea785"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2762125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Eugenics: Its Definition, Scope, and Aims","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2762125","wordCount":16243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Black"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43664687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629905"},{"name":"oclc","value":"226249657"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008215240"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6997a35-0384-3755-b8e3-0eb06c29dcb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43664687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reststudengllite"}],"isPartOf":"Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Orator in the Laboratory: Rhetoric and Experimentation in Thomas Shadwell's \"The Virtuoso\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43664687","wordCount":7820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Tennessee","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DARRELL VARGA"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfd19e2c-8951-3d76-95d1-597becbb4d6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24408028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"LOCATING THE ARTIST IN \"THIRTY TWO SHORT FILMS ABOUT GLENN GOULD\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24408028","wordCount":10714,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16367,16494]],"Locations in B":[[26749,26876]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Par une analyse du portrait complexe de l'excentrique pianiste et compositeur, Glenn Gould, que Fran\u00e7ois Girard brosse dans Thirty Two Short Films about Glenn Gould, l'auteur \u00e9tudie cette ic\u00f4ne nationale \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re des images multiples et contradictoires qui existent \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur du film et en \u00e0 parall\u00e8le avec l'\u0153uvre. Girard questionne les concepts de biographie, de documentaire et de fiction tout en sugg\u00e9rant que la valeur culturelle de Gould est produite \u00e0 la fois par des institutions comme le Canadian Broadcasting Corporation et par un r\u00e9seau de relations entre la culture des m\u00e9dias globaux et la sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 de l'espace, du lieu, du travail et des notions de valeur.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41236157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11f72d06-b89e-34d1-bd17-a39c405cf40d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41236157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41236157","wordCount":17609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erika Balsom"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kdsq.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089644718"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"576b3db4-b11c-3ffe-961c-ec18d6549b9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt45kdsq.4"}],"isPartOf":"Exhibiting Cinema in Contemporary Art","keyphrase":["othered cinema","moving image","gallery","overture","cinematic","artists","museum","practices","artists cinema","experimental film"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"9","pagination":"9-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt45kdsq.4","wordCount":7939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"To open, an Overture . In 1986, Stan Douglas produced a 16mm work that recycled some of cinema\u2019s earliest images and one of its earliest genres, the phantom ride. Douglas paired recycled footage from two Edison films shot in the Canadian Rockies, Kicking Horse Canyon (1899) and White Pass, British Columbia (1901), with a soundtrack of passages excerpted from Marcel Proust\u2019sIn Search of Lost Time<\/em>. Overture consists of three image sections, each separated by black leader, and six passages of text. These passages are read by a male voice-over through two repetitions of the image track, resulting in the","subTitle":"The Othered Cinema","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marlena Corcoran"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b49c70c-106d-3dbf-be8f-d338a5aa07fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Digital Transformations of Time: The Aesthetics of the Internet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576402","wordCount":4025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"CURRENT DISCUSSION OF DIGITAL CULTURE IS DOMINATED by the metaphor of space--beginning with the very term \"cyberspace.\" Time is, however, not merely an inconvenience online, but constitutive of digital experience. The digital culture of time is transforming our sense of the aesthetic, as documented in sections on the museum click-visit, where the focus is not on the images but on the time-based activity of the visit; and on the time-based aesthetics of downloading. In encouraging digital artists, let us expand our notion of what the new medium in fact is and shift from digital art objects to digital art activities. Examples are taken largely from the collective online work of \"Blast\", in which the author participates.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOM QUICK"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26350718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18570ee0-5991-3268-a04e-c8f418c4cd3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26350718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"A capital Scot: microscopes and museums in Robert E. Grant's zoology (1815\u20131840)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26350718","wordCount":17653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":"Early nineteenth-century zoology in Britain has been characterized as determined by the ideological concerns of its proponents. Taking the zoologist Robert E. Grant as an exemplary figure in this regard, this article offers a differently nuanced account of the conditions under which natural-philosophical knowledge concerning animal life was established in post-Napoleonic Britain. Whilst acknowledging the ideological import of concepts such as force and law, it points to an additional set of concerns amongst natural philosophers \u2013 that of appropriate tool use in investigation. Grant's studies in his native Edinburgh relied heavily on the use of microscopes. On his arrival in London, however, he entered a culture in which a different set of objects \u2013 museum specimens \u2013 held greater persuasive power. This article relates changes in Grant's ideas and practices to the uneven emphases on microscopic and museological evidence amongst European, Scottish and English natural philosophers at this time. In so doing, it identifies the reliance of London-based natural philosophers on museology as constituting a limiting effect on the kinds of claim that Grant sought to make regarding the nature of life.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Zabel"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/966462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29c89165-2418-34c5-a000-410c8fe79f31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/966462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Adorno on Music: A Reconsideration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/966462","wordCount":3081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1754","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edie Thornton"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"426","pagination":"pp. 426-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fashion, Visibility, and Class Mobility in Stella Dallas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490127","wordCount":10043,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[8276,8392],[8708,8875]],"Locations in B":[[53490,53606],[53633,53800]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Trueman Wood"],"datePublished":"1912-01-26","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41339999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38d22288-8249-391c-ab2b-e86d3ef4583d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41339999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1912,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTS. VI.\u2014The Premiums. (1754-1851) (Concluded)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41339999","wordCount":9412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3088","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. J. L. Duyvendak"],"datePublished":"1938-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4527145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00825433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47298280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234564"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a247e4a3-331b-3fad-a334-451fc04dd923"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4527145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"toungpao"}],"isPartOf":"T'oung Pao","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Last Dutch Embassy to the Chinese Court (1794-1795)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4527145","wordCount":49360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HERBERT CHANAN BRICHTO"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23506813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609049"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56017725"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23506813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hebruniocollannu"}],"isPartOf":"Hebrew Union College Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"KIN, CULT, LAND AND AFTERLIFE\u2014A BIBLICAL COMPLEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23506813","wordCount":28454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMOS MORRIS-REICH"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43820408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070874"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44626783"},{"name":"lccn","value":"227321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26481c77-7352-367d-8a2a-9983f29eafc5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43820408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjhistscie"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal for the History of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Anthropology, standardization and measurement: Rudolf Martin and anthropometric photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43820408","wordCount":13453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Recent scholarship on the history of German anthropology has tended to describe its trajectory between 1900 and the Nazi period as characterized by a paradigmatic shift from the liberal to the anti-humanistic. This article reconstructs key moments in the history of anthropom\u00e9trie photography between 1900 and 1925, paying particular attention to the role of the influential liberal anthropologist Rudolf Martin (1864-1925) in the standardization of anthropological method and technique. It is shown that Rudolf Martin's primary significance was social and institutional. The article reconstructs key stages in Martin's writing on and uses of photography and analyses the peculiar form of scientific debate surrounding the development of anthropom\u00e9trie photography, which centred on local and practical questions. Against the political backdrop of German colonialism in Africa and studies of prisoners of war during the First World War, two key tensions in this history surface: between anthropological method and its politicization, and between the international scientific ethos and nationalist impulses. By adopting a practical-epistemic perspective, the article also destabilizes the conventional differentiation between the German liberal and anti-humanist anthropological traditions. Finally, the article suggests that there is a certain historical irony in the fact that the liberal Martin was central in the process that endowed physical anthropology with prestige precisely in the period when major parts of German society increasingly came to view ' race' as offering powerful, scientific answers to social and political questions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Lifson","Abigail Solomon-Godeau"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b85ddf8-fddb-3f38-bb3c-7171d4ee038b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 102-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photophilia: A Conversation about the Photography Scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778377","wordCount":6266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernd Frohmann"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25548545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08948631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45856037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ff22386-816f-304d-8bfe-2443a85587f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25548545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"librandcult"}],"isPartOf":"Libraries & Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Information science - Information resources"],"title":"\"Best Books\" and Excited Readers: Discursive Tensions in the Writings of Melvil Dewey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25548545","wordCount":9701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"The ambivalences and tensions in Melvil Dewey's writings on the library's delivery of \"best books\" to readers reveal the contests for control of intellectual resources in his day. His writings mix support for the library's service to high culture with a modern technobureaucratic and managerial approach to librarianship which was seen by several of Dewey's antagonists as a threat to their authority over books and readers. The tensions in Dewey's texts show how the discourses of high culture are undermined by the discourses of technobureaucratic procedure. The kind of librarianship described in the language of commodities, markets, and readers' excited desires conflicts with one described in the language of high culture. Dewey's writings on \"best books\" reveal the contours of a newly emerging social order wherein authority over culture and intellectual resources shifts to managers of intellectual capital.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John C. Tibbetts"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fc162cc-8929-3fa6-b530-71d64eb05122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Whole Show: The Restored Films of Buster Keaton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797786","wordCount":9534,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[13262,13402],[13827,14004]],"Locations in B":[[52793,52933],[52945,53137]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Walzer Leavitt"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5f7e65b-b2bb-3b51-be97-31f57bdb5420"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry","Health sciences - Medical treatment","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Under the Shadow of Maternity: American Women's Responses to Death and Debility Fears in Nineteenth-Century Childbirth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177988","wordCount":11227,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred R. Myers"],"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"079fab2b-2c0e-3d6e-b025-9f58aec4b142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"699","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-699","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Culture-Making: Performing Aboriginality at the Asia Society Gallery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646835","wordCount":13624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"This article presents and analyzes the construction and performance of Australian Aboriginal cultural practice, a sandpainting, at a major art exhibition at the Asia Society in New York. Drawing on an ethnography for which anthropological knowledge is part of the event itself, I examine the multiple constructions of Aboriginal identity in the performance. Such intercultural performances represent an important form of cultural production and constitute salient contexts for the contemporary negotiation and circulation of indigenous peoples' identities. The focus of the analysis is on the unsettled and pragmatic quality of the performance as a form of social action, emphasizing the goals and trajectories of the differing participants and the specificities of context and discourses involved. 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He received his Ph.D. from Australian National University in 1984 and has conducted research among the Foi of Papua New Guinea since 1979. His publications include The Heart of the Pearl Shell: The Mythological Dimension of Foi Sociality (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988), The Empty Place: Poetry, Space, and Being among the Foi of Papua New Guinea (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991), and The Lost Drum: The Myth of Sexuality in Papua New Guinea and Beyond (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1995). The present paper was submitted 12 II 96 and accepted 4 III 96; the final version reached the Editor's office 6 III 96. The appropriation of Western visual media technology by indigenous peoples around the world, particularly in Australia, North America, and the Amazon Basin, has drawn the attention of anthropologists impressed with how such people have utilized visual self\u2010representation as a mode of empowerment, political assertion, and cultural revival in the face of Western cultural and economic imperialism. In this paper I maintain, however that there are different relationships between signs, concepts, and sociality in different cultures and that visual media have embedded within them their own Western ontology of these semiotic relations. Anthropologists have by and large not sufficiently problematized their own participation in this modern ontology of representation, and they assume that it is the same framework as that operating in the representational practices of the indigenous peoples on which they focus their attention. I situate a critique of Western visual representation within the progress of marxist theory in the 20th century. I go on to suggest that a dialectical approach to this phenomenon preserves the anthropological perspective on non\u2010Western ritual, art, and representation that was bequeathed to us by Victor Turner and is still an essential component of the \u201canthropological lens\u201d.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctv9hj9r9.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781517906115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4539b1a6-73ed-3853-b84f-3c3c58754a71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctv9hj9r9.6"}],"isPartOf":"Bodies of Information","keyphrase":["digital humanities","artificial intelligence","memorability","algorithms","intrinsic memorability","robots","humanoid","human cognition","humanoid texts","cognition"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"39","pagination":"39-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"What Passes for Human?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctv9hj9r9.6","wordCount":7781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the 1980s television seriesSmall Wonder<\/em>, inventor father Ted Lawson creates a robot, a Voice Input Child Identicant, and brings it home to live with his family while passing as a distant relative named Vicky. While she resembles a ten-year-old girl dressed in a pinafore, concealed panels hide the cyborg\u2019s AC outlet, serial port, and electronics panel. Early in the first season, Ted demonstrates Vicky\u2019s ability to scan text at swift speeds and recite information back. In mere seconds, Vicky successfully repeats information from the newspaper on command. Ted\u2019s son, the enterprising young Jamie, makes Vicky speedread research for","subTitle":"Undermining the Universal Subject in Digital Humanities Praxis","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Sch\u00fclting"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c62e3e07-2977-3f9a-9999-c45d23d66178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"INDIANIZED WITH THE INTOXICATING FILTHIE FUMES OF TOBACCO\": ENGLISH ENCOUNTERS WITH THE \"INDIAN WEED\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274295","wordCount":11428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Menard"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44077696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"635555851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f14412aa-4e3c-366c-af75-1c31a3ba1f11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44077696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Rolleston"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"064f9644-c541-3fe9-9930-788bd73583cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Politics of Quotation: Walter Benjamin's Arcades Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462328","wordCount":11312,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13207,13271]],"Locations in B":[[21801,21865]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":"An essay on language that Benjamin wrote in 1916 provides access to his \"arcades project\" (Das Passagenwerk), the materials on nineteenth-century Paris that he collected from 1927 until his death, in 1940. The arcades, glass-and-steel structures enclosing spaces between houses into exotic commercial zones, function as Benjamin's emblems of capitalist modernity. Rhythms of ceaseless production and obsolescence not only absorb all counterideologies (revolution) but control the language of possible experience. By juxtaposing documents on objects, technologies, and dreams with glimpses of allegorical clarity in Balzac, Baudelaire, Blanqui, and others, Benjamin seeks to establish a text that will both embody and unmask the myth of history that obscures these rhythms. His goal is a structure of quotation that will speak for itself. Such speaking requires and makes possible \"awakened\" readers, able to translate the repetitious syntax of commodified individualism into a usable political language.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925022247"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2175f478-a3f5-3121-9139-9caffc8db196"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt15r3xcb.6"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["became","baldwin","minister","francis bacon","politician","english","french","scottish","educated","novaya zemlya"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"45","pagination":"45-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"B","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.6","wordCount":77206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio Clericuzio"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48628841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13837427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16963d8c-f328-3745-aa93-ff70eb81d163"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48628841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlsciemedi"}],"isPartOf":"Early Science and Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"584","pageStart":"550","pagination":"pp. 550-584","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Plant and Soil Chemistry in Seventeenth-Century England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48628841","wordCount":15904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"In seventeenth-century England agriculturalists, projectors and natural philosophers devoted special attention to the chemical investigation of plants, of soil composition and of fertilizers. Hugh Plat\u2019s and Francis Bacon\u2019s works became particularly influential in the mid-seventeenth century, and inspired much of the Hartlib Circle\u2019s schemes and research for improving agriculture. The Hartlibians turned to chemistry in order to provide techniques for improving soil and to investigate plant generation and growth. They drew upon the Paracelsian chemistry of salts, as well as upon the works of van Helmont and Glauber. Benjamin Worsley, Boyle\u2019s scientific companion in the 1640s and 1650s, played a leading role in the Hartlib Circle\u2019s research on saltpetre and on fertilizers. The Hartlib Circle\u2019s research in agricultural chemistry shaped much of the research carried out by the Royal Society in the 1660s and in the 1670s. Daniel Coxe, who adopted Boyle\u2019s chemical theories and pursued original experimental research on the composition of plants, played a central part in the early Royal Society\u2019s agricultural projects and notably in the investigations of plants.","subTitle":"Worsley, Boyle and Coxe","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louisa Wood Ruby"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25160278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1cd05e3-8c3a-31f8-95ec-15bf66b03266"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25160278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Layers of Seeing and Seeing through Layers: The Work of Art in the Age of Digital Imagery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25160278","wordCount":2527,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6997]],"Locations in B":[[107,522]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zvi Jagendorf"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3733063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"882","pageStart":"870","pagination":"pp. 870-882","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Berma and the Scenes of Interpretation in \"A la recherche du temps perdu\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733063","wordCount":8559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"90","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-02-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3075929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b13cd9e-8794-3dd6-9456-1b9327face1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3075929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":"1412","pageStart":"1322","pagination":"pp. 1322-1412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3075929","wordCount":66693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5558","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"295","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Mareel"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.4.1199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c19f8934-e7af-38e8-bb30-9aca554cc8c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.4.1199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"1220","pageStart":"1199","pagination":"pp. 1199-1220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"PERFORMING THE DUTCH REDERIJKER<\/em> LYRIC: EDUARD DE DENE AND HIS TESTAMENT RHETORICAEL<\/em> (1562)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/modelangrevi.108.4.1199","wordCount":9100,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6677,6755]],"Locations in B":[[37873,37965]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"108","abstract":"Applied to literary texts, the notion of performance is often reserved for forms of oral presentation. This article argues that such a characterization is anachronistic if projected onto Dutch literary texts from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It proposes that performance manifests itself not in orality and the physical presence of a performer but in the interaction of a text with a specific place, moment, and audience. This is illustrated through several types of performance in the Testament Rhetoricael (1562), an important collection of lyrical texts by the Flemish poet and rhetorician Eduard De Dene.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pershing Vartanian"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"986fbef0-9719-3189-8e6f-16ecf2996b34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25070581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Cotton Mather and the Puritan Transition into the Enlightenment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25070581","wordCount":5249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William A. Jenkins"],"datePublished":"1964-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41385675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00135968"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f9f66d3-7e52-3184-8a85-078c00b49e3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41385675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elemengl"}],"isPartOf":"Elementary English","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"492","pagination":"pp. 492-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"V. Illustrators and Illustrations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41385675","wordCount":3877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30109663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60a3cc44-c185-36aa-8c93-9786bf8b1930"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30109663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30109663","wordCount":3742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"146","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha Rosler"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"322c38a9-848b-3f02-8ac7-8d94feada9c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1262610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 108-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Travel Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262610","wordCount":12015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1938-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2180698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318108"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39648313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2180698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Philosophical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1938,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Descriptive Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2180698","wordCount":6728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haytham Bahoora"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40e7bbfa-7152-3d20-869e-59ee1056cdce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43302997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BAUDELAIRE IN BAGHDAD: MODERNISM, THE BODY, AND HUSAYN MARDAN'S POETICS OF THE SELF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302997","wordCount":9744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"During a revolutionary period of cultural production and anticolonial political commitment in 1950s Baghdad, the modernist poet Husayn Mardan was put on trial for his \"obscene\" collection entitled Qasa\u02beid \u02bfAriya (Naked Poems). Heavily influenced by Baudelaire, Mardan's poetics provide a revolutionary paradigm focused on the gratification of the corporeal. This paper considers how Mardan's poetry, largely marginalized from the canonized modernist Arabic poetic tradition, registers resistance to an increasingly rationalized and bureaucratic social order through a transgressive poetics that displace the political onto the body. Lampooning social uprightness and middle-class sterility, Mardan's poems encourage sexual licentiousness, embrace the space of the brothel, and celebrate filth and germs. Through a consideration of Mardan's appropriation of Baudelaire, this essay theorizes the translation and transformation of Baudelaire's paradigmatic literary representations of modernity into the context of a modernizing Baghdad and therefore historicizes the appearance of modernist aesthetics in a non-European space.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachael\u00a0Ziady DeLue"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/521889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec892e6f-0ef8-3353-8a05-071a654290c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/521889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Diagnosing Pictures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/521889","wordCount":14199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Best known for his writing on photography, the Stieglitz circle critic Sadakichi Hartmann (1867\u20131944) also wrote extensively about painting, championing those artists, such as James McNeill Whistler, whose work he deemed expressive of meaning beyond surface appearance. In an article entitled \"The Influence of Visual Perception on Conception and Technique,\" published in Camera Work in 1903, Hartmann discussed certain trends in recent European and American painting, including impressionism; but he departed from his usual critical approach by borrowing the model of diagnosis from the field of medicine to explain the appearance and effects of this recent art. In other words, Hartmann modeled his activity as an art critic after the work of a physician, diagnosing the physical and mental maladies of painters by way of an examination of their pictures, much as a doctor diagnoses a patient by examining his or her symptoms. This article considers Hartmann's diagnostic method in terms of his own critical investments\u2013including his interest in the nature and limits of photographic portraiture\u2013and also in terms of transformations of the diagnostic method itself in turn\u2010of\u2010the\u2010century medicine in order to suggest what motivated Hartmann's \"scientific\" criticism. In so doing, the article posits Hartmann's project as part of a larger conversation about scientific seeing and knowing at the time.","subTitle":"Sadakichi Hartmann and the Science of Seeing, circa 1900","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe Moran"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2489a52d-bae5-3e98-8e84-d48e5555a42a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27556769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Don DeLillo and the Myth of the Author: Recluse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27556769","wordCount":6948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407063"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50649976"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dddd16b3-7048-32d1-8112-c0e82c189e49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26369345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecompbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Integrative and Comparative Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":190.0,"pageEnd":"e190","pageStart":"e1","pagination":"pp. e1-e190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Symposia and Oral Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26369345","wordCount":195297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christine Rosen"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43152146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15431215"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56518547"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005213386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a527033-636a-3afa-a488-6f0929196c35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43152146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newatlantis"}],"isPartOf":"The New Atlantis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Technology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"The Age of Egocasting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43152146","wordCount":9687,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[25309,25779],[37935,38018],[43975,44079],[46586,46804]],"Locations in B":[[49829,50299],[51754,51837],[52512,52616],[52682,52921]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Center for the Study of Technology and Society","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Weimann"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5579139b-29f5-3575-9907-d5e78698a75c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3047189","wordCount":3428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ron Horning"],"datePublished":"1985-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24471989","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9db82880-bb48-3fa4-89dc-62339e042a18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24471989"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Visual arts","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Portraits of Plants. A Limited Study of the \"Icones\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2395120","wordCount":17498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Missouri Botanical Garden Press","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"A set of four criteria for defining the word \"icones\" is established: that the illustrations be full page in size; that they include some portrayal of the habit of growth of the plant; that they be botanically accurate; that they give aesthetic satisfaction. Each of the \"icones\" must fulfill each requirement in some degree, except in the plant portrayals of the 16th and 17th century herbals. The history of these cuts is traced throughout their oft-repeated use, and their exception to the general rule discussed in the light of their great botanical importance. Four genera of the Cucurbitaceae (Fevillea, Cucurbita, Lagenaria, Luffa) are chosen as limiting factors in the study, and illustrations of these plants available in the library of the Missouri Botanical Garden discussed in relation to the criteria previously set up. The study is concluded with a chronological index of \"icones\" of these key species.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan David Gross"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04534387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aff6a12e-4307-33a7-9ca0-463b8904d46b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30210391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keatsshelleyj"}],"isPartOf":"Keats-Shelley Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30210391","wordCount":17137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Keats-Shelley Association of America, Inc.","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DALE ROYLANCE"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26402232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fa3ed79-94b7-3e48-903c-09c1f562356e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26402232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Graphic Arts in America, 1670-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26402232","wordCount":8278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Princeton University Library","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIEKE BAL"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac4cde96-0fb1-31c1-9187-d23c718405b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Light Writing\": Portraiture in a Post-Traumatic Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030024","wordCount":8115,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19304,19658]],"Locations in B":[[20733,21080]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALF L\u00dcDTKE","William Templer"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43802224"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008233977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f79bd21-2942-3256-8898-f2c80baf7838"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44735367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Polymorphous Synchrony: German Industrial Workers and the Politics of Everyday Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44735367","wordCount":23825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel R. Fusfeld"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213624"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d7d2100-d616-31b4-bbc4-35bb298bf89c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4224896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconiss"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"The Conceptual Framework of Modern Economics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224896","wordCount":22390,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Association for Evolutionary Economics","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOM CLIFF","Matei Gheorghiu"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24096299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10219013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b825cabf-99b0-3e8b-b95e-171b82da608f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24096299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspectiveschin"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives Chinoises","keyphrase":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Un urbanisme \u00e0 la p\u00e9riph\u00e9rie: \u00c9crire l'histoire \u00e0 la fronti\u00e8re nord-ouest de la Chine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24096299","wordCount":12915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3 (124)","publisher":"French Centre for Research on Contemporary China","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Cet article analyse les causes, les processus et les effets de l'urbanisation de Korla, une petite ville du nord-ouest de la Chine ayant connu une expansion rapide, et dans laquelle l'auteur a conduit une enqu\u00eate de terrain pendant plus de deux ann\u00e9es. Il cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9montrer que, dans cet environnement urbain, les monuments historiques sont les manifestations physiques d'un programme de changements id\u00e9ologiques et socio-\u00e9conomiques profonds, et parfois m\u00eame violents, qui affecte la p\u00e9riph\u00e9rie de la Chine et tous ses r\u00e9sidents \u2013 bien que certains de ces r\u00e9sidents soutiennent et participent \u00e0 ces transformations en cours.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10f049aa-f9dc-3235-95c1-c634c6629a06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41616789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":138.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41616789","wordCount":40358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"126","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph H. Sommer"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24115687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa37d94b-d381-335b-9309-9f715b2cae55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24115687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":88.0,"pageEnd":"1232","pageStart":"1145","pagination":"pp. 1145-1232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Science and Mathematics","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Against Cyberlaw","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24115687","wordCount":39330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"There has been tremendous attention given to the Internet over the last five years. Many groups and commentators now speak about cyberlaw as a revolution that will sweep the legal landscape. These groups also argue that new information technologies pose new and difficult problems that traditional law is unable to solve. The author first argues that cyberlaw is not a body of law in and of itself as technologies generally do not define bodies of law. Next, the author argues that it is dangerous to consider cyberlaw as its own body of law and that to do so will lead to the development of bad law. Then, the author examines whether any legal issues posed by new informatics technologies are novel. The author concludes that most legal issues posed by these technologies are not new at all and that existing law is flexible enough to deal with such issues.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert F. Moe"],"datePublished":"1969-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/454738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031283"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709499"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/454738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanspeech"}],"isPartOf":"American Speech","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"On Haber's \"Canine Terms Applied to Human Beings and Human Events\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/454738","wordCount":10922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b37ac2f8-5448-39d1-92dd-f202e7a160a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":202.0,"pageEnd":"1906","pageStart":"1705","pagination":"pp. 1705-1906","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program of the 2007 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501819","wordCount":102596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-11-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1734927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1721b3da-1249-3a28-9fe0-1e9a453a6c72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1734927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"914","pageStart":"884","pagination":"pp. 884-914","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Central Program of the 1972 AAAS Annual Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1734927","wordCount":19495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4063","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"178","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bethany Nowviskie"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30204699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ac0ee36-a607-3004-b80d-f793edcc8c5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30204699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comphuma"}],"isPartOf":"Computers and the Humanities","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Systems science","Information science - Information management","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Select Resources for Image-Based Humanities Computing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30204699","wordCount":7287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1950-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3458814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6727100-6df3-3757-9b60-411e549f3952"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3458814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":183.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1950,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Cumulative Index: Vols. 46-50, January 1946-December 1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3458814","wordCount":215246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Goldberg"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23113339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d62280ea-9558-3c56-ab1c-6b7dfcdcbae9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23113339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23113339","wordCount":1507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia A. Marshall"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/648742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07455194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205070"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5d52f08-7ef6-3d1d-a512-035f5b0d9e18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/648742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medianthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Medical Anthropology Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Anthropology and Bioethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/648742","wordCount":11448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"The field of bioethics has been dominated by the tenets and assumptions of Western philosophical rationalistic thought. A principles and rights-based approach to discussions of moral dilemmas has sustained and reinforced a pervasive reductionism, utilitarianism, and ethnocentrism in the field. Recent explorations of casuistry and hermeneutics suggest a movement toward an expanded theoretical and conceptual framing of medical ethical problems. Increased attention to moral phenomenology and a recognition of the importance of social, cultural, and historical determinants that shape moral questioning should facilitate collaborative work between anthropologists and ethicists. In this article, I examine the philosophical orientation of U.S. bioethics and the relationship of the social sciences to the field of medical ethics. Deterrents to collaboration between anthropologists and bioethicists are explored. Finally, I review past and possible future contributions of anthropology to the field of bioethics and, more generally, to medical ethics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kay Young"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"feccba26-75ac-3643-8524-025d0df3a9c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41289294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Elegance and Extravagance in Science and Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289294","wordCount":8690,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43175,43957]],"Locations in B":[[16569,17353]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael R. Curry"],"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2563301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d33dafac-6d8d-3839-967b-0bd5fd27072e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2563301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"210","pagination":"pp. 210-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Postmodernism, Language, and the Strains of Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2563301","wordCount":14485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":"During the last few years a group of geographers has seen decisive problems in the accepted ways of thinking about the subject matter of geography, the ways of knowing that subject matter, and the ways of communicating the results of geographical inquiry. They have attempted to develop alternatives to these accepted practices. Advocates of these alternatives have characterized the now questionable views as \"modernist,\" and have claimed to be \"postmodern.\" In doing so they have appealed to the intellectual authority of several individuals, notably Nietzsche, Rorty, and Wittgenstein. Yet a closer analysis of the works of those authorities suggests the need to rethink the claims of the most vocal of postmodernists. Indeed, an analysis of the works of postmodernists in terms of the critiques-of authority, ontology, history, and language-developed by the very authorities whom they cite suggests that postmodernism is in important respects modernist. This, if we return to the works of postmodern geographers' intellectual predecessors, should come as no surprise; an important emphasis of their work, yet one typically missing in postmodernists' uses of it, is the nature of habit and custom in human life and language.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen M. Robinson","Samuel Weintraub","Helen K. Smith"],"datePublished":"1965-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/747114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":121.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Educational psychology"],"title":"Summary of Investigations Relating to Reading July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/747114","wordCount":45201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"Draws from the published research literature and reviews the findings of the 236 reading studies reported within the one year period from July 1, 1964 to June 30, 1965. Studies are categorized into six major areas, each of which has several subdivisions. As in past years, the majority of studies reported was classified into two of the six major topic areas: the Physiology and Psychology of Reading and the Teaching of Reading. Under the designation, Physiology and Psychology, two subdivisions contribute the greatest quantity of studies: Visual Perception and Factors Related to Reading Disability. If the sheer number of research articles reported is a criterion measure, the area of beginning reading methods holds most interest for researchers whose studies are reported in the Teaching of Reading category. In the same section, a number of reports on the effectiveness of college reading programs is also reviewed. The majority of studies reported in the Sociology of Reading is concerned with readership of various types of printed materials. The present summary also includes a listing of other bibliographies of specific aspects of reading research. The annotated bibliography supplements the written text, providing information about the plan of each study.\/\/\/ [French] Cet article passe en revue les 236 \u00e9tudes concernant la lecture publi\u00e9 pendant la p\u00e9riode s'\u00e9tendant entre le 1er juillet 1964 et le 30 juin 1965. Les \u00e9tudes sont class\u00e9es en six principaux groupes et sous-groupes. Comme dans les ann\u00e9es pr\u00e9c\u00e9dentes, la majorit\u00e9 des \u00e9tudes sont class\u00e9es dans deux des six sujets principaux: la physiologie et la psychologie de la lecture et l'enseignement de la lecture. Sous la d\u00e9signation, physiologie et psychologie, deux sous-divisions comportent la majorit\u00e9 des \u00e9tudes: la perception visuelle et les facteurs ayant rapport \u00e0 l'inabilit\u00e9 de lire. Si le nombre d'articles de recherche dont le compte rendu est donn\u00e9, est un \u00e9l\u00e9ment de mesure de l'int\u00e9r\u00eat, le domaine des methodes pour commencer \u00e0 apprendre \u00e0 lire attire le plus de chercheurs dont les \u00e9tudes sont rapport\u00e9es dans la section: enseignement de lecture. Dans la m\u00eame section un certain nombre de rapports sur l'efficacit\u00e9 des programmes d'enseignement de lecture au coll\u00e8ge est \u00e9galement pass\u00e9 en revue. La plupart des \u00e9tudes rapport\u00e9es dans la section concernant la sociologie de la lecture concerne la lisibilit\u00e9 de diff\u00e9rents types de mat\u00e9riels imprim\u00e9s. Le pr\u00e9sent r\u00e9sum\u00e9 inclus \u00e9galement une liste d'autres bibliographies d'aspects sp\u00e9cifiques de recherches sur la lecture. Une bibliographie annot\u00e9e compl\u00e8te le texte, donnant des informations sur le plan de chaque \u00e9tude.\/\/\/ [Spanish] Se considera el material de investigaci\u00f3n publicado y se revisan los resultados de 236 estudios de lectura sometidos en el per\u00edodo de un a\u00f1o, desde Julio 1, 1964 hasta Junio 30, 1965. Los estudios se dividen en seis categor\u00edas de m\u00e1s importancia, cada una de las cuales tiene varias subdivisiones. Como en a\u00f1os anteriores, la mayor\u00eda de los estudios presentados se clasific\u00f3 dentro de dos de los seis t\u00f3picos principales: Fisiolog\u00eda y Psicolog\u00eda de la Lectura y la Ense\u00f1anza de la Lectura. Dentro de la designaci\u00f3n, Fisiolog\u00eda y Psicolog\u00eda, dos subdivisiones contribuyen el mayor n\u00famero de estudios y estos son: Percepci\u00f3n Visual y Factores Relacionados a la Inhabilidad en la Lectura. Si el gran n\u00famero de art\u00edculos sobre investigaci\u00f3n sometido es medida de criterio, el campo de m\u00e9todos para la lectura de principiantes ofrece el mayor inter\u00e9s a los investigadores que presentan estudios en la categor\u00eda de Ense\u00f1anza de Lectura. En la misma secci\u00f3n tambi\u00e9n se revisa un n\u00famero de informes sobre la eficacia de programas de lectura en colegio superior. La mayor\u00eda de los estudios sometidos sobre la Sociolog\u00eda de la Lectura trata de la facilidad de lectura de varios tipos de materiales impresos. El resumen actual tambi\u00e9n incluye una lista de otras bibliograf\u00edas sobre aspectos espec\u00edficos de la investigaci\u00f3n sobre lectura. La bibliograf\u00eda anotada suplementa el texto escrito, proporcionando informaci\u00f3n sobre el plan de cada estudio.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilbert A. Clark","Michael D. Day","W. Dwaine Greer"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3332748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7b8d101-5f7a-3eff-bafd-fef869016909"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3332748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Discipline-Based Art Education: Becoming Students of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3332748","wordCount":27036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1902-07-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2f7d908-9dc1-37d2-8090-fbf18e5f85b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1902,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 50, no. 2590","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335647","wordCount":16322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2590","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb314ccd-9b5e-3b8a-942e-1650c9dc3f7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"494","pageStart":"494","pagination":"p. 494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374538","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-12-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1665679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba139b70-8a42-3db9-9eb6-d7f2cca13f64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1665679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"551","pageStart":"550","pagination":"pp. 550-551","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Cold Spring Harbor Biological Laboratory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1665679","wordCount":1675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2398","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"92","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdcac536-0231-3e80-8f26-d136fc911c50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1297104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297104","wordCount":12619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20757488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07470088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2db48084-cd96-3a4a-97ae-1b8e55b3faa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20757488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"abaj"}],"isPartOf":"ABA Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20757488","wordCount":27650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00924725"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ff5e104-ffa6-3c72-a3b8-d6e47e9e9225"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"browinststud"}],"isPartOf":"Browning Institute Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Reprint of the Dobell Browning Catalogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057599","wordCount":26265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN P. TAYLOR"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41548465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"380944f8-7813-303b-83f2-3790edf21b97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41548465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ricefolk"}],"isPartOf":"La Ricerca Folklorica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photogenic authenticity and the spectacular in tourism: experiencing the Pentecost gol","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41548465","wordCount":5145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"61","publisher":"Grafo s.p.a.","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The paper explores the articulation of 'authenticity' with the phenomenology of tourism, and, in particular, with the 'tourist gaze' as embodied experience. This question is especially explored in reference to tourist photography -including what I call 'photogenic authenticity' - and through brief reference to a specific ethnographic example of spectacular 'cultural tourism' from the Pacific region: the South Pentecost nagol or 'land dive'. Here, the 'tourist gaze' and the production of 'photogenic authenticity' are seen as dynamic, embodied and emotive processes that are shared (albeit often contested) by tourists and locals alike. This view disrupts previous analyses \u2014 of 'cycles of representation, for instance \u2014 that would cast locals and tourists as unwilling puppets performing a gaudy dance on the fingertips of some nebulously conceived 'tourism industry', and by contrast highlights the articulation of objectifying and subjective processes that are inherent in witnessing and performing culture. Preliminarmente il saggio si pone la seguente domanda: in che modo si declina e si articola il concetto di autenticit\u00e0 nell'ambito della fenomenologia del turismo quale pratica e quale esperienza incorporata? L'articolo affronta la questione attraverso la fotograf\u00eda e considera la produzione di ci\u00f3 che \u00e8 definibile come \"autenticit\u00e0 fotogenica\". L'autenticit\u00e0 fotogenica si applica alie immagini fotografiche che sono prodotte (pi\u00f9 o meno) consciamente seguendo convenzioni estetiche oggettivate, e in particolare a quelle ehe si riferiscono agli ideali di autenticita culturale. In parole pi\u00f9 semplici, le immagini fotogenicamente autentiche del Carnevale di Rio, delle gondole veneziane, o dei nativi delle Isole Fiji, appaiono come \"dovrebbero essere\". Nel caso della produzione delle immagini fotografiche del famoso salto nel vuoto chiamato gol a Vanuatu, occorre identificare le linee di frizione e di fissione per cui le idee e la comprensione dell' autenticit\u00e0 -sia da pane dei turisti sia da pane degli studiosi \u2014 sono intrecciate a risposte fenomenologiche ed emotive (per esempio di stupore), e coinvolte in panicolari forme di \"presenza\" (being there, essere l\u00e0). Il fatto che l'argomento dell'autenticit\u00e0 abbia generato un dibattito cosi acceso nell'ambito degli studi sul turismo \u00e8 la prova del potere e dell'imponanza di questo concetto nel pi\u00f9 ampio contesto dell'industria turistica. Ci\u00f3 include la sua centralit\u00e0 nel processo creativo volto a sviluppare il marchio (branding) e la commercializzazione della destinazione turistica, le motivazioni e le valutazioni dei turisti che visitano questi posti, e le azioni e le identit\u00e0 delle comunit\u00e0 locali che vivono e 'si esibiscono' in questi luoghi. Tuttavia, come illustra il caso di studio, la nozione di autenticit\u00e0 ha effetti e riscontri oltre questi contesti che si sovrappongono. Infatti, data la sua \"aura\" persistente -\"l'unico fen\u00f3meno della distanza\" (Walter Benjamin) - e alla luce della problematica cross-culturale complessa che spesso produce effetti oggettivanti e contraddittori, trascurare il termine di autenticit\u00e0 implicherebbe gettare via il bambino \"vero\" con l'acqua post strutturalista. Ci\u00f3 che \u00e8 importante non risiede nell'interrogarsi se alcune cose o azioni sono considerate in s\u00e9 stesse \"autentiche\" dagli studiosi, dai turisti o dagli \"altri\" che le eseguono; ma piuttosto nel capire corne questi concetti e attribuzioni di autenticit\u00e0 sono usati strategicamente dagli attori, e corne si articolano con altri concetti e fenomeni nella pratica reale. Elaborando la distinzione tra Tautenticit\u00e0 \"oggetto\" e l'autenticit\u00e0 \"esistenziale\" proposta da Wang (1999), \"lo sguardo del turista\" (Urry 2002) e la produzione delT\" autenticit\u00e0 fotog\u00e9nica\" sono viste quali processi incorporati ed emotivi condivisi (anche se spesso contestati) dai turisti e dagli abitanti del luogo. Questa prospettiva sowerte le analisi precedenti del \"ciclo ermeneutico della rappresentazione\" e dell'\" autenticit\u00e0 inscenata\" (MacCannell 1973), per esempio, ci\u00f3 che, da una parte, trasforma gli abitanti del luogo e i turisti in burattini poco propensi a eseguire una danza ostentata per un' \"industria tur\u00edstica\" vagamente concepita, ma dall'altra, mette in risalto Particolazione dei processi oggettivanti e intersoggettivi che sono inerenti alla produzione e alla ricezione della performance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-04-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3076407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65eb52dd-829a-35b1-a3d4-c697f127302a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3076407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3076407","wordCount":32689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5565","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"296","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lelyveld"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Upon the Subdominant: Administering Music on All-India Radio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466366","wordCount":7609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"39","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Arnal"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23555779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee3042bc-ef4b-3870-8bae-feb9af1a2c7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23555779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"The Collection and Synthesis of \"Tradition\" and the Second-Century Invention of Christianity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23555779","wordCount":11556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"BRILL","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"The following paper argues that \"Christianity\" as a discursive entity did not exist until the second century CE. As a result, the first-century writings that constitute the field of inquiry for \"Christian origins\" are not usefully conceived as \"Christian\" at all. They were, rather, secondarily claimed as predecessors and traditions by second-century (and later) authors engaged in a process of \"inventing tradition\" to make sense of their own novel institutional and social circumstances. As an illustration, the paper looks at the ways that a series of second-century authors cumulatively created the figure of Paul as a first-century predecessor, and how this process has affected the way the first-century Pauline materials are read. At issue in all of this are our imaginative conceptions of social entities (including \"religions\") and what they are, and of how canons and notions of social continuity attendant on them are formed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1847251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"713cab7e-6201-3988-a2db-a7a369d420ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1847251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":131.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1847251","wordCount":83997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith S. Hull"],"datePublished":"1993-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cb01298-f879-3cc4-a77a-1cb7d7b05a57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/990836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"School of Upjohn\": Richard Upjohn's Office","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/990836","wordCount":16698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Richard Upjohn's office has long been recognized as an important force in the architectural world of the United States in the mid-nineteenth century. Its large size compared to that of architects such as Alexander Jackson Davis, who worked alone, and its early concern with the development of professional standards, distinguished it in the still-pre-professional building world. Teaching young architects was another key aspect of Upjohn's office. This article discusses the character of the office as well as its occupants in order to explore the nature of this educational enterprise and its legacy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL SCHRADER"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43460320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0015119X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf5848d5-fca1-3285-b96f-f939875aa1a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43460320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcomment"}],"isPartOf":"Film Comment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CANON FODDER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43460320","wordCount":12273,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[30031,30105]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Film Society of Lincoln Center","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc3c214e-c134-3641-80a1-0aa512b5dace"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3390644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390644","wordCount":9648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesco d'Errico","Christopher Henshilwood","Graeme Lawson","Marian Vanhaeren","Anne-Marie Tillier","Marie Soressi","Fr\u00e9d\u00e9rique Bresson","Bruno Maureille","April Nowell","Joseba Lakarra","Lucinda Backwell","Mich\u00e8le Julien"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25801199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08927537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1963061-f6a6-38f4-82b6-e2bbc948e7b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25801199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworlprehist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World Prehistory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Archaeological Evidence for the Emergence of Language, Symbolism, and Music\u2014An Alternative Multidisciplinary Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25801199","wordCount":30418,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"In recent years, there has been a tendency to correlate the origin of modern culture and language with that of anatomically modern humans. Here we discuss this correlation in the light of results provided by our first hand analysis of ancient and recently discovered relevant archaeological and paleontological material from Africa and Europe. We focus in particular on the evolutionary significance of lithic and bone technology, the emergence of symbolism, Neandertal behavioral patterns, the identification of early mortuary practices, the anatomical evidence for the acquisition of language, the development of conscious symbolic storage, the emergence of musical traditions, and the archaeological evidence for the diversification of languages during the Upper Paleolithic. This critical reappraisal contradicts the hypothesis of a symbolic revolution coinciding with the arrival of anatomically modern humans in Europe some 40,000 years ago, but also highlights inconsistencies in the anatomically\u2014culturally modern equation and the potential contribution of anatomically \"pre-modern\" human populations to the emergence of these abilities. No firm evidence of conscious symbolic storage and musical traditions are found before the Upper Paleolithic. However, the oldest known European objects that testify to these practices already show a high degree of complexity and geographic variability suggestive of possible earlier, and still unrecorded, phases of development.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2943338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d8ca488-ad8d-315c-be18-a07b3343d499"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2943338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2943338","wordCount":13920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1293544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f9bf926-0a9f-30ae-9348-588853857c02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1293544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1293544","wordCount":12464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grace Quimby","Frank B. Evans"],"datePublished":"1964-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75e8a35e-284e-3cdd-87bd-2725fa7a76f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40291025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"561","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-561","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Information science - Library science"],"title":"Bibliography: Writings on Archives, Current Records, and Historical Manuscripts: 1963","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291025","wordCount":15572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Middleton"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e27c7b86-9c22-3119-8ad0-c4b755d8d506"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Articulating Musical Meaning\/Re-Constructing Musical History\/Locating the 'Popular'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853282","wordCount":16076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Slauter"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98f3fbb9-c163-39e7-9650-b778dd80b575"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Craft and Objecthood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057355","wordCount":6384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander M.ggg Cruickshank"],"datePublished":"1977-03-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1743739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3aec27a1-ae7f-31b1-b5ed-24758b373311"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1743739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"1034","pageStart":"1009","pagination":"pp. 1009-1034","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Gordon Research Conferences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1743739","wordCount":22467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4282","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"195","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1965-01-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1714936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cf83917-267e-341b-b2cb-c69b1cd5c3ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1714936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143+200+203-206+208-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1714936","wordCount":6506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3654","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"147","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"ASSUMING THE POSITION: FUGITIVITY AND FUTURITY IN THE WORK OF CHESTER HIMES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287100","wordCount":11416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e90ffb-fd1b-32b7-a024-514988cef032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2699195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Planning for Scholarly Photocopying","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2699195","wordCount":9825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23344768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"973855df-5a63-3aa0-86f1-856113a93dc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23344768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature"],"title":"Printing the Dragon's Bite: Joyce's Poetic History of Thoth, Cadmus, and Gutenberg in \"Finnegans Wake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25570967","wordCount":13542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/4","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"42\/43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin A. Shoaps"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43103994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10551360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7b9b517-47f7-3b59-883f-6cc2b1072719"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43103994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlinganth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Linguistic Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"Pray Earnestly\": The Textual Construction of Personal Involvement in Pentecostal Prayer and Song","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43103994","wordCount":19221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"This article addresses how a perceived tension between the spontaneous personal and the shared textual elements of religious language is resolved in the context of Pentecostal services recorded at two Assemblies of God (AG) churches in California and Michigan. In an analysis of pray er and the metapragmatic commentary that surrounds it, I argue that the balance between spontaneously created prayer and invocation of fixed text plays on an opposition that goes beyond ritual or religious language; rather, it is best understood as characterizing two opposing text-building or entextualization strategies. Using evidence from AG prayer, sermons, and songs, I show that the preferred entextualization strategy highlights the situatedness of the text in a particular context and as emanating from a particular speaker. My findings have significance not only for research on religious language, but also for further understandings of entextualization and the discursive means of constructing personhood and affect.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas R. Geen","Louis G. Tassinary"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1423439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b07a11c7-b3b1-3cf2-bd8d-0f6e5be6aa90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1423439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjpsyc"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Psychology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Mechanization of Emotional Expression in John Bulwer's \"Pathomyotomia\" (1649)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1423439","wordCount":10316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":"John Bulwer's \"Pathomyotomia\" of 1649 appears to be the first substantial English-language work on the muscular basis of emotional expressions. Although Bulwer's impact on modern investigators has been indirect at best, it is clear that he confronted many of the same issues concerning the nature of the emotions and their relationship to facial movements, although his solutions to these problems clearly reflect the theories and methods of his time. Bulwer's theoretical assumptions and methods are discussed. The accuracy of some of his observations (in light of modern research) suggests that \"Pathomyotomia\" might have had a much greater impact on the science of physiognomy if it had not been dismissed by eighteenth- and nineteenth-century writers for some of its outdated theoretical foundations.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Hansen"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4b234c0-0565-3da2-a613-b766bd9fc213"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ambivalences of the \"Mass Ornament\": King Vidor's The Crowd<\/italic>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685952","wordCount":6984,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46979,47061]],"Locations in B":[[40281,40363]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Aoki"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86c8a097-f9d6-3b27-9cff-82c37cc7a9a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1229388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"1355","pageStart":"1293","pagination":"pp. 1293-1355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"(Intellectual) Property and Sovereignty: Notes toward a Cultural Geography of Authorship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1229388","wordCount":39014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"Keith Aoki discusses the challenge that the rise of digital information technology poses to traditional legal conceptions of property. He chronicles the evolution of the idea of \"property\" and its relationship to \"sovereignty\" in Anglo-American law. In contrast to developments in other areas of property law, the legal characterization and protection of intellectual property rights maintain a sharp boundary between public and private, a division counter to early understandings of copyright law. Professor Aoki locates the origins of this division in a deeply embedded image of originary romantic authorship, which is evoked to justify rights in information itself. As information flows more freely across borders, supranational sovereignty over information erodes traditional, territorial notions of sovereignty. Professor Aoki calls attention to the flaws in our current maps of intellectual property and concludes that reimagining the regulation of digital information flows will shape both the conceptual and the physical geography of the information age.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642585"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91c0a779-8324-3b8a-aa90-be129073c299"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wp64r.4"}],"isPartOf":"Bastard or Playmate?","keyphrase":["theatre","installation","audience","theatrical","ghost illusion","performance","visual arts","museum","theater topics","inside"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"17","pagination":"17-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Theatre Between Performance and Installation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wp64r.4","wordCount":7266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In the age of mechanical and especially digital reproduction, the factual and material presence of the artwork is very relative. It is no longer truly necessary to be close to the real work in order to study it, interpret it or aesthetically appreciate it. Every act of theatre seems to form an exception to this instance. Of course, the theatrical performance can be reproduced in film (or in words or images), but everyone will agree that watching these documents will never be a true match to the experience of sitting in the theatre. Exactly this architectural domain of the theatre","subTitle":"Three Contemporary Belgian Examples","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wen Fong"],"datePublished":"1962-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3249249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a313d75-124d-3706-af20-113857cfd19a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3249249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibusasiae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus Asiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-119+121-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Problem of Forgeries in Chinese Painting. 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Emerging in London in 1829, this was an enormously popular brand of commercial publication conventionally produced for holiday sales. One particular copy - given as a present to an 11-year-old girl that year - proves a useful starting point from which to interrogate these items as a whole. Several avenues of inquiry suggest themselves: ideas of gift exchange and commerce, histories of the role such music played in adolescent upbringing and pianism, accounts of period notions of 'the fair sex', and considerations of the relation between authenticity and deception in annual poetics. In the end, the author attempts to recuperate some enigma or aura for the musical score - not by appealing to some allusive or metaphysical 'work-content' immanent in the text, but by exploring the sense in which these volumes were and are souvenirs - perhaps remote from traditional intellectual concerns, but redolent of a bygone and elusive 'social life'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cca2dcf1-b6a4-38a9-985b-7b2d67dbaf56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24032388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24032388","wordCount":37098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herman Rapaport","Ren\u00e9e","Judd"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"132d2684-b0cb-355f-a11b-3e7a3e0b9707"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Text in a Box","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684832","wordCount":5626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Warner","Bennett H. 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This supposes a certain rule of faith of which the spectator would be the incarnation, in the unfolding of a liturgy associated with film, with cinema, and with film in the cinema situation.I wrote \u201cremains the condition,\u201d because the distinctive reality of this experience \u2013 more","subTitle":"A Special Memory","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1951-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00967645"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60339763"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1ae2b99-a405-388a-b00b-6daf34fdd398"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1292235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aibsbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"AIBS Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-5+7-39+41-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"General Program of the Meeting of Biological Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1292235","wordCount":31562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heidi Tinsman"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874687","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1212ffbf-6199-3edf-9d42-2fe1b6cdf2b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3874687"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Politics of Gender and Consumption in Authoritarian Chile, 1973-1990: Women Agricultural Workers in the Fruit-Export Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3874687","wordCount":11618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"This essay explores the impact of new consumer cultures on rural women in Chile's fruit-export sector during the military regime of Augusto Pinochet, 1973-1990. It challenges the longstanding assumption that the \"consumerism\" associated with Chile's neoliberal makeover was overwhelmingly reactionary in its political consequences and debilitating for working-class communities in particular. It argues that while new consumer cultures emerged within, and sometimes exacerbated, conditions of extraordinary exploitation and want, consumption was also a site through which women fruit workers challenged family patriarchy and created new forms of community with each other. Taking the central valley province of the Aconcagua Valley as its focus, the essay examines women's enthusiasm for the proliferation of imported commodities such as ready-made clothes, makeup, televisions, refrigerators, and electronic music devices, whose availability resulted from employment in the fruit-export sector as well as new sources of consumer debt. It concludes that while such new consumer desires and practices positioned rural women as validating certain aspects of the military's modernization project, it simultaneously encouraged women to resist necessarily linkages between \"authoritarian\" and \"modernity\" and to embrace gender ideals that were quite oppositional to those the regime promoted. \/\/\/ Este ensayo explora el impacto de nuevas culturas de consumo en trabajadoras rurales del sector exportador de frutas en Chile durante el r\u00e9gimen militar de Augusto Pinochet, 1973-1990. Desaf\u00eda la suposici\u00f3n tradicional sobre la cultura consumista asociada a las reformas neoliberales chilenas que argumenta haber tenido consecuencias pol\u00edticas reaccionarias y en particular, perjudiciales para las comunidades de clase trabajadora. Este trabajo sostiene que mientras que la nueva cultura consumista surgi\u00f3, y en algunos casos, se potenci\u00f3, dentro de condiciones de explotaci\u00f3n extraordinaria y necesidad, el consumo tambi\u00e9n conform\u00f3 un sitio a trav\u00e9s del cual las trabajadoras de la fruta desafiaron familias patriarcales y crearon formas alternativas de comunidad entre ellas mismas. Enfoc\u00e1ndose en el valle central de la provincia de Aconcagua, este ensayo examina el entusiasmo de las mujeres frente a la proliferaci\u00f3n de productos importados, como vestimentas manufacturadas, cosm\u00e9ticos, televisiones, refrigeradoras y equipos de m\u00fasica, a los cuales ellas tuvieron la oportunidad de acceder por su empleo en el sector exportador de frutas y por la disponibilidad de nuevas formas de financiamento de consumo. Este ensayo concluye que mientras que nuevos deseos y pr\u00e1cticas de consumo ubicaron a las trabajadoras rurales de la fruta en una posici\u00f3n de revalidaci\u00f3n de ciertos aspectos del proyecto militar de modernizaci\u00f3n, \u00e9stos motivaron a las mujeres a resistir conexiones entre \"autoritarismo\" y \"modernidad\", y promover ideales de g\u00e9nero contrarios a los aceptados por el r\u00e9gimen.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20033822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4331b3e7-40e5-34ac-812f-b4128263c161"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20033822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Affairs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20033822","wordCount":15923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Subhash Jaireth"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4559d1d-a44b-3836-82e2-be8354f0f065"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"What Is There in a Portrait? 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All forms of contemporary music in the world have intercultural roots, and the traffic of influence can be metaphorically referred to as the flow of water from high to low position, from center to margin, and vice versa. Korea adopted as her main intercultural partner Western music, ranging from classical to gospel, folk, pop, ballad, jazz, rock, blues, rap. P'ansori is a storysinging art that emerged from the repertoire of the outcast kwangdae singers during the mid-Choson era and evolved into Korea's Intangible Cultural Asset No. 5 in the twentieth century\u2014it is an intriguing matrix of societal and aesthetic crossings, contradictions, engagements, disengagements, tale, and telling. Every cross-cultural act breaks new ground, forging a new connection, a new hybridity, a new aesthetics, and it would be presumptuous to define cross-cultural aesthetics infixed terms. My performance of the Tale of Hungbo, a cross-cultural p'ansori narrating the travails and triumphs of the Korean-American journey, sums up the key issues linking hybridity and cross-cultural aesthetics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. L. 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Keesing","Michael Moffatt","Renato Rosaldo","Milton Singer"],"datePublished":"1984-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"232c61f2-e9d4-31e0-a434-d2c9a8af0b0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2742799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Collective Representation in American Anthropological Conversations: Individual and Culture [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742799","wordCount":25415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"The paper is an investigation into the conversational processes which lead to a peculiarly American appropriation of the holistic intuition into the nature of culture. The individualism of American culture is well known. The fact that one can find in the United States many statements that go beyond individualism (e.g., in the Pragmatist tradition) is either ignored or used as an argument for the impossibility of speaking of an \"American\" culture. The paper criticises the latter statements on the ground that, in stereotypical American fashion, they place the locus of culture \"in the individual,\" as an aspect of personality. It argues that a holistic understanding of cultural processes places their locus in the conversational processes within which action proceeds.This accounts for the fate of possibly holistic intuitions, e.g., those of Benedict, Bateson, Schneider, and Geertz, as these become \"understood\" or, rather, retold psychologically. The analysis is conducted in terms of the historical fate of the early work that became known as \"culture and personality.\" It then traces the sources and evolution of the latest work to address itself to the same issues of cultural integration, particularly work in \"symbolic anthropology,\" and shows how it contains elements that would justify a psychological appropriation. The paper ends with and appeal for the preservation of the holistic intuition in modern restatements of cultural structuring.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691eedde-5ab5-3f17-b768-b677d849eb7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/948998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/948998","wordCount":22866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1441","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-05-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2874376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ee9ec8a-0b64-32ad-9237-76b38550d879"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2874376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"618","pagination":"pp. 618-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2874376","wordCount":20774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4955","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"248","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodanthi Tzanelli"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10928e9d-cbba-3252-b55c-5536aec910c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Domesticating the tourist gaze in Thessaloniki's Prigipos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496450","wordCount":11072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"The article examines how Prigipos, a caf\u00e9 in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, communicates Greek cosmological themes through the way it 'stages' urban memories. The staging suggests an 'Oriental' tourist-like fl\u00e2nerie that matches, and is directed towards, the caf\u00e9's physical and symbolic surroundings (notably, the Turkish Consulate, the adjacent paternal house of Turkey's first President, Kemal Atat\u00fcrk, but also the old part of the city, historically populated by Greek refugees from Anatolian Turkey). My ethnographic eye is examined as constitutive of this fl\u00e2nerie, especially since I grew up in Thessaloniki. Through the employment of mixed research tools and methods, I explore how Prigipos's spectacular self-presentation replaced old migrant kafeneion culture with new aesthetic fusions to enable its global consumerist mobility. At the same time, the article argues that old ethno-national formulas are enmeshed in Prigipos's design and narratives, endorsing a Thessalonikiote permutation of culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond Corbey","Wil Roebroeks"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/204683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57bafe63-7417-34bd-8637-24ecc0fe90a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/204683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"921","pageStart":"917","pagination":"pp. 917-921","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - 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Coding theory","Biological sciences - Biology","Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Computer science","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Directory of Scholars Active","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30199438","wordCount":13300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Buttimer"],"datePublished":"1990-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2563326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0419d57f-f3b3-3fb7-979b-61e87d39eb3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2563326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Humanism is defined as the liberation cry of humanity, voiced at times and places where the integrity of life or thought was threatened or compromised, or when fresh horizons beckoned. The modes whereby the humanist spirit has been negotiated within the changing contexts of Western history reveal a cyclically-recurring drama which is here captured in the mythopoetic characters of Phoenix, Faust, and Narcissus. It is for its potentially emancipatory role that humanism merits attention today as Western scholars seek better communication with colleagues from other cultures in a common concern about global environmental problems.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Edgar","W. R. Scott","J. C. Irvine","C. D. Broad","J. B. B.","G. A. Johnston","Arthur Robinson","A. E. T.","H. Butler Smith","C. M. Gillespie","H. J. W. Hetherington","A. E. Taylor","D. S. Margoliouth"],"datePublished":"1914-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2249002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00264423"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40463594"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2249002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mind"}],"isPartOf":"Mind","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2249002","wordCount":16142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"91","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl E. 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Hall"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6733f73-5fb6-3589-aa65-7ee8b6d8ac2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1454","pageStart":"1453","pagination":"pp. 1453-1454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231095","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CRAIG HARTLEY","ANTONY GRIFFITHS","BRUCE DAVIS","JANE MUNRO","RALPH HYDE","GIORGIO MARINI","OLIVER VICARS-HARRIS","SHEILA O'CONNELL"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41824925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66fb5ee6-f071-3a30-b003-8bbbc3e7d2e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41824925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Oster"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27654644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"992","pageStart":"963","pagination":"pp. 963-992","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Shop of Curiosities: Henry James, \"The Jew,\" and the Production of Value","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654644","wordCount":13488,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[80338,80405]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan C. Braddock"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef00880a-f0d4-391f-b5e0-8d8069f9cbc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Eakins, Race, and Ethnographic Ambivalence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215206","wordCount":15781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin H. D. Buchloh"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5f5609f-0445-38b0-a334-8454e9e7d73d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Detritus and Decrepitude: The Sculpture of Thomas Hirschhorn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600407","wordCount":6134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marybeth Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Voice of the Blues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289803","wordCount":10702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"54","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mauro Pasqualini"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43867460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02142570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606013449"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1268c57e-05e1-3b1e-9329-03a86e157949"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43867460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historiasocial"}],"isPartOf":"Historia Social","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LA JUVENTUD MODELO DEL FASCISMO ITALIANO: EDUCACI\u00d3N F\u00cdSICA, DISCORSO M\u00c9DICO Y CULTO DEL CUERPO EN LA \"OPERA NAZIONALE BALILLA\", 1930-1937","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43867460","wordCount":14424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"82","publisher":"Fundacion Instituto de Historia Social","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"El art\u00edculo explora la relaci\u00f3n entre comentes eugen\u00e9sicas y las pol\u00edticas sobre juventud y educaci\u00f3n f\u00edsica desplegadas por el fascismo italiano entre 1930 y 1937. Enfocando en la experiencia de la Academia Fascista de Educaci\u00f3n F\u00edsica, dependiente de la Opera Nazionale Ballila, se resalta la participaci\u00f3n de m\u00e9dicos, psic\u00f3logos y antrop\u00f3logos en la construcci\u00f3n de un \"italiano nuevo\" moldeado de acuerdo a los requisitos ideol\u00f3gicos del fascismo. El trabajo argumenta que la relaci\u00f3n entre est\u00e9tica y pol\u00edtica es fundamental para entender la participaci\u00f3n de m\u00e9dicos y sanitaristas en las pol\u00edticas del fascismo hacia la juventud. The article explores the relationship between eugenicists and the policies on youth and physical education that Italian fascism displayed between 1930 and 1937. Focusing on the Fascist Academy of Physical Education, which depended on the Opera Nazionale Ballila, the article highlights the participation of doctors, psychologists, psychiatrists, and anthropologists in the construction of a \"new Italian\" shaped according to the demands of the fascist regime. The article argues that understanding the relationship between aesthetics and politics is crucial to account for the mode in which doctors and other health professionals participated in fascism's policies toward youth.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Pennell"],"datePublished":"1914-07-03","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49b38f64-b03d-398a-9237-368e5bb9e287"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41341652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"724","pageStart":"701","pagination":"pp. 701-724","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"ARTISTIC LITHOGRAPHY. Lecture I","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341652","wordCount":11179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3215","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert C. Twombly"],"datePublished":"1977-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2701014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487511"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40611904"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23320"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2701014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"Reviews in American History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class Consciousness in Chicago's Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2701014","wordCount":2427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Ernest Irving"],"datePublished":"1945-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/765858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00804452"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165001"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235621"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ba66db8-345a-31a3-b69b-0251c8a57035"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/765858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1945,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Opinions and Prognostications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/765858","wordCount":7670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Sweeney"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23073533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03071022"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45096141"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b99f947-07cd-329f-a5e9-3edb46bbd4c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23073533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socihist"}],"isPartOf":"Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconsidering the modernity paradigm: reform movements, the social and the state in Wilhelmine Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23073533","wordCount":17490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"In the past decade, many German historians have embraced a new historiographical paradigm that stresses the force of 'modernity' in shaping the historical trajectories from the Kaiserreich to the Third Reich. This new interest in German 'modernity' has been inspired by cross-disciplinary borrowings from the work of sociologists, political scientists and cultural theorists, and scholars now frequently invoke the term to explain the powerful conjunction of social reform, 'social discipline' and biopolitics in the evolution of welfare states, racism, ethnic cleansing and genocide in twentieth-century Europe. This article interrogates this new interest in the term 'modernity' in German historiography, and its relation to 'the social' and the state, in order to challenge its increasingly undifferentiated usage as the label for an apparently singular and inherently authoritarian process of 'social discipline', driven by Enlightenment or scientific 'reason', as the malevolent essence of 'modern' politics. It questions the analytic value of this definition of modernity and seeks to recover the multiple political contests over the very shape of 'the social', the diverse rationalities and discourses of social reform, and the complex and varied institutional and ideological formations of the evolving welfare state in imperial Germany. In these ways, this article argues for a definition of the German 'modern' that permits analysis of the high degree of ideological innovation and struggle \u2014 rather than convergence and uniformity \u2014 in the domains of the social and the generative social and political contexts of state-orchestrated projects of social reform, discipline and biopower during the Wilhelmine era.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAVLE LEVI"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20721266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b0c426f-bd37-3ff8-a6f6-d2ed6f291385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20721266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cinema by Other Means","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20721266","wordCount":7838,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[43975,44304],[44322,44684],[73248,73886]],"Locations in B":[[40567,42289],[42308,42666],[42854,43489]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"MIT Press","volumeNumber":"131","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Rosen"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ab21fde-008b-3494-8ecd-4100370cbbfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Adorno and Film Music: Theoretical Notes on Composing for the Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930010","wordCount":9428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"Yale University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M\u00e9dar Serrata"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43279285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"901e562a-460a-3f7d-afdc-3efbaaa971f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43279285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Anti-Haitian Rhetoric and the Monumentalizing of Violence in Joaqu\u00edn Balaguero \"Gu\u00eda Emocional de la ciudad rom\u00e1ntica\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43279285","wordCount":8367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":"This essay compares four editions of the book Gu\u00eda emocional de la dudad rom\u00e0ntica, by the Dominican author and politician Joaqu\u00edn Balaguer. The book, a celebration of Santo Domingo's monumental architecture, evokes the topos of the romantic poet who strolls down the streets of an ancient city admiring the remnants of the past. A closer examination, however, reveals a text deeply invested in the monumentalizing of violence\u00b9\u2014a text that portrays the dictator Rafael Le\u00f3nidas Trujillo as the savior of the nation. Moreover, the metaphorical stroll that the reader is invited to take reenacts the movement of history in order to justify the 1937 massacre of thousands of Haitians living in Dominican territory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3421736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002936X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48985714"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a23f7cdb-64c6-31b7-9958-60e9e1b11fe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3421736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjnursing"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Nursing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":132.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Political science - Government"],"title":"Cumulative Index: Vols. 66-70, January 1966 - December 1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3421736","wordCount":170074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carlo Ginzburg","Anna Davin"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03092984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60812507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005263080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4288283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histwork"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Morelli, Freud and Sherlock Holmes: Clues and Scientific Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288283","wordCount":19679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-10-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee59bd98-0fd5-35bc-8d99-45937a58ce41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1730115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"314","pagination":"pp. 314+365-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730115","wordCount":4962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3955","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"170","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Morris Eaves"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3817576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22164301-b068-382b-a97b-0a29fd8e1f67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3817576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"439","pageStart":"413","pagination":"pp. 413-439","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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As such, they indicate that high and mass culture were neither antithetical nor identical but, instead, complementary resources in the larger product of modern identity-construction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1940-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9099b34a-43da-3600-bb45-855e32721b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25690609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":317.0,"pageEnd":"H397","pageStart":"H81","pagination":"pp. H81-H397","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1940,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MEMBERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690609","wordCount":206660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold Coward"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1399493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43643554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214400"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"088ea7c5-2c72-334b-b3a8-0ffa1df59467"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1399493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phileastwest"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy East and West","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Taoism and Jung: Synchronicity and the Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1399493","wordCount":8535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"What was the nature and degree of Eastern influence on Carl Jung's complex concept of \"the Self\"? It is argued that Chinese Taoism rather than Hinduism provided the fundamental formative influence on this central idea, especially as it is expressed through the I Ching. This influence came indirectly through the development of Jung's notion of \"synchronicity,\" correlative parallels between the inner and the outer realms of experience.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Durant"],"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69c4a582-d2cf-3ba8-b650-6eda5f9ad1c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/853475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/853475","wordCount":1682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Burden"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3137705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03061078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38949504"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235659"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3137705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlymusic"}],"isPartOf":"Early Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 268-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'Gallimaufry' at Covent Garden: Purcell's \"The Fairy-Queen\" in 1946","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3137705","wordCount":8204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth R. Allan"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24878431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88337485-eb11-3e37-8632-a45fbf801ef2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24878431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marshall McLuhan and the Counterenvironment: \"The Medium Is the Massage\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24878431","wordCount":15323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Scranton"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"478dfad4-d85f-3b9f-b8aa-1d7336f112a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Varieties of Paternalism: Industrial Structures and the Social Relations of Production in American Textiles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712726","wordCount":11628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy F. Walton"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0798bf9-d1ce-3692-9b11-445e5ebd9656"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24894004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltislams"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Islams","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Geographies of Revival and Erasure: Neo-Ottoman Sites of Memory in Istanbul, Thessaloniki, and Budapest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894004","wordCount":9204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"In this article, I draw on Pierre Nora's concept of \"sites of memory\" to explore the material textures and political effects of neo-Ottomanism in three locations: Miniat\u00fcrk, a theme park in Istanbul that features scale replicas of many prominent Ottoman structures; Thessaloniki's New Mosque, a former place of worship for the syncretic religious community of the d\u00f6nme; and the Tomb of G\u00fcl Baba, a 16th-century Sufi dervish and saint, in Budapest. My exposition moves in two directions. On the one hand, I emphasize how sites of memory frequently serve to bolster dominant, politicized discourses of neo-Ottomanism. On the other hand, I trace how sites of renascent Ottoman memory \u2013 especially those outside of Turkey \u2013 undermine and contradict the premises of neo-Ottomanism in unanticipated ways. Over the course of my article, I develop the concept of \"disciplined historicity\" as a method for approaching sites of memory that integrates both historical knowledge and appreciation for the material and aesthetic qualities of the spaces in question.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAMELA ROBERTSON WOJCIK"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f286a8-f42d-3905-a5e0-28726087ba96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23126345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Typecasting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23126345","wordCount":12334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leo Miller"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00264326"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87dfb63a-a41a-305e-a1f7-fe735c446b8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24463230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"miltonquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Milton Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MILTON'S PORTRAITS: An Impartial Inquiry into their Authentication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463230","wordCount":29328,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ba12054-f4ba-32a2-ba5d-7948845b9bdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/957678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957678","wordCount":20274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1571","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. Pinar","William M. Reynolds","Patrick Slattery","Peter M. Taubman"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17bdf955-eab1-3ea1-a333-cf8bab20a5e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"358","pagination":"pp. 358-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 7: Understanding Curriculum as Gender Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974923","wordCount":21579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chelsea L. Gulinson"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26426449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08971277"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61283474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-228720"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5944e042-c457-3961-aaae-875cb56d0ca2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26426449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jurimetrics"}],"isPartOf":"Jurimetrics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"EMBRYONIC STEM CELL TOURISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26426449","wordCount":17974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":"This comment argues for a continuation and increase of federal funding for embryonic stem cell research and treatment. Embryonic stem cells are the most promising of the different types of stem cells because of their pluripotency. Several studies have illustrated the potential curative power of these stem cells. However, the highly controversial nature of embryonic stem cells, led by religious, philosophical, and legal objections to federally funding this type of research, has impeded scientific progress and opportunity. As a result, many engage in medical tourism, the traveling abroad for medical procedures. Medical tourists engage in such action for personal, health, monetary, and opportunistic reasons. Medical tourism is beneficial to some but is riskier than it is worth. This comment discusses the negative implications of medical tourism as an argument for continued funding in the United States, benefitting U.S. citizens and global citizens alike.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhonda K. Garelick"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46984450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23537219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Material Girls: Dance, Decadence, and the Robotics of Pleasure in \"L'Eve future\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23537219","wordCount":7957,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,9978]],"Locations in B":[[46283,46368]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"The encounter between the Decadent dandy and the female performer of the popular stage provides an excellent opportunity to study the transition from the self-enclosed Decadent texts of the late nineteenth century to the early Modernism that embraces what the original dandies tried so hard to avoid: mass culture and the crowds. At once decadent novel and modern science fiction tale, L'Eve future stages the interaction between fin-de-si\u00e8cle literature and popular culture. The story of a dandy's unhappy affair with a small-time danseuse and the subsequent construction of a female android to replace her, this novel confronts directly questions of mass culture, mechanical reproduction, and the industrialization of the human body.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS ELSAESSER"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mt94.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053560594"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae631796-7d74-328e-a15c-e22b06d9b61a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mt94.13"}],"isPartOf":"Fassbinder's Germany","keyphrase":["fassbinder","fassbinders films","historicising","historicising the subject","berlin alexanderplatz","cinema","gennan","gennan cinema","sexual politics","fassbinders sexual"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"237","pagination":"237-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Historicising the Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mt94.13","wordCount":12700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Writing about Fassbinder more than a decade after his death is both too late and too soon. Too late to have much to add to the already voluminous literature, too soon to presume to have a perspective on the phenomenon Fassbinder. As the 1992 celebrations around the tenth anniversary of his death amply proved, in Germany itself, Fassbinder\u2019s films still split the critical establishment and baffle audiences.\u00b2 During his lifetime, the director had passionate detractors, but also a number of loyal followers, who watched his progress from sub-Hollywood B-pictures to middle-class melodramas to international super-productions with a steadfast belief in","subTitle":"A Body of Work","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Herhuth"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c55a071-ff66-3500-ab64-2656c7d02d7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Life, Love, and Programming: The Culture and Politics of \"WALL-E\" and Pixar Computer Animation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653675","wordCount":12985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"Given Pixar's initial standardization of computer-animated feature films, this article examines the studio's relation to digital modernization and to animation's legacy of subversion through an analysis of WALL-E (Andrew Stanton, 2008). The film exemplifies themes of modernization and subversion, and it demonstrates how a playful alienation of naturalized norms can distract from the narrative's perpetuation of specific cultural values and practices. The narrative of WALL-E gives essentialist status to liberal desire and heterosexuality through robot characters presented in juxtaposition to consumerist, infantile, human characters. The portrayal of these sociocultural norms within the fictional space of the film (both on Earth and in outer space) is compounded by the playful space of animation itself. Pixar's computer animation, if represented by WALL-E, presents itself as free for the essence of technology and the human to emerge but simultaneously functions as a space for precise control that is a corollary to the proliferation of programmed, algorithmic media.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Gallope"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cc86976-3f01-3703-9368-d25bbe72c46f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40984944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusictheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Music Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Cavell and Deleuze","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40984944","wordCount":7378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"This article attempts to elucidate the main characteristics of Stanley Cavell's philosophy of music by comparing it to the work of French philosopher Gilles Deleuze. The analysis begins from the simple observation that both philosophers affirmed and supported the broad outlines of the modernist project while rejecting musical experiments that went too far in the direction of abstraction, opacity, or self-indulgence. From this point of agreement, differences emerge between Cavell and Deleuze over exactly how philosophy might prescribe a virtuous, sober, or ethical version of musical modernism. Cavell's commitment to intentions, his frustration with the preponderance of precompositional schema sustained by rationalized composition, and his preoccupation with the practice of criticism lead him to develop a humanist metaphysics built around the responsibility of third parties to determine a fraudulent or insincere musical effort. Through recourse to Cavell and Deleuze's writings on music as well as their respective philosophies of language, I demonstrate how Cavell's position stands in clear methodological disagreement to the broadly inhuman and metaphysical orientation espoused by Deleuze. In the end, I demonstrate how the differences between the two philosophies reveal structural problems both confront in using a metaphysical position to prescribe a concrete musical practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Pollak"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4306163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00242519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54843411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68fdcfb1-afec-3106-a10d-7b1f81d14c66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4306163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"libraryq"}],"isPartOf":"The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Applied sciences - Technology"],"title":"The Performance of the Wooden Printing Press","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4306163","wordCount":28306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"The speed at which printing was done during the wooden-press era (circa 1436--circa 1820) is of importance from both the economic and the bibliographic points of view. How many usable printed sheets could be turned out in a day depended upon the nature of the work, the level of quality being sought, the industry and craftsmanship of the pressmen, and certain other considerations, notably the design and construction of the press itself. This study contends that: (1) numerous advances were made in printing machinery and methods during the wooden-press period with concomitant increases in productivity, a position with which some historians of printing do not agree; (2) the technique of printing a complete folio side during one pass of a sheet of paper through the press, thus speeding up the printing process, was probably developed much earlier than is now generally believed; and (3) most of the claims concerning production rates which were published while wooden presses were still in common use should be regarded with a great deal of skepticism--because the individual writer's familiarity with everyday printing procedures may have been peripheral, his terminology was vague or obscure, or the conditions to which his statistics applied were not described. It is suggested that as much pertinent background material as possible be gathered about a specific printing plant and its methods of operation, and that certain guidelines furnished in this study be taken into account, before attempting to estimate the productivity of that plant.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ute Holl"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"537d1ca0-5874-36c7-bff8-72c5d12fe2cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Franz Boas and Anthropology in the Age of Technical Media","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341158","wordCount":11336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"For Franz Boas, the art of describing cultures exceeds the mere surveillance of people's behavior as visual phenomena. Instead, all anthropological research requires a constant reflection of possible rules inherent not only in the cultures observed but also in the observers' cultural techniques. Technical media, which Boas took into the field from his first excursions onwardphotography, wax cylinder phonography, and cinematography\u2014not only record or transmit information, but have to be considered as a fundamental reorganization of perception and a redistribution of the senses. These processes of transformation concern the culturally formed bodies of researchers and informants, as well as mutual transformations between cultures. Boas's approach, which fundamentally criticizes classification and universalism in anthropology, is thus based on that kind of critical reflection that aesthetics conceives of as culturally formed perception. Boas's use of media, my essay argues, discovers a third space of mutual transference between media techniques and ritualistic forms. The article takes its cue from Boas performing for a diorama series, personifying a figure that, in a critical moment, escapes the cannibalistic spirit Baxbaxalanuxsiwae. In following this figure through a series of media transformations, anthropology is, according to Boas, conceived of as a permanent negotiation of values and power relations. The specific virtue of technical media is to integrate bodies and the senses as archives of singular historical and cultural experiences.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4134803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00143820"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446897"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227428"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db8f5856-4b93-3c3e-bcf8-5ef30d7279d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4134803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"evolution"}],"isPartOf":"Evolution","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"xvi","pageStart":"2667","pagination":"pp. 2667-xvi","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4134803","wordCount":13330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Society for the Study of Evolution","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesco Pellizzi"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biology","Physical sciences - Physics","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826362","wordCount":10644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-06-30","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43473745","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23805366"},{"name":"oclc","value":"926718072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015203103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd1f936f-d9ff-31b5-a1d1-0fffb94a1eaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43473745"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurepomusefine"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Employees of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston July 1995 - June 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43473745","wordCount":3042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Museum of Fine Arts, Boston","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1941-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e42391cf-c85b-3502-a5f6-a097aca8c777"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1838845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Historical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838845","wordCount":5020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thyrza Nichols Goodeve"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eabba2f5-bfe9-3983-a4d4-c37417cc8e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Houdini's Premonition: Virtuality and Vaudeville on the Internet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576496","wordCount":8426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"The author discusses what isn't \"new\" about our use of new technologies such as the Internet, drawing links between turn-of-the-century vaudeville and turn-of-the-millennium digital culture while charting, historically and metaphysically, the differences between these performative and social technologies. The point is threefold: to situate the Internet within the cultural history of media technologies and 20th century performance; to remember vaudeville and bring it back to life; and to explore current online theater (such as MOO performances) as a species of virtual vaudeville.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Inkster"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1050481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03054985"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979800"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dfad063-90a8-3ad6-81a9-a83758ccc63b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1050481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxforevieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Review of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Social Context of an Educational Movement: A Revisionist Approach to the English Mechanics' Institutes, 1820-1850","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1050481","wordCount":18523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY N. 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Tribe"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d11839f-4fb3-3ffa-a926-1be71b3ffdd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1342592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":549.0,"pageEnd":"550","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-304+306-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The Supreme Court, 2000 Term","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1342592","wordCount":287583,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Bornstein"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.6.2.92","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15592936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71801176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213693"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff58d1ec-9d79-3ffc-9ed0-f7a38bc44700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/textcult.6.2.92"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"textcult"}],"isPartOf":"Textual Cultures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Facsimiles and their Limits The New Edition of Yeats's The Winding Stair and Other Poems<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/textcult.6.2.92","wordCount":4996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":"Abstract This essay uses the recent 2011 volume of W. B. Yeats, The Winding Stair and Other Poems: a Facsimile Edition to argue that so-called facsimile editions can never be exact replicas of literary works but necessarily differ in various and important ways. Chief among them in this case are cover design, paper, and binding among other elements. Some of these are inevitable, but others result from often legitimate organizational and financial demands of publishers. A \u201c\u201cfacsimile edition\u201d\u201d will always be a new edition, even if of a special kind.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rendigs Fels"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"952d6980-966c-3185-9bb1-ae98ba75341b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":590.0,"pageEnd":"582","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-iii+v-xi+xiii-xv+1-453+455-481+483-551+553+555-579+581-582","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"1974 Directory of Members","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804863","wordCount":1459353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10582428"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54750764"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ec2fd90-9375-36c3-9007-9c16af4b3876"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"usblackengineer"}],"isPartOf":"US Black Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876741","wordCount":22080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Career Communications Group","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yates McKee"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46ba3c54-d1b6-356f-b9e5-4c81195d906d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40368435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Suspicious Packages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40368435","wordCount":11946,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1944-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1893526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161391X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35781793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f86b0c5-dfb5-35d4-be6f-d4a90395ea10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1893526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missvallhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Valley Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Historical News and Comments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1893526","wordCount":8556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Organization of American Historians","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald R. 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Dick examines the complex relationship between artists, patrons, and cultural brokers who mediate between them. 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I suggest that the current eclecticism in literary studies well serves the project of democratic criticism at a time when the traditional raison d'\u00eatre of the university as the preserver of Euro-American culture is in decline. Next I draw on my current work on the republican tradition in literature and political thought, focusing on translations of Vergil by the 17th-century theorist James Harrington. The study of reception is a crucial part of renewing Latin studies for the new world, I suggest, because it reveals the role of Latin literature in shaping modern conceptions of the political, the aesthetic, and the relation between the two. Concluding, I turn briefly to Cicero, whose blurring of the political and the aesthetic calls into question our habits of thinking about the transition from Republic and Empire.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd Spencer"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ec1e9f0-ec4b-326b-93f4-c73077322b33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Allegory in the World of the Commodity: The Importance of Central Park","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488339","wordCount":8151,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"34","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Kearney"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30023267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332060X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720461b9-f609-37d4-a288-47e9cfd1e5b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30023267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cranebag"}],"isPartOf":"The Crane Bag","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30023267","wordCount":1276,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[13019,13402],[13512,13764],[14202,14281]],"Locations in B":[[6568,6953],[6941,7193],[7277,7356]],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Richard Kearney","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. 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McBride"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073030"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d520924a-a0fe-33b5-8326-873afd5e566b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08k8.7"}],"isPartOf":"The Chatter of the Visible","keyphrase":["storytelling","narrative","experience","montage","narrative restitution","benjamin","mimesis","mimetic","analogical","berlin alexanderplatz"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"41","pagination":"41-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History","European Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Narrative Restitution of Experience:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08k8.7","wordCount":9660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Montage holds a distinctive place in Benjamin\u2019s discourse. The term comes up with remarkable insistence in his writings, which probe the rich meanings the concept assumed in contemporary discourses bent on outlining the realignment of literature, drama, and the visual arts following the rise of new media and mass-cultural forms. In surveying the term\u2019s semantic range and occasional vagueness, one can easily receive the impression that it functions like a useful conceptual prop in Benjamin\u2019s texts, its role subordinated to what invariably appear to be more pressing concerns\u2014the need for an alternative thinking on history in the face of","subTitle":"Walter Benjamin\u2019s Storytelling","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Gubser"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3654190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7f7d57a-a5ef-3a44-a44e-bc59040f2ace"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3654190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistoryideas"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Ideas","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Science & Technology Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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In order to delineate the specific features of this urban aesthetic I turn to the very different ways in which William Makepeace Thackeray in Pendennis (1848-50) and, especially, Vanity Fair (1847-48) articulates the city and those who inhabit it-despite Thackeray's familiarity with the representational modes that developed in the relatively \"lower\" forms of visual culture. Through this process of differentiation I show how this urban aesthetic involves distinct ways of negotiating such problems as the tension between the dispersive and the centralizing impulses of the city, as well as the threat that the teeming, socially unpredictable life of the city posed to the traditional domain of the novel, the middle- or upper-class home. Finally, by setting off Dickens's mode of figuring character against Thackeray's more self-consciously literary methods, I highlight the ways in which the urban aesthetic that underlies Bleak House affected Dickens's methods.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark P. 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HEBA","SALLY MILLER","JANE PLASENCIA"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43088523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00493155"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0d2f9ab-d1fe-3ff4-8927-24d16c29690d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43088523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Technical Communication","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Educational psychology","Information science - Coding theory","Applied sciences - Technology","Biological sciences - Biology","Linguistics - Language","Information science - Information storage","Business - Business operations"],"title":"STC 1997-98 International Competitions: Best of Show and Distinguished Technical Communication Winners","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43088523","wordCount":12384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society for Technical Communication","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"\u25c6 Best of Show and Distinguished Technical Communication winners in the online communication, technical art, technical publications, and technical video competitions \u25c6 Notable features, judges' comments, and illustrations","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adaf826f-d73d-3523-afde-d3b736570fc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3103756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":89.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"268","pagination":"pp. 268-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1976)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3103756","wordCount":52820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John C. Welchman"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e5525d-e2f0-3d46-bca5-6569495094e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3177199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3177199","wordCount":7266,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19181,19228]],"Locations in B":[[32415,32462]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yoshiro Kamitake"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43296285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018280X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9257aca4-1776-3fee-8c35-e54935562709"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43296285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hitojecon"}],"isPartOf":"Hitotsubashi Journal of Economics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"METAECONOMIC THEORY OF CAPITALIST SYSTEM AND CIVILIZATION: FROM 'VALUE' TO MEASURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43296285","wordCount":8018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Hitotsubashi University","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":"The structure of the present global capitalist world, which is composed of various sets of capitalist systems, can be clearly explained and described with the mathematical concept of 'measure' instead of the conventional term of 'Value.' The history of the commodity world is that of the irreversible order of three measures: use-measure, exchange-measure and temporal exchange-measure. According to that order, sets of capitalist systems have 'grown' up to the present day. This process of capitalist 'growth' is a transformation process from the realeconomic world or space-time of use-measure to the rational space of null sets dominated by money. It may foretell the destiny of mankind's economic activities and the vicissitudes of human civilization.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence C. Wroth"],"datePublished":"1944-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31e49886-682c-3b06-a058-37eb80dc4df1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Some American Contributions to the Art of Navigation 1519-1802","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080376","wordCount":19327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William H. Preece"],"datePublished":"1905-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20497865"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae9fc03b-57d0-3a26-a8d5-86e634ba92b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41335865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarts"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Atmospheric sciences"],"title":"Journal of the Society for Arts, Vol. 54, no. 2767","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41335865","wordCount":20616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2767","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Drott"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235606"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"616e229d-70a7-356a-8d23-f8844a6b6f58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43305043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusictheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Music Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The End(s) of Genre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305043","wordCount":21870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"This article presents a critique of the commonplace trope that holds genre to have declined in relevance under modernism. Contrary to the widespread notion that composers' repudiation of received tradition rendered the very idea of genre categories obsolete, this article argues that such categories have never ceased playing a decisive role in the production, circulation, and reception of post-1945 art music. In interrogating the assumptions that underpin the \"decline-of-genre\" thesis, this article underlines the utility that renewed attention to genre and its framing effects may have for the analysis of this repertoire. To this end, an alternative to standard theories of genre is advanced, one that draws on actor-network theory to destabilize categories too often conceived as fixed, solid, and binding. This revised theory of genre is applied to G\u00e9rard Grisey's six-part cycle, Les espaces acoustiques (1974-85). Habitually regarded as an exemplar of spectral music, Grisey's cycle may be understood as participating in a number of additional generic contexts at the same time. Taking such generic overdetermination into account not only sheds light on the range of conflicting interpretations that Les espaces acoustiques affords but also suggests how music analysis might better address the heterogeneous contexts and multiple listener competences that this and other musics engage.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/384744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/384744","wordCount":10279,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Ferrell"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45ea5728-3fda-3abe-bc17-e88f5f08d4a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The World Politics of Wall Painting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766763","wordCount":6651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3\/4 (53-54)","publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Reynolds"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15349322"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43501722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstud"}],"isPartOf":"Composition Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Publishing in '63: Looking for Relevance in a Changing Scene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501722","wordCount":5344,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33183,33393]],"Locations in B":[[3044,3255]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Cincinnati on behalf of Composition Studies","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodor W. Adorno","Jamie Owen Daniel"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8affbd33-e55e-3557-8a85-a7c5f9c8b0e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"On Jazz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389140","wordCount":10952,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55951,56079]],"Locations in B":[[65491,65619]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALEXANDRA KIEFFER"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b101b2c3-7979-3064-a5df-79838ee081ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26414226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"432","pagination":"pp. 432-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Bells and the Problem of Realism in Ravel\u2019s Early Piano Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414226","wordCount":14941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":"Early in his career Maurice Ravel composed two pieces that take bells as their subject: \u201cEntre Cloches\u201d from Sites auriculaires, composed in 1897, and \u201cLa vall\u00e9e des cloches,\u201d the final movement of the 1905 work Miroirs. Although these pieces can be contextualized within a nineteenth-century lineage of French piano pieces that depict bell peals, they also set themselves apart by virtue of their heightened attention to the particularities of bell sonorities. Relying heavily on repetitive ostinato patterns, quartal harmonies, and intense dissonances, these pieces play in the nebulous space between transcription and composition. Ravel\u2019s experimentation with bell sonorities in his piano music can be understood in relation to a broader discourse surrounding the sound of bells in nineteenth-century France. A complex sonic object, bell resonance lent itself to different modes of listening: the harmoniousness of bell peals was a common refrain among romantic poets, Catholic clergy, and campanarian historians, but toward the end of the century it became increasingly common for physicists and popular-science publications to complain that bells were inherently discordant. In this context Ravel\u2019s depictions of bells in \u201cEntre cloches\u201d and \u201cLa vall\u00e9e des cloches\u201d suggest a shift in the place of musical listening in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century cultures of aurality. Ravel\u2019s musical listening entailed heightened attentiveness to the empirical qualities of non-musical sound; his pieces negotiate in new ways the boundary between musical composition and the protean sonic world outside of music. This reorientation of musical listening participates in a broader questioning by early twentieth-century modernists of the nature of music and its sonic material.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSHUA D. RUBIN"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79b3a7c8-8d65-3dd1-ba40-c7a55575c8ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48579358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"719","pageStart":"699","pagination":"pp. 699-719","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MAKING ART FROM UNCERTAINTY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579358","wordCount":9497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"This essay examines the intersection of the politics of post-apartheid South Africa and the politics of playing rugby. It traces the sport\u2019s history through its manifestations in the apartheid state and the anti-apartheid struggle, but it also shows that South African rugby counts for more than the sum of these histories. Drawing inspiration from the writings of Claude L\u00e9vi-Strauss and Franz Boas, as well as from the aesthetic theory of Theodor Adorno, the article argues that rugby contains an inherent dimension of unpredictability that allows it to recombine and challenge the symbols and sentiments assigned to it. Considered in this way, rugby acquires a measure of autonomy as a social production, shaping possibilities and entering into existing political conversations with its own voice. Acknowledging this small space of unpredictability, then, carries important implications for how we theorize sporting performances in relation to other forms of creative expression. Rugby players, coaches, and teams, for their part, are well aware of the sport\u2019s autonomous dimension, and they know that they must negotiate the uncertainty of the sport if they wish to participate at all. These social actors regard uncertainty as a problem to be solved, and they conceptualize and work through rugby\u2019s layering of unpredictable instant atop unpredictable instant in socially and historically specific ways. As a result, the negotiations between South Africans and their rugby become a powerful heuristic for post-apartheid social life, and they produce not only violence and injuries but also moments of magic thick with political significance.","subTitle":"Magic and Its Politics in South African Rugby","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42569628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4441947f-919e-3511-a956-8e5b2558fb98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42569628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - 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The rhetoric of a unified literature and canon that emerged in Russian criticism then and which prevails to this day constructs \u00e9migr\u00e9s as prodigal sons, finally readmitted into the fold of national culture. Typical titles of \u00e9migr\u00e9 anthologies and prefaces to \u00e9migr\u00e9 works published since theglasnost<\/em>\u2019 period recycle a familiar repertoire, spelling out the myth of return: \u2018Returning","subTitle":"The Case of the Paris Note","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b129cbe-f5da-3b03-8d74-fbd93661aae8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30161640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161640","wordCount":2636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anupama Kapse"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.58.1-2.0187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0918334a-08a3-3188-8cbe-d2567dbf56b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/framework.58.1-2.0187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Double Trouble: SRK, Fandom, and Special Effects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/framework.58.1-2.0187","wordCount":8845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"Drake Stutesman","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Domna C. 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Visitors' varied responses to the exhibit, I argue, ultimately reinforced the organizers' claim that the activities that occur within this 'non-religious' space of the French church are self-evident aspects of a broadly recognizable and 'secular' French or European culture. L'auteure explore ici la relation entre le s\u00e9culier et le catholicisme \u00ab culturel \u00bb en France \u00e0 travers le prisme d'une \u0153uvre d'art contemporain expos\u00e9e dans le cadre d'un nouveau projet de l'\u00c9glise catholique fran\u00e7aise. Selon elle, les r\u00e9actions diverses des visiteurs \u00e0 l'exposition sont finalement venues \u00e0 l'appui de l'affirmation des organisateurs selon laquelle les activit\u00e9s qui s'inscrivent dans l'espace \u00ab non religieux \u00bb de l'\u00c9glise fran\u00e7aise sont des aspects \u00e9vidents d'une culture \u00ab s\u00e9culi\u00e8re \u00bb fran\u00e7aise ou europ\u00e9enne largement reconnaissable.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. Howard"],"datePublished":"1976-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25667339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00320447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557793195"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234580"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c160ed19-4ca0-36d8-8425-c19355851008"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25667339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"plainanthro"}],"isPartOf":"Plains Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"MEMOIR 11: YANKTONAI ETHNOHISTORY AND THE JOHN K. 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As background for the detailed consideration of the various year events included in the count, this study includes sections concerning the recent history of the count, a brief sketch of Yanktonai history and culture, a biographical sketch of Drifting Goose, and a discussion of the methodology of winter count studies. The appendix consists of a catalog of the extant published and unpublished winter counts, and will hopefully serve as a useful tool for ethnohistorians and archeologists interested in winter counts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brigitte Derlon","Monique Jeudy-Ballini"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8786461-749e-382a-8ad3-0d328797eb22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25699954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Theory of Enchantment and the Enchantment of Theory: the Art of Alfred Gell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25699954","wordCount":9428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"Gell's Art and Agency that aimed to articulate the first anthropological theory of art has achieved a near-cult status among the academic community. Departing from previous semiological and aesthetic approaches, this theory takes it that art is a form of instrumental action, the canonical efficacy of which lies in its power to function as a cognitive trap and to captivate the spectator's mind. In this article it is argued that Gell's theory is not as novel as it is claimed; that it fails to define the specific field of art; and that by excluding the aesthetic properties of art objects, it discards ethnographical data nonetheless necessary for understanding the agency of art in Melanesian local cultures. At a meta-level, Gell assigned to his theory the same captivating purpose as he did to art, and this probably explains the seductive fascination that his work continues to exert.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Symes"],"datePublished":"1983-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3332332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a01a96e-556d-33e5-9bf5-84255c642d98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3332332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creativity: A Divergent Point of View","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3332332","wordCount":7188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26436244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f7c18c5-01ad-3428-8c93-f865d2d5bcce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26436244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-90, 92-94, 96-98, 100, 102-106, 108-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NOTES ON CURRENT BOOKS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26436244","wordCount":10446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Virginia","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2561527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97356ece-63c0-36d1-b5ea-b9b029c5fa06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2561527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, March 30-April 2, 1959","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2561527","wordCount":37358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Stein"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08946019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4a28619-6caa-3033-ba70-12615524c13f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40553080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbaanthstudcult"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peruvianist Social Anthropology: An Appraisal of Recent Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553080","wordCount":15473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"Over the last decade and a half, earlier work on Peru's rural sector has been subjected to criticism. This paper attempts to assess some recent studies, both Peruvian and North American, in terms of researchers' awareness of and response to that criticism. Some of the questions have focused on such problems of method and theory as whether or not the \"community\" is the appropriate unit of study and analysis, assumptions as to the sources and processes of social change, and judgments about the character of rural people. Although there is a residual tendency to treat Andean culture as a constant, research has been largely redirected to the study of variables.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-02-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14663567-246c-3950-bd0c-925a77213700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1730930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"604","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-604","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Technology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1730930","wordCount":17210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3971","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"171","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER McLAREN"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45178202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"423f9eca-ad3e-346a-819b-bf1d1ab6e001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45178202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: Reflections on Paulo Freire, Critical Pedagogy, and the Current Crisis of Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45178202","wordCount":10977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"500","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Z. ESRA MIRZE SANTESSO"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be6784a3-48d0-302c-9196-e491bf8c3ca5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26237267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Vision and Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237267","wordCount":4130,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9893,10068]],"Locations in B":[[9367,9542]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Photography in Orhan Pamuk\u2019s<\/em> Istanbul: Memories and the City","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beno\u00eet Turquety"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4907c36e-1be7-3654-b21e-a151da0ffe6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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As new communication technologies emerged in the twentieth century, copyright owners advanced an innovative theory of performance called the \"multiple performance theory\" that made every transmission of a record of a performed composition itself a performance of it. Established as current law by Congress, this theory sees practically everyone who operates a media device as a performer and, in combination with recent technical and legislative developments, grants copyright owners in the digital age extraordinary control over their works.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Corbesero"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24665382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094288X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"244771048"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009233355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b03c2fa2-21b3-36fb-9e6f-42313f54afdd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24665382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russhisthistruss"}],"isPartOf":"Russian History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History, Myth, and Memory: A Biography of a Stalin Portrait","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24665382","wordCount":10806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"During the troublous post-war and post-Soviet periods, the iconography of Stalin has served as a powerful interpreter of the past. Since World War II, portraits and attendant mass reproductions of the notorious Soviet leader have conveyed a historical memory that fused the triumphalist mythology of the Second World War and the cult of Stalin. Appropriated for political, national, nostalgic and commercial purposes, these iconic vehicles have functioned as integral \"vectors of memory\" in times of political change. In that vein, this article traces the remarkably dynamic and influential life of Aleksandr Laktionov's Portrait of I. V. Stalin (1949) in order to illuminate how its meaning and use, past and present, reflects and refracts the political landscape that deploys it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0e8197a-e844-30fd-964e-5a80757317bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1297570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education","Education - Formal education","Applied sciences - Engineering","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1297570","wordCount":19147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20165697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a52e9c9-93d5-3a13-87a2-8f0f5aa656c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20165697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Washington, D. 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Meeting with AAAS Dec. 26-31, 1966","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20165697","wordCount":20604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTINA COGDELL"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctv9b2tnw.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781517905385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f20a72c6-ad17-37d4-9672-0f5f461f4a39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/j.ctv9b2tnw.5"}],"isPartOf":"Toward a Living Architecture?","keyphrase":["computation","material computation","menges","design","crutchfield","biomolecular computing","ssembly","generative","systems","biocomputing"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"69","pagination":"69-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Architecture and Architectural History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"MATERIAL COMPUTATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/j.ctv9b2tnw.5","wordCount":15570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"These terms in current usage in architecture, engineering, and the sciences\u2014material computation, natural computation, biocomputation, and biomolecular computation\u2014are ambiguous about their subject or object, about what is being computed or doing the computing and whether components are interacting of their own agency or being designed to act according to scripted rules.\u00b9 This same ambiguity pertains to self-organization, not only because the above terms describe processes often categorized as self-organizing but also because a similar vagueness surrounds self-organizing components\u2019 agency, the identity of the \u201cself,\u201d and the origin of the rules supposedly being followed. These ambiguities may bother few","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RACHANA VAJJHALA"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862996","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91fda2f1-eacb-3ac6-bfb4-4fadd4067e76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862996"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Telling Time: Statues and Stasis, \"Daphnis et Chlo\u00e9\" and \"L'apr\u00e8s-midi d'un faune\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862996","wordCount":13098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"141","abstract":"This article considers the statuomaniacal impulse sweeping Paris in the first years of the twentieth century, and how contemporary interest in the animation of antiquities resulted in new ways of seeing. Despite the shared aspects of setting and choreographic inspiration, Daphnis et Chlo\u00e9 and L'apr\u00e8s-midi d'un faune staged profoundly divergent conceptions of how bodies could and should move, a result of emerging optical modes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALESSA JOHNS"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzj1.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5cec5ac-3264-36c3-87e1-68aef967fcdb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3znzj1.7"}],"isPartOf":"Bluestocking Feminism and British-German Cultural Transfer, 1750-1837","keyphrase":["forkel","translation","g\u00f6ttingen","clarissa","michaelis","forster","meta forkel","georg forster","following clarissa","johann"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"39","pagination":"39-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","British Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Translation Following Clarissa:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzj1.7","wordCount":20808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Johann David Michaelis, translator of Vandenhoeck\u2019s edition of Clarissa<\/em>, was a professor of Near Eastern languages and literatures at the University of G\u00f6ttingen. He was internationally known for his biblical translation and exegesis; a member of the Academies of Sciences in Paris and London, he was also named a Knight of the North Star by Swedish king Gustavus III. He gained prestige as advisor to the royal Danish expedition to Yemen, carried out by Carsten Niebuhr and others from 1761 to 1768, an undertaking Michaelis hoped would demonstrate how studies of contemporary Near Eastern culture could shed light on practices","subTitle":"Georg Forster and Meta Forkel, Mary Wollstonecraft and Joseph Johnson","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1pk3jqt.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089648518"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d387f96-1fd2-3938-9886-2977c74f5e0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1pk3jqt.14"}],"isPartOf":"The Spell of Capital","keyphrase":["luk\u00e1cs","debord","reification","buchloh","spectacle","adorno","theatre","critique","situationists","social"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"203","pagination":"203-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Casting a belief shared by many contemporaries in the language of Constructivism, Moholy announces that photography and film are poised to displace literature as a medium of communication in virtue of their superior clarity, simplicity, and exactness. Photography\u2019s exactness, in particular, is the source of its striking narrative power, which dispenses with the vagaries","subTitle":"L\u00e1szl\u00f3 Moholy-Nagy\u2019s \u201cVision in Motion\u201d","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL HINDEN"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c93da26e-85c1-3cd2-9094-e0379e8d17fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading the Painting, Seeing the Poem: Vermeer and Keats","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777678","wordCount":9548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan M. 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During World War II, Ise became inextricably linked with nationalism and imperialistic conquest. Yet after the war modernists seized on this symbol of the antiquity of Japanese culture as a touchstone for their designs. Watanabe's photographs were effective catalysts in the process through which modernists neutralized Ise's wartime political associations by establishing a new vision of Ise compatible with the postwar democratic rhetoric and consonant with modernist aesthetic values.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Trussler"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7bc71a1-8767-3571-910d-e045426cb05a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Literary Artifacts: Ekphrasis in the Short Fiction of Donald Barthelme, Salman Rushdie, and John Edgar Wideman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208761","wordCount":15535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-03-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1729115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3eb5a0a-010f-35c1-a8d9-cf07f4cee0a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1729115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"1656","pageStart":"1531","pagination":"pp. 1531-1656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1729115","wordCount":24100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3925","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"167","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan J. 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Though contests were widely popular, they were also controversial. Fans of baby shows saw them as an expression of domesticity and maternal love, while critics of the shows argued that they objectified and commodified human beings. At issue was whether domesticity could be displayed and whether the objectified could be esteemed. Support for the shows overwhelmed opposition, and as the century wore on, criticism of the contests faded. By introducing a new form of display\u2014the exhibition of the normal-baby contests helped to usher in a culture in which traditional oppositions such as public and private, home and market, objectification and approbation, were complementary rather than contradictory.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph R. 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The results of quantitative chemical analysis of the enamels from eight Walters' objects are presented here and discussed in relation to the historical and documentary evidence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAMUEL PANE"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56500bfb-c46f-3736-8ce7-032673cf81d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Trauma Obscura: Photographic Media in W.G. Sebald's \"Austerlitz\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030367","wordCount":8203,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42943,43040]],"Locations in B":[[40348,40445]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"Informed by Cathy Caruth's discussion of trauma theory, Peter Brooks's notion of narrative desire, and Roland Barthes's investigations into photographic viewing, this essay examines photography in W.G. Sebald's Austerlitz as a locus of trauma rather than as a transparent device of historical testimony.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARTHUR S. MARKS"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23558190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003049X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55941028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236857"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dcb9381-e218-338e-9970-5b40397cd844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23558190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Private and Public in \"The Peale Family\": Charles Willson Peale as Pater and Painter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23558190","wordCount":36344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"156","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Antliff"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52528710-ce61-31ff-9621-a8f9a694adda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3051419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"733","pageStart":"720","pagination":"pp. 720-733","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Fourth Dimension and Futurism: A Politicized Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3051419","wordCount":12721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":"Although scholars have recognized antirationalist premises undergirding the Italian Futurists' rejection of parliamentary politics, the integral role of Futurist aesthetics in that polemical project has yet to be elucidated. Through an examination of Umberto Boccioni's Futurist tract Pittura scultura Futuriste: Dinamismo plastico (1914) and works such as his Unique Forms of Continuity in Space (1913) and Carlo Carr\u00e0's Funeral of the Anarchist Galli (1911), I explore the Futurists' incorporation of French philosopher Henri Bergson's theories of time and space into a utopian campaign to transform the consciousness of the Italian citizenry and inaugurate a political revolt against Italy's democratic institutions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Birgit Meyer"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c3bbaf1-f5af-3bd5-8526-50c17d1e1992"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23349842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"1056","pageStart":"1029","pagination":"pp. 1029-1056","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mediating Absence\u2014Effecting Spiritual Presence: Pictures and the Christian Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349842","wordCount":9321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The New School","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1957-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1847383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c4aff0-b33b-3077-95d9-47f3848d0c75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1847383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"806","pageStart":"740","pagination":"pp. 740-806","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Historical News","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1847383","wordCount":32895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriele Schwab"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf6a63e7-22c0-3abd-b6e7-94c01c5a9637"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cyborgs. 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Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\u201cLifting the Veil\u201d: Judaic-Themed Israeli Cinema and Spiritual Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/jewifilmnewmedi.3.1.0025","wordCount":9109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Stephenson"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction to Adorno","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487649","wordCount":3794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[30689,30990]],"Locations in B":[[15506,15801]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AK Thompson"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671440","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5a88dbc-e43c-3b95-9e07-ffa9bf4196cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"When Shock is No Longer Shocking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671440","wordCount":9403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"Walter Benjamin\u2019s conception of the dialectical image provided a strong foundation for the development of political art during the rst half of the twentieth century. However, with the rise of late capitalism and its attendant reorganization of our experience of shock, culture, and history itself, the concept must be reevaluated. This is so not least because, whereas Benjamin operated on the presumption that shock had a kind of self-evident revelatory power, we now occupy a eld in which shock is no longer shocking. Through a reconsideration of the contributions made by artists Mark Lombardi and Cindy Sherman, I show how Benjamin\u2019s concept might be saved by strategies of epistemological seduction that operate, not as substitutes for shock, but as a concrete strategy for revitalizing our capacity to experience it.","subTitle":"The Role of Seduction in Revitalizing Benjamin\u2019s Dialectical Image Under Late-Capitalist Conditions","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Molesworth"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17ba14f7-81d7-337c-839b-26d323fca373"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Work Avoidance: The Everyday Life of Marcel Duchamp's Readymades","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777927","wordCount":9026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Middleton"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11238615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8334ec5b-f566-3eb7-bf78-def1d87ea095"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43029782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"saggmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Il Saggiatore musicale","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"MUSICOLOGIA STORICA E MUSICA DI CONSUMO: COMPLETAMENTO DELLA TAVOLA ROTONDA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43029782","wordCount":6971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki s.r.l.","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott D. Paulin"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/musimoviimag.3.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21678464"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182537648"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216422"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c785d8e-4a2f-394f-abd2-eb1ad8798e71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/musimoviimag.3.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musimoviimag"}],"isPartOf":"Music and the Moving Image","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Music","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cCinematic\u201d Music: Analogies, Fallacies, and the Case of Debussy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/musimoviimag.3.1.0001","wordCount":16156,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[37002,37056]],"Locations in B":[[27997,28051]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":"Abstract As one among many analogies commonly used to describe music as \u201c cinematic,\u201d a supposed affinity is often identified between musical discontinuity and film-editing or montage techniques. The modernist assumptions behind these claims (abetted by translation errors) have led to distorted interpretations of Claude Debussy and his music vis-\u00e0-vis cinema. The movies have learned a great deal from music, and now music can learn a few things from the movies. \u2014Charlie Chaplin","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liz Aders"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66a1710c-0cf1-3adc-a762-3949c9894c0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25564103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dublin: Amy O'Riordan at Kevin Kavanagh and Abigail O'Brien at Rubicon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564103","wordCount":1170,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5021,5205]],"Locations in B":[[4677,4861]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"107","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Naumann"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a11040aa-98ed-3bbe-9e4a-264f3763178f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Remembrance and Political Reality: Historical Consciousness in Germany after the Genocide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488630","wordCount":4703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"80","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis Palmer"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"113e7e37-c8c5-3355-bb62-777c33648a35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bourgeois Blues: Class, Whiteness, and Southern Gothic in Early Faulkner and Caldwell","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908287","wordCount":10822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Faulkner Journal","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. George Parks"],"datePublished":"1965-03-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1715643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99a32d4e-698f-3a22-8031-6c5b0266f578"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1715643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"1331","pageStart":"1312","pagination":"pp. 1312-1326+1328+1330-1331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry","Biological sciences - Biochemistry"],"title":"Gordon Research Conferences: Program for 1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1715643","wordCount":13922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3663","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"147","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID TRIPPETT"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24252409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09545867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822656"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235630"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b8ccc01-6052-3490-8f6d-4ec058f59eed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24252409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambridgeoperaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cambridge Opera Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Facing Digital Realities: Where Media Do Not Mix","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24252409","wordCount":12789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Wagner's vaunted model of artistic synthesis persists in scholarly assessments of his work. But at its centre, the composer argued that the media of voice and orchestra do not mix: they retain their identities as separate channels of sound that can neither duplicate nor substitute for one another. Taking as a starting point Wagner's claims for the non-adaptability of media, this article addresses the adaptation of Wagner's music to the modern digital technologies of HD cinema and video game. Drawing on a wide circle of writers, from Schiller and \u017di\u017eek to Bakhtin, Aug\u00e9, Baudrillard and second-generation media theorists, it interrogates the concept of 'reality' within live acoustic performance, both historically, as a discursive concept, and technologically, via the sensory realism of digital simulcasting and telepresence. The philosophical opposition of appearance and reality fails when reality is defined by the intimate simulation of a sensory event as it is registered on the body. And by contrasting the traditions of high fidelity in (classical) sound recording with that of rendering sound in cinema, I suggest ways in which unmixable media appear to have an afterlife in modern technologies. This raises questions \u2014 in a post-Benjamin, post-McLuhan context \u2014 about our definition of 'liveness', the concept of authenticity within mediatised and acoustic sounds, and our vulnerability to the technological effects of media.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Christiansen"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzcv5.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462981881"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3534fa35-7737-35a7-8362-e94956a797a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv8pzcv5.13"}],"isPartOf":"Orchestrating Public Opinion","keyphrase":["mondale ferraro","reagan","morning","america","russian bear","viewers","campaign","president reagan","snare drum","political ads"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"101","pagination":"101-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Morning in America:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8pzcv5.13","wordCount":7009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Following on the heels of technological developments in sound reproduction in television sets and MTV\u2019s introduction three years earlier, the 1984 presidential campaign saw striking changes in the way ads were conceived and constructed. \u201cMorning in America\u201d\u2014also known as \u201cProuder, Stronger, Better\u201d\u2014used music as never before in a political ad. Whereas previously music was merely accompaniment to an ad\u2019s voice-over and images, here, for the first time, music was the argument itself. Sweeping orchestral gestures, frequent chromatic modulations, and suspended chords led to a convincing resolution ending with Reagan\u2019s name and picture. \u201cMorning in America\u201d stood out from","subTitle":"1984","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41699966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"620000756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f25ff4d-8211-3d12-9d2f-0763da8f857a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41699966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldofmusic"}],"isPartOf":"The World of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":349.0,"pageEnd":"367","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-367","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Contents and Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41699966","wordCount":197017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1\/3","publisher":"Florian Noetzel GmbH Verlag","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1936-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72c7e962-e1d6-3042-ad5e-a8fb2b5624ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2808525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1936,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2808525","wordCount":22412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Wilsbacher"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff8ec383-b045-3e57-8bd5-f7027caf2f53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lumiansky's Paradox: Ethics, Aesthetics and Chaucer's \"Prioress's Tale\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115305","wordCount":12691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"R. M. Lumiansky's removal of Chaucer's \"Prioress's Tale\" from his 1948 edition of the Canterbury Tales demonstrates that ethical challenges exist for those studying anti-Semitic texts from the past. This essay suggests that such ethical conflicts don't emanate from the text itself but from the dual context of the historical past and the contemporary context of that reading. The obligation to account accurately for the past may not always sit well against the responsibilities issuing from contemporary events. \"Lumiansky's Paradox\" provides medievalists with an opportunity to judge how best to \"respect\" \"The Prioress's Tale\" (as well as other bigoted texts) by examining the unrecognized role aesthetics has played in historicist and non-historicist readings of the tale. The essay contends that the response should not be to reject aesthetics in favor of historicism but to dwell in \"Lumiansky's Paradox\" so as to explore the potential for an ethical aesthetics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre-Louis Mayaux","Katharine Throssell"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/revfranscipoleng.65.2.19","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"954718460"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"423cf165-26d0-37ea-a2c7-626981c207eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/revfranscipoleng.65.2.19"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revfranscipoleng"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise de science politique (English Edition)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Production of Social Acceptability: Privatisation of water services and social norms around access in Latin America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/revfranscipoleng.65.2.19","wordCount":12817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sciences Po University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geoffrey H. Hartman"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431500"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54394554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bb23c66-e581-360f-9230-5873d15b44ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/743352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cardstudlawlite"}],"isPartOf":"Cardozo Studies in Law and Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Is an Aesthetic Ethos Possible? Night Thoughts after Auschwitz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/743352","wordCount":9294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. J. Demos"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f35dcfc-8724-326e-9185-95501a5bb94d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1262606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 6-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Duchamp's Bo\u00eete-en-valise: Between Institutional Acculturation and Geopolitical Displacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262606","wordCount":13726,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743],[26590,26886]],"Locations in B":[[33242,33403],[33550,33807]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Fletcher"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43250548","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43250548"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newblackfriars"}],"isPartOf":"New Blackfriars","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Incognito Ergo Sum: Political Theology and the Metaphysics of Existence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43250548","wordCount":5150,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55865,56079]],"Locations in B":[[9826,10040]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"961","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"82","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graham Bader"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e943253-5050-3bdc-b7ea-1f05fe806aa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Donald's Numbness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600495","wordCount":12844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Roy Lichtenstein repeatedly identified 1961's \"Look Mickey\" as his inaugural pop work. Painted immediately after the artist's first sustained encounter with the work of Allan Kaprow and other 'junk' artists in late 1960, the painting both thematises its own 'firstness' and raises questions about American art at the outset of the 1960s that are not far from Kaprow's own. These questions are broached by \"Look Mickey's\" re-telling of the story of Narcissus, identified by Leon Battista Alberti as the father of painting, and through the work of cultural critics including Herbert Marcuse and Norman O. Brown, a figure of great cultural resonance in early-1960s America. This article reconsiders \"Look Mickey\" through the lens of these historical and theoretical connections, focusing on the tension between sensation and numbness driving its pictorial narrative. This tension, the article concludes, is symptomatic of Lichtenstein's own aesthetic struggles at the time -- above all, his grappling with questions of how, and what, to paint at an historical juncture at which the call to 'give up the making of paintings entirely' (Kaprow) was stronger than ever before.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rainer Usselmann"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"389d17df-a09d-3d9c-be95-72e02b838fde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"18. Oktober 1977: Gerhard Richter's Work of Mourning and Its New Audience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778164","wordCount":4982,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[57837,58264]],"Locations in B":[[8839,8906],[8985,9408]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Holger Klein"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43023659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01715410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43023659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aaaarbeanglamer"}],"isPartOf":"AAA: Arbeiten aus Anglistik und Amerikanistik","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative Technique and Reader Appeal in Dorothy Sayers' Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43023659","wordCount":10349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"Since the early seventies, interest in reader response studies has steadily increased. Yet there seems to be a dearth of concrete schemes with which one might try to gauge presumed responses. The present article explores the possibilities of presenting such a scheme with which the structure of reader appeal signals in a text can be described. A second main interest is the study of intertextuality, which in many cases has inferable impact on specific types of readers. The article combines both aspects in an analysis of Dorothy Sayers fiction, which is, perhaps more densely than has hitherto been recognised, full of individual and system references to other literary texts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Kornberger","Stewart Clegg"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23728614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14761270"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55042456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-699103"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a05e6a76-023a-3506-9865-27327e081fde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23728614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"straorga"}],"isPartOf":"Strategic Organization","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strategy as performative practice: The case of \"Sydney 2030\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23728614","wordCount":15574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"This article frocuses on the relation between strategy-as-practice and its power effects in the context of a strategy project (Sustainable Sydney 2030) undertaken by the City of Sydney. The following three interrelated questions guided the enquiry: How is strategy practised? What knowledge is it based upon? And what are its power effects? Based on a detailed empirical analysis of the strategy-making process, the articel charts how strategy rendered the city knowable and how performative effects of strategizing mobilizedthe public and legitimized outcomes of the process while silencing other voices. The article's theoretical contribution is threefold: first, it shows that strategizing is performative, constituting its subjects and shaping its objects; second, that strategizing has to be understood as aesthetic performance whose power resides in the simultaneous representation of facts (traditionally the domain of science) and values (the realm of politics); third, and consequently, that strategy is a sociopolitical practice that aims at mobilizing people, marshalling political will and legitimizing decisions. The article concludes with reflections on five practical implications of the study.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chandra Mukerji","Michael Schudson"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2083194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e48008dd-300a-38f5-b494-9dd56da5119f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2083194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Popular Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2083194","wordCount":10460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"Popular culture studies have until recently been treated as more or less unworthy of serious scholarly attention. But developments in anthropology, history, communication, American studies, and literary criticism have given the study of popular culture new analytic tools and legitimacy. This article reviews some of the more noteworthy contributions to this body of scholarship. Interpretive anthropology by Clifford Geertz, Victor Turner, and others, historical work influenced by the Annales school, studies of mass media, and the work of structuralists and post-structuralists from many disciplines are all discussed. This work, as well as sociological analyses of leisure, art, and mass culture are shown to have provided rich and vital insights into the social power and forms of popular culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cindy Bonilla"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26854143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5270db6d-5729-368f-96c1-ec272513ab8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26854143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Representing Realities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26854143","wordCount":6444,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[37002,37402]],"Locations in B":[[26382,26781]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Colorado State University","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":"The Role of Documentary in It all Started at the End<\/em> (2015) by Luis Ospina","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Campbell"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1151238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03085694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55939414"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236896"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6fbeb2c-0108-3517-b394-d02225ea0f6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1151238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"imagomundi"}],"isPartOf":"Imago Mundi","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Chronicle for 1991","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1151238","wordCount":7830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Imago Mundi, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-05-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1712862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"409f5ed7-ed62-3293-b977-7f1a5b7b0171"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1712862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"774","pageStart":"581","pagination":"pp. 581-774","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1712862","wordCount":46473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3619","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"144","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642738"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03b32634-9eb6-3dda-8925-d1c001f51fc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n2tx.7"}],"isPartOf":"Alexander Kluge","keyphrase":["cinema","female","circus","female spectator","leni peickert","early cinema","bourgeois","artists","heide schl\u00fcpmann","mainstream cinema"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"72","pagination":"72-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018What is Different is Good\u2019:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n2tx.7","wordCount":10358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Alexander Kluge formulated this statement in the early 1970s, when he took issue with the protests raised by those in the women\u2019s movement against his film Gelegenheitsarbeit einer Sklavin\/Part-Time Work of a Domestic Slave (1973). In order to determine the meaning of \u2018female productive force\u2019, the film had attempted to depict a \u2018femininity\u2019 [Weiblichkeit<\/em>] that was oppressed, but which, unaccommodated to its oppression, resisted it. The doubt that arose in the course of those discussions as to whether that attempt had been successful \u2013 indeed, whether it could have succeeded \u2013 to some extent still remains today. At the same time we","subTitle":"Women and Femininity in the Films of Alexander Kluge","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Cypess"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad3cc417-2d98-3022-959b-4852bda637bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41478971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Die Natur und Kunst zu betrachten\": Carlo Farina's Capriccio stravagante (1627) and the Cultures of Collecting at the Court of Saxony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41478971","wordCount":23853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"95","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Pasquariello"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13867d21-f991-3156-adc3-760482af53f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ed Ruscha and the Language That He Used","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397674","wordCount":12642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HILLARY WESTON"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81a2960c-2836-3abf-8098-266205483b5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413755","wordCount":2676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cornelius C. 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A Case of Mistaken Identity for the Indian Classical Dancer?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20444598","wordCount":2381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Slifkin"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23046594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47b013cf-af3f-38c6-925f-4e010848c9e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23046594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Philip Guston's Return to Figuration and the \"1930s Renaissance\" of the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23046594","wordCount":21126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":"In his paintings from the late 1960s and early 1970s, Philip Guston employed an unconventional model of figuration in which temporal relations forged between two moments produce a meaningful statement about the present. Guston's art partook in a larger \"1930s renaissance,\" in which artists cited the earlier decade\u2014famous for its documentary impulse\u2014as a means of figuring a present deemed resistant to representation. Guston's use of the past, especially his appropriation of his own earlier motifs, invested his art with the drama of history at a moment when art's capacity to affect history itself appeared increasingly diminished.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j77d.15","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bd586cf-7e19-305b-8a4b-d10123c07f2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155j77d.15"}],"isPartOf":"The new aestheticism","keyphrase":["criticism","judgement","critique","relation","transcendental","aesthetic judgement","banham","fist fuck","notion","banham kant"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"193","pagination":"193-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Kant and the ends of criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j77d.15","wordCount":8501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Since the beginning of the 1990s there has been a marked revival of interest in both Kant and aesthetics.\u00b9 This revival has been accompanied with a move beyond the theoretical positions that sought to displace the notion of aesthetics and often requires a rethinking of the relationship between criticism and philosophy. I wish to present here an account of Kant\u2019s \u2018invention\u2019 of aesthetics that allows its terms to become both operative within and yet also transformed by the practice of critical engagement with literary and visual works of art. It is important to mention however that the context for this","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER L. 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Said's major contribution, Orientalism, is discussed in light of his own concept of \u201ctraveling theory\u201d and its impact on various disciplines, especially postcolonial studies. Said's views on Palestine and the Palestinians are also elaborated and contextualized in his own oeuvre. Finally, the essay discusses Said's interest in musical performance and attempts to read his work \u201cmusically,\u201d showing how all his interests are part of a larger whole that constitutes his intellectual legacy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YNGVAR KJUS","ANNE DANIELSEN"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46595915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235612"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47d838d5-7ff3-34ca-ad34-2a9d2d4d442b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26358296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"320","pagination":"pp. 320-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Live mediation: performing concerts using studio technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358296","wordCount":10309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"The use of computers is continuously changing the sound of records but also increasingly challenging established forms of live concert aesthetics. So what becomes of creativity and expressivity in the live performance? In this study, we present an artist-oriented approach to this question through interviews with artists invested in performing studio works on stage, as well as improvising musicians using studio technology in their concerts. We find that challenges to creative authorship and expressive agency are constantly negotiated through evolving practices of up- and down-scaling particular aspects of studio works on stage, as well as designing technological setups tailored to individual forms of improvisation. While these practices challenge deep-rooted notions of the 'right' or appropriate bond between musician and music, the appropriation of studio technology in live performance has clearly become an integral part of many artists' continual exploration of their musical agency.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erin M. Brooks"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.36.1.0003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50574305"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f4f515b-3781-3f89-a39d-5f097407dd6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/americanmusic.36.1.0003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Movies at the Met? Space and Meaning in Early Film Screenings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.36.1.0003","wordCount":20749,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6743]],"Locations in B":[[82403,82564]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Fane"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03eb0395-b198-3c25-8679-9380049a63d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1577440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Invented World of Mariano Taccola: Revisiting a Once-Famous Artist-Engineer of 15th-Century Italy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1577440","wordCount":6546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"The Sienese artist-engineer Mariano Taccola left behind five books of annotated drawings, presently in the collections of the state libraries of Florence and Munich. Taccola was well known in Siena, and his drawings were studied and copied by artists of the period, probably serving as models for Leonardo da Vinci's notebooks. However, his work has received little attention from scholars and students in recent times. The author, a sculptor, has long been interested in Taccola's drawings for his studio projects. Although Taccola lacked the fine drawing hand displayed by many of his contemporaries, his inventive work may appeal especially to viewers today. Based on examination of the original drawings, the author discusses the qualities that make Taccola's drawings unique and considers what Taccola's intentions may have been in making them.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew B. Wachtel"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26633634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976395"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13135885-6321-3f34-ba13-8852ddf32136"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26633634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"552","pageStart":"539","pagination":"pp. 539-552","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Slavic Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"FROM THE MUSEUM OF UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER TO THE MUSEUM OF INNOCENCE: MUSEUM NOVELS IN THE AGE OF GLOBALIZATION AND VIRTUALIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26633634","wordCount":7461,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[8708,9090],[9094,9484]],"Locations in B":[[1585,1965],[1973,2398]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN FLATLEY"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20721277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47273509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17e150e9-ae10-352b-adad-92edc6161609"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20721277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Like: Collecting and Collectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20721277","wordCount":14032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"MIT Press","volumeNumber":"132","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. P. Neuman"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3786713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3786713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Masturbation, Madness, and the Modern Concepts of Childhood and Adolescence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3786713","wordCount":12994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1rfsrst.27","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760461256"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dbaa5b7-02be-3e5b-b70f-2aed3ff6de16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1rfsrst.27"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","keyphrase":["wagner","english","nobel prize","became","wallace","bayreuth","warwick","wallenstein","politician","walpole"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"914","pageStart":"873","pagination":"873-914","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"W","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1rfsrst.27","wordCount":37119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1942-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f75beaf8-1916-3f86-8ac6-560110e2d545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1840056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"699","pageStart":"658","pagination":"pp. 658-699","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1942,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notices and Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1840056","wordCount":23330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Guti\u00e9rrez-Jones"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5a5444f-7141-3be3-9c4c-15cd42514ff2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Stealing Kinship: Neuromancer<\/em> and Artificial Intelligence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.41.1.0069","wordCount":12053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"William Gibson's Neuromancer (1984) taps into anxieties surrounding humanity's status in a world shared with artificial intelligences; in particular, Gibson asks what habits of thought might such intelligences inherit from their makers. Gibson is invested in the possibility of fostering kinship between humans and A.I.s, but he sees propensities in humanity that might well subvert this goal. From early religious beliefs through cyberspatial dreams of escaping the body, Western culture has often demonstrated disdain for fleshly existence. Gibson's self-desructive hacker, Case, provides an opportunity to rethink this disdain; counter-intuitively, his climactic suicidal crisis enables a new, embodiment-friendly kinship. Gibson's imagining of kinship also shapes the novel's formal experimentation; Neuromancer anticipates hyperlinking technology and engages readers in an emulated version so that they might participate, to some degree, in a new form of hybridized intelligence. Specifically, readers practice a hypertextual construction of meaning, building on a convergence of digital (computer) and analog (human pattern-recognition) memory. As modeled by Case, this cognitive shift requires a radical rebooting. The experience of reading the novel, however, also offers an alternative model of transformation, one of extended adaptation that would more gradually reshape cognitive habits toward the kinship Gibson envisions. Ultimately, Neuromancer modulates between these more radical and more gradual models of adaptation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Elizabeth Gilpatrick"],"datePublished":"1922-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90cb48de-859a-3b92-bf58-4cba4cb894bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"647","pageStart":"572","pagination":"pp. 572-647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Twelfth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to March 1922)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223867","wordCount":35925,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1984-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47b322c3-a350-328e-8970-08b9908bfe52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/940709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"868","pageStart":"819","pagination":"pp. 819-868","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index to Record Reviews: With Symbols Indicating Opinions of Reviewers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/940709","wordCount":25075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn M. Callahan"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1493034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0161956X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45090468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20307b05-d278-3021-a624-8e5a6d22015c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1493034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peabjeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Peabody Journal of Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Construct of Talent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1493034","wordCount":6014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSHUA SCODEL"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08e2cc47-fa71-3063-91c9-192bb5381ee6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23118188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Pleasures of Restraint: The Mean of Coyness in Cavalier Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23118188","wordCount":16781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1937-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b17beee9-9f6d-3fb1-a48d-d21d38d5c523"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1838898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"609","pageStart":"576","pagination":"pp. 576-609","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notices of Other recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1838898","wordCount":19076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julle F. Codell"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eeb7bb1-4745-38a2-b5df-64b5607d4ece"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3600510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Righting the Victorian Artist: The Redgraves' \"A Century of Painters of the English School\" and the Serialization of Art History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3600510","wordCount":16411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"\"A Century of Painters of the English School\" by Richard and Samuel Redgrave, 1866 and revised in 1890, attempted a radical transformation of the art historical discourse from artists' biographies strung together to a master narrative of a new national art history and a new image of the artist as professional. Their text participated in an on-going discourse about the nature and role of the artist in Britain since the eighteenth century among earlier 'Vasarian' texts (e.g. Walpole, Cunningham). To achieve their ideal 'connected narrative', they attempted to eradicate the anecdotage typical of the biographical histories. To nationalise their narrative they also wrote to erase foreigners and women from the 'English School' as they leveled and embedded genius in an historical 'progress' defined as collective and accumulative. Their major narrative device was a serialisation, a method of story-telling that penetrated all areas of Victorial cultural production. Through serialisation's discontinuities and disruptions, the 'progress' of British art became a professional, collective, masculine, and national enterprise.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. D. Brady"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43573555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01451413"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43573555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musenoteamernumi"}],"isPartOf":"Museum Notes (American Numismatic Society)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Classical Studies","Social Sciences","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"REDISCOVERY OF JOSEPH WRIGHT'S MEDAL OF GEORGE WASHINGTON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43573555","wordCount":9970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Numismatic Society","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Gonzalez"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03977870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"651a0478-2565-3f7d-86de-8be33f14e8a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20874932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revufranetudamer"}],"isPartOf":"Revue fran\u00e7aise d'\u00e9tudes am\u00e9ricaines","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"In and Along the Mississippi: The Motif of Music in Joel and Ethan Coen's \"O Brother, Where Art Thou?\" and Jim Jarmusch's \"Mystery Train\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20874932","wordCount":5202,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9995,10273]],"Locations in B":[[24441,24716]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"98","publisher":"Editions Belin","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In O Brother, Where Art Thou? and Mystery Train the Coen brothers and Jim Jarmusch choose the state of Mississippi and the city of Memphis, Tennessee as the settings of their heroes' peregrinations. Music permeates Joel Coen's and Jim Jarmusch's cinematic spaces, so much that it influences their narrative and stylistic perspectives and structures their works. The aim of this paper is to examine how the Coen brothers' and Jarmusch's choice of the musical field as a territory for their reconstructions of the South enables them to collate distinct artistic domains and genres in their representations of \"border incidents\" between stories, legends and history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurtz Myers"],"datePublished":"1954-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/893074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23b09def-acde-3024-ade4-eb0e63ff5b2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/893074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"671","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-671","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index of Record Reviews: With Symbols Indicating Opinions of Reviewers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/893074","wordCount":23504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARY THOMAS CRANE"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23112449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ee5b02c-3e0f-3d22-86ea-7867a9c4b493"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23112449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"His Owne Style\": Voice and Writing in Jonson's Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23112449","wordCount":9076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-03-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25bf9267-dbef-3cc8-b5f1-7a6862f74644"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1688081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1444","pageStart":"1388","pagination":"pp. 1388-1444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688081","wordCount":22950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4538","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"215","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1944-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2809108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"408afc48-0b93-3f50-b68f-16b17dd1068b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2809108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1944,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Brief Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2809108","wordCount":34808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josiah McC. 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Among the many historical parallels that came to people\u2019s minds, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was one. Yet the aftermath of that event, the \u201crelocation\u201d of all people of Japanese origin from the Pacific Coast states to internment camps, was never suggested as a model for the treatment of Arab or Muslim minorities in the United States after 9\/11. Indeed, there were a few nasty incidents, but if anything, the official response, from the White House on","subTitle":"Picturing the Horror of 9\/11","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl Kirchwey"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/arion.25.1.0163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00955809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620643"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235555"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66ca5be6-596b-3ff7-9d67-2c53a857ac3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/arion.25.1.0163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arion"}],"isPartOf":"Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Mutabor<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/arion.25.1.0163","wordCount":2655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Trustees of Boston University through its publication Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SIMON TURNER","ANTONY GRIFFITHS","HENRI ZERNER","RUTH BROMBERG","GIORGIO MARINI","ROBERT A. 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C. Greetham"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20698032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07363974"},{"name":"oclc","value":"300516480"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234739"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20698032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"text"}],"isPartOf":"Text","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"408","pagination":"pp. 408-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Parallel Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20698032","wordCount":10870,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[56839,57038]],"Locations in B":[[45306,45504]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSSEN VENTZISLAVOV"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee607b14-ad50-3738-bb98-90df7e54b9a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42635562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Idle Arts: Reconsidering the Curator","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635562","wordCount":9120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":"In this article, I propose a way for philosophical aesthetics to make sense of the curator's work and specifically its claim to creativity and value making. My thesis is that selecting art should be thought of as a fine art in itself. This thesis, in various formulations, has been a source of controversy for art historians, critics, and theorists for more than a century. Even though philosophers have barely addressed the issue, philosophical aesthetics has been complicit in the prevalent modes of resistance. The unspoken reason that various figures of the artworld find it problematic to identify curators as artists is that the divisions of labor they protect are inherently normative. The inadvertent application of this normativity in equal measure affects curators who style themselves as artists. I offer a critique of the historical and philosophical underpinnings of this normative picture, which sets the stage for a reconsideration of curatorship and its stake on a place among the rest of the fine arts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Pinney"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20112346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01121227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61456457"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3440e1ee-d64f-3260-9035-3a053bb63885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20112346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnewzeallite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of New Zealand Literature (JNZL)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Creole Europe: The Reflection of a Reflection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20112346","wordCount":10030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"20","publisher":"Journal of New Zealand Literature","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8bt2xn.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8220aa33-86b6-32e4-9a79-c6165697a3cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv8bt2xn.11"}],"isPartOf":"Making Copyright Work for the Asian Pacific","keyphrase":["fair use","zealand","dealing","exceptions","tpp agreement","australian","intellectual property","productivity commission","digital","agreement amendment"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"163","pagination":"163-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources"],"title":"Harmony and Counterpoint:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8bt2xn.11","wordCount":13110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This chapter considers whether introducing a fair use provision into Australia\u2019s and New Zealand\u2019s copyright laws would be beneficial, in particular for facilitating technological developments and international trade in each country. Although Australia considered and rejected the possibility of introducing fair use, largely to reduce the impact of its harmonisation with United States copyright laws when negotiating entry into the Australia \u2013 United States Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA), the issue has since been revived.\u2074 Conversely, New Zealand has not, to date, given much detailed examination to the possibility of introducing fair use into the Copyright Act 1994. Yet for such close","subTitle":"Dancing with Fair Use in New Zealand and Australia","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro Peixoto Ferreira"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25578110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43873cae-a9e5-3e34-8554-2e496acb1cb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25578110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"When Sound Meets Movement: Performance in Electronic Dance Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25578110","wordCount":3230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":"This article discusses the problem of performance in electronic dance music (EDM), considering its specificity in the use of technically reproduced sound to promote a non-stop dancing experience. Instead of a schizophonic rupture between performer and audience, EDM is seen to perform a transducive mediation between machine sound and human movement.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stacy Thompson"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9495fba3-d933-3697-b2b9-1e2cff060a52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Punk Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225914","wordCount":10329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"Despite the casual use to which the term \"punk cinema\" has been put since the inception of punk rock, the concept, as reimagined in this essay, denotes an identifiable aesthetic, bolstered by a correlative economics. Adherents of this model demand of cinema what punks have demanded of music--that it encourage production, in any medium. Punk cinema employs an open, writerly aesthetic, engages with history, and critiques its own commodification. It can be negatively defined as non-Hollywoodized, where a Hollywood aesthetic demands a closed, readerly text unconcerned with history and obfuscating its position within the relations of production. 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A Text-Critical Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3154234","wordCount":15460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Schwartz"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3006010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fb96b09-57bf-37be-a8a3-7464779e07b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3006010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodernity and Historical Reputation: Abraham Lincoln in Late Twentieth-Century American Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3006010","wordCount":17730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":"Postmodernity has eroded America's metanarrative-the myth that answers ultimate questions about national origin, purpose, and fate. I explore this claim by tracing America's grandest narrative-the narrative of Abraham Lincoln-through the twentieth century. Gallup Poll ratings of presidential greatness, shrine visits, and citation counts from the Reader's Guide to Periodic Literature, New York Times Index, and Congressional Record show Lincoln's prestige plummeting during the 1960s and never recovering. During this same period the reputation of other popular presidents-Washington, Roosevelt, Truman, and Eisenhower-fell abruptly and simultaneously. The erosion of these reputations and the metanarrative of which they are a part resulted not from political and social crises of the period but from a \"postmodern turn\" within which these crises assumed their traumatic character. Because an emergent pattern of indifference toward great presidents of the past coexists with a residual pattern of reverence (most evident in history texts and in surveys of visitors to national shrines), however, claims about the erosion of metanarratives must be qualified. The theoretical problem is to develop a perspective on American memory that recognizes the uniqueness of late twentieth-century culture while making the coexistence of continuity and change its principal point of focus.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann S. Haskell"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25093232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23400850-2ca0-3944-b7d8-05836d19b609"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25093232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The St. Giles Oath in the \"Canon's Yeoman's Tale\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25093232","wordCount":2732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"St. Giles, who appears at G 1185 of the Canon's Yeoman's Tale, is a general patron of outcasts, and is therefore suitable for the oath of a socially alienated alchemist. This saint's specific patronages include lepers, whose affliction, in the medieval scheme of sin-disease equations, was believed to represent (and even result from) lechery. In terms of the alchemical allegory of human reproduction Chaucer's practitioner is an agent of lechery, since his coupling of elements is primarily motivated by material lust rather than by a desire to multiply. Juxtaposition of the Canon's Yeoman's Tale with the opposed Second Nun's Tale, underscores such a conclusion: the St. Cecelia legend concerns physical abstinence of the bride and groom which produces spiritual multiplication, whereas the Canon's Yeoman's Tale emphasizes consummation of the male and female metals without resultant issue. Chaucer's alchemist is a spiritual lecher, and St. Giles, protector of lepers-and by extension lechers-is an appropriate patron for him.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marie F. Busco"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/883635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f7d96bc-7de4-3e98-89a8-09e031862c83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/883635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"924","pageStart":"920","pagination":"pp. 920-924","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The 'Achilles' in Hyde Park","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/883635","wordCount":5078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1029","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"130","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-06-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1684081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbf7b2c9-f990-301b-8b5b-959cbc7be9d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1684081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"1400","pageStart":"1364","pagination":"pp. 1364-1400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1684081","wordCount":15621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4450","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"208","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arndt Niebisch"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07417527"},{"name":"oclc","value":"576509799"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011236610"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29c3fe4e-c364-3cbd-974b-e5c76417a506"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24016263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annalidital"}],"isPartOf":"Annali d'Italianistica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cruel Media: On F. T. Marinetti's Media Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24016263","wordCount":6947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Annali d\u2019Italianistica, Inc.","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Green"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cffabf5a-0d1a-3529-89cb-da2ba54331d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"DISASTER FOOTAGE: SPECTACLES OF VIOLENCE IN DELILLO' S FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285570","wordCount":11223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID IMHOOF","JOY H. CALICO"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44110830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586760"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3881b9ce-1917-3355-bc88-0fc20a3e9cb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44110830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction: Sampling Sound Studies in German Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44110830","wordCount":2277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chandos Michael Brown"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1920279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c57d001-8047-3aa9-93d8-7fbb8d0ba393"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1920279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1920279","wordCount":1492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brett Colasacco"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.12.1.0027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e9a091f-c531-3ace-a392-ab1059a90e69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jstudradi.12.1.0027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Before Trump: On Comparing Fascism and Trumpism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.12.1.0027","wordCount":10966,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[2660,2870],[9893,10422]],"Locations in B":[[7781,7850],[39805,40015],[64049,64578]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy M. Adler"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a911c08f-a640-3c75-aaef-bce110ac2906"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"1378","pageStart":"1359","pagination":"pp. 1359-1378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Post-Modern Art and the Death of Obscenity Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796739","wordCount":10930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Trachtenberg"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Seeing and Believing: Hawthorne's Reflections on the Daguerreotype in The House of the Seven Gables","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490176","wordCount":9863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Varun Begley"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41679613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03fc2129-05dc-379e-8344-cea6efd801a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41679613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Objects of Realism: Bertolt Brecht, Roland Barthes, and Marsha Norman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41679613","wordCount":9774,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42256,42513]],"Locations in B":[[12182,12435]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":"This essay argues the need to rethink the straw man of dramatic realism as a pure embodiment of bourgeois \/patriarchal ideology. Even in early, canonical works, such as Strindberg's Miss Julie and Glaspell's Trifles, we find contradictory attitudes toward material reality, attitudes observable in the use of props. While many critics have claimed that realism is a static form that ratifies the status quo, the fixations surrounding realist props may suggest struggle and transformation. The essay tests this hypothesis on Marsha Norman's hyper-realist play 'night, Mother, which has polarized politically minded critics since its premiere. Examined from the perspective of props, the play's apparently suffocating realism discloses a counter-economy of craft and appropriation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas J. Falen"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2458c45d-02dd-3361-9fc4-e3a57f9161e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26358824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"483","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-483","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Vod\u00fan, Spiritual Insecurity, and Religious Importation in Benin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26358824","wordCount":12609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"The Republic of Benin (formerly Dahomey) is known as the African source of New World Vodou and Voodoo, but the country's religious landscape is best characterized by religious importation. Since precolonial times Beninois Vod\u00fan has exhibited ongoing amalgamation of deities introduced from neighboring peoples. This essay outlines historical Vod\u00fan imports along with more-recent spiritual influences from abroad. I argue that while Beninois people have always been accepting of foreign religions, today this process is largely motivated by the dangers and promises of witchcraft. The current constellation of spiritual traditions embodies a dynamic moment of religious transformation that prompts people to collect even more distant spiritual remedies to seemingly old problems. In this analysis we see that what scholars call syncretism is not necessarily an ideological or hegemonic process, but a product of Beninois people's pragmatic response to life's troubles, inequalities, and opportunities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/958966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b6b562a-56df-361c-95f7-95a038fa4cec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/958966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/958966","wordCount":20973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1598","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"117","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Fleming"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7723\/antiochreview.74.2.0287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234471"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30af26a8-130c-3b30-afe4-5da2283283b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7723\/antiochreview.74.2.0287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antiochreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Antioch Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Night in the Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7723\/antiochreview.74.2.0287","wordCount":10068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Antioch Review Inc.","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JERRY L. MASHAW"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25681946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"349eff50-85cb-324c-9d49-b64504512486"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25681946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":111.0,"pageEnd":"1472","pageStart":"1362","pagination":"pp. 1362-1472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Federal Administration and Administrative Law in the Gilded Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25681946","wordCount":46365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":"The dominant story of America's so-called \"Gilded Age\" describes an era of private excess and public corruption. In a rapidly industrializing society, private capital, in league with venal politicians, ran roughshod over a national state apparatus incapable of responding to the emerging social and economic needs of the day. Only toward the end of this era, with the passage of the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, did the national government begin to break free from a laissez-faire ideology that was antithetical to state building in virtually all of its forms. Indeed, on this conventional account, the American administrative state, and with it administrative law, only began to emerge in the early twentieth century. And both remained underdeveloped until the New Deal constitutional revolution. There is much truth to this familiar narrative, but it is far from the whole truth. State capacities built steadily throughout the post-Reconstruction era. Congress created multiple new departments, bureaus, and programs, and federal civilian employment grew much more rapidly than population. Just as today, conflicts between political parties, the drama of electoral politics, and the vagaries of congressional lawmaking dominated the headlines. But the day-to-day activities of government were in the charge of administrative departments and bureaus. Operating under broad delegations of authority, administrators developed a rich internal law of administration that guided massive administrative adjudicatory activity and substantial regulatory action as well. Moreover, policy innovation at the legislative level depended heavily on the research and recommendations of existing administrative agencies. In short, if we look at legislative and administrative practice rather than at constitutional ideology or political rhetoric, we can see the emergence of a national administrative state and national administrative law before either had a name.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert P. Multhauf","Bernard S. Finn","Aleida Cattell Renwick","Diana Davis Menkes"],"datePublished":"1966-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf5933c5-e2d3-3149-9ba3-7e4f996e6aff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/228534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":129.0,"pageEnd":"644","pageStart":"516","pagination":"pp. 516-644","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ninety-First Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1966)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228534","wordCount":82530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan Bruck"],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbceef96-8c4b-38f2-838b-4371e2fa9497"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beckett, Benjamin and the Modern Crisis in Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488029","wordCount":6380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"26","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Holston"],"datePublished":"1991-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41a5525-fde6-3921-9841-413a23da87e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Autoconstruction in Working-Class Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656164","wordCount":8979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Fracchia","R. C. Lewontin"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2678058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Biological sciences - Biology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Does Culture Evolve?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678058","wordCount":14211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wesleyan University","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"The drive to describe cultural history as an evolutionary process has two sources. One from within social theory is part of the impetus to convert social studies into \"social sciences\" providing them with the status accorded to the natural sciences. The other comes from within biology and biological anthropology in the belief that the theory of evolution must be universal in its application to all functions of all living organisms. The social-scientific theory of cultural evolution is pre-Darwinian, employing a developmental model of unfolding characterized by intrinsic directionality, by definable stages that succeed each other, and by some criterion of progress. It is arbitrary in its definitions of progress, and has had the political problem that a diachronic claim of cultural progress implies a synchronic differential valuation of present-day cultures. The biological scheme creates an isomorphism between the Darwinian mechanism of evolution and cultural history, postulating rules of cultural \"mutation,\" cultural inheritance and some mechanism of natural selection among cultural alternatives. It uses simplistic ad hoc notions of individual acculturation and of the differential survival and reproduction of cultural elements. It is unclear what useful work is done by substituting the metaphor of evolution for history.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rand Brandes"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20557493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0f8c6ea-a0d3-37c2-ad4b-e0bd61569f73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20557493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Letter by Strange Letter\": Yeats, Heaney, and the Aura of the Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20557493","wordCount":9637,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9649]],"Locations in B":[[1708,2180]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTHONY BURNETT-BROWN","RUSSELL ROBERTS","MARK HAWORTH-BOOTH"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24472714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9733f8d4-cf2c-34af-9238-49347acf7830"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24472714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SPECIMENS AND MARVELS: WILLIAM HENRY FOX TALBOT THE INVENTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24472714","wordCount":20302,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[198,249],[508,632],[764,927]],"Locations in B":[[7397,7448],[8026,8217],[8544,8832]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"161","publisher":"Princeton University Art Museum","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030364X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b694aaf-6a7e-3556-9722-8fcbb4d0f4e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"operrese"}],"isPartOf":"Operations Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223073","wordCount":6869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"INFORMS","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George M. Cheston","Evan H. Turner","David DuBon","Calvin S. Hathaway","Jean Gordon Lee","Stella Kramrisch","John L. Tancock","Theodor Siegl","Frank P. Graham","Rafeal Ferrer","Elsie Siratz McGarvey","Kneeland McNulty","Barbara Sevy","Sandra Horrocks","Robert Safrin","Alfred J. Wyatt","Mary Anne Dutt","George H. Marcus","Shelley Pakradooni","Mrs. Stuart F. Louchheim","Luther W. Brady","Mrs. John C. Russell"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3795245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab812337-cbda-3d5b-b95a-00f13913de2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3795245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmuseartbull"}],"isPartOf":"Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":77.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32+44-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Annual Report July 1, 1969-June 30, 1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3795245","wordCount":27502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"304","publisher":"Philadelphia Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua D. Esty"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Amnesia in the Fields: Late Modernism, Late Imperialism, and the English Pageant-Play","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032018","wordCount":13961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Helgesson"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shifting Fields: Imagining Literary Renewal in \"Itiner\u00e1rio\" and \"Drum\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618384","wordCount":11501,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[13262,13402]],"Locations in B":[[39823,39890],[40193,40333]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":"This article looks at the beginnings of anti-apartheid\/anticolonial literary cultures in Johannesburg and Maputo (then Lourenqo Marques) after the Second World War. It pays specific attention to the ways in which they attempted to harness aesthetics of \"newness.\" By focusing on the influential journals Drum (1951-) and Itiner\u00e1rio (1941-1955), I argue that both journals tapped into transnational intellectual currents such as Harlem Renaissance writing, but that the discrete discursive networks of English and Portuguese contributed to a differentiation of their aesthetic approaches. Itinerdrio acted out an avantgarde-like resistance to bourgeois\/colonial culture. Drum was market-driven and achieved in its early phase a compromise between a racially circumscribed mass-cultural appeal and the literate ideals of mission-educated South African blacks. These differences can then be factored into an analysis of persistent differences between the literatures of South Africa and Mozambique.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alison Booth"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3054570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Neo-Victorian Self-Help, or Cider House Rules","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054570","wordCount":12526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry C. Boyte"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dac169a8-2b23-3d1e-a6f5-b2195b017a46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23036076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"660","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-660","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructive Politics as Public Work: Organizing the Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036076","wordCount":12425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"This essay argues that fulfilling the promise of participatory democratic theory requires ways for citizens to reconstruct the world, not simply to improve its governance processes. The concept of public work, expressing civic agency, or the capacity of diverse citizens to build a democratic way of life, embodies this shift. It posits citizens as co-creators of the world, not simply deliberators and decision-makers about the world. Public work is a normative, democratizing ideal of citizenship generalized from communal labors of creating the commons, with roots in diverse cultures. Shaped through contention with forces which threaten shared ways of life and their commons, grounded in an understanding of human plurality, public work has political qualities that unmask sentimentalized civic discourses of modern elites. Public work places citizens, not markets or states, as the foundational agents of democracy. It opens a path beyond the political crisis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-03-22","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20396361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3de56df-d894-3153-9ebd-5f9088b97d4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20396361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Industry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20396361","wordCount":81879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5646","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andr\u00e9 Jansson"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43084205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"625b6611-d22c-3448-b7c6-d6a0e5414604"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43084205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Negotiated City Image: Symbolic Reproduction and Change through Urban Consumption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43084205","wordCount":9315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"The article presents an analysis of how consumption contributes to the continuous negotiation between locality, market dynamics and image-creation in a metropolitan area. Approaching consumption in terms of encoding and decoding processes, the aim is to stress both how the city is objectively created and how it is interpreted. Focusing upon the principal distinctions between dominant, oppositional and negotiated modes of consumption, the article illuminates the symbolic struggle that permeates urban development. The findings underscore the self-generating character of contemporary urban image-making. The empirical study combines quantitative and qualitative data: a Swedish market survey and an interview study from G\u00f6teborg, Sweden.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN CORRIGAN","DAVID MORGAN","MARK SILK","RHYS H. WILLIAMS"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rac.2006.16.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10521151"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953597"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d2e828f-81ef-3d79-9959-8ac0133a1365"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rac.2006.16.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reliamercult"}],"isPartOf":"Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Religion","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Forum: Electronic Media and the Study of American Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rac.2006.16.1.1","wordCount":10552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"review-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Jacks"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43324400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02772426"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43324400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landscapej"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Environmental Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Walking and Reading in Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43324400","wordCount":9547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"In a previous essay (Jacks 2004), the author identified four walking practices\u2014siting, measuring, reading, and merging\u2014that inform the design and perception of the built environment. This article focuses on the practice of reading by considering three examples of spiritual, aesthetic, and psychological walking: walking in the medieval monastery courtyard, walking in the life of the artist Richard Long, and walking in the contemporary lifestyle shopping center. The examples illuminate how we use landscapes to construct our sense of self, identity, integrity, and authenticity. They also show how the act of walking facilitates reading at both the near-at-hand tactile scale and the larger scale of visual and narrative culture. In medieval spiritual walking, monks used ine monastery courtyard not only as a living metaphor for the world, but also as a device to make explicit connections between written texts and actual experiences. In contemporary aesthetic walking, the artist Richard Long addresses some of the challenges of living under the vastly altered conditions of modernity. In contemporary psychological terms, developers of lifestyle shopping centers package consumer walking experiences that promise self-fulfillment and self-improvement. In these examples, walking the landscape is more than an alternative to intellectual knowledge: it is essential to knowing.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1704208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96b4b4b9-0702-3024-b714-a3a78d906d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1704208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"1020","pageStart":"994","pagination":"pp. 994-1020","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1704208","wordCount":29513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4921","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"245","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028282"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35705012"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23013"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d14d1893-242d-333a-a8c1-1a2ac094c0be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1914551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereconrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Economic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":208.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"Alphabetical List of Members (as of June 15, 1948)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1914551","wordCount":243851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Economic Association","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANGHARAD CLOSS STEPHENS"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfec695c-fd67-36c2-9184-ee6fb729fbe0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40588081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"868","pageStart":"866","pagination":"pp. 866-868","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Weighing heavily in-between","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588081","wordCount":1282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard R.N. Ashley"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20677444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00061999"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac6942d8-9aa1-3918-984e-26e41785498c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20677444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biblhumarena"}],"isPartOf":"Biblioth\u00e8que d'Humanisme et Renaissance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"RECENT PUBLICATIONS ON ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND AND RELATED FIELDS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20677444","wordCount":35062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Librairie Droz","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Afshin Marashi"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43997924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74fa4e53-a6fd-3f5f-aa33-4db9a161e691"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43997924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PRINT CULTURE AND ITS PUBLICS: A SOCIAL HISTORY OF BOOKSTORES IN TEHRAN, 1900\u20131950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43997924","wordCount":11178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"This article investigates the evolution of print culture and commerce in Tehran during the first half of the 20th century. The first section examines technological changes that facilitated the commercialization of texts and then details the history of early print entrepreneurs in the Tehran bazaar. The second section examines the expansion of the book trade between the 1920s and 1940s, tracing the emergence of modern bookstores in a rapidly changing Tehran. I argue that patterns of change in print commerce between 1900 and 1950 contributed to the emergence of mass culture by midcentury. This new mass culture involved the social and political empowerment of a diversity of new reading publics in the city, and enabled the emergence of new forms of popular politics.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert P. Multhauf","Bernard S. Finn","Aleida v. H. Cattell","Diana D. Menkes"],"datePublished":"1964-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87eec830-1f9a-3ef4-9f2e-781930333b25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/228335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":131.0,"pageEnd":"605","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-605","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-Ninth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1964)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228335","wordCount":85779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GABRIEL M. PALETZ"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15323978"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51005951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41167042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"movingimage"}],"isPartOf":"The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"ARCHIVES AND ARCHIVISTS REMADE: The Paper Print Collection and \"The Film of Her\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41167042","wordCount":10099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2511702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182168"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2511702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispamerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Hispanic American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["History","Latin American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Book Notices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2511702","wordCount":8497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eduardo Cadava"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49812178-2a90-36f1-a189-4f838457f1cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"STERNPHOTOGRAPHIE<\/italic>: BENJAMIN, BLANQUI, AND THE MIMESIS OF STARS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686034","wordCount":13210,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[13673,13782],[42521,42775],[42781,42932]],"Locations in B":[[11729,11843],[20707,20948],[20959,21108]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1pk3jqt.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089648518"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"217b2c9e-6d35-347f-afb0-67704a4bc92e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1pk3jqt.5"}],"isPartOf":"The Spell of Capital","keyphrase":["ication","adorno","luk\u00e1cs","heidegger","forgetting","autonomy","reification bet","ween autonomy","reification bet ween","luk\u00e1cs and heidegger"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"37","pagination":"37-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Reification\u2019 between Autonomy and Authenticity:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1pk3jqt.5","wordCount":7708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In an aphorism entitled \u2018Le Prix de Progress\u2019, appended toDialectic of Enlightenment<\/em>, Horkheimer and Adorno write that \u2018Alle Verdinglichung ist ein Vergessen<\/em>\u2019 (All reification is a forgetting) (Horkheimer and Adorno, 2008, p. 229, translation altered).\u00b2 This comes as the very last sentence of a reading of a letter by Pierre Flourens, a French physiologist, who was elected to the Acad\u00e9mie Fran\u00e7aise in preference to Victor Hugo. A groundbreaking anaesthesiologist, Flourens raised serious concerns about the use of chloroform in surgery because the substance didn\u2019t simply inure the body to pain but, rather, consigned it to oblivion. In other words,","subTitle":"Adorno on Musical Experience","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwyneira Isaac"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27108582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c1735b7-1efc-3bbe-a3a4-a1ad4e475fc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27108582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"S296","pageStart":"S286","pagination":"pp. S286-S296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Information science - Library science","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Perclusive Alliances","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27108582","wordCount":9875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"S12","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"Although social mechanisms for the control of knowledge are widely studied, research into how intersecting groups and institutions reconcile culturally different approaches to knowledge has been limited. I explore this territory by looking at a collaborative project to create digital 3-D scans and replicas of objects of cultural patrimony that was developed between the National Museum of Natural History and the Tlingit tribe of Alaska in 2010. These 3-D reproductions highlight the social values ascribed to digital technology, including its perceived ability to disseminate knowledge and reveal to the public the inner workings of museums, such as the process of repatriation. The presumed and deceptively straightforward nature of copies, however, belies their powers of social transformation. As explored through these 3-D digital replica projects, I argue these are not only about the power to physically replicate something but also the potential to construct relationships and, therefore, to transform the current social order. I look at the problems of using the term \u201csecrecy\u201d in these cross-cultural contexts, opting instead to identify how responsibilities are assigned to knowledge and its use. By also identifying what I term \u201cperclusive\u201d alliances that traverse groups and public\/private knowledge categories, I argue for an analytical approach that studies across institutional and cultural contexts, thereby identifying variations in how these responsibilities toward knowledge are assigned and according to which contexts as well as the means employed to negotiate difference.","subTitle":"Digital 3-D, Museums, and the Reconciling of Culturally Diverse Knowledges","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Walton"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2002.26.1.3","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0978b869-7bd0-3c84-a54e-057c49979d0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2002.26.1.3"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Quelque peu th\u00e9\u00e2tral\": The Operatic Coronation of Charles X","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2002.26.1.3","wordCount":14828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"The intersection of politics and spectacle has a long tradition in French history, from Louis XIV's Versailles to the streets of revolutionary Paris. As a result, Chateaubriand's criticism of the coronation of Charles X in May 1825 as theatrical may at first seem unremarkable. His description of the occasion as a dramatic performance rather than a real event, however, deserves closer examination. In line with Chateaubriand, this article suggests that the anachronistic final Bourbon coronation can best be understood, at the most literal level, as an opera, with music, resplendent costumes, dashes of orientalism (the envoy for the Bey of Tunis provoked much interest), hired claqueurs, and the whole of Rheims turned into a stage set. Conversely, the coronation's reliance on operatic props and aesthetics can shed light on the dramatic crisis that led to the appearance of grand op\u00e9ra. The largest piece written to celebrate the coronation, the multianchored Pharamond, was performed at the Paris Op\u00e9ra, but failed to command either critical or popular acclaim, in contrast with Rossini's Il viaggio a Reims at the Th\u00e9\u00e2tre Italien. Yet Pharamond's troubled negotiation between the demands of historical drama and celebratory Pi\u00e8ce de circonstance mirrors the logic that underpinned the planning of the coronation: a desire to invoke the authority of French history while bypassing unresolved memories of the Revolution and the Empire. Ultimately, the failure of Pharamond and its selective appropriation of history offer a productive mode for understanding the connections between opera, ceremonial language, and historical precedent, as well as those between musical works and large-scale political events.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d68c8e21-d6fd-30d0-b83a-38adadea7156"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"949","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-949","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462572","wordCount":32265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Swingewood"],"datePublished":"1983-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/590774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/590774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/590774","wordCount":1211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"34","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a15f13a-561d-358c-a3f8-e90c89af6633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"120","pagination":"p. 120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Information science - Information management"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657290","wordCount":2043,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/898788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b312d227-5e9a-3c42-8486-624b67f18f07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/898788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/898788","wordCount":13211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mikhail Iampolski"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20166981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Translating Images...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20166981","wordCount":3992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"32","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel J Sander"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671757","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba6b14df-c221-3c0b-8005-fbeab7aecd2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"I STAND IN RUINS BEHIND YOU","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671757","wordCount":9162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Daniel J Sander\u2019s article specifically takes up noise as a tactic that enacts \u201cthe stigmatizing cut of queerness\u201d in ways that take up contamination, fragmentation, abjection, and melancholia as modes of queer subjectivity and sociality. By tracing the echoic afterlives of Foreigner\u2019s \u201cI Want To Know What Love Is\u201d in explicitly queer texts, Sander links the aural contamination of the original song to practices of queer world-building and self-making that inhabit those spaces which cannot be redeemed by the logics of capitalist production and reproductive futurity.","subTitle":"QUEER TACTICS OF NOISE","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Kammen"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00764981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a480ebc1-36b2-35b0-8d8e-0aaa1ce0a444"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25080847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmasshistsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Changing Perceptions of the Life Cycle in American Thought and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25080847","wordCount":13876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Massachusetts Historical Society","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Speranza"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53faff41-33d4-31af-8c59-ef355914ea8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27949086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"An Artist Speaks: Working on the Web and Its Antecedents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949086","wordCount":873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeannene M. 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Walcott, also an accomplished painter, has often engaged with the visual arts, but this is the first volume in which every poem \u201ccor-responds\u201d to a painting, offering unique opportunities to examine Walcott\u2019s ekphrastic practices and the way in which they might offer alternatives to current paradigms. Rejecting the paradigm of a paragonal struggle for dominance, I will argue that Morning, Paramin is shaped by an ekphrasis of Relation (resonating with Glissant\u2019s poetics of Relation) in which the verbal and the visual interact in complex ways, exercising mutual reclaimings of agency and transformative dialogues that engender new composite works of art governed by a noncompetitive, nonexploitative approach; as otherness is reconfigured, the right to \u201copacity\u201d is upheld, and each image and word contribute to a whole bigger than the sum of its parts.","subTitle":"Derek Walcott, Peter Doig, and an Ekphrasis of Relation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2758873f-354a-35dd-8d4a-25ace85d0a89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3102403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":112.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1971)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102403","wordCount":65137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNE-MARIE BROUDEHOUX"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94b6c536-c917-3068-b987-965ad822e1e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20778807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Images of Power: Architectures of the Integrated Spectacle at the Beijing Olympics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20778807","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"Arguing for the continued relevance of the spectacle as a powerful conceptual tool for analyzing structures of power and revealing how they co-opt the material landscape to build, consolidate, and reproduce their hegemony, this article uses the theory of the spectacle as a lens to interpret the proliferation of architectural mega-projects in the contemporary landscape. Using the case of Olympic Beijing, the author revisits the notion of the spectacle as a technique of governance, and demonstrates the way in which, in the context of post-socialist China, the state and the market coexist in the form of the spectacle as a way of regulating society. By examining some of the issues at stake in the current spectacularization of the built environment, the article suggests that the spectacle, especially in the context of global mega-events, can also have a productive side and exert pressure upon the producers of the spectacle to open up to the public and allow room for diverse forms of resistance, contestation and change.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yuri Leving"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zxshw2.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781934843116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"134908ea-7a8a-35e8-a819-9804747653fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1zxshw2.10"}],"isPartOf":"Keys to The Gift","keyphrase":["fyodor","nabokov","russian","dolinin","godunov","alexander dolinin","godunov cherdyntsev","literary","biography","father"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"125","pagination":"125-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STRUCTURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zxshw2.10","wordCount":50599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One ofThe Gift\u2019s<\/em>key scenes is disguised in the description of a mundane Berlin night, but the portrayal of the cityscape is deceptively laconic:Behind the brightly painted pumps a radio was singing in a gas station, while above its pavilion vertical yellow letters stood against the light blue of the sky the name of a car firm and on the second letter, on the \u2018E\u2019 (a pity that it was not on the first, on the \u2018B\u2019 would have made an alphabetic vignette) sat a live blackbird, with a yellow for economy\u2019s sake beak, singing louder than the","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Taussig"],"datePublished":"1991-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"521a09f4-4385-3ed8-ac4a-e2d9390ef5ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tactility and Distraction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656411","wordCount":3729,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46197,46485]],"Locations in B":[[6489,6844]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kirsten Moana Thompson","Terri Ginsberg"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30132008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9256388b-b1d8-3748-85a8-b8e9608d0e08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30132008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Professional Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30132008","wordCount":6700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. 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After outlining the scope of such study, historical and cultural reasons for the relative neglect of body movement in anthropological enquiry are examined critically and placed in the wider context of recent social and cultural theorizing about the body and the problem of dynamic embodiment. A historical overview situates earlier approaches, such as kinesics and proxemics, in relation to more recent developments in theory and method, such as those offered by semasiology and the concept of the \"action sign.\" Overlapping interests with linguistic and cognitive anthropology are described. The emergence of a holistic \"anthropology of human movement\" has raised new research questions that require new resources. Theoretical insights have challenged researchers to devise new methods and to adopt or devise new technologies, such as videotape and an adequate transcription system. An example of the latter illustrates the analytic advantages of literacy in the medium.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. D. 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Henry Jenkins, inConvergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide<\/em> (2008), discusses modding in terms of how gamers make additions to a favorite game by editing source code or using tools that come with the game to produce their own content. Is this practice current only today? How did children in earlier periods, particularly girls, engage in a participatory fashion with their texts and what does this tell us about girlhood? Can an historical angle contribute to scholarly efforts to push girlhood studies beyond a present-day focus?","subTitle":"Religious Flap Books Created by Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Girls","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melissa Sue Ragain"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0496184-71e1-3ccd-8cbc-3cba3e4a1ef0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43188556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Homeostasis Is Not Enough\": Order and Survival in Early Ecological Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43188556","wordCount":9380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roderick D. Gordon"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3344810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44683915"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236973"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c8bef17-7312-3758-9629-21a561517d64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3344810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresemusieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Research in Music Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":288.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Doctoral Dissertations in Music and Music Education, 1972-1977","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3344810","wordCount":125657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"MENC: The National Association for Music Education","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haris Exertzoglou"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b281063-e6c0-3a89-af0e-eba4ee069d70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"The Cultural Uses of Consumption: Negotiating Class, Gender, and Nation in the Ottoman Urban Centers during the 19th Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879928","wordCount":14188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHARLOTTE BOMAN"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e5a3f12-a127-3da0-bcca-4a8fc4bb59a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43663331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Peculiarly marked with the character of our own time\": Photography and Family Values in Victorian Domestic Journalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663331","wordCount":7296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVEN F. OSTROW"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edab0a24-291b-3398-a04e-72fc97328dde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44973137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Zurbar\u00e1n's \"Cartellini\": Presence and the \"Paragone\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44973137","wordCount":21433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":"The cartellino\u2014a small trompe l'oeil slip of paper bearing the artist's signature\u2014is examined in early modern Spanish painting, focusing on the works of Francisco de Zurbar\u00e1n and the ways he exploited the device metapictorially. In his hands, it inserted his presence in works from his brush and commented on the art of painting, articulating his position on xht paragone, the much-debated comparison between painting and sculpture, which he demonstrated most vividly in his images of the Holy Face, works in which Veronicas veil, a variation of the cartellino, is presented for our meditation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGINA BORN"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48573851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02690403"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47209123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3403a30e-ef10-30f5-b6ae-acd62a32dd5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48573851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyamusiasso"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Musical Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Listening, Mediation, Event","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48573851","wordCount":5348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Royal Musical Association","volumeNumber":"135","abstract":"This paper outlines an approach to listening drawn from the anthropology and sociology of music, arguing that there is a pressing need for comparative empirical studies of listening. I suggest that the terms of the discussion should shift from listening to the broader category of musical experience, in this way allowing questions of the encultured, affective, corporeal and located nature of musical experience to arise in a stronger way than hitherto. I propose a focus on the relations between musical object and listening subject, where this entails analysis of the social and historical conditions that bear on listening, and of the changing types of subjectivity brought to music. The point is that neither these conditions, nor the forms of music\u2019s mediation, nor the relations between musical object and subject can be fully known in advance. I sketch three perspectives from anthropology and sociology that indicate the kinds of insight offered by empirical research which takes listening-as-musical-experience, and the situated, relational analysis of musical subjects and objects, as its focus.","subTitle":"Anthropological and Sociological Perspectives","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Huntington"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca632f68-ac12-39a9-8579-d95194a73944"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4239878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Philip K. Dick: Authenticity and Insincerity (Philip K. Dick: l'authentique et l'insinc\u00e9rit\u00e9)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4239878","wordCount":5011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":"Au coeur de l'\u0153uvre de Philip K. Dick se trouve un proc\u00e9d\u00e9 narratif automatique qui lui permet de fuir la rigueur cognitive tout en lui donnant le loisir de discuter de sujets s\u00e9rieux par ailleurs inabordables. Nous savons fort bien que les r\u00e8gles pr\u00f4n\u00e9es par A.E. van Vogt pour acc\u00e9der \u00e0 une \u00e9criture int\u00e9ressante ont influenc\u00e9 Dick. Qu'une nouvelle id\u00e9e devrait appara\u00eetre apr\u00e8s 800 mots est le principe tr\u00e8s important mis de l'avant par van Vogt. Dans une large mesure, ce sont des changements narratifs arbitraires qui g\u00e9n\u00e8rent l'illusion d'une profondeur consciente dans Le ma\u00eetre du haut ch\u00e2teau, Les andro\u00efds r\u00eavent-ils de moutons \u00e9lectriques?, et SIVA. Cependant, s'il est exact que la qu\u00eate du \"vraie\" et de \"l'authentique\" est au centre du projet philosophique de Dick, ce proc\u00e9d\u00e9 narratif automatique est important et significatif au niveau th\u00e9matique. \/\/\/ At the heart of Philip K. Dick's work is a mechanical narrative device which allows him to evade cognitive rigor but which also liberates him to discuss serious issues otherwise inaccessible. It is well known that Dick was influenced by A.E. van Vogt's rules for interesting writing. Especially important is van Vogt's dictum that every 800 words a new idea should be introduced. The illusion of conscious profundity in such works as High Castle, Androids, and VALIS is to a large extent generated by arbitrary narrative shifts. However, insofar as the search for the \"real\" and \"authentic\" is central to Dick's philosophical program, the mechanical narrative device is itself thematically important and expressive.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Lenman"],"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650992","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6241232e-7e6c-3a45-ac13-efe40486ab5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/650992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Painters, Patronage and the Art Market in Germany 1850-1914","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650992","wordCount":13245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"123","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Bode"],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26484043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00259233"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613762107"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30532fad-0193-34fe-bdc0-4606bf90b56a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26484043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"menckeniana"}],"isPartOf":"Menckeniana","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MENCKEN AND SEMITISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26484043","wordCount":4250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"120","publisher":"Enoch Pratt Free Library","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7a21ab9-2c3f-3964-83e9-a67b56c2aa5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3390970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390970","wordCount":8536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Flores"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-14+16-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Proletarian Meditations: Georg Luk\u00e1cs' Politics of Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464596","wordCount":11494,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[910,1094],[1714,2190],[2348,2629],[37649,37741]],"Locations in B":[[51973,52157],[52413,52823],[52824,53105],[53728,53820]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ef49e6e-b7c7-3b82-ba87-d7829a016b53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25697807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25697807","wordCount":10058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John B. Rae","Richard S. Hartenberg","Arnold Thackray","Thomas Parke Hughes","Brooke Hindle","James E. Brittain"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73f8bc8b-e31d-3e2d-89c2-fd1af66718b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3102330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"The Washington Meeting, December 27-29, 1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3102330","wordCount":12727,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Dicks"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26894352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17180198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"527387769"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201325"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1889c42c-4794-382b-b73b-fc0fcf98466f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26894352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"enviphil"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Philosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Poetics of Biomimicry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26894352","wordCount":13492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"The Ancient Greeks understood both art and technology (techne) as imitation (mimesis) of Nature (physis). This article argues that the rapidly growing ecological innovation strategy known as biomimicry makes it possible for technology to leave behind the modern goal of \u201cmastering and possessing\u201d Nature and instead to rediscover the initial vocation it shared with art: imitating Nature. This in turn suggests a general strategy for philosophical inquiry into the biomimetic principle of \u201cNature as model\u201d: the transposition of philosophical analyses of concepts associated primarily with poetics and related fields\u2014mimesis, mimicry, translation, analogy, metaphor, etc.\u2014into the philosophy of biomimicry.","subTitle":"The Contribution of Poetic Concepts to Philosophical Inquiry into the Biomimetic Principle of Nature as Model","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Adams"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2563978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac08994e-159e-3bc5-b5e6-76c9c7fe6d35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2563978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Network Topologies and Virtual Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2563978","wordCount":13208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Association of American Geographers","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"The use of terms such as \"cyberspace,\" \"electronic frontier,\" and \"information superhighway\" implies a project for geographers: the attempt to incorporate such innovative views of place within an ontological framework sensitive to geographical concerns. Combinatorial theory and structuration theory provide a basis for this incorporation. Just as places are dialectically related to social processes, so too are communication media. Similar factors related to the patterning of communication flows pertain in both cases. In particular, geographers can identify similar patterns of nodes (communicators) and links (communication paths) in places and in communication media. These patterns, or topologies, provide a set of opportunities and constraints for social interaction. When topologies in computer networks replicate the topologies in familiar places, certain elements of social structuration are shared, as well. This sharing, in turn, lends validity to claims about \"virtual place\" that can be quantitatively described, through combinatorial methods, to indicate the level of specialization in the topological form that has been replicated, and hence the significance of the replication. In light of such similarities, the political and social implications of computer networking are explored.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1923-08-11","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297261192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234955"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25591305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artnews1923"}],"isPartOf":"The Art News (1923-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1923,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Art News, Vol. 21, no. 39","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591305","wordCount":25315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"39","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Warren S. Goldstein"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a22bd2d3-dea8-3d5d-baff-c2e29cefc460"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"470","pagination":"pp. 470-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconstructing the Classics: Weber, Troeltsch, and the Historical Materialists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907155","wordCount":15896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4\/5","publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":"Max Weber and Ernst Troeltsch constructed their theoretical frameworks in debate with historical materialism. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels provided Weber and Troeltsch with the tools of base\/superstructure and class analysis that they employed in their analysis of religion. The article places Weber and Troeltsch in the historical context of the rise of the Social Democratic Party and its splintering during World War 1. It compares the writing on religion by Engels, Eduard Bernstein and Karl Kautsky with those of Weber and Troeltsch. It focuses on Ancient Judaism, the origins of Christianity, Christian heretical sects, the Reformation, the German Peasant Wars, and the Puritan Revolution. Some points in common are the origins of communism in Judaism and Christianity and the association between Protestantism and capitalism. This article shows how Weber and Troeltsch critically appropriated from historical materialism and uses this with the intent of constructing a critical sociology of religion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30129607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac230fc2-1ca3-3cc2-bfff-f3ebdd69e90c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30129607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30129607","wordCount":8680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"161","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WULF D. REHDER"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23007645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1046218X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efa3d336-4432-3815-b95d-5031bb87119b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23007645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agni"}],"isPartOf":"Agni","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Descriptive Analysis of Bank Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23007645","wordCount":6174,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[19377,19534]],"Locations in B":[[11145,11302]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"44","publisher":"Agni","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NICHOLAS HOWE"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43472372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43472372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"southwestreview"}],"isPartOf":"Southwest Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Places, Buildings, Photographs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43472372","wordCount":7461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Southern Methodist University","volumeNumber":"89","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Fuller"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30060551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332060X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6bdc142-9da5-31ce-af26-e0bfb0f8a60f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30060551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cranebag"}],"isPartOf":"The Crane Bag","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Aesthetic Dimension Reconsidered","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30060551","wordCount":2870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Richard Kearney","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-01-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc31eb33-9e4d-3af2-a57c-93f37ee2a4af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1688263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1688263","wordCount":21735,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4530","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"215","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liza Kirwin","Robert F. Brown","William McNaught","Sue Ann Kendall","Paul J. Karlstrom","Stella Paul","Marina Pacini"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039853"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62266454"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237303"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4cb5df1-5f20-3697-a10f-398bacfae6e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archamerartj"}],"isPartOf":"Archives of American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Regional Reports","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557356","wordCount":7594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Smithsonian American Art Museum","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. M. Knittel"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed086947-f9d3-3951-9b46-2d1c625357a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/831897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Wagner, Deafness, and the Reception of Beethoven's Late Style","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/831897","wordCount":16752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":"The belief that Beethoven's \"late\" or \"third-period\" works represent the pinnacle of his achievement is at odds with the earliest critical views of these pieces. In the decades just following the composer's death, critics could not separate the perceived musical problems of the late style from Beethoven's physical ailments. While the common explanation for the elevation of these last pieces to their current position of privilege has been a musical one-the works were written before their time, demanding considerable study before they were fully understood and appreciated-I propose that it was a new understanding of Beethoven's biography that led to their veneration. Richard Wagner, in his 1870 Beethoven essay, radically reinterpreted the influence of deafness, claiming that it was in fact the source of Beethoven's creativity and genius. This paper explores Wagner's romanticization of Beethoven's deafness and speculates as to why such a paradoxical position may have appealed not just to Wagner, but to the critics who followed him.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ray A. 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If the massive production of children in Les Mamelles is purposive, the production of \u201c\u201cCirce\u201d\u201d is out of control, embodying both the pleasures and the dangers of industrial capitalism, an endless production of commodities that seems to offer change but generates instead a phantasmagoria. Reading \u201c\u201cCirce\u201d\u201d and Les Mamelles alongside Walter Benjamin's understanding of the effects of the capitalist city \u2014\u2014 explored in the Arcades Project in Paris while Joyce was finishing Ulysses there \u2014\u2014 allows us to see how \u201c\u201cCirce\u201d\u201d moves beyond the limits of Surrealism and offers another way of conceiving of the avant-garde.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George F. Comfort"],"datePublished":"1903-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25540449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19327080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"300323876"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235487"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25540449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"brushandpencil"}],"isPartOf":"Brush and Pencil","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1903,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Need of Popularizing Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25540449","wordCount":2370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Thomas J. Watson Library, The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Stein"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swqh.21","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cb81fc3-ff6c-3971-9497-bb8f48caed5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv65swqh.21"}],"isPartOf":"Poetry's Afterlife","keyphrase":["poetry","poet laureate","james whitcomb","unpublished draft","ski area","shakur tupac","william","anderson","opposing poetries","robert"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"253","pagination":"253-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swqh.21","wordCount":3625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Winkler"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb73a09a-c40d-3af2-a2ea-0a77c1496e91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40004429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Kinsey, Sex Research, and the Body of Knowledge: Let's Talk About Sex","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40004429","wordCount":11356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3\/4","publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/962845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8364c7e3-cb11-321d-8ced-4642ba2d6e1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/962845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/962845","wordCount":15104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1657","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Gray Funkhouser"],"datePublished":"1937-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a95ba7ce-7aea-3895-9a49-ec756358c2e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/301591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":136.0,"pageEnd":"404","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-404","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Mathematics - Pure mathematics","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Historical Development of the Graphical Representation of Statistical Data","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/301591","wordCount":49144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rudy J. Koshar"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5eb4c72-a8b2-374e-903a-346481468eee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25618610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Altar, Stage and City: Historic Preservation and Urban Meaning in Nazi Germany","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618610","wordCount":9589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rainer Rumold"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224d41e9-f445-3f21-9acc-3c76d31166b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"Painting as a Language. Why Not?\" Carl Einstein in \"Documents\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397593","wordCount":10666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43278,43363]],"Locations in B":[[13070,13155]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b398bcc0-b52f-3126-87e9-c598f9abe81c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25614429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":190.0,"pageEnd":"2142","pageStart":"1953","pagination":"pp. 1953-2142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program of the 2009 Convention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614429","wordCount":95413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"124","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yun You"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10695834"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42671683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211014"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d141709d-afee-3662-bee7-09e71e1baed6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26892152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinreviinte"}],"isPartOf":"China Review International","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26892152","wordCount":1944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155jfm0.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa3d7da2-0580-364f-9f87-218fed1f14de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155jfm0.12"}],"isPartOf":"Memory and popular film","keyphrase":["prosthetic","prosthetic memory","empathy","rosewood","scheler","emmett","mass cultural","internet","cyberspace","politics"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"144","pagination":"144-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Prosthetic memory:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155jfm0.12","wordCount":7302,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[42327,42513]],"Locations in B":[[11297,11479]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Memory is not commonly imagined as a site of possibility for progressive politics. More often, memory, particularly in the form of nostalgia, is condemned for its solipsistic nature, for its tendency to draw people into the past instead of the present. This is the case, for example, in Kathryn Bigelow\u2019s 1995 filmStrange Days<\/em>, in which the use of memory \u2013 usually another person\u2019s memory \u2013 is figured as a form of addiction. The film is set in Los Angeles, on New Year\u2019s Eve 1999. The Los Angeles of the film is a chaotic, multicultural world of violence, epitomised by","subTitle":"the ethics and politics of memory in an age of mass culture","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy M. West"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23740730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"CAMERA FIENDS: EARLY PHOTOGRAPHY, DEATH, AND THE SUPERNATURAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740730","wordCount":12639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RONALD R. THOMAS"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23116640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"790509c1-d586-3654-9938-fde5a92070b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23116640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Dream of the Empty Camera: Image, Evidence, and Authentic American Style in \"American Photographs\" and \"Farewell, My Lovely\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23116640","wordCount":15550,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16755]],"Locations in B":[[11364,11487]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Lindey"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10547479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f056a0b-ec23-3ce4-bd6f-50509adb3595"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23025209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerperi"}],"isPartOf":"American Periodicals","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boys Write Back: Self-Education and Periodical Authorship in Late-Nineteenth-Century Story Papers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025209","wordCount":6564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Ohio State University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elise Brault-Dreux"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a9c2b4e-ceb4-385a-9ca1-827d4d57c610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44234627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Praying Poetic \"I\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234627","wordCount":4844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Christopher Johnson"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379174"},{"name":"oclc","value":"105851932, 85447168"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f2d8fe8-858e-3e36-b3ca-6ae16f3498f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26573766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Journal de la Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des am\u00e9ricanistes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Modes and moods of \u201cSlave Anast\u00e1cia,\u201d Afro-Brazilian saint","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573766","wordCount":18451,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43580,43685]],"Locations in B":[[30867,30972]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des Am\u00e9ricanistes","volumeNumber":"104","abstract":"Agency activated through exchanges with saints is not simply present or absent. Rather it is emergent, depending on the mode of saints\u2019 material and social configurations, and the mood evoked by a specific saint\u2019s manifestation. In this essay I consider the history of an Afro-Brazilian saint called Slave Anast\u00e1cia, as she signifies with varying social effects for different groups of ethno-racial users. I consider how saints become manifest in a given mode, and educe a particular mood. Mood is inseparable from intangible entities\u2019 \u201cpresence.\u201d In this essay, I leverage such radical disjunctures between the forms of presence generated by the same saint\u2014Anast\u00e1cia as suffering martyr, as serene helpmeet, as erotic object\u2014to reconsider how saints work at the intersection of mode and mood. By paying attention to saints and mood, I seek to worry over-familiar terms like will and agency. Thinking through mood points us toward material conjunctures and emotional resonances whose agency is diffuse but nevertheless generates predispositions to act in certain ways. L\u2019agentivit\u00e9, activ\u00e9e par les \u00e9changes avec les saints, n\u2019est pas simplement pr\u00e9sente ou absente. Elle est plut\u00f4t \u00e9mergente, selon le mode de configuration mat\u00e9rielle et social des saints et l\u2019humeur \u00e9voqu\u00e9e par la manifestation sp\u00e9cifique d\u2019un saint. Dans cet essai, je consid\u00e8re l\u2019histoire d\u2019un saint afro-br\u00e9silien, appel\u00e9 Esclave Anast\u00e1cia, et sa signification et son impact social dans diff\u00e9rents groupes ethniques et religieux. Je consid\u00e8re comment les saints se manifestent \u00e0 travers une modalit\u00e9 et une configuration sp\u00e9cifique de mat\u00e9riaux et comment ils induisent une humeur particuli\u00e8re. L\u2019humeur est ins\u00e9parable de la \u00ab pr\u00e9sence \u00bb des entit\u00e9s intangibles. Dans cet essai, je tire parti de ces disjonctions radicales entre les formes de pr\u00e9sence g\u00e9n\u00e9r\u00e9es par le m\u00eame saint - Anast\u00e1cia en tant que martyre souffrante, en tant que compagnon serein, en tant qu\u2019objet \u00e9rotique - pour reconsid\u00e9rer comment les saints travaillent \u00e0 l\u2019intersection de la modalit\u00e9 et de l\u2019humeur. En pr\u00eatant attention aux saints et \u00e0 l\u2019humeur, je cherche \u00e0 interroger des termes trop familiers comme \u00ab volont\u00e9 \u00bb et \u00ab agentivit\u00e9 \u00bb. Penser \u00e0 travers la notion d\u2019humeur peut r\u00e9v\u00e9ler des conjonctures mat\u00e9rielles et des r\u00e9sonances \u00e9motionnelles dont l\u2019agence est diffuse mais g\u00e9n\u00e8re n\u00e9anmoins des pr\u00e9dispositions \u00e0 agir de mani\u00e8res sp\u00e9cifiques. La activaci\u00f3n de la iniciativa o acci\u00f3n personal a trav\u00e9s del contacto con santos no se concibe simplemente como presente o ausente. Por el contrario, es m\u00e1s bien emergente, dependiendo del modo del material del santo y de sus configuraciones sociales, as\u00ed como del tono o ambiente evocado por la manifestaci\u00f3n de tal o cual figura. En este ensayo examino la historia de un santo afro-brasile\u00f1o llamado Slave Anast\u00e1cia, a trav\u00e9s de sus sentidos con diferentes efectos sociales para grupos distintos de consumidores etno-raciales. Considero c\u00f3mo los santos se manifiestan en un modo determinado, suscitando un tono o ambiente particular. Este tono es inseparable de la \u201cpresencia\u201d de estas entidades intangibles. Asimismo, tengo en cuenta estas separaciones radicales entre las formas de presencia generadas por el mismo santo-a saber, Slave Anast\u00e1cia como m\u00e1rtir sufriente, como serena acompa\u00f1ante, como objeto er\u00f3tico-con el fin de reconsiderar c\u00f3mo los santos operan en la intersecci\u00f3n de modos y ambientes. Prestando atenci\u00f3n a los santos y su ambiente, revelo el abuso cr\u00edtico de t\u00e9rminos como \u2018voluntad\u2019 e \u2018iniciativa\u2019. El tono o ambiente nos dirige a encrucijadas materiales y resonancias emotivas cuya iniciativa es difusa, si bien consigue generar disposiciones para actuar en formas concretas.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kojin Karatani","Sabu Kohso"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uses of Aesthetics: After Orientalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303618","wordCount":6895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09641998"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23417"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2982952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyastatsocise3"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Statistics"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Library science"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2982952","wordCount":2150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"155","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. M. BERNSTEIN"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"059e7d0f-a633-30ed-8e75-5d8fa80da1fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Mad Raccoon, Demented Quail, and the Herring Holocaust: Notes for a Reading of W. G. Sebald","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685739","wordCount":10544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREI NAKOV"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25702890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919064"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61496655"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"482c9832-9577-35ff-9b6a-4ca3b00d5056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25702890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibushistoriae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus et Historiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Is critica d'arte a Relic of the Past? On the New Definition of the Image \u2014 Victim of a Misinterpreted Russian Avant-Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25702890","wordCount":11008,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[198,707],[714,1094]],"Locations in B":[[26309,26813],[26823,27204]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"IRSA s.c.","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"The point of departure for this article is the alarming increase in recent incorrect, if not fraudulent, attributions of Russian avant-garde paintings (see the scandal of January 2009 at the \"Alexandra Exter\" exhibition at the Ch\u00e2teau de Tours in France). Setting aside the fact that source documents on the subject are scarce and reference works very few, the author investigates the problem of the danger threatening the very notion of the imago princeps, the original, being more and more obscured by the use of digital images which can be manipulated freely and practically without restrictions. The recent example of the digital reproduction of the Wedding at Cana of Paolo Veronese, a procedure praised by sociologists, is criticised here using the theoretical apparatus of art history. The manipulation of documents, which should constitute another kind of originals of reference, has also been facilitated by digital reproduction techniques, and art historians should be made aware of that new danger. The present paper gives several instances to illustrate this problem, including the erroneous attribution of a \"blue relief\" to Tatlin, an attribution which has not long ago exploited the authority of the Burlington Magazine (issue of January 2008). The critical considerations presented in the paper go far beyond mere \"attributionism\". They open a broad new field of reflexion, which hitherto has been prey to tabloid newspapers only.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wensheng Lan","Hui Li","Wei-Dong Wang","Yoko Katayama","Ji-Dong Gu"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40802277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00953628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"645a0f4e-8a69-36bd-88e2-7c4c5a9106e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40802277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"micrecol"}],"isPartOf":"Microbial Ecology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Microbial Community Analysis of Fresh and Old Microbial Biofilms on Bayon Temple Sandstone of Angkor Thorn, Cambodia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40802277","wordCount":6724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":"The temples of Angkor monuments including Angkor Thorn and Bayon in Cambodia and surrounding countries were exclusively constructed using sandstone. They are severely threatened by biodeterioration caused by active growth of different microorganisms on the sandstone surfaces, but knowledge on the microbial community and composition of the biofilms on the sandstone is not available from this region. This study investigated the microbial community diversity by examining the fresh and old biofilms of the biodeteriorated bas-relief wall surfaces of the Bayon Temple by analysis of 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequences. The results showed that the retrieved sequences were clustered in 11 bacterial, 11 eukaryotic and two archaeal divisions with disparate communities (Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Cyanobacteria, Proteobacteria; Alveolata, Fungi, Metazoa, Viridiplantae; Crenarchaeote, and Euyarch-aeota). A comparison of the microbial communities between the fresh and old biofilms revealed that the bacterial community of old biofilm was very similar to the newly formed fresh biofilm in terms of bacterial composition, but the eukaryotic communities were distinctly different between these two. This information has important implications for understanding the formation process and development of the microbial diversity on the sandstone surfaces, and furthermore to the relationship between the extent of biodeterioration and succession of microbial communities on sandstone in tropic region.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1900-01-13","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25435339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19480202"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448020521"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235499"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25435339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collartcritic"}],"isPartOf":"The Collector and Art Critic","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1900,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"[Notes]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25435339","wordCount":3621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Thomas J. Watson Library, The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noel Malcolm"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44024696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03932516"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3186d239-64d5-3690-ae80-6fcacf2ab3f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44024696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rivistordellfilo"}],"isPartOf":"Rivista di Storia della Filosofia (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE PRINTING AND EDITING OF HOBBES'S \"DE CORPORE\": A REVIEW OF KARL SCHUHMANN'S EDITION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44024696","wordCount":16596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"FrancoAngeli srl","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Briggs"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ba2bf05-9966-382c-92e1-9d9fdac1ae6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contested Mobilities: On the Politics and Ethnopoetics of Circulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.50.1-3.285","wordCount":5887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Abstract This article argues that ethnopoetics can make important contributions to current work in anthropology, science-technology-society studies, and other disciplines on the mobility and circulation of cultural forms. Scholars have suggested that mobility is not an intrinsic property of words, images, technologies, etc.; it rather takes particular types of interventions to make phenomena seem intrinsically mobile. The articles in this special issue by Gerald L. Carr and Barbra Meek, Sean Patrick O'Neill, and David W. Samuels provide ethnographic challenges to dominant models of circulation, as promoted by anthropologists, missionaries, and educators. They document how Native American translators, language teachers, and Christian converts scrutinize models that, as O'Neill and Samuels point out, have long histories. In doing so, they engage in practices that disrupt hegemonic models, propose alternatives, and question the foundational premise that promoting the circulation of cultural and linguistic forms is always a moral good, one that confers positive\u2014if not superior\u2014ethical standing on anthropologists, linguists, missionaries, and educators.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-02-08","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee81a0ec-660f-3829-9e09-c9b832a21f4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1694512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"684","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-684","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Education - Specialized education","Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1694512","wordCount":29658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4687","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"227","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-03-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707916","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19458c20-e2ad-3221-9f02-616fbaf11b8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43707916"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707916","wordCount":25550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"209","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIYADAI SHINJI","Shion Kono","Thomas Lamarre"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41511581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342489"},{"name":"oclc","value":"493260789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-203474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41511581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mech"}],"isPartOf":"Mechademia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Transformation of Semantics in the History of Japanese Subcultures since 1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41511581","wordCount":12667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL BAGGETT"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19312555"},{"name":"oclc","value":"86222266"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008216369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83626dda-0e51-353c-a5f7-037873245cf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26300752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamernatu"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Naturalism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300752","wordCount":1778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind E. Krauss"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f96f4198-3f01-35c4-b493-c3ae00136890"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reinventing the Medium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344204","wordCount":7622,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16494]],"Locations in B":[[12088,12187]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW PAYNE"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15262065"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"praxis"}],"isPartOf":"PRAXIS: Journal of Writing + Building","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PUBLIC SPACES PRIVATE TRACES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328796","wordCount":3988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"0","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1903-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/659355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a99f0fc-8f29-333f-9073-7a5edfebf7a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/659355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"ii","pagination":"pp. ii-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1903,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/659355","wordCount":24823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mar\u00eda del Cisne Aguirre Ullauri"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26918012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07160925"},{"name":"oclc","value":"614893836"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fad13f31-2843-3282-80db-b85b937f3cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26918012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estuatac"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Atacame\u00f1os","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Arquitectura patrimonial y arqueolog\u00eda hist\u00f3rica - Heritage architecture and Historical archeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26918012","wordCount":12239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"64","publisher":"Universidad Cat\u00f3lica del Norte","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Esta investigaci\u00f3n analiza los esfuerzos profesionales e investigativos para correlacionar arquitectura patrimonial y arqueolog\u00eda hist\u00f3rica. Se emplea como caso de estudio el Centro Hist\u00f3rico de Cuenca, segmento urbano que por sus particularidades socioculturales y por procesos locales emprendidos ostenta un amplio potencial t\u00e9cnico y cient\u00edfico para dar cuenta de la importancia de esa relaci\u00f3n. Metodol\u00f3gicamente, el an\u00e1lisis recurre a una revisi\u00f3n sistem\u00e1tica de los informes t\u00e9cnicos de prospecci\u00f3n, excavaci\u00f3n e intervenci\u00f3n realizados entre 2008 y 2011 por la Unidad de Arqueolog\u00eda Urbana (UAU) y a otros documentos t\u00e9cnicos y administrativos vinculantes. Para el estudio, se emplean fichas anal\u00edticas que sintetizan pr\u00e1cticas, relaciones disciplinares y proyecciones investigativas. Como resultado, se aprecia el bajo nivel de cohesi\u00f3n interdisciplinar en las pr\u00e1cticas, mecanismos y alcances de dicho proyecto. En efecto, la investigaci\u00f3n en los 34 bienes se enmarca en la excavaci\u00f3n; a su vez, la cer\u00e1mica denota como el material cultural identificado y documentado; otros de origen prehisp\u00e1nico se han minimizado sin llegar a descartar su inter\u00e9s hist\u00f3rico. As\u00ed se concluye que los par\u00e1metros b\u00e1sicos, las estrategias de gesti\u00f3n y la socializaci\u00f3n del patrimonio son m\u00ednimos; la arqueolog\u00eda ha supuesto un medio de legitimaci\u00f3n de la intervenci\u00f3n en entidades monumentales, y rara vez ha sido un medio para su gesti\u00f3n integral. La experiencia de la UAU permite identificar campos disciplinares complementarios y plantear una hoja de ruta articulada al marco profesional e investigativo para su aplicaci\u00f3n en bienes patrimoniales con potencial arqueol\u00f3gico. This research analyzes professional and research efforts to correlate heritage architecture and historical archeology. The Historical Center of Cuenca is used as a case study, an urban segment that, due to its socio-cultural particularities and local processes undertaken, has ample technical and scientific potential to account for the importance of this relationship. Methodologically, the analysis uses a systematic review of the technical reports on prospecting, excavation and intervention carried out between 2008 and 2011 by the Urban Archeology Unit (UAU) and other binding technical and administrative documents. For the study, analytical sheets that synthesize practices, disciplinary relationships and research projections are used. As a result, the low level of interdisciplinary cohesion in the practices, mechanisms and scope of said project is appreciated. In fact, the approach of the 34 goods is framed in the excavation, at the same time, ceramics found denotes as the identified and documented cultural material; other of pre-Hispanic origin have been minimized without discarding their historical interest. This concludes that the basic parameters, management strategies and socialization of heritage are minimal; Archeology has been a means of legitimizing intervention in monumental entities, and it has rarely been a means of integral management. The UAU experience allows to identify complementary disciplinary fields and to propose a roadmap articulated to the professional and research framework for its application in heritage assets with archaeological potential.","subTitle":"relaciones y proyecciones en el siglo XXI, caso Cuenca (Ecuador)","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5bb4076-f8fd-3235-a91c-325a778aa0ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"907","pageStart":"901","pagination":"pp. 901-907","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344061","wordCount":11059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Bell"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1fe866b-fea6-36be-aa5d-3cb048a31a75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Carpenter's Apprentice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425214","wordCount":6784,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[50052,50156]],"Locations in B":[[923,990],[2538,2636]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"This essay explores an understanding of architectural space that neither rejects out of hand nor is fully premised in prevailing assumptions about it as constitutionally independent of time, movement, experience, and the world. In so doing, various sources are examined that provide some insight on possible ways of expanding our notions of space and its involvement with vision, tactility, the body, and the body's capacities for action. Of special interest in this regard is Walter Benjamin's proposition of a \"distractive art.\" Under this rubric, connections between film and architecture, their inherent characteristics, and their means of appropriation are pursued. As a corollary, a few important qualitative characteristics of experience at Le Corbusier's Carpenter Center are discussed.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James L. Yarnall"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594634","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027359"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19b68928-6e90-317d-aa6e-4e7b3e3b1485"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1594634"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanartj"}],"isPartOf":"American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Adventures of a Young Antiquarian: John La Farge's \"Wanderjahr\" in Europe, 1856-1857","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594634","wordCount":24612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Kennedy Galleries, Inc.","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John M. Chenoweth"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24028895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77b7f3f7-9f20-30e7-a2a0-bc545c09277d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24028895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Practicing and Preaching Quakerism: Creating a Religion of Peace on a Slavery-Era Plantation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24028895","wordCount":12178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"116","abstract":"A meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (\"Quakers\") formed in the British Virgin Islands in the 1740s offers a window onto broader practices of religion making. Equality, simplicity, and peace form a basis for Quaker thought, but in the BVI these ideals intersected with the realities of Caribbean life and the central fact that members also held enslaved Africans. What members did to create Quakerism varied for this group, yet it was nonetheless understood to be a part of the broader community of \"Friends.\" Practice perspectives are employed here to gain access to seemingly ephemeral religion through the concrete objects of archaeology but also as a means of reconciling variation in practice with the idea of a coherent religion. Here religious identity was negotiated through practices on multiple scales, creating unity via larger-scope practices of writing and reading while the most frequent identifications were local and variable. Written works are often seen to encode a static, \"real\" version of religion against which actions can be measured, but I will argue that religion is better seen in practice, and here Quakerism was created at least as much in the variable minutia of individual performance as in widely shared documents. Una reuni\u00f3n de la Sociedad Religiosa de Amigos (Cu\u00e1queros) formada en las Islas V\u00edrgenes Brit\u00e1nicas (IVB) en los a\u00f1os 1740s ofrece una ventana hacia pr\u00e1cticas m\u00e1s amplias de formaci\u00f3n de religi\u00f3n. Igualdad, simplicidad, y paz forman una base para el pensamiento cu\u00e1quero, pero en las IVB estos ideales intersectaron con las realidades de la vida caribe\u00f1a y el hecho central que tambi\u00e9n miembros retuvieron africanos esclavizados. Lo que los miembros hicieron para crear cuaquerismo fue diferente para este grupo, sin embargo, a\u00fan as\u00ed, fue entendido como parte de una comunidad de \"Amigos\" m\u00e1s amplia. Perspectivas de la pr\u00e1ctica son empleadas aqu\u00ed para ganar acceso a una religi\u00f3n aparentemente ef\u00edmera a trav\u00e9s de objetos concretos de arqueolog\u00eda, pero tambi\u00e9n como un medio de reconciliar la variaci\u00f3n en pr\u00e1ctica con la ideas de una religi\u00f3n coherente. Aqu\u00ed la identidad religiosa fue negociada a trav\u00e9s de pr\u00e1cticas en escalas m\u00faltiples, creando unidad a trav\u00e9s de pr\u00e1cticas de escritura y lectura de mayor alcance mientras las identificaciones m\u00e1s frecuentes fueron locales y variables. Trabajos escritos a menudo se ven como codificando una versi\u00f3n est\u00e1tica, \"real\" de la religi\u00f3n en contra de la cual acciones pueden ser medidas, pero argumentar\u00e9 que la religi\u00f3n es mejor vista en pr\u00e1ctica, y aqu\u00ed Cuaquerismo fue creado al menos tanto en minucias variables de desempe\u00f1os individuales como en documentos ampliamente compartidos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["INES G. \u017dUPANOV"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24871258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8dff5b8-355c-3b9b-82c2-f477f24401dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24871258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","History - Historical methodology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The pulpit trap: Possession and personhood in colonial Goa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24871258","wordCount":11126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"65\/66","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edw. 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Byron's long poem Don Juan (1819-1824) was the fulcrum for colliding communities within London's rapidly expanding print culture of the 1820s. Increasingly aligned with an underground radical, libertarian, and obscene press, Byron's poem animated debates about the proliferation and mass consumption of popular print. The pirating of Don Juan's later scandalous harem cantos only escalated the debates and ultimately led to legal deliberation over the poem's copyright. In this paper I argue that the controversy that erupted over Don Juan was connected to the emergence of obscenity as a trade and reveals how obscenity began to gather meaning in relation to reprographic media, popular consumption, and orientalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark D. 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intelligent Design, Darwinism, and the Philosophy of Public Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41939474","wordCount":18503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Hoynes"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa13e3b7-d40a-3d49-b7e7-8db51780ef78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1496","pageStart":"1494","pagination":"pp. 1494-1496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231117","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3671696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384909"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3966e91-a814-3f63-a49f-a56d449e0188"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3671696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutnatu"}],"isPartOf":"The Southwestern Naturalist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3671696","wordCount":1771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Southwestern Association of Naturalists","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167487","wordCount":5478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"36","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert P. Multhauf","Bernard S. Finn","Aleida Cattell Renwick","Diana D. Menkes","Virginia Skidmore Rutledge"],"datePublished":"1967-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"045798ae-ed32-3e4c-8fb4-5fe86d7aa933"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/228025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":143.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ninety-Second Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1967)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/228025","wordCount":91738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fran\u00e7ois Roche"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41765724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"'Alchimis (t\/r\/ick)\u2014machines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765724","wordCount":2848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"22","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkk499.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f55edc25-246a-3176-a796-9293e4ca7768"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvbkk499.12"}],"isPartOf":"Zeichentragende Artefakte im sakralen Raum","keyphrase":["decorative kufic","foliated alif","plaited alif","symbolic","derrida","writing","knotted alif","kufic alif","phoenician","benjamin"],"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"199","pagination":"199-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Symbolic Space of Writing in Decorative Kufic of Samanid Slipwares","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvbkk499.12","wordCount":5462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Visual forms of writing have different meanings than the writings\u2019 content. This becomes more obvious in a specific cultural context, such as the Islamic, where one can observe many inscriptions with the same content but different forms. One of these forms is the decorative Kufic of Samanid slipwares, of which various letterforms\u2019 imply symbolic meanings.Samanid slipwares are glazed ceramics dating approximately from the 9th to 11th centuries AD (3th \u2013 5th c. Hijri) in the eastern north of Iran. A major part of the decoration repertoire of these ceramics, ornamental inscriptions hold a crucial role in making invisible mystical","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helena E. Wright"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40968107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01601040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5300b749-e65e-317b-b9d7-e78a3085c8fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40968107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iajsocinduarch"}],"isPartOf":"IA. The Journal of the Society for Industrial Archeology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Image Makers: The Role of the Graphic Arts in Industrialization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40968107","wordCount":7312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Society for Industrial Archeology","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"The Industrial Revolution brought many changes to the American landscape. How these changes were perceived was due in no small part to their interpretation in paintings and prints. Prints in particular had the advantage of wider distribution at lower cost and therefore reached a larger public, helping to inform American attitudes about the process of industrialization. This paper will address the ways that works of art were commissioned and published when a specific purpose was intended, that of influencing the public toward positive acceptance of an industrial way of life.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RBR","BJB"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43323318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02772426"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd81ce50-7311-3a55-b0ac-ffab44888e59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43323318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"landscapej"}],"isPartOf":"Landscape Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Architecture & Architectural History","Garden & Landscape","Environmental Science","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Editorial Commentary: ANALOGY AND AUTHORITY: BEYOND CHAOS AND KUDZU","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43323318","wordCount":5990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Sklair"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52285eb7-4b17-354b-bb26-565ec9757932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1122","pageStart":"1121","pagination":"pp. 1121-1122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231328","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadir Lahiji"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"431aabdf-ffec-3140-9fa5-82d8bf78d1f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Gift of the Open Hand: Le Corbusier Reading Georges Bataille's \"La Part Maudite\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425288","wordCount":16381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":"Georges Bataille (1897-1962) was a contemporary of Le Corbusier (1887-1965) and one of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century. He gave Le Corbusier a copy of his most celebrated book, \"La Part Maudite\" (The accursed share) and inscribed it with a warm dedication. At the time he received this gift, Le Corbusier was about to embark on the planning of Chandigarh in India. On his way to India, Le Corbusier read the book; he read it autobiographically, the same way he had read his copy of Homer's \"The Iliad\" and Friedrich Nietzsche's \"Thus Spake Zarathustra\". Le Corbusier's reading of \"La Part Maudite\" is a significant event in his late intellectual life. This essay reflects on the nature of Le Corbusier's reading. It traces the circumstances of the friendship between these two very different thinkers and speculates on the origin of their affinities and the confluence of the ideas that brought them together. I argue that the notions of the gift and potlatch in \"La Part Maudite,\" coming to Bataille from Marcel Mauss, are at the origin of the idea of the Open Hand in India.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Mattioli"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"34986105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009268063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"991d3311-cce4-3dd3-b2b2-5f956eb838a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26488664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Law","Science & Mathematics","Technology","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"The Data-Pooling Problem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488664","wordCount":24710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California, Berkeley","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"American innovation policy as expressed through intellectual property law contains a curious gap: it encourages individual research investments, but does little to facilitate cooperation among inventors, which is often a necessary precondition for innovation. This Article provides an in\u2013depth analysis of a policy problem that relates to this gap: increasingly, public and private innovation investments depend upon the willingness of private firms and institutions to cooperatively pool industrial, commercial, and scientific data. Data holders often have powerful disincentives to cooperate with one another, however. As a result, important research that the federal government has sought to encourage through intellectual property policy and through other targeted investments is being held back. This Article addresses this issue by offering three contributions\u2014one theoretical, one empirical, and one prescriptive. The theoretical contribution builds upon legal, economic, and public choice literature to explain why pooling data is relevant to innovation policy and why the level of data sharing in some settings may be suboptimal. This discussion offers a conceptual framework for scholars and policymakers to examine how data\u2013pooling relates to innovation policy goals. This leads to the second contribution: an ethnographic study of private efforts to pool data in an important field of research. This Article focuses on the field of cancer treatment because it is one of the most active areas where efforts to pool data have recently coalesced. Interviews with lawyers, executives, and scientists working at the vanguard of \u201cBig Data\u201d projects in the field of cancer treatment offer a detailed view of how, precisely, data\u2013pooling problems can hinder technological progress. The study\u2019s most significant finding is that impediments to the pooling of patient treatment and clinical trial data are diverse, nuanced, and not reducible to collective action problems that are already well understood by legal scholars and economists, such as the free\u2013rider dilemma. These findings lead to the third key contribution: a set of targeted policy suggestions designed to facilitate data pooling through regulatory action, amendments to federal healthcare legislation, and tax incentives. These prescriptive measures are tailored to address the sharing of health\u2013related data, but they capture an approach that could be applied in other settings where technological progress depends upon data\u2013pooling. Ultimately, this Article argues for a vision of innovation policy in which cooperative exchanges of data are recognized as important preconditions for innovation that may require government support.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Lambek"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41473883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035459"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a750b56-123a-3b12-9a90-158e110a1acb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41473883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropologica"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropologica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anthropology's Ontological Anxiety and the Concept of Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41473883","wordCount":4576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Canadian Anthropology Society","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARLA BILLITTERI"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca90f809-e665-39ff-b514-1d22b7223dde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24726699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma2"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE PASSION OF BECOMING AN OBJECT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24726699","wordCount":5099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"National Poetry Foundation","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winfried Menninghaus","Alex Skinner"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23334446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03919714"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51169498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-263456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1587882-02f6-3389-82f8-d1046e1c003e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23334446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histphillifescie"}],"isPartOf":"History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Biology \u00e0 la mode: Charles Darwin's Aesthetics of \"Ornament\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23334446","wordCount":5579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn - Napoli","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Historians have long noted the importance of Victorian culture for the emergence of Darwin's ideas. This paper takes this understanding one step further by illustrating a deep cultural analysis for the underlying aesthetics framework which, on the one hand, is part of Darwin's notion of sexual selection while, at the same time, serving to give rise to a new \"aesthetics semantics.\" While evolutionary biology avoids this language, it nevertheless had far-reaching influences in the decades following the publication of Darwin's work. Additionally, evolutionary aesthetics from Darwin provides unique insights on the philosophical foundations it draws upon.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Mulvey"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c657af5-52e7-3a44-b44c-abb0635dcf81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43909557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Striking of the Hour","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43909557","wordCount":1496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"122","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Overmyer-Vel\u00e1zquez"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/msem.2007.23.1.63","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07429797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45913592"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15d05d7e-35a2-3fef-aa09-b490356cac93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/msem.2007.23.1.63"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mexistudestumexi"}],"isPartOf":"Mexican Studies\/Estudios Mexicanos","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Portraits of a Lady: Visions of Modernity in Porfirian Oaxaca City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/msem.2007.23.1.63","wordCount":16131,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[74638,74708]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"This article explores the relationship between the photographic regimentation of sex workers and ideas of modernity in Porfirian Oaxaca City, Mexico. In particular, it examines the development of the commercial sex trade and how it played an integral role in the construction of the mutually defining discourses and practices of tradition and modernity. Following an examination of the era's reigning medical-legal notions of crime, deviance, and race and the city government's attempts to define and regulate the trade, the article focuses on different ways in which city officials and female sex workers utilized photographs in registries of prostitution among other elements of the capital's regulatory apparatus to harness dominant notions of modernity for their own separate ends. Este ensayo explora la relaci\u00f3n entre la regimentaci\u00f3n fotogr\u00e1fica de las trabajadoras del sexo y las ideas sobre modernidad en la ciudad de Oaxaca durante el porfiriato. Se examina de forma particular el desarrollo de un comercio del sexo y c\u00f3mo \u00e9ste jug\u00f3 un papel integral en la construcci\u00f3n de pr\u00e1cticas y discursos mutuamente definitorios de tradici\u00f3n y modernidad. Luego de examinar las nociones m\u00e9dico-legales dominantes sobre crimen, perversi\u00f3n y raza, y los intentos del gobierno de la ciudad para regular dicho comercio, el ensayo se enfoca en las diversas formas en que representantes del gobierno y las trabajadoras del sexo utilizaron fotograf\u00edas de los registros de prostituci\u00f3n, entre otros elementos del aparato regulatorio gubernamental, para apropiarse de las nociones dominantes de modernidad para sus propios fines.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID SOCHER"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44481249"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212136"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccdf37c8-6e37-3156-9312-da2648a8ccb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25656244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Propaedeutic to Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656244","wordCount":3534,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[4942,5364],[5783,6051]],"Locations in B":[[5936,6356],[14034,14302]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VIRGIL HAMMOCK"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03159906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"502281820"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc0b1a65-7fb1-332a-bb37-b6e8a50fa23c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42630449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racar"}],"isPartOf":"RACAR: revue d'art canadienne \/ Canadian Art Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42630449","wordCount":1592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"AAUC\/UAAC (Association des universit\u00e9s d\u2019art du Canada \/ Universities Art Association of Canada)","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurie E. 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Official\/standard languages, for example, are commonly thought to represent the speech of the dominant classes, and states are said to seek hegemony over these languages. What happens, however, when institutions besides the state make successful claims to control over these languages? What happens when the choice of an official language is not guided by the speech habits of the dominant classes? What becomes of the relationship between the official language and the dominant classes when proficiency in a foreign language rather than the official language earns the highest rewards? These questions prove central to a critique of Bourdieu's notions about linguistic exchange and its relation to cultural capital.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivan Kreilkamp"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e3ed2a5-8d5c-3015-9846-0bda96370f48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40007037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victpoet"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Poetry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"611","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-611","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","British Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Victorian Poetry's Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40007037","wordCount":3577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"West Virginia University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle Cho"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5a27c73-ac6f-3d4b-8375-904c417f78e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genre, Translation, and Transnational Cinema: Kim Jee-woon's \"The Good, the Bad, the Weird\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653435","wordCount":13874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"This article examines the operation of genre translation in transnational cinemas through an analysis of Kim Jee-woon's 2008 film The Good, the Bad, the Weird, which triangulates the genre conventions of Hollywood, spaghetti, and Manchurian westerns. I argue that Kim uses the literal and depthless rendering of genre tropes to create a work whose fidelity to its generic predecessors ultimately dismantles their conventional ideologies. The article presents an overview of The Good, the Bad, the Weird's discursive contexts, a theoretical discussion of translation in genre adaptation, and a close reading of the film's key scenes and motifs.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton","Frances Siegel"],"datePublished":"1948-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1086d20f-102f-3dbb-b7dc-f996e5baa899"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1948,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Seventy-First Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (To October 1947)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226775","wordCount":60404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann T. Martinez"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23262699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d327dd2-c724-39da-aab8-3001d26376d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23262699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"WALTER BENJAMIN A SOCIOLOGIST IN THE PATH OF SIMMEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23262699","wordCount":6934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":"This paper is a discussion of the life and work of a controversial figure: Walter Benjamin. Benjamin has been justifiably classified as a mystic, and yet, has similarly been pegged as a Marxist. Both of these seemingly divergent strains, do, in fact, permeate his work. Yet, Benjamin was, perhaps, more. This paper is an attempt to classify Benjamin as a sociologist whose work closely resembles the work of a master sociologist, namely, Georg Simmel. Both personally and professionally these men resemble each other as marginal people in relation to their families and to their academic contemporaries. At the same time, their work is also kindred in spirit and substance, in that, they were both onlookers\u2014passive observers of the unfolding social fabric. And, in fact, they both captured the essential texture of this fabric in the language of what David Frisbe has termed \"sociological impressionism.\" Like impressionist painters, Benjamin and Simmel capture the rich details of social life amid the totality which makes up society itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. R. Martland"],"datePublished":"1975-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20126734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73fdb6e2-6ef5-3efa-849e-e38171a1a5e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20126734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revmetaphysics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Metaphysics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On \"The Limits of My Language Mean the Limits of My World\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20126734","wordCount":3039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Philosophy Education Society Inc.","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Charles Fran\u00e7ois"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d52536da-f7d6-3039-a0ef-642424368a65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Writing without Representation, and Unreadable Notation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833281","wordCount":6294,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16265,16387]],"Locations in B":[[32554,32676]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRISON T. 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A grand binary of the unique as opposed to copies is shown to underlie Walter Benjamin's classic essay \"The Work of Art in an Age of Mechanical Reproduction\"--people's experiences of capital as it relates to humanity--and popular experience of capital--and some recent texts in popular culture, principally the film \"The Ring.\" The homology occurring across those texts and experiences is manifested with different polarities of value so as to adapt to differing rhetorical needs.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20168073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"310ea690-44aa-3075-b362-5823caab4c72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20168073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":503.0,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"1996 Annual Combined Meeting. 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Two paths clear the way: the detection or reasoned reconstruction of \"situation,\" how graphic notations were used in the past and in what social and cultural setting, and the process of \"extraction,\" the hermeneutic scholarship that decodes such messages and establishes the relative plausibility of an interpretation. Situation is easier to study and extraction more likely to occur in cases of phonic writing, where varieties or types, physical inspection, decipherment, origins, and extinction permit multiple inroads into past sound and meaning.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9010772-5ada-30ee-865c-bfd301b05cb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27850341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27850341","wordCount":6898,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DONATO ESPOSITO","SIMON MCKEOWN","CHRISTOPHER BROWN","SUZANNE BOORSCH","CAMILLA MURGIA","MARTIN HOPKINSON","CHRIS MICHAELIDES","MICHAEL TUCKER","SIMON TURNER"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02658305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4134408b-2ffb-3206-87e2-66e06663d964"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41826922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"printquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Print Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41826922","wordCount":17561,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Print Quarterly Publications","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Lipking"],"datePublished":"1977-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7ba221a-0f07-37a9-9918-ff68d3f15973"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"655","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-655","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Marginal Gloss","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343054","wordCount":20802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Massimo Negrotti"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41550644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"288403bf-d2e9-340d-bd37-44a96c445c16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41550644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Music and Naturoids: The Third Reality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41550644","wordCount":5438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"At a high level of abstraction, it can be shown by analogy that attempts to reproduce natural phenomena occur not only in technological endeavors but also in human communication and the arts, including music. This paper presents the paral \u00b7 lel development of artificial devices\u2014or \"naturoids\"\u2014 in the fields of technology, message communication and musical composition, highlighting the transfiguration that unavoidably affects the resulting device, message or musical work. In the technological field and, to an extent, in the communications field, the transfiguration of the natural object is taken as a more or less unsatisfying outcome. By contrast, in the arts, and mainly in music, the transfiguration effect is exactly what the artist pursues through placing him-or herself at a nonordinary observation level.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan E. Flowers","A. L. Candy"],"datePublished":"1916-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27824019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0096977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e6f9698-0a63-31ea-a821-d9665053fefd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27824019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sigmxiquar"}],"isPartOf":"Sigma Xi Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"CHAPTER REPORTS: Ohio, Texas, Union, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Yale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27824019","wordCount":7934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward H. Cohen"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":132.0,"pageEnd":"744","pageStart":"613","pagination":"pp. 613-744","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1995","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828970","wordCount":78808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Branislav Jakovljevi\u0107"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08f6.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472073146"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92202e31-b1a7-355c-ba5e-e527523d135b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gk08f6.7"}],"isPartOf":"Alienation Effects","keyphrase":["yugoslav","yugoslavia","associated labor","management","yugoslav self","political","kardelj","economy","socialist","interest"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":91.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"196","pagination":"196-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disalienation Defects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gk08f6.7","wordCount":39772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The emergence of conceptual art in Yugoslavia coincided with the period of dismantling of a socialist market economy and return to a conservative form of socialism under the guise of a better and improved self-management introduced by a new constitution in 1974 and the Law of Associated Labor in 1976. According to official histories of Yugoslav self-management, alongside with nationalism, centralism, and \u201cleftist deviations,\u201d \u201cthe tendency toward increasing strength and independence of techno-managerial social forces\u201d was perceived as one of greatest threats to Yugoslav socialism. Du\u0161an Biland\u017ei\u0107 and Stipe Tonkovi\u0107, the official historians of Yugoslav self-management, write that if \u201cuntil","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48507905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02506807"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cfcbabe-b6b9-3b59-920f-2b0f52cd74ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48507905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annanutrmeta"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of Nutrition & Metabolism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":314.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness","Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Poster Sessions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48507905","wordCount":264100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"S. Karger AG","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2016b952-84f9-3559-9281-936f600c2412"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"lxxv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i+iii+v-lxxv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Proceedings: The American Philological Association One Hundred and Third Annual Meeting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935960","wordCount":28184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHELLE SMITH"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07b34926-e28b-33d6-88a8-a45cc9a3bc39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44176048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Interment: Re-framing the Death of the Red Location Museum Building (2006 \u2013 2013)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44176048","wordCount":10449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"42","publisher":"University of Western Cape","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The design and construction of the Red Location Precinct was the culmination of a national architectural competition, the first outcome of which was the Red Location Museum. Situated in New Brighton, Port Elizabeth, the materiality of the township impressed itself on the factory-styled museum building. However, the residents of New Brighton were not unanimously in favour of the building of a cultural precinct and museum, and through a number of protests, closed down the museum. Renaming it 'a house for dead people', the community began to disassemble the museum building. The museum is now a ruin, its frame decomposing. Rather than staging the porousness between an inside and an outside of the museum \u2013 and between the past and present, the real and the simulated, the living and the dead \u2013 as a problem to be worked out in dialogue, the museum has, by framing the struggle against apartheid commemoratively, incorporated the residents of New Brighton into what is called here a 'mortificationary complex'. This article elaborates the concept of the frame as it works through the displays within the Red Location Museum and its building, reframed by Simon Gush's installation, Red. Juxtaposing Red and the Red Location Museum allows the affects and effects of this artwork to seep beyond the confines of the events with which it explicitly grapples. Through the concept of the frame, this encounter asks that we rethink the materiality of the photograph, the commemoration of the struggle against apartheid, and the ways in which death marks the sights and sites of public history in museums after 1994.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto Mangabeira Unger"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fe54c1e-8e72-3380-95cd-4efbf3b01459"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":115.0,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Critical Legal Studies Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341032","wordCount":49546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"96","abstract":"This Article represents a revised and expanded version of a talk given at the Sixth Annual Conference on Critical Legal Studies, which was held at Harvard Law School in March 1982.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6c23d34-d97b-3dad-8239-f623b9389da2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Law - 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Civil law"],"title":"IMPORTANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE YEAR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20767779","wordCount":175316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrian Anagnost"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26430782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849883"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5320227b-061d-3a5a-870c-0b7c234cea6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26430782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 7: Responsive Education: Enabling Transformative Engagements with Transitions in Global\/National Imperatives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979302","wordCount":8291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"280","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jen Boyle"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jearlmodcultstud.13.4.79","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daec05af-30b3-3666-9a18-0659f0ee571a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jearlmodcultstud.13.4.79"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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While labour has not been replaced as the most important means of economic and cultural participation, the social construction of personal individuality is seen to take place through an ever-increasing multitude of means of consumption. The article analyses this profound process of cultural change and at the same time reflects upon the opportunities and limits of the current scholarly paradigm concerning the consumer society. Le sujet de cette \u00e9tude est la relation ambigu\u00eb et contradictoire entre le travail, la consommation et l'individualit\u00e9 dans la culture moderne de masse: relation qui se conceptualise diff\u00e9remment dans les visions am\u00e9ricaine et europ\u00e9enne de l'individualit\u00e9. Dans les ann\u00e9es r\u00e9centes, le scepticisme traditionnel des Europ\u00e9ens (et surtout des Allemands) en ce qui concerne la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 de consommation, nourri par des influences conservatrices, (n\u00e9o) lib\u00e9rales et marxistes, a d\u00fb c\u00e9der devant l'acceptation g\u00e9n\u00e9rale du consum\u00e9risme moderne. Sans que le travail ait perdu sa place comme la grande clef de participation \u00e9conomique et culturelle, la construction sociale de l'individu peut maintenant se baser sur une multitude toujours croissante de moyens de consommation. L'article se fonde sur ce processus de changement culturel profond et en m\u00eame temps, contemple les possibilit\u00e9s et les limitations du paradigme construit par les chercheurs contemporains pour repr\u00e9senter la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 de consommation. Gegenstand dieses Artikels ist der vieldeutig-widerspr\u00fcchliche Zusammenhang zwischen Arbeit, Konsum und Individualit\u00e4t in der modernen Massenkultur, der sich Europa und in den USA in jeweils unterschiedlicher Weise konzeptualisiert wurde. Die kontinentaleurop\u00e4ische und insbesondere deutsche Tradition war lange Zeit von einem tiefgreifenden, kulturpessimistisch grundierten Skeptizismus gegen\u00fcber der Konsumgesellschaft charakterisiert, der sich sowohl aus b\u00fcrgerlich-konservativen wie aus marxistischen Wurzeln speiste. In den letzten Jahrzehnten ist dieser Skeptizismus zugunsten einer weitgehenden Akzeptanz des modernen consumerism zur\u00fcckgetreten. Obwohl die Erwerbsarbeit noch immer das entscheidende Eingangstor zur kulturellen Partizipation bildet, vollzieht sich die soziale Konstruktion von Individualit\u00e4t doch immer st\u00e4rker durch eine stetig zunehmende Vielfalt von Konsumm\u00f6glichkeiten. Der Beitrag analysiert diese tiefgreifende kulturelle Ver\u00e4nderung und verkn\u00fcpft sie mit \u00dcberlegungen zu den M\u00f6glichkeiten und Grenzen des in der Forschung aktuellen Paradigmas der Konsumgesellschaft.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Dator","Dick Pratt","Yongseok Seo"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3zp081.28","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780824829506"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e754283-ba1f-32ab-a8c3-cd69ade8e818"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3zp081.28"}],"isPartOf":"Fairness, Globalization, and Public Institutions","keyphrase":["cultural","east asian","cultural industry","asian values","cultural policy","tomooka kanno","japanese","korean","japanese cultural","cultural products"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"319","pagination":"319-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"East Asian Response to the Globalization of Culture:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3zp081.28","wordCount":7471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This chapter focuses on East Asia\u2019s responses to a particular aspect of globalization, namely the globalization of culture. While that response is manifested in many ways, consideration is given mainly to the cultural policies of national governments.Changes in East Asian perceptions of culture from the late nineteenth century onward will first be examined and compared. How these perceptional changes were articulated in the cultural policies of various government bodies in selected East Asian states is then discussed. At the end of the chapter, the effectiveness and durability of state subsidization of culture and other cultural policies is briefly explored.","subTitle":"Perceptional Change and Cultural Policy","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Meyer Spacks"],"datePublished":"1983-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41398596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6c71fe3-e486-31c3-8275-78dfe60c35b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41398596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"813","pageStart":"791","pagination":"pp. 791-813","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Borderlands: Letters and Gossip","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41398596","wordCount":9904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on Behalf of the University of Georgia and the Georgia Review","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandra Keller","Frazer Ward"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca966454-8cfd-38fa-8276-6e63eacc3ad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3877760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Matthew Barney and the Paradox of the Neo-Avant-Garde Blockbuster","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3877760","wordCount":7752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"Analyzing the connections between Matthew Barney's Cremaster series and a double genealogy-performance art of the 1960s and 1970s and blockbuster film and museum culture-this essay argues that the series' investment in the blockbuster serves to spectacularize performance in ways that undermine its historical relations to protest culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-10-23","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1687364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a5cf54e-2a28-35e5-9981-f109ec920794"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1687364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1687364","wordCount":7947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4519","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"214","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1849232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a592071-fad5-3393-8c7f-ab14543fe855"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1849232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1849232","wordCount":39438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"73","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacob J. Goldberg"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30bd9576-39c6-3486-ab93-a910a47bb720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Corporate Capital and the Techniques of Modernity: Problems in the Mass Production of Space, Image, and Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425385","wordCount":10462,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[13769,14004]],"Locations in B":[[59411,59641]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"48","abstract":"This article seeks to accomplish two tasks. The first is to employ a materialist approach to the study of architecture that emphasizes the nature of practice as a set of techniques within history, rather than emphasizing the form of the finished work. The second task is to study the implications of the corporate franchise for the practice of architecture and for the landscape and to argue that this particular device has participated in the establishment of a new category of architectural production, that is, a mass production of architecture. The article also suggests that such mass production has created a new physical context--accessible networks of accommodation--that serves to fulfill a vision of the United States as a complex, integrated market.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FLORENCE BERNAULT"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09df6d91-d169-35d5-9637-474886f5ff5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"779","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-779","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Aesthetics of Acquisition: Notes on the Transactional Life of Persons and Things in Gabon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908370","wordCount":13357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","volumeNumber":"57","abstract":"Based on a historical study of older and newer visual regimes in Gabon, Equatorial Africa, this paper examines spectacles as world-manufacturing processes that produce and circulate assets. Visual and aesthetic strategies have often been analyzed as technologies of the self that transform and manifest people's identities. I show here that they also work as a means to create resources and put them into motion. The notion of \"aesthetics of acquisition\" helps to capture the dynamic energy of visual events and reinsert them into the realms of economic production and material exchange. If spectacles allow people to acquire riches, produce new statuses, and circulate resources, I argue, the process through which this occurs cannot be analytically reduced to a mere commodification of the person. Instead, I explain how aesthetics of acquisition enable institutional and social actors to assume temporary commodity status, a moment and a strategy that I call \"transactional life.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL A. NOVAK"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85410045-0b83-3ed1-a691-f41ee1862ee9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23128732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Labors of Likeness: Photography and Labor in Marx's \"Capital\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128732","wordCount":12499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan M. Hoem","Gerda Neyer","Gunnar Andersson"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14359871"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43714181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4335ff59-7593-3c59-9d0e-64550de50ec8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26347896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"demorese"}],"isPartOf":"Demographic Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Education and childlessness The relationship between educational field, educational level, and childlessness among Swedish women born in 1955-59","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26347896","wordCount":20047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Max-Planck-Gesellschaft zur Foerderung der Wissenschaften","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"In this paper we extend the concept of educational attainment to cover the field of education taken in addition to the conventional level of education attained. Our empirical investigation uses register records containing childbearing and educational histories of an entire cohort of women born in Sweden (about a quarter-million individuals). This allows us to operate with a high number of educational field-and-level combinations (some sixty in all). It turns out that the field of education serves as an indicator of a woman\u2019s potential reproductive behavior better than the mere level attained. We discover that in each field permanent childlessness increases some with the educational level, but that the field itself is the more important. In general, we find that women educated for jobs in teaching and health care are in a class of their own, with much lower permanent childlessness at each educational level than in any other major grouping. Women educated in arts and humanities or for religious occupations have unusually high fractions permanently childless. Our results cast doubt on the assumption that higher education per se must result in higher childlessness. In our opinion, several factors intrinsic and extrinsic to an educational system (such as its flexibility, its gender structure, and the manner in which education is hooked up to the labor market) may influence the relationship between education and childlessness, and we would not expect a simple, unidirectional relationship.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4533421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00057959"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44487265"},{"name":"lccn","value":"238520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b6333fe-995c-3124-8a30-09e96098d3fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4533421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"behaviour"}],"isPartOf":"Behaviour","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":300.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Cumulative Abstract Index to Behaviour, Part 1: Volumes 1-40","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4533421","wordCount":195015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Ray"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68f0a958-68d9-3083-86ea-afc2327cd2dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Robert Ray Responds to Leland Poague's \"All I Can See Is the Flags': \"Fort Apache\" and the Visibility of History\" (\"Cinema Journal,\" Winter 1988)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225291","wordCount":2498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Texas Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sun-ah Choi"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e9a3659-43cd-3485-9559-20fcb0c1a854"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43947750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"364","pagination":"pp. 364-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Zhenrong to Ruixiang: The Medieval Chinese Reception of the Mah\u0101bodhi Buddha Statue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43947750","wordCount":18831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":"Two related historical trajectories surround the medieval Chinese reception of the Buddha statue at the Mah\u0101bodhi Temple in Bodhgay\u0101, India: first, the shift in the perception of the ontological status of the image from \"as if real\" to the \"real,\" and second, the transmission and the subsequent replication of the foreign image in China as ruixiang, or an auspicious image. While the awareness of the Indian prototype as substituting the real presence of the Buddha grew stronger, the medieval Chinese produced ruixiang as a material mediation of the divine presence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred Novak"],"datePublished":"1971-05-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1295791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00063568"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41477721"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05a5210d-6086-3e7f-9030-05a0e65de09b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1295791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bioscience"}],"isPartOf":"BioScience","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Boerhaave: Three Chairs to Oblivion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1295791","wordCount":4158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"American Institute of Biological Sciences","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard H. Millington"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"717","pageStart":"689","pagination":"pp. 689-717","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Willa Cather and \"The Storyteller\": Hostility to the Novel in My \u00c1ntonia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927694","wordCount":13147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1921-08-20","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25589831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1921,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 19, no. 39","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25589831","wordCount":14674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"39","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Wilson"],"datePublished":"2014-11-21","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/narrcult.1.2.0125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21690235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20d33e97-64eb-36ac-bafc-f278ecbf98e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/narrcult.1.2.0125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrcult"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cAnother Fine Mess\u201d: The Condition of Storytelling in the Digital Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/narrcult.1.2.0125","wordCount":7246,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Rothstein"],"datePublished":"1988-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d722750-7943-359b-bf85-fa8ac0657e6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/438362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"609","pageStart":"588","pagination":"pp. 588-609","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Organicism,\" Rupturalism, and Ism-ism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438362","wordCount":12508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA JACOBUS"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a3b6de5-d699-3359-b9e9-339292f5b07e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44972830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Propria Figura\": The Advent of Facsimile Portraiture in Italian Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44972830","wordCount":21350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":"Scrutiny of two medieval portraits shows that they are \"facsimile portraits,\" exploiting mechanical means of reproduction with the intention of capturing and re-creating exact physical likeness. Through the development of a new kind of portraiture the artists, their patron Enrico Scrovegni, and the early humanist Albertino Mussato expressed a particular historical consciousness arising within their specific cultural milieu. The discovery challenges prevailing ideas about medieval concepts of likeness, prompting revision of accepted histories of portraiture. Establishing the category \"facsimile portraiture\" and employing methods of close observation may also help to nuance historical understanding of portraiture beyond the medieval period.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1956-08-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3143767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003049X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13c1dde4-f1b4-35b1-a89e-cbef1ff02b99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3143767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Catalogue of Franklin Exhibition in the Library of Congress","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3143767","wordCount":19323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard I. 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Quintessentially human and yet ineffably ghostly, of the body and yet disembodied, the mechanically reproduced voice echoes the paradoxical condition of the alienated modern subject.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. 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In this article I examine language, actions, and interactions in a multidisciplinary team of biomedical specialists whose members meet routinely to visually interpret and assess such images. Convened behind the scenes, in a conference room from which patients are excluded, these meetings are examined as privileged performances in which team members exercise their visual faculties and interpretive skills to address issues that include their statuses and reputations, and to politically position themselves and their specialties. Ethnographic data derived from close observation of 23 such diagnostic meetings are presented. I suggest that problems posed by the attempt to synthesize information from diagnostic images serve as vehicles for evaluating or \"diagnosing\" the professional capabilities and \"image\" of the participating physicians. Team-based divisions and attempts to reassert challenged autonomies also characterize this socially oriented diagnostic process.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Robert Leo"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6aec398e-521c-3164-a50e-b6f8133e6d45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 46-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Landscape, Consumption, Redemption: Thomas Moran's \"Mountain of the Holy Cross\" and the Signifying of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684104","wordCount":12312,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[13039,13524],[13769,14004]],"Locations in B":[[4652,5140],[5149,5379]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bo Earle"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8feb830b-f6f4-35ca-bb3a-74f54b53fd22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27669230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Putting the Dialectic back in \"Negative Dialectics\": Modern Melancholia and Adornian Ethical Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27669230","wordCount":8878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"104","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. 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He traces how photography and recording have precipitated changes and hastened the natural evolution of new forms in art and music by allowing artists to document their compositions and distribute them to wider audiences. The author then examines technology's deeper influences, as seen in audience receptivity to new art and in the changing relationships of artists and composers to their crafts. As composers and artists respond to technology--by adapting their art for recording, incorporating technology into their works, or developing new forms that cannot be recorded or will not compete with the products of technology--art and the artist are redefined.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER LAMARQUE"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Uselessness of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793262","wordCount":7809,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,202]],"Locations in B":[[41761,41841]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44091393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09277544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57b856de-94fe-3ee4-8ef0-5b565b4f8948"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44091393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrealestalite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Real Estate Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational resources","Education - Formal education","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44091393","wordCount":3526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Real Estate Society","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Luban"],"datePublished":"1986-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3fc256e-b2b0-315d-8c93-59d520603a1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1288942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"1695","pageStart":"1656","pagination":"pp. 1656-1695","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Legal Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288942","wordCount":17301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert R. 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This is for the most part also true of his letters and diaries; nonetheless, his vividly visual and gestural prose shows a close kinship to forms and techniques silent cinema, which he dismissed late in his life as a \"marvelous toy.\" This paper explores how aspects of his late, overtly autobiographical and retrospective story, Investigations of a Dog (1922) evinces the subliminal impact of cinematic experience upon the formative period of writing that preceded his creative breakthrough in 1912. the story also marks the culmination of one of Kafka's major thematic concerns-food and hunger-which the canine narrator, who is a nutritional scientist, links to his pubescent encounter with a troupe of dancing dogs whose silent apparitional nature, I content, allude to the vestigial presence of cinematic experience in Kafka's fiction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Heller","Burt Kimmelman"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42944041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Conversation about Living Root Between Michael Heller and Burt Kimmelman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42944041","wordCount":2580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Purdue University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle Bloom"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64fbf13a-89d2-3d5a-8a91-3f6dbfc6a33e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Transnational Chinese Cinema with a French Twist: Emily Tang Xiaobai's \"Conjugation\" and Jia Zhangke's \"The World\" as Sinofrench Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491013","wordCount":17437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alla Efimova"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b26a094-712e-339a-8cce-0ef602d7f03d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3045922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"692","pageStart":"690","pagination":"pp. 690-692","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045922","wordCount":3256,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[56081,56191]],"Locations in B":[[13481,13591]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. 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Parsons"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed5a52a0-2e98-346d-ab96-049efd721c59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20718888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Utopia and Charismatic Legitimacy: A Weberian Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718888","wordCount":5059,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9592]],"Locations in B":[[10235,10658]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Mareel"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24244969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03610160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076136"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77dce729-6d1c-3cd9-bd65-f3010811ad63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24244969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sixtcentj"}],"isPartOf":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1035","pageStart":"1013","pagination":"pp. 1013-1035","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"In the Book of Life: Manuscript, \"Memoria\", and Community in Eduard de Dene's \"Testament Rhetoricael\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24244969","wordCount":10780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sixteenth Century Journal","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":"This essay investigates why the Testament Rhetoricael (Bruges, 1562), a large collection of poems and songs by Eduard de Dene, a prominent sixteenth-century rhetorician (rederijker) from the city of Bruges, has been preserved in manuscript instead of print. By discussing the links made by the poet between his text and the biblical image of the Book of Life, it is argued that for an early modern author like De Dene, the act of writing and its material result, the manuscript, could be a more than purely functional tool. By means of the Testament Rhetoricael the essay shows that the associations called up by the act of writing and the handwritten text could constitute an important motive for the use of the manuscript medium.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41256121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dca3ddee-bf90-350e-88c4-9bb986766804"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41256121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"799","pageStart":"791","pagination":"pp. 791-799","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Chapter I\u2014Early History of Water Measurement and the Development of Meters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41256121","wordCount":4398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2094126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb237048-54de-3056-bb0f-6ddbfb58975d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2094126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"LVI","pageStart":"I","pagination":"pp. I-LVI","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Ecology","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2094126","wordCount":17842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Raybin"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00092002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f362a657-822a-33c6-b432-b90ed3025474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25094224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chaucerrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Chaucer Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Wommen, of Kynde, Desiren Libertee\": Rereading Dorigen, Rereading Marriage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25094224","wordCount":10604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. 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Art history"],"title":"DOUBLE VISIONS AND AESTHETICS OF THE MIGRATORY IN ALEKSANDAR HEMON'S \"THE LAZARUS PROJECT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23757942","wordCount":9542,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43187,43258]],"Locations in B":[[14052,14123]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Hanke"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bd0029e-f752-3b5b-8c57-09ff2ea8d611"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Biggins","Shankar Srinivas"],"datePublished":"2018-10-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26532186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00278424"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43473694"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae2f30c3-27b2-3233-8f31-d34257108d26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26532186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procnatiacadscie"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"10380","pageStart":"10375","pagination":"pp. 10375-10380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Mechanics of mouse blastocyst hatching revealed by a hydrogel-based microdeformation assay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26532186","wordCount":7848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"41","publisher":"National Academy of Sciences","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":"Mammalian embryos are surrounded by an acellular shell, the zona pellucida. Hatching out of the zona is crucial for implantation and continued development of the embryo. Clinically, problems in hatching can contribute to failure in assisted reproductive intervention. Although hatching is fundamentally a mechanical process, due to limitations in methodology most studies focus on its biochemical properties. To understand the role of mechanical forces in hatching, we developed a hydrogel deformation-based method and analytical approach for measuring pressure in cyst-like tissues. Using this approach, we found that, in cultured blastocysts, pressure increased linearly, with intermittent falls. Inhibition of Na\/K-ATPase led to a dosage-dependent reduction in blastocyst cavity pressure, consistent with its requirement for cavity formation. Reducing blastocyst pressure reduced the probability of hatching, highlighting the importance of mechanical forces in hatching. These measurements allowed us to infer details of microphysiology such as osmolarity, ion and water transport kinetics across the trophectoderm, and zona stiffness, allowing us to model the embryo as a thin-shell pressure vessel. We applied this technique to test whether cryopreservation, a process commonly used in assisted reproductive technology (ART), leads to alteration of the embryo and found that thawed embryos generated significantly lower pressure than fresh embryos, a previously unknown effect of cryopreservation. We show that reduced pressure is linked to delayed hatching. Our approach can be used to optimize in vitro fertilization (IVF) using precise measurement of embryo microphysiology. It is also applicable to other biological systems involving cavity formation, providing an approach for measuring forces in diverse contexts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. P. PARK"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a64f410-93b4-3d1f-b180-383afc94abdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41415381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artibusasiae"}],"isPartOf":"Artibus Asiae","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE ART OF BEING ARTISTIC: PAINTING MANUALS OF LATE MING CHINA (1550-1644) AND THE NEGOTIATION OF TASTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415381","wordCount":19193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Artibus Asiae Publishers","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ananya Roy"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26001856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14730952"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a568abad-7b61-3803-a16e-d87d61061048"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26001856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"planningtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Planning Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PRAXIS IN THE TIME OF EMPIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26001856","wordCount":10661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"In the time of war and military occupation, it is possible for planning to articulate an ethics of disavowal and refusal. However, when empire involves much more than war, when empire also involves reconstruction, renewal, aid, and democracy, then it is much more difficult for planning to opt out of this liberal moral order. Situated at the heart of empire, that is, in America, this article explores some of these dilemmas of praxis and thereby the limits of liberalism. Drawing upon Marxist theory, cultural studies, and postcolonial critique, it makes a case for an ethics of 'doubleness', one where benevolence can be recognized as Othering but also where complicity can be transformed into subversion.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dale Tomich"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1811fd8a-7ebd-3805-93c3-5047bc5d0a91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1458","pageStart":"1456","pagination":"pp. 1456-1458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231097","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64ddd332-0ed4-3044-a51e-c8aa532b0256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41207542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The American Scholar","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"553","pageStart":"544","pagination":"pp. 544-553","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Significant Science Books 1976-1977","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41207542","wordCount":6101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Phi Beta Kappa Society","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam B. 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Egerton"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/bullecosociamer.94.1.36","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d7599f0-9347-348d-90df-fd1a3fe2f2b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/bullecosociamer.94.1.36"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"History of Ecological Sciences, Part 45: Ecological Aspects of Entomology During the 1800s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/bullecosociamer.94.1.36","wordCount":23784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"94","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth F. Emens"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236898"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b7d306a-355f-30b6-9db1-f676e0f23e86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":84.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Compulsory Sexuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246965","wordCount":40781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Stanford Law Review","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":"Asexuality is art emerging identity category that challenges the common assumption that everyone is defined by some type of sexual attraction. Asexuals\u2014 those who report feeling no sexual attraction to others\u2014constitute one percent of the population, according to one prominent study. In recent years, some individuals have begun to identify as asexual and to connect around their experiences interacting with a sexual society. Asexuality has also become a protected classification under the antidiscrimination law of one state and several localities, but legal scholarship has thus far neglected the subject. This Article introduces asexuality to the legal literature as a category of analysis, an object of empirical study, and a phenomenon of medical science. It then offers a close examination of the growing community of self-identified asexuals. Asexual identity has revealing intersections with the more familiar categories of gender, sexual orientation, and disability, and inspires new models for understanding sexuality. Thinking about asexuality also sheds light on our legal system. Ours is arguably a sexual law, predicated on the assumption that sex is important. This Article uses asexuality to develop a framework for identifying the ways that law privileges sexuality. Across various fields, these interactions include legal requirements of sexual activity, special carve-outs to shield sexuality from law, legal protections from others ' sexuality, and legal protections for sexual identity. Applying this framework, the Article traces several ways that our sexual law burdens, and occasionally benefits, asexuals. This Article concludes by closely examining asexuality's prospects for broader inclusion into federal, state, and local antidiscrimination laws.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane\u00a0M. Gaines"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/421882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b92178a8-cb7e-3e77-9c8d-f30880b671cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/421882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"1317","pageStart":"1293","pagination":"pp. 1293-1317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"First Fictions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/421882","wordCount":9430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16504,16622]],"Locations in B":[[48426,48544]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danille Elise Christensen"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1328f57e-6b73-35f4-8dce-d759f1ef3ca9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Materializing the Everyday: \u201cSafe\u201d Scrapbooks, Aesthetic Mess, and the Rhetorics of Workmanship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.3.04","wordCount":20065,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[4,68]],"Locations in B":[[116601,116673]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"Like most political engagements, handcrafted book genres may share broad common goals but differ in philosophies of action and articulation\u2014how they take shape matters. Two distinct orientations emerge from scrapbooks at the turn of the millennium. In the 1990s and early 2000s many scrapbook makers embraced material durability and aesthetic regularity, favoring a workmanship of certainty that ensured a maximally stable, coherent, and coordinated arrangement of commodities. Soon, other makers pushed back with an alternate approach, advocating the kind of ephemeral presence and risky workmanship associated with third-wave zines. This mode of making asserts meaning through the unexpected encounter, the intentional chaos that frames the viewing moment as a mode of \u201coccasion.\u201d Despite rhetorical differences that emerge from these philosophies of workmanship and aesthetic expression, neither \u201ctraditional\u201d scrapbooks nor those modeled on zines entirely jettison the comfort associated with the everyday content they document. In fact, in the act of claiming regard for perspectives and activities not generally considered noteworthy, the makers of these books question\u2014by means of material choices\u2014dominant systems of attention and interaction.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Hoberman"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10809317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aa6ea2b-0e91-3ea6-ab43-11c900b22acb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24906571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"woolstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Woolf Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aesthetic Taste, Kitsch, and \"The Years\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24906571","wordCount":9872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pace University Press","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1951-12-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1679411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"686669c4-e5c9-3cdc-8195-3a99a6fde7bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1679411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"702","pageStart":"699","pagination":"pp. 699-702","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1951,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"News and Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1679411","wordCount":3540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"news","issueNumber":"2974","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Mehlman"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Baudelaire with Freud: Theory and Pain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464607","wordCount":6921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt9qfv6g.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acb02d75-becb-3355-adfc-0f2f8e61915c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt9qfv6g.10"}],"isPartOf":"Genders 22","keyphrase":["pornography","betwee","russia","andrei","wester","accordin","visual","explici","throug","new members"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"164","pagination":"164-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"New Members and Organs:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt9qfv6g.10","wordCount":19096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Until perestroika, finding pornography in Moscow was less likely than encountering a singing nun at a bazaar. Yet by 1990Moscow News<\/em>reported a lively trade in girlie magazines at newsstands, an adolescent complained in print about the pornographic videos inundating the city, and metro stations and dashboards of taxis routinely displayed pictures of women wearing only a pout or a smile.\u00b9 Public reactions to the relentless omnipresence of naked flesh pressured Gorbachev, in fact, on 5 December 1990 to establish a commission charged with elaborating measures to safeguard the country\u2019s morality. Anyone curious about the effectiveness of that official","subTitle":"The Politics of Porn","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Bullock"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee49badc-d128-3f84-b42b-68e0c625f58f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20709238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Teaching Mass Culture: An Introductory Reading List","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709238","wordCount":3971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"15","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26455672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e939b42-a895-3a37-8f37-ca2a2ca868d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26455672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":271.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xxx, 1-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26455672","wordCount":187487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Robinson","Keith R. Thompson"],"datePublished":"1970-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/876394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4d573bb-4ebf-3e0f-a0cf-626c4243b962"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/876394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"507","pageStart":"497","pagination":"pp. 497-507","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Matthew Boulton's Mechanical Paintings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/876394","wordCount":9105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"809","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karlijn De Jongh","Jeanette Doyle"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02639475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61146881"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-236008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2e2d760-db44-3912-b4a4-c55c87a0c422"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25564973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"circa"}],"isPartOf":"Circa","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Space of Inevitability: An Interview with Jeanette Doyle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25564973","wordCount":3543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"126","publisher":"Circa Art Magazine","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Everett K. Wilson"],"datePublished":"1972-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fe97aab-aab1-3263-8505-080fa3f73104"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24026152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":208.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-xiv, 1-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"SOCIAL FORCES \/ 1922-1972: CUMULATIVE INDEX: VOLUMES 1 - 50","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026152","wordCount":129881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Rosen"],"datePublished":"1981-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72d94861-5c95-375c-9aa5-e4df4b4d8c83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Politics of the Sign and Film Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778246","wordCount":8222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUCIA ALLAIS"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a45515ba-09f2-3c49-90c2-5ee05b3b30b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23360985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Integrities: The Salvage of Abu Simbel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23360985","wordCount":17661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"50","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriela Polit Due\u00f1as"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b68a965b-948b-3df8-b3b4-d59d73c00ea2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26743788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"874","pagination":"pp. 874-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Falling into Silence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26743788","wordCount":10484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Based on a case study of Colombian journalist Patricia Nieto, who has written extensively about Colombia\u2019s armed conflict, this article offers a new approach to understanding demands on journalists and challenges that face them when covering the effects of violence and trauma. The analysis focuses on the prologues Nieto wrote for the edited volumes of testimonies that she and her students put together. The books were product of a collective endeavor by which Nieto and her students guided and helped victims and survivors of violence to write their own stories. In the prologues to these volumes, Nieto\u2019s reflections place politics and aesthetics close together in discussing the act of writing as the search for an inner voice to reconstruct the events that transformed someone into a victim. To understand the process of working with the victims, the article combines textual analysis and ethnographic fieldwork. It analyzes Nieto\u2019s professional trajectory and her position in the local field of journalistic production, considering her emotional and ethical quest when covering her country\u2019s armed conflict. Con el an\u00e1lisis del trabajo de Patricia Nieto, quien ha escrito profusamente sobre el conflicto armado en Colombia, este art\u00edculo procura entender las demandas y los retos que enfrentan los periodistas que escriben sobre los efectos de la violencia y el trauma. El an\u00e1lisis se centra en los pr\u00f3logos que Nieto escribi\u00f3 para tres antolog\u00edas de testimonios de las v\u00edctimas que ella y sus estudiantes editaron. Las antolog\u00edas son fruto de un emprendimiento colectivo en el que Nieto y sus estudiantes sirvieron de gu\u00edas y ayudaron a las v\u00edctimas y sobrevivientes de la violencia a escribir sus historias. En los pr\u00f3logos a estos vol\u00famenes, Nieto vincula la pol\u00edtica con la indagaci\u00f3n est\u00e9tica y habla de la escritura como la b\u00fasqueda de una voz personal, con la que el narrador cuenta el evento que lo transform\u00f3 en v\u00edctima del conflicto. Para entender este proceso, este ensayo combina el an\u00e1lisis textual con observaciones etnogr\u00e1ficas sobre el trabajo de Nieto, incorpora, datos de su trayectoria profesional y su posici\u00f3n en el campo cultural local. As\u00ed mismo, ofrece observaciones sobre las demandas emocionales y \u00e9ticas que definen el trabajo de la cronista.","subTitle":"or, The Reach and Limits of Reporting Horror in Patricia Nieto\u2019s Work","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24489858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00255521"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54385218"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008247685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"feecdaa3-6044-3f65-b11d-702a9ac7a1ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24489858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mathscan"}],"isPartOf":"Mathematica Scandinavica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"BOOKS RECEIVED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24489858","wordCount":32196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Mathematica Scandinavica","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl Figlio"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"367e7e89-1d4e-3f33-aa03-ab56f0e24092"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"617","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-617","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHLOROSIS AND CHRONIC DISEASE IN 19TH-CENTURY BRITAIN: THE SOCIAL CONSTITUTION OF SOMATIC ILLNESS IN A CAPITALIST SOCIETY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130811","wordCount":16363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"This paper is informed by the recent attempts to construct Marxist views of nature, by the lively historical work on 19th-century British class structure, and by the dedicated work of feminist historians of medicine. Using the common disease of adolescent girls, chlorosis, as an example of a real \"physical\" illness, I shall argue that disease is, in part, socially constructed. Not only is the social class of both doctor and patient an important determinant in the perception of illness, but so too is the relationship between the disease and the mode of production. Both the \"existence\" of chlorosis and the way it was understood served ideologically to conceal the growing importance of adolescent labor and the recognition of the social genesis of illness. In doing so, chlorosis was similar to other forms of chronic illness. In a time when the conditions of work were strikingly insalubrious, the etiological emphasis was on individual failure, not on physical or social conditions of work. I argue that notions of health and disease partake of the struggles and social relations of the society that sustains them, but in a way which hides that very social nature. In this sense, they are like Marx's concept of a commodity-and in being a commodity, diseases appear not to embody social relations, but rather to be part of nature. I suggest that we see this \"nature\" in part as a commodity fetish-something we construct as \"other\" for a reason-and that we rediscover the social in the natural.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1249677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1498257-fb40-3065-8023-cda572363cf3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1249677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmarketing"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Marketing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Marketing & Advertising"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business operations"],"title":"Marketing Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1249677","wordCount":17056,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Marketing Association","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel E. Perry"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/histmemo.28.2.0089","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dbcd407-e16f-3137-ab18-6016d59d1142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/histmemo.28.2.0089"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Holocaust Hospitality: Michal Rovner's Living Landscape<\/em> at Yad Vashem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/histmemo.28.2.0089","wordCount":12372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Michal Rovner's Living Landscape is the first \u201cexhibit\u201d in the new Holocaust History museum at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. A permanent, site-specific, multimedia installation woven from found footage of prewar Jewish life in Europe, it covers the entire thirteen-meter high, triangular southern wall of the museum, occupying one of the most important spaces in the museum. This article considers the poetics and polemics of Living Landscape through the concept of hospitality theorized by Emmanuel Levinas and Jacques Derrida. Not only does the piece welcome us into the museum, it also thematizes hospitality in returning to the motifs of home\/land and the address\/greeting. Positioning its viewers alternately as host and guest, it presses us to an ethical reflection on our relationship to the history and memory of the Holocaust and its victims.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JARED GARDNER"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"AUTOGRAPHY'S BIOGRAPHY, 1972\u20142007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540919","wordCount":10302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"This essay studies the development of the autobiographic comic, beginning in 1972 with the pioneering work of Justin Green, Aline Kominsky, Harvey Pekar, and Art Spiegelman, and culminating in the contemporary work of graphic autobiographers such as Alison Bechdel, Phoebe Gloeckner, and Lynda Barry.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Rowan Beye"],"datePublished":"1981-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1770909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1770909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"280","pagination":"pp. 280-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1770909","wordCount":1536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans van Maanen"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0p3.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089641526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2c284e0-4ddb-3b98-9e26-e694cdb75032"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n0p3.6"}],"isPartOf":"How to Study Art Worlds","keyphrase":["bourdieu","capital","cultural","cultural capital","artistic","artistic field","positions","habitus","cultural production","agents"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"53","pagination":"53-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pierre Bourdieu\u2019s Grand Theory of the Artistic Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n0p3.6","wordCount":12260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Undoubtedly Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) was the most influential art sociologist of the second half of the twentieth century. Leaning on, although also attacking, the French neo-Marxist-structuralist tradition of the 1960s (Althusser,\u00b9 Hadjinicolaou, Macherey) he began his career with the critical study of education, in particular how educational systems reproduce class distinctions. In 1970 he wrote, together with Jean-Claude Passeron,R\u00e9production: \u00c9lements pour une th\u00e9orie du syst\u00e8me d\u2019enseignement<\/em>, which was translated into English in 1977 (Reproduction in Education, Society and Culture<\/em>) and reprinted in 1990. Bourdieu\u2019s lifelong themes \u2013 the character of social distinction and the processes of societal reproduction of","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce McComiskey"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866617","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e02fba0-fca7-36e5-b8ea-80793ec7379f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866617"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Visual Rhetoric and the New Public Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866617","wordCount":7361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"JAC","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donny Smith"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9eace990-27fd-3592-b673-139ade43046a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27949259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Surrogate vs. the Thing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949259","wordCount":4418,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8457,8602]],"Locations in B":[[678,823]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["bonnie lenore kyburz"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15349322"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43501721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstud"}],"isPartOf":"Composition Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Totally, Tenderly, Tragically\": Godard's Contempt and the Composition Qu'il y Aurait (that Might Have Been)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43501721","wordCount":8005,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17032,17110]],"Locations in B":[[1061,1139]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Cincinnati on behalf of Composition Studies","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben S. Bunting"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26569587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10760962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259735452"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008213757"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c775721-0ee9-34d5-9c0c-3b80ea2f9467"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26569587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudliteenvi"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"602","pagination":"pp. 602-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Humanities","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Alternative Wilderness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26569587","wordCount":9018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6582,6691]],"Locations in B":[[48534,48643]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":"How Urban Exploration Brings Wildness to the City","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind Jane Schonwald"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ea5a3cc-7fea-3df2-a155-28f720795dd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24119956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"799","pagination":"pp. 799-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Science and Mathematics","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Associated Press v. Meltwater US Holdings, Inc.: Fair Use, a Changing News Industry, and the Influence of Judicial Discretion and Custom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24119956","wordCount":14393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1249922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e774b574-4274-38d2-9de8-bbf47c6d0732"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1249922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmarketing"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Marketing","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Marketing & Advertising"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business operations","Economics - Economic disciplines","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Marketing Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1249922","wordCount":21599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Marketing Association","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew D. Adler"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba8b4d66-5461-3621-93f4-c29aa851cc02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4150613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":130.0,"pageEnd":"1250","pageStart":"1121","pagination":"pp. 1121-1250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Against \"Individual Risk\": A Sympathetic Critique of Risk Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4150613","wordCount":58243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","volumeNumber":"153","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-11-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3839494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d16aec3-c9ad-3955-807d-4c3f9df88ead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3839494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"1238","pageStart":"1199","pagination":"pp. 1199-1238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3839494","wordCount":39163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5699","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"306","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eli J. Finkel","Paul W. Eastwick","Benjamin R. Karney","Harry T. Reis","Susan Sprecher"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15291006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e81d7017-45f6-39e2-8ae0-bfd25c969632"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23484637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"psychscipubint"}],"isPartOf":"Psychological Science in the Public Interest","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Online Dating: A Critical Analysis From the Perspective of Psychological Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23484637","wordCount":58954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"Online dating sites frequently claim that they have fundamentally altered the dating landscape for the better. This article employs psychological science to examine (a) whether online dating is fundamentally different from conventional offline dating and (b) whether online dating promotes better romantic outcomes than conventional offline dating. The answer to the first question (uniqueness) is yes, and the answer to the second question (superiority) is yes and no. To understand how online dating fundamentally differs from conventional offline dating and the circumstances under which online dating promotes better romantic outcomes than conventional offline dating, we consider the three major services online dating sites offer: access, communication, and matching. Access refers to users' exposure to and opportunity to evaluate potential romantic partners they are otherwise unlikely to encounter. Communication refers to users' opportunity to use various forms of computer-mediated communication (CMC) to interact with specific potential partners through the dating site before meeting face-to-face. Matching refers to a site's use of a mathematical algorithm to select potential partners for users. Regarding the uniqueness question, the ways in which online dating sites implement these three services have indeed fundamentally altered the dating landscape. In particular, online dating, which has rapidly become a pervasive means of seeking potential partners, has altered both the romantic acquaintance process and the compatibility matching process. For example, rather than meeting potential partners, getting a snapshot impression of how well one interacts with them, and then slowly learning various facts about them, online dating typically involves learning a broad range of facts about potential partners before deciding whether one wants to meet them in person. Rather than relying on the intuition of village elders, family members, or friends or to select which pairs of unacquainted singles will be especially compatible, certain forms of online dating involve placing one's romantic fate in the hands of a mathematical matching algorithm. Turning to the superiority question, online dating has important advantages over conventional offline dating. For example, it offers unprecedented (and remarkably convenient) levels of access to potential partners, which is especially helpful for singles who might otherwise lack such access. It also allows online daters to use CMC to garner an initial sense of their compatibility with potential partners before deciding whether to meet them face-to-face. In addition, certain dating sites may be able to collect data that allow them to banish from the dating pool people who are likely to be poor relationship partners in general. On the other hand, the ways online dating sites typically implement the services of access, communication, and matching do not always improve romantic outcomes; indeed, they sometimes undermine such outcomes. Regarding access, encountering potential partners via online dating profiles reduces three-dimensional people to two-dimensional displays of information, and these displays fail to capture those experiential aspects of social interaction that are essential to evaluating one's compatibility with potential partners. In addition, the ready access to a large pool of potential partners can elicit an evaluative, assessment-oriented mindset that leads online daters to objectify potential partners and might even undermine their willingness to commit to one of them. It can also cause people to make lazy, ill-advised decisions when selecting among the large array of potential partners. Regarding communication, although online daters can benefit from having short-term CMC with potential partners before meeting them face-to-face, longer periods of CMC prior to a face-to-face meeting may actually hurt people's romantic prospects. In particular, people tend to overinterpret the social cues available in CMC, and if CMC proceeds unabated without a face-to-face reality check, subsequent face-to-face meetings can produce unpleasant expectancy violations. As CMC lacks the experiential richness of a face-to-face encounter, some important information about potential partners is impossible to glean from CMC alone; most users will want to meet a potential partner in person to integrate their CMC and face-to-face impressions into a coherent whole before pursuing a romantic relationship. Regarding matching, no compelling evidence supports matching sites' claims that mathematical algorithms work\u2014that they foster romantic outcomes that are superior to those fostered by other means of pairing partners. Part of the problem is that matching sites build their mathematical algorithms around principles\u2014typically similarity but also complementarity\u2014that are much less important to relationship well-being than has long been assumed. In addition, these sites are in a poor position to know how the two partners will grow and mature over time, what life circumstances they will confront and coping responses they will exhibit in the future, and how the dynamics of their interaction will ultimately promote or undermine romantic attraction and long-term relationship well-being. As such, it is unlikely that any matching algorithm that seeks to match two people based on information available before they are aware of each other can account for more than a very small proportion of the variance in long-term romantic outcomes, such as relationship satisfaction and stability. In short, online dating has radically altered the dating landscape since its inception 15 to 20 years ago. Some of the changes have improved romantic outcomes, but many have not. We conclude by (a) discussing the implications of online dating for how people think about romantic relationships and for homogamy (similarity of partners) in marriage and (b) offering recommendations for policymakers and for singles seeking to make the most out of their online dating endeavors.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TRENT SCHROYER"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40958872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ef22704-5335-380c-9cab-1fca130d04a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40958872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critique of the Instrumental Interest in Nature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40958872","wordCount":8690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The New School","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ron Broglio"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41552384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b28b8b0e-a361-3dd0-b6b0-0eec6b5b7cba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41552384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Recovering Art in the Language of Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41552384","wordCount":979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Dellaira"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94b7a4a3-b628-3941-b0a7-fb30047dce9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/833705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Some Recorded Thoughts on Recorded Objects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/833705","wordCount":6188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher D. Morris"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07195b11-d611-3049-b78c-8b4666655a16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777306","wordCount":2776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Allegheny College","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ayisha Abraham","Emily Apter","Maurice Berger","Victor Burgin","Juli Carson","Sarah Charlesworth","Rosalyn Deutsche","Johanna Drucker","Rainer Ganahl","Isabelle Graw","Ren\u00e9e Green","Liz Kotz","Sowon Kwon","Ewa Lajer-Burcharth","Ernest Larsen","Leone","MacDonald","Kate Linker","Adrian Piper","Yvonne Rainer","Arlene Raven","Susan Rubin Suleiman","Carolee Schneemann","Mary Anne Staniszewski","Lisa Tickner","Michele Wallace"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a772db12-e5b9-34ff-84d1-c06c0831c4be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Thirty-Sixth Annual Convention of the Midwest Modern Language Association","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315098","wordCount":28019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3434604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00916765"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35526936"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn96-47857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3434604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envihealpers"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Health Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"A321","pageStart":"A284","pagination":"pp. A284-A321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3434604","wordCount":14095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences","volumeNumber":"107","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LOUISE HORNBY"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40929605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e46645a-377d-38cf-8b2f-02776ed393d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40929605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Stillness and the Anticinematic in the Work of Fiona Tan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40929605","wordCount":9872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"41","publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Robertson"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9f07038-eb55-3c18-b57c-8cac14171f6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"996","pageStart":"970","pagination":"pp. 970-996","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mon Japon: The Revue Theater as a Technology of Japanese Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646395","wordCount":16438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"In this article I examine the role of the montage-like revue theater in dramatizing and aestheticizing Japanese imperial ideology in the first half of this century. The all-female Takarazuka Revue serves as an organizing framework for exploring the general pattern of theater-state relations during this time. I review intersections of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and nationalism on and off the revue stage together with the specific Japanese orientalism informing the imperialist project and the formation of national identity. As a technology of imperialism, the revue theater helped to bridge the gap between perceptions of colonized others and actual colonial encounters; it was one way of linking imperialist fantasies and colonial realities. [theater, imperialism, colonialism, orientalism, gender ideology, ethnicity, Japan]","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juliano Spyer"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d07.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22d52dfc-10f1-334d-a801-51af76f27a51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv550d07.12"}],"isPartOf":"M\u1f77dias sociais no Brasil emergente","keyphrase":["dispon\u00edvel","nova york","londres","youtube dispon\u00edvel","ci\u00eancias sociais","classe m\u00e9dia","londres ucl","g\u00eanero","cadernos pagu","revista"],"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"273","pagination":"273-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Refer\u00eancias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550d07.12","wordCount":6719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roann Barris"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b151173b-2d60-3f56-9982-ab4db15862b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Life of the Constructivist Theatrical Object","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819822","wordCount":10528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":"Focusing on three of Vsevelod Meierkhold's productions from the early 1920s, this essay argues that the role of constructivism in the theatre was not limited to the creation of the stage set or prototypical models for the accouterments of the new communist lifestyle. Because the constructivist theatrical object redefined function in terms of the relationship among the actor, the performance, and the audience, the constructivist object succeeded through its transformation into a conceptual network of performances.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William R. Buck","Lois Brako","Allison D. Slavick","Mark A. Wetter"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2996223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00409618"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446704"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57d4f5ad-e19f-3da7-9889-2e064659c152"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2996223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulltorrbotaclub"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Index to American Botanical Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2996223","wordCount":31131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Torrey Botanical Society","volumeNumber":"111","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TOM CLIFF"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24055764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20703449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c94d6c89-8528-31ff-a87a-bb37b978e65e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24055764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaperspective"}],"isPartOf":"China Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Peripheral Urbanism: Making history on China's northwest frontier","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24055764","wordCount":11391,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50052,50124]],"Locations in B":[[56696,56768]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3 (95)","publisher":"French Centre for Research on Contemporary China","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This paper analyses the motives, processes, and effects of urbanisation in Korla, a small but rapidly expanding city in northwest China, where the author conducted over two years of fieldwork. The paper aims to show that the historical monuments of the urban environment are physical manifestations of a stirring, and often violent, program of ideational and socio-economic change that is directed at the periphery and all of its residents \u2013 even as some of those residents are also posed as agents of the ongoing transformation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Holdengr\u00e4ber"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7e5171b-a051-3ad6-bccd-4d5a46b146c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25618636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Between the Profane and the Redemptive: The Collector as Possessor in Walter Benjamin's \"Passagen-Werk\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618636","wordCount":11485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Hines","Michael Smith"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24137355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0736623X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3204d99-30b8-3245-b498-fe9d066bd2a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24137355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eartsciehist"}],"isPartOf":"Earth Sciences History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Geography","Geology","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE RUSH STARTED HERE II: HARD ROCK GOLD MINING IN NORTH CAROLINA, 1825 TO 1864","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24137355","wordCount":18464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":"From 1799 until the early 1830s, North Carolina's Piedmont had rich surface and near-surface gold deposits. Land owning farmers were interested in improving their finances through gold mining in the slow seasons. Those unable to work their deposits leased them to neighbors or landless prospectors for additional income. Over this thirty year period, the surface placer deposits were exhausted and ended the casual off-season gold mining. Dabblers and fair-weather farmers turned miners became entrepreneurs who sought investors for the hard rock mining necessaries of labor, machinery and processing technology. State government stepped in to help them by liberalizing the terms of incorporation for mining companies. The government support of mining stock companies facilitated private profits and improved the state (and ultimately federal) money supply by adding specie and advancing industrialization in mining and, contagiously, other industries and services such as textiles and the railroads. North Carolina's early industrial leaders invested in mining stock companies. However, the heaviest investments came from Northeastern industrialists and European, especially English, mining firms that insisted upon skilled managers, labor and the best technology with which to develop their investment. Thus, a new breed of miner and mining and milling supervisor, usually immigrants from the northern states or abroad, came to dominate North Carolina's gold fields from 1825 to 1864.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernadette A. Lear"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10987371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227000"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30227389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bookhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Book History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Book History in \"Scarlet Letters\": The Beginning and Growth of a College Yearbook during the Gilded Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30227389","wordCount":14357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7493fe4-bf7c-388d-84f3-3f1635c2991d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"1216","pageStart":"1051","pagination":"pp. 1051-1216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Program of the 1984 Convention of the Modern Language Association of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462112","wordCount":78587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Genese Grill"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44077738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"635555851"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c1868aa-c966-3469-aebe-35a6f55a1264"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44077738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"563","pagination":"pp. 563-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Re-Materialization, Remoteness, and Reverence: A Critique of De-Materialization in Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44077738","wordCount":8608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Georgia Review","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1961-06-24","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20353900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a4b9c99-0185-3239-842c-de856b7a2e23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20353900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1961,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20353900","wordCount":68921,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5242","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kingsley R. 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Rather than being a product purely of discriminatory demand, however, many sex differences in occupational distribution are at least partially a result of an imbalance in supply. Sex differences in both temperament and cognitive ability, which are products of our evolutionary history, predispose men and women toward different occupational behavior. The tendency of men to predominate in fields imposing high quantitative demands, high physical risk, and low social demands, and the tendency of women to be drawn to less quantitatively demanding fields, safer jobs, and jobs with a higher social content are, at least in part, artifacts of an evolutionary history that has left the human species with a sexually dimorphic mind. These differences are proximately mediated by sex hormones.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine Pe\u00f1a"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3a7f6c6-42a2-3289-a9dd-1806a5e2a0e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"747","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-747","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond Mexico: Guadalupan Sacred Space Production and Mobilization in a Chicago Suburb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068522","wordCount":9776,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"60","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Winspur"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d8b5417-fd1f-31cd-be48-214f39472b99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Problem of Remains","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685250","wordCount":6619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brenton J. Malin"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40345611","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70b88ae7-a1c3-3b74-9ab7-f49700fd2511"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40345611"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"366","pagination":"pp. 366-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Mediating Emotion: Technology, Social Science, and Emotion in the Payne Fund Motion-Picture Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40345611","wordCount":11983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"50","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSS COLE"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26845313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89665d39-8f23-3b4b-b8ee-1a073b9d4eb9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26845313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Vernacular Song and the Folkloric Imagination at the Fin de Si\u00e8cle<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26845313","wordCount":15760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":"This article foregrounds discrepancies between vernacular singing in England and the work of London's Folk-Song Society during the 1890s. Figures such as Lucy Broadwood, Kate Lee, and Hubert Parry acted as gatekeepers through whom folk culture had to pass in order to be understood as such. Informed by colonialist epistemology, socialist radicalism, and literary Romanticism, what may be termed the \"folkloric imagination\" concealed the very thing it claimed to identify. Folk song, thus produced, represents the popular voice under erasure. Situated as the antidote to degeneration, burgeoning mass consumer culture, and escalating urbanization, the folk proved to be the perfect tabula rasa upon which the historiographical, political, and ethnological fantasies of the fin de si\u00e8cle could be inscribed. Positioned as a restorative bulwark against the shifting tides of modernity, the talismanic folk and their songs were temporal anachronisms conjured up via the discursive strategies that attempted to describe them. Increased attention should hence be paid to singers such as Henry Burstow and the Copper brothers of Rottingdean in order to rescue their histories from the conceptual apparatus of folk song.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Vertinsky"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43636118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00941700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cecaab1f-1a79-30b3-98fa-b4b1ffae98f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43636118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsporthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Sport History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Old Age, Gender and Physical Activity: The Biomedicalization of Aging","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43636118","wordCount":9838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5922879-4ec3-3344-96e4-23fa9e1269fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/957126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/957126","wordCount":21682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1549","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"113","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela Born"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e45cb6-5bf9-30fb-897f-0365b1ef4d3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27949200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Canon Is Cast: Plaster Casts in American Museum and University Collections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27949200","wordCount":5080,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Sheehi"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dd05438-9b55-34f2-af63-f29856c5db7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30069572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Social History of Early Arab Photography or a Prolegomenon to an Archaeology of the Lebanese Imago","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069572","wordCount":13959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles W. 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From smart software to nimble industrial robots, new labor-saving technologies seem to explain why the post-Recession period has witnessed the decoupling of economic growth and employment. This essay argues that Marx's contribution to the automation debate is his critique of the contradictions and hollow promises of capitalist technological progress. For Marx, although robots could potentially help transform labor time, they are ultimately frauds that express the emancipatory potential of science and technology in the inverted form of humanized machines and mechanized, superfluous humans.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elliott Sober"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02708647"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976361"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"985d906b-0fab-3725-a938-f444c7675d04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/192588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"psaprocbienmeetp"}],"isPartOf":"PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Holism, Individualism, and the Units of Selection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/192588","wordCount":13845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"1980","abstract":"Developing a definition of group selection, and applying that definition to the dispute in the social sciences between methodological holists and methodological individualists, are the two goals of this paper. The definition proposed distinguishes between changes in groups that are due to group selection and changes in groups that are artefacts of selection processes occurring at lower levels of organization. It also explains why the existence of group selection is not implied by the mere fact that fitness values of organisms are sensitive to the composition of groups. And, lastly, the definition explains why group selection need not involve selection for altruism. Group selection is thereby seen as an evolutionary force which is objectively distinct from other evolutionary forces. Applying the distinction between group and individual selection to the holism\/individualism dispute has the desirable result that the dispute is not decidable a priori. This way of looking at the dispute yields a conception of individualism which is untainted by atomism and a conception of holism which is unspoiled by hypostatis.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gordon Bigelow"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"615","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-615","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Market Indicators: Banking and Domesticity in Dickens's \"Bleak House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031926","wordCount":12310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1957-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4304678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00242519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54843411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212340"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce9604d0-cf53-3d5e-b486-94ba6f63415b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4304678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"libraryq"}],"isPartOf":"The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1957,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4304678","wordCount":2909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arthur Efron"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43853069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02710137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3f0fe02-d724-3120-bcae-cafdac1df92b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43853069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmindbehavior"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Mind and Behavior","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":315.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15, 17-87, 89-177, 179-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sexual Body: An Interdisciplinary Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43853069","wordCount":158217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Institute of Mind and Behavior, Inc.","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwyneira Isaac"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/659141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11ea6a7e-7055-38b0-956c-6af84ea24421"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/659141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Whose Idea Was This?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/659141","wordCount":9282,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[3263,3370]],"Locations in B":[[14329,14435]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"52","abstract":"Zuni principles value repetition as an affirmation of the continuity of knowledge, thereby challenging particular Euro-American notions of the \u201ccopy\u201d as a devaluation of the \u201coriginal.\u201d Using examples from Zuni philosophy as well as scientific traditions in creating replicas, I examine overlaps and differences between Zuni and Euro-American approaches to the reproduction of knowledge. Contemporary Zuni concerns about controlling the reproduction of esoteric knowledge are explored here through the history of replicas made in the nineteenth century by anthropologists as well as the development of protocols for reproducing knowledge in the newly established Zuni tribal museum. These temporally situated transcultural encounters with and debates over the reproduction of knowledge are used to argue against the cross-cultural applicability of representational theories, as these are characteristically based on Euro-American postmodern notions of the instability of meaning between \u201ccopies\u201d and \u201coriginals.\u201d","subTitle":"Museums, Replicas, and the Reproduction of Knowledge","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1983-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40305147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6647ff28-b8da-3116-8745-7ba9fe6e0c1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40305147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Dramas and comedies like True Blood, Veep, Silicon Valley, and True Detective describe human forms in various states of transformation: into a menagerie of supernatural creatures, polling data, digital information and, even, the landscape of the American South. These transformations anticipate and seek to rationalize the exchange of the programs in which they appear into and out of diverse forms of Time Warner brand equity \u2014 even as they rehearse anxieties that the network's famed \"quality\" diminishes in the face of such exchanges. Female characters bear the brunt of this reflexivity; their forcibly contorted and monetized bodies figure the temporary material form assumed by otherwise liquid equity as it moves within Time Warner and, ultimately, over Internet lines and into the viewer's home. The network's famed misogyny is, in this respect, self-conscious and idiosyncratic, and reveals something essential about the incoherence of HBO's parent company at the moment that the network discovers new pathways for the direct distribution of its product.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1937-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41447345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b1e2e59-11ac-376e-9727-33bc11ef2131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41447345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humanbiology"}],"isPartOf":"Human Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"572","pagination":"pp. 572-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1937,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Biological Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health","Public Health","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - 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S. Byatt's \"The Children's Book\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029515","wordCount":7015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":"Byatt's latest novel, The Children's Book, like her previous fiction, may be said to foreground materiality. This is evident in its many depictions of objects, within both museum collections and domestic spaces, descriptions that explore both the public\/private dichotomy and the relationship between high and low culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rey Chow"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/488233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d83988e2-4e66-3381-970f-26424b6d6e09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/488233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Globalization, or, The Humanities in Ruins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949389","wordCount":9518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Michigan State University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1902-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03664457"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290670"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4113336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullmiscinforoya"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information (Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1902,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Botany & Plant Sciences","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Note","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4113336","wordCount":9243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew","volumeNumber":"1902","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanjay Srivastava"],"datePublished":"1996-02-17","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4403799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"524ae52e-f705-31ee-9f4c-0faa14f30505"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4403799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Modernity and Post-Coloniality: The Metropolis as Metaphor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4403799","wordCount":12549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Founded in 1935 and supported by a wide cross-section of Indian society, the Doon School has produced a very specific discourse on modernity and citizenship, a discourse which has had wide currency in the (metropolitan) public sphere in India. The article suggests that the metropolis itself has functioned as a metaphor at the school and in Indian national discourse in general. The discussion explores the cultural, political and gender aspects of the metropolitan metaphor in the 'nation-building' discourse of the school.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alison Armstrong"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08993114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259372100"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68901649-86d1-33be-bfe4-e311c1fdf867"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26635415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoyclitesupp"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Literary Supplement","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Modernism, The Roadkill of Contemporary Theory?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635415","wordCount":2857,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[55865,56171]],"Locations in B":[[7225,7514]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Miami","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-08-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10584838"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43573821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"620600f4-97d1-39a3-9489-7db4726cd974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26371839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clininfedise"}],"isPartOf":"Clinical Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26371839","wordCount":27989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUKE PLONSKY"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43651771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709600"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9241f2aa-029c-39cf-a68d-977e495b447e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43651771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlanguagej"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"450","pagination":"pp. 450-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Study Quality in Quantitative L2 Research (1990-2010): A Methodological Synthesis and Call for Reform","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43651771","wordCount":14469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"This article builds on the growing line of inquiry into methodological practices in quantitative second language (L2) research. Specifically, the study uses synthetic techniques to examine changes over time in research and reporting practices. 606 primary reports of quantitative L2 research from two journals\u2014Language Learning and Studies in Second Language Acquisition\u2014were surveyed on different design features, statistical analyses, and data reporting practices. Frequencies and percentages of each feature were then calculated and compared across the 1990s and the first decade of the 2000s to examine changes taking place in the field. The results, while not necessarily representative of all substantive and methodological approaches within the domain of L2 research, indicate numerous changes including increases in sample sizes, delayed posttesting, and the availability of critical data such as effect sizes, reliability estimates, and standard deviations to accompany means. With respect to statistical procedures, the range of analyses has not changed, and the field continues its unfortunate reliance on statistical significance. The findings are grouped according to three themes, which are discussed in light of previous reviews in this and other fields: (a) means-based analyses, (b) missing data, null hypothesis significance testing, and the \"power problem,\" and (c) design preferences. The article concludes with an extended call for reform targeting six groups of stakeholders in the field. Most notably, an argument is made for field-specific methodological standards and enhancements to graduate curricula and training.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2003.7.2.114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10926690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50633713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e87ff3-70c9-30aa-b9d2-932ac887a283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nr.2003.7.2.114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"novareligio"}],"isPartOf":"Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","Arts - Literature","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2003.7.2.114","wordCount":7241,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Viscomi"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00187895"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52050526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212225"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5eafb64d-3cb4-334d-8561-36d9f75c3933"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90013267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"huntlibrquar"}],"isPartOf":"Huntington Library Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","History","History","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Library Science","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Signing Large Color Prints","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013267","wordCount":16724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","volumeNumber":"80","abstract":"ABSTRACT Among William Blake\u2019s greatest achievements as both painter and printmaker are his large monoprints of 1795. Blake produced thirty-three monoprints of twelve designs, twenty-nine of which are extant. He signed at least twenty, using five different formats, but is thought to have sold only eleven, all to Thomas Butts. The present essay sequences the signatures and argues that Blake also sold nine monoprints to three collectors between 1806 and 1810, that he sold his first monoprints to Butts by mid-1796, that he printed designs in a heretofore unknown printing session in ca. 1795\u201396, and that, around 1807, he changed his idea about the monoprint, from large color print to a new kind of painting. The monoprints reveal that Blake\u2019s general practice was to sign artworks not upon execution or completion, but upon sale.","subTitle":"The Significance of Blake\u2019s Signatures","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna G. Piotrowska"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27822861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03515796"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ac2934e-f271-3f4b-80e4-8cb25da4777b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27822861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intereviaestsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Individual Strategies of Seeking Employment Among Early 20th-century American and European Composers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27822861","wordCount":6367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Croatian Musicological Society","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"Individual strategies of seeking jobs by the early 20th-century composers can be viewed in two prevailing perspectives. On one hand they inherited the 19th-century ideal of the artists as individuals independent from the society regulations, while on the other hand the reality of European and American situation made them realize the necessity of assuring safe sources of income. Thus, individual choices, although resulting from variety of determinatns, seem to follow two dominating models: the first one is indebted into the 19th-century legacy whereas the second model certifies the composers ability to adapt to the new economic and historical situation. Pojedina\u010dne strategije u tra\u017eenju zaposlenja med\u0304u skladateljima po\u010detkom 20. stolje\u0107a mogu se razmatrati s dva prevladavaju\u0107a motri\u0161ta. Mo\u017ee se utvrditi da su do neke mjere skladatelji modernisti naslijedili pojam umjetnika iz 19. stolje\u0107a: stvaratelja \u010diju se sposobnost da zamisli umjetni\u010dko djelo smatralo gotovo bogolikom mo\u0107i. Skladatelji su osje\u0107ali da se od njih o\u010dekivalo da se otud\u0304e od obi\u010dnih grad\u0304ana i zdru\u017ee s drugim umjetnicima, stvaraju\u0107i na taj na\u010din sliku umjetni\u010dke boeme. No, zbilja europske i ameri\u010dke situacije navela ih je na to da shvate nu\u017enost osiguranja sigurnih izvora prihoda. Pojedina\u010dni izbori, kolikogod proizlazili iz raznih odrednica, \u010dini se da su slijedili prevladavaju\u0107e modele. Med\u0304utim, i njegovanje ideala 19. stolje\u0107a o umjetniku kao pojedincu neovisnom o dru\u0161tvenim pravilima, i ozbiljno dovod\u0304enje u pitanje nasljed\u0304a 19. stolje\u0107a o umjetniku kao pojedincu neovisnom o dru\u0161tvenim pravilima, i ozbiljno dovod\u0304enje u pitanje nasljed\u0304a 19. stolje\u0107a o skladatelju-geniju, podjednako su predstavljeni u osobnim razmi\u0161ljanjima skladatelja o njihovu vlastitom statusu u dru\u0161tvu.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48418558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227348"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"manadeciecon"}],"isPartOf":"Managerial and Decision Economics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108315","wordCount":1229,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. L. Davies"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25832985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64f3a6f3-b22e-3824-a1c8-ee892380fe01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25832985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"822","pageStart":"768","pagination":"pp. 768-822","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE CLASSICAL ERA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25832985","wordCount":22572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nishlyn Ramanna"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44651146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"620000756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ad94503-007a-3ffb-a293-3a2b0b2486f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44651146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldofmusic"}],"isPartOf":"The World of Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction: Discursive Flows in South African Jazz Studies\u2014Texts, Contexts, and Subtexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44651146","wordCount":10376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Florian Noetzel GmbH Verlag","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"This essay reviews a range of scholarly writings about South African jazz that have appeared as monographs, journal articles, and postgraduate dissertations over the past three decades. It identifies two main streams of research that are respectively contextual or textual in their focus: firstly, social histories of South African jazz culture and\/or biographies of particular musicians that consider their lives in the light of these histories; secondly, close musical analyses of particular styles, compositions, and recorded improvisations, and literary analyses of journalistic and creative writings about South African jazz culture. 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Rooted in classic comedy (unlike British and American vaudeville), French vaudeville was a precursor to the modern television sitcom and was at the forefront of changes that remade theatre into a spectacular media product. Vaudevilles portrayed the pursuit of social status in satirical send-ups that suggested the ways in which consumption was becoming a vehicle for the performance of new forms of identity and social exchange. In its connection to consumer culture, vaudeville invites us to reconsider assumptions that have tended to inform our readings of bourgeois and popular culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Aaron Lawry","Laee Choi"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41922283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03441369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c224aef-cb53-35e6-b6d5-bc46581b4fdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41922283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"markzeitforsprax"}],"isPartOf":"Marketing: Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Forschung und Praxis","keyphrase":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Marketing & Advertising"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Omnichannel Luxury Retail Experience: Building Mobile Trust and Technology Acceptance of Quick Response (QR) Codes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41922283","wordCount":8031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Verlag C.H.Beck","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"By drawing upon Symbolic Self-Completion theory and the Technology Acceptance model, a theoretical model is developed for omnichannel luxury retailing. The theoretical model unifies the inner-directed, hedonic aspects of luxury consumption and the cognitive facets of technology acceptance and use. In order to test the model, an online survey is given to a convenience sample of affluent professionals (n = 425) and relevant hypotheses are developed. Respondents are shown prototypes of a luxury window display and mobile website. The prototypes are used to evaluate the respondents' intentions to scan custom QR codes to browse, shop and search a luxury mobile website. Structural equation modeling is used to test the hypotheses. Findings suggest that self-identity and self-hedonism can increase luxury consumers' technology acceptance of custom QR codes, while enhancing the visual appeal of a luxury window display. An interchannel transference of experiences is supported, whereby the visual appeal of the window display and technology acceptance of QR codes relates to mobile trust. Perceived usefulness and visual appeal appear to increase QR code scanning intentions, but mobile trust is not shown to significantly increase scanning intentions. Based upon these findings, implications are discussed and recommendations are provided for academicians and practitioners.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6394eccd-c982-35bb-a2e0-bb909047d3c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/959847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"907","pageStart":"809","pagination":"pp. 809-907","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/959847","wordCount":20596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1580","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"115","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie Beth Napolin"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7c419cd-d6aa-36cf-bfcf-b7d53190e797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Fact of Resonance: An Acoustics of Determination in Faulkner and Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.24.1-2.0171","wordCount":7899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1-2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothea Dietrich"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40514339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37f8086f-64bd-3f43-a595-0fbda224eb44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40514339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Refashioned Traditions: Kurt Schwitters' Collages of Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40514339","wordCount":7513,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. San Juan, Jr."],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"542","pagination":"pp. 542-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Identity Politics: The Predicament of the Asian American Writer in Late Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490015","wordCount":9568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tze-wan Kwan","\u5173\u5b50\u5c39"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23754061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00913723"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7835a727-c14c-3a3f-9d4a-6380995036ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23754061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jchinling"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Chinese Linguistics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"WILHELM VON HUMBOLDT ON THE CHINESE LANGUAGE \u2014 INTERPRETATION AND RECONSTRUCTION \/ \u5a01\u6d77\u59c6\u2027\u51af\u2027\u6d2a\u5821\u7279\u7684\u6c49\u8bed\u7406\u8bba: \u89e3\u91ca\u4e0e\u91cd\u5efa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23754061","wordCount":28148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Chinese University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"Acclaimed as the father of general linguistics, Wilhelm von Humboldt's scholarship on the Chinese language was also a remarkable one. For Humboldt, language universals are nothing but some general principles pertaining to the function of language as a major intellectual activity. These principles, however, have to be exemplified by individual languages with all their linguistic particularities. Humboldt considered languages to be like organic entities capable of consistent development over ages. Starting from specific linguistic idiosyncrasies, individual languages tend to follow their own consistent and self-adjusted line of development. In the Chinese language, initial linguistic features such as \"phonic poverty\", \"phonic isolation\" (monosyllability) etc. prevented the Chinese from developing a grammatical system on the basis of inflection, as is the case in most Indo-European languages. In regard to grammar, the Chinese language seems to have found a way of its own. Instead of relying on externally precipitated sound forms, Chinese grammar has developed in such a way that the intellectual power tends to take direct control over the sentence. For this to function smoothly, a number of linguistic devices (such as tonality, the use of particles and idioms etc.) were also developed as compensation measures to offset the relative weakness of the Chinese sound system. For the same reason, in the development of the Chinese script, the graphical elements were allowed to share with the phonic elements the burden of meaning discrimination. With the measure of \"analogy of script\", as highlighted by Humboldt, the hidden creativity of the Chinese mind is liberated to its greatest extent. Besides being an interpretation of Humboldt's theory, this paper is also an attempt for reconstruction. 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In pursuing his musical ideals, however, Gould obsessed over material objects\u2014the qualities of a chair, the action of piano keys, the placement of splices in magnetic tape. This paper argues that for him, the detailed properties of machines and electronic media were crucial, not just as tools for pursuing disembodied aesthetic aims, but as instruments and material sites for a moral project. Locating Gould's concerns among the techniques and technologies that inspired him, the concert hall he despised, and the jazz and chance music he tolerated, the paper explores how Gould's famed philosophy of technology was rooted in a \"technological self\" that tied morality and aesthetics, and intimacy and isolation, to concrete ideals for the kinds of people we ought to be.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dolores Mart\u00edn Moruno"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26562752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03697827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205410"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e97d6dac-af3f-303c-b20b-f5bc2c9fd15f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26562752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"osiris"}],"isPartOf":"Osiris","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Pain as Practice in Paolo Mantegazza\u2019s Science of Emotions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26562752","wordCount":14342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Saint Catherines Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"Paolo Mantegazza\u2019s science of emotions represents the dominant style of thinking that was fostered by the late nineteenth-century Italian scientific community, a positivist school that believed that the dissemination of Darwin\u2019s evolutionary ideas would promote social progress in that country. Within this collective thought, Mantegazza was committed not only to studying the physiological experience of pain by means of vivisection but also to completing an anthropological study that examined the differences between the expressions of suffering in primitive and civilized cultures. Thus, the meaning of pain appears throughout Mantegazza\u2019s research as a result of applying an ensemble of scientific practices integral to observation, experimentation, and the scientific self, which enabled its main physiological and psychological manifestations to be reproduced in the laboratory. Among these practices, photography allowed Mantegazza to mobilize pain as an emotion whose performativity shaped national identities, such as those that embodied the recently created Italian state.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Astrid Erll"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b93546c4-5331-331e-ba41-47a45ef4bc79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Generation in Literary History: Three Constellations of Generationality, Genealogy, and Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542733","wordCount":11195,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Russell Belk"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25097913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b519eca2-b840-30fe-b849-ec6984942c4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25097913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Not Share Rather than Own?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25097913","wordCount":7396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"611","abstract":"Sharing is an alternative form of distribution to commodity exchange and gift giving. Compared to these alternative modes, sharing can foster community, save resources, and create certain synergies. Yet outside of our immediate families, we do little sharing. Even within the family, there is increased privatization. This article addresses impediments to sharing as well as incentives that may encourage more sharing of both tangible and intangible goods. Two recent developments, the Internet and intellectual property rights doctrines, are locked in a battle that will do much to determine the future of sharing. Businesses may lead the way with virtual corporations outsourcing the bulk of their operations. Whether virtual consumers sharing some of their major possessions are a viable counterpart remains an open question.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20782677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01473700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4ae4553-c830-3955-b05a-e3c6342cf7e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20782677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mentdisalawrepor"}],"isPartOf":"Mental Disability Law Reporter","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"DECISIONS\/NEW FILINGS & PENDING CASES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20782677","wordCount":29183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Bar Association","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yochai Benkler"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4224e675-ac07-3f02-baa8-dae2ed8d4b20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1562247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and \"The Nature of the Firm\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562247","wordCount":36659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"112","abstract":"For decades our common understanding of the organization of economic production has been that individuals order their productive activities in one of two ways: either as employees in firms, following the directions of managers, or as individuals in markets, following price signals. This dichotomy was first identified in the early work of Ronald Coase and was developed most explicitly in the work of institutional economist Oliver Williamson. Recently, public attention has focused on a fifteen-year-old phenomenon called free software or open source software. This phenomenon involves thousands, or even tens of thousands, of computer programmers who collaborate on large- and small-scale projects without traditional firm-based or market-based ownership of the resulting product. This Article explains why free software is only one example of a much broader social-economic phenomenon emerging in the digitally networked environment, a third mode of production that the author calls \"commons-based peer production.\" The Article begins by demonstrating the widespread use of commons-based peer production on the Internet through a number of detailed examples, such as Wikipedia, Slashdot, the Open Directory Project, and Google. The Article uses these examples to reveal fundamental characteristics of commons-based peer production that distinguish it from the property- and contract-based modes of firms and markets. The central distinguishing characteristic is that groups of individuals successfully collaborate on large-scale projects following a diverse cluster of motivational drives and social signals rather than market prices or managerial commands. The Article then explains why this mode has systematic advantages over markets and managerial hierarchies in the digitally networked environment when the object of production is information or culture. First, peer production has an advantage in what the author calls \"information opportunity cost,\" because it loses less information about who might be the best person for a given job. Second, there are substantial increasing allocation gains to be captured from allowing large clusters of potential contributors to interact with large clusters of information resources in search of new projects and opportunities for collaboration. The Article concludes with an overview of how these models use a variety of technological, social, and formal strategies to overcome the collective action problems usually solved in managerial and market-based systems by property, contract, and managerial commands. This Article contends that the common understanding of Miranda as a direct restraint on custodial interrogation by police is mistaken. Instead, Miranda, like the privilege against compulsory self-incrimination that serves as its constitutional foundation, is a rule of admissibility. As the text of the privilege, the Supreme Court's Fifth Amendment jurisprudence, and the Miranda majority's reasoning all demonstrate, neither the privilege nor Miranda can be violated without use of a compelled statement in a criminal case. Miranda controls police conduct only indirectly, by requiring suppression of statements taken in violation of the Miranda rules. At least two significant consequences flow from this understanding. First, police violations of the Miranda rules alone cannot support civil lawsuits under 42 U.S.C. \u00a7 1983. Second, and more importantly, police have no constitutional obligation to comply with the Miranda warnings and waiver regime. Rather, police are free to disregard Miranda if they deem it advantageous. If the Supreme Court had fashioned a stringent Miranda exclusionary doctrine-one similar to that which applies when prosecutors compel testimony by use of immunity grants-police would have good reason to comply with the Miranda rules even absent a constitutional duty. But, the Court has done the opposite, creating a host of evidentiary incentives for police to violate those rules. Thus, it is not surprising that some police officers and departments deliberately disregard Miranda in order to benefit from those incentives. Because many federal appellate courts already have interpreted Miranda as a rule that governs only admissibility, and there is a good chance that the Supreme Court will construe the privilege accordingly when it decides Chavez v. Martinez this Term, Miranda's future appears bleak. It is likely that the Court will signal to police that they have no constitutional duty to follow Miranda rules and, at the same time, will leave intact its decisions tempting police to violate those rules. This Article offers an alternative approach, one by which the Court squares its Miranda doctrine with its treatment of the privilege in other contexts. This proposed approach would mandate that the Court treat Miranda as a rule of admissibility but also would require that it rethink many of the decisions that entice police to violate the Miranda rules.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27829800","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3e9fc89-c886-3316-bb79-be69e1c4c89d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27829800"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received for Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27829800","wordCount":8514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tok Freeland Thompson"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3814911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebfa52c2-81d2-3319-a740-990e34fb2712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3814911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Ladies and Gentlemen, the North Road Pounders!\": An Inquiry into Identity, Aesthetics, and New Authenticities in Rural Alaska","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3814911","wordCount":5581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This essay seeks to understand a particular musical ensemble and related ritual traditions in a rural immigrant community in Alaska. While some of the materials used in the ensemble are gathered locally, other articles are mass-produced, and one element, an interpretation of the Australian dijiridu, is the result of information gleaned from the Internet. The cultural complex is viewed as \"local\" as well as \"global,\" and \"invented\" as well as \"traditional.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Kaplan"],"datePublished":"1956-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1337393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d769415-8690-3d74-ae30-c503869e89d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1337393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"439","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-439","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Performer's Right and Copyright: The Capitol Records Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1337393","wordCount":15309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward H. Cohen"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":138.0,"pageEnd":"768","pageStart":"631","pagination":"pp. 631-768","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Victorian Bibliography for 1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829121","wordCount":82613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nina Lara Rosenblatt"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90610be0-81e2-3541-9e59-359132a1bec1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Photogenic Neurasthenia: On Mass and Medium in the 1920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779107","wordCount":6573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"86","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Michael Roberts"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20467675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06be9091-1ed3-3aef-a242-735ca4e57da6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20467675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Ecology"],"title":"2002 PROGRAM ISSUE: THE SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE FLORIDA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24322790","wordCount":32540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreas Huyssen"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7370a035-5c2f-3248-8228-5a610e7c3253"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/487818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Brewer"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"349ce958-8a63-35ff-9f48-7cc700f00c5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2902907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Making Hogarth Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2902907","wordCount":18448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"72","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer T. Kennedy"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c79225f-e72d-3b60-90d1-65a9ff911bfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Death Effects: Revisiting the Conceit of Franklin's \"Memoir\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057231","wordCount":15025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lydia Kallipoliti"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606242963"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47e43ada-d177-3440-81c8-9116b915a2a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43876227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Dross: Re-genesis of Diverse Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43876227","wordCount":3570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20693990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207829"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32546118-8c56-3a32-bc15-dd0dd2a5b799"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20693990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelegamate"}],"isPartOf":"International Legal Materials","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":134.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"310","pagination":"pp. 310-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences"],"title":"INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE (ICJ): CASE CONCERNING KASIKILI\/SEDUDU ISLAND (BOTSWANA V. NAMIBIA)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20693990","wordCount":81997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Society of International Law","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN CONISBEE BAER"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c191341a-c2aa-3551-b485-e508c57e1355"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25704460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"896","pageStart":"622","pagination":"pp. 622-639, 896","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Creole Glossary: T\u0101r\u0101shankar Bandop\u0101dhy\u0101y's H\u0101nsul\u012b B\u0101nker upakath\u0101","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704460","wordCount":11450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"125","abstract":"T\u0101r\u0101shankar Bandop\u0101dhy\u0101y's novel H\u0101nsul\u012b B\u0101nker upakath\u0101 'The Tale of Hansuli Turn' (1946\u201351) straddles the period of independence and partition in India. Its literary staging of the creolized Bengali spoken by a marginal, untouchable, semiaboriginal group is both formally innovative and politically imaginative. T\u0101r\u0101shankar disperses the book's glossary throughout its text, and the workings of this glossary embody an unusual perspective on class and caste segregation in modern India. The novel's historical narrative tells of the disintegration of a rustic, semifeudal Kahar community under the crises of war and modernity in the 1940s. While this history says that proletarianization and loss of idiom are inevitable for such figures of the rural margins, H\u0101nsul\u012b B\u0101nker elaborates a counterfactual possibility. This alternative history is not simply a romanticized novelistic preservation of a dying way of life but a minimal imagining of a different line of connection between the realm of subalternity and the public sphere. In its reimagining, H\u0101nsul\u012b B\u0101nker also rethinks and prefigures modern India's other internal partitions, internal diasporas, and emergent political dilemmas and the history of the Bengali novel itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/342652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2ea8958-7d88-3254-9394-6c421ecf61b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/342652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":139.0,"pageEnd":"lxiv","pageStart":"968","pagination":"pp. 968-lxiv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/342652","wordCount":130353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurie Hawkinson","Barbara Kruger","Nicholas Quennell","Henry Smith-Miller","Stanley Allen","Mark Wigley"],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08893012"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8914454a-ec2e-3580-aed9-78d27ba69255"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3171141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"assemblage"}],"isPartOf":"Assemblage","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Imperfect Utopia \/ Un-Occupied Territory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3171141","wordCount":16202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger N. Lancaster"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c25ed35-3280-303b-9b5d-54747545a15a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/682727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"604","pagination":"pp. 604-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Coming-Out Stories: Recent Videos on Gay and Lesbian Themes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682727","wordCount":9977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-12-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e349119-7d53-33ce-8354-9fef11ec01bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43707894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43707894","wordCount":20247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"12","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"208","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carmen R. Delle Donne"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e500d0e0-1c85-345f-bd14-b626f08bfc37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40291354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Information resources","Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bibliography: Writings on Archives, Current Records, and Historical Manuscripts 1967-1968","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40291354","wordCount":26923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679732","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f47fb69f-93d6-3ffe-9ea8-4a14d43ae919"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/679732"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"892","pageStart":"882","pagination":"pp. 882-892","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Index to Isis<\/em>, Volume 105, 2014","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/679732","wordCount":7952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alvin W. Wolfe"],"datePublished":"1969-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edb9934c-d019-328a-a977-bd7a21592280"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2740682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Social Structural Bases of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740682","wordCount":39561,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"10","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KYOKO TAKANASHI"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ee396f9-de69-38fd-891e-e7971e6f7b9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23256755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CIRCULATION, MONUMENTS, AND THE POLITICS OF TRANSMISSION IN SIR WALTER SCOTT'S \"TALES OF MY LANDLORD\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256755","wordCount":11380,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6780,6875]],"Locations in B":[[43785,43880]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"79","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claude Imbert","Nima Bassiri","Michael Allan"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ABY WARBURG, BETWEEN KANT AND BOAS: FROM AESTHETICS TO THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF IMAGES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685703","wordCount":16042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hannah Frank"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780520303621"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26c0b11a-e40b-3259-b445-72ec4bf6f1b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvr7fd7m.14"}],"isPartOf":"Frame by Frame","keyphrase":["walt disney","animation","university","cinema","disney studios","emily dickinson","mickey mouse","translated","eisenstein","walt disney studios"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"189","pagination":"189-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Performing Arts","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvr7fd7m.14","wordCount":6717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIELLE WARD-GRIFFIN"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26643943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d5871ca-764e-308f-aebc-088688b0c69e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26643943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"654","pageStart":"595","pagination":"pp. 595-654","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"As Seen on TV","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26643943","wordCount":26201,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[8303,8392]],"Locations in B":[[93577,93666]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"71","abstract":"This article examines the relationship between opera on television and opera on the stage in America in the 1950s and 1960s.Using the NBC Opera (1949\u201364) as a case study, I trace both what television borrowed from the operatic stage and what television sought to bring to the stage in a relationship envisioned by producers as symbiotic. Focusing on the NBC\u2019s short-lived touring arm, which produced live performances of Madam Butterfly, The Marriage of Figaro, and La traviata for communities across America in 1956\u201357, I draw upon archival evidence to show how these small-scale stage productions were recalibrated to suit a television-watching public. Instead of relying on the stylized presentation and grand gestures typical of major opera houses, the NBC touring performances blended intimate television aesthetics with Broadway typecasting and naturalistic direction. Looking beyond the NBC Opera, I also offer a new model for understanding multimedial transfer in opera, one in which the production style of early television opera did not simply respond to the exigencies of the screen, but rather sought to transform the stage into a more intimate\u2014and supposedly more accessible\u2014medium in the mid-twentieth century.","subTitle":"Putting the NBC Opera on Stage","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Baldo"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc874120-fd31-39b7-ab02-a3705e3435b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"382","pageStart":"364","pagination":"pp. 364-382","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative Foiled in Bergman's \"The Seventh Seal\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208155","wordCount":10951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe Luna"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d6216d8-5da5-3c91-a178-b109d9139589"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26547673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Space | Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547673","wordCount":14137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Zipes"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205291"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227249"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66175277-a6e3-30b6-827b-5b56cdae173e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20487600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Folklore","Anthropology","American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20487600","wordCount":3810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"480","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"121","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olivia Hamlyn"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09528873"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42836639"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238483"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cb183d6-8223-333f-87a4-87102abf1078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jenvilaw"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Environmental Law","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Law","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Political science - Government"],"title":"Sustainability and the Failure of Ambition in European Pesticides Regulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168889","wordCount":13012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"ABSTRACT Sustainability, as a concept, is recognised as consisting of various complex but familiar elements. One would expect to find such elements in legislation purporting to adopt sustainability as its orientating goal. This is arguably so with the EU\u2019s 2009 Directive that aims to achieve the sustainable use of pesticides (the Sustainable Use Directive). Legislation governing pesticide use built on the principles of sustainability could provide a powerful and sophisticated framework through which to consider, and respond to, the multiplicity of concerns pesticide use raises. This article examines sustainability in terms of its potential to regulate pesticide use. It articulates various elements of sustainability that one might expect to find in legislation designed to achieve sustainable pesticide use. It assesses the Sustainable Use Directive against the elements identified and argues that the Directive implements a narrow agenda of risk management rather than genuinely and ambitiously adopting the true principles of sustainability.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. J. T. MITCHELL"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aafdb2c7-12e0-3ead-88e7-9de182766a81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Surplus Value of Images","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029949","wordCount":9293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":"This essay analyzes the ways in which images are over- and underestimated, from idols that signify the highest values and demand human sacrifice, to empty signs that are worthless, hollow illusions. It then shows how these disparate estimations of \"the surplus value of images\" lead to the perception of images as living agencies that play crucial in social conflicts.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Sarton"],"datePublished":"1925-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bad65d3-3500-35eb-8245-8d378afa60c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":78.0,"pageEnd":"606","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-606","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1925,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Seventeenth Critical Bibliography of the History and Philosophy of Science and of the History of Civilization (to March 1925, with 4 Facsimiles on 2 pl.)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223775","wordCount":37152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Tomlins"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2009.21.2.185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd854f87-6122-3741-b453-1db7e29deb6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2009.21.2.185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Revolutionary Justice in Brecht, Conrad, and Blake","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2009.21.2.185","wordCount":16057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Historians have approached the scholarly genre of \"law and literature\" as a means to mine works of literature for images, descriptions, and representations of law and legal events in historical (or historical-analogical) contexts. The questions asked are framed by history and treat literature as source material. Suppose we instead make literature our frame and history our subject. What can literature as form tell historians about \"history\" as we currently practice it? How might an inspection of literature as a practice change the practice of legal historians? Here I consider the possibilities through an examination of time and justice, and particularly the time of justice, in three literary works: Bertolt Brecht's Threepenny Novel, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, and William Blake's poem \"London\" from Songs of Experience. My principal interlocutor in this exercise is the Marxist literary theorist and historical materialist Walter Benjamin. The conjunction is informative, for Benjamin was deeply engaged in the exposition of concepts of justice. My purpose is to show that literature as practice lends itself to the strategy of explanation that Benjamin termed \"constellation\" in ways that are suggestive of how legal historians in turn might employ constellation in approaching questions of time and justice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Andrew Fisher","Jason Potter"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976463"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227021"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/431262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaestartcrit"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Philosophy","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Technology, Appreciation, and the Historical View of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/431262","wordCount":12559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Br\u00fcckner"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00840416"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52087281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213737"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"596872ea-d4f9-308a-b36a-28810cb05131"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/660909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wintport"}],"isPartOf":"Winterthur Portfolio","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","Architecture & Architectural History","History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Ambulatory Map","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660909","wordCount":6527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":"This essay examines the cultural significance of \u201cambulatory maps\u201d in the Atlantic world between 1700 and 1800. Comparing stationary and portable maps, the essay in particular explores the emergent genre of the commercial pocket map. As \u201cthings-in-motion,\u201d pocket maps occupied a unique place in American material life. Used for mapping people\u2019s transits while at the same time being objects in transit, pocket maps constituted a unique visual and literary experience that affected early American engagements with space and spatial ideology.","subTitle":"Commodity, Mobility, and Visualcy in Eighteenth-Century Colonial America","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. G. King-Hele"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/531355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83e8c6fd-9d50-35e5-8a59-5034e51b28f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/531355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noterecoroyasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Erasmus Darwin, Man of Ideas and Inventor of Words","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/531355","wordCount":14005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman K. Denzin"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dca0b3b1-3a1d-3dc4-8285-1c7ab99596c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/201888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Postmodern Social Theory\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/201888","wordCount":8293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Sociological Association","volumeNumber":"4","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine L. Kelley"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41244063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07307187"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-202298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a00b0785-de0b-30b4-9821-13c19a35f84c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41244063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artdocumentation"}],"isPartOf":"Art Documentation: Journal of the Art Libraries Society of North America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Museum Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Applied sciences - Imaging"],"title":"The Complications of \"Bridgeman\" and Copyright (Mis)use","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41244063","wordCount":5111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":"In 1998, when the Bridgeman Art Library sued Corel Corporation for copyright infringement, the plaintiff did not realize that the decision would go so strongly in its disfavor. Not only was the infringement dismissed, but the copyright itself was found to be invalid. Bridgeman Art Library, Ltd. v. Corel Corp. set a precedent establishing reproductive images of two-dimensional artworks as not copyrightable. Details of the court decision include two previous cases that involve the copyrightability of photography in general and the copyrightability of facts, respectively. Most photographs are copyrightable, while most presentations of facts are not; these two areas intersect in reproductive photography. This article describes the background to the court case, Bridgeman's reactions to the court decision, and the ramifications of the decision for museums and other organizations that claim copyright over their images.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Silvia Tandeciarz"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1891e8be-9ddb-3675-89af-5a3f9985aa84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing for Distinction? A Reading of Cortazar's Final Short Story, \"Diario para un cuento\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119859","wordCount":12609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"58","publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSHUA CLOVER"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40784074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00093696"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1325aa54-ba2e-35fd-84f4-64a123d4cb88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40784074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chicagorev"}],"isPartOf":"Chicago Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Adventures of Lisa Robertson in the Space of Flows","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40784074","wordCount":2036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Chicago Review","volumeNumber":"51\/52","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen C. Meyer"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2009.33.2.151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94b67107-fc57-31a9-993c-3b448a163d79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2009.33.2.151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Parsifal<\/em>'s Aura","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2009.33.2.151","wordCount":14979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Abstract \u201cAura\u201d\u2014configured as an interplay of preservation and loss or\u2014to quote the first version of Walter Benjamin's famous artwork essay\u2014as an \u201cinterweaving of space and time\u201d\u2014is central not only to sound recording, but also to the musical dramaturgy of Wagner's final work. This article examines ways in which this unusual alignment affected early (pre-1948) recordings of Parsifal. The potential contradictions implicit in the concept of aura are nowhere more strikingly revealed than in these early recordings. On one hand, they foreground the problems of reducing complex and lengthy works to easily recorded excerpts or arrangements. In this quasi-Adornian reading, early sound recordings of Parsifal manifest the inexorable power of the culture industry to undermine the authentic work of art. And yet sound recording can also be seen as the fruit of a different impulse, the impulse toward a fully transcendent work of art, the realization of the \u201cinvisible theater\u201d for which Wagner himself supposedly yearned. Indeed, Parsifal (even more than Wagner's other works) was recorded primarily as a symphonic work, divested of what Adorno so tellingly called the \u201cphony hoopla\u201d of operatic production. Early sound recording of Parsifal thus amplifies the conflict between materialism and transcendence that forms the ideological substratum of the plot. This conflict manifests itself in the \u201cresistance\u201d that Parsifal offers up to the process of recording, a resistance that is ironically most audible precisely during the age in which the recordings themselves are most \u201cimperfect.\u201d It is in these traces of resistance, I will argue, that we may imagine the aura of Wagner's final work.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Briggs"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1e5986f-06b9-35b4-8455-e368c77647cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Metadiscursive Practices and Scholarly Authority in Folkloristics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541905","wordCount":25005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"422","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"Recent research on the social\/political and literary power of relations between texts is used in criticizing the metadiscursive practices\u2014methods used in locating, extracting, editing, and interpreting discourses\u2014of folklorists, anthropologists, and other practitioners. The Grimms' construction of Kinder- und Hausm\u00e4rchen provides a crucial example of the way scholars manipulate literary features in creating the illusion that a written text reflects a prior oral text\u2014while at the same time rendering this process invisible. The retention of these metadiscursive practices in contextualist and performance-based approaches and ethnopoetics is examined.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN BLOOD"],"datePublished":"2006-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.93.1.49","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05d3f274-c224-3278-b46d-faee900ae309"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2006.93.1.49"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Precinematic Novel: Zola's La Be\u00eate humaine<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.93.1.49","wordCount":14391,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[43975,44458]],"Locations in B":[[4922,5403]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"93","abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay is a study of Zola's 1890 crime novel as it anticipates the aesthetics of cinema. Theoretical reflections on technology and violence are drawn from the works of Walter Benjamin and Rene\u00e9 Girard.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samuel Weintraub","Helen M. Robinson","Helen K. Smith"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/746952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":240.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Summary of Investigations Relating to Reading, July 1, 1968 to June 30, 1969","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/746952","wordCount":94469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":"Summarizes 416 reports of research dealing with reading published between July 1, 1968 and June 30, 1969. The studies are grouped into six major categories. The first category includes 72 summaries on specific topics, almost twice the number appearing in the previous summary. The second category incorporates studies in teacher preparation and practice. The third category, sociology of reading, deals with such areas as investigations of the effects of reading, information retrieval, and persuasion resulting from reading. Category four, the physiology of reading, covers such areas as intellectual abilities, language abilities, and reading interests. Several new sub-sections on oral reading, laterality, visual perception, and auditory perception have been added this year. The teaching of reading, the fifth category, surveys studies of reading materials, instructional techniques, and test development and validation. The last category contains studies on the reading of the mentally retarded and the blind. An annotated bibliography of 416 titles is included.\/\/\/ [French] Ce resume dresse un bilan des 416 articles sur la lecture publi\u00e9s entre le 1er Juillet 1968 et le 30 Juin 1969. Les \u00e9tudes sont group\u00e9es en 6 cat\u00e9gories principales. La premi\u00e8re comprend 72 sommaires sur des sujets pr\u00e9cis, c'est-\u00e0-dire presque le double par rapport au r\u00e9sum\u00e9 pr\u00e9c\u00e9dent. La deuxi\u00e8me cat\u00e9gorie comporte des \u00e9tudes sur la pr\u00e9paration professionnelle de l'instituteur et son exp\u00e9rience p\u00e9dagogique. La troisi\u00e8me cat\u00e9gorie, sociologie de la lecture, traite, entre autre, des recherches sur les effets de la lecture, de la r\u00e9cup\u00e9ration des informations et de la persuasion r\u00e9sultant de la lecture. La cat\u00e9gorie num\u00e9ro 4, physiologie et psychologie de la lecture, englobe des sujets tels que les aptitudes intellectuelles et linguistiques, et pr\u00e9f\u00e9rences en ce qui concerne les sujets de lecture. Ont \u00e9t\u00e9 rajout\u00e9s cette ann\u00e9e sous cette rubrique les sujets suivants: la lecture \u00e0 haute voix, la lat\u00e9ralit\u00e9 et les perceptions visuelle et auditive. La cinqui\u00e8me cat\u00e9gorie, l'enseignement de la lecture, donne un aper\u00e7u des recherches sur les textes de lecture, les techniques p\u00e9dagogiques, et le d\u00e9veloppement et le contr\u00f4le de validit\u00e9 du test. La derni\u00e8re cat\u00e9gorie contient des \u00e9tudes sur la lecture par les attard\u00e9s et les aveugles. On trouve enfin une bibliographie annot\u00e9e des 416 titres.\/\/\/ [Spanish] Se hace un resumen de 416 informes relacionados a la lectura desde Julio 1, 1968 a Junio 30, 1969. Los estudios se agrupan en seis categor\u00edas de mayor importancia. La primera categor\u00eda incluye 72 res\u00famenes de t\u00f3picos espec\u00edficos, casi el doble del n\u00famero que apareci\u00f3 en el resumen anterior. La segunda categor\u00eda incluye estudios sobre la preparaci\u00f3n de profesores y m\u00e9todos de ense\u00f1anza. La tercera categor\u00eda incluye la sociolog\u00eda de la lectura y trata de asuntos como investigaciones sobre los efectos de la lectura, recopilaci\u00f3n de informaci\u00f3n y obstenci\u00f3n de opiniones como resultado de la lectura. La cuarta categor\u00eda, la fisiolog\u00eda, y la psicolog\u00eda de la lectura cubre las \u00e1reas de la habilidad intelectual, facilidad en el idioma \u00e9 inter\u00e9s en la lectura. Varias nuevas sub-secciones sobre la lectura oral, literalidad, percepci\u00f3n visual y auditor\u00eda se han agregado este a\u00f1o. La ense\u00f1anza de la lectura, la quinta categor\u00eda comprende una encuesta de estudios de lectura, t\u00e9cnicas de instrucci\u00f3n y desarrollo y validez de las pruebas. La \u00faltima categor\u00eda comprende estudios sobre la lectura de retardados mentales y ciegos. Se incluye una bibliograf\u00eda anotada de 416 t\u00edtulos.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele Bertomen","Maria Vera","Alex Helwig","Michael Russell","John Cuniffe","J. Andrew Heidig"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d2212f7-62cd-30b4-b114-8e3d1a462e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Library","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425114","wordCount":2161,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[50832,50990]],"Locations in B":[[667,824]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Esther Leslie"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9619048d-a094-3025-93fa-23c55c3d67ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43825820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"New German Adventures in Realism and Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43825820","wordCount":3044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHIHYUNG JEON"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24468693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95d7a65b-031d-370c-bf61-bf07c949b44c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24468693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"The Virtual Flier: The Link Trainer, Flight Simulation, and Pilot Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24468693","wordCount":11336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":"The Link Trainer is often described as the first successful attempt at what we now recognize as flight simulation and even virtual reality. Instead of asking how well the device simulated flight conditions, this article shows that what the Link Trainer simulated was not the conditions of the air, but rather the conditions of the cockpit that was gradually filled with flight instruments. The article also considers the Link Trainer as a cultural space in which shifting ideas about what it meant to be a pilot were manifested. A pilot in the Link Trainer was trained into a new category of flier\u2014the virtual flier\u2014who was an avid reader of instruments and an attentive listener to signals. This article suggests that, by situating the pilot within new spaces, protocols, and relationships, technologies of simulation have constituted the identity of the modern pilot and other operators of machines.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Irwin"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23052726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03603709"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3f3af87-ae1d-3c06-a1f2-47607d981638"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23052726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoetrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Poetry Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Distortion and Disjunction in Contemporary American Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23052726","wordCount":5807,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[51562,51693]],"Locations in B":[[13498,13626]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Poetry Review","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert Fu","Martin Murray"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.9.1.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"968e4888-a1f9-3d48-86a9-48939a15e7d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.9.1.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sentimentalizing Racial Reconciliation in the \u201cNew South Africa\u201d: Cinematic Representation of the 1995 Rugby World Cup","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.9.1.02","wordCount":11144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":"In an age when the obsessive fixations on virtual reality scenarios and digital simulations of historical events have blurred the boundaries between truth and fiction, collective memory\u2014and the authenticity it purports to maintain\u2014come under threat of irrelevance if not outright extinction. As a distinctive kind of storytelling, filmmaking can be a powerful tool for promoting the collective remembrance of the past. Yet film is a notoriously slippery medium where questions of factual accuracy, objectivity, and truthfulness are concerned. Focusing attention on the Hollywood blockbuster film Invictus (2009) enables us to explore how feature films based on true stories produce modes of collective remembrance that have only tangential relationship to actual histories of real events. Directed by Clint Eastwood, and starring Morgan Freeman as President Nelson Mandela and Matt Damon as Fran\u00c7ois Pienaar, captain of South Africa's national rugby team, the Springboks, Invictus recounts the story of South Africa's hosting and winning of the 1995 World Rugby Cup, barely a year after the historic liberation elections of April 1994 brought an official end to white minority rule. The surprising, last-minute victory against the heavily favored Australian national team, the All Blacks, was a highly charged emotional moment in the contemporary history of the New South Africa, capturing the hope for racial reconciliation and the optimism that accompanied the rainbow vision of the future. Invictus fosters a distinctive kind of sentimentalized remembrance that requires a selective, partial engagement with the actual politics of the day and a caricatured understanding of race and racism in contemporary South Africa.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward J. Carvalho"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e43fb9cf-2989-3a61-b954-8bed55923bfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Star Wars and \"Star Wars\": Teaching Pre-9\/11 Literature as Post-9\/11 Reality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445151","wordCount":13941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Language Studies","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf9313cc-7a62-3add-8c06-adbaa2a095a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976100","wordCount":2834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","volumeNumber":"59","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graeme Caughley"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/5542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218790"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42799265"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23440"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/5542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"janimalecology"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Animal Ecology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Directions in Conservation Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/5542","wordCount":25940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"1. Conservation biology has two threads: the small-population paradigm which deals with the effect of smallness on the persistence of a population, and the declining-population paradigm which deals with the cause of smallness and its cure. 2. The processes relevant to the small-population paradigm are amenable to theoretical examination because they generalize across species and are subsumed by an inclusive higher category: stochasticity. 3. In contrast, the processes relevant to the declining-population paradigm are essentially humdrum, being not one but many. So far they have defied tight generalization and hence are of scant theoretical interest. 4. The small-population paradigm has not yet contributed significantly to conserving endangered species in the wild because it treats an effect (smallness) as if it were a cause. It provides an answer only to a trivial question: how long will the population persist if nothing unusual happens? Rather, its major contribution has been to captive breeding and to the design of reserve systems. 5. The declining-population paradigm, on the other hand, is that relevant to most problems of conservation. It summons an investigation to discover the cause of the decline and to prescribe its antidote. Hence, at least at our current level of under-standing, it evokes only an ecological investigation which, although utilizing the rigour of tight hypotheses and careful experimentation, is essentially a one-off study of little theoretical interest. 6. The principal contribution of the small-population paradigm is the theoretical underpinning that it imparted to conservation biology, even though most of that theory presently bears tenuous relevance to the specific problems of aiding a species in trouble. It would contribute immeasurably more if some of the theoretical momentum so generated were channelled into providing a theory of driven population declines, thereby liberating the declining-population paradigm from the inefficiency of case-by-case ecological investigations and recovery operations. 7. The declining-population paradigm is urgently in need of more theory. The small-population paradigm needs more practice. Each has much to learn from the other. A cautious intermixing of the two might well lead to a reduction in the rate at which species are presently going extinct.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Mulcaire"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de3b6dba-6a53-3ae7-bb30-ce4d1b469779"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Progressive Visions of War in \"The Red Badge of Courage\" and \"The Principles of Scientific Management\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712966","wordCount":11995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deborah P. Britzman"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1179406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a8c7c7f-2e0b-33d9-b3f5-fc32fd9b090b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1179406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Who Has the Floor? Curriculum, Teaching, and the English Student Teacher's Struggle for Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1179406","wordCount":9577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":"This article presents an ethnographic inquiry into the problems of theorizing about teaching and learning within a social context organized to suppress the subjective experiences and meanings of classroom actors. Three questions are explored: 1) What is the nature of curriculum practice in secondary education, and how does it shape the voices of students and teachers?; 2) What meanings do classroom actors construct about teaching and learning, and how do these meanings affect voice?; 3) How can a critical reading of curriculum practice enable preservice teachers and their students to make their own voices? Stories from one preservice English teacher's classroom experience illustrate the \"struggle for voice\" and the concurrent power struggles arising when curriculum practice mirrors school organization and its institutional values. I argue that conventional notions of curriculum can neither account for the classroom actors' struggles for their voices nor enable preservice teachers to explore social experience as a source of their pedagogy. Utilizing the tripartite distinction of curriculum as constituting the explicit, the implicit, and the null, this article demonstrates how these dimensions coalesce during the teaching and learning encounter to infiltrate the intentions and discourse of the classroom actors. If unaccounted, curriculum works to dissipate both the actors' meanings and its potential to be a means to illuminating student and teacher experience. Finally, this article continues the tradition of advocating the use of ethnography as a means for enabling preservice teachers to become critics of their teaching experience -- a necessary stage in developing challenging forms of pedagogy.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45201360"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236975"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6b2a179-6f6c-3664-84a4-63cf09175e00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3390767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musiceducatorsj"}],"isPartOf":"Music Educators Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3390767","wordCount":6828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Lesjak"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30031910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Utopia, Use, and the Everyday: Oscar Wilde and a New Economy of Pleasure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30031910","wordCount":11832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"67","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kaira M. Caba\u00f1as"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cfcba3c-4286-33dc-871a-6b80a5d9f09a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Yves Klein's Performative Realism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442790","wordCount":10840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"31","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kaja Silverman"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d7f13cb-7ab8-3866-bdf9-2f69423d35be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Is a Camera?, or: History in the Field of Vision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389284","wordCount":15446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjz0m.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089647566"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e2289b8-027e-3bfe-a522-c3ca4dfff20d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1zkjz0m.7"}],"isPartOf":"World Building","keyphrase":["gerhard richter","images","baldacci","massimiliano gioni","atlases","huberman","baldacci cristina","visual","visible world","warburg"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"77","pagination":"77-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cVisible World\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjz0m.7","wordCount":5099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Traditionally, an atlas is a systematic collection of maps with which humans have redefined the world. We also know that, even before designating maps and their representations, Atlas was the mythological Titan who, for the ancients, held up the sky. The Flemish geographer Gerhard Kremer (1512-1594) chose Atlas for the cover of his Renaissance compendium, the first geographical atlas in the modern sense of the term, along with the one by the Flemish Abraham Ortelius (1528-1598).The geographical atlas as a collection of maps is literally at the fingertips of users as a \u201chandy and consultable\u201d book, as an ordered","subTitle":"The Atlas as a Visual Form of Knowledge and Narrative Paradigm in Contemporary Art","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/874268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a412ea7f-4139-3c67-86e0-6a2cae79e40f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/874268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"lxiv","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-lxiv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/874268","wordCount":7800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"733","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2445447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6624407-40e7-3799-81d2-cfe19ad8b1a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2445447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanjbotany"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Botany","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":209.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Botany & Plant Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2445447","wordCount":142187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Botanical Society of America","volumeNumber":"81","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colm Kiernan"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40351788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00704806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cab87d1-18e6-3988-919b-aa957d7ef334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40351788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diderotstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Diderot Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Additional Reflections on Diderot and Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40351788","wordCount":9687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Librairie Droz","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Uwe Hohendahl"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x04.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781501707186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"259d41c3-ca20-3f69-b227-38433235eb33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x04.6"}],"isPartOf":"The Institution of Criticism","keyphrase":["literary","literary criticism","literature","curtius","boehlich","public","social","technischen zeitalter","percent","criti\u00ad cism"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"126","pagination":"126-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The End of an Institution?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x04.6","wordCount":13821,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Looking back at postwar German literature from the perspective of the 1970S, we begin to realize that the earlier years of this period have become historical. The literature of the late forties and the fifties appears to be somewhat remote, separated from us by the new tendencies of the following decade. Would this observation suggest that the 1960s were qualitatively different from the postwar era, that they perhaps comprised an epoch of their own? I believe that there is much to be said for this hypothesis in the field of literary criticismo To demonstrate this, I must include an analysis","subTitle":"The Debate over the Function of Literary Criticism in the I960s","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda Dobbie","Eunice N. Askov"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27541997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44519024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02f044d1-f35d-3428-9ea5-5e4ac10cfea7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27541997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Progress of Handwriting Research in the 1980s and Future Prospects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27541997","wordCount":11812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":"In 1970 and 1980, The Journal of Educational Research published reviews of handwriting research from the previous decades (Askov, Otto, & Askov, 1970; Peck, Askov, & Fairchild, 1980), using the directions for research identified in an earlier article (Herrick & Okada, 1963). We now offer an update for the research conducted in the 1980s, with the addition of two categories of research efforts that have recently emerged. The use of computers has also become a tool in handwriting instruction and research, and more sophisticated research designs are being applied.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1914-03-28","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25591182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1914,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 12, no. 25","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25591182","wordCount":25006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"25","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20165622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129623"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48020354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-263020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be8c0d8a-f139-3f79-a994-68b15e5d8f5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20165622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullecosociamer"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Program of Papers: Thursday Afternoon, December 26, Sessions I, II, and III","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20165622","wordCount":16344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. A. Westrup"],"datePublished":"1959-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50211713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24026143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicletters"}],"isPartOf":"Music & Letters","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":140.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INDEX to volumes I-XL (1920-1959)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24026143","wordCount":76768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Fisher III"],"datePublished":"1988-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60d4ff7a-1900-3540-bae0-4c49cf6440e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1341435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":137.0,"pageEnd":"1795","pageStart":"1659","pagination":"pp. 1659-1795","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Reconstructing the Fair Use Doctrine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1341435","wordCount":75410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"8","publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":"The fair use doctrine, codified at 17 U. S. C. \u00a7 107, permits a court to excuse a putatively infringing use of copyrighted material when the circumstances surrounding the use make it \"fair.\" In this Article, Professor Fisher criticizes the doctrine - and in particular the changes wrought by two recent Supreme Court decisions - and considers how it might be improved. The most serious of the many problems with current fair use jurisprudence, he maintains, is that it rests on considerations derived from four disparate philosophic traditions; this incoherent foundation makes the application of the doctrine unpredictable and aggravates the cacophony of contemporary legal argumentation. To alleviate these problems, Professor Fisher considers two alternative strategies for reconstructing the field. First, he examines fair use from an economic standpoint, arguing that, by comparing the various entitlements that might be accorded copyright owners in terms of the incentives they provide for creativity and the costs they impose on consumers, courts could employ the doctrine to increase efficiency in the use of scarce resources. Second, building on a discussion of the limitations of the economic approach, Professor Fisher deploys a \"utopian\" analysis of fair use, suggesting how the doctrine might be recast to incorporate particular conceptions of the \"good life\" and the \"good society.\" So formulated, the fair use doctrine would contribute to the realization of a more just social order and a more integrated legal discourse.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Pon"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2543906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03610160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f77d5cc1-53c3-301d-a3dc-cab736394eaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2543906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sixtcentj"}],"isPartOf":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1037","pageStart":"1015","pagination":"pp. 1015-1037","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Michelangelo's Lives: Sixteenth-Century Books by Vasari, Condivi, and Others","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2543906","wordCount":12897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Sixteenth Century Journal","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This study examines how a number of books published in the sixteenth century played important roles in formulating a public identity for Michelangelo as a singular artist touched by genius. The books discussed include Giorgio Vasari's first and second editions of his Vite de' piu eccellenti architetti, pittori et scultori; Ascanio Condivi's biography Vita di Michelagnolo Buonarroti; the funerary pamphlet called Esequie del divin Michelagnolo Buonarroti; and a special offprint edition of Vasari's 1568 biography of Michelangelo. These books were neither the first biographies of Michelangelo, nor the earliest texts written about artists. Nonetheless, they were instrumental in building a public image of Michelangelo as an artist of outstanding stature; they did so through their dialogues with other texts and other genres, their amplified effects as printed and published books, and their tangible presence as objects which could be bought or given.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antoinette Burton"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d60aa287-124b-3c5b-811a-fc7b0172d784"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"780","pageStart":"779","pagination":"pp. 779-780","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231263","wordCount":34146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09277544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0a7c644-68e0-3c38-8fc7-b1b642fa2aa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44103334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrealestalite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Real Estate Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44103334","wordCount":3243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Real Estate Society","volumeNumber":"5","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Skoller"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e71279a0-4b5d-30be-8eb3-5caa8981d976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1213490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213490","wordCount":3722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911307273"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3810e3a-31bb-3226-90d3-9f5a6447f0a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.5"}],"isPartOf":"Drawing Futures","keyphrase":["digital","glitch","pixel array","digital drawing","madelon vriesendorp","binary numeric","architectural","architecture","algorithms","gavin perin"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"7","pagination":"7-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Architecture and Architectural History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Augmentations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ht4ws4.5","wordCount":62673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Drawing has always had an implicit relationship to technology. While drawing is often framed as an instinctive and intuitive act, we should not forget that many of the principles we take for granted today were developed through technologies as much as through the hand. Alberti\u2019s devices for perspectival drawing helped the artist manage the complexities of perspective and in turn assisted its proliferation as a representational mode. Piranesi\u2019sCarceri<\/em>were distributed as one might buy a contemporary mass-produced art print, the etching plate and the printing press working in combination. We might also think of tools like the pantograph as","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Brown"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33dcd353-9e3e-3dda-9ba5-38e83198ed56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Thing Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344258","wordCount":8944,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1960-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71068abf-2f92-32e4-8a09-2f119bd1942a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/951036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/951036","wordCount":9331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1409","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"101","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEAN MICHEL MASSING","MARCO PESARESE","MICHAEL BURY","MEREDITH M. 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In the early and mid-1920s, two of the movement\u2019s founders and greatest contributors, S\u00e3o Paulo natives Oswald de Andrade and M\u00e1rio de Andrade (no relation), labored toward a new language of Brazilian nationhood that would both challenge and reassess the","subTitle":"A Theory of Allegory in Oswald de Andrade\u2019s Antropofagia","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e66d21ff-5e53-3830-8e5b-bf34adf65b10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/878585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":135.0,"pageEnd":"cxxxii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cxxxii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/878585","wordCount":23847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"884","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"118","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vance C. 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Close to technicians and journalists of early film, Mallarm\u00e9 developed what might be called a cinepoetics, especially in Un coup de d\u00e9s (1897)-the ur-modernist visual poem whose preface recoups the single declaration he made on cinema-and in the unrealized project known as Le Livre (1893-98), a poetic performance involving electrical lighting and image projection. Close readings make explicit Mallarm\u00e9's cinepoetic aesthetics. Its epistemology of d\u00e9roulement 'unfolding' is compared with that of other 1890s figures: \u00c9tienne-Jules Marey, Henri Bergson, and Lo\u00efe Fuller. Cinepoetry has not been recognized as the distinct practice it was, although Walter Benjamin and Jacques Derrida came close to theorizing Mallarm\u00e9's interest in cinema. Cinepoetic experimentation has shadowed the whole French vanguard. The study of its genealogy should reshape our understanding of the intersection of modernist lyricism and new media.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martine Danan"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3815217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From a 'Prenational' to a 'Postnational' French Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3815217","wordCount":7835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1912-10-12","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1912,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 11, no. 1","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590902","wordCount":12410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sean Meehan"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"516","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-516","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Specimen Daze: Whitman's Photobiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540331","wordCount":14465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"Whitman's use of photography throughout his career plays a key role in the conception of his work's autobiographical nature. Focusing on and around his prose autobiography Specimen Days (1882), this essay argues that Whitman incorporates photography (in both image and word) to produce a faithful version of his autobiography, but at the same time, that Whitman writes with an understanding of the dynamic play of the process of photographic representation that serves to question the accuracy and completion presumed in photographs. In Specimen Days, Whitman thus uses photography against its own positivist grain, provoking the recognition of the relationship between the positive identity represented and the means of its representation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Urban A. 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Bodie State Historic Park, once a booming gold-mining town, now greets some two hundred thousand tourists annually and is widely applauded for its authenticity. In this paper, I explore the meaning of this term in its ghost-town context: while boom-town Bodie was a bustling commercial center, ghost-town Bodie appears abandoned and devoid of commercial activity. Thus, authenticity in a ghost town is not tied to the accuracy with which it represents its past. Yet a version of Bodie's past is what both visitors and staff experience: they employ Bodie's authenticity to engage with the mythic West, a romanticized version of the Anglo-American past that upholds dominant contemporary Anglo-American values. Bodie's false-fronted facades and ramshackle miners' cabins call forth these images, familiar to visitors from movie Westerns. Since ghost towns have few or no residents, it is largely through the landscape and the artifacts that are part of that landscape that these mythic images are experienced. Thus, an experience of authenticity is not the end result of a visit to Bodie; rather, authenticity is a vehicle through which both visitors and staff engage with powerful notions about American virtues. In this paper, I explore how the notion of authenticity is triggered by landscape, and examine the narratives about the past that the concept of authenticity enables.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lois Parkinson Zamora"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1770341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1770341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Magical Tables of Isabel Allende and Remedios Varo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1770341","wordCount":12194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Charles Roy"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25535789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332415X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a31fb65c-9eda-3e72-9b7f-c4357825aabf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25535789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgalarchhistsoc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Archaeology","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Prefer a Free Country\" Letters to and from County Galway Emigrants 1843-1856","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25535789","wordCount":35527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Galway Archaeological & Historical Society","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Boorman"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rethinking the Expressionist Era; 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Harding"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b26d3091-0da0-3bb1-b7ce-6156fa6c57d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Adorno, Ellison, and the Critique of Jazz","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354448","wordCount":11887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"31","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aug Nishizaka"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee5fb7a4-774b-3ba5-9e44-a378704b6a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41301935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The embodied organization of a real-time fetus: The visible and the invisible in prenatal ultrasound examinations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41301935","wordCount":11759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":"Through an analysis of videotaped interactions between healthcare professionals and pregnant women during ultrasound prenatal examinations in Japan, I explore some aspects of sequence organization in which an ultrasound real-time fetus is organized. The ultrasound demonstration of the fetal condition is an intrinsically interactional and distributed achievement. The ultrasound fetus is constructed as a real-time object in a particular technological environment; in this environment, the participants' orientations to spatially separated operational fields, that is, the monitor screen and the woman's abdomen, are exhibited and integrated in the actual course of interaction. In conclusion, the fundamental relation between organizational lived work in a technological environment and the observable features of technology will be suggested.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44607758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263982"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560807841"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1389d28b-0bee-34d4-a1ec-43694ed84093"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44607758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryengineer"}],"isPartOf":"The Military Engineer","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":118.0,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering","Military Studies","Technology","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - 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The article explores how commercial music is applied, experienced and conceptualized in the modern, Western hospital. The position of the music in the market--it is profiled by the authority of medicine--is examined along with the positive experiences of private users. In outlining aspects of the interfaces between healing and biomedical treatment and caretaking, the article discusses how medicinal music with its overt notions of the natural and universal aims at altering the healing space of hospital wards and private homes. The power to define healthy sounds and regulate bodily behaviour in relation to ideas of health is examined in the light of postcolonial critique of social and institutional hegemony.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH CAROLYN MILLER"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swhm.14","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8b4d6e4-3cfe-3015-8eb7-ef92dd2e4c2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv65swhm.14"}],"isPartOf":"Framed","keyphrase":["arthur conan","doyle arthur","doyle arthur conan","victorian","london","princess casamassima","strand magazine","oscar wilde","wilde oscar","robert eustace"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"255","pagination":"255-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WORKS CITED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv65swhm.14","wordCount":6856,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jed Rasula"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8f3f28c-aacc-3045-978e-9264661ecc9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Nietzsche in the Nursery: Naive Classics and Surrogate Parents in Postwar American Cultural Debates","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928418","wordCount":13923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard Faure"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44171439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07661177"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e13def-0364-3ce6-979e-d2b688c75c14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44171439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahiextrasie"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'Extr\u00eame-Asie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"QUAND L'HABIT FAIT LE MOINE : THE SYMBOLISM OF THE \"K\u0100\u1e62\u0100YA\" IN S\u014cT\u014c ZEN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44171439","wordCount":17470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"\u00c9cole fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Extr\u00eame-Orient","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":"La sacralisation de tr\u00e9sors dynastiques, d'objets de culte, de reliques, de talismans et de diagrammes est un ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne politique et religieux qu'on peut dire universel. Sur sa valeur de l\u00e9gitimation dans le contexte chinois, Anna Seidel avait \u00e9crit quelques-unes de ses \u00e9tudes les plus p\u00e9n\u00e9trantes. Avec des limites bien trac\u00e9es, le pr\u00e9sent article se voudrait une prise de relais : dans une monographie du H\u014db\u014dgirin encore in\u00e9dite, Anna Seidel avait suivi les vicissitudes de la transmission (purement fictive) de la robe du Buddha durant les d\u00e9buts du Chan en Chine. Sur base de cette recherche qu'il d\u00e9crit bri\u00e8vement, l'auteur pousse ici l'enqu\u00eate du c\u00f4t\u00e9 japonais, tout en gardant dans sa perspective la question fondamentale : pourquoi le v\u00eatement monastique est-il devenu le symbole par excellence du Dharma, surclassant d'autres symboles et reliques, et occupant une place eminente dans l'imaginaire bouddhique ? Du c\u00f4t\u00e9 japonais, son information repose surtout sur quelques chapitres hautement liturgiques et eccl\u00e9siastiques du Sh\u014db\u014dgenz\u014d de D\u014dgen (1200-1253) et sur quelques textes de son Ecole, notamment des extraits du Denk\u014droku de Keizan (1268-1325) et d'autres textes, plus tardifs, r\u00e9unis dans la section Shingi du \"Suppl\u00e9ment aux Ecrits de l'Ecole S\u014dt\u014d\". Une derni\u00e8re source enfin est constitu\u00e9e par quelques Kirigami initiatiques du S\u014dt\u014d, souvent proches du tantrisme Mikky\u014d. D\u014dgen h\u00e9ritait de traditions complexes concernant l'habit monastique. Il \u00e9tait d'abord concern\u00e9 par l'exaltation apocryphe du v\u00eatement du Buddha, gage de la filiation l\u00e9gitime (mais non sans accrocs) des patriarches du Dhy\u0101na en Inde et en Chine qui aboutissait au sixi\u00e8me patriarche chinois, Huineng (m. en 713). Il ne fut pas indiff\u00e9rent non plus aux divergences dont le k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya et notamment sa confection mat\u00e9rielle (haillons ou brocards, coton ou soie) faisaient l'objet dans diff\u00e9rentes traditions du Vinaya : celle de Daoxuan (596-667) et celle de Yijing (635-713). Enfin, il connaissait l'assimilation bien \u00e9tablie entre ordination monastique (concr\u00e9tis\u00e9e par la prise d'habit) et sacre royal (kanj\u014d). D\u014dgen, d'autre part, semble port\u00e9 par un effort de synth\u00e8se mystique : identit\u00e9 de tous les k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya du Buddha entre eux, identification de tout kesa monastique orthodoxe (donc Zen) au k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya du Buddha, identification du k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya au Dharma, identification enfin du moine \u00e0 son habit. Dans l'exaltation de l'habit qui distingue le religieux compl\u00e8tement ordonn\u00e9 des la\u00efcs profanes, ne retrouve-t-on pas la distinction, exacerb\u00e9e dans le Grand V\u00e9hicule, entre religieux (shukke) et profane? D\u014dgen passe de la richesse symbolique de la compl\u00e9mentarit\u00e9 (\u00e0 la la mani\u00e8re des insignes fu chinois en deux parties) entre le Dharma et son v\u00eatement, \"robe de d\u00e9livrance\", \u00e0 une sublimation de la robe au point de la rendre immat\u00e9rielle et en quelque sorte sup\u00e9rieure au Dharma. Une telle abstraction aide en fait la diss\u00e9mination de la robe monastique. L'exaltation du k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya du Buddha est ins\u00e9parable du riche potentiel magique qu'il d\u00e9gage : son poids, son extension, qui peuvent \u00eatre incommensurables, comme la taille du Buddha. Mais, ce potentiel miraculeux affecte tout k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya. La fantaisie d'Utpalavar\u1e47\u0101, prostitu\u00e9e, rev\u00eatant une robe de nonne, la conduira \u00e0 la saintet\u00e9 par l'effet du v\u00eatement. En outre, D\u014dgen est confront\u00e9 au jeu politique dont le k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya fait l'objet, jeu politique que refl\u00e8te son adoption en Chine comme tr\u00e9sor national par des empereurs Tang tandis qu'avant eux Wu Zetian honorait des religieux par des robes de pourpre. Du c\u00f4t\u00e9 japonais, on per\u00e7oit la relation ambigu\u00eb chez D\u014dgen de ce k\u0101\u1e63\u0101ya vis-\u00e0-vis des tr\u00e9sors imp\u00e9riaux et l'embarras du m\u00eame D\u014dgen, honor\u00e9 d'une robe de grand prix par l'empereur Go-Saga. Les \u00e9crits post\u00e9rieurs \u00e0 D\u014dgen d\u00e9veloppent encore l'analyse du symbolisme du kesa. Tous ses aspects sont envisag\u00e9s : nombre de pi\u00e8ces constitutives, couleurs, assimilation au riche th\u00e8me du champ de m\u00e9rite, aux reliques de contact et \u00e0 leurs vertus, au cosmogramme du ma\u1e47\u1e0dala, aux multiples facettes du si\u00e8ge de l'illumination (bodhima\u1e47\u1e0da), au st\u016bpa et \u00e0 ses rites, et pour finir\u2014et ici l'enqu\u00eate devient plus anthropologique\u2014\u00e0 la matrice. Du kesa, assimil\u00e9 au placenta et \u00e0 la naissance, au kesa, symbole d'ordination et de sacre, et donc de renaissance, il y a continuit\u00e9. Cette continuit\u00e9 dans le Zen concorde avec la doctrine bouddhique des deux v\u00e9rit\u00e9s comme avec la vision compl\u00e9mentaire et quasi talismanique de la cosmologie traditionnelle. D'autre part, par une virevolte \"rh\u00e9torique\" du Zen, d\u00e9j\u00e0 observ\u00e9e ailleurs, la sacralisation n'emp\u00eache pas dans la pratique quotidienne une certaine d\u00e9sinvolture vis-\u00e0-vis de l'objet sacr\u00e9, en l'occurrence le froc monacal. Si la ritualisation du froc a contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 renforcer la sup\u00e9riorit\u00e9 des religieux sur les la\u00efcs, la contradiction qu'on a voulu voir entre un v\u00eatement fait de haillons et un v\u00eatement de soie (avec le massacre de vers \u00e0 soie que sous-entend sa fabrication) se r\u00e9sout peut-\u00eatre dans la dualit\u00e9 du Buddha lui-m\u00eame, asc\u00e8te et souverain universel dont le Grand V\u00e9hicule exalte le corps glorieux.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Cochran"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture in Its Sociohistorical Dimension","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303192","wordCount":16779,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[52301,52815],[58402,58724],[59181,59477],[59779,60104]],"Locations in B":[[57179,63813],[77978,78300],[100616,100912],[103005,103330]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c82777c8-cc86-3076-9cc0-f384d56894fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"460","pagination":"p. 460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374470","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Wild"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9abb9716-1ad5-35f7-a073-26b0c02ae719"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4152875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4152875","wordCount":1645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andreu Ball\u00fas","Alba G. Torrents"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/mech.9.2014.0283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19342489"},{"name":"oclc","value":"493260789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-203474"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42a34704-1acd-315b-a109-a8c653e7987f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/mech.9.2014.0283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mech"}],"isPartOf":"Mechademia","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Evangelion<\/em> as Second Impact: Forever Changing That Which Never Was","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/mech.9.2014.0283","wordCount":4054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"9","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Harte"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6b63d6b-c598-387f-9f40-15fcc7897604"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"920","pageStart":"919","pagination":"pp. 919-920","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5612\/slavicreview.70.4.0919","wordCount":1316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"70","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES WALTON"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01467891"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"263705f7-b0d7-3173-a325-cef37676546b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23538403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century French Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Realism and \"Trompe-l'\u0153il\" in \"Le P\u00e8re Goriot\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23538403","wordCount":7525,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":"This essay consists in an extended gloss on Balzac's paradoxical claim that \"All is true.\" Author and audience (figured as guide and mentor, degraded avatars of Virgil and Dante), descend into a merely material underworld constructed as an illusion of depth upon the flat field of the text. A symbol of Balzac's art appears as a trompe l'\u0153il arch over a plaster figure of Eros. The allegory of \"realism\" proceeds from a low-mimetic temptation scene to the Diorama as model of the factitious `reality' shared by artist and spectator and to the materialist reduction of Shakespeare's tragedy into a Lear-orama. Balzac's tragedy manqu\u00e9 lacks a Cordelia, representing reality's third dimension or the apex of the triangle identified in Louis Lambert as symbol of transcendence. In the end Rastignac, Bildungsroman hero, confronts the mere panorama of Paris and resumes the trompe l'\u0153il \"descent.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd Cronan"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f62e255c-38af-3b92-b9e6-24d28b4b523a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SHAKEN REALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686168","wordCount":12303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helmut R\u00f6sing"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25099354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14723808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"310470957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85773332-c491-3626-8c55-70a2cc6944f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25099354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rmarschchron"}],"isPartOf":"Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Their makers invested a great deal of effort into the design of their goods, whose consumers expected stoves to be both visually attractive and useful. There was an enormous variety of stove models and increasingly rapid superficial change but also technological convergence and stylistic consensus. The article explores this apparent paradox and explains it by focusing on the comparatively few men who designed most American stoves in the industry\u2019s heyday.","subTitle":"Designing the First Mass\u2010Market Consumer Durable, ca. 1810\u20131930","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Leckey"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44543741"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235694"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5619afd-ab37-3d71-a5b7-3daee5b0c6e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20533223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Cohabitation and Comparative Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20533223","wordCount":14209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Law Review","volumeNumber":"72","abstract":"The paper intervenes in current policy debates on unmarried cohabitation and comparative law debates on methodology. It adopts a culturally alert, discursive methodology of comparison to study regulation of unmarried cohabitation under the common law and civil law as well as the effect of an entrenched right to equality protecting against marital status discrimination. It identifies not different legislative solutions to a common problem, but distinct discourses of family law regulation. Yet the approaches are less radically opposed than is often thought. Discursive comparison tends to highlight dominant voices at the expense of minority ones, wrongly characterising minority views as foreign to a tradition. Discursive comparison should not confine itself to a synchronic view of present legal debates; a richer diachronic approach will also attend to views within a legal tradition's past.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald M. 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Back to 40,000 years ago all fossil hominids are of the sapiens desing, while all those clearly older show the erectus pattern. Except for their large brains, Neandertals are of the erectus type. The sapiens differences (many of them mal-adaptive in themselves) follow directly, for biomechanical reasons, from an elongation of the pharynx and indicate full development of speech as the delivery system for laguage. The archeological record at the same time showns a worldwide change of increased tool complexity, geographical localization of desings, and increased rate of change. Faster and easier transmission of information by the vocal medium would increase culture content and would facilitate building flexible social organizations. The final step in developing vocal language would be the phonemic priciple of using meaningless sounds in meaningful combinations. This invention would transform vocalizations from calls with fixed meanings into a more flexible and rapid form of communication. Phonemic speech would spread by diffusion because all erectus would be able to use it to some degree. All populations would then select for the same vocal anatomy and consequent cranial changes that best facilitate speech behavior. This accounts for the speed of transformation and the continuity of line traits through it.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark A. Lemley"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23216799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46972891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237195"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61ce6732-135b-3c05-8710-730495510cba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23216799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"760","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-760","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE MYTH OF THE SOLE INVENTOR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23216799","wordCount":27678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Michigan Law Review Association","volumeNumber":"110","abstract":"The theory of patent law is based on the idea that a lone genius can solve problems that stump the experts, and that the lone genius will do so only if properly incented. But the canonical story of the lone genius inventor is largely a myth. Surveys of hundreds of significant new technologies show that almost all of them are invented simultaneously or nearly simultaneously by two or more teams working independently of each other. Invention appears in significant part to be a social, not an individual, phenomenon. The result is a real problem for classic theories of patent law. Our dominant theory of patent law doesn't seem to explain the way we actually implement that law. Maybe the problem is not with our current patent law, but with our current patent theory. But the dominant alternative theories of patent law don't do much better. Prospect theory\u2014under which we give a patent early to one company so it can control research and development\u2014makes little sense in a world in which ideas are in the air and are likely to be happened upon by numerous inventors at about the same time. And commercialization theory, which hypothesizes that we grant patents in order to encourage not invention but product development, seems to founder on a related historical fact: most first inventors turn out to be lousy commercializers who end up delaying implementation of the invention by exercising their rights. If patent law in its current form can be saved, we need an alternative justification for granting patents in circumstances of near-simultaneous invention. I offer another possibility: patent rights encourage patent races, and that might actually be a good thing. Patent racing cannot alone justify a patent system, but it may do more than any existing theory to explain how patents work in practice.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brigid Doherty"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fe8031d-afd4-3a14-8669-12c4969de5a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 64-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Figures of the Pseudorevolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779209","wordCount":10678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"84","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20093571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00314587"},{"name":"oclc","value":"64637891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006267556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e07598f-fd23-37c8-a489-86ade0af63cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20093571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pennmaghistbio"}],"isPartOf":"The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20093571","wordCount":11464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Historical Society of Pennsylvania","volumeNumber":"126","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1962-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25696441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc07214e-0ccb-3bc0-a7d0-b88e01867b5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25696441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":71.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1962,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25696441","wordCount":18769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angela Berkley"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab2dac6b-d608-3e09-b4d2-d1fdddc5d63c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SNAPSHOT SEEING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421897","wordCount":11837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":"KODAK FIENDS, CHILD PHOTOGRAPHERS, AND HENRY JAMES\u2019S WHAT MAISIE KNEW<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THEODORE F. 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KG","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1987-12-04","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe4fc364-ef29-3091-9aca-20ded9b6ea97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1700098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"1445","pageStart":"1327","pagination":"pp. 1327-1445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1700098","wordCount":18721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4832","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"238","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley Cavell"],"datePublished":"1976-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41399650","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd9f8553-e6e3-38bb-97e4-6daa4b615efa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41399650"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"LEOPARDS IN CONNECTICUT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41399650","wordCount":12409,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[47494,47573],[47642,47731]],"Locations in B":[[6283,6363],[6385,6474]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on Behalf of the University of Georgia and the Georgia Review","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. Philip McMahon"],"datePublished":"1929-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045442","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cb8455c-473a-3fd4-8fd3-a032f62265b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3045442"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1929,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The New Protagoras: A Pedantic Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3045442","wordCount":17654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"11","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom McEnaney"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d5e4a06-0c46-32ae-8e1d-3c1b235acfae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"No Transmitter: Clandestine Radio Listening Communities in Ricardo Piglia's The Absent City<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0072","wordCount":10691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"91","abstract":"This essay examines the Argentine author Ricardo Piglia's 1992 novel La ciudad ausente (The Absent City) as itself a sophisticated theory of political listening. A critique of both the dictatorial radio voice and the testimonial narrative usually thought to counter that voice, Piglia's novel ultimately eschews radio in favor of an auditory underground where rebels circulate cassette tapes dubbed with stories the state wants erased. Redefining notions of active and passive listening, The Absent City depicts a non-subject-centered form of political community in which listening to and disseminating a story becomes a revolutionary act. Challenging the divide between subject and object, Piglia's attention to listening includes an imaginative description of a cassette tape consciousness, whose narration renovates the novel form by narrating the act of being heard.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kuang\u2010Chi Chang"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3ec2978-65c5-305d-abc2-e7b18e35f9d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1127","pageStart":"1125","pagination":"pp. 1125-1127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231330","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mrs. Hadaway"],"datePublished":"1908-02-07","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13f59076-a39a-323b-b028-22707ec17048"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1908,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"DEVELOPMENTS IN THE ART OF JEWELLERY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337952","wordCount":9193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2881","publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","volumeNumber":"56","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Rosenboom"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09611215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"607a83c8-9afb-3208-a362-46f7354b5c92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1513243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardomusicj"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo Music Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Propositional Music: On Emergent Properties in Morphogenesis and the Evolution of Music: Part II: Imponderable Forms and Compositional Methods","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1513243","wordCount":5204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":"In Part I of this article, \"Essays, Propositions and Commentaries,\" published in Leonardo Volume 30, Number 4 (1997), a point of view about creative music making termed \"propositional music\" was described. This method of composing involves proposing models for whole musical realities emphasizing the dynamic emergence of forms through evolution and transformation. Related areas of music, science and philosophy influencing this view were discussed. In Part II, this discussion is continued by considering the comprehension of initially undefined or imponderable forms, some premises with which to approach making propositional music and some fundamental steps to consider in constructing methods for composition and improvisation. The article concludes with comments on how substantive phenomena emerge and spread through complex dissipative and resonant processes and discussion of the relationship of propositional music to society.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Henchy"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40860672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07412037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607531898"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40860672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crossroads"}],"isPartOf":"Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40860672","wordCount":1226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Board of Trustees of Northern Illinois University","volumeNumber":"12","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW EPSTEIN"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70723ce3-9ce0-369f-a955-c2800cb054fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41261814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"776","pageStart":"736","pagination":"pp. 736-776","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"There Is No Content Here, Only Dailiness\": Poetry as Critique of Everyday Life in Ron Silliman's \"Ketjak\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261814","wordCount":15678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","volumeNumber":"51","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gene Burns"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"222dcdb7-464c-3814-bc43-d44700c6e924"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1086","pageStart":"1084","pagination":"pp. 1084-1086","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231309","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra L. Zimdars\u2010Swartz"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6bd1229-67de-371f-bb6b-3d8e4af09d73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"1482","pageStart":"1480","pagination":"pp. 1480-1482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231109","wordCount":30503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barkley L. Hendricks"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40514671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00843539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742269074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234583"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1de863d4-c66a-3ec8-b25d-e1feab0e2e96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40514671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yaluniartgalbul"}],"isPartOf":"Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Acquisitions: July 1, 2005-June 30, 2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40514671","wordCount":21047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Yale University","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FLORIANE REVIRON-PI\u00c9GAY"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02079be7-1527-3c87-94a2-9fff3362dd60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"TRANSLATING GENERIC LIBERTIES: \"ORLANDO\" ON PAGE AND SCREEN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540947","wordCount":11136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":"In the 1920s, modernist art and philosophy shared cinema's ambitious project to refashion representations of subjectivity and time. Virginia Woolf was able to foresee that, in terms of representation, the cinema offered advantages literature did not have. By exploring the link between the advent of the cinema and what Woolf called \"The New Biography,\" this article explores the convergence between film theory, of adaptation in particular, and the theory of the New Biography as Woolf conceived it. Because Orlando: A Biography can be considered a mise en ab\u00eeme of this theory, and because it lies at the crossroads between Woolf's interest in the new visual medium and her search for a new mode of expression, its cinematic adaptation by Sally Potter in 1992 provides a particularly revealing insight into the problems of translation from one medium to another. The cinematic language of Orlando and its modernism led Potter to invent a new mode of adaptation as translation that is perhaps as challenging and innovative as Woolf's original.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f81562a1-da46-3d00-815b-a8dc67c07aa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1076","pageStart":"1075","pagination":"pp. 1075-1076","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231304","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"103","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. Moore"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031569"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46381485"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-238562"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3883085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerzool"}],"isPartOf":"American Zoologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":159.0,"pageEnd":"573","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Zoology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Science as a Way of Knowing: Developmental Biology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3883085","wordCount":85719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"This essay is part of the fourth yearly presentation of an educational project of the American Society of Zoologists. The purpose is to offer suggestions for improving the first-year biology courses in colleges and universities. We emphasize the conceptual framework of the biological sciences, show how scientific information is obtained and validated, and relate science to human concerns. The topic for consideration this year is Developmental Biology. This essay gives some of the background information-mainly classical experimental embryology. The speakers in the symposium will deal with more recent discoveries and insights.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas J. 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Modernization theories, as developed (most notably) by Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Elias, attempted to explain the transition from feudalism and a closed agrarian economy to capitalism and industrial society, as well as to understand and predict the avenues, consequences, and dangers of that transformation. The author argues that Simmel\u2019s work and his theoretical framework fit neatly into the \u201cmodernization paradigm\u201d template and, in fact, constitute one of its finest articulations. The conclusion points at those aspects of Simmel\u2019s sociology that transcend the boundaries of modernization discourse and make him a forerunner of the postmodernist structure of \u201cfeeling.\u201d","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Peter Byrne"],"datePublished":"1989-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796588","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f42c4975-8ffa-37c3-8aec-3b71e40ded58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796588"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Academic Freedom: A \"Special Concern of the First Amendment\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796588","wordCount":49704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"99","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Anderson"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3554317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3554317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. 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The first half of the paper draws upon the process philosophy of Ernst Bloch to argue that utopia is not located else-where or else-when in a transcendent realm separate from the present but is paradoxically immanent to 'everyday life'. This argument revolves around the novel 'open' experimental ontology that Bloch elaborates through the operator the 'not-yet'. Bloch's work enables the beginnings of an immanent utopianism that is able to discern, rather than critique, the dimly vibrating figures of hope that exist within rather than outside 'everyday life'. The second half of the paper sets this thought in motion by connecting two of Bloch's concepts, the 'trace' and 'novum', to the logic of one particularly common way of using recorded music: the use of music to 'feel better'. Drawing on in-depth case study research with seventeen lower-middle-class households I describe how this practice enables people to momentarily enact two forms of hope that are both based around the geographies of affect and affection: how something better might feel and an ability to forget. I conclude by speculatively describing the practice of a Blochian 'immanent utopianism' that itself embodies 'a principle of hope'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Brown","Harrison T. 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Thus, Heidegger anticipates a direct linkage between metaphysical self-critique, technological media analysis, sound studies, and postcolonial theory that resonates productively with our own time.","subTitle":"Film, Western Metaphysics, and the Figure of Japanese Aesthetics","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sophie Thomas"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6f5d9be-b4f1-37ac-afdf-5d876ebda0da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - 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The latter aims to put into perspective the questions raised in the panorama, which necessarily reach beyond the sole medium of film to affect the vast territory of media art.At stake beneath what Philippe Dubois qualifies as \u201cthe cinema effect in contemporary art\u201d (see his contribution to this chapter) is, first and","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. N. 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This article explores how culture is invoked in the making of these struggles and in the process draws attention to the relationship between culture, nation and communalism.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Silvia Kadiu"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6q5315.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787352520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79b16004-11f0-3ae9-952e-5e0e4e9845ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv6q5315.11"}],"isPartOf":"Reflexive Translation Studies","keyphrase":["reflexive method","translator","translator training","derrida","jacques derrida","deconstructionist approach","deconstructionist","maier ethics","translation theories","theory"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"145","pagination":"145-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conclusion:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6q5315.11","wordCount":7052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This book has given insight into translation theories that call for greater reflexivity in translation, and sought to map the various aspects of reflexivity brought into focus in each case. 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My experimental approach in this book has revealed that in practice the distinction between reflexivity and non-reflexivity is more unstable, ambiguous and fuzzy than these theories tend to","subTitle":"Towards self-critical engagement in translation","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Joseph Shulman"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20720565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15367827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57357872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf34f9e-e626-3411-b00c-069818ead3fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20720565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japalanglite"}],"isPartOf":"Japanese Language and Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":168.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Doctoral Dissertations and Masters Theses in Japanese Language, Linguistics, and Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20720565","wordCount":74862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Japanese","volumeNumber":"43","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vaheed K. 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Debucourt's image effectively mobilizes print to conceptualize the reproduction of Revolution across temporal and national boundaries, providing a means of thinking about the relation between Revolutionary time and the materiality of the image.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wynne Walker Moskop"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"558d70ec-2d13-3ae9-8230-2f001a13ec68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43823098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Balcony and the Street: Gender, Virtue, and Politics in George Caleb Bingham's Antebellum America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823098","wordCount":12687,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17032,17110]],"Locations in B":[[10561,10639]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"65","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank R. 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Using the iconographie 'invented memory' of New Imperialism, it was designed to project a bifocal 'colonial nationalism' at a time when white identity and South African citizenship were at their most fluid. Delville Wood has both failed and transcended this goal. Over the last eight decades, while becoming one of the most popular destinations on the Western Front tourist circuit today, the site has mediated the ongoing evolution of South African nationhood as an imaginative dialogue between 'Europe' and 'Africa'. Comparing Delville Wood to other Dominion memorials, the paper proposes that the site's durable but mutable resonance has been sustained by echoes of decisions taken in the 1920s about landscape materiality and making which are sequentially revealed by the visitor's journey to and through the site today. As a result, Delville Wood functions as a 'memory theatre', in which the topological trajectory continues to link auratic 'locale' and the modern spatial semiotic of 'free uninterrupted flow'.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1921-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303491","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ee2a1ab-0be6-3b29-a3fd-759f3827f97e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40303491"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":245.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1921,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Index to the Annual Reports of the Trustees of the Corporation Vol. III 1912-1921","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40303491","wordCount":74943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN AUERBACH"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23105084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08683d13-68c7-323e-9a30-a045b09ee07a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23105084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Poe's Other Double: The Reader in the Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23105084","wordCount":8848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John V. Maciuika"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff4aeb1-8e6e-3697-b3fc-0a13b4177dc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1511864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Adolf Loos and the Aphoristic Style: Rhetorical Practice in Early Twentieth-Century Design Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511864","wordCount":6911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Weisberg"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19400977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"263448435"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008252976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de2ab372-6383-397c-bca1-c5bda1aa5491"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4238444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"memoameracadrom2"}],"isPartOf":"Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. Supplementary Volumes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Twentieth-Century Rhetoric: Enforcing Originality and Distancing the Past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4238444","wordCount":9900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Academy in Rome and University of Michigan Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Cooper","Michael Simpson"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438006"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24044106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wordsworthcircle"}],"isPartOf":"The Wordsworth Circle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The High-Tech Luddite of Lambeth: Blake's Eternal Hacking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24044106","wordCount":5592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Marilyn Gaull","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07407661"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4a2d148-63b9-3c31-a8e8-3c76a8037545"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40304891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annreptrusmetmar"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Report of the Trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Staff: As of July 1, 1983","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40304891","wordCount":6538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"113","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Fenrick"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08842949"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a403b490-560b-349f-b06b-9a45710a01f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24908229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"faulknerj"}],"isPartOf":"Faulkner Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"With Judgment Reserved\": Reading Both Predictably and Unpredictably In William Faulkner's \"Light in August\" and \"The Wild Palms\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24908229","wordCount":6714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Faulkner Journal","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. C. Lewontin"],"datePublished":"1963-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20114463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00397857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233322"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6534b6fd-b756-3ee2-be83-15c73755b75e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20114463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"synthese"}],"isPartOf":"Synthese","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Models, Mathematics and Metaphors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20114463","wordCount":8318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"15","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert W. Sweeny"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3497097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3b257be-4720-3745-b563-2688409b239a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3497097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lines of Sight in the \"Network Society\": Simulation, Art Education, and a Digital Visual Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3497097","wordCount":6461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"National Art Education Association","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Contemporary societies are in the process of developing digital technological networks that simultaneously result in their transformation. The operations of networked computer systems, based in forms of simulation, have shifted general notions of visuality within a visual culture. Practices in art education that address these contemporary developments should be able to respond to the current forms of visuality being created in a variety of educational spaces-both actual and virtual. In this article, I identify three theoretical 'lines of sight' that represent contemporary forms of vision related to the use of networked digital technologies-specifically the Internet. These critical aesthetic tactics of individuals and collectives point to possibilities for adapting similar approaches in art educational spaces, making connections between curriculum and pedagogy, new media theory, and contemporary sociology, forming the matrix of a digital visual culture.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ken Lum"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwvr2jd.21","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781988111001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6fd0a4f-5b1f-3932-893f-4019bc34675c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwvr2jd.21"}],"isPartOf":"Everything is Relevant","keyphrase":["aesthetic education","chinese","bauhaus","hangzhou","modernist","republican china","artists","mei shih","xia peng","national academy"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"104","pagination":"104-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Aesthetic Education in Republican China:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwvr2jd.21","wordCount":6070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In preparing for Shanghai Modern<\/em>, the curators\u2014Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker, Zheng Shengtian, and I\u2014paid several visits to the West Lake (Xi Hu) city of Hangzhou, ninety minutes by train west of Shanghai. One of six capital cities in the long history of China, Hangzhou was the national capital during the Southern Song Dynasty (1127\u20131279). Many of China\u2019s most celebrated poets and writers, including Lin Bu, Bai Juyi, and Su Shi, lived in and around the Hangzhou area. The beautiful West Lake, around which is poised the city of Hangzhou, is the source of many of China\u2019s most cherished","subTitle":"A Convergence of Ideals, 2004","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judson Rosengrant"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/308543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae71e6b3-7e0a-3bf1-bc25-94b6dd32ea9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/308543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteuroj"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavic and East European Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Nabokov, Onegin, and the Theory of Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/308543","wordCount":7045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Augst"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4496982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Temperance, Mass Culture, and the Romance of Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4496982","wordCount":10480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Gretton"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44653988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac609d25-85a5-3222-baee-910d56ef845e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44653988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Visual arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"'Un Moyen Puissant de Vulgarisation Artistique'. Reproducing Salon Pictures in Parisian Illustrated Weekly Magazines c.1860\u2014c.1895: From Wood Engraving to the Half Tone Screen (and Back)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44653988","wordCount":14446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"L'Illustration and Le Monde illustr\u00e9, Parisian up-market general-interest weekly lustrated magazines of the Illustrated London News genre published long Salon views every year there was a Salon. They also reproduced numbers of Salon pictures each year, in fluctuating (often very large) numbers, in a range of reproductive technologies, and accompanied by textual and presentational clues about what sorts of value the magazine was inviting its reader\/viewers to attach to the reproduction: to the painting represented also but in the first instance to the reproduction. Engaging with recent work by Stephen Bann, this article discusses the ways in which, in these magazines, reproductive wood engravings were aligned with the great tradition of French reproductive intaglio printmaking, and it looks at the impact of the introduction of photomechanical technologies (the line block and the half-tone screen) on the values that were attached to these pictures of Salon pictures. It demonstrates the persistence into the 1890s of the value system of reproductive engraving, and its eventual displacement by the more mechanical efficiencies of the half-tone screened photograph of a work of art, The essay calibrates this displacement with the increasingly compelling demands of the news cycle in relation to the visual reporting of the Salon, and it provides evidence that the half-tone screen, for a decade after its introduction, was a less-thanadequate technology for the reproduction of photographs of works of art, as the evidence of its uptake in the more technologically progressive of these two titles, L'Illustration, demonstrates. The essay also engages with the debate over 'the end of the Salon' (Mainardi). From the evidence of the resources that these magazines devoted not only to writing about but also to reproducing pictures from, the Salon through from the 1860s to the end of the 1890s, the essay argues that, at last for the national-bourgeois audience that was constituted by the wide readership of these two magazines, reports of the Salon's death have been greatly exaggerated.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Whalan"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/661968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10739300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44669024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c67f660a-ede6-39ec-b60f-7667266e55fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/661968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanart"}],"isPartOf":"American Art","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Majesty of the Moment Sociality and Privacy in the Street Photography of Paul Strand<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/661968","wordCount":7674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conway Zirkle","John F. Fulton","I. E. Drabkin","Carl B. Boyer","I. Bernard Cohen","Katharine Strelsky"],"datePublished":"1956-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226894","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68e5b888-21a7-364c-b2d6-5c2aed1a9a46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/226894"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":114.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1956,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Eighty-First Critical Bibliography of The History of Science and Its Cultural Influences (To 1 January 1956)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/226894","wordCount":81383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Zilczer"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27069318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00403261"},{"name":"oclc","value":"551288487"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e6a1e6e-0853-3f17-a510-5625c0e0f5d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27069318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tennhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"Tennessee Historical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Discovering J. Trousdale Haden","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27069318","wordCount":21330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Tennessee Historical Society","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Genteel Impressionist of Nashville","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Hansen"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a839d3f-30ec-33dc-9d98-31e272d2589c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"437","pagination":"pp. 437-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"With Skin and Hair\": Kracauer's Theory of Film, Marseille 1940","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343960","wordCount":15314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"19","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vera L. Zolberg"],"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90aadd3e-c3de-329b-b8fe-24bcd1a269bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2579052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art Museums: Sanctuary or Free-For-All?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579052","wordCount":7058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"63","abstract":"The conflict between elitism and populism in the development of American art museums is analyzed in the light of the gap between intention and accomplishment with regard to their public education mission. In the course of examining the origins and changing character of these institutions, it is suggested that although a public mission was adduced to justify their existence and gain access to public subsidy, in fact, art museums were never really designed to be \"democratic.\" Almost in spite of this, however, they are reaching a far broader public than their founders could have imagined. In the process, the nature of the art viewing experience has changed, as have the definitions of what constitutes Art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis C. Jones"],"datePublished":"1960-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23154228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0146437X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd04485c-06c0-32ca-a335-799817933427"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23154228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newyorkhist"}],"isPartOf":"New York History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1960,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Director's Report For 1959","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23154228","wordCount":11384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"New York State Historical Association","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Felicity D. Scott"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c402b7e-6473-3241-8f21-2517061198f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3397633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Involuntary Prisoners of Architecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3397633","wordCount":13024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVE SAVAGE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472117857"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e16d1e1-00b3-3f79-9747-8e47de16a769"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvc5pf3g.8"}],"isPartOf":"Bytes and Backbeats","keyphrase":["musical","recording","performance","click track","mixing","metronomic","beat detective","process","popular music","rhythmic"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"25","pagination":"25-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Communication Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Application Study:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.8","wordCount":10038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"One of the first responsibilities that a producer of popular music takes on is the requirement that the final product delivered to the record company be \u201cin tune and in time.\u201d That is to say, the musical performances are to realize a certain standard of technical pro\u2039 ciency in pitch and rhythm. The legacy of this central role for a producer may be found in the many rough performances that were a part of the early history of rock and roll. Along with a heavy reliance on attitude came some rather oblique relationships to musicianship on the part of some","subTitle":"Rock Band","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margot Lovejoy"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60cf5e75-9392-30d6-9cef-c41dc5a35075"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art, Technology, and Postmodernism: Paradigms, Parallels, and Paradoxes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777117","wordCount":5627,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16294,16841]],"Locations in B":[[9980,10516]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"49","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lester W. Smith"],"datePublished":"1953-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40289431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03609081"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234846"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efa0efd1-b8ea-301a-bf66-7fdfb0478dc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40289431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerarchivist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Archivist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1953,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Museum Studies","Library Science","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Writings on Archives, Current Records, and Historical Manuscripts, July 1952-June 1953","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40289431","wordCount":16036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Society of American Archivists","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVE SAVAGE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472117857"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4cbfa63-84e0-32f3-ad0e-4a642830db5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvc5pf3g.17"}],"isPartOf":"Bytes and Backbeats","keyphrase":["musical","technology","recordings","consumer","cultural","ivey and tepper","studio","studio study","performer","participation"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"150","pagination":"150-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Music","Communication Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Studio Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvc5pf3g.17","wordCount":9651,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16395,16494]],"Locations in B":[[43654,43753]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Much has been written on questions surrounding art, craft, amateurism, authenticity, and meaning in cultural artifacts. This studio study concentrates on the relationship of these broader ideas to the shifting dynamics of participation between composer, performer, and consumer of music. I propose that we are witnessing a paradigm shift in the music consumer\u2019s relationship to music creation. This is a circular proposition where the technology that facilitates new forms of music consumption is also returning consumers to the act of musical creation. To begin I follow researchers struggling with the implicit cultural hierarchies that seem to rank these successive elements","subTitle":"From iPod to GarageBand","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-09-15","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02724634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47723158"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-242166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d20018ab-d283-38e5-baae-d5698837d161"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4523942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jvertpale"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":94.0,"pageEnd":"A94","pageStart":"A1","pagination":"pp. A1-A94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Paleontology","Biological Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Paleontology"],"title":"Abstracts of Papers. Fifty-Eighth Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4523942","wordCount":113664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Society of Vertebrate Paleontology","volumeNumber":"18","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dianne Chisholm"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Obscene Modernism: Eros Noir and the Profane Illumination of Djuna Barnes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928172","wordCount":16517,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"69","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James M. Jasper"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf14c7d-2372-380b-aaeb-fafa9787541a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"ART AND AUDIENCES: DO POLITICS MATTER?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035337","wordCount":12787,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELLEN CAROL JONES"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08c85872-a464-32a2-bf50-710185977936"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Applied arts","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"MEMORIAL DUBLIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871333","wordCount":31894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Brill","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek de Solla Price"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659746"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f067d7e-f93b-3e75-8789-5b743db2e881"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1006146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranamerphilsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the American Philosophical Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Gears from the Greeks. The Antikythera Mechanism: A Calendar Computer from ca. 80 B. C.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1006146","wordCount":45271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"American Philosophical Society","volumeNumber":"64","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald A. Sharp"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ef8d1bb-15bd-3359-b8b9-2ee5ebd8f531"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interrogation at the Borders: George Steiner and the Trope of Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469290","wordCount":14854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1967-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01860658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1138ec92-c105-3464-aa54-8b764947028b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40972621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bbaabolbibantame"}],"isPartOf":"B.B.A.A. Bolet\u00edn Bibliogr\u00e1fico de Antropolog\u00eda Americana","keyphrase":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":107.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"RESE\u00d1A BIBLIOGRAFICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972621","wordCount":31623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Pan American Institute of Geography and History","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMY MULLIN"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24439168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metaphilosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Metaphilosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ART, POLITICS AND KNOWLEDGE: FEMINISM, MODERNITY, AND THE SEPARATION OF SPHERES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24439168","wordCount":12554,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[90,175]],"Locations in B":[[73556,73643]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"27","abstract":"Feminist epistemology and feminist art theory are characterized by an opposition to modernity's separation of art, politics, and knowledge into three autonomous spheres. However, this opposition is not enough to distinguish them from other philosophies. In this paper I examine parallels between the two fields of inquiry in order to discover what makes them distinctively feminist. Feminist epistemology sees interconnections between knowledge and politics, feminist art theory sees connections between art and politics. We need to explore as well connections between art and knowledge. Compared to feminist epistemology, feminist art theory has had much less exposure, and in this paper I emphasize what the former can learn from the latter. In particular, I suggest that feminist art can answer a call made by feminist theories of knowledge for a kind of transformative knowledge. If we focus on the features of activist art explored by feminist art theories, we see that feminist art is particularly suited to engage emotions as well as the intellect. It is an example of nonpropositional knowledge, and is interactive rather than striving to pass down lessons from above. Feminist art celebrates the power of art to \"make strange\" and to unsettle fixed identities which can transform our understanding of the world. There is a tendency in some feminist art theory to separate the more concrete work (rediscovering women artists, recognizing women's crafts as art forms, and investigating sexist imagery in art), from the theoretical project of reenvisioning the relations of art to its sociopolitical context. I conclude by arguing that without an awareness of the dialectical relationship between the concrete and the theoretical, feminist art theories run the risk of losing their feminist specificity. They would then amount to little more than abstract pronouncements of the interconnections between art, politics, and knowledge. We need to maintain the feminist specificity of feminist politics in our theories of art and knowledge, and I use examples throughout the essay, drawn particularly from feminist activist art, with this goal in mind.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendy Seltzer"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24118602","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10863818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03060564-2e35-3b16-b152-b6e8c64b0f71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24118602"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berktechlawj"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Technology Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"972","pageStart":"909","pagination":"pp. 909-972","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law","Science and Mathematics","Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"The Imperfect Is the Enemy of the Good: Anticircumvention versus Open User Innovation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24118602","wordCount":27774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gustavo Geirola"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40356818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00487651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626456"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-2349777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89abddf6-6786-3abd-8227-1652b1554e9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40356818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revchilenalit"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Chilena de Literatura","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Confluencias y divergencias entre la poes\u00eda de Vanguardia en Latinoam\u00e9rica y la poes\u00eda surgida de la guerra civil espa\u00f1ola","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40356818","wordCount":13091,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16117,16832]],"Locations in B":[[33092,33808]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"47","publisher":"Universidad de Chile","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"El art\u00edculo trata los est\u00fcos de la vanguardia (tomando la dimensi\u00f3n militar que el t\u00e9rmino admite en la teor\u00eda de la guerra de Clausewitz) para ensayar una hip\u00f3tesis seg\u00fan la cual la vanguardia no encarnar\u00eda \"lo nuevo\", sino que ser\u00eda una prolongaci\u00f3n de lo viejo y una \"reacci\u00f3n\" ante lo nuevo (fascismo\/nazismo, el proletariado, la industrializaci\u00f3n, la cultura de masas, el dise\u00f1o de un nuevo intelectual, etc.). Se intenta contrastar la hip\u00f3tesis con la poes\u00eda latinoamericana y la surgida de la Guerra Civil Espa\u00f1ola (exilio y poes\u00eda fransquista). \/\/\/ The article presents the avant-garde styles (considering the military dimension of the term as defined by Clauseivitz's theory of war) to propose a hypothesis that the avant-garde does not represent \"the new\". It is instead an extension of the old and a reaction to the new (fascism\/nazism, the proletariat, industrialization, mass culture, the design of a new intellectual, etc.). This hypothesis is contrasted with Latin American poetry and poetry inspired by the Spanish Civil War (exile and Francoist poetry).","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Masako Kamimura"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02707993"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdfc71d3-e804-3349-ba5c-8388e95cdada"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1358339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womansartj"}],"isPartOf":"Woman's Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Barbara Kruger: Art of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1358339","wordCount":3706,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[3303,3370]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Hodgdon"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39852252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3844071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shakquar"}],"isPartOf":"Shakespeare Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"x","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii-x","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From the Editor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3844071","wordCount":3794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Folger Shakespeare Library","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jessica Riskin"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08909997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45919525"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214626"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eaad84e2-64d9-37ec-bfb0-f93c17473238"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27757797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histstudphysbiol"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Physics"],"title":"Poor Richard's Leyden Jar: Electricity and Economy in Franklinist France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27757797","wordCount":16854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1904-09-10","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23600100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00658987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565053385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23600100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjewiyearbook"}],"isPartOf":"The American Jewish Year Book","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":162.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1904,"sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF JEWS PROMINENT IN THE PROFESSIONS, ETC., IN THE UNITED STATES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23600100","wordCount":60852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"American Jewish Committee","volumeNumber":"6","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark LeVine"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23280436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bd8c26d-1233-33cc-ab8a-c7b3dbe86c88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23280436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"797","pageStart":"794","pagination":"pp. 794-797","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Music and the Aura of Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23280436","wordCount":2290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1dgn5sf.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760460235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6273e726-06ec-328c-a0dc-54d9b9f0781e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1dgn5sf.17"}],"isPartOf":"War, Strategy and History","keyphrase":["science","warfare","clausewitz","military","theory","tactics","guerre","practice art","emphasis","osnabr\u00fcck biblio"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"179","pagination":"179-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory and Practice, Art and Science in Warfare:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1dgn5sf.17","wordCount":7055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In writings on war, we find the claim made that war is an art. Other authors stress the need for a science of war. This article explores these claims and the reasoning behind them. It will sketch how these terms were used in relation to the terms \u2018strategy\u2019 and \u2018tactics\u2019.The difference between theoretical reflection and practical application of the results of the reflection is traditionally conveyed by the terms \u2018science\u2019 and \u2018art\u2019. A brief reminder of the etymology of both terms is useful here, as the current usage of both terms in English is the exact opposite of its","subTitle":"An Etymological Note","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1t304z1.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781922064868"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0da8cff2-1bcc-3358-a19d-469ac0dbd324"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.20851\/j.ctt1t304z1.3"}],"isPartOf":"Framing French Culture","keyphrase":["visual","ranci\u00e8re","paris \u00e9ditions","photography","\u0153uvres compl\u00e8tes","discourses","barthes","barthes \u0153uvres","eiffel tower","discursive"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"3","pagination":"3-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The doubling of the frame \u2014 Visual art and discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.20851\/j.ctt1t304z1.3","wordCount":9118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"The notion of framing is one that has emerged as a key factor in current investigations into representations of culture. In the disciplinary area of French Studies, framing is understood as collective and individual rules of identity construction that are based upon a combination of modes of visual production, past and present narratives, and discourses of knowledge and power. The present volume will pursue the question of framing in all three areas.The first sustained discussion of framing, understood in the modern sense, is attributed to anthropologist and linguist Gregory Bateson. In 1954, in 'A theory of play and fantasy',","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irving Louis Horowitz"],"datePublished":"1975-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1084490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00366773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54678474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21392b14-6700-3d5b-ba9d-e56f6452ed93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1084490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"schoolreview"}],"isPartOf":"The School Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Head and Hand in Education: Vocationalism versus Professionalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1084490","wordCount":6078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER J. BURGARD"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab043e8b-e27c-3cd4-b956-7c7f642ee187"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24777733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Unlikely Affinities: Warhol and Goethe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24777733","wordCount":5124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Manitoba","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Rovee"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4a55c5c-913b-3587-9922-8e37d6d18484"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25601585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studroma"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Romanticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Everybody's Shakespeare\": Representative Genres and John Boydell's \"Winter's Tale\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25601585","wordCount":13097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Boston University","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GIOVANNA FOSSATI"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8bt181.7","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db63244c-f43b-3fbf-851d-58f6c4162743"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv8bt181.7"}],"isPartOf":"From Grain to Pixel","keyphrase":["archival","digital","archival practice","artifact","film artifact","archivists","film archival","film ontology","analog","indexical"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"145","pagination":"145-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Theorizing Archival Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv8bt181.7","wordCount":22916,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[9169,9606],[16504,16622]],"Locations in B":[[48722,49159],[50238,50356]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In this brief introduction, I would like to explain why I think the theorization proposed in this chapter is still relevant a decade after it was originally formulated and why I decided to add a new \u201cfilm as performance\u201d framework (Fossati, 2012a).Over the last decade, the interest in film archives has increased significantly. Due to the growing number of digitization projects, film archives have increased their (online) visibility, which has made them interesting partners for online services offering audiovisual content. At the same time, the recurrent dialogue between archivists and scholars has stimulated academic interest. New gatherings are being","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUCAS BESSIRE"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9494a67-89ec-3d91-b8f4-6e9aada1e175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23274531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Isolation: Refused Relation as an Emerging Regime of Indigenous Biolegitimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274531","wordCount":15161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":"This essay describes the politics of voluntary isolation, an emerging category of indigeneity predicated on a form of human life that exists outside of history, the market, and wider networks of social connection. It traces a recent controversy around one such \"isolated\" population\u2014Ayoreo-speaking people in the Paraguayan Gran Chaco\u2014to suggest how these politics of isolation may represent a new regime of what Didier Fassin has called \"biolegitimacy,\" or the uneven political parsing and authorization of valid human life, within global formations of indigeneity. Here, I identify how international human rights law, multiculturalist state policies, humanitarian NGO programs, and genetic science all share an investment in the moral defense of isolated life. I explore how this investment may divide the kind of humanity authorized or claimed as \"indigenous\" into opposing legitimacies that are set against one another and vertically ranked. The essay argues that what is at stake in this process is not merely a new technique of the self or the enduring romance of the primitive, but the redistribution of the meaning and value assigned to those domains of human life imagined in opposition to social relation itself.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abbie Garrington"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653360","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"849496170"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014265026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"309b46cc-386d-33b5-8ede-76efca637937"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26653360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pilgrimages"}],"isPartOf":"Pilgrimages: The Journal of Dorothy Richardson Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TOUCHING DOROTHY RICHARDSON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26653360","wordCount":8203,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[126,191],[46399,46499],[50756,50990]],"Locations in B":[[14669,14736],[14942,15042],[15209,15983]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Dorothy Richardson Society","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":"APPROACHING PILGRIMAGE<\/em> AS A HAPTIC TEXT","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Dorrian"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"947073ff-177e-3ce0-8a48-0f11e1550a6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Of Skulls and Stealth: Reflections on the Image of the New Military Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225781","wordCount":5216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donna Przybylowicz"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"D. H. Lawrence's the Plumed Serpent: The Dialectic of Ideology and Utopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303104","wordCount":15266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8bc50b0-e834-3f06-87d7-94c1570b7756"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":274.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-v+vii-xxiii+1-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125060","wordCount":209887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"97","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00335770"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45446985"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56a3f44e-2f73-3e89-a3f5-4609b33ce613"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/374436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quarrevibiol"}],"isPartOf":"The Quarterly Review of Biology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"445","pagination":"p. 445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/374436","wordCount":47321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"77","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2809163a-b118-3bb7-8e00-4a4d2c1ea7ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":70.0,"pageEnd":"968","pageStart":"901","pagination":"pp. 901-968","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261375","wordCount":37917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"85","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Abel"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.20.2.0035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"718530e2-fe24-3f9b-8817-1749c9065e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.20.2.0035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Skin, Flesh, and the Affective Wrinkles of Civil Rights Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.20.2.0035","wordCount":12875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MATTHEW ENGELKE"],"datePublished":"2012-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8846df0-d274-3665-a978-47c608c2298c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41410482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Angels in Swindon: Public religion and ambient faith in England","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41410482","wordCount":14716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":"In this article, I introduce the idea of \"ambient faith\" in an effort to clarify the stakes in long-standing debates about public and private religion. I take as my starting point the increasingly common recognition that conceptual distinctions between publicity and privacy are difficult to maintain in the first place and that they are, in any case, always relative. The idea of \"ambient faith,\" which I connect to work on the turn to a materialist semiotics, can serve as both a critique of and supplement to the ideas of \"public\" and \"private\" religion. Introducing ambience\u2014the sense of ambience\u2014allows one to raise important questions about the processes through which faith comes to the foreground or stays in the background\u2014the extent to which faith, in other words, goes public or stays private. I use my research on a Christian organization in England, the Bible Society of England and Wales, to illuminate these points, discussing the society's campaign in 2006 to bring angels to Swindon and its promotion of Bible reading in coffee shops. I also consider Brian Eno's music and recent advertising trends for additional insights into the notion of \"ambience.\"","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40060680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c15014d-918e-3dfd-9b58-ad4397591a1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40060680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40060680","wordCount":13050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"45","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter A. Jackson"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9573e277-687f-3122-aea9-9ee5e5bc2d7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23750140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Semicoloniality, translation and excess in Thai cultural studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750140","wordCount":14256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"Increasing numbers of students of Thai history and culture are turning to varieties of critical theory to respond to the limitations of the empiricist methodologies of classical Thai area studies. These diverse theoretical appropriations constitute a critical project of Thai cultural studies that seeks to deconstruct essentialist readings of Thai culture, Thai identity and Thai nation by revealing the genealogical origins of these notions as contingent products of historical projects of power. Thai cultural studies resists narratives of Thai uniqueness, drawing on comparative theoretical frames such as post-structuralism and post-colonial analysis in order to read Thai history alongside rather than in isolation from the histories of other countries. While these critical methodologies have the potential to open up exciting new lines of inquiry in Thai history and culture, there is nevertheless a risk that unreflective applications of theory may perpetuate Euro\u2013Amerocentric analyses. Thai cultural studies needs to be built upon a practice of translation that takes into account the ways that power imbalances between Western analytical discourses and Thai cultural logics may systematically distort forms of knowledge. Insufficient attention to the technical requirements of translating between Thai and Western languages and discourses, respectively, may lead to theory erasing the specificity of Thai cultural logics. A case study is provided of the analytical tensions that may result from a deficient practice of translation in Thai studies. It is concluded that accounts of Thailand's supposed 'excessiveness' point to the limits of current theory in fully accounting for modern Thai cultural logics and indicate the need for further theoretical development.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Volney P. Gay"],"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27505672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224197"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56ce40e6-1eae-38a9-931a-e65a53a2452e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27505672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrelihealth"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion and Health","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Repression and Sublimation in Religious Personalities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27505672","wordCount":9567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"Like all intense experiencing, religious life is particular: one's feelings are tied to specific people, through specific actions, and in specific contexts. Descriptive typologies, like that of Capps and Capps in \"The Religious Personality\", reflect the contours of specific self-understanding, but by themselves they do not permit one to compare hierarchically the types that are uncovered. Abstract theories, like psychoanalysis, are not particularistic, but they do permit one to conceive of a hierarchy of mental functioning. Capps and Capps's typology of Aesthetic, Chastised, Resigned, and Fraternal religious selves can be improved by placing each self along the continuum that stretches from repressed (maladaptive) to sublimated (adaptive) functioning.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/580241","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138266"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/580241"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The English Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1427","pageStart":"1401","pagination":"pp. 1401-1427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/580241","wordCount":16894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"459","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"114","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL J. SHAPIRO"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26298889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8551846-950e-3895-bf60-3e9cb186f221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26298889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'The Fog of War'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26298889","wordCount":6272,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[46112,46321],[46586,46804]],"Locations in B":[[13212,13421],[13522,13740]],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1935-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/738972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274631"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53165498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235646"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/738972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicalquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1935,"sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/738972","wordCount":6378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edbda49e-a6a4-3cd3-bfad-052cfe3015ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27826525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826525","wordCount":10307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sydney J. Krause"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Penn's Elm and Edgar Huntly: Dark \"Instruction to the Heart\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927600","wordCount":9467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"66","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerry Beegan"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25224132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44910652"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25224132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Studio: Photomechanical Reproduction and the Changing Status of Design","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25224132","wordCount":8259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"MIT Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sidney Feshbach"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ee67094-ef6b-38d1-8a76-4f13715701a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marcel Duchamp or Being Taken for a Ride: Duchamp Was a Cubist, a Mechanomorphist, a Dadaist, a Surrealist, a Conceptualist, a Modernist, a Post-Modernist: And None of the Above","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484985","wordCount":9060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"University of Tulsa","volumeNumber":"26","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Krapp","Rolf Tiedmann"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fc44409-cfc3-386e-a566-4bb7bf5437dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Kafka Studies, the Culture Industry, and the Concept of Shame: Improper Remarks between Moral Philosophy and Philisophy of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489216","wordCount":5618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"60","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN W. CROWLEY"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23028698","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373052"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59597a59-4b6d-355b-b711-3544589c32ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23028698"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sewaneerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Sewanee Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"REVALUATION: ALLEN TATE'S THE FATHERS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23028698","wordCount":2038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen Foster"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44698026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08904197"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313112"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2017202169"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04c5f894-80b6-311c-bb9f-ada1b760b18d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44698026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nathhawtrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Nathaniel Hawthorne Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Hawthorne Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44698026","wordCount":11307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sonita Sarker"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6f2dd80-f2a0-3937-974a-9212f2a744d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Locating a Native Englishness in Virginia Woolf's \"The London Scene\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316806","wordCount":13284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":"In the last century, British modernist studies have dealt increasingly with issues of class and gender. Yet, untill today, hardly any have scrutinized how race and nation are integral and intersecting elements in the perspectives of such prominent literary modernists as T. S. Eliot, Gertrude Stein, or Virginia Woolf. This essay focuses on a set of six articles written by Woolf between 1931-1932 and titled \"The London Scene\" (1975a), in order to demonstrate how Woolf reclaims England from \"great men\" for the common (wo)man. I argue that maintaining distinctions between demos (the basis for democracy) and ethnos (the basis of ethnicity) is constitutive of English nationalism. I show how Woolf's act of reclamation is based simultaneously in an implicit racialization of the English self that was prevalent in her time. I juxtapose the views about England of contemporary political and literary figures as contrasts and comparisons to explicate how Woolf's gender and class politics is contingent upon her understanding of race that, in turn, is tied to English culture and nationhood.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/tph.2003.25.3.103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02723433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46314299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae960659-fc03-3805-802f-e3f552232816"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/tph.2003.25.3.103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publichistorian"}],"isPartOf":"The Public Historian","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["History","History","Museum Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/tph.2003.25.3.103","wordCount":13647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"National Council on Public History","volumeNumber":"25","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Leong"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c23a3c8-9631-39a4-890e-f94a833d15fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes Toward an Interventionalist Conceptualism: On the Composition of \"The Philosophy of Decomposition\":","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445169","wordCount":6663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Studies","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-06-18","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1732080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99b4071f-8bed-3e90-9351-dab1579a3654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1732080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"1276","pageStart":"1228","pagination":"pp. 1228+1268+1270-1272+1274-1276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1732080","wordCount":4915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3989","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"172","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/680345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f72156-cedf-36e5-8390-a60440b1ec3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/680345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":334.0,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2014","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/680345","wordCount":248167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"other","issueNumber":"S1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"105","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41235099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0003150X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91905c32-ff16-3307-996c-f9a8e6cb2ce7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41235099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamewatworass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal (American Water Works Association)","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["Aquatic Sciences","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41235099","wordCount":14221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Water Works Association","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. A. McKnight Jr."],"datePublished":"1931-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27534630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00373052"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48157598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216116"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27534630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sewaneerev"}],"isPartOf":"The Sewanee Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1931,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Power and Matthew Boulton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27534630","wordCount":8385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sianne Ngai"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/444516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"513da4e8-a20a-3cc9-80cc-7733be212533"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/444516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"847","pageStart":"811","pagination":"pp. 811-847","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cuteness of the Avant\u2010Garde","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/444516","wordCount":12471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1954-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3635090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d901e08f-04ae-3b2e-89bb-dc7948c1ef67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3635090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacihistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1954,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Other Recent Publications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3635090","wordCount":4778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of California Press","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothy Barenscott"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2010.22.2.34","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0935560X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391674"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20c5f996-c738-3bf8-b5ab-7049b9e470ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/his.2010.22.2.34"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmemo"}],"isPartOf":"History and Memory","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trafficking in Photographs: Representational Power and the Case of Lajos Kossuth, Budapest 1894<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/his.2010.22.2.34","wordCount":12801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"22","abstract":"This article examines the tensions related to the memory of revolutionary loss and the increasing resistance to imperial rule that emerged with the death and funeral of the internationally recognized exiled leader of the 1848 Hungarian Revolution, Lajos Kossuth, in April 1894. Taking place during the preparations for Budapest's highly anticipated 1896 Millennial Exhibition, Kossuth's funeral became a controversial and highly publicized event once the Austro-Hungarian monarch strictly prohibited the Hungarian government and parliament from taking any official notice of Kossuth's death. The plethora of photographic images of Kossuth and his funeral that circulated at this time allowed the specter of revolutionary loss and reassessments of the 1867 Compromise between Austria and Hungary to reemerge in the public and private spheres of Budapest. The ideas of death and proliferation associated with the photographic medium are critical to this understanding, and are punctuated through a close examination of how Kossuth was represented and \u201cre-presented\u201d in life and in death.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Crimp"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c15cc3b-4f62-3e75-9a2c-e46223cb3c6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Art of Exhibition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778299","wordCount":13354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH ANN MACKAY"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90003587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15310485"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56842341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213411"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4207a878-bdb0-37fd-9ed1-123a9a9a7c8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90003587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlmodcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Good Grammar, Possessive Pronouns, and Preposterous Possessions in The Taming of the Shrew<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90003587","wordCount":16865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"17","abstract":"ABSTRACT With their focus on Bianca\u2019s Latinate lessons in act 3 of The Taming of the Shrew, scholars have long overlooked the play\u2019s indebtedness to a vernacular English grammar. Drawing attention to such vernacular \u201ccharacters\u201d as possessive pronouns, shrews, hysteron proteron, and other preposterous rhetorical figures, this essay considers new possibilities for reading The Taming of the Shrew, Shakespeare\u2019s representations of this vernacular grammar, and the purpose and message of Katherine\u2019s final speech. The essay considers what it means that, in both early modern England and in The Taming of the Shrew, English takes precedence over Latin; that possessive pronouns become keys to interpreting lessons in an English grammar; and that pronouns, even in their proper places, become sites of \u201cpreposterous possession.\u201d Strategically employing possessive pronouns in her final speech, Katherine, the shrew of this play who is (supposedly) tamed, enacts some preposterous possessions of her own. Through a close reading of a wide range of early modern texts alongside The Taming of the Shrew, the essay navigates a variety of contexts in order to reveal their continuities, rather than thinking about them as mutually exclusive. Such contextualizations illuminate and culminate in a reading of Katherine\u2019s final speech, which demonstrates how her grammar disrupts and overturns grammatical and gendered orders and allows her (and Shakespeare, too) to shape and imagine a new order of things. Indeed, Katherine embodies a burgeoning English vernacular, and as such, she is a figure through which Shakespeare explores that vernacular\u2019s critical moment, thereby reflecting Shakespeare\u2019s understanding of and participation in a changing educational landscape of early modern England.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maarten Doorman"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz0k.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053565858"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1c0deaa-f517-31f2-8b9b-7552ddbfbe4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mz0k.13"}],"isPartOf":"Art in Progress","keyphrase":["london","van doesburg","pagina","cambridge","geschichtliche grundbegriffe","progres","theo van doesburg","munich","stijl the formative","formative years"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"165","pagination":"165-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz0k.13","wordCount":4047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Loewenstein"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2873037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Jonsonian Corpulence, or the Poet as Mouthpiece","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2873037","wordCount":11965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"53","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mstx.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089643292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac3cf149-dcd0-33c7-9715-0f67b8d3c37d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mstx.7"}],"isPartOf":"In Medias Res","keyphrase":["aesthetic","sloterdijk","categorical imperative","stuttgart reclam","reclam verlag","commandment","schelling","modernism","modernity","stuttgart reclam verlag"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"83","pagination":"83-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Sloterdijk and the Question of an Aesthetic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mstx.7","wordCount":7365,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841],[52540,52619]],"Locations in B":[[25845,26055],[26063,26142]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In order to understand Peter Sloterdijk\u2019s writings on aesthetics and their singularity, we must first at least outline the \u201csetting\u201d, the historical foil to the problems he addresses. Today, art is a \u201cdiscourse\u201d, as we know, a conceptual field in which the different types of images, objects, processes, activities, theories, ideas and institutions play a role. The dynamism of this field is characterized by instabilities, contradictions and conflicts that trigger disquiet among the one or other viewer. The one set learns from New Jersey (Land Artist Robert Smithson), the other from Las Vegas (Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown). The one","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alessandro Abbate"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60947c19-6489-3e8a-a7f7-96235928c7cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"To Be or Inter-Be\": Almereyda's end-of-millennium \"Hamlet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797159","wordCount":4621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ben Moore"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425473"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65a4aec3-04c0-3e41-b702-f60434a4fa8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45292749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickensquart"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292749","wordCount":1494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Leja"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39c98d17-f659-3ddb-8229-4c57fef8b0fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23349841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"1028","pageStart":"999","pagination":"pp. 999-1028","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Scenes from a History of the Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349841","wordCount":8256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"The New School","volumeNumber":"78","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charlotte Whittle"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23286876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07326750"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3eacf09-c50d-3b54-bd93-06b7245fbb36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23286876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inti"}],"isPartOf":"INTI","keyphrase":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"UNA ECONOM\u00cdA DEL DOLOR: LECTURA DE \"LOS NUEVE MONSTRUOS\" DE C\u00c9SAR VALLEJO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23286876","wordCount":1692,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[7519,7619]],"Locations in B":[[6698,6802]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"67\/68","publisher":"INTI, Revista de literatura hisp\u00e1nica; Roger B. Carmosino, Founder, Director-Editor, 1974-","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. V. Buttrey"],"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/885097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a9f8bf6-0827-3824-a607-d838f4dfeab4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/885097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"burlmaga"}],"isPartOf":"The Burlington Magazine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/885097","wordCount":2841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"1071","publisher":"The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"134","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brigitta Hauser-Sch\u00e4ublin"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41941022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00442666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0c0f3ae-c5ed-3b5c-a0ea-2f7130bd486f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41941022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitethn"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Ethnologie","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Ku and the Battlefield of Authenticity: A Hawaiian Feather Image between Empathic and Objectified Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41941022","wordCount":11327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Dietrich Reimer Verlag GmbH","volumeNumber":"137","abstract":"The anthropological discussion on \"authenticity\" came more or less to a halt in the 1990s by concluding that there exist two forms of authenticity, one which is embedded in a cultural setting with its characteristic values, experience and goals. The other conceived as a universal value is applied mostly to material culture and the question how an artifact's authenticity can be established. This article explores the contrasting fields of authenticity and genuineness as developed by Benjamin (1936) by discussing the story of the Hawaiian feather image which became deeply involved in questions both of genuineness and authenticity. The authenticity of the feather image originating from the Cook Voyages and housed at G\u00f6ttingen University had finally to be carefully assessed. The author though arguing that both concepts are opposed to each other shows how the experience of genuineness of the feather image, while on a tour to different exhibition halls around the world, was ultimately based on its display value, thus on its authenticity.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. N. Humble"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63679208-310c-3077-93f2-d3d85f1182af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3333557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marcel Duchamp: Chess Aesthete and Anartist Unreconciled","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3333557","wordCount":7960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"32","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lutz Koepnick"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40039828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Photographs and Memories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039828","wordCount":13505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vera L. Zolberg"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e7e1d1d-c241-3e91-9dfa-9d641e415403"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40981291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Marginality Triumphant? On the Asymmetry of Conflict in the Art World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981291","wordCount":8247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2\/3","publisher":"Springer","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":"The relatively stable cultural structure that privileged the artist's individual autonomy has had to respond to challenges from social and political sources that intrude into developments intrinsic to existing art forms. With the expansion of markets and consumerism, the arts are increasingly called upon to be innovative in order to appeal to emergent middle classes. Historically, academic or similar prestige systems associated with national states came face to face with competitors, found largely on the margins of art worlds. Artistic change may result either from internal developments in aesthetic forms, or stem from the intrusion of sources external to established traditions. I want to argue that increasingly the sources of innovation stem from the margins; they are bome by agents who, rather than being central to the most important institutions of culture, arise in their peripheries. Their marginality may be seen from two perspectives: it may result from choice (as the deviant, or \"maverick\" of Howard Becker 1982) or from spontaneous or involuntary positioning (as \"insane,\" \"naif,\" or \"primitive\") of \"outsider artists\" (Zolberg and Cherbo 1997). Whether acting deliberately or as pawns managed by other agents (Dubin 1999), these artists engage in an asymmetrical conflict in which the political stakes are high. Thus, the weak confront the strong\u2014the establishment. \"Marginals\" and their allies strive to profit from using the resources of their more powerful adversaries, who occupy established gatekeeping roles. Without asserting that all art worlds are necessarily wholly engaged \"in political\" strife, examination of a variety of cases casts light on the contentious nature of innovation.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183pdh2.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780816530953"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5beded4b-d4da-3ebd-917e-b0c4ab77269c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt183pdh2.15"}],"isPartOf":"Nature Inc.","keyphrase":["conservation","university","london","capitalism","neoliberalism","biodiversity","http wwwe","antipode","environmental","development"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"255","pagination":"255-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","General Science","Political Science","Environmental Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183pdh2.15","wordCount":13127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer J. Bottinelli"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dadb2c17-41ed-36cf-a38b-3e42fec776f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Watching Lear: Resituating the Gaze at the Intersection of Film and Drama in Kristian Levring's \"The King Is Alive\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797218","wordCount":5650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Salisbury University","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8953c49-1acd-3aa4-b9f4-ac2075534b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":122.0,"pageEnd":"1283","pageStart":"1162","pagination":"pp. 1162-1283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462979","wordCount":61434,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"109","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul D. Schweizer"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027359"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4b27bd9-8acb-327d-a899-5fa3062139a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1594633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanartj"}],"isPartOf":"American Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 82-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Visual arts"],"title":"William J. Weaver and His \"Chymical and Mechanical\" Portraits of Alexander Hamilton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1594633","wordCount":10724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Kennedy Galleries, Inc.","volumeNumber":"30","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magnus Fiskesj\u00f6"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.1.1.0162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bb84b00-cc81-379b-91d8-6437a73849be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.1.1.0162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"vergstudglobasia"}],"isPartOf":"Verge: Studies in Global Asias","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Terra-cotta Conquest: The First Emperor's Clay Army's Blockbuster Tour of the World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/vergstudglobasia.1.1.0162","wordCount":8834,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126,191]],"Locations in B":[[47037,47107]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","volumeNumber":"1","abstract":"In recent years, a seemingly never-ending tour of blockbuster exhibits featuring China\u2019s First Emperor\u2019s terra-cotta army soldiers organized by Chinese state-sponsored agencies have been staged around the world, notably in European and American museums, and usually with great success. This essay asks why, at this juncture in history, museums and their audiences have been so curiously willing to accept and engage in the admiration for empire that is encouraged and cultivated in these exhibits. To be sure, several answers are possible. This essay suggests that in Western countries, a widespread loss of faith in democracy has engendered admiration for empire and authoritarianism, which extends even to the First Emperor of Qin, the dictatorial creator of empire in ancient China\u2014even as, in China itself, he remains heavily resented by many thinking people for his brutal and infamously bloody program of empire building.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1982-08-27","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1689093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42f62588-9bd6-3c08-a6d8-5b2a6011c112"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1689093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"876","pageStart":"824","pagination":"pp. 824-876","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1689093","wordCount":17939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4562","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"217","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Helph"],"datePublished":"1919-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3253645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00261521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d8770c6-554d-3c67-bd84-051649a77687"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3253645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"metrmuseartbull"}],"isPartOf":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1919,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Art Museums and the Shops","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3253645","wordCount":2128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"9","publisher":"The Metropolitan Museum of Art","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald H. Paulson"],"datePublished":"1967-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/449606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"883c3e74-656e-3be2-8547-561c51abda4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/449606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in the Restoration and Eighteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/449606","wordCount":11137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Rice University","volumeNumber":"7","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hester L. Furey"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daefb604-672e-3c2a-8ecd-3e37a52e0745"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"671","pagination":"pp. 671-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"POETRY AND THE RHETORIC OF DISSENT IN TURN-OF-THE-CENTURY CHICAGO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283494","wordCount":7462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1959-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/937495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"192b8b45-9234-3132-8543-64fd3ec1c684"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/937495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"musicaltimes"}],"isPartOf":"The Musical Times","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1959,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/937495","wordCount":6632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"1394","publisher":"Musical Times Publications Ltd.","volumeNumber":"100","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harrison T. Meserole"],"datePublished":"1968-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b922636-183a-3bed-be30-4a1551dcfb8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1261328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":380.0,"pageEnd":"930","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-930","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"1967 MLA International Bibliography: Of Books and Articles on the Modern Languages and Literatures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1261328","wordCount":337691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"83","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert L. Mode"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3828954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3828954","wordCount":1520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"39","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen G. Nichols"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68361896-a1eb-3c8e-8728-ec58740ca4a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Image as Textual Unconscious: Medieval Manuscripts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285920","wordCount":7235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[9169,9606]],"Locations in B":[[37565,38002]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ehrhard Bahr","Ruth Kunzer"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culinary Marxism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464522","wordCount":3069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"book-review","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"3","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1922-12-16","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25590041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1922,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 21, no. 10","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25590041","wordCount":22503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"10","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael E. 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One side of this story is Schoenberg's well-known concern for how posterity would view him, evident in his obsession with demonstrating his stature as a genius and defining his place in history as the first to break with tonality and as the inventor of \"the method of composing with twelve tones related only to one another.\" But as significant for the present context are the ways that, beginning in the first decade of the century, he started to make his Nachlass known through the dissemination of manuscripts, sketches, and fragments, and by means of discussions of the creative process and compositional techniques in his voluminous writings. Schoenberg's interjection of the act of composition into public musical discourse has clear origins in the nineteenth century, but it also has important implications for the blurring of boundaries between the work, the creative process, the artist, and the audience, a characteristic of twentieth- and twenty-first-century art and now a fundamental feature of our cultural life.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1905-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00659711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a8cd4b0-5670-35c1-aff7-a8125d3fad17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/282670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranprocamerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":109.0,"pageEnd":"cviii","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-cviii","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1905,"sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Proceedings of the Thirty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the American Philological Association Held at Ithaca, New York, December, 1905 Also of the Seventh Annual Meeting of the Philological Association of the Pacific Coast Held at the Same Time in San Francisco, California","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/282670","wordCount":48887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodor W. 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Adorno and Thomas Mann should be read not merely as biography, but also as a logical model for reconstituting dialectical thinking without reconciliation, static identities, or oppositions. In \"The Culture Industry\" and Negative Dialectics, Adorno sets forth merely negative models of failed dialectics that internally limit the reconciliatory aims of Hegelian dialectic without abandoning its fundamental categories of identity, difference, and opposition. However, in the letters between Adorno and Mann, we can see an aporetic struggle to replace the unifying, reconciliatory, and statically oppositional forms of dialectics with a radical dialectics, or aporetics, of exile. The significance of this dialectics of exile is constituted both by its production of an alternative logic cognizant of the historical power and limits of Marxist-Hegelian dialectic, and by how it sheds light on Adorno's and Mann's historical struggles for a non-identitarian way of articulating complex, evolving, non-identitarian worlds without pure identities and oppositions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Li-fen Chen"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15209857"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606354510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"938064b1-7e54-37b0-a7a8-4c23556d817e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26895763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modechinlitecult"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Author as Performer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26895763","wordCount":9084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Modern Chinese Literature and Culture","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":null,"subTitle":"The Making of Authorship in The Man behind the Book<\/em>","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Blasius"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25164540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00316016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80346818-b57b-3991-98fc-b45fca10b02c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25164540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persnewmusi"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives of New Music","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Late Feldman and the Remnants of Virtuosity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25164540","wordCount":21605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Perspectives of New Music","volumeNumber":"42","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Cohen"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71f00d9f-e381-3e59-b6c6-aa696c9bcb63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3567190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"731","pageStart":"719","pagination":"pp. 719-731","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Orphanista Manifesto: Orphan Films and the Politics of Reproduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567190","wordCount":10054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"American Anthropological Association","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"In this essay, I review the works of filmmakers Bill Morrison and Gregorio Rocha and contextualize their work within a growing apocalyptic cultural movement of film preservationists who identify as \"orphanistas.\" As orphanistas they struggle to reshape and reproduce cultural memory and heritage through reviving \"orphans\"--films abandoned by their makers. Moving images mimic cognitive memory, yet, depending on reproductive technologies, copies of moving images may organize mass publics and influence cultural imaginaries. Traditionally considered conservative, preservation in the midst of destruction is not only a creative but also an avant-garde act of breathing new life into storytelling and the reproduction of cultural memory. In this essay, I discuss how the surrealist works of Morrison and Rocha radically confront dominant cultural imaginings of race and nation, and I argue that film preservation has the potential of being socially transformative. An interview with Gregorio Rocha follows.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/521127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0009837X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976274"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c19f5641-9dd5-30c7-9774-34c61253baff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/521127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clasphil"}],"isPartOf":"Classical Philology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literature Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/521127","wordCount":5815,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"102","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Nagel"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20167638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fashion and the Now-Time of Renaissance Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20167638","wordCount":15480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"46","publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ron Graziani"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0be5908c-91aa-3334-934c-b9f01074cfac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Robert Smithson's Picturable Situation: Blasted Landscapes from the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343864","wordCount":16166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"20","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f127b0e8-9391-3e4a-a1f9-38827f97f935"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/775247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/775247","wordCount":12211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KIRSTEN E. WOOD"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43695886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691cac9c-3c38-3c22-a486-f86ab24d2486"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43695886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"1116","pageStart":"1083","pagination":"pp. 1083-1116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Join with Heart and Soul and Voice\": Music, Harmony, and Politics in the Early American Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43695886","wordCount":18014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"119","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ASSAF LIKHOVSKI"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26564584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07382480"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47833951"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-252950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f1a3dd8-5cb2-38a3-ba8b-724775a77058"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26564584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawhistoryreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law and History Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"sourceCategory":["Law","History","History","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peripheral Vision","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26564584","wordCount":15653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Society for Legal History","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":null,"subTitle":"Polish-Jewish Lawyers and Early Israeli Law","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shelley Rice"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ae0d7e4-969d-3673-8942-4f64f21b0907"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25676506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Back to the Future: George Kubler, Lawrence Alloway, and the Complex Present","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25676506","wordCount":5952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1949-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54e5ddd8-a1dc-34ae-8a02-7d8a7871107f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27826261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerscie"}],"isPartOf":"American Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1949,"sourceCategory":["General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27826261","wordCount":10554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Sigma Xi, The Scientific Research Society","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES JANOWSKI"],"datePublished":"2011-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02643758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24356140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplphil"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Philosophy","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bringing Back Bamiyan's Buddhas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356140","wordCount":14116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"Bamiyan's Buddhas, long the treasured centrepiece of Afghanistan's material culture, were blown up by the Taliban in 2001. Since then controversy has arisen regarding whether \u2014 and, if so, how \u2014 the sculptures might be resurrected. One option \u2014 possible in principle because of careful 20th century survey work \u2014 would be to reconstruct exact replicas. I argue this would be a mistake. Reconstructing the sculptures, though it might serve useful ends, is inappropriate on aesthetic, moral, and metaphysical grounds. I then consider restoration, arguing that it is appropriate on these same grounds. Unlike reconstruction, restoration stands to (partly) resuscitate the artistic, cultural, and historical value that now lies, inaccessible, in piles of rubble. And while restoration stands to achieve this worthy end, it would contribute as well to the economic and political well-being of Afghani citizens. In short, I argue that restoring \u2014 and thereby resurrecting \u2014 Bamiyan's Buddhas, both metaphysically possible and morally appropriate, is a win-win proposition. Afghanistan deserves our support to make this happen.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["XIYIN TANG"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47017193"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235686"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86b800df-93d2-337c-b952-728c19a381ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23528653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Artist as Brand: Toward a Trademark Conception of Moral Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528653","wordCount":17873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","volumeNumber":"122","abstract":"The Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA) controversially recognized artists' \"moral rights\" by protecting their work from alteration or destruction and by preventing the use of an artist's name on a work he did not create. While moral rights are frequently criticized as antithetical to the traditional economic framework of American intellectual property law, Henry Hansmann and Marina Santilli have suggested that moral rights can be justified economically because they vindicate artists' pecuniary interests. This Note, in contrast, argues that VARA also benefits the purchasing and viewing public, especially in an era of factory-made or assistant-produced art works. Specifically, moral rights, like trademark law, can reduce search costs, ensure truthful source identification, and increase efficiency in the art market. This comparison between trademark law and moral rights shows that the sort of rights regime established by VARA is neither unique nor unprecedented in American law, and that it is highly economic in character. Thus, this Note hopes to reframe the dialogue surrounding moral rights, shifting it away from the classic \"personhood\" or \"anti-commodification\" arguments that have undergirded the rhetoric up to this day.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ajay J. Sinha"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54c3dcf5-dd00-332e-aaa3-efd90f3f58d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4132348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Visual Culture and the Politics of Locality in Modern India: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132348","wordCount":14015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"41","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pauline T. Kim"],"datePublished":"2020-06-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27074709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00426601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47016858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1142226-6399-38e1-8861-e1e147fa60ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27074709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virglawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Virginia Law Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":69.0,"pageEnd":"935","pageStart":"867","pagination":"pp. 867-935","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"MANIPULATING OPPORTUNITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27074709","wordCount":29449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Virginia Law Review","volumeNumber":"106","abstract":"Concerns about online manipulation have centered on fears about undermining the autonomy of consumers and citizens. What has been overlooked is the risk that the same techniques of personalizing information online can also threaten equality. When predictive algorithms are used to allocate information about opportunities like employment, housing, and credit, they can reproduce past patterns of discrimination and exclusion in these markets. This Article explores these issues by focusing on the labor market, which is increasingly dominated by tech intermediaries. These platforms rely on predictive algorithms to distribute information about job openings, match job seekers with hiring firms, or recruit passive candidates. Because algorithms are built by analyzing data about past behavior, their predictions about who will make a good match for which jobs will likely reflect existing occupational segregation and inequality. When tech intermediaries cause discriminatory effects, they may be liable under Title VII, and Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act should not bar such actions. However, because of the practical challenges that litigants face in identifying and proving liability retrospectively, a more effective approach to preventing discriminatory effects should focus on regulatory oversight to ensure the fairness of algorithmic systems.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miri Nakamura"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c75b43d-549f-3e73-9214-4f6380d084e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"364","pagination":"pp. 364-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Horror and Machines in Prewar Japan: The Mechanical Uncanny in Yumeno Ky\u00fbsaku's \"Dogura magura\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241105","wordCount":9224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"SF-TH Inc","volumeNumber":"29","abstract":"The popular genre known as \"irregular detective fiction\" (henkaku tantei sh\u00f4setsu), the forerunner of Japanese science fiction, flourished in Japan during the 1920s and the 1930s. Yumeno Kyusaku's \"Dogura magura\" (1935) is a representative work of this group of texts and is perceived as the culmination of the author's literary career. For Yumeno, the mode of horror was an essential ingredient for his detective fiction, and in \"Dogura magura\", this horror arises from what I refer to as \"the mechanical uncanny\"-the blurring of the line between human and machine resulting from the \"mechanization\" of human cognition.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1966-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/895472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00274380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e118c39b-9218-3720-afc4-eed241fe4d72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/895472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"notes"}],"isPartOf":"Notes","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/895472","wordCount":24775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Music Library Association","volumeNumber":"23","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott G. McNall"],"datePublished":"1983-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4106020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42e8d7de-80f9-3904-8f1b-bc1c44efeb31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4106020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Variations on a Theme: Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4106020","wordCount":9730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","volumeNumber":"24","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alanna Cant"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c392cce8-48cd-3430-ace0-03a54c2a2ed2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"837","pageStart":"820","pagination":"pp. 820-837","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The allure of art and intellectual property: artisans and industrial replicas in Mexican cultural economies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907905","wordCount":10829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Wiley","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":"This article considers the establishment of a collective trademark by Mexican artisans which occurred in response to the discovery of industrial replicas of Oaxacan woodcarvings, and it suggests that artisans' appeals to intellectual property cannot be readily understood as resulting from the economic or cultural threat that the replicas ostensibly pose. By bringing an analysis of aesthetics and the desirability of art into anthropological discussions of intellectual property, I argue that intellectual property is appealing to cultural producers in such contexts because it seems to offer an opportunity to stabilize the ambiguities concerning the relationship between authorship and the allure of artworks within competitive cultural markets. I conclude that in this case, claims to intellectual property reveal concerns that are more about local practices than about foreign production. L'auteure examine la constitution d'une marque commerciale collective par des artisans mexicains, en r\u00e9ponse \u00e0 la d\u00e9couverte de r\u00e9pliques industrielles de gravures sur bois d'Oaxaca. Elle sugg\u00e8re que le recours des artisans \u00e0 la propri\u00e9t\u00e9 intellectuelle ne peut pas se comprendre simplement comme une r\u00e9action \u00e0 la menace \u00e9conomique ou culturelle que constituent manifestement ces r\u00e9pliques. En int\u00e9grant une analyse de l'esth\u00e9tique et de la d\u00e9sirabilit\u00e9 de l'art dans les discussions anthropologiques sur la propri\u00e9t\u00e9 intellectuelle, elle avance que dans le contexte envisag\u00e9 ici, cette derni\u00e8re s\u00e9duit les producteurs de biens culturels parce qu'elle semble donner les moyens de stabiliser les ambigu\u00eft\u00e9s relatives \u00e0 la relation entre statut d'auteur et attrait des oeuvres d'art sur des march\u00e9s culturels concurrentiels. Elle conclut qu'en l'esp\u00e8ce, les revendications de propri\u00e9t\u00e9 intellectuelle r\u00e9v\u00e8lent des pr\u00e9occupations li\u00e9es aux pratiques locales davantage qu'\u00e0 la production externe.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher K. Ryan"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3487845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44545933"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233991"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3487845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjeconsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Economics and Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":273.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-vii+ix+xi+xiii-xiv+1-25+27-69+71-169+171-193+195-203+205-223+225-233+235+237-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Harry Gunnison Brown: An Orthodox Economist and His Contributions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3487845","wordCount":91877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"American Journal of Economics and Sociology, Inc.","volumeNumber":"61","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David LeHardy Sweet","\ufea9\ufe8d\ufb6c\ufef4\ufeaa \ufedf\ufef4\ufeec\ufe8e\ufead\ufea9\ufef1 \ufeb3\ufeee\ufef3\ufe96"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3377f95-9d14-36b0-8b9b-00301a3c98a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4047455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Edward Said and the Avant-Garde \/ \ufe87\ufea9\ufeed\ufe8d\ufead\ufea9 \ufeb3\ufecc\ufef4\ufeaa \ufeed\ufe8d\ufedf\ufec4\ufee0\ufef4\ufecc\ufe94 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufed4\ufee8\ufef4\ufe94","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047455","wordCount":10953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"25","publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"This article examines the interconnections between Said's critical oeuvre and a range of theoretical positions apropos of the European and American Avant-gardes. Questions raised in this article pertain to the critical deconstruction of generic distinctions between the work of art and the work of the critic; the role of the Avant-garde in identifying and critically subverting the institutional basis of aesthetic discourse; the ironic antagonisms between Said's discursive projects and the critical \"heritage\" of the Avant-garde. In light of the latter's proto-critical maneuvers in a variety of media (plastic, literary, musical), Said's work can be seen as expanding, enriching, and radically acclerating certain avant-garde initiatives, though he often subverts them in turn, conspicuously in respect of their postmodern inflections. \/\u202e\u062a\u0628\u062d\u062b \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0634\u0627\u0626\u062c \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0631\u0628\u0637 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u062c\u0645\u0644 \u0623\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0644 \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0639\u062f\u064a\u062f \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0648\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u062a\u062c\u0627\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0644\u064a\u0639\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u0631\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u0645\u0631\u064a\u0643\u064a\u0629\u0660 \u062a\u062a\u0645\u062d\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0633\u0626\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0637\u0631\u0648\u062d\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062d\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0641\u0643\u064a\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a \u0644\u0644\u062e\u0635\u0627\u0626\u0635 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufecc\ufe8e\ufee3\ufe94 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0646 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u060c \u0648\u062d\u0648\u0644 \u062f\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0644\u064a\u0639\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u062a\u062d\u062f\u064a\u062f \u0645\u0627\u0647\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0639\u062f\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0676\u0633\u0633\u0627\u062a\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u064a\u0642\u0648\u0645 \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0637\u0627\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0645\u0627\u0644\u064a \u0648\u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636\u0647\u0627 \u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0627\ufe70 \u0641\u064a \ufe81\u0646\u0660 \u0643\u0645\u0627 \u062a\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0623\u0648\u062c\u0647 \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0635\u0648\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0627\u0631\u0642\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u0634\u0631\u0648\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f \u062f\u0627\u0626\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u062f\u062f \u0648\"\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0631\u0627\u062b\" \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0644\u064a\u0639\u064a\u0660 \u0648\u0641\u064a \u0636\u0648\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0631\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0644\u064a\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u0644\u0649 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u062f\u064a\u062f \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0633\u0627\u0626\u0637 (\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0634\u0643\u064a\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0648\ufe8d\ufef7\ufea9\ufe91\ufef4\ufe94 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0648\u0633\u064a\u0642\u064a\u0629)\u060c \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0631 \u0644\u0623\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0644 \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f \u0643\u0639\u0627\u0645\u0644 \u064a\u062b\u0631\u064a \u0648\u064a\u0641\u0639\u0651\u0644 \u0628\u0639\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0628\u0627\u062f\u0631\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0644\u064a\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u062c\u0630\u0631\u064a\u0627\ufe70\u060c \ufead\ufecf\ufee2 \u0646\u0632\u0648\u0639\u0647\u060c \u0628\u062f\u0648\u0631\u0647\u060c \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636\u0647\u0627 \u0641\u064a \u0623\u063a\u0644\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062d\u064a\u0627\u0646 \u062e\u0627\u0635\u0629 \u0641\u064a\u0645\u0627 \u062a\u064a\u0639\u0644\u0642 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u062c\u0648\u0627\u0646\u0628 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u062d\u062f\u0627\u062b\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0628\u0627\u062f\u0631\u0627\u062a\u0660\u202c","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jack Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3101991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0040165X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38122975"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-5033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b2faadf-9873-3133-ac30-f82e775566e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3101991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"techcult"}],"isPartOf":"Technology and Culture","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Current Bibliography in the History of Technology (1965)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3101991","wordCount":31004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"8","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David E. James"],"datePublished":"1983-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02e96907-8ad9-37a5-b2c4-66f9637e8e2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Blake's Laoco\u00f6n: A Degree Zero of Literary Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462047","wordCount":7627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"98","abstract":"Blake's late engraving, erroneously known as The Laoco\u00f6n, presents an unusually direct relation between the content of a literary work and the way the work is produced and consumed as an artifact. By restoring the statue's correct meaning (\"Jah & his two Sons Satan & Adam\"), Blake arrested its fall into materiality and application to \"Natural Fact\" and, in doing so, redeemed for spiritual purposes the engraving that he had begun as a commercial undertaking. In his commentary on the plate, he clarified for the first time the mutual exclusivity of art and commerce, not by making a materialist analysis, but by associating art with religion's traditional antipathy to money. He formulated a view of art as devotional practice rather than as the production of commodities, and this logic allowed the plate only the barest form of material existence.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen D. Carter"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.2.0177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a835dc5c-575e-3d14-ae7c-9d9951680236"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.58.2.0177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dialectic of War and Utopia: Systemic Closure and Embattled Social Life in the Work of Fredric Jameson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.2.0177","wordCount":12823,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52817,52885]],"Locations in B":[[20938,21006]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Wayne State University Press","volumeNumber":"58","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea L. Yates"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09273131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51392071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-234422"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5d59763-0297-3f7e-8488-828bcddd453d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25781482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"samubecktoda"}],"isPartOf":"Samuel Beckett Today \/ Aujourd'hui","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"437","pagination":"pp. 437-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ABANDONING THE EMPIRICAL: Repetition and Homosociality in \"Waiting for Godot\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25781482","wordCount":4502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Editions Rodopi B.V.","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":"Much has been written on Beckett's use of repetition in Waiting for Godot but none have addressed the ways in which this repetition informs the relationship of the two men. To assume that either is simply a tool for comic effect, or that the one has no relation to the other is to lose the ways in which the play explores relationships between two men. This article addresses the ways in which repetition both affects the relationship of these two characters and is a reflection of that relationship. I will argue that their relationship, and the repetitive behavior and dialogue on which it is predicated, constructs the only 'truth' that Vladimir and Estragon know, and that the shared recognition of that 'truth' is their fundamental bond.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.bm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcce6409-1b54-3741-890c-ff02f84b9f0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.bm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.21.1.bm","wordCount":2306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"21","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1964-10-09","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fb1d8f3-0001-3643-8a4b-d985ddc59f22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1713825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"science"}],"isPartOf":"Science","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240+305-306+308+310-315+317-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1964,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"New Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1713825","wordCount":8782,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"3641","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"146","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erk Grimm"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3994d857-5e1b-309b-9d4e-ae573bf5cbb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3211161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fathoming the Archive: German Poetry and the Culture of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3211161","wordCount":14853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"88","publisher":"New German Critique","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harrison T. 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The historical roots of this discourse extend through the nineteenth century in complicated ways, connecting with the institutional history of Oxford, the poetics of dialogue form itself, the cultural implications of Victorian homosexuality, and the contradictions of British capitalism in its imperial moment. These fastidiously playful texts therefore enable us to explore the importance of being idle, amateurish and unproductive.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAURIZIO PELEGGI"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d46af5a2-d97a-3a0a-90f7-f0bf2f8481df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24494219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"1548","pageStart":"1520","pagination":"pp. 1520-1548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Buddhist Icons to National Antiquities: Cultural Nationalism and Colonial Knowledge in the Making of Thailand's History of Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494219","wordCount":11636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"Cambridge University Press","volumeNumber":"47","abstract":"In the mid 1920s Prince Damrong Rajanubhab and George Coed\u00e8s jointly formulated the stylistic classification of Thailand's antiquities that was employed to reorganize the collection of the Bangkok Museum and has since acquired canonical status. The reorganization of the Bangkok Museum as a 'national' institution in the final years of royal absolutism responded to increasing international interest in the history and ancient art of Southeast Asia, but represented also the culmination of several decades of local antiquarian pursuits. This paper traces the origins of the art history of Thailand to the intellectual and ideological context of the turn of the twentieth century and examines its parallelism to colonial projects of knowledge that postulated a close linkage between race, ancestral territory and nationhood.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Meurig Thomas"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9fccf9d-4d8d-3114-b955-601cadce69cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/532147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noterecoroyasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"sourceCategory":["History","History","History of Science & Technology"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Computer science"],"title":"Predictions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532147","wordCount":5643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Royal Society","volumeNumber":"55","abstract":"The fallibility of predictions of scientific and technical advances is illustrated by errors and omissions.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc3aecf7-606f-394c-b999-045746ff0980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":142.0,"pageEnd":"1420","pageStart":"1279","pagination":"pp. 1279-1420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461552","wordCount":48476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"6","publisher":"Modern Language Association","volumeNumber":"88","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Marie Perl"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43892689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1091711X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606242963"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67a580b0-8891-3b88-91c6-1219a7d2cf9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43892689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thresholds"}],"isPartOf":"Thresholds","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-19, 362-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SUCC\u00c8S DE \"SCANDALE\" and Biblical scandal: Yves Klein's debut performance of Anthropometries in 1960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43892689","wordCount":8901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"43","publisher":"Massachusetts Institute of Technology","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arthur C. 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This literature review examines the dominant discourse on diversity\u2014a discourse that positions difference as deficit. Although traditional schooling has been resistant to system-wide change, this review will also consider research showing teachers as well positioned to make emancipatory choices\u2014critically engaging in and demonstrating values and classroom practices that can counteract the limited knowledge and normative practices so common in schools today. This review concludes with a discussion of an emancipatory model of education that educators can build on as part of a paradigm shift grounded in the Black Studies intellectual tradition. This model represents an alternative to the hierarchy of human worth embedded in the predominant conception of diversity. By moving past the constraints of traditional schooling, emancipatory educators can affirm the collective humanity of all students-teachers-families and the cultures and groups they represent.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Agnes Heller"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03034178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43028439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poetica"}],"isPartOf":"Poetica","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"AUTONOMY OF ART OR DIGNITY OF THE ARTWORK?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43028439","wordCount":9565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1\/2","publisher":"Wilhelm Fink GmbH & Co. Verlags-KG","volumeNumber":"40","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Zhang"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42579116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0014164X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200617"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dbc0ac3-d633-3ac7-be62-1c24f83a54ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42579116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etcrevgensem"}],"isPartOf":"ETC: A Review of General Semantics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"GILLES DELEUZE AND MINOR RHETORIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42579116","wordCount":6597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"Institute of General Semantics","volumeNumber":"68","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BENJAMIN SPECTOR"],"datePublished":"1963-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44446895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9a7a5b5-ef18-3f5a-bbe1-44933f797091"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44446895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"JEREMY BENTHAM 1748-1832: HIS INFLUENCE UPON MEDICAL THOUGHT AND LEGISLATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44446895","wordCount":7498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"37","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Trommler","Michael Geyer","Jeffrey M. Peck"],"datePublished":"1990-02-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1431057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61523181"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c56005a-b002-3154-8006-377716ed73f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1431057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germstudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"German Studies Review","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Germany as the Other: Towards an American Agenda for German Studies. A Colloquium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1431057","wordCount":13029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"German Studies Association","volumeNumber":"13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lily Saint"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29778076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34bb49a6-f3c9-372b-a050-e409d6210ad8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29778076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"958","pageStart":"939","pagination":"pp. 939-958","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Not Western: Race, Reading, and the South African Photocomic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29778076","wordCount":10961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","volumeNumber":"36","abstract":"Photocomics were widely popular in South Africa in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, yet they have received little critical attention. This article has two goals. First, it seeks to contextualise the production and consumption of photocomics during apartheid. Second, focusing on one popular form of the photocomic \u2014 the Western \u2014 I look at how narrative and aesthetic conventions of the form reinforced, yet simultaneously disturbed, the apartheid state's fantasy of total segregation. Reading practices fostered interracial contact in the imaginative and affective spheres even while apartheid doctrine attempted to prevent it. Conjoining text and photograph, sequence and still, mimesis, fantasy, Europe, Africa, and the Americas, the photocomic is not just an outmoded form of popular entertainment, but instead connects readings in popular culture with the formation of complex political subjectivities.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George B. Wilbur"],"datePublished":"1941-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87810944-dab8-3d43-99d7-a0bce5a7e1a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26300899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"SOME PROBLEMS PRESENTED BY FREUD'S LIFE-DEATH INSTINCT THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26300899","wordCount":27496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1916-02-05","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19440227"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568751079"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25588803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerartnews"}],"isPartOf":"American Art News","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1916,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"American Art News, Vol. 14, no. 18","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25588803","wordCount":22277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"18","publisher":"The Frick Collection","volumeNumber":"14","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah K. Rich"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ebc522a-5d65-3ade-80f2-a1613400f879"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20108005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fran\u00e7ois Dallegret's Astrological Automobiles: Occult Commodities for France in the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108005","wordCount":11906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"31","abstract":"At the Iris Clert gallery in 1962, Fran\u00e7ois Dallegret exhibited twelve automobile designs, each of which was calibrated to accommodate a sign of the zodiac. The designs, at once futuristic and nostalgic, engaged some of the more intricate workings of commodity culture and class identity in mid-century France. This article compares Dallegret's series to developments in French popular culture (such as the growing fascination with the automobile), and reads his exhibition alongside contemporary theoretical investigations of astrology by figures like Theodor Adorno and Roland Barthes.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Traub","Jonathan Lipkin"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fe97cb7-c2e5-3018-aa02-e06a0689ae78"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1511860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Creative Interlocutor and Multimedia Dialog","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511860","wordCount":5330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"16","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne M. Marchese","Francis T. Marchese"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0024094X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24b86daa-f2c1-3cf5-9e19-8bc08f6e80ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1576230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonardo"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Education - Educational resources","Applied sciences - Technology","Arts - Literature","Applied sciences - Engineering","Applied sciences - Systems science","Law - Computer law","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Digital Media and Ephemeralness: Art, Artist, and Viewer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1576230","wordCount":2277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"28","abstract":"WHILE HIGH-QUALITY MATERIALS ENABLE PRODUCTION OF EXTREMELY durable artworks, contemporary artists have selected materials and processes that bring about a degeneration of the object. Easy reproduction and faster proliferation of the image mean new ideas are communicated rapidly and each work is considered more briefly by the viewer. Artists' concepts are incorporated into other pieces, with recently exhibited work frequently looked upon as passe. Digitalization produces intangible art, planned rather than crafted by the artist. The temporality, intangibility, and transience that mark art's ephemeralness are advanced through cyberspace, where the digital piece is placed on a network, downloaded, manipulated, and placed back on the network by others, sometimes simultaneously. Someday the artist may manipulate a program she or he began long ago without recognizing the creator or the creation. The authors trace these developments, with emphasis on how technology has contributed to the increased ephemeralness of art.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Uwe Hohendahl"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/405347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d2c75d4-1a92-3a45-90da-be22a093f204"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/405347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Autonomy of Art: Looking Back at Adorno's \u00c4sthetische Theorie","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/405347","wordCount":8133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"2","publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","volumeNumber":"54","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221899"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41275996"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f117bced-8b98-322e-8627-e39b19c1e606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43708417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinfedise"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Infectious Diseases","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical sciences"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43708417","wordCount":18830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"7","publisher":"Oxford University Press","volumeNumber":"209","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryne V. Lindberg"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/302824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/302824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing \"Frankly\": Pound's Rhetoric against Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/302824","wordCount":14951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Duke University Press","volumeNumber":"12\/13","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Uwe Hohendahl"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69xjd.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801497063"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c336316a-e273-39af-842f-e8417d35af4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt1g69xjd.7"}],"isPartOf":"Reappraisals","keyphrase":["adorno","aesthetic","theory","aesthetische theorie","luk\u00e1cs","frankfurt","frankfurt school","autonomy","aesthetic theory","social"],"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"75","pagination":"75-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Autonomy of Art:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69xjd.7","wordCount":8555,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[16632,16841]],"Locations in B":[[42244,42455]],"docSubType":null,"issueNumber":null,"publisher":null,"volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"Theodor W. Adomo\u2019s major contribution to the philosophy of art, hisAesthetische Theorie,<\/em>appeared in 1970.\u00b9 The work was almost completeo when the author died in 1969. Adorno meant to rewrite the introduction, but otherwise the text needed only stylistic revisions, which were carried out by Rolf Tiedemann, Adomo\u2019s faithful disciple and editor. Tiedemann rightly feh thatAesthetische Theorie<\/em>deserved immediate publication, since it was the legacy of Critical Theory. Yet it was precisely this aspect that marred the reception of the book. Except for a few voices in the liberal and conservative camp, the response was surprisingly negative. One","subTitle":"Looking Back at Adomo\u2019s Aesthetische Theorie","collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1955-12-31","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20333978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86bbe8da-28fa-31b7-91f0-ac0294ded40e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20333978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britmedj"}],"isPartOf":"The British Medical Journal","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1955,"sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Medical treatment"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20333978","wordCount":55605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4956","publisher":"BMJ","volumeNumber":"2","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H-B. MOELLER"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcde31e8-96cf-38b2-8969-550ad3092da0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"College Course File: THE NEW GERMAN CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687711","wordCount":8647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"1","publisher":"University of Illinois Press","volumeNumber":"38","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Sherer"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42231514-d835-30b7-9bb8-30650eecd7df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43630898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Architectural Project and the Historical Project: Tensions, Analogies, Discontinuities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43630898","wordCount":11706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"31","publisher":"Anyone Corporation","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine Williams"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00849812"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2e5d16f-6758-3e69-9d7e-b41d970b6b8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44372073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickstudannu"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Studies Annual","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Glass Windows: The View from \"Bleak House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44372073","wordCount":14750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","volumeNumber":"33","abstract":"Conceived and written in the immediate aftermath of the 1851 Great Exhibition, Bleak House has been mined by critics for allusions to that event and to the Crystal Palace that housed it. Although Paxton's \"bundle of transparency\" is never mentioned, another version of transparency abounds: the glass window. In Bleak House, Dickens uses windows as what Philip Hamon calls \"character particles.\" Windows, in other words, not only serve as metaphors and plot devices, but also as characters, fostering misprision and understanding, exclusion and inclusion, stability and change, constraint and freedom, blindness and insight. Windows provide light, air, and vision, but also boundaries and limitations. Rather than the illusion of \"utter transparency,\" a modernist, Utopian value inaugurated by Paxton's edifice, Dickens opts for the imperfect view from windows.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24320239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00984590"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24320239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"floridascientist"}],"isPartOf":"Florida Scientist","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"i","pagination":"pp. i-vi, 1-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Supplement 1: Program Issue: THE FORTY-FIFTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ACADEMY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24320239","wordCount":33063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","volumeNumber":"44","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karyn Ball","\u0643\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0628\u0648\u0644"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64c54aba-b69a-304e-8d4f-152d66d77fb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27929821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Melancholy in the Humanities: Lamenting the \"Ruins\" of Time between Bill Readings and Augustine \/ \u0623\u062d\u0632\u0627\u0646 \ufe8d\ufef9\ufee7\ufeb4\ufe8e\ufee7\ufef4\ufe8e\ufe95: \u0627\u0644\u0628\u0643\u0627\u0621 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0637\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0632\u0645\u0646 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0628\u064a\u0644 \u0631\u064a\u062f\u0646\u062c\u0632 \u0648\u0623\u0648\u062c\u0633\u0637\u064a\u0646","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929821","wordCount":13251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"29","publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","volumeNumber":null,"abstract":"In \"The University in Ruins\", Bill Readings traces shifting ideas about the university from the writings of Kant and von Humboldt to their \"ruins\" in a managerial newspeak that prioritizes profitable programs over humanities scholarship and teaching. The author contends that Readings narrates the dehiscence of these ideas in the form of a lament, even as he urges humanities faculty to abandon melancholic fixations on our deteriorating prestige and besieged values. This article recasts Readings's account in light of Paul Ricoeur's explication of the Augustinian lament to speculate about the ontological lineaments of a sense of lost time among human scientists. \u064a\u062a\u062a\u0628\u0639 \u0628\u064a\u0644 \u0631\u064a\u062f\u0646\u062c\u0632 \u0641\u064a \u0639\u0645\u0644\u0647 \u0623\u0637\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0627\u0645\u0639\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0627\u0647\u064a\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u063a\u064a\u0631\u0629 \u0639\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0627\u0645\u0639\u0629 \ufe91\ufe8e\ufea9\ufe8b\ufe8e\u064b \u0628\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a \u0643\u0627\u0646\u0637 \u0648\u06a8\u0648\u0646 \u0647\u0648\u0645\u0628\u0648\u0644\u062a \u0648\u0645\u0646\u062a\u0647\u064a\u0627\u064b \u0628\u0638\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0627\u0647\u064a\u0645 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0644\u063a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0673\u062f\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0639\u0627\ufe8b\ufef4\ufe94 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u062a\u062e\u0630 \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u0631\u0627\u0645\u062c \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0643\u0627\u062f\u064a\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u0628\u062d\u0629 \u0623\u0648\u0644\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u0647\u0627\u060c \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062d\u0633\u0627\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u062d\u062b \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0644\u0645\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0633 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0673\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0627\u062a. \u0648\u062a\u0631\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0627\u062a\u0628\u0629 \u0623\u0646 \u0631\u064a\u062f\u0646\u062c\u0632 \u064a\u0633\u0631\u062f \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062d\u0648\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0641\u064a \u0635\u064a\u063a\u0629 \u0631\u062b\u0627\u0621 \ufef3\ufe86\ufedb\ufeaa \u062a\u0631\u0627\u062c\u0639\u0647\u0627\u060c \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0642\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u064a\u062d\u062b \u0641\u064a\u0647 \u0623\u0633\u0627\u062a\u0630\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0673\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062e\u0644\u064a \u0639\u0646 \u0647\u0648\u0633\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0648\u062f\u0627\u0648\u064a \u0628\u0645\u062b\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0639\u0641\u0649 \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0632\u0645\u0646. \u0648\u062a\u0639\u064a\u062f \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062a\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0645 \u0639\u0645\u0644 \u0631\u064a\u062f\u0646\u062c\u0632 \u0641\u064a \u0636\u0648\u0621 \u0634\u0631\u062d \u067e\u0648\u0644 \u0631\u064a\u0643\u0648\u0631 \u0644\u0644\u0631\u062b\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u062c\u0633\u0637\u064a\u0646\u064a\u060c \u0645\u062a\u0623\u0645\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0646\u0637\u0648\u0644\u0648\u062c\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632 \u0634\u0639\u0648\u0631 \u0639\u0644\u0645\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0673\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0632\u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0642\u0648\u062f .","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothy Noyes"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfr.2009.46.3.233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65193a41-4810-317d-8fa0-14f5593934e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfr.2009.46.3.233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tradition: Three Traditions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfr.2009.46.3.233","wordCount":12335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":"3","publisher":"Indiana University Press","volumeNumber":"46","abstract":"Abstract This article traces \u201ctradition\u201d as a keyword of Western modernity, circulating between general and scholarly usage and between analytic and ideological applications. After a historical overview, I identify three main orientations: tradition as a communicative transaction, tradition as a temporal ideology, and tradition as communal property. I conclude by proposing that scholars explore yet another working definition of tradition: the transfer of responsibility for a valued practice or performance.","subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Neu"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/232274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63ca236f-f561-3ca2-a110-e9bafa68d048"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/232274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":202.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"One Hundred Ninth Critical Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/232274","wordCount":131137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"5","publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","volumeNumber":"75","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Dessler"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"807b0dbf-98cb-33c2-9736-09b24fd8c144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":73.0,"pageEnd":"786","pageStart":"785","pagination":"pp. 785-786","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Biology","Physical sciences - Earth sciences","Applied sciences - Engineering","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1693561","wordCount":17936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4669","publisher":"American Association for the Advancement of Science","volumeNumber":"225","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d061a79-520c-3a09-a393-66329a2808cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983448","wordCount":8166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"4","publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","volumeNumber":"62","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonia Lant"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84218bb0-a4cb-3b47-9689-3072d118f47b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Haptical Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778820","wordCount":13312,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[12231,12303],[13405,13524],[35937,36445],[36365,36456],[36748,37056],[46236,46499]],"Locations in B":[[64946,65018],[65766,65885],[66199,66712],[66632,66723],[66732,67032],[68083,68354]],"docSubType":"research-article","issueNumber":null,"publisher":"The MIT Press","volumeNumber":"74","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1941-11-01","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03644006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c684a1f-65af-3126-a1d4-b86b72338197"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25690880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alabulletin"}],"isPartOf":"ALA Bulletin","keyphrase":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":165.0,"pageEnd":"H484","pageStart":"H2","pagination":"pp. H2-H82, H401-H484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1941,"sourceCategory":["Library Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"[Handbook]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25690880","wordCount":106018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"docSubType":"misc","issueNumber":"11","publisher":"American Library Association","volumeNumber":"35","abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} diff --git a/text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl b/text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c1d933 --- /dev/null +++ b/text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl @@ -0,0 +1,4281 @@ +{"creator":["Heidi Grunebaum"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823278","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"836d4c06-35c6-3e16-8685-707e68aedd47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823278"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Talking to Ourselves \"among the Innocent Dead\": On Reconciliation, Forgiveness, and Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823278","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":3405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thora Margareta Bertilsson"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4dcffda-32db-35c1-92be-f242decd34a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20058719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20058719","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":1190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodger Cunningham"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45237547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10486143"},{"name":"oclc","value":"818672282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5730217a-e5a2-3ddc-b99e-775b32b23e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45237547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappstuass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Center for Appalachian Studies and Services\/ East Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dividing the World: Conflict and Inequality in the Context of Growing Global Tension","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455066","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The central themes in development theory have addressed exclusion of social groups, poverty gaps and strategies to overcome development deficits. In order to perceive the spatial structuring of inequality, concepts defining three separate worlds found ubiquitous appreciation and omnipresent adaptation. Coinciding with the end of the Cold War the 'endism' debate also suggested the end of the 'Third World'. Presently it has become apparent that development theories which have ordered global space into three different worlds are experiencing rejuvenated appreciation. Nevertheless, the recourse towards trichotomising the world is not necessarily stimulated by the same concepts as previously. In the era of globalisation and post-developmentalism concepts favouring nation-states as sole reference points have been challenged and criticised, although the debate about failed states has again drawn attention to those entities. The post-9\/11 perception of world order, chaos and conflicts has structured the previously acknowledged limitation of resources and the impossibility of catching-up strategies for developing countries in such a manner that 'new' Third World theories point at the exclusion from the developed world of outsiders, by attributing them pre-modern levels of state development and sovereignty. A prominent result of this debate is a perception of ordered space along lines which seemed to have been abandoned some time ago. This paper compares and scrutinises contemporary concepts of dividing the world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D.W. Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23925819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"BEYOND THE COLONIAL NOVEL: THE LAST NOVELS OF LAURENS VAN DER POST","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23925819","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":5056,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[29426,29474]],"abstract":"This article argues that while Van der Post accepts the narrative structures of the colonial quest-romance in A Story Like the Wind and A Far-Off Place, he transforms and goes beyond the trope by rejecting colonial perceptions and infusing his books with Jungian intimations of reality. His protagonists achieve a wholeness of being that allows them to move beyond Manichean polarities and transcend the blinkered sensibilities of their literary forebears. They are not only liberated from the ideologies of colonialism, racial dominance and Marxism, but also from an epistemological vision that has constituted contemporary reality in terms which deprive the human spirit of its full potentials.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. R. F. Taylor"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceptualizing Development Space in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490510","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":4052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alice M. Nah"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3878374","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3878374"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"(Re)Mapping Indigenous 'Race'\/Place in Postcolonial Peninsular Malaysia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3878374","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":10205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper focuses on how indigeneity has been constructed, deployed and ruptured in postcolonial Malay(si)a. Prior to the independence of Malaya in 1957, British colonial administrators designated certain groups of inhabitants as being 'indigenous' to the land through European imaginings of 'race'. The majority, politically dominant Malays were deemed the definitive peoples of this geographical territory, and the terrain was naturalized as 'the Malay Peninsula'. Under the postcolonial government, British conceptions of the peninsula were retained; the Malays were given political power and recognition of their 'special (indigenous) position' in ways that Orang Asli minorities - also considered indigenous - were not. This uneven recognition is evident in current postcolonial political, economic, administrative and legal arrangements for Malays and Orang Asli. In recent years, Orang Asli advocates have been articulating their struggles over land rights by drawing upon transnational discourses concerning indigenous peoples. Recent judicial decisions concerning native title for the Orang Asli potentially disrupt ethno-nationalist assertions of the peninsula as belonging to the 'native' Malays. These contemporary contests in postcolonial identity formations unsettle hegemonic geopolitical 'race'\/place narratives of Peninsular Malaysia.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KENNEDY C. CHINYOWA"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48604380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15423166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e44f15c0-a483-31dd-9f3f-b6c416980491"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48604380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peacebuilding"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peacebuilding & Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BUILDING CRITICAL CITIZENSHIP THROUGH SYNCRETIC THEATRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48604380","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Community-based theatre in Zimbabwe has played a limited, if not passive, role in promoting active citizenship among its audiences. More often than not, crucial decisions affecting target communities have been made from outside, making it appear as if externally driven interventions are being imposed upon them. The overriding tendency has been that of \u2018taking theatre to the people\u2019 rather than \u2018making theatre with the people\u2019. The former approach seems to promote passive spectatorship, which is not effective in resolving conflict and building peace in a country characterised by the virtual absence of the rule of law. This article argues that syncretic (or hybridised) theatre can satisfy the need for critical objectivity by staging fictionalised stories that illuminate the specific conflicts affecting target communities. As a means of \u2018waging conflict non-violently\u2019, such theatre creates space for critical citizens to assess their problems objectively, to try out theatrically staged options for resolving conflicts and transfer these alternatives to real life.","subTitle":"A ZIMBABWEAN CASE STUDY","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wisam Kh. Abdul-Jabbar"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48600078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17550912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63e7718a-6732-36f8-af21-5a042a872c22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48600078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contemporaryarab"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Arab Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Internalized Arab diasporic identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48600078","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores how the notion of double-consciousness peculiar to the African dispersion is not distant from the condition of most Arabs in diaspora. Arguably, it is similarly creolized as a syncretic product of continuous historical, cultural and linguistic processes, and is correspondingly an immediate consequence of the advent of the colonized world. Although connections with the Arab ties, whether emotional or cultural, vary largely, the politicized aspect of double-consciousness remains salient. This article examines internalized personality formation and the process of forming ethno-cultural identity within the Arab diasporic community through the Duboisian narrative of double-consciousness.","subTitle":"revisiting the Duboisian double-consciousness","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arlene Akiko Teraoka"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/406212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52cfd597-9026-3c97-af39-a6a306c71aa2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/406212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Der Auftrag and Die Ma\u00dfnahme: Models of Revolution in Heiner M\u00fcller and Bertolt Brecht","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/406212","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9940,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609497,609594]],"Locations in B":[[40015,40113]],"abstract":"Heiner M\u00fcller's Der Auftrag departs radically from the action of its model, Brecht's Die Ma\u00dfnahme: the chorus as a collective authority no longer exists; the young comrade, abandoning the tactics of the Party, becomes a new kind of revolutionary; finally, the Party, responding to political exigencies, betrays the authentic revolt of the slaves on Jamaica. The ideological assumptions underlying Brecht's play are thereby brought under critical scrutiny: M\u00fcller exposes the formalist quality of Brecht's notions of \"individual\" and \"collective,\" which erase genuine political differences, and he attacks the authority and universal claim of the European revolutionary experience grounded in rationality. M\u00fcller's closeness to and criticism of Brecht are thus revealed in his contemporary \"learning play\" which demonstrates not the strengths but the fundamental limitations of the European revolution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JESSICA STERN"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26361939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87656d7c-684e-3833-89f4-b83a6dba83cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26361939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radicalization to Extremism and Mobilization to Violence: What Have We Learned and What Can We Do about It?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26361939","volumeNumber":"668","wordCount":8326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses individual mobilization to extremist violence from the perspective of a researcher and analyst, exploring what we know about the psychological and social factors motivating young people to join extremist groups and how that knowledge relates to the recruitment of individuals into ISIS. The biggest threat to the West, at least for now, is not core ISIS (or any jihadi group operating in the Middle East and North Africa region), but Westerners who self-mobilize for attacks at home or who return, trained to fight, from the \"jihad\" abroad. Finally, the article suggests specific ways for governments to respond to this threat, noting the limits of what government can do, and arguing that they join forces with the private sector. Mobilization to extremism must be addressed with broad, multi-institutional social strategies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Ifeka"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14d3ba4b-a7fe-3cad-901b-12dc8837353c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23178840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Market Forces, Political Violence, and War: The End of Nation-States, the Rise of Ethnic and Global Sovereignties?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178840","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":5096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benita Parry"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Contradictions of Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935170","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Morrison","James Legge"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27095438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19917295"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653372214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"173ab780-7d1c-30d0-8e89-ccf757755f88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27095438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaaisasocihkb"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Branch","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Historical Talks by Sir Lindsay Ride on Robert Morrison and James Legge - \u8cf4\u5ec9\u58eb\u7235\u58eb\u7d30\u8aaa\u99ac\u79ae\u905c\u8207\u7406\u96c5\u5404\u7684\u6b77\u53f2\u50b3\u5947","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27095438","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":14791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"These scripts of talks, one on James Legge and a set of four on Robert Morrison, given in the mid- to late 1960s by Sir Lindsay Ride, then recently retired as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hong Kong, offer an interesting insight into the prevailing understandings and attitudes of a typical member of Hong Kong\u2019s ruling elite of the period. The talk scripts are introduced by a short essay intended to cast light on the context in which they were composed, further context is then provided in the extensive notes to the edited versions of the talks. The talks are not presented in the date order in which they were given in the 1960s, but rather in the order in which, in the nineteenth century, their subjects came to Hong Kong and lived out their missions. \u672c\u6587\u7531\u4e00\u7bc7\u6709\u95dc\u7406\u96c5\u5404\u53ca\u4e00\u8f2f\u56db\u7bc7\u6709\u95dc\u99ac\u79ae\u905c\u7684\u8b1b\u7a3f\u5408\u7d44\u800c\u6210\uff0c\u662f\u7576\u6642\u525b\u5378\u4efb\u9999\u6e2f\u5927\u5b78\u6821\u9577\u4e00\u8077\u7684\u8cf4\u5ec9\u58eb\u7235\u58eb\u65bc1960\u5e74\u4ee3\u4e2d\u665a\u671f\u6240\u767c\u4f48\u7684\u6f14\u8aaa\u5167\u5bb9\u3002\u8b1b\u7a3f\u63d0\u4f9b\u4e86\u9952\u6709\u8da3\u5473\u7684\u898b\u89e3\uff0c\u8b93\u8b80\u8005\u5f97\u6089\u7576\u6642\u9999\u6e2f\u7ba1\u6cbb\u7cbe\u82f1\u4e2d\u4e00\u4f4d\u5225\u5177\u4ee3\u8868\u6027\u7684\u4eba\u7269\u6240\u6301\u7684\u7406\u89e3\u548c\u614b\u5ea6\u3002\u672c\u6587\u7531\u4e00\u7bc7\u77ed\u6587\u4f5c\u5e8f\u8ad6\uff0c\u65e8\u5728\u95e1\u660e\u9019\u4e9b\u8b1b\u7a3f\u7684\u5beb\u4f5c\u80cc\u666f\uff0c\u800c\u6ce8\u91cb\u90e8\u5206\u5247\u662f\u70ba\u4fee\u8a02\u8b1b\u7a3f\u6240\u4f5c\u7684\u8a73\u7d30\u9673\u8ff0\u3002\u9019\u4e9b\u8b1b\u7a3f\u4e26\u975e\u6309\u5b83\u5011\u65bc1960\u5e74\u4ee3\u7684\u767c\u4f48\u65e5\u671f\u6392\u5217\uff0c\u800c\u662f\u4ee5\u7576\u4e2d\u4e3b\u4eba\u7fc1\u65bc\u5341\u4e5d\u4e16\u7d00\u5230\u6e2f\u5c65\u884c\u5176\u50b3\u6559\u5de5\u4f5c\u7684\u9806\u5e8f\u7de8\u6392\u3002","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hope Sabanpan-Yu"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01150243"},{"name":"oclc","value":"566025042"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34715dd6-e345-3d25-9cb3-5ff72f14b720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41762433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philquarcultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of San Carlos Publications","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women Coming to Voice in Emecheta's The Joys of Motherhood and Espina-Moore's Mila's Mother","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41762433","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Battle-Sister"],"datePublished":"1971-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/349840","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222445"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976459"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227020"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/349840"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmarriagefamily"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Marriage and Family","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conjectures on the Female Culture Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/349840","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7313,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[2304,2364]],"abstract":"Regardless of the groups concerned, under oppression ideological justifications of oppression take standard forms. All oppressed groups are attacked by claims of putative differences. The standard responses to these claims are all potentially politically harmful to the responding group. Cultural nationalist replies in particular are ways to cover up the political realities of oppression. Normally oppressed peoples base such replies on the fact that they do have an independent or autonomous culture. In addition, they are defined in standard ways by their oppressors, and share similar adaptation patterns. While the last two hold for women, we have no independent culture. Thus women may avoid cultural nationalism. But men do have an independent culture. So at present many feminists are trying to create a female culture, but they would be better advised to aim for power-bases instead.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy E. Martin"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41932934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16496507"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e303444-3b97-3ae3-803e-78b4dc91d41c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41932934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fieldayrev"}],"isPartOf":"Field Day Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"126","pagination":"pp. 126-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Field Day Publications","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representing the \u2018Indian Revolution\u2019 of 1857: Towards a Genealogy of Irish Internationalist Anticolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41932934","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELLEKE BOEHMER"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j4ws.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1baca334-d018-3828-bf67-8603f8ddac45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155j4ws.12"}],"isPartOf":"Stories of Women","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"140","pagination":"140-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The nation as metaphor:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j4ws.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The first, post-1945 phase of anti-colonial nationalism in Africa, as in other colonised regions, was distinguished byliteral<\/em> belief structures: a strong, teleological faith in the actual existence of the nation as \u2018people\u2019, and the sense that history essentially unfolded as a process of that nation\u2019s coming-into-being. There was a belief, too, in Africa as in South Asia, as in the Caribbean, that the distinctive forms of modernity, in this case in particular the sovereign state, could be incorporated, indigenised, repatriated.\u00b2 These may seem at face value rather obvious statements to make about nationalism, which broadly demands some form of","subTitle":"Ben Okri, Chenjerai Hove, Dambudzo Marechera","keyphrase":["chenjerai hove","ben okri","boehmer makeup","okri chenjerai","mac johns","okri chenjerai hove","postcolony","nation","ben okri chenjerai","johns job"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMANDA HURON"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26947516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10429719"},{"name":"oclc","value":"428850565"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235281"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47b258ac-afbf-3df0-bc81-3b028e90e6db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26947516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"washhist"}],"isPartOf":"Washington History","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Historical Society of Washington, D.C.","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Defending Tenants in the Midst of Plague","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26947516","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy L. Chua"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"314ce297-d951-3162-a28c-1d0dc724f8df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1123231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":81.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Privatization-Nationalization Cycle: The Link between Markets and Ethnicity in Developing Countries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1123231","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":40917,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth Keating"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44807359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46487730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"200-1214148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f45b1bb-521d-3cb0-9f8d-32d72f2299ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44807359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Irish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Reductive Logic of Domination\": Narratives and Counter-Narratives in Irish Poetry Anthologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44807359","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Drott"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2008.61.3.541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51281476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b24acfac-d822-3182-be17-1cbc3de9c003"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jm.2008.61.3.541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamermusisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Musicological Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Free Jazz and the French Critic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jm.2008.61.3.541","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":20833,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35649,35757]],"Locations in B":[[47218,47326]],"abstract":"Abstract From the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, free jazz was the subject of considerable public interest in France. The present article examines the conditions that fueled enthusiasm for American avant-garde jazz, focusing on the politicization of discourse surrounding the \u2018new thing.\u2019 Critics hostile to the movement felt that it undermined jazz's claim to universality, a cornerstone of postwar attempts to valorize the genre in the French cultural sphere. Yet the tendency to identify free jazz with various forms of African American political radicalism presented no less of a challenge for the movement's advocates. By constructing an image of free jazz that stressed its irremediable difference from the norms and values of European culture, writers were compelled to find alternative ways of relating it to contemporary French concerns. A reading of Philippe Carles and Jean-Louis Comolli's text Free Jazz Black Power shows how the authors' attempt to reinscribe African American cultural nationalism as an expression of transnational anticolonial struggle not only helped bring free jazz closer to the French experience, but also served as a way of working through the unresolved legacies of colonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23493572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10270353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ad5ad88-3190-3155-a0e1-26082a5a2d26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23493572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Science \/ Revue Africaine de Science Politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Role of Intellectuals in the Struggle for Democracy, Peace and Reconstruction in Africa: Presidential Address delivered at the 11th Biennial Congress of the African Association of Political Science (AAPS) in Durban, South Africa, June 23-26, 1997","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23493572","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":6281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen A. Lucas"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"859202c8-4005-3b12-83ff-be840184ca38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"63\/64","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Social Deviance and Crime in Selected Rural Communities of Tanzania (D\u00e9viations sociales et crime dans certaines communaut\u00e9s rurales de Tanzanie)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391478","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A partir de cas de suicides f\u00e9minins chez les Shambaa, de sorcellerie chez les Nyamwezi et de meurtre motiv\u00e9 par une insulte chez les Hehe, se pose la question des r\u00e9manences ou r\u00e9actions socio-culturelles dans une situation de transformation socio-\u00e9conomique rapide (ici le socialisme agrarien tanzanien). La notion de d\u00e9viance se trouve affect\u00e9e d'une double relativit\u00e9 qui complique les probl\u00e8mes de normalisation, que les solutions propos\u00e9es soient \u00e9ducatives ou r\u00e9pressives. La comparaison avec certaines th\u00e9ories sur la gen\u00e8se sociale des n\u00e9vroses en milieu occidental para\u00eet pertinente ici.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sylvia G. Carullo"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8bf2b2e-22f9-378b-851e-221e7fabba3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23053705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La dial\u00e9ctica hambre-agresi\u00f3n en \"Chambac\u00fa: corral de negros\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053705","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":3593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard S. Morris"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d226cc4-3df3-3ca1-a8e5-6d6767d266b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20718269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718269","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":1285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick F. Clairmonte"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160097","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2187,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[225826,225935]],"Locations in B":[[7930,8043]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KRZYSZTOF GORLACH"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12311413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea6bcbc5-3f18-3bd6-b485-7bcee6696250"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Polish Sociological Review","issueNumber":"117","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Polskie Towarzystwo Socjologiczne (Polish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Class Position of Family Farm Owners in Poland: an Attempt at a Characterization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274641","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An attempt is made to delineate the class location of owners of family-run farms in contemporary Poland. In the first part of the article the author reviews the literature on the class differentiation of the peasantry, drawing attention to conflicting opinions on this issue. Analysis of the literature on the political activity of the peasantry likewise leads to equivocal conclusions. Investigators have indicated that the specific forms which such activity takes always depend on the specific socio-economical or historical-cultural context. The class membership of the peasantry must therefore always be determined empirically. The author presents such an empirical attempt in the second part of the article, taking as his point of departure the definition of the category of \"owner of family-owned farm\" and the concept of contradictory class location. Descriptions of studied farms lead author to the conclusion that the vast majority of peasants studied can be classified as independent petty-producers. These objective descriptions are reflected in the peasants' conscious self-descriptions which contain elements typical for both the \"owner ideology\" and the \"hired worker ideology.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neal D. Houghton"],"datePublished":"1969-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00434078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205207"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f311abc4-5726-36b5-9e66-795bef3d3a40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/447034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westpoliquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Western Political Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"789","pageStart":"774","pagination":"pp. 774-789","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What Price Development for Mass-Poverty Areas?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447034","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda Tavernier"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ec6b406-b5b6-38b9-a70d-195fa120925a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"THE BLACK SCHOLAR BOOKS RECEIVED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068940","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Parama Roy"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9501943b-eb6e-3233-bf9f-f23ae6c5aff1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thinking with Cannibals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0161","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":10286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rub\u00e9n George Oliven","Graciela Salazar"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3540061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01882503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73082733"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236992"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3540061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revimexisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Mexicana de Sociolog\u00eda","issueNumber":"4","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"1643","pageStart":"1627","pagination":"pp. 1627-1643","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales de la Universidad Nacional Aut\u00f3noma de M\u00e9xico","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Aspectos econ\u00f3micos, pol\u00edticos y culturales de la marginalidad urbana en Am\u00e9rica Latina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3540061","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Nazareth"],"datePublished":"1967-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934235","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934235"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Committed Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934235","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele Lemonius"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563965938"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e23fbfa-07e3-341c-b8b7-8520684a6838"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44779908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Peace Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Canadian Mennonite University","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"\"Deviously Ingenious\": British Colonialism in Jamaica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779908","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7919,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the British heteropatriarchal colonial system imposed sociocultural and structural constructs of gender and sexuality on local people as tools to maintain power and control. It created highly volatile states and a legacy of trauma for many generations of colonized people. This article, grounded in Peace and Conflict Studies, examines British colonialism in Jamaica, the use of slavery as a tool in Britain's war for trade and economic prosperity, and its impact on Jamaican inhabitants and their generations. It explores the concepts of nationalism and privilege as oppressive forces that encouraged the division of gender, class, race, and sexuality to establish and legitimize British authority over Jamaica. Finally, this article posits that British colonialism was a powerful psychological tool that was created by British economic and political elites who knew that sustaining their power into the future meant creating fragmented bodies and minds in Jamaica.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard K. Fenn"],"datePublished":"1972-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1384295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49890280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1384295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsciestudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a New Sociology of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1384295","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper questions the assumption that religion, or its functional alternatives, inevitably provides the basis for the cultural integration of all societies. In modern societies the process of differentiation has reached the point at which a normative order based on religious beliefs and values is no longer possible. This development, however, coincides with increases in productive capacity which tend to make less difficult the tasks of motivating enough individuals to work and of providing legitimacy for the social order. As a religious basis to the normative order becomes less necessary, religion will continue to have functions for certain strata and for private individuals, but these functions will be more likely to be expressive than utilitarian.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RON J. SMITH"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41758893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10502092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd7f8acf-dc9f-3ed2-93ff-9ac301eddc9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41758893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traddwelsettrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments (IASTE)","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geographies of Dis\/Topia in the Nation-State: Israel, Palestine, and the Geographies Of Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41758893","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the dawn of the twenty-first century there have been numerous calls to break with the tradition of nationalism. Even so, the state remains vital for those seeking liberation. Denied a representative form of government, safety, or autonomy, the colonized may embrace a vision of liberation in the form of a independent state. This article interrogates the dual image of the nation-state as both a space of Utopian liberation and dystopic violence and repression. It focuses on the pernicious nature of the nation-state vision for peoples on both sides of the Palestinian\/Israeli divide.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjo Lindroth"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54a51116-d37d-3095-8444-9c246d795622"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45084678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"562","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-562","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Paradoxes of power: Indigenous peoples in the Permanent Forum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084678","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the United Nations (UN) Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (PF), indigenous political subjectivities take shape in the power relations that not only make indigenous peoples subjects but also subjugate them. This article discusses the process and the possibilities of resistance that open up for indigenous peoples within it. The approach taken acknowledges the limiting political environment of the UN for indigenous peoples, because it is a non-indigenous political system based on state sovereignty. Yet, it does not view the situation of those peoples in the PF as totally determined by the states and their dominant discourse. The theoretical framework of the article draws on the work of Michel Foucault and his conceptions on power, resistance, subjectification, technologies of domination and of the self. The power struggles in the PF, described through the complex of sovereignty, discipline and government, and the resistances within them engender paradoxical indigenous subjectivities: colonized\/decolonized, victim\/actor, traditional\/modern, global\/local. Indigenous peoples are able to engage both in resistance that is a reaction to states' exercise of power or the creative use of its tools and in indirect resistance that 'stretches' the UN system and constitutes action on its own terms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia Hamilton"],"datePublished":"1988-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e56de5-ff33-34aa-a0ef-312a61f24ed9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Alice Walker's Politics or the Politics of the Color Purple","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784513","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fionnt\u00e1n de Br\u00fan"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25801060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46487730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"200-1214148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60194955-4e4f-3b97-ba99-0fef897bd357"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25801060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Irish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Expressing the Nineteenth Century in Irish: The Poetry of Aodh Mac Domhnaill (1802-67)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25801060","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Larry O. Johnson"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00212385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c35a35be-b1e2-3ce7-9829-d4adb75e9046"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42909695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issueincrim"}],"isPartOf":"Issues in Criminology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Black Perspective on Social Research: In Response to Merton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909695","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raj G. Chetty"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d31fc31-010e-3eb2-8ae6-9553a944aba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE TRAGICOMEDY OF ANTICOLONIAL OVERCOMING: Toussaint Louverture and The Black Jacobins on Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264872","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Clingman"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Through the Looking Glass","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935135","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis J. Cantori"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/162121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"356","pagination":"pp. 356-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162121","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":2047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ward Churchill","Pierre Orelus"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68221398-1121-3297-aea5-533d7cc15d7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"CONFRONTING WESTERN COLONIALISM, AMERICAN RACISM, AND WHITE SUPREMACY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981847","volumeNumber":"430","wordCount":28958,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[136398,136465]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Follert"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.40.3.391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49846124"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236970"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81fb1c09-c129-3be3-ae40-a5f1d1084e2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajsocicahican.40.3.391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"394","pageStart":"391","pagination":"pp. 391-394","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.40.3.391","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard Harris"],"datePublished":"1978-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3129944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76075b2d-45a2-3ae2-9a86-57e4416fec01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3129944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Philosophy in Black and White","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3129944","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":3489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ray H. Elling"],"datePublished":"1971-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3762752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00257079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"560b83cd-173b-3099-94f9-aef84260ef22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3762752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"medicalcare"}],"isPartOf":"Medical Care","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Health Planning in International Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3762752","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":13552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stafford Hood","Rodney K. Hopson"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcf1814c-a1e9-375c-bf46-89b1aecb4b2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"426","pageStart":"410","pagination":"pp. 410-426","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education","Education - Educational psychology","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Evaluation Roots Reconsidered: Asa Hilliard, a Fallen Hero in the \"Nobody Knows My Name\" Project, and African Educational Excellence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071134","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":8905,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[49491,49555]],"abstract":"Asa Hilliard has left his mark, and his name belongs in the pantheon of esteemed African American scholars, educational researchers, teachers, and activists. Although his work has served as a clarion call for an Afrocentric orientation in psychology and education to address the needs of African American students, his contributions to the field's thinking about educational evaluation date back 30 years and have seldom if ever been noted. For nearly three quarters of a century, issues of fairness and equity have guided and driven the work of African American scholars in educational evaluation. These issues remain uppermost in their minds today as they investigate society 's woefully inadequate schools for children from racial minority and\/or poor backgrounds. It is within this space that this discourse links the legacy of African American educational researchers and evaluators during the preBrown era to Hilliard' s later contributions to the field's thinking about educational evaluation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Steadman"],"datePublished":"1990-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"963c15e1-1fbe-3e31-8744-3efb55b57370"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Towards Popular Theatre in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637075","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. Augustus Durham"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"163a713d-d3d3-3fa8-8132-94ad470b4103"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"U, (New) Black(?) Maybe: Nostalgia and Amnesia in Dope<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.8.2.10","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":7527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In March 2014, for an article in GQ magazine, Pharrell Williams invoked the term \u201cthe new black\u201d; he further elaborated on the phrase's definition in an interview with Oprah Winfrey for her show Oprah Prime. A little over a year later, in the summer of 2015, Rick Famuyiwa's film Dope, executively produced by Williams, was released to rave reviews. Although these two events appear disparate, this article asserts that the film is a cinematic interpretation of Williams's ideation. By highlighting the movie's aesthetic nods to hip-hop\u2014clothing, paraphernalia, music, and casting\u2014as forms of nostalgia, and reading the protagonist's preoccupation with attending Harvard as a form of cultural amnesia reminiscent of rhetoric from bygone cultural movements, the piece questions, what is the \u201cnew\u201d that constitutes blackness? In like manner, does the arrival of such a category suggest that \u201cthe old black\u201d no longer exists, or does it maintain a paradigmatic influence which stands to impart a lesson on culture and history to the \u201cnew\u201d?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781776140305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f2889d8-3ca3-3751-8e91-3b25f0d8341b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.18772\/22017030305.8"}],"isPartOf":"Remains of the Social","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"92","pagination":"92-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ETHICS OF PRECARITY:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In her theorising from the last decade, Judith Butler combines Levinasian insights about the primacy of the other with psychoanalytic insights about the intersubjective formation of human beings to devise a post-Enlightenment, postmetaphysical ethics that \u2013 as she explains in the epigraph above \u2013 is supported by \u2018a new bodily ontology\u2019 based on a rethinking of precariousness, vulnerability, injurability, interdependency and exposure. If Emmanuel Levinas sought, as he put it, to break \u2018the obstinacy of being\u2019 (202) by showing that we owe our very existence to the other, and that we are therefore irrevocably responsible for the other as \u2018face\u2019,","subTitle":"JUDITH BUTLER\u2019S RELUCTANT UNIVERSALISM","keyphrase":["precarity","butler","ethics","apartheid","precariousness","global apartheid","suffering","precarious life","parting ways","others"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Barrows"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdcfb9a4-bc2a-3027-a3a2-fe7a1eb0e259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"THE SHORTCOMINGS OF TIMETABLES\": GREENWICH, MODERNISM, AND THE LIMITS OF MODERNITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287690","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":11651,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[599387,599486]],"Locations in B":[[64926,65022]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["O. A. Ladimeji"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nationalism, Alienation and the Crisis of Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934954","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6117,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609476,609612]],"Locations in B":[[30333,30470]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K\u014dya Nomura","Annmaria Shimabuku"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Undying Colonialism: A Case Study of the Japanese Colonizer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949768","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9441,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Audrey Small"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26410070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da9e42d8-b1fb-387f-b4d9-8f07552a80c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26410070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reversals of Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26410070","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":7205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines two novels by exiled Guinean writers in which physical space functions as a central point of reference for very different, though related, considerations of traumatized memory, identity, and exile. In Williams Sassine\u2019s Wirriyamu (1976), a violent and violated rural landscape becomes emblematic of a specific traumatic event occurring within the time frame of the novel and of contemporary political reality; while in Tierno Mon\u00e9nembo\u2019s Pelourinho (1995), a present-day cityscape provides consistently uncertain territory for thinking through a trauma that transcends history, that of the transatlantic slave trade. This article seeks to examine some of the ways in which contemporary trauma theory may be useful in reading Francophone West African fiction as well as some of the limitations of this theory in its applications to this corpus. Cet article examine deux romans d\u2019\u00e9crivains guin\u00e9ens exil\u00e9s dans lesquels l\u2019espace physique agit comme un point de r\u00e9f\u00e9rence central dans la discussion de th\u00e8mes tr\u00e8s diff\u00e9rents bien que reli\u00e9s: la m\u00e9moire traumatis\u00e9e, l\u2019identit\u00e9 et l\u2019exil. Dans le roman de Williams Sassine, Wirriyamu (1976), un paysage rural rempli de violence et de violations devient embl\u00e9matique d\u2019un \u00e9v\u00e9nement traumatique sp\u00e9cifique qui se d\u00e9roule sur la dur\u00e9e du roman et dans le contexte chronologique des \u00e9v\u00e8nements politiques contemporains; d\u2019autre part, le roman de Tierno Mon\u00e9nembo, Pelourinho (1995) met en sc\u00e8ne un paysage urbain d\u2019aujourd\u2019hui offrant un terrain de r\u00e9flexion toujours mouvant sur un traumatisme transcendant l\u2019histoire, celui de la traite transatlantique des esclaves. Cet article vise \u00e0 examiner les mani\u00e8res vari\u00e9es dont la th\u00e9orie universitaire contemporaine sur la compr\u00e9hension des traumas pourrait \u00eatre utile dans la lecture de la fiction francophone provenant d\u2019Afrique de l\u2019ouest, ainsi que les limites de son application \u00e0 un tel domaine.","subTitle":"Williams Sassine\u201ds Wirriyamu<\/em> and Tierno Mon\u00e9nembo\u201ds Pelourinho<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis B. Nyamnjoh"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44b77c3a-95d2-380e-a9dc-f0662ebc700c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"A Relevant Education for African Development\u2014Some Epistemological Considerations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482724","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper argues that education in Africa is the victim of a Western epistemological export that takes the form of science as ideology and hegemony. Under the Western epistemological export, education in Africa and\/or for Africans has been like a pilgrimage to the Kilimanjaro of Western intellectual ideals, the tortuous route to Calvary for alternative ways of life. Sometimes, with rhetorical justification about the need to be competitive internationally, the practice has been for the elite to model education in Africa after educational institutions in the West, with little attempt at domestication. Education in Africa has been and mostly remains a journey fuelled by an exogenously induced and internalised sense of inadequacy in Africans, and endowed with the mission of devaluation or annihilation of African creativity, agency and value systems. Such cultural estrangement has served to reinforce in Africans self-devaluation and self-hatred and a profound sense of inferiority that in turn compels them to 'lighten their darkness' both physically and metaphysically for Western gratification. The paper argues that the future of higher education in Africa can only be hopeful through a meticulous and creative process of cultural restitution and indigenisation even as African scholars continue to cooperate and converse with intellectual bedfellows in the West and elsewhere. If Africa is to be party to a global conversation of universities and scholars, it is only appropriate that it does so on its own terms, with the interests and concerns of ordinary Africans as the guiding principle. Le pr\u00e9sent article pose comme postulat que l'\u00e9ducation en Afrique est victime d'une exportation \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique qui pr\u00e9sente la science comme id\u00e9ologie et h\u00e9g\u00e9monie. Conform\u00e9ment \u00e0 cette logique d'exportation \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique occidentale, l'\u00e9ducation en Afrique et\/ou pour les Africains est comparable \u00e0 un p\u00e8lerinage au Kilimanjaro des id\u00e9aux intellectuels du Nord, comme le chemin tortueux du calvaire, \u00e0 la recherche d\u00e9sesp\u00e9r\u00e9e de moyens de survie. Parfois, sur la base d'une rh\u00e9torique justificative quant \u00e0 la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'\u00eatre comp\u00e9titif sur le plan international, la pratique pour l'\u00e9lite a toujours \u00e9t\u00e9 de calquer l'\u00e9ducation en Afrique sur le mod\u00e8le des institutions \u00e9ducatives de l'occident, sans le moindre effort d'adaptation. L'\u00e9ducation en Afrique a toujours \u00e9t\u00e9 et demeure largement un parcours aliment\u00e9 par un sens d'inad\u00e9quation induit et int\u00e9rioris\u00e9 de mani\u00e8re exog\u00e8ne chez les Africains, avec pour mission d'annihiler le sens cr\u00e9atif, le dynamisme et les syst\u00e8mes de valeur des Africains. Cette ali\u00e9nation culturelle n'a servi qu'\u00e0 cristalliser chez l'Africain le sentiment d'auto d\u00e9valuation et de haine contre soi-m\u00eame, ainsi qu'un profond sentiment d'inf\u00e9riorit\u00e9 qui \u00e0 son tour l'oblige \u00e0 \u00ab\u00e9claircir sa noirceur\u00bb tant physique que m\u00e9taphysique pour faire plaisir \u00e0 l'occident. Cet article soutient que l'avenir de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique ne peut \u00eatre prometteur que s'il subit un processus de restitution et d'inculturation culturelle m\u00e9ticuleux et cr\u00e9atif, bien que les intellectuels africains continuent de collaborer et de converser avec des coll\u00e8gues intellectuels du Nord et d'ailleurs. Si l'Afrique souhaite participer au d\u00e9bat mondial des universit\u00e9s et des intellectuels, il n'est que convenable qu'elle le fasse en ses propres termes, avec pour principe directeur les int\u00e9r\u00eats et les pr\u00e9occupations de l'Africain ordinaire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reza Banakar"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"652","pageStart":"648","pagination":"pp. 648-652","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557255","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. J. MUNFORD"],"datePublished":"1972-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38b1c21d-7a0c-3383-8384-ca57d135d812"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND BLACK REVOLUTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163605","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8471,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286855,286953]],"Locations in B":[[113,218]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdullahi Ali Ibrahim"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7c1c82a-d4b5-3516-9ba4-467d5d658cd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4187290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"A Theology of Modernity: Hasan al-Turabi and Islamic Renewal in Sudan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187290","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":13333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Biographers of Hasan al-Turabi, the leader of the Islamic revival in Sudan, are inclined to see his \"fundamentalism\" as an expression of the religious traditions of the al-Turabis, a lineage of sufis, Mahdis, jurists, and clerics that came into existence in the seventeenth century. This view obscures the politics of a shrewd thinker with a great ability to respond to and effect change. This article examines al-Turabi's religious ideas as a \"theology of modernity\" which includes a lucid interrogation of tradition and modernity. Al-Turabi focuses on the concept of ibtila, the challenges posed by God to test Muslims' faith, in constructing a mode of worship worthy of a time of dramatic technological innovations, human mobility, and interconnectedness. In fashioning a theology which applies long-standing religious traditions to the challenges of the modern world, al-Turabi disputes claims of the incompatibility of these two realms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kay Lawson"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"681","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-681","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159589","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Salom\u00e9 Aguilera Skvirsky"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30136118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df7234ac-57ed-3ec9-9103-52429bfd0392"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30136118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Price of Heaven: Remaking Politics in All That Heaven Allows, Ali: Fear Eats the Soul, and Far from Heaven","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30136118","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay investigates identity politics in Todd Haynes's 2002 film, Far from Heaven, and in two of its precursors, Douglas Sirk's All that Heaven Allows and Rainer Werner Fassbinder's Ali: Fear Eats the Soul. It takes as its starting point two puzzling features of Haynes's film: the oddity of setting a remake in the same time and place as its original, and the films banal representation of racism and homophobia. The essay proposes a reading of Far from Heaven in which the film questions the ability of melodrama to plausibly address contemporary forms of social injustice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TEISHAN A. LATNER"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"88e6896b-9f18-3453-9a1e-5082433c61f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26376639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Take Me to Havana! Airline Hijacking, U.S.\u2013Cuba Relations, and Political Protest in Late Sixties\u2019 America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376639","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Monroe H. Little"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.4.0586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca13d6e9-137d-347c-80aa-3149f7a8a013"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.4.0586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"594","pageStart":"586","pagination":"pp. 586-594","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WHAT MANNER OF MAN?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.4.0586","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":4436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lena Meari"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2012.xlii.1.86","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47e86033-6e38-3d38-98d3-9d9fe5c60fc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2012.xlii.1.86"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2012.xlii.1.86","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jahan Ramazani"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42ad2a24-bebe-33d6-9624-e2cd86c94ce0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Wound of History: Walcott's Omeros and the Postcolonial Poetics of Affliction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462949","volumeNumber":"112","wordCount":8521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The figure of the wound is central to Derek Walcott's Omeros, one of the most ambitious works of postcolonial poetry. Walcott grants a European name to the primary bearer of the wound, the black fisherman Philoctete, who allegorizes African Caribbean suffering under European colonialism and slavery. This surprisingly hybrid character exemplifies the cross-cultural fabric of postcolonial poetry but contravenes the assumption that postcolonial literature develops by sloughing off Eurocentrism for indigeneity. Rejecting a separatist aesthetic of affliction, Walcott frees the metaphoric possibilities of the wound as a site of interethnic connection. By metaphorizing pain, he vivifies the black Caribbean inheritance of colonial injury and at the same time deconstructs the experiential uniqueness of suffering. Knitting together different histories of affliction, Walcott's polyvalent metaphor of the wound reveals the undervalued promise of postcolonial poetry.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HANNAH ARENDT"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022197X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24356590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356590","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":17110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Ellen Wolf"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5e06cb4-5436-354b-862d-33d02e0507b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685122","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":1214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cassie Carter"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49a94fad-ff57-3f10-a92c-0fafb1e24125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Metacolonization of Dick's \"The Man in the High Castle\": Mimicry, Parasitism, and Americanism in the PSA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240455","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With the postcolonial writings of Frantz Fanon, Edward Said, and Rob Nixon as a theoretical base, I argue that the Japanese-occupied PSA of Philip K. Dick's \"The Man in the High Castle\" represents an America colonized and oppressed by a simulation of itself. In effect, Dick's Japanese have colonized America following the guidelines set in Asia by Western imperialists. As products of centuries of Western colonization themselves, Dick's Japanese characters, Tagomi and the Kasouras, are mirror images of Western ideals and values, reflecting back the West's Orientalist construction of the East. At the same time, Dick's \"native\" Americans, especially Childan, are parodies of nonwestern peoples displaced through colonization. Because Dick's colonized state is enforced by people constructed by Western colonialism and through the same values and practices upon which the United States was founded, \"The Man in the High Castle\" interrogates Americanism, our cherished beliefs about America, as a world view along-side the Taoism and Nazism of America's \"colonizers.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Homi K. Bhabha"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17ec4b31-a386-34b1-8479-c769dca71a8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Signs Taken for Wonders: Questions of Ambivalence and Authority under a Tree outside Delhi, May 1817","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343466","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Yidana"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d4da33f-9d0b-38bf-a4d5-9023c0a6c746"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45194855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOCIONATIONALISM IN GHANA: HISTORY, INSIGHTS, AND LESSONS FOR AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194855","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":13726,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[23349,23536]],"Locations in B":[[64150,64336]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diego A. Millan"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94b1af15-a86a-3513-b964-f153d3a149c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90017445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wit\u2019s End","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017445","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":8858,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[146933,147014]],"Locations in B":[[27994,28076]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Frantz Fanon, Transnationalism, and the Politics of Black Laughter","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre L. van den Berghe","Robert A. LeVine","Alvin Magid"],"datePublished":"1970-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"caa0c81d-66d7-306a-90e1-00eb7dc37654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Brief Communications and Letters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523486","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":2470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dismas A. Masolo"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40759463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da5daa3f-193f-30d7-9770-4fb2bce8cc93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40759463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"SOME ASPECTS AND PERSPECTIVES OF AFRICAN PHILOSOPHY TODAY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40759463","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In questo articolo l'Autore propone una revisione critica ed un punto di vista nuovo sulla vecchia questione dell'esistenza meno di una valida, efficace ed originale filosofia africana. Facendo una lunga analisi della visione sociale e politica del Presidente Julius Nyerere e del concetto del socialismo africano nei confronti della problematica storica fondamentale dell'Africa, l'Autore sostiene che l'importanza di un pensiero originale africano deve essere accentuato e stimolato dalle esperienze storiche e dai problemi politici, economici, sociali e culturali piuttosto che dalla ricerca di una vecchia saggezza esistenziale tradizionale, collettiva e mitica. La filosofia africana deve avere carattere costruttivo, deve cio\u00e8 essere capace di dare un giudizio critico sul significato e sulle tendenze delle forme e strutture storiche attuali. Dans cet article l'Auteur nous propose une r\u00e9vision critique et un nouveau point de vue sur la vieille question s'il existe ou non une philosophie africaine efficace et valable. Sur la base d'une longue analyse de la vision sociale et politique du Pr\u00e9sident Julius Nyerere et du concept du socialisme africain par rapport \u00e0 la probl\u00e9matique historique fondamentale de l'Afrique, l'Auteur d\u00e9montre que l'importance d'une pens\u00e9e originelle africaine doit \u00eatre accentu\u00e9e et stimul\u00e9e par les exp\u00e9riences historiques, \u00e9conomiques, sociale et culturelles plus que par la recherche d'une vieille sagesse existentielle, traditionnelle, collective et mythique. La philosophie africaine doit avoir un caract\u00e8re construc\u00feii, c'est \u00e0 dire qu'elle doit \u00eatre en mesure de donner un jugement critique sur la signification et sur les tendances des formes et des structures historiques actuelles.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Ciccariello-Maher"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af2d863e-4cfe-3704-b697-1e88902dc460"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critique of Du Boisian Reason: Kanye West and the Fruitfulness of Double-Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282568","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article seeks to disentangle a number of outstanding controversies regarding the radical potential of W.E.B. Du Bois's seminal notion of doubleconsciousness. The author concludes that the early Du Bois\u2014of the 1897 \"Strivings\"\u2014idealistically conflates double-consciousness with the racist veil, thereby erroneously negating the materiality of the latter. This error persists only briefly, and Du Bois's transformation is already palpable by the 1903 publication of Souls, especially \"On the Coming of John.\" Against those who would dismiss the relevance of double-consciousness, the author demonstrates that the continued relevance of double-consciousness is simultaneously the liberation of the concept from its idealistic and middle-class content through the recognition of the veil in all its materiality. Finally, the author assesses the recent work of rap artist Kanye West, whose political progression parallels that of Du Bois before him, arguing that this progression is intimately linked to the radical potential inherent in double-consciousness.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Cuervo Hewitt"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb3632ca-fb1d-3b10-8f40-80c9c5d09b21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Lu\u00eds de Camoens en el reino de Calib\u00e1n: Las \"Lus\u00edadas\" en \"Chang\u00f3, el gran Putas\" de Manuel Zapata Olivella","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054464","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David M. J. Wood"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02613050"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38871257"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236966"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5eca74da-0e41-3da8-b511-396dcfd77c29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27733821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulllatiamerrese"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Latin American Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Indigenismo and the Avant-Garde: Jorge Sanjin\u00e9s' Early Films and the National Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733821","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Jorge Sanjin\u00e9s' 1960s films \"Revoluci\u00f3n\" and \"Ukamau\" challenge the class and ethnic hierarchies of Bolivian society by casting the proletarian and indigenous masses as revolutionary liberators. The new national imaginary they evoke is tightly bound to the experimental cinematic techniques they employ, since their rejection of rationalist, realist aesthetics signals a partial undermining of the linear time of the modern nation. \"Ukamau\" both recalls and resists previous Bolivian indigenismo, which sought to co-opt the Indian into a national mestizo consciousness. Its exoticist portrayal of the Indian ultimately limits its political effectiveness, but textual and contextual analyses show subversive Indian agency leaking through.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2f77ccd-460e-3501-96ba-82fa0854d1d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40175270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa for Africans or Africa for \"Natives\" Only? \"New Nationalism\" and Nativism in Zimbabwe and South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175270","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article makes historical sense of the recent signs of the metamorphosis of nationalism into nativism in Zimbabwe and South Africa. The central thesis of the article is that the resurgence of Afro-radicalism and nativism in post-settler and post-apartheid societies partly reflected deep-rooted antinomies of black liberation thought and partly current ideological conundrums linked to the limits of both the African national project and global liberal democracy. Dismissals and sententious approaches towards nativism do not help in understanding the current issues in Zimbabwe and South Africa. There is the need to revisit the issues of imaginings of the African liberation agenda together with issues of the resolution of the national question, teleology of the liberation, ownership of strategic resources, knowledge production, control of public discourse, imaginations of the nation and visions of citizenship and democracy. Making sense of nativism provides an oblique entry into an interrogation of the current status of the African national project in Zimbabwe and South Africa. \/\/\/ Dieser Artikel stellt die in j\u00fcngster Zeit aufgetretenen Zeichen einer Entwicklung von Nationalismus hin zu Nativismus in Zimbabwe und S\u00fcdafrika in einen historischen Kontext. Als zentrale These des Artikels wird dargelegt, dass das Wiederaufleben von Afro-Radikalismus und Afro-Nativismus in Post-Kolonial- und Post-Apartheidgesellschaften zum Teil tief verwurzelte Widerspr\u00fcche im schwarzen Befreiungsdenken sowie aktuelle ideologische Fragestellungen widerspiegelt, die sowohl mit den Grenzen des afrikanischen nationalen Entwurfs als auch der globalen freiheitlichen Demokratie in Bezug stehen. Ein Leugnen und eine moralisierende Betrachtungsweise des Nativismus tragen nicht zum Verst\u00e4ndnis der aktuellen Probleme in Zimbabwe und S\u00fcdafrika bei. Vielmehr ist es notwendig, die Themen und Vorstellungen des afrikanischen Befreiungsprogramms im Zusammenhang mit einer Reihe von Themen neu zu reflektieren. Dazu geh\u00f6ren die L\u00f6sung der nationalen Frage, Teleologie der Befreiung, Besitz der strategischen Ressourcen, Wissenssch\u00f6pfung, Kontrolle der \u00f6ffentlichen Meinungs\u00e4u\u00dferung sowie Vorstellungen von Nation, Staatsb\u00fcrgerschaft und Demokratie. Den Nativismus zu verstehen, schafft einen au\u00dfergew\u00f6hnlichen Zugang zur Analyse des aktuellen Zustandes des afrikanischen nationalen Entwurfs in Zimbabwe und S\u00fcdafrika.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Hearty"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ps31x5.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786940476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b2b7763-bb85-303e-bcdc-a1fcb63f9ae8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ps31x5.15"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Engagement","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"263","pagination":"263-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Irish Studies","European Studies","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ps31x5.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["northern ireland","sinn f\u00e9in","policing","wwwbbccouk news","accessed","belfast","bbc news","memory","transitional justice","basingstoke palgrave"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["La Frances Rodgers Rose"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42de9188-e8db-3cf6-80cd-3f06ddf902f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23261870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"338","pageStart":"320","pagination":"pp. 320-338","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"THEORETICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN THE STUDY OF BLACK CULTURE AND PERSONALITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261870","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8824,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[48963,49022]],"abstract":"This article analyzes the relationship between black culture and personality. The role of white society in shaping black personality and identity is also discussed. The author maintains that we must go beyond the simplistic idea that blacks automatically suffer from low self-esteem because white society devalues blackness. The author avers that there is nothing so sacred about white skin color that precludes whites from suffering the negative consequences of living in a society that also devalues femaleness, poverty, old age, white ethnic groups, and holds numerous prejudices that impact negatively on the white dominant group. Finally, the author identifies four dominant values in black culture that grow out of an African heritage and a southern segregated life style. These values are (a) belief in sharing, (b) belief in the uniqueness of the individual, (c) affective humanism, and (d) belief in diunital existence. These values account for the differences in the behavior (personality) of blacks and whites. There is a need to study these differences.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tommie L. Jackson"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44318078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93fb3fd4-2e75-3f6c-a55c-84725189b9dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44318078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"THE CANINE IN NGUGI'S \"A GRAIN OF WHEAT\" AND NADINE GORDIMER'S \"A WORLD OF STRANGERS\": A METAPHOR FOR THE MASTER-SLAVE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE COLONIZER AND THE COLONIZED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44318078","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUZANNE DALY"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43233928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5988fc0e-1162-3a1f-8cc5-80f1715d4eae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43233928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"BELLIGERENT INSTRUMENTS: THE DOCUMENTARY VIOLENCE OF \"BLEAK HOUSE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43233928","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruby C. Tapia"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75ceab9e-20f8-30e5-ab1c-4ed65165832f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"743","pageStart":"733","pagination":"pp. 733-743","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What's Love Got to Do with It?: Consciousness, Politics and Knowledge Production in Chela Sandoval's Methodology of the Oppressed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041921","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":3980,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yael S. Feldman"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4131511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03640094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51479789"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237228"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb5cd79c-a278-3691-8123-e9c988358ba0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4131511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ajsreview"}],"isPartOf":"AJS Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","History","Jewish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"A People That Dwells Alone\"? Toward Subversion of the Fathers' Tongue in Israeli Women's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4131511","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Molefi Kete Asante"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"712fcfc3-a0ea-3b58-b294-002b9bb9d049"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ideological Significance of Afrocentricity in Intercultural Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784027","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Istv\u00e1n Adorj\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6df3ddeb-1070-3716-b016-601f0ac74929"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NEW COSMOPOLITANISM: ALTERED SPACES IN A POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274153","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaul Magid"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.2.0202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23341777"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00914273-f8fb-30cd-a773-60c89973a4b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.2.0202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjewiethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Jewish Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anti-Semitism as Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jjewiethi.1.2.0202","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9715,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[311016,311310],[601229,601368]],"Locations in B":[[35195,35489],[46068,46206]],"abstract":"In this essay I examine the \u201cethics of violence\u201d of Rabbi Meir Kahane, iconoclastic American rabbi, Israeli Parliamentarian, and founder of both the Jewish Defense League in America and the KACH political party in Israel. While much has been written about Kahane's career in Israel, almost nothing has been written about his critique of American Judaism, which I maintain is crucial to understanding his life's work. In particular Kahane developed what I call an \u201cethics of violence\u201d based on selected classical sources and a theory of perennial anti-Semitism that I argue is similar to colonialism. While Kahane was not conversant in contemporary philosophy or neocolonial literature, I argue his thinking corresponds and contrasts in interesting ways with postcolonial theory. In this essay I attempt to contextualize Kahane's \u201cethics of violence,\u201d reading him with Jean Paul Sartre, Hannah Arendt, Frantz Fanon, and Slavoj Zizek. Framing Kahane's understanding of anti-Semitism as colonialism, I try to offer a coherent case, although certainly not a justification, as to why Kahane was an advocate of violence.","subTitle":"Meir Kahane's \u201cEthics of Violence\u201d","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard W. Reichard"],"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7d6cc12-473d-3ff1-8062-d643270220d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"484","pageStart":"482","pagination":"pp. 482-484","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401448","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":1014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shannon Young"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e528d0b-5e69-34f2-9d15-9f6a67bc589b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Therapeutic Insanity: The Transformative Vision of Bessie Head's A Question of Power<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.227","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Bessie Head's largely autobiographical novel A Question of Power (1974) describes Elizabeth's psychological derangement resulting from her abuse, neglect, and exile as a half-black, half-white woman in apartheid South Africa. The novel examines the human cost of oppressive power systems, but more important, Elizabeth's ability to extricate herself and live affirmatively. The yawning chasm of evil that had engulfed her is negated as she finds a cooperative living situation characterized by simple human acts of compassion, acceptance, and selflessness that powerfully nurture her. Even more significant are Elizabeth's painstaking internal realizations regarding the psychic scaffolding required to overcome exploitation and pursue a \u201cfuller humanity\u201d (Freire 141). This article explores the nature of these realizations, grounded in inclusive mental structures that counteract the former divisiveness based in self versus other, male versus female, good versus evil, white versus black formulations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard M. Brace"],"datePublished":"1974-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1877333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ad1ef84-bc94-3c29-853f-3237d9449abe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1877333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"542","pagination":"p. 542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1877333","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Floyd W. Hayes, III"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.6.2.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21623244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740919793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b040cfd2-c80b-399b-bdc7-c318a88fdb7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/spectrum.6.2.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"spectrum"}],"isPartOf":"Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trauma, Divorce, and the Black Male in the American (In)justice System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.6.2.06","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. JAMA ADAMS"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d11110c8-e591-341f-8e47-682bfae9906b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40654502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subjectivity, Difference And Commonalities In The Context of Gender in The Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654502","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":5909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The areas of subjectivity, difference and commonalities in the context of gender have been historically neglected from a research perspective in the Caribbean. The major reason for this is the historical denial of the humanity of most of the oppressed peoples in the region and the longstanding lack of safe and creative places in which to explore these issues. These areas have not been totally neglected however, the Caribbean artistic community has been prolific in its commentary on these issues in a variety of mediums; it is in the area of academic theorizing that one observes a paucity of analytic exploration. Such limitations reflect longstanding institutional practices that attempt to suppress ways of thinking and acting that could be viewed as a challenge to the dominant groups who have historically exercised hegemony in the Caribbean In this paper I will first explore some defining features of subjectivity and relate it to differentiation and commonalities within the context of socioeconomic structures. Using the framework of gender in the Caribbean, the expression of subjective differences is then explored. Finally, using a psychoanalytic frame of reference I suggest ways of thinking that permit us to build a paradigm to understand the differences and commonalities around gender in a way that does not dichotomize. Such a model would permit a more detailed understanding of the subjective and gendered individual.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT STAM"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f161482b-a45d-3df5-9bb5-968b8af2e932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20687636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"College Course File: THIRD WORLD CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20687636","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. J. Mosha"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3446746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181560"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"922b3e8e-9621-3508-baa3-4c8766929a11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3446746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highereducation"}],"isPartOf":"Higher Education","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Role of African Universities in National Developments: A Critical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3446746","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The role of the university in national development is the subject of much discussion in Africa today. Attention and interest in the role of the university in national development has increased because of continuing concern that universities address problems caused by the technological changes that have affected the political and social-economic order in African society. Failure to cope effectively with such changes has led to a general disenchantment among students, parents, legislators, the client system and the general populace about the quality and relevance of university education today (Group for Human Development in Higher Education, 1984; Gaff et al, 1978; and Stordahl, 1981). Hence all three groups have demanded greater accountability: efficiency in the economic sense in the way universities deliver their programmes, as well as effectiveness in the educational sense (Miller, 1974). History shows that most African nations strove to establish at least one national university immediately after independence. The major purpose for establishing universities in these countries was, and still is, for the institutions to play a pioneering role in addressing problems of poverty, social disorganization, low production,unemployment, hunger, illiteracy, diseases, that is, the problems of underdevelopment, which appeared to be common on the African continent.Insurmountable political, social, economic, legal, ethnic, demographic and technological problems have continued to threaten the very existence of most new African nations and their people. Yet, governments have continued to invest heavily in the education of a selected few, whose direct contribution in solving these problems has not been objectively established. The purpose of this paper, therefore, is to synthesize the body of literature on the subject; to inject some critical analysis of positions taken by previous writers and pave the way for a more informed conceptualization of what the role of African Universities on national development ought to be, and must be, in the light of existing literature and personal reflection on the subject. The paper is divided into four sections. Section one defines a university and development. Section two presents and discusses problems that African universities face in a transitional era. Section three delineates the role areas of universities in national development. Section four provides analysis and discussion of contemporary problems that hinder universities from realizing their roles and contains suggestions on how to overcome them. A brief conclusion is then provided. A detailed development of each of the five components is provided in the ensuing sections of the paper.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22019033061.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781776143061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"378ddc11-1227-3396-9c01-3efc2c0cddfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.18772\/22019033061.7"}],"isPartOf":"Racism After Apartheid","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"49","pagination":"49-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EMANCIPATION, FREEDOM OR TAXONOMY?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22019033061.7","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10405,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[434264,434614]],"Locations in B":[[37733,41524]],"abstract":"What does it mean to be \u2018African\u2019? The apartheid state, like colonialism, long used the term \u2018African\u2019 to classify those with particular skin colour, curly hair and certain facial features, based on assumptions about biological differences that supposedly separate the human species into \u2018races\u2019. Others use the term to refer to those who live in, or whose origin is from, any part of the continental land mass referred to as \u2018Africa\u2019. Still others use the term to refer to those in or from the continent but exclude the Arabic-speaking people of the northern parts of the continent. Some exclude even","subTitle":"WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE AFRICAN?","keyphrase":["african","cabral","emancipatory freedoms","emancipatory","people","humanity","amilcar cabral","continent","colonial","colonialism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ketu H. Katrak"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d263922e-b8dd-370b-b65d-d1649b150300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26282988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DECOLONIZING CULTURE: TOWARD A THEORY FOR POSTCOLONIAL WOMEN'S TEXTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282988","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Ng"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48652165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60547480"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74afa2a9-6cc8-3c52-9c34-080d7d5742b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48652165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48652165","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9343,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[492449,492659],[495491,495848]],"Locations in B":[[49808,50018],[50073,50429]],"abstract":"This paper develops an approach to humanist social critique that combines insights from Marx and Fanon. I argue that the concept of the human operative in humanist social critique should be understood both as the normative background against which questions of human flourishing and dehumanization can come into view, and as the evolving demand for universal human emancipation. Far from being abstract, essentialist, or ahistorical, Marx and Fanon show that humanist social critique operates through a dialectic between particular, socially and historically situated forms of oppression and struggle, and the universal species-context of the human life-form in which particular forms of suffering and injustice can come into view as instances of dehumanization. In developing this approach to humanist social critique, I defend humanism against three prominent objections: the charge of speciesism, the charge of essentialism, and the recent charge from Kate Manne who argues that humanism underdescribes relations of social antagonism and that recognition of humanity is compatible with inhumane treatment. In addition to considering the necessary relation between the particular and the universal, I also consider the relation between the psychological and social\/political, arguing against the recent approach to the problem of dehumanization in the work of David Livingstone Smith.","subTitle":"A Defense","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saffo Papantonopoulou"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6eb85ab-680c-3393-a127-44650fedb19f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24364930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Even a Freak Like You Would Be Safe in Tel Aviv\": Transgender Subjects, Wounded Attachments, and the Zionist Economy of Gratitude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364930","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6564,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[117521,117605]],"Locations in B":[[36755,36839]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JED ESTY"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4eb8bf1a-466a-30bd-9b0e-9fbd0149413b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27764333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"366","pagination":"pp. 366-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Global Luk\u00e1cs","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27764333","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. S. Atieno Odhiambo"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab499a93-cfd6-3e67-b085-71fa903cd7a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/532280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reviews of Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532280","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":1888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.3.2.4","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7607efc8-8d85-34f1-9b82-2a76031a296c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.3.2.4"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Haile Gerima's Black Radical Tradition On Screen: African Cinema of Liberation at Home and Abroad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.3.2.4","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard A. Hay Jr.","Peter H. Koehn","Eftychia F. Koehn"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44256864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00103802"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93e8fc7d-e7ce-3891-8178-4589c1620007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44256864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"commdevej"}],"isPartOf":"Community Development Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Community Development in Nigeria: Prevailing Orientations Among Local Government Officials","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44256864","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7262,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[401560,401664]],"Locations in B":[[3069,3192]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jared Sexton","Huey Copeland"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd10cba7-9789-3da7-ace1-64f469b71f6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RAW LIFE: AN INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686150","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred M. Gottheil"],"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213624"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e53927b8-0a79-3d19-93b7-95642d44b953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4224567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconiss"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Issues","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Association for Evolutionary Economics","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On an Economic Theory of Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224567","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evelyne Delgado-Norris"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6a6b0b9-0146-31da-b5c3-8ed8bfc2bfb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ALTERATIONS OF THE AFRICAN EPIC IN NAFISSATOU DIALLO'S \"LE FORT MAUDIT AND LA PRINCESSE DE TIALI\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325092","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":4082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjd80.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781846317538"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24d50541-e69c-3365-a204-c808f40ee763"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjd80.12"}],"isPartOf":"American Creoles","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"129","pagination":"129-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leaving the South:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjd80.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7803,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27674]],"Locations in B":[[50219,50262]],"abstract":"In his biography of Frantz Fanon, David Macey is somewhat dismissive of the scattered allusions to jazz Fanon makes throughout his work. Thus, according to Macey, the \u2018parody of then\u00e9gritude<\/em> vision of Louis Armstrong\u2019s music\u2019 inPeau noire, masques blancs<\/em> (1952) proves that Fanon knew little about the music itself and was interested primarily, if not exclusively, in its sociological significance (Macey, 2000: 124). The promotion of modern jazz, inLes Damn\u00e9s de la terre<\/em> (1961), as a model for the \u2018national culture\u2019 of a newly independent Algeria, meanwhile, was simply \u2018not at all pertinent\u2019 to Algeria (ibid.: 378).","subTitle":"Frantz Fanon, Modern Jazz and the Rejection of N\u00e9gritude","keyphrase":["modern jazz","n\u00e9gritude","munro britton","frantz fanon","senghor","masques blancs","noire masques","britton sfps","peau noire","munro britton sfps"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["kecia hayes"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9984ea6-48e3-3126-9ade-211ca258fb23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"13. Appreciating the Landscape that Urban Youth of Color Must Navigate to Become Effective Social Actors in Our Civil Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979466","volumeNumber":"306","wordCount":7478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan W. 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What this deformed system did, instead, was to assimilate the privileged castes into the ruling structure, while simultaneously unleashing multiple forms of oppression on marginalised sections of the population in India. This article attempts to narrate the lesser known stories of the unacknowledged Dalits who were inspired by the Marxist ideology of class struggle and used it to mobilise agricultural labourers and manual scavengers in the Telugu country.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gene Burns"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"222dcdb7-464c-3814-bc43-d44700c6e924"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1086","pageStart":"1084","pagination":"pp. 1084-1086","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231309","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony W. 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Konrad Lorenz's Theories Re-Assessed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30088674","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":5897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig A. 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Zablocki"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df8cb0cc-7db5-3bdc-873c-5c7bfd974c81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1099","pageStart":"1098","pagination":"pp. 1098-1099","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231316","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Branwen Gruffydd Jones"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25261963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09692290"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238789"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1caee026-3885-3470-97a2-614fb19f3074"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25261963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviintepoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Political Economy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Global Political Economy of Social Crisis: Towards a Critique of the 'Failed State' Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25261963","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The notion of 'failed states' has gained widespread currency in political and academic discourse. This article contributes to a critique of the 'failed states' discourse. It identifies methodological flaws in the 'failed states' discourse which undermine its explanatory power, and proposes an alternative framework for analysing conditions of social crisis in neocolonial states, rooted in global political economy. This paper focuses on conditions of crisis in Africa. The discourse of 'state failure' characterises conditions of crisis as local in origin, the product of culture or poor leadership. The current condition of structural crisis in so many of Africa's neocolonial states must be situated in the imperial history of global capitalism. This requires examining the legacy of colonial transformation; the specific form of the postcolonial state, society and economy after independence, which tended in many cases to give rise to factional struggles and authoritarian rule; and the ways in which such 'internal' social tensions and contradictions have been reinforced by the global political economy, both the geo-politics of the Cold War and the contradictions of global capitalism. The argument is developed through examination of the specific case of Somalia.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary A. Olson","J. Hillis Miller"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07316755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77dba115-d579-3399-ba48-1c7b946e8b1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20865974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadvacomp"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Advanced Composition","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rhetoric, Cultural Studies, and the Future of Critical Theory: A Conversation with J. Hillis Miller","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20865974","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":15119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218715"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c442d2e6-90c1-316b-84de-9d3e104ec87e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/541312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerfolk"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American Folklore","issueNumber":"441","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Anthropology","Area Studies","Folklore","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Folklore's Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/541312","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":24182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The field of folklore is experiencing topic drift, as the gap widens between the name of the field and what it now signifies. This article traces the history of a mutating disciplinary subject and its relationship to the discipline's formation, institutionalization, and name. Three themes are of special importance: folklore's temporality or the problem of a contemporary subject, orality and the question of technology, and folklore as a mode of cultural production. This explication of folklore as a keyword goes to the root of our history as a field, to the atavism that popular understanding preserves in the notion of folklore as error, and to the revolutionary energy that Walter Benjamin found in its embrace.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Michael Dash"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3339287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02613050"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38871257"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3339287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulllatiamerrese"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Latin American Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3339287","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julian Go"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3f2bc87-3c2d-351f-bca9-9966d781c787"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26370901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26370901","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":4082,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Epistemic Inequality and Sociological Thought","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Barber\u00e1n Reinares"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db3615aa-e45a-3354-8291-93e50b4321ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41635653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Globalized Philomels: State Patriarchy, Transnational Capital, and the Fermicides on the US-Mexican Border in Roberto Bola\u00f1o's 2666","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41635653","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":9213,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chong Chon-Smith"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"189004a1-0eec-3dab-a4a6-7b3d0bf768ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24573590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"730","pageStart":"708","pagination":"pp. 708-730","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Asian American Writing Movement and Black Radicalism: Race and Gender Politics in Multiethnic Anthologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573590","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reconsiders the genesis and formation of Asian American literature by focusing less on the Chin-Kingston debate and more on the impact of Black radicalism and the genre of antiracist anthologies. I explore Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers and Yardbird Reader 3 to examine the centrality of Black cultural revolution for the rise of Asian American literature, and the works of multiethnic anthologies within cultural nationalisms and emergent multiethnic movements. During the post\u2013civil rights era of racial realignment, Black radical thought is the counterpoint to forced Asian ethnic assimilation; this Asian-Black sensibility had challenged an uncritical complicity with white supremacy, which had suppressed Black revolution and modeled Asian America. In Aiiieeeee!, the editors use the vernacular languages, performance styles, and oppositional consciousness of Black masculinity as a means to expose the contradictions of post\u2013civil rights racial formations that disunite Asian and Black communities. In Yardbird Reader 3, the institutional and homosocial bonds between Ishmael Reed and Frank Chin became a crucial relationship to solidify the Asian American Writing Movement and multiethnic collaborations through Afro-Asian connections. Both works carved a niche in U.S. national culture by conceptualizing new models of multiethnicity and subsequently birthed a germinal literary sensibility.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olga Barrios"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"893dd354-570a-3758-be31-240c13403a15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A REFLECTION ON THE SIMILARITIES OF THE BLACK THEATER MOVEMENT IN THE USA AND IN SOUTH AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055456","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":3769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Civil Rights Movement and the several peaceful marches by Blacks to demand their rights both in the U.S.A. and in South Africa greatly contributed to the dawn of a the Black Arts Movement. The artists of this Movement realized the richness of African and African American cultural richness firmly embedded in their oral traditions and founded the bases for the creation of a new aesthetics which I have labelled as the Aesthetics of Self-Affirmation J The artists of the Black Theater Movement were committed wo\/men who wanted to restore theater to its social function and, thus, give the audience the essential role that it had occupied in ancient times. Scholars and intellectuals such as Frantz Fanon, Amiri Baraka in the U.S.A. and the leader of the Black Consciousnes Movement in South Africa, highly influenced and contributed to the birth of the Movement in both countries. Moreover, the artists of this time period also considered and adopted some of the theories by western theatre playwrights, actors and directors such as Artaud, Brecht or Grotowski, who had also observed the missing protagonism of the audience in western theater. Consequently, Black artists created a genuine type of theatre which combined western and traditional African theatrical techniques and returned theater to its original source: the people.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel C. Gibson"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31f62667-2bd3-32c1-8b29-4dff32082fe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Speaking the Truth in Uncertain Times: Creating solidarity with the shack dwellers movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758838","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc8c8b4d-15b1-3d8f-accc-2adf2ade1587"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"845","pageStart":"772","pagination":"pp. 772-845","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studies in Caribbean and South American Literature: An Annual Annotated Bibliography, 1987","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931723","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":29004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Ireland"],"datePublished":"1998-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/398976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/398976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"467","pageStart":"454","pagination":"pp. 454-467","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Writing the Body in Marl\u00e8ne Amar's La Femme sans t\u00eate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/398976","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":7052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La Femme sans t\u00eate, the story of a North African Jewish family's experience of exile in France, is built around images of the body. In particular, the images of the chameleon and of cosmetic surgery serve as metaphors for the erasure of the family's Algerian cultural identity. While this loss is equated with dismemberment and decapitation, the narrator's coming to writing is associated with memory and re-membering. Her narrative gives voice to her nostalgia for her Algerian past and raises questions about assimilation and difference in the relationship between France and its Others.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret Wickens Pearce"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08901686"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fc0a69d-1252-31c0-b698-f2d2cb9829df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Central Michigan University","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"The Holes in the Grid: Reservation Surveys in Lower Michigan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174084","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Smart"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96a9676b-3163-34a8-a141-38c175a4c9e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Nancy Morej\u00f3n as Guill\u00e9n's \"Mujer Nueva\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054068","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James E. Genova"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82406630-7589-3407-be06-606825740859"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20464156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cinema and the Struggle to (De)colonize the Mind in French\/Francophone West Africa (1950s-1960s)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20464156","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul C. 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The purpose of this essay is to understand black consciousness by working out the theoretical and methodological problems from which these two divergent paradigms are constructed in order to give a more sociohistorical, rather than biological (i.e., racial), understanding of black consciousness, which, I believe, will better equip us to understand for whom and for what purpose contemporary race matters matter.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerome H. Schiele"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c369a95-74de-3e17-9c20-4005d5ba4258"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mutations of Eurocentric Domination and Their Implications for African American Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180885","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An increasing observation by many social scientists is that the method through which European Americans maintain control over society's political, economic, and cultural institutions has mutated. Over the last 30 years or so, Eurocentric domination can be assumed to have mutated away from domination by repression\/terror toward domination by seduction. This article discusses five sociopolitical trends through which this mutation has occurred and examines how this transformation has placed African Americans at significant risk of capitulating to Eurocentric domination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wenying Xu"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wqwpv.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780824831950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d150c27c-04e7-33e6-b753-f0fe642b5496"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt6wqwpv.6"}],"isPartOf":"Eating Identities","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"37","pagination":"37-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Masculinity, Food, and Appetite in Frank Chin\u2019s Donald Duk and \u201cThe Eat and Run Midnight People\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt6wqwpv.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11869,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The name Frank Chin provokes controversy among Asian American readers and scholars, but almost all agree that masculinity has preoccupied his entire literary and critical career. Almost all his writings aim at dismantling the U.S. hegemonic, emasculating representations of Asian American males, even when this agenda must sometimes be carried out at the expense of Asian American women and gay men. Recognizing his homophobic and macho tendencies, I nevertheless value Chin\u2019s literary attempts to assail the prevailing stereotype of Asian American male sexuality. His is not only an important but also a necessary project in the evolution of Asian American","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["masculinity","chinese","donald duk","kwan kung","appetite","american","masculinity food","fred astaire","hegemonic","cooking"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oscar Guardiola-Rivera"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f5c77c7-396e-392c-94a7-d0cfba69d623"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Concerning Violence, Part 1: The People Are Missing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0155","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil McInnes"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42894901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08849382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f63a2e43-5e72-3068-93eb-fb46c13c8767"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42894901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nationalinterest"}],"isPartOf":"The National Interest","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Center for the National Interest","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enough Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42894901","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali Kadri"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1hj9zdb.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781783084401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8173be40-b0a2-3fe9-a52d-625b97ee9576"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1hj9zdb.12"}],"isPartOf":"The Unmaking of Arab Socialism","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"285","pagination":"285-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Research methods","Applied sciences - Engineering"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1hj9zdb.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["viewed","onthly review","economic","london","economy","middle","united nations","syrian arab","syrian","capitalism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenda E. 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On one side, with a narrow range of options, are low-income parents, mostly of color. On the other side, with a much broader array of choices, are middle- and upper-income, mostly White parents. With choice for low-income Black parents comes the possibility of receiving a quality education, a key to attaining relative freedom in American society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katarzyna Pieprzak"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"433e864b-7c24-3dc7-8669-293fe25b86fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Zones of Perceptual Enclosure: The Aesthetics of Immobility in Casablanca's Literary Bidonvilles<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.03","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9716,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286839,286953]],"Locations in B":[[11362,11494]],"abstract":"This essay explores the imagination of the Moroccan bidonville as \u201ccaptive space\u201d in two recent francophone Moroccan novels: Mahi Binebine's Les Etoiles de Sidi Moumen [The Stars of Sidi Moumen] (2010) and Na\u00efma Lahbil Tagemouati's La Liste [The List] (2013). Drawing on theoretical work on the \u201czone of nonbeing\u201d (Fanon), \u201cperceptual enclosure\u201d (Sekyi-Otu), and \u201cconditions of appearance\u201d (Gordon), the essay seeks to understand the aesthetics of immobility and the possibilities of self-constitution and self-revision present in the two novels.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark V. 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Literature"],"title":"Bookshelf 2013","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713579","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":9632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reiland Rabaka"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb4d11b-a13b-335b-9524-faccd3328653"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"W. E. B. Du Bois's Evolving Africana Philosophy of Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180873","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":24283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aim of this article is to analyze W. E. B. Du Bois's educational thought for its key contributions to contemporary Africana philosophy of education. To succinctly explore Du Bois's philosophy of education, the article outlines some of the ways his pedagogical theories and practices are inextricable from, and virtually incomprehensible without critically considering, his philosophy of history, concepts of culture, economic thought, and social and political philosophy. Arguing that many scholars have both masked and marred Du Bois's contributions to philosophy of education by focusing almost exclusively on his \"talented tenth\" theory, this study examines his educational thought after he produced the classic, \"The Talented Tenth\" (1903), essay. The article advances that Du Bois's revision of the talented tenth into a theory of the \"guiding hundredth,\" which stresses struggle, sacrifice and service, group leadership, and African historical and cultural grounding, provides Africana philosophy of education with a pedagogical paradigm and provocative point of departure.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdul Khakee"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20851882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccfe137d-d122-3857-86d5-57b0ddacf74b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20851882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socifors"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologisk Forskning","issueNumber":"2","language":["swe"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Sveriges Sociologf\u00f6rbund (Swedish Sociological Association)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20851882","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chielozona Eze"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.89","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7be44ddb-bfba-3095-8caa-ddf61f6732a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.89"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism with a Big \u201cF\u201d: Ethics and the Rebirth of African Feminism in Chika Unigwe's On Black Sisters' Street<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.89","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT The 21st century has seen an outpouring of works by African women writers and many of them have been unabashedly feminist. These works have one thing in common: they tell of bodies in pain and they provoke pertinent ethical questions in that regard. This article examines Chika Unigwe's novel, On Black Sisters' Street, and argues that it belongs to the new generation of African women's writing that recasts feminism as a moral issue of our times. The novel draws attention to some of the central issues of feminism: rights and dignities of the body of woman. In so doing, it establishes women's rights as fundamental human rights that have to be addressed in Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Mowitt"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f500997-3b0e-3233-ba04-9a2b9bc85ec1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Algerian Nation: Fanon's Fetish","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354087","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberta Ann Johnson"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f81a646-1142-304b-9a18-56f1623bdb33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41229289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Failure\" of Independence in Puerto Rico \/ L'INDEPENDANCE \u00abMANQUEE\u00bb DE PORTO-RICO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229289","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Tandis que la d\u00e9colonisation se g\u00e9n\u00e9ralise dans le monde, Porto-Rico entend demeurer \u00e9troitement li\u00e9e aux Etats-Unis, comme le confirma le pl\u00e9biscite de 1967. Il y a de multiples raisons \u00e0 cette attitude assez exceptionnelle, raisons largement admises et raisons moins apparentes. Parmi les premi\u00e8res, les avantages du d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique que l'\u00eele tire de ses relations de d\u00e9pendance avec les Etats-Unis. Cependant, il faut rechercher dans les origines et l'\u00e9volution historique de Porto-Rico les v\u00e9ritables raisons de cet \u00e9tat de non-ind\u00e9pendance. D'une part, la domination \u00ab imp\u00e9rialiste \u00bb exerc\u00e9e par la nation souveraine (Espagne, puis Etats-Unis) tend \u00e0 d\u00e9truire ou \u00e0 r\u00e9duire tout mouvement d'ind\u00e9pendance. D'autre part, le r\u00e9gime colonial imposant la sup\u00e9riorit\u00e9 culturelle et politique de l'Etat souverain d\u00e9veloppe chez les colonis\u00e9s une psychologie de r\u00e9signation et d'impuissance. La relation serait longue des multiples obstacles par lesquels la souverainet\u00e9 am\u00e9ricaine n'a cess\u00e9 de r\u00e9duire les efforts des Porto-Ricains \u00ab independentistas \u00bb. Pour beaucoup, la notion d'ind\u00e9pendance s'est associ\u00e9e aux m\u00e9thodes de violence, que la plupart d\u00e9sapprouvent. Cette m\u00eame notion, pour d'autres, s'est trouv\u00e9e rattach\u00e9e au mouvement communiste, peu en faveur dans l'\u00eele. En d\u00e9finitive, la domination \u00ab imp\u00e9rialiste \u00bb, loin de favoriser les tendances \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance, les r\u00e9prime fortement. Le sentiment d'inf\u00e9riorit\u00e9 des Porto-Ricains, n\u00e9 des conditions sociales et raciales, s'est accru sous la domination am\u00e9ricaine au point de compromettre leurs propres capacit\u00e9s \u00e0 se gouverner eux-m\u00eames. C'est une autre mani\u00e8re d'inf\u00e9riorit\u00e9 que ressentent plus intimement les habitants de cette petite \u00eele des Antilles, qui n'a rien apport\u00e9 au monde et o\u00f9 rien d'important n'arrive. Si la domination espagnole, \u00e0 la fois tyrannique et instable, a marqu\u00e9 le peuple porto-ricain de r\u00e9signation, la souverainet\u00e9 am\u00e9ricaine lui a apport\u00e9 d'autres motifs de frustration. La religion catholique a contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 accentuer l'acceptation passive des \u00e9v\u00e9nements et des hasards malencontreux, de la mis\u00e8re mat\u00e9rielle et des cyclones. Enfin, l'individualisme, h\u00e9rit\u00e9 de la tradition hispanique, s'oppose au sens civique et aux initiatives de caract\u00e8re communautaire. Ce m\u00eame individualisme r\u00e8gne en politique, o\u00f9 l'influence personnelle de Luis Mu\u00f1oz Mar\u00edn s'est r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9e pr\u00e9pond\u00e9rante. Ainsi, Porto-Rico ne semble pas pr\u00eat \u00e0 la formation d'une id\u00e9ologie politique, non plus qu'\u00e0 la constitution d'un mouvement de masse tendant \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven C. Roach"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15283577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d8fd8a9-14e9-33d2-a270-ab284adf2302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44218522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudpers"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"446","pagination":"pp. 446-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Constitutional Right to Secede? Basque Nationalism and the Spanish State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218522","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes the strategic parameters of a constitutional right to secede. It argues that these parameters help to qualify the right as a potentially effective alternative to either status quo symmetrical arrangements or a constitutional right to national territorial autonomy. To frame the right in this way is a little like decriminalizing drugs. If we legalize secession under certain conditions, we also eliminate much of the volatile tension underlying the demand for secession. Granted, it is possible that such a right might encourage the Basques to secede. However, this is precisely why we need to frame the right to secede in a highly restrictive manner, so that we can strengthen the accountability of this right under public law and redress the residual link between violence and the demand for secession.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Daniel Elam"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e279465a-38e0-36ef-a038-04812c501712"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43823103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Cosmopolitanisms of Forgotten Diasporas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43823103","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":4372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Bjerk"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27594342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a309037-3e76-3a1c-81f5-87a218a01f67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27594342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"361","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-361","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"'Building a New Eden': Lutheran Church Youth Choir Performances in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27594342","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":15844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A study of three songs by a Tanzanian youth choir reveals a synthesis of historical and intellectual sources ranging from pre-colonial social philosophy to Lutheran theology to Nyerere's \"Ujamaa\" socialism. The songs show how the choir performances break down the barrier between Bourdieu's realms of the disputed and undisputed. In appropriating an active role in shaping Christian ideology, the choir members reinterpret its theology into something wholly new and uniquely Tanzanian. Thus they appropriate an authoritative voice that shapes the basic societal concepts about the nature of life and society. They envision themselves as essential workers in an ongoing sacred task of building a modern Tanzanian nation in the image of a new Eden.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN SADOWSKY"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44444882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25f9e935-cece-34fb-92e0-8d5b27c32118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44444882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Psychiatry and Colonial Ideology in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44444882","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dvora Yanow"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40861622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07349149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4b71ed7-4204-36cc-a073-d1940034fb9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40861622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"publadmiquar"}],"isPartOf":"Public Administration Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"SPAEF","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Management & Organizational Behavior","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40861622","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Awino Okech"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48630968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c319f383-b5b6-3b77-bf76-0091f2a47c3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48630968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Governing Gender","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48630968","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":8053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article draws on a qualitative study piloted in Maiduguri, Northern Nigeria, to unpack the gender logics that shape why women join Boko Haram, their roles, how they are perceived by their communities on their return and how these dynamics inform the \u2018deradicalisation\u2019programmes of the Nigerian government and civil society organisations. The study reveals that the absence of a gender power analysis reproduces the dominant tropes evident in radicalisation theories and programmes about who is radicalised and why, thus limiting a holistic response to the factors that drive association with Boko Haram in Northern Nigeria. The article points to the opportunities that a more nuanced reading of women\u2019s experiences of associating with armed groups and their return to their communities offers to re-conceptualising integration programmes. Cet article s'appuie sur une \u00e9tude qualitative men\u00e9e \u00e0 Maiduguri, dans le nord du Nigeria, pour analyser les logiques de genre qui d\u00e9terminent les raisons pour lesquelles les femmes rejoignent Boko Haram, leurs r\u00f4les, la mani\u00e8re dont elles sont per\u00e7ues par leurs communaut\u00e9s \u00e0 leur retour et la mani\u00e8re dont ces dynamiques influencent les programmes de \u00ab d\u00e9radicalisation \u00bb du gouvernement nig\u00e9rian et des organisations de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile. L'\u00e9tude r\u00e9v\u00e8le que l'absence d'une analyse de genre et des relations de pouvoir reproduit les tropes dominants \u00e9vidents dans les th\u00e9ories et programmes de radicalisation pour savoir qui est radicalis\u00e9 et pourquoi, limitant ainsi une r\u00e9ponse holistique aux facteurs qui poussent \u00e0 l'association avec Boko Haram dans le nord du Nigeria. L'article souligne les opportunit\u00e9s qu'une lecture plus nuanc\u00e9e des exp\u00e9riences des femmes associ\u00e9es \u00e0 des groupes arm\u00e9s et de leur retour dans leurs communaut\u00e9s offre pour reconceptualiser les programmes d'int\u00e9gration.","subTitle":"Violent Extremism in Northern Nigeria","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER HAYS GRIES"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20672573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60652588"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215272"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6778694-6a64-3aaa-8166-592d23429fb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20672573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"World Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"World Affairs Institute","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A \"China Threat\"? POWER AND PASSION IN CHINESE \"FACE NATIONALISM\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20672573","volumeNumber":"162","wordCount":9829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Loren Kruger"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Filming the Edgy City: Cinematic Narrative and Urban Form in Postapartheid Johannesburg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821162","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"From its early years to the present, Johannesburg has escaped the strictures of literary as well as civil decorum. The city has appeared to planners and artists alike to be unimaginable as well as unmanageable. While the deep divisions of apartheid Johannesburg inspired the clear-cut conflicts of anti-apartheid drama, the more ambiguous fractures of the contemporary city have lent themselves to the creation of vivid but elliptical narratives of shifting alliances more suited to the montage and mise en sc\u00e8ne of cinema. A few feature-length films with international distribution, such as Jump the Gun (1996) and Fools (1997), have generated multiple readings to the exclusion of smaller, more experimental films such as The Foreigner (1997) and A Drink in the Passage (2002) or the television series The Line (1994) and Gaz'Lam (2002 ff.) whose association with television, whether through funding or production for serial broadcast, has apparently kept them from critical view. This article redresses that balance with close analysis and contextual relocation of cinematic and televisual representations of Johannesburg, the edgy city.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shawn McHale"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c086b71-d9a6-343d-9f1a-265e5ba39872"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2700187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Vietnamese Marxism, Dissent, and the Politics of Postcolonial Memory: Tran Duc Thao, 1946-1993","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2700187","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":14249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ipek Demir"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73d4e73f-c0e7-3805-a501-d8798df8269c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Global South as Foreignization: The Case of the Kurdish Diaspora in Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.04","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article tilts the North\/South axis of the Global South scholarship towards the East\/West axis, specifically the Middle East and Kurds. I first re-visit the notion of the Global South by using the conceptual tools of translation studies, especially the notion of \u201cforeignizing translation,\u201d a strategy aimed at pushing the boundaries of the target language (and culture) rather than simply assimilating the translated text into it. Besides arguing that the Global South perspective concerns itself with questioning North-South relations temporally and spatially, I focus on the foreignizations diasporas can bring to the Global North. As both insiders and outsiders to Northern spaces, diasporas are uniquely placed both in terms of the foreignizations they bring to the Global North and the entanglements of the North and South which they expose. In this paper I examine the \u201cGlobal South in the North\u201d by taking the Kurdish diaspora living in European metropoles as a case study and conceptualizing the Kurdish movement as a transnational indigenous movement. I argue that through the foreignizations diasporas bring, the Global South is making claims not only in the North but also on the North. By focusing on the role of diasporas and the Middle East, areas which have received little attention within Global South scholarship, I seek to complicate and thus enrich our understandings of the Global South.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wen-chi Li","\u0648\u064a\u0646-\u062a\u0634\u064a \u0644\u064a"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27002738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d705b7a7-ef90-3497-8843-2f58e11961e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27002738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transgressing Hegemonic Discourses - \u062a\u062e\u0637\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0637\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0647\u064a\u0645\u0646\u0629","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27002738","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article draws on historical and postmodern concepts by Hayden White, Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Lyotard, and Prasenjit Duara in its analysis of two poems by Taiwanese author Yang Mu: the historical drama The Story of Five Concubines and \u201cThe Lost Ring.\u201d Providing a version of history that is differentiated, decentralized, and localized, the article illustrates how the poems can be read as a revolt against the discourses of the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), respectively, and how both raise awareness of a Taiwanese national identity. By investigating these poems as minor narratives, the article sheds light on Yang Mu\u2019s role as a poet-historian whose work reflects his contemporaneous Taiwan. .\u062a\u0639\u062a\u0645\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u0641\u0627\u0647\u064a\u0645 \u0645\u062e\u062a\u0644\u0641\u0629 \u0639\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e - \u0645\u062b\u0644 \u062a\u0639\u062f\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e \u0644\u0647\u0627\u064a\u062f\u0646 \u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u060c \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0633\u0631\u062f\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0628\u0631\u0649 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0635\u063a\u0631\u0649 \u0644\u062c\u0627\u0646 \u0641\u0631\u0627\u0646\u0633\u0648\u0627 \u0644\u064a\u0648\u062a\u0627\u0631\u060c \u0648\u0641\u0643\u0631\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0634\u0639\u0628 \u0644\u062f\u0649 \u067e\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0646\u062c\u064a\u062a \u062f\u0648\u0627\u0631\u0627 - \u0641\u064a \u062a\u062d\u0644\u064a\u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0644\u0639\u0645\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u0644\u0644\u0634\u0627\u0639\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u064a\u0648\u0627\u0646\u064a \u064a\u0627\u0646\u062c \u0645\u0648: \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e\u064a\u0629 \u0642\u0635\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062d\u0638\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0645\u0633 \u0648\u0642\u0635\u064a\u062f\u0629 \u00ab\u0627\u0644\u062e\u0627\u062a\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u0642\u0648\u062f\u00bb. \u062a\u0638\u0647\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0643\u0648\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0645\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u064a\u0645\u062b\u0644\u0627\u0646 \u0646\u0648\u0639\u0627\u064b \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0645\u0631\u062f \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0637\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0647\u064a\u0645\u0646\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u0627\u062f\u0631\u0629 \u0639\u0646 \u0643\u0644 \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0632\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0648\u0645\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0635\u064a\u0646\u064a (\u0643\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0646\u062a\u0627\u0646\u062c) \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062d\u0632\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0634\u064a\u0648\u0639\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0635\u064a\u0646\u064a\u060c \u0648\u0630\u0644\u0643 \u0628\u062a\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0645\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0633\u0631\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u063a\u0627\u064a\u0631\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0644\u0627\u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0645\u062d\u0644\u064a\u0629\u061b \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u0647\u0646\u0627\u060c \u064a\u0639\u0632\u0632 \u0643\u0644\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0645\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0639\u064a \u0628\u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0637\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u062a\u0627\u064a\u0648\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629. \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u062a\u062d\u0644\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0645\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u0628\u0627\u0639\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0631\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0646\u0648\u0639\u0627\u064b \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0631\u062f\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0635\u063a\u0631\u0649\u060c \u062a\u0644\u0642\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0636\u0648\u0621 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u064a\u0627\u0646\u062c \u0645\u0648 \u0628\u0648\u0635\u0641\u0647 \u0634\u0627\u0639\u0631\u0627\u064b- \u0645\u0624\u0631\u062e\u0627\u064b \u064a\u0639\u0643\u0633 \u0648\u0627\u0642\u0639 \u062a\u0627\u064a\u0648\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631 \u0641\u064a \u0623\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0644\u0647","subTitle":"Yang Mu, the Poet-Historian, and His Minor Narratives","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Wanjala"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE GROWTH OF A LITERARY TRADITION IN EAST AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325681","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. T. Willetts"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2613555","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2613555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2613555","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEES VAN DER PIJL"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18fs90b.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745326016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a1bd1f6-e85f-3e2f-97e5-d03d6ad125ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt18fs90b.10"}],"isPartOf":"Nomads, Empires, States","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"215","pagination":"215-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18fs90b.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["london","harmondsworth penguin","london verso","pijl assassi","international","university","frankfurt suhrkamp","history","london routledge","cologne pahl"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PROSHANTA K. NANDI"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41420411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09732047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdca08ba-9225-3083-ae4e-2873b9e8005e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41420411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevmodsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Modern Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"International Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Educational resources","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EDUCATIONAL CULTURE IN THE THIRD WORLD: THE LINGERING COLONIAL CONNECTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41420411","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper seeks to bring under scrutiny the state of knowledge in the Third World and the process in which it is acquired. The continuing influence of the former colonizers upon the educational systems and philosophies of many of the recently independent Third World countries is seen as leading to the development of an educational culture that is not only irrelevant but also dysfunctional Argument is presented about the possible exercise of ideological power through which the former colonialists define the world-view for the former colonies with some sort of acquiescence on the part of the latter. The Third World is urged to abandon the ready-made educational systems handed down to them by the pacesetters of colonialism and neocolonialism, and devise a learning process that is relevant, non-exploitative and humane.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JESSE OAK TAYLOR"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c940464-7e4e-355f-a79b-a500f563185b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24643273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Texas Tech University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"White Skin, White Masks: Joseph Conrad and the Face(s) of Imperial Manhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643273","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9543,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[55206,55252]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Portia L. Reyes"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39374104-1144-3efb-8a92-051e22aa98f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23750473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A 'treasonous' history of Filipino historiography: the life and times of Pedro Paterno, 1858\u20131911","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23750473","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Pedro Paterno (1858\u20131911) is widely regarded as a 'traitor' to the Philippine nation. That reputation has its origins in his role in the negotiation of the 1897 Pact of Biac-na-Bato between the Philippine revolutionaries and the Spanish, under which the former agreed to abandon their struggle and collaborate with the colonial administration. Then when the USA in 1898 declared war on Spain, Paterno urged the revolutionaries to defend Spanish rule against the Americans, and he continued to urge resistance to the USA during the Philippine\u2013American war. When captured, he swore allegiance to the USA, and was subsequently appointed President of the Consultative Assembly. He has long been an easy target for nationalist historians. This paper is not intended to re-examine his political trajectory. Rather, it focuses on Pedro Paterno as a scholar, as the author of a considerable number of works of history, and it seeks to place him in his intellectual context, an ilustrado who compromised with both colonialism and nationalism, with loyalties split between Spain and the Philippines.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana Keita"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484673","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"333e7db1-e48c-3705-a516-58c3df12ffc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484673"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484673","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRAM WISPELWEY","YASSER ABU JAMEI"],"datePublished":"2020-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26923484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10790969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626346"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-249116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2d64528-9eb9-3e1a-b960-3fbaa02399bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26923484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healhumarigh"}],"isPartOf":"Health and Human Rights","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Harvard School of Public Health\/Fran\u00e7ois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Great March of Return","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26923484","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Gaza Strip is under an Israeli land, sea, and air blockade that is exacerbated by Egyptian restrictions and imposes an enormous cost in terms of human suffering. The effects of blockade, poverty, and frequent attacks suffered by the population have taken a significant toll on people\u2019s mental health. The Great March of Return, a mass resistance movement begun in March 2018, initially provided a positive impact on community mental health via a sense of agency, hope, and unprecedented community mobilization. This improvement, however, has since been offset by the heavy burden of death, disability, and trauma suffered by protestors and family members, as well as by a failure of local and international governments to alleviate conditions for Palestinians in Gaza. Reflecting on the ephemerality of the material and political gains of this movement, this paper shows that Palestinian and international health practitioners have an opportunity to develop an understanding of the psychosocial consequences of community organizing and mass resistance while simultaneously providing holistic mental and physical health care to community members affected by the events of the Great March of Return and other efforts.","subTitle":"Lessons from Gaza on Mass Resistance and Mental Health","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KAREN MCINTYRE"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17d610fe-91a7-38d7-af03-43bfe4510dec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40654005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lyrical Liberation: David Dabydeen's Slave Song and Turner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654005","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ferial J. Ghazoul"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Arabization of Othello","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771217","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":14714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HIREN GOHAIN"],"datePublished":"2011-07-30","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23017870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79a982e8-0494-369b-b761-0adb53b7db23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23017870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"31","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Two Roads to Decolonisation: Tagore and Gandhi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23017870","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":3797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Postcolonial societies have suffered the consequences of half-understood and incomplete decolonisation in a modern world where the resurrection of a past culture is no longer an option. An exploration of Jose Marti, Tagore, Gandhi and Fanon.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn N. McDaniel"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/495033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182745"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0c3025e-d57f-361f-9581-e90d846bb0fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/495033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The History Teacher","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Society for History Education","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Four Elements of Successful Historical Role-Playing in the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/495033","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leo Zeilig"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcd258af-df51-3fe1-b654-f8fcdac57a2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24858316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"139","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From exile to the thick of the struggle: Ruth First and the problems of national liberation, international sanctions and revolutionary agency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858316","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Much of Ruth First's work examined the projects for radical transformation of Africa's political economy. She was aware of the failures of independence, writing in 1970 that decolonisation had been little more than 'a bargaining process with cooperative African elites'. But she remained an enthusiastic advocate of some of these 'projects' on the continent. In 1977 she moved to Maputo to contribute to the socialist transformation of the country. This paper looks at First's contribution to the critical appraisal of independence in Africa and her own commitment to the transition to socialism in Mozambique. In this commitment are many of First's greatest strengths, but also some limitations and contradictions. The paper also presents a biographical account of Ruth First's astute enquiries into the development of capitalism in Southern Africa and the two-stage theory of revolution. Une grande partie du travail de Ruth First a examin\u00e9 les projets de transformation radicale de l'\u00e9conomie politique africaine. Elle \u00e9tait consciente des \u00e9checs de l'ind\u00e9pendance, \u00e9crivant en 1970 que la d\u00e9colonisation avait \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e0 peine plus qu'un \u00abprocessus de n\u00e9gociation avec les \u00e9lites africaines coop\u00e9ratives\u00bb. Mais elle restait une avocate enthousiaste de certains de ces 'projets' sur le continent. En 1977, elle a d\u00e9m\u00e9nag\u00e9 \u00e0 Maputo pour contribuer \u00e0 la transformation socialiste du pays. Cet article analyse la contribution de First \u00e0 l'\u00e9valuation critique de l'ind\u00e9pendance en Afrique et son propre engagement pour la transition vers le socialisme au Mozambique. Dans cet engagement se trouvent beaucoup des plus grandes forces de First, mais aussi quelques limites et contradictions. Cet article pr\u00e9sente \u00e9galement une explication bibliographique des enqu\u00eates astucieuses de Ruth First vers le d\u00e9veloppement du capitalisme en Afrique australe et la th\u00e9orie en deux \u00e9tapes de la r\u00e9volution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. E. ANDERSON"],"datePublished":"1971-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcce2df7-9524-316b-b6d8-e1f0eee79595"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41202889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REVOLUTIONARY BLACK NATIONALISM IS PAN-AFRICAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202889","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4402,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609476,609612]],"Locations in B":[[25798,25936]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781776140305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3bb200c-8340-39cf-b53d-a66931fc3ae7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.18772\/22017030305.5"}],"isPartOf":"Remains of the Social","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TRAVERSING THE SOCIAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As Jacques Derrida reminds us, it is not possible to \u2018forget about the suffering, the humiliation, the torture and the deaths\u2019, in short, the weight of lived experience that was and is apartheid. At the same time, particularly when we consider apartheid as a question that extends beyond its own borders, it remains both necessary and urgent to distil the question of what he calls \u2018South Africa\u2019, to shape it and focus it as a problem for thought, so as to enable the possibilities of thinking what we in this volume call, without hyphenation, the postapartheid, neither a point in","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["apartheid","global apartheid","postapartheid","mbembe","whiteness","mourning","postapartheid social","hardt and negri","multitude","traversing"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Sprinker"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"A New Urgency for the Study of Literature in the Global Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25474246","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":2304,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Allen"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decency and the Struggle for Recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559034","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lily Hamourtziadou","Shehla Khan"],"datePublished":"2021-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/jglobfaul.8.2.0147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23977825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"861186855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34f96779-e4ac-339d-ba2d-9b2e0c26ac03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/jglobfaul.8.2.0147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jglobfaul"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Global Faultlines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"War crimes and crimes against humanity: Decolonizing discourses of international justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/jglobfaul.8.2.0147","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kojo Koram"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47fcb74f-228a-3414-998f-5514e9a89faa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cOrder Is the Best We Can Hope For\u201d: Sicario<\/em> and the Sacrificial Violence of the Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0230","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dipak K. Gupta"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17419166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f461ec0f-e97b-3637-b2b0-34a2719634aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"demandsec"}],"isPartOf":"Democracy and Security","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Naxalites and the Maoist Movement in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602583","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":15150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Far away from the glare of the achievements in the fields of information technology, a long festering Maoist insurgency is growing in the heart of India. The Maoists have found a strong base among the tribal people of India. By examining the history of Communist movements in India within a behavioral perspective, this article asks the question why in the past similar movements were relatively easy for the authorities to suppress, while the current Maoist insurgency is proving to be much harder to manage? \u201cThe Naxalites occupy an ambiguous niche in history. Exemplary idealist to some, he indicates to others an expression of immature disaffection that has nothing constructive to offer. In either case, he embodies the reinstatement of man as a moral agent if only because Naxalites so radically challenge the premises of established morality.\u201d","subTitle":"Birth, Demise, and Reincarnation","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Franz Peter Hugdahl"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41330061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17d90bcb-0345-3e48-a7fa-b425b4791cad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41330061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"689","pageStart":"687","pagination":"pp. 687-689","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41330061","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":1470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Ney"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12f0868a-020c-3c34-b844-bdae445afb4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1073","pageStart":"1071","pagination":"pp. 1071-1073","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231302","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry\u00a0Louis Gates, Jr."],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d90eac2e-a585-3332-80fd-3e2ab2a1c32a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/529096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"S2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"S205","pageStart":"S191","pagination":"pp. S191-S205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Third World of Theory: Enlightenment\u2019s Esau","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/529096","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6936,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Russell Perkin"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c29a1af5-f16d-37d8-84bf-9ea2f9522cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imagining Henry: Henry James as a Fictional Character in Colm T\u00f3ib\u00edn's The Master<\/em> and David Lodge's Author, Author<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jml.2010.33.2.114","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Beginning with a discussion of the famous episode in Lyndall Gordon's A Private Life of Henry James of the disposal of Constance Fenimore Woolson's clothes, this article explores the hybrid genre of the \u201cbiographical novel\u201d through a comparison of Colm T\u00f3ib\u00edn's The Master and David Lodge's Author, Author. There are some striking similarities between these two works, and this reveals the extent to which Henry James's version of his own life has given shape to all subsequent accounts of it. At the same time, each novelist gives us a Henry James in his own image, and Harold Bloom's theory of literary history helps us to understand how Lodge and T\u00f3ib\u00edn have attempted to overcome the influence of a writer that each of them holds in very high regard.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hawkridge"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bde0ced6-f947-362a-b299-d424a651e859"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44111069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","issueNumber":"26\/27","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Drake Stutesman","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111069","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Osha Neumann"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"004d6062-0125-3019-8376-cbac0d9bd7af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"1 (39)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Victim of the Victim: Echoes of the Past in the Palestinian\/Israeli Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766520","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13957,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[81820,81866]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. X. Goudie"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4454327b-a665-3a1f-99a6-9f7ec412f7ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3042437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Leavin' a Mark on the Wor(l)d\": Marksmen and Marked Men in Middle Passage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042437","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8839,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[52156,52197]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadine Sinno"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23071610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b17edfb0-1d35-3e16-8b47-a061beb370d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23071610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"BRILL","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Confinement to Creativity: Women's Reconfiguration of the Prison and Mental Asylum in Salwa Bakr's \"The Golden Chariot\" and Fadia Faqir's \"Pillars of Salt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23071610","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":13214,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[604673,604760]],"Locations in B":[[45685,45773]],"abstract":"Confined in a women's prison in modern Egypt for murdering her stepfather, Aziza, the central protagonist in Salw\u0101 Bakr's al-'Arabah al-dhahabiyyah l\u0101 ta\u1e63'ad il\u0101 al-sam\u0101' [The Golden Chariot] spends her time fantasizing about a golden chariot and selecting qualified inmates to accompany her on her journey to the heavens. As part of her screening project, Aziza informally 'interviews' various women prisoners and solicits their stories. Because the prison inevitably forces these women to interact with one another, the exclusively women's space becomes boundless as it creates a space for the women to compare stories\u2014while simultaneously negotiating socio-economic differences and individual idiosyncrasies. Similar to Aziza and her fellow inmates, Maha and Umm Sa'd, the protagonists in Fadia Faqir's Pillars of Salt share a room in a mental hospital in Jordan. And like Aziza and her fellow prisoners, Maha and Um Sa'd's relationship is fraught with tension at the beginning. As the novel unfolds, they learn to co-exist and develop an intimate friendship that makes their existence more bearable. Maha and Umm Sa'd tell their stories to each other\u2014and their private stories become windows into the outside world in which they used to live. In this study, I provide a textual analysis of the two novels, shedding light on how the prison and mental asylum in Bakr and Faqir's works are transformed from sites of confinement into vehicles of social critique, refuges for female solidarity, and forums for creativity and self-expression.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. M. Mahmoud"],"datePublished":"1983-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0c974c0-70d6-38fe-85bd-50eaac2b44d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3998067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"26","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Indigenous Sudanese Capital: A National Bourgeoisie?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998067","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8791,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[374742,374837]],"Locations in B":[[8375,8466]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Col\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4b00f16-c5c3-39df-ba86-51d6ff1445ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23358976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Role of Folklore in Pepetela's Historiography of Angola","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358976","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A influ\u00eancia da tradi\u00e7\u00e3o oral africana tem um papel indiscut\u00edvel nas discuss\u00f5es da literatura luso-africana. Sem d\u00favida, este \u00e9 o caso do romance Yaka (1984) do escritor angolano Pepetela. Em particular, o autor utiliza elementos folcl\u00f3ricos para efectuar uma reescrita da hist\u00f3ria nacional. Na primeira sec\u00e7\u00e3o deste estudo, analiso o modo como o folclore, em termos gerais, funciona como uma historiografia alternativa e n\u00e3o oficial que existe paralelamente \u00e0 ret\u00f3rica e aos discursos hist\u00f3ricos do governo central. Na segunda sec\u00e7\u00e3o apresento os argumentos b\u00e1sicos do discurso colonial do Estado Novo sobre as prov\u00edncias ultramarinas, o qual deriva da escrita do antrop\u00f3logo e soci\u00f3logo brasileiro Gilberto Freyre. Finalmente, na \u00faltima sec\u00e7\u00e3o, demonstro como Pepetela utiliza os elementos do folclore descritos na primeira sec\u00e7\u00e3o para subverter a vers\u00e3o oficial da rela\u00e7\u00e3o entre Portugal e as col\u00f3nias descrita na segunda.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Regenia Gagnier"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4338315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163075X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91377622-9f8a-3261-b9c9-7a42386746c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4338315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kenyrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Kenyon Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Kenyon College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Oxford Occidentalism, or the Idea of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4338315","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":3503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OKWUDIBA NNOLI"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99bbc7e4-fa2a-33de-9f39-1bb59812bda1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ETHNICITY AS A COUNTER-REVOLUTIONARY FORCE IN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341451","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Stoller"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26543134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746585372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235500"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0414be19-dc63-34ed-86b4-e242ebd64b01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26543134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Storytelling and the Construction of Realities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26543134","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":2373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Dole"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41515354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ad140d2-f67d-36a3-88dc-b0f23c3f286c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41515354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolution, Occupation, and Love: The 2011 Year in Cultural Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41515354","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":11458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What does anthropology have to offer for making sense of the events that have come to be known as the \"Arab Spring\"? In this article, I use this question to organize my discussion of the prominent scholarly conversations occurring in cultural anthropology for the year 2011. The topics I consider in this review are the critical study of secularism and liberalism; affect intimacy, and care as registers of politics and economy; space, place, and time; and indigeneity. I will suggest that last year's publications, while by no means anticipating such revolutionary transformations, do offer us a rich body of conceptual approaches and methodological innovations for productively engaging the emergent conceptual and worldly horizons being associated with the \"Arab Spring.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Clutterbuck"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2619078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2619078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2619078","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald R. Butters"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bdae94fb-f188-336c-a519-598f7a8344e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/417204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"923","pageStart":"921","pagination":"pp. 921-923","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417204","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":1952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911307747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df129728-4a3f-351e-8bfd-7f944a826b16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1mtz521.6"}],"isPartOf":"Britain, France and the Decolonization of Africa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation, state and agency:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As the title of this volume suggests, scholars of decolonization are increasingly looking at the connected or \u2018entangled\u2019 histories of empire and its aftermaths. From this perspective, decolonization was not a discrete process that marked a shift from empire to national independence but a multi-layered, multifaceted phenomenon. While decolonization had particular, specific causes and effects in different African settings, it was also shaped by wider, structural dimensions of empire that may be seen as systemic: the political and economic relationship between imperial \u2018core\u2019 and colonial \u2018periphery\u2019; the colonial state in terms of its bureaucratic structure; ideologies of governance, \u2018development\u2019 and","subTitle":"evolving historiographies of African decolonization","keyphrase":["colonial","african","empire","imperial","evolving historiographies","african decolonization","nationalism","postcolonial","colonial state","british"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oscar Guardiola-Rivera"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea481fd6-ba3b-3185-b5f8-49c5e7b86820"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Concerning Violence, Part II: Fanon and the Intelligent Machine: Reflections from a Conversation with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.39.2.0177","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ira Katznelson"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be559c9c-ad2b-3192-aa7d-1117fd793aad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comparative Studies of Race and Ethnicity: Plural Analysis and Beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421358","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8126,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[16899,16965]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ming Dong Gu","Jianping Guo"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43643554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214400"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31dd9ea1-fd5b-388e-815c-2b4c0cc895d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43285785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phileastwest"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy East and West","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"How Can We Cross the Intellectual Divide between East and West? Reflections on Reading \"Toward a Complementary Consciousness and Mutual Flourishing of Chinese and Western Cultures: The Contributions of Process Philosophers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285785","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":9374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The essay by Fan Meijun and Wang Zhihe has sparked broad reflection by Ming Dong Gu and Jianping Guo in the form of a sustained response to the philosophical issues in the intellectual encounter between East and West. While agreeing with the thesis and major ideas of Fan and Wang, Gu and Guo offer a critique of some issues and continue to reflect on a series of questions relevant to the exchanges between Eastern and Western thought, which include: Is there an intellectual divide between East and West? What are the intellectual barriers to genuine dialogue? Do the intellectual barriers identified by Fan and Wang accurately mirror the real conditions of Eastern and Western thought? If they are true, have they formed a paradigm in East-West studies? If yes, what is the conceptual ground for the paradigm? Which is more responsible for the intellectual barriers, Western-centrism or Eastern-centrism? Besides Western process thought, is there any Eastern thought that can be appropriated to overcome the intellectual barriers? Gu and Guors reflections are summarized in a general question: under what conditions can East meet West in intellectual thought? Identifying some common ground in Eastern and Western thought, they reveal blind spots in current efforts to cross the East-West divide and examine some successful cases of East-West dialogue. Based on their meditations, they suggest new dimensions to the Second Enlightenment and call for transcultural intellectual empowerment for all cultural traditions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Naomi Nkealah"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e730f5e-505d-31da-81b0-d291fae1bcab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24389458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women as Absented Presences: Gender and Nationalist Discourse in Bole Butake's \"Shoes and Four Men in Arms\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24389458","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sakina M. Hughes"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/natiindistudj.3.1.0024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23321261"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fa07166-b131-39dd-890c-3c3ac5d7cfdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/natiindistudj.3.1.0024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natiindistudj"}],"isPartOf":"Native American and Indigenous Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Community Became an Almost Civilized and Christian One: John Stewart's Mission to the Wyandots and Religious Colonialism as African American Racial Uplift","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/natiindistudj.3.1.0024","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[62825,62885]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claude Ake"],"datePublished":"1976-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Explanatory Notes on the Political Economy of Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159645","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sina Mansouri-Zeyni","Sepideh Sami"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb8705d1-fb46-3b6e-8302-3e01735e2aa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The History of Ressentiment in Iran and the Emergig Ressentiment-less Mindset","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482917","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Two dichotomies, one that resents the West and another that admires it, seem to have long polarized both Iranian intellectuals and the public imagination. Darioush Ashouri discusses this issue in terms of \"ressentiment,\" a term he borrows from Nietzsche. This study puts Ashouri's scattered views within a Nietzschean framework to form a coherent theory, and places it against the background of a brief history of ressentiment in Iran. It then argues that signs of a ressentiment-less young generation, mostly university students, seem to be appearing, and a certain kind of social behavior on Facebook and a work by the Iranian musician Mohsen Namjoo are analyzed as evidence of this emerging mindset.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Mathews"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcf5c8c3-4b7a-3735-94e9-3c40fa07b90e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The OAU and Political Economy of Human Rights in Africa: An Analysis of the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights, 1981","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186410","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Hodapp"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.10.1.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20437bdc-5548-3693-b12e-58f33eb9e16b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.10.1.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Proto-Afropolitan Bildungsroman<\/em>: Yoruba Women, Resistance, and the Nation in Simi Bedford's Yoruba Girl Dancing<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.10.1.07","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9460,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The fields of world literature and African literary studies are currently wrestling with the issue of scale in wondering how the worldliness of texts (their circulation, politics, etc.) impacts their ability to be culturally specific. Too often, a dichotomy between local and global has been the fallback position within both of these fields, arguing essentially that the more local a text is the less global it is and vice versa. This essay mobilizes the concept of Afropolitanism, a worldly African sensibility, to problematize such a facile formulation. In doing so, it turns to a widely praised though rarely analyzed novel, Simi Bedford's 1991 Yoruba Girl Dancing, to argue that the proto-Afropolitanism of the novel offers an alternative lens through which to see African texts and literary figures who are constituted by multiple locales. In turning to an African text that was published before the current Afropolitan movement, this essay argues that Afropolitanism has a longer genealogy than currently acknowledged and that its ideological insights are useful even for texts published well before the termed gained its current cultural and literary capital.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaun Richards"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53329e25-9595-3d39-8e37-47dde1f60c6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Placed Identities for Placeless Times: Brian Friel and Post-Colonial Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484702","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hussein M. Adam"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/723236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/723236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"369","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"518","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-518","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon as a Democratic Theorist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/723236","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":8764,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[380490,380593],[380817,380884],[401345,401438]],"Locations in B":[[12704,12809],[13038,13106],[21947,22040]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian F. Haney L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04d1e0fc-4e7b-39d5-a61a-d373d42848a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40040347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":79.0,"pageEnd":"1063","pageStart":"985","pagination":"pp. 985-1063","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A Nation of Minorities\": Race, Ethnicity, and Reactionary Colorblindness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040347","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":38530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Justice Clarence Thomas insists upon \"a'moral and constitutional equivalence' between laws designed to subjugate a race and those that distribute benefits on the basis of race in order to foster some current notion of equality.\" This asserted congruence between Jim Crow laws and affirmative action seems intellectually indefensible--but it is now a constitutional commonplace, as it underlies the contemporary rise of an anticlassification understanding of the Equal Protection Clause that accords race-conscious remedies and racial subjugation the same level of legal hostility. This Article lays out the intellectual history of \"reactionary colorblindness,\" meaning the current form of race blindness that principally targets affirmative action. Measuring debates among legal elites against a background of evolving racial ideas, this Article traces the use of colorblindness to attack Jim Crow in the years before Brown v. Board of Education, and as a tactic to forestall integration in that decision's immediate wake. It then locates the proximate origins of contemporary colorblindness in the effort by neoconservatives beginning in the 1960s to respond to an emerging structural understanding of racism by positing instead an ethnic reconceptualization of race. The ethnic analysis replaced the notion of dominant and subordinate races with a narrative of culturally defined groups in pluralistic competition, where culture rather than systemic racial advantaging or disadvantaging explained disparate group success. This Article demonstrates the foundational role ethnicity played in Justice Lewis Powell's 1978 Bakke opinion, and also shows how his analysis subsequently served as the cornerstone for contemporary colorblind reasoning, evident for instance in Richmond v. Croson. Finally, this Article argues that the liberal legal defenders of affirmative action, by remaining wedded to mid-century racial orthodoxies, not only failed in the 1970s to respond effectively to the emergence of reactionary colorblindness but contributed to its intellectual legitimacy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bellegarde-Smith"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41711918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"696c4ed2-d133-356b-8ed2-e81afddb8eee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41711918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Haitian Studies Association Plenary Address: 22 nd<\/sup> Annual Conference, Brown University, November 13, 2010","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41711918","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Buck"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre, Fanon, and the Case for Slavery Reparations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512881","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6324,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[37722,37782]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shu-Mei Shih"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46d3a91e-67fe-3d5f-a942-db98e1bd28e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"1362","pageStart":"1347","pagination":"pp. 1347-1362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comparative Racialization: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501940","volumeNumber":"123","wordCount":10295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Tuitt"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13854879"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44506980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242157"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4623cc07-ceeb-3bb2-a7a9-55485323d4e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24675881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jminogrourigh"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on Minority and Group Rights","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Transitions: Refugees and Natives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675881","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"European Directive 2004\/83 (the 'Qualification Directive') limits claims for asylum to those refugees coming from outside of the European Union. This provision institutionalises a long established practice in which member states of the European Union are presumed to be safe countries of origin and safe countries of asylum. This article argues that the European Union could not have come into being without producing refugees. With reference to the definition of refugee enshrined within Article 1.A (2) of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees1 and the jurisprudence surrounding one key qualifying element of the definition \u2013 persecution \u2013 the article seeks to explore how the international law governing the status of refugee has been deployed to deny that the European Union is a place of origin of refugees.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irma Maini"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b96e834b-e7b8-3c6c-8c78-88c9267b7c36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Writing the Asian American Artist: Maxine Hong Kingston's Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468245","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ADRIENNE RICH"],"datePublished":"1976-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27775366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03603709"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fd8f3bd-b174-385d-85b3-c1f57e225357"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27775366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoetrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Poetry Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"American Poetry Review","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mother And Son, Woman And Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27775366","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":13954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nick Nesbitt"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fb561c8-ebaa-3efc-82b6-a51b7043c82b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Incandescent I, Destroyer of Worlds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.121","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article describes C\u00e9saire's work as the articulation of a poetics and politics of the universal. While he rightly celebrated the legacy and accomplishments of Afro-Atlantic cultures, these specificities never served to ground the ethical and political claims he made against global imperialism. From his initial invocation of Negritude on, C\u00e9saire's every intervention brought the claims of universal equality to bear on diverse planes of being, from the poetic to the political. In this light, the article returns to the Cahier d'un retour au pays natal and the article \u201cMaintenir la po\u00e9sie\u201d to examine C\u00e9saire's singular fashioning of the universal against the backdrop of philosophers such as Heidegger and Badiou.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Colucciello Barber"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6c9f452-c7ba-3806-9075-24346d43ecdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"World-Making and Grammatical Impasse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.25.1-2.0179","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suki Ali"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"861a42f7-f2f9-3a3c-ae79-b5b465d7b762"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41495196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"100","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"the sense of memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495196","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[51058,51105]],"abstract":"In recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the role of collective memory in ethno-national projects. In addition, there has been an expansion of research utilising memory work and auto\/biographical methods, which have been particularly effective in the writing of feminists of colour. The paper is prompted by a return to Avtar Brah's 'The Scent of Memory' that it uses as a starting point to explore the relationships between competing accounts of 'private' memories of racialisation that come from mixed-race siblings growing up in a mainly white town. Drawing on interviews, the paper uses familial narratives and their individual telling, to show how sense is made of divergent experiences and memories of childhood and teenage in 1960s and 1970s Britain. The paper shows how narrative accounts are often negotiated through multiple senses, revealing them as both imagined and recalled, contested and negotiated. The paper considers the strengths and limitations of narrative analysis in understanding the relationship between individual and collective memories at both national and familial levels. It argues that the ways in which the social and personal memories are connected in the processes of subjectivation are unstable and opaque, and can only ever be partially known through the process of narrativisation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Waziyatawin Angela Wilson"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74f9b040-1be8-3633-aff4-b2ce1d5d15d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4139057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Decolonizing the 1862 Death Marches","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139057","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Green"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c01d9d4-b080-3a0d-a29c-852cd3aeb781"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3117520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"805","pageStart":"804","pagination":"pp. 804-805","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3117520","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":1429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ira Wells"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79e3e822-b2f4-387c-b929-70c5e4f54c5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40983440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"895","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-895","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"What I Killed for, I Am\": Domestic Terror in Richard Wright's America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40983440","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":11016,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[68152,68206]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Creagh McLean Cole"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26224092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0143781X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7dd5c4e2-5677-3dd5-ba51-018298022963"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26224092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histpolithou"}],"isPartOf":"History of Political Thought","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Imprint Academic Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ETHIC OF THE PRODUCERS: SOREL, ANDERSON AND MACINTYRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26224092","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The unifying moral theme represented by the ethic of the producer has not always been prominent in studies of Georges Sorel's work. But this theme was critically important to the political and moral education of the generation of socialists that came to maturity in the era of cultural modernism 1910\u201330. The most interesting of these was John Anderson who left Scotland in 1926. He was the most important philosopher to have worked in Australia, and for more than thirty years he presented to his students a sophisticated understanding and appreciation of Georges Sorel's ethic of the producers. Anderson's social and political thought reveals a neglected aspect of the Scottish intellectual and cultural synthesis of Calvinist theology and Aristotelian virtue ethics identified by Alasdair Macintyre. It also suggests an unexpected connection between Macintyre's virtue ethics and the distinctively Augustinian response to the modernist crisis in authority represented by Georges Sorel.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Jusdanis"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821369","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821369"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enlightenment Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821369","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RIEDWAAN MOOSAGE"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ebc17a6-d112-38b8-bd54-ee4cb9d0b652"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41056647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Prose of Ambivalence: Liberation Struggle Discourse on Necklacing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056647","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article is concerned with the ambivalence that permeates liberation struggle discourse on the practice of necklacing. Through examining what was said about the killing of suspected collaborators and\/or necklacing during the mid- to late 1980s by leaders of the African National Congress (ANC) and the United Democratic Front (UDF), I argue that those public positions produced a prose of ambivalence. I ask how this prose of ambivalence was produced and why that ambivalence is seemingly rendered intangible. I suggest that the ANC and UDF were caught in a double bind. They could not explicitly condemn the practice and risk losing their mass support base, nor explicitly condone the practice and risk losing the support of important internal and international constituencies thereby giving the apartheid state the upper hand in a discursive war on the moral and political legitimacy over using violence. Yet, I argue, this ambivalence was not merely a tactical one in that underlying the liberation discourse on the practice of necklacing was\/is an inherent formulation of the binary of resistance and oppression\/repression. The practice understood within this framework could only be rendered as state violence or resistance. In rendering it as the latter, though uncomfortably so, the ANC and UDF proposed that it be understood within a causal framework, as the result of oppression\/repression. Ambivalence about the practice of necklacing thus, I argue, was produced in the interstice of the resistance - oppression\/repression binary. Leading from this, I argue more broadly that the problematic of violence and attending ambivalence within the ANC has a history that predates the discourse around necklacing. I suggest that necklacing refuses to be forgotten precisely because of its ambivalence. Indeed, it may be that the inescapable ambivalence of necklacing is the condition for the possibility that it will always also be remembered.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Harlow"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4b4b80c-aefc-307e-ae78-e335bd1393ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Egyptian Intellectuals and the Debate on the \"Normalization of Cultural Relations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354333","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Quest"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bef6af64-fffc-3ef1-9a37-57896b6f27d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon's Critique of the National Bourgeoisie Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758924","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":5466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ken McCullough"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"737668ff-9a02-33b3-bd34-742b9131ac6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20737193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"If You See the Buddha at the Stomp Dance, Kill Him!: The Bicameral World of LeAnne Howe's Shell Shaker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737193","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4735,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[25970,26011]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JON FRAENKEL","DAVID CHAPPELL","MURIDAN S WIDJOJO","SOLOMON KANTHA","GORDON LEUA NANAU","HOWARD VAN TREASE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23725524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1964291b-5d39-38d1-b873-c2ea466a40c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23725524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2010","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23725524","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":37995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carmen Gautier Mayoral"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad94648e-762e-3780-8ef6-21bb3aa2dd54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25612875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interrelation of United States Poor Relief, Massive Unemployment and Weakening of \"Legitimacy\" in Twentieth Century Puerto Rico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612875","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":15318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38ab0dad-754f-356d-9a72-20440b4738a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20027607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":64.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Subject Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20027607","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":19883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.46.3.85","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9885f649-db67-3976-9dd5-f246d0e67292"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.46.3.85"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Okigbo's Drum Elegies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.46.3.85","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":13967,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article appraises Ben Obumselu's examination of Christopher Okigbo's conception of his poetry as music as particularly insightful. Okigbo's intent to make a music of words, evident in his denunciation of poetry of denotative statements, and reverent invocation of his favorite impressionist composers, and of St\u00e9phane Mallarm\u00e9 as models or even Muses notwithstanding, Obumselu discerns an underlying reference in every poem to events of Okigbo's life and even to contemporary Nigerian\/African politics. This article extends the examination of Okigbo's poetics by investigating his exploration of funeral African drum music as an absorbing idiom of abstraction consistent with surrealism. Discussing the African elegiac tradition, it privileges in the pivotal drumming event a conflation of lamentation with a rousing heroic tradition that illuminates Okigbo's practice in \u201cLament of the Drums\u201d and \u201cLament of the Masks\u201d and links many of the last poems in Path of Thunder together in significant unity. Moreover, the interpretation of the poems offered here is linked to the trajectory of the Okigbo narrative and the poet's heroic temper.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TESSA DOOMS","TOBY FAYOYIN"],"datePublished":"2021-06-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep34101","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf25e25e-0073-3979-8014-3f76cd40b82d"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"South African Institute of International Affairs","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Youth Perspectives on South Africa\u2019s Governance Challenges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep34101","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"South Africa joined the APRM, Africa\u2019s voluntary self-assessment tool for promoting good governance, in 2003 and has remained committed to the ideals of the continental instrument since undergoing its first country review in 2007. However, young people, a demographic who are key stakeholders and who form a significant proportion of the country\u2019s population \u2014 as is the case across the continent \u2014 have so far been inadequately engaged and involved in APRM processes. In attempting to bridge this gap and include youth voices in the country\u2019s second generation APRM review, SAIIA partnered with Johannesburg-based Jasoro Consulting to facilitate the collection","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeane Kirkpatrick"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/193420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f7833ca-8c49-3552-a209-de5c652cb0d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/193420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representation in the American National Conventions: The Case of 1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/193420","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":28658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Williams A. Akande","Bolanle Eliz Adetoun","Modupe Fal Adewuyi","Titilola Ikeoluwa E. Akande","L. P. Z. Ntshanga","Balin Dlamini","James T. Williamson","Nomvul Dladla","Zama Hlongwane","Osad Ibeagu","Erh J. Osagie"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41476592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03038300"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233530"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95cc385b-3494-3937-9fa7-50f47c4664cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41476592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociindirese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Indicators Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Wisdom of Eve: On Differentiating the Colours of Emotion that May Be Threats to Good Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41476592","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":18899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Emotion's twin roles\u2013'unite and divide' our daily life, thus motivating the good and the worst in human behaviour. The way one \"feels\" does influence the way one \"acts\" toward others. If this reasoning is correct, then behaviour can never be without motive or \"motiveless.\" Given the importance of emotions in human communication and decision making, the context of intergroup relations, with its themes of prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination against culturally dissimilar was touched on selectively. Using the Differential Emotions Scale and building upon Boyle's (Personality 56:747\u2013750, 1984) work, with students, the present study reports a repeated-measure multiple discriminant function analysis for items across raters. The findings further indicate that most of the DES items are sensitive indicators. The correspondence of some of the results with prior research findings makes facial emotions less the holy grail of the social behaviour field. Likely consequences of emotions are considered, and research needs are discussed vis-a-vis uplifting individual happiness, collective identity and sense of connection to others. Perhaps its implications can be extended to the literature, thus revealing how the different lenses through which human emotions are usually viewed are connected by the incipient\/concept attitude and self-identification\/labelling that run through each of them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert L. Allen"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bff81779-7c37-3dd0-bd15-30b29cc372a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PAST DUE: THE AFRICAN AMERICAN QUEST FOR REPARATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069773","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Laura Stoler"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Colonial Categories: European Communities and the Boundaries of Rule","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178797","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0e4614d-60af-33b2-b0af-8bafef3d433c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Prospero and Caliban: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and Interidentity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241658","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"By concerning itself with the identity processes in the time-space of the Portuguese language, this article aims to contribute to the study of postcolonialism. Since modern Western identity is largely a product of colonialism, identity in the time-space of the Portuguese language cannot but reflect the specificities of Portuguese colonialism. Por tuguese colonialism is a subaltern colonialism, itself colonized by reason of its semipe ripheral condition, and not easily understood in the light of the theories that prevail in postcolonial thought in core countries, the latter derived from hegemonic colonial ism. The author proposes the concept of interidentity to account for a complex identity constellation, in which colonizer and colonized features are combined. Far from erasing the unequal power relations engendered by colonialism, interidentity invites a complex analysis of such relations. The lack of hegemony on the Portuguese side encouraged the formation of internal colonialisms that prevail until today. Hence the article concludes that postcolonialism in the time-space of the Portuguese language, a situated postcolo nialism, must manifest itself, in a time of neoliberal globalization, as anticolonialism and counter-hegemonic globalization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Field"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e85b9b2-217e-3b51-a622-2f6a16cfd306"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Looking for Jimmy Baldwin: Sex, Privacy, and Black Nationalist Fervor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300682","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL ROTHBERG"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb182f24-942f-3051-9bf0-6179415a803c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23256723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"Ensnared in Implication\": Writing, Shame, and Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23256723","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":4669,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toni C. King","S. Alease Ferguson"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ac506aa-a8c5-3a7c-a737-f50b4c0d574a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Charting Ourselves: Leadership Development with Black Professional Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316818","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry Blagg"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9d3564b-70c8-3e7e-b431-effeed050905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23638671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A JUST MEASURE OF SHAME? Aboriginal Youth and Conferencing in Australia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638671","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the limits of 'reintegrative shaming' and family conferencing as encapsulated in the 'Wagga Model' currently popular in Australia. I question the relevance of the model to the task of reducing the over-representation of Aboriginal people in custody. I argue that the model represents an 'Orientalist' appropriation of a Maori decolonizing process and is based on a one-dimensional reading of the New Zealand experience which involved a significant reduction in police powers. The product being franchised in Australia (and marketed internationally) promises to intensify rather than reduce police controls over Aboriginal people. There is also danger in assuming that all indigenous peoples are amenable to conference-style resolutions and that all operate within shaming structures of social control.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annmaria M. Shimabuku"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv75db00.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fc24881-f3f9-3c89-8676-57e462cbb5d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv75db00.10"}],"isPartOf":"Alegal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"88","pagination":"88-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","History","Asian Studies","Political Science","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Okinawa, 1958\u20131972:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv75db00.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15989,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Chapter 3, I showed how the simple pro-Japanese versus pro-American national binary was complicated by fundamental shifts in the global economy. The economic policy changes of 1958 triggered a second, more substantial exodus from Okinawa\u2019s peripheries to U.S. military base towns in pursuit of dollars. This era also marked the emergence of the New Left, both globally and in Japan, and the development of its thought in Okinawa as a critique of the Old Left\u2019s ethno-nationalism.While class solidarity seemed like a progressive step beyond the trappings of Marxian ethno-nationalism, a number of Marxist activists started to question New","subTitle":"The Subaltern Speaks","keyphrase":["okinawa","subaltern speaks","subaltern","okinawan proletariat","matsushima","picketers","new left","ecause","base town","reversion"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fran\u00e7oise Verg\u00e8s"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1535ec8-6d58-35f7-8810-a49724166f02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"578","pagination":"pp. 578-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Creole Skin, Black Mask: Fanon and Disavowal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344036","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ross Posnock"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"818","pageStart":"802","pagination":"pp. 802-818","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dream of Deracination: The Uses of Cosmopolitanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490204","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. Davis"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00212385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2741437-1260-3213-affb-20085fb4e5f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42909708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issueincrim"}],"isPartOf":"Issues in Criminology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Justification for No Obligation: Views of Black Males toward Crime and the Criminal Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909708","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Louis Gates, Jr."],"datePublished":"1991-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"727","pageStart":"711","pagination":"pp. 711-727","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Good-Bye, Columbus? Notes on the Culture of Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489882","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":6878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilbert Shang Ndi"],"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a092761-598f-3ab3-98f0-afe2323f0893"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"On the Aesthetics of Mimicry and Proliferation: Interrogations of Hegemony in the Postcolonial Public Sphere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359629","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines innovative modes of interrogating spectacles of State power in postcolonial dictatorship novels. Authoritarian power in the postcolonial public sphere perpetuates itself through practices that reiterate the prerogatives of State reason, national progress, national unity and the indispensability of the potentate. All these are mobilized and deployed in order to produce indocile subjects socialised by dominant ideologies. Given that discourses of resistance have often ended up re-enacting modes of hegemonic power, authors employ tactics of resistance based on slender narrative and non-totalizing subversive acts that nevertheless constitute an unsettling menace to symbolic fabrics of dictatorial power. Using the theoretical approaches elaborated by Achille Mbembe, Homi K. Bhabha and Michel de Certeau, this paper examines narrative deconstructive practices that aim at opening up the postcolonial public sphere for the expression of marginal voices without endowing literary texts with explicit political teleologies. Examples are taken from the novels of Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Sony Labou Tansi, Ahmadou Kourouma and Garcia Marquez. The article concludes that subversive reactions to postcolonial State power thrive on a threatening hybridity and a subversive collocation of significations like profanity\/mythology, banality\/exceptionality, life\/death, laughter\/lamentation that find their valence in the context of excessive and pervasive State power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Rathbone"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/181710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3d1a319-66f5-30c6-80da-ee7dada70084"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/181710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Writing in Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/181710","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ENDA DUFFY"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fb6362f-10c2-3906-81fa-7c2dc769a47f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MOLLY'S THROAT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871198","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Feierman"],"datePublished":"1985-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d3e0f8c-bdc5-3ecd-9c57-777dea3363ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":75.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Social sciences - Sociology","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Struggles for Control: The Social Roots of Health and Healing in Modern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524604","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":41943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Faruk YALVA\u00c7"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13047310"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"251f483f-f1c7-3499-9a01-967f80771ae6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43926174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ulusilis"}],"isPartOf":"Uluslararas\u0131 \u0130li\u015fkiler \/ International Relations","issueNumber":"29","language":["tur"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Uluslararas\u0131 \u0130li\u015fkiler Konseyi \u0130ktisadi \u0130\u015fletmesi","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Uluslararas\u0131 \u0130li\u015fkiler Kuram\u0131nda Anar\u015fi S\u00f6ylemi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926174","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":13198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Bu makale uluslararas\u0131 ili\u015fkiler kuram\u0131ndaki anar\u015fi s\u00f6yleminin geli\u015fmesini, hangi sorunsallar etraf\u0131nda \u015fekillendi\u011fini ve uluslararas\u0131 ili\u015fkileri anlamak i\u00e7in h\u00e2l\u00e2 anlaml\u0131 bir kavram olup olmad\u0131\u011f\u0131n\u0131 sorgulamaktad\u0131r. Yerle\u015fik uluslararas\u0131 ili\u015fkiler teorisi anar\u015fiye sadece kurumsal bir a\u00e7\u0131dan bakmakta, anar\u015fiyi tan\u0131mlamak i\u00e7in devletler aras\u0131 ili\u015fkileri temel alman\u0131n yeterli olaca\u011f\u0131 varsay\u0131m\u0131ndan hareket etmektedir. Pozitivizm sonras\u0131 uluslararas\u0131 ili\u015fkiler teorisi devlet temelli bu kurumsal s\u00f6yleme farkl\u0131 ele\u015ftiriler getirmi\u015ftir. Bu makale pozitivizm sonras\u0131 d\u00f6nemde postmodernizm, tarihsel sosyoloji, s\u00f6m\u00fcrgeci sonras\u0131 d\u00fc\u015f\u00fcnce ve feminist yakla\u015f\u0131mlar taraf\u0131ndan anar\u015fi kavram\u0131na y\u00f6neltilen ele\u015ftirilere yer vermektedir. Makalenin temel tezi uluslararas\u0131 anar\u015finin ancak toplumsal ili\u015fkilerle (ve g\u00fcn\u00fcm\u00fcz uluslararas\u0131 sisteminin anla\u015f\u0131lmas\u0131 a\u00e7\u0131s\u0131ndan \u00f6zellikle kapitalizmin toplumsal ili\u015fkileriyle) bir arada d\u00fc\u015f\u00fcn\u00fcld\u00fc\u011f\u00fc zaman anlaml\u0131 bir kavram olaca\u011f\u0131d\u0131r. Bu anlamda pozitivizm sonras\u0131 bir\u00e7ok ele\u015ftiri ile ama \u00f6zellikle baz\u0131 tarihsel sosyolojik yakla\u015f\u0131mlar ve s\u00f6m\u00fcrgeci sonras\u0131 d\u00fc\u015f\u00fcnce ile \u00f6rt\u00fc\u015fmektedir. Makalenin ikinci tezi, anar\u015fi\/d\u00fczen sorunsal\u0131n\u0131 ortaya \u00e7\u0131karan toplumsal ili\u015fkiler de\u011fi\u015fmedik\u00e7e anar\u015fi\/d\u00fczen etraf\u0131nda olu\u015fmu\u015f ikili z\u0131tl\u0131\u011f\u0131n da ortadan kalkmas\u0131n\u0131n m\u00fcmk\u00fcn olmad\u0131\u011f\u0131d\u0131r. This article discusses the development of the anarchy discourse in international relations theory. It questions the main problematiques around which the discourse of anarchy is organised and asks whether anarchy is still a valid concept to understand international relations. The mainstream IR theory analyses anarchy from an institutional framework, and is based on the assumption that state relations is sufficient to describe and understand anarchy. Post-positivist period have developed diverse criticisms to this conceptualisation. The article evaluates the criticisms of postmodernist, historical sociological, postcolonial and feminist approaches to the concept of anarchy. One of the main theses of this article is that the concept of anarchy can meaningfully be used to analyse international relations only if it is connected to social relations (and more specifically to social relations of capitalism with respect to understanding present international system). Therefore, the approach adopted in this article overlaps with many of the criticisms of anarchy by postmodernism, feminism, but more specifically with recent historical sociological approaches and the postcolonial studies. Another argument of the article is that the anarchy\/order opposition can not totally be eradicated unless the social relations sustaining them can be altered.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara A. Sizemore"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295294","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2295294"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Curriculum, Race, and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295294","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":3993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luana Ross"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72d10dcf-c7c9-3271-8882-81b5e8668e54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"From the \"F\" Word to Indigenous\/Feminisms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587780","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5674,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[33151,33210]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1969-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24348707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af2d4a4e-8588-3a9d-87b1-1d39a2fc32ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24348707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"69","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uhuru Na Umoja","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24348707","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Sandbrook"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43391963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07027605"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43391963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"manpunemrese"}],"isPartOf":"Manpower and Unemployment Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Labour, Capital & Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE STUDY OF THE AFRICAN 'SUB-PROLETARIAT' : A REVIEW ARTICLE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43391963","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Wylie"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819528","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Ruth Hosek"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23742837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10450300"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e9da00d-5622-3c58-a3cd-96bbd698c128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23742837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germpolisoci"}],"isPartOf":"German Politics & Society","issueNumber":"1 (86)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Subaltern Nationalism\" and the West Berlin Anti-Authoritarians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23742837","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The West Berlin anti-authoritarians around Rudi Dutschke employed a notion of subaltern nationalism inspired by independence struggles in the global South and particularly by post 1959 Cuba to legitimate their loosely understood plans to recreate West Berlin as a revolutionary island. Responding to Che Guevara's call for many Vietnams, they imagined this Northern metropolis as a Focus spreading socialism of the third way throughout Europe, a conception that united their local and global aims. In focusing on their interpretation of societal changes and structures in Cuba, the anti-authoritarians deemphasized these plans' potential for violence. As a study of West German leftists in transnational context, this article suggests the limitations of confining analyses of their projects within national or Northern paradigms. As a study of the influence of the global South on the North in a non-(post)colonial situation, it suggests that such influence is greater than has heretofore been understood.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARY MARZOTTO","TONY PLATT","ANNIKA SNARE"],"datePublished":"1975-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1ccf541-9d90-34f5-9b70-c68b1062e333"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29765958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A REPLY TO TURK","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765958","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ran Greenstein"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15b28fd3-253e-3619-bb6c-6edb2232bfec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2636978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"661","pageStart":"641","pagination":"pp. 641-661","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Study of South African Society: Towards a New Agenda for Comparative Historical Inquiry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636978","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":13948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper seeks to outline a new research agenda for the comparative historical study of South African society. It argues that the existing work in the field exhibits several limitations, expressed in particular in its adoption of a top-down approach to the study of history and its focus on class and state to the exclusion of identity. The paper seeks to overcome these limitations by adopting a new approach that focuses on identity formation and indigenous capacities. It does that from a comparative perspective which combines historical specificity with theoretical elaboration. After offering theoretical reflections on the relations between history and theory, the paper illustrates the new approach by addressing two fields of particular concern from a comparative perspective: (1) the study of class formation, economic development and identity formation; (2) the role of indigenous capacities in the historical formation of racial and national identities. The paper concludes by considering the production of knowledge in South African studies, arguing that social, political and theoretical concerns combine to effect changes in scholarly trends in an on-going process of paradigm shifts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Massad"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed6a5f26-bd4d-3727-8c76-6442558da6c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE<\/span> INTELLECTUAL<\/span> LIFE OF<\/span> EDWARD<\/span> SAID<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.007","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines Edward Said's philosophy of intellectual life and what an intellectual vocation entails. Said's major contribution, Orientalism, is discussed in light of his own concept of \u201ctraveling theory\u201d and its impact on various disciplines, especially postcolonial studies. Said's views on Palestine and the Palestinians are also elaborated and contextualized in his own oeuvre. Finally, the essay discusses Said's interest in musical performance and attempts to read his work \u201cmusically,\u201d showing how all his interests are part of a larger whole that constitutes his intellectual legacy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Pe\u00f1aloza"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3203397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7145b0c-1718-3403-9c80-d7d9ac1ca7b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3203397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmarketing"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Marketing","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Marketing Association","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Marketing & Advertising"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3203397","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":4392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Mpofu"],"datePublished":"2019-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"777aead7-aab7-3be4-8669-c63c1aa0d272"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: (Re)Imagining Liberations: Institutionalised Despair*Critical Hope","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0006","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwendolen M. Carter"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a616d17b-6864-3270-91fe-454c0d18fe06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Initiatives for Change in Southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166356","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred Sherman","Daniel Franklin","Anthony Hyman"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40396569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00439134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3d03899-ef93-36ac-8388-cfa529e3d433"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40396569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldtoday"}],"isPartOf":"The World Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Royal Institute of International Affairs","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes of the Month","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40396569","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jasbir Puar"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5784b0a4-67ec-30b9-a32b-bdd0b576bc0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23362779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Precarity Talk: A Virtual Roundtable with Lauren Berlant, Judith Butler, Bojana Cveji\u0107, Isabell Lorey, Jasbir Puar, and Ana Vujanovi\u0107","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362779","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":9442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With reference to the ongoing economic \"crisis,\" several European and American scholars discuss the concept and politics of precarity. As their conversation shows, precarity is inextricable from our ever-shifting understandings of bodies, labor, politics, the public sphere, space, life, the human, and what it means to live with others.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Costas M. Constantinou","Armand Mattelart","Amandine Bled","Jacques Guyot"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c77d0417-f05f-3798-a845-38a4f5b8fbb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20542749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Communications\/Excommunications: An Interview with Armand Mattelart","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20542749","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":12680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James E. Doan"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22f750c9-d234-3c66-9a00-4a129792ed47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25477881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477881","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":1726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avishai Margalit","Gabriel Motzkin"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2961917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00483915"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23362"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a72ed9b-449b-3820-81be-d7fa17eb753d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2961917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Public Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Uniqueness of the Holocaust","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2961917","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER ROBERTS"],"datePublished":"1998-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23767458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Faculty of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Knowledge, Dialogue, and Humanization: The Moral Philosophy of Paulo Freire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767458","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Paulo Freire has been one of the most influential educationists of the 20th century. While many theorists in recent years have focused on the application of Freirean ideas, this paper concentrates on the philosophy which lies behind Freire's practice. The author considers the metaphysical, ontological, epistemological, and ethical dimensions to Freire's thought. A number of key moral principles in Freire's work are identified. The paper suggests that Freire's moral philosophy is built on a dialectical approach toward the world, a praxical view of knowledge and the human ideal, and a deep commitment to the liberation of the oppressed. Paulo Freire fut un des p\u00e9dagogues les plus influants du XX\u00e8me si\u00e8cle. Alors que nombre de th\u00e9oriciens se sont int\u00e9ress\u00e9s \u00e0 l'application des id\u00e9es de Freire ces derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, cet article se concentre sur la philosophie qui est derri\u00e8re la pratique de Freire. L'auteur consid\u00e8re les dimensions m\u00e9taphysique, ontologique, \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique et d\u00e9ontologique de la pens\u00e9e de Freire. Un certain nombre de principes moraux clefs sont identifi\u00e9s dans le travail de Freire. L'article sugg\u00e8re que la philosophie morale de Freire est construite sur une approche dialectique du monde, une perception prax\u00e9ologique du savoir et de l'id\u00e9al humain, et un engagement profond envers la lib\u00e9ration des oppress\u00e9s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dirk Klopper"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1d1fec8-7395-3c84-9070-2cfed54458d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Soliciting the Other: Interpenetration of the Psychological and the Political in Some Poems by Guy Butler","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238727","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6000,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[2039,2124]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Filomina Chioma Steady"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d149ec0-441c-3e2c-b25e-416d03575178"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Women, Climate Change and Liberation in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496976","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Women in Africa have been among the first to notice the impact of climate change and its effects on the agricultural cycle, human and animal life; food production and food security. As major custodians and consumers of natural resources, the lives of women in rural areas are profoundly affected by seasonal changes, making them among the most vulnerable to climate change. Their pivotal role in any measure aimed at mitigation and adaptation is indisputable. Despite Africa's minimal emission of green house gases, it is one of the most vulnerable continents to climate change and climate variability and is prone to ecosystem degradation and complex natural disasters. (United Nations Environment Programme, 2006). This article examines women and climate change in Africa as an aspect of Africa's environmental problems. It is argued that the ideologies that drive the exploitation of the earth's resources are linked to the legacy of colonialism and its aftermath of economic globalization. Both have important implications for continuing oppression of the environment and people, with important implications for race, gender and class. Particular attention is given to women in rural areas in Africa, who are the main custodians of environmental conservation and sustainability and who are highly threatened by environmental degradation and climate change. Yet, they are often marginalized from the decision-making processes related to solving problems of Climate Change. The paper combines theoretical insights with empirical data to argue for more attention to women's important ecological and economic roles and comments on the policy implications for Climate Change. It calls for liberation that would bring an end to economic and ecological oppression through climate justice and gender justice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Lonsdale"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e72d4c67-fa1c-39f9-8019-ae182de7cc19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40175091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng","ger","fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Studies, Europe & Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175091","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11850,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Why do most Europeans see 'Africa' as feckless victim and 'the West' as a rescue service? How far are Africanists responsible for this misperception? How are you\/we to see to it that the EU and G8 act on the Commission for Africa's generally sound proposals? How far can we look to our predecessors for lessons in how to urge, not that Europe 'does something', but that Africans be allowed a better chance to help themselves? How far might our own analyses of Africans' societies, economies and polities be better adapted to exploring how far African agency might combat local and global structures of inequality, injustice, and misrule? How best, finally, can we help our African academic colleagues to become sources of constructive internal criticism? \/\/\/ Warum sehen die meisten Europ\u00e4er 'Afrika' als ein hilfloses Opfer und 'den Westen' als einen Rettungsdienst? Inwieweit sind Afrikanisten f\u00fcr diese Missinterpretation verantwortlich? Wie k\u00f6nnen wir daf\u00fcr Sorge tragen, dass EU und G8 auf die Vorschl\u00e4ge der Commision for Africa reagieren? Inwieweit k\u00f6nnen wir auf unsere Vorg\u00e4nger zur\u00fcckblicken, um von ihnen zu lernen, wie man nicht Europa dazu dr\u00e4ngt 'etwas zu machen', sondern den Afrikanern eine bessere Chance gibt, sich selbst zu helfen? Inwieweit k\u00f6nnten unsere eigenen Analysen der afrikanischen Gesellschaften, \u00d6konomien und Politiken besser auf die Beantwortung der Fragen ausgerichtet werden, wie afrikanische Kr\u00e4fte lokale und globale Strukturen von Ungleichheit, Ungerechtigkeit und schlechtes Regieren bek\u00e4mpfen k\u00f6nnten? Und schlussendlich, wie k\u00f6nnen wir unseren afrikanischen Akademikerkollegen am besten dabei behilflich sein, dass sie zu Quellen von konstruktiver, interner Kritik werden? \/\/\/ Pourquoi la plupart des Europ\u00e9ens voient-ils l'Afrique comme une pauvre victime irresponsable, et 'l'Ouest' comme un service de secours ? \u00c0 quel point les africanistes sont-ils responsables de cette fausse perception? Comment pouvonsnous veiller \u00e0 ce que l'UE et le G8 r\u00e9agissent aux propositions publi\u00e9es par la Commission for Africa ? Dans quelle mesure pouvons-nous tirer des le\u00e7ons de nos pr\u00e9d\u00e9cesseurs non pas pour presser l'Europe '\u00e0 faire quelque chose', mais pour que les Africains aient la possibilit\u00e9 de s'aider eux-m\u00eame ? Jusqu'\u00e0 quel point nos propres analyses des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s, \u00e9conomies et politiques africaines peuvent-elles \u00eatre mieux adapt\u00e9es pour \u00eatre \u00e0 m\u00eame d'expliquer comment les pouvoirs africains pourraient combattre les structures locales et globales de l'in\u00e9galit\u00e9, de l'iniquit\u00e9 et du mauvais gouvernement? Et finalement, comment pouvons-nous aider nos coll\u00e8gues africains \u00e0 devenir des sources de critique interne et constructive?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Bernard"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjk1v.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781846319433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4bcaeda-1e90-3d87-b204-597441000395"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5vjk1v.12"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetorics of Belonging","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"195","pageStart":"177","pagination":"177-195","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5vjk1v.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["palestinian","israeli","london","university","london routledge","palestine studies","postcolonial","london verso","hebrew","orly castel"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lesley Gill"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2503563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a54a140-902b-390f-bdea-957e899729ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2503563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Painted Faces: Conflict and Ambiguity in Domestic Servant-Employer Relations in La Paz, 1930-1988","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2503563","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Randall Styers"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00096407"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50586756"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237156"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"118739e0-adb7-35bb-948a-f3ff3abc7c7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20618795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"churchhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Church History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"854","pageStart":"849","pagination":"pp. 849-854","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"American Society of Church History","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Postcolonial Theory and the Study of Christian History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20618795","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":2692,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[31529,31611]],"Locations in B":[[5158,5240]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaun Irlam"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mariama B\u00e2's \"Une Si Longue Lettre\": The Vocation of Memory and the Space of Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820723","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Manzo"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7a5c7cb-58ad-3e29-8d53-7579bf3ab4cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Humanism: Postcolonialism and Postmodern Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644896","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11417,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[67088,67148]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVEN RATUVA"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvq4c0m7.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760463199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f312bf34-53db-3879-bcc0-8fb37b24582e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvq4c0m7.11"}],"isPartOf":"Contested Terrain","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"267","pagination":"267-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","History","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Earth sciences"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvq4c0m7.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["pacific","security","islands","human security","pacific islands","solomon","canberra","retrieved","fiji government","south pacific"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Hylland Eriksen","Finn Sivert Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183gzx9.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745333526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67e66244-53f6-3022-8b64-8b494c57d9f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt183gzx9.13"}],"isPartOf":"A History of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"166","pagination":"166-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"The End of Modernism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183gzx9.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"If every age has its ambience, that of the 1980s is unmistakable. The decade seems to roll in on us in a heavy cloud of AIDS, black leather, urban decay and crack. The sound of The Cure from a Walkman, drifting down the street, past the pale guy on the corner with his spikes and golden mohawk. Or watch the girls in tight pastels swooning to Michael Jackson and dancing till dawn \u2013 while the first clunky personal computers hit the home market, and the pale moon shines down on you from a sky that now contains ozone holes and","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["eriksen hoa3","anthropologists","postmodernism","geertz","gellner","postmodernists","fieldwork","discipline","cultural","ardener"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lamar L. Johnson","Johnnie Jackson","David O. Stovall","Denise Taliaferro Baszile"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966572"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235660"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0306b89-ce97-3128-90a4-25a077a5c569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Loving Blackness to Death\": (Re)Imagining ELA Classrooms in a Time of Racial Chaos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359464","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":4799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, the authors argue that the racial violence that unfolds against Black youth in various communities seeps into ELA classrooms. They contend educators must begin to reimagine ELA classrooms as revolutionary sites that disrupt racial injustice while striving to transform the world and humanize the lives of Black youth.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Alvarado Saggese","Christopher Patrick Miller","Emily O'Rourke","Genevieve Renard Painter"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cd60985-35f8-3094-aa6b-653f5c746e8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Essays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.22.1.0193","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":20445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Constantin Katsakioris"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26613028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174145640"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234556"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bdb5eb4-42bb-36a9-885c-b9fa931fb201"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26613028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"226 (2)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Creating a Socialist Intelligentsia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26613028","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":12469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[203056,203129]],"Locations in B":[[4754,4817]],"abstract":"This paper examines the history of the Soviet-African educational cooperation during the Cold War and focuses mainly on the training of African students at Soviet universities. It analyzes the ideas, aspirations and motives that governed the cooperation both in Africa and in the USSR. As regards the African side of the interaction, it draws a distinction between different actors, such as governments, opposition parties, national liberation movements and student organizations. Contrary to many assumptions and stereotypes, the paper downplays the importance of Marxist-Leninist indoctrination. It argues that the training programmes aimed to educate, not only \"friends\" of the Soviet Union, but notably qualified specialists who would both embody and defend the superiority of socialism and of the Soviet university system. By the end of the 1960s, most African governments had managed to impose their control over and their own criteria for the selection of students. This made Soviet aid even more attractive. The conclusion traces the impact of Soviet aid on Africa. The Appendix provides new data on African students in the USSR, on returning students, as well as suggestive comparative data on African students in major host countries. L'article examine l'histoire de la coop\u00e9ration \u00e9ducative entre l'URSS et l'Afrique pendant la Guerre froide, se concentre sur la formation des cadres africains dans les universit\u00e9s sovi\u00e9tiques, et analyse les id\u00e9es, les aspirations et les motivations qui orientaient la coop\u00e9ration aussi bien en Afrique qu'en URSS. Loin de tout monolithisme, il distingue du c\u00f4t\u00e9 africain, les diff\u00e9rents acteurs : gouvernements, partis d'opposition, mouvements de lib\u00e9ration nationale et organisations \u00e9tudiantes. Et du c\u00f4t\u00e9 de l'URSS, \u00e0 l'encontre des st\u00e9r\u00e9otypes, il d\u00e9dramatise l'importance de l'endoctrinement marxiste-l\u00e9niniste ; l'objectif des formations n'\u00e9tait en effet pas seulement de faire des \u00e9tudiants des \u00ab amis \u00bb de l'URSS, mais aussi de former de bons sp\u00e9cialistes qui d\u00e9fendraient et surtout prouveraient gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 leurs connaissances la sup\u00e9riorit\u00e9 du socialisme et de l'universit\u00e9 sovi\u00e9tique. Vers la fin des ann\u00e9es 1960, la plupart des gouvernements africains avaient r\u00e9ussi \u00e0 imposer leur contr\u00f4le et leurs crit\u00e8res sur la s\u00e9lection des \u00e9tudiants, ce qui rendit l'aide de l'URSS encore plus attractive. La conclusion \u00e9voque l'impact de l'aide sovi\u00e9tique en Afrique, notamment sur la formation des \u00e9lites. En annexe, des donn\u00e9es in\u00e9dites sur les effectifs des \u00e9tudiants africains form\u00e9s en URSS selon le pays d'origine, sur le retour des dipl\u00f4m\u00e9s dans leur pays, ainsi que des donn\u00e9es comparatives sur les \u00e9tudiants africains dans les plus grands pays d'accueil.","subTitle":"Soviet Educational Aid and its Impact on Africa (1960-1991)","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Block"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dad4c1d1-d865-3354-8356-44913097cadc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1150","pageStart":"1149","pagination":"pp. 1149-1150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231343","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Jayne Kimmel"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671618","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"895b68b4-500b-360c-b657-34932f338f5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Remembering Le premier festival culturel panafricain d\u2019Alger 1969<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671618","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This assembled interview centers both Elaine Mokhtefi and Le premier festival culturel panafricain d\u2019Alger 1969 (PANAF), a festival which she organized and attended as a part of the Algerian Ministry of Information, noting it as an exemplary instance of the power of performance at the nexus of political ideology, activist history, and the subsequent nostalgia for that era of liberation. It is equally an attempt to overcome a distant relationship to each, reflecting on the potential of oral histories to open up new pathways through the past. This history\u2014of entangled international relations negotiated under the guise of a festive performance, a complicated trajectory of global politics which culminated in a remarkable event of celebration and solidarity\u2014remains understudied, a footnote to more \"political\" concerns of Third World agendas, decolonial reorderings, and capitalist critiques. Yet through Mokhtefi's testimony, interwoven with searching tendrils of archival detail, we can see that this festival was not a superficial exaltation in extravagance, but a pivotal moment in foreign affairs. More importantly, through her personal history, we can trace the central role that women played in these politics, if often unacknowledged. Edited in 2020, it also counters the pejorative label of non-essential labor applied to most cultural activities during the contemporary pandemic response to COVID-19.","subTitle":"An Assembled Interview","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Urs Jaeggi"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26549637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212224"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6d98d0f-b69c-370a-8e36-1ceae5406755"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26549637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"554","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-554","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Here and There","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26549637","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":4309,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"Art, compared to all the sciences, is still an open field. No one really needs art, but--and this is the crazy thing--there has been an intense art-like work for as long as there have been people. A mysterious impulse, indeed, to make something that ostensibly no one needs in order to live and survive, and yet it arises from an urgent need.\"","subTitle":"Reflections on Postcolonial Art and Society","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James J. Cooke"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45137162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03627055"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607810067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1fe42409-45ad-38af-a494-658664d8c2f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45137162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmeetfchs"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"COLONIAL PROPAGANDA AND LEGISLATION, 1880-1920","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45137162","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[29381,29452]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marlene L. Daut"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.1.35","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32deedf9-2b93-3f33-a40e-73f3f0522c8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.1.35"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"From Classical French Poet to Militant Haitian Statesman: The Early Years and Poetry of the Baron de Vastey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.1.35","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":13234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article reconsiders the Baron de Vastey's \u0153\u0153uvre in light of new information that proves that he led a vibrant career as a classical French poet in metropolitan France before becoming a Haitian statesman. Because little is known about Vastey's childhood and adolescence, few scholars are aware that before he became perhaps the most well-known statesman of postindependence Haiti, he was a classical French poet who espoused peaceful sentiments, but uttered nary a word about the problems of colonialism and slavery. As a result of the very existence of these poems, literary critics and historians of the Black Atlantic will no doubt have to reconsider their assessments of the poet turned statesman whom the French Revolution taught to consider violence as an awful bourgeois indulgence, but for whom the Haitian Revolution was considered to be the only protection against the tyranny of colonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Hurst"],"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2093577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc9dc8b4-7b3e-3799-bb19-104e10cb558b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2093577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"658","pagination":"pp. 658-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Race, Class, and Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2093577","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Past studies reveal weakness in their analyses of class and race consciousness. They fail, for example, to separate out the effects of race and class on components of race and class consciousness. This study discusses the roles of class and race in developing class and race consciousness and interest in politics. It emphasizes the need to clarify the roles of race and class as well as those of age and size of birthplace in each type of consciousness. The main findings show that race and class are sometimes differently related to these dimensions, and suggest that the colony model of American society for which race is decisive is more complete than the class model of race relations, although both are similar.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Garner"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19358644"},{"name":"oclc","value":"82470510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214183"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25594976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racethmulglocon"}],"isPartOf":"Race\/Ethnicity: Multidisciplinary Global Contexts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The European Union and the Racialization of Immigration, 1985-2006","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594976","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":12201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Over the past two decades, the European Union (EU) has played an increasingly influential role in the construction of a de facto common immigration and asylum policy, providing a forum for policy-formulation beyond the scrutiny of national parliaments. The guiding principles of this policy include linking the immigration portfolio to security rather than justice; reaffirming the importance of political, conceptual, and organizational borders; and attempting to transfer policing and processing functions to non-EU countries. While these decisions appear neutral, I argue that structural racialization of immigration occurs across the various processes and escapes the focus of much academic scrutiny. Exploring this phenomenon through the concept of the \"racial state,\" I examine ways to understand the operations of immigration policy-making at the inter-governmental level, giving particular attention to the ways in which asylum-seekers emerge as a newly racialized group who are both stripped of their rights in the global context and deployed as Others in the construction of national narratives.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Erotics of Aryanism\/Histories of Empire: How \"White Supremacy\" and \"Hellenomania\" Construct \"Discourses of Sexuality\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949873","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank B. Wilderson III"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cc36c4f-0e81-3472-83c5-8b22ed3e696e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"2 (92)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Prison Slave as Hegemony's (Silent) Scandal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768181","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4769,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[29554,29600]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Desmond King"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c169efdd-f04c-32cb-a517-381b1819da3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44483148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When an Empire is not an Empire: The US Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483148","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":13804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony D. King"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"554","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-554","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing Colonial Space. A Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179219","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josef Gugler"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a86d354-818b-343b-8f0b-f8ce483b7456"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"African Writing Projected onto the Screen: Sambizanga, Xala, and Kongi's Harvest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525529","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Trois films servent ici \u00e0 examiner l'adaptation \u00e0 l'\u00e9cran d'un texte de fiction. Le texte et l'\u00e9cran ont des exigences diff\u00e9rentes, mais il y a aussi souvent un changement de public vis\u00e9 par le texte \u00e9crit et le film, comme c'est le cas ici de Xala et de Kongi's Harvest. Ni un tel changement de public, ni le niveau de financement n'ont de rapport avec la grande diff\u00e9rence de qualit\u00e9 et de succ\u00e8s entre ces trois films. Par contre la comparaison entre ces films renvoie \u00e0 des contraintes communes au cin\u00e9ma: la formation et l'exp\u00e9rience du metteur en sc\u00e8ne et aussi le rapport entre le metteur en sc\u00e8ne et les producteurs. En outre elle soul\u00e8ve deux probl\u00e8mes sp\u00e9cifiques \u00e0 l'adaptation d'un roman ou d'une pi\u00e8ce de th\u00e9\u00e2tre \u00e0 l'\u00e9cran. Notons d'abord que la transformation de textes si divers est plus ou moins ais\u00e9e. Et il existe aussi le risque que le texte finisse par dominer l'image, soit \u00e0 cause du prestige de l'auteur, soit \u00e0 cause des rapports entre celui-ci et le metteur en sc\u00e8ne. Three films serve to explore the metamorphosis involved in translating written fiction onto the screen. Text and screen have different requirements, but there is often also a change in intended audience between written fiction and film-as demonstrated here in the cases of Xala and Kongi's Harvest. Neither such change in intended audience nor the level of funding bears a relationship to the striking difference in the quality and the success of the three films examined in this essay. The comparison among these films instead raises issues that affect all film making: the director's training and experience, and the relationship between the director and the producers. The comparison furthermore suggests two issues that are specific to the transformation of a novel or play to the screen. There is first of all the relative ease or difficulty of transforming very different texts. And there is the risk that the text may come to dominate the picture because of its stature or because of the relationship between author and director.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Biko Agozino"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76d83c15-0a60-3ccb-ac2e-5d615ab7c4fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24858559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"140","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Africana paradigm in Capital: the debts of Karl Marx to people of African descent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858559","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article will attempt an original interpretation of Capital (Marx, K. 1867. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. 1. Marx\/Engels Internet Archive, 1995, 1999. http:\/\/ www.marxists.org\/archive\/marx) and other major works of Karl Marx to demonstrate that people of African descent are central to the discourse of Marx, contrary to widespread misconceptions by critics who attribute a Eurocentric orientation to Marx because of the accident of his birth in Europe and by allies because of his scholarly activism in European working-class politics. The paper argues that the earlier work of Marx and Engels ([1847] 1969. The Manifesto of the Communist Party in Marx\/Engels Selected Works, Vol. One, pp. 98\u2013137. Moscow: Progress Publishers), especially the Manifesto of the Communist Party, may have misled critics into believing that the history of all hitherto existing society alluded to by Marx and Engels was exclusively European history. On the contrary, there are hundreds of references to the 'Negro' in Capital, not as part of a peripheral or superficial concern relating to the issue of class exploitation in Europe, but as a foundational model for explaining and predicting the ending of the exploitation of the working class globally. The paper concludes that this reading adds credence to Africana Studies paradigms that privilege critical, Africa-centred scholar-activism as an important contribution to original theoretical, methodological and policy innovations. Cet article va tenter une interpr\u00e9tation originale du Capital ((Marx, K. 1867. Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. 1. Marx\/Engels Internet Archive, 1995, 1999. http:\/\/www.marxists.org\/archive\/marx) et d'autres travaux majeurs de Marx pour montrer que les populations d'origine africaine sont tr\u00e8s importantes dans le discours de Karl Marx, contrairement aux id\u00e9es fausses largement r\u00e9pandues par les d\u00e9tracteurs de Marx, qui lui attribuent une orientation euro-centr\u00e9e en raison du hasard de sa naissance en Europe et, par extension, en raison de son activisme intellectuel dans les politiques des classes ouvri\u00e8res europ\u00e9ennes. L'article soutient que le travail ant\u00e9rieur de Marx et d'Engels ([1847] 1969. The Manifesto of the Communist Party in Marx\/Engels Selected Works, Vol. One, pp. 98\u2013137. Moscow: Progress Publishers), en particulier le Manifeste du parti communiste, pourrait avoir induit en erreur les d\u00e9tracteurs de Marx et leur avoir fait croire que l'histoire de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 existante jusqu'\u00e0 pr\u00e9sent, \u00e0 laquelle font allusion Marx et Engels, \u00e9tait exclusivement europ\u00e9enne. Au contraire, il y a plusieurs centaines de r\u00e9f\u00e9rences au \u00ab n\u00e8gre \u00bb dans Le Capital, non dans le cadre d'un int\u00e9r\u00eat mineur ou superficiel li\u00e9 \u00e0 la question de l'exploitation des classes en Europe, mais dans le cadre d'un mod\u00e8le fondamental pour expliquer et pr\u00e9voir la fin de l'exploitation de la classe ouvri\u00e8re au niveau mondial. L'article conclut que cette lecture ajoute du cr\u00e9dit aux paradigmes des \u00c9tudes africaines qui privil\u00e9gient l'activisme intellectuel critique, centr\u00e9 sur l'Afrique dans les bourses d'\u00e9tude, comme une contribution importante aux innovations originales th\u00e9oriques, m\u00e9thodologiques et politiques.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley J. Tambiah"],"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc9213f3-5b9b-31b1-b961-0344bfcc7eba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/645006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnic Conflict in the World Today","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/645006","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorothy Sterling"],"datePublished":"1969-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/811653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96b14e1e-477d-3882-888c-cdbefc199049"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/811653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"832","pageStart":"817","pagination":"pp. 817-832","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What's Black and White and Read All Over?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/811653","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric King Watts"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/philrhet.51.4.0441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318213"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42429544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn-99004676"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bca8eaf-c144-3470-ab74-de3bc94c24ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/philrhet.51.4.0441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrhet"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Rhetoric","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cZombies Are Real\u201d: Fantasies, Conspiracies, and the Post-truth Wars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/philrhet.51.4.0441","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":10848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article asserts that post-truth is the name we have assigned to a powerful repetitive mode of discourse that legitimizes conspiracies and anxieties regarding how blackened biothreat bodies will be unleashed upon society. Post-truth signifies a kind of excess and excessiveness wherein grammars of common sense making are overrun. Post-truth indexes a desire for gratuitous violence against norms of civil society\u2014indeed, against civil society itself. Post-truth is not a set of lies. It is a precondition for tribal war. The article sets forth post-truth as a disorienting and frightening \u201cdissemblage\u201d that is driven by fantasies of sovereignty, rituals of militarization, and the colonization of expertise. I outline the formal features of post-truth by examining a docudrama produced by the Discovery Channel called Zombie Preppers. In the end I speculate about how post-truth metastasizes in the social body as \u201cbrain damage.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James McCain"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35f5de9b-52bd-3d49-8198-76a32a6e9bde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Perceptions of Socialism in Post-Socialist Ghana: An Experimental Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523895","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Matthews"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7133a15-7359-3759-8587-d21c75c400d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"135","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on the Appropriate Use of Unjustly Conferred Privilege","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705255","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What ought beneficiaries of injustice to do with the privileges unjustly conferred upon them? This article examines how those who have been privileged as a consequence of injustice can best contribute to struggles for justice. In particular, I ask whether we ought to renounce privileges which have been unjustly conferred, or whether it may be better to use such privileges in ways that help bring about justice. The article engages in particular with feminist literature on the topic of privilege, building on arguments provided in this literature to argue that in many cases the best contribution the privileged can make to struggles for justice, is to use unjustly conferred privileges in a way that ultimately undermines the unjust systems and structures that conferred them. I tentatively outline some ways in which the privileged can develop the sensibilities which will allow them to use their privilege in this way.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre W. Orelus","Noam Chomsky"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5d8cf4d-7b02-3308-859f-65c69d1027a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Envisioning Social Justice: Noam Chomsky and Pierre Orelus in Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982201","volumeNumber":"458","wordCount":2731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CLAUDIA MILIAN"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n76g.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780820344355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f182152-c22f-339b-a542-68b7ca155dd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n76g.11"}],"isPartOf":"Latining America","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"259","pagination":"259-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WORKS CITED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n76g.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["james weldon","weldon johnson","university","durham duke","duke university","james weldon johnson","works cited","american","latino","beinecke rare"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toni Pressley-Sanon"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3f78cd1-637b-3121-97f4-abcdd8a1fc3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24894146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wounds Seen and Unseen: The Workings of Trauma in Raoul Peck's \"Haitian Corner\" and Edwidge Danticat's \"The Dew Breaker\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24894146","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luise White"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2782126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2733e693-84d1-3ba8-af1e-355756eea81c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2782126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1739","pageStart":"1737","pagination":"pp. 1737-1739","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2782126","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel A. Offiong"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40759686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ca8a7e4-40db-3e09-a7df-5a33b560cbaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40759686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE NIGERIAN NATIONAL BOURGEOISIE TO DEVELOPMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40759686","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7452,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[351250,351434]],"Locations in B":[[8114,8292]],"abstract":"Questo studio si ispira al modello delineato da Frantz Fanon circa il contributo delle borghesie africane alio sviluppo dei rispettivi paesi nelTera postcoloniale. Secondo Fanon, la borghesia africana, priva di forza e di anima, sa solo perpetuare il capitalismo dei padroni di ieri; \u00e1vida e vorace, questa borghesia \u00e8 il complice deU'imperialismo nel neocapitalismo contempor\u00e1neo ed \u00e8 quindi incapace di contribuir\u00e9 alio sviluppo delTAfrica. Pur ammettendo che il modello di Fanon presenta alome esagerazioni, \u00c3 Au tore di questa indagine ritiene che esso si adatti bene alTodierna Nigeria (indipendente dal 1960), paese che, a suo par\u00e8re, \u00e8 stato governato dalla borghesia locale come un'impresa privata e con tutti gli inconvenienti che caratterizzano le grandi imprese commercial!: corruzione, sprechi, lottizzazione del potere, nepotismo, clientelismo, ecc. Per TAutore non occorrono nuove leggi contro Timmoralit\u00e0, bastando decidersi ad applicare seriamente quelle gi\u00e0 esistenti in Nigeria. Cet essai s'inspire du mod\u00e8le dessin\u00e9 par Frantz Fanon quant \u00e0 la contribution des bourgeoisies africaines au d\u00e9veloppement de leurs pays respectifs dans l'\u00e2ge posteolonial. D'apr\u00e8s Fanon, la bourgeoisie africaine, d\u00e9nu\u00e9e de force et d'\u00e2me, ne fait que perp\u00e9tuer le capitalisme des ma\u00eetres d'hier; avide et vorace, cette bourgeoisie est le complice de l'imp\u00e9rialisme dans le n\u00e9ocolonialisme contemporain, \u00e9tant donc incapable de contribuer au d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique. Tout en admettant que le mod\u00e8le de Fanon pr\u00e9sente certains exc\u00e8s, l'Auteur de cette \u00e9tude estime qu'il s'adapte bien au Nigeria d'aujourd'hui (ind\u00e9pendant depuis 1960), pays qui, \u00e0 son avis, a \u00e9t\u00e9 gouvern\u00e9 par la bourgeoisie locale comme une entreprise priv\u00e9e et avec tous les inconv\u00e9nients qui caract\u00e9risent les grandes entreprises commerciales: corruption, gaspillages, lotissement du pouvoir, n\u00e9potisme, syst\u00e8me de client\u00e8les, etc. D'apr\u00e8s l'Auteur, il n'est pas n\u00e9cessaire de forger de nouvelles lois contre l'immoralit\u00e9; il suffirait d'appliquer s\u00e9rieusement celles qui existent d\u00e9j\u00e0 au Nigeria.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Staples"],"datePublished":"1975-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b81cd58f-89df-30a0-afcc-220915f0b5d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/274841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"White Racism, Black Crime, and American Justice: An Application of the Colonial Model to Explain Crime and Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274841","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4612,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61982,62050]],"Locations in B":[[21770,21838]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db9c850c-5f3f-3e07-a7e7-5b0f3f0f657f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"400","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157340","volumeNumber":"499","wordCount":12504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charif Quellel"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75eedf00-d6e3-38b8-86d8-ed4ca9a916a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Franz Fanon and Colonized Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185057","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara L. Gonzalez","Darren Modzelewski","Lee M. Panich","Tsim D. Schneider"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629413"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212072"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4139020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Archaeology for the Seventh Generation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139020","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rupert Emerson"],"datePublished":"1971-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2755376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030851X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670084"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2343d593-2731-3337-824b-9e78e7d55484"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2755376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Pacific Affairs, University of British Columbia","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Independence Nationalism in South and Southeast Asia: A Reconsideration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2755376","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xochitl Leyva","Jorge Alonso","R. A\u00edda Hern\u00e1ndez","Arturo Escobar","Axel K\u00f6hler","Aura Cumes","Rafael Sandoval","Shannon Speed","Mario Blaser","Esteban Krotz","Susana Pi\u00f1acu\u00e9","H\u00e9ctor Nahuelpan","Morna Macleod","Juan L\u00f3pez Intz\u00edn","Jaqolb\u2019e Lucrecia Garc\u00eda","Mariano B\u00e1ez","Graciela Bola\u00f1os","Eduardo Restrepo","Mar\u00eda Bertely","Abelardo Ramos","Sergio Mendiz\u00e1bal","Laura Mateos","Gunther Dietz","Juan Ricardo Aparicio","Joanne Rappaport","Mar\u00eda Patricia P\u00e9rez","Jenny Pearce","Luis Guillermo Vasco","Charles R. Hale","\u00c1ngela Ixkic Bastian","Jos\u00e9 Antonio Flores","Lina Rosa Berr\u00edo","Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Araya","Sabine Masson","Virginia Vargas","Hanna Laako","Mariana Mora","Gilberto Vald\u00e9s","Mar\u00eda Isabel Casas","Retos","Michal Osterweil","Jo\u00e3o Pacheco de oliveira","Dana E. Powell","Roc\u00edo Salcido","Marcio D\u2019Olne Campos","M\u00f3nica Gallegos","Mercedes Olivera","Rodrigo Montoya","Sylvia Marcos","Mar\u00eda Lugones","Walter Mignolo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96g1f.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba1531ca-f7a9-3a27-8ac2-7c8528509756"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvn96g1f.12"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e1cticas otras de conocimiento(s)","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"223","pagination":"223-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","American Indian Studies","Gender Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"En las fronteras del zapatismo con la academia:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96g1f.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En 1987, Gloria Anzald\u00faa plante\u00f3 el concepto de la frontera<\/em> (borderlands<\/em>) para describir una conciencia (mestiza) nacida de las culturas mexicanas y anglosajonas en la frontera entre los Estados Unidos y M\u00e9xico. Pero su conceptualizaci\u00f3n fue m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de una zona concreta pues concibi\u00f3 la frontera como una conciencia plural que precisa de m\u00faltiples entendimientos entre los conocimientos contradictorios que contiene y no del simple posicionamiento ante ellos. Para Anzald\u00faa, la conciencia de la frontera emerge del intento de observar las ambig\u00fcedades y las contradicciones, por lo que es simult\u00e1neamente una conciencia individual y colectiva, localizada en la teorizaci\u00f3n del","subTitle":"lugares de sombra, zonas inc\u00f3modas y conquistas inocentes","keyphrase":["pol\u00edtica mundial","movimiento zapatista","frontera","fronteras","ind\u00edgenas","academia","pueblos ind\u00edgenas","solidaridad","investigaci\u00f3n","sociedades civiles"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Gilmartin","Lawrence D. Berg"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Locating Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004594","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":3507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter C. W. Gutkind"],"datePublished":"1977-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20629754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388384"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213772"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fba6710-e9b9-35c4-9679-f8d8144f294c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20629754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The View from below: Political Consciousness of the Urban Poor in Ibadan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20629754","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":15377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael J. Monahan"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d112e735-5cbe-3750-9665-f8c22f81c3e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Creolizing History and Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752189","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":3769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"On the Subject of History in Jane Gordon's Creolizing Political Theory<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haytham Bahoora"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40e7bbfa-7152-3d20-869e-59ee1056cdce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43302997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"BAUDELAIRE IN BAGHDAD: MODERNISM, THE BODY, AND HUSAYN MARDAN'S POETICS OF THE SELF","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302997","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9744,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[328196,328313]],"Locations in B":[[34715,34832]],"abstract":"During a revolutionary period of cultural production and anticolonial political commitment in 1950s Baghdad, the modernist poet Husayn Mardan was put on trial for his \"obscene\" collection entitled Qasa\u02beid \u02bfAriya (Naked Poems). Heavily influenced by Baudelaire, Mardan's poetics provide a revolutionary paradigm focused on the gratification of the corporeal. This paper considers how Mardan's poetry, largely marginalized from the canonized modernist Arabic poetic tradition, registers resistance to an increasingly rationalized and bureaucratic social order through a transgressive poetics that displace the political onto the body. Lampooning social uprightness and middle-class sterility, Mardan's poems encourage sexual licentiousness, embrace the space of the brothel, and celebrate filth and germs. Through a consideration of Mardan's appropriation of Baudelaire, this essay theorizes the translation and transformation of Baudelaire's paradigmatic literary representations of modernity into the context of a modernizing Baghdad and therefore historicizes the appearance of modernist aesthetics in a non-European space.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EARL McKENZIE"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f2dbab6-fc53-3bcb-b8ae-7bf80b49e029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23050492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy: A View from the Canepiece","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050492","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":4563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mongane Wally Serote","Oswald Mtshali","Romanus Egudu","Pol Ndu"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46c5aafb-3c43-3731-a771-f8de014fd303"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Panel on Contemporary South African Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166568","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. L. Nwafo Nwanko","Chinelo G. Nzelibe"],"datePublished":"1990-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"229a0c42-d2ed-3bc9-9329-75ac352cf7e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Communication and Conflict Management in African Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784482","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":4374,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Fry"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07479360"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44910652"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213665"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1511575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"designissues"}],"isPartOf":"Design Issues","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Geography of Power: Design History and Marginality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1511575","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Maxwell"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67c86bce-74b8-3db0-b940-58041bd508a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1581659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Durawall of Faith: Pentecostal Spirituality in Neo-Liberal Zimbabwe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581659","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper considers the nature of Pentecostal spirituality in contemporary Zimbabwe, taking as its case study Zimbabwe Assemblies of God, Africa (ZAOGA), one of the continent's largest and most vital Pentecostal movements. The analysis centres upon a lexicon of key words, phrases and narratives used in song, preaching, testimony and prayer. For example, there is a preponderance of images of security, including the 'durawall', the protective concrete fencing surrounding a factory or a suburban home. The paper demonstrates how Pentecostalism, as quintessential popular religion, is able both to satisfy deep existential passions and to aid those struggling for survival in the specific social conditions of neo-liberal Zimbabwe. While Pentecostalism helps create an acquisitive, flexible person better suited to coping with neo-liberalism's economic agenda, it rejects the neo-liberal cultural project. Instead Pentecostal communities provide believers with security in the face of state retrenchment, the capriciousness of global capitalism and growing levels of violence and crime. Pentecostal religion also offers hope to those suffering from a sense of personal abjection created by the shattered hopes of independence and the elusive promise of modernity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chester J. Fontenot, Jr."],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783759","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b14d0c1-95d2-3dfa-9c2e-ce4195e8a058"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783759"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fanon and the Devourers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783759","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Muthyala"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ea8a7d8-02cf-3bce-ac4c-5a4c191730ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"1261","pageStart":"1253","pagination":"pp. 1253-1261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Twilight of the Gods: Britain, America, and the Inheritance of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068340","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":3845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carine M. Mardorossian"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afac366c-e178-3e68-b4e8-094ae5dcdd54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3252040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Literature of Exile to Migrant Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3252040","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VINCENT L. WIMBUSH"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25ea5792-458f-3113-8d03-d8970a8eeaed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Interpreters\u2014Enslaving\/Enslaved\/Runagate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304184","volumeNumber":"130","wordCount":9120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gisela Carrasco Mir\u00f3"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26562630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11336595"},{"name":"oclc","value":"190707052"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008262203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b59cc87-4157-336c-a994-4e34203768bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26562630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revcidafeint"}],"isPartOf":"Revista CIDOB d'Afers Internacionals","issueNumber":"120","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"CIDOB","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Cooperaci\u00f3n trilateral Sur-Sur al desarrollo: por una descolonizaci\u00f3n de la solidaridad \/ Trilateral South-South cooperation for development: towards a decolonisation of solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26562630","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La cooperaci\u00f3n trilateral Sur-Sur al desarrollo (CTSS) ha generado un gran debate sobre si estas alianzas constituyen un nuevo paradigma para el desarrollo o solo son un disfraz para una nueva forma de imperialismo. M\u00e1s all\u00e1 de las categorizaciones, este art\u00edculo muestra una imagen m\u00e1s matizada y examina el enfoque de solidaridad de la CTSS, esto es, la naturaleza intr\u00ednsecamente pol\u00edtica del desarrollo y las relaciones de poder desiguales presentes en su seno. A partir del Memorando de Entendimiento (MdE) de CTSS entre Brasil, Mozambique y el Banco Mundial, se analizan las narrativas del desarrollo agr\u00edcola y los imaginarios sociales que lo sustentan, a fin de comprender mejor los patrones y motivaciones de solidaridad. Al constatar la l\u00f3gica colonial, capitalista y patriarcal que se mantiene en el concepto de solidaridad utilizado en el marco actual de desarrollo, este art\u00edculo sugiere descolonizar dicho concepto. Trilateral South-South Cooperation (TSSC) for development has generated great debate over whether these alliances constitute a new paradigm for development or merely disguise a new form of imperialism. Beyond categorisations, this paper presents a more nuanced image and examines the focus of TSSC solidarity, specifically, the intrinsically political nature of development and the unequal power relations at its heart. Starting with the TSSC memorandum of understanding (MoU) between Brazil, Mozambique and the World Bank, the narratives are analysed of agricultural development and the social imaginaries that support it in order to better understand the patterns and motivations of solidarity. By showing the colonial, capitalist and patriarchal rationale that persists in the conception of solidarity used in the current development framework, this paper proposes the decolonisation of this concept.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["COLUMBA PEOPLES"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae85869-6e43-3775-85db-5e0a836d2e40"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23025413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"1135","pageStart":"1113","pagination":"pp. 1113-1135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Security after emancipation? Critical Theory, violence and resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23025413","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Within the current configuration of Critical Security Studies (CSS) the concept of 'emancipation' is upheld as the keystone of a commitment to transformative change in world politics, but comparatively little is said on the status of violence and resistance within that commitment. As a means of highlighting this relative silence, this article examines the nature of the connection between CSS and the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School. In particular it disinters the reflections of Herbert Marcuse on the connections between emancipatory change, violence and resistance as a means of interrogating and challenging the definition of 'security as emancipation'. Doing so, it is argued, points towards some of the potential limitations of equating security and emancipation, and provides a provocation of contemporary CSS from within its own cited intellectual and normative foundations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Quarles"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da951fe7-b4df-36ab-bd4d-b6255788415f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Black History Unbound","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024210","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":9035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J. Sefa Dei"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3445460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208566"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5fe6722-458a-3a70-9a25-fb6fe755183a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3445460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevieducinte"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Education \/ Internationale Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Erziehungswissenschaft \/ Revue Internationale de l'Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"360","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-360","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Learning Culture, Spirituality and Local Knowledge: Implications for African Schooling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3445460","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":12952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Using a Ghanaian case study, this paper looks at the relevance and implications of local knowledge, culture and spirituality for understanding and implementing educational change in Africa. It examines how teachers, educators, and students use local cultural knowledge about self, personhood and community. Among the critical issues raised are: How do subjects understand the nature, impact and implications of spirituality for schooling and education? What is the role of spirituality, culture, language and social politics in knowledge production? What contribution does the local cultural knowledge base make to the search for genuine educational options in Africa? \/\/\/ Am Beispiel einer ghanaischen Fallstudie betrachtet der Autor dieses Artikels die Relevanz und Auswirkung lokalen Wissens, Kultur und Spiritualit\u00e4t auf das Verst\u00e4ndnis und die Einf\u00fchrung eines Wandels im Bildungswesen. Er untersucht, in wie weit Lehrer, Erzieher und Sch\u00fcler lokales kulturelles Wissen \u00fcber ihr Selbst, ihre Pers\u00f6nlichkeit und die Gemeinde anwenden. Zu den kritischen angesprochenen Themen geh\u00f6ren: Wie verstehen Individuen die Natur, den Einfluss und die Auswirkungen von Spiritualit\u00e4t auf das Schulwesen und die Bildung? Wie sieht die Rolle der Spiritualit\u00e4t, Kultur, Sprache und Sozialpolitik bei der Produktion von Wissen aus? Wie tr\u00e4gt die lokale kulturelle Wissensbasis zur Suche nach wahren Bildungsoptionen in Afrika bei? \/\/\/ \u00c0 l'appui d'une \u00e9tude de cas effectu\u00e9e au Ghana, l'auteur examine la port\u00e9e et les implications du savoir traditionnel, de la culture et de la spiritualit\u00e9 sur la conception et la mise en oeuvre d'une r\u00e9forme \u00e9ducative en Afrique. Il \u00e9tudie la fa\u00e7on dont enseignants, \u00e9ducateurs et \u00e9coliers utilisent le savoir culturel local relatif \u00e0 l'individu, la personnalit\u00e9 et la communaut\u00e9. Il pose des questions fondamentales telles que: Comment les sujets con\u00e7oivent-ils la nature, l'impact et les cons\u00e9quences de la spiritualit\u00e9 sur la scolarit\u00e9 et l'\u00e9ducation? Quel est le r\u00f4le de la spiritualit\u00e9, de la culture, de la langue et de la politique sociale dans la production de connaissances? Quelle contribution le savoir culturel local apporte-t-il \u00e0 la recherche de v\u00e9ritables options \u00e9ducatives en Afrique \/\/\/ Sobre la base de un estudio casu\u00edstico, este art\u00edculo se ocupa de la relevancia e implicaciones que tienen el conocimiento local, la cultura y la espiritualidad para la comprensi\u00f3n e implementaci\u00f3n de una nueva educaci\u00f3n en Africa. Examina c\u00f3mo los docentes, educadores y alumnos usan el conocimiento local para definirse a s\u00ed mismos, su calidad de seres humanos y la comunidad. Entre otras, han surgido al respecto los siguientes interrogantes: \u00bfC\u00f3mo entienden las personas la naturaleza, el impacto y las implicaciones que tiene la espiritualidad para la educaci\u00f3n? \u00bfCu\u00e1l es el papel que juega la espiritualidad, la cultura, el lenguaje y la pol\u00edtica social en la producci\u00f3n del conocimiento? \u00bfCu\u00e1l es el aporte que brinda la base del conocimiento cultural local a la b\u00fasqueda de opciones de educaci\u00f3n genuinas en \u00c1frica. \/\/\/ \u0418\u0441\u043f\u043e\u043b\u044c\u0437\u0443\u044f \u0434\u0430\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0433\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0438\u0441\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f, \u0432 \u0434\u0430\u043d\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0435 \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0441\u043c\u0430\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0432\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0440\u043e\u043b\u044c \u0438 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u0441\u0442\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0439, \u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u044b \u0438 \u0434\u0443\u0445\u043e\u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0434\u043b\u044f \u043f\u043e\u043d\u0438\u043c\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438 \u043e\u0441\u0443\u0449\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u0430 \u0432 \u0410\u0444\u0440\u0438\u043a\u0435. \u0412 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0442\u044c\u0435 \u0438\u0441\u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u0443\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f. \u043a\u0430\u043a \u043f\u0440\u0435\u043f\u043e\u0434\u0430\u0432\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u0438, \u0432\u043e\u0441\u043f\u0438\u0442\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u0438 \u0438 \u0441\u0442\u0443\u0434\u0435\u043d\u0442\u044b \u0438\u0441\u043f\u043e\u043b\u044c\u0437\u0443\u044e\u0442 \u043c\u0435\u0441\u0442\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043e \u0441\u0435\u0431\u0435, \u043b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0438 \u0441\u043e\u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0432\u0435. \u041a\u0440\u0438\u0442\u0438\u0441\u043e\u0439 \u0431\u044b\u043b\u0438 \u0437\u0430\u0442\u0440\u043e\u043d\u0443\u0442\u044b \u0441\u043b\u0435\u0434\u0443\u044e\u0449\u0438\u0435 \u0432\u043e\u043f\u0440\u043e\u0441\u044b: \u041a\u0430\u043a \u043f\u043e\u043d\u0438\u043c\u0430\u0435\u0442\u0441\u044f \u0432 \u043f\u0440\u0435\u0434\u043c\u0435\u0442\u0430\u0445 \u043f\u0440\u0438\u0440\u043e\u0434\u0430, \u0432\u043b\u0438\u044f\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0438 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0434\u0443\u0445\u043e\u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438 \u0434\u043b\u044f \u043e\u0431\u0443\u0447\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438 \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044f? \u041a\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0432\u0430 \u0440\u043e\u043b\u044c \u0434\u0443\u0445\u043e\u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0438, \u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u044b. \u044f\u0437\u044b\u043a\u0430 \u0438 \u0441\u043e\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u043f\u043e\u043b\u0438\u0442\u0438\u043a\u0438 \u0432 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u0435 \u043f\u0440\u0438\u043e\u0431\u0440\u0435\u0442\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0437\u043d\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0439? \u041a\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0432\u043a\u043b\u0430\u0434 \u0432\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0438\u0442 \u0431\u0430\u0437\u0430 \u0437\u043d\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u043e \u043c\u0435\u0441\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0439 \u043a\u0443\u043b\u044c\u0442\u0443\u0440\u0435 \u0434\u043b\u044f \u043e\u043f\u0440\u0435\u0434\u0435\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u0438\u0441\u0442\u0438\u043d\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u043e\u0431\u0440\u0430\u0437\u043e\u0432\u0430\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0432\u043e\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0435\u0439 \u0432 \u0410\u0444\u0440\u0438\u043a\u0435?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beverly Jones"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17487331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcfaf07d-9d5b-3b63-8b3e-7aa78b8b7e72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1557941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"leonsuppissu"}],"isPartOf":"Leonardo. Supplemental Issue","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Computer Imagery: Imitation and Representation of Realities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1557941","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contemporary theory in philosophy, aesthetics and cognitive\/social sciences stresses the embedment of cultural and historical conventions in art and technology. Computer imagery for aesthetic\/artistic or technical\/scientific purposes have these conventions embedded in them and consequently reflect larger models of humanly constructed cultural reality. Careful analyses of the form, content and practice of computer graphics are proposed to reveal views of reality embedded in technology and in models generated by the technology.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shahnaz Khan"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"410c364f-6bef-3ab2-b6c2-1078a5cb83fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"494","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Muslim Women: Negotiations in the Third Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175099","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08992851"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1672fd87-c72d-38d6-923d-05ce434a8d12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3012986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middleeastreport"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Report","issueNumber":"178","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Orientalizing America: Beginnings and Middle Passages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012986","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Meisenhelder"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d91caf28-0e48-3d35-93ed-ca2c33eb5c20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41675090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"African Bodies: \"Othering\" the African in Precolonial Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41675090","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper attempts a \"genealogical\" analysis of European precolonial constructions of the African \"other\". My focus is on the early formation of the European discursive regime concerning the \"African,\" a symbolic framework that still haunts what is said and thought about Africans by Europeans and North Americans. An cautionary introductory note may be necessary to avoid any possible confusion: my subject is not subSaharan or non Arabic Africans, but early European imaginings of them; not African reality, but the European imagination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ray H. Elling"],"datePublished":"1977-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29771072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00469580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623589"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-264647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52ace748-67af-377d-8d22-9808cd1986c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29771072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29771072","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":1459,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan A. Reed"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e699ddc4-6ccc-3b70-8def-71128b85a243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Respectability: The Berav\u0101, Middle-Class Nationalism, and the Classicization of Kandyan Dance in Sri Lanka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656629","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":16314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane E. Goodman"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cae162be-ad93-3e59-9150-f7cf3b2d919d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3567143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"793","pageStart":"782","pagination":"pp. 782-793","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Proverbial Bourdieu: Habitus and the Politics of Representation in the Ethnography of Kabylia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567143","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":11564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the 1970s, anthropologists have been centrally concerned with the relationship of ethnographic representation to political and historical context. Interestingly, the work of Pierre Bourdieu has largely escaped such contextualization, despite the significance of Bourdieu's ideas to anthropological theorizing. Today, many of Bourdieu's central concepts float free from the context out of which they arose--the Kabyle region of Algeria. This article addresses this omission by reading Bourdieu's early works against each other to reconstitute aspects of his methodology and fieldwork. Focusing on his choice to represent the Kabyles of his early work in prose, and those in his later work via proverbs, I suggest that key premises of Bourdieu's theory may not be supported by historical and ethnographic evidence. I consider how Bourdieu's position as a young social scientist grappling with ethnographic responsibilities in colonial wartime led him to privilege his interlocutors' accounts in some studies while expunging them from others.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Delgado"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af1eb6f9-c10d-3919-a13e-4e6593a0ba62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3480789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rodrigo's Third Chronicle: Care, Competition, and the Redemptive Tragedy of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3480789","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":14640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.42.1.166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcc73831-0f46-3053-b1e1-6d5f6f0a3641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.42.1.166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Infiltrated Intimacies: The Case of Palestinian Returnees","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.42.1.166","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10389,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126857,127124]],"Locations in B":[[15869,16136]],"abstract":"This essay examines Palestinian women\u2019s struggles following the 1948 Nakba, when many challenged their uprooting by attempting to return back to their homes and land. Analyzing women\u2019s narratives recounting their experiences from 1948 to 1953 within the context of the settler-colonial regime of control, the essay reveals Israel\u2019s criminalization of the return of Palestinian refugees as acts of \u201cinfiltration,\u201d and the unspoken gendered history of trauma that infiltrates the intimate space of women\u2019s families, bodies, and lives. By sharing women\u2019s voices and their embodied memories about childbirth, menstruation, intimate family life, their homes, and domestic life, the article works to provide gender analyses of the political work of suffering, to demonstrate how women were uniquely targeted and affected by such criminalization. Unmasking the political history of trauma and suffering and borrowing meanings from women cast out as illegal by the Israeli state, positions women returnees as frontliners against the political illegality and criminalization of settler colonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Viviene Taylor"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44257346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00103802"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"833c24e1-9aa4-3a6e-8bbd-c6cf53553617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44257346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"commdevej"}],"isPartOf":"Community Development Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Trajectory of National Liberation and Social Movements: The South African Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44257346","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The template of South Africa's experiences of organising mass mobilisation against apartheid, national domination and racial capitalism informs current social relations and the type of transformation underway. Key in the restructuring process is the role of mass democratic organisations and agents of social change in enabling people who have been historically excluded from mainstream social, economic and political activity to engage in participatory planning in development. Consequently, this article offers a critical reflection on past experiences of South Africa's mass democratic struggles in order to provide pointers on how people on the ground were involved in the past and what might catalyse joint action today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Amsler"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"249d6724-ec83-3db8-a846-7bcedd4b7910"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44016766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1007","pageStart":"1005","pagination":"pp. 1005-1007","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016766","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JoAnn Pavletich","Margot Gayle Backus"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a8dca62-3464-3e8f-b3d6-f3d1dc9b8356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"27","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"With His Pistol in Her Hand: Rearticulating the Corrido Narrative in Helena Mar\u00eda Viramontes' \"Neighbors\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354480","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ervin Beck"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2337ed68-1ff0-3664-ae55-3a26cc01e611"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"855","pagination":"pp. 855-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"POSTCOLONIAL COMPLEXITY IN THE WRITINGS OF RUDY WIEBE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286500","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Bernasconi"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ae9925e-eb21-3bcc-9909-66c0841ccff3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon's \"The Wretched of the Earth\" as the Fulfillment of Sartre's \"Critique of Dialectical Reason\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511098","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":5119,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[449242,449376]],"Locations in B":[[3020,3154]],"abstract":"Frantz Fanon was an enthusiastic reader of Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason and in this essay I focus on what can be gleaned from The Wretched of the Earth about how he read it. I argue that the reputation among Sartre's critics of the Critique as a failure on the grounds that it was left incomplete should take into account its presence in Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth. Their shared perspectives on the systemic character of racism and colonialism, on the genesis and fragility of groups, and on parties indicates the vitality of the ideas set out in the Critique. However, these similarities between the two thinkers are offset by their differences on national consciousness and on the rural masses. I end by speculating about a certain defence on Sartre's part toward Fanon's concrete experience.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mercedes Gonz\u00e1lez de la Rocha","Janice Perlman","Helen Safa","Elizabeth Jelin","Bryan R. Roberts","Peter M. Ward"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1555388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91b72ac8-092e-3695-9cc3-71c084004b39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1555388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From the Marginality of the 1960s to the \"New Poverty\" of Today: A LARR Research Forum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1555388","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper derives from a LARR-sponsored forum at the LASA 2003 Congress held in Dallas in March 2003. Targeted at younger scholars, a panel of leading researchers whose early work was shaped by marginality and dependency thinking of the 1960s were invited to reflect cross-generationally about how paradigms analyzing poverty in Latin American cities have shifted from that time to the present. Specifically, each of the authors compares \"marginality\" as it was construed more than three decades ago with contemporary constructions of poverty and social organization arising from their more recent research. While there are important continuities, the authors concur that the so-called \"new poverty\" today is very different, being more structural, more segmented and, perhaps paradoxically, more exclusionary than before. Moreover, the shift from a largely patrimonialist and undemocratic state towards one that, while more democratic, is also slimmer and downsized, thereby shifting state intervention and welfare systems ever more to local level governments and to the quasi-private sector of nongovernmental organizations. If earlier marginality theory overemphasized the separation of the poor from the mainstream, today's new poverty is often embedded within structures of social exclusion that severely reduce opportunities for social mobility among the urban poor.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marina La Salle","Rich Hutchings"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26344931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07052006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637786"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5caa44f3-6299-32cc-8783-59aaf9902ca6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26344931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajarch"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Archaeology \/ Journal Canadien d'Arch\u00e9ologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Canadian Archaeological Association","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"What Makes Us Squirm\u2014A Critical Assessment of Community-Oriented Archaeology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26344931","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7954,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"We provide a critical response to Andrew Martindale and Natasha Lyons' 2014 special section on Community-Oriented Archaeology (Canadian Journal of Archaeology Volume 38, Issue 2), discussing the authors' definitions, interpretations, and motivations around archaeology and community. By not defining archaeology in terms of how it is most commonly practiced, we argue the collective work misses the mark, with serious consequences for descendent communities. We show how Community-Oriented Archaeology appropriates the challenge posed to archaeologists to make their discipline relevant and responsive to Indigenous communities; instead, the authors foreground archaeology itself and reaffirm the privilege of non-Indigenous archaeologists, especially academic archaeologists. By considering what is excluded and taken-for-granted, we examine the special section in terms of selection bias and revisionist history. We suggest Community-Oriented Archaeology co-opts aspects of Indigenous, critical, and radical discourses to legitimize the institution and practice, in the process forgetting what is at stake for Indigenous peoples. Rather than focusing on the needs of archaeology and archaeologists, we emphasize the interests of Indigenous communities and address uncomfortable truths about institutional racism and systemic inequality. As the editors had hoped, Community-Oriented Archaeology makes us \"squirm,\" but not for the reasons they intended. Nous offrons une r\u00e9ponse critique \u00e0 Andrew Martindale et Natasha Lyons sur leur section sp\u00e9ciale de 2014 concernant l'arch\u00e9ologie ax\u00e9e sur la communaut\u00e9 (Journal canadien d'arch\u00e9ologie volume 38, num\u00e9ro 2) en \u00e9valuant les d\u00e9finitions, interpr\u00e9tations et motivations des auteurs \u00e0 propos de l'arch\u00e9ologie et la notion de communaut\u00e9. En \u00e9vitant de d\u00e9finir l'arch\u00e9ologie par la fa\u00e7on dont elle est la plus souvent pratiqu\u00e9e, nous soutenons que le travail collectif manque la cible, non sans cons\u00e9quences pour les communaut\u00e9s descendantes autochtones. Nous d\u00e9montrons comment l'arch\u00e9ologie ax\u00e9e sur la communaut\u00e9 s'approprie le d\u00e9fi lanc\u00e9 aux arch\u00e9ologues de rendre leur discipline pertinente et sensible aux communaut\u00e9s autochtones; \u00e0 la place, les auteurs mettent \u00e0 l'avant-plan l'arch\u00e9ologie elle-m\u00eame et r\u00e9affirme le privil\u00e8ge des arch\u00e9ologues non-autochtones, particuli\u00e8rement des arch\u00e9ologues acad\u00e9miques. En consid\u00e9rant ce qui est exclus et pris pour acquis, nous examinons cette section sp\u00e9ciale sous les plans du biais en s\u00e9lection et d'histoire r\u00e9visionniste. Nous sugg\u00e9rons que l'arch\u00e9ologie ax\u00e9e sur la communaut\u00e9 combine des \u00e9l\u00e9ments de discours autochtones, critiques et radicaux pour l\u00e9gitimer l'institution et sa pratique, en oubliant dans le processus ce qui est en jeu pour les peuples autochtones. Plut\u00f4t que de se concentrer sur les besoins de l'arch\u00e9ologie et des arch\u00e9ologues, nous mettons l'emphase sur les communaut\u00e9s autochtones et adressons les inconfortables v\u00e9rit\u00e9s sur le racisme institutionnel et l'in\u00e9galit\u00e9 syst\u00e9mique. Comme les \u00e9diteurs l'avaient esp\u00e9r\u00e9, l'arch\u00e9ologie ax\u00e9e sur la communaut\u00e9 nous met dans l'embarras, mais pas pour les raisons dont ils en avaient l'intention.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam Raditlhalo"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"960a0d7d-edac-35df-bd27-2007ff06fe35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40239049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beggars' Description: 'Xala,' the Prophetic Voice and the Post-Independent African State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239049","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jo\u00e3o Biehl","Amy Moran-Thomas"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9786d31c-d09d-3697-a94f-6cd0006be474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20622653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Symptom: Subjectivities, Social Ills, Technologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20622653","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":13235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the domain of health, not only are the raw effects of economic, social, and medical inequalities continually devastating, but novel processes of reconfiguring illness experience, subjectivity, and control are also underway. Human relationships to medical technology are increasingly constituted outside the clinical encounter. In this article we explore how the domestic encroachment of medical commodities affects social bonds in both affluent and resource-poor contexts, as well as how these commodities become interwoven in the very fabric of symptoms and identities. Symptoms are more than contingent matters; they are, at times, a necessary condition for the afflicted to articulate a new relationship to the world and to others. In exploring how people conceptualize technological self-care, we are specifically concerned with disciplinary modes of evidence-making and ask the following: what are the posibilities and limitations of theoretical frameworks (such as structural violence, biopower, social suffering, and psychoanalysis) through which these conceptions are being analyzed in contemporary anthropological scholarship? What can the unique capacities of ethnography add to the task of capturing the active embroilment of reason, life, and ethics as human conditions are shaped and lost? The intellectual survival of anthropological theory, we argue, might well be connected to people's own resilience and bodily struggles for realities to come.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Godwyns Ade\u2019 Agbude","Ademola L. Lawal"],"datePublished":"2020-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2056564X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"924347354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a223978-f44e-30d8-abb2-94152af8fb03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriforeaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology and International Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976637","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An ideology serves as a tool for socioeconomic and political transformation in any polity. Global politics is littered with several political ideologies that serve as guides for several countries. The central place of ideology in governance has led some scholars to argue that no State can exist without an ideology, whether well-articulated by its leaders or not. Therefore, ideology is the bedrock of governance. This implies that the political ideology that guides a particular political community affects the relationship between citizens and their leaders. An ideology also determines and influences the foreign policy of a nation. Given the imperativeness of ideology, this paper discusses and elaborates on the several ideologies in play in global politics. However, special focus is placed on Africa given the dire need for socioeconomic and political transformation in the continent. This paper concludes that the African quest for development can only be realized when African leaders generate the right socioeconomic and political ideology that will enhance the status of the continent in international politics and transform Africans.","subTitle":"Finding a Place for Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman Kelvin"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3830230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"470","pagination":"pp. 470-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3830230","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":2173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Ellis"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8201d7cf-f6a7-3c05-ac69-bb555494bdae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20709031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Women, Culture and Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20709031","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":6323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Roache"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9877e38f-7125-3ac9-a4bb-336c70fd466e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3684067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"15","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"What Had Made Him and What He Meant:\" The Politics of Wholeness in \"How 'Bigger' Was Born\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3684067","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olabanji Akinola"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48598884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19392206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2f2dd25-c761-33e7-8318-3ca352fcfc1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48598884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrsec"}],"isPartOf":"African Security","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Boko Haram Insurgency in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48598884","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":13548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Boko Haram currently poses existential threats to the Nigerian state and its citizens. But defeating the group has proved very challenging for the Nigerian government. This is partly due to lack of understanding about the contributing factors relating to the emergence and continued existence of Boko Haram. Thus, this article examines how the interaction of Islamic fundamentalism, politics, and poverty explain the emergence and continued existence of Boko Haram in Nigeria. As a reflection of the hollowness within Nigeria\u2019s overall security architecture, the inability of Nigeria\u2019s security agencies to combat the current threats posed by Boko Haram is also analyzed.","subTitle":"Between Islamic Fundamentalism, Politics, and Poverty","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xuan Santos"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"557725e2-5c06-3911-89d9-679f8429219a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20628196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Chicana Canvas: Doing Class, Gender, Race, and Sexuality through Tattooing in East Los Angeles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20628196","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Inspired by the increased presence of tattoo parlors in East Los Angeles and the increasing numbers of their Chicana clients, this ethnography focuses on the changing world of tattooing in East Los Angeles. Findings are derived from a triangulated methodology: Participant observation, focus groups, and open-ended structured client interviews with Chicana clients. This study explains how Chicanas are accountable to Chicano male tattoo artists' expectations of how femininity, class, race\/ethnicity, and sexuality should be done; as cultural gatekeepers of what it means to be a cultural insider, Chicano tattoo artists hold their Chicana clients accountable to dominant Chicano values. I find that the Chicana body as a canvas is a signifier of social agency influenced by the social context. This study offers a new analysis that emphasizes how Chicanas use their bodies as canvases to challenge the status quo and subvert the power imposed on them by men who are tattoo artists.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paulette A. Ramsay"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"532b419c-e77d-3eac-85c8-b89bcae15e7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24368752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shirley Campbell's Ideology of Historiographic Legitimation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24368752","volumeNumber":"97","wordCount":8467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines a number of poems in which Shirley Campbell challenges the myth of historical objectivity by suggesting that the history of African diasporic peoples and societies has been obliterated in Europe's agenda to relegate them to positions of subservience and deny even their very existence. The poetic voice declares that imperial history has been used to justify slavery and the othering of the non-European world. The analyses will reveal too, how the persona destroys the myth that the history of Blacks does not exist by showing how this history was hidden, even though it existed before other histories were written. The persona's ultimate objective is that Blacks should confront and understand their history as a means of understanding their existence as human beings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Boyle","Audrey Kobayashi"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"192a7f53-13bb-374f-a271-d9dff4ac9fc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23020803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"408","pagination":"pp. 408-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Metropolitan anxieties: a critical appraisal of Sartre's theory of colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23020803","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13532,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[106577,106634]],"Locations in B":[[32841,32899]],"abstract":"Within postcolonial studies there is now a well-established wariness of the Eurocentric or metrocentric tendencies of postcolonial theory itself. For some the charge that postcolonial theory continues to interpret the history and culture of non-European societies through European frames of reference can be traced to the provocative theory of colonisation developed by French philosopher, novelist and political activist Jean-Paul Sartre. We subject Sartre's theory of colonialism to critical scrutiny and question this claim. We locate Sartre's philosophical works and political activism against the backdrop of a twentieth-century Parisian intellectual life marked by fierce struggles over the future of Marxism. Sartre's metrocentricism was tempered by his tortuous efforts to write existentialism into the Marxist canon, a theoretical endeavour that led him to replace Marxism's eschatology and linear teleology with a series of circular histories based on the complex ways in which separate anti-colonial movements spiral off following their own contingent, creolised and anarchic trajectories. Sartre's desire to contest and rethink rather than submit to and seal metrocentric framings of colonialism and anticolonialism derived from his weddedness to a historicised phenomenology of existence as spatial. Critical interrogation of the complicity of postcolonial theory in the global march of metrocentric ontology affords both geography and postcolonial studies a new impetus for dialogue. Any project that aspires to a transcendence of metropolitan modes of knowing must first better understand the situated production and complexities of such modes of knowing. Before scrutinising how the colonising tendencies of postcolonial theory might best be handled, there is a need to map historical geographies of the different theoretical projects and practices that have emerged in different metropolitan locations and at different times.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benita Parry"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critique Mishandled","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466447","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6163,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17360,17452]],"Locations in B":[[29660,29747]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801425752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37575bdd-8081-3401-8551-11dca6308dc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.6"}],"isPartOf":"Writing in Limbo","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"66","pagination":"66-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Exile to Nationalism:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What I have identified as the essential feature of Caribbean modernism\u2014the reversion of exile from a sense of loss into the necessity from which national consciousness springs\u2014is limpidly presented in George Lamming\u2019s 1983 introduction to his first novel,In the Castle of My Skin<\/em>, a work published soon after his arrival in England in 1953. In this introduction, which can be read as a commentary on the conditions in which Caribbean literature was produced in the 1950s, Lamming makes a basic linkage between exile (as the misfortune of the colonized writer) and the narrative of national liberation which","subTitle":"The Early Novels of George Lamming","keyphrase":["lamming","narrative","caribbean","colonial","language","trumper","george lamming","pouchet paquet","narration","nationalism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Chege"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"70","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Color Lines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935345","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark C. J. Stoddart"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10945830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"253890390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33051a0c-ee16-3c6f-8f7f-b14dc4b6e0e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23252126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socithourese"}],"isPartOf":"Social Thought & Research","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology, Hegemony, Discourse: A Critical Review of Theories of Knowledge and Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252126","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13311,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[15051,15222],[28286,28544]],"Locations in B":[[53163,53333],[53221,53479]],"abstract":"For over a century, social theorists have attempted to explain why those who lack economic power consent to hierarchies of social and political power. They have used ideology, hegemony and discourse as key concepts to explain the intersections between the social production of knowledge and the perpetuation of power relations. The Marxist concept of ideology describes how the dominant ideas within a given society reflect the interests of a ruling economic class. In this paper, I trace the movement from this concept of ideology to models of hegemony and discourse. I then trace a second set of ruptures in theories of ideology, hegemony and discourse. Marx and others link ideology to a vision of society dominated by economic class as a field of social power. However, theorists of gender and \"race\" have questioned the place of class as the locus of power. I conclude by arguing that key theorists of gender and \"race\"\u2014Hall, Smith, hooks and Haraway\u2014offer a more complex understanding of how our consent to networks of power is produced within contemporary capitalist societies. This argument has important implications for theory and practice directed at destabilizing our consent to power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HISHAM AIDI"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26781373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07402775"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38482151"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a924e187-5466-3371-aa8d-f228d16155c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26781373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldpolicyj"}],"isPartOf":"World Policy Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO ALL THAT BEAUTY?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26781373","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":3177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"France, which has long prided itself on providing refuge to African-American artists and dissidents, has found it much easier to support minority agitation abroad than at home. Hisham Aidi shows how Muslim youth in France are looking to the Black Power movement in the U.S. for inspiration as they found their own race-conscious political organizations.","subTitle":"BLACK POWER IN THE BANLIEUES","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28a08c50-890b-349a-9932-ad64e5e561b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rmq3.18"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"585","pagination":"585-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"M\u00e1s all\u00e1 del pensamiento abisal:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.18","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14611,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"El pensamiento occidental moderno es un pensamiento abisal.\u00b9 Consiste en un sistema de distinciones visibles y no visibles, siendo las invisibles la base de las visibles. Las distinciones invisibles se establecen mediante l\u00edneas radicales que dividen la realidad social en dos reinos: el reino de \u201ceste lado de la l\u00ednea\u201d y el reino de \u201cel otro lado de la l\u00ednea\u201d. Una divisi\u00f3n en la que \u201cel otro lado de la l\u00ednea\u201d se desvanece como realidad, se convierte en no existente, y de hecho se produce como inexistente. No existente significa que no existe de ninguna forma relevante o comprensible de","subTitle":"DE LAS L\u00cdNEAS GLOBALES A LAS ECOLOG\u00cdAS DE SABERES","keyphrase":["l\u00edneas globales","pensamiento","pensamiento abisal","derecho","fascismo","apropiaci\u00f3n","apropiaci\u00f3n violencia","violencia","regulaci\u00f3n","saberes"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Wise"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"601b8182-819e-392f-8c14-a4ed25059aa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"1070","pageStart":"1054","pagination":"pp. 1054-1070","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Excavating the New Republic: Post-Colonial Subjectivity in Achebe's \"Things Fall Apart\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299871","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9263,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[56535,56581]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald E. Shenk"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40583749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168297"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"141cc54b-5526-3a10-bfbe-5feafa8cf179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40583749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"662","pageStart":"622","pagination":"pp. 622-662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Georgia Historical Society","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Race, Manhood, and Manpower: Mobilizing Rural Georgia for World War I","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40583749","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":16709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4aff0e2-4713-32cc-930e-eca18e0f92d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"2","language":["ita","fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BOLLETTINO BIBLIOGRAFICO AFRICANO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852593","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paolo Gerbaudo"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183pdzs.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745332482"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d054ecab-9177-35d5-95d7-c415626c2227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt183pdzs.13"}],"isPartOf":"Tweets and the Streets","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"187","pageStart":"179","pagination":"179-187","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183pdzs.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["social movements","cambridge","london verso","university","london","london routledge","activism","routledge","blackwell","internet"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sergio Prieto D\u00edaz"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10618899"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3734d2f-bebd-313b-981c-b53829a1155e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48648068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Chicanx-Latinx Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Chicanx-Latinx Law Review","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"UNDOCUMENTED MIGRATION FROM THE OTHER PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648068","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"COLONIALITY, SUBALTERN SUBJECT, AND MIGRANT MAPPING","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAVIER AUYERO","AGUST\u00cdN BURBANO DE LARA","MAR\u00cdA FERNANDA BERTI"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022216X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227216"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93b1faf6-a02f-3d8f-adcc-a4484d69c9cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatiamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"469","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-469","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Uses and Forms of Violence among the Urban Poor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544169","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":13231,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59961,60014]],"Locations in B":[[57763,57815]],"abstract":"Based on 30 months of collaborative fieldwork in a poor neighbourhood in Buenos Aires, Argentina, this paper scrutinises the multiple uses of violence among residents and the concatenations between private and public forms of physical aggression. Much of the violence reported here resembles that which has been dissected by students of street violence in the United States \u2013 that is, it is the product of interpersonal retaliation and remains encapsulated in dyadic exchanges. However, by casting a wider net to include other forms of aggression (not only criminal but also sexual, domestic and intimate) that take place inside and outside the home, and that intensely shape the course of poor people's daily lives, the paper argues that diverse forms of violence among the urban poor (a) serve more than just retaliatory purposes, and (b) link with one another beyond dyadic relationships. Basado en 30 meses de trabajo de campo colaborativo en un barrio pobre de Buenos Aires, Argentina, este art\u00edculo estudia los m\u00faltiples usos de la violencia entre sus residentes y las concatenaciones entre formas p\u00fablicas y privadas de agresi\u00f3n f\u00edsica. Mucha de la violencia reportada aqu\u00ed recuerda a aqu\u00e9lla que ha sido analizada por estudiosos de la violencia callejera en los Estados Unidos, es decir como el producto de revanchas interpersonales y que queda encapsulada en intercambios binarios. Sin embargo, al desarrollar una red m\u00e1s amplia para incluir otras formas de agresi\u00f3n (no s\u00f3lo criminal, sino tambi\u00e9n sexual, dom\u00e9stica e \u00edntima) que se da dentro y fuera del hogar, y que configura intensamente el devenir de las vidas diarias de los pobres, el material se\u00f1ala que las diversas formas de violencia entre los pobres urbanos (a) funciona m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de las meras revanchas y (b) se vinculan entre s\u00ed en un marco mayor a las relaciones binarias. Baseado em 30 meses de trabalho de campo colaborativo em um bairro pobre de Buenos Aires, Argentina, este artigo escrutina os m\u00faltiplos usos de viol\u00eancia entre moradores e as rela\u00e7\u00f5es entre formas p\u00fablicas e privadas de viol\u00eancia f\u00edsica. Grande parte da viol\u00eancia reportada pelo artigo assemelha-se \u00e1quela que j\u00e1 foi dissecada por estudantes de viol\u00eancia de rua nos Estados Unidos, ou seja, ela \u00e9 o produto de retalia\u00e7\u00e3o interpessoal e permanece encapsulada em trocas bilaterais. No entanto, aplicando uma abordagem mais ampla e que inclui outras formas de agress\u00e3o (n\u00e3o apenas criminal, mas tamb\u00e9m sexual, dom\u00e9stica e \u00edntima) que ocorrem dentro e fora do lar e moldam intensamente a din\u00e2mica da vida di\u00e1ria de pessoas pobres, este artigo argumenta que as diversas formas de viol\u00eancia entre a popula\u00e7\u00e3o pobre urbana t\u00eam (a) prop\u00f3sitos que v\u00e3o al\u00e9m da simples retalia\u00e7\u00e3o e (b) interconex\u00f5es que v\u00e3o al\u00e9m de rela\u00e7\u00f5es dicot\u00f4micas.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Henderson"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/719849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/719849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"288","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wage-Earners and Political Protest in Colonial Africa: The Case of the Copperbelt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/719849","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":5516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana Jeater"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917375","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc0846b8-3738-3f8c-b3dc-28209338e43c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43917375"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"81","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Terence Ranger, 1929-2015","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917375","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rutvica Andrijasevic","Carrie Hamilton","Clare Hemmings"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d2568c8-4755-38d6-ad69-9956697575db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"106","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"editorial: re-imagining revolutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571935","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eamonn Jordan"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c75ff89-372d-3dc4-aa6d-738deb659849"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Martin McDonagh's \"The Lieutenant of Inishmore\": Commemoration and Dismemberment through Farce","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274485","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Martin McDonagh's contentious play The Lieutenant of Inishmore (2001) has divided spectators, critics, and academics. Although set in the West of Ireland, the play deals predominantly with the Northern Irish and highlights issues around the legitimacy of the military force tradition within Republicanism. The play queries issues of sacrifice, moral justification, especially when acts of terrorism rely on embedded, reflexive, and sometimes spurious thinking, and takes up an anti-paramilitary, pacifist stance. McDonagh claims that the work is written from a position of \"pacifist rage,\" yet it seems to be a bizarre justification for the violence of the work. This paper argues that it is within the framework of farce where issues of misrepresentation\u2014the accusation most levied against McDonagh\u2014must be tested. Farce shapes how violence, romance, and the mentalities of the characters are considered and performed. McDonagh's commitment is to take the subversive potential of farce to the politics of violence, so that certain contradictions and anomalies are exposed. Through farce, McDonagh suggests that he is to demythologize paramilitary groups who have been mythologized all too easily but that to demythologize is not always simply to demonize or pathologize. Ultimately, this paper wishes to bring some balance to the current critical debate.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SEAN L. MALLOY"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44254307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d32c86f-a055-360d-b921-165560db342f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44254307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uptight in Babylon: Eldridge Cleaver's Cold War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44254307","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":17648,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u05d0\u05d3\u05d9\u05e8 \u05db\u05d4\u05df","ADIR COHEN"],"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23392825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07934637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a8b4198-ee25-3793-b34f-c8a76548ac8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23392825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studieseducation"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Education \/ \u05e2\u05d9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da","issueNumber":"34","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"University of Haifa \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05d7\u05d9\u05e4\u05d4","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Education as a Social Revolution (The Educational Philosophy of Paulo Freire) \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05da \u05db\u05de\u05d4\u05e4\u05db\u05d4 \u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea: \u05de\u05e9\u05e0\u05ea\u05d5 \u05d4\u05d7\u05d9\u05e0\u05d5\u05db\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05e4\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5 \u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23392825","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article is a summary of the comprehensive research of the educational philosophy of Paulo Freire that identifies the political revolution. In his opinion there exists one philosophical basis for both of them, one receiving nourishment from the other, and this is not possible without each one, and with the existence of one, the existence of the other is unavoidable. He creates an analogy between the \"depressed\" mother and the \"depressed\" child and emphasizes that both are dependent on outside forces that control and manipulate them. The research examines the pedagogical writings of Freire and in researching Cultural Action for Freedom, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, and Education for Critical Consciousness, he examines how to establish an important position in radical educational philosophies and places their author among the leading exponents of the rarical movement in education. As a radical philosopher he pleads for the freeing of education that is nourished by a critical spirit that in reality is intent on participation and creative activity. In the course of the research a comparison is made between the theories of Freire and the dialogical philosophy of Martin Buber from which Freire was able to learn a great deal. But he digresses from it in many aspects, and did not stand by many of the main principles and did not succeed to satisfactorily establish the philosophical basis of his educational theory which is principally based on the existentialist theory in freedom and authority. Wide sections of the article are devoted to discussion of the principal theses of the socio-political theories of Freire and their consequences in connection with education. These theses will be tested in an aggressive philosophical examination and in their actual application and will undergo great critical examination. A special section is devoted to his theory of adult education and his important contribution to new methods and ideas in adult education.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine Rusinko"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4212145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376795"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28f46463-232b-3229-b380-d465dc621179"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4212145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slaveasteurorev2"}],"isPartOf":"The Slavonic and East European Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Slavic Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Between Russia and Hungary: Foundations of Literature and National Identity in Subcarpathian Rus'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4212145","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":10823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The early literature of Subcarpathian Rus' is an illustration of the problems faced by a developing minority culture in a multinational empire. Hryhoryi Tarkovich's 1804 panegyric to Palatine Joseph of Hungary expresses kinship with Russia and encouragement for the advancement of native Rusyn literature, tempered by pragmatic homage to Hungarian culture. From the perspective of post-colonial theory, the Rusyn orientation to Russian literature is shown to be a subversive manoeuvre against Magyar domination and a means of national and cultural self-assertion in an imperialist context.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Wood"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41546256"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41979394-9ce1-36ad-9ec4-a419d164a950"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culthealsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Culture, Health & Sexuality","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Contextualizing Group Rape in Post-Apartheid South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005415","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Collective male sexual violence is part of a continuum of sexual coercion in South Africa. This paper is based on long-term ethnographic work in an urban township in the former Transkei region. Drawing on intensive participant observation and interviews with young men in particular, it attempts to make sense of emergent narratives relating to streamlining, a local term for a not uncommon form of collective sexual coercion involving a group of male friends and one or more women. The paper begins with an overview of existing anthropological literature on collective male sexual violence, going onto elaborate the different scenarios associated with group sexual violence in the fieldsite. It seeks to provide a multi-layered contextualization of the phenomenon by considering prevailing gender discourses, subcultural issues pertaining to the urban tsotsi phenomenon, the rural practice of ukuthwala (bride capture), young working-class Africans' experiences of marginalization, and the complex links between political economy and violence in this setting. \/\/\/ La violence sexuelle de collectifs masculins fait partie d'un continuum de coercitions sexuelles en Afrique du Sud. Cet article s'appuie sur un travail ethnographique men\u00e9 dans un township urbain de l'ancienne r\u00e9gion du Transkei. Etabli sur une observation participante intensive et des entretiens, en particulier avec des jeunes hommes, il tente de comprendre les r\u00e9cits qui \u00e9mergent \u00e0 propos du \"streamlining\" (terme utilis\u00e9 localement pour d\u00e9signer une forme assez courante de coercition sexuelle \u00e0 laquelle participent un groupe d'amis de sexe masculin et une ou plusieurs femmes). L'article d\u00e9bute par une revue de la litt\u00e9rature anthropologique disponible sur la violence sexuelle masculine en groupe, puis passe \u00e0 l'\u00e9laboration des diff\u00e9rents sc\u00e9narios associ\u00e9s \u00e0 cette violence sur le terrain. Il cherche \u00e0 developper une mod\u00e9lisation stratifi\u00e9e du ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne en prenant en compte les discours dominants de genre, les questions subculturelles relatives au ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne urbain du tsotsi (voyou), la pratique rurale de l'ukuthwala (enl\u00e8vement de la mari\u00e9e), les exp\u00e9riences de marginalisation des jeunes africains de la classe ouvri\u00e8re, et les liens complexes entre l'\u00e9conomie politique et la violence dans cet environnement. \/\/\/ La violencia sexual masculina en grupo forma parte de la continua coerci\u00f3n sexual en Sud\u00e1frica. Este documento est\u00e1 basado en un trabajo etnogr\u00e1fico a largo plazo en un municipio urbano en la antigua regi\u00f3n de Transkei. Bas\u00e1ndonos en una intensa observaci\u00f3n de los participantes y entrevistas, especialmente con hombres j\u00f3venes, se intenta dar un sentido a los relatos emergentes relacionados con streamlining, un t\u00e9rmino local para la forma no poco com\u00fan de coerci\u00f3n sexual en grupo que implica a un grupo de amigos varones y una o m\u00e1s mujeres. El documento comienza con un esquema general de la literatura antropol\u00f3gica existente sobre la violencia sexual masculina en grupo y elabora los diferentes escenarios relacionados con la violencia sexual en grupo en el lugar donde ocurren. Se intenta dar una contextualizaci\u00f3n multifac\u00e9tica del fen\u00f3meno al analizar los discursos predominantes de los diferentes sexos, los problemas subculturales que pertenecen al fen\u00f3meno urbano tsotsi, la pr\u00e1ctica rural de ukuthwala [caza de novias], las experiencias de marginaci\u00f3n de los j\u00f3venes africanos de clase obrera y los complejos enlaces entre econom\u00eda pol\u00edtica y violencia en este ambiente.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yogita Goyal"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.3.v","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79391a2c-6599-32fc-a407-5c6be7abec5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.3.v"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"xxv","pageStart":"v","pagination":"pp. v-xxv","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa and the Black Atlantic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.3.v","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":11407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN HICKS","MICHAEL UY","CARINA VENTER"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02779269"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45918209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214627"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81707b85-c340-34ec-87a0-1fe095404cbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26414193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmusicology"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Musicology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26414193","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":4357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Music and Landscape","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BAYO OGUNJIMI"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"110c8400-d73d-3d4b-b569-21c3dc234592"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45293557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE MILITARY AND LITERATURE IN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293557","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Colonialism and its vestiges, neo-colonialism, have debased the historical, socio-political and economic landscape of Africa by breeding exploitative and oppressive ideologies such as imperialism, capitalism and fascism. The crisis is exacerbated by the \"pitfalls of national consciousness\" of the ruling class, who lack political vision, altruism and authentic nationalism. The political culture is characterized by under development, poverty, social upheavals and class oppression, culminating at times in wars or coups. These incessant crises led to the intervention of the military in politics. Abandoning its traditional role of maintaining social order and protecting national territorial integrity, the military now meddles in politics. African scholars of various disciplines have addressed this issue. The African writer is not left out, since no writer creates in a vacuum. Accordingly, we explore the political history of Africa through the eye of several novelists, examining in particular the relevance of the military in maintaining a functional socio-culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khaled Furani"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41968269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607770089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3571bdfe-cd0f-3eaf-92dd-347b70e3074a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41968269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Center for Contemporary Arab Studies","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"DANGEROUS WEDDINGS: PALESTINIAN POETRY FESTIVALS DURING ISRAEL'S FIRST MILITARY RULE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41968269","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARLENE YOUNG"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbdb7471-13be-33d7-a11e-ba582fef7bae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography of Black Works: BLACK SCHOLARS AND THE SOCIAL SCIENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066012","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel K\u00fcnzler"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29778086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df2110ee-1016-3924-8b4c-0d0edf4ff7ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29778086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"South African Rap Music, Counter Discourses, Identity, and Commodification Beyond the Prophets of Da City","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29778086","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"South African rap music developed in the Cape Town area as a form of resistance to apartheid. With its diffusion to other areas and to different social groups, however, rap became more heterogeneous. The existing literature on South African rap still focuses, to a considerable extent, on Capetonian rappers and especially the group the Prophets of Da City, even though this group collapsed more than ten years ago. This literature mainly discusses the counter hegemonic potential of rap music informed by Black Consciousness thought and its position in relation to questions of identity and commodification. Is this focus still meaningful for rappers who are too young to be part of the anti-apartheid struggle, and who grew up in the context of formal democracy? An analysis of 88 South African rap albums reveals that some ideas of Black Consciousness are still present in rap lyrics. However, the counter hegemonic discourse of earlier rappers has lost its hegemony and representations of identity have become more varied and individualised. As social advancement became a more pressing concern, the relationship between rap music and commodification has become more pluri-dimensional than previous studies have portrayed. As the comparative perspective followed here reveals, the heavy focus on particular case studies, while theoretically acknowledging the contestation of meanings in popular cultures, is problematic.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. Pinar"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2531cd2-3f6c-3cc9-afa7-496781817181"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Dreamt into Existence by Others:\" Curriculum Theory and School Reform (1991)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975631","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5637,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[33832,33897]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan W. Moore"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1388832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308919"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60574668"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236990"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e31386fc-0ac5-3d5b-ab45-286cf32eb8d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1388832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Pacific Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Minorities and \"New Nation\" Perspectives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1388832","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines the fruitfulness and fit of two Third World models for the analysis of the situation of American racial minorities. The widely used model of \"internal colonialism\" and the more restricted model of \"dual economy\/society\" are evaluated with regard to two minority situations: the American Indian reservation and the urban minority ghetto. Processes examined include: (a) exploitative gain for the larger society or economy; (b) intermediary elites or counterpart strata; (c) ecology and boundedness of the minority subsystem; (d) economy of the subsystem; (e) motivational structures, including attachment to the larger system and toward social mobility; and (f) welfare agencies and communal autonomy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Franziska Rueedi"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5a44cd0-17ca-37bc-8440-95e42322f2b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24525691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'SIYAYINYOVA!': PATTERNS OF VIOLENCE IN THE AFRICAN TOWNSHIPS OF THE VAAL TRIANGLE, SOUTH AFRICA, 1980\u201386","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525691","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":11729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Between 1984 and 1986, South Africa was engulfed in widespread uprisings in the townships across the country. State repression, aimed at curbing popular protests, had the detrimental effect of radicalizing sections of black youth who were at the forefront of the struggle against the apartheid regime. While the insurrectionary period was marked by non-violent repertoires of protest including boycotts, strikes and protest marches, violent strategies gained momentum as well. One area that saw the proliferation of popular protest was the Vaal Triangle, a highly industrialized complex south of Johannesburg. It was in this area where protests against an illegitimate and defunct local government, poor service delivery and rent increases turned into a popular uprising in September 1984. This up-rising not only signified the redrawing of boundaries of community but also a shift towards more militant and violent strategies among sections of politicized youth. Based on life history interviews and archival research, this article argues that political violence aimed to forge a new political and social order. Strategies of violence emerged out of the intersection between localized conflicts and broader ideologies and strategies of the African National Congress, including its call for 'ungovernability' in 1984 and its promotion of a People's War in 1985. Entre 1984 et 1986, l'Afrique du Sud \u00e9tait aux prises avec des soul\u00e8vements g\u00e9n\u00e9ralis\u00e9s dans les townships du pays. La r\u00e9pression d'\u00c9tat, qui visait \u00e0 juguler les protestations populaires, a eu pour cons\u00e9quence n\u00e9gative de radicaliser des franges de la jeunesse noire qui \u00e9taient \u00e0 l'avant-garde de la lutte contre le r\u00e9gime d'apartheid. Alors que la p\u00e9riode d'insurrection \u00e9tait marqu\u00e9e par des r\u00e9pertoires de protestation non violents (tels que boycotts, gr\u00e8ves et d\u00e9fil\u00e9s de protestation), des strat\u00e9gies violentes ont \u00e9galement gagn\u00e9 du terrain. Vaal Triangle, grand complexe industriel au sud de Johannesburg, \u00e9tait l'une des r\u00e9gions qui ont connu une prolif\u00e9ration de la protestation populaire. C'est l\u00e0 que des protestations contre un gouvernement local ill\u00e9gitime et d\u00e9funt, des services d\u00e9ficients et des hausses de loyers se sont transform\u00e9es en soul\u00e8vement populaire en septembre 1984. Ce soul\u00e8vement ne signifiait pas seulement la red\u00e9finition des fronti\u00e8res communautaires, mais aussi une transition vers des strat\u00e9gies plus militantes et violentes dans certaines franges de la jeunesse politis\u00e9e. S'appuyant sur des entretiens de r\u00e9cits de vie et des travaux d'archives, cet article soutient que la violence politique visait \u00e0 forger un nouvel ordre politique et social. Des strat\u00e9gies de violence ont \u00e9merg\u00e9 de l'intersection entre les conflits localis\u00e9s et les id\u00e9ologies et strat\u00e9gies plus larges de l'ANC (African National Congress), y compris son appel \u00e0 l' \u00ab ingouvernabilit\u00e9 \u00bb en 1984 et sa promotion d'une Guerre du peuple en 1985.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher L. Blakesley"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43041311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34377393-74d5-32aa-8394-df5c1dda0d92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43041311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"brigyoununivstud"}],"isPartOf":"Brigham Young University Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Brigham Young University","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Terrorism and the Constitution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43041311","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10839,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[105663,105717]],"Locations in B":[[17094,17145]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phyllis Peres"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"927880ca-f62b-3014-ab58-f2500d0e45aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3514080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Traversing PostColoniality: Pepetela and the Narrations of Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3514080","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4192,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[26673,26720]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eduardo Subirats"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d17eb138-cf0a-3f41-a306-82f01d6cf383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41349281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Colonialismo: Comercio, cristianismo y civilizaci\u00f3n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41349281","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALI A. ABDI"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23767154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Faculty of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Identity in the Philosophies of Dewey and Freire: Select Analyses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767154","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7103,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[43270,43334]],"abstract":"Identity, even if it has not been separately treated in the educational philosophies of John Dewey and Paulo Freire, remains, nevertheless, an important component of the teaching and writing of the two philosophers. This paper first presents a limited discussion of some theoretical and conceptual points on identity, followed by a general discussion of identity as it has been, either directly or indirectly, located in the educational philosophies of Dewey and Freire. The importance of identity, whether at the community, national, or even international stages, and as an educational and social development construct, is being rendered more fluid, dynamic, and therefore, probably less tangible by such transnational and trans-continental forces of globalization, information technology, and the electronic media. The paper ends with the acknowledgment that, while observations in this short article could only be the beginning of an interesting debate, a vigorous undertaking in reexamining questions and issues of identity (against the backdrop of Deweyan and Freirean philosophies of education) should be appreciated. L'identit\u00e9 n'\u00e9tait pas trait\u00e9 s\u00e9par\u00e9ment dans les philosophies de John Dewey et Paulo Freire, et pourtant, elle restait un \u00e9l\u00e9ment tr\u00e8s important de l'enseignement et de l'\u00e9criture de ces deux philosophes. Apr\u00e8s avoir pr\u00e9sent\u00e9 une discussion limit\u00e9e sur quelques points th\u00e9oriques et conceptuels concernant l'identit\u00e9, l'article porte l'attention sur une discussion g\u00e9n\u00e9rale sur l'identit\u00e9 ce qui \u00e9tait pr\u00e9sent d'une fa\u00e7on directe ou indirecte dans les philosophies d'\u00e9ducation de Dewey et Freire. L'importance de l'identit\u00e9 soit au niveau local, national ou m\u00eame international vue en tant que construction d'\u00e9ducation et du d\u00e9veloppement social, est per\u00e7ue plus souple, dynamique et probablement pour cette raison- moins tangible par les forces transnationales et transcontinentales de la globalisation, la technologie de l'information et les media \u00e9lectroniques. Ce texte se termine par l'admission que- si les observations de ce court article soient le d\u00e9but de la discussion int\u00e9ressante il faudrait s\u00fbrement appr\u00e9cier l'entreprise vigoureuse de r\u00e9examiner des questions et des issues de l'identit\u00e9 (par opposition au \u00abparavent\u00bb inclus dans les philosophies d'\u00e9ducation de Dewey et Freire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert L. Allen"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b833a9f-f52b-317b-9fb3-67c8403b5625"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Past Due: The African American Quest for Reparations: The Black Scholar<\/em> 28, no. 2, Black Social Issues (Summer 1998)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0007","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":11054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pnina Werbner"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3695034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0268540X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23402"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3695034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthtoda"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Islamophobia: Incitement to Religious Hatred: Legislating for a New Fear?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3695034","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel P.S. Goh"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43590666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030851X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670084"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ec4940a-283e-3884-bbc3-da2c52800315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43590666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"373","pagination":"pp. 373-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Pacific Affairs, University of British Columbia","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43590666","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":1011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josaphat B. Kubayanda"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Dictatorship, Oppression, and New Realism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819275","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Interrogating Mythology: The Mandela Myth and Black Empowerment in Nadine Gordimer's Post-Apartheid Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267610","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Manning"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d895d441-4d46-352e-b094-c65d9d958d20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes toward a Theory of Ideology in Historical Writing on Modern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483767","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cette contribution vise \u00e0 identifier des influences de l'id\u00e9ologie sur l'histoire \u00e9crite de l'Afrique moderne, afin de mieux \u00e9crire l'histoire et de mieux critiquer l'histoire \u00e9crite. L'importance des distinctions nationales des classes sociales \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard de l'\u00e9tablissement de point de vue, et donc de l'id\u00e9ologie, est soulign\u00e9e ainsi que le r\u00f4le de l'histoire comme soutien de l'id\u00e9ologie. Pour rendre plus sp\u00e9cifique cette analyse, plusieurs \u00e9tapes de la construction d'une interpr\u00e9tation historique sont distingu\u00e9es, ainsi que les \u00e9tapes correspondantes de la critique d'une interpr\u00e9tation historique, et l'influence de l'id\u00e9ologie sur chaque \u00e9tape est indiqu\u00e9e. En employant des exemples de l'Afrique moderne, on conclut \u00e0 l'hypoth\u00e8se que l'id\u00e9ologie peut am\u00e9liorer ou retarder la qualit\u00e9 des interpr\u00e9tations historiques, selon la fa\u00e7on de l'utiliser.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony R. de Souza","Philip W. Porter"],"datePublished":"1975-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43618548","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00132942"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"468415b8-c317-3b35-86c0-52044a0666d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43618548"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ekistics"}],"isPartOf":"Ekistics","issueNumber":"237","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Athens Center of Ekistics","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Urban and national development in the postindependence era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43618548","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carrie Griffin Basas"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24052419","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10677666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93889794-4181-3dec-a1b2-a0cc38a4b896"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24052419"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjempllabolaw"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Employment and Labor Law","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of California, Berkeley, School of Law","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Labor & Employment Relations","Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back Rooms, Board Rooms\u2014 Reasonable Accommodation and Resistance Under the ADA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24052419","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":28425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Reasonable accommodations under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) are at the center of the integration of people with disabilities into mainstream work environments. Responses on the part of employers, however, have couched many feasible accommodations as excessive, burdensome, and costly. Employers resist hiring people with disabilities and accommodating existing disabled employees. This position is affirmed by societal and legal messages about the inferiority of disabled workers. Courts have tended to take a pro-employer point of view, deciding that some accommodations are \"unreasonable\" without specifically unpacking that concept in relation to the language and spirit of the ADA. Meanwhile, one of the most important parts of the ADA remains largely undefined, and employers and courts can take cover behind a vague notion of reasonableness whenever any request seems like \"too much.\" While scholars have debated whether or not the ADA goes too far in requiring employers to adapt to the needs of disabled individuals, the latter are cast aside in the reasonable accommodation process by employers, courts, and scholars themselves. As a result of this exclusion, people with disabilities struggle to get even the most basic and achievable accommodations granted, such as those related to transportation and assistance with arriving at work. This Article advocates for the involvement of people with disabilities in the accommodation process, not only from a place of cooperation but also in the form of resistance to subjugation. This participation must happen at all levels for any meaningful change to happen in the American workforce. The realization of it depends not on the generosity of employers, jurists, or scholars, but on people with disabilities' active confrontation of unjust and irrational interpretations of the ADA. Relying on disability studies approaches and a social model of disability, the author places prospective and current workers with disabilities at the center of the reasonable accommodation process. She suggests that those models can go even farther\u2014and be replaced by a resistance model\u2014 to recognize and respond to the biases and prejudices about people with disabilities that lead to their marginalization at work and in communities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Allan"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"READING WITH ONE EYE, SPEAKING WITH ONE TONGUE: ON THE PROBLEM OF ADDRESS IN WORLD LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659558","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan P. Eburne"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c2fcd18-43d1-31e7-993f-e08c1c6fad43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"109","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Antihumanism and Terror: Surrealism, Theory, and the Postwar Left","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149284","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey D. Needell"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec9b0f4c-16bb-34ce-adcb-3ebed7950651"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3513986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Domestic Civilizing Mission: The Cultural Role of the State in Brazil, 1808-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513986","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este artigo \u00e9 uma reflex\u00e3o sobre o papel do Estado na cultura brasileira; mostra que, de muitas maneiras, a elite pol\u00edtica tratava de imp\u00f4r a cultura como uma miss\u00e3o civilisadora, como se fosse urn poder europeu contemplando uma col\u00f4nia do terceiro mundo. O artigo come\u00e7a com a tentativa de Dom Jo\u00e3o (c1808-1820) de importar e imp\u00f4r as belas artes francesas e a tentativa do governo imperial de promover a cultura e imp\u00f4r institui\u00e7\u00f5es culturais de origem francesa no come\u00e7o da \u00e9poca rom\u00e2ntica (1820s-1850s). Depois, mostra a ambi\u00e7\u00e3o maior (e falhada) do governo do Visconde do Rio Branco (1871-1875) de imp\u00f4r institui\u00e7\u00f5es, reformas e pr\u00e1ticas europeias. Finalmente, mostra a continua\u00e7\u00e3o e amplifica\u00e7\u00e3o dos mesmos impulsos no triunfo da Bela \u00c9poca do fim do s\u00e9culo passado, focalizando nos successos da administra\u00e7\u00e1o Rodrigues Alves (1902-1906). Conclui corn o contraste interessante entre esta cultura oficial de origem europ\u00e9ia e a cultura popular, espont\u00e2nea, rica, e vital dos afro-brasileiros que come\u00e7ava de formar a base da cultural brasileira moderna no Rio no come\u00e7o deste s\u00e9culo. As \u00faltimas palavras indicam como o governo Vargas manipulava esta cultura popular como parte de um programa de cultura nacionalista imposta na popula\u00e7\u00e3o, de uma maneira semelhante (imposi\u00e7\u00e3o do governo) mas com origins e significado diferentes (folcl\u00f3rico e nacionalista).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Valandra"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/wicazosareview.31.1.0046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"246c2215-edfd-34bd-9840-fb95447e9110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/wicazosareview.31.1.0046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"\u201cGod Made Me an Indian\u201d: Who Made Native Studies?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/wicazosareview.31.1.0046","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes the first dissertation written about the significant role that Native Studies scholar Elizabeth Cook-Lynn has played in the development of Native Studies. The dissertation, Reading Cook-Lynn: Anti-Colonialism, Cultural Resistance, and Native Empowerment, written by Kodjo Ruben Afagla, identifies the initial challenges to developing Native Studies as a discipline. Afagla's work explores Cook-Lynn's influence on how Native Studies has addressed\u2014or, in her view, fallen short of addressing\u2014these challenges. In Afagla's narrative, Cook-Lynn established herself as a leading Native Studies spokesperson in the mid-1980s. Her consistent call to Native Studies has been that, without a sharp focus, the discipline would become fuzzy and uncritical; it would not step up to the original tasks before it: decolonization, nation building, defense of Native peoples, and cultural revitalization. Arguably, disciplinary fuzziness could give rise to a claim that Native Studies is for everyone\u2014that Native peoples hold no special relation to the discipline and cannot hold the discipline accountable. For Native Studies to serve Native peoples, disciplinary coherency remains the discipline's primary challenge. In this article, I also emphasize how groundbreaking Afagla's 2010 work is. Approaching its fiftieth anniversary, Native Studies has an opportunity to self-reflect, to assess its contribution to Native Country, and to rethink its disciplinary evolution since 1969. The article engages an important dialogue about the first fifty years of Native Studies as a discipline and envisions where Native Studies needs to focus its intellectual capacities over the next fifty years.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Veena Das"],"datePublished":"1987-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3033216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0268540X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669748"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23402"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3033216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthtoda"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Anthropology of Violence and the Speech of Victims","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3033216","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":2813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alex Pillen"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24811556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fc2e79b-a9a6-3764-a411-7268338bd174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24811556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language, Translation, Trauma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24811556","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contemporary definitions of trauma and their application remain controversial within anthropology. A survivor's awareness of a parallel, incompatible world of atrocity is understood to bypass language or conscious expression. Such a framework can be compared with ethnographic work on the silence of survivors. Experiences of inhumanity and extreme violence eventually find a discursive niche but nevertheless pose problems of translation. Through the lens of traditional anthropology another realm emerges\u2014a world of vampires, zombies, and cannibals. ''Crimes against humanity'' can be added to the list, but overall translations seem oriented toward the maintenance of interpretative control, even in contexts of mass dehumanization. Anthropologists are well placed to pay attention to both the complex evidential systems of survivors and the construction of liberal voices. The image of trauma and its untranslatability, however, linger in the background of interventions and point to the vital but endangered bond between language and humanity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rylanda Nickerson"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92939d43-d151-3314-967c-dd3b5e5db088"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Symposium Photos: Remembering the Life and Work of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0058","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GUY D. WHITTEN","HENRY S. BIENEN"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45347061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095327X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49621350"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002238344"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f61bf00-c085-3893-8a21-36c7258d6e1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45347061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"armedforcessoc"}],"isPartOf":"Armed Forces & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Political Violence and Time in Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45347061","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With this article we hope to add something new to explanations for violence within polities. We examine the consequences of time in power for political violence. We are interested in the length of time a leader is in power and the time when political violence occurs. We start with a simple hypothesis: the longer a leader is in power, the less likely it is that there will be occurrences of large-scale political violence. We are not aware of any theories of violence that have taken account of leadership duration. We do not argue below that leadership duration and the timing of violence explain all variation in violent political outcomes. Rather, it is our assertion that theories of violence have ignored an important factor: the length of time that a leader has been in power. Throughout the analyses presented in this article we have found a relationship between the number of years a leader has been in power and the probability and volume of political violence that the nation that they are governing is likely to experience. As the length of a leader's time in power increases, the probability of political violence declines. This relationship has been demonstrated to be significant in both statistical and substantive terms in a number of different statistical settings that make a variety of assumptions about the quality of the data we are working with and the underlying relationships we are investigating.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EMILY GARC\u00cdA","DUNCAN FAHERTY","KATHLEEN DONEGAN","BRYCE TRAISTER","EDWARD CAHILL","ROBERT FANUZZI","JOANNA BROOKS","LAUREN FREDERICA KLEIN"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41348730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90dc39f0-0228-3113-a666-cd8f4ca32b52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41348730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"632","pageStart":"601","pagination":"pp. 601-632","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Roundtable: Critical Keywords in Early American Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41348730","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ADRIANO VINALE"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24809689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38912614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233856"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd69cace-a23e-3818-9fd2-b8eb91117f2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24809689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"history"}],"isPartOf":"History","issueNumber":"3 (346)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"362","pagination":"pp. 362-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A (Conceptual) History of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24809689","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":8648,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[125969,126074]],"Locations in B":[[51431,51536]],"abstract":"The article sketches a general history of the concept of violence, particularly focusing on the most significant turning points in western political thought. My main aim is to question the position according to which in western history violence has been progressively declining, in quantity and quality. My working hypothesis follows Michel Foucault's assumption in Discipline and Punish, according to which a modern society of control is based on the gradual transition from the spectacular medieval manifestation of public violence to a disciplinary system perpetrating non-visible violence. Through this shift violence does not disappear but merely changes its physiognomy, becoming less manifest but not for this reason less present in our economic, social and political relations. As Pierre Bourdieu has shown in a masterly manner, there is a symbolic violence which is not registered in public records and statistics, but which is nonetheless effective and coercive. It is my belief that the diachronic study of the modifications of violence in relation to its changing historical and semantic context will help us to find the most relevant metamorphoses and mystifications of this concept in a western tradition.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brett Shadle"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227403"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f215beb7-584d-3332-9949-716f94ebe1ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Settlers, Africans, and Inter-Personal Violence in Kenya, ca. 1900\u20141920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267171","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":13646,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59961,60014]],"Locations in B":[[6178,6231]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13f84659-1a0a-3285-97e4-7c5237ccd02e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Abstracts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511108","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard W. Bell"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"242b65f3-df9f-38fd-8921-5f5e9d996899"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3042139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3042139","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fredrick B. Pike"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1407028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50565005"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d472914-6e96-3cb8-8b42-d907a60c0509"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1407028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviewpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of Notre Dame du lac on behalf of Review of Politics","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Psychology of Regeneration: Spain and America at the Turn of the Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1407028","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jahlani Niaah"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484689","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b535055-6882-360a-9482-63f2257d7078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484689"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Towards a New Map of Africa through Rastafari 'Works'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484689","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper seeks to broaden the notion of the African Public sphere to include the historical Diaspora by highlighting the works of Mortimo Planno, cultural historian - Rastafari luminary and plenipotentiary - in closing the void between Africa and its Diaspora, through examining Planno's definition of the African public sphere, as articulated in his general writings and main text: 'The Earth Most Strangest Man', as well as travelogues articulating his discourse on Back-to-Africa. Mortimo Planno is credited as having tutored reggae icon Bob Marley and many others in the faith of Rastafari which was to emerge as a new world religion and way of life out of Jamaica. Planno, an outstanding panAfrican scholar and activist, travelled to the United States of America, Canada, the United Kingdom and some fifteen African states, lecturing on the Movement developed in Jamaica, celebrating the Emperor of Ethiopia, Haile Selassie I as God incarnate. For more than fifty years, this elder was seen as the de facto leader of the Rastafari movement of Kingston. The study applies Paulo Freire's theory of a 'pedagogy of liberation' to assess whether Rastafari thinkers such as Planno can be seen as facilitating a trans-Atlantic conscientisation towards remedial African national development and liberation from what Garvey (1927) described as 'mental slavery'. Cet article vise \u00e0 \u00e9largir la notion de la sph\u00e8re publique africaine pour inclure la diaspora historique \u00e0 travers une mise en \u00e9vidence des travaux de Mortimo Planno, historien de la culture, sommit\u00e9 et pl\u00e9nipotentiaire rastafari, en comblant le vide entre l'Afrique et sa diaspora, par l'examen de la d\u00e9finition par Planno de la sph\u00e8re publique africaine, comme exprim\u00e9e dans la plupart de ses \u00e9crits, et le texte principal, \u00ab The Earth Most Strangest Man \u00bb, ainsi que ses r\u00e9cits de voyage exprimant son discours sur le Retour en Afrique. Mortimo Planno aurait form\u00e9 l'ic\u00f4ne de reggae, Bob Marley, et bien d'autres dans la foi rastafari qui devait \u00e9merger comme une nouvelle religion mondiale et un mode de vie \u00e0 partir de la Jama\u00efque. Planno, un remarquable intellectual et militant panafricain, s'est rendu aux \u00c9tats-Unis d'Am\u00e9rique, au Canada, au Royaume-Uni et dans une quinzaine d'\u00c9tats africains, pour animer des conf\u00e9rences sur le mouvement d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 en Jama\u00efque, glorifiant l'Empereur d'Ethiopie, Hail\u00e9 S\u00e9lassi\u00e9 I, comme Dieu incarn\u00e9e. Pendant plus de cinquante ans, cet homme \u00e9tait consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme le leader de facto du mouvement rastafari de Kingston. Cette \u00e9tude applique la th\u00e9orie de Paulo Freire d'une \u00ab p\u00e9dagogie de la lib\u00e9ration \u00bb pour \u00e9valuer si les penseurs rastafari comme Planno peuvent \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9s comme ayant facilit\u00e9 une conscientisation transatlantique en vue de soutenir le d\u00e9veloppement national en Afrique et la lib\u00e9ration de ce Garvey (1927) qualifiait d'\u00ab esclavage mental \u00bb.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philippe Bourgois"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7079dd9-34c5-3d1d-aa97-7443fe5e37ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The power of violence in war and peace: Post-Cold War lessons from El Salvador","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047716","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":12832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Cold War sanitized the author's analysis of political violence among revolutionary peasants in El Salvador during the 1980s. A 20-year retrospective analysis of his fieldnote(s) documents the ways political terror and repression become embedded in daily interactions that normalize interpersonal brutality in a dynamic of everyday violence. Furthermore, the structural, symbolic and interpersonal violence that accompanies both revolutionary mobilization and also labor migration to the US inner city follows gendered fault lines. The snares of symbolic violence in counter-insurgency was spawn mutual recrimination and shame, obfuscating the role of an oppressive power structure. Similarly, everyday violence in a neo-liberal version of peacetime facilitates the administration of the subordination of the poor who blame themselves for character failings. Ethnography's challenge is to elucidate the causal chains and gendered linkages in the continuum of violence that buttresses inequality in the post-Cold War era.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. Llewellyn Watson"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a9bcf56-1562-31fa-a8b7-c885bed3a555"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Patterns of Black Protest in Jamaica: The Case of the Ras-Tafarians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783660","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carole Fabricant"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30032076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Speaking for the Irish Nation: The Drapier, the Bishop, and the Problems of Colonial Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30032076","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":16575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-02-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206791","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"870e81a9-79c2-3fb4-a277-73d40129b377"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41206791"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206791","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":17668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda K. Richter"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv9zcjr9.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780824811402"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9c0d7a6-9b8e-3885-8905-06256c1bfa02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv9zcjr9.15"}],"isPartOf":"The Politics of Tourism in Asia","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"273","pagination":"273-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Business","History","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Health sciences - Medical specialties","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Political science - Government","Applied sciences - Research methods","Biological sciences - Biology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv9zcjr9.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["asia travel","sri lanka","travel trade","tourism research","eastern economic","pakistan","asia travel trade","international tourism","economic review","yearbook"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUIS GIMENEZ AMOROS"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00654019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"616280295"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14d0d6c8-dac0-37ba-811e-3bd06bc428ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24877332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrimusi"}],"isPartOf":"African Music","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"International Library of African Music","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"AZAWAN: PRECOLONIAL MUSICAL CULTURE AND SAHARAWI NATIONALISM IN THE REFUGEE CAMPS OF THE HAMADA DESERT IN ALGERIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24877332","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Zimmerman"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d288e6b-2efe-3144-9a58-6e060306be5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43305131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AFRICA IN IMPERIAL AND TRANSNATIONAL HISTORY: MULTI-SITED HISTORIOGRAPHY AND THE NECESSITY OF THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305131","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":5539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A multi-sited, but nonetheless locally grounded, transnational history breaks with older modes of imperial history that treated Africa as little more than a setting for the history of colonizers. More recently, critical approaches to imperial history have pointed to, but not adequately pursued, the treatment of colonizer and colonized as coeval subjects of history and objects of analysis. Historians of Africa and the diaspora, however, moved beyond imperial history decades ago, and these fields provide important resources and models for transnational historians. Transnational history, nonetheless, always risks reproducing the boundaries between colonizer and colonized that it seeks to overcome. The need to think outside of empire from within a world structured by empires requires that historians embrace critical theory, but in a manner consistent with the groundedness of multi-sited historiography.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tetteh A. Kofi"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41803046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86e015f9-978b-3b50-9145-9aa8f56bdbb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41803046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The need for and principles of a Pan-African economic ideology \/ NECESSITE ET PRINCIPES D'UNE IDEOLOGIE PAN-AFRICAINE DU DEVELOPPEMENT ECONOMIQUE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41803046","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11574,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[39919,40051]],"abstract":"L'histoire \u00e9conomique de l'actuel Tiers Monde refl\u00e8te, pour une large part, la suite des effets de l'expansion capitaliste europ\u00e9enne. Plus qu'aucune autre partie du Tiers Monde, l'Afrique a ressenti le choc de cette expansion et de son \u00e9volution en un capitalisme international \u00e0 base de monopoles. Aussi, le probl\u00e8me qui se pose \u00e0 elle est-il particuli\u00e8rement ardu. Comment, en effet, les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s pan-africaines peuvent-elles atteindre \u00e0 l'auto-d\u00e9termination et \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance \u00e9conomique, alors qu'elles se trouvent \u00e9troitement, organiquement d\u00e9pendantes du capitalisme occidental des monopoles ? Plusieurs th\u00e9oriciens ont trait\u00e9 de la formation du capitalisme et de son expansion dans le monde occidental, mais on ne trouve gu\u00e8re dans leurs travaux de quoi expliquer la d\u00e9pendance du monde africain \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard du capitalisme europ\u00e9en. Il faut recourir \u00e0 Marx pour avoir une interpr\u00e9tation du d\u00e9veloppement et du sous-d\u00e9veloppement dans le monde actuel. Pourtant, la th\u00e9orie marxiste visant \u00e0 l'action sociale, explicite en ce qui concerne la r\u00e9volution du prol\u00e9tariat industriel, contient assez peu de chose touchant la lib\u00e9ration des colonis\u00e9s du Tiers Monde. Quant aux leaders pan-africains, on peut se demander pourquoi, ayant admis le dogme du communisme, ils n'en ont pas ajust\u00e9 les th\u00e9ories comme l'ont fait L\u00e9nine et, apr\u00e8s lui, Mao Ts\u00e9-tung. Le monde pan-africain se compose de nations-Etats, toutes issues du d\u00e9veloppement de l'\u00e9conomie mondiale de march\u00e9, que ce soit en Afrique noire, aux Cara\u00efbes ou dans les Am\u00e9riques. Leur \u00e9volution historique et sociale refl\u00e8te les lois du capitalisme, depuis la forme la plus \u00e9l\u00e9mentaire de l'accumulation jusqu'au type actuel du capitalisme de monopoles. Cette \u00e9volution n'a pas manqu\u00e9 d'\u00eatre observ\u00e9e d'un \u0153il critique par la plupart des pan-africanistes, dont certains ont tent\u00e9 d'en modifier le cours. Plus tard, c'est la recherche de fondements th\u00e9oriques d'auto-d\u00e9termination et d'\u00e9mancipation \u00e9conomique qui a mobilis\u00e9 les efforts du pan-africanisme. Cependant, jusqu'en 1945, le d\u00e9veloppement id\u00e9ologique a surtout \u00e9t\u00e9 dirig\u00e9 sur le probl\u00e8me de l'ind\u00e9pendance politique. Il appara\u00eet \u00e0 pr\u00e9sent que les rapports entre l'Afrique et l'Europe, sur le plan de l'histoire \u00e9conomique, ont abouti \u00e0 un d\u00e9s\u00e9quilibre total des structures \u00e9conomiques du monde africain, structures qui ne sont ni rattach\u00e9es organiquement \u00e0 celles du monde occidental, ni ind\u00e9pendantes en elles-m\u00eames. La notion de d\u00e9pendance a ainsi \u00e9t\u00e9 formul\u00e9e, impliquant le contr\u00f4le par des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s multi-nationales des institutions, de la technologie, de la finance et du capital. On peut avancer que c'est cette notion de d\u00e9pendance qui entretient le d\u00e9s\u00e9quilibre \u00e9conomique du Tiers Monde et qui accro\u00eet son appauvrissement. Il reste \u00e0 ce Tiers Monde \u00e0 choisir entre le maintien de son actuelle association au capitalisme industriel d'Occident, d'une part, et la recherche d'une nouvelle strat\u00e9gie de d\u00e9veloppement qui lui permettrait de rompre avec cette d\u00e9pendance, d'autre part. Une double hypoth\u00e8se se pr\u00e9sente : t\u00f4t ou tard, le monde africain refusera l'appauvrissement croissant, l'incapacit\u00e9 du capitalisme industriel \u00e0 r\u00e9duire le ch\u00f4mage et l'instabilit\u00e9 politique qui en r\u00e9sulte pour les nations africaines; plus tard, le monde africain se r\u00e9voltera, contre les bourgeoisies nationales, qui se seront rang\u00e9es du c\u00f4t\u00e9 du capitalisme des monopoles, rejettera l'id\u00e9e de d\u00e9pendance et recherchera sa propre identit\u00e9, nationale et raciale, dans la possession de ses propres moyens de production. C'est dans cette double perspective qu'appara\u00eet la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'une id\u00e9ologie pan-africaine de d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique. Mais l'\u00e9mancipation \u00e9conomique du monde noir requiert une condition pr\u00e9alable : celle de l'unit\u00e9 de l'Afrique m\u00eame. Les r\u00e9centes calamit\u00e9s qu'a connues le Sahel \u2014 s\u00e9cheresse et famine \u2014 d\u00e9montrent une fois de plus l'instabilit\u00e9 d'une r\u00e9gion dont les structures fondamentales ont \u00e9t\u00e9 boulevers\u00e9es par l'occupation \u00e9trang\u00e8re \u00e0 caract\u00e8re de trafic colonial. Car l'incapacit\u00e9 des pays du Sahel \u00e0 ma\u00eetriser la famine ne d\u00e9pend pas d'un d\u00e9sastre naturel caus\u00e9 par une s\u00e9cheresse accidentelle. Elle refl\u00e8te la d\u00e9sint\u00e9gration d'institutions sociales et \u00e9conomiques d'une r\u00e9gion encore marqu\u00e9e par le colonialisme, dans la r\u00e9partition du travail, dans la cr\u00e9ation artificielle des entit\u00e9s politiques, et dans le d\u00e9sordre int\u00e9rieur, souvent provoqu\u00e9 du dehors. Si la solution qui s'impose au Sahel r\u00e9side dans la r\u00e9organisation des entit\u00e9s \u00e9conomiques r\u00e9gionales, c'est aussi une r\u00e9organisation \u00e0 la fois politique et \u00e9conomique qu'il faut \u00e0 l'unit\u00e9 pan-africaine, dont la socialisation doit reposer sur des r\u00e9alit\u00e9s bien concr\u00e8tes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BEVERLY E. COLEMAN"],"datePublished":"1971-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163481","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f02a0a1-fdfb-3e1f-afb8-87f350ad640d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163481"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"A HISTORY OF SWAHILI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163481","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7627,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[322360,322429]],"Locations in B":[[40651,40714]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George E. Marcus"],"datePublished":"1969-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2128352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223816"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38309773"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a2dd797-62fb-30d1-8ad8-3163f218e34f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2128352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Politics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"931","pageStart":"913","pagination":"pp. 913-931","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Psychopathology and Political Recruitment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2128352","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Youssef Yacoubi"],"datePublished":"2018-05-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.55.2.0361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4599caf-f816-3de1-ba42-a1a97f2c8953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.55.2.0361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"378","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-378","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Suspended Crisis in Arab-American and Arabic Literatures: Modernity, Violence, and Afflicted Textuality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.55.2.0361","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":6411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Through a comparative and poststructuralist reading, I will examine the artistic manners in which a selection of Arab-American and Arabic literary texts builds a strategy of a poetics-of-suspended-crisis. By conceptualizing crisis through the discourse of violence, I examine three of its dimensions: crisis as a matter of discursive silencing and silence; crisis as a problem of structure in orientalism, and finally crisis as a textual event, which ultimately announces the detonation of silencing and silence. On this account, I distinguish between two modes of representation of crisis. The first concerns itself with narrating the repository of discursive censures over crises in the Middle East, and therefore aims to depoliticize the silences built over crisis. The second mode exemplifies a trend of inscribing crisis as an antagonistic condition of the text and language itself. My argument pays attention to some of the most esoteric and visceral literary strategies that may have remained repressed in Western frameworks of reading \u201cworld\u201d or \u201cethnic\u201d literatures. My selection of these texts is but a small sample concerned with aestheticizing violence as a fundamental mode of imagining crisis in order to allow new counterpoints of thinking it differently outside modern visions of apocalypse, paralysis, and psychosis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris A Eng","Amy K King"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671430","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0819449-cac2-3828-8586-684496c2586e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Forum Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671430","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":2217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Edited by Chris A Eng and Amy K King, this rst of a two-part forum identifies and contemplates the emergent potential of four analytics for imagining alternative humanities. Structuring thought across disciplines, these analytics resonate strongly with the specic ways that cultural studies shifted, developed, and re ned its ideas and focus: J. Kehaulani Kauanui takes up settler colonialism; Kyla Wazana Tompkins, New Materialism; Julie Avril Minich, disability; and Jodi Melamed, institutionality.","subTitle":"Emergent Critical Analytics for Alternative Humanities","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A.A. Jalloh"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e209ca-2140-3146-b719-3ce76fcbf51b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neo-colonialism and he Prospects for Developmen Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341526","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SYD THOMAS"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45291615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425473"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc7e04ee-7bc4-3f5f-85cb-8ca392014377"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45291615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dickensquart"}],"isPartOf":"Dickens Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"PRETTY WOMAN, ELEGANTLY FRAMED\": THE FATE OF BELLA WILFER IN DICKENS'S \"OUR MUTUAL FRIEND\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45291615","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5hgxtt.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781922144492"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abe38832-8c77-3997-8177-9a96bd2343b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt5hgxtt.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"279","pagination":"279-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Language & Literature","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt5hgxtt.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":31310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","became","faisal","french","nobel prize","minister","politician","english","educated","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janet M. Bujra"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2d80215-0e47-3384-89b9-49ff1c12e39a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Women \"Entrepreneurs\" of Early Nairobi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484081","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article vise deux objectifs: le premier veut montrer comment et pourquoi les femmes vinrent s'\u00e9tablir dans les toutes premi\u00e8res ann\u00e9es du XXe si\u00e8cle et qu'une fois sur place, pourquoi elles devinrent des prostitu\u00e9es; le second veut \u00eatre une explication des voies par lesquelles ces femmes ind\u00e9pendantes ont su cr\u00e9er une telle vie sociale, par leur adh\u00e9sion \u00e0 l'Islam, leurs r\u00e9seaux \u00e0 la fois de pseudo-parent\u00e9 et d'urbanit\u00e9 sociale, et par l'investissement de leurs revenus dans la propri\u00e9t\u00e9 urbaine. Nous montrons que, dans cette d\u00e9marche, elles sont devenues une strate importante de la petite bourgeoisie africaine qui s'est d\u00e9gag\u00e9e comme marginale dans l'\u00e9conomie coloniale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michel Paul Richard"],"datePublished":"1969-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2948434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221465"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38543580"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83abb0fc-6076-3390-ba1a-cf53f2d8c418"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2948434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhealsocibeha"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Health and Social Behavior","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Negro Physician: Babbitt or Revolutionary?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2948434","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Negro physician has been portrayed as a black Babbitt by E. Franklin Frazier and as a liberal or even a potential revolutionary by Gerhard Lenski. This study examines the professional experiences and the ideology of 98 Negro doctors practicing in New York City, and finds that they are pressing for change in the economic as well as in the racial organization of medical practice. On the basis of the indices used in this study, Negro doctors are more liberal than white physicians practicing in the same area; more liberal even than Jewish doctors. While Frazier's observations may have been accurate a decade ago, Lenski is now closer to the mark.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Wright"],"datePublished":"1987-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"697","pageStart":"695","pagination":"pp. 695-697","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160952","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":1524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Monti"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cbae929-6290-3daf-857a-e938b4504e46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1145","pageStart":"1144","pagination":"pp. 1144-1145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231340","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madeline Merlini"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5081ebf-0391-3863-ab04-a04e4c853fa6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44234119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234119","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giselle Liza Anatol"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81e58138-0747-3c53-8b79-d6875f3150c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40027035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Maternal Discourses in Nalo Hopkinson's \"Midnight Robber\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027035","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8870,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36097,36174]],"Locations in B":[[11869,11949]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nichola Khan"],"datePublished":"2007-06-23","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ad630c5-6f73-3873-9d5d-f8863337520c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4419733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"2443","pageStart":"2435","pagination":"pp. 2435-2443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mobilisation and Political Violence in the Mohajir Community of Karachi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4419733","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ideas revolving around exclusion and the wholesale failure of democratic political legitimacy encouraged the mobilisation of Pakistan's mohajirs in an oppositional ethnic identity. From the mid-1980s to the millennium, the Muttahida Quami Movement was engaged in a conflict in Karachi involving high levels of violence with other ethnic groups, rival factions and the state. Drawing on the biographies of a minority of celebrated career \"killers\", this paper examines how violence emerged as a solution to the mohajir predicament. The biographies contain past and present experiences of perceived humiliation and losses between mohajirs and the state, and fathers and sons, leading to fractured masculinities in which violence is powerfully inscribed. Whilst their participation compensated them temporarily for problems in the family, it also exacerbated and regenerated those conditions under protest.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leon Moosavi"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26940362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e2421e2-4abd-3016-9485-dfaa7c7c88dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26940362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26940362","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":1189,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[2191,2252]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. Pal Ahluwalia"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45419718","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565346657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36c66ca4-ad9d-364b-8a11-ed72f14b7b64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45419718"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Into, Out of or Inventing Africa?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45419718","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kristin Bumiller"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9050ea5-0c5b-32dc-b703-9bc55f699f91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"439","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-439","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Victims in the Shadow of the Law: A Critique of the Model of Legal Protection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174330","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9459,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[44455,44514]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEFFEN JENSEN"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7c0b396-6e17-3a9a-8217-142bb66f8c91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26301186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Security and Development Nexus in Cape Town: War on Gangs, Counterinsurgency and Citizenship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26301186","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I argue that the security and development nexus takes on specific forms depending on the context, and that in Cape Town's coloured townships it is embodied in policies and practices around what has come to be known as the 'war on gangs'. Furthermore, the war on gangs in Cape Town bears resemblances to counterinsurgency strategies \u2013 not least in the sense that both are responses to a similar problem of governance. This comparison allows us explore how citizenship is being reconfigured for residents of the townships in ways that resemble what James Holston (2007) calls 'differentiated citizenship'. Such differentiated citizenship is opposed to the universal inclusivity promised by post-apartheid South Africa. By exploring the specific merging of security and development in the Capetonian war on gangs as compared to counterinsurgency and the subsequent reconfiguration of citizenship, I am able to address a central question: How \u2013 and with what consequences \u2013 does power maintain itself when faced with an onslaught from those that it restricts to the margins of institutions and social life?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence Wilde"],"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26213280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0143781X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c27859cd-84aa-3608-8b1f-c8c19377e760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26213280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histpolithou"}],"isPartOf":"History of Political Thought","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Imprint Academic Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOREL AND THE FRENCH RIGHT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26213280","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kaiya Aboagye"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.126.1.11","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8648c1fb-e8f3-3128-8624-ec14c319b5d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/transition.126.1.11"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"126","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Australian Blackness, the African Diaspora and Afro\/Indigenous Connections in the Global South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.126.1.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Kaiya Aboagye interrogates conventional narratives of Australia's colonial intervention and explores the ways in which erasure and omission have long concealed a complex history of racism, struggle and resistance on the continent.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fredric Michelman"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27796387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213667"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42432120"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d951bed1-e6bd-3252-a21c-1a5d580bffa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27796387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgeneeduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of General Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"AFRICAN LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27796387","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":1840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8528e40-d84c-3489-9d24-01758901c3b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40388304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"1158","pageStart":"1139","pagination":"pp. 1139-1158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making Sense of Mugabeism in Local and Global Politics: 'So Blair, Keep Your England and Let Me Keep My Zimbabwe'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388304","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe has emerged as one of the most controversial political figures since 2000, eliciting both admiration and condemnation. What is termed 'Mugabeism' is a summation of a constellation of political controversies, political behaviour, political ideas, utterances, rhetoric and actions that have crystallised around Mugabe's political life. It is a contested phenomenon with the nationalist aligned scholars understanding it as a pan-African redemptive ideology opposed to all forms of imperialism and colonialism and dedicated to a radical redistributive project predicated on redress of colonial injustices. A neoliberal-inspired perspective sees Mugabeism as a form of racial chauvinism and authoritarianism marked by antipathy towards norms of liberal governance and disdain for human rights and democracy. This article seeks to analyse Mugabeism as populist phenomenon propelled through articulatory practices and empty signifiers. As such it can be read at many levels: as a form of left-nationalism; as Afro-radicalism and nativism; a patriarchal neo-traditional cultural nationalism and an antithesis of democracy and human rights. All these representations make sense within the context of colonial, nationalist, postcolonial and even precolonial history that Mugabe has deployed to sustain and support his political views.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alamin Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3992572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5676fb7c-9163-30af-8029-f0b9bfa43088"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3992572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language and the Quest for Liberation in Africa: The Legacy of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3992572","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7171,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[43237,43282]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Opal Palmer Adisa"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"722fc401-19af-3a01-a260-517148ec990e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Culture and Nationalism on the World Stage: Louise Bennett's Aunty Roachy Seh<\/em> Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.124","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":5775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT In this paper, I offer a brief overview of Louise Bennett's work, discuss some of her influences, and show how she emerged as the preeminent purveyor of Jamaican culture, using poetry, storytelling, and the stage. Mainly, however, I focus on Bennett's role as the national spokesperson and advocate for nationalist sentiments after Jamaica gained its independence. Through the examination of Bennett's Aunty Roachy stories, I demonstrate that she was a fierce advocate for all things Jamaican and that she primarily used these stories via radio broadcast to instill pride in a people emerging from a colonial legacy that attempted to dehumanize and discredit their history. I assert that through the creation of the character Aunty Roachy and the format of these stories, each beginning with a Jamaican proverb, Bennett sees her role as both educator and informer and does not shy away from a didactic mode to drive home her point.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas O'Toole"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03627055"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42952119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmeetfchs"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Made in France\": The Second Central African Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952119","volumeNumber":"6\/7","wordCount":5009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ismail Rashid"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/486216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe3785a1-bc8f-3790-9165-1a389993acc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/486216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"683","pageStart":"656","pagination":"pp. 656-683","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science","Political science - Government"],"title":"Escape, Revolt, and Marronage in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Sierra Leone Hinterland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/486216","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contrairement \u00e0 ce que pensent certains intellectuels, les Africains ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 des traditions autonomes de r\u00e9sistance \u00e0 la servitude et d'anti-esclavage. Aux dix-huiti\u00e8me et au dix-neuvi\u00e8me si\u00e8cles, les peuples r\u00e9duits \u00e0 l'esclavage sur la c\u00f4te de la Haute-Guin\u00e9e ont r\u00e9guli\u00e8rement r\u00e9sist\u00e9 aux commer\u00e7ants d'esclaves r\u00e9gionaux et aux propri\u00e9taires d'esclaves, en s'\u00e9vadant, en cr\u00e9ant des enclaves libres et en usant de violence. La r\u00e9volte de Mandigo de 1785 \u00e0 1796 et la r\u00e9bellion de 1838 illustrent deux exemples d'une r\u00e9sistance prolong\u00e9e des esclaves contre les propri\u00e9taires d'esclaves r\u00e9gionaux. Ces r\u00e9bellions ont sem\u00e9 la confusion, mais elles ont aussi contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 la r\u00e9organisation de la police, de l'\u00e9conomie et de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 dans la r\u00e9gion. Les architectes de ces r\u00e9bellions, particuli\u00e8rement Bilali, chef de la seconde r\u00e9bellion, se sont montr\u00e9s inflexibles dans leur opposition \u00e0 l'esclavage. Loin d'\u00eatre des actes de r\u00e9sistance isol\u00e9s, ces r\u00e9bellions doivent \u00eatre comprises comme faisant partie de l'histoire plus large de l'anti-esclavage dans la r\u00e9gion.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Bucher","Simon Dickel"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3133186-3f02-3717-a18a-dea4c12fcafd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24589705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Affinity for the Lumpen: Depictions of Homelessness in Delany's \"Bread & Wine\" and \"The Mad Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589705","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8866,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286635,286910]],"Locations in B":[[46870,47144]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Upendra Baxi"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b01ef049-25b3-35b6-976b-34cb3dd075f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4017773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"725","pageStart":"713","pagination":"pp. 713-725","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What May the 'Third World' Expect from International Law?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017773","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What may the Third World expect from international law? To answer this question, one must begin by interrogating the meaning of the terms 'Third World' and 'international law'. This article argues that the meaning of the term 'Third World' has historically had layers of complexity to it, and it crucially includes not only states but also peoples. On the other hand, grand narrative traditions of the rise and growth of international law remain typically concerned with its 'lawness', the changing nature of its subjects, and its sources. Arguing against such an understanding from a sociological perspective, the article argues that no longer can the re-make of contemporary international law be understood as the exclusive law of the West. It must recognise the authorial role played by the Third World in all its complexity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georges N. Nzongola"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Bourgeoisie and Revolution in the Congo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159087","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[56944,56984]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul N. Siegel"],"datePublished":"1974-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91e93218-eaba-352f-8d71-99a8f516017e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/461587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Conclusion of Richard Wright's Native Son","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/461587","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":5512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Both Max's courtroom speech in Richard Wright's Native Son and his final scene with Bigger have been grievously misunderstood. The numerous critics of the novel have regarded Max's speech as a Communist \"party-line oration\" whose propaganda is poorly related to the rest of the book. Rather, Max seeks desperately to avert the cataclysmic end toward which he sees American society heading by striving to have wrongs redressed. Bigger, however, finds a meaning in his life by accepting his feelings of hate. This is not a defeat for him, as critics have asserted. Hatred of the oppressor is a natural, human emotion which, used as the motor power of an idea driving toward a goal, can transform both the individual and society. As Max says, \"The job in getting people to fight and have faith is in making them believe in what life has made them feel....\" This is the belief Bigger finally acquires. With this belief comes a sense of comradeship with those whites such as Jan who have earned such comradeship in action.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MALREDDY PAVAN KUMAR"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"957a4620-fb57-39b1-bee9-d046f5c896cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41341184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"1572","pageStart":"1557","pagination":"pp. 1557-1572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(An)other Way of Being Human: 'indigenous' alternative(s) to postcolonial humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341184","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay articulates the ways in which the Indigenous People's Movement leading to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples (2007) succeeds in what postcolonial theory has conventionally set out to emancipate, but has failed to do. Postcolonial theory challenges all eurocentric and liberal humanist discourses on rights which place the Western subject as the ideal subject figure of all histories and societies, and appeals for a language that would articulate other ways of being human and humanist. Yet recent trends in postcolonial theory have come to embrace the language of cosmopolitanism and humanism as viable alternatives for a postcolonial future. Drawing upon the principle thematic of the UN Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples, the article suggests that the Declaration provides an alternative to postcolonial theory's revisionist humanism\u2014the re-cognition of difference. As part of the international legal discourse, the Declaration is particularly noted for its political victory in the legitimisation of collective rights in postcolonial societies. Furthermore, as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) remains an integral part of the collective rights of the Indigenous Peoples, the article suggests that the Indigenous People's Movement succeeds in negotiating a language that would legitimise other ways of being human without being adversarial or antithetical to euro-humanism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manfred Mackenzie"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771638","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":1480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fad357c6-6947-3ab1-9477-a47b541f49c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"THE SIXTH PAN-AFRICAN CONGRESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066283","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GHIRMAI NEGASH"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c109b64f-6da4-3de5-be7a-5d3fb2b10b1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"NATIVE INTELLECTUALS IN THE CONTACT ZONE: AFRICAN RESPONSES TO ITALIAN COLONIALISM IN TIGRINYA LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540870","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines the critical responses of two African texts, The Author's Journey (1895) and The Conscript (1927, 1950), to Italian colonialism in Eritrea, and unpacks the relations between writing and authorial representations of imperial power, home, and the colonial order as particularized in those narratives. Written by Tigrinya intellectuals, who shared colonial education and wrote about the imperial European project with indigenous reflexivity, the texts provide the rare opportunity of an early, indigenous-written critical \"native point of view\" on colonialism and its (after)effects. Based on those arguments, the article concludes by claiming that The Conscript is an African language postcolonial novel avant la lettre.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Larry Neal"],"datePublished":"1968-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1144377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00125962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55617034"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236866"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c3638b9-c7f7-34b7-acd7-7a7b27cf60fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1144377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dramareviewtdr"}],"isPartOf":"The Drama Review: TDR","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Black Arts Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1144377","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":5982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benigno S\u00e1nchez-Eppler"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"464","pagination":"pp. 464-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Telling Anthropology: Zora Neale Hurston and Gilberto Freyre Disciplined in Their Field-Home-Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489860","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ann Laura Stoler"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b29376e-1c43-3d8b-bf31-474d82e2649b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20484502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Debris: Reflections on Ruins and Ruination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484502","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I look at \"imperial formations\" rather than at empire per se to register the ongoing quality of processes of decimation, displacement, and reclamation. Imperial formations are relations of force, harboring political forms that endure beyond the formal exclusions that legislate against equal opportunity, commensurate dignities, and equal rights. Working with the concept of imperial formation, rather than empire per se, the emphasis shifts from fixed forms of sovereignty and its denials to gradated forms of sovereignty and what has long marked the technologies of imperial rule--sliding and contested scales of differential rights. Imperial formations are defined by racialized relations of allocations and appropriations. Unlike empires, they are processes of becoming, not fixed things. Not least they are states of deferral that mete out promissory notes that are not exceptions to their operation but constitutive of them: imperial guardianship, trusteeships, delayed autonomy, temporary intervention, conditional tutelage, military takeover in the name of humanitarian works, violent intervention in the name of human rights, and security measures in the name of peace.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RAMESH DEOSARAN"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d5bbdc4-7232-3955-ba13-1ccddfd64610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF CULTURAL PLURALISM: UPDATING THE OLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653675","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10493,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[61530,61590]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maryse Cond\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"O Brave New World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820615","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Srirupa Roy"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54b9c8dd-2f2b-31ba-a1f7-979ef3c44fa3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Seeing a State: National Commemorations and the Public Sphere in India and Turkey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879333","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":16370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David E. Apter"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09893abc-a564-38d4-9a54-23e3c755d518"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes on the Underground: Left Violence and the National State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024641","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":9450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNE-MARIA MAKHULU"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"744060b9-0901-3e30-959e-63341b7a0cc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"799","pageStart":"782","pagination":"pp. 782-799","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Conditions for after Work: Financialization and Informalization in Posttransition South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489086","volumeNumber":"127","wordCount":11399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay situates the problem of twenty-first-century work in the global South\u2014specifically, in South Africa\u2014to challenge northern theories of the crisis of work. Addressing the break between Fordism and post-Fordism peculiar to the postcolonial context, it argues that new regimes of work should be understood in relation both to longer histories of colonial resistance to proletarianization (to the racisms of the shop floor) and to colonial Fordisms, as well as to the way these two factors inform the current expansion of informal employment. What practices and forms of life emerge from the precarity of informal economies and informal settlements? How are precarious modes of life connected to and informed by the steady dematerialization of the economy through financialization?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["April R. Biccum"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35fb60ec-6c21-3621-91e5-201fce4841d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4017822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"1020","pageStart":"1005","pagination":"pp. 1005-1020","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development and the 'New' Imperialism: A Reinvention of Colonial Discourse in DFID Promotional Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017822","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin A. Klein"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96741029-d816-3945-a3e5-e8cc933b87e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Back to Democracy: Presidential Address to the 1991 Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525125","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Nichols"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1047105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c61fbad7-3290-321e-8972-9b70b078f3a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1047105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1047105","volumeNumber":"513","wordCount":1118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan Marcellus Tauri"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3281f0b2-d4b8-36dc-95f6-a523253db7e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26405722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"3 (145)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Indigenous Peoples and the Globalization of Restorative Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405722","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":7693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Much of the criminological research and literature to date on the globalization of crime control has focused on macro-level theorizing about whether such globalization exists, and if so, its extent, scale, and impact. Little attention has been paid to the micro-level impact of all this activity, and in particular to the experiences of Indigenous peoples residing in settler colonial contexts. This article seeks to address this gap while also meeting Aas's exhortation that criminologists systematically explore connections between globalization and colonization. The article argues that the globalization of the restorative justice industry, especially the development of interventions such as family group conferencing, has had a profound impact on the ability of Indigenous peoples to develop and practice their own responses to social harm.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saloni Mathur"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b354724f-9568-3145-8570-56a4276ff1bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"558","pagination":"pp. 558-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Response: Belonging to Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619636","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":3169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Purnima Bose"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Hindutva Abroad: The California Textbook Controversy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339280","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":10802,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay traces the ideological transformations that accompany Hinduisms passage to the United States. Specifically, the essay analyzes the 2005-2006 California textbook controversy in which some members of two diasporic groups, the Vedic Foundation and the Hindu Educational Foundation, lobbied to change the content of the sections on Hinduism and ancient Indian in sixth-grade history-social science textbooks. Their intervention in the textbook certification process was challenged by secular Hindus, South Asian progressives, and academics specializing in South Asian studies. In addition to outlining the relationship between these groups and militant Hindu groups in India, the essay considers how the arguments in favor of changing textbook content draw simultaneously on forms of cultural nationalism associated with the Civil Rights movement and with the dominant forms of religiosity in the United States. The HEF's and VF's attempts to alter textbook content reveal deep ideological fissures over historical knowledge in the Indian American diaspora between, on the one hand, those Hindus purporting to speak on behalf of the larger community, and, on the other hand, secular Hindus, South Asian progressives, and academics with a South Asia focus. At the same time, however, the ensuing debates underscore the importance of religion in staking epistemological claims about ancient history, the status of memory, and the construction of a collective diasporic identity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sunera Thobani"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af0f632b-fa22-3864-890c-ea63627c8828"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"War Frenzy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338532","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":3537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremiah O. Arowosegbe"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40175253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Social Sciences and Knowledge Production in Africa: The Contribution of Claude Ake","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40175253","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the strengths and weaknesses of Ake's contribution to the social sciences and knowledge production in Africa. It discusses the relevance of Ake's works for adapting the intellectual legacies of Marxist scholarship to understanding the political economy and social history of contemporary Africa. It also highlights the shortcomings noted in his orientation, and dispositions to expatriate knowledge generally, and the Western social science in particular. Given his advocacy of the need to reconstruct existing disciplinary fields following uniquely African critiques and interpretations, the study presents Ake's works as a corrective intervention to Euro-centrism and advocates the practice of 'non-hierarchical' 'cross-regional' 'dialogue', in which neither the North nor the South is taken as the paradigm against which 'the other' is measured and pronounced inadequate. \/\/\/ Die Sozialwissenschaften und die Wissensproduktion in Afrika: Der Beitrag von Claude Ake Dieser Aufsatz untersucht die St\u00e4rken und Schw\u00e4chen der Beitr\u00e4ge Akes zu den Sozialwissenschaften und der Wissensproduktion in Afrika. In diesem Artikel wird die Relevanz der Arbeiten Akes f\u00fcr die Anpassung des intellektuellen Erbes marxistischer Analyse an die Politische \u00d6konomie und die Sozialgeschichte des gegenw\u00e4rtigen Afrika thematisiert. Dabei werden gleicherma\u00dfen die Unzul\u00e4nglichkeiten in Akes Haltung gegen\u00fcber externer Wissensproduktion im allgemeinen und gegen\u00fcber der Westlichen im Besonderen diskutiert. Angesichts seines Eintretens f\u00fcr eine Umstrukturierung der wissenschaftlichen Disziplinen unter Ber\u00fccksichtigung afrikanischer Kritiken und Interpretationen stellt die Studie ein Korrektiv zum Eurozentrismus dar. Ake bef\u00fcrwortet einen \"nichthierarchischen\", interregionalen Dialog, in dem weder der Norden noch der S\u00fcden als Paradigma gelten sollte, an dessen Vorbild die \"andere Seite\" gemessen und als unzul\u00e4nglich beurteilt wird. \/\/\/ Les sciences sociales et la production du savoir en Afrique: la contribution de Claude Ake Cet article examine les forces et les faiblesses de la contribution de Claude Ake aux sciences sociales et \u00e0 la production du savoir en Afrique. L'\u00e9tude pr\u00e9sente examine dans quelle mesure les travaux d'Ake permettent de revisiter les h\u00e9ritages intellectuels marxistes, afin de mieux comprendre l'\u00e9conomie politique et l'histoire sociale de l'Afrique contemporaine. Elle souligne \u00e9galement les d\u00e9fauts des positions d'Ake par rapport aux savoirs expatri\u00e9s en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral et aux sciences sociales occidentales en particulier. Etant donn\u00e9 que pour Claude Ake, il est n\u00e9cessaire de reconstruire les champs disciplinaires existants, en prenant uniquement en compte les critiques et les interpr\u00e9tations africaines, l'auteur de cet article consid\u00e8re le corpus d'Ake comme un apport correctif a 'eurocentrisme, et pr\u00e9conise d'\u00e9tablir un dialogue interr\u00e9gional et non hi\u00e9rarchique, dans lequel ni le Nord ni le Sud n'est pris comme paradigme par rapport auquel l'autre est mesur\u00e9 et d\u00e9cr\u00e9t\u00e9 inf\u00e9rieur.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. NDUBISI OKECHUKWU"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44480725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84602cc6-d41b-377e-90df-277f9cf491b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44480725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullpeacprop"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Peace Proposals","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"382","pagination":"pp. 382-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peace Education in the Third World: Cultural Constraints on Peace Education in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44480725","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":4467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juliette Dupont"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48502254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16236297"},{"name":"oclc","value":"745979010"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7da4fd8-e5b1-3e76-b788-9eb2a05f4938"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48502254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polieuro"}],"isPartOf":"Politique europe\u0301enne","issueNumber":"61","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48502254","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ella Shohat"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bf25303-132f-30a2-a7ff-17888ba5e090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE<\/span> \u201cPOSTCOLONIAL<\/span>\u201d IN<\/span> TRANSLATION<\/span>: READING<\/span> SAID IN<\/span> HEBREW<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.055","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The essay focuses on the \u201ctravel\u201d of various debates\u2014orientalism, postcolonialism, postzionism\u2014between the U.S. and Israel, between one institutional zone and political semantics and another. Through a comparative history of these critical intellectual debates, the author considers some key moments and issues in the \u201ctranslation\u201d of Said's ideas into Hebrew. The reception of Said's work is engaged in its contradictory dimensions, especially in liberal-leftist circles, where the desire to go-beyond-Said offers some ironic twists. The issues examined include: the nature of the \u201cpost\u201d in the concepts of the \u201cpost-colonial\u201d and \u201cpost-Zionism\u201d; the problem of \u201chybridity\u201d and \u201cresistance\u201d in the land of partitions and walls; and the mediation in Israel, via the Anglo-American academy, of the \u201csubaltern\u201d intellectual.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Himani Bannerji"],"datePublished":"2000-03-11","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4409022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a497b058-f7ca-313e-8568-8ad39043e2de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4409022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"11","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"920","pageStart":"902","pagination":"pp. 902-920","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Projects of Hegemony: Towards a Critique of Subaltern Studies' 'Resolution of the Women's Question'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4409022","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":21672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this paper is to integrate a Marxist critique of subaltern studies with a feminist one, using Partha Chatterjee's formulation of the \"nationalist resolution of the women's question\" as a reflector for his and other subaltern theorists' position of hegemony and de-colonisation. Such a Marxist feminist perspective, applied to questions of idology and politics, should help to throw light on aspects of cultural nationalism in India as well as in other places, including the west, where mini-nationalism flourish within the small domain of multiculturalism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Kennedy"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997788","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19ca3e35-8bf5-301c-8a9b-de01c26700a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3997788"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Indigenous Capitalism in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997788","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M.L. Baregu"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8cc21d9-4450-3193-99f1-27e6c5f2517b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa: Imperatives for Delinking from the Capitalist World Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341549","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordy Rocheleau"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Critical Theory: Discursive Proceduralism and Its Discontents","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559217","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norval Edwards"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee2b4ce8-3343-3d82-8cf6-4aab6e463f18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"TALKING ABOUT A LITTLE CULTURE\": SYLVIA WYNTER'S EARLY ESSAYS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019778","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9115,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mwelwa C. Musambachime"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec81a4d5-234c-30db-847b-b7f7181c0494"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/219502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"664","pageStart":"643","pagination":"pp. 643-664","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Military Violence against Civilians: The Case of the Congolese and Zairean Military in the Pedicle 1890-1988","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219502","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shiera S. el-Malik"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42912416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03321460"},{"name":"oclc","value":"160064644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-236265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4faf726-3b22-312a-9d81-07b21145e7c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42912416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisstudinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Irish Studies in International Affairs","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Royal Irish Academy","sourceCategory":["History","Irish Studies","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intellectual Work 'In-the-World': Women's Writing and Anti-Colonial Thought in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42912416","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper considers women's practices of thinking, writing and speaking as a less acknowledged part of the anti-colonial project. I argue that the anticolonial moment in history exposed, and continues to expose, how hegemonic epistemological structures are fundamentally racist and sexist, setting boundaries around who can speak and what can be said, even in the historical record. I posit that 'looking back' and asking 'where are the women?' reveals a complexity in how women's intellectual energies and writing practices get harnessed in defining the political problem and in devising a response. I present three examples of women's writing and intellectual work regarding anticolonialism in narrative form and suggest that too little attention is paid to the value of what I call 'present-hind-sight'.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. R. Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/423605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb4aed75-8d16-3add-a934-53bd2a3f313f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/423605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Evaluating Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/423605","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9403,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The argument that social or international conflicts are functional or dysfunctional is re-examined. It is suggested that discussion has tended to confuse at least three levels at which any conflict could realistically and usefully be evaluated; that of the parties engaged in the conflict, that of factions and individuals within each of the parties, and that of the overall social system within which the conflict occurs. Various kinds of costs and benefits of engaging and then succeeding in a conflict are considered, ranging from economic or political to psychological, including costs and benefits that are deferred to some future time. The point of view that sees conflicts as simply functional or dysfunctional is criticised and instead it is suggested that these terms be seen as an invitation to carry out some form of cost calculation, bearing in mind key considerations of 'Functional for whom and over what time period?' Finally, it is argued that any efforts to resolve (or even merely to settle) the conflict should take account of benefits some may achieve by active participation and role playing, so any solution should find some compensation for such foregone benefits. Illustrations are drawn from the settlement ending the civil war in the Sudan.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asselin Charles"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30336a13-1c96-33fe-a446-a66527373449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonial Discourse Since Christopher Columbus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784839","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7115,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[44165,44223]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert L. Green, Dean and Professor Emeritus"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0178","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bbce26b-66b6-3ae1-a13c-060be700711d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0178","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":1489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. ANN KAPLAN"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303952","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"000f2175-2e1d-3b14-a444-466371577d88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26303952"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Couch Affair: Gender and Race in Hollywood Transference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303952","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger A. Berger"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819613","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Phillips"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18ee23f7-bc4a-3b72-b4ad-7dd7c4b90514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"860","pageStart":"837","pagination":"pp. 837-860","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617619","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In contemporary renderings of modernity, it is patented to the West and assumed to include gender equality; a commitment to gender equality then risks becoming overlaid with hierarchies of country and culture. One way of contesting this, associated with alternative modernities, takes issue with the presumed Western origins of modernity. Another, associated with feminism, subjects the claim the modern societies deliver gender equality to more critical scrutiny. But the first is vulnerable to the charge of describing different routes to the same ideals, and the second to the response that evidence of shortcomings only shows that modernity has not yet fully arrived. The contribution of the West to the birth of modernity is not, in my argument, the important issue. The problem, rather, is the mistaken attribution of a \u201clogic\u201d to modernity, as if it contains nested within it egalitarian principles that will eventually unfold. Something did indeed happen at a particular moment in history that provided new ways of imagining equality, but the conditions of its birth were associated from the start with the spread of colonial despotisms and the naturalisation of both gender and racial difference. There was no logic driving this towards more radical versions. It is in the politics of equality that new social imaginaries are forged, not in the unfolding of an inherently \u201cmodern\u201d ideal.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pnina Werbner"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183p51f.22","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745334950"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ba66a51-2825-334a-acc0-13950228b1bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt183p51f.22"}],"isPartOf":"The Making of an African Working Class","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"277","pagination":"277-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183p51f.22","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["botswana","indexphp sid","werbner t02853","labour","retrieved","gaborone","botswana gazette","accessed","botswana guardian","london"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shehla Burney"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"514a6475-de4b-3160-a078-e5094f73b3dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER FOUR: Resistance and Counter-Discourse: Writing Back to the Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981701","volumeNumber":"417","wordCount":4726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa R. Peattie"],"datePublished":"1970-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/671613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67b85c94-43a4-307a-8235-31b1698a50dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/671613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/671613","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James D. Le Sueur"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41299238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dd0ee1d-1511-33fd-b373-cf022e018efa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41299238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Decolonization? The Legacy of the Algerian Conflict and the Transformation of Identity in Contemporary France","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41299238","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Priebe"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2929654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2806267e-855c-3059-9a4c-3972fbca9f19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2929654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Demonic Imagery and the Apocalyptic Vision in the Novels of Ayi Kwei Armah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2929654","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Baugh"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sartre, Derrida and Commitment: The Case of Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511147","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. 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The values of cultural pluralism as opposed to the melting pot ideology are pointed out. It is time, the author maintains, to try the \"great experiment\"\u2014to opt for the desirability of ethnicity, to provide a decent standard of living for minority groups and an opportunity to enter the mainstream while at the same time maintaining their differences.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dominic J. Capeci Jr.","Jack C. 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First, we argue that extant descriptive practices do not diversify archives. Rather, we find that descriptive work that isolates and scatters aims to erase the identifiable existence of unique Indigenous voices. Next, we argue that while on one hand, the mass digitization of slavery-era records holds both the promise of new historical knowledge and of genealogical reconstruction for descendants of enslaved peoples, on the other hand, this trend belies a growing tendency to reinscribe racist ideologies and codify damaging ideas about how we organize and create new knowledge through harmful descriptive practices. Finally, working specifically against the rhetoric of diversity and inclusion, we challenge the ways archives claim diverse representation by uncritically describing records rooted in generational trauma, hatred, and genocide, and advocate for developing and employing decolonizing and redescriptive practices to support an archival praxis rooted in justice and liberation, rather than more palatable (and less effective) notions of \u201cdiversity and inclusion\u201d.","subTitle":"Decolonizing Description and Embracing Redescription as Liberatory Archival Praxis","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mattia Fumanti"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"111cbb46-8257-3ed2-bf85-60543d51b106"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23182112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Nation Building and the Battle for Consciousness: Discourses on Education in Post-Apartheid Namibia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182112","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":13163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Education carries strong emotional connotation in Africa, not least for its association with emancipation, liberation, and social mobility. Drawing on research conducted in Northern Namibia, this essay examines how education is conceived by a cadre of elite, educated professionals working in the Ministry of Basic Education regional offices. It contrasts these officials' views with those of white settlers, many of whom, in contrast, place their faith in the market, not in a regulatory state\u2014and certainly not in a regional educational office. Whereas elite officials deploy images of education for purposes of state making and state ceremonialism, white businessmen use education to undo officials' authority, with the effect, implicitly, of reinscribing apartheid visions of race and governance. This article draws on, and offers ethnographic evidence in support of, a body of theoretical work on state-ritualized uses of education, civil religion, and the moral character (and counter-morality) of state education.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vusi Gumede"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8635090-7001-360b-99fc-407657f5473f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26174214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leadership for Africa's Development: Revisiting Indigenous African Leadership and Setting the Agenda for Political Leadership","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174214","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":6887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The African continent remains at the periphery in world affairs, as many have argued. Similarly, many scholars have advanced cogent reasons for this unfortunate reality. The development of the continent is also unimpressive, relative to the potential of the African economies. It is therefore important that Africa pursues its own socioeconomic development approach instead of what appears to be inappropriate policies that are being implemented in most if not all African countries, as argued elsewhere. This article makes a case for African (traditional\/indigenous) leadership and examines political leadership in particular with the view of ensuring that Africa reclaims its lost glory and recovers its stolen legacy (to paraphrase George James). The article argues that African leadership should be infused with thought leadership, thought liberation, and critical consciousness. And critical consciousness and thought liberation should be linked to decolonizing the minds of Africans, as Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o and others have argued.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Louis Bertucelli","Wm. Starr","Lita Paniagua","Gary Crowdus","Renee Delforge"],"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43868787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38571931"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b86b12e-468b-3b0f-b61d-ddf96fe91ffb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43868787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"3","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-3","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RAMPARTS OF CLAY an interview with Jean-Louis Bertucelli","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43868787","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":2054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27761519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27761519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"7","pagination":"p. 7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Isaac Julien Visits Indiana University Bloomington","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27761519","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":459,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claudia M. Milian Arias"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758819","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51910c08-13a1-31ff-80c8-c2e03180c367"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758819"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Studying New World Negro Problems: Open Double Consciousness and Mulatinidad in Edwidge Danticat's \"The Farming of Bones\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758819","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerd\u00e8s Fleurant"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3f9a404-1c3c-3f67-9f59-d1ec4f4e7910"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Song of Freedom: Vodun, Conscientization and Popular Culture in Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715017","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Floro Quibuyen"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fbe4552-8fd2-3075-83ac-6336af955b99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42634460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rizal and Filipino Nationalism: Critical Issues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634460","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":15240,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reiland Rabaka"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b720285-25fb-32d7-9b9b-94c1c081d927"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Malcolm X and\/as Critical Theory: Philosophy, Radical Politics, and the African American Search for Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180931","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The principle objective of this article is to examine Malcolm X as a critical theorist. Malcolm is viewed as a significant contributor to the Africana tradition of critical theory as articulated by several Africana Studies scholars and Africana philosophers in specific. This article argues that Malcolm's social and political philosophy provides radical theorists with a new paradigm and point of departure for developing an Africana critical theory of contemporary society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223781"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"369b9cbf-aa83-3407-8e7f-8aa0c159c534"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rkt3.11"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"297","pagination":"297-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introdu\u00e7\u00e3o \u00e0s epistemologias do Sul","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Tenho argumentado profusamente, em outra parte, que nos albores do novo mil\u00eanio precisamos nos distanciar do pensamento cr\u00edtico euroc\u00eantrico (Santos, 2015: 19-46). Reproduzo aqui a conclus\u00e3o do argumento. Criar dita dist\u00e2ncia \u00e9 condi\u00e7\u00e3o pr\u00e9via para poder realizar a tarefa te\u00f3rica mais importante do nosso tempo: que o impens\u00e1vel seja pensado, que o inesperado seja assumido como parte integral do trabalho te\u00f3rico. J\u00e1 que as teorias de vanguarda, por defini\u00e7\u00e3o, n\u00e3o se deixam pegar de surpresa, acredito que, no atual contexto de transforma\u00e7\u00e3o social e pol\u00edtica, n\u00e3o precisamos de teorias de vanguarda, sen\u00e3o de teorias de retaguarda. Penso no trabalho te\u00f3rico","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["linha abissal","colonialismo","conhecimento","outro lado","ocidental","lutas contra","exclus\u00e3o","colonialismo hist\u00f3rico","sociais","grupos sociais"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PANOS D. BARDIS"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8355cabf-1759-36fb-8787-e3af22c9ef63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45292778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE: THEORY AND QUANTIFICATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292778","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this preliminary study is to evaluate and synthesize the most important theories of violence and then, on the basis of theories and additional data, to develop an eclectic and quantitative model of violence etiology. The author begins with a definition of violence followed by a list of 12 of its \"causes.\" The 26 generalizations based on various published studies are given along with a summary of typologies of violence. The longest section of the study summarizes and evaluates 24 theories of violence, including the frustration-aggression hypothesis, the logical causal model, the circulation of the elites, the J-curve of satisfactions, the social change theory, and the Spiegel-Kluckhohn model. Finally, the author presents his own eclectic model of violence stressing human needs and their gratification, as well as six intervening variables that may influence violent behavior. Thus far, two variables of the model's components have been operationalized, the result being a \"Family Violence Scale\" and a \"Violence Scale.\" When the rest of the variables have been similarly quantified, it is hoped that some etiological relationships among the various variables will be established.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BO EARLE"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2006.61.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08919356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23439"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a4ac2d8-1248-328c-8ee6-6535caa5de9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncl.2006.61.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ninecentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Nineteenth-Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Policing and Performing Liberal Individuality in Anthony Trollope's The Warden<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncl.2006.61.1.1","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11537,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this essay I argue that Anthony Trollope's The Warden (1855) anticipates and problematizesTrollope's oft-cited representativeness of the Victorian period generally, andVictorian liberalism in particular. As J\u0178rgen Habermas has shown, Victorian liberalismshould be construed less in terms of its promotion of pluralism than in terms of an\"ambivalence\" as to its practical implications. Correspondingly, The Warden offers a performativeexemplification of Victorian liberalism that is instructive precisely because itparadoxically refuses definitively to represent it. The instruction I would draw from thisparadox relates to the moral \"pinch\" that Septimus Harding, the novel's protagonist,feels as a result of his aspiration to \"be right\" as opposed to being \"proved\" right. Thisparadox disrupts the reader's reflexive inclination to read Harding's emancipation intraditionally Romantic terms. Just as Harding was \"awoken\" from the self-inducedoblivion of a hegemonic morality, so too the reader is awoken from the self-inducedoblivion of the disciplinary conventions of Victorian literary experience that D. A.Miller and David Lloyd critique. Thus the novel can be said to embody Victorian liberalismprecisely to the extent that it illuminates the question of such embodiment asopen, as a practical problem confronting and animating Victorian society. Hence Trollopemakes Harding's imaginary cello-playing the medium or 'embodiment' of his\"awakening\": the pursuit of \"right being\" is a matter of \"testing\" the boundaries of politicalaction and aesthetic imagination alike.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gideon S. Were"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570359471"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12afad8a-d1b0-3429-b218-f0d732baea83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE RELEVANCE OF HISTORY IN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT: SOME HINTS TO AFRICAN STATES ON DEVELOPMENTAL STRATEGIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325604","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7503,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2963044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"666a6c20-0582-30a1-8498-48feedc45e41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2963044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Information science - Informetrics","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Are American Libraries Closing the Book on African-American Authors?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2963044","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Forsythe"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/273824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0adb2832-f82e-33d7-801c-9d0ff688ae47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/273824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon -- The Marx of the Third World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/273824","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5722,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[27627,27679],[124905,125003]],"Locations in B":[[3069,3115],[13225,13321]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanjay Palshikar"],"datePublished":"2005-12-17","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4417556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dc64b48-172b-3465-b018-b4430ea0c4bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4417556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"51","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"5432","pageStart":"5428","pagination":"pp. 5428-5432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding Humiliation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4417556","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Humiliation is a critical point in a power relationship, the cusp region as it were, something that brings sharpness to the exercise of power and helps reproduce those relations of power. But it is also a potentially disruptive element of power that can have corrosive effects for the underlying normative order. If \"humiliation\" is a claim which is made complete only by incorporating in it the proposed response to the alleged humiliation, then those who are making that claim must face a situation of choice and attain the clarity required for making that choice. It is then that \"humiliation\" becomes more than a language used to make sense of a disagreeable situation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre Michel Fontaine"],"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4906952e-0ac9-3468-b53c-7b003582e9ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unions, Employers and Politicians in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185881","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":1550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert Kohl"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8286178-3b34-3668-832f-4d9b7f5f8df6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"4 (90)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Fire This Time: A Review of Taking It Personally","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768158","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mfanya Donald Tryman"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2294881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Reversing Affirmative Action: A Theoretical Construct","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294881","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":5862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Walling"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/273820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70c2ac7b-aa4c-352d-83a6-770409bb0444"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/273820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Art\" and \"Protest\": Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man Twenty Years After","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/273820","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7235,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred J. Lopez"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40339270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Comparative Literature and the Return of the Global Repressed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40339270","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":6838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Comparative literature's crisis under globalization is that it has historically defined itself as a study of differences\u2014a system of different literatures and languages\u2014while denying or repressing those literary, linguistic, and cultural productions within that system that it has deemed \"unequal.\" Under the guise of \"literariness,\" comparative literature has from its beginnings maintained a relation of what we might for now call \"foreign-ness\" between itself and subaltern texts and writers working within its self-defined system of languages: in English, French, German, and so on. The discipline's historic aversion to such texts and writers is inextricably related to its current much-lamented failure to embrace inequalities within its self-defined standard of \"inclusiveness.\" The rise of postcolonial studies and related projects has begun to expose this problem in comparative literature, as the latter has only in the past decade starting playing a belated game of inclusive multicultural \"catchup\" in an area in which it has effectively been trumped\u2014and which paradoxically fit the discipline's self-defined boundaries from the beginning.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cajetan N. Iheka"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.33","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62a39909-fc50-3f16-9914-55af8c4aed6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.33"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colo-mentality: Colonial Trauma in Oyono's Houseboy<\/em> and Cond\u00e9's Crossing the Mangrove<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.45.4.33","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9762,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay analyzes the traumas induced by colonial violence in Ferdinand Oyono's Houseboy and Maryse Cond\u00e9's Crossing the Mangrove. Despite the differences between both texts, they are joined by their engagement with colonial violence in African societies, by their discursive inscription of trauma arising from such violence, and the way their portrayal of the severity of colonial violence shows the limits of trauma theory. Moreover, both novels' portrayals of bloodshed and death make them rich for a comparative study of colonial trauma. Cathy Caruth's notion of trauma inspires the use of the term in this essay.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Metz"],"datePublished":"1993-12-10","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11412","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95ed482c-cd06-3a72-b2aa-91a3e819281d"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE FUTURE OF INSURGENCY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11412","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Insurgency will persist even after the end of the cold war. But as insurgent strategists recognize the bankruptcy of old techniques, especially protracted, rural \"people's war,\" they will innovate. It is vital for those interested in preventing or controlling insurgency to think creatively, speculate on the new forms that will emerge, and craft new frames of reference to serve as the foundation for strategy and doctrine. The key to post-cold war insurgency is its psychological component. The greatest shortcoming of Third World states (including most of the former Soviet bloc) is their inability to meet the psychological needs of their","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sunil Agnani","Fernando Coronil","Gaurav Desai","Mamadou Diouf","Simon Gikandi","Jennifer Wenzel","Patricia Yaeger","Susie Tharu"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acf3e3e6-722e-3584-b94c-73a3c3e4dfd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"633","pagination":"pp. 633-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editor's Column: The End of Postcolonial Theory? A Roundtable with Sunil Agnani, Fernando Coronil, Gaurav Desai, Mamadou Diouf, Simon Gikandi, Susie Tharu, and Jennifer Wenzel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501734","volumeNumber":"122","wordCount":10984,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[24091,24231]],"Locations in B":[[5363,5503]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauro A. Ogden","Billy Hall","Kimiko Tanita"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21506779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97d2bfc1-56d6-3f03-adde-349e0b45db96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43297034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Environment & Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Science & Mathematics","Sociology","Environmental Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Animals, Plants, People, and Things: A Review of Multispecies Ethnography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297034","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article defines multispecies ethnography and links this scholarship to broader currents within academia, including in the biosciences, philosophy, political ecology, and animal welfare activism. The article is organized around a set of productive tensions identified in the review of the literature. It ends with a discussion of the \"ethnographic\" in multispecies ethnography, urging ethnographers to bring a \"speculative wonder\" to their mode of inquiry and writing.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vishanthie Sewpaul"],"datePublished":"2001-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45400290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00094021"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560242985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"471a3a2c-aa80-3b0a-ba59-50182e11e37c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45400290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"childwelfare"}],"isPartOf":"Child Welfare","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"586","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-586","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Child Welfare League of America","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Social Work","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education","Business - Industry"],"title":"Models of Intervention for Children in Difficult Circumstances in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45400290","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":5016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Advances in policy have helped to create interventions for children in difficult circumstances in South Africa. This article examines models addressing children suffering abuse and neglect and children affected by HIV \/ AIDS. The focus is on innovative local attempts to deal with these problems, rather than theoretical reflection. Larger programs are usually conducted by government agencies because they have more resources but valuable solutions have also been created by NGOs.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fredric Jameson"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/377726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d1ffe28-2622-3e4f-8a4f-3e5cf8ce4aa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/377726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"718","pageStart":"695","pagination":"pp. 695-718","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The End of Temporality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/377726","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vandana S. Gavaskar"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a86384b-e2ab-3e4c-803e-f48a3f0711a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Education - Formal education","Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"\"I Don't Identify With the Text\": Exploring the Boundaries of Personal\/Cultural in a Postcolonial Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866176","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana Keita"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bbb0781-db78-3c73-a229-367199dc298e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy and Development: On the Problematic of African Development: A Diachronic Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482723","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The idea of development is generally seen as central to any discussion of the economic, cultural, and political sociologies of the world's nations. Nations of the West are seen as 'developed' and members of the 'First World', while those of Africa, Latin America and some of those of Asia are seen as 'developing' and belonging to the 'Third World'. I propose to examine the meaning and application of the term 'development' with respect to Africa, then discuss whether Africa was ever developed\u2014recognizing that the term is temporally relative. I will also discuss the idea of what Africa 'would look like' were it at the frontiers of development. I will then examine theories and applications of theories of development for Africa. Finally, I will examine current theories of development and their potential for success in Africa. Theories to be examined are the neoclassical theory, dependency theory, post-structuralism, and developmentalism. Le concept de d\u00e9veloppement est habituellement consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme central \u00e0 toute discussion portant sur les sociologies \u00e9conomiques, culturelles et politiques des pays du monde. Les nations de l'Occident sont consid\u00e9r\u00e9es comme \u00abd\u00e9velopp\u00e9es\u00bb et faisant partie du \u00abPremier Monde\u00bb, tandis que celles d'Afrique, d'Am\u00e9rique Latine et certaines d'Asie sont per\u00e7ues comme \u00e9tant \u00aben d\u00e9veloppement\u00bb et constituent le \u00abTiers-monde\u00bb. Je sugg\u00e8re que l'on proc\u00e8de \u00e0 un examen de la signification et de l'application du terme \u00abd\u00e9veloppement\u00bb, dans le cas de l'Afrique, puis que l'on cherche \u00e0 savoir si l'Afrique a jamais \u00e9t\u00e9 d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e (consid\u00e9rant que ce terme poss\u00e8de une temporalit\u00e9 relative). J'\u00e9voque \u00e9galement \u00abce \u00e0 quoi l'Afrique ressemblerait\u00bb si celle-ci se trouvait au seuil du d\u00e9veloppement. Ensuite, j'analyse les th\u00e9ories et applications des th\u00e9ories de d\u00e9veloppement \u00e0 l'Afrique. Et pour finir, j'\u00e9tudie les actuelles th\u00e9ories de d\u00e9veloppement, ainsi que leur potentiel de r\u00e9ussite sur le continent. Les th\u00e9ories examin\u00e9es sont les suivantes: la th\u00e9orie n\u00e9oclassique, celle de la d\u00e9pendance, du post-structuralisme et du d\u00e9veloppementalisme.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Touria Khannous"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6198376c-a3dd-389b-af13-e2ce6fb39b13"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Subaltern Speaks: Assia Djebar's \"La Nouba\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019154","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abiola Irele"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0bdf400-2d4d-37bd-a25d-348dd7914226"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25111988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dimensions of African Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111988","volumeNumber":"19\/20","wordCount":7542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith BUTLER","Ivan ASCHER"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f23c922-aaa2-3c04-a04d-ac094e579120"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"55","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"VIOLENCE, NON-VIOLENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603885","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article examines Sartre\u2019s highly controversial preface to The Wretched of the Earth. Its aim is to identify what, in the various modes of address, are elements in an economy of violence and what, on the contrary, participates in a process of recognition. The examination of the addressees of the address leads to a correlative transformation of the very notion of the author, commonly equated with the merely singular individual. What is at stake here is to grasp what makes Fanon, as it does any political theorist, not merely an author but also a \u201cmovement emerging\u201d. The exploration of discursive regimes also leads to a reflection on what, within the habitual practices of interpellation, participates in a gendered division of the conversation and companionship of struggles.","subTitle":"SARTRE, \u00c0 PROPOS DE FANON","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Preben Kaarsholm"],"datePublished":"1990-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637077","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68a6e7f9-34af-3c16-9ab3-b14425b159c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637077"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mental Colonisation or Catharsis? Theatre, Democracy and Cultural Struggle from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637077","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":15396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol R. Swenson"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23717768","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23717768"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Clinical Social Work's Contribution to a Social Justice Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23717768","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Social justice is increasingly described as the organizing value of social work. But does that apply to clinical social work? Following Wakefield, this article argues that it does and offers a variety of theories and practices to elaborate this claim, including ways to understand clients in the contexts of their strengths, social positions, and power relationships. In addition, clinicians can develop techniques to enable clients to understand themselves in these relationships and to be liberated when these relationships are oppressive. The clinician engages in self-reflection about personal experiences, not only of oppression but also of privilege and domination. Clinicians may work with people who are privileged and powerful to help them assess their motivation to change behavior associated with such roles. And finally, clinicians can develop new structures in agencies to counter oppressive beliefs and practices and work to develop programs that will offer social, economic, spiritual, political, and psychological resources. Social workers can offer a social justice perspective to members of other therapeutic professions who are interested in clinical social justice practice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FRANCISCO J. VILLEGAS"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84b8e926-c280-39d2-83d5-5e7a74b7e95f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER SEVEN: Strategic In\/Visibility and Undocumented Migrants","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980670","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":10449,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[118470,118581],[121828,121994],[146612,146818]],"Locations in B":[[10396,10506],[45656,45822],[50318,50522]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALI A. MAZRUI"],"datePublished":"1981-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"269f0b51-5679-3923-b201-3281848318ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45071636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MICRO-DEPENDENCY : THE CUBAN FACTOR IN SOUTHERN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071636","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7839,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[22881,23013]],"abstract":"We accept the proposition that the worst kind of dependency lies in North-South interaction. But emphasizing this dimension should not go to the extent of ignoring other dimensions. It is simply not true that all forms of international dependency concern interactions between the Northern Hemisphere and the South, or between industrialism and sources of raw materials. There are important forms of dependency among industrialized nations themselves. Increasingly, there are also forms of dependency between one country in the Third World and another; or between one region of the Third World and another. Dependency is a form of political castration. For the purposes of this essay, dependency between one country in the Northern Hemisphere and another or between one industrialized state and another, is categorized as macro-dependency. This involves variations in power within the upper stratum of the world system. Macro-dependency is thus upper-horizontal, involving variations in affluence among the affluent, or degree of might among the mighty. Micro-dependency for our purposes here concerns variations of technical development among the under-developed, or relative influence among the weak, or degrees of power among those that are basically exploited. The dependency of some West African countries upon Nigeria, or of some of the Gulf States upon Iran or Saudi Arabia, are cases of micro-dependency. We shall return to this level more fully later, but let us first begin with the phenomenon of macro-dependency.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joanna Kurowska"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26473092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18993028"},{"name":"oclc","value":"958652799"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4417f420-b16f-3e4e-8fbb-dd0906994651"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26473092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearconrstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yearbook of Conrad Studies (Poland)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Jagiellonian University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"COUNTER-IMAGES OF EUROPE IN THE UTTERANCES OF SELECTED CHARACTERS IN CONRAD'S AFRICAN FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26473092","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":3783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SARAH CLAIRE DUNSTAN"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779749","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18389554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607530099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fd9d90-9b98-3af9-8085-b5815e23ae19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44779749"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austjamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Australasian Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Australia New Zealand American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A QUESTION OF ALLEGIANCE: AFRICAN AMERICAN INTELLECTUALS, PR\u00c9SENCE AFRICAINE AND THE 1956 CONGR\u00c9S DES \u00c9CRIVAINS ET ARTISTES NOIRS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779749","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent scholarship has demonstrated that in the period from 1945 through to the late 1950s African American intellectuals re-oriented their activism from an internationalist and human rights framed agenda towards a domestically bound struggle. This article will contribute to this literature by mapping out a facet of African American intellectual engagement with the African diaspora during this period. Of particular focus will be African American reactions to the journal Pr\u00e9sence Africaine and the conference sponsored by the journal in 1956, le Congr\u00e8s des \u00e9crivains et artistes noirs. Iwill argue that the experiences of a select group of African American delegates to this Congr\u00e8s served to emphasise the radically different objectives and strategies of nationalities within the African diaspora, thereby consolidating black American perceptions of themselves as first, and foremost, American. In interrogating this diasporan dimension of the period, this article will shed light on a neglected aspect of African American history and expand the intellectual and political boundaries of the black freedom struggle.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fouzi Slisli"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d17c7b57-68e4-382c-8432-93ad50f09232"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\u201cThe Idea that One Could Come to Terms with the Arabs\u201d: How Frantz Fanon Found Common Ground with Islam in Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0021","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Horace CAMPBELL"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2e24dda-ad7a-342b-9620-96fc14b69e56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE BUDGET AND THE PEOPLE: Reflections on the 1984 Budget in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487206","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rama S. Melkote"],"datePublished":"1993-06-05","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4399813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc8b2be1-82e6-3ece-afc6-e1bbc6aeb8f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4399813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1150","pageStart":"1148","pagination":"pp. 1148-1150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Blacks against Blacks' Violence in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4399813","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A regime founded on racial segregation could only have survived by the use of force and not by democratic consent. For generations of Black Africans, hatred and violence have become part of daily existence. Not surprisingly, today, the two major issues in South Africa are township violence and the restructuring of a post-apartheid society in the face of ethnic violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELI JELLY-SCHAPIRO"],"datePublished":"2013-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae78ba18-d510-3f8e-bd9f-5ffaee4714db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24485841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"826","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-826","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Security: The Long History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485841","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":11807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This articles undertakes a genealogy of security: its integral place in the philosophic justification of settler-colonial processes, its constitutive role in the genesis of the modern state and capitalist mode of production, its intellectual and political history in the twentieth- and twentyfirst-century United States. I contend that the current-day expressions of security governance \u2013 neoliberal technologies of accumulation by dispossession; the prosecution of a boundless and interminable War on Terror \u2013 reveal with a particular clarity the essential tensions and contradictions of the security project over the longue dur\u00e9e. And inversely, I argue, reflecting upon the longer history of the modern security project deepens our insight into the contemporary manifestation of security discourse and practice. My analysis of security is divided into three parts: security and property, security and race, and security and emergency. Property is the principal object of security governance, race delimits and structures the security state, and emergency is one governmental tactic through which a multifarious politics of security is legitimated and enforced.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Porter"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e18101e-c0e3-3dab-8ffa-e76c238c05b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483663","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e7056d3-cf50-3489-946c-1170838f3fae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316191","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":2445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas L. Friedman"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1149649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157228"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38481287"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236886"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08b9cbe6-aa66-39c3-a9a8-082630fd4146"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1149649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignpolicy"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Policy","issueNumber":"116","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DOScapital 2.0","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1149649","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Halford H. Fairchild"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ceafed55-01c8-3ef2-af2d-7150f89b122b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth in Contemporary Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784461","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2929,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[237417,237525]],"Locations in B":[[7811,7920]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Romero"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1555124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2a5efaf-d03e-3046-b28c-5ce18fe61e9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1555124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Invoking Totalitarianism: Liberal Democracy versus the Global Jihad in Boualem Sansal's \"The German Mujahid\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43830000","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Crusz"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"863229f6-f18b-3d1b-98ce-dea02908cc12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44111672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Drake Stutesman","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The crisis and cultural practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111672","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Omon Osiki","Sola Owonibi","Oluyinka Ojedokun"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef8a4236-7b00-3e13-b334-5cc832bcc345"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48618358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Wars as Postcolonial African Illness in Uzodinma Iweala's Beasts of No Nation<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618358","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"There has always been a war somewhere in the world among Homo sapiens, allegedly the most advanced species in the universe. In Africa, right on the heels of colonialism and the celebration of independence loom the devastation and desolation of war. It is not a sweeping statement to conclude that everywhere colonialism has touched in Africa and let go, ruthless tribal wars have followed suit. The thematic preoccupation of the post-war literature is the training of children, mostly boys, to kill, in the form of the phenomenon of the \u2018child soldier\u2019. This article argues that one of the extreme cases of geopolitical illness that Africa suffers is the prominence of war in the turbulent journeys of her nation-states to nationhood. The article also examines the psychological implications of wars and bloodshed on the lives of children, who ought to be protected, which results in illness behaviours. We explore these themes with close reference to Uzodinma Iweala\u2019s Beasts of No Nation. Quelque part dans le monde, il y a toujours une guerre entre Homo sapiens, la soi-disant esp\u00e8ce plus avanc\u00e9e de l\u2019univers. En Afrique, dans la foul\u00e9e du colonialisme et des ind\u00e9pendances, se profilent la d\u00e9vastation et la d\u00e9solation de la guerre. Il n\u2019est pas radical d\u2019en conclure que partout o\u00f9 le colonialisme a touch\u00e9 et puis abandonn\u00e9 l\u2019Afrique, d\u2019impitoyables guerres tribales ont pris le pas. La pr\u00e9occupation th\u00e9matique de la litt\u00e9rature d\u2019apr\u00e8s-guerre est l\u2019entrainement d\u2019enfants, pour la plupart des gar\u00e7ons, \u00e0 tuer, cr\u00e9ant le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne d\u2019\u00ab enfant-soldat \u00bb. Cet article fait valoir que l\u2019une des maladies g\u00e9opolitiques dont souffre l\u2019Afrique est l\u2019importance de la guerre dans la turbulence de son \u00e9volution d\u2019\u00c9tats-nations \u00e0 nations. Le document examine \u00e9galement les implications psychologiques des guerres et de l\u2019effusion de sang sur la vie des enfants, qui devraient en \u00eatre prot\u00e9g\u00e9s, cr\u00e9ant des comportements pathologiques. Nous explorons ces th\u00e8mes en nous r\u00e9f\u00e9rant de pr\u00e8s \u00e0 l\u2019ouvrage Beasts of No Nation d\u2019Uzodinma Iweala.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phyllis Dannhauser"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.9.2.20","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4beaee6-a3c1-3d91-ade5-75c6cb7d24d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.9.2.20"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Westbury, Plek Van Hoop<\/em> and Waiting for Valdez<\/em>: Self-Representation, Memory and Coloured Identity in Westbury, Johannesburg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.9.2.20","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores how the documentary film Westbury, Plek van Hoop (2003) and the short fiction film Waiting for Valdez (dir. Dumisani Phakathi, 2003), as two films produced by residents of Westbury, Johannesburg, negotiate the tensions of finding a voice in the new South Africa. In examining the self-representation of the coloured community in this area, the article interrogates to what extent residents of Westbury have succeeded in subverting apartheid-era stereotypes of a gang-ridden, violent community. The concept of \u201ccoloured identity\u201d is problematic due to the uncomfortable stance of the coloured community, whose sense of self has historically been situated between the more generally accepted binaries of whitenes\u201d and blackness. When hybrid communities reflect on their own social circumstances and try to imagine themselves in different ways, representations of community and identity become open to revision as people reflect on their perceptions of the circumstances of their lives. In the absence of a shared common history and deep-rooted, collective cultural codes, members of coloured communities are engaging in a process of social reconstruction, and they may have chosen to reiterate, if not perpetuate, their marginal status and collective sense of marginality. The films suggest that that the apartheid legacy may have distorted community memory and selfhood in Westbury and that the stereotypes of the past still emerge as dominant representations in the present.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da6fccda-4b20-3bd6-8752-29fcd0e4682a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979877","volumeNumber":"285","wordCount":6320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liz Gunner"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ba2b0a3-279c-35bd-9778-70d110fcceea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: Mapping 'performance and social meaning in Africa'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758679","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bonnie Roos"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-Historicizing the Conflicted Figure of Woman in Ngugi's \"Petals of Blood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820979","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":8779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irene Bignardi"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41689226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7bf9cf8-387f-318f-a6ff-472d14ff237b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41689226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Making of \"The Battle of Algiers\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41689226","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Eck"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b73ca4-ba45-3fe7-b8aa-c5a81cdb6629"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"598","pageStart":"578","pagination":"pp. 578-598","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thinking Globally, Teaching Locally: The \"Nervous Conditions\" of Cross-Cultural Literacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472295","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":10187,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James G. Kennedy"],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/374415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61aa7e0e-5035-3ae9-bfb9-10c3c646ae1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/374415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"602","pageStart":"571","pagination":"pp. 571-588+593-602","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Two European Cultures and the Necessary New Sense of Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/374415","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":16722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-05-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3be5bd4f-2f73-3b81-b907-b28f3257068f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41206385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206385","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":1118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brenda J. Mehta"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bfb50fc-9244-32fa-91c8-527689f2fae2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colonial Curriculum and the Construction of \"Coolie-ness\" in Lakshmi Persaud's \"Sastra\" and \"Butterfly In The Wind\" (Trinidad) and Jan Shinebourne's \"The Last English Plantation\" (Guyana)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986117","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Greenburg"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24344213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24344213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The \"Strong Arm\" and the \"Friendly Hand\": Military Humanitarianism in Post-earthquake Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24344213","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122658,122782]],"Locations in B":[[59288,59411]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346090","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2014.68.1.61","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13db6a75-8be2-3d6d-85c6-0c16085f1268"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2014.68.1.61"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PREFACE TO CONCERNING VIOLENCE: NINE SCENES FROM THE ANTI-IMPERIALISTIC SELF-DEFENSE<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2014.68.1.61","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":1519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Film Quarterly reprints the Preface to G\u00f6ran Olsson\u2019s documentary Concerning Violence: Nine Scenes from the Anti-Imperialistic Self-Defense. This preface written by renowned author, scholar and activitis Gayatri Chavrakovrty Spivak is handed out in printed form to audiences prior to screenings of the film. It is meant to set the tone and to provide background and commentary on the images that audiences will see in the film that aims to contextualize the writings of Frantz Fanon, in particular The Wretched of the Earth, upon which this film is based.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julius A. Amin"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45419961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565346657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75115bd1-2000-3a87-a4cb-a3be4916bee8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45419961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PATTERNS OF CHANGE AND CONTINUITY IN EDUCATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45419961","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert Moller"],"datePublished":"1968-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/177801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edbf834b-bd89-3f32-b7cf-e3afc311d7fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/177801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Youth as a Force in the Modern World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/177801","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Weaver"],"datePublished":"2010-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d216d59-1a76-3b24-b7cd-c9e45ff553ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42857368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The 'Other' Laughs Back: Humour and Resistance in Anti-racist Comedy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42857368","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8371,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[626300,626348]],"Locations in B":[[35465,35513]],"abstract":"This article outlines the 'reverse discourses' of black, African-American and Afro-Caribbean comedians in the UK and USA. These reverse discourses appear in comic acts that employ the sign-systems of embodied and cultural racism but develop, or seek to develop, a reverse semantic effect. I argue the humour of reverse discourse is significant in relation to racism because it forms a type of resistance that can, first, act rhetorically against racist meaning and so attack racist truth claims and points of ambivalence. Second, and connected to this, it can rhetorically resolve the ambiguity of the reverse discourse itself. Alongside this, and paradoxically, reverse discourses also contain a polysemie element that can, at times, reproduce racism. The article seeks to develop a means of analysing the relationship between racist and non-racist meaning in such comedie performance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zehlia Babaci-Wilhite","Macleans A. Geo-JaJa","Shizhou Lou"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208566"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41569093"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233329"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b7bfdd-0a95-3998-aeb4-8eff3ec14aa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23352399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevieducinte"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Education \/ Internationale Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Erziehungswissenschaft \/ Revue Internationale de l'Education","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"647","pageStart":"619","pagination":"pp. 619-647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Education and language: A human right for sustainable development in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352399","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":14698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Pre-colonial Africa was neither an educationally nor a technologically unsophisticated continent. While education was an integral part of the culture, issues of language identification and standardisation which are subject to contentious debate today were insignificant. Children learned community knowledge and history by asking questions instead of being taught in a hegemonic alien language. This article argues that education and development should take place in a broader context of human rights, and explores the links between three areas often dealt with separately, namely: language, education and development. The authors of this paper demonstrate that changing the face of the multi-dimensionalities of poverty within societies is possible only when education is constructed in a rights perspective over the favoured colonial languages, which are not an integral part of the culture and resources of a community. The authors make a distinction between the right to education and rights in education, the latter of which are found to be more significant for the challenges Africa faces. It is argued here that the elements of Amartya Sen's \"threshold\" conditions for inclusion in human rights and self-development in education are essential, and that a more promising architecture of education would include what the authors term meta-narrative frameworks, i.e. interrelated policies. The authors contend that the neoliberal commodification of the knowledge sector has only exacerbated human rights and capabilities deprivation \u2014 which encompasses both human and income poverty. \u00c9ducation et langage : un droit fondamental en vue du d\u00e9veloppement durable en Afrique \u2014 L'Afrique pr\u00e9coloniale \u00e9tait un continent sophistiqu\u00e9 tant sur le plan \u00e9ducatif que technologique. Si l'enseignement faisait partie int\u00e9grante de la culture, les questions d'identification et de standardisation linguistiques, aujourd'hui sujettes \u00e0 des d\u00e9bats controvers\u00e9s, n'\u00e9taient pas significatives. Les enfants acqu\u00e9raient le savoir et l'histoire de la communaut\u00e9 en posant des questions, et non pas en \u00e9tant instruits dans une langue \u00e9trang\u00e8re et h\u00e9g\u00e9monique. Les auteurs avancent que l'\u00e9ducation et le d\u00e9veloppement devraient avoir lieu dans le contexte \u00e9largi des droits fondamentaux, et examinent les liens entre trois domaines fr\u00e9quemment trait\u00e9s isol\u00e9ment, \u00e0 savoir : langage, \u00e9ducation et d\u00e9veloppement. Ils d\u00e9montrent qu'il n'est possible de changer la face multidimensionnelle de la pauvret\u00e9 au sein des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s que si l'\u00e9ducation est \u00e9labor\u00e9e dans une perspective de droits fondamentaux primant sur les langues coloniales privil\u00e9gi\u00e9es, qui ne font pas partie int\u00e9grante de la culture et des richesses d'une communaut\u00e9. Les auteurs font une distinction entre le droit \u00e0 l'\u00e9ducation et les droits dans l'\u00e9ducation, ces derniers \u00e9tant jug\u00e9s plus importants pour r\u00e9pondre aux d\u00e9fis auxquels l'Afrique est confront\u00e9e. Les auteurs argumentent que les conditions \u00ab minimales \u00bb d'Amartya Sen devant \u00eatre incluses dans les droits fondamentaux ainsi que le d\u00e9veloppement personnel dans l'\u00e9ducation sont des \u00e9l\u00e9ments essentiels; en outre qu'une architecture de l'\u00e9ducation plus prometteuse contiendrait ce que les auteurs appellent des cadres \u00ab m\u00e9ta-narratifs \u00bb, c'est-\u00e0-dire des politiques \u00e9troitement li\u00e9es. Ils affirment que la marchandisation n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9rale du secteur des connaissances n'a fait qu'aggraver la privation des droits fondamentaux et des capacit\u00e9s \u2014 se traduisant par la pauvret\u00e9 tant humaine que mon\u00e9taire. Bildung und Sprache: Ein Menschenrecht f\u00fcr nachhaltige Entwicklung in Afrika \u2014 Weder technologisch noch im Hinblick auf Bildung war das pr\u00e4koloniale Afrika primitiv. Bildung war ein integraler Bestandteil der Kultur, und Fragen nach sprachlicher Identit\u00e4t und Standardisierung, die heute z\u00e4nkisch debattiert werden, waren schlicht bedeutungslos. Kinder erlernten das Wissen und die Geschichte der Gemeinschaft durch Erfragen, anstatt in einer hegemonialen, fremden Sprache unterrichtet zu werden. Die Autoren dieses Beitrags treten daf\u00fcr ein, Bildung und Entwicklung in einem gr\u00f6\u00dferen Zusammenhang der Menschenrechte zu verorten. Sie erkunden dazu die Verbindungen zwischen drei Bereichen, die oft separat behandelt werden: Sprache, Bildung und Entwicklung. Der Beitrag zeigt, dass die vieldimensionalen Erscheinungsformen von Armut innerhalb von Gesellschaften nur dann im Kern ver\u00e4ndert werden k\u00f6nnen, wenn Bildung aus einer Rechteperspektive \u00fcber die bevorzugten Kolonialsprachen gestellt wird, denn diese Sprachen sind kein integraler Bestandteil der Kultur und der Mittel einer Gemeinschaft. Die Autoren unterscheiden zwischen dem Recht auf Bildung und Rechten in der Bildung, wobei sie Letztere im Hinblick auf die dr\u00e4ngenden Probleme Afrikas f\u00fcr bedeutungsvoller halten. Grundlegend sind aus ihrer Sicht die von Amartya Sen formulierten \u201eSchwellenbedingungen\u201cf\u00fcr den Einschluss in die Menschenrechte und die Pers\u00f6nlichkeitsentwicklung in der Bildung. Ein aussichtsreicherer Ansatz f\u00fcr Bildung m\u00fcsse untereinander verwobene politische Prozesse beinhalten, f\u00fcr die die Autoren den Begriff \u201emeta-narrative Strukturen\u201cvorschlagen. Die Autoren vertreten die These, dass die neoliberale Kommodifizierung des Wissenssektors den Entzug von Menschenrechten und F\u00e4higkeiten beschleunigt und somit menschliche wie auch wirtschaftliche Armut verursacht. Educaci\u00f3n y lengua: un derecho humano para el desarrollo sostenible en \u00c1frica \u2014 \u00c1frica nunca ha sido un continente con bajos niveles de exigencia en educaci\u00f3n y tecnolog\u00eda durante su \u00e9poca precolonial. Dado que la educaci\u00f3n era una parte integral de la cultura, no ten\u00edan relevancia los problemas de identificaci\u00f3n y estandarizaci\u00f3n de la lengua que hoy provocan grandes controversias. Los ni\u00f1os adquir\u00edan conocimientos sobre la comunidad y la historia formulando preguntas, en lugar de ser instruidos en una lengua extranjera hegem\u00f3nica. En este art\u00edculo se plantea que la educaci\u00f3n y el desarrollo deber\u00edan tener lugar en un contexto amplificado de derechos humanos y se explora c\u00f3mo est\u00e1n enlazadas tres \u00e1reas que frecuentemente se tratan por separado, a saber: lengua, educaci\u00f3n y desarrollo. Los autores de este trabajo demuestran que cambiar la cara de las multidimensionalidades de la pobreza dentro de las sociedades solamente es posible cuando la educaci\u00f3n se construye dentro de una perspectiva de derechos, por encima de las favorecidas lenguas coloniales que no son parte integrante de la cultura ni de la riqueza de una comunidad. Los autores establecen una distinci\u00f3n entre el derecho a la educaci\u00f3n y los derechos en la educaci\u00f3n, considerando que estos \u00faltimos tiene mayor relevancia para los retos que \u00c1frica est\u00e1 enfrentando. Argumentan que las \"condiciones umbral\" de Amartya Sen para la inclusi\u00f3n en derechos humanos y autodesarrollo en la educaci\u00f3n son esenciales, y que una arquitectura de la educaci\u00f3n m\u00e1s prometedora podr\u00eda incluir lo que los autores denominan marcos \"metanarrativos\"; por ejemplo, pol\u00edticas interrelacionadas. 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\u0443\u0441\u0443\u0433\u0443\u0431\u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044e \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u0430 \u0443\u0442\u0440\u0430\u0442\u044b \u043f\u0440\u0430\u0432 \u0438 \u0432\u043e\u0437\u043c\u043e\u0436\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u0435\u0439 \u0447\u0435\u043b\u043e\u0432\u0435\u043a\u0430 \u2014 \u0447\u0442\u043e \u0432\u043a\u043b\u044e\u0447\u0430\u0435\u0442 \u043a\u0430\u043a \u043b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u043d\u043e\u0435, \u0442\u0430\u043a \u0438 \u0444\u0438\u043d\u0430\u043d\u0441\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0435 \u043e\u0431\u0435\u0434\u043d\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Akhona Nkenkana"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.41","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81400f51-54f2-3880-adb1-65ddb3f697d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.41"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"No African Futures without the Liberation of Women: A Decolonial Feminist Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.41","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Coloniality of gender speaks to the perennial question of the liberation of women from various forms of oppression. The \u2018modern\u2019 world system and its global order have remained fundamentally patriarchal. This implies that any initiative aimed at creating African futures has to address the fundamental question of the liberation of women. Liberation of women does not speak to the incorporation of women within the patriarchal system. The first step, as Thomas Sankara said in his 1987 speech, is to understand how the patriarchal system functions, to grasp its real nature in all its subtlety, in order to work out a line of action that can lead to women's genuine emancipation. Decolonising gender therefore becomes a necessary task so that answers to what should be done are formulated from the perspective of asking correct questions. Decolonising gender is to enact a critique of racialized, colonial, and capitalist heterosexualist gender oppression as a lived transformation of the social (Lugones 2010). As such, decolonizing gender places the scholar in the midst of people in a historical, peopled, subjective\/intersubjective understanding of the oppressing-resisting relation at the intersection of complex systems of oppression. To a significant extent, it has to be in accord with the subjectivities and intersubjectivities that construct and in part are constructed by the situation. This article deploys decolonial feminist ideas of Thomas Sankara, amomg others, to push forward the frontiers of the struggle for the liberation of women as a constitutive part of initiatives of creating African futures. Its central argument is that women's liberation struggle should not be reduced to efforts of incorporation of women within the patriarchal, colonial and imperial modern system\/s women seek to reject. Making use of Maria Lugones' theoretical framework, we should be able to understand that the instrumentality of the colonial\/modern gender system is subjecting both men and women of colour in all domains of existence and therefore allows us to reveal that the gender transformation discourse is not just a women's emancipation discourse but rather efforts of both men and women to overcome the colonial global structure that is subjectifying in different ways. The change of the system and its structures, which are essentially patriarchal, is the main mechanism that will bring about possible equal futures for women in Africa, as case studies of Rwanda and South Africa show in the article.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilbert N. Mudenda"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01938703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27f3244e-ec4d-3676-931e-0ba9afe01f8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29765725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Marxism","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class Formation and Class Struggle in Contemporary Zambia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765725","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter WORSLEY","St\u00e9phanie TEMPLIER"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09748dd6-62ea-366c-9065-1dfb56f3d8eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"55","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"FRANTZ FANON ET LE LUMPENPROL\u00c9TARIAT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603889","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article focuses on the work which had the widest circulation in the context of the liberation struggles of the 1960s and 70s: The Wretched of the Earth. Peter Worsley stresses the originality of a work which emphasised the need for a theoretical and practical rehabilitation of the lumpenproletariat, that underclass denigrated by orthodox Marxism. Thus while Fanon\u2019s intellectual genealogy reveals his primary interest for black demands, for Worsley, he is above all a thinker of the revolution, in the Marxist sense of the term, whose contribution was a rethinking of the notions of class and revolutionary strategy. It is in particular through his efforts to think through the alliance between the peasantry and the urban under-proletariat that Fanon manages to grasp the originality of the social formations of the emerging Third World.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia R. Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d4730129-b808-399e-bdc5-657882f30580"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FRANTZ FANON AND THE N\u00c9GRITUDE MOVEMENT: How Strategic Essentialism Subverts Manichean Binaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264913","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zahid Chaudhary"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"204059b9-4633-3539-8692-8735d7420471"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"59","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Phantasmagoric Aesthetics: Colonial Violenca and the Management of Perception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489198","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":21330,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[90994,91126]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Clammer"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24492999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03038246"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9528b646-32fc-3364-a321-5dd277b8b31e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24492999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutasiajsocisci"}],"isPartOf":"Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Studies\/Asian Studies: Alternatives, Intersections, and Contradictions in Asian Social Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24492999","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The social sciences in Asia face a peculiar theoretical challenge. Heirs to ancient civilizations and traditions of thought and cradles to all of the great world religions, they nevertheless perceive themselves as suffering from a \"theoretical deficit\". High theory is almost entirely Western and in fact largely European in provenance. This essay is directed to the possibility of constructing an Asian variety of cultural studies as a response to the hegemony of European social theory, and as an attempt to redress the balance of theory-power in the world intellectual economy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mwalimu J. Shujaa"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2295412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Afrocentric Transformation and Parental Choice in African American Independent Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2295412","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":5620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nazli Kibria"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e09e9c45-89f2-36db-96b7-d9df347eab1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1141","pageStart":"1140","pagination":"pp. 1140-1141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231338","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8d12.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781607328131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"944bf08b-b5ef-3056-9111-eaf0b64bdb10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwh8d12.15"}],"isPartOf":"Historicizing Fear","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"213","pagination":"213-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8d12.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["racial","white power","klux klan","smallpox","power music","arkansas","jewish","smallpox eradication","semitism","violence"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele M. Moody-Adams"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d68f3ac-47cb-356c-8c74-cc9274c190a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26433449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy and Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433449","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Szymon Chodak"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee04a7d0-384f-3245-852b-ff74a2226790"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Birth of an African Peasantry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484179","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hortense J. Spillers"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303639","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303639"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":67.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"All the Things You Could be by Now, If Sigmund Freud's Wife Was Your Mother\": Psychoanalysis and Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303639","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":31772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sylvie Kand\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Renunciation and Victory in \"Black Shack Alley\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618263","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharad Chari","Katherine Verdery"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27563729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"966666d2-8737-3c82-97b3-f4d574a3ff73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27563729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thinking between the Posts: Postcolonialism, Postsocialism, and Ethnography after the Cold War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27563729","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":13619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46d1e9c9-40ed-3920-996e-5df65329755b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42974932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":166.0,"pageEnd":"1034","pageStart":"869","pagination":"pp. 869-1034","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42974932","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":66027,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[133637,133701]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivy G. Wilson"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0dd543a-5f46-38bd-909f-892f6b82bccd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25486325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On Native Ground: Transnationalism, Frederick Douglass, and \"The Heroic Slave\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25486325","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":10021,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[58320,58360]],"abstract":"Beginning with a reconsideration of the symbolic ending of \"The Heroic Slave,\" where Madison Washington and his compatriots find themselves in the Bahamas and not the United States, this article works through Frederick Douglass's understanding of national affiliation. Taking two specific problems in his imagination-the rhetoric of democracy and transnationalism-I reassess the concept of national affiliation for African Americans when political citizenship is denied. Through its protagonist, Washington, who is thoroughly versed in the vocabulary of United States nationalism, \"The Heroic Slave\" discloses the incongruence between the rhetoric of nationalism and its materialization as a failure of democratic enactment. The text also intimates Douglass's increasing recognition of transnationalism as an affective system of imagined belonging based on either a shared belief (in democracy) or racial contingency. By deterritorializing cultural belonging, \"The Heroic Slave\" depicts the liminal position of African Americans, suspended between the nation-state and the black diaspora.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashvin Kini"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671557","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08b11c83-b29f-3cd3-8d73-81774be9606d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Blackness, British Cinema, and the Queer Politics of Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671557","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay queries \"political Blackness\" as a coalitional antiracist politics in England in the 1970s and 1980s. Contemporary debates on the relevance of political Blackness in contemporary British race politics often forget significant critiques of the concept articulated by feminist and queer scholars, activists and cultural producers. Through close readings of Isaac Julien and Maureen Blackwood\u2019s The Passion of Remembrance and Hanif Kureishi\u2019s Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, this essay examines cinematic engagements with political Blackness by foregrounding the gender and sexual fault lines through which queers and feminists articulated relational solidarities attentive to difference.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shridath S. Ramphal"],"datePublished":"1979-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"197","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-197","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"International Co-Operation and Development: The Role of Universities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160714","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6330,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AARON KAMUGISHA"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c24eedc-ff36-374b-9c95-b524e541d70f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23050531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Life and Death of a Nation: The Mood on Immigration in Barbados","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050531","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":1639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Cherif Bassiouni"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45302373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10892605"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f4ee58d-ba65-3da7-a2f3-229032ebf8f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45302373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"uclajofintllaw"}],"isPartOf":"UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs","sourceCategory":["Law","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE \"ARAB REVOLUTION\" AND TRANSITIONS IN THE WAKE OF THE \"ARAB SPRING\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45302373","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":18575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Democracies are based on institutions whose foundations are social but depend on legal institutions whose ligament is the Rule of Law. Democracies require frameworks, institutions, decision-makers, and operators who come out of these very traditions and who are part of a culture that is supported by the values and practices of a given society. Democracies are the product of practices whose best protection is not only its value-oriented goals, but also the commitment of those making up the society. Indeed, precedent and practice are indispensable, and so far they are absent in the Arab World. But as an Arab proverb states, \"the longest journey starts with the first step.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stafford Kay","Bradley Nystrom"],"datePublished":"1971-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1186734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49882921"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cb05e62-ab33-3d51-8255-52b98c8483ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1186734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Education and Colonialism in Africa: An Annotated Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1186734","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9021,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[23132,23178]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CYRA LEVENSON"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393541"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48808430"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236609"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17d3d7c2-3f9e-3f05-b0b7-b60ef577564c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24465492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studarteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Art Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"National Art Education Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Re-Presenting Slavery: Underserved Questions in Museum Collections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24465492","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":7072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article looks at the notion of what, not who, is underserved in museum education. The importance of looking through, in, and from objects in order to uncover underserved questions and themes is vital. A willingness to consider new ways to approach collections and display is necessary to have a dialogue with our audiences about how museums can be relevant and best serve their needs. I argue that how we research, display, and discuss works of art creates openings for new historical insight and contemporary relevance. Using an upcoming exhibition focused on the representation of slavery in 18th-century portraiture as a case study, the following themes will be explored as strategies for opening space for the underserved subjects in our pictures and the underserved questions of our audience: (1) unfreezing the past, (2) recognizing scenes of subjection, (3) converting absence to presence, and (4) seeing the flexible history of objects.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Beverley"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.98.2018.0267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f35d872c-da68-3fa0-a86f-704721fb2214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.98.2018.0267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caliban After Communism: Thoughts on the Future of Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.98.2018.0267","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":4271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u201cCaliban after Communism\u201d deals with the nature of the transition that is taking place in Cuba today to a postrevolutionary society. What happens when Cuba loses its \u201cexceptionalism\u201d as a world-historical entity? The answer involves a reconsideration of the essay \u201cCaliban. Notes on Culture in Our America\u201d by Roberto Fernandez Retamar, one of the most influential statements of Cuban cultural politics in its time (the 1970s) and a foundational text of postcolonial criticism generally. \u201cCaliban\u201d implied a connection between the emergence of a new postcolonial intellectual and the spread of communism and socialism in the Third World. Is \u201cCaliban\u201d still a relevant image for the Left in Latin America and elsewhere today? Yes and no.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miguel Gomes"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182176"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709561"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b988900-76fa-3bad-9639-d5c976102066"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30040377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Poder, alegor\u00eda y naci\u00f3n en el neoclasicismo hispanoamericano","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040377","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":8575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alf Andrew Heggoy"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec953cb7-2b6c-3472-9bb9-7fba2ceaf84c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/216486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrihiststud"}],"isPartOf":"African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Books on the Algerian Revolution in English: Translations and Anglo-American Contributions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216486","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":3230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Ward"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1087c046-a2d8-3c0c-a2b1-001980c784b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Scholarship in the Context of Struggle\": Activist Intellectuals, the Institute of the Black World (IBW), and the Contours of Black Power Radicalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069814","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara D. 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Signposts for a politically engaged pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44259137","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":1985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heather M. Turcotte"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b668acd-2016-3c44-b940-139203dd8613"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23210893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Contextualizing Petro-Sexual Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23210893","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Petro-violence is a feminist issue. Through the examination of U.S. mainstream narratives of gender violence and petroleum violence within Nigeria, the author reveals how gender and sexuality are central to representations of terrorism and ethnic-gang conflict within petroleum politics. Through a framework of petro-sexual politics, which links histories of gender and petroleum violence together, the author considers how petro-violence materializes in multiple forms that have always been gendered and systemically violent. By demonstrating that gender violence is not merely an effect of petro-violence, the author argues it is the necessary condition for such violence to even take place. Understanding petro-politics means recognizing that gender violence is part of a larger political economy of violence that creates the conditions fostering and facilitating petro-politics in the first place.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tsuneo YASUDA"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44653312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13691465"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48058473"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238604"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"716e6f86-a744-3c4e-aa85-2014dfa6b0a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44653312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciejapaj"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science Japan Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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In the social sciences, the mathematical concept of graph or network has provided a powerful paradigm both for scientific explanation and humanistic understanding, through social network analysis. Its application in the present article transcends these applications through a shift in emphasis, from explanation and understanding to social transformations, induced by forging new transnational networks out of the collaborative, iterative cycles of participatory action research (PAR) centered on music, digital musical production, and sociomusical relationships. These networks are designed to address what the UN has identified as the \u201cresponsibility to protect\u201d (R2P), as a means of mitigating that dehumanisation underlying all human rights abuses. Beyond explanation or understanding, I emphasise PAR networks as tools and instances of social transformation, not only as means, but as ends in themselves, holding that the right sort of transnational social network\u2014a harmoniously interacting global community\u2014is precisely what is sought. Further, whereas the network actor is typically either human (in social network analysis) or non-human (in much network science), I combine the two in applied research, building on Latour\u2019s \u201cActor Network Theory\u201d (ANT) in two respects. First, beyond joining the human and nonhuman I consider also their double intersection: the expressive arts (including music) as the human nonhuman; and dehumanisation as the nonhuman human. Second, I extend such constructivism to transformative participatory action research. The chapter charts the iterative formation of a transnational PAR actor-network, including Liberian refugee musicians, academics, students, and producers, constituting both method and objective for applied ethnomusicology. I identify the digital song (manifesting in multiple remixes) as flexible mediator, its potential remixes enhancing connectivity, forging harmoniously interacting transna tional actor-networks via people, technology, and music. Such networks not only facilitate a better world, they embody it.","subTitle":"Responsibility to Protect via Musical Rehumanisation in Post-War Liberia","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1339496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5609d755-0a98-3847-963e-915fce74662c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1339496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"1858","pageStart":"1818","pagination":"pp. 1818-1858","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Indian: The Forgotten American","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1339496","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":21712,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff D. Bass"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10948392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46630641"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001214679"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41940494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rhetpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Rhetoric and Public Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Alterity and Identity Slippage: The Sin of Becoming \"Other\" in Edmund D. Morel's \"King Leopold's Rule In Africa\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41940494","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11346,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127533,127746]],"Locations in B":[[2918,3127]],"abstract":"The tradition of postcolonial critique has long noted that the construction of an imperial identity of \"alterity,\" the posture of moral superiority that serves to differentiate the imperialist from those under his or her control and thus legitimate the practice of expansion, is a significant characteristic of imperial discourse. For the most party however, this critical practice has focused on the construct of alterity as a justification for imperial oppression on the basis ofracialized images of subject populations. This essay approaches alterity as a property to be maintained by the imperial culture itself as crucial to its understanding of its own identity. Failure to maintain such an identity constitutes the ultimate \"sin\" of identity slippage, a \"sin\" that undermines the moral validity of empire. This argument is detailed through an analysis of Edmund D. Morels book-length expos\u00e9 of Belgian atrocities committed against the peoples of the Congo entitled King Leopolds Rule in Africa. Morels text is not so much concerned with evoking reader pity for the plight of the Congolese as with inciting outrage over the subversion of imperialism by the Belgians' abandonment of their own imperial alterity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MURSAL FARAH AFDUB","LIDWIEN KAPTEIJNS","HASAN FARAH WARFA"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08030685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d82d92e8-728a-3518-ac9c-df7c372ea947"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25653338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sudanicafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Sudanic Africa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Centre for Middle Eastern Studies (University of Bergen)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"'PARTING WORDS OF WISDOM' (DARDAARAN) A POEM BY SAYYID MU\u1e24AMMAD \u02bfABD ALL\u0100H \u1e24ASAN OF SOMALIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25653338","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":2664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marta Hern\u00e1ndez Salv\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Heterodox Marxism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949787","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marion Ouma"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26979259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"891eabb7-533e-3123-ae29-feb4711af230"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26979259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Protection Policymaking in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26979259","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Policymaking is no longer exclusively a national affair. Due to globalisation, global agendas easily influence and permeate national plans through policy transfer, diffusion and learning. One such recent global agenda is social protection policies in the form of cash transfers. Studies examining the process of adoption and making of such policies portray a benign learning approach. However, these approaches represent an incomplete view of the dynamics that characterise the adoption of policies. Social protection policymaking arenas are sites of power and resistance which are mutually constituted and exhibited through various forms. Drawing from the nexus of policy transfer and power, this article investigates the forms of power and resistance in the social protection policymaking space by examining the Cash Transfer for Orphans and Vulnerable Children (CT-OVC) and the Hunger Safety Net Programme (HSNP) in Kenya. The findings indicate that, as international actors attempted to impose their agendas, political elites resisted in two ways: firstly, by suppressing the action of other actors, and secondly, by asserting alternatives in the policy process. The findings suggest that even in enduring asymmetrical social relations, \u2018subordinate\u2019 actors in policy development arenas find space to exercise power through resistance, and exhibit the capacity to influence processes. L'\u00e9laboration de politiques n'est plus une affaire exclusivement nationale. En raison de la mondialisation, les agendas mondiaux influencent et impr\u00e8gnent facilement les plans nationaux gr\u00e2ce au transfert, \u00e0 la diffusion et \u00e0 l'apprentissage de politiques. L'un de ces r\u00e9cents programmes mondiaux concerne les politiques de protection sociale dans la forme de transferts mon\u00e9taires. Les \u00e9tudes examinant le processus d'adoption et d'\u00e9laboration de telles politiques d\u00e9crivent une approche d'apprentissage b\u00e9nigne. Cependant, ces approches pr\u00e9sentent une vision incompl\u00e8te de la dynamique qui caract\u00e9rise l'adoption de politiques. Les lieux d'\u00e9laboration des politiques de protection sociale sont des sites de pouvoir et de r\u00e9sistance qui se renforcent mutuellement et se manifestent sous diverses formes. S'appuyant sur le lien transfert de politique\/pouvoir, cet article examine les formes de pouvoir et de r\u00e9sistance dans l'espace d'\u00e9laboration des politiques de protection sociale en examinant le transfert d'argent au profit d\u2019orphelins et d\u2019enfants vuln\u00e9rables (CT-OVC) et le programme de protection sociale contre la faim (HSNP) au Kenya. Les r\u00e9sultats indiquent que, alors que les acteurs internationaux tentent d'imposer leurs agendas, les \u00e9lites politiques r\u00e9sistent de deux mani\u00e8res : premi\u00e8rement, en supprimant l'action des autres acteurs, et deuxi\u00e8mement, en affirmant des alternatives dans le processus politique. Ces r\u00e9sultats sugg\u00e8rent que m\u00eame dans de persistantes relations sociales asym\u00e9triques, les acteurs \u00ab subordonn\u00e9s \u00bb dans les lieux de d\u00e9veloppement de politiques continuent de trouver, par la r\u00e9sistance, un espace d\u2019exercice de leur pouvoir, et ainsi d\u00e9montrent leur capacit\u00e9 \u00e0 influencer les processus.","subTitle":"Power and Resistance in a Globalised World","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mina Karavanta"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4465f79-1f59-3a4e-8dd5-08c70e6d4cb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"746","pageStart":"723","pagination":"pp. 723-746","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TONI MORRISON'S \"A MERCY\" AND THE COUNTERWRITING OF NEGATIVE COMMUNITIES: A POSTNATIONAL NOVEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287308","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":10382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Hart","Vishnu Padayachee"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2696690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0eefddf-b79d-3254-a057-a45a0272d2ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2696690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"712","pageStart":"683","pagination":"pp. 683-712","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Indian Business in South Africa after Apartheid: New and Old Trajectories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2696690","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony O'Brien"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 66-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Literature in Another South Africa: Njabulo Ndebele's Theory of Emergent Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465238","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwaku Larbi Korang"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 37-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Where Is Africa? When Is the West's Other? Literary Postcoloniality in a Comparative Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805816","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":13393,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433807,433897]],"Locations in B":[[54701,54800]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Burawoy"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa1dc513-cdc2-319d-b160-6e7e6e7a7793"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/202212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Extended Case Method","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202212","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":18478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article I elaborate and codify the extended case method, which deploys participant observation to locate everyday life in its extralocal and historical context. The extended case method emulates a reflexive model of science that takes as its premise the intersubjectivity of scientist and subject of study. Reflexive science valorizes intervention, process, structuration, and theory reconstruction. It is the Siamese twin of positive science that proscribes reactivity, but upholds reliability, replicability, and representativeness. Positive science, exemplified by survey research, works on the principle of the separation between scientists and the subjects they examine. Positive science is limited by \"context effects\" (interview, respondent, field, and situational effects) while reflexive science is limited by \"power effects\" (domination, silencing, objectification, and normalization). The article concludes by considering the implications of having two models of science rather than one, both of which are necessarily flawed. Throughout I use a study of postcolonialism to illustrate both the virtues and the shortcomings of the extended case method. Methodology can only bring us reflective understanding of the means which have demonstrated their value in practice by raising them to the level of explicit consciousness; it is no more the precondition of fruitful intellectual work than the knowledge of anatomy is the precondition of \"correct\" walking.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Onono-Wamonje"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"CULTURALLY UNHOLY SCHOOLS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325713","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":4409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Frye"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"491e9d78-698d-37bc-a8d6-943a2d0d5b12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40642980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing Indigeneity: Postcolonial Dynamics in Charles Brockden Brown's Monthly Magazine and American Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40642980","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valentine Moulard-Leonard"],"datePublished":"2005-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27642713","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b77c3982-651e-3af1-9df5-863d2632a65b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27642713"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Revolutionary Becomings\": Negritude's Anti-Humanist Humanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27642713","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this paper I establish an alliance between the thought of Frantz Fanon and Gilles Deleuze's Philosophy of Difference. In light of Fanon's critique of Sartre's characterization of the place of the Negritude movement in terms of dialectic, I point to the inherent limitations of modern humanism's dialectical accounts for enabling genuine historical change. Alternatively, I appeal to Deleuze's distinction between history and becoming, and his concomitant idea of intensive becoming-revolutionary. I conclude that such an alliance with Deleuzian metaphysics holds far greater promises for effecting Fanon's revolutionary project of the creation of a new humanity (and therefore, of a new ethics and a new politics) than his traditional assimilation to Phenomenology and Existentialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nah Dove"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71b82932-d81c-3749-8e93-ec7e7acd2a9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"African Womanism: An Afrocentric Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784792","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward E. TELLES","Edward MURGUIA"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42862790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384941"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32be6c92-d702-34fe-8e60-37b7763f07f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42862790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"696","pageStart":"682","pagination":"pp. 682-696","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Phenotypic Discrimination and Income Differences among Mexican Americans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42862790","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":5711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study examines the earnings of Mexican American males and demonstrates that Ch\u00edcanos with a dark and native American phenotype receive significantly lower earnings than those of a lighter and more European phenotype. Most of the earnings differences are unexplained by \"personal endowments\" known to be linked to income and are thus related to differences in labor market discrimination. However, Mexican American incomes in all phenotypic groups are far below those of non-Hispanic whites.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. Felice"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2624664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2624664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Militarism and Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2624664","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":7386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Through an analysis of the impact of military spending on economic growth, the author argues that militarism and human rights are incompatible. Implementation of the economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights set out in the International Bill of Human Rights requires national mobilization of economic resources. If limited national capital is consumed in excessive military expenditures the feasibility of rights fulfillment diminishes. The article outlines initial public policies designed to limit militarism and to allow international human rights to serve as the cornerstone of domestic and foreign policy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. J. Vincent"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2618476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2618476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"658","pagination":"pp. 658-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race in International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2618476","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":6720,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[35237,35303]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER HUDIS"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45294325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a48aae66-6e56-38b0-b887-be7e36bec44b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45294325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BOSNIA IN THE HISTORIC MIRROR: A COMMENTARY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45294325","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With the signing of the Dayton accords and the introduction of 60,000 NATO and U.S. troops into Bosnia-Herzegovina, the basic aim of those who launched the war against Bosnia\u2014the destruction of Bosnia's multiethnic heritage\u2014has largely been achieved. However, this does not mean the need to analyze the significance of its struggle has come to an end. On the contrary, in light of the exclusivist nationalism and racism which increasingly characterizes the global political arena, the need to theoretically comprehend the meaning of Bosnia's struggle for multiethnicity has taken on new importance. As against theoretical approaches which tend to minimize the significance of the subjective factors involved in the Bosnian struggle for a multiethnic society, the time has come to grasp its inner dynamic as a preparatory strategy for combatting the crises soon to emerge elsewhere in our post-Cold War world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pinar Bilgin"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e3aa4db-34bd-3cb4-a084-a9e172d99501"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thinking past 'Western' IR?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455023","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The laudable attempts at thinking past 'Western' IR should not limit their task to looking beyond the spatial confines of the 'West' in search for insight understood as 'difference', but also ask awkward questions about the 'Westernness' of ostensibly 'Western' approaches to world politics and the 'non-Westernness' of others. For there may be elements of 'non-Western' experiences and ideas built in to 'Western' ways of thinking about and doing world politics. The reverse may also be true. What we think of as 'non-Western' approaches to world politics may be suffused with 'Western' concepts and theories. Indeed, those who are interested in thinking past 'Western' IR should take an additional step and inquire into the evolution of the latter. While looking beyond the 'West' may not always involve discovering something that is radically 'different' from one's own ways of thinking about and doing world politics, such seeming absence of 'difference' cannot be explained away through invoking assumptions of 'teleological Westernisation', but requires becoming curious about the effects of the historical relationship between the 'West' and the 'non-West' in the emergence of ways of thinking and doing that are--in Bhabha's words--'almost the same but not quite'. This article looks at three such instances (India's search for nuclear power status, Turkey's turn to secularism, and Asia's integration into the liberal world order) in the attempt to illustrate how 'mimicry' may emerge as a way of 'doing' world politics in a seemingly 'similar' yet unexpectedly 'different' way.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas R. Hilder"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17411912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51498e78-b44e-32d0-810e-e22b180e3514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23271871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnmusiforu"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Repatriation, Revival and Transmission: The Politics of a S\u00e1mi Musical Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23271871","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article concerns music and the politics of indigenous cultural heritage by focusing on contemporary musical performance of the S\u00e1mi. Often drawing on the distinct unaccompanied vocal tradition of joik since the 1970s political mobilisation, contemporary S\u00e1mi music has assisted in reviving language, identity and a nature-based cosmology, whilst commenting on the processes of Nordic state assimilation, land dispossession and border creation. S\u00e1mi musical performance thus helps to imagine a transnational S\u00e1mi community S\u00e1pmi, traversing Arctic regions of Norway, Sweden, Finland and the Russian Kola Peninsula, whilst furthermore articulating S\u00e1mi concerns as an indigenous people. Owing to the legacy of cultural dispossession in S\u00e1mi encounters with modernity, and the recent emergence of debates concerning cultural ownership in S\u00e1mi and indigenous contexts, S\u00e1mi cultural heritage has become a politicised field. This article explores the themes of revival, repatriation and transmission in contemporary S\u00e1mi musical performance by considering strategies of claiming authorship over a S\u00e1mi cultural heritage. Based on ethnographic research of S\u00e1mi musicians, festivals, record companies, media, musical institutions and the Internet, my article investigates: recent efforts to repatriate archived joik recordings to S\u00e1mi communities; the use of archive recordings in work by contemporary S\u00e1mi artists; and education projects that work to strengthen the transmission of a S\u00e1mi musical heritage. By drawing on Diana Taylor's model of the 'archive' and 'repertoire', I ask: how does S\u00e1mi musical performance offer alternative ways of conceiving of a S\u00e1mi musical heritage that overcome logocentric notions of 'culture'? In conclusion, I propose that we might consider the S\u00e1mi festival as a kind of 'indigenous museum' in which a S\u00e1mi cultural heritage is performed, negotiated and transmitted into the future.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRAD SIMPSON"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44376167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45b00e34-ae89-3546-9098-f84fcabb7f38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44376167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"694","pageStart":"675","pagination":"pp. 675-694","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The United States and the Curious History of Self-Determination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44376167","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9744,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[160259,160372]],"Locations in B":[[22434,22547]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gn6d5h.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781781381717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7142a32-a27d-3f88-b35f-3ceb45719aa3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1gn6d5h.8"}],"isPartOf":"Creolizing Europe","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"38","pagination":"38-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Creolization and Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1gn6d5h.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8730,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[54467,54538]],"abstract":"At the 2007 conference \u2018Creolizing Europe\u2019 at the University of Manchester, I worked through the notion of creolization to discuss the project I was then working on, theMaison des civilisations et de l\u2019unit\u00e9 r\u00e9unionnaise<\/em> (MCUR), a museum that was scheduled to open in Reunion Island. Rewriting this contribution, with the distance that a series of events has produced, I approach the question differently. Indeed, in the meantime, there was an important crisis in the French overseas departments and the museum project I had worked on was brutally stopped. In December 2008 and January 2009, there were strikes throughout the","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["creolization","glissant","reunion","\u00e9douard glissant","french","slavery","indian ocean","vernacular","chamoiseau","cultural"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tsenay Serequeberhan"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reflections on \"In My Father's House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820007","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Smith"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2706215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40611891"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23319"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c619b9a-83a6-3ff2-ba57-8548314df2d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2706215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteorga"}],"isPartOf":"International Organization","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Configurations of Power in North-South Relations since 1945","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2706215","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":13162,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[228907,228975]],"Locations in B":[[58222,58292]],"abstract":"The demand by Third World countries for a \"new international economic order\" also has its political dimension. Do the threats of commodity cartels, debt defaults, and investment expropriation reflect a fundamental shift in the balance of power between North and South? This paper argues, to the contrary, that the power of the South is quite limited. An analysis of trade, financing, and investment relations between North and South reveals the latter's clearly subordinate position, which is all the more weakened by the fragile political-administrative structures of many Third World regimes. Nevertheless, the demands being made should in some form be accommodated since they serve Northern interests in two important respects: they potentially allow the North new means of leverage in relations with the South; and they offer the North the opportunity to coordinate its various policies and interests in regard to the Third World. Had the South not called for a new international economic order, the North should have pressed for one.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Helgesson"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shifting Fields: Imagining Literary Renewal in \"Itiner\u00e1rio\" and \"Drum\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618384","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article looks at the beginnings of anti-apartheid\/anticolonial literary cultures in Johannesburg and Maputo (then Lourenqo Marques) after the Second World War. It pays specific attention to the ways in which they attempted to harness aesthetics of \"newness.\" By focusing on the influential journals Drum (1951-) and Itiner\u00e1rio (1941-1955), I argue that both journals tapped into transnational intellectual currents such as Harlem Renaissance writing, but that the discrete discursive networks of English and Portuguese contributed to a differentiation of their aesthetic approaches. Itinerdrio acted out an avantgarde-like resistance to bourgeois\/colonial culture. Drum was market-driven and achieved in its early phase a compromise between a racially circumscribed mass-cultural appeal and the literate ideals of mission-educated South African blacks. These differences can then be factored into an analysis of persistent differences between the literatures of South Africa and Mozambique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Guenther"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0176abcf-905f-33a0-8ea8-8ee10bc0687f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44840726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Phenomenology Of Dwelling in Carceral Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44840726","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrienne Kennedy"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4336843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163075X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bee7ea7a-7e4b-385c-a285-7a846f14d98c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4336843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kenyrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Kenyon Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Kenyon College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Letter to My Students on My Sixty-First Birthday by Suzanne Alexander","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4336843","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Kopkind"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25006887","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07345496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42ac0a89-db6a-3e0a-a2e7-df35a8295dcd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25006887"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"granstre"}],"isPartOf":"Grand Street","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Jean Stein","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neglect of the Left: Allard Lowenstein","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25006887","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":4025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Auritro Majumder"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.1.12","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc3aed99-f9c1-3e50-a891-2ca64d4a9184"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.1.12"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Materialist Critique of the Postnational: Haile Gerima's Luk\u00e1csian Realism in Harvest 3000 Years<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.1.12","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay contextualizes and provides a materialist critique of the post-national turn in cultural theory by linking it to postcolonialism, postmodernism, poststructuralism, and posthumanism\u2014\u201cpost-ality\u201d in short. Drawing from Georg Luk\u00e1cs's seminal distinction between modernism and realism, I argue that post-al concepts such as postnationalism, with their celebration of the rupture and radical newness supposedly unleashed by capitalist globalization, reiterate a philosophy of modernism. Here the past, especially histories of anticolonial national liberation and collective transformation, is rendered irrelevant or subsumed by contemporary globalization. By contrast, through a discussion of the Ethiopian filmmaker Haile Gerima's 1976 film, Harvest 3000 Years, I trace an alternative politico-aesthetic mode of realism that emerges from the ex-colonial peripheries of the world. Gerima's cinematic deployment of Luk\u00e1csian realism critically reclaims the national-popular traditions of collective sovereignty, illuminates the subjective human potential for transformation, and most importantly situates the nation as a continuous yet evolving site of contestation in the global system of capital. The essay offers a revaluation of two distinct strands of intellectual history: the little-acknowledged parallel between conservative, early 20th-century modernism and recent post-al theory, the obscured resonance between radical interwar-era Luk\u00e1csian realism and postcolonial African cinema of liberation, and their contrasting implications for the present.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Matheson","David Matheson"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3099869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49631317"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03b96527-f54d-32fd-a0ec-147e7484519a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3099869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Languages of Scotland: Culture and the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3099869","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The indigenous languages of Scotland are in a precarious position faced with the massive presence of English. This essay examines the state and nature of the Scots and Gaelic languages. It places them in their historical context and traces how each has had its heyday in Scotland, in the case of Gaelic to be supplanted by Scots and in the case of Scots to be supplanted by English. Both have become marginalised in Scottish life and in the Scottish school. Both have been subject to various concerted campaigns aimed at their destruction. Gaelic, however, has at least had the consolation of being regarded as a language while Scots has not. The changing relationship between the school and these languages is examined in the context of the current revival of Scottish culture on a multiplicity of fronts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Galef"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e322314-0fdb-3f64-b29f-66ab15758b04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4240978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tiptree and the Problem of the Other: Postcolonialism versus Sociobiology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4240978","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The work of Alice Sheldon, better known as James Tiptree, Jr., is marked by conflict between a desire to overcome imperialist habits of mind and a scientist's fatalism about the limits of altering human behavior. Accordingly, much of her fiction vacillates between the two poles of postcolonialist theory and sociobiology, though with a decided leaning toward the latter, as an analysis of works from Ten Thousand Light-Years from Home (1973) to The Starry Rift (1986) shows. A focal examination of the short story \"I'll Be Waiting for You When the Swimming Pool Is Empty\" (1971) demonstrates the complexity of these contradictory forces at work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Schwarz"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23310729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b198fd27-310e-3c3e-b3da-5b24ccb57514"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23310729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"977","pageStart":"976","pagination":"pp. 976-977","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23310729","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kopano Ratele"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6160ed0d-b18f-331f-bc22-89c273673b53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The End of the Black Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066175","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["V\u00cdCTOR ROSA","V\u00edctor Hern\u00e1ndez Cruz"],"datePublished":"1975-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25743643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00945366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e85b3955-e471-3cfb-a2de-8d9d00cad6f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25743643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bilrevrevbil"}],"isPartOf":"Bilingual Review \/ La Revista Biling\u00fce","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Bilingual Press \/ Editorial Biling\u00fce","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INTERVIEW WITH V\u00cdCTOR HERN\u00c1NDEZ CRUZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25743643","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":3599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Ginio"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156874617"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad9df230-7d76-3e3e-8a2a-dc5b99857b3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41403692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"French Officers, African Officers, and the Violent Image of African Colonial Soldiers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403692","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article examines the ways in which French officers manipulated the image of the \"savage and violent\" African colonial soldier. While the background for the development of this image was the general European perception of Africa as a violent space, during World War I, officers, as well as parts of the French public, began to see Africans as \"grown children\" rather than savages. However, as this image served French military purposes and made the soldiers useful on the battlefields, it was not rejected outright. I look at the debate around recruiting Africans to serve in Europe on the eve of World War I, and the French attempts to refute the German accusations around the deployment of African soldiers in the Rhineland during the 1920s. Finally I examine how, thirty years later, during the Indochina War, African officers dealt with these conflicting images in reports about violent incidents in which African soldiers had been involved.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Adam Nash"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/819734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f24acd6-268a-3783-a0a6-eebaefd13e9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/819734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"One Person's Opinion: The Truth about Emotion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/819734","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":914,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard HARRIS"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da7b205a-333b-3f53-b72e-8a3bceea99a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"113","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Romanticism and Scientism in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351174","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert O. Edwards"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1509101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf1189e-5057-3fac-9530-f7585d28e60e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1509101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Third World and the Problem of God-Talk","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1509101","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":5189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shane Graham"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7941e995-2c01-377f-8c77-4f88afd57872"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24247101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"512","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-512","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cultural Exchange in a Black Atlantic Web: South African Literature, Langston Hughes, and Negritude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247101","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":12045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meta Schettler"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ac8d7ba-271c-3a9b-a67c-d372f8b8d475"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44489191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Going to the Territory with Jay Wright and Michael Harper: Explorations of Black History and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489191","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto Dainotto"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b65227-663f-3bbf-b367-0a8252faf309"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"South by Chance: Southern Questions on the Global South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.03","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper looks at the epistemic and practical possibilities that the notion of a \u201cGlobal South\u201d may open. Drawing from works on the subject such as Anibal Quijano's \u201cColoniality of Power, Eurocentrism, and Latin America\u201d (2000), Raewyn Connell's Southern Theory (2007), and Boaventura de Sousa Santos's Conocer desde el Sur (2006) but also from a long Italian Marxist tradition that goes from Antonio Gramsci's \u201cSome Aspects of the Southern Question\u201d (1926) through Franco Cassano's Southern Thought and Other Essays on the Mediterranean (1996) to Franco Piperno's workerist Elogio dello spirito pubblico meridionale [Praise of the Southern Public Spirit] (1997), this essay considers the Global South as a possible commonplace where European Marxism and global post-colonial and de-colonial movements may meet.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.bm","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e45d68b-0992-3615-b736-661a2be55691"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.bm"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.bm","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":1127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Dur\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc7d9369-11b7-362f-b8ea-1e2f65f3b068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"1 (115)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Over-Inclusive Gang Enforcement and Urban Resistance: A Comparison Between Two Cities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768527","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WANDA RIVERA-RIVERA"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40647489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57e29f6d-1f6f-3961-b355-e04a49e59add"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40647489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The Politics of Madness in Francisco Matos Paoli's Prison Poem, Canto de la locura<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40647489","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":8833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane E. Goodman"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.64.4.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1690ac-ef65-302d-8050-9ad99b938010"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.64.4.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Embodying Halqa: Algerian Storytelling on a Global Stage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.64.4.06","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Istijmam, an Algerian theater troupe selected to tour the United States in 2016 by the Center Stage program of the US State Department, sought to recreate for US audiences an experience of halqa, a traditional North African storytelling performance. Algerian playwrights had been experimenting with the halqa since the 1960s, putting it in dialogue with Brechtian styles of acting. Istijmam went further, attempting to recreate an embodied experience of it via a new mise-ensc\u00e8ne and a form of physical theater inspired by Grotowski. Previous analyses have focused on the discursive organization of a halqa-style play, but this article considers the halqa in terms of its mise-en-sc\u00e8ne and its embodied materiality. The article links to a US performance of the play on YouTube.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shehla Burney"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981705","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"093de4af-1838-304f-8653-e724270c411c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981705"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CHAPTER EIGHT: Toward a Pedagogy of the Other: Interculturalism, Inclusiveness, Interdisciplinarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981705","volumeNumber":"417","wordCount":5800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alamin M. Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespeare in Africa: Between English and Swahili Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820004","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isaac Ndlovu"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"573c0153-1c84-3eef-a456-05da07081374"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"130","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poverty in Freedom versus Opulence in Chains: Satirical Expos\u00e9 of the Postcolonial Dictatorships in Kourouma's \"Waiting for the Wild Beasts to Vote\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705233","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":14075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In my examination of Ahmadou Kourouma's satirical 'historiographie metafiction' (Hutcheon 1988: 93) Waiting for the Wild Beasts to Vote [1998] (2004), I argue that this narrative shows that in postcolonial Africa freedom from colonial rule has resulted neither in privilege nor power for the majority of African citizens. In the novel, Kourouma employs but also subverts the style of donsomana or praise poetry in his satirisation of postcolonial African ways of wielding political power. Largely narrated by Bingo, a satirical griot, the novel adopts a mock-epic mode as a way of acknowledging but also subverting both traditional African and European modernistic conceptualisations of the historical and literary. Among other things, the title of the novel satirises the inadequacy of electoral processes imposed by the Western nations to bring about smooth power transitions and genuine freedoms to the African populace. The novel's title also mocks African rulers for undermining democracy and those who are ruled for their inability to seize the voting opportunities, which in the novel are sometimes presented as moments of genuine civil power, to rid themselves of the emasculating dictators.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oscar Glantz"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66c0d569-70b9-3232-a311-c0d7165ff304"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PERSONAL EFFICACY, SYSTEM-BLAME, AND VIOLENCE ORIENTATION: A TEST OF THE BLOCKED-OPPORTUNITY THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861600","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAREK MIKU\u0160"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42640175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00090794"},{"name":"oclc","value":"558846948"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42640175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceskylid"}],"isPartOf":"\u010cesk\u00fd lid","issueNumber":"3","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of Ethnology, Czech Academy of Sciences","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"DISKURZ\u00cdVNA (DE)KON\u0160TRUKCIA KOLEKT\u00cdVNEJ IDENTITY: S\u00daPERIACE OBRAZY \u201eR\u00d3MOV\u201c","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42640175","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":8634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This interdisciplinary work explores current controversy over the collective identity of Romani and reasons for their social predicament. The first position, associated with Romani studies and identity politics, sees all Romani as a part of an \u2018ethnic group\u2019, and connects their plight to \u2018racial\u2019 discrimination and intolerance. Some anthropologists and social policy-makers call this \u2018primordialism\u2019 and deconstruct the notion of a unitary and natural \u2018Romani nation\u2019, maintaining most ghetto inhabitants are only classified as \u2018Romani\u2019 and their identity derives from their \u2018social exclusion\u2019. Matching policies are advocated. The author combines contemporary anthropological approaches to the identity construction with theories of discourse to conceptualize the debate, completing the framework with self-reflection of social science. The method of Critical Discourse Analysis is applied in examining corpora of academic and specialized writing, policy papers and media texts for the discourse construction of identity. Arguing that both discourses are differentiated instantiations of the same diagram of power normalizing \u2018troublesome\u2019 subjectivities, the author touches upon the ethical responsibility of scientists deconstructing essentialist representations of identities and circulating their own constructs instead.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lethbridge"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"034a99f8-29de-3e5a-98ab-756b9e90793b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511165","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":2191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcia Holmes"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02923d12-0fac-31d3-9de0-13eb9f50507b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43917372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"81","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The 'Brainwashing' Dilemma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917372","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Billy Hawkins"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10811753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b1a5801-2ace-3044-ab6f-d1f2020c6bb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanamermen"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Men","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Black Student Athlete: The Colonized Black Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819389","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article views the black student athlete as colonized Black Body. It uses an internal colonial model to place the experiences black student athletes encounter at predominantly white National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Institutions into a broader theoretical framework. This theoretical approach draws upon the similarities that exist between black student athletes and internally colonized people. The conclusion of this article is that the Black Body is again internally colonized by these institutions for physical exploitation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ryan Poll"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45151156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839053"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cda8124-8839-3bae-befa-1974fbc5d358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45151156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Can One \"Get Out?\" The Aesthetics of Afro-Pessimism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45151156","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":12906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[20323,20389]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas De Genova"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15452476"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54395462"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f81ebe3-5aa8-3115-9490-299221ed4b65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44861310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatamergeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Geography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Incorrigible Subject: Mobilizing a Critical Geography of (Latin) America through the Autonomy of Migration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861310","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":12439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article suggests the indispensable purchase of sustaining a critique of the conventional geography of \"Latin America.\" Any critical approach to (Latin) American geography must be organized in relation to the genealogy of concepts, discourses, and practices implicated in the historical and ongoing sociopolitical production of the space of (\"Latin\") \"America.\" This article's specific intervention toward a critical geography of Latin America adopts the vantage point of migration as a standpoint of critique, and thus posits a critical geographical perspective on Latin\/America from the point of view of the experiences of Latino\/a migrants in the United States. Situating its inquiry in relation to the pivotal role of anti-Mexican\/anti-Latino racism in the political rhetoric of Donald Trump, this paper is ultimately interested in the relationship of Latin American and Latina\/o Studies to the autonomy of migration, the subversion of the U.S.-Mexico border, and the politics of incorrigibility articulated through migrants' struggles within the United States. This article also seeks thereby to revisit the perennially (but productively) problematic relationship between what comes to be known as \"Latin American Studies\" and the field of scholarly inquiry called \"Latino Studies.\" Este art\u00edculo sugiere la indispensabilidad de sostener una cr\u00edtica de la geograf\u00eda convencional de \u201cAm\u00e9rica Latina.\u201d Cualquier enfoque cr\u00edtico de la geograf\u00eda (latino-)americana tiene que ser organizado en relaci\u00f3n con la genealog\u00eda de conceptos, discursos, y pr\u00e1cticas implicados en la historia y producci\u00f3n socio-pol\u00edtica perpetua del espacio de \u201cAm\u00e9rica\u201d (\u201cLatina\u201d). La intervenci\u00f3n espec\u00edfica de este art\u00edculo hacia una geograf\u00eda cr\u00edtica de Am\u00e9rica Latina utiliza la migraci\u00f3n como punto de entrada de la cr\u00edtica y, por lo tanto, plantea una perspectiva geogr\u00e1fica cr\u00edtica sobre la Am\u00e9rica\/Latina a partir del punto de vista de las experiencias de los migrantes latinos en los Estados Unidos. En relaci\u00f3n con el papel fundamental del rac ismo anti-mexicano \/ anti-latino en la ret\u00f3rica pol\u00edtica de Donald Trump, este trabajo est\u00e1 en \u00faltima instancia interesado en la relaci\u00f3n entre estudios latinoamericanos y latinos con la autonom\u00eda de la migraci\u00f3n, la subversi\u00f3n de la frontera entre M\u00e9xico y los Estados Unidos, y la pol\u00edtica de la incorregibilidad articulada a trav\u00e9s de las luchas de los migrantes dentro de los Estados Unidos. Este art\u00edculo tambi\u00e9n busca revisar la relaci\u00f3n (productivamente) problem\u00e1tica entre lo que se conoce como \u201cEstudios Latinoamericanos\u201d y el campo de la investigaci\u00f3n acad\u00e9mica llamado \u201cEstudios Latinos.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith FOULCHER"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02179520"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27d1b7e0-5d69-39ad-825a-35665917e30a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41056910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sojourn"}],"isPartOf":"Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS)","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Area Studies","Asian Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In Search of the Postcolonial in Indonesian Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056910","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Conceived in historical terms, the postcolonial paradigm identifies three distinct types of historical space, moving from the initial awareness of inauthenticity to a final repudiation of nationalism's Self-Other binary in a fully politicized recognition of unstable cultural location. The absence of recognizably postcolonial characteristics in Indonesian literature is related to the unbroken nexus between literature and nationalism in independent Indonesia. Itself produced in a new \"colonizing\" language with submerged connections to the former colonial language, Indonesian literature has specific characteristics that set it apart from the postcolonial paradigm. In this respect, the work of Pramoedya Ananta Toer is problematic, however.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian I. Smart"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec4cca73-69da-36b4-913a-087566482f17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1\/2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Trickster \"P\u00edcaro\" in Three Contemporary Afro-Hispanic Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054126","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":2982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rasheeduddin Khan"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d2bdc04-08a0-3bd1-b0ea-84313cf080de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45071933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"COMMONWEALTH AND THE THIRD WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071933","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":20274,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What is the Commonwealth ? Is it the continuation of the British Empire by other means ? Does it constitute a form of neo-colonialism ? Is it a trap laid by the old colonialists to lure the newly freed countries into newer forms of dependence ? The answer to questions like these used to be in the affirmative in 1948, by a wide variety of perceptive analysts of international politics. Thirty-five years later and wiser today in 1983, except the ignorant, the naive or the hardcore text-book dogmatist, indeed none with an understanding of the new and complex international situation and an awareness of the logic of an interdependent world, would be prone to give a straight-cut answer. The international context in which the Commonwealth took its shape and form in the fifties of this century was basicaliy different in terms of political power-equation ; the situation of world finance, trade and commerce ; the far-reaching effects of the revolution in technology, electronics, communication, aeronautics, defence technology and in the many critical fields with an impact on human life and group relations. Together with this the phenomenal proliferation of human population and explosion of democratic human consciousness and the surging passion for national identity, freedom and equality; had brought into being a global situation that was qualitatively different from any epoch in human history. It was a new world, a radically different world, but an amazing world of contrasts and of opportunities. On the collapse of the European imposed global order around 1945, the United States and the Soviet Union emerged on the world scene (to borrow the current jargon) as Super-Powers. The global spread of the United States and the US dominated TNC's created a situation of new challenges even to the old world. The formation of the socialist commity of nations in eastern Europe and Asia, and the spread of socialist ideas and perceptions the world over, provided sustenance and support to the struggling people and established an alternative focus in the balance of power. The ferment in the colonies was such that with the breaking of the chains in India, one by one new states in Asia, Africa, Central America and Oceania appeared on the horizon of the expanding international community. Since the Commonwealth was not born in an age of imperialism but in the age of the winding-up of imperialism, its roots can be traced not in British constitutional practices and institutions\u2014part of it as the starting point are undoubtedly there\u2014but in their \"disruption\" mutation and transformation by the triumphant liberation movements which congregated in the Commonwealth.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. Randall"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2717040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f267e008-c870-3f59-983f-58d4c54531b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2717040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegrohistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2717040","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":1589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aldona Bialowas Pobutsky"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac5d6a28-a5d2-30fb-a745-f726405c089d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CULTURAL ALIENATION AND COLONIAL DESIRE IN \"ALIENACI\u00d3N\" BY JULIO RAM\u00d3N RIBEYRO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803064","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3199,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[19354,19400]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shakir Mustafa"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20557522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d42f18e2-1304-3fea-ba74-b2263caf51eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20557522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revisionism and Revival: A Postcolonial Approach to Irish Cultural Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20557522","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8703,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Keith Booker"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Literature and the World System: Dystopian Fiction, Collective Experience, and the Postcolonial Condition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820227","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barnor Hesse"],"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"620f51e8-6a9d-34db-9137-bff25d1a0d32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24571402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Escaping Liberty: Western Hegemony, Black Fugitivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24571402","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay places Isaiah Berlin's famous \"Two Concepts of Liberty\" in conversation with perspectives defined as black fugitive thought. The latter is used to refer principally to Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire, W. E. B. Du Bois and David Walker. It argues that the trope of liberty in Western liberal political theory, exemplified in a lineage that connects Berlin, John Stuart Mill and Benjamin Constant, has maintained its universal meaning and coherence by excluding and silencing any representations of its modernity gestations, affiliations and entanglements with Atlantic slavery and European empires. This particular incarnation of theory is characterized as the Western discursive and hegemonic effects of colonial-racial foreclosure. Foreclosure describes the discursive contexts in which particular terms or references become impossible to formulate because the means by which they could be formulated have been excluded from the discursive context. Through an examination of the action of foreclosure, based largely on unraveling the liberal-colonial convergences of Two Concepts the essay reflects on the political and theoretical problems posed for black political thought by the hegemony of Western formulations of liberty that deny their indebtedness to Western colonialism. Drawing upon juxtapositions between white liberal\/republican thinkers and black fugitivity thinkers, it argues a particular lineage of black political thought is compelled to conceive of itself as an escape from the colonial and racial hegemony of Western liberty.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terri L. De Young"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43195684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08898731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"987fd7f7-1668-3b0b-9418-e50b5d738864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43195684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabiyya"}],"isPartOf":"al-'Arabiyya","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE INFLUENCE OF THE COLONIAL ENCOUNTER: SELF, IDENTITY AND OTHER IN MODERN ARABIC INTELLECTUAL DISCOURSE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43195684","volumeNumber":"40\/41","wordCount":7969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vanessa K. Vald\u00e9s"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27743034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30800dd0-8dad-3efa-963b-a5adbfa1bb98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27743034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"679","pageStart":"675","pagination":"pp. 675-679","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27743034","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Foner"],"datePublished":"2001-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2652222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c7fcdd-4a6b-32b8-8cbb-90c09f143a66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2652222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Freedom in a Global Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2652222","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":8768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Muriam Haleh Davis"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671627","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a7a2bf5-0ad9-3b20-8aac-da0e4a1edc80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cIncommensurate Ontologies\u201d? Anti-Black Racism and the Question of Islam in French Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671627","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":4868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In recent years, scholars and activists in France and the United States have questioned whether discrimination against Muslims constitutes a form of racism. In France, some on the left have claimed that religion is a category of belief and therefore should remain separate from discrimination based on skin color or other physical characteristics. In the United States, Afropessimist approaches insist on the specificity of anti-Black racism, rooted in the historical difference between the native and slave. This article, by contrast, argues that race and religion should be studied relationally and highlights how being Muslim exceeded the frame of personal conviction in colonial Algeria, where religious identity was the basis of a political and economic project that were constructed in their wake. The works of Frantz Fanon are particularly instructive in this regard, as he insisted on viewing Blackness as fundamentally relational and also drew on his analysis of anti-Black racism in mainland France to understand the dynamics of settler colonialism in Algeria. The porous line between religious and racial categories also sheds light on discussions of sectarianism in the Middle East more broadly, as colonial regimes irrevocably shaped the contours of the nation-state that were constructed in their wake. Postcolonial sectarianism inherited the intimate relationship between race and religion constructed by empire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marika Sherwood"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/221228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55776e2d-7a89-3606-8c1b-5886bdfb4339"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/221228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Elder Dempster and West Africa 1891-C.1940: The Genesis of Underdevelopment?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/221228","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Outhwaite"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"490e8844-5551-3e90-bc2d-5ddd35054cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1071","pageStart":"1069","pagination":"pp. 1069-1071","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231301","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shannon Dunn"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40666466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35879ba4-d121-3418-8b31-efbc522619fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40666466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Female Martyr and the Politics of Death: An Examination of the Martyr Discourses of Vibia Perpetua and Wafa Idris","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40666466","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":9832,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines female martyr narratives from two different traditions and historical periods to show a pattern between gender, politics, and martyrdom. In the stories of Vibia Perpetua and Wafa Idris, martyrdom gives women access to political participation. The narratives crafted about these women and their deaths reflect ambivalence about this participation, for they tend to reinforce strict gender roles for women. An examination of female martyr narratives allows us to compare the reasons that individuals, who write on behalf of communities, use to justify women acting as dealers in death. Martyrs engage in truth-producing actions through their deaths, and thus these actions must be regulated. Authorities in Islam and Christianity limit the reasons one may kill and be killed; the female martyr represents an interesting case as she transgresses boundaries of theological traditions and also reinstates them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anita Chari"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exceeding Recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512880","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5221,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[492343,492430]],"Locations in B":[[27454,27542]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth Chan"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6270987d-8d51-3930-8d6c-7be5c37a2c0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1225641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Construction of Black Male Identity in Black Action Films of the Nineties","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1225641","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In five recent black action films designed for crossover appeal, such factors as capitalism and the drug trade, racial self-hatred, and the geopolitics of ghetto space have influenced the construction of a 1990s black male identity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA CHRISMAN"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theorizing \u2018race\u2019, racism and culture: pitfalls of idealist tendencies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263393","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":5304,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Bell"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de6ca17d-8ae4-30ce-8ac9-ffb743243c4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44482382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The End of Ideology Revisited (Part I)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482382","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAIME AMPARO ALVES"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022216X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227216"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22a6f658-1600-3c7e-9dfd-8904fb27ff61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatiamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Blood in Reasoning': State Violence, Contested Territories and Black Criminal Agency in Urban Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168380","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":13634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines black criminal agency in the context of drug trafficking and territorial control by the Primeiro Comando da Capital (First Capital Command, PCC), a self-identified criminal organisation in S\u00e3o Paulo's favelas. It argues that black youth's racialised encounters with the police shape their political praxis in the city. Since in the racial imaginary, they are constantly linked to crime and violence, and since their criminalised status justifies mass incarceration and death by the police, criminality appears as a valid category to better understand not only their fate but also their agency. Ethnographic fieldwork carried out in 2009 and 2010 in a hyperimpoverished, predominately black slum community, along with weekly visits to a local detention centre in S\u00e3o Paulo, informs the author's analysis of the PCC's controversial languages of resistance and the gendered and racialised outcomes that emerge from their attempts to fend off the state in such topographies of domination. Este art\u00edculo examina la agencia de delincuentes negros en el contexto del narcotr\u00e1fico y el control territorial del Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), una organizaci\u00f3n autoidentificada como criminal en las favelas de S\u00e3o Paulo. Se sostiene aqu\u00ed que los encuentros racializados de j\u00f3venes negros con la polic\u00eda dan forma a su pr\u00e1ctica pol\u00edtica en la ciudad. Desde el imaginario racial, dichos j\u00f3venes son constantemente relacionados con el crimen y la violencia (y ya que su estatus criminalizado justifica encarcelamientos masivos y muertes por la polic\u00eda) la criminalidad parece ser una categor\u00eda v\u00e1lida para entender mejor no s\u00f3lo su suerte sino tambi\u00e9n su agencia. Un trabajo de campo etnogr\u00e1fico llevado a cabo en 2009 y 2010 en una barriada muy empobrecida predominantemente negra, junto con visitas semanales a un centro de detenci\u00f3n local en S\u00e3o Paulo, sirvieron de base para el an\u00e1lisis del autor sobre los lenguajes controversiales de resistencia del PCC y de las consecuencias racializadas y de g\u00e9nero que emergen tras sus intentos de protegerse frente al estado en tales topograf\u00edas de dominaci\u00f3n. Este artigo examina as estrat\u00e9gias de resist\u00eancia negra no contexto do tr\u00e1fico drogas e controle territorial pelo Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC), uma auto-identificada organiza\u00e7\u00e3o criminosa operando nas favelas de S\u00e3o Paulo. O artigo sustenta que os encontros racializados da juventude negra com a pol\u00edcia moldam suas pr\u00e1ticas pol\u00edticas na cidade. Se no imagin\u00e1rio racial, jovens negros s\u00e3o constantemente ligados ao crime e a viol\u00eancia, e uma vez que o seu estatus criminalizado justifica o encarceramento em massa e a morte pela pol\u00edcia, a criminalidade negra parece ser uma categoria anal\u00edtica v\u00e1lida para compreender melhor n\u00e3o s\u00f3 o regime de domina\u00e7\u00e3o racial, mas tamb\u00e9m a ag\u00eancia negra para al\u00e9m dos espa\u00e7os tradicionais. Trabalho de campo etnogr\u00e1fico realizado entre maio de 2009 e dezembro de 2010, em uma favela paulistana, juntamente com visitas semanais a um centro de deten\u00e7\u00e3o provisoria, informa a an\u00e1lise do autor sobre as estrat\u00e9gias de sobreviv\u00eancia desenvolvidas em resposta \u00e0 viol\u00eancia produzida pelo estado. Finalmente, o artigo analisa o regime de domina\u00e7\u00e3o imposto pelo PCC, notadamente a pol\u00edtica do medo e as opress\u00f5es de g\u00eanero que emergem do controle territorial em tais topografias da viol\u00eancia.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Randal Doane"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45fb4b9e-2b8b-3b81-af1f-f6d57ef8e160"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4120771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ralph Ellison's Sociological Imagination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120771","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":12713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article investigates how the theoretical frameworks of Hegel. Marx. and Freud inform Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, and it highlights the novels exploration of sociological concepts such as alienation, freedom, and the unconscious. I will consider Ellison's emergence as a writer and explore how the formal and the thematic variations of the novel are informed by the concepts of dialectics, being, and labor (Hegel and Marx), and psychic structure. Eros. and Ananke (Freud). I will conclude by considering how Ellison's project resonates with the tenets of feminism and post-modernism and how literature can be conceptualized for sociological analysis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dbdc090-bec6-3e70-84a6-d868d8f09de6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41231243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Mwalimu \/ LE \u00ab MWALIMU \u00bb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231243","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En swahili, le terme \u00ab Mwalimu \u00bb d\u00e9signe celui qui, s'\u00e9tant soumis \u00e0 un entra\u00eenement intellectuel, est capable \u00e0 son tour d'enseigner. Les habitants de la Tanzanie ont donn\u00e9 ce nom \u00e0 leur Pr\u00e9sident, Julius Nyerere, en signe de d\u00e9f\u00e9rent attachement. Nyerere, l'un des plus remarquables penseurs du socialisme africain d'aujourd'hui, a \u00e9labor\u00e9 un v\u00e9ritable syst\u00e8me politique et social, dont il a d\u00e9fini les objectifs essentiels avec pr\u00e9cision : l'ind\u00e9pendance donne aux Africains la possibilit\u00e9 de cr\u00e9er une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e9quilibr\u00e9e et qui leur soit propre; elle leur impose d'\u00e9laborer eux-m\u00eame leurs propres institutions; elle exige d'eux qu'ils demeurent r\u00e9ellement Africains, car c'est en Africains qu'ils pourront effectivement participer au d\u00e9veloppement de la civilisation universelle. Le fondement du syst\u00e8me politique et social de Nyerere g\u00eet dans sa conception de la famille africaine traditionnelle. Pour le Mwalimu, d\u00e9mocratie et socialisme sont depuis longtemps enracin\u00e9s dans la famille africaine traditionnelle. Aussi, le nouvel \u00e9tat africain peut-il \u00eatre \u00e0 la fois progressiste et moderne, sans pour autant devoir renoncer \u00e0 son caract\u00e8re profond d' \u00ab africanit\u00e9 \u00bb . Dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 africaine traditionnelle, la vie de la communaut\u00e9 familiale reposait sur des comportements bas\u00e9s sur l'\u00e9galit\u00e9, la libert\u00e9 et la coh\u00e9sion. La terre \u00e9tant propri\u00e9t\u00e9 collective assurait \u00e0 chaque membre de la communaut\u00e9 un suffisant moyen de subsistance. Chacun ayant sa part de travail, l'id\u00e9e de classe sociale \u2014 patrons et ouvriers \u2014 \u00e9tait sans signification dans le langage comme dans les faits. L'analyse faite par le Mwalimu des effets d\u00e9vastateurs engendr\u00e9s par l'invasion occidentale, est men\u00e9e avec grande lucidit\u00e9. Non seulement le centre de gravit\u00e9 politique, social et \u00e9conomique, est transf\u00e9r\u00e9 d'Afrique dans les m\u00e9tropoles d'Occident, mais encore l'Africain se trouve priv\u00e9 de tout jugement et de toute initiative. L'introduction du syst\u00e8me mon\u00e9taire bouleverse la structure des communaut\u00e9s africaines, comme le syst\u00e8me d'instruction europ\u00e9enne d\u00e9truit la coh\u00e9sion familiale en dirigeant les enfants vers un individualisme \u00e9gocentrique, inconnu du socialisme traditionnel. Nyerere fait observer que le socialisme africain, \u00e0 la diff\u00e9rence du socialisme occidental, ne se fonde pas sur la lutte des classes (puisque les classes n'existent pas), mais sur le d\u00e9veloppement institutionnel de la famille traditionnelle. Par ailleurs, il existe plus d'un chemin d'acc\u00e8s au socialisme v\u00e9ritable. Cest par le terme \u00ab Ujamaa \u00bb que Nyerere d\u00e9signe sa conception de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 africaine socialiste : la synth\u00e8se de tout ce qui demeure valable dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 traditionnelle et de ce qui a \u00e9t\u00e9 acquis au cours de l'exp\u00e9rience coloniale. De cette exp\u00e9rience, le Mwalimu a tir\u00e9 son refus du capitalisme, syst\u00e8me d'exploitation de l'homme totalement \u00e9tranger au mode de vie africain, propre \u00e0 d\u00e9clencher les dissensions int\u00e9rieures et \u00e0 favoriser la mainmise des puissances du dehors. Pour r\u00e9aliser l'Ujamaa, il faut cr\u00e9er de nouvelles institutions capables de rajeunir et de moderniser le socialisme traditionnel. Il faut aussi que ces institutions ne s'\u00e9cartent pas de leur objectif r\u00e9el et qu'elles puissent cependant s'adapter aux n\u00e9cessit\u00e9s \u00e0 venir. Un ensemble de conditions fondamentales s'impose : le parti unique, la libert\u00e9 d\u00e9mocratique, une politique r\u00e9volutionnaire d'ind\u00e9pendance et, par-dessus tout, une autorit\u00e9 supr\u00eame \u00e0 la fois totalement vou\u00e9e \u00e0 sa t\u00e2che et d'une extr\u00eame rigueur morale. Dans sa d\u00e9fense du syst\u00e8me politique \u00e0 parti unique, le Mwalimu expose les besoins complexes li\u00e9s \u00e0 la formation d'une nouvelle nation africaine, en m\u00eame temps qu'il d\u00e9finit la notion de d\u00e9mocratie dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 traditionnelle. Il fait la critique du syst\u00e8me de Westminster, \u00e0 majorit\u00e9 et opposition, syst\u00e8me bas\u00e9 sur les classes sociales et les cat\u00e9gories \u00e9conomiques. Il d\u00e9montre qu'un tel syst\u00e8me r\u00e9duit consid\u00e9rablement la libert\u00e9 dans le choix des candidats et dans l'action des \u00e9lus. Enfin, il rejette le syst\u00e8me de Westminster parce qu'il est en d\u00e9finitive soumis aux int\u00e9r\u00eats du capitalisme. Le parti unique ne signifie nullement absence d'opposition. On peut s'\u00e9lever contre la politique du gouvernement en place, sans pour autant diviser le pays en partisans et opposants syst\u00e9matiques. Nyerere d\u00e9clare que le syst\u00e8me du parti unique conduit non seulement \u00e0 la vraie d\u00e9mocratie, mais aussi \u00e0 l'\u00e9quilibre social et l'efficacit\u00e9 r\u00e9elle. Les \u00e9lections de 1965, qui furent pour le Mwalimu un succ\u00e8s total, ont apport\u00e9 une nette justification de ses id\u00e9es politiques et sociales.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick C. Hogan"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5762f0fd-267e-3eff-9a4d-c8d61f7053fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44323165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"431","pagination":"pp. 431-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"OTHELLO\", RACISM, AND DESPAIR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323165","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT BOYERS"],"datePublished":"1965-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79a3d7e7-8e98-3d68-a87e-18c575b6e466"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40546506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"publisher":"Skidmore College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Culture, Politics, and Negro Writers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40546506","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Sandbrook"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2010120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bed41b37-e05a-332d-b3a0-8cecc83da59d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2010120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"World Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"478","pageStart":"448","pagination":"pp. 448-453+455+457+459+461+463+465+467+469+471+473+475+477+478","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Working Class in the Future of the Third World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2010120","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald N. Jacobs","Philip Smith"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db762188-7e4e-3d41-bdef-6cf3868d33da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/202135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Romance, Irony, and Solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/202135","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":13220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contemporary social theory has turned increasingly to concepts such as civil society, community, and the public sphere in order to theorize about the construction of vital, democratic, and solidaristic political cultures. The dominant prescriptions for attaining this end invoke the need for institutional and procedural reform, but overlook the autonomous role of culture in shaping and defining the forms of social solidarity. This article proposes a model of solidarity based on the two genres of Romance and Irony, and argues that these narrative forms offer useful vocabularies for organizing public discourse within and between civil society and its constituent communities. Whilst unable to sustain fully-inclusive and solidaristic political cultures on their own, in combination the genres of Romance and Irony allow for solidaristic forms built around tolerance, reflexivity, and intersubjectivity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bethany S. Keenan"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0de207f5-8cac-3159-a856-067c6367f7d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41403712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Flattering the Little Sleeping Rooster\": The French Left, de Gaulle, and the Vietnam War in 1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403712","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines conflicts concerning French policy on the American phase of the Vietnam War between the French Left and Charles de Gaulle during the 1965 elections. The Left faced a dilemma on a matter of central foreign policy as it found it difficult to differentiate its position on the war from de Gaulle's public statements on it. Through an evaluation of press commentary, I demonstrate that in its attempt to set itself apart from de Gaulle, the French Left challenged not only his interpretation of the war in Vietnam but also his understanding of France and its role in the world, proffering a softer, cooperative conception in opposition to de Gaulle's push for a militant leadership status for France in the international community. The study shows the limits political parties face as part of protest movements, while also situating French debate over the Vietnam War squarely within the ongoing dialogue over French national identity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Se\u00e1n Golden"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1207877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"774f8945-8184-3181-91d6-e44cad999faf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1207877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"455","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-455","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Familiars in a Ruinstrewn Land: \"Endgame\" as Political Allegory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1207877","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":13289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YOAV DI-CAPUA"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45284682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23399"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a2ea9a2-5160-3d8d-8927-a6b34c5b5bc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45284682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"135\/136","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Arab Existentialism: What Was It?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45284682","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Breckenridge"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18df0460-283f-3f52-b3ca-c185e54e9b46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"693","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-693","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Allure of Violence: Men, Race and Masculinity on the South African Goldmines, 1900-1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637469","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":16235,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59961,60024]],"Locations in B":[[10825,10886]],"abstract":"In the history of the modern industrial world the Witwatersrand stands out in four key respects. First, the size of the workforce which grew from around 200,000 men in 1910 to over 400,000 in 1940; second, the longevity of an industry that has continued almost uninterrupted for well over a century; third its geographical concentration; and fourth, its exclusively male demographic character. All four of these features suggest that we need to pay very close attention to an important question: What kinds of masculinities, to use Connell's term, were forged on the South African gold mines? A succinct answer does spring to mind. The gold mines fashioned explicitly racial masculinities and an intensely monitored legal, economic and geographical boundary between them. Between 1900 and 1950 and probably for some time thereafter, the definitive encounter between white and black men in South Africa was underground on the gold mines. The evidence that we have on the relationship suggests that it was characterised by high levels of personal violence. This article explores worker relationships, and argues that the reason that violence was so common on the mines was that both black and white men celebrated the capacity for personal violence as a key element of masculinity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Martial FRIND\u00c9THI\u00c9"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ab850a0-6c71-33ce-a7fd-1b08c70507bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24352047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"157","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tracing a (theoretical) gesture : Reading Patrick Taylor and Ato Sekyi-Otu reading Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352047","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En voulant prendre la d\u00e9fense de Fanon contre ceux qui pensent qu'il a aid\u00e9 \u00e0 consolider les r\u00e9gimes despotiques en Afrique, quelques chercheurs ont tent\u00e9 de le relire pour le rendre pertinent dans le discours politique afro-carib\u00e9en. Ainsi Patrick Taylor et Ato Sekyi-Otu proposent-ils des lectures qui, bien que diff\u00e9rentes, partagent un m\u00eame optimisme dans la dialectique de l'intentionnalit\u00e9 du discours de Fanon et dans sa d\u00e9fense.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leny Mendoza Strobel"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fbc8aef-59ff-3646-b08a-cd4ef4b6b46d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching about Whiteness When You're Not White: A Filipina Educator's Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978601","volumeNumber":"273","wordCount":8376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Louis Gates, Jr.","Rita Dove","Manning Marable","Franklyn G. Jenifer","Leonard A. Slade, Jr.","Sharon P. Holland","Richard A. Goldsby"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2962578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ed159b9-32cc-3891-a3d0-6882b651610d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2962578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Great Books for Entering Black Freshmen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2962578","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3925,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ebony Rose"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/blachistbull.79.2.0027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19386656"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"977083c0-888a-3006-be86-6f1abe59db4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/blachistbull.79.2.0027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blachistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Black History Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Life and Death in the Schooling of Black Youth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/blachistbull.79.2.0027","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":3036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard S. Morris"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1959390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d42fa150-5cc5-3044-8de7-c50d44ad0ca8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1959390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1259","pageStart":"1258","pagination":"pp. 1258-1259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1959390","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":1158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bo Rothstein"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"054990b5-e65a-3d0c-845f-96ab309a626a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24522114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"752","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What is the opposite of corruption?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522114","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8897,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Corruption has turned out to be difficult to define and what should be counted as the opposite to corruption remains widely disputed. If the goal for a post-conflict society is not only to become democratic and prevent a return to violence but also to reduce systemic corruption, we need to know what it is that should be fought and how the opposite to systemic corruption should be conceptualised. To define the opposite to corruption, choices have to be made along four conceptual dimensions. These are universalism vs relativism, uni- vs multidimensionality, normative vs empirical and whether the definition should relate to political procedures or policy substance. As a result of this conceptual analysis, it is argued, a universal, one-dimensional, normative and procedural definition should be preferred. The suggested definition is that of impartiality as the basic norm for the implementation of laws and policies. This conceptual analysis ends with a discussion of why such a norm has historically and in the contemporary world been hard to achieve and why it is especially problematic in post-conflict societies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce M. Knauft"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3035018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3035018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender Identity, Political Economy and Modernity in Melanesia and Amazonia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3035018","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":14285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Classic studies in Melanesian and Amazonian ethnography attempted to link oppositions between men and women to the structural features of collective male bonding and to a psychology of male insecurity and resentment against women. This article juxtaposes such arguments with the contemporary relationship between gendered identity and appropriatinos of modernity in these world areas. Gendered identities nowadays engage with the importance of acquiring trade goods and money, with the altered significance of female sexual propriety and of restrictions on women's activities, and with the intrusion of national economic and political agendas. the intertwining of commodity aspirations and idioms of modernity is central to the contemporary construction of masculine prestige and feminine propriety in these regions. The major differences between Amazonian and Melanesian gender relations are connected to constrasts in customary marriage and residence patterns, and to differing histories of colonial domination, geographic intrusion and cultural influence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert B. Revere"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7efbf216-c636-313c-985e-6eda42fe8654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3234016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionary Ideology in Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234016","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donnie Johnson Sackey"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44781878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"635882127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-204573"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"778af11b-7c68-3ab5-a0b9-31ede9bed26f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44781878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"390","pagination":"pp. 390-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44781878","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2382,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Bewes"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b81a7240-7776-338d-8f03-f3540106cfac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Social and Political Thought of Amilcar Cabral: A Reassessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160605","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12528,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eddie Bruce-Jones"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24676537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13854879"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44506980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242157"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97800354-c06c-3e88-856b-3a07976076fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24676537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jminogrourigh"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on Minority and Group Rights","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Death Zones, Comfort Zones: Queering the Refugee Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24676537","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This expansion in the field of refugee law mirrors international efforts to address homophobia in various sites around the globe, and in legal terms, this has predominantly taken the form of rights-based protections, such as decriminalising same-sex sexual acts as a matter of civil and political rights. The strategies of addressing sex-, gender- and sexuality-based oppression in the context of free movement on one hand and constitutional protections on the other share a common set of tensions and dilemmas, and both risk re-inscribing fundamental aspects of the very violence that they each seek to address. This article asks what it might mean to \"queer\" refugee law, particularly in the context of its dynamic relationship with the discourse of decriminalisation. The article takes forward the centrality of sexual politics within the moral economy of migration regulation and attempts to approach it with the methodological impulse and transformative potential that \"queer\" suggests.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHAUNA HUFFAKER"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07094698"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60448801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-242029"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60bbeb6b-edee-340d-bfbf-0e1809b0a047"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43663144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victperiodrev"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Periodicals Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Research Society for Victorian Periodicals","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","British Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representations of Ahmed Urabi: Hegemony, Imperialism, and the British Press, 1881-1882","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663144","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aefeb234-adbd-32a4-9dbd-2c3f0020e2fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Fanon and Development: A Philosophical Look","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482720","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10107,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[44042,44093]],"Locations in B":[[62734,62795]],"abstract":"This article examines concepts of imitation, theodicy, and immaturity in Fanon's ideas on development and explores how his critique unfolds in the thought of two scholars influenced by his work: Sylvia Wynter and Irene Gendzier. Wynter, working from a poeticist semiotic perspective, rejects development as a much limited concept premised upon European normativity and calls for building an epistemological revolution. Gendzier, through a genealogical historicist critique of development studies, substantiates Wynter's critique and argues that development studies reveals more about the First World than any others. The author then considers and issues a critique of Amartya Sen's recent effort to rescue development studies through his formulation of development as an economy of freedom. The rest of the article presents an Africana postcolonial phenomenological treatment of freedom as a dialectical relationship between the lived reality of choices and social options and the need for a radical humanistic globalism with which to fight contemporary neoliberal and conservative ones. Cet article analyse les concepts d'imitation, de th\u00e9odic\u00e9e et d'immaturit\u00e9 contenus dans les id\u00e9es de Fanon relatives au d\u00e9veloppement, et examine la mani\u00e8re dont sa critique transpara\u00eet dans la pens\u00e9e de deux universitaires influenc\u00e9es par son \u0153uvre: Sylvia Wynter et Irene Gendzier. Partant d'une perspective po\u00e9tiste s\u00e9miotique, Wynter rejette le d\u00e9veloppement, qu'elle consid\u00e8re comme un concept tr\u00e8s limit\u00e9, fond\u00e9 sur la normativit\u00e9 europ\u00e9enne et pr\u00f4ne plut\u00f4t une r\u00e9volution \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique. Gendzier, quant \u00e0 elle, justifie l'argument de Wynter, \u00e0 travers une critique historiciste g\u00e9n\u00e9alogique des \u00e9tudes sur le d\u00e9veloppement, et affirme que ce type d'\u00e9tude est plus centr\u00e9 sur le Premier Monde que sur les autres mondes. Ensuite, l'auteur analyse puis critique les efforts d'Amartya Sen, qui cherchait \u00e0 \u00absecourir\u00bb les \u00e9tudes sur le d\u00e9veloppement, en d\u00e9finissant ce dernier comme \u00e9tant l'\u00e9conomie de la libert\u00e9. Le reste de l'article pr\u00e9sente une d\u00e9finition africana ph\u00e9nom\u00e9nologique post coloniale de la libert\u00e9, sous la forme d'une relation dialectique entre la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 v\u00e9cue des choix et des options sociales et le besoin d'un mondialisme humaniste radical, permettant de lutter contre les autres formes contemporaines n\u00e9olib\u00e9rales et conservatrices du mondialisme.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonard Harris"],"datePublished":"1978-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44213841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00282529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b7512ca-55aa-3623-b90a-b633ec65c649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44213841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"negrhistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Negro History Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"840","pageStart":"836","pagination":"pp. 836-840","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy In The Black World: A Negro History Bulletin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44213841","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":3604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Belinda Edmondson"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13b59750-045e-3e68-a3e1-3c102a521078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Race, Privilege, and the Politics of (Re)Writing History: An Analysis of the Novels of Michelle Cliff","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931825","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Downing Thomas"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"656f13d7-b4d3-3637-80c7-0e05902d8f0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685538","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Errol A. Henderson"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33c44a2e-3eb1-3c62-99e1-3c0e35bb89a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"308","pagination":"pp. 308-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Black Nationalism and Rap Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784825","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eva Sansavior"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26418735","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"oclc","value":"12130734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"92657368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6d6d383-2d79-3326-8fd2-e6b9bdf9e36c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26418735"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Just a Case of Mistaken Ancestors? Dramatizing Modernisms in Maryse Cond\u00e9\u2019s Heremakhonon<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26418735","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":5259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The marked intertextual patterning of Maryse Cond\u00e9\u2019s first novel Heremakhonon is a widely acknowledged feature, with the relationship between Cond\u00e9\u2019s novel and Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire\u2019s Notebook of a Return to my Native Land attracting the bulk of critical attention. Through close readings of to date unexamined dramatic codes in Heremakhonon, this article proposes to extend the cultural context in which Cond\u00e9\u2019s text is traditionally read. Moving beyond the standard critical discussions of authenticity, I track Heremakhonon s mobile positionings in relation to polarizing debates in the broader French literary-critical field between engagement and modernism. This focus allows for an exploration of the complex sets of relationships between the cultures of modernism and engagement that provide the conditions of possibility for Cond\u00e9\u2019s novel.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Roberts"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"400be135-9934-353f-b788-8d6c82c6d3ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25655477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"309","pageStart":"296","pagination":"pp. 296-309","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recognition, Power, and Agency: The Recent Contributions of Axel Honneth to Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25655477","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":5835,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[610360,610465]],"Locations in B":[[33628,33733]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Manning"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03606333"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b761af43-7105-3aca-b256-a9f893c89965"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3601097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrieconhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Economic History Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"African Studies Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Analyzing the Costs and Benefits of Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601097","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":3827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOY D. SIMMONS"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10632042"},{"name":"oclc","value":"891456947"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97d573ca-ac7a-35b2-b2c0-b5b7e5caeaf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45170719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"simobeaustud"}],"isPartOf":"Simone de Beauvoir Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR'S RACIAL \"OTHERS\": AN EXPLORATION OF WHITENESS IN \"AMERICA DAY BY DAY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45170719","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[29435,29483]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guyora Binder"],"datePublished":"1989-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e66c9867-b3a4-33a4-9c12-8d58c5445076"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/796747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":63.0,"pageEnd":"1383","pageStart":"1321","pagination":"pp. 1321-1383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Representing Nazism: Advocacy and Identity at the Trial of Klaus Barbie","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/796747","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":32506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Isbister"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4617596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452258"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"866d97a5-bfd4-32aa-8204-89fdca60d1da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4617596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrieconhist"}],"isPartOf":"African Economic History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"African Studies Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Southern African Liberation Movements as Governments and the Limits to Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27756293","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":5315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katie Kane"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82e67609-9a09-3415-950c-3f2498afcedc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Nits Make Lice: Drogheda, Sand Creek, and the Poetics of Colonial Extermination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354592","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9027,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[20298,20383]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NOURI GANA"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b6cb4f8-bbd0-332f-bcf8-f9bd4973e5cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26504453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"143","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afteraffect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26504453","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay discusses the politics of affect in post-1967 Arabic literary and cultural production. It argues that melancholia\u2019s underappreciated swerve from normative structures of power and mourning is a threshold moment of critical and cultural enablement in the Arab world, where the nexus between proxy and settler colonialisms continues to produce and reproduce almost all aspects of literature and culture.","subTitle":"Arabic Literature and Affective Politics","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neal D. Houghton"],"datePublished":"1970-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00434078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205207"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af6c74ab-3e54-37e3-b743-fc10d819801b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/447079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westpoliquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Western Political Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"384","pagination":"pp. 384-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Case for Essential Abandonment of Basic U. S. Cold War Objectives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447079","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":16342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabrielle McIntire"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6f44528-da6e-3ae7-9431-535d2bdbd0bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE WOMEN DO NOT TRAVEL: GENDER, DIFFERENCE, AND INCOMMENSURABILITY IN CONRAD'S \"HEART OF DARKNESS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286130","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":11536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francesca Kazan"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345835","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345835"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recalling the Other Third World: Nuruddin Farah's \"Maps\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345835","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven R. Brown"],"datePublished":"1985-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3791277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791277","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jer\u00f3nimo Arellano"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dce4c19f-14b3-3ae4-a959-11030be1e86b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26744330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"548","pagination":"pp. 548-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"The Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading the Affects in the Colonial Americas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26744330","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9686,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[155080,155244]],"Locations in B":[[10418,10589]],"abstract":"This article proposes an affective turn in scholarship on colonial Latin American literature, focusing on \u00c1lvar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca\u2019s Naufragios as a case study. Through an engagement with embodied, intersubjective, and circulatory affects in Cabeza de Vaca\u2019s text, it sketches out a critical framework that investigates what I call the exteriority of feeling in the colonial Americas. My reading focuses on three main areas: the theory of the humoral body as the cultural referent that shapes the externalization of embodied affect in Cabeza de Vaca\u2019s text, the description of forms of affective transmission precariously established between European and indigenous communities, and the emergence of affective minefields and emotional untranslatables in colonial contexts. In this way, this article works toward a broad investigation of the meanings, functions, and circulation of affect and emotion in the colonial Americas. Este art\u00edculo propone un giro afectivo en los estudios coloniales latinoamericanos, tomando a los Naufragios de \u00c1lvar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca como caso de estudio. A trav\u00e9s de una discusi\u00f3n de afectos encarnados, intersubjetivos, y circulatorios, se esboza un marco te\u00f3rico para la investigaci\u00f3n de lo que podr\u00eda llamarse la exterioridad de los sentimientos en la \u00e9poca colonial en Am\u00e9rica Latina. El an\u00e1lisis se enfoca en particular en tres \u00e1reas: la teor\u00eda de los humores corporales como el referente cultural que da forma la externalizaci\u00f3n de los afectos encarnados en el texto de Cabeza de Vaca; la descripci\u00f3n de formas de comunicaci\u00f3n afectiva que se establecen de forma precaria entre comunidades europeas e ind\u00edgenas; y la emergencia de campos minados afectivos y expresiones de emotividad intraducible en contextos coloniales. De esta forma, este art\u00edculo intenta impulsar una investigaci\u00f3n m\u00e1s amplia de los significados, funciones y circulaci\u00f3n del afecto y las emociones en las Am\u00e9ricas en el per\u00edodo colonial.","subTitle":"The Exteriority of Feeling in Cabeza de Vaca\u2019s Naufragios<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MaryEllen (Ellie) Higgins"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c423b384-e152-334e-b0c7-d676025fa01c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transnational, Transcultural Feminisms? Amma Darko's Response in \"Beyond the Horizon\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455284","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arun Kumar"],"datePublished":"2003-11-22","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4414314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e374cbb-94ad-3491-ba5c-f50e82fe2a88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4414314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"4983","pageStart":"4977","pagination":"pp. 4977-4983","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and Political Culture: Politics of the Ultra Left in Bihar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4414314","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8305,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Violence, no matter in what name it is courted - tactic, expediency or compulsion - blurs the distinction between emancipatory and retrogressive, the Left and the Right. As a political method it functions on the principle of absolute dualism, permanent war between the good and the evil god and satan. The Ultra Left in Bihar began its career by following the violent path already taken by a number of individuals between 1967 and 1971. It picked up the argument of the 'inevitability of violence' involved in individualised cases of resistance and turned it into a 'party-line', a generalised political wisdom, into a social good. Not surprisingly, in the Ultra Left's extreme vision there was little space for self-criticism, doubts, ambivalence and thus for dialogue and democracy itself. Today the Ultra Left, unable to break the vicious circle of violence, is doomed to follow the politics of marginality.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sylvia Carullo"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f2770b-5421-37b7-ad27-c8bea6eb56cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1\/3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El vaudoux como protagonista en \"El reino de este mundo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054095","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David A. Chappell"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20078465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392448"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004906"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69dc5e27-b4b1-3702-ad34-5093e62b1dc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20078465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworldhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Crisis of Bipolar Ethnicity on the Great Frontier: Nativist \"Democracy\" in Fiji, Malaysia, and New Caledonia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20078465","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Hook"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0d3e90e-bfe3-35ba-b53e-0ed5f95d0354"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"101","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802234","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1432,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5788,5848]],"Locations in B":[[5855,5915]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abamfo Ofori Atiemo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13635247"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46606516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebf9b7ab-170f-3106-a165-d9a5c5480d7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26552300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldviews"}],"isPartOf":"Worldviews","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Religion","Science & Mathematics","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Dumping Sites, Witches and Soul-Pollution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26552300","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The generation of waste and how to manage it pose challenges to municipal and district authorities in many parts of the world. In the African context, poverty, bad management practices, and increasing consumerist culture have conspired to render the situation even more complex. Complicating the situation further is the addition of synthetic and electronic waste, non-biodegradable and, in several cases, hazardous. Drawing on personal first hand experiences in Ghana from the perspective of a pastor and a scholar of religious studies, the author reflects on contemporary waste and its (mis)management in Africa and how these affect the dignity and security of present and future generations. He draws on relevant theological motifs from Christianity and indigenous African religious beliefs and practices as well as insights from sociology and eco-theological ethics to analyse the challenge and explore ways in which African Christian public opinion may be mobilized to help address the challenge.","subTitle":"A Pastoral Reflection on Waste and the Church in Ghana","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vitaly Chernetsky"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25748122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163450X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"562178321"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75051d93-552c-3d63-ba8f-4d8a3f794329"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25748122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ulbarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Ulbandus Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Columbia University Slavic Department","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Postcolonialism, Russia and Ukraine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25748122","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":12745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL ROTHBERG"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad32ec01-7ab6-3f62-992d-b4230efc1afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DECOLONIZING TRAUMA STUDIES: A RESPONSE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533869","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":5090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Hulme"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7cffb9f-3397-3332-92d8-bc5ca3cfdd55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41678636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"346","pagination":"pp. 346-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing on the land: Cuba's literary geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678636","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This Transactions of the IBG Plenary lecture looks at some of the ways in which writers, geographers, and artists have imagined the island of Cuba. Particular attention is paid to the image of the island as a body. The dominant context for the paper is the long historical relationship between Cuba and its powerful northern neighbour.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauren Berlant"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c65a53b-3eb3-3ed2-bab5-f6c3b79b1dda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"859","pageStart":"831","pagination":"pp. 831-859","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Race, Gender, and Nation in \"The Color Purple\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343674","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87227e30-787a-36b0-80e3-feddb5649a88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977505","volumeNumber":"168","wordCount":11474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Detlev Khalid"],"datePublished":"1971-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20833035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05788072"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557670399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234711"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30148e48-66f2-3d19-b406-8f4be8111c27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20833035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islamicstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Islamic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Islamic Research Institute, International Islamic University, Islamabad","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20833035","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":2418,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grant Silva"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/pluralist.13.2.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19307365"},{"name":"oclc","value":"277052422"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-216366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9cc28506-2e60-3211-8e8d-44ea17883a99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/pluralist.13.2.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pluralist"}],"isPartOf":"The Pluralist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cThe Americas Seek Not Enlightenment but Liberation\u201d: On the Philosophical Significance of Liberation for Philosophy in the Americas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/pluralist.13.2.0001","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9647,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[118583,118929]],"Locations in B":[[42852,43200]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Max Liboiron","Manuel Tironi","Nerea Calvillo"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48569078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03063127"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976340"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82110ec7-a51d-3e93-b85f-792d7b676175"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48569078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socistudscie"}],"isPartOf":"Social Studies of Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toxic politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48569078","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Toxicity has become a ubiquitous, if uneven, condition. Toxicity can allow us to focus on how forms of life and their constituent relations, from the scale of cells to that of ways of life, are enabled, constrained and extinguished within broader power systems. Toxicity both disrupts existing orders and ways of life at some scales, while simultaneously enabling and maintaining ways of life at other scales. The articles in this special issue on toxic politics examine power relations and actions that have the potential for an otherwise. Yet, rather than focus on a politics that depends on the capture of social power via publics, charismatic images, shared epistemologies and controversy, we look to forms of slow, intimate activism based in ethics rather than achievement. One of the goals of this introduction and its special issue is to move concepts of toxicity away from fetishized and evidentiary regimes premised on wayward molecules behaving badly, so that toxicity can be understood in terms of reproductions of power and justice. The second goal is to move politics in a diversity of directions that can texture and expand concepts of agency and action in a permanently polluted world.","subTitle":"Acting in a permanently polluted world","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P-Kiven Tunteng"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Freedom and Mental Colonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935100","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SABELO J. NDLOVU-GATSHENI"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63c72811-c21d-3109-b24e-cf52d6aac469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44646195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Emergence and Trajectories of Struggles for an 'African University': The Case of Unfinished Business of African Epistemic Decolonisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646195","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and legitimate knowledge system. This means that African people had their own valid and legitimate indigenous systems of education prior to colonisation. However, the dawn and unfolding of Eurocentric modernity through colonialism and imperialism unleashed a particularly racial ethnocentric attitude that led European colonialists to question the very humanity of African people. This questioning and sometimes outright denial of African people's humanity inevitably enabled not only genocides but epistemicides, linguicides and cultural imperialism. The long-term consequence was that Western education became propagated as the only valid and legitimate form of socialisation of humanity across space and time. Needless to say, indigenous African systems of education were displaced as the idea of the modern university took root in Africa. This article flashes back to precolonial African\/Nilotic\/Arab\/Muslim intellectual traditions in its historical reflection on the idea of the university in Africa. It posits a 'triple heritage' of higher education, which embraces Western imperial\/ colonial modernity and anti-colonial nationalist liberatory developmentalism in its engagement with the contested idea of the university in Africa. The article critically examines the long and ongoing African struggles for an 'African university. It locates the struggles for an African university within the broader context of African liberation struggles, the search for modern African identity, autonomous African development and self-definition. Four core challenges constitutive of the struggle for an African university are highlighted: the imperative of securing Africa as a legitimate epistemic base from which Africans view and understand the world; the task of'moving the centre' through shifting the geography and biography of knowledge in a context where what appears as 'global knowledge still cascades from a hegemonic centre (Europe and North America); the necessity of 'rethinking thinking itself as part of launching epistemic disobedience to Eurocentric thinking; and the painstaking decolonial process of 'learning to unlearn in order to relearn, which calls on African intellectuals and academics to openly acknowledge their factory faults and 'miseducation, cascading from their very production by problematic 'Western-styled' universities, including those located in Africa, so as to embark on decolonial self-re-education.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Konai Helu Thaman"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1bdd2c7-857a-30fa-aef6-5b723444bc0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23722020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Decolonizing Pacific Studies: Indigenous Perspectives, Knowledge, and Wisdom in Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722020","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As part of a larger effort to reflect critically on the nature, scope, and processes of colonialism in Oceania, decolonizing the field of Pacific studies must focus on the impact of colonialism on people's minds\u2014particularly on their ways of knowing, their views of who and what they are, and what they consider worthwhile to teach and to learn. It is essential to challenge the dominance of western philosophy, content, and pedagogy in the lives and the education of Pacific peoples, and to reclaim indigenous Oceanic perspectives, knowledge, and wisdom that have been devalued or suppressed. Modern scholars and writers must examine the western disciplinary frameworks within which they have been schooled, as well as the ideas and images of the Pacific they have inherited, in order to move beyond them. The curricula of formal education, particularly higher education, should include indigenous Oceanic knowledge, worldviews, and philosophies of teaching and learning, for several reasons: to contribute to and expand the general knowledge base of higher education; to make university study more meaningful for many students; to validate and legitimize academic work, particularly in the eyes of indigenous peoples; and to enhance collaboration between indigenous and nonindigenous peoples.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DOGU ERGIL"],"datePublished":"1977-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20847031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05788072"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557670399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234711"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13cfaaf3-f080-39c7-acfd-72a5de718596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20847031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islamicstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Islamic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Islamic Research Institute, International Islamic University, Islamabad","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TOWARD A THEORY OF MODERN PEASANT MOVEMENTS: WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON TURKEY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20847031","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Naomi H. Chazan"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96f34bfb-2b1f-3aab-999a-586a3bc48086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Africanization of Political Change: Some Aspects of the Dynamics of Political Cultures in Ghana and Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523659","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":14300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ricarda Hammer"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26589014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"472e90e0-08d6-3297-89a4-42166b503ebe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26589014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bringing the Global Home","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26589014","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article describes a class that draws on postcolonial insights to create a global sociological imagination. Postcolonial approaches can make visible how global connections have shaped our local environments even if these relations are not always immediately visible. Specifically, students in this class highlight how global relations, such as the slave trade, settler colonialism, racial formations, or migrations, constitute the local. If we start to reconnect global ties, how do we interpret local inequalities differently? Whose voices do we fail to listen to, and why are these global linkages and histories silenced or forgotten? The article describes the development of the curriculum and local student research projects as the main class assignment. It then discusses how students grapple to understand how global ties are and always have been crucial to our everyday lives and think critically about giving voice to perspectives that have conventionally been marginalized.","subTitle":"Students Research Local Areas through Postcolonial Perspectives","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J. Sefa Dei","Nana Sefa Atweneboah I"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ce97018-0e50-3204-91e7-74c5fab916cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The African Scholar in the Western Academy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572948","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":5763,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[35164,35215]],"abstract":"In this essay, I push the discursive envelope on what it means to speak of a particular space, location, and position of the \"Black Scholar\" in the (Western) academy and its colonial satellites globally. The Black Scholar is not about racializing the identity of Blackness (or Black subject as simply an intellectual of Black identity) nor a pursuit for \"an essential Black subject.\" Rather, it is about an appreciation of the interface of critical (Black) scholarship and creative intellectual thought and practice that goes back through time as a counterpoint and challenge to dominant ideologies, including \"ideologies of the authentic.\" It is argued that the Black Scholar is fundamentally about an intellectual praxis informed by an African sense of history, culture, identity, community knowledge, and political work to bring about change in the lives of African peoples.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurence E. Prescott","Antonio D. Tillis"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb7aaff7-3069-343c-a27b-779a0edeee63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: Manuel Zapata Olivella","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054699","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":2569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shirley Laska","Kristina Peterson"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23548943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19367244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"123990706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35cd2dbb-2ecc-3609-911b-96d1281385ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23548943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"japplsociscie"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Applied Social Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Specialized education"],"title":"The Convergence of Catastrophes and Social Change The Role of Participatory Action Research in Support of the New Engaged Citizen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23548943","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susantha Goonetilake","Susantha Goonatilake"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23731284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1391720X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607463078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23731284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaasiasocisri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":84.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka (RASSL)","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"WHITE SAHIBS, BROWN SAHIBS: TRACKING DHARMAPALA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23731284","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":25877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tshepo Madlingozi"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0263323X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40341509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4129582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawsociety"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cardiff University","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Apartheid Social Movements and the Quest for the Elusive 'New' South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129582","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9877,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The South African Constitution guarantees justiciable socio-economic rights such as the rights to access to housing; to sufficient food and water; to social security and health care services. This 'transformative constitution' is meant to help rid the country of legacies of apartheid such as huge economic inequalities and entrenched poverty. The government's embrace of neoliberalism has, however, meant that these legacies have not only remained largely untreated but have also become entrenched. Poor communities have started organizing themselves in order to challenge the government's neoliberal policies as well as marginalization from structures of governance. This paper evaluates the nature of these 'social movements' as well as their impact on democracy and development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kariann Yokota"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0d03727-bf51-34ae-8099-235395a30fea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4491619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonialism and Material Culture in the Early United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491619","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":3491,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WALTER RODNEY"],"datePublished":"1975-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0555a01-0702-3457-886f-4c0aaffc1c2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Contemporary Political Trends in the English-speaking Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066542","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toon Dirkx"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep28282","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"894729fc-1712-393c-a854-bb3e68afbf89"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Swisspeace","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Institutional Legacies of Rebel Governance Theorising the Political Stability of Post- Insurgent States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep28282","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":38720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In sub-Saharan Africa, several governments consist of victorious insurgents that became recognised as sovereign rulers.\u00b9 This is a rare outcome of insurgency. Most civil wars are either won by the incumbent government, or end in a negotiated settlement (de Rouen Jr & Sobek, 2004, p. 314). Yet, when rebels win, the consequences are far-reaching (Woldemariam, 2018, p. 28). In some states built or captured by insurgents, political order fragments quickly, but in other cases, the new order is consolidated. Said differently, some regimes consisting of former rebels show a quick relapse into civil war, whereas in other cases they dominate post-war","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":["Front Matter","Abstract","Table of Contents","Introduction","Existing Explanations","Variation in the Political Stability of Post-Insurgent States","Theorising the Political Stability of Post-Insurgent States","Concluding Remarks","Bibliography","About the author and swisspeace","swisspeace Publications","Back Matter"],"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Williamson"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44481525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d86ba441-0db5-3555-8a7e-ecf49bd20140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44481525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullpeacprop"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Peace Proposals","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Is Religion Still a Factor in Armed Conflict?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44481525","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anouar Majid"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d18470c7-a179-35b0-9db2-72a4fee6c2dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Can the Postcolonial Critic Speak? Orientalism and the Rushdie Affair","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354529","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AKIN ADESOKAN"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fd0f21a-604a-35a5-8c98-97582a4683b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26158940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"1470","pageStart":"1462","pagination":"pp. 1462-1470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"African Literature in the World: A Teacher's Report","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158940","volumeNumber":"131","wordCount":5817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ibrahim Makkawi"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.2.0090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10144dfc-5ee7-3644-8d4e-1895142165f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.2.0090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Community Engagement from the Margin: Zionism and the Case of the Palestinian Student Movement in the Israeli Universities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.2.0090","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The recently emerging concept of community engagement is better conceived as a context dependent concept. However, when examining the case of native communities living in colonial situations, community engagement by universities of the colonial authorities fail to capture the level of grassroots organizing among students of the colonized communities as a form of community engagement, albeit community engagement from the margin. The Palestinian community in Israel, lives in a colonial situation in its own homeland where the Israeli universities have been established as an integral part of the Zionist colonial project in Palestine. As the Palestinian formal educational system, hegemonic and identity blurring, the Palestinian Student Movement in the Israeli universities is conceived as a grassroots form of community engagement intending to reconstruct and reassert a shared sense of collective-national identity among the Palestinian students within the Israel campuses. Furthermore, Palestinian student activists are involved in community grassroots organizing and action within their own home communities and places of residence. This form of grassroots organizing and political action by members of colonized communities, calls our attention to re-conceptualization of the conventional understanding of the concept of university-community engagement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abram Foley"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4525810e-e51f-399b-a139-96d152668e1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24246914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"527","pageStart":"520","pagination":"pp. 520-527","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literary History and its Incorporations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24246914","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":3112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brad Kent"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40681738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07415842"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43626814"},{"name":"lccn","value":"214387"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40681738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shaw"}],"isPartOf":"Shaw","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SHAW'S EVERYDAY EMERGENCY: COMMODIFICATION IN AND OF \"JOHN BULL'S OTHER ISLAND\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40681738","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u05d0\u05de\u05dc \u05d2'\u05de\u05d0\u05dc","Amal Jamal"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdc64ede-afde-3a0a-a479-4b1e38d1f1d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Mutual Recognition and Transformation of Conflicts \/ \u05d4\u05db\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d3\u05d3\u05d9\u05ea, \u05e4\u05d9\u05d5\u05e1 \u05d5\u05d8\u05e8\u05e0\u05e1\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e1\u05db\u05e1\u05d5\u05db\u05d9\u05dd: \u05d4\u05d9\u05d1\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442144","volumeNumber":"\u05d2","wordCount":12006,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[71680,71743]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracey Nicholls"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a913448b-806a-3106-8aee-e77691e30f18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Interreligious Dialogue as a Politics of Recognition: A Postcolonial Rereading of Hegel for Interreligious Solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/431810","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":12880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terence K. Hopkins"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b77038e7-17f5-31a9-9ff7-1f361929b903"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Note on the Concept of Hegemony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241161","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":1017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Dutch, British, and U.S. hegemonies ought to be associated, respectively, with the rise, dominion, and decline of the modern world-system. The period of Dutch predominance and the development of the institutional framework of historical capitalism eliminated the possibility that the emergent world-economy might be transformed into a world-empire. British hegemony was accompanied by the consolidation of stateness\/interstateness and the incorporation or destruction of other historical social systems. The U.S. period of hegemony, by contrast, has been witness to the emergence of trans-state structures and social movements which may foretell the end of the modern world-system.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Cecil Wyld"],"datePublished":"1934-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/409606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"631f6099-2ba6-3aaf-acfd-40295d8adbb6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/409606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1934,"publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Studies in the Diction of Layamon's Brut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/409606","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":20388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emanuela Tegla"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd43f818-3adb-3933-8b27-bcffee8394d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"980","pageStart":"967","pagination":"pp. 967-980","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Age of Iron: The Collective Dimension of Shame and of Responsibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001302","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Age of Iron has received much critical attention; most interpretations of the novel revolve around themes such as trust, the silence of the victim-figures, or the fictional treatment of real, historical events. Derek Attridge, for example, discusses the question of trust and responsibility towards the other represented in the novel by Vercueil and John; Jane Poyner analyses the connection between confession and truth, on the one hand, and the historical situation Mrs Curren lives in, on the other; Michael Neill focuses on the novel's representativeness for the period of 'interregnum' in South Africa. The concept of shame as dramatised in Coetzee's work in general and in this novel in particular has received little attention. The present article is devoted to an analysis of shame in Age of Iron, shame derived from a corrupted sense of community and justice. It will look into the effects shame causes, as dramatised in the person of the protagonist of the novel. Another concern of the following discussion consists in an analysis of the imagery the narrator's discourse creates in order to designate moral wrongs, both individual and social. The novel teems with repulsive images evoked by the frequent use of references to insects or aggressive animals and birds, images that translate the narrator's ample rage against the times, her sense of helplessness and abhorrence of the injustices occurring around her. The last part of the essay offers an interpretation of the narrator's failure to burn herself and thus convert her death into a meaningful event. Rather than regarding her death as salvation facilitated by Vercueil, as Benita Parry suggests, the following reading will consider her death and the struggle preceding it as an impossibility of redemption.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christian Joppke"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ab578d5-1f32-3039-8895-75cce50ed52c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Multiculturalism and Immigration: A Comparison of the United States, Germany, and Great Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657908","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":21786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Meltzer Bonnefond"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1917816a-94a1-3c46-bb45-3f830f2afcd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sexual Demon of Colonial Power: Pan-African Embodiment and Erotic Schemes of Empire<\/em>, by Greg Thomas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.185","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ULRIKE BRUNOTTE"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23898836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00443441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17b1a71e-d645-376a-b3f9-e0adb37d5f18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23898836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitreligeis"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Religions- und Geistesgeschichte","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Netzwerk, Bruderschaft, Zelle: Die Rolle von Geschlecht und Gewalt bei der Formierung neuer religionspolitischer Gruppen in \u201aOkzident' und \u201aOrient'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23898836","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":7904,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Taking as a starting point the reality of a worldwide return of religion in the cultural and political spheres, the article undertakes a comparative examination of the role of gender metaphors and performance in building of new religious groups as \"imagined communities\". These groups have increasingly taken the form of fundamentalist and Islamist networks, especially in non-European regions including the United States, and in the context of \u201enew wars.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peggy Ochoa"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4b0e641-c7e1-3d22-86cb-7046362ca796"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historical Moments of Postcolonial Writing: Beyond Colonialism's Binary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464132","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter James Hudson","Katherine McKittrick"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e044d03-9769-3a53-9c2c-0279f9017bb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Geographies of Blackness and Anti-Blackness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752069","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"An Interview with Katherine McKittrick","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Basem L. Ra'ad"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5cc57b9-f153-3183-96fe-bb08f0e16041"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24769459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Enlarging \"Palestine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769459","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":1354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8e1a30a-bf26-3ff0-8271-c98112f58670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Modernism and Modernity: T. 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Adorno and Contemporary White South African Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354359","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04c54f95-62a3-33c1-8e9a-504b82938535"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cThe Erotics of \u2018Under\/Development\u2019 in Walter Rodney: On Sexual or Body Politics and Political Economics \u2013 for \u2018Guerilla Intellectualism\u2019\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758879","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432219,432313]],"Locations in B":[[27345,27443]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evyn L\u00ea Espiritu","Jasbir K. Puar"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.24.1.0063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a38c44c-7db5-373f-bf62-308c758a4d6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.24.1.0063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Civility, Academic Freedom, and the Project of Decolonization: A Conversation with Steven Salaita","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.24.1.0063","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emile A. Nakhleh"],"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6700188-df69-3bc0-b368-04d52a202500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4324726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Anatomy of Violence: Theoretical Reflections on Palestinian Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324726","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10392,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[14928,14975]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas L. Wheeler"],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08dcfbfb-9488-3840-a203-c5079e28a1c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185073","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eberhard Rothfuss"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25648201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140015"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557461728"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235745"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91b43535-7be5-3915-a429-1a9ecbef7a0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25648201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"erdkunde"}],"isPartOf":"Erdkunde","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Erdkunde","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intersubjectivity, Intercultural Hermeneutics and the Recognition of the Other \u2014 Theoretical Reflections on the Understanding of Aliennes in Human Geography Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25648201","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":12483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Communication in the intercultural context of geographical (development) research is defined by a specific intersubjective relation between the researcher and the researched. It always faces the danger of misinterpretation concerning the actions of the 'other'. Without the cultural and social differences that affect understanding and thus limit comprehension, the interpretation of research findings remains dubious. The article draws attention to this issue, which, so far, has not received sufficient recognition in human geography. It is a 'self-experiment', in the sense of Bourdieu, regarding the asymmetric relation between two subjects from specific and highly dissimilar backgrounds, found in a peculiar situation defined as 'field research'. With this self-experiment, the possibilities and limits of intercultural hermeneutics are evaluated. Central to the argument is the critical discussion of the socio-philosophical conceptual foundation on which intersubjectivity and interculturality are based. This critique follows a perspective of the theory of recognition that understands the practices and perceptions of the other in the particular context of everyday life, in order to base the analysis of rationalities underlying social action on their understanding. \/\/\/ Die Kommunikation im interkulturellen Kontext geographischer (Entwicklungs-)Forschung definiert ein intersubjektives Verh\u00e4ltnis von Forschenden und Beforschten, das st\u00e4ndig Gefahr l\u00e4uft, Fehlinterpretationen \u00fcber die handelnden Anderen zu produzieren. Ohne Reflexion der auf sozialen und kulturellen Differenz basierende Verstehensdifferentiale und Grenzen, bleibt wissenschaftliche Erkenntnis im Forschungsprozess zweifelhaft. Der Beitrag m\u00f6chte einen Ansto\u00df geben, die in der Humangeographie bisher wenig gef\u00fchrte Auseinandersetzung \u00fcber das Eigene und das kulturell Andere in das Bewusstsein zu r\u00fccken: Ein letztlich unumg\u00e4nglicher 'Selbstversuch' im bourdieuschen Sinne, der die zumeist asymmetrische Relation zweier, sich in einer sonderbaren Konstellation der Feldforschung befindlichen Subjekte, beleuchten und dabei die M\u00f6glichkeiten und Grenzen interkultureller Hermeneutik kritisch in den Blick nehmen m\u00f6chte. Dabei stehen sozialphilosophische Gedankeng\u00e4nge \u00fcber die Intersubjektivit\u00e4t, die letztlich Grundlage der Interkulturalit\u00e4t darstellt, zur Disposition, ebenso erscheint die Ann\u00e4herung an eine anerkennungstheoretische Forschungshaltung notwendig, die die Wahrnehmungen und sozialen Praktiken der Anderen in ihrem Lebenskontext begreift und bel\u00e4sst, um dabei ihre Handlungsrationalit\u00e4ten zu verstehen versucht.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Wise"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40059647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08883769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ac0d694-673b-3364-a884-355968c5501c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40059647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reliandliter"}],"isPartOf":"Religion & Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The University of Notre Dame","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Qur'anic Hermeneutics, Sufism, and \"Le Devoir de violence\": Yambo Ouologuem as Marabout Novelist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40059647","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. WALLACE","R. G. WALLACE"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26512852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09502688"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43802157"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234135"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90bbcdda-be31-31dd-bbcc-f1f158349235"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26512852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"epidinfe"}],"isPartOf":"Epidemiology and Infection","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"2080","pageStart":"2068","pagination":"pp. 2068-2080","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Biological sciences - Agriculture","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Blowback","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26512852","volumeNumber":"143","wordCount":7362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"By their diversity in time, space, and mode, traditional and conservation agricultures can create barriers limiting pathogen evolution and spread analogous to a sterilizing temperature. Large-scale monocropping and confined animal feeding-lot operations remove such barriers, resulting, above agroecologically specific thresholds, in the development and wide propagation of novel disease strains. We apply a newly developed class of necessary-conditions statistical models of evolutionary process, first using the theory on an evolutionarily stable viral pathogen vulnerable to vaccine treatment: post-World War II poliomyelitis emerged in the UK and USA from sudden widespread adoption of automobile ownership and usage. We then examine an evolutionarily variable pathogen, swine influenza in North America. The model suggests epidemiological blowback from globalizing intensive husbandry and the raising and shipping of monoculture livestock across increasing expanses, is likely to be far more consequential, driving viral selection for greater virulence and lowered response to biomedical intervention.","subTitle":"new formal perspectives on agriculturally driven pathogen evolution and spread","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26961560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e50818-69c6-31ba-a490-fb266746c48e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26961560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":681.0,"pageEnd":"695","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-695","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE DE LA LITT\u00c9RATURE FRAN\u00c7AISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26961560","volumeNumber":"120","wordCount":359000,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lou Turner"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9332f42a-4719-3097-b1d5-b2e4c3428a0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Corporate Coup D'\u00c9tat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0030","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michel Degraff"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c22ef26-1a22-352f-b75b-d0ceeff14633"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4169447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":59.0,"pageEnd":"591","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-591","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Linguists' Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Creole Exceptionalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4169447","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":31112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"Creole Exceptionalism\" is defined as a set of beliefs, widespread among both linguists and nonlinguists, that Creole languages form an exceptional class on phylogenetic and\/or typological grounds. It also has nonlinguistic (e.g., sociological) implications, such as the claim that Creole languages are a \"handicap\" for their speakers, which has undermined the role that Creoles should play in the education and socioeconomic development of monolingual Creolophones. Focusing on Caribbean Creoles, and on Haitian Creole in particular, it is argued that Creole Exceptionalism, as a sociohistorically rooted \"r\u00e9gime of truth\" (in Foucault's sense), obstructs scientific and social progress in and about Creole communities. Various types of Creole Exceptionalist beliefs are deconstructed and historicized, and their empirical, theoretical, and sociological flaws surveyed. These flaws have antecedents in early creolists' theories of Creole genesis, often explicitly couched in Eurocentric and (pre-\/quasi-)Darwinian doctrines of human evolution. Despite its historical basis in colonialism and slavery and its scientific and sociological flaws, Creole Exceptionalism is still enshrined in the modern linguistics establishment and its classic literature, a not unexpected state given the social structure of scientific communities and the interaction between ideology and \"paradigm-making.\" The present Foucauldian approach to Creole Exceptionalism is an instantiation of a well-defined area of the linguistics\/ideology interface. The conclusion proposes alternatives more consistent with Creole structures and their development, and more likely to help linguists address some practical problems faced by Creole speakers.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick L.J. Bailey"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01425692"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42052163"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e83037-d856-35fa-bc56-5e299b1b0954"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43818179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsocieduc"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Sociology of Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"634","pageStart":"622","pagination":"pp. 622-634","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Globalising knowledges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43818179","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5428,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lev Luis Grinberg"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt21h4xqw.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781936235414"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e257c05-bbe7-3a1f-98fb-66a368a0ea57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt21h4xqw.17"}],"isPartOf":"Mo(ve)ments of Resistance","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"315","pagination":"315-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt21h4xqw.17","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6257,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[11420,11483]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["hebrew","israel","oved hebrew","jerusalem","palestine","university","political","palestinian","cambridge","economy"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FARHAN MUJAHID CHAK"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921174","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1302177X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"271010760"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf7f71d1-493a-33d2-a663-17e308bca31d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26921174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"insightturkey"}],"isPartOf":"Insight Turkey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"SET VAKFI \u0130ktisadi \u0130\u015fletmesi, SETA VAKFI","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Deconstructing the Gulf Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26921174","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article deconstructs the stated reasons behind the quartet\u2019s blockade on Qatar, including i) Iranian-relations; ii) funding \u2018terror;\u2019 iii) supporting \u2018political Islam\u2019 \u2013Hamas, Muslim Brotherhood, etc.; and iv) destabilizing the Arab world through Al Jazeera, and scrutinizes their veracity. In actuality, these accusations are mere obfuscation. Henceforth, understanding the quartet\u2019s motivation requires employing post-colonialism as an explanatory variable. It does so by assuming the preponderance of U.S. military power in the GCC produces three conflicting ideal-types: i) Saudi-led quartet Arab project, \u2018subservient\u2019 to U.S. hegemony; ii) Iranian- led partisan project, resisting\/increasing engagement to U.S. hegemony; iii) Turkish-led \u2018civic Islam\u2019 project, pivoting from engagement to resisting U.S. hegemony. In this, three-rivalry is the roots of the blockade and the larger meta-strategy at behind the blockade.","subTitle":"Post-Colonialism and Competing \u2018Projects\u2019 in the Middle East","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd Shepard"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/663172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8304db3-0b02-3eb7-8de6-7ed3cc756c0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/663172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cSomething Notably Erotic\u201d: Politics, \u201cArab Men,\u201d and Sexual Revolution in Post-decolonization France, 1962\u20131974","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/663172","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":14919,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Samoff"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452258"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3396546-be6e-304e-8f88-566f547cdf49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3601240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrieconhist"}],"isPartOf":"African Economic History","issueNumber":"11","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"African Studies Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601240","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwin Jones"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70c1ff9b-d907-31e3-9a9d-9135c1242e8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ROLE OF THE STATE IN PUBLIC ENTERPRISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861922","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":13788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Ellen Wolf"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00140767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb168257-df6a-35f9-9a90-912c19ecdf74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"espritcreateur"}],"isPartOf":"L'Esprit Cr\u00e9ateur","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking the Radical West: Khatibi and Deconstruction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287497","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aidan Arrowsmith"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b717723f-605d-3816-a601-f2c6b35bdd12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25504981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'To Fly by Those Nets': Violence and Identity in Tom Murphy's \"A Whistle in the Dark\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25504981","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rafael P\u00e9rez-Torres"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"553","pageStart":"534","pagination":"pp. 534-553","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ethnicity, Ethics, and Latino Aesthetics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490219","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Homi K. Bhabha"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59c4d8c7-1d1b-39bb-bca3-1697a9bbc09a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Race', Time and the Revision of Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973716","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Dixon"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec37787c-70ff-39b0-9619-9abb148ec913"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23639363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"521","pagination":"pp. 521-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639363","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":2293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sumanta Banerjee"],"datePublished":"2006-10-14","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418806","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a4f252f-30de-3907-8b58-69f5d89ca41d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4418806"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"4331","pageStart":"4329","pagination":"pp. 4329-4331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hour of the Assassins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418806","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":3300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Terrorism rears its head whenever a society suffering from great inner political confusion and social disintegration reaches a cul-de-sac, where certain aggrieved sections of the people find that the democratic business of political change becomes an impossibility, and when the socialist and secular forces break faith with these disgruntled and desperate masses by failing to provide an alternative leadership. Tragically, governments have in turn put in place a state of permanent emergency through a slew of draconian laws, and created a monolithic monster that controls every activity of individuals - from street demonstrations to air travel.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Connor Harney"],"datePublished":"2021-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intejcubastud.13.1.0067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17563461"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232979331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010252038"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce9145c-a95b-3143-a874-43dcaa3580c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intejcubastud.13.1.0067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejcubastud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radio Free Cuba: From D\u00e9tente to Re-escalation in Havana and Miami","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intejcubastud.13.1.0067","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While the United States long represented a safe haven for Cuban political exiles, the Cuban Revolution and its Cold War context accelerated the tendency of disaffected Cubans to flee the island for Yankee shores. As the main destination of those that left Cuba in the decades following the revolution, Miami and its \u00e9migr\u00e9 community played an increasingly important role in exile politics, and later US national politics. This article looks at how the first-wave of migrants to Miami established an outsized influence there and continued to dominate politically and culturally, even as subsequent waves representing more diverse perspectives on the Cuban Revolution set down roots in Florida. It does so by considering the attempts by one segment of the exile community to start a dialogue with the island during the Carter administration and another section\u2019s establishment of the propaganda station Radio Mart\u00ed in Reagan years. These examples highlight the fluidity between political violence and soft-power subversion in maintaining the hegemony of an antagonistic position to the Cuban Revolution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jason A. Springs"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40378114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8fd786e-dd55-3c7a-9a99-c136eaae4732"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40378114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"448","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-448","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"Dismantling the Master's House\": Freedom as Ethical Practice in Brandom and Foucault","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40378114","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13362,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[99733,99879]],"Locations in B":[[33386,33532]],"abstract":"This article makes a case for the capacity of \"social practice\" accounts of agency and freedom to criticize, resist, and transform systemic forms of power and domination from within the context of religious and political practices and institutions. I first examine criticisms that Michel Foucault's analysis of systemic power results in normative aimlessness, and then I contrast that account with the description of agency and innovative practice that pragmatist philosopher Robert Brandom identifies as \"expressive freedom.\" I argue that Brandom can provide a normative trajectory for Foucault's diagnoses of power and domination, helping to resolve its apparent lack of ethical direction. I demonstrate that Foucault, in turn, presents Brandom with insights that might overcome the charges of abstraction and conservatism that his pragmatic inferentialism frequently encounters. The result is a vindication of social practice as an analytical lens for social criticism that is at once both immanent and radical.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vijay Mishra","Bob Hodge"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1450c4af-9ace-3bac-8fc1-90a381fd7bce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"402","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-402","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Was Postcolonialism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057902","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Jamieson","Kieran McEvoy"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cd8ebb7-6114-3ef6-8fa3-6cfc8ac0bf61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23639252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"527","pageStart":"504","pagination":"pp. 504-527","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"STATE CRIME BY PROXY AND JURIDICAL OTHERING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639252","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":13336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper explores the range of strategies employed by states to obfuscate their responsibility in state crime through 'othering' both perpetrators and victims. It draws upon a range of frameworks of international humanitarian law, human rights, transitional justice as well as criminological theory to explore the historical and contemporary techniques of obfuscation. The first part of the article focuses upon the ways in which state agency is either exercised covertly or by proxy. Strategies include 'resort to perfidy', the expanded use of 'specialist' forces, collusion with indigenous paramilitaries and the use of private-sector mercenaries and military firms to outsource state deviance. The second part of the article then examines the 'othering' of the enemies of the state. These strategies include holding detainees outside national territories, using third-party nations to carry out torture or redefining the status of individuals to designate them as juridical 'others', with few national or international legal protections. The authors conclude that the notion of state crime should move beyond a monolithic conceptualization of the state and that a more subtle grasp of the different modalities of proxy agency and othering encourages us to look beyond retributive-centred international and national criminal law as but one of the mechanisms for attributing responsibility for state deviance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Cooper"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing Situations: The Rise, Fall, and Rise of Colonial Studies, 1951-2001","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843232","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":15361,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35649,35757]],"Locations in B":[[76307,76415]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL F. SILVA"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv69tgxz.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786941008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a5f75ab-be52-38a3-bc6a-65d6ed2644bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv69tgxz.14"}],"isPartOf":"Anti-Empire: Decolonial Interventions in Lusophone Literatures","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"290","pagination":"290-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv69tgxz.14","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["s\u00e3o paulo","lisbon","ant\u00f3nio lobo","dom quixote","editora","lobo antunes","portuguese","university","mem\u00f3rias coloniais","lisbon publica\u00e7\u00f5es"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magnus O. Bassey"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978155","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a4fef48-b15e-3a22-bab6-82d33e00a065"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978155"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Chapter Seven: Foundational Studies in Teacher Education: A New Imperative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978155","volumeNumber":"218","wordCount":5788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26918194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45600f31-b4e6-3026-bb6b-284cbd9c9c99"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26918194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"1\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CUMULATIVE REFERENCES, PP. 51\u2013194","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26918194","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":3010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicola Ansell"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60373a72-7004-347d-a06f-8ea32c11c9da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"'Because It's Our Culture!' (Re)Negotiating the Meaning of 'Lobola' in Southern African Secondary Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823409","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11337,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[452406,452481]],"Locations in B":[[63062,63155]],"abstract":"Payment of bridewealth or lobola is a significant element of marriage among the Basotho of Lesotho and the Shona of Zimbabwe. However, the functions and meanings attached to the practice are constantly changing. In order to gauge the interpretations attached to lobola by young people today, this paper analyses a series of focus group discussions conducted among senior students at two rural secondary schools. It compares the interpretations attached by the students to the practice of lobola with academic interpretations (both historical and contemporary). Among young people the meanings and functions of lobola are hotly contested, but differ markedly from those set out in the academic literature. While many students see lobola as a valued part of 'African culture', most also view it as a financial transaction that necessarily disadvantages women. The paper then seeks to explain the young people's interpretations by reference to discourses of 'equal rights' and 'culture' prevalent in secondary schools. Young people make use of these discourses in (re)negotiating the meaning of lobola, but the limitations of the discourses restrict the interpretations of lobola available to them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aziza Khazzoom"],"datePublished":"2003-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1519736","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031224"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161061"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55b0a882-c9f1-33ab-99bc-565650e0c448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1519736"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"American Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Great Chain of Orientalism: Jewish Identity, Stigma Management, and Ethnic Exclusion in Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1519736","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":20722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper explores the role that orientalism has played in shaping ethnic inequality among Jews in Israel. Earlier works usually explain ethnic exclusion as a function of Jewish life on Israeli territory. Here, however, exclusion is located within an earlier history of a Jewish encounter with orientalism and Western European colonialism. It is argued that prior to their immigration to Israel, Jews the world-over had been stigmatized as Oriental. Through a complex process, they accepted this stigma, and they arrived in Israel deeply invested in developing the new country as \"western\" and uncomfortable with anything identified as \"eastern.\" It is the imperatives of this westernization \"identity project\" that account for the initial impetus to exclude Middle Eastern Jews, as well as non-Jewish Arabs, from emerging Israeli society. Viewing history from this perspective, ethnic cleavages in the Jewish world appear to have a historical stability and consistency that is at odds with the current focus on contingency and historical indeterminacy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toussaint Losier"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a66081a0-e504-3843-8be2-729652da6aa9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26405726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"3 (145)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prison Movement History for the Era of #BlackLivesMatter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405726","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":1822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rory Pilossof"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9f4f996-c572-30a9-9094-7d40be04d19a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24589122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reinventing Significance: Reflections on Recent Whiteness Studies in Zimbabwe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589122","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KARL PRECODA"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"212e2f77-3d32-3f80-9726-5f6c4812c65d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"From New Criticism to Cultural Pluralism: The Southern Legacy of Marshall McLuhan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029753","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Marshall McLuhan's career illustrates the continuities between Southern New Criticism and contemporary cultural pluralism. A better understanding of McLuhan's debt to the New Critics helps to explain both why McLuhan's stocks have declined in recent years and what he and they have to contribute to discussions of multiculturalism today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond","Demba Moussa Dembele"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dc59988-c8cc-3728-be98-e97eba0e7490"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Economic Situation in Contemporary Africa: Comment on Questions Posed by Lansana Keita","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.197","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract The economic situation in contemporary Africa is highly problematic, creating populations that are in general much discontented with matters as they now stand. Africa's populations are now assailed by negative phenomena such as high unemployment; low wages in an environment of high prices (Third World wages and First World prices); low capital accumulation; banks that cater to expatriates of the wealthy mainly; human capital flight; political instability; questionable democracy; weak and inefficient infrastructures, all now supervised by the IMF and the World Bank.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Simatei"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.3.56","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4357fc6-d1c9-3139-8785-fdf4cb85c860"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.3.56"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Diasporic Memories and National Histories in East African Asian Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.3.56","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article analyzes texts by East African Asian writers in order to tease out ambiguities and disjunctions that problematize the relationship between nation and diaspora. First, I briefly mention the counternationalistic discourses towards which this literature seems to gesture and then read texts by Moyez Vassanji and Jameela Siddiqi to show how their works gesture toward the diasporic imaginary while persistently returning to the site of the nation to enact the difference of the diasporic subject. I argue that these works disavow and at the same time re-inscribe national narratives as if to suggest the continuing significance of the nation as a site of enacting the politics of identity. I discuss how these writers, for example, deal with the fact that the Asian attempt to relate to the national memory in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda is often circumscribed by the perception that they do not share, in equal measure at least, the experience of colonial oppression and the history of decolonization, twin events that provide defining moments in the construction of nationhood in these countries. I conclude that the very act of writing the Asian presence in East Africa is itself an attempt to uncover connections to histories of resistance that get suppressed when the stereotype of Asians as collaborators of colonialism is amplified within the official discourse of nation building.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Lwanda"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29779119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037993X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75229023-551f-38a6-998f-f94bff1ba9eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29779119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socofmalawij"}],"isPartOf":"The Society of Malawi Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Society of Malawi - Historical and Scientific","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29779119","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":1372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Pithouse"],"datePublished":"2004-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50885ca8-721d-3012-95d7-848d711e95de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"104","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802269","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"915e7fc8-6a83-3a48-8b21-989bd6b250d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4324828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"585","pagination":"pp. 585-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324828","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boatema Boateng"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43670364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee85c496-503b-3705-89cc-b938a9da870e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43670364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"973","pageStart":"943","pagination":"pp. 943-973","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Hand of the Ancestors: Time, Cultural Production, and Intellectual Property Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43670364","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":14298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In successfully lobbying for the expansion of the copyright protection term, culture industries in the United States have used one of the temporal dimensions of intellectual property law to strengthen their control over the circulation of cultural goods. There is another less obvious way that time factors into the regulation of cultural products, and this has to do with the modes of temporality within which those products are made and their circulation regulated. In Ghana, where certain cultural products are protected as \"folklore\" under copyright law, cultural goods from one kind of temporality enter a regulatory framework that belongs to another. In this article, I examine these two ways of organizing time and argue that differences in ways of conceptualizing time also factor into the exercise of power over cultural products. I further argue that the Ghanaian case provides resources for radically rethinking intellectual property law.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adolph Reed"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Paths to Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466554","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1655,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darlene Clark Hine"],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40580872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168297"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"084940cc-36f5-31da-86bf-cff73cb99c3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40580872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Georgia Historical Society","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40580872","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sean Kicummah Teuton"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c30f3659-8c12-3c7c-a68a-3bc6596be449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23358469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cities of Refuge: Indigenous Cosmopolitan Writers and the International Imaginary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23358469","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Beckett"],"datePublished":"1973-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/446648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00434078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205207"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c9a44bb-8e7f-3ddd-b375-7ad8a7d6202c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/446648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westpoliquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Western Political Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Algeria vs. Fanon: The Theory of Revolutionary Decolonization, and the Algerian Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/446648","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12585,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212362,212444]],"Locations in B":[[12034,12121]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin D. Lam"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48684513","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"212626331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56b2b0bd-e612-3074-8930-996bf731562c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48684513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiaamer"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian American Education & Advancement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wayne E. Wright","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Education","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Racism, Schooling, and the Streets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48684513","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper is an analysis of the relationship between educational experiences, street life, and gang formation for Vietnamese American youth gang members in Southern California. I use critical narrative methodology to center the life and experiences of a Los Angeles area gang member. His narrative substantiates how racism in schools and on the streets works together to impact and inform gang formation. Schools were sites of inter-ethnic conflict and racialized tension, and streets were spaces for contentious interactions with the police. In addition, I place the Vietnamese American youth gang phenomenon in larger historical and political contexts such as California\u2019s anti-youth legislation, representations of Asian American youth, and U.S. geo-politics and imperialism\u2014factors that have serious material and ideological implications and consequences.","subTitle":"A Critical Analysis of Vietnamese American Youth Gang Formation in Southern California","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lindsay Pentolfe Aegerter"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07327730"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709956"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227205"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5392e44-99bf-3423-9649-b7f425725e42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tulsstudwomeslit"}],"isPartOf":"Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Dialectic of Autonomy and Community: Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464133","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Garth Stevens"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5940a568-d639-3270-8892-2b1cd12d660c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Raced Repetition: Perpetual Paralysis or Paradoxical Promise?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0042","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article engages with key contemporary questions about the extent to which the obstinacy of racial formation processes, as well as the apparent global resurgence of raced thinking, represent a paralysis of the global anti-racist project or signal an important analytic opportunity for revitalising critical race scholarship and anti-racist praxis. To this end, it is incumbent upon critical race scholars and practitioners to take stock of their historical, current and future contributions to addressing the vexing nature of race and racism. The article mobilises three main illustrative arguments in this regard. First, we have to deploy our analytic tools more thoughtfully and robustly in the service of understanding the current historical period in which race seems to have an infinite elasticity globally as such analyses have a great deal to offer us in thinking through the contemporary relationships between race, materiality, histories, politics and populism. Second, writing from South Africa, the article focuses on the historically racialised nature of the social formation as an exemplar of how the deployment of race and resistance to it did not simply reflect an unprocessed repetition compulsion of the raced binary over time but actually represented incremental gains for a productively antagonistic and adversarial anti-racist political project. Third, the article also surfaces alternative ways of approaching the question of race today, by examining elements of the post-race paradigm, raced embodiment and affectivity, and more diverse conceptions of what it means to be human as part of the anti-racist project. The article concludes that thoughtful analyses of the histories of anti-racist praxis, contemporary manifestations of race and racism, and an openness to new approaches to addressing the histories and continued legacies of race are paradoxically promising and hopeful in a seemingly despairing time when race thinking seems to be on the ascension once more.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shehla Burney"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b428a624-96a6-340a-ba51-487ab0483060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWO: Edward Said and Postcolonial Theory: Disjunctured Identities and the Subaltern Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981699","volumeNumber":"417","wordCount":8145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne M. Bianchi"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3aa022cd-3dc8-3429-9090-6f7fab92d068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1136","pageStart":"1134","pagination":"pp. 1134-1136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231335","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Campbell"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a6d5bee-2003-3458-915d-28918cac1f31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1067","pageStart":"1066","pagination":"pp. 1066-1067","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231299","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Cummings","Thomas Lambert"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42864341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00384941"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5313ce09-2dbd-3b96-9eb9-68774d5bf55d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42864341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Social Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Anti-Hispanic and Anti-Asian Sentiments among African Americans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42864341","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":6377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Objective. This article reports the results of an analysis of anti-Hispanic and anti-Asian sentiments held by African Americans. Media coverage suggests that negative attitudes among African Americans toward Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans is a serious problem. Methods. An OLS regression examines the social, economic, and psychological sources of anti-Hispanic and anti-Asian sentiments among African Americans. Results. Contrary to media opinion, the data show that prejudice toward Asian Americans and Hispanic Americans among African Americans is similar to that expressed by members of the Anglo American majority. Conclusions. African Americans holding the most negative views of their own group expressed the most negative feelings toward Hispanic Americans and Asian Americans. The analysis strongly suggests that recent media coverage about a growing African American backlash against Asian Americans and Hispanic Americans is greatly exaggerated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen D. Grimshaw"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9cc2fd3-22d0-382e-95c5-752f9fe18c95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1108","pageStart":"1106","pagination":"pp. 1106-1108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231321","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Roberts"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon, Sartre, Violence, and Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512882","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9229,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[48218,48278]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 E. Lim\u00f3n"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17c9df31-c7ed-39b1-b047-b6b2dc0b1b7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Folklore, Gendered Repression, and Cultural Critique: The Case of Jovita Gonzalez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755025","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard D. Headley"],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766497","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94cb3f7a-f017-3c0d-a7ca-1ed0bc83441f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766497"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"4 (38)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Political science - Political geography","Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Crime, Justice, and Powerless Racial Groups","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766497","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":3699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Monteiro"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb173ec1-c896-33c3-92ce-5a8a61bcb3ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40034424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"621","pageStart":"600","pagination":"pp. 600-621","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"W. E. B. Du Bois and the Study of Black Humanity: A Rediscovery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034424","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholars have often viewed Du Bois as a Eurocentric thinker concerned with Black people yet inhibited by his Eurocentric method from a thorough study of them. This essay shows the opposite. Du Bois clearly sought new methods and philosophical foundations for studying Black humanity. His work is the earliest engagement with the philosophical and scientific assumptions and foundations of the White supremacist study of Black humanity. He seeks out through theory, philosophy, and empirical and historical studies ways to study Africans from the standpoint of being an African. In most respects, he achieved his goal. The author terms his achievement an epistemic rupture and revolutionary breakthrough in knowledge.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Chrisman"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.41.4.0018","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1357a38-bb22-3f05-a2a2-5859c7b7abfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.41.4.0018"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Vanishing Body of Frantz Fanon in Paul Gilroy\u2019s Against Race<\/em> and After Empire<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.41.4.0018","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8954,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27674]],"Locations in B":[[51018,51066]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1988-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbf5477e-aead-3910-b5f3-f199d3d5ccc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Consciousness 1977-1987; The Dialectics of Liberation in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186460","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11015,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[8571,8631]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James W. Fraser"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45135947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b4feff5-bbc5-3108-8476-bc756d831f81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45135947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER NINE: LOVE AND HISTORY IN THE WORK OF PAULO FREIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45135947","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":8995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Blauner"],"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/799949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/799949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"393","pagination":"pp. 393-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Internal Colonialism and Ghetto Revolt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/799949","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9121,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[31502,31550]],"abstract":"The paper explores the thesis that white-Black relations in America are essentially those of colonizer and colonized. The concept of colonization as a process is distinguished from colonialism as a social system in order to isolate the common features in the experience and situation of Afro-Americans and the colonial peoples. Three contemporary social movements are analyzed in this light: urban riots, cultural nationalism, and ghetto control politics. Some dilemmas within these movements are considered in terms of the ambiguities that exist when colonization has taken place outside of a colonial political context. The essay concludes with a brief discussion of the white role in ghettoization and decolonization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuel J. Carvajal","David T. Geithman"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1153145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49349450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fbbe7b4-465b-3f39-8b73-59f5ca81339d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1153145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econdevecultchan"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Development and Cultural Change","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"An Economic Analysis of Migration in Costa Rica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1153145","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19ff8f04-0824-3cbd-8940-9933fa87cc53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24350619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"80","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Autour d'une biographie de Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350619","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guido Pezzarossi"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44169294"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac2d83e1-1b41-359b-8d28-e067fa4975a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Camouflaging Consumption and Colonial Mimicry: The Materiality of an Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Nipmuc Household","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572709","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article serves as an interpretation of Nipmuc history in colonial contexts by focusing on the engagement and survival of the \"capitalist colonial\" world by the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Nipmuc inhabitants of the Sarah Boston Farmstead Site in Grafton, Massachusetts. Ceramic analyses are drawn upon to argue that active consumer strategies and\/or choices may potentially undermine the material and discursive markers of difference linked to notions of domesticity, class and race. The apparent homogenized or \"insignificant\" character of the Sarah Boston Farmstead ceramic assemblage is argued to in fact be quite significant, as its banality speaks to a degree of knowledgeable \"mimicry\"\u2014tactical or not\u2014that may have deflected (but not negated) inequality through the undermining of markers and discourses of difference.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. Reginald Daniel","Laura Kina","Wei Ming Dariotis","Camilla Fojas"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644984","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"818654450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c003c7-22ca-399d-b2db-aad72deaf954"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48644984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcmrs"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Emerging Paradigms in Critical Mixed Race Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644984","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":42371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret A. Majumdar"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b610416-e7b0-3522-bde8-c17df0cd070b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.12"}],"isPartOf":"Postcoloniality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"175","pagination":"175-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Loss of Empire:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11038,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[228930,229046]],"Locations in B":[[43185,43312]],"abstract":"Important though the development ofFrancophonie<\/em> has been in the postcolonial francophone world, it does not give the whole picture of the development of postcolonial relations and attitudes, least of all from the point of view of French people themselves and the different sections of the postcolonial diaspora who have settled in metropolitan France. Neither the latter nor the populations of the D\u00e9partements et territoires d\u2019outre-mer (DOM-TOM) (essentially the Caribbean, Indian Ocean and Pacific island populations still under French rule) play a part in the world ofLa Francophonie<\/em> , except as represented through the offices of France herself. It is,","subTitle":"French Perspectives","keyphrase":["french","algerian war","majumdar text3","france","reparations","bicentenary","commemoration","memory","haitian independence","haitian"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chachage S. L. Chachage"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0c9aa41-7835-3b4d-8a84-e2f33e814d16"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Human geography","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Citizenship and Partitioned People in East Africa: The Case of the Wamaasai","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484563","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":19261,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[433807,433897]],"Locations in B":[[27737,27833]],"abstract":"This paper focuses on the issues of globalization and citizenship. It takes to task the various ways in which the issue of African integration has been conceptualized, by bringing in the question of the partitioned communities. It examines the situation of a partitioned people in East Africa, the Wamaasai, as social actors capable of making interventions and reconstructing other organizational capacities, including states, which can effectively deal with the global economy for their mutual survival. Moreover, it deals with the differentials in access to land and natural resources in the context of gender, class, race, age, ethnic, national, and other forms of imbalances, while at the same time problematizing citizenship in the African and global context. The Wamaasai people, cut nearly in half by the Kenya-Tanzania border live in a situation whereby boundaries were drawn across well established lines of communication including, in every sense, an active sense of community based on traditions, common ancestry, kinship ties, shared socio-political institutions and economic resources. These pastoralist groups, in both countries, have been facing harsh conditions because of being deprived of their lands and resources by their respective states, which have alienated them for agriculture and tourism. They have also been persecuted because of their resistance to 'modernity'. The paper is historical in its focus and analysis, with the aim to find ways of dealing with the problems facing the border\/partitioned people through Pan-Africanist solutions. Cet article porte sur les questions de mondialisation et de citoyennet\u00e9. Il aborde les diverses mani\u00e8res dont la question de l'int\u00e9gration africaine a \u00e9t\u00e9 conceptualis\u00e9e, en soulevant la question des communaut\u00e9s divis\u00e9es. Il \u00e9tudie la situation d'un peuple divis\u00e9, situ\u00e9 en Afrique de l'Est, les WaMaasai, en leur qualit\u00e9 d'acteurs sociaux capables de mener certaines interventions et de reconstituer d'autres capacit\u00e9s organisationnelles, telles que la constitution d'\u00c9tat qui peuvent effectivement traiter avec les acteurs de l'\u00e9conomie mondiale, afin d'assurer leur survie. Cet article examine \u00e9galement les diff\u00e9rentiels au niveau de l'acc\u00e8s \u00e0 la terre, ainsi qu'aux ressources naturelles, dans un contexte caract\u00e9ris\u00e9 par le genre, la classe, la race, l'\u00e2ge, l'ethnie, l'appartenance nationale et autres formes de d\u00e9s\u00e9quilibres, tout en probl\u00e9matisant la question de la citoyennet\u00e9 dans un contexte africain et mondial. Le peuple WaMaasai, pratiquement coup\u00e9 en deux par la fronti\u00e8re kenyane-tanzanienne, a vu cette fronti\u00e8re trac\u00e9e par-dessus des \u00e9l\u00e9ments de communication bien \u00e9tablis, tels qu'un large sens communautaire bas\u00e9 sur des traditions, des anc\u00eatres communs, de forts liens de parent\u00e9, des institutions socio-politiques et des ressources communes. Ces groupes de pasteurs des deux pays ont v\u00e9cu dans de rudes conditions, car \u00e9tant priv\u00e9s de leurs terres par leurs \u00c9tats respectifs, qui les ont ali\u00e9n\u00e9s de leurs biens, pour pouvoir pratiquer l'agriculture et le tourisme. Ils ont \u00e9galement \u00e9t\u00e9 pers\u00e9cut\u00e9s, \u00e0 cause de leur r\u00e9sistance \u00e0 la \u00abmodernit\u00e9\u00bb. La probl\u00e9matique de cet article est historique du point de vue du th\u00e8me et de l'analyse, et son but est de chercher des solutions panafricanistes aux probl\u00e8mes que vivent les peuples divis\u00e9s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diane Driedger"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42870324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07011008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0837eb5a-bdb7-367e-a86c-fa041c3ffb92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42870324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etudinuistud"}],"isPartOf":"\u00c9tudes\/Inuit\/Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Association Inuksiutiit Katimajiit Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing and publishing as empowerment in Baker Lake, Nunavut","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42870324","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cette \u00e9tude se penche sur l'\u00e9criture cr\u00e9ative, la publication et l'autonomisation d'apprenants inuit adultes \u00e0 Baker Lake, au Nunavut. J'ai enseign\u00e9 r\u00e9criture cr\u00e9ative lors d'un atelier au Nunavut Arctic College, de pair avec les a\u00een\u00e9s locaux qui y enseignaient des chansons de la r\u00e9gion de Baker Lake. \u00c0 la suite de cet atelier, en f\u00e9vrier 2006 fut publi\u00e9 l'ouvrage The Sound of Songs: Stories by Baker Lake Writers, anthologie des \u00e9crits des apprenants adultes, et il fut lanc\u00e9 au Centre communautaire de Baker Lake. En cours de projet, le Comit\u00e9 conseil et moi-m\u00eame avons examin\u00e9 la signification du terme \u00abautonomisation\u00bb dans le contexte de la culture inuit. Chacun des neuf apprenants faisant partie de l'atelier a publi\u00e9 au moins un \u00e9crit dans le livre. La majorit\u00e9 d'entre eux ont mentionn\u00e9 un certain degr\u00e9 d'autonomisation sur le plan de la confiance en soi au sujet de leur propre \u00e9criture, sur le fait d'avoir gagn\u00e9 le respect des membres de la communaut\u00e9, en particulier des a\u00een\u00e9s, ainsi qu'en apprenant \u00e0 \u00eatre un \u00abv\u00e9ritable Inuit\u00bb aupr\u00e8s des a\u00een\u00e9s qui enseignaient les chansons de la r\u00e9gion de Baker Lake. La plupart des apprenants n'avaient jamais entendu ces chansons auparavant et il s'agissait donc d'une opportunit\u00e9 pour les a\u00een\u00e9s et les jeunes de mieux se comprendre les uns les autres. This article examines creative writing, publishing, and empowerment of Inuit adult learners in Baker Lake, Nunavut. I taught a creative writing workshop at Nunavut Arctic College along with the local elders, who taught songs from the Baker Lake area. After the workshop, in February 2006 The Sound of Songs: Stories by Baker Lake Writers, an anthology of the adult learners' writings, was published and launched at the Baker Lake Community Centre. In the course of the project, the Project Advisory Committee and I examined the meaning of the term \"empowerment\" in the context of Inuit culture. Each of the nine learners who took part in the workshop published at least one piece in the book. Most of them reported some degree of empowerment through increased confidence in their own writing, through increased respect from community members, especially the elders, and also through learning to be a \"real Inuk\" from the elders who taught songs from the Baker Lake area. Since most of the learners had not heard the songs before, elders and younger people had an opportunity to understand each other better.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Matthews Lewis","Linda Johnson","Donald Askins"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.30","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2316e75-0dd1-3d00-8dd5-5dc843828b2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.30"}],"isPartOf":"Colonialism in Modern America","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"365","pagination":"365-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Suggestions for Further READING AND RESEARCH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.30","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["frantz fanon","monthly review","mannoni prospero","internal colonialism","memmi colonizer","smokies","kwame nkrumah","noppen catalog","trestles tunnels","gorz colonialism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarat Colling","Sean Parson","Alessandro Arrigoni"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23377611-92f8-383b-ac9b-fcc6cabfb64a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Until All Are Free: Total Liberation through Revolutionary Decolonization, Groundless Solidarity, and a Relationship Framework","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982377","volumeNumber":"448","wordCount":10660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yasmine Dominguez-Whitehead"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472328"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082294"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"462945ce-b3a1-3eb0-bcdd-3714ed921990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44509182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcompfamistud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Comparative Family Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Dr. George Kurian","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Impediments to Pursuing Graduate Studies in South Africa: The Role of the Family, Social Class, and Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509182","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Increasing the number of graduate students has been identified as a priority for South African universities. Despite the shortage of graduate students in South Africa and the impetus to increase the number of graduate students, little is known about some of the impediments that undergraduate students, particularly Black students, face in pursuing graduate school. This paper critically examines the role of the family, social class, and race in considering the pursuit of graduate studies, from the perspective of students. The research adopts intersectionality as a theoretical framework and is based on focus group interviews with student participants. The findings indicate that race and social class must be understood as factors that operate concurrently and that participants' educational plans are informed by the needs of their family and by raceclass factors. Socio-political and economic factors in South Africa are also discussed in relation to the family, class, race and the pursuit of graduate studies. Acco\u00eetre le nombre des \u00e9tudiants du troisi\u00e8me cycle a \u00e9t\u00e9 identifi\u00e9 comme une priorit\u00e9 pour les universit\u00e9s sud-africaines. Malgr\u00e9 la p\u00e9nurie d'\u00e9tudiants du troisi\u00e8me cycle en Afrique du Sud et l'\u00e9lan d'acco\u00eetre leur nombre, on connait tr\u00e8s peu de choses des obstacles que les \u00e9tudiants du second cycle, particuli\u00e8ment les \u00e9tudiants noirs, sont confontr\u00e9s dans la poursuite de leurs \u00e9tudes. Ce papier examine de fa\u00e7on critique le role de la famille, de la classe sociale, et de la race dans la poursuite des \u00e9tudes du troisi\u00e8me cycle en Afrique du Sud du point de vue des \u00e9tudiants. La recherche adopte l'intersectionnalit\u00e9 comme cadre th\u00e9orique et est bas\u00e9e sur des interviews de groupes repr\u00e9sentatifs avec pour participants des \u00e9tudiants. Les r\u00e9sultats obtenus indiquent que la race et la classe sociale do\u00eevent \u00eatre comprises comme des facteurs qui op\u00e8rent simultan\u00e9ment et que les projets d'\u00e9tudes des participants sont motiv\u00e9s par les besoins de leurs familles et par des facteurs raciaux. Des facteurs socio-politiques et \u00e9conomiques en Afrique du Sud sont aussi discut\u00e9s par rapport \u00e0 la famille, la classe sociale, la race et la poursuite des \u00e9tudes du troisi\u00e8me cycle. Incrementar el n\u00famero de estudiantes de posgrado ha sido identificado come una \u00e1rea de prioridad para las universidades en Sud\u00e1frica. A pesar de que existe una escasez de estudiantes de posgrado en Sud\u00e1frica y un \u00edmpetu para incrementar la cantidad de estudiantes de posgrado, poco se sabe sobre unos de los impedimentos que enfrentan los estudiantes, particularmente los estudiantes negros, cuando prosiguen estudios posgrados. Este art\u00edculo, de manera critica, examina el papel de la familia, la clase social, y la raza en tomar en cuenta la prosecuci\u00f3n de estudios posgrados, desde el punto de vista de los estudiantes. La investigaci\u00f3n utiliza \"intersectionality\" como una infraestructura te\u00f3rica y est\u00e1 basada en entrevistas de grupo focales con estudiantes que participaron en el estudio. Los descubrimientos indican que la raza y la clase social deben de ser comprendidas como factores que funcionan a la misma vez y que los programas de educaci\u00f3n de los estudiantes que participaron en el estudio son formados por las necesidades de sus familias y por factores de raza-clase social. Los factores sociopol\u00edticos y econ\u00f3micos en Sud\u00e1frica tambi\u00e9n son tratados en relaci\u00f3n con la familia, la clase social, la raza y la prosecuci\u00f3n de estudios posgrados.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Sibley","\u0625\u064a\u0645\u064a\u0644\u064a \u0633\u064a\u0628\u0644\u064a"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"848306ed-ab44-3c4c-a859-29e90508fdec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26596423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Redefining Theater: Yusuf Idris's \"al-Far\u0101f\u012br\" and the Work of Cultural Decolonization \/ \u0625\u0639\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u062a\u0639\u0631\u064a\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d: \u0641\u0631\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0631 \u064a\u0648\u0633\u0641 \u0625\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0633 \u0648\u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596423","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores Yusuf Idris's thought in \"Towards an Egyptian Theater\" and his play al-Far\u0101f\u012br in light of broader discourse on cultural decolonization. Idris advocates decolonization through returning to Egyptian and Arab forms of theatricality and diminished affiliation with European aesthetics. The author argues that the contradictions between his goals and al-Farafir's realization can be resolved through the premises of adab in its premodern modalities and its contemporaneous demands for political commitment. The emphasis on inclusive participation and radically open textuality creates a horizon of possibility for the decolonized stage, where the renegotiation of socio-political relations invokes the shattering of the play itself. \u062a\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0627\u062a \u064a\u0648\u0633\u0641 \u0625\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0633 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u00ab\u0646\u062d\u0648 \u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u0645\u0635\u0631\u064a\u00bb \u0648\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u062a\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0631 \u0641\u0649 \u0636\u0648\u0621 \u062e\u0637\u0627\u0628 \u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a \u060c \u062d\u064a\u062b \u064a\u062f\u0639\u0648 \u0644\u0644\u0639\u0648\u062f\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0634\u0643\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0635\u0631\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0627\u0646\u0633\u0644\u0627\u062e \u0639\u0646 \u062c\u0645\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u0631\u0648\u0628\u064a . \u062a\u0631\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0627\u062a\u0628\u0629 \u0625\u0645\u0643\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u062d\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0636\u0627\u062a \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u063a\u0627\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0625\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0633 \u0648\u0625\u062e\u0631\u0627\u062c \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u062c\u0648\u0639 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u0628\u0627\u062f\u0626 \u00ab\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628\u00bb \u0628\u0623\u0646\u0645\u0627\u0637\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0642\u0644\u064a\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0645\u0646\u0627\u062f\u0627\u062a\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631\u0629 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0632\u0627\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a . \u0641\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0623\u0643\u064a\u062f \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u0634\u0627\u0631\u0643\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0645\u0647\u0648\u0631 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0641\u062a\u0648\u062d\u0629 \u0639\u0646\u062f \u0625\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0633 \u062a\u062e\u0644\u0642 \u0625\u0645\u0643\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u062a\u0642\u0648\u064a\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u062d\u064a\u062b \u062a\u0624\u062f\u064a \u0625\u0639\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u0635\u064a\u0627\u063a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0642\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0627\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0629 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufeb4\ufef4\ufe8e\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u062f\u0627\u0639\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u0629 \u0630\u0627\u062a\u0647\u0627 .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asgedet Stefanos"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45135950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad1db5dc-cbdd-39bc-b9fd-dcf4d0c0f18a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45135950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWELVE: AFRICAN WOMEN AND REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE: A Freirian and Feminist Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45135950","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":9616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. Das"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23330027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"227364f0-35a4-3263-ac5a-7038e6500e3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23330027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Metaphysical Mode in Modern Oriya and Sister-Languages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23330027","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":4881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia M.E. 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Vann"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41299413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3427145-d648-3dab-bb61-78e2a703da96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41299413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Building Colonial Whiteness on the Red River: Race, Power, and Urbanism in Paul Doumer's Hanoi, 1897-1902","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41299413","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10180,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[6042,6109]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. 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Minc"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1347594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afb1241f-6c09-36af-ba56-6073f3dcd1e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1347594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1347594","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANNE WHITEHEAD"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ae7a0ee-598a-325e-b034-b48fe137adc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"JOURNEYING THROUGH HELL: WOLE SOYINKA, TRAUMA, AND POSTCOLONIAL NIGERIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533857","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie Parle"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92390fc4-b440-3f3f-a4ce-9020b627c807"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44448645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"748","pageStart":"746","pagination":"pp. 746-748","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448645","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eyal Amiran"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.100.2018.0134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00008d2d-e83d-3d29-a5a1-86ad9d959fce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.100.2018.0134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Pornocratic Body in the Age of Networked Paranoia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.100.2018.0134","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":7831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The age of Big Data produces a both cultural paranoia\u2014the sense that the surveillance apparatus sees anybody and everything\u2014and the fear that individual bodies become insignificant or interchangeable to the public. This fear affects political figures like Donald Trump whose public bodies help secure political power under pornocracy. This essay explains the cultural paranoia produced by the scopic regime by reading South Park\u2019s \u201cMagic Bush\u201d episode, the case of the disappeared Malaysia Airlines MH370 airplane, and the depiction of bodies in Wikileaks\u2019 leaked video, \u201cCollateral Murder\u201d (2007). It then reads two instances where pornocratic bodies struggle to gain visibility against the indifference of the surveillance apparatus: leaked surveillance tapes of conversations between the British royalty Princess Diana and Prince Charles and their lovers.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Butterworth","Irene Gendzier"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b85d2d7-3196-3de1-bedd-d27fd44393df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4325292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"451","pagination":"pp. 451-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and the Justice of Violence: An Essay on Irene L. Gendzier's \"Frantz Fanon\": A Critical Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325292","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5198,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[48,99]],"Locations in B":[[6324,6384]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shirley Sharon-Zisser"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f59db186-e708-3270-a6fd-a6dd90ce2880"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrhet"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Rhetoric","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"From \"Guest\" to Occupier? Unstable Hospitality and the Ahistoricity of Tropology in the Discourse of Rhetoric","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238045","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe Street"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2015.84.3.333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214644"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"066d7d42-2efc-3f38-99c8-4b84f842c75c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/phr.2015.84.3.333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacihistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Shadow of the Soul Breaker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/phr.2015.84.3.333","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":13720,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article probes the impact of prison on Huey P. Newton, founder of the Black Panther Party. Incarcerated for three years in various locations in California, Newton descended into cocaine addiction and criminality soon after his 1970 release. The current literature fails to account for the impact of solitary confinement on Newton\u2019s life and consequently misinterprets his descent into criminality. The article suggests that the immense pressures placed on Newton in prison and after freedom were related to the decline of the rehabilitative experiment in California\u2019s prison system. It reveals the psychological effect of prison on Newton before linking his fragile mental state to his drug addiction. It concludes by demonstrating how Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) surveillance unwittingly took advantage of Newton\u2019s fragility to compound his psychological stress, indicating the extent to which prison successfully prevented Newton reclaiming his position as a significant force in the African American political struggle.","subTitle":"Solitary Confinement, Cocaine, and the Decline of Huey P. Newton","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Hartman"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24462249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38907558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98048229"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3acd5bba-b9f2-343e-9700-aa17be68ada9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24462249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"328","pagination":"pp. 328-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"LOST IN TRANSLATION: Postcolonial Reflections on \"the Panare killed Jesus Christ\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24462249","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":8122,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[64113,64200]],"Locations in B":[[19107,19194]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Morani Kornberg"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c95e8e5-bec3-38d2-bc89-f10250e1a070"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Awakening and National Revolt in Nawal El Saadawi's God Dies by the Nile<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.03","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay positions Egyptian physician, novelist, and activist Nawal El Saadawi's understudied novel God Dies by the Nile within a broader framework of Egyptian revolutionary movements. It analyzes representations of the peasantry\u2014which, historically, symbolize Egyptian nationalism\u2014and argues that British and American (neo)colonial intervention in Egyptian policies has legitimized patriarchal violence while disrupting the subaltern family unit through the misuse of religious rites; as a result, women, especially, become victims of sexual exploitation and forced labor. By focusing on the heroine's political awakening through her participation in a Zar ritual, a folklore exorcist practice, the paper highlights the importance of the ritual's failure in subverting the matrimony between Islam, patriarchy, and capitalism. The novel thus overturns preexisting beliefs concerning peasant oppression and foregrounds the significance of non-linguistic modes of political awakening, class-consciousness, concerted collective action, and, ultimately, national revolt.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth J. Higgins"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8b370a0-2c0e-3a9d-9e05-adfd33cd0cd5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44322547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322547","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Didier Bertrand"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40059620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08883769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2707e524-2527-3ed5-9d29-b40ecc6f85d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40059620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reliandliter"}],"isPartOf":"Religion & Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Notre Dame","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Order and Chaos in Paradise: Colonial and \"Postcolonial\" Constructions of Religious Identity through the Robinson Crusoe Story","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40059620","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Briggs","Gladys McCormick","J. T. Way"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068518","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1a7e7ef-f92d-395c-a913-acdc048e3667"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068518"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"648","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-648","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transnationalism: A Category of Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068518","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Max Haiven"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.78.2011.0060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c87f1b90-1329-3ecf-8e14-11060b881148"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.78.2011.0060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Are Your Children Old Enough to Learn about May '68? Recalling the Radical Event, Refracting Utopia, and Commoning Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.78.2011.0060","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":11743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0848413e-9f4c-3ea8-bc6a-0ecaf28f46a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44489316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Mankind's Queerest Laboratory\": Richard Wright and the Speed of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489316","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth R. White"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"769eab94-6f00-34fc-ae86-8c54a6917039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"471","pagination":"pp. 471-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Scourge of Racism: Genocide in Rwanda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282573","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":4385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One of the major social problems of the 21st century is the problem of the color line. Racism is any activity by individuals, groups, institutions, or cultures that treats human beings unjustly because of color, physical features, and ethnicity and rationalizes that treatment by attributing to them undesirable biological, psychological, social, or cultural characteristics. Rwanda is no exception to the effects of racism. More than 800,000 Rwandans were killed in the government-directed ethnic cleansing of Tutsis and Hutus during 1994. It is considered this century's best organized genocide. New plans and visions for peace and justice must include a psychocultural segment for social therapy if the cycle of violence is to be broken in Rwanda and the Great Lakes Region.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PHILIPP CASULA"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26934353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12526576"},{"name":"oclc","value":"220954172"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fb66331-72b2-3edd-a59a-4ad3bb2ab7dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26934353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahimondruss"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers du Monde russe","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SOVIET AFRO-ASIAN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE AND SOVIET PERCEPTIONS OF THE MIDDLE EAST DURING LATE SOCIALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26934353","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":10408,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Comment le petit groupe des repr\u00e9sentants sovi\u00e9tiques de la culture percevait-il le Moyen-Orient sous le socialisme tardif ? Qu'en pensait-il et comment l'appr\u00e9hendait-il ? Le comit\u00e9 sovi\u00e9tique de solidarit\u00e9 afro-asiatique a valeur d'\u00e9tude de cas et l'analyse de ses d\u00e9clarations, rapports et communications permet de fournir des r\u00e9ponses \u00e0 ces questions. L'auteur passe au crible les archives du comit\u00e9 de solidarit\u00e9 et discute l'interaction de celui-ci avec divers mouvements et \u00ab fronts \u00bb de lib\u00e9ration. De la sorte, il souligne les singularit\u00e9s d'un orientalisme sovi\u00e9tique. Pour d\u00e9buter, il contextualise l'engagement sovi\u00e9tique pour le Tiers monde en mentionnant les multiples \u00ab organisations publiques \u00bb charg\u00e9es de propager le socialisme. Le comit\u00e9 de solidarit\u00e9, lui, bien que d\u00e9pendant du d\u00e9partement international du PCUS, se targuait de jouir d'une certaine autonomie. Ensuite, l'auteur montre comment le comit\u00e9 de solidarit\u00e9 \u00e9tait engag\u00e9 vis-\u00e0-vis de ses partenaires \u00e9trangers dans quatre activit\u00e9s de fa\u00e7onnage identitaire : il \u00e9tablissait une distinction entre les amis et les ennemis, il \u00ab agr\u00e9ait \u00bb ses partenaires comme r\u00e9volutionnaires, et il jugeait constamment et \u00e9valuait leur comportement, tant sur le plan institutionnel qu'individuel. Il en \u00e9merge un orientalisme particulier, dans lequel le Moi est indubitablement le plus puissant, mais dans lequel l'Autre est toujours consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme ayant le potentiel de devenir semblable au Moi sovi\u00e9tique. How did selected Soviet cultural representatives in late socialism see the Middle East? What were their opinions or understanding of it? This paper replies to these questions by analysing the statements, reports and communications of the Soviet Afro-Asian Solidarity committee (SKSSAA), which is analysed as a case study. It scrutinizes archival material of the SKSSAA and discusses the interaction between the Solidarity Committee and various liberation movements and \"fronts\". In doing so, it highlights the peculiarities of a Soviet Orientalism. In the first section, the paper sets the context of the Soviet \"Third World\" engagement with a description of the myriad of \"public organisations\" tasked with spreading socialism; while dependent on the CPSU International Department, the SKSSAA claimed to enjoy some autonomy. In the second part of the paper, it is shown that the Solidarity Committee engaged in four identity-crafting activities vis-\u00e0-vis its foreign partners: it drew a line between friends and enemies, it \"certified\" its partners as revolutionary, and it continuously assessed and evaluated their behaviour, both on an institutional and on an individual level. What emerges is a peculiar Orientalism, in which the Self is obviously more powerful, but in which the Other is continuously deemed as having the potential for becoming similar to the Soviet Self.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Somdeep Sen"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.2.0161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77d38495-4559-3d6e-8adb-57d6422b86b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.2.0161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cIt's Nakba<\/em>, Not a Party\u201d: Re-Stating the (Continued) Legacy of the Oslo Accords","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.2.0161","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Two decades later, how should we conceptualize the relevance of the Oslo Accords today? This article reconstitutes our understanding of the Accords through three parameters and purports that the legacy of the Interim Agreement is one that oscillates between what it has failed to achieve with regard to the Palestinian quest for statehood and what it continues to do as a mechanism influencing the \u201cbrand\u201d Palestinian politics that can be practiced (uninhibitedly) within the occupied Palestinian territories (oPt). In this way, charting the path for future research, this article concludes that any subsequent studies on Palestinian politics and political behavior would need to account for both what the Accords has not done and what it continues to do.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendy Griswold"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85835de9-360c-32e4-9bfc-e125e3e1d78c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2779997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"1117","pageStart":"1077","pagination":"pp. 1077-1117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Fabrication of Meaning: Literary Interpretation in the United States, Great Britain, and the West Indies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779997","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":18322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study, an investigation of how human beings make cultural works meaningful, compares the different meanings that readers from the West Indies, Britain, and the United States constructed from a single source, the fiction of Barbadian novelist George Lamming. The socially shared presuppositions they brought to their reading caused West Indian reviewers to interpret Lamming's novels as involving questions of personal and national identity, British reviewers to concentrate on the novels' language and literary qualities, and American reviewers to emphasize race. Each of Lamming's novels exercises a different degree of \"cultural power,\" and this capacity to engender multiple meanings while retaining coherence shows that cultural meanings emerge from the interaction between cultural works of varying power and human recipients of varying expectations and concerns. In turn, this interaction suggests a theory of metaphor that enables research in the sociology of culture to utilize both cultural and sociological data without reducing one to the other.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NICHOLAS HARRISON"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Positioning (Fanon)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263534","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5497,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[603858,603930]],"Locations in B":[[8704,8785]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mshai S Mwangola"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483999","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e2d8b48-1228-3534-ac39-5bfeec612e58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24483999"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Performing Our Stories, Performing Ourselves: In Search of Kenya's Uhuru Generation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483999","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce R. 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperialism: Conrad's Heart of Darkness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/259954","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald E. Santoni"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aac73d04-5bd6-3826-957e-8a84697da858"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Liberatory Violence, Bad Faith, and Moral Justification: A Reply","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720575","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4786,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Can violence ever be justified or is violence necessarily oppressive? Is self-defensive counter-violence or \"revolutionary violence\" aimed at human liberation, which Sartre defended, necessarily in bad faith? These questions form the crux of the debate between Matt Eshleman and Ronald Santoni. Is violence by nature Manichean, making the Other into an \"object\" and evil antagonist, and thus dehumanizing and oppressing the Other? Or can violence be liberatory when it is directed at oppressors? Both authors\u2014but especially Eshleman, and Santoni reluctantly\u2014agree that some forms of violence (such as self-defense) do not involve bad faith, but disagree about whether or when revolutionary violence can be justified.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00b1231a-b0a6-3f6d-b692-d9c0be5df8c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24486521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards Relevant Culture and Politics in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486521","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sister Marie Augusta Neal, S. 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D."],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61138057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3711416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianal"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Analysis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Commitment to Altruism in Sociological Analysis: Paul Hanley Furfey Lecture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3711416","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12639,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[72827,72874]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert I. Schiller"],"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4610820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec2ac933-b601-32a6-9ac3-6b80c34a9985"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4610820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antiochreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Antioch Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Antioch Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"National Development Requires Some Social Distance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4610820","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4671,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy P. 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Women later transformed organizational functions and sources of funding, but raised no questions about the structure of sex stratification. Cooptation legitimized female political activity and authorized leader use of compulsion to induce participation, yet maintained women's political dependency on local officials. This dependency later fueled an organizational crisis over the dispensation of funds. The paper concludes with implications of sexual subordination and sex-based organizing for ultimate empowerment and the realization of women's interests.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael M. J. Fischer"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f81562a1-da46-3d00-815b-a8dc67c07aa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1076","pageStart":"1075","pagination":"pp. 1075-1076","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231304","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tommy J. 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The course was designed to cover basic theory on the development of social movements and revolutions and to provide case studies from the United States and around the world through the use of documentary films. A major goal was to present the material in such a way as to be of interest to a wide range of students. This article describes the organization, teaching, and evaluation of such a course recently taught to 100 students at the University of Connecticut.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heidi J. Nast"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"765e36ff-4c28-37cd-bcc6-b03af1db4b9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1515234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mapping the \"Unconscious\": Racism and the Oedipal Family","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1515234","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":26291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper argues that modern constructions of \"race\" are inherent in specifically modern constructions of heterosexuality and that both of them inform the normative familial quadrad: Mother, Father, Son, and the Repressed (Bestial). These mythic familial categories constitute the basis of the \"oedipal\" family and are instrumentally interconnected. Here the oedipal triad of Mother-Son-Father is ideationally encoded as white, the repressed bestial being \"colored\"-typically \"black.\" I argue racism's immanence to oedipal familial constructions by spatially reworking Fredric Jameson's notion of the political unconscious. In so doing, I develop ways for thinking through how the psyche can be understood as a structured and libidinized spatial effect, a repository of colonial violences of body and place, unspoken and hence repressed (\"unconscious\"). I propose the term racist-oedipalization (after Deleuze and Guattari's oedipalization) to connote the processual ways in which racist thinking and practices are integral to white oedipal family structures and norms. In so doing, I explore how racist-oedipal configurations have worked variably, in the interests of contemporary and past colonialisms, to great embodied geographical effect. The paper begins by theoretically linking blackness to incestuousness and colonization to productions of the psychical \"unconscious.\" The core of the paper threads the theory through particular racialized geographies in the U.S. These include, on the one hand, southern plantation slave and post-Reconstruction settings, and, on the other hand, urban segregationary practices impelled by the University of Chicago, culminating in their racialized plans for urban renewal in the 1950s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HARRY SPECHT"],"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23710333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23710333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disruptive Tactics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23710333","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6631,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[47065,47169],[47263,47348]],"Locations in B":[[2459,2569],[2624,2710]],"abstract":"This paper describes the various tactics that can be used to achieve change\u2014from collaboration to violence\u2014the relationship among them, and the moral, ethical, and social consequences that the professional must assess before he chooses a specific tactic. The author discusses disruption, in particular, to point up how the various factors mentioned bear on its use.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Perry A. Hall"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2294870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Systematic and Thematic Principles for Black Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294870","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":3123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daynal\u00ed Flores-Rodr\u00edguez","Joseph Jordan"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3fcba39-dcdd-3ab8-9d10-59a899f0dd5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: The Continuing Relevance of Fanonian Thought: Remembering the Life and Work of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0003","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":2964,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[17776,17829]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith P. Feldman"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representing Permanent War: Black Power's Palestine and the End(s) of Civil Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949599","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":15224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind O'Hanlon"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/312498","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"045b6013-b8f1-387e-8a5e-d72fc55e2a84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/312498"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recovering the Subject Subaltern Studies and Histories of Resistance in Colonial South Asia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/312498","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":20019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ephraim Yuchtman-Yaar","Tamar Hermann"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"906a6f4f-40a8-3a4a-b578-a59ea0d4de41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/174391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"743","pageStart":"721","pagination":"pp. 721-743","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Latitude of Acceptance: Israeli Attitudes toward Political Protest before and after the Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174391","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9470,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article answers two related questions: did the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin bring about significant changes in the attitudes of Israeli Jews toward antigovernment protest, and were there systematic group differences in these attitudes before and after Rabin's assassination? The empirical findings of four public opinion surveys point to a significant decline in overall support for antigovernment protest immediately after the assassination, apparently reflecting the shock effect of the murder. The decline was noticeable across the entire spectrum of political and sociodemographic segments of the public, and the plateau attained shortly after the assassination remained almost intact afterwards. Findings also indicate significant group differences in attitudes toward political protest, especially before the assassination. The changes in attitudes were systematically related to two hypothesized influences: guilt by association and socioeconomic status.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diptendra Banerjee"],"datePublished":"1987-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3520285","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40eb7c78-668e-35bc-8b99-94c5731be173"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3520285"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"8\/9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historical Problematic of Third World Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3520285","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":20475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Renk"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90091777-2c41-3fb9-83cb-37935e7f5d32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"'I Can Make a Hell of Heaven: A Heaven of Hell'\" Jean Rhys's Heresy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986151","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":3923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annemarie HEYWOOD"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aeff21cb-7b96-3517-83ca-771809fec73c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"113","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Modes of Freedom : The Songs of Okot p'Bitek","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351177","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7175,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[492343,492430]],"Locations in B":[[5350,5438]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asbj\u00f8rn Gr\u00f8nstad"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n1k3.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640109"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96e3cda3-ba6f-352b-9e25-c94cb84a5e10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n1k3.15"}],"isPartOf":"Transfigurations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"191","pagination":"191-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n1k3.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["violence","cinema","aesthetic","mimetic","violent","film violence","mimesis","gangster","narrative","wild bunch"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Amede Obiora"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20644657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800727"},{"name":"oclc","value":"32590928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215650"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20644657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indjglolegstu"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism, Globalization, and Culture: After Beijing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20644657","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":23396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, Professor Obiora begins with the premise that the credibility of traditional legal frameworks has eroded, because the law remains unable to relieve the oppressions and polarization between cultures, even in the wake of global institutional transformations that seem to help the oppressed, particularly women. Professor Obiora offers the Beijing Platform for Action as a radical new solution for human rights protection, radical in that it is one of the first declaratives to transcend the previous dichotomy of issues among women by expressing a commitment to a global framework in which to address these issues, particularly the feminization of poverty. After a brief description of the Platform, the author asks whether it is really possible to provide such a global framework, given the inherently cultural and communitarian nature of feminist issues. In the second section, Professor Obiora argues that because the Platform for Action is not a legally binding instrument, and because traditional sources of monetary and social support may not be present, particularly in developing countries, alternative mechanisms for enforcement of the Platform must be explored. As a solution, the author suggests that in order to realize the Beijing mandate, women need to collaborate and move to mechanisms outside traditional institutions. In the third section of the article, Professor Obiora responds to Aihwa Ong's article, and begins by highlighting Ong's concept of feminist imperialism as a starting context for a discussion of the role of culture in defining a feminist agenda for the alleviation of women's oppression. Professor Obiora then argues that the international human rights regime is enhanced by culturally-sensitive approaches, as centrality is the framework for existence. Yet, Professor Obiora questions how to define and validate custom or culture in light of the inevitable effect of world economic, political, and cultural forces. Professor Obiora also questions how to reconcile the validation of cultural practices that are seen by Western feminists as oppressive to the women who practice them. Finally, in the fourth section, Professor Obiora attempts to integrate the previously raised issues with a discussion of a universalist-relativist framework. In doing so, the author suggests that the greatest challenge to developing a human rights regime that appeals to all cultures may be to negotiate a productive end for the recognition of difference, balancing the benefits of both universalism and relativism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul B. Miller"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2961f522-e09d-35d9-bf01-541a4fab1686"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Blancas Y Negras: Carpentier and the Temporalities of Mutual Exclusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119856","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JASON FRANKS","OLIVER P. RICHMOND"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"208e30fc-36b4-381f-b317-b49cf7f3e776"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45084568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Coopting Liberal Peace-building: Untying the Gordian Knot in Kosovo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084568","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The liberal peace framework aims to regulate, govern and empower the individual in a democratic and pluralist milieu. Yet liberal peace-building, even on the scale and depth employed in the international governance of Kosovo, is susceptible to local cooption, particularly where one group can adopt the language of the liberal peace and has strong support and credibility from the international community. This has led to a focus on achieving statehood for Kosovan Albanians, the marginalization of other identity groups and their agendas, and consequently the undermining of the pluralist goals of peace-building with the implicit cooperation of liberal peace-builders. Given Serb opposition to statehood for Kosovo, there is a danger that liberal peace-building will encourage the partition of Kosovo rather than create a pluralist polity. The article illustrates the susceptibility of liberal peace-building to local cooption.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Nehemkis"],"datePublished":"1974-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41164540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617835"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-204579"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a5cf4fd-1321-384d-81f6-913d6ffe6f96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41164540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calimanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Management Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Expropriation Has a Silver Lining","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41164540","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Successful East-West business arrangements have shown that ownership is not a prerequisite for the realization of profits. Adjustment to this fact of contemporary life is probably the central problem for the survival of U.S. overseas investors. The ploy to cooperate in liquidation of an already doomed facility has the potential for producing a windfall of benefits for both the investor and the appropriating state.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracy C. Davis"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21658b81-1a9a-3ce1-a67d-5089bdba8483"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24584793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"I Long for My Home in Kentuck\": Christy's Minstrels in Mid-19th-Century Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24584793","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":16824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Christy's Minstrels set a new standard for minstrel performance in mid-Victorian Britain. Yet reception was far from monolithic: the cultural affiliations of audiences led to important regional differences in reception, including room for racialist perspectives complicated by religion, nationalism, class, and antislavery convictions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seri Luangphinith"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b03ee395-cf77-3eea-9991-21e2c65ab543"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23722953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tropical Fevers: \"Madness\" and Colonialism in Pacific Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23722953","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Pacific literature, theorizing madness in fictional narratives encourages a reexamination of the notion of \"deviancy\" that supports the western colonial differentiation between the powerful and the disempowered. Fictional accounts of madness often reveal how such bipolar ideology is inadequate to address individual identity in Pacific Island societies, which include variegated expressions of ethnic or racial diversity, sexuality, and gender. Not surprisingly, many Pacific writers use \"disturbed\" characters to disrupt social conventions and challenge the tendency of the mainstream toward two-dimensional, black and white portrayals. In an attempt to understand the prevalent use of madness to deconstruct colonial polarity in Pacific literature, this paper traces the depiction of insanity in the works of James Norman Hall, Albert Wendt, Subramani, Alistair Te Ariki Campbell, and Sia Figiel, authors who move beyond simplistic notions of identity and rethink the Pacific on their own terms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GRACE A. MUSILA"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b29ef8a-3c47-37b1-96a7-48c7dc58e348"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26158939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1461","pageStart":"1452","pagination":"pp. 1452-1461","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lot's Wife Syndrome and Double Publics in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26158939","volumeNumber":"131","wordCount":6021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["His Excellency Issoufou Mahamadou"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.118.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf4f9d0a-2e0d-384a-a907-730bb82871cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/transition.118.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"118","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Address to the African Development Conference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.118.1","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"His Excellency President Issoufou Mahamadou of Niger draws lessons from history in describing his vision for the Renaissance Program for Niger and for \u201cthe renaissance of the continent\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rituparna Roy"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz7z.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089642455"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fdb2e9f-1069-3be5-9a28-ff63b8d6c3d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mz7z.12"}],"isPartOf":"South Asian Partition Fiction in English","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"163","pagination":"163-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mz7z.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3164,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[6435,6480]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["new delhi","delhi penguin","ravi dayal","ghosh amitav","delhi ravi","new delhi penguin","salman rushdie","dayal ghosh","delhi ravi dayal","penguin books"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Van Mitchell Smith"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1858367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"660383c2-5235-35de-875f-4e25b3915c8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1858367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"1023","pageStart":"1023","pagination":"p. 1023","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1858367","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Neocosmos"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce91c632-2eb1-3678-9fc9-d0727791bebb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Contradictory Position of 'Tradition' in African Nationalist Discourse: Some Analytical and Political Reflections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484562","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":15311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the immediate post-colonial period, 'tradition' was seen by African nationalism both as the basis of an authentic indigenous culture to be celebrated and opposed to a hegemonic Western (globalised) culture, and as a backward formation created (or manipulated) by Western (neo) colonialism to divide and rule and thus as inimical to 'modern' nation-state formation. An idealised tradition thus held a contradictory location within what came to be state nationalist discourse, as exhibiting both potentially liberatory and repressive features simultaneously. Different aspects of an idealised 'tradition' were drawn upon by different post-colonial leaders at different ends of the political spectrum in their attemptS'at nation-building and in order to legitimise different forms of authoritarian developmentalism (eg. Nyerere's 'Ujamaa' and Mobutu's 'Authenticit\u00e9'). Some were evidently more successful than others, but broadly, such attempts bore witness to the continued and unwavering legitimacy of tradition among the populations of the continent. There is no evidence that this legitimacy has declined today despite the evident failure of state nationalism. The contradictory character of tradition in Africa is also reflected today in the views of African scholars where some intellectuals stress that tradition forms the basis for a 'decentralized despotism' inherited from the colonial period, while others visualise it as forming the site of a 'convivial' alternative to Western individualism and globalizing culture or even as containing the possible model for a democratic alternative to liberalism. Moreover, tradition often finds itself at the receiving end of a powerful critique by human rights discourse supported by liberal feminism inter alia. This paper addresses this central issue and sheds light on the possible place of tradition within an alternative popular-nationalist discourse on the continent. It suggests that the dominant trend within the nationalism of the 1950s and 1960s (from which emerged the dominant state-nationalist perspective in the immediate post-colonial period) operated very much within the context of a hegemonic liberal conception of politics and state-formation, and as such was unable to overcome this contradiction. The paper argues for the necessity of a democratic struggle within tradition itself (as well as within rights) and argues against both the uncritical celebration of tradition as an essentially authentic culture, as well as its undermining from 'beyond its boundaries' by liberal rights-discourse. An alternative look at 'tradition' in Africa requires that it be understood from within the perspective of an altogether new way of thinking about politics, in particular this means an understanding for which democracy is not equated with human rights. A critical engagement with tradition must form part of a questioning of human rights discourse from the perspective of the oppressed majority in Africa. Au cours de la p\u00e9riode post-coloniale imm\u00e9diate, le nationalisme africain consid\u00e9rait la \u00abtradition\u00bb \u00e0 la fois comme la base d'une culture locale authentique, qui devait \u00eatre c\u00e9l\u00e9br\u00e9e et mise en opposition avec la culture h\u00e9g\u00e9monique occidentale (mondialis\u00e9e), mais \u00e9galement comme une cr\u00e9ation archa\u00efque cr\u00e9\u00e9e (ou manipul\u00e9e) par le (n\u00e9o)colonialisme occidental, afin de diviser pour mieux r\u00e9gner, et par cons\u00e9quent, comme \u00e9tant hostile \u00e0 la formation de l'\u00c9tat-nation \u00abmoderne\u00bb. Le discours nationaliste \u00e9tatique v\u00e9hiculait ainsi un concept de tradition id\u00e9alis\u00e9e, qui comportait un sens \u00e0 la fois potentiellement lib\u00e9rateur et r\u00e9pressif. Plusieurs dirigeants de la p\u00e9riode post-coloniale se sont inspir\u00e9s des diff\u00e9rents aspects de cette \u00abtradition\u00bb id\u00e9alis\u00e9e, \u00e0 diverses fins politiques, dans le cadre de la construction nationale et de la l\u00e9gitimation de diverses formes de d\u00e9veloppementalisme autoritaire (\u00e0 l'exemple de l' \u00abUjamaa\u00bb, de Nyerere et le concept d' \u00abauthenticit\u00e9\u00bb, d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 par Mobutu). Certaines exp\u00e9riences ont connu plus de succ\u00e8s que d'autres, mais de mani\u00e8re g\u00e9n\u00e9rale, ces tentatives t\u00e9moignent de la forte l\u00e9gitimit\u00e9 de la tradition parmi les population africaines. Aujourd'hui, rien ne prouve que cette l\u00e9gitimit\u00e9 est en d\u00e9clin, malgr\u00e9 l'\u00e9chec du nationalisme \u00e9tatique. Le caract\u00e8re contradictoire de la notion de tradition, en Afrique, est visible aujourd'hui \u00e0 travers les opinions des universitaires africains, dont certains pensent que la tradition constitue la base de la \u00abd\u00e9centralisation du despotisme\u00bb h\u00e9rit\u00e9 de la p\u00e9riode coloniale, tandis que d'autres consid\u00e8rent la tradition comme une alternative \u00abconviviale\u00bb \u00e0 l'individualisme occidental et \u00e0 la culture mondialisante, ou comme un mod\u00e8le possible d'alternative d\u00e9mocratique au lib\u00e9ralisme. En outre, la tradition est souvent la cible de s\u00e9v\u00e8res critiques formul\u00e9es par le discours sur les droits de l'homme, soutenu par le f\u00e9minisme lib\u00e9ral, entre autres. Cet article aborde ce th\u00e8me central et analyse la place \u00e9ventuelle de la tradition au sein d'un discours populaire-nationaliste alternatif en Afrique. Il soutient que la tendance dominante du nationalisme des ann\u00e9es 50-60 (qui a donn\u00e9 naissance \u00e0 la perspective \u00e9tatique-nationaliste dominante au cours de la p\u00e9riode post-coloniale imm\u00e9diate) \u00e9tait fortement caract\u00e9ris\u00e9e par une conception h\u00e9g\u00e9monique lib\u00e9rale de la politique et de la formation de l'\u00c9tat, et n'\u00e9tait donc pas en mesure de vaincre cette contradiction. Cette contribution insiste sur la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'instaurer une lutte d\u00e9mocratique \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur m\u00eame du concept de tradition (mais \u00e9galement au niveau des droits que conf\u00e8re ce dernier) et d\u00e9nonce la c\u00e9l\u00e9bration peu critique de la tradition, en tant que culture authentique par essence, ainsi que la menace symbolis\u00e9e par le discours lib\u00e9ral des droits de l'homme, qui porte sur des questions \u00abd\u00e9passant ses limites\u00bb (de la tradition). Pour avoir un regard alternatif sur la \u00abtradition\u00bb en Afrique, celle-ci doit \u00eatre per\u00e7ue comme une nouvelle mani\u00e8re de concevoir la politique (qui implique que la d\u00e9mocratie ne peut \u00eatre mise \u00e0 \u00e9galit\u00e9 avec les droits de l'homme). La remise en question du discours sur les droits de l'homme doit inclure un engagement majeur envers la notion de tradition, \u00e0 partir de la perspective de la majorit\u00e9 africaine opprim\u00e9e.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra K. Danziger"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc44d305-2ab5-3aae-ab14-ccdcf8857cd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1156","pageStart":"1154","pagination":"pp. 1154-1156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231346","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bi-yu Chang"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251418","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eddfe30d-53ae-35cc-a0fa-2697e45e1959"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44251418"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"So close, yet so far away: imaging Chinese 'homeland' in Taiwan's geography education (1945-68)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44251418","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":13661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"After their defeat in the Chinese civil war, in 1949 the exiled Kuomintang (KMT) government fled to Taiwan and endeavoured to educate the baby-boomer generation on the island to become 'true Chinese'. Geography education was one of the fundamental vehicles used by the KMT to construct a Chinese identity and to create a longing for a Chinese motherland. This paper explores the ways in which a KMT-versioned 'sense of place' was constructed in elementary education during the period between 1945 and 1968, and investigates how the concepts of 'home' and 'homeland' were introduced and presented in school textbooks. By examining the geographic knowledge taught in Taiwan's elementary schools (both through the content of textbooks and the design of the curriculum), this paper investigates how the foundations of a China-centric identity were laid, and also the ways in which a Chinese homeland was constructed through geography education. However, in the process of reinforcing a sense of Chinese-ness, the relationship between the island and its inhabitants was sacrificed. The island became distant, insignificant and absent in school education and was turned into a meaningless flatscape. This paper argues that the rise of Taiwanese awareness in the 1990s has proven that an arbitrary construction of an inauthentic Chinese identity is both problematic and unsustainable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Schultz"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5aa4f3ee-27e2-306d-a3db-e72c87a362d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"377","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-377","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"And The Children May Know Their Names\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930969","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Warwick Anderson"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c58b2e1-07e9-3e5a-aee5-702ca3997b61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"506","pagination":"pp. 506-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"\"Where Every Prospect Pleases and Only Man Is Vile\": Laboratory Medicine as Colonial Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343814","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Hoogland"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08992851"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531006"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c83c333-2d60-3a00-b289-2ec5eeed51aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27735283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middleeastreport"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Report","issueNumber":"250","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Middle East Research and Information Project, Inc. (MERIP)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Thirty Years of Islamic Revolution in Rural Iran","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735283","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Imre Szeman"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.40.2.0252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca80fb15-a9be-3ad9-9086-da6071c9b347"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/discourse.40.2.0252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afterword: From Apartheid to Precarity: On the Politics of Separation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/discourse.40.2.0252","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4846,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard Aresu"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3818935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Polygonal and Arithmosophical Motifs: Their Significance in the Fiction of Kateb Yacine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818935","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia Young"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40403883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"671ad849-3acd-3c1a-b949-989fafd63532"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40403883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Havana up in Harlem: LeRoi Jones, Harold Cruse and the Making of a Cultural Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40403883","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":10282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the 1960s the Cuban Revolution was a seminal influence on black Americans. In July 1959, LeRoi Jones (later Amiri Baraka) and Harold Cruse traveled to Cuba, where they witnessed the Rebel Army becoming the new Cuban government. That trip shaped Cruse's and Jones' ideas about the relationship between First World protest and Third World revolution. Jones' participation in the Black Arts Movement and Cruse's ideas in Rebellion or Revolution? and The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual were informed by their comparison of African Americans to colonized peoples and their assertions that cultural production was central to the forging of oppositional identities. Consideration of their political and cultural activism lends critical insight into the U. S. Third World Left, a group of African-American, U. S. Latino\/a, and U. S. Asian writers, artists and activists who created cultural, material and ideological links to the Third World in order to challenge U. S. economic, racial and cultural hierarchies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roshni SENGUPTA"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17336716"},{"name":"oclc","value":"835227051"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005248007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"019de46f-fdb8-3ff8-8c97-b024fa7de7fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26916358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politeja"}],"isPartOf":"Politeja","issueNumber":"59","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Ksi\u0119garnia Akademicka","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"DAUGHTERS OF TRAUMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916358","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper attempts to delineate and focus on the common narrative thread running through subsequent cinematic treatises on the situation of women during the Partition, particularly those kidnapped and sexually violated during the vivisection. It proposes to construct a cultural and memorialized history of the Partition through a reading of mediated representations of literary engagements with the event, particularly the narrativization of the cinematic trope of the \u2018radicalized\u2019 Muslim and his involvement in the abduction of \u201cchaste\u201d Hindu women during the cataclysmic event. In doing so it considers films such as 1947-Earth (1999), Pinjar (2003), and Khamosh Pani (2003) as seminal films addressing female abductions during the Partition and the memorialization of trauma through cinema. The paper takes a feminist approach to addressing the question of the possession of the female body as the symbolic occupation of the nation.","subTitle":"WOMEN AS SITES OF NATIONALISTIC APPROPRIATION IN PARTITION CINEMA","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Mapolu"],"datePublished":"1982-06-12","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4371020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98f076f2-298e-3d02-a872-968424551abf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4371020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"24","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"984","pageStart":"981","pagination":"pp. 981+983-984","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Classes and Class Struggle in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4371020","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PATRICK BOND"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41507169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72565b6b-6fb1-3e56-82a1-058438e52b18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41507169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"South African People Power since the mid-1980s: two steps forward, one back","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41507169","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The advent and growth of a community-based democracy movement in South Africa in the late 1970s was decisive in destabilising the apartheid regime and paving the way to democracy. But in the quarter century since then progressive civil society has ebbed and flowed, reaching a peak in the early 1990s as an anti-apartheid force, retreating into a 'honeymoon period' with Nelson Mandela's ANC government during the late 1990s, and emerging as 'new social movements' around 1999. These latter included the Treatment Action Campaign, which won enormous victories in cheapening AIDS medicines, and urban community movements which advocated improved water I sanitation, electricity and housing. Within five years these movements had either won or begun to fade; more recent people power has taken the form of disruptive -but ultimately disorganized -township insurgencies. In cases where the popular movements allied with the Congress of SA Trade Unions, they made progress, but the latter's political allegiances to the ANC and the unions' ability to replace the ANC president in 2007 meant continuing gridlock for social and economic change, as society remained under neoliberal public policy domination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd W. 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Working against this outcome-oriented framework, which undermines the importance of children's social location and situated doings, this study employs an interactional, intersectional approach to examine how bilingual youth navigate multiple inequalities when they translate for their immigrant parents. Based on 72 interviews with Mexican American and Korean American youth, my findings demonstrate that these \"language brokers\" confront racialized nativism and develop different interactional strategies to negotiate power imbalances pertaining to age, race, and class in different institutional contexts. Paying particular attention to structural barriers that limit the effectiveness of these strategies while highlighting their considerable agency, I argue that children of immigrants do not simply become American. Rather, they strategically use their \"outsiderwithin\" position and perform \"American\" behaviors in an attempt to gain social citizenship rights. This study, therefore, calls attention to how the margin, as a social location, can create moments of resistance and empowerment.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerhard Grohs"],"datePublished":"1976-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159648","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159648"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Difficulties of Cultural Emancipation in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159648","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aaronette\u00a0M. 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Thompson"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc6d6e3f-411b-332f-9089-bba08e9116b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bringing the War Home: Anti-Globalization and the Search for \"The Local\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035625","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":11718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The North American anti-globalization movement's turn to local organizing at the beginning of the 21st Century was marked by a degree of uncertainty about what that move was thought to entail. Specifically, white middle-class activists often found it difficult to envision how they themselves occupied the space of \"the local.\" I argue that this difficulty can be attributed in large measure to the persistence of the universalizing and transcendental conceits of whiteness-especially for the middle class -and to a corresponding belief in the gross particularity of the Other. Interrogating both the binary opposition between \"global\" and \"local\" in activist discourse and the fetishistic elevation of \"community\" to the position of privileged ground of struggle, I propose that meaningful solidarity between white activists and the communities they designate as \"local\" demands that white activists become both willing and able to map the specificities of their own situated experiences of globalization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL SHARPE"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f05ebada-a5c7-33ad-ade5-ecc7946fb392"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Globalization and Migration: Post-Colonial Dutch Antillean and Aruban Immigrant Political Incorporation in the Netherlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790741","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9881,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[52807,52873]],"abstract":"For much of its colonial history, the Neterlands experienced little contact with its island possessions in the Caribbean. Subsequent Dutch policy was formulated in the shadow of the Netherlands primary concern with its prosperous colony of Indonesia. The 1985 closing of the oil refineries in Aruba and Curacao, Netherlands Antilles and Aruba's \"status aparte\" in 1986 triggered a mass migration from those Dutch \"overseas countries\" to the Netherlands. These recent migrations of thousands of Dutch post-colonial citizens have added to the Dutch reevaluation of its colonial past and debates about its multicultural democratic future.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3318067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5901f997-e191-3d61-b6c8-f84fdb29e901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3318067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"240","pagination":"pp. 240-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social 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Green"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d959761-035c-3290-bed7-b0edc730406d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23274343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"818","pageStart":"815","pagination":"pp. 815-818","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23274343","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":1286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tabassum Fahim Ruby"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f854e67-693e-3c4c-a349-06e752b0bc4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Discourses of Shari\u2018a<\/em> Law and Muslim Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776839","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12549,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[39044,39129]],"abstract":"In 2005, the National Film Board of Canada released the documentary Sharia in Canada, which had been produced in the midst of the massive legal and public discussions following Ontario\u2019s Islamic Institute of Civil Justice\u2019s announcement that, under the Ontario Arbitration Act, Muslims could resolve their family disputes through faith-based arbitration. The documentary offers a remarkable case study in the intersections of imperialist and sexist discourses, in its characterizations of arranged marriages, intolerance of homosexuality, lapidation for adultery, domestic violence, and the practice of the hijab to the identity politics of multiculturalism. This article unpacks these intersections by focusing on critics of faith-based arbitration as featured in the documentary\u2014critics who overwhelmingly self-identified as Muslims or as descendents of Muslims. Their arguments divide women into two categories: enlightened subjects, who can make informed decisions, and oppressed subjects, who need to be rescued. While such representations feed into longstanding Orientalist discourses, they also indicate a shift in those same tropes\u2014for now it is brown women and brown men who shall save brown women from brown men. From this perspective, the article underscores the ways insiders participate in the colonial narrative and afford a powerful voice to Islamophobic and civilizational projects.","subTitle":"A Critical Reflection on Sharia in Canada<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Jean Corbett"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3829051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3829051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"681","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-681","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"IN THE INTERVAL\": FRANTZ FANON AND THE \"PROBLEMS\" OF VISUAL REPRESENTATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686152","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":11170,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61982,62050]],"Locations in B":[[45095,45163]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen Douglas"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.111.5.1638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2b5fe61-7645-3b13-a345-b3a990fc071f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/ahr.111.5.1638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1639","pageStart":"1638","pagination":"pp. 1638-1639","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/ahr.111.5.1638","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VITTORIO H\u00d6SLE"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2960782f-36d9-3a2d-8f28-b0fb90009301"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Third World as a Philosophical Problem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970692","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":12619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice St. Pierre"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d15434b5-8e6e-378d-ae54-7abe01198c3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"503","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-503","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RACE, THE POLITIICAL FACTOR AND THE NATIONALIZATION OF THE DEMERARA BAUXITE COMPANY, GUYANA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861579","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[13241,13307]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ntandazo Sifolo","Portia Pearl Siyanda Sifolo"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2056564X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"924347354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"695ad8c0-45e6-3428-b5bd-cfa644e13441"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26664052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriforeaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Blind Spots to Reaping Tourism Dividend","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664052","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article highlights strategic factors that ought to be taken into consideration in order for Africa to reap dividends that are offered by the tourism sector. Noting that 2017 was the international year of tourism for sustainable development, the article purports that apart from various challenges that continue to face the continent, there are some tourism sector blind spots that require constant monitoring. In this context, illicit financial flows, evolution of technology and global risks are identified as some of the blind spots that require the attention of tourism policy makers. This article utilises text analysis with particular emphasis on thorough scrutiny and heavy reliance on key developmental reports produced by credible institutions like the World Bank, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) as well as reports from the United Nations and the African Union (AU). The idea is to draw inferences from data to systematically identify key messages pertaining to tourism development in Africa. The revelation thereof is that while it is necessary to nurture the tourism sector for long-term benefits, it is equally imperative to understand potential blind spots to the tourism sector and their impact on the intended developmental contribution of the sector in Africa.","subTitle":"Key Strategic Developmental Lessons for Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. O. Nzelibe"],"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40397037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54355747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-214707"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5394d85a-ef9c-36b8-949b-a56d9497d74a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40397037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudmanaorga"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies of Management & Organization","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology","Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"The Evolution of African Management Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40397037","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":3177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Max Dorsinville"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66bf97ae-bbcc-367f-8688-18c940d56e45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marxism and Literature in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484222","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TRUNG T. LE"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27011870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006216709"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7eab5310-ceb1-3c53-973c-33fb84e0613f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27011870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Janet Leake (on behalf of the estate of Edmund Bojarski, copyright holder)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"An Appeal to the Other in Us","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27011870","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":18063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Now is the opportune moment to trace a middle path between Chinua Achebe's criticism of Conrad and Heart of Darkness for being insensitive to the issues of race and Conradians' defense of the author and his works as being otherwise. This article examines the intimate oppositions between critics like Achebe and defenders of Conrad, as well as the desire within Marlow to respond to the blank otherness in him when he confronts the people in Africa. I unearth the signs of response and responsibility, and advocate a mode of recuperative reading that sutures the ostensibly unbridgeable gap between the self and the other. This mode of reading can serve to retain the values of a work of art that nevertheless finds itself entangled within the flow of history and the matrix of politics. Achebe's essay \"An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness\" is an ethical response and a responsible call for further attention to the emptied space marked by the West's othered victims. Achebe's call, later in life, is for the recognition that this space populates more than just Conrad's beings (dis)colored by his artistic imagination. And in Heart of Darkness, Marlow's is a vague but useful response to the immense blankness of the Other that commands from him a responsibility to speak, first to save himself, and by so doing, to admit that the Other out there and in him are saving him. Through an intimately close reading of the novella, I argue that Marlow, in transforming himself into a quasi-native, lives on; the Other as such bypasses denegation and emerges into consciousness.","subTitle":"Intimate Oppositions between Chinua Achebe and Conrad's Heart of Darkness<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daryl B. Harris"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8034629c-aa3b-37d6-a226-5b48b5af6e44"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Logic of Black Urban Rebellions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784739","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura E. Donaldson"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20736846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c8b9c5f-0ee0-3b17-8274-cb6511dbd068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20736846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Noah Meets Old Coyote, or Singing in the Rain: Intertextuality in Thomas King's Green Grass, Running Water","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20736846","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tedros Abraham"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbfa536c-10c6-3236-812b-520b7541b706"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Fresh form to suit myriad ideas in Beyene Haile's \"Heart-to-Heart Talk\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758402","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8305,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[380817,380884]],"Locations in B":[[31037,31105]],"abstract":"This article probes the production of Beyene Haile's play Weg'i Libi ('Heart-to-Heart Talk') to contextualize some seemingly provincial contemporary concerns that in fact are relevant throughout Africa. Written in one of the Eritrean languages, Tigrinya, Weg'i Libi (2008) comes with a fresh form, which includes various elements from western classical to other various modern and African traditional performance forms examining a myriad of national and continental contemporary concerns such as migration, power consolidation, aesthetics, and oral tradition, which hinder it from immediate production. Though written by a prominent author, unlike government-sponsored productions with professional actors, this play was staged by amateur university students after it was rejected for professional production.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio Luciano de Andrade Tosta"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c99d69a3-6c28-308a-85c3-fb4be22399f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"MODERN AND POSTCOLONIAL? OSWALD DE ANDRADE'S \"ANTROPOFAGIA\" AND THE POLITICS OF LABELING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803487","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":3637,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DENNIS M. RATHNAW"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23319450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00654019"},{"name":"oclc","value":"616280295"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010234996"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83e3f4b4-7721-3790-9e46-77301dc32530"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23319450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrimusi"}],"isPartOf":"African Music","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"International Library of African Music","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE EROTICIZATION OF BIKUTSI: RECLAIMING FEMALE SPACE THROUGH POPULAR MUSIC AND MEDIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23319450","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":8134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre W. Orelus","Noam Chomsky"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982202","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5ede28e-5b6a-30fe-971f-468b2534c145"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982202"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What Should Be the Role of Intellectuals in the Twenty-First Century?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982202","volumeNumber":"458","wordCount":5554,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a0a7df9-f30f-37cf-b3fb-bec949991bb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Presidential Address the African Crisis: The Way out","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524496","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tunde Zack-Williams"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003357","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d73630b6-2e22-3d83-9ff6-77a4403f6f1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42003357"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"137","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"498","pagination":"pp. 498-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003357","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":1234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mar Gallego Dur\u00e1n"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af4e4090-d086-3a36-84e4-19668d8bea97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24757742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24757742","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":2498,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[14961,15001]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernest J. Wilson, III"],"datePublished":"1975-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c356debd-4c08-3fe3-b9cb-27590a6fa125"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"The Energy Crisis and African Underdevelopment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185540","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":12928,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anders Strindberg","Mats W\u00e4rn"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2005.34.3.23","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a6917e8-3873-3fa1-ba64-3937a7a194bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2005.34.3.23"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Realities of<\/span> Resistance<\/span>: Hizballah, the<\/span> Palestinian<\/span> Rejectionists, and al<\/span>-Qa'ida<\/span> Compared<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2005.34.3.23","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9058,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[8575,8660]],"abstract":"In the U.S.-led \u201cglobal war on terrorism,\u201d al-Qa'ida and its militant affiliates have come to serve as both symbol and explanatory matrix for a range of disparate militant groups in the Middle East and beyond. Included among these are the Palestinian rejectionist factions and the Lebanese Hizballah, despite the fact that their roots, worldviews, and agendas are inimical to those of al-Qa'ida. This article argues that the scholarly and political effort to lump together diverse resistance groups into a homogenous \u201cterrorist enemy,\u201d ultimately symbolized by Osama Bin Laden, is part and parcel of neocolonial power politics whereby all \u201cnative\u201d struggles against established power structures are placed beyond reason and dialogue. The authors contend that while the Palestinian rejectionist factions and the Lebanese Hizballah may be understood as local representations of the anticolonial \u201cthird worldist\u201d movement, al-Qa'ida and its affiliates operate within a \u201cneo--third worldist\u201d framework, a dichotomy that entails tactical and strategic differences, both political and military. The article draws on an extensive series of author interviews with leaders and cadres from Hizballah and the Palestinian factions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ASHLEY DAWSON"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543185","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16ac599d-194f-3288-aa5d-90ae7ba9fae4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24543185"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EDWARD SAID'S IMAGINATIVE GEOGRAPHIES AND THE STRUGGLE FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543185","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Can viable links be established between environmental justice activists from communities in climate chaos-threatened locations in the Global North and communities of what the environmental historian Ramachandra Guha calls \"ecosystem people\" in the Global South? In order for such transnational links to be forged, new forms of empathy and solidarity need to be fostered that extend our political imaginary beyond the dominant geographic scales of the past\u2014the city, nation, or region\u2014without collapsing into a sweeping and abstract planetary universalism. Such a process of rewriting will entail an ability to see established geographies as the product of social struggles, as ways of imagining the world in order to cement or to contest hegemony. Geography, as Edward Said consistently argued, never simply involves describing the world, but rather is an inescapably political practice of world-making through representation. Considering Said alongside figures such as Antonio Gramsci and C. L. R. James, the essay argues that Edward Said's work on what he called \"imaginative geographies\" blazed a path for the political and theoretical project that confronts the movement for climate justice today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Traveling Theory: Ngugi's Return to English","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821053","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vijay Prashad"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bb5d3b0-33a3-3f22-9f52-9c21884cc09c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afro-Dalits of the Earth, Unite!","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524727","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Un groupe de chercheurs africains am\u00e9ricains et dalits travaillent actuellement sur un projet portant sur les similarit\u00e9s dans l'histoire et la vie des peuples africains et dalits. Des chercheurs tels que Ivan van Sertima, Runoko Rashidi, V. T. Rajshekar et d'autres forment ce r\u00e9seau occulte de litt\u00e9rature afro-dalite. Le Projet afro-dalit cherche \u00e0 avancer une origine commune pour les africains et les dalits dans le but d'appeler \u00e0 la solidarit\u00e9 politique dans le pr\u00e9sent. 'Afro-Dalits of the Earth, Unite!' ('Afro-dalits de la terre, unissez-vous!') examine la structure du savoir universitaire afro-dalit, en fait une critique puis offre une approche alternative aux interconnections pr\u00e9sentes dans la vie africaine et indienne. Plut\u00f4t qu'\u00e0 un d\u00e9terminisme \u00e9pidermique, cet article appelle \u00e0 une approche polyculturelle du caract\u00e8re cosmopolite de notre vie. A group of African American and Dalit scholars are at work on a project on the similarities in the histories and lives of African and Dalit peoples. Scholars such as Ivan van Sertima, Runoko Rashidi, V. T. Rajshekar, and others form this submerged network of Afro-Dalit literature. The Afro-Dalit project seeks to posit a common origin for Africans and Dalits as a means to call for political solidarity in the present. \"Afro-Dalits of the Earth, Unite!\" explores the framework of Afro-Dalit scholarship, critiques it, and then offers an alternative approach to the interconnections in African and Indian life. Rather than endorsing epidermal determinism, this article calls for a polycultural approach to the cosmopolitanism of our lives.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nihal Perera"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26165885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14730952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50320696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250707"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1642f554-f1a6-3c5d-913e-58d929275948"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26165885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"planningtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Planning Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Social sciences - Human geography","Political science - Politics"],"title":"PEOPLE'S SPACES: FAMILIARIZATION, SUBJECT FORMATION AND EMERGENT SPACES IN COLOMBO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26165885","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In between and besides official plan-making, ordinary people produce more quantity and variety of spaces than the authorities and professionals. They both adapt to and adjust extant spaces for their daily activities and cultural practices, thus producing lived spaces out of abstract space. Yet we know very little about these basic space-making processes. This article aims to acknowledge and 'understand' the processes of familiarizing space employed by ordinary people to create milieus that can support their everyday activities and cultural practices. Relying on subjects' vantage points of critique, it examines the space-making processes of four social actors in late 19th-century Colombo, then Ceylon, now Sri Lanka.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Rowe"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20527623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f368d04a-b196-3d3a-953f-a027ad720973"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20527623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Salvagism: Choreography and Its Discontents in the Occupied Palestinian Territories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20527623","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simone Bull"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639260","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eab5d007-fdf3-37fd-afa2-9333c48dfd50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23639260"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"519","pageStart":"496","pagination":"pp. 496-519","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"'THE LAND OF MURDER, CANNIBALISM, AND ALL KINDS OF ATROCIOUS CRIMES?' Maori and Crime in New Zealand, 1853\u20141919","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23639260","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A novel longitudinal profile of 'Maori crime' from 1853 to 1919 is presented. It constitutes an additional step towards understanding how the indigenous Maori have come to be over-represented in New Zealand's post-colonial criminal justice system. The profile is explained in terms of culture conflict, literal normlessness and pursuit of the illusion of state control. The British colonial government also criminalized Maori whenever they 'rebelled'. In the statistics presented here, gross violations of human rights and the criminalization of Maori independence are reflected in four distinct episodes: around the mid-1860s, 1881, 1897 and 1911. The analysis points to conflict and critical criminology as the principal paradigms through which the 'crimes' of the powerful colonial state converted Maori into criminals.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Naomi Rogers"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576424","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1235f7bd-c22b-386e-8afc-648ce37b5393"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26576424"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1693","pageStart":"1692","pagination":"pp. 1692-1693","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576424","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":1994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erling Eng"],"datePublished":"1967-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3849765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018702X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616103"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82788d1b-604d-3e32-acc0-239e0cba9a61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3849765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hudsonreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Hudson Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"472","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-472","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Hudson Review, Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond Psychiatry?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3849765","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynda Ng"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7093ea4e-758d-33f6-8076-3995739c8f37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cannibalism, Colonialism and Apocalypse in Mitchell's Global Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540792","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yuan Shu"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec964a06-e503-339e-9ebc-6733f02dc5f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Globalization and \"Asian Values\": Teaching and Theorizing Asian American Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115247","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay investigates the question of \"Asian values\" posed by students in Asian American literature classes. In interrogating \"Asian values\" in both the Asian and American contexts, it argues that they reflect the impact of American capitalism upon Asian America and, as critic Nguyen suggests, the interests of Asian Americans in participating in American capitalism. This understanding of \"Asian values\" enables us to have a glimpse of the changing reality of Asian America and the heterogeneity and multiplicity of Asian American cultural production. This situating of \"Asian values\" also convinces students that \"Asian values\" are not politically neutral but culturally loaded in the interests of the nation-state, dominant culture, and individuals. This examination of \"Asian values\" finally leads us to reconsider what critic Palumbo-Liu calls \"progressive humanism\" and understand racial and cultural differences in non-essentialist and historical materialist terms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1975-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45313326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113530"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad46a9a7-b1c3-3b6f-ae74-f83c9154b61c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45313326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currenthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Current History","issueNumber":"406","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["History","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Readings on Food and Energy: Part I","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45313326","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":1514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. Said"],"datePublished":"1975-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1314778","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263419"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af9aa638-14b4-36a0-8f50-e3150a6c911d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1314778"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullmidwmodelang"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Text, the World, the Critic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1314778","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Delbanco"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24517539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02782324"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d57093d3-f4ba-3a31-b0a2-785034b0f097"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24517539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conjunctions"}],"isPartOf":"Conjunctions","issueNumber":"51","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Conjunctions","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mere Oblivion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24517539","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David B. Carter"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26296879","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"244204101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f578e4e0-7e2e-3862-aabd-061a42ee1060"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26296879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persponterr"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Terrorism","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Terrorism Research Institute","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Terrorist Group and Government Interaction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26296879","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Much progress has been made in the literature on terrorism and political violence over the last decade or more. More specifically, the proliferation of cross-national quantitative empirical work on terrorism has generated numerous advances and insights. While the volume of published work is impressive and the key findings are helpful to both scholars and policy-makers, much remains to be done. This paper argues that future work in this area can be improved with progress in several key areas. Interaction between a violent group and the government it targets is central to much of our theory. However, the theoretical implications of this interaction are not fully exploited with current data and prominent methods of analyzing it. Suggestions are provided that are intended to aid future researchers in addressing this point and in exploiting synergies between cross-national quantitative work and qualitative case study work.","subTitle":"Progress in Empirical Research","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lillian Corti"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colonial Violence and Psychological Defenses in Ferdinand Oyono's \"Une vie de boy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821096","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Temitope Adefarakan"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fb693d2-430e-317a-b2f6-5ff60b515025"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"CHAPTER TWO: (Re) Conceptualizing 'Indigenous' from Anti-Colonial and Black Feminist Theoretical Perspectives: Living and Imagining Indigeneity Differently","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980883","volumeNumber":"379","wordCount":11736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James W. Vander Zanden"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4105733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da4e5f0d-9ae4-3ef2-b46f-cde90bf7c65d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4105733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Sociological Studies of American Blacks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4105733","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":10505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The paper reviews sociological work dealing with American Blacks. In the past five decades three themes have largely dominated the work: (1) a description and documentation of Black disadvantage within American life; (2) an attack upon racist notions of Black biological inferiority; and (3) an interpretation of Black disadvantages as derived from White prejudice and discrimination. The work has been largely static and non-processual in character, derived largely from the structure-function model of society. The paper calls for the employment of multiple models and for emphasis upon a dynamic, processual model of social life. The concepts of network and field appear to offer much promise.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mehmet Gurses"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zj0p.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472131006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f78e8422-b7b1-3942-82db-625f306f85a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvh4zj0p.13"}],"isPartOf":"Anatomy of a Civil War","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"149","pagination":"149-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","International Relations","European Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zj0p.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["kurdish","turkey","conflict","accessed","political","kurdish question","civil wars","political science","ethnic","peace research"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE J. SEFA DEI","ALIREZA ASGHARZADEH"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23767242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"297","pagination":"pp. 297-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Faculty of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Power of Social Theory: The Anti-Colonial Discursive Framework","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767242","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper introduces the anti-colonial discourse as a guiding framework for forming alliances and partnerships among anti-oppression activists in the academia and the larger society. To this end, it builds upon insights from narratives of \"indigeneity\" and traditions of anti-racism theory and praxis. Thanks to the spaces created by Marxist, feminist, postcolonialist, and deconstructionist struggles, the anti-colonial discourse seeks to reclaim a new independent space strongly interconnected with and heavily interlocked to those other spaces. This paper illustrates the interconnectivities, similarities, and dissimilarities between this new anti-colonial space and the spaces created by those other rich traditions. Its aim is to envision a common zone of resistance in which the oppressed and marginalized groups are enabled to form alliances in resisting various colonial tendencies. Ce papier pr\u00e9sente le discours anti-colonial comme une structure directrice pour former des alliances et des partenariats parmi les activistes d'anti-oppression dans le monde universitaire et dans la plus grande soci\u00e9t\u00e9. Ainsi, il s'\u00e9labore sur des id\u00e9es faites \u00e0 partir de r\u00e9cits sur la th\u00e9orie et la pratique des traditions anti-racistes des \"indig\u00e8nes\". Gr\u00e2ce aux points forts cr\u00e9\u00e9s par Marx, par les f\u00e9ministes, par les post-colonialistes et par les luttes contre les d\u00e9molisseurs, le discours anti-colonial cherche \u00e0 r\u00e9clamer une nouvelle place ind\u00e9pendante fortement li\u00e9e et r\u00e9ellement encr\u00e9e \u00e0 ces autres points. Cet \u00e9crit illustre les interconnections, les ressemblances et les dissemblances entre ce nouveau point anti-colonial et les points cr\u00e9\u00e9s par ces autres riches traditions. Son but est de pr\u00e9voir une zone commune de r\u00e9sistance pour les groupes opprim\u00e9s et marginalis\u00e9s incapables de s'unir contre les tendances coloniales diverses.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carrie Noland"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4621059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Red Front\/Black Front: Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire and the Affaire Aragon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621059","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Anne Boittin"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843598","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3835529f-9f1f-3b3f-8060-6205474b44b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843598"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black in France: The Language and Politics of Race in the Late Third Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843598","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses notes generated by France's surveillance of African and Afro-Caribbean migrants during the interwar years to analyze the use black men made of racial terms such as n\u00e8gre and mul\u00e2tre. Although developed before the twentieth century, such racial language was infused with new political, social and cultural meaning after World War I. Workers and intellectuals, often at odds with each other, developed a race consciousness that was both a means of uniting in response to colonialism and a reaction against those within their communities who did not appear anti-imperial enough in their politics. Arguing that racial language expressed the nuances and range of black men's political and ideological stances with respect to the French Empire, this article traces the meanings granted to race and the important role in cultivating their significance played by members of organizations such as the Union des Travailleurs N\u00e8gres.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victor A. Olorunsola","Ramakris Vaitheswaran"],"datePublished":"1970-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022037X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33fc8856-a231-36cf-bbaa-960c506a72c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4189767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdevearea"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Developing Areas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"College of Business, Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections Prompted by Franz Fanon's \"The Wretched of the Earth\": A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189767","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1841,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[351325,351434]],"Locations in B":[[9256,9356]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. L. Chanock"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/721938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"296","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ambiguities in the Malawian Political Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721938","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":11176,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801425752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa4dcecb-2e73-310f-9908-1c9be86c48e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.4"}],"isPartOf":"Writing in Limbo","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Introduction:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Caribbean literature and culture are haunted by the presence of the \u201cdiscoverer\u201d and the historical moment he inaugurates. For if Columbus\u2019s \u201cdiscovery\u201d of the Americas and his initial encounter with the peoples of the New World have paradigmatic value in the European episteme because they usher in a brave new world, a world of modernity and modernist forms, as Tzvetan Todorov assumes in my first epigraph, these events also trigger a contrary effect on the people who are \u201cdiscovered\u201d and conquered. And while Eurocentric scholars have been eager to claim the conquest of the Americas as a radical and exemplary","subTitle":"Modernism and the Origins of Caribbean Literature","keyphrase":["caribbean","caribbean writers","modernism","colonial","cesaire","caribbean modernism","discourse","history","glissant","creolization"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Matambo","Ndubuisi Christian Ani"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45195121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8698493c-73b3-3664-9940-10560f82f7a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45195121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ENDORSING INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA'S AFFIRMATIVE ACTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45195121","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Th\u00e9r\u00e8se Migraine-George","Ashley Currier"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474069","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f539142-75ed-3b96-b984-f9357014bd75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44474069"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Querying Queer African Archives: Methods and Movements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44474069","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6732,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[433712,433905],[434792,434928],[435419,435751]],"Locations in B":[[23148,23341],[23395,23531],[23539,23870]],"abstract":"Rather than attempting to recover African same-sex practices from the past, we probe the kinds of discursive protocols that can be implemented to uncover queer African archives, defined as methods and movements. In this process, we reconceptualize a transnational queer archive that remains vigilant against dominant taxonomies and actively connected to its political present and future. Because queer African subjects are (dis) located at the junction of multiple sociocultural traditions and geographies, we approach the queer African archive as both an elusive and dynamic site of knowledge production that calls for cross-disciplinary methodologies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lindsay Pentolfe Aegerter"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ad1f9ff-17e5-3434-8903-831efc92b94d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Pedagogy of Postcolonial Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112303","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4130,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[24916,24956]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Horvath"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20072830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"907","pageStart":"879","pagination":"pp. 879-907","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Solzhenitsyn Effect\": East European Dissidents and the Demise of the Revolutionary Privilege","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072830","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":14097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"For much of the modern era, revolution served as a justification for gross violations of human rights. The sources of this \"revolutionary privilege\" are to be found in the historical experience of the Western world. Both the Jacobin tradition and Marxism contributed to the readiness of many Western intellectuals concerned with human rights to turn a blind eye to the atrocities of the Bolshevik revolution, its Stalinist aftermath, and a variety of Third World regimes. During the 1970s, East European dissidents, citizens of revolutionary societies, challenged this double-standard. The ensuing \"Solzhenitsyn Effect\" contributed not merely to the \"human rights boom\" of the era, but also to the emergence of a new, radical humanitarianism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M\u00f3nica G. Ayuso"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a73aa03b-27e0-3e41-bb11-02dc3c3f5b4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41350920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"How Lucky for You That Your Tongue Can Taste the 'r' in 'Parsley'\": Trauma Theory and the Literature of Hispaniola","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350920","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID MARIO MATSINHE"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfdf25a3-343b-3f7b-b2e8-752c7c17e189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41300231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa's Fear of Itself: the ideology of \"Makwerekwere\" in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300231","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9324,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[49300,49355]],"abstract":"Since the collapse of apartheid, the figure of Makwerekwere has been constructed and deployed in South Africa to render Africans from outside the borders orderable as the nation's bogeyman. Waves of violence against Makwerekwere have characterised South Africa since then, the largest of which broke out in May 2008 in the Johannesburg shantytown of Alexander. It quickly spread throughout the country. The militants were black citizens who exclusively targeted African foreign nationals, with some witnesses reporting grotesque scenes of sadistic behaviour. So far these violent spurts have been described as xenophobia, overlooking the history of colonial group relations in South Africa. From the perspective of this article, the history of colonial group relations cannot be overlooked, for the relations between citizens and noncitizens are extended shadows of this history. I argue that, rather than rushing to characterise these relations as xenophobia, we should factor in the history of colonial group relations and the extent to which the post-apartheid ideology of Makwerekwere and South Africa's 'we-image' vis-\u00e0-vis the rest of Africa may bear the imprints of this history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kay Saunders"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25168380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223344"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49726313"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238437"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4a893da-9844-3339-801a-afb12941751f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25168380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpacihist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Pacific History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Journal of Pacific History Inc","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"'Troublesome Servants': The Strategies of Resistance Employed by Melanesian Indentured Labourers on Plantations in Colonial Queensland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25168380","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Coker"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/722143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/722143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"312","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The United States and National Liberation in Southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/722143","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":5822,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA CHRISMAN"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j6gj.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780719058271"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0784ec51-28a0-3397-b4f0-df2a8ffaa87e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155j6gj.16"}],"isPartOf":"Postcolonial contraventions","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"175","pagination":"175-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j6gj.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["africa","chrisman laura","london","parry benita","london routledge","postcolonial theory","durban south","colonial discourse","biblio","university"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ondrej Ditrych"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c00e29f-5c8b-36e7-a5d5-2b4e832ef300"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26302247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From discourse to \"dispositif\": States and terrorism between Marseille and 9\/11","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302247","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article is a historical study of how states have articulated statements about terrorism since the 1930s; under what conditions these statements have been articulated; and what effects the discourses made up of these statements have had on global politics. This includes the constitutive role of the present discourse on what is posited as a terrorism dispositif. The inquiry is inspired by Foucault's historical method, and comprises the descriptive archaeological analytic focused on the order of the discourse (including basic discourses in which the terrorist subject is constituted) and the genealogical power analysis of external conditions of emergence and variation of discursive series, whose treatment benefits also from Carl Schmitt's concept of the nomos.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rajive Tiwari"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"985ea01b-ac89-3740-8fd4-1bdb330b754e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4418030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"1277","pageStart":"1269","pagination":"pp. 1269-1277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"A Transnarrative for the Colony: Astronomy Education and Religion in 19th Century India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418030","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Early in the colonial period, the orientalist presence in the administration ensured that traditional subjects and knowledge retained their earlier predominance in the educational sphere. However, by the mid-19th century, as colonialism witnessed its own growing assertion and power, it was the anglicists, and their belief in the superiority of western knowledge, who came to play a more dominant role. This article analyses how the debate between orientalists and aglicists was played out in the sphere of science education. With the evangelical influence too coming to play a key role, this debate took on a more complex note. The colonial transnarrative now equated Christianity with western astronomy and Hinduism with puranic lore. Thus philosophy and pedagogy ably assisted the formulation of colonial education policy, that soon saw a neglect of traditional institutions and subjects.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohammad-Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1x07z89.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745399096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f2eaab7-9069-3b61-adf8-e5e9ba5f763f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1x07z89.15"}],"isPartOf":"A Theory of ISIS","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"219","pagination":"219-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1x07z89.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["islamic","islamic state","abu ghraib","terrorism","bin laden","london","london hurst","torture","york times","cambridge"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Sacks"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f37d361-fa77-3399-a4e4-6e3e8c54e998"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Latinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949662","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":14520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avram Alpert"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f60dbe0f-3136-3ddf-9ed9-4521cfe99e63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Prehistories of the Postcolonial: On Philosophy, Politics, and Polemic in Timothy Brennan's Borrowed Light<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.168","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Timothy Brennan's Borrowed Light is a wide-ranging critique of contemporary postcolonial theory by way of a return to intellectual history. Brennan counter-poses a tradition of institutional commitment, systemic thought, and polemic in Vico and Hegel to the interest in subjectivity, fragments, and language games found in Nietzsche and Bataille. He suggests that though the latter has been ascendant since the late 80s, the former school of thought in fact has been the key to overturning colonialism in the past and continues to be so today. This review critically appraises Brennan's challenging work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwin A. Brett"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cce8146-a7db-3718-aec8-8bdbc0c4866d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dependency and Development: Some Problems Involved in the Analysis of Change in Colonial Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391131","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925022247"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02b226aa-57a2-3db3-84fd-a49583e86b6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt15r3xcb.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"283","pagination":"283-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt15r3xcb.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":31476,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","became","faisal","french","nobel prize","minister","politician","english","educated","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHANIE CLARE"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43304252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38c2beaf-f15b-30a0-b5ba-8225420f0a3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43304252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Shaw","Malcolm J. 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It has been acclaimed as stylistically Mungoshi's most innovative creative work. Critics Emmanuel Chiwome (1996) and Vitalis Nyawaranda (2005) have each drawn attention to the use of the technique of 'stream of consciousness' in the novel. Other than merely asserting that Mungoshi borrowed this technique from the Irish writer James Joyce (1916), no critics attempt to vigorously analyze this technique in relation to the history that made its use possible in a colonial context in Rhodesia. Furthermore, no single study has attempted to understand the 'content' of this technique in the overall ideology of narrative in Ndiko Kupindana Kwamazuva. This essay argues that questions of history, ideology and narrativity are central in giving Ndiko Kupindana Kwamazuva a fractured form that ruptures the modes of representation of classical realism typical of pre- and post-independence Zimbabwean fiction. The essay suggests that the 'content' of 'stream of consciousness' in the novel is manifest in its capacity to authorize a multiplicity of meanings from ideologically contrasting, conflicting and sometimes decentred perspectives all promoting alternative narrative voices.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Parker"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20557521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19dcf86c-30fb-3d9c-b924-26b7364ac965"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20557521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Coleman African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sources and Themes in the Art of Obiora Udechukwu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337897","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Martin Rich"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Students and Legal Obedience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589394","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Crystal Bartolovich"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f80e621f-3511-3bb0-912d-1acfb7228d56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Figuring the (In)Visible in an Imperial Weltstadt: The Case of Benjamin's Moor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354678","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17843,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan Carlos Coden Fermin"],"datePublished":"2021-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644332","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1243315016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc512371-f669-3a0f-9d63-94bb6845b1c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48644332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alonjfiliamer"}],"isPartOf":"Alon: Journal for Filipinx American and Diasporic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies at UC Davis","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"What Emerges From a \u201cRuined World\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644332","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":11703,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[136839,137057]],"Locations in B":[[20001,20217]],"abstract":"For canonical Philippine writer Nick Joaquin, the American occupation rendered insurrectionary action unfeasible. Thus, Joaquin is often read as lionizing the Spanish period in comparison. I challenge such readings to argue that Joaquin\u2019s engagement with the Spanish past reflects a search for the conditions of possibility for revolution. I examine how, in three of his works, Joaquin commendably depicts nonnormative, counter-hegemonic examples of a Philippine historical and revolutionary subject. Though the tenability of his representations remains delimited by a cosmopolitan mestizo episteme, I argue that nonetheless, his efforts represent an attempt to transcend the limitations of his own positionality.","subTitle":"The Dueling Philippine Humanisms of Nick Joaquin","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Connolly"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43855401","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe3a9c4b-902f-3dab-9261-5c699af0f216"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43855401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ef\u00fan: \"White Love\" and Modernity in Guinea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43855401","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11833,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[69511,69551]],"abstract":"This paper analyzes the award-winning novel Ef\u00fan (1955), by Liberata Masoliver. The novel, a romance-adventure set in Equatorial Guinea, stages a cosmopolitan, white identity in the form of the Catalan protagonists Ana Ribera and Carlos Isart. The narrative harnesses racial discourse, as well as the signs of technological advancement and modernity, to portray Spaniards as ideal colonizers in Guinea. Significantly, Ef\u00fan while in line with much of the ideological values espoused by National Catholicism, contains subtle counter discourses that construct upper-class Catalans as ideal national subjects. The novel's preoccupation with transgressive sex and miscegenation demonstrates an anxiety regarding the \"racial consequences\" of the colonial project: the destruction of European, white, identity. Ef\u00fan's unease about mixed race, dangerous mestizos, and insinuations of Catalan racial purity all form an integral part of Masoliver's education of desire. Este ensayo analiza la premiada novela Ef\u00fan, escrita en 1955 por Liberata Masoliver. La novela, rom\u00e1ntica y de aventuras, situada en la Guinea Ecuatorial, presenta una identidad cosmopolita, blanca, a trav\u00e9s de los protagonistas catalanes Ana Ribera y Carlos Isart. La narrativa emplea un discurso racial, as\u00ed como los indicios de avances tecnol\u00f3gicos y la modernidad para representar a Espa\u00f1a como una naci\u00f3n colonizadora ideal. Aunque Ef\u00fan refleje los valores ideol\u00f3gicos del Nacionalismo Cat\u00f3lico, contiene discursos sutiles que representan a los catalanes de clase alta como ciudadanos ejemplares. La preocupaci\u00f3n con el sexo transgresivo y el mestizaje demuestra una ansiedad con respecto a las \"consecuencias raciales\" del proyecto colonial: la destrucci\u00f3n de una identidad europea y blanca. La inquietud que se expresa en Ef\u00fan sobre el mestizaje, el peligro representado por los mestizos y la sugerencia de una pureza racial catalana, forman una parte integral de la educaci\u00f3n del deseo ideada por Liberata Masoliver.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley E. Gunterman"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3700917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00650684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4937c886-ffa9-35d9-bf67-a8d4cccd4943"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3700917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procacadpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"The Academy of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Bibliography on Violence and Social Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3700917","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chidi Amuta"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c69736c6-8e1b-3d81-895b-3e329c411a98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nigerian Civil War and the Evolution of Nigerian Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484662","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"L'article \u00e9tudie l'\u00e9volution de la litt\u00e9rature nig\u00e9riane dans le contexte de la guerre civile et de ses suites. L'auteur montre comment plusieurs th\u00e8mes litt\u00e9raires importants se rapportent aux issues soulev\u00e9es par la guerre. L'analyse insiste particuli\u00e8rement sur la litt\u00e9rature post\u00e9rieure au milieu des ann\u00e9es 1960, notamment un certain nombre d'oeuvres dont la guerre est le th\u00e8me principal. La conclusion qui se d\u00e9gage fait appara\u00eetre que m\u00eame quand ils n'ont pas \u00e9t\u00e9 personnellement impliqu\u00e9s dans le conflit, les auteurs abordent des sujets qui constituaient les principaux enjeux de la guerre civile.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelson Maldonado-Torres"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71243d4e-9446-3818-8e0f-ecdabda7a1dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Searching for Caliban in the Hispanic Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758818","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shashi Tharoor"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27800322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10752846"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630442"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008228632"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3af995a-f0d6-33c9-ab30-408ed82a6aa2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27800322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globgove"}],"isPartOf":"Global Governance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Lynne Rienner Publishers","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Messy Afterlife of Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27800322","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":2099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.38","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13882fca-ae12-3e7d-ab69-2f0bec1c30c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.38"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: Toward a Close-Up on Teza<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.38","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John H. Bracey"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.3.0434","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abe64897-22fb-3341-91ed-9714b1e828f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.3.0434"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ST. CLAIR DRAKE, THE ROOSEVELT YEARS: REFLECTIONS AND ANALYSIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.98.3.0434","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":5681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctvbqs2zk.22","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f9aff89-d240-38af-bf17-208809861fbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1163\/j.ctvbqs2zk.22"}],"isPartOf":"Ordinary Jerusalem, 1840-1940","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"280","pageStart":"262","pagination":"262-280","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Municipal Jerusalem in the Age of Urban Democracy:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctvbqs2zk.22","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What is the relationship between the act of writing urban history and historical processes themselves? How can Jerusalemites, Beirutis, or Baghdadis reclaim their urban pasts when their archives have been confiscated by occupation forces, destroyed by civil war and looted during European, American, and Israeli occupations?\u00b9 Can the urban fabric of Aleppo and other Syrian towns, bombed to smithereens by the Syrian government over the past seven years, be rebuilt without the institutional memory of their municipalities? What role might urban history play in national reconciliation once the twin tyrannies of Assadist and ISIS rule have ended? Can Palestinian and","subTitle":"On the Difference between What Happened and What Is Said to Have Happened","keyphrase":["ottoman","municipal","beirut","late ottoman","palestinian","hanssen","urban democracy","jens hanssen","municipal jerusalem","colonial"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dina Al-Kassim"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442731","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5253006c-799c-3e1a-9c01-70f636284fed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20442731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","issueNumber":"24","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The shantytown: Uku hamba'ze! (To Walk Naked)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20442731","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Chan"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26593316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21966923"},{"name":"oclc","value":"914477313"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38fc4612-2e92-39f1-9fca-40c0a88873a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26593316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eriseurointestud"}],"isPartOf":"European Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Verlag Barbara Budrich","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Limits of Guilt and Correctness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26593316","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5167,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"The Postcolonial Metropole and Postcolonial Literature","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachid Acim"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/islastudj.5.1.0026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23258381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821214105"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273840"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eea4c23e-5ad3-378e-b365-deb68feeec8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/islastudj.5.1.0026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islastudj"}],"isPartOf":"Islamophobia Studies Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Islamophobia, Racism and the Vilification of the Muslim Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/islastudj.5.1.0026","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Is Islamophobia a new phenomenon? Are Islam and the Judeo-Christian West still hateful of and hostile toward each other? Do Muslim women with veils and headscarves constitute a threat to the West's secular and liberal values? What has fueled the sudden rhetoric of Islamophobia in the United States of America and Europe? How does Anglophone print and digital media report pressures, prejudices and discriminatory practices against male and female students? How do Western media cover the social exclusion of the Muslim diaspora? These questions need a thoughtful coverage and concentration in academia. It is believed that most of the grievous and painful stories experienced, for example, by Muslim immigrants\u2014 be they legal or illegal, asylum seekers, refugees, or whatsoever, still do not find a room in scholastic research. This paper utilizes the narrative research method to study and probe into the problem of Islamophobia, the vilification of and racism against Muslims in the United States of America and Europe. The usage of human stories, people's personal experiences and narrative accounts or recounts of Islamophobic incidents (real or imagined) as the basis of this inquiry is particularly suitable for research because it can help understand the status quo of Muslim diaspora in the United States of America and Europe. Narrative data are retrieved from five major US-news publications and press elite (e.g., Foreign Policy, The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today and Chicago Tribune). The analysis of these data can be used to improve the situation of Muslim diaspora and their interaction with non-Muslims all over the world. The mediums cited above have been chosen because they are the prime source of information for intellectuals and policy-makers. Decidedly, they construct and build up ample epistemologies on Islamophobia and other epiphenomena of racism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anirudha Gupta"],"datePublished":"1982-07-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4371156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b447b99f-23c7-3a73-aa3b-2ca3607d4c58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4371156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1207","pageStart":"1205","pagination":"pp. 1205-1207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Approaches to Study of African Political Systems: Peeling off the Wrapping","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4371156","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper attempts to identify and describe the various possible approaches to the study of African political systems. Arguing that neither a purely formalist approach (in terms of written laws and constitutions) nor a structuralist approach (based on the proclaimed ideologies) can serve as reliable guides to probe the direction and functioning of the political systems currently prevailing in Africa, the paper considers three alternative approaches: the personal-psychological, the anthropological and the Marxist or neo- Marxist. It finds that a class analysis of African political process helps one to cross the barriers earlier raised by the development school. As most African economies function as subordinate units in the network of international finance and market systems, the dynamics of inter-relationship between the material base and the political superstructure can only be analysed in the context of the impact of external forces on Africa's internal developments.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manfred Stanley"],"datePublished":"1967-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022037X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e9b028-538d-30cd-a43a-1d3a76a76a6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4189440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdevearea"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Developing Areas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"College of Business, Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development in Some Not-so-Easy Lessons: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4189440","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arnold Rampersad"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ed04196-e953-3878-b448-55affcb9b45d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44321685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE UNIVERSAL AND THE PARTICULAR IN AFRO-AMERICAN POETRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321685","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kunle Amuwo"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbfb8b03-d6e3-39c5-a7b4-a2ddde9815f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43658286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transition Planning in Nigeria: A Critique of the Military-Civil Transiting Variant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658286","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A cause en grande partie de la nature des processus \u00e9conomiques et politiques dans lesquels l'\u00e9lite nig\u00e9riane op\u00e8re, un gouvernement uniquement civil est devenu une aberration. La nature et les caract\u00e9ristiques du paysage politique du pays ont \u00e9t\u00e9 rendus plus coercitifs et violents par le militarisme et la militarisation. Pour l'essentiel, ces caract\u00e9ristiques de l'Etat sont rest\u00e9s les m\u00eames pendant toute la p\u00e9riode post-coloniale. Parce qu'il oublie de tenir compte de ces facteurs, le Nigeria va encore rater l'occasion de planifier correctement sa transition du r\u00e9gime militaire au r\u00e9gime civil. En rejetant \u00e0 l' arri\u00e8re-plan ce qui est important et en n'insistant que sur la structure du gouvernement et de la typologie du personnel \u00e0 savoir la m\u00eame cohorte de personnel politique, les m\u00eames parties avec les m\u00eames nomenclatures, on a l'impression que tout le processus n'est que du vieux vin mis dans des bouteilles renouvel\u00e9es. Qui plus est, la t\u00e2che de mise en place d'un nouvel ordre politique incombe aux militaires, un groupe int\u00e9ress\u00e9 plus au maintien de l'ordre socio-\u00e9conomique actuel. Les exp\u00e9riences pass\u00e9es ont montr\u00e9 que les r\u00e9sultats les plus probables qui puissent sortir de cette transition sont que les militaires vont placer leurs candidats aux postes politiques.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26098675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14730952"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50320696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250707"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"652d2012-02f4-3a87-9fd0-83ac6e48881b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26098675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"planningtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Planning Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"210","pagination":"pp. 210-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"Using southern theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26098675","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"AbstractRecent work in social science challenges managerial assumptions about homogenous knowledge domains, and traces the effects of a world economy of knowledge structured by the history of colonialism and current north-south global inequalities. The differentiation of knowledge rests on the very different histories and situations of metropolitan, creole, colonized and post-colonial intelligentsias. Different knowledge projects have been constructed in global space, which feed back on our understanding of knowledge itself. Less recognized, but increasingly important, are uses of southern and postcolonial perspectives in applied social science, in areas ranging from education to urban planning. Some implications of these applications are discussed: southern theory is not a fixed set of propositions but a challenge to develop new knowledge projects and new ways of learning with globally expanded resources.","subTitle":"Decolonizing social thought in theory, research and application","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ray Black"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c1cbd31-f082-3b62-9fac-a28079da3ce8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Satire's Cruelest Cut: Exorcising Blackness in Spike Lee's \"Bamboozled\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069009","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":4183,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ella Robinson"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44201876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00282529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beb56b51-5bbb-3f2b-918d-9c80e4c42cc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44201876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"negrhistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Negro History Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Impact of Traditional Black Western Thought On Twentieth Century Afro-American Ideals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44201876","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Canfield"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72677764-70dc-378b-94f2-075de16eff09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Such Continuous Tragedies\": The Theatralization of Mexico in the Master-Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389409","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin Gaines"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0aa7674f-9f10-31bf-9c25-5df68a8239a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30041861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"554","pageStart":"546","pagination":"pp. 546-554","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Not Ready for \"Nation Time\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30041861","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":3270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jongwoo Han","L. H. M. Ling"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2600817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"International Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Authoritarianism in the Hypermasculinized State: Hybridity, Patriarchy, and Capitalism in Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600817","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14303,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Authoritarianism in East Asia's capitalist developmental state (CDS) is highly gendered. A hybrid product of Western masculinist capitalism and Confucian parental governance, CDS authoritarianism takes on a hypermasculinized developmentalism that assumes all the rights and privileges of classical Confucian patriarchy for the state while assigning to society the characteristics of classical Confucian womanhood: diligence, discipline, and deference. Society subsequently bears the burden of economic development without equal access to political representation or voice. Women in the CDS now face three tiers of patriarchal authority and exploitation: family, state, and economy. Nevertheless, new opportunities for democratization may arise even in the hypermasculinized state. We suggest: (1) emphasizing substantive, not just procedural, democratization, (2) exercising a maternalized discourse of dissent, and (3) applying hybrid strategies of social mobilization across states, societies, cultures, and movements. South Korea during the 1960s-1970s serves as our case study.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guy Martin"],"datePublished":"1982-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa and the Ideology of Eurafrica: Neo-Colonialism or Pan-Africanism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160304","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret A. Majumdar"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.15","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fb4389f-1fb5-394d-b9f6-e936828637b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.15"}],"isPartOf":"Postcoloniality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"239","pagination":"239-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcoloniality:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14133,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"After examining various aspects of the long history of France\u2019s relationships with her erstwhile or present colonies, the point has been reached where we need to pose the question of what the specifically French dimension to postcoloniality might be or, indeed, whether there is a French dimension to postcoloniality. At the heart of these questions is the matter of the continuing relevance of postcoloniality as an influence on these relationships, as a factor of explanation of some of the issues on the present agenda or as part of any strategy for the future.There is a general consensus in the","subTitle":"The French Dimension?","keyphrase":["majumdar text3","postcolonial","postcolonial theory","french dimension","global","former","french","countries","former colonies","imperialism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Nathanson"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13824554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41570577"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a834c55-3185-33d4-879f-84cf15536aff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25656269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jethics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Ethics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Patriotism, War, and the Limits of Permissible Partiality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25656269","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines whether patriotism and other forms of group partiality can be justified and what are the moral limits on actions performed to benefit countries and other groups. In particular, I ask whether partiality toward one's country (or other groups) can justify attacking enemy civilians to achieve victory or other political goals. Using a rule utilitarian approach, I then (a) defend the legitimacy of \"moderate\" patriotic partiality but (b) argue that noncombatant immunity imposes an absolute constraint on what may be done to promote the interests of a country or other group involved in warfare or other forms of violent conflict.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amalia L. Cabezas"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94ad8c46-a8e2-3902-bdaa-daebbcca0200"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27648095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Tropical Blues: Tourism and Social Exclusion in the Dominican Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648095","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Tourism development is the backbone of many Caribbean economies, and its advocates argue that it contributes to sustainable development, the alleviation of poverty, and integration into the globalized economy. Scholars and activists, in contrast, point to tourism-related ecological deterioration, profit leakage, distorted cultural patterns, rising land values, and prostitution. They suggest that tourism perpetuates existing disparities, fiscal problems, and social tensions. Examination of tourism development in the Dominican Republic indicates that it deskills and devalues Dominican workers, marginalizing them from tourist development and sexualizing their labor. The majority of people are relegated, at best, to positions of servitude in low-paid jobs in the formal sector, unemployment, or unstable activities in the informal sector that include the commoditization of sexuality and affective relations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharon Stichter"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035232","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"065bd09b-d2bf-3ea6-9cae-0b4bc6b3861b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035232"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"157","pagination":"pp. 157-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"IMPERIALISM AND THE RISE OF A 'LABOR ARISTOCRACY' IN KENYA, 1945-1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035232","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James P. Comer","Paula J. Giddings","Richard A. Goldsby","William Chester Jordan","Randall Kennedy","David Levering Lewis","Albert J. Raboteau","Ronald Walters"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2998935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80b06d75-75de-3e01-b12e-04320c3654bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2998935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Books That Changed the Lives of Black Scholars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2998935","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY M. DUNCAN-ANDRADE","ERNEST MORRELL"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d213742e-3934-3e76-8bb5-7b429cb6358e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Contemporary Developers of Critical Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979868","volumeNumber":"285","wordCount":10724,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[608007,608131],[608450,608585]],"Locations in B":[[47800,47924],[48062,48209]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susie Tharu"],"datePublished":"1996-07-27","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4404443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb721e02-d07a-3dac-b36e-7eae6d7e9024"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4404443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"2021","pageStart":"2019","pagination":"pp. 2019-2021","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critique of Hindutva-Brahminism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4404443","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":3310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Pithouse"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41791397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7abeba18-cd03-3388-8970-c0ae94aabc23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41791397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"102","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41791397","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MRINALINI CHAKRAVORTY"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6cf5c43e-df73-3c77-aad7-1c6d7ec69069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41289257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Worlding the Nation and Its Ghosts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41289257","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael J. C. Echeruo"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/161270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"684","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-684","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Edward W. Blyden, W. E. B. Du Bois, and the 'Color Complex'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161270","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Burton","Richard Lowenthal"],"datePublished":"1974-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/643370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f26c08a-d5ca-3844-9f18-b654e3c1cb8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/643370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The First of the Mohegans","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/643370","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Historians have tended to treat Indian-Puritan relations in New England as though the Indian people were simple reactors to Puritan behaviors. Specifically, the behavior of the Mohegan Sachem, Uncas, has been interpreted in various ways, none of which, however, take into account the ongoing political system amongst the New England Indians. By applying simultaneously the principles of anthropology and history, the authors suggest an interpretation for Uncas' actions which reveals him as an active initiator of the Pequot War in 1637 for political purposes entirely within the realm of Indian social structure.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria L\u00facia Mill\u00e9o Martins"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5029136f-6b0d-3fc4-a1a4-257bb836fe4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26795149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dionne Brand and Afua Cooper","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26795149","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":6988,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[441943,442085]],"Locations in B":[[799,941]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Diaspora and Continuities Shaped by National and Regional Cultures","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J. Sefa Dei"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf04c73d-e165-33f7-8f3b-cfea95e8fd6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"846","pageStart":"823","pagination":"pp. 823-846","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Suahunu,\" the Trialectic Space","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414677","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9879,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[62162,62212]],"abstract":"This article discusses the concept of \"suahunu\" as the \"trialectic space\" and highlights its key principles and ideas as part of the project of pioneering new analytical systems for understanding Indigenous communities. The concept is borrowed from the lexicon of the Akan people of Ghana, with the embedded meaning that if one is seriously about learning, one will come to know and acquire knowledge and act responsibly.The article also raises lessons for the ways we produce and validate knowledge for social action and practice. In the discussion, the ideas embodying the \"trialectic space\" (e.g., body-mind-soul interconnections, culture-society-nature interface, sacredness of activity, spiritually centered space, ancestralism, embodied connection, decolonization, and multicentricity) are fleshed out, pointing to the implications for revisioning schooling and education globally for contemporary learners.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernest J. Wilson III"],"datePublished":"1978-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eea7b4c0-2cb9-3abf-84ed-88f90ad93237"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"CRISIS OF RESOURCES: IN UNDERDEVELOPED AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066460","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Martin"],"datePublished":"1971-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159461","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":1454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. H\u014dk\u016blei Lindsey"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45407132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25754270"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e046018-0e51-30e1-8948-2cb967281c89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45407132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indipeopjlawcult"}],"isPartOf":"The Indigenous Peoples' Journal of Law, Culture, & Resistance","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indigenous Peoples' Journal of Law, Culture, & Resistance","sourceCategory":["Law","Area Studies","American Indian Studies","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Reclaiming Hawai'i: Toward the Protection of Native Hawaiian Cultural and Intellectual Property","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45407132","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":15912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ST. CLAIR DRAKE"],"datePublished":"1975-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a50ee220-3258-3ed6-b03d-4dc3ad23af8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE BLACK DIASPORA IN PAN-AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066541","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Ama Onwuzurike"],"datePublished":"1987-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aec53ad8-5eab-3796-b583-73ca6db1e557"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"229","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-229","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black People and Apartheid Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784552","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Messay Kebede"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb062141-3152-3957-ad56-86440f7f95b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Development and the Primacy of Mental Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482722","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The drastic and manifold difficulties Africa faces suggest that something more than mere delay, unfavorable conditions or misguided policies is obstructing the goal of development. The suggestion calls for a serious reflection on the experience of colonialism, but in a way different from those studies tracing African predicaments back to colonial or imperialist misdeeds. This does not mean colonialism is not the real culprit, just that such a stance is necessary in light of the fact that many studies have not focused on the real source of Africa's ills: the phenomenon of mental colonization. Those scholars who bring out the detrimental impact of mental alienation either fail to totally emancipate their views from Western constructs, or cannot produce an alternative to Eurocentrism. This paper discusses the contributions of African philosophical debates to the elucidation of the negative impacts of colonial discourse on Africa's development effort. It draws attention to the limitations of the contributions and proposes an alternative conception vindicating the view that the great task of freeing the African mind from Eurocentric constructions takes priority over the design of development policies. Les nombreuses et graves difficult\u00e9s que traverse l'Afrique laissent penser qu'il existe d'autres \u00e9l\u00e9ments qu'un simple retard, des conditions d\u00e9favorables ou encore des politiques inadapt\u00e9es, faisant obstacle au d\u00e9veloppement. Cela appelle \u00e0 une s\u00e9rieuse r\u00e9flexion sur l'exp\u00e9rience du colonialisme, qui soit diff\u00e9rente des autres \u00e9tudes, qui, elles, affirment que les probl\u00e8mes de l'Afrique seraient caus\u00e9s par les abus coloniaux et imp\u00e9rialistes. Cela ne signifie pas que le colonialisme n'est pas le r\u00e9el coupable, mais plut\u00f4t, que la plupart des \u00e9tudes n'ont pas analys\u00e9 les v\u00e9ritables sources des maux dont souffre l'Afrique, notamment le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne de la colonisation mentale. Les universitaires qui cherchent \u00e0 d\u00e9montrer l'effet n\u00e9gatif de l'ali\u00e9nation mentale n'arrivent pas \u00e0 se d\u00e9tacher des visions occidentales, ou alors ne parviennent pas \u00e0 d\u00e9finir une alternative \u00e0 l'eurocentrisme. Ce papier analyse la contribution des d\u00e9bats philosophiques africains \u00e0 une meilleure compr\u00e9hension de l'impact n\u00e9gatif du discours colonial sur les efforts de d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique. Il pr\u00e9sente les limites de cette forme de contribution et propose une conception alternative selon laquelle, la mission consistant \u00e0 lib\u00e9rer le mental des Africains des conceptions eurocentristes aurait pr\u00e9s\u00e9ance sur la conception de politiques de d\u00e9veloppement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jesse Mills"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9203763-774e-319d-ac6b-94486c945c3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43497488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Somali Social Justice Struggle in the U.S.: A Historical Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43497488","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The relatively recent trans-Atlantic crossing of Somali refugees into the United States (1993-present) should be viewed within the context of centuries of African trans-Atlantic crossings to the Americas and the legacy of black freedom struggle that has emerged within those flows of people, resources, and ideas. This framework allows for a re-examination of U.S. racial hegemony\u2014an impossible negotiation Somali refugees face between, on the one hand, hyper-masculinized racial constructs of Somalis as violent threats, and, on the other hand, a generational wedge based on internalized disavowal of African Americans. Somali anti-racist progressive action can re-frame the racial and ethnic identification of Somali refugees in the U.S. and simultaneously challenge the living historic legacy of race discrimination. This article roots this analysis in contemporary forms of anti-black racism that Somalis experience in the U.S., and frames their recent labor organizing (in meat processing and taxicab industries) and progressive movement building struggles in terms of race, class, and gender liberation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jason E. Glenn"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019782","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f95682a6-7ef0-3941-b264-75250a431d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019782"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A SECOND FAILED RECONSTRUCTION? THE COUNTER REFORMATION OF AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES: A TREASON ON BLACK STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019782","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":18475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herme J. Mosha"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3099236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49631317"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae649135-378d-30c6-b5c4-a84ef90f4638"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3099236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Role of African Universities in National Development: A Critical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3099236","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John R. Hall"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eeb492b2-08cd-3150-a1a8-0ceb5cfda0e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1080","pageStart":"1078","pagination":"pp. 1078-1080","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231306","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Paul Farley"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2003.15.3.421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bfbc943-8bf2-3763-9b49-caedb29ae467"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2003.15.3.421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Behind the Wall of Sleep","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2003.15.3.421","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5899,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[20351,20417]],"abstract":"Abstract. This article is a response to Maria Aristodemou's brilliant book, Law & Literature: Journeys from Her to Eternity (Oxford University Press, 2001).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Doyin Coker-Kolo","William K. Darley"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57921834-76fe-3948-b7aa-a0589c249447"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45198797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Education - Formal education"],"title":"THE ROLE FOR AFRICAN UNIVERSITIES IN A CHANGING WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198797","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manning Marable"],"datePublished":"1980-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7deb143-1a57-33d6-864f-8e471465b808"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE FIRE THIS TIME: THE MIAMI REBELLION, MAY, 1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067932","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin W. Winks"],"datePublished":"1969-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3826104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3826104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"410","pagination":"pp. 410-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"A Burden of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3826104","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen B. Bennett","William W. Nichols"],"datePublished":"1971-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26279100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"587498e8-022d-3be1-b970-afb71ea30fe0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26279100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"VIOLENCE IN AFRO-AMERICAN FICTION: AN HYPOTHESIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26279100","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3604,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103001,103059]],"Locations in B":[[1388,1449]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea Rapini"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26394875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43802224"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008233977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34e65779-60b9-3579-bed0-3904c29459c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26394875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"389","pagination":"pp. 389-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Can Peasants Make a Revolution? Colonialism, Labour, and Power Relations in Pierre Bourdieu\u2019s Algerian Inquiries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26394875","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":14474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyses the Algerian inquiries of Pierre Bourdieu. It begins by retracing the most pervasive, medium- and long-term interventions of French colonial power in Algerian society: the introduction of capitalism and the internment of civilians in the centres de regroupement. Next, it outlines the social subjects studied by the young agr\u00e9g\u00e9 of philosophy and his representation of labour. Subsequent sections deal with shifts in the public stance of Bourdieu regarding the revolutionary propensity of these people. On this tricky testing ground, Bourdieu engaged with and critically confronted the ideas of Germaine Tillion and Frantz Fanon. His position is reviewed from a historical-philological approach in order to set the texts in their temporal and spatial contexts, establish parallels and\/or divergences, and verify the effects such comparisons produced. The conclusions emphasize the richness and originality of Bourdieu\u2019s inquiries given the era in which they were made and highlight, in light of the recent global reorientation of labour history, some of the vital viewpoints expressed on the origins of capitalism in the colony. Cet article analyse les \u00e9tudes alg\u00e9riennes de Pierre Bourdieu. Il commence par retracer les interventions les plus r\u00e9pandues \u00e0 moyen et \u00e0 long terme de la puissance fran\u00e7aise coloniale en Alg\u00e9rie: l\u2019introduction du capitalisme et l\u2019internement de civils dans les centres de regroupement. L\u2019auteur analyse ensuite les sujets sociaux que le jeune agr\u00e9g\u00e9 de philosophie \u00e9tudie et la repr\u00e9sentation qu\u2019il fait des travailleurs. Les parties suivantes portent sur les changements dans la position publique de Bourdieu concernant la propension des travailleurs \u00e0 faire la r\u00e9volution. Sur ce terrain d\u2019essai d\u00e9licat, Bourdieu examine les id\u00e9es de Germaine Tillion et de Frantz Fanon, en les abordant dans une perspective critique. Sa position est \u00e9tudi\u00e9e selon une approche historicophilosophique pour replacer les textes dans leur cadre temporel et spatial, \u00e9tablir des parall\u00e8les et\/ou des divergences et v\u00e9rifier les effets que ces comparaisons produisent. Les conclusions soulignent la richesse et l\u2019originalit\u00e9 des recherches de Bourdieu pour l\u2019\u00e9poque \u00e0 laquelle elles furent faites et mettent en valeur, \u00e0 la lumi\u00e8re de la r\u00e9cente r\u00e9orientation globale d\u2019histoire du travail, certains points de vue essentiels qui y sont exprim\u00e9s sur les origines du capitalisme dans la colonie. Dieser Beitrag analysiert Pierre Bourdieus Untersuchungen zu Algerien. Einleitend werden die tiefgreifendsten mittel- und kurzfristigen Interventionen der franz\u00f6sischen Kolonialmacht in die algerische Gesellschaft rekonstruiert: die Einf\u00fchrung des Kapitalismus und die Inhaftierung von Zivilisten in den centres de regroupement. Anschlie\u00dfend werden die sozialen Subjekte skizziert, die der junge agr\u00e9g\u00e9 in der Philosophie untersuchte, ebenso seine Darstellung der Arbeiterklasse. Die darauf folgenden Abschnitte befassen sich mit den Ver\u00e4nderungen in den \u00f6ffentlichen \u00c4u\u00dferungen Bourdieus hinsichtlich der revolution\u00e4ren Neigungen dieser Menschen. Auf diesem verf\u00e4nglichen Untersuchungsterrain setzte sich Bourdieu kritisch mit den Ideen Germaine Tillions und Frantz Fanons auseinander. Seine Position wird von einem historisch-philologischen Standpunkt aus betrachtet, damit die Texte in ihre zeitlichen und r\u00e4umlichen Kontexte gestellt, Parallelen bzw. Unterschiede bestimmt und die von solchen Vergleichen gezeitigten Effekte \u00fcberpr\u00fcft werden k\u00f6nnen. Abschlie\u00dfend wird die Reichhaltigkeit und Originalit\u00e4t betont, die Bourdieus Untersuchungen im Vergleich zu anderen Texten der Zeit auszeichnet, und es werden, mit Blick auf die j\u00fcngere globale Neuausrichtung der Geschichte der Arbeit, einige der wesentlichen Perspektiven Bourdieus auf die Urspr\u00fcnge des Kapitalismus in der Kolonie hervorgehoben. En este texto se analizan los planteamientos de Pierre Bourdieu sobre Argelia. Comienza por poner recordar las intervenciones m\u00e1s persiasivas a medio y largo plazo del poder colonial franc\u00e9s en la sociedad argelina: la introducci\u00f3n del capitalismo y el internamiento de civiles en los centres de regroupement. A continuaci\u00f3n se subrayan los sujetos sociales estudiados por el joven agr\u00e9g\u00e9 de Filosof\u00eda y su representaci\u00f3n de trabajo. Las secciones siguientes tratan de los cambios en la esfera p\u00fablica de Bourdieu tomando en consideraci\u00f3n la propensi\u00f3n revolucionaria de las personas que la compon\u00edan. En este delicado \u00e1mbito de an\u00e1lisis Bourdieu se acab\u00f3 enfrentando con las ideas defendidas por Germaine Tillion y Frantz Fanon, planteando una confrontaci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica. Su posici\u00f3n se analiza desde una perspectiva hist\u00f3rico-filol\u00f3gica para situar los escritos en sus contextos temporales y espaciales, estableciendo paralelismos y\/o divergencias, y comprobando los efectos que resultan de tales comparaciones. Las conclusiones permiten enfatizar la riqueza y originalidad de los planteamientos de Bourdieu para una \u00e9poca en la que estos fueron hechos y pone de relieve, a la luz de la reciente reorientaci\u00f3n global de historia del trabajo, alguno de los puntos de vista vitales expresados sobre los or\u00edgenes del capitalismo en la colonia.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LILY HOANG"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26616776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623685"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008214150"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23def642-4ee2-3968-97ac-bd61183bd6f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26616776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mississreview"}],"isPartOf":"Mississippi Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Southern Mississippi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"On Recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26616776","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":5891,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Valente","Margot Backus"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27742946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7e62ec5-4196-3e9f-87bd-448cc33bd66f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27742946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"545","pageStart":"523","pagination":"pp. 523-545","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Metaphysics"],"title":"Each of Us Is a Council House: Talking to Spirits, Psychoanalysis, and Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.4.2.0141","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article attempts to address the sites of friction, antagonism, and productivity that define the intersections between Freudo-Lacanian psychoanalysis and Indigeneity. In particular, it attends to the ways in which psychoanalysis\u2019 cosmological formations are settler colonial and necessitate specific forms of violence that become visible in the ways that language and the unconscious are theorized. This article then examines the ways in which Indigenous forms of healing and language\u2014as seen in the Din\u00e9 society as well as in curanderismo, a Mexican folk healing\u2014might provide evidence of a different cosmological basis for therapeutics. However, this article does not seek to produce another aporia. Rather, it shows that when Indigenous spirituality comes to replace psychoanalytic metaphysics it produces new ways of thinking not only the violence of Native genocide and decolonization, but psychoanalysis itself.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Finseth"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476964","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4924ff99-65b3-3302-bbec-3819789dc669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476964"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"David Walker, Nature's Nation, and Early African-American Separatism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476964","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9949,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[22344,22404]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jay Murphy"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre on Cuba Revisited: The 'Unhappy Consciousness' of the Marxist Sartre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512665","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9933,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25065176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e50773bc-3273-3722-ad89-caed08244b75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25065176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Thinking the Colonial Encounter in Zimbabwe in the Early Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25065176","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An orthodox nationalist scholarship has always defined the colonial encounter between the Ndebele and the early Rhodesian settlers in the dichotomous terms of domination and resistance pioneered by T.O. Ranger in the 1960s. In this article, I seek to transcend this traditional conceptualisation of the colonial encounter by recognising mimicry, hybridity, negotiation and alienation as the central aspects of the encounter between the coloniser and the colonised. I employ recent theoretical work to historically problematise the colonial encounter, in order to understand both the strategies used by the early Rhodesian settlers to indigenise themselves and the dynamics of Ndebele political consciousness in the period 1898-1934. Scholars have not seriously engaged with this period of Zimbabwean history, seeing it only as a simple pre-history of Zimbabwean mass nationalism. This article will open this historical period to interpretations based on the agency of the colonised and the coloniser in the construction of colonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mara Mattoscio"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5600284-0bb5-3064-863c-7bf2a07946dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44987327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"117","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"what's in a face?: Sara Baartman, the (post) colonial gaze and the case of \"V\u00e9nus Noire\" (2010)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44987327","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The story of Sara Baartman, who was brought to Europe in 1810 to be exhibited as the erotic-exotic freak 'Hottentot Venus', is arguably the most famous case study of the scientific validation of (gendered) racism. Her scientific examination and post-mortem dissection by Georges Cuvier, who looked for an alleged connection between the Khoisan and the orangutan, have been the object of famous critical works (Gilman, 1985; Haraway, 1989; FaustoSterling, 1995), but also exposed her to the unpalatable fate of becoming the 'quintessential' figure of intersecting gender and racial oppressions. This paper deals with Abdellatif Kechiche's film V\u00e9nus Noire (2010), which interestingly rearticulates the (in) famous narrative in unexpected ways. Shot by a male director who is also a postcolonial subject, the film exposes the performativity not only of gender and racial identities, but also of science theorisation, while at the same time raising the issue of whether exposing a violent male colonial gaze on a heavily exhibited woman can contribute to a counter-knowledge of her experience or rather risks reiterating the historical violence. The startling dynamic between the portrayed abuse and Kechiche's peculiar filmic strategies is the crucial focus of this paper. While Sara's body is continually exposed and violated, V\u00e9nus Noire relies on her face, shot in recurrent extreme close ups, as a haunting presence potentially exceeding violence. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze and F\u00e9lix Guattari's (1987 [1980]) account of the close up, I explore how Kechiche's take on Sara's face builds a strong connection with the spectator's extra-filmic dimension. As a case of what Deleuze and Guattari call a 'reflective face', such close ups invest the viewer with the ethical responsibility of being complicit in the othering practices of (post)colonial times. V\u00e9nus Noire thus manages to engage the spectator's own corporeal awareness of violence, and calls attention to the persisting exploitation of sexual and racial colonial tropes in the contemporary world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amos Oz"],"datePublished":"1983-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f1e4e4a-4a00-38ed-8451-9fac30a56d0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTERVIEW WITH A DISTINGUISHED ISRAELI","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790098","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn Meskell"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3889120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265268"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efe732ae-1759-3f31-9beb-e9842fece412"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3889120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutafriarchbull"}],"isPartOf":"The South African Archaeological Bulletin","issueNumber":"182","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"South African Archaeological Society","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Recognition, Restitution and the Potentials of Postcolonial Liberalism for South African Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3889120","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":7842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper challenges a straightforward notion of multiculturalism as always offering an inherently positive way forward in thinking about South African heritage, specifically in its guise for negotiating difference in cultural and legal spheres. The promises and pitfalls of a multicultural approach to South African heritage are outlined with specific case studies. Countering claims for blanket multiculturalism, I argue that the tenets of political liberalism, particularly in this context, postcolonial liberalism, provide appropriate frameworks from which to rethink the South African context and the ensuing negotiations with indigenous stakeholders. It is argued that ethical researchers are those who willingly entertain multiple stakeholders, are consistent in their communications, collaborative in their research, public in their findings, and embracing of recognition, restitution and mutual benefit.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rach\u00e8le-Jeanie Delva"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26790804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdcbd875-e6aa-368d-b507-1686fba76dc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26790804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"\u201cKrey\u00f2l Pale, Krey\u00f2l Konprann\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26790804","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Lek\u00f2l Kominot\u00e8 Mat\u00e8nwa (LKM), a small island school in the Mat\u00e8nwa La Gon\u00e2ve community, is engaged in the reform of the Haitian education system and the legitimization of the Creole language. Through a culturally relevant Creole mother-tongue pedagogy coupled with cultural awareness learning model, primary school children are encouraged to develop their Haitian identity. A qualitative research was conducted with diverse participants from LKM and other two other schools\u2014first graders, sixth graders, and their educators\u2014to understand the model. Through observations, interviews, a focus group, and prolonged stay in the field, this research aimed to offer a comparative and explanatory view on the impact of this combined learning model on identity.","subTitle":"Haitian Identity and Creole Mother-Tongue Learning in Mat\u00e8nwa, Haiti","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alicia Ostriker","AnaLouise Keating","Beverly Guy-Sheftall","Callie Crossley","Courtney E. Martin","Ellen Feldman","Jennifer Camper","Kate Clinton","Katie Grover","Layli Maparyan","Yi-Chun Tricia Lin","Marjorie Agosin","Martha Nichols","Moya Bailey","Robin Becker","Rochelle Ruthchild"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07381433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626931"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265287"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36066325-c8f2-3562-9b0c-97a8a3588f58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26433215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womesrevibook"}],"isPartOf":"The Women's Review of Books","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Old City Publishing, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"To the Reader in Chief...","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26433215","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6108,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Some of our favorite feminists recommend books for the next US president's reading list","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LARS-ANDERS BAER"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13854879"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf32f100-bea7-34b6-b980-180d65f1ab84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24675300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jminogrourigh"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on Minority and Group Rights","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Rights of Indigenous Peoples \u2013 A Brief Introduction in the Context of the S\u00e1mi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675300","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred Block"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf837d3-6336-3828-9425-6c632c23e11f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1114","pageStart":"1113","pagination":"pp. 1113-1114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231324","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadi Tofighian"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25165460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Jos\u00e9 Nepomuceno and the Creation of a Filipino National Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25165460","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":13785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The essay examines the contribution made by Jos\u00e9 Nepomuceno to the Philippine quest for independence and the raising of national consciousness. By portraying Filipino views, lives and traditions, Nepomuceno was instrumental in creating an imagined community in a colonial society. He created a national consciousness by writing the history of the national with his camera; films that were viewed by people from all social strata across the Islands. The films of Nepomuceno spread Tagalog language and culture, and gradually made Filipino national culture converge with Tagalog culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivone Margulies"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3439b02d-7762-30cd-a308-0d6c81144885"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44016935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A \"sort of psychodrama\": Cinema verit\u00e9 and France's self-analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016935","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5174,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[31060,31120]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ilan Kapoor"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60244555-8d1a-35fb-a538-ba03a15d8ed1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24522167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"1143","pageStart":"1120","pagination":"pp. 1120-1143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Psychoanalysis and development: contributions, examples, limits","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522167","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the contributions of psychoanalysis to international development, illustrating ways in which thinking and practice in this field are psychoanalytically structured. Drawing on the work of Lacan and \u017di\u017eek, the article will emphasise three key points: (1) psychoanalysis can help uncover the unconscious of development \u2013 its gaps, dislocations, blind spots \u2013 thereby elucidating the latter's contradictory and seemingly 'irrational' practices; (2) the important psychoanalytic notion of jouissance (enjoyment) can help explain why development discourse endures, that is, why it has such sustained appeal, and why we continue to invest in it despite its many problems; and (3) psychoanalysis can serve as an important tool for ideology critique, helping to expose the socioeconomic contradictions and antagonisms that development persistently disavows (eg inequality, domination, sweatshop labour). But while partial to Lacan and \u017di\u017eek, the article will also reflect on the limits of psychoanalysis \u2013 the extent to which it is gendered and, given its Western origins, universalisable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaun Cullen"],"datePublished":"2016-01-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.1.0059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ad7809d-2c56-3ff7-8025-975812dbce5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/criticism.58.1.0059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"White Skin, Black Flag: Hardcore Punk, Racialization, and the Politics of Sound in Southern California","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/criticism.58.1.0059","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":12185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodger Yeager"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a02471ea-3da1-393e-8f9b-476a33e7d204"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217352","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":2173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua J. Masters"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c530517-8daf-3f55-8d7c-54f3cb3990f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Race and the Infernal City in Tom Wolfe's \"Bonfire of the Vanities\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225728","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory A. THOMAS"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25df564f-0fa0-3897-8648-b104b9626696"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24352121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"159","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-reading Frantz Fanon and E. Franklin Frazier on the Erotic Politics of Racist Assimilation by Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24352121","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Selon l'auteur de cet essai, une surprenante identit\u00e9 de la pens\u00e9e sociale \u00e9merge de la juxtaposition de l'\u0153uvre de E. Franklin Frazier et de celle de Frantz Fanon. Leurs points de vue et leurs critiques s'unissent sur plus d'un point bien que leurs objectifs soient diff\u00e9rents. C'est ce que d\u00e9montre cet article qui aborde l'\u00e9tude comparative sous l'angle particulier de l'aspect \u00e9rotique de la politique d'assimilation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashley Dawson"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzng.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04ab15db-c3eb-36c1-9d81-31eaa4cb097c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3znzng.12"}],"isPartOf":"Mongrel Nation","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"189","pagination":"189-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzng.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15351,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[22900,22954]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["brathwaite","kamau brathwaite","britain","carnival","york routledge","caribbean","paul gilroy","whitewashing britain","discussion","paul whitewashing"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allan Francovich"],"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1144503","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00125962"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"103d761e-02e6-3f9b-a361-3331b6f95c4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1144503"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dramareviewtdr"}],"isPartOf":"The Drama Review: TDR","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Genet's Theatre of Possession","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1144503","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":12087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bryan Mukandi","Brian Mukandi"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"babf1c09-8908-3d15-93d3-16204052d833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44652910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652910","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":1200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fafd3afc-3167-3eca-8c66-4302b376594b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981697","volumeNumber":"417","wordCount":8353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jo\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 Reis"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef76c14c-a549-31c1-a324-5794a287adcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3513114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Slave Resistance in Brazil: Bahia, 1807-1835","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513114","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":15710,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27679]],"Locations in B":[[95594,95639]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fazil Moradi"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jhigheducafri.8.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a8115a5-54d2-3c80-8f31-fdea418fff69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/jhigheducafri.8.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Colour-line: The Petrifaction of Racialization and Alterity at the University of Stellenbosch","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jhigheducafri.8.2.1","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9040,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[55146,55216]],"abstract":"Abstract This paper investigates \u2018black\u2019 (minority) student experiences and living conditions at an Afrikaans-speaking historically white university, the University of Stellenbosch (SU). It is an empirical attempt to unearth the present conditionality of minority students that make up 14 per cent of the enrolled students at SU. Thus it involves social (under-)development and is a move away from the individual as unit of analysis per se and includes assessment of the social processes that condition a racialized dividing-line between different groups and at once prolong group affiliation\/belonging. The main focus is on the following themes essential to the dispute on educational transformation in South Africa: racialized skin colour and stereotypes, access to language and education, and segregated spaces and economic reality. I apply qualitative research interview and utilize the postcolonial approach to argue that minority students constantly encounter the reinstatement of a racialized system of difference that excludes and positions them as marginalized subjects. It is argued that these experiences are due to the corporeal schema and cultural characteristics that delineate membership at SU, which make minority students more resistant and at once more ambivalent about the pursuit of education as a self-realization process, and more importantly an investment for future life, which constitute the main force for almost all of the minority students.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bheki R. Mngomezulu","Mmeli Dube"],"datePublished":"2019-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26890404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20504292"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1058286759"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bda7b8f5-ef4d-385a-92ff-7559afe33023"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26890404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrnlafrunionstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Union Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lost in translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26890404","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Following the full-blown attacks on foreign nationals in South Africa in 2008, which had been isolated before then, xenophobia as a concept has reclaimed its place in the African and international discourse. As commentators turned their attention to South Africa following these attacks, the \u2018Ghana Must Go\u2019 debacle \u2013 mass deportation of Ghanaians from Nigeria which was carried out by the Nigerian government- was rehashed. Instead of recounting xenophobic events, this article will focus on problematizing the concept and juxtaposing it with terms such as \u2018Afrophobia\u2019 and \u2018Negrophobia\u2019. We argue that the term \u2018xenophobia\u2019 has been used so loosely that it has lost its actual meaning. We provide a critical analysis of the events that have taken place in South Africa and locate them within the broader analytical context. We then conclude with a warning on the negative repercussions of a casual use of the term \u201cxenophobia\u201d which might obscure meaning.","subTitle":"A critical analysis of xenophobia in Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DEAN E. McHENRY Jr."],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"915affa0-5bf5-36ed-b357-517c8b1293db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Study of the Rise of TANU and the Demise of British Rule in Kigoma Region, Western Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341291","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":10016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CAITLIN JANZEN","SUSAN STREGA","LESLIE BROWN","JEANNIE MORGAN","JEANNINE CARRI\u00c8RE"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3df3ecd6-9519-381c-a7c1-a579b65032a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23352280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Nothing Short of a Horror Show\": Triggering Abjection of Street Workers in Western Canadian Newspapers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23352280","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Over the past decade, Canadian media coverage of street sex work has steadily increased. The majority of this interest pertains to graphic violence against street sex workers, most notably from Vancouver, British Columbia. In this article, the authors analyze newspaper coverage that appeared in western Canadian publications between 2006 and 2009. In theorizing the violence both depicted and perpetrated by newspapers, the authors propose an analytic framework capable of attending to the process of othering in all of its complexity. To this end, the authors supplement a Foucauldian analysis of abjection by considering the work of Judith Butler along with Julia Kristeva's conceptualization of abjection. Using excerpts from western Canadian newspapers, the authors illustrate how the media's discursive practices function as triggers for the process of cultural abjection by inscribing street sex workers with images of defilement. The authors argue that newspaper coverage of street sex workers reinforces the inviolability of normalized life by constantly reiterating the horror reserved for abjected bodies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. O. Ebong"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41143594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dcb348b-ac5b-3a90-afd7-bd349fdd36fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41143594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"The Structure of Urban Poverty in Nigeria: The Calabar Municipality Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41143594","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":6145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As Nigeria experiences the major thrust of urban growth, urban poverty has become the most intractable phenomenon attracting the attention of concerned observers. Because Calabar Municipality lacks solid economic base it cannot easily absorb its burgeoning population into productive medium and high income occupations. A wide range of interrelated variables, including the people's annual income, their educational level, occupational distribution, residential status and even psychological factors, explain the structure of poverty in Calabar. As a result the poor in Calabar are seen to fall within a wide spectrum of deprivation, ranging from the \"poor of hope\" who are capable of moving on their own across the poverty line, to the \"hopeless poor\" who require assistance for survival. Thus the study suggests that since a mix lot of factors are involved in the structure of urban poverty the phenomenon calls for a systems approach which takes into consideration the interacting characteristics of the diverse parameters of the whole urban system, in the formulation of anti-poverty measures. Admittedly, any war against poverty in this city is destined to be one of the longest wars in human history. However, it is possible to substantially reduce the yawning gap between the rich and the poor which is the crux of the problem facing policymakers in this city.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Taylor","Carol Dozier"],"datePublished":"1983-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"426e2426-3586-310b-bdad-824c933a0bc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Television Violence, African-Americans, and Social Control 1950-1976","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784315","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Harlow"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afro-Caribbean Liberations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345941","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony C. Bleach"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ea5370e-028d-3516-97ef-2190ca5a8ddd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Salisbury University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hooray for Hollywood: The Creation of an Israeli National Identity in Amos Oz's \"Panther in the Basement\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797097","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIKKO TUHKANEN"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9163486f-cb0e-3ca3-a996-389b990315bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"615","pagination":"pp. 615-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Queer Guerrillas: On Richard Wright's and Frantz Fanon's Dissembling Revolutionaries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476884","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":10659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Michael Dash"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40145552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40145552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"612","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-612","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Writing the Body: Edouard Glissant's Poetics of Re-membering","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40145552","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":3654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold P. Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44520132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768929"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfded67b-f640-3e00-ab57-b2abf73bbf3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44520132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envicons"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Conservation","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Challenges in a Changing World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44520132","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Frishkopf"],"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.2.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07377037"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51288821"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215654"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a73f830-3d2e-3e00-b7a9-adc8e6483b62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.2.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfolkrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Folklore Research","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Folklore","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Popular Music as Public Health Technology: Music for Global Human Development and \u201cGiving Voice to Health\u201d in Liberia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jfolkrese.54.2.03","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":15077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article presents an applied ethnomusicological approach to public health promotion, showing how mediated popular music can support better sanitation behavior, by outlining a pilot project conducted in post-conflict Liberia. This approach centers on a method for effective, sustainable, empowering, and ethical collaboration and a theory for positive behavioral change. The method is Participatory Action Research (PAR), a powerful model for applied, collaborative ethnomusicology. The PAR model radically revises the relationship between \u201cresearcher\u201d and \u201cresearched,\u201d combining committed, egalitarian participation, transformative action, and applied research aimed at positive, sustainable social change, in a continuous spiral of planning, acting, observing, and reflecting. The theory is the social psychological notion of \u201creasoned action\u201d (Fishbein and Ajzen 1975), as applied to public health by Hubley (1984; 1988; 1993) to underscore the combined roles of beliefs, values, and subject norms to influence behavioral intentions toward health. I augment this theory, highlighting music's affective potential for shaping belief, value, and subject norms. Taken together, theory and method support what I call \u201chuman development,\u201d defined as progress toward collaboratively-set humanly-oriented objectives, via grassroots, egalitarian, empowering collaborations. The pilot project is enacted by a far-flung PAR network, including nationals of Liberia, the USA, and Canada, connecting creative music\/video production, ethnomusicology, public health, and development. Project outputs include a music video and a documentary video, linked through common sounds, images, and purpose. Each is \u201cdouble-sided,\u201d seeking to change behavior in both the developing and developed worlds. The article assesses project limitations and charts strategies to address them in the future.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan O'Leary"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ace9d0b1-c5bd-3517-9579-9a1300fc9d1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS<\/em> AT FIFTY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413762","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":8560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"END OF EMPIRE CINEMA AND THE FIRST BANLIEUE<\/em> FILM","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHERYL HERR"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b521881d-29fb-3356-b6b8-8d15e1d1f4f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE ERRATICS OF IRISHNESS: SCHIZOPHRENIA, RACISM, AND \"FINNEGANS WAKE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871145","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In contrast to the existing discussions in Joyce criticism dealing with references to schizophrenia in Finnegans Wake\u2014arguments that focus on the central role of Lucia or Issy in motivating that depiction\u2014this essay interrogates the persistent cultural stereotype that equates Irishness with mental illness and demonstrates Joyce's refusal of that equation through a strategy of \"schizophrenesis,\" a writing style that forces the reader to inhabit a colonized world, fractured by modernization and institutional racism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dylan Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/radicalteacher.1.88.0007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50255711"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212921"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6bfdf0e-61e1-34ef-93be-c5a09219fbe7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/radicalteacher.1.88.0007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"88","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Disorientation of the Teaching Act:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/radicalteacher.1.88.0007","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Abolition as Pedagogical Position","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fedor Hagenauer","James W. Hamilton"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72cc9814-c9c8-33e1-8383-0e1dd6713842"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26302879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"\"Straw Dogs\": Aggression and Violence in Modern Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26302879","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An attempt has been made in this paper to study some aspects of aggression and violence as presented in \" Straw Dogs \" which was adapted from a novel by its director in such a way as to emphasize intrapsychic core conflicts of dependence, oral rage, separation-individuation and passivity. Popular and critical responses to the film, which were unusually intense, have stressed in an almost cliched fashion concepts such as the territorial imperative and male chauvinism or machismo. A psychoanalytic approach to the material reveals definite patterns of highly overdetermined behavior with clearly identifiable genetic components and offers a more complete understanding of the story and more thorough account for the impact of the film on its audience. Because so much has been added to the film by the director, it is possible, by including biographical data, to explore certain aspects of the creative process, particularly the element of mastery. Reference is made to the role of violence in human evolution, the availability of consistent internalized control of primitive aggressive impulses and certain speculations are considered to account for the lack of instinctive mechanisms of inhibition in man.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. V. Olgu\u00edn"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f6bd368-3b2a-3c3e-8721-e252f3f78844"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tattoos, Abjection, and the Political Unconscious: Toward a Semiotics of the Pinto Visual Vernacular","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354544","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18825,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard D. Headley"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de9551c6-9b59-36a4-be9e-c57a5eaeb6be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Political geography"],"title":"RACE, CLASS AND POWERLESSNESS IN WORLD ECONOMY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067695","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":5750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ralph Armbruster-Sandoval"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c363e536-5023-3746-b9c4-ed3f6fd0c0bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"2 (100)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is Another World Possible? Is Another Classroom Possible? Radical Pedagogy, Activism, and Social Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768306","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hellen Lee-Keller"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27743149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6bb070e-6df9-36f3-ac4d-f7d2644ce397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27743149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"1311","pageStart":"1293","pagination":"pp. 1293-1311","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Madness and the Mul\u00e2tre-Aristocrate: Haiti, Decolonization, and Women in Marie Chauvet's \"Amour\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27743149","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1963-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41835161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00981818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60638700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-230179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1959616-0555-3d69-949f-fab2de5cdc7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41835161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monthlylaborrev"}],"isPartOf":"Monthly Labor Review","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"publisher":"Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Applied sciences - Systems science"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41835161","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":4614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrice Ladwig","Ricardo Roque"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52713944"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c50f01-2f51-387d-8f04-6274812a3430"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26952411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952411","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":11615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Engaging critically with literature on mimesis, colonialism, and the state in anthropology and history, this introduction argues for an approach to mimesis and imitation as constitutive of the state and its forms of rule and governmentality in the context of late European colonialism. It explores how the colonial state attempted to administer, control, and integrate its indigenous subjects through mimetic policies of governance, while examining how indigenous polities adopted imitative practices in order to establish reciprocal ties with, or to resist the presence of, the colonial state. In introducing this special issue, three main themes will be addressed: mimesis as a strategic policy of colonial government, as an object of colonial regulation, and, finally, as a creative indigenous appropriation of external forms of state power.","subTitle":"Mimetic Governmentality, Colonialism, and the State","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rustom Bharucha"],"datePublished":"1999-02-20","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4407678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94ef8390-6ac3-3f5e-aee3-5a3e1f0446e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4407678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"489","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-489","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Politics of Culturalisms in an Age of Globalisation: Discrimination, Discontent and Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4407678","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":14868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The intercultural, the multicultural and the global inhabit different yet overlapping narratives that should not be arbitrarily conflated. There is a crisis of practice in much philosophical and social scientist thinking on multiculturalism and an insufficient engagement of philosophers with emergent cultural practices. This article attempts to intersect political philosophy and cultural practice. While multiculturalism works within the cultural logic of multinational capital, interculturalism has the potential to work against this logic.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lauren M. Gould"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d8298b4-bda7-3cd3-a10d-6fc1b26896ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Politics of Portrayal in Violent Conflict: The Case of the Kony 2012 Campaign","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569466","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A global discourse on cosmopolitan humanism can become tragically disconnected from how it plays out locally. By analyzing Invisible Children's Kony 2012 campaign, this article examines how and why the \"new war\" discourse presented in Kony 2012 does not correspond to how an array of local actors frame the violence that took place in Uganda. It also highlights how the Kony 2012 narrative and the interventions it advocates are translating into \"perverse consequences\": a militarization of the central African region and a decline in awareness and in funding for more complex security issues on the ground. Finally, insight is provided into why the development of cosmopolitan norms and laws favors strong states and institutions, while civilians on the receiving end of \"humanitarian interventions\" lack the power to define what rights should be protected, by whom and how, and have no way of holding the intervening \"humanitarian\" actors accountable for their actions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Paul Riquelme"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598703","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe95e624-21d0-3fb3-a332-af96acc7fe9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598703"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Manliness Doubly Bound: From Parnell to Joyce","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598703","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew W. M. Smith"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48562169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156874617"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d01e6911-9ac6-34b0-91b1-8bb2876f177a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48562169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Dawn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48562169","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9780,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461025,461146]],"Locations in B":[[29910,30045]],"abstract":"This article addresses the cultural activity of Ke\u00efta Fod\u00e9ba, a popular musician, poet, dramatist, and ultimately prominent member of the independent Guinean government. His experiences during the 1950s reflect emergent trends during this period of profound negotiation, in which the terms of the \u201cpostcolonial\u201d world were established. Fod\u00e9ba was a formative figure in the emergence of Guinean national culture but also played an important role in providing Guinea\u2019s independence movement with a renewed impetus beyond Marxist ideology and demands for political equality. Using archival material that reveals French metropolitan fears about his activities, one gains insight into the networks of anticolonial activism with which he engaged. Following Fod\u00e9ba, from his triumph on Broadway to his death at Camp Boiro, gives new perspectives on his challenging work and offers greater insight into the transfers and negotiations between metropole, colony, and beyond that characterized the decolonization process.","subTitle":"Ke\u00efta Fod\u00e9ba and the Imagining of National Culture in Guinea","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cameron Leader-Picone"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44384147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ba43216-d360-3111-b458-d7d099dcbab8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44384147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An Unhyphenated Man: Alice Randall's \"Rebel Yell\" and the Literary Age of Obama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44384147","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Allsobrook"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c28e3ca-e779-385d-9553-46cc107b0da4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"132","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Blackout: Freedom, without Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802528","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":8590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article attributes the conception of 'freedom-without-power' which dominates contemporary Western political philosophy to a reification of social agency that mystifies contexts of human capacities and achievements. It suggests that Plato's analogy between the structure of the soul and the polis shows how freedom is a consequence, rather than a condition, of political relations, mediated by inter-subjective contestation. From this basis, the article draws on the work of Raymond Geuss to argue against pre-political ethical frameworks in political philosophy, in favour of a more contextually sensitive, self-critical approach to ethics. Such reciprocal ethical-political integration addresses problems of ideological complicity that may arise if freedom is discretely abstracted from history and power in political philosophy. Finally, the article roughly reconstructs a critical account of African identity from writings of Steven Biko to illuminate symptoms of 'meritocratic apartheid' in South Africa today which Thad Metz's influential pre-political conception of ubuntu obscures, by abstracting the figure of African personhood from politically significant historical conditions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dana Grosswirth Kachtan"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413981","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fc144e9-11ff-3f70-b973-1817ade3a684"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413981"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"726","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-726","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cActing Ethnic\u201d\u2014Performance of ethnicity and the process of ethnicization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413981","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9035,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[53143,53208]],"abstract":"This paper examines the process of \u201cacting ethnic\u201d, and demonstrates that, in certain circumstances, people act in keeping with an ethnic identity. Based on a study of two infantry brigades in the Israeli army (the IDF), the paper shows how organizational ethnic culture forms the basis of the process of \u201cacting ethnic\u201d. This paper highlights the tendency in certain situations to suspend nonethnic privileges by adopting an ethnic identity and in addition, to exaggerate ethnic performance. Moreover, it is argued that \u201cacting ethnic\u201d is a collective performance, aimed not only at belonging to the group, but also as a means of maintaining and reproducing ethnic identity and asserting a legitimate alternative to the hegemonic identity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Njoki Nathani Wane"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40336784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236875"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3522591-268d-37d7-a512-e2d32dff6a7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Indigenous Education and Cultural Resistance: A Decolonizing Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475955","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Molly E. FERGUSON"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468000989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb25bab7-8c36-303b-83ee-ff41150c06a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41415002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","sourceCategory":["Irish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading the Ghost Story: Roddy Doyle's \"The Deportees and Other Stories\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41415002","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8925,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes metaphors of ghosts and haunting in Roddy Doyle's 2007 collection The Deportees and Other Stories. Through a postcolonial framework, I contend that Doyle's collaboration with the multicultural newspaper Metro \u00c9ireann is inherently folkloric, telling tales from a diverse urban working class in response to popular narratives of exclusion that reinscribe colonialism. I apply Sigmund Freud's concept of the unheimlich to the stories in the collection that present immigrants and refugees as simultaneously afraid and fearsome, threatening the home of the nation. Close readings of the stories ' The Pram\" and \"I Understand\" support my claim that casting the immigrant as a ghost confers a covert agency that undermines structures of oppression and xenophobia. Cet article analyse les m\u00e9taphores de fant\u00f4mes et d'apparitions dans la collection de 2007 de Roddy Doyle, \u00ab The Deportees and Other Stories. \u00bb A l'aide des th\u00e9ories postcoloniales, j'avance l'id\u00e9e selon laquelle la collaboration de Doyle au journal multiculturel Metro Eireann est folklorique par nature car il raconte des contes originaires d'une classe ouvri\u00e8re urbaine mixte qui se posent en tant que r\u00e9ponse aux r\u00e9cits populaires d'exclusion en r\u00e9\u00e9crivant le colonialisme. J'applique le concept du unheimlich chez Sigmund Freud aux histoires de la collection qui d\u00e9peignent les immigrants et les r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s comme \u00e9tant \u00e0 la fois effray\u00e9s et effrayants et mena\u00e7ant la nation.Une analyse textuelle des histoires \u00ab The Pram \u00bb et \u00ab I Understand \u00bb confirment mon hypoth\u00e8se selon laquelle faire de l'immigrant un fant\u00f4me \u00e9branle les structures de l'oppression et de la x\u00e9nophobie.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rida Blaik Hourani"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44504482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182745"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c1ac720-a088-3dc4-8d9c-08b70fd9edf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44504482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The History Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Society for History Education","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"A Call for Unitary History Textbook Design in a Post-Conflict Era: The Case of Lebanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44504482","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew John Miller"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0013bfd-ad8b-31ed-92ae-bd8221387a5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Under the Nation-State: Modernist Deterritorialization in Malcolm Lowry's \"Under the Volcano\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149251","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":6894,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fran\u00e7oise Lionnet"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781501723117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"156d4851-0cd6-3af2-9957-a4f0e2cc0064"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.8"}],"isPartOf":"Autobiographical Voices","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"67","pagination":"67-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Silence and Circularity in Ecce Homo:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"We have seen how Augustine writes himself into silence, the silence of religion, the eternal silence of God, whose words become his own. By losing himself in an ideal other who redeems the flaws of his material being, Augustine returns to the origin. His goal is to become the mirror image of God through the imitation of Christ. The idea that redemption means total absorption into the other implies a hierarchical system of relationships in which all possibilities of egalitarian relations or interactions, as Glissant might put it, are abolished and negated. In such a system, the self and the","subTitle":"\u201cUnd so erz\u00e4hle ich mir mein Leben\u201d","keyphrase":["nietzsche","ecce homo","aime cesaire","cesaire","negritude","zarathustra","circularity","silence and circularity","silence","corpus"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vito Stagliano","Joseph Ernst"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40260694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75c41cbe-e678-31ea-bd35-72fdbe029752"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40260694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"4","pagination":"p. 4, 6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The German Way","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40260694","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cesare Cuttica"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24005358","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0032325X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63ec0729-e558-39ba-a037-bdbc1ca312d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24005358"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ilpolitico"}],"isPartOf":"Il Politico","issueNumber":"2 (206)","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Rubbettino Editore","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'IDEA DI EUROPA: La difficile definizione di un concetto sfuggente","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24005358","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":8049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Anthony Pagden's The Idea of Europe appears at a crucial moment for the creation or reinforcement of our contemporary European identity. The Idea of Europe is an informative and competent work that presents a full-range of philosophical, political, ethical, and, in a broad sense, cultural issues and controversies stimulated throughout the centuries by the multifarious attempts at carving out an idea of Europe and his values on the part of philosophers and intellectuals of different disciplines. Pagden and the contributors to the volume elucidate the pivotal questions that scholars, students, and also citizens are to address in order to better understand the historical origins of the wavering idea of what is Europe. Together with providing a powerful insight into different concepts of European identity, the book fosters a series of stimulating considerations on the future of the European Union and on our role as its members.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Ogude"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"706e3ce6-809d-3c13-bae9-8800dddcce88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/485326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ngugi's Concept of History and the Post-Colonial Discourses in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485326","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"L'article cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9montrer que les sens de l'histoire chez Ngugi est \u00e9troitement li\u00e9 \u00e0 sa politique d'interpr\u00e9tation et que ses textes post-coloniaux peuvent \u00eatre mieux compris si on les place dans le contexte des discours contradictoires post-coloniaux au Kenya. Ses romans expressent la qu\u00eate d'un ordre socio-politique nouveau et critiquent l'\u00e9lite africaine qui s'est compar\u00e9e du pouvoir \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance pour devenir simple gardien du capitalisme occidental. Une lecture des textes de Ngugi lie son concept de l'histoire aux discours sur la th\u00e9orie de la d\u00e9pendance au Kenya et \u00e0 la conceptualisation de la r\u00e9volution post-coloniale en Afrique de Fanon. L'article d\u00e9clare que les histoires supprim\u00e9es dans les textes de Ngugi sont invariablement li\u00e9es \u00e0 la tendance \u00e0 supprimer les contradictions \u00e0 la fois au niveau local et \u00e0 un niveau plus sp\u00e9cifique dans la perspective de la d\u00e9pendance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63fb4deb-c048-39c9-b5cf-0a4e854b2017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"1233","pageStart":"1179","pagination":"pp. 1179-1233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977771","volumeNumber":"163","wordCount":25244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"145c5cef-2d10-331d-9b3e-3c9bfa3c4c46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rmq3.11"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"303","pagination":"303-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Introducci\u00f3n a las Epistemolog\u00edas del Sur","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"He argumentado profusamente, en otra parte, que en los albores del nuevo milenio necesitamos distanciarnos del pensamiento cr\u00edtico euroc\u00e9ntrico (Santos, 2014: 19-46). Reproduzco aqu\u00ed la conclusi\u00f3n del argumento. Crear dicha distancia es condici\u00f3n previa para poder realizar la tarea te\u00f3rica m\u00e1s importante de nuestro tiempo: que lo impensable sea pensado, que lo inesperado sea asumido como parte integral del trabajo te\u00f3rico. Puesto que las teor\u00edas de vanguardia, por definici\u00f3n, no se dejan tomar por sorpresa, pienso que en el actual contexto de transformaci\u00f3n social y pol\u00edtica no necesitamos teor\u00edas de vanguardia sino teor\u00edas de retaguardia. Pienso en el trabajo te\u00f3rico","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["l\u00ednea abisal","exclusiones","colonialismo","luchas","conocimiento","sociabilidad","colonialismo hist\u00f3rico","exclusi\u00f3n","saberes","occidental"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mzvn.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053566350"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdbd6a19-bf08-35d3-9c09-566a3e520998"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46mzvn.18"}],"isPartOf":"Harun Farocki","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"211","pagination":"211-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Political Im\/perceptible:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46mzvn.18","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11416,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the 1970s and \u201980s, Harun Farocki was not as well known as Fassbinder, Schl\u00f6ndorff, and Kluge \u2013 the group that came to be known as New German Cinema. Yet Farocki\u2019s films constituted more of a departure from or radical alternative to dominant cinematic practice. Farocki was a member of the first year class of the Deutsche Film und Fernsehakademie Berlin (DFFB), and his classmates included Helke Sander, Hartmut Bitomsky, Wolfgang Peterson, and former protester and activist Holger Meins. Though Farocki was not an active member of the RAF, he, like many of his colleagues, clearly sympathised with RAF politics, and","subTitle":"Farocki\u2019s Images of the World and the Inscription of War","keyphrase":["images","auschwitz","essay film","perceptible","political","inscription","montage","visuality","female voice","vision"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clement White"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebe313ff-2ec8-3836-8a22-05682270b3d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Silencing Prospero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752033","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":18794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Socio-Political Conscience Raising and Anti-Imperial Imperatives in C.L.R. 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(Lessons from a conference)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790567","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brad Hanson"],"datePublished":"1983-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3508562b-bd40-3423-88b0-4ab8f2929267"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/162924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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A leitmotif of the film is struggling to end the communities' \"paralysis\" caused by the domination of drug lords and corrupt, brutal police. Many residents and viewers feel that the favela lies outside the Brazilian nation. However, this essay shows that AfroReggae is part of a Brazilian artistic tradition that begins with Oswald de Andrade's \"Manifesto antrop\u00f3fago\" (1928). Andrade focuses on sublimation, translating emotions into art. But Andrade's ideas, while sometimes inspired by the favelas, did not reach most of their residents until later movements, such as Freire's pedagogy of the oppressed, Boal's theater of the oppressed, and Quilombhoje's Cadernos Negros. This history explains why AfroReggae stands out among today's literatura marginal, most of which is a continuation of the determinist Naturalist tradition. Andrade's essay and AfroReggae's performances predate and confirm Kelly Oliver's argument that the oppressed need a sublimation space to combat oppression. AfroReggae and the Brazilian tradition they represent have much to teach about how art can transform communities around world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Idrissi Alami"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d657b00c-06f9-3700-b242-09f4653ac5e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44016828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dialectics of Desire, Victimhood and Postcolonial Migrancy in Tahar Ben Jelloun's \"Leaving Tangier\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016828","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":14208,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[329812,330062]],"Locations in B":[[57751,57999]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John E. 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The Famine and its untold victims project specters that haunt the processes of modernization and progressive rationalization that catastrophe is often held to have enabled. For contemporary observers, the scenes of mass starvation produce the effect of an \u201cindigent sublime\u201d; the spectacle on a vast scale of humanity reduced to \u201cbare life\u201d exceeds the possibility of realistic representation, but the excess of representation is not accompanied by an enhancement of the powers of the subject.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy Begaye"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Native Teacher Understanding of Culture as a Concept for Curricular Inclusion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131301","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward S. Casey"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8be4a9f-47fd-3b06-932f-ff5e9d09c815"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25769933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Finding (Your Own) Philosophical Voice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25769933","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":9410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto Marquez"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2502940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c095d9d2-9142-33e2-8f73-11fd915a4e29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2502940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Racism, Culture and Revolution: Ideology and Politics in the Prose of Nicolas Guillen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2502940","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl I. Harris"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419494"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47013958"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236658"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce057cd7-c4b5-38bb-b6f6-6922bae1c84b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1600086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univchiclawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The University of Chicago Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"793","pageStart":"783","pagination":"pp. 783-793","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bell's Blues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1600086","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":5355,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ramchandran Sethuraman"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49bcdbc1-7f0b-3d45-8ccb-c230206dc73a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"EVIDENCE-CUM-WITNESS: SUBALTERN HISTORY, VIOLENCE, AND THE (DE)FORMATION OF NATION IN MICHELLE CLIFF'S \"NO TELEPHONE TO HEAVEN\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285471","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":14837,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Moylan"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1045991X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606618122"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-200204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3a3b345-a1be-387a-b314-35a3abfb1645"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20718922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"utopianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Utopian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MISSION IMPOSSIBLE? LIBERATION THEOLOGY AND UTOPIAN PRAXIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20718922","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wyatt MacGaffey"],"datePublished":"1981-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e84edc7-7124-3b60-aca5-262d7e572ee9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Ideology and Belief: A Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523905","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":25755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Madsen"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d825fe23-7730-3da9-a255-2cba8d5b957b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1075","pageStart":"1073","pagination":"pp. 1073-1075","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231303","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy J. Ransom"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b24bf93-61d4-3338-ad43-97cafc0f279e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Oppositional Postcolonialism in Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241436","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois and Franco-Canadian sf through the lens of postcolonial theory. Drawing specifically on Vijay Mishra and Bob Hodge's concept of \"oppositional postcolonialism,\" it argues that the extrapolated futures, other worlds, and alternate histories of \"SFQ,\" la science-fiction qu\u00e9b\u00e9coise, reveal the same preoccupations found in the works of writers more commonly referred to as \"postcolonial.\" Using the three defining traits of oppositional postcolonialism as an organizational framework, the article examines the elements of racism, second language, and political struggle in a representative body of texts, including Jean-Pierre April's \"Le Vol de la ville\" [The Flight\/Theft of the City], Sylvie B\u00e9rard's Terre des Autres [Land of the Others], Alain Bergeron's \"Le Prix\" [The Prize], Jean-Louis Trudel's \"Report 323: A Quebecois Infiltration Attempt,\" and \u00c9lisabeth Vonarburg's Tyrana\u00ebl series.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NATHAN HARE"],"datePublished":"1969-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"887e011b-4303-3a86-8160-f2855a6af4d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A REPORT ON THE PAN-AFRICAN CULTURAL FESTIVAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163402","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie Avril Minich"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"153e2a85-60c7-3139-a2c5-f5095174727a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"714","pageStart":"694","pagination":"pp. 694-714","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ENABLING AZTL\u00c1N: ARTURO ISLAS JR., DISABILITY, AND CHICANO CULTURAL NATIONALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287225","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":9024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tarsis B. Kabwegyere"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/422513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3af17f7-0a4b-35a5-9cbd-22aeac2b004e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/422513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Dynamics of Colonial Violence: The Inductive System in Uganda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/422513","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the nature and effects of colonial rule implantation at the local level, with specific reference to the case of Colonial Uganda. The general hypothesis is that any agent of change alien to those people whose way of life this agent is to change radically, will use violence as a main means to bring about the change. Linking Galtung's basic distinction between physical, psychological, and structural violence to the three stages in the colonial process of conquest, rule establishment, and maintenance of colonial domination, the author presents concrete examples from the history of Colonial Uganda. It is concluded that a 'successful' change agent would then be one whose aspirations and objectives merged with those of the people he aspires to change - which is impossible in a colonial setting, given the very nature of colonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melissa Thackway"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.5.2.5","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f3c7fc8-1851-319a-a192-86e827745464"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.5.2.5"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Exile and the \u201cBurden of Representation\u201d: Trends in Contemporary Sub-Saharan Francophone African Filmmaking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.5.2.5","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract For a number of sub-Saharan Francophone Africa's most prolific filmmakers resident in Europe, itinerancy and the subsequent plurality of identities engenders a blurring of boundaries that is inevitably reflected in their works. Many of these filmmakers explicitly explore the themes of exile and return. Embracing and exploring this \u201cin-betweenness\u201d as they negotiate their cultures of origin and those in which they live, their films gain critical and syncretic possibilities. This increasingly visible thematic and aesthetic hybridity can at the same time be seen as intrinsically related to a marking characteristic of sub-Saharan African filmmaking since its inception: the desire to challenge dominant discourse's problematic hegemonic representations of the African continent. Constituting an ever-present \u201cburden of representation,\u201d this desire helps to explain the continuing prevalence of a socially responsible vein of filmmaking among Africa's contemporary generation of Europe-based filmmakers, and suggests that diversification and continuity are not necessarily antinomic in this context.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert J. Tristram"],"datePublished":"1980-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12b92c58-eedc-313e-a406-0ad17c0ab36f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42852176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VALUES, ANALYSIS AND THE STUDY OF REVOLUTION: II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852176","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This second and concluding part of the paper deals with a third problem area; the relationship between values and explanation. It is discussed by examining Myrdal's distinctions between valuations and value premises and between theoretical and practical research; Stretton's conception of the role of the 'Valuing skill' in all kinds of sociohistorical research; and MacIntyre's arguments concerning categories and accounts that combine either evaluation and description or evaluation and explanation. Like the first part of the paper, it is illustrated by studies in the history and sociology of revolutions. Again, the main aim is methodological clarification.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WEIHONG BAO","NATALIA BRIZUELA","ALLAN DESOUZA","SUZANNE GUERLAC","SANSAN KWAN","ANNEKA LENSSEN","ANGELA MARINO","JEFFREY SKOLLER","WINNIE WONG"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1ceb771-fa95-3131-9772-6d11bafdd4e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26420582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"136","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reflections on Durational Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420582","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"These short reflections, from UC Berkeley faculty in a variety of disciplines, respond to the following question: \u201cWhat does the phrase \u2018time-based art\u2019 mean to you? What are the central stakes, conventions, challenges, and opportunities of durational art in the contexts in which you work?\u201d Collectively, they probe a wide range of practices and contexts, including, for example, Mexican festivals and midwestern American carnivals, Syrian documentary films and the \u201cimage-event,\u201d bystander recordings of US police and state harassment of black men, and the photographic interventions of the Colombian artist Oscar Mu\u00f1oz. The respondents are Weihong Bao, Natalia Brizuela, Allan deSouza, Suzanne Guerlac, SanSan Kwan, Anneka Lenssen, Angela Marino, Jeffrey Skoller, and Winnie Wong.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kris Sealey"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.6.1.0026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21658684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"775767149"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-201135"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7228bb74-a989-3e56-a90a-592dbcb48a27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/critphilrace.6.1.0026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"critphilrace"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Philosophy of Race","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Composite Community: Thinking Through Fanon's Critique of a Narrow Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.6.1.0026","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10103,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[354725,354809]],"Locations in B":[[25574,25647]],"abstract":"This article presents \u00c9douard Glissant's account of a composite community as an articulation of Frantz Fanon's alternative, de-colonial conception of the nation. It shows that, subsequent to Fanon's critique of the xenophobia and racism of a narrow nationalism (found in The Wretched of the Earth), we are left with a conception of a national consciousness that registers with what Glissant names, in Poetics of Relation, a composite community in relation. Both accounts ground community in a foundation of difference, process and dynamism, all of which is carried into a collective identity, without the reductive homogenizing practices of most nation-building endeavors. As such, the article argues that Glissant's work is positioned to underscore what, in Fanon's understanding of national culture, is meant to protect the living dynamism of a people from a chauvinistic ultra-nationalism. Similarly, the work of The Wretched of the Earth can be used to take Glissant's alternative political ontology into the arena of thinking the nation otherwise.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Paula Meneses"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97ea6690-8b47-3d88-8ab0-e15cb232f50b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90013893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Hidden Processes of Reconciliation in Mozambique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013893","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract The southern Africa region has witnessed, over the last 50 years, several episodes of violent conflicts, and Mozambique is no exception. The dominant perspective of the Global North on transition to democracy insists on reinforcing a eurocentric version of modernity, symbolized by a linear transition towards a single legal system and nationhood. This dominant international model of justice reproduces violence in the form of epistemicide and privatization of violence. If courts cannot end civil wars, what are the alternatives? This article, which is focused upon Mozambique and based upon interviews and archival data, aims to explore the extent to which the multiple, almost invisible and silenced processes of national reconciliation can find expression within methodologies of national reconciliation processes. Specific emphasis is placed upon the analysis of initiatives (in the 1970s and 1980s) to deal with \u2018traitors of the revolution\u2019 in open organized meetings that produced little-known practices of national reconciliation. It is in such a context where the limits of the discourse about \u2018universal jurisdiction\u2019 and criminalization of perpetrators of violence are arguably best understood, and where alternatives can find their strongest manifestations and most radical expressions.","subTitle":"The Entangled Histories of Truth-seeking Commissions held between 1975 and 1982","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen D. Pyke"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2010.53.4.551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af8cf15d-56e3-3f3a-827d-fa7a612b5644"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sop.2010.53.4.551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"572","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What is Internalized Racial Oppression and Why Don't We Study it? Acknowledging Racism's Hidden Injuries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2010.53.4.551","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11576,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[63693,63739]],"abstract":"Despite sociology's longstanding interest in inequality, the internalization of racial oppression among the racially subordinated and its contribution to the reproduction of racial inequality has been largely ignored, reflecting a taboo on the subject. Consequently, internalized racism remains one of the most neglected and misunderstood components of racism. In this article, the author argues that only by defying the taboo can sociology expose the hidden injuries of racism and the subtle mechanisms that sustain White privilege. After reviewing the concept and providing examples of the phenomenon, the author draws on critical social theory to examine reasons for the taboo, such as a theoretical fixation on resistance, a penchant for racial essentialism, and the limitations of an identity politics. The author concludes by offering a method for studying internalized racism and resistance concurrently within the matrix of intersecting forms of oppression.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn Krieger Mytelka"],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524549","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b1edebe-9b03-3156-ba1e-537d2e8b10e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524549"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Economics - Economic policy"],"title":"The Unfulfilled Promise of African Industrialization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524549","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":33257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Garrett Felber"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.100.2.0199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e18d76ca-68a1-3e73-949a-97b7a41dc020"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/jafriamerhist.100.2.0199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cHarlem is the Black World\u201d: The Organization of Afro-American Unity at the Grassroots","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.100.2.0199","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":13387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHANIE MALIA HOM"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23612199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10502092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed311ba7-275d-3155-91f5-bdce06a91b6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23612199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traddwelsettrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Traditional Dwellings and Settlements Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"International Association for the Study of Traditional Environments (IASTE)","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Simulated Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23612199","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":14557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Simulated imperialism is a paramount dynamic of the contemporary. It marks the mutual articulations of empire and hyperreality that build signifying distance into imperial formations and their discriminatory operations. The Disney empire is one of its most pernicious forms. This article looks to Disneyland to bring simulated imperialism into sharper relief by detailing its three interlocking movements: the signification of imperial processes generated by simulacra; the amplification of colonizing projects through simulation; and the interpellation of hybrid subjects between (im)mobility and (in)animation. It takes the It's a Small World ride as its primary example. One of the oldest attractions at Disneyland, it provides a multicultural tour of a metaphorical global village wherein animatronic children, stylized in cultural stereotypes, sing and dance in the name of world peace. Yet this simulated world is one of deceptive heterogeneity. In fact, It's a Small World reveals an idealized world to be one erased of all difference in favor of a white, English-speaking, and culturally American utopia. It thus spatializes the forceful presence of empire within its all-embracing discursive formation. To theorize simulated imperialism using this example is to position empire within the domains of unending semiotic breakdown and the globalized (im)mobilities that presently order our excessive, networked, high-carbon societies. This opens a way to think through imperial formations from the destabilized margins of signification, and from these limits, to search out radical possibilities for subversion and resistance in the spaces between the imperial and the hyperreal.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Penelope Deutscher"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"671","pageStart":"656","pagination":"pp. 656-671","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enemies and Reciprocities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251953","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":6991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olabanji Akinola"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.7.1.11","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"660773b0-02a3-34d2-9f4e-6a7cc8d4a126"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.7.1.11"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Rebirth of a Nation: Nollywood and the Remaking of Modern Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.7.1.11","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT With over 2000 movies produced annually, and an estimated $200 million in U. S. earnings in 2006, the Nigerian film industry is now the third largest in the world after those of the United States of America (Hollywood) and India (Bollywood). The unprecedented rise of Nollywood in the past two decades attests to its successes in uniquely telling African stories from the perspectives of Africans, a storytelling role that had for too long been left in the hands of many who portrayed the continent as the bastion of dangers and backwaters of human civilization. However, despite Nollywood's contributions to the telling of African stories to the rest of the world, the need to contribute to the remaking of Nigeria \u2013 its home base \u2013 has now become necessary at a time when the country is beset with numerous social, economic, cultural and political problems that threaten national unity. In the three sections of this article, a short history that provides a background to Nigeria as a state and highlights the taproots of the current problems being encountered in the country, an argument for a redefinition of the Nigerian state which supports the idea of remaking the country as a viable postcolonial African state in the 21st century, and the role of Nollywood in Nigeria's national rebirth are presented.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew W. Hughey"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26625942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206478"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38b76af3-68b9-37e0-980d-a5889a8b680b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26625942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"642","pageStart":"619","pagination":"pp. 619-642","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Riots and Racism: Fifty Years Since the Best Laid Schemes of the Kerner Commission (1968\u20132018)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26625942","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":12027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"What happened? Why did it happen? What can be done to prevent it from happening again and again?\" Voiced less that one week after the July 1967 race riots in Detroit, Michigan, Lyndon B. Johnson spoke these words as he ordered the establishment of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders. Seven months later, on March 1, 1968, the Commission's account\u2014known as the Kerner Commission Report\u2014was a scathing appraisal of riots and racism in the United States. While it included bold language about the linkage between rioting and racism, it is rife with paradoxical assumptions and findings. Moreover, the report's failure to define sociological concepts, coupled with a reliance on individualism and cognitive attitudes via psycho-analytic and pop-psychological conjecture, together beckon scholars to wrestle with how this state-issued report reflected and reproduced dominant assumptions about the \"race\" concept, violence, and human nature. Employing a critical content analysis of the report, I ask: How does the Kerner Commission Report define and use the concept of \"riots\" and \"racism,\" and what are the logics employed in the production of that knowledge?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter P. Ekeh"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7978e938-e210-3c7b-981c-a9c4b6dce877"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24486618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DEVELOPMENT THEORY AND THE AFRICAN PREDICAMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486618","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":15692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael T. Martin","Gaston Kabor\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"I am a Storyteller, Drawing Water from the Well of My Culture\": Gaston Kabor\u00e9, Griot of African Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820506","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9702,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gennaro Ascione"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26940352","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3c14b08-2a83-33b4-aa22-74608591a34d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26940352"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unthinking Capital<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26940352","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9499,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[14884,15235]],"Locations in B":[[21347,21697]],"abstract":"In this article I take issues with some Eurocentric limits of the two contradictions of capital: capital\/labour and capital\/nature. These limits are exposed by elaborating on two theoretical insights from researches in critical race studies and indigenous political ecologies: respectively thingification and uncommon. These insights produce a tension between colonialism and capitalism, which calls for a post-Eurocentric process of concept formation. This reconceptualization of capital is pursued through the notion of muri, which the Japanese thinker Uno K\u014dz\u014d deployed to designate a bold non-western pathway to reading Capital. The article elaborates and formulates three conceptual and terminological landmarks to unthinking capital for a global social theory.","subTitle":"Conceptual and Terminological Landmarks","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karin Shankar"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48202970"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d956bcf-5fea-3629-adcc-b6732b6360d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femteacher"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Teacher","issueNumber":"2-3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Education","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Teaching Postcoloniality and Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/femteacher.28.2-3.0105","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1pwtd47.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760460907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c876a4f9-e36e-3da4-9d1a-1973a4b1587f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1pwtd47.11"}],"isPartOf":"New Worlds from Below","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"131","pagination":"131-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Chemistry"],"title":"Informal Labour, Local Citizens and the Tokyo Electric Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Crisis:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1pwtd47.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14651,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124382,124442]],"Locations in B":[[7674,7734]],"abstract":"The ongoing disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station (FDNPS), operated by Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), since 11 March 2011 can be recognised as part of a global phenomenon that has been in development over some time. This disaster occurred within a social and political shift that began in the mid-1970s and that became more acute in the early 1990s in Japan with the downturn of economic growth and greater deregulation and financialisation in the global economy. After 40 years of corporate fealty in return for lifetime contracts guaranteed by corporate unions, as tariff protections were lifted further","subTitle":"Responses to Neoliberal Disaster Management","keyphrase":["fukushima","fukushima daiichi","radiation","nuclear","fukushima prefecture","chernobyl","workers","informal labour","labour","nuclear workers"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Smethurst"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3733083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"988","pageStart":"987","pagination":"pp. 987-988","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733083","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tirop Simatei"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colonial Violence, Postcolonial Violations: Violence, Landscape, and Memory in Kenyan Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131143","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":5239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One of the most persistent concerns of Kenyan literature is violence generated by colonial injustice and perpetuated in independent Kenya through unaltered colonial structures and institutions. In their fiction, writers discussed here demonstrate complex linkages between colonial violence, the violent responses to it, and the violations of the rights of citizens in the postcolonial nation-state. Violence is seen as a crucial tool to both revolutionary nationalism and the constitution of the revolutionary subject, while colonial representation of land and its inhabitants becomes a form of epistemic violence to the extent that it involves immeasurable disruption and erasure of local cultural systems. Colonial representation aimed at the suppression of the difference of the \"other\" is countered in Kenya literature through a grammar of contestation that constructs not only a counterdiscourse to colonial ideologies of conquest and domination but also a liberation aesthetics that justifies anticolonial violence while legitimating postcolonial struggles.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Byron Caminero-Santangelo"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neocolonialism and the Betrayal Plot in \"A Grain of Wheat\": Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's Re-Vision of \"Under Western Eyes\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820536","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VANESSA FRANGVILLE","Elizabeth Guill"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24055463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20703449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebc6344a-9433-34d4-815b-225d66ade9b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24055463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaperspective"}],"isPartOf":"China Perspectives","issueNumber":"2 (90)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"French Centre for Research on Contemporary China","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Non\u2013Han in Socialist Cinema and Contemporary Films in the People's Republic of China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24055463","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The following article places in context cinematographic representations of the non-Han during the socialist and contemporary eras of the People's Republic of China. These two periods are characterised by the prolific production and distribution of films featuring non-Han characters and by the wealth of subjects they deal with. The aim is therefore to shed light on the analysis of contemporary productions and to understand how they coexisted with the promotion of socialist films in the first decade of the twenty-first century.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL FRANC WRIGHT"],"datePublished":"1971-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a448eafb-18eb-343a-95fc-6461f3ec5c26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41202892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"LUMUMBA, TEN YEARS AFTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202892","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George W. 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An Interview with David Whisnant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41057393","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Howard Yoder"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1051625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07480814"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52796148"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"32d89acb-cd48-3a0d-93d7-eb8c083d985c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1051625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlawreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Law and Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Religion","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Many Ways Are There to Think Morally about War?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1051625","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Slater"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/622559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"437","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-437","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Geopolitical Imagination and the Enframing of Development Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/622559","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It is argued that all the major conceptualizations of development in the post-war period contain and express a geopolitical imagination which has had a conditioning effect on the enframing of the meanings and relations of development. The Occidental deployment of modernization theory for the developing countries reflected a will to geopolitical power. It provided a discursive legitimation for a whole series of practical interventions and penetrations that sought to subordinate and assimilate the Third World Other. In a connected but far from identical manner, neo-liberal readings of development in the 1980s have accompanied and been inspired by rapidly changing geopolitical conditions. Similarly, it is argued that on the other side of the North-South divide the radical dependencia perspective of the 1960s and early 1970s cannot be separated from a series of geopolitical events such as the Cuban Revolution, nor from the perceived need on the part of critical Latin American intellectuals to confront and challenge the relevance of modernization theory for the periphery. Finally, it is suggested that in any attempt to rethink development for global times the nature of our geopolitical imagination must be a key element, just as the theorization of the geo-political is equally relevant for development theorists and political geographers.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kanishka Chowdhury"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26286210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de5db7d8-68c4-3b2f-a523-3f5d1e4e155b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26286210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"496","pagination":"pp. 496-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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What parallels are there between the spread of Western empire and cultural hegemony (and theories of indigenous regeneration) and the visualization, parcelization, and dominance of virtual space? What continuities are there between the battle for identity among the colonizer and colonized and the blurring of identity in cyber-realms? Will the mapping of cyberspace be significantly different from the \"imaginative geography\" used to rationalize Western globalization and the spread of corporate networks, developmentalist discourses, and settler communities?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD SCHUR"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01624962"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43625963"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23540734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"biography"}],"isPartOf":"Biography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND THE LIMITS OF AUTO\/BIOGRAPHY: READING PATRICIA WILLIAMS'S \"THE ALCHEMY OF RACE AND RIGHTS\" THROUGH\/AGAINST POSTCOLONIAL THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23540734","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines how Patricia Williams's The Alchemy of Race and Rights develops critical race theory by carrying out the concerns, methods, and goals of Gayatri Spivak's articulation of the subaltern and postcolonial theory within the context of U.S. law. Williams's book performs a critique of legal subjectivity by first creating and then deconstructing a series of auto\/biographical moments. By placing critical race theory and postcolonial theory into dialogue, the article demonstrates how these distinct theoretical orientations rely on auto\/biography to supplement the limits of the Western political tradition in order to realize its potential.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephany Rose"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44395277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"685eb51b-6323-3318-af6b-fc273e75aa1a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44395277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MISCEGENATED NATION: ADAM MANSBACH'S \"ANGRY BLACK WHITE BOY\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44395277","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Nazareth"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20158626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0021065X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebeb681a-04ff-3455-9b01-c23a83cbe55d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20158626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iowareview"}],"isPartOf":"The Iowa Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of Iowa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Social Responsibility of the East African Writer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20158626","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kostis Kornetis"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b307974-18a5-36ea-9cd9-ff76afe1cfe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43697387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"515","pageStart":"486","pagination":"pp. 486-515","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Cuban Europe'? 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Examining the impact of extra-European anti-imperialist violence on the discourse and action of the most radical organizations that espoused the 'armed struggle' in both countries, the article shows that whereas Greek militants used violence only symbolically, their counterparts in Spain went all the way. The article finishes with the espousal of thirdworldist rhetoric by a new student generation in Greece leading to the mass uprising of November 1973, and a brief look at the afterlives of ETA and PAK, two of the most vocal exponents of this tendency, after the demise of the respective authoritarian regimes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gavin Jones"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3567935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"792","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-792","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poverty and the Limits of Literary Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567935","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12447,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohamed Shahid Mathee"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2333262X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560668942"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201897"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bba2903f-09a4-3a65-8ef5-24708abd502a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90017599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islamicafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Islamic Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Probing the Theological Resources of a Seventeenth-Century t\u0101r\u012bkh<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017599","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Modern Western scholars, journalists, travellers, and colonial officials have shown an interest in Timbuktu\u2019s famous seventeenth-century chronicles ever since they heard of them in the mid nineteenth-century. The three t\u0101r\u012bkhs (chronicles) are the T\u0101r\u012bkh al-S\u016bd\u0101n, the so-called Tar\u012bkh al-fatt\u0101sh, and the Notice historique. The first Western written works began to be produced at the end of the nineteenth century and burgeoned over the twentieth century with several large projects continuing into the present century, as recent as 2015. These works were primarily, though not exclusively, concerned with the authorship, sources, and political properties of the t\u0101r\u012bkhs. This article is interested in Muslim theology as a resource of the T\u0101r\u012bkh al-S\u016bd\u0101n, one the three t\u0101r\u012bkhs. It focuses in particular on the precepts of Ash\u02bfar\u012b kal\u0101m (theology) of Sunni Islam as the key resource the author of the Tar\u012bkh al-S\u016bd\u0101n.","subTitle":"the T\u0101r\u012bkh al-S\u016bd\u0101n<\/em> and Ash\u02bfar\u012b kal\u0101m<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lila Ammons"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"704c2dbc-33a5-3345-b792-39c848aafafc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Consequences of War on African Countries' Social and Economic Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524669","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD C. KELLER"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61b55bf4-00f5-3587-9bf6-e2f66bf9dabf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44448254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Pinel in the Maghreb: Liberation, Confinement, and Psychiatric Reform in French North Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448254","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":17266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"For early twentieth-century French psychiatrists, the colonies of Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco appeared as crucial sites for innovation. Citing Pinel's liberation of the insane during the French Revolution as a precedent, colonial psychiatrists preached of their capacity to advance France's \"civilizing mission\" by delivering the insane from their suffering. Yet colonial renovation programs also drew them to scrutinize the failings of their own common practices. Psychiatrists saw their field in a state of crisis, marked by overcrowded asylums and outdated therapeutic concepts. Attempts to modernize colonial terrains thus also aimed at re-creating a discipline that had fallen into decline.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Beinart"],"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8095f42b-3a69-3216-844a-7c4f454fb4e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Political and Collective Violence in Southern African Historiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637297","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":16959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mario T. Garc\u00eda"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40891029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07358318"},{"name":"oclc","value":"318540786"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-202593"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35bb6481-1766-3109-84d4-3ae0f3157a09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40891029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"uscathhist"}],"isPartOf":"U.S. Catholic Historian","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Catholic University of America Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Liberation Correspondent: The Preachings of Mois\u00e9s Sandoval","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40891029","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Philcox","Maryse Cond\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40426864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07433204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9d035ae-0b01-38be-a84e-088113a70161"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40426864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bomb"}],"isPartOf":"BOMB","issueNumber":"82","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"New Art Publications","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Humanities","Language & Literature","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"An Excerpt from \"The Story of the Cannibal Woman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40426864","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjzkd.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462984394"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dd3ed3a-e476-3af6-815e-97083858cc2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1zkjzkd.7"}],"isPartOf":"Religion and Nationalism in Chinese Societies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"89","pagination":"89-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","History","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Missionizing, Civilizing, and Nationizing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjzkd.7","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[129182,129287]],"Locations in B":[[44330,44434]],"abstract":"This chapter aims at drawing connections between the three sets of discourses on the colonial integration of others into the self and its legitimation: first, the Chinese nationalist discourse on \u2018China\u2019s assimilative power\u2019, second, its pre-discursive root or dispositif<\/em>, the \u2018Confucian civilizing mission\u2019, and, third, European Christian missionizing. The chapter is divided into two main parts. In the first part, I will go into detail about the post-1900 nationalist discourse and highlight how the idea of \u2018China\u2019s assimilative power\u2019 was developed due to the demands of Chinese nation-building. In the second part, I will argue why I see a theoretical","subTitle":"Linked Concepts of Compelled Change","keyphrase":["confucian civilizing","qing empire","assimilative power","colonialism","china\u2019s assimilative","civilizing mission","chinese nation","internal colonialism","bluntschli","liang qichao"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Bongie"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41849856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13822373"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613124167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73d4b255-f12c-38ac-98f1-e845f7e3fdf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41849856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwignewwesindgui"}],"isPartOf":"NWIG: New West Indian Guide \/ Nieuwe West-Indische Gids","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"307","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-307","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"KITLV, Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FRANCOPHONE CONJUNCTURES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41849856","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":7327,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claire Canavan","Gwendolyn Alker","Randy Martin","Barbara Browning","Awam Amkpa"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23266988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dialogues: The State of the Body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23266988","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexandra Hrycak","Maria G. Rewakowicz"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09259392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41978849"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0632928-8a0d-3abd-b272-33689c838903"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40646240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studeasteurothou"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in East European Thought","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Feminism, intellectuals and the formation of micro-publics in postcommunist Ukraine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646240","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":12574,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article broadens understanding of the role that East European intellectuals have played in building foundations for democratic institutions and practices over the past two decades. Drawing on Habermas' writings on the public sphere, we use interviews conducted with founders of women's and gender studies centers, professional women's NGOs and Internet forums to examine the establishment of new micro-contexts for civic engagement and critical debate in Ukraine. Three main types of indigenous feminist micro-public are identified: academic, professional and virtual. Through an analysis of these micro-publics as well as the works of writer Oksana Zabuzhko, we explore the articulation and legitimation of a \"national feminist\" standpoint that draws upon feminism to criticize populist understandings of national history and civic belonging. We contribute to studies of democratization and transition by suggesting how small groups of critical intellectuals (locally called \"tusovky\") acted as microfoundations of civil society. By supporting local engagement with Western critical theory, these small groups helped to create a new infrastructure for engaging intellectuals in the pluralization and diversification of public life.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.2.2.8","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f4c919f-256d-30d6-bf6f-3e4180a062fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.2.2.8"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hyenas in the Enchanted Brothel: \u201c\u201cThe Naked<\/em> Truth\u201d\u201d in Djibril Diop Mamb\u00e9\u00e9ty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.2.2.8","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article examines how the revolutionary African cinema of Djibril Diop Mamb\u00e9\u00e9ty reconceptualizes what is conventionally termed sexuality, pleasure, or eroticism, under colonialism and neocolonialism. Critically, it argues against puritanical interpretations of continental film work and for an anti-imperialist black body politics freed from puritanical imperialism or its project of dominating desire of all kinds. In particular, it demonstrates how Mamb\u00e9\u00e9ty's magna opera, Touki-Bouki and Hy\u00e8\u00e8nes, expose and resist what Frantz Fanon called \u201c\u201cthe naked truth\u201d\u201d of colonization, or the capitalist empire of the West, toward an ecstatic politics of pan-African revolution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Edison"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26559626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77d503d7-5be9-3228-9c20-d703a3bdadd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26559626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ash\u00e9-Caribbean Imagery and Folklore in Four Poems of Nicol\u00e1s Guill\u00e9n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26559626","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":21756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. Kelly"],"datePublished":"1995-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd07ec1f-5142-3bbe-8a23-7e0391d3f1a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Threats to Difference in Colonial Fiji","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656231","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":10584,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[125180,125258]],"Locations in B":[[16810,16887]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald W. Cooley"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae2f983-21f6-35da-832f-2aa28d43744f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE HOTHOUSE OR THE STREET: IMPERIALISM AND NARRATIVE IN PYNCHON'S \"V.\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284217","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Child"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26410801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc620543-b73c-3b8d-8e42-0f4d921e90ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26410801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Magical Real and the Rural Modern in Cinema Novo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26410801","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Vidas Secas and Black God, White Devil","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josephine Nock-Hee Park"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30053139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30053139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Modern Horizons: Review of Brown's Utopian Gestures and Marx's The Modernist Novel and the Decline of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30053139","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":3530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JUSTIN JACKSON"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41887645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kissinger's Kidnapper: Eqbal Ahmad, the U.S. New Left, and the Transnational Romance of Revolutionary War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887645","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":18533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adolph L. Reed, Jr."],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23556656","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23556656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MARXISM AND NATIONALISM IN AFROAMERICA: INTRODUCTION: A NOTE ON BLACK INTELLECTUALS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23556656","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":22236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. 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By paying attention to a brief history of state-implemented social categories, we see how the dawn of political democracy in 1994 marked an embrace of \u2013 not opposition to \u2013 their inheritance by the African National Congress. The argument is placed within a theoretical framework that dovetails David Lyon\u2019s popularization of \u2018social sorting\u2019 with an extension of Harold Wolpe\u2019s understanding of apartheid and capitalism. This bridging between Lyon and Wolpe is developed to advance the view that apartheid is a social condition whose historical social categories of rule have been reproduced since 1994 in the framing of credit legislation, policy and scoring. These categories are framed in the \u2018new\u2019 South Africa as indicators of \u2018social transformation\u2019. Through the lens of credit scoring, in particular, it is demonstrated that \u2018social transformation\u2019 not only influences, shapes and reproduces historical forms of social categories, but also serves the state\u2019s attempt to create and maintain populations as risks.","subTitle":"Credit scoring and the reproduction of populations as risks in South Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3749c1e8-99a2-3b3a-9b91-c195e9521bc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977558","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":3250,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea L. 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Underdevelopment and Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44480168","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":6221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gloria Harper Dickinson"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03641686"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205596"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41709e2d-d437-3bc3-9552-d607039cde20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/532678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asareviewbooks"}],"isPartOf":"ASA Review of Books","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/532678","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1169,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[7169,7230]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bennetta Jules-Rosette"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de5294ac-2598-3450-84e8-70852514de3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3337896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-29+90-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mus\u00e9e Dapper: New Directions for a Postcolonial Museum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337896","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08848971"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52b4f3e8-47da-3135-a3ab-819ff5b58a64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23362173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociforu"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Different Kind of Whiteness: Marking and Unmarking of Social Boundaries in the Construction of Hegemonic Ethnicity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362173","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12141,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[50563,50629]],"abstract":"This article proposes a new theoretical approach to the analysis of hegemonic ethnicity through an examination of the construction of white ethnicity among Ashkenazim (Jews of European origin) in Israel. Contrary to the theory of symbolic ethnicity, I argue that \"Ashkenaziness\" in Israel is not an optional, voluntary identity; rather, it is constituted by employing narratives that continually establish cultural, color-based, and ethnic boundaries between Ashkenazim and Mizrahi Jews. In certain social and ideological circumstances, however, boundary marking is not enough to maintain a privileged status. From the narratives of Ashkenazi Jews\u2014the Israeli version of whites\u2014it emerges that not only do they demarcate social boundaries between themselves and other groups, thereby preserving the ethnic hierarchy, but they are constantly engaged in blurring or erasing these same boundaries, allowing Ashkenazim to remain a transparent, unmarked social category. This dual practice of marking and unmarking is a result of the tension between the Jewish-Zionist and Western-secular images of the state. While Israel's Jewish discourse supposedly negates intra-Jewish ethnic conflicts, the Western ideal identifies Ashkenazim with the state, thus solidifying their power and preserving their privileged status.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melanie Shepherd"],"datePublished":"2011-03-15","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerethnhist.30.3.0076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02785927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49605417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238338"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de60838d-6b2d-3614-b849-0f2b2b33b82f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jamerethnhist.30.3.0076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerethnhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Ethnic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jamerethnhist.30.3.0076","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELLIOTT P. 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Vernon"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/amerindiquar.36.1.0034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629413"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212072"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aea24ed-4ef9-3741-932a-3f70823e11e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/amerindiquar.36.1.0034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"\u201cWe Were Those Who Walked out of Bullets and Hunger\u201d: Representation of Trauma and Healing in Solar Storms<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/amerindiquar.36.1.0034","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6871,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[37794,37861]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Robertson","Edwina Light","Wendy Lipworth","Garry Walter"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0099","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14421771"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-252088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf63cec3-9bd5-330a-adc5-0674a773f028"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0099"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healthhist"}],"isPartOf":"Health and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Australian and New Zealand Society of the History of Medicine, Inc","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Medicine & Allied Health","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Contemporary Significance of the Holocaust for Australian Psychiatry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0099","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this paper we survey briefly the components of the Holocaust directly relevant to the psychiatric profession and identify the main themes of relevance to contemporary psychiatry. The \u2018euthanasia\u2019 program; the persecution of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) citizens; and the complex relationship between the psychiatric profession and Nazi state are the main themes to emerge from this survey. We then compare this period with key themes in the history of Australian psychiatry and link these themes to some of the contemporary ethical challenges the profession faces.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Magaziner","Sean Jacobs"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01475479"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48794761"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233802"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbc39ebe-fa3b-3088-a2d2-083b0385f116"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43302712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelaboworkhist"}],"isPartOf":"International Labor and Working-Class History","issueNumber":"83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"International Labor and Working-Class, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes from Marikana, South Africa: The Platinum Miners' Strike, the Massacre, and the Struggle for Equivalence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43302712","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This note reflects on the August 2012 miners' strike at Marikana, South Africa in light of a century long history of violence associated with worker actions in that country and elsewhere in the Global South. It suggests that the breakaway union's allegedly 'illegal' strike fits within a long tradition of radical worker activism in South Africa, which is best understood in light of anticolonial efforts to short-circuit the chronologies of imperial power. The Marikana strike, like anticolonial rebellions during the early twentieth century and, critically, white worker struggles following First World War, was an effort to speed up the process by which the value of workers' lives and labor might be made equivalent to those in power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Badia Sahar Ahad"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.13.3.0139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b5f1ac6-4120-3331-a7ee-065f3539f254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.13.3.0139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231322","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anders Nilsson"],"datePublished":"1993-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e840fa95-70cf-3114-88ea-e83577356a17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Pseudo-Terrorists to Pseudo-Guerillas: The MNR in Mozambique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006104","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Jeffries"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1161321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aaf1e701-c10c-3e30-a366-24d495d2ac85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1161321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Netland"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ef8aaab-c83e-3a02-b7d9-482aa5b28fe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44312667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"From Resistance to \"Kenosis\": Reconciling Cultural Difference in the Fiction of Endo Shusaku","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312667","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SAURAV DASTHAKUR"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219118"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37893507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-34803"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0764fd79-39d0-33de-b9a9-2087e92aa1f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24738614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"World-History,\" \"Itih\u0101sa,\" and Memory: Rabindranath Tagore's Musical Program in the Age of Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738614","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":12127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay attempts an exploration of the historical and historiographical implications of the interplay of individual, local, \"national,\" and global forms of memory in the music of Rabindranath Tagore. Produced at a time of crises in the Indian postcolonial subjectivity, this music offers a critique of the Eurocentric discourses of \"World-history\" and nationalism, by invoking alternative Indian discourses of \"Itih\u0101sa\" and \"sam\u0101j\". At the same time, Tagore departs from the contemporary Hindu cultural nationalist revivalist approach of the tradition of North Indian (Hindustani) classical music and subjects it to a creative regenerative endeavor by reconnecting the tradition with its original subaltern roots. Skeptical of several kinds of homogeneous impulses, this music offers an alternative idea of universalism that is as much human as a specific civilizational concept. Tagore's musical program thus offers an aesthetic blueprint of a more inclusive indigenous modernity in the subcontinent.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Bowman"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/westhistquar.46.3.0335","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00433810"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47773060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85ea8cae-aab6-31a6-aa51-16f0cbb2bd27"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/westhistquar.46.3.0335"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"Western Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Negotiating Conquest: Internal Colonialism and Shared Histories in the South Texas Borderlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/westhistquar.46.3.0335","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay conceptualizes the post-1848 South Texas borderlands through the internal colonial model. South Texas Mexicans, rather than being the passive victims of domination by a colonial power, actively negotiated their places within the South Texas internal colony, similar to colonized peoples in formal colonial settings throughout world history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0423df75-3005-3f7b-be52-08529cd8de3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979876","volumeNumber":"285","wordCount":3377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert S. G\u00e9rard"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438101","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84935935-93d5-3718-914c-6a4c4a76fdc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/438101"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438101","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwaku Larbi Korang"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41957256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41957256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Africa and Australia\" Revisited: Reading Kate Grenville's \"Joan Makes History\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41957256","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Straussberger"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93645701-3521-314e-b2fb-a4cb2236ee8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44509327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"STORMING THE CITADEL: DECOLONIZATION AND POLITICAL CONTESTATION IN GUINEA'S FUTA JALLON, 1945-61","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44509327","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":11120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines how contestation between political parties, politicians, and their supporters shaped Guinea's decolonization from 1945 to 1961. The last region to resist the rise of S\u00e9kou Tour\u00e9's PDG, the Fulbe-dominated Futa Jallon-as both a political space and representation of Fulbe culture-was at the center of strategic and intellectual struggles over the shape of the postcolonial Guinean state and society. What resulted from contestation was the general belief that the Fulbe and the Futa Jallon were divergent from the rest of Guinea, a fragment in the making.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Friedman Goldstein"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3031533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af59784d-25f1-32cf-8923-fa21a1c80f37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3031533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegrohistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Violence as an Instrument for Social Change: The Views of Frederick Douglass (1817-1895)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3031533","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen Messer"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3630956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bb9182f-5781-32a9-9708-60e3042adbe9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3630956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"janthrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Anthropological Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of New Mexico","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pluralist Approaches to Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3630956","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Some anthropologists criticize United Nations \"universal\" human rights as ethnocentrically Western. But all sociocultural groups define some concept analogous to human rights, and multiple political and philosophical cultures have contributed to the evolving UN framework. This essay traces the four major sources of modern human rights (Western political liberalism, socialism and social welfare principles, cross-cultural rights traditions, and the UN instruments) and focuses on points of agreement in the evolving framework. The evidence is used to argue for a pluralist approach to human rights (rather than narrower universal, Western, or broader cultural relativist approaches) and suggests points for additional anthropological contributions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxt17.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837624731"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cba5e9f7-7f7d-33df-a134-56ef83869044"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1xxt17.7"}],"isPartOf":"Spaces of the Poor","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"97","pagination":"97-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Blood in the Air","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxt17.7","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8866,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[38731,38786],[150652,150767],[151676,151834]],"Locations in B":[[31561,31617],[31928,32043],[42841,42997]],"abstract":"In 1913, a popular newspaper columnist in the Russian capital observed with dismay that \u201cnewspapers are printed on white paper, but, really, in our times its pages seem covered with blood\u201d\u00b9. Many commentators shared this view, often emphasizing the point with dramatic metaphors. Both typical and often repeated was a phrase that the physician and public health activist Dmitrii Zhbankov often used in talks, reports, and newspaper columns: a \u201ctraumatic epidemic of blood and violence\u201d was raging in everyday city life, especially in the capital city St. Petersburg.\u00b2 For newspapers, it was \u201ceveryday\u201d violence that was the main concern. Certainly,","subTitle":"Everyday Violence in the Experience of the Petersburg Poor, 1905-1917","keyphrase":["violence","peterburgskii listok","gazeta","gazeta kopeika","gazeta kop","zhizn dlia","steinberg","petersburg","hooligan","skitalets"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maarit Laitinen-Ford"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dd375dc-7cf2-3274-aa64-f0b885eb20f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26759622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Global Cosmology of a Local Religion: A Caribbean Twist in Discourses of Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759622","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benita Parry"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Criminal law"],"title":"Criminal Obsessions, after Foucault: Postcoloniality, Policing, and the Metaphysics of Disorder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/423773","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aparna Basu"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44146127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"22491937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe00bd3d-510a-37df-bf96-1e89bd5015e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44146127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procindihistcong"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Indian History Congress","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"736","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-736","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Indian History Congress","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Brown"],"datePublished":"1977-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3366769f-c1ba-35d0-9235-f2ce665a21a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"West Indian Literature: Road to a \"New World\" Sensibility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783946","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin C. 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Autochthony discourses link identity and space, enabling the speaker to establish a direct claim to territory by asserting that one is an original inhabitant, a 'son of the soil'. Drawing from recent African examples, this contribution argues that the employment of autochthony discourses is an attractive response to the ontological uncertainty around political identities within the postmodern\/postcolonial condition. Autochthony discourses can resonate deeply with populations longing for a sense of primal security in the face of uncertainty generated by a variety of sources, from the processes of contemporary globalisation to the collapse of neo-patrimonial structures. Yet this sense of security is inevitably fleeting, given the instability and plasticity of autochthony claims. The contribution examines why these discourses are often characterised by violence, and argues that autochthony is frequently linked to the desire for order inherent in contemporary state making, which invariably relies on multiple manifestations of violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kalliopi Nikolopoulou"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24659565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00855553"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bdd67ca-c70a-383b-9137-a384d76e6cbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24659565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resephen"}],"isPartOf":"Research in Phenomenology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"283","pagination":"pp. 283-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Of a Sense beyond Words","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24659565","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4174,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juliet Hooker"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3662820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e2e9102-8698-32fb-a2d4-720192ccd54f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3662820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Beloved Enemies\": Race and Official Mestizo Nationalism in Nicaragua","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3662820","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes the persistence of an official discourse of mestizo nationalism in Nicaragua in spite of the adoption of multicultural citizenship rights for black and indigenous coste\u00f1os in 1986. These reforms appeared to directly contradict key premises of previously dominant nationalist ideologies, particularly the idea that Nicaragua was a uniformly mestizo nation. Instead of a radical break with the past, however, what we find in contemporary Nicaragua is a continuous process of negotiation and contestation among three variants of official mestizo nationalism: vanguardismo, Sandinismo, and \"mestizo multiculturalism\" that emerged in the 1930s, 1960s, and 1990s respectively. This article traces the continuities among these disparate but intimately related accounts of national history and identity and the way they all operate to limit the political inclusion of black and indigenous coste\u00f1os as such. \/\/\/ Este art\u00edculo analiza la persistencia de un nacionalismo oficial mestizo en Nicaragua a pesar de la adopci\u00f3n de derechos ciudadanos multiculturales para coste\u00f1os afro-descendientes e ind\u00edgenas en 1986. Estas reformas constitucionales aparentan contradecir directamente premisas claves de ideolog\u00edas nacionalistas previamente dominantes, en particular la idea de Nicaragua como una naci\u00f3n uniformemente mestiza. Pero en vez de una radical ruptura con el pasado, este art\u00edculo argumenta que lo que se divisa actualmente en Nicaragua es un proceso constante de negociaci\u00f3n y contienda entre tres modalidades del nacionalismo oficial mestizo: el vanguardismo, Sandinismo, y lo que yo llamo \"multiculturalismo mestizo\" que surgieron en las d\u00e9cadas de 1930, 1960, y 1990 respectivamente. Este art\u00edculo traza las continuidades entre estos divergentes pero \u00edntimamente relacionados relatos sobre la identidad e historia nicarag\u00fcenses, y la manera en la cual todos funcionan para limitar la plena inclusi\u00f3n pol\u00edtica de coste\u00f1os afro-descendientes e ind\u00edgenas como tales.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Slaughter"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/762582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"406","pagination":"pp. 406-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"A Question of Narration: The Voice in International Human Rights Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/762582","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Doreen E. 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We believe there is a need to interrupt (neo)colonizing approaches to decoloniality, that is, the limitations of the master\u2019s tools. Rather, we offer a mediation that critiques the centering of the colonial. In doing so, we weave into this analysis a series of narratives that beckon us back prior to the decolonial\/postcolonial turn and beyond postcolonial and decolonial feminist thought\u2014allowing for a precolonial knowing and telling to emerge. Through these tellings, we define and acknowledge spaces of meaning and traditions.","subTitle":"Voices of Ancestors, Revolutions, and Being","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Sykes"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346551"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709637"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20184761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revienglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of English Studies","issueNumber":"241","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"656","pageStart":"654","pagination":"pp. 654-656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20184761","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":1004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohammad A. 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Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23493676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10270353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9dcfb3a-c806-31c2-b269-240de4ba2b22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23493676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Science \/ Revue Africaine de Science Politique","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Explaining and Managing Ethnic Conflict in Africa: Towards a Cultural Theory of Democracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23493676","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Situating the salience of ethnic conflicts in the character of the state as a partisan and major source of ethnic conflict, this article argues that we may reasonably expect to lessen rather than deepen ethnic conflict by changing the character of the state, making access to it more inclusive of significant ethnic groups in the country. Using Ethiopia and Nigeria as examples, the article shows how federal-type consociational power-sharing constitutional arrangements, which divide or fracture and structure the sovereignty of the state, such that significant ethnic groups have their own \"sovereignty\" within their natal or local spaces, while entrenching their participation within the national \"sovereign\" space, through provisions for mutual control of the state at that level, can be strategically utilised to achieve such an object.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARYSE COND\u00c9","Dawn Fulton"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41104213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48455320"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235202"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fdf486ea-089e-3bf4-9f7e-792496f7ea18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41104213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"673","pagination":"pp. 673-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"How to Become a So-Called Caribbean Woman Writer: A User's Manual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41104213","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":2319,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[454513,454736]],"Locations in B":[[9566,9787]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher K. Githiora"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69dc732f-ab3b-38a8-8213-ef0b4450bb5a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25473400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Recreating Discourse and Performance in Kenyan Urban Space through \"M\u0169githi\", Hip Hop and \"G\u0129cand\u0129\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25473400","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines the one-man guitar \"M\u0169githi\" music dance and performance popular in urban Kenyan urban space together with localized Kenyan Hip Hop. The music genres are seen as cultural practices that perform global socio-cultural discourses, and which can also be read for the ways in which they both indicate and formulate contexts. A close examination of the two popular genres shows how they continue to borrow from a variety of cultures and poetic forms. Both \"M\u0169githi\" and Kenyan Hip Hop music also embody such forms as G\u0129k\u0169y\u0169 poetic tradition known as \"G\u0129cand\u0129.\" The male-dominated tradition is somewhat comparable to such well known traditions as West African praise-singers and Imbongi male Zulu biographers in terms of their praise-singing performances and poetry. Consequently the borrowing and fusion between \"G\u0129cand\u0129\" on the one hand and \"M\u0169githi\" and Hip Hop traditions on the other, help to display dynamic stylistic variations along with creative dialogic inter-textuality (Bakhtin 1981). This paper suggests that, given the creative and popular nature of the two musical genres, and the often controversial sociocultural discourses they embody, both \"M\u0169githi\" and Kenyan Hip Hop music enjoy wide acclaim and 'covert prestige' (Trudgill 1972), irrespective of the perceptions that they are both transgressive and subversive sociocultural and political representations of 'the wretched of the earth' (Fanon 1967).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Steinmetz"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5311d4a4-f37c-3d39-adfb-17c8449efeac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Sociology of Empires, Colonies, and Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049527","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":16113,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[83295,83358]],"abstract":"Sociologists are adding specific disciplinary accents to the burgeoning literature in colonial, imperial, and postcolonial studies. They have been especially keen to add explanatory accounts to the historical literature on empires. Starting in the 1950s, sociologists pioneered the study of colonies as historical formations. Against traditional anthropological approaches, sociologists insisted on studying colonizer and colonized in their dynamic interactions, asking how both groups were being transformed. Like contemporary postcolonial scholars, sociologists began asking in the 1950s how metropoles were being remade by overseas colonialism and colonial immigration. Echoing discussions in the 1950s among sociologists working in the colonies, current discussions of postcolonial sociology question the applicability of Western social scientific concepts and theories to the global South and ask how sociology itself has been shaped by empire. Current sociological research on empires focuses on six sets of causal mechanisms: (1) capitalism; (2) geopolitics, war, and violence; (3) cultural representations and subjectivity; (4) resistance and collaboration by the colonized; (5) institutional dimensions of empires and colonies; and (6) conflict and compromise among colonizers at the heart of colonial states.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Ratcliff"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f5638a8-85a2-3881-8312-825a4c719c2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"BLACK WRITERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!\" Negotiating Pan-African Politics of Cultural Struggle in Afro-Latin America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069281","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Demba Moussa Dembele"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9710253a-0059-3dcf-bd02-84eeb07caa4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa's Developmental Impasse: Some Perspectives and Recommendations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.179","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Africa is among the \u201cpoorest\u201d regions of the world. The reality is that Africa is not poor but rather impoverished. This impoverishment dates back to the dawn of capitalism when slavery was one of the key elements of capitalism's \u201coriginal accumulation\u201d, as demonstrated par Karl Marx in The Capital. Colonial administration replaced slavery as from the 19th Century with the occupation of Africa by Western powers. This has led to a systematic looting of its natural resources and the exploitation of its cheap labour which served to industrialise Western countries. Thus, slavery and colonisation constituted the main causes of Africa's impoverishment. With its accession to independence from the 1960s, one may have thought that looting Africa would have come to an end and its development stepped up. It was the contrary that occurred because in many countries, foreign domination had been reinforced in connivance with the new African leaders. The failure of the neo-colonial management of African countries was illustrated by the external debt crisis which started from the end of the 1970s and led to the World Bank and IMF's intervention. These institutions forced upon African countries the notoriously sad adjustment programmes which contributed to worsening the crisis in their economies, taking poverty to an unprecedented level. The international financial crisis that occurred in 2008 illustrated the failure of market fundamentalism of which adjustment programmes are the forerunners. This crisis which has shaken the very bases of the capitalistic system affords African leaders and thinkers the opportunity to break loose of the neoliberal yoke and explore a development path that is more in tune with Africa. The author underscores that such a path should be non-capitalistic because the heavy toll that Africa has paid since the birth of capitalism until now is a proof that the capitalistic development model is bound to fail. Socialism is the most appropriate development option because it can reconcile economic efficiency, wealth redistribution, social justice and democracy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["N. Alva"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08992851"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531006"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eccb2398-e027-334b-8be6-dfecb16cf1f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44578536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middleeastreport"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Report","issueNumber":"281","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Middle East Research and Information Project, Inc. (MERIP)","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Palestinian Workers Campaign for Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44578536","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Deepa Ollapally"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2152572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323195"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064101"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2152572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Academy of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Third World Nationalism and the United States after the Cold War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2152572","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":9033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian","Yossi David"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44074893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44223331-9c55-344b-be89-d2a152bf5c25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44074893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"856","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-856","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Computer law"],"title":"IS THE VIOLENCE OF TAG MEHIR A STATE CRIME?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44074893","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":10986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on the violent acts of Tag-Mehir (Price Tag), a group of Israeli citizens that injure, attack, vandalize and violate Palestinian individuals, communities and property. The paper discusses the criminalities of Tag-Mehir by reporting statistics on their crimes and juxtaposing statistical data with voices and analyses of Israeli officials and media coverage. By looking at the interlocking effects of religious, hate and state crime in the context of Israel's settler colonialism, we argue that the acts of Tag-Mehir constitute aggressive violence aimed at concealing the state's criminalities against the colonized Palestinian body and space. The state's failure to effectively prosecute the perpetrators of these crimes demonstrates a tacit approval for the religiously and nationally motivated violence. Tag-Mehir's state crimes hide within the resulting violent shuttling between nationalistic hate, violence and religious crimes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mireille Fanon-Mend\u00e8s France","Donato Fhunsu"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ea25038-a021-3c5c-b5e4-3e4899bac28b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Contribution of Frantz Fanon to the Process of the Liberation of the People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0008","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl Plasa"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224550","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05b3d895-08b7-3380-8a05-fa3415febbae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30224550"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Charlotte Bront\u00eb's Foreign Bodies: Slavery and Sexuality in \"The Professor\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30224550","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Engle Merry"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"689e8f2e-17cd-3dfd-80f3-5fe38e6f39a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24510831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought: Colonialism, Post-Colonialism, and Legal Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510831","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haseenah Ebrahim"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efcf9f39-0c59-3ed4-82c6-a16f4dd93d66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Salisbury University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Sugar Cane Alley\": Re-reading Race, Class and Identity In Zobel's \"La rue cases n\u00e8gres\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797085","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TAITU HERON","YANIQUE HUME"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564315992"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235739"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52555bb4-5400-30b5-af83-5db2e812cceb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43487733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Caribbean Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Stepping Out: Peter Tosh and the Dynamics of Afro-Caribbean Existence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43487733","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joanna Schneider Zangrando","Robert L. Zangrando"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f153cec4-e45d-3ff4-a868-e5bfde3a5843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Protest: A Rejection of the American Dream","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783799","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":6123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1989-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f99788d1-e11a-3d87-b902-e7103df1ad64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Three Books on Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186557","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3082,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[6865,6925]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd W. Brown"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783655","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f19ed7dc-eaed-36e9-b087-6711afbe21a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783655"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Lorraine Hansberry as Ironist: A Reappraisal of A Raisin in the Sun","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783655","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARCIN WOJCIECH SOLARZ"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41698805","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc7dbca1-7834-37f3-a069-70daf5371833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41698805"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"1573","pageStart":"1561","pagination":"pp. 1561-1573","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Third World': the 60th anniversary of a concept that changed history","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41698805","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The term 'Third World' was coined in 1952 by the French scientist Alfred Sauvy. From the start the meaning of both the phrase itself and its geographical reference have been ambiguous. Generally speaking the term has always had both a political and a socioeconomic meaning, even though at first, during the Cold War, the political sense was more widely applied. The term gained popularity quickly and it became one of the most important and expressive concepts of the 20th century. From the very beginning, however, it was strongly criticised. Its critics have pointed out many different problems, which is why some people have argued that the notion of the 'Third World' should be abandoned. These voices were particularly widespread after the end of the Cold War. Nevertheless, the concept 'Third World' is still valid and it remains one of the most frequently used terms for describing the global South. The factors that made the concept of the 'Third World' popular are still valid.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Watts"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abe5612c-1366-3bd2-a10f-8e2293459388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Roland Barthes's Cold-War Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685729","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TREVOR PARFITT"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42002184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfe82fe3-c77f-34a1-8f76-3ecd30f56bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42002184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"1192","pageStart":"1175","pagination":"pp. 1175-1192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Modalities of Violence in Development: structural or contingent, mythic or divine?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42002184","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9169,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[125785,125955]],"Locations in B":[[16367,16509]],"abstract":"This paper examines the relationship between violence and development. It explores whether violence is an intrinsic (structural) part of development, or a contingent result of poor or mistaken policies and practices that might be corrected. The issue of how far an element of violence might be desirable for development is also considered. These two issues are debated in the context of a variety of approaches to development and in light of various accounts of violence offered by analysts such as Fanon, Benjamin, Critchley and Zizek. In conclusion it is argued that an emancipatory conception of development may be reconciled with Benjamins idea of divine violence in the form of a Badiouan event\u2014with the proviso that the Derridian conception of the economy of violence is also applied in such a way as to minimise, or at least limit violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William J. Nichols"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Report on Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934670","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin Staniland"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/719495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/719495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"270","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and the African Political Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/719495","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":11213,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne Herzog"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23738693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23738693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"258","pagination":"pp. 258-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ADRIENNE RICH AND THE DISCOURSE OF DECOLONIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23738693","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Adlai Murdoch"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4b493cd-9ec6-3538-aa98-3f017a8888a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Autobiography and Departmentalization in Chamoiseau's \"Chemin d'\u00e9cole\": Representational Strategies and the Martinican Memoir","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468114","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Purportedly a childhood memoir, Chamoiseau's Chemin-d'\u00e9cole is inscribed in a long tradition of Caribbean autobiographical writing. As such, it inherits and expands upon the themes and tensions of autobiography, both as a narrative of selfhood and as a discursive tool of identity and culture in the Caribbean context. Patrick Chamoiseau inscribes a set of writing practices in Ecrire en pays domin\u00e9 and Chemin-d'\u00e9cole, both aimed at illuminating the contradictory results of almost fifty years of French Caribbean overseas departmentalization. This double process of economic and cultural domination appropriates identitarian issues of ambiguity, belonging, and authenticity predicated on the departmental experience in general and its educational practices in particular, and inserts them into his re-presentation of his Martinican childhood. Ultimately, his work highlights the intrinsic paradoxes of departmental integration that, in bringing the d\u00e9partements d'outre-mer directly within the ambit of France, progressively erased their ethnic, linguistic, and cultural difference from the mainland.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdullahi Ali Ibrahim"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aca4db7-28f9-3327-ab66-2abe2e0f75e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Tale of Two Sudanese Courts: Colonial Governmentality Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525031","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuela Ribeiro Sanches"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.94","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0855364e-6baa-3317-8dc3-5241289ddf4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.94"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Memory, Authenticity, and (the Absence of) Ruins: Resonances between Werner Herzog and John Akomfrah","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.2.94","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This essay engages in a contrapuntal reading of John Akomfrah's Testament (1988) and Werner Herzog's Cobra Verde (1987), considering their respective strategies of dealing with issues of memory and identity. This way of reading the two filmmakers' works reveals unexpected angles of both films through juxtapositions that may illuminate in a new way the objects of comparison\u2014not in their absolute irreducibility or untranslatability but rather in their most resonant moments. In particular, I explore how Akomfrah's film, in contrast to Herzog's historical fiction, addresses the memories of individuals and the traces left unacknowledged in their lived experiences.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christine Montgomery"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2df0497b-f177-37c4-86fc-6a00f0ed7e9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44155287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pendulum Time, Collective Freedom, and Rethinking the Neo-Slave Narrative in Arna Bontemps's \"Black Thunder: Gabriel's Revolt: Virginia, 1800\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155287","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan Rabinowitz","Daniel Monterescu"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6896c7e2-fa66-308d-a61f-3dffebc79942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30069610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconfiguring the \"Mixed Town\": Urban Transformations of Ethnonational Relations in Palestine and Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069610","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":16692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GUO-OU ZHUANG"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026749X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227025"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7147e140-fe67-3c72-95fc-220890e9e38f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24494659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modeasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Asian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"550","pagination":"pp. 550-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nostalgia for the Old Versus Wonder at the New: Cultural disenchantment and the temptation of modernity in \"Nie Hai Hua\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24494659","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper attempts to revise aspects of the existing interpretations of Nie Hai Hua (A Flower in a Sinful Sea) by applying perspectives from post-colonial studies to the study of this late Qing Chinese novel. Here the novel is read as a national narrative that portrays the emergence of China as a modern nation state from a decaying empire, with its intelligentsia caught between their desire to embrace modernity and nostalgia for cultural traditions. From the mid-nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, traditional Chinese scholars were faced with a predicament: they were lured by the modernity represented by Western learning, on the one hand, but were tied by an emotional link to Chinese tradition, on the other. In a disintegrating society, they struggled both to preserve their own cultural identity and construct a new identity. The opposing groups of Chinese literati portrayed in the novel in fact reflect the schizophrenic state of the Chinese consciousness on the threshold of modernity. To write the story of the nation demands that we articulate that archaic ambivalence that informs modernity.\u00b9","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Sandbrook"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6556c2b1-df6a-38a9-a884-e947e6c434a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Political Potential of African Urban Workers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483719","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La classe ouvri\u00e8re a, l'histoire le d\u00e9montre, jou\u00e9 un r\u00f4le important lorsqu'il s'est agi d'encourager \u00e0 la fois les r\u00e9formes sociales et la r\u00e9volution dans les pays industrialis\u00e9s. Peut-on s'attendre \u00e0 ce que les travailleurs urbains jouent un r\u00f4le analogue en Afrique tropicale \u00e9tant donn\u00e9 les caract\u00e9ristiques bien diff\u00e9rentes du capitalisme p\u00e9riph\u00e9rique? Les partisans de la th\u00e9orie de l' \u00ab aristocratie ouvri\u00e8re \u00bb diraient que non. Mais cette th\u00e9orie n'est pas seulement vague sur le plan abstrait et faible sur le plan pratique en ce qui concerne l'emploi pour l'ensemble des travailleurs en Afrique tropicale, elle est aussi simpliste de par son grossier mat\u00e9rialisme. Alors que l' \u00ab \u00e9conomisme \u00bb s'av\u00e8re une tendance g\u00e9n\u00e9rale parmi les mouvements ouvriers des villes, certains segments en sont venus \u00e0 une conception sinon r\u00e9volutionnaire, du moins \u00ab populiste \u00bb qui transcende l'\u00e9conomisme. Certains des facteurs de politisation qui favorisent chez les travailleurs une mentalit\u00e9 populiste et partisane de changements radicaux trouvent un \u00e9cho dans la conclusion de cet essai.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John McLeod"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbbd65a1-844e-32d7-acdc-bd6dad9110f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"WHEEL AND COME AGAIN\": TRANSNATIONAL AESTHETICS BEYOND THE POSTCOLONIAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274148","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Gonz\u00e1lez Yuen"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"579","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-579","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Alienation or Empowerment? Law and Strategies for Social Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828619","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13966,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[35983,36029]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin McKinsey"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2935e93-1f54-346d-a1cb-68a21e12f0cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27654929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"902","pageStart":"891","pagination":"pp. 891-902","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Missing Sounds and Mutable Meanings: Names in Derek Walcott's \"Omeros\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27654929","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Gordon"],"datePublished":"2003-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e45e66a-a302-3208-b42b-dff48490d7fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4241204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hybridity, Heterotopia, and Mateship in China Mi\u00e9ville's \"Perdido Street Station\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4241204","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10664,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article considers the ways in which China Mi\u00e9ville's \"Perdido Street Station\" (2000) exhibits its hybridity, by connecting notions of hybridity to those of the grotesque. It goes on to consider the novel in terms of heterotopia as Foucault discusses it. Last, it links ideas of hybridity and heterotopia to the idea of mateship, as the novel uses dialectics to form an interconnected and dynamic network.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ERIN M. FEHSKENS"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544587","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"865f66d7-2230-3786-ac97-207cbef415e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544587"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ELVIS HAS LEFT THE COUNTRY: MARRONAGE IN CHRIS ABANI'S \"GRACELAND\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544587","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article considers the modes of resistance employed by Elvis Oke, the teenage protagonist of Chris Abani's GraceLand (2005). I argue that the novel encrypts creative marronage in Elvis's actions to draw them together into a sustained critique of Nigerian masculinity and state-sponsored terror. Creative marronage refers to practices of cultural resistance and conscious self-displacement whose features conceptually and tactically align with historical acts of resistance and displacement performed by self-emancipated slaves in the American Tropics. The connection to a wider geographical concept of the Americas also draws Elvis into a black Atlantic tradition of resistance to the colonial and neo-colonial powers that enslave people and underdevelop regions of the Global South. Read through the concept of marronage, Oke's desultory behavior and unusual characteristics become more purposive, and the novel gains traction as a consideration of class struggle, gendered violence, and alternative nationalisms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LaShandra Sullivan"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6344b2c-228c-3c19-9fa6-881d930bc09e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43652730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652730","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":2146,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[13196,13242]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janet McIntosh"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2023f24a-6ac3-325f-bc0c-5a0e30648ba7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43652743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"1199","pageStart":"1165","pagination":"pp. 1165-1199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Linguistic Atonement: Penitence and Privilege in White Kenyan Language Ideologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43652743","volumeNumber":"87","wordCount":15948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes language ideology among whites in Kenya, documenting an historical shift from colonial settlers' condescending attitude toward Kiswahili to an enthusiastic stance among settler descendants, some of whom pride themselves on their Kiswahili abilities and say it is their languge of \"connection\" to Afro-Kenyans. I situate this change in a context of contemporary white anxiety about national belonging, especially given that colonial misdeeds have been put in the spotlight by events of the last decade. I argue that whites' stance of \"linguistic atonement\" attempts, with mixed results, to elide racial and class-based distinctions in Kenya, but it is thwarted in part by the fact that whites perpetually link Kiswahili to a register of \"slang,\" banter, and informality, reserving English as a language of authority. I further suggest that settler descendants experience a certain relief in being able to move from the affectively stunted persona they associate with English to a relaxed, warm, and open one in Kiswahili, but that this very mobility between registers could be construed as a new manifestation of white privilege.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MD. Mainul Islam"],"datePublished":"1983-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27768770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195286"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297452090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b19a4de1-f90b-3ba9-a768-0b236ba2c722"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27768770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijindurela"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Journal of Industrial Relations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Shri Ram Centre for Industrial Relations and Human Resources","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Industrial Relations in Bangladesh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27768770","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The present paper attempts to define industrial relations in greater depth and details. It focuses on the role of industrial relations in promoting or negating the overall economic growth of a country.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John C. Burnham"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2228a5f-4bc1-3c02-81ce-f0f84c2d9b9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1091","pageStart":"1090","pagination":"pp. 1090-1091","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231312","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nirmal Puwar"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe919504-2030-3c56-ba36-e56eb95d9932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42858214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"670","pageStart":"651","pagination":"pp. 651-670","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Racialised Somatic Norm and the Senior Civil Service","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42858214","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10102,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One of the central ways in which institutional racism is perpetuated is through the designation of the somatic norm. However, although the classed and gendered nature of the somatic norm underlying somataphobic representations of the universal 'individual' have been both theoretically and substantially explored, the racial character of this embodied being has received scant attention. This paper introduces race to the wider debates on the embodied nature of the political 'individual', before analysing the specific ways in which an institution that is deemed to be at the absolute apex of disembodied, neutral professionalism \u2013 the British senior civil service \u2013 is naturalised as the domain for white men. The somatic norm underlying the representation of the impartial senior civil service is brought to the fore in this paper by discussing the location of black senior civil servants, whose presence helps us to highlight the synchronie relationship between racialised bodies and elite spaces in the body politic. These 'Space Invaders' disturb the racialised nature of these spaces whilst at the same time adhering to the assimilative pressure of the somatic norm. An engagement with the interview accounts of black senior civil servants allows us to grasp some idea of what it is like for them to coexist in a place that is built on a 'racial contract' which has demarcated spaces in accordance with racialised corporealities. As matter out of place these 'different' bodies generate disorientation, undergo the burden of invisibility and abide by the racialised and classed informal rules of behaviour, particularly those of the legitimate language. All of which problematises the notion of 'difference' in organisations as entailing much more than the mere existence of 'different' bodies, on the basis of race or gender.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1971d1b9-aadd-30d2-a7a8-e680c62d21a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Theory in Black: Teleological Suspensions in Philosophy of Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.193","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8599,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BILL MARSHALL"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc08fc8c-eafa-371a-b187-843c423687d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"118\/119","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Of Cones and Pyramids: Deleuzian Film Theory and Historical Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337087","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda Hutcheon"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4db3817e-e354-3836-ac94-c8c2b5ff9ec9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Colonialism and the Postcolonial Condition: Complexities Abounding","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463191","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":4118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodore Hughes"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47412050-ba57-3d48-8cee-737807cf3ef8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41490208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Washington Center for Korea Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development as Devolution: Nam Ch\u014fng-hy\u014fn and the \"Land of Excrement\" Incident","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41490208","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12909,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[79762,79823]],"abstract":"Working under a strict regime of censorship enforced by the National Security Law, what strategies did south Korean writers use in the 1960s to contest the Cold War developmental trajectory privileged by the authoritarian state? This article examines the ways in which Nam Ch\u014fng-hy\u014fn (who was prosecuted and convicted of violating the National Security Law in 1967) attempts to reappropriate the body as site of resistance opposing statist development made in the name of the nation. It traces the history of representations of the body in Korean literature, paying particular attention to the intersection between the disassociation of labor from the body in 1950s and 1960s literary texts and the Park Chung Hee regime's investment of the national body in the commodity form.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keorapetse Kgositsile","Dennis Brutus","Chinua Achebe","Ali A. Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d65f86e7-415e-3745-87d3-c24215dcb496"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Panel on Literature and Commitment in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166569","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":15642,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[607479,607544],[608753,608811],[609476,609612]],"Locations in B":[[50134,50196],[51377,51434],[51500,51637]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fawzia Mustafa"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f67bd443-11bf-3afd-95a9-f8f0fa1ba240"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"406","pageStart":"379","pagination":"pp. 379-406","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"READING DEVELOPMENT AND WRITING AFRICA: UNFPA, NERVOUS CONDITIONS<\/em>, AND THE BOOK OF NOT<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659721","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":12532,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.55","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e93d646a-cae5-3b64-a35a-d0faf0b8f856"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.55"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dragons!: George Jackson in the Cinema with Haile Gerima\u2014from the Watts Films to Teza<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.55","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":13257,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article examines Haile Gerima's film work from his earliest cinema (Hour Glass, Child of Resistance, and Bush Mama) to his latest cinema (Teza) with the political and intellectual work of George L. Jackson distinctly in mind. It analyzes these Pan-African screen texts with other seminal texts such as Soledad Brother and Blood in My Eye and thus locates \u201cComrade\u201d George L. Jackson, \u201cthe Dragon,\u201d in the theater of African cinema of liberation. Finally, it recalls rather than overlooks the filmmaker's own radical invocation of the revolutionary prisoner as a source of artistic inspiration toward new possibilities of African film criticism and Global African social and political consciousness.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. K. Angress"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30156776","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baee08f3-1a19-3c8b-8de8-f9f697bd80bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30156776"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kleist's Treatment of Imperialism: \"Die Hermannsschlacht\" and \"Die Verlobung in St. Domingo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30156776","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":8353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the two works under consideration Kleist dealt with the politics of revolution and anti-imperialism in a significantly modern, although unprecedented and therefore shocking, way. He showed that total political commitment is necessarily in conflict with traditional ethics and the right to the pursuit of happiness. While the Hermannsschlacht is about propaganda, it is not a propaganda piece, for it confronts us with the price which the guerilla leader exacts. The novella, against the background of the successful Haitian revolution, seems to stress loyalty between individuals and to deplore terrorism. Yet the arguments of the revolutionaries are virtually identical with those proffered in Hermannsschlacht. The comparison shows that Kleist understood the conundrum of total politics well enough to treat it from different perspectives. He treated it both times as a problem and his advocacy in either case is at least partially deceptive.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. K. Heggenhougen"],"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/675783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c806d8ea-de0f-336b-8757-d2f293a96947"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/675783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Therapeutic Anthropology: Response to Shiloh's Proposal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/675783","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":2291,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[12849,12895]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Walter D. Mignolo"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03335372"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227134"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1772980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poeticstoday"}],"isPartOf":"Poetics Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Canons A(nd)Cross-Cultural Boundaries (Or, Whose Canon are We Talking about?)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1772980","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis M. Killian"],"datePublished":"1971-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27701802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8020fec2-57f8-36a2-987a-3da472e3ca85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27701802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Optimism and Pessimism in Sociological Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27701802","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["O. Hugo Benavides"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/972084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77cfda5e-46ce-35ce-b1a2-b7f76f80eab6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/972084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiameranti"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Antiquity","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Society for American Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Archaeology","Area Studies","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Returning to the Source: Social Archaeology as Latin American Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/972084","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"[English] The following article proposes reconsidering the social archaeology paradigm as a worthwhile school of thought within Latin American philosophy. Rather than critiquing social archaeology for its supposed methodological limitations, I argue that this Latin American approach has already had an enormous contribution to the anthropological and political thought of the region. Instead of assuming that archaeology is a neutral enterprise, social archaeologists and others influenced by their ideas have already carried out important interdisciplinary and socially relevant research in the historical understanding of the past. Archaeological sites such as those of Cochasqu\u00ed and Agua Blanca (among others) in Ecuador have benefitted significantly from a more refined political analysis of their histories than those routinely carried out in the positivistic paradigm of the United States. Finally, social archaeology also points to a much needed and useful link between the committed assessment of the continent's past with the varied and important political transformation essential for the future well being of Latin America's people. \/\/ [Spanish] El siguiente art\u00edculo propone una seria discusi\u00f3n sobre la imporatancia y relevancia de la propuesta de la arqueolog\u00eda como ciencia social. De esta manera, esta particular escuela Latino Americana no tiene nada que envidiar a las corrientes positivistas del norte. Al contrario, la arqueolog\u00eda como ciencia social ha desarrollado un amplio esquema de trabajo que va mucho m\u00e1s alla de lo meramente arqueol\u00f3gico, o de lo que se podr\u00eda definir como antropol\u00f3gico dentro de un plano acad\u00e9mico. Esta contribuci\u00f3n, una de las caracter\u00edsticas m\u00e1s positivas de la corriente, es su clara incorporaci\u00f3n del quehacer pol\u00edtico como una realidad esencial del estudio y an\u00e1lisis hist\u00f3rico de nuestras propias naciones. Las investigaciones arqueol\u00f3gicas y antropol\u00f3gicas realizadas en sitios como Cochasqu\u00ed, Agua Blanca, y Real Alto en Ecuador proponen una manera diferente de entender el pasado y de la contribuci\u00f3n de este a nuestra realidad contempor\u00e1nea. En vez de simplemente recuperar el pasado, estas investigaciones buscan entender cual es el significado de este pasado y como este pasado en s\u00ed mismo toma un lugar tan hegem\u00f3nico y esencial en el desarrollo nacional de nuestros estados. De esta manera es tambi\u00e9n importante destacar que las limitaciones tecnicas o (mal entendidas) metodol\u00f3gicas no deber\u00edan ser vistas como un problema sino como una clara priorizaci\u00f3n de preguntas de fondo sobre el destino hist\u00f3rico del continente m\u00e1s que de un simple interes de quedarnos en discusiones cronol\u00f3gicas, tipol\u00f3gicas o meramente descriptivas. Por eso discute que es m\u00e1s que factible el proponer el largo alcance de la arquelog\u00eda como ciencia social como un desarrollo paradigm\u00e1tico en colaboracion con la tradicional antropolog\u00eda coprometida y filosof\u00eda anti-imperialista del continente. Las contribuciones de la arqueolog\u00eda como ciencia social (como bien lo intu\u00edan sus iniciales progenitores) ha escapado el \u00e1mbito arqueol\u00f3gico y est\u00e1 claramente enmarcaada con la lucha por profundos y necesarios cambios sociales en nuestras sociedad neo-coloniales: luchas en las que la historia es de una importancia fundamental.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gelvin Stevenson"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc22540d-527e-397a-8cd9-ab51cc660da9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOCIAL RELATIONS OF PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION IN THE HUMAN SERVICE OCCUPATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130707","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper presents a Marxist analysis of human service occupations. As the forces of monopoly capitalism increased the need for human services and destroyed the social institutions which previously satisfied those needs, employment in the human service industries grew rapidly, and may now exceed that in manufacturing. The nature of human services is discussed: production and consumption occur simultaneously; the social relations of consumption and production are closely related; and service workers play a direct social control role. These characteristics generate contradictions between service and control in service work, and between service workers' roles as both oppressed workers and oppressors. Discussions of the ideologies impacting on the relationships between workers and \"clients,\" the dynamics of these relationships, and the struggles to which they give rise conclude the paper.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tarak Barkawi"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef048765-ff1a-3d07-abb5-94cab02d0e33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"58","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Globalization, Culture, and War: On the Popular Mediation of \"Small Wars\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140775","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aimee Carrillo Rowe"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.43.3.0525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86f50c95-1d42-3371-9f5a-7f24c79389ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15767\/feministstudies.43.3.0525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"536","pageStart":"525","pagination":"pp. 525-536","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Settler Xicana: Postcolonial and Decolonial Reflections on Incommensurability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15767\/feministstudies.43.3.0525","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":4427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper takes Chicana\/Xicana indigeneity as a productive and problematic site to consider the vexed conjuncture between decolonial and postcolonial approaches to critical knowledge production. I examine the intersection between Chicana and Native feminisms as a point of entry to consider how the incommensurabilities between these formations get played out within specific sites of knowledge production. I read my positionality as a Californio Rancho descendent to explore urgent questions of landedness raised by Indigenous studies scholars and consider how we might productively center questions of settlement within Chicana feminism. While Chicana relationships to land are varied, I reflect on my own positionality as a \u201csettler Xicana\u201d in an effort to sense the political and epistemic stakes for centering decolonial approaches in conversation with postcolonial\/transnational feminisms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catherine Kroll"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.3.54","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c96b4bdc-36ce-329f-af56-7d11aae2aa7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.3.54"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Tyranny of the Visual: Alex La Guma and the Anti-apartheid Documentary Image","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.43.3.54","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":13896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay has three major aims: first, to understand how the visual image articulated in both textual and photographic media constituted a crucially important element of South African apartheid resistance efforts of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Second, to investigate the ways in which Alex La Guma and three fellow anti-apartheid activists working in critical documentary photography\u2014Peter Magubane, David Goldblatt, and Omar Badsha\u2014used the image in order to critique the tyranny of visual hegemonies, particularly those that enunciated a materialist standard from which non-white South Africans were excluded. And third, to complicate recent La Guma criticism that has excised the image from its surrounding narrative trajectories. What La Guma and these photographers achieved made for powerful leverage against apartheid's putative control of the visual realm.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dale H. Porter"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179216","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a518982f-e5f8-3669-895e-63c2ca26aa54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41179216"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE GOLD IN FORT KNOX: Historical Fiction in The Context of Historiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41179216","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":13893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Ellis"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Same to You","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466576","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1488,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[453008,453084]],"Locations in B":[[1429,1507]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0633\u0627\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u062f\u064a\u062b\u064a","Samia Al Hodathy"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74d2f5aa-08f1-33aa-a29f-0930c64cced9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26924881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"40","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"\u0661\u0664\u0661","pageStart":"\u0661\u0660\u0664","pagination":"pp. \u0661\u0660\u0664-\u0661\u0664\u0661","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a - Postcolonialism and Arabic Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924881","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":".\u062a\u0643\u0627\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0635\u0648\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0641\u0627\u0626\u0644\u0629 \u0628\u0645\u0633\u062a\u0642\u0628\u0644 \u0623\u0641\u0636\u0644 \u0644\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u062a\u062a\u0641\u0642 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0647\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u0633\u064a\u0644\u0639\u0628\u0647 \u0641\u064a \u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0629 \u0625\u0634\u0643\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0644\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0627\u0644\u062b\u0629. \u062a\u062b\u064a\u0631 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0633\u0627\u0624\u0644 \u062d\u0648\u0644 \u0645\u062d\u0648\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0642\u062f \u064a\u0633\u0647\u0645\u0627\u0646 \u0628\u0634\u0643\u0644 \u0643\u0628\u064a\u0631 \u0641\u064a \u062a\u063a\u064a\u064a\u0631 \u0645\u0633\u0627\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0648\u0628\u0627\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0644\u0633\u0637\u064a\u0646\u064a \u0648\u0644\u062d\u0638\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0621 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0641\u0637 \u0641\u064a \u0623\u062f\u0628 \u062f\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0644\u064a\u062c \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a. \u0648\u0647\u0630\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062d\u0648\u0631\u0627\u0646 \u064a\u062a\u0648\u0627\u0641\u0642\u0627\u0646 \u0645\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0632\u0639\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0627\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0623\u062b\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0627\u0631\u0643\u0633\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0632\u0627\u064a\u062f \u0644\u0644\u0646\u0642\u0627\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631\u064a\u0646. \u0641\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0644\u0633\u0637\u064a\u0646\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0644\u064a\u062c\u064a \ufe97\u064f\ufea4\ufe98\u0651\u0650\ufee2 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u0627\u062d\u062b \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0631 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0638\u0631\u0648\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0627\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0643\u064f\u062a\u0628 \u0641\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u060c \u0645\u062b\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0634\u0647\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062e\u0631\u064a\u0637\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u063a\u0631\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0622\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0646\u062a\u0627\u062c \u0648\u062a\u0648\u0632\u064a\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0631\u0648\u0629 As many voices within Postcolonialism call for bridging the gap between theory and praxis, questions about literary representation and cultural hegemony are being replaced with more materialist issues like territorial conflicts and environmental exploitation. This article argues that Arabic literature from Palestine and Gulf States can illustrate this Postcolonial material turn. Palestinian literature can pave the way for more fluid and inclusive definitions of material concepts like nationalism, nation-states, and borderlands. Gulf Literature, on the other hand, draws attention to the encounter between international oil companies and the natives, and the subsequent destruction of ecological systems.","subTitle":"\u0628\u062d\u062b \u0639\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0630\u0648\u0631 \u0623\u0645 \u062a\u063a\u064a\u064a\u0631 \u0644\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0627\u0631\u061f","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph S. Kraemer"],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323497"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"522f8da6-fa6e-3094-bd99-6a198b4d1337"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3234160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polity"}],"isPartOf":"Polity","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionary Guerrilla Warfare & the Decolonization Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3234160","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8033,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Anyang' Nyong'o"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10174974"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85479416"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"619a6a64-1ff5-3687-a90c-73da4a54f1bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45401899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Economy \/ Revue Africaine d'Economie Politique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The History of Development Cooperation: Appraisal and Proposals for a New Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401899","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. F."],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852574","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14125513-c7f7-3f1e-8ba8-71e22027b7da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852574"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"1","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"111","pagination":"p. 111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852574","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1bw1h8n.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760460099"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2af18f66-505f-30f5-8273-fc5b3a971a39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1bw1h8n.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":null,"pageEnd":"314","pageStart":"279","pagination":"279-314","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1bw1h8n.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":31817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","became","faisal","french","nobel prize","politician","fabius","minister","educated","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles R. Lawrence III"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1228797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"964a9f88-1504-3880-bec2-de4e9115e93a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1228797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":72.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Id, the Ego, and Equal Protection: Reckoning with Unconscious Racism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1228797","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":39124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert Lauterbach"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40438249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432636"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"609b8593-3796-3535-a420-3e9d7a6b7494"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40438249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltarch"}],"isPartOf":"Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"347","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-347","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Concepts of Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40438249","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":11128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DARAGH GRANT"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42216159-3faa-37aa-ba2f-cd43a58aa8d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43908365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"Civilizing\" the Colonial Subject: The Co-Evolution of State and Slavery in South Carolina, 1670-1739","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43908365","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":16127,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"South Carolina was a staggeringly weak polity from its founding in 1670 until the 1730s. Nevertheless, in that time, and while facing significant opposition from powerful indigenous neighbors, the colony constructed a robust plantation system that boasted the highest slave-to-freeman ratio in mainland North America. Taking this fact as a point of departure, I examine the early management of unfree labor in South Carolina as an exemplary moment of settlercolonial state formation. Departing from the treatment of state formation as a process of centralizing \"legitimate violence,\" I investigate how the colonial state, and in particular the Commons House of Assembly, asserted an exclusive claim to authority by monopolizing the question of legitimacy itself. In managing unfree laborers, the colonial state extended its authority over supposedly private relations between master and slave and increasingly recast slavery in racial terms. This recasting of racial slavery rested, I argue, on a distinction, pervasive throughout English North America, which divided the world into spheres of savagery and civility. Beneath the racial reordering of colonial life, the institution of slavery was rooted in the same ideological distinction by which the colonial state's claims to authority were justified, with the putative \"savagery\" of the slave or of the Indian being counterpoised to the supposed civility of English settlers. This article contributes to the literatures on Atlantic slavery and American colonial history, and invites comparison with accounts of state formation and settler colonialism beyond Anglo-America.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kristin Carter-Sanborn"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"593","pageStart":"573","pagination":"pp. 573-593","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"We Murder Who We Were\": Jasmine and the Violence of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927605","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9036,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvm201r8.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783847421740"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b186358-51df-3da0-8d57-c8785f45d6d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvm201r8.5"}],"isPartOf":"Bildung und Erziehung im Kontext globaler Transformationen","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":62.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"17","pagination":"17-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Education"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Education for Sustainable Development in the Postcolonial World:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvm201r8.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":28519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aim of the paper is to offer an analysis and critique of recent regional policy agendas in Africa, namely the African Union\u2019s Agenda 2063 Framework Document: The Africa We Want<\/em> (AUC 2015) and the accompanying Continental Education Strategy for Africa (CESA) (AU 2015). The documents claim to set out a transformative vision for Sustainable Development (SD) and for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) respectively, linked to a pan-African vision of a united and prosperous Africa. SD and ESD have achieved a hegemonic status as global discourses thanks to the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).A focus on","subTitle":"Towards a transformative agenda","keyphrase":["and esd","africa","globalisation","education","africanism","the african","development","agenda","environmental","social"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cristina Rojas de Ferro"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27c6501e-d73c-3533-a724-fc2cd203e275"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Formation, Violence, and the Nation-State in Nineteenth-Century Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644831","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":12118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Betsy Bowman","Bob Stone"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Alter-Globalization Movement and Sartre's \"Morality and History\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512973","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MANUEL GONZ\u00c1LEZ PRADA","CATHLEEN CARRIS","THOMAS WARD"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59f02555-d31d-3888-a196-bb172e009743"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"777","pageStart":"765","pagination":"pp. 765-777","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leila Aboulela, Religion, and the Challenge of the Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41472503","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":11934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anjali Prabhu"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narration in Frantz Fanon's \"Peau noire masques blancs\": Some Reconsiderations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821236","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Frantz Fanon's writings are evoked in a variety of disciplines where groups of disenfranchised or marginalized peoples can be identified. More recently, his work has spawned discussion of the negotiating between such margins and more centrally identifiable locations of power. Fanon figures prominently in the notion of hybridity as it has been debated in postcolonial studies, particularly as a form of resistance that can be discerned in culture. In this reading of crucial passages taken mostly from chapter five of \"Black Skin White Masks,\" I suggest some significant ways in which the narrative shifts of this text operate an aesthetic and ethical pressure on salient understandings of hybridity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terenjit Sevea"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15684849"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50779604"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-242017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecec3970-d81d-3fe6-ad31-a3493180d8d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23654649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiajsociscie"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"607","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-607","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Islamist' Intellectual Space: 'True Islam' and the Ummah in the East","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654649","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":14125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper re-visits the narratives of select 'Islamists' from South and Southeast Asia to explore what their narratives offer for a discussion on Islamist intellectual space. Departing from resilient biases in scholarship that de-privilege expressions of the 'Ummah in the East', I focus on a realm of Islamist self-understandings that reveal a consciousness of being important interlocutors of Islam. These Islamists blatantly exercised their intellectual authority through deriding a larger Ummah that had become divorced from a 'true Islam' that they were aware of. This paper highlights facets of Islamist contact that occurred between these regions through Islamist Third Worldist discourses. I also emphasize South and Southeast Asian Islamist reconstructions of Islam into a system and\/or polity through returning to, and reconstructing 'orthodox' texts, Prophethood and earlier Islamic periods. This study bears implications for the study of regions often reduced to 'peripheries' in discourse.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Val\u00e9rie Loichot"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10b08592-9c58-3ff7-a7ef-3fca36b9ebb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"1032","pageStart":"1014","pagination":"pp. 1014-1032","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u00c9DOUARD GLISSANT'S GRAVES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264962","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nayoung Aimee Kwon"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44478349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00730548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670097"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1f4bcad-d861-35f6-af7f-7527f3f73490"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44478349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvjasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"266","pagination":"pp. 266-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Harvard-Yenching Institute","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44478349","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":1346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Fernandez"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fef70c6b-b3aa-383e-832d-e51c2f76b9f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1078","pageStart":"1077","pagination":"pp. 1077-1078","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231305","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabyasachi Bhattacharya"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57aee7fe-7b78-3b11-9d39-535edc5f8d29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3517020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'History from Below'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517020","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul W. Hollenbach"],"datePublished":"1981-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1462450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1462450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"567","pagination":"pp. 567-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Jesus, Demoniacs, and Public Authorities: A Socio-Historical Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1462450","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin DeMott"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4637556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234471"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4a5803b-1341-322a-8b86-3e2092b0177d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4637556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antiochreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Antioch Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Antioch Review Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Hartford\/Chicago & Return: Reflections on the Sociology of Standards","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4637556","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janice Spleth"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Narrating Ethnic Conflict in Zairian Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820534","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Howard A. Palley"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30020852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46851131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57fc05a5-0f71-39b4-b9f1-acfd17bd2334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30020852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociservrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Social Service Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The White Working Class and a Strategy of Coalition for Social Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30020852","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":5873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A significant factor in the sociopolitical scene in the United States is the patchwork of ethnic identifications and class styles. Conflict among ethnic and class groups sharing common interests often contributes to their political impotency. Analysis of voting data presented in this paper sug- gests that the commonality of interests within different ethnic components of the white working class transcends ethnicity and seems to be related to class interests. If perceived, such commonality offers the possibility of an intraclass and interclass coalition focused upon social development. Such a coalition would offer a political input sufficient to bring about major social development in the United States.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin A. Miller"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41887594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ordinary Terrorism in Historical Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41887594","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":13721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hortense Spillers"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"233c3210-cd79-3530-891d-2668d410c1d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41809979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"937","pageStart":"928","pagination":"pp. 928-937","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A TRANSATLANTIC CIRCUIT: BALDWIN AT MID-CENTURY: Opening Keynote Address","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41809979","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e10178f-108e-3da0-b436-ba09c7afa022"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"462","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-462","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Out of the Bazaar, into the Club and Far Beyond with Monsieur Homi Bhabha","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866750","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":22797,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hein Willemse"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Insularity and Ambivalence: The Case of the South African Poet P. J. Philander's Epic Poem, \"Zimbabwe\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109563","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay explores the South African author P. J. Philander's epic \"Zimbabwe\" (1968), an Afrikaans poem of 307 alternate quatrains largely based on the disproved notion that the Phoenicians built the ancient complex of Great Zimbabwe and established a religion of phallic or fertility worship. The essay initially traces the longstanding debate on the \"mystery\" of Great Zimbabwe and arrives at the conclusion that the poet made a deliberate choice for the Semitic or Phoenician thesis. In the second phase of the discussion, \"Zimbabwe\" is read with Frantz Fanon's classic text \"Les damn\u00e9s de la terre,\" especially with regard to the complex but key binary relationship between settlers and aboriginals. In conclusion, the essay discusses the author's political ambivalence and his attempts at making the rise and decline of Great Zimbabwe applicable to apartheid South Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paola Bacchetta"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79b135a0-710f-3c50-b2e7-d8478d3ee47f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonial Praxis: Enabling Intranational and Queer Coalition Building","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.147","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":17705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Chappell"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"114d44d0-1c4e-3bdf-be53-3e49a4ecf2f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23724721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A \"Headless\" Native Talks Back: Nidoish Naisseline and the Kanak Awakening in 1970s New Caledonia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23724721","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Studies of the Kanak independence movement have tended to focus on the turbulent 1980s in New Caledonia and their aftermath, but the roots of the modern nationalist movement go back to Kanak and Caledonian students who attended universities in France in the 1960s. They were radicalized by what they experienced, including the May 1968 student-worker uprising, and they went home again in 1969 to find colonialism alive and well in their own country. Their protest movement gradually grew into a pro-independence political party, when Jean-Marie Tjibaou was still a moderate cultural activist and political autonomist. The words and actions of Nidoish Naisseline, in particular, merit closer examination in tracing the genealogy of anticolonial Kanak and Caledonian radicalism. They show that when he became high chief on an outer island, his own politics began to change, though he remains to this day a local leader who supports indigenous rights.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Okwudiba Nnoli"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10174974"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85479416"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3bcb208c-8252-3815-9f3b-3dd78d919325"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45401818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Economy \/ Revue Africaine d'Economie Politique","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Poor and Politics in Nigeria: An Exploratory Note","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401818","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ranu Samantrai"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caught at the Confluence of History: Ama Ata Aidoo's Necessary Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820277","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth W. Harrow"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00915637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53c2fdb1-5f88-34e2-a0a9-2bef66977c12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40873257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsasianlit"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of South Asian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"336","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-336","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AN AFRICAN READING OF NAIPAUL'S \"A BEND IN THE RIVER\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873257","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharon Elise"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2004.47.4.409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84f85908-8568-3360-8c37-a1748cf63068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sop.2004.47.4.409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"438","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-438","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"How Whites Play Their rAce Card: Drylongso<\/em> Stories Reveal \u201cthe Game\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sop.2004.47.4.409","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":17317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes the \u201cself-portrait\u201d rendered through interviews with blacks in John Langston Gwaltney's Drylongso to highlight a theory of whiteness and race from the standpoint of \u201cdrylongso\u201d\u2014meaning ordinary\u2014blacks. The game metaphor that emerges in Gwaltney's ethnography is extended in this analysis to further our understanding of the privileged position of whites and the strategies undertaken by diverse \u201cplayers\u201d to defend it. The \u201cgame\u201d begins with the assignment of a rAce card to whites, one that grants them access to a life that is different from that of blacks, who are dealt a low card that consigns them to the role of a \u201closing player.\u201d Gwaltney's ethnography and this game metaphor provide a means for ongoing analyses of continuity and change among blacks, of \u201cwhiteness,\u201d of white privilege, and of white racism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeraldine Kraver"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"769ad485-a82a-3b57-aa25-5914afe25d6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Laughing Best: Competing Correlatives in the Art of Katherine Anne Porter and Diego Rivera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201038","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":10916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Qu\u1ef3nh N. Ph\u1ea1m","Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 M\u00e9ndez"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f206a7be-c2a7-3d47-9cf3-71a4c2bd6117"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonial Designs: Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed, H\u1ed3 Ch\u00ed Minh, and Global Entanglements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569429","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Drawing on the writings of two prominent political thinkers and activists, Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed and H\u1ed3 Ch\u00ed Minh, our article foregrounds the imaginative crossings, ethical\u2013political inspirations, and mutual learning among the colonized. Although embedded in different histories, both Marti's and H\u1ed3's writings evince an insurgent solidarity with others under colonial enslavement. They evoke conceptions of self-determination and relationality that are strikingly global rather than national or regional. Going beyond affinities of insurgency, we also investigate critical moments of silence and effacement in Mart\u00ed's and H\u1ed3's engagement with subaltern groups. In weaving their anticolonial visions together as well as examining their limitations, we seek to sketch the contours of an alternative, non-Eurocentric international relations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hyun Ok Park"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d16df360-4150-3341-9ea8-0991615a67fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1093","pageStart":"1092","pagination":"pp. 1092-1093","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231313","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mazi E. N. Njaka"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31622295-e1af-39a6-9435-e0459ccefcdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1262519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Africanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1262519","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":2619,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victoria D. Alexander"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c22e2ab-8e15-36d9-9c1a-75e5dad07640"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1106","pageStart":"1104","pagination":"pp. 1104-1106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231320","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elie Kedourie"],"datePublished":"1968-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44481891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f9c98ae-ad0d-3b57-8c92-7e0b47fd8f6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44481891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"453","pagination":"pp. 453-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionary Nationalism in Asia and Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44481891","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":5226,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28539]],"Locations in B":[[17169,17230]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rob Doggett"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abe58d53-0250-30ed-96f8-cad261c7fa68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/827847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Writing out (Of) Chaos: Constructions of History in Yeats's \"Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen\" and \"Meditations in Time of Civil War\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/827847","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daphne Phillips"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ffae2c3-364c-3562-93b9-6d8c0d38c484"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27866483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"YOUTH HIV\/AIDS IN THE CARIBBEAN: Teenage Sexuality In Montserrat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866483","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":6775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aims of the study were to understand the extent to which high school students had correct information on the spread of the HIV virus and related issues, and whether their own behaviour was influenced by this knowledge. The methodology used was that of qualitative research, in the form of Focus Group Discussions, undertaken in March 2004, which followed a KAPB1 Survey in July 2003. The results showed that while correct knowledge was high, sexual behaviour practices were very risky. The use of material exchange in negotiating sexual relations is uncovered, as well as the involvement of older men. Los objetivos del estudio fueron entender hasta que punto, los estudiantes de escuelas secundarias han obtenido informaci\u00f3n pertinente sobre la transmisi\u00f3n del virus del VIH y los asuntos relacionados con la misma, y si su propio comportamiento fue influenciado por esta informaci\u00f3n. La metodolog\u00eda utilizada, fue aquella de investigaci\u00f3n cualitativa en la forma de Grupos Focales de Discusi\u00f3n llevados a cabo en marzo del 2004, los que siguieron a una Encuesta KAPB* en julio del 2003. Los resultados demostraron que, aunque el nivel conocimiento id\u00f3neo fue alto, las pr\u00e1cticas de comportamiento sexual fueron de alto riesgo. Se descubre la utilizaci\u00f3n del intercambio material al negociar las relaciones sexuales, as\u00ed tambi\u00e9n como la participaci\u00f3n de hombres mayores. Cette \u00e9tude a pour objectif de d\u00e9terminer le niveau de connaissances des lyc\u00e9ens de la propagation du virus du VIH et des questions y associ\u00e9es. Elle cherchait \u00e9galement \u00e0 d\u00e9terminer si leur propre comportment \u00e9tait influenc\u00e9e par ces connaissances. La recherche qualitive a \u00e9t\u00e9 employ\u00e9e comme m\u00e9thodologie, sous forme de Discussions en groupe en mars 2004, suivant un sondage KAPB en 2003. Les r\u00e9sultats indiquaient que les connaissances, bien qu'\u00e9lev\u00e9es, \u00e9taient accompagn\u00e9es de comportements tr\u00e8s risqu\u00e9s. L'\u00e9tude r\u00e9v\u00e8le \u00e9galement la pr\u00e9sence d'\u00e9change mat\u00e9riel dans les relations sexuelles ainsi qu'une certaine influence exerc\u00e9e par des hommes plus \u00e2g\u00e9s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Dening"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23706868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1170c29-103d-305a-990d-7c04b10cd83c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23706868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Empowering Imaginations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23706868","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN E. BABBITT"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ede23f9-71be-3a83-bd6f-96beaf4c2469"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24542083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"748","pageStart":"733","pagination":"pp. 733-748","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Humanism and Embodiment: Remarks on Cause and Effect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24542083","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"I understand humanism to be the meta-ethical view that there exist discoverable (nonmoral) truths about the human condition, that is, about what it means to be human. We might think that as long as I believe I am realizing my unique human potential, I cannot be reasonably contradicted. Yet when we consider systemic oppression, this is unlikely. Systemic oppression makes dehumanizing conditions and treatment seem reasonable. In this paper, I consider the nature of understanding\u2014drawing in particular upon recent defenses of realism in the philosophy of science\u2014and argue that humanism makes sense if we recognize more thoroughly the role of cause and effect in practical deliberation. By this I mean the cause-and-effect relation between mind and body and between minds, bodies, and the world. Three philosophical sources\u2014Marxism, Buddhism and Christianity\u2014show what this might mean, as I indicate in the second half of the paper.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"411","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-411","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618221","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":1347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas B. Grassey"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44641716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00281484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42629245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002230211"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b46765b-6062-330f-ac9a-c0da98569783"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44641716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"navawarcollrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Naval War College Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"U.S. Naval War College Press","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","History","Peace & Conflict Studies","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOME PERSPECTIVES ON REVOLUTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44641716","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6270,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Concern over the past decade with insurgency and counterinsurgency has tended to obscure the distinction between a revolution and an insurgency. The revolutionary rejects a government's legitimacy and in doing so denies its right to enforce rules and laws. The essence of the revolutionary's claim is that he is right. This claim is ultimately based on a concept of justice: men make a revolution when they are convinced they are unjustly treated. In a world characterized by a growing gap between the rich and the poor nations, the United States cannot afford to ignore the claims of other nations and peoples for justice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paget Henry"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4a2903f-b9de-3d7e-b291-3c3cf2fadc57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Anti-coloniality of Power and the Coloniality of Diasporas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752117","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":2829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Arnold Gibbon"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2966760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2966760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Analysis of the Ivory Coast Educational Television Project","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2966760","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":4067,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Kinkead-Weekes"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00114936"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98025a6a-de9e-3d05-963f-ba2eddbc9a5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44234015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dhlawrencereview"}],"isPartOf":"The D.H. Lawrence Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"D.H. Lawrence Review","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE GRINGO SENORA WHO RODE AWAY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44234015","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David A. Smilde"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a52cbe9-529d-3880-9495-6593e39eb5f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1090","pageStart":"1088","pagination":"pp. 1088-1090","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231311","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ron Briley"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41689438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce1d0cad-e036-3747-a1b7-b1b9373c8786"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41689438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41689438","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":2494,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saloni Mathur"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddfdbf12-3b49-3579-a7ef-92a06ad1c6e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41430589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Charles and Ray Eames in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430589","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":10483,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rolena Adorno"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce1e808c-6c9b-35e4-9d66-6ce12e133c4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"33","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Todorov y De Certeau: La alteridad y la contemplacion del sujeto","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530525","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Audrey Kobayashi"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d65ee27-fd11-3101-ad57-ccbb7dc51a5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"1115","pageStart":"1101","pagination":"pp. 1101-1115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: The Dialectic of Race and the Discipline of Geography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537605","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":11692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses a biographical approach to trace the ways in which major thinkers in the discipline and, in particular, past presidents of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) in their Presidential Addresses have conceptualized race. Race thinking emerged during the Enlightenment and, in geography, became more explicitly environmentalist through the nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth century. By the mid-twentieth century, environmentalism was surpassed, but most human geographers, including cultural geographers, urban geographers influenced by the Chicago School of urban sociology, or radical geographers, tended to avoid projects on race. I want to highlight the advances in antiracist scholarship by geographers of color since the 1970s. They have received too little attention, although they influenced a new generation of geographers. \u672c\u6587\u8fd0\u7528\u4f20\u8bb0\u65b9\u6cd5\uff0c\u8ffd\u6eaf\u672c\u9886\u57df\u4e2d\u7684\u4e3b\u8981\u601d\u60f3\u5bb6\u3001\u7279\u522b\u662f\u7f8e\u56fd\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4f1a\uff08AAG\uff09\u8fc7\u5f80\u7684\u5927\u4f1a\u4e3b\u5e2d\u5728\u5176\u4e3b\u5e2d\u81f4\u8bcd\u4e2d\uff0c\u6982\u5ff5\u5316\u79cd\u65cf\u7684\u65b9\u5f0f\u3002\u79cd\u65cf\u601d\u8003\u5728\u5553\u8499\u65f6\u4ee3\u6d6e\u73b0\uff0c\u5e76\u4e14\u5728\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4e2d\uff0c \u81ea\u5341\u4e5d\u4e16\u7eaa\u81f3\u4e8c\u5341\u4e16\u7eaa\u521d\u671f\u6570\u5e74\u4e4b\u95f4\uff0c\u53d1\u5c55\u6210\u4e3a\u660e\u786e\u7684\u73af\u5883\u51b3\u5b9a\u8bba\u3002\u4e8c\u5341\u4e16\u7eaa\u4e2d\u671f\uff0c\u73af\u5883\u51b3\u5b9a\u8bba\u53d7\u5230\u538b\u6291\uff0c \u4f46\u591a\u6570\u7684\u4eba\u6587\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\uff0c\u5305\u62ec\u6587\u5316\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\u3001\u53d7\u829d\u52a0\u54e5\u5b66\u6d3e\u57ce\u5e02\u793e\u4f1a\u5b66\u6240\u5f71\u54cd\u7684\u57ce\u5e02\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\uff0c \u4ea6\u6216\u662f\u6fc0\u8fdb\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\uff0c\u7686\u503e\u5411\u907f\u514d\u6709\u5173\u79cd\u65cf\u7684\u7814\u7a76\u6848\u3002\u6211\u4f01\u56fe\u5f3a\u8c03\u81ea1970\u5e74\u4ee3\u8d77\uff0c \u6709\u8272\u4eba\u79cd\u7684\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\u63a8\u8fdb\u53cd\u79cd\u65cf\u4e3b\u4e49\u4e4b\u8fdb\u5c55\u3002\u8fd9\u4e9b\u5b66\u8005\u5118\u7ba1\u5f71\u54cd\u4e86\u4e00\u6574\u4e2a\u65b0\u4e16\u4ee3\u7684\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u8005\uff0c\u4f46\u5374\u53d7\u5230\u592a\u5c11\u7684\u5173\u6ce8\u3002 En este art\u00edculo se sigue un enfoque biogr\u00e1fico para explorar la manera como conceptualizan raza los principales pensadores de la disciplina, y c\u00f3mo lo han hecho, en particular, los ex presidentes de la Asociaci\u00f3n de Ge\u00f3grafos Americanos (AAG) en sus discursos presidenciales. Sobre raza se empez\u00f3 a pensar durante la Ilustraci\u00f3n y en geograf\u00eda el tema racial se hizo expl\u00edcitamente ambientalista durante el siglo XIX y a comienzos del XX. A mediados de ese siglo el ambientalismo qued\u00f3 relegado, pero la mayor\u00eda de los ge\u00f3grafos humanos, incluyendo ge\u00f3grafos culturales y urbanos influenciados por la escuela de sociolog\u00eda urbana de Chicago, o los ge\u00f3grafos radicales, se inclinaron por rehuir los proyectos relacionados con raza. Deseo destacar los progresos en erudici\u00f3n antirracista por ge\u00f3grafos de color desde los a\u00f1os 1970. Ellos han recibido poca atenci\u00f3n, aunque hayan influido seriamente sobre una nueva generaci\u00f3n de ge\u00f3grafos.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Schwarz"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48664473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20569203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebdb9898-a187-31d5-8ecc-1e5d67eed395"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48664473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamebaldrevi"}],"isPartOf":"James Baldwin Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Manchester University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"After Decolonization, After Civil Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48664473","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":12849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The escalation of systematic, if random, violence in the contemporary world frames the concerns of the article, which seeks to read Baldwin for the present. It works by a measure of indirection, arriving at Baldwin after a detour which introduces Chinua Achebe. The Baldwin\u2013Achebe relationship is familiar fare. However, here I explore not the shared congruence between their first novels, but rather focus on their later works, in which the reflexes of terror lie close to the surface. I use Achebe\u2019s final novel, Anthills of the Savanah, as a way into Baldwin\u2019s \u201cdifficult\u201d last book, The Evidence of Things Not Seen, suggesting that both these works can speak directly to our own historical present. Both Baldwin and Achebe, I argue, chose to assume the role of witness to the evolving manifestations of catastrophe, which they came to believe enveloped the final years of their lives. In order to seek redemption they each determined to craft a prose\u2014the product of a very particular historical conjuncture\u2014which could bring out into the open the prevailing undercurrents of violence and terror.","subTitle":"Chinua Achebe and James Baldwin","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Bienen"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"555","pagination":"pp. 555-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"State and Revolution: The Work of Amilcar Cabral","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159579","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William H. Hansell"],"datePublished":"1979-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12033e4f-4d5f-340a-9730-29d95bb1e293"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/274654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Some Themes in the Jamaican Poetry of Claude McKay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274654","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine McKittrick"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14744740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50996597"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011233054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea83eb70-ef51-3126-bd83-e1c17ed50e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Geographies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","Anthropology","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Diachronic loops\/deadweight tonnage\/bad made measure","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168700","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article is a relational conversation nested in black studies, science studies of blackness and race, geographies of knowledge, and black creative text. The overlying purpose is to address how the social production of biologically determinist racial scripts \u2013 which extend from a biocentric conception of the human \u2013 can be dislodged by bringing studies of blackness in\/and science into conversation with autopoietics, black Atlantic livingness, weights and measures, and poetry.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Krieger"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45138259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31526ca2-0550-3603-b292-61e59b8006f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45138259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"EMBODYING INEQUALITY: A REVIEW OF CONCEPTS, MEASURES, AND METHODS FOR STUDYING HEALTH CONSEQUENCES OF DISCRIMINATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45138259","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":29145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Investigating effects of discrimination upon health requires clear concepts, methods, and measures. At issue are both economic consequences of discrimination and accumulated insults arising from everyday and at times violent experiences of being treated as a second-class citizen, at each and every economic level. Guidelines for epidemiologic investigations and other public health research on ways people embody racism, sexism, and other forms of social inequality, however, are not well defined, as research in this area is in its infancy. Employing an ecosocial framework, this article accordingly reviews definitions and patterns of discrimination within the United States; evaluates analytic strategies and instruments researchers have developed to study health effects of different kinds of discrimination; and delineates diverse pathways by which discrimination can harm health, both outright and by distorting production of epidemiologic knowledge about determinants of population health. Three methods of studying health consequences of discrimination are examined (indirect; direct, at the individual level, in relation to personal experiences of discrimination; at the population level, such as via segregation), and recommendations are provided for developing research instruments to measure acute and cumulative exposure to different aspects of discrimination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Tew"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55cea76b-11d5-3df1-b2f1-810cb09ae0d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"RE-INVOKING HERBERT SIMMONS: MAN WALKING ON EGGSHELLS OF RADICAL NARRATIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274061","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6328,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[121252,121322]],"Locations in B":[[24486,24554]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SABINE JELL-BAHLSEN"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59c71c04-93a3-34bb-a2aa-ab78ae405e2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Continuing the Quest of \"Dialectical Anthropology\" in the 21st Century: Reflections on the Igbo of Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790701","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7983,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thulani Nxasana"],"datePublished":"2011-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23074951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5490b26-92cd-3753-9821-4d8d3af046a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23074951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Journey of the African as Missionary: The Journal and Selected Writings of the Reverend Tiyo Soga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23074951","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":6780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Abiola Irele"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f95d28d-c655-3b2f-b87d-7d7dd3f3c9a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Poetic Legacy of Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843618","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines the centrality of Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire's work in the emergence of a black poetic and intellectual discourse in French, and his influence, in terms both of theme and idiom, on generations of Francophone writers, an influence that can be discerned in the work of Tchikaya u Tamsi, Jean-Baptiste Tati-Loutard, Lamine Sall and Sylvie Kand\u00e9 in Africa, and Frantz Fanon, Edouard Glissant, Ren\u00e9 Depestre, and Daniel Maximin in the French Caribbean region. The relationship of C\u00e9saire's work to the Cr\u00e9olit\u00e9 movement is discussed, as is the impact of his work on Anglophone Caribbean writers, such as Kamau Brathwaite of Barbados and Lansana Sekou of St Martin, as evidence of the enduring legacy of his work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darius Cooper"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00915637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aefa7879-6928-3399-912e-2f59dbe4b385"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40873341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsasianlit"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of South Asian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"THE WHITE MAN'S BURDENS AND WHIMS OF THE CHESS-BESOTTED ARISTOCRATS: COLONIALISM IN SATYAJIT RAY'S \"THE CHESS PLAYERS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873341","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8124,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis B. Nyamnjoh"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a2f6d57-b56d-3a5a-ae22-237f73024d12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"\"For Many are Called but Few are Chosen\": Globalisation and Popular Disenchantment in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487390","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":21637,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vinay Lal"],"datePublished":"2008-10-04","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40278027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"166b2f8b-63d0-3276-aabd-f9d085a17342"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40278027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"40","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Gandhi Everyone Loves to Hate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40278027","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Gandhi has legions of admirers, but he has also been the target of severe, even virulent, criticism from numerous perspectives. Though Gandhi still commands veneration from many, he is also someone everyone loves to hate. Some critics fault him for particular positions, such as his support of the Khilafat movement, his inexplicable views on the Bihar earthquake, his deployment of Hindu imagery or idioms of speech such as 'Ram Rajya', and so on. Other critics, arguing from specific ideological positions, are inclined to find systemic shortcomings in Gandhi's views. This paper, focusing in the latter half to a greater extent on modernist and especially feminist readings of Gandhi, suggests that the feminist reading is fraught with more ambivalence than is commonly recognised, and in somewhat unexpected ways. It is argued that though Gandhi may not have been his own best critic, his critics have also not done him the justice of attempting to understand how he negotiated the various critical worldviews that he encountered.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Engle Merry"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"590","pageStart":"569","pagination":"pp. 569-590","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Law and Colonialism to Law and Globalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215784","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10676,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Castle"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620416"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"147c5b26-9204-37c0-8253-68fbe492920b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24598789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"384","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-384","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coming of Age in the Age of Empire: Joyce's Modernist \"Bildungsroman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24598789","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, which depicts the development and exile of a quintessentially modernist artist-hero, has not often been read in terms of the challenge that it issues to the classical Bildungsroman and the space it affords for a radical reconfiguration of Bildung, the \"inner culture\" theorized by German Enlightenment thinkers like Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich von Schiller, and Wilhelm von Humboldt. This essay looks closely at Joyce's depiction of his protagonist, Stephen Dedalus, and argues that a colonial society like Ireland in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries was inhospitable to the culture of Bildung. Family life and education fail to offer Stephen the means for harmonious self-formation and thus the vocational opportunities (particularly the priesthood) for integration into the larger social world. The colonial subject, internally split and alienated from that social world, must pursue self-development along different pathways. Joyce's articulation of this critical and subversive \"colonial Bildung\" paradoxically takes place within the bounds of a narrative that adheres mainly to the formal limits of the classical Bildungsroman. In this way, Joyce's Bildungsroman is able to critique immanently the very imperialist assumptions and attitudes about the individual and his relation to society that legitimates the classical form. By examining Stephen's experiences with significant father figures and the women and girls he meets, by looking closely at the alternative vocation of \"priest of eternal imagination\" that he evolves out of an elaborate profane aesthetics and confessional performativity, I demonstrate that Stephen's struggle with the processes of socialization, together with Joyce's struggle to represent those processes, indicates some of the problems the modernist Bildungsroman faces\u2014and not just in the colonial territories but in the entire field of late modernity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Bruce"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcb22e63-979c-34bf-81a2-872d3fc387b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1084","pageStart":"1083","pagination":"pp. 1083-1084","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231308","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elisabeth Young-Bruehl"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"60","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Discriminations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934918","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christina Kullberg"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26875136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13822373"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613124167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4aa51d7b-f810-354d-a479-01a36f874c55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26875136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwignewwesindgui"}],"isPartOf":"NWIG: New West Indian Guide \/ Nieuwe West-Indische Gids","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Perspectives on Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26875136","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":2759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Immanuel Wallerstein"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"180b8b8a-2a35-3a6d-ab8e-cf866113dd0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class and Class-Conflict in Contemporary Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484165","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Jusqu'\u00e0 r\u00e9cemment, la plupart des analystes ont voulu, pour des raisons diverses, nier l'existence des classes sociales en Afrique. Ces analyses proviennent des erreurs d'appr\u00e9ciation \u00e0 la fois de la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 sociale d'Afrique contemporaine, de l'histoire v\u00e9ritable de l'Europe occidentale, et des concepts marxistes classiques de classe. Une classe est une antinomie qui d\u00e9coule du fait que, d'une part, l'\u00e9conomie capitaliste est mondiale et donc les classes existent par rapport \u00e0 l'\u00e9conomie-monde et que, d'autre part, les ar\u00e8nes politiques sont les \u00c9tats et donc les classes s'expriment par rapport \u00e0 ces \u00c9tats. \u00c0 cette antinomie s'ajoute celle des deux formes de conscience politique: celle de classe et celle d'ethnicit\u00e9-nationalit\u00e9. Pour appr\u00e9cier donc le conflit de classes dans l'Afrique actuelle il faut comprendre que les modes de conscience de classe different si l'on se trouve au centre ou \u00e0 la p\u00e9riph\u00e9rie de l'\u00e9conomie-monde capitaliste.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Lyons"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pacific Scholarship, Literary Criticism, and Touristic Desire: The Specter of A. Grove Day","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303763","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROGER VAN ZWANEBERG"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab438058-ce83-3b67-93a2-cb9fe65421bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43658303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NEOCOLONIALISM AND THE ORIGIN OF THE NATIONAL BOURGEOISIE IN KENYA BETWEEN 1940 AND 1973","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658303","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":13671,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karega-Munene","Peter Schmidt"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02630338"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44513179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233336"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86e59746-2d1f-33e0-806e-9068a3fde9ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40930993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriarchrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The African Archaeological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Postcolonial Archaeologies in Africa: Breaking the Silence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930993","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Postcolonial archaeologies in Africa are engaged in a variety of agendas including the decolonization of everyday practices in the field and in the classroom. Postcolonial theory, concerned with issues of power and the Other, is increasingly being invoked to examine how archaeologists conduct their field research and how archaeology is used to dismantle essentialized histories\u2014the metanarratives that arose in the colonial as well as the postcolonial era. Easily misunderstood, however, is the passion expressed by some African archaeologists who are voicing their own views while simultaneously trying to free themselves from dominating \"expert\" voices. These occurrences create tensions in archaeological discourse that are a natural part of decolonizing archaeology, joining other forms of disenchantment, particularly the disenchantments arising in contemporary African communities about social services, civil society, and human rights. Archaeologists are also implicated in disenchantments as they conduct investigations in the midst of people who may be without water or are suffering from HIV\/AIDS\u2014conditions that starkly contrast with their own comfortable lives. We may also need to reconsider how to deal with states that see archaeological research as contrary to nation building. This essay responds to some current misunderstandings that have arisen over these and related issues. Les arch\u00e9ologies postcoloniales en Afrique sont engag\u00e9es dans une vari\u00e9t\u00e9 de discussions qui s'int\u00e9ressent \u00e0 la d\u00e9colonisation des pratiques quotidiennes de recherche arch\u00e9ologiques sur le terrain et d'instruction dans les salles de classes. Les th\u00e9ories postcoloniales pr\u00e9occup\u00e9es par les questions des relations de pouvoirs et du rapport \u00e0 l'Autre sont de plus en plus \u00e9voqu\u00e9es pour examiner comments les arch\u00e9ologues conduisent leurs recherches de terrain et comment l'arch\u00e9ologie est utilis\u00e9e pour d\u00e9manteler les histories essentialis\u00e9es \u2013 des grandes th\u00e9ories qui ont domin\u00e9 \u00e0 la fois les \u00e8res coloniales et post-coloniales. Facilement mal comprise, cependant, est la passion exprim\u00e9e par quelques arch\u00e9ologues africains qui tentent de donner voix \u00e0 leur propres point de vue tout en, simultan\u00e9ment, essayant de se lib\u00e9rer de la domination des voix \"expertes\" venant d'ailleurs. Ces concurrences cr\u00e9ent des tensions dans le discours arch\u00e9ologique qui constitue une part naturelle de la tentative de decolonisation de l'arch\u00e9ologie, joignant d'autres formes de d\u00e9senchantement, plus particuli\u00e8rement le d\u00e9senchantement fleurissant dans les communaut\u00e9s africaines contemporaines \u00e0 propos des services sociaux, de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile, des droits de l'homme. Les arch\u00e9ologues sont aussi impliqu\u00e9s dans les d\u00e9senchantements au moment o\u00f9 ils conduisent leurs recherches au milieu des gens qui n'ont pas acc\u00e8s \u00e0 l'eau ou qui souffrent du Sida \u2013 des conditions qui contrastent diam\u00e9tralement d'avec nos propres vies confortables d'arch\u00e9ologues du Nord. Nous aurons aussi besoin de reconsid\u00e9rer comment se comporter vis-\u00e0-vis d'Etats qui consid\u00e8rent la recherch\u00e9 arch\u00e9ologique comme contraire \u00e0 la construction des identit\u00e9s nationales. Cet essai r\u00e9pond \u00e0 quelques unes de ces mal-compr\u00e9hensions qui se sont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9es autour de ses th\u00e9matiques et de leurs prolongements dans les d\u00e9bats arch\u00e9ologiques actuelles.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jared Sexton"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27734975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fbaa0d8c-07bd-3fac-bd7d-4216f31a4581"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27734975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Ruse of Engagement: Black Masculinity and the Cinema of Policing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27734975","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":12083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John A. Strong"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"809a9d8b-d379-3149-a107-b4d15d235c9c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-92+107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Images of a Liberation Struggle: The Film as Document","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185284","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/180336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d287d93-ba7c-3b0b-bf58-c2db42cad3b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/180336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/180336","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52de5f40-580e-336a-ba58-19ccf1710b0f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE AUTHENTICITY OF NEOCOLONIALISM: IDEOLOGY AND CLASS STRUGGLE ZAIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035249","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annmaria M. Shimabuku"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv75db00.16","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40063e79-3927-3af5-b565-1c02043847dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv75db00.16"}],"isPartOf":"Alegal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"211","pagination":"211-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","History","Asian Studies","Political Science","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv75db00.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3534,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["okinawa","japanese","prostitution","higa malia","reversion","prefecture","ryukyu","ryukyus uscar","miscegenation","military bases"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JONATHAN SCOTT LEE"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f09d6874-06bd-36b5-b1f7-37fc63a49a96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Spike Lee's \"Malcolm X\" as Transformational Object","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304234","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":5013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Frederickson"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4626287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4626287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"302","pagination":"pp. 302-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberalism and the Time of Instinct","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4626287","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay, which reads Walter Bagehot's Physics and Politics alongside the economic theories of its day-most notably, William Stanley Jevons's Theory of Political Economy-suggests how the term \"instinct\" affords Bagehot a means of distinguishing \"civilized,\" self-determining subjects from their \"savage\" others by providing an account of agency outside of a liberal framework committed to rational willfulness and individual character development. In Bagehot's usage, savage actors governed by \"instinct,\" supposedly insensible to any knowledge of the relation between means and ends, are deprived of any association they might be thought to have with either lengthier horizons of aspiration or the anxious deferral of pleasure, ideas valued as cornerstones of the liberal subject.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith K. Little","Jennifer Eichstedt"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2654841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d922ac23-1ff6-38d7-a9b0-9cb78f14085c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2654841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gendered List Making behind the Redwood Curtain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2654841","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Schiaffini"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24357867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022197X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24357867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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And, Arendt's Reply?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4494964","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":6928,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[228775,228846]],"Locations in B":[[39793,39874]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Pessimism of the Intellect, Optimism of the Will: A Reading of Ayi Kwei Armah's \"The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819251","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":18083,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[103398,103439]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Gilbert Brown"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bde3afd-6aa0-3453-92ba-f6eee67dcb5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"De-Composing the Canon: Alter\/Native Narratives from the Borderlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112376","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7120,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas H. Henriksen"],"datePublished":"1977-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1987094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263931"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032240"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1987094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Military Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some Notes on the National Liberation Wars in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1987094","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. Maureen Searle","Eugene B. Gallagher"],"datePublished":"1983-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3349877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01601997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"68579300"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236967"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3349877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"milbmemofundqua2"}],"isPartOf":"The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"686","pageStart":"659","pagination":"pp. 659-686","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Milbank Memorial Fund","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Social Sciences","Health Policy","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Health sciences - Health and wellness"],"title":"Manpower Issues in Saudi Health Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3349877","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":10514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Wealthy yet underdeveloped Saudi Arabia presents an important contrast to health manpower models advocated by the World Health Organization. Infectious diseases are still prevalent; the degenerative and chronic diseases of \"progress\" are gaining. In attempting to balance between primary care and specialized manpower, the Saudis continue to rely on expatriate physicians. But a unique pattern of self-sufficiency appears to be emerging.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26613096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00352411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565143699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3ba2fde-a464-32fd-9bec-7b457ad25a3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26613096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuhistlittfran"}],"isPartOf":"Revue d'Histoire litt\u00e9raire de la France","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":620.0,"pageEnd":"636","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-636","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Presses Universitaires de France","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHIE DE LA LITT\u00c9RATURE FRAN\u00c7AISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26613096","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":322449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911307747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04b4b8ad-b1cf-3e41-a311-9ccf90d775f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1mtz521.16"}],"isPartOf":"Britain, France and the Decolonization of Africa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"224","pagination":"224-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Select bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["empire","colonial","basingstoke palgrave","london","oxford","university","cambridge","british","history","basingstoke palgrave macmillan"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio T. Tiongson Jr."],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.1.2.0033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dc923dc-67f9-308c-bc46-6432c94b9399"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/jcritethnstud.1.2.0033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcritethnstud"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Ethnic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afro-Asian Inquiry and the Problematics of Comparative Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.1.2.0033","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[57740,57794]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vadim Shkolnikov"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25748123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163450X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"562178321"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b92b3916-ffa2-3c54-ad55-de1deb7fba18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25748123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ulbarevi"}],"isPartOf":"Ulbandus Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Columbia University Slavic Department","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Realism: Belinsky and the Wretched of the Earth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25748123","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3818,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[23363,23448]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anton L. Allahar"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26588041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08263663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"111c2b7d-3aa0-35e9-825a-808d228a5474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26588041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajlatiamercar"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies \/ Revue canadienne des \u00e9tudes latino-am\u00e9ricaines et cara\u00efbes","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marxist or not? Oliver Cromwell Cox on capitalism and class versus \"race\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26588041","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":14813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Marx's overall theory of social change he reasoned that the social segment most negatively affected by capitalism was the working class. He felt that it was in the interest of the working class to abolish the system that alienated, exploited, and oppressed them; to overthrow the class that benefitted from their alienation, exploitation, and oppression. Marx's was thus a class theory of change and this is clearly announced in the opening line of The Communist Manifesto, in which he and Engels affirmed that \"the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggle\". More recently, scholars and analysts working in the critical tradition have challenged what they call the class reductionism of Marxism. Known generally as critical race theorists, these scholars criticize Marx and orthodox Marxists for neglecting the central issue of \"race\", some even claiming that their theory is incapable of accommodating the question of \"race\" as a possible rallying cry in the struggle to overthrow capitalism. For these thinkers, \"race\" is not a mere epiphenomenon and race consciousness is not false consciousness. The two questions I will pursue in this essay are: Can one embrace the notion of race consciousness and still be a Marxist? And, where does Oliver Cromwell Cox stand? Dans sa th\u00e9orie g\u00e9n\u00e9rale du changement social, Marx a conclu que la couche sociale la plus durement affect\u00e9e par le capitalisme \u00e9tait la classe ouvri\u00e8re. Selon lui, c'\u00e9tait dans l'int\u00e9r\u00eat de la classe ouvri\u00e8re d'abolir le syst\u00e8me qui l'ali\u00e9nait, l'exploitait et l'opprimait, et de renverser la classe qui avait profit\u00e9 de leur ali\u00e9nation, exploitation et oppression. La th\u00e9orie de Marx \u00e9tait donc une th\u00e9orie des classes pro-changement et ceci est clairement annonc\u00e9 d\u00e8s la premi\u00e8re ligne du Manifeste du Parti Communiste o\u00f9, avec Engels, il a annonc\u00e9 que l' \u00ab L'histoire de toute soci\u00e9t\u00e9 jusqu'\u00e0 nos jours est l'histoire de luttes de classes\u00bb. Plus r\u00e9cemment, les universitaires et commentateurs dans le domaine de la tradition critique ont remis en question ce qu'ils appellent le r\u00e9ductionnisme des classes propos\u00e9 par le marxisme. G\u00e9n\u00e9ralement connus sous le nom de Th\u00e9oriciens Critiques des Races, ces universitaires reprochent \u00e0 Marx et aux Marxistes orthodoxes d'ignorer la question de la \u00ab race \u00bb, qui aurait pu constituer un cri de ralliement dans la lutte contre le capitalisme. Pour ces penseurs, la notion de \u00ab race \u00bb ne constitue pas un simple \u00e9piph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne, et la conscience raciale n'est pas une fausse conscience. Les deux questions qui guideront mon essai sont : peut-on embrasser la notion de conscience raciale et demeurer un marxiste ? Et, o\u00f9 peut-on situer Oliver Cromwell Cox dans ce contexte ?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ralph Bauer"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23739998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CRITICISM ON THE BOUNDARY: POSTCOLONIALITY AND THE \"WORLDING\" OF LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23739998","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pablo Mukherjee"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db9ad27f-af0e-3c2d-8e41-05ac745950a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20479287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Doomed to Smallness: Violence, V. S. Naipaul, and the Global South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479287","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article traces the cultural authority of \"V. S. Naipaul's essays and travel writing\" to his use of violence to represent and analyse the condition of the Global South. In this Naipaul may appear to be drawing on the works of other social scientists and theorists of decolonization\/neocolonialism, but in reality he sharply veers away from these. Instead, Naipaul uses violence to promote a homogenizing and exclusivist vision of the Global South, so that it appears at once to be irreducibly distant and essentially different from what, according to him, is the core of human civilization. This faux-historicism is accorded substantial cultural authority since it is a crucial component in the triumphalist narratives of late capitalism and the 'new world order'.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxs3r.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837625332"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb403edf-6f87-39df-a8bc-549b88983409"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1xxs3r.10"}],"isPartOf":"Culture \u2013 Theory \u2013 Disability","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"81","pagination":"81-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Dis\/entangling Critical Disability Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1xxs3r.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"If late-twentieth-century disability studies was associated with establishing the factors that led to the structural, economic and cultural exclusion of people with sensory, physical and cognitive impairments, then disability studies in the current century might be seen as a time of developing nuanced theoretical responses to these factors. The politicization of disabled people is at the heart of these developments. Disability activisms have brought about a host of national and pan-national responses, including the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. The potency of Disabled People\u2019s International is testimony to the growing interconnectedness of the politics of disability","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["disability studies","critical disability","goodley","disabled people","critical disability studies","dan goodley","entangling crit","intersectionality","impairment","ableism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Youssef Yacoubi","\u064a\u0648\u0633\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u064a\u0639\u0642\u0648\u0628\u064a"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8b0b1c0-363b-343c-b877-0bc1868d8fe6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26924867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"40","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Redirecting Postcolonial Theory - \u0625\u0639\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u062a\u0648\u062c\u064a\u0647 \u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26924867","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article makes three central claims. First, it explores the extent to which critical revisions done on pre-colonial Arabic and Islamic Humanities by Mohamed al-J\u0101bir\u012b and Mohamed Arkoun may respond to a process of re-envisioning non-Western Humanities as part of the pedagogical and political concerns of postcolonial theory. Moving into Arkoun\u2019s hermeneutic act of shattering the traditional boundaries of revelation, the second line of argumentation reinserts deconstructionism, seen as a nexus in interdisciplinary discourse between postcolonial theory and Arab-Islamic critique. The article concludes that reorienting an alternative notional framework for a sub-field across these two disengaged disciplines must compel a move towards \u201cmultiple critique.\u201d The latter meshes the study of the Islamicate worlds and the analysis of their interconnected Western lineages by augmenting inquiries concerning medieval classical knowledges, while sustaining a theoretical resistance to Western ethnocentric Orientalism. .\u062a\u0642\u062f\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062b\u0644\u0627\u062b \u0623\u0637\u0631\u0648\u062d\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a\u0629. \u0641\u0647\u064a \u062a\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0634 \u0623\u0648\u0644\u0627\u064b \u0645\u062f\u0649 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062c\u0627\u0628\u0629 \u0645\u0631\u0627\u062c\u0639\u0627\u062a \ufee3\ufea4\ufee4\ufeaa \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0627\u0628\u0631\u064a \u0648\ufee3\ufea4\ufee4\ufeaa \u0623\u0631\u0643\u0648\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0629 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\u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u062f\u0627\u062e\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u062a\u0639\u0632\u064a\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u062d\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0631\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0644\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0643\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0635\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0633\u0637\u0649 \u0645\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0641\u0627\u0638 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0645\u0642\u0627\u0648\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0642\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u062e\u064a\u0651\u0645 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0634\u0631\u0627\u0642 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0628\u064a","subTitle":"Arab-Islamic Reason, Deconstructionism, and the Possibility of Multiple Critique","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ferdinand de Jong","Elizabeth Harney"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38364090"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236965"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09a2a782-9bc3-30b9-9b51-54c014ca79a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"1","pagination":"p. 1, 4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","African Studies","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Art from the Archive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720680","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":2446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Martinot"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19358644"},{"name":"oclc","value":"82470510"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214183"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25594974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racethmulglocon"}],"isPartOf":"Race\/Ethnicity: Multidisciplinary Global Contexts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Immigration and the Boundary of Whiteness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25594974","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In his investigation of European immigrant \"alienation\" in The Uprooted, Oscar Handlin characterizes the phenomenon as a hidden boundary between the immigrant and American society. Despite his sensitive, humanistic treatment of the boundaries European immigrants faced, his discussion elides the significance of a different kind of immigration, another hidden boundary, and a similar anti-immigrant movement-that of the African American northern migration. When escaped slaves moved from the South into Pennsylvania, many of the problems that these \"immigrants\" faced were similar to the ones encountered by European immigrants coming from outside of the country. Despite some shared similarities in the experience of national exclusion, however, there is a different character to each of the anti-immigrant movements that opposed them. Taking the obsessive white animus that beleaguered the career of black heavyweight prizefighter Jack Johnson as a point of departure, I begin to elucidate this difference. The hidden border that Handlin intuits, but does not clearly articulate, is the border of white society and the white nation-internal to the geographic boundary of the United States. If this boundary is difficult for European immigrants to penetrate, I argue that it is even less permeable for black people. Turning to the contemporary movement against Latino immigration, I note the structural congruence of \"immigrant\" blacks and immigrant Latinos, including debt servitude, police impunity, and a systematized prison industry. Finally, I suggest that with respect to Latino immigration, the geographic boundary and the white border, or color line, of the United States, have become one.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kim Evelyn"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"278b73ad-bf48-3db4-9276-796a3031c0f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43739219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Claiming a Space in the Thought-I-Knew-You-Place: Migrant Domesticity, Diaspora, and Home in Andrea Levy's \"Small Island\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739219","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":9451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. HOBERMAN"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43458864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0015119X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d641e85c-f2aa-3976-b7a9-e5113602221b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43458864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcomment"}],"isPartOf":"Film Comment","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Film Society of Lincoln Center","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"IN PRAISE OF Da Pasta","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43458864","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":3685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael C. Lambert"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Citizenship to Negritude: \"Making a Difference\" in Elite Ideologies of Colonized Francophone West Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179399","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Wolfe"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2170830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ca340ab-78f6-3fa0-8b53-a1e1829924d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2170830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"420","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-420","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History and Imperialism: A Century of Theory, from Marx to Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2170830","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":20609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Chalcraft"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3880103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20612c20-34bb-3b10-90eb-555e765db833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3880103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engaging the State: Peasants and Petitions in Egypt on the Eve of Colonial Rule","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3880103","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Kahn Zemans"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03619486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51863793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235695"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerbarfounresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Bar Foundation Research Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":83.0,"pageEnd":"1071","pageStart":"989","pagination":"pp. 989-1071","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Law - Judicial system","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Framework for Analysis of Legal Mobilization: A Decision-Making Model","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828252","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":43275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The American legal system, structured in an entrepreneurial mode, relies upon the individual actor to personally evaluate the burdens and benefits of invoking the law on his or her own behalf. Without discounting the contribution to our understanding of legal mobilization which has been made by the access-to-justice movement, the author argues that focusing on the poor and the distribution of legal services has limited our understanding of the legal system. The article presents an alternative analytic framework for examination of citizen use of the law. The model of legal mobilization presented focuses on demands rather than needs, on citizens rather than lawyers or judges, on decision making rather than access, and on invoking the law rather than compliance with it. Drawing on the literature and available empirical evidence, the author attempts to analytically clarify the complex process of legal mobilization by organizing relevant variables into a decision-making model that focuses on the individual actor and the factors weighed in deciding whether and how to proceed in mobilizing the law.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Issa G. Shivji"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c92c1910-403e-3a58-af49-9f3c5838fd8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"95","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Life & Times of Babu: The Age of Liberation & Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006743","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":5750,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Juan O'Neill"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"075cdc24-8530-3b8a-828e-f1edcae335cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.05","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":3308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Chioni Moore"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fce52f0-5790-348e-804d-d830ce894197"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Is the Post- in Postcolonial the Post- in Post-Soviet? Toward a Global Postcolonial Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463645","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":11863,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The enormous twenty-seven-nation post-Soviet sphere-including the former Soviet republics and the former \"East Bloc\" states-is virtually never discussed in the burgeoning discourse of postcolonial studies. Yet Russia and the successor Soviet Union exercised colonial control over the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Baltics, and Central and Eastern Europe for anywhere from fifty to two hundred years. The present essay interrogates the possible postcoloniality of the post-Soviet sphere, including Russia. The investigation is complicated by Russia's seeming Eurasian status and its history of perceived cultural inferiority to the West. A broad range of theoretical, historical, cultural, and geographic positions are examined, and figures such as Curzon, Conrad, Lermontov, and Shohat are addressed. In conclusion the essay argues against the current occidentocentric privileging of Western European colonization as the standard and proposes a fully global postcolonial critique. Overall, it critiques both too narrow post-Soviet studies and too parochial, too Anglo-Franco-focused postcolonial studies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ella Shohat","Robert Stam","Emanuelle Santos","Patricia Schor","Maria Isabel de Castro Lima"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50b578f6-2ddc-346e-8650-ccc9f4cc530a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24328302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"726","pageStart":"701","pagination":"pp. 701-726","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Brasil, estudos p\u00f3s-coloniais e contracorrentes an\u00e1logas: entrevista com Ella Shohat e Robert Stam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24328302","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11160,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[68026,68072]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reiland Rabaka"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63e2fbbd-e5b2-387f-92a1-866fc5931755"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Souls of White Folk: W.E.B. Du Bois's Critique of White Supremacy and Contributions to Critical White Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819131","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article utilizes W.E.B. Du Bois's often-overlooked classic essay \"The Souls of White Folk\" to develop a long overdue dialogue between Africana studies and critical white studies. It demonstrates the dialectical nature of Du Bois's philosophy of race and critical race theory by comparing and contrasting his groundbreaking critiques of racism in The Souls of Black Folk with his reconstructed and decidedly more radical critique of the political economy of race, racism, whiteness, and white supremacy in \"The Souls of White Folk.\" The conception and critique of white supremacy that the author develops in this article does not seek to sidestep socio-legal race discourse as much as it intends to supplement it with the work of Du Bois et al. in philosophy of race, sociology of race, radical politics, and critical social theory. One of the main reasons this supplemental approach to critical white studies and critical race theory is important is because typically legal or lawfocused studies of race confine theorists to particular political, social, national, and\/or disciplinary discursive arenas, which is extremely problematic considering the fact that white supremacy is an international imperialist or global racist system.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony J Marsella"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40966720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03553140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1201e372-e72a-38e9-b8c1-6dd03f08475f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40966720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanjworkenvihea"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Health Sciences","Labor & Employment Relations","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Migration, ethnocultural diversity and future worklife: challenges and opportunities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40966720","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":14550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Matthews Lewis","Linda Johnson","Donald Askins"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.19","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48e4bf68-f811-3e79-bca3-60eb0e47c734"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.19"}],"isPartOf":"Colonialism in Modern America","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"211","pagination":"211-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"ANNIHILATING THE HILLBILLY:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1xp3n1t.19","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Not too long ago, CBS television featured, back-to-back on Tuesday nights, three of America\u2019s most popular TV programs: \u201cThe Beverly Hillbillies,\u201d \u201cGreen Acres,\u201d and \u201cHee-Haw.\u201d This combination has to be the most intensive effort ever exerted by a nation to belittle, demean, and otherwise destroy a minority people within its boundaries. Within the three shows on the one night, hillbillies were shown being conned into buying the White House, coddling a talking pig, and rising from a cornpatch to crack the sickest jokes on TV. All of this occurred on the same channel, all only a short while after Eric","subTitle":"THE APPALACHIANS\u2019 STRUGGLE WITH AMERICA\u2019S INSTITUTIONS","keyphrase":["appalachian","hillbilly","annihilating the hillbilly","percent","region","institutions","mountain","people","eastern kentucky","appalachian youth"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brent Green"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3aa5162-f57e-3102-9484-09c666e29adf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"INTERNAL COLONIALISM VS. THE ELDERLY: RENEWAL AND CRITIQUE FOR GERONTOLOGICAL THEORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035263","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henning Melber"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb06fe53-f8ca-368d-804f-edbc2e0d7f2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Liberation Movements to Governments: On Political Culture in Southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487678","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5399,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mogobe Ramose"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aacb50a7-6d2f-3c39-8855-9959d754f797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44862880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"153","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wiping away the Tears of the Ocean: Ukusulaizinyembezizolwandle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44862880","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":14006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article distinguishes between pan-Africanism and pan-Africanness. It argues that the history of pan-Africanism is replete with achievements but that the achievements could have been more and radical if the movement had from its inception adopted pan-Africanness, manifesting itself as ubuntu, as its point of departure. It focuses on epistemic and material injustice and suggests that there cannot be social justice without epistemic justice. The pursuit of the latter ought to lead to giving up one's life if necessary, for the sake of giving life to others.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Marriott"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd54f51-01b4-3fb2-9c41-0edd2c0bac41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bastard Allegories: Black British Independent Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.179","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This is a study of the founding terms of Black British independent cinema from the 1980s. Looking closely at the work of filmmaker John Akomfrah, and cultural theorists such as Stuart Hall, this essay examines the complex imbrication of form and theory in that cinema, paying particular attention to Hall's emphasis on the motif of \u201carticulation\u201d and how, for Akomfrah, the formal qualities of Black British independent cinema related\u2014allegorically, dialectically, symptomatically\u2014to Hall's theory of the conjuncture. Drawing on four structural motifs\u2014method, archive, genre, and filiation\u2014I also look at works by Isaac Julien, Kobena Mercer, and Frantz Fanon.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melissa M. Ptacek"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43694924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9475b9fd-6f61-3940-bb08-1713c61d2d2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43694924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"535","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-535","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Simone de Beauvoir's Algerian war: torture and the rejection of ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43694924","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":24169,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses the trajectory of Simone de Beauvoir's concern with the issue of torture. It argues that Beauvoir's interest in torture extends back at least to World War II and that her activities and writings against torture during the French-Algerian War of 1954-1962 were pivotal in prompting her to reject ethical philosophical language and to embrace, in its place, a new concept of politics based on need. It further suggests that exploring the development of Beauvoir's ideas about torture helps elucidate her belated turn to feminism and that in Beauvoir's disarray and disillusionment regarding the use of torture by the French during the French-Algerian War and her compatriots' complaisance with regard to this, there are lessons of sorts, though not necessarily entirely comforting ones, for Americans and others facing similar situations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JACK L. DANIEL"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a437c78c-191f-35d0-a944-284881bc64b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BLACK ACADEMIC ACTIVISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163621","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":5779,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pinar Batur-VanderLippe"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1319328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9db9dfe-33c0-32d0-9180-64cba3a0c5ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1319328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Necessity of Antiracist Praxis: An Experience in Teaching and Learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1319328","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper discusses the role of antiracist praxis in teaching and learning, concentrating on the experience and reflections of the participants of the course \"Racism and Intellectuals.\" Participants of this class decided to write this article as a way to convey alternative methods of establishing antiracist praxis. These involved creating and maintaining a community among students and faculty members, and developing collaborations with antiracist student organizations to extend beyond the walls of the campus, and to participate in a collective educational effort for antiracism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Kuenz"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"170","pagination":"pp. 170-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Racial Discourse, 1900-1930: Schuyler's \"Black No More\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345699","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12671,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daiana Bruzzone","Manuela Papaleo","Amparo Marroqu\u00edn Parducci","Andrea Varela Carlos del Valle","Rodolfo G\u00f3mez","Claudia Villamayor","Jorge Acevedo","Lina Mar\u00eda Patricia Manrique Villanueva","\u00c1lvaro Enrique Duque Soto","Evandro Vieira Ouriques","Omar Rinc\u00f3n","Daniel Badenes","Malely Linares S\u00e1nchez","Leonardo Gonz\u00e1lez","Julia Barba","Ramiro Blasco","Fernanda Garc\u00eda Germanier","Andrea Alvarado Vargas","Manuel Chaparro Escudero","Andrea Cristancho","Lorena Antezana Barrios"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96f5x.12","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f82fb273-bafc-3b1a-8c89-d1e61d31649f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvn96f5x.12"}],"isPartOf":"Comunicaci\u00f3n para la resistencia","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"147","pagination":"147-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","History","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Desobediencia psicopol\u00edtica frente al perspectivismo de la gobernancia y sus pol\u00edticas p\u00fablicas:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96f5x.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"De las preguntas que Boaventura de Sousa Santos (2018) hizo sobre lo ocurrido en Nicaragua en 2018, trato aqu\u00ed dos de ellas: \u201c\u00bf Por qu\u00e9 las alianzas con las diferentes fuerzas de izquierda parecen siempre m\u00e1s dif\u00edciles que las alianzas entre la izquierda hegem\u00f3nica y las fuerzas de derecha?\u201d; y \u201c\u00bf por cu\u00e1nto tiempo la memoria de conquistas revolucionarias turba la capacidad de denunciar las perversidades que les siguen, hasta el punto de que la denuncia llegue casi siempre demasiado tarde?\u201d. A ellas respondo por su car\u00e1cter emblem\u00e1tico de lo que sucedi\u00f3 en Brasil con la gobernancia y las pol\u00edticas","subTitle":"el caso de Brasil","keyphrase":["ser humano","condici\u00f3n comunicacional","pol\u00edticas p\u00fablicas","trav\u00e9s","brasil","manera","teor\u00eda","seguridad","identidad","sujeto"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KAREN KURCZYNSKI","NICOLA PEZOLET"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23647795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02771322"},{"name":"oclc","value":"448052534"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235714"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23647795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resanthroaesth"}],"isPartOf":"RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics","issueNumber":"59\/60","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"282","pagination":"pp. 282-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"President and Fellows of Harvard College","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Art & Art History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Primitivism, humanism, and ambivalence: Cobra and Post-Cobra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23647795","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv512st2.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780957354883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4180233e-5154-38b0-a287-6944aad4c993"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv512st2.5"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights, Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in The Commonwealth","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":60.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Human rights, sexual orientation and gender identity in the Commonwealth:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv512st2.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":24431,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sexual orientation and gender identity are reaching the heart of global debates over human rights and social change. Such debates are particularly acute in many Member States of the Commonwealth of Nations. Following the criminalisation of same-sex sexual behaviour across the British Empire from the 19th century, decriminalisation in the Commonwealth commenced in England and Wales in 1967, yet struggles for the decriminalisation of same-sex sexual behaviour still continue in 42 of the 54 Commonwealth states. These struggles are increasingly accompanied by often-interrelated struggles for legal recognition of gender identity. A landmark \u2018reading down\u2019 of Section 377 of the Indian","subTitle":"from history and law to developing activism and transnational dialogues","keyphrase":["sexual behaviour","sex sexual","states","criminalisation","sex sexual behaviour","commonwealth states","waites","gross indecency"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John O. Calmore"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a20e1b0e-60cf-3553-a8d1-37ead0927776"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3312475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"1273","pageStart":"1233","pagination":"pp. 1233-1273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racialized Space and the Culture of Segregation: \"Hewing a Stone of Hope from a Mountain of Despair\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3312475","volumeNumber":"143","wordCount":17675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WARREN F. ILCHMAN"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2fd2c4da-d170-3343-9113-3b52171cf502"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Microeconomics"],"title":"Decision Rules and Decision Roles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341237","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":14224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne W. Gulick"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.49","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55b7011b-5cc9-333d-85b0-15c6a5c359ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.49"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Africa, Pan-Africanism, and the Global Caribbean in Maryse Cond\u00e9's The Story of the Cannibal Woman<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.4.2.49","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":13162,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[591574,591669]],"Locations in B":[[50547,50640]],"abstract":"ABSTRACT The Caribbean is frequently imagined as a quintessential site of diasporic arrival and encounter in modernity. But since the early years of the twentieth century, the Caribbean has more prominently served as a site of diasporic departure as well as the intellectual point of origin for pan-Africanism, negritude and other radical conceptions of transnational community and global justice. This essay situates a recent work of Caribbean fiction, Maryse Cond\u00e9's 2003 The Story of the Cannibal Woman, in relation to this author's longstanding engagement with the often fraught relationship between diasporic movement and black internationalism in her fiction and criticism. The story of Ros\u00e9lie, Cond\u00e9's diasporic protagonist living in post-apartheid Cape Town, is linked to the midcentury transatlantic history of negritude and pan-Africanism, as well as to more recent histories of postcolonial violence in southern Africa. Exploring these links, this article interrogates how we might read the early twenty-first century Caribbean novel of globalization within a genealogy of mid-twentieth century black internationalism and its afterlives.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREAS KILLEN","STEFAN ANDRIOPOULOS"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e233647f-67cc-3594-9f56-fbfe4ececd61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editors' Introduction On Brainwashing: Mind Control, Media, and Warfare","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342500","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33375bb2-032b-3a8e-9ba9-a28af177613e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979566","volumeNumber":"244","wordCount":10953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brendan Duffin"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25560208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7871d0c6-d14f-307f-acb4-38ca3e0c8246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25560208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fortnight"}],"isPartOf":"Fortnight","issueNumber":"393","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Fortnight Publications Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ethnicity Cleansed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25560208","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc85639b-27be-3ee7-95e7-814d966077ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"1\/2 (51-52)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Memoirs on the Black Panther Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766744","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":3949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Cole"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f84a5fec-7616-3dd1-8927-1fff226dc822"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25614389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"1647","pageStart":"1632","pagination":"pp. 1632-1647","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Enchantment, Disenchantment, War, Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614389","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":10186,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[628172,628282]],"Locations in B":[[15888,16008]],"abstract":"This essay employs the notions of enchantment and disenchantment to develop a theory of literature and violence across the twentieth century. War and violence were imagined either as generative, providing the symbolic core for cultural self-definition, or as entirely unredeemable, as pointless attacks on human flesh. A wide-ranging language is provided for elucidating the relation of literature to war and violence, and T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land (1922) is considered as an example of the key motifs traversing and defining this history. The poem demonstrates that literary modernism, for all its tendency to encode, rescript, and miscegenate, was fully and intricately engaged with the polarization between transformative and useless violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Walters"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474045"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c6bfd55e-05ed-3672-8bef-e73355f77d5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4168737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"langsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Language in Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Linguistics","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Gender, Identity, and the Political Economy of Language: Anglophone Wives in Tunisia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4168737","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":21453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Using the frameworks of the political economy of language, and of language use as acts of identity, this study attempts to describe and analyze the situation of natively anglophone wives living with their Tunisian husbands in Tunisia -- a speech community characterized by Arabic diglossia and Arabic\/French bilingualism. Particular attention is devoted to these women's beliefs about using Tunisian Arabic (TA), the native language of their husbands, and the ways in which access to TA or the use of it becomes a site of conflict between husbands and wives, or mothers and children, in these mixed marriages.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. Raghuramaraju"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0aa0946c-b342-3803-a92b-2f3ed3b05ba1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Internal Criticism in the Democracies Outside the West","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645273","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8975,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[17018,17103]],"abstract":"Democracy requires criticism. A significant feature of democracies outside the West, though often ignored by liberal traditions of analysis, is the practice of internal criticism. This article examines some experiences of internal criticism that may be found in the writings of some Indian philosophers, focusing especially on the work of Swami Vivekananda.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Cheyfitz"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23378"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2927902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlite"}],"isPartOf":"American Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"853","pageStart":"843","pagination":"pp. 843-853","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology","Education - Formal education","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"What Work is there for us to do? American Literary Studies or American Cultural Studies?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2927902","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":4034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. E. Greene"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ac160fe-cef5-3af3-9f4a-1284b2dd806a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A REVIEW OF POLITICAL SCIENCE RESEARCH IN THE ENGLISH SPEAKING CARIBBEAN: TOWARD A METHODOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861489","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":20887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond","Khadija Sharife"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6472dec1-09ea-325d-b9b3-610b4accb26d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42003282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"132","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Zimbabwe's clogged political drain and open diamond pipe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42003282","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henrique Furtado"],"datePublished":"2017-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"707d2252-a6b5-3d94-8593-ab9de75a368d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26294222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"316","pagination":"pp. 316-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On demons and dreamers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294222","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":11050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Measures towards post-conflict or post-authoritarian justice have historically relied on the merging of the concepts of silence, violence and impunity in order to create a single promise of justice. Scholars and practitioners in the field usually defend a trifold agenda of breaking the silence about violations of human rights, denouncing systematic violence in the past and fighting impunity as the only way of ensuring that violence never happens again. This trope was mobilized in Brazil in 2014, when the report of the country\u2019s National Truth Commission (CNV) was released. However, in the Brazilian case, truth-seeking also produced its own form of \u2018silence\u2019. Whereas the CNV commendably denounced 377 perpetrators as the \u2018demons\u2019 responsible for implementing a state of terror during the last dictatorship (1964\u20131985), it also created a depoliticized and victimized idea of leftist militants as mere dreamers who fought for liberty and democracy in the past. By representing leftist militants as freedom fighters, the CNV silenced their fundamental ideas (and actions) regarding the concept of revolutionary violence and its radical programme of structural change. In this article, I provide an explanation that connects the CNV\u2019s \u2018silencing\u2019 of this political project to the unreflective merging between the concepts of silence, violence and impunity in the literature. Via a narrative analysis of the CNV\u2019s report and a critique of transitional justice debates, I argue that the silence on the political project of the radical left in Brazil echoes transitional justice\u2019s silence about the complexities of violence in general.","subTitle":"Violence, silence and the politics of impunity in the Brazilian Truth Commission","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. F. Nursey-Bray"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/721632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"314","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tanzania: The Development Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721632","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":11354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sharon B. Stichter"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"127ab975-9511-3606-b63a-1bd0d3a25966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"259","pagination":"pp. 259-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Workers, Trade Unions, and the Mau Mau Rebellion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484083","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Les masses urbaines ont jou\u00e9 un r\u00f4le \u00e9tonnamment important lors de la r\u00e9volte mau-mau au Kenya, et le mouvement ouvrier a \u00e9t\u00e9 aussi profond\u00e9ment impliqu\u00e9. Cependant, \u00e0 la fois dans la classe ouvri\u00e8re et dans le mouvement ouvrier, il y eut des diff\u00e9rences de perception politique. Les vues du r\u00f4le politique des travailleurs en Afrique, comme celles de Hodgkin, Woddis ou Fanon, ne cernent pas toute la complexit\u00e9 de la situation au Kenya. Alors que le mouvement nationaliste \u00e9tait scind\u00e9 entre une aile mod\u00e9r\u00e9e et l'aile militante mau-mau, les travailleurs Kikuyu de Nairobi appuyaient pleinement la r\u00e9bellion. Les travailleurs Kikuyu non sp\u00e9cialis\u00e9s formaient un contingent important o\u00f9 se recrutaient les combattants mau-mau alors que les travailleurs sp\u00e9cialis\u00e9s appuyaient passivement la r\u00e9volte. Ceux qui ne l'appuyaient pas avaient tendance \u00e0 \u00eatre des collets blancs. Ces divergences dans le statut \u00e9conomique des travailleurs se r\u00e9v\u00e9laient politiquement significatives. Dans les unions ouvri\u00e8res, qui repr\u00e9sentaient plus de travailleurs sp\u00e9cialis\u00e9s, il y avait une aile favorable aux Mau-Mau et une aile qui, se r\u00e9v\u00e9lant en principe neutre, travaillait en fait contre la r\u00e9volte. Cette divergence peut \u00eatre retrouv\u00e9e non seulement dans les tendances politiques de la masse mais encore jusque dans l'influence de l'administration coloniale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Mirzoeff"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53257fe2-59ee-3e77-a82f-f2200609d3a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23349848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"1210","pageStart":"1185","pagination":"pp. 1185-1210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Clash of Visualizations: Counterinsurgency and Climate Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23349848","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":8596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tavengwa Gwekwerere"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eae55343-eb7f-31e7-a3ab-0edb01df7cd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"819","pageStart":"801","pagination":"pp. 801-819","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Universal, Normative, and Indispensable","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574596","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8118,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[48117,48168]],"abstract":"Literary-critical discourse on the Black Zimbabwean novel constitutes one of several platforms on which the self-other dialectic in Zimbabwe finds expression. This is especially the case at the level of literary-critical theory where the tendency is to advance arguments that frame Afrocentric and Eurocentric literary-critical theories as mutually exclusive. In this article, I explore the scholarship of Flora Veit-Wild and Ranka Primorac on the Black Zimbabwean novel with a view to discoursing the ways in which it can be argued that in their discussion of the corpus, the two scholars are anchored in the Eurocentric framework. In pursuing this objective, I focus on the critics' reliance on Eurocentric literary-critical theories and apparent discomfiture with Afrocentric benchmarks in their criticism of the Black Zimbabwean novel. Thus, I argue in this article that while the version of critical discourse discussed here speaks to the complex and contradictory ways in which cultures find places of translation and dialogic engagement where history is made, the overall impression created by Veit-Wild and Primorac in their criticism of the Black Zimbabwean novel is that Eurocentric perspectives are universal, normative, and indispensable.","subTitle":"Exploring the Emphasis on Eurocentric Literary-Critical Perspectives in the Criticism of the Black Zimbabwean Novel","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evaleila Pesaran"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6aae6a1-10ce-3afb-bf5d-42309f8d78c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25597509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"718","pageStart":"693","pagination":"pp. 693-718","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards an Anti-Western Stance: The Economic Discourse of Iran's 1979 Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25597509","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Iranian Revolution of 1979 saw the mobilization and cooperation of a variety of groupings that were brought together by their shared determination to overthrow the Shah. However, it was not only opposition to the Pahlavi regime, but also suspicion of and disdain for that regime's Western backers that united these revolutionary groups. Religious leaders (ulama), merchants (bazaaris), intellectuals and students alike all espoused the strong anti-Western sentiments that had been developing in Iran over the previous two decades. But what particular factors can be seen to have encouraged the adoption of these sentiments in the lead-up to the revolution, and in what ways were they articulated and subsequently put into practice by the leaders of the new regime? This article suggests that various domestic and international influences can be seen to have shaped the emergence of Iran's revolutionary discourse of \"economic independence.\" In particular, the paper argues that a peculiar blend of Shi'i concepts of social justice and Marxist-Leninist discourses of class struggle and anti-imperialism not only informed the economic outlook of Iran's burgeoning revolutionary movement during the period 1953-79, but was also enshrined in the Constitution of the Islamic Republic.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mutiu Abimbola Oyinlola"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43301194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388384"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213772"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d678978e-c79d-3539-b995-c2c24a7cd507"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43301194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejsoci"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Dependent Scholarship and the Economics of International Publishing in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43301194","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"From the legion of challenges involved in treading the path of academia, striking a delicate balance between teaching and research remains an elusive task for scholars. This is a universal phenomenon \u2014 \"publish or perish\" \u2014 that subjects scholars around the world to pressure to constantly publish articles in order to advance or sustain an academic career. In Nigeria, as in other African countries, there is the additional weight of publishing in international journals, which further increases the pressure on authors who are expected to operate on a skewed global scholarly platform where Africa is grossly underrepresented. Some relatively unknown international journals have emerged and they charge huge publishing fees while creating a humongous paid-publication market. This tends to derail the essence of scholarship as the emphasis on publishing can lower the quality of the resulting scholarship. Scholars now spend more time scrambling to publish whatever they can manage and are eager to pay, rather than spending the time to advance significant research agendas. Data were collected through in-depth interviews with seventeen scholars in the social sciences and other related fields at the University oflbadan, Nigeria. It was found that a majority of scholars (67 percent) would be willing to pay for publication if it is in the range of US$ 100-200, although about 57 percent of the interviewees have paid less than US$ 100 for publication. In addition, the major incentive for paying to publish in relatively unknown journals is attributable to promotion on the career ladder. The reason for continued demand for pay-to-publish journals is that foreign-based journals are ranked higher in awarding points for promotion, and those journals seemingly offer wider coverage than local onces.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen Carey-Webb"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44a2650c-114c-3d3a-b722-59fa134bdb0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching to the Contemporary Crisis: Notes on English 223: Prison, Race, and Social Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112205","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Harris PhD"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/jinte.2.1.0051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25152114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1018187707"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"abc70f25-d39a-3c18-823a-8d6a7c5b2a38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/jinte.2.1.0051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinte"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Intersectionality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Black Organic Intellectual Tradition and the Challenges of Educating and Developing Organic Intellectuals in the 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/jinte.2.1.0051","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":28420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"By summarizing the legacy of the first and second wave Black working class organic intellectuals in North America in the 20th century, I will use this as a backdrop to discuss my efforts in the first decade of the 21st century to develop a third wave of organic intellectuals in the hip hop generation. I will offer a case study of the Freedom Cipher Program at the Black Action Defense Committee (BADC), and discuss the implications of this experience for organizing oppressed Black working class and underclass youth into organic intellectuals today in this age of neo-liberal capitalism and globalization. I hope this paper will contribute to the work of the revolutionary party-building Left, and youth movements concerned with organizing the hip hop generations of the 20th century (born 1965-1984) and 21st century (born 1985-2004) into a new socialist hegemonic project.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Masao Miyoshi"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c61db054-6c39-35ca-b28b-dacc6e15fa71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"751","pageStart":"726","pagination":"pp. 726-751","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Borderless World? From Colonialism to Transnationalism and the Decline of the Nation-State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343904","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":13042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT BERNASCONI"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00855553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47766712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28203ace-7ca1-35a2-85b0-ecc19ab01ec2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24654793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resephen"}],"isPartOf":"Research in Phenomenology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Almost Always More Than Philosophy Proper","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24654793","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":5040,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul C. Mocombe","Carol Tomlin","Cecile Wright"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496987","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb1da502-73b1-35a1-a6b9-09485eee2e7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496987"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Racial Caste in Class: Race and Class Distinctions within Black Communities in the United States and United Kingdom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496987","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the 1960s, there have been four similar schools of thought on the origins and nature of black practical consciousness in the United States (US) and the United Kingdom (UK): the adaptive-vitality school and the pathologicalpathogenic school in the US; and the anti-essentialist and anti-anti-essentialist schools in the UK. In the US, the pathological-pathogenic position argues that in its divergences from white American norms and values black American consciousness is nothing more than a pathological form of, and reaction to, American consciousness rather than a dual (both African and American) hegemonic opposing \"identity-in-differential\" (the term is Gayatri Spivak's) to the American one. Proponents of the adaptive-vitality school argue that the divergences are not pathologies but African \"institutional transformations\" preserved on the American landscape. Just the same in the UK, the two main opposing schools of thought are the anti-essentialist and the anti-anti-essentialist. Anti-essentialists argue against any ideas of a black phenomenon that unites all black people, and contends that diasporic identities and cultures cannot place African origin at the center of any attempt to understand the nature of black practical consciousness in the UK. The anti-anti-essentialist position posits the idea that African memory retentions exist in diasporic cultures to some degree. The purpose of the present work is to understand black practical consciousnesses in the US and UK by working out the theoretical and methodological problems from which these four divergent positions are constructed in order to arrive at a more sociohistorical, rather than racial, understanding of black practical consciousnesses in the US and UK.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro Alexis Tabensky"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfb020bc-34df-3bfb-a093-6a5ddeec785d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"125","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Axiology"],"title":"The Oppressor's Pathology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802487","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":10411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Black Skin, White Masks Frantz Fanon discusses the neurotic condition that typifies the oppressed black subject, their 'psychoexistential complex'. He argues that this neurotic condition is closely related to another, the 'psychoexistential complex' of the white oppressor. Both of these complexes sustain and are sustained by social and economic injustice. But Fanon does not delve in detail into the nature of this second neurosis, for he was primarily interested in discussing this neurosis only insofar as it helps him understand the first. My aim in this paper is to provide an account of the white neurosis, and why it should be understood literally as a neurotic condition. Typical, white oppressors, not solely those who are militantly committed to oppressing others, are alienated from the world and from themselves, making their behaviour seem like that of soulless dolls, to use J.M. Coetzee's image from Age of Iron.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan T. Camp"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e1ac69f-7ea9-3149-ae7e-357578455a35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27735014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"717","pageStart":"693","pagination":"pp. 693-717","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"We Know This Place\": Neoliberal Racial Regimes and the Katrina Circumstance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27735014","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11573,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6zdbtz.6","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837641325"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61d1a6f8-e44b-3bc5-b1aa-7b51a636f805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv6zdbtz.6"}],"isPartOf":"A Poetics of Neurosis","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"75","pagination":"75-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading Rap with Fanon and Fanon with Rap","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6zdbtz.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8073,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5788,5848]],"Locations in B":[[435,510]],"abstract":"Already in the early twentieth century, Frantz Fanon advanced the decolonisa tion of psychiatric praxis (see Verg\u00e8s and Razanajao et al) and his writings have been receiving renewed and intensifying attention in recent years. Evidence of an increasing engagement can be found in, for instance, the republication of his best-known textsBlack Skin, White Masks<\/em>(2008 and 2017) andThe Wretched of the Earth<\/em>(2004) in new translations and with new introductions,\u00b9 while publications considering his life, writings and ideas have contributed to a body of Fanonian thought. Homi Bha bha (1993; 2004), Paul Gilroy (2000; 2005; 2010) and Achille","subTitle":"The Potential of Transcultural Recognition","keyphrase":["rap music","colonial neurosis","masta killa","white masks","wegner","black skin","reading rap","skin white","fanon with rap","reality rap"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Friedrich Von Krosigk"],"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3013613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3013613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"530","pagination":"pp. 530-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"International Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marx, Universalism, and Contemporary World Business","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3013613","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":6435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. K. JHA"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41855881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a2daf0c-e06b-31ad-bf28-5137ff8e472b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41855881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FANON'S THEORY OF VIOLENCE: A CRITIQUE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41855881","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":3788,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[222662,222739]],"Locations in B":[[6448,6520]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hiren Gohain"],"datePublished":"1984-08-25","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41625638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aafbf852-bd2b-33c2-97c3-99cb1c85c67c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41625638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1471","pageStart":"1469","pagination":"pp. 1469-1471","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Baboo and the Brown Sahib: Enemies or Partners?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41625638","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":3135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84058dba-0ce7-39a9-8d57-d02e4393711a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976905","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4507,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[7678,7725]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Kahn Zemans"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1957268","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99ffcaa6-138f-3cf1-aed7-31ace54a7dc8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1957268"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"703","pageStart":"690","pagination":"pp. 690-703","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Legal Mobilization: The Neglected Role of the Law in the Political System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1957268","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":11377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that the role of the law in the political system has been construed much too narrowly. A review of the political science literature demonstrates an interest in the law that is largely confined to the making of new laws, social change, and social control. That view implies an acceptance of the legal profession's distinction between public and private law as a reasonable guide for political scientists in the study of law. A more interactive view of the law is presented, characterizing legal mobilization (invoking legal norms) as a form of political activity by which the citizenry uses public authority on its own behalf. Further, the legal system, structured to consider cases and controversies on an individual basis, provides access to government authority unencumbered by the limits of collective action. This form of public power, although contingent, is widely dispersed. Consideration of the factors that influence legal mobilization is important not only to understanding who uses the law, but also as predictors to the implementation of public policy; with very few exceptions, the enforcement of the laws depends upon individual citizens to initiate the legal process. By virtue of this dependence, an aggregation of individual citizens acting largely in their own interests strongly influences the form and extent of the implementation of public policy and thereby the allocation of power and authority.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Haynes"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dea5ba58-1216-3629-9492-94e110943b6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27666895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Nollywood in Lagos, Lagos in Nollywood Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27666895","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Nollywood\u2014the Lagos-based Nigerian film industry\u2014has become the third-largest film industry in the world, and it is by far the most powerful purveyor of an image of Nigeria to domestic and foreign populations. It consists of many small producers working with tiny amounts of capital; it therefore has not been able to build its own spaces\u2014studios, theaters, office complexes\u2014and remains nearly invisible in the Lagos cityscape, apart from film posters and the films themselves, displayed for sale as cassettes or video compact discs. Material constraints and the small screens for which the films are designed shape the images of Lagos that appear in them. Nigerian videos differ markedly from typical African celluloid films, both in their \"film language\" and in their handling of the city. They present Lagos as a turbulent and dangerous landscape, where class divisions are extreme but permeable, and enormous wealth does not buy insulation from chaos and misery. They show supernatural forces permeating all social levels, particularly the wealthiest. A shared realism, born of location shooting and common strategies for imaging the desires and fears of the audience, creates a considerable coherence in the representation of Lagos, despite the size and variety of the city and the industry.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Kilroy"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79c4a6c1-c64e-3f46-a123-dc076aaccb83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Afterlives of Photography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.91.2015.0209","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":4438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Funso Afolayan"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/530139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3893722-aa2d-31c8-aa9d-5b5051714950"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/530139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1570","pageStart":"1569","pagination":"pp. 1569-1570","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Reviews of Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/530139","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":1858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brendon Nicholls"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116604","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"465a1554-e3a9-3940-af31-88a2c5b9464d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45116604"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Decolonization and Popular Poetics: From Soweto Poetry to Diasporic Solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116604","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":15007,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reads Soweto poetry in terms of Steve Biko's Black Consciousness thought. I argue that Soweto poetry develops dialectically. It uses popular cultural theorizations of shared daily experience to formulate black solidarity, while remaining attuned to historical change as the Soweto uprising and the murders of Onkgopotse Tiro and Steve Biko unfold. The implication of Biko's dialectic is that we need to consider Soweto poetry's volumes not as settled texts in themselves, but as texts in history whose modes and values are constantly re-formed by the very environment of historical impermanence and political contestation from which they emerge. In line with Biko's dialectic, I argue that Soweto poetry's affinity with the wider black diaspora is in keeping with its project of developing a fuller humanity after Apartheid, and that its lasting influence on South African artists and poets is but one sign of its sublation. Biko's dialectic, I argue, offers South African literary history a way of thinking a genuinely multiracial, transnational canon via a national experience of political conflict and contested cultural value. Moreover, I suggest, the presence of a suppressed women's poetic tradition after Soweto 1976 means that we ought to complicate Biko's thought by contemplating the South African literary canon via polythetic, intersecting dialectics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edna Aizenberg"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Untruths of the Nation: Petals of Blood and Fuentes's \"The Death of Artemio Cruz\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819323","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Ellner"],"datePublished":"2003-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3875581","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022216X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227216"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3875581"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatiamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Contrasting Variants of the Populism of Hugo Ch\u00e1vez and Alberto Fujimori","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3875581","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jude C. Aguwa"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e1bf89e-dbb7-34ac-bd93-c2f84128185b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"RELIGIOUS CONFLICT IN NIGERIA: IMPACT ON NATION BUILDING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790463","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William M. LeoGrande"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b1c4d19-b572-3241-aafe-b5e31627cd5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45367319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Comparative Communism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government"],"title":"The Theory and Practice of Socialist Democracy in Cuba: Mechanisms of Elite Accountability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367319","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":9539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136546","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"807a6786-b08f-38c5-8c03-d15a6be7893c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45136546"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45136546","volumeNumber":"476","wordCount":8794,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[16749,16814]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SABELO J NDLOVU-GATSHENI"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5453d772-56e5-3764-8dbf-a3adfe82d3c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41341212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fiftieth Anniversary of Decolonisation in Africa: a moment of celebration or critical reflection?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41341212","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9131,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article deploys the concept of coloniality of power to critically reflect on the decolonisation process, using a 'colonial difference' perspective which enables a critical reflection on the limits of decolonisation from the side of the ex-colonised ordinary citizens of Africa. Three principal arguments are advanced. First, celebration of the decolonisation process as the proudest moment in African history obscures the continuing operation of the colonial matrices of power in maintaining Africa's subaltern position in global politics. Second, decolonisation resulted only in politico-juridical freedom, which is often conflated with freedom for the ordinary peoples of Africa. Third, celebrations of decolonisation are belied by the fact that ordinary African citizens engaged in new struggles for freedom soon after decolonisation aimed at liberating themselves from oppression by the inherited and imposed postcolonial African state. The article delves into the genealogical, ideological and ethical elements of decolonisation, alongside its political assumptions and implications. This facilitates the decoupling of ideas of liberation from notions of emancipation, which are often considered the same thing. It also enables critical engagement with the character of the postcolonial African state imposed on Africans without being fully reconstituted and decolonized institutionally. The article provides a fresh appreciation of ordinary citizens' ongoing struggles for liberation from the postcolonial state exemplified by the current North African popular uprisings against dictatorial regimes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CAMILLE LOGAN"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe801533-37e5-325a-8739-3bd9597288db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWO: Body Politics and the Experience of Blackness within the Field of Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980665","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":12165,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[65121,65306],[65389,65548],[69306,69394],[208649,208799],[224764,225089]],"Locations in B":[[52565,52753],[52854,53011],[53913,54001],[53963,54111],[66007,66332]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Rice-Sayre"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303443","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303443"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Veiled Threats: Malek Alloula's Colonial Harem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303443","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Onyemaechi Udumukwu"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology and the Dialectics of Action: Achebe and Iyayi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820307","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dianna Bell"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.61.3.45","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c5a4193-b85d-3f6e-858a-b6f616a9b4cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.61.3.45"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Choosing Medersa<\/em>: Discourses on Secular versus Islamic Education in Mali, West Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.61.3.45","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":9040,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As leaders in Mali continue to stress the importance of education and literacy, those seeking to follow the call for formal schooling have options to choose from, including public schools modeled after the European education system, Qur'anic schools, and medersas. This article explores the motivations that lead Malians to select and value Islamic education. It describes how systems of Islamic education in colonial and postcolonial Mali have operated and reveals the ways Malians measure the worth of education. It shows that education cannot be understood solely for its potential to advance development and alleviate poverty: rather, it argues that Malians assess the worth of education through Islamic notions of merit (baraji) and as an opportunity for expressing a Muslim identity against a colonial legacy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lorena Cuya"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43855402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10962492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"76810189"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b08c95a7-82d2-37dc-aa3b-ad99e8c68f25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43855402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arijhispcultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Seventeenth Century Environmental Criticism, the Taqui Onqoy and Garcilaso de la Vega's \"Comentarios reales\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43855402","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes Book IX of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega's Comentarios reales (1609) and argues that the ninth book constitutes a sophisticated environmental observation that relates the Inca with the ideology of an insurgent indigenous movement, the Taqui Onqoy. Members of this movement believe that old Inca deities would avenge the indigenous populations through ocean flooding, infestations, and diseases washing the Spaniards away from their lands. Curiously, Garcilaso not only describes land, animal, and plants' transformations, but adds information about how animals and plants become plagues acting against the Spanish\u2014just as the Taqui Onqoy prophesied it. Through a close examination of dates, names, and places mentioned by the Inca, this article explains the ideological correspondence between the insurgent movement and the mestizo writer. The article concludes that the deliberate omission of the Taqui Onqoy rebellion can be read as a rhetorical strategy to avoid endangering the author's social position. Such a stratagem unavoidably alters the production and reception of what constitutes an important ecological discourse during the Colonia. Este art\u00edculo analiza el libro IX de los Comentarios reales (1609) del Inca Garcilaso de la Vega y sostiene que dicha secci\u00f3n constituye una sofisticada observaci\u00f3n medio ambiental que relaciona al Inca con la ideolog\u00eda del Taqui Onqoy, un movimiento insurgente ind\u00edgena. Considerando que los miembros de dicho movimiento cre\u00edan que, por medio de una venganza divina, plagas y enfermedades se volver\u00edan contra los propios conquistadores, es curioso que Garcilaso no s\u00f3lo comente los cambios f\u00edsicos de la tierra, plantas y animales, sino que adem\u00e1s a\u00f1ada episodios en los que plantas y animales se convierten, en efecto, en plagas\u2014tal como lo predicaba el Taqui Onqoy. Al examinar las fechas y nombres de lugares referidos y omitidos por el Inca, el art\u00edculo da cuenta de las coincidencias ideol\u00f3gicas entre Garcilaso y el movimiento rebelde ind\u00edgena, y sostiene que la deliberada omisi\u00f3n del nombre del movimiento puede atribuirse a una estrategia ret\u00f3rica que el Inca realiza para proteger su posici\u00f3n social como intelectual mestizo. Dicha estrategia ideol\u00f3gica alterar\u00eda inevitablemente la emisi\u00f3n y recepci\u00f3n de lo que constituir\u00eda un importante discurso ecol\u00f3gico colonial.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glen Coulthard","Leanne Betasamosake Simpson"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3557d132-aec2-3130-9e94-0b9f19f101ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"255","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-255","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Grounded Normativity \/ Place-Based Solidarity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359594","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":3011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosemary R. P. Lerner"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27642786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb194ada-7cab-3abb-bd59-3ccd2d7641c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27642786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Between Conflict and Reconciliation: The Hard Truth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27642786","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the context of the fairly recent Truth and Reconciliation Commissions (TRC), I examine phenomenologically the nature of truth as the essential condition for overcoming social and political conflicts, and as an instrument for enforcing so-called \"transitional justice\" periods and promoting reconciliation. I also briefly approach the limits of this truth's possibility of being recognized, if its evaluative and practical dimensions and its appeal to an \"intelligence of emotions\" do not prevail over its merely theoretical claims. Though not expounding Schutz's and Husserl's contributions, and meditating on phenomena they did not deal with, I carry out this reflection inspired by their work and methodological approach. The case study used as an intuitive illustration is the recent Peruvian Truth and Reconciliation Commission.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip O'Regan"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40698533","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01484184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e361f43-778b-30c3-9213-010012b659aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40698533"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"accohistjour"}],"isPartOf":"The Accounting Historians Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Academy of Accounting Historians","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Finance","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"ACCOUNTABILITY AND FINANCIAL CONTROL AS 'PATRIOTIC' STRATEGIES: ACCOMPTANTS AND THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE IN LATE 17TH AND EARLY 18TH - CENTURY IRELAND","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40698533","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The decades immediately following the Glorious Revolution in 1688 witnessed a variety of political, social and structural responses to this cataclysmic event. In Ireland, religious conflict and economic under-development, as well as the devastation of war from 1689 to 1691, combined to ensure that the Anglo-Irish body politic found it difficult to capture the fruits of success from an English polity that had gradually accreted to itself much of the political power and economic wealth of the country. By 1704, however, the Anglo-Irish had managed to appropriate to themselves some of the economic and constitutional benefits of the Revolution by exploiting various parliamentary practices and structures. One of their strategies centered around developing and leveraging the role of the Public Accounts Committee as a means of imposing accountability on the executive and its officials. To achieve this the members were required to understand, contest and reconfigure official accounting information.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ime IKIDDEH"],"datePublished":"1986-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"584e6ccf-c3bb-3f60-859f-a58518ddfec3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"139","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology and Revolutionary Action in The Contemporary African Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351128","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10802,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47065,47348]],"Locations in B":[[8473,8708]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Howard"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25548279","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09614524"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39737429"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-242086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ddfaf9a-a0b5-3f1d-8b2b-3c2ade188b95"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25548279"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deveprac"}],"isPartOf":"Development in Practice","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"738","pageStart":"725","pagination":"pp. 725-738","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development, Racism, and Discrimination in the Dominican Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25548279","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"From an analysis of recent empirical research in the Dominican Republic, this article addresses the ways in which racism underpins elements of governance, and explores organisational and individual responses to racialised discrimination initiated by the state. The context is timely, given the steady rise in reported racist and violent attacks against people presumed to be of Haitian origin in the Dominican Republic over the past five years. The government has intensified formal military and police round-ups of migrants and settlers suspected to be of Haitian origin, and this article assesses the group and individual responses to these state-led actions, analysing formal and informal interventions, their evolution, maintenance, and impact.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark A. 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The paper finds that race and administrative inquiry and praxis in America have co-aligned, and entangled, since the inception of public administration. Their relevance, each for the other, is determined here to be lasting and profound.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwasi N. 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The arguments given ranged from cultural ones about the pervasive nature of clientalism to structural ones on the dependence of African economies or the atypical levels of rent seeking in African economies. This paper argues that Africa has had states that were 'developmental' in both their aspirations and economic performance. It further argues that these experiences need to be examined critically for useful lessons, an exercise that has been hindered by an excessive levelling of the African political and economic landscapes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph L. Sax","Fred J. 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The varied exposure to the conflict of young people in different parts of Northern Ireland influences their conceptualizations of peace and recognition of this should be operationalized in the peace process.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. M. 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RADHAKRISHNAN"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1d2d1ad-a6ee-36f2-93e8-6c217e23e241"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26824947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Epistemology of Pessimism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824947","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":13617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15547000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5033161-facd-3a18-8895-6b511bda2b3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26942928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"levinasstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Levinas Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942928","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus","Esperanza Bielsa"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11372354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f047a618-21a7-3255-909d-73f6f87cc961"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25596150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"guaraguao"}],"isPartOf":"Guaraguao","issueNumber":"10","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Asociacion Centro de Estudios y Cooperacion Para America Latina","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Capital acad\u00e9mico y formaci\u00f3n de canon en los estudios poscoloniales","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25596150","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clarence Lang"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3790161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"754","pageStart":"725","pagination":"pp. 725-754","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Civil Rights and Black Power in the Gateway City: The Action Committee to Improve Opportunities for Negroes (Action), 1964-75","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790161","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15722,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses the origins and development of the Action Committee to Improve Opportunities for Negroes (ACTION), a protest organization based in St. Louis, Missouri. Active during the 1960s and 1970s, the group used militant, nonviolent direct action to fight for more and better black employment at the city's major firms. Exploring ACTION's evolution contributes to a revisionist narrative of the Civil Rights' struggle that foregrounds local working-class African Americans. A study of ACTION also challenges depictions of a Civil Rights agenda focused on public accommodations and the vote, and highlights the demand for economic opportunity that anchored the movement. Further, this work augments new historical interpretations framing Civil Rights and \"Black Power\" as cohesive political projects. Yet, this paper suggests that scholars should not commit the error of collapsing Civil Rights and Black Power as historical constructs; removing the distinguishing traits between the two effectively removes the African American experience from the fluid patterns of continuity and change that ground historical inquiry. Using ACTION as an illustration, this paper contends that Civil Rights and Black Power were neither dichotomous nor seamless, but rather discernible phases in an ongoing Black Freedom Movement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Opoku Agyeman"],"datePublished":"1988-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Setbacks to Political Institutionalisation by Praetorianism in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160891","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":14135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Mafukidze","Vandudzai Mbanda"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739472","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c74ef881-524a-310d-9968-ddcb0687a2ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27739472"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"78","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Education - Specialized education","Political science - Politics","Law - Computer law","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Low-Income African Migrant Women and Social Exclusion in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739472","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The objective of this study was to understand how low-income African migrant women respond to socio-economic exclusion within South Africa so as to contribute to existing knowledge on women and migration. It examines the experiences of these women in relation to how these are influenced by and influence the structures and practices that exclude them. Structured and unstructured interviews and observation were the core qualitative techniques that were used to gather data in Thohoyandou (a settlement that straddles the rural-urban divide) and Pretoria (a metropolitan city). The data was thematically analysed and the findings suggest that migrant women experience both female specific and generally shared difficulties in gaining entry into the economic and social spheres. Their exclusion is exacerbated by labelling, prejudice and administrative decisions and impacts hard upon them due to their lowly socio-economic status. Furthermore, the findings also suggest that migrant women are innovative and resourceful and show a good understanding of the context in which they live.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miguel A. de La Torre"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52613954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221996"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1466343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jameracadreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the American Academy of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"861","pageStart":"837","pagination":"pp. 837-861","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Och\u00fan: (N)Either the (M)Other of All Cubans (n)or the Bleached Virgin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1466343","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":9808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Cuban Virgen de la Caridad del Cobre\/Och\u00fan has the potential to inspire a theology of reconciliation for the Cuban community of Miami, Florida, and La Habana, Cuba. To ignore Och\u00fan disregards the religious contribution to reconciliation that can be made by Cuba's most marginalized communities. Although La Virgen de la Caridad\/Och\u00fan can serve as a catalyst for reconciling the two Cubas, She also serves as a witness against the dominant white Cuban elite who reconstruct Her image in a way that masks their own power and privilege.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yifen Beus"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41428153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68490719-9a94-3c8b-84ca-46fc28c77c71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41428153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Authorship and criticism in self-reflexive African cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41428153","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":13770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Many theories and criticisms have been devoted to analysing various modes and themes of presentation in a postcolonial context in dealing with African cinema. Topics range from authenticity, cultural identity, decolonization, to the influence of oral tradition on cinema. However, little has been said about a type of criticism that comes from within cinema itself through a reflexive directorial intrusion. As a political tool to address continual cultural imperialism of the former colonial power and as a type of criticism on cinema as an art form, self-referentiality is often overlooked, and yet is capable of travelling freely between the filmmaker and the spectator like an organic agency that inherently resides within to manifest itself as criticism, to satirize, and to self-deconstruct in the Derridaian sense the very process of filmmaking. This article examines the self-critiquing nature of Abderrahmane Sissako's La Vie sur terre (Mali, Mauritania and France, 1998), Mahamat-Saleh Haroun's Bye Bye Africa (Chad, 1999), and Fanta Regina Nacro's Un Certain matin (Burkina Faso, 1992) and argues that these directors, despite intra-and international differences in their creative circumstances, display a common mechanism in critiquing African cinema by laying bare in the Brechtian sense the process of filmmaking while retaining their aesthetic traits. Through reflexive cinema, they reaffirm the agenda to narrate in the voice of a griot (whose role is also to provide criticism and commentary in the oral tradition) and paradoxically display the realities of filmmaking in Africa today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Fatton, Jr."],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2150827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323195"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064101"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2150827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"473","pageStart":"455","pagination":"pp. 455-473","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Academy of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Liberal Democracy in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2150827","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":9324,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[8598,8665]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christiane Chaulet Achour"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"news","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94817098-2557-3e29-a853-8b5105e81a5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25613141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng","spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Pour Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire \/ For Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire \/ Para Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613141","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8316,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Bloom"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3e50d4c-11be-3139-9726-1c39b66b21d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26576423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1692","pageStart":"1691","pagination":"pp. 1691-1692","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26576423","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":2049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BADAL MUKHERJI","SWAPNA MUKHOPADHYAY"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29793626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00194670"},{"name":"oclc","value":"560982241"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0beda33a-7a25-3581-a769-c3453bc65873"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29793626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indeconrev"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Economic Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"474","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Department of Economics, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democratic Decentralization in Rural West-Bengal: Socialism of the Plains","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29793626","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9572,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jessica C. Harris"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab4a7a07-1e44-3487-a222-fc3090d25414"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1562458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegrohistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"409","pagination":"pp. 409-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionary Black Nationalism: The Black Panther Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1562458","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":7087,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.77","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c14e77ab-e13e-3271-a332-3bd5b7481e2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.77"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colonial Mimicry and Postcolonial Re-membering in Isidore Okpewho's Call Me by My Rightful Name<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.36.4.77","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Call Me by My Rightful Name (2004), Isidore Okpewho harnesses the distinctive virtues of the African imagination and worldview to both complement and interrogate Western paradigms of knowledge. Where in his earlier novels The Victims (1970), Last Duty (1976) and Tides (1993) Okpewho conformed to the tradition of European realism, Call Me by My Rightful Name appropriates the techniques of magical realism that the novelist locates in African folk imagination. However, with both the techniques of orality and embodied textuality to excavate common bonds of black experience, Okpewho treads the challenging path between transvaluation and reification of colonial myths about Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Gordon"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39bd37a1-605e-3367-8c2b-8936170293d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"341","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-341","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WORKING CLASS RADICALISM IN JAMAICA: AN EXPLORATION OF THE PRIVILEGED WORKER THESIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861720","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11279,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aim\u00e9 J. Ellis"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccd374d1-0b6d-3658-9ad5-e15e44c66ed4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Boys in the Hood\" Black Male Community in Richard Wright's \"Native Son\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805702","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10774,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[61884,61924]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SADANAND MENON"],"datePublished":"2011-05-28","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23018585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c74401ea-80ac-3d58-a40a-087a8be26e7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23018585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Badal Sircar (1925-2011): A Curtain Call for Political Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23018585","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":4002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A tribute to Badal Sircar, the radical theatre personality of Bengal, who over four decades rewrote the language of political theatre in India.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald E. Santoni"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca247880-fe83-377d-9f89-52ce4d3a2f6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Concerning the Ambivalence of Sartre on Violence: A Commentary\/Rejoinder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705226","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I maintain that (1) Sartre's views on violence are ambivalent and (2) Sartre sometimes justifies violence. More specifically, I attempt to establish the misreadings by Michael Fleming and Marguerite LaCaze (on whom Fleming relies) of both my writing and Sartre's in these regards. Each, by arguing that, for Sartre, violence is \"sometimes acceptable\" or \"functionally necessary\" or \"understandable,\" but not morally justifiable, is ignoring Sartre's tendency at times to skirt the issue of justifiability by employing \"weasel words\" that amount to justification. Both critics seem to forget that Sartre says that, on occasion, violence \"could be called just\" (qu'on pourrait appeler juste) , especially in conditions of last resort defense against oppression, in which case violence, according to Sartre, can restore and regenerate the oppressed. Further, although I acknowledge Fleming's noteworthy emphasis on \"structural violence,\" I offer considerable counterevidence against his (and LaCaze's) claim that I ignore or slight Sartre's concern for it. I argue, on Sartrean grounds, against his (and Zizek's) claim that structural violence can be purely objective. Finally, I contend that in arguing that Sartre's views are not strictly ambivalent, Fleming, following LaCaze, makes the error of equating \"consistency\" with not being ambivalent.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac002ef6-3827-3b39-a79d-33c3db6ae45f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Robert L. Allen's \u201cPast Due: The African American Quest for Reparations\u201d: A Contemporary Observation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.3.0029","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":1238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Federica Morelli","Sara Antonelli"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43780203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03016307"},{"name":"oclc","value":"4356418"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 85011819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c4353a-722f-3830-aa22-aa107471c85b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43780203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quadernistorici"}],"isPartOf":"Quaderni storici","issueNumber":"148 (1)","language":["ita"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Societ\u00e0 editrice Il Mulino S.p.A.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A PROPOSITO DI \u00abFREEDOM PAPERS\u00bb DI REBECCA J. SCOTT E JEAN M. H\u00c9BRARD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43780203","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":6217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wahneema Lubiano"],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/366398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284866"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709799"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4793cb18-43d1-37bd-b47e-1a33b10a4410"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/366398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newenglquar"}],"isPartOf":"The New England Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"572","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-572","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"New England Quarterly, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","American Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Henty Louis Gates, Jr., and African-American Literary Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/366398","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":4445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hugh Macmillan"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c2c9588-3109-37ae-be73-cbc90162c2e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"959","pageStart":"943","pagination":"pp. 943-959","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The University Of Zambia and the Liberation of Southern Africa, 1966\u201390","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566707","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the role of the University of Zambia (UNZA) in relation to the liberation of southern Africa, and seeks to cast light on Zambia's often ambivalent role. A contradiction emerged between the Zambian government's support for liberation abroad and its intolerance of criticism at home. The university came to be seen as a centre of opposition and was often a place of conflict. I seek to answer a number of questions. What was the role of exiled academics and intellectuals, such as Jack Simons, Ben Magubane, Ezekiel Mphahlele, Lewis Nkosi and Fay Chung, at the university in the first two decades of its existence? Why did issues relating to the liberation struggle become points of conflict in the major crises of 1971 and 1976? What was the role of the founders of the Chikwakwa Theatre \u2013 and the exponents of 'theatre for development', John Reed, Michael Etherton and Fay Chung \u2013 in the radicalisation of the student body? What role did UNZA staff such as Simons, Magubane and Chung play in the life of the liberation movements to which they belonged? What was the role of UNZA in the training of students who went on to play important roles in liberation movements and in government on their return to their home countries? What were the links, from an UNZA perspective, between the liberation struggles waged by exile groups based in Zambia and the demand for democracy in Zambia itself?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gordon Bigelow"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revolution and Modernity: Assia Djebar's \"Les enfants du nouveau monde\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618290","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert E. Wood"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1153688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49349450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"468303cf-1241-39e0-b085-65fea27c4ecf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1153688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econdevecultchan"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Development and Cultural Change","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"International Tourism and Cultural Change in Southeast Asia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1153688","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9326,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[492343,492430]],"Locations in B":[[11248,11336]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donato Ndongo-Bidyogo","Translated by Julia Borst"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ee5789b-cd11-3dee-badd-696407013440"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":null,"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"xix","pageStart":"x","pagination":"pp. x-xix","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Ser escritor negro en Espa\u00f1a: Ensayo \/ On Being a Black Writer in Spain: Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.02","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":5540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter McLaren"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04d7822-6430-359e-bd5e-9e4584a88e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Nine: Developing a Pedagogy of Whiteness in the Context of a Postcolonial Hybridity: White Identities in Global Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976127","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":2758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annie Gagiano"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238836","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2da7f10-c3d9-30e8-82cb-34db7e229980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238836"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Tree Goes on\": Reconsidering Alex La Guma's \"Time of the Butcherbird\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238836","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Davinia Caddy"],"datePublished":"2007-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2007.30.3.288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01482076"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45954950"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b4aaf59-2cde-3aeb-8e90-9cc875484009"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/ncm.2007.30.3.288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"19thcenturymusic"}],"isPartOf":"19th-Century Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"317","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-317","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Parisian Cake Walks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/ncm.2007.30.3.288","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":19069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The popularity of the cake walk among Parisians in the early 1900s is usually attributed to the dance's assumed racial signification. Scholars have argued that the cake walk, owing to its African American origins, was welcomed by Parisians as iconic of a racial \"other,\" a signifier of the primitive, uncultured, and grotesque. This article proposes an alternative reading, setting the standard scholarly line against other, more subtle impressions of the cake walk's cultural import. A consideration of popular response to the dance--on stage, on film, and in the circus arena--reveals Parisian tastes not only for distinct styles of gesture but for American chic, athleticism, and popular participation, as well as the world of the \"other.\" These connotations invite us to consider afresh what is perhaps the most celebrated cake walk of the period, Debussy's \"Golliwogg's cake walk\" (1908), known particularly for its quotation of Wagner's Tristan. Debussy's piece, I argue, has a more complex significance than that of a mere canvas on which to poke fun at Wagner or a straightforward reference to a minstrel doll. By means of various cultural and aesthetic nuances, it suggests a persona shaped by buffoonery, slapstick, despondency, and irony: in short, a persona identified with that fetish of modernist art, the clown.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Edward Ford III"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"995cd0b0-7988-329b-82ec-df5e99363506"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Black Study and Political Theology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.101.2018.0187","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":12579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eug\u00e8ne van Erven"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolution, Freedom, and Theater of Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819707","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7803,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allon J. Uhlmann"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bfbd8f08-8855-3b35-ba4d-8dd684a1e47a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23178869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","History - Historical methodology","Social sciences - Sociology","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"Introduction: Reflections on the Study of Sexuality in the Middle East and North Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178869","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":6072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"After outlining the aims of this thematic section, I introduce the articles that follow. Although they reflect different geographical interests and theoretical orientations, the articles raise some interesting issues, of which I take up two. One is the role of Islam. It appears that both Islam's historical role and its contemporary effect are critical, yet indeterminate and contestable. The other issue is comparative. There is much in common between the way sexuality is configured in Europe, on the one hand, and in the Middle East and North Africa, on the other. But there are also significant differences. I discuss some of these differences in the way sex and sexuality are culturally mobilized to construct genderedness.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claudia Schaefer-Rodriguez"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474134"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91329f10-19b4-3f86-8160-82f9daf1f27e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20119603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latinamerlitrev"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Literary Review","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Latin American Literary Review","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Embedded Agendas: The Literary Journalism of Cristina Pacheco and Guadalupe Loaeza","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20119603","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian I. Smart"],"datePublished":"1982-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca9b188c-33a3-3bfe-8070-06e024eec79b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23053754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Religious Elements in the Narrative of Quince Duncan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053754","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Buchanan"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43248120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43248120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newblackfriars"}],"isPartOf":"New Blackfriars","issueNumber":"809","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"454","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-454","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development: What Development?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43248120","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":2780,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL ADJEI"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3db0ca0-1c36-3a56-b56c-f1559118e6e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"CHAPTER FOUR: Resistance to Amputation: Discomforting Truth about Colonial Education in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980667","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":11967,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[56,129],[46618,46734],[47363,47538],[445974,446057],[446221,446289],[488050,488683]],"Locations in B":[[12438,12518],[13643,13762],[14036,14214],[33709,33790],[33980,34049],[35084,35746]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elisabeth S. Clemens"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40220042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa6eb656-9759-333f-a2a8-2035728424a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40220042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Tactics and Traumas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40220042","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":5868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Qadri Ismail"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d579f34-e1a6-3780-aaa4-608b35a4dec6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4398721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"31\/32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1679","pageStart":"1677","pagination":"pp. 1677-1679","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Boys Will Be Boys': Gender and National Agency in Frantz Fanon and LTTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398721","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3998,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While there are important differences between Frantz Fanon's accounts of national liberation and the LTTE's representation of the Tamil struggle, there is a strong basis for comparing the two: both hold that the nationalist project can only be fulfilled through revolutionary violence and both forge a nationalist subject\/agent that is singularly male.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James F. Petras","Morris H. Morley"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40240864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21bd6e05-05b5-3979-b36d-11843f025f76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40240864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The U.S. Imperial State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40240864","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":17317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James G. Ferguson"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75986200-4237-3350-8f25-9235982f91b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"569","pageStart":"551","pagination":"pp. 551-569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Mimicry and Membership: Africans and the \"New World Society\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651618","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9868,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[56903,56949]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. FRANK WRIGHT"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d030895-19f6-3b5e-8bcb-299f4b75df00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41065799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FRANTZ FANON: HIS WORK IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065799","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tiffany Tsao"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c25ce572-7f6a-30b1-ae91-7415eab08cf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23752678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The evolution of Java-men and revolutionaries: A fresh look at Pramoedya Ananta Toer's \"Buru Quartet\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752678","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":16792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article undertakes an in-depth exploration of the trope of human evolutionary development undergirding Pramoedya Ananta Toer's Buru Quartet \u2013 a trope that has hitherto received no detailed critical attention in Pramoedya scholarship. Drawing on the traditional Javanese values of Pramoedya's child-hood and the Marxist ideological values of his early adulthood, the Quartet casts the individual's moral development from selfish individualism to selfless community-mindedness as the development from animalism to 'modern humanity'. In the context of traditional Javanese and Marxist cosmologies, such self-denial ends in victory: respectively, the accumulation of personal power and the successful revolutionary replacement of capitalism with socialism. However, during his brutal imprisonment in the Darwinian wilderness of Buru, Pramoedya experienced an environment that rewarded animalism and made it difficult for those ascribing to 'human' values to survive. Originally composed in Buru, the Quartet bears the mark of its origins and its author's disillusionment, portraying the attainment of Javanese and Marxist standards of humanity as a decision to defy the laws of natural selection and overcome one's instinct for self-preservation. By dissociating the acquisition of humanity from the acquisition of power, the Quartet produces modified versions of the Javanese and Marxist moral human development based not on the expectation of success and the will to live, but on the expectation of failure and the determination to die.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvnp0k5d.4","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3e1f97a-b305-3921-bfbe-5e6567660217"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvnp0k5d.4"}],"isPartOf":"Epistemolog\u00edas del Sur","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"25","pagination":"25-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy","History","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"INTRODUCCI\u00d3N A LAS EPISTEMOLOG\u00cdAS DEL SUR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvnp0k5d.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"He argumentado profusamente, en otra parte, que en los albores del nuevo milenio necesitamos distanciamos del pensamiento cr\u00edtico euroc\u00e9ntrico (De Sousa Santos, 2014: 19-46). Reproduzco aqu\u00ed la conclusi\u00f3n del argumento. Crear dicha distancia es condici\u00f3n previa para poder realizar la tarea te\u00f3rica m\u00e1s importante de nuestro tiempo: que lo impensable sea pensado, que lo inesperado sea asumido como parte integral del trabajo te\u00f3rico. Puesto que las teor\u00edas de vanguardia, por definici\u00f3n, no se dejan tomar por sorpresa, pienso que en el actual contexto de transformaci\u00f3n social y pol\u00edtica no necesitamos teor\u00edas de vanguardia sino teor\u00edas de retaguardia. Pienso en el","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["las exclusiones","l\u00ednea abisal","las luchas","colonialismo","otro lado","sousa santos","conocimiento","las epistemolog\u00edas","colonialismo hist\u00f3rico","sociabilidad"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret Kohn"],"datePublished":"2008-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25166254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49251980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"177b5765-d43b-39ea-a304-e4920f71bfba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25166254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Empire's Law: Alexis de Tocqueville on Colonialism and the State of Exception","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25166254","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In recent years there has been a debate about how to evaluate Alexis de Tocqueville's defense of colonialism. Some scholars have argued that there is a tension between the key doctrines of Tocqueville's political theory and his enthusiastic promotion of the French conquest and colonization of Algeria. Others have concluded that the apparent contradiction can be explained by paying careful attention to the nuances of his work or the logic of liberalism. This article advances this debate by reconstructing Tocqueville's theory of martial law, a dimension of his work that has been frequently overlooked. In a series of letters, notes and parliamentary reports on Algeria, Tocqueville criticized of the use of martial law in governing French citizens and defended its use against native Algerians. Tocqueville's writings on Algeria make it clear that he treated the rule of law not as a natural right held by all people but rather as a technique of government that was appropriate in communities already united by social ties. \/\/\/ R\u00e9cemment, l'interpr\u00e9tation de la d\u00e9fense du colonialisme par Alexis de Tocqueville est devenue l'objet d'un d\u00e9bat important. Certains auteurs discernent une tension entre les principes centraux de la philosophie politique de Tocqueville et sa promotion enthousiaste de la conqu\u00eate et la colonisation de l'Alg\u00e9rie par la France. D'autres ont conclu que la contradiction apparente s'explique lorsqu'on regarde de pr\u00e8s les nuances de ses \u00e9crits sur la logique interne du lib\u00e9ralisme. Cet article contribue \u00e0 ce d\u00e9bat en reconstruisant la th\u00e9orie de la loi martiale de Tocqueville - une dimension de son oeuvre trop souvent n\u00e9glig\u00e9e. Dans une s\u00e9rie de lettres, notes et rapports parlementaires sur l'Alg\u00e9rie, Tocqueville a critiqu\u00e9 l'usage de la loi martiale dans le gouvernement des citoyens fran\u00e7ais, mais l'a d\u00e9fendu contre les indig\u00e8nes. Ses \u00e9crits sur l'Alg\u00e9rie d\u00e9montrent que Tocqueville consid\u00e9rait l'\u00c9tat de droit non comme un droit naturel inh\u00e9rent \u00e0 la personne, mais plut\u00f4t comme une technique de gouvernement s'appliquant principalement aux communaut\u00e9s d\u00e9j\u00e0 unies par des liens sociaux.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHARLES L. BRIGGS"],"datePublished":"2014-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e96aa041-7f10-3a66-8ad3-9cbc75f7c8bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48579348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"DEAR DR. FREUD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48579348","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Framed as a letter to Sigmund Freud, this text weaves precariously between psychoanalytic interpretations of mourning and laments sung during an epidemic of an unknown disease in the Delta Amacuro rain forest of Venezuela in 2008. This encounter extends reflection on the ways that Freud, Klein, Laplanche, Nasio, and other psychoanalysts have characterized \u201cthe work of mourning,\u201d urging attention to the poetics, acoustics, and bodily materiality of lamentation. Focusing on a meeting that took place just before the burial of a young man, it explores claims made by lamenters on audiences, interpellating them into particular modes of listening and demanding attention to the politics of the circulation of images of lives and deaths. This intersection between psychoanalysis and lamentation provides a challenge to rethink the nature of anthropological research and writing.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josaphat B. Kubayanda","Josephat B. Kubayanda"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07340591"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b26fa5e-f9d4-3787-8d73-d4aa7cf4db4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41491353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dispositio"}],"isPartOf":"Dispositio","issueNumber":"36\/38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON DISCOURSE OF DECOLONIZATION IN AFRICA AND THE CARIBBEAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41491353","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valerie Kaussen"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Slaves, \"Viejos\", and the \"Internationale\": Modernity and Global Contact in Jacques Roumain's \"Gouverneurs de la ros\u00e9e\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821208","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":11725,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[35843,35900]],"Locations in B":[[73857,73919]],"abstract":"This article analyzes the depiction of contact and revolutionary politics in Jacques Roumain's \"Gouverneurs de la ros\u00e9e\" (1944). While this novel is often interpreted as participating in a narrow cultural nationalism, I show the ways that Roumain, in fact, represents a liberatory internationalism that connects the demands of Haiti's rural populace to the larger context of the Marxist-influenced decolonization struggles of the World War Two era. Revisiting the more political aspects of Edouard Glissant's theories of creolization and revealing their similarities to another recent analysis of \"global modernity\" and proletarian internationalism, I argue that Roumain's novel could be seen as corresponding with rather than opposing current notions of hybridity and cultural heterogeneity in the Caribbean. I thus analyze the novel's main character, a migrant sugarcane cutter, as a figure of creolization that grounds cultural creolization in the economics of one specific moment of US imperialism in the Caribbean.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1971-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357626"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1acf874b-32ed-346d-96d1-aeffb9903c76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullrockmounmode"}],"isPartOf":"The Bulletin of the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346636","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rashmi Bhatnagar"],"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b992327c-8e15-370e-99ff-92919b545302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3517247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Uses and Limits of Foucault: A Study of the Theme of Origins in Edward Said's 'Orientalism'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3517247","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9513,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432204,432313]],"Locations in B":[[7253,7366]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. W. TROMPF"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1ce6ddf-bff3-3d88-a0e1-533f53dc26aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41178111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE FUTURE OF MACRO-HISTORICAL IDEAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41178111","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":7672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hafid Gafaiti"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40152308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40152308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"822","pageStart":"813","pagination":"pp. 813-822","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Blood of Writing: Assia Djebar's Unveiling of Women and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40152308","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":9478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clarence E. Hardy III"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a70e2e78-fd18-3788-8a50-f4f1a4c12f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"757","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-757","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"From Exodus to Exile: Black Pentecostals, Migrating Pilgrims, and Imagined Internationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068448","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alden Reimonenq"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"623b477d-9a37-353f-a432-eaa060189c82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467247","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Hansen","Brigitte Schulz"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e837bb87-a0f0-314f-9adb-6f95a6acb692"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperialism, Dependency, and Social Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186016","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":14608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Freund"],"datePublished":"1984-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81ee5ee4-33f2-3a98-8315-9b1c94bc3636"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Labor and Labor History in Africa: A Review of the Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524115","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":32489,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Muhsin al-Musawi"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20720601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b14054b1-85f7-3710-859d-a37ef7d84390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20720601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Beyond the Modernity Complex: 'Abd al-\u1e24ak\u012bm Q\u0101sim's Re-Writing of the Nah\u1e0dah Self-Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20720601","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this paper is to study 'Abd al-\u1e24ak\u012bm Q\u0101sim's Ayy\u0101m al-ins\u0101n al-sab'ah (1969; The Seven Days of Man) and its sequel al-Mahd\u012b (1977) as post-nah\u1e0dah self-narratives that leave behind the complex encounter with the West and bypass thereby the modernity binary of a backward tradition versus the offers of a European civilization. The schizophrenic narratives of encounter have confined Arabic narrative and limited its potential to engage individual experience in a dynamic social life. The post-nah\u1e0dah narrative interrogates other facts on the ground that relate to the nation-state, selfhood, family, communal life and religion. 'Abd al-\u1e24ak\u012bm Q\u0101sim's Ayy\u0101m al-ins\u0101n al-sab'ah is a pioneering text in this respect and deserves full attention in order to understand the radical shift in Arabic literature after 1967. Its mode of self-narration is not subservient to the canonical autobiography of \u1e6c\u0101h\u0101 \u1e24usayn, and its unfolding takes place among contending powers where space implicates characters in action and enables human agency to have full play beyond the nah\u1e0dah legacy of cultural dependency.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICARDO E. GONSALVES"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f647ad70-e48c-385b-a47c-de7c644e2c68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: Hysterical Blindness and the Ideology of Denial: Preservice Teachers' Resistance to Multicultural Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979849","volumeNumber":"319","wordCount":10920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Sykes"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170124","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7414e043-7183-38c3-a404-830b3319c61a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23170124"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"12","pagination":"pp. 12-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gift of Shame: The Invention of Postcolonial Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170124","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":5785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David E. Hoegberg"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3f040b8-2b93-3ded-b9ce-43ad970ff2a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unstable Identities: Allusion and Hybridity in Walcott's Omeros","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986065","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":7234,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rub\u00e9n Mart\u00ednez"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"393507e7-956d-390f-a5cb-c6cb15aeddce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23261862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"INTERNAL COLONIALISM: A RECONCEPTUALIZATION OF RACE RELATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261862","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":5206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Students of race and ethnic relations in the United States disagree about the basic theories and methods that should guide research in this area. More importantly, this disagreement reflects the viewpoints of members of groups which are situated differently in society. This situation contributes to a crisis in the social sciences and, more specifically, in sociology. Further, critiques of conventional theories and research in the area of race and ethnic relations by minority scholars reflect the already existing crisis in sociology. These sociologists tend to perceive the internal colonial perspective as most reflective of the situation of racial minorities in this society. Despite ideological criticisms of the internal colonial framework, it appears that the internal colonial view of blacks and Chicanos is consistent with the major conclusions of comparative research on race and ethnic relations. Such research indicates that societies which are colonial and have a relatively high level of economic development tend to be more racist than those which are not characterized by these features. The United States has both a history of colonialism and a very high level of economic development, and, thus, fits the internal colonial view better than any other.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AK Thompson"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671555","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98df043f-d3ab-386c-aaf1-29bb1d030623"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671555"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How to Do Things with Walter Benjamin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671555","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9765,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Walter Benjamin is now a common reference point within cultural studies. But while a considerable secondary literature has emerged around his work, efforts to build upon his contributions by operationalizing the method they elaborate have remained relatively rare. Nevertheless, I maintain that it is solely through such operationalization that Benjamin\u2019s intellectual project can truly be understood. In this article, I provide a sketch of Benjamin\u2019s intellectual biography\u2014with particular emphasis given to the purported tension between his metaphysics and his materialism\u2014to highlight the overarching methodological coherence of his approach. In conclusion, I demonstrate how this method might be operationalized by cultural studies scholars today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Ellen Wolf"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b31b6e6-953d-3ae8-9d8e-c7906ceac7c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Textual Politics in Contemporary Moroccan Francophone Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315072","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd McCallum"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25149754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Vancouver through the Eyes of a Hobo: Experience, Identity, and Value in the Writing of Canada's Depression-Era Tramps","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25149754","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":13064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As a window into contemporary debates about the concept of experience, this essay examines 1934's Vancouver Through the Eyes of a Hobo, which may have the distinction of being the only extant book about hoboing in Depression-era Canada written by a self-identified transient, Victor Wadham Forster. Forster mapped for his readers a dialectic: Nature - an antimodern pastoral refuge where hoboes lived in freedom - stood against the City - a wholly modern capitalist nightmare, home to economic exploitation and its attendant moral degradations. Yet, the author also articulated his desire to destroy this way of life - and the foundation of his claims to authority as a writer - in order to effect his and every hobo's reintegration with society. Casting off his avowed allegiance to tramping, Forster divined for his readers a third social formation, a new kind of capitalism infused with a Christian ethos of brotherhood and cooperation, and propped up by an unbounded white supremacy and a rigidly patriarchal division of labour. Herein lies the tragedy of Vancouver Through the Eyes of a Hobo: to save the hobo required the destruction of the hobo way of life. \/\/\/ Comme une fen\u00eatre s'ouvrant sur les d\u00e9bats contemporains \u00e0 propos du concept d'exp\u00e9rience, cet article examine Vancouver \u00e0 travers les yeux d'un vagabond, parut en 1934, un livre qui peut avoir la distinction d'\u00eatre le seul ouvrage d'histoire \u00e0 propos de la vie vagabonde au cours de la p\u00e9riode de la D\u00e9pression au Canada, \u00e9crit par un migrateur autoproclam\u00e9, Victor Wadham Forster. Forster a donn\u00e9 \u00e0 ses lecteurs une pens\u00e9e dialectique: la nature - un refuge pastoral contre la vie moderne o\u00f9 les vagabonds vivaient en libert\u00e9 - se tenaient debout contre la ville - un cauchemar capitaliste enti\u00e8rement moderne, centre de l'exploitation \u00e9conomique et de d\u00e9gradations morales. Pourtant, l'auteur a aussi exprim\u00e9 son d\u00e9sir de d\u00e9truire ce mode de vie - et la base de son affichage comme \u00e9crivain - afin d'effectuer sa r\u00e9int\u00e9gration, ainsi que celle des autres vagabonds, dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9. En laissant tomber son engagement vou\u00e9 \u00e0 la vie vagabonde, Forster a pr\u00e9sent\u00e9 \u00e0 ses lecteurs une troisi\u00e8me formation sociale, un nouveau genre de capitalisme infus\u00e9 d'un \u00e9thos chr\u00e9tien de camaraderie et de coop\u00e9ration, accompagn\u00e9 d'un supr\u00e9natisme blanc et d'une division patriarcale rigide de la main-d'\u0153uvre. D'o\u00f9 cette trag\u00e9die inh\u00e9rente \u00e0 Vancouver \u00e0 travers les yeux d'un vagabond: pour sauver le vagabond il fallait d\u00e9truire le mode de vie fond\u00e9 sur l'itin\u00e9rance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Humphrey"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"482ec02f-c3f2-3512-8398-1453950ea19f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Gods, Gender, and Nation: Building an Alternative Concept of Nation in Four Novels by Mayra Montero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949207","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Stark"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2a12d0b-49b7-30f0-9e5c-a4716a07bc3d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"705","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE EPIDEMIC AS A SOCIAL EVENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130421","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":13429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The concept of disease causation has changed twice, first from natural to social determining factors, and, second, from determination by social conditions to determination by stressful social relations. These changes roughly parallel the emergence of industrial capital and its change from a highly individualistic and competitive process to a \"social\" process. In this article, \"epidemics\" are treated as social events that occur amidst these changes in disease and the economic organization of society. Nineteenth-century epidemics occurred when business attempted to solve its economic problems by creating dramatic gaps between the social needs of an expanding labor force and available goods and services. The coincidence of periodic crises in production and in health ensured that \"epidemics\" would be occasions for labor to struggle against injustice, not simply sickness. And workers demonstrated a capacity for self-organization during epidemics that forced municipal authorities to reform fundamentally their organization of work, the market, and social service. After 1900, \"reform\" was a permanent part of capital's developmental strategy. The new \"social\" capitalist sought to organize work politically, far beyond the factory, and to extract \"value\" not from blue-collar workers alone but from all social activity. These developments reduced mortality due to infectious and childhood disease. But they also created the new epidemics of chronic stress. Despite the mystification of social etiology by medicine, the identity of the disease process with more general means of social reproduction indicates that illness is now \"endopolic,\" the product not of nature but of historically specific political and economic decisions and processes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valerie J. Hoffman"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231336","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea70875c-695e-346a-813c-8027ad08bdca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231336"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1138","pageStart":"1136","pagination":"pp. 1136-1138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231336","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Selinger","Kevin Outterson"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17180198"},{"name":"oclc","value":"527387769"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201325"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70680d44-53d6-311e-a474-7785c1a63c66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26168044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"enviphil"}],"isPartOf":"Environmental Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"The Ethics of Poverty Tourism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26168044","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Poverty tours\u2014actual visits as well as literary and cinematic versions\u2014are characterized as morally controversial trips and condemned in the press as voyeuristic endeavors. In this collaborative essay, we draw from personal experience, legal expertise, and phenomenological philosophy and introduce a conceptual taxonomy that clarifies the circumstances in which observing others has been construed as an immoral use of the gaze. We appeal to this taxonomy to determine which observational circumstances are ethically relevant to the poverty tourism debate. While we do not defend all or even most poverty tourism practices, we do conclude that categorical condemnation of poverty tourism is unjustified.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Foster"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"086b141f-59b8-3fa9-a23d-3f5ace2bf75d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodernism in Parallax","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778862","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":8964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. I. ASIWAJU"],"datePublished":"1978-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"92f11f84-3243-3dda-a1c1-5f5a02f23617"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41854914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsocnige"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Historical Society of Nigeria","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Control Through Coercion; A Study of the Indigenat Regime in French West African Administration, 1887-1946","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854914","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":14964,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabina S. Singh"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810798","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49251980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59e0bf2b-85c3-3889-8757-f710b6361f4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24810798"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"402","pagination":"pp. 402-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24810798","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":809,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[3952,4005]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Timothy L. Carens"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"182b4d77-e6ed-344b-9be6-610661c40b30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1556208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"826","pageStart":"805","pagination":"pp. 805-826","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonial Male Authority in George Meredith's \"Lord Ormont and His Aminta\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1556208","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["miriam cooke"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41970035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21513481"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7b79a01-ce90-36fb-8fe8-39cc3b99463d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41970035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revimiddeaststud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Middle East Studies Association of North America (MESA)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tadmor's Ghosts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41970035","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3576,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janis L. Pallister"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40799317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b0e0507-70b1-34f4-853f-1b61d3563760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40799317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Daniel Boukman: Literary and Political Revolutionary or, A New Orpheus Oils the Squeaky Wheels of Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40799317","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b75565a0-c868-3296-b840-697e2c0e0dcc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Passion for Excess or Just Another Way of Telling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749583","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":14103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Caryl Phillips's narrative is painfully concerned with the relationship of Empire, Colony, and the In-between; Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean; slavery, rebellion, and freedom; Men, women and children; absent or useless fathers and damaged, aimless sons. It explores what hold in common while never losing sight of the painful quotidian, the specific. It is a narrative where the picaresque shakes hands with the epic and the linearity is broken, encircled, and put fast forward or in reverse by a mise-en-ab\u00eeme of sorts: the tale-within-the-tale-within-the-tale even if interrupted by the tapestry of an emergent voice that finally proposes itself as both the identity and the difference of its verbal universe. \"Enter your own self and discover the world,\" Phillips seems to be saying, \"but also go out into the world and discover yourself.\" Once that call is answered, fiction itself becomes another way of questioning truth as we strive for it through the paradox of a lie. That lie can be called the imagination. It can also be seen as a parallel reality. For it may be observed as a critical mirror of what passes for the truth in the world of convention. It certainly sets up a second universe of being, where the narrator, say Cambridge in Cambridge, has a reality greater, though no less important, than the host of hastily met and then forgotten people we deal with on a daily basis. It is in this sense that Phillips brings into light another way of telling in that his narrative gives weight and presence to the virtues and vices\u2014the fugitive personalities\u2014of our daily acquaintance. This is the prerogative of his style, which I try to discuss in this essay. It has the power to render disenchantment and pleasure without resolving the contradiction between them. In fact, what holds them in tension, as equal forces straining in opposite directions, is the artist's mature subjectivity, stripped of hubris, unashamed either of its fallibility or of the modest assurance it has gained as a result of being out of place and not quite right.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodwell Makombe"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"835a6acf-44cc-3975-a282-eedadc1d80a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Apartheid, Crime, and Interracial Violence in \"Black Boy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414672","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10940,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[150501,150767]],"Locations in B":[[22682,22944]],"abstract":"This article critically interrogates the interplay of compatibility among crime, violence, and racial discrimination in Wright's biographical novel Black Boy (BB). It exploits parallels between selected postcolonial and criminological theories to conceptualize crime and violence as a way of negotiating and translating hegemony in the third space of cultural enunciation. The objective of every oppressive system is to have an absolute monopoly on all structures of power, to make sure it has \"total\" control. This is evident in the American South where laws were enacted to exclude African Americans from the social, political, and economic spheres of life. However, that same system that was designed to silence and marginalize African Americans also, inadvertently, created spaces that led to the emergence of subcultures of resistance. This article focuses on criminal subcultures of resistance that emerged as a result of and in direct response to institutionalized racism\/apartheid.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44583702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26c31b01-608a-3885-9e8f-023a62b62027"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44583702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"714","pagination":"pp. 714-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44583702","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":34077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Annette Jaimes","Moira Carney"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1409387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409387","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":4095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21eaedbd-a9db-32d7-aa52-1453620cb30a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4325535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"624","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-624","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325535","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Cohen"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20156225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0021065X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d296239-4c80-32a3-815b-700dd7fa93d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20156225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iowareview"}],"isPartOf":"The Iowa Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"University of Iowa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shamsky and Other Casualties","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20156225","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7978,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashmita Khasnabish"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ab552c2-9a8e-3ea2-8dec-eabbda02dac7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Psychic Versus the Social in Brennan and Kincaid","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758901","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis B. Nyamnjoh"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25798906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25798906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racism, Ethnicity and the Media in Africa: Reflections Inspired by Studies of Xenophobia in Cameroon and South Africa\/Rassismus, Ethnizit\u00e4t und die Medien in Afrika: Reflektionen angeregt durch Studien zu Fremdenfeindlichkeit in Kamerun und S\u00fcdafrika","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25798906","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":15425,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[87799,87845]],"abstract":"This paper demonstrates the extent to which the media and belonging in Africa are torn between competing and often conflicting claims of bounded and flexible ideas of culture and identity. It draws on studies of xenophobia in Cameroon and South Africa, inspired by the resilience of the politicization of culture and identity, to discuss the hierarchies and inequalities that underpin political, economic and social citizenship in Africa and the world over, and the role of the media in the production, enforcement and contestation of these hierarchies and inequalities. In any country with liberal democratic aspirations or pretensions, the media are expected to promote national citizenship and its emphasis on large-scale, assimilationist and territorially bounded belonging, while turning a blind eye to those who fall through the cracks as a result of racism and\/ or ethnicity. Little wonder that such an exclusionary articulation of citizenship is facing formidable challenges from its inherent contradictions and closures, and from an upsurge in the politics of recognition and representation by small-scale communities claiming autochthony at a historical juncture where the rhetoric espouses flexible mobility, postmodern flux and discontinuity. Der vorliegende Beitrag zeigt auf, inwieweit die Medien und gesellschaftliche Bindungen in Afrika zwischen konfligierenden Anspr\u00fcchen abgegrenzter und sich wandelnder kultureller Identit\u00e4ten zerrissen sind. Angeregt durch die Erfahrung der kontinuierlichen Politisierung kultureller und sozialer Identit\u00e4ten zieht der Autor Studien zu Fremden-feindlichkeit in Kamerun und S\u00fcdafrika heran, um die Hierarchien und Ungleichheiten zu diskutieren, auf denen politische, wirtschaftliche und soziale Staatsb\u00fcrgerschaft in Afrika und dar\u00fcber hinaus basiert, sowie die Rolle der Medien bei der Entstehung, Verst\u00e4rkung und im Wettstreit dieser Hierarchien und Ungleichheiten. In jedem liberal-demokratisch ausgerichteten Staat kann man davon ausgehen, dass die Medien die nationale Staatsangeh\u00f6rigkeit mit ihrer Betonung gro\u00dfr\u00e4umiger, assimilierender und territorial begrenzter Staatszugeh\u00f6rigkeit f\u00f6rdern und Menschen ignorieren, die infolge rassischer und\/ oder ethnischer Zugeh\u00f6rigkeit durch das Raster fallen. Es verwundert nicht, dass eine solche exklusive Auffassung von Staatsangeh\u00f6rigkeit erheblichen Herausforderungen ausgesetzt ist aufgrund immanenter Widerspr\u00fcche und Abgrenzungen, aber auch durch wachsende Anspr\u00fcche kleiner Gemeinschaften auf politische Anerkennung und Repr\u00e4sentanz \u2014 in einer historischen Phase, in der Flexibilit\u00e4t und Mobilit\u00e4t, postmoderne Beliebigkeit und Diskontinuit\u00e4t im politischen Diskurs miteinander verbunden werden.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Olsen"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86a200b5-3bc4-3b28-91c9-a055b6e45539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3012415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meripreports"}],"isPartOf":"MERIP Reports","issueNumber":"26","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012415","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry A. Giroux"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26a4689e-c65c-3cd4-963d-95caeddd91e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"21","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-Colonial Ruptures and Democratic Possibilities: Multiculturalism as Anti-Racist Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354115","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13308,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[79146,79186]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AARON KATZEMAN"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48642010","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10184252"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646827036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8df1262-7bfb-35d6-9e25-f0352d854297"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48642010"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificarts"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Arts","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pacific Arts Association","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Making Room for Earth in Hawai\u2018i","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48642010","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":13746,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 2013, Pacific Islander American artist and architect Sean Connelly formed a geometric sculpture with 32,000 pounds of earthen matter at the now-closed ii Gallery in the Kaka\u2018ako neighborhood of Honolulu. Titled A Small Area of Land (Kaka\u2018ako Earth Room), the work was composed of volcanic soil and coral sand\u2014deemed by Connelly as \u201ctwo of Hawai\u2018i\u2019s most politically charged materials and highly valued commodities\u201d\u2014sourced from various locations on the island of O\u2018ahu. Connelly allowed his sculpture to slowly erode in the gallery over the course of its installation, a non-gesture toward what might seem to be uncontrollable disintegration. A Small Area of Land adds a divergent dimension to Euro-American art movements, pushing back against the rigidity and firmness of minimalism and the grand impositions of land art that initially inspired him. In doing so, Connelly expands the notion of \u201cland\u201d beyond a material or merely site-specific interest for artists into something that additionally includes more explicit references to structural systems of dispossession, exploitation, theft, and lasting injustices. Connelly\u2019s work amplifies relationships to land that do not rely on economic value in the extractive, capitalist sense so much as values that link Indigenous onto-epistemologies with ecological flourishing, providing an avenue through which we can think about histories of land, labor, and the increasing disassociation between the two, as well as how material choices are imbricated with personal and political complexity in Hawai\u2018i.","subTitle":"Sean Connelly\u2019s A Small Area of Land<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TIM LIVSEY"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26398325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09639268"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44166743"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb1c43a0-2b5f-3cd7-8891-9d5a205054fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26398325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"664","pagination":"pp. 664-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Suitable lodgings for students\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26398325","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that development and modernity have had spatial manifestations. It considers understandings of modern space in colonial and post-colonial Nigeria through the study of University College Ibadan, the country\u2019s first university institution founded in 1948. It contends that the university was shaped by existing West African conceptions of modern space and university buildings took on new meanings with the shifting politics of decolonization. The article also suggests that colonial development involved a range of groups and forms of knowledge. It seeks to recognize the strength of colonial institutions and cultures but also the limits to and contingencies in late colonial power.","subTitle":"modern space, colonial development and decolonization in Nigeria","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald R. Wehrs"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30039804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d55eb20-8260-32f2-b44e-b23368891398"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30039804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gendering the Subject and Engendering the Self: Mande Acculturation, Islamic Piety, and the Forging of Ethical Identity in Camara Laye's L'enfant noir","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30039804","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MALREDDY PAVAN KUMAR"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5071a86f-f6c2-3be9-8ec5-db1f3e30fcd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41300340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"672","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-672","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonialism: interdisciplinary or interdiscursive?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300340","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay critically examines the nature and scope of postcolonial interdisciplinarity. Although postcolonial studies claims to operate on, and forge in, an interdisplinary approach, its intentions are largely inter discursive. In spite of the vague and elusive claims evident in the catalogue of introductory texts on postcolonial theory, neither postcolonial theorists nor its exponents have adequately established the disciplinary bounds or their methodological fusion(s) specific to, and required for, inter disciplinar ity. Drawing from the disciplinary foundations of literature, history and philosophy, this essay demonstrates that postcolonial theory has developed an implicit oppositional critique to eurocentrism. This oppositional critique, while discursive in intention and formulaic in application, is subsequently borrowed by a host of social science disciplines\u2014anthropology, geography and development studies\u2014as a proxy methodology that protects against the perils of eurocentric longings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. V. Hartman","Farah Jasmine Griffin"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26446135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a158d1e5-ccdb-3faf-b1f8-10764825cd91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26446135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"863","pageStart":"851","pagination":"pp. 851-863","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Are You as Colored as That Negro?: The Politics of Being Seen in Julie Dash's \"Illusions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26446135","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":5451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susanne Franco"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d5cfd7ba-b652-3ea0-aa72-7124f681d8ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Reenacting Heritage at Bomas of Kenya: Dancing the Postcolony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966872","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John W. Maerhofer"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20642082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f92ae582-ad60-3dd0-96b1-6fa81c75f43b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20642082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Algeria \"Revisited\": Imperialism, Resistance, and the Dialectic of Violence in Mohammed Dib's \"The Savage Night\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20642082","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8074,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Writing in the midst of one of bloodiest conflicts in the history of postcolonial Algeria, Mohammed Dib probes the brutalities of war, exploitation and the isolation of economic marginalization, and the complexities of postcolonality in his \"The Savage Night\". For Dib violence is not an inexplicable component of human society, but the outcome of systemic conditions that continually work against the concept of humanity itself. The relationship between writer and society for Dib is less a process of conscious alignment than it is a means of nurturing the dialectical relation that emerges when texts collide with history. In this collection of stories, Mohammed Dib overcomes the existentialist abandonment of the uncommitted writer to confront what he calls the \"invisible prison\" of systemic violence by offering a model for aesthetic confrontation based on intellectual engagement and the awakening of the reader to the accountability of the text.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40256946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca742d53-2966-3428-94b8-e0dcc7cd2835"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40256946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"153","pagination":"p. 153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Paperbounds","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40256946","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Clarke Kaplan"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.1.1.0094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19352743"},{"name":"oclc","value":"277050143"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008216364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc90e339-789a-374f-9411-5638dc21c9b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.1.1.0094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacwomegendfami"}],"isPartOf":"Black Women, Gender + Families","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Love and Violence\/Maternity and Death: Black Feminism and the Politics of Reading (Un)representability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/blacwomegendfami.1.1.0094","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":13596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article explores how Toni Morrison\u2019s acclaimed neoslave narrative, Beloved, intervenes in both mainstream and counterhegemonic histories of slavery by producing a black feminist theory of history that emphasizes the contingent, the unrepresentable, and the foreclosed. I argue that in its attention to sexualized racial violence, reproduction, and reproductive labor as defining elements of African chattel slavery and subsequent forms of raced and gendered unfreedom, Beloved functions as a narrativized political theory that posits the enslaved maternal body as the exemplary subject of what Orlando Patterson has named \u201csocial death.\u201d By exploring the complexity and brutality with which slavery introduced sexualized racial violence to the most intimate of places\u2014the body and the home\u2014Morrison\u2019s novel both enables and requires reconceiving the relationship between love, violence, and reproduction on the ostensibly private scales of the antebellum plantation. At the same time, by depicting the enslaved black female not only as an object of bodily violence, but as an agential body of violence, Beloved offers an explicitly feminist reconceptualization of black radical politics that leverages productive contradictions and destabilizes constraining binaries, exposing the outlines of a black feminist liberatory politic that expands and enriches traditional conceptions of both black radicalism and black feminism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Wilmot"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20e82ae1-9b7b-37b0-bcfa-f2afa69f46a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rationalism and Commitment in Sorel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2708961","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09944524"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e77b56c4-c13f-364a-a454-cf5d98442704"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actuelmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Actuel Marx","issueNumber":"55","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Editions Belin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ABSTRACTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603912","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hunt Hawkins"],"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01e57fb7-4d2a-389c-9ea0-7f1ecd5d2a7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44322509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"400","pagination":"pp. 400-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"JOYCE AS A COLONIAL WRITER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322509","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3701,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[3780,3834]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Muthyala"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d9f5c08-59ee-35b4-8508-02bfbb259647"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reworlding America: The Globalization of American Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354582","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10842,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[66002,66042]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolina Rocha"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ps32cc.21","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786940544"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f90b3ea0-a623-3639-a512-e0d0d64ac82a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ps32cc.21"}],"isPartOf":"Argentine Cinema and National Identity (1966-1976)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"221","pagination":"221-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Art & Art History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ps32cc.21","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["non pag","heraldo","heraldo del cine","cine argentino","buenos","argentina","torre nilsson","am\u00e9rica latina","mart\u00edn fierro","mart\u00edn"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charmaine C. Williams"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41669733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0820909X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcc7705a-d6b2-37e1-b717-6b54cf31c4e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41669733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canasociworkrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Social Work Review \/ Revue canadienne de service social","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Canadian Association for Social Work Education (CASWE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"CONFRONTING THE RACISM IN RESEARCH ON RACE AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41669733","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent research seeks to explain why patients from racial minority groups avoid or terminate prematurely their involvement with mainstream mental health care services. Although this research has generated recommendations for increasing access to care, it also contains inherent theoretical, epistemological, and ideological problems that are rooted in maintaining the current structure of Eurocentric privilege. A review of the literature suggests that research in this area is consistent with the racism of a system that excludes ethnoracial groups from full participation in setting the agenda for mental health research and services. A commitment to anti-racist research that disrupts the hegemony of Eurocentric medicine and White privilege will lead to transformative research questions and answers. De r\u00e9centes \u00e9tudes tentent d'expliquer pourquoi les patients de minorit\u00e9s raciales fuient les services de soins de sant\u00e9 grand public ou cessent pr\u00e9matur\u00e9ment de s'en servir. Bien que ces \u00e9tudes recommandent d'accro\u00eetre l'acc\u00e8s aux soins de sant\u00e9, elles renferment \u00e9galement des probl\u00e8mes th\u00e9oriques, \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques et id\u00e9ologiques ancr\u00e9s dans le maintien de l'actuelle structure du privil\u00e8ge eurocentrique. Un recensement des \u00e9crits donne \u00e0 penser que la recherche dans le domaine concorde avec le racisme d'un syst\u00e8me qui interdit aux groupes ethnoraciaux de participer pleinement \u00e0 l'\u00e9tablissement du programme de la recherche et des services en sant\u00e9 mentale. S'attacher \u00e0 faire de la recherche antiraciste perturbant l'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie de la m\u00e9decine eurocentrique et du privil\u00e8ge des Blancs soul\u00e8vera des questions et r\u00e9ponses transformatives au plan de la recherche.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angela M. O'Rand"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a43039c-010b-32a1-9284-f930102d9bec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1124","pageStart":"1122","pagination":"pp. 1122-1124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231329","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aamir Mufti"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading the Rushdie Affair: An Essay on Islam and Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466301","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11047,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOEL SAMOFF","RACHEL SAMOFF"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca399b5d-bbb0-33cf-b5e4-5aa30fa2e505"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Local Politics of Underdevelopment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341403","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":14649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mathew Zachariah"],"datePublished":"1985-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1188140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104086"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49882921"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213730"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a24865dd-2257-394d-b10a-415523e2f6b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1188140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Lumps of Clay and Growing Plants: Dominant Metaphors of the Role of Education in the Third World, 1950-1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1188140","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9629,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frances Gouda"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3351084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00197289"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa361c1d-6fee-3e7e-81c0-8e20a03f3be2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3351084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indonesia"}],"isPartOf":"Indonesia","issueNumber":"55","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Southeast Asia Program Publications at Cornell University","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Gendered Rhetoric of Colonialism and Anti-Colonialism in Twentieth-Century Indonesia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3351084","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12444,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432204,432313]],"Locations in B":[[22920,23025]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Loren Kruger"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f21b7dc8-7199-3864-a0ba-5e1d11ebfedd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theatre, Crime, and the Edgy City in Post-Apartheid Johannesburg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068913","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":17144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OLIVIA C. HARRISON"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d210ba60-3b97-38fd-9dab-5390a257fd7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cross-Colonial Poetics: \"Souffles-Anfas\" and the Figure of Palestine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489065","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":11090,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[604027,604109]],"Locations in B":[[427,509]],"abstract":"From the mid-1960s onward, Moroccan, Algerian, and Tunisian writers have turned to the question of Palestine as a model of political and aesthetic innovation. Taking the Moroccan cultural journal Souffles-Anfas as an early, paradigmatic example of the literary turn to Palestine in the Maghreb, I argue that writers such as Abdellatif La\u00e2bi and Abdelkebir Khatibi used Palestine as a springboard for \"cultural decolonization,\" reactivating global anticolonial discourses in order to articulate a relational, cross-colonial Maghrebi identity. Focusing on discussions of language, poetic form, and cultural autonomy, I show that Palestine served as a point of reference in debates on postcolonial Maghrebi culture. Without muting the ethical pitfalls inherent in representing a heterogeneous anticolonial struggle in a postcolonial context, I take this example of cross-colonial poetics as an invitation to rethink along multidirectional, transnational lines the way we approach Maghrebi and, more generally, postcolonial literature and culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhys Jones","Richard Phillips"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694035","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c52142fc-22c2-3fd6-b3a2-700f44bf394b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3694035"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unsettling Geographical Horizons: Exploring Premodern and Non-European Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694035","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":16906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A critical genealogy of the emerging subfield of postcolonial geography illustrates how human geography has become historically shortsighted. Postcolonial geography interrogates the significance of imperialism and colonialism for disciplinary and material geographies, though its reference points, like those of most other geographical subfields, have been almost exclusively modern (c.1500-present). The marginalization of premodern imperialism rests upon the argument, or more often the assumption, that the imperialisms of the modern period have been fundamentally different from those of the premodern. We criticize this position by focusing on colonialism-as a specific aspect of imperialism-with reference to social, cultural, and political geographical theory and to wide-ranging empirical material. Regarding the social relations and the politics and scales of colonialism in the premodern and modern periods, there are no a priori grounds for distinguishing between modern and premodern forms of imperialism. We advocate a more historically and geographically inclusive postcolonial geography that will best equip geographers and others to understand and, potentially, to intervene against contemporary forms of imperialism, including those that have survived from the past and also those that have emerged in the context of present-day forces.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael A. Mel"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26788750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10184252"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646827036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5442d793-2d9c-376a-acb2-b557ea17e69e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26788750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificarts"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Arts","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Pacific Arts Association","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Art & Art History","Area Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pasin Pasifik \u2013 Bifo, Nau na Bihain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26788750","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":3198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Wanem Rot? Ways of the Pacific \u2013 Before, Now and the Future: Which Way?","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. N. Sang-Mpam"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1407385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50565005"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62c1961c-335b-3162-bb77-27e9e612dca1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1407385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviewpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Politics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"596","pagination":"pp. 596-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"University of Notre Dame du lac on behalf of Review of Politics","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The State-Society Relationship in Peripheral Countries: Critical Notes on the Dominant Paradigms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1407385","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Conceptualizing the state-society relationship in order to explain its by-product underdevelopment in all peripheral countries presupposes agreement on the definition of underdevelopment. Such agreement is possible only by making the concept less abstract. Dominant paradigms which have conceptualized the state-society relationship and attempted to explain underdevelopment have not generally been successful because of their failure to make operational the concept of underdevelopment and the corollary of their excessive reliance on \"regional or local differences.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Markus Nehl"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt1v.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837636666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be54c3ef-642e-32f3-a965-5f9fd5e65adf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1wxt1v.11"}],"isPartOf":"Transnational Black Dialogues","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"191","pagination":"191-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Epilogue:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt1v.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In his novella Every Day Is for the Thief<\/em> (2014), which was first published in a different version in Nigeria in 2007, Teju Cole tells the story of a young Nigerian American psychiatrist who leaves New York City to visit his country of birth\u2014for the first time after more than a decade. In a way similar as in his novel Open City<\/em>, Cole adopts the perspective of an urban fl\u00e2neur<\/em>, a black intellectual who walks through the streets of Lagos. Focusing on the omnipresence of corruption, poverty and violence in present-day Nigeria as well as on the nation\u2019s role","subTitle":"The Past of Slavery and \u201cthe Incomplete Project of Freedom\u201d","keyphrase":["slavery","morrison","hartman","incomplete project","toni morrison","morrison hartman","neo slave","black feminist","enduring","hartman venus"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMY NOVAK"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533858","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35ebc077-4ff3-38a4-b55a-d2c57846b8c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533858"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"WHO SPEAKS? WHO LISTENS?: THE PROBLEM OF ADDRESS IN TWO NIGERIAN TRAUMA NOVELS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533858","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10288,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[126815,127124]],"Locations in B":[[11417,11726]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Issa G. Shivji"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f78b9eb2-0ba9-3c47-b572-77ecdc5e5a91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24483875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Silences in the NGO Discourse: The role and future of NGOs in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483875","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":13209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper is an attempt to examine critically the role and future of the NGO in Africa in the light of its self-perception as a non-governmental, non-political, non-partisan, non-ideological, non-academic, non-theoretical, not-for-profit association of well-intentioned individuals dedicated to changing the world to make it a better place for the poor, the marginalised and the downcast. It is the argument of the paper that the role of NGOs in Africa cannot be understood without a clear characterisation of the current historical moment. On a canvas of broad strokes, I depict Africa at the cross-roads of the defeat of the National Project and the rehabilitation of the imperial project. In the face of the avalanche of 'end of history' diatribes, I find it necessary, albeit briefly, to reiterate the history of Africa's enslavement from the first contacts with the Europeans five centuries ago through the slave trade to colonialism and now globalisation. The aim of this historical detour is to demonstrate the fundamental antithesis between the National and the Imperial Projects so as to identify correctly the place and role of the NGOs in it. I locate the rise, the prominence and the privileging of the NGO sector in the womb of the neo-liberal offensive whose aim is as much ideological as economic and political. I argue that the NGO discourse, or more correctly the non-discourse, is predicated on the philosophical and political premises of neo-liberalism\/globalisation paradigm. It is in this context that I go on to discuss the 'five silences' or blind-spots in the NGO discourse. I draw out the implications of these silences on the contemporary and future role of the NGO sector in Africa. At the outset, I must make two confessions. First, the paper is undoubtedly critical, sometimes ruthlessly so, but not cynical. Secondly, the criticism is also a self-criticism since the author has been involved in NGO activism for the last fifteen years or so. And, finally, I must make it clear that I do not doubt the noble motivations and the good intentions of NGO leaders and activists. But one does not judge the outcome of a process by the intentions of its authors; one analyses the objective effect of actions regardless of intentions. Hopefully, that is what I have done. Cet article tente de faire un examen critique du r\u00f4le et de l'avenir des ong en Afrique, qui se veulent \u00eatre des associations non gouvernementales, non politiques, non partisanes, non id\u00e9ologiques, non acad\u00e9miques, non th\u00e9oriques et \u00e0 but non lucratif, compos\u00e9es d'individus bien intentionn\u00e9s, ayant pour ambition de changer le monde afin, de le rendre meilleur pour les pauvres, les marginalis\u00e9s et les groupes opprim\u00e9s. Cet article affirme que le r\u00f4le des ong en Afrique ne peut \u00eatre compris sans une caract\u00e9risation bien claire du moment historique actuel. Je d\u00e9peins l'Afrique comme \u00e9tant au carrefour de la d\u00e9faite duProjet National et de la r\u00e9habilitation du projet imp\u00e9rialiste. Face \u00e0 l'avalanche de diatribes \u00ab catastrophistes \u00bb, je consid\u00e8re qu'il est n\u00e9cessaire de rappeler l'histoire de l'asservissement de l'Afrique, de ses premiers contacts avec les Europ\u00e9ens il y a cinq si\u00e8cles \u00e0 l'actuelle mondialisation, en passant par l'esclavage et le colonialisme. L'objectif d'une telle digression historique est de d\u00e9montrer l'antinomie fondamentale entre les Projets Nationaux et Imp\u00e9rialistes, afin de bien identifier la place et le r\u00f4le des ong au sein de ceux-ci. Je situerais le d\u00e9veloppement, l'importance et la place privil\u00e9gi\u00e9e des ong dans les entrailles m\u00eames de l'offensive n\u00e9olib\u00e9rale dont la finalit\u00e9 est aussi bien id\u00e9ologique qu'\u00e9conomique et politique. Je soutiens que le discours des ong, ou plus exactement leur non-discours, est fond\u00e9 sur les hypoth\u00e8ses philosophiques et politiques du paradigme du n\u00e9olib\u00e9ralisme\/de la mondialisation. C'est dans ce contexte que je poursuis, en discutant des \u00ab cinq silences \u00bb ou zones d'ombres d\u00e9cel\u00e9es dans le discours des ong. Je d\u00e9gage ensuite les implications de ces silences sur le r\u00f4le futur et contemporain des ong en Afrique. D\u00e8s le d\u00e9part, j'aimerais me livrer \u00e0 deux confessions. Premi\u00e8rement, cet article est sans nul doute critique, parfois impitoyablement critique, mais jamais cynique. Deuxi\u00e8mement, cette critique est \u00e9galement une auto-critique, car l'auteur s'est livr\u00e9 \u00e0 l'activisme des ong au cours des quinze derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es. Enfin, j'aimerais pr\u00e9ciser que je ne doute pas des bonnes intentions et de la noble motivation qui animent les dirigeants et activistes des ong. Mais l'on ne peut juger du r\u00e9sultat d'un processus \u00e0 travers les intentions de ses auteurs. L'on analyse l'effet objectif des actions men\u00e9es, sans tenir compte des intentions. J'esp\u00e8re que c'est ce que j'aurai r\u00e9ussi \u00e0 r\u00e9aliser ici.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Peters"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f73e0bc4-3eb2-3912-8772-b96389c045e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30161917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"425","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Witness to the Execution: Kafka and Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30161917","volumeNumber":"93","wordCount":12918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[145267,145338]],"Locations in B":[[9716,9794]],"abstract":"Kafka's celebrated story In der Strafkolonie has been the object of many interpretations, particularly of the theological or formalist bent: as a text on the agonies of faith, or on the agonies of writing. Even where it has been interpreted more politically, the fact that it might have had a concrete historical background (other than that of the Dreyfus case) has seldom been considered. The article proposes such a reading, identifying this background as that of European colonialism; for Kafka's text is not only replete with telltale colonial motifs, its very subject may be understood as a depiction of the \"primal scene\" of colonialism: the application of arbitrary violence and \"overwhelming force\" to subjugate an indigenous population. Bringing the classic anticolonialist analyses of Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire, Frantz Fanon, and Albert Memmi, as well as examples of imperial narrative and practice itself, into a type of interface with Kafka's story, historical and political dimensions of this text may be disclosed which have hitherto eluded commentary.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gail M. Gerhart"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20048263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbdaf559-f349-335b-b1b2-b5549d6bf8a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20048263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20048263","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Rogin"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"174dcb64-0826-39ec-a53d-4dd7e4aa60d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Democracy and Burnt Cork\": The End of Blackface, the Beginning of Civil Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928777","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Black"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21623244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740919793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2daee48b-3098-34c7-ace1-205898ca95ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"spectrum"}],"isPartOf":"Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"More Beautiful Than Rainbows: How Mumia Strengthens Intergenerational Resistance Through Coterminous Recognition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.05","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This work surveys the life story and scholarship of imprisoned intellectual radical Mumia Abu-Jamal for the purpose of presenting an exemplary model of intergenerational Black political resistance. By uniting the social activism of Abu-Jamal's life with the contemporary youth movements of the moment, the study identifies and articulates a mutual dialectic of violence, resistance, and repression. By emphasizing these commonalities of experience we move toward a coterminous recognition of the continuity of struggle. Coterminous recognition emphasizes the shared origin and interconnectedness of Black revolutionary initiatives and deemphasizes generational divisions. Finally, using a number of previously unpublished letters and papers generated by Abu-Jamal, as well as employing an extensive examination of the breadth of his professional life, the paper suggests that coterminous recognition may be a vital and necessary approach to the efficacy of our political objectives.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joyce A. Joyce"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"694001a8-c98b-3f84-8e18-5f507ac8581d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"565","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-565","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black Woman Scholar, Critic, and Teacher: The Inextricable Relationship between Race, Sex, and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469203","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane H. Hill"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e94f9241-7560-3571-98a3-2429bd9069e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1103","pageStart":"1101","pagination":"pp. 1101-1103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231318","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clive W. Kronenberg"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c2a4053-38db-3279-bf02-eb8838571368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24573997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Equality, Solidarity, and the Human Condition: Categories of Humanism in Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed's Anticolonial Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24573997","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An examination of the humanist thought embedded in Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed's anticolonial critique reveals his deep devotion to human solidarity and human equality, with education, in particular, seen as \"an act of love.\" Underpinning this commitment is Mart\u00ed's considerate awareness of the \"human condition\" of the oppressed and colonized. Whereas humanism as theorized and practiced in Western liberal circles has neglected to challenge the current order of oppression, misery, and suffering, Mart\u00ed's humanist critique is situated squarely on the side of victims, waving the banner of human dignity and equality as well as of solidarity with the disfavored. Un an\u00e1lisis del pensamiento humanista que caracteriza la cr\u00edtica anticolonial de Jos\u00e9 Mart\u00ed revela su profunda devoci\u00f3n a la solidaridad e igualdad humana; la educaci\u00f3n, en particular, es vista como \"un acto de amor.\" Este compromiso se sustenta en la conciencia que tiene Mart\u00ed de la \"condici\u00f3n humana\" de los oprimidos y colonizados. Mientras que el humanismo como teor\u00eda y pr\u00e1ctica en c\u00edrculos liberales occidentales no ha buscado desafiar el orden actual de opresi\u00f3n, miseria, y sufrimiento, la cr\u00edtica humanista de Mart\u00ed se encuentra del lado de las v\u00edctimas, ondeando la bandera de la igualdad y la dignidad humana as\u00ed como de la solidaridad con los desfavorecidos.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Honaida Ghanim"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33b963ac-646c-3563-8f46-ec9145b09ee4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poetics of Disaster: Nationalism, Gender, and Social Change Among Palestinian Poets in Israel After Nakba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608203","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8482,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Following the 1948 Nakba (disaster) and collapse of Palestinian society, its national project and cultural sites, a residue of 170,000 Palestinians became citizens of the emerging state of Israel, which existed under a strict military rule until 1966. This residue was mainly illiterate villagers who were left without national and intellectual leadership. After a few years of frightened silence, a new intellectual stratum of young poets from this group began to publish reflections on their national situation. Intentionally simple, direct, and mainly easily memorized, their poetry became the ultimate cultural channel to create and disseminate a Palestinian version of the 1948 war, its subsequent state, and the vision of a desired future. These young poets gradually became the leading producers of Palestinian culture in Israel and abroad. Their poetry became the ultimate reference point for Palestine's national ethos and myths. Palestinians abroad named them the \"poets of resistance\" and their poems were composed into inflaming national songs. But while this new intellectual strata became active cultural producers, intervening in \"the nation building process,\" their social role remained ambivalent and problematic. Despite their national enthusiasm and appeal for social change, they were unable to transgress the patriarchic rule that was hegemonic in Palestinian society. This hegemonic narrative was interwoven in three themes: (1) using the lexicon of natural disaster to conceptualize the 1948 events, presenting them as an irresistible natural disaster (even by God who appeared during the events as pathetic and useless); (2) representing the Palestinian defeat in 1948 through patriarchal language of \"collective shame,\" \"land rape,\" and \"honor lost;\" and (3) articulating the national liberation project as masculine, promising to liberate the \"captured land-woman\" and to recover the collective honor of the nation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul James"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f839d030-3624-3a2b-9714-b31ae4dd1e9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postdependency? The Third World in an Era of Globalism and Late-Capitalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644888","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yuko Kikuchi"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43945802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09134700"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607605918"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-203351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9288ffb-7f74-30c5-b1c9-9142f1e1d294"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43945802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revijapacultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Japanese Culture and Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"266","pagination":"pp. 266-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Minor Transnational Inter-Subjectivity in the People's Art of Kitagawa Tamiji","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43945802","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8879,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[471721,471780]],"Locations in B":[[37670,37729]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eleanor Reeds"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26806762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23a2e420-f000-3408-9e8c-6cc26470378f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26806762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"429","pagination":"pp. 429-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Silence as Resistance in Pat Barker\u2019s Regeneration<\/em> and Assia Djebar\u2019s Children of the New World<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26806762","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":7739,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[157593,157741]],"Locations in B":[[4474,4622]],"abstract":"This essay reads the hidden histories of the First World War and the Algerian War of Independence in Pat Barker\u2019s Regeneration and Assia Djebar\u2019s Children of the New World, focusing on their representation of a feminized resistance to war that takes silence as its most powerful weapon. In contrast to the privileging of bearing witness in post-Holocaust theories of language and suffering, this essay argues that Barker and Djebar ultimately suggest that, in the face of war\u2019s atrocities, not speaking is an equally valuable act.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15572455"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61836701"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-212500"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41805095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israstudforu"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Gender Performance in a Changing Military: Women Soldiers in \"Masculine\" Roles","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41805095","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5487,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis B. Nyamnjoh","Nantang B. Jua"],"datePublished":"2002-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1514785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5778f938-fcfb-33db-aef6-8fbeea2363c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1514785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction to a Special Issue: African Universities in Crisis and the Promotion of a Democratic Culture: The Political Economy of Violence in African Educational Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1514785","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":12325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article cherche \u00e0 montrer que l'\u00e9ducation en Afrique, de la p\u00e9riode coloniale \u00e0 la post-colonie, a \u00e9t\u00e9 victime de diverses formes de violence, dont la plus d\u00e9vastatrice fut la violence de la conversion culturelle et politique: c'est \u00e0 dire des initiatives et des processus conduits aux niveaux externe et interne et destin\u00e9s \u00e0 domestiquer, exploiter, transformer, modifier, remodeler, adapter ou reconstruire l'Afrique et les africains par le biais des \u00e9coles et des universit\u00e9s afin de les conformer aux nouvelles formes d'\u00eatre, de voir, de faire et de penser. Le r\u00e9sultat d'une telle violence est que les syst\u00e8mes \u00e9ducatifs ont privil\u00e9gi\u00e9 le mim\u00e9tisme et les \u00e9pist\u00e9mologies appropri\u00e9es inform\u00e9es par des th\u00e9ories partiales, et les ont transform\u00e9es en m\u00e9ta-narrations d'arrogance, de sup\u00e9riorit\u00e9, et d'intol\u00e9rance \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des diff\u00e9rences cr\u00e9atives. M\u00eame quand sont imagin\u00e9es des alternatives claires pour faire face \u00e0 l'ineptie de la situation actuelle dans le domaine de l'\u00e9ducation, les difficult\u00e9s d'ordre \u00e9conomique rendent leur application extr\u00eamement difficile. Les \u00e9tats r\u00e9pressifs ont perp\u00e9tu\u00e9 et capitalis\u00e9 sur cette situation f\u00e2cheuse en manipulant les universitaires d\u00e9sesp\u00e9r\u00e9s et en les for\u00e7ant \u00e0 se plier et se rendre complices de la m\u00e9diocrit\u00e9. Cet article examine quelques unes des cons\u00e9quences \u00e9pist\u00e9mologiques d'une telle ali\u00e9nation et d'une telle ineptie, et se penche sur leurs implications pour la th\u00e9orisation de l'Afrique. Il appelle \u00e0 une conversation globale entre les universit\u00e9s et les universitaires \u00e0 laquelle participerait l'Afrique en ses propres termes, avec pour principe directeur les int\u00e9r\u00eats et les pr\u00e9occupations de l'africain moyen.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saswat S. Das"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23005516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03769771"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557596396"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235401"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ed4562b-2b0e-36b7-90f8-c38a526c3dff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23005516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaintecentq"}],"isPartOf":"India International Centre Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"India International Centre","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Emergence of African Discourse: Tradition as a Function of Time","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23005516","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3236,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. P. Sarvan"],"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40140837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40140837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"French Colonialism in Africa: The Early Novels of Ferdinand Oyono","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40140837","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":4878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sophie McCall"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0f0a1b0-c5de-3ae6-83b1-ec7a60a9d7db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dialogic Spaces of Afro-Caribbean Philosophy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758816","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":6344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mitsuhiko Kimura"],"datePublished":"1993-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2122408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220507"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e40c9940-0ba7-3c8b-bfa3-2ea8de7df69e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2122408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconomichistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Economic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"652","pageStart":"629","pagination":"pp. 629-652","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Standards of Living in Colonial Korea: Did the Masses Become Worse Off or Better Off Under Japanese Rule?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2122408","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses the changing living standards among the Korean masses under Japanese rule. Farm income per household, agricultural real wages, and per capita calorie intake from staple foods declined. On the other hand primary school enrollment, literacy, and survival rates rose, and average stature at least did not decrease. Arguing that literacy rates, survival rates, and average stature are variables more directly related to living conditions than the others, this article concludes that the Korean masses' standards of living rose between colonization and 1940. Still, any summary assessment depends on the weights assigned to different variables.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valentin Dedji"],"datePublished":"2001-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b508944e-9217-320e-9be3-7888123f66fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1581609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Ethical Redemption of African Imaginaire: Ka Mana's Theology of Reconstruction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581609","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this article is to introduce the work of the Congolese philosopher and theologian K\u00e4 Mana to the Anglophone audience. After an explanation of his use of the concept of imaginaire, his approach to the redemption of Africans' imaginaire from its present 'brokenness' will be explored. KM's proposal for a 'theology of reconstruction' will form the third part of the article. The deduction will be that in KM's project the ultimate objective of the theology of reconstruction in Africa consists in training 'anti-crisis human beings' who are equipped with new models of rational, ethical and spiritual convictions. This implies first the re-evan-gelisation of the institutions and structures that determine the existence of African societies today, and second the re-orientation of the global imaginaire of African people according to the fundamental vision of humankind that the word of God proposes through the revelation of a 'new reality' embodied by Jesus Christ.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kaushik Bagchi"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20079220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392448"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004906"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c62a6c16-3983-3c67-801b-2299fab2deac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20079220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworldhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"325","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-325","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An Orientalist in the Orient: Richard Garbe's Indian Journey, 1885-1886","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20079220","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":19713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Richard Garbe, a German professor of Indology, lived and studied in India for one year in the 1880s. Using Garbe's travel journal, a novel he wrote on India, and other writings, this article seeks to locate German Orientalism and Orientalists via-\u00e0-vis Edward Said's critique of Orientalism and the debates arising from his critique. Although Germany was not a major colonial power, this study finds that German Orientalism reflected and benefited from European power, even if it did not contribute overtly to its growth.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfredo Mirand\u00e9","Enrique M. L\u00f3pez"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23262728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a831a68-08d8-3125-ba5e-742f9fc42e4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23262728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RADICAL FEMINISM, POSTMODERNISM, MULTICULTURALISM, AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER: UNA PERSPECTIVA CHICANA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23262728","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10969,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[66885,66932]],"abstract":"The paper presents a review and critical synthesis of recent theoretical developments in the areas of race and gender studies, and discusses the limits of postmodernism and multiculturalism in contemporary society. We isolate and discuss three significant theoretical developments in the study of subordinated communities that have transpired over the past decade or so: (1) the proliferation of writing by radical women of color, (2) the emergence of postmodernism as a significant force across a wide range of fields, and (3) the increased emphasis on multiculturalism, pluralism, and diversity. Though our focus is on developing una perspectiva Chicana, and we cannot speak for other groups, the perspective presented is comparative and cross-national, and addresses issues that are relevant to other subordinated communities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nirmal Puwar"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42614a7d-9ed2-376b-85a4-e32f860cad21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1396022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"71","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Multicultural Fashion... Stirrings of Another Sense of Aesthetics and Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396022","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper looks at the place of items long associated with the bodies of South Asian women in mainstream fashion. First, there will be a profiling of some of the scenes where bindhies, mendhies and related scents and sounds are donned and adored by white bodies. By participating in conversations with South Asian women in Britain in the second part of the article, the author is able to discuss some of the stirrings raised by the recent legitimization of these items by multicultural capitalism, leading towards an exploration of a different sense of aesthetics, memory and desire. The ambivalent attraction of limited recognition offered by the anthropological urge to 'know' the ethnic 'other' is noted. A consideration of the rage induced by the power of whiteness to play with 'ethnic' items which had not so long ago been reviled when they were worn by South Asian women points to the historical amnesia that underlies much multicultural celebration. The allure of images packaged as oriental for South Asian women themselves, although often from a different set of sensibilities and memories, stresses the importance of historical reconstruction.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.20","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ced5a6c-320e-3c19-a428-deb91da0c47d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.20"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Esiaba Irobi's Legacy: Theory and Practice of Postcolonial Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.20","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Connelly"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2651808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff2cc3e2-7e98-3da8-a456-b7fd0174e261"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2651808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"769","pageStart":"739","pagination":"pp. 739-769","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Taking Off the Cold War Lens: Visions of North-South Conflict during the Algerian War for Independence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2651808","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":18432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donn C. Worgs"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034371","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bf5b92f-fa25-3d0a-bcac-9470c4dde881"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40034371"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Beware of the Frustrated . . .\": The Fantasy and Reality of African American Violent Revolt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034371","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Throughout African Americans' struggle for liberation, there have been incidents of their engaging in violent revolt-from slave revolts to the urban riots of the 21st century. Images and depictions of violent revolt have also been a recurring element in African American artistic productions-including literature, music, and film. An analysis of these \"fantasies\" of violent revolt provides insight into how African Americans understand violent revolt, and under what conditions such actions are justified. The analysis reveals that violent revolt is understood by many as both instrumental (a means to a desired end-usually freedom) and cathartic. Furthermore, there are four recurring themes within these fantasies. These include a justification for violence, the need to fight to gain the \"respect\" of the oppressor, the rage of the oppressed along with their yearning for retribution, and the humanizing or transformative effect of participating in a violent revolt against an oppressor.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhys H. Williams"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"558f3107-05f0-3ec9-ba60-707680b96942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1083","pageStart":"1081","pagination":"pp. 1081-1083","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231307","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781776140305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"580467ec-1882-351e-85e2-924ed94aaad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.18772\/22017030305.17"}],"isPartOf":"Remains of the Social","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"281","pagination":"281-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22017030305.17","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6927,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["apartheid","postapartheid","liberation","mourning","politics","trojan horse","african","communist party","mandela","discourse"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sen Luangphinith"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"795e2d99-e1a3-309d-a99f-850d3a77d580"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40755453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Homeward Bound: Settler Aesthetics in Hawai'i's Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40755453","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10919,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha Crenshaw Hutchinson"],"datePublished":"1972-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/173583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"775a819c-b000-3e1f-b807-981f9c2a37bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/173583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Concept of Revolutionary Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/173583","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper deals with the definition and explanation of the concept of revolutionary terrorism, considered a part of insurgent strategy in internal war. It contends that such terrorism is a rational method of action, employing acts of extraordinary violence against selected physical victims, deliberately creating a psychological effect and thereby influencing political behavior and attitudes. This definition is tested against the activity of the FLN during the Algerian War and used as a basis to explain the theoretical and empirical significance of terrorism. The paper compares the relative costs and benefits of a terrorist strategy from the revolutionary point of view and concludes that the attractiveness of terrorism derives from the combination of economy and facility of means with high psychological and political effectiveness. The risks of the strategy are controllable, and the results are predictable. Revolutionary terrorism combines low cost with potentially high yield.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan V. Segre"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178745","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"785c62a7-07cb-3c92-bd93-0cb06f943fbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178745"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonization and Decolonization: The Case of Zionist and African Elites","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178745","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9137,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[62163,62321]],"Locations in B":[[36102,36321]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jodi Kim"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5d2b9c4-cb9d-3825-82b2-8056d8fd5adb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24364925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Debt, the Precarious Grammar of Life, and Manjula Padmanabhan's \"Harvest\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364925","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edmund Burke III"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/720937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"294","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720937","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Ogo Ujomu"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482693","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f06ae504-4215-345b-99a1-08d22ad8e953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482693"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Institutionalised Marginality, Social Conflicts and the Quest for National Unity in an African Nation-State: A Theoretical Exploration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482693","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay focuses on the issue of marginality, marginalisation and the quest for national unity. Although, the issue of marginalisation in a nation-state such as Nigeria has been widely discussed by writers, few have attempted to offer a systematic analysis of the issue through a theoretical or conceptual basis. This paper examines the extent to which the competition for resources and the exercise of political control have compelled the marginalisation of various segments of Nigerian society. It highlights the evolving nature and different expressions of marginalisation. By looking at the issue of marginality and the social order in Nigeria against the backdrop of the brutal facts of injustice, inequality and exploitation, we seek to discern the epochal configurations and socio-cultural locations of the problem. Our aim is to discover how this problem has militated against the quest for national integration and reconciliation in the polity. And by highlighting the attendant crisis of social order occasioned by marginalisation, this essay reinforces the need for the urgent establishment of enduring humane rules of distributive justice in the society. Cet articles s'int\u00e9resse \u00e0 la question de la marginalit\u00e9, de la marginalisation et de l'unit\u00e9 nationale. Bien que la question de la marginalisation dans un \u00e9tat-nation tel que le Nigeria ait \u00e9t\u00e9 largement trait\u00e9e par divers auteurs, tr\u00e8s peu d'entre eux (voire aucun) ont essay\u00e9 de pr\u00e9senter une analyse syst\u00e9matique de cette id\u00e9e, en s'appuyant sur une base th\u00e9orique ou conceptuelle. Cette contribution cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9couvrir dans quelle mesure la concurrence relative au contr\u00f4le des ressources et du pouvoir politique au sein de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 a provoqu\u00e9 la marginalisation de divers groupes de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 nig\u00e9riane. Elle montre le caract\u00e8re \u00e9volutif, ainsi que les diff\u00e9rentes formes de marginalisation pr\u00e9sentes au sein de cette soci\u00e9t\u00e9. En examinant la question de la marginalit\u00e9 et de l'ordre social au Nigeria, dans le contexte de l'injustice sur fond de violence, de l'in\u00e9galit\u00e9 et de l'exploitation, nous cherchons \u00e0 distinguer les configurations p\u00e9riodiques, ainsi que les localisations socioculturelles du probl\u00e8me. Notre objectif est de d\u00e9couvrir dans quelle mesure ce probl\u00e8me a constitu\u00e9 un frein \u00e0 l'int\u00e9gration nationale et \u00e0 la r\u00e9conciliation politique. A travers l'\u00e9vocation de la crise connexe de l'ordre social provoqu\u00e9e par la marginalisation, cette contribution tente de souligner le besoin urgent de mise en place de r\u00e8gles humaines viables pour une justice distributive au sein de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OMNIA EL SHAKRY"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26577264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebdc45a9-82f3-3d48-a47b-184c54375a6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26577264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"934","pageStart":"920","pagination":"pp. 920-934","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Doremus"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72d15991-e653-3caf-a45c-94c63c0dd75b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27922767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Authenticity, the Pelado and the Mexican National Identity: Essay versus Film during the 1930s and the 1940s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27922767","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ibram H. Rogers"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.96.1.0014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4167e188-6410-3ced-b65a-ae7f32023760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/jafriamerhist.96.1.0014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cPEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD ARE SUPPORTING YOU\u201d: MALCOLM X, IDEOLOGICAL FORMATIONS, AND BLACK STUDENT ACTIVISM, 1960-1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.96.1.0014","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":12553,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bonaventure Swai"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24520323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e76d8f6-f75f-39ad-bc04-cef2fe557f90"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24520323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tranjhist"}],"isPartOf":"Transafrican Journal of History","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"COLONIAL RURAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY AND AGARIAN PROTEST IN TANGANYIKA TERRITORY: THE USAMBARA CASE 1920-1960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24520323","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leo Kuper"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178199","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62e2fef2-8dc4-3247-af53-9d4480b601d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178199"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theories of Revolution and Race Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178199","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9056,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[7808,7874]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali A. Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f120223-435b-38a7-8a69-86417b323c1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Global Africa: From Abolitionists to Reparationists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524900","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.18","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223781"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8f126ad-3fae-3e77-8cc0-42102bb7133b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rkt3.18"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"639","pagination":"639-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Para al\u00e9m do pensamento abissal:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.18","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14418,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"O pensamento moderno ocidental \u00e9 um pensamento abissal\u00b9. Consiste num sistema de distin\u00e7\u00f5es vis\u00edveis e invis\u00edveis, sendo que as invis\u00edveis fundamentam as vis\u00edveis. As distin\u00e7\u00f5es invis\u00edveis s\u00e3o estabelecidas atrav\u00e9s de linhas radicais que dividem a realidade social em dois universos distintos: o universo \u201cdeste lado da linha\u201d e o universo \u201cdo outro lado da linha\u201d. A divis\u00e3o \u00e9 tal que \u201co outro lado da linha\u201d desaparece enquanto realidade, torna-se inexistente, e \u00e9 mesmo produzido como inexistente. Inexist\u00eancia significa n\u00e3o existir sob qualquer forma de ser relevante ou compreens\u00edvel\u00b2. Tudo aquilo que \u00e9 produzido como inexistente \u00e9 exclu\u00eddo de forma radical","subTitle":"Das linhas globais a uma ecologia de saberes","keyphrase":["outro lado","pensamento","direito","deste lado","linhas","pensamento abissal","viol\u00eancia","linhas globais","fascismo","estado"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059112","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ded94ca0-8c56-33ab-bbdb-e2c26c9d173a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20059112"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"106","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"619","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-619","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Zimbabwe's Hide & Seek with the IMF: Imperialism, Nationalism & the South African Proxy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20059112","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elisheva Machlis"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24268921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924526"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237371"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cde0be9e-5530-3bde-bbfd-91596c228511"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24268921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltislams"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Islams","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Al\u012b Shar\u012b'at\u012b and the Notion of taw\u1e25\u012bd: Re-exploring the Question of God's Unity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24268921","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper evaluates the intellectual roots of 'Al\u012b Shar\u012b'at\u012b, the leading ideologist of the Islamic revolution in Iran. It focuses on his unique worldview of taw\u1e25\u012bd and places his writings within the broader context of both Western and Muslim thought. Shar\u012b'at\u012b created a new merger between a holistic approach to Islam promoted by both Sunni and Shi'i reformists, and an existentialist worldview, tied to a religious-philosophical basis. Through this exchange with existentialism, Shar\u012b'at\u012b sought to transform Shi'i Islam into an all-encompassing faith, anchored in human existence and reaching its full realization through political action. His aim was to mobilise the Iranian intelligentsia towards an Islamic revolution by relying on a dualist Muslim-existentialist vocabulary. The outcome was a new blend between ontology, ethics, society and politics, and a new inter-connectivity between God, man, this world and the hereafter, resulting from Shar\u012b'at\u012b's effort to promote religious renewal and social justice, through his innovative interpretation to taw\u1e25\u012bd.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Qussai Samak"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41685910","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ead89783-2001-318f-a5bc-baaee394df26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41685910"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ARAB CINEMA AND THE NATIONAL QUESTION: From the Trivial to the Sacrosanct","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41685910","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":3071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anand Pandian"],"datePublished":"2008-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9391527-d5c3-3c14-8713-76feabd9e3d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20484496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Pastoral Power in the Postcolony: On the Biopolitics of the Criminal Animal in South India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20484496","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":14445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I argue that a close examination of the government of animals by humans is essential for an anthropology of modern biopolitics: for an understanding, that is, of the many ways in which humans themselves have been governed as animals in modern times. I aim also to work toward a way of theorizing such biopolitics in milieus beyond the modern West. Relying on cultural and historical materials from South India, I call attention to three domains of local biopolitical difference: the particular conditions of modernity that constitute certain human lives as an animal object of government, the quotidian practices of care and struggle through which animals are governed in moral terms, and the cultural idioms through which these lives become visible and intelligible as appropriate sites for the exercise of both power and resistance. The empirical ground of this article is formed by three modes of government of human and animal existence in colonial and postcolonial South India: the management of a population of subjects putatively criminal by nature as organisms of instinct and impulse by means of the colonial Indian Criminal Tribes Act; the contemporary echoes of such policing in the everyday practices through which cultivators and plowmen in the region govern the moral conduct of their oxen; and the persistent postcolonial legacies of a Tamil political idiom of \"grazing\" or restraining populations of human and animal beings deemed incapable of restraining themselves. The intimacy between practices of care and techniques of control in each of these instances suggests that a close attention to animality may provide a way of resolving some of the constitutive paradoxes of the \"pastoral\" mode of power elaborated by Michel Foucault.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Merod"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wisdom of Our Violent Knowledge: Postmodern Economics and Academic Cyberspace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303606","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harshana Rambukwella"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787351295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1381916b-a231-3dac-88b5-d781bc8fbfa4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9"}],"isPartOf":"Politics and Poetics of Authenticity","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"137","pagination":"137-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conclusion:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3hh4f7.9","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Liyanage Amarakeerthi\u2019s award-winning 2013 novelKurulu Hadawatha<\/em>(A Bird\u2019s Heart) features as its protagonist Dinasiri Kurulugangoda, a budding radio producer struggling for fresh ideas to promote his channel. Earlier in the novel, Dinasiri changes his name from Walangangoda, which means \u2018Village of Potters\u2019 (indicative of his low caste), to Kurulugangoda, which means \u2018Village of Birds\u2019, which has more aesthetic appeal and no caste overtones. Idly doodling a rough sketch of his village in the studio, he has a moment of epiphany. He realises that his village is shaped like a bird\u2019s head and that his house, at the centre of","subTitle":"the postcolonial afterlife of authenticity","keyphrase":["sinhala","sri lanka","cultural","village","sinhala cultural","discourse","gam udawa","postcolonial","sinhala authenticity","popular culture"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bart Moore-Gilbert"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb2331e7-1d66-3cbb-84ac-bf76d161f1a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41274143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MARXISM AND POSTCOLONIALISM RECONSIDERED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41274143","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":6486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anton L. Allahar"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9f9d4a4-214e-374f-99d3-46ac8a3c5aa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27866359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FALSE CONSCIOUSNESS, CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS AND NATIONALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866359","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The present paper aims to propose a schema for analysing the contemporary politics of national identity in postcolonial Caribbean states. To this end it will seek: (a) to provide a comprehensive operational definition of nationalism, (b) to qualify that definition by the addition of the adjective 'ethnic,' and (c) to assess the extent to which the concept 'ethnic nationalism' can help us to understand some of the politics of ethnicity and national identity in a post-independence setting. My argument will be situated within the broad theoretical framework of a non-reductionist, neo-Marxist class analysis, for it is my conviction that ethnonational consciousness and politics are better understood if we are able to trace the concrete class interests and motives of their promoters. In other words, whether as sentiment or as movement, nationalism cannot be divorced from the class interests of its leading promoters. But one must be cautious when absolutizing the class claim, for in the specific case of ethnic nationalism, for example, Robin Williams has noted that \"to dismiss ethnicity as false consciousness ignores the clear evidence that ethnies often sacrifice economic interests in favour of symbolic gains\" (1994:64-65), and even beyond this, as Ronaldo Munck reminds us, \"nationalism matters because people die for it\" (1986:2). Este documento estudia la posibilidad de proponer un esqema para analizar las pol\u00edticas actuales sobre la identidad \u00e9tnica y nacional de los pa\u00edses del Caribe, en la era post colonial. Para este fin, este buscar\u00e1: (a) proporcionar una definici\u00f3n operacional general del nacionalismo, (b) calificar esa definici\u00f3n mediante la adici\u00f3n del adjetivo \"\u00e9tnico\", y (c) evaluar hasta que punto el concepto \"nacionalismo \u00e9tnico\" puede ayudarnos a entender algunas de las pol\u00edticas de identidad \u00e9tnica y nacional, en un \u00e1mbito de post independencia. Mi argumento estar\u00e1 situado dentro del amplio marco te\u00f3rico de un an\u00e1lisis de clase no reduccionista, neo marxista, dado que estoy convencido que la conciencia \u00e9tnico-nacionalista y la pol\u00edtica son mejor entendidas si podemos trazar los intereses concretos de las clases y los motivos de sus promotores. En otras palabras, ya sea como un sentimiento o como un movimiento, el nacionalismo no puede estar divorciado de los intereses de las clases de sus promotores. Pero uno debe ser cuidadoso al otorgarle un car\u00e1cter absoluto a las demandas de las clases, porque en el caso espec\u00edfico del nacionalismo \u00e9tnico, por ejemplo, Robin Williams ha mostrado que \"desechar la etnia como una falsa conciencia, ignora la clara evidencia de que los grupos \u00e9tnicos a menudo sacrifican los intereses econ\u00f3micos en favor de las ganancias simb\u00f3licas\" (1994:64-65), y a\u00fan m\u00e1s all\u00e1, como Ronaldo Maunk nos recuerda que, \"el nacionalismo es importante porque la gente muere por \u00e9l\" (1986:2). Le pr\u00e9sent article a pour objectif de proposer un sch\u00e9ma pour analyser la politique contemporaine de l'identit\u00e9 nationale et ethnique des Etats de la Cara\u00efbe. A cette fin, il cherchera \u00e0 i) fournir une d\u00e9finition op\u00e9rationnelle compr\u00e9hensive du nationalisme, ii) qualifier cette d\u00e9finition par l'adjonction de l'adjectif \u00abethnique\u00bb, et iii) \u00e9valuer la mani\u00e8re dont le concept de \u00abnationalisme ethnique\u00bb peut nous aider \u00e0 comprendre une partie de la politique de l'ethnicit\u00e9 et de l'identit\u00e9 nationale dans un contexte post-ind\u00e9pendance. Mes arguments seront plac\u00e9s dans le cadre th\u00e9orique plus large d'une analyse de classe non r\u00e9ductionnelle et non Marxiste car je suis convaincu que la conscience et la politique ethniques et nationaux sont mieux compris si nous pouvons tracer les int\u00e9r\u00eats et les motivations concrets de leurs d\u00e9fenseurs. Autrement dit, le nationalisme, qu'il soit mouvement ou sentiment, ne peut \u00eatre s\u00e9par\u00e9 des int\u00e9r\u00eats de classe de ses d\u00e9fenseurs. Mais nous devons avancer doucement lorsque nous traitons d'absolues les pr\u00e9tentions de classe, car, dans le cas particulier du nationalisme ethnique par exemple, Robin Williams a signal\u00e9 que \u00abl'\u00e9cartement de l'ethnicit\u00e9 comme fausse conscience ne tient pas compte de la preuve \u00e9vidente que les ethnies sacrifient souvent leurs int\u00e9r\u00eats \u00e9conomiques en faveur des gains symboliques' (1994:64-65). Comme nous le rappelle Ronaldo Munck, le nationalisme a de l'importance car les gens meurent pour le prot\u00e9ger\u00bb (1986:2).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Castle"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0da3947f-f9d8-3a82-86bf-53e2187d48f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Staging Ethnography: John M. Synge's \"Playboy of the Western World\" and the Problem of Cultural Translation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208643","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":12493,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Voth"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/natiindistudj.5.2.0016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23321261"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a17374bc-3f2c-312e-a6a5-07a3da0c0349"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/natiindistudj.5.2.0016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natiindistudj"}],"isPartOf":"Native American and Indigenous Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Order Up! The Decolonizing Politics of Howard Adams and Maria Campbell with a Side of Imagining Otherwise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/natiindistudj.5.2.0016","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gertrude James Gonz\u00e1lez de Allen"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97b19c5-4350-38db-b016-438d1f00ee0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"403","pageStart":"394","pagination":"pp. 394-403","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"In Search of Epistemic Freedom:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.26.2.0394","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":3019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Afro-Caribbean Philosophy's Contributions to Continental Philosophy","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Aronson"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea8c9f71-41a2-3fa2-a2ee-ff56afea4b54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"436","pagination":"pp. 436-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre and the Radical Intellectuals Role","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401899","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Martial Frind\u00e9thi\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de69f651-e0e1-34c8-8b59-f6477d0965dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40836990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Allegorizing the Quest for Autonomy: Cheick Oumar Sissoko's Finzan and Amadou Seck's Saaraba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40836990","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":7734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Hamil"],"datePublished":"2006-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49116861-2229-34f7-aa2e-4e157cc4ab8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mohamed Zafzaf's \"Al-Mar\u02bea wa-l-warda\" or the Voyage North in the Postcolonial Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879760","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric S. Nelson"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffb27711-f230-360f-be16-b1562f4cb339"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"131","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Against Liberty: Adorno, Levinas and the Pathologies of Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705242","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9207,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[54611,54673]],"abstract":"Adorno and Levinas argue from distinct yet intersecting perspectives that there are pathological forms of freedom, formed by systems of power and economic exchange, which legitimate the neglect, exploitation and domination of others. In this paper, I examine how the works of Adorno and Levinas assist in diagnosing the aporias of liberty in contemporary capitalist societies by providing critical models and strategies for confronting present discourses and systems of freedom that perpetuate unfreedom such as those ideologically expressed in possessive individualist and libertarian conceptions of freedom.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Johnson"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40257477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4cd5c8d1-117b-3dac-b0c5-fc592d62bb12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40257477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Jean-Paul Sartre: 'A Little Ball of Fur and Ink'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40257477","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7384,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erin Mitchell"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f5af5e8-598b-3103-9175-18c57873eb5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"91","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Towards the Garden of the Mothers: Relocating the Capacity to Narrate in J.M. Coetzee's Life & Times of Michael K","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802093","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Supriya Nair"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Melancholic Women: The Intellectual Hysteric(s) in \"Nervous Conditions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820276","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tejumola Olaniyan"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820905","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820905"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cosmopolitan Nativist: Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and the Antinomies of Postcolonial Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820905","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6549,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph L. Venosa"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.3.1.27","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2156695X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"651009014"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"386fa76e-f47c-3592-95ba-98ff6975b0ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.3.1.27"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africonfpeacrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Conflict and Peacebuilding Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Eritrean Muslim League and Political Mobilization during the Ethiopian-Eritrean Federation (1952\u201362)<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.3.1.27","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11035,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This paper argues that as the Ethiopian government's efforts to compromise Eritrean sovereignty increased throughout the period of the Ethiopian-Eritrean Federation (1952\u201362), the regional Islamic leadership and community activists within the Eritrean Muslim League (EML), the country's oldest and largest nationalist organization, played an increasingly dominant role in arguing for the protection of Muslim rights. In the process, activists influenced the growing nationalist movement by using the legacy of Islam to justify both the political and cultural autonomy of Eritrean society. Using previously overlooked archival sources, Muslim League publications, secondary literature, and interviews with activists from the period in question, this article attempts to revise current understandings about how the implementation and steady erosion of the Ethiopian-Eritrean Federation influenced the course of political and cultural activism among Eritrea's Muslim communities. It discusses some of the ways that federation-era nationalists within the League embraced interreligious cooperation as a means of addressing perceived injustices and as way of building broad political support.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Uru Iyam"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"307b2fe7-a2f5-3327-91da-4e6bab7ee3e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Silent Revolutionaries: Ousmane Sembene's Emitai, Xala, and Ceddo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524007","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES P. WALSH"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43822072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15589080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"116b44b9-f104-32fc-b5ec-47e28169c2aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43822072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanapers"}],"isPartOf":"Academy of Management Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT SCHOLARSHIP IN AND FOR AFRICA ... AND THE WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43822072","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":3313,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[18304,18373]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d24fecc7-ba64-322b-981a-138486750f20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some African Theorists of Culture and Modernization: Fanon, Cabral and Some Others","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523767","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10277,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609476,609594]],"Locations in B":[[4457,4576]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brinda J. Mehta"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e1520f2-cd42-392b-a648-24252efaac32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Negotiating Arab-Muslim Identity, Contested Citizenship, and Gender Ideologies in the Parisian Housing Projects: Fa\u00efza Gu\u00e8ne's Kiffe kiffe demain<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.173","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":16119,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[59227,59293]],"abstract":"AbstractFa\u00efza Gu\u00e8ne's Kiffe kiffe demain describes the coming-of-age experiences of Doria, a second-generation Franco-Maghrebi, or beur, adolescent of Moroccan origin, who lives in an economically and socially disfavored Parisian housing project. Doria's abandonment by her father, who abruptly leaves for Morocco to marry a younger woman capable of giving him a male heir, provides the novel's focus: a simultaneous critique of Maghrebi, or North African, patriarchy and a searing indictment of the socioeconomic and political disenfranchisement experienced by the residents of the \u201cother France,\u201d namely, Maghrebi Arab-Muslim working-class immigrants and their French-born beur children. This paper demonstrates how the protagonist's negotiation of biculturality exposes the hypocrisy of the French secularizing mission, in which all markers of difference are suspect until they are assimilated into a homogeneous ideal of sameness. At the same time, social oppression produces a vibrant \u201cvernacular\u201d culture in the projects as a contestation of second-class citizenship, racialization, and mediated representation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwaku Larbi Korang"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.10","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26733cb8-7dcb-360c-90bf-7a932fd5802a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.10"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Canonizing Senghor: On Cheikh Thiam's Return to the Kingdom of Childhood<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.3.10","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10875,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[429173,429350]],"Locations in B":[[4442,4620]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Harding"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38cf7a87-81ee-3e35-9590-efd122efecf0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Two Influential Theories of Ignorance and Philosophy's Interests in Ignoring Them","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810949","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud provided powerful accounts of systematic interested ignorance. Fifty years ago, Anglo-American philosophies of science stigmatized Marx's and Freud's analyses as models of irrationality. They remain disvalued today, at a time when virtually all other humanities and social science disciplines have returned to extract valuable insights from them. Here the argument is that there are reasons distinctive to philosophy why such theories were especially disvalued then and why they remain so today. However, there are even better reasons today for philosophy to break from this history and find more fruitful ways to engage with systematic interested ignorance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cyprian Fonyuy Fisiy"],"datePublished":"1988-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40760256","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be6a8db2-21d0-3884-bab9-77c9d5302472"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40760256"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"262","pagination":"pp. 262-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"COLONIAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCES ON CUSTOMARY LAW: THE CAMEROONIAN EXPERIENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40760256","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6924,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rajeswari Sunder Rajan"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c14f2de3-b465-36ec-96d6-fcc971dd480c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"596","pagination":"pp. 596-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Third World Academic in Other Places; Or, the Postcolonial Intellectual Revisited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344037","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ndubuisi Christian Ani","Emmanuel Matambo"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26893857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20504292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c6081a2-9de6-3f40-b93a-683406c5750d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26893857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrnlafrunionstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Union Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cAfrican Solutions\u201d in Chains","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26893857","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8426,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The political independence of African states in the 1960s provided opportunity for Africa to materialize the Pan-African desire for \u2018African solutions to African problems\u2019 as opposed to the dependence on, and impositions of, external powers. Over fifty years after independence however, the continent remains chronically dependent on external systems and interventions. Using Mills\u2019 Racial Contract theory and Frantz Fanon\u2019s Pitfalls of National Consciousness, the study engages with the causes of Africa\u2019s continued dependency. The paper contends that the constraints in materializing \u2018African solutions to African problems\u2019 resides in the fact that while outside forces have condescendingly treated Africa as \u2018a charity case\u2019 from which no real solution to its woes can emerge, Africa\u2019s lackluster and myopic leadership also share the blame for the miscarriage of a potentially sound ideal.","subTitle":"External and Internal Causes of Africa\u2019s Continued Dependency Fifty Years On","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary B. Miles"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1446c592-96c1-38a9-8750-b2cb2cc185eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"659","pageStart":"629","pagination":"pp. 629-659","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Roman and Modern Imperialism: A Reassessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178956","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":14784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nic Cheeseman"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33efecd7-d496-33bf-8c76-ff22a4c72f9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4187770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Political Linkage and Political Space in the Era of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4187770","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The continuing importance of Kenya's institutional colonial inheritance has been underestimated because the impact of decolonization on Kenya's formal political institutions has rarely been systematically addressed. Consequently, there is a pressing need to reevaluate the structure of government in the colonial and postcolonial periods in a manner that takes a critical perspective on the domestic relationship between government and opposition. In addition to introducing the papers that follow, this essay examines the factors that underpin the continued supremacy of the executive-administrative axis in the Kenya postcolony. It develops the twin concepts of political linkage and political space as tools to describe the political landscape of the colonial and postcolonial eras. Institutional factors, it is argued, must be central to any attempt to explain the longevity and eventual breakdown of KANU rule.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4ac030e-c8c1-3d1a-980b-e3c7f360db6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26355914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26355914","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":3141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Decolonizing the University: A Battle for the African Mind","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William P. Nye"],"datePublished":"1978-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"967b92ec-82a6-3788-8433-eeab39cb6332"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Emergent Idea of Race: A Civilization-Analytic Approach to Race and Racism in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656990","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana Keita"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbf8eff6-56ce-3b73-b959-09319285ebe7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26645585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Models of Economic Growth and Development in the Context of Human Capital Investment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645585","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The economic literature ever since the dawn of modern economics has been much preoccupied with the issue of economic growth. Economic growth has also been understood to establish the conditions for economic development. The better-known models of economic growth such as the Lewis, Rostow, Harrod-Domar, Solow, and Romer growth models are discussed. The discussions apply contextually to the problematic issue of growth and development in Africa. It is argued that a very necessary condition for growth and transformational development in Africa is heavy investment in human capital. It is pointed out that countries that invest much human capital to produce highly educated populaces usually reap the benefits of such in terms of high per capita GDPs, regardless of the levels of their technological and industrial output. Countries like New Zealand, Iceland, and Denmark offer evidence of this. Models of African development such as the Lagos Plan of Action in terms of the whole continent are discussed within the context of existing impediments to such progress. Depuis l\u2019av\u00e8nement de l\u2019\u00e9conomie moderne, la litt\u00e9rature \u00e9conomique s\u2019est beaucoup pr\u00e9occup\u00e9e de la question de la croissance \u00e9conomique. La croissance \u00e9conomique est \u00e9galement comprise comme \u00e9tablissant les conditions du d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique. Les mod\u00e8les de croissance \u00e9conomique les plus connus, tels que ceux de Lewis Rostow, Harrod-Domar, Solow et Romer, sont abord\u00e9s. Les discussions s\u2019appliquent contextuellement \u00e0 la probl\u00e9matique de la croissance et du d\u00e9veloppement en Afrique. Il a \u00e9t\u00e9 avanc\u00e9 que de grands investissements dans le capital humain \u00e9taient une condition indispensable \u00e0 la croissance et au d\u00e9veloppement transformationnel de l\u2019Afrique. Il est soulign\u00e9 que les pays qui investissent dans le capital humain produisent des populations hautement \u00e9duqu\u00e9es et en tirent g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement des avantages en termes de PIB \u00e9lev\u00e9 par habitant, quel que soit le niveau de leur production technologique et industrielle. Des pays comme la Nouvelle-Z\u00e9lande, l'Islande et le Danemark en apportent la preuve. Les mod\u00e8les de d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique, tels que le Plan continental d'action dit de Lagos, sont examin\u00e9s dans le contexte d\u2019actuels obstacles \u00e0 de tels progr\u00e8s.","subTitle":"The Way Forward for Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernedette Muthien"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20838927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00300071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98aade25-a444-3204-9727-e1516ac4595b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20838927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"offourbacks"}],"isPartOf":"Off Our Backs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"off our backs, inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EGALITARIANISM AND NONVIOLENCE: Gifts of the Khoe-San","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20838927","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":2680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alejandro A. Vallega"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24659729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00855553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47766712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006242124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2e66a7c-1a4d-3273-bf50-0c69c595dd48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24659729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resephen"}],"isPartOf":"Research in Phenomenology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"250","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-250","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Remaining with the Crossing: Social-Political Historical Critique at the Limit in Latin American Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24659729","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"If the question of the humanity of \"the other\" may become a question, and not be reinscribed into Western colonizing patterns of thought, then its issuing must concern a limit (always arising beyond Western thought), a delimitation of existence that is risked and put at risk without recourse to the project or operation of that colonizing thought that situates it. Ideas of subjectivity, agency, and power-knowledge potential for progress, as well as rationalist instrumental thought used to recognize those peoples and cultures excluded and oppressed under the Western Modern tradition, must be put into question by the very agents claiming recognition, as well as the epistemic structures that sustain these concepts and the dispositions and subconscious expectations constituted by the colonizing practices of bodies and imaginaries that project the very horizons of one's existence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michele Ruth Gamburd"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbdaa120-b432-3014-832e-fcfeede9e112"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24510855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE STUDIES: AN INTRODUCTORY CURRICULUM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24510855","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gareth Cornwell"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e48abf44-0558-394a-8218-f469e46048a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"441","pagination":"pp. 441-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"George Webb Hardy's The Black Peril and the Social Meaning of 'Black Peril' in Early Twentieth-Century South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637313","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The `Black Peril' - the threatened rape of white women by black men - was an important factor in the moral economy underpinning colonial debate about the `Native Question' in early twentieth-century South Africa. This essay gives sympathetic consideration to studies which have attempted to link the recurrence of Black Peril panics with specific disturbances in the economy or body politic, before offering symptomatic readings of two pieces of writing by George Webb Hardy, the article `The Black Peril' (1904) and the novel The Black Peril (1912). These readings suggest that the rape threat was essentially a rationalizations of white men's fear of sexual competition from black men. The imagery of purity and contagion, in terms of which the `endogamous imperative' is typically represented in such texts, suggests that the idea of caste may usefully be invoked in attempts to explain the seemingly irrational public hysteria surrounding the Black Peril phenomenon.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VELIA GARCIA\u2014HANCOCK"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ba7831c-4998-3ab0-b039-e109f94a2c70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29765940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Justice and La Raza Communities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765940","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Branch"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26946001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565102408"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53cf21dc-aa39-3271-add9-91e3e683ddeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26946001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Decolonizing the African Studies Centre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26946001","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The African Studies Centre has been a privileged institutional form in Britain for knowledge production on Africa since the end of colonialism. This article argues that the origin of these UK centres should be located in the colonial research institutes established in Africa, in particular the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute and the East African Institute of Social Research. Attention to the knowledge about Africa that was deemed authoritative by these institutes as well as to the institutions and structures underpinning that knowledge production can raise important questions about today's centres that need to be addressed as part of a decolonization agenda.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Babatunde Joshua Omotosho"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"511eee0f-e7f6-34cb-bb9c-e0aec355b504"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48618317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Situating African Indigenous Ideas within Conventional Learning as an Impetus for Knowledge Construction in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48618317","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":5446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Literature regarding knowledge production reveals that Africa can do better than its present state through the exploration and installation of homegrown ideas detached from the Western hold on its academy. This article contributes to this debate by exploring the place of indigenous knowledge within the academy and the challenges facing its popularity within the continent. The article further provides suggestions on how indigenous and conventional orthodox knowledge can cohere towards a more pragmatic knowledge production that can propel Africa\u2019s development. La litt\u00e9rature sur la production de connaissances r\u00e9v\u00e8le que l\u2019Afrique peut faire mieux par l\u2019exploration et l\u2019installation, dans son acad\u00e9mie, d\u2019id\u00e9es lo-cales d\u00e9tach\u00e9es de l\u2019emprise occidentale. Cet article contribue \u00e0 ce d\u00e9bat en explorant la place du savoir autochtone au sein de l\u2019acad\u00e9mie et les d\u00e9fis qui s\u2019opposent \u00e0 sa popularit\u00e9 sur le continent. En outre, l\u2019article propose des mani\u00e8res d\u2019harmoniser les connaissances orthodoxes autochtones et conventionnelles vers une production de connaissances plus pragmatique qui peut propulser le d\u00e9veloppement de l\u2019Afrique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kurt Korneski"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43560229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07030428"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43560229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbahistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History Review \/ Revue d'histoire urbaine","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Urban History Review","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reform and Empire: The Case of Winnipeg, Manitoba, 1870S-1910S","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43560229","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16122,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a host of journalists, ministers, medical doctors, businessmen, lawyers, labour leaders, politicians, and others called for an assault on poverty, slums, disreputable boarding houses, alcoholism, prostitution, sweatshop conditions, inadequate educational facilities, and other \"social evils.\" Although they represented an array of political positions and advocated a range of strategies to deal with what they deemed problems, historians have come to term this impulse \"urban reform\" or the \"urban reform movement\" Over the past several decades, there have developed two main approaches to the study of this flurry of activity in Canada. Some historians, mostly writing before the mid-ipSos, argued that it was an effort to reconstitute \"the nation,\" which arose in response to the anonymity and social conflict and ills apparent in modern, urban-industrial society. More recently, scholars have emphasized that in Canada reform often preceded urban-industrial development, and that the institutions that reformers supported, like later state agencies, were focused upon moral regulation and in particular fostering and sustaining a liberal order premised on patriarchal concepts of gender and related notions of race. This article demonstrates that important as urban industrial development and moral regulation were, understanding reform in Canada requires the addition of another layer of complexity to already existing analyses. In particular, it shows that we must conceive of Canadian reformers and their institutions as rooted in and shaped by a broader and longer history ofEuropean, and particularly British, imperialism. Pendant la p\u00e9riode couvrant la fin du dix-neuvi\u00e8me et le d\u00e9but du vingti\u00e8me si\u00e8cle, une quantit\u00e9 de journalistes, de ministres, de m\u00e9decins, d'hommes d'affaires, d'avocats, de dirigeants syndicaux, de politiciens et de membres d'autres professions ont r\u00e9clam\u00e9 une lutte \u00e0 la pauvret\u00e9, aux taudis, aux pensions de mauvaises r\u00e9putations, \u00e0 l'alcoolisme, \u00e0 la prostitution, aux mauvaises conditions de travail, \u00e0 l'infrastructure scolaire inad\u00e9quate et\u00e0 d'autres plaies sociales. Bien qu'ils aient repr\u00e9sent\u00e9 un \u00e9ventail de positions politiques et pr\u00e9conis\u00e9 toute une gamme de strat\u00e9gies pour s'attaquer \u00e0 ce qu'ils consid\u00e9raient des probl\u00e8mes, les historiens en sont venus \u00e0 nommer ce mouvement \u00ab r\u00e9forme urbaine \u00bb ou \u00ab mouvement de r\u00e9forme urbaine \u00bb. Au cours des d\u00e9cennies pass\u00e9es, les historiens ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 deux principales approches dans l'\u00e9tude de cette activit\u00e9 marqu\u00e9e au Canada. Certains historiens, \u00e9crivant surtout avant le milieu des ann\u00e9es So, ont avanc\u00e9 que ce mouvement correspondait \u00e0 un effort de reconstruire la nation, en r\u00e9ponse \u00e0 l'anonymat, aux conflits et aux maux sociaux \u00e9vidents de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 moderne, urbaine et industrielle. Plus r\u00e9cemment, les chercheurs ont mis en lumi\u00e8re qu'au Canada, la r\u00e9forme a souvent pr\u00e9c\u00e9d\u00e9 des d\u00e9veloppements urbains et industriels, et que les institutions soutenues par les r\u00e9formateurs, comme ult\u00e9rieurement les agences d'\u00e9tat, se pr\u00e9occupaient davantage de r\u00e9glementation en mati\u00e8re morale, d'assistance familiale et du maintien de l'ordre lib\u00e9ral, relevant de conceptions patriarcales de sexe et de race. Cet article montre que, aussi important que puissent \u00eatre le d\u00e9veloppement industriel urbain et la r\u00e9glementation morale, la compr\u00e9hension de la r\u00e9forme au Canada exige que l'on tienne compte d'une composante additionnelle de complexit\u00e9 qui a d\u00e9j\u00e0 fait l'objet d'analyses. En particulier, ces analyses montrent que nous devons concevoir les r\u00e9formateurs canadiens et leurs institutions en tant qu'enracin\u00e9s dans l'histoire de plus grande ampleur de l'imp\u00e9rialisme europ\u00e9en et en particulier de l'imp\u00e9rialisme britannique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marla Morris"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9215520-9f33-377d-b709-99635d5954a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature"],"title":"POSTCOLONIAL CURRICULUM CONCEPTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157337","volumeNumber":"499","wordCount":15843,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[520027,520091]],"Locations in B":[[83930,83996]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Ellis"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5845ea2-0dbe-37d5-a9dd-5a9ea239f9f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Produce of More than One Country\": Race, Identity, and Discourse in Post-Windrush Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225763","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amritjit Singh"],"datePublished":"1984-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44318060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8098c302-3278-3dbe-ac26-61ae7b918cfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44318060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RICHARD WRIGHT'S \"THE OUTSIDER\": EXISTENTIALIST EXEMPLAR OR CRITIQUE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44318060","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gamal Abdel-Shehid","Zahir Kolia"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18de0479-01f1-37d3-9b01-c9b3ac4c9651"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"In Light of the Master","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752152","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8188,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116689,116932]],"Locations in B":[[9169,9410]],"abstract":"While there has been significant literature concerning the relationship between Frantz Fanon and European philosophy; particularly, Marxism, psychoanalysis, phenomenology and existentialism, there has been little work addressing the influence of Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire to Fanon's work. In this essay we argue that C\u00e9saire's ethical sensibility concerning freedom and transformation had a major role in shaping Fanon's thought. We suggest that C\u00e9saire's work cannot be reduced to an essentialist reading of blackness, or a retrograde form of African nativism. Rather, we argue his anti-colonial philosophy can be understood as an \"ethics of acceptance\" that seeks to journey to the inward of human consciousness in order to transcend the black's negative self-concept under colonialism. Contrasting C\u00e9saire's ethics of acceptance, we trace Fanon's external ethics of confrontation through his reading of C\u00e9saire, and also the thought of Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. In doing so, we argue that Fanon departs from C\u00e9saire not based on the latter's conception of blackness, or n\u00e9gritude, but rather his ethics of acceptance.","subTitle":"Re-reading C\u00e9saire and Fanon","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen J. Scott"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8497f11a-47b1-3599-bd52-4bda60dd33dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1143","pageStart":"1141","pagination":"pp. 1141-1143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231339","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Castle"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00214183"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff1dd804-6a4a-3389-9017-71b80be7387c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25477988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoycq"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"665","pagination":"pp. 665-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Tulsa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coming of Age in the Age of Empire: Joyce's Modernist \"Bildungsroman\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25477988","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Peller"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372723","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9918bf33-b245-3699-9ef4-8fb742062715"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1372723"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":90.0,"pageEnd":"847","pageStart":"758","pagination":"pp. 758-847","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372723","volumeNumber":"1990","wordCount":45922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES H. CONE"],"datePublished":"1977-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24458316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24458316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"BLACK THEOLOGY AND THE BLACK CHURCH: Where Do We Go From Here?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24458316","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graeme Newman"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Punishment and Social Practice: On Hughes's \"The Fatal Shore\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828449","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10287,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALFRED W. TATUM"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44510446","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646209115"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55447df5-ceaa-38b7-9919-b74a240b8950"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44510446"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Engaging African American Males in Reading (Reprint)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44510446","volumeNumber":"195","wordCount":2766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Routledge"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e7ef586-55e9-3473-a436-c72ad403744a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"389","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-389","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geopoetics of Resistance: India's Baliapal Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644960","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Raboteau"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20204233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"97","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Searching for Zion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20204233","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Javier de Taboada"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce5eebc8-ba91-32f2-9b9e-d6eede71c4a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41407228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"73","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Tercer Cine: Tres Manifiestos","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41407228","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En los a\u00f1os 60, el cine latinoamericano se distancia de su tradici\u00f3n previa, construida a imitaci\u00f3n del modelo industrial de Hollywood, e irrumpe en el panorama del cine mundial. Nuevos cineastas plantean un cine pol\u00edtico que aborde las cuestiones sociales urgentes del momento y que rompa radicalmente la pasividad del espectador. La actividad de estos cineastas fue tanto pr\u00e1ctica como te\u00f3rica, esta \u00faltima expresada en manifiestos que replantean todo el proceso de realizaci\u00f3n cinematogr\u00e1fica, desde su producci\u00f3n hasta su exhibici\u00f3n. El presente trabajo analiza tres de los m\u00e1s influyentes de estos manifiestos, explorando sus posibilidades, l\u00edmites y contradicciones. In the 60s, Latin American cinema distances itself from its previous tradition, modeled around Hollywood's industry, and emerges into the landscape of World Cinema. New filmmakers propose a political cinema that addresses the urgent social problems of the time and radically breaks with the passivity of the spectator. The activity of these filmmakers was both practical and theoretical, the latter expressed in manifestos which rethink the whole filmmaking process, from production to exhibition. This essay analyzes three of the most influential manifestos, exploring their possibilities, limits and contradictions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marnia Lazreg"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"254cbc8b-8ec8-387e-b34d-6978f9928f14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45198826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE COLONIAL IN THE GLOBAL: WHERE DOES THE THIRD WORLD FIT IN?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198826","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6417,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[34310,34370]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AHMED ALI ILMI"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1d86eb7-4f20-333a-a1a7-0fffdd1dab7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER EIGHT: Rethinking Development: An Indigenous African Communal Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982053","volumeNumber":"443","wordCount":6382,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[39399,39463]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brenda Cooper"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"650dabba-6636-3f3d-a9e1-8018e42f22eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/219283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219283","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manfred Sing"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41105368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00432539"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61dfa556-e818-3744-974d-237f8cf908f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41105368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"weltislams"}],"isPartOf":"Die Welt des Islams","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"BRILL","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Brothers in Arms: How Palestinian Maoists Turned Jihadists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41105368","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":17326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"At the beginning of the 1980s, the idea of zrmed jih\u0101d against Israel was not only promoted by renegades from the Muslim Brothers in the Gaza strip, but also by former Maoists of Fatah in Lebanon. After the pull-out of most PLO-fighters from Beirut in 1982, a group around its spokesman Mun\u012br Shaf\u00ecq formed the Brigades of Islamic Jihad which were subsequently responsible for attacks in Israel. In a posthumously published booklet, two activists explained their reasons for their turn from Maoism to Islamism. The following article exposes the activists' trajectory and the stages of their ideological and religious conversion. According to their own narration, the former Maoists at first came to the conviction that Islam was a factor for mass mobilization and then individually adopted Islam to become practising Muslims.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758921","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dc68766-f24a-36ec-b8f5-42b3ad63ac4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758921"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Through the Zone of Nonbeing: A Reading of Black Skin, White Masks in Celebration of Fanon's Eightieth Birthday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758921","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":19688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dabcefc1-4580-3f32-a5cf-ddbe1d0b5033"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980009","volumeNumber":"208","wordCount":8282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine McKittrick"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.2.0016","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c32ab807-ac5a-309a-9b79-92e5e89fe17d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.44.2.0016"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mathematics Black Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.2.0016","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liza Schuster"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acde72c7-75a2-3466-83af-5a843f7623a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40646180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kindness to Strangers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40646180","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lemuel A. Johnson"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Shakespearean Imports: Whatever Happened to Caliban's Mother? Or, The Problem with Othello's","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820003","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":24071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwadwo Osei-Nyame, Jr."],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African 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\u05d4\u05e7\u05d8\u05d2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d6\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05d4\u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc. \u05ea\u05d7\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05de\u05d5\u05d1\u05d0\u05ea \u05e1\u05e7\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e7\u05e6\u05e8\u05d4 \u05dc\u05ea\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05d9\u05ea \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05ea\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05d6\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05dc\u05de\u05e6\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd. \u05d0\u05d7\u05e8-\u05db\u05da \u05e0\u05d9\u05d3\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05de\u05e6\u05d0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05de\u05e1\u05d2\u05e8\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d8\u05e8\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d1\u05e1\u05e1 \u05d0\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05dc \"\u05d4\u05e9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05db\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4\". \u05dc\u05e4\u05d9 \u05de\u05d5\u05d3\u05dc \u05d6\u05d4, \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05d5 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05d4\u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc \u05de\u05db\u05d9\u05dc\u05d4 \u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d1 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05e6\u05d3 \u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d1 \u05e4\u05dc\u05e1\u05d8\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9. \u05d1\u05e0\u05d9 \u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05d6\u05d4 \u05de\u05e0\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05e4\u05ea\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05ea\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d1\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05dc\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d0\u05de\u05e6\u05e2\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05e0\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05e4\u05e1\u05d9\u05db\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05de\u05e0\u05d8\u05dc\u05d9\u05d6\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4. \u05d4\u05de\u05e0\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d6\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05e1\u05d8\u05e8\u05d5\u05de\u05e0\u05d8\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d1\u05db\u05da \u05e9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d4 \u05dc\u05e7\u05d1\u05dc \u05d0\u05ea \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05dd \u05d4\u05db\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d4, \u05de\u05d1\u05dc\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05e0\u05e4\u05dc\u05d9\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4\u05e8\u05e0\u05d8\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5 \u05dc\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d7\u05dc\u05e7\u05d9\u05d4. \u05db\u05df \u05de\u05d5\u05e6\u05e2, \u05e9\u05d1\u05e0\u05d5\u05e1\u05e3 \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05e9\u05d2\u05ea \u05d9\u05e6\u05d9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d9, \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05e9\u05e8 \u05de\u05e0\u05d2\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05e4\u05e8\u05d8\u05de\u05e0\u05d8\u05dc\u05d9\u05d6\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05dc\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05e8\u05de\u05d4 \u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05d7\u05d4 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d3\u05e2\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05e2\u05e8\u05da \u05e2\u05e6\u05de\u05d9 \u05d7\u05d9\u05d5\u05d1\u05d9. The focus of the present article is on the self-categorization of the Palestinian minority in Israel. First, we present a brief review of Social Identity Theory, with special emphasis on the case of minorities. Subsequent analysis of relevant findings, within this framework, is utilized for substantiating a 'double marginality' model. According to this model, the collective identity of the Palestinian minority contains a marginal civic-Israeli component, alongside a marginal national-Palestinian component. It is proposed that minority members attempt to resolve the inherent conflict between these identities by adhering to the psychological defense mechanism of 'compartmentalization'. This mechanism is instrumental in the sense that it enables group members to accept their dual identity, without the need to experience its conflictual nature or to reconcile its conflicting components. Furthermore, it is proposed that in addition to achieving a critical stability of the self, compartmentalization enables group members to achieve a satisfactory degree of positive self-esteem.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Quito Swan"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jcivihumarigh.4.1.0037","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23784245"},{"name":"oclc","value":"907082458"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015200328"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f35b37c-d845-3aa6-9647-8ea5e4125066"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jcivihumarigh.4.1.0037"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcivihumarigh"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Civil and Human Rights","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Giving Berth: Fiji, Black Women's Internationalism, and the Pacific Women's Conference of 1975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jcivihumarigh.4.1.0037","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay is centered on Fiji's Pacific Women's Conference (PWC) of 1975. It adds to Africana scholarship by demonstrating how Black women's internationalism weaved across the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Ocean worlds. Organized by Fijian women such as Amelia Rokotuivuna, Claire Slatter, and Vanessa Griffen, the conference was a unified berth for Pacifica women to address the interlocking regional issues of gender, neocolonialism, ecological justice, human rights, ethnicity, race, culture, and sovereignty. These women helped transform Suva, Fiji, into a hub for Pacifica nationalist movements, such as the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific Movement (NFIP). They also attended the United Nations World Conference on Women in Mexico City (1975). Slatter and Griffen edited NFIP's newsletter, Povai, which became a collective voice for Melanesian, Polynesian, and Micronesian anticolonial struggles. The PWC occurred at a critical moment of Indigenous, Global South women's and anticolonial liberation struggles across the region. Conference participants represented political movements from across New Caledonia, New Hebrides, Tahiti, Micronesia, Papua New Guinea, New Zealand, Australia, and the Americas. They denounced French, Australian, American, British, and Indonesian (neo)colonialism and imperialism in the South Pacific. This highlighted the relationships between Oceanic, Asian, African American, Caribbean, and African liberation struggles.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mwenda Ntarangwi"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482701","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c3a93bc-c2db-3bb6-9490-6b8f2031f31b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482701"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"The Challenges of Education and Development in Post-Colonial Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482701","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7640,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Explorations of socio-cultural realities of many African countries in the post-colonial era reveal a very complex yet saddening reality. Poor infrastructure, large numbers of the local populations living below poverty lines, and continued civil and ethnic strife are some of the most prevalent identifiable markers of post-colonial Africa. This paper addresses the legacy of colonialism as manifested in the educational system of Kenya in the post-colonial era. I argue that although Kenya is an independent country, it is overly dependent on the West for its cultural and intellectual nourishment. I critically analyse the role of education in shaping a national sense of identity and as an agent for development. I show that the education system offered in Kenya needs a total overhaul in order to tap the best of its brains by recreating a new cultural orientation. Therefore, this paper examines, with examples from Kenya, the condition of post-coloniality as it relates to education and development, two concepts that are closely related in both national and individual discourses. I argue that through colonialism and post-colonialism, Kenyans have absorbed imperialist values that consequently condition them to think of 'development' as the process of shedding any traces of their unique traditions and cultural practices. This has led to a situation where majority of Kenyans have become schizophrenic members of a nation-state that tries to nurture citizens who strive to be Western and yet remain Kenyan. I also argue that even after three decades of political independence, Kenya's education system has not been able to tailor its content and pedagogy to the socio-economic and cultural realities of its people. Instead it continues to uphold an education system that is centered around schooling rather than learning and which consequently produces a people who are incapable of fitting into their own social environments. I often revert to the first person to articulate my own embeddedness in that which I am critiquing. L'\u00e9tude des r\u00e9alit\u00e9s socioculturelles d'un grand nombre de pays africains r\u00e9v\u00e8le une r\u00e9alit\u00e9 tr\u00e8s complexe et plut\u00f4t triste. L'Afrique post coloniale est caract\u00e9ris\u00e9e par de pauvres infrastructures, par le fait qu'une grande partie de ses populations locales vive en-dessous du seuil de pauvret\u00e9, mais \u00e9galement par les interminables conflits ethniques et civils. Cet article se penche sur l'h\u00e9ritage du colonialisme, tel qu'il se manifeste au niveau du syst\u00e8me \u00e9ducatif Kenyan, dans la p\u00e9riode post coloniale. J'explique que, m\u00eame si le Kenya est un pays ind\u00e9pendant, il d\u00e9pend excessivement de l'Occident, sur le plan culturel et intellectuel. J'analyse de mani\u00e8re critique le r\u00f4le de l'\u00e9ducation en tant que facteur de d\u00e9veloppement jouant un certain r\u00f4le dans la formation d'un sentiment d'appartenance nationale. J'explique que le syst\u00e8me \u00e9ducatif Kenyan doit \u00eatre r\u00e9organis\u00e9, afin de produire de bons \u00e9l\u00e9ments, en mettant en place une nouvelle orientation culturelle. Cette contribution examine ainsi la situation post coloniale, dans le domaine de l'\u00e9ducation et du d\u00e9veloppement, deux concepts intimement li\u00e9s, au niveau des discours nationaux et individuels. Je soutiens qu'\u00e0 travers le colonialisme et le post colonialisme, les Kenyans ont int\u00e9gr\u00e9 des valeurs imp\u00e9rialistes, qui les conditionnent \u00e0 concevoir le \u00ab d\u00e9veloppement \u00bb comme un processus n\u00e9cessitant la destruction de leurs traditions uniques et de leurs pratiques culturelles. Cela a cr\u00e9\u00e9 une situation o\u00f9 la majorit\u00e9 des Kenyans sont devenus des membres schizophr\u00e9niques d'un Etat-nation, favorisant les citoyens qui s'\u00e9vertuent \u00e0 devenir des occidentaux, tout en restant Kenyans. Apr\u00e8s trois d\u00e9cennies d'ind\u00e9pendance politique, le syst\u00e8me \u00e9ducatif Kenyan n'est toujours pas parvenu \u00e0 adapter son contenu et sa p\u00e9dagogie aux r\u00e9alit\u00e9s socio\u00e9conomiques et culturelles de sas population. Au lieu de cela, ce pays continue de faire valoir un syst\u00e8me \u00e9ducatif centr\u00e9 autour de l'instruction au lieu de l'apprentissage, et qui, par cons\u00e9quent, produit des individus incapables de s'adapter \u00e0 leur propre environnement social. J'emploie souvent la premi\u00e8re personne du singulier, pour d\u00e9crire mon ancrage dans ce syst\u00e8me m\u00eame que je critique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin McLean"],"datePublished":"1980-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3120361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071005"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50069179"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71456acb-ac4b-39e7-bb00-bc57ca709dd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3120361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjeducstud"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Educational Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Autonomy and the Education of Ethnic Minority Groups","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3120361","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2551,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Kammen"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"838b9b24-a6b0-3ccc-a04f-a284fb9063b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2713051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Problem of American Exceptionalism: A Reconsideration","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2713051","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":18372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT J. KRUSE II"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26225565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0038366X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"963e0251-d134-3bad-a5d3-780b25664140"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26225565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Southeastern Geographer","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Geographical Imagination of Barack Obama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26225565","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9459,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It has been noted that the geographical work on race and space has often overlooked the geographies of individual African-Americans. This paper adds to the literature on race and space by focusing upon Barack Obama, the 44th president of the United States. Unusual in many ways, Obama offers the opportunity to combine two types of analysis in this paper. First, his memoir, Dreams From My Father, is treated as a geographical text through which we may gain insight into his geographical imagination. Second, this paper discusses the spatialization of racial identities, particularly whiteness, that have informed the public\u2019s impressions of Obama. Together, these discussions may help us to understand the point at which Barack Obama\u2019s personal geographies intersect with larger racialized landscapes that show increasing hybridity and permeability.","subTitle":"Representing Race and Space in America","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neel Ahuja"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1d8ac12-d2c3-3324-b53c-a91f0fdde9ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25614298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"556","pagination":"pp. 556-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonial Critique in a Multispecies World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25614298","volumeNumber":"124","wordCount":4667,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[129816,130045],[130271,130460]],"Locations in B":[[5866,6088],[6146,6338]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["N. J. Udombana"],"datePublished":"2000-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02750392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33418941"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-4254"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4489300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humarighquar"}],"isPartOf":"Human Rights Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"787","pageStart":"753","pagination":"pp. 753-787","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Third World and the Right to Development: Agenda for the Next Millennium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4489300","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":15591,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609486,609537]],"Locations in B":[[57102,57153]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tarak Barkawi"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3569291","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3569291"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Pedagogy of 'Small Wars'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3569291","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":10243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that flawed western strategies for 'small wars', those fought in the non-European world, have been informed by illusions concerning the cultural, military and political superiority of the West. With 9\/11, such wars ceased to be small. The main threat to the western powers no longer emanates from other states organized along lines similar to their own, but from a transnational network enterprise that has its origins in the global South and the Islamic world. Nonetheless, old imperial and orientalist constructions continue to inform western and particularly US perceptions of the war on terror. 'Knowing thy enemy' and 'knowing thyself', Sun Tzu's formula for victory, requires abandoning flattering accounts of western identity and learning to empathize with those we call terrorists.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip C. Naylor"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25740971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00088080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45416719"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720d4e3c-036c-314e-87cf-2999d40058ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25740971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cathhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Catholic Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"742","pageStart":"720","pagination":"pp. 720-742","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Catholic University of America Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"BISHOP PIERRE CLAVERIE AND THE RISKS OF RELIGIOUS RECONCILIATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25740971","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":9518,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Bishop Pierre Claverie's life and death illustrated the challenge posed by interreligious dialogue, especially when pursued in a deteriorating political environment. Furthermore, the bishop embodied the inspiring history of the Church in Algeria, which sought to transform its identity during the trying transition from colonialism to postcolonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro Carlos Louzada Fonseca"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803395","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9dc75a3-4baf-344f-8cc9-70a0a46bc831"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803395"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"O FEMININO E A FEMINIZA\u00c7\u00c3O DA AM\u00c9RICA DOS DESCOBRIMENTOS E COLONIZA\u00c7\u00c3O","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803395","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":4674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GERRY MCCARTHY"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20768855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03322580"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5115af5-c5f4-34b8-890e-0921b6713561"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20768855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"corkreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Cork Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-43, 45-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Triskel Arts Centre","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Arts","Irish Studies","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"UNIMAGINING IRELAND: FAMINISM IN GUTENBERG GHETTO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20768855","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Athanasopoulos"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671614","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73b8baf3-a632-3674-9955-451d15d92fe1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\u201cA Program of Complete Disorder\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671614","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[117442,117546]],"Locations in B":[[32365,32472]],"abstract":"This essay examines the scholarship of revolutionary theorist Frantz Fanon and the debate surrounding his conception of decolonization and \u201cnew humanism.\u201d Across a multitude of fields, Black and cultural studies among them, Fanon has been heralded as an iconic thinker who offers us a path toward an alternative humanity. Working against the grain of this popular form of Fanonism, I suggest that there is a Black iconoclasm\u2014a deep desire to unsettle the very rendering of a systematic path toward decolonization\u2014that pervades Fanonian thought. Accordingly, the essay examines and unsettles various forms of Fanonism by suggesting that their teleological narratives of redemption ultimately end up serving anti-Fanonian pursuits. Through an extended meditation on Fanon\u2019s claim that decolonization is \u201ca program of complete disorder,\u201d I explore what it might mean to embrace a Black iconoclastic approach to Fanon and the pursuit of Black liberation.","subTitle":"The Black Iconoclasm Within Fanonian Thought","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amy Washburn"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e5088e1-e4df-3cfb-80b4-ed73747a9edf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Pen of the Panther: Barriers and Freedom in the Prison Poetry of Ericka Huggins","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0051","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10225,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cilas Kemedjio","R. H. Mitsch"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonial Mythologies: Jean Metellus and the Writing of Charismatic Memory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821347","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The movements for cultural and political emancipation that led to the abolition of slavery as well as the independences grew out of a charismatic scenario, which in this essay means that the struggle for freedom was centered around a charismatic figure. Postcolonial mythologies are thus to be understood as an attempt to re-appropriate decolonization through the formulation of a new imaginary in the postcolony. The present study intends to analyze, from the writings of Haitian writer Jean Metellus, the process of mythification (of historical heroism, the crystallization of the founding figure of Jean-Jacques Dessalines as a catalyst of new existential, historic, and symbolic legitimacies. The strategies of marginalization set in place by postindependence authorities, the contemporary context of failure that lends credibility anew to the nostalgia for these messianic figures, and the limits of postcolonial mythology constitute the main points of this study.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ted Robert Gurr"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7764f400-b7dd-3091-b30b-5c3ecc51d0b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Revolution. Social-Change Nexus: Some Old Theories and New Hypotheses","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421270","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":14168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Hansen"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon: Portrait of a Revolutionary Intellectual","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934953","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAHMOOD MAMDANI"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccdb96eb-75fd-32c5-9ac1-196e509ba940"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40971353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"886","pageStart":"859","pagination":"pp. 859-886","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Historicizing Power and Responses to Power: Indirect Rule and Its Reform","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971353","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9749,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert H. Stroup","Richard E. Gift"],"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1152926","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49349450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed105f31-a34f-3971-a638-455e4d19adde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1152926"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econdevecultchan"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Development and Cultural Change","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"423","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-423","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Applied sciences - Engineering","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Underemployment in Rural South Vietnam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1152926","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles C. Verharen"],"datePublished":"2002-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"605d49a4-a64d-367d-9e69-5a7f636e1c04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Black to the Future: A Philosophy for a Global Village","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180934","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6984,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aim of this article is to look for common ground in the philosophies advanced by Africans in the diaspora. The Africana response to racism establishes a tradition of resistance to oppression, grounded in a philosophy of freedom. What is the meaning of being Black in the world's future? What new philosophy emerges out of Africana experience? Challenging the orthodoxy of racist ideology, this article argues that Afrocentricity allows one to embrace the divergent cultural experiences of a global village.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis G. Snyder"],"datePublished":"1980-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3053197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a402e21e-21a2-3011-9c74-20d0051d5764"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3053197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":82.0,"pageEnd":"804","pageStart":"723","pagination":"pp. 723-804","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law and Development in the Light of Dependency Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3053197","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":38026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Post-World War II theories of modernization, including theories of law and development, have proved inadequate either to explain development and underdevelopment or to make a substantial contribution to our understanding of the role of law in underdeveloped countries. To what extent do contemporary ideas of underdevelopment and dependency in the social sciences provide the foundation for a theoretical renewal in the comparative sociology of law? To answer this question, the paper first examines the origins of these ideas and discusses the methods, presuppositions, and concepts of the principal theoretical writings on underdevelopment and dependency. It then considers two important issues raised by these writings and addressed by a number of recent studies: the relation between the state and classes, and the relationship of peasants to capitalism. This review concludes that theories of underdevelopment and dependency contribute to the reorientation of social research on law by forcing a reappraisal of previous ideologies and proposing new frameworks of analysis. But it also argues that such a reorientation must ultimately transcend those concepts by participating in the elaboration of Marxist theories of law.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phil Brown"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130389","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dac92a33-9bc8-31ca-b736-cd0c5ee383ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130389"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MARXISM, SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, AND THE SOCIOLOGY OF MENTAL HEALTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130389","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14773,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The political activism of the 1960s brought with it activism in the mental health field, broadly defined as antipsychiatry. Included in this social phenomenon are R.D. Laing and his colleagues, mental patients' rights activists, movements against psychotechnological abuses such as psychosurgery, Marxist and radical critiques of mainstream psychiatric practices, and feminist therapy. Some aspects of this broad movement have been influenced or even directed by Marxist perspectives. When Marxist influences have not predominated, antipsychiatric points of veiw still have much affinity with Marxism. This broad-based criticism of mental health practices and ideologies not only influences the mental health field, but also affects general Marxist social theory, adding to traditional Marxism a concern with feminist issues and the politics of personal and family life. This article explores the progress made by these antipsychiatric perspectives, and examines their limitations as well. Four schools of thought in Marxist psychology\u2014Freudo-Marxism, orthodox-economist Marxism, see Marxist medical model, and \"ideology-critique\"\u2014are explored to see how they can contribute to the further production of Marxist psychological theory and practice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronaldo Munck"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09bc09a8-5204-31b1-b3a9-d70aa390d7a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27648116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Deconstructing Violence: Power, Force, and Social Transformation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27648116","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diptendra Banerjee"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44139940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"22491937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e487d06-656a-30ed-84f6-53fe3cee9680"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44139940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procindihistcong"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Indian History Congress","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Indian History Congress","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: THE HISTORICAL PROBLEMATIC OF THIRD WORLD DEVELOPMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44139940","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":21009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Balabanis","Adamantios Diamantopoulos"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966594","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1069031X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42611504"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-214069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bf1e8b4-446f-39e0-97f1-eab7486960fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43966594"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintermarket"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Marketing","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Marketing Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Marketing & Advertising","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Consumer Xenocentrism as Determinant of Foreign Product Preference: A System Justification Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43966594","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Foreign and domestic product purchase behavior largely depends on consumer predispositions. The dominant construct in international marketing literature explaining such behavior has been consumer ethnocentrism, which is conceptually anchored in social identity theory. However, such a perspective overlooks evidence that certain consumers are consistently attracted by the \"foreignness\" of a product. Drawing from system justification theory, the present investigation conceptualizes and provides an empirical test of the consumer xenocentrism construct that is intended to explain consumer attraction toward foreign products. Using survey data from five complementary studies, the authors develop and validate a new scale (the C-XENSCALE) to measure consumers' xenocentric tendencies and offer extensive evidence on its ability to explain consumer preferences for foreign products. The authors discuss implications of the findings for theory and managerial practice and identify future research directions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip Pomper"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2505431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"World History and Its Critics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2505431","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzy Kim"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559530872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69270923-0f09-3692-aa84-4eea0424c321"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43923272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies (1979-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Center for Korean Research in the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mothers and Maidens: Gendered Formation of Revolutionary Heroes in North Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923272","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"North Korean political discourse is distinctive in its application of maternalism across genders in which motherhood is depicted as an ideal model for men as well as women. This article seeks to explain how motherhood has been redefined in the process of North Korean nation building, and what influences this process has had on the formation of gendered identities as part of modern subjectivity. The following research examines two of the three so-called great classics of anti-Japanese revolutionary works, Sea of Blood (P'ibada) and The Flower Girl (Kkot p'an\u016dn ch'\u014fny\u014f), to compare the two female heroines and their roles as consummate revolutionaries. Reported to have originated as stage plays during the 1930s anticolonial guerrilla struggle in Manchuria, throughout the 1970s the plays developed into films, live operatic performances, and finally novels. While the works may officially serve to project images of national unity against imperialism, they raise interesting questions about the role of gender in postcolonial state formation. By comparing the mother in Sea of Blood and the maiden in The Flower Girl, this article explores the significance of gender in the construction of modern militarized citizenship in North Korea.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Simoes da Silva"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95c91673-6518-334f-ae34-3db92fdea004"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"999","pageStart":"997","pagination":"pp. 997-999","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"... New Criticism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557399","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":2255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew C. Reilly"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44169294"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"448b9703-6062-3d62-8ade-e70e67a92756"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26174262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"\"Poor White\" Recollections and Artifact Reuse in Barbados: Considerations for Archaeologies of Poverty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26174262","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Archaeologists regularly confront the material realities of economic inequality. This article contributes to a growing body of literature on the archaeology of poverty but challenges archaeologists to consider how such approaches are politically weighted and directly come to bear on how communities experience economic hardship in the present. Additionally, through a case study of a \"poor white\" tenantry in Barbados, this article suggests that material culture from sites associated with people of limited economic means necessitates alternative interpretive methods that combine archaeological, historical, and oral sources.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Debal K. SinghaRoy"],"datePublished":"2005-12-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4417584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"990bb9ea-34ea-30bf-9de1-fbc179569678"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4417584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"5513","pageStart":"5505","pagination":"pp. 5505-5513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peasant Movements in Contemporary India: Emerging Forms of Domination and Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4417584","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines ways in which peasant movements transform, institutionalise themselves, forge new collective identities and articulate new strategies to ensure peasant survival and resistance against domination in contemporary India. Focusing on four villages that were witness to the Tebhaga, Telangana and the Naxalite movements it sociologically analyses the socio-economic status of the peasantry, nature of their participation in those movements and processes of articulation of resistance against the emerging structure of domination in the wider state-level context.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GREG DENING"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41054020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18389554"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d8b657-b71b-3a11-bd4f-211f4ac626f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41054020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austjamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Australasian Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PERFORMING CROSS-CULTURALLY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41054020","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":4670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CAROL RAISH","ALICE M. MCSWEENEY"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24889589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00280739"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52637785"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007266036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98f4beba-081b-3734-ab33-e018ade8b95d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24889589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"naturesoj"}],"isPartOf":"Natural Resources Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"1055","pageStart":"1039","pagination":"pp. 1039-1055","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Regents of the University of New Mexico on behalf of its School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Social Sciences","Environmental Studies","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Land Grants and the U. S. Forest Service","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24889589","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The U.S. Forest Service (Forest Service) has a long, shared history with the land grants of northern New Mexico. During the land grant adjudication process after U.S. conquest, much common land from both Spanish and Mexican land grants was declared public domain, eventually becoming part of the northern and central New Mexico National Forests. These forests were established during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Other lands went into private ownership and were later sold to the government. This paper focuses on the contemporary situation concerning land grants and the Forest Service. We explore current land-loss issues through the theoretical and historical framework of other indigenous cultures, whose experience with a colonizing force mirrors that of the initial northern New Mexico land grantees. This paper presents interview results with land grant heirs, now grazing permittees on the Carson and Santa Fe National Forests, and with Forest Service personnel in terms of resolving land- and resource-loss problems. A federal solution might include compromise on both sides for present-day problems deriving from past actions and policies of the Forest Service. We explore the question: Is there a middle ground or some area of agreement that would lower tensions and ameliorate, if not resolve, the conflict between land grant heirs and the federal government?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eli Park Sorensen"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b61c102-5b1c-3152-818a-3e697b727ae0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Naturalism and Temporality in Ousmane Semb\u00e8ne's Xala<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.222","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"AbstractThe article analyzes and discusses Ousmane Semb\u00e8ne's Xala, a satirical novel that ruthlessly exposes the many obstacles littered along Senegal's path towards an independent identity. Focusing on the novel's inspiration from Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth, as well as\u2014more indirectly\u2014Georg Luk\u00e1cs's critique of naturalism, the article argues that Xala's literary form explores the links between ideologically disjointed temporal and spatial dimensions, which can only be re-connected negatively, through a principle embodied symbolically in the figure of the xala (meaning the curse of impotence). By bringing together different, and mutually exclusive, dimensions, the literary form of Xala traces the underlying causes and effects of neocolonialism a decade after Senegal gained independence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenan Malik"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b086ec0-3ece-330b-ae4b-91cee523f87c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20097717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Universalism and Difference in Discourses of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20097717","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12440,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[605028,605134]],"Locations in B":[[55958,56063]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Parimal Ghosh"],"datePublished":"1990-07-28","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4396554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a920b58-d47d-3ba3-8758-8a4361741757"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4396554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"PE72","pageStart":"PE61","pagination":"pp. PE61-PE72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"Communalism and Colonial Labour: Experience of Calcutta Jute Mill Workers, 1880-1930","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4396554","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":17691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper attempts to find out to what extent colonialism dominated the milieu of jute mill workers in Calcutta. It is shown that, the two selves of the mill worker-of the peasant and of the worker-were both situated in contexts where colonialism was the biggest determinant. The peasant in north Bihar could experience for himself the tacit alliance between the state, the planter and the landlord operating in his daily life. When he came to the city, he again could see a different version of the same alliance dominating him. It is in this context that the jute mill workers' communal involvement should be placed. His community orientation may have been part of his pre-bourgeois self, but this was no unalloyed extra-colonial nativity. On the contrary, it functioned within the colonial framework, and blossomed under its dispensation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah A Radcliffe"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d75a6db-d8d7-3c42-821d-bf7ec3c6fedc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41678637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Relating to the land: multiple geographical imaginations and lived-in landscapes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41678637","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":4109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne McClintock"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"31\/32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Angel of Progress: Pitfalls of the Term \"Post-Colonialism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466219","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter O\u2019Brien"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1kft8dx.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781439912768"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23ef4b9e-e882-3daa-8dda-3672c19d1a86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1kft8dx.7"}],"isPartOf":"The Muslim Question in Europe","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"104","pagination":"104-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Veil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1kft8dx.7","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholarship on policies regulating Islamic veiling in Europe exhibits the propensity to impose order on what is actually a messy reality. Christian Joppke (2009: vii), for instance, points to distinct national approaches in \u201cRepublican France,\u201d \u201cChristian-Occidental Germany,\u201d and \u201cMulticultural Britain.\u201d Similarly, Schirin Amir-Moazami (2007: 35\u201338) insists on the critical differences between a discourse based on \u201cabstract universalism\u201d in France compared to an \u201cethnic-cultural\u201d idiom in Germany. Sawitri Saharso (2007: 527) differentiates between the Netherlands\u2019 \u201cmulticultural\u201d and Germany\u2019s \u201cethno-cultural\u201d model (also see Collet 2004). Anna Korteweg and G\u00f6k\u00e7e Yurdakul (2014) contend that France, Turkey, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["veiling","islamic","headscarf","quoted","joppke","schools","burqa ban","female muslims","public","religious"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brent Hayes Edwards"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire and the Syntax of Influence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131136","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Much of the criticism on Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire's Cahier d'un retour au pays natal focuses on the poem's linguistic innovation, especially its use of neologism. This paper considers the poem's syntax, its unusual and sometimes disorienting ways of organizing the links between sentence elements and between individual poetic lines. In this regard, the Cahier's recourse to anaphora is one of its features that has had the most influence on the work of other African diasporic writers. Looking in detail at the function of anaphora in the poem, especially in the crucial lines defining the term n\u00e9gritude, I suggest that C\u00e9saire's use of formal repetition is related both to his translation of a poem by Sterling Brown, and to his reading of Hegel's concept of \"negative determination.\" I then read the ways a C\u00e9sairean poetics of anaphora is appropriated, translated, and revised by other New World black writers, including Edward Kamau Brathwaite, C. L. R. James, and Will Alexander.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khytie K. Brown"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.125.1.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ebe58b8-ca44-3f3a-bc31-c98f3e30b10b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/transition.125.1.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"125","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Spirit of Dancehall: embodying a new nomos<\/em> in Jamaica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/transition.125.1.04","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5305,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Khytie K. Brown investigates dancehall subculture in Kingston, Jamaica as a novel arena where ritualized bodies address existential questions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Wells Borden"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad8bbd99-dce2-3e94-ac98-5fa65c1ac5dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"431","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-431","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Rhetoric in the 1960s: Sociohistorical Perspectives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783854","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":2915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Kahana"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2005.59.2.19","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94aed5b1-fd13-3a69-a23b-f00892a195ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2005.59.2.19"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cinema and The Ethics of Listening: Isaac Julien's Frantz Fanon<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2005.59.2.19","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":10094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Sound production and reception are central to the film and video work of Isaac Julien. In his film biography of Frantz Fanon, unconventional uses of documentary sound carry Julien's challenge to the cinematic theory of the gaze, and to the visual social order re-flected in it.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Camille","Zeynep \u00c7elik","John Onians","Adrian Rifkin","Christopher B. Steiner"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b761a9-6b3b-39ab-93de-63d53e075ac3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3046172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rethinking the Canon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3046172","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":18499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Andrews"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27871135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1414381b-8be6-3f1a-ae1a-5a05cec12573"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27871135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ceci n'est pas un Indien","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27871135","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":2687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adeshina Afolayan"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.01","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f09df58-3aba-32ea-bca5-065d858c06c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.01"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Abiola Irele and the Context of African Philosophy Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.01","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The objective of this essay is to inscribe Abiola Irele into the African philosophical discourse through a philosophical scrutiny of his own negritude analysis. And the justification for this exercise goes beyond the attempt to recognize the philosophical import of Irele's literary oeuvres. It is also a significant attempt at challenging the parochial arrogance of (African) philosophy, which hinges the term \u201cphilosopher\u201d around the narrow qualification of being a professional philosopher. The significance of expanding the African philosophical discourse creates the possibility for a transdisciplinary space that allows for a multifaceted confrontation of the African predicament around the discipline of philosophy. Grounded on the idea of discourse as \u201cthe continued, enduring and interactive exchange, creation, and debate of shared interpretations (meanings),\u201d the essay outlines a sense in which Irele's critical analysis of negritude can serve as a means by which we can update the lopsided critique of ethnophilosophy. This makes it possible to reintroduce the significance of Africa's self-imperative within the urgency of modern consciousness.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kamal Abdel-Malek"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fab3c658-70bd-3ff1-893e-47083fd28bc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4183516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"244","pagination":"pp. 244-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183516","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":1312,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Micah S. Tsomondo"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"262fdaaf-2d08-3ac8-8655-06aec6c932ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Pan-Africanism to Socialism: The Modernization of an African Liberation Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166523","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert C. Oberst"],"datePublished":"1985-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2758263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030851X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41670084"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e44c3559-1b61-3259-bad1-01e9a590d6c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2758263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Pacific Affairs, University of British Columbia","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Legislative Behavior and Ethnicity in a Third World Democracy-Sri Lanka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2758263","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":9606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn Worsham"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389271","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43a15b08-8965-32d9-88f8-327cbc9e3dd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389271"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Emotion and Pedagogic Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389271","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugen Weber"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/260045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"245a0857-39b8-3eab-af96-e766ee884760"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/260045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolution? Counterrevolution? What Revolution?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/260045","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":16624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Markus Nehl"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt1v.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837636666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f830ea49-12c9-3948-8bba-ec61a1349943"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1wxt1v.10"}],"isPartOf":"Transnational Black Dialogues","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"161","pagination":"161-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Vicious Circle of Violence:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt1v.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u201cI am more interested in darker subjects than brighter ones,\u201d the Jamaican author Marlon James contends in a 2006 interview, \u201cbecause somewhere in that shadow is a story.\u201d\u00b9 Highlighting the extreme brutality of slavery and British colonial rule in late eighteenth-century Jamaica, his prize-winning novel The Book of Night Women<\/em> (2009) explores one of the darkest and most painful chapters of Caribbean and modern transatlantic history. Set between 1784 and 1801, James\u2019s text focuses on the fate of Lilith, the daughter of a slave woman\u2014who dies giving birth to her child\u2014and a tyrannical and sadistic white overseer, Jack","subTitle":"Revisiting Jamaican Slavery in Marlon James\u2019s The Book of Night Women (2009)","keyphrase":["night women","slaves","burnard mastery","mastery tyranny","lilith","violence","slavery","jamaica","burnard mastery tyranny","caribbean"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6ee51ab-6ad8-3a11-a911-3e37765456af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40239047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nadine Gordimer: The Mandela Myth and Black Empowerment in Post-Apartheid South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239047","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan B. Fenderson","Candace Katungi"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a4b953a-0ebf-33e5-b6ab-b08067c02577"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43525478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":47.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Committed to Institution Building\": James Turner and the History of Africana Studies at Cornell University, an Interview","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525478","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":26112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"James Turner has been at the center of the modern Black Studies Movement since its emergence in the 1960s, as an extension of the Black Power Movement. Since his days as a student activist at Northwestern University he has remained a consistent voice in the struggle to expand the discipline and re-write scholarship on the people of Africa and the African Diaspora. This detailed oral history interview chronicles the life of the initiator of the term \"Africana Studies\" and the founding director of Cornell University's Africana Studies and Research Center. Aside from addressing contemporary debates and interrogating his own writings in this area, the interview also draws parallels between Turner's unique career as a scholar-activist and the experiences of others working in African-American, African Diaspora and Africana Studies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mona Takieddine-Amyuni"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"593d8ba0-1b39-3e2d-ba2f-4fc05131c641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41857525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tayeb Salih's \"Season of Migration to the North\": An Interpretation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857525","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Duanfang Lu"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01081fe3-d4e8-3039-ba67-35dc76124a7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40480706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Third World Modernism: Utopia, Modernity, and the People's Commune in China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40480706","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":7546,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores an intriguing aspect of Third World modernism\u2014 the utopianization of modernity\u2014 through an investigation into the people's commune movement launched in China in 1958. Concurrent with sweeping institutional changes, architects and planners boldly experimented with modernist design between 1958 and 1960. By looking into the curious combination of Utopian and modernist elements in the commune movement the study reveals that the mass Utopia intensified some of the most tragic contradictions of Chinese modernity. The article argues that the failure of commune design led to a new conceptual distinction between the Modernism of the West and that of the Third World in Chinese architectural discourse.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henning Melber"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4b9b7c6-ddbf-37d8-9ec9-ebc9947ab5b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23055122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"127","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Namibia: a trust betrayed \u2014 again?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055122","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Hanson"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d6b007b-3c64-3751-bc02-1f4134f715a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40212397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Suppose James Brown Read Fanon: The Black Arts Movement, Cultural Nationalism and the Failure of Popular Musical Praxis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40212397","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":15376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the articulation of politics and sound became explicitly marked during the civil rights transition to embryonic types of racial nationalism, black power and the novel forms of 'citizenship' implied therein. Music mediated and registered these critical shifts in political outlook, structural change and black collectivity. Yet, despite the power of black soundings to communicate or gesture toward a particular political sensibility, black popular music in particular remained elusive to those political workers most invested in identifying the articulations of popular sound aesthetics and the masses. Popular music, and soul culture more generally, frustrated nationalist efforts at enlisting the black masses, a failure that paradoxically reflected black nationalism's inability to appeal to and enlist the political potential of the mass black public that it so valorised. This article explores the political-aesthetic interface particularly as it played out in the relationship between cultural nationalism and black popular music. This relationship offers a powerful index of the correspondence and dissonance between the political intentions of nationalist political workers and the political desires of the urban masses. It is argued that both the formal attempts at producing revolutionary cultural products and the broader influence and reception that black nationalist politics had within the field of black popular culture were in significant ways less communicative of collective political will and desire than emergent popular musical formations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arthur Riss"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Art of Discrimination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029929","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":16278,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[87472,87532]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard A. Brosio"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6eb9337-afc6-3508-8049-582ebf406733"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Six: Liberationists: Freire and Various Spiritualists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976142","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":21381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danielle Ross","James Stone"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf874e34-7665-361f-9421-871bd2958dfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Viewing Teza<\/em>, Reading Fanon: Ten Questions for Haile Gerima's Cinema (A Study Guide)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.4.2.137","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":2994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This brief study guide is designed to engage audiences of Haile Gerima's film Teza in a critical analysis inspired by some of the classical critical insights put forth by Frantz Fanon. It is comprised of ten questions that encourage viewers to move beyond the entertainment value of the film and of necessity to reflect on its sociopolitical significance with regard to African people throughout the world. All of Gerima's work consistently depicts the lives of black people from a Pan-African perspective. Teza could perhaps be his magnum opus. It is committed to sharpening African people's consciousness and cultivating the desire to build a new social order, worldwide. Fanon's own work expressed revolutionary insights on the conditions of colonized and racialized African and Third World subjects at large. Gerima continues this tradition by depicting Fanon's insights cinematically. Moreover, not only does Gerima subvert the juggernaut film establishment by distributing his and other films independently, he does so as well by taking his films directly to those communities he represents for exhibition and collective discussion. Therefore, this brief study guide can be used as a critical tool that upholds Fanon's revolutionary, anticolonialist insights and fosters in-depth discussions of Gerima's cinema, particularly among those Global African communities affected by colonialism, neocolonialism, or imperialism today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelson Maldonado-Torres"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5935df4f-11cf-30bc-9b73-847581b2e825"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24586119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"711","pageStart":"691","pagination":"pp. 691-711","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"RACE, RELIGION, AND ETHICS IN THE MODERN\/COLONIAL WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24586119","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The concept of religion as an anthropological category and the idea of race as an organizing principle of human identification and social organization played a major role in the formation of modern\/colonial systems of symbolic representation that acquired global significance with the expansion of Western modernity. The modern concepts of religion and race were mutually constituted and together became two of the most central categories in drawing maps of subjectivity, alterity, and sub-alterity in the modern world. This makes the critical theory of religion highly relevant for the theory of race, and both of them crucial for ethics. It follows from this, not only that religion and race have been profoundly intertwined in modernity, but also that any ethics that seeks to take seriously the challenges created by modernity\/coloniality has to be, at least to some extent, decolonial.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tade Akin Aina"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90094e29-07ad-3999-b29f-feb2843c16ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Scales of Suffering, Orders of Emancipation: Critical Issues in Democratic Development in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487378","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gavin Williams"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08c00a0f-b4dc-3302-9fcc-55cd97678e5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3997974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997974","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3807,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marnia Lazreg"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"418e1bf5-9571-3647-b76c-8a43e0824c51"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"780","pageStart":"755","pagination":"pp. 755-780","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Politics in Algeria: Unraveling the Religious Paradigm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174641","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean G. Zorn"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/828696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Lawyers, Anthropologists, and the Study of Law: Encounters in the New Guinea Highlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/828696","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":18588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pi-chao Chen"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eed817b8-e38a-3cc1-8ce8-9677bc8c5336"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Overurbanization, Rustication of Urban-Educated Youths, and Politics of Rural Transformation: The Case of China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421558","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. E. SEIGEL"],"datePublished":"1968-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d0689e8-da53-38d9-8985-de4c56c6bfac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41209632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The American Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"The Phi Beta Kappa Society","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209632","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HOWARD SIMSON"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc27629b-e0f8-3803-a0ec-9ace613fa559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fascism in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341292","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":14996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OKELLO OCULI"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971970","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfd88715-02b1-36bc-98b9-cb3ed3776019"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40971970"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"1296","pageStart":"1277","pagination":"pp. 1277-1296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Narrative on \"Shame\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40971970","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":5943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger A. Berger"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Contemporary Anglophone Literary Theory: The Return of Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819307","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4380,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paget Henry"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758839","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31569977-4464-3d0e-8e08-e099d9ec6734"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758839"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Africana Phenomenology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758839","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":14012,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[84065,84110]],"abstract":"This paper examines the long dialogue between Africana phenomenology and Africana feminism. In particular, it examines the exchanges between WEB Du Bois, Frantz Fanon, Lewis Gordon and Sylvia Wynter on the one hand, and a number of black feminists on the other, including bell hooks, Natasha Barnes, Farrah Griffin, and Joy James. The primary outcome of the survey of these exchanges is that the pro-feminist spaces created by black male phenomenologists have all been insufficient for the full representation of the black female voice. In the words of Sylvia Wynter, such a full representation can only come through \u201ca feminism in its own name\u201d.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emilio del Valle Escalante"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808575","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5660f4a6-95e2-3695-a0c6-615488777ba0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43808575"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"157","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE DISCURSIVE ECONOMY OF MAYA \"CULTURALES\" IN GUATEMALA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43808575","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5926,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Calder\u00f3n-Zaks"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163918","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48f3d656-0721-3959-9d26-7e3cbd5b765b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163918"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Domestic Colonialism: The Overlooked Significance of Robert L. Allen's Contributions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163918","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6859,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[37593,37725]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Enrica Capussotti","Liliana Ellena"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01417789"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40348469"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238476"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa9ed062-c2bf-34c1-bd7d-c23da067d4ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1396005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministreview"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Review","issueNumber":"73","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Way of Oblivion: Refugees in Italy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1396005","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EARL OFARI"],"datePublished":"1972-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163496","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15364cbd-a451-3afc-ab68-0242b3b0116e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163496"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MARXISM-LENINISM--THE KEY TO BLACK LIBERATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163496","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":7393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tsitsi Jaji"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9982092-6089-3144-86a2-4a4131df9e35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cassava Westerns: Ways of Watching Abderrahmane Sissako","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.154","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":11712,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[68390,68444]],"abstract":"Abstract This essay takes Mauritanian filmmaker Abderrahmane Sissako's statements about the impression Spaghetti Westerns made on him as a teen as an entry point to consider new insights into Sissako's films that emerge when they are viewed comparatively through the genre convention of the western. Rather than arguing that Sissako seeks to fulfill or depart from such conventions, the essay shows that Sissako's experience of the genre is in fact common to a number of West African artists and that his approach to landscape, quest narratives, and seriality resonate with the Spaghetti Western genre. Yet the influence of key francophone thinkers like Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire and Frantz Fanon is equally strong in Sissako's work. The political engagement that motivated many Italian directors is transmuted in Sissako's work to address the slow violence of globalization, using familiar generic tropes to anchor viewers confronted with cross-genre, self-reflexive, and open-ended films.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carolyn Martin Shaw"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"You Had a Daughter, but I Am Becoming a Woman\": Sexuality, Feminism and Postcoloniality in Tsitsi Dangarembga's \"Nervous Conditions\" and \"She No Longer Weeps\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109535","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this paper, an anthropologist examines sexuality, feminist consciousness, and postcolonial politics in Tsitsi Dangarembga's \"Nervous Conditions\" and in her earlier play, \"She No Longer Weeps\". In both works, sexuality offers the promise of freedom, entails a loss of security, and delivers punishment. Reading the novel in light of the play provides insight into the sexual tension in the father-daughter relationship and suggests that Nyasha's nervous condition is in good part derived from the opposition between becoming a woman and being a daughter. Dangarembga's feminism, expressed through the power of speaking up and the erotic as power, has traces of the work of Audre Lorde, which Dangarembga uses and critiques. When directly addressing postcolonial Zimbabwe, feminism is vital to Dangarembga, but other forces, such as rampant corruption and state violence, form the backdrop for family dynamics. In the play, Dangarembga satirizes women's groups even as she points to the new government's betrayal of women.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cynthia Tolentino"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Road out of the Black Belt: Sociology's Fictions and Black Subjectivity in \"Native Son\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346170","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":14492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Morris"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2385744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00270741"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42882501"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23444"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe176e77-a814-343e-bd0c-b3dd8dece3be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2385744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monunipp"}],"isPartOf":"Monumenta Nipponica","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"547","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-547","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sophia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Her Story So Far","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2385744","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":9459,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R\u00e9gine Jean-Charles"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a57ccf14-2b90-386f-a678-a1b319c526a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"They Never Call It Rape: Critical Reception and Representation of Sexual Violence in Marie Vieux-Chauvet's \"Amour, Col\u00e8re et Folie\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715326","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7810,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Sked"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03504bf7-c908-31e1-ac50-edcd6db4a846"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43697307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"440","pagination":"pp. 440-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race in America: From Civil War to Civil Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697307","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7292,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Modupe O. Olaogun"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Irony and Schizophrenia in Bessie Head's \"Maru\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819868","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bal\u00e1zs Majt\u00e9nyi","Gy\u00f6rgy Majt\u00e9nyi"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7829\/j.ctt1d4txpm.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789633861226"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75dea028-0628-302c-a63d-be643083f029"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7829\/j.ctt1d4txpm.8"}],"isPartOf":"A Contemporary History of Exclusion","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"187","pagination":"187-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Panopticon:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7829\/j.ctt1d4txpm.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"There are many ways of conceptualizing the state: some explain it through its operations, existence and institutions. In Foucault\u2019s writing we encounter a concept borrowed from Bentham: the metaphor for the state is the panopticon. This word is derived from ancient Greek for \u201call\u201d (pan) and \u201cview\u201d (opticon). According to this approach institutions create a unique order in society. A massive building in the form of a ring encircles a central tower. It contains small cells, each with two windows, one looking outward and the other looking in, one letting light in from outside, the other making the prisoner visible","subTitle":"Roma Policy, 2010\u20132015","keyphrase":["hungarian","fundamental law","bookindb","minority","national","ethnic","rights","national avowal","ethnic minorities","workfare"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James McDougall"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77ed2f10-372a-39b1-a8da-7c5e949fa243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3993767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Savage Wars? Codes of Violence in Algeria, 1830s-1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993767","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8334,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Political violence in Algeria has often been accounted for only by recourse to caricatures of a society supposedly 'intensely violent' by nature, or else rationalised as the product of a peculiar political culture and national historical experience. Departing from both approaches, this article suggests that different occurrences of both state and non-state violence must be understood as particular, distinct moments in both the recomposition and breakdown of inherently conflictual social relations. While Algerian history (including colonial history) provides many examples of the non-violent negotiation of social and political tensions, the social production and experience of violence have been written into dominant historiographies and public culture in complex ways. These complexities of the successive ways in which different moments of violence have been encoded belie both theories of the inescapable reproduction of cyclical violence as a pattern of political behaviour, and less sophisticated, but enduring, clich\u00e9s of 'Algerian savagery'.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Persson","Martin Sj\u00f6stedt"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23260182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67bb1248-8099-3d7b-a45c-4784c62cdd14"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23260182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"632","pageStart":"617","pagination":"pp. 617-632","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Responsive and Responsible Leaders: A Matter of Political Will?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23260182","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13666,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Policy makers and policy-oriented scholars concerned with development and reform commonly appeal to \"political will\" as a cornerstone of development. We question the circular and voluntaristic view of leadership behavior inherent in such an approach, and argue that\u2014to be more useful for the analysis of development outcomes, as well as for policy design\u2014the discourse on political will should be firmly integrated into a more systematic framework of analysis. In particular, we suggest that it should engage in more active dialogue with the combined insights offered by principal-agent theory and what we refer to as state theory. More specifically, in the framework we develop, the principal-agent framework offers the analytical tools for analyzing leadership behavior at the micro level, while state theory provides crucial insights regarding the macro-level factors shaping leadership behavior. In the end, these two perspectives in tandem have the potential to significantly increase our understanding of empirically observed leadership behavior as well as our theoretical understanding of how the context\u2014and especially the character of underlying social contracts\u2014shapes and constrains \"political will.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Marriott"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.215","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b709020-c152-3469-87cd-2d8ee3aaa805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.215"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Racial Fetishism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/quiparle.18.2.215","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":13239,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[10405,10471]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joel Darmstadter","M. D. Kossoris","Herbert Hammerman","Walter O. Fischer","Alonzo B. May","Alice W. Shurcliff","A. Harvey Belitsky","Robert B. Schwenger","James D. Hoover","Jack Alterman"],"datePublished":"1963-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41835181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00981818"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60638700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-230179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52ae275b-4731-305f-bc6b-0e8e6c26fa71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41835181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monthlylaborrev"}],"isPartOf":"Monthly Labor Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1963,"publisher":"Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews and Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41835181","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":9347,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NEIL LEVI"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08993114"},{"name":"oclc","value":"259372100"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc8d79b7-824c-31fc-9fbd-d4240637deb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26635257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamejoyclitesupp"}],"isPartOf":"James Joyce Literary Supplement","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"14","pagination":"p. 14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Miami","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Did Joyce Leave His Marx?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26635257","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":1160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jessica Venable","Brandy Ann Sato","Jimi Del Duca","Franklin Sage"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e3c0d83-4915-3719-abe2-780ee3592400"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26372212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Education - Specialized education"],"title":"Decolonizing Our Own Stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26372212","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the 2013 American Indigenous Research Association (AIRA) conference, it was noted that graduate students using Indigenous research methodologies make unique contributions to academia and have unique needs. In response, Student Storytellers Indigenizing the Academy (SSITA) was formed, a worldwide support network of graduate students using an online forum. A SSITA working group launched a project with two goals: to gather SSITA members\u2019 stories about decolonizing research and to reflect on how decolonizing research may impact their sense of place in the Western academy. This project was also an opportunity for students to develop a method for conducting collaborative research across space, time, and cultures and share that knowledge with the broader scholarly community. Several themes emerged: our varied, sometimes disorienting, educational experiences; our difficulty in locating and accessing mentors and resources; and our resilience in developing and sharing our solutions to decolonizing our research.","subTitle":"A Project of the Student Storytellers Indigenizing the Academy (SSITA) Group","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Phelan"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b56b6c29-b7fd-3b46-81b8-e6ea08cae708"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Authentic Reproductions\": Staging the \"Wild West\" in Modern Irish Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587391","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":7956,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article examines the metatheatricality of Gerald MacNamara's The Mist That Does Be on the Bog (1909) and Marie Jones's Stones in His Pockets (1990) in terms of their respective critiques of the cultural politics of nationalism and globalization during the periods of the Irish Revival and the Celtic Tiger. MacNamara's satirical restaging of the theatrical conventions of the early Abbey Theatre and his rejection of the national theatre's \"authentic\" (re) production of the wild west of Ireland precociously anticipates the postmodern cultural politics of contemporary Celtic Tiger Ireland as described by Colin Graham, whereby essence or authenticity are constantly interrogated and consistently ironized. This essay argues that the deconstructive power of Mist's metatheatrical critique of the Revival and the Abbey Theatre continues to resonate, even in (post) Celtic Tiger Ireland, as the politics and performance of authenticity remain imbricated within the aesthetics and ideology of theatre, tourism, cinema, and culture, as well as in the history and heritage industries, and their collective (re) presentations of Ireland, as satirized in Jones's commercially successfully though critically neglected play, Stones in His Pockets. Drawing on various critiques of the notion of \"authenticity\" posited by Graham, David Lloyd, Frantz Fanon, and Declan Kiberd, this essay examines how the very concept of \"authenticity\" is consistently ironized and undermined in both plays, as each dismantles dominant constructions of national identity that have emerged diachronically during both the colonial and postcolonial periods.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Mwangi"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Gender, Unreliable Oral Narration, and the Untranslated Preface in Ng\u0169g\u0129 Wa Thiong'o's \"Devil on the Cross\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109536","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this paper, I consider the narrative in Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's \"Devil on the Cross\" against a largely ignored preface in the G\u0129k\u0169y\u0169 edition of the novel \"Caitaani M\u0169tharaba-in\u0129,\" and against the conventions of the g\u0129caand\u0129 art that the novel invokes. Focusing on the interimplication of gender and orality in the story, I employ cultural narratology as my framework to examine the dialogic relationship between the novel's formal features and their cultural contexts, especially the gendered implications of the oral narrative strategies that Ng\u0169g\u0129 deploys to frame the narrative. I argue that, contrary to most readings of the novel, the \"g\u0129caand\u0129\" oral artist who frames the story is unreliable, and the text provokes the reader to see his presentation as incomplete and contradictory. When the preface is considered, and the narrator subjected to tests of reliability, the oral narrator's account comes through not only as totalized and teleological but also as shot through with imperatives of hegemonic masculinity that call for a challenging voice as required by the protocols of the g\u0129caand\u0129 art-form that this frame narrator conjures up. Although the preface is paratextual, untranslated, and consigned to the margins of the narrative, its consideration in the analysis of the text offers new ways of unpacking the gendered dimensions of Ng\u0169g\u0129's use of oral techniques.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. Said"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eacd7904-b320-3b71-9723-24682f036e57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Representing the Colonized: Anthropology's Interlocutors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343582","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9771,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asbj\u00f8rn Gr\u00f8nstad"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n1k3.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789089640109"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d9e48fd-f817-357f-b284-a6791d81cdd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46n1k3.16"}],"isPartOf":"Transfigurations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"221","pagination":"221-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Film Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46n1k3.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["violence","cinema","stanley kubrick","wild bunch","quentin tarantino","film noir","london","sam peckinpah","movies","dir sam"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue Ashford"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43046219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02101602"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43046219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teorreviintefilo"}],"isPartOf":"Teorema: Revista Internacional de Filosof\u00eda","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"KRK Ediciones, SL","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El terror del terrorismo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43046219","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent discussions of terrorism often emphasize the role of terror in acts of terrorism. On these accounts, acts of terrorism are designed to produce terror in individuals \u2014 citizens of a state \u2014 to effect changes in state policies or intimidate the citizenry. The kinds of political backgrounds to those acts of violence which are counted as terrorism are sometimes extended beyond everyday civil politics to include (for example) instances of rape as evidence of sexual politics. Suppose that we can, should resist the terror of violence: does this suggestion affect how acts of violence in the extended class are perceived? Las discusiones recientes sobre el terrorismo subrayan a menudo el papel del terror en los actos de terrorismo. De acuerdo con esas explicaciones, los actos de terrorismo est\u00e1n dise\u00f1ados para producir terror en los individuos \u2014ciudadanos de un estado\u2014, con el objeto de producir cambios en las pol\u00edticas del estado o intimidar a la ciudadan\u00eda. Los g\u00e9neros de trasfondo pol\u00edtico de esos actos de violencia que se consideran terrorismo se extienden algunas veces m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de la pol\u00edtica civil cotidiana, incluyendo, por ejemplo, casos de violaci\u00f3n como evidencia de la pol\u00edtica sexual. En el supuesto de que podamos \u00bfdebemos ofrecer resistencia al terror de la violencia? \u00bfAfecta esta sugerencia a c\u00f3mo se perciben los actos de violencia en la clase extendida?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brendan D. Works"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162025","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/162025"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"778","pageStart":"776","pagination":"pp. 776-778","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162025","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":1450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Paul"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a9ab17d-9f74-37a4-8231-d35e0e6f749b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"864","pageStart":"848","pagination":"pp. 848-864","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"I Whitened My Face, That They Might Not Know Me\": Race and Identity in Olaudah Equiano's Slave Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282603","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":7471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aim of this essay is to explore the process of racial adaptation to the image of the Other\u2014of the \"White Mask\" that is adopted by the Black man\u2014as it is revealed in one of the most famous early slave autobiographies: Olaudah Equiano's \"The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Written by Himself\". Over the years, critics have reiterated the historic, documentary significance of Equiano's work. The author instead looks more critically at the contradictions in racial consciousness\u2014alienation and identification\u2014that Equiano's self-portrayal tries to resolve. He also argues that Equiano's condition of psychological dualism corresponds to what Frantz Fanon, in his seminal work \"Black Skin, White Masks\", sees as a denial of the Black self and adoption of the false racial identity of the White Other.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert E. Morsberger","Katharine M. Morsberger"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40126066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00067431"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76ab6b9f-c3bb-31bd-8b01-303f680bb63f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40126066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"booksabroad"}],"isPartOf":"Books Abroad","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40126066","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":1461,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ketra L. Armstrong","Michael A. Jennings"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5da2ec96-2e9b-3f98-9958-c430846bbeae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Race, Sport, and Sociocognitive \"Place\" in Higher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574565","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this research was to further examine the juxtaposition of race, sport, and higher education. It utilized an existential-phenomenological approach to obtain data from a purposeful case selection of three Black male student-athletes enrolled in a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 1 collegiate football program. Through the lenses of social-cognitive theory and critical race theory, the results elucidated (a) the impact of race as a psychological, cultural, and social anchor of \"place\" for Black male studentathletes on a predominantly White college\/university campus, and (b) race intersectionality with age, gender, social class, and environment to influence their educational experience. The contributions of Black male student-athletes as critical theorists are highlighted, and a model depicting the relationships between race, sport, and the sociocognitive \"place\" of Black males in higher education as articulated by the participants is presented.","subTitle":"Black Male Student-Athletes as Critical Theorists","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Safi Mahmoud Mahfouz"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.66.163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffb79c33-d922-3728-a0ae-1c43192cb60a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/rockmounrevi.66.163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Exploring Diasporic Identities in Selected Plays by Contemporary American Minority Playwrights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.66.163","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":12975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study aims at shedding light on the rhetoric of ethnic self-expression which contemporary American minority playwrights use to explore their diasporic identities and empower their ethnic communities. It also explores the nature of contemporary ethnic theaters and the function they serve in assimilating people of diverse ethnic backgrounds into the American mainstream culture. A diverse selection of ethnic theaters in the United States is tackled with the aim of crystallizing a new understanding of ethnicities and the rhetoric they use to stress their wish to melt into America's or to preserve their own ethnic identities. The underrepresented American plays discussed in this article include the Chinese-American David Henry Hwang's F.O.B. (2000), that depicts the social dilemmas of Chinese immigrants, and M. Butterfly (1988), that has problematized the entire notion of ethnicity and has revealed the distorted stereotypical images of oriental cultures as perceived by the West; the Korean-American playwrights Julia Cho's The Architecture of Loss (2004), and Philip Kan Gotanda's Day Standing on its Head (1994); the African-American Pearl Cleage's Flyin' West (1995), which portrays from a feminist perspective the Blacks' Great Migration; Hispanic theater represented by Milcha S\u00e1nchez-Scott's Latina (1980), and Silvia Gonzalez' The Migrant Farmworker's Son (1994). Though classified as marginal in the dramatic rung, these plays achieved renowned positions not only in ethnic theaters throughout the United States but also claimed a notorious position in American mainstream theater. The plays contain themes that range from displacement or diaspora, to exile, migration, border-crossing to create new worlds, nationhood, belonging, cultural hybridity, and even invisibility. Although it should be noted that a minority text is not essentially representative of its race, the playwrights' rhetoric of ethnic self-expression is articulated in their plays.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Qadri Ismail"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7579d42a-844b-3d06-bfb5-7e4d2d975f8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25475466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"247","pageStart":"210","pagination":"pp. 210-247","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Not) at Home in (Hindu) India: Shahid Amin, Dipesh Chakrabarty, and the Critique of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25475466","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Farhad Saba"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30221277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f73abf9b-37f0-319f-a716-f5e48a59e29d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30221277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinstdeve"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Instructional Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Instructional Development in Developing Countries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30221277","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":2591,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Instructional Development (ID), as a concept, a policy, and a technology takes place under rather distinct circumstances in developing countries. These include, but are not limited to traditional, political, and economic conditions. Such circumstances often influence and may sometimes dictate how instructional development is implemented in the countries. An understanding of these conditions is useful for analyzing existing instructional development efforts in developing countries and for planning new ones.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Forsdick"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4125349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"265","pageStart":"263","pagination":"pp. 263-265","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4125349","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":1242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leiyo Singo"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45342119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1ca1813-bcfc-3eb6-aa94-ec2a22a9a334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45342119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Julius Malema: A Racist or a Nationalist?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45342119","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4638,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The rise of Julius Malema in the African National Congress (ANC)\/South Africa's politics has received different interpretations within and beyond South Africa. First, it is because of his personality as a tricky, opportunistic and firebrand young politician; and secondly because of \"uncomfortable\" issues he is raising about nationalization of mines and land redistribution which contravene ANCs policy. The rise of Malema has not received a serious interrogation as many studies and discussions focus on the person of Malema and not on the issues. This article revisits the development that led to Malema's expulsion from ANC; the emergence of the new movement \u2013 the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and the possible consequences of mass (youth) education by Malema to get popular support. It argues that mobilization of the desperate population that is seeking a new path or an alternative to the Neo-liberal policies is vital and therefore political activism is awaited for to spark off the anti-neoliberalism movement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BETHUEL SETAI"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aca1491d-994e-3b18-9ccb-9b05d8799f2f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BALKANIZATION OF SOUTH AFRICA: POVERTY OR REVOLT?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341452","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7271,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[375355,375427]],"Locations in B":[[24797,24875]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mrinalini Chakravorty"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41552303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41552303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Picturing \"The Postmaster\": Tagore, Ray, and the Making of an Uncanny Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41552303","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":13069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony W. Pereira","Diane E. Davis"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2634188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb0c639b-8214-3e5f-af1f-165577e0ca79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2634188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Patterns of Militarized Violence and Coercion in the Americas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2634188","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manthia Diawara","Silvia Kolbowski"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6d03b91-0545-346c-8a17-ee2f353df76c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Homeboy Cosmopolitan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779070","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":8205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elena Furlanetto"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6zdc2s.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783631677247"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cab1702-9d2e-321e-8193-1929dcac7a4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv6zdc2s.4"}],"isPartOf":"Towards Turkish American Literature","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"49","pagination":"49-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Imaginary Spaces:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6zdc2s.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":29377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The present chapter revolves around representations of space, both real and imaginary, that display mechanisms of state-imposed repression and removal, but also prepare the ground for cultural encounters. The strongly comparative focus of this chapter begins to outline the difference between Turkish literature with an international readership and Turkish American literature, which originates and dwells in a diasporic dimension. The first section investigates representations of Istanbul in Shafak\u2019sThe Bastard of Istanbul<\/em>(2007) and Pamuk\u2019sThe Black Book<\/em>(1990) andThe New Life<\/em>(1994). Both writers imagine the city as governed by dichotomous ideologies: imitation and truthfulness, Americanization and authenticity,","subTitle":"Representations of Istanbul between Topography and Imagination","keyphrase":["caf\u00e9 kundera","istanbul","ottoman","black book","orhan pamuk","croutier","turkish literature","cultural","turkey","bastard"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanjukta Dasgupta"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23341167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef0dc14b-134b-3eed-9f93-2b615ccb0e77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23341167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","issueNumber":"4 (216)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23341167","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":1315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["I. William Zartman"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"735ac9a8-cfc8-3037-9d8a-b9def94a2a8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41229066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolution and development: form and substance \/ REVOLUTION ET DEVELOPPEMENT : FORME ET FOND","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229066","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9130,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La probabilit\u00e9 de r\u00e9volutions r\u00e9p\u00e9t\u00e9es dans les pays de moindre d\u00e9veloppement ne peut \u00eatre d\u00e9montr\u00e9e. Il appara\u00eet au contraire que dans ces pays l'\u00e9nergie politique d\u00e9pens\u00e9e dans la r\u00e9volution anticoloniale n'a plus assez de virulence pour s'engager dans une r\u00e9volution de type national. Tout au plus peut-on admettre que les rares r\u00e9volutions que connaissent les pays sousd\u00e9velopp\u00e9s ne sont que des manifestations inachev\u00e9es, limit\u00e9es au premier stade du renversement de l'ordre existant, mais incapables d'atteindre la transformation radicale de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9. Il importe de d\u00e9finir avec pr\u00e9cision ce qu'est la r\u00e9volution et quels sont ses caract\u00e8res constitutifs. Par l'identification d'\u00e9v\u00e9nements d\u00e9terminants dans leur cause et dans la similitude de leurs effets, on arrivera \u00e0 reconna\u00eetre leur v\u00e9ritable port\u00e9e. Il s'agira ensuite de s'interroger sur leur origine r\u00e9elle. Une distinction pr\u00e9alable doit \u00eatre faite entre renversement de l'ordre existant et transformation r\u00e9volutionnaire. L'un et l'autre impliquent le recours \u00e0 la violence et un certain nombre de modifications de la structure sociale. Mais dans le renversement de l'ordre existant (\" overthrow \") il faut voir un changement venu du bas et qui vise au rejet de l'\u00e9lite dominante, alors que la transformation est un changement par le haut impliquant une refonte de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 en accord avec les principes de la nouvelle \u00e9lite. Le renversement r\u00e9volutionnaire ne d\u00e9bouche pas n\u00e9cessairement sur la transformation r\u00e9volutionnaire. On peut donc poser que si les pays en voie de d\u00e9veloppement connaissent d'assez nombreux coups de force et quelques renversements de l'ordre existant, on n'y observe que de rares transformations r\u00e9volutionnaires. D'autre part, les notions de r\u00e9volution nationale et r\u00e9volution anticoloniale n'apparaissent pas fix\u00e9es avec une pr\u00e9cision suffisante. Consid\u00e9r\u00e9e dans l'optique socio-politique \u00e0 l'\u00e9chelle nationale, la r\u00e9volution anticoloniale remplace dans bien des cas la r\u00e9volution nationale, la retarde ou la laisse inachev\u00e9e. Aussi notre \u00e9poque conna\u00eet-elle des r\u00e9volutions suppos\u00e9es bien plus aue des r\u00e9volutions effectives. Reste la question de l'improbabilit\u00e9 des r\u00e9volutions dans les pays en voie de d\u00e9veloppement pour un avenir proche et m\u00eame de moyen \u00e9loignement. Une telle improbabilit\u00e9 peut trouver sa justification dans le fait que les r\u00e9gimes socio-politiques actuels ne disposent pas des \u00e9l\u00e9ments n\u00e9cessaires \u00e0 la transformation r\u00e9volutionnaire, non plus qu'au renversement de l'ordre existant. En r\u00e9alit\u00e9, ces r\u00e9gimes sont plus stables qu'on imagine g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement. Ils refl\u00e8tent \u00e0 la fois la situation des forces sociales et politiques au point mort, l'absence d'orientation et d'\u00e9nergie. En d'autres termes, pour que l'id\u00e9e r\u00e9volutionnaire prenne corps dans les pays sous-d\u00e9velopp\u00e9s, il faudrait qu'apparaissent certaines conditions d\u00e9terminantes, telles qu'une transformation dans l'\u00e9quilibre des int\u00e9r\u00eats en pr\u00e9sence, une r\u00e9action plus vive contre l'arr\u00eat des recrutements dans les nouveaux groupes, l'\u00e9puisement de l'h\u00e9ritage l\u00e9gu\u00e9 par la p\u00e9riode coloniale, en biens et en emplois, et enfin une reprise de la violence capable de mettre en \u00e9chec le maintien de l'ordre par la force. Ces conditions \u00e9tant remplies, il faudrait encore compter avec un temps de maturation qu'il est difficile d'estimer.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dvora Yanow"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627160"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-201531"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44b09c05-37d7-3e41-a732-c47856b2ca31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25611066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration","Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25611066","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Vitalis"],"datePublished":"1990-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/164129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72dbf8b5-78e5-3aa4-ac29-074f40680bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/164129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Theory and Practice of Compradors: The Role of Abbud Pasha in the Egyptian Political Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/164129","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro P. Porb\u00e9n"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24369343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15773388"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607189719"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b225c8c4-0a52-3d25-86c8-a8b0f6fc684f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24369343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iberoamericana"}],"isPartOf":"Iberoamericana (2001-)","issueNumber":"57","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Revoluci\u00f3n 'c\u00f3mica': historietas y pol\u00edticas de afectos en Cuba posrevolucionaria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24369343","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":7747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este ensayo intenta establecer, si bien esquem\u00e1ticamente, una suerte de concierto ca\u00f3tico o rizom\u00e1tico, distribuido en varios ejes con centros fluidos entre las m\u00faltiples iteraciones de las aventuras 'c\u00f3micas' de Elpidio Vald\u00e9s y Fidel Castro a trav\u00e9s de retazos te\u00f3ricos de Carlos Marx, Slavoj \u017di\u017eek y Gilles Deleuze. Para ello, acudo a la teor\u00eda marxista de la doble repetici\u00f3n hist\u00f3rica, la primera vez como tragedia y despu\u00e9s, como farsa; farsa que es muchas veces m\u00e1s terror\u00edfica que la tragedia original. Teor\u00eda que fue ampliada por Deleuze para incluir un tercer momento, la repetici\u00f3n c\u00f3mica, cuando la repetici\u00f3n no llega a producir algo nuevo sino que se queda en una m\u00e1scara. This essay attempts to establish, although only schematically, a kind of chaotic or rhizomatic concert, distributed on several narrative axes with fluid centers across multiple iterations of the 'comic' adventures of Elpidio Vald\u00e9s and Fidel Castro through theoretical pieces of Karl Marx, Slavoj \u017di\u017eek and Gilles Deleuze. For this, I turn to the Marxist theory of historical repetition that says that history always repeats itself twice, first as tragedy, then as farce; farce that is often more terrifying than the original tragedy. This theory was extended by Deleuze to include a third stage, the comic repetition, on which I focused my work, when repetition fails to produce something new but remains in a mask.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zubairu Wai"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23145884","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bab400e-58bc-3eb4-b397-e4fd7eb51b2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23145884"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"131","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neo-patrimonialism and the discourse of state failure in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23145884","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper is a critical interrogation of the dominant Africanist discourse on African state forms and its relationship with what is seen as pervasive state failure on the continent. Through an examination of the neo-patrimonialist literature on African states, this paper argues that what informs such problematic scholarship, inscribed on the conceptual and analytical landscape of the Weberian ideal-typical conception of state rationality is a vulgar universalism that tends to disregard specific historical experiences while subsuming them under the totalitarian grip of a Eurocentric unilinear evolutionist logic. The narrative that such scholarship produces not only constructs a mechanistic conception of state rationality based on the experience of the Western liberal state as the expression of the universal, but also denies the specificity of the continent's historical experience, by either denying its independent conceptual existence or vulgarising its social and political formations and realities, dismissing them as aberrant, deviant, deformed and of lesser quality. Immanent in this move is the ideological effacement and the rendering invisible, hence the normalisation of the relational and structural logic, of past histories of colonial domination and contemporary imperial power relations within which the states in Africa have been historically constituted and continue to be reconstituted and reimagined. When exactly does a state fail, the paper asks. Could what is defined as state failure actually be part of the processes of state formation or reconfiguration, which are misrecognised or misinterpreted because of the poverty of Africanist social science and ethnocentric biases of the particular lenses used to understand them? [Le n\u00e9o-patrimonialisme et le discours de la d\u00e9faillance de l'\u00e9tat en Afrique ]. Cet article est une interrogation critique du discours africaniste dominant sur les formes d'\u00e9tat africain et sa relation avec ce qui est consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme une d\u00e9faillance persistante de l'\u00e9tat sur le continent. A travers un examen de la litt\u00e9rature n\u00e9o-patrimonialiste sur les \u00e9tats africains, cet article soutient que ce qui est \u00e0 la base de ces savoirs probl\u00e9matiques, inscrit dans le paysage conceptuel et analytique de la conception id\u00e9altypique w\u00e9b\u00e9rienne de la rationalit\u00e9 \u00e9tatique, est un universalisme vulgaire qui tend \u00e0 ignorer les exp\u00e9riences historiques sp\u00e9cifiques tout en les subsumant sous l'emprise totalitaire d'une logique \u00e9volutionniste unilin\u00e9aire euro-centrique. Le r\u00e9cit que ces \u00e9tudes permet de produire non seulement construit une conception m\u00e9caniste de la rationalit\u00e9 \u00e9tatique bas\u00e9e sur l'exp\u00e9rience de l'\u00e9tat lib\u00e9ral occidental comme l'expression de l'universel, mais aussi nie la sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 de l'exp\u00e9rience historique du continent soit en niant son existence ind\u00e9pendante conceptuelle, ou en vulgarisant ses formations et ses r\u00e9alit\u00e9s sociales et politiques, les rejetant comme aberrantes, d\u00e9viantes, difformes et de moindre qualit\u00e9. Immanent dans ce mouvement sont l'effacement id\u00e9ologique et le rendement invisible qui conduisent \u00e0 la normalisation de la logique relationnelle et structurelle des histoires pass\u00e9es de la domination coloniale et des relations contemporaine de pouvoir imp\u00e9riale, dans laquelle les \u00e9tats en Afrique ont \u00e9t\u00e9 historiquement constitu\u00e9s et continuent \u00e0 \u00eatre reconstitu\u00e9s et r\u00e9-imagin\u00e9s. Quand, exactement, est-ce que l'\u00e9tat \u00e9choue, se demande l'article? Ce qui est d\u00e9fini comme \u00e9tat d\u00e9faillant pourrait-il faire partie du processus de formation ou de reconfiguration de l'\u00e9tat, qui sont m\u00e9connues ou mal interpr\u00e9t\u00e9es \u00e0 cause de la pauvret\u00e9 des sciences sociales et les pr\u00e9jug\u00e9s ethnocentiruqes africanistes des lentilles notamment utilis\u00e9es pour les comprendre?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Juan Rosa"],"datePublished":"1996-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"351e0df6-a102-328e-b72c-6508fc084e0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"El Que No Tiene Dingo, Tiene Mandingo: The Inadequacy of the \"Mestizo\" as a Theoretical Construct in the Field of Latin American Studies-The Problem and Solution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784752","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4714,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea Smith"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24518001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe9e3cea-a3e4-3c99-b55d-e56ca55a4079"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24518001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Settler Sites of Memory and the Work of Mourning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24518001","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11704,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since their arrival in France in the early 1960s, former settlers of Algeria have developed an array of private and public \"sites of memory\" projects that have remained unnoticed in wider French society or have been interpreted uncharitably. This article offers a new perspective on these projects. Informed by Maurice Halbwachs' concern with the material supports for collective memory and Sigmund Freud's insights on loss, I reinterpret them as stages in a work of mourning, and offer new insights on the wider question of France's relationship to its colonial past.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas K. Ranuga"],"datePublished":"1986-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51e01db2-ac22-30dc-9acb-1849325dfc20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/274985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and Black Consciousness in Azania (South Africa)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274985","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":5001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ZIAD BENTAHAR"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2736fe32-b6c5-3321-8200-d661602267df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"140","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-140","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon: Travelling Psychoanalysis and Colonial Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030671","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6769,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[7736,7829],[7948,8016],[21640,21682],[35843,35900]],"Locations in B":[[1288,1380],[1406,1483],[39808,39850],[40918,40980]],"abstract":"Although Frantz Fanon's writings were intimately tied to colonial Algeria, his reflections have found resonance among a wide variety of audiences because of their theoretical and ideological value. Possibly, Fanon's limited proximity to Algerian culture and society contributed to the relevance of his writings elsewhere. This essay argues that, in spite of Fanon's involvement in the struggle for Algerian independence, his position in North Africa remained that of an outsider.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benita Parry"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03092984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60812507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005263080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histwork"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"232","pagination":"pp. 232-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289261","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6066,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[17360,17452]],"Locations in B":[[31481,31567]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carrie Hamilton"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/513020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e49a148b-7e93-38b1-bcec-3d4185540c1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/513020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"932","pageStart":"911","pagination":"pp. 911-932","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Political Violence and Body Language in Life Stories of Women ETA Activists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/513020","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Brantlinger"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19172d08-556a-304e-952a-c5a1f7460f0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Victorians and Africans: The Genealogy of the Myth of the Dark Continent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343467","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":13352,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John keith fairless"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Negro as performance in V.S. Naipaul","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263492","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977441","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efaed36e-4aef-3717-a2ba-b8192d73d3bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977441"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"364","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977441","volumeNumber":"164","wordCount":3085,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[624780,624848]],"Locations in B":[[9066,9135]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARINA E. RAY"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23784414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41748d28-b03c-3c8c-8e6d-e22c2cfc0895"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23784414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decrying White Peril: Interracial Sex and the Rise of Anticolonial Nationalism in the Gold Coast","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23784414","volumeNumber":"119","wordCount":20526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07edee03-6461-32ae-a066-16153de597e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race under Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973711","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":14027,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[70715,70800]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Clasby"],"datePublished":"1974-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7177216-4766-3898-9fe5-4384a21601dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Autobiography of Malcolm X: A Mythic Paradigm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783620","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5351,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e374f3b-3677-301e-af3d-3af337ae2bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Following the Path of Revolution: Frantz Fanon's Political Legacy for Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0036","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6529,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[38251,38297]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gloria T. 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Although some students opt out of the prison visit, a field trip to a prison creates a vibrant learning environment where students can share their experience with other classmates as well as reflect on their experiences with authority figures. It also disrupts power relationships between students and instructors because all prison field trip participants are virtual inmates for a day.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Strand"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247109","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d62b59b6-c69d-3c89-b57a-4463cc7a1b56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24247109"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Last Frontier: Burroughs's Early Work and International Tourism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247109","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":13816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melanie Walker"],"datePublished":"2018-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181560"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24bff2dc-559c-3123-9487-0df8a3c34849"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45116714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highereducation"}],"isPartOf":"Higher Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"569","pageStart":"555","pagination":"pp. 555-569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Dimensions of higher education and the public good in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116714","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":8560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The focus is on the micro-possibilities of student capabilities formation as the end of public-good higher education, rather than on a systems or organizations approach more commonly found in discussions of the public good and higher education. This does not discount other valuable public-good ends. Using South Africa as a global South context, a capability-based approach to the public good of higher education is proposed for its humanizing ethic, attention to fair opportunities, and participation in terms of what students are able to do and to be in and through higher education. A capability frame is complemented by thinking about decoloniality and epistemic justice to help identify central higher education capabilities. The three proposed intersecting capability dimensions are as follows: personhood self-formation, epistemic contribution, and sufficiency of economic resources, intended to guide university practices and policy interventions in the direction of the public good. By populating the space of the public good with capabilities, a shift is made away from micro-economics which see the public good as a reductionist space of commodities and human capital development. Higher education is rather understood as having both instrumental and intrinsic value, generating an alternative logic to that of neo-liberalism, and an individualist ontology of competition and untrammeled markets. The pressures of the global context are acknowledged so that the public good is understood as both \"ideal-aspirational\" but also \"practical-feasible\" in the light of local South African conditions. An expanded capability-based framing would contribute to reducing higher education inequalities as a public-good and publicaccountable contribution by universities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margot Francis"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/natiindistudj.2.2.0087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23321261"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"870a4163-d83d-375f-a2c1-2987897b3b06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/natiindistudj.2.2.0087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"natiindistudj"}],"isPartOf":"Native American and Indigenous Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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R\u00e9ciproquement on a longtemps cr\u00fb que le pouvoir n'avait aucune action sur les groupes dont le comportement est dirig\u00e9 parall\u00e8llement ou qui n'agissent pas de concert entre eux. Cette approche omet de consid\u00e9rer, en termes de pouvoir, les structures d'in\u00e9galit\u00e9 qui ne rencontrent aucune r\u00e9sistance en provenance de groupes de d\u00e9poss\u00e9d\u00e9s ou de d\u00e9pendants. En temps qu'alternative, le pouvoir est \u00e9tudi\u00e9 ici en observant ce comportement, sp\u00e9cialement chez les groupes subordonn\u00e9s, en ce qu'il contribue \u00e0 maintenir les structures d'in\u00e9galit\u00e9 au del\u00e0 d'une p\u00e9riode donn\u00e9e.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toby Miller"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"A Short History of the Penis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466624","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Macias"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41156082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e80bf37-d087-3c15-b9c2-dad64ca98062"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Racial and Ethnic Exclusion: A Problem for Anthropology and Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195727","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4077,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael D. Curley","Richard E. Gift"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45193068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20420692-f0f3-349e-a8f7-e20c05cd9c1c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45193068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DUALISM, ENDOGENOUS INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE, AND THE INTERPRETATION OF VIOLENT TENDENCIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45193068","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leo Kuper"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229043","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cd9bebc-fa86-3539-8600-a877ae772147"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41229043"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race Structure in the Social Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229043","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Scott"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonial Governmentality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466631","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janet Remmington"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5d84720-afd5-3f21-b015-a961d24df79c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42001322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"446","pageStart":"425","pagination":"pp. 425-446","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Solomon Plaatje's Decade of Creative Mobility, 1912-1922: The Politics of Travel and Writing in and beyond South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42001322","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article foregrounds the hitherto relatively unexplored travel-writing nexus that characterised the extraordinarily mobile and textually productive, if personally precarious, decade (1912-1922) of Solomon T. Plaatje, founding General Secretary of the South African Native National Congress (later African National Congress) and South Africa's first black novelist in English. Drawing on cross-disciplinary work, including 'travel writing' and 'travel culture' frameworks, it argues that Plaatje's strategic travel within South Africa and to Britain and North America combined with the production, publication and circulation of his writing during the tumultuous period of landmark South African segregationist legislation and the First World War were telling symbiotic means of African political assertion, cultural nationalism, and self-inscription as a modern global citizen, in effect, Plaatje's travelling and writing put him 'on the map', challenging the bounds of white exclusionary politics and intellectual space in the newly consolidated racist dominion state of the Union of South Africa, while also testing the tenets of Empire. Native Life in South Africa (1916), a construct of crisis and political charge against the 1913 Natives' Land Act and associated subjugation of the black majority, is read as a personalised political travelogue for multiple publics, not least aimed at calling for intervention by metropolitan Britain to aid the native cause. Mhudi (1917-1921\/1930), with its no-lessresolute but more complex, searching impetus in the context of increasing disillusionment with imperial rule and two costly if provocative deputations to London, is treated as an historicised fictional travel account of the young, black female which challenges colonial, Afrikaner, and traditional African historiographies, while probing possible futures for South Africa in the light of betrayal of black peoples by white. The works concern themselves in part with excavating African, and particularly Bechuana, cultural stores for interplay in the modern world and national asset-building; however they \u2014 especially Mhudi \u2014 also register something of a modernist search for moorings in a world in upheaval and apparent retrogression. Plaatje's decade of creative mobility, in which travel fuelled his writing and writing galvanised his travel, bore striking witness to the immovable socio-political positions of the South African state and the British Imperium, registering the great distance to go in racial equality being achieved.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. Merritt"],"datePublished":"1969-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"612ef6a0-c4b7-379f-bb8f-1b9338f3af34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"516","pagination":"pp. 516-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Student Protest Movement in West Berlin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421493","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAPA SAMBA DIOP","Donald Nicholson-Simth"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0953e175-34a9-30c5-a250-c124821dbfab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Francophone Sub-Saharan African Novel: What World Are We In?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337113","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lizabeth Zack"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20020148","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e69a427b-88ad-32a1-9424-15d58c0c2cc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20020148"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who Fought the Algerian War? Political Identity and Conflict in French-Ruled Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20020148","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":20224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Why did settlers, natives, and metropolitan agents fight each other as \"French\" and \"Algerian\" during the famously brutal Algerian War of the 1950s? While scholars identify key factors in launching and escalating the war, they take for granted that it was fought between \"the French\" and \"the Algerians\" when evidence shows that those terms were also a source of struggle among the parties involved in the war. Drawing on insights from the fields of colonial studies and collective action, along with archival sources, the article explains why this particular set of terms framed the war, in other words, why the categories \"French\" and \"Algerian\" predominated in the political discourse, and why they were so opposed to each other. It contends that punctuated political conflicts among state authorities and social-movement organizations in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, rather than indigenous cultural or social structural factors, played a key role in constructing this identity framework. The article concludes by challenging our basic definitions of the war and the prevailing theories about its course and outcomes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Horace Campbell"],"datePublished":"1991-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d8b0f96-30bc-36cf-91eb-38f15714844d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE IMPACT OF WALTER RODNEY AND PROGRESIVE SCHOLARS ON THE DAR ES SALAAM SCHOOL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865003","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Walter Rodney taught at the University of Dar-es-Salaam in the aftermath of the Arusha Declaration in 1967, when the African liberation movements based in Tanzania were searching for a philosophical framework to guide the decolonization process. The debates on socialism, social emancipation, underdevelopment and imperialism attracted progressive scholars who taught and researched in the University. Walter Rodney's writing and teaching contributed to and formed an essential part of this intellectual framework. Walter Rodney enseignait \u00e0 l'Universit\u00e9 de Dar-es-Salaam dans les suite de la d\u00e9claration Arusha en 1967, quand les mouvements pour la lib\u00e9ration africaine bas\u00e9s en Tanzanie cherchaient le cadre philosophique pour guider le processus de la d\u00e9colonisation. Les discussions sur le socialisme, l'\u00e9mancipation sociale, le sous-d\u00e9veloppement et l'imp\u00e9rialisme attirerent des \u00e9rudits progressistes qui enseignaient et qui faisaient des recherches \u00e0 Universit\u00e9. Les \u00e9crits et l'enseignement de Walter Rodney ont contribu et ont form\u00e9 une partie essentielle de ce cadre intellectuel. Walter Rodney ense\u00f1aba en la Universidad de Dar-es-Salaam en la secuela de la Declaraci\u00f3n de Arusha de 1967, \u00e9poca en la cual los movimientos por la liberaci\u00f3n africana ubicados en Tanzania, iban en pos de un marco filos\u00f3fico para el proceso de descolonizaci\u00f3n. Los debates en torno al socialismo, la emancipaci\u00f3n social, el subdesarrollo y el imperialismo atrajeron a letrados progresistas quienes dictaban clases y llevaban a cabo investigaciones en la Universidad. Los trabajos y ense\u00f1anzas de Walter Rodney constituyeron una contribuci\u00f3n significativa y formaron parte integral de este marco intelectual.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. Gabrielle Foreman"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054582","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3054582"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"539","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-539","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Who's Your Mama? \"White\" Mulatta Genealogies, Early Photography, and Anti-Passing Narratives of Slavery and Freedom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3054582","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14519,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[87224,87270]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Zornado"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44313576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61711b8c-7fe0-3a11-b0a4-82e8eb991b07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44313576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Free Play: Christian Hierarchies, the Child, and a Negative Way","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44313576","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15389,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lucy Mae San Pablo Burns"],"datePublished":"2021-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644346","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1243315016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ef2db16-6a78-39ac-b021-2f849beab17f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48644346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alonjfiliamer"}],"isPartOf":"Alon: Journal for Filipinx American and Diasporic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies at UC Davis","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Masagana 99","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644346","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":7510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Alongside official policies and speeches declaring and steering official national identity, I turn to songs and dances as affective and performance archives that strategically rouse and structure our feelings of belonging to a cohesive and stable national culture. More broadly, I track the crafting of a Filipino \/ a national subject through state reliance on sedimented (and thus value-laden) forms such as \u2018national traditions\u2019 and \u2018folk cultures\u2019to make possible the idea of a laboring and productive citizenry. I ask: How do traditional dances and songs sustain and indeed supplement the ambitions of government initiatives implemented during Ferdinand Marcos\u2019s martial law, such as the rice production program Masagana 99? How do the timeless assemblages of performance shore up the edifice of an embattled and yet resilient nation-state? As we commemorate the afterlives of Martial Law, I return to such fragments of embodied memory with adjacent governmental policies of the time to underscore the complex scope and the scale of Marcos\u2019s dictatorship, as well as relay these scenes as seeds of struggle, labor, and resistance.","subTitle":"Beyond Seeds, Grains, and Stalks","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. E. Finer"],"datePublished":"1967-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44484386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c73baf68-05ab-37fe-9223-ede44ec02bd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44484386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"509","pageStart":"491","pagination":"pp. 491-509","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The one-party regimes in Africa: reconsiderations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44484386","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josaphat Kubayanda"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Unfinished Business: Dictatorial Literature of Post-Independence Latin America and Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820783","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781911307747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f976a6e-b700-396f-9883-89aad3121c61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1mtz521.15"}],"isPartOf":"Britain, France and the Decolonization of Africa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"186","pagination":"186-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1mtz521.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":25218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["empire","colonial","cambridge","basingstoke palgrave","british","oxford","history","imperial","university","frederick cooper"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Okonkwo"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Space Matters: Form and Narrative in Tsitsi Dangaremgba's \"Nervous Conditions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618293","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gus Deveneaux"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df61a667-0945-30f4-8f3f-7fcc7cf7e9a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589201","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":1615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lois Marchino"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1347593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bf3a703-97d3-3942-bb17-dbada8e1c29e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1347593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Worst Conceivable Form: Race, Global Capital, and \"The Making of the English Working Class\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720604","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7577,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"W. E. B. Du Bois noted that the nineteenth-century US slave plantation corresponded with the factory in its worst conceivable form. This article expands upon Du Bois's insight to consider the emergence of the English working class in correspondence with American settler slavery and colonial projects within the British Empire. From above, elites theorized about the exploitation of labor as a world historical project to compare the enslaved, the colonized, and the English worker against one another. From below, proletarian intellectuals imagined the freedom of English laborers through the condition of the enslaved in the American South and Jamaica and the colonized in South Asia. By placing these histories from above and below together, this article argues that it is impossible to conceive of the English working class making itself and being made at remove from the enslaving and colonizing projects of global capital.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Choi Chatterjee"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26416643","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d7df9b2-7736-3650-9909-195120d2a914"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26416643"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"934","pageStart":"913","pagination":"pp. 913-934","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Subjects in the Soviet Union","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26416643","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":11422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The compelling trope of \u2018Russia and the West,\u2019 or to be more precise, \u2018Russia Under Western Eyes,\u2019 has produced a vast and significant body of literature. This has helped in the political framing of the twentieth century as a world divided between the democratic and market-based nations of the West, and the dictatorial and state controlled countries in the Soviet East. Simultaneously, it has served to bury, blunt, and otherwise obscure perspectives from the colonized world on the East\u2013West dichotomy. An analysis of the travel writings of two important Indian visitors to the Soviet Union, M.N. Roy and Rabindranath Tagore, shows that Europe\u2019s imperial subjects filtered their impressions of Soviet authoritarianism through their own experiences of repressive Western imperialism, thus charting a new global map of political freedom. Roy and Tagore\u2019s writings, powered by both their colonial and Soviet experiences, make a significant contribution to the twentieth-century intellectual debates on moral freedom, individualism, and authoritarianism.","subTitle":"M.N. Roy, Rabindranath Tagore, and Re-Thinking Freedom and Authoritarianism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel C. Eze"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41243197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d606f58-6c8d-33fb-bfe4-b6676a05d0da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41243197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"898","pageStart":"877","pagination":"pp. 877-898","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON DOUBLE CONSCIOUSNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41243197","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":13093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lionel Pilkington"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.68.1-2.0295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85b13e6b-86cd-398c-91ee-632da8827833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.68.1-2.0295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Princeton University Library","sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The \u201cFolk\u201d and an Irish Theater: Re-reading J. M. Synge's The Playboy of the Western World<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.25290\/prinunivlibrchro.68.1-2.0295","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":4293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy A. Denton"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd5bce7b-d7f4-35ac-a5df-8925a9b73102"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1134","pageStart":"1132","pagination":"pp. 1132-1134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231334","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["QADRI ISMAIL"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dda12c25-89be-341d-94e0-90556a3bfd39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44646194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exiting Europe, Exciting Postcoloniality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646194","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. Odera Oruka"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325715","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325715"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IDEOLOGY AND CULTURE: The African Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325715","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":3731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Barrows"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20710499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50255711"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212921"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da8087aa-fa09-33b1-9e6b-3c5df8bae51e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20710499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"85","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching the Literature of Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20710499","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adrian Jones"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4091716","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018246X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537246"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227405"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4091716"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historicalj"}],"isPartOf":"The Historical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"640","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-640","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Russian Bourgeois's Arctic Enlightenment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4091716","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Studies of Europe's Enlightenment have been enriched by attending to its real and imagined impacts on indigenous peoples and of indigenous peoples on Europeans. Applying these methods to new-settled eighteenth-century societies offers another standpoint on the Enlightenment. This study is a sample: a civic history of a relatively new - in European terms - place suggests the possibilities. In 1792, a bourgeois, Vasilii Krestinin, from Russia's White Sea shore, published a history of Archangel, founded in 1584. Krestinin's view from a new Arctic society is as far from Europe's elegant metropoles and eloquent lumi\u00e8res as the ship captains. Pacific Islanders, and cat killers in influential recent studies of the Enlightenment. Just as these studies - and others on readers and reading - transformed studies of the Enlightenment, historians can use sources from new societies to observe answers and actions of people casting themselves as Enlighteners. This study of enlightened sensibility in an Arctic society suggests how the Enlightenment - viewed from settler societies - became anxious, how it fanned nationalisms, and how it was ensnared by naive presuppositions that progress was a prerequisite of power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Carleton Hayden"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42973744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b731848-f50b-319d-af7c-e4b8821b9f3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42973744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histmagaprotepis"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Historical Society of the Episcopal Church","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Men, Strange Faces, Other Minds: The Human Rights Revolution, 1954-1978","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42973744","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sunday Paul Chinazo Onwuegbuchulam","Khondlo Mtshali"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.64.1.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa577931-9654-30dd-bc86-41c84768003b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.64.1.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"To Be or Not to Be? A Theoretical Investigation into the Crisis of National Identity in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.64.1.04","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":10471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An issue that influences political discussions on Nigerian nationhood is the reality of the ethno-religious identities that make up that country. The stakeholders in Nigerian politics have tried to find ways of consolidating the unity of their country amid signs of failure evident in the emergence of dissident and oftentimes violent groups calling for self-determination. The recent Boko Haram crisis is a case in point, which has seen a call for an Islamic state in the north. The resurgence of MASSOB and IPOB in the southeast, with their protests and rallies advocating for Biafra, is also a sign of deep-seated desire of certain ethnic groups for self-determination. It is argued that the core problem with Nigeria will be found in the reality of diversity and oftentimes incompatibility of the entities that make it up. Discord and a lack of consensus are apparent among the political elites and ethno-religious groups, on what the Nigerian nation is and should be. Building on extant literature, this article problematizes the resurgence of ethnic consciousness in Nigeria and presents a way forward out of the quagmire the nation finds itself in.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heather Hewett"],"datePublished":"2005-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60601ffa-35d2-3f27-a4aa-e3dce7675793"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40239030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Coming of Age: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and the Voice of the Third Generation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239030","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10680,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacqueline S. Ismael","Shereen T. Ismael"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.3.0229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6988ab07-6d9b-399c-a406-e3103b4d9720"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.3.0229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Arab Spring and the Uncivil State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.35.3.0229","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the ongoing Arab Spring uprisings. The Arab Spring is characterized as a fundamental challenge to the postcolonial political order of the Arab world. The postcolonial Arab world has been defined by its oppressive nature and its subjugation within the international system. This autocratic and peripheral order represents the political legacy of colonial rule, where the postcolonial regimes inherited and refined the repressive techniques of the colonial regimes while, owing to international developments, reinforcing their subjugated status within the international system. The Arab Spring has, thus, represented an attempt to chart an independent path in Arab politics, marked by efforts towards democracy and civil rights. The successes and failures of the Arab Spring are critically evaluated, paying special attention to the role played by Islamist political actors. Beyond an evaluation of the domestic factors behind the various protests, the regional significance of the uprisings is evaluated, providing discussion of counterrevolutionary forces and political-sectarian developments.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wahneema Lubiano"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"432","pagination":"pp. 432-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing and Reconstructing Afro-American Texts: The Critic as Ambassador and Referee","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489917","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":6291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRITTNEY MICHELLE EDMONDS"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26814217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"24709506"},{"name":"oclc","value":"957693489"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016203977"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba08fddd-7292-32aa-ae63-e2ff55bad6a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26814217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutschoj"}],"isPartOf":"South: A Scholarly Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON WITNESSING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26814217","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"JAMES BALDWIN'S SOUTHERN EXPERIENCE AND THE QUARENESS OF BLACK SOCIALITY","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9d0ff5b-c94f-390a-8d60-090a8293adf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24769412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":124.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Back Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24769412","volumeNumber":"128","wordCount":87835,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles W. Mills"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865977","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7989e7eb-4cca-3188-a6c9-64ba28988b8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865977"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REVISIONIST ONTOLOGIES: THEORIZING WHITE SUPREMACY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865977","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The supposedly neutral underpinnings of Western political philosophy are questioned in this paper. It argues that behind the claim to objectivity and pure knowledge, there exists an implicit ideology of global white supremacy. It suggests that it is critical for persons opposed to racism to recognize this and oppose this approach with what is called 'the politics of personhood'. This is essentially a philosophical and political approach which opposes the sub-personhood to which people of colour are relegated in the global system and calls for a re-thinking of the history, culture and epistemology of Third World peoples and people of colour. Este estudio cuestiona el supuesto apuntalamiento neutral de la filosof\u00eda pol\u00edtica occidental. Discute que detr\u00e1s de la afirmaci\u00f3n de objetividad y conocimiento puro, existe una ideolog\u00eda impl\u00edcita de supremac\u00eda blanca a nivel global. Sugiere que es crucial que las personas opuestas al racismo reconozcan \u00e9sta ideolog\u00eda y se opongan a \u00e9ste enfoque utilizando lo que se conoce como \"pol\u00edtica de la personalizaci\u00f3n\". Se trata esencialmente de un enfoque pol\u00edtico y filos\u00f3fico que se opone a la condici\u00f3n de sub-personalizaci\u00f3n a la que ha sido relegada la gente de color dentro del sistema global e insta a volver a pensar la historia, cultura y epistemolog\u00eda de los pueblos del Tercer Mundo y de los pueblos de color. Ce document remet en question le syst\u00e8me pr\u00e9tendu neutre de la philosophie politique occidentale. Il d\u00e9clare que derri\u00e8re les pr\u00e9tentions \u00e0 l'objectivit\u00e9 et \u00e0 la connaissance pure se cache une id\u00e9ologie implicite de supr\u00e9matie de la race blanche. Il souligne la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 pour les gens oppos\u00e9s au racisme de le reconna\u00eetre et de rejeter cette approche avec l'application de la politique de \"personhood\" (la prise en consid\u00e9ration de l'individu en tant qu'\u00eatre humain). Cette approche essentiellement philosophique et politique s'oppose \u00e0 la philosophie de \"sous-humanit\u00e9\" \u00e0 laquelle sont r\u00e9l\u00e9gues les gens de couleur dans le syst\u00e8me mondial. Elle invite \u00e9galement \u00e0 une r\u00e9vision de l'histoire, de la culture et de l'\u00e9pist\u00e9mologie des gens de couleur et des peuples du Tiers monde.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynda Lytle Holmstrom","Ann Wolbert Burgess"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/581944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00147214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a721d0c-c89d-3404-970b-bc9e82d900d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/581944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"famicoor"}],"isPartOf":"The Family Coordinator","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Rape: The Husband's and Boyfriend's Initial Reactions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/581944","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper analyzes the reaction of husbands and boyfriends to the rape of a wife or girlfriend. Interviews with sixteen couples revealed that the man's reaction to the rape has two main components. The first is his own response to the rape\u2014his perceptions of who is the victim, wanting to go after the assailant, and \"if-only\" feelings. The second component involves his interaction with the raped woman, and here the issues are whether the couple can discuss the rape, how they deal with the woman's new phobias, and the resumption of sexual relations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tessa Brown"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27027816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01471635"},{"name":"oclc","value":"810134518"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c916cbd7-c421-34db-baf7-04efdf9342be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27027816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbasicwriting"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Basic Writing","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cLet the People Rap\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27027816","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":14354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article writes the histories of CUNY Open Admissions and hiphop toward each other, illuminating both. Bringing Open Admissions to bear on hiphop history helps us see that, while historians locate the birth of hiphop culture in a 1970s New York gutted by divestment and displacement, in fact the decade before hiphop\u2019s birth was characterized by a flourishing Black and Puerto Rican arts scene in New York and the radical education of tens of thousands of students of color in the CUNY system. Revisiting the archives of Open Admissions with a hiphop lens draws attention to the cultural rhetorics education being taught in remedial writing classrooms by adjunct lecturers like June Jordan, Adrienne Rich, and others, who drew students\u2019 attention and inquiry to their own communities and language practices. Looking at a selection of documents chosen for their use of the term \u201crappin,\u201d including teachers\u2019 reflective writing, administrative documents, and community writing, this article argues that, as bureaucratic language evolved to disguise racism in the 1960s and 1970s, a resistive, identity-based language of rappin evolved in response. Ultimately, hiphop language only entered the commodity market at the end of the 1970s when CUNY instituted tuition for the first time in its history, pushing out many of the students Open Admissions had been designed to welcome in.","subTitle":"Cultural Rhetorics Pedagogy and Practices Under CUNY\u2019s Open Admissions, 1968-1978","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Chapman"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"614d3a93-1beb-321e-9a68-6fcabf143f7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40232378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonialism: A Literary Turn","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232378","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":5768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane E. Goodman"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00912131"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205464"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b42402f-5cc5-3cbf-b178-b83913f398f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/640677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethos"}],"isPartOf":"Ethos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Singers, Saints, and the Construction of Postcolonial Subjectivities in Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/640677","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Through a close study of the multivocal plays of intertextuality in the \"new songs\" of Algeria's Berber Cultural Movement, this paper explores how genres can support the emergence of new forms of self-recognition and promote novel possibilities for engagement with older expressive forms. Via double-voiced parodies of religious chants known as adekker, the new Berber singers call into question the \"magical\" powers of saints and exhort the population to relinquish the notion that saints control human destiny. Paradoxically, however, this interplay of genres generates unexpected interpretive possibilities, which in some cases subvert new song's secularist vision.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Chrisman"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8be76d87-a81c-3922-8030-14d9818c0a6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In Memoriam: GEORGE JACKSON: SEPTEMBER 23, 1941 - AUGUST 21, 1971","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203676","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":1261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melani McAlister"],"datePublished":"1999-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30042184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d350e51-a94d-3ca1-b6bc-4ee57cdfe8aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30042184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"656","pageStart":"622","pagination":"pp. 622-656","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"One Black Allah: The Middle East in the Cultural Politics of African American Liberation, 1955-1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30042184","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":15085,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. W. Johnson"],"datePublished":"1971-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/720563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"280","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720563","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guy Martin"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b30538a2-119c-3ca8-abd7-daacd017c7fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology and Praxis in Thomas Sankara's Populist Revolution of 4 August 1983 in Burkina Faso","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166927","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adbul Karim Bangura"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39ea980f-41d0-30eb-be05-cb7652493868"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45198556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"UBUNTUGOGY: AN AFRICAN EDUCATIONAL PARADIGM THAT TRANSCENDS PEDAGOGY, ANDRAGOGY, ERGONAGY AND HEUTAGOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45198556","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":15795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul A. Beckett"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"030f455b-6f4f-33de-9e67-7f5e317294a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and Sub-Saharan Africa: Notes on the Contemporary Significance of His Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185234","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":5953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd G. Adu Amoah"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29783157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10841806"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd3c0a2e-228a-3591-a5e0-a83469d6964c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29783157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"admintheoprax"}],"isPartOf":"Administrative Theory & Praxis","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"610","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-610","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"M.E. Sharpe, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Public Policy Formation in Africa: Toward a Grounded Ontology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29783157","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":2010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriele Lazzari"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.07","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47fc75be-d158-3915-8811-7671166e753f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.07"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Peripheral Realism and the Bildungsroman in Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.07","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8998,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay analyzes Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions and argues that this novel appropriates and resignifies the bildungsroman, thus demonstrating that this genre cannot provide a symbolic resolution for the \u201cnervous condition\u201d of the colonized subject. To do so, I integrate a world-systemic approach with a formalist analysis of genre. Starting from the premise that the modern world-system has been constituted by capitalist modernization and colonial expansion, I read Dangarembga's novel as a localized literary response to these two world-historical forces and analyze the entanglements between formal choices and socioeconomic transformations, as well as their impact on the characters' psyche. By appropriating the realist bildungsroman from a peripheral perspective, Nervous Conditions frames the tense relations between a self-reflecting individuality and her social totality. In so doing, Dangarembga rejects the ideological premises of a genre tied to European bourgeois subjectivity and simultaneously reactivates realism and mimesis as dynamic and flexible modes of representation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. Shankar"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150361","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40150361"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"487","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-487","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Thumb of Ekalavya: Postcolonial Studies and the \"Third World\" Scholar in a Neocolonial World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150361","volumeNumber":"68","wordCount":8539,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan M. Fayer","Joan F. McMurray"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec79d969-6948-38c6-ab4e-cd3b557c17a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25613258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Shakespeare in Carriacou","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613258","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Adah"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c125b20-7783-3dfb-a90b-f4ef2992ed31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44019088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Post-and Re-Colonizing Aotearoa Screen: Violence and Identity in \"Once Were Warriors and What Becomes of the Broken Hearted?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44019088","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred B. Zack-Williams"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993187","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6f0d955-2321-3f76-99c5-127e9498b85d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3993187"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Sierra Leone: The Political Economy of Civil War, 1991-98","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993187","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article looks at the causal factors for the May 1997 military intervention in Sierra Leone which unleashed complex political emergencies engulfing the entire country. The paper argues that the causal factors are historical, reflecting the political economy of underdevelopment in that country. Attention is drawn to the role played by personalised rule of the APC leadership, and structural factors such as deteriorating terms of trade and the irrationality of the post-colonial development strategy. Particular attention is drawn to the role played by IMF and World Bank Structural adjustment programmes in creating a corp of socially excluded intellectuals who could not find jobs either within the state or private sectors.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RORY CRATH"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a52978b-c8f4-39b7-86de-03b0ca9371a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER SIX: Reading Fanon in \"Homosexual Territory\": Towards the Queering of a Queer Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980669","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":11135,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609476,609641]],"Locations in B":[[28794,28959]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Ouma Akoth"],"datePublished":"2017-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27083acf-1d16-36d0-b3e7-06a482171d11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26739706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"194","pagination":"pp. 194-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Positioning and making citizenship through Obama K\u2019Ogelo Cultural Festivals in Siaya County, Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739706","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines how cultural festivals are used as both symbols and instruments for producing and claiming citizenship in Kenya. It analyses in particular the Obama K\u2019Ogelo Cultural Festival, held in 2008 and 2010, to commemorate the election and presidency of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States of America (U.S.A.). The two events were used in the first place to position President Obama in Kenya. More importantly, I argue in this paper, the Luo people of K\u2019Ogelo used it in documenting their ethnographies and as an instrument of positioning themselves in Kenya\u2019s body politic, contesting narratives of exclusion as well as claiming their human rights. This paper develops an interpretation of the K\u2019Ogelo Cultural Festival in the light of the Kenyan Constitution-making debate on the subject of \u2018culture\u2019 and the public comments of the U.S. ambassador to Kenya at the time (Michael Ranneberger). At the local level in K\u2019Ogelo, these festivals are primarily used by local intellectuals and their courtiers to develop an ethnography of Luos and Luoness. In addition, the festivals were used to claim the presidency of Obama in support of the argument that Luos are good enough to be leaders. Kitabu ni lero kaka nyasi madongo mag kit oganda itiyogo kuom nyiso kido kod ranyisi moko mag dwaro kendo loso bedo jokanyo ei piny kaka mar Kenya. Moloyo, oluwo kaka nyasi maduong mar dhood jo-K\u2019Ogelo mar higa ka higa, mane otim e higa 2008 kod higa 2010, nyiso rapar mar yiero kod loch mar wuod K\u2019Ogelo, Migosi Barrack Hussein Obama, kuom bedo mare e kom maduong mar ker mar 44 e piny Riwruok mar Amerka (U.S.A.). Nyasi ariyogo ne otigo mokuongo kuom diero Migosi Obama kaka jathur-ka kata wuod lowo e piny Kenya. To maduong moloyo, oganda Luo mae piny Kenya medo tiyo kod nyasi kailagi kuom rito kendo dhialo kitgi gi timbegi e dier ogendni mamoko kendo nyiso lemo margi kuom loch mar rito piny Kenya. Ma nyiso ni oganda joka nyanam tiyo gi nyasi gi kuom dwaro kendo rito pok margi mane Nyasaye osemiyogi kendo ma Katiba maduong bende osiro kaka achiel kuom oganda ei piny Kenya. Kuom mano, kitabuni chiwo achiel kuom temo lero kuom yor tiegruok, lemo mar nyasi maduong mar dhood jo-Kogelo, moloyo ka ingiyo kuom katiba maduong morito piny mane okadh e higa 2010, kendo ma osemiyo duong kido kod timbe mag oganda duto ei thur-ka. Bende oyaro tiend twak moko mane ochiw kod jachung maduong mar piny Riwruok mar Amerka (U.S.A.) e piny Kenya a kinde mane Barrack Obama okawo e loch, Migosi Michael Ranneberger. Kendo ka inono matut ei jo-Kogelo giwegi, yudore ni nyasi gi itiyo kod jonanga kata josomo mag jo-Kogelo kuom gero nyadhi margi kaka dho-ot moluor ei piny Luo. Kuom mago duto, nyasi ariyogi ne otigo kuom diero loch mar Migosi Barrack Obama kendo kuom dhiale kaka ranyisi makende maonge kiawa ni Oganda Luo oromo rito piny.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert G. Newby"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1319290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a14e32b-f759-304e-8221-10a446aeda24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1319290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1319290","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":1567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald Sim"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2009.62.3.48","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbef8af3-ebdb-37b2-b20a-27aeacc255ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2009.62.3.48"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Yasmin Ahmad's \u201cOrked\u201d Trilogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2009.62.3.48","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":3506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Sepet (2004), the sequel Gubra (2006), and prequel Mukhsin (2006), directed by Yasmin Ahmad, narrate the three major relationships of Orked, a Muslim girl in Malaysia negotiating them at different points in her life. The essay considers Ahmad's cinephilia and sentimental style, and their relation to the trilogy's postcolonial themes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Archie Mafeje"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1aea7b81-78fc-36b0-a3cb-a2e882e7ae4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24486821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"183","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-183","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Africanist\" Heritage and its Antinomies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486821","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10902,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[30969,31020]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kadeshia L. Matthews"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf038bd4-0a2b-31b4-a149-bbeae9495c9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"BLACK BOY NO MORE? VIOLENCE AND THE FLIGHT FROM BLACKNESS IN RICHARD WRIGHT\u2019S NATIVE SON<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421721","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10320,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[103001,103059]],"Locations in B":[[33018,33079]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BRUCE GRANT","JUDITH FARQUHAR","JUDITH (JACK) HALBERSTAM","GEORGE E. MARCUS","DONALD MOORE","DIANE M. NELSON"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41336311","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cff69ebd-9be5-3b6e-947a-0f24d8ce8539"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41336311"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"706","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-706","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PLAYLISTS: Cultural Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41336311","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":2653,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Gasster"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10795154-4d1d-3dee-9f28-5e1d4fc79092"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44322493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM: THE ROMAN DE MOEURS IN THE WEST AFRICAN FRANCOPHONE NOVEL OF THE EIGHTIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322493","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anoop Mirpuri"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.1.0073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b842316-60bd-3838-8a5d-b30105751637"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.1.0073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcritethnstud"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Ethnic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racial Violence, Mass Shootings, and the U.S. Neoliberal State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.1.0073","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":15868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay historicizes the phenomenon of mass shootings within the context of transformations in the spatial and political economy of the U.S. neoliberal state. While mass shootings are not usually understood as iterations of racial violence, this essay argues that both the discursive and actual phenomenon of mass shootings must be understood in relation to the manifold forms of violence structured by racial capitalism\u2014from territorial conquest to U.S. imperialism, spatial privatization to mass incarceration. It suggests that doing so disturbs and complicates positivist conceptions of the relation between race and violence that predominate in the humanities and social sciences, while demanding a reconsideration of the meaning and trajectory of civilian life within studies of race and biopolitics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ineke Phaf","G. J. van Exel","Maureen Berkel"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931118","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15d8a8fc-851c-3cc4-9df2-4666d37d483c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931118"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Caribbean Imagination and Nation-Building in Antillean and Surinamese Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931118","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christienna D. Fryar"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26598927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac5f2c0a-68e1-36b1-8a46-12efbd1d2f70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26598927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"727","pageStart":"709","pagination":"pp. 709-727","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Imperfect Models","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26598927","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines an imperial scandal concerning the treatment of patients in the lunatic asylum of Kingston, Jamaica, that highlighted the inadequacies of the imperial government. A significant moment in the development of colonial public health policy, this scandal also spoke to broader questions of postemancipation imperial governance. At the heart of the scandal was a debate about whether standards of treatment developed in Britain\u2014symbolized by the image of the ideal asylum and the ideology of moral management\u2014could and should be implemented in colonies. This debate was all the more fraught because the designation of moral management as the official protocol was recent, its implementation incomplete, and its underlying ideas contested. Nevertheless, despite the instability of these ideas, during the scandal and its aftermath, actors treated them as a monolithic package of standards before making them the definitive model for all colonial institutions. Indeed, the scandal helped further bolster moral management in Britain.","subTitle":"The Kingston Lunatic Asylum Scandal and the Problem of Postemancipation Imperialism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. Sklar"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71104062-d16d-3c15-9108-8f6cf1492354"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postimperialism: A Class Analysis of Multinational Corporate Expansion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421292","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9025,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ariel Meyerstein"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20108710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"508","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-508","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Business - Business administration"],"title":"Between Law and Culture: Rwanda's Gacaca and Postcolonial Legality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20108710","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":19354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article recounts a clash between an establishment international nongovernmental organization (NGO), Amnesty International, and the government of Rwanda over the meaning of international human rights norms in a postconflict society. It offers a critical perspective on the main-stream human rights community's due process critique of Rwanda's gacaca--a system of over ten thousand local judicial bodies modeled on a precolonial communal dispute resolution the Rwandan government introduced to process the over one hundred twenty thousand suspects crowding its prisons following the 1994 genocide. This moment of norm contestation offers a lens to broader problems facing the human rights regime. It argues that Amnesty International's legalistic approach to the gacaca prevents it from appreciating its unique postcolonial hybrid form, and that other approaches, such as the one adopted by Penal Reform International, are perhaps better models for human rights praxis in the developing world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. K. Khinduka"],"datePublished":"1971-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30021784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377961"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46851131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dd6b699-3cac-3ed2-9a93-c7074d2b14c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30021784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociservrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Social Service Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Work and the Third World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30021784","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Instead of following the Western model of professional social work, social workers in the third world should pursue a developmental and institutional orientation in which rapid structural change and socioeconomic improvement are assigned central significance. A broadly and humanely defined notion of development is proposed as the organizing frame- work for both social work practice and social work education in the third world. Implications of adopting a developmental model of social work are indicated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Peppis"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247110","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ad08a45-38ab-31cc-8135-a158644254a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24247110"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Salvaging Dialect and Cultural Cross-Dressing in McKay's \"Constab Ballads\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24247110","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":15671,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George G. Grabowicz"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2501742","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00376779"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076037"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e1d2e93-30ed-3d77-b449-4fb157b17e70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2501742"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"slavicreview"}],"isPartOf":"Slavic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"690","pageStart":"674","pagination":"pp. 674-690","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ukrainian Studies: Framing the Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2501742","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8177,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Easlea"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284486","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976324"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13ec65ee-4962-344b-bed5-6d77ade7700c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/284486"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciencestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Science Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An Introduction to the History and Social Studies of Science: A Seminar Course for First-Year Science Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/284486","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":9697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah Eden Schiff"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61f2f68c-a752-32dc-a39d-1f5adb00e47e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"POWER LITERATURE AND THE MYTH OF RACIAL MEMORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287666","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":11545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Orser Jr."],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23070040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04409213"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dd6eee3-3d18-3846-9ab7-0a3fb29256cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23070040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histarch"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Society for Historical Archaeology","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beneath the Surface of Tenement Life: The Dialectics of Race and Poverty during America's First Gilded Age","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23070040","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Life during the first Gilded Age in the United States (1865\u20141925) was a time of considerable social differentiation between rich and poor. Newly arrived immigrants with little money were often relegated to substandard housing in American cities. In this study, I argue that some nonwealthy immigrants were racialized as poor, and I investigate whether this racial categorization created homogeneity in housing and material culture. I use the Five Points district in New York City as my point of investigation, confining my analysis to the late 19th century. My findings are that both tenement housing and artifact possession were generally homogeneous when the analysis is performed at the societal scale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meredith Terretta"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25741429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8170e1a-c817-3723-b0b9-80728c93e1d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25741429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"253","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-253","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chiefs, Traitors, and Representatives: The Construction of a Political Repertoire in Independence-Era Cameroun","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25741429","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12380,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[426074,426416]],"Locations in B":[[68443,68783]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Mary Davalos"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43943380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15502546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"755176388"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235301"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96a33132-ca20-368b-83f8-d8ce47c64db7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43943380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chiclatistud"}],"isPartOf":"Chicana\/Latina Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social (MALCS)","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE VISUAL ARTS OF LINDA VALLEJO: Indigenous Spirituality, Indigenist Sensibility, and Emplacement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43943380","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":10777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Analyzing nearly forty years of art by Linda Vallejo, this article argues that her indigenist sensibility and indigenous spirituality create the aesthetics of disruption and continuity. In turn this entwined aesthetics generates emplacement a praxis that resists or remedies the injuries of colonialism, patriarchy, and other systems of oppression that displace and disavow indigenous, Mexican, and Chicanalo populations in the Americas. Her visual art fits squarely within the trajectory of Chicana feminist decolonial practice, particularly in its empowerment of indigenous communities, Mexicans, and Chicanalos in the hemisphere.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert M. Kaplan"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14421771"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-252088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2def563e-c31d-3623-a428-9a17d1101824"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healthhist"}],"isPartOf":"Health and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Australian and New Zealand Society of the History of Medicine, Inc","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","History","Medicine & Allied Health","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Doctors and the Armenian and Bosnian Genocides","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5401\/healthhist.18.2.0040","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The extensive degree of mass murder that occurred throughout the twentieth century saw the rate of non-combatant (civilian) deaths rise by over seventy-five percent in the space of seventy years, amounting to a death toll exceeding 170 million. Where genocides are concerned, the central role of doctors is undeniable. Their participation arose from the preoccupation with eugenics for improving the health of the nation. From here, their belief in nationalism overrode the sacred duty to save lives. These doctors descended into moral anarchy, breaching an ethical code of two millennia. This paper examines the role of doctors in the Armenian genocide and that of psychiatrists (notably Radovan Karadzic), in the Bosnian genocide. That medicine contains the seeds of its own destruction is confirmed by the recurrent involvement of doctors in genocide.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Yewah"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nation as a Contested Construct","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820423","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lars Engle"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450841","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc63a623-6471-345d-b053-daba42091645"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/450841"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"460","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-460","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Studies in Tudor and Stuart Drama","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/450841","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":18932,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Anne Parker"],"datePublished":"2018-09-30","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.32.3.0439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42679673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"211016"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"740cd620-fba2-3414-afeb-7438b978cc49"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/jspecphil.32.3.0439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Human as Double Bind: Sylvia Wynter and the Genre of \u201cMan\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/jspecphil.32.3.0439","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":3582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sylvia Wynter's philosophy of sociogenesis is an implicit response to a double bind instituted by conceiving of humanity in what she calls generic terms. Either one is human and measured by a morphology that privileges an implicit whiteness, masculinity, cis-ness, hetero-ness, symmetry, and ability, or one is a biological organism without necessarily having recourse to the recognition humans share with each other. Wynter addresses this double bind in arguing first that what is political has in fact always had ecological implications. Bodies denied in politics are in fact of great consequence for politics. This implicit morphology of the genre \u201cMan\u201d has always included the presumption that \u201cMan\u201d can and does act unilaterally. And second, Wynter addresses the double bind in her reading of Fanonian sociogenesis. There is no generic body, as Wynter reads Fanon. The way in which a body is regarded, given the \u201csociogenic principles\u201d of a political context, is an indistinguishably biological-political matter.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paramjit S. Judge"],"datePublished":"2004-08-07","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4415382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9688dfde-1a0b-3995-9e78-299354610cd0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4415382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"3608","pageStart":"3605","pagination":"pp. 3605-3608","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Religion, Identity and History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4415382","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":3867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Hansen"],"datePublished":"1977-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb0f221c-84b4-3314-9dfd-b059080c37d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24486306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Freedom and revolution in the thought of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486306","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":12125,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[64387,64441]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PETER W. MWIKISA","MAUDE M. DIKOBE"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15423166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"308fc2a3-5a25-3242-bb2e-833415ac2092"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peacebuilding"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peacebuilding & Development","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"STORIES AND LITERATURE IN CULTURE AS SOURCES OF INDIGENOUS INSIGHTS IN PEACEBUILDING AND DEVELOPMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603366","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper asserts that stories as a cultural heritage contribute to the promotion of the universal values of a culture of peace: respect for life, liberty and justice, solidarity, tolerance, and gender equality. One of the ways in which literature in general contributes to the creation of a culture of peace is found in how stories become repositories of indigenous insights and wisdom about the root causes of conflict and about how to address them in peacebuilding that includes economic and social dimensions The paper presents three stories and reads them as artefacts of African cultural heritage. In the context of a vibrant literary culture they not only yield indigenous insights into peacebuilding, but could also be the basis of a reading and discussion culture that would promote awareness-raising, intercultural dialogue and understanding. Since literary texts, including stories, are the means by which society imagines itself, the cultivation of a dynamic literature must be fostered as a valuable peacebuilding action tool.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susantha Goonatilaka","Susantha Goonatilake"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45219021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1391720X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607463078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df4acd17-eed9-3914-b621-60772b5b2dee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45219021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaasiasocisri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka (RASSL)","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Weber: Protestantism and Buddhism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45219021","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":12208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Like the other Abrahamic religions, Christianity did not come through an intellectual search, but was 'revealed' to Jesus, considered the son of a non-existent 'God'. Christianity's initial imprint, Catholicism, was challenged in the 16th century by Protestantism which although accepting the myths of Christianity wanted to search for 'God' through the Bible by-passing the then corrupt Catholicism. Weber, writing 100 years ago at a time of European supremacy, thought that the rise of the industrialized West was due to Protestant attitudes, and from this perspective, examined the stagnation of civilizations with other belief systems including Buddhism. His understanding and interpretation of translated Buddhist texts was scanty and, with the rise of Asian societies 100 years later, Buddhism is shown not inimical to industrialization. A 'Protestant' perspective has also been adopted by Obeyasekara who unlike Weber, had not read foundational Buddhist texts. Obeyasekara interprets the anticolonial Buddhist revival of the 19th and early 20th century as due to colonial Protestant forces allegedly brought by Olcott who had rejected Protestantism. Due to these two intellectual misunderstandings, one by a distant European who read the Buddhist texts, and the other by a colonised Sri Lankan who had not read the texts, a generation of colonised social scientists has grown up in Sri Lanka. They operate in effect as today's intellectual carriers of the White Man's Burden.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sebastian Weier"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37f1ea72-1f22-3b55-b637-309e5de1fbee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44071852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Consider Afro-Pessimism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44071852","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":7502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jesse Benjamin"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43199126","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f1c9f63-8f6a-368f-8a69-7c3c501de7ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43199126"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading Du Bois on East Africa: Epistemological Implications of Apartheid Constructions of Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43199126","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":9538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper \"reads\" the scholarship of W. E. B. Du Bois and references East African history and historiography, including the broader pan-African tradition of which Du Bois was a leading member. Du Bois and his pan-African colleagues were often more accurate in their analyses and perception of biases and colonial myths than their Western counterparts. What is significant is that biases and myths that existed some fifty or more years before acknowledgement in the academy persist today, which raises important questions about the relationship between epistemology and identity, and between racial consciousness and the politics of academic production.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guy Martin"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1514947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e4b9a48-1325-3964-8567-8363c27e2136"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1514947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revisiting Fanon's Life, Times, and Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1514947","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":3187,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[615859,615915]],"Locations in B":[[58,114]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Perry Mars"],"datePublished":"2001-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6bbfe4d4-627b-39b3-b410-e5e427b84b1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/425005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"372","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-372","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnic Politics, Mediation, and Conflict Resolution: The Guyana Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425005","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Coercive and elitist approaches to political control in post-colonial states like Guyana have often proved counterproductive with respect to resolving ethno-political conflicts in these parts. In Guyana, this contradiction is usually manifested in terms of the escalation of legitimate political competition into overtly violent ethno-political violence and polarization, and reinforced by the consequent devaluation of the more democratic or pacific alternatives to conflict resolution such as mass or grass-roots participation, intergroup negotiations, and third-party mediation. Recurring debates between Cultural Pluralists and Marxists on this issue have so far failed to shed light on the prospects for the more pacific approaches to conflict resolution. Closer analytic scrutiny of actual ethno-political conflict events in Guyana between 1948 and 1999 leads to the understanding that such conflicts derive largely from what is termed a continual crisis of political legitimacy reflected in the inequities of political representation and economic resource distribution across groups. The more democratic or pacific approaches are here suggested as most appropriate for the resolution of the political legitimation crisis and the ultimate realization of a sustainable peace among the diverse groups in the Guyana political system.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN MOONEY"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f13fc6c7-8379-3230-b22e-cb418961ed70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20779166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Invisible War: Violences and Violations in Novels under Censorship in Franco's Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20779166","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo considera temas de violencia y modos narrativos que producen \"cicatrices\" en varias novelas espa\u00f1olas de la dictadura: Se\u00f1as de identidad (1966) y Reivindicaci\u00f3n del conde don Juli\u00e1n (1970), de Juan Goytisolo; Si te dicen que ca\u00ed (1973), de Juan Mars\u00e9; y Volver\u00e1s a Regi\u00f3n (1967), de Juan Benet. Estas obras desaf\u00edan los criterios y la fuerza de la censura franquista y presentan relaciones complejas entre los vencidos y los vencedores de la Guerra Civil, sobre todo en la complicaci\u00f3n del concepto de la masculinidad espa\u00f1ola, el uso del masoquismo como arma de poder y el recurso de la figura del sacrificio. Los modos masculinos se pueden comparar con la m\u00edmesis de la feminidad seg\u00fan la teor\u00eda de Luce Irigaray. Estas novelas no prev\u00e9n una victoria feliz alternativa. En actos de autoformaci\u00f3n (self-fashioning) y contextualizaci\u00f3n nacional, proponen una erotizada autodestrucci\u00f3n perpetua y el desenga\u00f1o, as\u00ed como un masoquismo ag\u00f3nico a veces confundido con el sacrificio.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel E. Agbiboa"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.62.2.95","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ac63dca-0f3c-36a5-8340-27ef361df498"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.62.2.95"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\u201cPolicing Is Not Work: It Is Stealing by Force\u201d: Corrupt Policing and Related Abuses in Everyday Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.62.2.95","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":13937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article critically and empirically examines the everyday problem of corrupt policing and related abuses in urban Nigeria, with attention to the threat posed to ordinary Nigerians' basic human rights. The analysis, sociohistorically anchored, foregrounds colonial and military policies that have entrenched a culture of predation in the Nigeria Police Force. The article contributes to existing scholarship by directly relating corrupt and abusive policing to complex sociohistorical conditions, rather than seeing it as a purely managerial problem, whose solution lies in simplistic demands for internal reform. The article attempts to fill a gap in empirical scholarship by approaching corrupt and abusive policing from the angle of everyday practice, rather than by taking normative structural approaches and basing suppositions of actual behavior upon these. The article draws on evidence from eight months of ethnographic fieldwork research in Lagos State, southwestern Nigeria. The fieldwork evidence is supported by analyses of public discourse, a review of extant literature, some semiformal interviews, a review of national constitutions and international human rights law, and historical research. These together suggest conclusions pertinent to democratic reform of the Nigerian police.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["IBRAHIM M. ABU-RAB\u012a'"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20837251","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05788072"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557670399"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234711"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5606d77-d8f7-3de5-be9d-f8538037c743"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20837251"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"islamicstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Islamic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Islamic Research Institute, International Islamic University, Islamabad","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Critical Arab Reason: The Contributions of the Moroccan Philosopher Mu\u1e25ammad '\u0100bid al-J\u0101bir\u012b","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20837251","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kimberly Chung"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559530872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aeff6858-0e8d-33e5-83e2-56c4bd754401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43923157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies (1979-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Center for Korean Research in the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Proletarian Sensibilities: The Body Politics of New Tendency Literature (1924-27)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43923157","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the New Tendency movement spearheaded by the artist organization KAPF (Korean Artist Proletarian Federation) that represented the beginning of \"proletarian sensibility\" in 1920s colonial Korea. Influenced by the convergence of literary criticism and the importation of Marxism, proletarian sensibility is a network that threads through a fabric of images, film, and affective narrative representations about the abject conditions of the masses. New Tendency literature\u2014with its development of tropes of excess, sensational language, descriptions of poverty, and the image of the body-in-pain\u2014exhibits the complex development of collective politics through the embodied experience of the abject subject.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lawrence D. Kritzman"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3182542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ee4ae29-17f1-366e-a19d-888a94c01974"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3182542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"103","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Certain Idea of French: Cultural Studies, Literature and Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3182542","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5874,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bongani Nyoka"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b165761c-cf5c-3cdd-b6fe-a945a1dd563e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Concepts of Cabralism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617820","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article evaluates Reiland Rabaka\u2019s book, Concepts of Cabralism: Amilcar Cabral and Africana Critical Theory. In the context of calls for knowledge \u2018decolonisation\u2019 on the African continent, the book is relevant and important for a variety of reasons. In the first instance, Rabaka traces the genealogy of Amilcar Cabral\u2019s intellectual and political thought to leading figures of the Negritude Movement such as Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire and L\u00e9opold S\u00e9dar Senghor, and then to Frantz Fanon. In doing so, Rabaka argues that, unlike other revolutionaries, Cabral avoided an uncritical regurgitation of orthodox Marxism. Instead, Cabral studied the concrete conditions of his locale not only to lead the liberation struggles of his people, but also to enrich revolutionary theory. In this regard, he was able to critique and, where necessary, dispense with some of the taken-for-granted categories of orthodox Marxism. Ultimately, Rabaka sees Cabral not only as a \u2018revolutionary nationalist\u2019 and \u2018revolutionary humanist\u2019, but also as a critical theorist. Consequently, he suggests that Cabral should be read as contributing to \u2018Africana critical theory\u2019. This article will take up each of these issues in its proper course. Cet article \u00e9value le livre de Reiland Rabaka, Concepts of Cabralism: Amilcar Cabral and Africana Critical Theory. Dans le contexte d\u2019appels \u00e0 la \u00ab d\u00e9colonisation des connaissances \u00bb sur le continent africain, le livre est pertinent et important pour diverses raisons. En premier lieu, Rabaka retrace la g\u00e9n\u00e9alogie de la pens\u00e9e intellectuelle et politique d\u2019Amilcar Cabral \u00e0 des personnalit\u00e9s du Mouvement de la n\u00e9gritude, telles qu\u2019Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire et L\u00e9opold S\u00e9dar Senghor, puis \u00e0 Frantz Fanon. Ce faisant, Rabaka soutient que, contrairement aux autres r\u00e9volutionnaires, Cabral a \u00e9vit\u00e9 une r\u00e9gurgitation sans critique du marxisme orthodoxe. Au lieu de cela, Cabral a \u00e9tudi\u00e9 les conditions concr\u00e8tes dans son pays, non seulement pour mener les luttes de lib\u00e9ration de son peuple, mais aussi pour enrichir la th\u00e9orie r\u00e9volutionnaire. \u00c0 cet \u00e9gard, il a pu critiquer et, le cas \u00e9ch\u00e9ant, se passer de cat\u00e9gories consid\u00e9r\u00e9es comme acquises du marxisme orthodoxe. En fin de compte, Rabaka consid\u00e8re Cabral non seulement comme un \u00ab nationaliste r\u00e9volutionnaire \u00bb et un \u00ab humaniste r\u00e9volutionnaire \u00bb, mais aussi comme un th\u00e9oricien critique. Par cons\u00e9quent, il sugg\u00e8re de consid\u00e9rer Cabral comme une contribution \u00e0 la \u00ab th\u00e9orie critique d\u2019Africana \u00bb. Cet article abordera chacune de ces questions en son temps.","subTitle":"On Cabral\u2019s Intellectual Contributions","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Boone","Frank O'Hara"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Gay Language as Political Praxis: The Poetry of Frank O'Hara","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466406","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roderick J. Macdonald"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217552","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccfa85af-22cf-39eb-b16e-9339f5b6a0a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217552"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217552","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.13","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"822640c2-9ff5-31b5-8f3c-2e5967f5f123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.13"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Genealogies of Coloniality and Implications for Africa's Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.40.3.13","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract How Africa was conceived as an idea and integrated into the evolving Euro-North American-centric modernity is a tale of genealogies of colonialities and African resistance(s). Genealogies of coloniality span eight broad and overlapping epochs in the production of Africa that impinged on its development in various direct and indirect ways. The eight epochs distilled are the paradigm of discovery and mercantilist order running from the fifteenth century to the eighteenth century dominated by the slave trade and mercantilism; the post-1648 Westphalian order that inaugurated the exclusion of Africa from sovereignty; the 1884-5 Berlin consensus, scramble for and conquest of Africa that concretised the dismemberment and fragmentation of Africa; colonial governmentality that was characterised by production of African colonial subjectivity; the post-1945 United Nations decolonisation normative order that amounted to the accommodation of Africa to the lowest echelons of the modern world system; the Cold War coloniality that polarized Africa ideologically and reduced it to a theatre of proxy hot wars; the post-Cold War triumphalism of neoliberal order that Francis Fukuyama (1992) articulated as \u2018the end of history and the last man\u2019; the post-9\/11 anti-terrorist order that produced a new securitization order; and the current coloniality of markets and new scramble for Africa. The article posits that African development's trials and tribulations are deeply embedded within these overlapping epochs that were accompanied by epistemicides, genocides, usurpations, appropriations and disruptions. Africa is today still struggling to free itself from the constraining global colonial matrices of power that have been in place since the time of colonial encounters.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. P. Riquelme"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23740005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"LOCATION AND HOME IN BECKETT, BHABHA, FANON, AND HEIDEGGER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740005","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mayer N. 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MOHOME"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24349790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee28db42-95bb-3694-bc58-9a31fda478f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24349790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"98","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"186","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-186","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The First Decade of Africa's Independence : A Balance-Sheet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24349790","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4723,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emory M. Roe","Norman Rush","Paul Smith","Donald S. Moore","Bruce Robbins","Michael Lerner","James Ferguson","Jonathan Arac","Manning Marable","Michael Watts","Jeffrey C. 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In a postcolonial situation, one that still prevails in Namibia, these actors draw on diverse memory contents and rely on grossly unequal means to promote them. This takes place against the background of a fragmented past, the consequence of a uniquely divided colonial experience, with settler colonialism in the south and centre, and indirect rule in the northern regions. On the one hand, this regional problem is highlighted by the official discourse on the liberation movement, which greatly privileges the military aspect. On the other hand, communal memory practices in the south and centre refer to the pivotal experience of the colonial war and genocide in 1904-8. Associated claims have gained momentum through the centennial of 2004, but in its aftermath, cleavages, particularly between various Herero groups, have also persisted. At the same time, the official vision of the past is validated by government insistence on unity, also in relation to Herero claims for German reparations for the genocide. This has created an impasse that once again underscores the processual, controversial and manifold nature of the process through which public memory is defined and negotiated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AKIIKI B. 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Ces deux composantes sont ensuite mises en rapport avec la situation politique des Inuit contemporains, en particulier avec leur qu\u00eate d'auto-d\u00e9termination. On en conclut que la pr\u00e9servation de l'identit\u00e9 culturelle est li\u00e9e au contr\u00f4le des symboles. This essay on Inuit idendity seeks to describe identity in terms of individual experience and of collective processes. These two elements are subsequently put into relation with the political situation of contemporary Inuit, particularly with their quest for self-determination. The author concludes that the maintenance of cultural identity is a process related to symbolic control.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pilar Somacarrera \u00cd\u00f1igo"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61517127"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005249106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d294f830-4be4-3477-8f16-1875c0c1eb96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43486070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43486070","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali Kamali","Basil Kardaras"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1318900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0092055X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48950428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-238724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5111be9-0985-3341-b3cb-2e32caf715be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1318900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teacsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Teaching Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Approaching the Sociology of Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1318900","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annette K. Joseph-Gabriel"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26527984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41e1ee90-5abb-32bb-b7f3-c21826feec11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26527984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26527984","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MONICA POPESCU"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43830244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"181c9462-4b7a-327c-95b7-cb2baac96cfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43830244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Literacy: Gender, Nationalism, and Visibility in African Literary History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43830244","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":2406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Ney"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.04","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2eae0fd3-ebb3-3cd3-b643-edf3b7220f5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.04"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Teleology and Secular Time in Armah and Ng\u0169g\u0129: Augustine, Manicheanism, and the African Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.04","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Modern secularity is sometimes taken to require an understanding of time as shapeless and open-ended. In contrast, Armah's novel Two Thousand Seasons and Ng\u0169g\u0129's novel Matigari deploy a temporality that steers the reader's attention to a certain deliverance in the future. Rather than taking this teleology as the rejection of secularity, I propose a notion of secularity derived from the North African Aurelius Augustine's fourth-century The City of God. Like these two novels, Augustine's work was disparaged as \u201cmanichean\u201d because it seems to deny human freedom by dividing up individuals, institutions, and eras too starkly. However, Augustine's dualism complements a notion of the saeculum\u2014the current age\u2014as a time of intractable mixedness. In embracing key aspects of manicheanism without its morally exclusivist and politically separatist vision of the present, Augustine anticipates and illuminates the interventions by Armah and Ng\u0169g\u0129 into the problem of postcolonial time.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alisa Solomon"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3694dbd3-f98a-3d2c-a87d-188e54fb108d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25501629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"1592","pageStart":"1585","pagination":"pp. 1585-1592","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Who Gets to Be Human on the Evening News?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25501629","volumeNumber":"121","wordCount":5202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a41a9603-cf13-3923-80f9-1febe17f40ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2932219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":103.0,"pageEnd":"1033","pageStart":"931","pagination":"pp. 931-1033","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studies in Caribbean and South American Literature: An Annotated Bibliography, 1991-1992","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932219","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":52214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karen Langg\u00e5rd"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42870924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07011008"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74565051-7419-3054-85d3-f757a531c3e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42870924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etudinuistud"}],"isPartOf":"\u00c9tudes\/Inuit\/Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Association Inuksiutiit Katimajiit Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"An examination of Greenlandic awareness of ethnicity and national self-consciousness through texts produced by Greenlanders 1860s-1920s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42870924","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article d\u00e9montre que d\u00e8s le d\u00e9but des ann\u00e9es 1860, les Groenlandais de l'ouest poss\u00e9daient une identit\u00e9 ethno-nationale bien marqu\u00e9e. \u00c0 travers l'\u00e9tude de textes publi\u00e9s par des auteurs groenlandais dans le journal Atuagagdliutit, l'auteure d\u00e9crit la nature de cette identit\u00e9, sa gen\u00e8se, et son d\u00e9veloppement jusqu'aux ann\u00e9es vingt. This paper demonstrates that from the beginning of the 1860s, West Greenlanders had a very well defined ethno-national identity. Using texts from Greenlandic writers that have been published in the Atuagagdliutit newspaper, the author describes the nature of this identity, its genesis, and its development until the 1920s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan B. Fenderson"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"baf6cc5a-9ab0-3064-aaf9-ed89e55b13bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Wherever I've Gone, I've Gone Voluntarily\": Ayi Kwei Armah's Radical Pan-African Itinerary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069284","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manning Marable"],"datePublished":"1984-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d432927-52be-31e7-bddc-f583b7611631"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RACE AND DEMOCRACY IN CUBA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067811","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8880,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christina Judith Hein"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"610457957"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236361"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"674c1142-a5a3-3898-b769-f203709fb4da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41158415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Can the Squaw Bluff?': Negotiations of Vision and Gazes in \"Tracks\" and \"The Last Report on the Miracles at Little No Horse\" by Louise Erdrich","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41158415","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Theories concerned with the abstract, larger structures that influence the distribution of power in a visual regime\u2014negotiations of social life facilitated through modes of seeing and the exchange of gazes\u2014have quite importantly established that whiteness as well as maleness constitute positions of privilege. Non-white women, according to such theories, are mostly considered as objects of the look and relegated to the margins. In the encounter between raced and gendered persons, however, the ability to gaze and exert power might be distributed differently. This essay suggests an expansion on Jean-Paul Sartre's concept of the essential and subjectivity-constituting exchanges of looks between ' me' and ' the Other' so as to accommodate the structural differences inherent in hierarchically organized societies. The theoretical gains of this approach are then illustrated in a reading that focuses on the negotiations of the gaze as well as of the visual in the very particular situations of three female characters in two novels by Anishinaabe-German-American literary writer Louise Erdrich. Her texts illustrate that agency and power are not necessarily assigned exclusively to those advantageously positioned within a Western scopic regime and that being structurally privileged by hegemonic culture might carry with it some drawbacks.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SEAN PURCHASE"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e920f82-3e2a-3520-bd82-ecf6326a8894"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41556146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Speaking of Them as a Body': Dickens, Slavery and \"Martin Chuzzlewit\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41556146","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sandra Swart"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9058efc6-bf1b-3173-9bb1-fa09c6bb0233"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"705","pageStart":"689","pagination":"pp. 689-705","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'It Is As Bad To Be a Black Man's Animal As It Is To Be a Black Man' \u2014 The Politics of Species in Sol Plaatje's \"Native Life in South Africa\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566751","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sol Plaatje and his contemporaries described the traumatic effects of the Natives Land Act 27 of 1913: forced expulsions of Africans and their animals, followed by desperate livestock sales at slaughterhouse prices. In many places, previously secure sharecroppers on white-owned farms became roaming exiles accompanied by their skeletal sheep and cattle, many of which starved along the road. Yet no single overarching narrative can capture the new law's immediate effects, as the dynamics of changes were geographically idiographic. This Act is perhaps the most thoroughly studied piece of legislation in South Africa's past, but the historical meta-narrative should be contested. The 'land' part of this Act has monopolised historiographical attention, while other aspects have been neglected. In this essay, I hope, therefore, to contribute another category to the analytical lens of class, race and gender through which the Act has been considered: species. Thus I focus on Sol Plaatje's Native Life in South Africa as a key source, arguing that his repeated refrain that the Act was 'cruel to animals' was both a sincere response to its impact on African livestock and a deftly deployed act of political theatre scripted by Plaatje himself.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Immanuel Wallerstein"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035178","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00675830"},{"name":"oclc","value":"569280401"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e21c3dc7-1b94-32b9-8f11-fe9e7eb182ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41035178"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"berkjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Berkeley Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"222","pagination":"pp. 222-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Regents of the University of California","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FRANTZ FANON: REASON AND VIOLENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41035178","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Burawoy"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4007036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84221265-0891-3902-a455-5fab617dae72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4007036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"102","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"675","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-675","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Liberation to Reconstruction: Theory & Practice in the Life of Harold Wolpe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4007036","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James P. Mackey"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27679763","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00163120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00a892d5-76e1-3eba-8b40-1a18374c13ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27679763"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"furrow"}],"isPartOf":"The Furrow","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The Furrow","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Theology 20: Grace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27679763","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6692,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Lang"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618337","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DENNIS FORSYTHE"],"datePublished":"1971-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203670","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b4b6782-b8a0-3a01-b2fe-0fb9d2d2385f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203670"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BLACKS AND THE DIALECTICS: THIRD PRIZE-The Black Scholar Essay Contest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203670","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Kwong"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/591495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideological Crisis among China's Youths: Values and Official Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/591495","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines youth culture in a socialist society. Pragmatism, consumerism, individual accomplishment, admiration for the West, and dissatisfaction with the Party, but support for the political system, stand out as the major beliefs of young Chinese in the 1980s. The young rejected the harsh and irrelevant values promoted in the ideal youth culture the government packaged for their consumption. Instead they created their own subculture adopting what they deemed most pertinent and desirable from the official ideology and from the conditions they encountered. In light of these orientations, it is likely that the present policies will continue when this generation takes over political control.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rajen Harshe"],"datePublished":"2006-09-16","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418700","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e38f37f4-8962-3ff1-b853-bae799e173d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4418700"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"37","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"3951","pageStart":"3945","pagination":"pp. 3945+3947-3951","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture, Identity and International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418700","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the interrelationship between culture, identity and international relations. After critiquing some significant writings on this theme in the post-cold war context, it analyses liberal and Marxian modes of analysing hegemony in contemporary international relations. It sheds light on the impact of macro-social identities such as race and the nation state in shaping the landscapes of international relations. The area of culture and international relations still appears nascent in scholarly writings. This critical gap in the literature can be eventually overcome if scholars of international relations studies creatively interact with scholars from other social sciences where more sustained and systematic efforts have already been made to understand culture and the role of social identities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold A. 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Their reemergence may account for the direction of the transformation process and, specifically, for the differential transformations which characterize some movements at various points in their careers. A case study illustrating this effect is presented, followed by a more general consideration of when this phenomenon may be expected to occur and what movement-related factors facilitate its effects.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Halim Kara"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/826220","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09668136"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537293"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227408"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac131e28-e46a-3975-b1f5-6fa067d4e862"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/826220"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"euroasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Europe-Asia Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reclaiming National Literary Heritage: The Rehabilitation of Abdurauf Fitrat and Abdulhamid Sulaymon Cholpan in Uzbekistan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/826220","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":11332,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca M. 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This article focuses on postcolonial transitions in parts of Africa where the state actively injures or kills a local citizenry, sometimes in the name of development. Using Zimbabwe and Rwanda as very different examples of such transitions, and drawing on selected development and postcolonial writings - fact and 'fiction' - I argue for framing such cases as examples of the 'bare life', 'camp' biopolitics articulated by Georgio Agamben. These concepts enable us to see the widening spaces of exception to law that a postcolonial state can create in periods of crisis and defend on the grounds of post-coloniality, that is, as states always already injured by colonialism and its biopolitical development project. The terrain such states enter might be termed 'fascism' - a location of political economy that development studies has generally neglected in recent years but that novels depicting postcolonial contexts can make vivid.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen M. 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Israel"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212224"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0fdf2ef-81e8-3601-838e-c42667e6f294"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23350306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"New School","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Why \"Portnoy's Complaint\" Matters","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350306","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":8341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arun Kumar Pokhrel"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81f6a88b-76c5-35fc-97e9-23c0e2a197dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43739211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"[2012 SAMLA Graduate Student Essay Award]: \"Brutish empire,\" Irishness, and \"the new Bloomusalem in the Nova Hibernia\" in James Joyce's \"Ulysses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43739211","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":11239,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[132554,132635]],"Locations in B":[[17563,17665]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A Y\u0118MISI JIMOH"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a30e50b2-da99-33fb-91e2-1669f7f434f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"488","pagination":"pp. 488-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"MAPPING THE TERRAIN OF BLACK WRITING DURING THE EARLY NEW NEGRO ERA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544455","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":16006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The literary movement that so many refer to as the \"Harlem Renaissance\" remains contested terrain and the need to periodize and name the movement is ongoing. As the literary production of the New Negro era came to a close, participants in the literary movement such as Zora Neale Hurston, Sterling Brown, Wallace Thurman, James Weldon Johnson, Dorothy West, Arna Bontemps, Langston Hughes, Alain Locke, W. E. B. Du Bois, Charles S. Johnson and others gave different accounts of its value, its beginnings, and its end. Subsequently, historians and literary scholars, as well as New Negro Movement participants, have found very little consensus on key questions of periodization. This essay returns to the question of periodizing this movement by identifying a broad range of its distinguishing characteristics and by bracketing its duration, although with a clear recognition that the temporal frame and characteristics may be re-positioned yet again. The project here is not to determine the perceived failure or success of the literary movement or the collective quality of the literary production, a project that would involve determining by whose standards of success, failure, or quality such judgments would be made. This study of the New Negro era expands its boundaries and opens a space for engaging the literary movement by mapping it in ways that scholars too often have deemphasized or have not explored.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samira Meghdessian"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40153532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40153532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Discourse of Oppression as Expressed in Writings of the Intifada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40153532","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":9363,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HENRY VUSSO MOYANA"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21554e5d-3566-3d2b-9686-c7b539efd797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"UNDERDEVELOPMENT IN KENYA AND SOUTHERN RHODESIA 1890-1923: A COMPARATIVE STUDY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341437","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":11999,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Ebel"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/375536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6569db7-5c51-32bb-9351-61896d530a76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/375536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"550","pageStart":"537","pagination":"pp. 537-540+549-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Eyeless in Gaza: Some Reflections on Teaching Early English Literature in Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/375536","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James F. PETRAS"],"datePublished":"1976-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03017036"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5096f04b-93a2-34c5-b7e8-ae2073b086af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43907098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"probdeldesa"}],"isPartOf":"Problemas del Desarrollo","issueNumber":"25","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Instituto de Investigaciones Econ\u00f3micas, Universidad Nacional Aut\u00f3noma de M\u00e9xico","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Latin American Studies","Economics","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"ASPECTOS DE LA FORMACION DE CLASES EN LA PERIFERIA: ESTRUCTURAS DE PODER Y ESTRATEGIAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43907098","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":12015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"El rasgo m\u00e1s sobresaliente de la estructura de clases en las sociedades perif\u00e9ricas son los \u00abgrupos de enlace\u00bb entre el exterior y el interior. Por eso, la transici\u00f3n al socialismo incluye el problema del desarrollo dirigido por el estado bajo control de fuerzas revolucionarias y su organizaci\u00f3n pol\u00edtico-administrativa, as\u00ed como la desmodernizaci\u00f3n y deslumpenizaci\u00f3n. Por el contrario, bajo el necolonialismo, el capitalismo de estado acent\u00faa la modernizaci\u00f3n y la lumpenizaci\u00f3n y llega a antagonismos insalvables. The most important feature of the class structure in peripheral societies are the linkgroups between inner and outer classes. In that way transition to socialism implies development controlled by revolutionary state and political-administrative organization, and demodernization and delumpenization. On the contrary, state capitalism in neocolonized countries stresses modernization and lumpenization generating unsolvable contradic tions. Le trait plus important de la structure de classes dans des soc\u00e9t\u00e9s p\u00e9riph\u00e9riques sont les groupes de liaison entre l'ext\u00e9rieur et l'int\u00e9rieur. En cons\u00e9quence, la transition au socialisme comprend le d\u00e9veloppement control\u00e9 par l'\u00e9tat revolutionnaire et son organisation politico-administrative, et la d\u00e9modernisation et d\u00e9lumpenisation. Contrairement, le capitalisme d'\u00e9tat des pays n\u00e9ocolonis\u00e9s souligne la modernisation et la lumpenisation conduisant \u00e0 des contradictions sans solution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kariamu Welsh-Asante"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2628672-e5d0-3891-863f-24c8df38e5de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"224","pagination":"pp. 224-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Philosophy and Dance in Africa: The Views of Cabral and Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784475","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":3156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marjorie J. 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Du Bois, Karl Barth, and the Problem of the Imperial God-Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949760","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":22837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[131373,131419]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liela Groenewald"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23620807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380229"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565192286"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a1e1b2f-6531-37b9-96de-ecafd7d79e04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23620807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socibull"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indian Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Race and Gender: From Double Burden to Acute Advantage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23620807","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":7201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The intersection of race and gender identity is primarily recognised in accounts of cumulative obstacles experienced by certain black women. A study among South African students suggests that this double burden theory may be extended to the other end of the spectrum. In a study at a Johannesburg University, white men were set apart from all others by a failure to recognise racism, while women, both black and white, were most likely to acknowledge discrimination. To explain this, a position of acute advantage, contributing to a shared insensitivity to discrimination, may be proposed with respect to white men.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Gurin","Arthur H. Miller","Gerald Gurin"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3033746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01902725"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d033fbaf-2859-3408-95d1-560ec3dc05d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3033746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipsycquar"}],"isPartOf":"Social Psychology Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Stratum Identification and Consciousness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3033746","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"National sample data were analyzed to describe the identification and class consciousness of people with working- and middle-class occupations, race consciousness of blacks and whites, sex consciousness of women, and age consciousness of people sixty years or older. Stratum consciousness, an ideology about the position of the stratum in society, includes a sense of power discontent, evaluation of the legitimacy of its position, and the view that collective action is the best means to realize its interests. Comparisons of the two sets of subordinate and superordinate strata showed that only along the racial dimension was identification more widespread in the lower-power stratum, but that power discontent and collectivist orientations were stronger among both identified blacks and the working class than among identified whites and the middle class. Comparisons among the identified members of lower-power strata additionally demonstrated that consciousness was strongest among blacks, weakest among women, and moderate among people with working-class occupations and older people. Multivariate analyses further showed that identification, power discontent, and rejection of legitimacy influence the collectivist orientations of women and blacks additively, rather than interactively.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Tiyambe Zeleza"],"datePublished":"1987-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80356a91-3dee-3d17-8a27-c7f0f6dd4e36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27862889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trade Union Imperialism: American Labour, The ICFTU and the Kenyan Labour Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862889","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The paper seeks to examine the relations between the Kenyan and Western labour movements, particularly with the AFL-CIO and the ICFTU. It is shown that apart from the mere offer of financial inducements by these Western labour movements, on which many writers tend to dwell, the collaborative relationship between them and the Kenyan labour movement, which emerged from the early 1950s to the mid-1960s, was made possible by the remarkable ideological compatibility between these movements. This arose out of the conjuncture of internal contradictions of both movements and the process of decolonisation. It will be argued that while the Kenyan labour movement was not simply being 'manipulated', as is so often asserted by some dependency writers, its relations with the Western labour movements reinforced 'internal' trends towards deradicalisation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sidney Hook"],"datePublished":"1989-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f1f6cdc-a294-3f2e-ba65-cfd51eed195b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3130372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"715","pageStart":"707","pagination":"pp. 707-715","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Curriculum Building","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130372","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":4915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LISA STEVENSON"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b787324-e556-3ebc-91a4-c275cb5a87cd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23250787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"613","pageStart":"592","pagination":"pp. 592-613","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The psychic life of biopolitics: Survival, cooperation, and Inuit community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23250787","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":20641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What does it mean for Inuit to cooperate with the (disavowed) desires that emerge in a colonial bureaucracy dedicated to improving Inuit lives? In this article, I consider the psychic life of biopolitics in the context of welfare colonialism in the Canadian Arctic. I suggest that the colonial desire that Inuit cooperate in their own survival is haunted by other desires the colonist can never name and that such unspeakable desires are also at work in the response to the contemporary suicide epidemic among Inuit youth. Attention to Inuit naming practices provides an alternate way of linking death, desire, and community in a postcolonial world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacqueline Rose"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b6cd2a9-e7bd-3a16-b532-418e45e5a768"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"418","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-418","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"On the 'Universality' of Madness: Bessie Head's \"A Question of Power\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343863","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9181,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Mwangi"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"719743ef-9123-3986-9bac-dae6b43a38b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Amandina Lihamba's Gendered Adaptation of Sembene Ousmane's \"The Money-Order\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468142","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13987,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines the adaptation and translation of Sembene Ousmane's novella The Money-Order (originally published in French in 1966 as Le mandat) into \"Hawala ya Fedha\" (1980), a Kiswahili play by the Tanzanian woman dramatist Amandina Lihamba. Drawing on the contemporary theories of translation and adaptation that demote fidelity to the original as the cornerstone of translation, I demonstrate that the changes that Lihamba introduces in her text do not result from the incommensurability among the languages involved (Wolof, French, English, and Kiswahili), the muchvaunted clash of civilizations, or the supposed incompatibility between the two genres (novel and play); rather, she is invested in amplifying gender issues in Sembene's novel through a popular public medium to signify the urgent need for women's literacy in Julius Nyerere's Tanzania.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cristiana Bastos"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52713944"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"98706d37-26d3-3343-991e-375d18552366"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26952414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Hut-Hospital as Project and as Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26952414","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":8452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes one kind of colonial equipment designed in the early twentieth century for the purpose of providing medical assistance to the indigenous populations of Angola and Mozambique. I will refer to it as a \u2018hut-hospital\u2019, although it had several forms and designations. The layout of hut-hospitals consisted of a main building and a number of hut-like units that were supposedly more attractive to the indigenous population and therefore more efficient than the large, rectangular buildings of the main colonial hospitals. Using different sources, including three-dimensional plaster models of hut-hospitals, photographs, legal documents, and 1920s conference papers and articles, I will investigate the relatively obscure history of this colonial artifact while exploring the use of imitation as part of the repertoire of colonial governance.","subTitle":"Mimeses, Alterities, and Colonial Hierarchies","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdoulaye Gueye"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23236842","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b5824e39-b0ab-35fb-a4b0-662475f2c2fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23236842"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colony within the Metropole: The Racial Diversity of Contemporary France and the Insertion of the Colonial Past into the National Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23236842","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ce num\u00e9ro th\u00e9matique r\u00e9unit des contributions portant sur la confusion, en France contemporaine, au sujet de la m\u00e9moire et de l'histoire de la colonisation et de l'esclavage en particulier. Les fondements et l'aboutissement du d\u00e9bat qu'a suscit\u00e9 cette confusion dans l'espace public comme dans la sph\u00e9re universitaire y sont minutieusement examin\u00e9s. Le vote, en 2005, par l'Assembl\u00e9e nationale, d'un texte de loi dont un des articles invitait \u00e0 la reconnaissance des aspects positifs de la colonisation fran\u00e7aise en est une pr\u00e9mice. Plus tard, le d\u00e9bat sera nourri par deux autres revendications: celle de l'institutionnalisation de la m\u00e9moire de la traite n\u00e9gri\u00e8re et de l'esclavage par des organisations noires; et le souhait de groupes d'ascendance arabe qu'il soit fait de la place dans le r\u00e9cit national \u00e0 la m\u00e9moire des anciens sujets coloniaux alg\u00e9riens. Les auteurs s'attachent chacun, de mani\u00e8re empirique, \u00e0 \u00e9clairer un aspect pr\u00e9cis de l'enjeu social et scientifique que constitue la question de la m\u00e9moire et de l'enseignement de l'histoire en France. Par-del\u00e0 les diff\u00e9rences d'approches et de sujets, ces contributions sont li\u00e9es par le souci particulier d'examiner et de rendre compte de la tension entre m\u00e9moire et histoire. This volume assembles contributions that deal with the confusion taking place in contemporary France with regard to memory and history of colonization and slavery in particular. These articles thoroughly examine the foundations and outcomes of a debate that took place in both the public space and the academic sphere. The vote, in 2005, in the French Assembly of a bill including an article that demanded recognition of the positive aspects of French colonization has been a key forerunner of that debate. Later on the debate would be fuelled by two other demands: black organizations' collective claims for the institutionalization of the memory of the slave trade and slavery; and some Arab-descended groups' pressure to have the memory of Algerian former colonial subjects included in the national narrative. Each contributor strives empirically to shed light on one specific aspect of the stake that the issues of memory and of the teaching of history in France constitute today. Regardless of their differences of approaches and subjects, these contributions are invariably concerned.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond Suttner"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705231","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c479c831-8c83-3d30-b734-b78faa4197c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705231"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"130","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Understanding Non-racialism as an Emancipatory Concept in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705231","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Non-racialism is examined in relation to the concepts of race, generic humanism and universalism in order to establish conditions under which non-racialism can be implemented as an emancipatory concept. Denial of the salience or even the existence of the concept 'race' and also tendencies to organise on the basis of race essentialism are examined. It is accepted that race does not exist at an ontological level, in that it is not required for the constitution of the human subject. But race does exist historically and socially. To ignore its existence in addressing the question of non-racialism would be to deny the validity of the experience of racial inequality. At the same time, organisation on the basis of race, while sometimes motivated by strategic considerations, carries the danger of slippage and a permanent racialised identity. The post-1994 period is seen as opening the road to universalism and thus removing the basis for strategic essentialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kofi Ankomah"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d6f145e-1199-3ba4-9f48-fdbd50caf264"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Colonial Legacy and African Unrest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401477","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6369,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27679]],"Locations in B":[[3803,3849]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabyasachi Bhattacharya"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44141252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"22491937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82ecec1c-c5d3-378b-bee5-036b5723d1e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44141252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procindihistcong"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Indian History Congress","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Indian History Congress","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS: MODERN INDIAN HISTORY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44141252","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhonda Cobham"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Boundaries of the Nation: Boundaries of the Self: African Nationalist Fictions and Nuruddin Farah's \"Maps\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819826","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aliou C. Niang"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cf539be-cf72-3494-8b4d-e40ac5c73833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"889","pageStart":"882","pagination":"pp. 882-889","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Space and Human Agency in the Making of the Story of Gershom through a Senegalese Christian Lens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1914","volumeNumber":"134","wordCount":3339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irene L. Gendzier"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec17776a-9066-34b1-82c4-0e8d069a5aaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4325539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"515","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-515","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Psychology and Colonialism: Some Observations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4325539","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madhavi Sunder"],"datePublished":"2006-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00389765"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86bbeed6-b240-3a63-a9d1-e8a1f1e30d20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40040300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"stanlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Stanford Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":76.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Stanford Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IP\u00b3","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40040300","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":38281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A quarter century ago, Margaret Jane Radin interrupted the hegemonic law and economics discourse on property with a theory of personhood. And the New Jersey Supreme Court declared in the historic case of State v. Shack that \"property rights serve human values.\" From these our modern \"social relations\" theory of property was born. Now, the pundits declare that \"intellectual property has come of age.\" But is intellectual property philosophically and theoretically mature enough to face the world? Unlike its cousins property law and the First Amendment, which bear the weight of values such as autonomy, culture, equality, and democracy, in the United States intellectual property is understood almost exclusively as being about incentives. To put it bluntly, there are no \"giant-sized\" intellectual property values. But there should be. Intellectual property has grown, perhaps exponentially, but its march into all corners of our lives and to the most destitute corners of the world has paradoxically exposed the fragility of its economic foundations while amplifying its social and cultural effects. Indeed, with full compliance to the TRIPS Agreement now required in all but the world's very least developed countries, bringing with it patents in everything from seeds to drugs, intellectual property law becomes literally an issue of life or death. Despite these real-world changes, intellectual property scholars increasingly explain their field through the lens of economics alone, evidence of Amartya Sen's observation that \"[t]heories have lives of their own, quite defiantly of the phenomenal world that can be actually observed.\" The theory is behind the practice. On the ground, underground, and in the ether, intellectual property is spurring what the New York Times says \"could be the first new social movement of the century.\" I show that in case after case, from MGM v. Grokster, to new licenses from the Creative Commons for developing nations, to the rise of Internet auteurs of fan fiction, mash-ups, and machinima, to efforts to deliver medicines to the world's poor, to demands for \"Geographical Indications\" for sarees and other crafts of the developing world, and to the nascent global movement for \"Access to Knowledge,\" traditional economic analysis fails to capture fully the struggles at the heart of local and global intellectual property law conflicts. This Article builds from these examples to lay a foundation for a cultural analysis of intellectual property. I offer \"IP\u00b3\" as a metonym. The twentieth century closed with the rise of identity politics, the Internet Protocol, and intellectual property rights. I suggest that the convergence of these \"IPs\" begins to explain the growth of intellectual property rights where traditional justifications for intellectual property do not. IP\u00b3 reveals intellectual property's social effects and this law as a tool for crafting cultural relations. Call it the ripping, mixing, and burning of law.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48664817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20569203"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29ac5ff0-4f9d-344c-a56f-dcc2884d4166"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48664817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamebaldrevi"}],"isPartOf":"James Baldwin Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Manchester University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Losing Real<\/em> Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48664817","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6874,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212289,212444]],"Locations in B":[[21351,21511]],"abstract":"This essay proposes that we turn to James Baldwin\u2019s work to assess the cost of, and think alternatives to, the cultures of traumatization whose proliferation one witnesses in contemporary U.S. academia. Beginning with some recent examples, the essay briefly places these cultures into a genealogy of onto-ethics whose contemporary forms arose with the reconfiguration of diasporic histories in the idioms of psychoanalysis and deconstructive philosophy in 1990s trauma theory. Baldwin speaks to the contemporary moment as he considers the outcome of trauma\u2019s perpetuation in an autobiographical scene from \u201cNotes of a Native Son.\u201d In this scene\u2014which restages Bigger Thomas\u2019s murderous compulsion in Native Son\u2014he warns us against embracing one\u2019s traumatization as a mode of negotiating the world. In foregoing what Sarah Schulman has recently called the \u201cduty of repair,\u201d such traumatized engagement prevents all search for the kind of \u201ccommonness\u201d whose early articulation can be found in Aristotle\u2019s query after \u201cthe common good\u201d (to koinon agathon). With Baldwin, the present essay suggests the urgency of returning to the question of \u201cthe common good\u201d: while mindful of past critiques, which have observed in this concept\u2019s deployment a sleight-of-hand by which hegemonic positions universalize their interests, we should work to actualize the unfinished potential of Aristotle\u2019s idea. Baldwin\u2019s work on diasporic modernity provides an indispensable archive for this effort.","subTitle":"James Baldwin and the Ethics of Trauma","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Borst"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0ebeb9f-9d5b-35e2-b502-f8fbe68c8c19"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\u201cTo Be Black in a \u2018White\u2019 Country\u201d\u2014On the Ambivalence of the Diasporic Experience in C\u00e9sar A. Mba Abogo's El porteador de Marlow. Canci\u00f3n negra sin color<\/em> (2007)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.3.06","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":12138,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay focuses on the ambivalence of the diasporic experience of the Black subject in Equatoguinean writer C\u00e9sar A. Mba Abogo's collection of short stories and poems El porteador de Marlow. Canci\u00f3n negra sin color (2007). It discusses how these texts reflect the experience of alienness and exclusion lived by the Black diasporic subject in a \u201cwhite\u201d European society, unsilencing a marginalized perspective on African migration to and presence in Europe. Moreover, the essay proposes a reading of the extensive network of references to Black history, knowledge systems, and intertexts evoked throughout the collection as offering a way to transcend the Black diasporic subject's isolation and to connect to a shared and ongoing history of oppression, displacement, and marginalization on the one hand but of agency, resistance, and self-empowerment on the other.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Saber"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03627055"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42952114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmeetfchs"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"95","pagination":"pp. 95-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"L'ALIENATION ET L'ASSIMILATION COLONIALES DANS LE ROMAN AFRICAIN D'EXPRESSION FRAN\u00c7AISE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952114","volumeNumber":"6\/7","wordCount":3228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILLIAM JAMES STOVER"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20751620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07423640"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f9bbfdc-b77f-32a5-829b-7c634486b8dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20751620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejworlpeac"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on World Peace","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Professors World Peace Academy","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CULTURAL INTERACTION AND INTERNATIONAL CHANGE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20751620","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3191,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[18745,18791]],"abstract":"The clash of cultures has become a driving force behind international change as national minorities struggle to achieve a basic human right of self-determination. Their resistance to domination and cultural genocide can potentially affect the stability of the international system which has long ignored them. Researchers must better understand these cultural, ethnic, and linguistic minorities in order for decision makers to accommodate their demands and for the world to pass peacefully into the 21st century.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Radha D'Souza"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43643554"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214400"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9fc09fa-d81a-3fb5-a3ae-fd7d3d5ced33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43285878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phileastwest"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy East and West","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"WHAT CAN ACTIVIST SCHOLARS LEARN FROM RUMI?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43285878","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":11383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The neoliberal restructuring of higher education everywhere is accompanied by a distinctive branch of knowledge known as activist scholarship. Drawing from a number of disciplines including education, sociology, social anthropology, social theory, law, and human rights, activist scholarship proclaims as its core mission Marx's imperative that philosophy should transform the world. Activist scholars affirm human emancipation as the goal of scholarship and set themselves the task of building bridges between theory and practice. There is a spectrum of views on the theory-practice nexus. Regardless, they all share certain common grounds that affirm (1) a nexus between theory and practice; (2) a relationship between knowledge and action; (3) knowledge as a condition for emancipation and freedom; (4) the affirmation of love and solidarity for social change; (5) the importance of everyday life; and (6) the role of the activist scholar in social change. These themes form part of a long and entrenched tradition in dissident Eastern philosophies, in particular the poet-saint traditions. Here each of the themes in activist scholarship is interrogated using the works of Mawlana Jalal al Din Rumi, the thirteenth-century Persian poet. What can activist scholars learn from Rumi?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT STAPLES"],"datePublished":"1971-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1991527e-1446-3369-ac09-d2ef4ced1589"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41206322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE MYTH OF THE IMPOTENT BLACK MALE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206322","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5189,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[26948,27008]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Azfar Hussain"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1409462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Joy Harjo and Her Poetics as Praxis: A \"Postcolonial\" Political Economy of the Body, Land, Labor, and Language","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409462","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":15965,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[168792,168843]],"Locations in B":[[91796,91854]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MUHAMMAD AHMAD"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"957f7e17-ac1a-3ee7-838b-4523e8866e35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TOWARD PAN AFRICAN LIBERATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066328","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":4892,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[13177,13243]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Walcott"],"datePublished":"1968-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c113312e-e2cd-321d-8020-209adfdf0281"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"The Dream On Monkey Mountain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653063","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5623,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Banfield"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1914261a-ef02-3c64-8904-473fc4a2ac42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4129301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Black Artistic Invisibility: A Black Composer Talking 'Bout Taking Care of the Souls of Black Folk While Losing Much Ground Fast","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4129301","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article follows a long pattern of works where authors (e.g., Alain Locke, The New Negro; Harold Cruse, The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual; Amiri Baraka, Blues People) write to provide an aesthetic inquiry and examine what constitutes the politics of the documentation of Black concert music and culture (i.e., symphonies, opera, chamber work, etc.). Writings like these have taken a stab as well at American cultural institutions, which have in the past choked and blocked artistic voices of color and consciousness. The author addresses, celebrates, and critiques some current values carried within the traditional institutional culture around Black composers in contemporary concert music. This piece is a historical essay outlining thematic threads and trends in the concert music circles, and it poses questions to the industry and common listeners interested in music who do not yet recognize or celebrate these important and unique artists.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali A. Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1970-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"894e1249-1004-3722-84df-ff9297f190ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41854370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BLACK MILITANCY AND GANDHI'S CENTENARY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854370","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maulana Karenga"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282619","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0327b49-55e2-30d0-bd2c-bb63d9bdd9d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282619"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Names and Notions of Black Studies: Issues of Roots, Range, and Relevance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282619","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The principle purpose of this article is to bring under critical reflection some of the central issues surrounding and informing current and continuing notions of Black Studies and the ongoing concerns about its appropriate naming. It is a fundamental assumption of this article that the various notions and names of Black Studies are anchored in and reflective of differing concepts of the \"roots\", \"range\", and \"relevance\" of the discipline. The issue of \"roots\" has to do with the conception of the primary rootedness of the discipline in the African American initiative and experience and the Black Freedom Movement and its emancipatory thrust. The issue of \"range\" involves varied positions on the reach and inclusiveness of the discipline in terms of African peoples and its self-conception as a pan- African project. Finally, the issue of \"relevance\" raises questions of the intellectual value and viability of the African American initiative and experience as a self-standing discipline in the academy, as distinct from a dependent program or one area of emphasis within a regional study of African peoples\u2014that is, Diasporan or Atlantic Studies\u2014and its marketability as an area of competence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winifred Woodhull"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae6fbd6e-0fab-324f-b060-6c0fa8ae6a3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rereading \"Nedjma\": Feminist Scholarship and North African Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685114","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mamphela Ramphele"],"datePublished":"1990-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6b85863-d08b-324f-b3bf-accd9a95f305"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Do Women Help Perpetuate Sexism? A Bird's Eye View from South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186621","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":5004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yurika Tamura"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01609009"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770686"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216178"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40795bb0-30c2-3e59-afc5-62d11806ff1e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fronjwomestud"}],"isPartOf":"Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mimesis, Contention, and Corporeality of Otherness: Reading the Haircuts of Undocumented Immigrants' Daughters in Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/fronjwomestud.39.3.0183","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elmar G. 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Drawing on the work of Fanon, Hegel, and Bakhtin, the essay defines recognition as the awareness of mutuality or common ground linking two otherwise distanced subjects. Paying close attention to three of Hayden's poems\u2014\"Night, Death, Mississippi,\" \"Runagate Runagate,\" and \"Middle Passage\"\u2014the essay then demonstrates how he uses multiple and interweaving voices in his poetry to provoke and evoke recognition. Revealing that the trope of recognition is central to Hayden's understanding of race, agency, and the human self, this analysis helps us to better understand how he balanced careful attention to his own socio-historical context with a determination to be an internationalist poet not limited by narrow political affiliations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin M. 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It argues that previous efforts to arrive at such an understanding have been hampered by a lack of attention to the categories that Rizal himself used in that work. 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The iconic sign is shown to provide a ladder from arbitrary word to physical object, which in the case of Friday is the plan of a slave ship.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabry Hafez"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76888816-73ef-3971-877d-6194439b84d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EDWARD<\/span> SAID'S<\/span> INTELLECTUAL<\/span> LEGACY IN THE<\/span> ARAB<\/span> WORLD<\/span>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2004.33.3.076","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses Edward Said's intellectual legacy in the Arab world. After examining Said's own cultural influences, the trajectory of his early academic career in America, and his \u201cre-orientation\u201d towards his Arab identity and culture following the 1967 war, the author focuses on the reception of his works in Arab intellectual circles. Though Orientalism was initially misperceived through the frame of identity politics, his theoretical writings exerted a steadily growing impact on Arab criticism, particularly by offering a way out of its methodological dependency on the West. The author suggests that Said's final role as an oppositional intellectual \u201cspeaking truth to power,\u201d which reached beyond the Arab intelligentsia to a broader audience, may in the final analysis be his most lasting contribution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph A. Young"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f3168a7-2320-3b86-abad-2c61fd448171"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3185542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Phenomenology and Textual Power in Richard Wright's \"The Man Who Lived Underground\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185542","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Hutton"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231317","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8acb8fa-54c7-32fe-938b-ab878e21083d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231317"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1101","pageStart":"1099","pagination":"pp. 1099-1101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231317","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES A. KNAPP"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ad069cd-0149-3fcf-8495-ad8ea55ff798"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"450","pageStart":"415","pagination":"pp. 415-450","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"That moste barbarous Nacion\": John Derricke's \"Image of Ireland\" and the \"delight of the well disposed reader\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124204","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greville G. Corbett"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00978507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709582"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ce978e7-77c6-37eb-be31-c0814dce0bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/417205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"language"}],"isPartOf":"Language","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"925","pageStart":"923","pagination":"pp. 923-925","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Linguistic Society of America","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/417205","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":1371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anirudha Gupta"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45070950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77d4ce87-c4f0-354c-94a8-b880a52f3d22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45070950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AFRICA IN THE 1980s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45070950","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":9859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Scott"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/721837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"308","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Middle Class Politics in Zambia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/721837","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":6911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edmund Burke, III"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5950cb77-4f0e-376e-b989-cad4727e8466"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41858245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THEORIZING THE HISTORIES OF COLONIALISM AND NATIONALISM IN THE ARAB MAGHRIB","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858245","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PREETI SAMPAT"],"datePublished":"2014-03-08","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24479225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"faeedcf9-e712-36a6-a9f9-0b14d01180a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24479225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Land Question in 21st Century India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24479225","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":2695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHEIKH ANTA BABOU"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27895947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba854572-851a-3122-9918-8b65eb0c4d98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27895947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonization or National Liberation: Debating the End of British Colonial Rule in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27895947","volumeNumber":"632","wordCount":7041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"When discussing the end of British colonial rule in Africa, many historians have highlighted the role of postwar international relations and the impact of domestic imperial politics on decolonization and have failed to recognize the role of African nationalists. This article argues that such a viewpoint is flawed because it conceives of colonial policy makers as isolated and autonomous entities impervious to changes taking place in the colonies. The national liberation movements in Ghana, Central Africa, Kenya, and other regions of East Africa are explored in this article to illustrate the central role that colonial subjects played in the British decolonization of Africa. While dominant scholarship on the failures of the post-colonial state has made studies of decolonization and African nationalism less fashionable, it is becoming increasingly clear that our understanding of the nature and mechanics of the crises that beset the continent requires taking fresh stock of the record of European colonial rule in Africa. In this regard, the study of colonialism and decolonization in Africa continues to be of critical relevance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sheila Lloyd"],"datePublished":"2011-12-31","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.11.2.212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4b21508-32f0-3616-b142-cb1525e8fa58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.11.2.212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"212","pagination":"pp. 212-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sara Baartman and the \u201cInclusive Exclusions\u201d of Neoliberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.11.2.212","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This essay examines three African-American feminist texts\u2014Elizabeth Alexander's \u201cThe Venus Hottentot,\u201d Barbara Chase-Riboud's Hottentot Venus, and Suzan-Lori Parks's Venus. In their nuanced critiques of the sovereign power of neoliberalism as both a sociopolitical and a discursive condition, that is, as what Foucault calls a biopolitics, these texts represent a feminist cultural activism that challenges the hegemonic forms of neoliberalism and transnational market relations. Despite their apparent focus on African-American women's bodies and their exploitation and instrumentalization, what is additionally meaningful in these texts is that the more recent history of globalization to which women are subjected under late capitalism\u2014a history within and on which these texts and their writers work\u2014is shown to be coextensive (although not homologous) with the history of imperialism that made it possible in the first place to mark out a place for a Sara Baartman (the so-called Hottentot Venus) in nascent capitalist relations and forces of production and in the early colonization of southern Africa. In their nonreferential literary representations of twentieth-century neoliberalism, Alexander, Parks, and Chase-Riboud give readers a marginal subject, \u201cSara Baartman,\u201d who serves not simply as an icon of sexual difference between white and black, as some critics have argued, but as an economic placeholder for these interrelated nineteenth- and twentieth-century economic and social histories.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Savage Lee"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08886091"},{"name":"oclc","value":"653322867"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06376f3e-25ce-384c-91f8-2a54024014dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43490080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"confluencia"}],"isPartOf":"Confluencia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of Northern Colorado","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Cost of Dreams of Utopia: Neocolonialism in Juan Rulfo's \"Pedro P\u00e1ramo\" and Cormac McCarthy's \"All the Pretty Horses\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43490080","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11092,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[63807,63847]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert A. Fernea","James M. Malarkey"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2949355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3986802b-1af4-31ee-b12b-49d35f337569"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2949355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anthropology of the Middle East and North Africa: A Critical Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2949355","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Viney Kirpal"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282402","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"076a4c89-33c4-337b-88b5-f4e163db1c3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26282402"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE STRUCTURE OF THE MODERN NIGERIAN NOVEL AND THE NATIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282402","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julika Funk"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20757796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81c6c7f8-bed9-3041-9bcd-64129e53e7f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20757796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"2 (92)","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":85.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Forschungsrichtungen in der Anthropologie: Philosophische Anthropologie, Historische Anthropologie, Interkulturalit\u00e4t und Kulturanthropologie. \u00dcberblick und Auswahlbibliographie","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20757796","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":30507,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This overview of research in the field of anthropology seeks to offer an introduction into different directions and debates on the outlines of anthropological research and tries to relate the discussion in the German academic context to the Anglo-American context. It differentiates four fields: philosophical anthropology, historical anthropology, \"Interkulturalit\u00e4t\" (inter-cultural relations) and cultural anthropology, and focuses on theoretical and methodological reflections and on interdisciplinary debates relating to literary studies. The German philosophical anthropology with it's sources in the Enlightenment tried to establish an universal concept of what the human being originally is or could be. The historical anthropology has criticised this concept of an unchangeable human nature because it doesn't take into account the historical changes and diversities of the development of human beings. Nevertheless in the German context both fields remained for a long time dominated by universalistic assumptions and critical debates about relativism. Only in the last years philosophical, historical, and literary research begin to interest in inter-cultural relations, in ethnology, and in Anglo-American cultural anthropology establishing a differentiated relation to ethnic or cultural otherness. These fields are also influenced by the \"linguistic turn\" and the \"interpretative anthropology\" focusing on the role of language and on modes of representation and symbolising. The overview is connected to a selected (and partly commented) bibliography.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Doris L. Garraway"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.71","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18fdd75c-6082-3a1a-b76a-28499abf766f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.71"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cWhat Is Mine\u201d: C\u00e9sairean Negritude between the Particular and the Universal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.71","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8604,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Considering contemporary criticisms of C\u00e9saire's most important theoretical construct, Negritude, in light of the anti-essentialist turn in postcolonial studies, this article deploys the critical vocabulary of Frantz Fanon in order to read C\u00e9saire as a theorist of colonial disalienation whose Negritude is not a fixed object but a process through which C\u00e9saire comes to problematize both black essentialism and the very idea of racial particularism itself. The point, for C\u00e9saire, is not to opt for a constructivist model that evacuates both race and subjectivity, but rather to move toward the universal \u201chuman\u201d for which particularism is both a negation and a fundamental condition of possibility. In drawing attention to the self-reflexive aspects of the Cahier and other literary works, my reading brings forward the productive tensions between essentialism and constructivism, particularism and universalism, and independence and reciprocity, through which C\u00e9saire articulates this critique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUSAN VANZANTEN GALLAGHER"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bd6ed4d-2a7b-3168-ae8f-a4f2e1063b21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"395","pageStart":"376","pagination":"pp. 376-395","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE BACKWARD GLANCE: HISTORY AND THE NOVEL IN POST-APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533222","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Metz"],"datePublished":"1982-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160523","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160523"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"392","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-392","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In Lieu of Orthodoxy: The Socialist Theories of Nkrumah and Nyerere","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160523","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL W. DERBY"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f25f878e-bd35-39bf-97dc-8f9af75899e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Art history"],"title":"CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX: Bee & Nothingness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157258","volumeNumber":"478","wordCount":3556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMECHI UCHEG BU"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3dd61dd-a6a5-3fcd-b99f-997f33aa8f45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ARMED STRUGGLE FOR NATIONAL LIBERATION AND INTERNATIONAL LAW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341438","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shifra M. Goldman"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23f789a7-0399-3378-a0cc-e222132ea776"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/777197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Iconography of Chicano Self-Determination: Race, Ethnicity, and Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/777197","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/420567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3908c493-74f7-3f5b-9350-71a5437135d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/420567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":201.0,"pageEnd":"526","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-341+344-526","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Annual Meeting Preliminary Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/420567","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":122336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Martin"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d323abb5-a157-3d3e-aa42-f1b2c03bb39b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"399","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-399","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rescuing Fanon from the Critics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523492","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8000,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[234521,234658]],"Locations in B":[[14395,14523]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GUY AUSTIN"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679758","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23399"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56f9798a-7a37-38ff-98b8-a2d464584cb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679758"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"115","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Seeing and listening from the site of trauma\": The Algerian War in Contemporary French Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679758","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wilson Carey McWilliams"],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/795293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ff628a0-2ec9-35d3-bb0b-1d3319650d8c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/795293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"646","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-646","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Violence and Legitimacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/795293","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":10997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julius O. Ihonvbere","Eme N. Ekekwe"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40174326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40174326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"273","pagination":"pp. 273-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dependent Capitalism, Structural Adjustment and Democratic Possibilities in Nigeria's Third Republic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40174326","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Dem nigerianischen Staat kann weder kurz-noch langfristig eine g\u00fcnstige Prognose gestellt werden. Alles Handeln dieses Staates und seiner H\u00fcter war seit 1960 klassenbezogen. Das beruhte nicht auf besonderer Boshaftigkeit, Ignoranz oder sonst welchen Gr\u00fcnden. Die jetzige Regierung l\u00e4\u00dft einige der besten (und nat\u00fcrlich auch einige der schlechtesten) K\u00f6pfe des Landes f\u00fcr sich arbeiten. Die vom Politischen B\u00fcro empfohlene sozialistische Ideologie wurde nicht aus Ignoranz verworfen. Die verschiedenen Ablenkungsman\u00f6ver - seien es Vereinnahmungs-, Einsch\u00fcchterungs-, Z\u00e4h mungs- oder In-Schach-Halte-Taktiken - sind alle vom Klasseninteresse bestimmt. Auch die Entscheidung f\u00fcr eine r\u00fccksichtslose Durchf\u00fchrung des Strukturanpassungsprogramms (SAP) entspricht einer klaren politischen und ideologischen Position. Die Krise des abh\u00e4ngigen Kapitalismus und der vom SAP bewirkte negative Druck machen einen \u00dcbergang zur b\u00fcrgerlichen Demokratie unm\u00f6glich. Sollte jedoch ein \u00dcbergang \u00fcber Unterdr\u00fcckung, Einverleibung, Einsch\u00fcchterung und Manipulation herbeigef\u00fchrt werden, wird er nicht dauerhafter sein als die eingegangene Zweite Republik (1979 - 1983). Unruhen, Konflikte, Arbeitsk\u00e4mpfe, religi\u00f6se wie ethnische Auseinandersetzungen und sogar B\u00fcrgerkriege stehen Nigeria bevor. Der einzige Ausweg aus der Krise liegt im ''Strukturwandel\", nicht in der \"Strukturanpassung\". Hierf\u00fcr w\u00e4re es erforderlich, die Armee ihres t\u00e4uschenden Glanzes zu berauben, die Macht denen zu \u00fcbertragen, die das Volksverm\u00f6gen produzieren, und die Eigenst\u00e4ndigkeit \u00fcber blo\u00dfe Rhetorik hinaus zu f\u00f6rdern so wie wirklich eine antiimperialistische Innen- und Au\u00dfenpolitik zu verfolgen. Solange die Bev\u00f6lkerung Nigerias nicht die Basis der Planung bildet und nach ihren demokratischen Interessen bestimmen kann, wer die Staatsmacht kontrolliert und sich ihrer bedient , wird der Marsch in den Faschismus nicht mehr umkehrbar sein. Bis der kollektiv erzeugte Reichtum auch kollektiv verwendet wird, werden Mi\u00dftrauen, Staatsstreiche, Kampf, Hunger, Entfremdung und ausl\u00e4ndische Vorherrschaft auch weiterhin f\u00fcr die politische \u00d6konomie Nigerias kennzeichnend sein. \/\/\/ Il est impossible de faire un pronostic favorable \u00e0 l'Etat du Nig\u00e9ria, soit \u00e0 court, soit \u00e0 long terme. Depuis 1960, toutes les activit\u00e9s entreprises par l'Etat et ses repr\u00e9sentants ont \u00e9t\u00e9 fond\u00e9es sur des int\u00e9r\u00eats de classe. Il n'est pas question de m\u00e9chancet\u00e9, d'ignorance ou de quoi que ce soit. L'administration actuelle dispose de quelques uns des meilleurs esprits (\u00e9videmment aussi de quelques uns des plus mauvais). Si l'id\u00e9ologie socialiste recommend\u00e9e par le \"Bureau Politique\" a \u00e9t\u00e9 rejet\u00e9e, ceci ne s'est pas produit par ignorance. Les diff\u00e9rentes tactiques de diversion comme l'incorporation , l'intimidement, la domestication et le cl\u00f4turement sont toutes determin\u00e9es par des int\u00e9r\u00eats de classe. La d\u00e9cision d'implanter le SAP par force repr\u00e9sente \u00e9galement une prise de position nette au niveau politique aussi bien qu'id\u00e9ologique. La crise du capitalisme d\u00e9pendant et les pressions n\u00e9gatives de la part du SAP rendront impossible un transfert \u00e0 une d\u00e9mocratie bourgeoise. Si toutefois une transition est introduite par la r\u00e9pression, l'incorporation, l'intimidation et la manipulation, il ne durera pas plus longtemps que la Seconde R\u00e9publique d\u00e9funte (1979 - 1983). Ce qui attent le Nig\u00e9ria dans l'avenir, ce sont des \u00e9meutes, des conflits, l'instabilit\u00e9 industrielle, des luttes religieuses et ethniques, sinon la guerre civile. Le seul chemin pour sortir de la crise consiste en une \"transformation structurelle\", et non en une adaptation structurelle. Ceci n\u00e9cessiterait la d\u00e9mystification de l'arm\u00e9e, le transfert du pouvoir aux producteurs des richesses de la nation, la poursuite, au-del\u00e0 de la rh\u00e9torique, d'une voie bas\u00e9e sur la confiance en soi-m\u00eame, et une vraie politique anti-imp\u00e9rialiste \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur et \u00e0 l'ext\u00e9rieur. Tant que le peuple du Nig\u00e9ria ne deviendra pas sujet et objet ultime de la planification et tant qu'il ne peut pas d\u00e9cider selon ses propres int\u00e9r\u00eats d\u00e9mocratiques qui contr\u00f4lera et utilisera le pouvoir d'Etat, la marche vers le fascisme sera in\u00e9vitable. Aussi longtemps que la richesse produite collectivement ne sera pas appropri\u00e9e collectivement, ce sont la m\u00e9fiance, les coups, les guerres, la faim, l'ali\u00e9nation et la domination \u00e9trang\u00e8re qui continueront \u00e0 caract\u00e9riser l'\u00e9conomie politique de Nig\u00e9ria.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hatch"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1047104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af2455a9-3a34-362e-a5aa-1f4d73807eed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1047104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1047104","volumeNumber":"513","wordCount":1689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HENRY MAPOLU"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4653af24-13fa-38e9-a48f-2c605807de66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Organization and Participation of Workers in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341252","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":16589,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cole Harris"],"datePublished":"2004-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42cacf38-29f4-3279-9ef5-ab129d4eed39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3694073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Did Colonialism Dispossess? Comments from an Edge of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694073","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":14186,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The emphasis on culture in studies of colonialism tends to obscure other forms of colonial power while making it impossible to contextualize the cultural argument and assess its salience. Rather than focusing on texts, systems of signification, and procedures of knowledge generation, as the colonial discourse literature is wont to do, a fuller understanding of colonial powers is achieved by explaining colonialism's basic geographical dispossessions of the colonized. In so doing, the issue of power is not prejudged and the particular roles of different modes and theories of colonial power come into focus. I explore these propositions by considering the powers underlying the reserve (reservation) system in British Columbia, a system that, by allocating a tiny fraction of the land to native people and opening the rest for development, facilitated the geographical reorganization of the province. My conclusions are these: the initial ability to dispossess rested primarily on physical power and the supporting infrastructure of the state; the momentum to dispossess derived from the interest of capital in profit and of settlers in forging new livelihoods; the legitimation of and moral justification for dispossession lay in a cultural discourse that located civilization and savagery and identified the land uses associated with each; and the management of dispossession rested with a set of disciplinary technologies of which maps, numbers, law, and the geography of resettlement itself were the most important. Although no one body of theory explains colonial power, several theoretical perspectives yield crucial insights.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen H. Berger","M. E. F. Bloch","A. de Ruijter","I. C. Jarvie","John O'Neill","Ino Rossi","Marshall Sahlins","William W. Stein","Anton C. L. Zwaan"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cef64485-78c4-3ed4-8700-f0310901f30e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2741542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"305","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-305","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Philosophy of language","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Structural and Eclectic Revisions of Marxist Strategy: A Cultural Materialist Critique [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2741542","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":19255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Many anthropologists are no longer hesitant to identify themselves as Marxists, but along with this common identification there has developed a raging dispute as to what a Marxist anthropology is all about. Recent critiques of cultural materialism, the avowedly Marxist strategy developed by Marvin Harris, have attacked it for being a \"vulgar\" or \"mechanical\" interpretation of Marx. Two of these critiques, those of Jonathan Friedman and H. Dieter Heinen, are examined in this paper. The cultural materialist perspective and Harris's associated epistemological distinction between emic and etic operational procedures are briefly explained. They are then used as an orientation for a critical review of Friedman's structuralist and Heinen's eclectic perspective. Friedman's work is examined in conjunction with that of other anthropologists, principally Maurice Godelier and Marshall Sahlins. These three theorists have attemped to develop a dialectical, antipositivist research strategy based upon a synthesis of Levi-Strauss's structuralism and Marx's historical materialism. The nature of this synthesis and its effect on what is considered to be proper sociocultural explanation are critically examined here. The author's conclusion is that the materialist orientation of Marxist strategy is destroyed by the attempt to incorporate Levi-Straussian structuralism into its fabric. This conclusion is reached following discussion of two critical propositions: (1) that Levi-Straussian structuralist hypotheses are by their nature unfalsifiable and (2) that Friedman and Co. have failed to make the critical distinction between emic and etic operational procedures. Heinen's critique of Harris's position is shown to be based upon a misrepresentation of cultural materialism. Finally, it is argued that Heinen's own eclectic revision of Marxist strategy (he argues that we must give equal weight in historical explanation to emic rules of behavior) ignores the determinant role of relations of production and the problem of intracultural cognitive diversity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS MAST"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23980787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23980787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Representing the Colonized\/Understanding the Other? A Rereading of Anna Seghers' \"Karibische Geschichten\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23980787","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J\u00e9ssica Antunes Ferrara"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0104026X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"655208023"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09f11b7d-17c3-3899-8a28-18390d357bb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26748014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estufemi"}],"isPartOf":"Estudos Feministas","issueNumber":"2","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Instituto de Estudos de G\u00eanero da Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Di\u00e1logos entre Colonialidade e G\u00eanero","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748014","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"No presente estudo tem-se por objetivo apresentar as proposi\u00e7\u00f5es de Frantz Fanon acerca das consequ\u00eancias do colonialismo na forma\u00e7\u00e3o ps\u00edquica e cultural do sujeito colonizado e articul\u00e1las \u00e0 condi\u00e7\u00e3o espec\u00edfica da mulher dentro desse contexto. Tenciona-se discutir a heran\u00e7a do colonialismo na vida dessas mulheres, nas sociedades em que vivem e nos projetos de descoloniza\u00e7\u00e3o cultural. Para tanto, ser\u00e3o admitidas as observa\u00e7\u00f5es e argumentos do psicanalista e fil\u00f3sofo martiniquense presentes em suas duas principais obras, Pele Negra, M\u00e1scaras Brancas (1952) e Os Condenados da Terra (1961). Apesar de ambas as obras n\u00e3o tratarem sobre a quest\u00e3o da mulher de forma aprofundada, elas oferecem mecanismos de an\u00e1lise que possibilitam a intersec\u00e7\u00e3o das formas de domina\u00e7\u00e3o e a melhor apreens\u00e3o dos problemas socioculturais no cen\u00e1rio da descoloniza\u00e7\u00e3o. This study aims to present Frantz Fanon\u2019s propositions concerning the consequences of colonialism on the psychic and cultural formation of the colonized individual. The study also aims to articulate these consequences to the specific condition of women. It will import the legacy left by colonialism in the lives of these women and the colonial impact on the societies in which these women live. In addition, it is necessary to think about the projects of cultural decolonization. The main works of Fanon will be used for this study: Black Skin, White Masks (1952) and The Wretched of the Earth (1961). Although both works do not discuss the issue of women in depth, the works offer analysis mechanisms that make it possible to understand the intersection of oppression and allow a better apprehension of sociocultural problems in the context of decolonization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali Erritouni"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c30923d7-4b5b-3abf-9733-9f02cb065ff0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonial Despotism from a Postmodern Standpoint: Helon Habila's Waiting for an Angel<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.4.144","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT In Waiting for an Angel, Helon Habila criticizes African Marxists for holding that despotism in postcolonial Africa is largely consequent on the lingering effects of colonialism and on neocolonial exploitation. He also rejects their view that revolution is capable of ending political oppression and engendering an egalitarian order. For Habila, postcolonial despotism is coextensive with the will to power of the national rulers, and efforts aimed at countering it through revolutionary activism cannot but prove futile given the formidable means of violence available to the state. I argue in this article that Habila's disagreements with African Marxists are largely informed by the critique postmodernism levels at Marxism. Like many postmodernists, he is impatient with the primacy Marxism accords economics over politics and regards the calls of Marxist revolutionaries for radical change to be reckless.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Duncan Brown"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ebaea1-9c8a-3406-90e7-ae05a4224a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/823412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"769","pageStart":"757","pagination":"pp. 757-769","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"National Belonging and Cultural Difference: South Africa and the Global Imaginary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/823412","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"For at least the last two-and-a-half decades, critical theory in the humanities and social sciences has been concerned, amongst other things, with exploding the myths and fictions of nationalist thought. Instead of the coherence of 'imagined communities', or even the unity of the individual subject, it emphasises the multiple, shifting, fragmented and often contradictory modes of identification that characterise what are referred to variously as the 'postmodern', 'postcolonial', 'posthistorical' or 'postideological' conditions of the contemporary world. Yet recent history has seen a burgeoning of nationalist sentiments and struggles, and numerous bloody wars have been fought over inclusive and exclusive conceptions of identity. In less violent, although no less compelling, ways, countries such as South Africa are struggling with the competing demands of difference and unity as they seek to reconstruct themselves in more humane and equitable ways. Far from disappearing, arguments about national belonging and cultural difference have had increased prominence in the 1990s. The dangers of exclusive or 'ethnic' nationalisms are graphically evident in the history of the twentieth century. However a simple retreat from nationalism into multiplicity, division and difference can be immensely disabling in contexts, such as the South African one, in which the rebuilding of society requires a common commitment and a sense of shared responsibility. In this article, I investigate the possibility of reconciling the demands of difference and national belonging. Specifically, I argue for what I call a recuperated or revindicated nationalism, based not on the fictions of imagined unity, but on a shared problematic: a mutual implication in a history of difference, which acknowledges local as well as global affiliations. The humanities and social sciences have a crucial role to play in the developing of these understandings and, towards the end of the article, I set out what I perceive to be the challenges of this project for those involved in such teaching and research. I argue against a short-sighted state tertiary educational policy in South Africa which, despite its rhetoric of human development and Africanisation, promotes the 'hard' over the 'human' sciences.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Davison Bideshi"],"datePublished":"2020-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48638064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19347111"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607765201"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235805"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d246558e-ed5d-3edb-ae59-b2d5cafd405f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48638064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michsocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Sociological Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Michigan Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON INEQUALITY, LAW, AND RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48638064","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10548,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Using the sociological imagination, an attempt is made to illustrate the continued relevance of Rousseau\u2019s ideas through direct and indirect linkages with contemporary theorists, theories, and schools in interpreting residential segregation. Rousseau articulated that inequalities may be mediated through legislative processes that emanate from the General Will, which supersedes the individual will. Society provides the foundation for the development of higher moral claims and a move toward equality. However, modern American society provides a paradox in the promotion of inequality through both its legislative and legal processes, especially as they relate to residential accommodations for minorities. The works of Marx, Critical Legal Studies, Habermas, Bourdieu, and others are referenced to illustrate Rousseau\u2019s influence from an historical, integrative perspective.","subTitle":"ROUSSEAU\u2019S LINKAGES TO CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ibrahim M. Samater"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42800160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09134700"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607605918"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-203351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a960ffc-d79e-33a1-a08f-78d32b4c7d04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42800160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revijapacultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Japanese Culture and Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Josai University Educational Corporation","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender and Development: An Observer's Reflections on the JIU Symposium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42800160","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caspar ten Dam"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430870","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16098498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57570859"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"533982a8-5a40-3fbd-8fe0-36f777cac089"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41430870"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irancaucasus"}],"isPartOf":"Iran & the Caucasus","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"How to Feud and Rebel: 1. Violence-values among the Chechens and Albanians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430870","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":13652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on so-called violence-values (a composite term coined by the author), the first variable of the author's Brutalisation theory, which combines elements from disciplines ranging from anthropology to military psychology. It forms part of my ongoing research, which explores the values (norms, customs, beliefs), aims (objectives, aspirations, ideologies) and methods (targets, tactics, techniques) of violence by Chechen and Albanian separatists during the last Cold War and first post-Cold war periods, i.e. between the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan on 24 December 1979 and the attack by Osama Bin Laden's Al Qaeda (The Base) network on the United States on 11 September 2001. Through a meticulous exposition\u2014 and comparison with international norms\u2014of traditional morals on violence that still are salient in the remarkably similar communities of Chechens and Albanians, the author hopes to underpin his post-constructivist position that a genuine \"acting-out\" of norms, values and beliefs in vendettas, battles and other contests can shape one's identity, irrespective of whether these attributes are primordial, i.e. factual, or constructed, i.e. invented.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter C. W. Gutkind"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"328e4c3d-688f-36d0-83cb-7316a02f0853"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The View from below: Political Consciousness of the Urban Poor in Ibadan (La vue d'en bas: la prise de conscience politique chez les citadins pauvres d'Ibadan)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391364","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":15221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Une analyse d'attitudes parmi les couches les plus pauvres de la population urbaine d'Ibadan fait appara\u00eetre la prise de conscience d'appartenir \u00e0 un groupe distinct, et antagoniste, par rapport \u00e0 l'\u00e9lite politico-\u00e9conomique et \u00e0 la petite bourgeoisie nationale. Cette conscience de classe naissante s'accompagne d'une prise de conscience politique, aboutissant actuellement \u00e0 des positions plut\u00f4t r\u00e9formistes que r\u00e9votionnaires, qui s'expliquent par des raisons diverses, entre autres le manque de solidarit\u00e9 entre la couche la plus pauvre (talaka) et la couche imm\u00e9diatement sup\u00e9rieure (mekunnu) de ce prol\u00e9tariat. Discussion, dans une approche marxiste, de cette formation de classe et des perspectives qu'elle offre.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Lonsdale"],"datePublished":"1981-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fd0cd0e-bfda-378d-a989-354bf7e58b82"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":87.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"States and Social Processes in Africa: A Historiographical Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523904","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":50641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwidge Danticat"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3acb7903-eae7-34e8-b0f7-17b1de2671b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Portal Moment for Portal Writers and Scholars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325829","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":3354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maryse Cond\u00e9"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44b018b0-5c70-332e-a99d-184b47c1d0e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Order, Disorder, Freedom, and the West Indian Writer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930090","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Williams"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131267","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth A. Povinelli"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"451c43af-c540-307b-93ac-55432add9d33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23178879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What's Love Got to Do with It? The Race of Freedom and the Drag of Descent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23178879","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stacey Balkan"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"660a2b2c-9ff1-32f7-bbd3-9ec3de582b8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rogues in the Postcolony: Chris Abani's GraceLand<\/em> and the Petro-Picaresque","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.9.2.02","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The rogue in the postcolony is a p\u00edcaro (in the literary sense), and an instantiation of the internally displaced persons who Mike Davis chronicles in his Planet of Slums (2006). This particular rogue lives in the shadows of a new \u201clettered city\u201d\u2014an imperialist fantasy made possible by the discovery of petrol, if not silver and gold. His tale deploys such picaresque signatures as hunger and privation to critique and expose the real economic consequences of persons displaced by companies like Shell or Texaco-Chevron, not to mention mining companies across the Global South. Rife with moments of Swiftian abjection, Chris Abani's picaresque novel GraceLand (2004) is an exemplar of the form. It sutures corporeal depictions of life in Maroko\u2014a slum community on the outskirts of Lagos\u2014within an episodic narrative that defies the chrono-normativity of the development paradigm. Common approaches to Lagos generally evince one of two images: what Matthew Gandy calls \u201ceschatological\u201d images, which recall V.S. Naipaul's writings, or the utopian landscapes of what recent architects have called \u201cnew modes of urbanism.\u201d The latter, in their potential to efface the region's economic history, are surely no less problematic than the former. This essay proposes that neither image is sufficient to the task of representing the increasingly invisible rogue, who continues to be occluded in our myopic vision of globalization. We might look instead to petro-picaresque novels like Abani's as a means of navigating the aporia between the actual conditions of the city and the simulacra that saturate popular representations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Virginia Whatley Smith"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cdf1b8f-a745-3091-b5e2-e448cef97353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40027421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"586","pagination":"pp. 586-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40027421","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amber Ault"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121293","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4ac6085-077d-368e-9dae-cf80058818ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121293"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"463","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-463","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ambiguous Identity in an Unambiguous Sex\/Gender Structure: The Case of Bisexual Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121293","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores bisexual identity as an ambiguous social category within the dominant dualistic sex\/gender structure. The article documents the stigmatization of the bisexual category in the discourse of both the Religious Right and lesbian feminist communities, then examines the impact of dual stigmatization on bisexual women, who often see bi identity as disrupting the dominant sexual binary. Drawing from interviews with bisexual women, the article argues that bisexual women's discourse on sexual subjectivity does not escape the influence of binary structures, although it does at times reconfigure the binary along the queer\/nonqueer and bisexual\/monosexual axes. While the bisexual identity category may work as a discursive stabilizing device during the sex\/gender crisis provoked by the AIDS epidemic, its politicization by bi feminists also allows the category to be strategically deployed for feminist and queer political projects.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PEDRO GARC\u00cdA-CARO"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41679817","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"99fcbd9d-f151-3d6f-a301-8f6efe6bea75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41679817"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entre occidentalismo y orientalismo: la escritura estereogr\u00e1fica de la Revoluci\u00f3n Mexicana en Espa\u00f1a. El militarismo mejicano de Blasco Ib\u00e1\u00f1ez y Tirano Banderas de Valle-Incl\u00e1n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41679817","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":12413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kadiatu Kanneh"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb33ed1a-9228-307e-b152-c77dbb95410d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Place, Time and the Black Body: Myth and Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973714","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REY CHOW"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33ee2d46-71f4-35c5-bf93-527f6f014b8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Sacrifice, Mimesis, and the Theorizing of Victimhood (A Speculative Essay)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/rep.2006.94.1.131","volumeNumber":"94","wordCount":9396,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay is an attempt to identify and elaborate the inextricable mutual implications between mimesis and sacrifice in considerations of victimhood (understood as dominated or stigmatized existence), especially as found in prominent examples of contemporary cultural theory. The authors discussed include Giorgio Agamben, Luce Irigaray, Homi Bhabha, and Ren\u00e9 Girard.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio D. Tillis"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96d63f92-e7d6-3267-a7ac-8689efcf8030"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"NATIVE SON'S\" BIGGER AND \"LAS ESTRELLAS SON NEGRAS'\" IRRA: TWO POST-COLONIAL SUBJECTS OF LITERATURE OF THE AFRICAN DIASPORA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325151","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Per F. Gjerde"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018716X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12e0736d-8274-3d6c-acf3-5aa227610653"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26764721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humandevelopment"}],"isPartOf":"Human Development","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"S. Karger AG","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"An Evaluation of Ethnicity Research in Developmental Psychology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764721","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":17179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article aims to reorient developmental psychologists\u2019 view of \u201cethnicity\u201d and align them more closely with disciplines such as sociology and anthropology. Developmental psychologists mostly treat ethnicity as apolitical, ahistorical and limited to mutually exclusive, homogeneous categories measured by decontextualized self-report questionnaires. Moreover, self-report \u201cethnicity\u201d scales typically fail to integrate a full perspective on ethnicity, such as power, inequality, class, religion, gender, sexual orientation, age, and generation. I take issue with the position that ethnic groups constitute fixed natural entities based on ethnic identities. In my view, ethnicity emerges in social interaction in specific social and political contexts. Hence, \u201cethnicity\u201d is primarily a theory of social relations; it is intensified or abated when individuals engage in mutual interaction. I argue that no reference to ethnicity is politically impartial. Finally, I present a set of recommendations that might have useful theoretical and methodological implications for ethnicity research in developmental psychology.","subTitle":"Critiques and Recommendations","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwin Jones"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861947","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"906b725a-4a78-35a3-a986-7d0aeb7f16a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861947"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CLASS AND ADMINISTRATIVE DEVELOPMENT DOCTRINES IN JAMAICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861947","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashraf Jamal"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f0df11e-1b52-3061-b007-b292b1bb3f23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"100","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"Small Acts\": The Perspective, Location and Agency of Theory in South African Cultural Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802685","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Browning"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01497677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa293ed4-bc5a-37e0-aeb0-ccffe7864460"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30045075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"danceresearchj"}],"isPartOf":"Dance Research Journal","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Congress on Research in Dance","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Choreographing Postcoloniality: Reflections on the Passing of Edward Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045075","volumeNumber":"35\/36","wordCount":2700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol Clark D'Lugo"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6f6ef3f-e547-34a6-b181-db6c999f1f67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29741683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Armando Ram\u00edrez's \"Pu\" or \"Violaci\u00f3n en Polanco\": Looking at Race and Revenge in Modern Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29741683","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberto M\u00e1rquez"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712943","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07f0d803-d16b-313e-a336-27649f6bb31f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712943"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"477","pageStart":"456","pagination":"pp. 456-477","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"One Boricua's Baldwin: A Personal Remembrance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712943","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Avram Bornstein"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dcca4c4-435c-3f9d-ab57-302ea6c1482c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23182400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Military Occupation as Carceral Society: Prisons, Checkpoints, and Walls in the Israeli-Palestinian Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23182400","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Palestinians in the Occupied Territories have been subject to increasing confinement, starting with prisons in the 1970s and 1980s and growing into a regime of checkpoints and walls that encircle entire towns and villages. After a historical review of the incremental stages of this incarceration, the article examines the overall impact of prisons, checkpoints, and walls, based on observations garnered from more than a dozen research trips over two decades and a review of research by others. Although these architectures are built and used in the name of security, findings show that mass imprisonment debilitates the Palestinian economy, forcing Palestinians to flee or resist. The final section compares the Israeli carceralization of the Occupied Territories to the US occupation of Iraq, suggesting that similar, albeit more violent, processes are underway.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27756313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9df52b07-19e7-3837-9779-7c15552694d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27756313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"122","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"603","pageStart":"595","pagination":"pp. 595-603","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Removing Neocolonialism's APRM Mask: A Critique of the African Peer Review Mechanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27756313","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4922,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Connor Ryan"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.4.51","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"194b4e9a-1c38-33e0-8f4c-9edda58ce69d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.4.51"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Regimes of Waste: Aesthetics, Politics, and Waste from Kofi Awoonor and Ayi Kwei Armah to Chimamanda Adichie and Zeze Gamboa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.4.51","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":10053,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[348332,348705]],"Locations in B":[[55766,56137]],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay argues that waste\u2014as a symbol, a trope, and a material condition\u2014permits us to reimagine the link between post-independence novels of disillusionment and contemporary works preoccupied with the tenuousness of national prosperity and identity. From Kofi Awoonor's This Earth, My Brother (1971) and Ayi Kwei Armah's The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (1968) to Chimamanda Adichie's Half a Yellow Sun (2006) and Zeze Gamboa's recent film O Heroi (2004), waste is not merely an aesthetic oddity joining together these selected texts. Transforming literary representations of waste reflect a revaluation of our received notions of nationhood, the distribution of wealth and value in society, the aims of political liberation, and the legitimate means of political engagement. I argue that waste has become an ambiguous symbol of both the uncertainty resulting from national and social disintegration and the possibility of forming renewed social bonds.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bethwell A. Ogot"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"282cfa12-9aee-3f12-b3bc-e50848c1e950"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27667420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rereading the History and Historiography of Epistemic Domination and Resistance in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667420","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":10477,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Northover"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.6.1.66","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3436f6d4-33a7-309d-b2c5-0df09c6875d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.6.1.66"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Abject Blackness, Hauntologies of Development, and the Demand for Authenticity: A Critique of Sen's \u201cDevelopment as Freedom\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.6.1.66","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":10297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This paper sets out to examine the limits of Sen's paradigm of Development as Freedom by an interrogation of its critical silences on the structure of violence animating the progress of modern power. I argue that despite Sen's radical shift to an ontology of capabilities for evaluating states of (human) well-being, and his move away from a utilitarian ethics for social choice, his approach is fundamentally compromised by its complicity with an ideal of freedom, rooted in Kantian moral philosophy, that is measured by a transcendent figure of sovereign agency. Given this imbrication, Sen's valorization of freedom depends on an uncanny silence concerning the foundational violence grounding this figure of \u201cmodern freedom\u201d which is deployed, I argue, in order to sustain an obscure yet pernicious \u201chauntology\u201d of abject blackness. This omission acts to dislocate the past from the structuring of violence in the present, and is reinforced by Sen's myopic presentism on the violence emanating from a dialectic of becoming through this same ideal figure of freedom. However, to the extent that there is a continued presence of such a hauntology, which reflects the global shadows of a fetish of transparency, that is, a contingently racialized modern philosophy and politics of place in the processes and projects for development, then Sen's efforts to sustain an authentic relation to the present will suffer from a radical disability. Sen's ambitious project for global social justice and the advance of human development thus founders not only because of the normative fuzziness of values for sustaining choice, or because of the implicit privileging of an ethics of freedom over an ethics of care. Rather, more fundamentally, the fault lines of his projects rest with an obscure yet pernicious dependence on a freedom sustained through hauntologies of abject blackness in a violent politics of \u201cmapping the present\u201d in a modern world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Serafin Roldan-Santiago"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af339f89-a67a-35c6-a4f2-c8378bd870b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Thematic and Structural Functions of Folklore in Caribbean Literature: The Case of the \"Written\" and the \"Oral\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986166","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4073,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Huddart"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr776.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781781380253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3eccd0aa-0d5a-3336-af5b-4ea8b32c95fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt18kr776.3"}],"isPartOf":"Involuntary Associations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Linguistics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr776.3","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7614,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Although English has long spread around the world, it is only in recent years that its diverse speakers have come to appreciate the unexpected consequences. One consequence is a perceived convergence, as Pei suggests, and resistance to that convergence derives largely from its identification with the colonialism that he mentions. Nonetheless, there is more to the picture of English worldwide than a dominant colonial tongue, and, while Quirk\u2019s suggestion must seem a little wishful, there are also increasing numbers of researchers, writers, and everyday users who are willing to entertain the idea that English has at least nonecessary<\/em> connection","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["world englishes","postcolonial studies","huddart postcolonial","language","huddart postcolonial studies","communication","cultural","cultural studies","language myth","writing"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meta L. Schettler"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a91ce424-55c3-3adf-9943-f99fd7dfc38a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27655121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27655121","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":1634,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212362,212444]],"Locations in B":[[273,360]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pedro Carlos Louzada Fonseca"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43801787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36bf9c01-df8c-32fe-9672-19a19ba7bb03"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43801787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"1","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"TROPOS DA COLONIZA\u00c7\u00c3O DA AM\u00c9RICA: DISCURSO DO G\u00caNERO E SIMBOLISMO ANIMAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43801787","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":3456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Mpofu"],"datePublished":"2020-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.3.2.0033","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54ced5a1-ee80-31e1-b3c8-38304e73e21d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.3.2.0033"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Xenophobia as Racism: The Colonial Underside of Nationalism in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.3.2.0033","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11191,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The present article fleshes out the observation that in actuality what is circulated in journalistic and scholarly literature as xenophobia in South Africa is systemic and structural racism that is rooted in colonial and apartheid history. As such the term xenophobia, as it denotes the fear and also hatred of foreign others by native nationals of South Africa, tends to conceal rather than reveal that systemic and structural constructs of racism at a world and local scale produce and locate black Africans of other countries in South Africa as alien and foreign others that are in the receiving end of nationalist and ultimately racist passions of hatred and violence. In a country that has not fully recovered from the homeland racist nationalism that placed black natives of South Africa according to geographic and ethnic lines, the black Africans from other countries take the place of racialized and excluded outsiders who become candidates for hatred, discrimination, and violation. In this way what is termed xenophobia is actually racism and the coloniality of being and belonging that accompanies it. This article, therefore, provides a decolonial understanding and interpretation of xenophobia as racism in South Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mireille Rosello"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea9df728-6699-305f-8807-c2c858842ce4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40552457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Egalit\u00e9 des chances\": Success as mandatory treason","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552457","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":5766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marta E. Sanchez"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caliban: The New Latin-American Protagonist of the Tempest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465034","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Crowe"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40581976","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168297"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd719b44-08e4-340b-8ed6-276dde01f855"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40581976"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georhistquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Historical Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"277","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-277","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Georgia Historical Society","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Culture and White Power: Notes on the History of Historical Perceptions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40581976","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":10243,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Childs"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27734990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6e44c55-98d1-3a8b-b6ea-1ab408e54601"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27734990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet\": \"Beloved,\" the American Chain Gang, and the Middle Passage Remix","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27734990","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erin James"],"datePublished":"2013-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.50.1.0172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c87c96f9-8399-3d2f-ae46-986813563723"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.50.1.0172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.50.1.0172","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":1238,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerry W. Ward"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44491339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03606724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f88092d5-474c-326b-9621-b1bd0b0e0fe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44491339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian1975"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian (1975-1982)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FROM A POET'S BRIDGE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44491339","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KATIE AUBRECHT"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d85740af-4068-3e66-b159-9791baeaa002"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER THREE: Rereading the Ontario Review of the Roots of Youth Violence Report: The Relevance of Fanon for a Critical Disability Studies Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980666","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":11050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[158351,158812]],"Locations in B":[[424,876]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald Clark Hodges"],"datePublished":"1969-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2105658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318205"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38309698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23011"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2105658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philphenrese"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy and Phenomenological Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"International Phenomenological Society","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Fourth Epoch: Epilogue to the Unfinished Social Philosophy of C. Wright Mills","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2105658","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paget Henry"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a690835-dd6e-3160-8d37-0c17376746d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"CLR James and the Orthodoxies of John McClendon and David Scott: a Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758914","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert I. Rhodes"],"datePublished":"1968-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76ff157a-089c-3181-9d5d-148e21fb21bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"412","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-412","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Disguised Conservatism in Evolutionary Development Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401372","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Y\u00fadice"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530631","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f2e056a-4842-3011-af51-8431b290c142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4530631"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"36","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Testimonio y concientizacion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4530631","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine Morton"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.41.3.299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03186431"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49846124"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236970"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a27478e3-b0c1-34f2-9b01-ddfbf229e846"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/canajsocicahican.41.3.299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsocicahican"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Sociology \/ Cahiers canadiens de sociologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Sociology","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Arts - Literature","Political science - Political geography","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Hitchhiking and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/canajsocicahican.41.3.299","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Whether too much or the wrong kind, constraining Indigenous mobility is a preoccupation of the province of British Columbia. The province remains focussed on controlling Indigenous mobility and constructing forms of contentious mobility, such as hitchhiking, as bad or risky. In Northwestern British Columbia hitchhiking is particularly common among Indigenous women. Hitchhiking as a mode of contentious mobility is categorically named as \u201cbad mobility\u201d and is frequently explained away as risky behaviour. Mobility of Indigenous women, including hitchhiking is deeply gendered and racialized. The frequent description of missing and murdered Indigenous women as hitchhikers or drifters fosters a sense that \u201cchoosing\u201d a bad mode of mobility alone is the reason that these women disappear. This paper will identify how hitchhiking, framed as contentious mobility, supports the construction of missing and murdered Indigenous women as willing, available and blame-worthy victims. Morality is tangled up with mobility in the province\u2019s responses to Indigenous women who hitchhike. This paper engages in a critical discourse analysis of billboards posted by the province of British Columbia along the Highway of Tears that attempt to prevent women from hitchhiking. This paper will identify the point of convergence between contentious mobility, violence against Indigenous women and larger questions of colonialism and the negotiation of racialized and gendered power imbalances through the province\u2019s constraining of Indigenous mobility.","subTitle":"A Critical Discourse Analysis of Billboards on the Highway of Tears","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. Chukwudi Eze"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43052741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02653788"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e652811-3ae6-3497-966b-0192277d8adc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43052741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transformation"}],"isPartOf":"Transformation","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sources of Social and Political Theology: Interrogating the African experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43052741","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16202,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper analyses selected recent African theological works on the conceptual relationships between church and society. The author highlights what can be universally learned from the African writings with reference to debates about faith and its relationship to ideals of social and political justice. Some recent books by African theologians have taken up the challenge of directly confronting questions that arise from the relationships between Africa's religions and their wider social and political environment. The paper shows how according to these theologians the church in Africa must be judged by what it does and by what it does not do vis-\u00e0-vis the larger societies of which it is a part.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wahneema Lubiano"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d0515ce4-2a3c-3787-b7d4-c65e82e1a008"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3041686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"But Compared to what?: Reading Realism, Representation, and Essentialism in School Daze, do the Right Thing, and the Spike Lee Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041686","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12799,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[76892,76938]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah McKibben"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Poor Mouth: A Parody of (Post) Colonial Irish Manhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618330","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931413","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"598ecd1c-474a-3b24-92cf-e2b5d5473b87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931413"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":115.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studies in Caribbean and South American Literature: An Annotated Bibliography, 1990","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931413","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":56969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mona N. Mikhail"],"datePublished":"1990-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/164011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"639faf72-e59d-3dc8-a4ae-451ce95dd1c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/164011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"504","pagination":"pp. 504-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/164011","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Lomas"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8569c68-960d-3d7a-8094-cc57b5dd7888"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race and the Politics of Identity in Nepal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3773959","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8475,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While many anthropological studies on race have focused on dominant uses of race, race can be a powerful form of oppositional identity. Subaltern people may assert racial identities for political mobilization. This article investigates why a small political party that sought to mobilize Nepal's ethnic groups chose to redefine them as members of the Mongol race. By tracing the historical and contemporary meanings of race and other discourses of identity in Nepal, the article analyzes the meanings of this construction of race, and shows how using race appeared to be an effective political strategy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mikko Tuhkanen"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcf5585a-8a27-3e8d-a639-cd4599756b9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Optical Trade: From Slave-Breaking in Frederick Douglass's Narrative to Self-Breaking in Richard Wright's Black Boy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643850","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":14014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jini Kim Watson"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616406","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6decea8-728d-3b74-9580-f4449ca19652"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20616406"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"711","pageStart":"683","pagination":"pp. 683-711","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Way Ahead: The Politics and Poetics of Singapore's Developmental Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616406","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID HARDIMAN"],"datePublished":"2013-06-08","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23527210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51350bfb-a66b-3b2f-944d-467bc8e8259d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23527210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a History of Non-violent Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23527210","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8203,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Following on from Gandhi, peace activists have created a large body of work on the strategy of non-violent protest that brings out both its strengths and advantages over and above violent insurrection. This literature has not, however, constructed a convincing history of the non-violent method. Most have depicted it as a timeless phenomenon, found in all historical societies in one form or another. Rather, it is, as this essay suggests, a method rooted in modernity, arising out of a particular strategic reaction to the coercive and legal apparatuses of the modern state.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mervat Hatem"],"datePublished":"2009-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e77263-d712-31ee-bfff-0a984344322e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40206098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pens\u00e9e 1: Africa on My Mind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206098","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":1674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David R. Roediger"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3125134","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02751275"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44849568"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236855"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec92e0f3-0104-3fd1-bfee-91914925e3e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3125134"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jearlyrepublic"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Early Republic","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"600","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-600","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Pursuit of Whiteness: Property, Terror, and Expansion, 1790-1860","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3125134","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cuthbeth Tagwirei"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11582e5e-611a-30d8-b721-9be59e239b24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The \u201cHorror\u201d of African Spirituality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.03","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Conradian journey into the African interior also signified, in the Western colonial imaginary, an encounter with a seemingly incomprehensible spirituality. African spirituality was the site of excess, epitomized by darkness, frenzy, madness, superstition, and illogicality. Based on a reading of Andrea Eames's The Cry of the Go-Away Bird and Peter Godwin's Mukiwa: A White Boy in Africa, this article proposes that white-authored Zimbabwean narratives written after colonialism display a wider range of attitudes toward African spirituality, which are at once multiple and ambivalent. The two narratives, appearing at least a decade after Zimbabwe's independence from white minority rule, work against the dominant \u201cwhite\u201d fear of Christian decline and the attendant descent into spiritual darkness and enable a secondary non-secular experimentation with African spirituality. I use the core concept of horror from Heart of Darkness to treat jointly the experience among whites in Africa of encountering an \u201cother\u201d faith and the literary tradition of representing such an experience.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annie Stein"],"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401674","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7132ebbf-3dcf-3a31-80ac-3add9f5d65f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401674"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"476","pageStart":"469","pagination":"pp. 469-476","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Educational Equality in the U. S.: The Emperor's Clothes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401674","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":3325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jama Mohamed","Jama Mohammed"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41931228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07409133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41931228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Northeast African Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Health sciences - Medical conditions"],"title":"Epidemics and Public Health in Late Colonial Somaliland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41931228","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":13473,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noah De Lissovoy"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24871283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f48858b1-d8e4-36cd-b6e9-e625eec666a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24871283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"2 (140)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Injury and Accumulation: Making Sense of the Punishing State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24871283","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8358,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[29934,30000]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Al Schaller"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079271"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012200152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4541eb2-b907-3fb4-a66d-e7908f9a262c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43895211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"155","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"PURSUIT OF THE \"NEW MAN\" IN EDMUNDO DESNOES' \"MEMORIES OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895211","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ray H. Elling"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83369e23-c92f-3bc8-8e26-ea52987e5786"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"THE CAPITALIST WORLD-SYSTEM AND INTERNATIONAL HEALTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130020","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":17485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A number of world health problems which have been discretely considered in the past are viewed in this paper as interwoven with each other and with the functioning of the capitalist political-economic world-system. Thus, climactic explanations (\"tropical medicine\"), and even poverty when conceived in cultural terms or as a structural problem resident entirely within a single nation, are seen as inadequate for understanding any or all of the problems discussed briefly here: poor general health levels in peripheral and semi-peripheral nations, especially rising infant mortality rates in countries such as Brazil; comerciogenic malnutrition; dumping and exploitative sale of drugs, pesticides and other products banned or restricted in core nations; genocidal and other threatening approaches to population control; export of hazardous and polluting industry to peripheral and semi-peripheral nations; similar export of human experimentation; the sale of irrelevant, high medical technology to countries lacking basic public health measures; the \"brain drain\"; and medical imperialism. Also discounted are moralistic inveighing, complaints about inadequate information and its transfer, discussions of bureaucratic bumbling or inter-agency politics and professional rivalries, various forms of victim-blaming, and other explanations and corrective approaches which ignore class structures and the control, distribution, and expropriation of resources in nations and the world-system. The framework suggests the importance of a worldwide cultural hegemony, including a medical cultural hegemony, established by and in the service of the ruling classes. Socialist-oriented nations which are quasi-independent of the capitalist world-system are seen as suffering less from its effects. This suggests that we should conceive of world socialist health and world capitalist health, rather than any kind of unified phenomenon called \"international health.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas L. Blair"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431184","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564245597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a874ba56-c6d4-399a-96ac-9c9fab3bb854"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24431184"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"179\/180","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Crisis of Black Urbanism in Britain: From Folk to Freedom Ways","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431184","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. K. JHA"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf3a607f-a95d-34ff-a183-5c4b52d32abb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41854757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"UNMARXIAN DEVELOPMENT OF MARXISM: An Analysis of Deradicalization of Marx's Concept of Internationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854757","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alyson Cole"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643485","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8af66f7-dc48-3f1d-bffb-41e25e2efa4b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643485"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Trading Places: From Black Power Activist to \"Anti-Negro Negro\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643485","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":19099,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[105663,105717]],"Locations in B":[[90689,90740]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. Scot Hinson"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03282d35-8c30-36a0-af68-3ef0cf27ac4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3185545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative and Community Crisis in \"Beloved\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185545","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stuart Hall"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03067661"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60648584"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25922cdd-86cd-30ee-8dfd-02fefa0c75b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44111666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"framework"}],"isPartOf":"Framework: The Journal of Cinema and Media","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Drake Stutesman","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CULTURAL IDENTITY AND CINEMATIC REPRESENTATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44111666","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PATRICK TAYLOR"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41799653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08263663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c9ade0b-9e36-39b7-aa64-6d8564a6c2d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41799653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajlatiamercar"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies \/ Revue canadienne des \u00e9tudes latino-am\u00e9ricaines et cara\u00efbes","issueNumber":"26","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"HEGEL, AFRO-CARIBBEAN RELIGION, AND THE STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41799653","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"L'\u00e9tude de la religion afro-cara\u00efb\u00e9enne doit avoir pour point de d\u00e9part, le probl\u00e8me de l'oppression si le r\u00f4le de la religion dans l'ordre social et politique veut \u00eatre compris de fa\u00e7on ad\u00e9quate. Des distinctions indispensables doivent \u00eatre faites entre les formations religieuses qui perp\u00e9tuent l'oppression coloniale, ceux qui s'opposent \u00e0 cette oppression sans pr\u00e9senter de solutions de rechange et ceux qui contribuent concr\u00e8tement \u00e0 la lib\u00e9ration des hommes. Historiens et th\u00e9ologiens n'ont pas suffisamment fait de distinction \u00e0 cet \u00e9gard et, ont, par cons\u00e9quent, \u00e9t\u00e9 impuissants \u00e0 d\u00e9montrer la nature de la contribution des formations religieuses \u00e0 la lutte pour la libert\u00e9 et pour la lib\u00e9ration nationale dans les Cara\u00efbes. The study of Afro-Caribbean religion must take as its starting point the problem of oppression if the role of religion in the social and political order is to be adequately understood. Critical distinctions can be made between religious formations which perpetuate colonial oppression, those which react to that oppression without posing new alternatives, and those which contribute and give expression to the process of human liberation. Historians and theologians have not adequately made these distinctions and have therefore been unable to demonstrate the nature of the contribution of religious forms to the struggle for freedom and national liberation in the Caribbean.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana Taylor"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8eacaa6-df7d-3467-9105-f673721ee7b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4492659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"Performance and\/as History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492659","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The fiesta celebrated annually in Tepoztl\u00e1n, Mexico, repeatedly enacts a history-one that affirms a sense of identity and agency quite different from the one found in history books, allowing for the massive performance-of-communal-self year after year. Through this astonishing act, performed history trumps official written history and communal organizations stymie governmental structures.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven A. Burr"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/soundings.101.4.0322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-200154"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55fb3fc6-c714-3a55-b087-6995520b17e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/soundings.101.4.0322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transcending the Paradox of Violence: A Dialectical\/Dialogical Interrogation of the Colonial\/Anti-Colonial Struggle in Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/soundings.101.4.0322","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":5137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The growing complexity of contemporary globalized human culture, while creating greater opportunities for human relation, has likewise generated profound challenges to our human capacity to relate meaningfully. Using Gillo Pontecorvo's 1956 film The Battle of Algiers, Frantz Fanon's paradigmatic text The Wretched of the Earth, and the writings of Albert Camus as representative accounts of colonial\/anti-colonial violence in the Algerian struggle for independence, this article will question the legitimacy of a dialectical approach to transcending the paradox of violence, proposing instead a manner of dialogical reconciliation through the human capacity for solidarity-in-relation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Tiyambe Zeleza"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"257fee0b-5012-3852-8b8b-26e609a9691b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40003370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Visions of Freedom and Democracy in Postcolonial African Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40003370","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["O. F. Onoge","K. A. Gaching'a"],"datePublished":"1967-04-01","docSubType":"editorial","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mazrui's 'Nkrumah': \"A Case of Neo-Colonial Scholarship\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934345","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mattias Iser"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23961528","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00488143"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d5687c1-065c-3a04-9567-86262604c8e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23961528"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuintephil"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Internationale de Philosophie","issueNumber":"265 (3)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Revue Internationale de Philosophie","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Axiology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recognition and Violence: The Challenge of Respecting One's Victim","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23961528","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":12872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Salem"],"datePublished":"2022-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57c4f359-36b5-3a62-aec6-6bef9fa28128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48645757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radical Regionalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645757","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":13237,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyses how sovereignty in Africa\u2019s immediate post-independence period was necessarily conceptualised as a regional pan-African and internationalist project of decolonisation, outlining lessons for the contemporary period. The capacity of newly independent states to shape their domestic policy and mobilise resources was constrained by their subordinate place in the global political and economic order, which made them dependent on foreign capital and tied them to the interests of their former colonisers. As such, they fostered radical regional and international solidarity that would facilitate the continent\u2019s development. Looking at a series of feminist conferences in the immediate post-independence era, the article also traces the contributions of Southern feminists to the decolonisation project and African feminists to the conception of pan-Africanism, breaking with Western feminists to conceptualise national liberation as fundamental to gender justice. Cet article analyse la mani\u00e8re dont la souverainet\u00e9, dans la p\u00e9riode qui a imm\u00e9diatement suivi les ind\u00e9pendances en Afrique, a \u00e9t\u00e9 n\u00e9cessairement conceptualis\u00e9e comme un projet r\u00e9gional panafricain et internationaliste de d\u00e9colonisation, en insistant sur les enseignements pour la p\u00e9riode contemporaine. La capacit\u00e9 des \u00c9tats nouvellement ind\u00e9pendants \u00e0 fa\u00e7onner leur politique int\u00e9rieure et \u00e0 mobiliser des ressources \u00e9tait limit\u00e9e par leur place secondaire dans l'ordre politique et \u00e9conomique mondial, qui les rendait d\u00e9pendants du capital \u00e9tranger et les liait aux int\u00e9r\u00eats de leurs anciens colonisateurs. Ainsi, ils ont encourag\u00e9 une solidarit\u00e9 r\u00e9gionale et internationale radicale qui faciliterait le d\u00e9veloppement du continent. En examinant une s\u00e9rie de conf\u00e9rences f\u00e9ministes organis\u00e9es au lendemain des ind\u00e9pendances, l'article retrace \u00e9galement les contributions des f\u00e9ministes du Sud au projet de d\u00e9colonisation, ainsi que celles des f\u00e9ministes africaines \u00e0 la conception du panafricanisme, rompant avec les f\u00e9ministes occidentales pour conceptualiser la lib\u00e9ration nationale comme fondamentale pour l\u2019\u00e9galit\u00e9 entre les hommes et les femmes.","subTitle":"Feminism, Sovereignty and the Pan-African Project","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e60cd0f4-2dc4-39cd-aa32-8cc392366db5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45157341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"INDEX","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45157341","volumeNumber":"499","wordCount":6751,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Michael Dash"],"datePublished":"1985-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbedd4bf-1b00-35ba-b209-45fb88dc291b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27862808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862808","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":1141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oladipo Fashina"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23557066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and the Ethical Justification of Anti-Colonial Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23557066","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12037,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[66136,66196]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kamal Sheel"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44139913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"22491937"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c4a80c9-989e-3451-b0fe-500635d35614"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44139913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procindihistcong"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Indian History Congress","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"622","pageStart":"614","pagination":"pp. 614-622","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Indian History Congress","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","History","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FANG CHIH-MIN'S CONCEPT OF REVOLUTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44139913","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":3251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H\u00e9di Abdel-Jaouad"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40155249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40155249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"800","pageStart":"799","pagination":"pp. 799-800","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40155249","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":997,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID LISENBY"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565521770"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010235351"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e619539-645a-3f1d-8782-ff7440b9f2cb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24388603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dark Ambivalence: Resurgent Stereotypes of Afro-Cuban Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24388603","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En el contexto de la Cuba pos-sovi\u00e9tica, cuando el incremento del turismo internacional a la isla a partir de los a\u00f1os 90 ha conllevado una explosi\u00f3n de la industria del sexo, las novelas Los palacios distantes (2002), de Abilio Est\u00e9vez, y El Rey de la Habana (1999), de Pedro Juan Guti\u00e9rrez, construyen personajes que se aproximan al perfil del trabajador sexual masculino con tendencias violentas. La caracterizaci\u00f3n estereot\u00edpica del hombre negro como hiperviril y violento encuentra sus precursores en la sociedad esclavista. Este art\u00edculo analiza la ambivalencia en las representaciones de la masculinidad afrocubana en las novelas de Est\u00e9vez y Guti\u00e9rrez, en las que la presentaci\u00f3n cr\u00edtica de los estereotipos perjudiciales se ve complicada por la relaci\u00f3n entre la producci\u00f3n cultural cubana y el mercado internacional que la consume. En estas novelas, y en otras obras referidas aqu\u00ed, se observa la cosificaci\u00f3n sexuada del cuerpo varonil afrocubano como un agente de violencia que combate pr\u00e1cticas sociales discriminatorias, a la vez que evidencia la perduraci\u00f3n de las mismas.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. BRADFORD CAMPBELL"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82a2baee-8c54-37ce-9a01-d57aaa6b8aa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40959728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Schizophrenic Solution: Dialectics of Neurosis and Anti-psychiatric Animus in Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40959728","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nitish R. De"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4359551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3355022d-9dbb-35d9-9770-8b18d4a7f624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4359551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"3\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-203+205+207-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gherao as a Technique for Social Intervention","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4359551","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5777,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Gherao movement became endemic in West Bengal during the United Front regime in 1967. The movement re-emerged in 1969, offering certain new characteristics absent in the earlier phase of the movement. Faced with the reality of gherao and similar other militant phenomena, questions that seem appropriate are. What role does the new technique have to play in the social ferment that is going on in India? What is the meaning of this mode of confrontation between numbers on the one hand and authority on the other? Where will this urban-centre located social conflict lead to? In other words, in the event gherao is looked upon as a tool for social intervention, what kind of change will this intervention technique usher in? Will the movement take the respectable course of \"business-unionism\", or will it mean preparation for a struggle to change the social system itself? The following paper identifies some of the characteristics of the movement, which may suggest some answers to these questions. [A revised version of this paper will appear in Hornstein, HA, et al, \"Strategies of Social Intervention\", New York, Free Press, forthcoming.]","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dibinga Wa Said"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1509100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00178160"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eba9b3c8-3d1f-3313-92d2-8a39f830819d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1509100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvtheorevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Harvard Theological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An African Theology of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1509100","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":9258,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[118886,118954]],"Locations in B":[[7122,7203]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rod Bush"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"416d6218-f972-3407-bcb1-64ae3aea640f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"1 (91)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Civil Rights Movement and the Continuing Struggle for the Redemption of America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768166","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12014,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Keller"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790190","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3790190"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"295","pagination":"pp. 295-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Madness and Colonization: Psychiatry in the British and French Empires, 1800-1962","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790190","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":16359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cultural, social, and intellectual historians have begun to examine the intersecting histories of European colonialism and psychiatry. At their best, these studies engage with at least four distinct historiographies. First, they revise the history of European medicine by illustrating the importance of the colonies to metropolitan scientific developments. Second, they explore the relationship between knowledge and power in the colonial context that the pre-occupied scholars since the publication of Edward Said's \"Orientalism\" in 1978. Third, they explicitly address the psychology of colonialism, a phenomenon at the heart of many intriguing yet speculative works in postcolonial studies. Finally, they open a new methodological window into the history of race by exploring institutional psychiatry's contributions to definitions of race and citizenship under colonialism. This essay reveals the potential implications of such research by highlighting recent studies of British and French colonial psychiatry in Africa and Asia, while also addressing possible future directions for the study of colonial psychiatry.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40661972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fa7dd72-08a7-39db-9f0f-0da6a4cc1ad8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40661972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1261","pageStart":"1260","pagination":"pp. 1260-1261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40661972","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Taylor"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44c39160-c5d3-393e-a029-b153f9eeb5ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25111990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Narrative, Pluralism, and Decolonization: Recent Caribbean Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111990","volumeNumber":"19\/20","wordCount":5458,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Neocosmos"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b785508b-8db8-3fa3-bc6d-53f057bdd923"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24483904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development, Social Citizenship and Human Rights: Re-thinking the Political Core of an Emancipatory Project in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483904","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":16838,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The paper begins from the axiomatic point that, despite the form it eventually took, namely that of a neo-colonial process, development was understood and fought for in Africa as [part of] an emancipatory political project central to the liberatory vision of the pan-African nationalism which emerged victorious at independence. Indeed independence was always seen, by radical nationalism in particular, as only the first step towards freedom and liberation from oppression, the second being economic development. Indeed 'economism' and 'statism' were mirror images of each other: it was believed that only the economy could liberate humanity and that only the state could drive the economy to progress. Today, the first proposition has been retained but the second has been dropped from hegemonic discourse. Yet the two are inseparable twins; it is in fact the case that just as the latter is false so is the former, for human emancipation is and can only be a political project. While development today is said to be guided by the (not so invisible) \"hand of the market\", the state has simultaneously 'sub-contracted' many of its development management functions to external bodies such as NGOs. These are frequently simply new parastatals, vehicles for social entrepreneurship for a 'new' middle-class of development professionals. We have now a new form of state rule which forms the context for re-thinking development and politics. Central to this new form of rule is the hegemony of human rights discourse. This paper begins by reviewing the political assumptions of the nature of citizenship underlying T.H. Marshall's argument for 'social rights'; it provides a critique of human rights discourse and civil society from an emancipatory perspective, situating these within the new forms of imperialism and comments on the character of political parties and social movements in understanding political emancipation today. It argues that in Africa, if one is to think an emancipatory project, citizenship must be conceived as active citizenship, and political subjectivity must be thought, not as management or opinions but, following the work of Badiou and Lazarus, as the freedom to think new 'possibles'. Cette \u00e9tude part du point axiomatique selon lequel, en d\u00e9pit de la forme finalement prise par le d\u00e9veloppement, \u00e0 savoir celle d'un processus n\u00e9ocolonial, pour lequel l'Afrique a lutt\u00e9 et qui fait partie d'un projet politique \u00e9mancipateur au c\u0153ur de la vision lib\u00e9ratrice du nationalisme panafricain qui s'est r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e9 victorieux \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance. De fait, pour le nationalisme radical en particulier, l'ind\u00e9pendance a toujours \u00e9t\u00e9 consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme la premi\u00e8re \u00e9tape vers la libert\u00e9 et la lib\u00e9ration de l'oppression, la seconde \u00e9tant le d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique. En effet, \u00ab l'\u00e9conomisme \u00bb et \u00ab l'\u00e9tatisme \u00bb ont \u00e9t\u00e9 l'image invers\u00e9e de l'un et de l'autre; l'on croyait que seul l'\u00e9conomie pouvait lib\u00e9rer l'humanit\u00e9 et que seul l'\u00e9tat pouvait conduire l'\u00e9conomie au progr\u00e8s. Aujourd'hui, la premi\u00e8re proposition a \u00e9t\u00e9 retenue mais la seconde a \u00e9t\u00e9 effac\u00e9e du discours h\u00e9g\u00e9monique. Cependant, les deux sont des jumelles ins\u00e9parables; le fait est que tout comme la premi\u00e8re, la seconde proposition est fausse car l'\u00e9mancipation humaine est et ne peut \u00eatre qu'un projet politique. Alors qu'il est dit qu'aujourd'hui le d\u00e9veloppement est guid\u00e9 par la \u00ab main du march\u00e9 \u00bb (pas si invisible), l'\u00e9tat a simultan\u00e9ment \u00ab sous-trait\u00e9 \u00bb beaucoup de ses fonctions de gestion du d\u00e9veloppement \u00e0 des organismes ext\u00e9rieurs tels que les ONG. Celles-ci ne sont souvent que de nouveaux organismes para\u00e9tatiques, des v\u00e9hicules d'entreprenariat social aux mains d'une nouvelle classe moyenne de professionnels du d\u00e9veloppement. Nous avons maintenant une nouvelle forme d'\u00e9tatisme qui constitue le cadre d'une nouvelle r\u00e9flexion sur le d\u00e9veloppement et la politique. L'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie du discours des droits humains est au c\u0153ur de ce nouvel \u00e9tatisme. Cette \u00e9tude commence par passer en revue les hypoth\u00e8ses politiques sur la nature de la citoyennet\u00e9 qui sous-tendent l'argument de T.H. Marshall en faveur des \u00ab droits sociaux \u00bb. Cela suscite une critique du discours des droits humains et de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile \u00e0 partir d'une perspective \u00e9mancipatrice, en les situant dans les nouvelles formes de l'imp\u00e9rialisme et dans les commentaires portant sur la nature des partis politiques et des mouvements sociaux, dans la compr\u00e9hension actuelle de l'\u00e9mancipation politique. Selon l'argumentation qui en est faite; Si, en Afrique, l'on pense \u00e0 un projet \u00e9mancipateur, il importe que la citoyennet\u00e9 soit con\u00e7ue comme une citoyennet\u00e9 active, et la subjectivit\u00e9 politique doit \u00eatre pens\u00e9e, non pas en termes de gestion ou d'avis, mais \u00e0 la suite des travaux de Badiou et de Lazarus, en terme de libert\u00e9 de penser \u00e0 de nouvelles \u00ab possibilit\u00e9s \u00bb.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manthia Diawara"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43617526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564245597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3e208f9-a33d-377f-8283-894a5f05fcaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43617526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"175\/177","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"323","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-323","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"J'accuse\": French Intellectuals and the Race Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43617526","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fawzia Afzal-Khan"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00915637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c78a38d1-040a-3624-aa7a-7362a8d83821"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40873034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsasianlit"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of South Asian Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"POST-MODERNIST STRATEGIES OF LIBERATION IN THE WORKS OF SALMAN RUSHDIE: The Subject \/ Object dialectic and Manichean imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40873034","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Lester"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"321ea7b5-eb91-38bf-be56-89ae5078c297"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"132","pagination":"pp. 132-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Humanism, race and the colonial frontier","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427933","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Beginning with an engagement with Kay Anderson's recent post-humanist approach, I propose an alternative explanation for the rise of an innatist discourse of race around the mid-nineteenth century. I argue that the shift to innatist ideas of racial difference has to be seen as a matter of specific geographies of political contestation and transimperial mobilisation emerging in the spatial assemblages of colonial frontier zones during the early nineteenth century. I suggest that, aside from their violent struggles with indigenous peoples in these dispersed but interconnected locales, what prompted the refinement, dispersal and repetition of biologically determinist racial thought was emigrant British settlers' mobilisation against the critique of fellow Britons inspired by a religious humanist doctrine of universality. This explanation shares Anderson's focus on the affective realm of a colonial frontier, but it differs from her interpretation with its emphasis on the contested politics of colonial conquest and above all on the lingering political possibilities of humanism. In engaging with a specific post-humanist interpretation of innatism, this article seeks to address some of the implications of posthumanism more broadly for histories of race.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25b5582f-131c-3ff6-aa3b-0da01bee2319"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24522055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"921","pageStart":"905","pagination":"pp. 905-921","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From a 'terrorist' to global icon: a critical decolonial ethical tribute to Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela of South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24522055","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela's political life and legacy from the perspective of critical decolonial liberation ethics, which privileges a paradigm of peace, humanism and racial harmony and opposes the imperial\/colonial\/apartheid paradigm of war, racial hatred and separation of races. This system emerged in the 15th century and was driven by the desire to conquer, dispossess, colonise, exploit and segregate people according to race and, alongside imperatives of primitive accumulation, it informed the colonisation of South Africa and the imposition of apartheid. Mandela was a liberation fighter who provided an antidote to the colonial ideology of racial profiling and hierarchisation. What distinguished him from other freedom fighters was his commitment to the cause of human rights as early as the 1960s, long before it attained its status as a constitutive part of global normative order. When Mandela became the first black president of a democratic South Africa, his practical and symbolic overtures to whites and his reconciliatory politics aimed to call them back to a new inclusive humanity. Critical decolonial ethics logically enables a tribute to Mandela that privileges his commitment to a post-racial society and new humanism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Paul"],"datePublished":"1981-02-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477265"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8479b694-0276-3fee-92da-1015172f7017"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3012253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meripreports"}],"isPartOf":"MERIP Reports","issueNumber":"94","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Middle East Research and Information Project (MERIP)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3012253","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2101,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madina Tlostanova"],"datePublished":"2019-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"485be334-0cef-30ed-b62e-984a1b72638c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Delinking from Victimhood and Other Rivalries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.2.1.0092","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2492,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contemporary political, economic and social institutions have no adequate tools to deal with diversity and tend to see it as a challenge. The unresolved evils of modernity that neoliberal globalization attempted to lacquer in its first triumphant years, have reemerged with full force confirming the discriminatory nature of the global culture, its unfair conditions of inclusion through erasing identities or through their commercialization. The overwhelming negative sensibility marking the present darker stage of neoliberal globalization, is not a brotherhood but merely a condition of fellow sufferers who have not fully realized that we are in the same boat and need to cooperate rather than compete to survive. The opinion article addresses the danger of multiplying victimhood rivalries as a manifestation of the modern\/colonial agonistics. This position replaces politics with manipulative moral zeal and withdraws the dimension of the future as a collective existential condition from the horizon. Delinking from victimhood rivalries is a difficult but urgent task of transcending modernity and looking for other options and other worlds intricately correlating and interacting in a complex pluriverse.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Libia Grueso","Carlos Rosero","Arturo Escobar"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20742937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11306378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c64a4cfe-2cdf-3f07-8d7b-bed56c535bd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20742937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ecolpoli"}],"isPartOf":"Ecolog\u00eda Pol\u00edtica","issueNumber":"14","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Icaria Editorial","sourceCategory":["Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","Political Science","Science and Mathematics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El proceso organizativo de comunidades negras en Colombia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20742937","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. San Juan, Jr."],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02e1f213-2584-3c3f-a32b-c9cc57cc469c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Problematizing Multiculturalism and the \"Common Culture\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467725","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4486054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"08f4e540-f940-3ab9-906e-7cd3b8bed63e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4486054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"1594","pageStart":"1542","pagination":"pp. 1542-1594","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Recent Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4486054","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":25226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott Lucear"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43690901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"24720674"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d0d2353-ee43-3a50-9f2a-ea5165afc522"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43690901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"umojasasa"}],"isPartOf":"Umoja Sasa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Career Communications Group","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Engineering"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Traditional Cultures and the Impact of Technological Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43690901","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MEREDITH TERRETTA"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e06a83b-df41-3c24-9d19-bbfcacef2713"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40985070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CAMEROONIAN NATIONALISTS GO GLOBAL: FROM FOREST \"MAQUIS\" TO A PAN-AFRICAN ACCRA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985070","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":12378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reassesses the political alternatives imagined by African nationalists in the 'first wave' of Africa's decolonization through the lens of Cameroonian nationalism. After the proscription of Cameroon's popular nationalist movement, the Union des Populations du Cameroun (UPC), in the mid-1950s, thousands of Cameroonian nationalists went into exile, most to Accra, where they gained the support of Kwame Nkrumah's Pan-African Bureau for African Affairs. The UPC's external support fed Cameroon's internal maquis (as UPC members called the underground resistance camps within the territories), rooted in culturally particular conceptions of freedom and sovereignty. With such deeply local and broadly international foundations, the political future that Cameroonian nationalists envisaged seemed achievable: even after the Cameroon territories' official independence, UPC nationalists kept fighting. But, by the mid-1960s, postcolonial states prioritized territorial sovereignty over ' African unity' and Ghana's support of the UPC became unsustainable, leading to the movement's disintegration.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Lattas"],"datePublished":"1992-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40331315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40331315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hysteria, Anthropological Disclosure and the Concept of the Unconscious: Cargo Cults and the Scientisation of Race and Colonial Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40331315","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":7912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani ya Azibo","Jeanene Robinson-Kyles","Marc Johnson"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d19be495-9462-3b1c-b007-e699c1547a83"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Prototypical Psychological Africanity (racial identity) Profiles and Orientations for Social Engineering of African Descent People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496909","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It is asserted within the context of Frantz Fanon's call to set afoot a new person of African descent that for social, cultural, and economic development of the African-U.S. population, perhaps Africans worldwide, racial identity must be changed to \"psychological Africanity\", an orientation to sustain, develop, extend, and defend African life and culture as a priority. Desirable and undesirable profiles and orientations of psychological Africanity (also called racial identity and African personality) based on Azibo's (2006a) rudimentary psychological Africanity framework were investigated for this purpose. Five conceptual profiles and three empirically-derived psychological Africanity orientation groups labeled correct, diffused, and incorrect were articulated and operationalized. Hypothesized relationships with a measure approximating pure psychological Africanity (meaning identification as African descent as if there had been no Eurasian disruption of African civilizations) and huge amounts of explained variance were found in two studies for both profile conceptualizations and the orientations. Results confirm the desirable profiles and the correct orientation group stand the best chance of bringing the psycho-cultural change necessary for African-U.S. development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Tyner"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00040894"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46697281"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234470"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20004459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"area"}],"isPartOf":"Area","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"260","pagination":"pp. 260-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Landscape and the Mask of Self in George Orwell's 'Shooting an Elephant'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20004459","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent work in geography has focused attention on the imbrication of landscape and literature. A dominant thread of these 'fictive geographies' has been a concern with how imagined landscapes contribute to the constitution of self. Informed especially by post-structuralism and post-colonialism, geographers have recently provided critical readings of novels, short stories and essays. In this paper I provide a reading of George Orwell's essay 'Shooting an elephant'. The writings of Orwell reveal a long-standing engagement with issues of humanity and subjectivity, and I contend that this essay, rather than a straightforward polemic against British imperialism, reveals a concern primarily with the constitution of self within a colonial landscape. Orwell's essay thus provides insight into the processes whereby human subjectivities interact with space and structures.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cornel West"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778917","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62550d4e-a386-3be9-9f0e-e4ae465c977c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778917"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"october"}],"isPartOf":"October","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The New Cultural Politics of Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778917","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7529,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[46945,47182]],"Locations in B":[[20805,21151]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hopeton L. A. Gordon"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cf996e5-40cc-3f83-bc70-a946e98a2835"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25612876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"University Adult Education: A Caribbean Focus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612876","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6883,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G.K. Kamau"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570359471"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1580ed90-f272-3150-bd13-052d142b85e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Political science - Military science"],"title":"CURRENT PROBLEMS OF LEGAL EDUCATION IN KENYA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325592","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ligia Aldana"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"034c50b3-556a-3da8-afa5-925f253c8641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Entre mito e historia: hacia una est\u00e9tica fanoniana de la resistencia en \"El \u00e1rbol brujo de la libertad\" de Manuel Zapata Olivella","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054702","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7071,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[445991,446057]],"Locations in B":[[41166,41230]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HUSSEIN M. ADAM"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26195365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09552340"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47191783"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fc1be59-9897-39cc-bf8b-6ece0766eff2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26195365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jislamicstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Islamic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ISLAM AND POLITICS IN SOMALIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26195365","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":14260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Major J. Jones"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07324928"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57252837"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221983"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annusocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Society of Christian Ethics","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ETHICAL CRITERIA, PRINCIPLES, AND GUIDELINES FOR ONE'S STANCE AGAINST EVIL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559607","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":7377,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[41558,41614]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J.I. Okonkwo"],"datePublished":"1989-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c1f44de-81bb-3b87-b007-ff68d3c126f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE ECONOMIC QUESTION AND THE AFRICAN NOVEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067630","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":4841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sister Marie Augusta Neal, S. N. D."],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3710283","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61138057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234110"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3710283"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianal"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Analysis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"How Prophecy Lives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3710283","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9922,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[54315,54377]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yusuf Has"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24719950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6de2289e-6491-3146-b3ce-179f90afeee5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24719950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"142","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Historical Ontology of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24719950","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":12836,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59968,60024]],"Locations in B":[[75716,75781]],"abstract":"My aim in this article is to move the problematic of violence and its role in politics to a historico-ontological plane. I propose a perspective that breaks with the dominant subjectivist concept of human violence and its metaphysical foundations, which fail to distinguish this concept from that of aggression. According to this perspective, we are already in the field of violence in our everyday social existence, regardless of our personal choices or intentions, the sources of which are systemic. The ontological essence of this systemic violence lies in the fact that it is not external to human subjects but is engraved in their very social being by penetrating into the discourses, practices and frames of mind that make up their historical disposition, which makes it in many instances harder to escape than subjective violence. What I call from this ontological perspective the 'violence of closure' has the effect ultimately of suppressing the possibilities of social being open to human beings in their given historical situation, by normalising the existing way of social and political existence, and closing them off to alternatives. I argue that to this violence of closure must be opposed the violence of dis-closure, which, in its various particular intellectual and practical forms, can open up human social existence to its repressed possibilities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Roberts"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67f08183-a72c-3868-9abb-3c84fb74d1da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"152","pagination":"pp. 152-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715337","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2149,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[11667,11714]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jock McCulloch"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159590","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159590"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"682","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-682","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159590","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fouad Moughrabi"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e746ae0-9536-3af0-8731-2ce8a70905ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41857512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41857512","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":3675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leah Milne"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26566179","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d70f7ee-1d02-3f72-be47-04bbde88964d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26566179"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Disloyal to Civilization\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26566179","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10564,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article posits that recent multi-ethnic, metafictional texts present writing as a form of ethnic identity formation and self-care. Specifically, I focus on Gina Apostol's novel, Gun Dealers' Daughter (2012), which won the PEN Open Book Award in 2013. Gun Dealers' Daughter opens up questions about postcolonial subjects who find themselves living in the nation that colonized their countries of birth, and what options are available to those who are made to feel like foreigners in their own homes. The article shows how the fictional protagonist, Sol, challenges conventional approaches to an autobiographical genre known as the talambuhay in order to fight for her status as a subject. Within her talambuhay, Sol uses frequent revision, retellings, indirection, and other forms of nonlinear writing to reveal US history's erasure of its imperialist actions in the Philippines, especially in the wake of the 1901 Balangiga Massacre. In doing so, Sol seeks out a space of national belonging that does hinge upon an obliteration of her culture, history, or identity. I highlight how impossible it is for postcolonial American subjects such as Sol to achieve the rational wholeness expected of American multicultural citizens, and the ways that writing provides solace and a form of protest for subjects who have few other means to make themselves heard. Written in a way that would be considered \"incorrect\" by those around her, Sol's talambuhay becomes a form of creative activism as well as a way to protect and care for herself.","subTitle":"Metafiction as Protest in Gina Apostol's Gun Dealers' Daughter<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tennyson S. D. Joseph"],"datePublished":"2017-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44732919","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"561345841"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"572c44cc-ba6c-33e7-8680-7205f6980e06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44732919"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Intellectual Under Neo-liberal Hegemony in the English-Speaking Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44732919","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the impact of neo-liberal global hegemony on perspectives of the role of the intellectual in the English-Speaking Caribbean. It focuses on how neo-liberalism has resulted in shifting the notion of the politically engaged public intellectual to that of the marketdriven \"politically neutral\" consultant. Specifically, the article interrogates the question of the role of the Caribbean intellectual around three contending perspectives: the \"Platonic\" view (which sees good government as inextricably linked with the political leadership of intellectuals); the \"Marxist\" perspective (which rejects the idea of a neutral intellectual and sees intellectuals as serving specific classes); and finally the \"neutral\" perspective which suggests a depoliticised role for the intellectual. A central assumption of the paper is that neo-liberalism represents more than a mere \"alternative\" approach, but represents a crisis for the Caribbean intellectual, particularly given the acceptance of its assumptions as inherently self-legitimating. Cet essai examine l'impact de l'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie mondiale n\u00e9olib\u00e9rale sur les perspectives du r\u00f4le de l'intellectuel dans les Cara\u00efbes anglophones. Il se concentre sur la mani\u00e8re dont le n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9ralisme a entra\u00een\u00e9 le d\u00e9placement de la notion de l'intellectuel public politiquement engag\u00e9 associ\u00e9 aux prescriptions de Walter Rodney dans Groundings With My Brothers, \u00e0 celle de consultant \u00abpolitiquement neutre\u00bb ax\u00e9 sur le march\u00e9. Plus pr\u00e9cis\u00e9ment, l'essai interroge la question du r\u00f4le de l'intellectuel carib\u00e9en autour de trois perspectives oppos\u00e9es : la vision \u00abplatonicienne\u00bb (qui voit le bon gouvernement comme inextricablement li\u00e9 au leadership politique des intellectuels); la perspective \u00abmarxiste\u00bb (qui rejette l'id\u00e9e d'un intellectuel neutre et voit les intellectuels comme servant des classes sp\u00e9cifiques); et enfin la perspective \u00abneutre\u00bb qui sugg\u00e8re un r\u00f4le d\u00e9politis\u00e9 pour l'intellectuel. Une hypoth\u00e8se centrale du document est que le n\u00e9olib\u00e9ralisme repr\u00e9sente plus qu'une simple approche \u00abalternative\u00bb, mais repr\u00e9sente une crise pour l'intellectuel carib\u00e9en, en particulier du fait de l'acceptation de ses hypoth\u00e8ses comme intrins\u00e8quement auto-l\u00e9gitimant. Le document met en \u00e9vidence le sens et les implications de ces d\u00e9veloppements pour la vie intellectuelle des Cara\u00efbes et conclut en pr\u00e9sentant une r\u00e9ponse normative qui r\u00e9affirme la valeur de l'intellectuel engag\u00e9 politiquement en opposition aux compr\u00e9hensions n\u00e9olib\u00e9rales actuellement h\u00e9g\u00e9moniques. Este ensayo examina el impacto de la hegemon\u00eda neoliberal global sobre perspectivas del papel del intelectual en el Caribe Angl\u00f3fono. Se centra en c\u00f3mo el neoliberalismo ha causado el cambio de la noci\u00f3n del intelectual p\u00fablico comprometido pol\u00edticamente asociado con las prescripciones de Walter Rodney en The Groundings With my Brothers a la del consultor \u201cpol\u00edticamente neutral\u201d impulsado por el mercado. Concretamente, el ensayo interroga la cuesti\u00f3n del papel del intelectual caribe\u00f1o, centr\u00e1ndose en tres perspectivas contendientes: la visi\u00f3n \u201cPlat\u00f3nica\u201d (que ve el buen gobierno como inextricablemente vinculado al liderazgo pol\u00edtico de los intelectuales); la perspectiva \u201cMarxista\u201d (que rechaza la idea de un intelectual neutro y considera que los intelectuales sirven clases espec\u00edficas); y por \u00faltimo la perspectiva \u201cneutral\u201d que sugiere un papel despolitizado para el intelectual. Una hip\u00f3tesis central del trabajo es que el neoliberalismo representa m\u00e1s que un mero enfoque \u201calternativo\u201d, y que tambi\u00e9n representa una crisis para el intelectual caribe\u00f1o, especialmente teniendo en cuenta la aceptaci\u00f3n de sus hip\u00f3tesis como inherentemente auto-legitimadas. El art\u00edculo hace hincapi\u00e9 en el significado y las implicaciones de estos acontecimientos para la vida intelectual caribe\u00f1a y concluye con la presentaci\u00f3n de una respuesta normativa que reafirma el valor del intelectual comprometido pol\u00edticamente como un opositor de las concepciones neoliberales actualmente hegem\u00f3nicas.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neera Chandhoke"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f297cc35-1bde-35cf-b6cb-62587ee1d752"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45071954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NATURE OF THE DOMINANT ELITE IN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45071954","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9366,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"African countries seem to be constantly groping for the distinctive political paradigm as evinced by the fact that forms of political order have followed each other in rapid succession\u2014the multi-party state, the one party syndrome, the charismatic presidency, the military coup d'etat and in some cases, like that of Nigeria and for a short while in Ghana, a return to civilian rule. The future of the African continent is thus viewed with deep rooted pessimism by political analysts, economists and literary writers. They prophesy in symphony that African countries are catapaulting down the path of political unrest\u2014economic disorder, suspension of human rights, a breakdown of law and order\u2014towards instability and general anomie. In the words of the noted author Chinuah Achebe, in Africa \"things fall apart.\" Dennis Austen using the title of this book for his article, writes that since their inception African states have been in a state of flux moving with regularity in and out of misfortune : The treachery of political life has been very real : armed coups, civil wars, public executions, the threat of secession, the recurrence of famine, the fanaticism of religious beliefs, regional wars, the near genocide of entire communities, the transitory nature of military and party regimes and the indebtedness not only of corrupt dictatorships (as in Zaire) but also of governments that still struggle to preserve an element of political decency in their public life (as in Tanzania). The keynote of the criticisms made in this vein is the absence of stability and the consequent destabilization, disorganization and anarchy. However, all evidence in the African countries points to the centralization of power and authority, which can lead to a kind of stability\u2014i.e. if stability is the only end of government and politics. The post-colonial state in Africa has created strong centralized administrations to weld the various spcial groups in common structures. The striking feature of post-independence politics to Markovitz, is not the lack of stability, but \"indeed from any long range historical perspective the rapidity with which stability has been achieved.... The military coup d'etats and civil wars, appearence of anarchy notwithstanding, have furthered this process of consolidation.\" The modern African state is one which is increasingly dominated by a powerful public sector, an overpowering bureaucracy and increasing militarization. The highly centralized nature of the African state is almost a throwback to the early colonial state. The colonial state was based on patterns of domination, its very raison d'etre was domination. The colonial institutional form consequently was aimed at establishing hegemony over the subject population, together with its essential militarised character and the system of irresistable power and force associated with it. In the Belgian case, the state was known as \"Bula Matari\" (the crusher of rocks). The preindependence state forms have persisted. The observations of De Tocqueville are brought to mind. To De Tocqueville the 1789 Revolution did not bring an end to the ideas and order of the old regime in France. Springing from the chaos created by the revolution was a powerful institutional framework. Never since the fall of the Roman Empire, he commented, had the world seen a government so highly centralized. This new power was created by the Revolution, or, rather grew up almost automatically out of the havoc wrought by it. True, the governments it set up were less stable than any of those it overthrew; yet paradoxically they were infinitely more powerful. In Africa the heritage of colonial politics, namely power-politics, has been taken up by the post-colonial state. The colonial tradition has led to a scheme of affairs in African states where a premium has been placed on the holding and consolidation of political power. Politics has been construed strictly as a \"struggle for rulership.\" Political power is seen as a means of controlling the socio-economic structures of society. What becomes important in this context is the identification of the group that wields power. What is the nature and social basis of this ruling elite? As a pre-requisite to this, is the question as to what is the nature of class in Africa, so that the nature of class domination can be comprehended.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GREGORY CASTLE"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09239855"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57377916"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005265005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"319062fe-09de-36d6-92aa-498b9823355d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44871194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eurojoyce"}],"isPartOf":"European Joyce Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"COLONIAL DISCOURSE AND THE SUBJECT OF EMPIRE IN JOYCE'S \"NAUSICAA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44871194","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":12679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles R. Menzies"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917710"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60616192"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-237061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aead9338-adec-3c34-95f1-c849b8e91678"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24393823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"janthrese"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Anthropological Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy"],"title":"OIL, ENERGY, AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL COLLABORATION ON THE NORTHWEST COAST OF CANADA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393823","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":7672,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A veritable gold rush of oil and gas exploration and export development is washing along the coast of western Canada. This paper explores the contemporary setting and possibilities for collaborative research with Indigenous communities in the face of large-scale corporate interventions and the history of colonization. Drawing upon two decades of research and close collaboration with Indigenous communities on the North Coast of British Columbia, Menzies (himself an Indigenous scholar) argues that collaborative anthropology is both more necessary and more difficult than at almost any previous point in our history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Austin","Peter James Hudson"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752068","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b6d9105-3848-39ae-be18-24429357a0a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752068"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Research, Repression, and Revolution\u2014On Montreal and the Black Radical Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752068","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":18818,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"An Interview with David Austin","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HOMI K. BHABHA","JAMES CUNO","JITISH KALLAT","GEETA KAPUR","JAMES RONDEAU","JEREMY STRICK"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23392410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00693235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10353471-828e-3cf3-b85a-71db6560afc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23392410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artinstchicmuses"}],"isPartOf":"Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Art Institute of Chicago","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"E-Conversation with Jitish Kallat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23392410","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary L. Baker"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25b22988-42c9-393a-989d-265f8041a00d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42751384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetics of Violence in Uwe Timm's \"Rot\" and Friedrich Christian Delius's \"Mein Jahr als M\u00f6rder\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42751384","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":8307,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines how two novels written in the spirit of 1968 incorporate potential violent acts into narrative in ways that reflect the nonviolent principles of AutorenEdition and Hannah Arendt's ideas on the relation between violence and political action. The authors of these novels join art and terror by recounting purely fantasized acts of violence that become aesthetically reified in narrative form. This essay asserts that Timm's Rot and Delius's Mein Jahr als M\u00f6rder acknowledge the place of violence in the public realm of politics but displace it to the sphere of aesthetics and narrative in order to grant it a political legitimacy that it otherwise does not possess for peaceful social change.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUNIL AGNANI"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26404777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393657"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227138"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eebdfccd-390b-36b6-ae8a-3fcb0fb451bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26404777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studengllite1500"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"821","pageStart":"799","pagination":"pp. 799-821","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Rice University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colonial Ressentiment, Enlightenment Thought, and the Impasses of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26404777","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":9605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article traces the notion of ressentiment beginning with several key uses by Denis Diderot and Edmund Burke from the 1770s and 1780s, but shifts from there to consider Friedrich Nietzsche's impactful and distinct use in On the Genealogy of Morality (1887), emphasizing linkages between ressentiment and temporality. It juxtaposes these two moments with the colonial context, turning to Frantz Fanon and Ranajit Guha to explore how the sentiments of conquest are reflected in a conception of the past inextricably marked by colonialism. The conclusion notes Fanon's struggle with Nietzsche's formulation and suggests he is closer to the understanding of ressentiment visible in Diderot.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Sinavaiana-Gabbard"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23718514","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1043898X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42786121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a8b9270-d8de-32d6-a8bd-93843f15baae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23718514"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contpaci"}],"isPartOf":"The Contemporary Pacific","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Modeling Community: A Response to \"The Oceanic Imaginary\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23718514","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3299,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[18226,18272]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Allen"],"datePublished":"2001-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80c30b11-fe15-3505-9c59-9d545cb3c6f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3072553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Place of Negative Morality in Political Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3072553","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LADUN ANISE"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71b202a7-edfb-3403-b485-10dacf557515"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND NATIONAL LIBERATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066370","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":3968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raoul J. Granqvist"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.13","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9b3a6cd0-d63c-3c7e-bab4-a6c882a3c74f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.13"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Love and Diamonds at a Risk: Sara Lidman in Postcolonial Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.48.2.13","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Swedish writer Sara Lidman (1923\u20132004) wrote her second African novel, Med fem diamanter [With Five Diamonds], which is the topic of this article, during a prolonged sojourn in Kenya (1962\u201363) where she first lived in Kisumu, in the Nyanza province, near Lake Victoria, before moving to Njeri in Gikuyuland. She was accompanied by Wambui Njonjo, the country's first school inspector. The Njonjo family was close to the Kenyattas. The title of the essay, \u201cLove and Diamonds at a Risk,\u201d alludes to the postcolonial threshold dilemma of Kenyans being both perpetrators and victims of their own fate, freed from the colonial bonds but reintroduced to economic forms of Western dependence. I examine her allegorical chronicling of Kenya (1958\u201363) and the symbolic killing of Thiongo, a homosexual, by his brother Wachira, the \u201cboy\u201d pining in the servitude of both G\u0129k\u0169y\u0169 patriarchy and the greed of Western capitalism. I demonstrate how \u201cstealing\u201d\u2014both as an act of aggression and one of liberation\u2014is manifested in cultural and linguistic artifacts, in the textures of women's kangas, in a Luo legend, and in a Christian mission. As a postcolonial writer Lidman is unique for her time in transliterating and contextualizing (not translating) G\u0129k\u0169y\u0169 and Kiswahili words, proverbs, and stories. Finally, I examine how \u201clove\u201d or the idealization of \u201clove,\u201d heterosexual and homosexual, deteriorates under the pressure of \u201cthieving.\u201d In Lidman's ideal world androgynity is central. Med fem diamanter is a Kenyan novel written in Swedish.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice T. Vambe"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764261","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3db04f6e-1fbc-38c5-aa97-bd49595675be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764261"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Spirit Possession in the Zimbabwean Black Novel in English","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764261","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":4995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olusegun Adekoya"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Picture of the Big Apple","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618302","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40246440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a3c2fd7-3a6a-3a55-92a1-dedd8decce1b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40246440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"370","pagination":"pp. 370-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"When Evil-Doing Comes like Falling Rain\": Brecht, Alioum Fantour\u00e9, Ngugi wa Thiong'O","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40246440","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN C. MORACCO","JUDY A. MORACCO"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41420635","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09732047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"958c5192-3649-336e-94cd-8e1edb8d6c08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41420635"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevmodsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Modern Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"International Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"EDUCATION'S ROLE IN MODERNITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41420635","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":3864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The quest for modernization by developing countries often generates strategies designed to accomplish the task as efficiently as possible. Education is seen as one very viable strategy for modernizing a traditional society. Research helps to support this attitude as there is conclusive evidence supporting the relationship between education and modernity. This paper examines some implications this has for educational planners. It attempts to present viewpoints about how education effects attitudes of modernity and viewpoints on how education should be best utilized. Contrasting viewpoints are brought to bear in an attempt to better understand the present controversy regarding the role of education in modernization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CARL A. GRANT"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6c1db86-ec9f-3712-b99b-5e162ed95920"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"XII","pageStart":"IX","pagination":"pp. IX-XII","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Foreword","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980662","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":1557,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roland Sintos Coloma"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba62e0ca-01b0-3080-9866-90de0e91299e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"229","pagination":"pp. 229-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE: What's Queer Gotto Do with It?: Interrogating Nationalism and Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981404","volumeNumber":"367","wordCount":7360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTONIA DARDER"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6be83c7b-ef0c-3826-b580-fa56bab0a654"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 2: The Politics of Biculturalism: Culture and Difference in the Formation of \"Warriors for Gringostroika\" and \"The New Mestizas\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981638","volumeNumber":"418","wordCount":8505,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[47119,47178]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Metz"],"datePublished":"1995-02-28","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11312","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3966bfd9-9aab-3660-8125-f7004669829a"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"COUNTERINSURGENCY: Strategy and the Phoenix of American Capability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11312","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Today, there is no pressing strategic rationale for U.S. engagement in counterinsurgency but history suggests that if the United States remains involved in the Global South, one may emerge. American counterinsurgency strategy has unfolded in a distinct pattern over the past 50 years. At times, policymakers saw a strategic rationale for engagement in counterinsurgency. When they did, the military and Department of Defense formed or reconstituted counterinsurgency doctrine, concepts, and organizations. When the strategic rationale faded, these capabilities atrophied. This pattern may be repeated in the future. During the last decade of the Cold War, the U.S. military developed an","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anirudha Gupta"],"datePublished":"1968-05-04","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4358572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fbf2f88-1fd3-362c-8232-843d91833fe3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4358572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"18","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"710","pageStart":"703","pagination":"pp. 703-710","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Assessing the Reality in Africa: An Indian Point of View","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4358572","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":8419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It is not much use asking whether African governments are democratic or not nor whether the army could not be the 'modernising' and 'stabilising' force in Africa. Questions such as these may assist the construction of academic models of African political behaviour and processes, but they do not greatly further understanding of Africa. Far more worthwhile would it be to know what kind of changes have taken place in Africa during the post-war period, to examine the international situation that faces African countries and to understand who were the people who led the independence struggle in Africa and how they came to power. This article appears in two parts for reasons of space. In this, the first part, the author sketches the colonial origins of the present political divisions in Africa, examines the character of the economies of African countries and its consequences for their societies and, against this background, seeks to interpret the character of African revolution. In the second part of the article, which will appear next week, the author will discuss the Indian response to Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL BANAHENE ADJEI"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5af5f595-c2e4-39d8-9a10-48859b222382"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER SIX: Unmapping the Tapestry of \"Crash\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980162","volumeNumber":"339","wordCount":8925,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[28315,28544],[126873,127312],[127336,127442],[127533,127746]],"Locations in B":[[5702,5931],[6132,6569],[46364,46470],[46500,46707]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11b38da1-8fd9-315c-9918-952ddf70f1d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":142.0,"pageEnd":"697","pageStart":"556","pagination":"pp. 556-697","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studies in Caribbean and South American Literature: An Annual Annotated Bibliography, 1989","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931339","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":54143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry A. Giroux"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a672f380-00df-37e1-a655-54bc9bb14468"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From \"Manchild\" to \"Baby Boy\": Race and the Politics of Self-Help","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866509","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":13938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAOLO ISRAEL"],"datePublished":"2009-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"727a6526-b6fb-3a63-8485-20c276736d4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41056624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Utopia Live: Singing the Mozambican struggle for national liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41056624","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article engages a historical reconstruction of the formation of Makonde revolutionary singing in the process of the Mozambican liberation struggle. The history of 'Utopia live' is here entrusted to wartime genres, marked by heteroglossia and the use of metaphor, and referring to moments when the 'space of experience' and the 'horizon of expectation' of the Struggle were still filled with uncertainty and the sense of possibility. Progressively, however, singing expressions were reorganised around socialism's nodes of meaning. Ideological tropes, elaborated by Frelimo's 'courtly' composers, were appropriated in popular singing. The relations between the 'people' and their leaders were made apparent through the organization of the performance space. The main contention of the article is that unofficiality, heteroglossia, metaphor and poetic license, although they feature in genres that have been marked out as 'popular' in academic discourse, are by no means intrinsically 'popular'. Much on the contrary, they are the first victims of populist modes of political actions, that is, of a politics grounded on a concept of 'people'.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES PENNEY"],"datePublished":"2004-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79ea3d94-e98b-3abe-9407-1a27bf153d11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Passing into the Universal: Fanon, Sartre, and the Colonial Dialectic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151762","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7753,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[468718,468763]],"Locations in B":[[42984,43025]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane L. Parpart"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9216e650-e539-386f-9063-0e0374d166af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/485086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class Consciousness among the Zambian Copper Miners, 1950-1968","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485086","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":10375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La conscience de classes et le potentiel politique des travailleurs africains sont depuis longtemps l'objet de discussions. Ceci est tout particuli\u00e8rement le cas des mineurs zambiens, que l'on consid\u00e8re comme une aristocratie du travail apolitique g\u00e2t\u00e9e. Cet article lance un d\u00e9fi \u00e0 cette prise de position, d\u00e9clarant que les mineurs zambiens ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 et maintenu une conscience de classes et une conscience des conflits tout \u00e0 fait claires pendant la p\u00e9riode coloniale et que, depuis les ann\u00e9es 60, les mineurs ont d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 une critique populiste de l'\u00e9tat zambien, bas\u00e9e sur les classes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801425752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0d243ca-333f-3418-a551-47e2ab2dfc52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.5"}],"isPartOf":"Writing in Limbo","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"33","pagination":"33-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caribbean Modernist Discourse:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14231,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[12579,12645]],"abstract":"The most important literary and cultural documents in the Caribbean tradition\u2014Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire\u2019sCahier<\/em>, Frantz Fanon\u2019sBlack Skin, White Masks<\/em>, C. L. R. James\u2019sThe Black Jacobins<\/em>, V. S. Naipaul\u2019sA House for Mr. Biswas<\/em>, and George Lamming\u2019sIn the Castle of My Skin<\/em>\u2014were produced in exile. Because of this simple fact, any attempt to map the directions in which contemporary Caribbean writing has developed, or to account for the emergence of a distinctly Caribbean literary tradition, must investigate the phenomenon of exile as a historical and existential condition. In other words, exile and the displacement it engenders constitute","subTitle":"Writing, Exile, and Tradition","keyphrase":["colonial","cricket","caribbean","cricket field","discourse","caribbean modernist","jamess","modernist discourse","west indian","caribbean modernist discourse"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew Schoffeleers"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1160267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df7cdd4f-ebf7-390a-9e2d-85abd2644bc6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1160267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Ritual Healing and Political Acquiescence: The Case of the Zionist Churches in Southern Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1160267","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":13063,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[72661,72707]],"abstract":"Zionist Churches, especially those emphasising healing, exhibit a strikingly acquiescent attitude towards South African State politicies. This article examines the evidence as well as the explanations that have been put forward by social scientists and theologians. The particular focus of the article, however, is on medical systems as mechanisms of social control, a perspective that in this context has tended to be overlooked.\/Les \u00e9glises sionistes, en particulier celles qui mettent l'accent sur la gu\u00e9rison se montrent d'une disposition envers la politique d'\u00e9tat sud africaine d'un consentement frappant. Cet article examine \u00e0 la fois l'\u00e9vidence et les explications pr\u00e9sent\u00e9es par les sciences humaines et par les th\u00e9ologiens. Mais avant tout, cet article se concentre sur l'organisation du service de la sant\u00e9 en tant qu'appareil de contr\u00f4le social, une consid\u00e9ration qui a tendu \u00e0 \u00eatre n\u00e9glig\u00e9e dans ce contexte.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward A. Alpers"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216238","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68c07dc5-3dde-3807-8d4b-3a9027635781"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/216238"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrihiststud"}],"isPartOf":"African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"460","pagination":"pp. 460-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216238","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":2868,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fatimah Tobing Rony"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3079fc82-f7f9-34f2-b91b-2840538c32a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1213093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Victor Masayesva, Jr., and the Politics of \"Imagining Indians\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1213093","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Graham-White"],"datePublished":"1970-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152531","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e455bb25-9346-3d22-9854-da3a69c4deba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41152531"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"208","pagination":"pp. 208-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Jean Genet and the Psychology of Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41152531","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":3815,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[209114,209205]],"Locations in B":[[18740,18826]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Celarent"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dc1bd294-ae6d-316a-97e3-3be66f1336af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/660675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"2068","pageStart":"2062","pagination":"pp. 2062-2068","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/660675","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":2758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eileen Hunt Botting","Sean Kronewitter"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41703078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcba9652-1a54-3d0c-9c4a-009d04755a09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41703078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"496","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Westernization and Women's Rights: Non-Western European Responses to Mill's Subjection of Women, 1869-1908","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41703078","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The publication in 1869 of Mill's Subjection ofWomen gave rise to philosophical and political responses beyond Western Europe on the relationship between Westernization and women's rights in developing, colonial, and post-colonial countries. Through the first comparative study of the Subjection of Women alongside the forewords to six of its earliest non-Western European editions, we explore how this book provoked local intellectuals in Russia, Chile, and India to engage its liberal utilitarian, imperial, Orientalist, and feminist ideas. By showing how Mill's Western European biases and instrumental reasoning establish problematic rhetorical models for women's rights arguments, we are able to explore the ethical dimensions of women's rights issues in the context of cultural and political imperialism. Most importantly, this reception history illustrates how cross-cultural and culturally sensitive dialogue on women's rights can push us beyond Western bias and imperialism in advocating for the end of women's subjection around the globe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30184467","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd8bb161-f593-3bc5-85b4-ba1247a35572"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30184467"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng","ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Rethinking \"Germanistik\": \"Germanistik\", the Canon, and Third World Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30184467","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":6315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Third World Literature, minority discourse, post-colonial literature, or however one may name a mode of writing which increasingly exerts pressure on our traditional understanding of literature, have experienced a reception in Germany which to a certain degree differs from that in other countries. The article addresses the hopes and suggests a ten-point program for a different Germanistik in light of this German\u2014Third World literary relationship and argues for a significant change of our traditional parameters.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rohan Wilson"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/antipodes.29.1.0005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c5bcaa7-b557-38d7-b4f8-ac96522709e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13110\/antipodes.29.1.0005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Extinction Discourse in Wanting<\/em> and Doctor Wooreddy\u2019s Prescription for Enduring the Ending of the World<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13110\/antipodes.29.1.0005","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Taylor"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ff099c0-fbfa-38ca-8745-3c8319433c8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and Mythology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484307","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":2005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zakiyyah Iman Jackson"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719431","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec78aa1d-527f-3fb3-85b8-90d11ec841f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23719431"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"669","pagination":"pp. 669-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Animal: New Directions in the Theorization of Race and Posthumanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23719431","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Awam Amkpa"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484816","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"990d4ebf-f738-321d-94e2-abb3d09e061b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484816"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"294","pagination":"pp. 294-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Drama and the Languages of Postcolonial Desire: Bernard Shaw's \"Pygmalion\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484816","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4773,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Aronson","Ronald E. Santoni","Robert Stone","Kenneth L. Anderson"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The New Orleans Session\u2014March 2002","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511145","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6514,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mueni wa Muiu"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fbf1277-ae9c-3b40-b500-b28421a46ff9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45194438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"CIVILIZATION\" ON TRIAL: THE COLONIAL AND POSTCOLONIAL STATE IN AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194438","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8612,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[605028,605134]],"Locations in B":[[3639,3744]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alemseged Abbay"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40761565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5abdb78f-4793-35fe-a6c0-5017d1583e34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40761565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"491","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-491","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'NOT WITH THEM, NOT WITHOUT THEM': THE STAGGERING OF ERITREA TO NATIONHOOD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40761565","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":13391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Avant que le colonialisme italien crea, au nord du fleuve Mareb, l'Erithr\u00e9e, les populations de cette region partageaient le m\u00eame sens d'identit\u00e9 fond\u00e9 sur culture, valeurs, religion, langue et conscience historique communs. Ce sens d'identit\u00e9 ne fut pas balay\u00e9 par le colonialisme car les italiens ne consentirent pas que leurs \u00e9l\u00e9ments de modernit\u00e9 interagissent avec les traditions de leur colonie. Cela, avec la faible economie du pays, conduisit, dans les ann\u00e9es ' 40, l'\u00e9lite \u00e9rithr\u00e9enne, dont Walde ab Marian \u00e9tait un repr\u00e9sentant, \u00e0 tenter une fusion avec l'Ethiopie. Toutefois apr\u00e8s la fusion totale de 1962 l'\u00e9lite plus jeune commen\u00e7a \u00e0 consid\u00e9rer l'Erithr\u00e9e une region avanc\u00e9e digne d'avoir l'ind\u00e9pendance, ind\u00e9pendance qui arriva en 1991. Malgr\u00e9 le g\u00e9n\u00e9reux support de l'Ethiopie (1991-98) l'Erithr\u00e9e ne r\u00e9ussit pas \u00e0 se tenir sur sa seule \u00e9conomie. En plus ses leaders voulaient en faire la Singapore de la Corne d'Afrique que auraient trouv\u00e9 dans l'Ethiopie un march\u00e9 pour ses produits finis. Cette situation provoqua des tensions \u00e9conomiques avec l'Ethiopie entra\u00eenant \u00e0 la fin un conflit sanglant, d\u00e9guis\u00e9 par l'Erithr\u00e9e en une guerre frontali\u00e8re. La guerre, un test important pour la cr\u00e9dibilit\u00e9 de l'\u00e9tat \u00e9rithr\u00e9en, n'a pas r\u00e9ussi par contre \u00e0 obliger l'Ethiopie \u00e0 devenir l'arri\u00e8re-pays \u00e9conomique de la souhait\u00e9e Singapore de la Corne d'Afrique. Prima che il colonialismo italiano creasse a nord del fiume Mareb l'Eritrea, le popolazioni al di l\u00e0 del Mareb condividevano un comune senso di identit\u00e0 basato su stessa cultura, valori, religione, lingua e coscienza storica. Tale senso di identit\u00e0 non fu spazzato via dal colonialismo in quanto gli italiani non vollero che i loro elementi di modernit\u00e0 interagissero con le tradizioni della loro colonia primogenita. Questo, insieme alla debole economia del paese, port\u00f2, negli anni ' 40, l'\u00e9lite eritrea, di cui Walde -Ab Walde -Mariam era un esponente, a tentare una qualche fusione con l'Etiopia. Tuttavia, dopo la totale fusione avvenuta nel 1962, l'\u00e9lite pi\u00f9 giovane cominci\u00f2 a considerare l'Eritrea come una regione progredita degna di essere indipendente. L'indipendenza fu raggiunta nel 1991. Malgrado il generoso supporto dell'Etiopia (1991-98) l'Eritrea non riusc\u00ec a reggersi sulla sua sola economia. E tuttavia, i suoi leaders volevano farne la Singapore del Corno d'Africa che avrebbe trovato nell'Etiopia un mercato per i suoi prodotti finiti. Questo port\u00f2 a tensioni economiche con l'Etiopia e infine a un conflitto sanguinoso che l'Eritrea camuff\u00f2 in una guerra di confine. La guerra, un test impegnativo per la credibilit\u00e0 dello stato eritreo non \u00e8 riuscita a costringere l'Etiopia a diventare il retroterra economico dell'agognata Singapore del Corno d'Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd S. Etheredge"],"datePublished":"1977-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00322687"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11476cc9-495f-3843-a6cb-b1fed082e24c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4531680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"policysciences"}],"isPartOf":"Policy Sciences","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Public Policy & Administration","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Optimal Federalism: A Model of Psychological Dependence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4531680","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Increased size, scope, and visibility of government may strengthen relations of psychological dependence, an unintended aggregate effect of liberal programs. Such an effect depends upon the dominant phenomenological world of the citizenry which intersects objective trends: dependence, \u00e9minence grise identification, or enlightened maturity. A model of self-conceptions and emotional syndromes characteristic of the two parties in a dependency relationship predicts there will be objectively inconsistent and unrealistic expectations and demands by both parties, inadequate rationality and program evaluation, and mutual frustration, mistrust, and disillusionment. Trends in American politics suggest the possibility of an increasing dependency substructure. If dependency relations are growing, then the political and administrative problems outlined can be expected to increase.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Orna Sasson-Levy"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09daf87d-b707-340b-b720-c2aee79948f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4121532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"383","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-383","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing Identities at the Margins: Masculinities and Citizenship in the Israeli Army","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4121532","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the construction of multiple gendered and national identities in the Israeli army. In Israel, hegemonic masculinity is identified with the masculinity of the Jewish combat soldier and is perceived as the emblem of good citizenship. This identity, I argue, assumes a central role in shaping a hierarchal order of gendered and civic identities that reflects and reproduces social stratification and reconstructs differential modes of participation in, and belonging to, the Israeli state. In-depth interviews with two marginalized groups in the Israeli army-women in \"masculine\" roles and male soldiers in blue-collar jobs-suggest two discernible practices of identity. While women in \"masculine\" roles structure their gender and national identities according to the masculinity of the combat soldier, the identity practices of male soldiers in blue-collar jobs challenge this hegemonic masculinity and its close link with citizenship in Israel. However, while both identity practices are empowering for the groups in question, neither undermines the hegemonic order, for the military's practice of \"limited inclusion\" prohibits the development of a collective consciousness that would challenge the differentiated structure of citizenship.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KESHAV RAO JADHAV"],"datePublished":"2010-03-27","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25664270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e2fdab0-f970-3bc3-bd69-e9c74df22f6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25664270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-17, 19-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Backwardisation' of Telangana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25664270","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":4299,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The time has come to bid goodbye to everything else and reconstruct the Telangana personality. This reconstruction will be a part of the struggle for Telangana state. Kisans, the youth, and intellectuals of Telangana must take up this work. The movement should be based on peaceful mobilisation of the masses. Violence either against one's own self, illustrated by farmers and students committing suicide, or violence against the other should not be thought of.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Smith"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2009944","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b5e67f3-63fe-3d7c-8a16-808881aae45b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2009944"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"World Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Underdevelopment of Development Literature: The Case of Dependency Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2009944","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":18533,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As a vehicle for the growing association of southern nationalists and Marxists, dependency theory is an important part of the history of our times, something much more than a school of academic writing. Whatever the varieties of analysis existing within this school (and there are many), a major historiographic shortcoming is common to most of its literature: having grasped the Hegelian insight that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, dependencistas exaggerate the point, making the mistake of refusing any autonomy, any specificity to the parts (southern countries) independently of their membership in the whole (the imperialist system established by the North). A better approach to the study of the place of the South in the international system is to emphasize the variety of state structures present there with their different abilities to mobilize forces internally and translate this into international rank. Southern advances are more substantial than many realize; the essay concludes that southerners should pay more attention to the real room for initiative and maneuver they have, but which dependency theory systematically overlooks. Most of the illustrative examples concern India, the Ottoman Empire, and Latin America before World War I.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Banu \u00d6zkazan\u00e7-Pan"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20159455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03637425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f112c8a-2b24-303a-bc22-3e093183dd5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20159455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Academy of Management Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"974","pageStart":"964","pagination":"pp. 964-974","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"International Management Research Meets \"The Rest of the World\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20159455","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":6942,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[38146,38208]],"abstract":"I discuss the implications of postcolonial studies for examining and expanding the study of international management. First, I outline various debates and approaches within the postcolonial field. Following this, I summarize key theoretical concepts emanating from three seminal postcolonial scholars--Said, Spivak, and Bhabha--whose works have helped define the field. I rely on each of their lenses--Orientalism, gendered postcolonial subject, and hybridity, respectively--to discuss possibilities and new directions for international management research.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clive Whitehead"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3098767","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49631317"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef6790f9-7d19-3426-9e8e-7f3e30e893c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3098767"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Education in British Colonial Dependencies, 1919-39: A Re-Appraisal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3098767","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M.M. Badawi"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/196076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13530194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531621"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227374"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c50a61f6-3b15-3609-8891-76f2039dfb25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/196076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Perennial Themes in Modern Arabic Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/196076","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthias Pauwels"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48564482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7929325b-d02d-328b-9f2a-1a7e02e87a96"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48564482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"2 (155)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Portrait of the Artist as Colonised Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48564482","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":10301,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[451679,451836],[456711,456790]],"Locations in B":[[8863,9028],[56714,56793]],"abstract":"This article engages with Frantz Fanon\u2019s writings on different responses by artists among colonised peoples to the fact of their colonisation. Fanon develops a dialectical account in which an initial stage of assimilation of Western techniques and paradigms is followed by a phase of immersion in African artistic traditions. These two phases then function as prelude to a third, combative stage which is presented as the most efficacious and authentic way for artists to play their part in decolonisation. The article problematises the temporal logic and implicit hierarchies of Fanon\u2019s account. It does so by using Jacques Ranci\u00e8re\u2019s redemptive reading of early working class mobilisations in 1830s and 1840s France, prior to the advent of Marxian proletarian politics, as a counterpoint. The article here finds a different, more affirmative, non-dialectical and non-historicist way of evaluating the liberatory potential of artistic practices by the colonised prior to combative decolonisation.","subTitle":"Fanon, Ranci\u00e8re and the Struggle Toward Decolonisation on the Aesthetic Front","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis B. Nyamnjoh","Ben Page"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3518469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3518469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"405","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"634","pageStart":"607","pagination":"pp. 607-634","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Whiteman Kontri and the Enduring Allure of Modernity among Cameroonian Youth","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3518469","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":14023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article gathers together representations of whiteness constructed by young black Cameroonians. It contributes to arguments about white identity by arguing that the meaning of whiteness is, in part, made by Africans. It assembles descriptions of white people and of the whiteman kontri (the West) that are often contradictory and that include both positive and negative judgements. In this respect these ideas reflect both Cameroonian politics and Cameroonian identity. The young Cameroonians whose ideas we were interested in were simultaneously drawn to, and exasperated by, a Western vision of modernity. They were despairing of the existing Cameroonian social and political structure and looked beyond national contexts for their dreams. But they were equally sceptical about the justice of the global economic context and articulated their doubts in terms of antagonism towards whites and defence of African identity. We contribute to debates about Occidentalism by suggesting that this is a concept that should be used with caution, since by suggesting an equivalent to 'Orientalism' it suggests equality and endorses an essentialized notion of whiteness and blackness, which can undermine attempts to understand the history of relations between Africa and the West.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARLON SIMMONS"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe78cc37-dbf6-3e4f-b626-8b259439263f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484097","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":1244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bede Scott"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786941701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14206572-2475-3676-8406-67ed9b8bc575"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rj7f.4"}],"isPartOf":"Affective Disorders","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"I would like to begin, if I may, in a rather unpredictable place: provincial France in the summer of 1789. At this time, the country was undergoing a political and economic crisis that has been well-documented. The harvest had failed, food prices were rising, and unemployment was rife. In Paris, the Revolution was gathering momentum, and as news of the fall of the Bastille filtered through to the provinces, a number of rumours began to circulate. It was said that the aristocracy were planning to subdue the uprising by force, and that they had recruited foreign soldiers and \u2018brigands\u2019 in","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["emotion","feeling","postcolonial","literary","boredom","aesthetic","narratives","atmosphere","social","mikel dufrenne"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter O\u2019Brien"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1kft8dx.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781439912768"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8efb029-6747-3628-a1e2-e9d4c8de6335"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1kft8dx.12"}],"isPartOf":"The Muslim Question in Europe","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"249","pagination":"249-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1kft8dx.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["european","university","oxford","politics","citizenship","immigration","migration","cambridge","terrorism","princeton"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Pithouse"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43657707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb4eded2-78c9-388b-b3d1-74e47bcd8fed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43657707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Producing The Poor: The World Bank's new discourse of domination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43657707","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":15424,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[90320,90382]],"abstract":"The object of lumping all Negroes together under the designation of 'Negro people' is to deprive them of any possibility of individual expression. What is attempted is to put them under the obligation of matching the idea one has of them. - Frantz Fanon (1967b: 17).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW MAHLSTEDT"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4a75cd1-8c7a-3d78-aaa5-430f0b2d8aaf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44030341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Animal's Eyes: Spectacular Invisibility and the Terms of Recognition in Indra Sinha's \"Animal's People\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44030341","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Dominant narratives of poverty in the global south exacerbate the invisibility of the marginalized poor, blinding observers to all but a spectacle of abject destitution. Paying attention to narrative and the question of visibility in the context of recent globalization, this essay considers how Animal's People represents disempowerment without disempowering.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James D. Graham"],"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f02c6a06-761a-300a-9a82-5b975b84dcd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"The Tanzam Railway: Consolidating the People's Development and Building the Internal Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185423","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7508,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE J. MAKARI"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6af47b45-1a44-3699-8047-33e9fd229ac5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26303878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"359","pagination":"pp. 359-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Last Four Shots: Problems of Intention and Camus' \"The Stranger\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26303878","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":5585,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roberta E. McKown","Robert E. Kauffman"],"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dede85f5-8909-3945-8165-ea1f0abd1251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Party System as a Comparative Analytic Concept in African Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421345","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":9808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Tiyambe Zeleza"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1eaba106-4dfd-34df-bd4f-6479a195cc20"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/485342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"472","pagination":"pp. 472-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Democratic Transition in Africa and the Anglophone Writer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485342","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12161,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ces derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es les th\u00e8mes de libert\u00e9 et d\u00e9mocratie ont remplac\u00e9 ceux de d\u00e9veloppement et de construction de la nation et ils dominent les discours de politiques et d'\u00e9tudes africaines. La majorit\u00e9 des analyses, celles qui diagnostiquent la nature de la crise africaine de gouvernement ainsi que celles qui prescrivent des solutions, ont tendance \u00e0 \u00eatre d'orientation politique et \u00e9conomique. L'article d\u00e9clare que les discussions morales et culturelles de la crise et les rectification apport\u00e9es n'ont pas re\u00e7u l'attention qu'elle meritent. Plus particuli\u00e8rement, il \u00e9tablit que les \u00e9crivains ont sond\u00e9 les tourments des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines modernes plus profond\u00e9ment que n'ont pu le faire les intellectuels. En fait, les \u00e9crivains ont \u00e9t\u00e9 les premiers \u00e0 noter que le potentiel \u00e9mancipatoire d'ind\u00e9pendance avait \u00e9t\u00e9 exag\u00e9r\u00e9, et cela bien avant que les politologues n'aient d\u00e9couvert \"la crise\" africaine. Cet article explore les raisons derri\u00e8re ce ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne et sugg\u00e8re de permettre aux \u00e9crivains de s'exprimer en toute libert\u00e9 dans les discussions actuelles sur la d\u00e9mocratie et l'avenir de l'Afrique, car l'enjeu n'est pas seulement de concevoir de nouvelles structures politiques. Il est aussi de cr\u00e9er un nouvel ordre culturel et moral.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jaecheol Kim"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00404691"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45882258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213728"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10d28c4c-c27b-3a55-95fb-2c104be18f4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43280254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"texastudlitelang"}],"isPartOf":"Texas Studies in Literature and Language","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"184","pagination":"pp. 184-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cognitive Cartography in the Neocolonial World: Jameson's \"Third-World Literature\" and Ng\u0169g\u0129's \"Petals of Blood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43280254","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":10539,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[224764,224853]],"Locations in B":[[62175,62264]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tzvetan Todorov","John Anzalone"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40549566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4349881e-8bff-3f58-954a-646d639768a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40549566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","issueNumber":"143","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Skidmore College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Partial Portrait of Edward Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40549566","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Kreiss"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25433794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02763605"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810536"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235625"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25433794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacmusiresej"}],"isPartOf":"Black Music Research Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Appropriating the Master's Tools: Sun Ra, the Black Panthers, and Black Consciousness, 1952-1973","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25433794","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11225,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[67779,67825]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stanley A. Kochanek"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104159"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976381"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227039"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1ab5396-6a1e-3d76-bf60-8898ae09aaf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/421267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comppoli"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Comparative Politics, Ph.D. Programs in Political Science, City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Perspectives on the Study of Revolution and Social Change","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/421267","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":2748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN STOLLERY","Peter Lev"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688338","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ca5f41b-8ae1-36a4-815e-7f839a1f6d25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688338"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"College Course File: THE QUESTION OF THIRD CINEMA: AFRICAN AND MIDDLE EASTERN CINEMAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688338","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":6391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. Mittelman"],"datePublished":"2009-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15283577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6066763-055c-3407-94d4-f7f7ff9aa937"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44218583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudpers"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Salience of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44218583","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":4993,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While the salience of race is rising in public discourse, the dominant knowledge structure in international studies has deflected this issue. A look at curriculum and research programs suggests that the transnational dimensions of race are sidelined. The core concept of state sovereignty rarely opens to questions of race. Yet there is a longstanding tradition in transnational race relations, including substantial literature and university initiatives. These have had a tangible impact on the activities of international organizations. To restart such efforts in ways appropriate for our times, it is suggested that six sets of interaction between globalization and race could form the core of a curriculum and research program. This foundation provides the basis for explaining how the politics of \"we\" and \"they,\" friends and enemies, operates in racializing questions of identity, especially after 9\/11, when inclusion and exclusion are increasingly securitized.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mahmood Mamdani"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3137437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3137437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"87","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Brief History of Genocide","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3137437","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Delgado"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3311882","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00419907"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8de72ee3-25bf-325e-900b-410744775c46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3311882"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"univpennlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"University of Pennsylvania Law Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"578","pageStart":"561","pagination":"pp. 561-578","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"The University of Pennsylvania Law Review","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Civil law"],"title":"The Imperial Scholar: Reflections on a Review of Civil Rights Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3311882","volumeNumber":"132","wordCount":8730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amrita Basu"],"datePublished":"1987-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25b2cb05-1fe0-3a9f-8537-854711bd19b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/657678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"674","pageStart":"647","pagination":"pp. 647-674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Grass Roots Movements and the State: Reflections on Radical Change in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/657678","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter J Cullen"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43246474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43246474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newblackfriars"}],"isPartOf":"New Blackfriars","issueNumber":"667","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"532","pagination":"pp. 532-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Christianity and Violence: An Alternative Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43246474","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":5873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manfred Mackenzie"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18389554"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56cb0bd1-5794-39bf-8bc2-2a3e06e1d390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41053741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austjamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Australasian Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"AMERICAN AND\/OR POST-COLONIAL STUDIES AND \"THE SCARLET LETTER\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41053741","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Edgar Wideman"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c476169-d045-39c3-a8c6-c1ebf5db7abc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3805613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"386","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-386","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The Blanks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3805613","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":12034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEAN BATOU"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24583625","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47766701"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008201925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b64e6883-397a-3301-83c9-6000dbc5f5a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24583625"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","Economics","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Accumulation by Dispossession and Anti-Capitalist Struggles: A Long Historical Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24583625","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":10652,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"David Harvey has suggested the term accumulation by dispossession to capture the necessarily enduring role of primitive accumulation in the development of mature capitalism, particularly within \"the new imperialism.\" But this terminological change should be clearly limited, which is not always the case, to an attempt at better qualifying the functioning of primitive accumulation in the history of capitalism as a dependent variable of expanded capital accumulation. The dialectic between accumulation by dispossession and expanded accumulation, both being increasingly deeply intertwined, follows cycles that are best understood historically using the Marxist theory of long waves. Last but not least, in socio-political terms, there is a close relationship of strategic importance between the relative weight of accumulation by dispossession in a given period, and the need for exploited wage earners to build alliances with other dispossessed layers of the population.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stella M. Nkomo"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/258720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03637425"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"993f634c-0497-3ebe-a099-2dbbdfac3ebb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/258720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanarevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Academy of Management Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Business","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Emperor Has No Clothes: Rewriting \"Race in Organizations\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/258720","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":12634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes how race has been studied in organization scholarship and demonstrates how our approaches to the study of race reflect and reify particular historical and social meanings of race. It is argued that the production of knowledge about race must be understood within a racial ideology embedded in a Eurocentric view of the world. Finally, a \"re-vision\" of the very concept of race and its historical and political meaning is suggested for rewriting \"race\" as a necessary and productive analytical category for theorizing about organizations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christine MacLeod"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black American Literature and the Postcolonial Debate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509132","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nora M. Alter"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094033X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709608"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ada5f803-aa40-389e-8353-1651b8d20742"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3108669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newgermcrit"}],"isPartOf":"New German Critique","issueNumber":"68","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"New German Critique","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Political Im\/perceptible in the Essay Film: Farocki's \"Images of the World and the Inscription of War\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3108669","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harland Prechel"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0732913X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613783153"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96812e89-7a3e-317a-b4b2-471c87b76f8b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23252876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"midamerrevsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Mid-American Review of Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Social Thought and Research","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION AND CAPITAL ACCUMULATION IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: IMPLICATIONS FOR RURAL DEVELOPMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23252876","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Development policy and the role of technology in the capital accumulation process has been a subject of controversy since the 1960s. This paper reviews the divergent opinions on this issue, critiques development policy in sub-Saharan Africa, and analyzes how its connection to the global economy affects Africa's ability to accumulate capital and realize long-term growth. The paper demonstrates that the urban-oriented modernizationist policies of the 1960s and 1970s have hampered sub-Saharan Africa's ability to feed its expanding population. The analysis suggests that internally directed agricultural development must proceed externally-oriented urban-industrial development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Muttukrishna Sarvananthan"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413310","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"244204101"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014200073"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e43ad5fb-e6ed-3de7-a795-12ec9e304070"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persponterr"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Terrorism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Terrorism Research Initiative","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"\u2018Terrorism\u2019 or \u2018Liberation\u2019? Towards a distinction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413310","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article based on extensive empirical field research and primary sources\/data attempts to distinguish terrorism from liberation \/ freedom struggle by means of a case study of the armed struggle of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka. It is argued here that the LTTE was primarily a terrorist organisation\/movement because: (i) it\u2019s struggle was overwhelmingly based on armed violence; (ii) it demanded support from the masses through persecution; (iii) it intentionally targeted civilians; (iv) it substantially relied on suicide attacks; (v) it substantially deployed under-age children; and (vi) it was proactively involved in internecine war.","subTitle":"A Case study of the Armed Struggle of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241677","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dde4980b-9a07-34ae-a2a0-38cc2606b944"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241677"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Abyssal Thinking: From Global Lines to Ecologies of Knowledges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241677","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":19102,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[101504,101550]],"abstract":"Modern Western thinking is an abyssal thinking. It operates through radical lines that divide social reality into two realms, the realm of \"this side of the line\" and the realm of \"the other side of the line.\" The division is such that \"the other side of the line\" vanishes as reality, becomes nonexistent, and is indeed produced as nonexistent. What most fundamentally characterizes abyssal thinking is thus the impossibility of the copresence of the two sides of the line. The other side of the abyssal line is the realm of beyond legality and illegality (lawlessness), of beyond truth and falsehood (incomprehensible beliefs, idolatry, magic). These forms of radical negation together result in a radical absence, the absence of humanity, modern subhumanity. This article argues that although colonialism provided the model for modern radical negation and exclusion, this is as true today as in the colonial period. Modern Western thinking goes on operating through abyssal lines that divide the human from the subhuman in such a way that human principles don't get compromised by inhu man practices. First, the tension between regulation and emancipation (on this side of the line) continues to coexist with the tension between appropriation and violence (on the other side of the line) in such a way that the universality of the first tension is not contradicted by the existence of the second one. Secondly, abyssal lines continue to structure modern knowledge and modern law. Thirdly, these two abyssal lines are constitutive of Western-based political and cultural relations and interactions in the modern world-system. The struggle for global social justice must, therefore, be a struggle for global cognitive justice as well. In order to succeed, this struggle requires a new kind of thinking, a postabyssal thinking.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malini Schueller"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5eb7fbb-ca7d-368e-b51a-d063e6afd0ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"CONTAINING THE THIRD WORLD: JOHN UPDIKE'S \"THE COUP\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283180","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7468,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Peter Spanakos"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4499379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb28b4a5-ca22-3f70-a995-8e582fd4319e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4499379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Adjectives, Asterisks and Qualifications, or How to Address Democracy in Contemporary Latin America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4499379","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":5453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aristide R. Zolberg"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2010499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dadc872-4151-3cbf-99e2-9b8be09d0056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2010499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"World Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"331","pageStart":"309","pagination":"pp. 309-321+323+325+327+329+331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Military Decade in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2010499","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Libretti"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"873ce896-993b-34a8-b789-1b7fb49fa6ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"First and Third Worlds in U. S. Literature: Rethinking Carlos Bulosan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467832","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":9467,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[452406,452481]],"Locations in B":[[10137,10229]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice A. St. Pierre"],"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f177716d-007c-32a9-b1f7-a12ef351a135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861646","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":2204,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tavengwa Gwekwerere"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62b5e156-e483-3067-b7e3-764d5fffb91f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25704097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Nat Turner to Molefi Kete Asante: Reading the European Intellectual Indictment of the Afrocentric Conception of Reality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25704097","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The desperate Eurocentric intellectual undertaking to undermine the Afrocentric conception of reality is not a recent development. It originated the moment Europeans awoke from the slumber of their Dark Ages to find themselves lagging far behind in the march of the world's civilizations. The subsequent expropriation of principles and standards from ancient African civilization, the brazen European abduction of African people into slavery, and the unpardonable colonization, exploitation and dehumanization of African people all concatenate to drive European scholars into adopting an aggressive stance toward ideas that expose them in their cultural, social, political, economic and intellectual nudity. The Eurocentric prerogative to subvert the Afrocentric conception of reality is therefore a struggle for European survival and is inspired by the desire to keep the world misinformed in order that Europeans may escape their inferiority and crimes. This exegesis identifies the disappearance of the slave that Afrocentricity facilitates and the sordid nature of Europe's transactions with non-European peoples in history as the major reasons behind European intellectual discomfiture with Afrocentric principles.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hagel III"],"datePublished":"1976-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d3ac4c3-9f56-39de-b166-46d956eec8de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3997849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997849","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6671,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joy Porter"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"298724566"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-207833"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eedf2e7b-1680-3482-8f92-1eddbd468ceb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40930397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Primitive\" Discourse: Aspects of Contemporary North American Indian Representations of the Irish and of Contemporary Irish Representations of North American Indians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40930397","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Waldron"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13824554"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d4f2cc7-5e5b-3418-ab0f-606fd50dd2be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jethics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Ethics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Terrorism and the Uses of Terror","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115779","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":15365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"Terrorism\" is sometimes defined as a \"form of coercion.\" But there are important differences between ordinary coercion and terrorist intimidation. This paper explores some of those differences, particularly the relation between coercion, on the one hand, and terror and terrorization, on the other hand. The paper argues that while terrorism is not necessarily associated with terror in the literal sense, it does often seek to instill a mental state like terror in the populations that it targets. However, the point of instilling this mental state is not necessarily coercive or intimidatory: one can try to instill terror as an act of punishment, or as an expressive or therapeutic act, or because one values the political consequences that might follow, or because one thinks terror is preferable, from an ethical point of view, to the inauthentic complacency that characterizes the targeted population at present. Though this paper asks questions about the definition of \"terrorism,\" these questions are not asked for their own sake. The quest for a canonical definition of \"terrorism\" is probably a waste of time. But asking questions which sound like questions of definition is sometimes a fruitful way of focusing our reflections on terrorism and organizing our response.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STUART ELDEN"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43870934","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00167398"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2200b3d9-4303-3dc8-8bc7-b90e0b696e76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43870934"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geographicalj"}],"isPartOf":"The Geographical Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"425","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The geopolitics of Boko Haram and Nigeria's 'war on terror'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43870934","volumeNumber":"180","wordCount":10499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The April 2014 kidnapping of the schoolgirls at Chibok, north-eastern Nigeria, has meant that Boko Haram is now widely discussed by Western governments and in Western media. Yet within Nigeria the group has been well known for several years. Boko Haram's activities, or actions attributed to the group, have developed in a range of ways, many contradictory, including bombings, kidnappings of Europeans within Nigeria and neighbouring Cameroon, killing of medical personnel, and overtures for dialogue with the Federal Government. There are recurrent reports of links to Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, and in the past few years the United States has taken a much more active role in the region. Some of the wider geopolitical issues relate to the French-led intervention in Mali; a country to which Nigeria has also sent troops. This article tries to disentangle these different questions. It looks first at who Boko Haram are, and their history. It situates the group within the wider context of Nigerian politics, and to discuss the biopolitical and geopolitical elements of their operations and of the actions of the Nigerian security services and other actors towards them. It ends by relating what is happening within and beyond Nigeria to the wider context of the \u2019war on terror\u2019.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Hoffman"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44151236","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08849382"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50749669"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004255126"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c227e6ec-23c3-3c8e-9cb6-4265f38fd606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44151236"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nationalinterest"}],"isPartOf":"The National Interest","issueNumber":"141","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Center for the National Interest","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Return of the Jihadi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44151236","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4460,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[96820,96915]],"Locations in B":[[26629,26724]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Jell-Bahlsen"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.2.1.0115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23271868"},{"name":"oclc","value":"829373364"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77b01913-a399-3693-a906-012355f53275"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jwestafrihist.2.1.0115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestafrihist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West African History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Crime, Community, and Human Rights in Southeastern Nigeria, Then and Now","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jwestafrihist.2.1.0115","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":21512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article addresses crime and punishment in relation to community and human rights in southeastern Nigeria based on thirty years of observations complemented by additional research. A 1987 crime and its punishment in a rural community are providing a contrast to four violent incidents, their punishment, the absence of a trial, and other human rights violations prevalent in the area. Igbo culture and its socioeconomic and political institutions as well as its religious beliefs and ethics once provided the basis for a person's identity, economic security, and communal safety; the culture enabled prevention and punishment of crime within the community. This situation has changed drastically; the community has lost its clout; the people are disempowered by transnational corporations in collaboration with the nation-state and within the political economy of oil; the indigenous culture is dismantled, indigenous beliefs and ethics are depreciated, and violent crime is now prevalent and committed without impunity and on all levels of society. Human Rights Watch and other international organizations are pointing to potential solutions on the governmental and administrative levels. However, the socioeconomic situation, political economy, cultural-spiritual and individual issues must also be taken into account and addressed, calling for further research towards finding a way out of the current dilemma. R\u00e9sum\u00e9 Cet article aborde la question du crime et de son chatiment en relation avec les droits communautaires et humains dans le sud-est du Nigeria, en se fondant sur trente ans d'observation completee par des recherches. Le point de depart est l'observation d'un contraste entre le chatiment encouru pour un crime commis en 1987 dans une communaute rurale et les peines infligees ailleurs pour quatre incidents violents, en l'absence de proces et en violation des droits humains prevalant dans la region. Les institutions socio-economiques et politiques de la culture Igbo ainsi que ses croyances et son ethique religieuses ont longtemps constitue pour l'individu le socle de son identite et de sa securite economique et communautaire; cette culture permettait la prevention et la punition du crime au sein de la communaute. La situation a radicalement change. La communaute a perdu de son influence, les populations sont affaiblies par le pouvoir des multinationales soutenues par l'Etat et par la politique economique petroliere. Demantelee, la culture indigene voit ses croyances et son ethique depreciees. A tous les niveaux de la societe, la criminalite violente se generalise et demeure impunie. Human Rights Watch et d'autres organisations internationales suggerent diverses solutions applicables au niveau gouvernemental et administratif. Cependant, il faut aussi prendre en consideration la situation socio-economique et l'economie politique, ainsi qu'une serie de problemes culturels, spirituels et individuels qui doivent etre resolus. Il en ressort que d'autres recherches sont necessaires afin de sortir de l'impasse actuelle.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["St. Clair Drake"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2294860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Studies and Global Perspectives: An Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2294860","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PHILIP S. S. HOWARD"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982032","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5e513611-8c9a-3671-8926-d52e9edf2d4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982032"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER FOUR: The Smack of Self-Determination: A Fanonian Analysis of the Africentric Schooling Debate in Toronto","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982032","volumeNumber":"445","wordCount":13241,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[77594,77663]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josh Vandiver"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26419438","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ac260dc-14ec-3eac-8693-6fa7a86c9189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26419438"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"796","pageStart":"764","pagination":"pp. 764-796","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Plato in Folsom Prison","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26419438","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":14157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Of the many structures which constitute the intellectual architecture of Black Power, where do \u201ccanonical\u201d sources of political theory stand? How are they incorporated, reworked, and critiqued by the movement\u2019s leading, innovative thinkers? Eldridge Cleaver, author of Soul on Ice and Minister of Information in the Black Panther Party, is certainly such a thinker. Subsequently scorned or ignored, he sought to advance the African American struggle for liberty and equality by exposing gendered and sexualized structures of racial oppression. Cleaver chooses distinctive theoretical tools, a kind of queer classicism, engaging with Plato\u2019s Symposium and Republic as he develops new models for understanding the interdiction of black\u2013white erotic relations, the policing of black masculinity, and the subordination of black persons within a racialized political order. Analyzing Cleaver\u2019s engagement with Plato equips us to recognize intersections of classical political theory and modern radical thought and activism, the limits of such engagements, and the challenges for political theory when the complex interstices of race, gender, sexuality, and classicism are interrogated.","subTitle":"Eldridge Cleaver, Black Power, Queer Classicism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bart van Leeuwen"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562108","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037802X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42821717"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-201059"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23562108"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheoprac"}],"isPartOf":"Social Theory and Practice","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Florida State University Department of Philosophy","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Racist Variations of Bad Faith: A Critical Study of Lewis Gordon's Phenomenology of Racism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23562108","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10427,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[17194,17254]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1990-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"327b6921-7b84-3c8d-a1df-6e83da9fbbc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why Is Participation a Dirty Word in South African Politics?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186651","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":15100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Ireland"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b973089a-fcf0-3578-94fb-23bf8c637b5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sartre's America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720551","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5723,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Y. Bennett"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c831ec8-fa5b-3500-9de2-dd9068bd24b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"312","pagination":"pp. 312-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"DOMINANCE AND THE TRIUMPH OF THE WHITE TRICKSTER OVER THE BLACK PICARO IN AMIRI BARAKA'S \"GREAT GOODNESS OF LIFE: A COON SHOW\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264911","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":5250,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[6747,6832]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rivca Gordon"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511115","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511115"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Response to Hannah Arendt's Critique of Sartre's Views on Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511115","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5270,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59961,60024]],"Locations in B":[[31141,31203]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DENNIS FORSYTHE"],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9350905b-39ac-3bc5-aad4-ebd7dc7ff15d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FRANTZ FANON: BLACK THEORETICIAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163430","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5946,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692],[124905,125003]],"Locations in B":[[2828,2887],[13330,13426]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yaakov Herskovitz"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/shofar.33.4.173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08828539"},{"name":"oclc","value":"728469282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35cd5786-7522-3e7a-b79a-59605bf3e938"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5703\/shofar.33.4.173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"shofar"}],"isPartOf":"Shofar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"189","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-189","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Jewish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Settlers versus Pioneers: The Deconstruction of the Settler in Assaf Gavron's The Hilltop<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/shofar.33.4.173","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7522,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This paper engages in a close reading of settlers, settlements, and the portrayal of settler ideology in the novel The Hilltop. This trailblazing novel from 2013, written by Assaf Gavron, foregrounds the image of the settlers in the West Bank and their relationship to the State of Israel. The paper explores this relationship through a discussion of settler ideology and how this set of beliefs comperes to Zionist ideology at large. Thus, the images of the settler and of Zionist pioneers are coupled and reexamined.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael T. MARTIN","Howard COHEN"],"datePublished":"1980-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b496e69a-f7f2-38ba-b84b-4201c50e54fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24350095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"115","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u00ab Late Capitalism \u00bb and Race and Neo-colonial Domination : Discontinuities in Marxist Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350095","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mario Benedetti","David Arthur McMurray"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dbb8579-1b47-3db4-af8b-8c8e2683c033"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25088412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":80.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Juan Angel's Birthday","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088412","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":20607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. MICHAEL DASH"],"datePublished":"1985-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c035a1dc-eab4-35bc-ab6b-88ae30a5d8af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653644","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yumi Pak"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7faa12a5-9268-33a9-af6e-d3769ddb521b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"830","pageStart":"827","pagination":"pp. 827-830","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264852","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Muna S. Tareh"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a10f8d1e-beb0-30bf-bad0-039482bef12a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Violence of Self-Determination: The Palestinian Refugee as the Ontological Other","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.3.0181","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":20469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[131180,131226]],"abstract":"The discourse on migration and refugee studies continues to be framed around two main principles: sovereignty and identity. In contemporary politics, however, the refugee subject is defined and managed from a universal framework where the language of rights elevates the potency of liberalism as both a discourse and an instrument of domination. This article examines refugeehood from a framework that transcends the sovereignty\/identity dichotomy. It offers a more nuanced contextual approach through which this mass socio-political phenomenon can be better understood. To validate the article's new methodology, it sets out to examine the Palestinian refugee question, the oldest unresolved refugee problem in the history of the modern Middle East. The article makes visible the performative role of question framing by giving particular attention to historical transfigurations in the conceptualization of the people's right to self-determination. As a discourse-based analysis, the article demonstrates how current discursive formations produce colonial knowledge that can facilitate the development of new social and political tools of population control. The article concludes by showing how conceptual transfiguration of the right to self-determination incited the orientalist scholarship on the Palestinian refugee question in the interest of legitimizing and normalizing Israel as a Western colonial establishment.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Mirzoeff"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/659354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e9beb8c-5362-334a-8e4c-2f28444bc305"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/659354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"496","pageStart":"473","pagination":"pp. 473-496","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Right to Look","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/659354","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johan Geertsema"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb252b3e-34f8-3212-89b3-1c601bb30099"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4133881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"763","pageStart":"749","pagination":"pp. 749-763","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ndebele, Fanon, Agency and Irony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133881","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":10042,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article critically considers the place of the figure of irony in the critical work of the prominent South African intellectual Njabulo Ndebele. It argues that irony forms an important but underrated part of Ndebele's critical project of the 'rediscovery of the ordinary', a project aimed at restoring the agency of the oppressed victims of apartheid in order to transcend an apartheid discourse fixated on essentialised categories of blackness and whiteness. Ndebele's deployment of irony should be understood in view of his Black Consciousness roots, in particular in terms of its insistence, via the work of Frantz Fanon, on the complicity of the oppressed in their own oppression. But Fanon's work also appears prone to performing a doubling or repetition of the colonialism that it attacks. Ndebele's writing attempts to move beyond the colonialism of apartheid by insisting on identities-especially those of blackness and victimhood - but only in order to transcend them. This shift, I argue, may be given the name 'irony', and it characterises Ndebele's mistrust of essentialism while, at the same time, recognising its usefulness in the struggle for decolonisation. Ndebele's use of irony, then, may be understood as a way of reading against the discourse of apartheid, which precisely in its lack of reflexivity was unironic. Thus, irony as understood by Ndebele may be an important component in a new, humanising non-racialism that reaches beyond apartheid.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Shannon"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748289","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00340553"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47822033"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235661"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/748289"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"readresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Reading Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"What's My Name?\": A Politics of Literacy in the Latter Half of the 20th Century in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/748289","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":14625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Marginalized groups' struggles for recognition have driven much of the world's politics during the last 50 years. With the importance of schooling and literacy education as public spaces in the United States, marginalized groups in America have attempted to translate their social agendas for recognition to classroom contexts. These attempts sought and seek to change policies, structures, and practices of literacy teaching and learning, striking at the traditional values, texts, and rationales for schooling. Because these efforts intended to redistribute access to and benefits from literacy education, they form a central part of the politics of literacy during this time. This article explores reactions to these struggles among advocates of five distinct political ideologies with specific attention directed toward how these reactions offer us different futures in and outside American schools. \/\/\/ [Spanish] Las luchas de los grupos marginados por ser reconocidos han regido gran parte de la pol\u00edtica mundial durante los \u00faltimos 50 a\u00f1os. Con la importancia de la escolarizaci\u00f3n y la alfabetizaci\u00f3n como espacios p\u00fablicos en los Estados Unidos, los grupos marginados de Am\u00e9rica han intentado trasladar la agenda social de b\u00fasqueda de reconocimiento al contexto de las aulas. Estos intentos buscaron y buscan modificar pol\u00edticas, estructuras y pr\u00e1cticas de ense\u00f1anza y aprendizaje de la lectoescritura, cuestionando los valores tradicionales, los textos y los fundamentos te\u00f3ricos de la escolarizaci\u00f3n, Estos esfuerzos intentaron la redistribuci\u00f3n del acceso y los beneficios de la alfabetizaci\u00f3n, por lo que conforman el n\u00facleo de las pol\u00edticas de alfabetizaci\u00f3n de estos tiempos. Este art\u00edculo explora las reacciones a estas luchas entre los partidarios de cinco ideolog\u00edas pol\u00edticas diferentes, atendiento espec\u00edficamente a c\u00f3mo estas reacciones nos ofrecen futuros distintos, tanto dentro como fuera de las escuelas americanas. \/\/\/ [German] Die bestrebungen von Randgruppen nach Anerkennung haben die Weltpolitik in den letzten 50 Jahren wesentlich vorangetrieben. Mit der Bedeutung von schulischer Ausbildung im Schreib- und Leseunterricht als ein \u00f6ffentliches Anliegen in den Vereinigten Staaten haben die Randgruppen Amerikas versucht, ihre sozialen Ziele nach Anerkennung in den Kontext der Klassenr\u00e4ume hinein zu \u00fcbertragen. Diese Bestrebungen versuchten und suchen Verordnungen, Strukturen und Praktiken im Unterrichten und im Erlernen des Schreibens und Lesens zu ver\u00e4ndern. Da diese Bem\u00fchungen beabsichtigen den Zugang zum Schreiben und Lesen und deren Nutzen neu zu verteilen, bilden sie einen zentralen Teil der Politik in Bezug zum Schreiben und Lesen in unserer Zeit. Dieser Artikel untersucht Reaktionen auf diese Bestrebungen unter den Bef\u00fcrwortern von f\u00fcnf deutlich politischen Ideologien, hingelenkt mit spezifischer Aufmerksamkeit auf die Auswirkungen, die diese Reaktionen in differenzierten zuk\u00fcnftigen amerikanischen Schulen haben werden. \/\/\/ [French] Les luttes pour leur reconnaissance des groupes marginalis\u00e9s ont beaucoup pes\u00e9 sur la politique dans le monde au cours des 50 derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es. Compte tenu de l'importance de la scolarisation et de l'enseignement de la litt\u00e9ratie en tant qu'espaces publics aux Etats-Unis, des groupes marginalis\u00e9s en Am\u00e9rique ont essay\u00e9 de traduire leurs agendas sociaux de reconnaissance dans le contexte de l'\u00e9cole. Ces essais ont tent\u00e9 et tentent de changer les politiques, les structures, et les pratiques d'enseignement et d'apprentissage de la litt\u00e9ratie, luttant contre les valeurs, les textes, et les rationnels traditionnels de la scolarisation. Du fait que ces efforts ont tent\u00e9 de redistribuer l'acc\u00e8s \u00e0 l'\u00e9ducation de la litt\u00e9ratie et des b\u00e9n\u00e9fices qui en r\u00e9sultent, ils sont au coeur de la politique de la litt\u00e9ratie au cours de cette p\u00e9riode. Cet article explore les r\u00e9actions \u00e0 ces luttes chez les d\u00e9fenseurs de cinq id\u00e9ologies politiques diff\u00e9rentes, avec une attention plus marqu\u00e9e pour les diff\u00e9rents types d'avenir que ces r\u00e9actions nous proposent dans les \u00e9coles en Am\u00e9rique et ailleurs.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicole Eggers"],"datePublished":"2015-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df40d621-c477-325e-9278-915175cee801"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24525692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"417","pagination":"pp. 417-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"MUKOMBOZI AND THE MONGANGA: THE VIOLENCE OF HEALING IN THE 1944 KITAWALIST UPRISING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24525692","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":11210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article investigates the fraught relationship between violence and healing in Central African history. Looking at the case study of one of the largest uprisings in the colonial history of Congo \u2013 the Lobutu\u2013Masisi Kitawalist uprising of 1944 \u2013 the article asks how the theories of power that animated the uprising might help better illuminate the nature and role of violence not only in the uprising itself but in the broader history of the region. Drawing attention to the centrality of discourses that relate to the moral and immoral use of disembodied spiritual power (puissance\/nguvu\/force) in the uprising, the article evokes critical questions about the deeper history of such discourses and the imaginaries and choreographies of violence that accompanied them. Thinking about violence in this way not only breaks down imagined lines between productive and destructive\/legitimate and illegitimate violence by highlighting that such distinctions are always contentious and negotiated, but also demonstrates that the theories of power animating such negotiations must be understood not as tangential to the larger anti-colonial political struggle of Bushiri and his followers, but as central to that struggle. Moreover, it paves the way towards thinking about how these same theories of power might animate negotiations of legitimacy in more recent violent contexts in Eastern Congo. Cet article examine la relation malais\u00e9e entre la violence et la gu\u00e9rison dans l'histoire de l'Afrique centrale. \u00c0 travers l'\u00e9tude de cas de l'un des plus grands soul\u00e8vements de l'histoire coloniale du Congo, la r\u00e9volte kitawaliste de Lubutu-Masisi de 1944, l'article s'interroge sur la mani\u00e8re dont les th\u00e9ories du pouvoir qui ont anim\u00e9 la r\u00e9volte pourraient aider \u00e0 mieux mettre en lumi\u00e8re la nature et le r\u00f4le de la violence non seulement dans la r\u00e9volte elle-m\u00eame, mais aussi dans l'histoire plus large de la r\u00e9gion. Attirant l'attention sur la centralit\u00e9 de discours se rapportant \u00e0 l'utilisation morale et immorale du pouvoir spirituel d\u00e9sincarn\u00e9 (puissance\/nguvu\/force) dans la r\u00e9volte, l'article \u00e9voque des questions essentielles sur l'histoire plus profonde de tels discours et sur les imaginaires et les chor\u00e9graphies de violence qui les ont accompagn\u00e9s. Cette mani\u00e8re de penser la violence non seulement \u00e9limine les lignes de d\u00e9marcation imagin\u00e9es entre violence productive et destructive\/l\u00e9gitime et ill\u00e9gitime en soulignant le fait que ces distinctions sont toujours controvers\u00e9es et n\u00e9goci\u00e9es, mais aussi d\u00e9montre qu'il faut comprendre les th\u00e9ories du pouvoir qui animent ces n\u00e9gociations non pas comme tangentielles \u00e0 la lutte politique anticoloniale plus large de Bushiri et de ses disciples, mais au centre de cette lutte. De surcro\u00eet, elle ouvre la voie \u00e0 une r\u00e9flexion sur la mani\u00e8re dont ces m\u00eames th\u00e9ories du pouvoir pourraient animer des n\u00e9gociations de l\u00e9gitimit\u00e9 dans des contextes violents plus r\u00e9cents dans l'Est du Congo.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Tewkesbury"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570000","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"87692c01-f5d5-34b8-9816-b2645ef24681"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24570000"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sex, Violence, and Suffering: Rethinking Martin Luther King, Jr., in Julius Lester's \"And All Our Wounds Forgiven\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570000","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Alessandrini"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9665b81f-83c3-356a-8fb1-187227b595ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26759939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WHOSE FANON? A Review\/Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759939","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":3414,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[620045,620109]],"Locations in B":[[11526,11591]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shari Stone-Mediatore"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932737","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60547480"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7a733ce-90eb-35f7-9285-6ce1b839572a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43932737"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Attending to Others: Simone Weil and Epistemic Pluralism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43932737","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8118,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the 1980s, feminist epistemologists have traced the cultural biases that have denied epistemic value to certain epistemic styles and agents while they have explored ways to reclaim the devalued epistemic modes\u2014 including more practical, emotionally invested, and community-situated modes of knowing\u2014 that many of us have found to be meaningful ways of engaging the world. At the same time, feminist critics have sought not merely to reverse received epistemic hierarchies but to explore more pluralistic epistemologies that appreciate as well as examine critically the diverse ways that humans engage the world. This paper examines how Simone Weil's concept of paying attention can contribute to such a critical and pluralist epistemology. By reading Weil's account of \"a certain kind of attention\" together with feminist and decolonial critiques of modern epistemic norms, I show how Weil points toward an epistemic framework that would open our intellectual communities to a greater plurality of epistemic styles and agents and, ultimately, would make possible richer knowledge practices that are more responsive to world problems.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Krause"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691c63e1-c77a-3293-a95d-1906e1d8f83d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484730","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4344,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Janis"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720db076-00ca-3202-a23a-2b63f991946a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"REMEMBERING SEMB\u00c8NE: THE GRANDFATHER OF AFRICAN FEMINISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325427","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":5682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leif Sorensen"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aeb80802-808c-3c83-ba85-953d4c88e9fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30029632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Modernity on a Global Stage: Hurston's Alternative Modernism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30029632","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8378,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Claude Willame"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7d28326-5b80-3781-b4d7-8a0426161c4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"355","pageStart":"326","pagination":"pp. 326-355","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Patriarchal Structures and Factional Politics: Toward an Understanding of the Dualist Society (Structures patriarcales et factions politiques)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391213","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":13821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[328732,328846]],"Locations in B":[[83763,83890]],"abstract":"Politique moderne et chefferies traditionnelles chez les Yaka du Kwango (Za\u00efre). Historique de la p\u00e9riode coloniale. Depuis l'ind\u00e9pendance les conflits politiques ont essentiellement oppos\u00e9 des membres de l'\u00e9lite, le kiamfu (chef sup\u00e9rieur) restant en retrait. Case studies de diverses personnalit\u00e9s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Locksley Edmondson"],"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40200286","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b07cede4-43b6-324c-bd95-f341a2f5277f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40200286"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"internationalj"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"693","pagination":"pp. 693-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Challenges of Race: From Entrenched White Power to Rising Black Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40200286","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10050,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[23773,23839]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. Mittelman"],"datePublished":"1976-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159647","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159647"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Collective Decolonisation and the U.N. Committee of 24","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159647","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":9795,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Colm Hogan"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27797249","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213667"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42432120"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a59c1fd-1bde-31c5-ab64-a6c54f328d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27797249"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jgeneeduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of General Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"LITERARY ART AND LIBERAL EDUCATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27797249","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwangsoon Kim"],"datePublished":"2017-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00836ce2-c4e4-3d4e-bdc4-ecf4d5bc6647"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26556988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Oedipus Complex in the South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26556988","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":7198,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Castration Anxiety and Lynching Ritual in James Baldwin\u2019s \u201cGoing to Meet the Man\u201d","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Norman Girvan"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865266","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34be7dec-ba09-32e1-bc5f-2f73548d8c55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865266"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CARIBBEAN FANONISM REVISITED: A NOTE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865266","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":4246,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[25934,25980]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter C. W. Gutkind"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a04e402b-4bbb-31c9-9722-d7b3456d9578"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"81\/83","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":58.0,"pageEnd":"346","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-346","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Change and Consciousness in Urban Africa: African Workers in Transition (Changement et conscientisation en Afrique urbaine: les travailleurs africains en transition)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391747","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":23590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Pourquoi et comment les travailleurs des villes africaines prennent-ils conscience de leur position de classe? Le d\u00e9veloppement d'une classe ouvri\u00e8re urbaine est li\u00e9 \u00e0 des circonstances politiques et \u00e9conomiques sp\u00e9cifiques, coloniales et post-coloniales, concernant la main-d'\u0153uvre, ainsi qu'\u00e0 l'in\u00e9gale p\u00e9n\u00e9tration du capitalisme. De telles conditions d\u00e9terminent \u00e0 la fois la conscience politique de classe et l'action -- ou l'inaction -- de la classe ouvri\u00e8re, qui vont du soutien aux relations de client\u00e8le au r\u00e9formisme ou \u00e0 la recherche militante de transformations radicales. Celle-ci, notamment, est fonction du niveau d'\u00e9ducation et des efforts syndicaux autant que d'une r\u00e9action \u00e0 l'exploitation et \u00e0 la r\u00e9pression. Comment cette prise de conscience politique va-t-elle se d\u00e9velopper? Alors que son \u00e9volution vers la radicalisation, c'est-\u00e0-dire la lutte de classe, est lente et ambigu\u00eb, les travailleurs urbains et ruraux ont \u00e0 faire face \u00e0 ces questions: qui sont les ennemis -- et les alli\u00e9s -- de classe? Quelles alliances rechercher? \"Que faire?\" Comment r\u00e9agir \u00e0 l'exploitation? La conscience de classe doit rejeter le chauvinisme ethnique (mais non la conscience d'une tradition culturelle) et la concurrence, dans la mesure o\u00f9 cette conscience s'enracine dans le contexte historique du changement des modes de production, de l'appropriation des resources, et de la solidarit\u00e9 d'un mouvement syndical militant. Le tout rel\u00e8ve de la question plus g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de savoir quel genre de syst\u00e8me de classes existe d\u00e9j\u00e0 en Afrique et dans le reste du tiers monde.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefan Bird-Pollan"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4f3d3fc-01f3-3cef-a602-ded36a31d33f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lived Experience of Existence: Fanon between Theory and Meta-Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705175","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Myl\u00e8ne Priam"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.19","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"544feb24-5dce-3347-92ef-44556a7489df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.19"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond \u201cThe Drama of Consciousness\u201d and Against the \u201cDrama of the Manifesto\u201d: Poetic License and the Creolist Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.1.19","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT The purpose of this essay is to discuss how the concept of cr\u00e9olit\u00e9 can be currently tied to the socio-cultural realities of Martinique (as well as of Guadeloupe and Guiana), and to the developments of their political landscape. To what extent can theory and poetics really affect the everyday culture and politics in Antillean and Caribbean communities? This rapport was briefly dealt with in the creolist manifesto's appendix as at once a philosophical, poetic, and utilitarian matter. What role does the genre of the manifesto play in the possibility of effecting sociopolitical change? For indeed, in 1989, cr\u00e9olit\u00e9 was a new self-reflexive method for three Martinican authors (as Antilleans or Caribbeans) in the search for the meaning of their place and the place of their culture in the world. Cr\u00e9olit\u00e9 was also a concept that formulated a principle of representing this cultural identity via its social and poetical forms. In Praise of Creoleness, the manifesto that gave birth to this widely discussed concept, was Bernab\u00e9, Chamoiseau, and Confiant's collaborative effort to describe the heterogeneous character of Caribbean cultures and societies in addition to the phenomenon and processes at the root of their diversity. The genre of the manifesto had both provided a base for this act of writing and also very craftily allowed the coauthors to avoid what Wilson Harris, describing what inevitably accompanied the dual positioning of the Caribbean writer, calls the \u201cdrama of consciousness\u201d (48). This is because, through the form of the manifesto, Praise exposes its coauthors' desire to locate their voices within a collectivity of ideas (pertaining to an intellectual community, notably) of which the creolist manifesto itself became both a generative source (but not the only source) and a generated product. In this essay, I thus determine how the creolist manifesto was apt to make an impact on Martiniquan society. The creolists' rhetoric certainly sounded exalted, but it was based on their vision of all the aspects it might penetrate, from the \u00e9tant to the cultural and societal, \u201clangage\u201d \/ \u201cspeech,\u201d and of course \u201clangue\u201d \/ \u201clanguage.\u201d They believed that the Creole language was the most authentic expression of their being, as well as a means of keeping their affiliations intact while putting forth a vision of hope for Caribbean cultures and societies through art. The question of the Caribbean Creole artist and writer's role in society must thus be addressed. The word \u201cCreole\u201d in that sense could also have political implications. The dramatic overtone of the creolists' discourse that the genre of the manifesto at once authorizes, supports, and sets forth also contained an invitation to dedramatize, which has consistently been neglected by cr\u00e9olit\u00e9's detractors. Beyond poetical and rhetorical performance, Praise called for human action and, in order to promote their movement and best serve the implementation of their vision, the creolists encouraged Martiniquan artists to integrate all the cultural components deemed capable of influencing the destiny of both their movement and of Martinique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd Kuchta"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346093","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1346093"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Suburbia, \"Ressentiment\", and the End of Empire in \"A Passage to India\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1346093","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fiona R. Barnes"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b631edbc-f35d-376b-a990-5fb3ba129cee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Resisting Cultural Cannibalism: Oppositional Narratives in Michelle Cliff's \"No Telephone to Heaven\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315071","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":4015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Federico Settler"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24798422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85bfaa29-567d-307c-9f23-b298d2c694fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24798422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon\u2019s Ambivalence towards Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24798422","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":7115,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[173905,174086]],"Locations in B":[[7743,7925]],"abstract":"Abstract Frantz Fanon has for more than fifty years been a celebrated theorist, intellectual and activist of the black struggle for recognition, to the degree that he has assumed the status of a \u201csacred cow\u201d in African nationalist discourse. Without seeking to raise the significance of religion in Fanon\u2019s thinking, I use a critical, postcolonial literary reading of Fanon texts to critique his conception of religion. Although he regarded Catholicism and Islam as orthodox religions that deprived the colonized of their dignity, he referred to them as the \u201cgreat revealed religions.\u201d Interestingly, Fanon\u2019s writing reflects a particular ambivalence towards indigenous religions, in the Caribbean and Africa, which he regarded as primitive, terrifying and pre-modern \u2014 always depriving the colonized of the gains of modernity. His reflections on indigenous religion are less considered and more visceral. He describes these traditions as irrational and more terrifying than the colonial settler. Ultimately his ambivalence towards religions leaves Fanon unable to expel colonial representations of the black as superstitious, primitive and child-like from his theories of transformation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khaled Ahmed"],"datePublished":"2005-04-23","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4416525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83f2b427-3b16-324c-a26c-e67f3705ed80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4416525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"17","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"1692","pageStart":"1690","pagination":"pp. 1690-1692","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Colours of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4416525","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":2630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Tiyambe Zeleza"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29a867eb-2085-38db-8949-1955ddaf7cd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/485829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Tribulations of Undressing the Emperor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/485829","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FIONA KUMARI CAMPBELL"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b91dfd6-cea7-3a0f-b8c1-a63f2e5c8ebd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41300295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"1474","pageStart":"1455","pagination":"pp. 1455-1474","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Geodisability Knowledge Production and International Norms: a Sri Lankan case study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41300295","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Disability is a representational system and its denotation is a result of how communities make sense of and mark corporeal differences. In this paper I argue that the UN norm standard setting, a form of geodisability knowledge, determines the kinds of bodies known as disabled and acts as a technology of disability governmentality. The institutional strategic gaze, sited in the UN, examines, normalises and conditions nation-states. Without consensual international disability norms it would not be possible to disclose and make visible the dynamics of disability at a country level and for the World Health Organisation (WHO) to map disability globally. An alternate reading of international norms is to figure the functioning of geodisability knowledge to naturalise it through codifying hegemonic ways of seeing, citing and situating disability and thus colonise different cultural approaches to disability. A discussion of geodisability knowledge production is pursued within the context of a Sri Lankan case study.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerry Canavan"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9529f56b-f405-3f5c-846b-fec6bfbe56dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing the Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.39.3.0494","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":2982,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[117188,117398],[609898,610060]],"Locations in B":[[448,657],[1838,2000]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Catarina Kinnvall"],"datePublished":"2012-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"950c5cde-d82c-3f2f-895f-eab434a386be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23412513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"266","pagination":"pp. 266-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"European Trauma: Governance and the Psychological Moment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23412513","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9773,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the unfolding of traumas as structural and sociopsychological narratives focused on the bordering of identity and the governing of past present and future. Proceeding from a Lacanian conception of trauma and a Foucauldian understanding of governmentality, the analysis is centered on hegemonic counternarratives, even crises, involving the bordering of both Islam\/Muslim identity and Europe\/national identity. This \"European trauma,\" or psychological moment, is exemplified through events in London 2005 and Norway 2011. It is perceived in terms of Chosen Traumas and Chosen Glories, the mythologization of past events that are retold, reinvented, and awarded new meanings in the present. Such traumas and glories can create a foundation for governing practices in which hegemonic interpretations of identity turn into normalizing narratives that justify violence. However, the governing of narratives is a contested process and alternative narrative understandings in terms of everyday practices can stimulate social resistance and psychological resilience, eventually challenging the normalizing bordering processes encountered in Europe today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. R. Porter","R. E. Washington"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2083384","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4f4c575-a484-349f-9e64-8961ac793967"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2083384"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Minority Identity and Self-Esteem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2083384","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10154,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"We review the theoretical models and the research on self-esteem among Hispanic and Asian American subgroups and compare these findings to the existing literature on African American self-image. Group self-esteem refers to how the individual feels about racial or ethnic group membership. Personal self-esteem refers to how the individual feels about the self in a comprehensive manner. We describe the major paradigms of ethnic\/racial and personal self-esteem utilized in studies of Hispanics and Asian Americans. These paradigms are largely informed by the literature on ethnicity and stress the macrostructural forces that affect self-concept. Paradigms of African American self-image, however, tend to focus more on the psychological mechanisms that transform social context into personal identity. We also review empirical evidence on both dimensions of self-esteem among Hispanics and Asian Americans, and we contrast these findings to research on African Americans. We conclude by suggesting parallels between the theories dealing with ethnicity and those dealing with race, and we suggest areas for further theoretical integration and empirical research.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gilberto M. Blasini"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.70","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e15255-a25f-30cc-9a6e-6c026c4bd67b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.70"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Caribbean Cinematic Cr\u00e9olit\u00e9<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.70","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article proposes that Caribbean cinema needs to be understood in relation to the concept of cr\u00e9olit\u00e9, that is, the configuration and constant reinvention\u2014the imaging and imagining\u2014of transnational cultural communities emerging from or historically connected to the Caribbean. Cinematic cr\u00e9olit\u00e9 becomes apparent in the historical revisions, narrative constructions, and cinematic representations that engage Caribbean social, political, and cultural syncretism. In this sense, the formation and constant transformation of Caribbean hybrid cultures can be traced through different narrative and representational tactics, especially those connected to Afro-diasporic communities. As a result, these films rescue and give voice to many of the stories and cultural manifestations that have been suppressed, erased or forgotten by Eurocentric and normative versions of the region's history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID D. LAITIN"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ad266ed-4529-345c-9e8e-8b369ed02eeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23999432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"National revivals and violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999432","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":17453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"On recherche dans les mouvements nationalistes les microfacteurs de confrontations violentes. Ces facteurs comprennent la nature m\u00eame des structures sociales locales, les situations de basculement et les \u00e9v\u00e9nements fortuits qui d\u00e9clenchent des cycles action\/r\u00e9action. Ils expliquent mieux que les macro-th\u00e9ories dominantes le contraste entre un mouvement nationaliste, pacifique en Catalogne et violent au Pays basque. Un test de robustesse de l'explication par les microfacteurs est donn\u00e9 par la diff\u00e9rence des niveaux de violence entre les mouvements s\u00e9paratistes d'Ukraine et ceux de G\u00e9orgie. Micro factors that induce violent confrontations amidst national revival movements are identified. These factors include the nature of local social structures, tipping phenomena, and fortuitous events that set off action\/reaction cycles. They are shown to be better explanations than reigning macro theories to account for the peaceful nationalist revival in Catalonia in contrast to the violent one in the Basque Country. A robustness test for the micro factors succeeds in differentiating levels of violence in the politics of separation from the Soviet Union in the Ukraine and Georgia. Es werden diejenigen Mikrofaktoren nationaler Bewegungen herausgearbeitet, die gewaltt\u00e4tige Auseinandersetzungen hervorrufen k\u00f6nnen. Diese Faktoren beinhalten sowohl die Beschaffenheit der lokalen Sozialstrukturen, als auch Umbruchsituationen und unvorhergesehene Ereignisse, die Aktions\/Reaktionszyklen ausl\u00f6sen. Sie erkl\u00e4ren besser als die allgemein anerkannten Makrotheorien den Unterschied zwischen der nationalistischen, aber pazifistischen Bewegung Kataloniens und jener gewaltt\u00e4tigen des Baskenlandes. Die Widerstandsf\u00e4higkeit der Aussagekraft dieser Mikrofaktoren wird anhand eines Vergleichs zwischen den verschiedenen Gewaltstufen der Autonomiebewegungen der Ukraine und Georgiens getestet.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tomaz Carlos Flores Jacques"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aee7a6d9-3b5d-3d1a-ab35-b737af068620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Philosophy in Black: African Philosophy as a Negritude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512861","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"African philosophy, as a negritude, is a moment in the postcolonial critique of European\/Western colonialism and the bodies of knowledge that sustained it. Yet a critical analysis of its' original articulations reveals the limits of this critique and more broadly of postcolonial studies, while also pointing towards more radical theoretical possibilities within African philosophy. Jean-Paul Sartre's essay 'Black Orpheus', a philosophical appropriation of negritude poetry, serves as a guide for this reflection, for the text reveals the inspiration and wealth of expressions of negritude, as well as their ambiguity. Sartre's essay however also renders possible a further act of re-appropriation that takes us beyond culture and identity-centred readings of African philosophy and postcolonialism, readings whose conceptual and critical potential is far greater than what has hitherto been explored.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Van Roy"],"datePublished":"1970-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1152119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49349450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d99a7d08-cf84-3d8e-a883-236bea73f2c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1152119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econdevecultchan"}],"isPartOf":"Economic Development and Cultural Change","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Theory of Corruption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1152119","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanjukta Dasgupta"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338793","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c47930b-9b00-320e-a1e1-ad771156add9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23338793"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","issueNumber":"5 (187)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Politics of Language and Post-Independence Indian English Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338793","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3837,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[446221,446289]],"Locations in B":[[6156,6224]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter E. B. Coy"],"datePublished":"1972-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075934"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227208"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/174710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintestudworlaff"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"University of Miami","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Anarchism: An Atavistic Ideology of the Peasant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174710","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darcy Ribeiro","Jan Bouzek","K. O. L. Burridge","Eduardo Galvao","Frederic Hicks","Charles Leslie","Cynthia Nelson","Andrew Hunter Whiteford"],"datePublished":"1970-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85b83e24-ef36-3873-b361-0f5614d67cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2740366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"434","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-434","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Culture-Historical Configurations of the American Peoples [and Comments and and Reviews and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740366","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":34144,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Distinct processes of ethnic formation have operated to create the extra-European peoples of the modern world, and their identification and classification is a preliminary step toward an understanding of their differing ways of life and problems of modernization and development. Examination shows that four great culture-historical configurations can be recognized: the Witness Peoples, the New Peoples, the Transplanted Peoples, and the Emergent Peoples. The first three categories are represented in the Americas (the fourth includes the new nations of Africa and Asia, which have grown to nationhood from the tribal level or from colonial trading posts). Mexico, Guatemala, Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador represent the Witness Peoples, formed predominantly from highly civilized aboriginal components that felt the impact of European expansion. Brazil, Venezuela, Colombia, the Antilles, some parts of Central America and the southern United States, Chile, and Paraguay belong to the New Peoples, which have arisen from conjunction, deculturation, and fusion of African, European, and aboriginal ethnic matrices. The United States, Canada, Uruguay, and Argentina constitute the Transplanted Peoples, formed largely of European immigrants who re-established their former way of life almost intact in the regions they settled. An examination of the racial and cultural composition of each of these configurations, their process of formation and maturation, and their relationships to European centers of mercantile expansion and industrial civilization brings out their unique features: it also permits analysis of the sources of potential conflict between them in achieving national goals and makes possible some predictions of their relative viability with the passage of time.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CLAUDETTE WILLIAMS"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654545","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"054c8e93-610f-3afa-b452-aefaca654f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40654545"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cuban Antislavery Narrative in a Postcolonial Light: Anselmo Su\u00e1rez y Romero's Francisco","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654545","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":13249,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anjali Arondekar"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd722493-c77e-31c1-aa8c-2e6c223e3bc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading (Other) Wise: Transgressing the Rhetoric of Colonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550328","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT BARNETT"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23615067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14648172"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607494420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-242001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bc634aa-75a7-32bd-915a-af3d4b9a9596"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23615067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"innerasia"}],"isPartOf":"Inner Asia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Tsogt Taij\" and the Disappearance of the Overlord: Triangular Relations in Three Inner Asian Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23615067","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":17132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Three major history films were produced in Mongolia and Tibet in the socialist era that dealt with the role of earlier Chinese dynasties in those areas. Two of the films \u2014 Tsogt Taij (1945) and Budala gong mishi (1989) \u2014 portray events in Tibet in the seventeenth century and include portrayals of the Fifth Dalai Lama and the Mongolian leader, Gushri Khan. The third film, Mandukhai setsen khatun (1989), deals with fifteenth century history in Mongolia and the effort to maintain national unity. The three films were produced during brief periods of relative relaxation in socialist ideology, and each reflected the considerable influence of local historians and intellectuals in the views they presented of local history, producing epic accounts of nationalist heroes or heroines and of their efforts to defend or build up the nation or nationality against powerful foreign enemies. The films seem to have been understood locally at the time or later as criticising a colonising power or occupier, but in fact the stories of each film focus on internal or neighbouring enemies who from an outside perspective appear less significant. The paper discusses the relative absence of the external enemy from these films and analyses the forms of emotional characterisation used to mark the different ethnic and political groups portrayed in the films. This analysis suggests that views held by subaltern communities towards other dominated groups or minorities, often dismissed as forms of erroneous displacement, deserve serious consideration as reflections of complex, emic understandings of political relations and priorities in colonial-type conditions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alurista"],"datePublished":"1981-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21b0308d-58bc-389b-83cf-39bd20f5af76"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cultural Nationalism and Xicano Literature during the Decade of 1965-1975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467145","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":5256,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine Sugg"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f03ac8aa-2a16-3b24-8a42-967596d585d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"170","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-170","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ultimate Rebellion: Chicana Narratives of Sexuality and Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338579","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":12396,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[78146,78191]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benita Parry"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03051498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b84aeda6-eb11-3cdf-bb29-02aeac0d4c73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43973680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfoliterevi"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Literary Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Problems in Current Theories of Colonial Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43973680","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":15019,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[21618,21663]],"Locations in B":[[88182,88235]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hwa Yol Jung","Petee Jung"],"datePublished":"1977-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29789883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ede58ec-de1c-3ecc-914f-2e4f1b85befd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29789883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"REVOLUTIONARY DIALECTICS: MAO TSE-TUNG AND MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29789883","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":16413,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Albert Memmi","Thomas Cassirer","G. Michael Twomey"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de8d638d-cf8a-3000-a352-f32d689747da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25088315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Impossible Life of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088315","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11711,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[610360,610443]],"Locations in B":[[5169,5256]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey S. Ahlman"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.66","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c44e603-4322-350e-8257-586f9db5c40c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.66"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Algerian Question in Nkrumah's Ghana, 1958\u20131960: Debating \u201cViolence\u201d and \u201cNonviolence\u201d in African Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.66","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":8910,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In recent years, historians and other scholars have greatly expanded how they approach the study of African decolonization. This article builds upon this growing scholarship by exploring the political and intellectual debates surrounding the use of \u201cviolence\u201d in decolonization. Taking Kwame Nkrumah's Ghana as its setting, it explores the ways in which the armed struggle of the Algerian Revolution (1954\u20131962) helped transform African perceptions of the political and social processes of decolonization in the late 1950s and early 1960s, as well as the moral ambiguities surrounding them. It shows how the Algerian presence in the Ghanaian capital of Accra competed with and transformed Nkrumah's own interpretations of decolonization and the possibilities of a pan-African world created through \u201cnonviolent Positive Action.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Perry Mars"],"datePublished":"1975-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf4ecbef-077a-354d-ad9d-5c1f11779fba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NATURE OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861557","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Katherine Fierlbeck"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3232205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ca32085-311a-38f3-a0ea-2016f639d0f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3232205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Ambivalent Potential of Cultural Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3232205","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Despite the overwhelming prevalence of democratic ideals in contemporary political relations throughout the world, a potent ideological challenge to liberal democratic norms is the recent claim that \"differential\" rights are essential to foster and protect the identity of individual rights within culturally distinct groups. This article examines the claim that cultural identity confers sufficient normative force upon which to base distinct political rights for specific groups. In what, precisely, does the normative force of \"cultural identity\" lie? The article challenges the claims that individuals' sense of personal identity can only arise through a \"secure cultural context\"; that a passive sense of group identity is a \"primary good\" that equals or even precedes the importance of universal human rights; and that this \"politics of inclusion\" based upon differential rights for different groups will lead to greater equality and tolerance within the larger political community. \/\/\/ On se doit de constater la tr\u00e9s grande pr\u00e9pond\u00e9rance des id\u00e9aux d\u00e9mocratiques dans les relations politiques contemporaines dans le monde. Toutefois, la th\u00e8se selon laquelle les droits \u00e0 g\u00e9om\u00e9trie variable sont essentiels pour prot\u00e9ger et promouvoir l'identit\u00e9 des droits individuels \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de groupes culturellement distincts, s'est impos\u00e9e comme un puissant d\u00e9fi id\u00e9ologique lanc\u00e9 aux normes d\u00e9mocratiques et lib\u00e9rales. Cet article cherche \u00e0 v\u00e9rifier si l'identit\u00e9 culturelle conf\u00e8re suffisament de force normative pour l\u00e9gitimer l'attribution de droits politiques distincts \u00e0 des groupes sp\u00e9cifiques. En quoi au juste consiste la force normative de l'identit\u00e9 culturelle? L'argumentation remet en question les id\u00e9es suivantes: l'\u00e9mergence d'un sens de l'identit\u00e9 personnelle chez les individus n'est possible qu'\u00e0 travers un <>; un sens passif de l'identit\u00e9 de groupe est tout aussi sinon plus importante que les droits humains universels; la <> bas\u00e9e sur des droits \u00e0 g\u00e9om\u00e9trie variable pour des groupes diff\u00e9rents m\u00e8nera \u00e0 plus de tol\u00e9rance et d'\u00e9galit\u00e9 au sein de la communaut\u00e9 politique \u00e9largie.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Biray Kolluo\u1e21lu K\u0131rl\u0131"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472814","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ee9fb07-d1d1-30bf-a08b-9d4f1f6e93e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472814"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"60","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Forgetting the Smyrna Fire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472814","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dubravka Juraga"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3200744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd01d798-18aa-3d4c-8f06-522abc6a32af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3200744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Miroslav Krleza's \"Zastave\": Socialism, Yugoslavia, and the Historical Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3200744","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":9438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edwin Jones"],"datePublished":"1975-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2a1c54c-0160-3fae-973c-a7166a98c2d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"239","pagination":"pp. 239-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TENDENCIES AND CHANGE IN CARIBBEAN ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEMS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861558","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8657,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna M. Agathangelou","Dana M. Olwan","Tamara Lea Spira","Heather M. Turcotte"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dfa96ad5-ddec-3941-9823-4f1063d0ced5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43860818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sexual Divestments from Empire: Women's Studies, Institutional Feelings, and the \"Odious\" Machine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43860818","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article provides a critical genealogy of the shifts and transformations in the field of women's studies amid a longer trajectory of radicals and freedom fighters who have consistently challenged US empire and the co-opted elements of academic institutionalization. Conjoining archives of anti-colonial and Black feminist movements of the 1960s and '70s with contemporary debates in feminist theory, the article argues that critiques of sexual empire that were often located within women's studies have long laid the foundations for the most radical visions of sexual and gender revolution\u2014movements generated through global militant anti-imperialist, anti-colonial, anticapitalist, Black, and antiracist struggles of the mid-to-late-twentieth century. And yet, it is precisely such analyses and visions that have been consistently disciplined, devalued, and silenced within the academy, particularly through the institutionalization of women's studies. This collective article challenges the institutional amnesia that comes with problematic promises of inclusion. It is simultaneously attentive to the corporeal effects of these histories on global landscapes and lives. It demystifies the violence and social stratifications inherent in the institutionalizations of the field. In so doing it lays bare the sharp contradiction between the logics of war and profitmaking and the collective justice projects of decolonization, freedom, and revolution that compel our deepest dreams and desires for just futures.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjxq0.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789462981690"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4d0e84f-3dd7-31b1-be76-3edc41f2e9ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1zkjxq0.13"}],"isPartOf":"Global Diffusion of Protest","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"260","pageStart":"233","pagination":"233-260","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1zkjxq0.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["venezuela","protests","porta donatella","bosnia","wola venezuelan","gezi park","della porta donatella","politics","democracy","social"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Balthaser"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.7381040.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ca85935-0508-3690-bf8d-012c8c1c6139"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3998\/mpub.7381040.11"}],"isPartOf":"Anti-Imperialist Modernism","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"286","pageStart":"253","pagination":"253-286","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.7381040.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14872,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["archie phinney","clifford odets","langston hughes","black jacobins","american","durham duke","western worker","denning cultural","popular front","indian"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice St. Pierre"],"datePublished":"1978-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861706","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdebf7b5-7055-3e19-bdd2-d8af064781e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861706"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE 1938 JAMAICA DISTURBANCES. A PORTRAIT OF MASS REACTION AGAINST COLONIALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861706","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":12267,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHIRLEY WILLIAMS"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41375851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09580433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bad915c9-e2d4-3e74-82f4-5993c63cfa32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41375851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rsaj"}],"isPartOf":"RSA Journal","issueNumber":"5429","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The agony of transition: from Communism to Democracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41375851","volumeNumber":"140","wordCount":9317,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patti M. Marxsen","Patti M. Marxen"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607191198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0d54fea-12bc-3bb3-9183-b603d5a52199"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","History","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Map Within: Place, Displacement, and the Long Shadow of History in the Work of Edwidge Danticat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715295","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Slyomovics"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"899cf5b4-009f-3af3-b50f-5f51a279fda2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43305682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Algerian Women's \"B\u016bq\u0101lah\" Poetry: Oral Literature, Cultural Politics, and Anti-Colonial Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43305682","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"B\u016bq\u0101lah refers both to a ceramic pitcher as well as to poems ritually embedded in the traditional, favorite, divinatory pastime associated with women city dwellers of specific Algerian towns such as Blida, Cherchell, Tlemcen, Constantine, and Algiers. This essay considers the shift from orality to a written archive of French and Algerian collections of b\u016bq\u0101lah poems by focusing on analyses of Algerian Arabic oral literature as an expression of feminine cultural protest and resistance to the domination of language policies under French colonialism. What are the ways in which an intimate ritual\u2014one linked to orality, the divinatory, women's poesis, and the Algerian Arabic dialect\u2014begins to carry political meanings during the War of Independence and in post-1962 independent Algeria? Contributing to the circulation and creation of new meanings, forms, and venues for b\u016bq\u0101lah poetry are Algerian radio and television broadcasts, Internet postings, and the publication of the 1962 French poem \"Boqala\" by Djamila Amrane.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marco Demichelis"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.5.1.0047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20555601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"939666847"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016268510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1845aff0-be1d-30b0-b3f3-19f10401a672"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/reorient.5.1.0047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reorient"}],"isPartOf":"ReOrient","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Was Egyptian Islamic Revivalism really Counter-Hegemonic? Sayyid Qutb and the Problem of Islamic Occidentalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.5.1.0047","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Following the great fragmentation in the Arab world today, as well as the problematic de-colonization phase, it would be relevant to investigate whether Arab-Islamic Egyptian revivalism has been truly capable of shaping a counter-hegemonic narrative against Western colonialism and post-colonialism in the twentieth century. Can we consider Sayyid Qutb's political and religious analysis, as well as his formative background, a concrete counter-hegemonic narrative? Was the narrative of Rashid Rida and Hasan al-Banna solidly based on religious Islamic concepts and meanings? The main aim of this article is to reconsider the contemporary understanding of Islamic Egyptian thought in relation to Buruma and Margalit's proposed Occidentalism methodology, on the one hand, and the hegemonic\u2013counter-hegemonic debate, on the other.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Lane"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20c3ce3b-75be-315d-bdae-bb5834ff6369"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Savage Ecstasy\": Colonialism and the Death Drive","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389447","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REX NETTLEFORD"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27856493","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6065868-f9fa-3106-a429-305a2ea75eb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27856493"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":74.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MANLEY AND THE POLITICS OF JAMAICA n\u0335 Towards an analysis of political change in Jamaica 1938-1968","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27856493","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":39184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Floyd McKissick"],"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3479516","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42bcecf6-5c3c-3ba4-8fda-356d8adaacda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3479516"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"550","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-550","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3479516","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":1736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eunice N. Sahle"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb388f91-23e0-3241-abcf-6b8e51e8497b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon and Geographies of Political Violence in the Context of Democracy in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0045","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9412,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[120670,120723],[326688,326790]],"Locations in B":[[9196,9249],[42489,42642]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edmund Burke III"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8648a424-dd4d-38fa-80c9-4a6bb857e1f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon's \"The Wretched of the Earth\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024388","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":5251,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[605028,605116]],"Locations in B":[[11785,11872]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred Zack-Williams"],"datePublished":"1995-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f318109-2228-3347-91ae-76eb6a7dfd3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political 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\ufee3\ufed4\ufef4\ufea0\ufef2"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/521605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d10fed23-a461-325e-b26b-c0a1d1b67de8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/521605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"17","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied 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\u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \u060c \u0628\u064a\u0646\u0645\u0627 \u062a\u0648\u062c\u0647 \u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0642\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0646\u0642\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0644\u0637\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0633\u0627\u062f\u0660","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary T. Marx","James L. Wood"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2946051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcc16287-5b1b-3280-b097-57fcd63dda2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2946051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":66.0,"pageEnd":"428","pageStart":"363","pagination":"pp. 363-428","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strands of Theory and Research in Collective Behavior","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2946051","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":35311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tonya Foster","John Keene"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24879040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07433204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313615"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"197e9adf-48de-352b-9f00-9c4102894409"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24879040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bomb"}],"isPartOf":"BOMB","issueNumber":"133","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"New Art Publications","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Art & Art History","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tonya Foster and John Keene","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24879040","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juanita Heredia"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44112896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09cf18fc-d91b-3da3-98e7-0b8ae638a289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44112896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Migrating to the City: Negotiating Gender and Race in Marie Arana's \"Lima Nights\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44112896","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":7934,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Peruvian-American Marie Arana's second novel Lima Nights (2008) in which she represents Amazonian indigenous migrations to Lima, Peru during and after the Shining Path civil war years (1986-2006). As part of a generation of transnational US Latina authors in the post-2000 period, Arana recovers the image of the Amazonian migrant woman through a revision of gender and race relations in the diverse metropolis of Lima. Arana focuses on this central female figure in the novel to demonstrate how she survives in spite of racial discrimination and physical violence through sexual exploitation. By migrating across the neighborhoods of Lima, Arana further shows how this female migrant must negotiate her indigenous and gender identity in the process of making Lima, a place with a colonial legacy, a home for herself.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan A. Stone"],"datePublished":"1973-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017811X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2fcc63c-060a-37fb-84a4-95aa145446e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1340073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvardlawreview"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Law Review","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"1364","pageStart":"1352","pagination":"pp. 1352-1364","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The Harvard Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Axiology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1340073","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":5736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darren Thiel"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"oclc","value":"137349448"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb7b4451-d036-3ca7-8798-5ac58567a805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24431733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"412","pagination":"pp. 412-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Builders, bodies and bifurcations: How London construction workers 'learn to labour'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24431733","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines how the ideas about working-class culture presented in Paul Willis's classic monograph (1977) Learning to Labour apply or do not apply to the data generated by an ethnographic analysis of a London construction site that I conducted in 2003\/4. While Learning to Labour had significant relevance to understanding the class-bound masculine cultures of the construction workers, because building work has a pre-industrial history and a post-industrial contemporary, the claim that working-class masculinity is driven predominately by the features of industrial work life is found wanting. Rather than being bound exclusively to industrial work, the exigencies of working-class-bound masculinity could be found in the builders' problematic and attenuated relationships with the modern state and its legal and moral injunctions. Such relationships to the modern state illuminate why fundamental features of working-class masculine culture are reproduced in a post-industrial global London by both migrant and more indigenous workers, and thus also illustrate part of the reason why class and ethnic inequality persist in the contemporary UK.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cindy Lacom"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82853e6e-030d-3e18-9a79-303355d50ffa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4316928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revising the Subject: Disability as \"Third Dimension\" in \"Clear Light of Day and You Have Come Back\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4316928","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7400,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"When considering the work of post-colonial scholars, it becomes apparent that missing from the list of the oppressed and marginalized are those who are doubly colonized with physical and mental disabilities. If, as Frantz Fanon has argued, Othering occurs on the basis of physical and verbal difference, then that colonized subject who is Other in terms of body and voice is made doubly Other by means of her disability. In this paper, I examine the social framing and ideological work of disabled characters in two texts, Anita Desai's Clear Light of Day and Fatima Gallaire-Bourega's You Have Come Back. Using these texts' main characters-Baba, who is autistic (Desai), and the Madwoman and the Cripple (Gallaire-Bourega)-I argue that the incorporation of a disability studies perspective in post-colonial and feminist critiques can enrich our understanding of the dialectic between colonizer and colonized and refigure our consideration of hybridity. Though Desai and Gallaire-Bourega resist simple \"answers\" to the question of how gender intersects with disability in post-colonial worlds, both offer provocative instances of the transgressive potential of \"different\" bodies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Butterworth"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27558540","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87567555"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627250"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006212200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7fb78975-9154-32d8-ae98-b462947664bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27558540"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeteaching"}],"isPartOf":"College Teaching","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Understanding and Preserving Traditional Learning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27558540","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":3864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mumia Abu-Jamal"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9209dde-5d3e-3b0a-85d0-8a017feaccb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE FICTIVE REALISM OF JOHN EDGAR WIDEMAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068777","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Howard Adelman"],"datePublished":"2003-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40109323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07075332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235464"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f5ac7c0-6567-3834-ac79-eea279782192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40109323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The International History Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"374","pageStart":"357","pagination":"pp. 357-374","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bystanders to Genocide in Rwanda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40109323","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toral Jatin Gajarawala"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54663119"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212165"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"172febc4-a2d8-34c4-bf80-4ca6f1cac2b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"308","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-308","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Journal of Narrative Theory","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fictional Murder and Other Descriptive Deaths: V.S. Naipaul's \"Guerrillas\" and the Problem of Postcolonial Description","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484774","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7485,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[129303,129502],[144969,145195],[145247,145322]],"Locations in B":[[8125,8323],[8407,8637],[8684,8759]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerardo Marti"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49890280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b817524-b489-3a84-aaa3-15c0f8ffc2dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40664695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsciestudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"The Religious Racial Integration of African Americans into Diverse Churches<\/strong>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40664695","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11328,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[64733,64779]],"abstract":"Recent scholarship asserts that members of racial groups can transcend their ethnic differences, but other research asserts that ethnoracial identities must be reinforced in order to participate in multiracial churches. Analysis of field notes and interview data from a large, black-white Protestant congregation shows that while the core membership of African Americans come specifically for its ethnic and racial diversity, they also look for markers that affirm a distinctive African-American experience. Ethnic reinforcement attracts highly race-conscious participants who eventually move toward processes of ethnic transcendence and congregational integration. The value for researchers is that distinguishing ethnically transcendent and ethnically reinforcing processes encourages the discovery of subtle, racially specific, and continually reinforced affinities that would otherwise remain hidden in seemingly ethnically transcendent settings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Liu Kang"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303642","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303642"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Is There an Alternative to (Capitalist) Globalization? The Debate about Modernity in China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303642","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":10841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. Michael Henry"],"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"794b0cbc-e4e8-31c1-b950-4029a33a273a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NOTION OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE AND ITS RELEVANCE TO EX-COLONIAL STATES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865017","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper chronicles the notion of economic development in history expatiating the meanings endowed to the concept by the classical economists, Marx, and economists and policy makers engaged in development of the regions of recent settlement and exploitation of physical and human resources in the colonies. The paper attempts to explain why economic development through growth as a policy objective was achieved in Western Europe, Japan and the regions of recent settlement, but why, so far, efforts to achieve this objective in ex-colonial states have foundered. Foucus is given to selected ex-colonial states of the Caribbean. Ce papier enregistre l'id\u00e9e du d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique dans l'histoire, indiquant les sens dot\u00e9s au concept par les \u00e9conomistes classiques, Marx, et les \u00e9conomists et politiques occup\u00e9s dans le d\u00e9veloppement des r\u00e9gions r\u00e9cemment \u00e9tablies et l'exploitation des ressources physiques et humaines dans les colonies. Le papier tente d'expliquer pourquoi le d\u00e9veloppement \u00e9conomique par l'augmentation comme objectif politique \u00e9tait realis\u00e9 en Europe Occidentale, au Japon et dans les r\u00e9gions recemment \u00e9tablies, mais pourquoi, jusqu'\u00e0 maintenant, se sont effondr\u00e9s les efforts de r\u00e9aliser cet objectif dans les \u00e9tas ex-coloniaux. L'attention est concentr\u00e9e sur des \u00e9tats ex-coloniaux des Cara\u00efbes. Este trabajo documenta el tema del desarrollo econ\u00f3mico desde una perspectiva hist\u00f3rica. Pasa por los significados dados por los economistas tradicionales al concepto, Marx, los economistas y hacedores de pol\u00edtica involucrados en el desarrollo de las regiones de asentamiento reciente y la explotaci\u00f3n de recursos f\u00edsicos y humanos en las colonias. Intenta explicar c\u00f3mo se logr\u00f3 el desarrollo econ\u00f3mica a partir del crecimiento como objectivo pol\u00edtico en la Europa occidental, Jap\u00f3n y las regiones donde ha habido asentamientos recientes y por qu\u00e9 a pesar de esto, han fracasado los esfuerzos de los estados ex-coloniales. Se enfocan ciertos estados ex-coloniales del Caribe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Slyomovics"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.10.1.15","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d77484a4-30d0-3e96-97ce-2f04f4d40cba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.10.1.15"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cEvery Slight Movement of the People\u2026 is Everything\u201d: Sondra Hale and Sudanese Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmiddeastwomstud.10.1.15","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8502,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[605028,605116]],"Locations in B":[[16765,16852]],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay traces the intertwined topics of collaboration and multisited ethnography in the writings of anthropologist Sondra Hale on Sudanese artists and art. Hale's trajectories and movements in and out of Sudan traverse parallel, sometimes overlapping tracks with the artists she studied, championed, and curated. Studying Sudan and its artists may have begun in Khartoum during Hale's first three-year period there from 1961 to 1964; however, this essay analyzes Hale's subsequent writings based on the places where she encountered artists, residing abroad and in exile, in Cairo, Asmara, Addis Ababa, Oxford, the Hales' Los Angeles home, as well as in American venues for meetings of the Sudan Studies Association.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOSEPH RUANE","JENNIFER TODD"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a89bafab-79b2-3b6a-ba09-c6a4b451f8e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23999132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Roots of Intense Ethnic Conflict may not in fact be Ethnic: Categories, Communities and Path Dependence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999132","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":10371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Deux approches th\u00e9oriques de l'ethnicit\u00e9 et du conflit ethnique sont ici citiqu\u00e9es. L'une met l'accent sur l'intense solidarit\u00e9 engendr\u00e9e par le lien ethnique consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme un lien affectif profond et quasi falmilial; l'autre, tout au contraire, souligne la contingence situationnelle du sentiment ethnique et le caract\u00e8re incertain du \u00ab groupisme \u00bb ethnique. La perspective choisie est de voir l'ethnicit\u00e9 comme l'un des facteurs, nombreux, dont le croisement formera un syst\u00e8me auto-reproductif engendrant opposition communautaire et conflit ethnique. This article criticizes two theoretical approaches to ethnicity and ethnic conflict. One emphasizes the intense solidarity generated by the ethnic bond and explains this in terms of a deep, quasi-kin feeling. The other emphasizes the contingency and situatedness of ethnic feeling and the fluctuating character of ethnic \"groupness\". We adopt an alternative strategy, locating ethnicity as one factor among many, which may form a path-dependent selfreproductive system generating communal opposition and ethnic conflict. Zwei theoretische Ans\u00e4tze des Ethnischen und des ethnischen Konflikts werden hier kritisch beleuchtet. Der erste betont die starke Solidarit\u00e4tsbewegung, die durch den ethnischen Bezug entsteht, mit tiefen zwischenmenschlichen, fast famili\u00e4ren Beziehungen. Der andere, im Gegenteil, unterstreicht das situationsbezogene Auftreten des ethnischen Gef\u00fchls und den ungewissen Ausgang einer ethnischen Gruppenwirkung. Das Ethnische wird hier als einer der zahlreichen Faktoren betrachtet, deren Kreuzung zu einem sich selbst reproduzierbaren System von gemeinschaftlicher Abwehrhaltung une etnischem Konflikt f\u00fchren wird.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cilas Kemedjio"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.87","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6f19e9a-948a-31f3-b147-60c25a856dbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.87"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire's Letter to Maurice Thorez<\/em>: The Practice of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.1.87","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11768,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire's Letter to Maurice Thorez is sad a commentary on the controversial and uneasy relationship between the Marxist Internationalist Left and Third-world anticolonial activists. Written shortly after the Second Congress of Black Writers and Intellectuals, the Letter forcefully reintroduces race and the colonial question at the heart of battles that were being waged mainly along ideological lines. C\u00e9saire articulates the repudiation of Communist paternalism on the imperative, for colonized elites, to reclaim the historical initiative, therefore elevating the duty of responsibility as the ultimate test of decolonization. I contend, however, that this radical anticolonial stance ought to be nuanced by the pragmatism that characterized C\u00e9saire as the politician and chief advocate for departementalization. C\u00e9saire's resignation from the French Communist Party, against the background of the Algerian war against French domination, could also be defined as both a powerful \u201cdiscourse on colonialism\u201d as well as a political, intellectual, and ideological declaration of independence. The Letter, both a mirror and a vanguard call to action, deserves it rightful place in the glorious archives of men and women who stood up against colonial dehumanization, that is, who made this world more humane for both colonizers and colonized.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH OUTKA"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261824","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dff4325-d53d-335c-a03a-b762b29b2ca3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41261824"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Trauma and Temporal Hybridity in Arundhati Roy's \"The God of Small Things\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41261824","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARK A. TESSLER"],"datePublished":"1970-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20671213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60652588"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215272"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df03471d-8e5b-3c12-b5a5-15aeca8ecb92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20671213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"World Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"World Affairs Institute","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A CULTURAL BASIS FOR ARAB-ISRAELI ACCOMMODATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20671213","volumeNumber":"133","wordCount":8858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabrielle Cody"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492771","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef23751f-3621-34aa-b7d1-e6c9e51a0121"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4492771"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4492771","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":1284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pearl T. Robinson"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c21fcea2-5196-3769-8532-a353f8453049"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democratization: Understanding the Relationship between Regime Change and the Culture of Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525113","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick E. Ollawa"],"datePublished":"1983-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47a8fb52-afd9-3b02-9616-9cc8819d65f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"The Political Economy of Development: A Theoretical Reconsideration of Some Unresolved Issues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524614","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":15945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Boychuk"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231325","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"62c85a48-e439-3468-b59e-99e1f315ef9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231325"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1116","pageStart":"1115","pagination":"pp. 1115-1116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231325","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald J. McCormack"],"datePublished":"1973-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2129075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223816"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38309773"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34dc8d4b-a042-39d5-ac4a-aa8ff5649c73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2129075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Politics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"409","pageStart":"386","pagination":"pp. 386-409","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Stokely Carmichael and Pan-Africanism: Back to Black Power","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2129075","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8d12.3","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781607328131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6e34402-3e88-3bf6-a6b9-556e52f5d086"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwh8d12.3"}],"isPartOf":"Historicizing Fear","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cI Want to Get Rid of My Fear\u201d:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8d12.3","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This edited volume examines the use of fear and \u201cOthering.\u201d Certainly, we\u2019ll show how fear is used within contemporary political events. But this book goes deeper, searching many historical cultures and societies. We believe historians are crucial to the understanding today of how fear is used as a tool. This volume vigorously tackles how the \u201cOther\u201d is defined, how fear of the Other is reinforced and spread, and its use for political gain.Throughout this volume, the reader will get a clear view of how individuals and groups are oppressed and marginalized. When we look at the past, we can","subTitle":"An Introduction","keyphrase":["brexit","othering","racial","aldama","immigrants","nigel farage","brexit vote","violence","red scare","racist"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ABD-L HAKIMU IBN ALKALIMAT","GERALD McWORTER"],"datePublished":"1969-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97c058f0-a08a-3a03-8847-99718a51c247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41202826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE IDEOLOGY OF BLACK SOCIAL SCIENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202826","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5110,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Goffredo Diana","John Beverley","Roberto Fern\u00e1ndez Retamar"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff9314eb-1e22-37b3-a484-678b063506ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"433","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-433","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"These Are the Times We Have to Live in: An Interview with Roberto Fern\u00e1ndez Retamar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343929","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11410,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond B. Craib"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2692056","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d392055f-b135-39ce-985c-f333c3d5e8c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2692056"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cartography and Power in the Conquest and Creation of New Spain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2692056","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With the so-called linguistic turn, historians have begun to study the ways in which a multitude of cultural forms are imbricated in the colonial and imperial project. In analyzing the infinite ways in which power is exercised and manifested, historians are turning a critical eye toward a myriad of cultural productions for a better understanding of how culture, politics, and power work in concert. One example is the increasing scrutiny given to geographical conceptions and representations. In Latin American colonial studies, a number of recent works have analyzed the ways in which deep, culturally rooted structures of spatial perception and representation have influenced the colonial process. This essay attempts to bring a number of those works into meaningful dialogue with one another with respect to the cultural and political facets of cartography. It also introduces work by scholars studying other regions of the world that may push the field farther and the work of the \"new cultural cartographers\" who have problematized traditional notions about the mimetic quality of maps and their presumed objectivity. In sum, this essay surveys recent literature pertaining to colonial cartography in Latin America, analyzes a number of comparative and theoretical studies that may broaden future research, and suggests that cartography and maps offer a fruitful avenue for further study and analysis of colonialism, imperialism, and state formation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tina Grandinetti"],"datePublished":"2015-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569445","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbc0dd3c-592b-3055-be00-9499ccdaa338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569445"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Palestinian Middle Class in Rawabi: Depoliticizing the Occupation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569445","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9430,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[121441,121651]],"Locations in B":[[3869,4047]],"abstract":"This article examines the neoliberal promotion of the idea of a Palestinian \"middle class\" that can lead to peace by transcending perceived Arab backwardness or irrationality through market logic and capitalist reasoning. The Palestinian city of Rawabi is used as a case study, as it is marketed as a middle-class city built with support from both Israeli and Arab businesses and as a project that will \"eliminate radicals on both sides.\" An analysis of the marketing rhetoric of Rawabi provides insight into the political and cultural subjectivities being articulated by this new middle class. Ultimately, while the middle-class ethos being cultivated by Rawabi views neoliberal capitalism and consumerism as a sign of modernity and a new form of resistance, it operates to depoliticize economic development under occupation, preclude alternative models for \"resistance\" economies, and make the occupation less costly, or even profitable, to Israeli and Palestinian elite.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Craven"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360277","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1360277"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Abstract Expressionism and Third World Art: A Post-Colonial Approach to 'American' Art","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1360277","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":19228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon Cowans"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.69.2.0034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07424671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50408878"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216130"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5015a7d1-63af-3267-b015-d49a76e6ab88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/jfilmvideo.69.2.0034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jfilmvideo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Film and Video","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Ethnic-Avenger Films, 1971\u201373: A Moment in the Decolonization of American Film","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.69.2.0034","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":12474,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID E. WHISNANT"],"datePublished":"1973-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41177876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00381861"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adb620f2-9c27-3717-9483-cdbdf36b51d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41177876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soundings"}],"isPartOf":"Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ETHNICITY AND THE RECOVERY OF REGIONAL IDENTITY IN APPALACHIA: Thoughts Upon Entering the Zone of Occult Instability","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41177876","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":6030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcelo Hoffman"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44647300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb078498-e728-3ee2-81da-79421358e82e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44647300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"149","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sources of Anxiety About the Party in Radical Political Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44647300","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":9653,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[278582,278704]],"Locations in B":[[11833,11960]],"abstract":"New protest movements have recently occasioned debates about the party form on the left. Jodi Dean contributes to these debates through her theorisation of the party as an organisation for making the egalitarian impulses of the crowd durable. In this endeavour, Dean acknowledges anxiety about the party form on the left, yet she dilutes its complexity through recourse to generalities and abstractions. This article seeks to reclaim the complexity of anxiety about the party form on the left through the reflections of three major thinkers in radical political theory: Frantz Fanon, Michel Foucault and Alain Badiou. These thinkers suggest that anxiety about the party can spring from highly variegated sources and lend itself to equally variegated positions. These sources and positions capture the complexity of sources of anxiety about the party on the left. They also enable us to take stock of the forms of the betrayal of radical politics by the party.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rachel Holmes"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc7df174-9b7a-3894-bf3a-e5cc2b2e068c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4065945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Selling Sex for a Living","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4065945","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHARLES A. WATKINS"],"datePublished":"1971-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f39cee9a-05af-3058-9483-e7b450c06fb5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41206324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"SIMPLE: THE ALTER EGO OF LANGSTON HUGHES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41206324","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5958,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[146933,147014]],"Locations in B":[[10757,10839]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua Holst"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24574856","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43f1bf1b-0350-331e-ab74-19add6ad04ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24574856"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonial Histories and Decolonial Dreams in the Ecuadorean Amazon: Natural Resources and the Politics of Post-Neoliberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24574856","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10625,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[339346,339447]],"Locations in B":[[9739,9840]],"abstract":"The political changes sweeping Latin America have inspired scholars to declare a \"post-neoliberal\" era, some even suggesting a potential reversal of colonialism. Despite progressive political discourse in Ecuador, the indigenous movement continues to resist the state. Underlying the conflict between the indigenous and the state is a long-standing conflict between economic growth and the environment. Since Ecuador's economy relies on Amazonian natural resources, the post-neoliberal Ecuadorean state requires colonial advances into indigenous territory to fund its progressive social programs. The opposite of colonialism is autonomy, which in the right hands can represent a true development alternative. Los cambios pol\u00edticos arrasando Am\u00e9rica Latina han inspirado a los acad\u00e9micos a declarar una era \"posneoliberal,\" algunos incluso sugiriendo una inversi\u00f3n potencial de colonialismo. A pesar del discurso pol\u00edtico progresista en el Ecuador, el movimiento ind\u00edgena contin\u00faa resistiendo el Estado. Detr\u00e1s del conflicto entre los ind\u00edgenas y el Estado es un conflicto antiguo entre el crecimiento econ\u00f3mico y el medio ambiente. Como la econom\u00eda de Ecuador se basa en los recursos naturales de la Amazon\u00eda, el Estado ecuatoriano posneoliberal requiere avances coloniales en territorio ind\u00edgena para financiar sus programas sociales progresistas. Lo contrario del colonialismo es la autonom\u00eda, que en las manos adecuadas puede representar una verdadera alternativa de desarrollo.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Craig Jenkins"],"datePublished":"1982-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779117","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d30d148d-53e7-39b0-89f3-22ffbd5ae1d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2779117"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"514","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-514","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Why do Peasants Rebel? Structural and Historical Theories of Modern Peasant Rebellions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2779117","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":12153,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent analyses of the sources of 20th-century peasant rebellions have centered on two basic theories: a structural theory of class relations that points to the greater political volatility of smallholder tenancy and a historical theory pointing to the strength of traditional village institutions in the midst of the increasing economic insecurity of the peasantry brought about by the expansion of the market economy; increased exactions by landowners and the state, and the pressure of rapid population growth. These theories are evaluated against the experience of the large-scale rebellions that occurred throughout the Russian Empire in 1905-7. Although the historical record provides preliminary support for both theories, regression analysis of the links between provincial socioeconomic patterns and the incidence of the rebellions disconfirms the structural theory and corroborates the basic propositions of the historical theory. Peasants rebel because of threats to their access to an economic subsistence, not because of the particular form of class relations in which they are enmeshed.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ugo Mattei"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/gls.2003.10.1.383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800727"},{"name":"oclc","value":"32590928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-215650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ea2245c-5294-36c0-bc06-77d9a2d7509a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/gls.2003.10.1.383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indjglolegstu"}],"isPartOf":"Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Theory of Imperial Law: A Study on U.S. Hegemony and the Latin Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/gls.2003.10.1.383","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":30721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter ANYANG' NYONG'O"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42675066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0032342X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564675074"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17dd3ae9-75a9-3e3c-b792-f7c355731b22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42675066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polietra"}],"isPartOf":"Politique \u00e9trang\u00e8re","issueNumber":"3","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"601","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Institut Fran\u00e7ais des Relations Internationales","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Instabilit\u00e9 politique et perspectives de d\u00e9mocratie en Afrique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42675066","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":6626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Le r\u00e9tablissement de la d\u00e9mocratie et la d\u00e9fense des institutions d\u00e9mocratiques dans les processus politiques en Afrique sont tr\u00e8s importants \u00e0 la fois pour la stabilit\u00e9 et le d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique aujourd'hui. De ces deux conditions d\u00e9pend, en effet, l'existence de la responsabilit\u00e9 politique dans l'exercice du pouvoir, principale garante de l'emploi appropri\u00e9 des ressources disponibles pour am\u00e9liorer la qualit\u00e9 de la vie. On verra dans cet article que, si elles contr\u00f4lent des ressources consid\u00e9rables et jouent un r\u00f4le primordial dans la vie quotidienne des individus, les institutions publiques africaines, et notamment l'Etat, n'ont g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement pas eu \u00e0 r\u00e9pondre de leurs actes en raison de l'absence de toute responsabilit\u00e9. Il en est r\u00e9sult\u00e9 des conflits et des crises insolubles, souvent g\u00e9n\u00e9rateurs de coups d'Etat et d'une instabilit\u00e9 politique permanente. Certains mouvements populaires r\u00e9clament d'ores et d\u00e9j\u00e0 des formes de gouvernement d\u00e9mocratiques en r\u00e9action \u00e0 cette situation. Les tentatives des r\u00e9gimes politiques actuels en vue de leur suppression n'ont pas r\u00e9solu le probl\u00e8me ; au mieux, elles n'ont fait qu'accentuer l'instabilit\u00e9. Cet article souligne la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 de la d\u00e9mocratie en tant que condition sine qua non de la stabilit\u00e9, ainsi que du d\u00e9veloppement en Afrique. The restoration of democracy, and the defence of democratic institutions in the political processes in Africa is very important for both political stability and development in Africa to-day. On democracy and democratic institutions depend the presence of accountability in governance : with accountability comes the enhancement of proper use of developmental resources for the improvement of the quality of life. This essay argues that public institutions, including the state, while controlling substantial resources and while very critical in the daily lives of people, have been generally unanswerable for their actions due to lack of accountability. This has led to several unresolvable conflicts and crises in society which quite often lead to coups d'Etat and perpetual political instability. Already there are popular movements demanding democratic forms of government as a reaction to this state of affairs. Attempts by existing political regimes to suppress these movements have not solved the problem : if anything, they have merely led to more instability. This essay argues for the necessity of democracy as a condition sine qua non for political stability as well as development in Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Billing"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24672383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00787809"},{"name":"oclc","value":"297263330"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235318"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee427d3e-a8c7-3863-bdfd-da7f728081ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24672383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paideuma"}],"isPartOf":"Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Frobenius Institute","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"'WHAT WRITING HAS UPSET, WRITING MUST SET RIGHT': Colonialism and resistance in French Polynesia in Titaua Peu's novel \"Mutismes\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24672383","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9592,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Politically engaged indigenous French Polynesian writers have critiqued the ideological discourses used to legitimate the ongoing colonial administration of their country and its economic and political dependence on metropolitan France. However, their writings also convey the continuing appeal of French cultural norms, if not the assimilationist model of French citizenship for some colonised French Polynesians. Titaua Peu's best-selling 2003 first novel \"Mutismes\", dedicated to the early independence leader Pouvana'a a Oopa, presents a robust critique of the French colonial legacy in Polynesia. Nonetheless, \"Mutismes\" also thematises a degree of ambivalence towards the ideological discourses underpinning colonialism, as well as the familiar alternative of full political independence or an expansion of rights within a French political framework. Peu's counter-discourse emphasizes colonial wounds as well as the irreducibility of ethnic and cultural mixing in Polynesia, but does not finally choose between independence and the current model of autonomy under French tutelage, calling instead for a new politics that goes beyond the terms of the current political stalemate.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nick Shepherd"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae4c1fa7-76a7-3fc7-a616-055327c759ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4132877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics of Archaeology in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4132877","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":10446,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"Africa is various,\" writes Kwame Anthony Appiah in defiance of the Eurocentric myth of a unitary and unchanging continent. The politics of archaeology in Africa has been no less marked by variety. Yet, underlying this multiplicity of historical experience are a number of common themes and ideas. This review traces the engagement between archaeology and politics in Africa through an exploration of these common themes: first, as a colonial science in the context of European conquest and the subjugation of African people and territories; second, in the context of colonial administration and the growth of settler populations; third, in the context of resistance to colonialism and a developing African nationalism; and fourth, in a postcolonial context, among whose challenges have been the growing illicit trade in antiquities originating in Africa, and (in the past two decades) the decline in direct funding for departments of archaeology in universities and museums.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willfried F. FEUSER"],"datePublished":"1986-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01e1effe-e894-3591-8820-3f9696e289f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"137\/138","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Anomy and Beyond : Nigeria's Civil War in Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351085","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendell Bell","Robert V. Robinson"],"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2577796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f011c41-ee91-3057-afda-5e86a5e9b5a1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2577796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"European Melody, African Rhythm, or West Indian Harmony? Changing Cultural Identity among Leaders in a New State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2577796","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":13377,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[78244,78284]],"abstract":"We compare a re-study of the cultural identities of 83 leaders in 1974, twelve years after Jamaica's political independence, with a study completed just before independence in 1962. With a largely slave-descendant, black population, Jamaica has a mixed Creole culture with Anglo-European and African features combined with local modifications and innovations. Historically, cultural domination followed political domination, and the Anglo cultural features were most influential and positively correlated with social class. Over the last several years, however, the African elements have been asserted by a number of groups, including Black Power advocates. From 1962 to 1974, Jamaican leaders became dramatically less Anglo-European and more West Indian in their cultural identities. Also, a smaller increase in favorable attitudes toward the African heritage may have occurred among the leaders. In 1962, West Indian identified leaders were younger; light brown or medium brown in skin color; less well educated; political or labor leaders; relatively not wealthy; and favorably disposed toward political democracy, political independence, a large role of the state in the economy, and social equality. In 1974, only age maintained its correlation; others were smaller. Path models were constructed explaining 55 percent of the variance in West Indian cultural identity and 57 percent in attitudes toward the African heritage in 1962, but only 12 and 11 percent respectively in 1974. By 1974, there was a noticeable tendency for the two major political parties to polarize on the question of the African heritage.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40233152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e2af68f-a82e-3006-a1e5-1e764baf99aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40233152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Background Books: Africa Agonistes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40233152","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1407,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Boggs"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299573","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b50c56d-262f-3aa3-bec6-8c1d675402c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299573"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"494","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-494","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Queer Black Studies: An Annotated Bibliography, 1994-1999","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299573","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Smith"],"datePublished":"1973-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d26406c6-0f56-3845-bb31-3ec86e6de96c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/191062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"449","pageStart":"426","pagination":"pp. 426-449","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Idealism and People's War: Sartre on Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191062","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Soldatenko"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1052021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07429797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45913592"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af617272-6440-37f6-8344-7a27333917b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1052021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mexistudestumexi"}],"isPartOf":"Mexican Studies\/Estudios Mexicanos","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Quincentenary of an Erasure: From Caliban to Hispanic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1052021","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":16298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este ensayo traza la manera en que potencias dominantes Euro-americanas han construido poblaciones subalternas en \"Am\u00e9rica.\" Comenzando con Col\u00f3n, el autor utiliza el concepto de \"orientalismo\" para entender al sujeto subalterno. Termina con una discusi\u00f3n sobre la continuidad entre el \u00edndio definido por Col\u00f3n, Sep\u00falveda y Las Casas y la forma en que muchos intelectuales han analizado al m\u00e9xico-americano contempor\u00e1neo.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryne V. Lindberg"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26cf671f-16bd-3e19-8137-7744d8b4326c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mister Joans, to You: Readerly Surreality and Writerly Affiliation in Ted Joans, Tri-Continental Ex-Beatnik","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389883","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Beverley Ormerod","\u00c9douard Glissant"],"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1207746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc86cc1b-86e8-36e7-98f8-15bdfe7d2ce1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1207746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"360","pagination":"pp. 360-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Beyond \"N\u00e9gritude\": Some Aspects of the Work of \u00c9douard Glissant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1207746","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulla D. Berg","Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/683053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b650afa-6ead-3d19-bac0-7ed2d5ab2b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/683053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"654","pagination":"pp. 654-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racializing Affect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/683053","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":9214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Despite the recent boom in scholarly works on affect from a range of disciplines, scant attention has been paid to the intersection of affect and racialization processes, either historically or in contemporary contexts. This paper situates the diachronic articulation of race and affect\u2014particularly in terms of the historical everyday lives and the political, economic, and material contexts of populations from Latin American and Caribbean backgrounds\u2014in anthropological studies of \u201cracialization\u201d and the \u201caffective turn.\u201d Drawing on a broad reading of both scientific and popular constructions of affect among Latin American and US Latino populations, we propose the concept of \u201cracialized affect\u201d to account for the contradictions embedded in the study of race and affect, both separately and at their intersections. We highlight what we see as the two cornerstones of our theoretical intervention: on the one hand, a conception of \u201cliable affect\u201d results in a simplified, undermined subjectivity of populations racialized as Other, and, on the other hand, a conception of \u201cempowering affect\u201d perpetuates the privileged and nuanced affective subjectivity frequently reserved for whites in the United States and for self-styled \u201cwhitened\u201d elites in Latin America.","subTitle":"A Theoretical Proposition","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Chidester"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f258392e-aa43-3f84-a79d-5b5c90d9e83c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Mapping the Sacred in the Mother City: Religion and Urban Space in Cape Town, South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764040","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":17995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raja Khalidi","Sobhi Samour"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2011.xl.2.6","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"312df0a8-c259-3a40-aaac-4172cc98c4b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2011.xl.2.6"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neoliberalism as Liberation: The Statehood Program and the Remaking of the Palestinian National Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2011.xl.2.6","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Palestinian statehood-by-2011 program, framed through neoliberal institution building, redefines and diverts the Palestinian liberation struggle. Focusing on its economic aspects, and in particular the underlying neoliberal thought that goes beyond narrow economic policy applications, this essay argues that the program cannot succeed either as the midwife of independence or as a strategy for Palestinian economic development. Its weaknesses, the authors contend, derive not only from neoliberalism's inability to deliver sustainable and equitable economic growth worldwide, but also because neoliberal \"governance\" under occupation, however \"good,\" cannot substitute for the broader struggle for national rights nor ensure the Palestinian right to development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maritza Qui\u00f1ones Rivera"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a8d3fa2-fffe-34b7-b73b-e695bfb91b70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40338721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Trigue\u00f1ita to Afro-Puerto Rican: Intersections of the Racialized, Gendered, and Sexualized Body in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Mainland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40338721","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8547,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Opeyemi OLA"],"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0465ad6c-2109-3b73-8b77-5c8d25f819ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24350284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"101\/102","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The New Africa : Beyond the Nation-State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350284","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles R. Menzies"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559225"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d520a2d8-32b8-328a-a82d-0a598aa79ac0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44979821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"465","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-465","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"All that old crap\": realizing our indigenous utopian potential\u2014a response to Palmer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979821","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":5206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hedley Twidle"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23074942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7268ebe0-98f6-3df3-ba96-d3d8b7c2c0d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23074942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23074942","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom\u00e1s Wayne Edison"],"datePublished":"2000-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"761bce09-da35-36af-afd7-f75c148c3cb0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"HUMOR AND SATIRE: AMMUNITION IN CARLOS GUILLERMO WILSON'S RESISTANCE NOVEL, \"CHOMBO\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325011","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Z. Andrade"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55a88e8b-8b09-3e6e-ae63-50e845a17e66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"226","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-226","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Nigger of the Narcissist: History, Sexuality and Intertextuality in Maryse Cond\u00e9's Heremakhonon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931827","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7849,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[47094,47140]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fran\u00e7oise Lionnet"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781501723117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85325581-279e-3d2a-9aa9-9d1603c2f127"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.10"}],"isPartOf":"Autobiographical Voices","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"97","pagination":"97-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Autoethnography:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g5zp.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One need only glance at the table of contents of Hurston\u2019s autobiography to notice that it presents itself as a set of interactive thematictopoi<\/em>superimposed on a loosely chronological framework. The seemingly linear progression from \u201cMy Birthplace\u201d to \u201cLooking Things Over\u201d is more deceptive in that regard than truly indicative of a narrator\u2019s psychological development, quest for recognition, or journey from innocence to experience as traditionally represented in confessional autobiographies. The chapter titled \u201cSeeing the World as It Is,\u201d with which Hurston originally meant to conclude the book,\u00b9 is a philosophical essay on power, politics, and human relations on","subTitle":"The An-Archic Style of Dust Tracks on a Road","keyphrase":["hurston","dust tracks","zora neale","neale hurston","autoethnography","zora neale hurston","persephone","frantz fanon","culture","jonahs gourd"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL MCNEIL"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dab5c44c-1e24-33eb-b808-7a72b1b915ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24411797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NOSTALGIA FOR THE LIBERAL HOUR: TALKIN' 'BOUT THE HORIZONS OF NORMAN JEWISON'S GENERATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24411797","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Tout au long de sa carri\u00e8re de cin\u00e9aste, Norman Jewison a combattu des st\u00e9r\u00e9otypes qui d\u00e9peignent les lib\u00e9raux de race blanche comme des bien pensants hypocrites et de mauvaise foi. Il s'est \u00e9galement appropri\u00e9\u2013tout en la contestant\u2013la figure de la victimisation face \u00e0 des capitalistes r\u00e9volutionnaires et des antiracistes radicaux. Cet article attire l'attention sur les lieux communs qui existent entre la pens\u00e9e du cin\u00e9aste canadien et celles de Robin Winks et Michael Banton, deux universitaires reconnus aux \u00c9tats-Unis et en Grande Bretagne qui se sont aussi oppos\u00e9s aux pratiques n\u00e9olib\u00e9rales qui semblent faire une trop grande distinction entre l'\u00e9thique et la politique tout comme les \u00e9tudes politiques provenant des intellectuels radicaux. L'article conclut en contrepoint de l'humanisme lib\u00e9ral de Jewison, Winks et Banton en se tournant vers le nouvel humanisme de Paul Gilroy et de George Elliott Clarke, deux intellectuels post-coloniaux qui se sont oppos\u00e9s \u00e0 l'\u00e9troitesse disciplinaire et aux \u00e9tudes nationales trop insulaires. Je d\u00e9fends l'id\u00e9e que le travail explorateur, provacateur et \u00e9vocateur de Gilroy et Clarke peut aider aux \u00e9tudes canadiennes, dans leur tentative de s'arrimer aux d\u00e9bats qui ont cours aux \u00c9tats-Unis et en Grande Bretagne et aussi aux travaux transatlantiques qui se pr\u00e9tendent trop souvent globaux.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah L. Townsend"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.34.2.45","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7b5986d-8450-36a3-bb19-1069a00d657b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.34.2.45"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cosmopolitanism at Home: Ireland's Playboys from Celtic Revival to Celtic Tiger","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.34.2.45","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"At the end of J.M. Synge's The Playboy of the Western World, Christy Mahon departs for a cosmopolitan future at the very moment he demands personal and national sovereignty. This article examines why that conflicted gesture has proven so troubling in literary history. Christy's ambivalent combination of cosmopolitan ambition and nationalist sentiment stoked conflicts within the Celtic Revival, prompting the infamous riots that unfolded during Synge's 1907 premiere, and it continues to trouble Irish literary criticism. The figure of Christy Mahon challenges what audiences and critics think they know about cosmopolitanism and nationalism, especially as he is updated in recent Playboy adaptations for global stages.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lydia H. Liu"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Desire for the Sovereign and the Logic of Reciprocity in the Family of Nations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566383","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":17071,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mich\u00e8le Lamont"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f233f632-1c80-3130-aee8-9d0e2c573bca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1069","pageStart":"1068","pagination":"pp. 1068-1069","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231300","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Gillespie"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.4.2.0100","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735031"},{"name":"oclc","value":"881318049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014200218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aadf975d-35a1-327c-80b0-9d2a246660dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/jcritethnstud.4.2.0100"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcritethnstud"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Ethnic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Dada Nihilismus: Theorizing a Radical Black Aesthetic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.4.2.0100","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":7941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper will attempt to theorize a radical black aesthetic by extrapolating Amiri Baraka\u2019s poem \u201cBlack Dada Nihilismus\u201d as a radical theoretical poetics of black aesthetics. Black Dada Nihilismus is a concept utilized by black artist as a means by which revolutionary, cataclysmic critique is aimed, and reformation is rendered peripheral. Through intertwining concepts of blackness and political nihilism spearheaded by Afro-pessimist scholars Frank Wilderson and Calvin Warren, I attempt to flesh out the concept of Black Dada Nihilismus in order to introduce a new framework for theorizing a form of black radical aesthetics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfred Archer","Georgina Mills"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26948107","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02762080"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60547480"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010201067"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23705ee3-f740-385d-bcf8-9a5bfb9e88df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26948107"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philtopics"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophical Topics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Arkansas Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anger, Affective Injustice, and Emotion Regulation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26948107","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10228,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Victims of oppression are often called to let go of their anger in order to facilitate better discussion to bring about the end of their oppression. According to Amia Srinivasan (2018), this constitutes an affective injustice. In this paper, we use research on emotion regulation to shed light on the nature of affective injustice. By drawing on the literature on emotion regulation, we illustrate specifically what kind of work is put upon people who are experiencing affective injustice and why it is damaging. We begin by explaining affective injustice and how it can amount to a call for emotion regulation. Then we explain the various techniques that can be used to regulate emotions and explain how each might be harmful here. In the penultimate section of the paper, we explain how the upshot of this is that victims of affective injustice are left with a dilemma. Either they try to regulate their anger in a way that involves ignoring the fact of their oppression or they regulate it in a way that is likely to be harmful for them. Finally, we consider whether there are any good solutions to this dilemma, and how this issue opens up the possibility for further research into emotion regulation and moral philosophy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerard G. Pigeon"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6de5eb62-094e-3b20-b7c8-68c4ef074aca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Dynamics of Alienation in French Black Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783874","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609719,609839]],"Locations in B":[[34687,34802]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philippe BOURGOIS"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699450","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1157996X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38402778"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-255343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d107111-767e-34fd-9426-07a124f5b51c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23699450"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturesconflits"}],"isPartOf":"Cultures et Conflits","issueNumber":"47","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La violence en temps de guerre et en temps de paix: Le\u00e7ons de l'apr\u00e8s-guerre froide : l'exemple du Salvador","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23699450","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAURICE ST. PIERRE"],"datePublished":"1973-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fef91ca-466a-3ab7-9402-ee97c75b4e04"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23050211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"WEST INDIAN CRICKET PART II \u2014 AN ASPECT OF CREOLIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23050211","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olakunle George"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Modernity and the Promise of Reading","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465182","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chunmei Du"],"datePublished":"2014-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24701306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07075332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235464"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca386154-aae3-321a-b46d-85841c8adfdc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24701306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The International History Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Travel Along the Mobius Strip: Somerset Maugham and Gu Hongming East of Suez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24701306","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10715,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[64448,64488]],"abstract":"During his 1919\u201320 trip to China, English writer Somerset Maugham paid a special visit to Gu Hongming, an Edinburgh-educated Chinese philosopher and socalled 'Confucian Sage'. By exploring the enigmatic interactions between Maugham and Gu in the context of colonial travel, this article illustrates the important role of psychological projection in the exchanges among elite travellers during an age of empire. Beyond a simple Orientalist or Occidentalist approach, the author proposes a new framework modelled on the geometric puzzle of the 'Mobius strip', a twisted and closed one-sided surface, to highlight the intersubjective nature of the East\u2014West continuum. At first glance, East and West, as in the writings of Maugham and Gu, are on opposite sides of the strip, appearing static and well defined to each other at any given moment. However, the paradox of a Mobius strip lies in its twirling and continuous motion: East and West are constantly interacting, defining one another through contacts like Gu's and Maugham's, and actually merge as one object. As the transcultural processes of colonial travel created contacts between elites, their intersubjective encounters melded East and West in the co-construction of the binary. As such, East and West are always paradoxically defined together.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Radhakrishnan"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48b2e85b-003f-3ed2-894c-5f659a53c24b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2932208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"771","pageStart":"750","pagination":"pp. 750-771","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcoloniality and The Boundaries of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932208","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":13094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom\u00e1s Mac S\u00edomo\u00edn"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25571777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00102369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06c28b7e-8e81-3261-8575-bae9cdcc75d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25571777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comhar"}],"isPartOf":"Comhar","issueNumber":"5","language":["gle"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Comhar Teoranta","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Meon na Muintire agus Paradacsa U\u00ed Chadhain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25571777","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":7076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anna Marie Smith"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Imaginary Inclusion of the Assimilable \"Good Homosexual\": The British New Right's Representations of Sexuality and Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465164","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7271,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[12850,12935]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Thill"],"datePublished":"2011-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efd2d306-3a5c-3b96-9860-43562309c716"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Teaching Protest (and Other Antiquities)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427542","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefanos Geroulanos"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35801057"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23022"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85cb3f12-688e-3bab-96f2-5c35375d08f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26547463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodernhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"An Army of Shadows","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26547463","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":17980,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[114316,114389]],"Locations in B":[[106765,106838]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Black Markets, Adaptation, and Social Transparency in Postwar France","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LUCAS TROUT","CORINA KRAMER","LOIS FISCHER"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26542057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10790969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626346"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-249116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c23f1c32-cf01-3732-b656-6a895f403809"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26542057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healhumarigh"}],"isPartOf":"Health and Human Rights","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Harvard School of Public Health\/Fran\u00e7ois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Social Medicine in Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26542057","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"American Indians and Alaska Natives have long held a state-conferred right to health, yet Indigenous communities across the United States continue to experience significant health and health care disparities. In this paper we posit two contributing factors: socialization for scarcity in tribal health care, and a slowness among health workers and allied health and social scientists to make explicit and convincing linkages between social determinants of health and human rights. We then summarize one attempt to align tribal health care delivery in the Alaskan Arctic with a rights-based approach, highlighting both the role of social and structural determinants as causes of health disparities and the role of social and structural interventions in local efforts to chart a future of equal health for our home.","subTitle":"Realizing the American Indian and Alaska Native Right to Health","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Engle Merry"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"977","pageStart":"941","pagination":"pp. 941-977","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructing a Global Law-Violence against Women and the Human Rights System","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215792","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":17756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This ethnographic analysis of one of the core human rights conventions suggests that despite the lack of enforceability of this convention and its operation within the framework of state sovereignty, it is similar to state law. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, or CEDAW, the major UN convention on the status of women, articulates a vision of women's equal protection from discrimination and addresses gender-based violence as a form of discrimination. It had been ratified by 171 nation states as of mid-2003. Its implementation relies on a complex process of periodic reporting to a global body meeting in New York and a symbiotic if sometimes contentious relationship between government representatives and international and domestic NGOs. Like state law, it serves to articulate and name problems and delineate solutions. It provides a resource for activists endeavoring to address problems of women's status and turns the international gaze on resisting nations. Its regulatory strength depends on the cultural legitimacy of the international process of consensus building and related social movements to define social justice in these terms. Thus, like state law, its impact depends on its cultural legitimacy and its embodiment in local cultures and legal consciousness. This examination of CEDAW as quasi law extends our understanding of law as a plural and a symbolic system rooted in a particular historical moment of globalization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. 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Although rarely considered in scholarship, Les Ballets Africains' history during these years\u2014encompassing the company's first U.S. appearances and reflecting the influence of its founder, Fod\u00e9ba Keita\u2014are significant in relation to 20th-century trajectories of staged African dance, convergences between African and American performing arts practices and liberation struggles, and cultural transformations in Guinea under president S\u00e9kou Tour\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OLE SKOVSMOSE"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44382692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02280671"},{"name":"oclc","value":"503355356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234716"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"836e2379-aafd-3df7-a655-6199ac8f4cc0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44382692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"forlearningmath"}],"isPartOf":"For the Learning of Mathematics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"FLM Publishing Association","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Campbell Bunk: A Lumpen Community in London between the Wars","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4288257","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":28389,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Drake"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eed87dbb-1b0f-3ce6-a218-a804333f429b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720543","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Wise"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9145a225-20e5-39cf-9bb4-96519adeea0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44312520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction: The Poetics of Disgrace","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312520","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":3160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. S. S. Pandian"],"datePublished":"1993-10-16","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4400290","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bf35354-34eb-3e8e-94f5-3efbc3d24ae0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4400290"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"2287","pageStart":"2282","pagination":"pp. 2282-2287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Denationalising' the Past: 'Nation' in E V Ramasamy's Political Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4400290","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Departing from the conception which claims the 'nationalisation' of the past as a universal given of nations, this article argues that it has been possible at least in certain cases to imagine nations as disengaged from the past. To illustrate such a possibility the concept of 'nation' as propagated by E V Ramasamy, who denied its origin in classical Indian\/Tamil past and envisaged it fully in the future, is analysed.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mira Balberg"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09445706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fff5663e-9072-3734-9cb2-f2b6bb2b495a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41681774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewistudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Jewish Studies","Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"The Emperor's Daughter's New Skin: Bodily Otherness and Self-Identity in the Dialogues of Rabbi Yehoshua ben Hanania and the Emperor's Daughter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41681774","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracey Banivanua Mar"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5263\/labourhistory.113.0009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00236942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"173431040"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009236206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4fe8834-c262-362e-ada8-7c1cd07c0490"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5263\/labourhistory.113.0009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Labour History","issueNumber":"113","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Stabilising Violence in Colonial Rule: Settlement and the Indentured Labour Trade in Queensland in the 1870s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5263\/labourhistory.113.0009","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the dynamics of colonial violence through three apparently insignificant and disconnected events. In Queensland in the 1870s, a structural framework of laws and regulations standardised violent and often fatal conditions in the labour trade. In the imagined remoteness of frontiers from civilisation, Indigenous, indentured and non-white peoples were grouped together with environmental and natural hazards to be battled. Colonial governance called for more subtle forms of violence. Inaction and acquiescence played a role in the sanction, maintenance and institutionalisation of violence in conventionalised forms. The central theme of the article is that violence was inherent to the colonial project. It shows the shared role of humanitarian concerns and the need for land and labour in the performance and regulation of colonial violence. It provides insight into the role of violence in colonial relations more generally as it illustrates how violence in and around Queensland was consciously produced and operated. Each of the chosen incidents shows that violence was highly rationalised around principles such as race, and how implicit sanctions rendered violence non-visible as understandings of violence and its justification were normalised.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margot Miller","Paule Constant"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3133014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3133014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Matropole: Anxiety and the Mother in Paule Constant's Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3133014","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":4710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article investigates one of the ways in which loss of the mother is used in contemporary French\/Francophone women's writing to represent loss of connection to a critical part of the self. It takes as its focus the \"colonized\/colonizing\" mothers in the \"Tiffany\" trilogy and one other novel, \"La Fille du Gobernator\", by Paule Constant to raise the question of responsibility for the constructed self, in this case of the mothers who model themselves on idealized religious images. The term \"Matropole,\" as a variant of Metropole, links the inter(intra)-personal question of the mother's colonizing presence (as the absence of [self-]nurturance) to parallel international\/postcolonial experience.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dominic J. Capeci, Jr.","Jack C. Knight"],"datePublished":"1990-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24447725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e7d0a90f-b2b5-3c96-86ca-08c15380bd09"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24447725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historian"}],"isPartOf":"The Historian","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"601","pageStart":"584","pagination":"pp. 584-601","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Reactions to Colonialism: The North American Ghost Dance and East African Maji-Maji Rebellions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24447725","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ward Churchill"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"692e2a99-346b-3072-9c8f-0a0ba0d8582c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"THERE IS NOTHING \"POST\" ABOUT COLONIALISM: ON THE CONTINUING REALITY OF COLONIZATION AND THE IMPLICATIONS OF TERMINOLOGICAL DENIAL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981845","volumeNumber":"430","wordCount":14055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marc-A. Christophe"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44324748","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5390703-3e74-3025-a0e3-a3658d5c401c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44324748"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TOTALITARIANISM AND AUTHORITARIANISM IN AIM\u00c9 C\u00c9SAIRE'S \"LA TRAG\u00c9DIE DU ROI CHRISTOPHE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44324748","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua Mabie"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26196822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625073"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009221005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e334047-3191-3c51-892e-5cade9b4e8f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26196822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy"],"title":"The field is ripe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26196822","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":8484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Christian literary scholars and ecocritics have generally not engaged each other in sustained and productive conversation. This article therefore updates and extends Timothy J. Burbery's 2012 call for a Christian ecocriticism by showing that ecocriticism's recent postcolonial turn has opened new opportunities for Christian literary scholars. Ecocriticism's heightened attention to ways that environmental problems threaten the lives and livelihoods of the world's poorest and most vulnerable people provides an opportunity for Christians to become involved in both the scholarly project of ecocriticism and in the work of advancing global environmental justice. The author holds out hope that a rigorous Christian ecocriticism could pave the way for a potent new Christian environmentalism.","subTitle":"Christian literary scholarship, postcolonial ecocriticism, and environmentalism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre W. Orelus","Noam Chomsky"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b60710ea-a79c-3fe5-9b92-50eed99dbba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democracy and Language Rights of Minority Groups","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982197","volumeNumber":"458","wordCount":5097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georges Corm"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599993","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17550912"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8c7416b-9f81-35fa-bf22-32cc856d5b4d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48599993"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contemporaryarab"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Arab Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"251","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-251","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Arab contemporary political thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48599993","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":8023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper constitutes an attempt to show the large diversity of Arab culture and the various stages through which Arab political thought has developed since the reign of Muhammad Ali in Egypt in the early 19th century up to the present. This panorama of the various schools of political thought shows the impact of the constantly changing geopolitical environment on Arab thinkers. It also shows that essentialist attempts to analyze and grasp the \u2018Arab mind\u2019 through a single factor and, namely, through the structure of Muslim theology and laws (sharia) are not successful and lead to impoverishing the richness of both Arab culture and political thought.","subTitle":"secularist or theologist?","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ken Goodwin"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09cd9865-8cb0-3ece-ad70-68ed46890658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25111994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Studying Commonwealth Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25111994","volumeNumber":"19\/20","wordCount":5135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Ford","M. L. Ferrandis Garrayo"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40658149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02142570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3a1dd315-e497-3752-a4a4-1e8f0e42277e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40658149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historiasocial"}],"isPartOf":"Historia Social","issueNumber":"62","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Fundacion Instituto de Historia Social","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"EUGEN WEBER: EL HISTORIADOR COMO VIAJERO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40658149","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Caroline Ford, catedr\u00e1tica de Historia en la Universidad de California en los \u00c1ngeles, en la que ense\u00f1\u00f3 Eugen Weber durante m\u00e1s de treinta a\u00f1os, presenta un breve boceto biogr\u00e1fico de la vida de Weber y un perfil del historiador como erudito y colega. Trata de sus contribuciones al campo de la historia francesa, fascismo europeo y cultura popular. Finalmente, eval\u00faa su aproximaci\u00f3n global a la escritura de la historia y trata de la amplia importancia de su trabajo. Caroline Ford, professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles, where Eugen Weber taught for over thirty years, provides a brief biographical sketch of Weber's life and presents a portrait of the historian as a scholar and colleague. She discusses his contributions to the field of French history, European Fascism and popular culture. Finally, she assesses his overall approach to the writing of history and discusses the larger significance of his work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R\u00e9mi Armand Tchokothe"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c242a886-1622-37a7-a9cd-a84a56ccae98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Globalectical Swahili literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758399","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article argues that Swahili literature is one of the streams that would flow into the metaphoric sea which is world literature. Ng\u0169g\u0129's concept of 'globalectics' is used as the framework to address the global and local agenda of two Swahili works of narrative fiction. Babu Alipofufuka [When Grandfather Came to Life Again, 2001] by the Tanzanian Said A. Mohamed and Bina-Adamu! [God's Wretched Sons, 2002] by the Kenyan Kyallo Wamitila are analysed in order to achieve two aims: presenting these works as cultural bridges and maintaining that nowadays discourses on the nation cannot be detached from global contexts. The article concludes that globalectical works of narrative fiction in Swahili present an invitation to literary critics to start considering Swahili literature in discussions of world literature that are ignorant of such texts and traditions. Damrosch considers circulation, translation, and publication as the three signposts of world literature. This implies that works not translated into languages endowed with more prestige cannot qualify as world literature. The article suggests a further criterion for world literature.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Corinne Sandwith"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1a5991d-433b-3cb5-82c8-d543332ed156"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40232381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionaries or Sell-Outs? African Intellectuals and \"The Voice of Africa\", 1949-1952","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40232381","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodrick Wallace"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4621592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical logic"],"title":"Plague and Power Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4621592","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":14719,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Public policy and economic practice, quintessential expressions of institutional cognition, create an opportunity structure constituting a tunable, highly patterned, 'non-white noise' in a generalized epidemiological stochastic resonance that can efficiently amplify unhealthy living and working conditions, particularly within highly concentrated, marginalized urban populations, to evoke infectious disease outbreaks. This is especially true for the infections carried by socially generated 'risk behaviours' which are usually adaptations to histories of resource deprivation or marginalization. A number of local epidemics originating in such ecological keystone communities may subsequently under-go a policy and structure-driven phase transition to become a coherent pandemic, a spreading plague which can entrain more affluent populations into the disease ecology of marginalization. We use this approach to contrast the ecological resilience of apartheid and egalitarian social systems, and apply these perspectives to the forthcoming social and geographical diffusion of multiple drug resistant (MDR) HIV from present AIDS epicentres to the rest of the United States.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erika Lorraine Milam"],"datePublished":"2014-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/678175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976319"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227035"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42832cc8-daff-3123-9ddc-85721d9d358d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/678175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"isis"}],"isPartOf":"Isis","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"605","pageStart":"596","pagination":"pp. 596-605","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Field Study of Con Games","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/678175","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":5785,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACTIn 1978, the evolutionary biologist Robert Trivers and Huey P. Newton, cofounder of the Black Panthers, began a collaboration exploring the evolution of self-deception. Together they published a brief paper that used their ideas about the naturalistic basis of deceit and self-deception to explain the crash of Air Florida Flight 90 in Washington, D.C. Given the continued power of the naturalistic fallacy in the modern life sciences, historical attention typically focuses on highly visible controversies with great popular traction. This essay instead mobilizes the muted legacy of Trivers and Newton\u2019s publication to underscore the inherent difficulties scientists face in finding a receptive audience for their theories, even naturalistic ones.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth H. Oakes"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fb2438f3-bdaa-365c-837a-23295d219227"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TOWARDS A NONESSENTIALIST CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790169","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":7651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christine Gilmore","\u0643\u0631\u0633\u062a\u064a\u0646 \u062c\u0644\u0645\u0648\u0631"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24772811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae5ded9b-f804-3233-bf04-65c8684e726d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24772811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"35","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"\"A Minor Literature in a Major Voice\": Narrating Nubian Identity in Contemporary Egypt \/\ufe83\ufea9\ufe8f \u00bb \u0645\u0647\u0645\u0634 \u0630\u0648 \u0635\u0648\u062a \u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a \u00bb: \u0642\u0635 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u0635\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631\u0629","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24772811","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Over the course of the twentieth century, the Nubian people were resettled several times to make way for dams on the river Nile. This article examines how Nubian literature has exploited the relative freedom accorded the Egyptian literary sphere to highlight marginalized Nubian perspectives on the intergenerational legacy of dam-induced displacement and resettlement. Through analysis of three Nubian texts, the author examines how Nubian literature constitutes a distinctive form of literary expression that both reclaims Egypt's forgotten African identity and promotes a \"progressive\" nationalist project which celebrates, rather than silences, Egypt's ethnic and religious pluralism by integrating minority perspectives into the national imaginary. \u062a\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062a\u0647\u062c\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0639\u062f\u0629 \u0645\u0631\u0627\u062a \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0631\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0634\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0644\u0628\u0646\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u062f\u0648\u062f \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0646\u0647\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u064a\u0644. \u0643\u0645\u0627 \u062a\u0648\u0636\u062d \u0643\u064a\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062e\u062f\u0627\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a \u0644\u0647\u0627\u0645\u0634 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0633\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0627\u062d \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0635\u0631\u064a \u0644\u0625\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0636\u0648\u0621 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u0638\u0648\u0631\u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0647\u0645\u0634 \u0641\u064a\u0645\u0627 \u064a\u062e\u0635 \ufe97\ufe84\ufe9b\ufef4\ufeae \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0647\u062c\u064a\u0631 \u0628\u0641\u0639\u0644 \u0628\u0646\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u062f\u0648\u062f \u0639\u0628\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062c\u064a\u0627\u0644. \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u062a\u062d\u0644\u064a\u0644 \u062b\u0644\u0627\u062b\u0629 \u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 \u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629\u060c \u062a\u0633\u062a\u0643\u0634\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0643\u064a\u0641 \u0634\u0643\u0651\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a \u0646\u0648\u0639\u0627\u064b \u0645\u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632\u0627\u064b \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0639\u0628\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628\u064a \u064a\u0633\u062a\u0639\u064a\u062f \u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0635\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0641\u0631\u064a\u0642\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0646\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0648\u0642\u062a \u0630\u0627\u062a\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u064a\u062f\u0639\u0645 \u0641\u064a\u0647 \u0642\u064a\u0627\u0645 \u0645\u0634\u0631\u0648\u0639 \u0642\u0648\u0645\u064a \u00ab \u062a\u0642\u062f\u0645\u064a \u00bb \u064a\u062d\u062a\u0641\u064a \u0628\u062a\u0639\u062f\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0635\u0631\u0627\u0644\u0625\u062b\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062f\u064a\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0639\u0648\u0636\u0627\u064b \u0639\u0646 \u0643\u0628\u062d\u0647\u0627\u060c \u0648\u0630\u0644\u0643 \u0645\u0646 \u062d\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u062f\u0645\u062c \u0645\u0646\u0638\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0642\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062e\u064a\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0629 .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SANKAJAYA NANAYAKKARA"],"datePublished":"2016-06-04","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44004680","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a28c714d-9ffd-3407-9820-36dad951cd6c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44004680"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transformations in Sinhala Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44004680","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8542,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This examination of the formations and transformations of the Sinhala national movement in Sri Lanka from the Buddhist revival in the mid\u201419th century to modern times focuses on the changes in the ideology and the varied political manifestations of Sinhala nationalism. It asks whether there is a way of understanding nations and nationalisms that does not reject the \"desire for belongingness\" as \"fascism in disguise.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean Chesneaux","Richard C. Kagan"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41881427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02782308"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f573666c-db90-3795-9c7d-a59498d3498c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41881427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intesociscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"International Social Science Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Pi Gamma Mu, International Honor Society in Social Sciences","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Chinese Labor Movement: 1915-1949","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41881427","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":13610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study uniquely provides the reader with an overall account of the labor history in China which includes, not only a descriptive survey, but also a critical analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. The majority of the studies of Chinese labor history find the cause for the movement's failure in the political strategy of Stalin, of the imperialists in China, or of the Nationalist Party (the KMT). Others point to the Chinese Communist Party's decision to \"abandon\" the workers in favor of a peasant revolution. This article presents a sociological analysis which places the failures and successes of the movement within the context of the Chinese environment. It is the first major study to relate these circumstances to the political role of the labor movement in modern China.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SUZANNE GAUCH"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029775","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637308"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013242112"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91bb0b86-809f-3958-a82f-7206d43041ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44029775"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Phantasmatic Artifacts: Postcolonial Meditations by a Tunisian Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44029775","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9886,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Exploring manipulations of perception in postcolonial representations, Abdelwahab Meddeb's novel Phantasia employs architecture as a metaphor for the construction of identities and ideologies and uses the concept of exile to expose the politics of representation which inform cultural artifacts, and through them, history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Ngaboh-Smart"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nationalism and the Aporia of National Identity in Farah's \"Maps\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820426","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roderick Watson"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41273988","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"770204c9-ef55-3d0e-865e-681ebfc5320e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41273988"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"POSTCOLONIAL SUBJECTS? LANGUAGE, NARRATIVE AUTHORITY AND CLASS IN CONTEMPORARY SCOTTISH CULTURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41273988","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ketu H. Katrak"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d064c552-094d-3c0c-b154-d39f15b9f586"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theory and Social Responsibility: Soyinka's Essays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904312","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5115,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jerry White","Nino Dzandzava"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/filmhistory.27.4.151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08922160"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49633083"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-216002"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4a818c0-fa3d-3e65-8818-e1f5abc019ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/filmhistory.27.4.151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Film History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cinema of Georgia's First Independence Period: Between Republican and European","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/filmhistory.27.4.151","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article discusses films made during Georgia's first period of independence (1918\u201321), focusing on the newsreel series known as the Independence Chronicles (1918\u201320) by Germane Gogiditze. Imperatives around state consolidation and internationalism are clearly, although sometimes implicitly, visible in that series. The same disputes that define discussions of Georgia and of the post-Soviet world today\u2014multiethnic nationalism, European outlooks, and so on\u2014were very much part of the debates during this earlier period and are arguably being publically negotiated for the first time in this independently produced series of documentaries.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tejumola Olaniyan"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ad12a00-41ee-3ac7-b465-6c365608b53b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2932207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"749","pageStart":"743","pagination":"pp. 743-749","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"On \"Post-Colonial Discourse\": An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2932207","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":3580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0647\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u063a\u0646\u064a\u0645","Hala Ghoneim"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392135","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"941764a0-f38f-30d7-bb88-f7c11f1a0b52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24392135"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"174","pagination":"pp. 174-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imagined Audience and the Reception of World Literature: Reading Brooklyn Heights and Chicago \/ \u00ab \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0631\u0626 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u062e\u064a\u0644 \u0648\u062a\u0644\u0642\u064a \u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645: \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0621\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u00ab \u0628\u0631\u0648\u0643\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u0647\u0627\u064a\u062a\u0633 \u00bb \u0648 \u00ab \u0634\u064a\u0643\u0627\u062c\u0648","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392135","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that transnational Arab authors' envisaging of their national and international audiences and awareness of the contexts surrounding the reception of their texts impact the thematic and technical choices they make. These choices deliberately induce postcolonialist readings of these texts, set in motion through animating dialectical encounters of the self and the other within contexts of uneven power relations. Following a brief discussion of problems of, and insights into, the production, translation, and reception of transnational texts, the author offers readings of al-Tahawy's Brooklyn Heights and al-Aswani's Chicago which illustrate the theoretical issues raised earlier. \u0623\u0637\u0631\u0648\u062d\u0629 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0645\u0641\u0627\u062f\u0647\u0627 \u0623\u0646 \u062a\u062e\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0644\u0642\u0631\u0627\u0626\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062d\u0644\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0648\u0648\u0639\u064a\u0647\u0645 \u0628\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0642\u0627\u062a \u062a\u0644\u0642\u0651\u064a \u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635\u0647\u0645 \u064a\u0624\u062b\u0631\u0627\u0646 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u062e\u062a\u064a\u0627\u0631\u0627\u062a\u0647\u0645 \u0644\u0645\u0648\u0636\u0648\u0639\u0627\u062a \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 \u0648\u062a\u0642\u0646\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628\u062a\u0647\u0627. \u062a\u062a\u0639\u0645\u062f \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u062e\u062a\u064a\u0627\u0631\u0627\u062a \u062d\u062b \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0631\u0626 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0621\u0629 \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0621\u0629 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0630\u0644\u0643 \u0639\u0646 \u0637\u0631\u064a\u0642 \u062e\u0644\u0642 \u0645\u0648\u0627\u062c\u0647\u0627\u062a \u062c\u062f\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0646\u0627 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0622\u062e\u0631 \u062a\u062d\u062f\u062b \u0641\u064a \u0625\u0637\u0627\u0631 \u0639\u0644\u0627\u0642\u0627\u062a \u063a\u064a\u0631 \u0645\u062a\u0643\u0627\u0641\u0626\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0648\u0649 \u0628\u064a\u0646\u0647\u0645\u0627. \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0645\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0634\u0629 \u0642\u0635\u064a\u0631\u0629 \u0644\u0628\u0639\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0634\u0643\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0648\u0636\u0648\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0639\u0644\u0642\u0629 \u0628\u0625\u0646\u062a\u0627\u062c \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u062a\u0647\u0627 \u0648\u062a\u0644\u0642\u064a\u0647\u0627\u060c \u062a\u0642\u062f\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0621\u0629 \u0644\u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u064a \u0628\u0631\u0648\u0643\u0644\u064a\u0646 \u0647\u0627\u064a\u062a\u0633 \u0644\u0645\u064a\u0631\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0637\u062d\u0627\u0648\u064a \u0648\u0634\u064a\u0643\u0627\u062c\u0648 \u0644\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0633\u0648\u0627\u0646\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0644\u062a\u064a\u0646 \u062a\u0642\u062f\u0645\u0627\u0646 \u062a\u0637\u0628\u064a\u0642\u0627\ufe70 \u0644\u0644\u0645\u0634\u0643\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0648\u0636\u0648\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0634\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. David Singer"],"datePublished":"1985-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208833"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075699"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2600484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"International Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"The Responsibilities of Competence in the Global Village","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2600484","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Specialists in world affairs have a special responsibility to not only teach and conduct high-quality research, but to address the major problems confronting the global village. Two basic problems today are poverty and war, and the evidence suggests that very little progress can be made in the former until considerable progress has been made in regard to the latter. Armed rivalry between East and West so permeates and corrupts the underdeveloped societies that neither resources nor infrastructure can be put into place until that rivalry is brought under control. Among our responsibilities as teachers, researchers, writers and practitioners, is the need for less tolerance and acquiescence in `business as usual'. For example, our research requires greater attention to reproducible evidence and to generalizations based on entire classes of cases, rather than a small number based on selective recall. Our teaching requires not only greater attention to methodological rigor, but to explicit consideration of rival and unconventional interpretations. As writers and journalists, we need to be more critical of the arguments and evidence adduced by the elites and the counter-elites. And, as practitioners, it is time for us to pay more attention to the needs of our societies than to the short-run consideration of bureaucratic and personal interests. The problems are menacing, the time is short, and the responsibilities and opportunities are clearly in our hands.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. D. E. Andrews"],"datePublished":"1984-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41153116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1288a773-5ef1-3979-b3c8-da872a79dc28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41153116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparativedrama"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Drama","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Comparative Drama","sourceCategory":["Arts","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Marxist Theater of Amiri Baraka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41153116","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10485,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David S. Roh"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41440714","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b932d3bb-5df1-38af-969c-611c749eda47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41440714"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Scientific Management in \"East Goes West\": The Japanese and American Construction of Korean Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41440714","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4138843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629413"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212072"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4138843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Old School?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4138843","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARTHUR J. DAVIES"],"datePublished":"1971-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42335c5c-c2a4-3227-aacc-095a04fad728"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41202907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"8\/9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"34","pagination":"pp. 34-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ANGUISH OF A DEAD MAN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41202907","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Schacherreiter"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"05067286"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564544020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58928f09-074c-3b43-ac37-485d6966f52e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26160083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"verfrechuber"}],"isPartOf":"Verfassung und Recht in \u00dcbersee \/ Law and Politics in Africa, Asia and Latin America","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"291","pagination":"pp. 291-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Law","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postcolonial Theory and Comparative Law: On the Methodological and Epistemological Benefits to Comparative Law through Postcolonial Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26160083","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":10721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Working as a comparative lawyer means engaging with foreign law. In the process of comparing, the comparatist creates a relationship between the Self and the Other and tries to identify commonalities and differences. This always goes along with the danger of lapsing into an either-or dichotomy of ethnocentrism and cultural relativism. In comparative law we face the same danger. Either we use our own standards as if they were universal (ethnocentrism) or we abandon them completely to allow the Other the realization of its own world (cultural relativism). Postcolonial theory has shown that both ethnocentrism and cultural relativism impede the understanding of the Other and has suggested various possibilities for overcoming this either-or dichotomy. This article analyzes how comparative law can make use of these ideas, particularly regarding the use of universal standards, the comparative method and understanding, the classification of legal systems and legal transplants. Drawing from postcolonial ideas, the article argues that comparative lawyers should understand the relationship between the Self and the Other in terms of dialectic and hybridity rather than in terms of dichotomies and homogeneity. The comparison should be based on extensive engagement\u2014but not identification\u2014with the Other and self-critical analysis\u2014but not abandonment\u2014of our own standards. The aim is not a situation of perfect commensurability but rather to use the dialectic between the Self and the Other as a source of understanding.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jock McCulloch"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3556933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6f343ace-088e-3a91-8dce-091bb650c192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3556933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trains, Coal, and Industrial Labour","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3556933","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":4342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maidul Islam"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338859","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12242758-bf22-3593-9b49-9a98a41ef2e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23338859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"7\/8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking the Muslim Question in Post-Colonial India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338859","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Sweeney"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Living to Read True Crime: Theorizations from Prison","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389664","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Monteiro"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"425d69d3-58ee-3d01-89a7-9ca6e8008eeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RACE AND EMPIRE: W.E.B. Du Bois and the US State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069254","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13197,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roy Love"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4007130","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc300dcf-5646-35df-9d2a-26b854fa35d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4007130"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"110","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"634","pageStart":"619","pagination":"pp. 619-634","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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To the extent that it has a conclusion, it is that, at least in the Jewish-Israeli-Palestinian context, a peace that does not reproduce the past necessitates an ethico-politically based self-examination and change.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AYHAN KAYA"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26331143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1302177X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12a73143-f85b-3d81-9391-be9af3b3f818"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26331143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"insightturkey"}],"isPartOf":"Insight Turkey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"SET VAKFI \u0130ktisadi \u0130\u015fletmesi, SETA VAKFI","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Individualization and Institutionalization of Islam in Europe in the Age of Securitization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26331143","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses a new social and political phenomenon in Europe, which has become evident along with the visibility of Islam in the European public space. Revealing the current social-political context in Western Europe, which is mainly characterized by a growing drift of securitization of Islam and migration, this paper argues that there are two simultaneously running processes regarding the changing nature of Euro-Islam, which seem to are antithetical: individualization of Islam vs. institutionalization of Islam. Drawing upon the findings of the field research in Germany, France, Belgium and the Netherlands, this article shows that while the processes of globalization seem to prompt younger generations with Muslim background to liberate themselves from the constraints of their patriarchal parental and community culture, western states as well as ethnocultural and religious brokers tend to reify, or reinforce, their existing communal and religious boundaries. That is to say that the descendants of migrants seem to have been squeezed between individualization and institutionalization of Islam.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tejumola Olaniyan"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.46","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"953f0149-ad05-3fc6-9dfb-9c870d6ce114"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.46"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Paddle That Speaks English: Africa, NGOs, and the Archaeology of an Unease","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.46","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Chinua Achebe's No Longer at Ease was published in 1960. It is, very obviously, not the author's Things Fall Apart, published in 1958, so there were no splashy and widespread celebrations of its \u201c\u201cfifty years after\u201d\u201d in 2010. That could hardly mean that No Longer at Ease is any less weighty an exploration of the place of modern Africa in the world. Its task could actually be conceived as much harder, focused as it is on the longer-term and more uncertain task of reconstitution after the epochal \u201c\u201cfalling apart\u201d\u201d of things. This paper examines how No Longer at Ease intervenes most suggestively and sometimes prophetically in some of the defining conundrums of the postcolonial African condition: the vexed origins of a new kind of elite and its \u201c\u201cstrange\u201d\u201d tongue, the emergence of a new spatial hierarchy in the rural-urban divide, the postcolonial city and its fragments, gender and rural poverty, and the place of self-help and nongovernment organizations in African civil, social, and political life.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Louis Walker"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03c3cde8-1442-3301-bd3b-581b087351aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"NOT TO EXIST WITHOUT INTERPRETATION OF MEANING:\" THE COUNTERMODERNIST CHALLENGE OF SYLVIA WYNTER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019779","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8389,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Hayes"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.42","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c47589e-f9ad-3828-897f-212b4b40ee9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.42"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black and Cuba<\/em>: Liberation, African American Studies, and the Tools of Third Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.7.1.42","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract In this article director Robin Hayes discusses the making and content of the documentary feature Black and Cuba (2014), which follows a diverse group of Yale African American Studies PhD students who journey to Cuba to explore the island's revolutionary past and present. Although the group had no previous filmmaking experience or training, in the traditions of Third Cinema and Black studies, they decide to empower themselves to create a documentary about their trip in order to share what they learn with their communities. The film's depictions of the students' candid encounters with Afro-Cubans from all walks of life reveal the ongoing relationship between race and class in spite of mainstream tropes in both the United States and Cuba that assert these national cultures are \u201cpostracial\u201d and \u201ccolor-blind.\u201d The author argues that Black and Cuba's comparative exploration of continuing racial inequality illustrates that decreased investment in the social safety net and increased privatization of the economy create specific obstacles for both African Americans and Afro-Cubans.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID R. BURGEST"],"datePublished":"1973-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9c37bad-9f02-370a-a70d-bcba99b82788"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41065603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"THE RACIST USE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065603","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saidiya V. 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Wilderson, III"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686156","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21fd0f58-5ff6-34bd-8eaa-3b26d620ca7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20686156"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"183","pagination":"pp. 183-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE POSITION OF THE UNTHOUGHT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20686156","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kuang\u2010Chi Chang"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231330","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3ec2978-65c5-305d-abc2-e7b18e35f9d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231330"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1127","pageStart":"1125","pagination":"pp. 1125-1127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231330","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanva Osha"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ae0c31b-9056-347e-90ab-1f6e2a29b252"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484626","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":3251,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan Alexander Stein"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497015","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4497015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"873","pageStart":"849","pagination":"pp. 849-873","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A Christian Nation Calls for Its Wandering Children\": Life, Liberty, Liberia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4497015","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jorshinelle T. 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OSIEL"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999272","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"755a1a21-099b-300b-9c78-5ce5d1501d18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23999272"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"275","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-275","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Going to the people: popular culture and the intellectuals in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23999272","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13977,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robyn Dane"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186985","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29ee0c2c-23f7-3249-bab2-fa9cb76cde54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186985"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When Mirror Turns Lamp: Frantz Fanon as Cultural Visionary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186985","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9113,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Romesh Diwan"],"datePublished":"1977-02-26","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4365359","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94e116e7-cee5-3988-a9dc-eb03c20ee5b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4365359"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Development, Education and the Poor: Context of South Asia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4365359","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The development efforts of the countries of the Third World, in spite of their enormity and even when successful, have followed a path that has led to the intensification of the problems of poverty, unemployment and inequality. The solution of the problems of poverty, inequality and unemployment requires a different strategy. Elements in this strategy involve the provision of opportunities for 'self-defined' work, encouragement of production of 'use-values' and strengthening of small organisational structures that are not based on the principle of pure exchange. A reordering of the development effort on these lines requires that development be understood not only in terms of GNP, material goods and use-values, but also as a 'state of mind'. To understand the existing 'state of mind'-which values goods, activities, policies and programmes that lead to increases in poverty-one has to examine the system of education in the developing countries.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1rfsrst.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760461256"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91ac2fa6-5ea1-3ff9-8796-c2325bdb0866"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1rfsrst.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"279","pagination":"279-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1rfsrst.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":32430,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","became","faisal","french","politician","nobel prize","fabius","educated","minister","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Jansson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a8ccb88-9e04-3ddc-afe2-7ee2f4d2ccc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"202","pagination":"pp. 202-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Racialization and \"Southern\" Identities of Resistance: A Psychogeography of Internal Orientalism in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645341","volumeNumber":"100","wordCount":15670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the \"voices of the Others\" of internal orientalism in the United States. Internal orientalism creates a binary of the imagined spaces of \"America\" and \"the South,\" simultaneously racializing both spaces as white spaces. The article explores the extent to which this discourse informs a \"Southern\" resistance identity among members of the white \"Southern\" nationalist organization the League of the South, and African American residents of Lynchburg, Virginia. An analysis of interviews shows that for the League members, internal orientalism produces a psychogeography wherein \"Southerners\" feel that they are considered an inferior part of the \"American\" nation, which they might experience as hatred and demonization. To combat a colonial mentality, the League advances a positive notion of \"Southern\" identity that emphasizes the theme of resistance. The essentialist version of \"Southern\" identity they espouse is ultimately a derivative discourse in that it does not unsettle the internal orientalist assumption that \"the South\" is fundamentally different from \"the North\" and \"America.\" Those African Americans in the study who embrace \"Southern\" identity resist the internal orientalist racialization of \"Southern\" as referring to white people, although to the extent they associate \"Southern\" identity with racism and segregation they partly reinforce the discourse. Some who do not embrace \"Southern\" identity cannot overcome its negative connotations. The study shows that articulations of \"the South\" and \"Southern\" identity are best understood from an interscalar perspective and not by considering \"Southernness\" as something produced solely in \"the South.\" \u672c\u6587\u63a2\u8ba8\u4e86\u5728\u7f8e\u56fd\u7684\u5185\u90e8\u4e1c\u65b9\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u6240\u8c13\u7684\"\u5176\u4ed6\u58f0\u97f3\u3002\" \u5185\u90e8\u4e1c\u65b9\u4e3b\u4e49\u521b\u5efa\u4e86\u4e00\u4e2a\u60f3\u8c61\u7a7a\u95f4\u91cc\u4e8c\u5206\u7684\"\u7f8e\u56fd\"\u548c\"\u5357 \u65b9\u540c\u65f6\u5c06\u4e24\u4e2a\u7a7a\u95f4\u79cd\u65cf\u5316\u4e3a\u767d\u4eba\u7684\u7a7a\u95f4\u3002\u6587\u7ae0\u63a2\u8ba8\u4e86\u5728\u4f55\u79cd\u7a0b\u5ea6\u4e0a\u8fd9\u79cd\u8bed\u5883\u80fd\u591f\u4ece\u767d\u4eba\u7684\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u6c11\u65cf\u4e3b\u4e49\u7ec4\u7ec7\uff0c\u5357 \u65b9\u8054\u76df\uff0c\u548c\u5f17\u5409\u5c3c\u4e9a\u5dde\u6797\u5947\u5821\u975e\u6d32\u88d4\u5c45\u6c11\u7b49\u4e0d\u540c\u7684\u6210\u5458\u4e4b\u95f4\uff0c\u6807\u575d\u3001\u51fa---\u4e2a\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u62b5\u6297\u6210\u5458\u7684\u8eab\u4efd\u3002\u8bbf\u8c08\u7684\u5206\u6790\u8868\u660e\uff0c\u8be5 \u8054\u76df\u7684\u6210\u5458\uff0c\u5185\u90e8\u4e1c\u65b9\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u521b\u4f5c\u4e86\u4e00\u79cd\u5fc3\u7406\u5730\u7406\uff0c\u4f7f\"\u5357\u65b9\u4eba\"\u611f\u5230\u4ed6\u4eec\u88ab\u8ba4\u4e3a\u662f\"\u7f8e\u56fd\"\u56fd\u5bb6\u7684\u6b21\u7b49\u90e8\u5206\uff0c\u4ed6\u4eec\u53ef\u80fd \u4f1a\u56e0\u6b64\u800c\u7ecf\u5386\u4ec7\u6068\u548c\u5996\u9b54\u5316\u3002\u4e3a\u4e86\u6253\u51fb\u6b96\u6c11\u5fc3\u6001\uff0c\u8054\u76df\u53d1\u5c55\u4e86\u79ef\u6781\u610f\u4e49\u7684\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u6982\u5ff5\uff0c\u4ee5\u5f3a\u8c03\u62b5\u6297\u7684\u4e3b\u9898\u3002\u4ed6\u4eec\u6240\u4e3b\u5f20 \u7684\u5173\u4e8e\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u8eab\u4efd\u7684\u672c\u8d28\u7248\u672c\u5176\u5b9e\u7ec8\u7a76\u662f\u4e00\u79cd\u884d\u751f\u7684\u8bdd\u8bed\uff0c\u56e0\u4e3a\u5b83\u4e0d\u5e76\u52a8\u6447\u5185\u90e8\u4e1c\u65b9\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u7684\u5047\u8bbe\uff0c\u65e2\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u4e0e\"\u5317 \u65b9\"\u548c\"\u7f8e\u56fd\"\u662f\u6839\u672c\u4e0d\u540c\u7684\u3002\u7814\u7a76\u4e2d\u7684\u90a3\u4e9b\u975e\u88d4\u7f8e\u56fd\u4eba\uff0c\u4ed6\u4eec\u63a5\u53d7\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u7684\u8eab\u4efd\uff0c\u62b5\u5236\u5185\u90e8\u4e1c\u65b9\u4e3b\u4e49\u8005\u79cd\u65cf\u5316\u7684\"\u5357 \u65b9\"\u6982\u5ff5\uff0c\u65e2\u5b83\u662f\u4e13\u6307\u767d\u4eba\u7684\"\u5357\u65b9\u5c3d\u7ba1\u5728\u67d0\u79cd\u7a0b\u5ea6\u4e0a\u4ed6\u4eec\u628a\"\u5357\u65b9\" \u8eab\u4efd\u4e0e\u79cd\u65cf\u4e3b\u4e49\u548c\u79cd\u65cf\u9694\u79bb\u76f8\u5173\u8054\u5b9e\u9645\u4e0a\u52a0 \u5f3a\u4e86\u90a3\u90e8\u5206\u8bed\u5883\u3002\u6709\u4e9b\u4e0d\u63a5\u53d7\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u8eab\u4efd\u7684\u4eba\u65e0\u6cd5\u514b\u670d\u5176\u6d88\u6781\u7684\u542b\u4e49\u3002\u8fd9\u9879\u7814\u7a76\u8868\u660e\uff0c\u5173\u4e8e\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u548c\"\u5357\u65b9\u4eba\"\u8eab\u4efd \u7684\u8868\u8ff0\uff0c\u6700\u597d\u7684\u7406\u89e3\u8981\u4ece\u4e00\u4e2a\u8de8\u6807\u91cf\u7684\u89d2\u5ea6\u51fa\u53d1\uff0c\u5e76\u4e14\u4e0d\u80fd\u5c06\"\u5357\u65b9\u6027\" \u5f53\u4f5c\"\u5357\u65b9\"\u4e00\u8bcd\u6240\u5355\u72ec\u751f\u4ea7\u7684\u4e1c\u897f\u3002\u5173\u953a \u6708:\u623f\u73ed\u4e3b\u7a76\u65b9\u4e3b\u7acb\uff0c \uff0c{)!llA\u66feE\u7b0b~ !-\u8428\u5c45\u59d4\u4e3bJ\u5b9a\uff0c il;f\u73d1\uff0c\u7f8eE\u5e2d\u4e07\u3002 Este art\u00edculo examina las \"voces de los Otros\" del orientalismo interno en los Estados Unidos. El orientalismo interno crea un binario de los espacios imaginados de \"Am\u00e9rica\" y \"el Sur,\" racializando simult\u00e1neamente ambos espacios como espacios blancos. El art\u00edculo explora la extensi\u00f3n con la que este discurso informa una identidad de resitencia \"sure\u00f1a\" entre miembros de la organizaci\u00f3n nacionalista \"sure\u00f1a\" blanca, la Liga del Sur, y residentes afroamericanos de Lynchburg, Virginia. El an\u00e1lisis de la entrevistas muestra que para los miembros de la Liga, el orientalismo interno produce una psicogeograf\u00eda dentro de la cual los \"sure\u00f1os\" sienten que a ellos se les considera como una parte inferior de la naci\u00f3n \"americana,\" que ellos bien podr\u00edan experimentar como odio y demonizaci\u00f3n. Para combatir una mentalidad colonial, La Liga propone una noci\u00f3n positiva de la identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" que resalta el tema de la resistencia. La versi\u00f3n esencialista de la identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" por la que ellos abogan en \u00faltimas es un discurso derivado en el cual no se desmonta el supuesto orientalista interno de que \"el Sur\" es fundamentalmente diferente de \"el Norte\" y \"Am\u00e9rica.\" Aquellos afroamericanos del estudio que admiten la identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" resisten la racializaci\u00f3n orientalista interna de lo \"sure\u00f1o\" en lo que se refiere a la gente blanca, aunque hasta donde ellos asocian identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" con racismo y segregaci\u00f3n en parte, al menos, refuerzan el discurso. Algunos de quienes no admiten la identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" no pueden superar sus connotaciones negativas. El estudio muestra que las articulaciones de \"el Sur\" y la identidad \"sure\u00f1a\" son mejor entendidas desde una perspectiva interescalar y no considerando la \"suridad\" como algo producido solamente en \"el Sur.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Saunders"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bdc2500-2ee9-3351-9982-6ccd2ff8ffb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The Agony and the Allegory: The Concept of the Foreign, the Language of Apartheid, and the Fiction of J. M. Coetzee","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354585","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":20449,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danny K. Weil"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1e9e88c-1192-35b9-a404-eaac72def8de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42977556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":65.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Chapter 6: Reasoning Within Different Points of View: The Common Struggle for Human Dignity and the Logic of Oppression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42977556","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":27239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bedour Alagraa"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"review-essay","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e8352c3-334e-3896-bd45-6a6ecb7f2113"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cedric Robinson's Black Marxism<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752191","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4857,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Thirty-Five Years Later","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSA DEL OLMO"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765933","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9135e1c4-3270-3ce6-835f-bc1dde8396f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29765933"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Limitations for the Prevention of Violence: The Latin American Reality and Its Criminological Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765933","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Cooke"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23058971","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d389357c-b160-3be5-942b-4901ee22ee02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23058971"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudasbu"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Studies Association Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"250","pagination":"pp. 250-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Middle East Studies Association of North America (MESA)","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23058971","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":940,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kanishka Chowdhury"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10872bf9-9556-3669-a3dc-f8cf11f21dbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Afrocentric Voices: Constructing Identities, [Dis]placing Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112296","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosemary-Claire Collard","Jessica Dempsey","Juanita Sundberg"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddf64c08-31d1-3a60-bf20-329c556e3f5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"322","pagination":"pp. 322-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Manifesto for Abundant Futures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537846","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":6715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The concept of the Anthropocene is creating new openings around the question of how humans ought to intervene in the environment. In this article, we address one arena in which the Anthropocene is prompting a sea change: conservation. The path emerging in mainstream conservation is, we argue, neoliberal and postnatural. We propose an alternative path for multispecies abundance. By abundance we mean more diverse and autonomous forms of life and ways of living together. In considering how to enact multispecies worlds, we take inspiration from Indigenous and peasant movements across the globe as well as decolonial and postcolonial scholars. With decolonization as our principal political sensibility, we offer a manifesto for abundance and outline political strategies to reckon with colonial-capitalist ruins, enact pluriversality rather than universality, and recognize animal autonomy. We advance these strategies to support abundant socioecological futures. \u4eba\u7c7b\u4e16\u7684\u6982\u5ff5\uff0c\u5bf9\u4e8e\u4eba\u7c7b\u5982\u4f55\u4ecb\u5165\u81ea\u7136\u7684\u95ee\u9898\uff0c\u521b\u9020\u4e86\u5d2d\u65b0\u7684\u5951\u673a\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u4e8e\u672c\u6587\u4e2d\uff0c\u5904\u7406\u4eba\u7c7b\u4e16\u6b63\u5728\u63a8\u8fdb\u5267\u70c8\u53d8\u9769\u7684\u4e00\u4e2a\u9886\u57df\uff1a\u73af\u5883\u4fdd\u80b2\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u4e3b\u5f20\uff0c\u4e3b\u6d41\u7684\u73af\u5883\u4fdd\u80b2\u4e2d\u9010\u6e10\u6d6e\u73b0\u7684\u8def\u5f84\uff0c\u4fbf\u662f\u65b0\u81ea\u7531\u4e3b\u4e49\u53ca\u540e\u81ea\u7136\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u5219\u5bf9\u591a\u7269\u79cd\u7684\u4e30\u5bcc\u6027\uff0c\u63d0\u51fa\u4e00\u6761\u53e6\u7c7b\u8def\u5f84\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u6240\u8c13\u7684\u4e30\u5bcc\u6027\uff0c\u610f\u5473\u7740\u66f4\u591a\u5dee\u5f02\u53ca\u81ea\u4e3b\u7684\u751f\u547d\u5f62\u5f0f\uff0c\u4ee5\u53ca\u5171\u751f\u7684\u65b9\u5f0f\u3002\u5728\u8003\u91cf\u5982\u4f55\u5c55\u73b0\u591a\u7269\u79cd\u7684\u4e16\u754c\u65f6\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u53d7\u5230\u5168\u7403\u5404\u5730\u7684\u539f\u4f4f\u6c11\u8fd0\u52a8\u548c\u519c\u6c11\u8fd0\u52a8\uff0c\u4ee5\u53ca\u53bb\u6b96\u6c11\u548c\u540e\u6b96\u6c11\u5b66\u8005\u7684\u5553\u53d1\u3002\u53bb\u6b96\u6c11\u4f5c\u4e3a\u6211\u4eec\u7684\u4e3b\u8981\u653f\u6cbb\u654f\u611f\u5ea6\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u4ee5\u6b64\u63d0\u51fa\u4e30\u5bcc\u6027\u7684\u5ba3\u8a00\uff0c\u5e76\u6982\u8ff0\u653f\u6cbb\u7b56\u7565\uff0c\u4ee5\u6e05\u7b97\u6b96\u6c11\u2014\u8d44\u672c\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u6bc1\u574f\uff0c\u5e76\u5c55\u73b0\u591a\u91cd\u4e16\u754c\u6027\uff0c\u800c\u975e\u5355\u4e00\u4e16\u754c\u6027\uff0c\u4ee5\u53ca\u627f\u8ba4\u52a8\u7269\u7684\u81ea\u4e3b\u6027\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u63a8\u52a8\u8fd9\u4e9b\u7b56\u7565\u4ee5\u652f\u6301\u4e30\u5bcc\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u751f\u6001\u4e4b\u672a\u6765\u3002 El concepto del Antropoceno est\u00e1 creando aperturas nuevas alrededor del interrogante sobre el modo como los humanos deben intervenir en el medio ambiente. En este art\u00edculo abocamos un campo en el que el Antropoceno est\u00e1 incitando a un cambio marino: la conservaci\u00f3n. La ruta que emerge en la corriente principal de la conservaci\u00f3n es, sostenemos, neoliberal y posnatural. Proponemos una ruta alternativa para la abundancia en diversidad de especies. Por abundancia significamos formas de vida y maneras de vivir juntos m\u00e1s diversas y aut\u00f3nomas. A1 considerar c\u00f3mo representar mundos diversos en especies, nos inspiramos en movimientos de ind\u00edgenas y campesinos a trav\u00e9s del globo, lo mismo que en eruditos versados en descolonizaci\u00f3n y lo poscolonial. Con la descolonizaci\u00f3n como nuestra principal sensibilidad pol\u00edtica, ofrecemos un manifiesto en pro de la abundancia y del esquema de estrategias pol\u00edticas para lidiar con las ruinas colono-capitalistas, representar la pluriversalidad m\u00e1s que la universalidad, y reconocer la autonom\u00eda animal. Promovemos estas estrategias en apoyo de futuros socioecol\u00f3gicos abundantes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Foner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231347","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8b1ed47-e9ee-350e-b758-5ea9c9d41dca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231347"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1158","pageStart":"1156","pagination":"pp. 1156-1158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231347","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani ya Azibo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d22eafac-fee8-3fae-b2c8-1141aac4631c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26802895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ramifications of 1619 for Personality and Mental Disorganization in African-U.S. People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802895","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reports the deleterious impact into the present times of Anglo American civilization on the psyche of African-U.S. people (Africans and their descendants enslaved by the Americans in the United States) beginning in 1619. Fifty-five culture-focused disorders of the racial African personality construct resulting from (continuing) conquest by the Americans are pointed out emphasizing phylogeny. As well, disorganization and discombobulation in ontogenetic aspects of personality functioning is also pointed out. The psycho-cultural dementedness that 1619 has wrought appears as if tremendous body blows softening up the population for actual genocide or re-enslavement options of Anglo American civilization. However, the mental ravaging may be superable with psycho-cultural repair and restoration of the African personality. A psycho-behavioral templet is presented to that end.","subTitle":"Fifty-Five Psycho-sexual Terrors Attacking Personality\u2019s Phylogenetic Core Alongside Myriad Breakdowns in Its Ontogenetic Periphery","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jody Blanco"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eacf0b41-69c1-3d6a-ba10-eb2aac8a140e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41238510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"230","pagination":"pp. 230-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Oregon","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41238510","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":2951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES PENNEY"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43673605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08475911"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60615696"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn2006001075"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd28b376-f659-30c7-93c8-d5edc141ca88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43673605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revucanaetudcine"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Canadienne d'\u00c9tudes cin\u00e9matographiques \/ Canadian Journal of Film Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Film Studies Association of Canada","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"ZOOMING OUT: SEMBENE'S \"CEDDO\" AND THIRD CINEMA AESTHETICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43673605","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10312,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[417224,417289]],"Locations in B":[[35802,35867]],"abstract":"Trop souvent mal d\u00e9crites comme \u00e9tant des oeuvres de r\u00e9alisme social, les films d'Ousmane Semb\u00e8ne accordent une attention particuli\u00e8re \u00e0 l'impact politique des choix esth\u00e9tiques. Dans Ceddo (1976), Semb\u00e8ne a tr\u00e8s largement recours \u00e0 des plans zoom\u00e9s et des travellings en profondeur afin de permettre \u00e0 ses t\u00e9l\u00e9spectateurs d'\u00eatre en phase avec la relation r\u00e9solument dialectique qui existe entre une sc\u00e8ne donn\u00e9e et chacun de ses \u00e9l\u00e9ments ; de mani\u00e8re plus g\u00e9n\u00e9rale, entre ces \u00e9l\u00e9ments et le vaste contexte sociohistorique qu'ils cherchent \u00e0 repr\u00e9senter. Un aper\u00e7u des controverses qui animent l'h\u00e9ritage du Troisi\u00e8me cin\u00e9ma peut permettre de mettre en lumi\u00e9re les \u00e9l\u00e9ments esth\u00e9tiques d\u00e9laiss\u00e9s de la tradition et situer le style de cam\u00e9ra de Semb\u00e8ne en lien avec la dite tradition. Un retour \u00e0 un film comme Ceddo fournit non seulement une perspective critique \u00e0 partir de laquelle les d\u00e9veloppements r\u00e9cents dans le cin\u00e9ma mondial et les \u00e9tudes des m\u00e9dias postcoloniaux peuvent \u00eatre \u00e9valu\u00e9s. Bien plus, il peut \u00e9galement permettre de r\u00e9affirmer de fa\u00e7on authentiquement \u00e9mancipatoire le foss\u00e9 qui s\u00e9pare les repr\u00e9sentations cin\u00e9matographiques du r\u00e9el impr\u00e9visible des changements historiques.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shari Stone-Mediatore"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071205","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8ca62c4-6c1f-38a2-905e-b11a29e8872b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071205"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Challenging Academic Norms: An Epistemology for Feminist and Multicultural Classrooms","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071205","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Even while progressive educators and feminist standpoint theorists defend the value of marginalized perspectives, many marginal-voice texts continue to be deprecated in more traditional academic contexts due to their seemingly \"unprofessional,\" engaged, and creative styles. Thus, scholars who seek to defend a feminist and multicultural curriculum need a theory of knowledge that goes beyond current standpoint theory and accounts for the unorthodox format in which many marginal standpoints appear. In response to this challenge, this essay draws on feminist and postcolonial critics of objectivity, including Dorothy Smith, Chandra Mohanty, Barrios de Chungara, and Arundhati Roy to theorize the epistemic value of texts that respond with passion and creativity to marginalized people's struggles. In conclusion, I distinguish ethically oriented engagement with such texts from mere \"politicized teaching,\" and I suggest ways to teach such texts that cultivate their critical potential.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Babacar Camara"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9070ec5a-7021-354e-ae7a-d03ee4dc8a2e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theories of \u201cPostNegritude\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758854","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8563,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BEAU GROSSCUP"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20671747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60652588"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215272"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a36286b9-d4db-3e6f-bff2-5dea1ff34c23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20671747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"World Affairs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"284","pagination":"pp. 284-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"World Affairs Institute","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE RACIAL RATIONALE: CONSTRUCTING A THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL POWER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20671747","volumeNumber":"140","wordCount":10600,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[11170,11236]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansine Kaba"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cultural Revolution, Artistic Creativity, and Freedom of Expression in Guinea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160057","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":7113,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[461025,461134]],"Locations in B":[[10972,11096]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Griffith"],"datePublished":"2002-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6180a3bb-4d58-39bd-aba7-c2317ce3c21f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"527","pageStart":"506","pagination":"pp. 506-527","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"James Baldwin's Confrontation with Racist Terror in the American South: Sexual Mythology and Psychoneurosis in \"Going to Meet the Man\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180950","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":8545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The memory of Jesse, James Baldwin's protagonist in \"Going to Meet the Man,\" channels a flow of impressions that both dramatizes his psychic and sexual wounding and provides a useful perspective into the distorted reality growing out of Southern history of racist violence. Baldwin's experiments with perspective, time handling, and revealing reflect his interest in style as expos\u00e9 of harmful delusions. His treatment of point of view functions to analyze culture myths about sexuality that justify violent rape of Black women and castration and live burning of Black men. Validated as ethical norm, these myths serve as the altar on which the community sacrifices its capacity for self-examination. They supply the energy that keeps in motion cycles of barbarity against which the perpetrators claim, ironically, to be defending their enlightened selves. Inevitable, therefore, is the tragic undermining of individuals' humanity and warping of the social character.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Virginia Held"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27902891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269662"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60532856"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-233200"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"157fd4c6-6aca-3515-b01a-2a3c7f0063db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27902891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"themonist"}],"isPartOf":"The Monist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"605","pagination":"pp. 605-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History of Science & Technology","History","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE, TERRORISM, AND MORAL INQUIRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27902891","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":10264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francis Ngaboh-Smart"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dimensions of Gift Giving in Nuruddin Farah's \"Gifts\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819991","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Asef Bayat"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3992901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6419e62-2b63-3dde-a26a-444223b5b49e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3992901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Un-Civil Society: The Politics of the 'Informal People'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3992901","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1994-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8953c49-1acd-3aa4-b9f4-ac2075534b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":122.0,"pageEnd":"1283","pageStart":"1162","pagination":"pp. 1162-1283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Kenworthy"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"79e18915-1e36-3032-a2fe-6888e1cede85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24364909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Global Health: The Debts of Gratitude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364909","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6488,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[241197,241589]],"Locations in B":[[3007,3396]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. 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The Mungiki, Ethnic Violence and the Politics of the Moi Succession in Kenya, 1987-2002","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3518395","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":12255,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Kenya's return to pluralist politics in the early 1990s saw the eruption of political violence that has since laid siege to human rights and democracy. This article discusses the Mungiki movement which, like the Mau Mau movement that waged armed struggle against the British in the 1950s, has sprouted among the Kikuyu. It examines Mungiki within the broader theoretical context of competitive electoral politics and political violence in contemporary Kenya. In addition to tracing the movement's religious and ideological roots, the article shows how 'informal repression' or quasi-legitimization of sectarian violence for political ends by the state, has transformed a 'moral ethnic' movement into a 'politically tribal' one. As a contribution to the academic debate on Mungiki, the article draws on the rich public debate in Kenya and the author's close study of the movement in 2001-2.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Msha\u00ef S. Mwangola"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4ca7f1e-3049-3d4c-9f95-97a4833e8d3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Nurturing the Fourth Generation: Defining the Historical Mission for Our Generation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484662","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Reflections on the African academy have identified different generations of African scholars. These interventions have sought to using different criteria, identifying different foci and arguing the importance of each. This paper furthers Thandika Mkandawire's reflection on the first three generations of the post-colonial era (1995) by suggesting a historical mission for the next, the emerging fourth generation. Les r\u00e9flexions sur l'Acad\u00e9mie africaine ont identifi\u00e9 diff\u00e9rentes g\u00e9n\u00e9rations de chercheurs africains. Ces interventions ont cherch\u00e9 \u00e0 utiliser des crit\u00e8res diff\u00e9rents, \u00e0 identifier les diff\u00e9rents centres d'int\u00e9r\u00eat et \u00e0 discuter de l'importance de chacun. Ce document \u00e9largie la r\u00e9flexion de Thandika Mkandawire par rapport aux trois premi\u00e8res g\u00e9n\u00e9rations de la p\u00e9riode postcoloniale (1995) en sugg\u00e9rant une mission historique pour la prochaine, la quatri\u00e8me g\u00e9n\u00e9ration \u00e9mergeante.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S.R. Tulkin","M.J. 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Karger AG","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Alternative Conceptions of Intellectual Functioning","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26763992","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Research which discusses group differences in intellectual functioning utilizes a very limited definition of intelligence. Intelligence is not assessed within cultural context, and little regard is paid to intellectual activities which do not involve the manipulation of abstract concepts. This orientation de-emphasizes the potential development of other human capacities which might be even more helpful in adapting to or advancing our civilization by emphasizing childrearing patterns aimed primarily at the development of abstract thought.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Teodros Kiros"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176276","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e34a0d91-01a0-3f60-8de4-a593d429393a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45176276"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"138","pagination":"pp. 138-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"An Essay on the Evolution of Lewis Gordon's Thought: From Bad Faith to Disciplinary Decadence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176276","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe Lindenfeld"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618744","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029769"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38376720"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d811b0c0-9d2d-3d84-a04b-064f5922c86d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25618744"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlibr"}],"isPartOf":"American Libraries","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"American Library Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Library Science"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"International Understanding: A Booklist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25618744","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":2178,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig V. Smith"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Stereography of Class, Race, and Nation in \"God's Bits of Wood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820198","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8104,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b2077b4-2fed-38f3-a087-a9fc6c70602a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4501752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Northern Theory: The Political Geography of General Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4501752","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":15326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The relationship between geopolitical position and general social theory is examined by a detailed reading of three important texts, Coleman's Foundations of Social Theory, Bourdieu's Logic of Practice, and Giddens's Constitution of Society. Effects of metropolitan position are traced in theoretical strategies, conceptions of time and history, models of agency, ideas of modernity, and other central features of their theorizing. Four textual moves are identified that together constitute the northernness of general social theory: claiming universality, reading from the center, gestures of exclusion, and grand erasure. Some alternative paths for theory, embodying different relations with the global South, are briefly indicated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua Cole"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a943e73-4014-36b2-acb5-f66d60536cc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Massacres and their Historians: Recent Histories of State Violence in France and Algeria in the Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843641","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10708,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chia-rong Wu"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44288007","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21660042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"720c14c9-5062-3c51-850a-ef5db7a68a58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44288007"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjchinstud"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Chinese Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Association of Chinese Studies","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Remapping the Ethno-Scape of Taiwan: Representation of Violence in Dancing Crane's \"Remains of Life\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44288007","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":7574,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[69306,69426]],"Locations in B":[[19023,19143]],"abstract":"This article explores the representation of violence in Dancing Crane's Remains of Life [Yu sheng]. Centered around the lingering trauma of the Musha Incident, this novel serves to unpack the historical and ideological implications related to the declining Atayal aborigines in Taiwan. The article is divided into three parts. The first section takes into account how Dancing Crane re-narrates the historical violence with respect to the ethnic conflicts. Dancing Crane's heterogeneous writing makes possible the deconstruction of the dominant linguistic system and writing politics. His unruly language coincides with the heterogeneity and marginality of the aborigines. Second, I elaborate the significance of decapitation as a spectacle of violence and a sign of symbolic castration. Here the actual violence of decapitation is associated with the ideological violence of politics. The third part deals with the Atayals' remains of lives and the historical complexity in the past and the present, thus helping readers to reconsider the ethno-scape of Taiwan.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RAJIV MALHOTRA"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45064843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09718052"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1111735025, 1111735423, 755295167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9fee820-b03b-384b-bebf-e5e797241e6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45064843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worlaffainteissu"}],"isPartOf":"World Affairs: The Journal of International Issues","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Kapur Surya Foundation","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Asymmetric Dialogue Of Civilisations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45064843","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The asymmetries of power and intellectual representation prevent genuine dialogue among the peoples of the world. In the Indian context this is the last hold out of colonialism in trivialising her thought and culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernest W. Ranly"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24457826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24457826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"468","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-468","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE AND NON-VIOLENCE: A Survey of Recent Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24457826","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":4094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jenny Reardon"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23474492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622439"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51204698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227219"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9c9f4d1-51fe-39c5-8bb5-13545326dd9d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23474492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scietechhumavalu"}],"isPartOf":"Science, Technology, & Human Values","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Emergence of Science and Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23474492","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the last few years, justice has emerged as a matter of concern for the contemporary constitution of technoscience. Increasingly, both practicing scientists and engineers and scholars of science and technology cite justice as an organizing theme of their work. In this essay, I consider why \"science and justice\" might be arising now. I then ask after the opportunities, but also the dangers, of this formation. By way of example, I explore the openings and exclusions created by the recent conjugation of science and justice in the field of personal genomics. Finally, I conclude with reflections on what other forms \"science and justice\" might take, and what might be gained or lost in fostering them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ipek A. Celik"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097101"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42442107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4677"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c60ead61-68d9-3820-8544-000fbf1b755f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cinemaj"}],"isPartOf":"Cinema Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Wanted You to Be Present\": Guilt and the History of Violence in Michael Haneke's Cach\u00e9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962837","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":12091,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36097,36174]],"Locations in B":[[621,701]],"abstract":"The essay examines how Michael Haneke's Cach\u00e9 (2005) addresses contemporary racism in France. After discussing the film's historical background and reviewing Anglo-American and French criticism, the article explores the connection between the film's \"terrible realism\" and the implications of colonial violence and guilt in today's France.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2963006","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ae0df7-5be8-3cf0-9485-f62206b0ddc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2963006"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black Authors Solidly Represented in The New York Public Library's Books of the Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2963006","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45138411","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d16ed3e-dce0-30ae-91e7-a8ff0e9f840f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45138411"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Political science - Politics","Economics - Economic policy"],"title":"THE DISPOSSESSION OF AFRICAN WEALTH AT THE COST OF AFRICA'S HEALTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45138411","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article synthesizes new data about the outflow of Africa's wealth, to reveal structural factors behind the continent's ongoing underdevelopment. The flow of wealth out of sub-Saharan Africa to the North occurs primarily through exploitative debt and finance, phantom aid, capital flight, unfair trade, and distorted investment. Although the resource drain from Africa dates back many centuries\u2014beginning with unfair terms of trade, amplified through slavery, colonialism, and neocolonialism\u2014today, neoliberal (free market) policies are the most direct causes of inequality and poverty. They tend to amplify preexisting class, race, gender, and regional disparities and to exacerbate ecological degradation. Reversing this outflow is just one challenge in the struggle for policy measures to establish a stronger funding base for the health sector.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald J. Puchala"],"datePublished":"1997-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eadfe010-59df-34dd-aa59-9e63fb470088"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/425103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some Non-Western Perspectives on International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425103","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":3391,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47086,47169]],"Locations in B":[[15192,15275]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RAQUEL SCHEFER","Jos\u00e9 Cardoso","Jos\u00e9 Cardoso"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26432420","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dc9155b-21b7-3b87-b1f1-ce0ddedbd268"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26432420"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"315","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-315","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fictions of the Liberation Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26432420","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Ruy Guerra, Jos\u00e9 Cardoso, Zdravko Velimirovic","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen D. McCarthy"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20025087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a378cb9-9f75-3c40-abf9-7f7e9171584f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20025087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"93","pagination":"pp. 93-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Cold War to Cultural Development: The International Cultural Activities of the Ford Foundation, 1950-1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20025087","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":9264,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Wasserman"],"datePublished":"1978-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1148459","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157228"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38481287"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236886"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff34f813-0ce2-352c-8c05-e6b6a75b36c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1148459"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignpolicy"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Policy","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rhodesia Is Not Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1148459","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4093,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Angelina C. Yee"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/495556","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01619705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709509"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"950dd142-adc2-35e4-95a7-72bd2c00e35d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/495556"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinliteessaarti"}],"isPartOf":"Chinese Literature: Essays, Articles, Reviews (CLEAR)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Chinese Literature: essays, articles, reviews (CLEAR)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing the Colonial Self: Yang Kui's Texts of Resistance and National Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/495556","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bennetta Jules-Rosette"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20730796","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3eea211-6748-3de5-b78a-28e5e0b2fe00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20730796"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"285","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-285","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Jean-Paul Sartre and the philosophy of n\u00e9gritude: Race, self, and society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20730796","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, Jean-Paul Sartre's relationship to the n\u00e9gritude movement and black intellectuals in Paris between the 1940s and the 1960s is examined in sociological and historical context. Sartre's version of n\u00e9gritude, developed in his 1948 treatise \"Orph\u00e9e noir\" prefacing L\u00e9opold Senghor's collection of African and Malagasy poetry, is analyzed in terms of its role in shaping the discourses and debates surrounding n\u00e9gritude and the relationship of black intellectuals to the rest of French society. Sartre's phenomenological theories of race, juxtaposing dominant and subaltern ideologies, are contrasted with his dialectic of n\u00e9gritude. The antin\u00e9gritude movement of the late 1960s is also considered with reference to Sartre's theories and inspiration. During this period, the relationship that Sartre established with Martinican intellectual and revolutionary Frantz Fanon helped to place Sartre into prominence as an activist and a theorist of decolonization and Third World politics. Sartre's theories of race, self, and society were integral to both his early and later works and warrant review as approaches to the sociology of culture and sources of reflection for contemporary postcolonial studies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dina Jadallah"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27a6ff5a-dbc0-35d7-956d-2ac9dd488ded"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41858690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858690","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2194,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. J. Ball-Rokeach"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/800380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Normative and Deviant Violence from a Conflict Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800380","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10866,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59968,60024]],"Locations in B":[[61966,62030]],"abstract":"My aim in this paper is to propose ways of overcoming obstacles to the development of a theory of violence that can bridge previously fragmented domains of inquiry. The solutions proposed are to (1) neutralize the definition of violence by (2) locating the phenomenon of violence within the conceptual framework of conflict such that (3) the same set of basic assumptions may be employed to analyze instances of violence exhibited by the powerful or the powerless--instances which vary in their degree of social acceptability. The assumptions presented move progressively from purported relations between 1) unequal distribution of resources, 2) asymmetric social relations, and 3) conflict--to the conditions that affect a transition from a) latent to manifest conflict, b) nonviolent to violent manifest conflict, and c) from normative to deviant violence. Conditions that limit the applicability of these assumptions are discussed, followed by illustrative applications of the approach to two forms of interpersonal violence--parental violence and differential rates of male and female violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Melanie U. Pooch"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt87.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783837635416"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25a890a2-cd9d-38fc-a934-8f42592291cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1wxt87.13"}],"isPartOf":"DiverCity \u2013 Global Cities as a Literary Phenomenon","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"211","pagination":"211-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1wxt87.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["toronto","chang rae","karen tei","w\u00fcrzburg k\u00f6nigshausen","trudi bunting","filion ryan","pierre filion","university","dionne","bielefeld transcript"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jes\u00fas Varela Zapata"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02106124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"959d17e9-6ae3-3f58-93bd-7ac4eede2ea0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41055088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"atlantis"}],"isPartOf":"Atlantis","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"AEDEAN: Asociaci\u00f3n espa\u00f1ola de estudios anglo-americanos","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41055088","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":1915,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT STAPLES"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d8b988f-23cb-3e12-bd90-629062b3a90c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41065939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"To Be Young, Black and Oppressed","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41065939","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paulette A. Ramsay"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325323","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0257b36b-7b79-3882-b2f6-3065c037ecc3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325323"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"353","pageStart":"336","pagination":"pp. 336-353","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"THE POLITICS OF RESISTANCE AND AGENCY IN SHIRLEY CAMPBELL'S AND JES\u00daS COS CAUSSE'S HOMAGE TO THE AFRO-CUBAN POET NICOL\u00c1S GUILL\u00c9N","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325323","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":7008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780801425752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a37efc4-0dd1-34fa-b68b-9064f2e5ed5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.10"}],"isPartOf":"Writing in Limbo","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"197","pagination":"197-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing after Colonialism:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6bv.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14597,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"To consider the question of gender and subjectivity in modernist discourse is also to confront the ambiguous role women play in the construction of national identity. I have already hinted at this ambiguity in the previous chapters: in the central (male) texts of Caribbean modernism women either signify the social space over which the colonizer and the colonized struggle or function as what Franco, in the epigraph above, calls a space of loss. In many of the novels discussed earlier, women are often confined to private spaces, largely excluded\u2014like Sophia in Carpentier\u2019sEl siglo<\/em>\u2014from the historical events that","subTitle":"Crick Crack, Monkey and Beka Lamb","keyphrase":["caribbean","colonial","crick crack","beka lamb","language","crack monkey","narrator","discourse","creole","crick crack monkey"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Roberts"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf9fa57b-2bb9-3d9e-9d0a-e50c74a2494d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"6","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-6","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Marronage Between Past and Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752008","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":360,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Requiem for \u00c9douard Glissant","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susanne D. Mueller"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484731","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cd67507-42c6-382f-bfc7-492daae9ee2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"459","pagination":"pp. 459-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historical Origins of Tanzania's Ruling Class","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484731","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":17649,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Les conditions historiques de l'\u00e9mergence de la classe dominante en Tanzanie sont examin\u00e9es. La \"bourgeoisie bureaucratique\", par oposition \u00e0 une classe capitaliste productive au Kenya, a retard\u00e9 le d\u00e9veloppement du capitalisme tanzanien. Dans la premi\u00e8re partie, les ant\u00e9c\u00e9dants (avant 1967) de la classe actuellement au pouvoir en Tanzanie sont analys\u00e9s. Dans la deuxi\u00e8me partie, le mouvement d'ind\u00e9pendance et la sp\u00e9cificit\u00e9 de classe de l'Etat post-colonial sont \u00e9tudi\u00e9s. En conclusion, l'auteur observe une classe et un Etat qui suivent des politiques qui ont tendance \u00e0 institutionnaliser une petite bourgeoisie et un petit capitalisme.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rabab Abdulhadi"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190511","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18355f54-1711-3550-bf5d-859ce4e295ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/190511"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"673","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-673","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Palestinian Women's Autonomous Movement: Emergence, Dynamics, and Challenges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/190511","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":12381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the Palestinian women's autonomous movement that emerged in the early 1990s, emphasizing changes in the sociopolitical context to account for the movement's emergence, dynamics, and challenges. Using interviews obtained during fieldwork in Palestine in 1992, 1993, and 1994, and employing historical and archival records, I argue that Palestinian feminist discourses were shaped and influenced by the sociopolitical context in which Palestinian women acted and with which they interacted. The multiplicity of views voiced by the women I interviewed attests to the impossibility of homogenizing and flattening women's experiences, while the range of actions and strategies employed by different groups and organizations calls attention to contextual limitations on social action.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PATRICK EMMANUEL"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6db6ae02-cb21-39d7-881b-5b980a9493fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"136","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-136","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"APPROACHES TO THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF CARIBBEAN POLITICS: SOME COMMENTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861953","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Imani Sanga"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53164595"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Music and Nationalism in Tanzania: Dynamics of National Space in Muziki wa Injili in Dar es Salaam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174566","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12950,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jessica Christina Harris"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2649073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c40e65d-351d-3d72-9c74-21ecdd21d3ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2649073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegrohistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"162","pagination":"pp. 162-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionary Black Nationalism: The Black Panther Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2649073","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":7098,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elise M. Boulding","Ted Goertzel","Joseph W. Elder","Ruth Harriet Jacobs","Louis Kriesberg"],"datePublished":"1974-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27702143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afb50a09-c7ea-3aa2-b339-4b17457c9bbf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27702143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Teaching the Sociology of World Conflicts: A Review of the State of the Field","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27702143","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":4660,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Moss"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40201138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0eef048-831f-3e3d-8e57-3755511b56e4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40201138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"internationalj"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"International Terrorism and Western Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40201138","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":4490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David L. Swartz","Vera L. Zolberg"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20730792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74298f0d-be3f-395f-a6b4-c2743450c79f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20730792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre for the twenty-first century?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20730792","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4244,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"By virtually dominating French intellectual life (literature, philosophy, culture) during the early post-World War II period, Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) embodied what Pierre Bourdieu calls a \"total intellectual\" \u2014 one who responds to and helps frame public debate on all the intellectual and political issues of the day. During his lifetime and even after his death in 1980, Sartre's thinking and political engagements provoked sharp reactions, both positive and negative, in France and abroad. Marxism, decolonization struggles, and violence are three key themes on which Sartre's public positions continue to generate considerable debate \u2014 a debate that remains relevant today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dean Neu"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40698191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01484184"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f62b6480-5e33-3813-9439-424eb8689e01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40698191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"accohistjour"}],"isPartOf":"The Accounting Historians Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"The Academy of Accounting Historians","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Finance","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"DISCOVERING\" INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: ACCOUNTING AND THE MACHINERY OF EMPIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40698191","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10830,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study examines the historical usage of accounting as a technology of government within the domain of government-indigenous peoples relations in Canada. Our thesis is that accounting was salient within the chain of circumstances that influenced the discovery\/identification of indigenous peoples as a governable population. By the 1830s, accounting techniques had come to occupy a central place in the military machinery of empire. When the cost-cutting and reformist sentiments prevalent in Britain during the early 1800s encouraged the reconsideration of the military costs of empire, accounting techniques were one of the methods used in the attempt to interrogate military expenditures. Partially as a result of these interrogations, indigenous peoples came to be identified as a site for cost cutting by British bureaucrats. However, it was at the level of the colonial administration in the Upper and Lower Canadas that the competing demands of \"government\" encouraged indigenous peoples to be viewed as a potential site for government. And it was once this \"discovery\" was made that accounting and other techniques were utilized in the attempt to turn indigenous peoples into a governable population. This study contributes to our understanding of accounting by documenting the ways in which techniques such as accounting were central to the military machinery of empire and British imperialism. The study also contributes to our understanding of the historical antecedents that shape current-day usages of accounting as a technology of government within the domain of government-First Nations relations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARIA STERN"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d20c189c-2f05-3eb8-8835-b3a496b56457"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26299460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'We' the Subject: The Power and Failure of (In)Security","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26299460","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One way of exploring the paradox of (in)security and its implications for the reproduction of violence is to inquire into how the promise of a secure subject is inscribed in discourses of (in)security. Why is the successful securing of 'we' impossible? How might the supplementary relationship between security and insecurity inform the inscription of 'we' as the sovereign subject of security? Arguably, integral to the promise of an assured security is the concealment of the impossibility of fulfilling this very promise. This article aims to closely examine how a specific 'we', as the 'subject' of security, is constructed. Reading from the (in)security narratives of Mayan women \u2013 narratives that reflect the lived experiences of marginalized peoples struggling for security in resistance \u2013 it explores how the inscription of a specific and multiple identity, 'Mayan women', as the subject of security enacts and resists many of the dangers of securitizing identity that seem to be attendant to modern logics or grammars of security. Looking at how the impossible promise (or the ultimate failure) of securing identity plays out in a particular site among people whose voices are not often heard in writings on security invites reflection over failure as an opening for rethinking (in)securing identity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Wald"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467534","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17b71d5d-a280-3a61-978c-d84412201247"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467534"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Culture of \"Internal Colonialism\": A Marxist Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467534","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2613618","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2613618"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Other Books Received","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2613618","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":2027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jason Sumich","Rui Cabral"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41012637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00032573"},{"name":"oclc","value":"644153155"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234669"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41012637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"analisesocial"}],"isPartOf":"An\u00e1lise Social","issueNumber":"187","language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"345","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-345","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Instituto Ci\u00eancias Sociais da Universidad de Lisboa","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Construir uma na\u00e7\u00e3o: ideologias de modernidade da elite mo\u00e7ambicana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41012637","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"O presente artigo analisa a import\u00e2ncia, para a elite mo\u00e7ambicana politicamente dominante, de uma ideologia de modernidade unificadora. Argumento que esta ideologia de modernidade constitui uma categoria \u00abnativa\u00bb, sendo utilizada pelas elites para reivindicarem o seu poder social e legitimarem as suas posi\u00e7\u00f5es de privil\u00e9gio perante a sociedade em geral. N\u00e3o se trata de uma ideologia est\u00e1tica, mas antes profundamente enraizada nos antecedentes sociais da elite durante o per\u00edodo colonial e que acompanhou as transforma\u00e7\u00f5es resultantes da independ\u00eancia do pa\u00eds. Aquilo que foi em tempos um projecto autorit\u00e1rio, mas potencialmente emancipat\u00f3rio, de recria\u00e7\u00e3o da na\u00e7\u00e3o, est\u00e1 hoje firmemente confinado \u00e0s pr\u00f3prias elites e a antiga base do nacionalismo tornou-se cada vez mais um indicador de estatuto e de diferen\u00e7a social. This paper examines the importance of a unifying ideology of modernity for a politically dominant Mozambican elite, in the capital, Maputo. I argue that this ideology of modernity forms a \u00abnative\u00bb category, which elites use as both a claim to social power and as an attempt to legitimise their positions of privilege to the wider society. This is not a static ideology, but one that is deeply intertwined with the social background of the elite in the colonial period and has transformed with thier changing through independence. What was once an authoritarian, but potentially emancipatory, project to recreate the nation is steadily being confined to elites themselves, and the former bedrock of nationalism has increasingly become an indicator of high status and social difference.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Neocosmos"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97a994cb-ea5b-3aae-9883-dc0991e6436e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Dialectic of Emancipatory Politics and African Subjective Potentiality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752145","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":14448,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"All politics (i.e., a collective organised thought-practice), if it is to be emancipatory, must exhibit a dialectic of expressive and excessive thought. The absence of the dialectic implies the absence of a politics. The same point can be made by stressing that, in emancipatory politics, thought and practice are indistinguishable. The dialectic here concerns an emancipatory politics latent in excluded popular African traditions. Such latency means that a potentiality for dialectical thought often already exists within African traditions. Yet it can only be activated in struggle. I show through three examples separated by long periods of time, that Africans\u2014or more accurately some Africans\u2014have successfully activated existing potentials into emancipatory politics by thinking against and beyond the oppressive particularities of interests, place and identity embedded in dominant cultures (such as those typical of civil society today) and have thus emphasised the centrality of universal humanity in the politics of emancipation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claude E. Welch, Jr."],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37f80a52-94f4-3da8-8f75-479a27648182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"86","pagination":"p. 86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185201","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286855,286953]],"Locations in B":[[818,923]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derefe Kimarley Chevannes"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0054c29-b6c4-3e25-8579-09ea7079a9d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trabajando y estudiando para ser el hombre total","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752162","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":2994,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[231082,231222]],"Locations in B":[[18389,18529]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Socializing the Political in Living Ideology in Cuba<\/em>","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tobiasz TARGOSZ","Zuzanna S\u0142awik"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24920307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17336716"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b62b5e3c-5dac-3e82-814b-68d0ba2c6cd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24920307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politeja"}],"isPartOf":"Politeja","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Ksi\u0119garnia Akademicka","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BURMESE CULTURE DURING THE COLONIAL PERIOD IN THE YEARS 1885-1931","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24920307","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT The colonial period in Burma marked the start of slow changes which would eventually turn a traditional society into a modern one. The changes in Burmese culture which took place in the colonial period were an important aspect of this transformation. In the period of British rule, Burmese culture found itself in an ambivalent situation, on the one hand opposing foreign models and ideas and, on the other, adopting numerous foreign cultural elements which, if treated as cultural tools, allowed for the protection of autotelic indigenous Burmese values.","subTitle":"THE WORLD OF BURMESE VALUES IN REACTION TO THE INCLUSION OF COLONIALISM","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles W. 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\u0627\u0645\u062a\u064a\u0627\u0632\u0627\u062a\u0647\u0660","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Kershaw"],"datePublished":"1992-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d2cfd5a-697c-3a64-8c0d-6231dee1b5f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"493","pageStart":"477","pagination":"pp. 477-493","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied 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Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Black Power Advocacy: Criminal Anarchy or Free Speech","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3479267","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":28645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Justin Omar Johnston"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26806739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa2af009-af72-3cd1-bfa9-f789d13e5d6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26806739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cA Nother World\u201d in Indra Sinha\u2019s Animal\u2019s People<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26806739","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":11018,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Indra Sinha\u2019s novel Animal\u2019s People, an engagement with the consequences of the 1984 toxic chemical spill in Bhopal, India, in order to critique the humanist discourse of Dow Chemical\u2019s massive rebranding effort, \u201cThe Human Element,\u201d that began in 2006. The novel\u2019s narrator, when his spine is twisted forward by the chemical toxins, adopts the name \u201cAnimal.\u201d In contesting Western definitions of what constitutes a human, he helps to reimagine postcolonial activism by broadening its coalition to include nonhuman subjects. Sinha\u2019s version of postcolonial environmentalism, this article thus suggests, searches out the possibilities and limitations of a posthuman postcolonialism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DEBARATI SANYAL"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"894a1204-baad-3a65-af6f-6ff8a4b4ba70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26420608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"139","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Calais\u2019s \u201cJungle\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26420608","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In fall 2016, the French state razed Calais\u2019s \u201cjungle,\u201d encampments that had sheltered close to 10,000 refugees. An analysis of film and photography set in the \u201cjungle\u201d highlights practices of resistance to the interplay of humanitarian compassion and securitarian repression in the destruction of contemporary camps, nuancing the view of borderscapes as sites of total biopolitical capture, and of refugees as \u201cbare life.\u201d","subTitle":"Refugees, Biopolitics, and the Arts of Resistance","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["T. J. BOYNTON"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7846d9d-e244-36e1-892e-e92e1e3e683b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23356370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"THINGS THAT ARE OUTSIDE OF OURSELVES\": ETHNOLOGY, COLONIALISM, AND THE ONTOLOGICAL CRITIQUE OF CAPITALISM IN MATTHEW ARNOLD'S CRITICISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356370","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":10263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Golumbia"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0baacda-cd98-37ba-ab25-13c608499ccd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"38","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Quine's Ambivalence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354376","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00247413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51321212"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01119a0a-dc16-3f64-a07a-83c74860b743"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3513784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lusobrazrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Luso-Brazilian Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Prospero and Caliban: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and Inter-Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3513784","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":20876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Concentrando-se na an\u00e1lise dos processos identit\u00e1rios no espa\u00e7o-tempo da l\u00edngua portuguesa, este trabalho pretende ser um contribute para o estudo do p\u00f3s-colonialismo. Se a identidade moderna ocidental \u00e9, em grande medida, produto do colonialismo, a identidade no espa\u00e7otempo de l\u00edngual portuguesa reflecte as especificidades do colonialismo portugu\u00eas. Trata-se de um colonialismo subalterno, ele pr\u00f3prio \"colonizado\" em sua condi\u00e7\u00e3o semi-perif\u00e9rica, que n\u00e3o \u00e9 facilmente entendido \u00e0 luz das teorias que hoje dominam o pensamento p\u00f3s-colonial nos pa\u00edses centrais, um pensamento baseado no colonialismo hegem\u00f3nico. O autor prop\u00f5e o conceito de inter-identidade para dar conta de uma constela\u00e7\u00e3o identit\u00e1ria complexa, em que se combinam tra\u00e7os de colonizador com tra\u00e7os de colonizado. A falta e a saudade de hegemonia (ou imagina\u00e7\u00e3o do centro) propiciou a formac\u00e7\u00e3o de colonialismos internos que perduram at\u00e9 hoje. \u00c0 luz disto, o autor conclui que o p\u00f3s-colonialismo no espa\u00e7o-tempo de l\u00edngua portuguesa-um p\u00f3s-colonialismo situado-deve manifestar-se, em tempo de globaliza\u00e7\u00e3o neoliberal, como anti-colonialismo e globaliza\u00e7\u00e3o contra-hegem\u00f3nica.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clare Counihan"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.68","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6f67f05-7fa3-37b2-b1e2-fde15f2b4c7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.68"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Hell of Desire: Narrative, Identity and Utopia in A Question of Power<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.68","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Counter to the critical tradition of reading Bessie Head's novels as autobiographical, this essay argues that A Question of Power's notoriously challenging narrative structure cannily exposes the fault lines of colonial and decolonizing politics of race and gender. The novel argues that Elizabeth's status as an embodied woman of color is precisely what prevents her from attaining subjectivity in racial and national communities, and the novel suggests that the postcolonial subject's attempts to claim these narratives are destructive in and of themselves. Rather, Elizabeth's madness is a result of their prescriptive force, not her exclusion from stable racial and national identities. The essay concludes by examining the community work garden\u2014\u2014the novel's utopic alternative\u2014\u2014and, against the grain, arguing that this utopia on a troubling erasure of difference and desire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brenda F. Berrian"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"522e5348-4bd9-30fe-b6ae-f441746d6363"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"200","pagination":"pp. 200-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Claiming an Identity: Caribbean Women Writers in English","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784462","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ibrahim Abdullah"],"datePublished":"1998-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/161403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bush Path to Destruction: The Origin and Character of the Revolutionary United Front\/Sierra Leone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161403","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre-Michel Fontaine"],"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2739d356-43a3-3620-8407-125037606d41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language, Society, and Development: Dialectic of French and Creole Use in Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633128","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[59487,59533]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Harney"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337860","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"108a0620-4681-371a-8f5f-6386e36bd0e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3337860"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 12-31+88-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Ecole de Dakar: Pan-Africanism in Paint and Textile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3337860","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":16301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Selph"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"220a1e25-1c3c-3cde-81c8-85c90eeff327"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Teacher's Quest: Performance and Pedagogy in Earl Lovelace's \"Salt\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019880","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles L. Geshekter"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"887a725a-4e9d-3355-be6c-af8045fb971e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anti-Colonialism and Class Formation: The Eastern Horn of Africa before 1950","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217972","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":15258,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jordan A. Conwell"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.85.1.0028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56ee47a4-62b4-3663-beab-33a2d2c30e89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7709\/jnegroeducation.85.1.0028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Josephs without Pharaohs: The Du Boisian Framework for the Sociology of Education<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.85.1.0028","volumeNumber":"85","wordCount":20454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A Du Boisian framework is outlined for the sociology of education. Because of the totalizing nature of racial inequality, W. E. B. Du Bois was forced to simultaneously consider Black students\u2019 educational experiences and outcomes at both the macro and micro levels. The framework\u2019s central problematic is the macro-micro feedback loop between racial inequalities in the U.S. political economy and discriminatory treatment of Black students in schools. For Du Bois, the feedback loop perpetuates multigenerational educational inequality. This article uses a Du Boisian framework to situate research findings on within-school racial inequalities (such as racialized tracking) and between-school racial inequalities (such as urban\/suburban school segregation) in a broader analytical context. Situating previous research as such indicates avenues for future scholarship and activism surrounding the issues facing Black students in U.S. schools.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rafael Hern\u00e1ndez Rodr\u00edguez"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44287567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02710986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63d3b0a5-8c80-3d1b-9240-ddf14b3d7667"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44287567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanicj"}],"isPartOf":"Hispanic Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"353","pagination":"pp. 353-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University of Pennsylvania","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"EL POETA Y AM\u00c9RICA: BANDEIRA Y BORGES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44287567","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tze-ki Hon"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23733505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10695834"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42671683"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00211014"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"154e91d6-3508-30b1-ac26-6898fa793d70"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23733505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinreviinte"}],"isPartOf":"China Review International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23733505","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT STAPLES"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"861909fc-3d5c-3382-8170-1f491fe4322d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RACE AND COLONIALISM: The Domestic Case in Theory and Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066048","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8114,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[45137,45197]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHRIDATH S. RAMPHAL"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41372626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00359114"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc73be5e-d61c-3186-b4c2-168ef4f8057b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41372626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroysocart"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Royal Society of Arts","issueNumber":"5302","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"677","pageStart":"667","pagination":"pp. 667-677","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SHADOWS IN THE CAVE NORTH-SOUTH: THE ISSUE IS 'SURVIVAL'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41372626","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":10387,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. A. Olu Sule"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41144973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"869dd13d-de3b-395b-b6cb-435939e084a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41144973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts","Law - Civil law"],"title":"Recent Slum Clearance Exercise in Lagos (Nigeria): Victims or Beneficiaries?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41144973","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Divya Tolia-Kelly"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"314","pagination":"pp. 314-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Locating Processes of Identification: Studying the Precipitates of Re-Memory through Artefacts in the British Asian Home","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804494","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Memory has been figured as an important process of placing and locating people and communities, both geographically and socially. Memory has also been significant in research on people who are not part of a formal record of history. This memory work includes a focus on black identity, especially in the work of Toni Morrison and Paul Gilroy. This paper seeks to examine the relevance of memory and re-memory for the social geographies of the South Asian population in Britain. In the first section I examine visual and material cultures as mechanisms for memory, especially their role in figuring diasporic positioning, and identity politics. These memories are in the form of testimonies and biographical narratives. In the paper I have argued for the relevance and value of re-memory in understanding the narratives of British Asian heritage in the everyday domestic environment. Re-memory is an alternative social narrative to memory as it is a form of memory that is not an individual linear, biographical narrative. Re-memory is a conceptualization of encounters with memories, stimulated through scents, sounds and textures in the everyday. 'Home possessions' constitute precipitates of re-memories and narrated histories. These are souvenirs from the traversed landscapes of the journey, signifiers of 'other' narrations of the past not directly experienced but which incorporate narrations of other's oral histories or social histories that are part of the diasporic community's re-memories. Collectively, visual and material cultures are identified as precipitates of these re-memories in the form of historical artefacts of heritage and tradition.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani ya Azibo"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23884865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"43936f64-d15c-33d0-991c-ee35ffae89b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23884865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Psycho-cultural Case for Reparations for Descendents of Enslaved Africans in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23884865","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":12606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The psycho-cultural decimation of African-U.S. people descended from enslaved Africans at the hands of Caucasian Americans and American civilization itself is described. The processes employed in effecting this decimation are mentacidal and amount to psychological warfare. The results have inferiorized African-U.S. people and as a consequence placed them in extremis. This state of affairs is seen as warranting the crimes against humanity label. The fully 40 psycho-cultural perpetrations visited on the victims are identified and analyzed. Reparations in the domain of psycho-cultural destruction are seen to be in order and must be included in any costing formula along with reparations down payments advocated by the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (N'COBRA) in the domains of economic development, political prisoners, prisoners in general, education, and individual reparations (payments to individuals). The mental health and social science professions, especially psychology and psychiatry, are entreated to advocate for and participate in reparations payments.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ganeshwar"],"datePublished":"2022-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48674174","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"1055204157"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2018203760"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba5be8cc-ea15-341c-af28-d8bf7fef75f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48674174"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"castjsociexcl"}],"isPartOf":"CASTE: A Global Journal on Social Exclusion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"Brandeis University, Center for Global Development and Sustainability","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Periyar\u2019s Spatial Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48674174","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":9784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Even as historical studies of the conceptualisation of the region in Tamil Nadu invariably trace it back to the early Dravidian movement, \u2018region\u2019 is seen as peripheral to Periyar\u2019s radical anti-caste thought in existing scholarship. This flows from both a limited focus on the spatial aspects of Periyar\u2019s thought and a narrow conceptualisation of space itself. Diverging from the dominant physicalist view of space, this article views Periyar\u2019s politics of space as a radical attempt to subvert the cultural logic of hegemonic nationalism that sustained caste and its privileges through modernity. Outlining Periyar\u2019s criticism of the nation as a \u2018dominated space\u2019, it explores Periyar\u2019s conception of Dravida Nadu as an \u2018appropriated space\u2019 that attempted to further the pursuit of self-respect as a rationally conceived regional utopia. By doing so, the article tries to contextualise Periyar\u2019s spatial thought not as secondary to his anti-caste politics but as its fullest expression.","subTitle":"Region as Non-Brahmin Discursive Space","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ingrid johnston"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f975b3be-da69-374a-98ad-e7d7183028f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MILE FOUR: The Last \"Post\"? Postcolonialism and Literary Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979508","volumeNumber":"213","wordCount":2595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kelly Struthers Montford","Dawn Moore"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19334192"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71315089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57990a5d-a210-370a-ad7d-0bed5dab051b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26530577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newcrimlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Criminal Law Review: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"663","pageStart":"640","pagination":"pp. 640-663","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE PRISON AS RESERVE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26530577","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":9550,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Critical scholarship on the carceral reifies two main pillars of critical thought\u2014phenomenology and governmentality. In this study of shifting carceral logics and experiences concerning Indigenous peoples in Canada, we borrow from these traditions and also challenge their centrality in prison studies. We argue that the prison is the new reserve, and use that argument as a vehicle to illustrate the influence of less recognized forms of thought within critical prison studies\u2014especially post-colonial and Indigenous scholarship. It is through these varied lenses that we show the paradox of Indigenizing punishment that at once disavows the further incarceration of Indigenous peoples and sets out deliberate strategies to Indigenize the carceral.","subTitle":"GOVERNMENTALITY, PHENOMENOLOGY, AND INDIGENIZING THE PRISON (STUDIES)","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. \"Rio\" Riofrio"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587208","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e1fc461-5a5d-39ff-b2b0-e5cc6d635688"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587208"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"When the First World Becomes the Third: The Paradox of Collapsed Borders in Two Novels by Gabriela Alem\u00e1n","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587208","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10110,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[179541,179609]],"Locations in B":[[54764,54831]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frits Bekkers"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/423139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"592ed520-27b7-3009-8bdc-15a68ad6f757"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/423139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"237","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-237","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Threatened Leadership and Intergroup Conflicts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/423139","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Three simulation-experiments and one field-study among 29 Dutch labor Unions are reported in which is investigated the relation between the threat to a leadership position and the initiation of conflicts with an outgroup. It is found in all the studies that leaders who are threatened in the maintenance of their positions are more likely to start a conflict with another group in order to have better chances for re-election, whereas non-threatened leaders tend to opt for intergroup cooperation. This behaviour seems to be very instrumental (subjects take into consideration the chance of winning the conflict), even though most subjects deny that they are preoccupied with holding on to their leadership positions. The practical conclusion is (with the assumption that it is preferable in the interest of a safe world to have less conflicts between groups): to appoint the most influential leaders in our society for a certain limited period of time (e.g. 5 years) during which they would be very certain of the maintenance of their position, but who would be without a chance of re-election.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marietta Morrissey"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57a8592b-dc63-3455-ba5f-31965f7874c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperial Designs: A Sociology of Knowledge Study of British and American Dominance in the Development of Caribbean Social Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633316","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11175,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[69269,69315]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JI\u0158\u00cd HOU\u0160KA"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41129175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380288"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"948e6f7b-259b-3997-a370-2421b9efb5c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41129175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socicasoczechsr"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologick\u00fd \u010casopis \/ Czech Sociological Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["cze"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Institute of Sociology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Pozn\u00e1mky ke kritice n\u011bkter\u00fdch levi\u010d\u00e1ck\u00fdch koncepc\u00ed revoluce","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41129175","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u0410\u0432\u0442\u043e\u0440 \u0441\u0442\u0430\u0432\u0446\u0442 \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0434\u00b7 \u0441\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0439 \u0446\u0435\u043b\u044c \u0440\u0430\u0441\u0441\u043c\u043e\u0442\u0440\u0435\u0442\u044c \u0438 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0430\u043d\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437\u0440\u043e\u0432\u0430\u0442\u044c \u0441 \u043c\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0441\u043d\u043a\u043e\u0438 \u0442\u043e\u0447\u043a\u043d \u0437\u0440\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043d\u0435\u043a\u043e\u0442\u0440\u044b\u0435 \u0442\u0438\u043f\u0438\u0442\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u043c\u0435\u043b\u043a\u043e\u0431\u0443\u0440\u0436\u0443\u0430\u0437\u043d\u044b\u0435 \u0440\u0430\u0434\u043d\u0446\u043a\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0435, \u043b\u0435\u0432\u0430\u0446\u043a\u043d\u0435 \u043d \u043f\u0441\u0435\u0432\u0434\u043e\u043c\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0441\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043d\u0435 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0446\u0435\u043f\u0446\u043d \u0440\u0435\u0432\u043e\u043b\u044e\u0446\u043d\u043d. \u041e\u0431\u044b\u0447\u043d\u043e \u0437\u0442\u043d \u043a\u043e\u043d\u0446\u0435\u043f\u0446\u0438\u0438 \u0438\u0441\u0445\u043e\u0434\u044f\u0442 \u0438\u0437 \u0441\u0443\u0431\u044a\u0435\u043a\u0442\u0438\u0432\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0438\u043d\u0442\u0435\u0440\u043f\u0440\u0435\u0442\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043d \u0440\u0435\u0437\u0443\u043b\u044b\u0430\u0442\u043e\u0432 \u0438 \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u043e\u0432 \u043d\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e-\u043e\u0441\u0432\u043e\u0431\u043e\u0434\u0438\u0442\u0435\u043b\u044c\u043d\u044b\u0445 \u0434\u0432\u0438\u0436\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0432 \u0410\u0444\u0435\u0440, \u0410\u0437\u0438\u0438 \u043f \u041b\u0430\u0442\u0438\u043d\u043e\u0439 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\u043c\u0430\u0440\u043a\u0441\u043d\u0441\u0442\u0441\u043a\u043e \u043b\u0435\u043d\u0438\u043d\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0439 \u0438\u0434\u0435\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0433\u0438\u0438 \u0441\u043e\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0441\u0442\u0438\u0447\u0435\u0441\u0442\u0438\u0435 \u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u043d \u0438 \u0431\u043e\u043b\u0435\u0435 \u0438\u043b\u0438 \u043c\u0435\u043d\u0435\u0435 \u043e\u0441\u0442\u0440\u0430\u044f \u043a\u0440\u0438\u0442\u0438\u043a\u0430 \u0440\u0435\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0433\u043e \u0441\u043e\u0446\u0438\u0430\u043b\u0438\u0437\u043c\u0430, \u043e\u0442\u0440\u0438\u0446\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435 \u0440\u0443\u043a\u043e\u0432\u043e\u0434\u044f\u0435\u0439 \u0440\u043e\u043b\u0438 \u0440\u0430\u0431\u043e\u0447\u0435\u0433\u043e \u043a\u043b\u0430\u0441\u0441\u0430 \u0432 \u0440\u0435\u0432\u043e\u043b\u044e\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u043d\u043e\u043c \u043f\u0440\u043e\u0446\u0435\u0441\u0441\u0435. The aim of the present paper is to point out and to analyze from Marxist points of view some typical petty bourgeois radical, leftist and quasi-Marxist conceptions of the revolution. As a rule, these conceptions proceed from substantially subjectivistic interpretations of the results and processes of liberation movements in Africa, Asia and Latin America. In spite of their outward leftist radicalism, these movements are objectively oriented against the political strategy and tactics of the international communist movement. From both the theoretical and the practically political point of view, the basic difference between official bourgeois apologetics and petty-bourgeois radicalism consists in the fact that, while the first orientation holds the social revolution in the present world to be an inadequate and undesirable form of social change, the second orientation is objectively aimed at weakening the revolutionary front, since it regards revolution in its reduced form of a forcible, armed class struggle as the only possible way of solving the contradictions and conflicts of the world of our time. These conceptions differ from each other, on the one hand, in the form of expression \u2014 from theoretical analyses of the type of Marcusa's \u201e one-dimensional man\u201d to a kind of instigations to revolutionary action of the type of Debray's \u201e revolution in revolution\u201d, and, on the other hand, in their practically political orientation \u2014 from the criticism of present-day imperialism and colonialism to extremely anarchist provocations to terroristic actions. Simultaneously, however, they manifest a number of coincident traits involving particularly the verbal avowal of Marxism, a radical rejection of the so-called official Marxism \u2014 i. e. of the Marxist-Leninist ideology of socialist countries \u2014, a more or less sharp criticism of real socialism and the refusal of the working class' leading role in the revolutionary process.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Wilkinson"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"031bbcbb-3f22-36a8-9086-474356f817bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44482022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"290","pagination":"pp. 290-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Three Questions on Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482022","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9022,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joy M. Thomas"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496913","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8798cd17-c279-373f-869c-b56f9b4f6581"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43496913"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Mass Incarceration of Minority Males: A Critical Look at its Historical Roots and How Educational Policies Encourage its Existence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43496913","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5673,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[121999,122280]],"Locations in B":[[13534,13816]],"abstract":"This paper examines how the United States became the land of the imprisoned, incarcerating more people per capita than any other country. The paper will also scrutinize how the school to prison pipeline is complicit with mass incarceration of minorities. Imprisoning exorbitant amounts of human capital means imprisoning whole communities\u2014particularly communities of color. Implications of this study aspire to inform best teaching practices for curriculum development and classroom management.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdeen Jabara"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"215b6d4f-c31b-3d09-9b86-c2b7898b079b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41858409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTRODUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858409","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Haughey"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26333456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468000989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fab2a574-1953-37ee-859b-da3b1779f3dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26333456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","sourceCategory":["Irish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Landscape of Crisis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26333456","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":4538,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Photographing Post\u2013Celtic Tiger Ghost Estates","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ZO\u00cb LAIDLAW"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018246X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85897f48-8936-3740-9609-40fee66bcf05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23263275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historicalj"}],"isPartOf":"The Historical Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"830","pageStart":"807","pagination":"pp. 807-830","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BREAKING BRITANNIA'S BOUNDS? LAW, SETTLERS, AND SPACE IN BRITAIN'S IMPERIAL HISTORIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23263275","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":11184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Historians of the British empire recast their understanding of relations between the metropole and its peripheries in the late twentieth century, notably through the work of the 'British world' network and the 'new imperial historians'. The former emphasized the material, emotional, and financial links between British colonizers across the imperial diaspora; the latter focused on the empire's impact on Britain, particularly in terms of 'everyday' experience. This article critically reviews recent interventions, which extend and challenge these approaches by seeking new ways to juxtapose the macro with the micro, and balance the exceptional with the quotidian; by adopting a more transnational (or global) approach to colonialism; and by rethinking the categories of 'settler' and 'colonizer'. Collectively, these works question the traditional frameworks within which both colonialism and the British empire have been understood. In conclusion, the article considers their impact on the vibrant field of Britain's colonial legal history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oliver P. Richmond"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645212","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9d09148-b9e9-3d93-8551-071b3b1839b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645212"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Research Agendas for Peace: The Missing Link in the Study of International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645212","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":12439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"An elaborate intellectual and policy framework has been constructed in order to preserve and protect \"peace.\" The concept of peace is often used to refer to what Plato would have described as an \"ideal form,\" or to depict a minimalist, realistliberal version in which there is an absence of overt violence particularly between or within states. These common and differing usages illustrate that the concept of peace has generally been overlooked, and is often deployed in an ill-specified manner, while at the same time implying extraordinary levels of legitimacy. This article explores the consequences of not engaging with the concept of peace and outlines the possibilities inherent in opening up multiple conceptualizations of peace as a critical research agenda central to International Relations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SABINA SHARKEY"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Gendering inequalities: the case of Irish women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263387","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":7182,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen D. Krasner","Neil Roberts","Carol J. Greenhouse","Peter T. Manicas","Anne Clunan"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41622728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15375927"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50262156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-214562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13b70217-955e-3bda-b32b-b41ca6f73df6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41622728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"perspoli"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Politics","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"102","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-102","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"State, Power, Anarchism: A Discussion of \"The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41622728","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":20200,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[47417,47457]],"abstract":"The book under discussion is James C. Scott's latest contribution to the study of agrarian politics, culture, and society, and to the ways that marginalized communities evade or resist projects of state authority. The book offers a synoptic history of Upland Southeast Asia, a 2.5 million-kilometer region of hill country spanning Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, Burma, and China. It offers a kind of \"area study.\" It also builds on Scott s earlier work on \"hidden transcripts\" of subaltern groups and on \"seeing like a state.\" The book raises many important theoretical questions about research methods and social inquiry, the relationship between political science and anthropology, the nature of states, and of modernity more generally. The book is also deeply relevant to problems of \"state-building\" and \"failed states\" in places like Afghanistan, Iraq, and Somalia. As Scott writes, \"The huge literature on state-making, contemporary and historic, pays virtually no attention to its obverse: the history of deliberate and reactive statelessness. This is the history of those who got away, and state-making cannot be understood apart from it. This is also what makes it an anarchist history\" (p.x). In this symposium, I have invited a number of prominent political and social scientists to comment on the book, its historical narrative, and its broader theoretical implications for thinking about power, state failure, state-building, and foreign policy. How does the book shed light on the limits of states and the modes of resistance to state authority? Are there limits, theoretical and normative, to this \"anarchist\" understanding of governance and the \"art of being governed\"?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL CHAPMAN"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41803797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f4284d8-b1cb-3beb-bb40-1eb0ea7978e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41803797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"74","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE CRITIC IN A STATE OF EMERGENCY: TOWARDS A THEORY OF RECONSTRUCTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41803797","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tennyson S. D. Joseph"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"561345841"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"130eea4c-1ac8-3c95-94ba-ff8e64391962"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27866595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RECLAIMING W.A. LEWIS FOR THE CARIBBEAN POLITICAL THOUGHT TRADITION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27866595","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":12211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"W. Arthur Lewis is most notably appreciated for his contribution to Development Economics. However, intertwined in questions of development, are critical domestic and international political issues determining options and possibilities. In addition, Lewis himself was an important political actor, having served inter alia, as Secretary to the International African Service Bureau alongside the likes of George Padmore and C.L.R. James, advisor to Kwame Nkrumah and the first independent Government of Ghana, and as an activist for Pan-Caribbean Integration. Indeed, Lewis's first published work, was not an economic treatise, but a political tract on the labour upheavals in the West Indies, written under the auspices of the Fabian Society of the UK. This paper therefore seeks to highlight the political thinking of W.A. Lewis. In doing so, the paper seeks to put Lewis's economic ideas in the broader political context in which they were enmeshed, in order to enlarge understanding of these economic ideas. More importantly however, the paper argues that Lewis has been excluded from the tradition of Caribbean political thought, and explains the reasons for his exclusion, as well as presents arguments for reclaiming Lewis within that tradition. By isolating for scrutiny Lewis's political ideas, the paper hopes to make a contribution to the documentation of Caribbean political thought. W. Arthur Lewis ha sido apreciado principalmente por su contribuci\u00f3n a la Econom\u00eda del Desarrollo. No obstante, entremezclados con cuestiones de desarrollo, aparecen asuntos pol\u00edticos de car\u00e1cter dom\u00e9stico e internacional cr\u00edticos que determinan las opciones y posibilidades. Por otra parte, Lewis fue a su vez un importante personaje pol\u00edtico y, entre otras cosas, estuvo de Secretario del International African Service Bureau junto a personalidades de la talla de George Padmore y C.L.R. James, asesor de Kwame Nkrumah y el primer Gobierno independiente de Ghana; as\u00ed como activista para la Integraci\u00f3n Pan-Caribe\u00f1a. De hecho, la primera obra de Lewis que fuera publicada, no fue un tratado econ\u00f3mico, sino un panfleto pol\u00edtico sobre las agitaciones laborales en las Antillas Occidentales, escrito bajo los auspicios de la Fabian Society del Reino Unido. Este art\u00edculo trata por consiguiente de resaltar el pensamiento pol\u00edtico de W.A. Lewis. Con ello, el art\u00edculo trata de colocar las ideas econ\u00f3micas de Lewis en un contexto pol\u00edtico m\u00e1s amplio que el que se encontraban entretejidas y con ello aumentar la comprensi\u00f3n de dichas ideas econ\u00f3micas. M\u00e1s importante a\u00fan es que el art\u00edculo arguye que Lewis ha sido excluido del pensamiento pol\u00edtico caribe\u00f1o tradicional, y explica las razones de dicha exclusi\u00f3n, a la vez que argumenta el reclamo de Lewis hacia esta tradici\u00f3n. Al realizar un escrutinio por separado de las ideas pol\u00edticas de Lewis, el art\u00edculo espera contribuir a la documentaci\u00f3n del pensamiento pol\u00edtico caribe\u00f1o. W. Arthur Lewis est reconnu principalement pour sa contribution \u00e0 l'Economie appliqu\u00e9e au d\u00e9veloppement. Cependant, il existe des questions politiques locales et internationales indissociables des probl\u00e9matiques de d\u00e9veloppement, qui sont d'une importance cruciale dans l'identification d'options et de possibilit\u00e9s. De plus, Lewis \u00e9tait lui-m\u00eame un acteur de la sc\u00e8ne politique, ayant \u00e9t\u00e9 entre autres, Secr\u00e9taire du Bureau international de service \u00e0 l'Afrique, aux c\u00f4t\u00e9s de George Padmore et de C.L.R. James, activiste au service de l'Int\u00e9gration panafricaine, et Conseiller aupr\u00e8s de Kwame Nkrumah et du premier gouvernement du Ghana ind\u00e9pendant. En fait, la premi\u00e8re \u0153uvre de Lewis \u00e0 \u00eatre publi\u00e9e, fut non pas un trait\u00e9 d'\u00e9conomie, mais un tract politique sur les troubles sociaux dans les West Indies, r\u00e9dig\u00e9 sous l'\u00e9gide de la Fabian Society du Royaume-Uni. Cet article cherche donc \u00e0 mettre l'accent sur la pens\u00e9e politique de W.A. Lewis. Cet article vise en m\u00eame temps \u00e0 replacer les id\u00e9es de Lewis dans le domaine de l'\u00e9conomie, dans le contexte politique auquel elles sont fortement li\u00e9es, afin d'approfondir la compr\u00e9hension de ces id\u00e9es. Surtout, l'article avance que Lewis a \u00e9t\u00e9 exclu de la pens\u00e9e politique traditionnelle de la Cara\u00efbe et explique les raisons de cette exclusion, tout en pr\u00e9sentant des arguments en faveur d'une r\u00e9int\u00e9gration de Lewis dans cette tradition. En isolant les id\u00e9es politiques de Lewis dans un examen minutieux, l'article pr\u00e9tend contribuer \u00e0 la documentation de la pens\u00e9e politique traditionnelle de la Cara\u00efbe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chambi Seithy Chachage","Chachage Seithy L. Chachage"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487453","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbe7cd06-0c3e-3353-90f5-771af738b72d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487453"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"179","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-179","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nyerere: Nationalism and Post-Colonial Developmentalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487453","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":10433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwadwo Osei-Nyame"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3573862-9a7a-3d41-9881-5664f87ff9d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pan-Africanist Ideology and the African Historical Novel of Self-Discovery: The Examples of Kobina Sekyi and J. E. Casely Hayford","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771868","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[442027,442182]],"Locations in B":[[3635,3779]],"abstract":"Using the work of J. E. Casely Hayford and Kobina Sekyi, two of the great figures of African nationalism and Pan-Africanism in the Gold Coast, this essay examines the endeavour to create African cultural self-understanding through the Pan-Africanist visions and ideology which are articulated within the African historical novel of self-discovery. Although both men belonged to the class of Western educated and acculturated Africans, they were critical of colonial culture. Their philosophical and intellectual agenda led them to embrace an ideology of 'nativism' which informed the oppositional culture of resistance they adopted. Their lives and work demonstrate that the predicament inherent in discussing the early African nationalist subject is better negotiated by acknowledging the reality that this subject's identity was founded as much upon colonial culture as it was upon his local African or indigenous one. The creative work of these two nationalists, I argue, needs to be located within a decolonizing nationalist agenda which sought to negate the moral and civilizational binarisms and absolutes of Western colonial ideology.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adria S. Lawrence"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01622889"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076066"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb0788fe-bbde-3483-9ee8-40a67f16e9ac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40981244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intesecu"}],"isPartOf":"International Security","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Triggering Nationalist Violence : Competition and Conflict in Uprisings against Colonial Rule","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40981244","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":16969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Nationalist conflict has been one of the most pervasive and intractable types of conflict in the modern era. In some places, nationalist conflict has entailed lengthy wars, terrorist campaigns, and rural insurgency. Yet in many others, nationalist organizations have pursued peaceful strategies, engaging in bargaining, diplomacy, and popular protest. Why do some nationalist movements turn violent, whereas others remain primarily peaceful? Drawing on nationalist struggles against the French colonial empire, the competitive violence theory posits that violence was primarily driven by competition among nationalists. Nationalist violence erupted when colonial states pursued policies to restrict nationalist opposition and repress leading nationalists, creating a leadership vacuum and encouraging new nationalist actors to use violence to vie for influence. The competitive violence theory exemplifies an approach that can explain variation in both the timing and location of violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Linda Hutcheon","Homi K. Bhabha","Daniel Boyarin","Sabine I. G\u00f6lz"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463407","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e959d5-a9a4-343c-970e-e871f80a8b6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463407"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Four Views on Ethnicity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463407","volumeNumber":"113","wordCount":11794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashwin Desai"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1d531750-0256-3c78-b5de-a15606154d9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"When Rhodes met Mandela: History breaks down into images, not into stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487653","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":11214,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John S. Saul"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae5af3be-24d4-3e22-bed8-661c16482845"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40380103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"546","pagination":"pp. 546-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Revolutions and Remittances: Paul Nugent's \"Africa since Independence\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40380103","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4775,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rustom Bharucha"],"datePublished":"1992-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38f5f95e-a638-3455-9456-5228f09cd836"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4398720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"31\/32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"1676","pageStart":"1667","pagination":"pp. 1667-1676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anatomy of Official Cultural Discourse: A Non-Government Perspective","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4398720","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"No cultural discourse focusing on Indian realities can afford to evade the sheer depth of contradiction, if not confusion, that underlies different interpretations of 'Indian culture' determined through differences in location, history, culture and language. While paying lip-service to these differences, the tragedy and pathos of official cultural discourse is that it assumes a unitary position that subsumes all contradictions within predetermined and homogenised categories and premises. While this makes for an ordered, and occasionally eloquent, discourse, with high-sounding humanist sentiments, it also affirms an 'integral' view of Indian culture which is illusory, if not downright false. A most nuanced example of such discourse is available for scrutiny in the much-awaited and sadly-neglected report of the Haksar Committee. This essay questions the basic terms of reference which are raised in the report to provide the beginnings of a critique of official cultural discourse in India.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert Hill"],"datePublished":"1995-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00813d38-a3e6-34a9-b3b0-5551572dbcba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20007240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Importance of Race in American Labor History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007240","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":14446,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[46017,46063]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadine Gordimer","ROBERT BOYERS","CLARK BLAISE","TERENCE DIGGORY","JORDAN ELGRABLY"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40547636","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00363529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"780ebbd3-b327-3303-8212-4f1877e06ad1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40547636"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"salmagundi"}],"isPartOf":"Salmagundi","issueNumber":"62","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Skidmore College","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Conversation With Nadine Gordimer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40547636","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cornel West","Bill Brown"],"datePublished":"1993-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438430","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0226e805-5e3f-36b6-b680-e22c8a6c8572"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/438430"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"S166","pageStart":"S142","pagination":"pp. S142-S166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Eurocentrism and Multiculturalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/438430","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":11447,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[228907,228975]],"Locations in B":[[6378,6448]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hong Zhu","Junxi Qian"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e1c041cc-8607-3e6c-856f-ef1d0bfb681c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Drifting\" in Lhasa: Cultural Encounter, Contested Modernity, and the Negotiation of Tibetanness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537953","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":14109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"During the past decade, thousands of Han Chinese have migrated to Lhasa, the capital city of the Tibet Autonomous Region, to pursue a slow-paced and leisurely lifestyle in a land in which they have invested both fantasies and emotional attachment. These lifestyle migrants constitute a culturally unique group dubbed, by themselves and in folk discourse alike, \"drifters in Tibet.\" This group puts into question the positions and identities of the socially and economically advantaged Han, by hybridizing with and adopting what they assume to be authentic Tibetan values and worldviews. This article takes Han Chinese's \"drifting in Lhasa\" as a point of entry to inquiry of the ongoing negotiation of Tibetanness. Drifters mobilize Tibetanness as a repository of representational, discursive, and experiential resources to critically reflect on recent modernization and economic development in the interior of China. Yet, in embracing Tibetanness to problematize the privileged position of the Han in Tibet, the drifters have not distanced themselves from an essentialized conception of Tibetanness. They uncritically celebrate the state's economic subsidies as a means for preserving what they think of as \"authentic\" Tibetan lifestyles. Tibetans, on the other hand, contest the rigid binary opposition between Han developmentalism and the perceived economic inertia of Tibetans, a regime of identity regulation implicated in uneven power. In particular, Tibetans respond to the drifters' representations by configuring alternative, but nonetheless \"modernized,\" conceptions of ethnicity and indigenous identity. \u8fc7\u53bb\u5341\u5e74\u6765\uff0c\u6210\u5343\u4e0a\u4e07\u7684\u4e2d\u56fd\u6c49\u4eba\u79fb\u5c45\u81f3\u85cf\u65cf\u81ea\u6cbb\u533a\u7684\u9996\u90fd\u62c9\u8428\uff0c\u5728\u8fd9\u7247\u4ed6\u4eec\u6295\u6ce8\u4e86\u60f3\u50cf\u4e0e\u60c5\u611f\u4f9d\u604b\u7684\u571f\u5730\u4e0a\uff0c\u8ffd\u9010\u6b65\u8c03\u7f13\u6162\u4e0e\u60a0\u9592\u7684\u751f\u6d3b\u98ce\u683c\u3002\u8fd9\u4e9b\u8ffd\u6c42\u751f\u6d3b\u98ce\u683c\u7684\u79fb\u6c11\u8005\uff0c\u7ec4\u6210\u4e86\u4e00\u7fa4\u7279\u6b8a\u7684\u6587\u5316\u7fa4\u4f53\uff0c\u5e76\u88ab\u81ea\u8eab\u53ca\u76f8\u5173\u6c11\u95f4\u8bba\u8ff0\u79f0\u4e3a \u201c\u85cf\u6f02\u65cf\u201d\u3002\u6b64\u4e00\u7fa4\u4f53\uff0c\u900f\u8fc7\u6df7\u5408\u5e76\u63a5\u53d7\u5176\u6240\u8ba4\u5b9a\u7684\u897f\u85cf\u672c\u771f\u4ef7\u503c\u53ca\u4e16\u754c\u89c2\uff0c\u8d28\u7591\u5177\u6709\u793e\u4f1a\u53ca\u7ecf\u6d4e\u4f18\u52bf\u7684\u6c49\u4eba\u7684\u4f4d\u7f6e\u53ca\u8eab\u4efd\u8ba4\u540c\u3002\u672c\u6587\u5c06\u4ee5\u4e2d\u56fd\u6c49\u4eba\u7684 \u201c\u85cf\u6f02\u201d \u4e3a\u8d77\u59cb\u70b9\uff0c\u63a2\u95ee\u4e0d\u65ad\u534f\u5546\u7684\u897f\u85cf\u6027\u3002\u85cf\u6f02\u65cf\u8fd0\u7528\u897f\u85cf\u6027\u505a\u4e3a\u518d\u73b0\u3001\u8bba\u8ff0\u4e0e\u7ecf\u9a8c\u7684\u8d44\u6e90\u5e93\uff0c\u85c9\u6b64\u6279\u5224\u6027\u5730\u53cd\u601d\u4e2d\u56fd\u5185\u9646\u665a\u8fd1\u7684\u73b0\u4ee3\u5316\u4e0e\u7ecf\u6d4e\u53d1\u5c55\u3002\u4f46\u62e5\u62b1\u897f\u85cf\u6027\u4ee5\u8d28\u95ee\u6c49\u4eba\u5728\u897f\u85cf\u7684\u4f18\u52bf\u5730\u4f4d\u4e4b\u65f6\uff0c\u85cf\u6f02\u65cf\u5374\u672a\u80fd\u8fdc\u79bb\u5176\u5bf9\u897f\u85cf\u6027\u7684\u672c\u8d28\u5316\u6982\u5ff5\u3002\u4ed6\u4eec\u672a\u52a0\u6279\u5224\u5730\u9882\u626c\u56fd\u5bb6\u7684\u7ecf\u6d4e\u8865\u8d34\uff0c\u505a\u4e3a\u4fdd\u5b58\u5176\u6240\u8ba4\u4e3a\u7684 \u201c\u771f\u5b9e\u201d \u897f\u85cf\u751f\u6d3b\u98ce\u683c\u4e4b\u65b9\u6cd5\u3002\u53cd\u4e4b\uff0c\u85cf\u4eba\u8d28\u95ee\u6c49\u4eba\u7684\u53d1\u5c55\u4e3b\u4e49\u4e0e\u5176\u6240\u7406\u89e3\u7684\u85cf\u4eba\u7ecf\u6d4e\u505c\u6ede\u4e4b\u95f4\u7684\u575a\u5b9e\u4e8c\u5143\u5bf9\u7acb\u2014\u2014\u800c\u8fd9\u662f\u4e00\u4e2a\u5173\u4e4e\u6743\u529b\u4e0d\u5747\u7684\u8eab\u4efd\u8ba4\u540c\u89c4\u8303\u4f53\u5236\u3002\u85cf\u4eba\u7279\u522b\u900f\u8fc7\u6784\u7ec4\u53e6\u7c7b\u4f46\u4ecd\u7136\u662f \u201c\u73b0\u4ee3\u5316\u201d \u7684\u65cf\u88d4\u6982\u5ff5\u4e0e\u539f\u4f4f\u6c11\u8ba4\u540c\uff0c\u85c9\u6b64\u56de\u5e94\u85cf\u6f02\u65cf\u7684\u518d\u73b0\u3002 Durante la d\u00e9cada anterior, han migrado miles de chinos Han a Lhasa, la ciudad capital de la Regi\u00f3n Aut\u00f3noma del T\u00edbet, en b\u00fasqueda de un estilo de vida lento y reposado, en una tierra en la que han invertido fantas\u00edas y apego emocional. Estos migrantes con motivaciones de estilo de vida constituyen un grupo culturalmente \u00fanico calificado, por ellos mismos y en el argot folcl\u00f3rico, como \"vagabundos del T\u00edbet.\" Este grupo cuestiona las posiciones e identidades de los Han mejor dotados econ\u00f3mica y socialmente, hibridiz\u00e1ndose con lo que ellos presumen son los valores y visiones del mundo aut\u00e9nticamente tibetanos, y adopt\u00e1ndolos. Este art\u00edculo toma el \"vagabundeo en Lhasa\" de los chinos Han como punto de partida para investigar la corriente negociaci\u00f3n de la tibetanidad. Los vagabundos movilizan la tibetanidad como un repositorio de recursos representacionales, discursivos y experienciales para reflexionar cr\u00edticamente sobre la reciente modernizaci\u00f3n y desarrollo econ\u00f3mico en el interior de China. No obstante, al abrazar la tibetanidad para problematizar la posici\u00f3n privilegiada de los Han en el T\u00edbet, los vagabundos no se han distanciado a s\u00ed mismos de concepci\u00f3n esencializada de la tibetanidad. Sin cr\u00edtica ellos celebran los subsidios econ\u00f3micos del estado como un medio para preservar lo que ellos ven como estilos de vida tibetanos \"aut\u00e9nticos.\" Los tibetanos, a su vez, disputan la r\u00edgida oposici\u00f3n binaria entre el desarrollismo Han y la percibida inercia econ\u00f3mica de los tibetanos, un r\u00e9gimen de regulaci\u00f3n de identidad implicado en el poder desigual. En particular, los tibetanos responden a las representaciones de los vagabundos configurando concepciones alternativas pero \"modernizadas\" de etnicidad y de identidad ind\u00edgena.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1980-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6583a68c-4aa6-30ab-b2f6-1c80ccd0a1a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"14","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"1","pageStart":"1","pagination":"p. 1","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"OVERVIEW OF THIS ISSUE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766095","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":558,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John King"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3508123","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3508123"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'A curiously colonial performance': The Ec-Centric Vision of V. S. Naipaul and J. L. Borges","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3508123","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7739,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abebe Zegeye","Maurice Vambe"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241671","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3693e546-212f-3984-b6ee-457ebe66c6f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241671"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"African Indigenous Knowledge Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241671","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":11495,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One of the troubling questions in Africa is how to isolate what it is that people have come to call indigenous, and what is not. The question becomes even more complicated when one attempts to explore the genealogies of intellectual history that have been named \"African indigenous knowledge systems.\" The aim of this article is to trace and critique the variety of ways in which African knowledge systems have been named in Western scholarship, and the subaltern studies group inspired by the works of Indian diasporan intellectuals. The article ends with a critique of nationalist rhetorical modes of comprehending indigenous knowledge systems. We suggest that African indigenous knowledge systems are better appreciated in their changing-ness. Indigenous knowledge ystems exist at different sites and that as instances of Africa's cultural memories, they cannot be written about in the singular. African knowledge systems have benefited from other cultures in as much as non-African knowledge systems have also survived through borrowing from Africa. As such, neither the Western academy, subaltern studies nor Africa's cultural nationalists can lay total claim and monopoly on understanding and naming Africa knowledge systems. We conclude by suggesting that cultural syncretism is the condition of possibility of African knowledge systems.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Javier Padilla"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.08","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36aec646-0cfd-3360-9935-b822dd846bff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.08"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Yeats's Meditative Spaces: Between Modernity and Coloniality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.41.4.08","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The twentieth-century debate between modernist and postcolonial scholars around the figure of W.B. Yeats should move beyond purely modern or postcolonial frameworks. Yeats's poems can be read as meditations through which the Irish poet both anticipates the promise of a postcolonial, modern world, and yet remains attached to the lasting structures of its twinned dark excess: coloniality. As such, it is necessary to read Yeats as a poet confronted by a modernity that disguises its coloniality, or put another way, to conceptualize a heterogeneous reading of Yeats that goes beyond the purely emancipatory readings offered by previous readers of his oeuvre.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Stallybrass"],"datePublished":"1990-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928400","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83992975-8542-3a75-840a-60a056253375"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928400"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"31","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marx and Heterogeneity: Thinking the Lumpenproletariat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928400","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carole Anne Taylor"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"081f622b-1530-335d-b21a-3df6260274c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3810301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Positioning Subjects and Objects: Agency, Narration, Relationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3810301","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11408,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[70513,70559]],"abstract":"When assumed by positions of dominance, the impersonal, analytical perspectives of scholar-narrators may serve to flatten, simplify, or render invisible the differences of constructed Others. Strategies of resistance necessarily correspond to where narrator-subjects enter relations of power. Without the presence of Others' narrations, dominance can neither value newly visible subjective agency nor confront the complicity in its own subjectivity. Intersubjectivity suggests a dialogical process that utilizes differences in lived experience to reconceive relationality.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luis Urrieta, Jr."],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fdfec6a-fe52-3388-a53a-93ac75698ae5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"CHAPTER FIVE: Whitestreaming: Why Some Latinas\/os Fear Bilingual Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980681","volumeNumber":"371","wordCount":3677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rozann C. Rothman"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4466704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00216704"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391663"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004671"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4466704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jewisocistud"}],"isPartOf":"Jewish Social Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Education and Participation in the Israeli Defense Forces: Evaluation of Training and Education Courses for Officers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4466704","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":9666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47065,47182]],"Locations in B":[[42043,42159]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin Balthaser"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.7381040.12","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d11eb6ff-fd13-39e4-80a8-9916fa9de087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.3998\/mpub.7381040.12"}],"isPartOf":"Anti-Imperialist Modernism","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"300","pageStart":"287","pagination":"287-300","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.3998\/mpub.7381040.12","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["university","durham duke","american","chapel hill","duke university","orson welles","berkeley university","langston hughes","durham duke university","hill university"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruchell Magee Committee for Black Prisoners"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163595","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4362918b-b98a-303b-8d09-2fd00490b0d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163595"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"RUCHELL MAGEE: SLAVE REBEL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163595","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":2409,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seunghye Seok","Ansik Chang","Doohwan Kim"],"datePublished":"2019-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26658348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"26714574"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1111768468"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1641477-a15f-3f12-9cfc-3ad9e803ee0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26658348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jasiasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Asian Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Institute for Social Development and Policy Research (ISDPR)","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Varieties of Politically Moderate Groups in South Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26658348","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":9923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Morality is an appraisal of what is right and what is not. Sociological perspective sees such morality as a product of group identity. In this regard, morality is a useful tool for identifying groups that share different beliefs about right and wrong. Recent studies have found that the root cause of social conflict is based on moral differences related to political attitudes and behaviors. This study focuses on the political moderates that previous studies regarded as lacking ideological or political orientation. However, we found that they are multiple groups composed of groups based on different moral values. We also clarified the differences in political positions according to morality. First, we classified the morality groups in South Korea into five latent groups. In addition to traditional liberals (altruistic individuals) and conservatives (paternalistic), moderates are divided into three moral groups: moral idealists, selfish individuals, and amoral individuals. The moral idealists group emphasizes both moral values that are important to conservatives and liberals. The selfish individuals group is weak in most moral values, and the amoral individuals group does not care about any moral value. In contrast to liberals and conservatives who are consistently aligned left and right in their political positions, the moral qualities of moderates have been found to be complex and dualistic. The fact that moderates are pluralistic in terms of grouping and moral values complicates the conflicts of social and political issues rather than the mere confrontation between conservatism and liberalism.","subTitle":"Social Identity, Morality, and Political Attitude","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. Zauditu Selassie"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8696e73b-9bb8-3802-9746-6ebff1a84df3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STEP AND FETCH IT: ZORA NEALE HURSTON'S RECLAMATION OF AFRICAN ONTOLOGY IN \"THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325820","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":6920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Price"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08946019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f33de9ed-6ade-3a78-b7bc-eafbf4bd44ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40553524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbaanthstudcult"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"What the Zeeks Uprising Reveals: Development Issues, Moral Economy, And The Urban Lumpenproletariat In Jamaica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553524","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11991,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses a social situation, the Zeeks uprising of 1998, to outline some of the political, economic, and social issues facing contemporary Jamaica. Downtown Kingston's urban poor played a pivotal role in the insurgency, and in doing so revealed much about their moral economy, changes in Jamaica's clientelisi politics, the rise of \"Dons\" as formidable political and social actors, and how globalization and liberalization are affecting Jamaica.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allen Isaacman"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524470","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b21bc769-2fe2-3564-9023-a041b4313cd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524470"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":120.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peasants and Rural Social Protest in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524470","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":49945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JULI\u00c1N GUTI\u00c9RREZ CASTA\u00d1O"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48649200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02295113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df577e51-cde0-3132-bac8-58fa57c79aaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48649200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refucandjrefu"}],"isPartOf":"Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Centre for Refugee Studies, York University","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Borders of Tropicality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48649200","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10330,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[57375,57454]],"abstract":"This article argues that the discourse of tropicality in Colombia creates boundaries and binaries between racialized and normative territories, rural peripheral areas and urban centres, and spaces that have been constructed as darker \u201cbarbaric\u201d regions closer to sea level and whiter \u201ccivilized\u201d regions in temperate altitudes. Nevertheless, there is nuance to the geographies of tropicality, because race is difficult to contain within urban\/rural spaces. Additionally, race as a social construct that is permanently in the making, presents changes in space and time, challenging any static ideas of race in intersection with geography. In supporting the argument that the discourse of tropicality produces racialized spaces, this article addresses forced displacement and the racialization that takes place along with displacement, which implies the crossing of the \u201cborder\u201d between the \u201ctropics\u201d and the cities; and how Afro-Colombians, Indigenous, and Mestiza campesinas challenge the ideas of tropicality by creating new geographies as they settle after displacement. Cet essai soutient que le discours de la tropicalit\u00e9 en Colombie cr\u00e9e des fronti\u00e8res et des oppositions binaires entre territoires racialis\u00e9s et normatifs, entre r\u00e9gions rurales p\u00e9riph\u00e9riques et centres urbains ainsi qu\u2019entre les r\u00e9gions pr\u00e8s du niveau de la mer construites comme \u00e9tant plus fonc\u00e9es et \u00ab barbares \u00bb et les r\u00e9gions temp\u00e9r\u00e9es dites plus blanches et \u00ab civilis\u00e9es \u00bb situ\u00e9es en altitude. Les g\u00e9ographies de la tropicalit\u00e9 sont cependant plus nuanc\u00e9es car la race est difficile \u00e0 contenir \u00e0 l\u2019int\u00e9rieur d\u2019espaces urbains ou ruraux. De plus, la race est un construit social en devenir permanent qui change \u00e0 travers le temps et l\u2019espace, ce qui remet en question toute id\u00e9e statique concernant son intersection avec la g\u00e9ographie. Soutenant l\u2019argument selon lequel le discours de la tropicalit\u00e9 produit des espaces racialis\u00e9s, cet article traite du d\u00e9placement forc\u00e9 et du processus de racialisation qui accompagne le processus de d\u00e9placement, qui implique la travers\u00e9e de la fronti\u00e8re entre les \u00abtropiques\u00bb et les villes; et de la fa\u00e7on dont les campesinas afrocolombiens, autochtones et Mestiza, en s\u2019installant suite au d\u00e9placement, cr\u00e9ent de nouvelles g\u00e9ographies qui remettent en question l\u2019id\u00e9e de tropicalit\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ali Abdi"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980886","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c465bea-3dfc-34ca-af63-d8b8b624cb34"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980886"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER FIVE: African Philosophies of Education: Deconstructing the Colonial and Reconstructing the Indigenous","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980886","volumeNumber":"379","wordCount":7173,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[43857,43916]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard C. Keller"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"47d97db6-7d9c-31d2-ac36-553c7dd322f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44448181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44448181","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher L. Blakesley"],"datePublished":"2007-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2007.10.4.554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19334192"},{"name":"oclc","value":"71315089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"462c3c42-4306-3c30-b5a6-55bb1501b941"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nclr.2007.10.4.554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newcrimlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Criminal Law Review: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"581","pageStart":"554","pagination":"pp. 554-581","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Law","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Ruminations on Terrorism: Expiation and Exposition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nclr.2007.10.4.554","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"To paraphrase Richard Falk: Terrorism is political or ideological violence without restraint of law or morality. This article will consider terrorism and reactions to terrorism through a prism of history, philosophy, literature, and law. It is an attempt to show how terrorism is committed by state actors, as well as non-state-actors. I argue that intentional or reckless slaughter of innocents or torturing \"enemies\" constitutes terrorism and that it ultimately erodes a state's or a group's morality and well-being. Most nations and groups define terrorism in a way that \"allows\" them to commit atrocity, but condemns \"others\" who commit the same acts. This ultimately promotes terrorism. Some definitions obscure the line between terrorism as a crime and terrorism as a tactic or strategy of armed conflict. It is important that the law not do this, as I argue that terrorism is criminal conduct. In addition, many, perhaps most, definitions of terrorism, even in criminal statutes and treaties, do not comport with basic principles of criminal law, such as principles of legality, due process, and other human rights and constitutional norms. I will also compare terrorism to other core international concepts, such as war crimes and crimes against humanity. Thus, the article will consider terrorism as a crime, noting the conceptual relationship between terrorism and basic domestic and international substantive criminal law. I will present a definition of terrorism as a crime, including its constituent elements. This allows me to study terrorism in the context of basic principles of culpability and innocence. The definition applies to conduct whether performed by state or government actors, by those who attack innocents to get at state government, or who use it against innocent members of factions whom they don't see as adhering to the actor's vision of \"good order.\" Much of the article, however, is aimed at providing context by analyzing historical evidences of terrorism, including torture and other atrocities, designed to promote the power of those committing it. Thus, I will present an historical and comparative excursus, considering terrorism or analogous conduct and its punishment from antiquity, through the Middle Ages, to the present day, to show why such conduct ought to be punished.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Jones"],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2914d24-85c7-36c2-9968-45d8bea74801"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-31, 36-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE POLICE IN AMERICA: A BLACK VIEWPOINT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066213","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7748,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Namita Goswami"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.1.1.0104","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21658684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"775767149"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-201135"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bd6d0ab-b8ff-3147-97b6-4a15af9a53ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/critphilrace.1.1.0104"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"critphilrace"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Philosophy of Race","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The (M)other of All Posts:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.1.1.0104","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Paul Gilroy's subtle use of Theodor Adorno in Postcolonial Melancholia (2005) misses the opportunity to forge for the postcolonial world a sense of responsibility for the colonial cultures that this postcolonial world helped to create. Gilroy rightly emphasizes the na\u00efvet\u00e9 often associated with attempts to \u201cdwell convivially with difference\u201d (5). His negatively dialectical reading of the deterministic logics of racial difference brings into view an already present demotic multiculturalism. He neglects, however, how Adorno's conception of negative dialectics can be understood as postcolonial in its understanding of difference. In other words, both Adorno and Gilroy focus on recuperating a conception of non-antagonistic difference, that is, an understanding of difference as heterogeneity. Yet, Gilroy maintains an a priori sense of cultural difference from Adorno in spite of Postcolonial Melancholia's trajectory of positing a negative dialectics of conviviality. This conviviality is the \u201cfragile, emergent substance of vital planetary humanism\u201d (79) that refuses to render postcoloniality synonymous with the maintenance of nation-state boundaries. Thus, Gilroy forfeits the prospect of conducting a radical postcolonial reading of Adorno, which would demonstrate precisely how colonial history provides \u201can opening onto the multicultural promise of the postcolonial world\u201d (143).","subTitle":"Postcolonial Melancholia in the Age of Global Warming","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caspar ten Dam"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16098498"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa5191e2-f884-3ae3-8090-db08094a584c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41430896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irancaucasus"}],"isPartOf":"Iran & the Caucasus","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"273","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-273","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"BRILL","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"How to Feud and Rebel: 2. Histories, Cultures and Grievances of the Chechens and Albanians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41430896","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":15282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyses the historical roots and cultural characteristics of the Chechens and Albanians, and how they relate, in their recurrent conflicts with the Russians and Serbs, to long-term grievances, the second variable of my Brutalisation theory. In this article I also explain why the theory departs from the grievance rather than greed premise. Indeed, most of the Chechen and Albanian grievances appear to be based on real and correctly perceived, i.e. absolute deprivations. More fundamentally, given my post-constructivist proposition on the \"acting-out\" of norms, values and beliefs irrespective of factual or invented origins, I seek to show that martialism, (Sufiinspired) resistance, and (male) egalitarianism have helped to shape and sustain historic grievances, Islamisation (particularly among Chechens), nationalist aspirations and traditional violence-values in Chechen and Albanian societies. Finally, I describe how pre-1979 trauma's and devastations destroyed most records, buildings and symbols of their cultures and histories, as a cautionary note to my efforts to trace both the factual and mythologised foundations of their identities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria-Benedita Basto"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1243549X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a16f0f1-221f-306f-bf98-56494c16967b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24599399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tumultes"}],"isPartOf":"Tumultes","issueNumber":"31","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"L'Harmattan","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Le Fanon de Homi Bhabha: Ambivalence de l'identit\u00e9 et dialectique dans une pens\u00e9e postcoloniale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24599399","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980168","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d033c0b-e50e-3b1b-a2fa-f89be57640a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980168"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics","Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980168","volumeNumber":"339","wordCount":6130,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[12200,12263]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Nunley"],"datePublished":"1982-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3335810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019933"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6147f893-48e6-3e12-8f68-23732beb1e66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3335810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanarts"}],"isPartOf":"African Arts","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-46+92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"UCLA James S. Coleman African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Images and Printed Words in Freetown Masquerades","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3335810","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5462,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID JOHNSON"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"351581d3-4ebc-362f-9466-233503b5eaa5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24543169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FANON'S TRAVELS IN POSTCOLONIAL THEORY AND POST-APARTHEID POLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543169","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":14369,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Using Edward Said's reflections on travelling theory as a point of departure, this essay traces how Frantz Fanon's radical anticolonial and postcolonial theory has travelled to South Africa in the last fifty years. Said's mode of analyzing travelling theory is extended in two ways, namely by attending in detail to how specific historical moments and locations set limits and exert pressures on theory, and secondly, by examining how communities of activist-intellectuals rather than individual theorists reinterpret theory. Three groups of South African appropriations of Fanon's theory are analyzed: the anti-apartheid activists of the 1970s; African National Congress government ministers post-1994; and the communities of resistance critical of the ANC's post-apartheid governance. In the light of these reception histories, certain limitations of Said's model of travelling theory are identified and conclusions are drawn regarding how Fanon's theory serves conflicting political interests in these different (mis-)appropriations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kolawole Aderemi Owolabi"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74fca214-2909-30a3-8f59-5dd2bcc81823"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43658381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Nationalism and Western Hegemony: A Review Essay on Appiah's Universalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658381","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":4898,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GILSON L\u00c1ZARO"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d54b8a6-afaa-3bf9-ad93-7a854bc0fe7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26916219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Outsiders\u2019 and \u2018Insiders\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916219","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on some episodes from the prolonged Angolan conflict that can potentially broaden our understanding of the past. The analysis is centred on and describes the ways in which this traumatic experience has been represented in the official domestic narrative, relegating local or regional dynamics \u2013 such as in Malanje \u2013 to the margins. In my opinion, these dynamics are nonetheless of major importance in a discussion of the post-conflict period in Angolan society. The argument is based on the assumption that, although there are always contradictions between local micro-narratives which affect the processes of negotiation, the micro-narratives presented in this article assist in the interpretation of the official political-military rituals that are carried out by the Angolan state as an act of appeasement towards the past \u2013 with varied and sometimes contradictory implications for the process of national reconciliation.","subTitle":"Post-Conflict Political Violence and Reconciliation in Malanje, Angola","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. Kiven Tunteng"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d48023ab-0e4f-320d-bfc6-937125b44d07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"663","pageStart":"649","pagination":"pp. 649-663","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Theory of One-Party Government in Africa (Vers une th\u00e9orie du parti unique en Afrique)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391255","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":6878,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En d\u00e9pit de la pr\u00e9valence des syst\u00e8mes politiques \u00e0 parti unique en Afrique, le ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne reste assez peu \u00e9tudi\u00e9 sur le plan th\u00e9orique. Parmi les causes favorisantes il faut relever les tendances centrifuges (tribalisme v. nationalisme, etc.) manifest\u00e9es apr\u00e8s l'ind\u00e9pendance. Le parti, en tant qu'institution, ne se confond pas avec l'attitude pratique de l'\u00e9lite politique; il y a une certaine confusion entre stabilit\u00e9 institutionnelle et maintien d'une m\u00eame \u00e9quipe au pouvoir. Cette derni\u00e8re exigence est g\u00e9n\u00e9ratrice de contradictions, la suppression totale de l'opposition menant \u00e0 des conflits de fait au sein de l'\u00e9lite politique. La possibilit\u00e9 d'intervention des masses est r\u00e9duite \u00e0 n\u00e9ant par une contradiction analogue. En fait les m\u00e9thodes m\u00eames des partis uniques contredisent leurs objectifs officiels.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maidul Islam"],"datePublished":"2006-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27644170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78de7390-b999-3fd0-8fa3-c2b90ff43ac2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27644170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Postmodernized Cultural Globalisation: Threatening Folk Culture(s) in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27644170","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennison Nash","Anne V. Akeroyd","John J. Bodine","Erik Cohen","Graham Dann","Nelson H. H. Graburn","Dymphna Hermans","Jafar Jafari","Robert V. Kemper","Alan G. LaFlamme","Frank Manning","Raymond Noronha","Oriol Pi-Sunyer","Valene L. Smith","Richard W. Stoffle","J. M. Thurot","Karen Ann Watson-Gegeo","David Wilson"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742284","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"133faf90-043a-3616-acc0-0cc0b98d17b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2742284"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"481","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-481","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Tourism as an Anthropological Subject [and Comments and Reply]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2742284","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":26126,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper provides a critical evaluationof the growing number of anthropologically oriented studies of tourism and proposes a conceptual framework for future studies. A cross-culturally viable definition of tourism is offered. This definition, which conceives of the tourist as a person at leisure who travels and of tourism as a variety of leisure activity, suggest a transactional view of tourism that involves an encounter between tourist-generating and host societies. Such an encounter may be conceived of as a process or a system. Following this definition, it is possible ot identify tourism at all levels of sociocultural complexity. At present it does not seem possible to discover the causes of tourism, but one can begin to account for intra-or intersocietal touristic variability. Anthropological consideration of this latter is not well developed. Rather, interest has been centered on the consequences of tourism for host societies, particularly in the developing world. So far, thought, these studies have not demonstrated much methodological or theoretical sophistication. Though some variety of exchange theory may ultimately prove the best way of organizing an overview of the touristic process or system, less ambitious perspectives would seem to be, for the moment, indicated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Servet Mutlu"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4284198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630355"},{"name":"lccn","value":"65-009869"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1493bf70-5d1e-3848-9448-9ccd2a4e3787"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4284198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Economic Bases of Ethnic Separatism in Turkey: An Evaluation of Claims and Counterclaims","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4284198","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16971,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[80857,80925]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harriet P. Trader"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23711615","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23711615"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Survival strategies for oppressed minorities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23711615","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":3354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The theory underlying practice should take into account the cultural group to which the client belongs. The author presents criteria for a theory to support practice with blacks and other minority groups. An evolving model for clinical practice with black clients is also discussed.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henning Melber"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000042","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e295776-9ce4-309d-a1df-495eeef94414"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90000042"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Knowledge is Power and Power Affects Knowledge:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000042","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8652,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[49579,49625]],"abstract":"Abstract This article engages with the challenges facing genuine research collaboration and knowledge production in a North\u2013South interaction. It maps the asymmetries in global knowledge production in general and revisits African realities in particular. Using the experiences of the Norwegian research programme NORGLOBAL as an empirical reference point, it critically explores the limitations of partnerships and identifies some challenges resulting from the centuries of Northern hegemony established in all spheres related to global affairs and interactions. It presents some thoughts and suggestions as to how these limitations might be reduced or eliminated in favour of a truly joint effort to meet the challenges on the way towards equal relations and mutual respect.","subTitle":"Challenges for Research Collaboration in and with Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary West"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807131","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ad922b0-866e-3a86-9dad-c705845077cc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27807131"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Portraits in Miniature: White English-Speaking South African Women in Selected Short Stories by Nadine Gordimer","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27807131","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6119,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ALESSANDRA BENEDICTY-KOKKEN"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643711","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483171"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23399"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c015733f-738c-398d-87a0-943fc5c41331"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24643711"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"128","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Origins of Totalitarianism\": From Resistance to Human Rights in Marie Chauvet's \"Les rapaces\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24643711","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6709,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua D. Esty"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00107484"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38584750"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cd157ab-5e88-3b53-ba1b-57379b071aea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1208818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contlite"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Excremental Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1208818","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":15075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ihab Hassan"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157356","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03402827"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"879ee288-ecf1-36da-b4ce-148e375f14f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41157356"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerikastudien"}],"isPartOf":"Amerikastudien \/ American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Universit\u00e4tsverlag WINTER Gmbh","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Postmodernism Revisited: A Personal Account","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41157356","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":5496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Lonsdale"],"datePublished":"1968-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/720477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"266","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Emergence of African Nations: A Historiographical Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720477","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":9218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Sacks"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27934060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607770089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d892892-e81a-31e1-a6d1-0888dca18d12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27934060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"110","pagination":"pp. 110-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Center for Contemporary Arab Studies","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"BLACK SKIN, BLACK MASKS: THE CITATIONAL SELF IN THE WORK OF GLENN LIGON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850881","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":12871,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erik Garrett"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41568618"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233218"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0be2ff14-f313-3e43-b00f-5611ccc12dc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44979932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"502","pageStart":"493","pagination":"pp. 493-502","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Heinrich Popitz and the Power of Violence and Technical Action in the Revolutionary and Information Ages","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44979932","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":4949,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[28932,28995]],"abstract":"The publication of the Phenomena of power: Authority, domination, and violence into English allows for the English-speaking world to engage the work of Heinrich Popitz. Popitz provides a thorough and organized description of how power operates in social relations that should be valuable to any scholar of the human sciences. This essay is supportive of Popitz's project, but seeks a critical engagement by extending the analysis on violence and technical power. I argue that reading Popitz alongside the decolonial thinker, Franz Fanon and the media ecologist, Marshall McLuhan can provide important correctives. In particular, Fanon's analysis that the colonial use of rhetorical power to dehumanize the oppressed and McLuhan's comment on the importance of the control of medium are missing in an otherwise very thorough philosophical anthropology on the phenomena of power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Virginia Sapiro"],"datePublished":"1979-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/193536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc99d4c2-1d6d-30cf-a886-0011ff71826f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/193536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Sex and Games: On Oppression and Rationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/193536","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan Breman"],"datePublished":"1976-12-11","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4365172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f6a6a6b-1cd3-37df-bc2e-bc972517c6c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4365172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"1944","pageStart":"1939","pagination":"pp. 1939-1944","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Dualistic Labour System? A Critique of the 'Informal Sector' Concept: III: Labour Force and Class Formation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4365172","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines the utility of the concept of the 'informal sector'. The author argues, partly on the basis of research into labour relations in a small town in western India, that the concept of the informal sector is analytically inadequate. The informal sector, he suggests, cannot be demarcated as a separate economic compartment and\/or labour situation. In Part I of the article it is argued that any attempt to demarcate the informal sector will give rise to numerous inconsistencies and difficulties. Moreover, by interpreting the relationship of the informal sector to the formal sector in a dualistic framework and by focussing on the mutually exclusive characteristics, we lose sight of the unity and totality of the productive system. In Part II of the article, the author suggests that rather than divide the urban system into two segments, it is preferable to emphasise the fragmented nature of the entire labour market. Finally, in Part III, the author considers the social classes which are usually associated with the urban labour force. [This is the third and final part of the article. Part I and II were published on November 27 and December 4 respectively.]","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Waziyatawin Angela Wilson"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0095182X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aab7f12-74bc-3f94-a13e-3b3a74661aab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4139053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerindiquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Indian Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Introduction: Manipi Hena Owas'in Wicunkiksuyapi (We Remember All Those Who Walked)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4139053","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AUSTIN EMIELU"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02611430"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6142d708-dd7c-3afd-b797-7a0ec53fc14c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23359909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"popularmusic"}],"isPartOf":"Popular Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Arts","Music"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Some theoretical perspectives on African popular music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23359909","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Popular music occupies a dominant position in the musical landscape of contemporary Africa, yet academic study of popular music is still in its infancy in most parts of Africa. This may be due in part to the absence of theoretical frameworks that stimulate popular music discourses from the African perspective. This paper is an attempt to fill this lacuna. Based on a critical and qualitative analysis of data gathered from field situations, participant observation, interviews and published literary materials on the subject matter, the paper theorises that the creation of African popular music is characterised by two significant processes: indigenisation and syncretisation. The paper further states that African popular music is a socially responsive phenomenon, sustained through the interplay of cross-cultural and trans-national social dynamics. The paper therefore proposes 'social reconstructionism' as a new theoretical paradigm for the analysis of African popular music. The paper also suggests that the term 'African pop' should be adopted as a generic name for all popular music forms in Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey J. Sallaz"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24116014","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6d1a023-4670-36ff-bcdf-65f2cfee9d24"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24116014"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Deep plays: A comparative ethnography of gambling contests in two post-colonies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24116014","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":12511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Clifford Geertz famously argued that careful ethnographic study of a society's games of chance can generate insight into that society's history, structure and culture. Adopting and extending the technique of the 'ethnographic revisit', the author compares his own ethnographic data on the organization of casino card games in contemporary South Africa to Geertz's study of the Balinese cockfight. Three differences are delineated regarding the position of gambling as an institutionalized practice within the larger social matrix; the organization of the individual games; and the subjectivities produced through participation in the contests. These differences, it is argued, derive from divergent trajectories of post-colonial 'governmentality' in Indonesia and South Africa. The Indonesian state continued a colonial-era ban on gambling. As a result, cockfighting remained embedded in local village life as a vehicle for expressing both traditional status honor and resistance to central authority. In contrast, the South African state reversed colonial prohibition by sanctioning corporate casinos. Social and political dimensions of gambling are here subsumed within an economic framework of action and understanding.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gus Puleo"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203426","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00349593"},{"name":"oclc","value":"321449426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247577"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3d94c78-bbb9-307d-b7a0-f3f496be2967"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30203426"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revihispmod"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Hisp\u00e1nica Moderna","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa","eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"429","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-429","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Pan-Africanist Politics of the Imagination: Nancy Morej\u00f3n's \"Mujer negra\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30203426","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":6253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Faye V. Harrison"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08946019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9fea4a5-acb9-3f15-b3aa-adbe0f0e412d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40553114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbaanthstudcult"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: An African Diaspora Perspective For Urban Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553114","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13060,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheli Reutter"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44378350","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ba254a5-d6df-3e4e-be64-afafce81537b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44378350"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Harriet Beecher Stowe's \"Pear of Orr's Island\": Novel of Passing and Cultural Gem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44378350","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":9057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julie Peteet"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4f4ee33-d89f-3201-b337-6b389591b8f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Male Gender and Rituals of Resistance in the Palestinian \"Intifada\": A Cultural Politics of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646520","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":12222,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines ritualized inscriptions of bodily violence upon Palestinian male youths in the occupied territories. It argues that beatings and detention are construed as rites of passage into manhood. Bodily violence is crucial in the construction of a moral self among its recipients, who are enabled to juxtapose their own cultural categories of manhood and morality to those of a foreign power. Ritual as a transformative experience foregrounds a political agency designed to reverse relations of domination between occupied and occupier. Simultaneously, it both reaffirms and transforms internal Palestinian forms of domination. [Middle East, masculinity, ritual performance, violence, body, construction of self]","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Stewart"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab2c04ae-4e13-3e2c-a5a4-10a03e22b69e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29735960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'The Bitter Glass': Postcolonial Theory and Anglo-Irish Culture: A Case Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735960","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Tilly"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231331","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04f991fa-c1d7-3b2a-b626-db80e82c3962"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231331"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1129","pageStart":"1127","pagination":"pp. 1127-1129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231331","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0631\u0648\u0628\u0631\u062a \u062c. \u0633. \u064a\u0648\u0646\u062c","\u0631\u0627\u0645\u064a \u0623\u0645\u064a\u0646","Robert J. C. Young","Ramy Amin"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7db5c90-0be4-33e0-86aa-ce16f785ff01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26596439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"39","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"\u0661\u0669\u0662","pageStart":"\u0661\u0667\u0663","pagination":"pp. \u0661\u0667\u0663-\u0661\u0669\u0662","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646\u060c \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0627\u062a\u0628 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufee4\ufeb4\ufeae\u062d\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0648\u0631\u064a \/ Fanon, Revolutionary Playwright","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596439","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5862,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212703,212781]],"Locations in B":[[30822,30897]],"abstract":"\u0647\u0630\u0647 \u062a\u0631\u062c\u0645\u0629 \u0644\u0645\u0642\u062a\u0637\u0641 \u0645\u0646 \u0645\u0642\u062f\u0645\u0629 \u0631\u0648\u0628\u0631\u062a \u062c. \u0633. \u064a\u0648\u0646\u062c \u0644\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0621 \u0627\u0644\u062e\u0627\u0635 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u0645\u0646 \u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u063a\u062a\u0631\u0627\u0628 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u0641\u0631\u0627\u0646\u0632 \u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 (\u0661\u0669\u0662\u0665-\u0661\u0669\u0666\u0661) \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u0642\u0627\u0645 \u0628\u062a\u062d\u0631\u064a\u0631\u0647 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0627\u0634\u062a\u0631\u0627\u0643 \u0645\u0639 \u062c\u0627\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0641\u0628\u0629 . \u064a\u0631\u0643\u0632 \u064a\u0648\u0646\u062c \u0641\u064a \u0647\u0630\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0621 \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u062f\u0645\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0638\u0631\u0648\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0644\u0633\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062d\u064a\u0637\u0629 \u0628\u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 \u060c \u0648\u062a\u062d\u062f\u064a\u062f\u0627\u064b \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0631\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0648\u062c\u0648\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0649\u064a \u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632\u062a \u0628\u0647\u0627 \u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a\u0647 . \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u062f\u064a\u062f \u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0634\u0647\u0627\u062f\u0627\u062a \u0645\u0646 \u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 \u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 \u060c \u0648\u062a\u062a\u0628\u0639\u0647 \u0644\u0633\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a\u0646 \u0623\u062b\u0651\u0631\u0648\u0627 \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647 \u060c \u064a\u0642\u062f\u0645 \u064a\u0648\u0646\u062c \u0644\u0644\u0642\u0627\u0631\u0626 \u0625\u0646\u062a\u0627\u062c \u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u0642\u0644\u064a\u0644\u0627\u064b \u0645\u0627 \u064a\u0644\u0642\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0636\u0648\u0621 \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647 \u0645\u0642\u0627\u0631\u0646\u0629 \u0628\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0629 . This is a translation of part of the introduction by Robert J. C. Young to the section on theater in the book Alienation and Freedom by Frantz Fanon (1925-1961), which he co-edited with Jean Khalfa. In this part of the introduction, Young focuses on the historical and philosophical circumstances surrounding Fanon, specifically the surrealist existentialism which characterized his writings. With numerous excerpts from Fanon's texts, tracing the biographies of authors who left an imprint on Fanon, Young introduces the reader to Fanon's theatrical writing, which often receives little attention compared to his political writings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID ROUTLEDGE"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45232897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01100262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e58563a-0885-3dd7-9890-a5a62dc1c831"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45232897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newzealinterevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Zealand International Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"New Zealand Institute of International Affairs","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Philippines under Martial Law","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45232897","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":4497,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julietta Singh"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8348cf1a-d77f-376f-a5da-34e8ff46fb22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Post-humanitarian Fictions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0137","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8075,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sarah E. Lewis","Dagmawi Woubshet","GerShun Avilez"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9a408f9-22f7-336a-9e01-2b5bc998a5c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24264838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"657","pageStart":"634","pagination":"pp. 634-657","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"LOVE VISUAL: A Conversation with Haile Gerima","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24264838","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jos\u00e9 Rabasa"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1faa28a8-cccd-3a06-938b-83228f72277b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Aesthetics of Colonial Violence: The Massacre of Acoma in Gaspar de Villagr\u00e1's \"Historia de la Nueva M\u00e9xico\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112061","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally O'Driscoll"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425562"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5909004-1b19-33c3-9fab-ead6faa08d53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1315243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmidwmodelangass"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Midwest Modern Language Association","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"56","pagination":"pp. 56-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Midwest Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Michelle Cliff and the Authority of Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1315243","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicola Miller"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180702","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48ebb05c-5b2b-3a73-97f9-4fc7424c0097"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180702"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Absolution of History: Uses of the Past in Castro's Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180702","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"There are two transitions in question in the Cuban case, neither of which entirely fits the model of dictatorship to liberal democracy: 1) the actual transition from Batista's regime (1952-8), which was undeniably a dictatorship, to the revolutionary government; 2) the prospective transition from Castro's government, in relation to which the term dictatorship is not very illuminating, to an uncertain future. History has a key role in both processes. Louis A. P\u00e9rez's claim that history served as 'handmaiden to the Cuban revolution', supplying 'moral subsidy and ... a sense of continuity', provides the starting-point for my development of two main themes. The first theme, related to the first transition, concerns the conditions of production of the revisionist historiography appropriated by the revolutionaries, which was boosted by a degree of state sponsorship, ironically from Batista himself in the early 1940s. The second theme is the emergence during the 1990s of a critique of the regime's monopoly over Cuba's past, which has its roots in the revolutionary government's own promotion of historical research and debate in the 1960s, before the ideological clampdown of the 1970s and 1980s. In both periods, historians have tried to create a space - however restricted in practice - for civil society. The main comparative point to emerge from the Cuban evidence is that changes in historical perspective can precede and even anticipate political transition.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Odhiambo"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f9fffe1-8c08-3d1e-8f3c-3452d6e73d3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Whose Nation? Romanticizing the Vision of a Nation in Bole Butake's \"Betrothal without Libation\" and \"Family Saga\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468121","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7347,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[343918,344002]],"Locations in B":[[27774,27858]],"abstract":"This paper reflects on the project of the nation and nation-ness in postcolonial Africa with specific attention to the two plays by the anglophone Cameroonian playwright Bole Butake. The paper argues that in Butake's dramatic imaginary, the project of the nation and nation-ness are highly romanticized. The paper locates its argument in Butake's two play-texts: Betrothal without Libation (2005) and Family Saga (2005).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maimire Mennasemay"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41757572","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b17d0568-ab4a-33fb-abd1-7f4534a099d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41757572"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejethistud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Ethiopian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Tsehai Publishers","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Dialogue Between Fifteenth and Twenty First Century Ethiopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41757572","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":17509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The paper proposes a symptomatic reading of the writings of a fifteenth century heretical movement\u2014the Dekike Estifanos\u2014to throw light on the modernization predicament of twenty\u2013first century Ethiopia. Based on the assumption that all serious thinking about a society needs to be mediated by its intellectual tradition, the paper enucleates critiques of power, institutions and knowledge that are immanent in the teachings of the Dekike Estifanos and that throw a new light on how Ethiopians could approach the tasks they face in the twenty-first century. It shows that such a critical dialogue with Ethiopia's intellectual traditions discloses questions, ideas and ideals that could provide historically-rooted intellectual resources for developing an Ethiopian critical theory capable of illuminating the possible routes to a modernization productive of freedom, equality, justice, and prosperity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anne M. Serafin"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/820073","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138274"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"490f1f30-59cf-395f-b190-7ab5c796232f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/820073"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englishj"}],"isPartOf":"The English Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Humanities","Language & Literature","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"African Literatures: An Overview","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/820073","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":7655,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[41615,41655]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DEBARATI SANYAL"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337080","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6c7858c-d497-39bc-aab3-158a2e0013f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337080"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"118\/119","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Crabwalk History: Torture, Allegory, and Memory in Sartre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337080","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8421,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[31399,31486]],"Locations in B":[[22579,22670]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robinson O. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c9359eb-5e2d-3dd0-8bd4-db97a651ecd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"198","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-198","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black Friday, Queer Atlantic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.2.11","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article details the political significance of Booker Prize-winning novelist J. M. Coetzee queering a longstanding slave character trope. After briefly sketching how Shakespeare's Caliban and Daniel Defoe's Friday operate narratively, I demonstrate that Coetzee's Friday in Foe (1986), in contradistinction to his literary predecessors, refuses protocols attached to language, music, dance, and sex. That is, by disavowing all forms of intercourse with white heteropatriarchy, Coetzee's Friday averts his own erasure precisely by espousing a politics of castration. This castration\u2014or refusal to be made intelligible and thereby appropriable to European interlocutors during the time of slavery\u2014directs readerly scrutiny to the imperialist self-regard exemplified in Shakespeare's Prospero and Defoe's Crusoe. Distinct from the seeming critical consensus that dismisses Coetzee's Friday as \u201cthe castrated mute,\u201d I thus show that his castration produces a political alternative that commands recognition of the inconvenient, unsanitized history of the Atlantic.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philippe Bourgois"],"datePublished":"2002-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15ff3f92-494c-3c0f-9783-fdc87f52bdc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"231","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-231","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The violence of moral binaries: Response to Leigh Binford","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047831","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":4817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["WILLIAM F. MAY"],"datePublished":"1974-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970181","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b8b6e96-9c4f-3cc6-a344-5cd40a14a4fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970181"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"277","pagination":"pp. 277-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Terrorism as Strategy and Ecstasy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970181","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7672,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[59961,60024]],"Locations in B":[[16445,16506]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0645\u062d\u0645\u062f \u0633\u0644\u0627\u0645\u0629","Mohammad Salama"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9deb4a0-6aa4-3ad1-ab19-6aefb662c2fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24392143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"34","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"\u0666\u0666","pageStart":"\u0664\u0662","pagination":"pp. \u0664\u0662-\u0666\u0666","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u0647\u0645\u064a\u0634: \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0621\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \/ World Literature Between Center and Margin: A Reading of Postcolonial Arabic Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24392143","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article poses urgent questions about the relationship between postcolonial Arabic literature and World Literature, exposing the presuppositions of this relationship. The author argues that heated ideological conflicts exist between the understanding of literature as a phenomenon emerging from interaction and a universal human faculty irrespective of race, class, gender, or religion, versus the Orientalist bias of hegemonic critical thought in the era of postnationalist capitalism. The fundamental questions that arise are: How could one transcend the canonical hierarchies in \"World Literature\"? Consequently, how could one resolve the persistent tensions between Self and Other in a postcolonial literary era? \u062a\u0637\u0631\u062d \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u062a\u0633\u0627\u0624\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0639\u0646 \u0639\u0644\u0627\u0642\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631 \u0628\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645. \u062a\u0631\u0643\u0651\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u0631\u0627\u0639\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0625\u064a\u062f\u064a\u0648\u0644\u0648\u062c\u064a\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u062a\u0639\u0631\u064a\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0628\u0648\u0635\u0641\u0647 \u0638\u0627\u0647\u0631\u0629 \u064a\u0646\u062a\u062c\u0647\u0627 \u062a\u0641\u0627\u0639\u0644 \u0625\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a \u0645\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u063a\u0629 \u0648\u0645\u0644\u0643\u0629 \u0625\u0646\u0633\u0627\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u064a\u0634\u062a\u0631\u0643 \u0641\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0628\u0634\u0631\u0645\u0646 \u062c\u0647\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0628\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u0631\u0627\u0643\u0632\u0627\u0644\u0633\u0644\u0637\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0642\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u00ab \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u0644 \u00bb \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u062a\u0633\u0631\u0628\u062a \u0625\u0644\u064a \u0646\u0638\u0631\u064a\u0627\u062a\u0647\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0639\u0637\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0642\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u062a\u062f\u0627\u062e\u0644\u0627\u062a \u0633\u064a\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0629 - \u0631\u0623\u0633\u0645\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u062c\u0647\u0629 \u0623\u062e\u0631\u0649. \u0648\u062a\u0637\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0623\u0633\u0626\u0644\u0629 \u0623\u0633\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0647\u064a: \u0643\u064a\u0641 \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0648\u0641\u064a\u0642 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u062a\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0642\u0636\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0648\u0647\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0623\u062f\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645\u061f \u0648\u0643\u064a\u0641 \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u0627\u062c\u062a\u064a\u0627\u0632\u060c \u0628\u0644 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0627\u0648\u0632\u0639\u0646\u060c \u0647\u0631\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0642\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u00ab \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0646\u0627 \u00bb \u0648\u00ab \u0627\u0644\u0622\u062e\u0631 \u00bb \u0641\u064a \u0639\u0635\u0631 \u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0627\u0631\u061f","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Gould"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24365004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04a57af7-280f-3f9a-8e54-f40d36b60afd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24365004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Engendering Critique: Postnational Feminism in Postcolonial Syria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24365004","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8049,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ama Biney"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206699","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227387"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dd65c30-2ddd-320d-b7d0-e100249056fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40206699"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Development of Kwame Nkrumah's Political Thought in Exile, 1966-1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40206699","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":10969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The focus of this article is an examination of the evolution of Nkrumah's political thought during the last years of his life. There is a discernible radicalization as Nkrumah's intellectual thought developed between 1966 and 1972. He had clearly abandoned the constitutional path to independence and begun to adopt revolutionary armed struggle as the only solution to Africa's myriad problems of capitalism, neo-colonialism and imperialism. The unfolding social and political struggles in Vietnam and Latin America and the unrest in America's black cities impacted profoundly on his thinking. The coup d'etat which deposed Nkrumah on 24 February 1966 forced him into exile in neighbouring Guinea-Conakry. It therefore provides the political background against which Nkrumah's intellectual thinking unfolded.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Johanne Lamoureux"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb4e5882-580a-3e81-9a49-633c619403b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20068365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"64","pagination":"pp. 64-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"From Form to Platform: The Politics of Representation and the Representation of Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20068365","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":4496,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223637"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8ae268c-3d63-3044-a2e4-43dd3a48ec75"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rmq3.10"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"302","pageStart":"267","pagination":"267-302","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"La traducci\u00f3n intercultural.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rmq3.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14373,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Los dos principales procedimientos en que se basan las Epistemolog\u00edas del Sur son la ecolog\u00eda de saberes y la traducci\u00f3n intercultural. En textos anteriores me ocupaba del primero. En este hablo del segundo. En la base de las ecolog\u00edas de saberes est\u00e1 la idea de que los diferentes tipos de conocimiento son incompletos de distintas formas, y que despertar la conciencia de esta incompletitud rec\u00edproca (m\u00e1s que buscar la completitud) es condici\u00f3n previa para alcanzar la justicia cognitiva. La traducci\u00f3n intercultural es la alternativa tanto al universalismo abstracto en que se asientan las teor\u00edas generales centradas en occidente, como a","subTitle":"Diferir y compartir con passionalit\u00e0","keyphrase":["traducci\u00f3n","traducci\u00f3n intercultural","contacto","intercultural diferir","trabajo","saberes","pr\u00e1cticas","traducci\u00f3n intercultural diferir","traducir","compartir"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ufot B. Inamete"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947768"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6317d36-a402-3807-88e6-26b6ab49421e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44235144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intestudnote"}],"isPartOf":"International Studies Notes","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Profile and Development of Political Science in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44235144","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Todd A. Henry"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311613"},{"name":"oclc","value":"559530872"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250552"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38cc1585-ac64-3ae3-b48f-026a77327eb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43919620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jkorestud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Korean Studies (1979-)","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Center for Korean Research in the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ch'anggy\u014fng Garden as Neocolonial Space: Spectacles of Anticommunist Militarism and Industrial Development in Early South(ern) Korea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43919620","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":18039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses Ch'anggy\u014fng Garden, a Chos\u014fn Dynasty palace transformed into an amusement park under Japanese rule, to trace the violent process of (South) Korea's decolonization in the decade after 1945. It argues that the garden s colonial afterlives resulted from contentious interactions between the state-building projects of bourgeois elites and the everyday practices of subaltern subjects. For his part, Syngman Rhee sought to identify the garden as a Japanese vestige, but faced popular opposition by citizens who favored its reuse as a recreational grounds. As a result of these contentious interactions, postcolonial leaders learned to creatively exploit this powerful, if unruly, site. To highlight these contestations, I analyze two overlapping spectacles aimed at channeling the spiritual and material energies of the masses in directions that would promote nationalist projects. The first heroicized individuals who died on behalf of their new state, encouraged future generations of South Koreans to support the ever-expanding Hot Wars of Asia. If these memorial services sought to promote anticommunist militarism, industrial expositions persuaded visitors to support state-led projects of capitalist development. Both exploitative, these interrelated projects benefited citizens in markedly uneven ways, as government and business officials subjected them to their neocolonial agendas.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Ayala Milligan"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8a6b4fd-5718-3d7a-9bcb-e5666b16b2f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42634355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neocolonialism and Peace Corps Teaching in the Philippines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634355","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":4782,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[28979,29018]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hans Rogger"],"datePublished":"1968-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/127433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00360341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227192"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/127433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russianreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Russian Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","Slavic Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"October 1917 and the Tradition of Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/127433","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6807,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[607086,607130]],"Locations in B":[[38587,38636]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue J. Kim"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a360c45-4b29-3fb1-bb22-d69db88dc88c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"The Real White Man Is Waiting for Me\": Ideology & Morality in Bessie Head's \"A Question of Power\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115492","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":14911,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay explores how Bessie Head's best known novel explores the ideological valences of different models of morality and argues that the novel dissects and juxtaposes different notions of morality and subjectivity associated with various historical periods. Then, in the novel, a repressed \"real\" serves to debunk the rhetoric of the different modes of ideological morality, ultimately enabling a recuperation of notions of morality based on better understandings of what constitutes reality.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Koffi Anyinefa","Grace E. An"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hello and Goodbye to N\u00e9gritude: Senghor, Dadi\u00e9, Dongala, and America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820160","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10241,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Humphrey"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"965f3b01-c108-3232-8dba-2255f15d8bb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41858318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE, VOICE AND IDENTITY IN ALGERIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858318","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sara Berry"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219282","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39f73b20-045d-32b4-85d2-02e852fb9681"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/219282"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/219282","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conway W. Henderson"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07f9f031-dcc9-3443-881b-1dae8ccd2c6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/174207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conditions Affecting the Use of Political Repression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/174207","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The task of this study is to determine if certain political and socioeconomic variables have strong relationships with political repression conceptualized as disappearance, detention, torture, and political killings. The perspective of the study is from the question of why do people in power \u2013 with so many options available \u2013 choose repression as a method of rule. Repression is coded into numerical values from the State Department Country Reports, and then relationships with the degree of democracy, socioeconomic conditions, inequality, rate of economic change, and the level of economic development are tested in regression models. Significant relationships are found. The degree of democracy, the extent of inequality in society, and economic growth rate go a long way to explain and predict political repression in a parsimonious model.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan Lawson"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712480","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e633b42-fdb8-31a0-aa98-c8ecc97642a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712480"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"123","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-123","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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In particular, why would a fledgling Muslim-majority state choose to uphold the legal system of its European colonial master rather than publicly enact Islamic law? Drawing on archival and interview data I gathered in Sudan, this Article shows how English common law emerged from colonialism as a default option that helped local elites bridge deep social, ethnic, and political divides. Because democratic-minded intellectuals were unable to agree on a common implementation of Shari\u2019a (roughly translated as Islamic law), English common law provided a less satisfying but (to them) more practical basis to form a new state. Choosing common law over Islamic law allowed intra-elite conflicts, particularly among political parties and ethnic groups, to lay dormant during the transition to independence. But it also marginalized progressive Islamic jurists who had sought to create a democratic state built on Islamic principles of justice and equality. By unearthing Sudan\u2019s remarkable legal history, this study reveals the contested nature of common law and Shari\u2019a within Muslim-majority states. This Article ultimately demonstrates how debates over the place of religion shape democratic development and how colonial politics creates legal discourses that survive into the independent state.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HENRY VUSSO MOYANA"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c09240d4-25f3-3008-b3a9-604eb734c153"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43658320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"293","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-293","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Color of the Enemy in the New Millennium","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24460984","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":8530,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wandia Njoya"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f8690dc-8a95-34e2-a527-ace855890b66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25659719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"338","pagination":"pp. 338-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"LARK MIRROR: AFRICAN CULTURE, MASCULINITY, AND MIGRATION TO FRANCE IN ALAIN MABANCKOU'S BLEU BLANC ROUGE<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25659719","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9251,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[405263,405371],[405684,406047]],"Locations in B":[[20779,20887],[20937,21238]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Yochai Oppenheimer"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.32.3.381","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02729601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36585f58-e15e-3c85-84b7-91e4e60a1a30"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/prooftexts.32.3.381"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prooftexts"}],"isPartOf":"Prooftexts","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"408","pageStart":"381","pagination":"pp. 381-408","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cHow Bound the Arab Is to His Land\u201d: The House of Rajani<\/em> and the Limits of Zionist Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/prooftexts.32.3.381","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the ways in which Alon Hilu undermines conventional literary representations of the Arab in The House of Rajani, offering alternative possibilities for contact and communication between Jews and Arabs. The division of the text between two narrators, each of whom reflects a distinct viewpoint, represents the contrast between the Zionist world of the First Aliyah and the Arab world of people who had dwelled in Palestine for generations. Hilu returns to Palestinian history in order to situate the experience of Arab exile center stage. Not only does Hilu read national history and the place of the Arab within it anew, but he signals the instability of national categories, their tendency to merge and thereby to create an intermediate space. The Arab in Hilu's novel is immeasurably more complex and interesting than the familiar Arab as imagined by Hebrew and Israeli fiction in the past. He is understood through a lens of post-colonialism inconsistent with the dominant Israeli historiography and his human and collective experiences are presented with unprecedented power.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William V. Spanos"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.20.1-2.0083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc960146-9658-3e75-99e0-3775da09147d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.20.1-2.0083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Arab Spring, 2011","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.20.1-2.0083","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":18442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Buuck"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"African Doppelganger: Hybridity and Identity in the Work of Dambudzo Marechera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820447","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6524,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald M. Platt"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712517","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f68be23-2a0f-347e-a5ed-113e741063a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2712517"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"343","pagination":"pp. 343-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Sociological Endeavor and Psychoanalytic Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2712517","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":8349,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[47383,47429]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tristan McConnell"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790623","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2bcceba1-b70f-3b74-9667-734fc6b83798"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790623"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PERSONAL NARRATIVES OF POLITICAL HISTORY: SOCIAL MEMORY AND SILENCE IN NAMIBIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790623","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bud B. Khleif"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43645085","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afdc27c6-3cc6-32d9-ae4f-8b7094f5bfbc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43645085"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociologus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociologus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Duncker & Humblot GmbH","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Socio-Cultural Framework for Understanding Race and Ethnic Relations in Schools and Society of the U.S.A.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43645085","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7086,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Im Gegensatz zur offiziellen Ideologie gibt es in den USA nach wie vor eine ethnische Schichtung. Unter den Schlagworten \u201efeudale St\u00e4nde\u201d, \u201eKasten\u201d und \u201einterner Kolonialismus\u201d lassen sich die haupts\u00e4chlichen theoretischen Ans\u00e4tze zur Erfassung dieses Sachverhaltes angeben; sie alle weisen \u2014 unter Betonung jeweils unterschiedlicher Ph\u00e4nomene und Kausalfaktoren, deren Vorz\u00fcge und M\u00e4ngel hier diskutiert werden \u2014 die Diskriminierung zahlreicher rassischer und ethnischer Komponenten der heutigen amerikanischen gesellschaftlichen Zust\u00e4nde aus. Die Schulen wirken in mehrfacher Weise auf die Erhaltung der ethnischen Schichtung hin; zwei Aspekte werden hier herausgestellt: (1) die Lehrmaterialien ignorieren Traditionen und historische Leistungen der Minorit\u00e4ten und (2) mit offenen oder mehr sublimen Mitteln werden Sch\u00fcler, die nicht zu den WASP (White-Anglo-Saxon-Protestants) geh\u00f6ren, unmittelbar im Schulalltag diskriminiert.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hala Kh. Nassar"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6c8e167-f135-300f-8697-a696668b0465"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25069777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Stories from under Occupation: Performing the Palestinian Experience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25069777","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":12520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A plethora of research has been done on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict; however, few have ventured to investigate and theorize its subjects or the articulation of Palestinian culture. Theatre and drama in the Arab world are under-researched, and when cultural production is studied, Palestinian theatre is nowhere mentioned. The history of Palestinian theatre dates back to 1850 when it was in tune with the neighboring cultural centers of the Arab world, i.e. Beirut and Cairo. Occupation since 1967 has had a great impact on Palestinian theatre, which has become a vehicle for asserting Palestinian identity and collective memory in the face of cultural annihilation. Through the use of al-Hakawati (the traditional storyteller) combined with narratives of memories, current theatre aims to portray life in turmoil caused by the political situation and the frustrations of the peace process with Israel.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magnus O. Bassey"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034961","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0eb8db1e-2143-300b-97a4-ab7e97756135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40034961"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"935","pageStart":"914","pagination":"pp. 914-935","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What is Africana Critical Theory or Black Existential Philosophy?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034961","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, the author argues that Africana critical theory or Black existential philosophy is the philosophical discourse that critiques domination and affirms the empowerment of Black people in the world. However, although Africana critical theory shares similar concerns and themes such as existence, consciousness, trepidation, meaninglessness, hopelessness, fear, despair, servility, and abasement with European existentialism, there are important distinctions between them. For example, although European existentialism is, as Gordon says, \"predicated on the uniqueness of the individual as well as on a universalist conception of humans and their obligation to self,\" Africana critical theory or Black existential philosophy is predicated on the liberation of all Black people in the world from oppression.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Leys"],"datePublished":"1982-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf1a5574-00bf-3be3-b7e5-8afe602c8ba5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Economic Development in Theory and Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024787","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":13444,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[375355,375427]],"Locations in B":[[43823,43901]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabine Jell-Bahlsen"],"datePublished":"2016-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41559225"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004233260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fcde5d8-9b7b-30e2-ad6f-247c43d43408"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43895192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Commentary: reflections on 40 years of \"Dialectical Anthropology\", a personal journey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43895192","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KIMBERLY HUTCHINGS"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45128070","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"390c6b62-c465-3ea3-af53-91028d4ef5a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45128070"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Happy Anniversary! Time and critique in International Relations theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45128070","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"All critical theories lay claim to some kind of account not only of the present of international politics and its relation to possible futures, but also of the role of critical theory in the present and future in international politics. This article argues that if critical international theory is to have a future that lives up to its revolutionary ambition, then it needs to listen more carefully to the voices of postcolonial and feminist critics and take on board the heterotemporality of international politics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Omafume F. Onoge"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483773","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c398081e-0ddf-3ccd-91ff-795e014bde2d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483773"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Crisis of Consciousness in Modern African Literature: A Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483773","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":14232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Beaucoup d'\u00e9crivains africains de l'heure se posent, apr\u00e8s tant d'autres, la question angoissante du contexte existentiel de leur litt\u00e9rature, d\u00e9finie historiquement et prospectivement par et pour eux-m\u00eames. Les essais de d\u00e9finition et les efforts de conscientisation sont contradictoires. C'est l'examen de toutes ces opinions, contradictions, orientations et prises de conscience individuelles qui, sous divers \u00e9clairages, a guid\u00e9 l'auteur dans cet essai de synth\u00e8se. Apr\u00e8s un rappel du contexte sociologique au cours duquel, dans ce milieu hostile, colonialiste et imp\u00e9rialiste, la litt\u00e9rature africaine a \u00e9t\u00e9 vue au travers d'un prisme fort d\u00e9formant, l'Afrique a voulu s'affirmer. Deux tendances ont fait jour, l'une, r\u00e9volutionnaire, et l'autre mystique. Puis la litt\u00e9rature ax\u00e9e sur la n\u00e9gritude a \u00e9t\u00e9 consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme trop servile, mais le n\u00e9o-colonialisme qui a suivi au lendemain des ind\u00e9pendances a amen\u00e9 lui aussi une r\u00e9action. Alors que certains \u00e9crivains africains ont choisi la litt\u00e9rature pure, la majorit\u00e9 a adopt\u00e9 une approche de r\u00e9alisme critique: une litt\u00e9rature engag\u00e9e dans le r\u00e9alisme contemporain. Toutefois, certains ont pr\u00e9f\u00e9r\u00e9 le r\u00e9alisme socialiste, c'est-\u00e0-dire en fonction d'un monde \u00e0 tendance socialiste, dont Sembene Ousmane est le repr\u00e9sentant exemplaire. Ce r\u00e9alisme comporte ses probl\u00e8mes mais encore ses lueurs d'\u00e9panouissement, surtout lorsqu'on songe que ces \u00e9crivains s'adressent \u00e0 des gens dont 80% sont en-de\u00e7\u00e0 du seuil de simple subsistance...","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. Kelly"],"datePublished":"1992-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644827","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e23d066-5624-3318-8426-f344807c3dba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/644827"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fiji Indians and \"Commoditization of Labor\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/644827","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":16862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Fiji \"Gujaratis,\" free emigrant shopkeepers, refuse to commoditize their own labor, unlike the Fiji \"Indians,\" descendants of indentured laborers. The difference can be explained in relation to two different syntheses of bhakti devotionalism and capitalism, but only after the capitalism in Fiji's colonial history, the capitalism in India's precolonial history, and the relation of capitalism to Europe have been reconsidered. This article seeks to demonstrate the utility of a cultural approach to capitalism. [capitalism, commoditization, labor, Fiji Indians, bhakti]","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaun Richards"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5db5a6bd-76eb-3bb0-ac95-9e35af8cf0e6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25484620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"198","pagination":"pp. 198-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Yeats's Theatre and the Contemporary \"Crisis of Nihilism\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25484620","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6774,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicol\u00e1s Panotto","Hugo C\u00f3rdova Quero","Santiago Slabodsky"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.1.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"967938908"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04d16de6-fc7d-3f96-8369-41d8d8be0b1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/decohori.1.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"decohori"}],"isPartOf":"Horizontes Decoloniales \/ Decolonial Horizons","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Religi\u00f3n en clave poscolonial: Miradas des-colonizantes de los entramados de poder","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.1.1.0001","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":3345,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ckpcz7.10","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aebac1ec-7620-3581-908b-f839e2fa3607"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ckpcz7.10"}],"isPartOf":"Changing the Terms","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE THIRD SPACE IN POSTCOLONIAL REPRESENTATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ckpcz7.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The drive toward global uniformity in cultures, lifestyles and mentalities also extends to the production of literature. In literature, translation as an activity that always takes place in a specific social, historical and political context involves\u2014voluntarily or not\u2014asymmetrical power relations. With regard to \u201cThird World\u201d literatures, these power relations go as far back as the colonial period. Translation has played an eminent role in anticolonialism\u2014witness the discourse of opposition to colonialism from the very beginning\u2014and has therefore always been apart of the colonizing process. Postcolonialism, which generally refers to the period following independence, encompasses, more specifically,","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["translation","hybridity","postcolonial","cultural","postcolonial representation","discourse","bhabha","bhabhas","intertext","feminist"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joya F. Uraizee"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797307","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00904260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ff649db-b138-3bf2-9457-ce9ec402d1ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43797307"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litefilmquar"}],"isPartOf":"Literature\/Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Salisbury University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Subverting the Status Quo in S\u00e9n\u00e9gal: Djibril Di\u00f4p Mambety's \"Hyenas\" and the Politics of Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43797307","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":6965,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irina Alexandra Feldman"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23631263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02528843"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-242357"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1f64891-7113-3abf-aa83-630f02c16f85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23631263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicritlitelati"}],"isPartOf":"Revista de Cr\u00edtica Literaria Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"75","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Centro de Estudios Literarios \"Antonio Cornejo Polar\"- CELACP","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Las met\u00e1foras de colonialidad y descolonizaci\u00f3n en Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Arguedas y Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23631263","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo propone el proyecto de descolonizaci\u00f3n como el eje central en la obra de Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Arguedas. Retomando el concepto de la descolonizaci\u00f3n articulado en Los condenados de la tierra de Frantz Fanon, traza paralelos entre los textos arguedianos sobre la realidad sociopol\u00edtica peruana a mediados del siglo XX y la teor\u00eda articulada por el psiquiatra martinicano a partir de sus observaciones del conflicto en Argelia de los a\u00f1os 60. This article posits the project of decolonization as the central axis of Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Arguedas' narrative project. The study takes up the concept of decolonization articulated in Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth and traces parallels between Arguedas' texts on Peruvian socio-political reality in 1930s-1960s, and the theory elaborated by the Martiniquais psychiatrist on the basis of his study of the struggle in Algeria during the same decades.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHARON KIM"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"713eead7-8f54-31ae-80fd-a0922e2dc77d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"LAMARCKISM AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF TRANSCENDENCE IN \"THE HOUSE OF MIRTH\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533752","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":12260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seunghyun Song"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.4.1.3","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"25930273"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1037882964"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30ee4e5e-5aa1-34bb-b3bc-30d8b429dd50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.11116\/digest.4.1.3"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdivegendstud"}],"isPartOf":"DiGeSt. Journal of Diversity and Gender Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Leuven University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Religion","Feminist & Women's Studies","Communication Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Bridging Epidermalization of Black Inferiority and the Racial Epidermal Schema: Internalizing Oppression to the Level of Possibilities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.11116\/digest.4.1.3","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6185,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, we will engage with Frantz Fanon's two prominent theses of Black Skin, White Masks, the epidermalization of inferiority (internalization process of colonial oppression) and racial epidermal schema (bodily embodiment of racial oppression), in order to refine our understanding of race beyond its traditional concepts. We will focus on how race pertains to racialization, which functions through internalization of racial oppression. On this basis, we will investigate how racial oppression influences colonized subjects' possibility of existence, and how the case of French colonialism could help us to unpack current complex issues of black racism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis J. Downey"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389629","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83972ca3-5234-3a33-8184-19a2edeaaa5d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1389629"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Americanization to Multiculturalism: Political Symbols and Struggles for Cultural Diversity in Twentieth-Century American Race Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1389629","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":15223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Multiculturalism has been a central concept in conflicts over race\/ethnic relations for more than a decade, yet the debates that it ignited offer little systematic understanding of its origins and meaning. This research seeks to clarify those issues through an analysis of multiculturalism, and cultural diversity more broadly, from a symbolic and historical perspective. Symbolic analysis of multiculturalism focuses on its multivalence--an essential property of political symbols that facilitates the synchronization of diverse interests. Historical analysis focuses on the shifting balance of interests, and political struggles over cultural diversity through the course of the century, which provides the layers of meanings from which multiculturalism draws. Of particular importance is the interplay between movements seeking greater equity in race\/ethnic relations and market-based interests that find elective affinities with specific symbolic expressions of those relations--particularly the affinity between cultural diversity and economic competitiveness that developed in the context of economic globalization. \/\/\/ [Spanish] El multiculturalismo ha sido un concepto central en conflictos sobre relaciones de raza\/etnicidad por m\u00e1s de una d\u00e9cada; todav\u00eda los debates, que dicho concepto encendi\u00f3, ofrecen un entendimiento sistem\u00e1tico muy reducido de su significado y origen. Esta investigaci\u00f3n trata de clarificar estos problemas a trav\u00e9s de un an\u00e1lisis m\u00e1s amplio del multiculturalismo y de la diversidad cultural, desde una perspectiva simb\u00f3lica e hist\u00f3rica. El an\u00e1lisis simb\u00f3lico del multiculturalismo se enfoca en su polivalencia--una propiedad fundamental de s\u00edmbolos pol\u00edticos, la cual facilita la sincronizaci\u00f3n de diversos intereses. El an\u00e1lisis hist\u00f3rico se enfoca en el cambio del balance de intereses, y los retos pol\u00edticos sobre la diversidad cultural a trav\u00e9s del curso del siglo, el cual provee las capas de significados de las cuales se deriva el multiculturalismo. De importancia particular es la interacci\u00f3n entre movimientos que buscan una mayor equidad en las relaciones raza\/etnicidad y los intereses basados en el mercado, los que encuentran afinidades electivas con expresiones s\u00edmbolicas espec\u00edficas de aqu\u00e9llas relaciones--particularmente, la afinidad entre diversidad cultural y competitividad econ\u00f3mica la cual se desarroll\u00f3 en un contexto de globalizaci\u00f3n econ\u00f3mica. \/\/\/ [Chinese] (Unicode for Chinese abstract). \/\/\/ [Japanese] (Unicode for Japanese abstract).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Fleming"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe3bd02b-6c7a-3148-a1ce-3da49a93e75f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre on Violence: Not So Ambivalent?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512862","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8358,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sartre's views on violence have been subject to considerable scholarly discussion over the last decade. At the same time, there has been renewed interest in the issue of structural violence. This paper is an attempt to engage with the two debates. I argue that by highlighting structural violence it is possible to reframe our understanding of how Sartre viewed violence and to demonstrate that Sartre's work remains a useful compass with which to orientate ourselves in a world saturated in violence. I contend that Sartre maintained a broadly consistent line on violence that held in tension the world we live in and the possibility of humanity in the world that we may create. In addition to this temporal dimension, Sartre's thinking on violence oscillated between social scales: between the individual and the collective. Awareness of this methodological double-movement helps clarify and contextualise Sartre's views, and facilitates fruitful re-readings of current scholarship on violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tavengwa Gwekwerere","Davie E. Mutasa","Kudakwashe Chitofiri"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574542","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61566fb8-00a0-3c98-b322-ca32ee73b90e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574542"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Settlers, Rhodesians, and Supremacists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574542","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":11354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Texts written by some white Zimbabweans in the post-2000 dispensation are largely shaped by their authors' endeavor to contest the loss of lands they held prior to the onset of the Fast Track Land Reform Program (FTLRP). Written as memoirs, these texts are bound by the tendency to fall back on colonial settler values, Rhodesian identities, and Hegelian supremacist ideas in their narration of aspects of a conflict in which tropes such as truth, justice, patriotism, and belonging were not only evoked but also reframed. This article explores manifestations of this tendency in Eric Harrison's Jambanja (2006) and Jim Barker's Paradise Plundered: The Story of a Zimbabwean Farm (2007). The discussion unfolds against the backdrop of the realization that much of the literary-critical scholarship on land reform in post-2000 Zimbabwe focuses on texts written by black Zimbabweans and does not attend to the panoply of ways in which some white-authored texts yearn for colonial structures of power and privilege. This article evinces that the reincarnation of colonial settler values, Rhodesian identities, and Hegelian supremacist ideas undermines the discourse of white entitlement more than it promotes it. Values and identities of the colonial yesteryear on which this discourse is premised are not only anachronistic in the 21st century; they also obey the self-other binary at the heart of the patriotic history pedestal that was instrumental in the Zimbabwean regime's post-2000 populist deployment of the land grievance to reconstruct itself as the only and indispensable champion of African interests in Zimbabwe.","subTitle":"White Authors and the Fast Track Land Reform Program in Post-2000 Zimbabwe","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Galit Saada-Ophir"],"datePublished":"2006-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d95fc5a6-a7b9-37da-ab14-ed7e946925c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3651603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Borderland Pop: Arab Jewish Musicians and the Politics of Performance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3651603","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":13705,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article deals with the emergence of a popular musical field as an Arab Jewish borderland on the margins of the Middle East conflict. This borderland has crystallized as a site of empowerment for some Arab Jews, mostly Yemenites, and has simultaneously encompassed multiple ethnic conflicts. The conflicts have emerged between the borderland itself and the dominant Israeli musical style and concurrently through the inner struggles between different Arab Jewish styles competing for cultural supremacy. This study demonstrates the paradoxical nature of the Arab Jewish musical borderland, in which frequent crossings of musical borders not only fail to breach national boundaries but also serve to sustain them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Apter"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685098","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00492426"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391373"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99-4678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a274dea-c5ce-30b0-ab73-d41ab52710bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3685098"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"substance"}],"isPartOf":"SubStance","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"French Colonial Studies and Postocolonial Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3685098","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mischelle Booher"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057499","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128163"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45456765"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da4691de-87ce-330b-a084-bef5f2c51103"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25057499"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"earlamerlite"}],"isPartOf":"Early American Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"303","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-303","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I Trust Every Feeling Heart\": Reader History and P. D. Manvill's \"Lucinda; Or the Mountain Mourner\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25057499","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6700,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivo Ritzer"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.65.1.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61e144c1-33b4-3e00-8930-864db5f4a100"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.65.1.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Relational Politics of Media Culture in the Age of Post-Third Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.65.1.03","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":8459,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay reframes African cinema and discusses it along the lines of a philosophy of relationality. This approach not only aligns questions of aesthetics inextricably with questions of politics, but allows us to differentiate a complex epistemology within the realm of the aesthetic itself. It argues against an ideological fixation of fundamental difference, as between Africa and the rest of the world, therefore eschewing Third Cinema's protocol of didacticism and realism. Instead, with Post-Third Cinema, an aesthetic of sensible intensities comes into focus, leaving the fixed place reserved to the category of African cinema by essentialist thought and moving toward a universal understanding of cinematography in the age of global media culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marie-Paule Ha"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/399559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/399559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Cultural Other in Malraux's Asian Novels","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/399559","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":5454,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay proposes a critical reading of the inscription of the cultural Other in Malraux's Asian novels by recontextualizing the latter within the cultural politics that was in place in the colonies in the 1920s and 1930s. My analysis, which focuses on the three culturally hybridized characters of his texts (Hong in Les Conqu\u00e9rants, Tchen and Kyo in La Condition humaine), aims at articulating the contradictions inherent in the colonial politics of mimicry as formulated by Homi Bhabba.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KEN POST"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23998583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f39c453-f191-30ee-9889-900bdc72e909"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23998583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Peasantization' and Rural Political Movements in Western Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23998583","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":16216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Wright"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/161245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"689","pageStart":"679","pagination":"pp. 679-689","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon and Africa: A Retrospect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/161245","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":4256,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[605028,605074]],"Locations in B":[[25775,25820]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuel Maldonado Denis","Seymour Pollock"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57036c8a-313e-3e23-a5b1-8f014819f81b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25088414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Political Situation in Puerto Rico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25088414","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5797,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[328732,328804]],"Locations in B":[[16106,16181]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gyanendra Pandey"],"datePublished":"2006-11-18","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c95510a4-f8c1-3b7b-b5be-46d6f16424a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4418914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"4741","pageStart":"4735","pagination":"pp. 4735-4741","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Subaltern as Subaltern Citizen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418914","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8046,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The \"re-presentation\" of the subaltern (a relational position in the way power is conceptualised) as subaltern citizen is not about the technical question of citizenship; rather the claim is about historical agency, and about belonging - in a society and in its self-construction. For 200 years and more, the struggles waged by the oppressed and subordinated, i e, the subalterns, were seen as struggles for recognition as equals. The history of these efforts appeared as a history of sameness. However, in the later decades of the 20th century, this struggle was extended to encompass another demand - the demand for a recognition of difference - the existence of a variety of differences that explained the diversity, density and richness of human experience. It is this paradox that needs to be answered, while debating the construction of a subaltern citizen: how is the long-standing struggle for equality supposed to be folded into this newly asserted right to the recognition of difference?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peniel E. Joseph"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3559065","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34ad3820-aae1-3b8f-8973-6562164f2c33"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3559065"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"182","pagination":"pp. 182-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dashikis and Democracy: Black Studies, Student Activism, and the Black Power Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3559065","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":11051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Megenney"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43392264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03403068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43392264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iberamerarch"}],"isPartOf":"Ibero-amerikanisches Archiv","issueNumber":"3","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Iberoamericana Editorial Vervuert","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"COLOR Y SICOLOGIA SOCIAL EN \u201cJUYUNGO\u201d DE ADALBERTO ORTIZ","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43392264","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Pithouse"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758922","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48902881-3294-308a-a1f2-ad78ed4d4388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758922"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Explosive Alliance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758922","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":14176,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[70693,70752]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jaime Amparo Alves"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21819078-fe42-3f9b-935e-d46a9e9098d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neither Humans nor Rights: Some Notes on the Double Negation of Black Life in Brazil","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572923","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":8716,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the challenges of conceptualizing Black existence within the realm of what has been defined as civil society. Rather than entering the Afro-pessimism versus Afro-optimism debate, its aim is to provide ethnographic material to further an understanding of the (im)possibilities for redressing Black injury from racialized categories such as law, justice, and humanity. How might we understand mourning and grieving when the racial alterity of the Black subject positions \"it\" outside the domains of citizenship and humanity? This double negation\u2014neither human nor citizen\u2014is the basis from which the article provides a critique of the racial terror perpetrated by police-linked death squads in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hal Wylie"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40136500","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40136500"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"716","pageStart":"715","pagination":"pp. 715-716","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40136500","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meera Tamaya"],"datePublished":"1992-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00477729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839056"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236642"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"143f7976-b89b-3a51-96f8-234c2d4a659b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Modern Language Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ishiguro's \"Remains of the Day\": The Empire Strikes Back","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195017","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gillian Silverman"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263079"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6357a7a2-3965-3066-b90e-60819dae36ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40643380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudies"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sympathy and its Vicissitudes","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40643380","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arif Dirlik"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/deveandsoci.28.2.167","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15988074"},{"name":"oclc","value":"593021084"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f68e98b9-e9e7-33f1-b4bf-375b68d126b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/deveandsoci.28.2.167"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deveandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Development and Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Institute for Social Development and Policy Research (ISDPR)","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture against History? The Politics of East Asian Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/deveandsoci.28.2.167","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11216,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines changes in attitudes toward the question of cultural identity over the last three decades, with particular reference to the quest for an East Asian identity. The question of cultural identity is bound up with the history of EuroAmerican colonialism, which denied to other societies a historical presence of their own. The radical national liberation movements of the 1960s sought to overcome the opposition between \u201cthe past\u201d and \u201cthe West\u201d by resting their hopes on revolutionary struggles that would create new cultures in the process of the struggle out of present-day realities in which \u201cthe past\u201d and \u201cthe West\u201d were intertwined inextricably. By contrast, there has been a retreat in recent years into native \u201ctraditions,\u201d which once again focus on this opposition. The retreat into traditionalism nourishes ethnic and national particularism. The essay proceeds to examine, albeit sketchily, the recent \u201cConfucian revival\u201d in East Asia, and the quest for East Asian or Asian values. It argues that these developments are part of a resurgence of ethnicity that has accompanied globalization, and in many ways are its products. It is the irony of contemporary anti-Eurocentric movements that they themselves are entrapped in the history and geography of Orientalism. In other words, the very effort to counteract Eurocentrism is bound by the categories of a Eurocentric Orientalism. This is further demonstrated by the fact that EuroAmerican theorists have played a crucial part in the articulation of Asian values in their most recent appearance. These have been problems all along, it suggests, in national as well as regional and continental self-definitions in Asia to the extent that Eurocentric assumptions have been internalized in Asian ideas of Asia and Europe. The essay offers a sketchy overview of the history of these ideas by way of illustrating this argument. One of the basic problems that the essay seeks to bring out is the relationship of various approaches to the question of Asian identity to political and social interests. While the Confucian revival and the quest for Asian values have attracted the greatest attention, it suggests, there have been other efforts to approach the question from the bottom up, not in terms of categories of nation, region, and continent, but in terms of the everyday lives of the people in Asia, in which \u201cthe past\u201d and \u201cthe West\u201d are ever copresent. These efforts, which could be described as efforts within Asian contexts at \u201cglobalization from below,\u201d have a kinship with earlier national liberation efforts to overcome distinction of Europe and Asia, East and West, or modernity and tradition. They oppose the reification of cultures along inherited spatial or temporal categories, but insist instead on the historicity of cultures. History, employed not to reify culture in the interests of power, but in the complexity of everyday life, may yet offer, the essay suggests, a way to overcome the sharpening ethnic, national or divisions of our day. It is important for the same reason to recall the approaches to the question of cultural identity of an earlier day, while also recognizing that changing times present new problems.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arup Kumar Sen"],"datePublished":"2009-01-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40278838","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4a76f0f-7a0f-3f64-860c-b7e7e620e06a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40278838"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"82","pagination":"p. 82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - 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Literature"],"title":"Nothing to Root for: Zakes Mda and South African Resistance Theatre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208009","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheikh Thiam"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380125","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07118813"},{"name":"oclc","value":"570956188"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c4817c9-862b-335e-b8c4-87633de0f448"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26380125"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dalhfrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Dalhousie French Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Dalhousie University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race still Matters: The pragmatic limits of Mabanckou's plea for a non-racial French nation-state in \"Le sanglot de l'homme noir\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26380125","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":6740,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[41528,41574]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terrence Musanga","Anias Mutekwa"],"datePublished":"2011-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4903f7b4-d36d-33c6-929f-35663af20bd1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"1319","pageStart":"1299","pagination":"pp. 1299-1319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Destabilizing and Subverting Patriarchal and Eurocentric Notions of Time: An Analysis of Chenjerai Hove's \"Bones\" and \"Ancestors\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304585","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the notion of time as conceptualized and articulated in Chenjerai Hove's Rones and Ancestors. These texts, as this article sets out to demonstrate, are characterized by a deliberate attempt to subvert and transcend the Eurocentric and patriarchal notions of time as premised and predicated on linearity and progression. The authors argue, as is reflected in the texts, that these notions of time are a simplistic model and do not reflect the diversity that characterize and constitute human experience. These notions of time are premised on linearity and progression, and so they repress and stifle the existence of other and alternative narratives of history, time, and experience as demonstrated in the texts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Penn"],"datePublished":"1981-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852297","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2802bcbf-4a13-32c5-bc92-d9a0bc040bfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42852297"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"271","pageStart":"265","pagination":"pp. 265-271","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NUFFIELD CLASS CATEGORIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42852297","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3578,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emil Aslan Souleimanov"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11794","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2dd7068-86e7-315a-9b77-54dc3ea9f02c"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":139.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NORTH CAUCASUS INSURGENCY: DEAD OR ALIVE?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep11794","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":32136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the mid-1990s, Chechnya and the North Caucasus have attracted the attention of policymakers, scholars, and experts interested in the theory and practice of separatism, insurgency, and terrorism. As a natural laboratory of political violence in its most distinct forms, the North Caucasus, with inherent ethnic divisions, religious radicalism, an intricate sociocultural profile, and uneasy center-periphery relationships, has been a source of impressive scholarship. While a lot has been written on the causes and contexts of the North Caucasus insurgency, a consensus is still to be reached in the academic and expert community as to the structural factors leading to","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Saunders"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing the Body: Gender, Nation, and Narration in Tahar Ben Jelloun's \"L'enfant de sable\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821233","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":14057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Tahar Ben Jelloun's novel \"L'enfant de sable\" proposes that gender is a colonization of the body. This essay considers that proposition by placing it in a theoretical dialogue with postcolonial and gender studies and analyzing it in the context of Morocco. I critique the language of natural development common to both gender and colonization, examining its processes of abjection, reliance on distinct genres, and dependence on \"style.\" Arguing that Ben Jelloun's proposition is an invitation to scrutinize the historical specificities of colonization, I turn to an investigation of the Moroccan protectorate, to the ideological work done by its terminological distinction from colonization and the material and discursive forms of its implementation. These specificities, I argue, disclose significant nuances in the way gender operates: as a protective envelope from its own disciplinary effects, a safeguard from uncertainty, and an inculcation of desire subtended by violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LIONEL CLIFFE","L. R. Cliffe","JOHN S. SAUL"],"datePublished":"1972-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"76a5cc5d-fac1-3127-b780-84e5a1a4c543"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The District Development Front in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341228","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":22341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clifford Edogun"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59dfeff2-503f-3d73-a51b-d0336f0ad922"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Non-aligned Movement Today: Towards an Ideological Perspective of World Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341762","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xochitl Leyva","Jorge Alonso","R. A\u00edda Hern\u00e1ndez","Arturo Escobar","Axel K\u00f6hler","Aura Cumes","Rafael Sandoval","Shannon Speed","Mario Blaser","Esteban Krotz","Susana Pi\u00f1acu\u00e9","H\u00e9ctor Nahuelpan","Morna Macleod","Juan L\u00f3pez Intz\u00edn","Jaqolb\u2019e Lucrecia Garc\u00eda","Mariano B\u00e1ez","Graciela Bola\u00f1os","Eduardo Restrepo","Mar\u00eda Bertely","Abelardo Ramos","Sergio Mendiz\u00e1bal","Laura Mateos","Gunther Dietz","Juan Ricardo Aparicio","Joanne Rappaport","Mar\u00eda Patricia P\u00e9rez","Jenny Pearce","Luis Guillermo Vasco","Charles R. Hale","\u00c1ngela Ixkic Bastian","Jos\u00e9 Antonio Flores","Lina Rosa Berr\u00edo","Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Araya","Sabine Masson","Virginia Vargas","Hanna Laako","Mariana Mora","Gilberto Vald\u00e9s","Mar\u00eda Isabel Casas","Retos","Michal Osterweil","Jo\u00e3o Pacheco de oliveira","Dana E. Powell","Roc\u00edo Salcido","Marcio D\u2019Olne Campos","M\u00f3nica Gallegos","Mercedes Olivera","Rodrigo Montoya","Sylvia Marcos","Mar\u00eda Lugones","Walter Mignolo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96g1f.14","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21af2c8e-eba3-37e1-940a-37ef84cd0fec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvn96g1f.14"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e1cticas otras de conocimiento(s)","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"273","pagination":"273-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","American Indian Studies","Gender Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Forjado en el di\u00e1logo:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn96g1f.14","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11437,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La disciplina antropol\u00f3gica fue retada a descolonizarse como consecuencia de las luchas descolonizadoras alrededor del mundo. Trabajos como los de Frantz Fanon (1968 [1952], 1963 [1961]) obligaron a cuestionar la manera de tratar las \u201cdiferencias coloniales\u201d y llamaron a poner al servicio de la descolonizaci\u00f3n la producci\u00f3n del conocimiento y la educaci\u00f3n. Ya para inicios de la d\u00e9cada de 1970, las cr\u00edticas internas y externas motivaron a los antrop\u00f3logos a cuestionar y redefinir algunos de sus postulados m\u00e1s b\u00e1sicos. Esas cr\u00edticas no s\u00f3lo proven\u00edan de los \u201csujetos de estudio\u201d\u00b9 poscoloniales (v\u00e9ase, por ejemplo, Declaraci\u00f3n de Barbados 1971), sino tambi\u00e9n de","subTitle":"hacia una investigaci\u00f3n activista cr\u00edticamente comprometida","keyphrase":["nicol\u00e1s ruiz","ind\u00edgena","investigaci\u00f3n","identidad","comunidad","activista","pueblos ind\u00edgenas","investigaci\u00f3n activista","di\u00e1logo","an\u00e1lisis cr\u00edtico"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Coffin"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cf5b658-084d-3812-9ca4-b98aacfb02ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27933779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","issueNumber":"2\/1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Arab Studies Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading Inside and Out: A Look At Habibi's \"Pessoptimist\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27933779","volumeNumber":"8\/9","wordCount":11389,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James J. Cooke"],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523789","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"629f3595-ec4a-3317-88f1-6d56251510c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523789"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"513","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-513","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Biography of Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523789","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":1175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracey Nicholls"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d731456b-c965-3416-a861-478d934cc8f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: bell hooks' Contributions to Emancipatory Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758831","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew W. Hughey"],"datePublished":"2009-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.3.543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1f8a4fc9-ad3a-329a-93ad-928590bf2007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/sp.2009.56.3.543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"577","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-577","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Cinethetic Racism: White Redemption and Black Stereotypes in \"Magical Negro\" Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/sp.2009.56.3.543","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":20960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recent research on African American media representations describes a trend of progressive, antiracist film production. Specifically, \"magical negro\" films (cinema highlighting lower-class, uneducated, and magical black characters who transform disheveled, uncultured, or broken white characters into competent people) have garnered both popular and critical acclaim. I build upon such evidence as a cause for both celebration and alarm. I first examine how notions of historical racism in cinema inform our comprehension of racial representations today. These understandings create an interpretive environment whereby magical black characters are relationally constructed as both positive and progressive. I then advance a production of culture approach that examines 26 films that resonate with mainstream audiences' understanding of race relations and racialized fantasies. I find that these films constitute \"cinethetic racism\"\u2014a synthesis of overt manifestations of racial cooperation and egalitarianism with latent expressions of white normativity and antiblack stereotypes. \"Magical negro\" films thus function to marginalize black agency, empower normalized and hegemonic forms of whiteness, and glorify powerful black characters in so long as they are placed in racially subservient positions. The narratives of these films thereby subversively reaffirm the racial status quo and relations of domination by echoing the changing and mystified forms of contemporary racism rather than serving as evidence of racial progress or a decline in the significance of race.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seth C. Vannatta"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/educationculture.30.1.39","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10854908"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62458010"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215934"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3391ef8-32b7-30e1-b4ca-95efd5f04004"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5703\/educationculture.30.1.39"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"educationculture"}],"isPartOf":"Education and Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Purdue University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Teaching to the Test: A Pragmatic Approach to Teaching Logic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5703\/educationculture.30.1.39","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract The proper goal of an introductory logic course, teaching critical thinking, is best achieved by maintaining the principle of continuity between student experiences and the curriculum. To demonstrate this I explain Dewey's naturalistic approach to logic and the process of inquiry, one which presents the elements of traditional logic in the context of student experiences. I offer an example of a logic textbook which models the maintenance of the principle of continuity I advocate. Last, I advocate a pluralistic and experimental approach to accomplish this, including methods that rely on the role of the body in learning and reasoning.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally-Anne Jackson"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109544","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109544"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peter Abrahams's \"Mine Boy\": A Study of Colonial Diseases in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109544","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10200,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[59461,59501]],"abstract":"Disease, most often imagined in the past as an external invasion of bacteria or viruses, can also be imagined as \"dis-ease,\" a set of political, economic, and social imbalances that disturb the well-being of people's lives. Today, these imbalances would be termed psychological and psychosomatic diseases, but in a colonial arena, such as early twentieth-century South Africa, these forms of disease were inadvertently perpetuated and ignored. In addition, certain somatic diseases, such as tuberculosis, introduced into South Africa by the Europeans, had unforeseen and often fatal effects on the health of the natives. Tuberculosis, especially, became a peculiarly raced disease. Peter Abrahams fictionally recreates this area of colonial history in his 1946 novel, \"Mine Boy,\" which presents us with characters who negotiate the uncertain and often tragic terrain of colonial introduced and induced diseases. In particular, characters confront and deal, as best they can, with somatic, psychological, and psychosomatic diseases in ways that highlight the racist society of colonial South Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ayele Bekerie"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784458","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8f5c2762-61b2-35e9-ab60-08da2f6baf3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784458"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"The Four Corners of a Circle: Afrocentricity as a Model of Synthesis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784458","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Whitman","John L. McKnight"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27eee0ad-ea18-3307-8c3b-446c143fcf89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"IDEOLOGY AND INJURY PREVENTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130074","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6040,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Data from a recently completed study of head injuries reveal that many of these injuries, and deaths from these injuries, result from interpersonal violence and automobile accidents. Such injuries are normally difficult to prevent. In this study it was found that much of the interpersonal violence involves family members and many of the vehicle accidents, especially those that result in death, happen to pedestrians. Prevention thus becomes even more difficult. Based upon these data and observations, five categories of prevention strategies are generated and evaluated. It is determined that the four strategies usually within the domain of traditional prevention (inaction, education, legislation, and design alterations) are not likely to prevent many head injuries or injuries in general. A fifth category is thus recommended. This category requires meaningful involvement of people into work that impacts on the social and political reality of their lives. The prevailing ideology of prevention offered by the health professions is considered and is found to be in opposition to our fifth prevention category. The implications of this opposition are examined and the search for improved health is considered in this context.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STANFORD M. LYMAN","WILLIAM A. DOUGLASS"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970142","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e3cf45-5a95-3b05-b3d6-6bcc48c8b314"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970142"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"ETHNICITY: STRATEGIES OF COLLECTIVE AND INDIVIDUAL IMPRESSION MANAGEMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970142","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Negin Nabavi"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4311267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00210862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52825169"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-213059"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"751aff0c-5ddf-38a2-a9d8-bc1d54f7b144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4311267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iranstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Iranian Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"350","pageStart":"333","pagination":"pp. 333-350","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Changing Concept of the \"Intellectual\" in Iran of the 1960s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4311267","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9438,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. 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It is suggested that Canadian culture be studied in the same way that we study the disappearing cultures of the Inuit and the Indian. It is maintained that Canadians hold a position in the American socioeconomic system which is similar to that held by American blacks. \/\/\/ Cet article discute un aspect central de la culture Canadienne -- l'americanisation -- qui n'a pas re\u00e7u suffisament d'attention de la part du cercle acad\u00e9mique des sciences sociales, sp\u00e9cialement, celui engag\u00e9 \u00e0 l'\u00e9tude de la culture et de l'\u00e9thnicit\u00e9. Que la culture Canadienne soit \u00e9tudier de la m\u00eame fa\u00e7on que l'on \u00e9tudie les cultures Inuit et Indienne en voie de disparition est sugg\u00e9r\u00e8. 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The interweaving of the influences of Luk\u00e1cs and Gramsci was fundamental in enabling Said's radicalized geographical criticism. The essay shows that though Said frequently disavowed \"totalizing\" thought, Luk\u00e1csian theory actually underpins the ways Said opens his major books, from Beginnings to Culture and Imperialism. The influence of Gramsci, appearing from the later 1970s onward, permits Said to spatialize the insights he had already incorporated from Luk\u00e1cs in a productive interplay.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana KEITA"],"datePublished":"1988-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"147","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351640","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joana Plaza Pinto"],"datePublished":"2008-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42889214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09579265"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38526133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f480b3f2-467e-3003-a824-c2dea1b26e12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42889214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse & Society","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"559","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-559","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Instead, it can be seen in the way Aborigines, inspired by the example of the Panthers' community survival programs, developed their own free medical and legal services.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["OKWUDIBA NNOLI"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3b2a465a-2854-3d25-b985-4d7874d61616"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Socio-Economic Insecurity and Ethnic Politics in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341310","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612222","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2121f4d-a0d7-3012-8fc6-a223df7bf1bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25612222"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Current Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612222","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7899,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy L. Paxton"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827931","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00425222"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42576503"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3827931"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"victorianstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Victorian Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mobilizing Chivalry: Rape in British Novels about the Indian Uprising of 1857","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3827931","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12346,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[72692,72732]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ralph F. Grajeda"],"datePublished":"1979-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/340079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709558"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a75a0526-2c18-303f-8a73-92d7e0e4afa3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/340079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispania"}],"isPartOf":"Hispania","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Tomas Rivera's \"... y no se lo trago la tierra\": Discovery and Appropriation of the Chicano past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/340079","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":7306,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eyal Weizman"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41765057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Political science - Politics","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Architecture, Power Unplugged: Gaza Evacuations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765057","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3820,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Van Ness"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/652568","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057410"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63fb2d5c-bbe7-38b8-816a-6863d4221504"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/652568"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chinaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The China Quarterly","issueNumber":"72","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"838","pageStart":"835","pagination":"pp. 835-838","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/652568","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1798,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. G. Ullyatt"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0883105X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d993d67-bd0e-3969-abec-0084b5ba531f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41279398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudinter"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Hum of Omissions\/The Chant of Vacancies: Prologue to a Study of the American Long Poem Tradition and the Contribution of Some Nineteenth-Century Afro-American Poets","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279398","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":4702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[26545,26605]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret A. Majumdar"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.9","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"605e2ab8-b67a-3a4b-b7b9-fd801f37508c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.9"}],"isPartOf":"Postcoloniality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"111","pagination":"111-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nation in the National Liberation Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.9","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8357,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As we have seen, resistance to empire and to the different forms of imperial domination, exploitation and oppression had been present, both actively and passively, from the first stages of imperialism. It could be individual in scope or, more often, based on a collective linked by tribal, family, religious or regional loyalties. The process of transformation of these different movements offering sporadic, isolated, often spontaneous, resistance to the forces of empire into broader movements capable of mobilising the resources of an entire national community was a long one, often taking decades to mature. It required the development of a national","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["national liberation","communist","majumdar text3","communist party","colonised","struggle","liberation struggle","nationalist","algerian","french communist"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Field"],"datePublished":"2017-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b66d5684-3ff6-3038-bfdb-538da00f3e6b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Classics, African Literature, and the Critics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359429","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8219,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[153272,153345]],"Locations in B":[[18070,18141]],"abstract":"Faced with the criticism that myth and epic poetry have no place in contemporary South African literature departments, there is no point in defending the material on the grounds of intrinsic worth. No text can claim this privilege. Instead, students and lecturers alike may find value and relevance for these works if they explore a range of aesthetic, conceptual, cultural, and political issues that close readings may precipitate. After analysing a fictional demonstration of how not to teach The Odyssey, the article surveys a range of writers and cultural critics who identify as African or African-American, and whose work comments directly and indirectly on the history of the meaning, purpose and value of selected ancient and classical Greek texts. This spectrum stretches from defensive cultural nationalism to an open-ended combination of the cosmopolitan and the vernacular. The article concludes that a combination of resistance and appropriation is the best way to make new and local these canonical texts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u0129chingiri Nd\u0129g\u0129r\u0129g\u0129"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edb54f63-367e-3c18-a4e1-6209c0b06af3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26739738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Mythical hero or tragic failure? An interrogation of the Jomo Kenyatta \u2018black people\u2019s Moses\u2019 mystique in two Kenyan patriographies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739738","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Josiah Mwangi Kariuki\u2019s Mau Mau Detainee (1963) and Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong\u2019o\u2019s Detained (1982) are political patriographies that represent two starkly different sides of Kenyatta, Kenya\u2019s first president, as a political father figure. Detained intertextualizes Mau Mau Detainee in a way that voices Kariuki, Ng\u0169g\u0129\u2019s political brother, from beyond the grave. A discussion of pertinent background on patriography frames the interrogation of the constructedness of the Kenyatta myth embodied in the ennobled Kenyatta of Kariuki\u2019s memoir and the heroic Kenyatta of Ng\u0169g\u0129\u2019s early fiction. A defetishized Kenyatta emerges in Detained and we find echoes of him in the more life-like Kenyatta in Ng\u0169g\u0129\u2019s recent memoirs, which present fraternal and maternal relational frames as alternatives to Kenyatta\u2019s failed Messianism. I probe the ageing Kenyatta\u2019s Sartrean bad faith and mobilization of state violence and detention, tools that link the Kenyatta state\u2019s answer to dissidence back to its colonial predecessor. As I show, if surviving incarceration by the state is the test of heroism, Kenyatta failed that test but Kariuki and Ng\u0169g\u0129 pass it and thus become their own men.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nivedita Bagchi"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a33ff0a6-4b69-32ec-b1fd-a759c9f748b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26284403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE PROCESS OF VALIDATION IN RELATION TO MATERIALITY AND HISTORICAL RECONSTRUCTION IN AMITAV GHOSH'S \"THE SHADOW LINES\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26284403","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46msd4.20","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789053569948"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6368e0de-5ea1-3cd5-a990-d82387b1969d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46msd4.20"}],"isPartOf":"Transnational Archipelago","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"205","pagination":"205-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Diasporic Networks, Political Change, and the Growth of Cabo-Zouk Music","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46msd4.20","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"On any given weekend, if you stepped into a discoth\u00e8que in the capital city of Praia, or the port city of Mindelo, or the diaspora communities of Brockton, Rotterdam, Paris, and Lisbon, you would undoubtedly hear the strains ofcabo-zouk<\/em>\u00b9, a music which combines driving Antilleanzouk<\/em>rhythms and romantic lyrics in Cape Verdean Kriolu. Coinciding with a dramatic change in government in the early 1990s,cabozouk<\/em>has continued to gain in popularity, to a point where today it dominates the airwaves, nightclubs, and stages of Cape Verdean communities throughout the world. Despite its widespread popularity, there are many who","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["cape verdean","cabo zouk","verdean music","cape verdean music","diaspora","musicians","antillean","cabo verde","diaspora communities","antillean zouk"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M.O. Ijere"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229252","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6c1d49a-04a8-3e6e-a283-b6238e6a7f42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41229252"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Economics and African Nationalism \/ DEVELOPPEMENT ECONOMIQUE ET NATIONALISME AFRICAIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41229252","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7200,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[1472,1538]],"abstract":"La premi\u00e8re partie de la pr\u00e9sente \u00e9tude a pour objet l'examen des contributions apport\u00e9es \u00e0 la cause de l'ind\u00e9pendance \u00e9conomique africaine par les principaux leaders noirs d'Am\u00e9rique. L'un de ceux-ci, W.E.B. Du Bois, promoteur du Pan-Africanisme, fut \u00e0 l'origine de nombreux congr\u00e8s ayant pour th\u00e8me le progr\u00e8s politique et \u00e9conomique des peuples africains. Parmi d'autres personnalit\u00e9s afro-am\u00e9ricaines, il faut retenir le nom de Marcus Garvey qui fut l'un des plus importants protagonistes du nationalisme \u00e9conomique africain. Il publia en 1920 une \u00ab D\u00e9claration des droits des peuples africains dans le monde \u00bb. Son action et son influence ont \u00e9t\u00e9 comment\u00e9es par Joyce Cary. La cause profonde du mouvement anti-imp\u00e9rialiste qui s'est d\u00e9velopp\u00e9 en Afrique r\u00e9side dans la nature m\u00eame du syst\u00e8me \u00e9conomique colonial. Si la France organisait l'\u00e9conomie de ses territoires d'outre-mer en fonction de ses propres besoins, la Grande-Bretagne laissait \u00e0 ses colonies la charge de financer leur d\u00e9veloppement \u00e0 partir de leurs propres ressources. D'autre part, en assignant \u00e0 l'Afrique un r\u00f4le de producteur exclusivement agricole, les pays colonisateurs en excluaient tout effort de d\u00e9veloppement industriel. L'activit\u00e9 commerciale \u00e9tait dirig\u00e9e et soumise \u00e0 une r\u00e9glementation non favorable aux Africains. Quant \u00e0 la politique d'instruction publique, elle aboutit en fin de compte, et bien avant l'obtention de l'ind\u00e9pendance des pays africains, \u00e0 donner des emplois \u00e0 un nombre excessif de non-Africains. Parmi les premi\u00e8res organisations \u00e0 se dresser contre l'imp\u00e9rialisme colonisateur, il faut placer les associations de travailleurs ou \u00ab labour unions \u00bb. Longtemps interdites et d\u00e9clar\u00e9es ill\u00e9gales, ces associations finirent par \u00eatre admises et jou\u00e8rent un r\u00f4le important dans l'am\u00e9lioration des conditions \u00e9conomiques des travailleurs. C'est aussi gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 elles que bien des leaders africains purent prendre de l'autorit\u00e9 et s'imposer aussi bien aux Europ\u00e9ens qu'aux Africains eux-m\u00eames. Lorsque les bouleversements engendr\u00e9s par la guerre mondiale amen\u00e8rent les nations coloniales \u00e0 changer leurs objectifs, les Africains eurent enfin l'espoir de voir s'ouvrir la route menant \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance \u00e9conomique. C'est alors qu'entr\u00e8rent en action des groupements d'intellectuels pour \u00e9veiller et organiser les mouvements de masse, pour \u00e9laborer doctrines et programmes en vue d'un essor proprement africain. L'\u00e9tat d'ind\u00e9pendance politique ne fut pas consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme une fin en soi, mais comme base de d\u00e9veloppement des \u00e9conomies nationales. Si l'objectif final \u00e9tait unique pour tous, les moyens d'y atteindre variaient selon les leaders. On peut ramener ces divergences \u00e0 deux tendances principales, l'une favorable \u00e0 la coop\u00e9ration avec les anciennes puissances imp\u00e9rialistes, l'autre estimant qu'il faut rompre avec ces puissances. La premi\u00e8re tendance s'est manifest\u00e9e \u00e0 la Conf\u00e9rence de Monrovia, en 1961, la seconde, dite du Pan-Africanisme, s'est d\u00e9clar\u00e9e en 1958 lors de la premi\u00e8re Conf\u00e9rence des Etats ind\u00e9pendants d'Afrique tenue \u00e0 Accra. La deuxi\u00e8me conf\u00e9rence d'Accra, de 1960, s'est surtout pr\u00e9occup\u00e9e de l'\u00e9limination du colonialisme en Afrique. En d\u00e9finitive, l'ind\u00e9pendance \u00e9conomique d\u00e9pend des Africains eux-m\u00eames, qui ont \u00e0 choisir entre l'utilisation de leur faible potentiel de ressources et un lent d\u00e9veloppement s'appuyant sur d'importants investissements \u00e9trangers, cette seconde solution entra\u00eenant au moins dans les premiers temps un amoindrissement de leur puissance politique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MEREDITH LORDAN"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fe54ece-2b59-37c1-8d54-bd47dce61a06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWO: The Race to Self: Critical Anti-Racism Theory in a Global Change Era\u2014Lessons from Rio+20\u2014the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982030","volumeNumber":"445","wordCount":4625,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[26850,26914]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TORAL GAJARAWALA"],"datePublished":"2009-12-12","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25663880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4327fdd-49fa-3cf5-b56d-3f0a76797604"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25663880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Last and the First","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25663880","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":2339,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Aravind Adiga's novel The White Tiger has been criticised for its lack of realism and the caricature of its characters. The novel breaks with realist traditions of representing poverty and backwardness in Indian anglophone literature. Instead it poses a challenge to progressive traditions by framing the main character's revolt in Fanonian terms which challenges both the tradition of leftist movement politics as well as the liberal discourse of rights and privileges. Drawing from the same sources of anger and angst as much of realist literature, Adiga fashions a new voice which is unfamiliar and unsettling in its revolt.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maria Russo"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6cfd01a-362d-357c-b42b-73705d9096f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44652907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Counter-Violence and Islamic Terrorism: Is Liberation without Freedom Possible?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44652907","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[105600,105779]],"Locations in B":[[45848,46021]],"abstract":"One of the biggest threats in the contemporary world is the phenomenon of Islamic terrorism, which is increasingly becoming a facet of everyday life in Europe. In this article, I question whether it is possible to define Islamic terrorism as a form of counter-violence, according to how Jean-Paul Sartre presented this concept in Notebooks for an Ethics, and, as a consequence, whether it can be legitimized or justified. According to this argument, the freedoms that perceive themselves as oppressed can try to liberate themselves through violence, given certain conditions. However, with terrorism we do not simply face the paradox inherent to counter-violence. The key point, which clearly distinguishes Islamic terrorism from counterviolence, is the fact that behind this nihilistic fury there is no concept of freedom to be liberated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Luise White"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928731","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07346018"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45953560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214647"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83b093a3-772f-35e8-aa16-6ebf2cb67c0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2928731"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"representations"}],"isPartOf":"Representations","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Cars Out of Place: Vampires, Technology, and Labor in East and Central Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2928731","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger A. Berger"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.32","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff7dc0df-10db-3823-836b-edd7d88dbc17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.32"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Decolonizing African Autobiography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/ral.2010.41.2.32","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"AbstractDespite Western autobiographical theory's ongoing efforts to render it impossible, African autobiography\u2014and autobiography in general\u2014thrives. Examining the process of decolonization in African autobiography, this essay traces a discursive shift from tragedy to comedy in three African autobiographies by explaining how these texts negotiate the challenging terrains of history, language, genre, modernity, and colonialism. Camara Laye's haunting The Dark Child tragically narrates his discursive alienation from African society, while the other two\u2014Dugmore Boetie's Familiarity Is the Kingdom of the Lost and Buchi Emecheta's Head above Water\u2014comically challenge Western autobiographical discourse by denying the possibility of verifying autobiographical truth or by contesting the Western success narrative. Thus, in its analysis, this essay seeks to avoid a crippling essentialism by approaching Africans texts both as specific, localized narratives and as a part of an emerging global discourse of \u201cnoncoercive knowledge.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHNNETA B. COLE"],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77289388-6541-3f2e-9243-132f5cefdc6e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41203708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BLACK WOMEN IN AMERICA: AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41203708","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":8245,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[82,158]],"Locations in B":[[26568,26641]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Huntston Williams"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23914570","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0021969X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23914570"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jchurchstate"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Church and State","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"261","pageStart":"237","pagination":"pp. 237-261","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Four Modalities of Violence, With Special Reference to the Writings of Georges Sorel: Parts Two and Three","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23914570","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Megan Stuart Mills"],"datePublished":"1993-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45412149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02295113"},{"name":"oclc","value":"816979121"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2021240762"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cef96271-7199-32ee-a5b6-4442ef630bd9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45412149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refucandjrefu"}],"isPartOf":"Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees \/ Refuge: Revue canadienne sur les r\u00e9fugi\u00e9s","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Centre for Refugee Studies, York University","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mental Health Resilience of Refugees: The Case of Tamil Refugees","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45412149","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3526,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alan M. Klein"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0bc013c-8786-3f46-874a-1279e814d5d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"AMERICAN HEGEMONY, DOMINICAN RESISTANCE, AND BASEBALL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790287","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Biko Agozino"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069797","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b748aa5-c8e3-3d29-854d-692f312752d2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069797"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"WONDERS OF THE AFRICAN CRISIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069797","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":2061,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Howard Waitzkin","Rebeca Jasso-Aguilar"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24807599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03600572"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38161063"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f2208b14-cdbe-3eaa-8056-09652e871346"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24807599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Sociology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Empire, Health, and Health Care: Perspectives at the End of Empire as We Have Known It","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24807599","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Health and health care have played important roles during the rise of empire and during its subsequent decline. Research has emphasized the underdevelopment of health in less developed countries, the opening of new markets for medical products manufactured in dominant nations, the contribution of public health in enhancing the productivity of labor, the impact of medicine in reinforcing international class relations, and the adverse effects of military interventions on health and mental health. Latin American social medicine, especially work by Salvador Allende, has clarified the social origins of illness and early death in the context of empire. Connections among empire, health, and health care have operated through key mediating institutions: trade agreements and international financial institutions, foundations, and international public health organizations. Several popular struggles show a diminishing tolerance among the world's peoples for the health policies of empire and a growing demand for health systems grounded in solidarity rather than profitability.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcia E. Sutherland"],"datePublished":"1989-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e956b0f6-3b4b-362b-ba11-29dbce1bba22"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Individual Differences in Response to the Struggle for the Liberation of People of African Descent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784362","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6757,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[41122,41185]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shafqat Hussain Naghmi"],"datePublished":"1982-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/173760","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f94d11e2-04c3-3f72-8607-9e309cda5774"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/173760"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"507","pagination":"pp. 507-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pakistan's Public Attitude toward the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/173760","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edyta Oczkowicz"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26ca4caf-75d9-39a8-8906-f603f8b6be52"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/467979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"143","pagination":"pp. 143-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Jamaica Kincaid's Lucy: Cultural \"Translation\" as a Case of Creative Exploration of the Past","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/467979","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6661,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[38091,38131]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William James Stover","Mali A. Mann"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45014353","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07423640"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52346123"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13a487aa-04a3-3843-8887-a42d538600bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45014353"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejworlpeac"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on World Peace","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Paragon House","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"EXTERNAL ELEMENTS IN THE CONSTRUCTION AND DEMISE OF ETHNICITY AND IDENTITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45014353","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":3668,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[22688,22735]],"abstract":"Throughout history, different cultures have made contact. Some seek domination, others submit; some accommodate and barely survive, others succumb. This contact facilitates the process of identity formation and development. This essay identifies several types of cultural interaction and how they might affect identity construction: segregation inhibits identity, contact fosters its beginning; diffusion transforms two identities into a third; domination encourages resistance; and genocide may cause the destruction of cultural identity. Cultural genocide may be active as the institutions of the state and dominant national economy and society seek to destroy the cultural identity of a minority. The destruction of minority identity is possible unless minorities resist.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANDREW SANTANA KAPLAN"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824948","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5ff8711-a891-367f-8c9d-c74bf74bd356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26824948"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Notes Toward (Inhabiting) the Black Messianic in Afro-Pessimism\u2019s Apocalyptic Thought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824948","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10057,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[116372,116458]],"Locations in B":[[21011,21097]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Alan Rhodes II"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e863e93-3e31-328f-a0e9-3862072a9a87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43926941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Placing Paul Robeson in History: Understanding His Philosophical Framework","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43926941","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9609,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Paul Robeson is one ofthegreatestyetmostunknown figures of the 20th century. This article goes beyond the traditional bibliographic style of documenting this great life, toward constructing a usable philosophical framework from it. Utilizing Robeson's own works, and building on the small critical literature already in existence, I present his philosophical framework - comprised of anticolonialism, socialism, and human rights. I present these dense, interconnected, and ever-expansive philosophical stances into a form of communication that can be easily understood, evaluated, taught, and compared. Understanding the philosophies, actions, and examples of his ideological framework will provide the appropriate contextual background for understanding (to play off the title of Robeson's 1958 book, Here I Stand) where Paul Robeson philosophically stood.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeff Victoroff"],"datePublished":"2005-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc579b9a-2240-3a13-ba1e-ff7e28339cdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30045097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Mind of the Terrorist: A Review and Critique of Psychological Approaches","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30045097","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":20335,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reviews the state of the art of available theories and data regarding the psychology of terrorism. Data and theoretical material were gathered from the world's unclassified literature. Multiple theories and some demographic data have been published, but very few controlled empirical studies have been conducted investigating the psychological bases of terrorism. The field is largely characterized by theoretical speculation based on subjective interpretation of anecdotal observations. Moreover, most studies and theories fail to take into account the great heterogeneity of terrorists. Many practical, conceptual, and psychological barriers have slowed progress in this important field. Nonetheless, even at this early stage of terrorism studies, preliminary reports suggest that modifiable social and psychological factors contribute to the genesis of the terrorist mind-set. Psychological scholarship could possibly mitigate the risk of catastrophic attack by initiating the long overdue scientific study of terrorist mentalities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wolfgang Palaver"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671401","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"699807153"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9fa55d27-75db-3313-b1d6-0935c04b3f07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26671401"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliviol"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion and Violence","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"192","pagination":"pp. 192-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Religion","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Terrorism versus Nonviolent Resistance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26671401","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":10145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The following article starts with the horror and terror that have been caused be recent terrorist attacks like the mass murder of 9\/11 or the Norway massacre from 2011. From a Western perspective suicide terrorism is especially terrifying. In a first part of his article Palaver tries to show that suicide terrorism, despite our first reaction to it, is a rational phenomenon that has to be understood precisely in order to respond to this challenge properly. Drawing on the work of Louise Richardson and other experts on terrorism he shows that traditional forms of military sacrifices that have forced people to die for their country is much closer to suicide terrorism than we think at first sight. By using Ren\u00e9 Girard\u2019s mimetic theory, Palaver\u2019s second part focuses on the complex relationship between religion and violence. He especially emphasizes the danger that follows the Abrahamic overcoming of the scapegoat mechanism \u2013 the Abrahamic revolution parting from the world of human sacrifice \u2013 if the solidarity with the victims is disconnected from forgiveness. In the third part Palaver turns to an alternative model of how we can respond to injustice and oppression by emphasizing a still often overlooked legacy of the Abrahamic tradition that avoids the dangers that characterize contemporary terrorism. From this perspective, non-violence, forgiveness, and the love of enemies become important criteria for martyrdom and resistance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Prochaska"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/218385","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4dbad43-b658-3274-a885-8e2c4ee232d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/218385"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/218385","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":2178,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[535307,535379]],"Locations in B":[[10334,10406]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rupert Lewis"],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daf4013c-8b95-3bba-9a01-18fb47fe6551"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":50.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WALTER RODNEY: 1968 REVISITED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865974","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":19027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This study aims to locate and describe Walter Rodney's variant of black power ideology in the context of the developing nationalist and rastafarian trends which characterised Jamaican society in the mid-late Nineteen Sixties. It examines the extent to which Rodney inspired and was in turn influenced by the burgeoning movement, and suggests in conclusion that his premature expulsion opened the door for more hierarchical and centralist trends, which grew to dominate the radical agenda in the subsequent decade. Este estudio intenta ubicar y describir la variante de Walter Rodney sobre la ideolog\u00eda del poder negro en el contexto de las tendencias nacionalistas y rastafarianas emergentes que caracterizaron la sociedad jamaiquina en los \u00faltimos a\u00f1os de la d\u00e9cada de los sesenta. El estudio examina el grado en que Rodney inspir\u00f3 y fue a la vez influenciado por los movimeientos burgueses y sugiere, en conclusi\u00f3n, que su prematura expulsi\u00f3n abri\u00f3 las puertas a las tendencias jerarquizantes que se desarrollaron hasta dominar la agenda radical de la d\u00e9cada subsiguiente. La pr\u00e9sente \u00e9tude vise \u00e0 situer et \u00e0 d\u00e9crire la variante de l'id\u00e9olgoie du mouvement \"black power\" de Walter Rodney dans le cadre des tendances nationalistes et rastas qui se developpaient et qui ont caract\u00e9ris\u00e9 la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 jama\u00efquaine vers le milieu et la fin des ann\u00e9es 60. Elle examine dans quelle mesure Rodney a inspir\u00e9 et \u00e0 son tour a \u00e9t\u00e9 influenc\u00e9 par le mouvement en d\u00e9veloppement. L'\u00e9tude conclut en sugg\u00e9rant que son expulsion pr\u00e9matur\u00e9e a ouvert la voie \u00e0 des tendances plus hi\u00e9rarchiques et centralistes qui ont fini par dominer le programme radical de la d\u00e9cennie post\u00e9rieure.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GAYATRI CHAKRAVORTY SPIVAK"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304024","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b630f86c-43bc-398e-9043-b8fd173dc2b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304024"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"Examples to Fit the Title","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304024","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":13538,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[565545,565592]],"Locations in B":[[62318,62365]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Obika Gray"],"datePublished":"2003-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d87a2cb-1166-30c7-bf33-b7cdad77d965"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27865313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ROGUE CULTURE OR AVATAR OF LIBERATION: THE JAMAICAN LUMPENPROLETARIAT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27865313","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":12022,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286855,286953]],"Locations in B":[[11832,11937]],"abstract":"Accounts of emergent threats to national states and the international system have increasingly focused on so-called rogue actors. These menaces to domestic and international order include terrorist networks, drug mafias, a violent lumpenproletariat, and criminal gangs in third world cities. Given international concern with groups that employ violence and outlawry to challenge power and authority, this paper looks closely at one of them \u2014 the Jamaican lumpenproletariat \u2014 to assess its significance in the context of that country's highly charged socio-political environment. Drawing on the author's research on the politics of the Jamaican lumpenproletariat during the 1970s, and on Marxist and Fanonian assessments of the group, this revised account presents a portrait of the group that differs from classical depictions. Contrary to earlier essentialist perspectives that saw the group as merely the \"bribed tool\" of the powerful and as a criminal class, a more complex portrait is offered here. This new profile, based on actual case studies of outlaw actors in contemporary Jamaica, highlights the group's multiple vocations, multiform sensibility, and its use of indecent social power to constrain a voracious form of political domination. Informes sobre surgientes amenazas hacia estados nacionales y al sistema internacional se enfocan cada vez m\u00e1s en los as\u00ed llamados artistas del bandalaje. Estas amenazas al orden dom\u00e9stico e internacional incluyen a organizaciones terroristas, carteles de droga, un grupo proletariado violento y a pandillas criminales en ciudades del tercer mundo. Dada la preocupaci\u00f3n internacional respecto a los grupos que utilizan la violencia y la delincuencia para retar al poder y a la autoridad, este documento examina muy de cerca a uno de ellos - el grupo proletariado de Jamaica - para evaluar su significado en el contexto del ambiente socio-pol\u00edtico altamente cargado de ese pa\u00eds. Construyendo sobre la investigaci\u00f3n del autor sobre las pol\u00edticas del grupo-proletariado jamaiquino durante la d\u00e9cada de 1970, y sobre evaluaciones Marxistas y Fanonianas del grupo, este informe revisado presenta un cuadro del grupo que difiere de las descripciones cl\u00e1sicas. Contrario a las primeras perspectivas esencial\u00edsticas que vieron al grupo simplemente como \"la herramienta sobornada\" de los poderosos y como a una clase criminal, un cuadro m\u00e1s complejo se ofrece aqu\u00ed. Este nuevo perfil, basado en estudios de casos actuales sobre artistas de la delincuencia en la Jamaica actual, resalta las m\u00faltiples vocaciones del grupo, su sensibilidad multiforme y su uso del poder social indecente para forzar una forma vor\u00e1z de dominaci\u00f3n pol\u00edtica. Les rumeurs de menace imminente aux Etats et au syst\u00e8me international se concentrent de plus en plus souvent sur les acteurs voyous. Ces menaces \u00e0 l'ordre national et international comprennent les r\u00e9seaux terroristes, les mafias de la drogue et les bandes criminelles dans les villes du tiers monde. \u00c9ta\u1e45t donn\u00e9 la pr\u00e9occupation internationale avec des groupes qui emploient la violence et le non respect de la loi pour menacer le pouvoir et l'autorit\u00e9 \u00e9tablie, le pr\u00e9sant article examine le comportement d'un de ces groupes - les prol\u00e9taires jama\u00efcains \u2013 afin de d\u00e9terminer son importance dans le contexte de l'environnement socio-politique tr\u00e8s tendu du pays. Bas\u00e9 sur les recherches men\u00e9es par cet auteur au cours des ann\u00e9es 70, ainsi que sur les \u00e9valuations marxistes et fanoniennes du groupe, l'article pr\u00e9sente un portrait r\u00e9vis\u00e9 du groupe qui diff\u00e8re des descriptions classiques. Contrairement aux perspectives essentialistes d'autrefois, qui consid\u00e8rent le groupe comme \u00e8tant \u00ab l'outil pay\u00e9 \u00bb des gens puissants et comme la classe criminelle, l'article propose un portrait plus complexe. Ce nouveau profil, bas\u00e9 sur des \u00e9tudes de cas r\u00e9els des acteurs voyous dans la Jama\u00efque contemporaine, met l'accent sur les vocations multiples du groupe, la sensibilit\u00e9 multiforme et sur l'emploi d'un pouvoir social ind\u00e9cent pour contenir une forme virulente de domination politique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenn Jacobs"],"datePublished":"1988-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01630350"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770670"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-211163"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"769276d3-bb97-3ee9-b7fc-6a82c49fa865"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/779998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamermusirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Music Review \/ Revista de M\u00fasica Latinoamericana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Cuba's Bola de Nieve: A Creative Looking Glass for Culture and the Artistic Self","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/779998","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":13227,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[75602,75642]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sue Malvern","Gabriel Koureas"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24146114","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607367784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd2c5f94-0aa6-343b-8e28-a67cd12c01bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24146114"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"3 (149)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Center for Historical Social Research","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Terrorist Transgressions: Exploring the Gendered Representations of the Terrorist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24146114","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6595,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The primary aim of the Terrorist Transgressions network which is presented here was to analyse the myths inscribed in images of the terrorist and identify how agency is attributed to representation through invocations and inversions of gender stereotypes. Although terrorism, its contexts, histories and forms, has been the focus of intense academic activity in recent years, especially in the fields of politics and international relations, cultural representations of the terrorist have received less attention. While the terrorist is predominantly aligned with masculinity, women have been active in terrorist organizations since the late nineteenth century. Particularly since the 1980s, women have perpetrated suicidal terrorist attacks, including suicide bombing, where the body becomes a weapon. Such attacks have confounded constructions of femininity and masculinity, with profound implications for the gendering of violence and horror. The network established that there is a shift away from analyses of cultural representations of the Red Army Faction, which have dominated the literature since the 1980s. New work has emerged examining representations of the terrorist and gender, including investigations of material from the 1970s, recently made available in archives. There also has been a shift in terms of military discourses around the figure of the enemy or terrorist insurgent in relation to visualizing the invisible enemy. Emerging work on colonial insurgencies contributed to a historical understanding of such debates.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL NEOCOSMOS"],"datePublished":"2013-10-19","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"278e75e5-996c-332c-87db-fc69eaf2ed62"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23528578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"42","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mandela and the Politics of Representation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528578","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":1731,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Responding to Premesh Lalu (\"Nelson Mandela Is Very Much with Us\", EPW, 13 July 2013), this article calls for a reassessment of Mandela's legacy, which goes beyond the pre-liberation critique of liberal trusteeship. A reassessment of the nature of the politics of representation and their relation to popular presentation is essential in a postcolonial setting.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pierre L. van den Berghe"],"datePublished":"1968-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2575451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03e965a6-177e-3788-ad49-587ed46a08d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2575451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"590","pageStart":"589","pagination":"pp. 589-590","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2575451","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynette A. Jackson"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41344892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e054ee1-3f9a-365e-8453-ba2aef2ef953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41344892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmentheal"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Mental Health","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"The Place of Psychiatry in Colonial and Early Postcolonial Zimbabwe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41344892","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":14674,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vivan Steemers"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23609984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a1e5624-f3e7-379f-95b9-08b9e9a0c3b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23609984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(Post)Colonialism and Ideological Configurations: An Analysis of the Power Structures in Cheikh Hamidou Kane's \"Ambiguous Adventure\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23609984","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":5679,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (1996), Mahmood Mamdani provides an analysis of the obstacles to democratization in post-independence Africa whose roots reside to a large measure in the historical and institutional context of colonialism. The bifurcated colonial rule proved itself the most effective domination mode of the African colonies: a centralized exercise of colonial power combined with a decentralized, often despotic rule of tribal authorities (a hierarchy of chiefs) who enforced customary laws without checks or restraints, notably in rural areas. This two-tiered system of oppression allowed the colonizing forces to settle the \"native question,\" by maintaining law and order among the native people. This essay examines to what extent the ideological configurations under colonial rule as described by Mamdani are apparent in Cheikh Hamidou Kane's classic Francophone African novel Ambiguous Adventure (L'Aventure ambigu\u00eb, 1961) set in Futa Toro, the northern region of Senegal. In this text, it is primarily the issue concerning the foreign (French) school that reveals the power of the various local secular and Islamic authorities. Should they allow or encourage their children to attend the foreign school, acknowledged as the latest \"weapon\" of the colonial regime? The relevance of this analysis is twofold: on a sociological level, it examines the force and resilience of ingrained traditional power structures in the face of political reforms, whether imposed by a domestic or an imperial administration; on a philosophical level, it deals with the question of reflection of social and\/or historical reality within realist fiction.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RONALD J. DANIELS","MICHAEL J. TREBILCOCK","LINDSEY D. CARSON"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52899623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10e9603f-8f4d-384a-a8fd-0e917198c70e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25766182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjcomplaw"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Comparative Law","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":68.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Legacy of Empire: The Common Law Inheritance and Commitments to Legality in Former British Colonies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25766182","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":33291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this Article, we examine the colonial experiences of eight formerly British-controlled territories\u2014Barbados, Jamaica, Botswana, Nigeria, Kenya, India, Burma, and Singapore\u2014to identify how the processes and policies of the colonial enterprise affected their respective contemporary rule of law outcomes. While acknowledging the legal origins thesis that the British transplantation of the common law to its colonial territories conferred upon such recipient societies the institutional tools necessary and sufficient to promote the subsequent achievement of strong development outcomes, we note the diversity of modern rule of law indicators among former British colonies and question what heretofore unexplored dynamics of the colonial institutional environment may explain such divergent results. Based upon our investigations of the various governance models employed by the British, and, more significantly, the degree of responsiveness to citizen needs such institutional arrangements provided, we identify two features of colonial administration and legal transplantation whose anecdotal significance suggests to us some theoretical importance for these factors in the promotion of a long-run, stable commitment to legality in these countries (or lack thereof): (1) the degree of representation in legislative bodies afforded to the indigenous population; and (2) the extent to which indigenous and British common law courts and animating values were integrated, fostering the development of a localized common law jurisprudence. In this way, we not only seek to explain how the colonial experience influenced subsequent rule of law outcomes in these eight countries, but also to employ the lessons of the past to inform our current understanding of the dynamics of institutional development, particularly in the legal arena.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haunani Kay Trask"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768270","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ab38b73-30aa-38fb-9c8f-973094088d54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29768270"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"4 (98)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Color of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29768270","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Wise"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312522","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25e54d1a-c157-3359-9892-0bc11e711bed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44312522"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Messianic Hallucinations and Manichean Realities: Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Christianity, and the Third World Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44312522","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glyn Salton-Cox"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13699725"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1186589305"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f68cc6f-3029-3e74-b82e-21698bade737"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"keywords"}],"isPartOf":"Key Words: A Journal of Cultural Materialism","issueNumber":"16","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Raymond Williams Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uncivil Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976106","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Taking Engels\u2019s famous 1888 letter to Margaret Harkness as its starting point, this article explores the vicissitudes of the concept of the lumpenproletariat for late-nineteenth-century social and literary history. I argue that Harkness\u2019s overlooked work complicates both received accounts of the London \u2018residuum\u2019 and the possibilities of typicality for Marxist literary theory. Reading her novels of the late 1880s in conjunction with Marx and Engels\u2019s polemics against the lumpenproletariat, I argue that Harkness\u2019s socialist-feminist authorship simultaneously registers and amends Engels\u2019s famous concept through her depiction of female labour and male indolence in the precarious informal economy of London\u2019s East End in the 1880s. Most crucially, Engels\u2019s recommendation of Balzac\u2019s \u2018men of the future\u2019 is reworked in her corpus as the necessary adequation of a feminised labour force to the demands of a precarious economy reliant on just-in-time production. Harkness\u2019s novels open up a more elastic conception of the proleptic possibilities of the typical character, for such exigencies of a mobile labour force are themselves signature oppressions of post-Fordist economies.","subTitle":"Margaret Harkness, Engels and the Lumpenproletariat","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Epp Annus"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43213067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01629778"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95992df2-d93b-3eb1-8b78-3d9ac07cfa37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43213067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbalticstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Baltic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE PROBLEM OF SOVIET COLONIALISM IN THE BALTICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43213067","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":12578,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431195,431324]],"Locations in B":[[47581,47709]],"abstract":"This essay works through some of the necessary preliminary questions in thinking about Soviet colonialism in the Baltics. It opens by tracing the prehistory of critical thinking about Soviet colonialism in the 1960s and considers why the topic of Soviet colonialism has not (or not yet) become a dominant way to understand Soviet history. The central question posed by the article is whether one can speak about the Soviet invasions of the Baltic States as 'colonization'. It proposes that, initially, communist Russia did not in fact seek to colonize the Baltic States and instead 'Occupied' them; however, this initial period of occupation later developed into a period of a colonial rule.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7bd6a8bd-0536-39c2-beae-3bf70676dd45"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Editor's Note","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758920","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":333,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kanishka Chowdhury"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"292478fd-b92b-33ae-9275-e81bcdc1d103"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"616","pageStart":"609","pagination":"pp. 609-616","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THEORETICAL CONFRONTATIONS IN THE STUDY OF POSTCOLONIAL LITERATURES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283166","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":2986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maryna Romanets"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26155712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00085006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94c1beeb-0429-313b-8e60-4016d8c6aa06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26155712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canaslavpape"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Slavonic Papers \/ Revue Canadienne des Slavistes","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History, Politics, and the Cartography of Sexed Bodies in Iurii Illienko's \"A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26155712","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":8930,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the \"corporeal\" dimension of Iurii Illienko's reconstruction of cultural and historical discourses in the 2002 film Molytva za het'mana Mazepu [A Prayer for Hetman Mazepa], which focuses on the hetman's drama, his relationship with Peter I, and the defeat of Swedish and Ukrainian joint forces at the Battle of Poltava in 1709 that signified Ukraine's submergence into a supranational, imperial community. Illienko's cinematic space, in which plots of history and sexual politics are mapped onto one another, allows for conceptualizing the body as a site of political and cultural construction, contestation, and radical resistance. Demanding an intertextual approach that involves an open exchange between his cinematic domain and a \"universe\" of intersecting historical, cultural, ideological and political discourses, his multilayered re-memoration strategies expose both the fictionality and the political dogma surrounding the inherited mythologies. As a decentred reflection of the past, the film poses critical questions about competing histories and the dynamics of historical agency in colonial and postcolonial contexts, thus making a contribution to the protracted process of decolonization in Ukraine. Cet article aborde la dimension \" corporelle \" des reconstructions culturelles et des discours historiques dans Une pri\u00e8re pour l'hetman Mazepa de Youri\u00ef Illienko, film mettant l'accent sur la trag\u00e9die de la vie de l'hetman, sa relation avec Pierre I, ainsi que la d\u00e9faite des forces communes ukrainiennes et su\u00e9doises dans la bataille de Poltava en 1709, bataille ayant men\u00e9 a la submersion de l'Ukraine dans une communaut\u00e9 imp\u00e9riale supranationale. L'espace cin\u00e9matographique propos\u00e9 par Illienko pr\u00e9sente des complots historiques et politico-sexuels, et permet une conceptualisation du corps comme site d'une construction culturelle, politique, contestataire et de r\u00e9sistance radicale. Exigeant une approche intertextuelle qui implique un \u00e9change ouvert entre son domaine cin\u00e9matographique et son \" univers \" o\u00f9 se croisent discours politiques, historiques, culturels et id\u00e9ologiques, ses strat\u00e9gies de rem\u00e9moration multilat\u00e9rales r\u00e9v\u00e8lent la fictionnalit\u00e9 et le dogme politique entourant l'h\u00e9ritage des mythologies imp\u00e9riales. Comme r\u00e9flexion d\u00e9centr\u00e9e du pass\u00e9, le film pose des questions critiques sur les histoires antagonistes et sur la dynamique des agences historiques dans des contextes coloniaux et postcoloniaux, contribuant ainsi \u00e0 un long proc\u00e9d\u00e9 de d\u00e9colonisation en Ukraine.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael W. Kraus","Julian M. Rucker","Jennifer A. Richeson"],"datePublished":"2017-09-26","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00278424"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43473694"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227001"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7de0be2-3213-3b6a-99b2-6b586b26e3eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26488023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procnatiacadscie"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America","issueNumber":"39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"10331","pageStart":"10324","pagination":"pp. 10324-10331","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"National Academy of Sciences","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","General Science"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Americans misperceive racial economic equality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26488023","volumeNumber":"114","wordCount":13100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The present research documents the widespread misperception of race-based economic equality in the United States. Across four studies (n = 1,377) sampling White and Black Americans from the top and bottom of the national income distribution, participants overestimated progress toward Black\u2013White economic equality, largely driven by estimates of greater current equality than actually exists according to national statistics. Overestimates of current levels of racial economic equality, on average, outstripped reality by roughly 25% and were predicted by greater belief in a just world and social network racial diversity (among Black participants). Whereas high-income White respondents tended to overestimate racial economic equality in the past, Black respondents, on average, underestimated the degree of past racial economic equality. Two follow-up experiments further revealed that making societal racial discrimination salient increased the accuracy of Whites\u2019 estimates of Black\u2013White economic equality, whereas encouraging Whites to anchor their estimates on their own circumstances increased their tendency to overestimate current racial economic equality. Overall, these findings suggest a profound misperception of and unfounded optimism regarding societal race-based economic equality\u2014a misperception that is likely to have any number of important policy implications.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Tyner","Sokvisal Kimsroy","Savina Sirik"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"310db036-04cd-3dfa-8de5-ed6c9eeb0b37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24537813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"1299","pageStart":"1285","pagination":"pp. 1285-1299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nature, Poetry, and Public Pedagogy: The Poetic Geographies of the Khmer Rouge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24537813","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":11456,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Between 1975 and 1979, more than 2 million men, women, and children died in what has become known as the Cambodian genocide. In just under four years, approximately one quarter of the country's prewar population succumbed to arbitrary murder, torture, detention, starvation, and disease. Amidst these acts of destruction, however, the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK; the Khmer Rouge) advanced various pedagogical practices, including the promotion of poetry. Superficially, poems produced by the Khmer Rouge are literary forms of propaganda. Such a conclusion is incomplete. Through a reading of Khmer Rouge\u2013era poetry, this article contributes to two themes in geography: fictive and public pedagogy. We argue that the Khmer Rouge used poetry as a form of public pedagogy. More specifically, Khmer Rouge\u2013era poetry presented nature as the fulcrum on which society was to be transformed. The cultivation of a proper political consciousness required the nurturing of a community identity of what Democratic Kampuchea was to become. This argument is developed in five sections. First, we provide a brief overview of literary geographies. We then consider the transformative power of public education. Third, we provide an overview of educational policies under the Khmer Rouge. This is followed by a discussion of nature as conceived by the CPK. Our main empirical analysis of Khmer Rouge poetry is presented in the fifth section. Finally, we conclude with a consideration of the politics of creative interventions as a form of public pedagogy. 1975 \u5e74\u81f3 1979 \u5e74\u95f4\uff0c\u6709\u8d85\u8fc7\u4e24\u767e\u4e07\u7684\u7537\u5973\u53ca\u513f\u7ae5\uff0c\u5728\u540e\u6765\u4e3a\u4eba\u6240\u77e5\u7684\u67ec\u57d4\u5be8\u5927\u5c60\u6740\u4e2d\u4e27\u751f\u3002\u56db\u5e74\u4e0d\u5230\u7684\u65f6\u95f4\u4e2d\uff0c\u8be5\u56fd\u7684\u6218\u524d\u4eba\u53e3\uff0c\u7ea6\u6709\u56db\u5206\u4e4b\u4e00\u9677\u5165\u968f\u673a\u8c0b\u6740\u3001\u65bd\u8650\u3001\u62d8\u7559\u3001\u98e2\u997f\u548c\u75be\u75c5\u4e4b\u4e2d\u3002\u5728\u8fd9\u4e9b\u6bc1\u706d\u884c\u4e3a\u4e2d\uff0c\u67ec\u57d4\u5be8\u7684\u5171\u4ea7\u515a\uff08CPK\uff1b\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\uff09\u63a8\u52a8\u4e86\u5404\u79cd\u6559\u80b2\u65b9\u6848\uff0c\u5305\u542b\u63d0\u5021\u8bd7\u6b4c\u3002\u5c31\u8868\u9762\u800c\u8a00\uff0c\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u6240\u751f\u4ea7\u7684\u8bd7\uff0c\u662f\u653f\u5e9c\u5ba3\u4f20\u6d3b\u52a8\u7684\u6587\u5b57\u5f62\u5f0f\uff0c\u4f46\u6b64\u822c\u7ed3\u8bba\u662f\u4e0d\u5b8c\u6574\u7684\u3002\u672c\u6587\u900f\u8fc7\u9605\u8bfb\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u65f6\u671f\u7684\u8bd7\uff0c\u5bf9\u5730\u7406\u5b66\u4e2d\u7684\u4e24\u4e2a\u4e3b\u9898\u4f5c\u51fa\u8d21\u732e\uff1a\u60f3\u50cf\u4e2d\u7684\u4e0e\u516c\u4f17\u7684\u6559\u80b2\u5b66\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u4e3b\u5f20\uff0c\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u8fd0\u7528\u8bd7\u4f5c\u4e3a\u516c\u4f17\u6559\u80b2\u7684\u5f62\u5f0f\u3002\u66f4\u5177\u4f53\u800c\u8a00\uff0c\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u65f6\u671f\u7684\u8bd7\uff0c\u5c06\u81ea\u7136\u5448\u73b0\u4e3a\u6539\u53d8\u793e\u4f1a\u7684\u652f\u70b9\u3002\u57f9\u517b\u6b63\u786e\u7684\u653f\u6cbb\u610f\u8bc6\uff0c\u5fc5\u987b\u57f9\u80b2\u6c11\u4e3b\u67ec\u57d4\u5be8\u5c06\u5efa\u7acb\u7684\u793e\u7fa4\u8ba4\u540c\u3002\u6b64\u4e00\u4e3b\u5f20\u5c06\u5728\u4e94\u4e2a\u7ae0\u8282\u4e2d\u8fdb\u884c\u53d1\u5c55\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u9996\u5148\u63d0\u4f9b\u6587\u5b66\u5730\u7406\u7684\u7b80\u660e\u6982\u8981\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u63a5\u7740\u8003\u91cf\u516c\u4f17\u6559\u80b2\u7684\u53d8\u9769\u529b\u91cf\u3002\u7b2c\u4e09\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u6982\u89c8\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u4e0b\u7684\u6559\u80b2\u653f\u7b56\uff0c\u968f\u540e\u5e76\u63a2\u8ba8 CPK \u6240\u8ba4\u77e5\u7684\u81ea\u7136\u3002\u6211\u4eec\u5bf9\u7ea2\u8272\u9ad8\u68c9\u8bd7\u7684\u4e3b\u8981\u7ecf\u9a8c\u5206\u6790\uff0c\u5c06\u4e8e\u7b2c\u4e94\u4e2a\u90e8\u5206\u5448\u73b0\u4e4b\u3002\u6700\u540e\uff0c\u6211\u4eec\u4ee5\u8003\u91cf\u521b\u9020\u6027\u4ecb\u5165\u653f\u6cbb\u4f5c\u4e3a\u516c\u4f17\u6559\u80b2\u7684\u5f62\u5f0f\u4f5c\u7ed3\u3002 Entre 1975 y 1979 murieron m\u00e1s de 2 millones de hombres, mujeres y ni\u00f1os en lo que ha dado en llamarse el genocidio camboyano. En menos de cuatro a\u00f1os, aproximadamente un cuarto de la poblaci\u00f3n de preguerra del pa\u00eds sucumbi\u00f3 a causa del asesinato indiscriminado, la tortura, la detenci\u00f3n arbitraria, el hambre y la enfermedad. Sin embargo, en medio de estos actos de destrucci\u00f3n el Partido Comunista de Kampuchea (CPK; el Khmer Rouge) aplic\u00f3 varias pr\u00e1cticas pedag\u00f3gicas, entre las cuales se inclu\u00eda la promoci\u00f3n de la poes\u00eda. A primera vista, los poemas producidos por el Khmar Rouge son formas literarias de propaganda. Tal conclusi\u00f3n es incompleta. Por medio de la lectura de la poes\u00eda de la era del Khmer Rouge, este art\u00edculo contribuye en dos temas de la geograf\u00eda: la pedagog\u00eda ficticia y la p\u00fablica. Arg\u00fcimos que el Khmer Rouge us\u00f3 la poes\u00eda como una forma de pedagog\u00eda p\u00fablica. M\u00e1s espec\u00edficamente, la poes\u00eda de la era del Khmer Rouge represent\u00f3 la naturaleza como la piedra angular a partir de la cual la sociedad deb\u00eda ser transformada. El cultivo de una conciencia pol\u00edtica propia requer\u00eda alimentar una identidad comunitaria basada en lo que deber\u00eda llegar a ser la Kampuchea Democr\u00e1tica. Nuestro argumento es desarrollado en cinco secciones. Primero, presentamos un breve recuento de las geograf\u00edas literarias. Luego consideramos el poder transformador de la educaci\u00f3n p\u00fablica. Tercero, entregamos un recuento de las pol\u00edticas educativas bajo el Khmer Rouge. Esto es seguido por una discusi\u00f3n sobre la naturaleza, seg\u00fan la concepci\u00f3n del CPK. Nuestro principal an\u00e1lisis emp\u00edrico de la poes\u00eda del Khmer Rouge se presenta en la secci\u00f3n quinta. Por \u00faltimo, concluimos con una consideraci\u00f3n de la pol\u00edtica de intervenci\u00f3n creativa como una forma de pedagog\u00eda p\u00fablica.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Harris"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt9qggtn.6","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eaf87cbc-1a2c-3e08-a364-c62ef1d1c3b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt9qggtn.6"}],"isPartOf":"Black Rage Confronts the Law","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"31","pagination":"31-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Law"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"The Black Rage Defense, 1971","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt9qggtn.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":17685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the years since William Freeman died in a jail cell, many lawyers have argued that there is a causal relationship between suffering from racism and engaging in a criminal act. Some of those attempts, such as Clarence Darrow\u2019s defense of Henry Sweet for shooting into a white mob and Charles Garry\u2019s defense of Black Panther leader Huey Newton for shooting a policeman, have been preserved in our legal literature. But most of those attempts have been lost to history. Lawyers less famous than Darrow or Garry have stood next to their clients and urged judges or juries to recognize","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["rage defense","steven","black rage defense","lawyer","betwee","robinson","elaine","steven robinson","fillmore","courtroom"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dan Wood"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752154","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96ffa506-1593-3003-bc50-14304de511da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752154"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Immanence, Nonbeing, and Truth in the Work of Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752154","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":15436,"numMatches":4,"Locations in A":[[128416,128687],[143717,144073],[144178,144393],[296636,296789]],"Locations in B":[[18842,19113],[52037,52391],[52550,52763],[54301,54453]],"abstract":"The present essay examines three apparent contradictions to arise in Fanon's work regarding his operative critique of religion, ontology, and theory of truth. I review some of the prevailing evaluations of these apparent contradictions, and then argue that said interpretations of Fanon do not stand up to close textual and historical scrutiny. I then dissolve the aforementioned apparent contradictions and provide more adequate approaches to interpreting their theoretical significance in such a way as to highlight the internal coherence and force of Fanon's philosophical vision.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NASSER RABBAT"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26771360","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2314430c-07b8-3153-8871-4f0bbb57c579"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26771360"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"396","pageStart":"388","pagination":"pp. 388-396","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Hidden Hand","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26771360","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":7711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Edward Said\u2019s Orientalism<\/em> and Architectural History","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Taiaiake Alfred","Jeff Corntassel"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c594bca-b7b8-3198-ace8-bc7ebfbc2091"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44483133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POLITICS OF IDENTITY - IX: Being Indigenous: Resurgences against Contemporary Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44483133","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":6789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana Keita"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"048bd2d9-768f-33ff-8839-9fa7fef936b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90001833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Models of Economic Growth and Development in the Context of Human Capital Investment \u2013 The Way Forward for Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90001833","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11189,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract The economic literature ever since the dawn of modern economics has been much preoccupied with the issue of economic growth. Economic growth has also been understood to establish the conditions for economic development. The better-known models of economic growth such as the Lewis, Rostow, Harrod-Domar, Solow, and Romer growth models are discussed. The discussions apply contextually to the problematic issue of growth and development in Africa. It is argued that a very necessary condition for growth and transformational development in Africa is heavy investment in human capital. It is pointed out that countries that invest much human capital to produce highly educated populaces usually reap the benefits of such in terms of high per capita GDPs, regardless of the levels of their technological and industrial output. Countries like New Zealand, Iceland, and Denmark offer evidence of this. Models of African development such as the Lagos Plan of Action in terms of the whole continent are discussed within the context of existing impediments to such progress.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Shiviah"],"datePublished":"1995-11-18","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4403451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d6c0243-a834-34da-bef3-3af452f002be"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4403451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"2946","pageStart":"2937","pagination":"pp. 2937-2946","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Human Rights and the Third World: Towards a Reassessment of Ideological Dynamics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4403451","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":13742,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the aftermath of the failure of the Soviet Socialist experiment, the victorious social liberal (capitalist) camp led by the US is taking a narrow view of 'human rights' in the third world, policing the observance only of civil and political rights. The affluent countries accept social and economic rights for their citizens via the welfare state but deny the same to the rest of the world. Third world countries should struggle for an international declaration and programme of human rights in the broader sense, including rights to resources, food, education, health, and a clean environment.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Baquedano-L\u00f3pez","Rebecca Anne Alexander","Sera J. Hernandez"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24641960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0091732X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236895"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d04a2f00-dce5-375b-8863-81b70c1bc7c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24641960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revireseeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Research in Education","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Equity Issues in Parental and Community Involvement in Schools: What Teacher Educators Need to Know","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24641960","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16721,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rupert Lewis"],"datePublished":"1987-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6782566f-5b06-3d2a-994f-ed69e5f5b3b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27862907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"224","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-224","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862907","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":1916,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. R. Coulthard"],"datePublished":"1968-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07fbcf12-cac1-3672-862b-e6f94afb26c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25612044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Parallelisms and Divergencies between \"Negritude\" and \"Indigenismo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612044","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u0633\u062a\u064a\u0648\u0627\u0631\u062a \u0647\u0648\u0644","Stuart Hall","\u0641\u0631\u064a\u0627\u0644 \u062c\u0628\u0648\u0631\u064a \u063a\u0632\u0648\u0644","Ferial Ghazoul"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850752","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"449dfc17-4a1b-386e-ba1c-378f85f429f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41850752"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"32","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"\u0669\u0660","pageStart":"\u0667\u0665","pagination":"pp. \u0667\u0665-\u0669\u0660","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0627\u0644\u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0634\u062a\u0627\u062a \/ Cultural Identity and Diaspora","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850752","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This frequently anthologized essay addresses the multiple components of Black identity in the diaspora and the impossibility of retrieving Africa as the sole source of one's being. It emphasizes the role of cinema and the arts not only in representing Black subjectivity, but also in shaping it. Though the African legacy is part of the identity of West Indians and Blacks in the diaspora, it is not a fixed entity that can be recovered once and for all. In the Caribbean, African roots, European colonialism, and American New World presences combine and interact, constituting a complex, postcolonial, diasporic subjectivity. \u062a\u0637\u0631\u062d \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0630\u0627\u0626\u0639\u0629 \u0627\ufedf\ufebc\ufef4\ufe96 \u062a\u0639\u062f\u062f\u064a\u0629 \ufee3\ufebc\ufe8e\ufea9\ufead \u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0648\ufea9 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0634\u062a\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0627\u0633\u062a\u062d\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u062f\u0639\u0627\u0621 \u0623\u0641\u0631\u064a\u0642\u064a\u0627 \u0628\u0627\u0639\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0631\u0647\u0627 \u0627\ufedf\ufee4\ufebc\ufeaa\ufead \u0627\u0644\u0623\ufebb\ufee0\ufef2 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufeee\ufea3\ufef4\ufeaa \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u062a\u0624\u0643\u062f \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0623\u0647\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u064a\u0646\u0645\u0627 \ufeed\ufe8d\ufedf\ufed4\ufee8\ufeee\ufee5\u060c \u0644\u0627 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0639\u0628\u064a\u0631 \u0639\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0648\u062f\u0627\u0621 \u0641\u0642\u0637\u060c \u0628\u0644 \u0641\u064a \u062a\u0634\u0643\u064a\u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0623\ufef3\ufec0\ufe8e\ufe70 . \u0648\u0645\u0639 \u0623\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0631\u062b \u0627\ufef7\u0641\u0631\ufef3\ufed8\ufef2 \u062c\u0632\u0621 \u0644\u0627 \u064a\u062a\u062c\u0632\u0623 \u0645\u0646 \u0647\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0646\u062f \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0633\u0648\u062f \u0641\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0634\u062a\u0627\u062a\u060c \u0641\u0647\u0648 \ufedf\ufef4\ufeb2 \u062c\u0648\u0647\u0631\ufe8d\ufe70 \u064a\u0645\u0643\u0646 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0627\u0639\u0647 \u0643\u0645\u0627 \u0643\u0627\u0646\u060c \u062f\u0648\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0639\u062a\u0631\u0627\u0641 \u0628\u062f\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u063a\u064a\u064a\u0631 . \ufed3\ufed4\ufef2 \u062c\u0632\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0627\u0631\u064a\u0628\u064a \u0647\u0646\u0627\u0643 \u062d\u0636\u0648\u0631 \u0644\u0644\u062c\u0630\u0648\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0641\u0631\u064a\u0642\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629 \u0627\ufef7\u0648\u0631\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0639\u0627\u0644\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0645\u0631\u064a\u0643\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062c\u062f\u064a\u062f\u060c \u062a\u062a\u0634\u0627\u0628\u0643 \ufed3\ufef4\ufee4\ufe8e \ufe91\ufef4\ufee8\ufeec\ufe8e \ufee3\ufeb8\ufedc\ufc62\ufee0\ufe94\ufe70 \u0647\u0648\ufef3\ufe94 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u0643\u0628\u0629\u060c \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0627 \u0628\u0639\u062f \u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u064a\u0645\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0634\u062a\u0627\u062a .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. \u1ecclatunji \u1eccl\u1ecdruntim\u1eb9hin"],"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856958","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182540"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d4612c2-a0b0-385f-9781-4f4effaa8102"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41856958"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsocnige"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"289","pagination":"pp. 289-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Historical Society of Nigeria","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"THEORIES AND REALITIES IN THE ADMINISTRATION OF COLONIAL FRENCH WEST AFRICA FROM 1890 TO THE FIRST WORLD WAR","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856958","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":13379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashley (\"Woody\") Doane"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26579845","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07311214"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955351"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214635"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04201b83-0d46-3763-a379-f74875d7be81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26579845"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socipers"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Perspectives","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"991","pageStart":"975","pagination":"pp. 975-991","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Despite, or perhaps as a result of this success, the study of color-blind racial ideology has in many ways become stagnant. Following a critique of the current state of theorizing color-blindness, I strive to lay the foundation for a broader framework for understanding racial ideology. In this article, I undertake three core tasks: first, to present a general framework for understanding racial ideologies as fluid and dynamic constructions that are linked to a racial system; second, to outline how color-blind racial ideology is evolving and adapting in response to political challenges and changing social conditions; and finally, to discuss challenges to the hegemony of color-blindness and to propose an agenda for research on the future direction of racial ideology.","subTitle":"(Re) Theorizing Racial Ideology","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ayi Kwei ARMAH"],"datePublished":"1984-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24350928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb87df62-6f8f-3d67-b296-93e560af41b2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24350928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"131","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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V. Margavio"],"datePublished":"2000-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4356e47e-ad18-3a6e-a691-d8acc6969a60"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/223326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"416","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-416","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Honor, Status, and Aggression in Economic Exchange","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/223326","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":10823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The concept of honor links reputation and self-esteem with interaction in social groups and provides a promising way to approach questions about the release of aggression in economic exchange. While the internalization of conventional honor codes offers the hope of peaceful, if not just, exchange, competing codes of honor coexist within various aspects of the self and among members of various status groups. When a person's sense of individual or group honor is repeatedly violated in economic interaction, the reaction may include the release of aggression to repair damaged honor and establish self-respect. The narrative proceeds with an exploration of the concept of honor followed by a brief review of the association of honor with rational action in pursuit of economic success. The problematic inscription on the self of conventional codes of honor is then discussed. A brief discussion of staged role performance and the display of alternative codes of honor in workplace interaction and in extralegal market exchange illustrates the argument. A final section considers alternative approaches to the problem of self-control as social control.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Salah Moukhlis"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"A History of Hopes Postponed\": Women's Identity and the Postcolonial State in \"Year of the Elephant: A Moroccan Woman's Journey toward Independence\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821250","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":8890,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE J. SEFA DEI","MARLON SIMMONS"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dedc696-1dd2-3f84-89d2-3b8809548ed5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"XXV","pageStart":"XIII","pagination":"pp. XIII-XXV","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Pedagogy of Fanon: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980663","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":5855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[35731,35794]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Segun Osoba"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997979","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f45d4c3e-8708-3855-85f8-921098b2a63e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3997979"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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In line of the cinematic traditions of Charlie Chaplin\u2019sThe Great Dictator<\/em> (USA 1940) and Ousmane Semb\u00e8ne\u2019sXala<\/em> (Senegal 1975), Bekolo\u2019sLe Pr\u00e9sident<\/em> exposes the absurdities of dictatorial power in fiction and through humour. Contemporaneous with Bekolo\u2019sLe Pr\u00e9sident<\/em> , Abderrahmane Sissako\u2019s filmTimbuktu<\/em> (Mali\/Mauritania 2014) also addresses and fictionalizes African dictatorship, though","subTitle":"Televised","keyphrase":["valsero","mbembe","dictator televised","president","paul biya","cameroon","burkina faso","cameroonian","general valsero","africa"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adma d'Heurle"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40154885","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40154885"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"494","pagination":"pp. 494-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40154885","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fanon Che Wilkins"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20064229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"be1cd4f9-b718-3df5-8269-03123abe6f81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20064229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"490","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-490","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Making of Black Internationalists: SNCC and Africa before the Launching of Black Power, 1960-1965","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20064229","volumeNumber":"92","wordCount":11571,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt13wwvhn.22","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781925021721"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66f42ff8-34bd-3ebe-9a76-ebc1ed75d751"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt13wwvhn.22"}],"isPartOf":"Ngapartji Ngapartji","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"241","pagination":"241-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Lands of Fire and Ice:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt13wwvhn.22","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article brings together two Indigenous scholars who have come to better know their Indigenous history as they story it alongside their work as historians and academics. We find that the historical landscape changes when family history is better understood: time and space become embodied, history becomes personal. S\u00e1mi scholar May-Britt \u00d6hman speaks of singing to the hillside in a \u2018Sound of Music\u2019 style, and then feeling forced to break out of song and into yoik.\u00b9 Similarly, Aboriginal Australian scholar Frances Wyld writes about her connection to land and family history, including a visit to desert Australia where she no","subTitle":"From Hi-Story to History in the Lands of Fire and Ice\u2014Our Stories and Embodiment as Indigenous in a Colonised Hemisphere","keyphrase":["indigenous","ego histoire","history","aboriginal","indigenous peoples","indigenous australia","histoire europe","turn ego","moreton robinson","stallo"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Natalie Melas"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2c5daf5f-102e-3647-ad99-b0e7b74cc205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture and Development: Through Romantic Relativism into the Emerging Present","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932293","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald Rothchild"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216239","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019992"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2370d395-98fa-371a-8b26-7565d32b19c9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/216239"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrihiststud"}],"isPartOf":"African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"466","pageStart":"464","pagination":"pp. 464-466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/216239","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":1435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sebastian Kaempf"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02ebd340-3fa2-31b5-9f37-f2313e5d6e3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40388105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and Victory: Guerrilla Warfare, 'Authentic Self-Affirmation' and the Overthrow of the Colonial State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40388105","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8917,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[55542,55594]],"abstract":"This contribution critically investigates the ideas underpinning the armed struggle of colonial subjects against colonial states in the middle decades of the 20 th century. It focuses in particular on two of the most influential texts that inspired and guided violent anti-colonial resistance, The Wretched of the Earth by Frantz Fanon and On Guerrilla Warfare by Mao Zedong. Both Fanon and Mao provided powerful analyses of the violent (psychological and military) underpinnings of colonialism and articulated strategies of resistance. This contribution argues that the persuasiveness of Mao's and Fanon's thought stemmed from their deep dialectical (ie Hegelian) understanding of war and colonialism. By demonstrating the dialectical foundations of Mao's and Fanon's thought \u2014 inspired intellectually by their readings of Carl von Clausewitz and Jean-Paul Sartre\u2014the contribution illustrates how their understanding allowed them not only to fathom the interactive dynamics at the core of war and colonialism, but also to devise successful ways of unseating colonial power. Yet, while they shared a common belief in violent anti-colonial struggles, they nevertheless diverged fundamentally in their respective conceptions of violence. Mao (through Clausewitz) held an instrumental view of violence, whereas Fanon (through Sartre) understood violence in existential terms. This meant, as is argued here, that their respective conceptions of violence would not necessarily, on their own, have been sufficient to bring colonialism to an end. Taken together, however, their instrumental and intrinsic conceptions of violence complemented each other and helped armed anti-colonial struggles succeed around the globe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maulana Karenga"],"datePublished":"2008-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282557","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf69a165-d7c0-3023-b897-d051d7f9d930"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282557"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"166","pagination":"pp. 166-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Moral Anthropology of Marcus Garvey: In the Fullness of Ourselves","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282557","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":13030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article retrieves and articulates key elements in Marcus Garvey's philosophy that point toward a moral anthropology. The author discusses these in the context of ancient and modern concerns for issues of human dignity and human rights and the right and responsibility of the struggle for freedom as a particular African and universal human project. This article is also part of the author's ongoing effort to expand ethical discourse and discussion in Africana studies by critically engaging new subjects and sources of ethical thought beyond the Judeo-Christian tradition, especially the classical African ethics of ancient Egypt (the Maatian tradition) and ancient Yorubaland (the Ifa tradition). Finally, the article is conceived as a way of putting the author's Kawaida philosophy in renewed conversation with Garvey's philosophy, from which it borrows and on which it builds, in search of new links and lessons to expand and enrich the Kawaida philosophical and practical initiative.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Calvin Seerveld"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43913091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318035"},{"name":"oclc","value":"960870823"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"55f99dcc-0151-3571-ad5f-fbadf60a0333"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43913091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philrefo"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophia Reformata","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CHRISTIAN AESTHETIC BREAD FOR THE WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43913091","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":9050,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Houston A. Baker Jr."],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14a2a6c8-24e9-3dd4-b131-f315efb1036b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44489318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race, Displacement, and Richard Wright's Transatlantic Real Estate","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44489318","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":4111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael W. Sonnleitner"],"datePublished":"1987-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cad6fde6-4f32-3454-8515-24a60c4b9d11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"304","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-304","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Of Logic and Liberation: Frantz Fanon on Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784217","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5891,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47091,47182]],"Locations in B":[[14831,14922]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Inciardi"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6967f5ab-6858-3b2a-b0ad-f9a91ad5ac2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1104","pageStart":"1103","pagination":"pp. 1103-1104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231319","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tekletsadik Belachew"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa35b06c-9e93-368f-9b3b-3549f11e4af2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26617823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Imperfect Journey, Imperfect Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26617823","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11722,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49939,50021]],"Locations in B":[[50426,50508]],"abstract":"This article focusses on key themes in Haile Gerima\u2019s Imperfect Journey, which, despite being one of the most important African documentaries, is often neglected by film critics and historians. Abba Gerima, the traditional playwright, dramatist, historian, and epic-poet, is discussed through selectively translated passages from two historical masterpieces that he originally wrote in Amharic and English translations. Abba Gerima\u2019s and Haile Gerima\u2019s historical and artistic texts are critically examined across history, aesthetics and the three mega themes of Imperfect Journey in order to understand how Abba Gerima\u2019s vision is carried forward in the cinematic works of Haile Gerima. Cet article porte sur les th\u00e8mes cl\u00e9s du Voyage imparfait de Haile Gerima, qui, bien qu\u2019\u00e9tant l\u2019un des plus importants documentaires africains, est souvent n\u00e9glig\u00e9 par les critiques de cin\u00e9ma et les historiens. Abba Gerima, le dramaturge traditionnel, historien et po\u00e8te \u00e9pique, est d\u00e9crit \u00e0 travers des passages, traduits de mani\u00e8re s\u00e9lective, de deux chefs-d\u2019\u0153uvre historiques initialement \u00e9crits en amharique et traduits en anglais. Les textes historiques et artistiques d\u2019Abba Gerima et de Haile Gerima seront examin\u00e9s de mani\u00e8re critique \u00e0 travers l\u2019histoire, l\u2019esth\u00e9tique et les trois m\u00e9ga th\u00e8mes du Voyage imparfait pour comprendre comment la vision d\u2019Abba Gerima est refl\u00e9t\u00e9e dans les oeuvres cin\u00e9matographiques de Haile Gerima.","subTitle":"\u201cA fast, \u2018zinging\u2019 shot scares the baboon!\u201d","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William C. van Norman, Jr."],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031615"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45202766"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f4ab1b3-215f-352e-a46d-5b450fd7656a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4491060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americas"}],"isPartOf":"The Americas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Process of Cultural Change among Cuban Bozales during the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4491060","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":15610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tom Brass"],"datePublished":"1997-01-25","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4405017","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e4a8516a-5960-3094-a068-963bc3bd33b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4405017"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"PE42","pageStart":"PE27","pagination":"pp. PE27-PE42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Agrarian Myth, the 'New' Populism and the 'New' Right","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4405017","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":20321,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286839,286953]],"Locations in B":[[84176,84308]],"abstract":"It is argued here that the 'new' populism and the 'new' right, both of which emerged after the 1960s and consolidated during the 1990s, are structured discursively by the agrarian myth, and with it the reaffirmation of peasant essentialism. Whereas the earlier variants of the 'new' populism associated with the views of Marcuse and Fanon, expressed fears about alienation involving the estrangement from an 'authentic' peasant selfhood, in the third-worldist discourse which the more recent and postmodern variants of the 'new' populism share with 'new' right, this innate 'peasant-ness' is represented ideologically as the recuperation of a cultural 'otherness'\/'difference' that can now be celebrated. Alienation thus metamorphoses into its 'other', 'peasant-ness'-as-empowerment.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["N\u00e9stor Medina","Becca Whitla"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.5.1.0013","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"967938908"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcab7e66-a56d-3b24-8e7a-14646198bdef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/decohori.5.1.0013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"decohori"}],"isPartOf":"Horizontes Decoloniales \/ Decolonial Horizons","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"(An)Other Canada is Possible: Rethinking Canada's Colonial Legacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.5.1.0013","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5a41ce01-6128-3b7f-9191-71b7aa582657"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3998163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"20","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998163","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2065,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Janice E. Hill"],"datePublished":"1995-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6803715-9e45-3a82-b642-8907e3c66108"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Purging a Plate Full of Colonial History: The \"Nervous Conditions\" of Silent Girls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112165","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7506,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rafael L. Ramirez"],"datePublished":"1976-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f1c6d493-67c6-3d95-980d-c75be60e77d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"National Culture in Puerto Rico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633203","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":3853,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wayne Partridge"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eaa85fd3-a2c2-3fb3-8fa3-3d3e93feb12d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45177501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Averted Gaze: Representations of Race and the American South in Contemporary Young Adult Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45177501","volumeNumber":"434","wordCount":8969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20451815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490965"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976392"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227042"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbeda995-04b7-3178-951d-cf4486e8a2bc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20451815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pspolisciepoli"}],"isPartOf":"PS: Political Science and Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":184.0,"pageEnd":"774","pageStart":"591","pagination":"pp. 591-774","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"2006 Annual Meeting Preliminary Program","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20451815","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":115411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Hyland"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"58839839"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"439c5771-7855-372c-b8b2-b54e2d2de9fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90017448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Disrupting the Lines","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017448","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":8455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Tuning in to Edward Kamau Brathwaite\u2019s \u201cWord Making Man\u201d","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kausar S. Khan"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3342991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01975897"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a5f1b38-6539-35f7-a557-d89e5704559e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3342991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpublhealpoli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Public Health Policy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"225","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-225","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Palgrave Macmillan Journals","sourceCategory":["Health Policy","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epidemiology and Ethics: The Perspective of the Third World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3342991","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":2799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The relation of epidemiology and ethics is discussed from a Third World perspective, including the following issues: the structure and dynamics of a Third World Society; the nature of the relationship between the First World \"islanders\" in the Third World and their counterparts in the First World, and between the \"islanders\" and their fellow citizens; the inner dynamics of Third World researchers; the different knowledge systems; and the role of institutions in the Third World and the First World.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip L. Hammack"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018716X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f92d15a0-dd04-363b-a5df-c4f33da5e3bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26764960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humandevelopment"}],"isPartOf":"Human Development","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"S. Karger AG","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Identity as Burden or Benefit? Youth, Historical Narrative, and the Legacy of Political Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764960","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":17055,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholars across a range of disciplines have increasingly argued that the intractability of political conflicts is rooted in the proliferation of competing historical narratives. These collective narratives construct the basis of a sense of shared collective identity. Narrative and identity are thus increasingly conceptualized as fundamental to the maintenance and reproduction of political conflict. In this paper, I explore two underlying conceptions of identity that have emerged in the literature on youth and political conflict. One conception views identity as a burden for youth, suggesting that youth perceive the need to internalize a master narrative of collective identity that provides a sense of security and solidarity in the midst of existential uncertainty. Though psychologically beneficial, this internalization is problematic in the reproductive role it assumes in the larger conflict. An alternative conception views identity as a benefit in its ability to serve as a tool for social and political change, particularly for low-status groups. I review theory and research that adopt these varying conceptions and suggest that identity must be conceptualized as both burden and benefit for youth in conflict settings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher L. Miller","Adele King"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Forum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819877","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":1375,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cas Wouters"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26897909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01726404"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607367784"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234623"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffc59f25-fd15-3cea-b488-8aae91bcf1d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26897909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histsocres"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Social Research \/ Historische Sozialforschung","issueNumber":"2 (172)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Have Civilising Processes Changed Direction? Informalisation, Functional Democratisation, and Globalisation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26897909","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":20266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With his concept \u201cfunctional democratisation,\u201d Norbert Elias articulates how a specific type of \u201csocial equalisation\u201d is connected to expanding interdependency networks and long-term civilising processes. This article initially focuses on connections between functional democratisation and informalisation, throwing new light on the wider framework of the theory of civilisation and informalisation, as well as on these processes themselves. These insights are followed by a discussion into how functional democratisation and informalisation are interconnected with social differentiation and integration as the two major process drivers of globalisation, thus illuminating directions of processes of civilisation, informalisation, and functional democratisation within the overall process of globalisation. Special attention goes to trends of differentiation and integration on the one hand, and integration conflicts or disintegration and defunctionalisation on the other. Considering from a global perspective which side of these opposing trends is dominant helps to clarify directions in processes of (in-)formalisation and of (de-)civilisation. In addition, it helps to explain the declining power and status of the West as a global establishment, and changes in the balance of power between national and international political and economic centres. Expanding global interdependencies have given rise to a variety of practical problems and theoretical questions \u2013 a major policy question among them: \u201cHow to steer clear of financial and\/or political turbulence?\u201d Issues such as economic crises, global migration, and populism, brought up major theoretical questions: \u201cHave the driving processes of differentiation, integration, and increasing complexity of social functions stalled, changed direction, or ceased altogether?\u201d In other words, \u201cHave civilising processes changed direction?,\u201d an issue that was first raised in the turbulent 1960s and 1970s. Today, as strong spurts of globalisation give rise to feelings of loss and decline, it is reappraised once again in this paper.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana Fuss"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465162","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/465162"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 19-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interior Colonies: Frantz Fanon and the Politics of Identification","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/465162","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":13766,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462864"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6d798f8-e0c0-3c24-a994-28c7872dd246"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvh4zjfz.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"289","pagination":"289-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvh4zjfz.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":33106,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","faisal","became","french","politician","nobel prize","fabius","minister","educated","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julia Welland"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09670106"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45194003"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff876033-50c1-3bf6-ab3e-5a0d7355617b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26294209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"securitydialogue"}],"isPartOf":"Security Dialogue","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"524","pagination":"pp. 524-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and the contemporary soldiering body","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26294209","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10294,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article asks what is the significance of making the soldiering body (hyper)visible in war. In contrast to the techno-fetishistic portrayals of Western warfare in the 1990s, the recent counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan witnessed a re-centring of British soldiering bodies within the visual grammars of war. In the visibility of this body, violences once obscured were rendered viscerally visible on the bodies of British soldiers. Locating the analysis in the War Story exhibition at the Imperial War Museum, London, the article details two moments of wartime violence experienced and enacted by British soldiers, tracking how violence was mediated in, on and through these hypervisible soldiering bodies and the attending invisibility of \u2018other\u2019 bodies. The article argues that during the Afghanistan campaign, soldiers\u2019 bodies became not just enactors of military power but crucial representational figures in the continuance of violent projects abroad and their acceptance back home.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John L. Gwaltney"],"datePublished":"1976-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274452","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318906"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976270"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fa26d92-0fa6-31b1-bd33-62b82eb9f1a5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/274452"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"phylon1960"}],"isPartOf":"Phylon (1960-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"236","pagination":"pp. 236-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Clark Atlanta University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Going Home Again--Some Reflections of a Native Anthropologist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/274452","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":3170,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian I. Smart"],"datePublished":"1991-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8412635f-ec9a-37c5-944b-4d17090b14e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44322432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"CHANG\u00d3, EL GRAN PUTAS\" AS LIBERATION LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44322432","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stuart Hall","David Scott"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40427163","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07433204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ad43e9e-f90a-3ff8-a5ee-4c882d2ec6c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40427163"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bomb"}],"isPartOf":"BOMB","issueNumber":"90","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"New Art Publications","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Humanities","Language & Literature","Performing Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"David Scott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40427163","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5095,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Lowe"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e624cbea-7cfa-3cb7-8d28-faff6b0cc96e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"82","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literary Nomadics in Francophone Allegories of Postcolonialism: Pham Van Ky and Tahar Ben Jelloun","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930211","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ambe J. Njoh"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96270504-831f-3410-8c86-5513d6181c7f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40034423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"599","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-599","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Colonial Philosophies, Urban Space, and Racial Segregation in British and French Colonial Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034423","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8892,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"British colonial authorities adhered to a philosophy of racial segregation while their French counterparts subscribed to one that segregates along socioeconomic and cultural lines. This article interrogates the rationale for these two colonial philosophies and addresses the following questions: How were these philosophies given physical expression in colonial urban space? Why did the two seemingly opposing philosophies produce identical racially segregated urban space? It is argued that although the two colonial powers had different racial philosophies, they shared common cultural, psychological, political, social, and ideological objectives that were best accomplished through racially segregated space.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret A. Majumdar"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.8","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d1c2102-4404-39fd-a599-b8fd95f25ee8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.8"}],"isPartOf":"Postcoloniality","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"83","pagination":"83-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Subversion of Colonial Ideology:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1c0gkvv.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15064,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[83968,84046]],"Locations in B":[[64708,64777]],"abstract":"It is time now to look in greater depth at one of the key French figures in the history of anticolonialism, Jean-Paul Sartre. There is no denying the importance of Sartre in the theorisation of colonialism and anticolonialism, as well as in the politics and practice of the anticolonial struggle, not least for his recognition that this was not a subsidiary issue, but one that was absolutely central to twentieth-century history. In many ways, Sartre has to be considered as one of the pioneers in the history of European thought in this area, and much of the contemporary and subsequent","subTitle":"Jean-Paul Sartre","keyphrase":["sartre","colonised","majumdar text3","french","language","senghor","paul sartre","orph\u00e9e noir","ideology","universalism"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Searls Giroux"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7a879693-e007-3132-b22f-f46888c175ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45176280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critique of Racial Violence: The Theologico-Political Reflections of Lewis R. Gordon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176280","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11941,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40257734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03633276"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61564408"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234819"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c26b80f1-d1c7-34b9-9d8d-ce0be4a28a93"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40257734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wilsonq"}],"isPartOf":"The Wilson Quarterly (1976-)","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Wilson Quarterly","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Background Books: Castro's Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40257734","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":1801,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wahneema Lubiano"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36fd9b2f-26c7-3d0b-aeb6-2c7cfd37116a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3299321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Mapping the Interstices between Afro-American Cultural Discourse and Cultural Studies: A Prolegomenon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3299321","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Anne Clarke","Sean Byrne"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563965938"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf6ae0a0-a028-3f03-acde-e795692e20af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44779909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Peace Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Canadian Mennonite University","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Three Rs: Resistance, Resilience, and Reconciliation in Canada and Ireland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779909","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9151,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Resistance, resilience, and reconciliation are three under-recognized themes in response to British colonizations global imprint. Britain developed its methods of colonization in Ireland, and used further refined methods in Canada such as the Indian Residential Schools (IRSs). Colonization and repeated trauma continue intergenerationally for Indigenous peoples in multiple ways, as do also resistance and resilience that can lead to reconciliation through the generations with stories, family life, and spirituality. The Three Rs (resistance, resilience and reconciliation) are identified as Indigenous contributions to peacebuilding in Ireland and Canada. This study addresses the long-term social legacy of colonialism in conflict, in relation with potential positive peacebuilding within Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boris Bertolt"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"248cfcd3-c8cd-3c17-9ed9-98587a4d4dd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thinking otherwise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023843","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14088,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article aims to show that there is an entanglement between representations of the body and gender inequalities between the colonial period and contemporary African societies. Postcolonial Africa remains deeply marked by representations of sex, body and gender during colonization. This epistemological stance has the consequence of denying the idea of the end of decolonization, which appears at this moment as a myth. It derives theoretically from the works of the Latin American modernity \/ coloniality research program. Coloniality is understood as a set of paradigms of domination and regulation of the life of the colonized introduced during the construction of European hegemony around the world since the fifteenth century. Contemporary Discourses and knowledge about gender dynamics remain deeply embedded in Eurocentric thinking. To illustrate this situation, two aspects of life of former colonized seemed to me important to highlight: the inferiorization of women in Africa and gender categories. Even if it is not my point to argue that the situation of women and gays in Africa was better before contacts with Europeans, I am trying to show that the subalternization of women and homosexuals in contemporary Africa can\u2019t be account without a deep surgery on the body of colonized people and speeches about sexuality. Cet article vise \u00e0 montrer qu\u2019il existe un enchev\u00eatrement entre les repr\u00e9sentations du corps et les in\u00e9galit\u00e9s de genre entre la p\u00e9riode coloniale et les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines contemporaines. L\u2019Afrique postcoloniale reste profond\u00e9ment marqu\u00e9e par les repr\u00e9sentations du sexe, du corps et du sexe pendant la colonisation. Cette position \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique a pour cons\u00e9quence de nier l\u2019id\u00e9e de la fin de la d\u00e9colonisation, qui appara\u00eet en ce moment comme un mythe. Il d\u00e9rive th\u00e9oriquement des travaux du programme de recherche latino-am\u00e9ricain modernit\u00e9 \/ cololialit\u00e9. La colonialit\u00e9 est comprise comme un ensemble de paradigmes de domination et de r\u00e9gulation de la vie des colonis\u00e9s introduits lors de la construction de l\u2019h\u00e9g\u00e9monie europ\u00e9enne autour du monde depuis le XVe si\u00e8cle. Les discours contemporains et les connaissances sur les dynamiques de genre restent profond\u00e9ment ancr\u00e9s dans la pens\u00e9e eurocentrique. Pour illustrer cette situation, deux aspects de la vie des anciens colonis\u00e9s m\u2019ont paru importants: l\u2019inf\u00e9riorisation des femmes en Afrique et les cat\u00e9gories de genre. M\u00eame si je ne veux pas dire que la situation des femmes et des homosexuels en Afrique \u00e9tait meilleure avant les contacts avec les Europ\u00e9ens, j\u2019essaie de montrer que la subalternisation des femmes et des homosexuels en Afrique contemporaine ne peut pas \u00eatre prise en compte sans une chirurgie profonde. le corps des personnes colonis\u00e9es et les discours sur la sexualit\u00e9.","subTitle":"theorizing the colonial\/modern gender system in Africa.","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julius E. Nyang'oro"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29b05b3a-4437-3eec-a676-5f34701c68ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reform Politics and the Democratization Process in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525116","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":7819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grant H. Cornwell","Eve W. Stoddard"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c96b7db-d631-3216-a491-4104053a8d26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Reading Sugar Mill Ruins: \"The Island Nobody Spoiled\" and Other Fantasies of Colonial Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201872","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":8323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DENNIS WALDER"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcfcac54-072e-3b08-ae7f-cbbfb024b3ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23338004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","issueNumber":"3 (149)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"V.S. Naipaul's India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23338004","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/795308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a605037e-51a2-3d0a-a70e-99441022667a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/795308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The United Nations, Self-Determination and The Namibia Opinions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/795308","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":13654,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f871767e-c228-3fa4-b559-e231181c326a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"63\/64","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"614","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-614","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language and Politics: On the Cultural Basis of Colonialism (Langue et politique: sur les bases culturelles du colonialisme)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391483","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":5687,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27679]],"Locations in B":[[1712,1759]],"abstract":"Aux yeux de F. Fanon, parler la langue du colonisateur c'\u00e9tait accepter, voire assumer, sa culture. Cette affirmation pr\u00e9suppose une assimilation totale de la langue \u00e0 la culture, qui para\u00eet m\u00eame si, effectivement, la politique linguistique coloniale comporte toujours un aspect d'assimilationnisme autoritaire. Le probl\u00e8me ne change que partiellement apr\u00e8s l'ind\u00e9pendance, dans la mesure notamment o\u00f9 l'usage de la langue coloniale reste un des principaux privil\u00e8ges \u00e9conomico-sociaux de la classe dominante.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arnold Rampersad"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07406959"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-238251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19d55c21-075b-3de9-b3d1-ae488a00753c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25595466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"profession"}],"isPartOf":"Profession","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"14","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-14","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Values Old and New","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25595466","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lloyd"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25664532","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16496507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"312765156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"575384c0-2ae9-37de-b5d1-f123a1efdf2b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25664532"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fieldayrev"}],"isPartOf":"Field Day Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Field Day Publications","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Shadows of a Gunman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25664532","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JANE E. 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Literature","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Of Essence and Excrescence: History, Race, and Identity in Armah's Two Thousand Seasons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238851","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5320,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CAROLINE RODY"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3cdfc737-ed0d-3ca5-ac76-4850f4f7e2ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24544457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"531","pageStart":"528","pagination":"pp. 528-531","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24544457","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":1362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulrich Bach"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27676051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709742"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227145"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ff6b969-a194-35dc-bdd5-8ab28bd4bc29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27676051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"germanquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"The German Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of German","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sacher-Masoch's Utopian Peripheries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27676051","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":8540,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, the controversial Austrian author of the erotic novella \"Venus in Furs\" (1877), is little known for his distinctive political utopianism. Yet, he espouses a paradoxical German-language Pan-Slavism in many of his novellas and political essays. His \"opus magnum\" Verm\u00e4chtnis Kains (1870-77) depicts as natural determinism fierce ethnic conflicts within the para-colonial space of Eastern Europe. In fact, conflict is the prerequisite of his utopian pan-Slavic community in Eastern Europe. In his novellas \"Kapitulant\" and \"Paradies am Dniester,\" discussed in this essay, Sacher-Masoch creates a discourse on utopian space that delivers its message through its suspension in fantasy denying the spatial realities and political limitations of Europe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry M. Schutz"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185750","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e8c13ff-8a5f-3c7e-b427-c87a31340fe8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4185750"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colonial Heritage of Strife: Sources of Cleavage in the Zimbabwe Liberation Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4185750","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Danielle DiNovelli-Lang"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297041","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21506779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7acdb6a5-e4c4-3aa3-a25f-e3b2de390838"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43297041"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"envisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Environment & Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Science & Mathematics","Sociology","Environmental Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology","Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Return of the Animal: Posthumanism, Indigeneity, and Anthropology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43297041","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12341,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The vectors by which the question of the animal has confronted the discipline of anthropology are both diverse\u2014from paleoarchaeological fascination with the transition from ape to man to sociocultural accounts of human-animal conflict\u2014and fraught insofar as they tend to loop back into one another. For instance, while posthumanism is intellectually novel, to take its line of critique seriously is to recognize that the science of man has depended on the philosophical animal from the start. A still tighter loop could be drawn around L\u00e9vi-Strausss foundational interest in animal symbolism and the Amazonian ontologies undergirding Latours amodern philosophy. Three related interdependencies pull hard on these loops: 1) philosophy and anthropology; 2) the human and the animal; 3) modernity and indigeneity. This last interdependency is notably undertheorized in the present efflorescence of human-animal scholarship. This article attends to some of the consequences of modernity\/indigeneity s clandestine operations in the literature.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edgar A. Levenson","Althea J. Horner","Martin N. Fisher"],"datePublished":"1981-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41718044","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03624021"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"071e02d6-7d41-3c25-a2cd-d7f58d354fa1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41718044"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"group"}],"isPartOf":"Group","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society","sourceCategory":["Psychology","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"THE RHETORIC OF INTIMACY [with DISCUSSIONS]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41718044","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sheril D. Antonio"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17cd8940-e1f7-30d9-b149-b9797c908890"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Urban-Rural Binary in Black American Film and Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blc.2009.1.1.116","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This essay examines the urban and rural settings of black narratives and how they illuminate race relations in American society. It deploys fluid notions of blackness and identity in postslavery America that in part rely on the movement between these two geographical, ideological, and cultural sites. The urban-rural binary is an incubator for what I call the composite character, which refers to any form of reinvented blackness. Thus, any character composed of multiple disparate elements or ideologies such as rural and urban, North and South, black and white, rich and poor, etc., is a composite character. This binary is essential to the study of the black identity in films because it represents a central theme in American history; it is core to the development of postslavery blackness and is key to the understanding of black life today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea M. Ng'weshemi"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581564","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea3cee36-e8c6-32e4-a03c-d3ad0adbc7e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1581564"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"501","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-501","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581564","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":1310,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chielozona Eze"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"696a4f7e-895a-393a-ae7c-d16c5bafafb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'We, Afropolitans'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758437","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":3520,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9e9b125-b6ee-3b44-b1b5-9ebff182d563"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/469201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"524","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-524","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing the Canon: Considerations of Third World Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/469201","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana Taylor"],"datePublished":"1990-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a76e8bb1-edaf-3399-b3fb-346e2cfacd84"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3207753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theater and Terrorism: Griselda Gambaro's \"Information for Foreigners\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3207753","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10040,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Grace A. Musila"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42005333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"522be16d-7603-32a9-9464-d5f5d3eb11bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42005333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Familial cartographies in contemporary East African short stories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42005333","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10089,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Using two East African short stories by Binyavanga Wainiana and Muthoni Garland, this article explores literal, literary and nation-families as recurrent motifs in contemporary East African short stories, which comment on intergenerational relationships and the ensuing patterns of power relations. If, as much scholarship on the post-colonial state opines, the disintegration of the state in Africa ushered in a shift towards family networks, and, broadly, the domestic space, then contemporary East African short stories would seem to suggest that the refuge offered by the family space has, at best, been fraught with contradictions, with the familial space emerging as both a space of healing and a site haunted by the same predatory dynamics that mark the phallocratie state. It is in this environment that the arts \u2013 music, literature and other arts \u2013 seem to offer a platform for cross-generational critical engagement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40407620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02e42630-46de-34c1-aab1-4b9814a3f48b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40407620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"63","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Scholarly Papers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40407620","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olivia Noble Gunn"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.4.0337","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00365637"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50609098"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-250650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5eb93a45-c949-32fa-b7bb-ed508a08ed67"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/scanstud.88.4.0337"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scanstud"}],"isPartOf":"Scandinavian Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"363","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-363","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","European Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Mothers and the Limits of Bohemia in Alberte og friheten<\/em> and Bare Alberte<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/scanstud.88.4.0337","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":11419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary C. Anders"],"datePublished":"1980-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00213624"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082409"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234557"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"700d65ec-5026-3372-ac80-b440d90e493d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4224949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconiss"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Issues","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"701","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-701","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Association for Evolutionary Economics","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Theories of Underdevelopment and the American Indian","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4224949","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":8701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nkwelle Ekaney"],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159591","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159591"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"685","pageStart":"682","pagination":"pp. 682-685","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159591","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":1982,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID ROSENBERG"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341440","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41c7fad4-953a-3e0f-8c7c-1c9148fa8733"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341440"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AFRICAN MINE LABOUR IN SOUTHERN RHODESIA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341440","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5030,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ted Honderich"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2265141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00483915"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777411"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23362"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1db9ce48-a6eb-3c54-a7df-5bbb85a6ef5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2265141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philpublaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy & Public Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"190","pagination":"pp. 190-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities","Public Policy & Administration"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democratic Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2265141","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":10445,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVEN RATUVA"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvq4c0m7.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760463199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"675f4a34-1c04-32c9-aad6-4837f9a885de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvq4c0m7.5"}],"isPartOf":"Contested Terrain","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"17","pagination":"17-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["International Relations","History","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exploring the contours of threat:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvq4c0m7.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As mentioned in Chapter 1, the analytical eclecticism approach deployed in this book requires one to be cognisant of the diversity of theoretical positions in the area of security, their strengths and their weaknesses, and how they might inform one\u2019s formulation and application of relevant concepts in a constantly changing world. Disentangling the continually morphing and increasingly turbulent security sphere is a herculean task in its own right due to the multiplicity of factors involved and the range of discourses used to frame security across disciplines. This is made even more complex by the ever-changing nature of global and local","subTitle":"Competing security discourses","keyphrase":["security","human security","securitisation","threat","global","security discourse","political","conflict","securitisation theory","pacific"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cecil Blake"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784329","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fed15991-4d45-3057-808b-6a0c18eda170"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784329"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"218","pagination":"pp. 218-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Communication Research and African National Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784329","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":3621,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles Baxter"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4637995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4d3b59c0-a1a0-3f79-b478-c1e05fec47af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4637995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antiochreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Antioch Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Antioch Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Xavier Speaking","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4637995","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Lee"],"datePublished":"1971-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2230321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00130133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40108906"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23310"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2230321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"economicj"}],"isPartOf":"The Economic Journal","issueNumber":"324","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"862","pageStart":"847","pagination":"pp. 847-862","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Royal Economic Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rosa Luxemburg and the Impact of Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2230321","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":7289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark A. 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Kemp"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3299ddc-117e-3d7f-98ba-765bca6786e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"236","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-236","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"THE MARBLE FAUN\" AND AMERICAN POSTCOLONIAL AMBIVALENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285469","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Margaret Hillenbrand"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00956848"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2689c5d0-b0f6-31e3-9d79-8247ba9f9781"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jjapanesestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Japanese Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Society for Japanese Studies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Doppelg\u00e4ngers, Misogyny, and the San Francisco System: The Occupation Narratives of \u014ce Kenzabur\u014d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064725","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":16248,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u014ce Kenzabur\u014d's status as the left-wing conscience of postwar Japan was consolidated long before his Nobel prize of 1994. Several works dating from the late 1950s, however, give the lie to this radicalism and suggest instead a tendency toward the reactionary. In particular, \u014ce's politico-sexual series on occupied Japan-five narratives that center on a love triangle between a Japanese youth, his prostitute mistress, and her Euro-American patron-veer noticeably toward misogyny in their representation of Japan under Pax Americana. Although this series of texts purports to be a call to arms to Japanese male youth during the intense debates over the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty, a closer inspection reveals that \u014ce's hidden preoccupation is with his female characters, who become scapegoats for \"crimes\" of complicity with Japan's conquerors that were, in fact, extremely widespread.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MATTHEW P. 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M. 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I focus on the spatial construction of identity and alterity in this urban center with the aim of detailing how competing national identities are expressed in place and space. Looking specifically at the quotidian realities that unmarried, adult Palestinian women experience across this divided terrain, this article analyzes the potent intersections of gender and class-based oppressions, racism, and national chauvinisms under Israeli occupation. This article examines the multiple ways in which both Israelis and Palestinians have deemed unmarried, Palestinian women as uout of place,\" particularly as the latter have increasingly traversed different national and cultural spaces in Jerusalem and struggled for greater degrees of independence beyond the boundaries of the familial realm. This article challenges the bulk of the scholarly literature on this national conflict, writings that tend to ignore the colonial character of Israeli rule and the regimes of land and housing so central to the Jewish State's continual appropriation and reconfiguration of Palestinian land. I argue that the failure to properly examine the colonizing dimensions of Israeli power has hampered understandings of spatial relations in Jerusalem and across the fractured landscape of Palestine and Israel more generally.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Miller"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1955129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ea1884d-2a21-33fb-8d68-fc78a785e7de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1955129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"1025","pageStart":"1025","pagination":"p. 1025","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1955129","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paget Henry"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759936","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1cd4f3a6-c6e7-36e7-be0f-50f055c7a108"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26759936"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Specifically, this article explores the philosophies of language and education that informed this class and the organic relationship fostered between the classroom and the political goals of African American communities during the civil rights era.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STELLA M. NKOMO"],"datePublished":"2015-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1537260X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54659710"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214672"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f45d7c3-ce39-3ddb-ab93-b42e957301b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43697264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"acadmanaleareduc"}],"isPartOf":"Academy of Management Learning & Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"258","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-258","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Academy of Management","sourceCategory":["Management & Organizational Behavior","Business & Economics","Education","Business","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Challenges for Management and Business Education in a \"Developmental\" State: The Case of South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43697264","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose and quality of management and business education in universities have been subjected to an onslaught of vitriolic criticism. Most of this conversation emanates from the global north or west, particularly the United States and to a lesser extent Western Europe. I focus here on management and business education challenges in South Africa. Its sociopolitical history as well as its location in the global south, in juxtaposition to the global north, raises different challenges. South Africa's multilayer context creates differences in both the challenges faced by universities and management academics and the responses required. The dominant prescriptions for changing management and business education are inadequate where the challenge is transformative nation building across all sectors of society. After describing the challenges for management education, I offer an agenda that attempts to traverse the complex interplay between South Africa's simultaneous postapartheid and postcolonial conditions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olakunle George"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The National and the Transnational: Soyinka's \"The Interpreters\" and \"Ak\u00e9: The Years of Childhood\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267739","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9022,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[494636,494692],[494768,494901]],"Locations in B":[[43726,43787],[43853,43986]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eliga Gould"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5309\/willmaryquar.74.4.0729","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00435597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35811744, 35811662, 35811260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23024, sn97-23025, sn97-23026"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c59bdec-e589-355e-ad46-f29bb8d48fd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5309\/willmaryquar.74.4.0729"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willmaryquar"}],"isPartOf":"The William and Mary Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"752","pageStart":"729","pagination":"pp. 729-752","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Independence and Interdependence: The American Revolution and the Problem of Postcolonial Nationhood, circa 1802","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5309\/willmaryquar.74.4.0729","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":11713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What did it mean to be a postcolonial nation in the age of the American Revolution? What does the answer tell us about the new world that the revolution helped to create? To find out, this article turns to the brief, spectacular history of the State of Muskogee, an ersatz Indian nation founded on the Gulf Coast by the white adventurer William Augustus Bowles. Boasting its own army and navy, its own flag and vice admiralty court, and its own newspaper and plans for a university, Muskogee showed that the nation-making impulse was not unique to the colonists who declared independence in 1776 but was embraced by Indians, African Americans, and white dissidents and renegades. In its effort to be recognized as \u201ca free and independent\u201d republic, however, Muskogee is a reminder that postcolonial independence was an interdependent condition that required the consent of Britain and the Western Hemisphere's other imperial powers, including, by the time of Muskogee's collapse in 1802, the United States. For colonial peoples everywhere, independent nationhood was both the surest path to liberation and a road fraught with potential for new forms of subordination. For a correction to this article, see http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5309\/willmaryquar.75.2.0395.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacob Kipp","Harry S. Gailey"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1987242","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263931"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37032240"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23039"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1987242"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"militaryaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Military Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Basic Bibliography of Books Related to the Military in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1987242","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":4725,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashwin Desai"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487605","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"898bc281-7ff8-33bf-a259-f2d79c266ab5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487605"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Xenophobia and the place of the refugee in the rainbow nation of human rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487605","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":10658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JATINDER VERMA"],"datePublished":"1989-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41378008","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09580433"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"813371e3-bf4d-3c87-aebe-fb11f85e3bc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41378008"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rsaj"}],"isPartOf":"RSA Journal","issueNumber":"5400","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"778","pageStart":"767","pagination":"pp. 767-778","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts","Business","Business & Economics Collection","Education","History","History","History of Science & Technology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Transformations in Culture: the Asian in Britain","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41378008","volumeNumber":"137","wordCount":9641,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maik Nwosu"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109539","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20109539"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Christopher Okigbo and the Postcolonial Market of Memories","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20109539","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":8628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The association of Christopher Okigbo's poetry with Anglo-American modernist poetics has often attracted two main types of evaluation: the failure of ideology and Eurocentrism. But Okigbo demonstrates literary dexterity in the manner in which the deep structure of his poetry troubles the historical overvaluation of the white sign and the devaluation of the black sign manifest in the colonial market of memories between Europe and Africa. Historical dialogism or a postcolonial market of memories--involving the invocation of both the local and the foreign, the specific and the universal--is a strategic feature of Okigbo's poetry. He ultimately creates a third signifying field via a conjunction of two signifying systems, the native and the colonial, into a new state of consciousness rooted in a traditional African mythic code.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darrell L. Reeck"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217551","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"988668af-0463-378e-b901-16cf19040628"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217551"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"334","pagination":"pp. 334-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217551","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. Odun Balogun"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904313","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1d3b49d-96cf-3e05-ae7f-f24b6dfe53a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904313"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"530","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-530","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Wole Soyinka and the Literary Aesthetic of African Socialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904313","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NOAH DE LISSOVOY"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979415","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ab8b13f-36b1-389f-8666-218398595f9b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979415"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"355","pagination":"pp. 355-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 19: Frantz Fanon and a Materialist Critical Pedagogy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979415","volumeNumber":"299","wordCount":8501,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[4031,4163]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jaime Grinberg","Elizabeth R. Saavedra"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1170777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346543"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615341"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236890"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe2fe3ff-3879-3b08-87ca-a8f3aebd2cb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1170777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revieducrese"}],"isPartOf":"Review of Educational Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"441","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-441","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Constitution of Bilingual\/ESL Education as a Disciplinary Practice: Genealogical Explorations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1170777","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":12058,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[73969,74033]],"abstract":"This article provides a cultural and political critique of the constitution of bilingual\/English-as-a-second-language (ESL) education as a disciplinary practice in the case of New Mexico. Using genealogy and postcolonial, post-structural, and critical frameworks, this article claims that the directions advanced by the Chicano\/Chicana movement were lost. Instead, what emerged was a field that nurtured a mix of symbolic colonization and docilization through the construction of a settlement that controls thought and behavior, perpetuating misrecognition in a Bourdieuian sense. Illusion, collusion, and delusion have enabled the dominance of psycholinguistic approaches. Problematizing the constitution of bilingual\/ESL education within a cultural and political sphere could foster an emancipatory education for marginalized students.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Doshi"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.72","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"838781c6-21e7-3aaa-b400-aaee6b7f1ac4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.72"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"72","pagination":"pp. 72-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Brecht in Algeria: On the Question of Influence in Kateb Yacine's Late Theater","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.72","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":7847,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article questions the formative role that Bertolt Brecht is regarded to have had on Algerian writer Kateb Yacine's political theater in the 1970s and 80s. While Brecht did indeed play an important role in Algerian theater in the post-independence era, the assumption that he singularly shaped political theatrical forms in Algeria masks the particular trajectory of Kateb's work. Focusing specifically on his play Mohamed prends ta valise, this essay revisits the broad historical and political contexts of Kateb's theater to underscore the particularity of his practice after 1971 and to broaden the limiting analytic frames that cast his work in Brechtian terms. Attending to the important influence of local folk forms and Marxism-Leninism on Kateb's practice, I call attention to both the multiple vectors that shaped his work and further question the flattening effect of metropolitan theater histories that decontextualize Brechtian practice as they ascribe influence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Racquel Gates"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a9448667-1d90-3ca0-bdfb-e786c1bd25b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26413861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE LAST SHALL BE FIRST","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26413861","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":4966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"AESTHETICS AND POLITICS IN BLACK FILM AND MEDIA","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Bienen"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2152012","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00323195"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064101"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2152012"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polisciequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Science Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"282","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-282","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Academy of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leaders, Violence, and the Absence of Change in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2152012","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":5781,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Nash"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10274332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85856024"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009252818"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ac1ab6d-7574-3e8c-be91-0e08f339782c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24487379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrisocirevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Sociological Review \/ Revue Africaine de Sociologie","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Third Worldism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24487379","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":11078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martin A. Klein"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e427bfa8-179d-3ff8-bafe-ffec3b97b759"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"352","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-352","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401584","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2069,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julian Go"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186637","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9a7cb9c-f8dd-36ad-a195-24bb68fecb63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43186637"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing Bourdieu: Colonial and Postcolonial Theory in Pierre Bourdieu's Early Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43186637","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":15217,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[32192,32258]],"abstract":"While new scholarship on Pierre Bourdieu has recovered his early work on Algeria, this essay excavates his early thoughts on colonialism. Contrary to received wisdom, Bourdieu did in fact offer a theory of colonialism and a systematic understanding of its effects and logics. Bourdieu portrayed colonialism as a racialized system of domination, backed by force, which restructures social relations and creates hybrid cultures. His theory entailed insights on the limits and promises of colonial reform, anticolonial revolution, and postcolonial liberation. Bourdieu's early thinking on colonialism drew upon but extended French colonial studies of the time. It also contains the seeds of later concepts like habitus, field, and reflexive sociology while prefiguring more recent disciplinary postcolonial studies. Bourdieusian sociology in this sense originates not just as a study of Algeria but more specifically a critique of colonialism. It can be seen as contributing to the larger project of postcolonial sociology.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael D. Curley","Richard E. Gift"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4191417","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022037X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c61dbb10-76ce-3fd6-9e6b-68ea67711adf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4191417"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdevearea"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Developing Areas","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"College of Business, Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Investment Incentives and Rural Conflict: The Case of South Vietnam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4191417","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":8957,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c048799e-ba1a-336d-a1d3-e16963c93635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3998149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"108","pagination":"pp. 108-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3998149","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wa\u00efl S. 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Lustick"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2537322","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90cea68e-65b1-3a78-b887-68466f501ab3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2537322"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Changing Rationales for Political Violence in the Arab-Israeli Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2537322","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ren-Yo Hwang"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.2.0082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b708c2da-c126-3808-bcca-66d555fc9ebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.2.0082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcritethnstud"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Ethnic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Accounting for Carceral Reformations: Gay and Transgender Jailing in Los Angeles as Justice Impossible","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.2.2.0082","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the various ways in which \u201caccountability\u201d has been studied in relationship to what we call justice. Through three avenues of justice\u2014the criminal justice system, restorative justice, and transformative justice\u2014Ren-yo Hwang asks how such ideological and material interpretations of justice make and take life in very particular ways. Focusing on the political site of Los Angeles County, and specifically the case of K6G, the gay men and transgender women's unit inside Los Angeles County Men's Central Jail, this article highlights current community struggles against police, sheriff, and state violence in order to trace the difficulties and impossibilities of carceral reform efforts when working in tandem with local state agencies. Interwoven with an ethnographic narrative, it argues that differentiating community power wielded against expansion of state law enforcement agencies versus being yielded as a \u201ccommunity-based partner or relation\u201d controlled by state law enforcement agencies allows for clearer reflective pathways distinguishing abolitionist reform from carceral expansive reform. Moreover, in an effort to uplift the nuances of collective resistance to the entrapments of the criminal justice system, it argues that survival necessitates dealing with faulty options, ones that do not always result from or in strategic abolitionist reform, yet these contradictions are interlinked to visioning a world beyond just justice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Bondanella","R. Norman Junker","Jim McNab","Wayne Mixon","J. P. Whitson"],"datePublished":"1967-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/172938","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220027"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532777"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227378"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8db3f9a0-df9e-3f0e-8acb-7721f23c50bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/172938"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconfreso"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Conflict Resolution","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Communication","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/172938","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTOPHER GOGWILT"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780696","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1dfe72fb-1cf3-366a-b0a7-24f1d3fff97a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24780696"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Charm of Empire: Joseph Conrad's \"Karain: a Memory\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24780696","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7452,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tendayi Sithole"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a3b78be-daad-3669-92f2-7dc432f4f120"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Concept of the Black Subject in Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572957","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":7908,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, Blackness is examined in relation to the conception of the subject. From this perspective, Frantz Fanon's subjectivity is a rallying point of critique to account for the ways in which such a subject is positioned in the existential realm of anti-Blackness. This calls for the ways in which the Black subject should be understood from its existential reality of subjection. The demand of the Black subject to be free from subjection essentially means that Blackness should tenaciously militate for liberation. This is the existential necessity in that the Black subject will move from the existential condition of dehumanization and to what Fanon calls new humanism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SEAN L. MALLOY"],"datePublished":"2013-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376466","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c8197e8-bba2-330e-a8db-e3201e25dc5e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26376466"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"571","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-571","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Uptight in Babylon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26376466","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":17697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Eldridge Cleaver\u2019s Cold War","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frederick Cooper"],"datePublished":"1981-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523902","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b862bd6-120a-367f-8078-fe2421dc07ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523902"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":86.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa and the World Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523902","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":50443,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent Crapanzano","\u06a8\u064a\u0646\u0633\u0646\u062a \u0643\u0631\u0627\u067e\u0627\u0646\u0632\u0627\u0646\u0648"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"508e013a-04e8-3988-a33b-57d9dc52fc89"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27929847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"30","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wound that Never Heals \/ \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a \u0644\u0627 \ufef3\ufee0\ufe98\ufe8c\ufee2 \u0623\u0628\u062f\u0627\u064b","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27929847","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses the Harki reaction to Masaoud Benyoucef's play \"Le nom du p\u00e8re\". Harkis are Algerians who sided with the French during the Algerian War of Independence, tens of thousands of whom were massacred at the war's end by their compatriots. Those who managed to escape to France were incarcerated in camps, some for sixteen years. They considered the play a slur on their identity and attempted, unsuccessfully, to stop its performance. They objected to the portrayal of the protagonist, the son of a Harki, who, entrapped by his father's fateful decision, has lost his bearings and is manipulated by the Algerian military, the Islamists, and the French. \u062a\u0639\u0627\u0644\u062c \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0631\u062f \u0641\u0639\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0643\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0633\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0628\u0642\u0644\u0645 \u0645\u0633\u0639\u0648\u062f \u0628\u0646 \u064a\u0648\u0633\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a. \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0643\u064a\u0648\u0646 \u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a\u0648\u0646 \u0648\u0642\u0641\u0648\u0627 \u0645\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u062d\u0631\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062d\u0631\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u064a \u0627\u0646\u062a\u0647\u062a \u0628\u062e\u0633\u0627\u0631\u062a\u0647\u0645 \u0644\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0633\u0643\u0631\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u064a \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a. \u0641\u0642\u062f \u0642\u062a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0622\u0644\u0627\u0641 \u0645\u0646\u0647\u0645 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u064a\u062f \u0645\u0648\u0627\u0637\u0646\u064a\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0639\u0646\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0642\u0644\u0627\u0644. \u0623\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0630\u064a\u0646 \u0633\u0646\u062d\u062a \u0644\u0647\u0645 \u0641\u0631\u0635\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0631\u0648\u0628 \u0673\u0644\u0649 \u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u0627\u060c \u0641\u0642\u062f \u0641\u0631\u0636\u062a \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0643\u0648\u0645\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u064a\u0629 \u0673\u0642\u0627\u0645\u0629 \u062c\u0628\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u062e\u064a\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0633\u062a\u0645\u0631\u062a \u0623\u062d\u064a\u0627\u0646\u0627\u064b \u0644\u0641\u062a\u0631\u0629 \u062a\u0646\u0627\u0647\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u062a\u0629 \u0639\u0634\u0631 \u0639\u0627\u0645\u0627\u064b. \u0648\u0642\u062f \u0631\u0623\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0631\u0643\u064a\u0648\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u0627 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a\u0629 \u0673\u0647\u0627\u0646\u0629 \u0644\u0647\u0645\u060c \u0648\u0642\u062f \u0628\u0627\u0621\u062a \u0645\u062d\u0627\u0648\u0644\u062a\u0647\u0645 \u0628\u0648\u0642\u0641 \u0639\u0631\u0636\u0647\u0627 \u0628\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0634\u0644. \u0643\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0639\u062a\u0631\u0627\u0636\u0647\u0645 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062a\u0635\u0648\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0628\u0646 \u062d\u0631\u0643\u064a \u0628\u0648\u0635\u0641\u0647 \u0645\u062d\u0627\u0635\u0631\u0627\u064b \u0628\u0633\u0628\u0628 \u0642\u0631\u0627\u0631 \u0623\u0628\u064a\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0623\u0633\u0627\u0648\u064a\u060c \u0648\u0644\u0647\u0630\u0627 \u0636\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0628\u064a\u0644 \u0648\u062a\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0644\u0627\u0639\u0628 \u0628\u0647 \u0645\u0646 \u0642\u0628\u0644 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufee4\ufe86\u0633\u0633\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0633\u0643\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u0632\u0627\ufe8b\ufeae\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0673\u0633\u0644\u0627\u0645\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0641\u0631\u0646\u0633\u064a\u064a\u0646 .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nels C. 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A review of Norbert Mappes-Niediek's book \"Die Ethno-Falle\", by Jens Becker","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43293136","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theresa D. 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Addressing themselves to a variety of sites, conjunctures, and texts from around the globe, the essays deploy, test, interrogate, and revise the term, as they analyze forms of life writing that are shaped by or that shape imperialism's afterlives in the present. Singly and jointly, the articles shed light on the historical and contemporary structures that assail us, and on the possible contingencies that might counter them. Together, they convey the appositeness of \"baleful postcoloniality\" and the resistances to it as signs of and signposts to the dark yet hopeful times we inhabit.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CILAS KEMEDJIO","Alexis Pernsteiner"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17fc0e8f-9921-3bed-9c40-8ea56cc1c027"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41337121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"126","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Suspect Nation: Globalization and the Postcolonial Imaginary","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41337121","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6370,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[10562,10749],[10855,11094]],"Locations in B":[[11895,12081],[12232,12749]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles M. 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It is indeed true that the whole weight of the imperial state machine and the particular practices and messages of its ideologues were geared to produce a message or messages that reflected and bolstered the dominance of the Western imperialists. Often, this meant that the \u2018natives\u2019 were simply silenced, by use of a variety of means, ranging from outright physical repression, through censorship of different types, to","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["caliban","colonised","une temp\u00eate","c\u00e9saire","tempest","majumdar text3","prospero","tempest act","resistance","french"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph C. Miller"],"datePublished":"2007-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c683ad33-1c96-3158-8b6f-85010b8173b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27667183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Life Begins at Fifty: African Studies Enters Its Age of Awareness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27667183","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":16210,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The impending fiftieth anniversary of the African Studies Association offers the occasion for a historian to reflect on the maturation of the field as a historical process. The essay employs metaphors from human development to highlight the inevitably incremental, always partial, steps by which people\u2014including professional Africanists\u2014accomplish significant change. For African studies these steps have moved from an initial social-science orientation and reliance on the abstractions of the high modernity of the mid-twentieth century to more experiential ways of understanding that have opened the door to new epistemologically African sensibilities. Africanists based in the United States are already moving beyond the limits of the external and objectifying tendencies inherent in \"studying\" anything and instead are listening to and learning from their full partners and collaborators in and from Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald Denoon","Adam Kuper"],"datePublished":"1970-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/720209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"277","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nationalist Historians in Search of a Nation: The 'New Historiography' in Dar es Salaam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/720209","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":10273,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A.K. 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By reading Black Bloc activity into the history of women's political violence from the middle of the 18th Century onward, it becomes possible to see how the anti-globalization riot signaled a possible break from the paradigm of representational politics that dominated the 20th Century. These developments enjoin us to contemplate a post-representational politics founded on the capacity to wield \"law making\" violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Femi Abodunrin"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03062473"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47219807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234635"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3509139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearenglstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Yearbook of English Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Politics and Poetics of Otherness: A Study of Wole Soyinka's 'The Interpreters'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3509139","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maimire Mennasemay"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26586230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15434133"},{"name":"oclc","value":"742063731"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234587"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2c3f24a-f96c-3ebe-b35b-c175a9aea332"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26586230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejethistud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Ethiopian Studies","issueNumber":"1 & 2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Tsehai Publishers","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Reflections on an Oromo Aphorism and Emancipation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26586230","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":15902,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[44034,44093]],"Locations in B":[[100643,100703]],"abstract":"The article proposes a critical interpretation of the Oromo aphorism Kan darbe yaadatani, isa gara fuula dura itti yaaddui (By remembering the past, the future is remembered). It argues that the aphorism incubates a non-linear conception of history, a future oriented understanding of tradition, and a conception of emancipation that embraces political and economic democracy, social justice and cultural flourishing. The article indicates that the concepts of \u201cdecentring\u201d and \u201cfusion of horizons\u201d facilitate the nurturing of a crucial idea that gestates in the Oromo aphorism: the idea of emancipation as the means and goal of Ethiopian modernization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Mowitt"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354579","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ce0754-0da1-3723-af3f-866ccadff7e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354579"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"47","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"In the Wake of Eurocentrism: An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354579","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carlos A. J\u00e1uregui"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc0c6424-a4c4-3973-98e4-555f163156a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41350895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El \"Negro Comegente\": Terror, colonialismo y etno-pol\u00edtica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41350895","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":17212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JARED SEXTON"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62368690"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005215919"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"728380e5-83d2-3a6b-8741-ba0c868cd602"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26824949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"90","pagination":"pp. 90-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Affirmation in the Dark","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26824949","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Racial Slavery and Philosophical Pessimism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeraldine R. Kraver"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44378332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37bf4c1e-0441-391e-abbf-4575a1e366c1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44378332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ceacritic"}],"isPartOf":"CEA Critic","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"No Refuge for My Dreams: Aesthetic Imperialism in the Mexican Writings of D. H. 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I demonstrate how Kateb inflects classical tragedy's emphasis on eternal and universal suffering, with historicization and politicization. I locate Kateb's tragedies between Nietzsche's acceptance of suffering and death as the natural order of things, and Brecht's Marxist insistence on the unequivocal existential affirmation of life through understanding and enterprise. Kateb refashions the metropolitan model of ancient tragedy-both in its ideological content and in its stylistic form-with a modern political engagement. I propose that Kateb provides an exemplary dramatic template for the reflection of the complex tensions between suffering and optimism inherent in the struggle for social or political emancipation. I finally suggest that Kateb's transformation of tragedy affirms the autonomy not only of a new Algerian sovereign state, but also of his own unique anticolonial theater.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry C. 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Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Historiography of Human Rights Reflections on Paul Gordon Lauren's \"The Evolution of International Human Rights: Visions Seen\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072787","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":36269,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise Seamster","Victor Ray"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07352751"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227393"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b349b7d-cddc-31ff-9961-b539b32ef561"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26939883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socitheo"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Theory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"342","pageStart":"315","pagination":"pp. 315-342","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Against Teleology in the Study of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26939883","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":15862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"We argue that claims of racial progress rest upon untenable teleological assumptions founded in Enlightenment discourse. We examine the theoretical and methodological focus on progress and its historical roots. We argue research should examine the concrete mechanisms that produce racial stability and change, and we offer three alternative frameworks for interpreting longitudinal racial data and phenomena. The first sees racism as a \u201cfundamental cause,\u201d arguing that race remains a \u201cmaster category\u201d of social differentiation. The second builds on Glenn\u2019s \u201csettler colonialism as structure\u201d framework to describe race relations as a mutually constituted and place-based system of resource allocation. The third framework draws attention to racialized agency.","subTitle":"Toward the Abolition of the Progress Paradigm","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. Llewellyn Watson"],"datePublished":"1973-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/588377","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/588377"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Structure and Social Movements: The Black Muslims in the U. S. A. and the Ras-Tafarians in Jamaica","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/588377","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7864,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286839,286953]],"Locations in B":[[5105,5238]],"abstract":"This paper examines, by exegetical analysis, two contemporary social movements occurring in two different social structures. It seeks to throw light on the sociological categories of protest and discontent, and the relationship between these and social structural variables such as status situation. The Ras-Tafarians in Jamaica and the Black Muslims in the U.S.A. both openly reject their society. Adherents to these movements have created their own unique Weltanschauung, namely, a projection into semi-secular kingdoms: for the Ras-Tafarians Ethiopia is heaven, Haile Selassie is God; for the Muslims Allah is supreme, Islam is the black homeland. Deliverance from defined socio-economic deprivation will come not from a transcendental Christ, but from Allah and Ras-Tafari. How real are these hopes? It is concluded that both movements achieve some measure of adjustment to their unfavourable life-situations but that sociology must spell out that that which possesses Muslims and Ras-Tafarians is not a demon but the social system of which they are a part. Sociology can employ dynamic concepts to construct theories capable of predicting conditional outcomes of the conflicts which are built into social systems and which the rebels kick against. The outcome lies in this world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Milton Yinger"],"datePublished":"1968-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1037456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aff72631-df7b-3d2c-8b73-9d12c386a91a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1037456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Supplement: Recent Developments in Minority and Race Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1037456","volumeNumber":"378","wordCount":9440,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mireille Rosello"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820808","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820808"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The \"C\u00e9saire Effect,\" or How to Cultivate One's Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820808","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7781,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212684,212781]],"Locations in B":[[44332,44417]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. Kelly"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645937","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"162ee97c-ffc0-378a-8edb-ec2f450ccc0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26645937"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"1126","pageStart":"1085","pagination":"pp. 1085-1126","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"New Bedford, Capital of the 19th Century?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645937","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":14891,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Declaring New Bedford, not Paris, capital of the 19th century enables exploration of basic and yet remarkable issues in the relations of capitalism and culture. Paris, the city of light, needed New Bedford, the city that lit up the world. Following Boon, not Benjamin, takes us beyond the dazzle of commodity consumption and into the cultures of enterprise. Melville, not Marx, understands the ontology of enterprise and even its theology. And while Melville anticipates by generations Weber's interest in the complexities of Protestant ethics of the \"fighting Quakers\" and their nascent systems of company and finance, his fellow New Bedford resident Frederick Douglass explains the motives of crew, the racial history of work, and the significance of freedom in America. Benjamin's gender-challenged obsession with hunting for hidden, flashing meanings is more than matched by Boon's tactics for hunting and gathering; Boon teaches methods for non-symptomatic reading that can enable us to articulate race, company, finance and fiery hunt with fetish, class, and struggle in the history of capital. Pursuing surprises in the history of New England whaling, we juxtapose the views of C.L.R. James and D.H. Lawrence on race and colonial capitalism, as well as Edmund Burke, Henry David Thoreau, and Thorstein Veblen on the significance and politics of investment. In the end, we return to New Bedford and Paris in the 21st century, not because the dead are not safe, but because Boon has taught us to how to see new meanings living, not dead, even in the very Arcades haunted by the obsessions of Benjamin.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Just"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7a1246f-9d52-39b3-80b1-de6f0351b69f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40985334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"912","pageStart":"895","pagination":"pp. 895-912","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"From Guilt to Shame: Albert Camus and Literature's Ethical Response to Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40985334","volumeNumber":"125","wordCount":7521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Walter C. Parker","Akira Ninomiya","John Cogan"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1163536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028312"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55615299"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23ab42f5-20fe-30bc-95da-dfb98e3643ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1163536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amereducresej"}],"isPartOf":"American Educational Research Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"American Educational Research Association","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Business - Business administration"],"title":"Educating World Citizens: Toward Multinational Curriculum Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1163536","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":12943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"School curricula are virtually everywhere developed nationally and intranationally-by national or local curriculum committees. Ironically, even the portion of the curriculum that involves world study (e. g., courses in world history, world geography, world problems) is developed within nations. Has the time not come to create some portions of the school curriculum multinationally? A multinational research team from nine nations used Cultural Futures Delphi procedures to interview then survey iteratively a multinational panel drawn from an array of fields in the same nine nations. The panelists reached consensus on (a) complex global crises that humans will face in the next 25 years, (b) human characteristics needed for dealing with these crises, and (c) education strategies needed for developing these characteristics. Interpreting these findings, the research team developed a curriculum geared to the development of world citizens capable of dealing with the crises.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv9hj9pb.24","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462628"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7537dd23-05d4-3e50-9fac-3bffe0a9dc8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv9hj9pb.24"}],"isPartOf":"Indigenous Efflorescence","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"123","pagination":"123-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv9hj9pb.24","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1403,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[8661,8707]],"abstract":"Whilst the broad, contextual developments discussed in Part One of this book have enabled and supported Indigenous efflorescence, it is important to acknowledge that what has actually brought it about are the tireless efforts of Indigenous peoples themselves. Indigenous efflorescence has been driven not only by structural change, but also by the hope, tenacity and effort of Indigenous people. The individuals bringing about Indigenous efflorescence come from all walks of life: nurses, farmers, teachers, artists, journalists, chefs, lawyers, activists, livestock herders, academics, politicians and others. What they all share is a common desire to see their languages and cultures flourish","subTitle":"Practices of Efflorescence","keyphrase":["dauenhauer","karin aronsson","efflorescence subjectivities","fanon frantz","revitalisation","language","colonialism","richard dauenhauer","richard philcox","language revitalisation"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NADA ELIA"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285630","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"095ada3f-83f9-38e9-88ea-3229f1cc85f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285630"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"938","pageStart":"936","pagination":"pp. 936-938","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285630","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEORGE J. SEFA DEI"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8c6253e-ded2-3718-9f10-5184faf0c96f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: Rereading Fanon for His Pedagogy and Implications for Schooling and Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980664","volumeNumber":"368","wordCount":12543,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[73920,73981]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula \u015aledzi\u0144ska"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24635403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07031459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468000989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235758"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83e0e5c2-58d3-3b7c-b4bb-9aeb8b5140ae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24635403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajirisstud"}],"isPartOf":"The Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Canadian Journal of Irish Studies","sourceCategory":["Irish Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revisiting the Other: National Theatre of Scotland and the Mythologization of the Highlands and Islands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24635403","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Nineteenth-century Scottish cultural nationalism, largely propelled by popular works of theatre and literature, contributed to the establishment of the Highlands and Islands as a liminal, extratemporal space suspended between the reality of destitution and an enchanting dreamland, infused with poetic lore and romance. Looking back at the theatrical representations of the G\u00e0idhealtachd in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries (Isaac Pocock's Rob Roy, 1819, and John Mcgrath's The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil, 1973), this article investigates the transformation in the discursive treatment of the region in the contemporary period. Emphasizing the importance of the recent establishment and innovative character of the National Theatre of Scotland, I explore Iain Finlay Macleod's play Somersaults (2011) and David Harrower's adaptation of Calum's Road by Roger Hutchinson (2011). Examining the plays' engagement with concepts of cultural and linguistic identity, this article argues that although the perception of the G\u00e0idhealtachd as a mythologized \"other\" within the \"Scottish self\" continues to influence contemporary popular discourses, the work of the National Theatre of Scotland plays a significant role in the process of internalizing the G\u00e0idhealtachd into the complex Scottish cultural consciousness of today. Le nationalisme culturel \u00e9cossais du 19e si\u00e8cle, principalement soutenu par des \u0153uvres aussi bien au th\u00e9\u00e2tre que dans la fiction \u00e9crite, a popularis\u00e9 les Highlands et des \u00eeles en tant que territoire limitrophe et intemporel situ\u00e9 quelque part entre destitution bien r\u00e9elle et terre promise, imbue de po\u00e9sie et de romance. Cet article examine des repr\u00e9sentations de la G\u00e0idhealtachd issues de deux si\u00e8cles diff\u00e9rents, soit Rob Roy d'Isaac Pocock (1819) et The Cheviot, the Stag and the Black, Black Oil de John Mcgrath (1973) afin d'analyser la transformation dans le traitement discursif contemporain de la r\u00e9gion. En mettant l'emphase sur l'importance de la fondation r\u00e9cente du National Theatre of Scotland et de son caract\u00e8re innovateur, j'y explore les fa\u00e7ons dont les pi\u00e8ces Somersaults de Iain Finlay Macleod et l'adaptation de Calum's Road de Roger Hutchinson par David Harrower, toutes deux en 2011, les concepts de l'identit\u00e9 culturelle et linguistique, afin d'avancer qu'en d\u00e9pit du fait que la perception de la G\u00e0idhealtachd en tant \u00ab qu'autre \u00bb mythologis\u00e9 au sein de l'identit\u00e9 \u00e9cossaise continue d'influencer les discours populaires contemporains, le travail du National Theatre of Scotland joue un r\u00f4le significatif dans le processus d'internalisation de la G\u00e0idhealtachd au sein de la sensibilit\u00e9 culturelle \u00e9cossaise d'aujourd'hui.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Reid"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3876064","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3876064"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caught in the Headlights of History: Eritrea, the EPLF and the Post-War Nation-State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3876064","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"A little over a decade after the achievement of independence, Eritrea is confronted by a range of social and political problems, problems which are rooted both in the nation's past and in the ruling movement's interpretation of that past. This paper is concerned with the widening gulf between the nation-state, as envisaged by the Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) during the liberation struggle and as currently 'imagined' by the government, and the socio-political reality. Eritrean society is now marked by widening divisions between the 'struggle generation' and the membership of the former EPLF on the one hand, and large sections of the remainder of the population, notably youth. The 1998-2000 war with Ethiopia, the root causes of which are as yet unresolved, has proved more destructive than was apparent even at the time, and has been used by the state as a vindication of the EPLF's particular interpretation of the past. Political and social repression, rooted in a militaristic tradition and a profound fear of disunity, has intensified since the war. In this paper the current situation is examined in terms of the deep frustration felt by younger Eritreans, the urban-rural divide, the state-level determination to cling to the values and the aims of the liberation struggle, and the position of Eritrea in international politics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula Butler"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02295113"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c642851e-cadc-3c21-b75d-396f9c2bb31d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48648728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"refucandjrefu"}],"isPartOf":"Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Centre for Refugee Studies, York University","sourceCategory":["Population Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Law - Criminal law","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Colonial Walls","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48648728","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In May 2011, African Barrick Gold, owner of the North Mara Gold Mine in northern Tanzania, announced a plan to erect a three-metre-high concrete wall to enhance security against incursions from local (displaced) populations. Taking this wall as both metaphorical and material, this paper questions the psychological impact of displacement on \u201cdisplacers.\u201d How does this subject avoid psychic implosion? My review identifies legal infrastructure, mythologies of Canadian benevolence, CSR discourses, and community consultations as operating to provide psychic scaffolding for this dominant subject, who is thus inured against psychic distress and implosion in response to conditions of what can be deemed routine structural violence. En mai 2011, l\u2019African Barrick Gold, propri\u00e9taire de la mine d\u2019or du nord du Mara, au nord de la Tanzanie, a annonc\u00e9 le projet de construire un mur de b\u00e9ton de trois m\u00e8tres de haut afin d\u2019augmenter la s\u00e9curit\u00e9 face aux incursions des populations locales (d\u00e9plac\u00e9es). En consid\u00e9rant ce mur de fa\u00e7on mat\u00e9rielle et m\u00e9taphorique, cet article soul\u00e8ve la question de ses impacts psychologiques sur ces populations de \u00ab d\u00e9plac\u00e9s \u00bb, et demande comment les individus concern\u00e9s \u00e9viteront \u00ab l\u2019implosion psychique \u00bb. Cette \u00e9tude identifie les infrastructures l\u00e9gales, les mythologies de la bienfaisance canadienne, les discours de RSE et les consultations communautaires en tant que moyens pour fournir le soutien n\u00e9cessaire pour aguerrir les sujets contre la d\u00e9tresse psychique et l\u2019implosion en r\u00e9ponse \u00e0 des conditions pouvant \u00eatre consid\u00e9r\u00e9es comme une violence structurelle continue.","subTitle":"Psychic Strategies in Contemporary Mining-Related Displacement","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDWARD D. SULLIVAN"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26443394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0042675X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e616f39-1d8c-381f-9cab-698b8900509e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26443394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"virgquarrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Virginia Quarterly Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"University of Virginia","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE RELEVANCE OF FICTION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26443394","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claudius Fergus"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713398","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13822373"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613124167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf79977c-b0c1-33f1-a289-5c2adb8c62eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24713398"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwignewwesindgui"}],"isPartOf":"NWIG: New West Indian Guide \/ Nieuwe West-Indische Gids","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"322","pageStart":"319","pagination":"pp. 319-322","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713398","volumeNumber":"86","wordCount":1717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chester Himes","Dorothy Randall-Tsuruta"],"datePublished":"1980-09-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067991","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f731be0-a245-3db3-8e3c-9b0dbab6584f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067991"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Books Round-up #6 Fall 1980","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067991","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":22053,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Cocks"],"datePublished":"1996-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3e5e24df-9f42-3f08-b01a-d0f92b39ffd3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/191925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"537","pageStart":"518","pagination":"pp. 518-537","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Politics to Paralysis: Critical Intellectuals Answer the National Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/191925","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Mac Laughlin"],"datePublished":"1999-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43932025"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233801"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68b49188-619c-3253-95d7-a71e444af66a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42856019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociology"}],"isPartOf":"Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Political geography"],"title":"NATION-BUILDING, SOCIAL CLOSURE AND ANTI-TRAVELLER RACISM IN IRELAND","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42856019","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper examines relations between 'tinkers', or 'Travellers', and settled society in Ireland since the late nineteenth century. It argues that the racialisation and defamation of Travellers then reached new heights with the development of a rural fundamentalist nationalism which fused with Social Darwinism and caused Travellers to be treated as social anachronisms in an increasingly settled and sanitised society. This in turn meant that Travellers were located outside the moral and political structures of the Irish state and placed at the 'hostile' end of a continuum running from tradition to modernity. As a result of renewed modernisation through industrialisation in the 1970s through to the 1990s, new strategies of social closure have emerged which are causing Travellers to be located at the outer edges of Irish society. The paper finally suggests that the constant structuring and restructuring of economy and space in Ireland have fostered 'fortress' mentalities here. This is aggravating divisions, both at national and local level, between subaltern Travellers and hegemonic sectors in Irish society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Hawkins"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141828"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74e2e3ba-5e21-3aa6-a33a-68a30d293786"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25651543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh- Of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"HIJAB: FEMININE ALLURE AND CHARM TO MEN IN TUNIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25651543","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10029,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines a group of men in Tunis's old city, and the ways they watch and interact with women. It focuses on the complicated relationship between hijab and desire. Contrary to common assumptions, hijab does not necessarily reduce sexual desire in men, which takes many forms. Which women the men find attractive depends on context and the men's social identity. What appears as a common expression of desire, calling to women on the street, is oriented toward reinforcing homosocial bonds. While they may not call out to women in hijab, many young Tunisian men flirt with them because they interpret hijab as a sign the young women are interested in marriage. (Tunisia, hijab, gender, desire, sexuality)","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. E. Nunes"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"daa12738-1127-38a9-a227-0d4916904d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE NONSENSE OF NEUTRALITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861626","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl A. McLean"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10813004"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60620245"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b142f8a6-3fd6-3964-a4c4-a5b13ecd2759"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20749072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jadoladullite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"A Space Called Home: An Immigrant Adolescent's Digital Literacy Practices","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20749072","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":6699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ckpc18.16","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c2a3b06-17a1-3fdb-80d0-be398aa96d0d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt1ckpc18.16"}],"isPartOf":"Home-Work","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"229","pagination":"229-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"How Long Is Your Sentence?:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt1ckpc18.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This cranky academic discussion has two aims. One is to explore the uncanny presence of social class (more precisely, working classes) within the Canadian literatures\u2014and how this ghostly revenant conjures in the classroom the related spectres of law, transgression, and power. To teach the reality of social class as both a literary trope and a socio-political category, in other words, raises issues concerning, not solely pedagogy or social hierarchy, but personal agency, identity politics, and subject formation. In this modest proposal I share an understanding with my friend, Alan Lawson, who approaches postcolonialism as \u201ca textual effect, as a","subTitle":"Classes, Pedagogies, Canadian Literatures","keyphrase":["julienne","pedagogy","gary boire","postcolonial","willinsky","decolonizing","decolonizing the classroom","classroom","canadian","canadian literatures"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HERBERT F. GOODRICH, JR.","ROBERT J. SUGARMAN"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40685009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00076899"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dd4d9b3-2328-3165-b952-ff33eede3223"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40685009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"busilawyer"}],"isPartOf":"The Business Lawyer","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"369","pagination":"pp. 369-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"American Bar Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN THE GHETTOES: SOME PHILADELPHIA EXPERIENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40685009","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5602,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eliza Noh"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Problematics of Transnational Feminism for Asian American Women","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949869","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Naremore"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2010.63.4.18","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38650abd-7d4c-3159-8f27-3640339c0442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2010.63.4.18"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Films of the Year, 2009","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2010.63.4.18","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":9882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article presents reviews of the author's selection of the best films released in the U.S. in 2009: Police, Adjective; Shirin; Tulpan; Henri-Georges Clouzot's Inferno; 35 Shots of Rum; The Hurt Locker; Sita Sings the Blues; Me and Orson Welles; Summer Hours; Eccentricities of a Blonde-Haired Girl.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cyrus Vakili-Zad"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4283811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630355"},{"name":"lccn","value":"65-009869"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ab51e2c-add7-3893-bf91-9c25316b0cab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4283811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Collision of Consciousness: Modernization and Development in Iran","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4283811","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":10364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Machira Apollos"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43661157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2be118e-a547-3046-8bcc-107ed0dbe50a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43661157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"99","pagination":"pp. 99-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnicity, Violence and Democracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43661157","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":14479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Bolden"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44324394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"oclc","value":"654297943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90fc6349-a1ba-39f3-b817-2475b27954ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44324394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Racial Contract: Ferguson as Metonymy\u2014Why Now?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44324394","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":8971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harrison Adewale Idowu"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48678871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6c11a2e-7457-302e-a2cc-3974067afec7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48678871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"African Culture and the Quest for Sustainable and Improved Indigenous Knowledge Production","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48678871","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Culture is the way of life of a people. But Western culture has deprived Africa of most of its cultural practices and values. The jettisoning of the African way of life for a Western one has affected indigenous knowledge production. Beaming the light on South Africa and Nigeria, this article interrogates the impact of culture\/African ways of knowing on indigenous knowledge production in Africa, and unravels how much Africa has been able to incorporate its culture in knowledge production systems amid the penetration and preponderance of alien culture. It relies on historical perspective and document analysis. The article finds that African ways of knowing have been largely eroded in Nigeria, and that South Africa fares better but still faces some challenges. This has negatively affected the quest for sustained and improved indigenous knowledge production, vis-\u00e0-vis finding lasting solutions to the peculiar political, economic and social problems in these countries. It concludes that if Nigeria and South Africa, and indeed the African continent, are to attain sustainable and improved indigenous knowledge production, they must preserve African ways of knowing, without which indigenous knowledge production will remain in the abyss. La culture est le mode de vie d\u2019un peuple. Mais la culture occidentale a priv\u00e9 l\u2019Afrique de la plupart de ses pratiques et valeurs culturelles. L\u2019abandon du mode de vie africain pour un mode de vie occidental a affect\u00e9 la production de connaissances indig\u00e8nes. Mettant la lumi\u00e8re sur l\u2019Afrique du Sud et le Nig\u00e9ria, cet article interroge l\u2019impact de la culture\/modes de connaissance africains sur la production de connaissances indig\u00e8nes en Afrique, et r\u00e9v\u00e8le \u00e0 quel point l\u2019Afrique a int\u00e9gr\u00e9 sa culture dans les syst\u00e8mes de production de connaissances dans un contexte de p\u00e9n\u00e9tration et de pr\u00e9pond\u00e9rance de cultures \u00e9trang\u00e8res. L\u2019article s\u2019appuie sur la perspective historique et l\u2019analyse de documents. Il constate des modes de connaissance africains largement \u00e9rod\u00e9s au Nigeria, quand l\u2019Afrique du Sud s\u2019en sort mieux mais reste confront\u00e9e \u00e0 des d\u00e9fis. Cela a eu un impact n\u00e9gatif sur la recherche d\u2019une production durable et am\u00e9lior\u00e9e de connaissances endog\u00e8nes, ainsi que sur la recherche de solutions durables aux probl\u00e8mes politiques, \u00e9conomiques et sociaux sp\u00e9cifiques \u00e0 ces pays. L\u2019article conclut que si le Nigeria et l\u2019Afrique du Sud, et m\u00eame le continent africain, veulent parvenir \u00e0 une production de connaissances endog\u00e8nes durable et am\u00e9lior\u00e9e, ils doivent pr\u00e9server les modes de connaissance africains, sans lesquels la production de connaissances autochtones restera dans les ab\u00eemes.","subTitle":"Nigeria and South Africa in Perspective","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Allan Francovich"],"datePublished":"1969-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1210524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"426d3e8e-853d-3096-af3a-10e14da76ced"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1210524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1210524","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":1499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CATHERINE KROLL"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979957","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ba18075-bfa1-36d3-be1c-faade58174a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979957"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER ONE: Imagining Ourselves into Transcultural Spaces: Decentering Whiteness in the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979957","volumeNumber":"321","wordCount":8143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. S. ATIENO-ODHIAMBO"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75be7d7a-0f20-32ad-895b-53cca04e6395"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43658217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"THE SONG OF THE VULTURES\": A Case Study of Misconceptions about Nationalism in Kenya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43658217","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":5937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Dyer"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c33a94fb-8288-3102-ae84-2679531c516c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"167","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-167","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Class and Anticolonial Politics in Harold Pinter and Joseph Losey's The Servant<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.4.147","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Critics of The Servant (1963), based on the 1948 novel by Robin Maugham, have not examined the London-set film's many allusions to the global South. However, the screenwriter's and director's archives as well as many aspects of the film \u2014 including wardrobe, set design, music, and dialogue \u2014 reveal the significance of these references. Departing from Maugham's novel, Pinter and Losey portray the master as an African plantation owner's son with a plan to \u201cclear the jungle\u201d in Brazil. These additions to the narrative connect domestic servitude and abuses of power within Britain to the international division of labor established during colonial conquest and align the film's class commentary with the anticolonial movements underway in the 1960s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rajeev Patel","Philip McMichael"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993786","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f11e405e-850e-33da-aa47-ae2c4f2d7ebf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3993786"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"254","pageStart":"231","pagination":"pp. 231-254","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Third Worldism and the Lineages of Global Fascism: The Regrouping of the Global South in the Neoliberal Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3993786","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13089,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[79250,79296]],"abstract":"We come to an analysis of Third Worldism through an historical understanding of the development project, one that locates Third Worldism as a moment in a broader series of resistances both to capital and colonialism, and to the techniques used by the state to maintain hegemony. Viewing Third Worldism in this wider context, we argue, enables us to not only explain the failure of Third Worldism to deliver on its vision of emancipation from colonialism, but to also explain the shape of contemporary resistance to the world capitalist order. We argue that the theory and practice of development depends on a certain biopolitics, rooted in a regime of sovereign state control, and designed to mobilise citizens in ways favourable to capital. We hold that Third Worldism embraced this form of sovereignty and its biopolitics. Further, by blending cultural studies analysis with a Polanyian interpretation of the rise of fascism, we argue that Third Worldism can be situated as a moment in the maturation of 'global fascism'. Finally, we argue that contemporary resistances to neoliberalism have recognised the complicity of the state with capital. These 'new internationalisms' arise from the ashes of Third Worldism, with an altered understanding of 'sovereignty' that challenges the trajectory of the Third World sovereign state.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wenying Xu"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86c287ba-694d-3339-9440-304a7836d577"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4539809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"66","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"78","pagination":"pp. 78-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Masculinity, Food, and Appetite in Frank Chin's \"Donald Duk\" and \"The Eat and Run Midnight People\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539809","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George A. Kelly"],"datePublished":"1983-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2504935","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075028"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227189"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2504935"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historytheory"}],"isPartOf":"History and Theory","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Wesleyan University","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2504935","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":7688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Murungi"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1535097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15484505"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137807"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236883"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"02cd1e89-12a4-3fce-af6f-69b3d0450695"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1535097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanissues"}],"isPartOf":"African Issues","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Academy and the Crisis of African Governance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1535097","volumeNumber":"31\/32","wordCount":7362,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khawaja Alqama"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41394449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0030980X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"06e36122-b1a4-359a-8e94-28710dc91ddf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41394449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pakistanhorizon"}],"isPartOf":"Pakistan Horizon","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Pakistan Institute of International Affairs","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Blueprint for a Better Islamic Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41394449","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":4377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Harvey Brown"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579889","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba702408-9ee6-3513-9d6b-4fc7fe108329"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2579889"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"676","pageStart":"657","pagination":"pp. 657-676","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Representation and Ideological Domination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2579889","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":10261,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay shows how logical classifications - such as good-bad, high-low, black-white - become ordered into moral hierarchies that help create and legitimate social hierarchies of domination. It extends labeling theory and discourse analysis to macrosocial and intercivilizational phenomena, focusing on how classifications make what they pretend merely to describe. I examine devices by which cultural representation becomes ideological domination in specific cases: colonial encounters in the Americas, Africa, and India; parallel discourses of slavery in medieval Islam and the early United States; how British colonial ethnography in Afghanistan created an Other appropriate to the needs of exploration, frontier management, and imperial bureaucracy. Discourses of domination also dominate the masters, because the constitution of a colonized Alter requires reconstitution of the colonial Ego. Discourses of domination can also become rhetorics of resistance, inverting the master categories and reclassifying them into more embracing conceptions of the human","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vivaldi Jean-Marie"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42265cdf-512f-3cf8-a399-e3777bbbf388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752153","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This piece argues that Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks inscribes the social and psychological experience of the African Diaspora within the conceptual purview of the western sciences by the means of psychoanalytical and philosophical concepts. The upshots of Fanon's goal are twofold. Its first implication is that in employing psychoanalytical and philosophical lingo, Fanon commits to delineating a distinct tenet of self-determination for the African Diaspora. Such tenet of self-determination consists in a set of norms, beliefs, socio-cultural, and political practices. Secondly, besides the stated goal in the Introduction, namely to 'liberate the black individual from herself,' Fanon is attempting to alter the European perception of black communities as sexual and biological threats. Accordingly, this piece concludes that Fanon's successful inscription of the psychological and lived experiences of the African Diaspora in the western sciences, via his psychoanalytical and philosophical rendition, is hampered by the European perception of black bodies which prevents their complete scientific conceptualization.","subTitle":"The Irreducibility of Black Bodies","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DANIEL L. RACINE"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44177206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00282529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41991556-a9e8-3650-8009-f6b24d30122d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44177206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"negrhistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Negro History Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A PROFILE OF LEON-GONTRAN DAMAS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44177206","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3896,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glen Bush"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b38fd412-d821-3cc2-b0c2-f09d6e43793b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/525640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/525640","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam Moyo"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a677121-7e42-35c0-828f-a0c210fd897f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24483903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Land in the Political Economy of African Development: Alternative Strategies for Reform","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24483903","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":14659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since 2000, there has been an escalation of land-related conflicts in Zimbabwe, C\u00f4te d'Ivoire, the Delta region of Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa. These conflicts are examples of numerous national struggles for access to land in Africa and reflect the failure of the African state to address the land and development nexus on the continent. The land question in Africa is a by-product of globalised control of land, natural resources and minerals in general, reflecting incomplete decolonisation processes in ex-settler colonies along with the penchant for foreign 'investment' in a neo-liberal policy framework that marginalises the rural and urban poor. Global finance capital is increasingly entangled in conflicts over land, as the exploitation of oil, minerals and natural resources expands into new African enclaves that highlight the external dimension of distorted development. These processes define the significance of land in the political economy of African development. This paper examines the complex social and political contradictions that shape land struggles, including their colonial and post-independence trajectory. The failures of neo-liberal land reforms, based on market forces and their confrontation by popular demands for redistributive reforms are discussed. Depuis l'an 2000, il y a eu une escalade de conflits li\u00e9s \u00e0 la terre au Zimbabwe, en C\u00f4te d'Ivoire, dans la r\u00e9gion du Delta au Nigeria et ailleurs en Afrique. Ces conflits sont des exemples des nombreuses luttes pour l'acc\u00e8s \u00e0 la terre en Afrique, et refl\u00e8tent l'incapacit\u00e9 de l'Etat Africain \u00e0 aborder le lien entre terre et d\u00e9veloppement sur le continent. La question fonci\u00e8re en Afrique est un sousproduit du contr\u00f4le plan\u00e9taire de la terre, des ressources naturelles et mini\u00e8res en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral, qui refl\u00e8te le processus incomplet de d\u00e9colonisation dans les anciennes colonies de peuplement de m\u00eame que l'inclination en faveur de \u00ab l'investissement \u00bb \u00e9tranger dans un cadre de politique n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9rale qui marginalise les pauvres des zones rurales et urbaines. Le capital financier mondial est de plus en plus enchev\u00eatr\u00e9 dans les conflits fonciers, au fur et \u00e0 mesure que l'exploitation du p\u00e9trole, des minerais et des ressources naturelles s'est \u00e9tendue dans de nouvelles enclaves africaines qui mettent en exergue la dimension externe du d\u00e9veloppement d\u00e9voy\u00e9. Ces processus d\u00e9finissent la signification de la terre dans l'\u00e9conomie politique du d\u00e9veloppement africain. Cette \u00e9tude examine les contradictions sociales et politiques complexes qui fa\u00e7onnent les luttes pour la terre, y compris leur trajectoire coloniale et post-ind\u00e9pendance. Il y est discut\u00e9 de l'\u00e9chec des r\u00e9formes fonci\u00e8res n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9rales, reposant sur les lois du march\u00e9, et leur confrontation aux demandes populaires de r\u00e9formes en vue d'une redistribution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. L. Fisher"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt24hd4n.16","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781921666148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dfd6c46-b16d-34b8-9c01-9a6b87e4604a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt24hd4n.16"}],"isPartOf":"Pioneers, Settlers, Aliens, Exiles","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"239","pagination":"239-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt24hd4n.16","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10751,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["zimbabwe","harare","rhodesia","bookindb","printer harare","raftopoulos","ebert stiftung","friedrich ebert","zimbabwe injustice","weaver press harare"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anjuli I. Gunaratne"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d55c34f-8434-3718-aecb-c393a717163b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Writing Traumatic Time\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752177","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":15230,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay reads Sylvia Wynter's only novel The Hills of Hebron (1962) as a modern tragedy, one that both challenges and builds upon Raymond Williams's concept of modern tragedy. The essay's main argument is that tragedy, as a literary form, and the tragic, as a philosophical concept, are fundamental to Wynter's project of creating forms of counterpoieses. Engaging Wynter's interlocution with tragedy is crucial for comprehending how she is able to transform loss into a condition of possibility, primarily for the writing of what she calls \"traumatic time.\" Instead of only blocking mental representation, traumatic loss in Wynter becomes the first gesture of a philosophical activity that makes presentable that which has been lost or abandoned to a state of ruin, an argument that Walter Benjamin, another writer in dark times, had earlier made in The Origin of German Tragic Drama. Occupying the temporality of the tragic, Wynter has always made the reassumption of the past\u2014\"slave, slave masters and all,\" as she says\u2014central to her project of critiquing and dismantling the \"descriptive statement\" of Man as the only permissible version of the Human. In my reading of The Hills of Hebron, I show how the novel utilizes the aesthetic, particularly the medium of theatricality, as the grounds for a theoretical framework that makes, in a manner redolent of Antigone, \"the wretched of the earth\" presentable not as \"symbolic death\" but rather as allegories of resistance.","subTitle":"The Tragic Art and Thought of Sylvia Wynter","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Siba N. 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It claims that the particular way in which the idea of narrative identity is elaborated raises difficulties for a feminist understanding of gender identity. The syncretic and over generalised idea of narrative identity derived from communitarian thought ode snot adequately grasp important aspects of the ways in which gender inequalities are constructed.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Robinson","Jennifer Hudson"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26209973","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15210235"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b1c90b6-9a77-36ee-ba39-40f5f56900e2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26209973"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willintelawdisp"}],"isPartOf":"Willamette Journal of International Law and Dispute Resolution","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"366","pageStart":"335","pagination":"pp. 335-366","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Willamette University College of Law","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RESTORATIVE JUSTICE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26209973","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":12737,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"A TYPOLOGY AND CRITICAL APPRAISAL","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sibel Bozdogan"],"datePublished":"1999-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425410","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10464883"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44788261"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-213519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94e9e210-8657-3aad-8f16-3a134981c29e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1425410"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarcheduc1984"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Architectural Education (1984-)","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Architecture & Architectural History","Social Sciences","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Architectural History in Professional Education: Reflections on Postcolonial Challenges to the Modern Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1425410","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":8009,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In recent years, our inherited architectural culture, which privileges the autonomy of form and the paradigmatic status of the western tradition, has been contested from a range of critical perspectives. In this article I address some of the new challenges that architectural history faces today and contemplate two questions with important implications for teaching survey courses. First, how does one make architectural history less Eurocentric and more cross-cultural without either naturalizing the cultural difference of \"others\" or essentializing these differences into incommensurable categories? Second, how does one talk about the politics of architecture without reducing architecture to politics?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cecil A. 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South Sudan needed a national dialogue immediately after the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and it had another opportunity after the declaration of independence, but it was also missed. The on-going crisis calls for a comprehensive dialogue to resolve the political, military and civil grievances that lie at the root of the conflict. The ruling elite\u2019s manipulation of the military and ethnicity to maximize their power gain remains a serious threat to national cohesion and","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1970-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0017257X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45eccf10-cf1e-3c15-a228-0a554599609f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44482720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"goveoppo"}],"isPartOf":"Government and Opposition","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Front Matter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44482720","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":1492,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[82,158]],"Locations in B":[[5823,5903]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Barsamian"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49cd6f38-6151-3950-89b9-29345927c488"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25091695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"449","pagination":"pp. 449-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eqbal Ahmad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25091695","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip M. Allen"],"datePublished":"1988-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1046281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8211b9b2-6bb0-3a63-a06b-008dfc4c8ffa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1046281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1046281","volumeNumber":"500","wordCount":1865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANGELA NAIMOU"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f31427c2-bed6-301f-9f83-f737ad58a63f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24543221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MASKING FANON","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24543221","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11606,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since his death in 1962, Frantz Fanon has been an elusive and spectral figure, subjected to an endless process of academic, cultural, and political prosopopoeia. This essay reads John Edgar Wideman's 2008 novel Fanon as a novel that narrates its own failure to give voice to Fanon's life and legacy, a failure that paradoxically enables Wideman to experiment with alternative narrative modes for representing the human personality as a literary and legal category. Wideman's novel invokes narrative genres of personal development that delineate the well-developed person as the normative subject of international human rights and civil law, only to disrupt these genres by subjecting them to processes of fracture and incorporation adapted from Romare Bearden's collage aesthetics. In the novel Fanon, Wideman's collage technique adapts the historical Fanon's trope of the mask in his theories of the human personality in order to refashion the figure of the person as a mask of legal personhood. In doing so, Fanon challenges the figure of the person that lies at the core of contemporary human rights discourse.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tyler Stovall","Eva Montero","Hasan G. L\u00f3pez Sanz"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/pasajes.44.6","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15752259"},{"name":"oclc","value":"818673107"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49cf749b-e864-35e2-a14b-43522a91d821"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/pasajes.44.6"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pasajes"}],"isPartOf":"Pasajes","issueNumber":"44","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Publicacions Universitat de Valencia","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Universalismo, diferencia e invisibilidad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/pasajes.44.6","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Ensayo sobre la noci\u00f3n de raza en la historia de la Francia contempor\u00e1nea","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward Friedman"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41950494","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09706402"},{"name":"oclc","value":"605555348"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8fa1ce8-b151-3840-a48f-85a9452643b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41950494"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijasiaaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Journal of Asian Affairs","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Manju Jain","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Persistent Invisibility of Rural Suffering in China","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41950494","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erskine Childers"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356416","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022197X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24356416"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TECHNICAL CO-OPERATION AMONG DEVELOPING COUNTRIES: History and Prospects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24356416","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":12613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olli Alho"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4194194","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00016993"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51540545"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-233684"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"133dba9d-a698-391a-bd92-cbb829c7b0bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4194194"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"actasoci"}],"isPartOf":"Acta Sociologica","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Historical methodology","Philosophy - Logic"],"title":"The Incidence of the Terror: Some Lessons for Quantitative History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3786252","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10827,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manning Marable"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1347694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03611299"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb742a2e-edbe-3123-97e7-52b50d265b4e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1347694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevilang"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"248","pagination":"pp. 248-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Meaning of Faith in the Black Mind in Slavery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1347694","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":6427,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul C. Sondrol"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/157386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022216X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a2b2e4e-ca7f-3ce0-8a0c-9c1d265b6b47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/157386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatiamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"599","pagination":"pp. 599-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Totalitarian and Authoritarian Dictators: A Comparison of Fidel Castro and Alfredo Stroessner","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/157386","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":8931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elbaki Hermassi"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7e0d793-b6eb-3483-a295-3740b7fd6aa4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"211","pagination":"pp. 211-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward a Comparative Study of Revolutions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178129","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":11372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfredo Gonz\u00e1lez-Ruibal","Yonatan Sahle","Xurxo Ay\u00e1n Vila"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00438243"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52a25141-81c5-38f6-abb1-486b1a797008"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41308477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worldarchaeology"}],"isPartOf":"World Archaeology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A social archaeology of colonial war in Ethiopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41308477","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":10160,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The archaeology of twentieth-century warfare, with its focus on Western armies and military issues, has often neglected indigenous experiences of war and social aspects, particularly the role of women in reproducing culture through material practices in situations of great distress. In this article, we propose a postcolonial examination of imperialistic war in Ethiopia. We study the cave of Zeret, the refuge of a large guerrilla group that was massacred by the Italian colonial army in 1939. Using the material evidence available, life underground is described, as well as the military events that led to the destruction of the place and the killing of most of its inhabitants. We argue that archaeology can be a way of revealing, with material facts, the brutality of fascism and colonialism. Finally, drawing upon Spivak and Derrida, we ask: What are the ethical problems of representing the voice of the subaltern? What is the role of materiality in evoking her presence?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ilana Feldman"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"853285c9-48a8-31f2-9540-23fc9687d3e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3879346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"891","pageStart":"863","pagination":"pp. 863-891","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Everyday Government in Extraordinary Times: Persistence and Authority in Gaza's Civil Service, 1917-1967","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3879346","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REINALDO SILVA"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41693901","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15530981"},{"name":"oclc","value":"77079275"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216550"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41693901"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"marktwaij"}],"isPartOf":"The Mark Twain Annual","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Colonial Myopia to Cosmopolitan Clear-sightedness and Back Again: Twain's Imperial Relapses in Backward, Rural Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41693901","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8125,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. S. Miller"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041535","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b954585a-ff5b-3ed8-bc51-f093b2f90330"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3041535"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Cleaver and Juminer: Black Man and White Woman","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041535","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6812,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Glenn A. Trager"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08976546"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50528700"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213735"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e36376dd-a199-3f00-8c42-b71d7fba8b68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40783021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocialinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Social Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"367","pageStart":"339","pagination":"pp. 339-367","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Bar Foundation","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Loosing the Dragon: Charismatic Legal Action and the Construction of the Taiping Legal Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40783021","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article develops the notion of legal charisma by analyzing the Taiping Rebellion in mid-nineteenth-century China. The concept of legal charisma seeks to capture those normally inchoate aspects of law that transcend its institutionalized incarnations and empower its subjects to act out visions of the universal, often in anarchic and unpredictable ways. The article further suggests that such charismatic legal behavior, in spite of its anarchic qualities, provides an important means through which systems of legal authority revitalize and strengthen their hold over legal subjects. The Taiping Rebellion provides an example of both these facets of legal charisma; the rebellion drew on visions of collective empowerment inherent in a newly articulated legal code to act out a challenge to existing social institutions \u2014 even as this same code came to assert an ever-tightening grip on the lives of the Taiping population.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Enrique Martino"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03615413"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56138172"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236879"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbbe5902-30dd-39b8-988e-7acf57e3971a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26362096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyafrica"}],"isPartOf":"History in Africa","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"387","pagination":"pp. 387-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Computer law"],"title":"Open Sourcing the Colonial Archive \u2013 A Digital Montage of the History of Fernando P\u00f3 and the Bight of Biafra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26362096","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":14141,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[150158,150217]],"Locations in B":[[10768,10827]],"abstract":"The archival sources gathered for my PhD research have all been posted to a blog, opensourceguinea.org. Among other things, the sources trace the migrants and laborers in and around the plantation island of Fernando P\u00f3, moving through numerous empires and societies in Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Cameroon and Gabon for most of the twentieth century. Having sources \u201cspeak for themselves\u201d to the \u201cpublic\u201d and even \u201camongst themselves\u201d contributes not only to an expansionary information commons, but also to a methodological reorganization and pluralization. When a multiplicity of sources are displayed and interlinked as hypertext, the static conceptual lenses of traditional social and cultural history dissolve. Les sources d\u2019archives collect\u00e9es dans le cadre de ma th\u00e8se de doctorat ont \u00e9t\u00e9 toutes post\u00e9es sur un blog, opensourceguinea.org. Entre autres, les sources retracent l\u2019histoire des migrants et travailleurs dans et autour de l\u2019ile \u00e0 plantations de Fernando Po, traversant des nombreux empires et soci\u00e9t\u00e9s dans la Guin\u00e9e \u00e9quatoriale, le Nigeria, le Cameroun et le Gabon pendant la plupart du XXe si\u00e8cle. Ayant les sources \u201cparl\u00e9 pour elles-m\u00eames\u201d au \u201cpublic\u201d et aussi \u201centre elles-m\u00eames,\u201d celles-ci contribuent non seulement \u00e0 partager les documents num\u00e9ris\u00e9s, mais aussi \u00e0 une r\u00e9organisation et une pluralisation m\u00e9thodologique. Lorsqu\u2019une multiplicit\u00e9 de sources sont d\u00e9ploy\u00e9es et interconnect\u00e9es comme hypertexte, les filtres conceptuels statiques de l\u2019histoire culturelle et sociale traditionnelle se dissolvent.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Brett"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/181341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed15bba5-e035-3c7b-a2e5-b451bd0b8c10"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/181341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Continuity and Change: Egypt and North Africa in the Nineteenth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/181341","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":8706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Dommisse"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45140200","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee451414-b609-3998-b32b-57a639850797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45140200"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Health sciences - Health and wellness","Political science - Military science"],"title":"APARTHEID AS A PUBLIC MENTAL HEALTH ISSUE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45140200","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The most serious hazard to the physical and mental health of the majority rural poor black population in South Africa is caused by the ruling wealthy white minority's policy of apartheid. Forced removals and dumping of millions of people into small, disconnected, barren, poor reserve areas, bereft of adequate medical, psychiatric and public health services (the 'final solution' of the 'native problem') causes widespread malnutrition, infectious and other diseases, and high mortality and mentalillness rates. Blacks and progressive whites are banned, terrorized, detained without trial, tortured, and murdered by the state; the Africans are not only disfranchised but are now also being denationalized and deprived of their ancient birthright to this richly-endowed part of Africa. Acceptance of this modern version of Naziism by the World Psychiatric Association and the World Medical Association, in the face of adequate information provided by the United Nations, its agency the World Health Organization, the American Psychiatric Association, and numerous other agencies and reports, needs urgent examination and decisive action.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Priya Venkatesan Hays"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646892547"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011202778"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0570c76-dffc-39a1-8c3e-125b4c60a289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epistemic Cross Talk:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/intelitestud.15.2.0221","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article considers the roles of interdisciplinarity as both scholarly activity and social process and their implications for both academia and society. In addressing the interdisciplinarity between the sciences and humanities, rather than emphasizing antagonism, the article asserts that as science grows and expands, so will the humanities, because they both ask and answer separate sets of questions that have distinct intellectual significance and fulfill distinct social needs, which are not necessarily transposed onto neat hierarchical categories, disciplinary or otherwise. These distinctions between the sciences and the humanities are maintained through disciplinary programs emphasizing the epistemic foundations of science and the rhetorical basis of the humanities. In other words, it comes down to episteme. The article also considers the disciplinary confines of science studies and the interdisciplinary program of bioethics and suggests similar epistemic cross talk between the two. It concludes by stating that pursuing interdisciplinarity meets both scholarly and social needs more than would be achieved through solely disciplinary specialization.","subTitle":"Why We Need\u2014and Should Desire\u2014Interdisciplinarity","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SHERALLY MUNSHI"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26425324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0002919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"52899623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b31c3838-f509-3682-a5fe-846c299e9b28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26425324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjcomplaw"}],"isPartOf":"The American Journal of Comparative Law","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"207","pagination":"pp. 207-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comparative Law and Decolonizing Critique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26425324","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":13436,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This Article seeks to reanimate comparative legal scholarship by reorienting it towards decolonizing critique. In his critical assessment of the state of the field, Pierre Legrand suggests that comparative law has become mired in a solipsistic and outmoded style of positivism. Drawing upon theoretical insights from critical theory, Legrand argues that comparative law might render itself more generative and more relevant by engaging in a more contextualized analysis of law and encouraging active interpretation beyond descriptive reporting. This Article extends Legrand\u2019s arguments to suggest that an emancipated, incorporative, and interdisciplinary comparative law might play an important role in decolonizing legal scholarship more broadly. Founded in a commitment to constrain an ethnocentric impulse in legal discourse, comparative law might be expanded to challenge the varieties of Eurocentrism that continue to define legal scholarship and study, while providing hospitable ground for critical and interdisciplinary projects aimed at exploring the colonial roots of both the contemporary nation-state system and globalized racial formations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph Pugliese"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.247","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07c8585b-087f-3e1a-9a9a-94516af4ee72"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.247"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"276","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-276","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Abu Ghraib and its Shadow Archives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2007.19.2.247","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The focus of this essay is on the visual conditions of possibility that underpin the Abu Ghraib torture photographs. In the course of the essay, I proceed to map the codes, conventions, technologies, aesthetics, and visual archives that enable both acts of torture and their visual representation. By situating the Abu Ghraib torture photographs within Orientalist, fascist, and white supremacist shadow archives, I analyse those points of intersection between genealogies of technopolitico-military power and visual regimes of subjugation, mastery, violence, and torture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Disavowing Decolonization: Fanon, Nationalism, and the Problematic of Representation in Current Theories of Colonial Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820255","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":17818,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442],[392120,392241],[484027,484254]],"Locations in B":[[23873,23958],[26063,26187],[28670,28905]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sally Engle Merry"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3053874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00239216"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50059353"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0f2663b3-ec1e-3d33-a09b-34132949063e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3053874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawsocietyreview"}],"isPartOf":"Law & Society Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"922","pageStart":"889","pagination":"pp. 889-922","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Law","History","Political Science","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Law and Colonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3053874","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":16168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khondlo Mtshali"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468119","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2998fbc3-05d5-33dd-b9ba-33f0f1e40d7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40468119"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Journey of a Healing Community in Ayi Kwei Armah's \"Two Thousand Seasons\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40468119","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Basing itself on the African belief system's postulation of three dimensions of experience, this paper argues that Ayi Kwei Armah's \"Two Thousand Seasons\" articulates the journey of a healing community from the realm of the godhead through the realm of the ancestors into the realm of the living. The journey commences with an initial stability in the realm of the godhead that is disrupted by internal and external forces. While the resulting southward migration of the people of Anoa mimics the journey through the African belief systems' ancestral region, the crossing of the bog symbolizes the birth of a healing community.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick J. Lewis","H. Monty Montgomery","Craig A. Campbell","Heather Ritenburg","Marcelo Diversi"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2013.6.4.478","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19408447"},{"name":"oclc","value":"182857858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216447"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e399ad6e-f3a0-32f8-b773-2e492dfec132"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/irqr.2013.6.4.478"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevquares"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Qualitative Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"486","pageStart":"478","pagination":"pp. 478-486","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Communication Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Initiating a New Story","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/irqr.2013.6.4.478","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":3314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In May 2011, at the seventh annual gathering of the Congress of Qualitative Inquiry (QI), Norman Denzin organized two town hall meetings for anyone interested in exploring the idea of creating an Indigenous Qualitative Inquiry preconference day. In this article, we share the story of a small group that met to imagine into being the first Indigenous Qualitative Inquiry preconference day at the Eighth QI Congress in May 2012. We share the call that connected our work with others, describe the events of the preconference day, and share our hope for Indigenizing the academy \u2013 a journey of hope that we acknowledge requires careful navigation as we endeavour to move respectfully and in a good way for and toward transformative change.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John H. Hanson"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/530138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f43cd80e-ba3b-349d-ab16-2ea2ae632af5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/530138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1569","pageStart":"1568","pagination":"pp. 1568-1569","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reviews of Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/530138","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":1860,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981355","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9a2ff01b-25f8-31a6-9a81-6da18ad12ee9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981355"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981355","volumeNumber":"366","wordCount":2356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leah Gordon"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11d1c8d2-c793-37e4-b2d2-edfe7fff635f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Emasculated Possession: The Photographic Representation of Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715193","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":3718,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amitava Kumar"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"95bdd0cf-84a0-3aa6-a25f-65059b78ed4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"909","pageStart":"894","pagination":"pp. 894-909","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Poet's Corpse in the Capitalist's Fish Tank","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344053","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5747,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mar\u00eda In\u00e9s Lagos"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40151609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40151609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"732","pageStart":"726","pagination":"pp. 726-732","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Displaced Subjects: Valenzuela and the Metropolis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40151609","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":6963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BART van LEEUWEN","KAREN VINTGES"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928644","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf3cd2d6-aee4-3341-aeb8-5808c753a152"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40928644"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"674","pageStart":"653","pagination":"pp. 653-674","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"A Dream, Dreamed by Reason . . . Hollow Like All Dreams\": French Existentialism and Its Critique of Abstract Liberalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40928644","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":11129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The recent chiming of Simone de Beauvoir's legacy by French feminists for a policy of assimilation of Muslim women to Western models of self and society reduces the complexity and richness of Beauvoir's views in inacceptable ways. This article explores to what extent a politics of difference that challenges the ideals and political strategies of abstract liberalism can be extracted from and legitimized by the philosophies of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre. Without assuming their thought is identical, we can read them as elucidating each other and as implicitly exposing weak and strong points in their respective philosophies on ethnocultural rehtions and social identities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Mwangi Kagwanja"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"677804cd-6d34-3c75-b1bf-9af8490deeec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Globalizing Ethnicity, Localizing Citizenship: Globalization, Identity Politics and Violence in Kenya's Tana River Region","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484565","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":17092,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper is about the ways in which forces of globalization have impacted on, and shaped the construction of, citizenship in Africa generally and Kenya in particular. It is also about globalization and violence associated with the resurgence of ethnic nationalism. The empirical part of the paper focuses on Tana River region, a marginalized, poor and bandit-prone multi-ethnic region on the delta of Kenya's largest river. The region's proximity to Somalia, where the state has collapsed and warlords hold sway, has also exposed the region to the effects of cross-border flows of firearms, 'mercenaries' and bandits. Moreover, the World Bank has funded several projects in Tana River, but its funding, management policies and the overall impact of the investments have accentuated ethnic conflict within and between herders and farmers over water-points, pasture and farmlands. These conflicts have engendered the reconstruction of new ethnic identities and alliances, and the selective use of historical memories and cultural institutions to buttress exclusive claims to territorial citizenship. These localized processes are linked to ethnic contests at the civic realm by intense politicization of citizenship as a logical consequence of liberal majoritarian democracy in ethnically divided polities. The paper maps the contours of the historical process through which globalization has undermined social citizenship and the nationalist project in post-colonial Africa, thus everywhere animating ethnicity and localizing citizenship. Cette contribution \u00e9tudie l'impact des forces de la mondialisation sur le concept de citoyennet\u00e9, et sur sa construction sur le continent africain, en g\u00e9n\u00e9ral, et plus particuli\u00e8rement au Kenya. Elle porte \u00e9galement sur les principes de mondialisation et de violence, associ\u00e9s \u00e0 la r\u00e9surgence du nationalisme ethnique. La partie empirique de cet article \u00e9tudie la zone de la rivi\u00e8re Tana, une r\u00e9gion marginalis\u00e9e, multiethnique, pauvre, regorgeant de bandits, qui est situ\u00e9e sur le delta de la plus grande rivi\u00e8re kenyane. La proximit\u00e9 de cette r\u00e9gion d'avec la Somalie, o\u00f9 l'\u00c9tat a \u00e9chou\u00e9 dans sa mission et o\u00f9 les seigneurs de guerre dictent leur loi, a favoris\u00e9 dans cette r\u00e9gion l'apparition de ph\u00e9nom\u00e8nes, tels que le flux transfrontalier d'armes et la circulation de mercenaires et de bandits. De plus, la Banque Mondiale a financ\u00e9 un grand nombre de projets de la rivi\u00e8re Tana, mais ces financements et politiques de gestion, ainsi que l'impact global de ces investissements, ont aggrav\u00e9 les conflits ethniques entre pasteurs et agriculteurs, portant sur les points d'eau, les zones de p\u00e2turage et les zones agricoles. Ces conflits ont provoqu\u00e9 la re-formation de nouvelles identit\u00e9s et alliances ethniques, ainsi que l'exploitation exclusive des m\u00e9moires collectives et des institutions culturelles, dans le but de justifier les revendications exclusives de citoyennet\u00e9 territoriale. Ces processus localis\u00e9s sont li\u00e9s aux luttes ethniques, sur le plan civique, par une forte politisation de la notion de citoyennet\u00e9, qui d\u00e9coule logiquement de la d\u00e9mocratie lib\u00e9rale majoritaire au niveau des \u00c9tats divis\u00e9s sur le plan ethnique. Cette contribution d\u00e9finit les contours du processus historique, par l'interm\u00e9diaire duquel la mondialisation a port\u00e9 atteinte \u00e0 la citoyennet\u00e9 sociale et au projet nationaliste en Afrique post-coloniale, favorisant ainsi un peu partout des ph\u00e9nom\u00e8nes d'ethnicit\u00e9 et de localisation de la citoyennet\u00e9.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Obiechina"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300585","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33f4380f-f236-3944-ab29-644c0e734df6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300585"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"558","pageStart":"527","pagination":"pp. 527-558","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Poetry as Therapy: Reflections on Achebe's \"Christmas in Biafra\" and Other Poems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300585","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":14642,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. John Williams"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821234","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821234"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Doing History\": Nuruddin Farah's \"Sweet and Sour Milk\", Subaltern Studies, and the Postcolonial Trajectory of Silence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821234","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8713,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay argues that \"Sweet and Sour Milk,\" which should be understood as both a political and literary text, \"does history,\" which is not to say that it merely \"tells\" the history of postcolonial Somalia, but that it participates in a kind of historiography that is, to borrow a phrase from Edward Said, both \"frankly revisionist\" and \"fiercely theoretical and intellectually insurrectionary.\" In this paper, using the theoretical work of a group of Indian historians, collected in the journal of \"Subaltern Studies\" over the past two decades, I show how Nuruddin Farah's \"Sweet and Sour Milk\" uses the trope of \"silence\" to dramatize the potentially fruitful (and problematic) process of writing histories \"from below.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claudia Breger"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e186cad-14c7-3ca2-88d0-1926242c391d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30159664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"444","pagination":"pp. 444-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159664","volumeNumber":"91","wordCount":1057,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Washington"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27698813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00031232"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c004f49-4fb6-371a-858e-1a2f00b8c4d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27698813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amersociologist"}],"isPartOf":"The American Sociologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Horace Cayton: Reflections on an Unfulfilled Sociological Career","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27698813","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":9994,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the abbreviated sociological career of Horace Cayton, the co-author of Black Metropolis and one of the most talented young black sociologists in the 1930s\u20131940s. In seeking to explain why Cayton failed to continue his promising sociological career, this article focuses on: his feelings of racial alienation; his inability to locate a theoretical paradigm in mainstream sociology through which he could express his anger about American racism; the narrow range of job opportunities open to blacks in sociology; his desire to become a novelist and, thereby, attain the intellectual freedom not afforded by mainstream sociology to protest American race relations; and, finally, his failure to comprehend the psychological perils of assimilation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reginald Dumas"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00fe28b8-c6d5-3ee2-9418-101f95643f32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"124","pagination":"pp. 124-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Haiti at the Intersection of the World: Tapping the Past, Facing the Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715437","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Bongie"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49083ee9-1545-3718-82d5-b0b314b50ffe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4149312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"107","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"70","pagination":"pp. 70-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Monotonies of History\": Baron de Vastey and the Mulatto Legend of Derek Walcott's \"Haitian Trilogy\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4149312","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16862,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam L. No'eau Warner"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01617761"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41156082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-213826"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91f8fd18-f479-3402-a8e5-dc8f4750c942"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3195982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antheducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropology & Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Kuleana\": The Right, Responsibility, and Authority of Indigenous Peoples to Speak and Make Decisions for Themselves in Language and Cultural Revitalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3195982","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The recent movement to revitalize the Hawaiian language and culture through the Kula Kaiapuni, or the Hawaiian Language Immersion Program, has grown over the past 11 years to include almost 1,600 students during the 1998-99 school year. During this period, the field of Hawaiian language has become highly politicized by nonindigenous Hawaiian language educators attempting to colonize the field and control resources purported to redress wrongs to the native people including loss of language and culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meirav Aharon-Gutman"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608204","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5870185d-3119-37ac-a583-8df2d46f0fb7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40608204"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Day the Sun Rises in the West\u2014Ethnography of a Peace Process","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40608204","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9074,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[21424,21493]],"abstract":"Both politicians and academic researchers have focused on the Oslo peace agreements, generally emphasizing the \"New Middle East\" and \"Transnationalism.\" Less attention has been paid to social and economic changes affected by the process of peacemaking. This paper examines the reality that was created from below and asks what the peace process meant to migrant Palestinian workers in Israel. Three years of ethnography challenge accepted theories of borders and borderland in the case of Israel and Palestine by asking what can be learned about the cultural identity of people from the ways they cross, understand, and move between geopolitical and cultural boundaries. In the last years of the Oslo Agreements, it became clear to the workers that \"peace\" meant preserving national borders: it involved a policy of separation, whereas their very livelihood depended on their ability to move between Tel Aviv and the Gaza Strip. Torn between their national identity and their class-cultural identity, they formulated a demand for a dialectical reorganization: a state without borders. This demand stood in opposition to the national aspirations of Israel and the Palestinian state-in-being alike.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lupenga Mphande"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820005","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820005"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"80","pagination":"pp. 80-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dr. Hastings Kamuzu Banda and the Malawi Writers Group: The (un)Making of a Cultural Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820005","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Obioma Nnaemeka"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819872","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819872"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"157","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-157","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Orality to Writing: African Women Writers and the (Re)Inscription of Womanhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819872","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":10215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Tyner"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536027"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227390"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5630c01-0d99-37a0-8056-d8bc242f3215"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3694147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Association of American Geographers","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Defend the Ghetto\": Space and the Urban Politics of the Black Panther Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3694147","volumeNumber":"96","wordCount":11370,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Founded in 1966 by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale as a grassroots organization, the Black Panther Party achieved national and international prominence through their local activities and global ideas. By employing the concepts of spaces of dependency and spaces of engagement, I detail the spatial transformations associated with the evolving political thought of the Black Panther Party. I chart how the four \"moments\" of the Black Panther Party's doctrine (black nationalism, revolutionary nationalism, revolutionary internationalism, and intercommunalism) are geographically contingent, and argue that these four moments demonstrate, both ideologically and materially, how space matters within the political thought of black radical intellectuals. Despite considerable work within geography in articulating alternative conceptions of race and racism, serious lacunae remain. The concepts associated with black separatism, black radical thought, and, crucially, the Black Power Movement have received minimal attention in the geographic literature. And yet fundamental geographic concepts, including territoriality and scalar politics, are key components of black separatism and black power. I argue that a case study of the Black Panther Party provides insights into the fundamental questions of social justice and public space.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peyton Joyce"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"965b0413-3a27-3df0-b082-568ac0867510"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44155219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Neatly Folded Hope: The Capacity of Revolutionary Affect in Carlos Bulosan's \"The Cry and the Dedication\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155219","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charlie Wesley"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.20","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022281X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42806252"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-214383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab5f7093-5596-3ab2-abcc-8689293cc6dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.20"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodelite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Modern Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Inscriptions of Resistance in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/jmodelite.38.3.20","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":9761,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The possibility of native resistance to colonial tyranny and the threat of the loss of colonial \u201corder\u201d is a continual, sustained anxiety throughout Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness. Critics have largely ignored or downplayed these inscriptions of resistance in Conrad's text. Much of the criticism that surrounds this novella, according to Patrick Brantlinger, is focused on the European subjects of the text, and therefore renders Africa and its native peoples as a kind of backdrop. Literary critiques of Heart of Darkness that do discuss the African natives tend to portray them as victims rather than having any kind of agency. This latent fear of native resistance demonstrates the fantasy of stability and superiority endemic to imperialism: a narrative that the imperial administration must continually tell itself.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rodger Cunningham"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10486143"},{"name":"oclc","value":"818672282"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bb671d5-37e5-3442-b226-54aa8921da58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41445583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jappstuass"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Center for Appalachian Studies and Services\/ East Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Signs of Civilization: The Trail of the Lonesome Pine as Colonial Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41445583","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":12205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher C. Harmon"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310649","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18121098"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48776895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004255604"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4143a2ae-8e07-349f-af91-f1a9577f7e28"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26310649"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"connections"}],"isPartOf":"Connections","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":54.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Partnership for Peace Consortium of Defense Academies and Security Studies Institutes","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Terrorist Groups End","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26310649","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":25814,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Studies of the Twentieth Century","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amanda Rene\u00e9 Rico"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.76","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebdc7201-7474-3141-8826-45e0f6ce463e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.76"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"76","pagination":"pp. 76-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Seeking Balance: African Autobiography as Philosophy in Malidoma Patrice Som\u00e9's Of Water and the Spirit: Ritual, Magic and Initiation in the Life of an African Shaman<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.76","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT In this essay, I examine how one particular African autobiographical work\u2014Malidoma Patrice Som\u00e9's Of Water and the Spirit: Ritual, Magic and Initiation in the Life of an African Shaman\u2014embodies the concept of autobiography as philosophy and challenges Western metaphysical frameworks concerning the construction of the ethical self, temporality, and history. I argue that Som\u00e9's autobiographical affirmation of African philosophy serves as a thoroughgoing critique of Western hegemonic thought. Moreover, I claim that this text goes beyond a remedial rebuffing of Eurocentric metaphysics and instead proposes a synthesis between both African and Western ways of knowing and understanding the world. Ultimately, Som\u00e9's Of Water and the Spirit demonstrates that the act of philosophizing is a ubiquitous cultural phenomenon that helps shape the various \u201ccommonsensical\u201d realities of modern life around the globe and should therefore be considered a nonexclusionary practice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Dworkin"],"datePublished":"2000-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2652622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"979ecfb6-fe59-3416-a47b-cd3c270ba042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2652622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"328","pageStart":"327","pagination":"pp. 327-328","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2652622","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":945,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdoulaye Gueye"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/trs.2010.-.102.158","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18c47811-f42d-30b4-82f4-f0b353b8113a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/trs.2010.-.102.158"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"102","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Color of Unworthiness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/trs.2010.-.102.158","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The French visual media, like Western media in general, have often shied away from people of color. The Class, a 2008 documentary film directed by Laurent Cantet and based upon Fran\u00e7ois B\u00e9gaudau's book, relays the experience of a white French teacher in a multiracial lyc\u00e9e. Abdoulaye Gueye asks what the fanfare generated by this widely viewed film, winner of the coveted Palme d'or at Cannes, really reveals.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chris Gerry","Chris Birkbeck"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23590287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12938882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"278ec60d-5098-3de8-ba4f-7d7b391129f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23590287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revuetiersmonde"}],"isPartOf":"Revue Tiers Monde","issueNumber":"101","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Development Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"LES PETITS PRODUCTEURS URBAINS DU TIERS MONDE SONT-ILS DE PETITS BOURGEOIS?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23590287","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":4002,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOY PORTER"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e0cbbbec-659a-3d65-84ce-188c8328c84a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24485529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"458","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-458","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Native American Indian Freemasonry and Its Relation to the Performative Turn within Contemporary American Scholarship","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24485529","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":9059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article is informed by recent work by the author unearthing the histories of Native American Indain Freemasons from the Revolutionary era to the present. Given that performed ritual has always been key to Masonic practice, it was initially supposed that Indians performance within Masonry could be explained using the same performative analytical lens that has recently been applied to various other aspects of the American and American Indian past. However, this research reveals that the performance paradigm has important limitations when applied in colonial or postcolonial contexts and that these have a particular significance when we evaluate the Native American fraternal experience of Freemasonry. This article explores the specifics of recent \"performative\" analyses and argues that whilst performance offers potentially revealing and enabling new means of comprehending Indian and non-Indian interaction, it also carries with it risks against which we must remain vigilant. It argues that the performance paradigm is useful only to the extent to which it can differentiate between positive cultural interaction and negative cultural appropriation. It concludes by suggesting that it is only when we conceive of culture as being essentially imaginative that performance as an analytical paradigm fully functions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D. S. Carne-Ross"],"datePublished":"1969-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20163198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00955809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b99992d-71f3-3b67-9169-59b66b491535"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20163198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arion"}],"isPartOf":"Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":116.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-260, 262-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Scenario for a New Year","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20163198","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":42973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathryn Lofton"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"186383185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5d662a5-67b6-372f-9003-ed2b88dd1508"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26778576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Can\u2019t Help Lovin\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26778576","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":9875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the likability of hip-hop star Kanye West and The Voice champion Jordan Smith to explain the colonial terms for our pop culture taste. The writings of David Chidester establish the tie between religion and colonialism as an axiomatic one; he also argues that popular culture is a rich site for formations of religion. West and Smith offer an opportunity to argue the connection between these two strands of scholarly observance, showing the fractal effects of colonialism in Africa on the preferences of pop culture consumption in America. The attraction to West\u2019s unlikability is the other side of the easy adoration for Jordan Smith: like those colonists who gave religion to those colonized subjects they dominated, pop consumers refuse to admit their intimate and needful connection to those idols who resist their control. Although organized by particular instances, this article seeks to encourage those in pop culture studies to see the erotic work of dislike; it seeks to encourage those in religious studies to see how pop subjects carry forward the classificatory imprints of colonial frontiers.","subTitle":"David Chidester\u2019s Pop Culture Colonialism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981665","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"001c7779-48ef-31a9-9c4e-e569e494239d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981665"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"467","pagination":"pp. 467-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981665","volumeNumber":"418","wordCount":4633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Azzedine Haddour"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"301","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-301","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre and Fanon: On Negritude and Political Participation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512974","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8490,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DEVYN SPENCE BENSON"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03614441"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54052869"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004212044"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9bd037e9-89e5-3969-81e7-cc43cc742190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26614620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cubanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Cuban Studies","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Pittsburgh Press","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Sara G\u00f3mez","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26614620","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the ways black and mulato Cubans in the late 1960s and early 1970s continued to fight against racial discrimination despite the official end of the 1959 revolution\u2019s antidiscrimination campaign and announcement that racism no longer existed in Cuba. By focusing on the work of Sara G\u00f3mez (1943\u20131974), the first black woman filmmaker at the National Cuban Film Institute (ICAIC), the article shows how G\u00f3mez highlighted the experiences of Afro-Cubans and encouraged the revolution to live up to its antiracist and feminist goals. G\u00f3mez explored themes related to class divisions, racial discrimination, and gender inequalities and used the lens of her camera and ethnographic techniques to narrate histories about everyday lives in revolutionary Cuba. The article analyzes three of Gomez\u2019s lesser-known documentaries to reevaluate how censorship, antiracism, and feminism worked in Cuba in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Este art\u00edculo examina las formas en que los cubanos negros y mulatos a finales de los a\u00f1os sesenta y principios de los setenta siguieron luchando contra la discriminaci\u00f3n racial a pesar del final oficial de la campa\u00f1a contra la discriminaci\u00f3n en 1960 y el anuncio por lideres de la revoluci\u00f3n de 1959 que el racismo ya no exist\u00eda en Cuba. Dentro de una enfoque en las obras de Sara G\u00f3mez (1943\u20131974), la primera cineasta negra en el Instituto Cubano de Arte e Industria Cinematogr\u00e1ficos (ICAIC), el ensayo muestra c\u00f3mo G\u00f3mez subray\u00f3 la historia, cultura, y pol\u00edtica de afrodescendientes en Cuba y promovi\u00f3 el proyecto revolucionario al enfatizar espacios en Cuba d\u00f3nde no hab\u00eda llegado la visi\u00f3n de una naci\u00f3n para todos. G\u00f3mez explor\u00f3 temas relacionados a la divisi\u00f3n de clases, discriminaci\u00f3n racial, e inequidades de g\u00e9nero y us\u00f3 el lente de su c\u00e1mara y t\u00e9cnicas etnogr\u00e1ficas para narrar historias sobre las realidades de la vida revolucionaria. El ensayo analiza tres documentales menos conocidos de G\u00f3mez para reevaluar el funcionamiento de la censura, el antirracismo y el feminismo en Cuba a finales de los a\u00f1os sesenta y principios de los setenta.","subTitle":"Afrocubana<\/em> (Afro-Cuban Women\u2019s) Activism after 1961","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Wenzel"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821319","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"173d3547-35a0-3324-b736-bd00f3c7c45a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821319"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Voices of Spectral and Textual Ancestors: Reading Tiyo Soga alongside H. I. E. Dhlomo's \"The Girl Who Killed to Save\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821319","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":13105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Xhosa missionary Tiyo Soga appears, but does not speak, in H. I. E. Dhlomo's play about the 1856-57 Xhosa cattle killing, \"The Girl Who Killed to Save: Nongqause the Liberator.\" Archival evidence demonstrates that an unattributed song in the play is from a hymn by Tiyo Soga. While this nexus may not constitute evidence of the \"genuine intertextuality\" that Malvern van Wyk Smith seeks in postapartheid literary historiography, I argue that the (perhaps unwitting) presence of a hymn by Tiyo Soga contributes to the profound ambivalence of Dhlomo's play, which is also evident in Dhlomo's negotiation of colonial accounts of the cattle killing. For writers borrowing the voices of their predecessors, citing or ventriloquizing textual ancestors is as precarious and productive a process as is claiming to hear the voice of literal ancestors for prophets like Nongqawuse. What kind of reading practice can attend to such revenant voices?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466530","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466530"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Volume Information","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466530","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2016,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Ford"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843601","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"923bcc47-ddb8-322b-9114-1d1692bead08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42843601"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"84","pagination":"pp. 84-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peasants Into Frenchmen Thirty Years After","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42843601","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay provides an introduction to the articles by Laird Boswell, St\u00e9phane Gerson, and Gilles P\u00e9cout in this forum, which is based on a one-day conference held at UCLA in December 2006, several months before the death of Eugen Weber. It gives a brief biographical sketch of Weber's life, the central themes of his scholarly work, and assesses his contribution as an historian to the field of French and modern European history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Omar Grine"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00115266"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21b8dadf-49b4-3986-beb2-9a667566fef6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20024097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"daedalus"}],"isPartOf":"Daedalus","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"America against Itself: A Case of Democratic Anarchism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20024097","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":6698,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Sandbrook","Jack Arn"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/218955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4088fac5-ef3d-3133-a861-3940c190ab7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/218955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"517","pagination":"pp. 517-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Theory and Practice of the Laboring Poor: A Reply to Peter Gutkind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/218955","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":5031,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Diana L. V\u00e9lez"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93b13b56-e274-349b-80f7-0a4918848dbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"833","pageStart":"826","pagination":"pp. 826-833","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"We Are (Not) in This Together: The Caribbean Imaginary in \"Encancaranublado\" by Ana Lydia Vega","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931862","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":4039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Molefi Kete Asante"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41151340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1537e106-1bff-3732-a09b-c34e74a240c7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41151340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"276","pagination":"pp. 276-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Haiti: Three Analytical Narratives of Crisis and Recovery","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41151340","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":5003,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Perhaps no other revolution in modern times, whether American, French, Russian, or Algerian, has stirred such different emotions and raised so many theories of the act itself as the Haitian Revolution. This essay is framed around the given and received interpretations of Haiti's long history in order to demonstrate that there is neither curse nor punishment in Haiti's history; there is only intrigue, interest, and interference. The natural disasters whether earthquakes or hurricanes do not occur because of some rational targeting of the country but are the results of the arbitrariness of nature. Of course, how Haiti has dealt with these natural disasters can be interpreted from positions of class narrative, religious narrative, and cultural narrative.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KENNEDY C. CHINYOWA"],"datePublished":"2009-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15423166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97b7d975-9fd8-3a06-8190-194a10459d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48603365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peacebuilding"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peacebuilding & Development","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PLAYING AGAINST VIOLENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48603365","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"African popular theatre has emerged as an alternative strategy through which the oppressed can discard the culture of silence and assert their desire for peace, justice and freedom. Taking cognisance of the belief that violence only begets violence, such theatre employs meta-communicative devices, like play, as non-violent means of protest against forces that have militated against the people\u2019s welfare. This article uses the case study of a popular theatre performance carried out in Zimbabwe to explore how the culture of violence has become a cyclical phenomenon that began with colonialism and extended through the time of the liberation struggle to the post-colonial period. The article focuses on how the cycle of violence can be understood in order to chart the way forward for peacebuilding and development in Africa.","subTitle":"A CASE STUDY OF POPULAR THEATRE IN ZIMBABWE","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John F. 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In democracies, especially those built on Judeo-Christian traditions, bad character makes enemies enemies. However, as character is easily masked, the process of naming enemies is necessarily one of reading the signs. Thus, Jefferson focuses on his enemies' appearances, whereas Walker focuses on how his enemies talk. Because both means of naming the enemy are deeply flawed, democratic culture is perpetually in the process of negotiating its enemies as they are rhetorically named and unnamed.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Bayart"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24384116","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022197X"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24384116"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jinteaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Journal of International Affairs Editorial Board","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historicity of African Societies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24384116","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":10324,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jill Adler","Zain Davis"],"datePublished":"2006-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30034851","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218251"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36308865"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ea00a83-f01d-3495-8a6a-57dc822b37cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30034851"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jresematheduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for Research in Mathematics Education","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of Mathematics","sourceCategory":["Mathematics","Science & Mathematics","Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Opening Another Black Box: Researching Mathematics for Teaching in Mathematics Teacher Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30034851","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article describes an investigation into mathematics for teaching in current teacher education practice in South Africa. The study focuses on formal evaluative events across mathematics teacher education courses in a range of institutions. Its theoretical orientation is informed by Bernstein's educational code theory and the analytic frame builds on Ball and Bass' notion of \"unpacking\" in the mathematical work of teaching. The analysis of formal evaluative events reveals that across the range of courses, and particularly mathematics courses designed specifically for teachers, compression or abbreviation (in contrast to unpacking) of mathematical ideas is dominant. The article offers theoretical and practical explanations for why this might be so, as well as avenues for further research.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068053","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"252e5342-f8e5-3785-8738-412e84cf4c5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068053"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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This continued a pattern of associations rooted in colonial-era policies and ethnic stereotypes, and also represented a deliberate rhetorical strategy aimed at both internal and external audiences. During the second half of the Nigeria-Biafra War, the concept of race assumed an increasingly prominent role in both Biafran and pro-Biafran discourse, in part because of the diminished persuasiveness of Biafran claims about Nigeria's genocidal intentions. Arguments about race dovetailed with established claims about modernity in ways that persist today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seonghoon Kim"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155245","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f86212e9-051e-33d9-a493-9babf21c2447"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44155245"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Biological sciences - Ecology","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Writing \"Mother Earth\": Red Power Newspapers, Environmental Justice, and Simon J. Ortiz's Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44155245","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u00dcNE\u015e MURAT TEZC\u00dcR"],"datePublished":"2016-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24809521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3403e50f-0331-3bfd-afd7-d5a8ec6ba1d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24809521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"264","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-264","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ordinary People, Extraordinary Risks: Participation in an Ethnic Rebellion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24809521","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":15603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Why do ordinary people take extraordinary risks and join an ethnic armed rebellion? This article tests a series of well-established hypotheses about selfish and identity based motivations and a new hypothesis based on prospect theory. It then employs a unique multimethod research strategy combining one of the most comprehensive datasets on insurgent recruitment that contains biographical information about 8,266 Kurdish militants with extensive fieldwork involving in-depth interviews with relatives of the militants to test these hypotheses. The findings show the decision to rebel is as much political as economic and social. While security concerns and expectations of benefits affect the decision to rebel, social commitments, identities radicalized by state repression, and collective threat perceptions among efficacious individuals generated by political mobilization, rather than preexisting ethnic cleavages, also lead to participation in an ethnic insurgency. The latter findings explain the durability of insurgencies with limited economic resources and their ability to attract educated fighters.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN PIZER"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237259","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01957678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"568b4e61-03c5-3761-af66-6d9b0a592b41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26237259"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"comparatist"}],"isPartOf":"The Comparatist","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"19","pagination":"pp. 19-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Negritude in East German Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26237259","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Anna Seghers, Heiner M\u00fcller, and the Haitian Revolution","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. A. J. Coady"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3750562","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00318191"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8d7f64f-1d27-3f3a-9a31-90611b4be913"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3750562"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philosophy"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy","issueNumber":"231","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Morality of Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3750562","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":10688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zeus Leonardo"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26945997","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565102408"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7959b91e-a03c-3522-8581-482db94b37fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26945997"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dis-orienting Western Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26945997","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The decolonization movement is a knowledge project insofar as colonialism was an epistemological form of imperialism. As such, curricular change in the primary grades to university life requires a fundamental reworking of theories of knowledge, if not knowledge itself. To interrogate this problem and pose possible interventions, this article explicates Edward Said's conceptualization of colonialism as taking place on an epistemic level that orients western knowledge towards non-western ways through a will to dominate. Extending beyond the administrative colonial era, coloniality in the modern era, more appropriately called postcoloniality, transforms as a knowledge relation. Decolonization requires dis-orienting this relationship through Said's methodology. Finally, the article argues that a 'travelling curriculum' poses an alternative against the dominant mode of knowledge that aims to fix and essentialize people, ultimately opening up the known world towards processes of co-existence.","subTitle":"Coloniality, Curriculum and Crisis","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John L. Brown"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40153295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40153295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"734","pageStart":"730","pagination":"pp. 730-734","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A New Book of Flights: Immigration and Displacement in J. M. G. Le Cl\u00e9zio's Poisson d'or","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40153295","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":3394,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stefanie Van de Peer"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41306660","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00989355"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45629419"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"60aee1f0-6adb-37cc-8cf4-79280f3ea6dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41306660"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchforum"}],"isPartOf":"French Forum","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Selma Baccar's \"Fatma\" 1975: at the crossroads between Third Cinema and New Arab Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41306660","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7782,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Giuliano Garavini"],"datePublished":"2007-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20081364","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09607773"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43383809"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-227343"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f28ae9f6-e5a4-314a-89c3-09d8f71bc27a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20081364"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conteurohist"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary European History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colonies Strike Back: The Impact of the Third World on Western Europe, 1968-1975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20081364","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":11155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The history of western Europe and of European integration has been explained primarily with reference to internal political and economic factors, or to its relations with the United States. This article argues that decolonisation and the emergence of the Third World as a political and economic actor had a profound influence on western Europe, mainly contributing to a further weakening of the role of the nation-state. The impact of the Third World was particularly strong in the period from the global revolution of 1968 to the high point of d\u00e9tente in 1975. \/\/\/ L'histoire de l'Europe occidentale et de l'int\u00e9gration europ\u00e9enne a toujours \u00e9t\u00e9 expliqu\u00e9e en premier ressort par des facteurs politiques et \u00e9conomiques internes, ou au regard des liens avec les Etats-Unis. Cet article montre que la d\u00e9colonisation et l'\u00e9mergence du Tiers monde comme acteur politique et \u00e9conomique ont eu une profonde influence sur l'Europe occidentale, principalement en contribuant \u00e0 un affaiblissement du r\u00f4le de l'Etat-nation. L'impact de l'\u00e9mergence du Tiers monde a \u00e9t\u00e9 particuli\u00e8rement intense durant la p\u00e9riode allant de la r\u00e9volution globale de 1968 \u00e0 1975, au moment o\u00f9 la d\u00e9tente atteint son acm\u00e9. \/\/\/ Die Geschichte Westeuropas und der europ\u00e4ischen Integration nach 1945 wurde bisher vor allem mit internen politischen und wirtschaftlichen Faktoren oder mit dem Hinweis auf die Bedeutung der europ\u00e4isch-amerikanischen Beziehungen erkl\u00e4rt. Dieser Artikel argumentiert dagegen, da\u00df Dekolonisierung und der Aufstieg der 'Dritten Welt' als politischer und wirtschaftlicher Akteur in den internationalen Beziehungen eine grundlegende Bedeutung f\u00fcr Westeuropa hatten, da diese Prozesse vor allem zur Schw\u00e4chung der Rolle des Nationalstaates in Westeuropa beitrugen. Die Bedeutung der 'Dritten Welt' war besonders stark in der Zeit zwischen der weltweiten Revolution von 1968 und dem H\u00f6hepunkt der Entspannungspolitik im Jahre 1975.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JANET AFARY"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45371951","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39098781"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2019200162"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1cc336e-94b2-38c9-984a-ad53e5799ada"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45371951"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"284","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-284","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE PITFALLS OF NATIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS IN IRAN: THE CONSTRUCTION OF A MILITANT MUSLIM IDEOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45371951","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Homi Bhabha"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/430966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"569816c7-79ad-322e-ab25-2076d360f77f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/430966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Adagio","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/430966","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":4329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hugo C\u00f3rdova Quero","Bel\u00e9n Torchiaro"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.6.2020.0015","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"967938908"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddd6299c-f944-37e9-9c17-5d422c708728"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/decohori.6.2020.0015"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"decohori"}],"isPartOf":"Horizontes Decoloniales \/ Decolonial Horizons","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"15","pagination":"pp. 15-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"De orientalismos y occidentalismos: Porosidades trans\/decoloniales desde las miradas de Franz Fanon, Edward W. Said y Hassan Hanafi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/decohori.6.2020.0015","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":16723,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Este art\u00edculo analiza la situaci\u00f3n del mundo \u00e1rabe\/musulm\u00e1n en la mitad del siglo XX. Explica los tipos de colonialidad que han vivido Egipto, Palestina y Argelia. Centramos el an\u00e1lisis de las acciones pol\u00edtico-sociales a la colonialidad en sus pueblos. Recobramos el pensamiento de Frantz Fanon desde la experiencia argeliana, para luego retomar en los casos de Edward Said \u2014autor palestino\u2014 y su concepto de \u00aborientalismo\u00bb y Hassan Hanafi \u2014 autor egipcio\u2014 y su propuesta del \u00aboccidentalismo\u00bb. La \u00faltima parte ensaya una contextualizaci\u00f3n de la obra de estos tres autores desde nuestra mirada latinoamericana situada en los conceptos de \u00abporosidad\u00bb e \u00abhibridez\u00bb. Palavras-chave: colonialismo, Occidente, Oriente, islam, hibridez, porosidad Este artigo analisa a situa\u00e7\u00e3o do mundo \u00e1rabe\/mu\u00e7ulmano em meados do s\u00e9culo XX. Explique os tipos de colonialidade que o Egito, a Palestina e a Arg\u00e9lia experimentaram. Focamos a an\u00e1lise das a\u00e7\u00f5es pol\u00edtico-sociais sobre a colonialidade em seus munic\u00edpios. Recuperamos o pensamento de Frantz Fanon da experi\u00eancia argelina, para depois voltar aos casos de Edward Said \u2014autor palestino\u2014 e seu conceito de \u00aborientalismo\u00bb e Hassan Hanafi \u2014autor eg\u00edpcio\u2014 e sua proposta de \u00abocidentalismo\u00bb. A \u00faltima parte tenta contextualizar a obra desses tr\u00eas autores a partir de nossa perspectiva latino-americana, situada nos conceitos de \u00abporosidade\u00bb e \u00abhibridez\u00bb. Palavras-chave: colonialismo, Ocidente, Oriente, isl\u00e3, hibridez, porosidade This article analyzes the situation in the Arab\/Muslim world in the middle of the twentieth century. Explain the types of coloniality that Egypt, Palestine and Algeria have experienced. We focus the analysis of political-social actions on coloniality in their towns. We recover the thought of Frantz Fanon from the Algerian experience, to later return to the cases of Edward Said \u2014Palestinian author\u2014 and his concept of \u00abOrientalism\u00bb and Hassan Hanafi \u2014Egyptian author\u2014 and their proposal of \u00abWesternism.\u00bb The last part tries to contextualize these three authors' work from our Latin American perspective, situated in the concepts of \u00abporosity\u00bb and \u00abhybridity.\u00bb Keywords: colonialism, the West, the East, Islam, hybridity, porosity","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Melson"],"datePublished":"2009-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40542813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392448"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004906"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41c53f66-329a-318a-85a8-2166afccbaeb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40542813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworldhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"466","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-466","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40542813","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":1450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul J. Zingg"],"datePublished":"1979-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/491984","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182745"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8fdd016e-5fbc-36b0-9ba3-23bbba8f0674"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/491984"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The History Teacher","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Society for History Education","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"America and North Africa: A Case Study in United States-Third World Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/491984","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7226,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kanishka Chowdhury"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40150855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Revisioning History: Shashi Tharoor's Great Indian Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150855","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":7168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vidhu Verma"],"datePublished":"2000-04-15","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4409172","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d06608ad-d62b-31d0-9120-1e27052bbb56"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4409172"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"16","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1368","pageStart":"1367","pagination":"pp. 1367-1368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"State, Society and Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4409172","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":2140,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard Magubane"],"datePublished":"1971-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e96d023-5001-34c5-96cc-132be04101c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2740927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"419","pagination":"pp. 419-445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Critical Look at Indices Used in the Study of Social Change in Colonial Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740927","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":30666,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[180524,180569]],"abstract":"Colonialism imposed the urban order on the indigenous societies of Africa, especially in those areas of southern Africa settled by whites. Many anthropologists have investigated the consequent social changes, called acculturation, using as indices of this acculturation or Westernization \"European\" clothes (often considered the most important index), occupation, education, and income. Based on the assumption that white settlers were an \"elite\" to be imitated by Africans, these indices have also been used to describe the formation of status groups and even classes among the urban Africans. Studies utilizing these indices seem to perform a definite ideological function of \"vindicating\" white cultural supremacy, thus justifying Europe's \"civilizing\" missions. They make it clear that the anthropologists have not recognized any pre-existing African culture which would enable Africans to synthesize their urban experiences in a meaningful way. In this paper I take issue with some of the assumptions underlying the choice of indices for measuring social change and African aspirations under the colonial social order. The indices that have been selected correspond neither to the primary reality of a racially divided society, nor even to the secondary reality of limited individual mobility within the colonial social structure. Studies of status group and even class formation among urban Africans simply have not taken into account the colonial social order. We cannot ignore social stratification as reflected in consumption patterns, occupation, education, and income, or social status and prestige as experienced by individual members. But these features were subsidiary in a colonial situation because Africans were objectively oppressed by white settlers. Thus we see the primary difficulty of sociological studies employing these indices: the units of analysis-individuals and their reactions-are too small. Even the most detailed description of these small units fails to reveal patterns and trends of growth. No indication is given that struggles against colonial rule were taking place. The studies are not concerned with the way in which the colonial social order worked to limit every aspect of African life. The difficult problem of alienation (due to colonial oppression), \"class consciousness\" and \"false consciousness\" are completely ignored. Colonial anthropology has never analyzed the economic, social, and political structures of white settler societies as they were formed and transformed by the incorporation of Africans in the industrial system. The analysts have not seen the forest, only trees; they have managed to describe only fragmentary parts of the whole. When Africans join the industrial system, even under colonial rule, and begin to adopt \"urbanism as a way of life,\" they do not thereby become bad imitations of anyone. If they drink bottled beer, listen to recorded music, use furniture in their houses, and wear suits, they are merely taking their places in the scheme of things as they are. Where two cultures, differing in their technological development, meet, adjustments are inevitable. Yet the culture that is \"inferior\" in terms of technology does not simply yield to the other. The two cultures yield to one another, undergoing profund modifications. Thus the development of classes under such conditions does not lead to a static situation, but creates a dynamism which facilitates social change-where \"change\" refers not to internal modifications within a given social order, but to a total (\"historical\") transformation of the whole society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willy Maley"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735890","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"788aa522-0b77-3a84-8055-b5128726148f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29735890"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"22","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Braveheart: Raising the Stakes of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735890","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Schwarz"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25472726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"57","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Not Even past Yet","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25472726","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7948,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. D. Harootunian"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"149","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-149","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ghostly Comparisons: Anderson's Telescope","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566382","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Xochitl Leyva","Jorge Alonso","R. A\u00edda Hern\u00e1ndez","Arturo Escobar","Axel K\u00f6hler","Aura Cumes","Rafael Sandoval","Shannon Speed","Mario Blaser","Esteban Krotz","Susana Pi\u00f1acu\u00e9","H\u00e9ctor Nahuelpan","Morna Macleod","Juan L\u00f3pez Intz\u00edn","Jaqolb\u2019e Lucrecia Garc\u00eda","Mariano B\u00e1ez","Graciela Bola\u00f1os","Eduardo Restrepo","Mar\u00eda Bertely","Abelardo Ramos","Sergio Mendiz\u00e1bal","Laura Mateos","Gunther Dietz","Juan Ricardo Aparicio","Joanne Rappaport","Mar\u00eda Patricia P\u00e9rez","Jenny Pearce","Luis Guillermo Vasco","Charles R. Hale","\u00c1ngela Ixkic Bastian","Jos\u00e9 Antonio Flores","Lina Rosa Berr\u00edo","Mar\u00eda Jos\u00e9 Araya","Sabine Masson","Virginia Vargas","Hanna Laako","Mariana Mora","Gilberto Vald\u00e9s","Mar\u00eda Isabel Casas","Retos","Michal Osterweil","Jo\u00e3o Pacheco de Oliveira","Dana E. Powell","Roc\u00edo Salcido","Marcio D\u2019Olne Campos","M\u00f3nica Gallegos","Mercedes Olivera","Rodrigo Montoya","Sylvia Marcos","Mar\u00eda Lugones","Walter Mignolo"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn5tzv7.21","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f4167871-bddd-322a-83cd-a8ab0e654977"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvn5tzv7.21"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e1cticas otras de conocimiento(s)","issueNumber":null,"language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"451","pagination":"451-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","American Indian Studies","Gender Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hacia la investigaci\u00f3n descolonizada:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvn5tzv7.21","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13017,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Escribir en los albores del siglo XXI acerca de experiencias de gobierno local y regional, de formas de gobierno ind\u00edgena o de pol\u00edticas para la \u201cgobernabilidad\u201d resulta m\u00e1s que relevante cuando vemos que a lo largo de toda Am\u00e9rica Latina nuestros sistemas pol\u00edticos atraviesan por grandes dificultades para consolidar instituciones realmente democr\u00e1ticas y para hacer avanzar pol\u00edticas p\u00fablicas m\u00e1s equitativas y justas en contextos mul ticulturales. En ese marco, a finales de 2003 pusimos en marcha el proyecto Gobernar la diversidad: experiencias de construcci\u00f3n de ciudadan\u00eda multicultural. Una investigaci\u00f3n colaborativa<\/em> (Leyva, Burguete y Speed 2003) que dio pie a la","subTitle":"nuestra experiencia de co-labor","keyphrase":["investigaci\u00f3n","ind\u00edgenas","proyecto","leyva solano","pueblos ind\u00edgenas","fals borda","xochitl leyva solano","acad\u00e9micos","investigaci\u00f3n descolonizada","tensiones"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. Marie Perinbam"],"datePublished":"1973-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159609","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159609"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"445","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-445","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon and the Revolutionary Peasantry - The Algerian Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159609","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8168,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOE STREET"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218758"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41883886"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-238767"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46f0fba8-6302-38a2-b0a8-beeb48f1f9f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40648818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historiography of the Black Panther Party","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40648818","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":12245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines forty years of historical writing on the Black Panther Party (BPP), arguing that this historiography has now reached maturity. It evaluates key publications on the BPP, splitting the historiography into three periods. The first phase, the article asserts, was dominated by accounts written by participants and observers of the BPP in action. These offered insight into the personalities of the BPP leadership but included relatively little on other BPP members. They were supplemented by a collection of friendly academic studies, a number of which emphasized the role of the FBI in precipitating the BPP's decline. The article identifies the 1994 publication of Hugh Pearson's biographical study of Huey P. Newton as the beginning of a second phase. Pearson's work, which built on a collection of accounts written by observers and right-wing writers during the first phase, precipitated an outpouring of new studies that opposed its conclusions. These works overwhelmingly focussed on individual BPP chapters and the experiences of the BPP rank and file; they were generally friendly towards the party and often appraised the BPP's actions through the 1970s. A second wave of participant accounts also emerged in this period which offered a more personal interpretation of the BPP's decline. A third period emerged in the early 2000s that abandoned the obsession with Pearson's study and focussed instead on the BPP's contribution to African American and American culture beyond its political program and violent image. The article reveals the paradox at the heart of the local approach, one which recent studies addressed in their focus on the BPP's Oakland chapter and their return to a tight chronological approach that focussed on the BPP's peak years. It concludes by noting the remaining omissions in the BPP's historical record and anticipating further studies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTON L. ALLAHAR"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41800171","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08263663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628128"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5a9100d-1110-39a6-9104-61c27403b43f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41800171"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajlatiamercar"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies \/ Revue canadienne des \u00e9tudes latino-am\u00e9ricaines et cara\u00efbes","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"243","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-243","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FRAMING OF POLITICAL CULTURE IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING CARIBBEAN: CUBAN SOCIALISM VERSUS US IMPERIALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41800171","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":9250,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[27801,27933]],"abstract":"In this essay it is my contention that, as anachronistic as a revived political interest in Marxism and socialism in the Caribbean may appear today, it is nevertheless likely to stem form the unintended consequences of United States' aggressive leadership of the \"Free World,\" which includes the Caribbean. The backdrop to this study of the political culture of the Caribbean is the region's class-based and racialized history, whose roots are firmly planted in colonialism and slavery and latterly in neocolonialism and global capitalism. Since the end of the Second World War, however, with the decline of the British Empire and the decolonization of Africa, India and the British Caribbean, major changes have been registered in the political cultures of the countries concerned. In the Caribbean particularly, those changes have been increasingly tied to the fortunes of the Cuban revolution and the heavy-handed treatment meted out by the United States. This has conditioned the growth of a curious political climate in the Caribbean, which sees a blend of socialist, anti-American posturing by some political leaders, part of which includes a brand of racial politics imported from the American civil rights activists of the 1960s. La th\u00e8se propos\u00e9e dans cet article est que, aussi anachronique qu'il puisse para\u00eetre \u00e0 l'heure actuelle, le regain d'int\u00e9r\u00eat politique pour le marxisme et le socialisme dans les pays des Antilles d\u00e9coule probablement des cons\u00e9quences involontaires de la politique agressive men\u00e9e par les \u00c9tats-Unis en tant que leader du \u00ab Monde libre \u00bb , auquel ces pays appartiennent. Cette \u00e9tude sur la culture politique antillaise se donne pour cadre l'histoire de cette r\u00e9gion, caract\u00e9ris\u00e9e par des probl\u00e8mes de classe et de racisme et dont les racines sont fermement implant\u00e9es dans le colonialisme et l'esclavage, et plus r\u00e9cemment dans le n\u00e9ocolonialisme et le capitalisme mondial. Toutefois, depuis la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, \u00e0 la suite du d\u00e9clin de l'Empire britannique et de la d\u00e9colonisation de l'Afrique, de l'Inde et des Antilles britanniques, on assiste \u00e0 des bouleversements dans les cultures politiques des pays en question. Dans les Anti Iles, en particulier, ces changements ont \u00e9t\u00e9 progressivement li\u00e9s au sort de la r\u00e9volution cubaine et \u00e0 la politique maladroite adopt\u00e9e par les \u00c9tats-Unis \u00e0 son \u00e9gard. Une telle situation a favoris\u00e9 dans ces pays la mont\u00e9e d'un climat politique \u00e9trange, dans lequel certains leaders affichent un anti-am\u00e9ricanisme socialiste, tout en pratiquant un type de politique raciale qui est h\u00e9rite de celle des militants en faveur des droits civiques am\u00e9ricains au cours des ann\u00e9es soixante.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Fitzpatrick"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517267","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00211427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626209"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56147106-e6e9-388e-a7b4-6dade5ccc832"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25517267"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisunivrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Irish University Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"320","pagination":"pp. 320-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Disrupting Metanarratives: Anne Devlin, Christina Reid, Marina Carr, and the Irish Dramatic Repertory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25517267","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Garrett A. Duncan"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2967309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2967309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"150","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-150","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Space, Place and the Problematic of Race: Black Adolescent Discourse as Mediated Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2967309","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":11149,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[66454,66518]],"abstract":"This article examines Black adolescence and schooling within the conceptual framework of mediated action theory. It analyzes the discourses of six Black high school students that connect the concepts of \"space,\" relating to the physical body, and \"place,\" defining the arrangement of public institutions, to relations of domination and subjugation, or the political construction of \"race.\" The article highlights the resources that mediate Black adolescent development, placing emphasis on those that underlie Black adolescent resistance to White supremacy. The article concludes by exploring implications for developing pedagogy that is considerate of youth members of subjugated cultures in United States society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F. Timothy Ruppel"],"datePublished":"1995-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1694dfa0-4a62-38f0-bf90-ff6bb66aac02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Re-Inventing Ourselves a Million Times\": Narrative, Desire, Identity, and Bharati Mukherjee's \"Jasmine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112173","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fabio Rambelli"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44167366","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07661177"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e069b66e-0ed0-321d-9580-ed90a0b34b74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44167366"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahiextrasie"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'Extr\u00eame-Asie","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"453","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-453","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"\u00c9cole fran\u00e7aise d\u2019Extr\u00eame-Orient","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"THE EMPEROR'S NEW ROBES: PROCESSES OF RESIGNIFICATION IN SHINGON IMPERIAL RITUALS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44167366","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":12612,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article porte sur les modes complexes de traitement de la figure et du r\u00f4le de l'empereur, ainsi que celui de l'\u00c9tat par les institutions bouddhiques japonaises. A travers une analyse faisant \u00e0 la fois appel aux donn\u00e9es philologiques et \u00e0 une lecture s\u00e9miologique de deux rituels d'importance majeure de l'\u00e9cole \u00e9sot\u00e9rique Shingon, le Goshichinichi no mishuh\u014d et le Taigen no h\u014d, l'article montre les syst\u00e8mes conceptuels et les \u00e9difices id\u00e9ologiques changeants d\u00e9ploy\u00e9s par les institutions de l'\u00e9cole Shingon afin de d\u00e9finir et, jusqu '\u00e0 un certain point, de contr\u00f4ler le symbolisme li\u00e9 au corps de l'empereur en tant qu 'incarnation privil\u00e9gi\u00e9e de l'\u00c9tat.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa M. Vaughn"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44954779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01606379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd3dfb53-605b-3abc-a418-509276839159"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44954779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"famicommheal"}],"isPartOf":"Family and Community Health","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Lippincott Williams & Wilkins","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Information science - Informetrics"],"title":"Families and Cultural Competency: Where Are We?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44954779","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":6282,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[35595,35637]],"abstract":"In healthcare, there is an undeniable need for cultural competence in order to address the health needs of our growing, pluralistic families, eliminate existing health disparities, mend a fragmented system of care where some receive better services than others, and meet the required standards of accreditation bodies within health training programs. This review addresses the foundation, history, and complexity of cultural competency in healthcare and medicine. There is a description of current training in and evaluation of cultural competency, models of cultural competence, and future directions in research and training in the area of cultural competency.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. H. Stallings"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"I'm Goin Pimp Whores!\": The Goines Factor and the Theory of a Hip-Hop Neo-Slave Narrative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949871","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":11096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Na'Im Akbar"],"datePublished":"1984-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2649d4ea-3488-3f32-b963-2a259f962427"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"395","pagination":"pp. 395-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africentric Social Sciences for Human Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784083","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6082,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[38440,38486]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winifred Woodhull"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"314f79d4-87e6-3867-bff5-c62e878f280e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2903228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"98","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Mohammed Dib and the French Question","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2903228","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Searls Giroux","David Theo Goldberg"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866721","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21625190"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85ee60d4-5384-3d40-9870-591d276a9ccb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20866721"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jac"}],"isPartOf":"JAC","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":56.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"JAC","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the State of Race Theory: A Conversation with David Theo Goldberg","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20866721","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":19849,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ted L. Scheffler"],"datePublished":"1981-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9dcdc33b-c399-3935-beda-35c743f4fcb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE IDEOLOGY OF BINARY OPPOSITION: SUBJECT\/OBJECT DUALITY AND ANTHROPOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790030","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":2982,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[18353,18393]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Apter"],"datePublished":"2016-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758697","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2cb19eaa-82ef-3d09-98a8-46c67279db8f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758697"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond N\u00e9gritude: Black cultural citizenship and the Arab question in FESTAC 77","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758697","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7891,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"When Nigeria hosted the Second World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture (FESTAC 77) to celebrate the cultural foundations of the 'Black and African World', it was fashioned after Senghor's festival mondial des arts n\u00e8gres (FESMAN 66) held in Dakar 11 years earlier. What began as an alliance between festival co-patrons, however, soon developed into a divisive debate over the meanings and horizons of black cultural citizenship. At issue were competing Afrocentric frameworks that clashed over the North African or 'Arab' question. Should North Africans fully participate, as Lt-Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo maintained, or should they merely observe as second-class citizens, as Leopold S\u00e9dar Senghor resolutely insisted? If Nigeria's expansive and inclusive vision of blackness was motivated and underwritten by its enormous oil wealth, Senghor refused to compromise his position, precipitating a face-off that ultimately lowered Senegal's prestige. To understand why North Africa became the focus of these competing definitions of blackness, we turn to the 1969 Pan-African Cultural Festival in Algiers, where N\u00e9gritude was disclaimed as counter-revolutionary. Placed within a genealogy of postcolonial Afrocentric festivals, the struggle over North Africa in FESTAC 77 shows that the political stakes of black cultural citizenship were neither trivial nor ephemeral, but emerged within a transnational field of symbolic capital accumulation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joe R. Feagin"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67ec02bf-9cd8-3d09-baa7-fed40a4398e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1130","pageStart":"1129","pagination":"pp. 1129-1130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231332","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mridula Mukherjee"],"datePublished":"1988-10-08","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4379152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae4a7678-86b7-3501-8789-f1cea98a2dd2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4379152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"2120","pageStart":"2109","pagination":"pp. 2109-2120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Peasant Resistance and Peasant Consciousness in Colonial India: 'Subalterns' and Beyond","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4379152","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":17096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Two major themes have emerged in the writings of scholars writing under the 'subaltern' banner: (a) peasant resistance and peasant consciousness in colonial India, and (b) the relationship between the peasantry and the national movement. This paper, focusing on the first theme, tries to examine some of the basic concepts and assumptions of this 'new' methodology as well as their implications. The author also tries to assess the extent of the success of this new approach in enlarging our knowledge of peasant resistance and consciousness. The article appears in two parts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew C. Hess"],"datePublished":"1976-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1864780","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aec12f27-8668-3d41-9a1d-881670551b47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1864780"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"799","pageStart":"788","pagination":"pp. 788-799","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Consensus or Conflict: The Dilemma of Islamic Historians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1864780","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":5729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rhodri Windsor Liscombe"],"datePublished":"2006-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00379808"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46849067"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235648"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ae3464e-560a-3b85-9254-87086ee9b960"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25068264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsociarchhist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"188","pagination":"pp. 188-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Society of Architectural Historians","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Modernism in Late Imperial British West Africa: The Work of Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew, 1946-56","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25068264","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":15587,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article situates the educational architecture of Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew in British West Africa in 1946-56 in the context of late British colonial policy. The analysis extends discursive readings of architecture with contemporary literary texts as aspects of what might be termed the material cultural fabric. These different forms of articulation illuminate the sociocultural dynamic underlying the migration of modernism in the postwar era, and the extent to which the movement affected and was appropriated by British colonial enterprise. It also discloses modernism's simultaneous disruption and reinforcement of the objectives of modernity, among which were the ideological and technical systems of British imperial expansion. On this basis, it is argued that Fry and Drew were constrained in their endeavor to resolve the divergent expectations within modernist theory concerning the application of universal principles to local conditions, and thus also in their aim of initiating a legitimate modern African architecture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony D. Fisher"],"datePublished":"1968-08-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/670596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72e654e8-96b2-31db-addc-2d1bba87c7bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/670596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"799","pageStart":"799","pagination":"p. 799","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/670596","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":675,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Loong Wong"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24491928","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03038246"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c5ab03ad-8a98-3fbb-8acc-aebb231a2a6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24491928"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutasiajsocisci"}],"isPartOf":"Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"172","pagination":"pp. 172-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Touchy Neighbours: Australia's Muddled Relationship with Malaysia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24491928","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VIJAY PRASHAD"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35196226-2208-3647-ad96-08fb2853c4bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44582302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Marks of Capital: Colonialism and the Sweepers of Delhi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582302","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":14579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In a sub-field of Marxism, A.G. Frank and E. Laclau debated the intricate details of Frank's critique of the \"dualist thesis\". That thesis argued that capitalism failed to overcome feudalism in its colonial adventure; Frank argued that to posit the duality between capital and feudal forms does violence to the structural integration of feudal forms into the logic of capital. Frank's critique, however, remained wedded to a level of abstraction which was unable to reveal the full implications of his suggestions. In this essay, I attempt to show that the logic of capital during colonial rule produced a municipal sanitation regime which relied upon the control over the labor of manual sweepers mediated through jobbers, overseers and contractors. Far from being the embodiment of \"tradition\", the sweepers since colonial India bear on their bodies the marks of capital. This essay reveals those marks as well as demonstrating the integral relation between the logic of capital and barbaric colonial rule. Dans un sous-chapitre du marxisme, A. G. Frank et E. Laclau d\u00e9bat\u00e8rent des d\u00e9tails compliqu\u00e9s de la critique de Frank de la \u201cth\u00e8se dualiste\u201d. Cette th\u00e8se soutient que le capitalisme n'a pas r\u00e9ussi \u00e0 renverser le f\u00e9odalit\u00e9 dans son aventure coloniale; Frank soutient que poser en principe la dualit\u00e9 entre le capital et les formes f\u00e9odales fait violence \u00e0 l'int\u00e9gration structurelle de formes f\u00e9odales dans la logique du capital. La critique de Frank cependant resta attach\u00e9e \u00e0 un niveau d'abstraction qui \u00e9tait incapable de r\u00e9v\u00e9ler les pleines implications de ses suggestions. Dans cet essai, j'essaie de montrer que la logique du capital pendant le r\u00e8gne colonial produisit un regime de syst\u00e8me sanitaire municipal qui comptait sur le contr\u00f4le du travail de balayeurs manuels par l'entremise d'ouvriers \u00e0 la t\u00e2che, de contrema\u00eetres et d'entrepreneurs. Loin d'\u00eatre l'incarnation de \u201ctraditions\u201d, les balayeurs depuis l'Inde coloniale portent sur leurs corps les marques du capital. Cet essai r\u00e9v\u00e8le ces marques et d\u00e9montre la relation int\u00e9grale entre la logique du capital et le r\u00e8gne colonial barbare. Im Rahmen einer marxistischen Debatte er\u00f6rterten A. G. Frank und E. Laclau die komplizierten Details von Franks Kritik der \u201cDualit\u00e4ts-These\u201d. Diese These behauptet, da\u00df es dem Kapitalismus bei seinem kolonialen Abenteuer nicht gelungen ist, den Feudalismus zu \u00fcberwinden. Setze man die Dualit\u00e4t zwischen Kapital und feudale Formen, so Frank, entstelle man die strukturelle Integration der feudalen Formen in die Logik des Kapitals. Franks Kritik verblieb jedoch an ein Niveau der Abstraktion gebunden, das es nicht erm\u00f6glicht, seine Annahmen in ihrer ganzen Tragweite zu erkennen. In diesem Aufsatz versuche ich zu zeigen, da\u00df die Logik des Kapitals w\u00e4hrend der Kolonialherrschaft ein st\u00e4dtisches Stadtreinigungssystem hervorbrachte, das auf die Kontrolle der Arbeit der Stra\u00dfenkehrer durch Vermittler, Vorarbeiter und Unternehmer angewiesen war. Auch wenn die Stra\u00dfenkehrer weit davon entfernt sind, die Verk\u00f6rperung der \u201cTradition\u201d zu sein, tragen sie doch seit der Kolonialisierung Indiens die Zeichen des Kapitals. In diesem Aufsatz sollen diese Zeichen sowie die integrale Beziehung zwischen der Logik des Kapitals und der barbarischen Kolonialherrschaft gezeigt werden. En un subcampo del marxismo, A. G. Frank y E. Laclau discut\u00edan los detalles complejos de la cr\u00edtica de Frank sobre la \u201cdualist thesis\u201d. El argumento de la tesis era que el capitalismo no lograba vencer al feudalismo en su aventura colonial; Frank argumentaba que la postulaci\u00f3n de la dualidad entre capital y formas feudales tuerza la integraci\u00f3n estructural de formas feudales en la l\u00f3gica del capital. La cr\u00edtica de Frank, sin embargo, quedaba unida a un nivel abstracto que no pod\u00eda revelar toda la trascendencia de sus sugerencias. En este ensayo trato de mostrar que la l\u00f3gica del capital durante el r\u00e9gimen colonial produc\u00eda un r\u00e9gimen municipal de sanidad que contaba con el control sobre el trabajo de los barrenderos por mediaci\u00f3n de intermediarios, inspectores y contratistas. Lejos de ser la encarnaci\u00f3n de la \u201ctradici\u00f3n\u201d, los barrenderos llevan las huellas del capital en sus cuerpos, las llevan desde la India colonial. Este ensayo revela esas huellas y demuestra la relaci\u00f3n integrada entre la l\u00f3gica del capital y la del r\u00e9gimen colonial y b\u00e1rbaro.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Enoch Ndem Okon","Victor Ojakorotu"],"datePublished":"2018-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664071","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2056564X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"924347354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d6125733-4e2e-3d5d-90b8-87339f800380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26664071"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriforeaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperialism and Contemporary Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664071","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":8311,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The sixth decade of the twentieth century was remarkable for Africans, as it witnessed the attainment of Independence by a host of African states from European imperialists: However, Western influence continues to manifest in decisions and direction of events and policies on the continent till date. The study adopts historical method and depends solely on secondary sources of data which include textbooks, journals, and magazines. The finding is presented qualitatively and analysed using content analysis technique. This paper analyses the continuity and change in the dimension and process of imperialism in contemporary Africa. Grounded in the Hobson-Lenin Theory of imperialism, the study identifies the Bretton-Wood institutions and other neoliberal structures, designed by Western imperialist as veritable instruments for the perpetuation of economic exploitation, politico-military domination, and socio-cultural subjugation. It concluded that in spite of structural changes, the processes and objectives of imperialism remain same as they were in the late nineteen and twentieth century. The study calls on African leaders to hasten the process of integration, and continue to unite against imperialist tendencies like they did with the rejection of gay rights and AFRICOM across the continent, in order to preserve Africans\u2019 identity in a globalized world.","subTitle":"An Analysis of Continuity and Change","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winsley B. Hector"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781946230362"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d91d0acc-9ec4-327d-b193-ebe281942a41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwrm4dk.9"}],"isPartOf":"Racial Reconciliation and Privilege","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"151","pagination":"151-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Arguments for Preserving the Current Regional Conference Structure in the SDA Church in the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.9","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":23631,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27674]],"Locations in B":[[82544,82586]],"abstract":"Winston Churchill reportedly once remarked that \u201cThere is nothing wrong with change, if it is in the right direction.\u201d\u00b2 The challenge of Churchill\u2019s statement lies in the all-important question of who is determining the \u201cright direction.\u201d For Idealists, the right direction is change to a more integrated administrative structure, though parity in all levels of the administrative hierarchy may be harder to achieve. For Pragmatists, change is more administrative parity, while structural accommodation is maintained. This stance of Pragmatists will be outlined through three essential arguments: Cultural Pluralism, Blaming the Victim, and White Privilege. There is a plurality of voices","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["regional conferences","cultural pluralism","church","blacks","pragmatists","identity","leaders","church leaders","sda church","niebuhr"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saree S. Makdisi"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343831","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8bc6bac3-e7fc-3285-b9dc-aaad069b285c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343831"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"820","pageStart":"804","pagination":"pp. 804-820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Empire Renarrated: \"Season of Migration to the North\" and the Reinvention of the Present","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343831","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8213,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[452406,452481]],"Locations in B":[[31047,31139]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SOYOUNG YOON"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832730","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15263819"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47027776"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213398"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad947fec-625e-3978-8173-50966c8e0808"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43832730"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greyroom"}],"isPartOf":"Grey Room","issueNumber":"52","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Grey Room, Inc. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Cinema against the Permanent Curfew of Geometry: Guy Debord's Sur le passage de quelques personnes \u00e0 travers une assez courte unit\u00e9 de temps (1959)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43832730","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10184,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[15051,15222]],"Locations in B":[[61571,61741]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NOURI GANA"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304712","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065860X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21e72ffa-a352-3290-9f26-6d7b2072dfdb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26304712"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanimago"}],"isPartOf":"American Imago","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Poetics of Mourning: The Tropologic of Prosopopoeia in Joyce's \"The Dead\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26304712","volumeNumber":"60","wordCount":7488,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SIDNEY HOOK","E.S."],"datePublished":"1989-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41820790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00264695"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42210051"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-233264"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da497a5f-9d0b-3910-ae4c-ec8eb0fbf722"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41820790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"minerva"}],"isPartOf":"Minerva","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"534","pageStart":"505","pagination":"pp. 505-534","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Education","Science & Technology Studies","General Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REFLECTIONS ON THE OBLIGATION OF HONESTY IN THE UNIVERSITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41820790","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":16290,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terry Castle"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x25.4","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781501707148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"487d43e6-620b-3772-9e74-d22d01c8c9fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x25.4"}],"isPartOf":"Clarissa's Ciphers","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"15","pagination":"15-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt1g69x25.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One might imagine the present book as gloss for a single line ofClarissa.<\/em>\u201cI am but acypher,<\/em>to givehim<\/em>significance, andmyself<\/em>pain.\u201d The words are Clarissa\u2019s, written at Sinclair\u2019s, in the midst of her evil time. And \u201che\u201d of course is Lovelace\u2014jailer, bogey, courtier\u2014fixer of that intimate, brutal anguish she is made to suffer. Clarissa leaves her remark unexplained, almost a throwaway line. It is subsumed in a plangent cry of grief to Anna Howe, the only friend, it seems, who will not \u201cgrudge\u201d her her sadness. Yet Clarissa\u2019s startling image\u2014the body as","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["lovelace","richardsons","epistolary","fiction","hermeneutic","kinkead weekes","reading","cypher","fictional world","readers"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maryse Bray","Aline Cook","Debra Kelly","Samantha Neath","Ethel Tolansky","Margaret Majumdar","Helene Gill"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25832672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecf020d0-b7e6-3067-9406-1b69ec2b9b02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25832672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"241","pageStart":"233","pagination":"pp. 233-241","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"AFRICAN AND MAGHREB LITERATURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25832672","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":3444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Surendra Chopra"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45072421","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ee83f93-5dc6-3409-b2a5-c3ceaec518bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45072421"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"96","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-96","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TERRORISM: THE APEX OF VIOLENCE\u2014A PROLEGOMENON TO ITS CAUSES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45072421","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":5741,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\"As the inhumanity of man to man. violence has woven its fearsome thread from caveman to technological man\" says a distinguished writer on the problem. According to Erich Fromm: \"if a human being cannot create, he destroys.\" He adds: \"If man cannot create anything or make a dent in anything or anybody, if he cannot break out of the prison of his total narcissism, he can escape the unbearable sense of powerlessness and nothingness only by affirming himself in the act of destruction of the life that he is unable to create.\" From Justifies violence when he says: \"Destruction is the creative, self transcending act of the hopeless and crippled. the revenge of unlived life upon itself.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231473","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a38ca706-f70a-39ea-9de2-a6de6f1ea5d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41231473"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"482","pageStart":"466","pagination":"pp. 466-482","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Mwalimu (2nd part) \/ LE \u00ab MWALIMU \u00bb (2 e<\/sup> partie)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231473","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":8275,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Publi\u00e9e en 1967, soit six ans apr\u00e8s l'accession de la Tanzanie \u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance, la D\u00e9claration d'Arusha fixait les bases id\u00e9ologiques de la transformation sociale et \u00e9conomique du pays, dont l'infrastructure de type capitaliste devait \u00eatre remplac\u00e9e par une organisation socialiste, dirig\u00e9e vers l'accomplissement de l'Ujamaa. Nyerere a clairement expos\u00e9 la relation \u00e9troite qui unit libert\u00e9 et d\u00e9veloppement, l'une et l'autre s'influen\u00e7ant mutuellement. Il a longuement insist\u00e9 sur la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'une totale ind\u00e9pendance, politique, \u00e9conomique et culturelle, sans laquelle on ne pourrait r\u00e9aliser l'Ujamaa. Le retour \u00e0 l'authentique dignit\u00e9 africaine est pour le Mwalimu une condition psychologique d\u00e9terminante. Il faut, dans ce travail de formation d'un nouveau pays, que l'Africain retrouve la confiance en soi, en ses propres capacit\u00e9s. Nyerere est, sur ces points, tr\u00e8s proche de Sekou Tour\u00e9, pour qui l'essentiel n'est pas le recours \u00e0 la violence, mais le d\u00e9clenchement d'un mouvement r\u00e9volutionnaire de caract\u00e8re culturel et humaniste. Pour Nyerere comme pour Sekou Tour\u00e9, la r\u00e9volution doit \u00eatre dans les individus eux-m\u00eames, non dans le cadre mat\u00e9riel qui les entoure. Dans le cas de la Tanzanie, la masse des individus est constitu\u00e9e de paysans. La r\u00e9volution doit donc toucher les r\u00e9gions rurales, et non pas se limiter aux centres urbains ou aux secteurs urbanis\u00e9s. En fait l'Ujamaa con\u00e7ue par Nyerere tend \u00e0 conf\u00e9rer une r\u00e9elle qualit\u00e9 au mode de vie des individus de la communaut\u00e9. Ce qui importe, ce n'est pas l'abondance des biens mat\u00e9riels; c'est l'attitude des hommes envers ces biens. C'est aussi l'attitude des hommes entre eux. Or, la qualit\u00e9 du mode de vie est pour une large part d\u00e9termin\u00e9e par la formation \u00e9ducative, c'est-\u00e0dire par l'\u00e9cole. Il ne s'agit plus de donner \u00e0 l'enfant l'esprit individualiste de comp\u00e9tition dans une soci\u00e9t\u00e9 capitaliste. Il s'agit au contraire de d\u00e9velopper en lui l'esprit de coop\u00e9ration et de vie communautaire. De plus, la formation \u00e9ducative portera sur la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'une ind\u00e9pendance r\u00e9elle, indispensable \u00e0 la \u00ab d\u00e9colonisation mentale \u00bb comme \u00e0 la renaissance socialiste de la Tanzanie. Les manifestations estudiantines de 1966 donn\u00e8rent \u00e0 Nyerere l'occasion de pr\u00e9ciser ses vues sur la formation \u00e9ducative. En protestant contre le Service National et contre la contribution exig\u00e9e d'eux, les \u00e9tudiants r\u00e9v\u00e9l\u00e8rent l'id\u00e9e fausse qu'ils se faisaient d'eux-m\u00eames et de leur place dans la nouvelle soci\u00e9t\u00e9: ils ne se sentaient aucune obligation envers cette soci\u00e9t\u00e9, dont ils recevaient pourtant leur formation intellectuelle. Se consid\u00e9rant comme une \u00e9lite du pays, ils n'avaient pas \u00e0 participer aux t\u00e2ches propos\u00e9es par le Service National. C'est ce que le Mwalimu a appel\u00e9 la tentation de l'arrogance intellectuelle. Pour atteindre un jour \u00e0 la r\u00e9alisation de l'Ujamaa, il faut b\u00e2tir non seulement un pays mat\u00e9riellement prosp\u00e8re, mais aussi et surtout une nation. Cela suppose la constitution d'une \u00e9thique sociale appropri\u00e9e, une attitude mentale ouverte sur la nation. D'o\u00f9 l'extr\u00eame importance de la formation \u00e9ducative dans l'Ujamaa. Une \u00e9tape d\u00e9cisive vers l'id\u00e9e de nation a \u00e9t\u00e9 franchie par l'adoption du swahili comme langue officielle de la Tanzanie. Le swahili est en effet parl\u00e9 par tous, y compris par la masse des paysans, alors que l'anglais n'\u00e9tait accessible qu'\u00e0 une minorit\u00e9. Enfin, dernier point de la doctrine du Mwalimu, mais non des moindres: le r\u00f4le du chef de la nation. \u00ab Conduire le pays, dit Nyerere, cela ne veut pas dire s'adresser \u00e0 la foule en criant, ni tromper les individus ou les groupes avec lesquels on n'est pas d'accord; encore moins donner l'ordre de faire ceci ou cela. Etre le chef, cela veut dire parler aux hommes, discuter avec eux, expliquer et persuader... cela veut dire aussi prendre part aux travaux des hommes afin qu'ils comprennent par les actes ce qu'on leur demande de faire. Cela veut dire qu'il faut \u00eatre un citoyen parmi les autres et se reconna\u00eetre \u00e0 \u00e9galit\u00e9 avec eux. D\u00e9j\u00e0 la D\u00e9claration d'Arusha formulait certains imp\u00e9ratifs \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard des chefs politiques. Elle leur imposait une participation active au socialisme. Elle leur interdisait toute activit\u00e9 commerciale durant le temps de leur mandat. Nyerere attribue \u00e0 la valeur morale du chef un r\u00f4le d\u00e9terminant dans l'accomplissement de l'Ujamaa. Il ne se dissimule pas les obstacles \u00e9normes qu'il faudra surmonter pour imposer l'id\u00e9e du chef, telle qu'il la con\u00e7oit, c'est-\u00e0-dire totalement oppos\u00e9e \u00e0 la notion pragmatique la plus courante en Afrique. En d\u00e9finitive, l'exp\u00e9rience men\u00e9e par le Mwalimu montrera, dans l'esprit de son auteur, qu'un pays africain est apte \u00e0 se d\u00e9velopper lui-m\u00eame, selon ses propres ressources morales et mat\u00e9rielles, sans renier sa tradition profonde qui n'a cess\u00e9 de se nourrir de d\u00e9mocratie et de socialisme v\u00e9ritable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan VanZanten Gallagher"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44314432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59ce7540-cc0c-3a8e-9658-0cd0f19da4f3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44314432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"340","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-340","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading and Faith in a Global Community","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44314432","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":7259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kimberly Blockett"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f54832b2-ba6c-38a9-97d8-551e9f866cce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24570164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Disrupting Print: Emigration, the Press, and Narrative Subjectivity in the British Preaching and Writing of Zilpha Elaw, 1840-1860s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24570164","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":7500,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Devin Zane Shaw"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b403aa3-3720-3609-a0e1-b3560887d9db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42705182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nothingness of Equality: \"The 'Sartrean Existentialism' of Jacques Ranci\u00e8re\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42705182","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8526,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[431716,431848]],"Locations in B":[[11851,11987]],"abstract":"In this essay, I propose a mutually constructive reading of the work of Jacques Ranci\u00e8re and Jean-Paul Sartre. On the one hand, I argue that Ranci\u00e8re's egalitarian political thought owes several important conceptual debts to Sartre's Being and Nothingness, especially in his use of the concepts of freedom, contingency and facticity. These concepts play a dual role in Ranci\u00e8re's thought. First, he appropriates them to show how the formation of subjectivity through freedom is a dynamic that introduces new ways of speaking, being and doing, instead of being a mode of assuming an established identity. Second, Ranci\u00e8re uses these concepts to demonstrate the contingency of any situation or social order, a contingency that is the possibility of egalitarian praxis. On the other hand, I also argue that reading Sartre with Ranci\u00e8re makes possible the reconstruction of Sartre's project within the horizon of freedom and equality rather than that of authenticity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lansana Keita"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482717","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"892f48e9-88f3-3f8c-85ec-ee638c37e6a0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24482717"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"5","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-5","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Philosophy and Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24482717","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":2081,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LOCKSLEY EDMONDSON"],"datePublished":"1976-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae571b71-9bba-3a58-9424-c78ccb133290"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"TRANS-ATLANTIC SLAVERY AND THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF RACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653150","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ERIC CURRY"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.43.1.0023","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15403084"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174970348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ad3aada-ff70-3a47-b219-4d39cbc1b8c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/amerlitereal.43.1.0023"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cThe Power of Combinations\u201d: Sutton Griggs\u2019 Imperium in Imperio<\/em> and the Science of Collective Efficiency","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.43.1.0023","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8943,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Duncan Kennedy"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372722","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00127086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b61b308-f285-31f3-ad28-dfc1d232344f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1372722"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dukelawj"}],"isPartOf":"Duke Law Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"757","pageStart":"705","pagination":"pp. 705-757","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Duke University School of Law","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"A Cultural Pluralist Case for Affirmative Action in Legal Academia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1372722","volumeNumber":"1990","wordCount":26337,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toby Rollo"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574563","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"afd41586-462d-3ed4-a126-5c5756e04f7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574563"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Color of Childhood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574563","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9818,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432082,432313]],"Locations in B":[[26933,27168]],"abstract":"The binary between the figure of the child and the fully human being is invoked with regularity in analyses of race, yet its centrality to the conception of race has never been fully explored. For most commentators, the figure of the child operates as a metaphoric or rhetorical trope, a non-essential strategic tool in the perpetuation of White supremacy. As I show in the following, the child\/human binary does not present a contingent or merely rhetorical construction but, rather, a central feature of racialization. Where Black peoples are situated as objects of violence it is often precisely because Blackness has been identified with childhood and childhood is historically identified as the archetypal site of naturalized violence and servitude. I proceed by offering a historical account of how Black peoples came to inherit the subordination and dehumanization of European childhood and how White youth were subsequently spared through their partial categorization as adults.","subTitle":"The Role of the Child\/Human Binary in the Production of Anti-Black Racism","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jared A. Ball"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163915","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c99fa650-418e-3314-8f84-c996705ae7c0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163915"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anti-colonial Media: The Continuing Impact of Robert L. Allen's \"Black Awakening in Capitalist America\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163915","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8806,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donato Ndongo-Bidyogo","Dorothy Odartey-Wellington"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe761d4a-473a-3c1c-b90b-730abee91f66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23055340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Hacia una literatura nacional: entrevista a Donato Ndongo-Bidyoga","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23055340","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graeme R. Newman"],"datePublished":"1975-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/589589","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00071315"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205578"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/589589"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"217","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-217","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Theory of Deviance Removal","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/589589","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Breu"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"edbcf834-0da1-323d-ab23-b66e99ecd007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"795","pageStart":"766","pagination":"pp. 766-795","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Freudian Knot or Gordian Knot?: The Contradictions of Racialized Masculinity in Chester Himes' \"If He Hollers Let Him Go\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300726","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":16958,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Allen"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140198","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e51a18b-220d-3c6f-a974-9d2142d53610"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140198"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jaesteduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Aesthetic Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Biting the Bullet: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140198","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":5444,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["TONY N. BROWN","SHERRILL L. SELLERS","JOHN P. GOMEZ"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380237"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617066"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200248"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a076fdba-e365-3926-a4e2-242056278e3a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20832150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociofocus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Focus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INTERNALIZATION AND SELF-ESTEEM AMONG BLACK ADULTS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20832150","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7266,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"We address whether individual variation in internalization of positive or negative racial stereotypes was associated with low levels of self-esteem in a national probability sample of 2,107 self-identified black adults interviewed face-to-face in 1980 (National Survey of Black Americans). Rejection of positive stereotypes and acceptance of negative stereotypes were statistically linked to declining levels of self-esteem, controlling for background variables such as gender, region, education, age, income, marital status, and skin color. Weak evidence was found to suggest that the relationship between negative stereotype acceptance and self-esteem depended upon how close respondents felt to other blacks. We advocate that closer attention be given to conceptualizing internalization and measuring its psychological impact among stigmatized groups exposed to social discrimination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emmanuel Matambo"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26890363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20504292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7728bd4c-df2e-3a53-bb1b-6f1569e37fde"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26890363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrnlafrunionstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Union Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bystander in My Own House","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26890363","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5336,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article critiques Africa\u2019s agency and potential in solving the continent\u2019s peace and conflict challenges through the African Union (AU). Presently, Africa remains a marginal player because of insufficient economic ownership of conflict resolution and peace building and the constant intervention and interference of well-resourced non-African players. This article also appraises the AU\u2019s elite-centric, or top-down method of ending conflict and establishing peace, intended to fulfil the ideals of Agenda 2063. While welcoming the AU principle of non- indifference in obeisance to Responsibility to Protect (R2P), the paper argues that the impulse not to chastise errant African leaderships vitiates any hope of improving the welfare of ordinary Africans. If peace initiatives are done at the level of the elite without the consent of the non-elite, the conflict will endure despite the fa\u00e7ade at the elite level suggesting otherwise. With South Sudan as an example, the paper argues that conflict in Africa often takes undertones of identity politics and hence conflict resolution methods should take this into cognizance by forging a formula that enables amicable coexistence in countries that have diverse ethnic and racial identities.","subTitle":"A Critique of the Africa Union\u2019s Method and Role in Ending Conflict and Establishing Peace in Africa","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Bryant"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e8ceb0b-b23c-3831-b760-d3c1055adaad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Poetics of Testimony and Blackness in the Theology of James H. Cone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758815","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8072,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth McAlister"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2013.16.4.11","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10926690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50633713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002215106"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e1a4fbe-00ed-30d8-9430-37affcbf9548"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/nr.2013.16.4.11"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"novareligio"}],"isPartOf":"Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"34","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-34","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Humanitarian Adhocracy, Transnational New Apostolic Missions, and Evangelical Anti-Dependency in a Haitian Refugee Camp","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/nr.2013.16.4.11","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":10233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article addresses religious responses to disaster by examining how one network of conservative evangelical Christians reacted to the Haiti earthquake and the humanitarian relief that followed. The charismatic Christian New Apostolic Reformation (or Spiritual Mapping movement) is a transnational network that created the conditions for post-earthquake, internally displaced Haitians to arrive at two positions that might seem contradictory. On one hand, Pentecostal Haitian refugees used the movement\u2019s conservative, right-wing theology to develop a punitive theodicy of the quake as God\u2019s punishment of a sinful nation. On the other hand, rather than resign themselves to victimhood and passivity, their strict moralism allowed these evangelical refugees to formulate an uncompromising critique of the Haitian government, the United Nations peacekeeping mission, and foreign humanitarian relief. They rejected material humanitarian aid when possible and developed a stance of Christian self-sufficiency, anti-foreign-aid, and anti-dependency. They accepted visits only from American missionaries with \u201cspiritual,\u201d and not material, missions, and they launched their own missions to parts of Haiti unaffected by the quake.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Milton Krieger"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"177","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-177","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Building the Republic through Letters: \"Abbia: Cameroon Cultural Review,\" 1963-82, and Its Legacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820169","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11861,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terenjit Sevea"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29aa8bf2-42d2-335f-9517-9bd41b81a6e8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"1400","pageStart":"1375","pagination":"pp. 1375-1400","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Islamist Questioning and [C]olonialism: Towards an Understanding of the Islamist Oeuvre","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455004","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":13350,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper revisits the narratives of two South Asian 'Islamists' to explore what their questions and critiques offer for a discussion on Colonialism and the Islamist oeuvre. Departing from resilient biases in scholarship that dismiss the need to engage Islamist expressions, I focus on a realm of Islamist self-understandings. This paper highlights key facets of Muhammad Iqbal's and Abul Ala Maududi's questions of Colonialism and their psychological implications, and uncovers their metaphors and reconstructions that operate as technologies of critique. I also emphasize the urgency to engage these Islamists in light of the inadequacies of present scholarship on this topic, and the diverse translation and appropriation of their questions. This study bears implications for the understanding of Islamist consciousness and the broader rubric of Muslim intellectualism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arindam Banerjee"],"datePublished":"2015-11-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9227f87c-bf79-3a32-81a2-df8207f6f22b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24642386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"11\/12","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sam Moyo: A Scholar for the Oppressed (1954\u20132015)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24642386","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":1833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marvin Zonis"],"datePublished":"1975-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227392"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/162120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"356","pageStart":"354","pagination":"pp. 354-356","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Middle East Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Economics - Economic disciplines","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162120","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1876,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elana Bregin"],"datePublished":"2000-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238891","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e20ef885-710d-32dd-8f9a-1e7e8a0e2ca1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238891"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Representing the Bushmen: Through the Colonial Lens","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238891","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7615,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol Sicherman"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820624","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820624"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revolutionizing the Literature Curriculum at the University of East Africa: Literature and the Soul of the Nation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820624","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9942,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ode S. Ogede"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6885e0a4-3108-3c33-bd25-809bc94bc5e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"529","pagination":"pp. 529-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PATTERNS OF DECADENCE, VISIONS OF REGENERATION IN ARMAH'S \"FRAGMENTS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283161","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":9661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emma Kuby"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156874617"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccb448c5-adb7-319c-8fbd-8cb91d02d9c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24720627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Our Actions Never Cease to Haunt Us\": Frantz Fanon, Jean-Paul Sartre, and the Violence of the Algerian War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24720627","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10133,"numMatches":6,"Locations in A":[[98776,98833],[98943,99067],[99145,99309],[105298,105396],[110357,110494],[115152,115397]],"Locations in B":[[5394,5451],[5570,5689],[5795,5947],[44416,44514],[47691,47827],[48269,48609]],"abstract":"This article considers two famous works published in France during the Algerian War and forever after interpretively linked: Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth and Jean-Paul Sartre's Preface to Fanon's book. It argues that yoking together the two texts has distorted key features of each, in particular as they relate to the multiform problem of violence. To overcome a misreading of Fanon's position by Sartre, the analysis presented here uses the under-examined clinical case studies in the final chapter of Wretched to emphasize Fanon's acknowledgment of violence as a source of trauma, not only a means by which trauma is transcended. It then attempts to explain Sartre's reinterpretation of Fanon's message in light of ongoing postwar debates within the French intellectual Left about the revolutionary potential of violence in metropolitan France.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Hitchcock"],"datePublished":"2003-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057781","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f3c602c8-2278-31eb-bf38-f31bed9c940e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057781"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Genre of Postcoloniality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057781","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":15284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine H. Olaoye"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0cfaa28a-4fd7-3de9-a5ea-697700463faf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"An Analysis of Scientific, Cultural and Epistemological Issues in Teaching Introductory Psychology to College Students in Antigua and Barbuda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758908","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":10469,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[63670,63734]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Ottenberg"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3818810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818810","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":1767,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abraham M. Peter","Merey Ocheni"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45195122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd20234c-fa8b-3b45-82d7-d3e4639d203e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45195122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"313","pageStart":"293","pagination":"pp. 293-313","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BEYOND RESOURCE ENDOWMENT: THE STATE AND THE CHALLENGES OF NATIONAL SECURITY IN NIGERIA, 1999 TO 2014","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45195122","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":7616,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Justin Patch"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.34.3.0365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07344392"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50574305"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235615"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"771b409c-91ca-3758-a57b-06e90bebcee6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/americanmusic.34.3.0365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"americanmusic"}],"isPartOf":"American Music","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"401","pageStart":"365","pagination":"pp. 365-401","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Notes on Deconstructing the Populism: Music on the Campaign Trail, 2012 and 2016","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/americanmusic.34.3.0365","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":17600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathan Hare"],"datePublished":"1982-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068062","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"70696354-29ff-32e1-bd99-17efe30e82df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068062"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REVOLUTION WITHOUT A REVOLUTION: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX AND RACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068062","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":3645,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FINOLA FINN"],"datePublished":"2014-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44706139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18389554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607530099"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235161"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba5577e8-fe73-35a7-bdfa-11f6c159aead"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44706139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"austjamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Australasian Journal of American Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Australia New Zealand American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"AMERICA'S RECEPTION OF 'THE CRESS THEORY OF COLOR-CONFRONTATION'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44706139","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7263,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 1970, Frances Cress Welsing published her controversial 'Cress Theory of Color-Confrontation.' Based on pseudoscientific genetics, this 'theory' argued that racism is caused by whites' subconscious awareness \u2014 and subsequent fear \u2014 of being genetically inferior to black people. Welsing, a psychiatrist and associate professor of pediatrics at Howard University, publicized her theory in television appearances and speeches, drawing significant media attention. Though met with much criticism, Welsing's 'theory' was also welcomed by some African Americans. This article argues that the partly positive reception to her views should be viewed in the context of Black Power, cultural nationalism, and Black Studies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John MacMenamin"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30059822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0332060X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10892f59-19cd-3d82-a97c-8c1d91bcd55b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30059822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cranebag"}],"isPartOf":"The Crane Bag","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Richard Kearney","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Humanities","Irish Studies","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Irish Politics: Ideologies and Realities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30059822","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":7377,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Girma Negash"],"datePublished":"1999-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2049bddb-4a73-3b1c-863a-5ef383490b9f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Migrant Literature and Political Commitment: Puzzles and Parables in the Novels of Biyi Bandele-Thomas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771849","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":8058,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"By circumstance and self-designation Nigerian writer Biyi Bandele-Thomas is a cosmopolitan postcolonial writer. Postcolonial writers whose works are considered 'migrant' have been suspect in regard to their commitment to national resistance politics. I assert that such an undifferentiated designation will have us overlook the different degrees of political engagement of such writers, in spite of the migrant status of their work. A close political reading of the two novels by Biyi Bandele-Thomas, The Man who Came in from the Back of Beyond and The Sympathetic Undertaker and Other Dreams, in terms of their style, form and content, confirms the anti-neocolonial and actively humanist positions of this novelist. Bandele-Thomas constructs literary devices that reflect and at the same time accommodate both the postmodern and postcolonial worlds he deals with. Consequently he adopts a surrealistic approach in which he mixes the phantasmic with the naturalistic to refract Nigerian realities. Tales of cruelty, abuse of power and corruption are strung together to build parables on the moral and political questions of truth and falsity, idealism and freedom. Humour and irony lighten the horror and provide hope at the same time as they satirize systems of oppressive power. Three political themes stand out in these narratives: a description of the neocolonial wasteland; dystopic fears of dictatorship and economic stagnation; and madness (schizophrenia) as a surreal literary prop and a sign of unendurable suffering in the Fourth World. Bandele-Thomas's two novels are transparently engaged in Nigeria's present condition and its future. I encourage that we re-visit the politics of migrant literature.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Roney"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512324","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13d1c4a1-def9-37f7-ae13-560bd0b65f41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1512324"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"427","pageStart":"407","pagination":"pp. 407-427","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Paradox of Experience: Black Art and Black Idiom in the Work of Amiri Baraka","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512324","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":13783,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl Stobie"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b46925b-3bd5-3fc7-be8e-0a502158a52e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26359640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Longing and Belonging: Emancipation Moments and Ubuntu in Claire Robertson's \"The Spiral House\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26359640","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Claire Robertson's 2013 novel, The Spiral House, consists of two alternating South African chronotopes, one a farm in 1794, the other a mission hospital in 1961. The first narrative unfolds shortly before the abolition of slavery. Robertson critiques the ideology of slavery and the effects of Enlightenment scientific experimentation on human subjects. The consequences of social engineering, violence and sexism are shown in the suffering of the characters. The second narrative is set at the time when South Africa becomes a republic. It concerns a white nun who is breaking away from her convent life and acting as a surrogate mother to a young black boy. The novel, which concludes in 1994, requires the reader to contemplate who has been given full subjecthood within the framework of the nation, according to which ideologies. In analysing this novel I employ Leonard Praeg's A Report on Ubuntu (2014). Ubuntu is an African concept of community through an imagined sense of belonging, both material and ethical. Praeg notes: \"Ubuntu [...] can only play this role of positing past realities as future possibilities through a perpetual deconstruction of two essential building blocks of Western modernity: a linear conception of time and the binary separation of self and other, being and belonging\" (248). I argue that Robertson's novel effectively and movingly exemplifies Ubuntu.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oumar Ba"],"datePublished":"2017-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.03","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6496b544-d6e0-3941-b357-774e5dd6cad7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.03"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"International Justice and the Postcolonial Condition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.63.4.03","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":8269,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[6100,6148]],"Locations in B":[[1072,1120]],"abstract":"This article moves beyond the reductive debate whether the International Criminal Court is the \u201cCourt for Africa,\u201d targeting Africans. Placing the ICC in its historical, larger context and within global politics, I argue that international law and the theory and practice of international criminal justice lie on foundations that consecrated the West as the sole trustees of law, justice, and morality. To that extent, and drawing from IR, postcolonial and international law literatures, I contend that the postcolonial condition is the one in which the globally disenfranchised navigate the international justice system, which still consecrates the West as incapable of committing criminal acts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Khalid Lyamlahy"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748127","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68bb7311-f611-31a0-b02a-b4ae068dfb4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26748127"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"128","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-128","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"African and Maghreb Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26748127","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":8158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael O'Brien"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678942","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd827948-7930-3b87-9929-e9f5e29f5864"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2678942"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Resurrecting the Lost Voice of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2678942","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1711,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.89.2015.0129","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a43d148-ff0e-3704-ae48-832ed4486bf4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/culturalcritique.89.2015.0129"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FROM THE LAST DANCER","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/culturalcritique.89.2015.0129","volumeNumber":"89","wordCount":2343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This memorial piece takes as given the points of intersection between the author's own thought and the project of Stuart Hall. She is displacing his deep involvement with the British context\u2014the CND, Hungary, working class to mass culture, Birmingham cultural studies, the Open University, into a thinking of the world. She is writing as a younger contemporary, involved with Stuart Hall in the first wave presentations of \u201ctheory.\u201d The work of Frantz Fanon serves as a bridge in this articulation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosanna Hertz"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231349","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e794886a-b980-383b-9eac-59e181edd478"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231349"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1164","pageStart":"1160","pagination":"pp. 1160-1164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231349","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NOAH DE LISSOVOY"],"datePublished":"2010-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"15ee5c87-bf4c-348a-b7ae-d591c6154069"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40962975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"418","pagination":"pp. 418-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Staging the Crisis: Teaching, Capital, and the Politics of the Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40962975","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article proposes a philosophical reconstruction of the subject of the educator as the agent of curriculum. Starting from recent work in critical theory and philosophy, it describes the process of the existential crisis of the educator as the first step toward a truly critical education. The article argues that philosophy of curriculum must be concerned not just with forms of thought but also with forms of being\u2014with the very ground of the subject and its real. This political ontology of the subject suggests a process of reconstruction consisting of several stages: the disclosure of ideology and complicity, the investigation of the process of interpellation, and the creation of a fundamentally collective educational practice. It is only on the basis of the effective staging of this crisis at the heart of the teaching subject that a meaningful critical pedagogy and curriculum can be articulated. The article concludes with a description of the outlines of such a critical education, as they emerge through the process of reconstruction described above.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edna Aizenberg"],"datePublished":"1992-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dc8d6e9-990a-3459-a48c-8893f752fcda"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/462877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"1252","pageStart":"1235","pagination":"pp. 1235-1252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Historical Subversion and Violence of Representation in Garc\u00eda M\u00e1rquez and Ouologuem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/462877","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":12280,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The rediscovery of history, a recent literary-critical event, is problematic in its elision of the non-Western past and its subsumption of non-Western fictional works. Likewise, some new studies on the interplay of violence and representation, while offered as critiques of Western discourse, ignore significant earlier Third World theorizations. This essay, in focusing on Gabriel Garc\u00eda M\u00e1rquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude and Yambo Ouologuem's Bound to Violence, aims to reinstate the absent history: those Third World conditions and exigencies that link postcolonial novels and a desire to think historically. Both books adopt a violent narrative strategy that reflects their status as products of a ruptured history scarred by imperialization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alamin M. Mazrui","Judith I. Abala"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Sex and Patriarchy: Gender Relations in \"Mawt al-rajul al-wahid 'ala al-ard (God Dies by the Nile)\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820990","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ayanda Wiseman Nombila"],"datePublished":"2018-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26889813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20504292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20bf70df-dc7e-34c2-a105-77f45c7b0036"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26889813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrnlafrunionstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Union Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading the Idea of Nation, Pan-Africanism and Globalization in the Thought of Dr. Silas Modiri Molema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26889813","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper focuses on the reading of early Pan-Africanism, the idea of a nation, and the globalization movement in the 21st century, in relation to the intellectual work of the Africanist communitarian, Dr. Silas Modiri Molema. The main argument I shall be making in this article is that the early thinking of South African intellectuals like Molema was part of the global effort to seek for a modern political subjectivity, in a way that refuses to be mimetic of the West. I shall show that the political questions for the generation of Molema\u2019s time were: What does it mean to be modern in a distinctively African way? Can Africans become modern without being westernized? The paper also attempts to show the need to understand ideas produced within concrete political situations. The need to question the historical, contextual, cultural, and economic milieus within which the ideas about pan-Africanism, nation and globalization are produced. I will show that the works of early intellectuals were embedded in concrete political situations and that the early instantiations on pan-Africanism and globalization were based on the critique of westernization, liberalism and empire, and capitalist political economy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Graham Jones"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567682","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f083367c-c31b-318c-a626-a21bf1fc2eac"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3567682"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Diplomacy of Dreams: Jean Rouch and Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3567682","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":1907,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathan Hare"],"datePublished":"1978-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8e274ee2-0c1a-35bc-a9bd-b3712acee593"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"7","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-7","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"REVOLUTION WITHOUT A REVOLUTION: THE PSYCHOLOGY OF SEX AND RACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066476","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":3633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raju Das","Ashley Chen"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/worlrevipoliecon.10.2.0191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2042891X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"786959081"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e943baa-6352-3cc5-b405-b7b75a1f0444"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/worlrevipoliecon.10.2.0191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worlrevipoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"World Review of Political Economy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards a Theoretical Framework for Understanding Capitalist Violence against Child Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/worlrevipoliecon.10.2.0191","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":13866,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"More than 150\u2013200 million children work for a living in the world. A large number of them experience violence. The economic aspect of child labor has received much attention (as has the topic of violence against children as children), and rightly so. But the extra-economic aspect of child labor (i.e., the sheer violence against children as workers in the market-place and the workplace) has been relatively neglected. It is necessary to conduct empirical studies on the topic, which, however, require prior theoretical work. The aim of this paper is to provide a theoretical framework on violence against child labor. Central to this framework are three inter-connected arguments: the fact that under certain circumstances, and contrary to a widely-prevalent standpoint, capitalism produces, and makes use of, a pool of workers who lack the freedom to enter and exit a labor contract; the universal logic of capitalist accumulation interacting with the context where some workers are children; and finally, the fact that violence against child labor is enabled by a specific cultural aspect of capitalist society, \u201cchildism.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nfamewih Aseh"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68fb3108-2814-3e2a-b225-00ffc1702688"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"169","pagination":"pp. 169-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideologies, Governance and the Public Sphere in Cameroon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484046","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":24034,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The founding history of Cameroon, as a nation-state was influenced by externally imposed factors, which also means that the founding political philosophy on which the neo-colonial state in Cameroon rests is traceable to foreign sources. Hence, Cameroon has no indigenous philosophical basis of existence from which an indigenous worldview should have emerged with its religion, literature, paintings, music, etc., to govern a public sphere that derives from and supports its own reality. And since the 'Idea of Kamerun' was transformed into a neo-colonial political structure during the Cold War for the purpose of achieving a foreign economic objective, like the original idea itself, one of the ways of achieving that desired goal was by dominating the public sphere with idiomatic expressions that claim to make life rather than being supportive of reality, which at the same time sought to destroy the foundation of all indigenous political philosophies, yet with no intention of establishing a universal ideal. The hypothesis of this article is that for the foreign founding philosophy to be maintained and reproduced in the public domain for the survival of the foreign-oriented kleptocratic state, there was the need to flood the public sphere with ideological mechanisms of public mediation for the effective epistemic control of the population. The result is the emergence of a fractured and contested public sphere that selectively 'favours' certain social categories for the success of the project of domination. This article, which seeks to develop a theory that explains the operation of the public sphere in a neo-colonial context, will thus examine, from a historical standpoint, the origins of a selected sample of some of the idiomatic expressions that govern the public sphere in Cameroon and the ideological options they represent, as a methodological preference to showing their correlation with the project of domination. The aim is to show how governance is mediated by the alienating role of an incoherent public sphere \u2013 dominated by representations of foreign ideologies \u2013 which does not seek to create a common consciousness in all citizens but rather to help maintain and perpetuate a fractured image of the Enlightenment. This is reinforced by a style of governance that thrives on a fractured public sphere, an understanding of which should illustrate a public sphere that encourages hybridised notions that are critical for foreign interference, meddling, destruction and domination within the overall project of 'nation building'. The article also aims at showing the role of trans-territorial influences in the 'development' of the public sphere in Cameroon and how this has been changing over the years. L'histoire fondatrice du Cameroun, en tant qu'\u00c9tat-nation, a \u00e9t\u00e9 influenc\u00e9e par des facteurs impos\u00e9s de l'ext\u00e9rieur, ce qui signifie \u00e9galement que la philosophie politique fondatrice sur laquelle repose l'\u00c9tat n\u00e9ocolonial au Cameroun remonte \u00e0 des sources \u00e9trang\u00e8res. Ainsi, l'existence du Cameroun n'est fond\u00e9e sur aucune base philosophique indig\u00e8ne d'o\u00f9 aurait d\u00fb \u00e9merger une vision du monde indig\u00e8ne, avec sa religion, sa litt\u00e9rature, sa peinture, sa musique, etc., pour r\u00e9gir une sph\u00e8re publique qui d\u00e9coule de sa propre r\u00e9alit\u00e9 et soutient celle-ci. Et puisque l' \u00ab Id\u00e9e de Kamerun \u00bb a \u00e9t\u00e9 transform\u00e9e en une structure politique n\u00e9ocoloniale pendant la Guerre Froide aux fins d'atteindre un objectif \u00e9conomique \u00e9tranger, comme l'id\u00e9e initiale elle-m\u00eame, l'un des moyens pour atteindre cet objectif vis\u00e9 passait par la domination de la sph\u00e8re publique avec des expressions idiomatiques qui pr\u00e9tendent rendre la vie plut\u00f4t que de soutenir la r\u00e9alit\u00e9 qui, en m\u00eame temps, cherchaient \u00e0 d\u00e9truire le fondement de toutes les philosophies politiques indig\u00e8nes, toutefois sans aucune intention d'\u00e9tablir un id\u00e9al universel. L'hypoth\u00e8se avanc\u00e9e par cet article est que, pour que la philosophie fondatrice \u00e9trang\u00e8re soit maintenue et reproduite dans le domaine public pour la survie de l'\u00c9tat kleptocrate orient\u00e9 vers l'ext\u00e9rieur, il fallait inonder la sph\u00e8re publique de m\u00e9canismes id\u00e9ologiques de m\u00e9diation publique pour le contr\u00f4le \u00e9pist\u00e9mique efficace de la population. Il en r\u00e9sulte l'\u00e9mergence d'une sph\u00e8re publique fractur\u00e9e et contest\u00e9e qui \u00ab favorise \u00bb de fa\u00e7on s\u00e9lective certaines cat\u00e9gories sociales pour la r\u00e9ussite du projet de domination. Cet article qui cherche \u00e0 d\u00e9velopper une th\u00e9orie expliquant le fonctionnement de la sph\u00e8re publique dans un contexte n\u00e9ocolonial examinera donc, d'un point de vue historique, les origines d'un \u00e9chantillon choisi dans les expressions idiomatiques qui r\u00e9gissent la sph\u00e8re publique au Cameroun et les options id\u00e9ologiques qu'elles repr\u00e9sentent, en tant que pr\u00e9f\u00e9rence m\u00e9thodologique pour montrer leur corr\u00e9lation avec le projet de domination. L'objectif est de montrer comment la gouvernance est assur\u00e9e par le r\u00f4le ali\u00e9nant d'une sph\u00e8re publique incoh\u00e9rente \u2013 domin\u00e9e par des repr\u00e9sentations d'id\u00e9ologies \u00e9trang\u00e8res \u2013 qui ne cherchent pas \u00e0 cr\u00e9er une conscience commune chez tous les citoyens, mais plut\u00f4t \u00e0 faciliter le maintien et la perp\u00e9tuation d'une image fractur\u00e9e des \u00ab Lumi\u00e8res \u00bb. Cela est renforc\u00e9 par un style de gouvernance qui prosp\u00e8re sur une sph\u00e8re publique fractur\u00e9e dont la compr\u00e9hension devrait illustrer une sph\u00e8re publique qui encourage des notions hybridis\u00e9es cruciales pour l'interface, l'ing\u00e9rence, la destruction et la domination \u00e9trang\u00e8res dans le projet global \u00ab d'\u00e9dification de la nation \u00bb. L'article vise \u00e9galement \u00e0 montrer le r\u00f4le des influences transterritoriales dans le \u00ab d\u00e9veloppement \u00bb de la sph\u00e8re publique au Cameroun et comment il a \u00e9volu\u00e9 au fil des ann\u00e9es.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sisonke Msimang"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066437","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b32cd769-8271-345c-ab88-61c775121aa6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066437"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"83","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-83","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"African Renaissance: Where Are the Women?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066437","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9937,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rob Nixon"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4ec3cc3b-527f-355a-a0c5-c0cecd76bbc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"578","pageStart":"557","pagination":"pp. 557-578","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Caribbean and African Appropriations of \"The Tempest\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343513","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amrohini J. Sahay"],"datePublished":"1996-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112240","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5041481a-710a-3f5d-81bd-689e41d0ef12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112240"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112240","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":3223,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AMAN SIUM"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30038540-4c81-3284-b150-d8dbb11fa4f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER THREE: Dreaming Beyond the State: Centering Indigenous Governance as a Framework for African Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982048","volumeNumber":"443","wordCount":8844,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary E. Wood"],"datePublished":"2012-04-12","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.44.3.0189","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15403084"},{"name":"oclc","value":"174970348"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-215665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7240b015-af9e-3ca4-8159-05c20b6b86e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/amerlitereal.44.3.0189"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitereal"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary Realism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"208","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-208","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cA State of Mind Akin to Madness\u201d: Charles W. Chesnutt's Short Fiction and the New Psychiatry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/amerlitereal.44.3.0189","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9421,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth N. Ngwa"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50907082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221979"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ee9a705-372f-36ac-aa81-52506bff2769"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbibllite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Biblical Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"876","pageStart":"855","pagination":"pp. 855-876","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Society of Biblical Literature","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Making of Gershom's Story: A Cameroonian Postwar Hermeneutics Reading of Exodus 2","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.15699\/jbl.1344.2015.1912","volumeNumber":"134","wordCount":9981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In his first articulation of self-definition\u2014though not his first identity-forming moment\u2014in Exodus, Moses, a repeat survivor of violence, describes himself in genealogical and geographical terms: \u201cI have become a sojourner in a foreign land\u201d (Exod 2:22). The bearer of that identity and memory, however, is not Moses but Gershom; that is, \u201csojourner\u201d and \u201cforeignness\u201d function less as personspecific and boundary-specific tropes than as intergenerational and interregional presences. Moses's intergenerational and interregional interpretive act creates a narrative and embodied character, Gershom, whose \u201cinherited\u201d story illustrates an exodus motif of fragmented and dislocated identity reclaimed as traumapromise. Combining biblical exegesis with theoretical insights from postcolonial analyses, cultural memory, and identity formation in the nation-state of Cameroon, the essay reads Exodus 2 as a postwar story of identity formation, infused with multiple consciousnesses (political, ethnic, gendered, regional, and religious) and varied memories (conjunctive, disjunctive, and adjunctive). These consciousnesses and memories create gershomite identity, the narrative trope and communal embodiment that transform the traumas of communal fragmentation and displacement into trauma-hopes of survival and regeneration.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emilia Terracciano"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967599","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a57e86d-884e-3ad8-993c-f88dfe85eb47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43967599"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Fugitive Lines: Nasreen Mohamedi, 1960-75","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43967599","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":7906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ihab Hassan"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41400990","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00168386"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5818e520-a42b-3f20-869a-db28a06b907e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41400990"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georgiarev"}],"isPartOf":"The Georgia Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on Behalf of the University of Georgia and the Georgia Review","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Expense of Spirit in Postmodern Times: Between Nihilism and Belief","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41400990","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":7466,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. McCain"],"datePublished":"1979-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523432","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1202827d-1dfd-31c1-b41c-31191663c97b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523432"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Attitudes toward Socialism, Policy, and Leadership in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523432","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELIZABETH SUZANNE KASSAB"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13530194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531621"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227374"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16ef2697-3307-3be9-9c2b-0d8e58937930"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43917047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critics and Rebels: Older Arab Intellectuals Reflect on the Uprisings","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43917047","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":12026,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Most Arabs, including intellectuals, agree that the recent uprisings have profoundly changed the realities they have known for decades since the independence of their states. The historical character of the moment, and the emergence of a youth capable of producing unprecedented changes, have together forced an older generation of Arab intellectuals, born roughly between the 1930s and the 1950s, to acknowledge the coming of a new generation of critics and rebels. This article looks at how thinkers of the older generation have written about the uprisings and its actors, by examining their public statements in the form of articles or interviews on television channels, in newspapers and journals, some of them newly launched. I focus on Lebanese poet Abbas Baydoun, Syrian philosopher Sadeq Jalal al-Azm, Lebanese novelist Elias Khoury, Egyptian novelist Baha' Taher, Bahraini thinker Muhammad Jaber al-Ansari, Syrian poet Adonis and Tunisian sociologist Taher Labib. While most of them value the importance of intellectual work in the struggle for human dignity and freedom, they also admit its limitations. They reflect on the significance of the popular and youth participation in advancing the causes they militated for in previous decades.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bai Kisogie"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2934950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"6","pagination":"pp. 6-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"State Exhibitionists & Ideological Glamour","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2934950","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6884,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Teresa Winstead","Adrea Lawrence","Edward J. Brantmeier","Christopher J. Frey"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24398505","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218731"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24398505"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamerindieduc"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of American Indian Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Language, Sovereignty, Cultural Contestation, and American Indian Schools: No Child Left Behind and a Navajo Test Case","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24398505","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":8821,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[411147,411256]],"Locations in B":[[7615,7729]],"abstract":"In this interpretive analysis elucidating fundamental tensions of the implementation of the 2001 No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act within Native-serving schools, we point to ways in which NCLB further limits the already contested sovereignty tribes exercise over how, and in what language their children are instructed. We discuss issues related to the self-determination exercised by schools, some problematic cultural assumptions inherent in the NCLB law, and the legal tension between NCLB and the 1990\/1992 Native American Languages Act. Finally, we examine the detrimental effects that NCLB accountability measures could have on Navajo communities, and look at how the Navajo Nation has addressed sovereignty over tribal education in recent years vis-\u00e0-vis NCLB.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EMILY CALLACI"],"datePublished":"2016-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26398666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09639268"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44166743"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0efe1bdc-8836-3e89-8c48-75e2db92a741"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26398666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Urban History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u2018Chief village in a nation of villages\u2019","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26398666","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":8819,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[424573,424670]],"Locations in B":[[25530,25627]],"abstract":"This article explores how notions of African authenticity informed urban planning in post-colonial Africa. It examines an attempt by Tanzania\u2019s ruling party to build a new national capital in the sparsely populated region of Dodoma. Paradoxically, Dodoma\u2019s planners sought to build a modern African city based on the social principles of the traditional African village. This vision of African village authenticity legitimized Tanzania\u2019s ruling party by linking its authority to a purely African, rather than colonial, past. At the same time, it allowed politicians to criminalize urban poverty by attributing it to racial betrayal rather than broader structural failures.","subTitle":"history, race and authority in Tanzania\u2019s Dodoma plan","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Georg M. Gugelberger"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00269271"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73328284"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215675"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3518a68e-cf2e-3152-8450-046018ef59fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30159275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"monatshefte"}],"isPartOf":"Monatshefte","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"479","pageStart":"468","pagination":"pp. 468-479","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"University of Wisconsin Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Solidarity, Not Influence: An African Novelistic Incorporation of Brecht's \"Begr\u00e4bnis des Hetzers im Zinksarg\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30159275","volumeNumber":"78","wordCount":5603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Brecht continues to have an exceptional impact in an Africa which expressed grave reservations for things European during the early days of \"independence.\" Via Brecht the turn from ethnicity and Pan-Africanism to class-analysis found its way into literature. The Guinean novelist Alioum Fantour\u00e9 in his Le Cercle des Tropiques (1972) presents the development from colonialism to neo-colonialism in the fictitious Les Marigots du Sud. Under an indigenous and exploitative leadership called Messiah-Koism violence escalates until a young man distributes a Brecht poem to the masses. He is arrested and executed since the new \"leader\" who has never heard of Brecht correctly assumes that the poem (originally about Hitler) is about him. \"The barrel of the pen\" turns around events in a basically straightforward and traditional novel. This treatment puts the novel in the middle of the Brecht-Luk\u00e1cs debate. By incorporating Brecht's poem in a narrative context which lives up to Luk\u00e1csian expectations, Fantour\u00e9 succeeds in bringing the two most fruitful yet antagonistic \"models\" of a Marxist literary discourse together.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Dayan"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Erzulie: A Women's History of Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618262","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13486,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K.P. Binda"],"datePublished":"1994-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23607343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba88aadb-5e37-3aca-95bf-0a6a7940a128"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23607343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Peace Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"37","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-37","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Canadian Mennonite University","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"RESTRUCTURING COMMONWEALTH CARIBBEAN SOCIAL STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23607343","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Stigliano"],"datePublished":"1983-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766191","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17828843-7c18-3477-b7b2-d9e2f72f4c23"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766191"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"JEAN-PAUL SARTRE ON UNDERSTANDING VIOLENCE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766191","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDWARD L. KICK"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"286711ee-f46d-3ef1-af89-94dd979a8621"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45293206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"WORLD SYSTEM PROPERTIES AND MASS POLITICAL CONFLICT WITHIN NATIONS: THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293206","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":7981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"For the most part, conventional treatments of mass political conflict have attempted to identify intranational determinants of collective action. Extra national analyses of domestic conflict exist, but they may be criticized for theoretical shortcomings, inconclusive findings, and\/or a limited emphasis on the political experience of developing countries only. Recent world system formulations provide more comprehensive unit-environment models which may eliminate these deficiencies. However, current variants of this perspective fail to systematically delimit international effects on the group mobilization processes that are requisite for collective action. A preliminary framework is offered here which links world system properties, national political economy and countries' susceptibility to foreign influence, the nature of conflict group mobilization, and resulting forms of overt, mass political contention.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Schweikart"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48586968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53668d2f-cdd6-34e3-bb32-d9c86cbf194d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48586968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre, Camus and a Marxism for the 21st Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48586968","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10376,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 1952 Albert Camus wrote a caustic letter to Les Temps Modernes in response to the journal\u2019s negative review of The Rebel, addressed, not to the author of the review, but to \u201cM. Le Directeur,\u201d i.e. to Sartre. Sartre\u2019s response published in the journal ended their friendship. This article examines the deep cause of this rupture, Camus\u2019s political views moving rightward, Sartre\u2019s moving left. I examine Camus\u2019s critique of Marx and Marxism, then ask the question, \u201cWhat is Marxism, Anyway?\u201d I defend a version of Sartrean \u201cexistential Marxism\u201d as appropriate for our time.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelly A. Rosario"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732876","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21230172-1553-3595-91e9-278ff6512198"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40732876"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"390","pageStart":"383","pagination":"pp. 383-390","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"JUDGING A COVER BY HIS BOOKS: An Annotated Bibliography of the Intellectual Macdaddy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40732876","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2398,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. Ruby Rich"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2014.67.2.85","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00151386"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45955217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214639"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5704efcf-7f3f-384e-be87-bb392d3dbd6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/fq.2014.67.2.85"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Film Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sundance At Thirty","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/fq.2014.67.2.85","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":4136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL BANAHENE ADJEI"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982031","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb5cb955-845f-3daf-9f6a-3905dd1812a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982031"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER THREE: When Blackness Shows Up Uninvited: Examining the Murder of Trayvon Martin through Fanonian Racial Interpellation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982031","volumeNumber":"445","wordCount":8987,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[50650,50716]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. McCain"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd146dc7-3837-3758-8981-f78bc992517d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology in Africa: Some Perceptual Types","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523710","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":14498,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert W. Cox"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20039576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00157120"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"33af4fd0-8ab5-315e-9166-0bc8a16f4805"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20039576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"foreignaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Council on Foreign Relations","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Labor and the Multinationals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20039576","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":9381,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Franco Barchiesi"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23391669","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01475479"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f109dedd-2822-3eff-8e59-59fdb0d825af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23391669"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelaboworkhist"}],"isPartOf":"International Labor and Working-Class History","issueNumber":"82","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Far from Africa's Shore? A Response to Marcel van der Linden's Map for Global Labor History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23391669","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3693,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27679]],"Locations in B":[[22157,22205]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony M. Stevens-Arroyo"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48536082"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"543","pageStart":"515","pagination":"pp. 515-543","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Society for Comparative Studies in Society and History","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Inter-Atlantic Paradigm: The Failure of Spanish Medieval Colonization of the Canary and Caribbean Islands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179144","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":14451,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernesto Pujol"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778086","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043249"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436076"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235618"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29c75ab4-8dd8-3164-8245-ed0ab5e98bad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/778086"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artj"}],"isPartOf":"Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Notes on Obsessive Whiteness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/778086","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":1146,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rogers Tabe Egbe Orock"],"datePublished":"2013-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635380","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c5e82b6-d919-369b-b9d9-3ef73a65f867"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42635380"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Less-told stories about corporate globalization: transnational corporations and CSR as the politics of (ir)responsibility in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42635380","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":12424,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the wake of transformations being ushered by globalization, figures suggest that there is a rise in the power of transnational corporations (TNCs), raising important questions about the exercise of such power and\/or how to hold them accountable for it. Concomitantly, corporate social responsibility (CSR) discourse has emerged as a new discursive formation; a new meta-narrative that is propagated by TNCs. It seeks to portray the actions of TNCs as oriented by such values as \"responsibility,\" \"sustainability,\" \"development.\" Situated within what is emerging as \"an anthropological imperative to critique\" the actions of corporations, this article takes a critical approach to such a meta-narrative. It argues that not only do TNCs behave irresponsibly in contexts outside the Global North where they can easily get away with doing so, but also that the CSR discourse of responsibility helps to occlude these often damaging actions by TNCs. Drawing from an overview of the often untold or less-known stories of damaging actions by TNCs in Africa in the recent past, this article illustrates the disturbing co-existence of socially irresponsible actions amidst a forceful tendency to circulate a feel-good CSR discourse of responsibility.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Gyssels"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752186","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"865402d7-7e12-371a-98d8-0ce14b4cda91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26752186"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"255","pagination":"pp. 255-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bit in the Mouth, Death in the Soul","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26752186","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sixty years after the famous 'Conf\u00e9rence des \u00e9crivains et artistes noirs at the Sorbonne', and sixty years after Black-Label, the third collection of poetry by French Guianese Leon-Gontran Damas, the words \"n\u00e8gre\" and \"nigger\" remain offensive words all too much used in postcolonial Europe today. Even after the short-lived Obamamania, Damas's poetry remains actual as it expresses the censorship endured by the lyrical voice who cannot speak out loud against those violent verbal, physical, and thus psychological assaults. Consequently, his \"mors dans la bouche,\" or \"bit in the mouth\" is incorporated in his less well-known work which testifies to the \"mort dans l'\u00e2me.\" The latter is the constant feeling of depression and blues lurking on the Black or coloured citizen of France and the West Indies. Standing in the shadow of the cofounders, and quite neglected by the leading Martinicans of the post-N\u00e9gritude era, Damas nevertheless understood the urgency of transcontinental and transcultural solidarities in this battle and wrote against the dichotomies of race, class, and gender. Damas (b. 1912) and James (b. 1901) knew each other for over forty years. Damas read James's novel, Minty Alley (published in 1936) before they met in Paris when James was doing the research for The Black Jacobins (published in 1938), his landmark history of Tousssaint L'Ouverture and the revolution in the French colony of Saint-Domingue. Damas helped James with translations and discovering documents at the Biblioth\u00e8que Nationale. On one occasion, Damas brought James to the home of Robert Desnos. Both lived in Washington, DC, in the 1970s when Damas was at Howard University and James taught at Federal City College\/University of the District of Columbia.","subTitle":"Remembering the Poetry of L\u00e9on-Gontran Damas","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Theodora Goss","John Paul Riquelme"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1ff3468-524f-39ca-96cd-edc27bfc6552"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"434","pagination":"pp. 434-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FROM SUPERHUMAN TO POSTHUMAN: THE GOTHIC TECHNOLOGICAL IMAGINARY IN MARY SHELLEY'S \"FRANKENSTEIN\" AND OCTAVIA BUTLER'S \"XENOGENESIS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287111","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":11091,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARLENE L. DAUT"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412157","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0784047-e44c-36a4-a2f9-b67bcfc8101a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41412157"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Oregon","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Alpha and Omega\" of Haitian Literature: Baron de Vastey and the U.S. Audience of Haitian Political Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412157","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":14442,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane L. Parpart"],"datePublished":"1983-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6mtdm4.17","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba299590-bf39-3061-b48b-949bd442a1f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv6mtdm4.17"}],"isPartOf":"Labor and Capital on the African Copperbelt","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"212","pageStart":"171","pagination":"171-212","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv6mtdm4.17","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["rcm csd","northern rhodesia","russell commission","interview","interview see","perrings black","scrivener evidence","report","see note","evidence"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"1983-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765724","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01938703"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0df2270f-e3ad-33c2-9fcc-6ce218571302"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29765724"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contmarx"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Marxism","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class Struggle and National Liberation in Zaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29765724","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16429,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth C. 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This limitation, a general characteristic feature pervading post-colonial discourse has its genesis in Said. Explicating the genesis is one of the purposes of this essay.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin J. 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The rest of the films in the series then, echoing a strong trope in American horror, site in Africa the locus of evil. By juxtaposing these narratives with Frantz Fanon's writings about possession in The Wretched of the Earth, one might see how colonial violence and indigenous possession belief reflect a culture in tension over the violence done to bodies and the freeing power of exorcism.","subTitle":"A Fanonian Reading of The Exorcist<\/em> and its Sequels","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John La Rose"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068652","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"691153b3-0ac1-301a-b29f-3e98757a6828"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068652"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"UNEMPLOYMENT, LEISURE AND THE BIRTH OF CREATIVITY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068652","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":1662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maulana Karenga"],"datePublished":"1985-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067170","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c13f3349-a2d5-36dc-a16e-f56fe32e7a9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41067170"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POLITICAL CULTURE AND RESURGENT RACISM IN THE UNITED STATES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41067170","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel McNeil"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644992","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"818654450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c35c6bba-777d-3ca5-9a3a-376e1e67ad21"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48644992"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcmrs"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"203","pagination":"pp. 203-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Slimy Subjects and Neoliberal Goods","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48644992","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Obama and the Children of Fanon","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Reiland Rabaka"],"datePublished":"2003-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59ff98ea-2382-307d-877b-fe4ee4dd218f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"W.E.B. Du Bois and \"The Damnation of Women\": An Essay on Africana Anti-Sexist Critical Social Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819019","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":10733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores W.E.B. Du Bois's contributions to the discourse and development of the Africana tradition of critical theory, It examines the sociotheoretical and political linkages he made between various antiracist anti-sexist, anticolonial, and anti-capitalist thoughttraditions and movements. It argues that unlike most of the members of the Frankfurt School tradition of critical theory, Du Bois did not downplay gender domination and discrimination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Flores"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/464596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-14+16-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Proletarian Meditations: Georg Luk\u00e1cs' Politics of Knowledge","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/464596","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":11494,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[124869,125003]],"Locations in B":[[65080,65212]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Julian Go"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7ebfe524-3156-3e19-beb8-fe720f1c7acb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23362893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"For a postcolonial sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23362893","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":17370,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[101512,101583]],"abstract":"Postcolonial theory has enjoyed wide influence in the humanities but it has left sociology comparatively unscathed. Does this mean that postcolonial theory is not relevant to sociology? Focusing upon social theory and historical sociology in particular, this article considers if and how postcolonial theory in the humanities might be imported into North American sociology. It argues that postcolonial theory offers a substantial critique of sociology because it alerts us to sociology's tendency to analytically bifurcate social relations. The article also suggests that a postcolonial sociology can overcome these problems by incorporating relational social theories to give new accounts of modernity. Rather than simply studying non-Western postcolonial societies or only examining colonialism, this approach insists upon the interactional constitution of social units, processes, and practices across space. To illustrate, the article draws upon relational theories (actor-network theory and field theory) to offer postcolonial accounts of two conventional research areas in historical sociology: the industrial revolution in England and the French Revolution.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Syed Jamil Ahmed"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10542043"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50670623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-233101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ab9f920-93bb-30ea-94b6-0ee3a8118259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25599474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"tdr1988"}],"isPartOf":"TDR (1988-)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Performing and Supplicating M\u0101nik P\u012br: Infrapolitics in the Domain of Popular Islam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25599474","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":14285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Rituals and performances supplicating M\u0101nik P\u012br, a Sufi culture-hero venerated in isolated rural pockets of western Bangladesh and southern West Bengal (India), function as \"infrapolitics\" of the subaltern classes in the domain of \"popular Islam.\" A substantial segment of popular (\"folk\") culture of the subaltern classes articulates disguised ideological insubordination critiquing the dominant classes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Austin C. Okigbo"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.42","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f5e59f57-d256-3e82-8a97-f045d90487c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.42"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Musical Inculturation, Theological Transformation, and the Construction of Black Nationalism in Early South African Choral Music Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.2.42","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":8179,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[49623,49669]],"abstract":"In their encounter with Europeans under colonialism and apartheid, black South Africans struggled to preserve their African identity. From the middle of the nineteenth century, an emergent urban black intellectual elite used choral music to articulate the experiences and aspirations of their people. This paper discusses their use of choral music as expressive culture and a form of cultural nationalism that sought to maintain a balance between the integrity of their African identity and their Christian experience by reformulating and reinterpreting elements of biblical Christianity to correspond to their African worldview.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lisa Peattie","Jose A. 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Special Issue","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sartre: A Short Chronology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/487508","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Youssef Yacoubi","\u064a\u0648\u0633\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u064a\u0639\u0642\u0648\u0628\u064a"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596425","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72d601c6-d722-31a6-b05f-a4692861e4b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26596425"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Sadd\u012bk\u012b's Textual Recoveries: Arab Theater as Biofacticity \/ \u0627\u0644\u0627\u0633\u062a\u0631\u062c\u0627\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0635\u064a \u0639\u0646\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0635\u062f\u064a\u0642\u064a : \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0628\u0627\u0639\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0631\u0647 \u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629\u064b \u062d\u064a\u0629","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26596425","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Tayeb Sadd\u012bk\u012b's distinct contribution to refashioning \"indigenous\" and experimental techniques of dramatic representation on stage by excavating performative modes from classical texts. The aim of this argument is twofold: to reveal the limits of Eurocentric definitions of \"modernism\" or \"newness\" and to stress that Sadd\u012bk\u012b's so-called \"hybridized\" approach in theatre is rather a new vision of reclamation based on biofacticity. The discussion centers on Sadd\u012bk\u012b's dramatic adaptation of three texts: D\u012bw\u0101n S\u012bd\u012b Abderra\u1e25m\u0101n al-Majd\u016bb (1967), Maq\u0101m\u0101t Bad\u012b' al-Zam\u0101n al-Hamadh\u0101n\u012b (1971), and Ab\u016b \u1e24ayy\u0101n al-Taw\u1e25\u012bd\u012b (1984). \u062a\u062a\u0646\u0627\u0648\u0644 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0625\u0633\u0647\u0627\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0637\u064a\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u062f\u064a\u0642\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062a\u0645\u064a\u0632\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0625\u0639\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u0635\u064a\u0627\u063a\u0629 \u062a\u0642\u0646\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0639\u0628\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0645\u0649 \u00ab\u0627\u0644\u0623\u0635\u0644\u064a\u0629\u00bb \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0631\u064a\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0627\u0633\u062a\u0643\u0634\u0627\u0641\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0633\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0644\u0627\u0633\u064a\u0643\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a\u0629 . \u062a\u0647\u062f\u0641 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0625\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0634\u0641 \u0639\u0646 \u0645\u062d\u062f\u0648\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0631\u0627\ufe80\ufe8d\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0631\u0643\u0632\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0648\u0631\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u062d\u062f\u0627\u062b\u0629 . \u0643\u0630\u0644\u0643 \u062a\u0624\u0643\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0623\u0646 \u0645\u0627 \u064a\u0633\u0645\u0649 \u0628\u0645\u0646\u0647\u062c \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0651\u064e\u0647\u062c\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0633\u0631\u062d\u064a \u0644\u062f\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u062f \u064a\u0642\u064a \u0647\u0648 \u0641\u064a \u062d\u0642\u064a\u0642\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0645\u0631 \u0631\u0624\u064a\u0629 \ufe8d\ufeb3\ufe98\ufedc\ufeb8\ufe8e\ufed3\ufef4\ufe94 \u062c\u062f\u064a\u062f\u0629 \u064a\u0637\u0644\u0642 \u0639\u0644\u064a\u0647\u0627 \u0643\u0627\u062a\u0628 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u00ab\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062f\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062d\u064a\u0629\u00bb . \u062a\u0631\u0643\u0651\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0642\u062a\u0628\u0627\u0633\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0635\u062f\u064a\u0642\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062f\u0631\u0627\u0645\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u062b\u0644\u0627\u062b\u0629 \u0646\u0635\u0648\u0635 : \u062f\u064a\u0648\u0627\u0646 \u0639\u0628\u062f \u0625\u0644\u0631\u062d\u0645\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u0630\u0648\u0628 (\u0661\u0669\u0666\u0667) \u060c \u0645\u0642\u0627\u0645\u0627\u062a \u0628\u062f\u064a\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0632\u0645\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0647\u0645\u0630\u0627\u0646\u064a (\u0661\u0669\u0667\u0661) \u060c \u0623\u0628\u0648 \u062d\u064a\u0627\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0648\u062d\u064a\u062f\u064a (\u0661\u0669\u0668\u0664) .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sabyasachi Bhattacharya"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405449","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a5a3c8d2-7f33-38c9-a36d-2c9afe6e9936"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26405449"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26405449","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":6096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magid Shihade"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"590bf0e7-a49a-33b7-93f8-8f29b4207984"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41858513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"INTERNAL VIOLENCE: STATE'S ROLE AND SOCIETY'S RESPONSES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41858513","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5858,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darcie Fontaine"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15376370"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49780402"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213198"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0d15daaa-8a43-39ef-a149-bad22abf3a55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26378233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenpolicultsoci"}],"isPartOf":"French Politics, Culture & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"After the Exodus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26378233","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":10613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As French officials negotiated the terms of Algerian independence with the Provisional Government of the Republic of Algeria (GPRA) in 1961\u201362, among the issues discussed was the future of the Christian population. After colonial occupation and armed struggle, in which the defense of \u201cChristian civilization\u201d in Algeria had been a major ideological justification for French violence against the Algerian population, the future of Christianity in postcolonial Algeria was not self-evident. This article examines how European Catholics negotiated their position in post-independence Algeria. I demonstrate that Catholic attempts to \u201cbecome Algerian\u201d and decolonize the Church were intertwined with global religious politics, economic necessities, and colonial history. Yet their continued presence in Algeria demonstrates that the standard narratives of postcolonial rupture between the European and Algerian populations do not hold up, for, in the early years of post-independence Algeria, European Catholics played an active role in the construction of the postcolonial nation.","subTitle":"Catholics and the Formation of Postcolonial Identity in Algeria","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nana Wilson-Tagoe"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ea035ea-9a5a-3282-b482-369209dd68dd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative, History, Novel: Intertexuality in the Historical Novels of Ayi Kwei Armah and Yvonne Vera","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771869","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":6365,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"To have or not to have a history is a major anxiety in all areas of contemporary thought in Africa. History was the locus of difference that separated civilized from uncivilized in European perceptions of Others. Anxieties about history are thus anxieties about the meaning of history and the mode of its appropriation or representation. The African writer's conscious conflation of written narrative and indigenous oral forms are often ways of experimentation, ways of finding new means of locating different views of history and new ways of articulating them. This paper explores the problematics of this kind of experimentation through a framework of intertexuality. The anxiety about continuity, it seems will always create such ambivalences in narratives of history. For every reconstruction that a narrative achieves, there will always be other stories struggling to break out of the ruptures that are glossed over for the sake of continuity. The framework of intertextuality will enable the ruptures to be read even within the continuities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winsley B. Hector"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.7","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781946230362"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d730554-0ee3-31dd-b497-3ee3777453d3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwrm4dk.7"}],"isPartOf":"Racial Reconciliation and Privilege","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"63","pagination":"63-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"A Historical Overview of the SDA Church in the United States and in Great Britain Relative to its Mission to Black Expansion and Protest","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.7","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":37359,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The historical developments discussed in this chapter are chosen to show how the birth of a religious movement at a time of extreme societal fluctuations\u2014including racial tensions\u2014was able to thrive despite growing pains. Some of the beliefs and practices of the SDA Church were informed both by millennial influences of its founders, and the racialized society from which it emerged. The role of one founder, in particular, Ellen G. White, is explored with reference to the church\u2019s mission to blacks. Since the racial attitudes of Adventists mirrored to some extent those of society in general, it is perhaps","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["blacks","whites","sda church","southern whites","social","adventist","blight","sectional healing","social gospel","rauschenbusch"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Burke Stanton"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.26.1.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10635734"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51544673"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-212060"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9507939d-479b-3aa5-93e4-4f88d71ef6dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.26.1.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philmusieducrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Philosophy of Music Education Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Music","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Musicking in the Borders toward Decolonizing Methodologies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/philmusieducrevi.26.1.02","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7841,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay engages a decolonial border methodology to unveil dichotomies of theory\/practice, and scholarship\/education as contested spaces of multiplicity, dominated by a coloniality of power. Musicking's profound connections to embodied experience make it a locality ripe for decolonial activity. Furthermore, I argue that Christopher Small's insights when critically reevaluated with decolonial thought, Deleuzian ontology, and border thinking with and from subaltern epistemologies, emerges as a productive site of struggle. This methodology hopes to create a malleable framework for other decolonizing methodologies to engage with rather than provide a blueprint for application. Decolonization as a musicking methodology can facilitate emergent ideas through equitable dialogue while simultaneously creating real spaces for more democratic and equitable musicking relationships. I argue here that decolonial music education, broadly conceived as occurring both inside and outside of academic institutions, carries profound implications not only for decolonizing music as such, but for larger decolonial struggles. It is in the borders of our musicking communities that the educators become the educated and the oppressed wage their own struggle for liberation with solidary musickers at their side.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard L. Sklar"],"datePublished":"1979-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160739","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160739"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"552","pageStart":"531","pagination":"pp. 531-552","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nature of Class Domination in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160739","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["HERBERT I. SCHILLER"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00128783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567905712"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235392"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8e046f6-b129-393f-89aa-25a6265065cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27868829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpoli"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":132.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"COMMUNICATION AND CULTURAL DOMINATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27868829","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":39600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sankaran Krishna"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645028","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"749fce43-b7a7-3016-ba0a-02181bed0088"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645028"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"424","pageStart":"401","pagination":"pp. 401-424","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race, Amnesia, and the Education of International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645028","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":11144,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609246,609395]],"Locations in B":[[60617,60774]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. M\u00e1rquez"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5b52f2a9-9f01-3eec-9e47-73204617bd7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23273537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"651","pageStart":"625","pagination":"pp. 625-651","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Black Mohicans: Representations of Everyday Violence in Postracial Urban America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273537","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":12636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Abozeid"],"datePublished":"2021-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.2.0146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4631913d-88f3-3999-a0e9-e784cfca0b17"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.2.0146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"146","pagination":"pp. 146-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-reading Ibn-Khaldun in the 21st Century: Traveling Theory and the Question of Authority, Legitimacy, and State Violence in the Modern Arab World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.43.2.0146","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11683,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"To illuminate the complicated relationship between the authorities and society in the contemporary Arab world, this paper draws on Ibn Khaldun's propositions. By applying Edward Said's notion of traveling theory, it traces, interrogates, and evaluates ways in which multiple readings of Ibn Khaldun's theory have been (re)formulated, transplanted, and circulated by other authors, and how these theories traveled from an earlier point to another time and place where they come into new prominence. Furthermore, it examines how three contemporary Arab thinkers (Abid Al-Jabri, Abdullah Laroui, and Nazih Ayubi) addressed and interpreted the heritage of Ibn Khaldun and his theory on state formation and authority constitutive in the Arab Islamic world (particularly the Sunni world). The paper concludes that, in comparison with Said's \u201ctraveling theory\u201d intentions, the three modern Arabic readings of Ibn Khaldun's theory were not traveling as much as it was attempting to uproot, distort, suffocate, and even bury Ibn Khaldun's original theory, as well as obliterate and culturally appropriate the features of the original theory, and portray it as the opposite of progress and modernization, in favor of enhancing the dominance of Western epistemology.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Goodale"],"datePublished":"2006-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90180939-db1b-3bf2-99cf-02c2bf6b907b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"8","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-8","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction to \"Anthropology and Human Rights in a New Key\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804727","volumeNumber":"108","wordCount":6826,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this \"In Focus\" introduction, I begin by offering an overview of anthropology's engagements with human rights following the American Anthropological Association's (AAA) 1947 \"Statement on Human Rights.\" After offering a rereading of the Statement, I describe the two major anthropological orientations to human rights that emerged in the 1980s and 1990s, following several decades of relative disengagement. Finally, I locate the articles in relation to this history and indicate how, when taken as a whole, they express a new key or register within which human rights can be studied, critiqued, and advanced through anthropological forms of knowledge. This \"In Focus\" is in part an argument for an essentially ecumenical anthropology of human rights, one that can tolerate, and indeed encourage, approaches that are both fundamentally critical of contemporary human rights regimes and politically or ethically committed to these same regimes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jovan Scott Lewis"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26945998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565102408"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73d47539-b366-3620-89dc-f230a697df6a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26945998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Releasing a Tradition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26945998","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":5954,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[29374,29489]],"Locations in B":[[12454,12570]],"abstract":"With educational campaigns that ask 'Why isn't my professor Black?' and 'Why is my curriculum white?' there is a push directed towards institutions to provide an education that is diverse, inclusive and representative of the liberal ideals that many promote. This is being done primarily through a discourse of decolonization. In this article, I consider the formulation for a truly decolonized curriculum by first assessing what constitutes a 'colonial' education, especially one that is deserving of decolonization. I then discuss the parameters of educational decolonization, by thinking with decolonial and anti-colonial thinkers, to assess the tenability of a decolonized curriculum. Ultimately, I suggest what forms a decolonized curriculum might take by drawing on diaspora theory and by describing broader programmatic requirements within the framework of the Black Radical Tradition that offers decolonial epistemologies as a broad praxis for education.","subTitle":"Diasporic Epistemology and the Decolonized Curriculum","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Changwon Lee"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231326","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f79c02d4-f8ac-3850-9312-5e704279f3d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231326"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1118","pageStart":"1117","pagination":"pp. 1117-1118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231326","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Nazareth"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20152974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0021065X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"939014df-2662-3f4d-92b4-f16b679aa647"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20152974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"iowareview"}],"isPartOf":"The Iowa Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"University of Iowa","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Religion - Theology","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Rushdie's Wo\/Manichean Novel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20152974","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":2973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simboonath Singh"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819054","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2911d56d-2f08-31c1-bb60-7e1b1881c41e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819054"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Resistance, Essentialism, and Empowerment in Black Nationalist Discourse in the African Diaspora: A Comparison of the Back to Africa, Black Power, and Rastafari Movements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819054","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":9510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The mobilization of ethnicity entails the production of culture\u2014a process involving the interweaving of culture, history and identity, and the manipulation of cultural symbols to reconstruct and reshape conceptions of self and community. The shifting character and salience of ethnicity as demonstrated in the Back to Africa, Black Power, and Rastafari movements point to the flexibility of culture and identity. In demonstrating the interrelationships among activism, identity and culture and their impact on the creation of new and revitalized ethno-racial identities in the African-Caribbean Diaspora, all three movements allowed their socially dispossessed and culturally displaced adherents to be active social actors and knowledgeable agents capable of making their own history. This paper takes issue with the black cultural nationalists' deployment of a \"race-culture\" essentialist discourse to: (i) frame notions of difference vis-\u00e0-vis the Other; and (ii) \"imagine\" and homogenize blackness so as to produce ethno-racial solidarity in the minds of the disenfranchised.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Bolden"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511861","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15421619"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecfdee9f-e01e-3a5a-bfe3-80c6756fd3b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44511861"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidianiii"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian III","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Kalamu's Blues: Decolonizing the Mind in \"My Story, My Song\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511861","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":6132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Priscilla Wald"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273512","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2342ae12-423e-364d-8090-9adc05c13640"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23273512"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"185","pagination":"pp. 185-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"American Studies and the Politics of Life","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273512","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":8027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniele Archibugi","David Held"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24006685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0032325X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d60f7942-1e75-3e62-a193-3ba635cdb2f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24006685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ilpolitico"}],"isPartOf":"Il Politico","issueNumber":"3 (231)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Rubbettino Editore","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government"],"title":"COSMOPOLITAN DEMOCRACY: PATHS AND WAYS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24006685","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":8221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"One of the recurrent criticisms to the cosmopolitan democracy project has been that it has not highlighted which are the political and social forces that will have an interest to pursue this agenda. This criticism is addressed in this paper, showing that there are a variety of actions that, in its own right, will contribute to more democratic global governance. The paper also identifies the political and social agents that may have an interest and contribute to the pursuit of each of these actions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FREDERICK C. DeCOSTE"],"datePublished":"1994-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7fb2679-cc12-3c40-a352-63228aefde36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24775804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kafka, Legal Theorizing and Redemption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24775804","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":6990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While some legal theoreticians enlist reflection in defense of law, others decry the entire theoretical project as either ideological ploy or empty fashion. Through a reading of Franz Kafka's The Problem of Our Laws, this essay attempts to disclose the fundamental point of theoretical discourse about law: namely, the utopian and tragic possibilities of human association.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isaac Prilleltensky","Lev Gonick"],"datePublished":"1996-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791946","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0162895X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"44544062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234119"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3791946"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polipsyc"}],"isPartOf":"Political Psychology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"International Society of Political Psychology","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Polities Change, Oppression Remains: On the Psychology and Politics of Oppression","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3791946","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While both postindustrial and emerging states face economic, cultural, and political changes, the constant of oppression remains. Economically and culturally marginalized groups continue to endure untold degrees of suffering. From a moral point of view, it is imperative that social scientists attend to the needs of the oppressed. This paper examines the dynamics of oppression in postindustrial and emerging states from both a psychological and political perspective. The reality of oppression may be understood from various levels of analysis, from the macrolevel of global economic and political structures, to the microlevel of internalized psychological images of inferiority. A comprehensive analysis of oppression will emerge only from an interdisciplinary approach that integrates the political with the psychological. Otherwise, efforts to reduce conditions of oppression will be inhibited by limited perspectives that neglect either the internal or external domains. We explore some of the psychological mechanisms accounting for oppression, such as learned helplessness, internalization of hegemonic self-rejecting views, and obedience to authority. Some of the political mechanisms accounting for oppression in emerging countries include the oppressive structure of international financial systems and internal colonization. We conclude by outlining the process of conscientization necessary to overcome conditions of oppression at all levels of analysis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael J. Rulon"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a58dc119-ee03-39b2-af3a-87bf187f29e1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Healing the Wounds of the Algerian Revolution in Assia Djebar's Women of Algiers in their Apartment<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.23.1-2.0225","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":11004,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[116045,116193],[116372,116458],[117102,117218]],"Locations in B":[[701,848],[854,941],[1044,1159]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Lackey"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2e1e8da-cd8b-3b54-b27a-73c144bd3fc9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Moral Conditions for Genocide in Joseph Conrad's \"Heart of Darkness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115244","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholars have consistently used a moral lens to interpret the novels of Joseph Conrad. Conrad rejects morality. However, Conrad does not reject morality because it is an essential concept that leads necessarily to social injustice. Rather, he rejects it because it is such an amorphous concept that political powers can so easily exploit in order to justify some of the most heinous crimes against humanity, specifically genocide. This essay, examines how a charismatic political figure appropriates morality in order to justify crimes against humanity, and more specifically how an intelligent imperialist like Kurtz can strategically construct a political system that makes a crime like genocide a moral imperative.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tassadit Yacine","Lo\u00efc Wacquant","James Ingram"],"datePublished":"2004-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14661381"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"661f7d31-531c-39e7-b529-1f84320abf7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24047852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnography"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pierre Bourdieu in Algeria at war: Notes on the birth of an engaged ethnosociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24047852","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9608,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[59478,59518]],"abstract":"Pierre Bourdieu's early trajectory is retraced to highlight the foundational role his fieldwork in colonial Algeria played in his intellectual development and subsequent sociological theorizing. Plunged without forewarning into the midst of a caste society torn by capitalist development and a brutal war of national liberation, the young philosopher turned to empirical investigation in order to understand Algerian society from the inside and to take apart the mechanisms of imperial rule. This article reconstitutes the proximate academic milieu, the intellectual signposts, the personal contacts, and the tragic political conjuncture within which Bourdieu's youthful inquiries took shape. These inquiries, which entailed dangerous fieldwork in regions fought over by the French military and the guerrillas of the Algerian National Liberation Front, were facilitated by Bourdieu's social and regional dispositions as a 'colonized of the interior' of France and led him to erase the established intellectual division of labor between sociology, ethnology, and Oriental studies. It is in the Algerian crucible, suffused by fear, risk, and 'ambient fascism', that an engaged ethnosociology was forged, alive to the complexity of the real and resistant to theoretical simplification. Bourdieu's first field studies of the uprooting of the Algerian peasantry and the birth of that country's urban (sub)proletariat are essential to understanding the formation of his intellectual dispositions and bring to light the organic linkage that existed from the outset between his scientific and political engagements.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lamar L. Johnson"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0034527X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48530054"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008212262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23fc2db5-c528-32cb-be4f-0339235891a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26802728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"resintheteacheng"}],"isPartOf":"Research in the Teaching of English","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Where Do We Go from Here? Toward a Critical Race English Education","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26802728","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":10969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I propose Critical Race English Education (CREE) as a theoretical and pedagogical construct that tackles white supremacy and anti-black racism within English education and ELA classrooms. I employ autoethnography and counterstorytelling as methods that center my multiple identities and lived realities as I document my racialized and gendered experiences in relation to my journey to Ferguson, MO and my experiences as a secondary ELA teacher. The research questions guiding this study are the following: (1) As a Black male English educator and language and literacy scholar, how am I implicated in the struggle for racial justice and what does it mean for me to teach literacy in our present-day justice movement?; (2) How are Black lives mattering in ELA classrooms?; and, (3) How are we using Black youth life histories and experiences to inform our mindset, curriculum, and pedagogical practices in the classroom? This article explicates findings from three interconnected stories that work to show how CREE can be operationalized to better understand the #BlackLivesMatter movement in its historical and contemporary dimensions. The data analyzed stem from my autobiographical narratives, observations, social media artifacts, and images. I aim to expand English education to be more synergistically attuned to racial justice issues dealing with police brutality, the mass incarceration of Black people, and legacies of grassroots activism. This analysis suggests implications that aim to move the pedagogical practices around the intersections of anti-blackness and literacy from the margins to the center of discussion and praxis in ELA contexts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicole M. Rizzuto"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr6gb.9","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780823267811"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"098cce5a-be67-3dad-ba68-5018e178ad92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt18kr6gb.9"}],"isPartOf":"Insurgent Testimonies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"223","pagination":"223-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NOTES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr6gb.9","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["modernism","f6635 indb","joseph conrad","university","trauma","jacques derrida","stanford calif","calif stanford","western eyes","\u00e9tienne balibar"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282983","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc23e3cd-d314-3ea4-be34-245908f7f978"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26282983"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"WRITING IN THE SHIT: BECKETT, NATIONALISM, AND THE COLONIAL SUBJECT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282983","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":7512,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maulana Karenga"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068747","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"faea4886-4cb3-3b0f-a127-31240de722af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068747"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"KWAME TURE IN THE SCALES OF HISTORY \"A LEGACY OF LESSONS\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068747","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":3201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joshua M. Hall"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23215213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7803b216-d6fe-35a2-8d3e-08da6f372c63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23215213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"288","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-288","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Revalorized Black Embodiment: Dancing with Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23215213","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6051,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[155622,155908],[155975,156092],[156184,156444],[156685,156784],[448338,448403]],"Locations in B":[[8167,8663],[9127,9245],[9334,9593],[10669,10768],[30320,30385]],"abstract":"This article explores Fanon's thought on dance, beginning with his explicit treatment of it in Black Skin, White Masks and The Wretched of the Earth. It then broadens to consider his theorization of Black embodiment in racist and colonized societies, considering how these analyses can be reformulated as a phenomenology of dance. This will suggest possibilities for fruitful encounters between the two domains in which (a) dance can be valorized while (b) opening up sites of resignification and resistance for Black persons and communities\u2014including a revalorization of Black embodiment as a kind of empowering danced experience.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Benjamin P. Davis"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26841859","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"71825977"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006215186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cf08f2c3-3419-321f-86c8-8dde9f0a49a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26841859"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"willjamestud"}],"isPartOf":"William James Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"William James Society","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Pragmatic Interruption","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26841859","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":8754,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[33741,33807]],"abstract":"This essay envisions a habit of revising habits, that is, a habit of openness and transformation. By examining William James\u2019s descriptions of habits and his attention to the environments in which habits both function and break down, I offer a particular aesthetic engagement with the \u201cthickness\u201d of the entangled, textured environments in which we find ourselves. My active and mundane approach to \u201cpragmatic thickness\u201d and \u201cpragmatic interruption\u201d is different from both more receptive approaches to thickness and transcendental forms of interruption presented in recent Continental philosophy. In the fashion of James and by way of conclusion, I offer two maxims that address the ethical implications of a habit of interruption.","subTitle":"Habits, Environments, Ethics","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paulette Ramsay"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec7ef9be-c3a0-3457-b05f-eaef4dba3eb1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23053974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Quince Duncan's Literary Representation of the Ethno-racial Dynamics Between \"Latinos\" and Afro-Costa Ricans of West Indian Descent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23053974","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6778,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Arnove"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345837","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1345837"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"278","pagination":"pp. 278-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pierre Bourdieu, the Sociology of Intellectuals, and the Language of African Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1345837","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10123,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mariama Khan"],"datePublished":"2014-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24565707","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09614524"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39737429"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-242086"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7aa9a077-35b4-3900-999f-70ec02cd7c00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24565707"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deveprac"}],"isPartOf":"Development in Practice","issueNumber":"5\/6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"776","pageStart":"764","pagination":"pp. 764-776","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Indigenous languages and Africa's development dilemma","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24565707","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Most African states like The Gambia use European languages for state activities and formal education. Africa has been a global pilot site for \"transplanted\" development initiatives with apparently consistent outcomes: failure, medium triumph, or unsustainable \"success stories\". Its natural resources have been fully exploited, perhaps at the expense of resources like mother-tongue languages. Sidelining mother-tongue languages as the medium for the translation of the voice of the state, explains the gap in cultural relevance of many borrowed development initiatives, but also the neglect of workable endogenous practices. Africa must look inwards and exploit its indigenous language assets to benefit sustained development. La plupart des \u00c9tats africains comme la Gambie utilisent des langues europ\u00e9ennes pour les activit\u00e9s publiques et l'\u00e9ducation formelle. L'Afrique a \u00e9t\u00e9 un site pilote mondial pour des initiatives de d\u00e9veloppement \u00ab transplant\u00e9es \u00bb, avec des r\u00e9sultats apparemment constants : \u00e9chec, triomphe moyen ou r\u00e9ussites non durables. Ses ressources naturelles ont \u00e9t\u00e9 enti\u00e8rement exploit\u00e9es, parfois aux d\u00e9pens de ressources comme les langues maternelles. Le fait d'avoir mis sur la touche les langues maternelles comme moyen de traduire la voix de l'\u00c9tat explique le manque de pertinence culturelle de nombreuses initiatives de d\u00e9veloppement, mais aussi l'abandon de certaines pratiques endog\u00e8nes r\u00e9alisables. L'Afrique doit se tourner vers elle-m\u00eame et exploiter ses atouts linguistiques autochtones pour favoriser un d\u00e9veloppement soutenu. Al igual que Gambia, para sus actividades y para la educaci\u00f3n formal la mayor\u00eda de los Estados africanos utiliza los idiomas europeos. A nivel mundial, \u00c1frica se convirti\u00f3 en un sitio para la realizaci\u00f3n de ensayos en torno a ciertas iniciativas de desarrollo \"trasplantadas\", cuyos resultados aparentemente han sido constantes y repetitivos: fracaso, \u00e9xitos a medias o \u00abhistorias de \u00e9xito\u00bb insostenible. A pesar de ello, los recursos naturales de este continente han sido totalmente explotados, quiz\u00e1s a costa de ciertos recursos como los idiomas aut\u00f3ctonos. El menosprecio mostrado hacia los mismos como medios para expresar la voz del Estado explica la existencia de una brecha en relaci\u00f3n a la pertinencia cultural de muchas iniciativas de desarrollo trasplantadas y a la desestimaci\u00f3n concedida a las pr\u00e1cticas end\u00f3genas viables. Por lo que, para impulsar su desarrollo sostenible \u00c1frica deber\u00e1 mirar hacia dentro y comenzar a utilizar sus idiomas aut\u00f3ctonos.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DONNA K. DARDEN"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23565719","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09732047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2942ad71-6c9e-3845-b37e-12272de01c08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23565719"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevmodsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Modern Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"119","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-119","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"International Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"THE BLACK BOURGEOISIE: \"SUPER AMERICANS?\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23565719","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7215,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Lifestyle measurements of a sample of 303 white and 47 black middle-class suburban residents are examined using multivariate analysis of covariance. Four covariates (index of social position, wife's age, wife's education, and total family income) are used to control for variance due to factors other than race. Several areas of significant differences are compensatory; that is, that the black middle class is following traditional middle-class norms more stringently than the white middle class is now doing in some areas.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas Sturm"],"datePublished":"1991-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1203954","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d8838ac-a414-3450-b3c0-9ef88100803b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1203954"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"497","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-497","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reformed Liberalism and the Principle of Nonviolence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1203954","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":8284,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Reich"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23783543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10624783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892739"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23369"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1655b37d-e659-35e7-8f89-9ce2a18c9d07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23783543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afriamerrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African American Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indiana State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A New Kind of Black Soldier: Performing Revolution in The Spook Who Sat by the Door","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23783543","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oliva Blanchette"],"datePublished":"1974-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20098592","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393797"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3298861d-d2d4-3cc3-bcd5-562808787461"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20098592"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studsovithou"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Soviet Thought","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dialectic: Violence or Dialogue? The Issue between Sartre and Aron","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20098592","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6308,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. Hansen","Kingsley Jima","Nurudeen Abbas","Basil Abia"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26297656","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"244204101"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f9963d09-b21c-3e78-bf36-5ed4ff80148f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26297656"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"persponterr"}],"isPartOf":"Perspectives on Terrorism","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Terrorism Research Institute","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Poverty and \u201cEconomic Deprivation Theory\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26297656","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9895,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Street children, many of whom are \u2018almajirai\u2019, are part of a vast underclass that populates the cities of Northern Nigeria. Many of these children and young adults have no means of support other than begging for their daily food, petty crime or providing casual labor. For the most part illiterate, they have few educational skills that would allow them to function in a modern economy. This article argues that the appalling economic conditions experienced by these young people makes them prime targets for recruitment into fanatical religious groups such as Boko Haram, or into one or another of the political\/criminal gangs \u2013 generically called the \u2018Yan Daba\u2019\u2013that proliferate in northern Nigerian cities. It further argues that the underclass from which these young people emerge is the direct consequence of the failed governance of the parasitic predator class that dominates the post-colonial Nigerian state. This, in turn, makes attempts at de-radicalization and bolstering the security forces doomed to failure \u2013 unless there are far-reaching social reforms that would undermine the very class that dominates the post-colonial state.","subTitle":"Street Children, Qur\u2019anic Schools\/almajirai<\/em> and the Dispossessed as a Source of Recruitment for Boko Haram<\/em> and other Religious, Political and Criminal Groups in Northern Nigeria","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan R. Torruella"],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440094"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b7c01482-24cc-3ab9-a966-84d66ad7614b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/797405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawj"}],"isPartOf":"The Yale Law Journal","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"1522","pageStart":"1503","pagination":"pp. 1503-1522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Yale Law Journal Company, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"\u00bfHacia d\u00f3nde vas Puerto Rico?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/797405","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":10831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcel van der Linden","Peter Drucker"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582659","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b623dba4-b157-39b5-bff6-471db1703a64"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44582659"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"423","pagination":"pp. 423-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Global Labor History and \"the Modern World-System\": Thoughts at the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of the Fernand Braudel Center","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582659","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":16032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Neocosmos"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484679","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1bef8f4-d82f-3893-8515-4b05c72ca275"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484679"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thinking Political Emancipation and the Social Sciences in Africa: Some Critical Reflections","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484679","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15147,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The freedom which Africa was to attain with liberation from colonialism had originally promised to emancipate all the people of the continent from poverty and oppression. Yet anyone can observe that this has not happened. Uhuru is still elusive; freedom seems unattainable. Nationalist, socialist and neo-liberal conceptions of human emancipation have all failed to provide a minimum of freedom for the majority of Africans who are living under conditions which worsen daily as the crisis of capitalism and liberal democracy worsens. All three of these views of freedom were elaborated and theorised as universal by the social sciences. It is these conceptions which still orientate our thought. The fact that freedom has not been achieved evidently means that our thinking has so far been deficient. This article argues that the social sciences have played their part in our inability to think freedom and are consequently in need of fundamental restructuring. Central to their limitations if not their failure to comprehend emancipation in a manner adequate to the problems of the twenty-first century in Africa, has arguably been their inability to take what excluded people say seriously enough. In the past they have been plagued by the notion that only those with knowledge and power are capable of thinking a new way forward, thus aligning their thinking with that of the state (either in its current or forthcoming form). Given the lack of success of the social sciences in thinking human emancipation so far, we should consider alternatives which are open to popular perspectives. The article argies fpr am expansion of the social sciences to include the idea that 'people think' in Africa, and that therefore reason is not exclusively the prerogative of academics and politicians. Marx once observed that 'the state has need... of a very stern education by the people'. This remark is even truer today than it was in his time. Apr\u00e8s sa lib\u00e9ration du colonialisme, l'Afrique \u00e0 qui l'on avait promis initialement une \u00e9mancipation de tous les peuples du continent de la pauvret\u00e9 et de l'oppression, devait atteindre une certaine libert\u00e9. Pourtant, n'importe qui peut constater que tel n'est pas le cas. Uhuru est toujours insaisissable; la libert\u00e9 semble inaccessible. Les conceptions nationalistes, socialistes et n\u00e9o-lib\u00e9rales de l'\u00e9mancipation humaine ont tous \u00e9chou\u00e9 \u00e0 fournir un minimum de libert\u00e9 \u00e0 la majorit\u00e9 des Africains qui vivent dans des conditions qui s'empirent tous les jours comme se sont aggrav\u00e9es la crise du capitalisme et la d\u00e9mocratie lib\u00e9rale. Chacun de ces trois points de vue de la libert\u00e9 a \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e9labor\u00e9 et th\u00e9oris\u00e9 comme universel par les sciences sociales. Ce sont ces conceptions qui orientent encore nos pens\u00e9es. Le fait que la libert\u00e9 n'a pas \u00e9t\u00e9 vraiment atteinte signifie que notre intelligence a \u00e9t\u00e9 jusqu'\u00e0 pr\u00e9sent insuffisante. Cet article soutient que les sciences sociales ont jou\u00e9 un r\u00f4le dans notre incapacit\u00e9 \u00e0 penser librement et ont par cons\u00e9quent besoin d'une restructuration fondamentale. Domin\u00e9es par leurs limites, sinon leur incapacit\u00e9 \u00e0 comprendre l'\u00e9mancipation d'une mani\u00e8re ad\u00e9quate aux probl\u00e8mes du XXIe si\u00e8cle en Afrique, cela a sans doute \u00e9t\u00e9 leur incapacit\u00e9 \u00e0 prendre ce que dit le peuple exclu suffisamment au s\u00e9rieux. Dans le pass\u00e9, ils ont \u00e9t\u00e9 envahis par l'id\u00e9e que seuls ceux qui ont la connaissance et le pouvoir sont capables de penser autrement, alignant ainsi leur pens\u00e9e avec celle de l'Etat (soit dans sa forme actuelle soit dans celle \u00e0 venir). \u00c9tant donn\u00e9 l'\u00e9chec des sciences sociales \u00e0 la pens\u00e9e de l'\u00e9mancipation humaine jusqu'ici, nous devrions envisager des alternatives qui sont de s'ouvrir aux perspectives populaires. L'article plaide pour une extension des sciences sociales afin d'inclure l'id\u00e9e que \u00ab les individus pensent \u00bb en Afrique, et que par cons\u00e9quent la raison n'est pas exclusivement l'apanage des universitaires et des politiciens. Marx a une fois observ\u00e9 que \u00ab l'\u00c9tat a besoin... d'une \u00e9ducation tr\u00e8s s\u00e9v\u00e8re par le peuple \u00bb. Cette remarque est d'autant plus vraie aujourd'hui qu'elle l'\u00e9tait en son temps.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeanine Luciana Lino Costa"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807469","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3fe4dbdd-78cd-34cd-be02-ee85b2b674f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43807469"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hispanofila"}],"isPartOf":"Hispan\u00f3fila","issueNumber":"150","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"RETRATOS DE VIOL\u00caNCIA EM \"BARRELA, DOIS PERDIDOS NUMA NOITE SUJA\" E \"NAVALHA NA CARNE\", DE PL\u00cdNIO MARCOS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43807469","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4850,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212542,212633]],"Locations in B":[[23014,23108]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ferial J. Ghazoul"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/mew.2007.3.2.120","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15525864"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-215847"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f6cba32c-9580-3f52-b7c8-43f5c79871cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/mew.2007.3.2.120"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmiddeastwomstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Middle East Women's Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Assia Djebar, Children of the New World: A Novel of the Algerian War<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/mew.2007.3.2.120","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":1208,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID A. RICE"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07303238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c595ca9-6986-31f9-8a84-c5fa7f256c57"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20737306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studamerindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in American Indian Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["American Indian Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Witchery, Indigenous Resistance, and Urban Space in Leslie Marmon Silko's Ceremony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20737306","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lomarsh Roopnarine"],"datePublished":"2003-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613409","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c13958c-381e-321a-92b8-dcf69cb8c27b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25613409"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"East Indian Indentured Emigration to the Caribbean: Beyond the Push and Pull Model","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613409","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":12371,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"East Indian emigration to the Caribbean in the nineteenth and early twentieh centuries was not merely based on push and pull factors. Rather, it was caused by a myriad of international and complex factors. The development and intensification of world capitalism disturbed the traditional economic and social systems in colonized territories. Subsequently, East Indians in India were displaced from their material base becoming available for emigration. Various European governments channeled this available labor surplus from India to the Caribbean to resolve a so-called \"labor shortage\" on the sugar plantations. Moreover, the movement of thousands of East Indians with such a relative ease was directly related to imperialism. The Indian government was under the tutelage of the British government and therefore it was politically weak to enforce measures against malpractices in the recruitment process. The article concludes that world capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism exacerbated internal factors of emigration both in India and the Caribbean. \/\/\/ La emigraci\u00f3n de indios al Caribe durante el siglo diecinueve y principios del siglo veinte no fue ocasionada \u00fanicamente por factores de atracci\u00f3n y repulsi\u00f3n. M\u00e1s bien, fue causada por un n\u00famero de factores internacionales y complejos. El desarrollo e intensificaci\u00f3n del capitalismo mundial perturb\u00f3 los sistemas econ\u00f3micos y sociales tradicionales en los territorios coloniales. En consecuencia, los indios fueron desplazados de la base material en su pa\u00eds, estando as\u00ed m\u00e1s dispuestos a emigrar. Algunos gobiernos europeos canalizaron este excedente de mano de obra de la India en el Caribe para resolver la llamada \"falta de mano de obra\" en las plantaciones azucareras. M\u00e1s a\u00fan, el movimiento de miles de indios con tan relativa facilidad estuvo directamente relacionado al imperialismo. El gobierno indio estaba bajo el tutelaje del gobierno brit\u00e1nico y, por lo tanto, era pol\u00edticamente d\u00e9bil para implementar medidas en contra de las malas pr\u00e1cticas en el proceso de reclutamiento de trabajadores. El art\u00edculo concluye que el capitalismo mundial, el imperialismo y el colonialismo agravaron los factores internos de emigraci\u00f3n tanto en la India como en el Caribe. \/\/\/ L'\u00e9migration des Indiens \u00e0 la Cara\u00efbe pendant le XIX si\u00e8cle et le d\u00e9but du XX, n'a pas \u00e9t\u00e9 seulement d\u00e9clench\u00e9e par des facteurs d'attraction et de r\u00e9pulsion. Celle-ci a \u00e9t\u00e9 plut\u00f4t d\u00e9clench\u00e9e par de nombreux facteurs internationaux complexes. Le d\u00e9veloppement et l'intensification de capitalisme mondial ont perturb\u00e9 les syst\u00e8mes \u00e9conomiques et sociaux traditionnels dans les territoires coloniaux. En cons\u00e9quence, les Indiens ont \u00e9t\u00e9 d\u00e9plac\u00e9s de la base mat\u00e9rielle de leur pays, et sont devenus plus dispos\u00e9s \u00e0 \u00e9migrer. Certains gouvernements europ\u00e9ens ont canalis\u00e9 cet exc\u00e8s de main d'\u0153uvre de l'Inde envers la Cara\u00efbe \u00e0 fin de trouver une solution au soi disant \"manque de main d'\u0153uvre\" dans les plantations sucri\u00e8res. Plus encore, le d\u00e9placement, relativement facile, de milliers d'Indiens a \u00e9t\u00e9 mis directement en rapport avec l'imp\u00e9rialisme. Le gouvernement indien \u00e9tait sous la tutelle du gouvernement britannique et donc, il \u00e9tait politiquement faible pour implanter des mesures contre les mauvaises pratiques dans le processus de recrutement des travailleurs. L'article conclue que le capitalisme mondial, l'imp\u00e9rialisme et le colonialisme ont aggrav\u00e9 les facteurs internes d'\u00e9migration aussi bien aux Indes que dans la Cara\u00efbe.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Amatoritsero Ede"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758433","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a188b6ea-e89f-37f6-a264-4e9720007a5f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758433"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The politics of Afropolitanism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758433","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":7995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Afropolitanism has evolved over the past 10 years as a rubric for describing transnational African identity. This piece develops a cultural-materialist analysis of that phenomenon as a metropolitan instrument of self-affirmation, in the first instance. I argue that the phenomenon of Afropolitanism is to some extent a subjective and cultivated condition, and has become a cultural instrument of black political agency in the Metropolis. However, the resultant self-affirmation accrues only to the Afropolitan cultural producer, who acquires symbolic capital towards that goal. A larger black migrant population and diaspora, which does not possess symbolic capital and therefore lacks this same social and class mobility, is still marginalized. This creates a division between the culture of Afropolitanism and the politics it aims to engender. I conclude that a dialectical interaction between culture and politics is necessary and important in order for the condition of Afropolitanism to jettison its elitist tendency and to enable rich theoretical, and more progressive, ideological gains.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u05dc\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05df","Liora Bigon"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23715810","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03343774"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b0d61f6-0104-3540-9777-9ffda906adad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23715810"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"horigeog"}],"isPartOf":"Horizons in Geography \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d2\u05d0\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8\u05e4\u05d9\u05d4","issueNumber":"71","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Haifa \/ \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05d7\u05d9\u05e4\u05d4","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Geography","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"The 'white' vs. the 'other' city in colonial Africa: Residential segregation in the colonial novel \/ '\u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05dc\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4' \u05de\u05d5\u05dc '\u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05ea' \u05d1\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea: \u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d2\u05d6\u05e2\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05de\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23715810","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6973,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u05d4\u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05d3\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d2\u05d6\u05e2\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05de\u05d2\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd (\u05e1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d2\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4) \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05e2\u05d5\u05d8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9 \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05db\u05dc\u05d5\u05e1\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4, \u05d1\u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05e8\u05e9\u05de\u05d9 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05d1\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9 \u05e8\u05e9\u05de\u05d9, \u05d7\u05dc\u05e7 \u05d1\u05dc\u05ea\u05d9 \u05e0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d3 \u05de\u05d4\u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d8\u05d9 \u05d5\u05d4\u05e6\u05e8\u05e4\u05ea\u05d9. \u05d3\u05e8\u05da \u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05d1\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05de\u05d9\u05d5\u05e6\u05d2 \u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05de\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e2\u05d5\u05e1\u05e7\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e0\u05d2\u05dc\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d5\u05d4\u05e4\u05e8\u05e0\u05e7\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05ea\u05e7\u05d5\u05e4\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea, \u05de\u05d8\u05e8\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d0 \u05dc\u05d7\u05e9\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d4\u05e7\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d4\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05d2\u05d0\u05d5\u05d2\u05e8\u05e4\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d4\u05d9\u05e1\u05d8\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u2013 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d0\u05d6\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9 \u05d4\u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05dc\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e9\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d4 \u05d5\u05ea\u05d5\u05e4\u05e2\u05ea \u05d4\u05e1\u05d2\u05e8\u05d2\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dd, \u05d4\u05d7\u05dc \u05de\u05e1\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05ea\u05e9\u05e2-\u05e2\u05e9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d5\u05e2\u05d3 \u05dc\u05d0\u05de\u05e6\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05d4 \u05d4\u05e2\u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd. \u05ea\u05db\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05dc\u05d5 \u05d7\u05d5\u05e9\u05e4\u05d9\u05dd \u05e7\u05e9\u05ea \u05e2\u05e9\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05dd \u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd, \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d0\u05dd \u05d4\u05d3\u05d5\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d6\u05dd \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4'\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05dc\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4' \u05dc\u05d1\u05d9\u05df '\u05d4\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d7\u05e8\u05ea' \u05de\u05e2\u05d5\u05d2\u05df \u05d1\u05d4\u05dd \u05d0\u05d5 \u05de\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea\u05d2\u05e8: \u05de\u05d9\u05d7\u05e1 \u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d4 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05e8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d0\u05d9\u05ea \u05d0\u05dc \u05ea\u05d7\u05d9\u05dc\u05ea \u05d4\u05ea\u05d4\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d9 \u05d0\u05d5 \u05d9\u05d7\u05e1 \u05e8\u05d5\u05d5\u05d9 \u05d8\u05e8\u05d2\u05d3\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e9\u05d8\u05de\u05e0\u05d4 \u05d1\u05d7\u05d5\u05d1\u05d4 \u05d4\u05ea\u05de\u05d5\u05d8\u05d8\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05dd, \u05d5\u05e2\u05d3 \u05dc\u05ea\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05e0\u05d5\u05d2\u05d3\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d2\u05d6\u05e8\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d0\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d0\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05e0\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d8\u05d5\u05d1 \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05e8\u05e2, \u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d9, \u05dc\u05d1\u05df \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05e9\u05d7\u05d5\u05e8, \u05e1\u05d3\u05e8 \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05db\u05d0\u05d5\u05e1, \u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1-\u05d3\u05e2\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05d8\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05e3, \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05e4\u05e8\u05d0\u05d5\u05ea, \u05de\u05d5\u05e1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05d7\u05d5\u05e7\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d5\u05dc \u05d0\u05e0\u05e8\u05db\u05d9\u05d4, \u05e9\u05e8\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05db\u05d5\u05d7\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea. Residential segregation between expatriate communities and the indigenous population in Africa constituted, formally or informally, an inseparable part of British and French colonial planning. Through an analysis of urban space, as represented in anglophone and francophone novels that deal with colonial Africa, this article aims to explore the relations between literary contents and historical geography of the different regions designated for white settlement and the segregationist phenomena there from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. The literary contents of the colonial novel expose a wide variety of urban representations, in which the dualism between the 'white city' and the 'other city' is crystallized or rather challenged: from an ironic attitude on the part of the African society concerning the early establishment of European spaces, or a tragic view of collapsing ethical conducts, toward binary descriptions and spatial associations, such as good vs. evil, health vs. illness, white vs. black, order vs. chaos, sober vs. folly, culture vs. wilderness, etc.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ananth Aiyer"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634343","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49b021db-63f0-3c95-bad6-b612140056ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42634343"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"563","pageStart":"558","pagination":"pp. 558-563","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Writing Against the Current","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42634343","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":2322,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Banahene Adjei"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466678","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03802361"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312107"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236667"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"196d7984-c651-3c4a-a976-2fefcff0e1dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20466678"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajeducrevucan"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Education \/ Revue canadienne de l'\u00e9ducation","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"1067","pageStart":"1046","pagination":"pp. 1046-1067","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Canadian Society for the Study of Education","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonising Knowledge Production: The Pedagogic Relevance of Gandhian Satyagraha to Schooling and Education in Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20466678","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":7625,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I examine how Mahatma Gandhi's philosophy of non-violent resistance (Satyagraha) can be applied to decolonize schooling and education practices in Ghana. Satyagraha consists of three fundamental elements: appeal to the oppressor, non-cooperation, and civil disobedience. Part of an anti-racist and anti-colonial discourse, Satyagraha is a strategy, epistemology, and methodology for creating spaces for inclusion of Ghanaian Indigenous knowledge and worldview in school curricula and pedagogy. This article is also informed by my lived experiences and observations as an Indigenous student from Ghana. I conclude the article with a discussion of the benefits and dangers inherent in such transformative work. \/\/\/ Dans cet article, l'auteur montre comment la philosophie de non-violence (satyagraha) de Gandhi peut \u00eatre mise \u00e0 profit pour d\u00e9coloniser l'\u00e9cole et les pratiques p\u00e9dagogiques au Ghana. Le satyagraha comprend trois \u00e9l\u00e9ments essentiels: l'appel \u00e0 l'oppresseur, la non-coop\u00e9ration et la d\u00e9sob\u00e9issance civile. Partie int\u00e9grante d'un discours antiraciste et anticolonial, le satyagraha est une strat\u00e9gie, une \u00e9pist\u00e9mologie et une m\u00e9thodologie visant \u00e0 cr\u00e9er des espaces pour l'inclusion d'une vision du monde et d'un savoir proprement ghan\u00e9ens quant aux programmes scolaires et \u00e0 la p\u00e9dagogie. Cet article repose aussi sur l'exp\u00e9rience personnelle et les observations de l'auteur en tant qu'\u00e9tudiant ghan\u00e9en. L'article se termine par une discussion des bienfaits et des dangers inh\u00e9rents \u00e0 un tel travail de transformation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwyn Rowley"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41146454","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03432521"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac47f71d-c668-317c-91c5-8bc1d2daac69"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41146454"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geojournal"}],"isPartOf":"GeoJournal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"546","pageStart":"546","pagination":"p. 546","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41146454","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mangol Bayat Philipp"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4282510","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630355"},{"name":"lccn","value":"65-009869"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13907d60-4bc9-363f-bed4-5f0f6fb084b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4282510"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"M\u012brz\u0101 \u0100q\u0101 Kh\u0101n Kirm\u0101n\u012b: A Nineteenth Century Persian Nationalist","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4282510","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Clines"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27031303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00656801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"263448427"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234551"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eee7357-e9ed-3fc7-8fd1-529aa47522ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27031303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"memoameracadrome"}],"isPartOf":"Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"American Academy in Rome","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Classical Studies","Art & Art History","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Edward W. Said, Renaissance Orientalism, and Imaginative Geographies of a Classical Mediterranean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27031303","volumeNumber":"65","wordCount":23590,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since the publication of Edward W. Said\u2019s Orientalism, scholars have recalibrated how they understand discourses of power, formulations of knowledge, and Western constructions of cultural difference. While some premodernists have willingly engaged with Said\u2019s work, there remains within Italian Renaissance studies some reluctance to do so because of the misconception that Orientalism argued for East-West dichotomies that only operated under the larger structures of Western colonialism and imperialism. This essay conducts a close reading of crucial argumentative and methodological sections of Orientalism alongside the writings of two 15th-century humanists, Cyriac of Ancona and Biondo Flavio, to illustrate that Said argued for Orientalism as a transhistorical discourse of power and knowledge production by and for the West that tells us far more about the West\u2019s view of the Orient than about the Orient itself. This reading is broken down in three parts to explicate more fully Said\u2019s larger arguments and their implications for Renaissance studies and our scholarly engagement with humanism: how Said defined Orientalism; Said\u2019s concept of imaginative geography; the differences Said outlined between latent and manifest Orientalism, and what their differences tell us about the causal relationship between Orientalism and Western desires for military action in the Orient. This essay\u2019s central argument is that scholars must engage with Orientalism, even if they disagree with the book\u2019s premises, if they are to best understand to what extent Renaissance humanists\u2019 conceptualizations of the Orient fit within the long trajectory of Orientalism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Pattison"],"datePublished":"1994-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85cc5a9a-fff0-3dce-b5e3-3534e9b1bee8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2637388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Call No Man Happy: Inside the Black Insider, Marechera's Journey to Become a Writer?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2637388","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Over the last two decades or so an industry has burgeoned in universities and other educational institutions extolling the virtues of black African writers and their struggle to create a black historicity and to expose the evils of colonialism and neo-colonialism. Authors such as Chinua Achebe and Wol\u00e9 Soyinka figure high on the curricula. If the name of Dambudzo Marechera features at all, it is as the critics' stereotype of the `tortured artist' or the `flawed genius'. The activities of the Dambudzo Marechera Trust led to the posthumous publication of possibly his best work, The Black Insider (1990), a collection of poetry, The Cemetery of Mind (1992), with a further volume of prose due out in 1994. These indications of a sustained and growing interest in the work of a writer who died in 1987 at the age of 35, may well encourage a reassessment of Marechera's body of work. In turn, this may lead to a recognition that the high and enduring quality of his writing, together with his refusal to be labelled a `black writer', his fascination for the individual mind rather than the collective body, and his demand for intellectual freedom from the restrictions of race, class and nationalism, deserves to place him among the leading writers of his generation. This article examines, inter alia, how The Black Insider may contribute to that debate.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mpalive-Hangson Msiska"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"review-essay","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.4.05","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"77a41733-d5de-3815-8c49-0ac673fcd50f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.4.05"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Colonialism, Trauma, and Affect: Chinua Achebe's Arrow of God<\/em> as Oduche's Return","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.4.05","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":12321,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The paper examines Chinua Achebe's Arrow of God, which deals with the advent of colonialism in Nigeria, as a trauma narrative. It argues that, though the novel has generally and profitably been read as exemplifying the problem of cultural conflict in Africa, seen through the prism of the writer's last memoir, its primary aim is clearly to map out a genealogy of a certain \u201cAfrican postcolonial structure of feeling,\u201d in which the fracture of traditional society in the face of colonialism dramatized in the novel is seen as, to a large extent, a symptom of the foundational trauma of Umuaro's genesis. Thus, it is argued that Achebe deploys the fiction genre as a discursive site for mourning the loss of a precolonial cultural and political space. However, the paper does not read trauma in terms of the repetition compulsion complex proposed by Freud and post-structuralist trauma studies, but instead, it attends to the ways in which the novel re-historicizes trauma as a way of working through it. It considers the act of writing the novel itself as part of that process of working out the historical trauma of postcolonial affective dysfunction.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. KEITH BOOKER","DUBRAVKA JURAGA"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393827"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637278"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007216124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59e039e4-898c-370b-89fa-1449b26d9655"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29533218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studiesnovel"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in the Novel","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"274","pagination":"pp. 274-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE REDS AND THE BLACKS: THE HISTORICAL NOVEL IN THE SOVIET UNION AND POSTCOLONIAL AFRICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29533218","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Louis Decker"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466354","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466354"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"34","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"84","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-84","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"The State of Rap: Time and Place in Hip Hop Nationalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466354","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15968,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Terrence Musanga"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccb1b732-9316-3ddc-acfa-b9db89fe3dbd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Intra-Urban Mobilities and the Depiction of the City in Zimbabwean Fiction as Reflected in Valerie Tagwira's \"Uncertainty of Hope\" (2006)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572930","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":6277,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122575,122782]],"Locations in B":[[5592,5798]],"abstract":"This article explores intra-urban mobilities and the depiction of the city in contemporary Zimbabwean literature as reflected in Valerie Tagwira's Uncertainty of Hope. It shall be argued that intra-urban mobilities are closely related to the depiction of the city as a heterogeneous space that is unevenly constituted. This unevenness is influenced by economic and political factors and translates into the realm of the social and symbolic as some spaces are projected as \"safe\" and \"respectable\" while others are conceptualized as of \"ill repute\" and \"threat\" to the security, morals, and safety of its inhabitants. However, the boundaries between \"safe\" and \"threatening\" spaces are constantly transgressed by Zimbabwean urban dwellers in their day to day struggles for survival in a harsh and unrelenting economic and political climate. This political and economic environment has resulted in most Zimbabweans being insecure as testified by heightened intraurban mobilities. Furthermore, the insecurity and intra-urban mobility are exemplified by the creation of unstable identities premised on fear, anxiety, and restlessness that characterize the lives of most urban dwellers.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anup Shekhar Chakraborty"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42761444","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606240327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a6105974-c7ff-3058-9a41-15ffb95e5bba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42761444"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"596","pageStart":"583","pagination":"pp. 583-596","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"POLITICS OF SILENCINGS: ECHOES OF THE MARGINS FROM MIZORAM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42761444","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":8605,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The complex history(ies) of the Northeast India do not fit easily into the jigsaw of the standard narratives of pre-colonial, colonial and post-colonial history(ies) of mainland India. The 'Northeast' as a socio-politico category in contemporary Indian politics symbolizes a space where patriarchal hegemony dictates the construction of the discourses and narratives of inclusion and exclusion. To the mainland Indians, Mizoram as a category political as well as cultural serves as a faint reminder of 'Laldenga and the protracted insurgency in the Christian dominated area'; and the success of India's democratic mechanisms as reflected through the signing of the Peace Accord (1986) and the implementation of what Baruah calls 'Cosmetic Federalism'. To the other vast majority of mainland Indians the region remains a geo-political puzzle, mapping its geographic location; its habitants become a quest in itself. Mainland India and the world beyond are hardly aware of the underlying realities of the region- the Politics of Silencings-exclusions and inclusions, politics of identity, religious persecutions, state-led victimization of women and the marginals etc which are justified in the name of 'State-Building'. In this backdrop, the paper attempts to trace the sources and the construction of the marginal position of women, vai and the pois who form the triad of the marginals and also reflect on the politics of silencings as propelled by the hegemony of the nexus of patriarchy in Mizo society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwen Bergner"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463196","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8f7d428-3bc4-3c08-af85-6e5f886b1c94"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/463196"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"88","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-88","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Who Is That Masked Woman? Or, the Role of Gender in Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/463196","volumeNumber":"110","wordCount":9581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In Black Skin, White Masks, Frantz Fanon transposes psychoanalysis from its gender-based framework of subject formation in order to interrogate racial subjectivity in the colonial context. Though the work inaugurates a psychoanalytic discourse of racial identity, Fanon-like Freud-takes the male as the norm. Women are implicitly present, nonetheless, in Fanon's conception of colonial identity-a mirroring relationship between white men and black men that is mediated through the bodies of women. This colonial dynamic suggests a sex-gender economy circulating women among men to construct and maintain racial categories. Though Fanon's analysis of black women's sexual desire has been dismissed as obviously sexist, the terms of his critique reveal norms of gender, class, and sexuality by which black women are bound and against which he formulates black masculinity. Analyzing gender in Fanon's text works to broaden the outline of black women's subjectivity and to delineate the interdependence of race and gender.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22019033061.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781776143061"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b9c2fda-afb0-3bb6-bfb2-fe5c83f41650"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.18772\/22019033061.13"}],"isPartOf":"Racism After Apartheid","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"173","pagination":"173-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"DEMOCRATIC MARXISM AND THE NATIONAL QUESTION:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.18772\/22019033061.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The current development impasse in South Africa has incited public debate and analysis. Many commentators have traced its origins to the transition during the early 1990s and subsequent policies implemented by the ruling party. Positive accounts describe the transition as a miracle while critics view it as an elite pact (Bond 2000: 16). The latter perspective has been used to explain the underlying structural causes of the post-apartheid socio-economic crisis (Bond 2000; Freund 2013; Terreblanche 2012). This situation is exacerbated by the glaring race, class and gender inequalities that characterise post-apartheid society. The \u2018rainbow nation thesis\u2019 is being challenged by","subTitle":"RACE AND CLASS IN POST-APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA","keyphrase":["africa","capitalist","apartheid south","racialised","political","labour","marxism","apartheid south africa","democratic marxism","post apartheid south"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jon Miller"],"datePublished":"1993-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1386912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49890280"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221976"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1386912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsciestudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Society for the Scientific Study of Religion","sourceCategory":["Religion","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Missions, Social Change, and Resistance to Authority: Notes toward an Understanding of the Relative Autonomy of Religion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1386912","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":12724,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In sociology, studies of social change in the non-Western world have not assigned a prominent role to missionary organizations. This relative neglect is the product of two assumptions: first, that missions abroad were ineffective as agents of fundamental social change; and, second, that their activities were shaped more by powerful secular agendas over which they had little control than by autonomous religious interests. Contrary to the first assumption, there is ample evidence that some missions were impressive agents of social transformation; contrary to the second, some of them took a stand in direct opposition to the secular political and economic interests to which they are often considered subordinate. Together these observations reinforce the concept of the relative autonomy of religion. I argue here that one key to understanding mission resistance to powerful nonreligious forces can be found in religious conceptions of the proper relationships among land, labor, and community stability. When these are threatened, the symbiosis between religious and secular interests can give way to open and effective defiance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL SYROTINSKI"],"datePublished":"2001-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263658","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43263658"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"104","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Ghost Writing: Sony Labou Tansi's Spectrographic Subject","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43263658","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronnie Scharfman"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3182529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00440078"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07d7f098-9b59-360b-acc2-e6c2c58cf25e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3182529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalefrenstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yale French Studies","issueNumber":"103","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Yale University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Before the Postcolonial","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3182529","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dustin Crowley"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.13","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d73d9fb4-78ba-331d-acdc-1cfc57951df4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.13"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cA Universal Garden of Many-Coloured Flowers\u201d: Place and Scale in the Works of Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.13","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":9487,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[491704,491807],[495226,495486]],"Locations in B":[[39364,39467],[40287,40513]],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's literary career has attracted much attention from critics attempting to understand the tensions of culture and class, unity and difference, and oppression and resistance that exist within and between his works. Many of the contradictions are structured around perceived breaks in Ng\u0169g\u0129's thinking, especially between an early, locally focused concern with cultural nationalism and a later, more globally focused narrative of neocolonialism. Drawing on concepts and frameworks from recent debates in geography, this article challenges the assumptions of a local-global dichotomy that underpin much of this criticism; geocritical analysis of four works spanning Ng\u0169g\u0129's career (The River Between, A Grain of Wheat, I Will Marry When I Want, and Wizard of the Crow) suggests a consistently \u201cglocal\u201d understanding in his representation of place and scale. Ng\u0169g\u0129 has tended to narrate local place as the product of large-scale interventions and to understand the global as constructed from and manifested within place-based conditions. By decoupling issues of class, culture, domination, and resistance from dichotomous alignment with the local and global as opposing forces, this article argues critics can better understand the nature of these tensions and more precisely deal with the shifting means by which Ng\u0169g\u0129 attempts to negotiate them.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Youngsuk Chae"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17f10e82-505a-384e-a26a-1cd9fb413797"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"755","pageStart":"738","pagination":"pp. 738-755","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"NEOCOLONIAL GLOBAL CAPITALISM AND IMPERIAL DESIRE IN LAWRENCE CHUA'S \"GOLD BY THE INCH\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287227","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":7262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PHILLIP C. NAYLOR"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393340","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227403"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"12217983-c11f-3146-840c-e85341c28cd6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24393340"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24393340","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":1231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haidar Eid","Khaled Ghazel"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b416dcfb-c2c0-3790-9eca-2fc464a78c3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40239113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Footprints of Fanon in Gillo Pontecorvo's \"The Battle of Algiers\" and Sembene Ousamne's Xala","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239113","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4613,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani Ya Azibo"],"datePublished":"1989-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"456628b8-b4c1-36d6-98ea-bef5b6de1583"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"306","pagination":"pp. 306-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Pitfalls and Some Ameliorative Strategies in African Personality Research","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784661","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4415,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rutgerd Boelens","Paul H. Gelles"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733772","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02613050"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38871257"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236966"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"623034a4-a95d-379a-bd03-957f45176301"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27733772"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bulllatiamerrese"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of Latin American Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"311","pagination":"pp. 311-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cultural Politics, Communal Resistance and Identity in Andean Irrigation Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27733772","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8603,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses two case studies to illustrate how Andean irrigation development and management emerges from a hybrid mix of local community rules and the changing political forms and ideological forces of hegemonic states. Some indigenous water-control institutions are with us today because they were consonant with the extractive purposes of local elites and Inca, Spanish and post-independence Republican states. These states often appropriated and standardised local water-management rules, rights and rituals in order to gain control over the surplus produced by these irrigation systems. However, as we show in the case of two communities in Ecuador and Peru, many of these same institutions are reappropriated and redirected by local communities to counteract both classic 'exclusion-oriented' and modern 'inclusion-oriented' water and identity politics. In this way, they resist subordination, discrimination and the control of local water management by rural elites or state actors.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"news","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68e4b76f-2d0b-3b0b-9b09-ae7950817c08"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25115183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Stirrings Still; Or, The Impossibility of Mourning the Deaths of Edward Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25115183","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":7665,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEVEN C. ROACH"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13854879"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8eba2af-4e72-326f-bd14-ce0f0afe907f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24675280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jminogrourigh"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on Minority and Group Rights","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"432","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-432","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Law","Political Science","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government"],"title":"Minority Rights and an Emergent International Right to Autonomy: A Historical and Normative Assessment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24675280","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11478,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert I. Schiller"],"datePublished":"1968-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25087765","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a979223f-d31c-3e2b-8b38-3c17f54f4601"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25087765"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"650","pageStart":"631","pagination":"pp. 631-650","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Use of American Power in the Post-Colonial World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25087765","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6600,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Van Young"],"datePublished":"1988-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650833","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03b332bb-e528-3ef9-819d-d966141d914e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/650833"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"118","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"Islands in the Storm: Quiet Cities and Violent Countrysides in the Mexican Independence Era","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650833","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Elkins"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20143878","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00221953"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535971"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227389"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17436afb-2d24-35d9-bd80-06b84c9cbc53"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20143878"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jintehist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Interdisciplinary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"The MIT Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Re-Assertion of the British Empire in Southeast Asia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20143878","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10180,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Bayly and Harper's \"Forgotten Wars\" examines the interrelated events, individuals, and ideologies involved in Britain's re-conquest of Southeast Asia after World War II, as well as its authoritarian attempts to shape the postwar landscape there and to re-assert its political and moral authority in a rapidly shifting global context. British imperial violence and authoritarianism were more pronounced in Southeast Asia during the postwar era than commonly acknowledged. Hence, issues of morality, objectivity, and methodology acquire a new relevance concerning the literature about the end of the British Empire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert L. Colson"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.133","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4bdc5e60-cd7f-383a-b01e-9593904bea39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.133"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Arresting Time, Resisting Arrest: Narrative Time and the African Dictator in Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's Wizard of the Crow<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.2011.42.1.133","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12800,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay argues that the form of Ng\u0169?g\u0129? wa Thiongo's Wizard of the Crow challenges the Ruler's hegemony. In my analysis, the novel's narrators and Ng\u0169?g\u0129?'s inventive use of rumor, prolepsis, and metalepsis work to create pluralistic modes of community that counteract the autocratic, repressive politics of the novel's dictator. This analysis adds a distinctively political dimension to the work of narrative theorists like G\u00e9\u00e9rard Genette, Mark Currie, and Brian Richardson, reading the distinctive feature of multiple narrators or proleptic rumors in the novel as signs of resistance. These formal features of the novel present a discursive challenge to the authority of the Ruler. This discursive challenge to authority is significant because the dictator's power is exercised through the power to speak and shape the world to his own ends. These features of Ng\u0169?g\u0129?'s novel mark a development in the transnational genre of the dictator novel.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joan Cocks"],"datePublished":"1996-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10587446"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3014ba50-f36f-3863-8686-a741dea664ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20688834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womgeryearbook"}],"isPartOf":"Women in German Yearbook","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On Commonality, Nationalism, and Violence: Hannah Arendt, Rosa Luxemburg, and Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20688834","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":5828,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this essay I briefly discuss the reasons why feminist theory, which twenty years ago had repudiated Hannah Arendt, now embraces her. I then present my own embrace of Arendt as an illustration. I examine how Arendt, in the company of Frantz Fanon and Rosa Luxemburg, illuminates nationalism as an especially explosive form of \"identity politics.\" I argue that all three thinkers press feminists to consider the dangers of political solidarities based on \"being,\" not \"thinking and doing.\" In addition, Fanon and Arendt press feminists to reconsider the significance and value of violence in politics.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. E. Greene"],"datePublished":"1972-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27856537","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d494f7e3-c53c-3507-8152-7077a3945296"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27856537"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"283","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-283","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PARTICIPATION, INTEGRATION AND LEGITIMACY AS INDICATORS OF DEVELOPMENTAL CHANGE IN THE POLITICS OF GUYANA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27856537","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":17027,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En este trabajo se examinan los problemas y las posibilidades del desarrollo pol[Unrepresented Characters]tico en Guyana. Se concibe que el desarrollo pol[Unrepresented Characters]tico es un proceso de cambio desarrollista el cual empieza con la transformaci[Unrepresented Characters]n del individuo para terminar con la de la sociedad misma. EI desarrollo pol[Unrepresented Characters]tico tambi\u00e9n se concibe como una funci[Unrepresented Characters]n de tres variables independientes: la participac[Unrepresented Characters]on pol[Unrepresented Characters]tica, la integraci[Unrepresented Characters]n pol[Unrepresented Characters]tica y la legitimidad del r[Unrepresented Characters]gimen. Lad relaciones entre estas tres variables y el desarrollo pol[Unrepresented Characters]tico se prueban mediante un rango limitado de datos agregados y de una encuesta. En los datos agregados se presenta referencia emp[Unrepresented Characters]rica respecto a la violencia pol[Unrepresented Characters]tica, los primeros movimientos pol[Unrepresented Characters]ticos y virajes electorales entre los tres partidos pol[Unrepresented Characters]ticos m\u00e1s importantes en Guyana. En los datos de la encuesta se verifican las percepciones, las actitudes y el comportamiento actual de los guyaneses, proporcionados por los resultados de un muestreo aleatorio estratificado de novecientos cincuenta y cinco (955) electores guyaneses y ciento seis (106) l[Unrepresented Characters]deres de partidos pol[Unrepresented Characters]ticos del pa[Unrepresented Characters]s. Las conclusions generales extra[Unrepresented Characters]das, son son que, mientras hay un alto nivel de participaci\u00f3n pol[Unrepresented Characters]tica de parte de los guyaneses, son relativamente bajas las tendencias hacia la integraci[Unrepresented Characters]n y la legitimidad del r\u00e9gimen.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NORMAN LEVINE"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41481132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85445931"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16f32bed-42ae-32fb-896e-6afa7393e6c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41481132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studrose"}],"isPartOf":"Studia Rosenthaliana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"291","pageStart":"288","pagination":"pp. 288-291","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Peeters Publishers","sourceCategory":["Religion","Jewish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41481132","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":2607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alexander Sedlmaier"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzm0.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780472119417"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9c746054-2eea-33a9-9c5b-e81cead0c243"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv3znzm0.5"}],"isPartOf":"Consumption and Violence","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"94","pageStart":"61","pagination":"61-94","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","European Studies","Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Neo-Marxist Critiques of Affluent Society:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv3znzm0.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14139,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The historical and intellectual developments analysed so far need to be located in the wider context of the pervasive conflict between competing concepts of universal well-being during the Cold War. The social theory of the Frankfurt School, especially Herbert Marcuse\u2019s analysis of capitalism, and its influence on the New Left were part of this transatlantic quest for appropriate ways to organise or animate societies.\u00b2 The Frankfurt School\u2019s insights into modern mass society were read not only as analysis but also as directions for use. However, Marcuse\u2019s concrete influence on the protagonists of West German critiques of regimes of provision should","subTitle":"\u201cNeed to Break the Rules\u201d","keyphrase":["marcuse","herbert marcuse","affluent","marxist critiques","semler","dimensional man","neo marxist critiques","horkheimer","adorno","engels"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES McCLENON"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380237"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617066"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200248"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecff8e22-2a66-3563-b701-0c4d15d899a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20831460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociofocus"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Focus","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Terrorism As Persuasion: Possibilities and Trends","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20831460","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6788,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Although terrorism has often been portrayed as low intensity warfare, it also can be visualized as a form of persuasion, one frequently ineffective due to logical fallacies. Successful persuasion is dependent on the interaction of four elements: speakers, arguments, situations, and audiences. Terrorism constitutes a type of rhetoric in which terrorist speakers communicate with media audiences, using symbolic violence as a means of argument. Terrorists lacking \"rhetorical\" ability fail to persuade their audiences to engage in behavior desired by the terrorist group. Successful terrorists elicit actions which contribute to a movement's mobilization. The model focuses attention on the progression toward mass destruction events and the restrictions on individual liberties that tend to occur during terrorist waves. The terrorism-as-persuasion model encourages simulating terrorist waves within game situations in order that the persuasion processes can be observed experimentally.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael A. Mel"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23411393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10184252"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"90a0b979-caa2-312a-a1ec-10105c0ebcb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23411393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pacificarts"}],"isPartOf":"Pacific Arts","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Pacific Arts Association","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts","Asian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Ples bilong mi: Interfacing Global and Indigenous Knowledge in Mapping out a Pacific Vision at Home and Abroad","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23411393","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3247,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis Rene Beres"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589966","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10800786"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54bbd8b3-7b44-35d6-8521-a97913eee956"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24589966"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"browjworlaffa"}],"isPartOf":"The Brown Journal of World Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"335","pageStart":"313","pagination":"pp. 313-335","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brown Journal of World Affairs","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Facing the Ultimate Nightmare: Preventing Nuclear Terrorism Against the United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24589966","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric van Young"],"datePublished":"1986-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178857","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"19bcc90e-815f-35d5-b649-484fd3ae64b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/178857"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"413","pageStart":"385","pagination":"pp. 385-413","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Millennium on the Northern Marches: The Mad Messiah of Durango and Popular Rebellion in Mexico, 1800-1815","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/178857","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":16064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jana Evans Braziel"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715224","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10903488"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4e1086f-2cf3-3df8-8bf2-9a43d7eb3590"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41715224"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhaitstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Haitian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Center for Black Studies Research","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"Profit and Nothing But!\" (Le Profit et rien d'autre!): Raoul Peck's Impolite Thoughts on the (Haitian Diasporic) Class Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41715224","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":15633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bert J. Thomas"],"datePublished":"1992-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784622","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cdcbde6e-d8b4-3999-906f-8a6a4a3182fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784622"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"410","pageStart":"392","pagination":"pp. 392-410","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Caribbean Black Power: From Slogan to Practical Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784622","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":6630,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cilas Kemedjio","R. H. Mitsch"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820628","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820628"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"When the Detour Leads Home: The Urgency of Memory and the Liberation Imperative from Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire to Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820628","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5951,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[21626,21675]],"Locations in B":[[129,181]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Morris Szeftel"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006051","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17655b2d-e73e-3db7-8a08-1bb3e7433226"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006051"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"51","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Manoeuvres of War in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006051","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tim Murithi"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26893597","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20504292"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5cc6f093-7d10-3d1f-b041-8a35a416dcd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26893597"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jrnlafrunionstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Union Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"82","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-82","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Pan-Africanism and the Politicization of the International Criminal Court","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26893597","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7834,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Annie Gagiano"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.3.3","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b792a55e-8c0c-39cd-8359-0e1d0cf97feb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africatoday.57.3.3"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Farah's Sardines:<\/em> Women in a Context of Despotism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africatoday.57.3.3","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":9188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sardines (1981) is the middle text of Nuruddin Farah's first trilogy, to which he gave the title Variations on the Theme of an African Dictatorship and the subtitle Truth versus Untruth. Taking seriously the verbal artistry and the implicit political analysis built into the novel, this article contests dismissive characterizations of Farah's central character, Medina, by exploring how Medina becomes an example of female intellectual and moral strength and leadership, opposing not only the \u201c\u201cvariations\u201d\u201d of dictatorship, but the socially entrenched forms of conduct and primordialist values that allow tyranny to flourish in numerous African countries. The essay explores Farah's portrayals of African women's civic responsibility and powers of political influence, employing the useful theories of Maria Pia Lara, who recognizes that (metafictionally) novels bring women's emancipatory narratives into the public sphere. Sardines is read as Farah's study of the incomplete African project of social transformation involving the quest for gender justice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelson Maldonado-Torres"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26770020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1bf47743-9661-367e-9eba-d446473d9c35"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26770020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rousseau and Fanon on Inequality and the Human Sciences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26770020","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Burawoy"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566708","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"31096dfb-094b-3e83-8121-3890cd3611a7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24566708"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"979","pageStart":"961","pagination":"pp. 961-979","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Colour of Class\" Revisited: Four Decades of Postcolonialism in Zambia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24566708","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":12271,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ethnographic revisits have become an increasing practice in the social sciences, designed to advance the understanding of history through the linking of micro processes and societal structures. In this article I revisit my study of Zambianisation on the Copperbelt, conducted between 1968 and 1972. The methodology of the extended case method is used first to re-present the original study and then to reassess it critically in terms of what has happened over the last 40 years. Four types of revisit are considered: revisit as refutation of the original study, revisit as an approach to historical change, revisit as comparative analysis, and revisit as reconstructing social theory. My reassessment relies on other studies of the Zambian mines, but also on ethnographic research I conducted in the US, Hungary and Russia during the same 40-year period.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Batya Weinbaum"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071182","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10400656"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42391367"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004657"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18408f20-3ff9-3a0d-a86c-186aeeb9bf06"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40071182"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwsaj"}],"isPartOf":"NWSA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How Sexual Trauma Can Create Obstacles to Transnational Feminism: The Case of Shifra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40071182","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7864,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Obstacles to organizing peace can sometimes emerge because women have suffered previous sexual violence. Consequently, the frame through which they react to contemporary political situations, including peace demonstrations organized by transnational feminists, might at the core have an internal structure derived from previous violation that women then project to identify, modify, and contain controversy in external events. Therefore, closely examining the border between private and public spheres in women's lives might not always lead to progressive politics for women as a group, as some might hope. Rather, some women might attempt to recover from specifically sexual violence in previous wars, seizing upon discourse bound of national security. They may attempt to regain internal strength by fortifying gender identity that has been thrown into crisis, using nationalistic contours to reaffirm their sense of self. This might lead them to actively protest other women working for peace. Since trauma survivors exhibit modes of recounting life histories that vividly dramatize past events in order to draw attention to private pain in public, the force of such narrators who speak in the streets can upstage peaceworkers' events.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer Ang Mei Sze"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a0b53894-a09d-33fc-98e2-fef739b35389"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Whither Hegelian Dialectics in Sartrean Violence?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511193","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":9385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sartrean ontological intersubjectivity is often understood to be hostile and conflictive, and Sartrean dialectics is repeatedly interpreted through the lenses of the Hegelian master-slave dyad, translating into a conflictive theory of practical ensembles. Building on this, critics in the aftermath of 9\/11 argued that 'terror' and 'revolutionary violence' introduced in Critique of Dialectical Reason as the anti-thesis of oppression underscored his anti-colonial writings and this gives us justification to think that Sartre might consider terrorism a form of revolutionary violence. With this in mind, this paper does not deal with the bigger issue of Sartre's political position, but only aims to question the basis of reading Hegelian dialectics in Sartre's ontology of intersubjectivity and social ensembles. Revisiting the role of dialectics in his Search for a Method and Critique of Dialectical Reason, it reveals a Sartre who is critical of Hegelian dialectics, and establishes his intersubjectivity as more compatible with Heidegger's being-with-others rather than Hegel's being-for-others.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas G. Anglin"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40202345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91c89702-9636-3e87-858f-7f13be85b878"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40202345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"internationalj"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"504","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-504","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Independent Black Africa: Retrospect and Prospect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40202345","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":8515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Boaventura de Sousa Santos"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9789877223781"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a4c9368-43ea-3476-b2b7-6c58f29b421e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rkt3.10"}],"isPartOf":"Boaventura de Sousa Santos","issueNumber":null,"language":["por"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"261","pagination":"261-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Tradu\u00e7\u00e3o intercultural:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rkt3.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13770,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"As ecologias de saberes s\u00e3o um dos procedimentos centrais que estruturam as epistemologias do Sul. No centro das ecologias de saberes est\u00e1 a ideia de que os diferentes tipos de saberes s\u00e3o incompletos de diferentes formas e que a cria\u00e7\u00e3o da consci\u00eancia desta incompletude rec\u00edproca (em vez de procurar a completude) constitui a condi\u00e7\u00e3o pr\u00e9via para alcan\u00e7ar a justi\u00e7a cognitiva. A tradu\u00e7\u00e3o intercultural \u00e9 uma alternativa tanto ao universalismo abstracto no qual se baseiam as teorias gerais ocidentaloc\u00eantricas como \u00e0 ideia da incomensurabilidade entre culturas. As duas est\u00e3o ligadas e s\u00e3o respons\u00e1veis por dois \u201cn\u00e3o-relacionamentos\u201d da modernidade ocidental com culturas","subTitle":"Diferir e partilhar con passionalit\u00e0","keyphrase":["tradu\u00e7\u00e3o","tradu\u00e7\u00e3o intercultural","trabalho","contacto","intercultural diferir","saberes","pr\u00e1ticas","tradu\u00e7\u00e3o intercultural diferir","culturais","movimentos"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8cwp.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781908857651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4eb9502d-8f40-360b-9212-ef14a38a9542"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwh8cwp.14"}],"isPartOf":"Memory, Migration and (De)Colonisation in the Caribbean and Beyond","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"133","pagination":"133-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","History","Latin American Studies","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"To \u2018stay where you are\u2019 as a decolonial gesture:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwh8cwp.14","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9220,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What does the intensity of living in a \u2018paradise\u2019 do to its inhabitants? Jamaica Kincaid offers an answer in the closing pages of her book A Small Place<\/em>: \u2018Antigua is beautiful. Antigua is too beautiful. Sometimes the beauty of it seems unreal. Sometimes the beauty of it seems as if it were stage sets for a play, for no real sunset could look like that; no real seawater could strike that many shades of blue at once\u2019 (1988, p. 77). The list of things too beautiful to be real in Antigua extends for two pages; it includes a detailed description","subTitle":"Glissant\u2019s philosophy of Antillean space in the context of C\u00e9saire and Fanon","keyphrase":["glissant","c\u00e9saire","decolonial","decolonial gesture","antilles","decolonisation","antillean","d\u00e9tour","damn\u00e9s","culture"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ashraf Hoque"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550c56.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787351356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7807c4f-f3b0-3bf3-a232-dd3d051726d0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv550c56.11"}],"isPartOf":"Being Young, Male and Muslim in Luton","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"114","pageStart":"104","pagination":"104-114","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Political Science","Sociology","Population Studies","History"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv550c56.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["london","britain","werbner","york routledge","university","oxford","anthropology","politics","british","london new york"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magal\u00ed Armillas-Tiseyra"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.3.13","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35ad68f5-0f2f-3e5f-839d-0c089da045fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.3.13"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tales from the Corpolony: Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's Wizard of the Crow<\/em> and the Dictator-Novel in the Time of Transition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.49.3.13","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":9715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article reads Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's Wizard of the Crow as both a dictator-novel and a critical use of the genre to analyze the larger-scale global political transformations (so-called \u201ctransitions\u201d) that followed the end of the Cold War. Beyond its critique of dictators and dictatorship on the African continent, Wizard of the Crow turns attention to nascent networks of opposition to neoliberalism and neoliberal globalization. This constitutes the emergent Global South consciousness of Ng\u0169g\u0129's dictator-novel, which requires a reexamination of the contours of the genre in and for the twenty-first century.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Nursey-Bray"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160414","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160414"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race and Nation: Ideology in the Thought of Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160414","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":4212,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[3762,3828]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaun Richards"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289057","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03092984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60812507"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005263080"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289057"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histwork"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop","issueNumber":"31","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"120","pagination":"pp. 120-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Polemics on the Irish Past: The 'Return to the Source' in Irish Literary Revivals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289057","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7935,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul C. Mocombe"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26529188","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10828354"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676341456"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb26b323-4e6d-38ba-baae-1d9c28fb31f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26529188"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"racegenderclass"}],"isPartOf":"Race, Gender & Class","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Jean Ait Belkhir, Race, Gender & Class Journal","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Negro, The \u201cMy Nigga,\u201d and The African","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26529188","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6887,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article puts forth the argument that people of African descent in the postindustrial capitalist world-system of America are no longer Africans. Instead, their practical consciousnesses are the product of two identities, the negro, i.e., black bourgeoisie, or African Americans, on the one hand, under the leadership of educated professionals and preachers; and the \u201cmy nigga,\u201d i.e., the black underclass, on the other hand, under the leadership of street and prison personalities, athletes, and entertainers vying for ideological and linguistic domination of black America. These two social class language games were historically constituted by different ideological apparatuses, the church and education on the one hand and the streets, prisons, and the athletic and entertainment industries on the other, of the global capitalist racial-class structure of inequality under American hegemony, which replaced the African ideological apparatuses of Vodou, peristyles, lakous, and agricultural production as found in Haiti. Neither identities represent counter-hegemonic movements to the global (Protestant) capitalist world-system under American hegemony. The work concludes that unless African Americans seize to be interpellated and socialized by the aforementioned power elites and ideological apparatuses of the American capitalist social structure, these two social class language games will forever serve as the bearers of ideological and linguistic domination in black America.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nathalie Debrauwere-Miller"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016892","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2923493-85c3-356f-8b26-1fb866c9b23f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44016892"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Neither Victims nor Executioners\" in Hubert Haddad's \"Palestine\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44016892","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":11805,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Duguid"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5984ba97-9741-3ec5-9a9e-4e0a2591dfa0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/162327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Biographical Approach to the Study of Social Change in the Middle East: Abdullah Tariki as a New Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/162327","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":13618,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clyde Woods"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068327","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cbb8f49a-7fc0-3557-ae8e-94caf180fe8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40068327"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"1018","pageStart":"1005","pagination":"pp. 1005-1018","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?: Katrina, Trap Economics, and the Rebirth of the Blues","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40068327","volumeNumber":"57","wordCount":6405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maximilian Terhalle"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24587950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09467165"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607255433"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235469"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1398377-6788-3738-89a3-87121d98a025"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24587950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"zeitintebezi"}],"isPartOf":"Zeitschrift f\u00fcr Internationale Beziehungen","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"139","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-139","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Kritische Anmerkungen zur \u00bbPolitisierung internationaler Institutionen\u00ab","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24587950","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":9291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Die Politisierung internationaler Institutionen ist ein neuerer Forschungstrend. Zentrales Interesse sind die Formen und Gr\u00fcnde zivilgesellschaftlicher Infragestellung von Entscheidungen internationaler Institutionen. J\u00fcngste Politisierungsforschung erweitert die Akteurseinheiten um aufstrebende M\u00e4chte und erkennt Grundz\u00fcge einer neuen Weltordnung. Diese Innovationen sind jedoch konzeptionell kritisch zu betrachten. Erstens ist der neue Politisierungsbegriff inkoh\u00e4rent und unterspezifiziert. Die Souver\u00e4nit\u00e4tsvorstellungen der Akteurseinheiten sind nicht komplement\u00e4r und m\u00fcssen getrennt werden. \u00dcberdies kann das Verh\u00e4ltnis zwischen den Akteuren nicht ohne eine Machtkomponente verstanden werden. Zweitens ist die Herangehensweise \u00fcber internationale Institutionen an das Ph\u00e4nomen globale Ordnung dekontextualisiert. Es wird verkannt, dass Institutionen auf materieller Macht beruhen. Auch wird nicht gesehen, welche Mechanismen dem Entstehen von \u00bbresistance\u00ab vorausgehen. Dies h\u00e4tte verdeutlicht, gegen wen sich \u00bbresistance\u00ab wendet und inwieweit die Au\u00dferachtlassung der USA gerechtfertigt ist. Diese Kritik aufnehmend f\u00fchrt der Beitrag eine konzeptionell neue Fassung der Idee globaler Ordnung ein, welche auf die Dynamiken der \u00bbpolitics of legitimacy\u00ab abhebt. The so-called \u00bbPoliticization of International Institutions\u00ab thesis has been established as a powerful research trend in the last few years. Its key focus has been on the different shapes and causes of civil society's questioning of decisions made by international institutions. The most recent research that has been conducted on \u00bbpoliticization\u00ab builds upon these earlier strands. In particular, it has extended the number of actors, furthering \u00bbpoliticization\u00ab, to rising powers and has argued for the emergence of a distinctly new world order. However, these propositions are, from a conceptual point of view, questionable in two ways. Firstly, the revised term of \u00bbpoliticization\u00ab is both incoherent and underspecified. Put briefly, the assumed complementarity of the main actors' understandings of sovereignty cannot be taken for granted. Moreover, excluding a(n undeniable) power component from the relationship between the distinct groups of actors is not viable. Secondly, approaching global order simply via international institutions reveals an unbearable degree of decontextualizing the overall problem of order. What this overlooks is the fact that international institutions are, originally, built on material power. Neither does the thesis take into account those mechanisms that operate before the actual emergence of \u00bbresistance\u00ab. In turn, taking on these points would have made it much clearer against whom the notion of \u00bbresistance\u00ab is actually directed and whether leaving the US out of the picture is at all justified. Based on these criticisms, the article introduces an alternative version to the authors' underspecified concept of global order, which focuses on the dynamics underlying the central process of negotiating global legitimacy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Hart"],"datePublished":"2018-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26946002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057674"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565102408"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b12966a-bdcc-3abb-8e69-f4666afa98d9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26946002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cambanth"}],"isPartOf":"The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"92","pagination":"pp. 92-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing Cambridge University","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26946002","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7531,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"I dwell here on my own experience of working at Cambridge University for methodological reasons. Anthropologists could make more of the humanities tradition of going deeply into particular personalities, places, events and relations in search of wider truths. Ethnography exemplifies this, but the discipline's assimilation into the social sciences and academic bureaucracy counteract this impulse. I draw selectively on my anthropological education and academic work to interrogate the political relationship between western societies and their former colonies. Cambridge University is reactionary for sure, but its decentralized organization makes room for a minority sometimes to change the world. The historical example of the abolition movement illustrates this. Anthropology ought to be a way of rethinking the world, and I conclude with how and why I introduced students to the anti-colonial intellectuals who did just that when they led the liberation (not 'decolonization') movements that overthrew European empires.","subTitle":"A Participant Observer's View","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RITA M. PALACIOS"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636559","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03848167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9be715d7-5e4c-305b-a097-e1d11012b1d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41636559"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revicanaestuhisp"}],"isPartOf":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"595","pageStart":"577","pagination":"pp. 577-595","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hisp\u00e1nicos","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Luis De Li\u00f3n's \"El tiempo principia en Xibalb\u00e1\" and the Foundation of a Contemporary Indigenous Literature in Guatemala","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41636559","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":8646,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"El tiempo principia en Xibalb\u00e1, del escritor cakchiquel Luis De Li\u00f3n, ofrece una revisi\u00f3n de la identidad ind\u00edgena desde la perspectiva del ind\u00edgena mismo. Esta novela, a diferencia de la obra fundacional Hombres de Ma\u00edz de Miguel \u00c1ngel Asturias, se encuentra libre del idealismo m\u00edtico-ancestral que por muchos a\u00f1os ha atenuado la situaci\u00f3n actual del ind\u00edgena en Guatemala. Por medio de un marco te\u00f3rico h\u00edbrido que responde no solo a la condici\u00f3n poscolonial de la regi\u00f3n sino que tambi\u00e9n toma en cuenta la especifidad cultural de esta producci\u00f3n literaria, este art\u00edculo considera la articulaci\u00f3n de una literatura maya contempor\u00e1nea desde la inscripci\u00f3n de una identidad ind\u00edgena flexible y la consiguiente anulaci\u00f3n del discurso oficial indigenista\/indigenizador guatemalteco.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cheryl Stobie"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239075","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c14b1db3-a062-30da-a621-cdba1ed2c1e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40239075"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Queer Celebratory in Ashraf Jamal's \"Love Themes for the Wilderness\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40239075","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth A. Behnke"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01638548"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a1dd7c7-fc83-3770-830e-15cf8ff84e6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20011149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humastud"}],"isPartOf":"Human Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"201","pageStart":"181","pagination":"pp. 181-201","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Ghost Gestures: Phenomenological Investigations of Bodily Micromovements and Their Intercorporeal Implications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20011149","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10136,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper thematizes the operative kinaesthetic style of world-experiencing life by turning to the ongoing \"how\" of our habitual bodily comportment: to our deeply sedimented way(s) of \"making a body\"; to schematic inner vectors or tendencies toward movement that persist as bodily \"ghost gestures\" even if one is not making the larger, visible gestures they imply; and to \"inadvertent isometrics,\" i.e., persisting patterns of \"trying,\" \"bracing,\" \"freezing,\" etc. All such micromovements witness to our sociality insofar as they are not only socially shaped, but perpetuate certain styles of intercorporeal interaction and sustain certain modes of responsivity. \"Reactivating the sediment\" -- retrieving the tacit \"choreography\" of everyday life from its anonymity and sensing our ongoing ways of living out the legacy of our \"communal body\" -- not only allows one's individual bodily style to shift, but can open new possibilities for healthy interkinaesthetic comportment. Such work can thus contribute to an \"embodied ethics\" in both theory and practice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daniel Magaziner"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227403"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e372b1e-8d5e-325a-a487-103a094f9919"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40282386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Black Man, You Are on Your Own!\": Making Race Consciousness in South African Thought, 1968-1972","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40282386","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Silke Stroh"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt22727mv.14","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780810134034"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"78f41942-97aa-3f02-aa46-30c8224359f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt22727mv.14"}],"isPartOf":"Gaelic Scotland in the Colonial Imagination","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"326","pageStart":"305","pagination":"305-326","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"WORKS CITED","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt22727mv.14","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["scottish","edinburgh","fiona macleod","ossian","postcolonial","edinburgh birlinn","celtic","works cited","scottish gaelic","university"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mervat Hatem"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4327777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df1c63a2-0323-3111-acc4-6cb42242568f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4327777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"407","pagination":"pp. 407-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Egypt's Middle Class in Crisis: The Sexual Division of Labor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4327777","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7545,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ricardo Trumper","Lynne Phillips"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130229","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee8eeb76-475f-3ad4-b76d-3105e862f725"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45130229"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"GIVE ME DISCIPLINE AND GIVE ME DEATH: NEOLIBERALISM AND HEALTH IN CHILE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45130229","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The authors examine the connections between apartheid-like social relations and health in pre-Pinochet\/neoliberal \"democratic\" Chile and explore how these intersections have rearticulated with the perpetuation of a neoliberal regime imposed during 20 years of military dictatorship and continued by a Christian Democrat\/Socialist neoliberal regime.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isidore Diala"],"datePublished":"2003-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557393","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64e014dd-154e-31c6-92e4-66f2da614aae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3557393"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"919","pageStart":"903","pagination":"pp. 903-919","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Andr\u00e9 Brink and the Implications of Tragedy for Apartheid South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3557393","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Many critics acknowledge the particular difficulties of interpretation presented by an abiding paradox at the heart of Andr\u00e9 Brink's novelistic practice, delimiting his professed political aims. Thus, while some regard Brink as a representative dissident Afrikaans novelist seeking a resolution to institutionalised Afrikaner racism in South Africa through the writing of anti-apartheid fiction, others consider the contradictions in his work as a subconscious implication in the structures he passionately critiques. Yet others regard his work as merely 'performing dissidence', in other words, straining to be seen as resisting apartheid, while consciously reifying apartheid hegemony. This article contends that Brink's fixation within the matrix of the tragic is at the heart of his art and its political limits. For by transforming the powers of a mutable oppressive regime into relentless, implacable metaphysical forces, Brink presents apartheid as fate and reduces social action against it to the inconsequential, having only symbolic relevance. While engaging with European theories of (modern) tragedy and the possibilities of their negotiation and operation in a post-colonial context, the article also examines Brink's significant abandonment of tragic metaphysics in his post-apartheid fiction.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Wilder"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23308030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"933195ac-4ce9-3ab7-aef0-4fe79e71a70f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23308030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"1210","pageStart":"1209","pagination":"pp. 1209-1210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23308030","volumeNumber":"116","wordCount":875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["THOMAS V. McCLENDON"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267192","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537235"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227403"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c9ffa1a-121e-375b-a784-b0e2569e9e07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267192"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"141","pagination":"pp. 141-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Trustees of Boston University","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267192","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":901,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mohit Bhattacharya"],"datePublished":"1987-11-28","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4377784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ae1f8733-b15f-38a2-b8fd-9fc2248ae05c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4377784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"48","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"M142","pageStart":"M139","pagination":"pp. M139-M142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Crisis of Public Administration as a Discipline in India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4377784","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5045,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Reviewing the current status of the public administration discipline in the Indian universities, this paper raises questions about the relevance of so-called theories and approaches in public administration, developed in an alien context, to Indian realities. It is argued that the management science orientation and the practical concerns of the discipline have taken it away from its broader social science moorings. A meaningful discipline of public administration in India has to reckon with the undifferentiated nature of administration and politics and the deep involvement of the administration in the social structure and processes. The theories of the state, especially the theoretical developments in the conceptualisation of the 'third world' state, need to be related to the structure and operation of public organisations. Public administration as a subject of study has thus to be located within a broader field of political theory. A discipline that avoids analysing the role of administration in sustaining a structure of domination, repression and injustice, is not a genuine social science but a courtier subject.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Mowat"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267937"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47104130"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-234115"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3733084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modelangrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Modern Language Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"989","pageStart":"988","pagination":"pp. 988-989","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3733084","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":1242,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani ya Azibo"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525596","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56210516"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007215116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a3bf8e0-6cb4-30d1-adbe-848f504a0492"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43525596"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"318","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-318","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Moving Forward with the Legitimation of the Azibo Nosology II","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43525596","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11201,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"What have mental health practitioners to rely on for diagnosis of African descent clients that respectfully incorporates behavioral imperatives from centered African culture? The original 1989 Azibo Nosology contained 18 African-centered culture-focused disorders. Twenty-five years later, the 2014 Azibo Nosology II (ANII) was published open access in the Journal of Pan African Studies (volume 7, #5, 32-145) as a 2nd edition. In it, there are 55 disorders deriving from theory about the African personality construct. It draws on the work of 22 theorists writing over a 60-year span. To penetrate psychological establishmentarianism requires the ANII be perceived as legitimate. Under the backdrop of the quest for freedom and literacy by African descent people, legitimation is approached through (1) discussion of slave and colonial consciousness of African descent psychological workers including practitioners, (2) lingering colonial mentality among Eurasian descent practitioners and psychological workers, and (3) necessary future clinical work that practitioners can carry out now in daily praxis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Buck-Morss"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"db75befd-7ba2-34a2-a8f7-36b344126c2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1344332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"865","pageStart":"821","pagination":"pp. 821-865","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Hegel and Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1344332","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":21986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Spurr"],"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251250","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3251250"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"888","pageStart":"872","pagination":"pp. 872-888","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing in the \"Wake\" of Empire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3251250","volumeNumber":"111","wordCount":6882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Duncombe"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44259078","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00103802"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee31a8a9-cd6e-3b25-a3a6-1d42e9da4d47"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44259078"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"commdevej"}],"isPartOf":"Community Development Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"500","pageStart":"490","pagination":"pp. 490-500","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(From) Cultural resistance to community development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44259078","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4620,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Charting out the history of the study of cultural resistance, this article attempts to contextualize and situate the relationship between cultural resistance and community development. Resistance expressed culturally can engender solidarity, create a shared set of norms and values, and be the jumping off point for imagining new communities and new political subjectivities. But cultural resistance can also be little more than a negative reaction to what already exists, a way of setting oneself apart (and often above) the community, while at the same time binding oneself to the very values, systems and institutions that one is resisting.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Younes"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44746848","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10834753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"607770089"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012236358"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61ccb9ee-8c30-3f0b-af7f-53607878dd81"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44746848"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudij"}],"isPartOf":"The Arab Studies Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"116","pageStart":"98","pagination":"pp. 98-116","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Center for Contemporary Arab Studies","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A TALE OF TWO COMMUNISTS: THE REVOLUTIONARY PROJECTS OF THE LEBANESE COMMUNISTS HUSAYN MURUWWA AND MAHDI 'AMIL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44746848","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7544,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Kapferer"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552829","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03632024"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"038ef662-c4be-390d-9fdd-a9468ab1a558"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40552829"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbananthro"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Structural Marginality and the Urban Social Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40552829","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":16661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on the concept of marginality and argues for its redefinition in terms of the fundamental principles that influence the developing order of the urban formation as a whole. It is argued that the concept should only be applied to those populations that are located at points in the urban social order where contradictory and opposing principles underlying urban social and economic organization intersect. The argument develops in relation to two shanty areas in Kabwe, Zambia, and traces their emerging social order and the political participation of their residents over a period of 40 years.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laura Hurwitz"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.36.59","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"def448ca-4f5b-3421-b141-620d068ad89b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/humjsocrel.36.59"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Got Land? Thank an Indian: Settler Colonialism and the White Settler in the Karuk Ancestral Territory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.36.59","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9367,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract From the time of European invasion of what now constitutes the United States, the settler colonial system has aimed to exterminate Indigenous Peoples and replace them with settlers on the land. While settler colonialism benefits the settler at the cost of the Indigenous, all life on Earth suffers from the continuation of this system. This research examines how white settlers living in the Karuk Ancestral Territory, located in Humboldt County, California, understand our role in the settler colonial system. The goal of this study is to begin a collective pursuit of a white settler ethic of accountability, which is a difficult task even in preliminary stages, as it requires the admission of being a beneficiary of and accomplice to the vicious system of settler colonialism. This could bring about the loss of an already fragile identity and an insecure settler future. Yet settler society has a responsibility to face our role in the settler colonial system.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NEIL MCCAW"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42827932","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23721901"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42827932"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"georelioghlstud"}],"isPartOf":"George Eliot - George Henry Lewes Studies","issueNumber":"38\/39","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BEYOND \"A WATER TOAST SYMPATHY\": GEORGE ELIOT AND THE SILENCE OF IRELAND","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42827932","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6906,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacques Berque","Suha Sabbagh"],"datePublished":"1986-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2536830","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"606766ce-2be8-3e9b-b98e-2fd40bd80fff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2536830"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"109","pagination":"pp. 109-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Jacques Berque: The Pen and the Sword","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2536830","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4205,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean Houbert"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40724898","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03567893"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8eb50fa-512b-380e-8c34-47dc48421397"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40724898"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currespeacevio"}],"isPartOf":"Current Research on Peace and Violence","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Tampere Peace Research Institute, University of Tampere","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AFRICA IN THE STRUCTURE OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40724898","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":16839,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx6f.21","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780874214291"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c4f4e74-6ab6-3f25-a542-123930e6032a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt46nx6f.21"}],"isPartOf":"Personal Effects","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"357","pagination":"357-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt46nx6f.21","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["university","routledge","college english","writing","carbondale southern","chicago","pedagogy","forum pmla","urbana ncte","chicago university"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas C. Smyth"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24319607","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00984590"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24319607"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"floridascientist"}],"isPartOf":"Florida Scientist","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Biological Sciences","Ecology & Evolutionary Biology","General Science","Science and Mathematics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE RHETORIC OF GLOBAL RESOURCE POLITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24319607","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":5463,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Statements made at the U. N. Sixth Special Session, April, 1974, were coded according to the general causes for world economic problems mentioned, and for the solutions proposed. Existence of a Third World Consensus was then tested by comparing attitudinal positions against the U. N. categories: developing market economies (developing nations); developed market economies (western nations); and non-market economies (communist nations). Causes mentioned demonstrated significant consensus among developing nations and significant differences between developing and western or Communist nations respectively; differences within the Third World on the basis of economic status were not significant; the same was true of 3 of the 7 general solutions proposed; and 3 of the remaining specific solutions proposed by developing nations differed from proposals by developed nations.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FRANK B. WILDERSON III"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511920","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08884412"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fcb5239c-9732-3399-b1a1-b92afc3d7ca7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44511920"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidianii"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian II","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"From When the World Was October","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44511920","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7020,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas A. Brindley"],"datePublished":"1979-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42588783","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42588783"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MODERNIZATION AND DEMODERNIZATION: A CONFLICT OF VALUES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42588783","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":2435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heath Schultz"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671734","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"929011298"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"84dfd7f2-215a-399c-bfa6-acdc11ba65a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48671734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lateral"}],"isPartOf":"Lateral","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Cultural Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Debord in Watts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48671734","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":9566,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this paper, I explore Guy Debord\u2019s analysis of race and racializing processes by closely examining the use of footage of the Watts rebellion in Debord\u2019s f\u0131lm The Society of the Spectacle (1973), along with a close reading of Debord\u2019s 1965 text on the uprising, \u201cThe Decline and Fall of the Spectacle-Commodity Economy.\u201d Debord\u2019s Marxist perspective on Watts understands the insurgents as potential revolutionary actors, primed for a \u201csecond proletarian assault against class society\u201d (SotS, Thesis 47). To complicate Debord\u2019s position, I look at the similarities and differences between his stance and the emergent theoretical paradigm of Afropessimism, which understands anti-black violence not as contingent upon capitalist alienation but instead as gratuitous violence required to uphold the f\u0131gure of Humanity within civil society.","subTitle":"Race and Class Antagonisms Under Spectacle","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RUB\u00c9N GAZTAMBIDE-FERN\u00c1NDEZ","DENNIS THIESSEN"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342471","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03626784"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6e267c83-f775-3cdc-baee-93ac93d68e66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41342471"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currinqu"}],"isPartOf":"Curriculum Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"11","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-11","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Environmental studies - Environmental philosophy","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Editorial: Fomenting Flows and Internationalizing Curriculum Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41342471","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":5001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Darius Rejali"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40039967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"169","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-169","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Torture Makes the Man","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40039967","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8559,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303621","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303621"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":53.0,"pageEnd":"257","pageStart":"205","pagination":"pp. 205-257","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Counternarratives, Recoveries, Refusals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303621","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":23202,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[432204,432313]],"Locations in B":[[64925,65041]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ACHOLA O. PALA"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3d39ac6-5e44-3d9a-831c-a104431a7f80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43663914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"137","pagination":"pp. 137-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"THE ROLE OF AFRICAN WOMEN IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT: RESEARCH PRIORITIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43663914","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":11736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raewyn Connell"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585853","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00943061"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38037337"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6e2a865-febe-371f-8691-65d086b1b264"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26585853"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"407","pageStart":"399","pagination":"pp. 399-407","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"American Sociological Association","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonizing Sociology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585853","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":5535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["VINCENT J. CHENG"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283683","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10490809"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d64274a-ac7f-31d8-954b-d5c83f03d10b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26283683"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"joycstudann"}],"isPartOf":"Joyce Studies Annual","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"16","pagination":"pp. 16-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Fordham University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Empire and Patriarchy in \"The Dead\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26283683","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":12114,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugene Victor Wolfenstein"],"datePublished":"1977-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00434078"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205207"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee399e87-8ff5-367d-a489-e6119551d845"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/447404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"westpoliquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Western Political Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"163","pagination":"pp. 163-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race, Racism and Racial Liberation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/447404","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":12662,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Given a Marxist interest in human liberation, racism may be viewed as a form of false consciousness. Marxist theory does not adequately explain, however, the falsification of proletarian class interests in consciousness. Accordingly an attempt is made to develop a psychoanalytic mediation of Marxist theory, through which racism can be comprehended and the prospects for racial liberation evaluated. The conclusion reached is that racism is the product of ruling class interests disguised through a group emotional process, and that the struggle for racial liberation tends to converge with but is not reducible to proletarian class struggle.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. K. Grohs"],"datePublished":"1968-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159334","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159334"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"556","pageStart":"543","pagination":"pp. 543-556","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and the African Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159334","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":5914,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Chalis Johnson","Maize Woodford"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ae33737-0706-3ab8-b512-071055706265"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Communications","Education - Educational resources","Education - Formal education"],"title":"THE BLACK SCHOLAR BLACK BOOKS ROUNDUP 1996","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068690","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12573,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[5788,5848]],"Locations in B":[[63316,63396]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Pelley"],"datePublished":"1998-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072052","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49342616"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233967"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"49effda8-8a3c-35fa-a3bb-3c1fcf39b990"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20072052"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutasiastud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"374","pagination":"pp. 374-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Barbarians\" and \"Younger Brothers\": The Remaking of Race in Postcolonial Vietnam","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20072052","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the 1950s, as part of a concerted effort to undermine colonialist representations of Vietnam, Vietnamese historians began to construct new narratives of the national past. To counter colonial impressions of Vietnam as a fragmented and heterogenous society, they insisted instead on its essential unity. This new history required that traditional understandings of ethnic identities and ethnic relations be radically rescripted.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jason Silverman"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"adcc00c2-acc8-3a05-a563-85f6637cd433"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/blackcamera.6.1.225","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harold Wylie"],"datePublished":"1972-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3818809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"105","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-105","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818809","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":816,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Anderson"],"datePublished":"1990-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1436b9e8-31c2-3432-be79-84db201d8e25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Essential Gestures: Gordimer, Cronin and Identity Paradigms in White South African Writing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238661","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":8906,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[37322,37388]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert Mbukeni MNGUNI"],"datePublished":"1987-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351529","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82dc4990-3897-33d4-aec6-00c50754eadb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24351529"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"143","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"113","pagination":"pp. 113-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Intellectuals and the Development of African Political Thought in The Twentieth Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24351529","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3565,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. 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This article examines how certain Koreans attained socioeconomic success and how they became assimilated into Japanese society in the process. As a case study, it focuses on the career of prewar Japan's most successful Korean entrepreneur-turned-politician, Pak Chung\u016dm, to reveal how the internalization of Japanese values that came with success disconnected such individuals from the vast majority of Koreans residing in Japan, while offering them only a problematic sense of identification with the Japanese.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelson Maldonado-Torres"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f6b94c9-bc3f-3e06-b7f3-320dd658d0fd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45176275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"103","pagination":"pp. 103-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Lewis Gordon: Philosopher of the Human","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45176275","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":15589,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[604769,604875]],"Locations in B":[[41873,41979]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. van Wyk Smith"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222925"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73d7420e-d891-3b74-9093-4c399aa9102b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30225474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtechnique"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Narrative Technique","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"348","pageStart":"329","pagination":"pp. 329-348","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Department of English Language and Literature, Eastern Michigan University","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Emplotment of Ethnicity: Narrative Cognition and the Construction of \"Race\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30225474","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7516,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nihal Perera"],"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43196956","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00420980"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43196956"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbanstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Studies","issueNumber":"9","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"1721","pageStart":"1703","pagination":"pp. 1703-1721","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Temporary Publisher","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Urban Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Indigenising the Colonial City: Late 19th-century Colombo and its Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43196956","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11010,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper is concerned with the indigenisation of Colombo and the transformation of the city from an exclusive domain of colonial power to a milieu which supported Ceylonese social and cultural practices. It investigates the shifting indigenous response to the colonisation of Colombo, from challenging to indigenising the city between the 1860s and the 1880s. The paper approaches indigenisation from a 'reverse-Orientalist' perspective that focuses on the landscape produced by the emergence of national \u00e9lite, the revival of Buddhism and processes of naturalisation and migration. It demonstrates that indigenisation was integral to colonialism, which simultaneously instigated the Westernisation of subjects and the indigenisation of social and spatial structures. The resulting multilayered landscape, negotiated between imposing colonial structures and Ceylonese cultural practices, was characterised by irony, mimicry, ambivalence, liminality and hybridity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RANJEETA BASU","MTAFITI IMARA"],"datePublished":"2014-08-09","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24480785","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6486257f-f747-310d-946f-bec0510fc381"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24480785"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Shifts in Global Economic Power: Do We Dare to Act Differently?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24480785","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":2465,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Today's tourist is increasingly from the Global South, the emigrant is from the Global North, and the ethnographer is of colour, and the subject \"white\". Global shifts in economic power have brought about changes that have implications at many levels. This article reflects on the underlying causes of the changes they observe in the culture of music in Goa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George Yancy"],"datePublished":"2000-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44329576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8123c29f-03d0-39c1-bb2c-cd8746435f39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44329576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE BLACK SELF WITHIN A SEMIOTIC SPACE OF WHITENESS: REFLECTIONS ON THE RACIAL DEFORMATION OF PECOLA BREEDLOVE IN TONI MORRISON'S \"THE BLUEST EYE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44329576","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6990,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv7xbscn.17","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781787076815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"196c5f9a-4c3e-38de-8df4-59c9aa19cc77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv7xbscn.17"}],"isPartOf":"Fictions of African Dictatorship","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"255","pagination":"255-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv7xbscn.17","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["swaziland","somali","postcolonial","trickster characters","tour\u00e9 ahmed","malawian","s\u00e9kou tour\u00e9","sexuality","wizard","literature"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Ifeka"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006664","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8324cd9e-2ded-3551-9d47-1af127da56ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006664"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"85","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"450","pagination":"pp. 450-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics"],"title":"Ethnic 'Nationalities', God & the State: Whither the Federal Republic of Nigeria?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006664","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":5224,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Liggins Hill"],"datePublished":"1980-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041662","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"874dd5fc-a252-3276-beeb-16703ca0a572"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3041662"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"The Violent Space\": The Function of the New Black Aesthetic in Etheridge Knight's Prison Poetry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3041662","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6297,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M. Sammy Miller"],"datePublished":"1973-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bc4c7891-cdd9-321f-a9fe-6334110688f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163818","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vusi Gumede"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000045","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"343bcb64-f603-36ce-b6ee-8c2707c14164"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90000045"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Exploring Thought Leadership, Thought Liberation and Critical Consciousness for Africa\u2019s Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90000045","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":8684,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract It is argued that any discussion of Africa\u2019s social and economic development has to take into account the three critical issues that remain pressing constraints for the further advancement of well-being in Africa: thought leadership, thought liberation and critical consciousness. These three \u2018ingredients\u2019 should anchor aspects of the socio-economic development model. As I have discussed elsewhere, the twenty-first century will most likely be remembered as the Asian century fundamentally, and secondarily as a South American century. Africa will most likely miss the twenty-first century as its own and should be putting in place what is needed to ensure that Africa indeed captures the twenty-second century. It is in this context that this article argues that thought leadership, thought liberation and critical consciousness should ensure that Africa robustly addresses whatever constraints that limit Africa\u2019s progress. The three \u2018instruments\u2019 \u2013 the trio \u2013 should be pursued concurrently, for thought leadership without critical consciousness is useless. Thought leadership without a liberated mind is futile. Higher levels of consciousness, based on comprehensive understanding of phenomena, make for a better thought leader. It is also argued that African thought leadership must be able to produce not only a critical but also a conscious African citizenry that is grounded in pan-Africanist philosophies and driven to implement the African renaissance agenda. To do this and to successfully pursue other pertinent issues, Africa should build on its glorious past. The article also demonstrates the importance of knowledge production, its dissemination, organization and the implementation of revolutionary praxis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RODGER CUNNINGHAM"],"datePublished":"1985-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932899","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00903779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e80c539-975f-304e-8e27-df126f44f4de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40932899"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"appalachianj"}],"isPartOf":"Appalachian Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"256","pageStart":"252","pagination":"pp. 252-256","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Appalachian Journal & Appalachian State University","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Heritage or Hermitage? John Shelton Reed's \"Southerners\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932899","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":2673,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gwendoline L. Roget"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40146055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40146055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"181","pageStart":"180","pagination":"pp. 180-181","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40146055","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RODGER CUNNINGHAM"],"datePublished":"1987-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932994","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00903779"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f4bb907-b080-3f6d-bef8-e30b69c13374"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40932994"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"appalachianj"}],"isPartOf":"Appalachian Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Appalachian Journal & Appalachian State University","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reseeding Appalachian Soul: Bill Best's \"The Great Appalachian Sperm Bank\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40932994","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":5277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN GERMIC"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124280","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cd3bdd76-6f7e-357a-b481-35049c7cab97"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23124280"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"357","pageStart":"337","pagination":"pp. 337-357","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Border Crossing and the Nation: The Natural History of Nativ(ist) American Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23124280","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RODERICK A. McDONALD"],"datePublished":"1979-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653387","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0454f5df-9d65-31b0-bd2f-19824d54deba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653387"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE WILLIAMS THESIS: A COMMENT ON THE STATE OF SCHOLARSHIP","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653387","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":3184,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391132","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00080055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72b5bdfd-a58f-32eb-9cfe-698a827ef5c6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4391132"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cahietudafri"}],"isPartOf":"Cahiers d'\u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"44","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"588","pageStart":"564","pagination":"pp. 564-588","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"EHESS","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Relevance and Development in Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4391132","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":11142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mukoma Wa Ngugi"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20621477","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"656d36ca-4f9d-307e-aa79-0955baea5266"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20621477"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"Africa Is Not a Proverb","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20621477","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":3141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ake Blomqvist","M. Rashid","Asghar Qadir"],"datePublished":"1986-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41258766","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00309729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564752400"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-236379"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9145ade-4ef0-3be5-b4ce-dbf51eaa4041"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41258766"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pakideverevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Pakistan Development Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Microeconomics","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Higher Education and the Markets for Educated Labour in LDCs: Theoretical Approaches and Implications [with Comments]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41258766","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13536,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcel Cornis-Pope"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c52ba9b4-235a-3e8a-b406-12d7c8d123db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40550399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"47","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-47","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Rethinking Postmodern Liminality: Marginocentric Characters And Projects in Thomas Pynchon's Polysystemic Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40550399","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cilas Kemedjio"],"datePublished":"1994-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618264","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618264"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rape of Bodies, Rape of Souls: From the Surgeon to the Psychiatrist, from the Slave Trade to the Slavery of Comfort in the Work of Edouard Glissant","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618264","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":13882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seneca Vaught"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.2.2.87","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21623244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740919793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cad002f-3be6-3e73-9313-194ab05d7a39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/spectrum.2.2.87"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"spectrum"}],"isPartOf":"Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Tupac's Law: Incarceration, T.H.U.G.L.I.F.E., and the Crisis of Black Masculinity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.2.2.87","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":12419,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This article discusses Tupac Shakur's relationship with policy debates in the 1990s using an interdisciplinary approach to examine historical, musical, archival, and policy sources. Key episodes in his life, especially his incarceration at the Clinton Correctional Facility in New York from 1995 to 1996, illustrate numerous challenges Black men of the hip-hop generation encountered, such as incarceration, targeted enforcement, and police corruption. Shakur's contributions to the study of Black masculinity should not be relegated only to his music, but also include his contributions to policy discourse by engaging his T.H.U.G.L.I.F.E. code in its proper historical and cultural context. This research demonstrates how unsettled policy questions and cultural debates have continuing significance in the present, as well as the limitations of public policy approaches that exclude diverse perspectives on race, gender, and culture.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Layli Phillips"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819081","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15591646"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5fcb4739-3a25-305d-8abe-a6f227b394db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819081"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"15","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-15","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Deconstructing \"Down Low\" Discourse: The Politics of Sexuality, Gender, Race, AIDS, and Anxiety","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819081","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":6681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Discourse regarding Black men \"on the down low,\" also known as \"the DL,\" is deconstructed to reveal public anxieties around sexuality, gender, race, and HIV\/AIDS. After presenting a definition of the down low, ten basic facts are advanced: a) The down low is not new; b) the down low isn't just Black; c) the down low isn't just men; d) the down low discourse contributes to the spread of HIV\/AIDS; e) the down low discourse feeds a neo-racist agenda; f) the down low discourse obscures the link between HIV\/AIDS and poverty; g) the down low discourse contributes to homophobia in the Black community; h) the down low phenomenon suggests that there is more to sexual orientation than is currently acknowledged; i) the down low phenomenon demonstrates the need to decouple sexuality and gender; j) the down low discourse provides a new opportunity to consider questions of sexual freedom and choice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jayan Nayar"],"datePublished":"2017-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585088","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69f1ec4c-4006-3354-94c1-23beebe3dc1f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26585088"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some Thoughts on the \u201c(Extra)Ordinary\u201d","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26585088","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":14032,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this essay, I question the philosophical appropriation of the \u201cstreet\u201d; much recent critical theory fixes on the \u201cevents\u201d of the street as portending ruptural becomings\u2014into being\u2014of the new in the world. I argue that such readings of the \u201cextraordinary\u201d are founded upon a heroic ontologic\u2013epistemology of \u201cabandonment\u2013resurrection\u201d that defines colonial\u2013modern Eurocentric philosophy. Against this preoccupation with the extraordinary, I present a view that reads in the events of the street the ordinariness of the perceived extraordinary and the extraordinariness of the (often invisible) ordinary decoloniality of the everyday as the site of already being otherwise.","subTitle":"Philosophy, Coloniality, and Being Otherwise","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Femi Ojo-Ade"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44490978","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03606724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"079ce38e-2f86-377b-b7d9-be15b0858c3f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44490978"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian1975"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian (1975-1982)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"PROBLEMS OF TRANSLATION IN BLACK LITERATURE: AN EXAMPLE OF AIME CESAIRE'S \"LA TRAGEDIE DU ROI CHRISTOPHE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44490978","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4627,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Crosta"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"17783b94-adb0-3cc8-a9b0-bb5fdf3b184a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2931408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Narrative and Discursive Strategies in Maryse Cond\u00e9's Travers\u00e9e de la Mangrove","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2931408","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":4991,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[28354,28408]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meta L. Schettler"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26390263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a7ae1eb-e93b-37e3-b77f-35cd06a7c758"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26390263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Luta Continua","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26390263","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":4413,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[495956,496051]],"Locations in B":[[217,312]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"Afro-Brazilian Poets Navigating Pan-African Terrain","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicole M. Rizzuto"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr6gb.8","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780823267811"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecce2591-b8e7-3a08-9659-b844da915234"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt18kr6gb.8"}],"isPartOf":"Insurgent Testimonies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":45.0,"pageEnd":"222","pageStart":"178","pagination":"178-222","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Testimony and the Crisis of the Juridical Order in Ng\u0169gi wa Thiong\u2019o\u2019s A Grain of Wheat","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt18kr6gb.8","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":19378,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[125785,125955]],"Locations in B":[[106090,106232]],"abstract":"The previous chapter sought to enrich a postcolonial studies dominated by the cultural problematic of migrancy and deterritorialization by analyzing writings of colonial and postcolonial authors that were not migration narratives but that instead bore witness from within the nation to law\u2019s disruption of it. This final chapter also focuses on a work that eschews a narrative of movement out of the nation for one of detention inside it. Like the Jamaicans Reid and de Lisser, the Kenyan Ng\u0169gi wa Thiong\u2019o elaborates how traumas of a colonial past under Emergency threaten the transition from colony to postcolony. Ng\u0169gi\u2019s postindependence 1967","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["juridical order","f6635 indb","bare life","confession","crisis","colonial","testimony","homo sacer","ellipses","detention"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JAMES D. KIRYLO"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"543e9b30-2fd8-3158-a9af-046d311011df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Five: Influences: An Overview","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980927","volumeNumber":"385","wordCount":9647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Hall"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23033141","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07075332"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60617092"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235464"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc18e2b0-fb26-349f-8d4f-8a575b0c914d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23033141"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interhistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The International History Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Revolt against the West: Decolonisation and its Repercussions in British International Thought, 1945\u201375","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23033141","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":12259,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It has been suggested that British intellectuals were either indifferent to decolonisation or sought to downplay its impact. As a consequence, historians of international thought have overlooked the extensive debates that occurred among scholars and intellectuals concerned with British foreign policy and international relations. This article addresses those debates, examining the responses of internationalist, Whig, realist, and radical thinkers to decolonisation and to what they thought to be the changes it brought about in contemporary world politics. It argues that far from being indifferent to decolonisation, many British students of international relations were deeply worried about what some called `the revolt against the West', and that those concerned helped shape the distinctive character of British international thought in the formative period of the discipline of International Relations (IR).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ignacio L\u00f3pez-Calvo"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41340879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d765290-09d1-3635-b752-25993450a4b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41340879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"206","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-206","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41340879","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":4021,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Hiddleston"],"datePublished":"2005-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2005.17.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1535685X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50319132"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-212943"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21b460b3-ea60-3615-b79e-62925a7e739d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/lal.2005.17.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"lawliterature"}],"isPartOf":"Law and Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Law","Philosophy","Humanities","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Political Violence and Singular Testimony: Assia Djebar's Algerian White<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/lal.2005.17.1.1","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":9038,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the conflicts of 1990s Algeria and Assia Djebar's critique of these events using the flexibility and experimentation of the novel form. The entrenched government of the Front de Lib\u00e9ration Nationale has been engaged in an ongoing conflict with a group of radical, underground Islamist terrorists, and the result has been that both parties attempt to quash any political or cultural dissent. The government clings to its policy of strict Arabization, while the Islamists fight for the invention of a thoroughly new spiritual, Islamic community, necessarily in harmony with itself. Djebar's Le Blanc de l'Alg\u00e9rie (Algerian White) challenges both the Islamists and the government by exposing the limits of their stultifying rhetoric, and by describing the author's own experiences of bereavement using an alternative language resistant to generic norms. Djebar upholds unique, creative forms of commemoration that refuse to conform to the demands of Islamist ideology or sanctioned political rhetoric, and that can mimic her deceased friends' own singular art forms. At the same time, Djebar's commemorative text seeks a language free from convention-bound formulae and able to transcend the linear progress of a narrative necessarily evolving through time. In this sense, Le Blanc de l'Alg\u00e9rie uses both content and form to deconstruct the layers and masks of commemorative discourse, and the political misuse of those masks. The novel engages with the difficulties of creating an appropriate discourse of mourning while stretching and opening out existing rhetorical forms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia O'Brien"],"datePublished":"1978-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3787067","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3787067"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"508","pagination":"pp. 508-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Crime and Punishment as Historical Problem","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3787067","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":6582,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claire Valier"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00070955"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42032538"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00238245"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"765190ad-cd88-32e6-81d2-ab7dfb1d3283"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23638914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjcrim"}],"isPartOf":"The British Journal of Criminology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"FOREIGNERS, CRIME AND CHANGING MOBILITIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23638914","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11103,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the conceptual significance of changing mobilities to theories of crime and punishment through a critique of the work of scholars from the Chicago school of sociology. The argument presented demonstrates that the concepts of social disorganization, differential association and culture conflict are part of the colonial and national histories of the United States of America. The argument is advanced that these classic concepts are implicated in the processes by which this nation demarcated its nationals from 'foreigners'. Furthermore, the increasing pace, scope, and complexity of a range of globalizing processes questions the continuing validity of the Chicagoan paradigm. Simply put, modern distinctions between 'us' and 'them', as well as 'here' and 'there', are undergoing substantial transformation. Reconfigurations of such profound significance call for a critical engagement with the scholarly literature on contemporary mobilities, identities and forms of belonging.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Morgan"],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44313152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01483331"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625073"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009221005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40cd43ec-cb41-34ca-a6a6-6a649c290dd4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44313152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Christianity and Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"620","pageStart":"603","pagination":"pp. 603-620","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Veiled Truth: Reading Assia Djebar from the Outside","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44313152","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":8364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHRISTOPHER J. FINLAY"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588072","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"719a62da-6e67-380d-afad-d0e2f77af14a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40588072"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"774","pageStart":"751","pagination":"pp. 751-774","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How to do things with the word 'terrorist'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40588072","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":13730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Recently, some commentators have argued that the word 'terrorist' should be abandoned as it has become overloaded with undesirable 'rhetorical' connotations. This view is premised on the assumption that an adequate distinction may be drawn between principled, 'logical' usages and merely' rhetorical' ones. This article argues that the use of the word 'terrorist' normally has a 'rhetorical' aspect and that theorists must therefore find ways to distinguish between principled and unprincipled rhetorical deployments. I distinguish three rhetorical possibilities for using the word 'terrorist': the first invokes interlocutors' established background commitments to moral and descriptive norms, seeking agreement on the application of the word to a particular case; the second seeks to innovate, challenging either moral norms, descriptive criteria or, less often, the illocutionary force of the term; the third resists innovation but deploys the term in metaphorical ways for moral-rhetorical emphasis. Based on this taxonomy, the article reviews both polemical and scholary debates about definition and then proposes pragmatic, rhetorical considerations for adjudicating between competing definitional arguments. Finally, I review the implications of these considerations for the contentious issue of whether or not the term 'terrorist' properly applies to states.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ravayi Marindo"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013906","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"80b4719d-ba7b-328b-903d-00f22105b1a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90013906"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Gendered Epidemics and Systems of Power in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90013906","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":7953,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article is about systems of power, and the way different power systems \u2013 global, local, patriarchal and family \u2013 interconnect and create vulnerability to epidemic and infectious diseases among those with less power, mostly poor, resource-limited rural African women. The main argument is that to understand gendered epidemics in Africa, we need to examine the systems of power that create and perpetuate African women\u2019s vulnerabilities at local, national and global levels. The article uses case studies, extracted from published epidemic stories and interprets these cases from a feminist and power analytical framework. The results suggest that while a disease or an epidemic affect a group of individuals, systemic factors regarding responsible governance and the role of national politics and policies; the role of global systems that control knowledge production and sharing; as well as patriarchy and culture all contribute to creating an environment that increases women\u2019s vulnerability to epidemics.The article concludes by advocating for strengthening practical ways that can make hierarchical power less attractive and equitable distribution of power more attractive. Since current systems of power cannot be eliminated, they need to be challenged and transformed. The article has various limitations. It relies on a small number of case studies and though the literature refers to gender, the analysis is predominantly of women. Notwithstanding these limitations however, the article aims to contribute to the ongoing scholarly debate on governance of public health in Africa as well as to the growing field of African feminist epidemiology.","subTitle":"A Feminist Perspective on Public Health Governance","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William Toll"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52c806b2-d366-3a20-98ad-958a88268644"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23261869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"301","pagination":"pp. 301-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education","Arts - Art history"],"title":"REHABILITATION AND REVITALIZATION: BLACK PERSPECTIVES ON RACE RELATIONS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23261869","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7364,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"American studies of race relations have reflected a liberal ideology which has emphasized individual aspirations for mobility and patterns of discrimination. Instead, one examines the group perceptions and policies of racial minorities and the ideals of race relations which their spokesmen have promoted. Blacks have had distinctive and varied collective ideologies which were first clarified in the debate between Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois. Neither antagonist postulated separation or integration as ultimate objectivism nor were they preoccupied by strategies of accommodation or protest. Instead, Washington emphasized an ideology of social rehabilitation within black communities which would reconcile individual mobility with cultural assimilation. DuBois saw cultural revitalization as the only means of retrieving black dignity from the stigma of enslavement and as a means of achieving moral parity for black Americans. The tension between rehabilitation (even in separatist form), and revitalization has marked black social thought through the mid-20th century.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alvaro Reyes"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0013","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3014a4d-cc16-393d-9aaa-7c03aa12c575"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0013"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3-4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON FANON'S MANICHEAN DELIRIUM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.42.3-4.0013","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":5575,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[122586,122687],[123389,123617],[124869,124914],[167790,167843],[167998,168091]],"Locations in B":[[3295,3445],[4538,4784],[9841,9886],[18720,18773],[19113,19202]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gareth Stanton"],"datePublished":"2002-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13633554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50234546"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-263087"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4289784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histworkj"}],"isPartOf":"History Workshop Journal","issueNumber":"53","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"245","pagination":"pp. 245-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon in Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4289784","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4715,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kgomotso Michael Masemola"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645583","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7b06d160-1803-351c-ad1a-4756784296f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26645583"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Airport Geography of Power as Site and Limit of NEPAD\u2019s Transnational African Assemblage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26645583","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":6636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article mobilises the Deleuzian analytical category of \u2018assemblage\u2019 to distinctly bring to view how racial profiling in South African airport spaces operationalises a paradoxical discourse of invidious visibility and invisibility that flies in the face of the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD) as articulated in the vision embraced by the member states of the African Union, of which South Africa is part. The said discourse, this article argues, runs counter to the spirit of NEPAD as it becomes an inscribing socius in a territorial machine that is geared towards not only processing entries and exits of African migrants into the airport. It recolonises the African airport into a zone of exception, reterritorialising the African assemblage into a space definable by the particularities of race and nation. The airport becomes a veritable zone of exception: no recognition of movement rights for African migrants despite proclamations of priorities of regional integration in Africa. Over South African airports now hover signature meta-narratives that are at variance with NEPAD. Nothing exemplified this more than the unfair detention of Wole Soyinka in a South African airport, especially because the Nobel Laureate was officially invited to give an address in honour of Nelson Mandela. Cet article mobilise la cat\u00e9gorie analytique deleuzienne de l\u2019\u00ab assemblage \u00bb pour clairement illustrer comment le profilage racial dans les espaces a\u00e9roportuaires sud-africains op\u00e9rationnalise un discours paradoxal de visibilit\u00e9 et d'invisibilit\u00e9 injustes qui va \u00e0 l'encontre du Nouveau partenariat pour le d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique (NEPAD) dans sa vision adopt\u00e9e par les \u00c9tats membres de l\u2019Union africaine, dont l\u2019Afrique du Sud. Ce discours, selon le pr\u00e9sent article, va \u00e0 l\u2019encontre de l\u2019esprit du NEPAD, qui devient un socius inscriptible dans une machine territoriale qui n\u2019est pas ax\u00e9e uniquement sur le traitement des entr\u00e9es et des sorties des migrants africains dans l\u2019a\u00e9roport. Il recolonise l'a\u00e9roport africain en une zone d'exception et re-territorialise l'assemblage africain dans un espace d\u00e9finissable \u00e0 travers les particularit\u00e9s de la race et de la nation. L\u2019a\u00e9roport devient alors une v\u00e9ritable zone d\u2019exception: non reconnaissance des droits de circulation des migrants africains en d\u00e9pit des proclamations de priorit\u00e9s d\u2019int\u00e9gration r\u00e9gionale en Afrique. Dans les points d'entr\u00e9e sud-africains, il existe des m\u00e9ta r\u00e9cits distinctifs, en contradiction avec le NEPAD. Rien n\u2019illustre mieux cela que la d\u00e9tention injuste de Wole Soyinka dans un a\u00e9roport sud-africain, surtout que le prix Nobel avait officiellement \u00e9t\u00e9 invit\u00e9 \u00e0 prononcer un discours en l'honneur de Nelson Mandela.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rogers Tabe Egbe Orock"],"datePublished":"2015-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653004","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00035491"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45595540"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212088"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd0a29e7-028f-3483-b8dd-183e8cc31f91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43653004"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthquar"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropological Quarterly","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"533","pagination":"pp. 533-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Elites, Culture, and Power: The Moral Politics of \"Development\" in Cameroon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43653004","volumeNumber":"88","wordCount":14631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article discusses the connections between elites, development, and issues of moral agency in contemporary Cameroon. It argues that, in Cameroon, development is not only a means by which elites are socially created but, more importantly, that it is increasingly the means by which elites are held accountable by their local village or ethnic and regional communities. Integrating detailed observations of an elite figure and popular debates on elites in Cameroon, the article discusses the centrality of development as an idiom through which social inequality between elites and non-elites is internalized, negotiated, and legitimated. The article underlines how the expectations that elites should \"do development\" are critical to the mutual engagements between elites and their local communities, mainly through local development associations in which elites and would-be elites are expected to assume leading roles. By suggesting that development is central to the cultural practice of elite power in Cameroon, the article points to interesting connections between development and age-old idioms of patrimonial politics such as kinship, ethnicity, and patronage as forms of redistribution in which elites are highly implicated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miguel A. De La Torre"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23563092","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15407942"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56717329"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221984"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8c340df5-d65b-38e7-a098-df0cfdecb9aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23563092"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Georgetown University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Doing Latina\/o Ethics from the Margins of Empire: Liberating the Colonized Mind","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23563092","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":9634,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The uncritical appropriation of Eurocentric ethical paradigms can be detrimental to disenfranchised communities of color, especially the Hispanic community. This essay argues for an ethical methodology rooted in the hopelessness found within Latino\/a marginalized communities. Advocating for an ethics para joder (screw with) disrupts a normative Eurocentric ethical discourse that at times normalizes and legitimizes \"empire.\" The essay begins by casting a critical gaze at the academy before analyzing the overall social context in which Hispanics find themselves.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kopano Ratele"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739275","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61604655-eee4-3230-85b4-6b1cbe1e397a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27739275"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"72","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Native Chief and White Headman: A Critical African Gender Analysis of Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27739275","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5707,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth H. Lindeborg"],"datePublished":"1990-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819321","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819321"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Is This Guerilla Warfare? The Nature and Strategies of the Political Subject in Wole Soyinka's \"Ake\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819321","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":7099,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rimun Murad"],"datePublished":"2018-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.40.3.0213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eb5fd22-68d5-3cf2-a7c6-b951ff3254b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.40.3.0213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"232","pageStart":"213","pagination":"pp. 213-232","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Emotional Distance: Transnational Pleasure in Tayeb Salih's Season of Migration to the North<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.40.3.0213","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9758,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholars in Arab post-colonial literature have spoken of the lure of the West for immigrants in terms of the West's superiority of education, technological development, military prowess, political weight, and economic clout. Sudanese novelist Tayeb Salih presents a different, but not inconsistent, narrative: his novel Season of Migration to the North suggests that the lure of the West, in the case of England, consists in its accommodation of emotional distance. Even though Tayeb Salih's literary work acknowledges the role of emotional detachment in undermining the notions of community, home, and integration, Season asserts that emotionlessness is the source of gratification for the transnational protagonist Mustafa Sa'eed. In so doing, Season argues against the immigrant and transnational notion of emotional apathy being a source of pain for diasporic subjects. Mustafa Sa'eed's lack of emotions allows him to interact with the fiction of West through embodying Oriental and other performances. The protagonist's emotional detachment from English society, its women, and preconceived notions about the Orient, paradoxically, enables him to derive pleasure from his physical trysts, nomadism, anti-colonial revenge, and pretend play.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ELLEKE BOEHMER"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j4ws.4","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb920ce9-c5f4-372b-bb9c-fe45c6bda94c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155j4ws.4"}],"isPartOf":"Stories of Women","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j4ws.4","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":10004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The beginning of this study of gender, nation and postcolonial narrative lies, appropriately, in story \u2013 a story about a \u2018girl\u2019, a girl at war.The \u2018girl\u2019, Gladys, is the at first nameless young woman whom the narrator of Chinua Achebe\u2019s 1960s short story \u2018Girls at war\u2019 encounters at three representative moments during the years of the Biafra War.\u00b3 Achebe has long been intrigued by the power granted women in myth (take Ani, Idemili), but what is at issue in the present story is not so much mythical presence as the \u2018girl\u2019 Gladys\u2019s nationally signifying condition. She is in effect","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["boehmer makeup","nation","postcolonial","mac johns","johns jobs","gender","mac johns jobs","frantz fanon","nationalist","usersjohnpublicjohns mac"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher C. 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First it briefly summarizes common themes in historical and contemporary studies of sex work in the region, then describes the aims, methodology, and main trends of the project. It pays particular attention to the differences between definitions and experiences of sex work by female and male sex workers and of male and female sex tourists, as well as describing conditions in the Caribbean sex trade. Finally the article identifies some implications of the complexity in the region that were uncovered through the research project for feminist theorizing about sex work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry Louis Gates, Jr."],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343794","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9245377-1ea0-3b08-8c9d-4c0ff92653f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343794"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"470","pageStart":"457","pagination":"pp. 457-470","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Performing arts"],"title":"\"In the Tradition\": Amiri Baraka, Black Liberation, and Avant-Garde Praxis in the U.S.","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1512319","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11959,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Christopher Blattman","Edward Miguel"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40651577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220515"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41483144"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23396"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c09dd5cf-66b4-3d3b-b5f6-e1d9c8885228"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40651577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeconlite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Economic Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":55.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"American Economic Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - 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Yet while civil war is central to many nations' development, it has stood at the periphery of economics research and teaching. The past decade has witnessed a long overdue explosion of research into war's causes and consequences. We summarize progress, identify weaknesses, and chart a path forward. Why war? Existing theory is provocative but incomplete, omitting advances in behavioral economics and making little progress in key areas, like why armed groups form and cohere, or how more than two armed sides compete. Empirical work finds that low per capita incomes and slow economic growth are both robustly linked to civil war. Yet there is little consensus on the most effective policies to avert conflicts or promote postwar recovery. Cross-country analysis of war will benefit from more attention to causal identification and stronger links to theory. We argue that micro-level analysis and case studies are also crucial to decipher war's causes, conduct, and consequences. We bring a growth theoretic approach to the study of conflict consequences to highlight areas for research, most of all the study of war's impact on institutions. We conclude with a plea for new and better data.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nilou Mostofi"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120728","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380253"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45947331"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ebe71512-9102-3ef7-9543-1180ec801686"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4120728"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sociquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Sociological Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"703","pageStart":"681","pagination":"pp. 681-703","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Midwest Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Who We Are: The Perplexity of Iranian-American Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4120728","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":13110,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[80020,80066]],"abstract":"This article conveys the Iranian experience in the United States by analyzing the formation of an Iranian identity in the United States. The author characterizes this dual identity and interprets the Iranian-American culture. The essay also focuses on the relationship between American civil society and its immigrants.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kent Greenawalt"],"datePublished":"1970-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1121206","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101958"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46940210"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235699"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1709a6e2-cd89-36b7-a9fc-d60c67b1906a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1121206"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"colulawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Columbia Law Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Columbia Law Review Association, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"A Contextual Approach to Disobedience","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1121206","volumeNumber":"70","wordCount":16693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Smith"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019787","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ca31dad6-4578-398a-aef3-a575ca3895eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019787"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Aesthetics and History:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7591\/j.ctt207g6kg.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15447,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The foregoing chapters have emphasized that aesthetics is a theory and an ideology of history, but so far the question of history has not achieved centrality. We have seen that the notion of theBildungsroman<\/em>is inherently historical insofar as it claims to represent or enact aesthetic pedagogy, since the temporal arc of the individual subject\u2019sBildung<\/em>always at least potentially exemplifies that of humanity. We have also seen, however, that the literary texts designated by the notion of theBildungsroman<\/em>destroy the aesthetic narratives they provide. They do not simply cast doubt on the rationale or the outcome of","subTitle":"L\u2019Education sentimentale","keyphrase":["flaubert","education sentimentale","mme arnoux","madame bovary","fetish","fetishism","frederic","gustave flaubert","frederics","commodity"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert I. Weiner"],"datePublished":"1990-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952203","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03627055"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42952203"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procmeetfchs"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings of the Meeting of the French Colonial Historical Society","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE LEVANT, ALGERIA AND THE METROPOLE COMMENTS ON PAPERS BY O'DONNELL AND PROCHASKA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42952203","volumeNumber":"13\/14","wordCount":1717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Gibbs"],"datePublished":"1984-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85ac8c11-8510-3507-9a9e-1dd7dd35916d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"93","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-93","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Biological sciences - Agriculture"],"title":"The Politics of Economic Development: The Case of the Mauritanian Fishing Industry","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524060","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":7501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mindy Thompson Fullilove","E. Anne Lown","Robert E. Fullilove"],"datePublished":"1992-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3812633","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224499"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39109327"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-212058"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe01e2f1-460c-39bc-9e02-358dcf62448e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3812633"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsexresearch"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Sex Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"275","pagination":"pp. 275-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Sociology","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Crack 'hos and Skeezers: Traumatic Experiences of Women Crack Users","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3812633","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The involvement of women in crack cocaine abuse has had a severe impact on their health, the health of their children and the stability of their communities. Of particular concern has been the development of a system of barter in which crack-for-sex exchanges are the means through which women obtain the drug. Earlier studies have suggested that drug abuse may be related to and exacerbated by trauma. In the project described herein, we interviewed women crack users in Harlem to study the relationship between trauma, crack use, and crak-related sexual behavior. Results suggested the existence of three types of trauma: (1) traumas that predate the respondent's onset of crack use; (2) traumas that were the direct sequelae of crack use; and (3) stigma trauma, that is, trauma that results from membership in a despised or oppressed group. We observed a complex inter-relationship involving crack use, crack-for-sex transactions, and these three types of trauma. Treatment of the eventual co-morbidity of trauma and addiction is an urgent challenge.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tejumola Olaniyan"],"datePublished":"1992-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01922882"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33895455"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn95-6650"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"09e212ce-624f-3281-80f5-c29c87abea4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3208770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theatrej"}],"isPartOf":"Theatre Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"485","pagination":"pp. 485-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Dramatizing Postcoloniality: Wole Soyinka and Derek Walcott","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3208770","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MIKE COLE"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23890146","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8265551d-5ee6-3384-8ef0-3b4bd595d658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23890146"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"246","pagination":"pp. 246-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Race Theory comes to the UK: A Marxist response","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23890146","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":10268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. A. Jeanpierre"],"datePublished":"1965-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25087373","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"42e4da75-7313-3fbb-8716-3c208fd2a32c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25087373"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"872","pageStart":"870","pagination":"pp. 870-872","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1965,"publisher":"The Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre's Theory of \"Anti-Racist Racism\" in His Study of Negritude","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25087373","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":1401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Hylland Eriksen","Finn Sivert Nielsen"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183gzx9.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780745333526"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"711b368f-1e88-3c01-a4c5-566db99a3037"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt183gzx9.15"}],"isPartOf":"A History of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"221","pagination":"221-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt183gzx9.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["london routledge","university","chicago","cambridge","chicago university","berkeley university","eriksen hoa3","culture","oxford","london tavistock"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Quince Duncan","Tom\u00e1s Wayne Edison"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bcac2755-a932-314f-9e54-f6b61e6e9731"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"An Interview with Afro-Costa Rican Writer Quince Duncan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054034","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":3760,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Priscilla Wald"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489811","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/489811"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"100","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-100","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Becoming \"Colored\": The Self-Authorized Language of Difference in Zora Neale Hurston","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/489811","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":8867,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nicholas Brown"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267738","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00295132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48165635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005236620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40267738"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"noveforufict"}],"isPartOf":"NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"278","pageStart":"264","pagination":"pp. 264-278","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"African Literature, Modernism, and the Problem of Political Subjectivity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40267738","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7861,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mabogo P. More"],"datePublished":"2002-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489764","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10270353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab6df2e2-0f27-3f5d-bf57-fa2cac6ff981"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23489764"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Science \/ Revue Africaine de Science Politique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Renaissance: The Politics of Return","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23489764","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8829,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"On 8 May 1996, Thabo Mbeki made what, within the context of the politics of identity in South Africa, was regarded as a ground breaking speech in which he boldly declared: \"I am an African.\" This predated a call for the 'African renaissance' in an address to the United States Corporation Council on Africa in 1997. Since then, the concept of the African renaissance has assumed a life of its own, not only within the borders of South Africa but throughout the African continent. The term and the idea of an African renaissance are not new. Neither is the pronouncement of an African identity an historic one since so many people have, over the centuries, publicly declared and identified themselves as Africans. This paper argues that the concept of the renaissance has since brought into sharp focus the post-Apartheid notion of the 'return'. Two conceptions about 'the return' are identified. The first is an Afro-pessimistic conception that construes the return as a regression to something similar to the Hobbesian 'state of nature' and thus retrogressive and oppressive and, the second, and opposite, conception interprets the return as necessary, and thus progressive, liberatory politics. It is argued that the former view smacks of distorted (apartheid's) representations, symptomatic of most western images of Africa and the African, a view driven by ideological and political motives desirous of halting and obstructing transformatory praxis. In defense of the libratory interpretation, an attempt is made to show, contra current views, that this interpretation is not conservative, nativist or essentialist but that, in line with Aime Cesaire's Return to the Native Land and Amilca Cabral's Return to the Source projects, it is directed at reconstructing and rehabilitating the African while forging an identity and authenticity thought to be appropriate to the exigencies of 'modern' existence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fred Moten"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128740","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2d1f8af-05d6-3437-b23f-c1cd7b398164"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23128740"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"THE CASE OF BLACKNESS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23128740","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":19388,"numMatches":17,"Locations in A":[[448072,448320],[448338,448535],[448545,448788],[448807,449123],[449146,449376],[565810,565980],[566012,566235],[570376,570543],[570554,570775],[570899,571280],[572774,573049],[573175,573853],[573705,573861],[574293,574443],[576028,576183],[576818,576865],[589803,589989]],"Locations in B":[[80089,80338],[80357,80562],[80563,80824],[80841,81155],[81176,81406],[82125,82295],[82325,82547],[83681,83850],[83855,84073],[84157,84538],[87979,91471],[91615,92290],[92139,92298],[94318,94468],[98797,98953],[100499,100546],[101460,101653]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Fashole Luke"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484515","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c21e3e41-4ec9-31bf-aefe-659cd55336a9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484515"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"567","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-567","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dock Workers of the Port of Freetown: A Case Study of African Working-Class Ambivalence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484515","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article vise \u00e0 \"situer\" socialement les travailleurs \u00e0 bas revenu dans l'\u00e9conomie politique d'un Etat africain dans lequel on trouve des travailleurs dans une corporation publique faisant partie int\u00e9grante d'un syst\u00e8me politique et \u00e9conomique fond\u00e9 sur le rapport patron-client. Con\u00e7u essentiellement comme une \u00e9tude empirique du syndicat des dockers de la Soci\u00e9t\u00e9 des ports du Sierra L\u00e9one, ce travail analyse l'organisation du syndicat, les comportements des ouvriers de la base, et les relations avec la bourgeoisie gestionnaire et politique. Par ailleurs, cette \u00e9tude soul\u00e8ve des questions g\u00e9n\u00e9rales incluant dans quelle mesure les pratiques habituelles de surcro\u00eet de main d'oeuvre et de corruption dans une entreprise publique de l'Etat post-colonial se d\u00e9marque d'un mod\u00e8le capitaliste \"authentique\" ou d'un mod\u00e8le \"authentique\" de relations patron-client; la position dans la structure sociale des dockers (de la ville) en relation \u00e0 la fois avec la bourgeoisie et avec la masse des paysans; et les m\u00e9canismes et les valeurs qui favorisent ou vont \u00e0 l'encontre de la volont\u00e9 des leaders syndicaux d'encadrer les int\u00e9r\u00eats de leur base.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alice Bullard"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0277335X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13ccbd70-2ed0-374a-ab5c-3af5416240b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3201871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutatlarevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Atlantic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"114","pagination":"pp. 114-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"South Atlantic Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Truth in Madness","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3201871","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":6889,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeannette Mageo"],"datePublished":"2008-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203584","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13590987"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45640491"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227001"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20203584"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jroyaanthinst"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Zones of Ambiguity and Identity Politics in Samoa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20203584","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":10840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Here I illustrate a deconstructive practice through which indigenes actively resist colonial identity politics. By creating 'zones of ambiguity' in the performing arts, indigenes think through colonial images of gender and race. Bhabha's 'zones of ambivalence' characterize contradictions in colonists' approach to the colonized and self-contradictory identities that colonists force 'mimic men' to assume. Zones of ambiguity, in contrast, characterize indigenes' approach to the hybrid identities that colonists' ambivalence visits upon them: indigenes purposefully design these zones to transform stereotypic projections and to comment on colonial experience. I explore these ideas through two evening performances in Samoa described in two 1930s travelogues that allude to key figures in Samoan (post)colonial history -- the ceremonial virgin (t\u0101up\u014du) and the male transvestite (fa'afafine). \/\/\/ L'auteur illustre ici une pratique d\u00e9constructive par laquelle les autochtones r\u00e9sistent activement aux politiques identitaires coloniales. En cr\u00e9ant des \"zones d'ambigu\u00eft\u00e9\" dans les arts du spectacle, les autochtones d\u00e9tournent les images coloniales du genre et de la race. Les \"zones d'ambivalence\" de Bhabha caract\u00e9risent les contradictions dans l'approche par le colonisateur des colonis\u00e9s et les identit\u00e9s entrant en contradiction avec elles-m\u00eames qu'il impose aux \"mimic men\". En revanche, les zones d'ambigu\u00eft\u00e9 caract\u00e9risent l'approche par les autochtones des identit\u00e9s hybrides que l'ambivalence des colons leur renvoie: ils con\u00e7oivent d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment ces zones de mani\u00e8re \u00e0 transformer les projections st\u00e9r\u00e9otyp\u00e9es et \u00e0 commenter l'exp\u00e9rience coloniale. L'auteur explore ces id\u00e9es par l'interm\u00e9diaire de deux spectacles donn\u00e9s en soir\u00e9e aux Samoa, d\u00e9crites par des voyageurs-conf\u00e9renciers dans les ann\u00e9es 1930 et faisant r\u00e9f\u00e9rence \u00e0 des personnages cl\u00e9s de l'histoire (post)coloniale des Samoa: la vierge c\u00e9r\u00e9monielle (t\u0101up\u014du) et le travesti masculin (fa'afafine).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tony Visocchi"],"datePublished":"1980-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43247140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00284289"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43247140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newblackfriars"}],"isPartOf":"New Blackfriars","issueNumber":"718","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Liberation and the Church in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43247140","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":6848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James Nadell"],"datePublished":"1995-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85c79e77-bc83-3eeb-ac86-7752f5689f6d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"464","pageStart":"447","pagination":"pp. 447-464","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Boyz N The Hood: A Colonial Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784403","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6302,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[7283,7368]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael G. Vann"],"datePublished":"2010-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03157997"},{"name":"oclc","value":"156874617"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214519"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"39943ef4-0daa-3a31-93e0-8cf6211a81de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41403691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histrefl"}],"isPartOf":"Historical Reflections \/ R\u00e9flexions Historiques","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Of Pirates, Postcards, and Public Beheadings: The Pedagogic Execution in French Colonial Indochina","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41403691","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9420,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While there is a large body of literature on violence in colonial history, most studies have looked at either the bloodshed of conquest, major revolts, or decolonization. Despite the undeniable importance of such moments in the history of empire, an over-emphasis on these events creates a punctuated narrative where violence enters the story line, rears its ugly head, and then retreats. This paper argues that a complete understanding of the colonial encounter requires us to look at the violence in the many days between the arrival of the colonizers' expeditionary forces and the final achievement of national liberation. By examining the intersection between a rebellious band of pirates, a colonial state bent on revenge, and an opportunistic postcard maker, the portrait that emerges is one of a colonial society where violence was not just commonplace but an essential technique in maintaining the colonial order. Be it in the form of criminal violence that challenged French rule, the institutionalized violence of the state execution, or the symbolic reminders of such violence in the form of cheap postcards for sale in the city streets, acts, images, and memories of colonial violence were omnipresent. Importantly, the colonial state publicized its violence, making its ability to punish known to all. This violence terrorized the conquered native population and reassured the vulnerable white community. It is only in this context that other topics in colonial history such as educational reforms, city planning, and economic development can be understood.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nelson Maldonado-Torres"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613488","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9ac1137f-7043-30fa-b7bd-3e0293552993"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25613488"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":46.0,"pageEnd":"194","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-194","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon and C.L.R. James on Intellectualism and Enlightened Rationality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25613488","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":16852,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay explores critical accounts of modern rationality and efforts to articulate a conception of reason that is tied to the idea of decolonization as project. It focuses on the work of two of the most widely known and influential Caribbean theorists: the Martiniquean psychiatrist and revolutionary Frantz Fanon and the Trinidadean Marxist C.L.R. James. The essay first focuses on Fanon's diagnosis of reason in the colonial context and the overcoming of its ambiguities and limits through what he calls \"sociogeny.\" Sociogeny is instrumental for the combination of theory with ethics and politics, which provides the ground for a conception of the intellectual as a radical humanist and a revolutionary. James's view of rational activity in terms of making the \"abstract universal concrete\" and his approach to culture complements in important ways Fanon's typology of reason and human agency in important ways, but it introduces problems that a Fanonian understanding of the limits of modernity helps to address. \/\/\/ Este ensayo explora recuentos cr\u00edticos de la racionalidad moderna y esfuerzos dirigidos a articular una concepci\u00f3n de la raz\u00f3n ligada a la idea de la descolonizaci\u00f3n como proyecto. El mismo se enfoca en el trabajo de dos de los m\u00e1s conocidos e influyentes te\u00f3ricos caribe\u00f1os: el psiquiatra y revolucionario Frantz Fanon y el marxista trinidense C.L.R. James. La primera secci\u00f3n del ensayo examina el diagn\u00f3stico fanoniano de la raz\u00f3n en el contexto colonial y la superaci\u00f3n de sus l\u00edmites y ambig\u00fcedades a partir del concepto de \"sociog\u00e9nesis.\" La sociog\u00e9nesis es fundamental para combinar la teor\u00eda y la \u00e9tica con la pol\u00edtica, lo cual provee la base para una concepci\u00f3n del intelectual como un humanista radical y un revolucionario. La segunda secci\u00f3n del trabajo compara el punto de vista fanoniano con la concepci\u00f3n de la raz\u00f3n de James, la cual versa a cerca de \"hacer concreto el universal abstracto\" y en un enfoque particular en la cultura. En esta secci\u00f3n se concluye que mientras el trabajo de James complementa la tipolog\u00eda fanoniana de la raz\u00f3n y de la agencia humana con respecto a puntos de importancia, \u00e9ste a la vez introduce problemas que una concepci\u00f3n fanoniana a cerca de los l\u00edmites de la modernidad ayuda a resolver. \/\/\/ Cet essai explore des analyses critiques concernant la rationalit\u00e9 moderne et les efforts pour articuler une conception de la raison qui s'accorde \u00e0 l'id\u00e9e de la d\u00e9colonisation en tant que projet. II aborde les travaux de deux des plus reconnus et influents th\u00e9oriciens carib\u00e9ens: le psychiatre et r\u00e9volutionnaire Frantz Fanon et le marxista trinidadien C.L.R. James. La premi\u00e8re partie de l'essai examine le diagnostique fanonien de la raison dans le contexte colonial et la mani\u00e8re dont ses limites et ses ambigu\u00eft\u00e9s sont surmont\u00e9s \u00e0 partir de ce qu'il appelle la \"sociogen\u00e8se\". La sociogen\u00e8se est fondamentale pour combiner la th\u00e9orie avec l'ethique et la politique, ce qui \u00e0 son tour fournit la base pour concevoir l'intellectuel comme un humaniste radical et r\u00e9volutionnaire. La deuxi\u00e8me partie du travail compare le point de vue fanonien avec la conception de l'activit\u00e9 rationnelle de James. Celle-ci tourne autour de l'id\u00e9e de \"faire l'universel abstrait concrete\" et de son approche \u00e0 la culture. On conclue que le travail de James apporte de mani\u00e8re importante \u00e0 la typologie fanonienne de la raison et du sujets sociaux, tout en introduisant des probl\u00e8mes qu'une conception fanonienne sur les limites de la modernit\u00e9 aide \u00e0 r\u00e9soudre.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brad Evans"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331439","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bed9e18b-2e5b-392e-8a45-13dd38f58a3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331439"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"142","pagination":"pp. 142-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Life Resistance: Towards a Different Concept of the Political","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331439","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":8833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In an attempt to reaffirm Deleuze's Nietzschean affinities, this article argues that it is possible to detect in his thought an alternative concept of the political which gives ontological priority to difference. In order to map this out, a Deleuzian reading of the Zapatista experience will be provided, with particular attention given to the manner in which power is re-conceptualised, resistance strategised, subjectivities recast, and political solidarities formed anew. Once this has been established, the paper will argue that not only does Deleuze provide us with a meaningful basis for political action, he offers us possibilities for creating new forms of political solidarity that no longer take Hegelian inspired dialectical enmity or dangerous Kantian unfulfilment as their point of theoretical departure.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Larry Neal"],"datePublished":"1987-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ab308977-c4a7-3bf6-8bca-8cb0b09b91ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE SOCIAL BACKGROUND OF THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068165","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":7903,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Gaffar Laguerre"],"datePublished":"1989-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27864855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"59a085ed-886f-3777-8c9b-00b783327dc7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27864855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leadership in the British and French Caribbean: Some Comparisons","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27864855","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":7670,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ramona j.j. Bell"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.37.55","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01604341"},{"name":"oclc","value":"646982769"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5494618e-a963-3474-b930-45504e204056"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/humjsocrel.37.55"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humjsocrel"}],"isPartOf":"Humboldt Journal of Social Relations","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Department of Sociology, Humboldt State University","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Racializing Raven: Race and Gender in That's So Raven<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/humjsocrel.37.55","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6966,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[41484,41530]],"abstract":"Abstract Little has been said of African American girlhood and media images since the growth of girlhood studies beginning in the 1990s. This essay addresses this gap by interrogating the cultural messages that are signified in representations of African American girl culture in Disney's That's so Raven. The research draws on various theoretical frames from cultural studies and Black feminist theory to unpack the ways in which race and gender are constructed through the characters of Raven Baxter and her best friend Chelsea Daniels. The show stars actress Raven-Symon\u00e9 Pearman (Raven Baxter) who captivated hearts when she first appeared on the Cosby Show in 1989 as the precocious Olivia Kendall. I argue that various representational strategies are at work to fix difference in stereotypical ways and thereby racializes girlhood. I conclude that Disney's construction of girlhood has real life consequences for girls of color, and therefore I advocate that these young cultural consumers employ, to borrow from bell hooks, an oppositional Black gaze.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jock McCulloch"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Amilcar Cabral: A Theory of Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160757","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4701,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pheng Cheah"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303746","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303746"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"252","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-252","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Spectral Nationality: The Living on [sur-vie] of the Postcolonial Nation in Neocolonial Globalization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303746","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":12128,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mindie Lazarus\u2013Black"],"datePublished":"1995-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497972","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0051c453-4531-3e81-a4b9-fa4e882e7d43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497972"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Law and Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497972","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":2340,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael G. Panzer"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40600030","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bbfd3eb-9b81-3de1-8f49-2a513e761a79"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40600030"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"820","pageStart":"803","pagination":"pp. 803-820","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Pedagogy of Revolution: Youth, Generational Conflict, and Education in the Development of Mozambican Nationalism and the State, 1962-1970","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40600030","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article addresses a lacuna in analyses of FRELIMO's nationalist development during the 1960s. Specifically y the article examines the impact of generational tensions between Mozambican youth and FRELIMO party 'elders' that emerged during the anti-colonial war at the FRELIMO secondary school in Dar es Salaam. The main argument is that under the auspices of the Mozambique Institute, which operated almost exclusively in Tanzania, the FRELIMO secondary school was a site of significant intergene rational tensions that affected the liberation movement during a particularly critical moment of its anti-colonial war against Portugal. This analysis is particularly relevant for the issue of generational tensions and may help to encourage historians of contemporary Africa to (re)consider how African nationalist groups, operating within another nation's sovereign space, could build legitimacy and establish hegemony. This article, then, also indirectly argues that FRELIMO was able to utilise sovereign space within Tanzania and was, therefore, able to construct institutional bodies (schools, hospitals, military camps) that garnered hegemonic legitimacy in such a way as to allow the nationalist movement to act as a proto-state.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Bary"],"datePublished":"1991-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29740372","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01458973"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627630"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234714"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"18c5c03e-8714-356c-8cd9-e86bf984ec71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29740372"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"chasqui"}],"isPartOf":"Chasqui","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Chasqui: revista de literatura latinoamericana","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Latin American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Tropical Modernist as Literary Cannibal: Cultural Identity in Oswald de Andrade","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29740372","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5630,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[146933,147014]],"Locations in B":[[23729,23811]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Aijaz Ahmad"],"datePublished":"1993-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3520344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09700293"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49887664"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-255110"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"25d969ba-62d5-3998-82ba-39ca303171af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3520344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialscientist"}],"isPartOf":"Social Scientist","issueNumber":"7\/8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Social Scientist","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture, Community, Nation: On the Ruins of Ayodhya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3520344","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":15697,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracey Teets Schwarze"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"163ec40a-f93a-30ba-b8ce-919aa6ff3016"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"243","pagination":"pp. 243-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Silencing Stephen: Colonial Pathologies in Victorian Dublin","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441911","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":9282,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"188b1a20-1043-3358-bc45-c4a6b986bec0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3174464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"274","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-274","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African-American Women's History and the Metalanguage of Race","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3174464","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11393,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Zaret"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231314","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2e73d98-3dda-3be6-9b2c-db1fe196928f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231314"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1095","pageStart":"1094","pagination":"pp. 1094-1095","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231314","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan E. de Castro"],"datePublished":"2011-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012651","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f47e48f-af92-385b-99a2-d4bff84caa2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23012651"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"321","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-321","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\u00bf\"En qu\u00e9 idioma escribe Ud.?\": Spanish, Tagalog, and Identity in Jos\u00e9 Rizal's \"Noli me tangere\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012651","volumeNumber":"126","wordCount":8166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emilian Kavalski"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00d76798-74c0-3c68-ad9d-8702f4b2a992"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23019754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature, Department of Literatures in English, University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'All o' we is one': Imaginary Federation or the Federation of the Imagination of the West Indies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23019754","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8579,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Therese Saliba"],"datePublished":"1995-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112169","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cc75e632-9a78-3dab-a950-10bc3d1e9e77"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112169"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Bodies of Third World Women: Cultural Impurity, Prostitution, and Other Nervous Conditions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112169","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8651,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haggai Ram"],"datePublished":"2008-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069612","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207438"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"049f1c08-bfce-39c4-a383-405f4c099620"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30069612"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Middle East Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"268","pageStart":"249","pagination":"pp. 249-268","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","History","History","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"To Banish the \"Levantine Dunghill\" from within: Toward a Cultural Understanding of Israeli Anti-Iran Phobias","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30069612","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane I. Guyer"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c181ad85-b51b-3ece-9ccc-c1684b0ba6b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25064863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"523","pageStart":"499","pagination":"pp. 499-523","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anthropology in Area Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25064863","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":12070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"After 1989, the interpretation of a complex set of disputes and exigencies settled into a conventional narrative of paradigm shift, in which the intellectual past became essentialized as \"traditional area studies\" and \"classic anthropology.\" This approach obscures the processes of engagement (including dispute) by which disciplinary change occurred. The Area Studies engagement with interdisciplinary colleagues and voices from the \"area\" has been critically important over several decades. Necessarily, the intellectual terms for addressing other interlocutors about regional conditions and events have differed according to the experience of the area in changing universalist politics and analysis. The area\/anthropology intersection is examined for Africa (where race is basic to disputes), Latin America (where the place of culture and race in political economic arguments is central), and Europe (where culture and nation are at issue). During the 1990s a collective approach to areas emerged. Anthropologists, and particularly scholars of Asia, played a major role. The varied angles from different areas are linked by a broadly shared concern with the formation of emergent political communities and with themes of governmentality. Although the wider circulation of these ideas is promising, does it risk losing the grounding and accountability that Area Studies imposed (like it or not)? The events of September 11, 2001 and those that followed have made starkly clear the poverty and the dangers of essentialism, and the importance of focusing on the loci from which terms of argumentation in relation to power arise. Middle Eastern Studies is briefly discussed as \"epicenter\" for defining such an approach.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Samba Diop"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.221","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"96f30104-356c-3710-8772-395307d8f256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.221"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"African Elites and their Post-colonial Legacy: Cultural, Political and Economic Discontent \u2013 by Way of Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/afrdevafrdev.37.4.221","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":6685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract In this article, I propose to discuss the way in which the issues of postcolonial modernism in the context of neoliberal capitalism has impacted on the traditional cultures and economic life of Africa's new classes. These include the bureaucratic and professional classes and the materially less fortunate members of the other post-colonial classes. In this regard I choose to examine, specifically, the way in which cultural traditions and modernity exist in an uneasy symbiosis under the powerful influences of contemporary political economy. Normally, when one speaks of the economics of Africa, it is usually done at a distance, with numbers and charts reflecting GDPs, growth rates, per capita incomes, etc., all in the context of ministrations from institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank. Unless one were directly involved it would be difficult to grasp the impact of the structural adjustments imposed on Africa's peoples as they struggle to partake of the material life engendered by modern capitalism. The struggle is about maintaining statuses of economic materiality within a cultural context of eroding traditions. In this struggle to partake of modernity, as determined by the dictates of modern capitalism, the sociological results are a minority of economically well-off individuals, but with the masses of the people increasingly impoverished in a continent rich in natural resources and development potential. In sum, the theme of this is Africa's cultural and economc discontent in an age of an essentially unchallenged neoliberal capitalism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Biodun Jeyifo"],"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nature of Things: Arrested Decolonization and Critical Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819299","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Itamar Radai"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44503995","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35267058-d05a-3507-9593-9c719fb08c0e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44503995"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"487","pagination":"pp. 487-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Rise and Fall of the Palestinian-Arab Middle Class Under the British Mandate, 1920\u201339","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44503995","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":10260,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The Palestinian-Arab middle class under the Mandate may be characterized as bourgeois and educated, similarly to bourgeois classes that have developed in the West in the Modern era. The bourgeois characteristics of the Palestinian-Arab middle class, and their influence on its historical trajectory during the Mandate era, have not been studied in depth yet. This article aims to focus on a local aspect of the rise of the middle class in the region in that period: the rise of the Palestinian-Arab middle class under the Mandate, until the Palestinian-Arab Revolt (1936\u20139). The main hypothesis is that particular bourgeois social and cultural characteristics prevented the middle class full incorporation into the Palestinian-Arab National Movement, and even led to estrangement between the middle class and the national leadership, as well as members of lower strata, especially the villagers. Members of the middle class, mostly Christians but Muslims as well, espoused in their daily life modern habits, ideas, and customs, as a means to distinguish between themselves and other classes, similarly to their parallels in the West, and like their contemporaries elsewhere in the Eastern Mediterranean, as has demonstrated by Watenpaugh. Those gaps reached their climax during the years of revolt.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J Sefa Dei"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43657955","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2aa534e9-2cc5-3143-8557-06740f2f4bef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43657955"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Politics","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"The Challenges of Anti-racist Education Research in the African Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43657955","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":9717,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet article traite des d\u00e9fis auxquels la recherche et l'\u00e9ducation anti-racistes doivent faire face dans le contexte africain. L'auteur y indique les points sur lesquels l'attention des \u00e9tudiants, \u00e9ducateurs et chercheurs int\u00e9ress\u00e9s \u00e0 poursuivre une \u00e9ducation anti-raciste et \u00e0 mener une recherche dans l'environnement social africain doit se porter en priorit\u00e9. Parmi ces points figurent le changement des programmes, le discours et la p\u00e9dagogie \u00e0 l'int\u00e9rieur de la classe, le caract\u00e8re appropri\u00e9 de la recherche ainsi que les rapports entre les probl\u00e8mes d'\u00e9galit\u00e9 des th\u00e8mes par l'\u00e9ducation, de libert\u00e9 universitaire, de droits de l'homme et d'\u00e9ducation anti-raciste. La contribution de l'auteur est de montrer comment une \u00e9ducation anti-raciste peut \u00e9clairer les int\u00e9r\u00eats acad\u00e9miques et de recherche des \u00e9ducateurs et participer ainsi \u00e0 la lutte pour le pouvoir politique la justice sociale et le d\u00e9veloppement social de tous les peuples africains.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["F\u00e9lix Vald\u00e9s Garc\u00eda"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25622720","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216481"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93e4cb8b-eddd-3816-90d5-e83431dd82a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25622720"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"213","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-213","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"El discurso de Caliban, o de la filosof\u00eda en el Caribe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25622720","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":11326,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay incites reflection about philosophy in the insular Caribbean, disregarding the linguistic differences, cultural influences and imperial controls that characterize the region. In the face of the Eurocentric academic tradition and the traditional notion of philosophy itself\u2014\"the dominant mode of thinking\" reinforced by the Spanish conquest, slavery and colonialism\u2014there arises a Caribbean philosophical thought; a unique philosophy based on common themes, concepts and theories about the historical realities, the experiences and the lives of the peoples of the region who \"never surrendered to the conqueror's binary indulgence.\" This essay points to the need to excise the colonial perspective operative in philosophy that eclipses the thought that has taken place in the islands, since the demise of the colonial regime in some of them did not put and end to the symbolic and cultural reach of modern colonialism in the political, cultural, ideological, intersubjective and, certainly, philosophical spheres. Special attention is devoted in the text to the work of Frantz Fanon, whose philosophy is firmly aligned with revolutionary practice and transformation, a paradigm of Caribbean thought. \/\/\/ El texto incita a la reflexi\u00f3n sobre la filosof\u00eda en el Caribe insular, m\u00e1s all\u00e1 del \u00e1rea ling\u00fc\u00edstica, la influencia cultural y las \"fronteras imperiales\" vigentes en la regi\u00f3n. Frente a la tradici\u00f3n de la academia euro-occidental y de la concepci\u00f3n tradicional de la filosof\u00eda misma, del \"modo dominante de pensar\" reforzado por la empresa colombina, la esclavitud y el colonialismo, se destaca la existencia de un pensamiento filos\u00f3fico como expresi\u00f3n de la realidad caribe\u00f1a que comparte temas, conceptos, teor\u00edas en torno a la realidad espec\u00edfica e hist\u00f3rica, las experiencias y la vida de los pueblos de la regi\u00f3n, que \"nunca sucumbieron a la indulgencia binaria del conquistador\" y que hace de su filosof\u00eda una reflexi\u00f3n particular. El texto apunta la necesidad de extirpar la perspectiva colonial vigente en la filosof\u00eda que oculta la obra de pensamiento en las islas, pues el fin de la colonizaci\u00f3n en algunas de ellas no termin\u00f3 con todo el paquete cultural y simb\u00f3lico colonial-moderno\", en las esferas pol\u00edtica, cultural, ideol\u00f3gica, intersubjetiva y tambi\u00e9n del pensamiento filos\u00f3fico. En el texto se destaca la obra de pensamiento de Frantz Fanon, una filosof\u00eda estrechamente vinculada a la pr\u00e1ctica y la transformaci\u00f3n revolucionaria, paradigma del pensamiento caribe\u00f1o. \/\/\/ Cet article appelle \u00e0 la r\u00e9flexion concernant la philosophie dans les \u00eeles de la Cara\u00efbe, au-del\u00e0 des barri\u00e8res linguistiques, des influences culturelles et des \" fronti\u00e8res imp\u00e9riales \" existantes dans la r\u00e9gion. Face \u00e0 la tradition euro-occidentale et la conception traditionnelle de la philosophie elle-m\u00eame \u2014 c'est-\u00e0-dire, la \" pens\u00e9e pr\u00e9dominante \" renforc\u00e9e par les voyages de Christophe Colomb, l'esclavage et le colonialisme \u2014 surgit une nouvelle pens\u00e9e philosophique. Elle pr\u00e9sente une r\u00e9alit\u00e9 antillaise partag\u00e9e en termes de th\u00e8mes, de concepts et de th\u00e9ories autour d'une r\u00e9alit\u00e9 historique et sp\u00e9cifique, des exp\u00e9riences et de la vie des peuples de cette r\u00e9gion, qui ne succomb\u00e8rent jamais \u00e0 l'indulgence binaire du conqu\u00e9rant. Notre article vise \u00e0 montrer le besoin de faire abstraction de la perspective coloniale qui pr\u00e9domine dans la philosophie et qui cache le travail de r\u00e9flexion dans les \u00eeles antillaises. En effet, dans certaines \u00eeles, la fin de la colonisation n'a pas limit\u00e9 la port\u00e9e culturelle et symbolique du contexte colonial moderne dans les domaines politique, culturel, id\u00e9ologique, intersubjectif et philosophique. Nous mettons en avant l'\u0153uvre philosophique de Frantz Fanon, \u00e9troitement li\u00e9e \u00e0 la pratique et \u00e0 la transformation r\u00e9volutionnaire, paradigmatiques de la pens\u00e9e antillaise.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Chapman"],"datePublished":"2011-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.60","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"677d123f-06bc-3fef-bc9f-bbd6a3001fc2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.60"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"60","pagination":"pp. 60-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Postcolonial Problematics: A South African Case Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.4.60","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":6037,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT The paper argues that earlier literary designations\u2014\u2014in this case, \u201c\u201cSouth African literature\u201d\u201d\u2014\u2014have begun to be subsumed under a generalized category, postcolonial literature or literary studies. It is a category that has been given definitional purpose in North Atlantic literary and cultural institutions and is in danger of settling into orthodoxy: an orthodoxy that is somewhat removed from the palpability of human experience in any particular postcolony. An example is to be found in the treatment by influential postcolonial critics of Nobel laureate J. M. Coetzee, whose concern with the ache of history is made subservient to the intricate abstractions of continental philosophy. If the \u201c\u201cpost-\u201d\u201d paradigm wishes to retain purchase in contemporary times, it needs to establish a greater congruence than is current between a language of generality and its object of study, that is, the literary work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Paul Narkunas"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802301","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"241e32e8-3034-3686-9559-dd9cdca1f4f6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802301"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"108","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"28","pagination":"pp. 28-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Capital Flows Through Language: Market English, Biopower, and the World Bank","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802301","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11923,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert W. July"],"datePublished":"1983-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b0bc1391-1e75-3abb-88d1-c14ae7219c4a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/524165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"131","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-131","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Toward Cultural Independence in Africa: Some Illustrations from Nigeria and Ghana","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/524165","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":6963,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bernard A. Nkemdirim"],"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159792","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159792"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"75","pagination":"pp. 75-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reflections on Political Conflict, Rebellion, and Revolution in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159792","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6322,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286839,286946]],"Locations in B":[[6998,7123]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Gough"],"datePublished":"1968-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740394","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113204"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669879"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44a68a11-21d3-3c9c-afa5-5624351baf91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2740394"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"curranth"}],"isPartOf":"Current Anthropology","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"435","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-435","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1968,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Proposals for Anthropologists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2740394","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":40855,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frieda Ekotto"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e5d1591-8955-3ced-a8bc-5c431ff7bfb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43905147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"223","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-223","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43905147","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":1112,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ayo Kehinde"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484684","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3d987d29-d053-33d8-a83c-a721720b7c07"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484684"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rulers against Writers, Writers against Rulers: The Failed Promise of the Public Sphere in Postcolonial Nigerian Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484684","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12404,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Various literary critics have dwelt on the nature, tenets and trends of commitment in Nigeria literature. However, there is paucity of scholarly studies on the representations of the failed promise to the public sphere in postcolonial Nigerian fiction. This paper, therefore, examines the strategies and technicalities of representing the castrated hope of the public sphere in postcolonial Nigerian fiction, using the templates provided by Chinua Achebe's Anthills of the Savannah, Ben Okri's The Famished Road and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Purple Hibiscus. The methodology involves a close reading of the selected texts, using J\u00fcrgen Habermas's concept of the Public Sphere as the theoretical framework. The paper reveals that the context of the texts (Nigeria) lacks the public sphere, which is supposed to provide a liminal space between the private realm of civil society and the family, as well as the sphere of public authority. This is disclosed in the refusal of the characters to disregard 'status altogether' (Habermas 1991:36). Plusieurs critiques litt\u00e9raires ont insist\u00e9 sur la nature, les principes et les tendances de l'engagement dans la litt\u00e9rature nig\u00e9riane. Cependant, il existe peu d'\u00e9tudes scientifiques sur les repr\u00e9sentations de la promesse manqu\u00e9e de la sph\u00e8re publique dans la litt\u00e9rature postcoloniale nig\u00e9riane. Ainsi, le pr\u00e9sent article examine les strat\u00e9gies et les techniques de repr\u00e9sentation de l'espoir castr\u00e9 de la sph\u00e8re publique dans la litt\u00e9rature postcoloniale nig\u00e9riane, en utilisant les mod\u00e8les fournis par Anthills of the Savannah de Chinua Achebe, The Famished Road de Ben Okri et Purple Hibiscus de Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. La m\u00e9thodologie implique une lecture attentive des textes s\u00e9lectionn\u00e9s, en utilisant le concept de sph\u00e8re publique de J\u00fcrgen Habermas comme cadre th\u00e9orique. L'article r\u00e9v\u00e8le que le contexte des textes (le Nigeria) est d\u00e9pourvu de sph\u00e8re publique, qui est cens\u00e9e offrir un espace liminal entre le domaine priv\u00e9 de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile et de la famille, ainsi que la sph\u00e8re de l'autorit\u00e9 publique. Ceci est indiqu\u00e9 dans le refus des personnages de m\u00e9connaitre \u00ab compl\u00e8tement le statut \u00bb (Habermas 1991:36).","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Isaac Ariail Reed","Julia Adams"],"datePublished":"2011-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41475694","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9961351-4425-3382-9d70-8545a6c88510"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41475694"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culture in the transitions to modernity: seven pillars of a new research agenda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41475694","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":13633,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[82876,82940]],"abstract":"How did cultural dynamics help bring about the societies we now recognize as modern? This article constructs seven distinct models for how structures of signification and social meaning participated in the transitions to modernity in the West and, in some of the models, across the globe. Our models address: (1) the spread, via imitation, of modern institutions around the world (memetic replication); (2) the construal, by socio-cultural forces and by state organizations, of the modern citizensubject (social subjectification); (3) the continual search for new meanings to replace traditional religious meaning-systems (compensatory reenchantment); (4) repeated attempts, in modern revolutions, to remake society completely, according to a Utopian vision (ideological totalization); (5) the cultural origins and social consequences of scientific and humanistic worldviews (epistemic rift); (6) the gendered politics of state formation (patriarchal supercession); (7) the invention and production of race in the colonial encounter (racial recognition). We explicate the models in reverse chronological order, because in our synthesis, we argue that the original modern break results from a dynamic combination of racial recognition, patriarchal supercession, and epistemic rift; these changes set the stage for the four other processes we theorize. In addition to our synthesis, we also consider, from a more neutral perspective, the kinds of causal arguments upon which these models tend to rely, and thus explicate the analytical undergirding for the application of any of these models to empirical research on transitions to modernity. Throughout the article, we consider how these models might, and might not, mesh with other families of explanation, such as the politico-economic.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William G. Martin"],"datePublished":"1994-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241287","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01479032"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235317"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ee8a47ca-b01f-3a95-aa37-a4cc4611fd85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40241287"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revifernbraucent"}],"isPartOf":"Review (Fernand Braudel Center)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Fernand Braudel Center","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The World-Systems Perspective in Perspective: Assessing the Attempt to Move beyond Nineteenth-Century Eurocentric Conceptions","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40241287","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":15511,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The world-systems perspective is now a well recognized area within the social sciences and, most notably, the discipline of sociology. To many the development of this field is only part of the general trend of intellectual specialization--in this case the study of global social structures and change. This essay rejects this analysis, evaluating the world-systems perspective as part of an ongoing crisis within sociology and the social and historical sciences. The world-systems project is accordingly scrutinized from an alternative position, asking whether and to what extent those working in this area have been successful in advancing a quite different project: the construction of \"world-relational\" conceptions that escape the limits of concepts and texts rooted in partial accounts of the development of Europe and North America. Analysis is targeted at the methodological foundations of the field and, in particular, successive waves of conceptual and theoretical re-formulation surrounding such central terms as \"society,\" \"state,\" \"economy,\" \"labor\/family,\" and \"social movements.\" The strength of these efforts is shown to be found not simply in shifting the unit of analysis and the investigation of largescale constructs over long periods of time; more fundamental has been the displacement of conceptions of modern, Euro-North American \"societies\" as archetypes of social change and development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth Omeje"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.4.1.136","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2156695X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"651009014"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-202054"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a63a6646-3b90-3e8a-899e-418765e1a78d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.4.1.136"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africonfpeacrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Conflict and Peacebuilding Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"136","pagination":"pp. 136-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ademola Araoye. C\u00f4te d'Ivoire: The Conundrum of a Still Wretched of the Earth<\/em>. Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 2012","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/africonfpeacrevi.4.1.136","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":1172,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joani Marinoff"],"datePublished":"1997-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10431578"},{"name":"oclc","value":"675860698"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234598"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d404ce16-fb3d-3694-a3b7-176f407dfe37"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29767050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socijust"}],"isPartOf":"Social Justice","issueNumber":"4 (70)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"246","pageStart":"234","pagination":"pp. 234-246","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"There Is Enough Time: Rethinking the Process of Policy Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29767050","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5784,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen R. Davis"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40283237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f09406ab-85c4-35d0-af87-854f2cfb2e7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40283237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"373","pageStart":"349","pagination":"pp. 349-373","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The African National Congress, Its Radio, Its Allies and Exile","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40283237","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":16455,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article uses radio broadcasting as a lens into the fraught relationship between the African National Congress and the South African Communist Party during exile. Unlike the armed struggle, which waxed and waned, radio broadcasting remained a constant preoccupation for many constituencies within this alliance. This article provides several examples of the growing emphasis on radio broadcasting during the three decades of exile, explores the theoretical underpinnings of this strategic turn, and concludes with a discussion of the role of radio in the context of the camp mutinies in Angola. During this time, radio broadcasting underwent a significant transformation, beginning as a clandestine voice in the dark and ending as a significant means of public representation with a truly international reach. To illuminate this history, I will bring some of the literature on broadcasting in Africa into conversation with the voluminous writings on the South African exile community.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brendan O'Leary"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43054897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"16496507"},{"name":"oclc","value":"312765156"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7d4a7824-33d8-3524-bf01-e241fa29ab12"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43054897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"fieldayrev"}],"isPartOf":"Field Day Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"185","pageStart":"148","pagination":"pp. 148-185","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Field Day Publications","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Irish Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Shackles of the State & Hereditary Animosities: Colonialism in the Interpretation of Irish History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43054897","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":24570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thelma McCormack"],"datePublished":"1978-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45949613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214649"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/800103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialproblems"}],"isPartOf":"Social Problems","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"555","pageStart":"544","pagination":"pp. 544-555","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Machismo in Media Research: A Critical Review of Research on Violence and Pornography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/800103","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":6293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Two areas of media research, pornography and violence, are examined with a view to accounting for their discrepant findings, i.e. the effects of pornography are innocuous while those of violence are serious and warrant censorship. Both sets of research are characterized by sexist biases in the way problems are conceptualized and in their research designs. Drawing on a related field, studies of humour, I suggest that reference group theory could eliminate the bias. With respect to current state of knowledge. I treat the contradiction itself as a social fact. The underlying logic of the contradiction, it is suggested, is a machismo orientation defined here as narcissistic pride in sexual virility (pornography) the other side of which is anxiety about male sexual identity (male against male aggression films). Further research on machismo is proposed, similar to F scale research which also looked for unifying dimensions behind apparent contradictions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Govand Khalid Azeez"],"datePublished":"2015-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.3.0244","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ce6ee13-7733-36f3-a020-583f84a1b0aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.3.0244"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"263","pageStart":"244","pagination":"pp. 244-263","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Oriental Rebel in Western History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.37.3.0244","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":8870,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Edward Said's Orientalism through deconstructing colonial discourses of power-knowledge postulates that colonization for the colonized has a particular ontological finality, reification. I contend here that the process of subjection has a far more profound effect than merely reifying the colonized, to borrow from Anouar Abdel-Malek, as customary, passive, non-participating, and non-autonomous. Rather, Western imperial narratives and what Said calls its \u201cevaluative judgments\u201d and \u201cprogram of actions\u201d also come to interpellate the reified subject's cosmovision, agency, and its forms of resistance. Focusing on the Middle East, this study is a genealogy that exposes how techniques and technologies of imperial power have symbolically and materially produced the Oriental rebel in Western history. Through re-reading institutionalized knowledges and resurrecting a counter-history, this article reveals a hidden and buried discursive formation, one which I call counter-revolutionary discourse. I argue that this system of thought is built through dispersed and heterogeneous but power-laden statements from Aymeric and Comte de Volney to Napoleon Bonaparte, Ernest Renan, Gustave Le Bon, and Thomas Friedman.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. M. TAM\u00c1S"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972341","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef30fd1e-1593-3d15-86e5-510ecafadbd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40972341"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnarchy and Ethno-Anarchism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40972341","volumeNumber":"63","wordCount":14824,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Roberts"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20753509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07423640"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c6a7a18-ef9e-3ba6-880f-fd1dc34ee02d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20753509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejworlpeac"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal on World Peace","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Professors World Peace Academy","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"EMPOWERING THE HUMAN SECURITY DEBATE: MAKING IT COHERENT AND MEANINGFUL","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20753509","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":5012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Despite ongoing realist entrenchment in and domination of a still relatively narrow conceptualisation of \"security,\" an increasingly recognised school of thought has attempted to redefine the security referent from the State\/soldiery to the human being. The problem for both critics and proponents of the human security school has been potential incoherence due to the inevitable breadth and scope associated with the human security condition, leading to accusations of incoherence from more traditional perspectives. This article traces the evolution of the ideas in this debate and offers a way forward which, it is hoped, satisfies the dominant paradigm's concerns in terms of a viable security conceptualisation. It then identifies visible and empirical security issues that directly affect a far greater proportion of the world's population than those areas normally identified as security issues in the dominant Realist literature.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BILAL AWAD SALAMEH"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602243","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17550912"},{"name":"oclc","value":"213481729"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008254006"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de8ba58e-5301-3b1c-ac09-0b154ae6e424"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48602243"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"contemporaryarab"}],"isPartOf":"Contemporary Arab Affairs","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Social Actor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48602243","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9298,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article is based on a critical vision that attempts to highlight the importance of the social actor in the Palestinian context as a whole. It includes basic ideas about the author\u2019s understanding and expectations of all the aspects associated with the role and profession of the social actor as a transforming mechanism of issues in the Palestinian context. It broaches fields of work, specialization, and concentration in viewing individual cases as manifesting a nationwide social phenomenon. If we accept that Palestinian society is vulnerable to psychological setbacks, its recovery, according to Fanon (1972) lies in the resistance against the colonizer.","subTitle":"A Critical Appraisal of the Palestinian Context and its Challenges","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E VAN ECK","A G VAN AARDE"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048074","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43048074"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"SICKNESS AND HEALING IN MARK: A SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC INTERPRETARION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43048074","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":13736,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Sickness and healing in Mark: A social scientific interpretation This article constitutes an attempt to analyse Jesus' healings and exorcisms in Mark from a social scientific perspective. Attention is given to sickness, healing and demon-possession as understood in the first-century Mediterranean world. In this regard, attention is given to the important difference between, on the one hand, disease and curing, and on the other, illness and healing. It is further postulated that Jesus' 'miracles' in Mark, regarding sick or demon-possessed people, should be understood as at least healings. By healing ill and demon-possessed people, Jesus not only declared them clean, but also reinstated them as part of the community. However, by means of this activity, the Marcan Jesus was also restoring the kingdom of God by creating a new household as symbol thereof.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard K. Priebe"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30131140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"46","pagination":"pp. 46-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Literature, Community, and Violence: Reading African Literature in the West, Post-9\/11","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30131140","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Most of the African literature that is widely read is fiction written in French or English and published in the West, and much of that literature features violence. In addressing the question of how we read representations of violence in African literature, and how it functions symbolically, we are inquiring into how literature of violence succeeds or fails as art in general, regardless of culture. Three scenarios emerge: the representations may either overwhelm us with a sense of banality, impress us with the demonic, or offer a sense of the sublime. This essay explores those issues in African works from Okri to Mezlekia, Kourouma, and Djebar to show that violence is always local, but the causes they address are indeed global.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Dening"],"datePublished":"1993-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656422","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08867356"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205058"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227223"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6b7e1d97-94e6-3dd4-9328-3584e3388d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/656422"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cultanth"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Anthropology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Theatricality of History Making and the Paradoxes of Acting","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/656422","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11105,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gabriela Vargas-Cetina"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553339","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08946019"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4f02a0ba-ee37-327f-b787-5ad553de0966"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40553339"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"urbaanthstudcult"}],"isPartOf":"Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The Institute, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Uniting In Difference: The Movement For A New Indigenous Education In The State Of Chiapas, Mexico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40553339","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 1994 the Zapatista National Liberation Army rebellion in Chiapas, Mexico set in motion many political and social processes, including demands for the improvement of living conditions, health and education for the indigenous people of Chiapas and the rest of the country. Regarding education, many indigenous communities began to demand a new type of formal education, suited to the everyday life of their hamlets and villages. This paper, from the point of a participant observer, explores how the movement for the New Indigenous Education, as articulated by the Union of Teachers for the New Education (UNEM) is drawing on ethnic politics to present local concerns in global terms.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph L. Vigilante"],"datePublished":"1972-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23710908","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23710908"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"10","pagination":"pp. 10-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ethnic affirmation, or Kiss me, I'm Italian","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23710908","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":6972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ethnic minorities today, white and nonwhite, are not only identifying more noticeably with their own group, but are also becoming more insistent about their rights and privileges. Political coalitions that make the most of ethnic affirmation offer a possibility of reversing national priorities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4190003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022037X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"07a993af-8930-3fe4-9b53-e876eba97bfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4190003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jdevearea"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Developing Areas","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"College of Business, Tennessee State University","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Some Comments on Frantz Fanon and the Historiography of African Politics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4190003","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gruia Badescu"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861818","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04353684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205354"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20bbcd3e-a2e5-3b4a-9db8-fb763227629e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44861818"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"geogannaseribhum"}],"isPartOf":"Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"329","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-329","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Swedish Society for Anthropology and Geography","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"(POST) COLONIAL ENCOUNTERS IN THE POSTSOCIALIST CITY: RESHAPING URBAN SPACE IN SARAJEVO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861818","volumeNumber":"98","wordCount":7221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that postcolonial lenses can be useful in understanding postsocialism in particular urban situations, examining the postsocialist city of Sarajevo as an arena of postcolonial practices, processes and relationships. The city discussed, Sarajevo, provides a rich example of entanglements and relationships, both historical and of more recent origin. The article discusses with a postcolonial lens processes of urban reconstruction, specific to Sarajevo as a \"post-conflict city\", but focuses on later urban development patterns, which in fact echo the general trends of postsocialist urban transitions in the broader region. As such, the article aims to unpack how the flows of capital reflect a postcolonial configuration of relationships between local elites, international actors and urban space. The case of Turkish investments reflects an increasing re-forging of ties between the m\u00e9tropole and the former province of the Ottoman Empire. New relationships also emerge, but with similar dynamics \u2013 the cases of Saudi investment and the construction of the US Embassy are explored to highlight the role of the local elites. The article argues that the postcolonial lens is useful to explore the relationship between the local elites and international capital in postsocialist cities, highlighting processes, practices, and relationships that are complementary to political economy-based urban geographies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PARAMJIT S JUDGE"],"datePublished":"2014-07-19","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24479777","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1a066f2e-a118-382b-971b-7dd2362f1c65"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24479777"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"29","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"216","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-216","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Axiology","Philosophy - Metaphilosophy"],"title":"Existence, Identity and Beyond: Tracing the Contours of Dalit Literature in Punjabi","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24479777","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper traces the development and emergence of Punjabi dalit literature as a part of dalit assertion and effervescence in postcolonial India. Today, Punjabi dalit literature is well established despite its very short history. The two significant features of dalit literature \u2013 powerful narratives constructed about the existential conditions of the dalits and an overarching emphasis on dalit identity \u2013 are examined, so too Punjabi dalit literature in terms of the agenda of dalit liberation that is articulated in various genres.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fergal McCluskey"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917577","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"04128079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"468008548"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235759"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41917577"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clogreco"}],"isPartOf":"Clogher Record","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"89","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-89","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Clogher Historical Society","sourceCategory":["History","Irish Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unionist Ideology in Tyrone, 1911-1914","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41917577","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11397,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bill Brown"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08967148"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/490265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"American Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Identity Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/490265","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8759,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Herbert M. Kritzer"],"datePublished":"1977-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2577460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377732"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534262"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227382"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"58e8f166-aac5-3d64-a504-67cd26eb2477"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2577460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialforces"}],"isPartOf":"Social Forces","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"640","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-640","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics"],"title":"Political Protest and Political Violence: A Nonrecursive Causal Model","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2577460","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":4300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper presents a nonrecursive causal model of violence at protest demonstrations; it seeks to account for violence by both the police and the protestors. The model is tested using data on 126 protest events in the United States. The results of the analysis suggest strongly that the outbreak of violence at protest demonstrations is the result of a dynamic process resulting from the interaction of police and protestors; exogenous variables are found to have little predictive power when the reciprocal causal link between protestor violence and police violence is included in the model.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Trevor Lloyd"],"datePublished":"1972-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650225","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e18d743-177c-3704-8fc0-d5901cf60094"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/650225"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"55","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"153","pageStart":"130","pagination":"pp. 130-153","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa and Hobson's Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/650225","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11253,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["AIDAN FOSTER-CARTER"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66cdadd6-2fc3-316b-ad22-d0736d837b7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Marxism and the \"Fact of Conquest\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341399","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":8710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL KREYLING"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72be6f77-ded2-35c4-b885-ff66fb2508c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41557020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalsurvey"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Survey","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Italy and the United States: The Politics and Poetics of 'The Southern Problem'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41557020","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7650,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bede Scott"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.11","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786941701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5965aad9-c2aa-37ca-86b9-15744ab1a5f9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rj7f.11"}],"isPartOf":"Affective Disorders","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"169","pagination":"169-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Works Cited","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.11","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4386,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["university","sri lanka","london","london verso","james strachey","london routledge","naguib mahfouz","sigmund freud","london penguin","cambridge"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["H. 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Boorstin and the Rediscovery of a U.S. Archive of Decolonization","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lloyd W. 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The incoming discourse and practices originated in a mode of production, language and worldviews which were not only alien to Bengal but also at odds with it both in terms of power of assertion and contradiction within the existing social and cultural life. The work of the new classes lay in coping creatively with the new determining forces that impacted upon them. They developed a mode of doing and being, as the colonial era evolved, which provided them with a social physiognomy quite specific to themselves and distinct from other classes both in the city and country side. When we contrast the 19th century Bengali upper class society with its counterpart in 18th century Bengal, the rapidity in the reworking of the social and intellectual space seems astronomical. This was a matter both of choice and of need arising out of the actuality of colonialism, which was met both consciously and spontaneously. It illustrates the truth of Marx's statement that people make history, but not as they please.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jan Kees van Donge"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636733","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb86c545-6480-3f34-b9e8-80a698c99e1d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2636733"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nadine Gordimer's \"A Guest of Honour\": A Failure to Understand Zambian Society","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636733","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":9962,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William W. 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Two recent books, James Robert Brown's Who Rules in Science? (2001) and Phillip Kitcher's Science, Truth, and Democracy (2001), attempt in different ways to reflect on and extend the discussion from a 'Left' perspective. Brown argues Sokal's case from a perspective of philosophical rationalism and anti-naturalism. Kitcher's argument is that the aim of science is significant truth, and significance is a valuative notion. Explanation is relative to interests or values. But this does not mean that truth does not matter, or that the world has no influence on what we believe - the two considerations, significance and truth, interact and co-evolve. If this is true, how science is governed, and particularly what is studied, make a difference. A well-ordered science would be one in which decisions about what is studied would be both wise and democratic. Pure democracy would undermine wisdom, so a novel relation is needed, in which the preferences of voters would be tutored and a family-like dialogue would allow optimal choices to be made. Both discussions point to a genuine political dilemma over science and democracy, related to the dilemma faced by the Old Left, which hoped that science, through 'Planning', would seamlessly integrate itself into the social good in solidarity with the proletariat. Kitcher grasps that the forms of Liberal Democracy are not up to the task of dealing with science - and thus places himself at the opposite pole from thinkers like Habermas, who think that the Left must expand Public Reason. So the issue is 'Who rules?' and whether the proper role of science in society is one that effectively precludes 'democratic control.'","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ross Posnock"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34058563-b6fc-3818-b8dc-535eda4c75bb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"349","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-349","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3518571","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":1019,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979519","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5db9600b-e04a-30c0-afad-d5e8b6960dee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979519"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"References","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979519","volumeNumber":"213","wordCount":3588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rafael P\u00e9rez-Torres"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00268232"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709603"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7cb6384d-ba87-30f6-8186-3f040bc32ba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1215725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modernphilology"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Philology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"509","pagination":"pp. 509-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1215725","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":1001,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Seloua Luste Boulbina"],"datePublished":"2016-07-01","docSubType":"other","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.4.2.0145","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21658684"},{"name":"oclc","value":"775767149"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-201135"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"069a8444-ffe6-370e-bd3f-f41954560483"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/critphilrace.4.2.0145"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"critphilrace"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Philosophy of Race","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\u201cThinking in Lightning and Thunder\u201d: An Interview with Achille Mbembe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/critphilrace.4.2.0145","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6580,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Achille Mbembe has followed a singular path that led him to live and think in several continents at once: Africa, Europe, North America. He is one of the most innovative contemporary thinkers today, liberating the analysis of Africa (both myth and reality) from the classic economic and institutional approach, freeing this approach from its privileged axes (ancient vs. modern, colony vs. metropole, etc.), and displacing the point of view of rationality to the imaginary. From book to book, from position to position, he has developed an intra- and intercontinental migrant thought that has recently given birth to a \u201ccritique of negro reason [critque de la raison n\u00e8gre],\u201d since the Negro [le N\u00e8gre], he explains, is the only one whose flesh was made, under the empire of race, into a commodity. How does Achille Mbembe understand his work? How does he accomplish it? That is the guiding thread of this interview.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1973-10-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818904","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3818904"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"238","pageStart":"226","pagination":"pp. 226-238","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Other Conferences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3818904","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kathleen Gough"],"datePublished":"1967-09-09","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24477965","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"53b30452-5126-3218-bca8-338c1d17d8a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24477965"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"36","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"1658","pageStart":"1653","pagination":"pp. 1653-1655, 1657-1658","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"New Proposals for Anthropologists","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24477965","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":4689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"From the beginning anthropologists have inhabited a triple environment involving, first, loyalties to the people they studied; second, to their colleagues and their science; and, third, to the powers who employed them in the universities and who funded their research. In many cases anthropologists now seem to be in danger of being torn apart by the conflicts between the first and the third set of loyalties. On the one hand, part of the non-western world is in revolt, especially against the American government as the strongest and the most counter-revolutionary of the western powers. On the other hand anthropologists are becoming increasingly subject to restrictions, unethical temptations and political controls from the U S Government and its subordinate agencies. The question is: what does an anthropologist do who is dependent on a counter-revolutionary government in an increasingly revolutionary world?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Anne Parker"],"datePublished":"2021-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5851b2ba-3066-3128-b3ce-cb177d66d49f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Zoonosis and the Polis: COVID-19 and Frantz Fanon's Critique of the Modern Colony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.4.1.0058","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9516,"numMatches":12,"Locations in A":[[129045,129287],[129303,129636],[129790,130265],[236537,236759],[237266,237481],[498204,498577],[498648,498822],[498854,498926],[499061,499257],[499261,499331],[566786,566921],[567004,567401]],"Locations in B":[[32546,32784],[32798,33129],[33662,34105],[35738,35939],[36149,36364],[38952,39325],[39475,39646],[39681,39753],[40223,40419],[40464,40534],[42515,42650],[42908,43301]],"abstract":"The critiques of modernity by Bruno Latour and Amitav Ghosh are important for understanding the global pandemic of COVID-19 as well as modern responses to it. In spite of this importance, each maintains a commitment to the polis and \u201cthe body\u201d \u2013 a falsely universal body that opposes itself to others. I seek to extend their critique while also addressing the polis. In this essay, I argue that a helpful response is anticipated by French philosopher and decolonial psychiatrist Frantz Fanon. In The wretched of the Earth, Fanon's critique of the Manichaean distinctions between human and earthly agency, human and body, human and animal is the framework for his understanding of the significance of colonial wartime \u201ccortico-visceral disorders.\u201d The colony is (1) a manifestation on the part of the European polis of disgust for blackness, for animality, the agency of soil, the powers of the sun, for disability that the colony itself often causes and always denies, and (2) simultaneously an effort to install a supposedly nonracialized, non-disabled man, a universal body, and unilateral agency. A Fanonian response to the global pandemic and climate crisis would thus appreciate the myriad crises that arise precisely when humanity is thought to be the opposite of Earth.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bede Scott"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781786941701"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c31e0581-d6f7-3748-ad4a-0e21236649aa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvt6rj7f.5"}],"isPartOf":"Affective Disorders","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"31","pagination":"31-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Anger:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvt6rj7f.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Set in Cairo during the Second World War, Naguib Mahfouz\u2019s Midaq Alley<\/em> (1947) introduces the reader to a small circle of characters living in one of the old city\u2019s more dilapidated alleyways. It traces their interwoven lives and focuses, in particular, on the accelerated processes of social transformation that many of these characters are forced to undergo. As Magda Baraka has observed, the socioeconomic influence of the war made the 1940s \u2018a decade of sharp contradiction\u2019 in Egypt (87). For some, the presence of over 140,000 Allied soldiers in Cairo led to greater employment opportunities, and many local businesses flourished.","subTitle":"Naguib Mahfouz\u2019s Midaq Alley","keyphrase":["midaq alley","modernity","characters","colonial modernity","melodramatic","rumour","narrative","hamida","social","dysphoric"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROSS TRUSCOTT","MAURITS VAN BEVER DONKER"],"datePublished":"2017-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646193","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6fa9e3c3-a9dd-3ed9-ae62-833fd5e61849"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44646193"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"What Is the University in Africa for?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44646193","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16004,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian I. Smart"],"datePublished":"1983-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819164","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819164"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"417","pageStart":"414","pagination":"pp. 414-417","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819164","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":1484,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Hamil"],"datePublished":"2009-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638950","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7a2d76d-577d-340a-aa96-13604506789b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20638950"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Itineraries of Revival and Ambivalence in Postcolonial North African Cinema: From Benlyazid's \"Door to the Sky\" to Mokn\u00e8che's \"Viva Laldg\u00e9rie\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20638950","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":7078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article addresses the question of identity in contemporary North African cinema, situating the issue within the larger context of Arab discourse on tradition and modernity. It concentrates on two filmmakers, the Moroccan Farida Benlyazid and the Algerian Nadir Mokn\u00e8che, and their different perspectives on the formation of postcolonial identity (especially for women). While Benlyazid opts for a new form of Islamic feminism\u2014spiritual Islam\u2014Mokn\u00e8che portrays, in a provocative style, how Algerian women choose practices that subvert the retraditionalization of their country.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kari Marie Norgaard","Ron Reed"],"datePublished":"2017-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44981877","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03042421"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"51da605b-80ae-3a3d-95f5-da0de67fb700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44981877"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theorysociety"}],"isPartOf":"Theory and Society","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"495","pageStart":"463","pagination":"pp. 463-495","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Emotional impacts of environmental decline: What can Native cosmologies teach sociology about emotions and environmental justice?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44981877","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":18083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article extends analyses of environmental influences on social action by examining the emotions experienced by Karuk Tribal members in the face of environmental decline. Using interviews, public testimonies, and survey data we make two claims, one specific, the other general. We find that, for Karuk people, the natural environment is part of the stage of social interactions and a central influence on emotional experiences, including individuals' intemalization of identity, social roles, and power structures, and their resistance to racism and ongoing colonialism. We describe a unique approach to understanding the production of inequality through disruptions to relationships among nature, emotions, and society. Grief, anger, shame, and hopelessness associated with environmental decline serve as signal functions confirming structures of power. The moral battery of fear and hope underpins environmental activism and resistance. More generally, we expand this concern to argue that neglecting the natural world as a causal force for \"generic\" social processes has limited not only work on Native Americans, but also work sociology of emotions and theories of race and ethnicity, and has masked the theoretical significance of environmental justice. Taking seriously the experiences of Native people and the importance of the natural environment offers an opportunity to extend sociological analyses of power and to move sociology toward a more decolonized discipline.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Pallas","Bob Barber"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00212385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8a647a56-6f2e-3a20-b044-d321973837f1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42909753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issueincrim"}],"isPartOf":"Issues in Criminology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Riot to Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909753","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8132,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REHNUMA SAZZAD"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41721177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11bce134-be0c-3c95-8376-2477b0f305c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41721177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"829","pageStart":"815","pagination":"pp. 815-829","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Five Centuries of the New World Order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633762","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":1966,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conor McCarthy"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27917770","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c68817bf-6fee-3c5c-bb81-f6202e1fb7a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27917770"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Literature"],"title":"Beyond \u201cExtreme\u201d: Rereading Kim Ki-duk\u2019s Cinema of Ressentiment<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/jfilmvideo.62.1-2.0096","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":10607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrew Enaifoghe","Tafadzwa C. Maramura","Harris Maduku","Israel K. Ekanade","Hannah Muzee","Kira Tait"],"datePublished":"2020-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976632","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2056564X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"924347354"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a706ca3b-037c-36bf-9874-63a01c7deb54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26976632"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriforeaffa"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Foreign Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Adonis & Abbey Publishers Ltd","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa\u2019s Underdevelopment amidst Global Pressures","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26976632","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":8291,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"It is undeniable that Africa\u2019s under-development problems do not only emanate from the colonial legacy, they are also exacerbated by global pressures that place unnecessary demands on African countries. Some of these demands relate to aid and loans from the global north to the south, such as the need for good governance reforms. The lack of political will and pragmatic leadership are some of the major contributors to bad governance in Africa. Though Africa\u2019s problems includes poor leadership and resource mismanagement, the underdevelopment stems from misplaced priorities. The questions lie in the extent to which some of these problems are either a preservation of the African way of life or are importations. With the colonial spread and successive peripheralization of traditional African societies and organs of governance, it has become evident that it is difficult to westernize Africa and its institutions of supremacy such as \u201ctraditional leadership,\u201d which still sway the socio-cultural practices of the people. Hence, the consequential annihilation of the role these traditional institutions play has added to the expurgation of the understanding and knowledge of how they operate. Thus, the quest for good governance in Africa as imposed by the west, which is a significant departure from Africanity, is as daunting as ever. This research employed content data analysis and the authors concluded that unless African countries overcome their lack of identity and economic dependence, good governance will not be stained for a long time on the continent.","subTitle":"Is Good Governance Attainable?","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maryse Cond\u00e9","Richard Philcox"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0ac8fbd8-b667-3ae1-af4d-c60d557501a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"982","pageStart":"973","pagination":"pp. 973-982","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Tales from the Heart","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300302","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":5763,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marzia Milazzo"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"224c3e84-901e-3ef1-b663-1a8cc768c495"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"128","pagination":"pp. 128-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reconciling Racial Revelations in Post-Apartheid South African Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.1.128","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Offering a reading of Mongane Wally Serote's Revelations (2010) alongside other recent novels by black South African writers, this essay answers calls for more careful analyses of the roles that race plays within post-apartheid literature and culture. As it questions the shift away from a concern with institutional racism and white supremacy that is evident in much contemporary South African criticism, the essay contends that post-apartheid literature is not only racially marked, but also continues to produce knowledge on racial inequality, racial ideology, and resistance. In the process, it illustrates that grappling with colorblindness challenges pervasive understandings of nonracialism, reconciliation, and post-1994 literature. Revelations portrays nonracialism and reconciliation as necessary and inevitable, yet shows that the discourses are in conflict with demands for equality and justice. Concurrently veiling and revealing paradoxes inherent in South Africa's dominant racial discourses from within, Serote's novel demonstrates that enforcing colorblindness is an act of epistemic violence: not even at the diegetic level is nonracialism achievable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfdaniels Mabingo"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574593","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a368e781-05b4-34d7-b435-a893c57d89ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26574593"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"755","pageStart":"735","pagination":"pp. 735-755","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Teaching African Dances in the Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26574593","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":8321,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[50181,50231]],"abstract":"This article examines how pedagogy of African dances can act as a site where issues of Afrocentricity and horizontal interconnection can be activated, negotiated, and embodied. I draw on the selected reflections of the participants in dance workshops and my experiences as a teacher of Ugandan dances in Jamaica to demonstrate how pedagogy allowed the learners to embody, deconstruct, and conceptualize kinaesthetic, storied, and musicalized dance material as valued and valid knowledge that is anchored in the worldviews, dignities, and ontologies of indigenous Ugandan communities from where the dances originate. The article frames pedagogy of the dances as an epistemological and ontological framework through which the learners sought to know, think, do, question, connect, and become. For people of African descent, partaking in teaching and learning processes of the dances created possibilities for cultural connections through experiential, imaginative, participatory, and reflective dance activities. The analysis further reveals how teaching dances from African cultures, a subject that is treated as insignificant within academic and artistic thought, positioned me to en\/counter, rationalize, and address the challenges, dilemmas, and anxieties surrounding Black dance scholarship. It is hoped that this article can expand discourses on how African dances can be engaged as valued and valid epistemological and ontological domains in scholarship and practice to pluralize creative and cultural thought and empower communities and liberate their bodies of knowledge that have been dispossessed by Western hegemonic epistemological canons.","subTitle":"Horizontal Interpenetration and Afrocentricity in Jamaica","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. Khalil Saucier","Tryon P. Woods"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24719923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51782347"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-216251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c355bde-7b49-3202-b596-aa058035c068"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24719923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"141","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ex Aqua: The Mediterranean Basin, Africans on the Move and the Politics of Policing","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24719923","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":9979,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Within the annals of black studies, analyses of state power begin with a well-trod premise that policing is not a response to criminal behaviour; nor is it an extension of a criminal justice apparatus whose operations can be accounted for by political economy alone. Rather, the police power is foremost a cultural phenomenon irreducible to materialist conceptions of social control in a capitalist world system. More to the point, policing is a methodology for social organisation premised on antiblack sexual violence. We consider several recent events of state power in the Mediterranean basin \u2014 as in the Lampedusa boat victims \u2014 in order to ascertain the erotic authority governing the police power of state and civil society. By using the Lampedusa case and others, we highlight that police power in the Mediterranean is more than the interpersonal and the event, but instead manifests as a methodology of violence by the state and its regimes, as history, as legacy. The policing and murder of hundreds of Africans in the Mediterranean we contend are not single and episodic events or moments in time, but are situated in the accumulated violence against black people globally. Without an analysis of antiblackness in relation to policing as methodology, events such as Lampedusa can be seen and understood as moments of exception (i.e. bad FRONTEX policy) rather than a practice that fully follows racial slavery. Without understanding policing from this standpoint, the political reaction to Lampedusa and other events has the danger of promoting 'reform' and 'revision' rather than a more radical vision: a future where black lives matter.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cecilia J. Myrick"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"57aeaf60-bd5d-34eb-a578-0b8c2c13992f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"388","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-388","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Arts - Performing arts","Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Facilitating African Identity Development: Critical Literacy Books for African College Students","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180881","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":4955,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Henry A. Giroux defined critical literacy as the understanding of the historical roots and consequences of one's values and beliefs and the values and beliefs of others. This is a summary of a critical literacy, teacher-research study, in which the perspectives and reactions of African students at different points in their African identity development were explored. In this African literacy study, certain books were found to be more appropriate for college students at certain points in their African identity development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Rooney"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0954416X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227147"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c768a7f7-c6d2-3484-8282-7de433ea5caf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrilangcult"}],"isPartOf":"African Languages and Cultures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mothers of the Revolution: Zimbabwean Women in the Aftermath of War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771681","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bonnie Campbell"],"datePublished":"1974-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff9714f9-a0c2-3929-b472-43d7de17a3c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"306","pageStart":"285","pagination":"pp. 285-306","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Change and Class Formation in a French West African State","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483769","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11685,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Le point de d\u00e9part de l'explication des diff\u00e9rences fondamentales entre groupes dirigeants de l'Afrique de l'Ouest - les soi-disantes \u00e9lites africaines -, d\u00e9pend d'une analyse qui soit sp\u00e9cifique aussi bien que comparative du processus des changements \u00e9conomiques et sociaux dans chaque pays, d'une analyse des classes sociales, et des relations de ces classes avec le groupe dirigeant. Apr\u00e8s avoir esquiss\u00e9 certaines faiblesses des concepts sociologiques d'\u00e9lite et de classe tels que ces concepts ont \u00e9t\u00e9 utilis\u00e9s dans l'analyse des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines, une approche alternative est sugg\u00e9r\u00e9e. Cette approche analyse l'\u00e9mergence de nouveaux groupes sociaux dans le contexte du processus des changements socio-\u00e9conomiques. L'approche d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e est illustr\u00e9e par l'analyse historique des changements sociaux, politiques et \u00e9conomiques survenus depuis la p\u00e9n\u00e9tration coloniale dans un pays de l'Afrique de l'Ouest - la C\u00f4te d'Ivoire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alicia Ely Yamin"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40285214","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10790969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60626346"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-249116"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46faf4da-9061-3464-91c5-b852a96bc97d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40285214"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healhumarigh"}],"isPartOf":"Health and Human Rights","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"22","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-22","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Harvard School of Public Health\/Fran\u00e7ois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights","sourceCategory":["Medicine & Allied Health","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Suffering and Powerlessness: The Significance of Promoting Participation in Rights-Based Approaches to Health","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40285214","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":12547,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[76849,76902]],"abstract":"In a rights framework, participation is inextricably related to power. Through effective participation, we can challenge political and other forms of exclusion that prevent people from having power over the decisions and processes that affect their lives and health. Yet concepts of power are as contested as notions of participation. Thus, I argue here that, far from there being a formula for what participation means in a rights-based approach to health, the way in which we conceptualise the role of participation is closely linked to how we understand power and, in turn, the purpose and meaning of human rights themselves. I outline three ways of thinking about domination and participation-as-empowerment In a liberal understanding of how power operates, there is an overarching concern for ensuring processes of participation that enable competinggroups to express their voices on the proverbiallevelplay ing field, so that no one group may impose its will on the others. Critics of this approach assert that it ignores the power relations in which participatory processes are embedded, which determine which of the issues that affect health get decided\u2014and which issues are never brought to the table because they are systematically blocked. If a second dimension of power entails deciding what gets decided, participatory approaches need to challenge the definition of what is \" up for contention,\" or they risk merely legitimating social control. A third dimension of power entails securing compliance from oppressed groups by shaping their perceptions of their own interests. A human rights-based approach concerned with the effects of this form of domination on peoples health calls for developing critical consciousness before there can be any truly \"empowering\" participation. I conclude by arguing that much is at stake in defining participation in a human rights framework to health, because in defining what we are calling for, we will determine how relevant human rights are to the daily struggles of people around the world for well-being.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard King"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549963","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09433058"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51500968"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242118"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e5ba0df-dcf6-3846-bee1-e3fda230425a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23549963"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meththeostudreli"}],"isPartOf":"Method & Theory in the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"292","pageStart":"279","pagination":"pp. 279-292","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"RESPONSE TO REVIEWS OF \"ORIENTALISM AND RELIGION\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23549963","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":5696,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL A. KURZMAN"],"datePublished":"1969-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23709909","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00378046"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47907390"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-215358"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23709909"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialwork"}],"isPartOf":"Social Work","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Native-Settler Concept: Implications for Community Organization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23709909","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4473,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[211923,211984]],"Locations in B":[[13390,13458]],"abstract":"The militant confrontation that has proved so successful a community organization technique for northern Negroes does not seem to be a comfortable response for southern Negroes. The author uses Fanon's concept of the native-settler relationship and the Negeya bond, in which the white man is seen as having the \"will of God,\" to explain the difficulties in organizing Negroes in the Deep South. Although Fanon feels that the bond can only be broken through violent confrontation, the author suggests three progressive stages of nonviolent confrontation that achieve this end.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary Patten"],"datePublished":"2011-02-24","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/radicalteacher.89.0009","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01914847"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50255711"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-212921"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e20c6cd2-2125-34bb-a4d5-f690ecbdb3b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/radicalteacher.89.0009"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"radicalteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The Radical Teacher","issueNumber":"89","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"09","pagination":"pp. 09-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"What Is To Be (Un)Done: Notes on Teaching Art and Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/radicalteacher.89.0009","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Cook-Lynn"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1409547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Indian Studies: An Overview. Keynote Address at the Native Studies Conferences, Yale University, February 5, 1998","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1409547","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":4971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sheldon Hackney"],"datePublished":"1969-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1873128","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a7213b81-15bc-36db-881f-3f749ac23ad1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1873128"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"925","pageStart":"906","pagination":"pp. 906-925","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Southern Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1873128","volumeNumber":"74","wordCount":8218,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Hoffenberg"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175863","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537247"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227406"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9516fc7a-af4c-3178-9507-e7600c798828"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/175863"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jbritishstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of British Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"548","pageStart":"536","pagination":"pp. 536-548","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","British Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"There's No Place like Home\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/175863","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6212,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DENIS DONOGHUE"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26509288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00328456"},{"name":"oclc","value":"568032989"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d48e0879-1220-39a8-b162-6a691d93d694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26509288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"prinunivlibrchro"}],"isPartOf":"The Princeton University Library Chronicle","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"375","pageStart":"350","pagination":"pp. 350-375","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Princeton University Library","sourceCategory":["Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Yeats: The New Political Issue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26509288","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":9740,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Orser, Jr."],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23486487","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027316"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227011"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"df6c0a00-e576-3449-9734-11ea55e012ec"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23486487"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranti"}],"isPartOf":"American Antiquity","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"755","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-755","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF EUROCENTRISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23486487","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":13281,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The role of Europe and Europeans in the archaeology of post-1500 history has recently been critiqued. Some research has been pejoratively labeled Eurocentrism. This paper addresses the problems with adopting an emotional understanding of Eurocentrism and argues instead for its archaeological examination within the framework of an explicit multiscalar modern-world (historical) archaeology. An example comes from seventeenth-century Dutch settlements located in and around present-day Albany, New York. Hace poco se critic\u00f3 el papel de europa y los europeos en la arqueolog\u00eda despu\u00e9s de 1500. Algunas investigaciones han sido prejudicialmente designado euroc\u00e9ntricos. Este art\u00edculo se dirige a los problemas de adoptar un conocimiento puramente ideol\u00f3gico del eurocentrismo y en su lugar argumenta que se examina dentro un marco expl\u00edcito de escalas m\u00faltiples de la arqueolog\u00eda del mundo hist\u00f3rico y moderno. Se proporciona un ejemplo de los asentamientos h\u00f3landeses del siglo diecisiete localizados en los circundantes de Albany, Nueva York, pero tambi\u00e9n esta perspectiva es importante para los arque\u00f3logos que analizan la \u00e9poca antes del contacto.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Harlow"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949686","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41949686"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Child and\/or Soldier?: From Resistance Movements to Human Rights Regiments","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41949686","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":7433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Athol Fugard"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441586","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86a092b4-5781-379e-87b4-a31efa11e8a8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/441586"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"540","pageStart":"526","pagination":"pp. 526-540","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Recent Notebook Entries","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/441586","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6252,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derrek Bentley","Sherry Sullivan","Kathleen Wilson"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779907","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"563965938"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed8b41b8-b56a-3711-96f8-7bf61615c8dc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44779907"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"peaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Peace Research","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Canadian Mennonite University","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"British Colonialism: Perpetuating Structural Violence Through Perceptual Misunderstandings in Canada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44779907","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":6280,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[33464,33531]],"Locations in B":[[37580,37651]],"abstract":"It is not possible to achieve reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in Canada while upholding the British colonial model. Perceptual differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people perpetuate misunderstanding and maintain structural violence. This article presents two lenses that allow us to see this violence and how perceptual misunderstandings continue to reinforce colonialism and conflict. Viewing conflict through these lenses can redress the continued colonization of Indigenous people in Canada by creating an opportunity to align our perceptions. The first lens presented explores divergent perspectives of the colonizer and the colonized in relation to ecology and agency. The second lens describes the need to understand the co-creative, relational, and relative nature of meaning making.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Wayne Edison"],"datePublished":"2004-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"21e50d47-c090-3ba5-99ce-fe12f957b479"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Correcting \"a Touch of the Brush\": Afro-Caribbean Racial Identity and Shame in Francisco Arriv\u00ed's \"Los vejigantes\" and Carlos Guillermo Wilson's \"Chombo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054553","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6349,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[38964,39004]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Blake Stimson"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01426540"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54857465"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236624"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8567c75f-bb6b-3401-95e1-4c8f1c37df86"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43826246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oxfordartj"}],"isPartOf":"Oxford Art Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"35","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-35","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Photography and God","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43826246","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":16431,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[52091,52297]],"Locations in B":[[9720,9925]],"abstract":"This essay takes as its starting point Paul Strand's call to synthesize a 'new religious impulse' to counter the theotechnical drive that was the main concern of his 1922 essay 'Photography and the New God'. 'Some may grind their teeth at such prose', Alan Trachtenberg once noted about Strand's call, while others have taken it to be a misguided Bergsonism, and others still have cast it as the first, vague reach for what would later emerge as a 'mawkish' romantic socialism. This paper risks a different tack: first, by working to take Strand's theological impulse seriously and on its own terms; second, by working to reconcile that impulse with his later political convictions and those of the larger critical, political tradition stemming from Hegel's foundational theory of the state as an 'actual God'; and, third, by considering the implications of such a theopolitical reconciliation for us now.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eleanor W. Traylor"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930492","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"724d0033-5521-3f6a-9309-037238e4c79b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2930492"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"23","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"And the Resurrection, Let It Be Complete\": The Achievement of Larry Neal (A Bibliography of a Critical Imagination)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2930492","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11817,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MAUREEN SIOH"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27867945","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ce1a49de-cad8-3d10-b28e-3ec757f702b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27867945"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"597","pageStart":"581","pagination":"pp. 581-597","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Hollow Within: anxiety and performing postcolonial financial policies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27867945","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8733,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 1997\u201398 East and Southeast Asia experienced a region-wide financial crisis that saw national currencies lose 75 per cent of their value and stock markets wiped out. The financial crisis became an antagonistic and racialised referendum on Asian values between certain Asian governments and their Western critics. What was the larger political significance of this focus on Asian values? Focusing on the Malaysian government's controversial decision to go against the international financial community by implementing capital controls during the crisis, I argue that the debate over Asian values can be understood as performances to challenge and psychologically defend the conventional hierarchy of international relations that followed its symbolic disruption through the economic success of the regional economies before the crisis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvm201vq.5","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9783847401124"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"54810760-b8d5-358b-abc7-51be050e6668"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvm201vq.5"}],"isPartOf":"Das Geschlecht der Migration \u2013 Bildungsprozesse in Ungleichheitsverh\u00e4ltnissen","issueNumber":null,"language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"60","pageStart":"43","pagination":"43-60","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Differenzierungen von Rassismus und Migratismus in feministischen Ans\u00e4tzen zu \u201aMigration\u2018","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvm201vq.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5575,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In diesem Artikel er\u00f6ffne ich feministische Perspektiven auf die Zusammenh\u00e4nge von Migration und Rassismus. \u201eEuropeans of color are produced as \u201aqueer\u2018, \u201aimpossible\u2018 subjects in heteronormative discourses of nation as well as migration\u201c, stellt Fatima El-Tayeb fest (El-Tayeb 2011: xxxv). Auf antirassistischen Erkenntnissen aufbauend, die deutlich machen, dass \u00fcber Kolonialrassismus hergestellte Rassifizierungen grundlegend f\u00fcr Konstruktionsprozesse von \u201aEuropa\u2018 sind (vgl. El-Tayeb 2001, 2011; Wright 2004), entwerfe ich eine contra_ rassistische Differenzierung von Rassismus und Migratismus.Bei meinen Analysen gehe ich von der Konzeptualisierung kritischer Verortungen (Tudor 2011) aus, die Wissensproduktionen in eine kritische Relation zu Machtverh\u00e4ltnissen setzen. So nehme ich zum Beispiel","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["rassismus","braidotti","nduka agwu","differenzierung von rassismus","zuschreibungen","rassismus und migratismus","migrant women","positionierung","europ\u00e4isierung","vgl tudor"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gregory Goalwin"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45163928"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-233988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7060ccf1-4da3-36b3-8170-02aa4b0148e0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24713367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"215","pageStart":"189","pagination":"pp. 189-215","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Art of War: Instability, Insecurity, and Ideological Imagery in Northern Ireland's Political Murals, 1979\u20131998","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24713367","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":16905,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the purpose behind, and rhetorical content of, political wall murals produced during the troubles in Northern Ireland. I utilize a semiotic approach to analyze the ways that the symbolic content and physical placement of Northern Irish murals was used by actors on both sides of the conflict. I examine the major thematic traditions utilized by muralists on each side and situate them within the historical and political contexts of the conflict in Northern Ireland. This approach highlights the ways that murals did more than simply champion ideological causes, as earlier scholarship has argued, but served an active role in efforts to catalyze cultural support for organizations' political goals. I argue that murals played a key role for organizations on both sides of the conflict, as they each struggled to craft a communal self-identification and legitimizing central narrative that furthered their ideological goals. Organizations on both sides used murals to mobilize cultural support for their political and military struggles. In this regard, murals functioned as a form of mythic speech, attempting to depoliticize highly political ideologies and make the rhetoric used by the competing groups seem natural and pure. The grassroots nature of the mural traditions is particularly telling in this regard, exposing the deep-seated insecurity of organizations on both sides. This insecurity is further reflected by, and served as a catalyst for, the paramilitary violence that was a defining characteristic of Northern Ireland for so long.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1988-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186489","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019887"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388177"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 99004666"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d0e05f4-867d-3c13-8065-0730259179b6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4186489"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africatoday"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Today","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Language, Culture and Politics in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4186489","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":3769,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle Ty"],"datePublished":"2015-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421823","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"oclc","value":"31871426"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95007071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81a9ae8c-5a96-33fc-addb-ff5d90476889"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26421823"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"630","pageStart":"606","pagination":"pp. 606-630","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"TRASH AND THE ENDS OF INFRASTRUCTURE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26421823","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":9917,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122575,122782]],"Locations in B":[[575,781]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nagesh Rao"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209050","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15248429"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"65125ad4-eb75-32db-8396-2b0606416e25"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41209050"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intelitestud"}],"isPartOf":"Interdisciplinary Literary Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"184","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-184","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Neocolonialism\" or \"Globalization\"?: Postcolonial Theory and the Demands of Political Economy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41209050","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":8794,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosemary Lukens Traor\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9abe55b0-d4e6-3e66-8bc1-db6c273b7af8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3180941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"369","pageStart":"348","pagination":"pp. 348-369","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"Colonialism Continued: African Students in an Urban High School in America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3180941","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"According to a group of recently arrived students from eight different countries on the continent of Africa, schooling in America has not been a positive experience. The colonial mentality that degraded Africa and Africans for hundreds of years thrives in their schools, neighborhoods, and in the media. Their African American peers reported hearing that Africa is a \"jungle\" and Africans are \"savages.\" The African students expressed their frustrations and disappointments with their schooling experiences: the lack of information about Africa and the lack of interest in Africa on the part of their teachers and their peers. Their dreams of getting a quality education are not being realized. The students struggle with a lack of respect and low expectations and hope to find ways to promote a more positive image of Africa and Africans. Efforts to educate Americans about Africa and Africans is critical to help change the colonial mentality that still exists in America today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JEFFREY JAMES BYRNE"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44214020","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38911417"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233734"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ead42d3d-2d3e-3f20-9a39-f88df2da2229"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44214020"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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THE POETICS OF LOSS IN ZAKES MDA'S \"WAYS OF DYING\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285673","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9643,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ingrid Bianca Byerly"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852825","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af8a9327-bbaf-3bb6-a532-14b157ee40de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/852825"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Mirror, Mediator, and Prophet: The Music Indaba of Late-Apartheid South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/852825","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":19556,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmet Ersoy"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1523332","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07322992"},{"name":"oclc","value":"55529825"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237311"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14e4b7a5-f6e0-3f19-b68b-096a30707c18"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1523332"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"muqarnas"}],"isPartOf":"Muqarnas","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"207","pageStart":"187","pagination":"pp. 187-207","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Sartorial Tribute to Late Tanzimat Ottomanism: The Elbi\u0307se-i\u0307 \u02bfOs\u0331m\u0101ni\u0307yye Album","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1523332","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":12245,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Delfin Tolentino, Jr."],"datePublished":"1994-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42633451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8b4380c-b5e8-3c54-b11e-2fc0e614e810"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42633451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Indio As Other: Orientalism in \"Tandang Basio Macunat\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42633451","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":4560,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. Gopal"],"datePublished":"1976-05-22","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4364645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8d00dd50-14aa-38ca-9894-4224e7568d73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4364645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"21","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"792","pageStart":"787","pagination":"pp. 787-789+791-792","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Formative Ideology of Jawaharlal Nehru","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4364645","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":5925,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The ambivalences of Jawaharlal Nehru's ideology were to be embarrassing and sometimes even dangerous in the years after 1947 when they dominated his thinking, and that of the large number in India who followed his lead, because it necessarily meant a dilution of the thrust of policy. Looking back today at the ideology of Asian and African nationalism, Nehru's efforts at formulating a coherent body of thought and practice seem halting, incomplete, and perhaps circumscribed by his class background. But this is where Nehru has suffered from the hindsight of the historian. To do him justice, it should be remembered that he was also the pioneer. So long as nationalism in colonial countries was the comfortable monoply of only the middle class, there was no need to strive for a well-thought-out philosophy of action. They realised, without much close argument, what to demand or to concede, when to resist, where to push. But once nationalism became a heterogeneous social movement, this monopoly of the middle class was broken, and it became Nehru's burden to find for nationalism an ideology which would hold the various classes together. If Nehru in the years before 1947, which is what this paper is concerned with, now appears shaky, hesitant and faltering, we should remind ourselves that most of the more clear-sighted exponents of nationalist thought in Asia and Africa are, in a sense, standing on Nehru's shoulders.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. K. Ramazani"],"datePublished":"1980-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2617391","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00205850"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537221"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227401"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2617391"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"inteaffaroyainst"}],"isPartOf":"International Affairs (Royal Institute of International Affairs 1944-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"457","pageStart":"443","pagination":"pp. 443-457","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Iran's Revolution: Patterns, Problems and Prospects","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2617391","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":7687,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian I. Smart"],"datePublished":"1985-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321832","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aad07ad3-6a7c-3dd6-acec-83efd6ba663c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44321832"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"THE LITERARY WORLD OF QUINCE DUNCAN: AN INTERVIEW","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44321832","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":6510,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512869","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"72885eea-e933-3b21-9ef7-8989b6db5c54"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512869"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Notice Board","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512869","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5051,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip C. Naylor"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41938269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15393402"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51765415"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003212135"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41938269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frencolohist"}],"isPartOf":"French Colonial History","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"142","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-142","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Formative Influence of French Colonialism on the Life and Thought of Malek Bennabi (Malik bn Nabi)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41938269","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":5097,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Malek Bennabi (1905-73) fut un intellectuel alg\u00e9rien de premier rang. Cet article \u00e9tudie l'effet du colonialisme sur sa vie et ses id\u00e9es. L'\u00e9tude consid\u00e8re ses livres et offre une comparaison entre Bennabi et Frantz Fanon. Bennabi montre qu'il n'\u00e9tait pas \u00ab colonisable \u00bb \u00e0 cause de sa formation et sa conscience historique.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"1976-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"35f4a25b-b031-3857-8488-78013c609cb2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"137","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-137","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ideology, Political Religion, and Modernization: Some Theoretical and Empirical Explorations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523855","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":10543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malcolm Crick"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155895","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b061fbd1-45eb-32c0-bd9e-70bace907e6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2155895"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"344","pageStart":"307","pagination":"pp. 307-344","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representations of International Tourism in the Social Sciences: Sun, Sex, Sights, Savings, and Servility","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155895","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":19094,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Matthew J. Christensen"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05bda160-fd46-31f0-8cba-b1cbc8e34f02"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Cannibals in the Postcolony: Sierra Leone's Intersecting Hegemonies in Charlie Haffner's Slave Revolt Drama \"Amistad Kata-Kata\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821316","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":10472,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Through an examination of publications by Sierra Leone's president, the United States Information Service, and Sierra Leonean playwright Charlie Haffner, this article explores how the narrative of the 1839 \"Amistad\" slave revolt emerged in the late 1980s as a key modality through which meanings of Sierra Leonean nationalism and claims to state power were contested. The article argues that in its dialogic engagement with the two governmental texts, Haffner's play \"Amistad Kata-Kata\" transforms the fear of cannibalism that sparked the slave rebellion into a politically charged trope whereby it couples cannibalism as a name for the excesses carried out by local authorities with cannibalism as a description of the dehumanizing consumption of enslaved African labor within the Atlantic slave system. The trope thus forms a key for translating the slave revolt into a discrediting, disrupting critique of the complex interrelationships between global capitalism and excessive elite accumulation in the postcolony.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Kloos"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00062294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613144817"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8ef8bfa-57c8-3039-83a3-3177f2985368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43817925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bijdtaallandvolk"}],"isPartOf":"Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":41.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"A Crazy State: Violence, Psychiatry, and Colonialism in Aceh, Indonesia, ca. 1910-1942","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43817925","volumeNumber":"170","wordCount":18594,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article investigates the ways in which the Dutch colonial state dealt with a phenomenon known as the Atjeh-moorden ('Aceh murders'), the persistent suicide-attacks directed at the lives of Dutch residents, committed by Acehnese hoping to become syahid (martyrs to the Islamic faith). Concentrating on the development of colonial psychiatry, and its influence on colonial discourses and practices, I show how Dutch dealings with the Atjeh-moorden were, simultaneously, part and parcel of the construction of an Acehnese subject, and indicative of the administrative ambivalence found in the approach of the colonial state toward violence and criminality.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simon Gikandi"],"datePublished":"2001-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820804","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820804"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"Theory, Literature, and Moral Considerations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820804","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Fleming"],"datePublished":"2012-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412784","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00045608"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9975dce6-7d04-3027-b1e8-45f0fe0fb630"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41412784"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaassoamergeog"}],"isPartOf":"Annals of the Association of American Geographers","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"498","pageStart":"482","pagination":"pp. 482-498","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Geography","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Regime of Violence in Socialist and Postsocialist Poland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41412784","volumeNumber":"102","wordCount":13678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article seeks to contribute to the geographical debate about the nature of violence in socialist and postsocialist Poland. It responds to Bradshaw and Stenning's (2004) call to account for the uniqueness of postsocialism. By comparing \"regimes of violence,\" which characterize particular socioeconomic formations, a clearer conception of postsocialism can emerge, showing how different configurations of violence have dominated the socialist and postsocialist periods, respectively, and how violence has been directed toward non-Polish ethnocultural groups. The article indicates the important role that representational violence is playing in making postsocialism, where class-for-itself subjectivities are specific targets of marginalization. \u672c\u6587\u65e8\u5728\u4fc3\u8fdb\u5173\u4e8e\u5728\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u548c\u540e\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u6ce2\u5170\u6240\u5b58\u5728\u7684\u66b4\u529b\u884c\u4e3a\u6027\u8d28\u7684\u5730\u7406\u8fa9\u8bba\u3002\u5b83\u54cd\u5e94\u5e03\u62c9\u5fb7\u8096\u548c\u65bd\u5766\u5b81 (2004 \u5e74\u3009\u7684\u63ed\u793a\u540e\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u72ec\u7279\u6027\u7684\u53f7\u53ec.\u901a\u8fc7\u6bd4\u8f83\u4ee3\u8868\u7279\u5b9a\u7684\u793e\u4f1a\u7ecf\u6d4e\u5f62\u6001\u4e4b\u7279\u70b9\u7684\"\u66b4\u529b\u5236\u5ea6\"\uff0c\u663e \u793a\u51fa\u4e00\u4e2a\u66f4\u6e05\u6670\u7684\u540e\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u6982\u5ff5\uff0c\u8868\u660e\u4e0d\u540c\u7684\u66b4\u529b\u914d\u7f6e\u662f\u5982\u4f55\u5206\u522b\u4e3b\u5bfc\u4e86\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u548c\u540e\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u65f6\u671f\uff0c\u4ee5 \u53ca\u66b4\u529b\u662f\u5982\u4f55\u88ab\u5bfc\u5411\u975e\u6ce2\u5170\u6c11\u65cf\u6587\u5316\u56e2\u4f53\u7684\u3002\u6587\u7ae0\u6307\u51fa\u5f62\u6210\u540e\u793e\u4f1a\u4e3b\u4e49\u7684\u4ee3\u8868\u6027\u66b4\u529b\u884c\u4e3a\u6240\u8d77\u7684\u91cd\u8981\u4f5c\u7528\uff0c\u7c7b\u672c \u8eab\u7684\u4e3b\u89c2\u6027\u662f\u8fb9\u7f18\u5316\u7684\u5177\u4f53\u76ee\u6807\u3002. Este art\u00edculo pretende contribuir al debate geogr\u00e1fico relacionado con la naturaleza de la violencia en la Polonia socialista y postsocialista. El art\u00edculo responde al llamado de Bradshaw y Stenning (2004) de tomar en cuenta el car\u00e1cter \u00fanico del postsocialismo. Al comparar los \"reg\u00edmenes de violencia\", caracter\u00edsticos de formaciones socioecon\u00f3micas particulares, puede emerger una m\u00e1s clara concepci\u00f3n del postsocialismo, mostrando la manera como diferentes configuraciones de violencia han dominado los per\u00edodos socialistas y postsocialistas, respecti-vamente, y c\u00f3mo la violencia ha sido enfocada hacia grupos etnoculturales no polacos. El art\u00edculo indica el importante papel que est\u00e1 jugando la violencia representacional en la construcci\u00f3n del postsocialismo, donde las subjetividades asociadas con clase en s\u00ed misma son blancos espec\u00edficos de marginalizaci\u00f3n.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie Sklair"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231328","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"52285eb7-4b17-354b-bb26-565ec9757932"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231328"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1122","pageStart":"1121","pagination":"pp. 1121-1122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231328","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOZEF KONYARI"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982036","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"171263d7-5c77-35a3-a92d-4ba42c02cee1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982036"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"152","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-152","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER EIGHT: Understanding the Pathology and Cure for Euro-Colonial Whiteness: A Psychological, Behavioral, and Systemic Analysis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982036","volumeNumber":"445","wordCount":17281,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[23349,23536]],"Locations in B":[[44639,44825]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sheena Patchay"],"datePublished":"2003-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238980","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5d6ea61e-00c8-30d6-af91-3fa32712e4ad"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238980"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"155","pageStart":"145","pagination":"pp. 145-155","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Transgressing Boundaries: Marginality, Complicity and Subversion in \"Nervous Conditions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238980","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":4217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard C. Kagan"],"datePublished":"1977-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00393592"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bf7c6d08-276d-35ee-a473-4918c30f6e3b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45367165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studcompcomm"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Comparative Communism","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"87","pagination":"pp. 87-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trotskyism in Shanghai, 1929-1932: The Politics of Iconoclasm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45367165","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":8819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sami Shalom Chetrit"],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2676561","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2dad7bb5-c9e5-304a-908e-57ea1a887231"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2676561"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"65","pageStart":"51","pagination":"pp. 51-65","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Mizrahi Politics in Israel: Between Integration and Alternative","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2676561","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":7647,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the history of Mizrahi politics over the last twenty years and the entry of the Mizrahim into Israeli electoral politics as a force to be reckoned with. It analyzes the emergence of Mizrahi political parties such as TAMI and Shas, as well as the New Mizrahim, assessing their strengths and weaknesses and whether they augur well for the emergence of a new Mizrahi social and political movement that can successfully challenge the hegemony of Ashkenazi Zionism.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anja Jovic Humphrey"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463606","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267910"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302460"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23388"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b4553244-5864-3c57-baf9-a6aff090dbea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24463606"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mln"}],"isPartOf":"MLN","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"1148","pageStart":"1117","pagination":"pp. 1117-1148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Aim\u00e9 C\u00e9saire and \"Another Face of Europe\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24463606","volumeNumber":"129","wordCount":13859,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zubairu Wai"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858262","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"38fdaef3-0a2c-3268-8f15-e6d58c1c163e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24858262"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"142","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"499","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-499","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The empire's new clothes: Africa, liberal interventionism and contemporary world order","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24858262","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper interrogates the current upsurge in humanitarian interventionism in Africa. Disagreeing with those who see it in altruistic terms, the paper argues that the increasing militarisation of world politics seen in the routinisation of interventions in Africa is a function of a neo-imperialist posture driven by a Western will to domination and desire to restructure the world in line with the ideological preferences of liberalism as the dominant ideological formation of contemporary imperialism. Supported by power-knowledge regimes of Western intellectual production, which provide the legitimating frame and moral justification for imperial interventions, this Western will to domination disguises its violent imperialist pretensions under the cloak of benevolence and altruism. Cet article s'interroge sur l'accroissement contemporain de l'interventionnisme humanitaire en Afrique. En d\u00e9saccord avec ceux qui pensent que ces interventions sont de nature altruiste, l'article argue que la militarisation croissante de la politique mondiale, comme en t\u00e9moigne la routinisation des interventions en Afrique, est d'abord fonction d'une posture n\u00e9o-imp\u00e9rialiste pilot\u00e9e par une volont\u00e9 de l'Ouest de dominer et de restructurer le monde avec une mod\u00e8le id\u00e9ologique dominante de l'imp\u00e9rialisme contemporain construite sur les pr\u00e9f\u00e9rences id\u00e9ologiques du lib\u00e9ralisme. Soutenu par les r\u00e9gimes de pouvoir-savoir de la production intellectuelle occidentale, qui fournissent la trame l\u00e9gitimant et la justification morale pour des interventions imp\u00e9riales, cette volont\u00e9 de l'Ouest \u00e0 dominer d\u00e9guise ses pr\u00e9tentions imp\u00e9rialistes violentes sous le couvert de la bienveillance et de l'altruisme.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GEMMA ROBINSON"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986083","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ff99a714-14d1-3307-848f-24dce0c4c51e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986083"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"1\/2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"36","pagination":"pp. 36-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Vocabularies Of Protest And Resistance: The Early Work Of Wilson Harris And Martin Carter","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986083","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":5688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marcia Landy","Stanley Shostak"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01635069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"084c00f4-667e-35cd-a069-79e0c744a48b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44018753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"filmcriticism"}],"isPartOf":"Film Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"14","pagination":"pp. 14-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Allegheny College","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Politics and Ethnography: \"Ramparts of Clay\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44018753","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":6063,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PEPI LEISTYNA"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979456","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c585be8-2491-3070-bab9-23be313e5b71"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979456"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"3. How Multicultural Curriculum Development Often Misses the Mark","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979456","volumeNumber":"306","wordCount":6173,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert M. 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The authors argue that contemporary social integration and multicultural theories of student retention theory do not adequately address the academic needs of underrepresented students of color. Relying on case studies of student-initiated retention projects (SIRPs) at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, the authors develop insights into how student retention theory might be reconsidered for students of color. Three key components of SIRPs are discussed: developing knowledge, skills, and social networks; building community ties and commitments; and challenging social and institutional norms. Findings are then synthesized with theoretical constructs largely deriving from the work of Pierre Bourdieu, Frantz Fanon, and Paulo Freire. The result is a theoretical framework grounded in the concepts of cultural and social capital, collectivism, and social praxis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ward Churchill"],"datePublished":"1997-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23533210","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02757664"},{"name":"oclc","value":"557491550"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273867"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23533210"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"greaplaiquar"}],"isPartOf":"Great Plains Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"259","pageStart":"251","pagination":"pp. 251-259","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"IN THE SERVICE OF EMPIRE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23533210","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":5678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Francio Guadeloupe"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758152","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09215158"},{"name":"oclc","value":"746585372"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-235500"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"71f97268-83aa-36c0-a84a-8da857e058d4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25758152"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"etnofoor"}],"isPartOf":"Etnofoor","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Stichting Etnofoor","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Iis Just Myself': Writing the Individual in the Anthropology of the Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25758152","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":8754,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James V. 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It distinguishes the legitimate quest for alternative discourses from nativistic trends in the social sciences. Hence, this paper provides the intellectual background for the discussions in this volume on a variety of issues relating to the quest for alternative discourses in Asia.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonie Cox"],"datePublished":"2009-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40495608","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9d311e89-f9be-3dfd-8b36-e9f0c960c9a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40495608"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"120","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-120","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Queensland Aborigines, Multiple Realities and the Social Sources of Suffering: Psychiatry and Moral Regions of Being","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40495608","volumeNumber":"79","wordCount":16231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This two part paper considers the experience of a range of magico-religious experiences (such as visions and voices) and spirit beliefs in a rural Aboriginal town. The papers challenge the tendency of institutionalised psychiatry to medicalise the experiences and critiques the way in which its individualistic practice is intensified in the face of an incomprehensible Aboriginal 'other' to become part of the power imbalance that characterises the relationship between Indigenous and white domains. The work reveals the internal differentiation and politics of the Aboriginal domain, as the meanings of these experiences and actions are contested and negotiated by the residents and in so doing they decentre the concerns of the white domain and attempt to control their relationship with it. Thus the plausibility structure that sustains these multiple realities reflects both accommodation and resistance to the material and historical conditions imposed and enacted by mainstream society on the residents, and to current socio-political realities. I conclude that the residents' narratives chart the grounds of moral adjudication as the experiences were rarely conceptualised by local people as signs of individual pathology but as reflections of social reality. Psychiatric drug therapy and the behaviourist assumptions underlying its practice posit atomised individuals as the appropriate site of intervention as against the multiple realities revealed by the phenomenology of the experiences. The papers thus call into question Australian mainstream 'commonsense' that circulates about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people which justifies representations of them as sickly outcasts in Australian society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JILL A. BERGMAN"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"488b7500-1c6c-3b13-b14b-d6daa6e61251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25679661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"298","pageStart":"286","pagination":"pp. 286-298","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Motherless Child in Pauline Hopkins's Of One Blood","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25679661","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5343,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Russell Rickford"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.101.1-2.0097","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15481867"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628423"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-236700"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"476afa4e-451a-301c-901f-f85b508816fa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5323\/jafriamerhist.101.1-2.0097"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafriamerhist"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African American History","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\u201cKazi is the Blackest of All\u201d: Pan-African Nationalism and the Making of the \u201cNew Man,\u201d 1969\u20131975","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5323\/jafriamerhist.101.1-2.0097","volumeNumber":"101","wordCount":13241,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/924627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d03846f-651c-3a4a-acbc-094a9484fd87"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/924627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"380","pageStart":"367","pagination":"pp. 367-380","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Theorizing Heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/924627","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":6068,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia T. Rooke"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220701"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23767308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeducthourevupen"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Educational Thought (JET) \/ Revue de la Pens\u00e9e \u00c9ducative","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"78","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-78","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Faculty of Education, University of Calgary","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Woman as Artifact: Sexual Scripts and a Female Education From the Reformation to Monique Wittig","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23767308","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9149,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay postulates that the gendering of women in Western societies has assumed a conscious, systematic, therefore educational form over the last 500 years. Given the proliferation of advice literature whose intention was to domesticate women into a new heterosexualized bourgeois family model which reflected a burgeoning capitalist socio-economic policy the sites of female experience have become increasingly privatized. This educational discourse, made potent through recourse to the proliferation of the printed word, emphasised a sexual script which reflected a trope of separate spheres which socially constructed women into social roles at the same time as it narrowed their productive contributions by emphasising their reproductive functions. The author analyses these historical processes then addresses radical feminist positions whose ideological assumptions suggest the transformative possibilities of a new sexual script. The conclusion to this argument is that such separatist views do not, in fact, effectively break with the discourse of the last centuries despite the deconstructionist reversal postulated by contemporary gender-theorists such as Monique Wittig. Dans cet article, nous croyons que, dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s occidentales, la f\u00e9minisation a assum\u00e9e une position consciente, syst\u00e9matique et cons\u00e9quemment \u00e9ducative depuis plus de cinq cents ans. En tenant compte de la profusion de la litt\u00e9rature, dont l'intention \u00e9tait de localiser les femmes dans un nouveau mod\u00e8le familial bourgeois et h\u00e9t\u00e9rosexuel et qui r\u00e9fl\u00e9tait une politique socio-\u00e9conomique capitaliste, l'exp\u00e9rience f\u00e9minine est devenue de plus en plus une affairs personelle. Ce discours \u00e9ducationnel, mis de l'avant par l'ampleur de la documentation \u00e9crite, a plac\u00e9 beaucoup d'importance sur des \u00e9crits dont l'orientation est sexuelle. Cela se retrouve sp\u00e9cialement dans un ensemble de domaines qui ont rel\u00e9gu\u00e9 les femmes dans des r\u00f4les sociaux bien sp\u00e9cifiques. En m\u00eame temps, cela a r\u00e9duit la valeur de leurs contributions parce que trop d'importance a \u00e9t\u00e9 mise sur leurs fonctions de reproduction. L'auteur de cet article analyse ces processus historiques et s'adresse ensuite aux positions f\u00e9ministes radicales qui proposent une nouvelle \u00e9criture f\u00e9ministe. Nous concluons en croyant que de telles orientations ne s'\u00e9loignent pas des positions traditionnelles m\u00eame en tenant compte des consid\u00e9rations de th\u00e9oriciens qui croient, comme Monique Wittig, \u00e0 un reversement de ces positions.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Iver B Neumann"],"datePublished":"2014-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084246","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d24da38f-41fe-354e-aba4-5e65e735bac4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45084246"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperializing \"Norden\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084246","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":5699,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The two pre-Napoleonic Nordic polities are best understood as empires. Drawing on recent analytical and historical scholarship on empires, I argue that 17th and 18th century Denmark, on which the piece concentrates, was very much akin to the other European empires existing at the time. Read in this light, national identities within the fragments of the empire appear similar. Nationalisms are all shaped directly on the Danish model, having at the same time Denmark as their constitutive cultural other. The introduction notes that, where all European imperial experiences are concerned, overseas territories had the most wounds inflicted upon them. We would not know this if we considered Faroese, Icelandic and Norwegian nationalism in isolation. These polities, Norway in particular, participated in and benefited from the colonial policies of the empire. This notwithstanding, their national identities insist that these nations were on the receiving - as opposed to the imposing - end of imperialism. This is a historically unwarranted and ethically problematic stance requiring further discussion.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Juan R. Torruella"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23736226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07408048"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61312701"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-228676"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a797ff19-bf99-3f4b-8c55-4fca55beeda6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23736226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yalelawpolirevi"}],"isPartOf":"Yale Law & Policy Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Yale Law & Policy Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Social Sciences","Public Policy & Administration","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government","Law - Criminal law","Law - Judicial system"],"title":"Ruling America's Colonies: The \"Insular Cases\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23736226","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":18843,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip E. 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Part I of this paper clarifies the issues and explains why controversy persists. Part II attempts to reconcile opposing views by showing how the several different topics that comprise economic anthropology require different sets of analytical and measurement concepts for their fruitful investigation. Part III considers the recent extension of economic anthropology to processes of socio-economic change, growth, and development in communities undergoing \"modernization.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Camille M. 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Adeyanju","Temitope B. Oriola"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304566","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82c5aefa-3190-3dc8-b306-241c264647fe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41304566"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"967","pageStart":"943","pagination":"pp. 943-967","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Colonialism and Contemporary African Migration: A Phenomenological Approach","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41304566","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9714,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27679]],"Locations in B":[[56590,56641]],"abstract":"Scholars of international migration have paid scant attention to the phenomenon of bifurcated social identity of African migrants and their efforts to reinvent or re-and deconstruct a certain image of self in their everyday life. This article aims to offer a more nuanced approach to studying the phenomenon of Africans' involvement in voluntary migration to the West. Drawing on Goffman's idea of \"dramaturgy,\" the article enunciates ways that African immigrants and migrants manage their impression and represent themselves to their peers and social groups in home societies. Using selected cases of African immigrants and migrants in the West, the article enunciates, first, how African migrants (re) present their myriad of experiences to their peers and social groups in home societies as well as the effect of those representations on prospective migrants and, second, why African migrants construe themselves in a particular way to their peers and social groups in home societies. A speculative application of phenomenology to existing qualitative data on African immigration and migration is offered to explicate the lifeworld of African migrants in their oscillation between ancestral and current societies and their seemingly insatiable desire for Euro-American countries.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Haim Yacobi"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30245821","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10849513"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388186"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004670"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30245821"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Israel Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"94","pagination":"pp. 94-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Applied arts"],"title":"Architecture, Orientalism, and Identity: The Politics of the Israeli-Built Environment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30245821","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":8432,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article critically examines the role of architecture in the construction of national identity. Through critical analysis of architectural representations, I study the interrelations between the production of the architectural object and the practice of construction of Israeli national identity. The existing body of knowledge that supports this article claims that the creation of national identity is a socially constructed process which involves a variety of practices including education, music, and army service, as well as designing the built environment. It is important to note that the realization of such practices does not occur as a natural process, but rather as a result of power relations embodied within the national sphere.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Masipula Sithole"],"datePublished":"1984-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523953","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6010f733-f2e1-357a-8473-20a455164700"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523953"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class and Factionalism in the Zimbabwe Nationalist Movement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523953","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":4233,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL HEDGES"],"datePublished":"2020-05-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep40175","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"671c72c3-508d-39de-88c5-86d871eff55f"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conceptualising Social Cohesion in Relation to Religious Diversity: Sketching a Pathway in a Globalised World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep40175","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11296,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper offers an overview of current literature and best practice in terms of promoting social cohesion with a focus on how this relates to religious diversity. Its focus is Southeast Asia, but it explores this within a globalised context. It sets out some issues concerning how diversity is related to and experienced, before considering how we can conceptualise social cohesion in terms of religious diversity, offering three aspects as part of a contextual and down-to-earth descriptor. Tensions and issues which arise and counter social cohesion in contemporary societies are then noted, before postcolonial and decolonial theory is addressed as","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":["Abdullah Saeed","Paul Hedges"]} +{"creator":["SI BELKACEM TAIEB"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45178213","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22089050-b06c-3bb1-b164-2c75515b795e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45178213"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature","Political science - Politics"],"title":"CHAPTER TWELVE: Autoethnography in a Kabyle Landscape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45178213","volumeNumber":"500","wordCount":5184,"numMatches":7,"Locations in A":[[87152,87264],[87346,87641],[141224,141337],[449469,449786],[453622,453744],[453851,454075],[456996,457358]],"Locations in B":[[16352,16467],[16542,16837],[19242,19355],[20152,20468],[22778,22901],[22971,23193],[24340,24699]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saili S. Kulkarni","Cheryl Hanley-Maxwell"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/teaceducquar.42.4.59","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07375328"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41228220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5de6ce20-817c-37cd-9742-93e3657dbfc1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/teaceducquar.42.4.59"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teaceducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Teacher Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Educational psychology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Preservice Teachers' Student Teaching Experiences in East Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/teaceducquar.42.4.59","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":10479,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sukeshi Kamra"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619828","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e2d4a09c-a360-3170-96c3-d569482856b9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25619828"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"72","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"202","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-202","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Judicial system"],"title":"The \"Vox Populi,\" or the Infernal Propaganda Machine, and Juridical Force in Colonial India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25619828","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":16668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. Said"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":52.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Zionism from the Standpoint of Its Victims","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466405","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":33823,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R\u00c9AL LA ROCHELLE","GILBERT MAGGI"],"datePublished":"1972-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42683390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2cfe3ed-2cbc-35de-b797-03a04a2ad101"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42683390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"9","pageStart":"2","pagination":"pp. 2-9","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"POLTICAL SITUATION OF QUEBEC CINEMA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42683390","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Irene L. Gendzier"],"datePublished":"1966-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324063","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c51dcbfe-aecd-3177-a1a1-00129a575249"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4324063"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"544","pageStart":"534","pagination":"pp. 534-544","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Frantz Fanon: In Search of Justice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324063","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":7286,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1990-04-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23164576","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"26dd98de-fe91-313c-a175-a3888a28175c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23164576"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"27","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23164576","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zo\u00eb Brigley Thompson"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21517363"},{"name":"oclc","value":"463436635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009203961"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b466774c-a9a9-3ca3-9259-fb47fa0b0b7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26776834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"femiform"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Formations","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Beyond Symbolic Rape","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26776834","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":12960,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article contrasts two visions of trauma: a symbolic imaginary on film where women\u2019s violated bodies stand in for philosophical ideas about sex, violence, and politics; and a more complex literary imaginary using what Ann Cvetkovich calls an \u201carchive of trauma.\u201d The starting point for discussion is troubling representations of women on film; The Lover (1992, dir. Jean-Jacques Annaud) and Lust, Caution (2007, dir. Ang Lee) both portray their heroines falling in love with their abusers, men whose shame and vulnerability are expressed through a symbolic rape. Rather than dwelling on this dubious aspect of the films, the main discussion returns to the more nuanced view of trauma in the source texts: The Lover (1984) by Marguerite Duras (1914\u20131996) and \u201cLust, Caution\u201d (1979) by Eileen Chang (Zhang Ailing) (1920\u20131995), neither of which include sexual violence in an obvious way. Duras\u2019s traumatic portrait of French colonialism and Chang\u2019s sinister portrayal of the Japanese occupation of Shanghai refuse symbolic rape as shorthand for conquest. Instead, these stories present an archive of trauma through a series of objects that represent emotional value, and provoke affective responses. Duras and Chang lament what Cvetkovich labels \u201cinsidious\u201d or everyday trauma\u2014the impossible histories\u2014carried by women as a result of colonialism and war.","subTitle":"The Insidious Trauma of Conquest in Marguerite Duras\u2019s The Lover<\/em> and Eileen Chang\u2019s \u201cLust, Caution\u201d","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mahmood Mamdani"],"datePublished":"1975-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997883","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"00f187b4-b515-3007-ba71-8b031468f7ba"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3997883"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"61","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-61","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Class Struggles in Uganda","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3997883","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":18628,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G. WHITE"],"datePublished":"1967-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653027","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"217c17c0-7349-3f91-90ef-52cc228d8a43"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653027"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"39","pagination":"pp. 39-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Social sciences - Sociology","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Rudie, Oh Rudie !","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653027","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":2722,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[380817,380884]],"Locations in B":[[5388,5456]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald E. Santoni"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512960","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512960"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Bad Faith of Violence\u2014and Is Sartre in Bad Faith Regarding It?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512960","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jairos Gonye","Irikidzayi Manase"],"datePublished":"2015-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572941","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"da94baf9-38f7-3c2d-8525-741e8c6f1cb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24572941"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"141","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-141","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Debunking the Zimbabwean Myth of \"Jikinya\" Dance in Ndhlala's \"Jikinya\" and Zimunya's \"Jikinya\" (Dancer) and \"Jikinya\" (An African Passion)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24572941","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":7975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article analyzes representations of the Zimbabwean jikinya dance myth by Geoffrey Ndhlala in the novel Jikinya and Musaemura Zimunya in the poetry anthology Kingfisher, Jikinya and other poems. It examines the different social and historical settings considered in Ndhlala's Jikinya (pre-colonial Zimbabwe) and Zimunya's \"Jikinya\" (Dancer) and \"Jikinya\" (An African Passion) (the colonial period of the 1970s Zimbabwean anti-colonial war), and discusses how both texts attempt at describing the aesthetics of the jikinya dance and reinterpret Zimbabwe's pre-colonial and colonial culture and politics. Of significance, however, is that, being aware of the fact that the nature and significance of dance representations in these texts has received less attention, we analyze the way both writers handle Zimbabwean jikinya in colonial contexts. As a result, we argue in this article that although both authors struggle to portray a clear picture of what the dance really is to the reader, they are able to portray the significance of the jikinya myth and dance in the construction of the nation's memories and the mapping of the ongoing social experiences and political contestations encountered during Zimbabwe's colonial history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAUL WEINBERG"],"datePublished":"2019-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02590190"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606985680"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011234616"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f48820d5-a051-3bda-8af2-61b98576ee66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26916218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"kronos"}],"isPartOf":"Kronos","issueNumber":"45","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"103","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-103","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"University of Western Cape","sourceCategory":["History","History","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Angola 1992 \u2013 Hope in the Face of Anguish","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26916218","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":1875,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609719,609839]],"Locations in B":[[272,387]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Karl W. Deutsch"],"datePublished":"1978-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43208363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0032325X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d57d2abe-54b3-3afd-81d1-b43ed3c86a68"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43208363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ilpolitico"}],"isPartOf":"Il Politico","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Rubbettino Editore","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MAJOR CHANGES IN POLITICAL SCIENCE, 1952-1977","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43208363","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":15406,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Nell'ultimo quarto di secolo la scienza politica ha conosciuto un rapido processo di sviluppo e maturazione. Questo sviluppo si connette con drammatici mutamenti intervenuti nei singoli sistemi politici e nell'arena politica mondiale che hanno ampliato e articolato il campo dell'analisi politica: \u00e8 sufficiente pensare alla moltiplicazione degli stati sovrani a seguito della decolonizzazione e alla crescente politicizzazione della societ\u00e0 provocata dall'interventismo statale. La presente rassegna enuclea le aree tematiche principali sulle quali si \u00e8 concentrata la riflessione politologica negli anni 1952-1977. Essa \u00e8, dichiaratamente, esplorativa e incompleta, in quanto fa riferimento soprattutto agli avanzamenti della scienza politica negli Stati Uniti e, in misura minore, in Inghilterra, Francia, Germania e Scandinavia; e trascura quindi quanto di innovativo \u00e8 stato prodotto nei paesi del terzo mondo, in Giappone, in Italia, e altrove. Dopo avere brevemente discusso dei temi tradizionali della filosofia politica (la giustizia, il potere, la legittimit\u00e0 e la stabilit\u00e0 dei sistemi politici, le istituzioni e le procedure politiche, le concezioni generali della storia), in tutto o in parte rivisitati dai politologi contemporanei, l'a. entra nel vivo proponendo una tipologia dei nuovi poli di interesse della scienza politica. Questi sono raggruppati in tre categorie molto inclusive, e poi esaminati partitamente nel dettaglio. La prima categoria \u00e8 denominata cognition, e indica sia il processo di comprensione dell'agire politico sia la riflessione epistemol\u00f3gica sopra i criteri dell'analisi. Rientrano sotto questo titolo: l'ermeneutica, cio\u00e8 l'interpretazione del senso che l'agire riveste per gli attori e per gli altri; lo studio della determinazione sociale del pensiero e della falsa coscienza, nonch\u00e9 i problemi relativi alla razionalit\u00e0 del comportamento politico; l'indagine delle pulsioni profonde che muovono il comportamento e, in genere, le sue dimensioni psicologiche e antropologiche; la costruzione di modelli teorici logicamente coerenti e suscettibili di applicazione e verifica empirica (comportamentismo); l'adattamento alla scienza politica delle teorie probabilistiche. La seconda categoria, pi\u00f9 ristretta, si richiama alla policy analysis: l'analisi della formazione, dei contenuti, della durevolezza e degli impatti dei corsi politici emergenti dai processi di decisione e non-decisione. Nell'ultima categoria sono inclusi temi di macro-analisi che rimandano prevalentemente, ma non esclusivamente, alla teoria generale dei sistemi.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter C.W. Gutkind"],"datePublished":"1967-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231059","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00098140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889925"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012235037"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8dd6e89-e7e9-3ce0-9e89-d64a429e4038"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41231059"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"civi"}],"isPartOf":"Civilisations","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"405","pageStart":"380","pagination":"pp. 380-405","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1967,"publisher":"Institut de Sociologie de l'Universit\u00e9 de Bruxelles","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"The energy of despair : Social organization of the unemployed in two African cities : Lagos and Nairobi: A preliminary account (2nd part) \/ L'ENERGIE DU DESESPOIR : L'ORGANISATION SOCIALE DES CHOMEURS DANS DEUX VILLES D'AFRIQUE : LAGOS ET NAIROBI: UN expos\u00e9 pr\u00e9liminaire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41231059","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":13134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"2. R\u00e9seaux fond\u00e9s sur l'association (Dans la premi\u00e8re partie de cet article, publi\u00e9e dans le num\u00e9ro pr\u00e9c\u00e9dent de \u00ab Civilisations \u00bb, l'auteur a trait\u00e9 des \u00ab R\u00e9seaux sociaux d'entraide fond\u00e9s sur la p\u00e1rentele \u00bb.) Lorsqu'un nouveau citadin en qu\u00eate d'emploi a \u00e9puis\u00e9 toutes les possibilit\u00e9s d'aide du c\u00f4t\u00e9 de ses relations de p\u00e1rentele, il recherche celles qui peuvent lui \u00eatre offertes par ses amis. Progressivement, il r\u00e9duit ses relations avec sa famille \u00e0 de rares visites \u00e0 l'occasion de naissances, mariages, d\u00e9c\u00e8s, soit en des circonstances o\u00f9 une abstention serait tr\u00e8s critiqu\u00e9e. Lorsqu'il choisit, apr\u00e8s l'\u00e9chec des efforts de sa famille pour lui procurer du travail, de se tourner vers ses amis au lieu de rentrer dans son village \u2014 dans ce dernier cas, il abandonnerait tout projet de devenir un travailleur urbain \u2014, le ch\u00f4meur prend une d\u00e9cision lourde de cons\u00e9quences. D'une part, il se trouve incorpor\u00e9 dans un groupe dont les membres ne s'int\u00e9ressent \u00e0 lui que dans une mesure tr\u00e8s relative, d'autre part, il s'affranchit de bon nombre d'entraves \u00e0 sa libert\u00e9. D\u00e8s ce moment en effet, il est plus libre de ses all\u00e9es et venues. Mais la qualit\u00e9 de l'hospitalit\u00e9 qui lui sera accord\u00e9e d\u00e9pendra de celle de l'amiti\u00e9 qui le lie \u00e0 ses h\u00f4tes, qui n'ont d'autre obligation envers lui que leur bon vouloir. Etre h\u00e9berg\u00e9 par un ami \u00ab qui travaille \u00bb signifie pour le ch\u00f4meur p\u00e9n\u00e9trer dans un r\u00e9seau d'une esp\u00e8ce toute diff\u00e9rente de celui de la p\u00e1rentele. Cela suppose une extension des relations et des contacts, d\u00e9finis d'une mani\u00e8re \u00e0 la fois plus libre et plus pragmatique. Le ch\u00f4meur peut d\u00e9sormais rallier une association ethnique ou r\u00e9cr\u00e9ative, une \u00e9glise, ou encore un parti politique. Ce r\u00e9seau de relations est donc particuli\u00e8rement int\u00e9ressant pour le citadin r\u00e9cent en qu\u00eate de travail. Lorsque les tentatives de tous, amis et parents, ont \u00e9chou\u00e9, la situation du ch\u00f4meur devient r\u00e9ellement pr\u00e9caire. Une option s'offre \u00e0 nouveau \u00e0 lui : vivre en inadapt\u00e9 \u00e0 la ville ou retourner au village. Dans sa d\u00e9cision, entrent notamment en ligne de compte la distance qui le s\u00e9pare de son village, ainsi que la force des sentiments qui l'attachent \u00e0 sa terre d'origine, sentiments dont l'intensit\u00e9 varie parfois selon l'origine ethnique. Ceux qui ont choisi de rester en ville perdent souvent, apr\u00e8s plus d'un an d'essais infructueux, tout espoir de trouver, ou de retrouver, un travail r\u00e9gulier. Leur atrtude est renforc\u00e9e en ce domaine par celle des employeurs qui ne font gu\u00e8re confiance \u00e0 des hommes \u00e0 qui un trop long ch\u00f4mage a fait perdre la discipline d'une occupation r\u00e9guli\u00e8re, \u00e0 horaire fixe. Ayant perdu les espoirs qu'il avait plac\u00e9s en ses parents et en ses amis, se sentant consid\u00e9r\u00e9 comme un \u00ab inemployable \u00bb par les employeurs, le ch\u00f4meur commence \u00e0 ressentir les manifestations des barri\u00e8res de classe. Il se trouve rel\u00e9gu\u00e9 dans un nouveau milieu social au sein duquel ses relations se composeront, avant tout, de ch\u00f4meurs comme lui. Ceux d'entre eux qui sont totalement d\u00e9pourvus de qualification constituent un secteur immobile de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 urbaine africaine. Bien que poss\u00e9dant certaines caract\u00e9ristiques communes \u00e0 leur cat\u00e9gorie, ils sont solitaires et d\u00e9pendent enti\u00e8rement, notamment s'ils ont d\u00e9pass\u00e9 la quarantaine ou souffrent d'un handicap physique, de la charit\u00e9 ou de gains illicites. Beaucoup d'entre eux dorment \u00e0 la belle \u00e9toile. On les retrouve dans les m\u00eames endroits, nouveaux chantiers, march\u00e9s, zones de parking, centres commerciaux..., en qu\u00eate d'un engagement m\u00eame partiel ou d'un service \u00e0 rendre moyennant quelque r\u00e9mun\u00e9ration. Il n'est pas rare, lorsque quelques embauches ont eu lieu en un point quelconque, que la police doive intervenir pour disperser la foule de ceux qui restent. Non loin du coeur de Nairobi, une \u00ab communaut\u00e9 de pauvres \u00bb, Mathere Valley, constitue un exemple typique de ce que repr\u00e9sente le rassemblement d'une grande quantit\u00e9 de ces inadapt\u00e9s. C'est un cas typique parce que tous les jeunes qui y vivent, \u00e0 l'exception de quelques distillateurs clandestins, sont sans emploi. A Mathere Valley, l'eau courante est pratiquement inexistante, les pentes qui m\u00e8nent \u00e0 la route principale sont abruptes et, par temps de plure, presque impraticables. On y trouve une population dense et tr\u00e8s h\u00e9t\u00e9rog\u00e8ne, encore que les Kikuyu, les Luo, les Embu et les Maru en constituent environ 65 %. Les femmes et les enfants y ont rejoint les hommes et la vie de famille y est organis\u00e9e. Les trois centres qui forment Mathere Valley sont remarquablement organis\u00e9s et li\u00e9s, socialement autant que politiquement. Le K.A.N.U. (Kenya African National Union) y exerce une action pr\u00e9pond\u00e9rante, sp\u00e9cialement par le truchement d'un de ses parlementaires dont la circonscription comprend la communaut\u00e9. Celui-ci fait des visites r\u00e9guli\u00e8res, s'efforce d'aider les habitants, de leur procurer un emploi et veille au bon fonctionnement et \u00e0 l'am\u00e9lioration de l'organisation sociale. Certains jeunes sont charg\u00e9s de la s\u00e9curit\u00e9 et de l'ordre et lui font rapport lors de ses passages. Ce parlementaire a entrepris d'expliquer aux r\u00e9sidents de Mathere Valley les raisons pour lesquelles ils n'ont pas trouv\u00e9 d'emploi et de leur d\u00e9montrer que leur situation \u00e9conomique ne fait pas d'eux des \u00eatres inf\u00e9rieurs. Il r\u00e8gne entre les membres de la communaut\u00e9 une solidarit\u00e9 extr\u00eamement agissante, m\u00eame si celle-ci rev\u00eat parfois la forme de collaboration \u00e0 certaines activit\u00e9s illicites (fabrication et vente clandestines d'alcool). Elle se manifeste chaque fo: s que l'un des membres se trouve en difficult\u00e9. Les caract\u00e9ristiques de cette communaut\u00e9 ne rel\u00e8vent pourtant pas de l'utopie : la comp\u00e9tition y est extr\u00eamement s\u00e9v\u00e8re toutes les fois qu'un avantage \u00e9conomique ou social peut \u00eatre brigu\u00e9. Mathere Valley est cependant un mod\u00e8le d'organisation pour tous les autres camps qui se sont constitu\u00e9s dans les environs de Nairobi. Conclusion. Ayant pass\u00e9 en revue les probl\u00e8mes auxquels sont affront\u00e9s les emigrants des r\u00e9gions rurales qui tentent de trouver du travail dans les villes, ayant suivi ces ch\u00f4meurs dans leurs relations, d'abord avec leur famille, ensuite avec leurs amis, enfin au sein de communaut\u00e9s o\u00f9 les sans-travail se sont curieusement group\u00e9s pour subsister en s'entraidant, l'auteur arrive \u00e0 la conclusion que le syst\u00e8me social africain n'a pas encore achev\u00e9 sa transition du stade de la solidarit\u00e9 organique (\u00ab Gemeinschaft \u00bb) \u00e0 celui de la solidarit\u00e9 m\u00e9canique (\u00ab Gesellschaft \u00bb). En r\u00e8gle g\u00e9n\u00e9rale, les cons\u00e9quences extr\u00eamement \u00e9tendues de l'\u00e9volution et de la modernisation ont \u00e9t\u00e9 sous-estim\u00e9es, tout particuli\u00e8rement les r\u00e9actions provoqu\u00e9es par ces facteurs au sein de la partie la plus importante des populations, la population rurale. Les administrateurs n'ont que peu de contacts avec les masses et les \u00e9conomistes quittent rarement le domaine des villes. Les anthropologues ne se sont que r\u00e9cemment int\u00e9ress\u00e9s au probl\u00e8me de l'\u00e9volution sociale et peu d'entre eux \u00e9tudient les effets des migrations et de l'urbanisation. La p\u00e1rentele, le clan, la tribu mod\u00e8lent encore les formes de l'organisation sociale africaine. Mais l'importance d'une stratification socio-\u00e9conomique de cette soci\u00e9t\u00e9 africaine en voie de modernisation appara\u00eet dans le fait que, de plus en plus, les Africains pensent et agissent en termes de \u00ab classes \u00bb. Ceci semble avoir \u00e9t\u00e9 encore insuffisamment compris. Il est d'ailleurs significatif que le Pr\u00e9sident Nyerere, de Tanzanie, apr\u00e8s avoir vigoureusement soulign\u00e9 que la formation de classes est un ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne \u00e9tranger aux soci\u00e9t\u00e9s afrcaines, ait propos\u00e9 ensuite un programme destin\u00e9 \u00e0 combattre les clivages de classes qui se manifestent de plus en plus en Tanzanie. La transformation m\u00eame de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 implique un clivage, impos\u00e9 par la diversit\u00e9 des chances, les diff\u00e9rences d'\u00e9ducation et les errements dus aux inexp\u00e9riences en mati\u00e8re de planificaron. L'\u00e9lite restreinte qui g\u00e8re les ressources nationales ne semble gu\u00e8re d\u00e9sireuse d'abandonner sa consid\u00e9rable influence et la stratification croissante de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 africaine \u00e9merge de la r\u00e9volution technologique, de l'expansion de l'\u00e9ducation et de l'accroissement d\u00e9mographique. Les innombrables cons\u00e9quences de la modernisation constituent le grand probl\u00e8me des soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines et les ch\u00f4meurs paraissent une des plus r\u00e9elles manifestations de ces cons\u00e9quences. Leur situation marginale \u00e9tait en effet inconnue dans la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 traditionnelle. Dans la p\u00e9riode de transition que nous connaissons actuellement, les interventions du syst\u00e8me collectif traditionnel, m\u00eame si elles sont critiqu\u00e9es au nom du renouveau de l'\u00e9conomie africaine, constituent, par le genre de s\u00e9curit\u00e9 sociale au niveau de la parent\u00e8le et du clan que ce syst\u00e8me implique, un apport non n\u00e9gligeable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sanjay Krishnan"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287312","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5479a9a2-87d7-300b-a12c-b0689730cc7e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287312"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"836","pageStart":"818","pagination":"pp. 818-836","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"EDWARD SAID, MAHMOOD MAMDANI, V. S. NAIPAUL: RETHINKING POSTCOLONIAL STUDIES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287312","volumeNumber":"58","wordCount":7976,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Blaney","Naeem Inayatullah"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644790","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ee42d08-f1a7-3e72-b618-02ef1949f778"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40644790"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prelude to a Conversation of Cultures in International Society? Todorov and Nandy on the Possibility of Dialogue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40644790","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":12693,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["A. B. Assensoh","Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27761691","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15363155"},{"name":"oclc","value":"302412176"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009212221"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27761691"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackcamera"}],"isPartOf":"Black Camera","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"A Farewell Salute to Ousmane Sembene: Distinguished Filmmaker, Author, and Activist, 1923-2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27761691","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1509,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JOHN LOWE"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476881","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0026637X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48384242"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009250652"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"23b54d98-b6a9-340c-a52a-638f0185530f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26476881"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"missquar"}],"isPartOf":"The Mississippi Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"580","pageStart":"553","pagination":"pp. 553-580","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Mississippi State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Palette of Fire: The Aesthetics of Propaganda in \"Black Boy\" and \"In the Castle of My Skin\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26476881","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":11467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Hames-Garcia"],"datePublished":"2000-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1566310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"102","pagination":"pp. 102-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"How to Tell a Mestizo from an Enchirito\u00ae: Colonialism and National Culture in the Borderlands","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1566310","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":11738,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANITA WATERS"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7ad288a-fcc3-3cc1-b92b-ec38b98ed42e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40793462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Half the Story: The uses of History in Jamaican political Discourse","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40793462","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":6315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James T. Kloppenberg"],"datePublished":"1996-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218723"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35782298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23007"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b822e31-f68a-3190-a147-24a8b20ddd9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2945476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jamericanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of American History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"138","pageStart":"100","pagination":"pp. 100-138","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Pragmatism: An Old Name for Some New Ways of Thinking?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2945476","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":19791,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kate Swanson","Rebecca Maria Torres"],"datePublished":"2016-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861296","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15452476"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54395462"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212985"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bca946dd-44b4-3a63-a538-f12e8d5ceb59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44861296"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jlatamergeo"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Latin American Geography","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"48","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-48","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Geography","Latin American Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Child Migration and Transnationalized Violence in Central and North America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44861296","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":11159,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of unaccompanied migrant children attempting to enter the United States. In 2014, total numbers peaked at 68,000 apprehensions, mostly from Central America and Mexico. Since then, rising immigration enforcement strategies within Mexico have decreased the ability of unaccompanied migrant youth to reach the US border. However, underlying factors driving child migration have not changed. Children continue to flee high levels of violence, particularly from El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala, which are currently among the most violent nations in the world. Yet, violence does not end for youth once they leave the borders of their countries; as youth ride buses, trains, boats and trucks north, they continue to encounter it along every step of the way. Due to increasing militarization and punitive immigration policies in the United States, migrant children contend with further violence when they cross the US\/Mexico border. In this paper, we examine how varied nuanced manifestations of violence shape migrant children's lives and experiences. While youth may be able to escape immediate and corporeal violence, we explain how different forms of violence influence not only their decisions to leave, but also their journeys and encounters with Mexican and US immigration policies. We argue for a more spatially expansive understanding of violence that considers how state policies and practices extend far beyond national borders to negatively affect migrant children's lives. En los \u00faltimos a\u00f1os, ha habido un aumento dram\u00e1tico en el n\u00famero de ni\u00f1os migrantes no acompa\u00f1ados que tratan de entrar en los Estados Unidos. En 2014, el n\u00famero total alcanz\u00f3 un m\u00e1ximo de 68,000 aprehensiones, en su mayor\u00eda de Centroam\u00e9rica y M\u00e9xico. Desde entonces, el aumento de las estrategias de control de inmigraci\u00f3n en Mexico han disminuido la capacidad de los j\u00f3venes migrantes no acompa\u00f1ados de llegar a la frontera con Estados Unidos. Sin embargo, los factores subyacentes que impulsan la migraci\u00f3n infantil no han cambiado. Los ni\u00f1os siguen huyendo de altos niveles de violencia, en particular de El Salvador, Honduras y Guatemala, que actualmente est\u00e1n entre los pa\u00edses m\u00e1s violentos del mundo. Sin embargo, la violencia no termina para los j\u00f3venes una vez que salgan de la frontera de sus pa\u00edses; como los j\u00f3venes toman autobuses, trenes, barcos y camiones al norte, ellos lo siguen encontrando a lo largo de cada paso del camino. Debido al aumento de la militarizaci\u00f3n y las pol\u00edticas punitivas de inmigraci\u00f3n en los Estados Unidos, los ni\u00f1os migrantes luchan contra m\u00e1s violencia cuando cruzan la frontera de Estados Unidos\/M\u00e9xico. En este trabajo, examinamos c\u00f3mo matizados y variadas manifestaciones de violencia forman las vidas y experiencias de los ni\u00f1os migrantes. Mientras que la juventud puede ser capaz de escapar de la violencia inmediata y corporal, explicamos c\u00f3mo las diferentes formas de violencia no s\u00f3lo influyan su decision de salir, sino tambi\u00e9n sus viajes y encuentros con las politicas de inmigraci\u00f3n de M\u00e9xico y EEUU. Argumentamos a favor de un entendimiento m\u00e1s amplio y espacial de la violencia que tiene en cuenta c\u00f3mo las pol\u00edticas y pr\u00e1cticas estatales se extienden mucho m\u00e1s all\u00e1 de las fronteras nacionales para afectar negativamente la vida de los ni\u00f1os migrantes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S.E. ANDERSON"],"datePublished":"1973-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066316","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e16d29b-15f9-39f3-bca2-b666e81992b4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41066316"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"PITFALLS OF BLACK INTELLECTUALS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41066316","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6723,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[165444,165505]],"Locations in B":[[15534,15595]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lucy E. Creevey"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532281","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6c7b983-818a-3be5-b9bc-4ef4afb88751"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/532281"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"318","pagination":"pp. 318-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reviews of Books","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/532281","volumeNumber":"107","wordCount":1598,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["B. K. JHA"],"datePublished":"1978-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854874","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"457c867a-7bb8-3138-beac-f6875abfd2fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41854874"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MARXISM OF THE NEW LEFT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41854874","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":9849,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[222662,222769]],"Locations in B":[[39086,39192]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ranan D. Kuperman"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907201","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17438586"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f72c2ebf-8df0-3583-89d3-dae04ee90747"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24907201"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"forepolianal"}],"isPartOf":"Foreign Policy Analysis","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strategies of Asymmetric Warfare and Their Implementation in the South Lebanese Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24907201","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":10457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Mao Tse-Tung (1967 [1938]) proposed that militant groups could defeat state governments by maintaining an armed conflict in a protracted state of limited levels of violence. However, Mao was very vague regarding how to \"persuade\" the state's government not to escalate the conflict. This paper proposes three alternative strategies that could promote this objective. It will be illustrated with the aid of a longitudinal analysis of violent exchanges between the Israeli Defense Forces and Lebanese militants between 1991 and 1999 that both antagonists applied a modified version of one of these strategies.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steve Ellner"],"datePublished":"2013-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23466002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"73be2f9d-bd8f-377a-a748-fc90c6a2249d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23466002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Latin America's Radical Left in Power: Complexities and Challenges in the Twenty-first Century","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23466002","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":11145,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John Michalczyk"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41686318","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00097004"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ad84fd0e-fa95-3735-88e3-29a08aa20917"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41686318"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cineaste"}],"isPartOf":"Cin\u00e9aste","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"33","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-33","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Cineaste Publishers, Inc","sourceCategory":["Film Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Franco Solinas: THE DIALECTIC OF SCREENWRITING","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41686318","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":2200,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["W. T. Waugh"],"datePublished":"1913-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25518640","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00369241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c9042016-e062-357e-96da-fb228597a4b1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25518640"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scothistrev"}],"isPartOf":"The Scottish Historical Review","issueNumber":"41","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"92","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-92","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1913,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Political science - Government","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"The Lollard Knights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25518640","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":17682,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edna Acosta-Belen","Christine E. Bose"],"datePublished":"1990-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189645","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08912432"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48537302"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227409"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"13cfe0ed-a20b-3cf9-982e-8f01a46793e3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/189645"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"gendersociety"}],"isPartOf":"Gender and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1990,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Structural Subordination to Empowerment: Women and Development in Third World Contexts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/189645","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":9013,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article argues that the condition of women in Third World societies cannot be separated from the colonial experience since the power relationships that were established during the colonial era between Europe and its territories, and between women and men, have not varied significantly and are still recreated through contemporary mechanisms. For example, development projects promoted by Western countries to modernize the Third World have, in the long run, better served their own interests than those of their intended beneficiaries. As a result and contrary to expectations, growth and prosperity still elude the Third World. We also show that during the current international economic crisis, women's unpaid or underpaid labor has become the basis of new development programs and policies and is crucial to the recent phase of capitalist development. We discuss how the structural position and status of women and colonies closely resemble each other and have served as the foundations of the capital accumulation process and the development of industrial nations. The concept of women as a last colony thus becomes a compelling metaphor of liberation and leads us to stress the need for a worldwide process of gender decolonization, entailing the reformulation of power relations between women and men.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112455","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"906a1858-d694-313f-a4f3-4e1399db2fd7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112455"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"117","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Thoughts about Doing Fanonism in the 1990s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112455","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":10601,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Betsy Bowman","Bob Stone"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512873","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512873"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"27","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-27","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The End as Present in the Means in Sartre's \"Morality and History\": Birth and Re-inventions of an Existential Moral Standard","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512873","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12752,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roger Adelson","Natalie Zemon Davis"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24448079","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182370"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fad283fb-2674-3d12-a03c-750b7c35eba3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24448079"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historian"}],"isPartOf":"The Historian","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"422","pageStart":"405","pagination":"pp. 405-422","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Interview with Natalie Zemon Davis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24448079","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":7631,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacques Lezra"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389681","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15225321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47108631"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213449"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41389681"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"discourse"}],"isPartOf":"Discourse","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"75","pageStart":"48","pagination":"pp. 48-75","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Sade on Pontecorvo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41389681","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":12893,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROLA EL HUSSEINI"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896578","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05cf5633-0279-38c7-9429-26791108722c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27896578"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"815","pageStart":"803","pagination":"pp. 803-815","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hezbollah and the Axis of Refusal: Hamas, Iran and Syria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27896578","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":6467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Hezbollah has acquired a dual and contradictory reputation: as a legitimate political actor in Lebanon and as a terrorist organisation in the USA and Israel. This duality can be explained if we understand that Hezbollah is a nationalist entity that defines itself primarily within the Lebanese polity, as well as an anti-imperialist party intent on countering the regional hegemony of Israel and the USA. Forming alliances with Hamas, Iran and Syria, Hezbollah has become part of a 'rejectionist' axis that seeks to oppose perceived imperialism in the Middle East; this stance has become increasingly entrenched in the wake of the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq. Characterisations that focus on Hezbollah as a military opponent confirm the organisation's perceived need for a rejectionist stance. International acceptance of Hezbollah as a legitimate political actor within the Lebanese polity, on the other hand, would help to bring the basis of the rejectionist axis into question.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus"],"datePublished":"2005-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141303","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05ddcd47-dfa9-3d22-9f9f-fff5200b668c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4141303"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"101","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-101","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Representation and Terror in V.Y. Mudimbe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4141303","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":11116,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the field of Postcolonial Studies, no debate today is more consequential or vexed, than that concerning representation. The questions: Who speaks? Of and for whom? How, where, and to what ends? In which languages? Through means of which concepts and categories? On the basis of which problematics and epistemological assumptions? - are all central to contemporary scholarship in the field. Generally speaking, the question of representation has been broached under three main thematics in postcolonial scholarship: first, concerning subalternity and the recovery of popular consciousness; second, concerning the critique of Eurocentrism and colonialist ideology; third (an extension and radicalisation of the second), concerning the deconstruction of the 'Western' ratio and its discourses, and the corresponding production of what the Moroccan writer, Abdelkebir Khatibi, has called 'the thought of difference '. In my paper, I briefly discuss each of these postcolonialist thematics, before moving to a consideration and assessment of the ways in which the question of representation has tended to be situated in the work of V.Y. Mudimbe. Mudimbe has been concerned less with the actuality, the existential for-itselfness, of African material and symbolic practice than with the analysis of the epistemo-political problems surrounding the representation of such practice. I discuss the terms of Mudimbe's approach to the African chose du texte, focusing initially on his anthropological\/philosophical writings and then, more substantially, on his fiction (especially L'Ecart [The Rift] and Le bel immonde [Before the Birth of the Moon]). I conclude by examining his celebrated debate with the anthropologist, Peter Rigby, in which Mudimbe proposes that the violence of representation is irreducible. This proposition strikes me as being unwarranted, and I lay out my reasons for opposing Mudimbe. Ultimately, I find his critique of Rigby unsatisfactory on two accounts. First, it privileges the question of the conditions of possibility of the generation of 'truth-effects' over that of representational adequacy - a move that I regard as politically disenabling. Second, its identification of the 'gap ' of ethnographic (or, more generally, social scientific) representation in terms of a power differential fails to specify the precise form(s) of power involved. Instead, representational power is conceptualised on the model of colonialist power - on the model, that is to say, of terrorism and dictatorship. My own view is that not all forms of objectification are dominative; and that between authority and authoritarianism the question of application must be raised.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nitish R De"],"datePublished":"1969-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40736849","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f4f88c0-3f0d-3f9a-9073-0aa1e8bdd204"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40736849"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115, 117, 119, 121, 123, 125, 127-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Black Power Confrontation in United States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40736849","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":11644,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The current racial conflicts in United States involving such issues as housing and education are based as much on issues of poverty and social class as on racism. The gloomy facts of Negro life and living are not relieved by some improvement in his economic conditions. Nearly a quarter of urban Negro marriages are dissolved, a quarter of Negro births are illegitimate, and almost a quarter of Negro families are headed by women. His personal inadequacy and continued inability to establish himself in a traditionally male-dominated culture has forced the Negro to \"base his self-esteem . . . on a kind of behaviour that tended to support a stereotyped picture . . .\" Discrimination against the Negro has been institutionalised through built-in attitudes, inferior education and brutal police hostility. His metamorphosis from Uncle Tomism to aggressive Black Power confrontation has passed through several phases, ending now in the attacks on white property and white police as the twin manifestations of the power system: \"Whitey talks about [why] black people should not be armed when this country was born in violence. What he really wants is to be violent himself and insist that black people be submissive but if s not going to happen that way, not any more.\" The rise of the white backlash in strength is an obvious and significant consequence of the black power confrontation. There seems to be a distinct swing towards racial conservatism \u2014 and decadence \u2014 among the ranks of white workers and traders. Black militancy on the other hand seems to be moving towards making a community out of the numerous Negroes, active responsible and proud men out of emotional slaves. The programmes of the various black power groups are basically aimed at the economic, political and social resurgence of the Negro, the whys and hows of the future. The Negro's principal ally is the young college kid generation. In a significant way the university is the major action centre for racial desegregation. The most exciting dialogues on race relations are taking place in the university forums.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tommy J. Curry"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26770021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8ecf9bf3-ee0a-36cf-9a61-c5caada4ad15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26770021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"163","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-163","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Rousseau's Theory of Natural Equality to Firmin's Resistance to the Historical Inequality of Races","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26770021","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":12439,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K.W. Christopher"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44479273","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195804"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567931441"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"231f0766-5292-32b6-82f1-ffeb256459b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44479273"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indilite"}],"isPartOf":"Indian Literature","issueNumber":"1 (285)","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"164","pageStart":"150","pagination":"pp. 150-164","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sahitya Akademi","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology"],"title":"Negotiating the Spiritual: Purushottama Choudhari and Early 19 th<\/sup> Century Christian Literature in Telugu","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44479273","volumeNumber":"59","wordCount":6100,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. 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This essay argues that such legislation acted as the focus for travelers to Ireland in the early years of the 19th-century, resulting in a highly developed discourse of colonial and imperial appropriation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadia Louar"],"datePublished":"2018-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023695","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f6ecab6-0cd1-367f-ad12-8bebf7c75052"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/90023695"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"145","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-145","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"\u201cDeux cents mots et un gros marteau.\u201d Virginie Despentes\u2019s Skillful Construction of an Authorial Posture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90023695","volumeNumber":"72","wordCount":8379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay identifies and analyses the specific ways in which this female French writer and film maker has created herself as an author out of a biographical focus on her life as a sex worker and rape victim. Relying on the notion of \u201cposture\u201d which I tie in with art sociology and discourse analysis as developed by Pierre Bourdieu and revised by Alain Viala and J\u00e9r\u00f4me Meizos, I show how Despentes\u2019 authorial posture regulates the transgressive readings of her works.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["KWAME S.N. DAWES"],"datePublished":"1994-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653871","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"624d9c77-88e4-3db1-9ccb-35a1edee86af"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40653871"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"An Act of \"Unruly\" Savagery: Re-Writing Black Rebellion in the Language of the Colonizer. H. G. de Lisser's The White Witch of Rosehall","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40653871","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":5504,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gary Storhoff"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468011","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34a53692-c646-337c-beab-2429cb5f71f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/468011"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Yesterday Comes like Today\": Communitas in Paule Marshall's The Chosen Place, the Timeless People","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/468011","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7052,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judith Schacherreiter"],"datePublished":"2013-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24540613","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00337250"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61311355"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-235041"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1e7214e0-c4b5-327c-92e3-dd4da6609525"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24540613"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rabezeitauslinte"}],"isPartOf":"Rabels Zeitschrift f\u00fcr ausl\u00e4ndisches und internationales Privatrecht \/ The Rabel Journal of Comparative and International Private Law","issueNumber":"2","language":["ger"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"299","pageStart":"272","pagination":"pp. 272-299","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Mohr Siebeck GmbH & Co. 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence, Identity Mobilization and the Reimagining of Biafra","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484644","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":10005,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The events leading to the Nigeria Civil War marked the triumph of force and violence over dialogue and negotiation as a means of conflict resolution. The success of the Nigerian state in imposing a military solution on the preceding political crisis, and then suppressing the ensuing Biafran rebellion, has had a lasting effect on state\u2013society relations. As a result, the state has not refrained from using violence at the slightest provocation against competing and conflicting ethno-religious groups. The tendency of the state to exercise domination through the deployment of violence implies an ongoing crisis of state hegemony rather than a resolution of civil unrest. This article argues that state violence was more important than ethnic divisions in triggering the secessionist attempt of Biafra, and has continued to create rather than resolve ethnic divisions across the country. The emergence in post-Civil War Nigeria of regimes that perpetrated or permitted mass violence against restive social groups remains critical to understanding the contemporary rise of ethno-nationalist movements and waning allegiance to the Nigerian state, particularly among the Igbo. The aim of the article is to underscore the understated salience of state violence in the debates on identity and citizenship in multi-ethnic societies. Les \u00e9v\u00e9nements qui ont conduit \u00e0 la guerre civile au Nig\u00e9ria ont marqu\u00e9 le triomphe de la force et de la violence sur le dialogue et la n\u00e9gociation comme moyen de r\u00e9solution des conflits. Le succ\u00e8s de l'\u00c9tat nig\u00e9rian dans l'imposition d'une solution militaire \u00e0 la pr\u00e9c\u00e9dente crise politique, puis dans la r\u00e9pression de la r\u00e9bellion Biafra, a eu un effet durabl\u00e9 sur les relations entre l'\u00c9tat et la soci\u00e9t\u00e9. En cons\u00e9quence, l'\u00c9tat n'a pas renonc\u00e9 \u00e0 utiliser la violence contre les groupes ethno-religieux concurrents et conflictuels, \u00e0 la moindre provocation. La tendance de l'\u00c9tat \u00e0 exercer la domination par le d\u00e9ploiement de la violence implique une crise continue de l'h\u00e9g\u00e9monie de l'\u00c9tat plut\u00f4t qu'une r\u00e9solution de troubles civils. Cet article soutient que la violence d'Etat \u00e9tait plus importante que les divisions ethniques dans le d\u00e9clenchement de la tentative de s\u00e9cession du Biafra, et a continu\u00e9 \u00e0 cr\u00e9er, plut\u00f4t que de r\u00e9soudre, les divisions ethniques dans tout le pays. L'\u00e9mergence dans le Nigeria de l'apr\u00e8s-guerre civile de r\u00e9gimes qui ont perp\u00e9tr\u00e9 ou autoris\u00e9 la violence de masse contre des groupes sociaux agit\u00e9s demeure un facteur essentiel pour la compr\u00e9hension de la mont\u00e9e contemporaine de mouvements nationalistes ethniques et du d\u00e9clin de l'all\u00e9geance \u00e0 l'\u00c9tat nig\u00e9rian, en particulier chez les Igbo. L'objectif de cet article est de mettre en exergue l'importance sous-estim\u00e9e de la violence d'\u00c9tat dans les d\u00e9bats sur l'identit\u00e9 et la citoyennet\u00e9 dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s multiethniques.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roxanna Curto"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.73.2011.0082","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00844152"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564889930"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235055"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d81ba26d-22f8-3a1c-9925-bad0d272de80"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.73.2011.0082"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearworkmodlang"}],"isPartOf":"The Year's Work in Modern Language Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"82","pagination":"pp. 82-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Modern Humanities Research Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"French Studies: Caribbean Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5699\/yearworkmodlang.73.2011.0082","volumeNumber":"73","wordCount":3152,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ruth Gillman","Ruth Gilman","Scott Wilson"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41668967","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03168565"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30731893-c72e-3132-b653-7a32a6301a31"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41668967"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajsociworkedu"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Social Work Education \/ Revue canadienne d'\u00e9ducation en service social","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"113","pageStart":"107","pagination":"pp. 107-113","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Canadian Association for Social Work Education (CASWE)","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"AN APPROACH TO USE OF RAPE CONTENT IN SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41668967","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":2568,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Le mouvement des femmes a port\u00e9 \u00e0 l'attention publique un certain nombre de probl\u00e8mes sociaux que le service social, est en train d'aborder. La pr\u00e9sente \u00e9tude est centr\u00e9e sur l'un d'entre eux \u2014 le viol \u2014 dans le contexte des programmes deformation en service social. Le viol, en tant que probl\u00e8me social, est per\u00e7u en ce qui a trait a) \u00e0 son utilit\u00e9 dans l'int\u00e9gration de la th\u00e9orie et de la pratique et b) \u00e0 ses possibilit\u00e9s en tant que moyen d'int\u00e9gration du programme d'\u00e9tude. L'auteur indique les fa\u00e7ons et les difficult\u00e9s qu'il y a de traiter le sujet du viol dans un cours.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Achille Mbembe"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685692","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10418385"},{"name":"oclc","value":"145560513"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-214429"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20685692"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"quiparle"}],"isPartOf":"Qui Parle","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":49.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"ON THE POSTCOLONY: A BRIEF RESPONSE TO CRITICS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20685692","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":19239,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANJULI I. GUNARATNE","JILL M. JARVIS"],"datePublished":"2016-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44015826","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00308129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709947"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227204"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2ee69519-12bf-321d-801e-1302c22d0df4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44015826"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pmla"}],"isPartOf":"PMLA","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"124","pageStart":"116","pagination":"pp. 116-124","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Introduction: Inheriting Assia Djebar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44015826","volumeNumber":"131","wordCount":5632,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Horace Campbell"],"datePublished":"1984-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3991799","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"078298a0-8e37-37de-82dd-d7ac0ff3bab5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3991799"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"867","pageStart":"839","pagination":"pp. 839-867","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"War, Reconstruction and Dependence in Mozambique","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3991799","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":12457,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ellen Messer"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155847","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00846570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39064074"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn98-23295"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86762764-ad9f-3f40-9148-f8e232c876ee"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2155847"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annurevianth"}],"isPartOf":"Annual Review of Anthropology","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Annual Reviews","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anthropology and Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2155847","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":14971,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jacqueline Aquino Siapno"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752661","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0967828X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcb5a4c4-8dde-324f-8648-88bb0dcc1108"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23752661"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"souteastasiarese"}],"isPartOf":"South East Asia Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"455","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-455","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"IP Publishing Ltd","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"'A society with music is a society with hope': musicians as survivor-visionaries in post-war Timor Leste","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23752661","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":6792,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper explores the concept of 'speaking beyond trauma' in societies undergoing post-war reconstruction and recovery after decades of colonization and violence. It examines inequalities in the production of knowledge and the re-colonization of knowledge economies dominated by well funded 'experts'. It draws contrasts with the precarious lives of underfunded local knowledge producers, especially musicians and artists, whose compositions transcend methodological nationalisms. The focus of this paper is on the tactile aspect of practising and playing music: perceived by, connected with, appealing to the sense of touch, producing the effect of solidity. The paper examines how music can weave, repair, connect, disconnect and reconnect people and affective communities of belonging in a society shattered by colonization, war and ongoing conflicts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henning Melber"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020397"},{"name":"oclc","value":"316257973"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009235670"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4dedeaf-f751-3806-a235-5bf2128b3b4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23350460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africaspec"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Spectrum","issueNumber":"2\/3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"203","pageStart":"201","pagination":"pp. 201-203","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Institute of African Affairs at GIGA, Hamburg\/Germany","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23350460","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":1121,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Douglas M. Johnston"],"datePublished":"1975-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40201304","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207020"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60621718"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235751"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"543fe832-9621-3427-838b-fe76f891b20d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40201304"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"internationalj"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Civil law"],"title":"The New Equity in the Law of the Sea","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40201304","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8062,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurence E. Prescott"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4499351","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c9bab00-150d-3fbd-ac74-e09379da4bce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4499351"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng","spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Journeying through Jim Crow: Spanish American Travelers in the United States during the Age of Segregation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4499351","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":12236,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[73674,73714]],"abstract":"Postcolonial criticism and theory have been instrumental not only in showing how Western texts have constructed non-Western peoples and cultures, but also in analyzing discourse on the racialized Other in travel writings by members of formerly colonized societies and cultures who may reinscribe-consciously or unconsciously-the structural values of cultural domination. As privileged members of comparable societies that had assimilated and been assimilated into dominant ideologies of European cultural and biological superiority, Spanish American visitors to the United States during the segregation era uniquely exemplify such discourse and thus merit scholarly attention. Examining-within their respective cultural and historical contexts-selected texts by six Spanish American writers who visited or lived in the United States during the period 1880-1947, this paper analyzes their observations of, experiences with, and reactions to the realities of racial separation and the attendant violence against African Americans in order to determine the extent to which the writers resisted or participated in the \"othering\" process that represented African Americans as different and inferior. \/\/\/ La teor\u00eda y cr\u00edtica postcoloniales han jugado un papel decisivo no s\u00f3lo en mostrar c\u00f3mo los textos de Occidente han construido culturas y pueblos no occidentales, sino tambi\u00e9n en analizar el discurso sobre el Otro racializado en obras de viaje escritas por miembros de sociedades y culturas anteriormente colonizadas, quienes pueden re-inscribir -deliberadamente o no- los valores estructurales de la dominaci\u00f3n colonial. Como miembros privilegiados de sociedades comparables que hab\u00edan asimilado y, al mismo tiempo, hab\u00edan sido asimiladas por las ideolog\u00edas dominantes sobre la superioridad biol\u00f3gica y cultural europea, los viajeros hispanoamericanos que visitaron Estados Unidos durante la era de la segregaci\u00f3n racial ilustran de manera excepcional tal discurso y merecen atenci\u00f3n acad\u00e9mica. A partir del estudio de textos escritos por varios viajeros de los siglos diecinueve y veinte, este trabajo analiza sus observaciones, experiencias y reacciones al verse confrontados con las realidades de la separaci\u00f3n racial y la violencia que \u00e9sta conllevaba contra los afroamericanos a fin de determinar hasta qu\u00e9 punto los escritores se resistieron a participar -o por el contrario, colaboraron- en el proceso de construcci\u00f3n del grupo afroamericano como un Otro diferente e inferior.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeremy Jennings"],"datePublished":"1987-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26213299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0143781X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0edb30cd-b980-3fec-83fc-10f4e0e9b0ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26213299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histpolithou"}],"isPartOf":"History of Political Thought","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"325","pagination":"pp. 325-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Imprint Academic Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"GEORGES SOREL AND COLONIALISM: THE CASE OF EGYPT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26213299","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":4054,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Harney"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012704","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82d2d1b2-3eff-3c3e-884b-fe4230125242"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23012704"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"751","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-751","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Postcolonial Agitations: Avant-Gardism in Dakar and London","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23012704","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":9164,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Narugopal Mukherjee"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26747382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"18993028"},{"name":"oclc","value":"958652799"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"94497659-f1f1-3f11-83ae-b8beba9e595f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26747382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"yearconrstud"}],"isPartOf":"Yearbook of Conrad Studies (Poland)","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"172","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-172","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Jagiellonian University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"JOSEPH CONRAD AND E. M. FORSTER IN SEARCH OF A TRANSCULTURAL SPACE","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26747382","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":7663,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u201cOnly connect,\u201d this is the philosophy E. M. Forster popularizes in Howard\u2019s End and it becomes the central idea in his subsequent writings. Both Joseph Conrad and E. M. Forster speak of crossing the boundaries of culture and reaching out to the \u2018Other,\u2019 thereby turning their fictions into grand narratives of transculturalism. Conrad, in his novella, Heart of Darkness, and E. M. Forster, in his novel A Passage to India, feel an urgency to bridge up the gap between European imperialists and the natives, between the colonizer and the colonized, the exploiter and the exploited, whites and blacks, between \u2018us\u2019 and \u2018them,\u2019 thus advocating obliteration of all binary oppositions. Achebe might have criticized Conrad for his \u2018racist\u2019 bias but throughout his novel the focus is on tansculturalism, going across boundaries. Kurtz failed because he could not \u2018connect\u2019 properly. Forster speaks of the same in A Passage to India on a larger scale but in a more explicit manner. There are several attempts to \u2018connect\u2019 at personal, social, cultural, political, and even spiritual levels in the book. In the course of the novel Forster is in search of a \u2018lasting home\u2019 (\u201cThe Hill of Devi\u201d) under an open sky where people can come together on equal terms putting aside their racial and religious identities. Both Conrad and Forster are, thus, to be examined not just from a post-colonial perspective but from a broader philosophical one, where all lines of demarcation become dissolved and human entity is upheld. In this respect, both writers cross temporal and spatial boundaries and become universal.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carol Summers"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790288","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224529"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392476"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004658"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3790288"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocialhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"770","pageStart":"741","pagination":"pp. 741-770","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Radical Rudeness: Ugandan Social Critiques in the 1940s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3790288","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15726,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article asks how the people of colonial Uganda, especially the kingdom of Buganda, understood themselves in the 1940s not just as imperial subjects, but as citizens capable of mobilizing for change. To understand activism and agency in such a context, I explore how power in the protectorate was encoded in manners, politeness, and conventional rituals of sociability--built from complementary Ganda and British expectations--that could be disrupted by activists using tactics of rudeness. Activists lacked a clear issue-based politics, or the resources to engage in active state-building. Instead, they performed a rude, publicly celebrated strategy of insults, scandal mongering, disruption, and disorderliness that broke conventions of colonial friendship, partnership, and mutual benefit. They sought to delineate and make public the real clashes of interest both among Baganda, and between Baganda and Britons, as a way of opening up to public scrutiny the covert practices of negotiation that had produced land deals, cotton policy, bureaucratic appointments, and power within the kingdom and protectorate. By juxtaposing cultural analysis and political history, and using concepts, such as rudeness or manners, that are rooted in local practices, we can gain insights into big historical concepts such as popular activism and nationalist mobilization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PAGET HENRY"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25670508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0891625X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"30617c3c-9fbf-3438-a31c-c4ce75b51957"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25670508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jspecphil"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Speculative Philosophy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"148","pageStart":"129","pagination":"pp. 129-148","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Between Hume and Cugoano: Race, Ethnicity and Philosophical Entrapment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25670508","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":9799,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[61090,61135]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conerly Casey"],"datePublished":"1998-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24506255","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e6bb78b9-a430-30ec-b70c-77ba887a5489"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24506255"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Suffering and the Identification of Enemies in Northern Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24506255","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":11191,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[67151,67191]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elizabeth Cook-Lynn"],"datePublished":"2009-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40587769","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07496427"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45383197"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-212182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b3e31de-7604-3c22-8ff9-25ec65323c46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40587769"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"wicazosareview"}],"isPartOf":"Wicazo Sa Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"118","pagination":"pp. 118-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","American Indian Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Applied philosophy"],"title":"VIOLENCE AND THE ETHICS OF READING: THE 'BODY' AS SITE OF VIOLENCE AND RESISTANCE IN ALEX LANGUMA'S \"IN FOG OF THE SEASON'S END\" AND SONY LABOU TANSP'S \"LA VIE ET DEMIE\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45194938","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":8022,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[182713,182801],[205023,205097]],"Locations in B":[[30855,30945],[31168,31242]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Evan Stark","Anne Flitcraft","William Frazier"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45132090","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207314"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2133025-cd0d-3c72-a142-3722ef81c2f2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45132090"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhealserv"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Health Services","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"493","pageStart":"461","pagination":"pp. 461-493","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"MEDICINE AND PATRIARCHAL VIOLENCE: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF A \"PRIVATE\" EVENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45132090","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":18278,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Our objectives are to describe the pattern of abuse associated with battering and to evaluate the contribution of the medical system and of broader social forces to its emergence. A pilot study of 481 women who used the emergency service of a large metropolitan hospital in the U.S. shows that battering includes a history of self-abuse and psychosocial problems, as well as repeated and escalating physical injury. In addition, although the number of battered women using the service is 10 times higher than medical personnel identify, the pattern of abuse that constitutes battering emerges only after its initial effects are presented and in conjunction with specific medical interventions and referrals. Examination of intervention and referral patterns suggests a staging process by which battering is socially constructed. At first, the physical trauma associated with abuse is medicated symptomatically. But the patient's persistence, the failure of the cure, and the incongruity between her problems and available medical explanations lead the provider to label the abused woman in ways that suggest she is personally responsible for her victimization. Although secondary problems such as depression, drug abuse, suicide attempts, or alcoholism derive as much from the intervention strategy adopted as from physical assault or psychopathology, they are treated as the primary problems at psychiatric and social service referral points where family maintenance is often the therapeutic goal. One consequence of this referral strategy is the stabilization of \"violent families\" in ways that virtually insure women will be abused in systematic and arbitrary ways. The use of patriarchal logic by medical providers ostensibly responding to physical trauma has less to do with individual \"sexism\" than with the political and economic constraints under which medicine operates as part of an \"extended patriarchy.\" Medicine's role in battering suggests that the services function to reconstitute the \"private\" world of patriarchal authority, with violence if necessary, against demands to socialize the labors of love.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lewis R. Gordon"],"datePublished":"1999-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40018233","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03849694"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41979635"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221988"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"85a808ea-21cf-39ee-a34d-30894d213ecd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40018233"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreliethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religious Ethics","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"331","pagination":"pp. 331-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Journal of Religious Ethics, Inc","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Pan-Africanism and African-American Liberation in a Postmodern World: A Review Essay","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40018233","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":10329,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This review essay explores Josiah Young's project of developing a liberatory Pan-Africanism that is attuned to cultural diversity and Victor Anderson's advocacy of postmodern cultural criticism in African-American religious thought. After situating African-American religious thought as a branch of Africana thought, the author examines these two religious thinkers' work as an effort to forge a position on African-American religious thought--including its relation to theology--in an age where even theory is treated as a god that is about to die. At the conclusion, secularism emerges as a religious project that normatively undergirds the methodological dimensions of these works..","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louise Rolingher"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4107269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d396d3f0-60d3-31cd-974f-14bb1fb09d88"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4107269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"88","pagination":"pp. 88-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A Metaphor for Freedom: Olaudah Equiano and Slavery in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4107269","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":14048,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"En 1789, Olaudah Equiano, ancien esclave, grand voyageur, d\u00e9fenseur des \"Black Poor of London\" et de l'abolition du commerce transatlantique des esclaves, a publi\u00e9 son autobiographie. Les critiques litt\u00e9raires et culturels se sont servis de cette autobiographie dans leurs discussions sur l'identit\u00e9, comme l'ont fait d'ailleurs aussi les historiens du commerce atlantique des esclaves et de l'esclavage dans les Am\u00e9riques, int\u00e9ress\u00e9s par ses descriptions de la vie en esclavage dans cette partie du monde. L'histoire d'Equiano comprend \u00e9galement une br\u00e8ve description de sa vie en Afrique avant l'esclavage, que seuls quelques historiens de l'esclavage africain ont tent\u00e9 d'utiliser pour \u00e9lucider la nature de l'esclavage dans les soci\u00e9t\u00e9s africaines. G\u00e9n\u00e9ralement, la section sur l'Afrique et le reste du livre ont \u00e9t\u00e9 jusqu'ici consid\u00e9r\u00e9s s\u00e9par\u00e9ment. Cet article offre une nouvelle lecture s'inspirant des travaux des critiques litt\u00e9raires et culturels et du texte int\u00e9gral de l'oeuvre d'Equiano pour affirmer qu'il peut r\u00e9ellement nous en apprendre beaucoup sur la nature de l'esclavage et de la libert\u00e9 dans l'Afrique pr\u00e9-coloniale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Joseph G. Healey"],"datePublished":"1998-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581565","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224200"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50924590"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237368"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a92531fa-89cd-3cf2-a104-3b95fbac9dbb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1581565"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligionafrica"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Religion in Africa","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"506","pageStart":"501","pagination":"pp. 501-506","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Religion","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1581565","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2283,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Thomas Meagher"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48586974","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60618954"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005212502"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"047305ae-29ae-3d2e-b1f2-0c388a178c9a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48586974"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - 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Art history"],"title":"Pan-Africanism, Transnationalism, and Cosmopolitanism in Langston Hughes\u2019s Involvement in the First World Festival of Black Arts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/90017451","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":8272,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Vernay"],"datePublished":"2012-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41958021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08935580"},{"name":"oclc","value":"61313774"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013-273946"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41958021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"antipodes"}],"isPartOf":"Antipodes","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Big Father Is Watching You: A Postcolonial Reading of Peter Kocan's Total Institution Novellas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41958021","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":5698,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[36097,36174]],"Locations in B":[[28372,28452]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oyekan Owomoyela"],"datePublished":"1991-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3819822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Socialist Realism or African Realism? A Choice of Ancestors","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3819822","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":9353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Jackson","Mr. Stone"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068709","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ef56068-1360-3cb8-bd37-9869a920e7d8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068709"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"38","pagination":"pp. 38-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"The Outspoken Mr. Stone\": A Conversation With Chuck Stone","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068709","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shraga Elam"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2003.33.1.105","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0377919X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535356"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eeab1027-5b60-3aa1-806d-164bdb6e6ccc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/jps.2003.33.1.105"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpalestud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Palestine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"105","pagination":"pp. 105-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Middle East Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Brenner: Fifty-One Documents: Zionist Collaboration with the Nazis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/jps.2003.33.1.105","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":2285,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daudi Ajani ya Azibo"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25608675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Psychological Africanity (Racial Identity) and Its Influence on Support for Reparations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25608675","volumeNumber":"77","wordCount":6842,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Undergraduates at a historically Black university completed the 1997 N'COBRA Reparations Survey. N'COBRA stands for the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America. Five domains of reparations are covered: education, economic development, personal reparations (i.e., payments to individuals), political prisoners, and African-U.S. prisoners generally. Williams' Black Personality Questionnaire (BPQ), a multidimensional measure of psychological Africanity\/racial identity, was also completed. Statistically significant high levels of endorsement were found for each reparations domain. Reparations for prisoners, in general, were endorsed the least whereas reparations for education were endorsed the most. High BPQ scoring was associated with support for reparations and low scoring was associated with nonsupport. Pedagogical implications were pointed out.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carl D. Parris"],"datePublished":"1981-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861949","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dbbf7e0c-b678-3edd-821f-cf2a5768b724"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27861949"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"42","pagination":"pp. 42-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO\u2014SEPTEMBER TO DECEMBER 1973","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27861949","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8262,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Carole Boyce Davies"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.13.1.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15366936"},{"name":"oclc","value":"53873139"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-202596"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4e74f8b-b738-3714-9562-357d095cc4db"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/meridians.13.1.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"meridians"}],"isPartOf":"Meridians","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"25","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-25","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Gender\/Class Intersections and African Women's Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/meridians.13.1.1","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":9622,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract African women's rights, in its early expressions, was linked to the critique of particular economic\/class systems which disempowered the majority of women in contemporary Africa. However, the discourse was subsequently dominated by a move towards feminist politics as cultural politics. The way gender and class intersect in an African context continues to be an ongoing critical lever of analysis, despite some recent turns in the study of African gender systems that have evaded class as a critical variable.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u202e\u0631\u0636\u0648\u0649 \u0639\u0627\u0634\u0648\u0631\u202c","Radwa Ashour"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047468","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4dac3588-cc19-3844-a017-e393a552258f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4047468"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"25","language":["ara"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\u0627\u0644\u0635\u0648\u062a: \u0641\u0631\u0627\u0646\u0632 \u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646\u060c \u0625\u0642\u0628\u0627\u0644 \u0623\u062d\u0645\u062f\u060c \u0625\u062f\u0648\u0627\u0631\u062f \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f \/ The Voice: Frantz Fanon, Eqbal Ahmad, and Edward Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047468","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2743,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the relation between Frantz Fanon, Eqbal Ahmad, and Edward Said, and their common intellectual project. 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\u0641\u064a \u0643\u062a\u0627\ufe91\ufe94 \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f\u060c \u0628\u0644 \u062a\u062a\u0648\u0642\u0641 \u0639\u0646\u062f \u0630\u0644\u0643 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0645\u0627\u0633 \u0628\u064a\u0646 \u062d\u064a\u0627\u0629 \u0641\u0631\u0627\u0646\u0632 \u0641\u0627\u0646\u0648\u0646 \u0648\u0625\u0642\u0628\u0627\u0644 \u0623\u062d\u0645\u062f \u0648\u0625\u062f\u0648\u0627\u0631\u062f \u0633\u0639\u064a\u062f\u060c \u062b\u0644\u0627\u062b\u0629 \u0631\u062c\u0627\u0644 \u0645\u062d\u0645\u0651\u0644\u0648\u0646 \u0628\u0648\u0637\u0623\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0631\u0628\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0627\u062e\u062a\u0627\u0631\u0648\u0627 \u0623\u0646 \u064a\u0644\u062a\u0642\u064a \u0648\u0639\u064a\u0647\u0645 \u0628\u062a\u062c\u0627\u0631\u0628 \u0623\u0648\u0637\u0627\u0646\u0647\u0645 \u0628\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0643\u062a\u0633\u0628\u0648\u0647 \u0645\u0646 \u0645\u0639\u0627\u0631\u0641 \u0648\u062e\u0628\u0631\u0627\u062a \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0648\u0627\u0635\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u0648\u0644\u0648\u0646\u064a\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0644\u062a\u0635\u0628\u0651 \u0641\u064a \u062a\u0643\u0648\u064a\u0646 \u0645\u0634\u0631\u0648\u0639 \u0645\u0644\u0647\u0645 \u0644\u0644\u0645\u062b\u0642\u0641\u0660\u202c","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eyal Weizman"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765087","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15474690"},{"name":"oclc","value":"608244641"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ba3aeae-1a84-3d8a-9d58-2e02cf28d92d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41765087"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"log"}],"isPartOf":"Log","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"77","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-77","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Anyone Corporation","sourceCategory":["Architecture & Architectural History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lethal Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41765087","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":11356,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RICHARD C. KELLER"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44452161","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00075140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"33891126"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn 95006665"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45fbb4eb-d689-3b3b-8ca4-0f6827d15a2c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44452161"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullhistmedi"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the History of Medicine","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"841","pageStart":"823","pagination":"pp. 823-841","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Science & Technology Studies","History of Science & Technology","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Clinician and Revolutionary: Frantz Fanon, Biography, and the History of Colonial Medicine","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44452161","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":8078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Although scholars have exhibited close interest in the life and work of Frantz Fanon, few have emphasized his work as a psychiatrist. This essay surveys recent books and films that have placed Fanon's clinical experience at the center of his life's work. It concludes that historians of colonial medicine have much to gain from these works and their reexaminations of a controversial figure.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwaku Larbi Korang"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821362","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821362"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"52","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-52","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Man for All Seasons and Climes? Reading Edward Said from and for Our African Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821362","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":16018,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[492343,492430]],"Locations in B":[[83784,83872]],"abstract":"Is it possible-and if so desirable-to read and appropriate Edward Said and his work as African and Africanist? This essay answers \"why not?\" But it does so against a current of Africanist and Third Worldist critique that contends that the Arabness\/Third Worldness Said claims as his political place is severely compromised in his Euro-American identification in consciousness and intellectual expression. In this connection, grave ideological and political reservations have been expressed about the Westerncentric leanings of Said's scholarship-and hence the purity, authenticity, and radicalness of the anti-Occidentalist and anti-imperialist politics he proffers therein. This essay argues, however, that, as an intellectual, it is Said's ambiguous and ineluctable (post)colonial fate to be cognitively and subjectively formed in a Euro-American cultural forge. If this impurity and hybridity of formation is true of Said, the modern Arab intellectual, it is true also of the modern African intellectual. Arab and African, then, are affiliated in sharing a postcolonial condition of being at once \"cursed\" and \"blessed\" with a double vision-and in sharing also, as the essay comparatively demonstrates, the creative potentials of being so circumstanced. It has been Said's sustained ethico-political vision and mission, the essay concludes, to cultivate a planetary humanism out of his double disposition. And in working out this visionary humanism we find Said recurrently acknowledging a Pan-Africanist indebtedness.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CATHERINE S. WOODWARD"],"datePublished":"2011-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3247ca7b-96dd-387b-a9db-7ab7a1a0305a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"805","pageStart":"779","pagination":"pp. 779-805","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Discourse and Experience of the Arabian Mission's Medical Missionaries: Part I 1920\u201439","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054263","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":15012,"numMatches":3,"Locations in A":[[122575,122680],[122900,122979],[123121,123211]],"Locations in B":[[62086,62191],[62243,62322],[62328,62418]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Bayart","Stephen Ellis"],"datePublished":"2000-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/723809","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/723809"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"395","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":51.0,"pageEnd":"267","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-267","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Africa in the World: A History of Extraversion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/723809","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":25626,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Martha Kaplan","John D. Kelly"],"datePublished":"1994-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646525","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f376644c-57b2-3679-91cb-e769f7838090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/646525"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"151","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-151","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Resistance: Dialogics of \"Disaffection\" in Colonial Fiji","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/646525","volumeNumber":"21","wordCount":20348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In a colonial society of indigenous Fijian Pacific islanders, colonizing British, and indentured South Asian \"coolies,\" the terms \"loyalty\" and \"disaffection\" were a crucial locus of debate. This article examines important moments of dialogue in Fiji's colonial history, not to reveal the unified logic of an enduring British hegemony, nor to find the agency of the colonized in \"resistance,\" but to discover the relations of domination actually made and contested. Contests for power in postcolonial Fiji continue a dialogue about chiefship and custom, labor and profit, citizenship, and, above all, loyalty and disaffection. [colonialism, dialogics, Fiji Islands, hegemony, resistance, Overseas Indians]","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ikechukwu Okafor-Newsum"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820547","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820547"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"219","pagination":"pp. 219-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"African in the African-American Imagination: Perspectives from the Motherland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820547","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":6008,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Conn Malachi Hallinan"],"datePublished":"1977-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766019","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00947571"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb84e3d2-9e25-3dc6-8c8d-6496f7a3d16b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29766019"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crimsocijust"}],"isPartOf":"Crime and Social Justice","issueNumber":"8","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Sociology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE SUBJUGATION AND DIVISION OF IRELAND: TESTING GROUND FOR COLONIAL POLICY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29766019","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":3552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmad Sadri"],"datePublished":"1991-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007003","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08914486"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a1fa1c2c-6cb5-3058-af96-b41c5951fa8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20007003"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejpolicultsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["International Relations","Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphilosophy","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"What Rushdie Wrote and Wrought","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20007003","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":6607,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugene Kraft"],"datePublished":"1989-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054026","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02788969"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50239420"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-236527"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"263f5f69-d5c6-3a48-ac99-29317138f171"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23054026"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrohisprevi"}],"isPartOf":"Afro-Hispanic Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"William Luis","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23054026","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":1096,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Henry C. Kenski","Margaret C. Kenski"],"datePublished":"1976-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e5365758-aff4-33d5-981c-5c8858222c92"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"110","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-110","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Teaching African Politics at American Colleges and Universities: A Survey","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523567","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":4383,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Victor Bascara"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267743","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111589"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46770730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001211164"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2e36105c-edd8-335a-99ba-7c643582070a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23267743"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticism"}],"isPartOf":"Criticism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"327","pageStart":"323","pagination":"pp. 323-327","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Wayne State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"IN THE MIDST OF AND AT THE EDGES OF THIS MAELSTROM\": EXPERIENCE AND ARCHIVES AFTER THE FALLING AWAY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23267743","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":1900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sean P. Murphy"],"datePublished":"2000-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.34.3.538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00394238"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637260"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2014203188"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c961f782-371e-3c99-8ef6-b186d7b38471"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/style.34.3.538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"style"}],"isPartOf":"Style","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"542","pageStart":"538","pagination":"pp. 538-542","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/style.34.3.538","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":2023,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ebenezer Obadare"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484543","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89fba852-dec7-3bef-96a6-4d0046da7242"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484543"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"199","pagination":"pp. 199-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Democratic Transition and Political Violence in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484543","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6667,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Des temps coloniaux \u00e0 nos jours, l'activit\u00e9 politique a toujours \u00e9t\u00e9 accompagn\u00e9e d'un certain niveau de violence au Nigeria. Les deux tentatives d'instauration de la d\u00e9mocratie civile durant la premi\u00e8re et seconde r\u00e9publiques se sont sold\u00e9es par un \u00e9chec en raison de l'anarchie sociale. Une fois de plus, le pays est en plein \u00e0 une convulsion sociale, en t\u00e9moigne une avalanche d'attentats \u00e0 la bombe et d'assassinats dans tout le pays. Le pr\u00e9sent article soutient que la violence politique actuelle au Nigeria est le r\u00e9sultat du processus de transition politique rat\u00e9, et en l'occurrence, l'interruption brutale du processus de transition qui \u00e9tait suppos\u00e9 introduire la Troisi\u00e8me R\u00e9publique. Par ailleurs, l'article affirme que la violence, dans sa nature, est totalement diff\u00e9rente de la violence politique que connaissait le Nigeria avant, constituant ainsi une g\u00e9n\u00e9ration nouvelle du ph\u00e9nom\u00e8ne. La conclusion qu'il est possible de tirer provisoirement est que la violence politique peut avoir un impact n\u00e9gatif sur le demier programme de transition du Nigeria, \u00e9tant donn\u00e9 surtout le penchant bien connu des militaires \u00e0 user du pr\u00e9texte d'instabilit\u00e9 pour perp\u00e9tuer leur r\u00e8gne.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rita Ricketts","Nelson Mandela's","Ndaba Mandela"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45235490","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01100262"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b08dc77-d314-3076-9acb-872fe3752b5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45235490"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newzealinterevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Zealand International Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"New Zealand Institute of International Affairs","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Africa is rising","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45235490","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":3467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Speaking in the European Parliament, Nelson Mandela's grandson Ndaba captivated his audience of politicians, diplomats, journalists and lobbyists. If his manner was mild, his message was anything but. He had not come with a begging bowl, but with an open invitation to likeminded groups to work together with the 'Africa Rising Foundation' Ndaba, with Kweku Mandela, started creating in late 2009. The foundation was set up to create a new legacy and understanding of Africa as a continent, showcasing its tremendous potential and unprecedented growth. It attracted a group of young and progressive Africans from different backgrounds with a vision of establishing a platform that will enable every African living in and outside the African continent to identify with what it means to be an African, focusing on changing the perception of global youth on Africa and working together to help highlight and identify areas for social and economic development.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David M. Higgins"],"datePublished":"2013-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.2.0228","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00917729"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637576"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-234450"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c70e7ac-feb9-388b-9ef6-008a02f7c92b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.2.0228"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sciefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Science Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"SF-TH Inc","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Psychic Decolonization in 1960s Science Fiction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5621\/sciefictstud.40.2.0228","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":9338,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article surveys three iconic 1960s texts in order to show how popular authors appropriate Frantz Fanon's notion of \u201cpsychic decolonization\u201d for the advantage of privileged male subjects. Robert A. Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land (1961), Frank Herbert's Dune (1968), and Arthur C. Clarke's novelization of 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) each offer a superficial critique of imperial expansion and colonial occupation; despite this, however, all three portray inward psychic voyages in imperial terms, and each text replaces or augments the conquest of outer space with a central focus on the conquest of inner space. Inner space explorations offer a way of freeing the racially unmarked male subject from the repressive internal colonization of the mind; in this sense, Fanon's notion of psychic decolonization is appropriated in the service of the Western privilege it opposes in its intended context.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edmund V. Sullivan"],"datePublished":"1977-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764755","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0018716X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8cbe72cd-ca7d-34a3-adc2-e03340600f63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26764755"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"humandevelopment"}],"isPartOf":"Human Development","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"376","pageStart":"352","pagination":"pp. 352-376","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"S. Karger AG","sourceCategory":["Science & Mathematics","Biological Sciences","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A Study of Kohlberg's Structural Theory of Moral Development: a Critique of Liberal Social Science Ideology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26764755","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":12471,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article attempts a critical analysis of Kohlberg's stage theory of moral development in the context of an ideology critique. From this point of view, Kohlberg's stage theory is characterized as a species of 'liberal ideology'. The analysis of his postconventional stages relies on Rawls' criticism of the conception of a 'just community'. The critique of Rawls' is reflecting upon Kohlberg's theory since it draws heavily from this 'liberal' conception of justice. A critical analysis of Piaget's structuralism is briefly noted relating it to Kohlberg's developmental structuralism. The separations of thought from action, is from ought, are analyzed as weaknesses stemming from this structural point of view.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Olakunle George"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"362","pageStart":"344","pagination":"pp. 344-362","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Narrative of Conversion in Chinua Achebe's \"Arrow of God\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247508","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8501,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Youssef Yacoubi","\ufef3\ufeee\ufeb3\ufed2 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufef4\ufecc\ufed8\ufeee\ufe91\ufef2"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047457","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29d0bffe-a2e7-33a2-b1f7-55cf28e2879d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4047457"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"25","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"193","pagination":"pp. 193-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Edward Said, Eqbal Ahmad, and Salman Rushdie: Resisting the Ambivalence of Postcolonial Theory \/ \ufe87\ufea9\ufeed\ufe8d\ufead\ufea9 \ufeb3\ufecc\ufef4\ufeaa \ufeed\ufe87\ufed7\ufe92\ufe8e\ufedd \ufe83\ufea3\ufee4\ufeaa \ufeed\ufeb3\ufee0\ufee4\ufe8e\ufee5 \ufead\ufeb7\ufeaa\ufef1: \ufee3\ufed8\ufe8e\ufeed\ufee3\ufe94 \ufe8d\ufedf\ufe98\ufe92\ufe8e\ufeb1 \ufee7\ufec8\ufeae\ufef3\ufe94 \ufee3\ufe8e \ufe91\ufecc\ufeaa \ufe8d\ufedf\ufedc\ufeee\ufedf\ufeee\ufee7\ufef4\ufe8e\ufedf\ufef4\ufe94","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4047457","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9804,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Edward Said's personal, intellectual, and political affinities with Eqbal Ahmad and Salman Rushdie. Furthermore, it contrasts their common perspective with views held by two other notable South Asian intellectuals, V. S. Naipaul and Homi Bhabha. The author proposes that the noteworthy arguments of anti-imperialist theory, which translates most often in the struggle of Palestinians for self-determination, connect Said, Ahmad, and Rushdie. 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By examining literature and f\u0131lm produced by Japanese and Korean persons across the Asian diaspora, Kim reveals the ways in which loss and melancholia act as insurgent cultural forces. She considers how, despite silencing mechanisms which valorize narratives of reconciliation and pathologize the grief of colonized subjects, colonialism continues to haunt the present. A rich engagement with the overlapping histories of violence across the Pacif\u0131c, Kim effectively and carefully considers the relationship between liberal narratives of reconciliation, loss, and colonial violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William S. Haney II"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20716508","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07425503"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628557"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-250754"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"82a275ec-6449-3ce3-ba5a-4720c492309b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20716508"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mysticsquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"Mystics Quarterly","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"HYBRIDITY AND VISIONARY EXPERIENCE: DEREK WALCOTT'S DREAM ON MONKEY MOUNTAIN","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20716508","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8694,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles P. 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It illustrates how Indian nullification operates, not as a feature of constitutional design asserting minority rights over the tyranny of the majority, but rather as a rhetorical form of political contestation exposing the constitutive exclusions of American settler democracy. Apess illuminates how constitutional ideals of popular sovereignty cohere around regimes of settler colonialism and indigenous dispossession, high-lighting the paradox of settler sovereignty that provides the basis for American democracy. Indian nullification is not a simple demand that the boundaries of liberal citizenship be expanded to include Indians. It is a way of narrating and rhetorically representing the forms of settler conquest that establish the material and conceptual foundation of popular self-rule for white settlers.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mark Mathuray"],"datePublished":"2015-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"03900bcc-ee15-3386-a5f2-f4e50441e7b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24738408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"1117","pageStart":"1100","pagination":"pp. 1100-1117","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"\"THE FAMISHED ROAD\" AFTER POSTMODERNISM: African Modernism and the Politics of Subalternity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24738408","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":10129,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[286839,286953]],"Locations in B":[[44062,44202]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Willfried F. Feuser"],"datePublished":"1988-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904315","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"848925d2-bd0b-39be-8421-57d087ac3d4f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904315"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"575","pageStart":"555","pagination":"pp. 555-575","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Wole Soyinka: The Problem of Authenticity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904315","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":8552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian B. Johnson"],"datePublished":"2010-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25700521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f29e83c0-f1e6-32f5-8e5b-c2fe57d3fccf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25700521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonization and Its Paradoxes: The (Re)envisioning of Health Policy in Bolivia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25700521","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":10341,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[66016,66062]],"abstract":"In one of the most traditionally hierarchical and \"colonial\" of the Bolivian state apparatuses, the official health sector, attempts since 2006 by Evo Morales and the MAS government at radical restructuring have proved innovative but inconclusive and divisive. Reflecting a series of conflicts and contradictions, a number of often fundamentally competing scenarios are at work: the institutionalization of traditional medicine, the reinterpretation of previous primary health care and community participation models, social and \"socialized\" medicine, and the durability of a deeply ingrained vertical health system. The challenges and risks inherent in what at heart may be a struggle between cultural and political factions and ideologies among the government's public health authorities and planners are emblematic of many paradoxes in the effort to decolonize the Bolivian state as a whole.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ishtiaq Hossain","Mahmud Hasan Khan"],"datePublished":"2006-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654423","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15684849"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50779604"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-242017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6a3a4f99-4667-361b-8be6-cd8d7208c248"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23654423"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiajsociscie"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"339","pageStart":"324","pagination":"pp. 324-339","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Rift Within An Imagined Community: Understanding Nationalism(s) in Bangladesh","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654423","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7276,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The continuing debate in Bangladesh over the national identity of its people \u2014 whether one is a Bangali or Bangladeshi \u2014 is a post-1975 phenomenon. One of the main themes of the independence war (1971) was 'Bangali nationalism'. However, it was replaced with 'Bangladeshi nationalism' by a military government following a bloody military coup in 1975. This major change in the label of the national identity of the people of Bangladesh requires explanation. A sharp distinction in the nature of politics in Bangladesh between the pre- and post-1975 era offers an explanation of the politics of identity in Bangladesh. This study shows that the manifestations of these political identities have been represented discursively, according to the political ideologies adopted by the successive regimes in Bangladesh. This paper studies the material representations of national identity, specifically the discursive construction of national identity in Bangladesh. It investigates also whether national identity discourse is a creation of the political rhetoric during different eras or it is \"over-determined\" in Althusserian terms. In other words, this paper questions the ontological basis of national identity in Bangladesh.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Laurel Mei-Singh","Vernadette Vicu\u00f1a Gonzalez"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.3.2.0173","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23735031"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b9213017-fd41-3f7e-bcb3-11af3cd2cfd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5749\/jcritethnstud.3.2.0173"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcritethnstud"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Ethnic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"192","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-192","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"DeTours: Mapping Decolonial Genealogies in Hawai'i","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5749\/jcritethnstud.3.2.0173","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":8756,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines an alternative tour conducted on O'ahu, Hawai'i by DMZ Hawai'i\/Aloha \u2018Aina, a network of organizations confronting the U.S. military's negative cultural, social, and environmental impacts on the islands and elsewhere in the Pacific. Informed by a commitment to Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) self-determination and the principle of aloha \u2018aina (love for the land), DMZ Hawai'i offers \u201cDeTours\u201d to visitors and locals that highlight the geography and history of military occupation. The tours focus on the role of the U.S. military in the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom, its current effects on life on the island, and the ongoing struggles against militarism. These DeTours remap Hawai'i to convey the contestations and collisions that have defined the islands for well over a century, generating a model of Kanaka Maoli sovereignty rooted in familial relations to land while drawing from vast networks of kinship and affinity. In this endeavor, we engage three overlapping practices and concepts of genealogy: a critical historical understanding of the present and its conditions of emergence, the instantiation of Indigenous claims that have consistently confronted Western imperialism, and a spatiotemporal mapping of alliance and coalition. Our essay addresses the politics of U.S. empire in the Pacific, as Hawai'i stands as both the command center for U.S. military operations across half the Earth's surface and is also one of the world's preeminent tourist destinations. It also highlights possibilities for coalition predicated on Oceanic ties and shared histories of dispossession, illuminating strategies for survival and resistance in spaces of empire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwaku Larbi Korang"],"datePublished":"2011-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"37217aa9-4429-3d7b-a8e3-e1a6bbb8ef50"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Making a Post-Eurocentric Humanity: Tragedy, Realism, and Things Fall Apart<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.42.2.1","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":15688,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT This essay defends the proposition that in tragedy and realism Achebe finds the efficacious aesthetic means to remake the African person and world\u2014\u2014as represented by Okonkwo and Umuofia in Things Fall Apart\u2014\u2014to humanist measure. In invoking the two aesthetic forms, Achebe is to be seen delivering a literary rebuke to Joseph Conrad and Joyce Cary. Conrad's use of impressionism in evoking the Congo's presumed lack of humanity in Heart of Darkness impliedly denied that realism could have an African normativity. On the other hand, Cary's Mister Johnson denied proper tragic stature to the African\u2014\u2014and hence a humanity commensurate with the European\u2014\u2014whose story it was telling by depicting him in mock tragedy. Pitted against Eurocentric denial is Achebe's tragic-realist insistence in Things Fall Apart that African realities are humanistically translatable; and that African persons and worlds have a humanistic commensurability with those elsewhere.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Errol A. Henderson"],"datePublished":"1997-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"710dc050-5f37-344e-b414-285ae02dbc11"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lumpenproletariat as Vanguard?: The Black Panther Party, Social Transformation, and Pearson's Analysis of Huey Newton","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784850","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":10681,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fea3dde1-98c3-34a1-bf0b-948f1952bad5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45293506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"161","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-161","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45293506","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1084,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ulla Klingovsky","Georges Pfr\u00fcnder"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0058","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"2516550X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"1016319342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fd0a2a23-5c32-3f07-be82-69e0551569ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0058"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intecritdivestud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"71","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-71","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Paths to a \u201cToolbox for Social Change\u201d\u2014Interactions Between Art and Continuing Education in the Context of Critical Diversity Literacy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/intecritdivestud.1.2.0058","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":7232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The aim of this article is to systematise some of the findings that have emerged in the context of an international research cooperation between the Wits Centre for Diversity Studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, and the School of Education at the FHNW University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland. The objective of this collaboration is to generate research-based formats of continuing education concerning Critical Diversity Literacy activated by art. In this article, Critical Diversity Literacy is considered as a founding principle for a process towards an understanding of oneself and of the world, within the framework of global tensions and conflict situations. Adult and continuing education can successfully assist with framing the content and designing the concepts for such developmental spaces. Art and theatre education are understood as a catalysing force to open up new social imaginations. By interweaving these three disciplines, the intention is to create a body of theory and informed practice, the core components of which will be illustrated in this article. We begin by outlining the concept of Critical Diversity Literacy established by Melissa Steyn. We shall then go on to demonstrate how this concept is enriched by educational theory. As the third step\u2014informed by artistic theory and practice\u2014the fundamentals and tools (\u201cToolbox\u201d) for continuing education arrangements will be presented, together with an exposition of the status of knowledge to date: the key challenge is the configuration of \u201caesthetic spaces\u201d that can lead to \u201csocial imaginations,\u201d to be designed in the form of \u201ccontact zones.\u201d","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Valerie L. Scatamburlo"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975269","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cfd0408d-358a-3f87-aa59-e2d86da61bb3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42975269"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":61.0,"pageEnd":"219","pageStart":"159","pagination":"pp. 159-219","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 4: Theory Wars and Cultural Strife","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42975269","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":23519,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick J. McGowan"],"datePublished":"1976-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines","Economics - Microeconomics"],"title":"Economic Dependence and Economic Performance in Black Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159646","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":6527,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Simona Taliani"],"datePublished":"2012-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5ff74104-21e8-354b-85e3-d0c00f084e32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23356106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"608","pageStart":"579","pagination":"pp. 579-608","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar"],"title":"COERCION, FETISHES AND SUFFERING IN THE DAILY LIVES OF YOUNG NIGERIAN WOMEN IN ITALY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23356106","volumeNumber":"82","wordCount":16811,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In the aftermath of social conflicts and urban violence between autochthons and migrants in Italy in recent years, the question of how to control the growing number of illegal immigrants is increasingly discussed in the language of zero-tolerance anti-crime campaigns. Traffic in women has been a 'structural' social reality in the Italian migration landscape over the last 15 years, and is a prominent aspect of illegal female migration. These women are qualified as 'victims of human trafficking' when they denounce their pimps. Most of their suffering \u2014 involving psychological or psychiatric symptoms and requiring psychosocial support \u2014 is expressed through an emic vocabulary that talks about fetishes, spirit possession, witchcraft, sacrifice, debts, and spiritual and moral deliverance. This study \u2014 based on extensive field research in Turin into an Ethno-Psychiatric Service (provided by the Frantz Fanon Centre) in which 50 Nigerian women participated \u2014 addresses the following anthropological issues: the relationship between emic vocabulary (so called 'voodoo' or 'juju'), migration, and moral economies of violence; and the intersection between symbolic violence and coercion, as experienced through sexual abuse and\/or ritual violence (occurring both in Nigeria and Italy, and also during the migration itself in different countries such as Benin, Mali and Libya). In the conclusion of this article, I underline the limits of psychiatric and psychological therapeutical methods vis-\u00e0-vis the symptoms and traumatic experiences that 'mark' these female bodies; and I discuss in particular the emergence of new forms of post-colonial disorders affecting subjects who are at the mercy of compromised desires. Au lendemain des conflits sociaux et de la violence urbaine entre autochtones et migrants en Italie ces derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, la question de la mani\u00e8re de contr\u00f4ler le nombre croissant d'immigr\u00e9s clandestins est de plus en plus d\u00e9battue dans le langage des campagnes de tol\u00e9rance z\u00e9ro dans la lutte contre la criminalit\u00e9. Le trafic des femmes est une r\u00e9alit\u00e9 sociale \u00ab structurelle \u00bb du paysage de l'immigration en Italie de ces 15 derni\u00e8res ann\u00e9es, et un aspect important de l'immigration clandestine des femmes. Ces femmes sont qualifi\u00e9es de \u00ab victimes de trafic humain \u00bb lorsqu'elles d\u00e9noncent leurs prox\u00e9n\u00e8tes. L'essentiel de leur souffrance (qui comprend des sympt\u00f4mes psychologiques ou psychiatriques n\u00e9cessitant un soutien psychosocial) s'exprime \u00e0 travers un vocabulaire \u00e9mique qui parle de f\u00e9tiches, de possession d'esprit, de sorcellerie, de sacrifice, de dettes et de d\u00e9livrance spirituelle et morale. Cette \u00e9tude, bas\u00e9e sur d'importants travaux de terrain men\u00e9s \u00e0 Turin dans un service ethnopsychiatrique (g\u00e9r\u00e9 par le Centre Frantz Fanon) auxquels ont particip\u00e9 50 femmes nig\u00e9rianes, traite des questions anthropologiques suivantes : la relation entre vocabulaire \u00e9mique (dit \u00ab vaudou \u00bb ou \u00ab ju-ju \u00bb), migration et \u00e9conomies morales de la violence; et l'intersection entre violence symbolique et coercition, telle que v\u00e9cue \u00e0 travers l'abus sexuel et\/ou la violence rituelle (pr\u00e9sents au Nigeria et en Italie, mais aussi pendant la migration elle-m\u00eame dans des pays comme le B\u00e9nin, le Mali et la Libye). En conclusion, l'article souligne les limites des m\u00e9thodes th\u00e9rapeutiques psychiatriques et psychologiques quant aux sympt\u00f4mes et aux exp\u00e9riences traumatiques qui \u00ab marquent \u00bb le corps de ces femmes. Enfin, il \u00e9voque en particulier l'\u00e9mergence de nouvelles formes de troubles postcoloniaux affectant les sujets qui sont \u00e0 la merci de d\u00e9sirs hypoth\u00e9qu\u00e9s.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["EDITH HALL","PHIROZE VASUNIA","RICHARD ALSTON","ALEXANDER RIDDIFORD","JAMES THORNE","DEBORAH ROBERTS","ERIN MEE","JUSTINE MCCONNELL"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44216106","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23983264"},{"name":"oclc","value":"720163220"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3b585bf-6497-3205-9e77-2bf5e576bcaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44216106"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"bullinstclassup"}],"isPartOf":"Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. Supplement","issueNumber":"108","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":178.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"iii","pagination":"pp. iii, v, vii-ix, 1-11, 13-31, 33-49, 51-77, 79-97, 99-129, 131-157, 159-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Classical Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"INDIA, GREECE, AND ROME, 1757 TO 2007","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44216106","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":83710,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["RALPH H. METCALF, Jr."],"datePublished":"1970-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163447","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"28dab78b-9e1b-34ea-9fd4-fa20372c4b85"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163447"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"30","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-30","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHICAGO MODEL CITIES AND NEOCOLONIZATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163447","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":4920,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Molly Abel Travis"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20079638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c0de56f2-e652-3160-a311-511c70161ca6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20079638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"200","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-200","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Beloved\" and \"Middle Passage\": Race, Narrative, and the Critic's Essentialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20079638","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":11277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adaye Orugbani"],"datePublished":"1991-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45072388","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09749284"},{"name":"oclc","value":"609694797"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013233131"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"36626bb3-074f-3ac9-b4d2-11b308d29ba6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45072388"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indiaquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"India Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"80","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-80","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE DEBT TRAP AND THE CURRENT CRISIS IN NIGERIA : AN HISTORICAL ANALYSIS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45072388","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10163,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[375355,375427]],"Locations in B":[[36165,36243]],"abstract":"One of the most pressing problems of third world countries today is that of foreign debt Third world debt is now a matter of serious concern to the leading industrialised countires whose banks and gove:nments have advanced or guaranteed the credit For instance, both the City Corpcration of New York and the Midland Bank of the United Kingdom had to sell their assets to make provision for bad debts arising out of the inability of titird world countries torepay their debts, Thedebt problem is the result of the international devision of labour and the location of the third world countries within the existing international division of labour. As primary producers they have atched helplessly as the prices of their products plunged in the international market while the prices of manufactured goods keep rising. Superficially, it is this imbalance between their export earnings and their import bills that has created the debt problem.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kwame Akonor"],"datePublished":"2007-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034367","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d81d7f54-6d30-3c44-a0e0-b79c77c10090"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40034367"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"796","pageStart":"794","pagination":"pp. 794-796","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40034367","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":734,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John E. Drabinski"],"datePublished":"2018-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.3.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1532687X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49606386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002212682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aa2ce0d8-eeb4-351d-a711-6b04492ae284"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.3.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crnewcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"CR: The New Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Reproduction and the Universal in Glissant's Later Work","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/crnewcentrevi.18.3.0001","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":6985,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609898,610190]],"Locations in B":[[25318,25606]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nina Schneider"],"datePublished":"2017-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97a3d93d-6e0b-332b-bacb-363c78b8eb58"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Between Promise and Skepticism: The Global South and Our Role as Engaged Intellectuals","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.11.2.02","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":10289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Focusing on the benefits and limitations of the Global South concept and its fundamentally different readings, this article seeks to problematize our own role when using the term both as scholars and as engaged intellectuals. Historically, the Global South has been invoked by scholars and intellects from the so-called developed and less developed world alike. While the term has been used as a tool to denounce injustices, dependencies, and \u201csubalternity,\u201d it has also helped to reify problematic North-South dichotomies that have entrenched practices of inequality and domination. I argue that the heuristic, intellectual, and political value of the Global South requires a more thorough discussion. Merely welcoming it as a refreshing playground for unsettling old and unfair ordering systems seems insufficient. Offering a hopeful yet skeptical reading of the Global South, this article seeks to question that this category necessarily leads to radical transformations. To the contrary, it may reify rather than overcome injustices just like the previous concept of the \u201cThird World.\u201d I argue that it is vital to distinguish between the vocabulary's desired outcomes and its likely real effects. If our goal is to change the world (and not just parrot a utopian buzzword), we may need to elaborate precise conceptualizations and reflect upon their concrete\u2014not just imagined\u2014consequences. It is precisely the Global South concept's Janus-faced nature that has led to its success; while we cannot fully endorse it given its danger of abuse, we can neither completely abandon it given its interventionist potential.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Oyekan Owomoyela"],"datePublished":"1981-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523912","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2624545f-59a1-33ef-b1e4-b494c674df42"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523912"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dissidence and the African Writer: Commitment or Dependency?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523912","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":9411,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CHARLES W. MILLS"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23890147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1adf57f-5306-3a66-a8c8-2bdf5dca45f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23890147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"281","pageStart":"270","pagination":"pp. 270-281","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Critical Race Theory: A reply to Mike Cole","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23890147","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":5353,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jaganath Pathy"],"datePublished":"1981-04-04","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4369676","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9e983786-ffd3-367a-a595-f0377f56e082"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4369676"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"14","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"627","pageStart":"623","pagination":"pp. 623-627","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperialism, Anthropology and the Third World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4369676","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":5165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The discipline of anthropology had its origin in the colonial milieu. It was meant to meet the political and administrative problems which the colonial nd, later, the imperial forces faced in the process of expansion and consolidation of their domains. With the rise of national movements in the colonies and the consequent disintegration of colonial rule, new forms of imperialist domination have come into being. It is imperative for this imperialism to subvert and co-opt the raising anti-imperialist forces in third world countries. In this endeavour too, anthropology, specifically anthropology of development as it is practised today, provides the necessary academic and intellectual support. This paper seeks to establish some of these connections between imperialism, anthropology and the problem of development in third world countries.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANTONIA DARDER"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4b8d7a37-f573-3b23-9b66-1c30c1062ea3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42981663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"421","pagination":"pp. 421-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER 21: Political Grace and the Struggle to Decolonize Community Practice With Zeus Yiamouviannis","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42981663","volumeNumber":"418","wordCount":7960,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[50833,50891]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1996-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2962865","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10773711"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40892795"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"16f06eee-8021-3a73-967c-6aefcc86aebc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2962865"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblachigheduc"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education","issueNumber":"14","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":1.0,"pageEnd":"144","pageStart":"144","pagination":"p. 144","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"JBHE Foundation, Inc","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"No Black Americans Included in the Biographical Directory of 1,000 Twentieth-Century Philosophers","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2962865","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Siba Grovogu"],"datePublished":"2011-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.5.1.175","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"44d7a659-fc1d-3c4e-a04e-d134cae0304f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.5.1.175"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"190","pageStart":"175","pagination":"pp. 175-190","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Revolution Nonetheless: The Global South in International Relations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.5.1.175","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":7135,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"There have been debates on the meaning and appropriateness of the term Global South. To many, no unifying term can apply to regions and countries whose differences extent to the colonial past, cultural traditions, economic trajectories, and administrative or organizational structures. The critics are mistaken. This essay postulates that the term Global South is a symbolic designation with political implications. It is meant to capture a cohesion that emerged when former colonial entities engaged in political projects of decolonization and moved toward the realization of a postcolonial international order. As it stands today, the Global South has its origins in twentieth-century anti-colonialism, the 1955 Bandung Conference, the 1961 Non-Aligned Movement, and Cuba's Tricontinentalism, among others. Although the term Global South gained currency at the end of the Cold War, when the term Third World seemed to fall into disfavor, the change does not signify a renunciation of the \u2018Third World.\u2019 It merely signals an adjustment in ideological and political positioning to reflect the new forms of contentions around the legacies of colonialism. Thus, the Global South captures the spirit of Third World engagements in that it continues to invite re-examinations of the intellectual, political, and moral foundations of the international system. The Global South is therefore a multifaceted movement that underscores the need for a postcolonial international community of interest that advances the objectives of equality, freedom, and mutuality in the form of a new ethos of power and subjectivity through foreign policy, international solidarity, and responsibility to self and others in an international order free of the institutional legacies of colonialism. Finally, as a movement, the Global South has no central structure, no central command, and no appointed spokesperson. It has had multiple custodians, all of them self-selected, in reaction to the deepening and multifaceted violence experienced at the moment by its members.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID O. FRIEDRICHS"],"datePublished":"1981-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970801","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0037783X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ecf1ae3f-efee-3497-8819-1845314924fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40970801"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Social Research","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"156","pageStart":"135","pagination":"pp. 135-156","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"The New School","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and the Politics of Crime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40970801","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":7175,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Graham"],"datePublished":"1996-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d3327bf3-1aed-305f-b42a-b99e41a27390"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29735812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"19","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"62","pagination":"pp. 62-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Post-Colonial Theory and Kiberd's 'Ireland'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735812","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Phillip T. Nyahoda"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10174974"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85479416"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e76fb9e8-574f-3422-94ca-1dc6661f84ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45401903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijpoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"African Journal of Political Economy \/ Revue Africaine d'Economie Politique","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"African Association of Political Science","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Challenges of a Changing Global Order: Implications for African Communication Networks","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45401903","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9732,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PROMA TAGORE","FAIRN HERISING","JOCELYN ANNE GLAZIER","GEORGE LIPSITZ"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979143","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3c1a157d-175c-3e92-85c7-8f9d46fd2d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979143"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"297","pageStart":"287","pagination":"pp. 287-297","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conversation: Situating Anti-Oppressive Education in Our Times","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979143","volumeNumber":"315","wordCount":4772,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MICHAEL O. WEST"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24912274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452096"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e05a057e-3cd2-327a-810f-10e0ff4b814f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24912274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diplhist"}],"isPartOf":"Diplomatic History","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"387","pageStart":"371","pagination":"pp. 371-387","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Tuskegee Model of Development in Africa: Another Dimension of the African\/African-American Connection","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24912274","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8833,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YOAV DI-CAPUA"],"datePublished":"2012-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23427880","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4fd6191-25f9-3cf4-a26f-e7780cfd1ece"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23427880"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"1091","pageStart":"1061","pagination":"pp. 1061-1091","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Arab Existentialism: An Invisible Chapter in the Intellectual History of Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23427880","volumeNumber":"117","wordCount":18986,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Torbj\u00f8rn L. Knutsen"],"datePublished":"1994-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425376","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"087c7c70-ac6d-3d97-928e-19d057574f36"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/425376"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"247","pagination":"pp. 247-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Re-Reading Rousseau in the Post-Cold War World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425376","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":11293,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"While the study of world politics before and during the Cold War was dominated by the competing paradigms of 'idealism' and 'realism', the post-Cold War world requires different approaches. This essay suggests that Jean-Jacques Rousseau's writings on war and peace may serve as a vantage-point for a paradigm which goes beyond the two orthodox perspectives. It argues that Rousseau is not the unambiguous representative for the 'realist' approach that he is so routinely assumed to be. Rousseau developed a unique analysis which accentuates historical change, dialectical paradox and the tendency for interdependence to foster inequality and conflict. This analysis of interstate relations provides a useful starting-point for understanding both the global transformations which are now occurring before our eyes and the many challenges that lie ahead. First, this essay reconstructs from the many scattered pieces which Rousseau wrote about history and world politics a clear and consistent international relations theory. Then, it uses this theory to examine some of the most common assumptions about the nature of the post-Cold War world. It discusses whether the liberal-democratic values of the First World will emerge triumphant in the 21st century; whether the nations of the (former) Second World will experience prosperity and peace; and whether the struggle for liberation and justice in the Third World will finally be crowned with triumph.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gil Anidjar"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.4.2.0144","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20555601"},{"name":"oclc","value":"939666847"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2016268510"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a27f8a2-5241-3df6-8b31-2e41941cc2b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/reorient.4.2.0144"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reorient"}],"isPartOf":"ReOrient","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"165","pageStart":"144","pagination":"pp. 144-165","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"On the Political History of Destruction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/reorient.4.2.0144","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":10992,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay seeks to reframe the question of continuity (or discontinuity) between Orientalism and Islamophobia as, underlying the question, is an enduring conception of history as agentive, as a \u201cmaking,\u201d a \u201cconstruction,\u201d or a \u201cproduction\u201d (\u201cMen make their own history \u2026\u201d). Turning our attention instead toward destructive power\u2014distinct from repressive and coercive and from productive and enabling modes of power (Foucault, Said)\u2014a distinct history, or anti-history, emerges, which necessitates a different lexicon. Political or subject formations might still be at stake, but another logic or illogic, a different politics may become visible where the main concern is not the making of world (Arendt), but its undoing; not the production of collectives or of individual subjects, but their destruction. Torture, as Jean Am\u00e9ry described it, is one such destruction of world. It may thus become possible to ask whether, between Orientalism and Islamophobia, the Muslims or Muselm\u00e4nner of the Nazi camps were a \u201cproduct,\u201d whether they were \u201cmade\u201d into subjects. The essay builds on earlier reflections where elements of a lexicon and analytics of destruction were considered (Heidegger, Derrida), along with preliminary answers to the question: what is destruction? Or here: is there a history of destruction?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Steven Topik"],"datePublished":"1987-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/493756","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00182745"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205644"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227373"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97597280-9b97-3278-87fd-9bdf11544b98"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/493756"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historyteacher"}],"isPartOf":"The History Teacher","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"560","pageStart":"545","pagination":"pp. 545-560","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Society for History Education","sourceCategory":["Education","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Historical Perspectives on Latin American Underdevelopment","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/493756","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":6981,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John D. Kelly"],"datePublished":"1989-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/482653","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141801"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205286"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227248"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/482653"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnohistory"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnohistory","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"391","pageStart":"372","pagination":"pp. 372-391","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","History","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Government"],"title":"Fear of Culture: British Regulation of Indian Marriage in Post-Indenture Fiji","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/482653","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Fiji's colonial government resisted the imperial requirement to respect Indian \"customary law,\" especially in marriage. Administrators readily codified versions of indigenous Fijian \"custom\" as law but refused to grant legitimacy or authority to customs of the Indians come to Fiji as \"coolies\" and plantation \"labor units.\" In debate over Indian marriage law-child marriage, bride selling, polygamy, \"purdah,\" licensing of pandits, and so on-they resisted recognizing as valid all forms of Indian custom. The difference in policy followed the special project of colonial Fiji: the civilizing of the indigenous Fijians. The Indians, brought to Fiji as a means to that end, were considered (unlike the indigenous Fijians) to be \"free\" of custom already, but to be animalistic by nature and inferior to Europeans by race-a perfect working class. The British thus feared Indian culture as an anomaly threatening their order and progress in Fiji.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT MOLTENO"],"datePublished":"1973-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341300","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b3b87976-15c7-396e-a0a1-f07cc6f22c61"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341300"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"557","pageStart":"541","pagination":"pp. 541-557","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1973,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Zambian Humanism: The Way Ahead","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341300","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":8505,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hussein N. Kadhim"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00852376"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50515165"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-242125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"46a2e08e-e319-3921-9b59-e28d463b0ed8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4183397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jarablite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Arabic Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"179","pagination":"pp. 179-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Poetics of Postcolonialism: Two Qa\u1e63\u012bdahs by A\u1e25mad Shawq\u012b","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4183397","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":18882,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Makhanu Wafula"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645897","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a725ebbf-27c2-3900-9c62-594224d8f704"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48645897"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"166","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-166","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Leading an Academic Staff Union as a Middle-level Academic (2003\u20132013)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48645897","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":8581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the emergence of the author as a leader of the Universities Academic Staff Union at a university in East Africa. Using the role, resource and constraint-based theories as well as autoethnography, which is a sub-category of qualitative research, the author traces the intellectual and political ferment that enabled him to become a unionist. From the discussion that emanated from the data he collected, from memos, newspaper articles and personal memories, it became increasingly clear that as a unionist his story demonstrates tensions, contestations and in some cases expensive trade-offs. Overall, there were actions that he performed well and others that he would implement differently were he given a second chance to lead the union. Cet article examine l\u2019\u00e9mergence de l\u2019auteur en tant que leader du syndicat du personnel enseignant d\u2019une universit\u00e9 d\u2019Afrique de l\u2019Est. En utilisant les th\u00e9ories bas\u00e9es sur le r\u00f4le, les ressources et les contraintes ainsi que l\u2019autoethnographie, qui est une sous-cat\u00e9gorie de la recherche qualitative, l\u2019auteur retrace le ferment intellectuel et politique qui lui a permis de devenir un syndicaliste. \u00c0 partir de la discussion qui a \u00e9man\u00e9 des donn\u00e9es qu\u2019il a recueillies, des m\u00e9mos, des articles de journaux et des souvenirs personnels, il est devenu de plus en plus clair qu\u2019en tant que syndicaliste, son histoire t\u00e9moigne de tensions, de contestations et, dans certains cas, de compromis ruineux. Dans l\u2019ensemble, il y a des actions qu\u2019il a bien men\u00e9es et d\u2019autres qu\u2019il mettrait en \u0153uvre diff\u00e9remment, si on lui donnait une seconde chance de diriger le syndicat.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["STEPHEN CHAN"],"datePublished":"2007-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084451","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00108367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"39082868"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004242137"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c31a5d2-e319-3936-8318-1b0193e82256"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45084451"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"coopconfl"}],"isPartOf":"Cooperation and Conflict","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"151","pagination":"pp. 151-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","European Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon: The Octogenarian of International Revenge and the Suicide Bomber of Today","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45084451","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":9617,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Frantz Fanon has always been read as an apostle of violence \u2014 much of this owed to Sartre's Preface to Fanon's work, The Wretched of the Earth. There are, however, more nuanced possible readings of Fanon, readings that allow the possibility of new understandings of contemporary violence emanating from the Middle East. In this article, Fanon's intellectual trajectory is traced back to his first writings postulating an equality in which no slaves existed by virtue of there being no longer any masters. The psychological dimensions of Fanon's work are discussed and a hypothesis put forward about a moment of pure psychological lucidity and calm before the suicide bomber of today explodes his or her device. The work of Lacan and Kristeva is discussed in relation to a nuanced reading of Fanon, and an excursion into the Palestine of Hamas helps complete a complex meditation on Fanon's life and work.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Opportune Zongo"],"datePublished":"1997-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323038","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"183e724c-b0aa-30c0-a571-290d41d40467"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44323038"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"CARTOGRAPHIES OF POWER IN COLONIAL AFRICAN LITERATURE: FERDINAND OYONO'S \"THE OLD MAN AND THE MEDAL\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44323038","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7130,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["G\u0129chingiri Nd\u0129g\u0129r\u0129g\u0129"],"datePublished":"2016-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.4.06","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e57b6b8b-3cc0-3eb4-b7ba-622a0932c91c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.4.06"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Bloodhounds at the Gate: Trauma, Narrative Memory, and Melancholia in Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's Memoirs of Wartime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.47.4.06","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":12348,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The complicated positions from which Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o witnesses the trauma of the emergency period in Kenya (1952\u201359) are examined in this paper against the background of trauma and witnessing first threshed out by Dori Laub. Proceeding from a discussion of trauma, witnessing, narrative memory, and melancholia, I show that while the memoirs narrativize events that do not rise to the high threshold of traumatic experience, they contain reconstructed narrative memories of the loss and melancholia Ng\u0169g\u0129 felt during the period. Progressively, the young Ng\u0169g\u0129 accepts substitutes for what he calls \u201cthe lost old world\u201d that enable him to articulate his melancholia as grievance. These substitutes paradoxically become available to Ng\u0169g\u0129 at the colonial school, the site that would have ensured the production of the autonomous self alienated from his lost world. Paradoxically, the autonomous self ends up speaking for his community.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David P. Thomas"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27756265","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2a90dd4e-0ed1-3fc5-a294-26a69a95d4bd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27756265"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"120","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"269","pageStart":"253","pagination":"pp. 253-269","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Revisiting \"Pedagogy of the Oppressed\": Paulo Freire and Contemporary African Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27756265","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this article is to (re)introduce Paulo Freire's \"Pedagogy of the Oppressed\" to the study of contemporary African societies. Widely accepted as foundational work in the field of critical pedagogy, it is argued that Freirean scholarship and analysis is also useful in examining the top-down manner in which 'development' is currently being implemented on the continent. By examining the case of post-apartheid South Africa, this article posits that a Freirean understanding of liberation\/freedom as a dialogical exercise can aid in opening up a productive avenue of critical enquiry regarding the post-colonial condition in sub-Saharan Africa. This analysis will use Freire's theoretical work in order to contribute to the literature regarding possibilities for more participatory, democratic and bottom-up struggles for social justice.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MARTIN J. MURRAY"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292893","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00472697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c95860b8-c37c-355a-8677-36b84f65750f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45292893"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpolimilisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Political & Military Sociology","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"131","pagination":"pp. 131-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Military Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"ON VIETNAM AND VETERANS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45292893","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":2319,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosi Braidotti"],"datePublished":"2013-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331553","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"17502241"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6d342eda-a36c-3fda-9eca-0b0515c810b3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45331553"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"deleuzestudies"}],"isPartOf":"Deleuze Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"342","pagination":"pp. 342-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nomadic Ethics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45331553","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7232,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Deleuze's ethics constitutes the core of his philosophy, which proposes a post-humanistic but robust nomadic vision of the subject that respects the complexity of our times while avoiding the pitfalls of postmodern and other forms of relativism. Deleuze's neo-Spinozist ethics rests on an active relational ontology that looks for the ways in which otherness prompts, mobilises and allows for flows of affirmation of values and forces which are not yet sustained by the current conditions. Insofar as the conditions need to be brought about or actualised by collective efforts to induce qualitative transformations in our interactions, it requires the praxis of affirmative ethics. The process of becoming-minor, which necessarily involves becoming-woman, is central to this pragmatic ethical project that includes human as well as non-human actors. This paper addresses this ethics in terms of ontological relationality, affectivity and endurance.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["REZA RAHBARI"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"91a7f883-1316-3c2e-bb84-1fc4d5023305"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"332","pageStart":"321","pagination":"pp. 321-332","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Unveiling Muslim Women: A Trajectory of Post-Colonial Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790641","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":5385,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ian Baucom"],"datePublished":"2012-05-15","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.2.1.0001","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21599785"},{"name":"oclc","value":"702124609"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011201871"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"74b1d594-89e4-3f62-8398-3e26292b5148"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5406\/historypresent.2.1.0001"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"historypresent"}],"isPartOf":"History of the Present","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"23","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-23","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Human Shore: Postcolonial Studies in an Age of Natural Science","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5406\/historypresent.2.1.0001","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9912,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Russell West-Pavlov"],"datePublished":"2013-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.160","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"89fa5952-9b36-349f-96f5-a579567d31e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.160"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"175","pageStart":"160","pagination":"pp. 160-175","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Politics and Spaces of Voice: Ng\u0169g\u0129's A Grain of Wheat<\/em> and Conrad's Heart of Darkness<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/reseafrilite.44.3.160","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":8691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"ABSTRACT Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong'o's classic A Grain of Wheat displays unmistakable debts to Conrad's Heart of Darkness, yet markers of this particular Conradian connection have been largely ignored by critics, who have mostly concentrated on the connections with Under Western Eyes. In this essay, I argue that this odd intertextual oversight can and should be rectified, with a view to refocusing discussion of A Grain of Wheat on the questions of literary form posed by Heart of Darkness. These formal questions, located at the nexus of voice, \u201caddressivity,\u201d and community, in turn, connect to crucial issues of the place of literary production in the postcolonial polity. In particular, they point to the significant change in Ng\u0169g\u0129's cultural politics and aesthetic practice in the mid-1970s, as he became increasingly involved in popular community theater. The reading offered in this article, by shifting the focus of intertextuality to the more complex connections with Heart of Darkness, loosens A Grain of Wheat's bond, somewhat, with metropolitan literature and foregrounds the novel's integration into Ng\u0169g\u0129's project of autochton (and popular cultural) postcolonial emancipation. Because of the central, indeed, archetypical place of A Grain of Wheat in the African literary tradition and even in received understandings of the process of independence in East Africa, this recalibration of readings of the novel takes on a broader significance than merely that of studies of postcolonial intertextuality.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sam Okoth Opondo"],"datePublished":"2015-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569427","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ccda06a4-3c6f-3f7b-adce-211e7536a1ef"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24569427"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Biocolonial and Racial Entanglements: Immunity, Community, and Superfluity in the Name of Humanity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24569427","volumeNumber":"40","wordCount":10552,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Through a reading of Neill Blomkamp's 2009 science fiction\/mock documentary District 9 and John le Carr\u00e9's novel The Constant Gardener, this article illustrates how the acceptance that we are all human has an identity-constituting function that enables bodies and lives to be valued differently with far-reaching implications for both biomedical experiments and experiments with the ethics of cohabitation. More specifically, this article examines biocolonial regimes, \"imagined immunities,\" and limited sympathies that transform racialized, class-mediated, and transnational vulnerable bodies into experimental labor or biomaterial (hearts, kidneys, and corneas) to be consumed or disposed of as part of life-sustaining and life-administering apparatuses.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["GURPREET SINGH JOHAL"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"oclc","value":"903644852"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"48f7dc2d-ffbf-31c1-94d8-f4825a4e98b5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42978754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter Thirteen: Order in K.O.S. on RACE, RAGE, and METHOD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42978754","volumeNumber":"252","wordCount":10361,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard A. Roughton"],"datePublished":"1969-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324509","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263141"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1322cd1e-e7d0-3fb9-9968-927986362b2a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4324509"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeastj"}],"isPartOf":"Middle East Journal","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"444","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-444","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Middle East Institute","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Middle East Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Algeria and the June 1967 Arab-Israeli War","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4324509","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5656,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J. Sefa Dei","Leeno Luke Karumanchery","Nisha Karumanchery-Luik"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979560","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa3b1ee9-0e80-3306-a834-025a2c934eb4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42979560"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"99","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-99","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER FOUR: White Power, White Privilege","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42979560","volumeNumber":"244","wordCount":8346,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald H. Chilcote"],"datePublished":"1974-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dcca0f93-7782-3da0-8574-74c9c340ab59"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"29","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-29","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1974,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Dependency: A Critical Synthesis of the Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633526","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":13143,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Uzo Esonwanne"],"datePublished":"1993-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"49","pagination":"pp. 49-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Nation as Contested Referent","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820253","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":7970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald R. Wehrs"],"datePublished":"2003-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057812","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4462ad7a-98bd-3214-a96e-d8823c448ec6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057812"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"789","pageStart":"761","pagination":"pp. 761-789","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Sartre's Legacy in Postcolonial Theory; Or, Who's Afraid of Non-Western Historiography and Cultural Studies?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057812","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":14308,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[135612,135703]],"Locations in B":[[18293,18405]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Aberbach"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247429","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"29f14bcb-170b-3e43-a810-fe3b0d54df55"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40247429"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"230","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-230","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Enlightenment and Cultural Confusion: Mendele's \"The Mare\" and Dangarembga's \"Nervous Conditions\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40247429","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":7523,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca Morrison Van Voorhis"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23043348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10437797"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41157004"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201770"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2d0f20d1-c72c-37fe-ba45-db6c8c3110eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23043348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsocworked"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Social Work Education","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"133","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Social Work"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"CULTURALLY RELEVANT PRACTICE: A FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING THE PSYCHOSOCIAL DYNAMICS OF OPPRESSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23043348","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":7015,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27686]],"Locations in B":[[41123,41181]],"abstract":"This article presents a framework for culturally relevant practice that prepares students to assess the impact of institutionalized oppression on their clients, develop interventions that reduce the negative effects of sustained oppression, and empower clients to challenge existing oppressive conditions. The framework was developed as a synthesis of recurring themes from the literature on several oppressed groups, and, the author suggests, is broad enough to apply to clients from different marginalized groups. Suggestions for teaching the framework in practice courses \u2014 including assignments to evaluate student applications of the framework \u2014 are also provided.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Philip M. Royster"],"datePublished":"1986-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904436","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01486179"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8d5ec47-e20a-342b-bb3f-91616e2fb493"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2904436"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blacamerliteforu"}],"isPartOf":"Black American Literature Forum","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"370","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-370","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"St. Louis University","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In Search of our Fathers' Arms: Alice Walker's Persona of the Alienated Darling","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2904436","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":10686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nancy Postero"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1pq34b0.17","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"452a38ad-a213-33eb-9397-67e98bab45c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1525\/j.ctt1pq34b0.17"}],"isPartOf":"The Indigenous State","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"218","pageStart":"195","pagination":"195-218","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Anthropology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Biology"],"title":"REFERENCES","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1525\/j.ctt1pq34b0.17","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8808,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["bolivia","accessed","evo morales","estado","ind\u00edgena","garc\u00eda linera","university","duke university","politics","american"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane E. Goodman"],"datePublished":"2002-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095022","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00940496"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206375"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227377"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a4aa002f-118a-3925-b7de-4cdbef0bc905"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3095022"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerethn"}],"isPartOf":"American Ethnologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Writing Empire, Underwriting Nation: Discursive Histories of Kabyle Berber Oral Texts","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3095022","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":21129,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this article, I explore how colonial, nationalist, and media interests converge around the collection of oral texts. Moving from the French colonial project of collecting native lore to the nationalist project to recover indigenous heritage to the embedding of village songs in contemporary world music, I examine how oral texts from Algeria's Kabyle Berber region have been variously configured as signs through which social differences are imagined and hierarchically ordered. I foreground the history of intertextual penetration between North African poetic productions and Western aesthetic categories.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Auma Agola-Osolo"],"datePublished":"1980-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325813","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02510405"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"67482357-0cd0-3c42-952a-bce511f5064c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24325813"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jeastafriresedev"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Eastern African Research & Development","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"73","pagination":"pp. 73-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Gideon Were Publications","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Development Studies","Economics"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"OLIGOPOLY Versus OLIGOPSONY: THE GREAT AWAKENING OF THE THIRD WORLD ON THE WORLD MARKET","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24325813","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":11918,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patricia Neville"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41421390","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"09732047"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"474c590a-0a30-3a42-ac68-2c21dfe56ad3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41421390"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intrevmodsoc"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Modern Sociology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"International Journals","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"THE READING CURE?: Bibliotherapy, Healthy Reading Schemes and the Treatment of Mental Illness in Ireland","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41421390","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9678,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"With the publication of the mental health policy document, A Vision to Change, in 2006 the Irish government articulated an historic shift in the conceptualisation and development of services for mental health sufferers. This see change advocates a turn away from an institutionalised medical model to a more holistic, community based and self-care focused model of mental well-being. One year later Ireland's first book prescription scheme was established in Dublin which encouraged local general practitioner's to 'prescribe' self-help books to their patients with mild to moderate mental health issues. Operating on the guiding principle of bibliotherapy, book prescription schemes and other library based self-help healthy reading schemes are being promoted as an empowering, alternative model of care in the community for Irish mental health sufferers. In this paper we will critically assess these schemes to expose the structural, ideological and therapeutic limits of such an initiative.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bruce Fetter"],"datePublished":"1975-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217166","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03617882"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a87be097-34c2-38c8-b32a-c63380b83d00"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/217166"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejafrihiststu"}],"isPartOf":"The International Journal of African Historical Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"480","pageStart":"479","pagination":"pp. 479-480","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Boston University African Studies Center","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/217166","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":744,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gerald E. Tucker"],"datePublished":"1978-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160034","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160034"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"415","pageStart":"397","pagination":"pp. 397-415","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Machiavelli and Fanon: Ethics, Violence, and Action","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160034","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":8700,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[118886,118954]],"Locations in B":[[24732,24815]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jaime Hovey"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285309","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c669d358-41ed-3d3d-99fc-205cb9d4a071"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26285309"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"568","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-568","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"SAPPHIC PRIMITIVISM IN GERTRUDE STEIN'S \"Q.E.D.\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26285309","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":8433,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paget Henry"],"datePublished":"2005-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"acbf2120-fd39-3767-9127-6b77c901c1cf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26758923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"112","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-112","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Africana Phenomenology: Its Philosophical Implications","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26758923","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":14841,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[93501,93546]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Randolph Pope"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150852","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40150852"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"28","pageStart":"22","pagination":"pp. 22-28","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Letters in the Post, or How Juan Goytisolo Got to La Chanca","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150852","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":6323,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["K. 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Government","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"American Indian Permission for Mascots: Resistance or Complicity within Rhetorical Colonialism?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/rhetpublaffa.18.4.0649","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":13885,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In 2005 the National Collegiate Athletic Association banned the use of American Indian symbols such as mascots, nicknames, and imagery in postseason sporting events. However, several universities successfully appealed this decision by demonstrating permission from eponymous American Indian nations. The focus of this essay is on the rhetorical implications of this permission argument within American Indian rhetoric about American Indian mascots, nicknames, and imagery. Drawing from the lens of rhetorical colonialism and an examination of the University of Utah Utes, I reveal how American Indian permission for mascots can be seen as upholding rather than challenging the system of colonialism through a form of self-colonization.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paula Chakravartty","Denise Ferreira da Silva"],"datePublished":"2012-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273527","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030678"},{"name":"oclc","value":"40777451"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23366"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0c07fb05-4a22-360d-8630-6a5a7d1581d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23273527"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerquar"}],"isPartOf":"American Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"385","pageStart":"361","pagination":"pp. 361-385","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Accumulation, Dispossession, and Debt: The Racial Logic of Global Capitalism\u2014An Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23273527","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":11888,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Biodun Jeyifo"],"datePublished":"2018-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d7e38676-98bf-3f16-8aad-2d27dc75969a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26739734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"147","pageStart":"133","pagination":"pp. 133-147","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"English is an African language \u2013 Ka Dupe! [for and against Ng\u0169g\u0129]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26739734","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":9024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In a radical departure from the orthodoxies of postcolonial African cultural and linguistic nationalism, the paper calls for acceptance of English as an African language with a central argument that insists that all languages widely used in Africa ought to be classified as either indigenous or non-indigenous. This argument rests on a vigorous critique of what the author identifies as the principle of absolute autochthony as the only determinant of which languages are African and which are not. As the most eloquent and influential proponent of this principle, Ng\u0169g\u0129 wa Thiong\u2019o is the central focus of the paper with regard to both the positive and negative aspects of his ideas and positions on the language question in colonial and postcolonial Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Toral Jatin Gajarawala"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.47.3.0346","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104132"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42631267"},{"name":"lccn","value":"00-211251"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"97050e37-eda3-3dc9-a08e-2a0daf2005ea"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5325\/complitstudies.47.3.0346"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complitstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"368","pageStart":"346","pagination":"pp. 346-368","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"MISEDUCATION:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5325\/complitstudies.47.3.0346","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":20388,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract Berlin of 1884 was effected through the sword and the bullet. But the night of the sword and the bullet was followed by the morning of the chalk and the blackboard. The physical violence of the battlefield was followed by the psychological violence of the classroom. Ngugi wa Thiong\u2019o","subTitle":"DALIT AND BEUR WRITERS ON THE ANTIROMANCE OF PEDAGOGY","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Resa Crane Bizzaro"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140725","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00100994"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709524"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227121"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4489b212-48c3-3286-8693-c07eeefeab15"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4140725"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegeenglish"}],"isPartOf":"College English","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"74","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-74","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"National Council of Teachers of English","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Legal status"],"title":"Shooting Our Last Arrow: Developing a Rhetoric of Identity for Unenrolled American Indians","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4140725","volumeNumber":"67","wordCount":6728,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kenneth Knies"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759925","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21674256"},{"name":"oclc","value":"821582131"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273870"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"11e675f3-0d51-375e-8e6e-48a33cfd272c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26759925"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"clrjamesj"}],"isPartOf":"The CLR James Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking Two Categories of Political Economy: A Contribution to Black Marxism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26759925","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":14633,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Schwab"],"datePublished":"1976-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/159654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"155","pagination":"pp. 155-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Human Rights in Ethiopia","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/159654","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":2935,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47065,47169]],"Locations in B":[[444,548]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leonie Cox"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20877378","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00298077"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622386"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235315"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eba20e5f-dc14-3706-9685-5f83a1b6031d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20877378"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"oceania"}],"isPartOf":"Oceania","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"262","pageStart":"241","pagination":"pp. 241-262","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Asian Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Queensland Aborigines, Multiple Realities and the Social Sources of Suffering: Part 2: Suicide, Spirits and Symbolism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20877378","volumeNumber":"80","wordCount":15012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This is the second part of a paper that explores a range of magico-religious experiences such as immaterial voices and visions, in terms of local cultural, moral and socio-political circumstances in an Aboriginal town in rural Queensland. This part of the paper explores the political and cultural symbolism and meaning of suicide. It charts the saliency of suicide amongst two groups of kin and cohorts and the social meaningfulness and problematic of the voices and visions in relation to suicide, to identity and family forms and to funerals and a heavily drinking lifestyle. I argue that voices and visions are used to reinterpret social experience and to establish meaning and that tragically suicide evokes connectivity rather than anomie and here cannot be understood merely as an individualistic act or evidence of individual pathology. Rather it is about transformation and crossing a threshold to join an enduring domain of Aboriginality. In this life world, where family is the highest social value and where a relational view of persons holds sway, the individualistic practice of psychiatric and other helping professions, is a considerable problem.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barry Jones"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1rmjj8.10","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781760462185"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ed127315-5e46-3769-b360-6f611e1c30c2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctv1rmjj8.10"}],"isPartOf":"Dictionary of World Biography","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"320","pageStart":"283","pagination":"283-320","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["History","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Physical sciences - Astronomy","Political science - Military science"],"title":"F","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctv1rmjj8.10","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":32730,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["ferdinand","faisal","became","french","nobel prize","politician","fabius","educated","minister","physicist born"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["John S. 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Fanon's critique of neocolonialism and cultural nationalism along with his call for direct political and militant engagement with the enemy as the basis of national culture in the process of decolonization is at the core of the following discussion. This essay locates Fanon's anticolonial view of cultural production as it has been represented in literary texts by African and diaspora women writers. Zo\u00eb Wicomb (South Africa) and Michelle Cliff (Jamaica) serve as examples of postcolonial writers who explore the potential of national consciousness as a necessary stage in the politicization of female characters struggling to decolonize their minds.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Scott L. 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A first response was to attack false universalism with the particularism of indigenous sociologies, but this effectively reproduced the domination of northern sociologies. A second response has been to recognize and trace the superimposition of national traditions in a hierarchical world. With the movement toward commodification and rationalization of knowledge production, however, national sociologies have been aligned with and merged into the global field of sociology. Opting out of this field leaves one in the wilderness, so the third response is to enter struggle on the terrain of this global field, which in turn requires accountability to publics. To be sure there are limits to these struggles, but they are nonetheless important in keeping sociology alive as a distinct discipline, that is keeping alive the critical standpoint of civil society against the over-extension of the market and its accomplice the regulatory state.","subTitle":"Global Challenges for National Disciplines","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bob Quinn"],"datePublished":"2014-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24625153","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10923977"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46487730"},{"name":"lccn","value":"200-1214148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a880f7e9-e7c5-31ad-9c13-a2599bbb777f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24625153"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newhiberevi"}],"isPartOf":"New Hibernia Review \/ Iris \u00c9ireannach Nua","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"16","pageStart":"9","pagination":"pp. 9-16","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"University of St. Thomas (Center for Irish Studies)","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","Irish Studies","History","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Conamara Revolution","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24625153","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":3988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Ritskes"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980911","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4a82d205-956b-3270-a7ec-48228b415c66"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980911"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"421","pageStart":"411","pagination":"pp. 411-421","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX: Indigenous Spirituality and Decolonization: Methodology for the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980911","volumeNumber":"379","wordCount":6193,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eme N. Ekekwe"],"datePublished":"1979-06-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160726","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160726"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"334","pageStart":"332","pagination":"pp. 332-334","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160726","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":1521,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Koffi Anyinefa","Richard Bjornson"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820195","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820195"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Intertextuality in Dongala's \"Un Fusil dans la main, un po\u00e8me dans la poche\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820195","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":6581,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vincent Cl\u00e9ment"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"566d7d32-0583-356f-b526-25aaadbff046"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41495095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"193","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-193","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"LATITUDE AND LONGITUDE OF THE PAST: PUCE, NEGRITUDE AND FRENCH CARIBBEAN IDENTITY IN AIM\u00c9 C\u00c9SAIRE'S POETRY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41495095","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10142,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"C\u00e9saire is one of the greatest French poets of the 20th century and his oeuvre has been studied by many scholars in its slightest recesses. In what way could a geographic analysis lead to a better understanding of C\u00e9saire's poetry and his process of identity-making? Actually, the geographic dimension of his writings has not really been analyzed, though it is one of the main backdrops of his poetry. C\u00e9saire invents his own geography of imagination as he claims it. What are the frames of his map of the word for personal use? C\u00e9saire's purpose is to find again his latitude and longitude lost in the wake of the slave ships. To exist, an uprooted person, as C\u00e9saire was, has to write a new relationship with the Earth according to the philosophy of geography developed by Eric Dardel. The author of this paper analyzes the influence of C\u00e9saire's poetry and his vision of the world in the process of identity-making. C\u00e9saire's poetry is first a personal revolt against colonial domination. But thanks to the strength of his writings, he overcame his inner wound to build a new Caribbean identity. C\u00e9saire es uno de los m\u00e1s grandes poetas franceses del siglo veinte y su obra ha sido estudiada en sus menores rincones por numerosos universitarios. \u00bf En que podr\u00eda un an\u00e1lisis geogr\u00e1fico conducir hacia una mejor comprensi\u00f3n de su poes\u00eda y de su proceso de construcci\u00f3n identitaria? En realidad, la dimensi\u00f3n geogr\u00e1fica de sus escritos nunca fue realmente analizada pese a que constituya una de las principales telas de fondo de su poes\u00eda. C\u00e9saire inventa su propia geograf\u00eda imaginaria como lo proclama. \u00bf Cu\u00e1les son las tramas de su mapa del mundo para uso personal? El prop\u00f3sito de C\u00e9saire es volver a encontrar su latitud y longitud perdidas en la estela de los barcos de esclavos. Para existir, una persona desarraigada, como C\u00e9saire lo era, deber escribir una nueva relaci\u00f3n con la Tierra seg\u00fan la filosof\u00eda de la geograf\u00eda desarrollada por Eric Dardel. El autor de este art\u00edculo analiza la influencia de la poes\u00eda de C\u00e9saire y de su visi\u00f3n del mundo en el proceso de construcci\u00f3n identitaria. La poes\u00eda de C\u00e9saire es ante todo una revuelta personal en contra de la dominaci\u00f3n colonial. Pero gracias a la fuerza de su escritura, sobrepasa su herida interior para edificar una nueva identidad caribe\u00f1a. C\u00e9saire est Tun des plus grands po\u00e8tes fran\u00e7ais du 20\u00e9me si\u00e8cle et son oeuvre a \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00e9tudi\u00e9e dans les moindres recoins par de nombreux universitaires. En quoi une analyse g\u00e9ographique pourrait-elle conduire vers une meilleure compr\u00e9hension de la po\u00e9sie de C\u00e9saire et de son processus de construction identitaire ? En r\u00e9alit\u00e9, la dimension g\u00e9ographique de ses \u00e9crits n'a jamais \u00e9t\u00e9 profond\u00e9ment analys\u00e9e, bien qu'elle constitue l'une des principales toiles de fond de sa po\u00e9sie. C\u00e9saire invente sa propre g\u00e9ographie imaginaire comme il proclam\u00e9. Quelles sont les trames de sa carte du monde \u00e0 usage personnel ? Lobjectif de C\u00e9saire est de retrouver sa latitude et sa longitude perdues dans le sillage des navires d'esclaves. Pour exister, une personne d\u00e9racin\u00e9e, comme C\u00e9saire l'\u00e9tait, doit \u00e9crire une nouvelle relation avec la Terre selon la philosophie de la g\u00e9ographie d\u00e9velopp\u00e9e par Eric Dardel. Eauteur de cet article analyse l'influence de la po\u00e9sie de C\u00e9saire et de sa vision du monde dans le processus de construction identitaire. La po\u00e9sie de C\u00e9saire est d'abord une r\u00e9volte personnelle contre la domination coloniale. Mais gr\u00e2ce \u00e0 la force de son \u00e9criture, il d\u00e9passe sa blessure int\u00e9rieure pour b\u00e2tir une nouvelle identit\u00e9 carib\u00e9enne.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ernest Kaiser"],"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401412","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00368237"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7e66c1e5-1f9b-3d7d-adaa-b1762eb3ad8a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40401412"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"scieandsoci"}],"isPartOf":"Science & Society","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"196","pageStart":"168","pagination":"pp. 168-196","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Guilford Press","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Recent Literature on Black Liberation Struggles and the Ghetto Crisis: (A Bibliographical Survey)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40401412","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":11064,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Ten Kortenaar"],"datePublished":"2000-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771408","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1771408"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"245","pageStart":"228","pagination":"pp. 228-245","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fictive States and the State of Fiction in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1771408","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":9695,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Josef Gugler","Oumar Cherif Diop"],"datePublished":"1998-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820727","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820727"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"158","pageStart":"147","pagination":"pp. 147-158","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Ousmane Semb\u00e8ne's \"Xala:\" The Novel, the Film, and Their Audiences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820727","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":5947,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. A. Avil\u00e9s"],"datePublished":"2001-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25569386","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0143005X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"66a77799-34d3-3df9-92fe-e87ecd0b599c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25569386"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jepidcommheal"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health (1979-)","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"171","pageStart":"164","pagination":"pp. 164-171","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"BMJ","sourceCategory":["Health Sciences","Medicine and Allied Health"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Epidemiology as Discourse: The Politics of Development Institutions in the \"Epidemiological Profile\" of El Salvador","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25569386","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":7753,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Study objective-To determine the ways in which institutions devoted to international development influence epidemiological studies. Design-This article takes a descriptive epidemiological study of El Salvador, \"Epidemiological Profile\", conducted in 1994 by the US Agency for International Development, as a case study. The methods include discourse analysis in order to uncover the ideological basis of the report and its characteristics as a discourse of development. Setting-El Salvador. Results-The Epidemiological Profile theoretical basis, the epidemiological transition theory, embodies the ethnocentrism of a \"colonizer's model of the world.\" This report follows the logic of a discourse of development by depoliticising development, creating abnormalities, and relying on the development consulting industry. The epidemiological transition theory serves as an ideology that legitimises and dissimulates the international order. Conclusions-Even descriptive epidemiological assessments or epidemiological profiles are imbued with theoretical assumptions shaped by the institutional setting under which epidemiological investigations are conducted.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard Roberts"],"datePublished":"1981-10-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25140091","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07003862"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49779200"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-242174"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25140091"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labourtravail"}],"isPartOf":"Labour \/ Le Travail","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"333","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-333","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1981,"publisher":"Canadian Committee on Labour History","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","History","History","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Peculiarities of African Labour and Working-Class History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25140091","volumeNumber":"8\/9","wordCount":10639,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rania Mahmoud"],"datePublished":"2019-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0298","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"50d02617-1123-3349-bb8b-6a0b03189da2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0298"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"316","pageStart":"298","pagination":"pp. 298-316","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Towards an Egyptian Bildungsroman: The National Intellectual after the 1919 Revolution in Naguib Mahfouz's Sugar Street<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.41.4.0298","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":8706,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Reading Naguib Mahfouz's Sugar Street (1957) as a Bildungsroman, I argue that Mahfouz creates an Egyptian Bildungsroman that relies on constant revision of European forms and a merging of local and global paradigms to fit the Egyptian socio-historical context. Mahfouz rejects both the traditional Bildungsroman as well as classical indigenous forms as signifiers of mimicry and petrification respectively. While the resolution of the Bildungsroman entails the negation of the Other, whose maturation is requisite upon accepting models that marginalize him\/her, classical models render the Other a geographic and temporal anachronism. In place of the traditional Bildungsroman and classical Arabic literary models, Mahfouz advocates for an eclectic paradigm that changes with the historical moment.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["CLAIRE JOUBERT"],"datePublished":"2009-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705257","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00474800"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565162367"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"134e34e1-765f-3670-95aa-669b86ce7290"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41705257"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litterature"}],"isPartOf":"Litt\u00e9rature","issueNumber":"154","language":["fre"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"149","pagination":"pp. 149-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Armand Colin","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Th\u00e9orie en traduction : Homi Bhabha et l'intervention postcoloniale","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41705257","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14122,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[942,1013]],"Locations in B":[[34482,34553]],"abstract":"The translation of Homi Bhabha's seminal The Location of Culture, fourteen years after its publication in English, should deepen and sharpen debates around his sense of the relation between culture and postcolonial politics and identity ; the translation itself raises these issues, given Bhabha's willed difficulties of style, demonstrating issues of cultural translatability, and, in this case, immersion of the original in French, which further complicates the trip. La traduction fran\u00e7aise de l'ouvrage de Homi Bhabha, Les Lieux de la Culture, 14 ans apr\u00e8s sa parution en anglais, devrait approfondir et clarifier les d\u00e9bats concernant sa conceptualisation de la relation entre culture et enjeux politiques et identitaires postcoloniaux. La traduction elle-m\u00eame pose ces enjeux, \u00e9tant donn\u00e9 les difficult\u00e9s voulues du style de Bhabha, qui incarnent les enjeux de traductibilit\u00e9, et, dans ce cas, l'immersion du texte original dans la langue et la culture fran\u00e7aise, ce qui complique le trajet en retour.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Epifanio San Juan Jr."],"datePublished":"2002-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170149","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0155977X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0e449fb0-558b-38e6-9908-5e2175a3e0fb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23170149"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socianalysis"}],"isPartOf":"Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation-State, Postcolonial Theory, and Global Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23170149","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":9039,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["McGlory T Speckman"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02548356"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43049113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"neotestamentica"}],"isPartOf":"Neotestamentica","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"97","pagination":"pp. 97-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"New Testament Society of Southern Africa","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"HEALING AND WHOLENESS IN LUKE-ACTS AS FOUNDATION FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: A PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO '\u039f\u039b\u039f\u039a\u039b\u0397\u03a1\u0399\u0391 IN ACTS 3:16","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43049113","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":7840,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Post-apartheid South Africa needs the healing of memories, bodies, relationships, etc. This will create conditions for social and economic development. Luke-Acts seems to have something to say in such a situation, dealing as it does with a range of social and economic issues. This paper focuses on the word \u03cc\u03bb\u03bf\u03ba\u03bb\u03b7\u03c1\u03af\u03b1 (Acts 3:16), a word which describes what happened to the former beggar whose condition was transformed after his encounter with Peter and John. It also highlights aspects of the miracle Acts 3:1-10 which are relevant for the context of socio-economic development in South Africa today. The conclusions are that physical and mental health, productivity, participation in the processes of production, and the need for a holistic approach to ministry and community service are of utmost importance if economic stability is to be achieved in South Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Clare Counihan"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618382","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4618382"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"161","pagination":"pp. 161-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Reading the Figure of Woman in African Literature: Psychoanalysis, Difference, and Desire","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4618382","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":11163,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines two interconnected discourses of racial identity in colonial and postcolonial writing to challenge the narratives of difference as they now exist in postcolonial theory. In Black Skin, White Masks, Fanon translates psychoanalysis from a discourse of sexual difference into a discourse of racial difference while explaining the colonial condition. Homi Bhabha subsequently adopts this specific Fanon to create his own psychoanalytic narrative, centered around desire. Rewriting sexual into racial difference, however, introduces a ghost into postcolonial theory: the figure of woman. Marking the site at which translation becomes visible and haunting, she reveals both what is at stake in the act of translation and what is being occluded-the disposition of desire. Rereading Achebe's Things Fall Apart and Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions, the essay argues that attending to the figure of woman enables revised understandings of African literature and postcolonial subjectivity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mary E. Wood"],"datePublished":"2004-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107342","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10633685"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"302ebbe2-501c-3aff-a3c4-7c21f98f46a3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20107342"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"narrative"}],"isPartOf":"Narrative","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Ohio State University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"\"I've Found Him!\": Diagnostic Narrative in \"The DSM-IV Casebook\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20107342","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hoda Elsadda"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178448","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00463663"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38966895"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-236645"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bbb77201-79f0-32da-91fb-3a6e60de90e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3178448"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"feministstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Feminist Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Feminist Studies, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Sociology"],"title":"Discourses on Women's Biographies and Cultural Identity: Twentieth-Century Representations of the Life of 'A'isha Bint Abi Bakr","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3178448","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":11402,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u05d1\u05ea\u05d9\u05d4 \u05e8\u05d5\u05d3\u05d3","Batya Roded"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442803","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01d445a1-70f3-35a2-8b8c-18b5053b0c32"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442803"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"2","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"330","pageStart":"303","pagination":"pp. 303-330","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Informal Space between a Jewish Ghetto and Fortified Enclave: The Case of the Jewish Settlement in Hebron \/ \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05de\u05d1\u05e6\u05e8 \u05dc\u05d2\u05d8\u05d5: \u05d4\u05de\u05e7\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05df","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442803","volumeNumber":"\u05d9\u05d1","wordCount":10392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u05d4\u05de\u05d0\u05de\u05e8 \u05de\u05d1\u05e7\u05e9 \u05dc\u05d7\u05e9\u05d5\u05e3 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05d0\u05d5\u05e4\u05df \u05e9\u05d1\u05d5 \u05e4\u05e8\u05e7\u05d8\u05d9\u05e7\u05d5\u05ea \u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05e7\u05d9\u05d9\u05de\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 (\u05d0-\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8\u05de\u05dc\u05d9) \u05d1\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05df. \u05d0\u05d8\u05e2\u05df \u05e9\u05d1\u05ea\u05e0\u05d0\u05d9 \u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d6\u05e6\u05d9\u05d4 \u05de\u05ea\u05e7\u05d9\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05e2\u05d9\u05e8 \u05ea\u05d4\u05dc\u05d9\u05da \u05d3\u05d5 \u05e1\u05d8\u05e8\u05d9: \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05e9\u05d9\u05d9\u05e6\u05e8 \u05d4\u05ea\u05d4\u05dc\u05d9\u05da \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u05de\u05d1\u05e0\u05d4 \u05dc\u05de\u05ea\u05e0\u05d7\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05e6\u05d5\u05e8\u05ea \u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d4\u05de\u05e9\u05dc\u05d1\u05ea \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05de\u05d1\u05e6\u05e8 \u05d5\u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d8\u05d5, \u05d5\u05d6\u05d5 \u05d7\u05d5\u05d6\u05e8\u05ea \u05d5\u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4 \u05e2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d0\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1. \u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05d4\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05de\u05d7\u05e7\u05e8\u05d9\u05ea \u05e2\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05de\u05de\u05e2\u05d8\u05ea \u05dc\u05e2\u05e1\u05d5\u05e7 \u05d1\u05de\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea\u05d4 \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05ea\u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea \u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea, \u05d3\u05d9\u05d5\u05df \u05db\u05d6\u05d4 \u05d7\u05d5\u05e9\u05e3 \u05de\u05e2\u05e8\u05da \u05d9\u05d7\u05e1\u05d9\u05dd \u05de\u05d5\u05e8\u05db\u05d1 \u05d1\u05d9\u05df \u05d4\u05e9\u05d7\u05e7\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d6\u05d9\u05e8\u05d4. \u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d2\u05d5\u05d3 \u05dc\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05e6\u05e8 \u05de\u05dc\u05de\u05d8\u05d4, \u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \u05d7\u05d5\u05dc\u05e9\u05d4, \u05d4\u05e1\u05e4\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e7\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9 \u2014 \u05db\u05de\u05e8\u05d7\u05d1 \u05d0\u05e4\u05d5\u05e8 \u05d4\u05e0\u05d5\u05e6\u05e8 \u05de\u05dc\u05de\u05e2\u05dc\u05d4 \u2014 \u05de\u05e7\u05d5\u05e8\u05d5 \u05d1\u05e2\u05d5\u05e6\u05de\u05d4. \u05d5\u05d0\u05d5\u05dc\u05dd, \u05e0\u05de\u05e6\u05d0 \u05e9\u05de\u05e2\u05de\u05d3\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05de\u05ea\u05e0\u05d7\u05dc\u05d9\u05dd \u05d1\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05de\u05e9\u05e7\u05e3 \u05d0\u05ea \u05e9\u05e0\u05d9 \u05d4\u05e7\u05e6\u05d5\u05d5\u05ea \u05d4\u05dc\u05dc\u05d5 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d9\u05e8\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05df; \u05d0\u05e3 \u05e9\u05d4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1 \u05d4\u05d9\u05d4\u05d5\u05d3\u05d9 \u05d1\u05d7\u05d1\u05e8\u05d5\u05df \u05d4\u05d5\u05e7\u05dd \u05db\u05de\u05d1\u05e6\u05e8, \u05d4\u05d5\u05d0 \u05de\u05e7\u05d1\u05dc \u05dc\u05d0\u05d5\u05e8\u05da \u05d6\u05de\u05df \u05de\u05d0\u05e4\u05d9\u05d9\u05e0\u05d9\u05dd \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d8\u05d5. Exposing the ways in which colonial technologies create informal space in a city, in this case Hebron, I argue that in a colonial state they produce a bilateral process. The informal space leads to Ghettoization of the Jewish settlement, which has been established as fortified enclave, and the Ghetto characteristics produce and reproduce an informal urban space. Ghettoization as an informalizer of the urban colonial space has been hardly debated. The colonial frontier developed as informal from \"above\", in contrast to a parallel process from \"below\", arising out of weakness. The settlers' status includes both power and weakness, so that they could obtain only a very limited and fractured space.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil Lazarus"],"datePublished":"1986-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636741","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"706e969b-001e-3143-b0a5-c63ccf35d7e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2636741"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"182","pageStart":"158","pagination":"pp. 158-182","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Theology"],"title":"Longing, Radicalism, Sentimentality: Reflections on Breyten Breytenbach's A Season in Paradise","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2636741","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lynn Schler"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20065046","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c655f4cb-4acd-3574-a494-a67503dfdd4c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20065046"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History, the Nation-State, and Alternative Narratives: An Example from Colonial Douala","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20065046","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":8931,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines processes of community-building in the immigrant quarter of New Bell, Douala, during the interwar years. Historians of Douala have overlooked the history of New Bell, focusing instead on the political and economic activity of Duala's Westernized elite during this period. This historiographic oversight reflects a preoccupation with elite politics identified as the seeds of nationalism in Cameroon. An examination of the community of immigrants provides us with an alternative conceptualization of a multiethnic collective. By tracing the construction and evolution of public space in interwar New Bell, we can uncover elements of group solidarity binding together this highly diverse population. \/\/\/ Cet article examine les processus d'organisation communautaire dans le quartier immigrant de New Bell \u00e0 Douala, pendant les ann\u00e9es d'entre guerres. Les historiens de Douala ont n\u00e9glig\u00e9 l'Histoire du quartier de New Bell, se concentrant plut\u00f4t sur l'activit\u00e9 politique et \u00e9conomique de l'\u00e9lite occidentale de Douala pendant cette p\u00e9riode. Cet oubli refl\u00e8te une pr\u00e9occupation de l'\u00e9lite politique identifi\u00e9e comme \u00e9tant \u00e0 l'origine du nationalisme au Cameroun. Une analyse de la communaut\u00e9 immigrante nous offre une conceptualisation alternative d'une collectivit\u00e9 multiethnique. En retra\u00e7ant la construction et l'\u00e9volution de l'espace publique dans le New Bell de l'entre guerres, nous pouvons mettre en lumi\u00e8re les \u00e9l\u00e9ments d'une solidarit\u00e9 de groupe liant de mani\u00e8re solide cette population hautement diversifi\u00e9e.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["D.A.C. Boyd"],"datePublished":"1987-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b97d3411-fef3-3a9e-8228-d3fac7170bf2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/27862888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"143","pageStart":"123","pagination":"pp. 123-143","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Historical Materialist-Symbolist Theory of Race Discrimination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/27862888","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":6188,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Approaches to race discrimination in neo-classical economic literature generally regard such discrimination as synonymous with individaul preference, and the basis for the discrimination is not seen as a part of any short or long run strategy aimed at maximis-the profitability of firms. By contrast, some Dual Labour Market (DLM) theorists, drawing heavily on radical Marxian concepts and traditions of analysis, but moulding them in response to modern social and historical developments, have tended to subsume the racial discrimination question into the central debate of working class cohesion and strategies of capitalist domination. This article argues the need to take into account the holistic nature of racialism in order to analyse the effects of discriminatory relations, and says the origin of racial discrimination can best be understood in terms of the function of symbols in power relations, against the background of the historical materialist view which sees history as essentially the interaction of social and economic classes or groups. Hence, the author develops what he calls the Historical Materialist-Symbolist (HMS) theory of race discrimination. The author differentiates between categories and classes and argues that the operation of racial groups should be seen as a special case of the functioning of the more general concept of class in social and economic relations. This enables him to develop a theoretical explanation of the incidence of discrimination, and to show the labour market as functioning within this holistic view of society.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Opoku Agyeman"],"datePublished":"1977-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160263","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0022278X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48535892"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227388"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/160263"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jmodeafristud"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Modern African Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"488","pageStart":"481","pagination":"pp. 481-488","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Overlooked Spiritual Factor in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/160263","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":3951,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Guy Martin"],"datePublished":"1976-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483923","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"61a799f2-1995-3f42-9dff-4b5585b14230"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/483923"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"46","pageStart":"23","pagination":"pp. 23-46","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Socialism, Economic Development and Planning in Mali, 1960-1968","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/483923","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":12150,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Cet essai se situe dans la tradition marxiste de l'\u00e9conomie politique. Adoptant une m\u00e9thodologie pluridisciplinaire, il s'interroge sur les causes de l'\u00e9chec du r\u00e9gime socialiste de Modibo K\u00e9\u00efta que le Mali a connu entre 1960 et 1968. L'analyse semble r\u00e9v\u00e9ler que les causes de cet \u00e9chec sont \u00e0 rechercher \u00e0 la fois dans des probl\u00e8mes d'ordre \u00e9conomique et socio-politique. Une \u00e9tude attentive de l'\u00e9conomie d\u00e9montre que, compte tenu de l'\u00e9troitesse de la base \u00e9conomique initiale et des difficult\u00e9s dues \u00e0 l'environnement g\u00e9ographique et \u00e0 la raret\u00e9 des ressources \u00e9conomiques, le Mali accusait d\u00e8s le d\u00e9part un fort handicap dans la poursuite de quelque politique de d\u00e9veloppement que ce soit. D'autre part, l'analyse des classes sociales d\u00e9montre qu'en fait l'exp\u00e9rience socialiste au Mali ne fut autre qu'une tentative de la part de la classe bureaucratique, devenue politiquement dominante, de se constituer la base \u00e9conomique qui lui manquait jusqu'\u00e0 l'ind\u00e9pendance. En ce faisant, elle se posait en ennemie de la classe marchande au plan \u00e9conomique, et en ennemie de l'aristocratie traditionnelle au plan politique. En derni\u00e8re analyse, le socialisme au Mali semble n'avoir \u00e9t\u00e9 qu'un faux-semblant id\u00e9ologique utilis\u00e9 au profit exclusif de la classe bureaucratique dirigeante.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Hansen"],"datePublished":"2009-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15490815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54663119"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212165"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6aecbc08-5540-3ac5-92ec-130e2e6c236c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41427209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnarrtheory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Narrative Theory","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"279","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-279","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Journal of Narrative Theory","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Introduction","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41427209","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":3109,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan P. Eburne","Jeremy Braddock"],"datePublished":"2005-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287095","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c33c271-daef-3016-95b0-2ba9c6ef0004"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26287095"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"740","pageStart":"731","pagination":"pp. 731-740","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"INTRODUCTION: PARIS, CAPITAL OF THE BLACK ATLANTIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26287095","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":3873,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Heike I. Schmidt"],"datePublished":"2008-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30114368","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10434070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46673214"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213876"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c7ff7b4c-9025-32bd-8381-e82d30fe744c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30114368"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhistsexu"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of the History of Sexuality","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"25","pagination":"pp. 25-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"University of Texas Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","History","Sociology","History","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Colonial Intimacy: The Rechenberg Scandal and Homosexuality in German East Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30114368","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":17645,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27686]],"Locations in B":[[21227,21281]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ralph P. Forsberg","Janet Afary","Mark D. Stohs","Tom Foster Digby","Felicia Ackerman","Richard Double"],"datePublished":"1989-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130348","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0065972X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb662fc7-7032-3e74-b611-ae7ed3e184ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3130348"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"procaddramerphil"}],"isPartOf":"Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"861","pageStart":"855","pagination":"pp. 855-861","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"American Philosophical Association","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Axiology"],"title":"Letters to the Editor","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3130348","volumeNumber":"62","wordCount":3677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maimire Mennasemay"],"datePublished":"1982-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484295","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00083968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205190"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227236"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f75adf4d-491f-3be6-a054-cfdd994b433b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/484295"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajafristudrev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of African Studies \/ Revue Canadienne des \u00c9tudes Africaines","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"223","pagination":"pp. 223-244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Theory, Political Science and African Development","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/484295","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":9845,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"L'auteur se penche sur l'apport de la th\u00e9orie politique, et m\u00e8ne une r\u00e9flexion sur les formes humaines de la vie politique en Afrique. Il constate que la probl\u00e9matique du d\u00e9veloppement domine la science politique de l'Afrique. Cependant cette probl\u00e9matique est s\u00e9rieusement restreinte par quatre limites: conception objectiviste du temps, vision \u00e9conomiste de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9, conception instrumentaliste de la politique et n\u00e9gation de la primaut\u00e9 \u00e9pist\u00e9mologique de la vie politique. Suivent deux r\u00e9flexions qui mettent la th\u00e9orie politique en rapport avec les politiques africaines d'une part et l'\u00e9mancipation de l'Afrique d'autre part. Sans nier l'importance des recherches empiriques, l'auteur conclut qu'il est indispensable de construire en Afrique une th\u00e9orie politique. Elle seule pourrait rendre aux Africains la conscience historique leur permettant de comprendre qu'ils sont \u00e0 la fois les producteurs et les produits de leur propre histoire.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bojana Gledic"],"datePublished":"2012-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.66.58","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19482825"},{"name":"oclc","value":"367582387"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-200199"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f07e2c0a-7ab6-33be-845e-fda356011915"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/rockmounrevi.66.58"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"rockmounrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Rocky Mountain Review","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The (Dis)Position of Immigrants in the 1960s London of Anita Desai's Bye-Bye Blackbird<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/rockmounrevi.66.58","volumeNumber":"66","wordCount":7342,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Anita Desai's 1971 novel Bye-Bye Blackbird concerns an episode in the life of two friends from India living in the London of the 1960s. The two men are first-generation immigrants and the work depict their (dis)position in the decade that witnessed the founding of the first large immigrant communities in Great Britain. The identity of the characters is difficult to define as they undergo the same turbulent changes as the decade in which they are placed. The article suggests that the vertical history of immigrant communities has affected the desired development of multiculturalism. Crossing actual borders is not always accompanied by crossing the inner borders of the self, and this may be one of the possible reasons why today the idea of multiculturalism is being brought into question.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kirsten Thisted"],"datePublished":"2022-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48680646","identifier":[{"name":"oclc","value":"818654450"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012273755"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a6bd3a1-19f1-3c21-84f2-1e694d073e5b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48680646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcmrs"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Critical Mixed Race Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"214","pageStart":"197","pagination":"pp. 197-214","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2022,"publisher":"eScholarship Publishing, California Digital Library","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Blame, Shame, and Atonement","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48680646","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":9974,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Outside Greenland, many believe that the Greenlandic name for Greenland means \u201cLand of the People.\u201d However, the Greenlandic word for human being or person is inuk (plural: inuit), and Greenland is called Kalaallit Nunaat not Inuit Nunaat. Kalaallit is the West Greenlandic term for modern-day Greenlanders who trace their ancestry along two lines: to the Inuit in the West and the Scandinavians in the East. During the first half of the twentieth century, this mixed ancestry was an important argument for the Greenlandic claim for recognition and equality. This article examines a literary source, Pavia Petersen\u2019s 1944 novel, Niuvertorutsip pania (The outpost manager\u2019s daughter). The novel\u2019s female protagonist, who is of mixed ancestry, is staged as a national symbol for modern Greenland, a country that appropriates European culture while remaining Greenlandic. After the end of the colonial period, the Inuit legacy and Greenlanders\u2019status as an Indigenous people became important drivers of the Greenlandic claim for independence. In present-day Greenlandic film and literature, Danes are often left out of the story entirely, delegitimizing much of society\u2019s genetic and cultural legacy. Naturally, this poses a problem for the Greenlanders who not only number Europeans among their remote ancestors but also live with a dual identity, with one Danish and one Greenlandic parent. This article illustrates that the notion of \u201cmixed-breed\u201d or \u201chalf\u201d Greenlanders is currently regarded with such ambivalent feelings because it accentuates unresolved tensions among the ethnic groups, including the continued dominance of the outdated (colonial) affective economies in Danish-Greenlandic relations.","subTitle":"Greenlandic Responses to Racialized Discourses about Greenlanders and Danes","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Issa G. Shivji"],"datePublished":"1991-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2f23b29a-4ae5-3c81-a0bc-64df4d2f8b63"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4005924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"91","pageStart":"79","pagination":"pp. 79-91","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1991,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Democracy Debate in Africa: Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4005924","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6453,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robin Morgan","Carol Anne Douglas"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25796753","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00300071"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4fc0687b-2f78-3beb-a31e-09c5179fa353"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25796753"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"offourbacks"}],"isPartOf":"Off Our Backs","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-3, 21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"off our backs, inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"interview: Robin Morgan on Terrorism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25796753","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6158,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald M. Nonini"],"datePublished":"1985-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790122","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03044092"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0a5da157-c198-364a-92b8-71e0cc5349df"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29790122"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"dialanth"}],"isPartOf":"Dialectical Anthropology","issueNumber":"1\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":57.0,"pageEnd":"63","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-63","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"VARIETIES OF MATERIALISM","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29790122","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":37725,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Jumel","Basil Kingstone","Ronald Aronson","Francis Jeanson"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511207","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23511207"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":48.0,"pageEnd":"67","pageStart":"20","pagination":"pp. 20-67","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Third Man in the Story: Ronald Aronson Discusses the Sartre-Camus Conflict with Francis Jeanson","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23511207","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":19668,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Donald Rothchild"],"datePublished":"1970-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1953460","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00030554"},{"name":"oclc","value":"36114239"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23027"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"754e7367-7984-3c0e-9750-ecd4f3cc1c3e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1953460"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerpoliscierevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Political Science Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"753","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-753","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"American Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Kenya's Africanization Program: Priorities of Development and Equity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1953460","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":13207,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rita Kohli"],"datePublished":"2008-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23479180","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07375328"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ac2c9f4a-8a6a-3821-ac5b-1d08273bc606"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23479180"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"teaceducquar"}],"isPartOf":"Teacher Education Quarterly","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Breaking the Cycle of Racism in the Classroom: Critical Race Reflections from Future Teachers of Color","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23479180","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":5745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jared A. Ball"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0047","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"69e466e5-a7e8-3184-99b3-a66637518843"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0047"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"57","pageStart":"47","pagination":"pp. 47-57","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"A New Apartheid: Media Consolidation and Black America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5816\/blackscholar.44.1.0047","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":5314,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Sherene Razack"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811048","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cabbb47e-04ba-3291-b28f-ebcb021adc3c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3811048"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"211","pageStart":"204","pagination":"pp. 204-211","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Those Who \"Witness the Evil\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3811048","volumeNumber":"18","wordCount":3150,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[127359,127442]],"Locations in B":[[1097,1182]],"abstract":"For the better part of the last decade, Canadian peacekeepers have been encouraged to frame their activities in Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and Croatia as encounters with \"absolute evil.\" Peacekeeping is seen as a moral project in which the North civilizes the South. Using the Canadian peacekeeping context, I reflect on President Bush's use of the phrase \"axis of evil\" in the New World Order. I argue that this phrase reveals an epistemology structured by notions of the civilized (White) North and the barbaric (Racialized) South. These racial underpinnings give the concept of an \"axis of evil\" its currency in countries of the North.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anjali Prabhu"],"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942924","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15547000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"efec4b2b-d798-3e0c-9106-3d3fd083bdae"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26942924"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"levinasstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Levinas Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"146","pageStart":"127","pagination":"pp. 127-146","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eros in Infinity and Totality","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942924","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":7435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"A Reading of Levinas and Fanon","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Susan Phillips"],"datePublished":"1993-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497822","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc2ee639-056c-3392-aa51-5fac25fe2aa7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24497822"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Course Syllabus: Colonial And Post-Colonial Legal Systems","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24497822","volumeNumber":"16","wordCount":1190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brian Weinstein"],"datePublished":"1966-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45311476","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00113530"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dd1a9325-1437-36b3-8365-1735e9791450"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45311476"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"currenthistory"}],"isPartOf":"Current History","issueNumber":"296","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"244","pageStart":"214","pagination":"pp. 214-220, 244","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1966,"publisher":"University of California Press","sourceCategory":["History","Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","History","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The French Community\u2014Does It Exist?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45311476","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":4793,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jesse Taylor"],"datePublished":"1970-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163464","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cb2cf5a8-7a3e-37b3-8b4d-3aeea82a9553"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41163464"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"59","pageStart":"58","pagination":"pp. 58-59","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41163464","volumeNumber":"1","wordCount":1166,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charlotte H. Bruner"],"datePublished":"1972-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/387183","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0016111X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709544"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227123"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/387183"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"frenchreview"}],"isPartOf":"The French Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"American Association of Teachers of French","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Education","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Black French Literature in the Classroom","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/387183","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":3156,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Craig A. Lockard"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20078600","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10456007"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42392448"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-004906"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9998adf4-bd08-3ba4-bc80-c497ecbcd749"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20078600"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jworldhistory"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of World History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":44.0,"pageEnd":"270","pageStart":"227","pagination":"pp. 227-270","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"University of Hawai'i Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Meeting Yesterday Head-on: The Vietnam War in Vietnamese, American, and World History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20078600","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":18304,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The American-Vietnamese War can best be analyzed in the context of three distinct entities: Vietnam, the United States, and the larger world. It can be seen as an episode in the larger history of each of these entities. This important war resulted from a confluence of factors that were deeply rooted in these histories. The first is Vietnam's revolutionary tradition and centuries-long struggle for national independence. Second is U.S. foreign policy, driven by the Cold War but chronically outward-thrusting. Third is a global context of anticolonial, anti-imperialist, and socially transformational revolutions in the twentieth century.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["R. Kurtz"],"datePublished":"1996-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634939","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8b84827f-8546-3471-bafe-9946aebb4cfb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24634939"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"125","pageStart":"115","pagination":"pp. 115-125","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Texas Tech University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Lloyd Fernando's \"Scorpion Orchid\" and Lord Jim's Dilemma: Another Descendant, in Other Words","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634939","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5171,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[30865,30926]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Adam Gussow"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300383","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01612492"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41669989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23407"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ddceddcc-eada-3d25-9c4f-091a40ae4d0b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3300383"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"callaloo"}],"isPartOf":"Callaloo","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"44","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-44","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"\"Shoot Myself a Cop\": Mamie Smith's \"Crazy Blues\" as Social Text","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3300383","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":18071,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[178171,178270]],"Locations in B":[[37099,37197]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942930","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15547000"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86e99c82-5cb9-34d7-a11b-2fcf07c0848c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26942930"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"levinasstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Levinas Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"248","pageStart":"242","pagination":"pp. 242-248","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Philosophy Documentation Center","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26942930","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":3755,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kiran Banerjee","Abraham Singer"],"datePublished":"2018-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26600461","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10659129"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205217"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227238"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6ea33e34-245a-3690-a95e-734fe7cc7df2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26600461"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"poliresequar"}],"isPartOf":"Political Research Quarterly","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"227","pageStart":"215","pagination":"pp. 215-227","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"University of Utah","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Race and the Meso-Level Sources of Domination","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26600461","volumeNumber":"71","wordCount":10673,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[63929,63975]],"abstract":"This paper contributes to recent debates over the place of race in liberal theory, and the work of John Rawls in particular. Controversy has centered on whether Rawls's broader philosophical approach is capable of addressing racial injustice, and if not, precisely why the Rawlsian framework remains disconcertingly blind to such issues. Pace scholars who focus on Rawls's emphasis on \"ideal theory,\" and whether that precludes his engagement with racial domination, we show that Rawls's inability to account for, or address, racial injustice lies in his limited understanding of the kinds of \"associations\" or institutions that condition and perpetuate racial oppression. As studies in race and American Political Development have shown, nonstatutory institutions such as political parties, unions, and universities were key to the development and maintenance of racial hierarchical order. Fully understanding the role of these institutions in perpetuating racial injustice allows us to see that the limitations of Rawls are not his ideal theory, per se, but his preoccupation with the \"basic structure\" of society, which rendered such institutions outside his analysis. We conclude by drawing on thinkers in the Afro-Modern tradition who help us conceptualize how such institutions are complicit in, and can be weaponized against, racial domination.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter R. Saiz"],"datePublished":"1993-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29784482","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10409483"},{"name":"oclc","value":"73726972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-200215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"14df951c-1004-38a9-88d3-5d1a89970613"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29784482"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eugeoneirevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Eugene O'Neill Review","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"30","pagination":"pp. 30-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Penn State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities","Performing Arts","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Colonial Story in \"The Emperor Jones\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29784482","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3363,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[19817,19858]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["E. San Juan, Jr."],"datePublished":"1998-03-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42633626","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00317837"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60628445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-250570"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5f6647e4-d474-313f-b591-dfbf3db2ec41"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42633626"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"philstud"}],"isPartOf":"Philippine Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"121","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-121","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Ateneo de Manila University","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"In Pursuit of \"The Gangster of Love\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42633626","volumeNumber":"46","wordCount":4865,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Daphna Canetti","Stevan E Hobfoll","Ami Pedahzur","Eran Zaidise"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20798927","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"625bc8a7-c6de-3ef2-92a9-02de9010fe6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20798927"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"587","pageStart":"575","pagination":"pp. 575-587","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology"],"title":"Much ado about religion: Religiosity, resource loss, and support for political violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20798927","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":10141,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The association between religion and violence has raised much interest in both academic and public circles. Yet on the individual level, existing empirical accounts are both sparse and conflicting. Based on previous research which found that religion plays a role in the support of political violence only through the mediation of objective and perceived deprivations, the authors test Conservation of Resource (COR) theory as an individual level explanation for the association of religion, socio-economic deprivations, and support for political violence. COR theory predicts that when individuals' personal, social or economic resources are threatened, a response mechanism may include violence. Utilizing two distinct datasets, and relying on structural equation models analysis, the latter two stages of a three-stage study are reported here. In a follow-up to their previous article, the authors refine the use of socio-economic variables in examining the effects of deprivation as mediating between religion and political violence. Then, they analyze an independent sample of 545 Muslims and Jews, collected during August and September 2004, to test a psychological-based explanation based on COR theory. This study replaces measures of deprivation used in the previous stages with measures of economic and psychological resource loss. Findings show that the relationship between religion and support of political violence only holds true when mediated by deprivations and psychological resource loss. They also suggest that the typical tendency to focus on economic resource loss is over-simplistic as psychological, not economic, resources seem to mediate between religion and support of violence.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Hussein M. Adam"],"datePublished":"1992-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006165","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03056244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50245560"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-263330"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa3d727c-37f5-3d91-a947-19695b53d4d5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4006165"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviafripoliecon"}],"isPartOf":"Review of African Political Economy","issueNumber":"54","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"11","pagination":"pp. 11-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"ROAPE Publications Ltd","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Somalia: Militarism, Warlordism or Democracy?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4006165","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7832,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27692]],"Locations in B":[[49010,49056]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["\u05d3\u05e0\u05d9\u05d0\u05dc \u05de\u05d5\u05e0\u05d8\u05e8\u05e1\u05e7\u05d5","Daniel Monterescu"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442299","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15651495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2afb6a8-b72a-3dfc-a5e5-8ab0024aa68b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23442299"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"israelisociology"}],"isPartOf":"Israeli Sociology \/ \u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d9\u05e9\u05e8\u05d0\u05dc\u05d9\u05ea","issueNumber":"1","language":["heb"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"159","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-159","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Dept. of Sociology and Anthropology, TAU \/ \u05d4\u05d7\u05d5\u05d2 \u05dc\u05e1\u05d5\u05e6\u05d9\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4 \u05d5\u05dc\u05d0\u05e0\u05ea\u05e8\u05d5\u05e4\u05d5\u05dc\u05d5\u05d2\u05d9\u05d4, \u05d0\u05d5\u05e0\u05d9\u05d1\u05e8\u05e1\u05d9\u05d8\u05ea \u05ea\u05dc-\u05d0\u05d1\u05d9\u05d1","sourceCategory":["Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"\"Stranger Masculinities\": Cultural Constructions of Arab Maleness in Jaffa \/ \u05d6\u05d4\u05d5\u05ea \u05de\u05ea\u05d5\u05da \"\u05d6\u05e8\u05d5\u05ea\": \u05d4\u05d1\u05e0\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05ea\u05e8\u05d1\u05d5\u05ea\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e9\u05dc \u05d2\u05d1\u05e8\u05d9\u05d5\u05ea \u05e2\u05e8\u05d1\u05d9\u05ea \u05d1\u05d9\u05e4\u05d5","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23442299","volumeNumber":"\u05d4","wordCount":14789,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Demetrius L. Eudell"],"datePublished":"1998-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820850","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820850"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"173","pageStart":"156","pagination":"pp. 156-173","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A New Kind of Freedom: Some Notes on the Transformative Thought of C. L. R. James","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820850","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":9157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rosalind Petchesky","Meena Alexander"],"datePublished":"2014-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364903","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07321562"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60625258"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-216125"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c483730-63ac-3cc3-a966-7ef0b0c3698f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24364903"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"womestudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Women's Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"20","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-20","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"The Feminist Press at the City University of New York","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: Life and Debt","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24364903","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":3078,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lyman Tower Sargent"],"datePublished":"1983-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26212502","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0143781X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64f3e461-3a50-349e-9fce-836c8f8e3259"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26212502"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"histpolithou"}],"isPartOf":"History of Political Thought","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":40.0,"pageEnd":"522","pageStart":"483","pagination":"pp. 483-522","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1983,"publisher":"Imprint Academic Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"UTOPIANISM IN COLONIAL AMERICA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26212502","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":17691,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["C. WADE"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086495"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"05a4b446-a0d8-3b44-86af-3201382dbe73"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40654465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"cariquar"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"63","pagination":"pp. 63-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"A Forgotten Forum: The Forum Quarterly and the Development of West Indian Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40654465","volumeNumber":"50","wordCount":4900,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Today the West Indian novel is an internationally recognized literary phenomenon, and we speak without hesitation of a West Indian literature. But over sixty years ago, when Bim first appeared neither phenomenon had any recognizable existence. Edward Baugh's appropriately qualified assessment of Bim's role in the evolution of West Indian literature (1966) provides a context within which to examine the place and importance of Bim's antecedents in preparing the groundwork for the region's most influential and enduring literary magazine, and ultimately, for the development of West Indian literature itself. While the achievements of the Trinidadian little magazines have been comprehensively documented by Sander (1978,1988), there has been scant acknowledgement of the contribution of Bim's pioneering Barbadian counterparts - chiefly The Forum Quarterly launched in 1931 - without whose example those successes for Frank Collymore's journal would have been considerably less assured.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raphael Joseph"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856428","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00195510"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606240327"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6c871bb5-cfe8-36de-98d4-c9852c2d4858"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41856428"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"indijpoliscie"}],"isPartOf":"The Indian Journal of Political Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"430","pageStart":"427","pagination":"pp. 427-430","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Indian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41856428","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":1593,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["David Nicholls"],"datePublished":"1970-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3231868","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49251980"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-237237"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3231868"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"414","pageStart":"400","pagination":"pp. 400-414","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Politics and Religion in Haiti","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3231868","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":8349,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Politique et religion en Ha\u00efti. L'article \u00e9tudie le r\u00f4le de la religion dans la politique de l'Ha\u00efti contemporaine, en regard de la croissance du nationalisme pendant la p\u00e9riode de l'occupation am\u00e9ricaine de l'\u00eele (1915-34). L'auteur y soutient que les rapports entre la politique et la religion instaur\u00e9s par l'\u00e8re Duvalier ne sauraient s'expliquer sans cet arri\u00e8re-plan. Deux aspects du nationalisme ha\u00eftien lui semblent particuli\u00e8rement significatifs : l'hostilit\u00e9 des \u00e9crivains nationalistes \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard d'une \u00e9glise domin\u00e9e par l'\u00e9tranger, d'une part, ce qui a fait souhaiter l'\u00e9mergence d'une \u00e9glise nationale \u00e0 hi\u00e9rarchie autochtone et provoqu\u00e9 la d\u00e9nonciation du r\u00f4le de l'Eglise en mati\u00e8re d'\u00e9ducation ; la pr\u00e9sentation du Voodoo, d'autre part, comme v\u00e9ritable religion des masses ha\u00eftiennes par beaucoup de jeunes intellectuels de cette \u00e9poque, dont Duvalier. La deuxi\u00e8me partie de l'article scrute la crise de 1960-6 entre l'Eglise et l'Etat. Duvalier voyait \u00e9videmment l'Eglise catholique comme un des centres virtuels d'opposition \u00e0 son r\u00e9gime : la plus grande partie du clerg\u00e9 et tous les \u00e9v\u00eaques dioc\u00e9sains \u00e9taient \u00e9trangers, leur sympathie allant g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement aux adversaires de Duvalier. De fait, ils tendaient \u00e0 se m\u00ealer \u00e0 l'\u00e9lite mul\u00e2tre et \u00e0 refl\u00e9ter les vues politiques de ce groupe. Duvalier vit \u00e9galement une menace dans le d\u00e9veloppement rapide d'une gauche catholique, au sein des syndicats et parmi les \u00e9tudiants. Une lutte ouverte entre l'Eglise et l'Etat finit par se d\u00e9clarer, au bout de laquelle l'archev\u00eaque de Portau-Prince fut expuls\u00e9, le Pr\u00e9sident excommuni\u00e9 et le Nonce rappel\u00e9. La crise devait se r\u00e9sorber en 1966 par la signature d'un accord entre Duvalier et le Vatican portant sur l'institution d'une hi\u00e9rarchie catholique d'origine ha\u00eftienne. L'article expose \u00e9galement la politique de Duvalier \u00e0 l'\u00e9gard du culte Voodoo et des diverses congr\u00e9gations protestantes.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Gyanendra Pandey"],"datePublished":"2006-05-06","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"01b16595-8e3d-3585-a8e6-27b043cd9ac7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4418177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"18","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"1788","pageStart":"1779","pagination":"pp. 1779+1781-1788","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Government","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Time of the Dalit Conversion","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4418177","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":10541,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"More than a reference to the mass conversion of dalits to Buddhism in 1956 and to other religions in subsequent years, \"dalit conversion\", in this article, also denotes their conversion to full citizenship that followed with the abolition of untouchability, institution of universal adult franchise, extension of legal and political rights to all sections of the population, with special safeguards for disadvantaged groups. It could also denote a conversion to the \"modern\" - signified by a certain sensibility, particular kinds of dress and comportment and particular rules of social and political engagement. The time of the dalit conversion is also then the time of Indian democracy - a time of definition, anticipation and struggle, as seen in the call to educate, organise and agitate.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stephen Howe"],"datePublished":"2007-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a86dc727-aabe-3465-bfc5-03b62efad3c5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4539820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"67","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"50","pagination":"pp. 50-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Edward Said and Marxism Anxieties of Influence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4539820","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15015,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michelle Burnham"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/legacy.28.2.0177","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07484321"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46337834"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1c7ae8c9-4c4a-3c2c-a79d-8a6157af10fc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/legacy.28.2.0177"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"legacy"}],"isPartOf":"Legacy","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"204","pageStart":"177","pagination":"pp. 177-204","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Female Bodies and Capitalist Drive: Leonora Sansay's Secret History<\/em> in Transoceanic Context","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/legacy.28.2.0177","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":22480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["BEN MAGUBANE"],"datePublished":"1972-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5bf29e42-72a4-3321-9bbf-4b59e9a510a4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45341254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"447","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-447","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"[African Opposition in South Africa]","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45341254","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":7813,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Brenda Cooper"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238571","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a38efbfc-62f9-3812-a53f-ece87f8d0aa3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40238571"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chaiba the Algerian versus Our Sister Killjoy: The Case for a Materialist Black Aesthetic","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40238571","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":11689,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Perry Mars"],"datePublished":"1995-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425614","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00223433"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976383"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227040"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2560dbb4-084a-3a42-bcfc-15a3bac80881"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/425614"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jpeaceresearch"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Peace Research","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"451","pageStart":"437","pagination":"pp. 437-451","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Peace & Conflict Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Foreign Influence, Political Conflicts and Conflict Resolution in the Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/425614","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9295,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on the interconnection between international factors and domestic political conflicts in the Third World context, with specific reference to Caribbean countries. Theories suggesting either no correlation or a direct linear linkage between international and domestic conflicts are criticized. It is posited that (a) the linkage between international pressures and domestic political conflicts is usually mediated by domestic class forces, particularly the contentious role of the middle classes, which invariably control Caribbean states, (b) these middle-class controlled states usually display a preference for the more authoritarian approaches to conflict resolution; (c) states subjected to the most destabilizing international pressures, such as the ideologically deviant (or pro-socialist) states, tend to display the more intensive levels of both political conflicts and repressive force; and (d) these conflict patterns harbour largely negative implications for democratic developments in the region. It is suggested, further, that approaches to conflict resolution should involve institutionalized changes which foster the more direct, democratic inclusion of the subordinate classes in the political decision-working process. Supportive data and evidence are drawn from periodical news reports and other documentary archival sources pertaining to the English-speaking Caribbean during the post-colonial period.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Raymond Aaron Younis"],"datePublished":"1996-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926040","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926040"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"280","pagination":"pp. 280-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"APROPOS THE LAST 'POST-': CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE, THEORY AND INTERPRETATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926040","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":4391,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald Aronson"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512975","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512975"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"310","pageStart":"302","pagination":"pp. 302-310","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Camus versus Sartre: The Unresolved Conflict","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512975","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":4561,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miriam Rosser"],"datePublished":"1998-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740002","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01620177"},{"name":"oclc","value":"567527150"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23740002"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"centrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The Centennial Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":36.0,"pageEnd":"510","pageStart":"475","pagination":"pp. 475-510","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities","Philosophy"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"FIGURING CARIBBEANNESS: IDENTITY, HOME, NATION, WOMAN, 1972-1989","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23740002","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":15470,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[617780,617827]],"Locations in B":[[95453,95500]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Zifikile Gambahaya","Itai Muhwati"],"datePublished":"2010-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25780779","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0dc1e57b-1cb6-3bcb-b675-322a4b86210f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25780779"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"337","pageStart":"320","pagination":"pp. 320-337","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Tonga Orature as Historical Record: An Afrocentric Exegesis of the Dialectics Between African Human Factor Agency and the European Enslavement of Place","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25780779","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6354,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The article critically examines the history of the Tonga people's experiences of civilization and displacement from their life-affirming geographical location as enunciated through their oral forms, particularly, songs and other forms of reminiscence. The experiences of the Tonga people of Zimbabwe are largely overlooked in scholarship because they are considered one of the so-called minority groups, meriting little or no attention at all. Informed by an Afrocentric approach, in which it is \"valid to posit Africa as a geographical and cultural starting base in the study of peoples [of Africa and] of African descent,\" the article brings out an understanding of African orature as a redoubtable expression of the African classical past and the subsequent subversion and decimation of African human factor agency as a result of the European enslavement of place. In this regard, the authors contend that Africologists would do well to study African people's orature, as it often reflects their story from their own perspective.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Saree Makdisi"],"datePublished":"1995-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303663","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303663"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"115","pageStart":"85","pagination":"pp. 85-115","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Postcolonial\" Literature in a Neocolonial World: Modern Arabic Culture and the End of Modernity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303663","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":13956,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[609719,609839]],"Locations in B":[[85935,86051]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mario Gonz\u00e1lez Casta\u00f1eda"],"datePublished":"2018-05-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475501","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01854186"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85446277"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-235313"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f2397bf-fd27-3249-a687-9a6480b65133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26475501"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"estusoci"}],"isPartOf":"Estudios Sociol\u00f3gicos","issueNumber":"107","language":["spa"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"443","pageStart":"439","pagination":"pp. 439-443","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"El Colegio de Mexico","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26475501","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":2265,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MORAG PATRICK"],"datePublished":"2002-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889940","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"14687968"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47295537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1ff79ddf-29fd-3793-b7b7-3919eaa76d5c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23889940"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnicities"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnicities","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"51","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-51","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rights and recognition: Perspectives on multicultural democracy","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23889940","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9610,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Many contemporary liberals increasingly accept that plural societies must aspire to far more expansive and inclusive ideals of justice and citizenship than liberal doctrine would suggest. The dominant perception is that extending the set of rights is the most effective way to implement a just and stable multicultural society. In fact, this is not a very plausible description of what people seek in demanding greater respect for diversity. Nor does it offer a compelling vision of how things ought to be. First, social expectations regarding recognition are not uniquely linked to rights; they encompass intractable struggles over values, as well as ways of living and evaluating. For example, a central feature of feminist, black and multicultural politics is the attempt to change social culture into a medium through which personal integrity and self-esteem may be acquired. Second, liberalism cannot easily accommodate this type of struggle, since it takes for granted a narrowly constricted conception of politics that is based on instituting public laws that harmonize the freedom of everyone. Anyone who takes seriously the idea that recognition surpasses legal relations of respect will then surely wish to consider whether liberalism must not be corrected and extended to reveal the political significance of the social conditions that enable individuals to experience themselves as both autonomous and individuated.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["JASON L. FERGUSON"],"datePublished":"2015-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573219","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00039756"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50951428"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007233851"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f0116e74-1793-3201-9365-299bf4abe440"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26573219"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"archeurosoci"}],"isPartOf":"European Journal of Sociology \/ Archives Europ\u00e9ennes de Sociologie \/ Europ\u00e4isches Archiv f\u00fcr Soziologie","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"425","pageStart":"420","pagination":"pp. 420-425","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"THE AESTHETIC DIMENSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26573219","volumeNumber":"56","wordCount":2395,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"FROM SCIENCE TO THE POLITICS OF POETRY","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Partha Mitter"],"datePublished":"2008-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619638","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00043079"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38436072"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235629"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c1de8fb3-546a-38aa-a754-0142005ecf7a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20619638"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"artbulletin"}],"isPartOf":"The Art Bulletin","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":7.0,"pageEnd":"574","pageStart":"568","pagination":"pp. 568-574","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Interventions: The Author Replies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20619638","volumeNumber":"90","wordCount":6970,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Maurice Taonezvi Vambe"],"datePublished":"2004-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133834","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03057070"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48532114"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227376"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83bc3083-2378-32a0-9fea-ce0401e0fb38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4133834"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsoutafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southern African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"249","pageStart":"235","pagination":"pp. 235-249","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","Political Science","History","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Orality in the Black Zimbabwean Novel in English","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4133834","volumeNumber":"30","wordCount":8969,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The question of the extent to which African orality exerts an influence on the black Zimbabwean novel in English has taken centre stage in recent critical debates. One view is that a revived African cultural nationalism during the war of liberation claimed for its own purposes that African orality was always resistant to colonial policies. According to this view, colonialism's attempt to suppress African culture instead generated among Africans a sense of oneness, producing a united community with the single aim of achieving freedom. This assumption that resistance was inherent in orality, both before colonisation and during the struggle, is complicated by evidence that, in the periods in question, orality communicated absolutely everything, including authoritarian and hegemonic ideas. Because orality occupied a highly volatile cultural space in the lived contexts of African societies, serving multiple and sometimes apparently contradictory purposes, it is not surprising that the same paradoxical uses of orality can be traced in the black novel. The challenge for black Zimbabwean novelists was whether they would attempt to make use only of specific 'traditional' protest genres within orality or whether they felt that the mere evocation of orality was enough to give an anti-colonial authenticity to their novels. Referring to Feso, Waiting for the Rain, Bones and Black Sunlight, this article argues that, in fact, Zimbabwean authors use orality to confront the reader with an array of unstable meanings that potentially subvert narratives of resistance. The article demonstrates that there are ideological differences and conflicting views underlying the ways in which authors use orality. There are also, ironically, ideological inconsistencies and conflicting perspectives in the use of orality within a novel by an individual author. As a consequence of these paradoxes, the article concludes by suggesting that orality is a tool to express any social vision rather than a mark that confers 'authenticity' onto the black Zimbabwean novel in English.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane L. Parpart"],"datePublished":"1984-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601483","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01452258"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"486edef0-ad20-3e99-b48d-ddebd02e38c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3601483"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrieconhist"}],"isPartOf":"African Economic History","issueNumber":"13","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"191","pageStart":"171","pagination":"pp. 171-191","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"African Studies Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The \"Labor Aristocracy\" Debate in Africa: The Copperbelt Case, 1924-1967","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3601483","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":8854,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Geetha A. Rubasundram","Rajah Rasiah"],"datePublished":"2019-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"23395095"},{"name":"oclc","value":"856592565"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2013268613"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d493b698-1caa-36d3-8e2b-82b7251af2e7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26664253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jsouthasiaeconom"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Southeast Asian Economies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"57","pagination":"pp. 57-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Economics","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"Corruption and Good Governance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26664253","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":8028,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Since its formation in 1967, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has progressed to become an economic powerhouse. From a loosely formed grouping in the 1960s, its members have since undergone massive integration. A key motive of the Association is to transfer government and public services onto a technology platform, termed e-government. An important concern is whether e-governance can reduce corruption and stimulate sustainable development. Using traditional governance measures and e-governance indices, this paper analyses the state of governance and corruption in ASEAN. While the deepening of e-governance \u2014 via government and public participation \u2014 has raised the potential for improving good governance practices, that in itself can be counterproductive as socioeconomic agents could broaden corrupt practices by appropriating its public-good-like characteristics. Hence, ASEAN governments have to implement changes in their communications strategies and feedback mechanisms, remove barriers blocking the spread and use of information technology, and promote a collaborative environment with civil society organizations, while considering the use of the \u201ccarrot and stick\u201d approach to improve good governance.","subTitle":"An Analysis of ASEAN\u2019s E-Governance Experience","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["FIONA DARROCH"],"datePublished":"2008-09-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926896","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02691205"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23926896"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"litetheo"}],"isPartOf":"Literature and Theology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"371","pageStart":"368","pagination":"pp. 368-371","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology","Philosophy - Metaphysics","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23926896","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":2162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Troy Urquhart"],"datePublished":"2006-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479751","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0041462X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709693"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227139"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aabd8133-fb2f-3eac-85b5-b75820e3bde1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20479751"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"twencentlite"}],"isPartOf":"Twentieth Century Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Truth, Reconciliation, and the Restoration of the State: Coetzee's \"Waiting for the Barbarians\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20479751","volumeNumber":"52","wordCount":8480,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Cecilia I. C. Lin","Feng-Yang Kuo","Michael D. Myers"],"datePublished":"2015-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26629627","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02767783"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48415598"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227342"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2aba195-b6a9-36da-aabf-f25f65897e38"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26629627"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"misquarterly"}],"isPartOf":"MIS Quarterly","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"712","pageStart":"697","pagination":"pp. 697-712","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2015,"publisher":"Management Information Systems Research Center, University of Minnesota","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Business"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Education - Formal education"],"title":"Extending ICT4D Studies","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26629627","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":11481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the value of critical research for information and communications technology for development (ICT4D) studies. Most previous IS research on ICT4D projects is interpretive and has focused on the immediate organizational context, but there are very few critical studies that have engaged in macro sociopolitical analyses regarding institutional change. Hence we extend previous IS research on ICT4D by adopting a critical research perspective on the macro sociopolitical context within which most ICT4D projects take place. We illustrate this with an ethnographic study of a project that was intended to improve the education and social welfare of the aboriginal people in Taiwan. On the surface the project was tremendously successful; it became a showcase on national radio and TV showing how ICT could be used to support underprivileged children. However, our research uncovered a different story altogether\u2014a story of the aboriginal people themselves feeling marginalized and without much of a voice. We use concepts from postcolonial theory to make sense of these two contradictory stories. We found that the interrelationship between the macro sociopolitical context and the local organizational context of the ICT4D project is the key to understanding what went wrong, something which we would not have discovered if we had taken the traditional approach. The postcolonial context is powerful and pervasive, hampering any real progress.","subTitle":"The Value of Critical Research","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Penelope Reilly"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26586403","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00805459"},{"name":"oclc","value":"291042801"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008213227"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fee4e95c-439b-38a0-ba71-95d4fd386042"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26586403"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"franstud"}],"isPartOf":"Franciscan Studies","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"358","pageStart":"341","pagination":"pp. 341-358","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"St. Bonaventure University - Franciscan Institute Publications","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"New light on the road to Damascus? Some further thoughts on acculturation as seen in the auto La Conversi\u00f3n de San Pablo<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26586403","volumeNumber":"76","wordCount":7608,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on aspects of the early interaction between the Franciscan friars and the indigenous people of Mexico. The most appropriate name for the natives of the Valley of Mexico is contentious and confused by the fact that scholars frequently refer to the Azteca, the Mexica and the Nahua interchangeably. According to Dur\u00e1n, in the tenth and eleventh centuries waves of Aztecs or Azteca, having left their ancestral home in Aztl\u00e1n, moved down into the region of the Lake Texcoco. Here they quickly established themselves, building up an empire in the period immediately preceding the arrival of the Franciscans. Despite the fact that there were up to fifty semi-autonomous, self-governing states, each with its own language, the Nahua and their language Nahu\u00e1tl became the dominant tribe and their language became the chief language of Franciscan evangelism around the Lake Texcoco. Thus it seems reasonable, for the purpose of this article, which deals with a drama written in Nahu\u00e0tl, to refer to the Nahua or, where appropriate, to the generic Azteca. The article explores ambiguities in the relations and interpretations of the Christian message in the early period of conquest and evangelisation; it suggests that there was a greater degree of mutual accommodation than has been previously recognised and that the friars in their relations with the Nahua were changed, as the Nahua were by their contact with the friars. Consequently, the classical subaltern\/dominant interpretation should be viewed in a different light as an experience of adjustment, uneasy at times, fruitful at others, between two vastly different yet strangely similar cultures. These ambiguities are explored in detail in one of the most curiously \u2018alternative\u2019 autos La conversi\u00f3n de San Pablo, where Paul is accused of murdering Sebastian rather than Stephen and the whole text is overlaid with Aztec cultural and religious references, so that the Christian message and the native interpretation sit side by side in an almost symbiotic relationship or a curious truce. Este art\u00edculo tiene dos objetivos. En primer lugar, intenta mostrar que el proceso de aculturaci\u00f3n franciscana en M\u00e9xico en el siglo XV1 era menos lineal y m\u00e1s flexible que antes considerado: en efecto, que los frailes aprendieron tanto de los Aztecas como los Aztecas aprendieron de ellos. En segundo lugar, toma como ejemplo de este proceso mutuo, los autos sacramentales asombrosos. Considera en particular el auto \u2018alternativo\u2019 La Conversi\u00f3n de San Pablo donde, no solo San Pablo se encontr\u00f3 acusado del asesinato de San Sebastian, en lugar de San Esteban, sino tambi\u00e9n era expulsado al Infierno por cr\u00edmenes de avaricia y riquesa ostentosa. As\u00ed en este auto las dos culturas, Azteca y Francesca, se sentan una al lado del otra, cada una conservando su integridad.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mustapha Marrouchi"],"datePublished":"1999-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112474","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"9f19fd26-e6b1-3a60-b10f-eee02eb0bb01"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112474"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":42.0,"pageEnd":"58","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-58","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Fear of the \"Other\", Loathing the Similar","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112474","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":21971,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[212684,212816]],"Locations in B":[[124053,124183]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Farrah S. Brown"],"datePublished":"2012-04-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0176","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00222984"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41302468"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23391"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c3532be5-2f2c-33db-b954-097ed2e990b0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0176"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jnegroeducation"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Negro Education","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"178","pageStart":"176","pagination":"pp. 176-178","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Journal of Negro Education","sourceCategory":["Education","African American Studies","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.7709\/jnegroeducation.81.2.0176","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":1875,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Judy M. Iseke-Barnes"],"datePublished":"2004-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589774","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00225231"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60463747"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-252887"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42589774"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthought"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Thought","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":37.0,"pageEnd":"81","pageStart":"45","pagination":"pp. 45-81","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Caddo Gap Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Applied linguistics"],"title":"Politics and Power of Languages: Indigenous Resistance to Colonizing Experiences of Language Dominance","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42589774","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":15949,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dorota Kolodziejczyk"],"datePublished":"2008-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986258","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fc1250cb-1e78-301c-8f7d-9fe28abd949e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40986258"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"135","pageStart":"125","pagination":"pp. 125-135","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2008,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Place and Order: On the Impossible Ontology of the Postcolonial Condition","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40986258","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":5515,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["MART\u00cdN ESPADA"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750513","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00254878"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48455320"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-235202"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"41edb877-5a3a-3bfc-94a7-913f87db6cbe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25750513"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"massreview"}],"isPartOf":"The Massachusetts Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"529","pageStart":"510","pagination":"pp. 510-529","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Massachusetts Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Lover of a Subversive Is Also a Subversive: Colonialism and the Poetry of Rebellion in Puerto Rico","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25750513","volumeNumber":"51","wordCount":5879,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Bego\u00f1a Simal Gonz\u00e1lez"],"datePublished":"2001-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185526","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0163755X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227149"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef1c2911-09b9-381f-8ef7-ee2522456b7b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3185526"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"melus"}],"isPartOf":"MELUS","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"242","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-242","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The (Re)Birth of Mona Changowitz: Rituals and Ceremonies of Cultural Conversion and Self-Making in \"Mona in the Promised Land\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3185526","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":7076,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nzongola-Ntalaja"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633520","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"beddc50a-9f9c-3d8a-a4d4-6e1e41396c6f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2633520"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"54","pageStart":"43","pagination":"pp. 43-54","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Amilcar Cabral and the Theory of the National Liberation Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2633520","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":4637,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Mumia Abu-Jamal"],"datePublished":"2001-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068914","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"6304703e-9660-3107-b9ad-894ab6eadfa8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41068914"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"SOYINKA'S AFRICA: CONTINENT OF CRISIS, CONFLICT AND CRADLE OF THE GODS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41068914","volumeNumber":"31","wordCount":8435,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Patrick Bond"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484675","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7c90e147-7e20-3fa6-ac16-2b0f89b6490f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24484675"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"64","pageStart":"37","pagination":"pp. 37-64","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Social Scientists' Failure of Analytical Nerve: 'Africa Rising' from Above, or Uprising from Below?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24484675","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":10796,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"If Africa has been 'rising' since the outset of early 2000s commodity super-cycle, as so many of its elites and allied international economic actors claim, what are we to make of the evidence of growing popular uprisings? This survey of narratives and evidence finds convincing the converse claim that 'rising' translates into 'crashing' when a more accurate accounting is made of the continent's wealth. As a result of systematic looting, around 2010 the continent's most advanced social movements began awakening from the apparent 2000s slumber, in the wake of an earlier era of IMF Riots dating to the 1980s. At that stage, the intensity of rhetoric between the contending forces grew shrill, and some such conflicts were resolved only by recourse to state force. This is the point at which the failure of the progressive African intelligentsia's nerve was most acute: in its failure to either validate the merits of export-led growth based on extractive industries, as conventional wisdom had it but against which was all prior evidence and deep empirical observation, or to promote resistance by civil (and often uncivil) society. Will African social scientists return to some of the ideals that forty years ago helped make the continent one of the world's richest sources of revolutionary thought? Or instead, do the dialectics of wealth generation and social upheaval call forth no more than intellectual disinterest or, indeed, fear? Si l'Afrique a \u00e9t\u00e9 \u00ab en d\u00e9veloppement \u00bb depuis le commencement du super cycle des mati\u00e8res premi\u00e8res au d\u00e9but des ann\u00e9es 2000, comme l'affirme la plupart de ses \u00e9lites et alli\u00e9s qui sont des acteurs \u00e9conomiques internationaux, que devons-nous faire de la croissance des r\u00e9volutions populaires \u00e9videntes? Cette \u00e9tude compos\u00e9e de r\u00e9sultats narratifs et r\u00e9els qui cherche \u00e0 convaincre l'opposition de sa sollicitation \u00ab grandissante \u00bb traduite en \u00ab bouleversement \u00bb quand une comptabilit\u00e9 plus pr\u00e9cise est faite sur la richesse du continent. \u00c0 la suite de pillages syst\u00e9matiques, aux alentours de 2010 les mouvements sociaux les plus d\u00e9velopp\u00e9s du continent ont commenc\u00e9 \u00e0 se remettre de la torpeur apparente des ann\u00e9es 2000, dans le sillage d'une \u00e9poque ant\u00e9rieure aux \u00e9meutes du FMI dans les ann\u00e9es 1980. A ce stade, l'intensit\u00e9 des \u00e9changes avec l'opposition est devenue s\u00e9v\u00e8re, et certains de ces types de conflits ont \u00e9t\u00e9 r\u00e9solus que par le recours \u00e0 la force de l'Etat. C'est \u00e0 ce moment que l'\u00e9chec du nerf de l'intelligentsia africaine progressive a \u00e9t\u00e9 plus aigu : dans son incapacit\u00e9 \u00e0 soit valider les qualit\u00e9s de la croissance tir\u00e9e des exportations bas\u00e9es sur les industries extractives, comme l'avait la sagesse conventionnelle, mais pour lequel toutes les preuves ant\u00e9rieures et observations empiriques profondes \u00e9taient contre, soit favoriser la r\u00e9sistance de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 civile (et souvent incivile). Les chercheurs africains en sciences sociales retourneront-ils vers certains id\u00e9aux qui ont contribu\u00e9s, il y a quarante ans, \u00e0 faire du continent l'une des sources les plus riches du monde en mati\u00e8re de pens\u00e9e r\u00e9volutionnaire? Ou plut\u00f4t les conflits de la g\u00e9n\u00e9ration riche et le bouleversement social inviteront-ils \u00e0 adopter pas plus qu'un d\u00e9sint\u00e9ressement intellectuel ou, certainement, la peur?","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Shaobo Xie"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057397","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00286087"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709613"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227133"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba1786f6-2440-300d-80ee-e491c6170051"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20057397"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"newlitehist"}],"isPartOf":"New Literary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"19","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-19","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking the Problem of Postcolonialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20057397","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":5289,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["DAVID PAN"],"datePublished":"1999-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981864","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00101338"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23981864"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collogerm"}],"isPartOf":"Colloquia Germanica","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"199","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-199","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Narr Francke Attempto Verlag GmbH Co. KG","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Defending the Premodern Household against the Bourgeois Family: Anti-Enlightenment Anticolonialism in Heinrich von Kleist's \"Die Verlobung in St. Domingo\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23981864","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":16596,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[451282,451355]],"Locations in B":[[92436,92513]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Keith Carabine"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634986","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00106356"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"510ffb7f-ee88-3309-bde4-a7657754564f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24634986"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"conradiana"}],"isPartOf":"Conradiana","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"13","pageStart":"4","pagination":"pp. 4-13","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Texas Tech University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"ELOISE KNAPP HAY (1926-1996): AN APPRECIATION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24634986","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":4848,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Messay Kebede"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41931379","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07409133"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41931379"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nortafristud"}],"isPartOf":"Northeast African Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"188","pageStart":"165","pagination":"pp. 165-188","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Marxism-Leninism to Ethnicity: The Sideslips of Ethiopian Elitism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41931379","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":9090,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Njeri Githire"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821320","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"cebb6801-d102-3a85-a6df-f96fe3a595e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821320"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"74","pagination":"pp. 74-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Horizons Adrift: Women in Exile, at Home, and Abroad in Gis\u00e8le Pineau's Works","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821320","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":9372,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The quest for a place in which the self feels at home, comfortable, and secure pervades postcolonial literature, criticism, and theory. Likewise, the themes of location\/dislocation, belonging\/marginalization, alienation and identity-central to the problematic of home-have been among the major topics of critical inquiry and creative expression in contemporary literature. Contrapuntally entwined with these themes are the strategies of resistance and survival through which those dislocated invent a space of their own and alternative modes of identity. This article examines the processes and mechanisms through which displaced women \"place\" themselves at home, in exile and abroad, in Guadeloupean Gis\u00e8le Pineau's works. Indeed, with subtle interplay on the multi meanings of alienation, estrangement, and (dis)possession, Pineau explores the location of women in cultural, political, and social communities-primarily in France and in Guadeloupe-from a perspective informed by race, gender, nationhood and history.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dennis Carlson"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980567","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0b7fc6b2-c523-352c-b57a-e01724940aaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42980567"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"66","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-66","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Chapter 4: Life among the Ruins of Empire: A Peace Corps Education in Libya","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42980567","volumeNumber":"355","wordCount":5481,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard F. Lowy"],"datePublished":"1995-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784761","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3f0d232d-1a6e-3f41-a2ec-a6732ff58570"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784761"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"736","pageStart":"712","pagination":"pp. 712-736","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Eurocentrism, Ethnic Studies, and the New World Order: Toward a Critical Paradigm","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784761","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":8192,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael Brett"],"datePublished":"1994-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/183217","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00218537"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"63c50fcd-69ff-3c16-ba0c-1274e463addf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/183217"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanhistory"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of African History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"235","pageStart":"217","pagination":"pp. 217-235","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Anglo-Saxon Attitudes: The Algerian War of Independence in Retrospect","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/183217","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":10196,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The English-language literature on Algeria generated by the Algerian war of independence and continuing down to the present forms an intellectual as well as linguistic tradition apart from the much more voluminous literature in French. Despite the involvement of French and North African writers who have published in English, it is largely the creation of outsiders looking at the country from British and North American points of view, according to current fashions. The war of independence remains central to its concerns as the great transformer of a colonial into a national society, however that transformation is to be understood. The qualified approval of the nationalist cause by Alistair Horne contrasts sharply with Elie Kedourie's denunciation. Most judgements have been based on the outcome, the political, social and economic performance of the regime, considered as good or bad. Since the death of Boumedienne in 1978, they have tended to be unfavourable. Their largely secular analyses, however, have been called in question since 1988 by the rise of political Islam, which has called for a reappraisal of the whole subject of the war and its consequences. Such a reappraisal is still in the future. Meanwhile Ernest Gellner, in dispute with Edward Said over the question of Orientalism, has raised the matter of the role of Islam in the history of Algeria to a high level of generalization, at which the war itself may, paradoxically, return to the forefront of international scholarly concern.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eric Pennington"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803094","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00357995"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70889125"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012201098"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4e2e4f53-d127-3d4f-b24a-c97bd1145a48"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43803094"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"romancenotes"}],"isPartOf":"Romance Notes","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"176","pageStart":"167","pagination":"pp. 167-176","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for its Department of Romance Studies","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"STRUCTURING EMPIRE IN THE OPENING CHAPTER OF \"LA REGENTA\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43803094","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":4117,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ricky L. Jones"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819333","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10811753"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c8c01e87-803e-3a20-bcfd-7a9c73f254f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41819333"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricanamermen"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African American Men","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":27.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"81","pagination":"pp. 81-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Violence and the Politics of Black Male Identity in Post-Modern America","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41819333","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":12272,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[68387,68451]],"abstract":"As violence escalates among black males in many sectors of American life, thinkers are forced to seek solutions to this problem from a variety of perspectives. Inspired largely by a 1994 black fraternity hazing death, this article examines violence as a societal construct, not one intrinsic to individuals. The paradigmatic possibilities this approach brings to bear include: (1) the establishment of an unseverable link between race and class when studying marginalization, (2) the societal politicalization of black males in their struggle for identity, and (3) a societal approach to questions of freedom, identity, and violence where the black male is concerned.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tomasz Kamusella"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44983548","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03635570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70152989"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007249005"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e8d6db4c-8d6c-3784-b8ab-2c87389b306e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44983548"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"harvukrastud"}],"isPartOf":"Harvard Ukrainian Studies","issueNumber":"1\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"381","pageStart":"351","pagination":"pp. 351-381","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"The President and Fellows of Harvard College","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Rise and Dynamics of the Normative Isomorphism of Language, Nation, and State in Central Europe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44983548","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":12059,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emma Dabiri"],"datePublished":"2016-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13696815"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709779"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227148"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"64c0271e-cf4b-3010-ad06-0817989e2442"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24758435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jafricultstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of African Cultural Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":5.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"104","pagination":"pp. 104-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'Why I am (still) not an Afropolitan'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24758435","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":2576,"numMatches":2,"Locations in A":[[10249,10342],[325987,326116]],"Locations in B":[[3278,3373],[4751,4884]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["P. Anyang Nyong'o"],"datePublished":"1988-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486646","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08503907"},{"name":"oclc","value":"85855887"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2015233595"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0bc42c86-47ea-3558-a268-edf5f4d75833"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24486646"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrdevafrdev"}],"isPartOf":"Africa Development \/ Afrique et D\u00e9veloppement","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"86","pageStart":"71","pagination":"pp. 71-86","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Instability and the Prospects for Democracy in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24486646","volumeNumber":"13","wordCount":7690,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La d\u00e9mocratie rev\u00eat en elle-m\u00eame et par elle-m\u00eame un caract\u00e8re important pour le d\u00e9veloppement de l'Afrique. Au centre de l'\u00e9chec des pays africains \u00e0 tracer des voies viables pour le d\u00e9veloppement (ou l'industrialisation) se trouve le probl\u00e8me de l'absence de personnes envers qui on est responsable, d'o\u00f9 celui de d\u00e9mocratie aussi. Depuis l'ind\u00e9pendance, le r\u00f4le du citoyen dans la conduite des affaires du gouvernement a \u00e9t\u00e9 syst\u00e9matiquement r\u00e9duit. La sc\u00e8ne politique s'est retr\u00e9cie. La d\u00e9mobilisation politique est devenue plut\u00f4t la r\u00e8gle que l'exception dans le comportement du r\u00e9gime. La manipulation sociale pour expliquer et entretenir la r\u00e9pression politique a \u00e9t\u00e9 la pr\u00e9occupation de la plupart des gouvernements : tout cela a contribu\u00e9 \u00e0 consolider un aspect notoire mais commun \u00e0 presque tous les gouvernements africains : la mauvaise utilisation des ressources publiques ainsi que leur canalisation vers des gains priv\u00e9s pendant que les chances d'exploiter les proc\u00e9dures viables pour un d\u00e9veloppement local sont n\u00e9glig\u00e9es ou d\u00e9lib\u00e9r\u00e9ment d\u00e9truites. Ainsi s'est-il \u00e9tabli une corr\u00e9lation nette entre l'absence de d\u00e9mocratie dans la politique africaine et la d\u00e9t\u00e9rioration des conditions soico-\u00e9conomiques. Par le truchement de la politique de contr\u00f4le, les conflits sociaux n'avaient fait que passer au second plan et pouvaient \u00e9clater de fa\u00e7ons incontrollables et d\u00e9sorganis\u00e9es \u00e0 n'importe quel moment. Ces syst\u00e8mes de gouvernment non participatif \u00e0 parti unique ou sans parti \u00e9taient donc, de par leur nature, instables. Ces contradictions internes sont aggrav\u00e9es par les puissances \u00e9trang\u00e8res qui interviennent pour modeler le processus politique en leur faveur.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Erik Linstrum"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23323998","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00312746"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205445"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227360"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e362f126-2978-303b-bd8e-1fe74a6fa7ff"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23323998"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"pastpresent"}],"isPartOf":"Past & Present","issueNumber":"215","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":39.0,"pageEnd":"233","pageStart":"195","pagination":"pp. 195-233","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Anthropology"],"title":"THE POLITICS OF PSYCHOLOGY IN THE BRITISH EMPIRE, 1898\u20141960","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23323998","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15913,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey J. Williams"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0345","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10690697"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45631806"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-213600"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"22638e92-ea56-34db-bf9a-3e2579fa5ba4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0345"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"symploke"}],"isPartOf":"symplok\u0113","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"359","pageStart":"345","pagination":"pp. 345-359","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"University of Nebraska Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wages of Globalization: An Interview with Lisa Lowe","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.5250\/symploke.19.1-2.0345","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":7137,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Corinne Sandwith"],"datePublished":"2018-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116603","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03768902"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60623960"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2010-234815"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3edc2c2e-693c-368f-83f0-cd065d3f338f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45116603"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"englafri"}],"isPartOf":"English in Africa","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"39","pageStart":"17","pagination":"pp. 17-39","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Rhodes University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Reading and Roaming the Racial City: R. R. R. Dhlomo and \"The Bantu World\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45116603","volumeNumber":"45","wordCount":9658,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Scholarship on the literary inscription of urban space in early twentiethcentury South Africa has tended to focus on Sophiatown and the writers of the 1950s 'Drum generation'. In this reading, the idea of Johannesburg as it emerges in Drum magazine is seen to contrast sharply with earlier literary renditions of the city as a place of vice and moral decay. In this article, I draw attention to an important but little-known precursor to this emergent tradition of writing and claiming the modern city, namely journalist and writer, R. R. R. Dhlomo. As the author of a moralising fable about the depredations of city life, An African Tragedy (1928), Dhlomo is conventionally positioned as one of those writers whose reading of the city would inevitably be surpassed. This perspective ignores the significance of his popular satirical column, \"R. Roamer Esq.\" which appeared in the commercial African weekly The Bantu World over a period of ten years. Concerned in particular with the urban and peri-urban environments of late 1930s Johannesburg, the column maps out a detailed urban topography. Using the first-person perspective of an observing and observant urban street-walker\/roamer, it calls attention to particular sites of engagement and encounter such as the court room, the train station and the street as well as the more intimate spaces encoding black urban marginality such as the backyard servant's room. In this paper I consider what forms of the metropolis emerge from Roamer's verbal mapping as well as what kinds of city figures, topographies, movements and interactions are inscribed. I argue that the column grants particular significance to the experience, interpolation and movement of the black body in segregationist-era urban space, offering a striking early reading of the racial city as both a place of constraint and a zone of inventive resistance. The article makes a further claim for the importance of African print cultures as an index of urbanity, of African newspapers as significant but overlooked sites of city inscription and black urban life in which the boundaries between the 'literary' and the 'journalistic' are frequently breached.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jane Hiddleston"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151795","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02648334"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"703e72ad-e6c5-3eaa-a68c-2fbe562396ab"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43151795"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"paragraph"}],"isPartOf":"Paragraph","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"69","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-69","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Edinburgh University Press","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Lyotard's Algeria: Experiments in Theory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43151795","volumeNumber":"33","wordCount":7677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article explores the changing position of Lyotard's writing on Algeria within his corpus. The essays gathered together in La Guerre des Alg\u00e9riens: Ecrits 1956-63 (The Algerians' War: Texts 1956-63), and published much later in 1989, are certainly among his most overtly politically engaged. These pieces track the progress of the War of Independence from the early signs of unrest in 1952 to what Lyotard perceives as the divisive effects of FLN ideology in the aftermath of independence, and the collection as a whole underlines not only the conflict between coloniser and colonised but also that between the rural masses and the bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, despite his commitment to Algerian independence at the time of writing, Lyotard later lamented the failings of these essays. He also alters his stance on his own use of Marxism, and condemns his attempts to offer a Marxist revolutionary critique. He then chose to republish the work in 1989, yet this volte-face testifies to the author's ongoing ambivalence towards his own writing on decolonization. At one moment, Lyotard mocks and undermines his own efforts to understand and systematize the mechanics of the liberation movement. Yet he then goes on to suggest that the Algerian conflict exemplifies his later concept of the 'diff\u00e9rend'. This unease both within and towards the volume La Guerre des Alg\u00e9riens will be the focus of this article. The essays' eclecticism, and Lyotard's own altering response to them, can be understood as an early testimony to an increasing scepticism towards Marxism in French critical thought, and, at the same time, towards what Lyotard conceived as dogmatic 'theory', in the context of decolonization in Algeria.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Pamela Reynolds"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1160308","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019720"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50238863"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-237166"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ea014d0a-baaf-3af5-9f25-385082b043f8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1160308"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afrijinteafriins"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Journal of the International African Institute","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"221","pageStart":"220","pagination":"pp. 220-221","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Literature"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1160308","volumeNumber":"55","wordCount":1301,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Noel A. 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While he takes a critical view of orientalist representations, he at the same time identifies himself as a scholar in the tradition of humanism. 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This paper draws upon critical analysis of the connections between sf, empire, and Orientalist discourse developed by Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Patricia Kerslake, and John Rieder in the context of Chinese sf as a means of exploring Chinese articulations of these concerns. Through a close reading of Huangjiang Diaosou's Tales of the Moon Colony (1904\u20131905), this paper explores the anxieties associated with utopianism, nationalism, and Occidentalism that reveal themselves in early Chinese sf.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Helen Yitah"],"datePublished":"2018-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26754657","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21616140"},{"name":"oclc","value":"612352417"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b1f4c220-7990-345c-9cf9-9c535a0e4bca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26754657"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"obsidian2006"}],"isPartOf":"Obsidian","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"234","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-234","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2018,"publisher":"Board of Trustees of Illinois State University","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"PASTORAL PARCELS & GREEN GROWTH","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26754657","volumeNumber":"44","wordCount":6972,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"The Countryside as a Site of Communal Renewal in Early Ghanaian Radio Literature","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Wendell Bell"],"datePublished":"1980-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612900","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00086533"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7361a013-425b-3c03-bd78-07cb916ffbf9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25612900"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"caristud"}],"isPartOf":"Caribbean Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"36","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-36","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1980,"publisher":"Institute of Caribbean Studies, UPR, Rio Piedras Campus","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Latin American Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Equality and Social Justice: Foundations of Nationalism in the Caribbean","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25612900","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":13702,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[80028,80068]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Barbara Therese Ryan"],"datePublished":"2010-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325666","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1b1d2418-de05-3432-9eba-a7fde8660eaa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325666"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"53","pagination":"pp. 53-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"VIOLATIONS OF SERVITUDE: LEONG, HURSTON, OYONO","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325666","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":8217,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jennifer G. Brooks"],"datePublished":"2010-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325641","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00078549"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef160539-e3f6-30c2-84b3-b3523fceea74"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44325641"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"claj"}],"isPartOf":"CLA Journal","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"266","pageStart":"254","pagination":"pp. 254-266","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"College Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Arts - Art history"],"title":"AMIRI BARAKA'S CONVERSION TO LENINIST-MARXISM AS AN EXTENSION OF THE BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44325641","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":4048,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[119631,119911]],"Locations in B":[[8583,8841]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Colin Graham"],"datePublished":"1994-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735754","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0909fede-fd49-3538-a687-18d2a98252a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29735754"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"16","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"43","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-43","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1994,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"'Liminal Spaces': Post-Colonial Theories and Irish Culture","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29735754","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6288,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ANIA LOOMBA"],"datePublished":"2013-10-26","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528846","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d1a186f7-ee71-3a94-a135-f18e5d503cdf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23528846"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"111","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-111","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Inter-Caste Marriage and the Liberal Imagination: Vijay Tendulkar's \"Kanyadaan\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528846","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":13075,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27627,27692]],"Locations in B":[[74231,74291]],"abstract":"This paper discusses the depiction of inter-caste marriage in Vijay Tendulkar's controversial play Kanyadaan (1983), which has enjoyed a recent revival both in India and abroad. Responses to the play have been split largely along caste lines, with upper-caste audiences and critics regarding it as an expose of liberal reformism, and dalits either ignoring it or regarding its depiction of dalit masculinity as offensive. But few have commented on how the play pits its version of female agency against a particular vision of dalit masculinity. This paper sets the play in the context of Tendulkar's particular engagement with Dalit Panther literature, but argues that it also speaks to ongoing debates on sexual violence and on the literary representation of transgressive passion. It shows how Kanyadaan both unravels and embodies the most troubled aspects of the relationship between caste and gender in postcolonial India.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Leslie R. James"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764230","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10117601"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a2481152-7866-3091-805f-b4905d880220"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24764230"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudyreligion"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Religion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"98","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-98","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Association for the Study of Religion in Southern Africa (ASRSA)","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Naipaul, Religion, and \"The Masque of Africa\": Intersections of Religion and Literature in the Postcolony","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24764230","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":10416,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[49939,50021]],"Locations in B":[[14665,14747]],"abstract":"This essay explores the intersections between religion and literature in V. S. Naipaul's works with a focus on his 2010 publication, The Masque of Africa: Glimpses of African Belief. The essay brings Naipaul's earliest novel, his most recent work, and his Nobel Lecture into conversation with each other to show the relationship between religion and society in his works. It argues that Naipaul's fictional and travel writings are important resources for understanding the crucial ways in which politics and religion intersect in colonial and postcolonial societies. Since religion and literature were part of the wider colonial enterprise, they must be part of the process to address the havoc created by that enterprise.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Alfredo Gonz\u00e1lez-Ruibal"],"datePublished":"2010-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41719807","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10927697"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ec1f39dd-5a3a-3858-bdc7-74c40acd51da"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41719807"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intjhistarch"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Historical Archaeology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"574","pageStart":"547","pagination":"pp. 547-574","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Archaeology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fascist Colonialism: The Archaeology of Italian Outposts in Western Ethiopia (1936-41)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41719807","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":11911,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[122575,122639]],"Locations in B":[[36221,36285]],"abstract":"Despite the relevance of material culture in the politics and culture of Italian Fascism (1922-45), this phenomenon has rarely been approached from an archaeological point of view. In this article, I argue that archaeology can provide new insights into the study of this particular version of totalitarianism. I will show the connections that an archaeological study of fascism has with some concerns of historical archaeology, such as colonialism, power, conflict, and race. For this, three Italian military sites in Ethiopia will be examined.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Bernasconi"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512879","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13571559"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23512879"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"sartrestudint"}],"isPartOf":"Sartre Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"106","pagination":"pp. 106-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"Identity and Agency in Frantz Fanon","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23512879","volumeNumber":"10","wordCount":1567,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emily Greenwood"],"datePublished":"2009-01-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13822373"},{"name":"oclc","value":"613124167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c132c472-ff2a-3730-85ba-9566ad55ba05"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41850521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"nwignewwesindgui"}],"isPartOf":"NWIG: New West Indian Guide \/ Nieuwe West-Indische Gids","issueNumber":"3\/4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"281","pagination":"pp. 281-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2009,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"A TALE OF TWO O'S: ODYSSEUS AND OEDIPUS IN THE BLACK ATLANTIC","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41850521","volumeNumber":"83","wordCount":3938,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA H. V. WRIGHT"],"datePublished":"2014-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982049","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c4fef747-baff-3719-8a17-1a649088a4eb"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42982049"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"97","pageStart":"83","pagination":"pp. 83-97","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Biological sciences - Ecology"],"title":"CHAPTER FOUR: Transforming Canada's Hegemonic Global Education Paradigm through an Anticolonial Framework","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42982049","volumeNumber":"443","wordCount":6149,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[37395,37459]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Drucilla Cornell"],"datePublished":"1997-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175150","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00979740"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50389259"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2003-213736"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"45c05bcb-49d3-302e-9c90-c568964bf0d6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3175150"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signs"}],"isPartOf":"Signs","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"41","pagination":"pp. 41-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Anthropology","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Comment on Felski's \"The Doxa of Difference\": Diverging Differences","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3175150","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":7569,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jonathan Haynes"],"datePublished":"2006-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3876762","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019909"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51206437"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3876762"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanaffairs"}],"isPartOf":"African Affairs","issueNumber":"421","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"533","pageStart":"511","pagination":"pp. 511-533","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Royal African Society","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Political Critique in Nigerian Video Films","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3876762","volumeNumber":"105","wordCount":11535,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Video films have established themselves as the dominant form of Nigerian popular culture, with more than 1,000 titles being released every year. They arose during politically tumultuous times but have had a reputation for being studiously commercial and avoiding political subjects. This essay attempts to revise this conventional wisdom by exploring three video genres that embody forms of political critique: the hardy genre of films about traditional rulership; the crime thriller, with several variants; and family melodrama, which tends to infiltrate all other genres. It then surveys some films with directly political subjects made since the end of military rule in 1999.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmed Mohiddin"],"datePublished":"1970-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852558","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00019747"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8dc6c545-5480-3d7a-922a-8bfcad259639"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41852558"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africa2"}],"isPartOf":"Africa: Rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione dell\u2019Istituto italiano per l\u2019Africa e l\u2019Oriente","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"24","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-24","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO)","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE BASIC UNIT OF AFRICAN IDEAL SOCIETY IN NYERERE'S THOUGHT","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41852558","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":9162,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"La chiave di quel \u00ab socialismo africano \u00bb che ha trovato la pi\u00f9 vivida espressione in Julius Nyerere \u00e8 il concetto della famiglia tradizionale africana, considerata come unit\u00e0 costitutiva della societ\u00e0. Nella famiglia tradizionale africana \u00e8 implicito, secondo Nyerere, quell'atteggiamento mentale, senza il quale non vi puo essere ne democrazia ne socialismo. L'eredit\u00e0 culturale dell'Africano gli permette di essere progressista senza essere rivoluzionario in senso marxista-leninista o democr\u00e1tico in senso occidentale, ma socialista in senso africano. \u00c8 ad essa, quindi, che l'Africano deve attingere gli elementi per partecipare al moderno progresso; il che significa presa di coscienza, ma non esaltazione, di un passato che non puo e non deve configurarsi come un \u00ab paradiso perduto \u00bb. L'Autore conduce un'approfondita analisi critica di questa concezione pol\u00edtica e sociale del leader tanzaniano partendo dalla prima sistemazione org\u00e1nica che essa ebbe nell'opera Freedom and Unity, apparsa nel 1966, e seguendolo nei successivi sviluppi, senza nasconderne le contraddizioni, ma arrivando proprio attraverso T\u00e9same di queste a stabilirne la coerenza. La clef de la conception africaine du socialisme dont Julius Nyerere est le champion plus \u00e9minent consiste dans l'id\u00e9e de la famille traditionnelle africaine, consid\u00e9r\u00e9e comme l'unit\u00e9 fondamentale de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9. Dans la famille traditionnelle africaine se manifeste, selon Nyerere, l'attitude mentale particuli\u00e8re qui est \u00e0 la base de tout socialisme et de toute d\u00e9mocratie. C'est en puisant dans son patrimoine culturel que l'Africain peut \u00eatre moderne et progressiste sans \u00eatre r\u00e9volutionnaire en sens marxiste-l\u00e9niniste ou d\u00e9mocrate en sens occidental, mais certainement socialiste en sens africain. Cette prise de conscience africaine ne doit pas se transformer, d'autre c\u00f4t\u00e9, dans l'exaltation d'un pass\u00e9 qu'il serait absurde de consid\u00e9rer comme un \u00ab paradis perdu \u00bb . L'Auteur analyse critiquement \u00e0 fond la conception politique et sociale du leader tanzanien en prenant le d\u00e9part de son livre Freedom and Unity du 1966 et en suivant les d\u00e9veloppements successifs de sa pens\u00e9e, sans s'en cacher les contradictions, mais arrivant, \u00e0 travers leur examen, \u00e0 en \u00e9tablir la coh\u00e9rence fondamentale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michael W. Williams"],"datePublished":"1984-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784121","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f7c5bc5b-1c07-36cf-a738-a55e3ed11007"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2784121"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"134","pageStart":"117","pagination":"pp. 117-134","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nkrumahism as an Ideological Embodiment of Leftist Thought Within the African World","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2784121","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6119,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[34752,34792]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James H. Mittelman"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166237","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00471607"},{"name":"oclc","value":"56137772"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-236888"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"20ef9398-41b2-3105-aa83-9b29c4725474"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1166237"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issuejopinion"}],"isPartOf":"Issue: A Journal of Opinion","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":2.0,"pageEnd":"4","pageStart":"3","pagination":"pp. 3-4","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":null,"title":"A Tribute to Claude Ake","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1166237","volumeNumber":"25","wordCount":957,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Loubna Qutami","Omar Zahzah"],"datePublished":"2020-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.1-2.0066","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02713519"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38435972"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-263181"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"1faefaf1-e1eb-3713-bf1d-6b65d9e47c26"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.1-2.0066"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"arabstudquar"}],"isPartOf":"Arab Studies Quarterly","issueNumber":"1-2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"66","pagination":"pp. 66-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2020,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The War of Words: Language as an Instrument of Palestinian National Struggle","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/arabstudquar.42.1-2.0066","volumeNumber":"42","wordCount":11006,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This critical set of reflections addresses how the increasing visibility of the Palestinian struggle and the growing attention to Palestine in the (US) academy coincides with altered and depleted meanings for terms and concepts once central to a Palestinian liberation framework. The authors challenge the de-familiarization of the Palestinian political lexicon by ruminating on past, present and potential future meanings for words whose currency, they argue, has assumed a deceptively simple valuation. What are the unforeseen political consequences of visibility, of \u201cincorporation,\u201d and how might these be resisted within the arena of meaning and through the process of reviving language as an instrument of national liberation struggle? Revisiting old definitions of terms and contributing thoughts to the value of words such as Zionism, peace process and negotiations, statehood and violence, the authors contest the boundaries of disciplinary research in service of Palestinian liberation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magal\u00ed Armillas-Tiseyra"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.7.2.1","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19328648"},{"name":"oclc","value":"70862231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-215069"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fa8f9d1c-4ad5-35e6-9672-c48119c2744d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/globalsouth.7.2.1"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"globalsouth"}],"isPartOf":"The Global South","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"10","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-10","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"Introduction: Dislocations","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/globalsouth.7.2.1","volumeNumber":"7","wordCount":4855,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[120728,120865]],"Locations in B":[[26884,27021]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Antonio L. Rappa"],"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24492962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03038246"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"34fee53c-d575-3f60-8ae5-625e3c659214"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24492962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutasiajsocisci"}],"isPartOf":"Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"180","pageStart":"153","pagination":"pp. 153-180","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Surviving the Politics of Late Modernity: The Eurasian Fringe Community of Singapore","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24492962","volumeNumber":"28","wordCount":11318,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper locates the Eurasian community's reconciliatory politics in an age marked by a proclivity for primordial purity within complex political, social and economic sub-systems. The word \"Eurasian\" has both old and new connotations; \"old\" because of primordial accents of physically \"observable\" biological mixture, and \"difference\"; and \"new\" because of cultural origins in the early to mid-sixteenth century. This paper concentrates on Eurasians in Singapore after 1945. Eurasians are the architects, objects, and subjects of a hybrid culture, a momentary reminder of a formerly powerful colonial presence in Southeast Asia. Since the early sixteenth century Eurasians have been transformed by the impact of at least three different phases of Western colonialism, and since 1955, two ongoing phases of internal colonialism by a predominantly Malay state in Malay[si]a, and a migrant, Chinese-dominated State in Singapore. Eurasians in Malaysia and Singapore survive as a fringe community: a politically, and demographically marginal community that has existed and continues to exist on the fringe of the modern Malay world, subjected through the years to the state policies of the Portuguese, Dutch, British, Malay, and Singapore governments, yet managing to preserve their culture of \"Eurasianess\" through a strategy of reconciliatory politics in late modernity.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marwan M. Obeidat"],"datePublished":"1997-06-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279484","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0883105X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2eb6fe6f-e021-3fb4-85b8-f6f1cdda1a0c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41279484"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerstudinter"}],"isPartOf":"American Studies International","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"77","pagination":"pp. 77-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Mid-America American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["American Studies","Area Studies","History","History"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Prospects for American Studies in the Arab World: Present and Future","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41279484","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4302,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["George J. Sefa Dei"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044538","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03050068"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49631317"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-238353"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"184574c9-4ceb-3ec4-adca-d486b7434384"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30044538"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compeduc"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Education","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"289","pageStart":"267","pagination":"pp. 267-289","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Epistemology"],"title":"The Challenge of Inclusive Schooling in Africa: A Ghanaian Case Study","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30044538","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":11325,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This paper explores how African learners and educators work with difference and diversity in schooling populations. Using a Ghanaian case study the paper offers lessons on\/about how local discourses relating to 'inclusivity and nation building', 'minority' and 'difference' can inform debates about educational change and guide broad policy initiatives in pluralistic settings. while difference is affirmed, in some circles it can be said Ghanaian educators have not necessarily been responsive. It is contended that Ghanaian, and for that matter, African education, since historical times, has been approached in terms of its fundamental contribution to national development. In emphasizing the goal of post-independence national integration, 'postcolonial' education in Africa has denied heterogeneity in local populations as if difference itself was a problem. With this orientation education has undoubtedly helped create and maintain the glaring disparities and inequities; structured along lines of ethnicity, culture, language, religion, gender and class, which persist and grow. By pointing to how local subjects (educators, learners and policy-makers) link identity, schooling and knowledge production this paper implicates the search for genuine educational options or alternatives for Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Frank Lechner"],"datePublished":"1998-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231310","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00029602"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42017129"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23420"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3190ae2d-fa5a-394e-a0f9-cc398b8e2b8d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1086\/231310"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerjsoci"}],"isPartOf":"American Journal of Sociology","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":99.0,"pageEnd":"1088","pageStart":"1086","pagination":"pp. 1086-1088","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Book Reviews","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1086\/231310","volumeNumber":"103","wordCount":46111,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Lyle Ashton Harris"],"datePublished":"2019-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26668554","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00036420"},{"name":"oclc","value":"676369009"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"f8c2b1da-7548-3d4c-b9c7-9b028976d172"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26668554"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"aperture"}],"isPartOf":"Aperture","issueNumber":"235","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"21","pageStart":"18","pagination":"pp. 18-21","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2019,"publisher":"Princeton University Art Museum","sourceCategory":["Art & Art History","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Curriculum","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26668554","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":2024,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":"A List of Favorite Anythings","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Collins O. Airhihenbuwa"],"datePublished":"2007-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45055211","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10901981"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0fb25264-7b72-3a9e-b441-17aeefdd23d7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45055211"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"healeducbeha"}],"isPartOf":"Health Education & Behavior","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"42","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-42","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Education","Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Politics"],"title":"On Being Comfortable With Being Uncomfortable: Centering an Africanist Vision in Our Gateway to Global Health","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45055211","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":5661,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"African identity must be central to research on African health and development. This article focuses on three primary themes for advancing a different vision for understanding health issues in Africa. The first is the need to deconstruct conventional assumptions and theories that have been used to frame public health problems and solutions in Africa. The second is to insist that identity be central to how we frame issues of health and behavior in general and in Africa in particular. The third is the importance of the notion of \"social cultural infrastructure\" in defining African ways of knowing to guide public health research and intervention in Africa. Finally, the metaphor of the \"African gate\" is used to illuminate these themes while drawing on examples from an HIV- and AIDS-related stigma research in South Africa and its implications for addressing the critical global public-health issues of today.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Caroline Hughes","Vanessa Pupavac"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017815","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01436597"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37915623"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265284"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"852cd16a-7632-3aa4-929f-a8b5aea6205f"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4017815"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"thirworlquar"}],"isPartOf":"Third World Quarterly","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"889","pageStart":"873","pagination":"pp. 873-889","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Framing Post-Conflict Societies: International Pathologisation of Cambodia and the Post-Yugoslav States","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4017815","volumeNumber":"26","wordCount":8176,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the pathologisation of post-conflict societies through a comparison of the framing of the Cambodian and post-Yugoslav states. The notion of failed states fixes culpability for war on the societies in question, rendering the domestic populations dysfunctional while casting international rescue interventions as functional. The article suggests that the discourse of pathologisation can be understood primarily not as a means of explaining state crisis so much as legitimising an indefinite international presence and deferring self-government.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["YRJ\u00d6 ENGESTR\u00d6M"],"datePublished":"1988-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41344521","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00207411"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50388498"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005-213771"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b6f3a3e1-4cda-3c99-8283-bba6f79eb420"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41344521"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejmentheal"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Mental Health","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"41","pageStart":"29","pagination":"pp. 29-41","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Public Health","Medicine & Allied Health","Health Sciences","Social Sciences","Psychology"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Social sciences - Anthropology","Linguistics - Philosophy of language"],"title":"THE CULTURAL-HISTORICAL THEORY OF ACTIVITY AND THE STUDY OF POLITICAL REPRESSION","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41344521","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":3898,"numMatches":5,"Locations in A":[[534628,534745],[535296,535379],[536146,536409],[536629,536769],[536807,536867]],"Locations in B":[[3573,3691],[4012,4095],[4880,5149],[5324,5465],[5772,5831]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA CHRISMAN"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j6gj.15","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9780719058271"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"04831157-723e-3afb-8ad9-39efefc303a2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctt155j6gj.15"}],"isPartOf":"Postcolonial contraventions","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"174","pageStart":"164","pagination":"164-174","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"You can get there from here:","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctt155j6gj.15","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":4190,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Benita Parry is justly acclaimed as an exemplary demystifier \u2013 the thinker who has provided unsurpassed critiques of the neo-colonial elements that lurk in the work of some postcolonial critics and creative writers. Less acclaimed are the affirmative, even utopian elements of Parry\u2019s intellectual project. Her writings, from imperialism to postcolonial theory to resistance, articulate optimistic belief in the achievability of political solidarity and common understanding across races, nations and cultures, brought together in the struggle for human freedom. This may sound strange given Parry\u2019s renowned emphasis on the Manichean, and her strictures against a postcolonial theory predicated on models","subTitle":"critique and utopia in Benita Parry\u2019s thought","keyphrase":["benita parry","utopian","imperialism","contrapuntal","oxford literary","resistance","literary review","postcolonial theoretical","aesthetic","liberation theory"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fredric Jameson"],"datePublished":"1984-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466541","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466541"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"9\/10","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"209","pageStart":"178","pagination":"pp. 178-209","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1984,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Periodizing the 60s","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466541","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":15405,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["LAURA FAIR"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23785435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c341c6d0-858e-3ea3-a0dd-9295c34f5160"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23785435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":28.0,"pageEnd":"1104","pageStart":"1077","pagination":"pp. 1077-1104","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Political science - Political geography"],"title":"Drive-In Socialism: Debating Modernities and Development in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23785435","volumeNumber":"118","wordCount":17686,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Emanuel Sivan"],"datePublished":"1979-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/260226","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00220094"},{"name":"oclc","value":"49976309"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227033"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"27fdecc7-e9ea-3bfe-b485-4391e0bcbcfd"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/260226"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jconthist"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Contemporary History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1979,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Language"],"title":"Colonialism and Popular Culture in Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/260226","volumeNumber":"14","wordCount":14011,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ROBERT EUGENE JOHNSON"],"datePublished":"1978-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649654","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094288X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d8ec4104-cac2-34fc-8c6f-3a27596b6857"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24649654"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"russhisthistruss"}],"isPartOf":"Russian History","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"45","pageStart":"24","pagination":"pp. 24-45","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1978,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Strikes in Moscow, 1880-1900","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24649654","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":10851,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["PHILIP NEL"],"datePublished":"2010-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961962","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02602105"},{"name":"oclc","value":"43931243"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-233986"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c2bbc24c-5264-3e2e-87be-82128a52b2de"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40961962"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"revinterstud"}],"isPartOf":"Review of International Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"974","pageStart":"951","pagination":"pp. 951-974","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Redistribution and recognition: what emerging regional powers want","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40961962","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":14300,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Regional powers of the Global South are perceived to be agents of change. But what exactly is the nature of the change that they want? This article argues that there is some continuity between the goals of the current generation of regional leaders and that of their predecessors. The current generation tend to have more confidence in their ability to effect the redistribution of wealth, prestige, and power in the global political economy, though, and tend therefore to be more integrationist than the first generation of post-colonial leaders. The goal of redistribution is premised on a more fundamental unfinished struggle of developing countries, one that Brazil, India, and South Africa in particular have taken up. This is the struggle for recognition of developing countries as full and equal partners in the society of states, but also as states with specific development needs that are too easily ploughed-under in the spurious universality promoted by the developed North. The struggle for recognition focuses on inclusive multilateralism and ' nonindifference' towards the development needs of the Global South. Using recent contributions to the theory of recognition, the article interprets these two goals as linked to the unfinished struggle against disrespect and humiliation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Romesh Diwan","Kanta Marwah"],"datePublished":"1976-02-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4364365","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"317e0979-73eb-3350-8803-bb5abfca0d9e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4364365"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"5\/7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"205","pageStart":"191","pagination":"pp. 191+193+195+197+199+201+203+205","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Economics - Economic disciplines"],"title":"Transfers from Poor to Rich Countries: An Analysis of World Exports","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4364365","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":8469,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"On the basis of a simple extension of the rather conservative standard neo-classical theory, it has been estimated in this paper that poor countries transfer, annually, net resources to the rich countries equal to as much as three-fifths of their total exports or two-thirds of their exports to the rich countries. This result provides strong evidence in support of some of the hypotheses in the theories of neocolonialism and imperialism. It also provides an explanation for the phenomenon of continuous increase in the gap between rich and poor countries. It lends further support to the statement that \"development and underdevelopment are two opposite poles of a dialectical unity\".","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William P. Irvine"],"datePublished":"1972-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3231734","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00084239"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"847978f1-7f16-3e7b-8fa0-2feff403e8a6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3231734"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canajpoliscierev"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Journal of Political Science \/ Revue canadienne de science politique","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":"520","pageStart":"503","pagination":"pp. 503-520","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"Canadian Political Science Association","sourceCategory":["Business","Business & Economics Collection","Economics","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Applied mathematics","Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Recruitment to Nationalism: New Politics or Normal Politics?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3231734","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9209,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"L'adh\u00e9sion au nationalisme : un fait nouveau ou un fait normal?. On tente de comprendre dans cet article pourquoi certains francophones du Qu\u00e9bec expriment une id\u00e9ologie nationaliste, alors que d'autres ne le font pas. Le point de d\u00e9part est donn\u00e9 par la th\u00e9orie g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de la motivation ; de ce point de vue le fait d'entreprendre une action nouvelle est fonction d'un produit form\u00e9 par des motifs personnels, des ressources psychologiques, et des occasions qui se trouvent dans l'environnement. L\u00e0 o\u00f9 le nationalisme se pr\u00e9sente comme un mouvement nouveau, on doit l'expliquer par le produit et non par la somme de certaines variables. Guindon et d'autres ont pr\u00e9tendu que le nationalisme est rare, au Qu\u00e9bec, dans certains milieux, mais que dans d'autres milieux, il est presque une norme culturelle. Dans ces derniers milieux, selon l'hypoth\u00e8se de Burnham et Sprague, des mod\u00e8les additifs d'explication semblent appropri\u00e9s. C'est pourquoi on peut pr\u00e9voir que des mod\u00e8les additifs donneront de meilleurs r\u00e9sultats que des mod\u00e8les multiplicatifs chez les cols bleus les moins \u00e2g\u00e9s et chez les cols blancs plus \u00e2g\u00e9s, tandis que ce sera le contraire chez les bleus les plus \u00e2g\u00e9s et les cols blancs les moins \u00e2g\u00e9s. Ces pr\u00e9visions se r\u00e9alisent. L'auteur se demande de plus quels sont les variables quoi doivent \u00eatre retenues : les motivations sont-elles d'abord \u00e9conomiques, ou sont-elles culturelles avant tout ? Est-ce le sentiment d'ali\u00e9nation ou celui d'amour-propre qui constitue la ressource psychologique la plus forte, etc. ? L'article traite des variables li\u00e9es au nationalisme ainsi que des relations entre elles. Le mod\u00e8le suivant, qui exigerait d'\u00eatre v\u00e9rifi\u00e9, se d\u00e9gage de l'analyse des donn\u00e9es : 1 les ressources psychologiques aussi bien que les chances qu'offre la soci\u00e9t\u00e9 connaissent des seuils significatifs tout pr\u00e8s de la ligne de d\u00e9marcation entre les cols bleus et les cols blancs ; 2 au-dessous du seuil, la vie est g\u00e9n\u00e9ralement p\u00e9nible au point que les ressources sociales sont relativement invariables par opposition aux ressources psychologiques ; 3 au-dessus du seuil, ce sont les ressources psychologiques qui sont relativement invariables par rapport aux ressources sociales ; 4 en cons\u00e9quence, le nationalisme des classes inf\u00e9rieures doit reposer surtout sur des ressources psychologiques pour se maintenir, alors que le nationalisme des classes sup\u00e9rieures d\u00e9pend surtout de la place qu'occupent les individus dans la structure sociale.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdul R. JanMohamed"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343462","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00931896"},{"name":"oclc","value":"37521707"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213132"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"951b8e80-d18a-3c36-b190-68868259b693"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1343462"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"criticalinquiry"}],"isPartOf":"Critical Inquiry","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"87","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-87","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"The University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"The Economy of Manichean Allegory: The Function of Racial Difference in Colonialist Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1343462","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14041,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["SATADRU SEN"],"datePublished":"2013-11-16","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528610","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"af2a150c-1737-3046-8681-ace1b015e9ce"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23528610"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"45\/46","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"70","pageStart":"61","pagination":"pp. 61-70","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Benoy Kumar Sarkar and Japan","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23528610","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":10368,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines the tension between cosmopolitanism and ressentiment nationalism (i e, the nationalism of existential envy) in the work of Benoy Kumar Sarkar, the pre-eminent Indian social scientist of the decades before Independence. A prolific writer about India's place in the world and the nature of interstate relations, Sarkar was (and is) widely considered an \"internationalist\" and anti-imperialist. By focusing on Sarkar's fundamentally ambivalent outlook on the rise of a powerful Japan, this article argues that his internationalism and anti-imperialism were both compromised by a particular historical location, which had to do with the gendered concerns of the Indian nationalist elite, and his infatuation with a model of nationhood and power indebted to right-wing European ideologies and political developments.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["M\u2019bark Bouzzit"],"datePublished":"2017-05-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"report","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep12638","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b91d0eab-2bbc-3733-be2f-264a55dcde71"}],"isPartOf":null,"issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":18.0,"pageEnd":null,"pageStart":null,"pagination":null,"provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":"Arab Center for Research & Policy Studies","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Imperialism and the writing of the self in postcolonial criticism: preliminary notes on the Moroccan self and imperial heritage","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/resrep12638","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6315,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Imperial ideology still warrants thorough scrutiny on the part of the postcolonial observer. Though it has been repeatedly dismantled, misrepresentation and exploitation are ubiquitous and atrocities still go viral in the Arab-Muslim world. I claim that there is still a certain discontinuity in the application of the ethos from which the imperial West claims to take its philosophical activity. This paper further argues that the very defect which accompanies imperial ideology is that it fails to conceive of its own contradictions. That some practices have become axiomatic, the writing of the postcolonial identity as a subversion of imperial representations, structures","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":["Research Reports"],"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Uppinder Mehan","David Townsend"],"datePublished":"2001-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593475","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104124"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709734"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227144"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3593475"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"complite"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Literature","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Linguistics - Grammar","Linguistics - Language"],"title":"\"Nation\" and the Gaze of the Other in Eighth-Century Northumbria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3593475","volumeNumber":"53","wordCount":15254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kimberly Hutchings"],"datePublished":"2007-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640084","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08875367"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388138"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4669"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a33b1073-b0c5-3921-983d-e701becadb39"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4640084"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hypatia"}],"isPartOf":"Hypatia","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"132","pageStart":"111","pagination":"pp. 111-132","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Hypatia, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Feminist & Women's Studies","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Simone de Beauvoir and the Ambiguous Ethics of Political Violence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4640084","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":10392,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"In this essay, Hutchings contends that Simone de Beauvoir's argument in The Ethics of Ambiguity provides a valuable resource for feminists currently addressing the question of the legitimacy of political violence, whether of the state or otherwise. The reason is not that Beauvoir provides a definitive answer to this question, but rather because of the ways in which she deconstructs it. In enabling her reader to appreciate what is presupposed by a resistant politics that adopts violence as its instrument, Beauvoir illuminates the problems encountered by the kinds of \"realistic and positive\" and \"idealistic and moral\" arguments through which the use of violence in politics is routinely justified. At the same time, Beauvoir demonstrates that to deconstruct the question of the legitimacy of violence is neither to banish nor resolve it. She does not offer a recipe for determining the legitimacy or otherwise of the use of violence in politics in general; instead, she illuminates the irremediable difficulty and inescapability of such judgments in a violent and intransigent world.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin J. Wetmore Jr."],"datePublished":"2000-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414569","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08885753"},{"name":"oclc","value":"232114045"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2009-247559"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"86be5479-fc7e-38fe-bdb2-73532b43f118"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23414569"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"studpopucult"}],"isPartOf":"Studies in Popular Culture","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"106","pageStart":"91","pagination":"pp. 91-106","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Popular Culture Association in the South","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Film Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Music","Cultural Studies","Humanities","Arts"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"The Tao of \"Star Wars\", Or, Cultural Appropriation in a Galaxy Far, Far Away","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23414569","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":5570,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anthony Chase"],"datePublished":"1986-02-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288843","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00262234"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b63dcfc6-6328-3092-ae80-a9665cdb31c4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1288843"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"michlawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Michigan Law Review","issueNumber":"4\/5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"759","pageStart":"737","pagination":"pp. 737-759","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1986,"publisher":"The Michigan Law Review Association","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"In the Jungle of Cities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1288843","volumeNumber":"84","wordCount":14022,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert H. Mast"],"datePublished":"1985-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45197140","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"87553449"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"68306b27-3b96-3267-a31b-c4dc2ec0aba6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45197140"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jthirworlstud"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Third World Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"65","pagination":"pp. 65-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"University Press of Florida","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Development Studies","Political Science","Social Sciences","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"MINORITIES & THE CONCEPT OF THE THIRD WORLD","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45197140","volumeNumber":"2","wordCount":9231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["L. Adele Jinadu"],"datePublished":"1972-07-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1406506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00346705"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50565005"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2005 237214"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"24e92a3f-b7a5-364a-ba4b-75006e7b6662"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1406506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reviewpolitics"}],"isPartOf":"The Review of Politics","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"436","pageStart":"433","pagination":"pp. 433-436","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1972,"publisher":"University of Notre Dame du lac on behalf of Review of Politics","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Fanon: The Revolutionary as Social Philosopher","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1406506","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":1636,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Winsley B. Hector"],"datePublished":"2017-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.13","identifier":[{"name":"isbn","value":"9781946230362"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bb2ed207-d7a8-37b4-b566-d2cef289acb8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/j.ctvwrm4dk.13"}],"isPartOf":"Racial Reconciliation and Privilege","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"296","pageStart":"271","pagination":"271-296","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2017,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Religion"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Epistemology","History - Historical methodology"],"title":"Bibliography","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/j.ctvwrm4dk.13","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14012,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":["pastoral care","adventist","accessed","nashville abingdon","church","adventist church","minneapolis fortress","university","day adventist","herald publishing"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Paul Delaney"],"datePublished":"2005-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736274","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07907850"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ffa674ea-c1f8-336c-a20e-ae78b7a6eb91"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/29736274"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"irisrevi1986"}],"isPartOf":"The Irish Review (1986-)","issueNumber":"33","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"109","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-109","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Cork University Press","sourceCategory":["Area Studies","Irish Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"'A Lack of Invention': Corkery, Criticism and Minor Fatigue","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/29736274","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6231,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Suzanne Scafe"],"datePublished":"2010-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41411862","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"1086010X"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"93428dad-be22-3d2e-bad8-e9ea0a7273f5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41411862"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jcarilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Caribbean Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"79","pageStart":"67","pagination":"pp. 67-79","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Maurice Lee","sourceCategory":["Humanities","Language & Literature"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"\"Gruesome and Yet Fascinating\": Hidden, Disgraced and Disregarded Cultural Forms in Jamaican Short Fiction 1938-50","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41411862","volumeNumber":"6","wordCount":6929,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["S. Zeydabadi-Nejad"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455536","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"13530194"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48531621"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227374"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"aee10db8-a543-358f-8f09-6f09ac418a7c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20455536"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"britjmiddeaststu"}],"isPartOf":"British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"375","pagination":"pp. 375-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications","Law - Computer law"],"title":"Iranian Intellectuals and Contact with the West: The Case of Iranian Cinema","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20455536","volumeNumber":"34","wordCount":13467,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article focuses on the international prominence of Iranian cinema in relation to the politics of filmmaking and the discourses of identity in Iran. Beginning with the Iranian New Wave of the 1960s and 1970s, it analyses Iranian commentaries about the acclaim of the films at the time and shows their relevance to the intellectual discourse about Gharbzadegi or 'West-struckness'. It then explores various post-revolutionary discourses about the phenomenal success of the cinema since the late 1980s. Examining the trajectory of major Iranian filmmakers, the article concludes that the international acclaim has facilitated the cinema's engagement with issues of socio-political significance in the country.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Andrea L. Smith"],"datePublished":"1996-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24498061","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10816976"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef824bb4-e416-3536-b76a-29db56f10f0a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24498061"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"polilegaanthrevi"}],"isPartOf":"Political and Legal Anthropology Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"49","pageStart":"33","pagination":"pp. 33-49","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Social Sciences","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Citizenship in the Colony: Naturalization Law and Legal Assimilation in 19th Century Algeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24498061","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6092,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[28478,28544]],"Locations in B":[[32599,32665]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James K. Baker","Y. Tandon","Russell Warren Howe","Ama Ata Aidoo","Munhamnu B. Utete","Omufume F. Onoge","Kinoru A. Gaching'a","A. N. Hakam","E. R. Ibira","K. Y. Waibike","Ali A. Mazrui"],"datePublished":"1997-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935399","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00411191"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42646438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23435"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2935399"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"transition"}],"isPartOf":"Transition","issueNumber":"75\/76","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"154","pageStart":"134","pagination":"pp. 134-154","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African American Studies","Area Studies","African Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Polemics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2935399","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":13171,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Abdul R. JanMohamed"],"datePublished":"1982-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01903659"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709715"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227142"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/303029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"boundary2"}],"isPartOf":"boundary 2","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":20.0,"pageEnd":"290","pageStart":"271","pagination":"pp. 271-290","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1982,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Alex La Guma: The Literary and Political Functions of Marginality in the Colonial Situation","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303029","volumeNumber":"11","wordCount":9667,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27634,27692]],"Locations in B":[[58118,58172]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ivonne del Valle"],"datePublished":"2013-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24575096","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01935380"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60627062"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-216705"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"bd99bcf5-6f8b-3383-8385-6c922fd4467b"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24575096"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"eighcent"}],"isPartOf":"The Eighteenth Century","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":25.0,"pageEnd":"459","pageStart":"435","pagination":"pp. 435-459","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"University of Pennsylvania Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","History","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From Jos\u00e9 de Acosta to the Enlightenment: Barbarians, Climate Change, and (Colonial) Technology as the End of History","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24575096","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":13070,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Louis A. P\u00e9rez, Jr."],"datePublished":"1999-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2650370","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00028762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"35776522"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn97-23020"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9f21423-4286-3791-aff3-9b91a6f04ed2"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2650370"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"amerhistrevi"}],"isPartOf":"The American Historical Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":43.0,"pageEnd":"398","pageStart":"356","pagination":"pp. 356-398","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Oxford University Press","sourceCategory":["History","American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Incurring a Debt of Gratitude: 1898 and the Moral Sources of United States Hegemony in Cuba","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2650370","volumeNumber":"104","wordCount":20277,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Greg Thomas"],"datePublished":"2007-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43617524","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00327638"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564245597"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"506f3ad4-ae86-395f-bfa9-306538926589"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43617524"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"presafri"}],"isPartOf":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine","issueNumber":"175\/177","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"312","pageStart":"300","pagination":"pp. 300-312","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Pr\u00e9sence Africaine Editions","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Fire and \"Damnation\": Hip-Hop (\"Youth Culture\") and 1956 in Focus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43617524","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5179,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Vanessa Pupavac"],"datePublished":"2002-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645060","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03043754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60637285"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-263182"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"457a7c34-d24f-3859-b6ca-98a0a15f8bfa"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40645060"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alternatives"}],"isPartOf":"Alternatives: Global, Local, Political","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"511","pageStart":"489","pagination":"pp. 489-511","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Political science - Military science"],"title":"Pathologizing Populations and Colonizing Minds: International Psychosocial Programs in Kosovo","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40645060","volumeNumber":"27","wordCount":9199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jeffrey Sacks"],"datePublished":"2007-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616506","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03007162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709528"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227122"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20616506"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"diacritics"}],"isPartOf":"Diacritics","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"55","pageStart":"32","pagination":"pp. 32-43, 45-55","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"Futures of Literature: Inhitat, Adab, Naqd","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20616506","volumeNumber":"37","wordCount":16134,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Roland Puccetti"],"datePublished":"1971-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24776820","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00271276"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e3d81f80-5cba-3121-9d5d-cadb643e0439"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24776820"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"mosajintestudlit"}],"isPartOf":"Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"127","pageStart":"119","pagination":"pp. 119-127","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1971,"publisher":"University of Manitoba","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Man, Political Man, and the Luminaries of the New Left","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24776820","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":4588,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Femi Aborisade"],"datePublished":"2010-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43158363","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07061706"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5c8a8e89-213b-35af-9cbf-692fccf43f46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/43158363"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"labocapisoci"}],"isPartOf":"Labour, Capital and Society \/ Travail, capital et soci\u00e9t\u00e9","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":32.0,"pageEnd":"62","pageStart":"31","pagination":"pp. 31-62","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2010,"publisher":"Labour, Capital & Society","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics Collection","Development Studies","Labor & Employment Relations"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Petro-capitalism, Neoliberalism, Labour and Community Mobilization in Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/43158363","volumeNumber":"43","wordCount":11988,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Au Nig\u00e9ria, pays producteur, le liquide politique nomm\u00e9 p\u00e9trole sert de r\u00e9v\u00e9lateur fondamental de la lutte des classes. La plupart des \u00e9crits sur les crises caus\u00e9es par l'industrie du p\u00e9trole refl\u00e8tent pourtant fort mal le r\u00f4le crucial jou\u00e9 par la classe ouvri\u00e8re dans sa production et sa distribution. Pour bien saisir les perspectives de changement social et les d\u00e9fis qu'il pose dans une \u00e9conomie capitaliste bas\u00e9e sur le p\u00e9trole, il faut comprendre le r\u00f4le de la main d'\u0153uvre, particuli\u00e8rement celui du mouvement syndical. Cet article cerne et analyse la forme, les tendances et les limitations des actions entreprises par la communaut\u00e9 p\u00e9troli\u00e8re et par les travailleurs du p\u00e9trole au Nigeria, durant la phase n\u00e9olib\u00e9rale du p\u00e9trocapitalisme. En particulier, l'auteur note l'absence d'alliances organis\u00e9es entre ces deux groupes et la n\u00e9cessit\u00e9 d'efforts conscients pour b\u00e2tir l'unit\u00e9 entre les branches salari\u00e9es et non-salari\u00e9es de la classe ouvri\u00e8re. Selon l'argument central, une forme de gestion socialis\u00e9e de l'\u00e9conomie et de la soci\u00e9t\u00e9, bas\u00e9e sur la forme sociale de l'organisation de la production, mis en place par les forces productives, est n\u00e9cessaire pour r\u00e9soudre les contradictions fondamentales du capitalisme p\u00e9trolier. Pour ce faire, il faut \u00e9ventuellement que les travailleurs de l'industrie p\u00e9troli\u00e8re et la collectivit\u00e9 locale exercent un contr\u00f4le conjoint sur cette industrie. A fundamental measure of the class struggle in Nigeria, as an oil producing country, is the political liquid called oil. Yet, most writings on the oil industry-induced crises hardly reflect the crucial role of the working class, which is at the point of production and distribution. An adequate understanding of the prospects and challenges for social change in a capitalist oil-based economy lies in appreciating the role of labour, particularly organized labour. This article identifies and analyses the form, trends and limitations of actions undertaken by the oil community and oil workers in Nigeria within the context of the neoliberal phase of petro-capitalism. In particular, it notes a lack of organized alliances between these groups and calls for conscious efforts aimed at building unity between the waged and unwaged wings of the working class. This is based on the central argument that the resolution of the fundamental contradictions in oil capitalism requires a socialized form of management of society and the economy by the productive forces. This requires, ultimately, joint control of the oil industry by its workers and the local community.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Arif Dirlik"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354254","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"10f8772d-3c05-3055-97b7-1753bb674190"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354254"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"6","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"13","pagination":"pp. 13-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Culturalism as Hegemonic Ideology and Liberating Practice","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354254","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":14995,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Harry C. Boyte"],"datePublished":"2011-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036076","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00905917"},{"name":"oclc","value":"48534438"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227383"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"dac169a8-2b23-3d1e-a6f5-b2195b017a46"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23036076"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"politicaltheory"}],"isPartOf":"Political Theory","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"660","pageStart":"630","pagination":"pp. 630-660","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Constructive Politics as Public Work: Organizing the Literature","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23036076","volumeNumber":"39","wordCount":12425,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay argues that fulfilling the promise of participatory democratic theory requires ways for citizens to reconstruct the world, not simply to improve its governance processes. The concept of public work, expressing civic agency, or the capacity of diverse citizens to build a democratic way of life, embodies this shift. It posits citizens as co-creators of the world, not simply deliberators and decision-makers about the world. Public work is a normative, democratizing ideal of citizenship generalized from communal labors of creating the commons, with roots in diverse cultures. Shaped through contention with forces which threaten shared ways of life and their commons, grounded in an understanding of human plurality, public work has political qualities that unmask sentimentalized civic discourses of modern elites. Public work places citizens, not markets or states, as the foundational agents of democracy. It opens a path beyond the political crisis.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Jim Perkinson"],"datePublished":"2001-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1206055","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00224189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42818298"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212337"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2078afc5-5d13-308e-822d-7d8f30ffc788"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1206055"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jreligion"}],"isPartOf":"The Journal of Religion","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"594","pageStart":"566","pagination":"pp. 566-594","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"University of Chicago Press","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Ogou's Iron or Jesus' Irony: Who's Zooming Who in Diasporic Possession Cult Activity?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1206055","volumeNumber":"81","wordCount":12831,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Claude E. Welch, Jr."],"datePublished":"1977-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523757","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00020206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205622"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227372"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"83212089-7645-36f4-917a-9f5dd609e4d1"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/523757"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"afristudrevi"}],"isPartOf":"African Studies Review","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"130","pageStart":"121","pagination":"pp. 121-130","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1977,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Obstacles to \"Peasant War\" in Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/523757","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":5422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rayvon Fouch\u00e9"],"datePublished":"2006-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069218","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00064246"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38540633"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-201717"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4c016e7d-e702-38f5-91d3-e5f074aad597"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41069218"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"blackscholar"}],"isPartOf":"The Black Scholar","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"12","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-12","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2006,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Wretched of the Gulf: Racism, Technological Dramas, and Black Politics of Technology","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41069218","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":4181,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[23634,23724]],"Locations in B":[[7046,7135]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2002-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582710","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00208590"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a3830eb6-c7db-336d-bc89-fc108bd51dc4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44582710"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"interevisocihist"}],"isPartOf":"International Review of Social History","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":35.0,"pageEnd":"351","pageStart":"317","pagination":"pp. 317-351","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"BIBLIOGRAPHY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44582710","volumeNumber":"47","wordCount":14819,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Robert Crooks"],"datePublished":"1995-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112209","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00933139"},{"name":"oclc","value":"38583988"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-213959"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4342e73a-a748-3286-a19b-da8060890bfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/25112209"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"collegelit"}],"isPartOf":"College Literature","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"90","pageStart":"68","pagination":"pp. 68-90","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"From the Far Side of the Urban Frontier: The Detective Fiction of Chester Himes and Walter Mosley","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/25112209","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":11254,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["William F. May"],"datePublished":"1989-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559463","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07324928"},{"name":"oclc","value":"57252837"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-221983"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23559463"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annusocichriethi"}],"isPartOf":"The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":4.0,"pageEnd":"272","pageStart":"269","pagination":"pp. 269-272","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"Society of Christian Ethics","sourceCategory":["Religion","Philosophy","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Metaphysics"],"title":"A More Spacious View of Human Intelligence","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23559463","volumeNumber":"9","wordCount":1423,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anupam Chander","Madhavi Sunder"],"datePublished":"2007-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439103","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00081221"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42810539"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-234631"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"5dfcdf8b-1f17-36d8-92ac-30a47cd290bf"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20439103"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"calilawrevi"}],"isPartOf":"California Law Review","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"626","pageStart":"597","pagination":"pp. 597-626","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2007,"publisher":"California Law Review, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Law","Law"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Everyone's a Superhero: A Cultural Theory of \"Mary Sue\" Fan Fiction as Fair Use","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20439103","volumeNumber":"95","wordCount":14148,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Lieutenant Mary Sue took the helm of the Starship Enterprise, saving the ship while parrying Kirk's advances. At least she did so in the unofficial short story by Trekkie Paula Smith. \"Mary Sue\" has since come to stand for the insertion of an idealized authorial representative in a popular work. Derided as an exercise in narcissism, Mary Sue is in fact a figure of subaltern critique, challenging the stereotypes of the original. The stereotypes of popular culture insinuate themselves deeply into our lives, coloring our views on occupations and roles. From Hermione Granger-led stories, to Harry Potter in Kolkata, to Star Trek same-sex romances, Mary Sues re-imagine our cultural landscape, granting agency to those denied it in the popular mythology. Lacking the global distribution channels of traditional media, Mary Sue authors now find an alternative in the World Wide Web, which brings their work to the world. Despite copyright law's grant of rights in derivative works to the original's owners, we argue that Mary Sues that challenge the orthodoxy of the original likely constitute fair use. The Mary Sue serves as a metonym for all derivative uses that challenge the hegemony of the original. Scholars raise three principal critiques to such fair use: (1) why not write your own story rather than borrowing another's? (2) even if you must borrow, why not license it? and (3 won't \"recoding\" popular icons dstabilize culture? Relying on a cultural theory that prizes voice, not just exit, as a response to hegemony, we reply to these objections here. \"Gee, golly, gosh gloriosky,\" thought Mary Sue as she stepped on the bridge of the Enterprise. \"Here I am, the youngest Lieutenant in the fleet-only fifteen and half years old.\" Captain Kirk came up to her. \"Oh, Lieutenant, I love you madly. Will you come to bed with me?\" \"Captain! I am not that kind of girl!\" \"You're right, and I respect you for it. Here, take over the ship for a minute while I go for some coffee for us.\" Mr. Spock came onto the bridge. \"What are you doing in the command seat, Lieutenant?\" \"The Captain told me to.\" \"Flawlessly logical. I admire your mind.\"","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["August Nimtz"],"datePublished":"1985-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45342159","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08560056"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"947d39f9-5721-3408-9fb0-11b2d4a31bd8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/45342159"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"africanrev"}],"isPartOf":"The African Review: A Journal of African Politics, Development and International Affairs","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":23.0,"pageEnd":"76","pageStart":"54","pagination":"pp. 54-76","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1985,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":null,"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"THE MAKING AND UNMAKING OF A REVOLUTION: SOME LESSONS FROM GRENADA","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/45342159","volumeNumber":"12","wordCount":14157,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Neil ten Kortenaar"],"datePublished":"1993-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820113","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3820113"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1993,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"\"Only Connect\": \"Anthills of the Savannah\" and Achebe's Trouble with Nigeria","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3820113","volumeNumber":"24","wordCount":8221,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["NANCY TENFELDE CLASBY"],"datePublished":"1988-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24459151","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00111953"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24459151"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"crosscurrents"}],"isPartOf":"CrossCurrents","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"210","pageStart":"173","pagination":"pp. 173-184, 210","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1988,"publisher":"Wiley","sourceCategory":["Religion","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"MALCOLM X AND LIBERATION THEOLOGY","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24459151","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":5952,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nigel Gibson"],"datePublished":"2005-08-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802292","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00405817"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"de80ac59-1f21-3d1e-8f19-edd8b8ac30c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/41802292"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"theoria"}],"isPartOf":"Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory","issueNumber":"107","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"118","pageStart":"89","pagination":"pp. 89-118","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Berghahn Books","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Limits of Black Political Empowerment: Fanon, Marx, 'the Poors' and the 'new reality of the nation' in South Africa","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/41802292","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12918,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[27646,27686]],"Locations in B":[[75952,75991]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manthia Diawara"],"datePublished":"1992-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466223","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01642472"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709649"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227137"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/466223"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socialtext"}],"isPartOf":"Social Text","issueNumber":"31\/32","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"168","pageStart":"154","pagination":"pp. 154-168","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1992,"publisher":"Duke University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Canonizing Soundiata in Mande Literature: Toward a Sociology of Narrative Elements","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/466223","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":7677,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Manuel Maldonado-Denis"],"datePublished":"1969-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1037111","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027162"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50544474"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-235682"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"40fe772a-ea13-3ebc-8494-9232665182ca"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1037111"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"annaameracadpoli"}],"isPartOf":"The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"31","pageStart":"26","pagination":"pp. 26-31","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Economics","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Puerto Ricans: Protest or Submission?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1037111","volumeNumber":"382","wordCount":3268,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The situation of Puerto Ricans in the United States cannot be seen as abstracted from that of those living in Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico has been a colony of the United States since 1898, and the most pervasive characteristic of its population-both in the Island and in the Mainland-is its colonialist mentality or world view: hence, the attitude of submission and acquiescence characteristic of the Puerto Ricans. The only forces in Puerto Rico that represent Puerto Rican protest against the perpetuation of colonialism in Puerto Rico are the proindependence groups. In this respect, their goal is similar to that of the Black Power advocates in the United States, because both groups are faced with a similar situation. Only when Puerto Ricans have achieved decolonization, both psychologically and politically, will they be able to come of age as a true protest movement. Otherwise they run the risk of a total destruction of Puerto Rican nationality, and cultural assimilation by the United States.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2000-01-01","docSubType":"misc","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976147","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10581634"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e9fe9be5-7152-3618-b50a-9e14bd087194"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42976147"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"counterpoints"}],"isPartOf":"Counterpoints","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"365","pageStart":"347","pagination":"pp. 347-365","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2000,"publisher":"Peter Lang AG","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Index","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42976147","volumeNumber":"75","wordCount":5624,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elaine Rusinko"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40870029","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00085006"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60622494"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234668"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e15641c6-2432-3171-af16-1b7c2720fcfe"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40870029"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"canaslavpape"}],"isPartOf":"Canadian Slavonic Papers \/ Revue Canadienne des Slavistes","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"17","pageStart":"1","pagination":"pp. 1-17","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Slavic Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The National Awakening in Subcarpathian Rus' : Aleksander Dukhnovych's Reconfiguration of Cultural Identity","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40870029","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":6961,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Stewart Gordon"],"datePublished":"1999-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106667","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10224556"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41438060"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-047752"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ba2ffc4b-4574-35ff-8f8f-15c6793e49ed"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20106667"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"intejhindstud"}],"isPartOf":"International Journal of Hindu Studies","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":19.0,"pageEnd":"239","pageStart":"221","pagination":"pp. 221-239","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Springer","sourceCategory":["Religion","Asian Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Hindus, Muslims, and the Other in Eighteenth-Century India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20106667","volumeNumber":"3","wordCount":7729,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Madalitso Zililo Phiri"],"datePublished":"2021-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48678867","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08517762"},{"name":"oclc","value":"62161874"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"fe802a9c-dc19-3d10-8bd3-89c38eb0956c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/48678867"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jhigheducafri"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Higher Education in Africa \/ Revue de l'enseignement sup\u00e9rieur en Afrique","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"56","pageStart":"27","pagination":"pp. 27-56","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2021,"publisher":"CODESRIA","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences","African Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Beyond Academic Imperialism in Comparative Studies of the Global South","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/48678867","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":11881,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Contemporary debates on decolonisation have reluctantly forced social scientists to engage with neglected debates on race and epistemology. This article recasts these debates through methodological reflections that compare South African and Brazilian social policies by centring the interpellations of racial capitalism, poverty, inequality, and social exclusion. I conducted fortyfive in-depth interviews with beneficiaries of social assistance programmes such as social grants and Bolsa Familia and with policymakers in South Africa and Brazil. Both countries offer compelling cases for comparison because they share important characteristics. How does the generation of knowledge in comparative public policy aid in advancing methodological perspectives that lead towards an imagination of a more democratic global social science? I offer a methodological reflexivity that challenges academic imperialism and underscores the importance of how local questions have global relevance in advancing an agenda for knowledge decolonisation. I achieve this by critiquing the positivist tradition in comparative sociology. Les d\u00e9bats contemporains sur la d\u00e9colonisation ont pouss\u00e9 les chercheurs en sciences sociales \u00e0 s\u2019int\u00e9resser, \u00e0 contrecoeur, aux d\u00e9bats n\u00e9glig\u00e9s sur la race et l\u2019\u00e9pist\u00e9mologie. Cet article reformule ces d\u00e9bats \u00e0 travers des r\u00e9flexions m\u00e9thodologiques qui comparent les politiques sociales sud-africaines et br\u00e9siliennes en centrant les interpellations de capitalisme racial, de la pauvret\u00e9, de l\u2019in\u00e9galit\u00e9s et de l\u2019exclusion sociale. Nous avons men\u00e9 quarante-cinq entretiens approfondis avec des b\u00e9n\u00e9ficiaires de programmes d\u2019aide sociale tels que les allocations sociales et la Bolsa Familia, ainsi qu\u2019avec des d\u00e9cideurs politiques en Afrique du Sud et au Br\u00e9sil. Les deux pays offrent des cas de comparaison car ils partagent des caract\u00e9ristiques importantes. Comment la production de connaissances en mati\u00e8re de politiques publiques compar\u00e9es contribue-t-elle \u00e0 faire avancer les perspectives m\u00e9thodologiques qui m\u00e8nent \u00e0 l\u2019imagination d\u2019une science sociale mondiale plus d\u00e9mocratique? Pour faire avancer un programme de d\u00e9colonisation des connaissances, nous proposons une r\u00e9flexivit\u00e9 m\u00e9thodologique qui remet en question l\u2019imp\u00e9rialisme acad\u00e9mique et souligne l\u2019importance de la pertinence mondiale des questions locales. Nous y parvenons en proc\u00e9dant \u00e0 l\u2019analyse critique de la tradition positiviste de la sociologie comparative.","subTitle":"Methodological Reflections","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Charles E. Billings"],"datePublished":"1970-11-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40365875","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00181498"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46322850"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001227186"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"2b75c4ad-57a4-3cc4-994d-e12e37f15e7d"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40365875"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"highschooljour"}],"isPartOf":"The High School Journal","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"107","pageStart":"96","pagination":"pp. 96-107","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"University of North Carolina Press","sourceCategory":["Education","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Social sciences - Psychology","Social sciences - Behavioral sciences"],"title":"Black Activists and the Schools","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40365875","volumeNumber":"54","wordCount":4083,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["James A. Tyner"],"datePublished":"2004-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804495","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00202754"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205675"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227376"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3804495"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"traninstbritgeog"}],"isPartOf":"Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"343","pageStart":"330","pagination":"pp. 330-343","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers)","sourceCategory":["Geography","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Territoriality, Social Justice and Gendered Revolutions in the Speeches of Malcolm X","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3804495","volumeNumber":"29","wordCount":10219,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Geographers have, in recent years, attempted to develop an anti-racist research and teaching agenda. Critical to this endeavour has been an engagement directly with the theories and philosophies of key activists and scholars, such as W. E. B. DuBois and Richard Wright. Contributing to this effort, I provide a study of Malcolm X. As an activist and outspoken member of the African American Civil Rights Movement during the 1950s and 1960s, Malcolm X re-articulated Black radical thought in significant ways. In particular, Malcolm X placed a territorial dimension at the heart of the Civil Rights Movement and in so doing re-conceptualized the theoretical and practical linkages between the African American movement and other 'Third World' movements. The immediate purpose of this paper therefore is to delineate the territorial dimensions of the revolutionary thought of Malcolm X. Heuristically, this paper is situated within four broad areas of inquiry: revolutions and social movements; the thinking of space; anti-racist geographies; and the imbrication of gender and revolutionary thought. More broadly, however, this paper reiterates the call for a more sustained engagement by geographers on the theories and philosophies of Black radical intellectuals.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Tracey Sedinger"],"datePublished":"2002-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354688","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"08824371"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46645743"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-214167"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3ee49143-f5b5-3be1-87de-2cc7bd8e8694"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/1354688"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"culturalcritique"}],"isPartOf":"Cultural Critique","issueNumber":"50","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":34.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"40","pagination":"pp. 40-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2002,"publisher":"University of Minnesota Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Social Sciences","Cultural Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation and Identification: Psychoanalysis, Race, and Sexual Difference","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1354688","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":12996,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kim Robinson-Walcott"],"datePublished":"2014-11-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615465","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02588501"},{"name":"oclc","value":"67618071"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235525"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"75bae4bf-8568-3e2f-8096-336b01b3e5c8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24615465"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jwestindilite"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of West Indian Literature","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"95","pageStart":"86","pagination":"pp. 86-95","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Journal of West Indian Literature","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Review Article","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24615465","volumeNumber":"22","wordCount":1939,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian","Yossi David","Sarah Ihmoud"],"datePublished":"2016-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/statecrime.5.1.0139","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"20466056"},{"name":"oclc","value":"815648384"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c56ecd3b-32a7-31be-af42-23e085f88281"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.13169\/statecrime.5.1.0139"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"statecrime"}],"isPartOf":"State Crime Journal","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":24.0,"pageEnd":"162","pageStart":"139","pagination":"pp. 139-162","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Pluto Journals","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Law","Political Science","Sociology","Social Sciences","Criminology & Criminal Justice","Law","International Relations"],"tdmCategory":["History - Historical methodology","Political science - Politics","Political science - Military science","Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Theologizing State Crime","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.13169\/statecrime.5.1.0139","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":9206,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines a sacralized political economy of state crime, centring Israeli assaults on the occupied Gaza Strip over the last ten years, with a particular focus on the violent attack perpetrated in 2014. Taking the 2006 election of Hamas as a point of departure, the article analyses various manifestations of violence inscribed on the people of Gaza, including killing, injuring, starving, collective punishment, military assaults and other forms of cruelty. Drawing on a settler colonial framework, the article investigates Israel's violence as sacralized state criminality embedded in a local and global political economy of racism and impunity. It argues that Israeli crimes against Gazan Palestinians must be analysed as political technologies of counterinsurgent governmentality embedded in a structure of settler colonial dispossession initiated during the 1948 Nakba.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Michaeline A. Crichlow","Patricia Northover"],"datePublished":"2012-12-01","docSubType":"book-review","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24384435","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00377651"},{"name":"oclc","value":"561345841"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234206"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f3aff3e-ecdc-3ef5-99e5-95602e3605b8"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/24384435"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soceconstud"}],"isPartOf":"Social and Economic Studies","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":13.0,"pageEnd":"228","pageStart":"216","pagination":"pp. 216-228","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"University of the West Indies","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Rethinking the Mangrove of Caribbean Space and Time: Reply to Critics of \"Globalization and the Post-Creole Imagination: Notes on Fleeing the Plantation\"","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24384435","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":4543,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Si\u00e2n Adiseshiah"],"datePublished":"2013-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44789685","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"12187364"},{"name":"oclc","value":"606563913"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2012-235293"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d2edb82a-9014-32f2-b666-c03d604d4325"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44789685"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"hungjengamerstud"}],"isPartOf":"Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies (HJEAS)","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"393","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-393","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2013,"publisher":"Centre for Arts, Humanities and Sciences (CAHS), acting on behalf of the University of Debrecen CAHS","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","History","British Studies","Irish Studies","History","American Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Revolution will not be Dramatized: The Problem of Mediation in Caryl Churchill's Revolution Plays","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44789685","volumeNumber":"19","wordCount":6659,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Caryl Churchill has regularly demonstrated an awareness of the political potential of memories, the past, as well as historical events and processes to contest and reframe ways of thinking about the present. As a socialist, Churchill has paid particular attention to revolutions and the ways in which revolutionary processes affect agency, subjectivity, individual and collective forms of identity. As well as demonstrating interest in the power of temporal disjunction to modify frames of visibility, Churchill's revolution plays also attend to the difficulty of \"capturing\" the radical character of revolution in mediated forms of representation. The article discusses all three of Churchill's revolution plays: The Hospital at the Time of the Revolution (1972), Light Shining in Buckinghamshire (1976), and Mad Forest (1990). Significantly all three plays choose not to represent\u2014through simulation\u2014 the action of key revolutionary events and processes and instead operate with silences, gaps, and reports of events. With this negation as a key focus, the essay traces the ways in which the plays appear cognizant of the difficulties of mediating revolution as a historical temporality and demonstrate sensitivity to the importance of revolution as a series of live events and processes. (SA)","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Niloshree Bhattacharya","Vinod K. Jairath"],"datePublished":"2012-05-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23620969","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380229"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565192286"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"832f550a-ae79-3e9e-8edd-aa3ca9254ef9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23620969"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socibull"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Bulletin","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"319","pageStart":"299","pagination":"pp. 299-319","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":"Indian Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Social Movements, 'Popular' Spaces, and Participation: A Review","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23620969","volumeNumber":"61","wordCount":8562,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"People's movements have been viewed as possible ways in which people's participation or empowerment of the marginalised may be achieved. This paper, through a review of literature and using the metaphor of space, explores the role of mediating factors between people's movements and participation. The presence and the relationship of people's movements with the state, political parties, support groups, and transnational networks create the enabling environment in which popular spaces may be enlarged. Using illustrations of movements in India, Brazil, and Mexico it has been seen that, through enlargement of popular spaces, a social movement can achieve participation.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Miranda Young-Jahangeer"],"datePublished":"2003-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066305","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"10130950"},{"name":"oclc","value":"175290654"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-265253"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d9394f04-f679-3e36-b2e6-d0dedd88d1c3"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4066305"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"agenda"}],"isPartOf":"Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity","issueNumber":"55","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"108","pageStart":"101","pagination":"pp. 101-108","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2003,"publisher":"Agenda Feminist Media","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","Feminist & Women's Studies","Medicine & Allied Health","African Studies","Area Studies","Social Sciences","Health Policy"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy","Social sciences - Communications"],"title":"Sizodla la siyimbokodo thina: Acting out against Patriarchy with Inmates at the Westville Female Prison","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4066305","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":5044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fernande Gontier"],"datePublished":"1975-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44175672","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00282529"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"730728eb-2bc8-3ab4-90bf-50c316aa52e5"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/44175672"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"negrhistbull"}],"isPartOf":"Negro History Bulletin","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":3.0,"pageEnd":"379","pageStart":"377","pagination":"pp. 377-379","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1975,"publisher":"Association for the Study of African American Life and History","sourceCategory":["History","African American Studies","History","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"AIM\u00c9 CESAIR\u00c9: poet & politician","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/44175672","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":2596,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["ARLENE B. KELLY"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26189138","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"03021475"},{"name":"oclc","value":"45161484"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001212260"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"892b9392-3668-3195-871e-4c54b3e23d8e"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26189138"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"signlangstud"}],"isPartOf":"Sign Language Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":8.0,"pageEnd":"129","pageStart":"122","pagination":"pp. 122-129","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Gallaudet University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Linguistics","Social Sciences","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Education - Formal education"],"title":"Deaf HERstory","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26189138","volumeNumber":"17","wordCount":2799,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Abstract This article describes the emergence of Deaf women\u2019s studies by way of Deaf studies and women\u2019s studies. This discipline arose from the need to explore the Deaf female experience. Understanding the barriers Deaf women have faced and overcome engenders an appreciation of the experiences and contributions made by and for Deaf women. Deaf women\u2019s studies courses established at National Technical Institute for the Deaf (NTID), California State University, Northridge, and Gallaudet have advanced the discipline, including the documentation of the lives of Deaf women.","subTitle":"Making Strides","keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Curtis Marez"],"datePublished":"1997-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030253","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00138304"},{"name":"oclc","value":"41125269"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23380"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30030253"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"elh"}],"isPartOf":"ELH","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":31.0,"pageEnd":"287","pageStart":"257","pagination":"pp. 257-287","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Other Addict: Reflections on Colonialism and Oscar Wilde's Opium Smoke Screen","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30030253","volumeNumber":"64","wordCount":11815,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[61982,62050]],"Locations in B":[[76715,76782]],"abstract":"Between two of the windows stood a large Florentine cabinet, made out of ebony, and inlaid with ivory and blue lapis. He watched it as though it were a thing that could fascinate and make afraid, as though it held something that he longed for and yet almost loathed. His breath quickened. A mad craving came over him. ... At last he got up from the sofa on which he had been lying, went over to it, and, having unlocked it, touched some hidden spring. A triangular drawer passed slowly out. His fingers moved instinctively towards it, dipped in, and closed on something. It was a small Chinese box of black and gold-dust lacquer, elaborately wrought, the sides patterned with curved waves, and the silken cords hung with round crystals and tassalled in plaited metal threads. He opened it. Inside was a green paste, waxy in lustre, the odor curiously heavy and persistent.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Malak Hashem","\ufee3\ufee0\ufeda \ufeeb\ufe8e\ufeb7\ufee2"],"datePublished":"1987-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/521855","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"11108673"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50709466"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227117"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"4496c2f7-df34-3702-94cb-b91f495b2c29"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/521855"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"alifjcomppoet"}],"isPartOf":"Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics","issueNumber":"7","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"72","pageStart":"52","pagination":"pp. 52-72","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1987,"publisher":"Department of English and Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Out of the Wasteland into Afrotopia: Connected, Consciousness and the Afrocentric Elite of Ayi Kwei Armah's \"Two Thousand Seasons\" \/ \ufe8d\ufedf\ufea8\ufeae\ufeed\ufe9d \ufee3\ufee6 \ufe8d\ufef7\ufead\ufebd \ufe8d\ufedf\ufea8\ufeae\ufe8d\ufe8f \ufeed\ufe8d\ufedf\ufeaa\ufea7\ufeee\ufedd \ufed3\ufef2 \ufef3\ufeee\ufe9b\ufeee\ufe91\ufef4\ufe8e \ufe87\ufed3\ufeae\ufef3\ufed8\ufef4\ufe94 : \ufead\ufeed\ufe8d\ufef3\ufe94 \"\ufe83\ufedf\ufed4\ufe8e \ufee3\ufeee\ufeb3\ufee2\" \ufef5\u064a\u064a \ufedb\ufeee\ufef1 \ufe83\ufead\ufee3\ufe8e","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/521855","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9155,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u064a\u0639\u062a\u0628\u0631 \u0622\u064a\u064a \u0643\u0648\u064a \u0623\u0631\u0645\u0627 \u0623\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0643\u062a\u0627\u0628 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Comparative Literature, American University in Cairo","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Middle East Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Theology","Arts - Literature","Religion - Spiritual belief systems"],"title":"The Aesthetics of Difference: History and Representations of Otherness in \"al-Nubi\" and \"Wahat al-ghurub\" \/ \u00bb \u062c\u0645\u0627\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0627\u062e\u062a\u0644\u0627\u0641: \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e \u0648\u062a\u0645\u062b\u064a\u0644 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u064a\u0631\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u064a \u00ab \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a \u00bb \u0648\u00ab \u0648\u0627\u062d\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0648\u0628","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/24772812","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":9909,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This article examines Idris 'Ali's al-Nubi (2001) and Baha' Tahir's Wahat al-ghurub (2006) and their significant novelistic undertakings of Nubian and Amazigh experiences in Egypt, respectively. Departing from the ethnically confined and linguistically monolithic picture of the nation-state, both novels shift their creative concern toward the marginal communities of Nubia and Siwa, whose cultures, languages, and histories are often overlooked due to dominant cultural discourses and reductive historical narratives. The article demonstrates how the novels are deeply historical and suggests we can only understand the implicit inequalities of contemporary Egyptian society by looking to the past. \u062a\u062d\u0644\u0644 \u0647\u0630\u0647 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a (\u0662\u0660\u0660\u0661) \u0644\u0625\u062f\u0631\u0628\u0633 \u0639\u0644\u064a \u0648\u0648\u0627\u062d\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0648\u0628 (\u0662\u0660\u0660\u0666) \u0644\u0628\u0647\u0627\u0621 \u0637\u0627\u0647\u0631\u0648\u062a\u0639\u0647\u062f\u0627\u062a\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0648\u0627\u0626\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u062c\u062f\u064a\u062f\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u062a\u0635\u0648\u064a\u0631 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u062c\u0631\u0628\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a\u0629 (\u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u064a) \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u0645\u0627\u0632\u064a\u063a\u064a\u0629 (\u0641\u064a \u0648\u0627\u062d\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u063a\u0631\u0648\u0628) \u0641\u064a \u0645\u0635\u0631. \u062a\u0639\u0631\u0636 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u0627\u0644\u0629 \u0643\u064a\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u062e\u0631\u0648\u062c \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u064a\u0646 \u0639\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0635\u0648\u0631\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u062b\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0642\u064a\u062f\u0629\u060c \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0623\u062d\u0627\u062f\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u063a\u0648\u064a\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u062f\u0648\u0644\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0642\u0648\u0645\u064a\u0629\u060c \u0648\u062a\u0631\u0643\u064a\u0632\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0628\u062f\u0627\u0639\u064a \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u0623\u0642\u0644\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u0639\u0631\u0642\u064a\u0629 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u0625\u062b\u0646\u064a\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0646\u0648\u0628\u0629 \u0648\u0633\u064a\u0648\u0629 \u0639\u0644\u0649 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0648\u0627\u0644\u064a\u060c \u0648\u0639\u0644\u0649 \u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u0627\u062a \u0648\u0644\u063a\u0627\u062a \u0648\u062a\u0627\u0631\u0628\u063a \u0639\u0627\u062f\u0629 \u0645\u0627 \u064a\u062a\u0645 \u0625\u0647\u0645\u0627\u0644\u0647\u0627 \u0646\u062a\u064a\u062c\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u062e\u0637\u0627\u064a\u0627\u062a \u0627\u0644\u062b\u0642\u0627\u0641\u064a\u0629 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0647\u064a\u0645\u0646\u0629 \u0648\u0642\u0635\u0635 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062e\u062a\u0632\u0644\u0629 \u0641\u064a \u0645\u0635\u0631. \u0648\u0645\u0646 \u062e\u0644\u0627\u0644 \u0646\u0638\u0631\u0629 \u0625\u0628\u062f\u0627\u0639\u064a\u0629 \u0645\u062a\u0623\u0635\u0644\u0629 \u0648\u0645\u062a\u0639\u0645\u0642\u0629 \u0644\u0644\u062a\u0627\u0631\u064a\u062e\u060c \u062a\u0633\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u0631\u0648\u0627\u064a\u062a\u0627\u0646 \u0641\u064a \u0641\u0647\u0645 \u0627\u0644\u062a\u0628\u0627\u064a\u0646 \u0648\u0627\u0644\u062a\u062d\u064a\u0632 \u0627\u0644\u0636\u0645\u0646\u064a\u064a\u0646 \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0630\u064a\u0646 \u064a\u0639\u0627\u0646\u064a \u0645\u0646\u0647\u0645\u0627 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u062c\u062a\u0645\u0639 \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0635\u0631\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0645\u0639\u0627\u0635\u0631 .","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Marc Blanchard"],"datePublished":"1998-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189888","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"07436831"},{"name":"oclc","value":"54707713"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2004-212210"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3189888"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"soutcentrevi"}],"isPartOf":"South Central Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"18","pageStart":"8","pagination":"pp. 8-18","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1998,"publisher":"South Central Modern Language Association","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"Goodbye, Sisyphus","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3189888","volumeNumber":"15","wordCount":6985,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ronald T. 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V\u00e1squez","Philip J. Williams"],"datePublished":"2005-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040227","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"0094582X"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47076049"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227215"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"3734b95e-c8aa-3360-8387-6ba2773a39f4"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/30040227"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerpers"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Perspectives","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":22.0,"pageEnd":"26","pageStart":"5","pagination":"pp. 5-26","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Religion - Spiritual belief systems","Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Introduction: The Power of Religious Identities in the Americas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/30040227","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9379,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Edward W. 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Said","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/303174","volumeNumber":"20","wordCount":11745,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Fernando De Toro"],"datePublished":"1995-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150854","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"01963570"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60619315"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-214151"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/40150854"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"worllitetoda"}],"isPartOf":"World Literature Today","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":6.0,"pageEnd":"40","pageStart":"35","pagination":"pp. 35-40","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1995,"publisher":"Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Bibliography","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"From Where to Speak? Latin American Postmodern\/Postcolonial Positionalities","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/40150854","volumeNumber":"69","wordCount":5401,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ahmad H. Sa'di"],"datePublished":"2004-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654690","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"15684849"},{"name":"oclc","value":"50779604"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2007-242017"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"ef1b74e3-6eee-304c-8aaa-f29d7acf7bfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23654690"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"asiajsociscie"}],"isPartOf":"Asian Journal of Social Science","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":21.0,"pageEnd":"160","pageStart":"140","pagination":"pp. 140-160","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Brill","sourceCategory":["Asian Studies","Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Trends in Israeli Social Science Research on the National Identity of the Palestinian Citizens of Israel","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23654690","volumeNumber":"32","wordCount":9412,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The national identity of the Palestinian citizens of Israel has been a focal subject of inquiry by Israeli students (both Jews and Palestinian citizens of Israel) of the Palestinian minority. This articles aims to map this field of knowledge and critically evaluate its epistemologies, ideologies, as well as its affinity to existing power relations. The article reveals the instrumentalization of the concept of identity by mainstream Israeli academics, who employ it not in order to engage in a scholarly inquiry into identity formation, alteration or evolution, but rather to evaluate the effectiveness of state policy vis-\u00e0-vis the minority. Given this, a dialogue between the mainstream and non-mainstream academics has not developed. In addition, the article discusses new directions, which could be pursued to advance the research on this topic such as \"self-othering\", identity as a form of resistance, the articulation of historical consciousness, and the role of naming and counter-naming of places for manipulation or consolidation of identities.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["J. Michael Dash"],"datePublished":"2004-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821344","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00345210"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42388134"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-4673"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/3821344"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"reseafrilite"}],"isPartOf":"Research in African Literatures","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":10.0,"pageEnd":"53","pageStart":"44","pagination":"pp. 44-53","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2004,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","African Studies","Area Studies","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nineteenth-Century Haiti and the Archipelago of the Americas: Ant\u00e9nor Firmin's Letters from St. Thomas","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/3821344","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":4975,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay examines the question of black internationalism in the last work written by Ant\u00e9nor Firmin, The Letters from St. Thomas. These letters, written in exile on the island of St. Thomas, reveal Firmin's thoughts on the question of racial difference, national identity and Haiti's hemispheric role. Because of the tendency to see nineteenth-century Haitian intellectuals as alienated and unenlightened, the complexity of Firmin's thought, generally dismissed as universalist and cosmopolitan, has been overlooked. In calling into question fetishistic and exclusivist notions of race and territory that were very popular at the time, Firmin makes the case for crosscultural negotiations and post-territorial theorizing that anticipate the ideas of later Caribbean thinkers such as Edouard Glissant and Frantz Fanon.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Elias K. 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Literature","Arts - Art history"],"title":"The Interplay of Political and Existential Freedom in Earl Lovelace\u2019s The Dragon Can\u2019t Dance<\/em>","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/jwestindilite.23.1-2.35","volumeNumber":"23","wordCount":6694,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[573633,573853]],"Locations in B":[[35168,35387]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Eugene Perkins"],"datePublished":"1976-12-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2783968","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00219347"},{"name":"oclc","value":"42275858"},{"name":"lccn","value":"sn99-23423"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"d006e2a3-3f6a-305a-bba4-b134e702f39a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2783968"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jblackstudies"}],"isPartOf":"Journal of Black Studies","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"240","pageStart":"225","pagination":"pp. 225-240","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1976,"publisher":"Sage Publications, Inc.","sourceCategory":["African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - 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Bringing in organizational factors allows us to maintain assumptions of rationality and still explain violence which does not directly advance the political objectives of antigovernment actors. Using an agency framework, the article shows that within dispersed underground organizations strategies of violence solve a number of problems of internal control for leaders. It also shows that extensive use of violence generates asset specificity and adverse selection phenomena that make it difficult to revoke violence as a strategy.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Virginia Engquist","Frances Coles"],"datePublished":"1970-07-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909620","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00212385"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"56efe2b7-2d78-38f1-a966-c4380b598bfc"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/42909620"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"issueincrim"}],"isPartOf":"Issues in Criminology","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":12.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"209","pagination":"pp. 209-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1970,"publisher":"Social Justice\/Global Options","sourceCategory":["Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"\"POLITICAL\" CRIMINALS IN AMERICA: O'HARE (1923); CANTINE and RAINER (1950)","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/42909620","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":6499,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"1969-04-01","docSubType":"news","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2502306","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00238791"},{"name":"oclc","value":"47075614"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2001-227194"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"289a399a-c556-34fd-ac48-3e990020e078"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/2502306"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"latiamerreserevi"}],"isPartOf":"Latin American Research Review","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"220","pageStart":"206","pagination":"pp. 206-220","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1969,"publisher":"Latin American Studies Association","sourceCategory":["Latin American Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Libraries and Archives","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/2502306","volumeNumber":"4","wordCount":7464,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Magnus O. 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The commonality of Black experience manifested itself most importantly in the European and Arabic slave trades, slavery, oppression as well as in White colonization of Africa.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Rebecca S. Miller"],"datePublished":"2005-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174404","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00141836"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"e396cbe5-bef2-3987-b019-a9ca9042b811"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/20174404"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ethnomusicology"}],"isPartOf":"Ethnomusicology","issueNumber":"3","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":38.0,"pageEnd":"440","pageStart":"403","pagination":"pp. 403-440","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"University of Illinois Press","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Arts","Music","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Performing arts"],"title":"Performing Ambivalence: The Case of Quadrille Music and Dance in Carriacou, Grenada","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/20174404","volumeNumber":"49","wordCount":14165,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Anupama Rao"],"datePublished":"2001-10-27","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4411302","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00129976"},{"name":"oclc","value":"46735231"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2008-235309"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"7f86c990-fc31-37dd-89dd-022c2f02d1f0"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4411302"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"econpoliweek"}],"isPartOf":"Economic and Political Weekly","issueNumber":"43","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":9.0,"pageEnd":"4133","pageStart":"4125","pagination":"pp. 4125-4133","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2001,"publisher":"Economic and Political Weekly","sourceCategory":["Business & Economics","Asian Studies","Political Science","Economics","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Law - Criminal law"],"title":"Problems of Violence, States of Terror: Torture in Colonial India","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4411302","volumeNumber":"36","wordCount":11044,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"The impact of colonialism also evidenced itself in the attempts to establish a codified system of criminal law that differentiated and separated itself from the 'native' law that preceded it. Despite such attempts, native practices had their own uses in enforcing discipline as seen in the incidents that unfold in the 'Nassick Torture Case' and elaborated further in this paper. The paper also probes issues related to fear and suffering while also enunciating the social scientists' dilemma of needing to represent and reproduce violence without fetishising or merely re-enacting it.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dipankar Gupta"],"datePublished":"1999-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23619929","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00380229"},{"name":"oclc","value":"565192286"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"0924d7ff-fe28-37a2-b0a9-6ec2354a519a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23619929"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"socibull"}],"isPartOf":"Sociological Bulletin","issueNumber":"1\/2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":15.0,"pageEnd":"73","pageStart":"59","pagination":"pp. 59-73","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1999,"publisher":"Indian Sociological Society","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Nation-State and Open Systems of Stratification: Making Room for the 'Politics of Commitment'","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23619929","volumeNumber":"48","wordCount":6331,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Kevin McIntyre"],"datePublished":"1996-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179197","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00104175"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"452ab645-6974-3653-a4d6-0a47029e4585"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/179197"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"compstudsocihist"}],"isPartOf":"Comparative Studies in Society and History","issueNumber":"4","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":29.0,"pageEnd":"758","pageStart":"730","pagination":"pp. 730-758","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1996,"publisher":"Cambridge University Press","sourceCategory":["History","History","Social Sciences","Sociology"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Geography as Destiny: Cities, Villages and Khmer Rouge Orientalism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/179197","volumeNumber":"38","wordCount":15249,"numMatches":1,"Locations in A":[[47065,47182]],"Locations in B":[[81780,81897]],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Ron Eglash"],"datePublished":"1997-03-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682137","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00027294"},{"name":"oclc","value":"51205515"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2002-227363"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"81f49a60-7222-3f40-a658-2bc1265b0368"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/682137"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"ameranth"}],"isPartOf":"American Anthropologist","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":11.0,"pageEnd":"122","pageStart":"112","pagination":"pp. 112-122","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1997,"publisher":"American Anthropological Association","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Mathematics - Mathematical objects"],"title":"Bamana Sand Divination: Recursion in Ethnomathematics","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/682137","volumeNumber":"99","wordCount":7502,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Ethnomathematics can consider recursion in two senses of the word. Mathematically, recursion consists of iterated functions, a kind of discrete feedback loop. Anthropologically, recursion is used in reflexive ethnographic description in which modern analytic methods become part of their own investigation. By comparing the recursive structure of Bamana divination techniques to recursion in modern mathematics, we can investigate some of the complex relations that bind technology and culture in both modern and traditional contexts.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Richard O. Clemmer"],"datePublished":"2011-01-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23031802","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"02579774"},{"name":"oclc","value":"564825312"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011-234217"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"a8c5d277-171d-374d-ab8e-492f6c7c644a"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/23031802"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"anthropos"}],"isPartOf":"Anthropos","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":17.0,"pageEnd":"85","pageStart":"69","pagination":"pp. 69-85","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2011,"publisher":"Anthropos Institut","sourceCategory":["Anthropology","Linguistics","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Art history"],"title":"Museum Collections and the Search for \"Authentic Historical Consciousness\" in the Age of Nationalist Imperialism","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/23031802","volumeNumber":"106","wordCount":13757,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"Examination is made of the contexts in which three collections of Puebloan pottery were assembled by Aby Warburg, Thomas Keam, and John Wesley Powell in the period in which Anthropology was birthed, between 1870 and 1896. Accessioned by European museums in Hamburg, Berlin, and Paris, these collections embedded conflicting meanings. Utilizing the concept of \"ambivalence\" reveals the agency with which these collections became mantled and extends analysis to engage these conflicting meanings. The concept-metaphors of \"nation-state\"; \"imperial\"; and \"modernity\" evolving as products of the search for an \"authentic historical consciousness\" are examined in terms of these conflicting meanings.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Meredith Roman"],"datePublished":"2016-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.02","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"21623244"},{"name":"oclc","value":"740919793"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2011200250"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"c13551b7-51dd-3ae1-9b53-1a5c47dd46f7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.02"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"spectrum"}],"isPartOf":"Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":26.0,"pageEnd":"32","pageStart":"7","pagination":"pp. 7-32","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2016,"publisher":"Indiana University Press","sourceCategory":["Gender Studies","African American Studies","Sociology","Social Sciences","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"The Black Panther Party and the Struggle for Human Rights","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.2979\/spectrum.5.1.02","volumeNumber":"5","wordCount":12422,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"This essay illuminates how the Black Panther Party conceived of the African American liberation struggle as a struggle for human rights. In seeking to understand the elision of the Panthers from broader discussions of human rights, it contemplates the critical roles played by J. Edgar Hoover's counterintelligence program (COINTELPRO), Cold War geopolitics, the party's rhetoric of \u201cpigs\u201d and armed revolution, and US White supremacy that equates humanity with whiteness. Reconceptualizing the Black Panthers as human rights activists is not merely an academic exercise, but rather contains the potential to foster greater support for the Black Lives Matter movement.","subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Derek Wright"],"datePublished":"1989-04-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282982","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00267724"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"eb2e593a-46a7-30c2-8e31-d4529d95b3b7"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/26282982"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"modefictstud"}],"isPartOf":"Modern Fiction Studies","issueNumber":"1","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":14.0,"pageEnd":"68","pageStart":"55","pagination":"pp. 55-68","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":1989,"publisher":"The Johns Hopkins University Press","sourceCategory":["Language & Literature","Humanities"],"tdmCategory":["Arts - Literature"],"title":"REQUIEMS FOR REVOLUTIONS: RACE-SEX ARCHETYPES IN TWO AFRICAN NOVELS","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/26282982","volumeNumber":"35","wordCount":6450,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":null,"datePublished":"2012-01-01","docSubType":null,"docType":"chapter","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctt1w8h2zm.5","identifier":[{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b2bc9d91-dc33-3737-baee-7d6cf42ffaf6"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.1163\/j.ctt1w8h2zm.5"}],"isPartOf":"Beyond Empire and Nation","issueNumber":null,"language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram","fullText"],"pageCount":16.0,"pageEnd":"38","pageStart":"23","pagination":"23-38","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2012,"publisher":null,"sourceCategory":["Political Science"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"Decolonization","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.1163\/j.ctt1w8h2zm.5","volumeNumber":null,"wordCount":6199,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":"\u2018They shot up like volcanic lava\u2019, dramatically wrote the former French colonial administrator, Robert Delavignette (1977:137), of the independence movements that had occurred in the European colonial possessions. The metaphor seems at first glance to be most appropriate, suggesting that decolonization was a force gathering from deep causes and bursting forth uncontrollably onto the international scene. The metaphor, moreover, had a timeliness about it, appearing in 1968 when the several European empires had been largely replaced by dozens of new nation-states.The series of erupting facts to which the word decolonization had been applied by Delavignette were considered to be","subTitle":"A brief history of the word","keyphrase":["decolonization","colonial","africa","imperialism","partha chatterjee","africa decolonization","postcolonial","french","prosser gifford","suret canale"],"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Peter Roberts"],"datePublished":"2005-09-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4284405","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"00263206"},{"name":"oclc","value":"60630355"},{"name":"lccn","value":"65-009869"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"8eaa2d30-35c6-3c51-a056-217db026115c"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.2307\/4284405"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"middeaststudies"}],"isPartOf":"Middle Eastern Studies","issueNumber":"5","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":33.0,"pageEnd":"767","pageStart":"735","pagination":"pp. 735-767","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2005,"publisher":"Taylor & Francis, Ltd.","sourceCategory":["Middle East Studies","Area Studies"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"History: Puzzle and People or Prescription and Prophecy?","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/4284405","volumeNumber":"41","wordCount":18417,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} +{"creator":["Dawn Rae Flood"],"datePublished":"2014-10-01","docSubType":"research-article","docType":"article","id":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0021","identifier":[{"name":"issn","value":"19301189"},{"name":"oclc","value":"63763026"},{"name":"lccn","value":"2006-213542"},{"name":"local_uuid","value":"b8ae3ea4-7b30-3200-ad26-fc6aac45a0e9"},{"name":"local_doi","value":"10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0021"},{"name":"journal_id","value":"jstudradi"}],"isPartOf":"Journal for the Study of Radicalism","issueNumber":"2","language":["eng"],"outputFormat":["unigram","bigram","trigram"],"pageCount":30.0,"pageEnd":"50","pageStart":"21","pagination":"pp. 21-50","provider":"jstor","publicationYear":2014,"publisher":"Michigan State University Press","sourceCategory":["Sociology","Political Science","Social Sciences"],"tdmCategory":["Philosophy - Applied philosophy"],"title":"A Black Panther in the Great White North: Fred Hampton Visits Saskatchewan, 1969","url":"http:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/10.14321\/jstudradi.8.2.0021","volumeNumber":"8","wordCount":11211,"numMatches":0,"Locations in A":[],"Locations in B":[],"abstract":null,"subTitle":null,"keyphrase":null,"collection":null,"hasPartTitle":null,"editor":null} From aa0aefc62a54591ee8ad005caa45932e748af461 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2023 15:51:42 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 45/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 153 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 153 insertions(+) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index b9fbeb7..d2c0271 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -592,3 +592,156 @@ "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 } +{ + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getFirst(row): \n", + " if type(row) == list: \n", + " return row[0]\n", + " else: \n", + " return row\n", + "\n", + "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = publishers.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getCountry(publisher): \n", + " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", + " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", + " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", + " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", + " if type(publisher) != list: \n", + " return 'Unknown'\n", + " publisher = publisher[0]\n", + " if publisher in brits: \n", + " return 'Britain' \n", + " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Canada' \n", + " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Germany'\n", + " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Spain'\n", + " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", + " return 'France' \n", + " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Ireland'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'US'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "US 3901\n", + "Unknown 1247\n", + "Britain 825\n", + "Canada 59\n", + "Germany 15\n", + "Ireland 8\n", + "Spain 8\n", + "France 6\n", + "Name: country, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 94, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df['country'].value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", + "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", + "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", + "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", + "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", + "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", + "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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", + "text/plain": [ + "
" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" + ] + }, From 37baaf2ee9c520f2be3c9cf7cd153b105c56bde1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 7 Apr 2023 15:54:08 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 46/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 302 +++++++++++++++---------------- 1 file changed, 151 insertions(+), 151 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index d2c0271..eb43f4d 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -593,155 +593,155 @@ "nbformat_minor": 2 } { - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getFirst(row): \n", - " if type(row) == list: \n", - " return row[0]\n", - " else: \n", - " return row\n", - "\n", - "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = publishers.tolist()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getCountry(publisher): \n", - " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", - " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", - " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", - " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", - " if type(publisher) != list: \n", - " return 'Unknown'\n", - " publisher = publisher[0]\n", - " if publisher in brits: \n", - " return 'Britain' \n", - " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Canada' \n", - " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Germany'\n", - " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Spain'\n", - " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", - " return 'France' \n", - " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Ireland'\n", - " else: \n", - " return 'US'" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": { - "scrolled": true - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "US 3901\n", - "Unknown 1247\n", - "Britain 825\n", - "Canada 59\n", - "Germany 15\n", - "Ireland 8\n", - "Spain 8\n", - "France 6\n", - "Name: country, dtype: int64" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 94, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "df['country'].value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", - "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", - "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", - "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", - "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", - "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", - "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "image/png": 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", - "text/plain": [ - "
" - ] - }, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "display_data" - } - ], - "source": [ - "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" - ] + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getFirst(row): \n", + " if type(row) == list: \n", + " return row[0]\n", + " else: \n", + " return row\n", + "\n", + "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = publishers.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getCountry(publisher): \n", + " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", + " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", + " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", + " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", + " if type(publisher) != list: \n", + " return 'Unknown'\n", + " publisher = publisher[0]\n", + " if publisher in brits: \n", + " return 'Britain' \n", + " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Canada' \n", + " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Germany'\n", + " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Spain'\n", + " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", + " return 'France' \n", + " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Ireland'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'US'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "US 3901\n", + "Unknown 1247\n", + "Britain 825\n", + "Canada 59\n", + "Germany 15\n", + "Ireland 8\n", + "Spain 8\n", + "France 6\n", + "Name: country, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 94, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df['country'].value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", + "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", + "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", + "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", + "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", + "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", + "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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" + ] + }, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "display_data" + } + ], + "source": [ + "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" + ] + }, From 24e077fe338ada0a3036fa74f72d29413e33a7ae Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Tue, 11 Apr 2023 16:08:41 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 47/63] finish rerun ocr notebook --- .gitignore | 3 +- preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb | 173 +++------------------------ 2 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 157 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index ee6abdf..a79e6de 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -3,4 +3,5 @@ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl -preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs \ No newline at end of file +preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs +preprocessing/gender_trouble.pdf \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb index a43271a..aa50332 100644 --- a/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/input_re-run-ocr.ipynb @@ -84,7 +84,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 16, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -97,7 +97,8 @@ "articles_read_scores = {}\n", "\n", "# goes through each row (article) in the dataframe:\n", - "for index in range(0, 30):\n", + "\n", + "for index in range(len(articles)):\n", " article_index = index\n", " \n", " # defining variables\n", @@ -148,112 +149,9 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": null, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "text/html": [ - "
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40978757http://www.jstor.org/stable/409787572Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...0.277379en
23131522http://www.jstor.org/stable/2313152211SYLLEPSIS, MIMESIS, SIMULACRUM: \"THE MONK\" AND...0.147149en
24191440http://www.jstor.org/stable/2419144014The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass:...0.172303en
41147854http://www.jstor.org/stable/4114785415Re-viewing the \"Entrapment\" controversy: Megap...0.147606en
20119721http://www.jstor.org/stable/2011972116Playing Gender0.145977en
30038067http://www.jstor.org/stable/3003806720Fashionable Dancing: Gender, the Charleston, a...0.153173en
\n", - "
" - ], - "text/plain": [ - " ArticleID OriginalIndex \\\n", - "40978757 http://www.jstor.org/stable/40978757 2 \n", - "23131522 http://www.jstor.org/stable/23131522 11 \n", - "24191440 http://www.jstor.org/stable/24191440 14 \n", - "41147854 http://www.jstor.org/stable/41147854 15 \n", - "20119721 http://www.jstor.org/stable/20119721 16 \n", - "30038067 http://www.jstor.org/stable/30038067 20 \n", - "\n", - " Title Score Language \n", - "40978757 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 0.277379 en \n", - "23131522 SYLLEPSIS, MIMESIS, SIMULACRUM: \"THE MONK\" AND... 0.147149 en \n", - "24191440 The Crucifixion with Virtues in Stained Glass:... 0.172303 en \n", - "41147854 Re-viewing the \"Entrapment\" controversy: Megap... 0.147606 en \n", - "20119721 Playing Gender 0.145977 en \n", - "30038067 Fashionable Dancing: Gender, the Charleston, a... 0.153173 en " - ] - }, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "display_data" - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "display(articles_scores)" ] @@ -287,7 +185,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 6, + "execution_count": 18, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -314,7 +212,7 @@ " \"de\": \"deu\"\n", "}\n", "\n", - "folder = \"../incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", + "folder = \"./incorrect_articles_pdfs\"\n", "\n", "articles_chg = pd.read_json('../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl', lines=True)\n", "\n", @@ -332,9 +230,9 @@ " article_title = articles_read_scores[article_number][2]\n", "\n", " # run ocr \n", - " new_ocr_text = \"\"\n", + " new_ocr_text = []\n", " for image in pdf_page_images[1:]:\n", - " new_ocr_text += pytesseract.image_to_string(image, lang=lang_mapping[pdf_lang])\n", + " new_ocr_text.append(pytesseract.image_to_string(image, lang=lang_mapping[pdf_lang]))\n", "\n", " # rerun spellcheck for readability score\n", " spell = SpellChecker(language = pdf_lang)\n", @@ -344,53 +242,18 @@ " incorrect_percentage = float(len(misspelled))/len(word_list)\n", " print(f\"New incorrect percentage for:{article_number}\", incorrect_percentage)\n", "\n", - "\n", - " # TODO: replace texts with in json file (decide when we shold do this and whether user input should be involved)\n", - " old_error = articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['Score']]\n", - " if old_error - incorrect_percentage > 0.10:\n", - " articles_chg.loc[articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['OriginalIndex']],['fullText']] = new_ocr_text\n", + " # update the article text in the new dataframe based on the error change \n", + " old_error = float(articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['Score']])\n", + " index = int(articles_scores.at[article_number, \"OriginalIndex\"]) # gets the index in the original jsonl file\n", + " if old_error - incorrect_percentage > replace:\n", + " articles_chg.at[index, \"fullText\"] = new_ocr_text\n", " print('+')\n", " else:\n", " no_improvement[article_number] = [article_number, article_title, articles_scores.loc[article_number, ['ArticleID']], old_error, pdf_lang]\n", " print('-')\n", "\n", - " articles_chg.head(5)\n", - " " - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "## Replace fixable articles with new article text" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# create randomly named temporary file to avoid \n", - "# interference with other thread/asynchronous request\n", - "filename = '../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl'\n", - "\n", - "tempfile = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), str(uuid.uuid4()))\n", - "\n", - "with open(tempfile, 'w') as f:\n", - " json.dump(articles_chg, f, indent=4)\n", - "\n", - "# rename temporary file replacing old file\n", - "os.rename(tempfile, filename)" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "## Displays the articles that were unable to be fixed through rerunning OCR" + "# save the new dataframe as a new jsonl file (input what you want the name of the file to be here)\n", + "articles_chg.to_json(\"../algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles-updated.jsonl\", orient='records', lines=True)\n" ] }, { @@ -399,9 +262,7 @@ "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ - "no_improvement_pd = pd.DataFrame.from_dict(articles_chg, orient='index', columns=['ArticleNumber', 'ArticleTitle', 'ArticleID', 'Score', 'Language'])\n", - "\n", - "display(no_improvement_pd)" + "print(no_improvement)" ] } ], From 4efbdde4530d87146955db35ea1c0be4deb6eb82 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2023 15:27:22 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 48/63] updated matcher_notebook and annotated_by_size --- text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb | 9 ++++++--- visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb | 0 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) create mode 100644 visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb diff --git a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb index 2c4638e..0e7ef53 100644 --- a/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb +++ b/text_matcher/matcher_notebook.ipynb @@ -31,6 +31,9 @@ "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ + "# Replace with the format: AuthorLastName_TitleOfText (ex: Butler_GenderTrouble)\n", + "textname = 'Butler_GenderTrouble'\n", + "\n", "# Load the data. Replace articles with the path of the jsonl file you want to use - \n", "# should be a file of all the articles that cite the text you're looking at.\n", "articles = '/Users/annie/Documents/school/23spring/UROP/part-1.jsonl'\n", @@ -42,11 +45,11 @@ "\n", "# Load the text you want to find quotations from. Replace text with the text file you want to use.\n", "\n", - "text = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/gender-trouble/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "text = '/Users/annie/Downloads/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", "with open(text) as f: \n", " rawText = f.read()\n", "\n", - "tx = Text(rawText, 'Gender Trouble')" + "tx = Text(rawText, textname)" ] }, { @@ -83,7 +86,7 @@ "df = df.drop(['fullText'], axis=1)\n", "\n", "#Replace 'finaldata.jsonl' with whatever name you want to give this file.\n", - "df.to_json(path_or_buf='finaldata.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" + "df.to_json(path_or_buf=f'{textname}.jsonl', orient='records', lines=True)\n" ] } ], diff --git a/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb b/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e69de29 From dde2f184748016067490f11bb635373ae19fef87 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Fri, 14 Apr 2023 16:19:45 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 49/63] get page number --- .DS_Store | Bin 6148 -> 8196 bytes preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 298 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 2 files changed, 279 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) diff --git a/.DS_Store b/.DS_Store index 34e29f0fffbe35baac2de2f8b92c743f0cf9bb85..2246d0bd369b3a431b7d39f02cf965426dd12745 100644 GIT binary patch literal 8196 zcmeHM-%k@k5T1oTT>j#M(LfuAaX= z7(6V_m~+MA{){7*5!uhq!ebh?G^T3yfe zy)9VtNCs%!1Ho_qHe=dT2Bo1HJ6k-rnynBp=^ zPicjgsYa`0Q7y$D??#+GgP!3)uLAJ|2#eNJ_CHhhS$dA3(4kGpk-ZsXzmJbTnY5+? zFg|V2PI49*Qoh7O$`oek!WUSwJqM%U$Y8`L=#MK;jG&Rku|tV_35VLnngV_PAh8ad%S$2Q zPzfZy@TDx{YE{#m|JROx|9>ght{0^l&sDmK2KgEB0c%12>0Y2f_uR1TcZ3EOP(xd=im@z2ATl`0^C5t e6=e3t!tczJ`DHvoHZd?kYy~-lVRJms9A*G@xgYlc diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index 2b10eb3..d3b4404 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -1,37 +1,297 @@ { "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Converting the PDF to Text" + ] + }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 20, + "execution_count": 59, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "is\n", - "xxxi\n", - "\n", - "\f\n" + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE v\n", + "PAGE vi\n", + "PAGE vii\n", + "PAGE viii\n", + "PAGE ix\n", + "PAGE x\n", + "PAGE xi\n", + "PAGE xii\n", + "PAGE xiii\n", + "PAGE xiv\n", + "PAGE xv\n", + "PAGE xvi\n", + "PAGE xvii\n", + "PAGE xviii\n", + "PAGE xix\n", + "PAGE xx\n", + "PAGE xxi\n", + "PAGE xxii\n", + "PAGE xxiii\n", + "PAGE xxiv\n", + "PAGE xxv\n", + "PAGE xxvi\n", + "PAGE xxvii\n", + "PAGE xxviii\n", + "PAGE xxix\n", + "PAGE xxx\n", + "PAGE xxxi\n", + "PAGE xxxii\n", + "PAGE xxxiii\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE NONE\n", + "PAGE 3\n", + "PAGE 4\n", + "PAGE 5\n", + "PAGE 6\n", + "PAGE 7\n", + "PAGE 8\n", + "PAGE 9\n", + "PAGE 10\n", + "PAGE 11\n", + "PAGE 12\n", + "PAGE 13\n", + "PAGE 14\n", + "PAGE 15\n", + "PAGE 16\n", + "PAGE 17\n", + "PAGE 18\n", + "PAGE 19\n", + "PAGE 20\n", + "PAGE 21\n", + "PAGE 22\n", + "PAGE 23\n", + "PAGE 24\n", + "PAGE 25\n", + "PAGE 26\n", + "PAGE 27\n", + "PAGE 28\n", + "PAGE 29\n", + "PAGE 30\n", + "PAGE 31\n", + "PAGE 32\n", + "PAGE 33\n", + "PAGE 34\n", + "PAGE 35\n", + "PAGE 36\n", + "PAGE 37\n", + "PAGE 38\n", + "PAGE 39\n", + "PAGE 40\n", + "PAGE 41\n", + "PAGE 42\n", + "PAGE 43\n", + "PAGE 44\n", + "PAGE 45\n", + "PAGE 46\n", + "PAGE 47\n", + "PAGE 48\n", + "PAGE 49\n", + "PAGE 50\n", + "PAGE 51\n", + "PAGE 52\n", + "PAGE 53\n", + "PAGE 54\n", + "PAGE 55\n", + "PAGE 56\n", + "PAGE 57\n", + "PAGE 58\n", + "PAGE 59\n", + "PAGE 60\n", + "PAGE 61\n", + "PAGE 62\n", + "PAGE 63\n", + "PAGE 64\n", + "PAGE 65\n", + "PAGE 66\n", + "PAGE 67\n", + "PAGE 68\n", + "PAGE 69\n", + "PAGE 70\n", + "PAGE 71\n", + "PAGE 72\n", + "PAGE 73\n", + "PAGE 74\n", + "PAGE 75\n", + "PAGE 76\n", + "PAGE 77\n", + "PAGE 78\n", + "PAGE 79\n", + "PAGE 80\n", + "PAGE 81\n", + "PAGE 82\n", + "PAGE 83\n", + "PAGE 84\n", + "PAGE 85\n", + "PAGE 86\n", + "PAGE 87\n", + "PAGE 88\n", + "PAGE 89\n", + "PAGE 90\n", + "PAGE 91\n", + "PAGE 92\n", + "PAGE 93\n", + "PAGE 94\n", + "PAGE 95\n", + "PAGE 96\n", + "PAGE 97\n", + "PAGE 98\n", + "PAGE 99\n", + "PAGE 100\n", + "PAGE 101\n", + "PAGE 102\n", + "PAGE 103\n", + "PAGE 104\n", + "PAGE 105\n", + "PAGE 106\n", + "PAGE 107\n", + "PAGE 108\n", + "PAGE 109\n", + "PAGE 110\n", + "PAGE 111\n", + "PAGE 112\n", + "PAGE 113\n", + "PAGE 114\n", + "PAGE 115\n", + "PAGE 116\n", + "PAGE 117\n", + "PAGE 118\n", + "PAGE 119\n", + "PAGE 120\n", + "PAGE 121\n", + "PAGE 122\n", + "PAGE 123\n", + "PAGE 124\n", + "PAGE 125\n", + "PAGE 126\n", + "PAGE 127\n", + "PAGE 128\n", + "PAGE 129\n", + "PAGE 130\n", + "PAGE 131\n", + "PAGE 132\n", + "PAGE 133\n", + "PAGE 134\n", + "PAGE 135\n", + "PAGE 136\n", + "PAGE 137\n", + "PAGE 138\n", + "PAGE 139\n", + "PAGE 140\n", + "PAGE 141\n", + "PAGE 142\n", + "PAGE 143\n", + "PAGE 144\n", + "PAGE 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+ "PAGE 208\n", + "PAGE 209\n", + "PAGE 210\n", + "PAGE 211\n", + "PAGE 212\n", + "PAGE 213\n", + "PAGE 214\n", + "PAGE 215\n", + "PAGE 216\n", + "PAGE 217\n", + "PAGE 218\n", + "PAGE 219\n", + "PAGE 220\n", + "PAGE 221\n" ] } ], "source": [ - "import pdftotext\n", - "\n", - "with open(\"gender_trouble.pdf\", \"rb\") as f:\n", - " pdf = pdftotext.PDF(f)\n", - "\n", - " for i in range(len(pdf)):\n", - " page = pdf[i]\n", - " pdf_page_num = i + 1\n", - "\n", - " print(pdf_page_num)\n", - " if len(page.strip()) != 0:\n", - " print(\"PAGE\", page.strip()[-5:])\n", - "\n", + "import re \n", + "import pdfplumber\n", "\n", - " # write code that adds the printed page number and the actual page number in the pdf\n" + "with pdfplumber.open(\"gender_trouble.pdf\") as pdf:\n", + " for i in range(len(pdf.pages)):\n", + " page = pdf.pages[i].extract_text()\n", + " if len(page) != 0:\n", + " matches = re.findall(\"\\n([xXvViI]+|\\d+)$\", page)\n", + " if matches:\n", + " print(\"PAGE\", matches[-1].strip())\n", + " else:\n", + " print(\"PAGE NONE\")\n", + " else:\n", + " print(\"PAGE NONE\")\n", + "\n" ] } ], From 57ed23972a727adfb189a3899506195e67b21fd7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2023 15:17:05 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 50/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 133 ------------------------------- 1 file changed, 133 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index eb43f4d..bc0700e 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -592,139 +592,6 @@ "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 } -{ - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getFirst(row): \n", - " if type(row) == list: \n", - " return row[0]\n", - " else: \n", - " return row\n", - "\n", - "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = publishers.tolist()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getCountry(publisher): \n", - " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", - " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", - " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", - " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", - " if type(publisher) != list: \n", - " return 'Unknown'\n", - " publisher = publisher[0]\n", - " if publisher in brits: \n", - " return 'Britain' \n", - " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Canada' \n", - " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Germany'\n", - " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Spain'\n", - " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", - " return 'France' \n", - " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Ireland'\n", - " else: \n", - " return 'US'" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": { - "scrolled": true - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "US 3901\n", - "Unknown 1247\n", - "Britain 825\n", - "Canada 59\n", - "Germany 15\n", - "Ireland 8\n", - "Spain 8\n", - "France 6\n", - "Name: country, dtype: int64" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 94, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "df['country'].value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", - "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", - "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", - "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", - "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", - "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", - "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" - ] - }, { "cell_type": "code", "execution_count": null, From 0d2470b1719e32bba62bab738321afb3ce0d7f43 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2023 15:18:09 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 51/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 21 +-------------------- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 20 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index bc0700e..5b1d3a3 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -592,23 +592,4 @@ "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 } - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "image/png": 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AAABAcQRmpEnply+Mm3EiRYHZ2ZIlQnnm8DKuDJ5UZMBdvHixnnjiCbVr1865rH79+tq9e7ckKSCgRBdhBgAAAADPSj+jnL++JEnK+XVR8JgEiYBraEUG3J9++skl3EpSRkaGcnJylJ6e7tHCAAAAAAAojiJ3wdrt9gLLzGazxo4dq6Agt65PBQAAAACAVxQZcCtVqqTU1NQCy0+dOqXKlSt7rCgAAAAAAIqryIDbp08fvfHGGzp69Khz2Q8//KA33nhDffv29XRtAAAAAAC4rcjjjDt16qRz585pwoQJstlsMplMCgwM1MCBA9WxY0dv1QgAAAAAwDVd80TaHj16qFu3bjpx4oQkqV69epx/CwBAKeAnLAAAKF1uJdWgoCA1atTIw6UAAFDO8BMWAACUKn7IFgAAAABgCARcAAAAAIAhuB1ws7KyJF2+ivK6detks9k8VhQAAAAAAMXlVsBdtGiR3n77baWlpem1117TmjVrNG/ePE/XBgAAAACA29y6yNTOnTsVHx+v//znP7r11lv1yCOPKC4uztO1AYCkq1xpVuJqswAAGEj+33v+1kMq+fvB7d/7CQkJ0Z49e9S9e3dJUm5ubsmrBYDiKORKsxJXmwUAwFB+/XvP33pIKvH7wa1DlMPCwjRv3jylpKTopptu0oIFC2Q2m6+nXAAAAAAASpVbAffJJ5+U2WzWmDFjFBISIpPJpCeffNLTtQEAAAAA4Da3DlGuXr267rvvPuftBx980GMFAQAAAABQEkUG3Pvvv7/IBy9atKhUi/F1hV7ohhPfAQAAAMAnFBlw582bJ4fDoUWLFikiIkJ33XWXAgICtHbtWqWlpXmrRt9RyIVuOPEdAAAAAHxDkefghoWFqWrVqkpJSVG/fv1UpUoVVapUSXfffbf279/vrRoBAAAAALgmt87BvXTpklJTU2W1WiVJx48fv66fCVq/fr2WLVumvLw83X333erZs6fL/Vu3btXixYslSRERERoxYoSqVKlS4v4AAAAAAJ7hS6dyuhVwH3jgAf3lL39RgwYNJEk//vijRo4cWaIO09PT9fHHHyshIUFBQUEaO3asoqKiVK9ePUnSxYsXNW/ePE2ePFkWi0WLFi3SkiVL9Oc//7lE/QEAAAAAPMiHTuV0K+BGRERo+vTpOnjwoCTpxhtvVNWqVUvUYVJSkqKiopx7ZDt16qTExEQNGDBAkpSXl6ehQ4fKYrFIkho2bKjvvvuuRH0BAAAAAMoPt34H96233lK1atXUqVMnderUqcThVpIyMjJkNpudt81ms86ePeu8HRYWpujoaElSTk6Oli9fro4dO5a4PwAAAABA+eDWHtwGDRpo/fr1atGihUJDQ53LS3JerMPhKHDbZDIVaHfx4kVNnTpVDRs2VNeuXYvVR/65whknUpy7yPMFh4TI/Ov9+Uq73dXqcbdub7cry759vV1RbY36fvDF901hYy1de7zLw9j4W7uy7NsX2/E54vs1Mja+164s+/b1dmXZd1l9Jvr7Z6wnc4g33zeeGOuSPqdbAXfbtm1KTEwssLwkv4NrsVichzpLUmZmpvNw5HwZGRmaNGmSoqKi9PDDDxe7j9TUVEm6fHLzb+RkZzvvz1fa7a5ktVqLvL+s2/lDjb46NkZ8P/jq+6awsZaKHu/yMjb+1M4favR2Oz5HfLtGxsb32vlDjYxNydsV9zPRCJ+xnsoh3n7feGKsi3rOooKxWwF3wYIF7jRzS+vWrbVkyRKdP39eISEh2rx5s4YPH+683263KyEhQV26dNF9991Xav0CAAAAAIzNrYBrt9v1+eefa9euXbLZbGrTpo3uvfdeBQYGFrtDi8WigQMHKj4+XjabTd26dVNkZKQmT56s2NhYnT17Vj/88IPy8vKce42bNGmixx9/vNh9AQAAAADKD7cC7sKFC3Xs2DH16tVLDodDq1at0ocffqhHHnmkRJ3GxMQoJibGZVlcXJyky2G2JIc+AwAAAADKN7cC7u7duzV58mQFBV1u3r59e40ePdqjhQEAAAAAUBxuH6KcH24lqUKFCiU6PBkIzEiT0s9IunxlNOfJ45YI5ZXBD0EDAAAAMA63Am6jRo30/vvvq2fPnjKZTPrqq6/UsGFDT9cGI0o/o5y/viRJLpf9Dh6TIBFwAQAAAFwHtwLu0KFD9e6772rs2LFyOBxq06aNhgwZ4unaALfk7xVmjzAAAABQvhUZcBcuXKj27durWbNmeuqpp7xVE1A8v+4VZo8wAAAAUL4VGXAvXryouXPn6ty5c2rTpo3at2+vtm3bKiwszFv1AQDgotBz+TlqAwAA6BoBd9iwYZKk9PR07d27V3v27NHixYtVvXp1tWvXTv379/dKkQAAOBVyLr+vHbXBqRMAAJQNt87BtVgsuu2222S1WtWgQQOtW7dOK1euJOACAFAYTp0A3MLGIAClrciAe+nSJe3atUvbtm3Tzp07VbNmTbVv317Dhw9XkyZNvFUjAAAAjIiNQQBKWZEBd+jQoWrVqpW6dOmiQYMGqXr16t6qC0A5wLmUAAAAKE1FBtyOHTtq//79cjgcys7OVocOHRQREeGt2vwWX9oBN/nBuZQAAADwH0UG3GeffVZ2u10HDx7Utm3bNHHiRAUFBal9+/bq0KGDWrRo4a06/Qtf2gEAAADA6655kamAgAC1bNlSLVu21ODBg7V582YtW7ZM//rXv7Ro0SJv1AgAAMoIFwECAPiTawbcY8eOad++fdq/f78OHjyomjVrqmPHjnr00Ue9UR8AAB5HiCsCFwECAPiRa15kymQyqXXr1oqOjtZjjz2mqlWreqs2AAC8gxAHAIAhFBlwx4wZo8jISJlMJm/VAwAAAABAiRQZcJs2beqtOgAAAAAAuC4BZV0AAAAAAAClocg9uFu2bFF0dLRyc3NVoUIFb9UEAACAq8i/KJqk/10YjYuiAYCkawTcRYsWKTo6Wv/3f/+nhIQEb9WEQnCFTwAAIMl5UTRJzgujcVE0lBZPbEAxyvdYNi75hyIDbqVKlfTMM88oPT1dL7zwQoH7p02b5rHC8Btc4RMAgAL4wgmUMk9sQDHK91g2LvmFIgPuyy+/rB9++EFz5szRkCFDvFUTAAC4AiGuCHzhBABcociAW7FiRbVs2VJjxoyRxWJRSkqKbDabmjZtqooVK3qrRgDAVRQafCTCj9EQ4gAAcEuRATffxYsXFR8fr2rVqslut+vs2bMaM2aMmjdv7un6AABFKST4SIQfAABQPrkVcD/88EM9/fTTioqKkiTt3btX8+fP16RJkzxaHDyHw938m1Eu1gAAAACUJrcCblZWljPcSlJUVJSy879Uwz9xuJt/M8rFGgAAAIBS5FbANZlMOnPmjCIiIiRJp0+fVkBAgEcLAwAAgOeVx5+F4Ui268c1IOCr3Aq49913n/7yl7/opptukslk0u7duzV06FBP1wYAxebrX6oAwOeUx5+F4Ui268c1IOCj3Aq40dHRqlevnvbu3Su73a5+/fqpXr16nq4NMAS2EnuZr3+pgl9jA0r5wDwDMDojfz91K+BKktVqldVq9WQtgEeV2RcWthKjBIz8h8evsQGlfGCeAVwHvzh828DfT90OuPAMthJ7kZtfWAgW8AkG/sMDAIChcfh2mSLgljW2EvsegkW5wMYllHesA/AnbHy+fowhygu3Au6MGTP01FNPlVqn69ev17Jly5SXl6e7775bPXv2dLn/6NGjmjNnjrKysnTjjTfq0UcfVWBgYKn1b2R8YQHcxMYllHc+vg7wZRwu3Nz4XJbvG5//DsYGfJQTbgXco0ePyuFwyGQyXXeH6enp+vjjj5WQkKCgoCCNHTtWUVFRLheteuuttzR8+HA1a9ZMs2fP1urVq9WjR4/r7rtc8PEvLAAAuIUv4yiJUn7fFOtcSr6DwYD8cWOjWwHXbDbr+eefV9OmTRUaGupcPmTIkGJ3mJSUpKioKFWpUkWS1KlTJyUmJmrAgAGSpDNnzignJ0fNmjWTJHXt2lWLFy8m4AIwBH/8Q+HPfH6PioG4O9asA/6t3K1TZXguZbkba/imstxoVEJuBdxmzZo5A+f1ysjIkNlsdt42m81KTk52ub969eou96enp5dK3wBQ5tgrdVUeCT7sUfEed8eadcC/sU55D2N9VYR/P+aFjUYmh8PhcKdhTk6OTp06pXr16ik3N1chISEl6vDTTz9VTk6OHnjgAUnSqlWrlJKSoscee0ySdPDgQS1cuFCvvvqqJOnkyZNKSEjQ9OnTi93Xzz8ky3bmlMuyoIjaCrsh0ifa+UONubm5stlsru2CglShQoVS69dbr8Uf23mrb2/Ms7+OjT+284ca+Yz1TDt312V/eC28b66/XWl/tpfla/Gldv5QI2Pje+281Xd5/E73W24F3MOHD2vatGkKCAjQxIkTNXr0aL300ktq3rz5tR5awNq1a3Xw4EE9/vjjkqSlS5dKksshyq+++qreeustSdKBAwe0ePFijRs3zu0+UlNTCyyzWq2FLi/v7UrrOQOPHHBujckXPCZBeU1uLHG/xX1OXx0bd9sV9nql63vNpT2G7j6fJ94PZdXOSK+5tF+LkcamrNv5Q43+/prL8u8U64r/vm880a6s/jYX5zmN1u5abcvzGPpDjYW1s1qtV20fcM1nlPThhx9q7NixCgsLU40aNfTUU0/p/fffd+ehBbRu3Vp79uzR+fPnlZ2drc2bN6tt27bO+yMiIhQcHKyDBw9KktatW6d27dqVqC8AAAAAQPnh1jm42dnZLlc5bt++vT755JMSdWixWDRw4EDFx8fLZrOpW7duioyM1OTJkxUbG6smTZro6aef1ty5c5WVlaUbbrhBvXr1KlFf8CJLxOVj5yUFh4Qo59dz5wAAAADAW9wKuEFBQbpw4YLzZ4Lc3d19NTExMYqJiXFZFhcX5/x/o0aNNHny5OvqA96VZw53nhhuLsYhEQAAAOXKrzsFnDsEfl12vc8nsZMBkNwMuP3799f48eOVkZGh6dOnKykpyXlRKAAAABShtAMN/Fr+ToHS2iHAToZSwEYCQ3Er4Hbo0EF169ZVUlKS7Ha7BgwY4HLIMgAAAApX2oEGQOliI4GxuBVwJclms8lutyswMFBBQW4/DADgK9iLBAAADM6tpLpmzRotXLhQbdq0kd1u15IlSzRkyBB17tzZ0/UBAEoJe5EAAIDRuRVwV6xYoSlTpshsNkuS0tLS9Ne//pWAC5Smws7/+HU5yhB7PQEAAPyG21dRzg+3khQeHq7AwECPFQWUR5z/4ZvY6wkAAOA/igy4KSkpkqSGDRvqnXfeUffu3RUQEKC1a9eqefPmXikQAAAAAAB3FBlwX3/9dZfbO3bscP7fZDJpyJAhnqkKAAAAAIBiKjLgzpw501t1AAAAAABwXdw6BzczM1Nr167VhQsXXJYPGjTII0UBAAD4PC5CBwA+x62Am5CQoBo1aqhWrVqergcAAMAvcBE6APA9bgVcm82mF154wdO1AAAAeEZhP8XG3lYAMBy3Am7jxo11/PhxNWjQwNP1AAAAlDp+ig0Ayge3Am7z5s314osvymw2u/z+7YwZMzxWGAAAAAAAxeFWwP388881cuRI1a5d29P1AAAAAABQIm4F3EqVKumWW27xdC0AAAAAAJSYWwE3KipK8+fPV+fOnRUU9L+HNG7c2GOFAQAAAABQHG4F3PXr10uSNm/e7FxmMpk4BxcAAAAA4DPcCrgzZ870dB0AAAAAAFwXtwLuihUrCl3ep0+fUi0GAAAAAICScivgHj9+3Pl/m82m/fv3KyoqymNFAZIkS4SCxyQoOCREOdnZzmUAAAAAUBi3Au6IESNcbqenp2vOnDkeKQjIl2cOl8zhMlutSk1NLetyAAAAAPi4gJI8yGKx6MyZM6VdCwAAAAAAJVbsc3AdDoeOHDmiqlWreqwoAAAAAACKq9jn4EpSeHi4Bg8e7JGCAAAAAAAoiRKdgwsAAAAAgK8pMuDOmjXrqveZTCY98cQTpV4QAPilX6/6Lel/V/7mqt8AAABeVWTArV+/foFlP//8s7744gvVrFnTY0UBgL/Jv+q3JK78DQAAUEaKDLh9+/Z1uZ2UlKSZM2fqtttu05///JU7ymYAACAASURBVGePFgYAAAAAQHG4dQ5uXl6eFi5cqLVr1+rRRx9V586dPV0XAAAAAADFcs2Ae/LkSb355psKDQ3VlClTVKNGDW/UBQAAAABAsRQZcNesWaP58+erb9++6t+/v7dqAgAAAACg2IoMuHPmzJHJZNLy5cv12WefOZc7HA6ZTCZ98MEHxe4wLS1Nb731ls6dOyer1aqRI0cqNDTUpU1GRoZmzZqlzMxMBQQEaPDgwYqKiip2XwAAAACA8qPIgDtjxoxS73DevHnq0aOHbr31Vi1dulRLly7VoEGDXNp8+OGH6tChg3r27KnU1FSNGzdOc+fOVUBAQKnXAxjarz9d4/zZml+XAQAAAEZUZMCNiCjdL8I2m00HDhzQ6NGjJUldu3bV+PHjCwTc6Oho5x7b2rVrKzc3V5cuXVKlSpVKtR7A6PJ/uoafrQEAAEB5YHI4HA5vdZaRkaG4uDjNmTNH0uWrMw8aNEgff/zxVR+zfPly7d69W+PGjfNWmQCuImPLel2If9ZlWZVx02WOjilRO/im0p5n3g+Ae1hXAOD6ufUzQSWxadOmAufo1qlTRyaTyWVZUYcdf/HFF1q1apXGjx9frL4L21NldXMPVnlr5w81Mja+0y4w/zDnK+RkZxd4jLvtPFFjWbfzhxq9Pc/l+f1Qnt43xW3nDzX66rpXljWWdTt/qJGx8b12/lAjY1O8dlar9artPRZwu3Tpoi5durgss9lsGjp0qOx2uwICApSRkSGz2Vzo4z/66CPt2LFD8fHx/DQRAAAAAOCavHrVpqCgILVo0UIbN26UJK1bt05t27Yt0O6LL77Qvn37NGHCBMItAAAAAMAtHtuDezXDhg3TzJkztWzZMoWHh+uZZ56RJH399dfKyMhQbGysli5dqooVK7ocmhwXFyeLxeLtcgEAAAAAfsLrATciIqLQc2p79Ojh/P97773nxYoAAAAAAEbAD8sCAAAAAAyBgAsAAAAAMAQCLgAAAADAEAi4AAAAAABDIOACAAAAAAyBgAsAAAAAMAQCLgAAAADAELz+O7gAAAAohCVCwWMSJEnBISHKyc6WLBFlXBQA+BcCLgDAs/jSDrglzxwumcMlSWarVampqWVcEQD4HwIuAMCj+NIOAAC8hXNwAQAAAACGQMAFAAAAABgChygDAErm13NrnefV/roMAACgrBBwAQAlkn9uLefVAgAAX0HABVD6uGouAAAAygABF0Cp46q5AAAAKAtcZAoAAAAAYAjswQXgPg49BgAAgA8j4AJwG4ceAwAAwJdxiDIAAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAErwfctLQ0jRs3Ts8++6ymTJmiS5cuXbVtVlaWnn76ae3bt8+LFQIAAAAA/JHXA+68efPUo0cPTZ8+XY0bN9bSpUuv2vadd97RhQsXvFgdAAAAAMBfeTXg2mw2HThwQJ07d5Ykde3aVYmJiYW23bhxoypWrKiGDRt6s0QAAAAAgJ/yasD9+eefVbFiRQUGBkqSzGazzp49W6BdWlqavvjiCw0ePNib5QEAAAAA/JjJ4XA4PPHEmzZt0gcffOCyrE6dOjp16pRmz54tScrLy9NDDz2kBQsWONvY7XZNmjRJf/rTn9S4cWONHz9ef/zjH9WqVStPlAkA+I2MLet1If5Zl2VVxk2XOTqmjCoCAABwT5CnnrhLly7q0qWLyzKbzaahQ4fKbrcrICBAGRkZMpvNLm1SU1OVmprqDMGnTp3SnDlzNHz4cEVFRbnVd2pqaoFlVqu10OXlvZ0/1MjY+F47f6iRsSl5u8Ds7ALLcrKzr/qY8jQ2nmrnDzXymr3Xzh9qZGx8r50/1MjY+F47f6ixsHZWq/Wq7T0WcAvtLChILVq00MaNGxUTE6N169apbdu2Lm3q1avnDLeS2IMLAAAAAHCL16+iPGzYMK1atUrPPfecDhw4oAceeECS9PXXX2vRokXeLgcAAAAAYBBe3YMrSRERERo/fnyB5T169Ci0fWFtAQAAAAD4La/vwQUAAAAAwBMIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMgYALAAAAADAEAi4AAAAAwBAIuAAAAAAAQyDgAgAAAAAMIaisCwAA+BhLhILHJCg4JEQ52dnOZQAAAL7O6wE3LS1Nb731ls6dOyer1aqRI0cqNDTUpY3NZtP8+fN18OBB2Ww2Pfzww2rTpo23SwWAcinPHC6Zw2W2WpWamlrW5QAAALjN64coz5s3Tz169ND06dPVuHFjLV26tECbzz77TD///LMSEhL03HPPadasWXI4HN4uFQAAAADgR7wacG02mw4cOKDOnTtLkrp27arExMQC7TZu3Kh+/frJZDKpfv36Gjt2LAEXAAAAAFAkrx6i/PPPP6tixYoKDAyUJJnNZp09e7ZAu1OnTmn//v165513lJeXp4EDB6pevXreLBUAAAAA4GdMDg/tGt20aZM++OADl2V16tTRqVOnNHv2bElSXl6eHnroIS1YsMCl3cCBA9W7d2/96U9/0vHjxzVp0iRNnz5dlSpV8kSpAAAAAAAD8Nge3C5duqhLly4uy2w2m4YOHSq73a6AgABlZGTIbDYXeGz16tV16623ymQyqWHDhqpRo4ZSU1MVGRnpVt+FXRTF6ubFUspbO3+okbHxvXb+UCNj43vt/KFGxsZ77fyhRsbG99r5Q42Mje+184caGZvitbNarVdt79VzcIOCgtSiRQtt3LhRkrRu3Tq1bdu2QLsOHTo42/z0009KS0sr8kUAAAAAAOD1nwkaNmyYZs6cqWXLlik8PFzPPPOMJOnrr79WRkaG7r//fj344IN699139fzzz0uSHn/8cQ5PBgAAAAAUyesBNyIiQuPHjy+wvEePHs7/V6pUSU899ZQXqwIAAAAA+Duv/w4uAAAAAACeQMAFAAAAABgCARcAAAAAYAgEXAAAAACAIRBwAQAAAACGYHI4HI6yLgIAAAAAgOvFHlwAAAAAgCEQcAEAAAAAhkDABQAAAAAYAgEXAAAAAGAIBFwAAAAAgCEQcAEAAAAAhkDABQAAAAAYAgEXAAAAAGAIBFwAAAAAgCEQcAEAAAAAhhBU1gV4wn//+18lJibq7NmzCggIkNlsVtu2bdWkSZMSPd/WrVuVlpamdu3aqXbt2s7lq1at0l133eW8ffLkSYWEhMhisWj16tU6duyYWrRooVtuuaXI558/f74eeuihAsuTk5MVGRkpSdqzZ4927typwMBARUdHq2nTpi5td+3apaZNm6py5cr69ttvlZycrMaNG+uOO+5wtnn33XcVGxurKlWqXPM17927V8HBwWrWrJk+//xz7du3T5GRkerXr5+Cgv73ttmyZYu2bt2qzMxMBQUFqVatWrrlllvUrFmza/YBAAAAAKUpcPz48ePLuojStHLlSi1cuFD16tVT3bp1Vb16dV26dEmfffaZLl26pObNmxfr+RYsWKCtW7fKZDJp/vz5ql69uho2bChJmjt3rrp37y5JWrFihd577z1nsD106JBuvPFGbdy4UadPn1bLli0lSbNmzdLWrVtd/m3atEn//e9/tXXrVnXs2NHZd0JCgrp3766vvvpKn376qVq1aqWQkBB9+umnstvtzvD7/vvva9OmTYqOjtby5cu1a9cutWzZUtu3b9fhw4fVrl07SdKbb76pDRs2yGKxqF69eld9zR999JHWrFmj7du3KykpSenp6brzzjuVkpKi7du36+abb5Yk/fOf/9SOHTvUqlUrnTx5Us2bN1flypW1ZMkSBQUFqXHjxsUaa3jfrl27tHz5cq1cuVIbNmzQvn37ZLPZinx/XE1eXp6++uorbdq0ScHBwYqIiHDet3jxYrVq1cp5OykpSRcuXFC1atW0ePFiffHFFzp79qyaNWsmk8l01T6mT5+uzp07uyzbunWr6tatK0n65ptvtGzZMm3ZskV2u13169cvUOPq1asVHh6uoKAgffrpp/rXv/6l1NRUNW3aVIGBgZIur3tNmza95sagvLw8rV27Vv/9739ltVr13nvvacGCBTpy5IhuvPFGBQcHS5Lsdru+/PJLLVy4UMuXL9eqVau0e/duSVKDBg1cnrM05yS/Rl+el9Kek/zn9OV5McqcSKwrvjgvpT0nEusK60rBGo0wL6wr/v0drCgmh8PhKPGjfdAzzzyjKVOmKCQkxGV5dna2XnrpJU2fPt25LC0trcjnCg8P16hRozRlyhQFBgbq5MmTmjhxogYNGqQuXbroxRdf1JQpUyRJo0aN0uTJk3Xu3Dk9//zzeueddxQcHCybzaa4uDhNnTpV0uW9tevWrVP//v1VqVIlSZffeLGxsZKkrl27Ovt/6aWXlJCQoNGjR+uVV15RWFiYJCkrK0txcXHO1/L8889r2rRpCggI0EsvvaSJEyeqQoUKstvtGjVqlN544w1J0osvvqiRI0fqH//4h3Jzc9WnTx/dfPPNLitm/muZOnWqbDabnnjiCc2dO1dBQUFyOBx68cUXna9l9OjRmjJlikwmk3JycjR58mSNGzdOFy9e1F/+8hdnv/l27dpV6J71364s7sjLy9PKlSuVlpamjh076sYbb3Ted+V45ktKSlLlypXVqFEjLVmyxLl3vW/fvgoIuPqR+tOnT9ezzz7rsuzKDRHffPONduzYoaCgIEVHR7vsrc/Ly9M333yj6OhoVa5cWcuXL3fuWe/Xr59z3BMSEvTII4+oVq1a13zN3377rYKDg9W5c2d98MEH2r9/v5o0aaKHHnrI+UFgt9v173//u9A967feeqvz+RYtWqTk5GTddtttMpvNcjgcyszM1IYNG1S3bl3nUQX79+8vsq78jTezZ8+W3W5XgwYN9NVXX+nOO+9U//79Jf3vvSxd3oDy/fff6+LFi7JYLKpWrZpuueUWJSYmKjQ0VEOGDJEkxcfHF+grJSXFueFk3LhxLs+9ePFiHTx4UD179pR0+QiLG264QQMHDnQ+/u9//7sk6c9//rOWLFmiS5cuqUuXLtq+fbt++eUXPfPMM5KkYcOGqVKlSurevbt69erlctTClWbOnKns7Gzl5OTowoULioyM1F133aWtW7cqJSVFo0aNknR5I5TNZlOHDh2UmJiohg0bymKx6N///rduuukmDRgwoFhzYqR5Ke05Kct5KW9zUpx58fU5MdK8lPaclOW8GGVOPDEvrCusK1fOi6/PiSfmpSiGO0Q5MDBQeXl5BZbn5OS4bEmTpMmTJ+vUqVPON9aVTCaTZsyY4fy/JNWpU0djxozRxIkTVbVqVZetHA6HQxUqVFBERIT69u3rEhqvrOehhx5Su3bt9Mknn+jBBx9Uq1at9OWXX7oE23w2m012u11hYWGqUKGCc3lQUJBL3yEhITp37pzMZrNq1Kih7OxsVahQQZcuXXIJbyaTSfXq1VN8fLySkpK0atUqvffee7JarbJYLC4fxBcvXtSlS5eUnZ2trKwshYWFKScnRzabzdkmNzdX2dnZCg0Nda70khQaGlpgC9DVVuQ1a9bo0KFDzhX522+/LTAOV7r99tslSW+//bZzRZ4xY4bLirx9+3aXgFvYyty9e3clJibq/fffv+bKnL88f2VeunSpOnbsWOjKfOzYMefKPHPmTElS586dNX/+fF26dEm///3vtX37ds2ePds53ocPH9akSZOuuSLPmTPH+QH71VdfKTIyUs8995y2bt2quXPnOj9g58+fL5vNpnvuuafAh+vJkyedH64bN27UG2+8USDgx8TEaNSoUc45WbZsmQ4dOuQ8YuC38sclJSXFufHj9ttv14QJExQSEqLevXu7rF87d+7UtGnTdOHCBT399NN69913FRAQoHbt2unFF190tuvUqZM+++wz3X///apZs6YcDofmzp2rP/7xj4XWsXXrVk2aNMm57rVv316jRo1y+XA9duyYXn/9dUnSwYMHlZCQIJPJpHbt2um5555ztrNYLHr55Zf10UcfaeTIkerRo4duvfVWly2ikvTDDz9o2rRpstvtevzxxzVx4kRJUr169TR69Ghnu3379jnHpk2bNho3bpwmTJigm2++WS+88EKx58RI81Lac1KW81Le5qQ48+Lrc2KkeSntOSnLeTHKnHhiXlhXWFeunBdfnxNPzEtRDBdw+/fvrxdffFFRUVEym80ymUxKT0/Xvn379MADD7i0nTBhgsaNG6ehQ4eqRYsWhT5f586dNX78eD300EOKjIxU/fr19dxzz2natGnKzc11tuvUqZPGjx+vcePGOcPV0aNHNXfu3ALn4N5000264YYb9Pbbb2v79u2y2+2F9l21alWNGDFCkvTOO+/oySef1N69e/XRRx+pS5cuznb33Xef4uLidMstt6hmzZoaN26cbrrpJu3evVv33HOPs92Vb/DWrVurdevWstlsOn78uH766Sfnfffcc49Gjhwph8OhQYMGaeLEibrpppu0Z88el3N6u3btqrFjx6pNmzbavXu3unbtqrS0NE2ZMkUxMTEur8XdFXnPnj3avHmzy+u7Un7AdXdFlsrfB6y7H67BwcFKT09XeHi4Sz9nzpxxCdlxcXGKj49X7969nYenF8Zut+vSpUsKDQ1V1apVFRcXp7FjxxbYGCRd3jgSFhamwYMHO98TWVlZLhuDevbsqaioKP3jH/9Qt27ddPvtt6tixYouW5El6dKlS8rMzJTFYlFWVpZzPgrbqBUaGqoff/xR9evXl9Vq1dmzZxUeHq709HSXjUgmk0nVq1fXU089pZMnT2r16tWaOHGicnJyVKNGDefYm0wmpaam6uLFi7p48aJOnz6tmjVr6vz58y6vJS8vT+fOnVO1atWUmZmpnJwcSZc3Yl1Zo7tzYqR5Ke05KWpezp0759F5KW9zUpx5Kat1xd05MdK8lPaclOW8GGVOSmNefOXzy0jzwrri39/BimK4c3AbNGigzp07y263Kzc3VyaTSQ0aNND9999f4PzbChUqqHHjxlqzZs1V3zStWrVSeHi4wsLCVLVqVUmXD12+5ZZblJubq7Zt20qSoqKiVKtWLdWsWdP52IsXL6pRo0a68847CzxvcHCwunTporS0NKWlpel3v/tdgTZdu3ZVnz591L59e9WvX181atRQenq6mjVr5nJxK6vVqujoaKWnp+v8+fOyWCwKCwvTPffco/bt2zvbBQYG6oYbbnDpI/9Q4SuPk2/YsKF69eql3r17q0WLFmrevLkyMjL0u9/9zqXOFi1aqE6dOsrKytIdd9yhmJgYBQQEqFWrVgUOO/7mm2/UoUMH52HZ+U6fPq3ExET16NFDkhQdHa3Dhw+rTZs2io2NVceOHV3+5Vu5cqVuv/12BQUFKSQkRDfffLPefvttVa1aVYcPH3aeGy1JX3/9te644w5VqlRJYWFhzouNZWVlafXq1fr9738vSYqMjFTbtm21bNky1apVSx07dtTatWv14IMPuoTNFStWqEuXLtq3b5/atWun0NBQSZdX8rVr1zqfb926dWrWrJmqVaumffv2qWnTpqpUqZLS09O1adMmZ42rVq1S3759FR0drfbt2+v777/XJ598on/9619KTExUt27dJEn/+c9/FBUVpdOnT+s///mPYmJiVLlyZZ0/f15r1qxx9vvVV1+pc+fOCg0NVUZGhtatW6fu3bsrJyfHpV3t2rU1depU7dixQ3v27NGWLVu0cuVKrVixQo8++qjzvRwQEKAWLVpo27Ztat26dYH36ZXvr5kzZ6pevXqqVauWKlasqLZt22rWrFk6c+aM7rvvPkmXP7hmzpyp3//+9865+P777zVx4kT94Q9/cDl3u2rVqrrtttu0fv16rV69WpmZmc768/3www/67LPP9OOPP+rEiRO65ZZbtHnzZk2dOlV9+vRxubhc/fr1lZCQoEOHDik4OFgLFy7UwYMHtWzZMj3yyCOqU6eOc6zz5ycsLEytW7dWr169dPvtt6tp06ayWCySpFq1aulvf/ubNm7cqCeeeEKzZ8/W/v37tWTJEg0YMMB5vn5ISIjefPNNHT58WEuXLtWAAQMUHBysl19+Wffee69zvSxsTr7++usCc3K989KuXTu352XSpEnq27evx+altOekqHlZunSp7rvvPjVq1Mgj85I/J1u3bvXonJT2ujJlyhT17dvXrTl5+OGHnXNSnHkpal3xhTnx93kpybpSu3Ztvf7669ecE0/OS3n5/CrOvJT251edOnWK9be+pOuKL/29d3deVq1add3rypV/64szL+VtXSnOvBTn7/3VGO4cXPimpKQkzZkzR3Xq1JHZbJYkZWRk6OTJkxoxYoSioqKcbTMyMvTdd9/pD3/4w1Wfb9WqVfr88881bNgw3XTTTZIuXz170qRJOnfunBYsWOBs+/XXX+uLL75w2YP8/fff6+9//7vuvfdel40F0uWtbAsXLlRaWppOnDihv/3tby73z5o1SykpKUpLS1NUVJReeOEFbd68WR988IH69evnDOuHDh3S66+/rmbNmikkJERJSUlq2rSpUlJS9Nhjjzkv/nXludxX+vnnn/XTTz85D0vZvXu35syZI4fDoaFDh2rhwoWqX7++jhw5ovvvv9+58WHt2rVatGiRmjVrpsOHD+vBBx9UZGSkXn31Vf3xj3902Qu/YcMGnTx5UgEBAapZs6YsFouaNm2qb7/91mVc3L2S+Geffabc3FzFxMQ422VlZWnlypXq16+fs90XX3zh3Iteu3ZtnT17VhcvXtT3339/1X5Pnz6tDRs26IknnijQ75YtW5zt6tSpo+PHjzvn4Lfz++233+rMmTPOc+SrV6+uNm3aaOfOnc62O3fulM1mc+s15/fdvn17hYaG6uDBg6pfv74OHDhQ6NjceuutqlOnjnJzc3Xp0iVt3rzZpd2xY8f0yy+/ONePffv2qXv37oVejd3dK7enpqYqODhY4eHhznaRkZH6+eef1bt3b5d2oaGhzuc7fPiwatas6Tz8v7B+V61a5dwoVVi/ISEhstls2rt3rzZu3KiWLVs6/9Be+ZqPHj2qzMxM5ebmavny5Ro+fLhuu+02Z5udO3eqdu3aBV7vjTfeWOgRH1e+lqVLl2rTpk267bbbXN6H+e2OHDmiJk2a6MCBA0pOTlarVq0KHIWSk5Oj5ORkZWRkyOFw6JtvvtHLL798zXODrnaV/JMnT6pChQrOrffz589XbGysVq9e7TIn+XsK8s2ePVt9+/Yt8iIkSUlJznWlMDk5OcrMzFTNmjU1bdo0xcbGFrj4SVZWlpKSkvTTTz/JZrNpxYoVmjZtWoEvFjt37nR+ll3rNV8pMzNTY8eOVVxcnKxWq8t9qampOn78uBo1aqTatWtr/vz56t+/v8sFR5KTk9WgQQMlJycrLS1NixcvVs2aNTVw4ECXXxkozq8RJCcnq3LlyqpQoYJOnjzpbNuhQwcdOXLEOS/JycmqWrWqatas6XzOX375RXfccYfL0WBX9p2UlKQFCxbohhtu0J133llojTk5OVq3bp1SU1N1+vRp9e7d2+X6EsnJyapbt66SkpJ06tQpLVy4UFWrVtWoUaNc+s3/Uv3b19ypUyeXwxx/OzbfffedDhw4oJEjRxY6NpUqVdLx48d14cIFpaamKjAwUB07dizwqwm7du1ScHCwMjIy9NNPP2nPnj3q0qWL82/jle0iIyNVpUqVq/76gyR9+eWXio6OVnh4uLNdnTp1ZLfb1adPH2e7r7/+Wrfeeqvz1yT279+vRo0aqVevXgX6zf/VidWrV+vQoUNq0aJFgX537dqlhg0bKicnRwcPHtTatWsVHR1d4Pm2bdumvLw8nTp1Snl5efr000/Vr18/5xzk27lzp0wmU4FfvGjSpEmB09SuHJvly5fr22+/Va9evQqM4Zdffqnq1aurUaNGOnz4sA4cOKD/b+9eQ6JK4zCAP6OlZqtGtw+a9KWl7QKCokV3crdPQUGQGAllQW2yXcwkoQtdIIooaNnSiqnYgmJZ2O5aXiq6LOGMlpvVarUVlmWa1aSOzZz/fohzcHQcz9Rc7Pj8IMjh8f++74k557ydmfcdMWKEy3Exm82YO3cu6uvrtfOXeq3v+NTMm502zGYzpk+fjpiYGJcnkG1tbS7nMLPZjBkzZrhMmtTrfccHK53b7u4cpubCwsK0c5h6ve94DjObzZgzZw5qa2u1fxf1Wj9kyBAt98svv2DHjh09jrlz/5qbm7VrvbrAUsfstGnT8ObNG4wcOVK73tvt9i7tWCwW7cGHer3//vvvMX/+fJdrS8edTc6cOYPq6mq3O5sUFxcjLi4OY8aM0XZAiY2NRXR0tMu1r6SkBPHx8dpOKZWVlRg4cCBWrlzpsd2KigqMGzeuS7tVVVUIDw9HTEwMbt++jcrKSkRGRmLVqlVdrpHl5eV49uwZ+vXrh/b2dvz111+YMmUKli5dqmUrKirQv39/Xbu5dIcTXAqYzjeI7k6wehb+UnW+QQQ+35SVlpa63CACXW8S3Z1gO/PmJtHdCVbtj3oz0t0J1t0Noh6eTrDqDaKnk+uJEyfw+PFjxMXF4datW8jIyNAmyR0XJDBKzpvs8ePH8eTJk4D38fz587h48SIUWCArlgAACD1JREFURcH48ePR2NiIlJQUlJeXY/To0S43TOfOnUNhYWGPWb019eZ6e7v+aHv//v3ozGKxICkpCQC0r5IYOVdeXq590knNBbOP6vumsLAQly9fxsyZMyEiuHr1KlJTU7W1EfTmesrOnDlTm9j4uu1g54qKinDp0iWkpqZCURSvj03H7NGjR/HkyROsWbMGhYWFqK2tRUpKCioqKjB8+HAsXrzYZ7lhw4Zpa2h8Sb2ioiLU1tYiOTm5x1xNTY2u/j169MhtvWD2cdGiRYiJicGCBQswYcKELu8vld6cP2r6K5eenu5xIVN/Hpue2j5+/Dju378Pp9OJYcOGISQkBNOnT4fFYoHT6cTy5cvd5kwmE2bMmNFtzuFwYPjw4T7PfW3/vKn5+++/48GDBz320SMhCoCGhgaPf1TZ2dmyYMECycrKkhUrVrj8ycrK8rqeN9m+lsvOzhaHwyEiIi9evJAVK1bIzZs3RURk3bp1X5RzOp0+refLXDDb9ubY2O12ef36tWRkZIjdbhcRkU+fPklOTk6XsajZhQsXdpv9lnKexqy3nj/6eOzYMVmyZImcP39eysrKpKysTH7++Wft7301F8y2c3NzReTz++f9+/fa6y0tLbJq1aouuZycHI85b7LBzvlqzF9ybHpqe82aNdq5Ljc3V9rb20VExOl0yurVq3tdTn3P+7vdYI553bp18vz5c9m0aZPk5eXJjRs3tHF3pDfnj5pGyXmTVe8L7Ha7ZGZmyqdPn0RERFGULtcpI+T8VbM7hltkinonvStW61n4y5t63mTd5UwmE0Skx1yw6n1NTv0Z8LxCuDc5la/q+aN/wWy7p5x0WI199uzZ3a7G3jnraeX2bynnacx66/mjj3pXv+9ruWC2re4y8N1333ncZUDvbgTeZIOd89WYv+TY9NS23l0dekuuvb0dYWFhfm83mGPWu4OGNztt+LqmUXLeZvXsWGKknL9qusOPKFNAtLS06Jq4Ap+/61NSUoJly5b5pJ7ebF/L/fHHH6iqqtJWCAc+r/asrhB+7NgxQ+W+hT6eOnUK1dXV2Lx5s3aDoq7GnpSU5PIxXL3ZvpbzV00AsNlsOHjwIIYOHYq7d+9i9+7dcKev5YLR9pYtW/Dy5UsAn3cm6LjLQGJiorabgd6cP2oaJedNtry8HIcPH8akSZOgKAqqqqpcdnVQ/6Oir+WC2ba7dT467qChrmGgN+ePmkbJeZO9du0ajh49ChFBWloaysrKtB1LJk+erK1DY5Scv2p2S9dzXiIfqKmpkfz8/KDU05vta7m7d+/K8+fPXV5raGiQI0eOGDL3LfTx3r17Lj/X1dWJ1WrtMg5vsn0t56+aquLiYtm2bZvHTF/MBaPturo6efjwoYiI3L9/XywWy1fl/FHTKDm92VevXsnZs2fl0KFDkp+fLydPnpSampo+nwtW2yUlJW770pnenD9qGiXnbdZut0tra6uIiDx9+lROnz4td+7cMWzOXzXd4RNcIiIiIiIiMoSQniNEREREREREvR8nuERERERERGQIXEWZiIgowBRFwYULF3D9+nU4nU44HA4kJSUhLS0NBw8eRHx8vL6FNHSwWq2oqalBWlqaT+oRERH1ZpzgEhERBdihQ4fw8eNHbNq0CZGRkWhra8O+ffuQn5/fZXuRr1VbWwubzebTmkRERL0VF5kiIiIKoNevX2Pt2rUoKChAZGSk9npzczMePHgAi8WC1tZWNDc34927d4iPj8fKlSsRERGB0tJSFBcXw+FwwGazYe7cuZg1axauXLmCW7duQUTQ0NCAwYMHIysrC42Njdi1axcURcGPP/6I9PR0lJaWoqioCCKCqKgoZGZmIi4uDr/99htsNhtevXqFxMRELFy4MIhHiYiI6MvwCS4REVEAPX78GCNGjHCZ3ALAoEGDMHHiRFgsFjQ1NWHz5s3o378/8vLycPv2baSkpKCkpAR5eXmIiorCv//+i+3bt2PWrFkAgOrqauzcuROxsbE4ceIEjhw5grVr1+Knn37Chw8fkJ6ejurqaly9ehVbt25FeHg47ty5g927d2Pv3r0AgPb2duzZsyfgx4SIiMhXOMElIiIKoJCQEPT04ank5GSEh4cDAOLj4/Hu3TtERERg/fr1sFqtePnyJf777z+0tbVpv5OQkIDY2FgAQGpqKnJzc7vUtVqtqK+vx4YNG7TXbDab9hHm0aNHf/X4iIiIgokTXCIiogAaNWoU6urq0NraigEDBmivNzU1oaCgABEREQgNDdVeN5lMEBE0NjZiw4YNSE1NxQ8//ICJEyfCarVquY7f3RURt9/lVRQFU6dO1T5+rCgK3r59i4EDBwIAIiIifD5eIiKiQOI2QURERAE0ePBgTJkyBQcOHEBLSwsAoKWlBYcPH0ZUVBTCwsLc/t6jR48QHR2NefPmISEhQZvcKooCAPjnn3/Q1NQEALh8+TKSkpIAAKGhoXA6nQA+P+W9ceMG3r59q+W2bt3qv8ESEREFGJ/gEhERBdjSpUvx559/YuPGjQgJCYHD4UBycjLmz5+PgoICt7+TkJCAsrIyrF69GiaTCWPHjkV0dDTq6+sBAEOGDMGvv/6K5uZmxMXFYdmyZQCA8ePHY9++fTCbzcjMzMScOXOwfft2mEwmDBgwADk5OTCZTAEbOxERkT9xFWUiIqJv3JUrV/D3339j/fr1we4KERFRUPEjykRERERERGQIfIJLREREREREhsAnuERERERERGQInOASERERERGRIXCCS0RERERERIbACS4REREREREZAie4REREREREZAic4BIREREREZEh/A8Zqn6PHWoxIQAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==", 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" - ] - }, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "display_data" - } - ], - "source": [ - "plotSynchronicAnalysis(normYanks - normBrits)" - ] - }, + From 8c8614ab40454000c44933b0f52606c5d4d87057 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2023 15:19:10 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 52/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 134 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 133 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index 5b1d3a3..25eece6 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -592,4 +592,136 @@ "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 } - +{ + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getFirst(row): \n", + " if type(row) == list: \n", + " return row[0]\n", + " else: \n", + " return row\n", + "\n", + "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "publishers = publishers.tolist()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def getCountry(publisher): \n", + " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", + " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", + " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", + " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", + " if type(publisher) != list: \n", + " return 'Unknown'\n", + " publisher = publisher[0]\n", + " if publisher in brits: \n", + " return 'Britain' \n", + " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Canada' \n", + " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Germany'\n", + " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Spain'\n", + " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", + " return 'France' \n", + " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", + " return 'Ireland'\n", + " else: \n", + " return 'US'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": { + "scrolled": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "US 3901\n", + "Unknown 1247\n", + "Britain 825\n", + "Canada 59\n", + "Germany 15\n", + "Ireland 8\n", + "Spain 8\n", + "France 6\n", + "Name: country, dtype: int64" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 94, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], + "source": [ + "df['country'].value_counts()" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", + "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", + "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", + "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", + "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", + "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", + "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" + ] + }, From 9acac934acfbee9f62fb359d281922cd5bbb393f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kingston Lew <113212614+kingstonlyw@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2023 15:19:41 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 53/63] Update analyze_data.ipynb --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 133 ------------------------------- 1 file changed, 133 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index 25eece6..b9fbeb7 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -592,136 +592,3 @@ "nbformat": 4, "nbformat_minor": 2 } -{ - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "# By (Guessed) Country of Publication" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getFirst(row): \n", - " if type(row) == list: \n", - " return row[0]\n", - " else: \n", - " return row\n", - "\n", - "topPublishers = df['publisher_name'].apply(getFirst).value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = topPublishers[:80].index" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "publishers = publishers.tolist()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def getCountry(publisher): \n", - " brits = ['Oxford University Press', 'Cambridge University Press', 'Modern Humanities Research Association', \\\n", - " 'BMJ', 'Taylor & Francis, Ltd.', 'Edinburgh University Press', \\\n", - " 'Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce']\n", - " canadians = ['Victorian Studies Association of Western Canada'] \n", - " if type(publisher) != list: \n", - " return 'Unknown'\n", - " publisher = publisher[0]\n", - " if publisher in brits: \n", - " return 'Britain' \n", - " elif publisher in canadians or 'Canada' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Canada' \n", - " elif 'GmbH' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Germany'\n", - " elif 'estudios' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Spain'\n", - " elif 'France' in publisher: \n", - " return 'France' \n", - " elif 'Ireland' in publisher: \n", - " return 'Ireland'\n", - " else: \n", - " return 'US'" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": { - "scrolled": true - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "df['country'] = df['publisher_name'].apply(getCountry)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "text/plain": [ - "US 3901\n", - "Unknown 1247\n", - "Britain 825\n", - "Canada 59\n", - "Germany 15\n", - "Ireland 8\n", - "Spain 8\n", - "France 6\n", - "Name: country, dtype: int64" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 94, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], - "source": [ - "df['country'].value_counts()" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "dfBrits = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Britain']\n", - "dfYanks = df.loc[df['country'] == 'US']\n", - "dfCanadians = df.loc[df['country'] == 'Canada']" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Since British authors are greatly outnumbered in this corpus, we should normalize the data. \n", - "britsHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfBrits) \n", - "normBrits = britsHist.div(britsHist.max())\n", - "yanksHist = synchronicAnalysis(dfYanks)\n", - "normYanks = yanksHist.div(yanksHist.max())" - ] - }, From 215b42d0070c5b648966c91f9465de35317930e6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 21 Apr 2023 15:44:48 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 54/63] added histogram of quotation lengths --- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 556 ++++------------- visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb | 563 ------------------ visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb | 286 +++++++++ 3 files changed, 402 insertions(+), 1003 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 visualization/annotated-by-size.ipynb diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index b9fbeb7..86f3a32 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -2,450 +2,27 @@ "cells": [ { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 4, + "execution_count": 38, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "import pandas as pd\n", - "import json" + "import json\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "from pathlib import Path\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": 39, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "data": { - "text/html": [ - "
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abstractcreatordocSubTypedocTypeidentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguagepageCountpublicationYearpublishersourceCategorytdmCategorytitlewordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in B
0This paper investigates the logic of explanati...[Merje Kuus]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00202754'}, {'name...Transactions of the Institute of British Geogr...1[eng]122007Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute...[Geography, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Pu...96331[[101032, 101482]][[11865, 12316]]
1Seeking to elucidate understandings of sexual ...[Rebecca M. Herzig]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10400656'}, {'name...NWSA Journal3[eng]172000The Johns Hopkins University Press[Feminist & Women's Studies, Social Sciences][Social sciences - Communications, Philosophy ...The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertric...75092[[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]][[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]]
2NoneNoneresearch-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '11440821'}, {'name...Rue Descartes40[fre]52003Presses Universitaires de France[Humanities, Philosophy]NoneRéférences bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...15101[[481404, 481466]][[6685, 6747]]
6None[Kathryn R. King]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01935380'}, {'name...The Eighteenth Century2[eng]181994University of Pennsylvania Press[Language & Literature, History, History, Huma...[Arts - Literature]THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMA...86261[[143468, 143592]][[23255, 23380]]
7None[Chicago Cultural Studies Group]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00931896'}, {'name...Critical Inquiry3[eng]261992The University of Chicago Press[Language & Literature, Social Sciences, Cultu...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Critical Multiculturalism123241[[481404, 481471]][[77772, 77838]]
.........................................................
5170None[Judy Tobler]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10117601'}, {'name...Journal for the Study of Religion1/2[eng]302000Association for the Study of Religion in South...[Religion, Humanities][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]\"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred...139974[[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ...[[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315...
5171None[Andreas Spiegl, Fiona Elliot]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '14654253'}, {'name...Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry3[eng]82001University of Chicago Press[Art & Art History, Arts][Arts - Literature, Arts - Art history]A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICA...55522[[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]][[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]]
5175None[Sonia Núñez Puente]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '02721635'}, {'name...Anales de la literatura española contemporánea2[spa]222009Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies[Language & Literature, Latin American Studies...NoneCorporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero,...76841[[493724, 493799]][[45214, 45288]]
5178None[David Chioni Moore]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00917710'}, {'name...Journal of Anthropological Research4[eng]211994University of New Mexico[Anthropology, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Epistemology, Arts - Literature,...Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog...97991[[147640, 147832]][[16061, 16251]]
5181None[Irene Gedalof]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01417789'}, {'name...Feminist Review64[eng]42000Sage Publications, Ltd.[Gender Studies, Feminist & Women's Studies, S...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme...17891[[443416, 443517]][[2982, 3089]]
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\"Te quiero,... 7684 \n", - "5178 Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog... 9799 \n", - "5181 Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme... 1789 \n", - "\n", - " numMatches Locations in A \\\n", - "0 1 [[101032, 101482]] \n", - "1 2 [[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]] \n", - "2 1 [[481404, 481466]] \n", - "6 1 [[143468, 143592]] \n", - "7 1 [[481404, 481471]] \n", - "... ... ... \n", - "5170 4 [[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ... \n", - "5171 2 [[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]] \n", - "5175 1 [[493724, 493799]] \n", - "5178 1 [[147640, 147832]] \n", - "5181 1 [[443416, 443517]] \n", - "\n", - " Locations in B \n", - "0 [[11865, 12316]] \n", - "1 [[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]] \n", - "2 [[6685, 6747]] \n", - "6 [[23255, 23380]] \n", - "7 [[77772, 77838]] \n", - "... ... \n", - "5170 [[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315... \n", - "5171 [[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]] \n", - "5175 [[45214, 45288]] \n", - "5178 [[16061, 16251]] \n", - "5181 [[2982, 3089]] \n", - "\n", - "[2125 rows x 18 columns]" - ] - }, - "execution_count": 5, - "metadata": {}, - "output_type": "execute_result" - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ + "text = '../visualization/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", + "with open(text) as f: \n", + " rawText = f.read()\n", + "txt = Path(text).read_text()\n", + "\n", "articles = '../text_matcher/finaldata.jsonl'\n", "with open(articles) as f: \n", " rawData = f.readlines()\n", @@ -458,7 +35,7 @@ "df = df.drop(['id', 'url', 'outputFormat', 'volumeNumber', 'subTitle', 'provider', 'datePublished', \\\n", " 'pagination', 'pageEnd', 'pageStart'], axis=1)\n", "articlesWithMatches = df[df['numMatches'].apply(lambda x: x > 0)]\n", - "articlesWithMatches" + "df = articlesWithMatches" ] }, { @@ -471,7 +48,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 80, + "execution_count": 40, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -493,7 +70,7 @@ }, { "data": { - "image/png": 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X11ejT2o5++c//4mOHTuia9euGDFiBDIzM7Fp0yb4+flpjWXOpCM6OhodO3ZEjx498Morr+D+/fvYv38/PDw8NMZJKW/FxcV4++23sWDBAp1/9DyKeZOGmzdvIjQ0FO+99x7s7e0bHCulvPXr1w+rV69GXFwcDhw4gOnTp+Ozzz6Dm5ubzm0wb/rl5uaGsLAwHD58GHv27MGoUaMQEREBDw8PrYMvUsnZ1atXAUB9sDMqKgr79++Hg4MDFi9erP5326NrZ870S7XfAgICUFhYiD179iAmJgbGxsbw8/PTOttfKnnTJSYmBgDw5ptv6uxn3qQnJiYGMpkMc+fO1eqTStYMDQ2RnJyM/v37IyAgAA4ODujVqxdWrFiB7du3Y+3atTrXzqzpj7W1NZKTk9GuXTtMnToVdnZ26N27N3bs2IGEhAStK3CkkrV+/foBAE6dOqXRnpeXh19++QUA8Ntvv2mtnVlref369UNRUREuXbqk0X7p0iX1nVhu376tbpdKpp7mnIB2FkpKSpCamqpxBWBTFBUVoaKiQuecJiYmaN++PfMnIY271pFI4srLy3UW4gCozwooLy+HsbExqqqq8OWXX+Ltt99+ovkA6Jyz7nwtISkpCV5eXjAyMmrW6/W59j8jqedt06ZNiI+Px/z58zFq1CitfuZNWkJCQnDu3Dl88MEHcHFxUbdLMWfu7u5ISUlBRUUFfvrpJxw6dAhFRUVQKpVat1pgzqRj4sSJ6N27N8rKypCRkYHk5GTk5+drjJFa3pYtW4ba2lp8+OGHjRrPvElDYGCgurjQEKnl7dixYxrfT58+HSNGjMCMGTMQGhqKXbt2afQzb/p1/vx5je9nzZoFV1dXrF69Gh9//DFWr14NQFo5U93Krbq6GmfPnkX79u0BAFOnTkXfvn2xYcMGhISEwNraWv0a5kz/VPvN0tISqampMDY2BgBMmjQJPXv2xKpVq+Dv7w+5XC6pvD3q/v37SEhIQK9evTBixAidY5g3abl69SrS09Px8ssvw8HBQaNPalkzMzODk5MThgwZglGjRqG8vBx79uxBcHAwzM3NMWvWLI3xzJr+WVhYoH///pgwYQKGDRuGwsJC7NixA76+vjhy5AjGjBkDQFpZCwwMRFRUFAIDA1FVVQV3d3dkZ2dj6dKlqKmp0bkdZq11hISEICkpCVOnTsXWrVvRv39/ZGZmIiQkBEZGRhq3eJZSplp6zie9ArChOVXzMn/SwSvj6JmgUCjUl6I/qrKyUj0GAE6ePInS0tJmn3FQd1u65nx0vrKyMty5c0fjq+5Vek3x008/4dq1a622dnpyUs5bdHQ0li5dCi8vL523CGPepOX//u//EBERgfnz52PlypUafVLMWYcOHTB69Gh4e3tj+fLl+OKLLxAZGYmgoCCNccyZtHTv3h2jR4/GxIkTER4ejj179mD58uUahS4p5S09PR27du3Cpk2bGvXsAOZNGvbv34+vvvoKUVFRjz3oIaW81cfX1xf29vZahTrmTZqWLl0KY2Njjf0lpZypbtP22muvqQtxAGBkZARfX19UVlbi3Llz6nbmTBpU+83Hx0ddiAMeXlkyYcIE3LlzR331nJTy9qi4uDhUVFRg3rx5WrcRA5g3KWroSkYpZe3OnTsYMmQIbG1tsXPnTkyZMgWzZs1CSkoKhg4diuDgYI1nFDNr+vfjjz9i2LBhGDNmDD766CNMmjQJ8+bNQ3p6Orp06YKAgAB1cUtKWevVqxeOHTsGc3NzTJ8+Hfb29vD09ET37t3V/5+0adNGvW1mrfV4eHjg4MGDKC0thZeXF+zs7ODt7Y2RI0fitddeA/DffSOlTLXUnCqJiYno378/evXq1eT5Hjenal7mTzpYjKNnQteuXVFQUKDzg+f3339Hhw4d1H8UJSYmokePHnj++eefaD7VtnXNJ5PJ1GM2btwIGxsbja9//etfzZo3MTERpqamWg9lfpprB3RfTk3NI9W87d69G/Pnz8fYsWORkJCg82Ao8yYdYWFheP/99zFnzhxERUVp9Us1Z49uf/To0YiJidH4rGbOpM3V1RWDBg3Czp071W1SyltQUBAGDhyIoUOHIisrS/0FPDxDMCsrS+O5A8yb/lVVVWHx4sUYP348unTpot5n2dnZAB7edjQrKwv3798HIK28NcTe3l4ja6q1M2/SY2RkpP7bQUVKOevevTsA6HxmiI2NDQBoHLBmzqShKftNSnl7VExMDAwNDTF79myd/cybtCiVSuzduxft2rXTecBaSln75JNPcO/ePbzxxhsa25DL5Xj99ddRWlqKixcvaqydWdOvLVu2oLKyUmufKRQKeHl5ITs7G7du3QIgrawBwEsvvYTr168jMzMTp0+fxu3bt5GQkKD+3d+7d2/1WGatdb3xxhvIyclBRkYGzpw5g9zcXERFRSEnJweGhobqgpTUMvW05gQ0s6C6ArC5V8UBD0/8MTMz0zlnVVUV7t27x/xJCItx9EwYMmQIamtr8d1332m0V1ZW4tKlS/jLX/4C4OFDLZOTk5/oQ041HwB8++23Wn3nz5+Hi4sLLCwsAEB9tlfdr4EDBzZr3sTERIwZMwbm5uYtsvZz586hTZs2cHZ2bvb26b+kmrfY2FgEBARg9OjRSEpKqvdSduZNGsLDwxEeHo5Zs2YhOjpa6yxlqeZMl4qKCtTU1KCkpETdxpxJX0VFBQoLCwFIL2/Z2dm4dOkSnJycNL4AIDU1FU5OThoPl2fe9K+iogL5+fk4duyYxj5TPaNj//79cHJyQnR0tOTy1pCsrCx07txZo415k6bKykrk5OSo95fUcubm5gYAyMnJ0dqOqq1Tp07qNuZMGhq736SWt7ouXbqEixcvwsvLS2dREWDepObo0aO4e/cu/Pz8tP6mk1rWVAeJVVdS1aVUKjX+CzBrUtDYfSa1rKnIZDL07dsXI0aMQI8ePVBVVYVTp06hV69eGvudWWt9BgYGeO655+Dh4YFOnTrhzp07yMjIgKenJxQKhWQz1Rg2Njbo1q2bxl0MVFRtqmPUAJCSkoKysrInugJQLpdj8ODByMjI0LpI5bvvvkNtba3GnKRngugZcPnyZSGTycTkyZM12rdt2yYAiH379gkhhDhz5owAIE6dOtXg9i5cuCAAiNDQUJ39//nPf4SZmZlwc3MTSqVS3Z6cnCwAiLVr1zbrfXh5eYn6/re8ffu2ACB2797d4Dby8/MFAOHv76+zv7q6WtjY2AhbW1tRWlqqbr906ZKQy+Vi3rx5zVr7n1W/fv2EnZ2dzj4p5i02NlbI5XLx8ssvi/Ly8nrHMW/SEB4eLgAIPz8/UVNTo3OM1HJ2584dne2ZmZnC3Nxc9OzZU93GnElHXl6ezvZTp04JuVwuRo0aJYSQXt6OHDki4uPjtb4AiOeff17Ex8eLjIwMIQTzJhXV1dU699nOnTsFADFu3DgRHx8vrl69Krm83bt3T2d7RESEACACAwPVbcyb/hUUFOhsX7JkiQAg1q9fL4SQ3ueaUqkUdnZ2QqFQiJycHHV7WVmZ6NGjh7CyshJlZWVCCOZMSgoLC4WlpaXo1q2bxs8wNzdXmJubCycnJyGE9PJWV1BQkAAgkpOTdfYzb9KjOn5w+fJlrT6pZW3r1q1avyuFeJgHV1dXYWhoKO7evSuEYNakIiQkROP3pUpRUZGwsbER1tbW4sGDB5LLWn0WL14sAIjY2Fh1G7OmfzU1NeKNN94QMplMnSGpZ6qhY7dC/PffmnV/nyqVSjFkyBBhZWUlSkpK1O1z584Vtra2j51T9Tv65s2bOvtVf49s27ZNo33y5MnC0NBQ3Lhx47FzUOswfPJyHpH+DRgwAEFBQYiIiMDkyZMxfvx4/Pzzz9i2bRs8PT3h6+sL4OEZL+3atYOHh4fWNoqLi7F9+3YAQG5uLgDgzJkzeP/99wEAEyZMgKurKwCgY8eOWLt2LZYsWYLRo0fDx8cHv//+OzZt2oTevXsjJCSk0Ws/evQo/v3vfwOA+tZaqjmtrKwQHBysXruBgQG8vb11bkf1GtVDOS9fvqxuGzFihPoB3EZGRvj4448xbdo0eHh4ICAgACUlJdiyZQs6duyI8PDwRq/9z2rfvn3q22nl5+ejurpa/bO2s7ODn58fAOnlLTk5GfPmzUObNm0wbdo0JCQkaPRbWFiozzxi3vRvx44dCA0Nha2tLUaPHo24uDiN/s6dO2PMmDGSy9mHH36IlJQUeHl5wd7eHkIIXLlyBfv27cODBw+0bnfInElDYGAg8vLyMGrUKNjZ2aGyshI//PADDh48CEtLS2zatAmA9D7XJkyYUG9fly5dMGXKFPX3zJs0GBkZaewXFdVtjhwdHdX9UVFRksrb3r17ERMTg3HjxsHe3h5KpRJpaWlISkqCo6Ojxr5n3vTv/fffx7lz5zBy5EjY2tqirKwMx48fR2pqKoYOHYq33noLgPQ+1wwMDBAZGQlvb2+88MILWLRoEYyNjREbG4vffvsNMTEx6rP3mTPpsLa2xsaNG7FgwQK4u7tj7ty5qK6uRmRkJKqrq9XPZ5Za3lQqKysRFxeHrl27Yvz48TrHMG/SkpubixMnTsDNzQ0DBgzQ6pda1ubMmYOPP/4YkZGRyMnJwSuvvILy8nLs378fly9fxtKlS9VX/TJr0hASEoK9e/dixYoV+PHHHzF8+HAUFhZi165dyMvLw44dO2BoaCi5rAHA888/j5EjR8LJyQlVVVVISkpCamoq5s+fr3EbXmatdZWVlcHNzQ2TJk2Cg4MDiouLceDAAfzwww9Yt24dRo4cCUB6n19A44/dAsCKFSsQHx8PX19fLF68GN26dcOBAwdw4cIFREdHw9LSEsDDK5iPHj0KHx8fnXOeOXMGZ86cAQB8//33AICIiAj1s9LXrFmjHhsQEIDY2FgsXrwYt27dQp8+fXD8+HEkJiZizZo1cHBwaPR7pRam72og0dOiVCrFxo0bhbOzszA2NhZdu3YV7777rsZZKQ4ODvWeyXLz5k0BoN6vumfPqMTGxgpXV1dhYmIiOnbsKObMmaM+m6ux/P39652z7hVXI0eOFJ6envVup6G16zpL5OjRo2Lo0KHCzMxMWFlZiddff11kZWU1ae1/Vp6envX+rOvuI6nlLTQ0tME5mTdpaeizoW7WpJazlJQUMXnyZGFnZyfMzMyEsbGxcHBwELNnzxZXrlzRGMucScehQ4fE+PHjRffu3YWJiYkwNTUVLi4uIjg4WGRnZ6vHSS1v9QEgvLy8NNqYN2lT5ScoKEjdJrW8paenC29vb9GjRw9hamoqTExMRO/evcXy5ctFUVGRxljmTf+SkpLE2LFjRdeuXYWJiYlQKBRi4MCBYt26daKiokI9Tmo5U0lLSxMjR44UFhYWwszMTAwbNkzriiXmTHoSEhLE0KFDhUKhEBYWFmLMmDEiPT1d3S/VvH322WcCgFi1alW9Y5g3aVm3bp0AID755BOd/VLM2t27d0VQUJCwt7cXRkZGQqFQiCFDhohPPvlE1NbWqscxa9KRlZUlZs2aJbp16yYMDQ2FpaWl8PDwEAkJCeoxUszaokWLhJOTkzAzM1OvOS4uTmscs9a6qqqqxLRp04S9vb0wMTER1tbWYuzYseLEiRMa46SYqcYeu1XJyckRM2fOFO3btxcmJiZi0KBB4uDBgxpjTp8+LQCI1NRUnXM+7hjeo4qKikRQUJCwsbERxsbGok+fPmL79u0an6+kfyzG0Z/GpUuXBACRmJio76U0WUFBgTAwMBBbtmzR91KokZg3ag3MGbUm5o1aE/NGrYE5o9bEvFFrYdaotTBr9LT9L2eqqUJCQkT79u01bqFJzz45iP4kqqqqEBoairFjx+p7KU127949rFmzBlOnTtX3UqiRmDdqDcwZtSbmjVoT80atgTmj1sS8UWth1qi1MGv0tP0vZ6qp+vTpg23btsHAwEDfS6FWJBNCCH0vgoiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiOhZxCvjiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiFoIi3FERERERERERERERERELYTFOCIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIqIWwmIcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohbAYR0RERERE9BiffvopZDIZ0tLS9DqnPtahz3nrunXrFmQyGcLCwp76tmUyGWbPnv3Ut9sUYWFhkMlkuHXrll7XQURERERETx+LcURERERE9KeRlpYGmUym/jIwMIC1tTX69+8Pf39/nDhxAkKIpzpnWFgYkpKSnuo2W0JaWhrCwsJw//59fS+FiIiIiIjomcJiHBERERER/en4+Phg3759+PTTT7Fu3Tq8/PLLSEtLw6uvvoqxY8dqFaT8/PxQUVGBESNGNHmu8PDwZhXjnmTO5khLS0N4eLjOYlxrr0UXOzs7VFRUYM2aNXpbAxERERERUXMY6nsBRERERERErW3w4MGYOXOmRtvmzZuxbNkybN68GT4+Pvjyyy/VfQYGBjAwMGiVtZWWlsLS0rJV53wcKaxFJpPB1NRUr2sgIiIiIiJqDl4ZR0REREREhIcFp02bNuHFF1/EiRMnkJ6eru7T9cy0yspKhIWFwcXFBQqFAlZWVhgwYACWLl0K4L/POAOAPXv2aNweU0X1rLKTJ0/ixRdfhIWFBby9veudU0WpVCIsLAx2dnYwMTGBq6srDh48qDWuvmehPbrt2bNnIzw8HADg4OCgXqfq+Wz1raWgoABBQUHo0aMHjI2N0aNHDwQFBeHevXs65zt16hQ2btwIR0dHmJiYwNnZGXv27NHeGTroemZc3bYvvvgCQ4YMgampKWxsbLB06VIolcpGbVvl66+/hru7OxQKBbp06YJ33nkHf/zxh861+Pn5oXPnzjAxMYGjoyNWrVqF8vLyJxr7qJqaGixcuBByuRwbNmxo0nshIiIiIiLp4JVxREREREREdcybNw/p6ek4duwYXnzxxXrHBQUFYffu3Zg1axbeffdd1NTU4Pr16zh16hQAoGPHjti3bx/8/Pzg4eGB+fPn69zO999/j4SEBAQEBMDf379Ra1y+fDn++OMPBAYGQiaTITY2Fj4+PqisrNRZfHucBQsWoKSkBImJidiyZQs6dOgAAHB1da33NcXFxRg2bBiysrIwd+5cDB48GBkZGYiMjMSpU6fw3XffwdLSUuM1q1atQkVFBRYsWAATExNERkZi9uzZ6NWrF4YPH97kdascP34cO3fuxMKFCzF37lwcOXIEGzduhLW1NVatWtWobVy8eBGHDx9GQEAAZs2ahdTUVGzbtg1XrlxBSkoK5PKH57JmZ2fDzc0NxcXFCAwMhLOzM9LS0vDhhx/im2++wcmTJ2FoaNjksY+qqKiAj48Pjh8/jr1792pdyUlERERERP87WIwjIiIiIiKqQ1WAunbtWoPjEhMT8eqrr9Z7ZZe5uTlmzpwJPz8/9OzZs95iSmZmJlJSUjB69OhGr7GgoACXL19G27ZtAQALFy6Eq6srFi9ejGnTpsHMzKzR2wKAF154Aa6urkhMTMTEiRNhb2//2Nds2LAB169fx44dO7Bo0SJ1+3PPPYfg4GBs2LABa9eu1XhNVVUVLly4AGNjYwDAlClT0LNnT0RERDxRMS4zMxOZmZnqdS9cuBADBgzA9u3bG12M+/HHH9XvHwAWLVqEd955B9u2bcPnn3+O6dOnA3hYUMzPz8exY8cwfvx49dilS5di48aN2LNnD+bNm9fksXUVFhbC29sbly9fxhdffIGxY8c2+2dDRERERET6x9tUEhERERER1dGmTRsAQElJSYPj2rZti8zMTFy5cuWJ5hs4cGCTCnEAEBgYqC7EqdaycOFCFBUV6bytZUtITExEx44dta74W7BgATp06IDExESt1yxatEhdiAOAbt26wdnZGdevX3+itTxaQJTJZBg5ciTu3LmDsrKyRm3DxcVFXYhTWbFiBQCo30ttbS2Sk5MxaNAgdXFNZeXKlZDL5c0aW1d2djaGDx+OX3/9FadPn2YhjoiIiIjoGcBiHBERERERUR2qIpyqKFefrVu3oqioCAMGDICjoyPefPNNHDlyBLW1tU2az9nZuclr7NOnj1Zb3759AQA3btxo8vaa4+bNm3BxcdG6zaKhoSFcXFx0rqNnz55abe3bt9d6xlxT1bddAI3etq6fqY2NDaysrNTvJT8/H2VlZejXr5/W2Hbt2sHGxqZZY+vy9vZGdnY20tPTMXjw4EatnYiIiIiIpI3FOCIiIiIiojouX74M4OGVUg3561//ilu3bmHfvn0YNWoUTp48iYkTJ+Kll15CdXV1o+dTKBRNXqNMJtNqE0I0+vVKpbLJcz4NBgYGOtubsvambLcp29b1M3309U1ZZ3Pfk6+vLyoqKrB27domF3aJiIiIiEiaWIwjIiIiIiKqIyYmBgDg5eX12LHt2rXDzJkzsWvXLty4cQPLli3D2bNnceTIkRZd408//aTV9vPPPwPQvEqsXbt2KCws1Bqr64qs+opR9enZsyeuXr2qVdhTKpW4du2azqvVpEzXzzQvLw/FxcXq99KpUydYWloiMzNTa2xRURHy8vKaNbauFStW4KOPPsLevXvh5+eHmpqaJ31rRERERESkZyzGERERERERAaipqcGSJUuQnp6O8ePHY/jw4Q2OvX//vkabTCbDoEGDAECjAGZhYaGzIPYkIiMjUVxcrP6+uLgYUVFRsLKygqenp7rd2dkZ3377LcrLy9VtRUVFiI2N1dqmhYWF1tobMnHiROTn5yM6OlqjfdeuXcjPz8ekSZOa9J707erVq0hKStJoW79+PQConyUnl8vh7e2NjIwMnDhxQmPs3//+d9TW1qrfd1PGPmrJkiXYunUr4uLi4Ovrq7crGYmIiIiI6OkwfPwQIiIiIiKiZ8vFixexf/9+AEBpaam6EJOdnY2xY8ciLi6uwdeXlpbCxsYGEyZMwKBBg9CpUyfcvHkTkZGRsLa2hre3t3qsu7s7vv76a6xfvx62traQyWSYPn36E62/Q4cOGDp0KObOnQshBGJjY3H79m1ER0dr3PYyODgYM2fOxKhRo+Dn54f79+9j165dsLOzw507dzS26e7uDgBYvnw5ZsyYAVNTU/Tv3x/9+/fXuYZly5YhPj4eQUFBuHjxIgYNGoSMjAzExMTAxcUFy5Yte6L32NoGDBiAmTNnIiAgAE5OTkhNTcXhw4fh6emJadOmqcd98MEHSElJwcSJE7Fo0SL06tULZ86cwaFDhzBixAj4+/s3a+yj3nnnHRgZGSE4OBhKpRIHDx6EkZFRi/4MiIiIiIioZbAYR0REREREfzoHDhzAgQMHIJfLYWFhge7du8PT0xM+Pj4YN27cY1+vUCgQEhKCkydP4uuvv0ZZWZm6OLdy5Up07dpVPXbnzp0ICgrCunXrUFpaCgBPXIxbv349zp49i4iICNy9exdOTk747LPP4OvrqzFuxowZyM3NRUREBBYvXoyePXvivffeg1wux/nz5zXGDh8+HOvXr0dUVBQCAgKgVCoRGhpabzGubdu2+OabbxAaGork5GTExsaic+fOWLhwIcLDw2FpaflE77G1DR48GJs3b8bq1asRFRWFNm3aIDg4GB988AHk8v/eVMbOzg7nz5/He++9h/379+P+/fvo3r07Vq5ciTVr1sDQ0LBZY3VZtGgRjIyMsGDBAkyZMgXx8fEwNjZusZ8BERERERG1DJl40idlExEREREREREREREREZFOfGYcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohbAYR0RERERERERERERERNRCWIwjIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiaiEsxhERERERERERERERERG1EBbjiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiFoIi3FERERERERERERERERELYTFOCIiIiIiIiIiIiIiIqIWwmIcERERERERERERERERUQthMY6IiIiIiIiIiIiIiIiohfw/f1tTwHqKwGsAAAAASUVORK5CYII=", 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", "text/plain": [ "
" ] @@ -505,9 +82,8 @@ "source": [ "import matplotlib.pyplot as plt\n", "\n", - "genderRaw = '../visualization/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", "total_char_count = 0\n", - "with open(genderRaw) as f: \n", + "with open(text) as f: \n", " for line in f:\n", " total_char_count += len(line)\n", "\n", @@ -562,6 +138,106 @@ "source": [ "## Which sourceCategory of books are most quoted/ which genres are least quoted?" ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## What are the median, upper, and lower quartiles of quotation length?\n" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "#### Functions for extracting wordcounts, numbers of quotations for diachronic and synchronic analysis" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 41, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def countWords(locRange): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts words in text, given character ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " chunk = txt[locRange[0]:locRange[1]]\n", + " return len(chunk.split())\n", + "\n", + "def totalWords(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Counts total words in a list of location ranges. \"\"\"\n", + " return sum([countWords(locRange) for locRange in locRangeSet]) \n", + " \n", + "def countsPerSet(locRangeSet): \n", + " \"\"\" Returns an augmented location range set that includes word counts. \"\"\"\n", + " return [(locRange, countWords(locRange))\n", + " for locRange in locRangeSet]\n", + " \n", + "def extractWordcounts(locsAndWordcounts): \n", + " \"\"\" \n", + " Takes pairs of location ranges and wordcounts, \n", + " and returns just the wordcounts. \n", + " \"\"\"\n", + " return [item[1] for item in locsAndWordcounts \n", + " if len(locsAndWordcounts) > 0]\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 42, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Quoted Words'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(totalWords)\n", + "df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(countsPerSet)\n" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 43, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "df['Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'].apply(extractWordcounts)\n", + "wordcounts = []\n", + "for countSet in df['Wordcounts'].values: \n", + " for count in countSet: \n", + " wordcounts.append(count)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 47, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/plain": [ + "" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 47, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + }, + { + "data": { + "image/png": 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10This article investigates the practices of iti...[Alexander Rocklin]2015-09-01research-articlearticle[Obeah and the Politics of Religion's Making a...http://www.jstor.org/stable/24488181[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00027189'}, {'name...Journal of the American Academy of Religion3...[Religion - Theology]Obeah and the Politics of Religion's Making an...http://www.jstor.org/stable/2448818183113370[][]NaN2010
12NaN[CHUNG-KANG KIM]2015-09-01research-articlearticle[Nation, Subculture, and Queer Representation:...http://www.jstor.org/stable/24616518[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10434070'}, {'name...Journal of the History of Sexuality3...[Arts - Performing arts, Philosophy - Applied ...Nation, Subculture, and Queer Representation: ...http://www.jstor.org/stable/2461651824107360[][]NaN2010
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18A survey of the literature published in Englis...[Frank Episale]2012-04-01research-articlearticle[LITERATURE REVIEW Gender, Tradition, and Cult...http://www.jstor.org/stable/23359546[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '07425457'}, {'name...Asian Theatre Journal1...[Arts - Art history, Arts - Performing arts]Gender, Tradition, and Culture in Translation:...http://www.jstor.org/stable/233595462992660[][]NaN2010
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get spans\n", - " return [ x[0] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get tokens" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 58, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "mm = Text('nocite_pages.txt')" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 59, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "510344\n" - ] - }, - { - "name": "stderr", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "/var/folders/_g/ykvg1w8n5g7f967fyjqxrpgc0000gn/T/ipykernel_32735/807644614.py:11: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", - "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", - " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" - ] - } - ], - "source": [ - "# Get the size of the text. \n", - "textALength = mm.length\n", - "\n", - "# I don't know why, but without the offset the novel ends too soon,\n", - "# with \"unvisited tomb.\" This fixes it. \n", - "offset = 2\n", - "textALength += offset\n", - "print(textALength)\n", - "\n", - "# Make an empty array the size of the text. \n", - "tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 60, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Read the locations from the CSV file, and literally evaluate them into lists. \n", - "locations = df['Locations in A']\n", - "#locations = locations.apply(literal_eval)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 61, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Tally up every time a letter in the novel is quoted. \n", - "for article in locations: \n", - " for locRange in article: \n", - " for i in range(locRange[0], min(locRange[1]+1, len(tally))):\n", - " tally[i] += 1" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 62, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Make a color list in hex for all the values in the tally. \n", - "# Let's hope there aren't too many. \n", - "colors = list(np.arange(5,75,70/(tally.max()+1)))\n", - "colorList = colors" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 63, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "# Create a CSS Stylesheet for each color value in the map. \n", - "colorCSS = \"\"\n", - "for i, color in zip(range(0, tally.max()+1), colorList): \n", - " colorCSS += \".c-%s { font-size: %spx; }\\n\" % (i, color)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 64, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "n = 50\n", - "\n", - "checkpoints = np.linspace(0, textALength, n).round()\n", - "checkpoints = [int(point) for point in checkpoints]" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 65, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "def span(val): \n", - " return '' % val\n", - "\n", - "previousVal = None\n", - "for i, valChar in enumerate(zip(tally, mm.text)):\n", - " val, char = valChar[0], valChar[1]\n", - " if previousVal == None: \n", - " # First character. \n", - " out = '' % val\n", - " elif val != previousVal: \n", - " out += '' % val\n", - " if i in checkpoints: \n", - " out += '' % checkpoints.index(i)\n", - " out += char\n", - " previousVal = val" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": true - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "html = \"\"\"\n", - "\n", - "\n", - " \n", - " \n", - " \"\"\" % (colorCSS)\n", - "html += \"\"\"\n", - " \n", - "
%s
\n", - " \"\"\" % (out)" - ] - }, - { - "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, - "metadata": { - "collapsed": false - }, - "outputs": [], - "source": [ - "with open('nocite_2010.html', 'w') as f: \n", - " f.write(html)\n", - " f.close()" - ] - } - ], - "metadata": { - "kernelspec": { - "display_name": "Python 3.8.8 ('base')", - "language": "python", - "name": "python3" - }, - "language_info": { - "codemirror_mode": { - "name": "ipython", - "version": 3 - }, - "file_extension": ".py", - "mimetype": "text/x-python", - "name": "python", - "nbconvert_exporter": "python", - "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", - "version": "3.10.2" - }, - "vscode": { - "interpreter": { - "hash": "40d3a090f54c6569ab1632332b64b2c03c39dcf918b08424e98f38b5ae0af88f" - } - } - }, - "nbformat": 4, - "nbformat_minor": 0 -} diff --git a/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb b/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb index e69de29..34a7bbd 100644 --- a/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb +++ b/visualization/updated_annotated_by_size.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,286 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "Annotated by Size Final Version" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 52, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "3.8.8 (default, Apr 13 2021, 12:59:45) \n", + "[Clang 10.0.0 ]\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "import sys\n", + "print(sys.version)\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "import nltk\n", + "%matplotlib inline\n", + "import math\n", + "import json\n", + "from ast import literal_eval\n", + "import numpy as np\n", + "import re\n", + "from matplotlib import pyplot as plt\n", + "from colour import Color\n", + "from IPython.core.display import HTML\n", + "from matplotlib import cm\n", + "from matplotlib.colors import rgb2hex\n", + "plt.rcParams[\"figure.figsize\"] = [16, 6]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 53, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Set up all your file paths here!\n", + "matches = '/Users/annie/GIT/quotation-detection/text_matcher/fanondata.jsonl'\n", + "originalText = '/Users/annie/Downloads/frantz-fanon-richard-philcox-jean-paul-sartre-homi-k.-bhabha-the-wretched-of-the-earth-grove-press-2011.txt'\n", + "\n", + "# Replace with the format: AuthorLastName_TitleOfText (ex: Butler_GenderTrouble)\n", + "textname = 'Fanon_WretchedOfTheEarth'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 54, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "with open(matches) as f: \n", + " rawMatches = f.readlines()\n", + "\n", + "data = [json.loads(line) for line in rawMatches]\n", + "df = pd.DataFrame(data)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 55, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Adapted from text-matcher\n", + "class Text: \n", + " def __init__(self, filename): \n", + " self.filename = filename\n", + " tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\\w+\\'?\\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. \n", + " spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text))\n", + " # Take note of how many spans there are in the text\n", + " self.length = spans[-1][-1] \n", + " \n", + " @property\n", + " def text(self):\n", + " \"\"\" Reads the file in memory. \"\"\"\n", + " f = open(self.filename, encoding='utf-8', errors='ignore')\n", + " return f.read() \n", + "\n", + " @property\n", + " def tokens(self, removeStopwords=True): \n", + " \"\"\" Tokenizes the text, breaking it up into words, removing punctuation. \"\"\"\n", + " tokenizer = nltk.RegexpTokenizer('[a-zA-Z]\\w+\\'?\\w*') # A custom regex tokenizer. \n", + " spans = list(tokenizer.span_tokenize(self.text))\n", + " # Take note of how many spans there are in the text\n", + " self.length = spans[-1][-1] \n", + " tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(self.text)\n", + " tokens = [ token.lower() for token in tokens ] # make them lowercase\n", + " if not removeStopwords: \n", + " self.spans = spans\n", + " return tokens\n", + " tokenSpans = list(zip(tokens, spans)) # zip it up\n", + " stopwords = nltk.corpus.stopwords.words('english') # get stopwords\n", + " tokenSpans = [ token for token in tokenSpans if token[0] not in stopwords ] # remove stopwords from zip\n", + " self.spans = [ x[1] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get spans\n", + " return [ x[0] for x in tokenSpans ] # unzip; get tokens" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 56, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "text = Text(originalText)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 57, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stderr", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + ":5: DeprecationWarning: `np.int` is a deprecated alias for the builtin `int`. To silence this warning, use `int` by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing `np.int`, you may wish to use e.g. `np.int64` or `np.int32` to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.\n", + "Deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance: https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations\n", + " tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# Get the size of the text. \n", + "textALength = text.length\n", + "\n", + "# Make an empty array the size of the text. \n", + "tally = np.zeros(textALength, dtype=np.int)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 58, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Read the locations from the CSV file, and literally evaluate them into lists. \n", + "locations = df['Locations in A']" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 59, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Tally up every time a letter in the novel is quoted. \n", + "for article in locations: \n", + " for locRange in article: \n", + " for i in range(locRange[0], min(locRange[1]+1, len(tally))):\n", + " tally[i] += 1" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 60, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Make a color list in hex for all the values in the tally. \n", + "# Let's hope there aren't too many. \n", + "colors = list(np.arange(5,75,70/(tally.max()+1)))\n", + "colorList = colors" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 61, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Create a CSS Stylesheet for each color value in the map. \n", + "colorCSS = \"\"\n", + "for i, color in zip(range(0, tally.max()+1), colorList): \n", + " colorCSS += \".c-%s { font-size: %spx; }\\n\" % (i, color)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 62, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "n = 50\n", + "\n", + "checkpoints = np.linspace(0, textALength, n).round()\n", + "checkpoints = [int(point) for point in checkpoints]" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 63, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "def span(val): \n", + " return '' % val\n", + "\n", + "previousVal = None\n", + "for i, valChar in enumerate(zip(tally, text.text)):\n", + " val, char = valChar[0], valChar[1]\n", + " if previousVal == None: \n", + " # First character. \n", + " out = '' % val\n", + " elif val != previousVal: \n", + " out += '' % val\n", + " if i in checkpoints: \n", + " out += '' % checkpoints.index(i)\n", + " out += char\n", + " previousVal = val" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 64, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "html = \"\"\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + " \n", + " \n", + " \"\"\" % (colorCSS)\n", + "html += \"\"\"\n", + " \n", + "
%s
\n", + " \"\"\" % (out)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 65, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "with open(f'{textname}_Annotated_by_Size.html', 'w') as f: \n", + " f.write(html)\n", + " f.close()" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "base", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.8.8" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From 4b6964c1bb50b05677e81d8532c6e08bab316ce7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Sun, 23 Apr 2023 23:55:48 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 55/63] add initial page num detection w/ user input --- .DS_Store | Bin 8196 -> 8196 bytes preprocessing/.DS_Store | Bin 0 -> 6148 bytes preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 359 ++++++++------------------------ 3 files changed, 90 insertions(+), 269 deletions(-) create mode 100644 preprocessing/.DS_Store diff --git a/.DS_Store b/.DS_Store index 2246d0bd369b3a431b7d39f02cf965426dd12745..768750a989426ad6eca481dd304d78e3892aebbb 100644 GIT binary patch delta 70 zcmZp1XmQxUB0718U>Uoap^k#Fq3PrXQR&G6LMoG&h)8d~C91=;nO)*93mz4kOaKPu B6_5Y` delta 38 lcmZp1XmQxUB09NVVE5!DBGQ|0i|R0KW|R2Gf+V8F1OObT4od(4 diff --git a/preprocessing/.DS_Store b/preprocessing/.DS_Store new file mode 100644 index 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000..1ac9f9cbac32d9f62a2aef2dfc02b793a47795bb GIT binary patch literal 6148 zcmeHKJx{|h5PgOY6)^BI00WZ$07&c%0l|P6%U)=j0HP4oq^RAp^H-4geN6D~>>(de zF(E{KmHiU??%DT}*fjuiG8rBM>j1hef}IssUzqeuY1xu*kvO9q*O*|00ta|%d54Ce zKv3YXDInkO8d7BZa${7#-yzcTQ5FwI*?>M=AeL^32Onyh##Sq?uRI06{)w&v1*RzK zEattzvWXicc*KzP7=6Z#m1V${B+-?mH4_{+ICkc8xLM7alk&Y*GTZ$D-`p(m#u-)_ z*Oakfes@0CspdATtD|vMjknc5rXpkh5(=?+44mFQsi|uv)9n6i+etq zTh2gM=$5YPU!C=a=iTRM8Kh3+i8A_*Ju~tQ8Y8|mMm)kL$II}*Ip?tGG1lV3&%%<^ zsz*Z1$voEguwX6OT1KYY6LUm)OC;-5Gq>vTOpg)0r9ESR{=>{T&4oAP6zHxlyb?ix zpg>Tdser5xmPIh~SUS|DgOwfuh#fYo@mkIj5@S6^9!rPpp&1uSbfLx{F^mgmyY+sN z$I_t-hw+CG<3~3Bgkp4b@>_L>i5!MHC=e8=E3oWt*Jb}d`~Li24+?idfuO*@QowXh zd#5K%$?vVL 0:\n", + " if len(all_matches) > 1: # more than one potential page number \n", + " print(f'\\n{len(all_matches)} potential page numbers were found for this page.')\n", + " print(all_matches)\n", + " print(f'Check PDF page {i+1} for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.')\n", + " correct_page_number = input()\n", + " print(correct_page_number)\n", + " if len(correct_page_number.strip()) != 0:\n", + " printed_page_number = correct_page_number.strip()\n", + " else:\n", + " printed_page_number = None\n", + " else:\n", + " printed_page_number = all_matches[0]\n", + "\n", + " if printed_page_number is not None: \n", + " full_pdf_text += f'\\n\\n~printed_page_number:{printed_page_number}~'\n", + " \n", + " full_pdf_text += f'\\n~indexed_page_number:{i+1}~\\n\\n'\n", + "\n", + "# enter the name of your output file here \n", + "with open(\"gender_trouble_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", + " text_file.write(full_pdf_text)\n" ] } ], From e2889d4fab0755055910b4fb43a175d625564610 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Tue, 25 Apr 2023 17:55:23 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 56/63] make edits to regexes --- .DS_Store | Bin 8196 -> 8196 bytes .gitignore | 2 + preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 288 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++------ 3 files changed, 243 insertions(+), 47 deletions(-) diff --git a/.DS_Store b/.DS_Store index 768750a989426ad6eca481dd304d78e3892aebbb..2246d0bd369b3a431b7d39f02cf965426dd12745 100644 GIT binary patch delta 38 lcmZp1XmQxUB09NVVE5!DBGQ|0i|R0KW|R2Gf+V8F1OObT4od(4 delta 70 zcmZp1XmQxUB0718U>Uoap^k#Fq3PrXQR&G6LMoG&h)8d~C91=;nO)*93mz4kOaKPu B6_5Y` diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index cf7fb1f..eed0fcc 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -3,5 +3,7 @@ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs preprocessing/gender_trouble.pdf +preprocessing/foucault.pdf +preprocessing/kuhn.pdf algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index 7f91010..d1b9d73 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -12,53 +12,249 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 8, + "execution_count": 13, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['vi', '233']\n", - "Check PDF page 7 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "vi\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['212', 'I']\n", - "Check PDF page 213 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "212\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['234', '155']\n", - "Check PDF page 233 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "234\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['235', '13']\n", - "Check PDF page 234 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "235\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['236', '100']\n", - "Check PDF page 235 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "236\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['237', '202']\n", - "Check PDF page 236 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['238', '68']\n", - "Check PDF page 237 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['239', '27']\n", - "Check PDF page 238 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "\n" + "[]\n", + "[]\n", + "[]\n", + "[]\n", + "['vi']\n", + "['I']\n", + "[]\n", + "['4']\n", + "['5']\n", + "['6']\n", + "['7']\n", + "['8']\n", + "['9']\n", + "['10']\n", + "['11']\n", + "['12']\n", + "['13']\n", + "['14']\n", + "['15']\n", + "['16']\n", + "['17']\n", + "['18']\n", + "['19']\n", + "['II']\n", + "[]\n", + "['24']\n", + "['25']\n", + "['26']\n", + "['27']\n", + "['28']\n", + "['29']\n", + "['30']\n", + "['31']\n", + "['32']\n", + "['33']\n", + "[]\n", + "['35']\n", + "['36']\n", + "['37']\n", + "['38']\n", + "['39']\n", + "['40']\n", + "['41']\n", + "['42']\n", + "['43']\n", + "[]\n", + "['45']\n", + "['46']\n", + "['47']\n", + "['48']\n", + "['49']\n", + "['50']\n", + "['51']\n", + "['52']\n", + "['53']\n", + "['54']\n", + "[]\n", + "['56']\n", + "['57']\n", + "['58']\n", + "['59']\n", + "['60']\n", + "['61']\n", + "[]\n", + "['63']\n", + "['64']\n", + "['65']\n", + "['66']\n", + "['67']\n", + "['68']\n", + "['69']\n", + "['70']\n", + "[]\n", + "['72']\n", + "['73']\n", + "['74']\n", + "['75']\n", + "['76']\n", + "['77']\n", + "['78']\n", + "[]\n", + "['80']\n", + "['81']\n", + "['82']\n", + "['83']\n", + "['84']\n", + "['85']\n", + "['III']\n", + "[]\n", + "['90']\n", + "['91']\n", + "['92']\n", + "['93']\n", + "['94']\n", + "['95']\n", + "['96']\n", + "['97']\n", + "['98']\n", + "[]\n", + "['100']\n", + "['101']\n", + "['102']\n", + "['103']\n", + "['104']\n", + "['105']\n", + "['106']\n", + "['107']\n", + "['108']\n", + "['109']\n", + "['110']\n", + "['111']\n", + "['112']\n", + "['113']\n", + "['114']\n", + "['115']\n", + "['116']\n", + "['117']\n", + "['118']\n", + "[]\n", + "['120']\n", + "['121']\n", + "['122']\n", + "['123']\n", + "['124']\n", + "['125']\n", + "['126']\n", + "['127']\n", + "['128']\n", + "['129']\n", + "['130']\n", + "['131']\n", + "['132']\n", + "[]\n", + "['134']\n", + "['135']\n", + "['136']\n", + "['137']\n", + "['138']\n", + "['139']\n", + "['140']\n", + "['141']\n", + "[]\n", + "['143']\n", + "['144']\n", + "['145']\n", + "['146']\n", + "['147']\n", + "['148']\n", + "['IV']\n", + "[]\n", + "['152']\n", + "['153']\n", + "['154']\n", + "['155']\n", + "['156']\n", + "[]\n", + "['158']\n", + "['159']\n", + "['160']\n", + "['161']\n", + "['162']\n", + "['163']\n", + "['164']\n", + "['165']\n", + "[]\n", + "['167']\n", + "['168']\n", + "['169']\n", + "['170']\n", + "['171']\n", + "['172']\n", + "['173']\n", + "[]\n", + "['175']\n", + "['176']\n", + "['177']\n", + "['178']\n", + "['179']\n", + "['180']\n", + "['181']\n", + "['182']\n", + "[]\n", + "['184']\n", + "['185']\n", + "['186']\n", + "['187']\n", + "['188']\n", + "['189']\n", + "['190']\n", + "['191']\n", + "['192']\n", + "['193']\n", + "['194']\n", + "['195']\n", + "[]\n", + "['197']\n", + "['198']\n", + "['199']\n", + "['200']\n", + "['201']\n", + "['202']\n", + "['203']\n", + "['204']\n", + "['205']\n", + "['206']\n", + "['207']\n", + "['208']\n", + "['209']\n", + "['210']\n", + "['211']\n", + "['212']\n", + "['213']\n", + "['214']\n", + "['215']\n", + "['V']\n", + "[]\n", + "['220']\n", + "['221']\n", + "['222']\n", + "['223']\n", + "['224']\n", + "['225']\n", + "['226']\n", + "['227']\n", + "['228']\n", + "['229']\n", + "['230']\n", + "['231']\n", + "['232']\n", + "[]\n", + "['234']\n", + "['235']\n", + "['236']\n", + "['237']\n", + "['238']\n", + "['239']\n" ] } ], @@ -70,7 +266,6 @@ "\n", "# input the path to the PDF you want to convert here\n", "with pdfplumber.open(\"foucault.pdf\") as pdf:\n", - "\n", " for i in range(len(pdf.pages)):\n", " full_page = pdf.pages[i].extract_text()\n", "\n", @@ -79,9 +274,9 @@ " full_pdf_text += full_page\n", "\n", " if len(full_page) != 0:\n", - " top_left_page_matches = re.findall(\"^([xXvViI]+|\\d+)\\s\", first_line)\n", - " top_right_page_matches = re.findall(\"\\s([xXvViI]+|\\d+)\\r$\", first_line)\n", - " bottom_page_matches = re.findall(\"([xXvViI]+|\\d+)$\", last_line)\n", + " top_left_page_matches = re.findall(\"^([xXvViIlL]+|\\d{1,3})\\s\", first_line)\n", + " top_right_page_matches = re.findall(\"\\s([xXvViIlL]+|\\d{1,3})$\", first_line)\n", + " bottom_page_matches = re.findall(\"^([xXvViIlL]+|\\d{1,3})$\", last_line)\n", " \n", " all_matches = []\n", " if top_left_page_matches:\n", @@ -90,7 +285,6 @@ " all_matches.append(top_right_page_matches[-1].strip())\n", " if bottom_page_matches:\n", " all_matches.append(bottom_page_matches[-1].strip())\n", - "\n", " if len(all_matches) > 0:\n", " if len(all_matches) > 1: # more than one potential page number \n", " print(f'\\n{len(all_matches)} potential page numbers were found for this page.')\n", @@ -111,7 +305,7 @@ " full_pdf_text += f'\\n~indexed_page_number:{i+1}~\\n\\n'\n", "\n", "# enter the name of your output file here \n", - "with open(\"gender_trouble_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", + "with open(\"kuhn_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", " text_file.write(full_pdf_text)\n" ] } From cd3ff06959ce376653640b01bd2d2e1c76748b36 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Tue, 2 May 2023 19:17:27 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 57/63] add cell for installing packages when running notebook in browser --- .gitignore | 2 + preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 490 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++----- 2 files changed, 427 insertions(+), 65 deletions(-) diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index eed0fcc..30c5c49 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -5,5 +5,7 @@ preprocessing/incorrect_articles_pdfs preprocessing/gender_trouble.pdf preprocessing/foucault.pdf preprocessing/kuhn.pdf +preprocessing/hooks.pdf +preprocessing/benjamin.pdf algorithm-testing/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl algorithm-testing/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index d1b9d73..e6ab896 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -7,254 +7,614 @@ "source": [ "# Converting the PDF to Text\n", "\n", - "The PDFs are converted to text using this package: https://github.com/jsvine/pdfplumber#extracting-text. Follow the installation instructions before running this notebook. \n" + "The PDFs are converted to text using this package: https://github.com/jsvine/pdfplumber#extracting-text. Follow the installation instructions before running this notebook. If you're running jupyter notebook in your browser, just run the cell below to install packages.\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 13, + "execution_count": 5, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "name": "stdout", "output_type": "stream", "text": [ + "\u001b[31mERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement re (from versions: none)\u001b[0m\u001b[31m\n", + "\u001b[0m\u001b[31mERROR: No matching distribution found for re\u001b[0m\u001b[31m\n", + "\u001b[0m--- Logging error ---\n", + "Traceback (most recent call last):\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 177, in emit\n", + " self.console.print(renderable, overflow=\"ignore\", crop=False, style=style)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1673, in print\n", + " extend(render(renderable, render_options))\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1305, in render\n", + " for render_output in iter_render:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 134, in __rich_console__\n", + " for line in lines:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/segment.py\", line 249, in split_lines\n", + " for segment in segments:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1283, in render\n", + " renderable = rich_cast(renderable)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/protocol.py\", line 36, in rich_cast\n", + " renderable = cast_method()\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 130, in __rich__\n", + " pip_cmd = get_best_invocation_for_this_pip()\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/entrypoints.py\", line 58, in get_best_invocation_for_this_pip\n", + " if found_executable and os.path.samefile(\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/genericpath.py\", line 101, in samefile\n", + " s2 = os.stat(f2)\n", + "FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/bin/pip'\n", + "Call stack:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 196, in _run_module_as_main\n", + " return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 86, in _run_code\n", + " exec(code, run_globals)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/__main__.py\", line 31, in \n", + " sys.exit(_main())\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/main.py\", line 70, in main\n", + " return command.main(cmd_args)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 101, in main\n", + " return self._main(args)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 223, in _main\n", + " self.handle_pip_version_check(options)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/req_command.py\", line 190, in handle_pip_version_check\n", + " pip_self_version_check(session, options)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 236, in pip_self_version_check\n", + " logger.warning(\"[present-rich] %s\", upgrade_prompt)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1489, in warning\n", + " self._log(WARNING, msg, args, **kwargs)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1624, in _log\n", + " self.handle(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1634, in handle\n", + " self.callHandlers(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1696, in callHandlers\n", + " hdlr.handle(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 968, in handle\n", + " self.emit(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 179, in emit\n", + " self.handleError(record)\n", + "Message: '[present-rich] %s'\n", + "Arguments: (UpgradePrompt(old='22.2.2', new='23.1.2'),)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: pdfplumber in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (0.9.0)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: pdfminer.six==20221105 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (20221105)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: Wand>=0.6.10 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (0.6.11)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: Pillow>=9.1 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (9.4.0)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: cryptography>=36.0.0 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (40.0.2)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: charset-normalizer>=2.0.0 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (3.1.0)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: cffi>=1.12 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from cryptography>=36.0.0->pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (1.15.1)\n", + "Requirement already satisfied: pycparser in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from cffi>=1.12->cryptography>=36.0.0->pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (2.21)\n", + "--- Logging error ---\n", + "Traceback (most recent call last):\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 177, in emit\n", + " self.console.print(renderable, overflow=\"ignore\", crop=False, style=style)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1673, in print\n", + " extend(render(renderable, render_options))\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1305, in render\n", + " for render_output in iter_render:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 134, in __rich_console__\n", + " for line in lines:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/segment.py\", line 249, in split_lines\n", + " for segment in segments:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1283, in render\n", + " renderable = rich_cast(renderable)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/protocol.py\", line 36, in rich_cast\n", + " renderable = cast_method()\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 130, in __rich__\n", + " pip_cmd = get_best_invocation_for_this_pip()\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/entrypoints.py\", line 58, in get_best_invocation_for_this_pip\n", + " if found_executable and os.path.samefile(\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/genericpath.py\", line 101, in samefile\n", + " s2 = os.stat(f2)\n", + "FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/bin/pip'\n", + "Call stack:\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 196, in _run_module_as_main\n", + " return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 86, in _run_code\n", + " exec(code, run_globals)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/__main__.py\", line 31, in \n", + " sys.exit(_main())\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/main.py\", line 70, in main\n", + " return command.main(cmd_args)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 101, in main\n", + " return self._main(args)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 223, in _main\n", + " self.handle_pip_version_check(options)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/req_command.py\", line 190, in handle_pip_version_check\n", + " pip_self_version_check(session, options)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 236, in pip_self_version_check\n", + " logger.warning(\"[present-rich] %s\", upgrade_prompt)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1489, in warning\n", + " self._log(WARNING, msg, args, **kwargs)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1624, in _log\n", + " self.handle(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1634, in handle\n", + " self.callHandlers(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1696, in callHandlers\n", + " hdlr.handle(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 968, in handle\n", + " self.emit(record)\n", + " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 179, in emit\n", + " self.handleError(record)\n", + "Message: '[present-rich] %s'\n", + "Arguments: (UpgradePrompt(old='22.2.2', new='23.1.2'),)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "# run this cell to install packages if you're running jupyter notebook in browser \n", + "import sys\n", + "!{sys.executable} -m pip install re\n", + "!{sys.executable} -m pip install pdfplumber" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 11, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "T ran sg ress\n", + "[]\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "New York London\n", + "[]\n", + "CIP\n", "[]\n", + "—Paulo Freire\n", "[]\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", "[]\n", + "6 Essentialism and Experience 77\n", "[]\n", - "['vi']\n", - "['I']\n", + "Index 209\n", + "['7', '93']\n", + "\n", + "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", + "['7', '93']\n", + "Check PDF page 9 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", + "\n", + "were entirely appropriate because, she said, “You never wanted\n", "[]\n", + "were on a mission.\n", + "['2']\n", + "the practice of freedom. Realizing this, I lost my love of school.\n", + "['3']\n", + "confinement rather than a place of promise and possibility. I\n", "['4']\n", + "teaching and the learning experience could be different.\n", "['5']\n", + "about pedagogy in relation to the practice of freedom.\n", "['6']\n", + "stimulate serious intellectual and/or academic engagement.\n", "['7']\n", + "coupled with the tensions of “differences,” was impossible to\n", "['8']\n", + "ment forward does not seem to coincide with any significant\n", "['9']\n", + "classroom as different, that strategies must constantly be\n", "['10']\n", - "['11']\n", + "ognized more for insurgent intellectual practice. Indeed, the\n", + "[]\n", + "makes education the practice of freedom.\n", "['12']\n", + "13\n", "['13']\n", + "dents and professors regarded one another as “whole” human\n", "['14']\n", + "rare that anyone talks about teachers in university settings as\n", "['15']\n", + "The self was presumably emptied out the moment the thresh­\n", "['16']\n", + "teaching. It was particularly disappointing to encounter white\n", "['17']\n", + "hostile responses to the vision of liberatory education that con-\n", "['18']\n", + "gays and lesbians and the poor and anyone else who\n", "['19']\n", - "['II']\n", - "[]\n", + "her essay, “Interrupting the Calls for Student Voice in Libera-\n", + "['20']\n", + "practices a site of resistance. In her essay, “On Race and Voice:\n", + "['21']\n", + "capacity to live fully and deeply.\n", + "['22']\n", + "23\n", + "['23']\n", + "we were certain of our radicalness. Days before the reunion, I\n", "['24']\n", + "ference meant that we had to struggle to claim the integrity of\n", "['25']\n", + "separates white and black, the haves and the have-nots, men\n", "['26']\n", + "describes. They are most committed to maintaining systems of\n", "['27']\n", + "domination necessarily promotes addiction to lying and denial.\n", "['28']\n", + "mologies, and the concomitant demand that there be a trans-\n", "['29']\n", + "happening was not the comforting “melting pot” idea of cul-\n", "['30']\n", + "change. In one of my Toni Morrison seminars, as we went\n", "['31']\n", + "one set of absolutes with another, simply changing content,\n", "['32']\n", + "him of the necessity of dissent, challenge and change: “Be not\n", "['33']\n", - "[]\n", + "sion for justice, and our love of freedom.\n", + "['34']\n", + "35\n", "['35']\n", + "er, want it to be a space for constructive confrontation and crit­\n", "['36']\n", + "hope that his very traditional training and his progressive prac-\n", "['37']\n", + "black writers are “as good” as the white male canon when they\n", "['38']\n", + "seniors, who have skillfully managed never to speak in class­\n", "['39']\n", + "Most of the classes I teach are not small. They range anywhere\n", "['40']\n", + "that students should enjoy learning. Yet I found that there was\n", "['41']\n", + "Looking out over the class, across race, sexual preference, and\n", "['42']\n", + "places an unfair responsibility onto that student. Professors can\n", "['43']\n", - "[]\n", + "essence of a truly liberatory liberal arts education.\n", + "['44']\n", + "45\n", "['45']\n", + "the process of decolonization, particularly as it affects\n", "['46']\n", + "however good those intentions may be. The pos-\n", "['47']\n", + "language?\n", "['48']\n", + "for that work to touch me at the very core of my being. In\n", "['49']\n", + "Freire’s work?\n", "['50']\n", + "talk enough about the way in which class shapes our\n", "['51']\n", + "manifestation of my struggle with the question of moving\n", "['52']\n", + "insightful moments. He writes:\n", "['53']\n", + "guage, on Paulo’s work in Guinea-Bissau. I learn from this\n", "['54']\n", - "[]\n", + "owned his “sexism,” I want to know why he had not seen\n", + "['55']\n", + "and that struggle is often protracted.\n", "['56']\n", + "Cornel West. We have what Paulo calls “a talking book,”\n", "['57']\n", + "found solidarity.\n", "['58']\n", + "59\n", "['59']\n", + "my belonging. I was desperately trying to find my way home.\n", "['60']\n", + "bring a process or practice into being; concurrently one may\n", "['61']\n", - "[]\n", + "with collective sources. Echoing feminist theorists, especially\n", + "['62']\n", + "ten in a manner that renders it accessible to a broad reading\n", "['63']\n", + "movements when students, most of whom are female, come to\n", "['64']\n", + "false assumption that theory is not a social practice, they pro­\n", "['65']\n", + "folks that I do not want to make waves, or make myself an out-\n", "['66']\n", + "were seen as potentially disruptive of sisterhood and solidarity.\n", "['67']\n", + "cess to the process of theory making—threaten collective black\n", "['68']\n", + "theory is misused. We must do more than critique the conserva­\n", "['69']\n", + "based feminism, because I fear that any feminist transforma­\n", "['70']\n", - "[]\n", + "read my work and wanted to share that they are working to\n", + "['71']\n", + "thinking and practice wherever I am. When asked to talk in\n", "['72']\n", + "taking place within. Holding my hands, standing body to body,\n", "['73']\n", + "where it all began, to that moment when an individual woman\n", "['74']\n", + "be no gap between feminist theory and feminist practice.\n", "['75']\n", - "['76']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "77\n", "['77']\n", + "ist literary practices.” Curious to know what works would lend\n", "['78']\n", - "[]\n", + "feminist scholarship and professional encounters takes on\n", + "['79']\n", + "“Essentialism in the Classroom” is to some extent informed by\n", "['80']\n", + "their having to name the desire for it. They do not attend class\n", "['81']\n", + "power leaves unquestioned the critical practices of other\n", "['82']\n", + "groups enter classrooms within institutions where their voices\n", "['83']\n", + "it is her voice. When she raises the question “how are we to han-\n", "['84']\n", + "eralizations. Like her, I have seen the way essentialist stand­\n", "['85']\n", - "['III']\n", - "[]\n", + "pedagogical practices are silencing them, I have to examine\n", + "['86']\n", + "be posed in a manner that would not imply a condescending\n", + "['87']\n", + "dominant structures, a position that gives purpose and mean­\n", + "['88']\n", + "salized, I knew from my experience as a black female that black\n", + "['89']\n", + "passion of experience, the passion of remembrance.\n", "['90']\n", + "other ingredients but no flour. Suddenly, the flour becomes\n", "['91']\n", + "way to know.\n", "['92']\n", + "93\n", "['93']\n", + "tioning within sexist norms, personal contact between the two\n", "['94']\n", + "those rare cases where slaveholding white men sought divorces\n", "['95']\n", + "away from their enslaved mothers. Again it was within this\n", "['96']\n", + "realm of servant-served. Living in segregated neighborhoods,\n", "['97']\n", + "on relationships between black women domestics and white\n", "['98']\n", - "[]\n", + "and the comments and stories of black women in our commu-\n", + "['99']\n", + "positions similar to those assumed by cultural anthropologists\n", "['100']\n", + "are not rooted in historical relations and contemporary inter-\n", "['101']\n", + "Ironically, many of the black women who were actively en­\n", "['102']\n", + "of their analysis of “race,” but rather focus on black women or\n", "['103']\n", + "era, doing ‘great’ work on the topic of race.” Some black\n", "['104']\n", + "Talking with black women and women of color I wanted to\n", "['105']\n", + "impact of poverty and deprivation.\n", "['106']\n", + "was shaping the nature and direction of the discussions, and\n", "['107']\n", + "encounter, ways of being that promote respect and reconcilia-\n", "['108']\n", + "the racist assumption that we can never overcome the barrier\n", "['109']\n", - "['110']\n", + "ity, sisterhood based on political solidarity will emerge.\n", + "['122']\n", + "111\n", "['111']\n", - "['112']\n", - "['113']\n", - "['114']\n", - "['115']\n", - "['116']\n", - "['117']\n", - "['118']\n", - "[]\n", + "ies, and Women’s Studies as well as other disciplines usually\n", + "['122']\n", + "address diverse responses may be as threatened by the perspec-\n", + "['122']\n", + "assigned material to see if they were interested in it, if it was\n", + "['122']\n", + "would alter their relationships with black men. They were con-\n", + "['122']\n", + "their own lives they felt it was difficult to speak out and share\n", + "['122']\n", + "on their beliefs in other settings. There was silence when Tanya\n", + "['122']\n", + "“holds the key to liberation.”\n", + "['122']\n", + "119\n", + "['119']\n", + "“women” were talked about, the experience of white women\n", "['120']\n", + "scholarship. In those days, I imagined that my work and that of\n", "['121']\n", + "black women who embraced feminist thinking and practice\n", "['122']\n", + "women now responded to critiques and worked to create a criti­\n", "['123']\n", + "scholars, already seriously marginalized by the institutionalized\n", "['124']\n", + "literary critics received attention and at times acclaim. Black\n", "['125']\n", + "politically neutral scholarship. Yet, the absence of feminist\n", "['126']\n", + "the shifts in their thinking.\n", "['127']\n", - "['128']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "129\n", "['129']\n", + "and marginalized groups (women of all races or ethnicities,\n", "['130']\n", + "ers and privileges), I have taught primarily at private institu-\n", "['131']\n", + "me up to feel that the professor is something I become as\n", "['132']\n", - "[]\n", + "what’s that, fourteen years?\n", + "['133']\n", + "on the planet. I feel that one of the things blocking a lot\n", "['134']\n", + "cated by the fact that you and I are both sensitive to—and\n", "['135']\n", + "ly the challenge to that mind/body split. Once we start\n", "['136']\n", + "odds with the body. I think part of why everyone in the\n", "['137']\n", + "more evident that we work in the classroom. For some\n", "['138']\n", + "the case for professors and teachers who, in the class-\n", "['139']\n", + "been willing to change their curriculum, but who in fact\n", "['140']\n", + "should be such a wonderful word, a rich word. Yet it is\n", "['141']\n", - "[]\n", + "ment with pedagogical practices may not be welcomed by\n", + "['142']\n", + "cation would be threatened by and even resist teaching\n", "['143']\n", + "has the potential to revolutionize the classroom and they\n", "['144']\n", + "otherwise I don’t get the respect, and the students don’t\n", "['145']\n", + "with arbitrary rules about behavior.\n", "['146']\n", + "the control that they try to maintain, the comments they\n", "['147']\n", + "ment last semester at City College in my seminar on Black\n", "['148']\n", - "['IV']\n", - "[]\n", + "others, and how she responds to knowledge presented.\n", + "['149']\n", + "to be pursued in the classroom?\n", + "['150']\n", + "it’s a mistake to think we’re talking about giving students\n", + "['151']\n", + "have nothing to learn from their students.\n", "['152']\n", + "of what the banking system does for professors is create\n", "['153']\n", + "place. If we are all emotionally shut down, how can there\n", "['154']\n", + "eratory pedagogical practice is the challenge on the part\n", "['155']\n", + "agreed it wasn’t working out. Afterwards, people ran after\n", "['156']\n", - "[]\n", + "fear of failure. Progressive teaching tries to eradicate that\n", + "['157']\n", + "morning and go to it. I couldn’t even sleep at night,\n", "['158']\n", + "the material. But it was a horrible experience. We became\n", "['159']\n", + "institutional support for liberatory pedagogical practices.\n", "['160']\n", + "structures before coming into college, I wouldn’t be able\n", "['161']\n", + "ple, if you are a tenured professor, you can take a leave of\n", "['162']\n", + "incidents, both cases where African Americans were killed\n", "['163']\n", + "ing is not always a year sabbatical where you’re busting\n", "['164']\n", + "being with people.\n", "['165']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", "[]\n", - "['167']\n", + "167\n", + "['1', '1', '167']\n", + "\n", + "3 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", + "['1', '1', '167']\n", + "Check PDF page 176 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", + "167\n", + "could not be spoken, were outlawed tongues, renegade speech.\n", "['168']\n", + "culture of resistance could be formed that would make recov­\n", "['169']\n", + "more than the oppressor’s language.\n", "['170']\n", + "were individuals for whom standard English was a second or\n", "['171']\n", + "On Call when she declares:\n", "['172']\n", + "creating spaces where diverse voices can speak in words other\n", "['173']\n", - "[]\n", + "particularly difficult in a society that would have us believe that\n", + "['174']\n", + "selves in language.\n", "['175']\n", - "['176']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "177\n", "['177']\n", + "sent. Students are often silenced by means of their acceptance\n", "['178']\n", + "There is little or no discussion of the way in which the attitudes\n", "['179']\n", + "there was a shift in perspective.\n", "['180']\n", + "would enhance my class mobility. Yet I thought of this solely in\n", "['181']\n", + "encourage students to reject the notion that they must choose\n", "['182']\n", - "[]\n", + "ty for me to challenge this biased assumption. By challenging, I\n", + "['183']\n", + "opportunity to make spaces in the academy where class can\n", "['184']\n", + "more than others.\n", "['185']\n", + "Some students may feel threatened if awareness of class dif-\n", "['186']\n", + "power was not itself negative. It depended what one did with it.\n", "['187']\n", + "they will not have to work as hard as they do in other classes.\n", "['188']\n", + "cratic ideal of education for everyone can be realized.\n", "['189']\n", - "['190']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "191\n", "['191']\n", + "about ways such repression and denial could lead to the\n", "['192']\n", + "Recently, Susan B., a colleague and friend, whom I taught in\n", "['193']\n", + "classroom to aid the learning process. Keen continues:\n", "['194']\n", + "in the literature as well as critically interrogating our experi-\n", "['195']\n", - "[]\n", + "Here an Asian student offers her thoughts about a class:\n", + "['196']\n", + "right up to the front, picked me up and whirled me around.\n", "['197']\n", + "necessary to teach on the subject. I asked students once: “Why\n", "['198']\n", + "mind and body to feel and know desire.\n", "['199']\n", - "['200']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "201\n", "['201']\n", + "the spirit. After twenty years of teaching, I have begun to need\n", "['202']\n", + "more conventionally, because they frequently had small class-\n", "['203']\n", + "work that are most often deemed interesting by students and\n", "['204']\n", + "suggestions and interventions as we go along. Evaluations at\n", "['205']\n", + "conventional mind and who could actually stop my\n", "['206']\n", + "the practice of freedom.\n", "['207']\n", - "['208']\n", + "This page intentionally left blank\n", + "[]\n", + "209\n", "['209']\n", + "Burst of Light, A (Lorde), 93 atory education for, 69\n", "['210']\n", - "['211']\n", + "eratory practice, 134; as practice relating of, in classroom, 85-86;\n", + "['122']\n", + "Free speech, right to, 179 Perspective” (Orner), 20-21\n", "['212']\n", + "McLaren, Peter, 31, 129 Patriarchy, theories of, 69\n", "['213']\n", + "Race, and gender, 77-78, 108 men, 116\n", "['214']\n", + "also Professor 125\n", "['215']\n", - "['V']\n", - "[]\n", - "['220']\n", - "['221']\n", - "['222']\n", - "['223']\n", - "['224']\n", - "['225']\n", - "['226']\n", - "['227']\n", - "['228']\n", - "['229']\n", - "['230']\n", - "['231']\n", - "['232']\n", - "[]\n", - "['234']\n", - "['235']\n", - "['236']\n", - "['237']\n", - "['238']\n", - "['239']\n" + "Wilson, Jane Ellen, 185, 205 Cultural Politics (hooks), 72, 78\n", + "['216']\n" ] } ], @@ -265,7 +625,7 @@ "full_pdf_text = \"\"\n", "\n", "# input the path to the PDF you want to convert here\n", - "with pdfplumber.open(\"foucault.pdf\") as pdf:\n", + "with pdfplumber.open(\"hooks.pdf\") as pdf:\n", " for i in range(len(pdf.pages)):\n", " full_page = pdf.pages[i].extract_text()\n", "\n", @@ -305,7 +665,7 @@ " full_pdf_text += f'\\n~indexed_page_number:{i+1}~\\n\\n'\n", "\n", "# enter the name of your output file here \n", - "with open(\"kuhn_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", + "with open(\"hooks_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", " text_file.write(full_pdf_text)\n" ] } From f925aa9a86ee5c0282a51dcb3b74c3084042ec0a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Annie Wang Date: Fri, 5 May 2023 15:30:16 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 58/63] cleaning up analysis notebook --- visualization/analysis_template.ipynb | 4 +- visualization/analyze_data.ipynb | 488 ++++++++++++++++++++++++-- 2 files changed, 465 insertions(+), 27 deletions(-) diff --git a/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb b/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb index b0eed5e..389b492 100644 --- a/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analysis_template.ipynb @@ -1,10 +1,12 @@ { "cells": [ { + "attachments": {}, "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "# Analysis of Text Matching Data Generated from JSTOR Dataset " + "# Analysis of Text Matching Data Generated from JSTOR Dataset\n", + "#### Reference version" ] }, { diff --git a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb index 86f3a32..d4ae9e9 100644 --- a/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb +++ b/visualization/analyze_data.ipynb @@ -1,22 +1,460 @@ { "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Analysis of Text Matching Data Generated from JSTOR Dataset" + ] + }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 38, + "execution_count": 21, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "import pandas as pd\n", "import json\n", "import numpy as np\n", - "from pathlib import Path\n" + "from pathlib import Path" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 39, + "execution_count": 22, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], + "outputs": [ + { + "data": { + "text/html": [ + "
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abstractcreatordocSubTypedocTypeidentifierisPartOfissueNumberlanguagepageCountpublicationYearpublishersourceCategorytdmCategorytitlewordCountnumMatchesLocations in ALocations in B
0This paper investigates the logic of explanati...[Merje Kuus]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00202754'}, {'name...Transactions of the Institute of British Geogr...1[eng]122007Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute...[Geography, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Pu...96331[[101032, 101482]][[11865, 12316]]
1Seeking to elucidate understandings of sexual ...[Rebecca M. Herzig]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10400656'}, {'name...NWSA Journal3[eng]172000The Johns Hopkins University Press[Feminist & Women's Studies, Social Sciences][Social sciences - Communications, Philosophy ...The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertric...75092[[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]][[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]]
2NoneNoneresearch-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '11440821'}, {'name...Rue Descartes40[fre]52003Presses Universitaires de France[Humanities, Philosophy]NoneRéférences bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar...15101[[481404, 481466]][[6685, 6747]]
6None[Kathryn R. King]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01935380'}, {'name...The Eighteenth Century2[eng]181994University of Pennsylvania Press[Language & Literature, History, History, Huma...[Arts - Literature]THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMA...86261[[143468, 143592]][[23255, 23380]]
7None[Chicago Cultural Studies Group]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00931896'}, {'name...Critical Inquiry3[eng]261992The University of Chicago Press[Language & Literature, Social Sciences, Cultu...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Critical Multiculturalism123241[[481404, 481471]][[77772, 77838]]
.........................................................
5170None[Judy Tobler]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10117601'}, {'name...Journal for the Study of Religion1/2[eng]302000Association for the Study of Religion in South...[Religion, Humanities][Philosophy - Applied philosophy]\"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred...139974[[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ...[[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315...
5171None[Andreas Spiegl, Fiona Elliot]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '14654253'}, {'name...Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry3[eng]82001University of Chicago Press[Art & Art History, Arts][Arts - Literature, Arts - Art history]A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICA...55522[[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]][[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]]
5175None[Sonia Núñez Puente]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '02721635'}, {'name...Anales de la literatura española contemporánea2[spa]222009Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies[Language & Literature, Latin American Studies...NoneCorporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero,...76841[[493724, 493799]][[45214, 45288]]
5178None[David Chioni Moore]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00917710'}, {'name...Journal of Anthropological Research4[eng]211994University of New Mexico[Anthropology, Social Sciences][Philosophy - Epistemology, Arts - Literature,...Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog...97991[[147640, 147832]][[16061, 16251]]
5181None[Irene Gedalof]research-articlearticle[{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01417789'}, {'name...Feminist Review64[eng]42000Sage Publications, Ltd.[Gender Studies, Feminist & Women's Studies, S...[Philosophy - Applied philosophy]Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme...17891[[443416, 443517]][[2982, 3089]]
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King] research-article article \n", + "7 [Chicago Cultural Studies Group] research-article article \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "5170 [Judy Tobler] research-article article \n", + "5171 [Andreas Spiegl, Fiona Elliot] research-article article \n", + "5175 [Sonia Núñez Puente] research-article article \n", + "5178 [David Chioni Moore] research-article article \n", + "5181 [Irene Gedalof] research-article article \n", + "\n", + " identifier \\\n", + "0 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00202754'}, {'name... \n", + "1 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10400656'}, {'name... \n", + "2 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '11440821'}, {'name... \n", + "6 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01935380'}, {'name... \n", + "7 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00931896'}, {'name... \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '10117601'}, {'name... \n", + "5171 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '14654253'}, {'name... \n", + "5175 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '02721635'}, {'name... \n", + "5178 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '00917710'}, {'name... \n", + "5181 [{'name': 'issn', 'value': '01417789'}, {'name... \n", + "\n", + " isPartOf issueNumber language \\\n", + "0 Transactions of the Institute of British Geogr... 1 [eng] \n", + "1 NWSA Journal 3 [eng] \n", + "2 Rue Descartes 40 [fre] \n", + "6 The Eighteenth Century 2 [eng] \n", + "7 Critical Inquiry 3 [eng] \n", + "... ... ... ... \n", + "5170 Journal for the Study of Religion 1/2 [eng] \n", + "5171 Afterall: A Journal of Art, Context and Enquiry 3 [eng] \n", + "5175 Anales de la literatura española contemporánea 2 [spa] \n", + "5178 Journal of Anthropological Research 4 [eng] \n", + "5181 Feminist Review 64 [eng] \n", + "\n", + " pageCount publicationYear \\\n", + "0 12 2007 \n", + "1 17 2000 \n", + "2 5 2003 \n", + "6 18 1994 \n", + "7 26 1992 \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 30 2000 \n", + "5171 8 2001 \n", + "5175 22 2009 \n", + "5178 21 1994 \n", + "5181 4 2000 \n", + "\n", + " publisher \\\n", + "0 Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute... \n", + "1 The Johns Hopkins University Press \n", + "2 Presses Universitaires de France \n", + "6 University of Pennsylvania Press \n", + "7 The University of Chicago Press \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 Association for the Study of Religion in South... \n", + "5171 University of Chicago Press \n", + "5175 Society of Spanish & Spanish-American Studies \n", + "5178 University of New Mexico \n", + "5181 Sage Publications, Ltd. \n", + "\n", + " sourceCategory \\\n", + "0 [Geography, Social Sciences] \n", + "1 [Feminist & Women's Studies, Social Sciences] \n", + "2 [Humanities, Philosophy] \n", + "6 [Language & Literature, History, History, Huma... \n", + "7 [Language & Literature, Social Sciences, Cultu... \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [Religion, Humanities] \n", + "5171 [Art & Art History, Arts] \n", + "5175 [Language & Literature, Latin American Studies... \n", + "5178 [Anthropology, Social Sciences] \n", + "5181 [Gender Studies, Feminist & Women's Studies, S... \n", + "\n", + " tdmCategory \\\n", + "0 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "1 [Social sciences - Communications, Philosophy ... \n", + "2 None \n", + "6 [Arts - Literature] \n", + "7 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "5171 [Arts - Literature, Arts - Art history] \n", + "5175 None \n", + "5178 [Philosophy - Epistemology, Arts - Literature,... \n", + "5181 [Philosophy - Applied philosophy] \n", + "\n", + " title wordCount \\\n", + "0 Ubiquitous Identities and Elusive Subjects: Pu... 9633 \n", + "1 The Woman beneath the Hair: Treating Hypertric... 7509 \n", + "2 Références bibliographiques des ouvrages et ar... 1510 \n", + "6 THE UNACCOUNTABLE WIFE AND OTHER TALES OF FEMA... 8626 \n", + "7 Critical Multiculturalism 12324 \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 \"Home is Where the Heart Is?\": Gendered Sacred... 13997 \n", + "5171 A CONFLICT AT THE VERY HEART OF THE IDENTIFICA... 5552 \n", + "5175 Corporalidad(es) y cibercuerpos en \"Te quiero,... 7684 \n", + "5178 Anthropology Is Dead, Long Live Anthro(a)polog... 9799 \n", + "5181 Power, Politics and Performativity: Some Comme... 1789 \n", + "\n", + " numMatches Locations in A \\\n", + "0 1 [[101032, 101482]] \n", + "1 2 [[74475, 74701], [476453, 476563]] \n", + "2 1 [[481404, 481466]] \n", + "6 1 [[143468, 143592]] \n", + "7 1 [[481404, 481471]] \n", + "... ... ... \n", + "5170 4 [[446805, 446947], [481756, 481815], [495817, ... \n", + "5171 2 [[432496, 432753], [439768, 439971]] \n", + "5175 1 [[493724, 493799]] \n", + "5178 1 [[147640, 147832]] \n", + "5181 1 [[443416, 443517]] \n", + "\n", + " Locations in B \n", + "0 [[11865, 12316]] \n", + "1 [[4347, 4571], [43201, 43311]] \n", + "2 [[6685, 6747]] \n", + "6 [[23255, 23380]] \n", + "7 [[77772, 77838]] \n", + "... ... \n", + "5170 [[41303, 41445], [84793, 84852], [85260, 85315... \n", + "5171 [[27504, 27761], [27972, 28178]] \n", + "5175 [[45214, 45288]] \n", + "5178 [[16061, 16251]] \n", + "5181 [[2982, 3089]] \n", + "\n", + "[2125 rows x 18 columns]" + ] + }, + "execution_count": 22, + "metadata": {}, + "output_type": "execute_result" + } + ], "source": [ "text = '../visualization/gender_trouble_pages.txt'\n", "with open(text) as f: \n", @@ -35,7 +473,8 @@ "df = df.drop(['id', 'url', 'outputFormat', 'volumeNumber', 'subTitle', 'provider', 'datePublished', \\\n", " 'pagination', 'pageEnd', 'pageStart'], axis=1)\n", "articlesWithMatches = df[df['numMatches'].apply(lambda x: x > 0)]\n", - "df = articlesWithMatches" + "df = articlesWithMatches\n", + "df" ] }, { @@ -48,7 +487,7 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 40, + "execution_count": 23, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { @@ -144,27 +583,21 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "## What are the median, upper, and lower quartiles of quotation length?\n" - ] - }, - { - "attachments": {}, - "cell_type": "markdown", - "metadata": {}, - "source": [ - "#### Functions for extracting wordcounts, numbers of quotations for diachronic and synchronic analysis" + "## What are the patterns in quotation length?\n" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 41, + "execution_count": 24, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ + "# Functions for extracting wordcounts\n", + "\n", "def countWords(locRange): \n", " \"\"\" Counts words in text, given character ranges. \"\"\"\n", " chunk = txt[locRange[0]:locRange[1]]\n", - " return len(chunk.split())\n", + " return (len(chunk.split()))\n", "\n", "def totalWords(locRangeSet): \n", " \"\"\" Counts total words in a list of location ranges. \"\"\"\n", @@ -186,17 +619,17 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 42, + "execution_count": 25, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ "df['Quoted Words'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(totalWords)\n", - "df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(countsPerSet)\n" + "df['Locations in A with Wordcounts'] = df['Locations in A'].apply(countsPerSet)" ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 43, + "execution_count": 26, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [], "source": [ @@ -209,24 +642,24 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 47, + "execution_count": 29, "metadata": {}, "outputs": [ { "data": { "text/plain": [ - "" + "Text(0, 0.5, 'Number of quotations')" ] }, - "execution_count": 47, + "execution_count": 29, "metadata": {}, "output_type": "execute_result" }, { "data": { - "image/png": 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8NKdBmZmZmVlnNJ0cSpoL+AawH7DMAE0r9Vg2MzMzs+GjypnDHwH/A9xJGnPw2SGJyMzMzMw6pkpyuDNwSURUHejazMzMzLpElbmVFwX+PFSBmJmZmVnnVUkOJwHvHKpAzMzMzKzzqiSH3yPNkPLuoQrGzMzMzDqryj2HHwEeBO6SdD4wGXirrk1ExOGtCs7MzMzM2qtKcji+8PPODdoE4OTQzMzMrEtVSQ5XGLIozMzMzGxYqDK38oNDGYiZmZmZdd5gp89bnJlnEidHhAfENjMzM+sBVXorI2lNSROBp4B/5cdTkiZIWmMoAjQzMzOz9qkyt/LqwD+B+YELgTty1WrANsBVktaPiDtbHqWZmZmZtUWVy8rfB94A1o+IScWKnDj+I7fZoXXhmZmZmVk7VbmsvAFwfH1iCBARdwAnABu2KjAzMzMza78qyeGCwBMD1D+e25iZmZlZl6qSHD4AbD1A/da5jZmZmZl1qSrJ4enApySdLWk1SXPnx+qSzgI2A04dkijNzMzMrC2qdEj5GfBhYEfgC8CMXD4XIOAc4KiWRmdmZmZmbVVlhpS3gC9IOhnYnjQItoD7gQsi4vIhidDMzMzM2qbyDCkRcRlw2RDEYmZmZmYdVmmGFDMzMzPrbQ3PHEo6FAjghxExIz+fnYiIw1sWnZmZmZm11UCXlceTksMfA6/n57MTgJNDMzMzsy41UHK4AkBEvF58bmZmZma9q2FyGBEPDvTczMzMzHpP0x1SJF0haZMB6jeSdEVrwjIzMzOzTqjSW3kssPQA9UsBG85RNGZmZmbWUa0cymYR4LUWbs/MzMzM2mzAQbAlrQGsVSj6hKSydRYDvgbc1brQzMzMzKzdZjdDyqeBw/LPAeydH2VeAvZvUVxmZmZm1gGzSw5PBSaQ5lC+AjiC/lPnBTANuCsiprc4PjMzMzNrowGTwzx8zYMAknYFJkbElDbEZWZmZmYdMLszh30i4rShDMTMzMzMOq/p5LBG0hhgXWBR+vd29tzKZmZmZl2s6eRQ0tuB84DNSPcgRl5S+NlzK5uZmZl1sSrjHB5KSgx/CGxESga/DGwBXAXcAHyg1QGamZmZWftUSQ4/C5wbEYcCd+SyRyPib8CmwLzAuNaGZ2ZmZmbtVCU5fDcwMf/8Vl7OCxARbwK/B3ZsXWhmZmZm1m5VksOXmHmP4kvADGDZQv2LwDItisvMzMzMOqBKcng/sBJARLwF3Em61IwkAZ8BHm51gGZmZmbWPlWSw8uBHSTNnZ//Bthc0v3AvaT7Dn/b4vjMzMzMrI2qjHP4I+AM8vA1EXGCpPmBnUn3IJ4E/LTlEZqZmZlZ21SZIWUacE9d2c+Bn7c6KDMzMzPrjKYvK0s6RdK6A9SvI+mU1oRlZmZmZp1Q5Z7DccCKA9SvQBoU28zMzMy6VJXkcHYWBN5o4fbMzMzMrM0GvOdQ0nuA0YWiVSRtUNJ0MeCrwH2tC83MzMzM2m12HVJ2BQ4DIj++kx/1RBoUe9eWRmdmZmZmbTW75PACYAop+TsFOBG4tq5NANOAGyLCg2CbmZmZdbEBk8OIuA24DUDS8sCfIuKOVr24pIOBDwMfIXVoeTAiRg/QfmXgx8CGpHmdbwYOi4grStrOBRwA7E26NP40cA5waES8PCfbNjMzM+tVVcY5/N4QvP4RwHOkRGyRgRpKWhG4BngT+AlpLuc9gb9J2iIiLq9b5Whgf+B84Chg1fz8Q5I2jYgZc7BtMzMzs55UZYYUJC0IfAP4NPDeXPwAcB7w07IzcrOxYkQ8kLd9BzBqgLZHkhLIj0TErXmd00lzPB8vaZWIiFy+GrAfcF5E7FCIfzJwLLAjcPZgtm1mZmbWy6oMgr0YcD3wXWAZ4Jb8WBo4FLg+t2laLTFs4rUXBLYFJtSSt7z+NOBkYCVg7cIqO5HukzymblMnAa+Qpvwb7LbNzMzMelaVcQ6/D6wC7Au8MyI+ERGfAJYF9gFWBsa3PMJkDWA++neGAbguL4sJ3Nqk3tPXFxtGxHTg1rq2VbdtZmZm1rOqJIfbAidHxAkR8VatMCLeiohfkXozb9/i+GqWzctHS+pqZcvVtX8mIl5r0H4JSfMOcttmZmZmPatKcrg06TJyIzfnNkNhgbwsS/am17Wp/VzWtqx91W33kbSXpBsl3fj00083eDkzMzOz7lElOXwS+NAA9R/KbYbCK3k5X0nd/HVtaj+XtS1rX3XbfSLixIgYExFjllxyyQYvZ2ZmZtY9qiSHFwG7S9o7jyEIpPEEJe0F7AZc2OoAs8fysuzybq2seFn4MdKl47KEbznSJefXB7ltMzMzs55VJTk8lDRszQnAY5ImSppISq5+lesOa32IAEwiXfb9aEndenl5Y6HsBtJ7W6fYUNL8wFp1batu28zMzKxnNZ0cRsSzwBjgR8CzpB68awPPkMYJXDu3abk8rMxFwFhJa9bKJY0C9gDuZdaeyX8gTet3YN2m9iTdP3jWHGzbzMzMrGdVGgQ7IqYC38mPOSZpF2D5/HRJYF5Jh+TnD0bEGYXmBwObAJdKOhqYSkr2lgO2Kg5SHRGTJB0P7CvpPOBiZs6QMpFZB8CutG0zMzOzXlYpORwCu5PmMi46PC8nAn3JYUTcJ+ljpDOX32Lm/MebN5je7kBgCrAXsBXpDOdxpLmVZxQbDmLbZmZmZj2p6eRQ0peaaRcRpze7zYgY22zb3P5uYLsm275FmlP5qFZv28zMzKxXVTlzeCrpPj7Vlddfcm06OTQzMzOz4aVKcrhRg/VXBL5GGguwJfcimpmZmVlnNJ0cRsTEBlV/l3QaqUfvh4ErWxGYmZmZmbVflXEOG8pzGJ9JOoNoZmZmZl2qJclh9hrls4yYmZmZWZdoSXIo6Z3AV4DJrdiemZmZmXVGlaFsrmhQtRiwCmlswC+3IigzMzMz64wqvZXfS/9hawJ4DjgP+GVEXNOqwMzMzMys/ar0Vh49hHGYmZmZ2TDQyg4pZmZmZtblOj23so1gR044ttMhDMrBY/fvdAhmZmZDpkqHlBn0v+dwdiIinICamZmZdYkqidvppBlQVgfuAe4mzbO8CrAyMAm4udUBmpmZmVn7VEkOzwJ2ALaPiAuLFZK2B84A/iciLmtdeGZmZmbWTlU6pBwO/KY+MQSIiAuAE4EftCguMzMzM+uAKsnhGsD9A9TfR7rkbGZmZmZdqkpy+Dyw2QD1mwMvzlk4ZmZmZtZJVZLDs4HtJP1W0qqS5s6PVSWdAmxNui/RzMzMzLpUlQ4phwDvA3YFxgEzcvlcpF7LF+U2ZmZmZtalqkyf9xrwaUmbAduR5loW6T7EP0fEpUMTopmZmZm1S+UBqnMS6ETQzMzMrAd5bmUzMzMz6+Pk0MzMzMz6ODk0MzMzsz5ODs3MzMysj5NDMzMzM+vTMDmU9ICkbQvPD5Xk6fHMzMzMethAZw7fA7yj8Hw8aX5lMzMzM+tRAyWHjwIfrCuLIYzFzMzMzDpsoEGw/wx8Q9LmwHO57BBJew6wTkTEJi2LzszMzMzaaqDk8JvA88CmwPKks4ZLAgu0IS4zMzMz64CGyWFEvAoclh9ImgEcGBFntyk2MzMzM2uzKkPZ7ApcM1SBmJmZmVnnDXRZeRYRcVrtZ0mLAyvkp5Mj4tlWB2ZmZmZm7VdpEGxJa0qaCDwF/Cs/npI0QZKHuTEzMzPrck2fOcwDYP8TmB+4ELgjV60GbANcJWn9iLiz5VGamZmZWVs0nRwC3wfeANaPiEnFipw4/iO32aF14ZmZmZlZO1W5rLwBcHx9YggQEXcAJwAbtiowMzMzM2u/KsnhgsATA9Q/ntuYmZmZWZeqkhw+AGw9QP3WuY2ZmZmZdakqyeHpwKcknS1pNUlz58fqks4CNgNOHZIozczMzKwtqnRI+RnwYWBH4AvAjFw+FyDgHOColkZnZmZmZm1VZRDst4AvSDoZ2J40CLaA+4ELIuLyIYnQzMzMzNqmyplDACLiMuCyIYjFzMzMzDqs0gwpZmZmZtbbnByamZmZWR8nh2ZmZmbWx8mhmZmZmfVxcmhmZmZmfZpKDiW9XdKXJK071AGZmZmZWec0e+bwNeAk4ENDGIuZmZmZdVhTyWFEzAAeBhYa2nDMzMzMrJOq3HN4GrCLpPmGKhgzMzMz66wqM6RcA3wGuFXSCcC9wCv1jSLiHy2KzczMzMzarEpyWJwy7xdA1NUrl809p0GZmZmZWWdUSQ53HbIozMzMzGxYaDo5jIjThjKQZkiqP1tZ83JEjKpruzLwY2BDYF7gZuCwiLiiZLtzAQcAewOjgaeBc4BDI+Lllr0BMzMzs2GuypnD4eIq4MS6sjeKTyStSLpH8k3gJ8CLwJ7A3yRtERGX161/NLA/cD5wFLBqfv4hSZvm3tpmZmZmPa9Scijp3cD3gM2ApYDNI+IKSUuSztL9KiJuaH2Ys3ggIs6cTZsjgUWAj0TErQCSTgfuBI6XtEpERC5fDdgPOC8idqhtQNJk4FhgR+DsVr8JMzMzs+Go6aFsJK0A3AjsQEqy+jqeRMTTwBhgj1YH2CCWeSWNalC3ILAtMKGWGOYYpwEnAysBaxdW2YnUmeaYuk2dROqNvXPLAjczMzMb5qqMc/hDYAawOvBFUkJVdDHw8RbFNZDPkpK2lyQ9Jek4SQsX6tcA5gOuLVn3urwsJodrk97X9cWGETEduLWurZmZmVlPq3JZeVPguIh4WNLiJfUPAu9qTVgNXQ+cC9xHmq1lS2BfYENJ6+ezg8vmto+WrF8rW65QtizwTES81qD9+pLmjYjX6ysl7QXsBfCe97xnEG/HzMzMbHipkhwuBDw+QP28FbdXWUSsW1d0uqTbSWc1D8jLBXJdWbI3PS8XKJQt0KBtfft+yWFEnEjuHDNmzJhGPanNzMzMukaVy8oPA6sNUL8e6Yxeu/2UlLhtlZ/XZm0pm+Zv/ro2tZ8bTQlY1t7MzMysZ1VJDs8DdpO0eqGs1uN3B+BzpLEB2yoi3gAeA5bIRY/l5XIlzWtlxUvOjwFLNJgzejnSJed+Zw3NzMzMelHVDimPAP8CziQlht+SdC0pKbyNNEZgW0man3Sv45O5aBLpMvFHS5qvl5c3FspuIO2HdUq2u1ZdWzMzM7Oe1nRyGBFTSQnXyaRhawR8ElgZOAHYKPfwHRINOsEAHE661/GiHOe0/PNYSWsW1h9FGmrnXmbtmfwHUqJ7YN129yTda3hWC8I3MzMz6wqVOpDkBPEA4IA88LWAp2sDSg+xQyStB1wJPASMIvVW3oh0NvO4QtuDgU2ASyUdDUwlJXvLAVsV442ISZKOB/aVdB5pSJ7aDCkT8QDYZmZmNoIMundxHvi6nSYAHwC+DCwOvEU6C/gd4OfFs5YRcZ+kjwE/Ar7FzLmVNy+ZOg/SWcMppGFptgKeISWbh3rqPDMzMxtJKieHkj4PfBp4by56ADg/Ioa0M0pE/Bn4c4X2dwPbNdn2LdL9km2/Z9LMzMxsOGk6OZS0ACk525h0OfmFvFwb+LykvYFtI+LlIYjTzMzMzNqgSm/lI0j38R0HLBsRi0XEoqQZRo4j3fv3w9aHaGZmZmbtUiU5/AJwbkQcGBFP1Aoj4omIOBD4U25jZmZmZl2qSnK4EKmncCNX5DZmZmZm1qWqJIe3A+8foP79pAGozczMzKxLVUkODwH2lLRNfYWk7UgDTH+7VYGZmZmZWfs17K0s6ZSS4snABZLuAe4mzSzyAdIsKZOAL5IuL5uZmZlZFxpoKJtxA9Stkh9FawAfBHafw5jMzMzMrEMaJocRUeWSs5mZmZn1ACeAZmZmZtbHyaGZmZmZ9ak0t7Kk9YF9SMPWLE6aPq8oImLFFsVmZmZmZm1WZW7lPYFfA68D9wAPDVVQZmZmZtYZVc4cfhu4FfhURDwzNOGYmZmZWSdVuedwaeC3TgzNzMzMeleV5PBuYNGhCsTMzMzMOq9KcvhD4GuSlhuqYMzMzMyss5q+5zAizpO0AHCXpAuAKcBb/ZvF4a0Lz8zMzMzaqUpv5ZWA7wPvAHZp0CwAJ4dmZmZmXapKb+UTgKWAA4CrgOeHJCKzLnTkhGM7HcKgHDx2/06HYGZmw0yV5HA94GcRcdxQBWNmZmZmnVWlQ8pU4OmhCsTMzMzMOq9KcngO8JmhCsTMzMzMOq/KZeXfAKflnsrHApPp31uZiPC0emZmZmZdqkpyeCepN/IYYJsB2s09RxGZmZmZWcdUSQ6/T0oOzczMzKxHVRkEe/wQxmFmZmZmw0CVDilmZmZm1uOqzJCyQTPtIuIfgw/HzMzMzDqpyj2HE2junkN3SDEzMzPrUlWSw10brL8iMA6YQhruxszMzMy6VJUOKac1qpP0U+DmlkRkZmZmZh3Tkg4pEfE8cDLwjVZsz8zMzMw6o5W9lZ8H3tvC7ZmZmZlZm7UkOZQ0P7AL8EQrtmdmZmZmnVFlKJtTGlQtBnwUWBL4eiuCMjMzM7POqNJbeVyD8ueA/wAHRcTZcxyRmZmZmXVMld7Knk3FzMzMrMc54TMzMzOzPk4OzczMzKzPgJeVJV1YcXsREdvNQTxmZmZm1kGzu+dw64rba2buZTMzMzMbpga8rBwRc83uAWwM3JBXeXzIIzYzMzOzITPoew4lrS7pr8DfgZWB7wLvb1VgZmZmZtZ+VcY5BEDSu4HDgS8CbwHHAj+IiGdbHJuZdcCRE47tdAiDcvDY/TsdgplZT6gyQ8qiwHeArwHzAb8HDomIKUMTmpmZmZm122yTQ0nzAQcC3wQWAS4DvhkRtw5lYGZmZmbWfgPecyhpN+A+4AjgfmDTiPiUE0MzMzOz3jS7M4cnk4anuRE4B1hL0loDtI+IOLpFsZmZmZlZmzVzz6GAtfNjdgJwcmhmZmbWpWaXHG7UlijMzMzMbFgYMDmMiIntCsTMzMzMOm/Qg2CbmZmZWe9xcmhmZmZmfZwcmpmZmVmfytPnmZl1E08HaGZWjZPDTNJcwAHA3sBo4GnS2I6HRsTLHQzNzAxwomtm7eHLyjMdDfwcuAvYDzgX2B+4KCeOZmZmZj3PZw4BSauREsLzImKHQvlk4FhgR+DsDoVnZmZm1jZODpOdSDPBHFNXfhLwI2BnnByambWML5GbDV9ODpO1gRnA9cXCiJgu6VaamzrQzMxGoF5KdLv1vYAT91ZSRHQ6ho6TNAlYKiKWLqk7B/gcMF9EvF5XtxewV366MnDPEIW4BPDMEG27m3m/9Od9Us77pT/vk3LeL+W8X/rr9n2yfEQsWVbhM4fJAsBrDeqmF9rMkhxGxInAiUMYFwCSboyIMUP9Ot3G+6U/75Ny3i/9eZ+U834p5/3SXy/vE/fCTV4B5mtQN3+hjZmZmVlPc3KYPAYsIaksQVwOeKb+krKZmZlZL3JymNxA2hfrFAslzQ+sBdzYgZiKhvzSdZfyfunP+6Sc90t/3iflvF/Keb/017P7xB1SAEkfBG4Dzq8b53A/0jiHu0TEmZ2Kz8zMzKxdnBxmko4D9gXOBy4GViXNkHI1sHFEzOhgeGZmZmZt4eQwkzQ3cCBpaJrRpO7pfyDNrTytc5GZmZmZtY+TQzMzMzPr4w4pw5CkuSQdJOnfkqZLeljSUZIW7HRsQ03SSpK+L+k6SU9LeknSrZK+U//+JY2XFA0e/9Op9zBUBniv/c5sS1pZ0gWSnpf0sqSrJG3cibiH0myOgZD0RpNtu/J4kXSwpHMlPZDfx5TZtG/6uOjm30PN7hclO0v6X0n3SXpF0kOSLpS0boN1mv4eDidVjpWq35WRcKzktgP9rglJ32my/bA+VsCDYA9XR5PudzwfOIqZ9z9+SNKmPX7/427APsCFwFnAG8BGwA+Az0taLyJerVvnIPqPUn/TUAfaIVfRv4fcG8UnklYErgHeBH4CvAjsCfxN0hYRcXk7Am2T84D7SsrXAL4OXFRS10vHyxHAc8DNwCIDNRzEcdHNv4ea3S/zAWcAtwL/C0wG3gl8BbhW0pcadEac7fdwGGr6WClo9rsyEo4VgF0alI8HVqT89003HisQEX4MowewGmme5z/Vle8HBPBfnY5xiN//GGDhkvIf5Pe/b6FsfC4b3em427RvAji1iXbnAG8BaxXKRgEPkqZ4VKffSxv21W/y/tqql48X4L2Fn+8AprTiuOj230PN7hfSCZINS8qXJiVFTwJz1dU19T0cbo+Kx0rT35WRcqwMsP678vfqhpK6rjxWIsKXlYehnQABx9SVn0SapWXndgfUThFxY0S8WFL1h7xcvWw9SQtJGhFnwiXNK2lUg7oFgW2BCRFxa608Uqeqk4GVgLXbEWenSFoA2BF4FLikQZueOF4i4oFm2g3iuOjq30PN7peIeDMiJpaUPwlMBJbKj34G+h4OR83uk3pNfFdGxLEygF1Jt+id3KhBtx0r4HsOh6O1Sf+FXV8sjIjppEsfPf2HfQDvyssnS+puJ10imy7pGklbtC+stvss6RfuS5KeknScpIUL9WuQLpVdW7LudXnZ68fQ54GFgN9FxFsl9SPpeKmpelz491D6nfM68EJJ3ey+h72ime/KiD1WJImUHL4C/L5Bs648Vrr+P+cetCxpur7XSuoeBdaXNG+MoOn8lIYZOpR0r9TZhaoXSPdyXAM8D6xMGo7or5J2i4hT2xro0LseOJd0j91CwJaksTk3lLR+Pgu0bG77aMn6tbLlhjrQDtuddDnnlLryFxhZx0tR1eNiRP8ekrQlacasM3KSU9TM97DbvUDz35WRfKxsDKxAunQ8taS+a48VJ4fDzwJA2ZcMYHqhTS9+0Ro5BlgP+HZE3FMrjIhj6htKOoV038jRkv44nL98VUVEfe/J0yXdDvwQOCAvF8h1ZcdQ8fjpSZJWBj4O/D0iJhfrRtrxUqfqcTFifw9Jej+pk8qjwP+rr2/ye9jVKn5XRuyxAuyRl78tq+zmY8WXlYefV0iXf8rMX2gzIkg6nPSf1okRceTs2kfEs8CvSb3O1h/a6IaFn5J+6W6Vn9eOjbJjaCQcP7vnZcP7f4pG0PFS9bgYkb+HJK0A/J105nmLiHi6yVXrv4c9Z4Dvykg9VhYFPg38OyL+WWHVrjhWnBwOP48BS0gq+7ItRzp934v/gfUjaTxwCPA70tASzZqSl0u0OKRhJyLeIB8zueixvCy7dFwrK7u02PXyTfNfIg1LcX6FVafkZS8fL1WPixH3e0jSaOBKUg/uT0bEpGbXLfke9qopeVl8nyPuWMl2JiXFpWcNG+mWY8XJ4fBzA+lzWadYKGl+YC3gxg7E1HaSDgMOA04H9og8LkCT3p+XZZ1Xeko+Lt7FzPc6iXSJ56MlzdfLy149hrYhDUFyRoP7nxoZCcdL1eNiRP0ekrQ8KTFcmJQY3lJx/frvYa8q+66MqGOlYHfSeIWnV1mpW44VJ4fDzx9IlzQOrCvfk3TfxlntDqjdJB1KGmfrDGDXKBlAVdI8ZT2+JL0b+CrwLOlm6p4gafEGVYeT7h2+CPqGJrkIGCtpzcL6o0j3x9xLXa/CHlK7pNzvP/mRdrzUG8RxMWJ+D+XEcAKwKLBZRDQcEL3Z72E3G8R3ZcQcKzWSxgBrAhdFxFMN2nT1seIOKcNMREySdDywr6TzgIuZOdr8RGbtrdtzJO0DfA94CLgc+K80WkCfJyPiMtKln8mSLgDuZmaPuj1y3U7RfyaVbnaIpPVIZzceIr3HLUmzx/wLOK7Q9mBgE+BSSUcDU0m/qJcjDQrdcxOqS1oW2By4vsHlwJ48XiTtAiyfny4JzCvpkPz8wYg4o9C86eOi238PNbtfJL2D9J0aTfoOrZw7NRVdlsc9hGrfw2GlwrFS6bsyUo6VOs3c29y1xwrgGVKG4wOYm9RL7h7SpaBHgZ8DozodWxve+6mk/0IbPSbkdvORvpiTSL+83gAeB/4IrNPp9zEE+2U74G/5WJgOvEwaQ+zbwPwl7VcF/kwakuIV4J/App1+H0O4f76dj489G9T35PFCOuM14HdlsMdFN/8eana/kJLCgX7fBDC20L7S93A4PSrsk8rflZFwrBTavz1/fx6mbvacunZde6xERJouyczMzMwMfM+hmZmZmRU4OTQzMzOzPk4OzczMzKyPk0MzMzMz6+Pk0MzMzMz6ODk0MzMzsz5ODs3MzMysj5NDM+tJkk6V1NGBXCWNkxSSxnYyjqokjc9xj27BtlaX9KakT7YgtLbI7/3UQax3gaQrhiAks7Zycmg2QkhaSNJ3Jd0s6SVJr0i6S9JPJC3V5lgOlDSuBdsZJ+nAOY9o5JE0NieBiwzxS/0cuDrStJe97jDS/NXbdjoQsznh5NBsBJC0EnAbad7qB4BvAQcC1+XlnZLWbWNIBwLjWrCdcXlbZfYkTXVl5caSkplFhuoFJH0U+CQpQex5EXEbaTq273Y4FLM54uTQrMdJWgC4CFgO2CYiPhsRx0fEiRGxG7A+8DbgwnafQRxKEfFGREzvdBwj3NeAZ4GLOx1IjaS3S5pnCF/iDGCMpI8M4WuYDSknh2a9b3dgJeDoiPhrfWVE3EiaDH4p4Ou18oHul5M0QdKUkvLtJV0taVp+XC1pu7o2ASwPbJi3X3uMzvWbSfqDpAckvSrpBUmXStqwbjtTgA2B5eu2MzbXl95zKGkNSedLelbS9Hxp/RuS5q5rd2re3sKSfiXpqdz+6jk9yyppPknflnRn3uYLki6S9KG6dmNzDOMk7ZrbvybpQUnfaLDtr0q6J2/3P5L2rf8s8/10h+VVJhf23fi6zc0n6QhJj+TXvU3Slk2+x3mA7YHLIuKNQvnyZa+VP+Oov01A0r8k3VVXVvUzXFLSKZKeBF4G3pXrV5N0iaSXJT0n6cxG/yBJ+pKk6/Nn9XI+Ps+StGRd01oi/Llm9pPZcDSU/z2Z2fDw2bw8aYA2pwLHADtQSBCrkPQ14Hjg38APgCBd9r1A0t4RcWJuugtwNPAM8MPCJp7Oy3HAYsDpwCOkM557AH+XtFFEXJXbHQgcCSwBHFTYzt0DxDgGmAi8kWN9AtgG+DGwJvDFktX+lmP7PrA48N/AxZJGR8RLjV5rgBjeBlxCOmN7BvBLYGHSZfCrJW2QE/airwBLA78FXgB2Bn4s6ZGIOLuw7W8CPwJuJiX8C5A+z6frtvcbYCHg06R990wuv72u3WmkffUzYF7SPr9A0koRMWU2b/UjwCjg+mJhRDwoaTKwCTA+xz0v8DFgRi4/JpcvlLfz68J7HMxneFludziwIDBN0grAVcB8pM/g4bydS+pXlrRz3hdXAYcCrwLvAbYg/VPVt38j4sn8j8vY2ewfs+ErIvzww48efpAu601tot0kUkI3Kj8fl5+PLWk7AZhSeL4oMA24D1ioUL4QcD/wErBIoXwKMKFBHAuWlC1NSmAuHiiOurpT06+4WcquBt4E1iiUCTgnv9dN6tcHTqjbxudy+d5N7NN++5CUjAXwqbq2CwEPFfcLKcEI4LG6/bcAKSG5tlC2GClpuR2Yv1C+DPBiSRzjc9nokrhrdX8BVChfO5cf2cR73zW33bak7mTg9dpnDWyQ254BTAXmyeXb5PLPzOFneGZJDGfnuo3qtnN+Lj+1UH5eMa4m3vvlwEtz8r31w49OPnxZ2az3LURKDman1uYdg3iNT5LOyBwbEVNrhfnn40hnkDZtZkMR8XLtZ0mjJC0OvAX8Cxj05dx8uXB94MKI6DtDFhEBHJGffrpk1aPrnteGKnn/IEPZmXR29SZJS9QepDNzlwEfl1TfkeZ3EfFCIeZXSJ2JijF8Epgf+FUU7rWMiCeAswYZ6y/y/qlt6wZSot/Me69dbn2upO4K0n2uH8/PNwaeAn5BOv7WzuUbkc4mToA5+gx/VnwiaS5S4nljRFxZt52flKz/Iikh30qSSurrPQuMKvkczbqCLyub9b6ppARxdhYi/SF+ZnYNS6yQl3eW1N2Rl+9tZkOSViRdbv4U/XvSzsm4hQPFeBfpvZfF+MAsAUQ8m/ODxQcZx6qkXtT1l3qLliBd5iyNIXu2Loba+7unpG1ZWTPKXvc5mnvvtc+qLJmqJdgbky7bbwxcSboc/nx+fm1e3hYRtQRzsJ/hf+qeL0X6h+XfDbZT7wjS2c0LgGclTQT+D/hDlN9aUHvPHR1n02ywnBya9b47gA0kvS8i7itroNSjeWXgwZjZeWCgP2z1vzuaOZsyW5JGAf8gnYU8hnSp+yXSH/2DScnCoDc/mJUi4q1Wbi+vN4l072Ij9YljoxhaEc9A5uS9197DYvUVEfGEpLuBjfOxty6wX0TMyInXJpJ+DazBrMPgDPYzfKWuqFLyFhH3SvoA6X7ITUgdoU4CvpfvEb2/bpXFgGnh3vLWpZwcmvW+P5HOeuxBGt+wzJdIlzXPLJTVztb0++NOOoPzRuF57Y/jasDf69p+IC+LZ6Ea/VHeBFgW2C0ifleskPSDkvZVzszUXn+1krpVSKM3lJ0pa7V7SZdcr4iIGS3c7uS8XJmZZ+YolNUb6rNatTPGjS5BXwF8lXR5d15mHjd/J10G3oKUxBXfS6s+w6dI98iuWlL3gZIyIuI1Uk/kiwFyr+2/kpL8feqav4+Z79+s6/ieQ7PedzLpstpBkjavr5T0YVKv38dJvT9rapfiNq1rvxMpgSu6jDREyH6S3lFo+w5gP9If4uIMGdMoTzprZ6pmOUMkaTPK7zecBizazH1gEfEUcA2wjaTVC9sW6awkpM4IQ+10UieR0jOHkpYe5HYvA14Dvipp/sL2lqG8B++0vCz7HFrhFtItDes1qL+C9DfoMOChwtm3K0g9iA8mdTyp9U5v2WeYzwb/hTQe4UZ12+k3RFC+J7TezXm5WF3bZUhDNU2cXRxmw5XPHJr1uIh4RWk6r0uAv0r6E+kG/zeBdUhDyzxP6lX6ZGG9eyRdDuyd/2jeCqxFuuH/PlKHglrbF/K4e8cD/9LMeWnHkc6i7B0RxU4x1wG7SzqcNPTMDNJA3f8kDTlylNK4h4/k19yFdCn2g3Vv7zpga+CXkq4hJZdX5CSizAGkP9pXSaoNg7I16f7GsyOi/qznUPgFqfPITyVtTEqGppKGRtkEmE7qiFFJvhfye6T7466WdCapE8VepER/DLOeLbwuL38s6az8undEREvOeEXEW5LOA7aTNF8+81Z0JelzX5XUq7i23l2SniCdwbu25J6+Vn2Gh5DOTv5F0nGkY20bZnakKbpU0oukWx4eJt0LO46ZPayLtsrLc5uMw2z46XR3aT/88KM9D1KHk++SzuhMI/1hC9Llr0UarLMM6Y/c1LzO/5H+mE+gZAgZUuJ4Deks4sv55+1L2i1Futz9HClB6BtShXSf2SWkhPWl/FqfoHxomgVJY/89SUoM+4ZrKWufy9ckdSx4jnSm7W7S2aK569qVrp/rZhnqZIB9Pq4YU6F8HmB/4IbCvrqX1Kt4s0K7sXn9cSXbbvT+9iElg6/lbe5LOnsbwDp1bb9Bugz7Rq4fn8vHFz+TunWm0GAYopK26+Tt7NCg/qZcv0td+Vm5/AcN1pvjzzDXfxC4NO//5/LrLlX/+ZLGoKyNlfg66Sz7xRSGwSm0vRK4oZ3fbT/8aPVDEe5MZTYS5RksziXNYvH/ImJEzH87EuUzY/sCy0bE421+7UtI4xl+op2v2wmS1iJdbt4+Ii7scDhmg+bk0GwEyzNTnA9sCXwtIn7V4ZBsDkiaP+p6yEp6J2nIlociov6yfDtiWg24DdgyIi5t9+u3k6QLgIUjovJtAWbDiZNDM7MekTsc/ZQ0o8cjwGjSJdHFSfeU9ptb28ysnjukmJn1jvtIwwrVEsLpwI2k6e4u72RgZtY9fObQzMzMzPp4nEMzMzMz6+Pk0MzMzMz6ODk0MzMzsz5ODs3MzMysj5NDMzMzM+vz/wGDbm7RNIiuzAAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==", "text/plain": [ - "
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" ] }, "metadata": { @@ -236,7 +669,10 @@ } ], "source": [ - "pd.Series(wordcounts).hist()" + "pd.Series(wordcounts).hist(grid=False, figsize=(10,4), color='#86bf91', zorder=2, rwidth=0.9)\n", + "plt.title(\"Quotation Length\")\n", + "plt.xlabel(\"Quotation length (words)\")\n", + "plt.ylabel(\"Number of quotations\")" ] } ], From 791bed0283980e16a2a4fa9eee1b7d70686f493b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Mon, 8 May 2023 15:08:44 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 59/63] add final edits to notebook --- preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 604 +------------------------------- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 596 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index e6ab896..d7cdf37 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -7,139 +7,17 @@ "source": [ "# Converting the PDF to Text\n", "\n", - "The PDFs are converted to text using this package: https://github.com/jsvine/pdfplumber#extracting-text. Follow the installation instructions before running this notebook. If you're running jupyter notebook in your browser, just run the cell below to install packages.\n" + "**Recommended to run notebook in browser since user input functionality works better there.**\n", + "\n", + "This notebook converts a PDF to text files\n", + "The PDFs are converted to text using this package: https://github.com/jsvine/pdfplumber#extracting-text. Follow the installation instructions before running this notebook. If you're running jupyter notebook in your browser, just run the cell below to install packages." ] }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 5, + "execution_count": null, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "\u001b[31mERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement re (from versions: none)\u001b[0m\u001b[31m\n", - "\u001b[0m\u001b[31mERROR: No matching distribution found for re\u001b[0m\u001b[31m\n", - "\u001b[0m--- Logging error ---\n", - "Traceback (most recent call last):\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 177, in emit\n", - " self.console.print(renderable, overflow=\"ignore\", crop=False, style=style)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1673, in print\n", - " extend(render(renderable, render_options))\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1305, in render\n", - " for render_output in iter_render:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 134, in __rich_console__\n", - " for line in lines:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/segment.py\", line 249, in split_lines\n", - " for segment in segments:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1283, in render\n", - " renderable = rich_cast(renderable)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/protocol.py\", line 36, in rich_cast\n", - " renderable = cast_method()\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 130, in __rich__\n", - " pip_cmd = get_best_invocation_for_this_pip()\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/entrypoints.py\", line 58, in get_best_invocation_for_this_pip\n", - " if found_executable and os.path.samefile(\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/genericpath.py\", line 101, in samefile\n", - " s2 = os.stat(f2)\n", - "FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/bin/pip'\n", - "Call stack:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 196, in _run_module_as_main\n", - " return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 86, in _run_code\n", - " exec(code, run_globals)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/__main__.py\", line 31, in \n", - " sys.exit(_main())\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/main.py\", line 70, in main\n", - " return command.main(cmd_args)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 101, in main\n", - " return self._main(args)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 223, in _main\n", - " self.handle_pip_version_check(options)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/req_command.py\", line 190, in handle_pip_version_check\n", - " pip_self_version_check(session, options)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 236, in pip_self_version_check\n", - " logger.warning(\"[present-rich] %s\", upgrade_prompt)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1489, in warning\n", - " self._log(WARNING, msg, args, **kwargs)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1624, in _log\n", - " self.handle(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1634, in handle\n", - " self.callHandlers(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1696, in callHandlers\n", - " hdlr.handle(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 968, in handle\n", - " self.emit(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 179, in emit\n", - " self.handleError(record)\n", - "Message: '[present-rich] %s'\n", - "Arguments: (UpgradePrompt(old='22.2.2', new='23.1.2'),)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: pdfplumber in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (0.9.0)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: pdfminer.six==20221105 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (20221105)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: Wand>=0.6.10 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (0.6.11)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: Pillow>=9.1 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfplumber) (9.4.0)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: cryptography>=36.0.0 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (40.0.2)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: charset-normalizer>=2.0.0 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (3.1.0)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: cffi>=1.12 in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from cryptography>=36.0.0->pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (1.15.1)\n", - "Requirement already satisfied: pycparser in /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages (from cffi>=1.12->cryptography>=36.0.0->pdfminer.six==20221105->pdfplumber) (2.21)\n", - "--- Logging error ---\n", - "Traceback (most recent call last):\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 177, in emit\n", - " self.console.print(renderable, overflow=\"ignore\", crop=False, style=style)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1673, in print\n", - " extend(render(renderable, render_options))\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1305, in render\n", - " for render_output in iter_render:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 134, in __rich_console__\n", - " for line in lines:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/segment.py\", line 249, in split_lines\n", - " for segment in segments:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/console.py\", line 1283, in render\n", - " renderable = rich_cast(renderable)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_vendor/rich/protocol.py\", line 36, in rich_cast\n", - " renderable = cast_method()\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 130, in __rich__\n", - " pip_cmd = get_best_invocation_for_this_pip()\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/entrypoints.py\", line 58, in get_best_invocation_for_this_pip\n", - " if found_executable and os.path.samefile(\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/genericpath.py\", line 101, in samefile\n", - " s2 = os.stat(f2)\n", - "FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/bin/pip'\n", - "Call stack:\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 196, in _run_module_as_main\n", - " return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/runpy.py\", line 86, in _run_code\n", - " exec(code, run_globals)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/__main__.py\", line 31, in \n", - " sys.exit(_main())\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/main.py\", line 70, in main\n", - " return command.main(cmd_args)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 101, in main\n", - " return self._main(args)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/base_command.py\", line 223, in _main\n", - " self.handle_pip_version_check(options)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/cli/req_command.py\", line 190, in handle_pip_version_check\n", - " pip_self_version_check(session, options)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/self_outdated_check.py\", line 236, in pip_self_version_check\n", - " logger.warning(\"[present-rich] %s\", upgrade_prompt)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1489, in warning\n", - " self._log(WARNING, msg, args, **kwargs)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1624, in _log\n", - " self.handle(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1634, in handle\n", - " self.callHandlers(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 1696, in callHandlers\n", - " hdlr.handle(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/logging/__init__.py\", line 968, in handle\n", - " self.emit(record)\n", - " File \"/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/lib/python3.10/site-packages/pip/_internal/utils/logging.py\", line 179, in emit\n", - " self.handleError(record)\n", - "Message: '[present-rich] %s'\n", - "Arguments: (UpgradePrompt(old='22.2.2', new='23.1.2'),)\n" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "# run this cell to install packages if you're running jupyter notebook in browser \n", "import sys\n", @@ -149,475 +27,9 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": 11, + "execution_count": null, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [ - { - "name": "stdout", - "output_type": "stream", - "text": [ - "\n", - "T ran sg ress\n", - "[]\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "New York London\n", - "[]\n", - "CIP\n", - "[]\n", - "—Paulo Freire\n", - "[]\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "6 Essentialism and Experience 77\n", - "[]\n", - "Index 209\n", - "['7', '93']\n", - "\n", - "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['7', '93']\n", - "Check PDF page 9 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "\n", - "were entirely appropriate because, she said, “You never wanted\n", - "[]\n", - "were on a mission.\n", - "['2']\n", - "the practice of freedom. Realizing this, I lost my love of school.\n", - "['3']\n", - "confinement rather than a place of promise and possibility. I\n", - "['4']\n", - "teaching and the learning experience could be different.\n", - "['5']\n", - "about pedagogy in relation to the practice of freedom.\n", - "['6']\n", - "stimulate serious intellectual and/or academic engagement.\n", - "['7']\n", - "coupled with the tensions of “differences,” was impossible to\n", - "['8']\n", - "ment forward does not seem to coincide with any significant\n", - "['9']\n", - "classroom as different, that strategies must constantly be\n", - "['10']\n", - "ognized more for insurgent intellectual practice. Indeed, the\n", - "[]\n", - "makes education the practice of freedom.\n", - "['12']\n", - "13\n", - "['13']\n", - "dents and professors regarded one another as “whole” human\n", - "['14']\n", - "rare that anyone talks about teachers in university settings as\n", - "['15']\n", - "The self was presumably emptied out the moment the thresh­\n", - "['16']\n", - "teaching. It was particularly disappointing to encounter white\n", - "['17']\n", - "hostile responses to the vision of liberatory education that con-\n", - "['18']\n", - "gays and lesbians and the poor and anyone else who\n", - "['19']\n", - "her essay, “Interrupting the Calls for Student Voice in Libera-\n", - "['20']\n", - "practices a site of resistance. In her essay, “On Race and Voice:\n", - "['21']\n", - "capacity to live fully and deeply.\n", - "['22']\n", - "23\n", - "['23']\n", - "we were certain of our radicalness. Days before the reunion, I\n", - "['24']\n", - "ference meant that we had to struggle to claim the integrity of\n", - "['25']\n", - "separates white and black, the haves and the have-nots, men\n", - "['26']\n", - "describes. They are most committed to maintaining systems of\n", - "['27']\n", - "domination necessarily promotes addiction to lying and denial.\n", - "['28']\n", - "mologies, and the concomitant demand that there be a trans-\n", - "['29']\n", - "happening was not the comforting “melting pot” idea of cul-\n", - "['30']\n", - "change. In one of my Toni Morrison seminars, as we went\n", - "['31']\n", - "one set of absolutes with another, simply changing content,\n", - "['32']\n", - "him of the necessity of dissent, challenge and change: “Be not\n", - "['33']\n", - "sion for justice, and our love of freedom.\n", - "['34']\n", - "35\n", - "['35']\n", - "er, want it to be a space for constructive confrontation and crit­\n", - "['36']\n", - "hope that his very traditional training and his progressive prac-\n", - "['37']\n", - "black writers are “as good” as the white male canon when they\n", - "['38']\n", - "seniors, who have skillfully managed never to speak in class­\n", - "['39']\n", - "Most of the classes I teach are not small. They range anywhere\n", - "['40']\n", - "that students should enjoy learning. Yet I found that there was\n", - "['41']\n", - "Looking out over the class, across race, sexual preference, and\n", - "['42']\n", - "places an unfair responsibility onto that student. Professors can\n", - "['43']\n", - "essence of a truly liberatory liberal arts education.\n", - "['44']\n", - "45\n", - "['45']\n", - "the process of decolonization, particularly as it affects\n", - "['46']\n", - "however good those intentions may be. The pos-\n", - "['47']\n", - "language?\n", - "['48']\n", - "for that work to touch me at the very core of my being. In\n", - "['49']\n", - "Freire’s work?\n", - "['50']\n", - "talk enough about the way in which class shapes our\n", - "['51']\n", - "manifestation of my struggle with the question of moving\n", - "['52']\n", - "insightful moments. He writes:\n", - "['53']\n", - "guage, on Paulo’s work in Guinea-Bissau. I learn from this\n", - "['54']\n", - "owned his “sexism,” I want to know why he had not seen\n", - "['55']\n", - "and that struggle is often protracted.\n", - "['56']\n", - "Cornel West. We have what Paulo calls “a talking book,”\n", - "['57']\n", - "found solidarity.\n", - "['58']\n", - "59\n", - "['59']\n", - "my belonging. I was desperately trying to find my way home.\n", - "['60']\n", - "bring a process or practice into being; concurrently one may\n", - "['61']\n", - "with collective sources. Echoing feminist theorists, especially\n", - "['62']\n", - "ten in a manner that renders it accessible to a broad reading\n", - "['63']\n", - "movements when students, most of whom are female, come to\n", - "['64']\n", - "false assumption that theory is not a social practice, they pro­\n", - "['65']\n", - "folks that I do not want to make waves, or make myself an out-\n", - "['66']\n", - "were seen as potentially disruptive of sisterhood and solidarity.\n", - "['67']\n", - "cess to the process of theory making—threaten collective black\n", - "['68']\n", - "theory is misused. We must do more than critique the conserva­\n", - "['69']\n", - "based feminism, because I fear that any feminist transforma­\n", - "['70']\n", - "read my work and wanted to share that they are working to\n", - "['71']\n", - "thinking and practice wherever I am. When asked to talk in\n", - "['72']\n", - "taking place within. Holding my hands, standing body to body,\n", - "['73']\n", - "where it all began, to that moment when an individual woman\n", - "['74']\n", - "be no gap between feminist theory and feminist practice.\n", - "['75']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "77\n", - "['77']\n", - "ist literary practices.” Curious to know what works would lend\n", - "['78']\n", - "feminist scholarship and professional encounters takes on\n", - "['79']\n", - "“Essentialism in the Classroom” is to some extent informed by\n", - "['80']\n", - "their having to name the desire for it. They do not attend class\n", - "['81']\n", - "power leaves unquestioned the critical practices of other\n", - "['82']\n", - "groups enter classrooms within institutions where their voices\n", - "['83']\n", - "it is her voice. When she raises the question “how are we to han-\n", - "['84']\n", - "eralizations. Like her, I have seen the way essentialist stand­\n", - "['85']\n", - "pedagogical practices are silencing them, I have to examine\n", - "['86']\n", - "be posed in a manner that would not imply a condescending\n", - "['87']\n", - "dominant structures, a position that gives purpose and mean­\n", - "['88']\n", - "salized, I knew from my experience as a black female that black\n", - "['89']\n", - "passion of experience, the passion of remembrance.\n", - "['90']\n", - "other ingredients but no flour. Suddenly, the flour becomes\n", - "['91']\n", - "way to know.\n", - "['92']\n", - "93\n", - "['93']\n", - "tioning within sexist norms, personal contact between the two\n", - "['94']\n", - "those rare cases where slaveholding white men sought divorces\n", - "['95']\n", - "away from their enslaved mothers. Again it was within this\n", - "['96']\n", - "realm of servant-served. Living in segregated neighborhoods,\n", - "['97']\n", - "on relationships between black women domestics and white\n", - "['98']\n", - "and the comments and stories of black women in our commu-\n", - "['99']\n", - "positions similar to those assumed by cultural anthropologists\n", - "['100']\n", - "are not rooted in historical relations and contemporary inter-\n", - "['101']\n", - "Ironically, many of the black women who were actively en­\n", - "['102']\n", - "of their analysis of “race,” but rather focus on black women or\n", - "['103']\n", - "era, doing ‘great’ work on the topic of race.” Some black\n", - "['104']\n", - "Talking with black women and women of color I wanted to\n", - "['105']\n", - "impact of poverty and deprivation.\n", - "['106']\n", - "was shaping the nature and direction of the discussions, and\n", - "['107']\n", - "encounter, ways of being that promote respect and reconcilia-\n", - "['108']\n", - "the racist assumption that we can never overcome the barrier\n", - "['109']\n", - "ity, sisterhood based on political solidarity will emerge.\n", - "['122']\n", - "111\n", - "['111']\n", - "ies, and Women’s Studies as well as other disciplines usually\n", - "['122']\n", - "address diverse responses may be as threatened by the perspec-\n", - "['122']\n", - "assigned material to see if they were interested in it, if it was\n", - "['122']\n", - "would alter their relationships with black men. They were con-\n", - "['122']\n", - "their own lives they felt it was difficult to speak out and share\n", - "['122']\n", - "on their beliefs in other settings. There was silence when Tanya\n", - "['122']\n", - "“holds the key to liberation.”\n", - "['122']\n", - "119\n", - "['119']\n", - "“women” were talked about, the experience of white women\n", - "['120']\n", - "scholarship. In those days, I imagined that my work and that of\n", - "['121']\n", - "black women who embraced feminist thinking and practice\n", - "['122']\n", - "women now responded to critiques and worked to create a criti­\n", - "['123']\n", - "scholars, already seriously marginalized by the institutionalized\n", - "['124']\n", - "literary critics received attention and at times acclaim. Black\n", - "['125']\n", - "politically neutral scholarship. Yet, the absence of feminist\n", - "['126']\n", - "the shifts in their thinking.\n", - "['127']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "129\n", - "['129']\n", - "and marginalized groups (women of all races or ethnicities,\n", - "['130']\n", - "ers and privileges), I have taught primarily at private institu-\n", - "['131']\n", - "me up to feel that the professor is something I become as\n", - "['132']\n", - "what’s that, fourteen years?\n", - "['133']\n", - "on the planet. I feel that one of the things blocking a lot\n", - "['134']\n", - "cated by the fact that you and I are both sensitive to—and\n", - "['135']\n", - "ly the challenge to that mind/body split. Once we start\n", - "['136']\n", - "odds with the body. I think part of why everyone in the\n", - "['137']\n", - "more evident that we work in the classroom. For some\n", - "['138']\n", - "the case for professors and teachers who, in the class-\n", - "['139']\n", - "been willing to change their curriculum, but who in fact\n", - "['140']\n", - "should be such a wonderful word, a rich word. Yet it is\n", - "['141']\n", - "ment with pedagogical practices may not be welcomed by\n", - "['142']\n", - "cation would be threatened by and even resist teaching\n", - "['143']\n", - "has the potential to revolutionize the classroom and they\n", - "['144']\n", - "otherwise I don’t get the respect, and the students don’t\n", - "['145']\n", - "with arbitrary rules about behavior.\n", - "['146']\n", - "the control that they try to maintain, the comments they\n", - "['147']\n", - "ment last semester at City College in my seminar on Black\n", - "['148']\n", - "others, and how she responds to knowledge presented.\n", - "['149']\n", - "to be pursued in the classroom?\n", - "['150']\n", - "it’s a mistake to think we’re talking about giving students\n", - "['151']\n", - "have nothing to learn from their students.\n", - "['152']\n", - "of what the banking system does for professors is create\n", - "['153']\n", - "place. If we are all emotionally shut down, how can there\n", - "['154']\n", - "eratory pedagogical practice is the challenge on the part\n", - "['155']\n", - "agreed it wasn’t working out. Afterwards, people ran after\n", - "['156']\n", - "fear of failure. Progressive teaching tries to eradicate that\n", - "['157']\n", - "morning and go to it. I couldn’t even sleep at night,\n", - "['158']\n", - "the material. But it was a horrible experience. We became\n", - "['159']\n", - "institutional support for liberatory pedagogical practices.\n", - "['160']\n", - "structures before coming into college, I wouldn’t be able\n", - "['161']\n", - "ple, if you are a tenured professor, you can take a leave of\n", - "['162']\n", - "incidents, both cases where African Americans were killed\n", - "['163']\n", - "ing is not always a year sabbatical where you’re busting\n", - "['164']\n", - "being with people.\n", - "['165']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "167\n", - "['1', '1', '167']\n", - "\n", - "3 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", - "['1', '1', '167']\n", - "Check PDF page 176 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", - "167\n", - "could not be spoken, were outlawed tongues, renegade speech.\n", - "['168']\n", - "culture of resistance could be formed that would make recov­\n", - "['169']\n", - "more than the oppressor’s language.\n", - "['170']\n", - "were individuals for whom standard English was a second or\n", - "['171']\n", - "On Call when she declares:\n", - "['172']\n", - "creating spaces where diverse voices can speak in words other\n", - "['173']\n", - "particularly difficult in a society that would have us believe that\n", - "['174']\n", - "selves in language.\n", - "['175']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "177\n", - "['177']\n", - "sent. Students are often silenced by means of their acceptance\n", - "['178']\n", - "There is little or no discussion of the way in which the attitudes\n", - "['179']\n", - "there was a shift in perspective.\n", - "['180']\n", - "would enhance my class mobility. Yet I thought of this solely in\n", - "['181']\n", - "encourage students to reject the notion that they must choose\n", - "['182']\n", - "ty for me to challenge this biased assumption. By challenging, I\n", - "['183']\n", - "opportunity to make spaces in the academy where class can\n", - "['184']\n", - "more than others.\n", - "['185']\n", - "Some students may feel threatened if awareness of class dif-\n", - "['186']\n", - "power was not itself negative. It depended what one did with it.\n", - "['187']\n", - "they will not have to work as hard as they do in other classes.\n", - "['188']\n", - "cratic ideal of education for everyone can be realized.\n", - "['189']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "191\n", - "['191']\n", - "about ways such repression and denial could lead to the\n", - "['192']\n", - "Recently, Susan B., a colleague and friend, whom I taught in\n", - "['193']\n", - "classroom to aid the learning process. Keen continues:\n", - "['194']\n", - "in the literature as well as critically interrogating our experi-\n", - "['195']\n", - "Here an Asian student offers her thoughts about a class:\n", - "['196']\n", - "right up to the front, picked me up and whirled me around.\n", - "['197']\n", - "necessary to teach on the subject. I asked students once: “Why\n", - "['198']\n", - "mind and body to feel and know desire.\n", - "['199']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "201\n", - "['201']\n", - "the spirit. After twenty years of teaching, I have begun to need\n", - "['202']\n", - "more conventionally, because they frequently had small class-\n", - "['203']\n", - "work that are most often deemed interesting by students and\n", - "['204']\n", - "suggestions and interventions as we go along. Evaluations at\n", - "['205']\n", - "conventional mind and who could actually stop my\n", - "['206']\n", - "the practice of freedom.\n", - "['207']\n", - "This page intentionally left blank\n", - "[]\n", - "209\n", - "['209']\n", - "Burst of Light, A (Lorde), 93 atory education for, 69\n", - "['210']\n", - "eratory practice, 134; as practice relating of, in classroom, 85-86;\n", - "['122']\n", - "Free speech, right to, 179 Perspective” (Orner), 20-21\n", - "['212']\n", - "McLaren, Peter, 31, 129 Patriarchy, theories of, 69\n", - "['213']\n", - "Race, and gender, 77-78, 108 men, 116\n", - "['214']\n", - "also Professor 125\n", - "['215']\n", - "Wilson, Jane Ellen, 185, 205 Cultural Politics (hooks), 72, 78\n", - "['216']\n" - ] - } - ], + "outputs": [], "source": [ "import re \n", "import pdfplumber\n", From 16e3baa5c87b273801e704c3f0ca2b92d13ed217 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Mon, 8 May 2023 15:18:10 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 60/63] add more comments --- preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 7 ++++++- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index d7cdf37..8366515 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -9,7 +9,12 @@ "\n", "**Recommended to run notebook in browser since user input functionality works better there.**\n", "\n", - "This notebook converts a PDF to text files\n", + "This notebook converts a PDF to a text file and detects the page numbers. The printed page numbers and the indexed page numbers are added after each page's text in the text file in the following format: \n", + "\n", + "~printed_page_number:[NUM HERE]~ \n", + "\n", + "~indexed_page_number:[NUM HERE]~\n", + "\n", "The PDFs are converted to text using this package: https://github.com/jsvine/pdfplumber#extracting-text. Follow the installation instructions before running this notebook. If you're running jupyter notebook in your browser, just run the cell below to install packages." ] }, From c342c9b0fab6063a423fe9577f5b5e3b044b13c9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Mon, 8 May 2023 15:25:30 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 61/63] final comments --- preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 33 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 26 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb index 8366515..4b67c42 100644 --- a/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb +++ b/preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb @@ -5,11 +5,11 @@ "cell_type": "markdown", "metadata": {}, "source": [ - "# Converting the PDF to Text\n", + "# PDF to Text with Page Number Detection\n", "\n", "**Recommended to run notebook in browser since user input functionality works better there.**\n", "\n", - "This notebook converts a PDF to a text file and detects the page numbers. The printed page numbers and the indexed page numbers are added after each page's text in the text file in the following format: \n", + "This notebook converts a PDF to a text file and detects the page numbers. If multiple potential page numbers are detected, the user will be asked to confirm which of the page numbers is correct. The printed page numbers and the indexed page numbers are added after each page's text in the text file in the following format: \n", "\n", "~printed_page_number:[NUM HERE]~ \n", "\n", @@ -32,9 +32,26 @@ }, { "cell_type": "code", - "execution_count": null, + "execution_count": 1, "metadata": {}, - "outputs": [], + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "\n", + "2 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", + "['7', '93']\n", + "Check PDF page 9 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "3 potential page numbers were found for this page.\n", + "['1', '1', '167']\n", + "Check PDF page 176 for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.\n", + "167\n" + ] + } + ], "source": [ "import re \n", "import pdfplumber\n", @@ -62,11 +79,12 @@ " all_matches.append(top_right_page_matches[-1].strip())\n", " if bottom_page_matches:\n", " all_matches.append(bottom_page_matches[-1].strip())\n", + " \n", " if len(all_matches) > 0:\n", " if len(all_matches) > 1: # more than one potential page number \n", " print(f'\\n{len(all_matches)} potential page numbers were found for this page.')\n", " print(all_matches)\n", - " print(f'Check PDF page {i+1} for the correct page number and enter it below (exactly as displayed in the print) If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.')\n", + " print(f'Check PDF page {i+1} for the correct page number and enter it below. If the page has no printed page number, do not input anything.')\n", " correct_page_number = input()\n", " print(correct_page_number)\n", " if len(correct_page_number.strip()) != 0:\n", @@ -82,8 +100,9 @@ " full_pdf_text += f'\\n~indexed_page_number:{i+1}~\\n\\n'\n", "\n", "# enter the name of your output file here \n", - "with open(\"hooks_output.txt\", \"w\") as text_file:\n", - " text_file.write(full_pdf_text)\n" + "with open(\"hooks_output.txt\", \"w\", encoding=\"utf-8\") as text_file:\n", + " text_file.write(full_pdf_text)\n", + "\n" ] } ], From e274d08f2d0f532916d7aba95e64e80e283bba61 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kamau Njendu Date: Mon, 8 May 2023 23:01:57 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 62/63] auto and user confirmed deletion of book titles Auto deletion currently works well - removing ~.25 of text, but user confirmed deletion is still too broad and doesn't capture all possible matches. Current workaround is user just manually deletes remaining book titles. --- .gitignore | 8 + preprocessing/deleting-book-title.ipynb | 221 ++++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 229 insertions(+) create mode 100644 preprocessing/deleting-book-title.ipynb diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index dcf02d5..1d31b0f 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -1,3 +1,11 @@ __pycache__ text_matcher.egg-info dist/ +algorithm-testing\jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl +algorithm-testing\jstor-middlemarch-articles.json +preprocessing\gendertrouble-text.txt +preprocessing\gendertrouble-text-cleaned.txt +**/jstor-gender-trouble-all-articles.jsonl +**/jstor-middlemarch-articles.json +**/gendertrouble-text.txt +**/gendertrouble-text-cleaned.txt \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/preprocessing/deleting-book-title.ipynb b/preprocessing/deleting-book-title.ipynb new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5ce26c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/preprocessing/deleting-book-title.ipynb @@ -0,0 +1,221 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "# Detecting and deleting book/article titles\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "Setting up the text for regex\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "**Download txt file to preprocessing folder**\n", + "\n", + "**Run pip install ipysheet**" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 109, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "import re\n", + "import pandas as pd\n", + "from ipysheet import from_dataframe, to_dataframe\n", + "\n", + "#Replace file name assigned to book (make sure text file saved to preprocessing folder)\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "book = \"gendertrouble-text.txt\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "booktext=open(book,\"r\", encoding=\"utf8\")\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "test_str = booktext.read()" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Round 1: auto deletion of high accuracy title matching sequences" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# coding=utf8\n", + "# the above tag defines encoding for this document and is for Python 2.x compatibility\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "regex = r'“[^”[:lower:]]+”[^“”]+Vol\\.|“[^”[:lower:]]+”[^“”]+No\\.|eds\\.[^V()]+Vol\\.|eds\\.[^()V]+\\([^)]+\\)|“[^”[:lower:]]+”[^()]+\\([^()]+\\)|\\.,[^()]+\\([^)]+\\)|:[^()]+\\([^()]+\\)|“[^.]+pp\\.|, “[^.]+p\\.|“[^.]+ p\\. \\d|“[^V\\d]+Vol\\. \\d|“[^(\\d]+\\([^\\d]+\\d\\d\\d\\d\\)'\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "subst = \"\"\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "# You can manually specify the number of replacements by changing the 4th argument\n", + "result = re.sub(regex, subst, test_str, 0, re.MULTILINE)\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "if result:\n", + " test_str = result\n", + "# Note: for Python 2.7 compatibility, use ur\"\" to prefix the regex and u\"\" to prefix the test string and substitution." + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Round 2: Cycling through general regex with user input confirming deletion of a portion of text\n", + "\n", + "This section is still in progress as not as effective in finding possible matches as I would want. Current alternative is only having user run Round 1 and then manually delete the remaining matches." + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 101, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Sets up a panda dataframe of identified text for user to go through\n", + "\n", + "regex_match_list = ['“[^”]+”[^()]+\\([^()]+\\)','\\.,[^()]+\\([^)]+\\)',':[^()]+\\([^()]+\\)',',[^()]+\\([^)]+\\)',':[^()]+\\([^()]+\\)']\n", + "\n", + "prematches = []\n", + "\n", + "matches = []\n", + "\n", + "# Goes expression by expression to find possible matches\n", + "\n", + "for reg in regex_match_list:\n", + " regex = '((.*(\\n|\\r|\\r\\n)){2})' + reg + '((.*(\\n|\\r|\\r\\n)){2})'\n", + " \n", + " prematches = prematches + re.findall(regex, test_str) \n", + "\n", + "for m in prematches:\n", + " #matches.append(r\"'\"+''.join(m)+\"'\")\n", + " matches.append(repr(''.join(m)))\n" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "⚠️ Note: editing the spreadsheet may cause it to collapse. Don't worry just look below the following block of code and click the three dots following \"Outputs are collapsed\". ⚠️" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": null, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# Creates an interactive spreadsheet where user copy pastes actual matches on the cell 1 over.\n", + "\n", + "possible_matches = pd.DataFrame({\"Possible Matches\": matches, \"Correct Matches\": [None for i in range(len(matches))]})\n", + "\n", + "sheet = from_dataframe(possible_matches)\n", + "\n", + "sheet.column_width = [10,10,5,5,5,10] #adjust column widths so user does not have to scroll horizontally\n", + "\n", + "sheet" + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Processing correct matches given by user" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 87, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "# coding=utf8\n", + "# the above tag defines encoding for this document and is for Python 2.x compatibility\n", + "\n", + "correct_matches = \"\"\n", + "\n", + "new_possible_matches = to_dataframe(sheet)\n", + "\n", + "for m in new_possible_matches[\"Correct Matches\"]:\n", + " if m != None:\n", + " if len(correct_matches) != 0:\n", + " correct_matches = correct_matches + \"|\" + m\n", + " else:\n", + " correct_matches = m\n", + "\n", + "regex = correct_matches\n", + "\n", + "subst = \"\"\n", + "\n", + "# You can manually specify the number of replacements by changing the 4th argument\n", + "result = re.sub(regex, subst, test_str, 0, re.MULTILINE)\n", + "\n", + "if result:\n", + " test_str = result\n", + "\n", + "# Note: for Python 2.7 compatibility, use ur\"\" to prefix the regex and u\"\" to prefix the test string and substitution." + ] + }, + { + "attachments": {}, + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## Round 3: Output finalized txt file of cleaned up text\n", + " Saves a new txt file named 'given book file name - cleaned .txt'" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 95, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "cleaned_book = book.replace(\".txt\",\"\")+\"-cleaned\"+\".txt\"\n", + "\n", + "text_file = open(cleaned_book, \"wt\", encoding=\"utf-8\")\n", + "n = text_file.write(test_str)\n", + "text_file.close()" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.10.7" + }, + "orig_nbformat": 4 + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +} From b58a2be4d00a4beb975c87c5c97b78436fb280dd Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: irinaz Date: Tue, 9 May 2023 16:58:11 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 63/63] finish notebook --- preprocessing/.DS_Store | Bin 6148 -> 6148 bytes preprocessing/pdf-to-text.ipynb | 21 ++------------------- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 19 deletions(-) diff --git a/preprocessing/.DS_Store b/preprocessing/.DS_Store index 1ac9f9cbac32d9f62a2aef2dfc02b793a47795bb..d690efd53c824069161261d6b09c02dc855b64c3 100644 GIT binary patch delta 74 zcmZoMXfc=|#>B)qu~2NHo+2aL#(>?7jBJy6Sga@avbanxX8o~Qj6;xRVngv}b`E|H cpvujH9N(EI^NTogFaQA~0|U$E2$40+0OUv#5C8xG delta 371 zcma)2K}!Nb7=1G%v@C%|B6bMYqlcD-4h41bmUs#5&`oqzT-bI~C+Sv!KR}tE&{YuG zV?Qi9*_-hm4t(Ey@0<6{yf=$z5iP5-9Q`$3y&JdtOX#v_4IY!3nl3^J`?lX#>I#Zf?>Uuei+LIUwaYjbMPC^_w z#+-Mj&T_&kBQxX|3^3YTH=*=Qq)xZV6vd1qiKGlyh